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/ Page B a • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 27,2000

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

I

3:35p.m.

r - (Holllr9 15-13)

10), 8:35 p.m.

at-

~.Joc................ 30

(MOy.-

•a.

Mlnn- (Millon 13· 10) 01 Clwoland

W L

Gil
II•Atlanta ........... .............. ~ 63 .-51111
89
.587
e
Aorlda ............................. 74 82 .474 It 112
21
... .......................... 87 110 .427
30
Philadojphia .•.................. 84 93 .o4011
COinNI

,_Vorto .........................

ee

Totemo ~., 10.11) ol Bolllmoto
( - 1-12), 7:05p.m.
N.Y. --~ 13-1) 01 T - Bar
(RoiW 1-10), 7:15p.m.
Oolroil (MIIcld l-11) .. Ci1y (Mood·
5'2), 8:05 p.m.
Boooln ( A - . 10--8) at CNcogo Whllo
Sox (Slrolka15-10), a:os p.m.

x-St. LOUis ........................92 85 .586

10
21
23
28
28

Cincinoali ......... ,..............82 15 .522
Milwaukee .......................71 ee .452
Houston
............89 Ill .439

-

~~",llh .::::: ::::::::::::

:: f

_F_.._
Me

x-San Franci5co ...............93 84 .582

lo1Angan .....................84 73 .535
Arizona ..................... ......83 74 .528
Colorado ·· ··········- ······ ...... 79 18 .503
San Diego .•......................15 82 .478 •
X -dioaJed division title
T-'aFiorida 5, 4, 10 Innings
Pittsburgh 9, t-tou.ton 4
Allama 7, N.Y. Moll 1
1'111 ........... 10, ~ C&gt;Jbs 4
Milweukoe 7, Cintimali 4
c-.do7. - 8
Sl. Louis 7. San~ 1
Los " " " - 9, San """""""' 0

-011

T-,..-

(Atmos 7-8) .. -

10
14

18

1 - 2·

~-

Pl1iladolphla (Poli!te 3-3) al Chicago Cubo

(Nalion 0.1 ), 2'.20 p.m.
Arizona (Reynooo 1P. 12) at Coooldo (WUmn 0·2), 3:05p.m.
Cincinnati (OesHns 10.5) at MUwaukM

(D'Airico 12-8). 4:05p.m.
S1 .. Louis (Kilo 19-9) ol San Diego {Wilasidl
3-2). 5:05p.m.
Hous100 (Lima 7-18) al Pilbburgh (SiMI 10.
9), 7:05p.m.
AUanla (Maddux 18-8) 01 N.Y. MOia
(IIJJooeo H)-8), 7:10p.m.
San Franclsoo (Eoles 1~) 81 LOI ~
(Brown 13-&lt;1), 10:10p.m.

Eut

...

W L Pet.
New Vorl&lt; ......................... 87 1111 .558

Gil

Boston
...............82 75 .522 5 112
Toromo ............................ 82 75 .522 5 1/2
Baltimore ........................ 70 87 .448 17112
Tampa

Bay .......................85 91 .417
c.nlrlil

22

•..Chicago .................. ....93 84 .582
.5"8

Cleveland .. ......................86 71
Detroit ............... .... ..........78 81

-

7
11

.484

19

Kansas City .....................74 83 .471
Minnesola ....................... 68 89

.433

Saonlo ........................... 88 19 .581
Oakland .........................87 89 .568
Anaheim ......................... 80 n .510
Texas ............................. :10 87 .448
x-clinched dlviskJn title
TlloOdoy'a aa,_
Battimore 2. Toronto 1
CIOYOiencl 4, M l , _ 2
Tampa. Bay 2, N.Y. Yankee&amp; 1
Boston 4, Chicago White Sox 3
Kansas City 7, Oetrolt IJ
5eanle 5, l'exos 0
Oakland 10, Anaheim 3

25

1/2

8
18

r-,..Anaheim (Lavine 3-4) a1 08ldand (H...rla

15-11), 3 :35p.m .
Minnesota (Radke 12-15) at Cleveland

(Bore 5-3). 7:05p.m.
Toromo (Casfillo 11-S) 81 Bollimoro (Penson
9·12). 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yank- (Neagle 7-6) al Tampa Bar
(l.iclle 3-S). 7:15p.m.
Oeiroil (Nomo 8·11 ) 01 Konoes Clly (Suppon
9·9), 8 :05p.m.
BoS1on (Crowiord 1·1) a1 Chicago Whl1a So•
(Eldred 10·2). 8:05p.m.
Texas (Davis 7·5) at Seatt1e (Garcia 8-5),
10:05 p.m.
Anaheim

0 .750
OJI87
0 .!500
0 .!500

-

Cinc::6r'IWI ......... ............ 0 3 0 .000

Montrool (Lira 5·7! al Flonda (Panny 7-7).

-~

01 .00 ee ee
0 .750 58 22
0 .887 57 58
0 .8117 101 18
o.ooo s1 12

N.v . - .........................4 o
............................ 3 ,
l!u1lolo ...........................2 I
lndilnapolil ................... 2 1
, _ Englond ..................o 4
CWIInl
Balllmore ....................... 3 I
Ten I I .................... .2 1
Clor AMl ..................... .2 2
................... 2 2

88 55
53 50
84 110
110 89
7

74

l'll1lllu!lh ...................... 0 3 0.000 40 82

7), 7:05 p.m.
Hous100 (McKnlghl 3-1) 01 Pi!t....,.h
(Andorson 5-10). 7:05 p. m.
Atlama (Milwood 1D-12) at N.v. Mols (Rood
10.5). 7:10p.m.
Pl1iladolphla (WoH 11-8) .. Chicago Cubo
(Wood 7·7). 8:05p.m.
Cincinnati {Bol7-8) aiMi,_.eo (Rig0on44) , B:OS p.m.
Arizona (Schilling 11-12) al Colorado
(Tavarez 10-5}, 9:05p.m.
San Frorcioco (Gardner 11 ·7) 01 Los Angeles (Prokopoc 1.0), 10:05 p.m.
St L.ouia (Ankiel10.7) al San Diego cr-t
4-4) , 10:05 p.m.
1:05 p.m.

loot
W L TPia. PF PA

8

Ooldand ........................3 1 0 . 750107 80
Doffl« ......................... .2 2 0 .!500 133 102
Ci!r ................... .2 2 0 .!500 93 18

.......................... .2 2 0 .!500 74
San Diogo .....................0 4 0 .000 55
NFC

82
88

Eoot

N.Y.Giom ..................... 3
Phillldolplil .................. .2
Wlul1nglcn ...................2
Altzor. ......... ................. 1
001101 .............................

-

1
2
2
2
3

0 .750
0 .!100
0 .!100
0 .333
0.250

74 57
8380
87 55
51 81
88 135

MhwteSOta .....................3 0 01.00 84

47

OOIIOil ............................ 3
TampaBor ..................... 3
Gnoon
2
ChiCigO .........................0

65
47

, 0.750 80
1 0.750110
2 o.!100 1111
4 0 .000 ...

,........,.._

eor ......... .............

53
108

Sl. ..... .............. ...........4 0 01 .00 180 114
Allllra .-..........................2 2 0 .500 85 121
carolina .......................... 2 o.333 65 s7
NewOrlowll .................. l 3 0 .250 55 82
s.n Francilco ................1 3 0 .250 t15 131

332 11 .124 ,
R. Srrilh.Don................. .25 402 11.1 47 3
Glom, N£ ....................... .23 211 II .8 3111 2
Brown, N.E.....................22 187 8.0 2fl 0

· - 37,21Clnc:Wioll
0
F'tt11MIIp.'16a
, New CJnelnl
7

~==:=r20

Cl1r
- 20.

23, DorNW 22

San OioJo 12
N.Y. Jels 21, Tlmpo Boy 17
Ooldond :M. CIOYIIInd 10
18, N.Y. Gion1s e
Opon: ~.
Caloilna
lloncllfo lndionapolil43, - - 14
S..ndoy. Oct. ,
Dallaa at Carolina. 1 p.m.
San Diego 01 St Looio, 1 p.m.
Indianapolis 01 Bullalo, 1 p.m.
M - 01 Oolroil, 1 p.m.
N.Y. G8ms at Tennessee, 1 p.m.
Bllltlmore at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
Pi11IOulgh 01 JocQonvllle, 1 p.m.
Miami 01 Cincinnati, 4:05 p.m.
Now England 01 o.-. 4:05 p.m.
- 0 1 San
4:15p.m.
Chicago a1 GroM Bar. 4:15p.m.
Tampe Bay at WUhi~. • :1S p.m.
AllanUo all'hiladolphla, 8:20 p.m.
Open: N.Y. Jels, Ooidand, Naw Orloono

MI-.

Fi•.....,,

-,,Oct.2
Seattle a 1 - Cily, 8 p.m.

~ko
Alt. Cc:n. Yda. ""'Int.
a.-. Don ....................93 eo 111 1 o
. Manning, Ind ................. He 18 1080 8 3
Johnson, But.................. JKJ .ae 857 e 2
Couch, a. .................... 11a n 818 6 3
,..,_

Grllac, K.C . ............... .... 124

......

70 541 10 4

.....-

R..._

Andorton, Don ..... ...........

es

403
Monln, ~Y.J .................. .. 88 331
James, Ind ......................88 304

waners. s... .................65

L Smilh,Mia ....................80

290

2n

-c... . . . . .

.......

ee

Coo1Mgham. Dol ..............83
C011int. NY.Q .................. 131

.....

12 1102 10 4
e2 788 5 3
47 5113 8 2
83 1153 4 2

R-.
..__

.... U1111

358
344

4
3
5
0

Guno&lt;, S .F....................... n
- · NY.Q .................. 51
Davlo. ...................... 85
FOIJk, SI . L ......................... 74
R. - . N.O... ............. 87

...,._

V&amp;TD-...
95 1557 10 1

AII.C....

Wlnw, St.L. ................ I35
Gordo, S.F.................... 11e

-UITD

4.7283
3.8 2fl 2
4.5 30 3
4.5 36 3
3.5 3e 2

Recetu ....

~~k~,:a'(Appler 15-t11.. ~.Jac .................. : ; ~~ ~:\;~ rg

5.5 34
8.8781
3.8 33
4.8 30
4.0 22

Net. Ydl..

Ham, N.O ............................28 276

1

.... UITD

1.11 18 2

o-&gt;a, S.F......................... 23 328 14-3 53 4
M. Robinoon,Chi .............23 292 12.7IISI 2
FIIUik. SI.L ......................23 2118 11 .7 721: 1
Hiliord, NY.0 ....................22 285 13.0301 2

Olllo ~""':""COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - How a ota1e
poniil olopono writers lind , _ . , . ra1eo

Otolo hlgl&gt;
- 2000- .......,.,
·...
-Prin
of
olghl
~
. lholhlld
. poll. ill'
OfiSM divialona. will - - r.....a and
poll1l3 (fir11-p10ce ..,. In oer••~
DIVISION I
1. CioYe. Stlllnaliul (33) ........ 5.()
347
2. Maaallon Wuhington .......... 5.()
300
3.. Cln. ........................... 5.()
242
4. Ujlpor Arllng""' (1) ............... 5.()
238
5. ~ ......................... 5.()
198
8. 8t1alc• titS . .......................... 5-0
188
7. SOlon (2) ..............................5.()
150
8. Conlon Glen Ook.. ............ ... 5.()
130
8. Ma!sllon Porry .................... 5.()
74

):

10. ~~' i2'0&lt;'ii!: polnls: ~.
Lapn 28; 12. Troy 25; 13. Clo. GienYIJa 13;
1•. Mitton Hardl~ N
I. Youngs. Chaney (17) ........... 5.()
2. Dellance (2) .......................... 5-0
3. Nllos McKinley (5) ................
4. Awn Lai&lt;e (2) ....... ................ 5-0
5 . MolyS\Iille (2) ...........................5.()
6.
DoSoles (3) ................. 4-1

s-o

302
263
225
198
184
151
122
94
83

1. Tol. Sl. Francis ..................... 4-1
8. Aluon Bucl!lol (2) ...... ..............
9. Tranlon Ed(Jewood ................ 4-1
10. Piqua ...................................4-1
82
Otners recaiving 12 Df' more points: 11 . (tie)
Cole. Bnchaoft (1). Olmsted Falls 58; 13.
Spring. Sou1h (1) 43; 1 4 . - 33; 15. Mayfield 25; 16. Tol. Rogara 21; 11..
11;
18.. "lol Cin. St Bomord·~ Bocoo 11.1. Cin.
McNk:holu 14;
Colo. Broolchaven 13.
DMIIONIII
1.
(D) .._, __ ,. ... .5.()
~·3
2. llc:Comolovllo ....._ (2)5.()
3. Aknln Hoban (3) ................... 4-1
185
4. Big Wllloo1 (2) ........ 5-0
179
5. Cols. Wauerson ....................4-1
138
8. Orrvile (1) ...............................
134

Bt-

p-

7.

Day. Chaminac:le.Julleme .....-.1

202
133

8. COnlOn Calh. (2) .................. 4-1
131
8. COnlOn Soulh .. :....................S.O
70
10. Wlnl8fll\lllo lndlon CrOOk (2)5.()
57
Oltln rec:eivlng 12 or more polnta: 11 .
Millo!sl&gt;urg w. Holmes 50; 12. Usbon BeaLocal38; 13. onaw.GiandOrf 37; 14. LDulsville
40; 15. !ioleYue 38; 16. Carrolllon 30; 17. Mod·
Ina Hlgtland 22: 11. JecUon 20: 18. (lie)
Wooat• Triwlly, Clrdavllle LDgan Elm 19; 21 .
Golllpollo II; 22. ~lo) Cin. PutcA!I"Marian,
AohoYIIIo T•rs Voll. 15: 24. Thomvilis Shari·
dan 14; 25. Foatorla 13; 28. (tie) Copill)'. van
Wen 12.
DM810NIV
1. Sanduaky Porldno (21) .........5-0
328
2. Gormon1own \lalloylliew (2) .s.o
272
3. voungo. u""""" (3) ................s.o
2211
4. Nowarll Uddng \Iaiiey (3) ..... 5-0
208
5. Coohoc1on (3) ........................ 5-D
190
e. Clovo. VASJ (1) ....................5-0
181
C1J ...- ......- ............H
1M
a. L.oulovlllo Aquinas ................ s.o
152
e . Akron ManchestiW (1) ...........4--1
81
10. Coldwater ............................ 4-1
51
OlhWI ..-vlng 12 or more palms: 11 .
Wallington (1) 26; 12. Chearin Faits 24: 13. Cin.
WyomTng 21 ; '"'· Lo~TIIe 18; 15. Huron 13;
18. Cln. lndian Hil 12.
DMSIONY
1. Amlnda·Ciearcreek (19) ...... 4-1
296
2. llber1y Cenlor (4) ................. 5-D
243
3. Colo. Aoady (4) .................... 4-0
237
4. Blulllon (1) ............................. 5-0
188
5 . Mestlllon tualaw ................. .S.O
151
8 . Morral Rklgadlllo (I) ... ......... 5-D
130
7 . St Henry ...............................4-1
122
8 . JoMIIOWn Nor1hrldgo (1) .....5-0
107
• . - - I IIller ....................11.()
11

7.-

Shawnee State netters top Rio Grande
RIO GRANDE - The University of Rio Grande volleyball
squad lost a match to Shawnee
State for the first time since 1992
on Tuesday night as the Bears
won a grueling five-game affair,
15-9,13- 15, 15-8,4-15,16-14.
Shawnee State had lost 15
straight matches to Rio Grande
prior to Tuesday's victory.
Senior outside hitter ·Alisha
Flesher Jed Rio Grande (7-13,
AM C 1-3) with 24 kills. Flesher

had 35 in three matches last
week. The Bridgeport, W.Va.,
native added 18 digs and four
serve aces for Rio Grande.
Junior Andrea Brown had some
big moments for the Redwomen
with 15 kills and 13 digs, while
sophomore setter Jessica Wheeler
w•s busy &gt;ecumulating 38 assists
and four serve aces .
It was a sweet homecoming for
Shawnee sophomore Jeanne
Brabson, who played for the

Redwomen last season. Brabson
had 14 kills and 16 digs.
The Lady Bears (9-6, AMC 23) got tremendous net play from
Melissa Holland, Aimee Gaines
and River Valley product Jennifer
Cornelius. Holland recorded a'
match-best 28 kills. Gaines had 15
kills and Cornelius added 12 kills
and four blocks.
Rio travels to Point Park College Friday and plays at St. Vincent Saturday.

Olympics

CYCLING: Shifting gears
from the Tour de France to
Olympic road racing proved too
tough for Lance Armstrong.
The two-time Tour winner was
13th in the men's road race, well
behind geld medalist and former
Tour champion Jan Ullrich of
Germany. Ullrich completed the
148- mile course i.n 5 hours, 29
minutes, 8 seconds. The top
American, George Hincapie, finished eighth.
Armstrong still has a medal
chance in Saturday's individual
time trial , a stronger event for
him than road ucing.
TAEKWONDO: Kay Poe
reached the Olympics because
her best friend gave up her spot
on the U.S. team. Once Poe was
in Sydney. a fighter from Denmark knocked her right back our
of medal contention .
Hanne Hoegh Poulsen upset
Poe 4- 3 in a first - round flyweight match.
Poe wa s the world's top-ranked
fl ywe1ght going into the U.S. trials last spring. Then she dislocated a kneecap in the semifinals.

leaving her unable to compete in
the finals against her best friend,
Esther Kim.
Kim decided forfeit the match,
giving the more-accomplished
Poe a chance to go to the
Olympics. On Wednesday, Kim
ware hed Poe's Jo ss from the
stands.
"We are all proud of her," Kim
said : "She hasn 'r let anyone
down ."
GYMNASTICS: The flap over
whether all - around gymnastics
winner Andreea Radu ca n of
Romania gets her go ld medal
back will last at least another day.
Raducan was stripped of her
medal because took over- thecounter n1edicine containing a
banned stimulant. Rom anian
offi cials said rhe penalty was
unfair beca use the 16-year-old
was only trying to cure a cold
and took the drug on doctor's
orders.
After a 4 1/2- hour hearing
Wednesday, the Court of Arbitration for Sport uid it would rule
on Radu ca n's case by Thursday.

from Pap'B1
Sydney and killed days before
the game; ope ned .
Jones returned to the track a
day after publicly supporting her
hliSband in the wake of news that
he flunked four drug tests.
She advan ce d through two
hea lS of the 200 me ters, then
qualifi ed fo r the finals of the long
jump - two of the five events
' he hopes to win at these
O ly111pir,. She already took the
!(Old in rhe \ 00.
Jo ne&lt; husband , sho t putter C.J.
Hunter, sa id at a news conference
Tuesday that he has never knowingly taken steroids.
O n Wednesday, another field
athlete was hit with drug charges.
R o manian· Mihaela Melinte,
the world-record holder in the
women\ hammer throw, go't
kil k&lt;· d ofT the ;nficld at Olympi c
"'l 1&lt; lnnll JU'i[ before 'i h e was co
,.,mpt"t.c because she failed a pregames drug test.

(

Thomvlllt S""'klan (a-2) 5.7500; 7. (lie)
Bryan (4-1), St Marya. Memorial (3·2)
5.11500; 8. 8oilwue (4-1) 5.2000; 10. Colo.
Conlonniol (4· 1) 4.8580.
Region 11-1. II&lt;:ConnoiOYIIIo -gan
(f-0) 1.8000; 2. Cant Soulll (5.0) 8 .8000:3.
Winl:.,lvilltl Indian CrHk (5.0) Q.6500; 4.
Lisbon
(5.0) 8 . 1000; 5. Louisville (4·
I) a .8500; I . Loxlnglon (4·1) 8 . 8000; 7. C8r·
roiHon (5.0) 8.8500; 8 . Omrifto (4-1) 8 .5000;
8. Cant Cent Calh. (4·1) 8 .3400; 10.
-Ia Sloin M
~
IIMioroburg W. HOimH (4-1) 7.2!500 .
4. Narwllk St. PaU ............. ..... 5-0
D
Region 12-1 . Day. CNiminade-Julienne
• · P011M"""" Dome-W
11F (4· 1) 10.3500;
Pono1110U1h (I-OJ 8.11000:
8. E. CWQ\ .............................5-0
150- 3. Spring. Sha..,.. (4-1) 6.8500; • . Jock·
7. ~ Hts...................... 5-0
142,. eon (H) I.IIOOi 5. Cin. Purcell Marian (4·
8. Coool(lloo• .............................. s.o
na 1) 1.4190; 8. Allhvllle Teop Volley (4·1)
9. Toron1o (2) ............................5.()
85
8.3000; 7. Circleville Logon Elm (4·1)
10. McOonlld ......, ... ................ 4-1
38 , e .2000; I . Ham. Roao (3·2) 7.8000; t. Clol·
Oltw'l l'tiOIIMnQ 12 ot nue PI*U: 11. llpolla Gama Ac: ...amw (... 1) 7.3180; 10.
Carey 33; 12 . C81h. 29 13. McCcmb
Now Alchmond (5.0) 7.2500.
27: 14. GlouOiw 17; 15, Sloadyoido
•
DIVIIION IV

Ft.,,.,_
20.
lin._

a.o-

1

z.

423
381
372

R1 c 1lu..,.

20.

10. Colo. ~ .................... 5-D
78 .
Olhlrs ltcetNtg 12 or n"'Cft points: 11.
N o w - Spik- (1), 53; 12. Rod&lt;·
lord Pllrlcway (1), 48; f3. Sll-otle-.
doah 43; 14.llewoolr
41; 15. - . J
:M; 1e. caun-. ~ 21; 17.
Gai:M t.MI Hawken 10; 18. BloakWie (1~ 181
19. Coklmblona 15;
&amp;.ti¥on lllock Rlvor 14.
VI
;
1. Doipllol St Jalln'l (32)........ 5-0
~
~~~
2 ~]}~OgtdOfe~ ·;=(. ..)~

a-

a...:f.:te

coo.

Sl. Louls41,- 20
Oolroil21. Chicago 14
Son F - 41, Odu 24
MiMli 10, New England 3

-

New OVP 10 football poll, B1

Details, A3

September 11, 1000

...

(Colon 15-8), 7j)S p.m.

Eoot

Thursday

Special car care section inside today

Friday
High: 70s: Low: 40s

US.

Aegkln 13-1. Young. ursuline (5· 0)

8.8470; 2. Clove. YA·SI. Joseph (5· 0)
OHSM Prop ,oolto.ll
8.381 0; 3. Wickliffe (4-1) 8 .2000; 4. Chagrin
Computer Rellngo
FoUl (5-0) 7.11500; 5. Loulovlllo Aquinas (5·
WHit a
. 0) 7 .1000; I . Akron Manchester ("·1)
COLUMBUS Ohio (AP)- Horo orelho; j'7. 7250; 7. Porry (4·1) 7.8000; 8. Leovltta·
•
• burg LaBraa (4·1) 0 . 7000; e. Young . Liberty
1
second wHIIIy foolbllll compUIO&lt; rolngo
(3·2) 88500· 10 Gnad Indian Volloy (4-1)
from lhe Oftlo High School Alhlolle AaiOCia·
e 1500.
'
.
.
lion. Rolings ore b)' division ond region ...,h
·
j 1
.
record ana avera~• bl-lev_. polnta per game .
Reg .on ~ 1. Sandusky Per1nna (5·0~
""'hi
IN
--lo
-~·
•
8.1000,
2.
Tonlogonr
Oloogo
(4·
1)
.7.8000,
II o~ ....
""· n _.,reg n -....-ance 10
3. Wellington (5.0) 7 .5500; 4. Huron (4-1)
regiOnal quarterfi~~~ON I
7.3500; 5. C.atalla Margerena (4· 1) 8 .9000;
R-lon I-I Solon (5-0) 13 3000 . 2
·e . (tlo) BellvHio Cloor Fori&lt; (3-2), Onlarlo (4~
·
·
• ·
1) 1 .8500; 8 . Coldwallr (4·1) 8.4500; 9.
Shaker Hta. (5.0) 12.2130; 3. Cleve. St.
Avon {4-1) s 5500· 10 Wauseon (4·1)
Ignatius (4·0) 10.7380; 4. Lakewood Sl. ' ·s.sooo.
· · ·
Edward (4-1) 10.0000:5. P'alnuvlllo RlvO&lt;·
Rogion 15-1 , Iron- (Wj' 1o.aooo: 2.
oicle (4.. 1) 8 .7000. 8 . E. Clevo. Shaw (~·I)
Nowarl&lt; Udclng VBIIor (5.0) 10.4000; 3.
9.4000, 7. Clove. Glonvllla (4·1) g.2440, a. Coohoclon (5·0) 8.8000; 4. Loudonville (4-0)
8.2830; 5. Bollalre (a-2) 7.2500; e. Conal
S1rongsvlllo (4· 1) 8 .3870, t . Lakowoocl (4·1)
Wln&lt;h111or (4·1) 7.0000; 7, Ullca (4· 1)
8.0340; 10. Clove. Eall loch. (4·1) a.oooo.
Region 2-1 . Maaa. waantngton {~)
8.1500; 8. Zann. W. Musklngum (4-1)
4.9500; 9. Lone. Falrtield Union (4·1)
13.7500; 2. Mall. Porrr (S.Ol •~ · 4500 · 3 ·
Cant Glen Oak (S.O) 11 .0030; 4. Wodowo&lt;1h
4 .8500; 10. Martins Forry (3·2) 4.8000.
4
Region 18-1 Germantown Valley View
(5-0) 10.7500; 5. "arion Harding &lt; •1)
8.0000; e. lluo. J .... ~n (4-1) 8.8!500; 7.
(5.0) 0.11000; 2. an. indian HIU (5·0) 9 . 3000;
Mansfield (4·1) 8.0500, 8 . Tot SOOn (3·2) . 3. Cln. ~mlng (4·1) 8.8000; 4. Blanches·
lor (S.O) 7 .2000; 1, lclolo No-al (4-1)
7.8500. 9. (llo) Elrr!a (a-2), TOI. WhHmor (2·
31 ~!,~· 3-l Pickartnmon •
8.8000:8.
Hom. Bodin (2·3) 5.7850; 7.111.,.
.
12
-•'
·
•· 15 01 ·2000 ' lonl (3·2) 1.7120; I. Portomoulh WHI (a.
5
2. Tror (5-0)_11 .7500; 3. Upper Ar11ng1o~ 1 •
I) 1.1-: t . Cl.lrklvllle ClllliOn-Massle (3·
0) 11.2000, • · Logon (11-0) I.HOO, 5.
2) • oooo· 10 -Miorobu- (2 ") • a Hilliard Davidson (4·1) 8 .7500; 8 . (lio)
"·
• • "'O.viiiON
Gahanna Uncoln (3·2), Mlamllb"''J (3·2) , . Region 17_ 1 . New Mlckllalown Spnng·
8.7000.: 8. Worlhlnglon Kilbourne (4·1! ~ fl-.., 5·0) 8.7100; 2. Mall. Tuolaw (5·0)
8.1500, 8 . WHIIrYIHo Sou11l (3·2) 7.!000,
ii8500; 3. Bedford Chanel (4·1) 8.7980; 4.
10. Grove Clly (3·2) 8 ,2270.
.
flliiOI&gt;Ondon&lt;:o (4-1) 8 .8!500; 5. Windham (4·
Region 4-1 . Cin. MOellor(5·0) 13.1000,
1) 8.0780; e . Columbiana Craalviow (4·1)
2. Cln. Elder (3-1)_ 10.0520, 3. Cln. Ander·
e.D830; 7. Galao Mills Hawken (4-1) 5.6500;
8. orwell Grand Volley (4·1) 5 . 3500; 9.
oon (5.0) 10.0500, 4. Lebanon (5·0)
9.6500; 5. Cln. COiftfa•n (5.0) 8.3830; 6.
Alw.,er Waterloo (4-t) 5.2000; 10.
Cln. St Xavier (3·2) 8.1100; 7. Fairfield (4·
Columbiana 14.11 S.l500.
1) 9.0000, 6 . Harrison (4·1) 8 .5000, 9. Fair·
. Rogion 1a- 1. Ubortr C1r. (S.O) 9.7500;
born (4· 1) 7.3000, 10. Xenia (3·2) 8.7330.
~· Rocldord Porl&lt;wor (5·0) 8.0500; 3. Morral
.
DIVISION II
Rldgodolo (5.0) 7.0500; 4. Manon Pleasan1
Rog•on 5-1 . OlmS10d Folio (5·0)
{4·1) e .8500; 5. Sycomora Mohawk (4-t)
12 .~; 2. Broadvlow Hla. Breckavllle (~-D)
8.7500; 8. Blulflon (5·0) 8 .7000; 1. Sl Henry
11 .2000, 3. Avon Lake (5·0) 10.11500, 4.
(4-l) 8.3500; 8. BloomdOie Elmwood (4·1)
Niles McKJnlay (5·0) 9 .11500; 5. MarflOkl (56.0000; 8. Croolllne (4·1) 5.6000; 10. Mela·
0) 8 .9000; 6. ArnhOfll SlftiO (5.0) 8.4!100;
mora Evorgroon (3·2) 4.9000.
7. Uniontown Lake (~·1) 9.3500, 8. Young:
.Aegton 19---1 . Aehland Creetview (5-0)
Chanor (5·0) 8. 7000, 9. Berea (3·2) 7.!5000,
7.8500 ; 2 , Bovo~r F1. Frya (W) 7 .eooo; 3 .
10. Ftarma Hts. Holy Na'!le (4·1) 7.4500.
Amanda-Ciearcreek (4· 1) 7 3880· 4 Hem·
Region 6-1 . Sylvan•• Southview (4-1)
• 11 1
·
' •
1Ho
10.6500; 2. Tol. DeSales (4·1) 10.!5000: 3.
II or CS.O) 7.1120; 5. JoMSiown
Tiffin Columbian (5-0) 10.4000; 4. Akron
Northfl~e (5.0) 8.4000, 6. Barnesvtlle (~·1)
• 1) 8 ••oo· 5 Bo •ng Groen (• 1)
5.1500, 7. Newcomerllown (4-1) 5.8000. 8.
BuChi.'. (,..
....- • · w..
. ...
Sarahsville Shenandoah (5·0) 5.4500; 9.
8.1000, e. Tol. Rogers (3·2) 7.7500, 7. Per·
H
lb I R'
(3 2) 41390· 10 N I
(4-1) 7 5000· 8 GrHn (3·2) 7 4000'
ann I
tvtr
•
.
,
•
• •
•
ft~
·
•
•
.
•
•
-m•York (3·2) 4.eaoo.
;o,;--;'3.~~·~og) 7 · 3500 • 10· Mana. Modi·
Region 20-1 . Gohonna Cols. Acad . (5·0)
U500; 2. Colo . Reodr (4.0) 9.2430; 3.
Region 7-1. Spring Soulh 15 •01 12 .8500,
2. Coil.
chcroft (5-0) 10.0000; 3.
BrookVIlle (5-0) 8:0500; ~ - Spring NortheastMarysville (5·0) g 6000 . 4 Cola DaSales
om (4·1) 8.8000, 5. Chill. Hunllnglon C4·1)
(4·1) 8 .8950; 5 . ·Colo.' Brookhaven (4-IJ
8.eooo:. e. Bolnbridge Polnl vaner (4·1)
8.0500; 8. Cots. independence (4-1) 5.9240;
8 .1000: 7. Middletown Madison (4-1)
1. Delaware Hayes (a·2) e.?OOO; 8 _ Lewis
5.8500.' 8 . MIHord Ctr. Fairbanks (-4·1)
Cenler Olanlangy (3-2) 8.2500; e. Colo. Mil·
5.7000, 8. Rlchmondala SE (4-1) 5.4000;
IO. Sidney Lohm;~v~:l~J~~~ 5.1500.
llln (4·1) 5.2000; 10. coo. Sl. Chane• (3·2)

'y - ··-··

(

'Y'"";f.

a..

s.o~ion e-- 1. (tie) Cin.

41

McNicholas { ~ ),
S1. Bernard Roger Bacon
9 .7ooo: 3.
Piqua (4~1) SUSOOO; 4. Trenton Edgewood
(4 -1) 8.6000; 5. Vandalia Butler (4_1)
7.8500; B. Collno14· 1) 7.5500; 7. Cln . Glen
ESie (3· 2) 7.4000; 8 . Loveland (3·2) 8.8000;
9 Cln Turpin (3-2) 88500· 10 Springboro
·
·
·
• ·
3 2 6 7000
1• ) ·
·
DIVISION Ill
Region 9-l . Hubbard (4 •11 8 .•oeo; 2 .
Medina Highland (5·0) 8.3000; 3. Akron
H0 b
7 0500 4 c
• F
an (4· 1) ·
; · hagnn alto Ken·
ston {3·2) 6.5500: 5. Mentor Lake Cath. {3·
2) 6.0780; e . Copley (4·1) 5.8500; 7. Man·
lua CrooiWood (3·2) 5.8000; 8. Chollorland

&lt;•·t)

W. Geauga (3-2) 4.1500; I . Chardon NO·
Calhodral Lalln (2·2) 3.11010; 10. Fairview
Park Fairview (2-3) 3.6500.
Region 1G-1 . Sunbury Big Walnut (S·O)
10.7000; 2. Van Wert (-4- 1) e .9000; 3 . Fostoria (-4·1) 9.1500; 4. onawa-Glandorf (4~ 1 )
(4 1) 8 o••o e
8 8000 5 COl W tt
·
; ·
'· a orson ·
· - ; ·

Region 21-1. Mogadore (5·0) 11 .3500;
2. McOonald (-4·1) .8.3520; 3. Cleve. Cuya.
Hts. (5-0) 7.3780, 4. East Canton (5-0)
CU500; 5. Norwalk St. Paul (6.0) 5.9000; 8.
Glboonbur:e (4·1) 5.4000; 7. Tlftln Calvert (3·
2) 5.0500, 8. Monroev11t0 (4·1) 4.3500; 8.
Clwo. H11. Lulheron E. (4·1) 4.1080, 10.
~lvllle (4·1) 4.1 ooo .
Roglon 22-1 . Delphos Sl. John's (5.0)
8 .7480; 2. Carer (5·0) 7.2000; 3.
Spencervllle (15·0) 8.3500; 4. PandoraGlibOO (4·1) 8.2500; 5. Oregon Strilch (4-1)
5.7500; 8. Me Comb (5-0) 5.6500; 7. CoiumG
buo rove (4·1) 5.5000; 8 . Arllnglon (4·1)
5 ·4500 : 8. Anlworp (4·1) 5.3000; 10. Del.
ArOflvllla (3-2) 5.1 000.
Regktn 23-1. Ponemouth Notre Dame
f,.OliiO.IOOO: 2 . Sha ... aklo 14. 11 8 .7500 , 3.
"'
· oronto (5·0) 8.01500; 4. Newark Cath. (3·2)
5.esoo; a. Readevllla Eeatern C4-1)
~.1210: B. Beallsville (4·1) 4.7000; 7.
Malvern (3·2) 4.81500; 8. Strasburg-Franklin
(4·1) 4.8000; 8. Porlomoulh Eaol (3·2)

•

4.4500; 10. Danville (3·2) 3.7000.
Region 24-1 . Maria Stein Marion Local
(5.0) 8.8000; 2. Covlngion (5·0) 6.6500; 3.
Cln. Summit Counnv Oav (5.0) 6.8270: 4.
Cedarville (4·1) 6 .5000; 5. Anna (4· 1)
8.2000; 8. Ansonia (4·1) 5.4000; 7. (11e) Tipp
Cily Bolhel (3-2) , Spring . Colh. Cent (3·2)
4.4500; 0. Arcanum (4· 1) 4.3000; 10. DRy.
Jefferson Twp. (4-1) -4.1o;o .

~; PRO, ~ER .

J

Major Loegue Soceor
Playaff Glance
-lnoiRound
Kan•• City va. Loa AngeiM
Frldoy, Sopl. 211
Los Angeles at Kansas Ctty, 8 p .m.
lil-y. Oct. 3
Kan585 City at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
F-r. Oct. I
Los Angeles at Kansas City, 8:30 p.m., it
nac..ssary
Chicago Ya. New York-New Jereey

Tuoodoy, Sop!. 28
'
Chicago 3, New Yorlc·New Jersey 0, Chica·
go leads aerius 3.0
Soturdoy, Sop!. 30
Chicago at New York-New Jersey. 6 p.m.
F~doy, Oct. 8
New York-New Jersev at Chicago. 8 p.m., if

"""""'"'Y

Chlmplonahlp
Sunday, Oct. 115

at Washington, D.C., 1:30 p.m.
(Note: Three poln1s tor a win and one point
tor a tie. The wiMer in the· quaner and &amp;emifl.
nals will be the fifst team to reach or exceed
five points. The tl'lird game or 8 Hfies witl be
decided by pena11y kicks if eacn game has
ended in 8 tie or if the series is 1 · 1 ~1. )

BASEBALL
Am•rlun L•agut
CLEVELAND INDIANS- Placed AHP
Charles Nagv on the 15-day disabled list,
retroactive to Sept. 25 .
KANSAS CITY AOVALS-Extendeel
the contract of George Brett , vice presi·
dent tor baseball operations, three years .
National Leagu•
FLORIDA
MARLINS- Promoted
national crosschecker Bill Singer to
major league seoul.
BASKETBALL
Natlana1 Baaketball Aeaoclatlon
CHICAGO BULLS- Signed F Marcus
Fizer' to a three-vear conuac1.
DENVER NUGGETS- Signed F Terry
Oavls .
UTAH JAZZ- Waiverd C Bruno Sun·
dov.
FOOTBALL
Nallonal FootHIIleague
CHICAGO BEARS- Reached an Injury
settlement with LB Ty Hallock .
MIAMI DOLPHINS- Placed CB Ben
Kelly on in)urad reserve . Signed LB
Tommy Hendricks. Signed TE Rodrick
Monroe to the practice squad . Released
CB Deshane Malli!!ird from the practice
squad .
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS-Signed S
Greg Jackson. Placed S Jason Perrv on
injured reserve . Signed QB Kevin Deft to
the practice squad . Released WR Calvin
Sch8xnayder from the practice squad .
Waived DE Wayne Hampton from injured
reserved .
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS- Signed K Aian
Lindell. Released K Kris Heppner.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
NHL-$uspended Minnesota 0 Sean
O 'Donnell sht preseason games and fined
him $1,000 for actions in a game on Sept.
20.
BOSTON BAUINS-Sign eel C Joe
Thornton Blld LW Sergei Samsonov to
lhree-year contracts .
CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS- Asslgned
G Jet! Maund, D Dmitri Tolkunov, D Arne
Aamholl , F Tv Jones, F Steve Dubinsky,
F Nathan Perrott , F Kyle Calder and F
Aaron Downey to Norfolk of the AHL.
Returned F Steve Larouche ro Chicago ot
the IHL. Released F Patrick Lebeau .
DETROIT RED WINClS- Signad C Kris
Draper lo a four-year contract.
NEW YORK ISLANDEAS- Assignad G
Rick. DiPietro to Chicago of the IHL, F
Aatt1 Torres to Brampton of the OHLand
F Jeff Toms to Springfield of the AH L.
NEW YORK RANGERS- Recalled F
Jason Dawe from Hartford of the AHL and
0 David Wilkie from Houston of the IHL.
PHILADELPHIA FLYERS - Traded D
Regen Kelly to Toronto lo1 0 Chris MeAl ·
lister.
VANCOUVER CANUCKS- R,·$igned
0 Brent SoPel.

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100

Hometown Newspaper

Mel1s County's

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51 , Number 88

50 Cents

.CSX train derailment damages

Risk plan

property, knocks out power
BY JeNNIFER BUNDY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CHARLESTON, W.Va .. - One of 14
that came· off a 129-car CSX train
Tucsd ,1y cvc nm g crashed through an
abovL· - ~round &lt;;w immmg pool and came
to rest 15 ti:et from where a 72-ye:tr-old
1V1 a~on man was watching td evisw n 111 his
li vin g room .
Other railroad ,-ars also destroyed Ray
and Billil' Dawson's garage and ca rport,
with their \999 Buick LcSabre and l lJHS
Chl'vroler va n mside.
C:ll''

Special
prosecutor

The co uple had bee n watching television in separate room s about 9:45 p.m.
wh en they heard a roar like very loud
thunder and their lights went out .
Ray Dawson also saw a ball of fire when
a railroad car cras hed through a power
po le. That se nt him running through the
ho u!"e yelling, '' train wreck, train wreck,"
hi s wife , Mrs. Dawson , 67. said Wednesday.
"It sounded like the voi ce of doom , a
real loud crash. My daughter lives down

Please see CSX. Page Al

in works
at Gavin
BY KEVIN KELLY
OVP NEWS EDITOR

REPAIR JOB- CSX staffers work to repair the damage done by Tuesday's 14-car derailment in Mason , W.Va. (Sentinel staff photo)

Southern homecoming candidates

likely in ·
Priddy case

.

I£ntes has until
Oct. 6 to respond
to notice
BY BRIAN J. ReED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

0M EROY
Mei gs
Co unt y
Prosecutor John
Lent « has Lmtil Oc1. 6 to
either ·request a special prosecutor to investigate his handling of th e Fred Priddy case,
or to a£&gt;ent , by default , to the
appointment of a special prosc·cuto r by Common Pleas
Co urt Judge Fred W. Crow II I.
Crow riled a notice on
Wednesday. setting the O ct. 6
deadlin e. citing I() allegations
o f misco ndu ct in the way that
Lcnt es and his staffhandlt·d the
co ntroversial drug forfeiture
\1

,.

Crl'\C.

C ro\\' alle ges "possi ble criminal ofTenses" in th e way that
the case. was prosecutcd 1 and
the manner in which property
seized was diSposed of and
accou nted for during the civil
and criminal ·p roce edings
against Priddy.
Th at case concluded in July
as rhe result o f a consensual
settlem ent agreen1ent between
tlw prosecutor. Ohio attorn ey
gc nc:r.tl . U.S. attorney an d
attor nt'ys n:present1 ng Priddy
and hio;:, wife.
C row said he " patiently
w.u tcd" from FdJ. 29 ,until July
2 I befo re ordering Lentes to
provide· inventories and other
records rel ating co the vehicles,
live&lt;tock. and other property
seized from the Jlriddys during
tht' investigation of th e case
aga mst them.

Please see Lentes. Page Al

Southern High School recently announced the candidates for
Homecoming Queen. From left are , first row, Kenda Smith,
Racine, daughter of Terry Smith and Becky Dudding, Emily
Stivers, Rac ine, daughter of Don Stivers and Betsy Jones,
and Mia Bass , Syracuse, daughter of Angie and David Bass;

second row, Macyn Ervin, Racine, daughter of Herb and T.C.
Ervin, and Courtney Hill, Racine, daughter of Dennie and
Janet Hill. The queen will be selected Friday night during halftime festivities at Southern's homecoming football game.
(Tony M. Leach photo)

Pleese see Gilvin. Page AJ

Hill fills Morarity's seat on Southern school board
BY TONY M. LEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

RACINE - A new school board member was appointed and personn el matters
discussed Monday by the Southern Local
Board of Educatio n.
Richard Hill was named to fill the unexpired school board position vacated by the
resignation of Marty Morarity, who cited
business co nfli cts and health matters as reasons for leaving the board.
Hill's term w11l end Dec. 31, 200 1.

Grand Jury retums
nine indidments
fi cations and a charge of endanSENTINEL NEWS STAFF
ger in g children.
i'OM EROY N ine indi ctAlso indi cted were: Larry L.
n u·nr' rctu rn nl by thr: Sept. H ses- Jenkins. Le~ I ~ Stepp. Johnny R .
sJon nf tlH: M eigs Cou my Grand Billin!(' and Mary L. MJstcrs. all
jurv han: bL·c n tiled. and in clud e on charges o f crim inal non -sup·,~1 l;r c:\SL'" o f non - paym ent of p ort; Fred C. H ou~h to n II and
chi ld suppon , two charges of Jame s Edward Milhron on
grms. ~c:x ua1 imp osition and a c harges of gross sexual irnposinumber of o ther offenses.
ti on;Jerry Flora Jr., on charges of
i'ro;et" utor j oh n Lentes tiletl escape, failure to appear, re ce iving
c1~ h t ind ictm en ts Tues day in
srokn property and complicity to
Mc·igs County Common Pl eas receiv ing stolen property; and
Co urt . An indictment against Damd Murphy on an esca pe
Michael Antho ny G illilan of charge.
Lon~ Bottom was fi led sho rtly
The fe lo ny cases against
afte; th e ' grand jury met. That H ou ghto n and Milliron were
md1 ctment (Ontain ed two counrs
Please see lndlded, Pag• .U
of aggravated murder with speciBY BRIAN J ,' REED

,.

CHESH IRE - Risk m anagement plans for
installation of tanks containing anhydrous ammonia at th e James M. Gavin Power Plant are being
developed as construction continues on the project, an Ameri can Electric Power official said.
A plan is in development for the plant while
Gavin staff is working with the community and
the Local Emergency Planning Committee on
procedures to fOllow i11 case of an emergency, said
Thomas A. Holliday, AEP's director of corporate
communications.
" We fully understand it is a legitimate concern
to the community," Holliday said. "We want to
get the community's feedback in the planning
process.
Holliday and other AEP mffers were on hand
for an informati onal meeting Wednesday at River
Vall ey Hi gh School to fjeld questions about the
use of anhydrous ammonia, integral to the plant's
process in reducing nitrogen oxide content in its
enussmns.
Storage of ammonia at Gavin has spurred a
protest from residents of Ches hire village and
township. Citizens have cited potential health and
safety risks should one or more of the tanks leak.
"It's too dose for comfort for our conununity
and our schools ," Cheshire Mayor Tom Reese
said.
AEP set up four stations in RVHS' hallways
manned by experts on selective catalytic technology to answer questions on a face-to-face basis.
As Gavin Manager Duane Phlegar explained
the meeting's format , citizens pressed for an open
forum so that all questions could be answered at
once.
"They feel it's impo rtant to h ear what everyone
has to say," Reese said. "Going table to table is not
what everyone wants ."
RVHS staff offered to let AEP and the publi c
use th e gymnasium fo r an open discussion, but
the company stood by the station format, Gallia
County Local Board of Education President Fred
Dee) said.
.
"We thought at this point it would be a good
way to impart information to the community,"
Hollid~y said. "In many ways, answers to questions the publi c has may not be finalized, but we
want this input to develop the final approach."

,,

Jim Swartzmiller met with the board to Larry Lavender and Grams Administrator
discuss [he consrrun ion of the new ele- l:lob Winf';ett to discuss the futur~ of the
mentary school and the change order Syracuse Ekmentary facility and property.
In personnel matters , the board approved
involving the scope of work for the electhe followm g teachers for the 2000-01
trical prime contractor.
The change order for $126,1100 was sc hool year pending th eir approval by the
approved to extend the scope of responSI - Ohio Departm ent of Education: Carissa
bility by the electrical prime contra ctor. l:lai ley. Bethany Bay, James Essick, Bethany
Th e need. for the change is the resu lt of Justice, Kun Rou sh. Larry Wolfe, John
clarification in the scope of the original l:laruis. Kimberly Janey, Jennifer Roush ,
Laura Ellis.
specifications as they were bid.
The board also met with Syracuse Mayor
George Cummin s and Teresa M iller

Sentinel
Sedlons Paps

Individuals. familles and teams
from local businesses joined
together Tuesday for the annual
Meigs County American Heart
Association's Heart Walk. Partici·
pants collected contributions for
the Heart Association and joined
in the symbolic walk, which began
at the parking lot at Kroger and
moved ori to the Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Co . The walk was held in
memory of Addie Norris, and in
honor of Breanna Crisp, a survivor
of heart disease . Family members
of Norris, along with Crisp and her
family, pictured here , cut the rilr
bon for the annual event. The
American Heart Association
expected to report on the proceeds of the walk and the winning
teams later this week. (Brian J,
Reed photo)

16

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Obituaries
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Bt. 6
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Lotteries
'

Q}flQ
Pick 3: 1-3-2; Pick 4: 7-3-0- l
Supe&lt; Lotto: 1 -1 5-23-~1-47 '
Kicker: 0-4-5-1-6-{,

:WVA,
Daily J: 3-4-3 Daily 4: 2-6-1-9
Cl 20011 Oh •o Valley Publi shing Co.

•

. Ple.se see Board. Pap A:S

Walking for health

Today's
l

were plac ed on the classified substitute list
as a custodian and c'ook for the 2000-200 1
school year, pending the approval of their
ba ckground checks. and Susa n Bird, Abbie
Stratton and Ta nya Thacker's resignation as
substitute reach ers \"-'as approved .
Doreen Wegener was approved as a fore ib~l exchange student at Southern High
School in the 12th grade. She is from Germany and is living with th e Greg Duvall

.,

�Thursday, September 28, 2000
Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

/

Nader: shut
down indnerator

Bond lowered
for dancer

·. EAST LIVERPOOL (AP) CLEVELAND (AP) - The
.Green Party presidential candi flate Ralph Nader campaigned JUdge figured he could make
Wednesday in eastern Ohio and sure Jodi Ketterma n showed up
called for the shutdown of a for trial by clam ping an elechazardous-waste mcinerator.
t ro niC m o nitonng bracelet on
Nader said Von Roll WTI , the her ankle.
ope rator of the incinerator
But her lawyer o bjected, sayalong the O hio River near the ing the bulky device could put
border with West Virgmia and her out of work - she 's an
Pennsylvania, was negligent and exotic dancer.
should close the incinerator.
C uyahoga Cou nty Common
H e also said Vice President AI Pleas Judge Antho ny Anthony
Gore, the Democra tic prcsiden- 0. Calabrese Jr. dropped the
tiJ! nominee, had failed to keep ele ctronic monito ring idea
a pronuse to keep lhe mclnera- Wednesday. Instead, Calabrese
:tor from opening.
ordered Ketterman [0 repo rt ro
. . "Mr. Gore, after seve n years of a parole offi cer every day if she
do ubletalk and delays. the time m ade bond, whi ch he set at
· bJs co me to shut down this $30,000.
· iuctncra tor," Nader satd.
Ke.ttl" rman, 29. of Eu d1d , was
Vu:e Pn:sident-dect Gorl' r horged last, week in an alleged
promised in December 1992 to sc h ~mt" in whi ch. :tuthoriti~s
l1ppo sc tht• o pen in g of tht• say, fiJrmc r Assistan t C uya hog-a
incmcrator. whirh got an oper- ColltHY Prosec uto r Donald
tlting perm it from the Bush R olla , 52, fi xed a case for KetAdmmi strat iu n days beforL' terman after meeting h ~ r at a
·Gore took office Jan . "0, l 'l93.
Cleveland club where she
Gore Gmlpaign spokesw o man wo rked.
Kim Rubey in Nashville. Tenn .,
Prosecutors said Rolla, a prossaid health and public safety arc
ecutor for 14 years. fixed co urt
a prionty for Gore.
records so a sto k n property
" Beca use of Gore's leadership
charge was dropped against Keton this issue, he's called for sevterman .
eral extensive reviews of tht'
Ketterman has been charged
perntit. After these revlews were
with tampering with records,
·coilcluded, vario us government
tampering with evidence and
agencies fo und there were no
forgery. She also was reindicted
·technical or legal ·reaso ns fo r
on the stolen property charge.
:revoking the permit," Rubey
•aid.
. ·· Von Roll called the Nader
Girldiesr~nother
visit a ploy meant to embarrass
Gore.
" All he is doing is pandering
RAVENNA (AP) - A 7io a small group of critics of our year-old girl was killed and her
facility to secure a handful of pregnant mother seriously
votes," said Fred Sigg, WTI vice
inJured Wedn esday m a. twopresident and general manager.
vehicle crash, authorities said.
Nader headed to campaign
Erica Gumina of Ravenna
'!tops in Youngstown and suburdied in the crash, the State
·ban C leveland after his East LivHighway Patrol said . Her moth·erpool visit.
er, Michelle Gumina, 36, was m
the intensive care unit at Akron
City Hospital on Wedn esday
night. The condition of the fetus
was not inunediatelv known .
A car driven by Gumina colC ANTON (AP) -A fo rmer
&gt;&lt;:.mployee at a state- run juvenile hd ed with a p1ckup truck about
-prison in M assillon will go to · 5 p.m. on state R t. 5, about 35
Ja il for having sex with a teen- miles southeast of C leveland.
.1ge inmate co nvicted of murder. Gumina's car, h eaded east, had
Kathy Zsiros . 38 , was sen- [Urned northbound into t he
te nce d Wednesday to 30 days m path of a westbound pi ckup
·
,the Stark Co unty Jai l. She tru ck, the p atrol said.
Th e 'dnve r of ~he pickup,
pJe:1dl'd guilty in Augu~t to sex·ual barrery.
Charles Sandli, 21, of Kent, was
The t ~c n was assigned to treated at an area hospital and
.work for Zsiros, a labor crew rdea sed.
load&lt;r who h ad worked at the
facility since 1992. She was fared
in January, about two months
after she allegedly was caught
a~arcls
,• nga~: ing in sex with the yol1!h .
C OVINGTON, Ky (AI')
Th,• in matt', now 1'l , told
investigator! he and Zsiros The Ashland Inc. Foundatiun on
announced
a
beg&gt; n having sex around Wednesday
C hnstmas 19'JH. shortly after lm S lUO,IIOO grant mtended to help
independent colleges and uni !.8th birthday.
Sta rk County Common Pleas versities in Kentu cky and Oh10
Judge Jo hn H aas said he would i mprov~: administrative opera . .
allow Zsiros to serve her jail tion s.
The grant is divided equally
time o n weokends so It wou ld
not interfere with her current betwee n the Kentu ckv Independent College Fo u~datio n ,
JOb
Alth ough the sex was consen- with 18 . member sc hools, and
sual , Zsiros was charged under the Ohio Foundati o n of Indethe mo re serious sexual battery pendent Co lleges, With 35
law beca use she was in a posi- member institutions. The orga tion of authority.
niza tium represent co ll eges w ith
The inma te was conVicted of a to tal en ro llm ent of about
a 1994 murder in Summit ll 0.000 stude nts.
Cou nty.

injured

Ex-prison worker
sentenced

Ashland Inc.
pant

l

AKRON (A P) - More than
.1 year after Ak ro n pohce diScovered that a o r they had ticketed
for 1llegal parkmg co ntained the
.body o f an l R-year-ol d girl , the
'm ;1n Jccused of kilhng her w ill

T. lp L'.

tlllin..kr. . _ murdt•r.

ktdn .lpptn g ..lbtl'lt' of

.1

yo rp'L' .Jnd t . tlllp ~.:nng \\ 'tth C:\' 1dt..·n'-'L'.

1-fl . , rn .d 1-.

~,.:x pl'dL' d

ro l.1..; r

.~l' \ \' r,d \\l'l'b . 1 ~ dcf~_•m t' .H tnrnL'Y'~

try to ,Jw\\' rlut Akron

;dl'tcd Jn ·, ,,·rrld1dd t.: n dctH-L'
;tl1.1t ( ou ld h.IVL' c!c,Jrcd Ro\\
: j11 r\' \L'kn1on J'i L'XPL'dcd to

ukc

.I t lc.l'H l'l n1r

d.l\'..,.

with a .44-caliber gun .
Yarbrough said he planned to hire his own
pr ivate attorney to handle his appeal, instead of
one appointed by the court .
·
Jurors in Jefferson Cou nty Common Pleas
Court deliberated more than SIX hours over
the penalty. Before Ju dge Joseph Bruzzese
imposed the death se ntence, Yarbrou gh said to
the judge, "If I'm going to die, let me die." .
The judge added to the se nt~ nce 66 112
ye ars in prison o n other cnmes Yarbrough w'as
convicted of in the case, including kidnapping,
burglary, robbery, gross sexual Imposition,
receiving stolen property and g rand theft auto.

Student accused of assaulting Group works to improve
teacher had history of violence treatment of minorities
OBERLIN (AP) A til- sa id .
ye ar-old st udent &lt;\CC LI SL' d o f
ShL· 'aid her so n s uff~.:· rs from
.ISSaulti ng his teache r and b;IS h- diabetes and has been d1Jg;nmed
ing lockers at hi ~ vor ational with attention defic it disorde r,
sc hool ha s prL·,·iou sly fL':lC tt&gt;d which sometim es co nt ribute- s to
\"iolently to d1scipline. his mot h- his bch.1vior.
t'r sa id.
H e told her he beca me up se t
The tee n allege dl y strurk the bt• c w sc of a racial slur, but he
teacher wah a pen cil shar pe nL'r did not tell her who said it .
and co mputer print er. Th e
" l Intend to find out who did
teacher had ro get stitch es for a what," she said . "He docs have a
head wou nd , autho ri[i es s:1id .
lot of probl em s, and I do n't want
The student also is accuse d of
to te ac h him that thi s is OK, but
pulling a knife on an assistant
I also don 't think it's OK for
prin cipal during the co nfrontaan yo ne to start so mething \Vith
tio n Tu esday at Lorain Co unty
hin1 ."
J oint Vocation al School, law
The teen Will be charged
enforcement and sc hool officia ls
with juvenile delinquency by
sai d .
The student, whose. name was reason of assault , felonious
not released , has a learning di s- assault, aggravated menacing and
ability and was previously sus- vandalism , sheriff's Lt. Tim
pended from the hi gh school Mahar said on Wednesday.
The teacher who was inJured
after kicking or pushing school
property, hiS mother .said had asked the student to leave
class beca use he was being disWedn esday.
The mother said her son has ruptive, said sc hool Superintennever pulled a knife on anyone dent William Randall.
The student then allegedly
and said she did not know
where he got the knife . Th e returned from the hallway and
boy's father has a knife collec- knocked down and struck
tion that he keeps locked, she teacher Jack Yaneri s, 72.

COLU MBUS (AP ) - · A
group lppointed by Ohio C hi ef
Justice Tho mas M oyer is trying
to get m o re minorities into th e
legal profe ssion and improve th e
way rhc statt~'s judges rre:1t
min ority defendants.
The gro up was appointed
aftt' r a Dt'cembcr report concluded that too many Ohioans
think the state courts an.:- rac ist.
The Ohio Commission o n
Racial Fairness report was based
on 12 public hearm gs in l 0
cities from September to
November 1994 and surveys of
436 judges and 2,339 attorneys.
People at the hearings told
stories of being stopped by
police because of their color and
then facing judges, juries and
prosecutors who were all or
mostly white. One man in
Delaware said he pleaded guilty
ro a crime he didn 't commit and
spent four years (.n prison
because his public defender told
him a jury wouldn't believe
him .
"The report confirmed what
a lot of sociological studies in
the past have found," said U.S.

Dimi rt Judge Al genon L. M arbley, ch:1irm.u1 of the co mm i~­
sio n 's impl~mcntation t;lsk force.
"Now. o ur grou p \vill try to
sta n 111;1king souH:.' of the
changes rhar are 11L'eded. Gr:lnte d , it's going to t.1 h · a lo t of time
to change perce ptions and attitud es. But if we can tmple ment
som e of these re commenda tions, It' ll begin the pron ·ss."
The 13-perso n gro up has
split into co mmittees to dc-~1
with topi (:s cove red by the
report, including hirin g and
retention of min o rity lawyers,
crinllnal justi ce and sentencing
and jury pool diversi ty.
Members followed their
interests and expertise, Marbley
said. "We have law school deans
dealing with recru iting minority
law students and prosec utors
working on critninal JUStice
issues," he said.
Sandra Schwnrtz . exec utive
director of the northern Ohio
division of the National Conference for C ommunity and Jusrice, is one of two cmnmission
members without direct ties to
the legal system.

/

Residents line up to rescue chickens from collapsed barns
C ROTON (AI') Robin
Pozzuoli could no t stand the
thought of hundreds of thousands
of chickens starving to death at
Buckeye Egg Farm aft er last
week's tornado that destroyed
barns housing l million chickens.
" I didn't want to see them
die," she said as workers at Ohio's
large st . egg produce r loaded
duckens into the U-Haul truck
she had rt'ntt:d . " ( can save :1 few
anyways.
Pozzuoli , 39, was among those
who lined up with tlwi r pickup
tru cks, trailt:rs and wire c\g~ s nr:ar
one of th~ collapsed b;Hns
Wednesday morning to rt•scue as
many hens as possible.
The tornn lo th at t&lt;lrl' through
Delaware and Li cking tcollnties
Sept. 20 dest royed 12 barns ,1t
three Buckeye Egg "te&gt; ncar this
community, 25 miles norchcast of
Co lumbus. The tw is ter left
behind a mass of twtstc·d metal.
broken wood and rows ,- hundreds of fe et long - of chickens
trapped in metal cages - some
dead and some ali ve.
Most of the chickens have not
had food and water since the tornado. Witho ut any other space
available. the company has n o

place to put them . The company
has 15 million chickens at operations in four co unties.
Rescu e groups and individuals
have taken about 10,000 chickens, Bruce Collen, Buckeye Egg's
chief finan cial officer, said
We dn es~ay. The •ompany estt·
mates it has euthanized about
290,000 chickens.
"Our biggest situation is to
rea ch these chi ckens and end
their pain and suff,·ring," said
William Glass , the co mpany's
chi ef operating offi cer.
"Their demuction sadde1Is '"·
too," said Steve W;!l!ner, th e chief
pmdnction manager. "If we ca n
find homes through these ~roups,
it is a ~nod thin~."
The Ohio Depa rtm ent o f
Agn culture aud Ohio Environ memal Pmtcctwn Agency have
been working with the company
to resolve the problem.
But the company said Monday,
in a letter to Gov. Bo b Taft, that it
nee ds more help. It asked Taft's
offi ce to reques t a federal agriculture di saster declara tion that
would enable 1f to get techmcal
:lSSl Stance.

It also slid the EPA has
bloc ked th e company from taking

fast steps to humanely resolve the some kind of solutio n that is
problem.
palatable to the Departm ent of
Besides the treatment of the Agriculture, that is enviro nm enchickens, it said it is concerned . tally sound for the ne1ghbo rs and
about potential biological haz- pra cti cal for the.· co mpany;· she
ards , ground water contan1ination sa id.
and other health issues. The comMeanwhi le. animal rights
P"ny . is not seeking any financial groups, whkh criticize 13uckcve
assistance.
Egg opera tiom ,1s inhumane. co;'l Taft spokesman Joe Andrews tinuc to work with che company
said Wednesday that the company to save JS many ch1 ckens as poss i.. :
does not need help from the gov- ble.
ernor's office to seek federal help.
"We do h.1vc a lot of UJIIlmon
"It's unique situation . 1 don't ground on issut's," Wagner sJ td .
tlnnk there's a book or blueprint
H e SJ!d some groups have
on how to deal with it," he sa1d . been surprised at ho\v he.1lt hy tl)e
••Jt's a sad situation ."
d1i ckens arc.
EPA spokeswoman He~th e r
Still , one r&lt;·scuc• ~roup '·'Y' ,f
Lau,·r ilid it has given the com- th ~ chickens wert' 11or confint;d
pany alternatives. They include into SUI'h small spo ts, th at tlie
permission to incinerate chick- problem would not be tbts bad.
ens, cages and clean wood as long
"Now, they're locked into this
as plastic piping is removed. She horrible death," said Karen Davis,
said burning plastic piping could president of United Po ultry Conrelease dioxin in the air. Dioxin cerns . That's a group, based 111
has been linked to a variety of Mach1pongo, Va ., that has taken at
health problems.
least 25 chickens and fou nd
"We're pretty eager to find homes for others.
·

2000 MODEL YEAR·END CLEARANCE!
I

Managers
Special\

Brand

New/

Page A1

Jeanette Duffy

POINT PLEASANT, WVa. - Ronald K. Campbell, 41 , Point PleasSYRACUSE - Jeanette K. Duffy, 56, of Third Street, Syracuse,
ant, d1ed Tuesday, Sept. 26, 2000, in Dexter, Ohio.
passed away unexpectedly at ll :49 a.m . on Wednesday, September 27, .
Born Aug. I, 1959in Mason County,WVa., he was a son ofJames Olen 2000, in the emergency department of Holzer Medical Center.
Campbell and Adnnne Sturgeon Gilpin . He was a deckhand with
She was born on November 19 , 1943 in Minersville, daughter of Icy
Kanawha River Towing.
Marie Roush of Pomeroy, and her stepfather, the late Thomas Burton
C Survivors include his wife, Fay Campbell of Dexter; son , Ronald Allen Miller, with whom she was raised.
· ampbell of Dexter; daughter, Rhonda K. Campbell of Dexter; mother
She was a member of the Syracuse Presbyterian Church, and was
and stepfather, Darrell and Ada Gilpin of Point Pleasant; stepson, Jerry assistant manager of the Dollar General Store in Pomeroy.
VanKirk .of Dexter; brothers and siSters, Tom Smith ofHuntington.WVa.,
In addition to her mother, she is survived by her husband, Jack
Paul Snuth of Tampa, Fla., Tim Smith of Crow~ City, Pat Manikas of Duffy, whom she married in Racine on June 24, 1961 ; and three sons
Elonda, and Ann~ Ca~pbell ofWheeling; and one granddaughter.
and daughters-in-law, Jack and Lois Duffy Jr. of Columbus, Eddie and
. GraveSide serviCes will be 2 p.m. Friday in Forest Hill Cemetery, Ra- Kris Duffy of Racine, and David and Lori Duffy of Long Bottom;
trock, WVa., With the Rev. George Topping officiating. Burial will follow. seven grandchildren, Jon Duffy, Amber Duffy, Heather Duffy, Holly
Fnends may call at the Deal Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, Friday from Duffy, Michael Duffy, Tyler Duffy and Ashleigh Duffy; three brothers,
12:30 to 1:30 p.m.
Robert (Sarah) Roush of Alexandria, Virginia, Don Qo Ellen) Roush
of Racine, and Jackie Miller of Alexandria, Virginia . Her mother- in law, Gertrude Neigler of Racine survives, along with special friends,
Richard and Marlene Radford of Letart, West Virginia.
POINT PLEASANT, WVa. - Clair Lee Cottrill 95 Point Pleasant
In addition to her stepfather, she was preceded in death by her
died Tuesday. Sept. 26, 2000at his home following a I~ng illness.
' father-in-law, Forrest Neigler.
He was a former street commissioner for the City of Point Pleasant; an
Services will be held at I p.m. on Saturday, September 30, 2000 at
employee of Marietta Manufacturing Co.; a city mail carrier; a carpenter the Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine, with the Rev. Kris Robinson
and da1ry farmer; a member of the Krebs Chapel United Methodist officiating.
Church m Pomt Pleasant; a 1923 graduate of Point Pleasant High School;
Burial will follow at the Letart Falls Cemetery.
and the Tn-State Engineering College in Angola, Ind.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Friday, September 29,2000
Born Sept. 15,1905 in Ratrock,WVa., he was a son of the late Rev. from 6-9 p.m.
Lee Anderson andTheodosia Catherine (Pi&lt;:kens) Cottrill.
He was also preceded in death by his first wife, Enid Somerville; a
all other attempts to collect or
daughter, Barbara Eileen Harris; a sister. Vud Randolph; and a brother.
enforce payments have failed.
Clarence Cottrill.
The indictment of Murphy fol· . Su_rviving are_ his wife, Olive E (Hussell) Cottrill; two sons and daughlows his escape from the custody of
Page AI
ters-m-law, Clair Lee and Beverly Cottrill Jr. ofWest Columbia, WVa.,
the Meigs County Sherifl's
and Michael P. and Shirley Cottrill of Letart, WVa.; two daughters and
.sons-in-law, Elizabeth L. "Babe'' and Jack Shiflet of Rutland. and Linda L. bound over to the grand jury by Department earlier this surruner
and Charles Rogers of Parkersburg, WVa.; a sister, Virginia Orr of East Meigs County Court Judge after being sentenced on a theft
charge.
.Bank,WVa. ;a brother, Charles E. Cottrill of Point Pleasant; and11 grand- Patrick H. O'Brien.
He was later apprehended and
This
is
the
second
group
of
children and 19 great-grandchildren.
arrested
in Parkersburg, WVa., ...,
, Services will be I I a.m. Friday in Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Point indictments filed for non-payment
Pleasant, with the Rev. Bobby Woods. the Rev. Ed Rogers and the Rev. of child support. Lentes said earlier charges from the Wood County
Ben Stevens officiating. Burial will be in Sun crest Cemetery, Point Pleas- this surruner, when the first group court system and awaits extradition
of non-support indictments were to Meigs County to answer the
'ant. Friends may call at the funeral home Thursday from 5-9 p.m.
filed,
that the cases are filed when escape charge.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Height.&lt; United
Methodist Church Scholarship Fund, 2016 N. Main St., Point Pleasant ,
WVa. 25550.
nia is produced on site when
needed, eliminating risks caused
by transportation and storage at
Gavin.
PapAl
. CLIFTON, W.Va.- Roberta Marie Young, 90, Clifton, died WednesThe village has since appealed to
day, Sept 27, 2000 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
the
federal Environmental ProtecPhlegar
later
announced
that
Born March I 7, 1910 in Evans, WVa. , she was a daughter of the late
Thomas and Eliz:tbcth Shaffer Redman. She was a homemaker and another meeting, possibly in a tion Agency to focus on health
public forum format, would be and safety problems it believeds are
member of the United Brethren Church.
caused by the plant.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Alburtice Young; and scheduled in two or three weeks.
"We request prote ction and
The
technology
retrofit
at
Gavin
several brothers and sisters.
Surviving are two sons and daughters- in-law, Harold A . and Frances has been mandated to meet feder- mitigation from our 'disproporYoung of Clifton, and George R . "Dick" and Audrey Young of Point al clean air standards, Holliday said. tionate' exposure to pollution ,"
Pleasant; six grandchildren and eight great-grapdchildren; and several Injection of ammonia and air into Reese said in a letter to EPA.
Completion of Gavin's retrofit is
gases entitted from,the plant is a
nieces and nephews.
1
expected
by spring 2001, Holliday
Graveside services will be Saturday in Kirkland Memorial Gardens, "proven method " of reducing levsaid.
Point Pleasant, with the Rev. James Lewis officiating. There will be no els of nitrogen oxide, he added.
While a number of citizens did
"We
are
required
to
do
this
and
visitation. Foglesong Funeral Home is handling the arrangements .
when co nfronted with that, what not participate in the informationdo you do ?" Holliday' asked . al session, remaining outside the
"We're trying to start a dialogue school and holding protest signs,
with the community and work in others did meet with AEP staff to
MIDDLEPORT~ Naomi Pickens Beller, 87, Middleport, died Tuesevery way with it to address any- ask questions.
day, Sept. 26, 2000 in Holzer Medical Center.
But Cheshire resident Melissa
She was a homemaker and a· member of the Henderson Church of thing that will occur."
Amos
found the format unsatisfacReese
and
other
elected
officials
Christ, Henderson , WVa.
Born Dec. 12, 1912 in Leon, WVa., she was a daughter of the late have been in contact with the tory.
"If they care about people, they
company and LEPC over safety
Joseph ·and Blanche Thomas Pickens.
· She was also preceded in death by her husband, Charles Samuel Beller; concerns, but he said that if a tank would have answered questions
a son, Richard L. "Dick" Beller; five· sisters, Iona Chattin, Geraldine ruptures, the six minutes' warning more in an open forum ," she said.
"I think they just wanted us to
·cooper, Murl Dunn, Kathleen Hamlin and Myrtle Dunn; and three allowed for action isn't enough.
"The response time for shelter trickle in and casually ask quesbrothers, Allen, Harry and Harold Pickens.
•
Surviving are a daughter-in-law, Francis (Keener) Beller of Point Pleas- in place or evacuation is not tions."
Phlegar believed the session was
much," Reese said. "In a worstant, WVa.; and two grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
a
start
toward a better understandcase
scenario,
there
would
be
the
A private graveside service was held at Mount Zion Cemetery, Leon,
_WVa., with the Rev. Herman H. Jordan officiating. There was no visita- rupture of one 60,000 gallon tank. ing of the technology and other
tion . Arrangements were under the..direction of Crow-Hussell Funeral It's only one-sixth of a potential ISSUeS .
"I would hope that in the secthat worries us."
Home, Point Pleasant.
'
·
He and other residents have ond meeting, those who particicited risk not only to the village, pated would come back, because
but to the three sc hools within a they've learned about the process,"
mile of the plant and to an area of he said. " Overall, there was a positive movement here today, one
up to mearly nine miles.
Reese has argued for an alterna- that will develop a greater underRocky Boots - 5
Gannett - 50\
AEP - 36~
tive known as urea , where ammo- standing at the next meeting."
AD Shell - 60 ')•
Akzo - 42l.
General Electric - 59l o
Harley Davidson- 47l.
Sears - 34h
AmTech/SBC - 47i o
Kmart- 6
Shoney's -l.
Ashland Inc. - 32l o

Indicted
from

·Gavin

Roberta Marie Young

from

Naomi Pickens Beller

LOCAL STOCKS

AT&amp;T -27),

Bank One - 36 ~.
BOb Evans - 17),
t3crgWarner- 31 l.
G)!tampion - 2l.
!;harming Shops - 5'1•
C~y Holding - 1'1.
Federal Mogul - 5),

firstar - 22'111

Kroger - 22),
Lands End - 21 ~.
.Ltd . - 21~
Oak Hill Financial -

Wai·Mart- 48),
Wendy's - 19),
Worthington - 9

VALLEY WEATHER

1 5),

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4 p.m. closing quotes or
the previous day's transactions,
provided by
Advest or Gallipolis.

OVB - 26l.
BBT-

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·Peoples

-13~

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Rockwell - 28'1•

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992·2156 ..

*Power seat * Remote keyless entry * CD player

]~ C h Ht:;&lt;:LI \\'I{) J

dt.•.dt'l'

can loo k at."
Yarbrough was convicted Friday in the kidnapp ing and killings of Franciscan University
students Brian Muha, 18, of the Columbus
suburb ofWesterville, and Aaron Land, 20, of
Philadelphia.
The judge accepted the jury's recommendation Wednesday and sentenced Yarbrough , of
Pittsburgh, to death.
The students were beaten and then abducted from their ho m e nea r campus on May 31 ,
1999. Prosecutors said they were driven to
southwest Pennsylvania , about 14 miles east of
Steubenville, taken into the woods and shot

2000 GRADO

j11ry selcnion \V;'!S to begin
·Thursd.1y, 16 mont hs .1ftn
I )~,:nny F Ross was .url'stcd fin
:llkgcdly kdling l ~ - year - ol d
li .llll Lih Hdlill M.1y l&lt;J'.J9.
. R (h\, ~ I . L' Otdd bl' Sl'lltl..'llCI..'d
'ro d c.ltb 1f ..:o ll\' Jdl..·d . Thc

.1ggr.1\',lti:d

STEUBENVILLE (AP) - The gra ndmoth er of one of the two college students killed by
Terrell Yarbrough disagreed with the JUry's
recommendation that he be put to death .
Betty Ga nim said she prefer red a longer,
mo re agonizing punishment .
" I wish they wo uld lock you up for life in
soliu ry confinement with nothing no
books, no nugazines, no television - nothing;' Ganim told the 20-year-old Yarbrough
before the judge passed sentence on Wednesday.
" N othing except for a picture of Brian and
Aaron outside your cell as the only thing you

Entertainment
Centers

· ~u nd [rt;:al.

:L O(,lJ!h..'

Thuraday, September 28, 200()

Man sentenced to death for murder

New Shipment

Jury selection
begins

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

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A. slow warming trend will
begin o n Friday as the tri-county
area remains under the ~nfluence
of a high pressure system centered
over C anada, the Nat10nal Weath er Service sai d.
Highs o n Fri day will be 65-70.
Lows Friday night will be in th e
40s.
By Sunday, temperatures will
peak near 80 degrees.
Sunset tonight will be at 7: 18
and sunrise on Friday at 7:27a .m .
Weather forecast:
Tomght.. .Becoming
mostly
dear. Areas of dense fog developing after midnight. Lows in the
mid 40s. Light and variable wind .
Fr iday... Areas of dense fog until
mid-morning, then mostly sunny.
Highs near 70.
Friday night ... Clear. Lows in
the up per 40s.

Sunday... Mostly clear. Lows in
the upper 40s and highs in the
mid 70s.
Monday... Mostly clear. Lows in
the lower 50s and highs in the
upper ,70s.

on th e other end of town and
they could hear it ," Mrs. D awson
said .
Mrs. Dawson grabbed a flashlight and set out to check on her
neighbors.
"When you opened my door
and you stepped on my deck, that
was staring me in my face," Mrs .
Dawson said.
Three cars ended up in her yard
and the others were strewn about
an adjacent field. No other property was damaged and no one was
injured.
Power was knocked out for 250
residents of the town of Mason,
but was restored by Wednesday
morning.
The Dawsons spent the night
with relatives and CSX officials
were waiting for them when their
daughter brought them home
Wednesday morning. The company has assured them they will
pay for the damage, Mrs. Dawson
said.
"The worst part about it, a
couple of cars w~ re filled with a
black powder, a fine powder.
They have tracked it everywhere.
My porch, my deck and my sidewalk is black," Mrs. Dawson said.
The cars were carrying plastic
pellets and carbon black, a pow7
der used to make tires and plastics. Some of the cars were empty
chemical
tankers, a
CSX
spokesman said . ·
Tl)e cause of the accident is still
under investigation . The train
apparently was not exceeding the
25 mph speed lintit, WCHS-TV
reported.
CSX on Wednesday agreed to
reduce the speed limit on the

track between Parkersb1,ug and
Hpntington to I 0 mph, said Gary
Wollenhaupt, director of corporate communications for CSX in
Indianapolis.
CSX workers expected to have
the track repaired by midnight.
Mrs. Dawson said she and
neighbors had complained to
CSX for the last three years that
trains screeched loudly on that
section of track. She said CSX has
worked on the section behind her
home.
"We have been here 35 years.
It has bugged us the last three
years;' Mrs. Dawson said.
Wollenhaupt said he was not
aware of the complaints.
The track where the train
derailed had been inspected by
CSX earlier Tuesday.
The Federal Railroad Administration inspected it Sept. 13. CSX
had used ultrasound to analyze
steel in the rail in another inspection Sept., 20 and had measured
the placement and alignment of
track on June 15, Wollenhaupt
said.
"We have been taking some
very aggressive measures to
address the problems there. At this
point we will have to determine a
cause on this one before we can
determine what went wrong,"
Wollenhaupt said.
More inspections are planned,
he said,
In early August , local officials,
federal rail regulators and CSX
Corp. representatives gathered in
Point Pleasant to mark an accident-free year along railroad
tracks in Mason County.
A "Targeted Safety Zone,"
which linked local and federal
officials and representatives of the
railroad, was established following
seven train derailments in less
than four years.

JUdge would make unfounded
accusations against us and the law
enforcement agencies of the state
and county," he added.
ftom Page AI
"With just over a month until
Lentes said thi s morning that a the general election ... it appears
complete answer to discovery, to be not coincidental, but rather
including all rec ords and a video- a deliberate action calculated to
taped inventory, had already been influence the o utc ome of the
election;' Lentes said.
filed in the case.
"Over a perio.d of several
The court gave Lentes until
months , prior to any settlement . Oct. 6 to request a hearing into
being reached, the U.S. Attorney's the disqualification of himself to
Office, the Ohio Attorney Gen- investigate his own activities and
eral. the Internal Revenue Ser- those of others with respect to
vice, the Ohio Department of the Priddy property and related
Taxation and (defense counsel) all matters.
It was noted that should he fail
had access to ftles, reports, inventories and the actual real and per- to do so, that will be construed as
sonal property involved," Lentes his assent to the appointment of a
special prosecutor and the court
said in a written statement.
"I am limited in my public shall proceed to call a grand jury
responses by the Code of Profes- into session and appoint one.
Lentes said today that he will
sional Responsibility;' Lentes said.
"However, I feel compelled to say "certainly not assent" to the
that I am very disturbed by the appointment of a special prosecutor, but indicated that he would
timing of the notice.
"My assistants and I are file documents in response to
shocked and taken aback that the Crow's notice as early as Friday.

Lentes

Board
from PapAl
family.
The board also granted permission for members of the Southern
High School FFA chapter to
attend the FFA National Convention m Louisville, Ky. , the week of
Oct. 23-28.
In other matters the board • discussed various bus bids
which were opened on Sept. 22;
• approved purchase of a resograph for the high school because

Jon Cryer (The Trouble With
No rmal. Prerty in Pink) took up
the family business. 8oth his

parents are Broadway actors.

SPRING VAlll VCINEMA
44 L·4S24
0

' i l l llillllf I ,,1
I 'Ill

I~!~

L)lj I

1~1

I

the old one is worn out and repair
parts are no longer available;
• interviewed elementary principal candidates;
• approved budget revisions as
requested by D ennie Hill, treasurer.

From

Simple to
Simply
Magnificent
We offe!r the finesr granites
in an assortment of colors
and cound~ss designs . We
can provide the memorial
that's righr for you. Come

I'-!
I

ralk ro our counselors. We'll
help you selecr a memorial to be
cherished.

•

FRI 9/22/00 • THURS 9/28/00

101 OFFICI WIU OPElllT
6:30 PM FOR !VINING SHOWS
2:30 PM lOR MlTINIIS
'SCARY MOVIE (R)
7:10 SUN·TH R

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

LOSER {PG13)
HIGHLANDER: ENDGAME (R)
7:1 5 SUN· THURS

NUTTY PROFESSOR 2:
THE KLUMPS {PG13)
7;10 SUN·TMURS

THE CELL (R)

Extended forecast:
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Highs
in the mid 70s.

7:00 SUN· TliURS

THE WATCHER (R)
7:10 SUN·THURS

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

520 W Main St. - Pomeroy
Nf!ar the Ma1on Bnd ll!!

P hone 740·992-258@
Vinton 740-388-8603
Gallipolis 740-446-0852

�Thursday, September 28, 2000
Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

/

Nader: shut
down indnerator

Bond lowered
for dancer

·. EAST LIVERPOOL (AP) CLEVELAND (AP) - The
.Green Party presidential candi flate Ralph Nader campaigned JUdge figured he could make
Wednesday in eastern Ohio and sure Jodi Ketterma n showed up
called for the shutdown of a for trial by clam ping an elechazardous-waste mcinerator.
t ro niC m o nitonng bracelet on
Nader said Von Roll WTI , the her ankle.
ope rator of the incinerator
But her lawyer o bjected, sayalong the O hio River near the ing the bulky device could put
border with West Virgmia and her out of work - she 's an
Pennsylvania, was negligent and exotic dancer.
should close the incinerator.
C uyahoga Cou nty Common
H e also said Vice President AI Pleas Judge Antho ny Anthony
Gore, the Democra tic prcsiden- 0. Calabrese Jr. dropped the
tiJ! nominee, had failed to keep ele ctronic monito ring idea
a pronuse to keep lhe mclnera- Wednesday. Instead, Calabrese
:tor from opening.
ordered Ketterman [0 repo rt ro
. . "Mr. Gore, after seve n years of a parole offi cer every day if she
do ubletalk and delays. the time m ade bond, whi ch he set at
· bJs co me to shut down this $30,000.
· iuctncra tor," Nader satd.
Ke.ttl" rman, 29. of Eu d1d , was
Vu:e Pn:sident-dect Gorl' r horged last, week in an alleged
promised in December 1992 to sc h ~mt" in whi ch. :tuthoriti~s
l1ppo sc tht• o pen in g of tht• say, fiJrmc r Assistan t C uya hog-a
incmcrator. whirh got an oper- ColltHY Prosec uto r Donald
tlting perm it from the Bush R olla , 52, fi xed a case for KetAdmmi strat iu n days beforL' terman after meeting h ~ r at a
·Gore took office Jan . "0, l 'l93.
Cleveland club where she
Gore Gmlpaign spokesw o man wo rked.
Kim Rubey in Nashville. Tenn .,
Prosecutors said Rolla, a prossaid health and public safety arc
ecutor for 14 years. fixed co urt
a prionty for Gore.
records so a sto k n property
" Beca use of Gore's leadership
charge was dropped against Keton this issue, he's called for sevterman .
eral extensive reviews of tht'
Ketterman has been charged
perntit. After these revlews were
with tampering with records,
·coilcluded, vario us government
tampering with evidence and
agencies fo und there were no
forgery. She also was reindicted
·technical or legal ·reaso ns fo r
on the stolen property charge.
:revoking the permit," Rubey
•aid.
. ·· Von Roll called the Nader
Girldiesr~nother
visit a ploy meant to embarrass
Gore.
" All he is doing is pandering
RAVENNA (AP) - A 7io a small group of critics of our year-old girl was killed and her
facility to secure a handful of pregnant mother seriously
votes," said Fred Sigg, WTI vice
inJured Wedn esday m a. twopresident and general manager.
vehicle crash, authorities said.
Nader headed to campaign
Erica Gumina of Ravenna
'!tops in Youngstown and suburdied in the crash, the State
·ban C leveland after his East LivHighway Patrol said . Her moth·erpool visit.
er, Michelle Gumina, 36, was m
the intensive care unit at Akron
City Hospital on Wedn esday
night. The condition of the fetus
was not inunediatelv known .
A car driven by Gumina colC ANTON (AP) -A fo rmer
&gt;&lt;:.mployee at a state- run juvenile hd ed with a p1ckup truck about
-prison in M assillon will go to · 5 p.m. on state R t. 5, about 35
Ja il for having sex with a teen- miles southeast of C leveland.
.1ge inmate co nvicted of murder. Gumina's car, h eaded east, had
Kathy Zsiros . 38 , was sen- [Urned northbound into t he
te nce d Wednesday to 30 days m path of a westbound pi ckup
·
,the Stark Co unty Jai l. She tru ck, the p atrol said.
Th e 'dnve r of ~he pickup,
pJe:1dl'd guilty in Augu~t to sex·ual barrery.
Charles Sandli, 21, of Kent, was
The t ~c n was assigned to treated at an area hospital and
.work for Zsiros, a labor crew rdea sed.
load&lt;r who h ad worked at the
facility since 1992. She was fared
in January, about two months
after she allegedly was caught
a~arcls
,• nga~: ing in sex with the yol1!h .
C OVINGTON, Ky (AI')
Th,• in matt', now 1'l , told
investigator! he and Zsiros The Ashland Inc. Foundatiun on
announced
a
beg&gt; n having sex around Wednesday
C hnstmas 19'JH. shortly after lm S lUO,IIOO grant mtended to help
independent colleges and uni !.8th birthday.
Sta rk County Common Pleas versities in Kentu cky and Oh10
Judge Jo hn H aas said he would i mprov~: administrative opera . .
allow Zsiros to serve her jail tion s.
The grant is divided equally
time o n weokends so It wou ld
not interfere with her current betwee n the Kentu ckv Independent College Fo u~datio n ,
JOb
Alth ough the sex was consen- with 18 . member sc hools, and
sual , Zsiros was charged under the Ohio Foundati o n of Indethe mo re serious sexual battery pendent Co lleges, With 35
law beca use she was in a posi- member institutions. The orga tion of authority.
niza tium represent co ll eges w ith
The inma te was conVicted of a to tal en ro llm ent of about
a 1994 murder in Summit ll 0.000 stude nts.
Cou nty.

injured

Ex-prison worker
sentenced

Ashland Inc.
pant

l

AKRON (A P) - More than
.1 year after Ak ro n pohce diScovered that a o r they had ticketed
for 1llegal parkmg co ntained the
.body o f an l R-year-ol d girl , the
'm ;1n Jccused of kilhng her w ill

T. lp L'.

tlllin..kr. . _ murdt•r.

ktdn .lpptn g ..lbtl'lt' of

.1

yo rp'L' .Jnd t . tlllp ~.:nng \\ 'tth C:\' 1dt..·n'-'L'.

1-fl . , rn .d 1-.

~,.:x pl'dL' d

ro l.1..; r

.~l' \ \' r,d \\l'l'b . 1 ~ dcf~_•m t' .H tnrnL'Y'~

try to ,Jw\\' rlut Akron

;dl'tcd Jn ·, ,,·rrld1dd t.: n dctH-L'
;tl1.1t ( ou ld h.IVL' c!c,Jrcd Ro\\
: j11 r\' \L'kn1on J'i L'XPL'dcd to

ukc

.I t lc.l'H l'l n1r

d.l\'..,.

with a .44-caliber gun .
Yarbrough said he planned to hire his own
pr ivate attorney to handle his appeal, instead of
one appointed by the court .
·
Jurors in Jefferson Cou nty Common Pleas
Court deliberated more than SIX hours over
the penalty. Before Ju dge Joseph Bruzzese
imposed the death se ntence, Yarbrou gh said to
the judge, "If I'm going to die, let me die." .
The judge added to the se nt~ nce 66 112
ye ars in prison o n other cnmes Yarbrough w'as
convicted of in the case, including kidnapping,
burglary, robbery, gross sexual Imposition,
receiving stolen property and g rand theft auto.

Student accused of assaulting Group works to improve
teacher had history of violence treatment of minorities
OBERLIN (AP) A til- sa id .
ye ar-old st udent &lt;\CC LI SL' d o f
ShL· 'aid her so n s uff~.:· rs from
.ISSaulti ng his teache r and b;IS h- diabetes and has been d1Jg;nmed
ing lockers at hi ~ vor ational with attention defic it disorde r,
sc hool ha s prL·,·iou sly fL':lC tt&gt;d which sometim es co nt ribute- s to
\"iolently to d1scipline. his mot h- his bch.1vior.
t'r sa id.
H e told her he beca me up se t
The tee n allege dl y strurk the bt• c w sc of a racial slur, but he
teacher wah a pen cil shar pe nL'r did not tell her who said it .
and co mputer print er. Th e
" l Intend to find out who did
teacher had ro get stitch es for a what," she said . "He docs have a
head wou nd , autho ri[i es s:1id .
lot of probl em s, and I do n't want
The student also is accuse d of
to te ac h him that thi s is OK, but
pulling a knife on an assistant
I also don 't think it's OK for
prin cipal during the co nfrontaan yo ne to start so mething \Vith
tio n Tu esday at Lorain Co unty
hin1 ."
J oint Vocation al School, law
The teen Will be charged
enforcement and sc hool officia ls
with juvenile delinquency by
sai d .
The student, whose. name was reason of assault , felonious
not released , has a learning di s- assault, aggravated menacing and
ability and was previously sus- vandalism , sheriff's Lt. Tim
pended from the hi gh school Mahar said on Wednesday.
The teacher who was inJured
after kicking or pushing school
property, hiS mother .said had asked the student to leave
class beca use he was being disWedn esday.
The mother said her son has ruptive, said sc hool Superintennever pulled a knife on anyone dent William Randall.
The student then allegedly
and said she did not know
where he got the knife . Th e returned from the hallway and
boy's father has a knife collec- knocked down and struck
tion that he keeps locked, she teacher Jack Yaneri s, 72.

COLU MBUS (AP ) - · A
group lppointed by Ohio C hi ef
Justice Tho mas M oyer is trying
to get m o re minorities into th e
legal profe ssion and improve th e
way rhc statt~'s judges rre:1t
min ority defendants.
The gro up was appointed
aftt' r a Dt'cembcr report concluded that too many Ohioans
think the state courts an.:- rac ist.
The Ohio Commission o n
Racial Fairness report was based
on 12 public hearm gs in l 0
cities from September to
November 1994 and surveys of
436 judges and 2,339 attorneys.
People at the hearings told
stories of being stopped by
police because of their color and
then facing judges, juries and
prosecutors who were all or
mostly white. One man in
Delaware said he pleaded guilty
ro a crime he didn 't commit and
spent four years (.n prison
because his public defender told
him a jury wouldn't believe
him .
"The report confirmed what
a lot of sociological studies in
the past have found," said U.S.

Dimi rt Judge Al genon L. M arbley, ch:1irm.u1 of the co mm i~­
sio n 's impl~mcntation t;lsk force.
"Now. o ur grou p \vill try to
sta n 111;1king souH:.' of the
changes rhar are 11L'eded. Gr:lnte d , it's going to t.1 h · a lo t of time
to change perce ptions and attitud es. But if we can tmple ment
som e of these re commenda tions, It' ll begin the pron ·ss."
The 13-perso n gro up has
split into co mmittees to dc-~1
with topi (:s cove red by the
report, including hirin g and
retention of min o rity lawyers,
crinllnal justi ce and sentencing
and jury pool diversi ty.
Members followed their
interests and expertise, Marbley
said. "We have law school deans
dealing with recru iting minority
law students and prosec utors
working on critninal JUStice
issues," he said.
Sandra Schwnrtz . exec utive
director of the northern Ohio
division of the National Conference for C ommunity and Jusrice, is one of two cmnmission
members without direct ties to
the legal system.

/

Residents line up to rescue chickens from collapsed barns
C ROTON (AI') Robin
Pozzuoli could no t stand the
thought of hundreds of thousands
of chickens starving to death at
Buckeye Egg Farm aft er last
week's tornado that destroyed
barns housing l million chickens.
" I didn't want to see them
die," she said as workers at Ohio's
large st . egg produce r loaded
duckens into the U-Haul truck
she had rt'ntt:d . " ( can save :1 few
anyways.
Pozzuoli , 39, was among those
who lined up with tlwi r pickup
tru cks, trailt:rs and wire c\g~ s nr:ar
one of th~ collapsed b;Hns
Wednesday morning to rt•scue as
many hens as possible.
The tornn lo th at t&lt;lrl' through
Delaware and Li cking tcollnties
Sept. 20 dest royed 12 barns ,1t
three Buckeye Egg "te&gt; ncar this
community, 25 miles norchcast of
Co lumbus. The tw is ter left
behind a mass of twtstc·d metal.
broken wood and rows ,- hundreds of fe et long - of chickens
trapped in metal cages - some
dead and some ali ve.
Most of the chickens have not
had food and water since the tornado. Witho ut any other space
available. the company has n o

place to put them . The company
has 15 million chickens at operations in four co unties.
Rescu e groups and individuals
have taken about 10,000 chickens, Bruce Collen, Buckeye Egg's
chief finan cial officer, said
We dn es~ay. The •ompany estt·
mates it has euthanized about
290,000 chickens.
"Our biggest situation is to
rea ch these chi ckens and end
their pain and suff,·ring," said
William Glass , the co mpany's
chi ef operating offi cer.
"Their demuction sadde1Is '"·
too," said Steve W;!l!ner, th e chief
pmdnction manager. "If we ca n
find homes through these ~roups,
it is a ~nod thin~."
The Ohio Depa rtm ent o f
Agn culture aud Ohio Environ memal Pmtcctwn Agency have
been working with the company
to resolve the problem.
But the company said Monday,
in a letter to Gov. Bo b Taft, that it
nee ds more help. It asked Taft's
offi ce to reques t a federal agriculture di saster declara tion that
would enable 1f to get techmcal
:lSSl Stance.

It also slid the EPA has
bloc ked th e company from taking

fast steps to humanely resolve the some kind of solutio n that is
problem.
palatable to the Departm ent of
Besides the treatment of the Agriculture, that is enviro nm enchickens, it said it is concerned . tally sound for the ne1ghbo rs and
about potential biological haz- pra cti cal for the.· co mpany;· she
ards , ground water contan1ination sa id.
and other health issues. The comMeanwhi le. animal rights
P"ny . is not seeking any financial groups, whkh criticize 13uckcve
assistance.
Egg opera tiom ,1s inhumane. co;'l Taft spokesman Joe Andrews tinuc to work with che company
said Wednesday that the company to save JS many ch1 ckens as poss i.. :
does not need help from the gov- ble.
ernor's office to seek federal help.
"We do h.1vc a lot of UJIIlmon
"It's unique situation . 1 don't ground on issut's," Wagner sJ td .
tlnnk there's a book or blueprint
H e SJ!d some groups have
on how to deal with it," he sa1d . been surprised at ho\v he.1lt hy tl)e
••Jt's a sad situation ."
d1i ckens arc.
EPA spokeswoman He~th e r
Still , one r&lt;·scuc• ~roup '·'Y' ,f
Lau,·r ilid it has given the com- th ~ chickens wert' 11or confint;d
pany alternatives. They include into SUI'h small spo ts, th at tlie
permission to incinerate chick- problem would not be tbts bad.
ens, cages and clean wood as long
"Now, they're locked into this
as plastic piping is removed. She horrible death," said Karen Davis,
said burning plastic piping could president of United Po ultry Conrelease dioxin in the air. Dioxin cerns . That's a group, based 111
has been linked to a variety of Mach1pongo, Va ., that has taken at
health problems.
least 25 chickens and fou nd
"We're pretty eager to find homes for others.
·

2000 MODEL YEAR·END CLEARANCE!
I

Managers
Special\

Brand

New/

Page A1

Jeanette Duffy

POINT PLEASANT, WVa. - Ronald K. Campbell, 41 , Point PleasSYRACUSE - Jeanette K. Duffy, 56, of Third Street, Syracuse,
ant, d1ed Tuesday, Sept. 26, 2000, in Dexter, Ohio.
passed away unexpectedly at ll :49 a.m . on Wednesday, September 27, .
Born Aug. I, 1959in Mason County,WVa., he was a son ofJames Olen 2000, in the emergency department of Holzer Medical Center.
Campbell and Adnnne Sturgeon Gilpin . He was a deckhand with
She was born on November 19 , 1943 in Minersville, daughter of Icy
Kanawha River Towing.
Marie Roush of Pomeroy, and her stepfather, the late Thomas Burton
C Survivors include his wife, Fay Campbell of Dexter; son , Ronald Allen Miller, with whom she was raised.
· ampbell of Dexter; daughter, Rhonda K. Campbell of Dexter; mother
She was a member of the Syracuse Presbyterian Church, and was
and stepfather, Darrell and Ada Gilpin of Point Pleasant; stepson, Jerry assistant manager of the Dollar General Store in Pomeroy.
VanKirk .of Dexter; brothers and siSters, Tom Smith ofHuntington.WVa.,
In addition to her mother, she is survived by her husband, Jack
Paul Snuth of Tampa, Fla., Tim Smith of Crow~ City, Pat Manikas of Duffy, whom she married in Racine on June 24, 1961 ; and three sons
Elonda, and Ann~ Ca~pbell ofWheeling; and one granddaughter.
and daughters-in-law, Jack and Lois Duffy Jr. of Columbus, Eddie and
. GraveSide serviCes will be 2 p.m. Friday in Forest Hill Cemetery, Ra- Kris Duffy of Racine, and David and Lori Duffy of Long Bottom;
trock, WVa., With the Rev. George Topping officiating. Burial will follow. seven grandchildren, Jon Duffy, Amber Duffy, Heather Duffy, Holly
Fnends may call at the Deal Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, Friday from Duffy, Michael Duffy, Tyler Duffy and Ashleigh Duffy; three brothers,
12:30 to 1:30 p.m.
Robert (Sarah) Roush of Alexandria, Virginia, Don Qo Ellen) Roush
of Racine, and Jackie Miller of Alexandria, Virginia . Her mother- in law, Gertrude Neigler of Racine survives, along with special friends,
Richard and Marlene Radford of Letart, West Virginia.
POINT PLEASANT, WVa. - Clair Lee Cottrill 95 Point Pleasant
In addition to her stepfather, she was preceded in death by her
died Tuesday. Sept. 26, 2000at his home following a I~ng illness.
' father-in-law, Forrest Neigler.
He was a former street commissioner for the City of Point Pleasant; an
Services will be held at I p.m. on Saturday, September 30, 2000 at
employee of Marietta Manufacturing Co.; a city mail carrier; a carpenter the Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine, with the Rev. Kris Robinson
and da1ry farmer; a member of the Krebs Chapel United Methodist officiating.
Church m Pomt Pleasant; a 1923 graduate of Point Pleasant High School;
Burial will follow at the Letart Falls Cemetery.
and the Tn-State Engineering College in Angola, Ind.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Friday, September 29,2000
Born Sept. 15,1905 in Ratrock,WVa., he was a son of the late Rev. from 6-9 p.m.
Lee Anderson andTheodosia Catherine (Pi&lt;:kens) Cottrill.
He was also preceded in death by his first wife, Enid Somerville; a
all other attempts to collect or
daughter, Barbara Eileen Harris; a sister. Vud Randolph; and a brother.
enforce payments have failed.
Clarence Cottrill.
The indictment of Murphy fol· . Su_rviving are_ his wife, Olive E (Hussell) Cottrill; two sons and daughlows his escape from the custody of
Page AI
ters-m-law, Clair Lee and Beverly Cottrill Jr. ofWest Columbia, WVa.,
the Meigs County Sherifl's
and Michael P. and Shirley Cottrill of Letart, WVa.; two daughters and
.sons-in-law, Elizabeth L. "Babe'' and Jack Shiflet of Rutland. and Linda L. bound over to the grand jury by Department earlier this surruner
and Charles Rogers of Parkersburg, WVa.; a sister, Virginia Orr of East Meigs County Court Judge after being sentenced on a theft
charge.
.Bank,WVa. ;a brother, Charles E. Cottrill of Point Pleasant; and11 grand- Patrick H. O'Brien.
He was later apprehended and
This
is
the
second
group
of
children and 19 great-grandchildren.
arrested
in Parkersburg, WVa., ...,
, Services will be I I a.m. Friday in Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Point indictments filed for non-payment
Pleasant, with the Rev. Bobby Woods. the Rev. Ed Rogers and the Rev. of child support. Lentes said earlier charges from the Wood County
Ben Stevens officiating. Burial will be in Sun crest Cemetery, Point Pleas- this surruner, when the first group court system and awaits extradition
of non-support indictments were to Meigs County to answer the
'ant. Friends may call at the funeral home Thursday from 5-9 p.m.
filed,
that the cases are filed when escape charge.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Height.&lt; United
Methodist Church Scholarship Fund, 2016 N. Main St., Point Pleasant ,
WVa. 25550.
nia is produced on site when
needed, eliminating risks caused
by transportation and storage at
Gavin.
PapAl
. CLIFTON, W.Va.- Roberta Marie Young, 90, Clifton, died WednesThe village has since appealed to
day, Sept 27, 2000 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
the
federal Environmental ProtecPhlegar
later
announced
that
Born March I 7, 1910 in Evans, WVa. , she was a daughter of the late
Thomas and Eliz:tbcth Shaffer Redman. She was a homemaker and another meeting, possibly in a tion Agency to focus on health
public forum format, would be and safety problems it believeds are
member of the United Brethren Church.
caused by the plant.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Alburtice Young; and scheduled in two or three weeks.
"We request prote ction and
The
technology
retrofit
at
Gavin
several brothers and sisters.
Surviving are two sons and daughters- in-law, Harold A . and Frances has been mandated to meet feder- mitigation from our 'disproporYoung of Clifton, and George R . "Dick" and Audrey Young of Point al clean air standards, Holliday said. tionate' exposure to pollution ,"
Pleasant; six grandchildren and eight great-grapdchildren; and several Injection of ammonia and air into Reese said in a letter to EPA.
Completion of Gavin's retrofit is
gases entitted from,the plant is a
nieces and nephews.
1
expected
by spring 2001, Holliday
Graveside services will be Saturday in Kirkland Memorial Gardens, "proven method " of reducing levsaid.
Point Pleasant, with the Rev. James Lewis officiating. There will be no els of nitrogen oxide, he added.
While a number of citizens did
"We
are
required
to
do
this
and
visitation. Foglesong Funeral Home is handling the arrangements .
when co nfronted with that, what not participate in the informationdo you do ?" Holliday' asked . al session, remaining outside the
"We're trying to start a dialogue school and holding protest signs,
with the community and work in others did meet with AEP staff to
MIDDLEPORT~ Naomi Pickens Beller, 87, Middleport, died Tuesevery way with it to address any- ask questions.
day, Sept. 26, 2000 in Holzer Medical Center.
But Cheshire resident Melissa
She was a homemaker and a· member of the Henderson Church of thing that will occur."
Amos
found the format unsatisfacReese
and
other
elected
officials
Christ, Henderson , WVa.
Born Dec. 12, 1912 in Leon, WVa., she was a daughter of the late have been in contact with the tory.
"If they care about people, they
company and LEPC over safety
Joseph ·and Blanche Thomas Pickens.
· She was also preceded in death by her husband, Charles Samuel Beller; concerns, but he said that if a tank would have answered questions
a son, Richard L. "Dick" Beller; five· sisters, Iona Chattin, Geraldine ruptures, the six minutes' warning more in an open forum ," she said.
"I think they just wanted us to
·cooper, Murl Dunn, Kathleen Hamlin and Myrtle Dunn; and three allowed for action isn't enough.
"The response time for shelter trickle in and casually ask quesbrothers, Allen, Harry and Harold Pickens.
•
Surviving are a daughter-in-law, Francis (Keener) Beller of Point Pleas- in place or evacuation is not tions."
Phlegar believed the session was
much," Reese said. "In a worstant, WVa.; and two grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
a
start
toward a better understandcase
scenario,
there
would
be
the
A private graveside service was held at Mount Zion Cemetery, Leon,
_WVa., with the Rev. Herman H. Jordan officiating. There was no visita- rupture of one 60,000 gallon tank. ing of the technology and other
tion . Arrangements were under the..direction of Crow-Hussell Funeral It's only one-sixth of a potential ISSUeS .
"I would hope that in the secthat worries us."
Home, Point Pleasant.
'
·
He and other residents have ond meeting, those who particicited risk not only to the village, pated would come back, because
but to the three sc hools within a they've learned about the process,"
mile of the plant and to an area of he said. " Overall, there was a positive movement here today, one
up to mearly nine miles.
Reese has argued for an alterna- that will develop a greater underRocky Boots - 5
Gannett - 50\
AEP - 36~
tive known as urea , where ammo- standing at the next meeting."
AD Shell - 60 ')•
Akzo - 42l.
General Electric - 59l o
Harley Davidson- 47l.
Sears - 34h
AmTech/SBC - 47i o
Kmart- 6
Shoney's -l.
Ashland Inc. - 32l o

Indicted
from

·Gavin

Roberta Marie Young

from

Naomi Pickens Beller

LOCAL STOCKS

AT&amp;T -27),

Bank One - 36 ~.
BOb Evans - 17),
t3crgWarner- 31 l.
G)!tampion - 2l.
!;harming Shops - 5'1•
C~y Holding - 1'1.
Federal Mogul - 5),

firstar - 22'111

Kroger - 22),
Lands End - 21 ~.
.Ltd . - 21~
Oak Hill Financial -

Wai·Mart- 48),
Wendy's - 19),
Worthington - 9

VALLEY WEATHER

1 5),

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

OVB - 26l.
BBT-

29.,.
·Peoples

-13~

Premier- 5
Rockwell - 28'1•

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*Power seat * Remote keyless entry * CD player

]~ C h Ht:;&lt;:LI \\'I{) J

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can loo k at."
Yarbrough was convicted Friday in the kidnapp ing and killings of Franciscan University
students Brian Muha, 18, of the Columbus
suburb ofWesterville, and Aaron Land, 20, of
Philadelphia.
The judge accepted the jury's recommendation Wednesday and sentenced Yarbrough , of
Pittsburgh, to death.
The students were beaten and then abducted from their ho m e nea r campus on May 31 ,
1999. Prosecutors said they were driven to
southwest Pennsylvania , about 14 miles east of
Steubenville, taken into the woods and shot

2000 GRADO

j11ry selcnion \V;'!S to begin
·Thursd.1y, 16 mont hs .1ftn
I )~,:nny F Ross was .url'stcd fin
:llkgcdly kdling l ~ - year - ol d
li .llll Lih Hdlill M.1y l&lt;J'.J9.
. R (h\, ~ I . L' Otdd bl' Sl'lltl..'llCI..'d
'ro d c.ltb 1f ..:o ll\' Jdl..·d . Thc

.1ggr.1\',lti:d

STEUBENVILLE (AP) - The gra ndmoth er of one of the two college students killed by
Terrell Yarbrough disagreed with the JUry's
recommendation that he be put to death .
Betty Ga nim said she prefer red a longer,
mo re agonizing punishment .
" I wish they wo uld lock you up for life in
soliu ry confinement with nothing no
books, no nugazines, no television - nothing;' Ganim told the 20-year-old Yarbrough
before the judge passed sentence on Wednesday.
" N othing except for a picture of Brian and
Aaron outside your cell as the only thing you

Entertainment
Centers

· ~u nd [rt;:al.

:L O(,lJ!h..'

Thuraday, September 28, 200()

Man sentenced to death for murder

New Shipment

Jury selection
begins

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

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A. slow warming trend will
begin o n Friday as the tri-county
area remains under the ~nfluence
of a high pressure system centered
over C anada, the Nat10nal Weath er Service sai d.
Highs o n Fri day will be 65-70.
Lows Friday night will be in th e
40s.
By Sunday, temperatures will
peak near 80 degrees.
Sunset tonight will be at 7: 18
and sunrise on Friday at 7:27a .m .
Weather forecast:
Tomght.. .Becoming
mostly
dear. Areas of dense fog developing after midnight. Lows in the
mid 40s. Light and variable wind .
Fr iday... Areas of dense fog until
mid-morning, then mostly sunny.
Highs near 70.
Friday night ... Clear. Lows in
the up per 40s.

Sunday... Mostly clear. Lows in
the upper 40s and highs in the
mid 70s.
Monday... Mostly clear. Lows in
the lower 50s and highs in the
upper ,70s.

on th e other end of town and
they could hear it ," Mrs. D awson
said .
Mrs. Dawson grabbed a flashlight and set out to check on her
neighbors.
"When you opened my door
and you stepped on my deck, that
was staring me in my face," Mrs .
Dawson said.
Three cars ended up in her yard
and the others were strewn about
an adjacent field. No other property was damaged and no one was
injured.
Power was knocked out for 250
residents of the town of Mason,
but was restored by Wednesday
morning.
The Dawsons spent the night
with relatives and CSX officials
were waiting for them when their
daughter brought them home
Wednesday morning. The company has assured them they will
pay for the damage, Mrs. Dawson
said.
"The worst part about it, a
couple of cars w~ re filled with a
black powder, a fine powder.
They have tracked it everywhere.
My porch, my deck and my sidewalk is black," Mrs. Dawson said.
The cars were carrying plastic
pellets and carbon black, a pow7
der used to make tires and plastics. Some of the cars were empty
chemical
tankers, a
CSX
spokesman said . ·
Tl)e cause of the accident is still
under investigation . The train
apparently was not exceeding the
25 mph speed lintit, WCHS-TV
reported.
CSX on Wednesday agreed to
reduce the speed limit on the

track between Parkersb1,ug and
Hpntington to I 0 mph, said Gary
Wollenhaupt, director of corporate communications for CSX in
Indianapolis.
CSX workers expected to have
the track repaired by midnight.
Mrs. Dawson said she and
neighbors had complained to
CSX for the last three years that
trains screeched loudly on that
section of track. She said CSX has
worked on the section behind her
home.
"We have been here 35 years.
It has bugged us the last three
years;' Mrs. Dawson said.
Wollenhaupt said he was not
aware of the complaints.
The track where the train
derailed had been inspected by
CSX earlier Tuesday.
The Federal Railroad Administration inspected it Sept. 13. CSX
had used ultrasound to analyze
steel in the rail in another inspection Sept., 20 and had measured
the placement and alignment of
track on June 15, Wollenhaupt
said.
"We have been taking some
very aggressive measures to
address the problems there. At this
point we will have to determine a
cause on this one before we can
determine what went wrong,"
Wollenhaupt said.
More inspections are planned,
he said,
In early August , local officials,
federal rail regulators and CSX
Corp. representatives gathered in
Point Pleasant to mark an accident-free year along railroad
tracks in Mason County.
A "Targeted Safety Zone,"
which linked local and federal
officials and representatives of the
railroad, was established following
seven train derailments in less
than four years.

JUdge would make unfounded
accusations against us and the law
enforcement agencies of the state
and county," he added.
ftom Page AI
"With just over a month until
Lentes said thi s morning that a the general election ... it appears
complete answer to discovery, to be not coincidental, but rather
including all rec ords and a video- a deliberate action calculated to
taped inventory, had already been influence the o utc ome of the
election;' Lentes said.
filed in the case.
"Over a perio.d of several
The court gave Lentes until
months , prior to any settlement . Oct. 6 to request a hearing into
being reached, the U.S. Attorney's the disqualification of himself to
Office, the Ohio Attorney Gen- investigate his own activities and
eral. the Internal Revenue Ser- those of others with respect to
vice, the Ohio Department of the Priddy property and related
Taxation and (defense counsel) all matters.
It was noted that should he fail
had access to ftles, reports, inventories and the actual real and per- to do so, that will be construed as
sonal property involved," Lentes his assent to the appointment of a
special prosecutor and the court
said in a written statement.
"I am limited in my public shall proceed to call a grand jury
responses by the Code of Profes- into session and appoint one.
Lentes said today that he will
sional Responsibility;' Lentes said.
"However, I feel compelled to say "certainly not assent" to the
that I am very disturbed by the appointment of a special prosecutor, but indicated that he would
timing of the notice.
"My assistants and I are file documents in response to
shocked and taken aback that the Crow's notice as early as Friday.

Lentes

Board
from PapAl
family.
The board also granted permission for members of the Southern
High School FFA chapter to
attend the FFA National Convention m Louisville, Ky. , the week of
Oct. 23-28.
In other matters the board • discussed various bus bids
which were opened on Sept. 22;
• approved purchase of a resograph for the high school because

Jon Cryer (The Trouble With
No rmal. Prerty in Pink) took up
the family business. 8oth his

parents are Broadway actors.

SPRING VAlll VCINEMA
44 L·4S24
0

' i l l llillllf I ,,1
I 'Ill

I~!~

L)lj I

1~1

I

the old one is worn out and repair
parts are no longer available;
• interviewed elementary principal candidates;
• approved budget revisions as
requested by D ennie Hill, treasurer.

From

Simple to
Simply
Magnificent
We offe!r the finesr granites
in an assortment of colors
and cound~ss designs . We
can provide the memorial
that's righr for you. Come

I'-!
I

ralk ro our counselors. We'll
help you selecr a memorial to be
cherished.

•

FRI 9/22/00 • THURS 9/28/00

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in the mid 70s.

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.....h_e_n_ai..;;.ly_se_n_tin_e_I__________,;._ _ _ _

i

The Daily Sentinel
'£sttiMlslid 1/J 1.948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manllg8r

I OON'T ~NQW',,
tM'{R; Gat:.

Larry Boyer

Dear Ann Landers: I need your
answer as soon as possible . When my
children were in their late teens, my
husband took me to a statue of St. Mary
(we are Cathohc) and made me swea r, as
he did, that if anything happened to us,
either by dea(h or divorce, neith er one
of us would get marned again. Several
years later, we were divorced. That was
I 0 years ago. I'm in my early 60s, and
have kept my word. Thre e years after
our divorce, my ex- hus ba nd remarried .
I am living w1rh one of mv sons and
his wife. She is like a daughier to me,
and I am comfortable here. I rake care of
my two grandchildren and do some
housekeeping for them w htlc. thev
work. One of my daughter's friends h;s
been trymg to get me to go our w1rh a
gl.:'nt·h: man who is ;:ll~o in hi s 60s. Since
I took an oath th ~ t I wou ld 11L'VL' r marrv
.Jga111. wlut sho uld I do' Should l d;,
II h• my L'X d a.l, or keep my \Hlrd to

Mtt

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Advertising Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

IAittn to the editor tJI'f Wfltome. They should IH kss than JOO wrmb. A.U lefltn art Jub.fe•·l
to rditinr artd
bit tiJttN tttul iiiCIMih lllldrYu IJIIIJ ldcphont numb&lt;r. No l!utsifMII /.tncrs will
, JUIIIJslttd. IArun Mould be'" rood kutt, aJdnuinK inuu, twl ptnonal~~' .
Tilt opinitJru u,-.ucil in tht eolumn /.w/oh' tll't th e consensus o{tht OhJo l&gt;•ll•y l'ubi~ShmK
Co. '1 HitoNll#oanl, Mnlus ulhtrwist nokd.

••st

OUR VIEW

lfs alive

Mothman slegacy exerts
a continuing fascination
News that a movie based on' the Mothman story proves attraction
to the unusual events that occurred in the region in th e mid-1960s
remains strong and has worked tts way into the national controvcr~
sy over UFOs and the like.
.
The film is to be based on John A. Keel's "Mothman Prophecies,"
published in \ 975 and reprinted several times in the past decade.
The book explored the expenences of Ked, a paranormal investigator, and others when a man-like winged creature with blazing
red eyes was first seen in Mason County in the fall of 1966.
Mothman 's presence was reported on the ground and in the sky
for more than a year, and has not been seen since the collapse of the
Silver Bridge in December 1967.
The story has become part oflocal lore, but since Keel's book first
appeared, it has been fodder for other volumes on the unusua l and
endlessly debated by the UFO crowd. West Virginia's own UFO
hunter, the late Gray Barker, advised Ked and did some of his own
research into the matter.
You know Mothman had arrived in such circles when even "XFiles" used it as a story peg in a November \997 episode.
Perhaps what has made Mothman so fascinating to folks who
dabble in the strange is the same tlung that fuels the whole argument about UFOs and such - there is no satisfactory expla natio n
to what Mothman was, where it came from or why it was seen.
One theory that Mothman was a huge bird not native to this area
that somehow wound up here has some followers, while another
belief is that it was a hoax right from the start. Th e rest, includmg
Keel, have their own theories about Moth man's o rigins and purpose.
Whether you believe in Moth man or not, there's no denying the
story makes good talk, good copy and possibly 'even a good movie.
If it remains true to its source material, we hope th e film will be
as sympathetic to people - especially those who lives were disrupted by the Mothman sighti ngs - as Keel was in hts book.
A casual reading of sighting accounts leave&lt; yo u with the impression that these people were hardly making it all up, because no one
ever benefited from the experience. In fact, some fo lks' lives were
the never the same again.
For them, sighrings were all too reaL and terrifying, and rhetr
earnestness in telling their stories is roo strong to dismiss as hysteria.
Mothman is gone, but will never be forgotten . Real or not, it's
part of this region's history and sho uld be approached cautiously by
the filmmakers.
Three decades have passed since Mo thman was seen , but belief
that something happened over 30 years ago is too strong to be
!augh&lt;d off.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

I

I

Today is T hursday, Sept. 28, the 272nd day of 2000. There arc 94
da~ left in the year.
Today's Highlight in Htstory :
On Sept. 28, 193'1, during World War II , Germany and the Soviet Union agreed o n a plan to partition Poland .
On thiS date:
In \066 , William the Conqueror invaded England 1.0 claim th e
English throne.
In 1542, Portuguese navigato r Juan R odriguez Cabrillo arrived at
present-day San Diego.
In 17 81, American forc es in the Revo lu tionary War. backed by a
Fn;nch fleet , began their siege ofYorktown H eights, Va.
In 1787 , Congress voted to send the JUSt- completed Constitution
to state legislatures for th eir approval.
In 1850, flogging was abolished as a form of punishment in th e
Navy.
In 1924, two Army plan es land ed in Seattle, having completed the
first round-the-world fli g ht in I 75 days .
In 1967, Walter Washington took office as the first mayor of the
District of Colurn bia.
In 1972. Japan and Communist China agreed to re-establish
dlplomati c relations.
In 1974, first lady Betty Ford underwe nt a mastectomy at Bethesda Naval Medical Center in Mar yland, following discovery of a cancerous lump in her breast.
In 1989, deposed Philippine l'restdent Ferdinand E. Marcos died
in exile in H awa ii at age 72.
Ten years ago: The exiled emir of Kuwait visited the White
House, where he told President Bu sh the Iraqis were destroying and
looting his country.
Five years ago: Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak R.abin and I'LO
chairman Vasser Arafat signed an accord to transfer mu ch of the West
Bank to th e contro l of ihl Arab residents .
One year ago: The Supreme Co urt agreed to decide wh eth er a
state can give visitation rights to g randp aren ts when, after a divorce
or some o th e r family &lt;pi it. the children '&lt; parents say no. (Last June,
the court rul ed that Wash ingto n siate went too far in lettin g grandparent~ and o th ers seek vtS it.ltion . but it stopped short of g·i ving parents absolu te veto power over who gets to vtsit their chi ldren.)
· Today 's Birthda ys: Actor William Windom is 77 . Actor Arnold
Stang is 75 . Anrel\ llrigitte Oardo t is 60 .

Page AS
Thul"'d.y. September 21, 2000

Reader regrets making oath to never remarry

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publlsh'lr

the ·Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 11, 1000

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
God'

Please let me know as soo n as possible. I'm not gettmg any yo unger. -Need Some G u idance in Queens, N .Y.
Dear Queens: You haven 't m et the
man yet, and you are :-~sking mt~ what to
do about your oath that you would
never remarry? Slow down, please, and
take thinbrs one day at a time.
By all mean s. nH:d the gentleman
:md see where the rl'lationshtp goes.
Also, it would bl' OK to date mhl'r ge n -

tlemen if you get the opportunity.
If. down the road, you should wish to
remarry, talk to your parish priest and
ask for his guidance. Remarrying in the
church may not be possible, bm there
are- some satisfactory :llternatives.
Dear Ann Landers: My brother
"Rick" and I are not very close, but we
have always made a sincere effort to stay
in contact with each other. About a year
ago, Flick married a girl he nlet on the
Internet. ,! have no problem with that.
and am happy he found love, but since
he m~rried, I have barely spoken to htm .
Whenever I call , his wife answers th e
phone and \Vants to have a conversation.
I don't mind that, but when I ask to
speak with Ri ck, she says, "Tell me what
you want to ~ay. and [ will pas~ the messa~e alo ng." She checks his e-nw l and
responds on hts behalf Sh e picks up my
m essages to Rxk on th elr J.n swcrlng
machine an d c1lls me back. The only

cell-phone number I have is he rs.
I don 't dislike my sister- m- law and
have no problem talking to her, but
oc casion ally, I would like to speak
directly to my brother. In the pa st year.
I have spoken to him exactly once. My
husband sees Rick at his job, but otherWISe, we have no contact at all. If Rick
has no problem with this arrangement,
should I leave it alone? Or should I ke ep
trying? -- California Cookie
·
Dear Cookie: Can you ca ll Rick at
work? I recomm end it. Me anwhile,
invite Rick and his wife to dinner. Try
to build a soc ial re lationship -- as a couple. Enlist your husband's help. Renmu ber, you can catch more flu~s with horwy
than with vin egar.
Dear Ann Landers : It was heartw:uming to read in your column about
the couple who put a dollar in the 1111
box evL' ry time- tht·~· m;llk love. They
were sJving for rlwir drt•am rnp to

SOCIETY NEWS
Young ·birth announced
KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Bush is recovering, but Gore maintains lead
Last week was a good one for Texas Gov.
George W. Bush and a bad one for Vice President Al Gore, and it was reflected in 1he main
national polls.
Over the week, the · Gallup poll showed
Gore's lead increasing from five points to 10
early last week, then closing down to just
three at the end.
In the meantime, the Voter.com Battleground survey showed Bush increasing his
lead from one point to five. The
Zogby/Reuters poll showed Gore's lead
dropping from seven points to four. And th e
Ra smussen Portrait of Am erica poll showed
Bush up by two.
The Bush campaign insists that all this
means that the race is "statistically dead even,"
but when evidence from key~state polling is
facto red in, the presidential race looks close,
but it's still tilting toward Gore.
Bush has stopped making mistakes and
Gore has started making some - nuzzling
Hollywo.od , fabricating facts about drug cost.s
and playing politics with oil prices - but as
of the middle of last week, the advantage still
seemed to be with Gore.
The Bush aides said their man was leading
by seven points in Ohio, his besr battleground
state, but a Wayne State University/ Detroit
Free Press poll has his lead at just two. The
same poll put Gore up by eight in Michigan
and \8 in Pennsylvania, though another survey showed Gore ahead by just 3 there.
Rasmussen R.esearch, a GOP firm, showed
that in Florida the ca ndidates are runnin g
even. and Zogby had Gore leading by five in
hotly contested Missouri.
Moreover. the fund am entals of the contest
have changed. Before the national conventions, th e underlying .attitude of U .S. voters
seemed to be that they didn 't parti cularly like
Gore, they thought of Bush as a better leader,
;md they wanted a change after eight years of
Bill Clinton.
Since the conve ntions, polls show that
Gore and Bush are viewed equally favorably :
Got~· has acquired leadership talents voters

Morton
Kondracke
NEA COLUMNIST
hadn't seen before (though Bush still leads),
Clinton is less of an election factor, and "the
issues" are in the forefront.
And on the issues that matter most to voters - the economy, education, health care,
Social Security and Meditare Gore is
ahead.
According to the Pew Research Center,
Gore is up by six points on education, wherea&lt; the candidates once were even. On keeping
the economy strong, Gore is up by eight. On
health and retirement issues, he leads by \9
and 17 points, respectively.
Bush has a right ro lay claim to being the
reform er - the."big thinker," even - in this
race, with pioneering proposals on Social
Security, taxes and Medicare reform .
On the other hand, he is very late in
mounting the kmd of Systematic voter-education effort that his out-of-the-box ideas
require . Without that education, those ideas
have been a target for Core's favorite attack
word : "'k"
n s y.
Bush did get a boost by having a bipartisan
group, Economi c Security 2000, give his
Social Security plan high marks and blast
Gore's plan for doing "nothing to reduce the
$10.37 tr illi on Social Security deficits."
The grou p, whose chairs include Democratic Se n. Uob Kerrey, Nebraska, and Charles
Stenholm,Texas, said that Bush's plan to allow
individuals to invest part of their Social Security taxes in private markets was "bold and

forward-looking" while Gore's "accounting :
defies credibility."
Bush last week also took quick advan tage ·
of Gore's proposal to use part of the Strategic '
Petroleu m Reserve to lower hi gh fuel oil 'prices in the Northeast.
Gor~ previously had opposc·d the idea as ::.
ineffective and, as th e Wall Street Journal
reported, it was opposed both by Treasury
Secretary
Larry Summers and Fed e ral
R.eserve Chairman Alan Greenspan because
the reserve was designed for national security
emergenctes.
Bush pounced rln oil prices ~1 s evidence of
a "failed Clinton-Gore e nergy strategy" and
criticized Gore for switc hing position on the
reserve 47 days before the election.
Also last week, Bush performed winningly
on Oprah Winfrey's show, which is wtdely
watched by women voters - a group that's
shifted decisively to Gore since August.
The Battleground survey showed Gore.
ahead by seven points among women , while
Gallup had his lead at 17, and Zogby, I I .
·
Gore got caught m akin g up a story about
how much his mother-in - law pays for an
arthritis drug, but probably the ·.ntL"l damaging event of rhe week was the hasty retreat he
and his runningmate, Sen. Joe Lieberman. DConn ., made from th eir prevtous threats t~
get tough with Hollywood.
At a glittt:ry $4.2 nnllion fimd - r;t i ~rr, CorL'
· referred to th e t hreats as "the controversy of
the previous week" and Lieber mall sa i&lt;,l he
only meant to "n udge" Holl ywood - even
though he has asked the Federa l C oJI!tnunications Com ruis,ton to in VL'~ t i~:ltL' h rnadc.t-; tL' f~ ­
for "the expl osio11 of crude. ruJ e .111d kwd
· material" carriL'd. iit prime..· tim e. Bmh accusl'd_
Gore and Lirbenn .m. in dl~· c t. o f "t·ll in ~ out
their principles fi1r bi g monry. But It re;ll ~till'i.
to be seen 1 fb~ w1ll prc~s the .lfLl L"k.
Uu sh ha d a good Wl'l'k , htlt h L· ll l'l'~f... tllnlT
of th em - and a 'ltrong dcb.ttc p LTf~ • nn . utl"l'
- to regain the k-ad hl· o nn· cnjnycd.

K(lndmd·.:t' is r.\ TttH IJ 't' n/,,,,,.
Calf, ril e llf.'J/ISf!afnT t!( ( .'api1ol I /iff .)
(.\ifortor~

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --

~ ~r

Annual River Sweep
poster contest ready
POMEROY - Students in primary and seco ndary sc hools (public
and private, K-12) are invited to design a p&lt;~ster for River Sweep 2001 .
Fifteen prizes will be awarded. The grand prize is a $1,000 U.S. Savmgs Bond, and the sc hool represented by the grand prtze winner will
also recetve an award . The first runner-up will receive a $500 U.S. Savings Bond. Thirteen $100 U.S. Savings Bonds will be awarded to one
winner at each grade level.
The poster contest is open to students living in or atte ndin g schools
in counties bordermg the Ohio RIVer, or counties participating in the
River Sweep This in cludes all co umies along the Ohio River in Ohio,
WestVtrg in ia Indiana , Illin ois, Kentucky and Pennsylvania .
The annual River Sweep wt!l be held Saturday, Jun e \ 6, 200 I. River
Sweep is a one- day cleanup project for the O hio River and its tnbutartes. The Sweep covers nearly .1.000 miles of shoreh ne from Pittsburgh. Pa. tu C:tiro. Ill . :tnd avt'rages mon: than 11,000 volmue ers a
)'l'Jr. Trash co llected during the Sweep has included ca rs, tires, furnitlire, roys, a pianO, and a var i ~[)' of other Hems. AU nash collected is
either recycled or placc•d in approved la ndfill s.
R iver Sw~ep is heiJ to crcatl' an awarcnl'ss of watl'r quality probkms caused by litter and illcg.1 l dumptng. The postn cont&lt;st. held in
C011JU11ction with R.i\'t'r Swct' p, i~ one way to spread th~ word about
httn prevention . Posters submitted for the contest should reflect thts
gual and focu~ on L•Jtl'ULtraging volunteer participation. DEADLINE
for the lttver Sweep Postl'r Contl'St is Dec. 4 .
River Sweep is sponsored by the Ohto River Vallc•y Water Sa nita.
tion Commission (0 1\SANCO) .IJid voluntary co11tributions fro m
industries provi &lt;k maJor funding for the sweep.
For !ttrther informatio n abollt thl' R.iver Swl'ep Postc•r Contest, or
for compk•tl' co n tl''it ru iL·s a11d rcgLilatmns con ta ct Jea nnt' J. Ison at 1800-.1 59-J977.

, Five generations

1\,,IJ
.

RUTLAND - John and Erin
Young of Rutland announce the
btrth of their second duld. Kevin
Patrick.
Born at the Holzer Medt cal
Center, Aug. 26 , he weigh~d eight
pounds, four ounces.
Kevin 's paternal grandparents are joh11 and Lynn Young of
Gallipolis and his maternal grandparents are Guy and Carroll Ann
Harper of Middleport. Paternal
great-gnndmother is Sally Young
of Gallipolis. The Youngs have
an other son, Collen Allan, age
thre e.

-~

- - - ---------c' -,"

.

~

'HARDBALL'

Populism by day, courting the rich at night ·~
BY CHRIS MATTHEWS

SAN FRANCISCO - Aske d why he
sought the presidency in 1980, Ted Kennedy
us.eJ 70 hopeless words to find t he right one:
"restoration ." H e wanted to rekind le the
flame lit so brilliantly by hi s brothers John
and R o bert.
It has taken rh e 2000 candt dates a tad
longer to tell us what lights their fi res.
AI Gore sa~ he's running to fight for "the
people against the powerful." George W. Uush
says he's waging a "c'o ntest of ideas" betwee n
freedom and big .government. Both pitches
just ify healthy voter skepticism .
Watching Gore thiS week , for examp le, I
noted a dangerous di sco nnect in how he
invested his California tim e. Like the legendary Zarro of Spanish co lonial times, hi s
daylight hours produced a pageant of populism . With the TV cameras zooming for
close- ups, he shared m edi cal worries in
Sepulveda and rallied for higher min imum
wages in Sunnyvale.
By night, our gay caba llero carves a ditTeren t message. At a Beverly Hills dinner that
ra ised S4 million , Joe Li ebe rman told folk s
not to worry about those FTC probes of
dirty advertising to kids . H e and Gore were
JUst goi ng to "n udge' ' th em a little.
At dayb reak Tuesday, Gore was back to hi &lt;

populist line, railing at a con1munity ce nter
against companies who market patients' me~­
ical records. He told of a young woman who
bought a take- home pregnancy test only to
confront, just days later, a sample case of baby
formu la plopped on her front porch for all
the neighbors to see.
·
"That is w hy I'm running for president."
Gore ca ll ed for "tough penalties' on those
c-merchants w ho exploit a person's most
intimate health concerns ... That ought to be
against the law." That evening, among the hitech barons of Atherton, Gore may have forgotten his daytime call to arms. Crediting his
well - heeled -audience with being "publicspirited" enough to forgo Bush's tax cuts for
the rich. he said nothing about exploitive etraders.
Bush fa ces a different day-and- night danger. Like Bill C linton h e now "triangulates"
betwee n Gore o n the left and the Newt Gingri ch - lrained brig-ades of the right who still
contro l Congress . " I do not believe government is th e enemy. but I do not believe it is
always the answer."
Bur. who will be the young Bush's allies
once in offi ce? Those mainstream types who
cast the decisive votes this Nov. 7, or those
hard ideologues who ca ll the shots on Captto! Hill and on Supreme Court appoint-

who cheer his and Joe Licberrnau \ ;l.'iSault mi ~
Hollywaod vio lt'nce by chy, or the ]hy ing : ·
guest at th eir Beverly Hills fund -ro iser who . ·
made a profane joke of C hri sttani ty while Al :.
and Joe sat without objection? " Like llmh, l :.
roo found Christ in my 4tlo;. H t' caml' into m): ~
room one ni ght. And I sa id , ' What, no call (:..
You just pop in ?'"
· ;;
Back to th at real qu estion CBS'' R oge r :~
Mu1:fd put to Ted Kennedy question 3 ge ncr~ ~·

Retired teachers get tips on safety
POMER.OY - "Safety at Hoim· and Away" was the topic of Su5an
Oliver, di~ctor of Meigs County Co uncil on Aging, when she addressed
the Meigs Coun ty RenredTc&gt;ehcrs Association at Trinity Chul'Ch recently
Members were reminded to have thei r car keys ready when approaching a parked car and to check inside. under and uutstdc the vehicle before
entering. Oliver also recomnu:ndt'd that women carry mace or pepper gas ,
and a wluscle for extra protection.
When traveling alone, emergency supplies including a cell phone in the
automobile will hdp to assure safe travd, she said. Her other suggestions
ind11ded wearing litde and inexpensive Jewelry while traveling at home
and abroad to discouragt..' robbc..•ril.'s ,md k~r.•1.:ping an t"Yt' on your purse or
billfold at all times while shopping.
She also talked about fire, elcctric,l] and &lt;KUJ&lt;•nt h.tzards ut the home .
She warn~d of admitting str.mgers i11 the homt' for various reasons and 1\llggestcd ways of making homes bur~arp1nof Frauds and scams were
touched on by Oliver in her talk.
R c•tired teacher parttcipams in the s,·niors in Schools Program were
thankl'd by Oliver at the cond11siun of her presentation. A gift of appreciati&lt;ln was presented to the sp•·akl'r by Jean Alkire, first vite-presidem, who
also introdttced her.
Gay Perrin, second vice- presidem, gave devotions and ~1b!e grac,• before
the luncheon served by la dies of the church. Devotions included two readings, " ln My Hand" and" My Prayer", the first was about a teacher's influence o n the lives of childre n and the latter on answered prayer.
During the busine~s meeting conducted by Maxine Whitehead, prestdent, it was noted that three college sru dems in the field of education had
applied for the R etired Teachers· S250 scholarship. The scholarship recipient will be chosen in October. Carol Ohlinger, treasurer, reported that I 0
reared teachers had become new members of the orgamz.1tion. The deadtine for 2001 memberslup ts December and dues may be sent to the trea-

(7f
/l..
lkubh Sdw lrz hn ldr,; her g r...: .n -gt:t.'M-gr.mddnldrl'IL Cou rt tlt'Y
Nicole .1\ld J )rtl.l!l R .ty Lyo m, t\\'lll S nf hn grc,~r -g r :l!1d .-, nn. Tr.l\"1"
Lvom .Th t'l r g r.llldmothn IS I).. : bbil' Wha.c, kti:, .1nd I hl'ir grl' .lt -~ r.l!ld ­
n;mhl'r I!\ M .; qop l' Con1!nlly.

cquisitions
!Fine Jewefr:J .i.dlj ®

TWO lOCAnOHS

1

I )1 Second Avenue, GalllpoUs 446·2842
91 MI11Sireet, Middleport
992-6250

CLIFTON ~ Hom ec oming,
Sunday, Clifton Tabernacle. Covered dish . dinner, I p.m., gospel
sing, 2 p.m featuring "Delivered.:'
Public invited. No scrv1ce Sunday evening.

MIDDLEPORT Meigs
County Churches of Christ
Women's Fellowship, Thursday, 7
p.m. Bradbury Church. Zion to
have devotions; Bradbury, women
of the Bible; progra m, memory
album pages by Paula Pickens.
Take own pictures.

MONDAY
C OOLVILLE
Whites·
C hapd
Wesl eya n
Church,'
Coolville, revival services, Mon;day through Oct. 8, 7 p.m.
evenings with a 10:30 a.m. se!'vtce on Sunday. R ev. Jim Hord,
evangelist.

FRIDAY
PORTLAND LelHnon
Township Trustees, meet on Friday, 4:30 p.m., township building.

RACINE - Racine Chapter.
134, OES. Monday, ot the hall .
Officers to be elected.

SUNDAY
&lt;: :AI{I'ENTER - Paul .md

·The Conununity Calendar
is published as a free service.
to non-profit groups wishing
to announce meetings and ··
special events. The calendar
is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any ·
type. Items are printed only
as space permits and canno!
be guaranteed to be printed .
a specific number of days.

•·.n,.,.a•,

Dedicated,
·· Hours a Day, 7

Show Your Pa:st&lt;i:lii':
You
With Much
r

Appreciation
Pastor
Les Hayman
From the

+

!@)II

Congr ega tion
of th e
I
t• 1 t
111
Ash Street
Church

!

Pastor Lea Hayman
With Much
Appreciation
From the Congrcgallon of

Only8.00

~:~::!'...

. . o. . . ..

t:!0 · 7:00Frlday

~-·uo

ll:llliJ -

.,

With Picture

~("n&amp;r Jtwtltrs

Fl""nclnCJ AVGIIaDie

~oara of 'Trait

Frtt Gift Wrappln41

FrttPortd~

.,

Run s: Fridjl.y, October 20 . .
D ea dline: Friday, October 13

C

. WeHave
~;q ·
• ANew Look
v
• New Fall Merchandise
• Discounts for alll
Come see what we have for youl.

(Citris !1./rmht•w.;, cltilf t!( rftc S1111 Fnmciso.,;...""

p. 111.

POMEROY - Canng and
Sharing support group, 1 p 111 .
Thursday at the Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center. Dr. James
Witherell to talk on cholesterol
and triglycendes.

SATURDAY
STIVERSVILlE Hymn
sing, Saturday, 7 p.m. at the
Stiversville Co mmunity Church .
· Featured smg~rs rhe R.ainbmv
Singers of PJrkei-sburg, V./Va. and
Joe McCloud. R.ev. W:1ync Jewell
invites the public.

Sale

For The Month of October

....,.

M ary Nichols of Hurricane, W.
V:1 . will be singing at the Carpenter Baptist Church . 10 :30 a.m.
Sunday. and that same day at the
Poplar R.idge Church &lt;It 6:30

the Ash Street Church

Anni~ersary

I would lik e to think thaL the tru e· Zo rro,: ~·
rhe on e who kissL'd Tipper that night in Los:~
Angeles, wo uld have ' la shed a Z across thxt:· :
guy's stomach.
· :.:::;

.TOuchst&lt;mc· Bt1ab.)

POMEROY - Again this yea r Ewing C hap ter, Sons of rhe American Revolution , are local sponsors of rhe National Society's George S.
and Stella M Knight Essay Co nte st for high sc hool juniors and seniors.
James Lochary, president of the local chapter, stressed that the contest is open to all stu dents attendmg public. parochta!, private, or
accredited home schools in Gallia, Athens, Metgs, Washington , and
Morgan Counties. The topi c is "The U:S. Constitution: Does it Stand
the Test ofTime."
The winner of the national contest will receive $7,500, a plaque and
a trip to the NSSAR Headquarters in Louisville, Y The winning essay
will also be submitted to the SAR National Magazine for publication .
On the state level, the wmners will be awarded S30, $200, and $100
for first, second and third places respectively.
The contest is for an original essay of 500-750 words written in
English. They wtll be judged for historical accuracy, clarity of thought,
otganizatmn and proven topic, grammar, spelling and do cumentation .,
There is a list of 15 sources which are to be used in research.
The deadline for the contest is Jan . 20.
Contest rules, guidelines, and the resource ltst may be obtained from
Lochary, at 740-448-7269;Tad Cuckler, 740-594, 9115, or 74Cl-5935027 :The information may be obtained by mail by sending a NO 10
self-addressed, stamped envelop to James Lochary, \8660 State Route
550, Amesville, Ohio, 4571 \.
Last year's winner of the Ewings Chapter contest was Ryan Thacker who attends South Gallia High School. H er essay is posted for
review on the web site of Ewings C hapter, www.frognet.net/-assar/

10 fear

-.~

Examilrer 's j, j,;,.,)JiH.(!ftl11 BHrCtlll, is host (!( " H~rrd­
ba/1 " "" CN/JC a11d ,\/St\'/JC w/Jic r/r ,wllcls. Th r
199 9 cdi tioll or "/-lardb.r/1" "'"' Jllll&gt;lis!Jcd by

THURSDAY
POMEROY Pre ce ptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Stgma
Phi Sorority, hobo dress party at
the Thomas river camp m Mason .
H os tesses. Jean Powell, Thelma
Rue, and Eleanor Thomas.

SAR to sponsor essay contest

Come Ce!Ura.tt Witli fls

ation ago. Wh y arc you running for president~ r ·
.
.•
For your prmc1p Ies or your m ten::sts? For ~;
those you meet by night o r ch :m1pion by day? :
For the little people with heal th problems ot'.;-.
th e bi g boys with S25.000 in mft mo ney' Fot,;
the people of faith or the smug Hol lywood;:
insider who sees religion as stand -u p ma tcri-::
~~

CALENDAR

surer.
The bicentennial meeting of the Ohio Reared Teachers Assooatton
(ORTA) was announced for Oct. 5 at the Rhodes Center 111 Columbus.
Ten local members will attend.
Members attending in addition to those previously mentioned were
Bernice Carpenter, Charles and Daisy Blakeslee, John Riebel, Sr., Eileen
Buck, Martha Greenaway, Elma Louks, Kathleet;t Scott, Helen Maag, Grace
Weber, Rachel Downie and new member, Clarence Evans.

m ents?
Who wi ll be Gore's true fri,·nds ' Those ,

H awa ii .
I, too, pu t money aside every time on
the same occasion . My only regret is
that I did not give my wife all my busi ness .What a fabuluus trip we could have
gone on.-- Delray Beach , Fla .
Dear Del: I hope you are joking, but
if you are serious, you ought to be
ashamed of yo urself.
Is life pa ssi ng you by' Want to
improve your soc ial skills' Write for
Ann Lander s' ne w booklet , "How to
Make Friends and Stop Being Lonely."
Sc·nd a se lf- addressed , long , business-size
envdope :111d a check o r money order
for 54.25 (tim includ es postage and
handlin g) to : Friends, c/o A11n Landers ,
P.O. Box 1 I 562. C h tC;~go. Ill. 606110562. (In Canada, 'end $5 .15 .) To find
out mort· ,tbout Ann Lande-rs and n:ad
her pa ~ t c olumn'l, \ ' ISH the Crl'.Hors Syn dicltt.: Wt'b page .lt \Y\\"\\".LTl',ltOn. .COlll.

Fill out coupon below a nd ma,;l brbrihgpa~ment to:
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i

The Daily Sentinel
'£sttiMlslid 1/J 1.948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manllg8r

I OON'T ~NQW',,
tM'{R; Gat:.

Larry Boyer

Dear Ann Landers: I need your
answer as soon as possible . When my
children were in their late teens, my
husband took me to a statue of St. Mary
(we are Cathohc) and made me swea r, as
he did, that if anything happened to us,
either by dea(h or divorce, neith er one
of us would get marned again. Several
years later, we were divorced. That was
I 0 years ago. I'm in my early 60s, and
have kept my word. Thre e years after
our divorce, my ex- hus ba nd remarried .
I am living w1rh one of mv sons and
his wife. She is like a daughier to me,
and I am comfortable here. I rake care of
my two grandchildren and do some
housekeeping for them w htlc. thev
work. One of my daughter's friends h;s
been trymg to get me to go our w1rh a
gl.:'nt·h: man who is ;:ll~o in hi s 60s. Since
I took an oath th ~ t I wou ld 11L'VL' r marrv
.Jga111. wlut sho uld I do' Should l d;,
II h• my L'X d a.l, or keep my \Hlrd to

Mtt

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Advertising Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

IAittn to the editor tJI'f Wfltome. They should IH kss than JOO wrmb. A.U lefltn art Jub.fe•·l
to rditinr artd
bit tiJttN tttul iiiCIMih lllldrYu IJIIIJ ldcphont numb&lt;r. No l!utsifMII /.tncrs will
, JUIIIJslttd. IArun Mould be'" rood kutt, aJdnuinK inuu, twl ptnonal~~' .
Tilt opinitJru u,-.ucil in tht eolumn /.w/oh' tll't th e consensus o{tht OhJo l&gt;•ll•y l'ubi~ShmK
Co. '1 HitoNll#oanl, Mnlus ulhtrwist nokd.

••st

OUR VIEW

lfs alive

Mothman slegacy exerts
a continuing fascination
News that a movie based on' the Mothman story proves attraction
to the unusual events that occurred in the region in th e mid-1960s
remains strong and has worked tts way into the national controvcr~
sy over UFOs and the like.
.
The film is to be based on John A. Keel's "Mothman Prophecies,"
published in \ 975 and reprinted several times in the past decade.
The book explored the expenences of Ked, a paranormal investigator, and others when a man-like winged creature with blazing
red eyes was first seen in Mason County in the fall of 1966.
Mothman 's presence was reported on the ground and in the sky
for more than a year, and has not been seen since the collapse of the
Silver Bridge in December 1967.
The story has become part oflocal lore, but since Keel's book first
appeared, it has been fodder for other volumes on the unusua l and
endlessly debated by the UFO crowd. West Virginia's own UFO
hunter, the late Gray Barker, advised Ked and did some of his own
research into the matter.
You know Mothman had arrived in such circles when even "XFiles" used it as a story peg in a November \997 episode.
Perhaps what has made Mothman so fascinating to folks who
dabble in the strange is the same tlung that fuels the whole argument about UFOs and such - there is no satisfactory expla natio n
to what Mothman was, where it came from or why it was seen.
One theory that Mothman was a huge bird not native to this area
that somehow wound up here has some followers, while another
belief is that it was a hoax right from the start. Th e rest, includmg
Keel, have their own theories about Moth man's o rigins and purpose.
Whether you believe in Moth man or not, there's no denying the
story makes good talk, good copy and possibly 'even a good movie.
If it remains true to its source material, we hope th e film will be
as sympathetic to people - especially those who lives were disrupted by the Mothman sighti ngs - as Keel was in hts book.
A casual reading of sighting accounts leave&lt; yo u with the impression that these people were hardly making it all up, because no one
ever benefited from the experience. In fact, some fo lks' lives were
the never the same again.
For them, sighrings were all too reaL and terrifying, and rhetr
earnestness in telling their stories is roo strong to dismiss as hysteria.
Mothman is gone, but will never be forgotten . Real or not, it's
part of this region's history and sho uld be approached cautiously by
the filmmakers.
Three decades have passed since Mo thman was seen , but belief
that something happened over 30 years ago is too strong to be
!augh&lt;d off.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

I

I

Today is T hursday, Sept. 28, the 272nd day of 2000. There arc 94
da~ left in the year.
Today's Highlight in Htstory :
On Sept. 28, 193'1, during World War II , Germany and the Soviet Union agreed o n a plan to partition Poland .
On thiS date:
In \066 , William the Conqueror invaded England 1.0 claim th e
English throne.
In 1542, Portuguese navigato r Juan R odriguez Cabrillo arrived at
present-day San Diego.
In 17 81, American forc es in the Revo lu tionary War. backed by a
Fn;nch fleet , began their siege ofYorktown H eights, Va.
In 1787 , Congress voted to send the JUSt- completed Constitution
to state legislatures for th eir approval.
In 1850, flogging was abolished as a form of punishment in th e
Navy.
In 1924, two Army plan es land ed in Seattle, having completed the
first round-the-world fli g ht in I 75 days .
In 1967, Walter Washington took office as the first mayor of the
District of Colurn bia.
In 1972. Japan and Communist China agreed to re-establish
dlplomati c relations.
In 1974, first lady Betty Ford underwe nt a mastectomy at Bethesda Naval Medical Center in Mar yland, following discovery of a cancerous lump in her breast.
In 1989, deposed Philippine l'restdent Ferdinand E. Marcos died
in exile in H awa ii at age 72.
Ten years ago: The exiled emir of Kuwait visited the White
House, where he told President Bu sh the Iraqis were destroying and
looting his country.
Five years ago: Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak R.abin and I'LO
chairman Vasser Arafat signed an accord to transfer mu ch of the West
Bank to th e contro l of ihl Arab residents .
One year ago: The Supreme Co urt agreed to decide wh eth er a
state can give visitation rights to g randp aren ts when, after a divorce
or some o th e r family &lt;pi it. the children '&lt; parents say no. (Last June,
the court rul ed that Wash ingto n siate went too far in lettin g grandparent~ and o th ers seek vtS it.ltion . but it stopped short of g·i ving parents absolu te veto power over who gets to vtsit their chi ldren.)
· Today 's Birthda ys: Actor William Windom is 77 . Actor Arnold
Stang is 75 . Anrel\ llrigitte Oardo t is 60 .

Page AS
Thul"'d.y. September 21, 2000

Reader regrets making oath to never remarry

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publlsh'lr

the ·Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 11, 1000

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
God'

Please let me know as soo n as possible. I'm not gettmg any yo unger. -Need Some G u idance in Queens, N .Y.
Dear Queens: You haven 't m et the
man yet, and you are :-~sking mt~ what to
do about your oath that you would
never remarry? Slow down, please, and
take thinbrs one day at a time.
By all mean s. nH:d the gentleman
:md see where the rl'lationshtp goes.
Also, it would bl' OK to date mhl'r ge n -

tlemen if you get the opportunity.
If. down the road, you should wish to
remarry, talk to your parish priest and
ask for his guidance. Remarrying in the
church may not be possible, bm there
are- some satisfactory :llternatives.
Dear Ann Landers: My brother
"Rick" and I are not very close, but we
have always made a sincere effort to stay
in contact with each other. About a year
ago, Flick married a girl he nlet on the
Internet. ,! have no problem with that.
and am happy he found love, but since
he m~rried, I have barely spoken to htm .
Whenever I call , his wife answers th e
phone and \Vants to have a conversation.
I don't mind that, but when I ask to
speak with Ri ck, she says, "Tell me what
you want to ~ay. and [ will pas~ the messa~e alo ng." She checks his e-nw l and
responds on hts behalf Sh e picks up my
m essages to Rxk on th elr J.n swcrlng
machine an d c1lls me back. The only

cell-phone number I have is he rs.
I don 't dislike my sister- m- law and
have no problem talking to her, but
oc casion ally, I would like to speak
directly to my brother. In the pa st year.
I have spoken to him exactly once. My
husband sees Rick at his job, but otherWISe, we have no contact at all. If Rick
has no problem with this arrangement,
should I leave it alone? Or should I ke ep
trying? -- California Cookie
·
Dear Cookie: Can you ca ll Rick at
work? I recomm end it. Me anwhile,
invite Rick and his wife to dinner. Try
to build a soc ial re lationship -- as a couple. Enlist your husband's help. Renmu ber, you can catch more flu~s with horwy
than with vin egar.
Dear Ann Landers : It was heartw:uming to read in your column about
the couple who put a dollar in the 1111
box evL' ry time- tht·~· m;llk love. They
were sJving for rlwir drt•am rnp to

SOCIETY NEWS
Young ·birth announced
KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Bush is recovering, but Gore maintains lead
Last week was a good one for Texas Gov.
George W. Bush and a bad one for Vice President Al Gore, and it was reflected in 1he main
national polls.
Over the week, the · Gallup poll showed
Gore's lead increasing from five points to 10
early last week, then closing down to just
three at the end.
In the meantime, the Voter.com Battleground survey showed Bush increasing his
lead from one point to five. The
Zogby/Reuters poll showed Gore's lead
dropping from seven points to four. And th e
Ra smussen Portrait of Am erica poll showed
Bush up by two.
The Bush campaign insists that all this
means that the race is "statistically dead even,"
but when evidence from key~state polling is
facto red in, the presidential race looks close,
but it's still tilting toward Gore.
Bush has stopped making mistakes and
Gore has started making some - nuzzling
Hollywo.od , fabricating facts about drug cost.s
and playing politics with oil prices - but as
of the middle of last week, the advantage still
seemed to be with Gore.
The Bush aides said their man was leading
by seven points in Ohio, his besr battleground
state, but a Wayne State University/ Detroit
Free Press poll has his lead at just two. The
same poll put Gore up by eight in Michigan
and \8 in Pennsylvania, though another survey showed Gore ahead by just 3 there.
Rasmussen R.esearch, a GOP firm, showed
that in Florida the ca ndidates are runnin g
even. and Zogby had Gore leading by five in
hotly contested Missouri.
Moreover. the fund am entals of the contest
have changed. Before the national conventions, th e underlying .attitude of U .S. voters
seemed to be that they didn 't parti cularly like
Gore, they thought of Bush as a better leader,
;md they wanted a change after eight years of
Bill Clinton.
Since the conve ntions, polls show that
Gore and Bush are viewed equally favorably :
Got~· has acquired leadership talents voters

Morton
Kondracke
NEA COLUMNIST
hadn't seen before (though Bush still leads),
Clinton is less of an election factor, and "the
issues" are in the forefront.
And on the issues that matter most to voters - the economy, education, health care,
Social Security and Meditare Gore is
ahead.
According to the Pew Research Center,
Gore is up by six points on education, wherea&lt; the candidates once were even. On keeping
the economy strong, Gore is up by eight. On
health and retirement issues, he leads by \9
and 17 points, respectively.
Bush has a right ro lay claim to being the
reform er - the."big thinker," even - in this
race, with pioneering proposals on Social
Security, taxes and Medicare reform .
On the other hand, he is very late in
mounting the kmd of Systematic voter-education effort that his out-of-the-box ideas
require . Without that education, those ideas
have been a target for Core's favorite attack
word : "'k"
n s y.
Bush did get a boost by having a bipartisan
group, Economi c Security 2000, give his
Social Security plan high marks and blast
Gore's plan for doing "nothing to reduce the
$10.37 tr illi on Social Security deficits."
The grou p, whose chairs include Democratic Se n. Uob Kerrey, Nebraska, and Charles
Stenholm,Texas, said that Bush's plan to allow
individuals to invest part of their Social Security taxes in private markets was "bold and

forward-looking" while Gore's "accounting :
defies credibility."
Bush last week also took quick advan tage ·
of Gore's proposal to use part of the Strategic '
Petroleu m Reserve to lower hi gh fuel oil 'prices in the Northeast.
Gor~ previously had opposc·d the idea as ::.
ineffective and, as th e Wall Street Journal
reported, it was opposed both by Treasury
Secretary
Larry Summers and Fed e ral
R.eserve Chairman Alan Greenspan because
the reserve was designed for national security
emergenctes.
Bush pounced rln oil prices ~1 s evidence of
a "failed Clinton-Gore e nergy strategy" and
criticized Gore for switc hing position on the
reserve 47 days before the election.
Also last week, Bush performed winningly
on Oprah Winfrey's show, which is wtdely
watched by women voters - a group that's
shifted decisively to Gore since August.
The Battleground survey showed Gore.
ahead by seven points among women , while
Gallup had his lead at 17, and Zogby, I I .
·
Gore got caught m akin g up a story about
how much his mother-in - law pays for an
arthritis drug, but probably the ·.ntL"l damaging event of rhe week was the hasty retreat he
and his runningmate, Sen. Joe Lieberman. DConn ., made from th eir prevtous threats t~
get tough with Hollywood.
At a glittt:ry $4.2 nnllion fimd - r;t i ~rr, CorL'
· referred to th e t hreats as "the controversy of
the previous week" and Lieber mall sa i&lt;,l he
only meant to "n udge" Holl ywood - even
though he has asked the Federa l C oJI!tnunications Com ruis,ton to in VL'~ t i~:ltL' h rnadc.t-; tL' f~ ­
for "the expl osio11 of crude. ruJ e .111d kwd
· material" carriL'd. iit prime..· tim e. Bmh accusl'd_
Gore and Lirbenn .m. in dl~· c t. o f "t·ll in ~ out
their principles fi1r bi g monry. But It re;ll ~till'i.
to be seen 1 fb~ w1ll prc~s the .lfLl L"k.
Uu sh ha d a good Wl'l'k , htlt h L· ll l'l'~f... tllnlT
of th em - and a 'ltrong dcb.ttc p LTf~ • nn . utl"l'
- to regain the k-ad hl· o nn· cnjnycd.

K(lndmd·.:t' is r.\ TttH IJ 't' n/,,,,,.
Calf, ril e llf.'J/ISf!afnT t!( ( .'api1ol I /iff .)
(.\ifortor~

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --

~ ~r

Annual River Sweep
poster contest ready
POMEROY - Students in primary and seco ndary sc hools (public
and private, K-12) are invited to design a p&lt;~ster for River Sweep 2001 .
Fifteen prizes will be awarded. The grand prize is a $1,000 U.S. Savmgs Bond, and the sc hool represented by the grand prtze winner will
also recetve an award . The first runner-up will receive a $500 U.S. Savings Bond. Thirteen $100 U.S. Savings Bonds will be awarded to one
winner at each grade level.
The poster contest is open to students living in or atte ndin g schools
in counties bordermg the Ohio RIVer, or counties participating in the
River Sweep This in cludes all co umies along the Ohio River in Ohio,
WestVtrg in ia Indiana , Illin ois, Kentucky and Pennsylvania .
The annual River Sweep wt!l be held Saturday, Jun e \ 6, 200 I. River
Sweep is a one- day cleanup project for the O hio River and its tnbutartes. The Sweep covers nearly .1.000 miles of shoreh ne from Pittsburgh. Pa. tu C:tiro. Ill . :tnd avt'rages mon: than 11,000 volmue ers a
)'l'Jr. Trash co llected during the Sweep has included ca rs, tires, furnitlire, roys, a pianO, and a var i ~[)' of other Hems. AU nash collected is
either recycled or placc•d in approved la ndfill s.
R iver Sw~ep is heiJ to crcatl' an awarcnl'ss of watl'r quality probkms caused by litter and illcg.1 l dumptng. The postn cont&lt;st. held in
C011JU11ction with R.i\'t'r Swct' p, i~ one way to spread th~ word about
httn prevention . Posters submitted for the contest should reflect thts
gual and focu~ on L•Jtl'ULtraging volunteer participation. DEADLINE
for the lttver Sweep Postl'r Contl'St is Dec. 4 .
River Sweep is sponsored by the Ohto River Vallc•y Water Sa nita.
tion Commission (0 1\SANCO) .IJid voluntary co11tributions fro m
industries provi &lt;k maJor funding for the sweep.
For !ttrther informatio n abollt thl' R.iver Swl'ep Postc•r Contest, or
for compk•tl' co n tl''it ru iL·s a11d rcgLilatmns con ta ct Jea nnt' J. Ison at 1800-.1 59-J977.

, Five generations

1\,,IJ
.

RUTLAND - John and Erin
Young of Rutland announce the
btrth of their second duld. Kevin
Patrick.
Born at the Holzer Medt cal
Center, Aug. 26 , he weigh~d eight
pounds, four ounces.
Kevin 's paternal grandparents are joh11 and Lynn Young of
Gallipolis and his maternal grandparents are Guy and Carroll Ann
Harper of Middleport. Paternal
great-gnndmother is Sally Young
of Gallipolis. The Youngs have
an other son, Collen Allan, age
thre e.

-~

- - - ---------c' -,"

.

~

'HARDBALL'

Populism by day, courting the rich at night ·~
BY CHRIS MATTHEWS

SAN FRANCISCO - Aske d why he
sought the presidency in 1980, Ted Kennedy
us.eJ 70 hopeless words to find t he right one:
"restoration ." H e wanted to rekind le the
flame lit so brilliantly by hi s brothers John
and R o bert.
It has taken rh e 2000 candt dates a tad
longer to tell us what lights their fi res.
AI Gore sa~ he's running to fight for "the
people against the powerful." George W. Uush
says he's waging a "c'o ntest of ideas" betwee n
freedom and big .government. Both pitches
just ify healthy voter skepticism .
Watching Gore thiS week , for examp le, I
noted a dangerous di sco nnect in how he
invested his California tim e. Like the legendary Zarro of Spanish co lonial times, hi s
daylight hours produced a pageant of populism . With the TV cameras zooming for
close- ups, he shared m edi cal worries in
Sepulveda and rallied for higher min imum
wages in Sunnyvale.
By night, our gay caba llero carves a ditTeren t message. At a Beverly Hills dinner that
ra ised S4 million , Joe Li ebe rman told folk s
not to worry about those FTC probes of
dirty advertising to kids . H e and Gore were
JUst goi ng to "n udge' ' th em a little.
At dayb reak Tuesday, Gore was back to hi &lt;

populist line, railing at a con1munity ce nter
against companies who market patients' me~­
ical records. He told of a young woman who
bought a take- home pregnancy test only to
confront, just days later, a sample case of baby
formu la plopped on her front porch for all
the neighbors to see.
·
"That is w hy I'm running for president."
Gore ca ll ed for "tough penalties' on those
c-merchants w ho exploit a person's most
intimate health concerns ... That ought to be
against the law." That evening, among the hitech barons of Atherton, Gore may have forgotten his daytime call to arms. Crediting his
well - heeled -audience with being "publicspirited" enough to forgo Bush's tax cuts for
the rich. he said nothing about exploitive etraders.
Bush fa ces a different day-and- night danger. Like Bill C linton h e now "triangulates"
betwee n Gore o n the left and the Newt Gingri ch - lrained brig-ades of the right who still
contro l Congress . " I do not believe government is th e enemy. but I do not believe it is
always the answer."
Bur. who will be the young Bush's allies
once in offi ce? Those mainstream types who
cast the decisive votes this Nov. 7, or those
hard ideologues who ca ll the shots on Captto! Hill and on Supreme Court appoint-

who cheer his and Joe Licberrnau \ ;l.'iSault mi ~
Hollywaod vio lt'nce by chy, or the ]hy ing : ·
guest at th eir Beverly Hills fund -ro iser who . ·
made a profane joke of C hri sttani ty while Al :.
and Joe sat without objection? " Like llmh, l :.
roo found Christ in my 4tlo;. H t' caml' into m): ~
room one ni ght. And I sa id , ' What, no call (:..
You just pop in ?'"
· ;;
Back to th at real qu estion CBS'' R oge r :~
Mu1:fd put to Ted Kennedy question 3 ge ncr~ ~·

Retired teachers get tips on safety
POMER.OY - "Safety at Hoim· and Away" was the topic of Su5an
Oliver, di~ctor of Meigs County Co uncil on Aging, when she addressed
the Meigs Coun ty RenredTc&gt;ehcrs Association at Trinity Chul'Ch recently
Members were reminded to have thei r car keys ready when approaching a parked car and to check inside. under and uutstdc the vehicle before
entering. Oliver also recomnu:ndt'd that women carry mace or pepper gas ,
and a wluscle for extra protection.
When traveling alone, emergency supplies including a cell phone in the
automobile will hdp to assure safe travd, she said. Her other suggestions
ind11ded wearing litde and inexpensive Jewelry while traveling at home
and abroad to discouragt..' robbc..•ril.'s ,md k~r.•1.:ping an t"Yt' on your purse or
billfold at all times while shopping.
She also talked about fire, elcctric,l] and &lt;KUJ&lt;•nt h.tzards ut the home .
She warn~d of admitting str.mgers i11 the homt' for various reasons and 1\llggestcd ways of making homes bur~arp1nof Frauds and scams were
touched on by Oliver in her talk.
R c•tired teacher parttcipams in the s,·niors in Schools Program were
thankl'd by Oliver at the cond11siun of her presentation. A gift of appreciati&lt;ln was presented to the sp•·akl'r by Jean Alkire, first vite-presidem, who
also introdttced her.
Gay Perrin, second vice- presidem, gave devotions and ~1b!e grac,• before
the luncheon served by la dies of the church. Devotions included two readings, " ln My Hand" and" My Prayer", the first was about a teacher's influence o n the lives of childre n and the latter on answered prayer.
During the busine~s meeting conducted by Maxine Whitehead, prestdent, it was noted that three college sru dems in the field of education had
applied for the R etired Teachers· S250 scholarship. The scholarship recipient will be chosen in October. Carol Ohlinger, treasurer, reported that I 0
reared teachers had become new members of the orgamz.1tion. The deadtine for 2001 memberslup ts December and dues may be sent to the trea-

(7f
/l..
lkubh Sdw lrz hn ldr,; her g r...: .n -gt:t.'M-gr.mddnldrl'IL Cou rt tlt'Y
Nicole .1\ld J )rtl.l!l R .ty Lyo m, t\\'lll S nf hn grc,~r -g r :l!1d .-, nn. Tr.l\"1"
Lvom .Th t'l r g r.llldmothn IS I).. : bbil' Wha.c, kti:, .1nd I hl'ir grl' .lt -~ r.l!ld ­
n;mhl'r I!\ M .; qop l' Con1!nlly.

cquisitions
!Fine Jewefr:J .i.dlj ®

TWO lOCAnOHS

1

I )1 Second Avenue, GalllpoUs 446·2842
91 MI11Sireet, Middleport
992-6250

CLIFTON ~ Hom ec oming,
Sunday, Clifton Tabernacle. Covered dish . dinner, I p.m., gospel
sing, 2 p.m featuring "Delivered.:'
Public invited. No scrv1ce Sunday evening.

MIDDLEPORT Meigs
County Churches of Christ
Women's Fellowship, Thursday, 7
p.m. Bradbury Church. Zion to
have devotions; Bradbury, women
of the Bible; progra m, memory
album pages by Paula Pickens.
Take own pictures.

MONDAY
C OOLVILLE
Whites·
C hapd
Wesl eya n
Church,'
Coolville, revival services, Mon;day through Oct. 8, 7 p.m.
evenings with a 10:30 a.m. se!'vtce on Sunday. R ev. Jim Hord,
evangelist.

FRIDAY
PORTLAND LelHnon
Township Trustees, meet on Friday, 4:30 p.m., township building.

RACINE - Racine Chapter.
134, OES. Monday, ot the hall .
Officers to be elected.

SUNDAY
&lt;: :AI{I'ENTER - Paul .md

·The Conununity Calendar
is published as a free service.
to non-profit groups wishing
to announce meetings and ··
special events. The calendar
is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any ·
type. Items are printed only
as space permits and canno!
be guaranteed to be printed .
a specific number of days.

•·.n,.,.a•,

Dedicated,
·· Hours a Day, 7

Show Your Pa:st&lt;i:lii':
You
With Much
r

Appreciation
Pastor
Les Hayman
From the

+

!@)II

Congr ega tion
of th e
I
t• 1 t
111
Ash Street
Church

!

Pastor Lea Hayman
With Much
Appreciation
From the Congrcgallon of

Only8.00

~:~::!'...

. . o. . . ..

t:!0 · 7:00Frlday

~-·uo

ll:llliJ -

.,

With Picture

~("n&amp;r Jtwtltrs

Fl""nclnCJ AVGIIaDie

~oara of 'Trait

Frtt Gift Wrappln41

FrttPortd~

.,

Run s: Fridjl.y, October 20 . .
D ea dline: Friday, October 13

C

. WeHave
~;q ·
• ANew Look
v
• New Fall Merchandise
• Discounts for alll
Come see what we have for youl.

(Citris !1./rmht•w.;, cltilf t!( rftc S1111 Fnmciso.,;...""

p. 111.

POMEROY - Canng and
Sharing support group, 1 p 111 .
Thursday at the Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center. Dr. James
Witherell to talk on cholesterol
and triglycendes.

SATURDAY
STIVERSVILlE Hymn
sing, Saturday, 7 p.m. at the
Stiversville Co mmunity Church .
· Featured smg~rs rhe R.ainbmv
Singers of PJrkei-sburg, V./Va. and
Joe McCloud. R.ev. W:1ync Jewell
invites the public.

Sale

For The Month of October

....,.

M ary Nichols of Hurricane, W.
V:1 . will be singing at the Carpenter Baptist Church . 10 :30 a.m.
Sunday. and that same day at the
Poplar R.idge Church &lt;It 6:30

the Ash Street Church

Anni~ersary

I would lik e to think thaL the tru e· Zo rro,: ~·
rhe on e who kissL'd Tipper that night in Los:~
Angeles, wo uld have ' la shed a Z across thxt:· :
guy's stomach.
· :.:::;

.TOuchst&lt;mc· Bt1ab.)

POMEROY - Again this yea r Ewing C hap ter, Sons of rhe American Revolution , are local sponsors of rhe National Society's George S.
and Stella M Knight Essay Co nte st for high sc hool juniors and seniors.
James Lochary, president of the local chapter, stressed that the contest is open to all stu dents attendmg public. parochta!, private, or
accredited home schools in Gallia, Athens, Metgs, Washington , and
Morgan Counties. The topi c is "The U:S. Constitution: Does it Stand
the Test ofTime."
The winner of the national contest will receive $7,500, a plaque and
a trip to the NSSAR Headquarters in Louisville, Y The winning essay
will also be submitted to the SAR National Magazine for publication .
On the state level, the wmners will be awarded S30, $200, and $100
for first, second and third places respectively.
The contest is for an original essay of 500-750 words written in
English. They wtll be judged for historical accuracy, clarity of thought,
otganizatmn and proven topic, grammar, spelling and do cumentation .,
There is a list of 15 sources which are to be used in research.
The deadline for the contest is Jan . 20.
Contest rules, guidelines, and the resource ltst may be obtained from
Lochary, at 740-448-7269;Tad Cuckler, 740-594, 9115, or 74Cl-5935027 :The information may be obtained by mail by sending a NO 10
self-addressed, stamped envelop to James Lochary, \8660 State Route
550, Amesville, Ohio, 4571 \.
Last year's winner of the Ewings Chapter contest was Ryan Thacker who attends South Gallia High School. H er essay is posted for
review on the web site of Ewings C hapter, www.frognet.net/-assar/

10 fear

-.~

Examilrer 's j, j,;,.,)JiH.(!ftl11 BHrCtlll, is host (!( " H~rrd­
ba/1 " "" CN/JC a11d ,\/St\'/JC w/Jic r/r ,wllcls. Th r
199 9 cdi tioll or "/-lardb.r/1" "'"' Jllll&gt;lis!Jcd by

THURSDAY
POMEROY Pre ce ptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Stgma
Phi Sorority, hobo dress party at
the Thomas river camp m Mason .
H os tesses. Jean Powell, Thelma
Rue, and Eleanor Thomas.

SAR to sponsor essay contest

Come Ce!Ura.tt Witli fls

ation ago. Wh y arc you running for president~ r ·
.
.•
For your prmc1p Ies or your m ten::sts? For ~;
those you meet by night o r ch :m1pion by day? :
For the little people with heal th problems ot'.;-.
th e bi g boys with S25.000 in mft mo ney' Fot,;
the people of faith or the smug Hol lywood;:
insider who sees religion as stand -u p ma tcri-::
~~

CALENDAR

surer.
The bicentennial meeting of the Ohio Reared Teachers Assooatton
(ORTA) was announced for Oct. 5 at the Rhodes Center 111 Columbus.
Ten local members will attend.
Members attending in addition to those previously mentioned were
Bernice Carpenter, Charles and Daisy Blakeslee, John Riebel, Sr., Eileen
Buck, Martha Greenaway, Elma Louks, Kathleet;t Scott, Helen Maag, Grace
Weber, Rachel Downie and new member, Clarence Evans.

m ents?
Who wi ll be Gore's true fri,·nds ' Those ,

H awa ii .
I, too, pu t money aside every time on
the same occasion . My only regret is
that I did not give my wife all my busi ness .What a fabuluus trip we could have
gone on.-- Delray Beach , Fla .
Dear Del: I hope you are joking, but
if you are serious, you ought to be
ashamed of yo urself.
Is life pa ssi ng you by' Want to
improve your soc ial skills' Write for
Ann Lander s' ne w booklet , "How to
Make Friends and Stop Being Lonely."
Sc·nd a se lf- addressed , long , business-size
envdope :111d a check o r money order
for 54.25 (tim includ es postage and
handlin g) to : Friends, c/o A11n Landers ,
P.O. Box 1 I 562. C h tC;~go. Ill. 606110562. (In Canada, 'end $5 .15 .) To find
out mort· ,tbout Ann Lande-rs and n:ad
her pa ~ t c olumn'l, \ ' ISH the Crl'.Hors Syn dicltt.: Wt'b page .lt \Y\\"\\".LTl',ltOn. .COlll.

Fill out coupon below a nd ma,;l brbrihgpa~ment to:
The Daily Sentinel • Ill Court Street ,• Pomeroy, OH 45769

----------------------tPastor's Name:__________ ____
.!i

•

•church: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____
1

t

Message:·- - - - - - - - - - -- - - -

·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --

!Your Name::_ ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - tAdd~ss:: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
___
1Phone: _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___

•-----

•• All Major Credit Cards Accepted

�'

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, September 28, 2000

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Daily Scoreboard, Page BJ
Prep Volleyball, Page B6

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

Page Bl
'111ursday, September 28, 2000

THURSDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS

,.

Prep Sports

Alln.,.o-m

• WlnttOft Cup, NAPA Autoare 100
WINSTON CUP
1 p.m. • Sunde)' • ESPN
• Wh.t:: NAPA Autocare 500
• Butch Qrend Netlonal
• Wrtere: Martinsville (IJa.J
All Pro Bumper to
Auto Parts 300 Speedwa..- (.526-mile track)
• form.t:: 500 laps /2 63
1:05 p.m . • OCt. 7 • TBS
miles

sumP-

• Cr11'tam111 Truck, O'Reilly 300
8

p.m. • Oct. 13 • ESPN

-- - •

2000 POINTS STANDINGS

Bor»r t.aonl:t, • .Oil
2. Dllt tniWGI. 3.142
2.

,.,, GrHn. 4 .160
JIIOn Mtllll'. 3,844

J . OM J.,.tn, 3.824
.. Jetf ~- 3.823
I. ~ Stew•t. 3,63:2
.............. 3.1!2
7. Rusty WIIIK:e, 3,804
t. MM Mertfn; 3.!114
1. w.o &amp;~ton. 3.397
1.0. Jolt GGiton. UOI

Gr .. Bifn., 3.573
Mile W.O.., 3.28!
Kurt ~ICI'I . 3,246
Mt11 HOuston, 32U

TOdd BodiM, 3.581

""""" fWYICtl,

3.~

Ron HomNI'J, 3,272

Elton s.yw, 3.248
Randy LaJoie, 3,0&amp;3

--.2M2
c...,.
Atwood , 2.78&amp;

JlrlWIUt JaMIM, 2,121

·

• When: 1 p.m.. Sunday
G •doDefendln&amp; ch~mplon: Jeff
or n
• Qu.. lfylna; record: Tony
Stewart, Pontiac, 95.:275 mpn,
April 16, 1999

•Ra.:e record: Jeff Goroon.
Chevrolet, 82.223 mPh. 5e pt.

22.1996

BoDbr Labonte

Ji NOtlblt: This IS tM

•WMn: 1:05 p.m .. Oct. 7
• DelendlftC champlort:
Michael Waltrip
• Quallfyin&amp; record: Matt
Kenseth , Chevrolet , 177.328
mph, Oct. 7 , 1999 .a.
• Rece record: Mark Martin,
Ford , 155 .996 mph, Ma~ 25.

scason·s final snorl·trac:k race .
... Mark Martin won here earlier
this season. . Richard Petty
won an incredible 15 times
here.

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL

1996

• What: All Pro Bumper to
Bumper Auto Parts 300
• tWhere: Lowe 's Motor
Spd,ed""'a~. Charlotte. N.C..
I1.S-mile track I
•Formlt: 200 laps/300
miles

•Notable; Mark Martin leads
ail Busch Series drivers with sl~
victories at Charlotte .... Ford
an&lt;l Pontlec each tlave 10
Busch victories here . ... There
has been only one 4QO.m tle
Busch race at Charlotte- the

--·•.m
,.,._,uu

Never • factor

DOVER . Del.- Tile
teammates made the coach
proud .
To ny Stewart drove his Home
Depot POI'\Uac to victor~ in the
MBN.6..com 400~ Bobb~
Labonte finished fifttl and
extended his Winston Cu p point
lead considerably.
For Joe Gibbs. the Hall of
Fame coach of the washington
Redst&lt;lns turned NASCAA team
owner, It couldn't have been
bener.
Labonte 's showlr&gt;C may have
been more llistor lcall~
sla:nmcant tl'lan Stewart's
because Labonte is chasln&amp;
the cnampionsnip, not Just the
cl'lec:kered flaa.
That little fact toot&lt; nothina
away from the fact that Stewart
was astonlshinaly impressive.
To be truthful. Stewart and
Labonte behaved as If they
were rldln&amp; tharouahbreds, not
drivtn&amp; stock cars . Stewart was
tl'le "speed horse· who went
out and set such a pace thlt
the other horses broke down.
Labonte then moved In toward
his c: hemplonshtp, ell
opposition havinl been
conveniently vanquished.

IUICH GIRAND NATIONAL

DOVER.

Del. -The

MBNA.com 200, Its name

CRAniMAN TRUCK

DOVER. Dei. -On the
weekend of his Winston Cup

debut. Kurt Busch won tne
MBNA E-commerce.com 200
race on Friday at Dover Downs
International Speedway.
Busch, who wan the pole but
crashed his primer~ Ford truck
In practice . won at the expense
o f another Ford pilot , Mike
Waltace,wha spun with three
laps to 10 after the two trucks
toucl'led COin&amp; Into turn oo~ .
The victory wea Busch 's third
of the season .

FEUD Of THE WElK
c

-

~ ~·w. ~li!IMII!!n

-.n

·s~~lna
lnto.nit, · ·Prutnnkl: 'I moan. 1111o Ia tile.
. wor111fouP ol driYin&amp; l"vt - n In 11011f1 Ume. W..'rtiUIII
llllllnfl &amp;tilted, we're lour, live 1111111n10 ~.lllel Jutt nailed
me squerety comln&amp; off tum two, and there's Jut.t no need
fOr~.

•n•a just I)Obr. i&gt;Oor oil the woy around.·

NAICAII Tlllo Weoll't Mftl Duttoo IMo 1111 . , . . ,

·wi easy to sympall11!ti wfth Pruett. WftO nao tll&lt;en more

rookie seaton . tie has
liCK o1 weei&lt;J like tills

than t'lls share of lumptll'l this, hla

Used Cars &amp; Trucks

Our NASCAR Th is Week,
Templates 1nd criti ca l dimensions are mandated by NASCAR .
not to ment ion body sty les of the
manufa ctu rers. Wh y do rums
spend so much time and money on
wind-cunnellesting7 What do I hey
g1i n?
Dan Sparks
Milh·ille , N.J.

FROM lAST WEEK
differentiated from the Wln11ton
Cup race by d!s1ance only.
evolved Into a p8t for the Dover
Downs course Saturday.
Dover Busch races are often
fltlecl with e•cttement, and arter
a number of muiticar, and
sometimes flamlna. crashes.
Matt Kenseth hM survived
Intact .
The Cup rootl le from
Cambrld&amp;e , Wis .• dipped back
Into the Busch Series and
domin81ecl.
Not tnat anyol'le shOuld have
been surprised. Kenseth led
102 of 200 laps at Co~r.
&amp;lvin&amp; ntm a career total of 4 14
laps led In Busch Grand
National races. Tnat total Is
considerably more than
t&lt;enseth has led at any other
track .

one top-10 ftnlelloll ,..r .., ond

'ifl4eetd- &amp;
'Deald605 General
Hartinger Parkway
Middleport, Ohio
45670
740-992-4443
Fax: 740-992-4442
Ted Dexter
Home: 740-992-5260
Dwight Honaker
Home: 740-985-3709

Jerry ~ihbee
461 South Third Middleport, Ohio

(740) 992·2196

•
»111~"*­

-

••

.... ·~ - - . . , _,_llle-.2011WII II IE

, .•• , .Monlt DUtton
NASCAR ThiS Week

C. rot

OM

Coroor..-: ~~rl!l!ll, 0..00., 7,.. '&lt;~
lop.flw flnl&amp;hes. 31 top.10 nnlslles. 2 poles.

Dover Downs.
Still operating on a shoe string budget.
Benson should be In for even b etter
performancea next year when Valvaline
comes on board as his primary sponsor.
HOIIMt~: Grand Rapids, MICh .

A&amp;t:37

Cer: No. lQ Aaron 's Pontiac , owned .
officially by T(m Beverley
Children: Kalelyn (41, Mlkoyle (turns 3 on

Nov. 21)

•NOT: Ricky Rudd has posted a
lop-five finish In each of the last
six races . Rudd Is in a tie for
nfth In the point Standings.

r-n poJiont,

knowJna you ort ""-- lal noat rllf?

·our a:oals haven't chana:ed this year. Some

of the thii"CI that how hil&gt;c&gt;ened tQ us tnlo
year lleve mll&lt;la tlllnp difficult. ~ IUive
done very well tar what we have been

presented , and

o1thlnas.

we have overcome • lot

· we haven't been lbl• to telt end ao t.o
the wtnd tunnel as much aa we woutd have

That's IOinfl !O dl811f18 In the future.
With MB2 bU)Ina tile tesm and Aaron•a
stopplna on board, It Haa alloWed ua10

liked.

obviously finish the rest ot thll )'liar $nd

us to 110 ahead and use our tnt d8tes tot
thla year. Tile IUY* are lrotelul for ell of ll1at.
are ho~na fun. Thla lo the boot lfOUP
I have ever been with.

·we

Crew cNII': James lnce

Who'&amp; Not

(non~

beiln preparln&amp; tor 2001. lt"s also alloWed

wn.: Debbie

••••••••••••
Whd&amp;Hot ....

Daytona).
pole (Marcll10. 1996. at Allantal. victory

1 . What year did Martinsville (VI.) Speedway
ce lebrate its 5oth anniversary?
2 . Who won the first NASCAR·sanctloned race at
Martinsville in 1949?
3. What driver sold hi s pet Black Angus cow to buy his
first race car?

'lSVW )j:&gt;ttl '£
:uoJ .-(8 p s~ ·~ :l66"t 'I

•NOT: Bill Elliott has one top-10
nn tsh In his last 11 races.
·Awesome Bili •ts 20th in points.

IMJMINW

••••••••••••

AROUND THE GARAGE

Evernham taking young Atwood under his Winston Cup wing
NASCAR ThiS week

Lut week Ray Evernham WIS

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avoid hardship, but he needs to
fia:ure things oul himself," Evern ·
h1m sai d. "He ' ll fi nd out where
the line is i n Winston Cup, but
ltkc every rookre, he"I I need lo
step O\·er th~ t line m orde r to
Jearn ."
)(

1sked to describe his tnc:hi ng
style by di fferenti atin g between
letting a chil d lauch a 11ove to
learn th11 it is h01 or tell ing: the
child repeatedl y nol to tou ch the
stove.
TUEY CO ME IN HJREES:
Evernh1m, wh o is direct i ng Rusty Wall ace ll.nd Jeff Gor~on
Dodge 's impending entry i nlo had their three c ar e~ r Dover
Cup racing, replied . "I look f or victories i n consecuti ve ra ces.
the child th1t l icks his f inger first Wallace in 199.J-94andGordon 111
and 1hen jull laps the stove 199.5 ·96.
wi thout gelling burned ."
Cuey Atwood, 20, will be
Evernham 's pri me pupil nut
SU RPRI SE. SURPRISE: After
yeu.
• nst y denial s in New Hamp~h ire
" I wane to educate Cl!ey to last weekend , Bobby Ham ihon

d1d indeed announce his hi ri ng IO continue what we've bui ll here,
drive for Andy Peuee . next yea r. bu1 also l ake itlo rhe next level, "
Ham ilion, a _10-year W1ns1on Cup said Petree , who was Dale Ea rn·
ve tera n. wtll re place Kenn.y hard t's c~ew chid for , two. of
Walla ce al I he wheel of Petree s Earn hlrdt s seven champ1onsh1ps.
No .5.~ Chevrolu Monte Car lo.
Wallace , by the way, ~ ill j oin
. Ham ilton, 43, has won three Barry Dodson 11 Jlck 81rming·
11mes, with fiv e poln, since ham 's Eel River Racmg 1e1m.
win n in~ Cup rookie of th e year
X
honors rn 199 1.
"f 've been g1v~ n a fresh ~t1rt
CUP PHASE-I N: Busch Grand
with a tram ow ner who know s Nac i or~al regu l1r Jimmie Johnson
how 10 wi n championships,'' sa id has signed a contrac t to run four
Ham1 lt on. w ho li\·es in Mount Win slon Cup races ne•t yur ac
Ju liel , Ter1n . "' In Winston Cup, Hendrick Motorsports 1r1d then
bt!inga good driver is n 't enough. move up 10 run 1 full schedule in
You need rhc total package 10 be 2002. · Johnson, 25, Will remain
compet1Hve ."
wit h H erl'.Og Motor.sports, his
" We w~re l ooking for a ve teran BGN tum, nex t yur and ru n for
driver wh o wou ld no t only the se ries champion1hip.

'

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Pizza

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'""'·•dbluu.c.om

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St. Rl . 248
Chester . 985·3308

CPU
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.dl'i~~l

ALL

110 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone 992-1135
E-Mall /mas@frognel,ne1
www.perlormanceupgrad es.com

Volleyball

Intern.

tiHel IPMdWar WM

crewchl.rGrt~Zipa.
de4U 'I abllltJ to find
1
Mtup that woutd H8bll
Stew8rt to IO rut

wftltout abullftlthe

Sales &amp; Service
Enterprise
Pomeroy, OH

WIIIKeWithiMf ....

four

th wln at tho
Moniter M1le. He 1110

belt

won tho ..,.11\1 rae.
there.

1-740-992-130

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Wahama
2-3
Hannan
1-4
South Gallia
0-5
Friday's Game
Parkersbu rg Catholic at South
Gall ia, 7:30
Saturday's Game
Burch at Hannan. 7 :30

I ~[!c k,_
___ _.::.

MARINE

ALL

Area non-teague

~..,__

tlrn, lpeclfiCIIIJ hll
rllht-rront tire.
The ptt CIIW IIIO
perrotmed ftlwtHIIy.
.nd Stewalt tlld Rusty

"I stayed up and watched last
ni ght until I co uldn 't anymore,"
Indians
manager
C harlie
Manu el said. "We know we
need so me help."
With only fo ur games left. the
Indians are still chasing the
Oaklan d Athletics and hoping
the M ariners continue their
slide.
There 's c noug~ season left
that a lot of different scenarios
could happen, but every day the
math gets simpl er.
" It's gettin g down th ere now

Miller
0-0 5·0
Easlern
0-0 4-1
Trimble
0·0 3-2
Southern
0-0 2-3
Walerford
Q..O 2-3
Federal Hocking 0·0 1-4
Frtday•s Games
Wellston at Meigs
Federal Hock ing at Southern
Trimble at Eastern
Nelsonvi lle· York at Vinton County
Waterford at Miller
Belpre at Alexander

ltewlrt': victor/It
Dover Downt

Minnesota Twi ns.

Jackson
2·0 5·0
Logan
2·0 5·0
Galll a Academy 2·0 4· 1
Pomt Pleasant 1·1 4·1
Athens
1· t 2·3
Marietta
0·2 t ·4
Warren
0-2 1-4
River Valley
' 0· 2 0·5
Friday's Games
Gallla Academy at River Valley
Point Pleasant al Jackson
Athens at Logan
Warren at Marietta

Supply

•Thtk• tor...

ALL

SEOAL

Ridenour

:-: CRlW OFtliEWilil

C LEVELAND (AP) - Once
again , every TV in the Indians'
cl ubh ouse was tuned to the
same program.
No, it wasn 't th e 11 o'cloc k
. news, a Sei nfeld rerun or David
L.etterman 's opening monologue.
Cleveland's players were riveted on th e earl y inning; in Seattl e late Wedn esday night , rooting si len tl y for the Texas
Rangers after the Indians kept
pace in th e AL wild card chase
with an 8-2 victory over the

where even I can count it up

See us for Your Stih l.
Power Too ls &amp;
Accessories

.,l_

Twins, 8·2

Meigs
0-0 3-2
Nelsonvi lle-York 0-0 3-2
Belpre
0·0 2·3
Wellston
0-0 2·3
Alexander
0·0 0·5
V1nton County
0-0 0·5
Hocking Division

·.

•Fens have e chance to win a
Chevrolet 5-10 Xtreme tructl at
North carolina Speedway by
enterlnll the MoUfltain Oew
"Puts You In tne Fest Lane·
Sweepstakes .
Entry blanks are availab le at
Mountain Dew displays, but the
entry deadl ine is Frida~. Ten
winners will be selected to
attend the Oct. 22 Pop Secret
Microwave Popco rn 400 as
11uests of Mountain Dew.
Each person w"i be given a
key and a cnance to start a
Chevrolet S-10 Xtreme during
pre-race activities.

TVC

In last year's dramatic win, down 12-6
with JU St seconds remaining in the game,
Eastern set up on the two yard-line with a
fourth and goal, but got called for illegal
proced ure. Now at the seven, quarte rback "
Garrett Karr. fresh off a broken arm, rolled
out and drilled a pass to .tight end Ben
Holter in the corner o f the endzone to tie
the game. Karr found a seam on the extra
point try and ran the ball in for the gamewinning score.
Earlier in the game, Karr had broken a
57- ya rd touchdown o n the fir.t down in
the seco nd quarter to ti e the game at six.
A failed PAT followed. He carried the

Tribe thumps

Tri-Vattey Conference
Ohio Division

l

TVC

Fannps

C hristman also used a lot of psychology
in mapping out the 1999 win . In a
prega me article, Eastern was described by
Trimble as "faltering" after jumping off to

Football

.\

Special

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

in a row.

i
'

september

form and eve ned iTS record at 4-4 by
defeati ng the Tnmble Tomcats I 4- 12 in an
important come- trom- behind Tri -Valley
Conference showdown . Th e win halted a
two-game win streak by Trimble.

To eligible lor The OVP 10, s
team must e~her: a.1 be from
the Mason-Gallfa-Melgs area;
b .) be a local conference mem·
bar; or c.) play at leaa1 one
gama against local teams.

""'

Dear NASCA R This w~e k ,
I just read the co mmen l chat
road racing does not require any
real dri11ing stills. I would have to
say that I disagree with th is commen!. I myse lf am • race r and it
lakeS all ki nd!! or driving ski l l to be
a successful road r•cer. For example, you must be able 10 conuol a
nr 1ha1 is 1urn ing bolh l eft and
r ight al l the time. You must also b e
effic ient wilh a manual tr ansmis ·
sion. This comment kind of m~r.l e
me upset. Thank you.
Mandy Shaw
Oo ltewa h, Ten n.

Place Your Business's Ad here •
Call
The Daily Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Matt Haskins
992-2155

Trimble, ranked 14th in th e state AP
poll, has bee n a thorn in Eastern's side, it
seems. for many years, but last year Eastern
pull ed a rose out of the thistl es. At Trimble

a good start early in th e year, then losing a
coup le games.
C hristman said in last yea r"s pregame
speech. " In our team meeting last night
before we went o ut on the practice field,
I said, ' I looke d up faltering in the dictionary - and that means to stumbl e due to
lack of courage. Th ey're tellin g us we are
scared guys, that we don't have any
courage.' That pumped our kids up and
they ca me out ready to play."
C hristman is using some psychology
again thi s year and echoes of the "faltering" speech arc spiraling down the locker
room hallways. Th at parti cular ghost may
be one that h au~;~ ts Trimble fo r a long
tin'le.

Others
receiving votes:
Parl&lt;ersburg Catholic (1l

X

Flroto: Start (Feb. 18. 1996. ot

How tllfllclllt le It to

rcgwn 's co mputer ran kings .

The game was a big homecoming present fo r Eastern coa ch Scott C hri stman ,
who said after th e gam e, "This victory
means a lot because I'm from h ere (Trimble) . I was excited before th e game and
that got the kids excited."
This year Eastern (4- 1) is pumped for
th e task at hand in their home stadium. a
place that has been kind to them in 2000,
and where the Eagles are und efeated. Just
th e opposite of last seaso n, Trimble is on a
two game ski d, and Eastern has won three

Team
Prev. Votes
1. Ironton
I
46 (2)
1. Logan
46 (2)
2
3. Parkersburg
41 (1)
3
4. Jackson
5
36
5. Fort Frye
7
25
6. Point Pleasant 4
23
7 Gallipol is
6
22
8. Miller
8
19
9. Easlern
9
8
10. Ross SE
10
7

AI eve ry place on a body where
the fempiale does not measu re its
shape, wind -tunnel testing is used
to mold the body in a wa y to make
the car (aster. It is bard fo r a lay ·
man to undus1and llow Ibi s can
make a difference, but teams assure
us that it dou. We guc.s.s it shows
just how competitive this sport is.

a1mos1 $6.5 million In eamlnct

Johnny Benson, who was once Winston
Cup Rookie of the Year. Mas served notice
this year that he is capable a1 b ecomina: one
o fltt'le clrcutt's le&amp;Cltng drivers .
Despite sponsorship and ownership
ditncuttfes end changes, Benson has
frequent~ run near the front this season,
lncludln&amp; a second-place finish to Tony
Stewart on Sunday In the MBNA.c:om 400 at

•

8y Monte Dutton

~

Moore. We doubc i c will happen
•ga in.

ComobHk llorr contlnuoo

WINSTON CUP

way, Fort Worth (1 .5-m iie track I
•Format: 200 laps/300
miles
• Deftndlnt ehamplon: Jay
Sauter
• Qulllfrllll record: Jack
Spraaue. Chevrolet. 178 .642
mph. June 4 , 1998
•Race r~cord: Jay Sauter.
Chevrolet. 13:2.430 mph , Oct.

A weekly look at the region's
top football teams, as voted
by Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
sports s taffers. (First·place
votes in parentheses)

FYI, Earnhardt drove Ford s in
\982 and 1983 for car owner Bud

So clou to • win

10. (-) Johnny Bonoon
·

at Dover

broom
A quill o(llttll
A quill nlntll
SIIW hll OtrOik tnd

7. (8) JelfGOfdon

• What: O'Reilly 300
•When: 8 p.m .. Oct. 13
•Where: Te~a s Motor Speed·

Dt:ar NASCA R This Week ,
I h1ve 1 dre1m. I would l ike to
Ke D1le Elrnhudt win his eigh lh
championship dri ving a Chevrolet
for Rictlard Childrc ss, 1thcr1 go on to
wi n his ninch ticle drivi ng a 1:ord
... This would give the Ford Mboo
birr.ls" 1 chance co also cheer for
The lnlimidaror and change their
thoughts of him .
Bil l Bi e ~r
Co nn el lsville, Pa.

Oot out tilt

8. (8) Mlfk M•tln
9. (91 Ricky Rudd

CAAnSMAN TRUCK

Your
Tum
IAihn 1M O.Rtadtn

Johnny Benson

RIMy Tolsma, 2.i08

Runnlnl owoy wltll polnto

Dolo Jarrott
4. (3) Dolo Elmllllrdt
5. (7) Tony 5towort
6. (5) Rual)' Wollaco

1 985 Miller 400

••••••••••••

JJCII ~. ],().119

nre trouble did him In
Hldlbldllly, too

3. (4)

The OVP

EAST M EIGS- Eastern returns home
this week for the TVC opener against
Trimble at East Shade River Stadi um Friday night. Eastern is now fifth in the

last season. Eastern returned to winning

• weeki~ rankln&amp;s b~ NASCAR This Week writer Monte Dutton.
Last week 's rankin&amp; Is tn l;arentneses.

2. (11 Jofl Burton

11-R-W!&gt;tk
.~ .,..tile-·-­
.JIIOOL.......,._
IIOto
.. •·. 1lo, II.C. U014

ON THE SCHEDULE

.101 RunrriWI. 2.i78
DenniS SIUir, 2,92a

TOP HN

1 . (2)

~. CI R'IMt,, wdtt:

-~

'

·

BY ScoTT Wom
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

• .,...,..,. fDt·a'•ntlan

•

Red-hot Eagles begin TVC play·against Trimble

'

''

Wednesday"s Matches
Meigs def. Oak Hill , 15·2, 15·9
Gallia Academy def. Oak Hill, 15·
4. 15·12
Gallia Academy def. Meigs. 15·7.
8- 15, 15·6
Today's Matches
·Southern at Watertord. 5:55
Easte rn al Miller, 5:55
Wellston at Meigs. 5:55
South Gallia at lro nlon St. Joe.
6:00
Frlday•s Malches
Ohio Valley Chris11an at Grace Ghris·
tiar.. 5:00
Saturday's Matches
South Gall1a at Eastern Tourna·
ment. tO:OO
Morgan at Eastern Tourna ment.
10:00
Hannan at Eastern Tourn ament,
1000

Golf

Today's Malch
Poinl Pleasant, Ripley, Buffalo·
Putnam, TBA (at Hidden Valley)

Cross Country

Saturday's Meets
River Valley at Lan caster lnv..
10:00

Meigs al Lancaster lnv., 10 .00
Gallia Academy at Lancaster lnv..
10 :00
The b,·,tTri -County prep football coverage is in the Sunday
Times-Sentinel eve r y weekend!

DOUBLE PLAY- Cleveland's Omar Vizquel throws to first after touching second to force out Minnesota 's Corey Koskie Wedne sday night at Jacobs Field . (AP )

Meigs opens TVC
against Wellston
Bv

DAVE HARRIS

is led by one of the top players

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

in Souih eastern O hi o in junio r

ROCK SPRINGS - T he
~ec ond seao.;o n t(lr the Meigs

Brad Young.Young is li-foor. 190

Marauders ~ct s un derway this
Fnday l' Vl'l1111g w ht'IJ tht'

M:mud ers hos t th e We llston
Gold,·n Ro cket&gt; 111 th e TVC
opener.

The Co lde n R ockets (2-3)
n l' comi ng otr J w in over Rock

Hill

la st

wcc·k. WdL&lt;to n is

poundS and is a two year starter

at tl1 llback ami linebacker, but
this season he h as moved to tall ~
b ac k o n offense. Last season
dt:sp lte mi ssin g two games bea-:
cuSt· of a kn ee inJury rushed for

I .058 yards and 17 to uchdowns .
He along with Erron Brennan .
the two both run th e I00 in
under I I seconds.
'" We feel that Wellsto n in the
most ta le nted team in the TVC,"
M,tra udcr coach Mike C hancey
said. "Th ey haw the beST overall
player in the co nference in Brad

coach ed by D.tvt.' Lucas. who is
in h1 ' first ~t.'J~on a., th e Goldt.·n
R o&lt;.-kcts 111t'ntor.
Lu cas is no ;;rrangcr to t( w tball
in So u th l'aStt'rtl (.lhi n. having
tl!rectl'd Coa l c;rovc fo r 22
yt·ars. LLh..-a" guid t.'d tht.' Horn t't'i . Young, an d it will be a great
ro seven state pbyotf appear~ cha llenge for us that we are
ann·s. inrl t'1din g two tr ips to the loo king torward to."
statt' st·mifln i! ls in w hi ch they
Mei g; (3- 2) is comi ng otf a 3lost to tlw l've ntual state cham- 0 wm over Fairland, Adam
p10n.
Bullington's 36 yard field goal as

The Rockets welcom e back
~ s1x startcn on both 'otfense and
defe nse trom last years team that
f1ni shed second in Ih e TVC
beh ind champio n Vinton Coun ty.
Wellsto n ha1 a lot bf speed and

time ran out in the first period .
The Marauder offense, like in
other games, moved the ball
(306 total yards). but the drive s
stalled when Meig; reached th e

Pleese se1 Melp, P•l• Bl

and figure it out," said Manu el.
""What's that tell ya'"
Jamn Bcrc didn 't blow another seven- run lead and Manny
Ramirez and Jim Thome homered as C levela nd remain ed 1
1/2 games behind Oakland for
the AL wild card.
Bere (6-3) rebounded from a
disastrous start in Boston last
week when he gave back a 7-0
lead to the R ed Sox, who rallied
fo r a 9-8 win.
Th e Indi ans have four games
left and the A's four, plus a possibl e makeup against Tampa Bay
on Monday, if necessary.

"Two down, four to go,"
Manu el said.
Bill Selby, getting a rare start
at DH , had two RDi s when the
Indians broke it open with a
five-run fourth off, Brad Radke
(12-16).
Thome. in one of the worst
slumps of his career, homered
for the first time since Sept. 5 a span of 83 at-baTS .
" It 's not about me struggling,"Th ome said. "It's about us
winning ballgames right now."
Bere has either been real good
o r real bad in his 11 starts for
the Indians since coming over
in a July trade with Milwaukee.
The n ght- hander allowed two
runs and five hits 5 2- 3 inning;.
"We need to win at all costs
and it sta rts with the starting
pitcher,'' Bere said. ··1 was able to
put up so me zeros in the first
three inning&gt; and gave our guys
a chance to swing th e bats."
Cleveland came to the plate
in the first against Radke just
seco nds after Oa kland's 9-7 win
over Anaheim was posted on
th e left-field scoreboard. and
Ramirez quickly put the Indians up 2-0 with his 34th homer.
Kenny Lofton ope ned with a
bunt sin gle, and two outs later,
R amirez con nected for his fifth
h o m er in 47 career at - bats

against Radke.
It's frightening to think what
R amirez may have done if he
hadn't missed 44 games this season With a hamstring injury.
Si nce returnin g. he's batting
.372 with 22 hom ers and 7 1
RB Is in 67 games.
As his numb ers ~ise, so does
th e dollar amount it could cost
•

Please s" Tribe, Pa1e B:S

Richards v. Richards in Racine
BY

Scon WOLFE

Wahama's mag:ir pot ion put two

yards rushmg the entire second

RAC IN E Roll o ut th,·
table cloth and empty th e picni c

rushers over the I 00-yard mark.
all this against a So uth er n team
tha! had done a good job defen -

baskt·r ca u se Southe rn co ach

sively mo st of the season.

hal f, and 67 yards net overall.
Sou th em 's Jonathan Evans was
relieved by ll ra ndon Pi erce after
an injury. lloth co n1b ined for
I 07 hard-earned passing yards.
The result of a league push to

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

. Rusty Ri chards wi ll be hostin g a
fa mil y reu ni on Friday when th e
TornJdot.' '~ face Ft.:dnal Hnc kiug
for the .17th anm10l Tormdo
H o m cco mint; n: l ebr~ltlOil .
A n: union?
v~s . a l'l'lltlion in til . .· form of

fa th er - m L'l't"' -~01 1.
Ri chard s wil l 111&lt;'e t t;1tlwr
Dave R ichards, who 1' the coach
of th e Lancers. Ric h ,l rth' cumin
Stt.'Vt.' i" al'\o on tlw L.u lC&lt;.T team.

After a coup le hui ld n1g '\c.'a th e t.•l der ltickm. J... kd hi'

'\011~.

team to its lw&lt;.;t - t'Vc...T record la&lt;&gt;t
sealinn . Th i-; se .tson tht· Lm cc r'i,

after losi ng .1 '\e-n ior-dominarcd
team , ,tre a!!;ain rdmildi ng. Th t'
Lan cers ( 1- 4) won their first
game last wee k aga111'\t AlexJn -

der, 26- 6.
Southern (2-3) h ad won two
in a row, but the Wahan1a jinx
again cursed the Torm J oes. who
defensively wert· non -cx i ~te nt

against a White Falcon team tlut
had been having otTemrve strU!,;·
gles. Southern"s in abi lities or

Last yea r in the final game of
the seaso n, the Lan cer. flexed
tl1t·ir muscle in the seco nd half
in produ cing ·a 27~ 1 3 co me

behind victory over South em at
Lancer Stadiu m. Federal Hoc king fi ni shed second in the TV C
with a ~- I lll.l rk beh ind kagut·
c ha mp ion Miller. who had
ckfeated Trimble ~H - 1 ') in the
last gamt· .
Mi lln wt·m on , to .1 berth in
tht· playoff, whl're they wen:
dd~·Jtt· d m the fir st round .
Federal Hoc king managed the
h t.·"t rl'rord in school history
with an H- 2 overall &lt;;cason.

Southern finished third in the
leagu e. tied with Trimble at 2-.l.
Southern ended up J-7 overall .
In that game now -graduat ed
Southerner Josh Davis carri ed
the ball 20 tim es for 93 yards, 71
of whi ch came in th e first h alf.
Matt Ash as a &lt;ophomorc carried
nine time1 for 21 yards. wh ile
quarterback
sacks
negated
Sout hern rushing to mmus-24

restore league rivalr ies to the last

game moved Federal to th e fi rst
league game in 2000 and set the
ancit•tH E,tsttTn- So uthern C las-

sic

I(Jt

-.o n.
The

the final wee of the seaco mmon

o ppon e nt s

betwee n Ft'deral a1 d Southern
are Alcxandt:r an

Waham a.

Wahama
defeating
Federal
H ocking 56 - t 2 and Federal
H oc king beat Alexander 26-li.
Southern lo&lt;t 28- 18 to Wah ama
and pounded Alexande r 41 -6.
Federal Ho cking"s somew hat
stru ggling offense came to life
las t week . ga ining 24 1 yards
overall (120 rushing and 121
passing). Clint Sears scored the
Lan ce r.; ' first touchdown in the
seco nd quarter with a 60-yard
pass from Steve !l-ichards. Seth
Ottum then add ed a one-yard
sco ring run to his 30-ya rd rush-

PI••• Mt Southlm, ..... H
II

�'

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, September 28, 2000

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Daily Scoreboard, Page BJ
Prep Volleyball, Page B6

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

Page Bl
'111ursday, September 28, 2000

THURSDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS

,.

Prep Sports

Alln.,.o-m

• WlnttOft Cup, NAPA Autoare 100
WINSTON CUP
1 p.m. • Sunde)' • ESPN
• Wh.t:: NAPA Autocare 500
• Butch Qrend Netlonal
• Wrtere: Martinsville (IJa.J
All Pro Bumper to
Auto Parts 300 Speedwa..- (.526-mile track)
• form.t:: 500 laps /2 63
1:05 p.m . • OCt. 7 • TBS
miles

sumP-

• Cr11'tam111 Truck, O'Reilly 300
8

p.m. • Oct. 13 • ESPN

-- - •

2000 POINTS STANDINGS

Bor»r t.aonl:t, • .Oil
2. Dllt tniWGI. 3.142
2.

,.,, GrHn. 4 .160
JIIOn Mtllll'. 3,844

J . OM J.,.tn, 3.824
.. Jetf ~- 3.823
I. ~ Stew•t. 3,63:2
.............. 3.1!2
7. Rusty WIIIK:e, 3,804
t. MM Mertfn; 3.!114
1. w.o &amp;~ton. 3.397
1.0. Jolt GGiton. UOI

Gr .. Bifn., 3.573
Mile W.O.., 3.28!
Kurt ~ICI'I . 3,246
Mt11 HOuston, 32U

TOdd BodiM, 3.581

""""" fWYICtl,

3.~

Ron HomNI'J, 3,272

Elton s.yw, 3.248
Randy LaJoie, 3,0&amp;3

--.2M2
c...,.
Atwood , 2.78&amp;

JlrlWIUt JaMIM, 2,121

·

• When: 1 p.m.. Sunday
G •doDefendln&amp; ch~mplon: Jeff
or n
• Qu.. lfylna; record: Tony
Stewart, Pontiac, 95.:275 mpn,
April 16, 1999

•Ra.:e record: Jeff Goroon.
Chevrolet, 82.223 mPh. 5e pt.

22.1996

BoDbr Labonte

Ji NOtlblt: This IS tM

•WMn: 1:05 p.m .. Oct. 7
• DelendlftC champlort:
Michael Waltrip
• Quallfyin&amp; record: Matt
Kenseth , Chevrolet , 177.328
mph, Oct. 7 , 1999 .a.
• Rece record: Mark Martin,
Ford , 155 .996 mph, Ma~ 25.

scason·s final snorl·trac:k race .
... Mark Martin won here earlier
this season. . Richard Petty
won an incredible 15 times
here.

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL

1996

• What: All Pro Bumper to
Bumper Auto Parts 300
• tWhere: Lowe 's Motor
Spd,ed""'a~. Charlotte. N.C..
I1.S-mile track I
•Formlt: 200 laps/300
miles

•Notable; Mark Martin leads
ail Busch Series drivers with sl~
victories at Charlotte .... Ford
an&lt;l Pontlec each tlave 10
Busch victories here . ... There
has been only one 4QO.m tle
Busch race at Charlotte- the

--·•.m
,.,._,uu

Never • factor

DOVER . Del.- Tile
teammates made the coach
proud .
To ny Stewart drove his Home
Depot POI'\Uac to victor~ in the
MBN.6..com 400~ Bobb~
Labonte finished fifttl and
extended his Winston Cu p point
lead considerably.
For Joe Gibbs. the Hall of
Fame coach of the washington
Redst&lt;lns turned NASCAA team
owner, It couldn't have been
bener.
Labonte 's showlr&gt;C may have
been more llistor lcall~
sla:nmcant tl'lan Stewart's
because Labonte is chasln&amp;
the cnampionsnip, not Just the
cl'lec:kered flaa.
That little fact toot&lt; nothina
away from the fact that Stewart
was astonlshinaly impressive.
To be truthful. Stewart and
Labonte behaved as If they
were rldln&amp; tharouahbreds, not
drivtn&amp; stock cars . Stewart was
tl'le "speed horse· who went
out and set such a pace thlt
the other horses broke down.
Labonte then moved In toward
his c: hemplonshtp, ell
opposition havinl been
conveniently vanquished.

IUICH GIRAND NATIONAL

DOVER.

Del. -The

MBNA.com 200, Its name

CRAniMAN TRUCK

DOVER. Dei. -On the
weekend of his Winston Cup

debut. Kurt Busch won tne
MBNA E-commerce.com 200
race on Friday at Dover Downs
International Speedway.
Busch, who wan the pole but
crashed his primer~ Ford truck
In practice . won at the expense
o f another Ford pilot , Mike
Waltace,wha spun with three
laps to 10 after the two trucks
toucl'led COin&amp; Into turn oo~ .
The victory wea Busch 's third
of the season .

FEUD Of THE WElK
c

-

~ ~·w. ~li!IMII!!n

-.n

·s~~lna
lnto.nit, · ·Prutnnkl: 'I moan. 1111o Ia tile.
. wor111fouP ol driYin&amp; l"vt - n In 11011f1 Ume. W..'rtiUIII
llllllnfl &amp;tilted, we're lour, live 1111111n10 ~.lllel Jutt nailed
me squerety comln&amp; off tum two, and there's Jut.t no need
fOr~.

•n•a just I)Obr. i&gt;Oor oil the woy around.·

NAICAII Tlllo Weoll't Mftl Duttoo IMo 1111 . , . . ,

·wi easy to sympall11!ti wfth Pruett. WftO nao tll&lt;en more

rookie seaton . tie has
liCK o1 weei&lt;J like tills

than t'lls share of lumptll'l this, hla

Used Cars &amp; Trucks

Our NASCAR Th is Week,
Templates 1nd criti ca l dimensions are mandated by NASCAR .
not to ment ion body sty les of the
manufa ctu rers. Wh y do rums
spend so much time and money on
wind-cunnellesting7 What do I hey
g1i n?
Dan Sparks
Milh·ille , N.J.

FROM lAST WEEK
differentiated from the Wln11ton
Cup race by d!s1ance only.
evolved Into a p8t for the Dover
Downs course Saturday.
Dover Busch races are often
fltlecl with e•cttement, and arter
a number of muiticar, and
sometimes flamlna. crashes.
Matt Kenseth hM survived
Intact .
The Cup rootl le from
Cambrld&amp;e , Wis .• dipped back
Into the Busch Series and
domin81ecl.
Not tnat anyol'le shOuld have
been surprised. Kenseth led
102 of 200 laps at Co~r.
&amp;lvin&amp; ntm a career total of 4 14
laps led In Busch Grand
National races. Tnat total Is
considerably more than
t&lt;enseth has led at any other
track .

one top-10 ftnlelloll ,..r .., ond

'ifl4eetd- &amp;
'Deald605 General
Hartinger Parkway
Middleport, Ohio
45670
740-992-4443
Fax: 740-992-4442
Ted Dexter
Home: 740-992-5260
Dwight Honaker
Home: 740-985-3709

Jerry ~ihbee
461 South Third Middleport, Ohio

(740) 992·2196

•
»111~"*­

-

••

.... ·~ - - . . , _,_llle-.2011WII II IE

, .•• , .Monlt DUtton
NASCAR ThiS Week

C. rot

OM

Coroor..-: ~~rl!l!ll, 0..00., 7,.. '&lt;~
lop.flw flnl&amp;hes. 31 top.10 nnlslles. 2 poles.

Dover Downs.
Still operating on a shoe string budget.
Benson should be In for even b etter
performancea next year when Valvaline
comes on board as his primary sponsor.
HOIIMt~: Grand Rapids, MICh .

A&amp;t:37

Cer: No. lQ Aaron 's Pontiac , owned .
officially by T(m Beverley
Children: Kalelyn (41, Mlkoyle (turns 3 on

Nov. 21)

•NOT: Ricky Rudd has posted a
lop-five finish In each of the last
six races . Rudd Is in a tie for
nfth In the point Standings.

r-n poJiont,

knowJna you ort ""-- lal noat rllf?

·our a:oals haven't chana:ed this year. Some

of the thii"CI that how hil&gt;c&gt;ened tQ us tnlo
year lleve mll&lt;la tlllnp difficult. ~ IUive
done very well tar what we have been

presented , and

o1thlnas.

we have overcome • lot

· we haven't been lbl• to telt end ao t.o
the wtnd tunnel as much aa we woutd have

That's IOinfl !O dl811f18 In the future.
With MB2 bU)Ina tile tesm and Aaron•a
stopplna on board, It Haa alloWed ua10

liked.

obviously finish the rest ot thll )'liar $nd

us to 110 ahead and use our tnt d8tes tot
thla year. Tile IUY* are lrotelul for ell of ll1at.
are ho~na fun. Thla lo the boot lfOUP
I have ever been with.

·we

Crew cNII': James lnce

Who'&amp; Not

(non~

beiln preparln&amp; tor 2001. lt"s also alloWed

wn.: Debbie

••••••••••••
Whd&amp;Hot ....

Daytona).
pole (Marcll10. 1996. at Allantal. victory

1 . What year did Martinsville (VI.) Speedway
ce lebrate its 5oth anniversary?
2 . Who won the first NASCAR·sanctloned race at
Martinsville in 1949?
3. What driver sold hi s pet Black Angus cow to buy his
first race car?

'lSVW )j:&gt;ttl '£
:uoJ .-(8 p s~ ·~ :l66"t 'I

•NOT: Bill Elliott has one top-10
nn tsh In his last 11 races.
·Awesome Bili •ts 20th in points.

IMJMINW

••••••••••••

AROUND THE GARAGE

Evernham taking young Atwood under his Winston Cup wing
NASCAR ThiS week

Lut week Ray Evernham WIS

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avoid hardship, but he needs to
fia:ure things oul himself," Evern ·
h1m sai d. "He ' ll fi nd out where
the line is i n Winston Cup, but
ltkc every rookre, he"I I need lo
step O\·er th~ t line m orde r to
Jearn ."
)(

1sked to describe his tnc:hi ng
style by di fferenti atin g between
letting a chil d lauch a 11ove to
learn th11 it is h01 or tell ing: the
child repeatedl y nol to tou ch the
stove.
TUEY CO ME IN HJREES:
Evernh1m, wh o is direct i ng Rusty Wall ace ll.nd Jeff Gor~on
Dodge 's impending entry i nlo had their three c ar e~ r Dover
Cup racing, replied . "I look f or victories i n consecuti ve ra ces.
the child th1t l icks his f inger first Wallace in 199.J-94andGordon 111
and 1hen jull laps the stove 199.5 ·96.
wi thout gelling burned ."
Cuey Atwood, 20, will be
Evernham 's pri me pupil nut
SU RPRI SE. SURPRISE: After
yeu.
• nst y denial s in New Hamp~h ire
" I wane to educate Cl!ey to last weekend , Bobby Ham ihon

d1d indeed announce his hi ri ng IO continue what we've bui ll here,
drive for Andy Peuee . next yea r. bu1 also l ake itlo rhe next level, "
Ham ilion, a _10-year W1ns1on Cup said Petree , who was Dale Ea rn·
ve tera n. wtll re place Kenn.y hard t's c~ew chid for , two. of
Walla ce al I he wheel of Petree s Earn hlrdt s seven champ1onsh1ps.
No .5.~ Chevrolu Monte Car lo.
Wallace , by the way, ~ ill j oin
. Ham ilton, 43, has won three Barry Dodson 11 Jlck 81rming·
11mes, with fiv e poln, since ham 's Eel River Racmg 1e1m.
win n in~ Cup rookie of th e year
X
honors rn 199 1.
"f 've been g1v~ n a fresh ~t1rt
CUP PHASE-I N: Busch Grand
with a tram ow ner who know s Nac i or~al regu l1r Jimmie Johnson
how 10 wi n championships,'' sa id has signed a contrac t to run four
Ham1 lt on. w ho li\·es in Mount Win slon Cup races ne•t yur ac
Ju liel , Ter1n . "' In Winston Cup, Hendrick Motorsports 1r1d then
bt!inga good driver is n 't enough. move up 10 run 1 full schedule in
You need rhc total package 10 be 2002. · Johnson, 25, Will remain
compet1Hve ."
wit h H erl'.Og Motor.sports, his
" We w~re l ooking for a ve teran BGN tum, nex t yur and ru n for
driver wh o wou ld no t only the se ries champion1hip.

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Chester . 985·3308

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ALL

110 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone 992-1135
E-Mall /mas@frognel,ne1
www.perlormanceupgrad es.com

Volleyball

Intern.

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crewchl.rGrt~Zipa.
de4U 'I abllltJ to find
1
Mtup that woutd H8bll
Stew8rt to IO rut

wftltout abullftlthe

Sales &amp; Service
Enterprise
Pomeroy, OH

WIIIKeWithiMf ....

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th wln at tho
Moniter M1le. He 1110

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won tho ..,.11\1 rae.
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Wahama
2-3
Hannan
1-4
South Gallia
0-5
Friday's Game
Parkersbu rg Catholic at South
Gall ia, 7:30
Saturday's Game
Burch at Hannan. 7 :30

I ~[!c k,_
___ _.::.

MARINE

ALL

Area non-teague

~..,__

tlrn, lpeclfiCIIIJ hll
rllht-rront tire.
The ptt CIIW IIIO
perrotmed ftlwtHIIy.
.nd Stewalt tlld Rusty

"I stayed up and watched last
ni ght until I co uldn 't anymore,"
Indians
manager
C harlie
Manu el said. "We know we
need so me help."
With only fo ur games left. the
Indians are still chasing the
Oaklan d Athletics and hoping
the M ariners continue their
slide.
There 's c noug~ season left
that a lot of different scenarios
could happen, but every day the
math gets simpl er.
" It's gettin g down th ere now

Miller
0-0 5·0
Easlern
0-0 4-1
Trimble
0·0 3-2
Southern
0-0 2-3
Walerford
Q..O 2-3
Federal Hocking 0·0 1-4
Frtday•s Games
Wellston at Meigs
Federal Hock ing at Southern
Trimble at Eastern
Nelsonvi lle· York at Vinton County
Waterford at Miller
Belpre at Alexander

ltewlrt': victor/It
Dover Downt

Minnesota Twi ns.

Jackson
2·0 5·0
Logan
2·0 5·0
Galll a Academy 2·0 4· 1
Pomt Pleasant 1·1 4·1
Athens
1· t 2·3
Marietta
0·2 t ·4
Warren
0-2 1-4
River Valley
' 0· 2 0·5
Friday's Games
Gallla Academy at River Valley
Point Pleasant al Jackson
Athens at Logan
Warren at Marietta

Supply

•Thtk• tor...

ALL

SEOAL

Ridenour

:-: CRlW OFtliEWilil

C LEVELAND (AP) - Once
again , every TV in the Indians'
cl ubh ouse was tuned to the
same program.
No, it wasn 't th e 11 o'cloc k
. news, a Sei nfeld rerun or David
L.etterman 's opening monologue.
Cleveland's players were riveted on th e earl y inning; in Seattl e late Wedn esday night , rooting si len tl y for the Texas
Rangers after the Indians kept
pace in th e AL wild card chase
with an 8-2 victory over the

where even I can count it up

See us for Your Stih l.
Power Too ls &amp;
Accessories

.,l_

Twins, 8·2

Meigs
0-0 3-2
Nelsonvi lle-York 0-0 3-2
Belpre
0·0 2·3
Wellston
0-0 2·3
Alexander
0·0 0·5
V1nton County
0-0 0·5
Hocking Division

·.

•Fens have e chance to win a
Chevrolet 5-10 Xtreme tructl at
North carolina Speedway by
enterlnll the MoUfltain Oew
"Puts You In tne Fest Lane·
Sweepstakes .
Entry blanks are availab le at
Mountain Dew displays, but the
entry deadl ine is Frida~. Ten
winners will be selected to
attend the Oct. 22 Pop Secret
Microwave Popco rn 400 as
11uests of Mountain Dew.
Each person w"i be given a
key and a cnance to start a
Chevrolet S-10 Xtreme during
pre-race activities.

TVC

In last year's dramatic win, down 12-6
with JU St seconds remaining in the game,
Eastern set up on the two yard-line with a
fourth and goal, but got called for illegal
proced ure. Now at the seven, quarte rback "
Garrett Karr. fresh off a broken arm, rolled
out and drilled a pass to .tight end Ben
Holter in the corner o f the endzone to tie
the game. Karr found a seam on the extra
point try and ran the ball in for the gamewinning score.
Earlier in the game, Karr had broken a
57- ya rd touchdown o n the fir.t down in
the seco nd quarter to ti e the game at six.
A failed PAT followed. He carried the

Tribe thumps

Tri-Vattey Conference
Ohio Division

l

TVC

Fannps

C hristman also used a lot of psychology
in mapping out the 1999 win . In a
prega me article, Eastern was described by
Trimble as "faltering" after jumping off to

Football

.\

Special

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

in a row.

i
'

september

form and eve ned iTS record at 4-4 by
defeati ng the Tnmble Tomcats I 4- 12 in an
important come- trom- behind Tri -Valley
Conference showdown . Th e win halted a
two-game win streak by Trimble.

To eligible lor The OVP 10, s
team must e~her: a.1 be from
the Mason-Gallfa-Melgs area;
b .) be a local conference mem·
bar; or c.) play at leaa1 one
gama against local teams.

""'

Dear NASCA R This w~e k ,
I just read the co mmen l chat
road racing does not require any
real dri11ing stills. I would have to
say that I disagree with th is commen!. I myse lf am • race r and it
lakeS all ki nd!! or driving ski l l to be
a successful road r•cer. For example, you must be able 10 conuol a
nr 1ha1 is 1urn ing bolh l eft and
r ight al l the time. You must also b e
effic ient wilh a manual tr ansmis ·
sion. This comment kind of m~r.l e
me upset. Thank you.
Mandy Shaw
Oo ltewa h, Ten n.

Place Your Business's Ad here •
Call
The Daily Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Matt Haskins
992-2155

Trimble, ranked 14th in th e state AP
poll, has bee n a thorn in Eastern's side, it
seems. for many years, but last year Eastern
pull ed a rose out of the thistl es. At Trimble

a good start early in th e year, then losing a
coup le games.
C hristman said in last yea r"s pregame
speech. " In our team meeting last night
before we went o ut on the practice field,
I said, ' I looke d up faltering in the dictionary - and that means to stumbl e due to
lack of courage. Th ey're tellin g us we are
scared guys, that we don't have any
courage.' That pumped our kids up and
they ca me out ready to play."
C hristman is using some psychology
again thi s year and echoes of the "faltering" speech arc spiraling down the locker
room hallways. Th at parti cular ghost may
be one that h au~;~ ts Trimble fo r a long
tin'le.

Others
receiving votes:
Parl&lt;ersburg Catholic (1l

X

Flroto: Start (Feb. 18. 1996. ot

How tllfllclllt le It to

rcgwn 's co mputer ran kings .

The game was a big homecoming present fo r Eastern coa ch Scott C hri stman ,
who said after th e gam e, "This victory
means a lot because I'm from h ere (Trimble) . I was excited before th e game and
that got the kids excited."
This year Eastern (4- 1) is pumped for
th e task at hand in their home stadium. a
place that has been kind to them in 2000,
and where the Eagles are und efeated. Just
th e opposite of last seaso n, Trimble is on a
two game ski d, and Eastern has won three

Team
Prev. Votes
1. Ironton
I
46 (2)
1. Logan
46 (2)
2
3. Parkersburg
41 (1)
3
4. Jackson
5
36
5. Fort Frye
7
25
6. Point Pleasant 4
23
7 Gallipol is
6
22
8. Miller
8
19
9. Easlern
9
8
10. Ross SE
10
7

AI eve ry place on a body where
the fempiale does not measu re its
shape, wind -tunnel testing is used
to mold the body in a wa y to make
the car (aster. It is bard fo r a lay ·
man to undus1and llow Ibi s can
make a difference, but teams assure
us that it dou. We guc.s.s it shows
just how competitive this sport is.

a1mos1 $6.5 million In eamlnct

Johnny Benson, who was once Winston
Cup Rookie of the Year. Mas served notice
this year that he is capable a1 b ecomina: one
o fltt'le clrcutt's le&amp;Cltng drivers .
Despite sponsorship and ownership
ditncuttfes end changes, Benson has
frequent~ run near the front this season,
lncludln&amp; a second-place finish to Tony
Stewart on Sunday In the MBNA.c:om 400 at

•

8y Monte Dutton

~

Moore. We doubc i c will happen
•ga in.

ComobHk llorr contlnuoo

WINSTON CUP

way, Fort Worth (1 .5-m iie track I
•Format: 200 laps/300
miles
• Deftndlnt ehamplon: Jay
Sauter
• Qulllfrllll record: Jack
Spraaue. Chevrolet. 178 .642
mph. June 4 , 1998
•Race r~cord: Jay Sauter.
Chevrolet. 13:2.430 mph , Oct.

A weekly look at the region's
top football teams, as voted
by Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
sports s taffers. (First·place
votes in parentheses)

FYI, Earnhardt drove Ford s in
\982 and 1983 for car owner Bud

So clou to • win

10. (-) Johnny Bonoon
·

at Dover

broom
A quill o(llttll
A quill nlntll
SIIW hll OtrOik tnd

7. (8) JelfGOfdon

• What: O'Reilly 300
•When: 8 p.m .. Oct. 13
•Where: Te~a s Motor Speed·

Dt:ar NASCA R This Week ,
I h1ve 1 dre1m. I would l ike to
Ke D1le Elrnhudt win his eigh lh
championship dri ving a Chevrolet
for Rictlard Childrc ss, 1thcr1 go on to
wi n his ninch ticle drivi ng a 1:ord
... This would give the Ford Mboo
birr.ls" 1 chance co also cheer for
The lnlimidaror and change their
thoughts of him .
Bil l Bi e ~r
Co nn el lsville, Pa.

Oot out tilt

8. (8) Mlfk M•tln
9. (91 Ricky Rudd

CAAnSMAN TRUCK

Your
Tum
IAihn 1M O.Rtadtn

Johnny Benson

RIMy Tolsma, 2.i08

Runnlnl owoy wltll polnto

Dolo Jarrott
4. (3) Dolo Elmllllrdt
5. (7) Tony 5towort
6. (5) Rual)' Wollaco

1 985 Miller 400

••••••••••••

JJCII ~. ],().119

nre trouble did him In
Hldlbldllly, too

3. (4)

The OVP

EAST M EIGS- Eastern returns home
this week for the TVC opener against
Trimble at East Shade River Stadi um Friday night. Eastern is now fifth in the

last season. Eastern returned to winning

• weeki~ rankln&amp;s b~ NASCAR This Week writer Monte Dutton.
Last week 's rankin&amp; Is tn l;arentneses.

2. (11 Jofl Burton

11-R-W!&gt;tk
.~ .,..tile-·-­
.JIIOOL.......,._
IIOto
.. •·. 1lo, II.C. U014

ON THE SCHEDULE

.101 RunrriWI. 2.i78
DenniS SIUir, 2,92a

TOP HN

1 . (2)

~. CI R'IMt,, wdtt:

-~

'

·

BY ScoTT Wom
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

• .,...,..,. fDt·a'•ntlan

•

Red-hot Eagles begin TVC play·against Trimble

'

''

Wednesday"s Matches
Meigs def. Oak Hill , 15·2, 15·9
Gallia Academy def. Oak Hill, 15·
4. 15·12
Gallia Academy def. Meigs. 15·7.
8- 15, 15·6
Today's Matches
·Southern at Watertord. 5:55
Easte rn al Miller, 5:55
Wellston at Meigs. 5:55
South Gallia at lro nlon St. Joe.
6:00
Frlday•s Malches
Ohio Valley Chris11an at Grace Ghris·
tiar.. 5:00
Saturday's Matches
South Gall1a at Eastern Tourna·
ment. tO:OO
Morgan at Eastern Tourna ment.
10:00
Hannan at Eastern Tourn ament,
1000

Golf

Today's Malch
Poinl Pleasant, Ripley, Buffalo·
Putnam, TBA (at Hidden Valley)

Cross Country

Saturday's Meets
River Valley at Lan caster lnv..
10:00

Meigs al Lancaster lnv., 10 .00
Gallia Academy at Lancaster lnv..
10 :00
The b,·,tTri -County prep football coverage is in the Sunday
Times-Sentinel eve r y weekend!

DOUBLE PLAY- Cleveland's Omar Vizquel throws to first after touching second to force out Minnesota 's Corey Koskie Wedne sday night at Jacobs Field . (AP )

Meigs opens TVC
against Wellston
Bv

DAVE HARRIS

is led by one of the top players

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

in Souih eastern O hi o in junio r

ROCK SPRINGS - T he
~ec ond seao.;o n t(lr the Meigs

Brad Young.Young is li-foor. 190

Marauders ~ct s un derway this
Fnday l' Vl'l1111g w ht'IJ tht'

M:mud ers hos t th e We llston
Gold,·n Ro cket&gt; 111 th e TVC
opener.

The Co lde n R ockets (2-3)
n l' comi ng otr J w in over Rock

Hill

la st

wcc·k. WdL&lt;to n is

poundS and is a two year starter

at tl1 llback ami linebacker, but
this season he h as moved to tall ~
b ac k o n offense. Last season
dt:sp lte mi ssin g two games bea-:
cuSt· of a kn ee inJury rushed for

I .058 yards and 17 to uchdowns .
He along with Erron Brennan .
the two both run th e I00 in
under I I seconds.
'" We feel that Wellsto n in the
most ta le nted team in the TVC,"
M,tra udcr coach Mike C hancey
said. "Th ey haw the beST overall
player in the co nference in Brad

coach ed by D.tvt.' Lucas. who is
in h1 ' first ~t.'J~on a., th e Goldt.·n
R o&lt;.-kcts 111t'ntor.
Lu cas is no ;;rrangcr to t( w tball
in So u th l'aStt'rtl (.lhi n. having
tl!rectl'd Coa l c;rovc fo r 22
yt·ars. LLh..-a" guid t.'d tht.' Horn t't'i . Young, an d it will be a great
ro seven state pbyotf appear~ cha llenge for us that we are
ann·s. inrl t'1din g two tr ips to the loo king torward to."
statt' st·mifln i! ls in w hi ch they
Mei g; (3- 2) is comi ng otf a 3lost to tlw l've ntual state cham- 0 wm over Fairland, Adam
p10n.
Bullington's 36 yard field goal as

The Rockets welcom e back
~ s1x startcn on both 'otfense and
defe nse trom last years team that
f1ni shed second in Ih e TVC
beh ind champio n Vinton Coun ty.
Wellsto n ha1 a lot bf speed and

time ran out in the first period .
The Marauder offense, like in
other games, moved the ball
(306 total yards). but the drive s
stalled when Meig; reached th e

Pleese se1 Melp, P•l• Bl

and figure it out," said Manu el.
""What's that tell ya'"
Jamn Bcrc didn 't blow another seven- run lead and Manny
Ramirez and Jim Thome homered as C levela nd remain ed 1
1/2 games behind Oakland for
the AL wild card.
Bere (6-3) rebounded from a
disastrous start in Boston last
week when he gave back a 7-0
lead to the R ed Sox, who rallied
fo r a 9-8 win.
Th e Indi ans have four games
left and the A's four, plus a possibl e makeup against Tampa Bay
on Monday, if necessary.

"Two down, four to go,"
Manu el said.
Bill Selby, getting a rare start
at DH , had two RDi s when the
Indians broke it open with a
five-run fourth off, Brad Radke
(12-16).
Thome. in one of the worst
slumps of his career, homered
for the first time since Sept. 5 a span of 83 at-baTS .
" It 's not about me struggling,"Th ome said. "It's about us
winning ballgames right now."
Bere has either been real good
o r real bad in his 11 starts for
the Indians since coming over
in a July trade with Milwaukee.
The n ght- hander allowed two
runs and five hits 5 2- 3 inning;.
"We need to win at all costs
and it sta rts with the starting
pitcher,'' Bere said. ··1 was able to
put up so me zeros in the first
three inning&gt; and gave our guys
a chance to swing th e bats."
Cleveland came to the plate
in the first against Radke just
seco nds after Oa kland's 9-7 win
over Anaheim was posted on
th e left-field scoreboard. and
Ramirez quickly put the Indians up 2-0 with his 34th homer.
Kenny Lofton ope ned with a
bunt sin gle, and two outs later,
R amirez con nected for his fifth
h o m er in 47 career at - bats

against Radke.
It's frightening to think what
R amirez may have done if he
hadn't missed 44 games this season With a hamstring injury.
Si nce returnin g. he's batting
.372 with 22 hom ers and 7 1
RB Is in 67 games.
As his numb ers ~ise, so does
th e dollar amount it could cost
•

Please s" Tribe, Pa1e B:S

Richards v. Richards in Racine
BY

Scon WOLFE

Wahama's mag:ir pot ion put two

yards rushmg the entire second

RAC IN E Roll o ut th,·
table cloth and empty th e picni c

rushers over the I 00-yard mark.
all this against a So uth er n team
tha! had done a good job defen -

baskt·r ca u se Southe rn co ach

sively mo st of the season.

hal f, and 67 yards net overall.
Sou th em 's Jonathan Evans was
relieved by ll ra ndon Pi erce after
an injury. lloth co n1b ined for
I 07 hard-earned passing yards.
The result of a league push to

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

. Rusty Ri chards wi ll be hostin g a
fa mil y reu ni on Friday when th e
TornJdot.' '~ face Ft.:dnal Hnc kiug
for the .17th anm10l Tormdo
H o m cco mint; n: l ebr~ltlOil .
A n: union?
v~s . a l'l'lltlion in til . .· form of

fa th er - m L'l't"' -~01 1.
Ri chard s wil l 111&lt;'e t t;1tlwr
Dave R ichards, who 1' the coach
of th e Lancers. Ric h ,l rth' cumin
Stt.'Vt.' i" al'\o on tlw L.u lC&lt;.T team.

After a coup le hui ld n1g '\c.'a th e t.•l der ltickm. J... kd hi'

'\011~.

team to its lw&lt;.;t - t'Vc...T record la&lt;&gt;t
sealinn . Th i-; se .tson tht· Lm cc r'i,

after losi ng .1 '\e-n ior-dominarcd
team , ,tre a!!;ain rdmildi ng. Th t'
Lan cers ( 1- 4) won their first
game last wee k aga111'\t AlexJn -

der, 26- 6.
Southern (2-3) h ad won two
in a row, but the Wahan1a jinx
again cursed the Torm J oes. who
defensively wert· non -cx i ~te nt

against a White Falcon team tlut
had been having otTemrve strU!,;·
gles. Southern"s in abi lities or

Last yea r in the final game of
the seaso n, the Lan cer. flexed
tl1t·ir muscle in the seco nd half
in produ cing ·a 27~ 1 3 co me

behind victory over South em at
Lancer Stadiu m. Federal Hoc king fi ni shed second in the TV C
with a ~- I lll.l rk beh ind kagut·
c ha mp ion Miller. who had
ckfeated Trimble ~H - 1 ') in the
last gamt· .
Mi lln wt·m on , to .1 berth in
tht· playoff, whl're they wen:
dd~·Jtt· d m the fir st round .
Federal Hoc king managed the
h t.·"t rl'rord in school history
with an H- 2 overall &lt;;cason.

Southern finished third in the
leagu e. tied with Trimble at 2-.l.
Southern ended up J-7 overall .
In that game now -graduat ed
Southerner Josh Davis carri ed
the ball 20 tim es for 93 yards, 71
of whi ch came in th e first h alf.
Matt Ash as a &lt;ophomorc carried
nine time1 for 21 yards. wh ile
quarterback
sacks
negated
Sout hern rushing to mmus-24

restore league rivalr ies to the last

game moved Federal to th e fi rst
league game in 2000 and set the
ancit•tH E,tsttTn- So uthern C las-

sic

I(Jt

-.o n.
The

the final wee of the seaco mmon

o ppon e nt s

betwee n Ft'deral a1 d Southern
are Alcxandt:r an

Waham a.

Wahama
defeating
Federal
H ocking 56 - t 2 and Federal
H oc king beat Alexander 26-li.
Southern lo&lt;t 28- 18 to Wah ama
and pounded Alexande r 41 -6.
Federal Ho cking"s somew hat
stru ggling offense came to life
las t week . ga ining 24 1 yards
overall (120 rushing and 121
passing). Clint Sears scored the
Lan ce r.; ' first touchdown in the
seco nd quarter with a 60-yard
pass from Steve !l-ichards. Seth
Ottum then add ed a one-yard
sco ring run to his 30-ya rd rush-

PI••• Mt Southlm, ..... H
II

�September 28

B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Page

The Dally Sentinel• Page B 3

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
Chocago

s

Lou!
Alanta

RACINE GUN CLUB

Yard Sale

70

Announcement
GIYMway Loat • Found
Yllnl and Wanted
To Do Ada
Must Be Pald In Advance

110

21 0

CONSULTANTS NEEDED Fas
es g ow ng pa ty pan HOU SE
OF LLOYD S Pa y o Cho e
CHR STMAS AR OUND THE
WORLD G s &amp; Cook n Th e
Ame an Way Ea n Money
Me hand se &amp; T a e
aoo

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

JAIIUNE Q§AQUNE,

Help Wanted

2 00 p m the day belor.
the ad Ia to run
Sunday • Monday adltlon
2 00 p m Friday
SENDNEL PfAQUNE
1 00 p m the day before
the ad la to run
Sunday • Monday adltlon
1 00 p m Friday

230

Business
Opportunity

PAUL
VANCOONEY

Professional
Services

Pt Pleasant

a ea

ng Sole

24 h

Sop 28 29

Pllrwonals

To

ee

877 494 8695

s

An ques R 62 leon Baden
m e

gh on D nham Ad

4 on

994

oght

end Laund y Floom
CONSULTANTS NEEDEO

117 2110 nego1111111 30.C-ll82 21110
or (:104)112-HGI

Fos

II g ow ng PI y pan HOUSE

80
30 Announcement•

OF LLOYD S Po y of Cho co
CHR STMAS AROUND THE
WORLO G 1 &amp; Cook n Tho

Auction
and Flea Market

Ame can Way Ea n money me
chono tt &amp; 1v1 1 800 749
9909

Now To 'roll TMft ShCI&gt;PI

9 wes S maon Athtnt
7-40 582 1142

88• Ookwood Spoc 1 Ed on
•x70 2 Btdroom 2 Ba h A Ap
NSTANT
CASH
LOWEST
RATES CHEC~ OUT THE ~EST"
Up o 1500 NSTANTLY
811)
EARLYPIIY L~tc&lt;:70038

P H.Qol ()o(I.A-A P H-Y
'WHd "111

Qua y c o " ng and noulthO d
tma $ 00 bag 11 1 tvt V
Thu sdly Monday n u 81 u dly
900530

URGENTLY NEEOEO

p 11m1

m 0 $05 lor 2 0 3
nou • w11k v ca se a Ttc 1'40

d0ft011 II n
!82

ee5

510

educed

p anc11 nc ud ng Wuhe &amp;
0 ye Fu nace And H11 P mp
E ee

A

c

Mus

Household
Goode

Move

11

o

Help Wanted

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

AUDITOR

83 75

525

Colorado
90 78
San Diego
75 B3
x-d nched d VSJon title
y&lt;. nched Wlkl ca d

506

Hous on 0 Pmlbu gh 1
N Y Mats 6 Atlanta 2
M twaukee 1o Cincinnati 6

Frequen Tmvel
Great Benefi1s 401(k)

Flo ida e Mont ea 3
Ctucago Cubs

Ph adelph a 0

Colorsdo 8 Arizona 4
S LoutS 3 San D ego 0
San F ancisoo 4 L.Ds Angeles 0

Comp Wage

Pa d Vaca ons and Hoi days

TodlyaGMtea
Mon ea (U a 5 7) a Florida Penny 1 7)

Ma Resume 949 K ng Ave
Columbus Oh o 43212 or
Fa. 614 421 6525

OSpm
Ph !Kielph a (POiifte 3-3 a Ctucago CuDs

Na1000 ) 220pm
Arizona Reynoso 0 2 a Colorado ~as-­
dn02 305pm
C nc nna (Oessens 0 5 a M waukee
0 Amico 2-11 4 06 p m
Sl Lou s (Kite 9-9 a San Diego {'NitaSICk
32 505pm
Houston Uma 7 16) a Fttttsbwgh SIva 0
9 705 pm
Atana (Maddux 1G8) a NY Mes
(BJJoneo 108) 7 10 p m
San F anc aco Esres 5-6 a Los Ange as
(Brown 3-ll) 0 0 p m

Ca Mr Swanson
6 4 42 7500 ex 265

Pets for Sale

'rkl•y.. a.mu

Ph adeiph • (Chon 1 3) AI F on•• (Sm 1h 5
8) 706pm
Chlcogo Cuba (VIIn Poppei 4 5 • Pl11s
bu gh S&amp;rAfin 2 5) 7 05 p m
Mont eo (Thu man 4-8) • N Y M811 (Hamp
1on 14- 0 7 Opm

Apartment•
for Rent

(7.0 387 0•02 A1k ng S 4 000

080

Colorado (Bohanon 1 O) a A lanta Ashby
85)7-40pm

M waukee (Ea ada 2-0) a Houston E anon
17-ll) 805pm

Cncnna

adPhooga

Hansch 86

Eoot

•••••••

Batt mo e
Tampa Bay

Oe1

Need We And Sep c No Down
Paymen Aequ ed La ge Se ec
on 0 Homes Ca
800 948
568

Kansas C ty
M nnesota

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

mlta on o diSC m na on
baSed on race co o 81 g on
&amp;elt famU a a atua o nat onal

610 Farm Equipment
99 Te am e TSC Low hou s
$8500 34 Foo B eke T u k
$ 500 H
ng on 304 36

orgn o any nentonto
make any such p eference
lfTl ta lon o d set m na on

Help Wanted

4900

h a newspape w not
know ng y accept
advert sements fD eal es1a e

150
HCX
Owne Operata Company POw
a ton a 87 C PM Home E e y
Weekend Mo e No Eas Coas
00"1. No o ch Mos yOop&amp;
Hook
800-200.2823 ACCEPT
NG 983 NEWER RACTORS

Schools
Instruction

whiCh s n v ala lon of the
aw Ou eade a a e hereby
nformed ha a dwel ngs
advert sed n h s newspape
a eava abeonanequa
opponunlty baall

372 OR VERS NEEDED
No E pe en e Ne essa y 4
Day COL Tan "It No os u an

F

qua ed S a a $35k $40k
s Yea Ca Toda 800 958

REAL ESTATE

•

New
Mu dock s Fac ory Ou 18
C oss La es VN
Save housand A nve ory
mus be sod
NO Oeae s Pease
To F ee 866 88 885

2353

TRANSPORTATION

or 304 769.Q925

65
7
82
83
90

589
55
48
475
430

75

88

Frtdoy Oct e
LO&amp; Ange as a Kansas City 8 30 p m H

necessary

Chi._ Yl Ntw Vorl! JlfHy
Tuoldoy &amp;opt 28
Ch cago 3 New Yo k New Jersey 0 Chlca

go eads !lienes 3.()
8o1urdoy Sopt 30
Ch cago at New York New Jersey e p m
Frldoy Oct 8
New York New Jersey a Ch cago 8 p m

necessary

a

s...doy
Washngon DC

Oct. 15
30pm

No e Th ee po ms o a win and one poln1

fo a

&amp; The winner n he quarter and aem r
nals ~H be tne fl st earn to each or exceed
five po nts The h rd ~am.. o a series wl be
dec ded by penalty k cks
each game has
ended na eo f hese ass
1

6
7

8
25

710 Autos for Sale

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORK NG FOR HE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EXPER ENCE AE
OU RED
800 48 57 6 "
0

W

Phiadepha
NewJesey
Pmsbugh
NYRangers
NYSiandes

5

T OTLP!a

2

0

0

2 2

Buflao
Boston .••...•• ••..••..••.6
4

0
2

o0

0o

3400

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QA

5

3 2
B 23
9
340062224

o 3
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NorthNat Dlv a on
3

Ottawa
Monea

QF

0 23

2

23
0
Southeaat Dlv alon
5 0
0
.~·~········ ··- 2

4

0

2
3
4 0

0

0
0

6

25

7

59

2 20

0

8 24
6 20
5 5
5 g

20
26
23
24

4

20
6

4
3
2

9

2

4

8

3

5
2

Weattrn Conl•r.nc•
Ctntra Dlv a on

3

~~;

0

•••••32 22
2 4

2 00

4

0

0

7 7
7 2
6 6
5 2
3 8

20
22

8

Nonhwaat 0 v a on

Va co e
Ca gary

4
4

2 0
2 0 0

8 22

Coo ado

3

2

0

7 2

Edmon o
M nnesota

3 2 0
0

5

4

9

9

8

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420084
2 3 2
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3

5
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3

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3 0

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9

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San ose~ .
2 3 o o
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No oss charged n L co umn o o ertime
OSI.i earns ece e wo po n s o a viCtory and
onapontfo a eo o art me oss
Wedneaday e Qamu
Ph ade ph a 4 New Je sey 1
Pitlsbu gh 5 Co umbus 2
Ca o na 6 Wash gton 3
BuffalO 4 To on o 2
PhoenlC2 Cooado2 e
Mo ea 5 Edmo on 3
Vancou e
Onawa 2
M neso a 3 Sa Jose
Today • Game•

AFC

w

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

L TPta PF PA

4 0000 886&lt;5
3

0505922

2
o 667 57
2
066 0
0 4 0000 5

se
6&lt;5
72

Can •

...••••. •..•••• 3

.

0 750 98

2
0 667 53
22050064
22050090

....... ............. 030000

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

MERCHANDISE
RENTALS

510

Household
Goods

READERS 3.
AS RO OGERS NEEDED FOR
MA OR
V PS CH C
NE
WORK FROM OUR HOME OR
OFF C E MAG KA
BOO 3 0
8645

90

89

4

03000040
West
3
o 50 0
2 2 0 500 33
2 2 o 500 93

62

...••••••••• :;~2 2 o 500 74

92

74
83
6
5
96

57
60
65
6
35

64
60
0
69

4
65
4
53

Oakand
Denver
Kansas City

Seatt e

55
50

SanOego ...

o 4 0 000
NFC
Ecat
3
0 750
2 2 0 500
2 2 0 500
2 0333
3 0 250
Cent al
3 0 0 00
3
0 50
3
0 50
........ ............. .2 2 0 500

55

Oct B
NC

UAW GM Qua rty 500 Conoo d

Wins on 500 Ta ladega Ala
Oct 22 - Pop Sec e M CIOW8VA ..00
Rock ngham N C
Nov 5 - Checkef Auto PartS/DUra Lube
500k Avonda e Anz
Nov 2
Peni'\Zo 400 Homestead Fla
Nov 9 - NAPA 500 Hampton Ga
Driver Stlind ngt
Bobby Laban e 4 09
2 Oa • Ea nhard 3 842
3 oa • arren 3 824
4 Jeff Bur10n 3 823
5 Tony Stewart 3 832
8 Rk:lcy Rudd 3 832
7 Rua1y Wa ace 3804
8 Mart&lt; Man n 3 584
9 Ward Burton 3 397

Oct 5

0 Jeff Gordon 3 358
Matt Kenseth 3 005
12 Mke Sknne 2993
13 seve Park 2 975
4 Johnny Benaon 2 947
15 Dee Earnhardt J 2 859
8 Ken Sch ador 2 834
17 Terry LabOnte 2 7 8
18 oe Nemechek 2 705
9 s er1 ng Manm 2 101
20 a E b11 2seo
21 Chad un e 2 525
22 John And e11 2 4i7
23 J mmy Spence 2 476
24 Jerry Nadeau 2 4&amp;t
25

Fo daa Boson 7pm

Eaa1

VB

Jeremy

Maylield 2 • 4

Robert P eas ey 2 399
Kev n Lepage 2 3 e
M cnae Wattrt p 2 306
Kenny Wal ace 2 225
E ottSade 2 68
3 Bobby Ham Non 2 49
32 Dave Baney
33 Wal y Oa enbach J
909

26
27
28
29
30

EaN n Conference
At ant c D vie on

Seatt e
69 563
Oakland
88 69 56
1/2
Anahem
80 78 506
9
Texas
70 8B 443
9
x-c nched d v son e
w.dne*Ciay • Gamtt
Oak aM 9 Anahetm 7
To onto 4 BaNmo eo
Tampa Bay
NY Yankees
c e'.'e and 8 M nnesota 2
Boson 2 ChiCago 1Nh e Sox
Kansas C ty 3 De o 0
Sean e 6 1'elCas 4
Thu aday 1 Gamet
Anahetm Kar1 2 2) at Oak and (App er 5
3 35 p m
Te~tas Hel ng 5 3 a Seat1 e Moyer 3
0 635pm
Mnnesoa M on 13 O) a Ceveand
Coon 5-8 705pm
Toano Ca pane
o
a Ba moe
Rappe 2) 705pm
N Y Yankees C emens 3 1) a Tampa Bay
Aeka 6 0 7 5 pm
De o M k 8
a KansasC y Mead
ows62 805pm
Bas on AMart nez 0.(1 a Ch cage Wh e
Sox(S oka 5o 805pm
Frtday a Gamet
M nnesota Mays
4 a 091 cit r;Nea e
0 5 705pm
To on o (T achse e 4 a c eveland Burba
66 705pm
N Y Yank~es Flet1 tte 9 8 a 8a mo e
McE ay2.0 705pm
Sos on Arro a 5 2 at Tampa Bav Ha pe
2 7 5 pm
Kansas c ty (Ae chert 8 9 a Ch cago Wh e
Sox(Paque 36 805pm
Te1&lt;as Aoge s 3 3 at Oak and 0 a es
4-8), 005 p m
Seatt e Abbon 9 6 a Ana he m Or11Z 7-6
005 pm

10 advertioe "any p&lt;eferenoo

110

93
87
76
75
68
Weat
89

on

9

GB
554
525 4 12
525 4 12
443 7 12
420
2

83 10
75

:: :87
83
70
66

Cen1ra1

x Ch cage
C eveland

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

MIJor League Soccer
P ayotf Glance
Semlf na Round
KanMI Ctty Ya LOa Angelee
Frldoy Sept. 2e
Loa Angeles at Kansas City 8 p m
Tueodoy Oct 3
Kansas c ty a LOs Ange es 10 30 p m

W L Pot
Boson
New Yo: : .
To onto

Yard Sale

I:;~) Rip SQ~~~till

ChompiOMhp

American LAgue

-582 3345

70

(Da e E•llhard1 J )
C
May 28 - Coca-Cola eoo concono N
(Man-h)
June " - MBNA Pia num 400 ~ Oe4
(Tony S ewar1)
June 1 o&lt;man 400 Brool&lt; yn Mich (Tony
Sewan
June 9
Pocono 500 Long Pond Pa.
(Je emy Mayf eld
June 25
Save Mart/Kr'agen 350k Sonoma ca
Jeff Go don
Ju y
PepSI 400 Daytona Beael"l Fla.
Jeff Burton
J&lt;i;y i
Now Eng ard 300 L.oodoo N H
(Tony s ewart
Ju y 23
Penns~anitl 500 long Pond
RustyWa ace
Aug 5
Br Ckya d 400 nd anapol •
Bobby Labonte
l
Aug 3
Globa C oss ng a Th&amp; G en
Watktns G en N Y S eva Parte:)
Aug 20
Peps 400 Brook yn M ch
Rusty wa ace
Aug 26
go ac ng com 500 Br sto enn
Rusty wa ace
Sep 3
Southe n 500 Dart ng10n S C
(Bobby LAbon1e)
Sap 9
Chevro et Monte ca 10 400 Rich
mood Va ( elf Gordon)
Sep
7
Ou aLube 300 Loudon N H
Jeft Burton)
Sep 24
MBNA com 400 Dover Del
(Tony s ewart
Oct
NAPA AutoCa e 500 Mart nsv e

Sean e a Kansas City 9 p m
Sunday Oct 8
euffaoa Mamt
pm
Green Bay at Oet oit p m
nd anapo s a New Eng and
pm
New Orleans a Chteago
pm
Pittsbwgh at New York Jets p m
Tennessee a C nc n ati
pm
Washngona Ph adepha
pm
New Yor11: G ao s a Atlanta 4 05 p m
Cleveland a Arizona 4 5 p m
Denve a San Diego 4 5 p m
Oakanda SanFancsco 4 5pm
Seat11e a caro na 4 5 p m
Ba mo e a Jackson11 e 8 20 p m
Open Da as Kansas City S Louis
Monday Oct t
Tampa Bay a M nnesota 9 p m

f

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /8SI7
No Fee Un easWeW n

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

l.ous

San anclsco He nandez 6
a A zona
(Anderaon 1 e) 10 05 p m
LOs Angeles (Park 7 0 a San 0 ago
(Wi ams 07) 0 05 p m

RIIICinAt:H rlltll
Co !of IQpOinlmonl
304)875 7472
304)875 7279

AI ea estate advefttl ng n
1h a nowapape lo aublecl o
lho F-ol Folr Houo ng Act
of 1988 wh~ - - ft egal

a St

s ephenton e-a 8 0 p m

Phi

mond va

Mondav a Glimea

4
9

475

82

3e

ChcagoatGeenBay4 spm
Tampa Bay a wash ng on 415 p m
A amaatPhadepha 820pm
Open N v Jets Oek end New 011ea.ns

0

532

57

Mtam a Cine nna 4 05 p m
NewEnganda Den 81' 405pm
Anzona a San F anc sco 4 5 p m

2
23
27
29

Wadneeday • a.m..

Cer1 fied 0 I Company
Company Car

560

456

595

Anzona

.....

SporiiTHmo
Pot11ana Ca

589
59

Woot
94 64
64 74

os Angeles

Two bed oom mob e nome no
PII 740 992 5858

440

27
30

+43
869248
64 94 405

4x72 Sunahlnt Mob e

Home Exce en concl on To a
Eec c 2 Bed oom 2 Bah Ga
den Tub Cen 1 AJC K chen s

424
-405

72 116
10 88

a full t1me pos t on ava lab e n Me gs County Hours
12 30
8 30 am M F requ rements h gh schoo
d ploma/GED va d dr ver s cense three years good
dr v ng exper ence and adequate automob le nsurance
coverage S1artong sa ary $6 00/hour Excellent benef t
package nciud ng health nsurance lnte ested
app cants need to spec fy past on ol nterest and send
resume to
~ 0 Box 604 Jackson OH 45640-0604
AI appl catoons must be post marked by 10 5 00
Equa Opportun ty Emp oyer

ABSOLUTE GOlD MINE SO
down Ne s S50k Wo k 1 h s
Ca dy
VEND NG
e
n

&amp; Vicinity

S7 9

84 114
93 85

WANTED Buckeye Commun ty Serv ces currently has

Slllurday • Monday
adHion- 4 30 Thuraday
O.dllnH eubj«l to

4

12

478 8

.. ............... 82 16

x San F ancsco

torunby430pm

005

570

liKl 68
75 82

2

a 333 65

2

3 0 250 55
1 3 0 250 5
Sundlly a Gamea
Oa as a Caro~na p m
Sanoegoa S Lous 1pm
nd anapo s a BuftaiO p m
Mtnnesota a Oet 01
pm
N Y G.ams a Tennessee 1 p m
Batt mo e a C evetand 1 p m
Pittsbufgh a JacksonVI e p m

GB

Contra

11 0 Help Wanted

Mov

y New York

Ph ladeiphoa

749 9909

elY• du• to holldllr-

595

The game haa been poatponed

2 doya before the ad lo

L Pot

x A anta :-- ......... ....... ...... 114 84

Florida
Mont ea

Saturday
September 30
12 00 Noon

REGISTER QEAQL!NE

ANNOUNCEMENTS

W

!.o.il

4

New Orteans
San F anasco

Eoot

For

(Mar11 Marnn)
April e - DieHar11 500 olladego AlA
Cloftlon)
April 30
NAPA A\J10 POI10 500 Fon1ana
CAIN ( eremy Mayfield
May e - Pon1iac El(citement -400 Rich-

08

• 0 0 ()() 60
2 2 0500 85

Ca o na

BENEFIT SHOOT

611 Personal

04000048

Wto1

Toonoa De o 730pm
NY Rangers a New esey 730pm
Cooadoa Oaas 830pm
Mon ea a Vancou e 0 p m
Friday a Gamaa
A antaa NY Ranges 7pm
Washngo n s Buffao a E ePa 7pm
F o idavs Coumbus a Cncnna 7pm
P ttsb gh vs Bo s o a Pro dance A
730pm
Nasn e aCh ag 830pm
Ana 81ma Mn esoa Spm
Ca gary a Edmon on 9 p m
os Ange es a San ose 0 30 p m

AtrrORACNG

eo
02
76
99

Food Cty 500 B so

Ten

e as

m

34 A ck Mas
795
35 S acy Camp on 663

scon P uett 598
37 Bre11 Bod ne 565
38 Da el Wahnp 536
39 Kemy rw n 440
40 Kyle Peny 37
36

~-$19!9fi5i]

BASEBALL
Ame lean League
M NNESOTA TW NS S gned RHP
a son S montacch
o a m no
eague con a c
BASKETBALL
Nat onal Baaketball A1eoclatlon
BOSTON
CELT CS S gneo
F
Je ome Mo so
CLEVE AND CAVAL ERS Ag eed
o e ms w h F a Ke ne end hen
p a ed h m on wa e s
NO ANA
PACERS Announced
he e em en o C R k Sm s
SACRAMENTO
K NGS
Announced the con ac 81&lt; ens on of
coach R k Ada man h ough 2002
FOOTBALL
Nat ona Footb• League
GREEN BAY ~ACKERS S gne&lt;l
0
Ch ck Osbo ne
Waved OT
Ba 'i S okes S g ed TE Adam New
man o he p ac ce squad Ae eased
G Tom Scha
f om he p ac ce
squad
NO ANAPOL S
CO TS-S gned
AB Lennox Go don t om he p ac ce
squad and LB Ph
Go e
o he
p ac c e squad
ACKSONV LE
JAGUARSpaced C John Wade on
n u ed
ese ve Waved DE Oav d A ch e
S gned G A a n Ko h and S C a g
M e Waved OT Gannon Stlephe d
I om the J5 ac
e squad S gned OT
Aegg e Ne so
o
he p actce
squad
KANSAS C V CH EFS Paced
0
y Pa en on n u ed ese ve
S gned DE Ty one W
ams o wo
yea
o a
M NNESOTA
V K NGS S g ned
Oenn s G een coac h
o a h ee
yea
o
ac e ens on
h ough
2004
SAN FRANC SCO 49ERS S gned
LB JOI.i
Gen y
o
he p ac ce
squad
HOCKEY
N• ana Hoc:key League
A LAN A
HRASHEAS Reca ed
Oa S yde f om 0 ando o he HL
CAROL NA
HURR CANES
Ass gned F a os a S oboda and F
an MacNe
o C nc nna o he H
CO ORAOO AVALANCHE A g eed
o e ms w h 0 Adam Foo e o n a
mu yea co
a
ex ens o
OA LAS
STAAS Ass gned
W
Ryan C h s e
W Jam e W gh
0
oh E s k e D Ma k Wo on and C
Ch g W e s o U ah o f'ie H
NA SH V LLE
PREDATORS
Ass gned 0 A exand e Bo kov RW
Da d Gosse n
W Sean Hagge y
and LW Aya n Tob e o M wa ukee o
he HL
TAMPA BAY
GHTN NG Aeas
s gned RW She don Kee e o De o
o he H wa ed 0 Me Ang e s ad

• va

PS GH CS TARO

Tribe
from Page Bl
tl e I d ans to re s go i n as a
free age
W th Dav d Segu1 rest ng h s
sore ght foo Se by nade h s
first start as the lnd ans DH and

ORtCLOSURES $0
DOWN NO C RED T NEEDED
TAKE OVER OW PA MENTS
CA L NOW 800 8 0 280 EXT
39 0

FINANCIAL

210

Buein .. ,
Opportunity

CAREER
MED CA 8

JET
AERAT ON' 0 DRS
Reps ed New &amp; Reb
S ock
Aon E a s eoo 537 9528

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

fo r h v th
gle

gid
do ot
T av Fry a go
d uble
vh r g t f eide M t La o
vcar ng plast
a s I pp d and
fell o the rubbe zed wa n ng
track Selby followed v1th hiS
base hi o make t 4 1
It was rea 5 ppery I used

tal sp k o the e du ng bar
t ng p a t ce and I st II sl pped So
I fig ed t d d t ake any i f
fe
e l vt
ad
Sand) Alo a folio v d w th a
s ngle and K ny Lofton and
Omar V zquel h t bloope 5 befo e
Roberto Alo 1ars smgle capped
the outburst and gave Bere a 7 1
lead

Check out the OVP 10m today's sports section on page Bl

ca

The Datly Sentmel

�September 28

B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Page

The Dally Sentinel• Page B 3

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
Chocago

s

Lou!
Alanta

RACINE GUN CLUB

Yard Sale

70

Announcement
GIYMway Loat • Found
Yllnl and Wanted
To Do Ada
Must Be Pald In Advance

110

21 0

CONSULTANTS NEEDED Fas
es g ow ng pa ty pan HOU SE
OF LLOYD S Pa y o Cho e
CHR STMAS AR OUND THE
WORLD G s &amp; Cook n Th e
Ame an Way Ea n Money
Me hand se &amp; T a e
aoo

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

JAIIUNE Q§AQUNE,

Help Wanted

2 00 p m the day belor.
the ad Ia to run
Sunday • Monday adltlon
2 00 p m Friday
SENDNEL PfAQUNE
1 00 p m the day before
the ad la to run
Sunday • Monday adltlon
1 00 p m Friday

230

Business
Opportunity

PAUL
VANCOONEY

Professional
Services

Pt Pleasant

a ea

ng Sole

24 h

Sop 28 29

Pllrwonals

To

ee

877 494 8695

s

An ques R 62 leon Baden
m e

gh on D nham Ad

4 on

994

oght

end Laund y Floom
CONSULTANTS NEEDEO

117 2110 nego1111111 30.C-ll82 21110
or (:104)112-HGI

Fos

II g ow ng PI y pan HOUSE

80
30 Announcement•

OF LLOYD S Po y of Cho co
CHR STMAS AROUND THE
WORLO G 1 &amp; Cook n Tho

Auction
and Flea Market

Ame can Way Ea n money me
chono tt &amp; 1v1 1 800 749
9909

Now To 'roll TMft ShCI&gt;PI

9 wes S maon Athtnt
7-40 582 1142

88• Ookwood Spoc 1 Ed on
•x70 2 Btdroom 2 Ba h A Ap
NSTANT
CASH
LOWEST
RATES CHEC~ OUT THE ~EST"
Up o 1500 NSTANTLY
811)
EARLYPIIY L~tc&lt;:70038

P H.Qol ()o(I.A-A P H-Y
'WHd "111

Qua y c o " ng and noulthO d
tma $ 00 bag 11 1 tvt V
Thu sdly Monday n u 81 u dly
900530

URGENTLY NEEOEO

p 11m1

m 0 $05 lor 2 0 3
nou • w11k v ca se a Ttc 1'40

d0ft011 II n
!82

ee5

510

educed

p anc11 nc ud ng Wuhe &amp;
0 ye Fu nace And H11 P mp
E ee

A

c

Mus

Household
Goode

Move

11

o

Help Wanted

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

AUDITOR

83 75

525

Colorado
90 78
San Diego
75 B3
x-d nched d VSJon title
y&lt;. nched Wlkl ca d

506

Hous on 0 Pmlbu gh 1
N Y Mats 6 Atlanta 2
M twaukee 1o Cincinnati 6

Frequen Tmvel
Great Benefi1s 401(k)

Flo ida e Mont ea 3
Ctucago Cubs

Ph adelph a 0

Colorsdo 8 Arizona 4
S LoutS 3 San D ego 0
San F ancisoo 4 L.Ds Angeles 0

Comp Wage

Pa d Vaca ons and Hoi days

TodlyaGMtea
Mon ea (U a 5 7) a Florida Penny 1 7)

Ma Resume 949 K ng Ave
Columbus Oh o 43212 or
Fa. 614 421 6525

OSpm
Ph !Kielph a (POiifte 3-3 a Ctucago CuDs

Na1000 ) 220pm
Arizona Reynoso 0 2 a Colorado ~as-­
dn02 305pm
C nc nna (Oessens 0 5 a M waukee
0 Amico 2-11 4 06 p m
Sl Lou s (Kite 9-9 a San Diego {'NitaSICk
32 505pm
Houston Uma 7 16) a Fttttsbwgh SIva 0
9 705 pm
Atana (Maddux 1G8) a NY Mes
(BJJoneo 108) 7 10 p m
San F anc aco Esres 5-6 a Los Ange as
(Brown 3-ll) 0 0 p m

Ca Mr Swanson
6 4 42 7500 ex 265

Pets for Sale

'rkl•y.. a.mu

Ph adeiph • (Chon 1 3) AI F on•• (Sm 1h 5
8) 706pm
Chlcogo Cuba (VIIn Poppei 4 5 • Pl11s
bu gh S&amp;rAfin 2 5) 7 05 p m
Mont eo (Thu man 4-8) • N Y M811 (Hamp
1on 14- 0 7 Opm

Apartment•
for Rent

(7.0 387 0•02 A1k ng S 4 000

080

Colorado (Bohanon 1 O) a A lanta Ashby
85)7-40pm

M waukee (Ea ada 2-0) a Houston E anon
17-ll) 805pm

Cncnna

adPhooga

Hansch 86

Eoot

•••••••

Batt mo e
Tampa Bay

Oe1

Need We And Sep c No Down
Paymen Aequ ed La ge Se ec
on 0 Homes Ca
800 948
568

Kansas C ty
M nnesota

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

mlta on o diSC m na on
baSed on race co o 81 g on
&amp;elt famU a a atua o nat onal

610 Farm Equipment
99 Te am e TSC Low hou s
$8500 34 Foo B eke T u k
$ 500 H
ng on 304 36

orgn o any nentonto
make any such p eference
lfTl ta lon o d set m na on

Help Wanted

4900

h a newspape w not
know ng y accept
advert sements fD eal es1a e

150
HCX
Owne Operata Company POw
a ton a 87 C PM Home E e y
Weekend Mo e No Eas Coas
00"1. No o ch Mos yOop&amp;
Hook
800-200.2823 ACCEPT
NG 983 NEWER RACTORS

Schools
Instruction

whiCh s n v ala lon of the
aw Ou eade a a e hereby
nformed ha a dwel ngs
advert sed n h s newspape
a eava abeonanequa
opponunlty baall

372 OR VERS NEEDED
No E pe en e Ne essa y 4
Day COL Tan "It No os u an

F

qua ed S a a $35k $40k
s Yea Ca Toda 800 958

REAL ESTATE

•

New
Mu dock s Fac ory Ou 18
C oss La es VN
Save housand A nve ory
mus be sod
NO Oeae s Pease
To F ee 866 88 885

2353

TRANSPORTATION

or 304 769.Q925

65
7
82
83
90

589
55
48
475
430

75

88

Frtdoy Oct e
LO&amp; Ange as a Kansas City 8 30 p m H

necessary

Chi._ Yl Ntw Vorl! JlfHy
Tuoldoy &amp;opt 28
Ch cago 3 New Yo k New Jersey 0 Chlca

go eads !lienes 3.()
8o1urdoy Sopt 30
Ch cago at New York New Jersey e p m
Frldoy Oct 8
New York New Jersey a Ch cago 8 p m

necessary

a

s...doy
Washngon DC

Oct. 15
30pm

No e Th ee po ms o a win and one poln1

fo a

&amp; The winner n he quarter and aem r
nals ~H be tne fl st earn to each or exceed
five po nts The h rd ~am.. o a series wl be
dec ded by penalty k cks
each game has
ended na eo f hese ass
1

6
7

8
25

710 Autos for Sale

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORK NG FOR HE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EXPER ENCE AE
OU RED
800 48 57 6 "
0

W

Phiadepha
NewJesey
Pmsbugh
NYRangers
NYSiandes

5

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2

0

0

2 2

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Boston .••...•• ••..••..••.6
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0

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7

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6 20
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20
26
23
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4

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7 7
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4
4

2 0
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8 22

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3 2 0
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onapontfo a eo o art me oss
Wedneaday e Qamu
Ph ade ph a 4 New Je sey 1
Pitlsbu gh 5 Co umbus 2
Ca o na 6 Wash gton 3
BuffalO 4 To on o 2
PhoenlC2 Cooado2 e
Mo ea 5 Edmo on 3
Vancou e
Onawa 2
M neso a 3 Sa Jose
Today • Game•

AFC

w

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

L TPta PF PA

4 0000 886&lt;5
3

0505922

2
o 667 57
2
066 0
0 4 0000 5

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6&lt;5
72

Can •

...••••. •..•••• 3

.

0 750 98

2
0 667 53
22050064
22050090

....... ............. 030000

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

MERCHANDISE
RENTALS

510

Household
Goods

READERS 3.
AS RO OGERS NEEDED FOR
MA OR
V PS CH C
NE
WORK FROM OUR HOME OR
OFF C E MAG KA
BOO 3 0
8645

90

89

4

03000040
West
3
o 50 0
2 2 0 500 33
2 2 o 500 93

62

...••••••••• :;~2 2 o 500 74

92

74
83
6
5
96

57
60
65
6
35

64
60
0
69

4
65
4
53

Oakand
Denver
Kansas City

Seatt e

55
50

SanOego ...

o 4 0 000
NFC
Ecat
3
0 750
2 2 0 500
2 2 0 500
2 0333
3 0 250
Cent al
3 0 0 00
3
0 50
3
0 50
........ ............. .2 2 0 500

55

Oct B
NC

UAW GM Qua rty 500 Conoo d

Wins on 500 Ta ladega Ala
Oct 22 - Pop Sec e M CIOW8VA ..00
Rock ngham N C
Nov 5 - Checkef Auto PartS/DUra Lube
500k Avonda e Anz
Nov 2
Peni'\Zo 400 Homestead Fla
Nov 9 - NAPA 500 Hampton Ga
Driver Stlind ngt
Bobby Laban e 4 09
2 Oa • Ea nhard 3 842
3 oa • arren 3 824
4 Jeff Bur10n 3 823
5 Tony Stewart 3 832
8 Rk:lcy Rudd 3 832
7 Rua1y Wa ace 3804
8 Mart&lt; Man n 3 584
9 Ward Burton 3 397

Oct 5

0 Jeff Gordon 3 358
Matt Kenseth 3 005
12 Mke Sknne 2993
13 seve Park 2 975
4 Johnny Benaon 2 947
15 Dee Earnhardt J 2 859
8 Ken Sch ador 2 834
17 Terry LabOnte 2 7 8
18 oe Nemechek 2 705
9 s er1 ng Manm 2 101
20 a E b11 2seo
21 Chad un e 2 525
22 John And e11 2 4i7
23 J mmy Spence 2 476
24 Jerry Nadeau 2 4&amp;t
25

Fo daa Boson 7pm

Eaa1

VB

Jeremy

Maylield 2 • 4

Robert P eas ey 2 399
Kev n Lepage 2 3 e
M cnae Wattrt p 2 306
Kenny Wal ace 2 225
E ottSade 2 68
3 Bobby Ham Non 2 49
32 Dave Baney
33 Wal y Oa enbach J
909

26
27
28
29
30

EaN n Conference
At ant c D vie on

Seatt e
69 563
Oakland
88 69 56
1/2
Anahem
80 78 506
9
Texas
70 8B 443
9
x-c nched d v son e
w.dne*Ciay • Gamtt
Oak aM 9 Anahetm 7
To onto 4 BaNmo eo
Tampa Bay
NY Yankees
c e'.'e and 8 M nnesota 2
Boson 2 ChiCago 1Nh e Sox
Kansas C ty 3 De o 0
Sean e 6 1'elCas 4
Thu aday 1 Gamet
Anahetm Kar1 2 2) at Oak and (App er 5
3 35 p m
Te~tas Hel ng 5 3 a Seat1 e Moyer 3
0 635pm
Mnnesoa M on 13 O) a Ceveand
Coon 5-8 705pm
Toano Ca pane
o
a Ba moe
Rappe 2) 705pm
N Y Yankees C emens 3 1) a Tampa Bay
Aeka 6 0 7 5 pm
De o M k 8
a KansasC y Mead
ows62 805pm
Bas on AMart nez 0.(1 a Ch cage Wh e
Sox(S oka 5o 805pm
Frtday a Gamet
M nnesota Mays
4 a 091 cit r;Nea e
0 5 705pm
To on o (T achse e 4 a c eveland Burba
66 705pm
N Y Yank~es Flet1 tte 9 8 a 8a mo e
McE ay2.0 705pm
Sos on Arro a 5 2 at Tampa Bav Ha pe
2 7 5 pm
Kansas c ty (Ae chert 8 9 a Ch cago Wh e
Sox(Paque 36 805pm
Te1&lt;as Aoge s 3 3 at Oak and 0 a es
4-8), 005 p m
Seatt e Abbon 9 6 a Ana he m Or11Z 7-6
005 pm

10 advertioe "any p&lt;eferenoo

110

93
87
76
75
68
Weat
89

on

9

GB
554
525 4 12
525 4 12
443 7 12
420
2

83 10
75

:: :87
83
70
66

Cen1ra1

x Ch cage
C eveland

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

MIJor League Soccer
P ayotf Glance
Semlf na Round
KanMI Ctty Ya LOa Angelee
Frldoy Sept. 2e
Loa Angeles at Kansas City 8 p m
Tueodoy Oct 3
Kansas c ty a LOs Ange es 10 30 p m

W L Pot
Boson
New Yo: : .
To onto

Yard Sale

I:;~) Rip SQ~~~till

ChompiOMhp

American LAgue

-582 3345

70

(Da e E•llhard1 J )
C
May 28 - Coca-Cola eoo concono N
(Man-h)
June " - MBNA Pia num 400 ~ Oe4
(Tony S ewar1)
June 1 o&lt;man 400 Brool&lt; yn Mich (Tony
Sewan
June 9
Pocono 500 Long Pond Pa.
(Je emy Mayf eld
June 25
Save Mart/Kr'agen 350k Sonoma ca
Jeff Go don
Ju y
PepSI 400 Daytona Beael"l Fla.
Jeff Burton
J&lt;i;y i
Now Eng ard 300 L.oodoo N H
(Tony s ewart
Ju y 23
Penns~anitl 500 long Pond
RustyWa ace
Aug 5
Br Ckya d 400 nd anapol •
Bobby Labonte
l
Aug 3
Globa C oss ng a Th&amp; G en
Watktns G en N Y S eva Parte:)
Aug 20
Peps 400 Brook yn M ch
Rusty wa ace
Aug 26
go ac ng com 500 Br sto enn
Rusty wa ace
Sep 3
Southe n 500 Dart ng10n S C
(Bobby LAbon1e)
Sap 9
Chevro et Monte ca 10 400 Rich
mood Va ( elf Gordon)
Sep
7
Ou aLube 300 Loudon N H
Jeft Burton)
Sep 24
MBNA com 400 Dover Del
(Tony s ewart
Oct
NAPA AutoCa e 500 Mart nsv e

Sean e a Kansas City 9 p m
Sunday Oct 8
euffaoa Mamt
pm
Green Bay at Oet oit p m
nd anapo s a New Eng and
pm
New Orleans a Chteago
pm
Pittsbwgh at New York Jets p m
Tennessee a C nc n ati
pm
Washngona Ph adepha
pm
New Yor11: G ao s a Atlanta 4 05 p m
Cleveland a Arizona 4 5 p m
Denve a San Diego 4 5 p m
Oakanda SanFancsco 4 5pm
Seat11e a caro na 4 5 p m
Ba mo e a Jackson11 e 8 20 p m
Open Da as Kansas City S Louis
Monday Oct t
Tampa Bay a M nnesota 9 p m

f

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /8SI7
No Fee Un easWeW n

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

l.ous

San anclsco He nandez 6
a A zona
(Anderaon 1 e) 10 05 p m
LOs Angeles (Park 7 0 a San 0 ago
(Wi ams 07) 0 05 p m

RIIICinAt:H rlltll
Co !of IQpOinlmonl
304)875 7472
304)875 7279

AI ea estate advefttl ng n
1h a nowapape lo aublecl o
lho F-ol Folr Houo ng Act
of 1988 wh~ - - ft egal

a St

s ephenton e-a 8 0 p m

Phi

mond va

Mondav a Glimea

4
9

475

82

3e

ChcagoatGeenBay4 spm
Tampa Bay a wash ng on 415 p m
A amaatPhadepha 820pm
Open N v Jets Oek end New 011ea.ns

0

532

57

Mtam a Cine nna 4 05 p m
NewEnganda Den 81' 405pm
Anzona a San F anc sco 4 5 p m

2
23
27
29

Wadneeday • a.m..

Cer1 fied 0 I Company
Company Car

560

456

595

Anzona

.....

SporiiTHmo
Pot11ana Ca

589
59

Woot
94 64
64 74

os Angeles

Two bed oom mob e nome no
PII 740 992 5858

440

27
30

+43
869248
64 94 405

4x72 Sunahlnt Mob e

Home Exce en concl on To a
Eec c 2 Bed oom 2 Bah Ga
den Tub Cen 1 AJC K chen s

424
-405

72 116
10 88

a full t1me pos t on ava lab e n Me gs County Hours
12 30
8 30 am M F requ rements h gh schoo
d ploma/GED va d dr ver s cense three years good
dr v ng exper ence and adequate automob le nsurance
coverage S1artong sa ary $6 00/hour Excellent benef t
package nciud ng health nsurance lnte ested
app cants need to spec fy past on ol nterest and send
resume to
~ 0 Box 604 Jackson OH 45640-0604
AI appl catoons must be post marked by 10 5 00
Equa Opportun ty Emp oyer

ABSOLUTE GOlD MINE SO
down Ne s S50k Wo k 1 h s
Ca dy
VEND NG
e
n

&amp; Vicinity

S7 9

84 114
93 85

WANTED Buckeye Commun ty Serv ces currently has

Slllurday • Monday
adHion- 4 30 Thuraday
O.dllnH eubj«l to

4

12

478 8

.. ............... 82 16

x San F ancsco

torunby430pm

005

570

liKl 68
75 82

2

a 333 65

2

3 0 250 55
1 3 0 250 5
Sundlly a Gamea
Oa as a Caro~na p m
Sanoegoa S Lous 1pm
nd anapo s a BuftaiO p m
Mtnnesota a Oet 01
pm
N Y G.ams a Tennessee 1 p m
Batt mo e a C evetand 1 p m
Pittsbufgh a JacksonVI e p m

GB

Contra

11 0 Help Wanted

Mov

y New York

Ph ladeiphoa

749 9909

elY• du• to holldllr-

595

The game haa been poatponed

2 doya before the ad lo

L Pot

x A anta :-- ......... ....... ...... 114 84

Florida
Mont ea

Saturday
September 30
12 00 Noon

REGISTER QEAQL!NE

ANNOUNCEMENTS

W

!.o.il

4

New Orteans
San F anasco

Eoot

For

(Mar11 Marnn)
April e - DieHar11 500 olladego AlA
Cloftlon)
April 30
NAPA A\J10 POI10 500 Fon1ana
CAIN ( eremy Mayfield
May e - Pon1iac El(citement -400 Rich-

08

• 0 0 ()() 60
2 2 0500 85

Ca o na

BENEFIT SHOOT

611 Personal

04000048

Wto1

Toonoa De o 730pm
NY Rangers a New esey 730pm
Cooadoa Oaas 830pm
Mon ea a Vancou e 0 p m
Friday a Gamaa
A antaa NY Ranges 7pm
Washngo n s Buffao a E ePa 7pm
F o idavs Coumbus a Cncnna 7pm
P ttsb gh vs Bo s o a Pro dance A
730pm
Nasn e aCh ag 830pm
Ana 81ma Mn esoa Spm
Ca gary a Edmon on 9 p m
os Ange es a San ose 0 30 p m

AtrrORACNG

eo
02
76
99

Food Cty 500 B so

Ten

e as

m

34 A ck Mas
795
35 S acy Camp on 663

scon P uett 598
37 Bre11 Bod ne 565
38 Da el Wahnp 536
39 Kemy rw n 440
40 Kyle Peny 37
36

~-$19!9fi5i]

BASEBALL
Ame lean League
M NNESOTA TW NS S gned RHP
a son S montacch
o a m no
eague con a c
BASKETBALL
Nat onal Baaketball A1eoclatlon
BOSTON
CELT CS S gneo
F
Je ome Mo so
CLEVE AND CAVAL ERS Ag eed
o e ms w h F a Ke ne end hen
p a ed h m on wa e s
NO ANA
PACERS Announced
he e em en o C R k Sm s
SACRAMENTO
K NGS
Announced the con ac 81&lt; ens on of
coach R k Ada man h ough 2002
FOOTBALL
Nat ona Footb• League
GREEN BAY ~ACKERS S gne&lt;l
0
Ch ck Osbo ne
Waved OT
Ba 'i S okes S g ed TE Adam New
man o he p ac ce squad Ae eased
G Tom Scha
f om he p ac ce
squad
NO ANAPOL S
CO TS-S gned
AB Lennox Go don t om he p ac ce
squad and LB Ph
Go e
o he
p ac c e squad
ACKSONV LE
JAGUARSpaced C John Wade on
n u ed
ese ve Waved DE Oav d A ch e
S gned G A a n Ko h and S C a g
M e Waved OT Gannon Stlephe d
I om the J5 ac
e squad S gned OT
Aegg e Ne so
o
he p actce
squad
KANSAS C V CH EFS Paced
0
y Pa en on n u ed ese ve
S gned DE Ty one W
ams o wo
yea
o a
M NNESOTA
V K NGS S g ned
Oenn s G een coac h
o a h ee
yea
o
ac e ens on
h ough
2004
SAN FRANC SCO 49ERS S gned
LB JOI.i
Gen y
o
he p ac ce
squad
HOCKEY
N• ana Hoc:key League
A LAN A
HRASHEAS Reca ed
Oa S yde f om 0 ando o he HL
CAROL NA
HURR CANES
Ass gned F a os a S oboda and F
an MacNe
o C nc nna o he H
CO ORAOO AVALANCHE A g eed
o e ms w h 0 Adam Foo e o n a
mu yea co
a
ex ens o
OA LAS
STAAS Ass gned
W
Ryan C h s e
W Jam e W gh
0
oh E s k e D Ma k Wo on and C
Ch g W e s o U ah o f'ie H
NA SH V LLE
PREDATORS
Ass gned 0 A exand e Bo kov RW
Da d Gosse n
W Sean Hagge y
and LW Aya n Tob e o M wa ukee o
he HL
TAMPA BAY
GHTN NG Aeas
s gned RW She don Kee e o De o
o he H wa ed 0 Me Ang e s ad

• va

PS GH CS TARO

Tribe
from Page Bl
tl e I d ans to re s go i n as a
free age
W th Dav d Segu1 rest ng h s
sore ght foo Se by nade h s
first start as the lnd ans DH and

ORtCLOSURES $0
DOWN NO C RED T NEEDED
TAKE OVER OW PA MENTS
CA L NOW 800 8 0 280 EXT
39 0

FINANCIAL

210

Buein .. ,
Opportunity

CAREER
MED CA 8

JET
AERAT ON' 0 DRS
Reps ed New &amp; Reb
S ock
Aon E a s eoo 537 9528

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

fo r h v th
gle

gid
do ot
T av Fry a go
d uble
vh r g t f eide M t La o
vcar ng plast
a s I pp d and
fell o the rubbe zed wa n ng
track Selby followed v1th hiS
base hi o make t 4 1
It was rea 5 ppery I used

tal sp k o the e du ng bar
t ng p a t ce and I st II sl pped So
I fig ed t d d t ake any i f
fe
e l vt
ad
Sand) Alo a folio v d w th a
s ngle and K ny Lofton and
Omar V zquel h t bloope 5 befo e
Roberto Alo 1ars smgle capped
the outburst and gave Bere a 7 1
lead

Check out the OVP 10m today's sports section on page Bl

ca

The Datly Sentmel

�Thursday, September 28, 2000

P1ga B 4 • The Daily Sentinel

2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

Ohio

OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264

Square Dance 6 :00 -11 :00 pm

Red Barn- Route 338 Apple Grove, Ohio
Fri. Sept 29, 2000
Cake Walk Raffles

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Ex penses; College, Retirement,iJj
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
~
Medical •
Home
• ..., _ _ .

PHILLIP
ALDER

now PARTinG OUT ~~~
198&amp; Fant uan
1919 Toyota mR2
1919 tedlllat fleelwoed
1990 Fant ~rd
1990 Fofd llmslar Uen
1992 Fard Elqllorer
1991 fard Taurus
1994 fan! Ringer P/U

SECURITY·

High 8l Dry

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

Protect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
1
legal papers, investment records, photo
albums, cameras, household inventory and
sentimental items will be safe.
For more information call

Self-Storage
33795 HiltJNd Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

fOR ffiORf InfO. Pl[flSt CAll

. Call 740-992-7943
Sonshine
Bake Sale
Dorcas Bethany Church
September 30

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

HOWARD
EICAYATING CO.

• New Homes
·
• Garages
Simington
U1etlmt Warranty •CQ,mplete
Remodeling
local Conlrlelor
Stop &amp; Compare
Reasonable Prices
FREE
FREE Estimates
ESTIMATES
740.992-1671

''"M! wagg g

Clltllntetd,

Public Notice

The llama will be eotd aa
Ia. Appointments can be
arranged lor lnopectlon by
calling tho office or tho
Superintendant
or
T,..ourer' The
board
raaarvee the right to reJect
any or all blda or any or all
parte ol a bid. Succeaalul
bidder
muat
submit
payment In lull by caah or
caahler check only. Sealed
bldo will bo opened att2:DO
noon Eaetern Standard
Time on Thurodoy, October
12, 2000 In tha office ol the
Treasurer. Bid ahould be
clearly marked "Bid for
Surplua ltoma" and mailed

NOTICE OF ROAD CLOSING to:
Eaetern Locel School
(TEMPORARY),
Dlotrlct
PORTION OF SALEM
Attention:
Uea M. Ritchie,
SCHOOL LOT ROAD
Treasurer
(MEIGS COUNTY ROAD
50008 State Route 681
NO.I)
Reada~lllt, Ohio 45772
LOCATED IN
Phone: 740-667·3319
NORTHWESTERN MEIGS
74CHI67-6079
COUNTY, OHIO,
(9)21,282tc
AUTHORIZED BY OFFICE
OF THE MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO, ENGINEER,
Public Notice
POMEROY, OHIO
PUBUC NOTICE Ia ho110ln
•
given lhol TEXAS EASTERN
PUBUC NOTICE
TRANSMISSION
Tho VIllage of Middleport
CORPORATION,
by will hold two public
euthorlzltlon conlllnad In haorlnga for tha purpoll or
Utility Permit No. 00·15 dlacuealng 1 watert ..wer
dated Auguat 9, 2000, Community Development
luued by the omca of lha
Block Grant on October 9,
Malgo County Engineer,
2000 and on October 23,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
muet
2000. Each harlng to be
undertake certain noturol
g11 plpallno malntenenca held at 7:00 P.M. In council
work acroea. and beneath o chambera. Tho aubmloolon ·
of • grant oppllcotlon will be •
ponlon of Salem School Lbt
dlacual8d •. All Interested
Ro1d (County Road No. 1)
panlos are Invited to attend.
In tha vicinity of 30531
Bryan Swann
Salam School Lot Road In
Clork(l'reaaurer
nortllweotarn Malga County,
Ohio. The malnlanonco ~9) 21, 28, 21c
work will nactooltata tha
cloalng of a portion of the 1 -~:.!!.!!.!.!.!~N,!!O:!;tl~c:!e~
aforamantlonad County 1•
Rold !rom 7:00 a.m.,
Mondoy, October 9, 2000
PROBATE COURT OF
until 5:00 p.m., Tueaday,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
October 10, 2000.
In ro: Chongo of name of
Thlo Public Notice shall Timothy Levi Pearson to
be publlahed once a woek Timothy Levi VanCooney.
lor two consecutive waeka
NOTICE OF HEARING ON
In a newap1per ol general
CHANGE OF NAME
circulation In Meigs County,
Applicant hereby gives
Ohio.
notice to all Interested
OFFICE OF THE MEIGS porsono and to Timothy
COUNTY ENGINEER
Lovl Pearson that the
Robert H. Eaaon, P.E. P.S. applicant hae flied and
34110 Fair grounda Road Application lor Change ol
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 Nama In the Probata Coun
(I) 28, (10 5
of Malga County, Ohio,
requutlng tho change of
Public Notice
name of Timothy Levi
Pearoon to Timothy Levi
NOTICE
VonCooney. The hearing on
The Eaatern Local Board the application will be hold
of Education Is accepting on the 30th day or October,
bldo for the sale the
2000 at 1:30 o'clock p.m. In
following aurplue vehlclea tho Probate Court or Meigs
end equipment:
Co . . Probata, County,
11185 Chevy Van
located at Courthouse
1M&amp; Dodge 1!2 Ton Pickup
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
1986 International 71
Tareoa L. VanCoohoy
Pl . .ongor Bus- Dleael
TERESA L VANCOONEY
Engine
33450 Belley Run Road
2 Portable Backboard and
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
GOII Seta
(9) 28

------------~~----------~·
Stay 1111 the

cutting edge...

Bead the
Classified Ads

The Country
Candle ShoP

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE AITENTION
CONTRACTORS
S1ll1bury Townahlp will
l!e liking 111lod blda on
Httard Mitigation proJect to
be done In Sallobury
Town8hlp. Work will conolot
of llevetlon or homtl abovt
flood loval. Bldo will bo
opened on apeclaltownohlp
maeUng held on October
5th, 2000 at 8 pm at the
Townehlp
Holl
In
· Rockaprlnga. For acope of
work cell 992-61139.
(I) 27, 28, 29 3 tc

Sta.te Route 7,
Tuppers Pla.ins

repla,. hourt"

Tuea-Frl 1()..6

Certified in MeiQa,
Athens a.nd
Washington Counties.
Your Qua.iity 24·Hour

Sat; 1CI-4
• Candle making

supplies
• Wooden crafts
• Baskets

Chlldcare Services

740-992-4559

74o·667-6329

9/1/00 1 mo pd

GALLIPOLIS

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

'~

'

,.

-~ '

'

Rutland,

Mums,lndiiat\~

!IPP·Ies. APPle
lfems. Subs.
iaJCe, Ice Cream,
(QIIn;n,, Summer Saul;ue:
'J•
742-7405

HANING's
'•• •c•"•....,

......

FREE ESTIMATES

740-698-6735

Fall Mums 6 for SID
Also Gourds a. PumPkins.
HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYracuse. 011
740-992-5776

a~ailable

on

request.

,
~

Open Mon-Frl 8-6; Sal. 9-4
Sun. Closed
Phone 740·949-2804 ,
Owner -Jim Plckeno .
Mechanic- Bill Jones •
Porto Mar ·Tamra Picken&amp;

-

BISSELL IUILI)ERS
INC.

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

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages .
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
{OMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FAEit ESTIMATES .

Dozer work.

740·992·7599

740-992-5050

(Randy)

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

J@:,WICK'S41;

HfiOLIHG and·
EXCfiVfiTIHG ·
4 •

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

- ..

BORN LOSER
.... THE
...
00 YOO KNOW Wf\OSE

(740) 992-3470

~UlUiL

BLIND SPOT

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479
Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
·- Sales Representative
~~-~

..;:;

750 East Stale Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

..

Phone (740) 593-66

·(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916

[jj]

VINYL REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

-Any Size Double Hung·

\V c have VIl lage Ca ndl es

$229.00*

992-7696

• Free lnslallatlon
• Free In Home Estimates
Call for Further Details

QUALITY WinDOW
SYSTEmS, IDC.
992-4119

Free Estimates
Fully Insured

1-800-291 -5600
VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
ON STATE ROUTE 33 6
MILES NORTH OF
, POMEROY, OHIO, AT
COUNTY ROAD 18

Brian Morrlson/Radne, Ohio

•No Dealers or .Contractors

INSULATION ..
eucKet
TrucK

Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per II•"!'
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburet
Progreselva top line.

144 Third Ave. Galllpohs

446·4995

Uc. I oo-50

-8

"Ahead in Service"

740-985-3831

Please WI/H023477

JINES'

TREE SERVICE
(740) 367-0266 · swfl'\l
• ioP
• ~efl'o"al 1·800-950-3359 • Gtl~'o'"9
20 Yrs . Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

7 North

SMITtt'S COfimtOaiOfi
• New Homes
• Garages
• Siding

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

Need It done, ghte 111 • 0111
FREE ESTIMATES
Creal Priced on New Hom••

992·2753

·'

992-1101

B 131 ma

SELLERS CONSTRUCTION

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

C.OMI ~(:, UP ?

1\Nt-IIIJe:.R~Y, TOO I

"'!

·,·-

4577 1
7 4D-949-2217
Sizes 5 • x 1 0'

to 1O' x 30•
Hours

'·

11NIIIIn .

ERIUER

Rt

Truck seats. ::ar seats. headliners .
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle s·~ats,
boat covers, carpets, ~ tc.
Mon - F:i 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

CON CRETE
•
MA SON RY
BACKHOE SERVI CES
BOBCAT SERVI CES

st.,

• fall fertilizers

R:.Jtland, Ohio

We now offer Gin &amp;
W eddin g Registry

• Vertic.als • Wood
• Minia • Etc

Main

•Western Pride 12% Sweet feed - 5.25/50 lbs.
• 12% Cattle feed 16.75/100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog food 16.15/50 lbs.

Larry Schey

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc

HARTWELL HOUSE

UP TO 70'7o OFF

Road
Racine, Ohio

AT 8:30 P.M.

1

"A Better

llEl

All vertical blindo are
made to order at our
location

mt-~IIJE.~Y I~

TAAT':&gt; ODO ! :&gt;tiE ~~ D ll\~T
yc;p.s:, WP-.:':l OlliZ Dl ~MOI'-&lt;D

29870 Beahan

Thuradaya

(Factory Outlet)

P"

WEC)()II\&lt;',

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On •'

• 8 PM
7:00 AM
- - ... ·

i'

.L-------~~~12·t~MD~1~mo~.~od
.

Advertise i.n
this space for
$100 per
month.
• AD Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 St. Rl. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

""

.,..
0.

lvoc

IJo. + I &gt;nl&lt;.
i &lt;• I vOL
: II

•· ; n~

d.

vour

:1&lt; +o

'Oh

w.

v

I

r

...

-.

•...

•
'
''
'

PEANUTS
~OW

CAN I ASK I-IlM IF f-IE

MISSES ft,E IF 11M ASKIN6
I-IlM IF !olE Ml5SE5 I(OU ?

Dump Truck Delivery

a: Leav~ Mu1age

992 -6142 or
Toll-Free 1-877-604-735!

· Ball Logging &amp;
Firewood
35215 Ball Run Road

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
HEAP Vouchen accepted ror
Mel&amp;• &amp; GaUl• Countiea

Friday, Sept. 29, 2000
Even though you usuall y like
to have a partner in your in volvements, in the year ahead you' II
have better chances for success
when you operate independently
of others.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c t. 23)
Although you r fin ancial picture
may look better today th an it did
yesterday, cont inue 10 be prudent
in all your money dealings , and
· start to amass a surplus. Get a
• jump on life by understanding the
~ inlluences th at' II govem you in
: the year ahead . Send for you r
: Astro-Grap h predictions by mail: ing $2 to Aslro-Graph, c/o this
•. newspaper, P.O . Box 1758. Mur: ray Hill Station, New York, NY
: 10156. Be sure to state your
: Zodiac sign.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Chances are your leadership qual~ itie&lt; and assertive skill s will be
' more accentuated toduy, so now is
· a good time to press forward in
mailers that cou ld advum:e your
se lf-i nteres ts.
SAGITIARI US (Nov. 2~- Dec .
21) Today could be payback time.
· However. in your cnse, lhi•

Advertise -·our business
on this POi• ·tr one month for
:
as low as $25
I
1

Pone
992·21
55
------

3 NT

Easl
Pass
All pass

1

1M 50RR't' .. EVEN IF I(Olii&lt;IAVE

TilE RI61&lt;1T NUMBER, I TI&lt;IINK
'{OU J.IAVE THE WRON6 NUMBER

BY I'HILLIP ALDER
Cicero, a Roman orator and
philosopher, suggested that "no
one is so old as to think he can·
not live one more year."
No bridge player should be so
pessimistic as to 'think he cannot
win one more trick.
Today's deal looks a lot like
yesterday's, yet there is one major
difference. Again you are in three
no-trump. Once more, West leads
the spade queen. How would you
plan the play?
Despite knowing that they have
at most five hearts between them
(South would presumably have
rebid ·one heart with four), North
is still right to jump to three notrump, not to show his club support. Five clubs rates to have little or no play ; three no-trump
mignt be laydown, especially if
South has five good clubs.
Declarer starts with seven top
tricks: two spades, two hearts, one
diamond and two clubs. The other two must come from the club
suit, meaning that declarer needs
to rake in four club tricks .
Perhaps your first react ion is lo
cash dummy 's ace. but thai is
wrong. Eve n if you drop a singleton queen from the West hand,
you cannot run th e whole suit.
The ri ght start, because of dum my 's potentially useful nine. is a
low club from th e dummy.
If Eas t plays low, finesse the
jack, hoping for the best. Here,
th ou·gh, East cont ribu tes the
queen. Win with your king and
cash the jack. When East discards,
continue with a low club to dummy's nine, cash the ace, and
cruise home, regardless of age.
Cicero lived from 106 to 43
BC ; yet how did the Romans
count the years?

·•

in vol ves two unrelated indi vi du als. both of whom wish to do
more for you tha n you did for
th em .

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan.
19) Be optimi sti c concernin g any
dea li ngs or in vo lve men ts you
ha ve today with large organi zati ons or groups. Every thin g
shou ld work out to your ex pectati ons .
AQUA RIUS (.I an 20-Feb . 19)
Trv to deal 10c.Jav onl v with the
perso n who can make an on-thespot decis ion when called for.
Your probabilities fo r success are
greatl y enhanced if you can avoid
intermediaries.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marc h 20) If
you' re a good listener today, you
should be able to take the ideas of
others and reshape them to fit
your situalion and needs. One in
particular could be extremely
helpful to your cause.
ARLES (March 21-A pril 19)
You have excellent chances of
achieving financial support for
one of your favorite projects
today. Devote your lime and ener·
gy to go"ls thut ure tnut~riull y
meuningful.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Once you make a commitment ,
you strive to keep it, regardless of
any tnconvemences you may
encounter. Today. thi s action will
wi n you the respect of your peers.
GEM INI (May 21-June 20)
Be watc hful today for some constructive undercurrent s to begin
stirrin g what could prove to be
beneficial for you where your
career or work is conce.rned. Put
them to good u'e
CANCER (June 21-July 221
An opportu nity th at co ul d be
he lpfu l in establi shin g a better
relat ionship wi th &gt;o meone to
whom you :re attracted may present itself today. Look yo ur best.
LEO (Jul y B -Aug. 221 Saving
money could be first and foremost
on your mind today as yo u opt to
t&lt;1ke on a few do-it-yourse lf pro. jecls involving little things thai
req uire fix ing. You'll do a good
job.
VIRGO (Aug . 23 -Sept. 22)
Keep on lhe bes t of terms with
pals who wield influence in ureas
you don't. Plensum developments
could be in the offing through
people you know socially.

26 Greases

•.

28 Yours and

-

mine

30 Moat like
Santa'a ault
34 Arrow poiiOft
35 Copture
36 Greek lanar ~
38 S.lled
39 Imaginary
40 Elcpreeaod
anger
42 llHarl
plant
44 Ahlld of
ached !Ill
48 Simile
(2 wda.)
•'
50 Neighbor of ~
Fr.
·
52 Gun the
engine
•·
53 Jeckle'o 2nd

can*'

mate

...

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by

.•·

Lula Campos

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created !rom quotations by famous people, peat and
prennt. Each ltner In tha cipher stands lor another.

Today's c/uo: X oquals G

'DF'W

UCJV

DUSCJFOHF

RADRE

NDFM

SVCSAV

RADRE

NDFM

FMY

(SMCFCXJOSMVJ)

FC

FMOH

.

:

FC

WMBFFYJ . '
OAZJVI

VDWVHWFOVIF
PREVIOUS SOLUTION• "I like to write when I feel spiteful: il's like having a
good sneeze. " - O.H. Lawrence

,~~:t:~'

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WOlD
IAMI

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scrambled words

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low to form four simple words.

I

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VIMREN

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People were annoyed al the

t---.-:-,-,-......,.-.,.-i. ~obviousl y new check out cashier.

1_ 1_ 1_ . ~ A no t so smart cutie sighed lhat

_

.

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L....-'-..J........IL...L...J ~ she had green ------ her ears .

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Co,;plete tho chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing words

you develop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
1HE SE SQUARES

I

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTER S
TO GET AN SW ER

To get a current weather
report, check the

Kunono - Yeas t - Swank - Morbid- WORK DAY

Sentinel

Overheard 1n offtce bUJidtng e levator ''I've found that
the best cure for msomnta ts th e mornmg of a WORK
DAY '

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

SEPTEMBER 28

------If§~-------

Mel&amp;• and Gallla Counties
Call

1•

.....-+-+-+--+- +--1

!THURSDAY

S upp1o rt Services

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

949-2033

~

~

.•

Al l TypeS ol' Hu s mcss

WINTER
STORAGE
SPACE
AVAILABLE

CALL FOR MORE
INFORMATION

'

••

"

OFFICE EIPRESS
BUSINESS SERVICES

l140J 667-3224
1-800-828-0212

Oct. I , 2000 ·Apr. I , 2001

''

~ ~

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

74N87-G383

Meigs County
Fairgrounds

-.:

:~

.

DEPOYSAG
PARTS

North

29
3t
32

A missing trick

weedeaters , pick-up and :

delivery

Wesl
Pass
Pass

27

Opening lead: • Q

ch ainsaws . tillers,
generators, snowblowers ,·

••••••••••••••

Coli T &amp; R Logging
after,8:00 prn

CRAFTY,

BLESSIN•

We service mowers,

,_ .

The

I NT

I'LL DO TH'

mechanlcl

connECTion

740·742·801Sor
1-877·353·7022

frto Estimates

Before 6p.m. Leave Message
Aller 6pm· 740-985·4180

1.

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

Soulb

PARSON··YO'RE
JEST IN TIME
FER
SUP

Featuring two Brlggo &amp; •
Stratton trained

COPCRfTE

~

BARNEY

RACINE MOWER CLI,tliC •

Quality Driveways,
Patios, Sidewalks
25 years Experience
FREE ESTIMATES

WANTED

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

' 10-7 Sat 10-6 Sun- Closed

(740) 985-3948

ORA
VACATION ...

1-800-272-5179or446-9800

"Take the pain out
of paintingLet me do it for you"

nh,ln-·~•

••
•

• 7 4 2

• K J 5 Z

·~

17
18
20
21
23
24
25

33

• K 6 2
• A K 3

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yr.. Locnl

:· ....•.....

Ask For Mr. FOrd
Over 30 Year ExPerience

Soulb

992·6215

(7401 992-3131

•Q

• 10 B 7 6

Free Estimates
V.C. YOUNG 111

UtilitU.o

• 9 7 4
•Q 10985
• Q 10 9 8

• J 7 2
• KJ

• Vlnyllta_hlg &amp; Palnllng
• Patio &amp; Pardi Decks

Seplic Syolerru &amp;

Call Us First Or We Both Lose!

Easl

Q J 10 8

• £1tdrkal &amp; Plvml&gt;log
• Rtofl'!lJ ~ Gutttn

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

"W.elp"

LINDA'S
PAINTING

Residential, Commercial

DECORATION ..

• A 9 4 3

• Room adtlitlons &amp; RtmOdtllng
• New Garages

Bulldoser &amp; Bo ck/we
ServicB•
House &amp; Trailer Sites

09-28-110

• A 53
• 6 4
t A 6 5 3

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

BaJIDM

OF

"M'e're baclr to our'

P/8 CONTRACTORS, INC.

TION ...

North

•

7122/TFN

Public Notice

16

Wesl

HELP WANTED
Construction Workers
Siding. roofing, framing .
· Gallia-Meigs Counties

15

BlUM LUMBER
1'1'. 1'1'. 248
CHESTER

740-992-5232

?40-992-1506

1
7
13
14

PRODUCTS

34 Monitor the
Antwtlr to Previous Puzzle
content or
Sleeplng37 Hollywood"•
alckneu lly
elephant boy
Casual top
40 Ladder step
Big partlu
41 "-will be
Certain
done"
compound
43 Sole
Aquatic
45 Skill
mammals
46 Debtor'a lotlera 8 8 7
Ten years
47 Football coach ~¥1.!~
TV'a Peeples
Parseghlan
Exist
48 Carport
" Gosh!"
51 Volcano part
Art dO&lt;:o name 54 Usee o pencil
Actor Brynnar
and
Clarinet part
55 Breakfast food
Finnish first
56 leave
name
57 EnthuolEastern
aatlcally
philosophy
Brit. nobleman
DOWN
Filbert, e.g.
1 Steak choice
4 " - Lion King"
7 Coastal area
Workero'
2 Mark Twain 's
5 Sun. speech
8 Opp. ol NNW
assn.
9 Ad forte
6 School
Actress
3 Property
composition
10 Picture•
Joanne11 Uoe cpupon{
12 In a dlftlcull
,__.,.....,......,.,....,.,.,....,.,..,
poeHion
t 9 Wheel trteJI. :
~+--+--+---+-!---~ 22 Bookelbell'a.
Julius 24 ceremony
ACROSS

H. All1n1a

at New York Mtll (live) (CC)

I.

�Thursday, September 28, 2000

P1ga B 4 • The Daily Sentinel

2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

Ohio

OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264

Square Dance 6 :00 -11 :00 pm

Red Barn- Route 338 Apple Grove, Ohio
Fri. Sept 29, 2000
Cake Walk Raffles

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Ex penses; College, Retirement,iJj
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
~
Medical •
Home
• ..., _ _ .

PHILLIP
ALDER

now PARTinG OUT ~~~
198&amp; Fant uan
1919 Toyota mR2
1919 tedlllat fleelwoed
1990 Fant ~rd
1990 Fofd llmslar Uen
1992 Fard Elqllorer
1991 fard Taurus
1994 fan! Ringer P/U

SECURITY·

High 8l Dry

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

Protect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
1
legal papers, investment records, photo
albums, cameras, household inventory and
sentimental items will be safe.
For more information call

Self-Storage
33795 HiltJNd Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

fOR ffiORf InfO. Pl[flSt CAll

. Call 740-992-7943
Sonshine
Bake Sale
Dorcas Bethany Church
September 30

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

HOWARD
EICAYATING CO.

• New Homes
·
• Garages
Simington
U1etlmt Warranty •CQ,mplete
Remodeling
local Conlrlelor
Stop &amp; Compare
Reasonable Prices
FREE
FREE Estimates
ESTIMATES
740.992-1671

''"M! wagg g

Clltllntetd,

Public Notice

The llama will be eotd aa
Ia. Appointments can be
arranged lor lnopectlon by
calling tho office or tho
Superintendant
or
T,..ourer' The
board
raaarvee the right to reJect
any or all blda or any or all
parte ol a bid. Succeaalul
bidder
muat
submit
payment In lull by caah or
caahler check only. Sealed
bldo will bo opened att2:DO
noon Eaetern Standard
Time on Thurodoy, October
12, 2000 In tha office ol the
Treasurer. Bid ahould be
clearly marked "Bid for
Surplua ltoma" and mailed

NOTICE OF ROAD CLOSING to:
Eaetern Locel School
(TEMPORARY),
Dlotrlct
PORTION OF SALEM
Attention:
Uea M. Ritchie,
SCHOOL LOT ROAD
Treasurer
(MEIGS COUNTY ROAD
50008 State Route 681
NO.I)
Reada~lllt, Ohio 45772
LOCATED IN
Phone: 740-667·3319
NORTHWESTERN MEIGS
74CHI67-6079
COUNTY, OHIO,
(9)21,282tc
AUTHORIZED BY OFFICE
OF THE MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO, ENGINEER,
Public Notice
POMEROY, OHIO
PUBUC NOTICE Ia ho110ln
•
given lhol TEXAS EASTERN
PUBUC NOTICE
TRANSMISSION
Tho VIllage of Middleport
CORPORATION,
by will hold two public
euthorlzltlon conlllnad In haorlnga for tha purpoll or
Utility Permit No. 00·15 dlacuealng 1 watert ..wer
dated Auguat 9, 2000, Community Development
luued by the omca of lha
Block Grant on October 9,
Malgo County Engineer,
2000 and on October 23,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
muet
2000. Each harlng to be
undertake certain noturol
g11 plpallno malntenenca held at 7:00 P.M. In council
work acroea. and beneath o chambera. Tho aubmloolon ·
of • grant oppllcotlon will be •
ponlon of Salem School Lbt
dlacual8d •. All Interested
Ro1d (County Road No. 1)
panlos are Invited to attend.
In tha vicinity of 30531
Bryan Swann
Salam School Lot Road In
Clork(l'reaaurer
nortllweotarn Malga County,
Ohio. The malnlanonco ~9) 21, 28, 21c
work will nactooltata tha
cloalng of a portion of the 1 -~:.!!.!!.!.!.!~N,!!O:!;tl~c:!e~
aforamantlonad County 1•
Rold !rom 7:00 a.m.,
Mondoy, October 9, 2000
PROBATE COURT OF
until 5:00 p.m., Tueaday,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
October 10, 2000.
In ro: Chongo of name of
Thlo Public Notice shall Timothy Levi Pearson to
be publlahed once a woek Timothy Levi VanCooney.
lor two consecutive waeka
NOTICE OF HEARING ON
In a newap1per ol general
CHANGE OF NAME
circulation In Meigs County,
Applicant hereby gives
Ohio.
notice to all Interested
OFFICE OF THE MEIGS porsono and to Timothy
COUNTY ENGINEER
Lovl Pearson that the
Robert H. Eaaon, P.E. P.S. applicant hae flied and
34110 Fair grounda Road Application lor Change ol
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 Nama In the Probata Coun
(I) 28, (10 5
of Malga County, Ohio,
requutlng tho change of
Public Notice
name of Timothy Levi
Pearoon to Timothy Levi
NOTICE
VonCooney. The hearing on
The Eaatern Local Board the application will be hold
of Education Is accepting on the 30th day or October,
bldo for the sale the
2000 at 1:30 o'clock p.m. In
following aurplue vehlclea tho Probate Court or Meigs
end equipment:
Co . . Probata, County,
11185 Chevy Van
located at Courthouse
1M&amp; Dodge 1!2 Ton Pickup
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
1986 International 71
Tareoa L. VanCoohoy
Pl . .ongor Bus- Dleael
TERESA L VANCOONEY
Engine
33450 Belley Run Road
2 Portable Backboard and
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
GOII Seta
(9) 28

------------~~----------~·
Stay 1111 the

cutting edge...

Bead the
Classified Ads

The Country
Candle ShoP

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE AITENTION
CONTRACTORS
S1ll1bury Townahlp will
l!e liking 111lod blda on
Httard Mitigation proJect to
be done In Sallobury
Town8hlp. Work will conolot
of llevetlon or homtl abovt
flood loval. Bldo will bo
opened on apeclaltownohlp
maeUng held on October
5th, 2000 at 8 pm at the
Townehlp
Holl
In
· Rockaprlnga. For acope of
work cell 992-61139.
(I) 27, 28, 29 3 tc

Sta.te Route 7,
Tuppers Pla.ins

repla,. hourt"

Tuea-Frl 1()..6

Certified in MeiQa,
Athens a.nd
Washington Counties.
Your Qua.iity 24·Hour

Sat; 1CI-4
• Candle making

supplies
• Wooden crafts
• Baskets

Chlldcare Services

740-992-4559

74o·667-6329

9/1/00 1 mo pd

GALLIPOLIS

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

'~

'

,.

-~ '

'

Rutland,

Mums,lndiiat\~

!IPP·Ies. APPle
lfems. Subs.
iaJCe, Ice Cream,
(QIIn;n,, Summer Saul;ue:
'J•
742-7405

HANING's
'•• •c•"•....,

......

FREE ESTIMATES

740-698-6735

Fall Mums 6 for SID
Also Gourds a. PumPkins.
HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYracuse. 011
740-992-5776

a~ailable

on

request.

,
~

Open Mon-Frl 8-6; Sal. 9-4
Sun. Closed
Phone 740·949-2804 ,
Owner -Jim Plckeno .
Mechanic- Bill Jones •
Porto Mar ·Tamra Picken&amp;

-

BISSELL IUILI)ERS
INC.

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

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages .
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
{OMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FAEit ESTIMATES .

Dozer work.

740·992·7599

740-992-5050

(Randy)

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

J@:,WICK'S41;

HfiOLIHG and·
EXCfiVfiTIHG ·
4 •

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

- ..

BORN LOSER
.... THE
...
00 YOO KNOW Wf\OSE

(740) 992-3470

~UlUiL

BLIND SPOT

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479
Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
·- Sales Representative
~~-~

..;:;

750 East Stale Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

..

Phone (740) 593-66

·(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916

[jj]

VINYL REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

-Any Size Double Hung·

\V c have VIl lage Ca ndl es

$229.00*

992-7696

• Free lnslallatlon
• Free In Home Estimates
Call for Further Details

QUALITY WinDOW
SYSTEmS, IDC.
992-4119

Free Estimates
Fully Insured

1-800-291 -5600
VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
ON STATE ROUTE 33 6
MILES NORTH OF
, POMEROY, OHIO, AT
COUNTY ROAD 18

Brian Morrlson/Radne, Ohio

•No Dealers or .Contractors

INSULATION ..
eucKet
TrucK

Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per II•"!'
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburet
Progreselva top line.

144 Third Ave. Galllpohs

446·4995

Uc. I oo-50

-8

"Ahead in Service"

740-985-3831

Please WI/H023477

JINES'

TREE SERVICE
(740) 367-0266 · swfl'\l
• ioP
• ~efl'o"al 1·800-950-3359 • Gtl~'o'"9
20 Yrs . Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

7 North

SMITtt'S COfimtOaiOfi
• New Homes
• Garages
• Siding

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

Need It done, ghte 111 • 0111
FREE ESTIMATES
Creal Priced on New Hom••

992·2753

·'

992-1101

B 131 ma

SELLERS CONSTRUCTION

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

C.OMI ~(:, UP ?

1\Nt-IIIJe:.R~Y, TOO I

"'!

·,·-

4577 1
7 4D-949-2217
Sizes 5 • x 1 0'

to 1O' x 30•
Hours

'·

11NIIIIn .

ERIUER

Rt

Truck seats. ::ar seats. headliners .
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle s·~ats,
boat covers, carpets, ~ tc.
Mon - F:i 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

CON CRETE
•
MA SON RY
BACKHOE SERVI CES
BOBCAT SERVI CES

st.,

• fall fertilizers

R:.Jtland, Ohio

We now offer Gin &amp;
W eddin g Registry

• Vertic.als • Wood
• Minia • Etc

Main

•Western Pride 12% Sweet feed - 5.25/50 lbs.
• 12% Cattle feed 16.75/100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog food 16.15/50 lbs.

Larry Schey

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc

HARTWELL HOUSE

UP TO 70'7o OFF

Road
Racine, Ohio

AT 8:30 P.M.

1

"A Better

llEl

All vertical blindo are
made to order at our
location

mt-~IIJE.~Y I~

TAAT':&gt; ODO ! :&gt;tiE ~~ D ll\~T
yc;p.s:, WP-.:':l OlliZ Dl ~MOI'-&lt;D

29870 Beahan

Thuradaya

(Factory Outlet)

P"

WEC)()II\&lt;',

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On •'

• 8 PM
7:00 AM
- - ... ·

i'

.L-------~~~12·t~MD~1~mo~.~od
.

Advertise i.n
this space for
$100 per
month.
• AD Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 St. Rl. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

""

.,..
0.

lvoc

IJo. + I &gt;nl&lt;.
i &lt;• I vOL
: II

•· ; n~

d.

vour

:1&lt; +o

'Oh

w.

v

I

r

...

-.

•...

•
'
''
'

PEANUTS
~OW

CAN I ASK I-IlM IF f-IE

MISSES ft,E IF 11M ASKIN6
I-IlM IF !olE Ml5SE5 I(OU ?

Dump Truck Delivery

a: Leav~ Mu1age

992 -6142 or
Toll-Free 1-877-604-735!

· Ball Logging &amp;
Firewood
35215 Ball Run Road

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
HEAP Vouchen accepted ror
Mel&amp;• &amp; GaUl• Countiea

Friday, Sept. 29, 2000
Even though you usuall y like
to have a partner in your in volvements, in the year ahead you' II
have better chances for success
when you operate independently
of others.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c t. 23)
Although you r fin ancial picture
may look better today th an it did
yesterday, cont inue 10 be prudent
in all your money dealings , and
· start to amass a surplus. Get a
• jump on life by understanding the
~ inlluences th at' II govem you in
: the year ahead . Send for you r
: Astro-Grap h predictions by mail: ing $2 to Aslro-Graph, c/o this
•. newspaper, P.O . Box 1758. Mur: ray Hill Station, New York, NY
: 10156. Be sure to state your
: Zodiac sign.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Chances are your leadership qual~ itie&lt; and assertive skill s will be
' more accentuated toduy, so now is
· a good time to press forward in
mailers that cou ld advum:e your
se lf-i nteres ts.
SAGITIARI US (Nov. 2~- Dec .
21) Today could be payback time.
· However. in your cnse, lhi•

Advertise -·our business
on this POi• ·tr one month for
:
as low as $25
I
1

Pone
992·21
55
------

3 NT

Easl
Pass
All pass

1

1M 50RR't' .. EVEN IF I(Olii&lt;IAVE

TilE RI61&lt;1T NUMBER, I TI&lt;IINK
'{OU J.IAVE THE WRON6 NUMBER

BY I'HILLIP ALDER
Cicero, a Roman orator and
philosopher, suggested that "no
one is so old as to think he can·
not live one more year."
No bridge player should be so
pessimistic as to 'think he cannot
win one more trick.
Today's deal looks a lot like
yesterday's, yet there is one major
difference. Again you are in three
no-trump. Once more, West leads
the spade queen. How would you
plan the play?
Despite knowing that they have
at most five hearts between them
(South would presumably have
rebid ·one heart with four), North
is still right to jump to three notrump, not to show his club support. Five clubs rates to have little or no play ; three no-trump
mignt be laydown, especially if
South has five good clubs.
Declarer starts with seven top
tricks: two spades, two hearts, one
diamond and two clubs. The other two must come from the club
suit, meaning that declarer needs
to rake in four club tricks .
Perhaps your first react ion is lo
cash dummy 's ace. but thai is
wrong. Eve n if you drop a singleton queen from the West hand,
you cannot run th e whole suit.
The ri ght start, because of dum my 's potentially useful nine. is a
low club from th e dummy.
If Eas t plays low, finesse the
jack, hoping for the best. Here,
th ou·gh, East cont ribu tes the
queen. Win with your king and
cash the jack. When East discards,
continue with a low club to dummy's nine, cash the ace, and
cruise home, regardless of age.
Cicero lived from 106 to 43
BC ; yet how did the Romans
count the years?

·•

in vol ves two unrelated indi vi du als. both of whom wish to do
more for you tha n you did for
th em .

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan.
19) Be optimi sti c concernin g any
dea li ngs or in vo lve men ts you
ha ve today with large organi zati ons or groups. Every thin g
shou ld work out to your ex pectati ons .
AQUA RIUS (.I an 20-Feb . 19)
Trv to deal 10c.Jav onl v with the
perso n who can make an on-thespot decis ion when called for.
Your probabilities fo r success are
greatl y enhanced if you can avoid
intermediaries.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marc h 20) If
you' re a good listener today, you
should be able to take the ideas of
others and reshape them to fit
your situalion and needs. One in
particular could be extremely
helpful to your cause.
ARLES (March 21-A pril 19)
You have excellent chances of
achieving financial support for
one of your favorite projects
today. Devote your lime and ener·
gy to go"ls thut ure tnut~riull y
meuningful.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Once you make a commitment ,
you strive to keep it, regardless of
any tnconvemences you may
encounter. Today. thi s action will
wi n you the respect of your peers.
GEM INI (May 21-June 20)
Be watc hful today for some constructive undercurrent s to begin
stirrin g what could prove to be
beneficial for you where your
career or work is conce.rned. Put
them to good u'e
CANCER (June 21-July 221
An opportu nity th at co ul d be
he lpfu l in establi shin g a better
relat ionship wi th &gt;o meone to
whom you :re attracted may present itself today. Look yo ur best.
LEO (Jul y B -Aug. 221 Saving
money could be first and foremost
on your mind today as yo u opt to
t&lt;1ke on a few do-it-yourse lf pro. jecls involving little things thai
req uire fix ing. You'll do a good
job.
VIRGO (Aug . 23 -Sept. 22)
Keep on lhe bes t of terms with
pals who wield influence in ureas
you don't. Plensum developments
could be in the offing through
people you know socially.

26 Greases

•.

28 Yours and

-

mine

30 Moat like
Santa'a ault
34 Arrow poiiOft
35 Copture
36 Greek lanar ~
38 S.lled
39 Imaginary
40 Elcpreeaod
anger
42 llHarl
plant
44 Ahlld of
ached !Ill
48 Simile
(2 wda.)
•'
50 Neighbor of ~
Fr.
·
52 Gun the
engine
•·
53 Jeckle'o 2nd

can*'

mate

...

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by

.•·

Lula Campos

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created !rom quotations by famous people, peat and
prennt. Each ltner In tha cipher stands lor another.

Today's c/uo: X oquals G

'DF'W

UCJV

DUSCJFOHF

RADRE

NDFM

SVCSAV

RADRE

NDFM

FMY

(SMCFCXJOSMVJ)

FC

FMOH

.

:

FC

WMBFFYJ . '
OAZJVI

VDWVHWFOVIF
PREVIOUS SOLUTION• "I like to write when I feel spiteful: il's like having a
good sneeze. " - O.H. Lawrence

,~~:t:~'

S@ \\c{l lA- L£ r. ~s·

WOlD
IAMI

-------------- 1411o4 ~r CLAY I. POUAN
Aearrange letters of
O four
scrambled words

rhe

be· ~~~­

low to form four simple words.

I

,.

VIMREN

'

MU p H T

I1

~~

People were annoyed al the

t---.-:-,-,-......,.-.,.-i. ~obviousl y new check out cashier.

1_ 1_ 1_ . ~ A no t so smart cutie sighed lhat

_

.

,.

L....-'-..J........IL...L...J ~ she had green ------ her ears .

IG)
-rl---.,1,-,1--i
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BELBIN
1---ri"';''""TI-;"6
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$

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Co,;plete tho chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing words

you develop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
1HE SE SQUARES

I

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTER S
TO GET AN SW ER

To get a current weather
report, check the

Kunono - Yeas t - Swank - Morbid- WORK DAY

Sentinel

Overheard 1n offtce bUJidtng e levator ''I've found that
the best cure for msomnta ts th e mornmg of a WORK
DAY '

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

SEPTEMBER 28

------If§~-------

Mel&amp;• and Gallla Counties
Call

1•

.....-+-+-+--+- +--1

!THURSDAY

S upp1o rt Services

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

949-2033

~

~

.•

Al l TypeS ol' Hu s mcss

WINTER
STORAGE
SPACE
AVAILABLE

CALL FOR MORE
INFORMATION

'

••

"

OFFICE EIPRESS
BUSINESS SERVICES

l140J 667-3224
1-800-828-0212

Oct. I , 2000 ·Apr. I , 2001

''

~ ~

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

74N87-G383

Meigs County
Fairgrounds

-.:

:~

.

DEPOYSAG
PARTS

North

29
3t
32

A missing trick

weedeaters , pick-up and :

delivery

Wesl
Pass
Pass

27

Opening lead: • Q

ch ainsaws . tillers,
generators, snowblowers ,·

••••••••••••••

Coli T &amp; R Logging
after,8:00 prn

CRAFTY,

BLESSIN•

We service mowers,

,_ .

The

I NT

I'LL DO TH'

mechanlcl

connECTion

740·742·801Sor
1-877·353·7022

frto Estimates

Before 6p.m. Leave Message
Aller 6pm· 740-985·4180

1.

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

Soulb

PARSON··YO'RE
JEST IN TIME
FER
SUP

Featuring two Brlggo &amp; •
Stratton trained

COPCRfTE

~

BARNEY

RACINE MOWER CLI,tliC •

Quality Driveways,
Patios, Sidewalks
25 years Experience
FREE ESTIMATES

WANTED

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

' 10-7 Sat 10-6 Sun- Closed

(740) 985-3948

ORA
VACATION ...

1-800-272-5179or446-9800

"Take the pain out
of paintingLet me do it for you"

nh,ln-·~•

••
•

• 7 4 2

• K J 5 Z

·~

17
18
20
21
23
24
25

33

• K 6 2
• A K 3

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yr.. Locnl

:· ....•.....

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�Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

PREP VOLLEYBALL
'

Meip splits tri-match with
Gallaa Academy a Oak Hill

'

I

Thursday, September 28, 2000

Eastem
fn»mPapB1

.

together another I 00-yard rushing g.ome, a feat more noteworthy
than normal, since the senior tailback was playing with a severely
sprained ankle. What Willford
lacked in speed he made up for in
true grit with great seco(\d and
third efforts. Willford carried 15
times for 135 yards and additionally, he rushed for three touch-

ball 17 times for 120 yards to
lead the Eagles. Just the week
before, Eastern went through four
reserve quarterbacks, prompting
an early return for Karr. the talBY ~EW CARTER
ented Eastern star of the game.
iHowns.
OVP SPORTS EDlTOR
been
there
before.
He
Karr
has
.• Junior fullback R.J. Gibbs has
ROCK SPRINGS G allia
been in the pressure cooker and come into his own during this
Academy swept a tri-match
he has survived. With another 2000 campaign, shaking off years
against Meigs and Oak Hill
year under his belt he is poised of play as a lineman by improvWednesday at Meigs High
and versatile, getting good com- ing his speed and agility to
School.
plimentary efforts from backs become a good blocker and rushThe Blue Angels (8-6, SEOAL
Brad Willford, R.J. Gibbs, and er at fullback. Gibbs carried seven
4-4) defeated Oak Hill 15-4 and
Cacy Faulk.
.times for 43 yards and three
15-12, then outlasted the
Holter, Chris lyons, and Jeremy touchdowns.
Marauders in a hard-fought .
Connolly have been excelling as
Sophomore Cacy Faulk also
match, 15-7,8-15, 15-6.
receivers as well, bolstering East- had a good night with eight carMeigs (11-2) opened the
ern's passing attack and loosening ries for 62 yards and a touchevening with a relatively easy vicup opponentis defenses for a down . Brad Parker had a good
tory over Oak Hill, winning 15-2
ntorc prolific running game.
ground game with six carries for
and 15-9.
Scoring ~arly and often last 30 yards.
Margie Bratton dominated net
week, the Eastern Eagles avenged
Trimble (3-2) started the season
play with 14 kills and two blocks.
· a disappointing loss from 1999 st~g with talks of a playoff seaKayte Davis added eight kills.
and continued their crunch on son: A young, gutsy team of one
Corrie Hoover had three and
area opponents with a 57-6 vic- year ago had a yearis experience
Mindy Chancey and Jaynee Davis
tory over the Hannan Wildcats at under its belt and started 2000
added one each. Jaynee Davis had
Hannan High School.
like gangbusters. Then came
one block.
The
Eastern
powerhouse undefeated Portsmouth Notre
Setter Shannon Price recorded
amassed over 250 yards on the Dam,c. who pummeled the Tom13 assists to lead the Meigs attack.
ground and was perfect passing cats 42-7.
Chancey added seven assists
with ,193 more yards in the air.
Then, came Nelsonville- York
against Oak Hill.
Quarterback Garrett Karr again and their "Killer Bee" defense
Meigs was 40-of-43 on serve
showed his versatility with au 7- which pasted the Tomcats 28-7
against the Oaks. Katie Jeffers
11 passing night, and perfect tim- last week.
went 11-for-11 and accounted
ing in running the option.
In the past two games, Trent
for eight points.
Juni or C hris Lyons was 4-for-4 Patton has rushed 19 times for 31
Price was 8-for-9 with six
with 98 yards. R.J. Gibbs caught yards. Kyle Andrews carried 17
points and Chancey was 6-for-7
one for 34 yards, Holter caught times for 46 yards.
with six points. Kayte Davis was
three passes for 51 yards, and
Trimble has compiled 122 and
·•
8-for-8 with five points. Nikki
Connolly caught on.e for sixteen . 134 )'ilrds passing each of the last
Butcher was 5-for-5 with three
HOT HAND - Meigs setter Shannon Price had 18 points and 25 yards.
two w~eks with the accurate arm
points. Hoover went 2-for-3 with assists against Oak Hill and Gallia Academy in last night's tr~match.
Eastern's Brad Willford put of Quarterback Bobby Trace,
one point.
(Andrew Carter photo)
Gallia Academy then took the
floor and swept Oak Hill to set also saw Sarah Russell record play host to Wellston.
Gallia Academy is idle until
up the showdown with the three kills.
next
Tuesday when the Blue
Marauders. The Blue Angels
Bratton Jed Meigs with nine
r
jumped out to a 13-1 lead in the kills and four blocks in the match Angels entertain Warren.
first game, but Meigs rallied to cut with Gallia Academy. Price scored
•'
the gap to 13-7 before Gallia 12 points and had q assists .
. Academy tallied the final points
Kayte Davis had five points,
for the win.
while Jaynee Davis added four
The second game was tightly points and Corrie Hoover
contested, with neither side able chipped in wtih three.
to establish more than a threeHead coach Rick Ash said the
point lead until the Marauders key to the match was serving. His
out-gunned the Angels down the Marauder ballclub missed on 10
stretch to claim the 15-8 win.
service chances.
With Meigs trailing 8-7, senior
Mooney led Gallia Academy
Shannon Price stepped to the ser- with 15 points in the two matchvice line and recorded seven es.Jessica 'Donnally had 13 points.
straight points, including three
Gretchen Craig and Kau
aces, to give the Marauders the Adkins added seven points each.
win.
Haylie Johnson had eight points
Neither side was able to estab- and Sara Burnett recorded five.
lish an advantage in the third Russell had one point.
game until Gallia Academy
Russell had four kills in the
reclaimed the serve with an 8-6 pivotal third game against Meigs.
lead. Jenny Mooney scored seven Meredith Addington had three
consecutive point&lt; to lead the blocks.
Angels to the win. Mooney had
Meigs moves back into TVC
one ace during the span, which play today when the MArauders

who has completed 15 -of-29
passes and 12-of-29 respectively.
Again st Notre Dame. Patton
caught eight passes for 77 yards.
Justin Guinther caught four for
29 yards and Jeff Trace three for
16. Guinther ca ught five passes
for 70 yards at Nelso nville. while
Trace caught five for 5 1 yards.
Coach Phil Faires has seen a lot
of positive coming from the
tough Tomca t defense. which has
held opponents to single digits
except for the Portsmollth Notre
Dame game.
Faires again saw a good effort
defensively in tlw loss to Nelsonville, but admits that the team
must susmin a ground game to
become more effective in the
TVC.
Although Patton has been one
of the main cogs m the Tomcat
success, Eastern wont have to
worry abou t his efforts this week,
since Patton was ejected from last
week's game, forcing a mandatory
one-game suspe nsion.
Statistically. Trimble is penaltyprone. Offensive ~truggles have
been linked to a number of
penalties. As a team, Trimble has
had a total output of 139 yards
and 171 yards.
In contrast, Eastern has had 258
and 4 7 4 total yards, led by several
100-yard games by Willford and a
good running-passing game by
Karr.
Additiona ll y, the Eastern line
has been punishing the oppos ition . Crashmg pads and cracking
helmets have been the norm at an
Eastern game. What the line
doesn't stop the li nebackers handle.

Game time is 7:30p.m.

MORE LOCAL' · WS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscr be today • 992-2156

ill LINCOLN
Mercury i'

Southem
. fn»mPapB1
rushing game, while Richards
added a nine-yard run to a 37yard game. Eric Needs added the
last touchdown on a 20-yard run
as he emerged as th e leading
lancer rusher with 57 yards on
10 carri es.
Coming into this Friday's
game, federal Hocking has experienced some of the same struggles Wahama had experienced
prior to last weckis game. Eran
Branch exploded for 153 yards on
12 carries and Brandon Hankinson had 127 yards on 18 carries.
Wahama had 366 yards overall,
including 343 on the grou nd.
· Southern's offense churned out
225 yards in a credible effort,
gaining 88 yards on the ground
and 13 7 in the air.

Meigs
from Page Bl
red zone.
Me igs is led by the o ne-two
ground attack of Jeremy Roush
and C hris Jeffers. R o ush leads
Meigs w.ith 364 yards in 86 curies , Jeffers has been impressive
from his fullback spot gaming 328
yards in j ust 65 carries.
Sophomore Kyle Hannan has
played well at quarterback completing 26 of 6 1 for 275 yards and
a touchdown .
H annan's favo rite targe t'i are
Adam Bullington and Matt Stewart. Bullinton has 16 catches for

Clearance

Matt Ash led Southern rushers
with 32 yards and caught two
passes for 69 yards arld a .touchdown. Ash's touchdown and Joe
Cornell's earlier rushing touchdown were results of great second
and third efforts.
Joe Cornell rushed nine times
for 54 yards and a touchdown .
Aaron Ohlinger caught one pass
for nine yards and a touchdown,
Brandon Hill carried four times
for 51 yards and Brice Hill had
one ca rry for eight yards.
Southern hopes to get a better
running game going, and additionally hopes to b olster its
defense against the off-tackle and
outside runs.
One thing for sure about Friday's game is that there will a
' R.ichards standmg on the winning sideline.
Hometown fans hope he is
wearing purple.
Game time is 7:30 p.m .

132 yards, Stewart has nine for
120.
M eigs is averaging 242 yards a
games, while the maroon and
gold defense is giving up 198.
Meigs is giving up an average of
just 120 yards on the ground.
Among th ose lead ing the
Marauder defense are Derick
Miller, Bullington , Matt Stewart,
Ross St~wart , Ju stin Gilmore,
Jason Rosler.Jeffers, Billy Soulsby,
Roush, Justin Robson, Kennedy,
Brandon Bobb and Zach Bolin to
name a few. Bolin has two interceptions on the year and Bullingron and Fackler one each .
Kickoff is set for 7 ·30 p.m . Friday at Bob Rob rts Field in
Pomeroy.

...

•

Supplement to:
195
HOURS: MON. - FRI. 9·7: SAT. 9-5
740-446-9800 800-272-5179

The Daily Sentinel
September 28, 2000

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