<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7852" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/7852?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-18T14:51:07+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18265">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/69d4deb0c000ba19527fd40d9ddedf5c.pdf</src>
      <authentication>2490e9e2716f174bbe31f67db47a4dd2</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="25505">
                  <text>.
•

TODAY'S ·SCOREBOARD
.

1

.

.

,.

.

\

•

t

... ·,

... ,. .. -·,t•'

.•. ,.

:

-~

'

•

'~,..

..

-

-

Englortd 2, Clir.ogo 1
frtdoy, lopt. 22
cr.ago e. Now Englllnd o. Chocago wint

_,-3

·~·
...,

AIA--

_.._

Yoril- JorMy (3) vt. Dolloo (e)
Frtdoy, lopt. 15
Now Yori&lt;-Now Jtrsey 2, ilaJas 1, OT
-

DMIIOII &amp;EREll

Chloopn.-

\\WJ II j y, hpt. 20
Now 'lt&gt;rk·Now Jersey 2, Dol'&gt;s 1, Now
Yor\-N.w Jerwy wins - - e-O

~Ool.l

_
- _7,,-0
CNcovo 4, 10 lnrWlga. • WW'Miooll&gt;uooodldlnwwo., Oct. 4

- ( - H ) al Cl1lcago (Slrollca IS·
10), 1:07 p.m. (ESPN)
.

Frtdoy, Ool. t
Ctoago (BaldwVl 14-1) a1 Saam. (Stlo 17·

10), 4:07p.m. (ESPN)

-at

.........,, 001.. 7
Cl1lcago al Saalllo, 4:18p.m. (FOX), H Me:·
ooaary
.
llundoy, Oct. I
Chlcogo, 4:07 p.m. (ESPN) or 8
p.m. (FOX). In«

°CH nd

w. New York

~.Oct.

I

5. Now Yorlc 3, Oao,_. leods

-1-0
W-.adoy,Ool.4
Now Vorl&lt;
1Q-9) at Ooklancl (Appior
' 1~11); 8:1 B p.m. (FOX)

(P-•

0-nd (Hudoon I1Q.II) al Now Vorl&lt; (H•·
nondoz 12-13), l :ot p.m. (NBC)
Sol"'*f, Oct. 7
OolcJond ot Now Yon&lt;, 7:38 p.m. (NBC) 0&lt;
t :07 p.m (ESPN), Hnocouuy (becomea day
W
2-0 after
Sundoy, Oct. I
Now Vorl&lt; II Ookland, 8 p.m. (FOX), Wnec-

two_.,

-Is

_.._

san Fnncl-n. - w.dnes*y, OcL 4
Now 'lbt1l (Hampton 1~10) al San Fr1111Cisco (Hernondu 17·11). 4:07p.m. (ESPN)
Th.-ey, Oct. 5
Now Vorl&lt; (Loilor 1&amp;-8) at San Francisco
!Eat• 1!H), 8:18p.m. (FOX)
Solurd&lt;ow. Oct. 7
San Fronclsc:o (Ortiz 13-12) •a1 Now YQik
~ 11-5), 1:07 p.m. (ESPN) 0&lt; 4:18pm.•
(FOX) or 7:38 p.m. (NBC) (becomea night
H Attntico-Yanlceea " 2-0 aft•
- ; , _ , . . 4:1 8p.m. WA1111otlei-Yankeea
1-t lf'ler 1wO games and White Sox·Marinen is

two

.._,

Sopt. 2Q
Los Angeles 0, Kansas City 0, tie, series tied
1· 1

Tuaodoy,-oct 3
LosAngalea2. Kansas City 1. OT. Los AngeleS leads series 4-1
Frlday,o...e
Los Ang .... at Kensa5 City, 8:30p.m.
Yoril·- Joreay
Chlclogo n. Tueadey, Sept. :re .
Chicago 3, Now Yori&lt;-Now .!«soy 0
Saturday, Sapt. 30
Now York-New Jersey 2, Chicago o. series
tiod 3-3
°
Friday, Clot. t
Now York-Now .ierHy at Chicago. 8 p.m.
Chomplonthlp

Frtdoy, Oct. t

ooaary

F~doy,

"ry (8 p.m. H Glonto-Motl

"""Alftlotica.Yonl&lt;- . . _ ,

Ooidond

SemtfiNIII Round
KenNa CHy vo. U&gt;o Angelea

Sundoy, Ool. t

San Francisco at New Yortc, 4:07 p.m.
(ESPN) or 8 p.m. (FOX), W nec....ry
(bocomea night game H Alhlellcs- Yankeea IS

_,

M~,Oc:La

~- York It San Francisco, 8:1 B p.m.

(FOX), H - . . r y

SL Louie va. Atlantl
~.Ool.3

St. Loult 7, Allanta 5, St. Louis leads sorles
1-0
Thundly, Oct. 5

Atlanta (Giavint 21·i) st St. Louis (Kilo 20·
II), 4:07 p.m. (ESPN)
hlurclay, Oct. 7
St. Louis (Stophenson 18·9, An.Benes 12-9
or Hantgen 1~12) at Atlanta (Ashby 12· 13),
1:07 p.m. IESPN) or 4:18 p.m. (FOX) (becomas
4:18 p.m. It AtNe!ics Yankees is 2-o after two
games and White SOx-Mariners il sweep)
Sunday, OCt. 8
51. Louis at Arlanta, 1:07 p.!'fl. (ESPN), if
necessary (becomes night game tf all other
. - ... over)
~.Oc:t.e

Atlanta at St. Louis, 4:07 p.m. (ESPN) or
8:18 p.m. (FOX), H necassary (l&gt;ecomes nigh!
WGianta·Melo ia ovor)
~Uf.

CHAMPIONSHIP lf.Rif.S
Amorl ..n Leaslua

(NBC)

Tuaoday, OCt. 10
Oek-·Now York llrinner al Chicago OR
S:aanle 8'1 Oekland·NM York winner, 8:15 p.m.
Wodnooday, OCt. 11
·
Oakland..New York wfnner at Chicago OR
Seattle at Oakland·New York winner, 4:15 p.m.
'
F~,Oc:t.13
Cl'icago at ' Oakland-New York winner OR
oakland·'New York; winner at Seanla, 8:15p.m.
IIMul'llay, Ool. 14
Chica{jo ot OaklSnd·New York llrinn. OR
Oakfand-New Vonc winner at Seanla, 8:15p.m.
,
. Sunday, OCt. 15
Chica{jo at oakland-Now York winner OR
oakland-New YOfk winner at Seattle, 4:15p.m.,
fnoc:eosary
Tuaoday, Oct. 17
Qakland-Naw Yortc wiMer a1 Chicago OA
seattle at Oakland·New York. winner, !:15 p.m.,
Wnec-aary
-nooday. Ool. 11
Oakland-New York winner a1 Chicago OA
Seanle at Oakland-New York winner, 8:15p.m.,
if necessary
·
NMion~~ILMgue

(FOX)
-neoday, Oct. 11
St. Loult-AUanta winner 111 San Francisco
OR New Von&lt; 81 Atlanta-51. Louis winMl', 8:1 e
p.m.
Thurodo~O... 12
St LOuii-AHanta winner a1 San Francisco
OR New York 111: AUanta-SI. Louis winner. 8:1 B
p.m.
IIMurday, Ool. 14
San Franclsoo at St. Louis-AHanta winner
OR Sl. Louii·AUanta wii'Vl8f at New York, 4:18

s ...~~ay. OCt. u

al WOshlngton, D.C., 1:30 p.m.

(Note: Three points for a win and one point
for a tie. The winner in the quar1er and semifinals will be the first team to reach or 8)Cceed
flve points. The third game of a series will be
docklld by penally ki&lt;:ks ij eoeh game hos ·
en6ed in a tie Of if the series is 1·1-1.)

! PREP F&amp;iaaau,

1

OHSAA Prep Football Computar Rat·
lnga
WHk3
COLUMBU.S. Ohio (AP) -

Here are the

third weekly football computer ratings from
the Ohio Htgh School Athletic Asso ci ation.
Ratings are by division and region with
record and average bl·level points per
game (top eight teams in each region
advance to regional quarterfinals}:
DIVISION I
Reg ion 1-1. Solon (6·0) 17.2666. 2.
Cleve. St. Ignatius (8-0) 15.2086. 3. Shak·
er Hts. (6·0) 13.9466. 4 . Strongsville (5·1)
12.5270. 5. Lakewood St. Edward (5-1)
12 .• 290. 6 . Painesville Riverside (5 · 1)
H.74HI. 7 . Lakewood (5-1) 11.1463. B.
Clave. Glenville (S-1} 10.6560. 9 . E. Cleve.
Shaw (4-2) 9 . 7666. t 0. Middleburg HIS.
Midpark (3·3) 8 .1166.
Region 2-1. Mass. Perry (6-0)
18.8000 . 2. Mass . Washington (5-1)
15.0676 . 3. Cant GlenOak (6·0) 13.0908.
4. Marion Harding (5·1) 12.1666. 5 .
Wadsworth (6-0) 11.7833. 6. Mansfield (5·
t} 11 .5500 . 7. Mass . Jackson (5-t)
11.1500. 8 . N. Canton Hoover (4·2)
9.5166. 9. Fremont Ross (4-2) 9.4666 . 10.
Tol. Whitmer (3-3) 8.6166.
Region
3-1.
Picke rington
{6·0) '
t5.1166. 2. Troy (6·01 14.0500. 3. Upper
Arlington (6·0) 12.9500. 4. Logan (6·0)
12.5000. 5. Hilliard Davidson (5·1)
11.8333. 6. Miamisburg (4·2) 10.9833. 7.
Gahanna Lincoln (4·2) 10.8668. 8. Westerville South (4-2) 10.4500. 9. Worthington
Kilbourne (4·2) 9.1666. 10. Dublin Coffman (3·3) 7 .8666.
Region ·4-1. Cin. Moeller (6·0}
17.2476. 2. Cin . Elder {4-1) 13.8020 . 3.
Lebanon (6-0) 12.6666. 4. Cin. Colerain
(8-0} 11.7570. 5. Harrison (S-1) 11.5000.
e. Cin. Anderson (5· 1) H .4500 . 7. Xenia
(4·2) 11.2240. B. Cin. weatern Hills (5·1)
9.6990. 9 . MHtord (3·3) 9.. 418G. 10. Fairllold (4·21 9.4000.
OIVISION II
Region 5-1. Olmsted Falls (6-0)
14.3668. 2. Avon Lake (6-0) 13.8500. 3.
Amherst St~ele (6·0) 12.3833. 4. Niles
McKinley {6·0) 12.2666. 5. Young. Chaney
(6 -0)
11 .6333.
6. Broadview Hts .
Brecksville (5·1) 11 .3 166. 7. Berea (4-2)
10.2166. B. ' Chardon (4-2) 9.9230 . 9 .
Uniontown Lake (4-2) 9.6166. 10. Mayfield
(5·11 9.5000.
Region 6~1. Tol. Rogers (5·1) 13.7000.
2. Tiffin Columbian (6-0) 12.2833. 3. Syl vania Southview {5-1) 12.2666. 4. To I.
OeSales (4·2) 11.3666. 5 . Green (4-2)
11 .3500. 6. Akron Buchtel {5-1) 11 .0630. 7.
Bowling Green (5-1) 10.8833. B. Defiance
(6-0J 1o.5ooo . 9 . Holland Springfield (5-t) ·
7.51138. 10, Perrysburg (4-2) 7 ..2833 .
Region 7-1 . Spring· South (5·1)
13.0e66 . 2. Marysville (6·0) 12.3833. 3.
Cola. Brookhaven (5-1) 11 .4333. 4. Cols.
De Sales (5 -1) 11 0650. s. Cols. Beech croft
(6·0)11.0166. 6. Cols. Independence (5·1 )
8. 16B3. 7 . Dover (3-3) 7.716B. B. New
Carlisle Tecumseh (3-3) 7.1500. 9. Wash .
CH Miami Trace (4-2) 6.7166. 10. Lewis
Center Olentangy (3·3) 6.2833.
Region 8-1. Piqua (5-1) 13.6713. 2.
Cin. McNicholas (5- t) 13 .6333. 3, Cin.
Glen Este (4·2) 11.8166. 4. Tre nton Edgewood (5-1) 1 t .6000. 5. Vandalia Butler (5·
1) 10 6333 . 6. St. Bernard Roger Bacon
(4·2) 10.0326. ?. O~etord Talawanda (4·2)

8.71118. I. Cln. Turpin (3-3) 7.&amp;833 . a.
Colin. (4·21 7.3833. 10. SPflngboro (4·21
7.1188.
DIVISION Ill
Region 9-1. Hubbard (4·1) t0.96QO. 2.
Aleron Hoban (5·1) 10.8168. 3. Mentor
Lako Coth. (4·21 1.5323. 4. Coploy (5-1)
8.2188. 5. Modlna Highland (5·1) 7.Q333 .
8. Mantua Crtltwood {4·2) 7.4333. 7. Chagrin Folia Konaton (3·3) 8.1000. 8 . Conland Lak...,lew (3·3) 8 .• 653. 9. FaiNiew
Park Fairview (3·3) 1.2886. 10. Painesville
Harvey (3·3) 5.1333.
Region 10.:....t.·Sunbury Big Walnut (8-0)
11.8168. 2. Cots. wanerscn (5·1) 10.9796.
3 . Van Wert (4·2) 10.8866. 4. OtiBWI·
Glandorf (5·1) 9.9668. 5. Fostoria (4·2)
a.0333. 6. Bryan (5·11 8.9 500. 7. Oak liar·
bor (4·21 7.0688. 8. Hebron Lakewood (4·
21 8 . 7500. 9 . St Marys Memorial (4·2)
6.5168. 10. Willard (3· 3) fl ..a333 .
Region 11-1. Louisville (5-1) 13.1188.
2 . Lisbon Beaver (fl-O) 11.8500. 3 .
McConnelsville Morgan (8·0) 11 .8333. 4.
Orrville (5·11 11.3888. 5. Cant Cont. Cath.
(5·1) 11.0723. 6. Beloi.\ Wast Branch (4·2)
10.2666. 7. Wlntersvlllllndlan Creek (5-1)
9.8833. 8. c,_n t South (5·1 1 9.6333. 9.
Lexington (4·2) 9.1333. 10. Canfield (4·2)
8.7833.
Region
12-1. Portsmouth (6-D)
13.3380. 2. Day. Chamlnede-Jullenne (51) 12.0333. 3. Jackson (t-0) 11.0668. 4 .
Ham . Ross (4-2) 10.4833: 5. Cin. Purcell
Marian (4·2) 8.!5070. 6. New Richmond {8·
0) 9.2833. 7. Ashville Teayo Valley (4·2)
8.6166. 8. Eaton (4·2) 8 .5833 . 9. Spring.
Shawnee (4·21 6.5333. 10. Clan. Gallla
Acad. (5·1) 8.4 193.
'
DIVISION IV
Aegion 13-1. Young . Ursuline (6-0)
12.3230 . 2 . Wickliffe (5·1) 11.6500 .. 3.
Clove. VA-St. Joseph (6·01 11.4288. 4.
Chagrin Falls (8-0) 10.2 166. 5. Aleron Manchester (5·1) 8 .8646. 6 . Zoarville Tusc.
Valley (4-2) 8.7000. 7. Gnad. Indian Valley
(5·1) 7.5500. 8. Perry (4·2) 7.3500 . 9.
Aurora (.a-2) 7.2333. 10. Louisville Aquinas
(5·1)- 6.9833.
Region 14-1. Sandusky Perkins (8·0)
9.9666. 2. Wellington (8·0) 9.8880. 3. Bellville Clear Fork (4-2) 9.5666. 4. Tontogany
Olaego (5·11 9. t 000. 5 . Konlon (3·3)
8.6833. e. Castalia Margaratta (5·1)
6.3168 . 7. Coldwater (5·1) 8.2833 . 8 .
Huron (4·21 7. 7333. 9. Millbury Lake (4·21
7.2333. 10. Ontario (4·2) 6.8666,
R4tgion 15-1 . Newark Ucking Valley (60) 13.0500. 2. CoshOcton (6·0) 11.3500. 3.
tronlon (5·11 10.8666. 4. Bellaire (4·2)
9.1000. 5 . Utica (5·1) 9.0000 . 6 .
Lou donville (4-1) 8 .3590 . 7. Carroll Bloom Carroll (•·2} 8.9833. 8. Canal Winchester
(4·2) 6.9166. 9. Well.ston (3·31 6.3733 . 10.
Martins Forry (4-2) 6.2333.
Region 16- 1. German1own Valley View
(6·01 11.4500. 2. Cin. Wyoming (5·11
11.2000'.' 3 . Blanchester (8·0) 9.1500. 4.
Cln. Indian Hill (5·1) 9.0000.·5. Mlnlord (4 ·
2) 7.8833. 6. Portsmouth West (4-2)
7.4666 . 7. Cin. Finneytown (4·2) 6.8833. 8 .
Scioto Northwest (4·2) 6 .1 333. 9 . Ham .
.Badin {2·4) 5.9743. 10. Wheelersburg (2·
4) 5.5576.
DIVISION V
Region 17-1. New Middletown Springfield (6·0) 11.6343. 2. Mass. Tuslaw (6·0)
11 .4666. 3. Bedlord Chanol(5·1)10.0246.
4. Independence (5 - 1) 8 .6333. s. Windham
(5 -t) 7.4233 . 6. ~ate.s . Mills Hawken (5-1)
7.3333 . 7. Columbiana Cres1VIew (4·2)
6. 7016. 8 . Orwell Grand Valley (5 - 1)
5.8000. 9. N . LimaS. Range (4·1 ) 5.5400.
10. Atwater Waterloo (4-2) 5. 1000.
Region 18-1 . Liberty Ctr. (6·0)
10.9166 . 2. Bluffton (6 -0) 9 .3000. 3. Crestline (5-1) 8.7500. 4. Morral Ridgedale (8 ·0)
8.6868. 5. Marion Pleasant (5-t) 8 .3000.
6 . Rockforc Parkway {5·1) 8.1333. 7 . S1.
Henry (5·1) 7. 7500. 8. Sycamore Mohawk
(5·1) 7.8600. 9. Metamora Evergreen (4·2)
7.0333. 10. Delphos ·Jefferson (5·1)
6.8333 .
~
Region 19- 1. Amanda -Ciearcreek {5·1)
10.8886. 2. Ashland Ciestvlew (6·0)
9.6833. 3. Hemlock Miller (8·01 S.S643 .. 4.
Beverly Ft. Frye (6-0) 8.6833 . 5. Newcomerstown (5 · 1) 8 .0000. 6. Johnstown Northridge (S - 1} 6.8833. 7. Barnesville (4· 2)
6.3000. 8. Sarahsville Shenandoah (6· 0)
5.8333. 9 Smithville (5·1)5.3533 . 10. Nel·
sonville-York (4-2) 4 .8833 .
Region 20-1. Gahanna Cols . Acad . (6 0) 11 .3500 . 2. Colo. Roady (5·0)9.9720 . 3 .
Brookville (5- 1) B. 1833. 4. (tie) Bainbridge
Pamt Valley (5-1). Richmondale SE (5- 1)
7.6166. 6. Reading (4-2) 7.5803. 7. Sidney
Lehman (4·2) 7.1333. 8 . ChilL Huntington
(4-2) 6 .9500 . 9. Spring Northeastern (4·2)
6 .6500. 10. Milford Ctr. Fairbanks (5·1)
6.4 166 ..
DIVISION VI
Aegion 21-1. Mogadore (6-0) 14 .3666 .
2. McDonald (5-1) 10.4720. 3. Cleve.
Cuya. Hts. (6-0) 8.9283. 4. Gibsonburg (5·
1) 6.95001• 5. Norwalk St. Paul (6 -0)
6.6166 . 6. East Canton (5·1) 6.4333. 7.
Tiffin Calvert (4·2) B.4166. 8. Monroeville
(5 · 1) 5.6333. 9. Cleve. Hts. Lutheran E. (5·
1) 4.949 3. 10 . Lowellville (5-1) 4.6966 .
.. Region 22-1. Delphos St. John's (6·0)
10.6336. 2. Carey (6·0) 9.0000. 3. Arling t011 (5·1) 7.1333. 4. (lie) McComb (6·0)
Pandora -Gilboa (5-1) 7.1000. 6. Def:
Ayersville (4 ·2) 6.8500. 7. Columbus
Grove (5·1) 8 .7500 . 6 . Antwerp (5 · 1)

e.

on high
.Stop ln today!!

Volume 51. Number

. NttiOnll Bllketball AIHCIIetlon

""
••
•

Sunday, Oct.15
San Francisco It St. Louis-Atlanta winner

Monday, OCt. It
san Fmndsco at 51. Louis-Atlanta wtnner
OA St. Louii--Atlama winner at New York, 8:18
p.m., Wneceaaary
·
Wedn..ay, Oat. 11
St. l.Oui&amp;-AIIanra winner at san Francisco
OR New VOI1I: at Atlanta-St Louis winner, 4:18
p.m.. H necasaary
Thuroday, Ool. 19
Sl. Louis-Atlanta winner a1 San Francisco
OR&gt; New YOO at Atlanta-St. Louis winner, 8:18
p.m .. H neceaaary

.,e

V-6 enolnt, auto trans, air condltlonlnQ
power windows, pwr door lock, cruise, tilt
&amp;more.

L

Playoff Qllnee
QuortorflnaFRound
(BMdlna In paronth-•1
Colonodo (I) ••· KonNo Chy (1)
Saturday, Stpt. 1e
Kanaas City 1, Colorado o
Wodneaday, Sopt. 20
KanNI City 0, COlorado a, lie
Sunday, Sopt. 24
KanNt City 3, Colorado 2, Kansas City wins

••tet7-1.

.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

Moon roof, power ~lndows, power lock,
power seat, cruise, tilt, alloy wheels

..
.

Los Angeles 5, Tampa

wins senu e..o

Bay 2. Los Angates

Enaland (7) vo. Chlces~o (21
Frldoy, Sopt. 15
Cllago 2. New England t
TuMday, Sapt. ta
-

class on acrylic painting.
MIDDLEPORT -You say
StudeniS begin the course by
you can't draw · a straight line? learning how to draw the basic
You should talk to Carol Tan- shapes: cones, &lt;:ubes, and circles.
nehill.
And, as Tannehill notes, those
The Middleport woman ts are the important things,
once
agam
because everyteaching a class
thing
in
a
about
basic
drawing takes
Like anyone with a
·drawing at the
one of these
special talent, Carol
:R:iverbend
basic shapes.
Tannehill makes drawing
·Arts CounciL
From
Because
seem easy, btU-/Ier · the basics, stuthe class is
dents begin to
approach is easy ~o small with
examine how
light and fun. It's the
only five stu light afFects the ·
jim of draavi ng tltat
'dents - Tanappearance of
I
nehill can give
objects where
Tannehill emphasizes
close pers onal
th ey are, ·and
in her class, and that
attention
to
' take pencil to
her students, makes the class fim, too.
paper to ·simand share her
:~•· ..,.., ply~%.,..Wh~J
·
they see.
·
.U.oish · into
lighting, p e rspective and · the
Like anyone with a spedil
other elemeniS of drawing.
talent, Carol Tannehill makes
Tannehill teaches the · class drawing · seem easy, but her
about once a year, according to approach is easy too -light and
Arts Council board me mber fun. It's the fun of drawing th,a.t
ART CLASS- Carol Tannehill has begun teaching another drawing class at the Riverbend Arts Council
Mary Wise. After the four-week Tannehill e mphasizes in 1-((;t,
building in Middleport. Students who master the basic s kills of drawing under Tannehill's eye can
course is completed, Tannehill class, and that makes the cl~
advance to an acrylic painting class. which will follow late r this year. (Brian J. Reed photo)
will begin teaching an advanced fun, too.

&lt;--·

'•

Auto trans, A/C, power windows, power locks,
'It
tilt, cruise, cassette
,,

•

I

l'

'

Meigs .will crown queen frid~y
2QOO MERCURY MYSTIQUE GS

.

LOADED!

'

740 446-5225

, Holzer Clinic •.••• Keeping the Promise!
rww.holt.erc/inic.com

Air condition, AM/FM C.D. Alloy wheels

&amp;~)CHARLENE

HOEFliCH

SENliNEL NEWS STAFF

Auto trans, air condition

Auto trans, A/C, power windows,
power door lock, power seat, cruise, tilt

mal could be seen occasionally
running to a door that was hanging on what used to be the building's second floor.
Officials at first deemed the
structure too unstable to attempt

a rescue, but inspiration came

Please see Bu11dlnl- Pqe AJ

CONTEST

THE CANDIDATES - Meigs High School's 2000 homecoming queen
will be selected from these candidates, from left, Cara Ash, Andrea
Krawsczyn, Shannon Price, Tiffany Quails and Bethany McMillin.
(Charlene Hoeflich photo )

FROM STAFF REPORTS

.·stephen L. Wilson, MD, FACS completed his Surgical
Residency at Indiana University. He is Board Certified by
the American Board of Surgery. Dt. Wilson is now
Accepting·new patients in General Surgery
at Holzer Clinic, to schedule an appointment call

home .
"I was worried about the people upstairs and the people on the
other side. I didn't know if they
were there or not."
Luckily, the only other living
thing in the building was Sissy,
but the animal was trapped in a
second-floor apartment. The ani-

...

POMEROY - Candi dates for the 2000 Meigs
High School 11!5mecoming queen were announced
today.
.
.
The queen will be crowned Fndaym the 6:30
p.m. pre-game festtvltlcs at Bob Roberts Ftdd
before the Meigs Marauders and Nelsonvtlle- York
Buckeyes take to the fie ld .
The candidates are Cara Ash, Andrea Kraws czyn ,
.
.
Shannon Prt ce, Ttffany Qualls and Beth:tny
McMtlhn. . . .
.
.
,
Spec1al acttvltles leadtng up to Fnday s game have
. O M d . d _
taken place all wee k at Metgs. n 1 on ay. stu ents
"d
l
d
h
h
h · h
0 bserve team ogo ay w ere t ey wore t etr ats
·
, 1
.,., d
.
·1 1 · ,
an d sh uts wtt 1 t 1e1r lavonte teams ogo; 'ucs ay
·
·
st
was cow b oy d ay Wl th stu d en t s m we ern .1. ttl·re·•
Wednesday was costume day, today was hippie day;
and Friday the traditional maroon and gold day.
'
The traditional
night-be fore - thecga me pep rally
to be held tonight h;!s undergone some changes. In .
past years, a parade has moved through Rutland,
Middleport and Pom eroy followed by a bonfire near

Beegle files as candidate

U&gt;o Ana-lea (5) vo. Tompo Boy (4)
Th ......y. Sapt.14
Loo Ano- 1. Ta..,. say o
W - y . Sapt. 20

cloud of dust. You couldn't see
nothing," he said.
Tenant May Graves was inside
the roughly 150-year-old building when the walls started falling.
"There was a ·big . boom,"
Graves said, sitting in the shade at

the corner of Third and Court
Street. "Then there was a lot 9f
smoke, and the back caved in .'
" I jumped ofF the couch and
ran to see what was happening,
and a man yelled at m e and said,
'Get out of-there right now.' "
Graves 1nade it out, but she didn't know if her neighbors were

starts in Middleport

NL ot AL, 8 p.m. EST, Wneceosary

Mljar Lngue Soccer

"It ·was like an earthquake.
R:ight after it fell; th~re was a

:~paintin-g class

Iunday, OCt. 2Q

•

so t c nh

"'-to·,\

WORLD SERIES
(fOX)
IIMurday, OCt. 21
National League at American League, B p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 22
NL etAL, 8 p.m.
Tueodey, Oct. 24
AL at NL. 8:18p.m.
Wodn-..tay, Clot. 25
ALII NL. 8:18p.m.
Thuroday, Clot. 28
Alat NL. 8:18p.m., i1 necessary
Saturday,Ool.21
NL a1 AL. 8 p.m., if necessary

'

Barber Shop, contained three
.. : .GALLIPOLIS- Sissy the Dog apartmeniS with eight tenaniS .
"(The collapse) shook you,"
ls:safe today, but the same cannot
said for the building she for- · said Rob Saunders, who owns
Robbie's Billiards and Games. tie
.iterly occupied.
: •The three-story dwelling at 258 and Jamie Hill were outside
:Third Ave., Gallipolis; 'collapsed painting th e facility when the
"a6out 3 p.m. Tuesday. The build- building across the street col.
ing, which once housed CofFee's lapsed.
FROM STAFF REPORTS

Holzer Clln,ic

OR St. L.oUs-AIIanta winner at New York, 8

p.m.

r

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

3rd Ave.,building mmes down after collapse·

!

j:~:~~~~~:~~~~~~~~h~~

n

..

Hometown Newspaper

Meigs County's

I

ATLANTA HAWKs..-Signecl F PolO Chll·
cun, &lt;.l Michael Hawkins, G Matt Maloney,
F Anthony Miller, G Larry Robinson and F
Jaton Sa11er,
NEW JERSEY NETS-Signed 'G Kevin
Ollie.
NEW YORK KNICKs..-Signtd F Poto
Mlckaal, G Lavor Postell, G John Celtstand, C Felton Spencer. F Stephen
Howard and C Jonathan Kerner.
CHARLOTTE HORNETS- Signed G
Caswell Cyrus.
FOOTBALL
NltiOftll Football LIIQUI
CLEVELAND BROWNS.,.Piacod RB
Erric1 Rhett on injured reserve.
GREEN BAY P,ACKERS-Rt·llgned DB
Jason Moore to the practice squad .
Waived TE Adam Newman . Placed LB
Chris Gizzi' on waivers.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS-Signed RB
Paul Shields . Waived WR Joey Kent.
S!gn.ed OL Tim Ridder to the practlca
squad .
JACKSONVILLE JAClUARS-Roleaaod
TE Greg Delong.
MINNESOTA VIKINGs..-Signod DE Roy
Barker. Placed DE Michael Bolraau on
injured reserve.
NEW YORK GIANTS-Placed CB Ralph
Brown on injured resaNe. Re-signed LB
Kevin Lewis.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS-Released
WR Mikhaet Ricks.
HOCKEY
Natlonel Hockey Leegue
ATLANTA THRASHERS-Signed F
Darcy Hord ichuk. Raasigned G Scot1
Langkow to Orlando of the IHL. Placed 0.
Adam Burt, LW Hnat Oomenlchelll, D Gord
Murphy, D Rumun Ndur and C Patrlk Stefan on injured reseNe.
•
BOSTON BRUINS-Signed Cl Polar
Skudra to a one -year contract and LW Ivan
Huml to a three-year contract. Returned
Humt to Val O'Or of the QMJHL.
CALGARY
FLAMES-Claimed
F
Dwayne Hay off waivers from Tampa Bay.
CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS-Asalgned F
Blair Atcheynum, F Mark Bell. F Chris Herpurger. D Doug Zmolak, 0 Nolan Baumgartner and 0 Chris McAlpine to Norfolk of
the AHL. Released F Kris King.
DETR01T REO WINClS-Piacod C
Steve Vz.erman on lnlured reaerve.
Assigned 0 Todd Gill and ~Jasen Williams
to Cincinnati ot the AHL and G Ken
Wregget to Manitoba of the IHL. .
MONTREAL CANAOIENS-Signod G
Jose Theodore to a two-year contract.
Assigned D Barry Richter, 0 Miloslav
Guren, F Jason Ward aM F Matt Higgens
to Quebec of the AHL.
·
·
NEW YORK RANGERS-Assigned F
Derek Armstrong, F Manny Malhotra, F
Jeff Ulmer and G Jean-Francais Labbe 10
Hanford of the AHL; F Pavel Brandl to Cal·
gary of the WHL; and F Jamie Lundmark to
Moose Jaw of the WHL
PHILADELPHIA FLYERS-Assigned G
Roman Cechmanek to Philadelphia of tha
AHL
PITTSBURGH PENClUINS- Signad G
Garth Snow to the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton
Penguins of the AHL for a 25-game tryout
SAN JOSE SHAR,.;S-Aulgnod G
Johan Hedberg to Manitoba of the IHL.
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING- Assigned G
Dieter Kochan to Detroit of the IHL. Placed
D Paul Mara. D Petr Svoboda, D Bryan
Muir, D Sergey Gusev, D And rat Zyuzln, C
Steve Martins and LW Jaroslav Svejkovtky
on injured reserve.
VANCOUVER CANUCKS-Aasigned 0
Bryan Helmer to Kar1sas City of the IHL.
WASHINGTON CAPITALS-Signed 0
Sergei G,onchar to a 1our-year contract .

October 5, 2000

prices!

i

theKANSAS
contract of
coach,. will not be
MINNESOTA TWINs-Agreed lo a on•
year conlract extentlon through 2001 wld't
manager Tom Kelly.
TORONTO BLUE JAY5-Cialmod RHP
John Sneed off waivers from Philadelphia.
Qealgnated OF Marty cordova for &amp;llign ment.
BASKETBALL

Thursday

••

General Surgeon Joins

p.m.

PRO SOCCER

Details, A3

Blowin' the

8.481111. e. Oregon Strl1ch (4·2)1 .• 333 . 10.
Sponce,.lllo (5·11 8 .0833.
RasJion 23-1 . Ports. Notre Dame (0.0)
12.2673. 2. Shodyaldo (5·1) 8 .HII8. 3.
Newark Cath. (4·2) 7 .3ee&amp;. 4. Toronto (I·
01 7.ouo. 5. eaanavmo (5·11 11. 7833.
Rtadovlllo Eullrn (5·1) 8.5528. 7 .
Oonvlllo (4·2) 5 .4111~ . 8. Leolonla (3·11
5.2250. 8. Malvorn C4-2) 5.2118. 10.
Wellovllle (4-2) 5.0000.
Region 24-1 . Moria Sloln Marion Local
(8·0) 11.5188. 2. Covington (1·0) a.SOOjl.
3. Ansonia (5·1) 7.8188. 4. Codarvlllo (5·)j
7.3500. 5. Cin. Summit Country Oay (5-I
6.7850 . 6 . Anna (4·2) 6.4333. 7. Tlpp
Bothol (4·21 5.4000. 8. SPflny. Calh. Co .
(3·3) 4.4500. 9. Williamsburg (3·3) 4.38 .
10. DeGraff Rlvorsldo (4·2• 4.3023 .

Local society news and notes, ~s
Local football previews~ OVP ten, Bl.

· 1huncley
Hlp: 60s; Low: 401

Wednesday, October 4, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ing Course at Hocking College.
RACINE - Robert E. Beegle His training certificate was issued
of Racine has filed with the on Sept. 11.
Meigs County Board of Elections
Beegle began as a deputy under
as a write-in former Sheriff Rob ert C. Harten candidate fqr bach, and continued working
sherifF.
under Sheriffs Jame s J Protlitt and
Beegle's peri- Jam es M. Soulsby as chief deputy.
a
tion
a.s
"I have a high regard for the
Republican
office of sherifF and its place and
candidate was importance in the community,"
rejected prior Beegle said. "! am interested in
to the March Meig; County. It 's my home."
folprttnary
Beegle is a member of the
Rotary
Robert Beegle lowing
a Middleport-Pomeroy
protest, because Club, a member and Past Master
he dtd not have a certificate of of the Racine Masonic Lodge,
training from the Ohio Peace and a' member of Sacred Heart .
Officers Training Commission.
Catholic Church.
Beegle, who \VOrkcd os a fullHe served for 14 years on the
time deputy for more than 31
Meigs County l3oard of Health
yt!ars, spt"nt the summer at the
Ohio Peace Officer Basic Train-

Please see B~gle, Page AJ

..

. the tield.

'
Tonight, the rally will take at Metg; High Schoo l
following a parade which will form at the county
garage at 6 p.m. and then niove to the high &gt;Chool,
· where a cookout and party will be held from 7-8:30
p.m. The rally and bonfire will be at H:30 p.m.
"All friend&lt; ofMeill' Local are invited to attend,"
said Principal Dennis Eichinger, who explained the
change as a matter of student sa fety, citing incidents
•
.
o 1 prev10us years.
"We ~on't want people to feel w~'re taking anything away; we're JUSI changing the location and
dd
.
c
.. h . ·d
a ressmg t 11c sa1ety mue, e s::.1 .
· d
.
· b ·
A1·so t 1m year. .t 11e 1wmecommg ance S1s ('tng
changed from Fnday after the game to attm1ay
·
.
.
I
from 9 p.m. to nmlmght at the htgh schoo
.
_.
For couples who want to have rh~lf ptcture&lt;
taken, a photographer wtll be there at Bp.m . .
E.Jc' Iunget
·
· '"'·J t he c11ange tn t h'' mg•h t ot 1he
dance was made because by the nme the game was
over and stude111S prepared for the dance, tt wa&lt; half
over.
c

Local
photos
sought
Daily Sentinel
seeks art
·for calendar
POMEROY - The Daily
Sentinel is looking for the
dozen best photos of M eigs
County people, pla ces or
evento. -to be placed in a special 2001 calendar.
All amateur photographers, 18 or over, are invited
to submit their best photos.
Twelve picture&lt; will be chosen, one repre senting t"ach
month, to be used for the ca lendar, which will . be in&lt;erted
in the SentineL
Photographers will have
their photo di&lt;playcd under
the chosen monrb, a&lt; well as
rheir name ~nd town .
For exampl&lt;. January's calendar photo might be of chi I-'
dren sleddmg; August 's might
be a scene from the Mci~,'S
County Fair; and December'S
niight be of a lo ca l tarm blan keted with snow.
R.unners-up will alSo be
chosen for each month and
will be publi&lt;hed in the rq;ular new&lt;paper.
To submit photographs,
write your name, address and
phone munber on the back of
the photo and send it to The
Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy. Ohio +5769. All
entri ·e s must bl.:'" received no
later th an -+ p.m . on' Nov. I ll.
For ptl\cial rule&lt;, watch tin
an advcrtis~mcnt in The Daily
SentineL

SHS ·Homecoming Court

Toclay's

Sentinel
Sections-

I&amp; Pages

1

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS

BH
B7
A4

A3

Bl-3,5.8
A3

Lotteries
6mo
Pick 3: 3-6-9; Pick 4: .'1-2-1)-9
~YA.

Daily 3: 9-2-0 Daily 4: 9-5-2-1,

SHS HOMECOMING COURT - Southern High School's
coming Court was introduced during halftime at last Friday's hOmecoming game against Federal Hocking. The girls are shown with their escorts.
at left. They are, from left, Freshman Attendant Stephanie Bradford with
Ty Hill; Sophomore Attendant Rachel Chapman with Curt Crouch; Junior
Attendant lindsey Smith with Macy Rees; Queen Cam'Jidate Mia Bass
with Mathew Neigler; Homecoming Queen Kenda Smith with Joey Sands;
Queen Candidate Courtney Hill witfl Garrett Kiser; Queen Candidate
Macyn Ervin with Chad Hubbard, an/J Queen Candidate Emily Stivers with
Michael BaiL Also shown are crown bearers Adam Pape and Shelby Pickens. front (Photos courtesy of Image Gallery Photos)

. Kenda Smith
SHS HOMECOMING QUEEN
Kenda Smith, daughter of Ter.ry
Smith and Becky Dudding, was
named · 2000 Southern home
coming queen in halftime ceremoni~s at Southern High School
Friday night.

'

�1

•
BUCKEYE BR-IEFS
Recal effort fails
YELLOW SPRINGS (AP)
- Two members of the village
council have retained their seats
after a recall effort fell short.
Council President Stephanie
Slowinski received BOO votes
Tuesday agam" her removal
from council md 732 in favor of
it, according to the Greene
County' Board of Electwns.
Council member Trudy Abrams
receiv~d

790 votes agatnst 11 her
· removal and 739 for it.
In August, the Concerned
Cttizens Coahuo11 gathered
enough signatures to force. the
recall elecoon. The coahtion said

the two 'vomen wae pan of a
three-metnber. counnl majority
that aggressivdy pursued~~ own
agenda and \\"aS unWilling to
compro n11se or hstt•n
Slowmskt .'md AbrJllh. alo,ng
\Vtth Vtce Prestdent Jq:m Hl)Tn .
\'&lt;1ted lll the J-1 llUJOfltY un
ISSUt'S mvolnng groundw.ucr

•

pnnen10n and a sttL' tOr .ttlinJ-

_,bl,· houSing.
Yellow Sprmg&gt; " abour I il
nult"s east of DaYton.

Sheik acquires
Ohio home
HUNTING VALLEY (A I')
. -· Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan AI
Nabyan, president of the Unacd
Arab Emirates and ruler of Abu
Dhabi, has purchas.ed a home 111
thiS village about 15 nules em
of C leveland, a newspaper
reporte~.

eight to 12 vendors in the arei
hav~ been Implicated as sources
of the outbreak.

Court declines to
hear appeal
COLUMBUS (AP) The
Ohio Supreme Court won't
hear the state's appeal to reinstate a 14--yea.r-old boy's murder
confessiOn, effectively overturning his conv1c0on for killing a
5-year-old girL
The court released the decision Wednesday without comment.
Anthony Harns was C'onncted of ktllmg hJS neighbor Devan
Dumver. who disappeared June,
27. 1998. from her New
Phibddph &gt;a home, .1bout 70
n11le~ "ourh of (]en:bnd Her

body wa~ found onL~ da~: lata
brttl&lt;&gt;h nc..·Jr ht.:r home.

Hur rhl• 5th 0\uo D1~tnct
Cnurr nf Appt'al~ threw out thl'
conf. .-!'·~u&gt;n inJun~. ruhng: that tt
wJ~

....-oaced by pohrc..' Harpo;; ,
who was 11 ar the tune uf '
Devan's death. was freed June B
from jun:·nile detention.
Tuscarawas County Pros~cu­
ror Amanda. Sptes Bornhorst
,;ud ·in her appeal that the
appeals cOurt was wrong to rule
that a police chief's quesooning
of Harns was so barsh that any
12-vear-old would feel he had
no choice but to confess to a
en me.
Bornhorst said Wednesday m a
statemem that she does not
Immediately plan to bring the·
. case to trial again without the
confession .
"Anthony H a rris remains a

The 82-year-old sheik purchased a 25,000-square-foot,
23-room home for $6.5 million
from a couple who did not have
it on the m~rket , The (C: I en~­ 's ~.l:&gt;pe(t 111 the murder uf Devan
land) Plain Dealer reported Duniver. I expect th e New
rhursday. Apparendy it was a Philadelphia Police Department
deal too good for the couple to wi ll continue to thoroughly
refuse. They were g1ven four investigate this matter, and
d.1ys w relocate.
hopefully uncover additional
The sheik fell and broke his e\'idence concerning this tragic
hip at the Cleveland Clinic laSt cnme," she said in th e statemonth and underwent emer- ment.
gency surgery. He is recuperatmg from the fall and an Augusr
kidney transplant.
Paul and Sherry Blackman
purchased the home for S2.2
million last year and did S 1 mil(AP)
SANDUSKY
han in remodeling. The she1k's Columbia Gas of Ohio, the
workl!rs now are- renovanng the &lt;;;tate's largest natural gas utility, is
house.
raising its rates by 17 percent,
Real estate agent Momque effective Nov. 1.
Plociak said she had found
Th,• pnce hike is the rc·sult of
rental homes for the she1k and ·' growing. demand for nattlr:ll
h1s entoura~e dunng their ll·" .1nd tht· d1fficulty of pmdllcannual visits w the hospital. The crs to kl·L·p up wnh lt, Gin.t
roy.1l family prevtuu~ly n:nted Thomspon. pllbhc afl'Jm rcprc·two mansions in the Clt.·,·dand scntatiw for Columbia, told the
\llburb of Bratenahl.
~Jndusky Register ro r a \tory
The gat&lt;d property. set back
Thursdav.
on nearly 10 wooded acre~. 1~
ColumbiJ wtll r :ltSL' it ~ r:ltc to
not VIS ible from the· road Jnd "ts
S7 30 p~r thousJnd cub1 c feet of
next to Squire Valleevue F.um.
natura! ga.; from rhe cur n.:'nt
Case Western Reo;erve Unt\"Cr\Ipncc of 5(&gt;.2.5 per thou'ianJ
tv's 39l . . acrc research :lnd recn:cubJC feet. she ~.1id.
:ttion ccntt:r.
Columbta. an
of
The home contains e1ght bedColumbta Energy Group . ..,ern'\.
rooms and 7.5 baths .1nd
Jnclude~ a two-bedroom gue\t nearly I J million cmtnmer'&gt; in
wing, indoor pool. sau na , steam 64 of Ohio's 88 counties. The
room. exercise room and a hcat- gas company is headqu artered 1n
~d room wah two swmging. Columbus.
The pn cc h1ke IS caused by an
door. to the outSide for the
increa
se d demand for natural .g:~s
fJnu ly pets.
for mJmtrial ll'lC anJ a gre.ttt'r
usc of gas mstcad of coal to
met't clcJn air stan dards.
Thompson said._ Plus the fac t
that gas producers have had difMEDINA (AP) - Fa~r wJter .. tindty keepmg up wah the
m a sec tiOn of the Medina · grm..vmg demand .
Counry Fairgrounds apparently
em sed E. col i mfectmn~ uf 27 ·
people from five Ohio co untie s,
.lCCo rdmg to a p relnmna ry
"udy.
•
The waterline supphcd vendors and an anmu1 show barn
Junng the August fair 111 tim
city ~5 milos sourhwl'st nf
C leveland, aclordmg to the
study, released tim \\'eek and
conducted by the Adant.1-bm·d
national Centers for D1S1..'JiiC
Con trol and PrcvL"nnon
"Back flo\V of w.ttl'l fio111
hncs from amnul .l!'CJ'i to the

Authorities probe
outbreak

'

111 ·

RAVENNA (AP) - A baby cut from m
abducted and slam woman's abdomen was
due to be released &amp;Om the hospital Thursday while authorities await&lt;"d g&lt;"nebc test
results ro confirm the tdentity of the infant's
parents.
Portage County authorities are calling the
boy Oscar Andrews. They were k&lt;eping
temporary cusrody until blood samples from
Jon Andrews and the baby are analyzed to
confirm a genetic· match and confirm that
Andrews is the father. Results are expected
Friday.

last days of the f.m n'"l' h,wc
ctust•d transicm conc1minatmn

of watc:r. n:~ulting in E. coh
nrf~..·ction~." th~..· \Lltemcm \.tid.
E• coh i' a potcnti.&gt;ll y dc.1dly
h.1cter1.1 th.H l'.ln be 'Pr~·.1d
rlntl\l~h ~._·nm·.111111' 1f1' I In ,,j 111
lllliklllg
.Ink

\\'.![

111.111Ul'l.;

,ll]l .. l!l-~1(']'"()[]

ll/"1'

hln1' 1

lhdoJlllJJ.d

I

I

t1!

I'I.H

COLUMBUS (AP ) The that my superiors could go so far as
to set me up, frame me and destroy
&lt;.. )hHl Env1ronmental Protection
Ag,·nc\· 1lleg;illv punished the coor- my wbok life." Jayko said in a stateduumr of a conuhunanon lll\"t"SO- ment released by his attorney, Dengauon .md must reinstate hirn, an nis Muchnick.i. " I just tried to do
my JOb and tell the trurh ."
.tdnumsmi''e U\\' judge has ruled.
Phalen ruled the agency violated
The EPA · must pay Paul Jaykn
for wJgc' and other benefits lost the law by suspending Jayco for 10
when he was rransferred to the days in the swnmer of 1998 and
agency's Bowling Green office, said rem"'~ng him as lead investigator of
Judge Thomas F. Phalen Jr. of . the case in Marion. Jayco has been
Cincmnao, an adnllnistr.ltive law employed as a EPA site coordinator
since 1991.
judge fm the wbor Department.
Phalen ruled ~h is week - that
Several EPA managers testific;d
.
during
the rune-day hearing befOre
Jayko is protected under a federal
Phalen that Jayko was disciplined
whisde-blower law.
He said Jayco cannot be pun- because of a failure to communiished for writing critical internal cate.
memos of an investigation of possiOther people said tim Jayko was
ble links berween contaminated sou a respected employee and that
on the River Valley High School charges of drinking two beers
campus in Marion Counry and the before a night meeting and filiifYnumber of leukemia cases among ing an expense repon were fabricatd to justify the decision to reasgraduates.
Whistleblower laws were written sign him.
Carol Hester, an EPA spokesto protect people from their
employers when they bring a safe- ' woman, said ,the agency disagrees
cy-related issue to light. Jayko's case with Phalen's ruling.
was the first by an Ohio EPA
The RiverValley high school and
middle school, located 40 miles
employee to test those laws.
The judge also ordered the EPA north of Columbus, sit on the forto pay Jayko's legal fees and to post mer M arion Engineering Depot,
notices of his reinstatement at the where the Army repaired heavy
EPA's main and district offices for at engineering equipment and where
chemical waste was dumped for a
least 90 days.
" It's still so hard for me to believe number ~f years.

I 11: 111.'1

!

I !II !1

l•

1.1111)'1 r

wor..,r C"'l'\, k1d11LY (,Jdurl·
Davt: B.ddwm. J\.1cdnu ( ' nlllr
t\'

·hc .tlth

00

I
people gathered at an area church for a
memorial service for Theresa Andrews .
Ravenna detective Greg Francis md the
heavyset Bica had convinced her husband ,
Thomas Bica, thar she was premant, lhe
baby was theirs and that she had given birth
while he was working.
·
Bica shot herself in the mouth as poJ.ic·e
. arrived to question her a second 'time in die
disappearance of Theresa Andrews , who
lived less than half a mile away in this northeast Ohio city of about 12,000 people.

Donald H. 'Bumper' Craig

CINCINNATI (AP) - State
officials have known since July
that some Ohio driver's licenses
and state IDs wen= issued bearing
anothc:r state's security hologram,. but they didn't make the
error public until Monday, The
Cincinnati Enquirer reported.
The newspaper !"POrted
Thursday that the Ohio Bureau
of Motor Vehicles didn't publicize. the error until the . Enquirer
questioned bureau officials after
learning that a Miami Uruversiry
.student was detained by Oxford
police last week . because they
thought she had passed a fakr ID
to get into a bar.
Hundred,- of licenses and cards
bearing an Arlunsas hologram
were issued to drivers in the
Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus
and Toledo areas after a vendor
shipped the wrong supphes to 20
license bureaus, officials .said.
Ohioans should return faulty
licenses and cards· to the issuing
bureau for a replacement if they
find the dime-size hologram of
the Arkansas state seal stripped
across the bottom. The correct
holograms of the Ohio seal are
nearly quarter-size md are interspersed throughout licenses and
identification cards.
Bureau sp'okeswoman Julie

SI\'C.

Thl' Co ngrl' ss ion al Budget
Otlice normally a trusted
so urce of finJnCIJI predictionsestimated it wou ld cost taxpayers
at least S1.7 b1lhon over 10 years
to compensate terminally ill
workers from nuclear weJpons
and beryllium plants.
'' I rhink it is· very loose w ith
what could be a huge entitlemr:nt," H astert said.
H e made his comments as
House and Sena te negotiators
tried to hatch a comprom ise that
would enable a compensa tion
program to be passed before the
end of the congressional sess10n,
expected ~ome time next week.
Every proposal offered during
the negotiations has specifically

promised conlpemation to workers at the three uranium-enrichment plants, in Paducah, Ky.,
Piketon , Ohio, and Oak Ridge,
Tenn .
:rhe Budget Office estimate
had cheered the workers' advo~
cates on Capitol Hill, because it
was lower than an earlier prediction of $2..+ billi01i or more .
R1chard Miller, the lead lobbyi st on the compensation issue
for the union representing
weapons-plant workers, said he
cxpect&lt;'d a revised CBO estimate
would move th e predi cted co~t
higher but still less than $2.4 billion.
Even if the estimate is _roo low,
Mill er sa1 d, Hpu se leaders should
be consistc:nt about secondgu essi ng the financial expetts.
" The CBO was held up as the
para go n of integ rity in the bal e
anced budget showdown. Now
they decide to turn on it because
it 's conve nient," be said.
"The ISSUe should be, did the
govern ment defraud these workers, did it put them in harm 's
way."

Rep. John Kasich, R-Onio, a
member of the conterence committee, said there may be a way to
crea te an adequat&lt;' compensation
program but with congressional
control of the spending through
approval of annual appropriations. ·
"When people get sick
through the government and the
government infects them and lies
to them, then the government
has to do somethin,g," Kasich
said .
Kasich said he expected to see
an acceptable con1promise. 11 The
squeaky wheel gets the grease, so
something should happen," 'he
said.
The House has adopted a resolution supporting the idea of
compensating the ailing workers .
Last spnng, the Energy
Department reversed 50 years 'of
federal policy by declaring that
workers injured or k.iUed by radiation at weapons plants should be
compensated. The agency proposed medical care and minimum lump sum payments of
$100,000.

Stebbins told the newspaper chat
state officials estinuied that more
than 500 bad licenses wae
issued. She said sl)c did not know
specifically bow many were
returned.
·
The problem was diScovered
in July when a depury reg.strar in
Toledo reported it, Stebbins said.
She said the bureau contacted
all depury registrars in Ohio aft~r
the problem was reported again ,a
month later, and depu ry registtars
wen= told to contact Ohioans
who might have received the
faulry cards and licenses.
"They are independent contractors, and they have the
responsibiliry to serve their customers," Stebbins said.
•
Greg Gray is a bureau field
representative for H amilton_,
C lermont, Brown and Adams
counties. He said he knew nothing of the problem m;til M o nday.
That also · was the day Ohio's
police agencies were advised of
the mix-up. State officials notified the media on Tuesday.
Gray said he learned of the
mistake when his supervtsor.
asked him to begin checking
local records to identify drivers
who had received the faulty.
licenses.

~--~

e-\]filJfi/
\ ~

"Plant Now for Beautiful Spring
Bed~"·:· Many Color• &amp;
Vanetws . .. Readv to Plant

Building

Bush, G'ore sticking
with strategies

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
992-2156

•

'

Haray Fall Mums
"While Supplies Last"

FKESR ltPPl

The Daily Sentinel

Reader Services

1/4 mile North Pomeroy Mason Bridge
Mason, WV

P'hone (304) 773-532,3
2400 Eastern Ave. (Across from K-Mari)

Gallipolis, OH
Phone (740) 446-1711

l011lllll'!\IOIWI' ..... 11d

,.
;·

•

LOCAL BRIEFS
Advisory lifteCI
TUPPERS PLAINS - A boil
advisory issued by the Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District has
been lifted. Sutton Township
households on the following roads
were affected: Mitchell Road,
Bowman's Run, R.eifer Road,
Salser Road, Pine Grove within
two miles of Ohio 124, Ohio I 24
between Syracuse and Racine.
Results of the sample taken
Monday are considered safe.

Outage tonight

'

. '

Township, barn fire. Pearli.: Jewell
property, no li1JUries.

Square dance
TUPPERS PLAINS A
square dance will be held ai the
Tuppers Plains VFW on Saturday
from 8-11 p.m ., with clogging and.
line · dancing. True Country will
perform and Clifford Longenette
will be the caller.
'
I

CHOICE to meet
CHOICE
POMEROY
Home Educators will meet on
Tuesday at 1 p.m. at Royal Oak
Resort. Information is available
from Tammy Jones at 992-6743.

POMEROY - AEP customers
in the greater Albany area, which
includes sections of Meigs Counry, will experience a short power
interruption on Thursday beginning at. 8 p.m.
The two, minute interruption
MIDDLEPORT - First Bapwill affect almost 2,000 customer
tist Church in Middleport will
and is necessary to perform mainhave revival services Oct. 15-21 at
tenance -work at one of AEP'~ dis7 p.m. each night. R.ev. Dr. David ·
tribution substations near Albany,
and involves switching customers Raha~ut, an e\'angelist and nU.ssionary to South Africa , will speak,
to an alternate transformer.
According to Ronn Robinson , and there will be special smgmg
AEP corporate communications each night.
consultant, the work will enhance
future substation reliability.
In addition to customers in
APPLE' GROVE Square
Albany, other customers will be
affected, They are those living west danoes are hdd at The Red Barn
of Albany to Ohio 689 along in Apple Grove on the first and
Ohio 32; those living north of third Fridays of each month, from
Albany on Ohio 681 to Marsh- 8-11 p.m., withTrue Country.
field; those living south of Albany
on Ohio 681 to the Athens/ Meigs
County line; and those living east
of Albany to Radford Road
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
(County Road 19) .
Plains VF'.:t./ Ladies' Auxiliary will
.hold it' regular meeting on Tues·
day at 7 p.m. at the hall.

Plan revival

Dances held

Auxiliary to meet

REEDSVILLE - The Olive
Township Volunteer Fire Department has received a 1983 five-ton,
SHADE - B edford Township
all wheel-drive cargo truck Trustees will meet on Oct. I 0 at 7
through a program coordinated by p.m. at the town hall.
the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, Division of Forestry.
The equipment has an original
·acquisition value of more than
RUTLAN D - Rose of Sharon
S70,000.
Holiness Church will hold revival
The equipment was made availservices Friday through Oct'. 15
able by the U.S. Forest Service's
with the R.ev. Jack Dolin as speak'Federal Excess Perso nal Property
er.
program, "which provides vehicle s
and other fi re fighting eq uipm ent
to rural fire departm ent\ at no
charge . The program is adminisf',.ACINE - Raone Tnck or
tered in Ohio by ODNR.
Treat
\Viii be obsc!Ycd on Oct. 2U
"This program pru11des val uabk
resources to assist local fire depart- at 6 p.m. Sirens will sound to
ments in providing wildland and begin and end. Those participating
rural com.m unity fire protection," ~hould turn 011 the1r pon:h lights.
said Ron Al:irah am, chief of the
ODNR. forestry division .
The Division of Forestry , curPAGEVILLE -. Sup1o T"wnrently has coo pe rative wildfire
suppressiGn agreements with 325 ship TnJStees will meet at 6:30
fire departments loCJted within p.m. on Wednesday at the !'JgeviUe
the division's fire protection area Ti:Jwn Hall.
in eastern and southeastern Ohio.
RUTLAND - Rutland Township Trustees will meet on Monday at 5 p.m. at the Rudand Fire
POMEROY Units of the Station .
Em ergency
Se rvi ces
Meigs
answered six calls for assistance on
Wednesday. Unit!; respo nded as
follows:
CHESHIRE - DAV 53, locatCENiRAL DISPATCH
ed at 2805 1 Ohio 7 in C heshire,
6:47 a.m., Main Street, assisted will meet on Monday everting,
by Rutland , Cathlyne Tilli s, with dinner at 6:30 p.m .. and the
O 'Bieness Memorial Hospital;
meeting at 7.
' 10:29 a.m. , assisted by Pomeroy,
motor vehicle accident, Ma rgaret
Landers, treated;
2:42 p.m., East Main , T.1nm1y
Hutton, Holzer M edical Center;
5:41 p.m., Higley 11..oad, Raymond Hess, HMC;
8:30 p.m., Second Street, Donnie Edwards, treated .
RUTLAND
5:23 p.m ., Beech Grove Road,
assisted by Pomeroy and Salem
We oflt-r the fir\ est granites

Meeting set

Revival planned

Trick or Treat

To meet

...

EMS runs

DAV meeting

From

Simple to
Simply ·
Magnificent

7

SPRIIJGVAllEY CINEMA
!10Uil l'• WE 51
446 , 4524 OlO
I '0 4 JflCK50N PIK [
FRI9/29/00 • THURS 10/5/00

lOX OlflQ WIU OPIN AT

6:30 PM FOR EVENING SHOWS
2:30PM FOR MATINEES

in an assortment of colors
an"l councless desigm. We
can provide the memorial

. that's right for you. Come

taJk to our counselors. We'll
help you selecr a memorial co be
cherished.

SPACE COWBOYS (PG13)
(A)

"'"I

TWO LOCATIONS:

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph
Charles R1ffle. R. Ph.
· 8 am. 10 9 p m Sal 8:00am · 6 pm
SG~day I 0 00 a m. to 4 .00 p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992 2955
E. Ma1n
Fnendly Serv1ce
Pomeroy, Oh
Week
'till 9

VALLEY WEATHER

5'·

The bill is HR. 4205
On the Net:
Bill
text:
http :/ / thomas.loc.gov
· '
National Economic Coun cil ·
report on co mpen s&lt;~t ion issUeS:·
http: / I www.eh.doe.gov/bene-:
fits
Paper,
Allied - Indus t ri al ,
Chemical and Energy Workers
International
Union :
http :/ /www.paceu nion .co m

From The Shenandoah Valley
•
• Golden Delicious • Red Delicious • Rome •
• Ida Red • melrose • macintosh

Pharmacy

· POMEROY Donald Hampshire "Bumper" Craig, &amp;6, of · member of Racine Village CounPomeroy, formerly of Point Pleasant, West Virginia, died on Sunday, cil. He is a former member and
..O~tober 1, 2000 at his residence.
Born December 27, 1933 in Point Pleasant, he was the son of the officer of the Racine Volunteer
,late Sylvester and Mary Elizabeth Craig, and was a retired employee of
th~ Village of Pomeroy for Mode.rn Sanit;,tion Service Corporation .
He also attended Paint Creek Baptist Church in GaUipolis.
' Along with his parents, he was preceded in death by three brothers,
Gilbert M . Craig Sr., Sidney Craig and William Craig.
He is survived by two ' sisters and brothers-in-law, Laurena and
Claude Thompson, tnd Nettie aud Edgar Baxton, aU of Columbus; a
brother and sister-inclaw, Marvin and Connie C raig of Pomeroy;·two
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Chance of rain 50 percent.
sisters-in-law, Hazel Craig of Parkersburg, West Virginia, and Charlotte
Cool Canadian air being
Friday... Turning cooler. A
Craig of Gallipolis; a special friend, R ebecca Thom'pson of Pomeroy; pulled into the region by a high chance of showers or drizzle until
and several nieces and nephews.
·
pressure system will · lower tem- mid-morning, otherwise VJriable
.Services will be held at 2 p.m. on Saturday, O&lt;tober 7, 2000 at peratures in the tri-counry area cloudines.. Highs . in the lower
E:low- HusseU Funeral Home in Point Pleasant- Officiating will be the Friday and Saturday.
60s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
R.ev. Arius Hurt. Burial wiU follow at Lone Oak Cemetery in Point
Under partly cloudy skies,
Friday night. .. Partly clo udy
Pleasant.
.
highs on Friday will be mostly in with a chance of showers. Lows in
. ·· The family will receive friends one hour prior to the service.
the 60s. Then, on Saturday, the the mid 40s.
mercury isn't likely to climb out
Extended forecast:
of the 50s,' the National Weather
Saturday... Brisk and co lder
with a chance of showers. Highs
Service said.
Sunset tonight will be at 7:07 in the lower 50s.
a!'d sunrise on Friday at 7:34 a.m.
Sunday. .. Continued brisk and
Weather forecast:
chilly with a chance of showers
Tonight ... Cioudy with scat- during the day. Dry at night.
tered showers. A chance of a Morning lows in the mid 30s.
Highs only in the upper 40s.
POMEROY - Brittany Nichole Limbert, 2-month old daughter thunderstorm until midnight.
Monday.. .Partly cloudy. MornLows 55 to 60. Southwest wind 5
of Brian Lambert andTammyWright:both ofPomeroy,died onTues- .
to IS mph shifting to the north- ing lows in the mid 30s. Highs
tlay, Oct. 3, 2000 in Holzer Medical Center.
west during the predawn hours . near 50.
She was born on Aug. 4, 2000 in Gallipdlis.
Surviving in addition to her parents are three sisters, Augusta Wright,
Aria! Wright and Abbygail Lambert of Pomeroy, a brother, Brian Lam-·
bert Jr., Pomeroy; maternal grandparents, Tammy and Terty R.usseU of
Point Pleasant, WVa ., and Calvin and Brenda Wright of Wilkesville; AEP - 38
Gannett _:.__ 507.
Rocky Boots - 5
paternal grandparents , Charles and Carol Lambert of Rutland ; great- Akzo - 44'General Eleclric - 59~
AD Shell - 61l.
Harley
Davidson
49~
Sears33
AmTech/SBC51~
grandfather, Franklin Wright of Hamden; great-grandmother, Irene
Ashland Inc. - 33'•
Kmart-5'·
Shoney's
-'·
Shuster of Columbus; and several aunts and uncles.
Kroger·- 21,_
AT&amp;T- 29'),
Wai-Mart - 46lo
Lands End - 20Y.
Wendy's - 19'o
Services will be held 11 a.m. Friday in Willis Funeral Home, Gal- BankOne - 37
Ltd. - 23.,.
Worthington - 91.
lipolis, with the Rev. Ted Russell officiating. Burial will be in Pine Bob Evans - 18~
Oak Hill Financial - t sl.
BorgWamer - 37).
Grove Cemetery,Vinton. Friends may call at the funeral home on Fri- Champion - 2~
Daily stock reports are the
OVB-27
BBT -30'1,
4 p.m. closing quotes of
Charming Shops- 5').
d~y fiom 9- 11 a.m. '
CHy Holding - 6 ),
Peoples - 1d
the previous day's trans·
actions, provided by
· Federal Mogul =:n~~ll ' 5;2~
Advest of Gallipolis.
Firstar- 20
sell Wood to tak e down the
remainder of the stru cture.
Clarke said demolition will also
impact a nearby building owned
from Page AI
by Bob Ri chards .
\Vhen a large backhoe arrived to
"Our positi on is, these two
clear the building's remains.
owners have to figure out what to
Gallipolis volunteer firefighter do; · Clarke said. "It's in thei~
Jo• Carter agreed to ride the hands."
back hoe's "buc ket" up- to the
The 200 block of Third
aparttnenr, where he tl;'ied to lure remained blocked this mornin g.
DANVILLE, Ky. (AP) - AI gap he holds over th e two-term
Sissy to the door. Un s u ~cessful, Th e street section was roped off Gore and George. W. Bush are_ Texas governor. But the vice
C'l)'ter entered the apartme nt.
by police soon after the collapse.
sticking with the strat egies that , president turned off some voters
·. Abu") five tense minutes passed
"We don't want to take a marked their first debate, . t)l e · with constant int erruptions and
before he emerged wi th th e chan.ce on anyone getting hurt,"
R.epubhca11 o n the attack, the off-camera antics· his heJvy sighs
blon&lt;;le-ai1d-white dog t ucked Clarke said.
d
'1 n 1
D emocrat playin g nice. Both
o . h
.I .k
punctuate seve ra uus 1 answers.
under his arms like a football.
Ciry Engineer Randy Breec h courses are traug t w1t 1 ns .
"I h. k f
•
d b
. A cheer went up among the
·
· to
t m 1. you re .a e ate
was unavailable for co mm cnt ,this
M 1·u·ton s o f VIewers
tune d Ill
,
\vorkers, and a tearful D o nna
their
televised
clash
over
taxes,
coach,
Gore
did
everythmg
you
r~
mormng.
Cox, Sissy's owner, retrieved her
Clarke
compliment ed 1the Medi ci" "· abortion and Gore's trained to do, but he looked a litpuppy.
response of police, firefighters and character. But an alysts say the first tie strain ed and strid ent," sa id
Carter also managed to save
local contra ctor J.P. Holl ey in debate may have minimal imme- Terry Madonna , a po liti ca l scien$1 ,000 from a chest in a downdiate impac~ on the politiCJ! land- tist at Millersvill e Universiry in
responding to the collapse.
stairs apartment.
Pennsylvania, a key state th at
Clarke said officials called Hol- scape.
"We went two-for-two," said
That wou ld be good news for turn ed toward Gore in Septemley after the collap se to .clean
EMS D irector Terry Reed.
the
vice president, who came in ber.
"Wc'r~ very, very thankful thi s debris off the street and take
with an edge in the state-by-state
down the remainder of the wall.
Bush looked pre,id ential in
happened in th e daytime in stea d
ra ce for electoral votes. Bush
"I'd
like
to
comp
liment
him
on
style and substance, a relief to votof night, when residents were
needs to take advantage of every
hi
s
swift
respome,"
C
larke
said.
"I
ers who wondered whether he
asleep," said Police C hi ef Roger
thought the guy was very skillful chance to persuade Ameri cans to was fit for the job. But attacks o n
Brandeberry.
vote for ch ange in a time of peac e
"There would have bee n some in hJndlin g the situation."
Gore's character, a cor nersto ne of
and
prosperiry, ana lysts say.
The coUapse occurred near a
f:Italitie s," he added.
Gore appears to be playing it Bush's election strategy, co uld rub
Gallipoli s officia ls co ntinu ed section of Court Street ravaged
safe, though polls show the popu- some voters the wrong way.
monitoring th e bu ilding's condi- by major fires in the 1990s. A
1993 blaze destroyed the Womel- lar vote split and his electoral lead
tion today.
fragile. The Texas governor is
City Manager E.V. Clarke Jr. dortf and Thomas hardware
assuming the role of scrappy
said the city was cmisulting with building at T hird and Court,
underdog.
S91icitor Douglas Cowles on irs w hich was later razed. Another
"Bush didn't make a particu p 0 sition in preserving safe ry and stru c t~re further down Court was
larly good case for changing th e
if the ciry can direct own·e r R.us- demolished following a 1996 fire.
administration. He didn 't look
awful , he didn't lose anything, but
this wasn't the kind of performance that moved hin1 ahe ad,"
said John Green , political scientist
at the Universiry of Akron in
Ohio, ~ battleground state that
Subscribe today.
Gore is keeping tight .
Green and others said nobody
will know the full impac t of the
§ebate for a few days, unti l voters
. digest follow-up media reports
and ~1l k to fri ends and colleagues.
t,. Though theif messages were
1(11Changed,
both campaigns were
(USPS 213-960)
~ igh tly adjusting th eir electoral
Ohio Valley Publishing Co ..
Published every afternoon, Monday
1:n:tp plans after the debate.
through Friday, 11.1 Cour1 St., Pomeroy,
Correction Policy
Ohio. Second-class postage paid at
Gore planned to begin adverPomerov.
Our main concern in all stories is to
tising in his ho me state of Ten be accurate. If you know of an error in M8mber: The Associated Press and the
Oh1a
Newspaper
Assoc1ation
nessee and renew his ad campaign
a story, cal! the newsroom at (740)
Postmaster: Send address corrections to
992·2156 ..
in West Virginia in recognition of
The Daily· Sentinel, 111 Court. St .,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
ll_ush's inr~ads ii1 two states he·
News Departments
lfGfMIS: Iiiii CUI lffl 7:20 9:45
hacl hoped to have wrapped up.
Subscription rates
The main number is 992-2156.
IS&lt;Ispens!!HorrorfiM~I) Jomil~ M'!frlsoo,lmetta a; •.,
By carrier Qr motor roufe
'
Bush, meanwhile, \y:ts airing
Department extentlons are:
One week
$2
Showing Fridlr at 7:2il I 9:45
ads in Nevada, a state he had
One month
'$8 .70
Ext. 1101
General manager
RG IT ON
7:30, 9:55
Oneyaar
$104
hoped to haw fi~1i1ly in his corDally
50
cents
iColred~
K10101
Ounsl,
Jesse
B~~'l.~
Gabliele
Uilon
Ext.
1102
News
ner by this stagt·. Republicans say
Subscribers not desiring to pay the carri·
Showing Frldlr at 7,.., &amp;9:45
may remit in advance direct to The Daily
he may soon substantial ll y
Ext. 1106 er
or
Sentinel. Credit will be given carrier each
in crease the siZL' of his media
week . No subscription by mail permitted iM
Other services
areas where home earner service is avail·
across the country. Hi s
cJmpa1gu
able.
Ext.
1104
latest ad, due for release T hursday,
Advertising
Mail
subscription
~ is dL·scribcd: by :1ides as a "visio n
Ext. t103
Circulation
Inside Meigs County
spot" tlut outlines his governing
13 Weeks
$27 30
Ext. 1100 26 weeks
$53 82
Classified Ad s
pl1ilosophies.
5~ Weeks
$'05 56
The dcbat~ cou ld tu r n out to
To send e-mail
Rates outside Melgg County
be· a mixed blessing.
13 Weeks
$29,25
galtribune@eurekanet. com
26 Weeks
$56.68
Gore proved the best debater
$109.72
52Weeks
and drove home the experience
ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

LOCAL STOCKS

The Senate later approved :.a·
tneasur,e granting $200,000 In·
compensation from the fcd~ral
government, plus health benefits,
to workers who had been
exposed to ' r.1 dia tion , silica drberyllium, and who e~ther Hlffer
from or have died fmm silicosis,'
beryllium disease 9r a rJdioget1ic'
cancer.
Workers have given accounts'
of breathing clouds of dangero us
dust; being issued no protectiv~
clothing at snes
ha ndlins
radioactive materials; or being
issued
radianon-measuring
badges empty of essential film.

')Pumpkin for Yuor Jac:k-0-lanterns
Bob's Is fullg stocked wNh...
• Baled Straw • mini Pumpkins • Indian Corn Cnnr'llr
• foddershocks • more fall Decorating Items.

r--arl Pansies

and is serving in his 19th year as a

Brittany Lambert

•Gardenme
On
Over
To
Bob's·
•••
and Decorating Center Hnd find the perfect ..u.-;:._. . .,
,c:r,•. ,~..,·llar(ly

faomPapAl

Fire Depanment, a founding
member of the Racine emergency squad, and worked as a
teacher and principal in the
Southern Local School District
for 41 years.
He is marned to the former
Jane Gilmore Taylor, and they
have three daughters.

Highs will plunge on Friday

Speaker q,uestions whether compensation cost estimate is too low·
WASHINGTON (AI')
H ouse Speaker Dennis Hastert
exp re ssed doubts Wednesday
abo ut whe!'thcr h1s own l~xp~rts'
csti.matc of a si'k worh·rs' compl'nsanon plan is too low.
House leaders already h.we
stymied the Senate-approved
pl.m because they say th ey fear
the paynwnts will bt• too expcn-

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

-

•
l

,,

'

SWISHER LOHSE

'I~

.

.

OPEN Monday thru Friday
8:00 am - 9:00 pm
Saturday 8 am· 6 pm
Sunday 10 am- 4 pm

·I

Portage Cgunty Coroner Roger Marcial
said a tissue sample also was takrn from
Theresa Andrews during her autopsy for use
in helping in the identification' of her as the
baby's mother.
The week-old boy, found late Monday in
the house of MicheUe Bica, 39, remained in
good condition at R obinson Memorial
lfospita! Wednesday. Theresa Andrews, 23;
was found buried in Bica's garage.
Nicholas Phillips, Jon Andrews' lawyer,
said the family expected the babY to be
released Thursday. Wednesday evening, about

I

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•
nes

Judge rules EPA illegally Ohio officials knew
about license problem~
punished investigator

Serving You Since 1946
with Quality Prescription
Service at
Competitive Prices
We Honor most Third Party
Prescription Plans

v~nJors m th1~ areJ dun11g thl'

Thursday, October 5, 2000

s.

heparalions begin for

Columbia Gas
raising rates

I

200Q

Ohio

Page A 2 • 'The Dally Sentinel

THE

OF

THE WATCHER (R)
7:10 SUN-THURS
Starting Friday:
Meet the Parents

Remember th,e Titans
,Nurse

, 520 W.

~lain

St.- Pmueroy

Nl'ar the Mnson Bridge

Phone 7-10-992-2588
Vinton 740-388-8603
Gallipolis 740·446·0852

�1

•
BUCKEYE BR-IEFS
Recal effort fails
YELLOW SPRINGS (AP)
- Two members of the village
council have retained their seats
after a recall effort fell short.
Council President Stephanie
Slowinski received BOO votes
Tuesday agam" her removal
from council md 732 in favor of
it, according to the Greene
County' Board of Electwns.
Council member Trudy Abrams
receiv~d

790 votes agatnst 11 her
· removal and 739 for it.
In August, the Concerned
Cttizens Coahuo11 gathered
enough signatures to force. the
recall elecoon. The coahtion said

the two 'vomen wae pan of a
three-metnber. counnl majority
that aggressivdy pursued~~ own
agenda and \\"aS unWilling to
compro n11se or hstt•n
Slowmskt .'md AbrJllh. alo,ng
\Vtth Vtce Prestdent Jq:m Hl)Tn .
\'&lt;1ted lll the J-1 llUJOfltY un
ISSUt'S mvolnng groundw.ucr

•

pnnen10n and a sttL' tOr .ttlinJ-

_,bl,· houSing.
Yellow Sprmg&gt; " abour I il
nult"s east of DaYton.

Sheik acquires
Ohio home
HUNTING VALLEY (A I')
. -· Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan AI
Nabyan, president of the Unacd
Arab Emirates and ruler of Abu
Dhabi, has purchas.ed a home 111
thiS village about 15 nules em
of C leveland, a newspaper
reporte~.

eight to 12 vendors in the arei
hav~ been Implicated as sources
of the outbreak.

Court declines to
hear appeal
COLUMBUS (AP) The
Ohio Supreme Court won't
hear the state's appeal to reinstate a 14--yea.r-old boy's murder
confessiOn, effectively overturning his conv1c0on for killing a
5-year-old girL
The court released the decision Wednesday without comment.
Anthony Harns was C'onncted of ktllmg hJS neighbor Devan
Dumver. who disappeared June,
27. 1998. from her New
Phibddph &gt;a home, .1bout 70
n11le~ "ourh of (]en:bnd Her

body wa~ found onL~ da~: lata
brttl&lt;&gt;h nc..·Jr ht.:r home.

Hur rhl• 5th 0\uo D1~tnct
Cnurr nf Appt'al~ threw out thl'
conf. .-!'·~u&gt;n inJun~. ruhng: that tt
wJ~

....-oaced by pohrc..' Harpo;; ,
who was 11 ar the tune uf '
Devan's death. was freed June B
from jun:·nile detention.
Tuscarawas County Pros~cu­
ror Amanda. Sptes Bornhorst
,;ud ·in her appeal that the
appeals cOurt was wrong to rule
that a police chief's quesooning
of Harns was so barsh that any
12-vear-old would feel he had
no choice but to confess to a
en me.
Bornhorst said Wednesday m a
statemem that she does not
Immediately plan to bring the·
. case to trial again without the
confession .
"Anthony H a rris remains a

The 82-year-old sheik purchased a 25,000-square-foot,
23-room home for $6.5 million
from a couple who did not have
it on the m~rket , The (C: I en~­ 's ~.l:&gt;pe(t 111 the murder uf Devan
land) Plain Dealer reported Duniver. I expect th e New
rhursday. Apparendy it was a Philadelphia Police Department
deal too good for the couple to wi ll continue to thoroughly
refuse. They were g1ven four investigate this matter, and
d.1ys w relocate.
hopefully uncover additional
The sheik fell and broke his e\'idence concerning this tragic
hip at the Cleveland Clinic laSt cnme," she said in th e statemonth and underwent emer- ment.
gency surgery. He is recuperatmg from the fall and an Augusr
kidney transplant.
Paul and Sherry Blackman
purchased the home for S2.2
million last year and did S 1 mil(AP)
SANDUSKY
han in remodeling. The she1k's Columbia Gas of Ohio, the
workl!rs now are- renovanng the &lt;;;tate's largest natural gas utility, is
house.
raising its rates by 17 percent,
Real estate agent Momque effective Nov. 1.
Plociak said she had found
Th,• pnce hike is the rc·sult of
rental homes for the she1k and ·' growing. demand for nattlr:ll
h1s entoura~e dunng their ll·" .1nd tht· d1fficulty of pmdllcannual visits w the hospital. The crs to kl·L·p up wnh lt, Gin.t
roy.1l family prevtuu~ly n:nted Thomspon. pllbhc afl'Jm rcprc·two mansions in the Clt.·,·dand scntatiw for Columbia, told the
\llburb of Bratenahl.
~Jndusky Register ro r a \tory
The gat&lt;d property. set back
Thursdav.
on nearly 10 wooded acre~. 1~
ColumbiJ wtll r :ltSL' it ~ r:ltc to
not VIS ible from the· road Jnd "ts
S7 30 p~r thousJnd cub1 c feet of
next to Squire Valleevue F.um.
natura! ga.; from rhe cur n.:'nt
Case Western Reo;erve Unt\"Cr\Ipncc of 5(&gt;.2.5 per thou'ianJ
tv's 39l . . acrc research :lnd recn:cubJC feet. she ~.1id.
:ttion ccntt:r.
Columbta. an
of
The home contains e1ght bedColumbta Energy Group . ..,ern'\.
rooms and 7.5 baths .1nd
Jnclude~ a two-bedroom gue\t nearly I J million cmtnmer'&gt; in
wing, indoor pool. sau na , steam 64 of Ohio's 88 counties. The
room. exercise room and a hcat- gas company is headqu artered 1n
~d room wah two swmging. Columbus.
The pn cc h1ke IS caused by an
door. to the outSide for the
increa
se d demand for natural .g:~s
fJnu ly pets.
for mJmtrial ll'lC anJ a gre.ttt'r
usc of gas mstcad of coal to
met't clcJn air stan dards.
Thompson said._ Plus the fac t
that gas producers have had difMEDINA (AP) - Fa~r wJter .. tindty keepmg up wah the
m a sec tiOn of the Medina · grm..vmg demand .
Counry Fairgrounds apparently
em sed E. col i mfectmn~ uf 27 ·
people from five Ohio co untie s,
.lCCo rdmg to a p relnmna ry
"udy.
•
The waterline supphcd vendors and an anmu1 show barn
Junng the August fair 111 tim
city ~5 milos sourhwl'st nf
C leveland, aclordmg to the
study, released tim \\'eek and
conducted by the Adant.1-bm·d
national Centers for D1S1..'JiiC
Con trol and PrcvL"nnon
"Back flo\V of w.ttl'l fio111
hncs from amnul .l!'CJ'i to the

Authorities probe
outbreak

'

111 ·

RAVENNA (AP) - A baby cut from m
abducted and slam woman's abdomen was
due to be released &amp;Om the hospital Thursday while authorities await&lt;"d g&lt;"nebc test
results ro confirm the tdentity of the infant's
parents.
Portage County authorities are calling the
boy Oscar Andrews. They were k&lt;eping
temporary cusrody until blood samples from
Jon Andrews and the baby are analyzed to
confirm a genetic· match and confirm that
Andrews is the father. Results are expected
Friday.

last days of the f.m n'"l' h,wc
ctust•d transicm conc1minatmn

of watc:r. n:~ulting in E. coh
nrf~..·ction~." th~..· \Lltemcm \.tid.
E• coh i' a potcnti.&gt;ll y dc.1dly
h.1cter1.1 th.H l'.ln be 'Pr~·.1d
rlntl\l~h ~._·nm·.111111' 1f1' I In ,,j 111
lllliklllg
.Ink

\\'.![

111.111Ul'l.;

,ll]l .. l!l-~1(']'"()[]

ll/"1'

hln1' 1

lhdoJlllJJ.d

I

I

t1!

I'I.H

COLUMBUS (AP ) The that my superiors could go so far as
to set me up, frame me and destroy
&lt;.. )hHl Env1ronmental Protection
Ag,·nc\· 1lleg;illv punished the coor- my wbok life." Jayko said in a stateduumr of a conuhunanon lll\"t"SO- ment released by his attorney, Dengauon .md must reinstate hirn, an nis Muchnick.i. " I just tried to do
my JOb and tell the trurh ."
.tdnumsmi''e U\\' judge has ruled.
Phalen ruled the agency violated
The EPA · must pay Paul Jaykn
for wJgc' and other benefits lost the law by suspending Jayco for 10
when he was rransferred to the days in the swnmer of 1998 and
agency's Bowling Green office, said rem"'~ng him as lead investigator of
Judge Thomas F. Phalen Jr. of . the case in Marion. Jayco has been
Cincmnao, an adnllnistr.ltive law employed as a EPA site coordinator
since 1991.
judge fm the wbor Department.
Phalen ruled ~h is week - that
Several EPA managers testific;d
.
during
the rune-day hearing befOre
Jayko is protected under a federal
Phalen that Jayko was disciplined
whisde-blower law.
He said Jayco cannot be pun- because of a failure to communiished for writing critical internal cate.
memos of an investigation of possiOther people said tim Jayko was
ble links berween contaminated sou a respected employee and that
on the River Valley High School charges of drinking two beers
campus in Marion Counry and the before a night meeting and filiifYnumber of leukemia cases among ing an expense repon were fabricatd to justify the decision to reasgraduates.
Whistleblower laws were written sign him.
Carol Hester, an EPA spokesto protect people from their
employers when they bring a safe- ' woman, said ,the agency disagrees
cy-related issue to light. Jayko's case with Phalen's ruling.
was the first by an Ohio EPA
The RiverValley high school and
middle school, located 40 miles
employee to test those laws.
The judge also ordered the EPA north of Columbus, sit on the forto pay Jayko's legal fees and to post mer M arion Engineering Depot,
notices of his reinstatement at the where the Army repaired heavy
EPA's main and district offices for at engineering equipment and where
chemical waste was dumped for a
least 90 days.
" It's still so hard for me to believe number ~f years.

I 11: 111.'1

!

I !II !1

l•

1.1111)'1 r

wor..,r C"'l'\, k1d11LY (,Jdurl·
Davt: B.ddwm. J\.1cdnu ( ' nlllr
t\'

·hc .tlth

00

I
people gathered at an area church for a
memorial service for Theresa Andrews .
Ravenna detective Greg Francis md the
heavyset Bica had convinced her husband ,
Thomas Bica, thar she was premant, lhe
baby was theirs and that she had given birth
while he was working.
·
Bica shot herself in the mouth as poJ.ic·e
. arrived to question her a second 'time in die
disappearance of Theresa Andrews , who
lived less than half a mile away in this northeast Ohio city of about 12,000 people.

Donald H. 'Bumper' Craig

CINCINNATI (AP) - State
officials have known since July
that some Ohio driver's licenses
and state IDs wen= issued bearing
anothc:r state's security hologram,. but they didn't make the
error public until Monday, The
Cincinnati Enquirer reported.
The newspaper !"POrted
Thursday that the Ohio Bureau
of Motor Vehicles didn't publicize. the error until the . Enquirer
questioned bureau officials after
learning that a Miami Uruversiry
.student was detained by Oxford
police last week . because they
thought she had passed a fakr ID
to get into a bar.
Hundred,- of licenses and cards
bearing an Arlunsas hologram
were issued to drivers in the
Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus
and Toledo areas after a vendor
shipped the wrong supphes to 20
license bureaus, officials .said.
Ohioans should return faulty
licenses and cards· to the issuing
bureau for a replacement if they
find the dime-size hologram of
the Arkansas state seal stripped
across the bottom. The correct
holograms of the Ohio seal are
nearly quarter-size md are interspersed throughout licenses and
identification cards.
Bureau sp'okeswoman Julie

SI\'C.

Thl' Co ngrl' ss ion al Budget
Otlice normally a trusted
so urce of finJnCIJI predictionsestimated it wou ld cost taxpayers
at least S1.7 b1lhon over 10 years
to compensate terminally ill
workers from nuclear weJpons
and beryllium plants.
'' I rhink it is· very loose w ith
what could be a huge entitlemr:nt," H astert said.
H e made his comments as
House and Sena te negotiators
tried to hatch a comprom ise that
would enable a compensa tion
program to be passed before the
end of the congressional sess10n,
expected ~ome time next week.
Every proposal offered during
the negotiations has specifically

promised conlpemation to workers at the three uranium-enrichment plants, in Paducah, Ky.,
Piketon , Ohio, and Oak Ridge,
Tenn .
:rhe Budget Office estimate
had cheered the workers' advo~
cates on Capitol Hill, because it
was lower than an earlier prediction of $2..+ billi01i or more .
R1chard Miller, the lead lobbyi st on the compensation issue
for the union representing
weapons-plant workers, said he
cxpect&lt;'d a revised CBO estimate
would move th e predi cted co~t
higher but still less than $2.4 billion.
Even if the estimate is _roo low,
Mill er sa1 d, Hpu se leaders should
be consistc:nt about secondgu essi ng the financial expetts.
" The CBO was held up as the
para go n of integ rity in the bal e
anced budget showdown. Now
they decide to turn on it because
it 's conve nient," be said.
"The ISSUe should be, did the
govern ment defraud these workers, did it put them in harm 's
way."

Rep. John Kasich, R-Onio, a
member of the conterence committee, said there may be a way to
crea te an adequat&lt;' compensation
program but with congressional
control of the spending through
approval of annual appropriations. ·
"When people get sick
through the government and the
government infects them and lies
to them, then the government
has to do somethin,g," Kasich
said .
Kasich said he expected to see
an acceptable con1promise. 11 The
squeaky wheel gets the grease, so
something should happen," 'he
said.
The House has adopted a resolution supporting the idea of
compensating the ailing workers .
Last spnng, the Energy
Department reversed 50 years 'of
federal policy by declaring that
workers injured or k.iUed by radiation at weapons plants should be
compensated. The agency proposed medical care and minimum lump sum payments of
$100,000.

Stebbins told the newspaper chat
state officials estinuied that more
than 500 bad licenses wae
issued. She said sl)c did not know
specifically bow many were
returned.
·
The problem was diScovered
in July when a depury reg.strar in
Toledo reported it, Stebbins said.
She said the bureau contacted
all depury registrars in Ohio aft~r
the problem was reported again ,a
month later, and depu ry registtars
wen= told to contact Ohioans
who might have received the
faulry cards and licenses.
"They are independent contractors, and they have the
responsibiliry to serve their customers," Stebbins said.
•
Greg Gray is a bureau field
representative for H amilton_,
C lermont, Brown and Adams
counties. He said he knew nothing of the problem m;til M o nday.
That also · was the day Ohio's
police agencies were advised of
the mix-up. State officials notified the media on Tuesday.
Gray said he learned of the
mistake when his supervtsor.
asked him to begin checking
local records to identify drivers
who had received the faulty.
licenses.

~--~

e-\]filJfi/
\ ~

"Plant Now for Beautiful Spring
Bed~"·:· Many Color• &amp;
Vanetws . .. Readv to Plant

Building

Bush, G'ore sticking
with strategies

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
992-2156

•

'

Haray Fall Mums
"While Supplies Last"

FKESR ltPPl

The Daily Sentinel

Reader Services

1/4 mile North Pomeroy Mason Bridge
Mason, WV

P'hone (304) 773-532,3
2400 Eastern Ave. (Across from K-Mari)

Gallipolis, OH
Phone (740) 446-1711

l011lllll'!\IOIWI' ..... 11d

,.
;·

•

LOCAL BRIEFS
Advisory lifteCI
TUPPERS PLAINS - A boil
advisory issued by the Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District has
been lifted. Sutton Township
households on the following roads
were affected: Mitchell Road,
Bowman's Run, R.eifer Road,
Salser Road, Pine Grove within
two miles of Ohio 124, Ohio I 24
between Syracuse and Racine.
Results of the sample taken
Monday are considered safe.

Outage tonight

'

. '

Township, barn fire. Pearli.: Jewell
property, no li1JUries.

Square dance
TUPPERS PLAINS A
square dance will be held ai the
Tuppers Plains VFW on Saturday
from 8-11 p.m ., with clogging and.
line · dancing. True Country will
perform and Clifford Longenette
will be the caller.
'
I

CHOICE to meet
CHOICE
POMEROY
Home Educators will meet on
Tuesday at 1 p.m. at Royal Oak
Resort. Information is available
from Tammy Jones at 992-6743.

POMEROY - AEP customers
in the greater Albany area, which
includes sections of Meigs Counry, will experience a short power
interruption on Thursday beginning at. 8 p.m.
The two, minute interruption
MIDDLEPORT - First Bapwill affect almost 2,000 customer
tist Church in Middleport will
and is necessary to perform mainhave revival services Oct. 15-21 at
tenance -work at one of AEP'~ dis7 p.m. each night. R.ev. Dr. David ·
tribution substations near Albany,
and involves switching customers Raha~ut, an e\'angelist and nU.ssionary to South Africa , will speak,
to an alternate transformer.
According to Ronn Robinson , and there will be special smgmg
AEP corporate communications each night.
consultant, the work will enhance
future substation reliability.
In addition to customers in
APPLE' GROVE Square
Albany, other customers will be
affected, They are those living west danoes are hdd at The Red Barn
of Albany to Ohio 689 along in Apple Grove on the first and
Ohio 32; those living north of third Fridays of each month, from
Albany on Ohio 681 to Marsh- 8-11 p.m., withTrue Country.
field; those living south of Albany
on Ohio 681 to the Athens/ Meigs
County line; and those living east
of Albany to Radford Road
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
(County Road 19) .
Plains VF'.:t./ Ladies' Auxiliary will
.hold it' regular meeting on Tues·
day at 7 p.m. at the hall.

Plan revival

Dances held

Auxiliary to meet

REEDSVILLE - The Olive
Township Volunteer Fire Department has received a 1983 five-ton,
SHADE - B edford Township
all wheel-drive cargo truck Trustees will meet on Oct. I 0 at 7
through a program coordinated by p.m. at the town hall.
the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, Division of Forestry.
The equipment has an original
·acquisition value of more than
RUTLAN D - Rose of Sharon
S70,000.
Holiness Church will hold revival
The equipment was made availservices Friday through Oct'. 15
able by the U.S. Forest Service's
with the R.ev. Jack Dolin as speak'Federal Excess Perso nal Property
er.
program, "which provides vehicle s
and other fi re fighting eq uipm ent
to rural fire departm ent\ at no
charge . The program is adminisf',.ACINE - Raone Tnck or
tered in Ohio by ODNR.
Treat
\Viii be obsc!Ycd on Oct. 2U
"This program pru11des val uabk
resources to assist local fire depart- at 6 p.m. Sirens will sound to
ments in providing wildland and begin and end. Those participating
rural com.m unity fire protection," ~hould turn 011 the1r pon:h lights.
said Ron Al:irah am, chief of the
ODNR. forestry division .
The Division of Forestry , curPAGEVILLE -. Sup1o T"wnrently has coo pe rative wildfire
suppressiGn agreements with 325 ship TnJStees will meet at 6:30
fire departments loCJted within p.m. on Wednesday at the !'JgeviUe
the division's fire protection area Ti:Jwn Hall.
in eastern and southeastern Ohio.
RUTLAND - Rutland Township Trustees will meet on Monday at 5 p.m. at the Rudand Fire
POMEROY Units of the Station .
Em ergency
Se rvi ces
Meigs
answered six calls for assistance on
Wednesday. Unit!; respo nded as
follows:
CHESHIRE - DAV 53, locatCENiRAL DISPATCH
ed at 2805 1 Ohio 7 in C heshire,
6:47 a.m., Main Street, assisted will meet on Monday everting,
by Rutland , Cathlyne Tilli s, with dinner at 6:30 p.m .. and the
O 'Bieness Memorial Hospital;
meeting at 7.
' 10:29 a.m. , assisted by Pomeroy,
motor vehicle accident, Ma rgaret
Landers, treated;
2:42 p.m., East Main , T.1nm1y
Hutton, Holzer M edical Center;
5:41 p.m., Higley 11..oad, Raymond Hess, HMC;
8:30 p.m., Second Street, Donnie Edwards, treated .
RUTLAND
5:23 p.m ., Beech Grove Road,
assisted by Pomeroy and Salem
We oflt-r the fir\ est granites

Meeting set

Revival planned

Trick or Treat

To meet

...

EMS runs

DAV meeting

From

Simple to
Simply ·
Magnificent

7

SPRIIJGVAllEY CINEMA
!10Uil l'• WE 51
446 , 4524 OlO
I '0 4 JflCK50N PIK [
FRI9/29/00 • THURS 10/5/00

lOX OlflQ WIU OPIN AT

6:30 PM FOR EVENING SHOWS
2:30PM FOR MATINEES

in an assortment of colors
an"l councless desigm. We
can provide the memorial

. that's right for you. Come

taJk to our counselors. We'll
help you selecr a memorial co be
cherished.

SPACE COWBOYS (PG13)
(A)

"'"I

TWO LOCATIONS:

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph
Charles R1ffle. R. Ph.
· 8 am. 10 9 p m Sal 8:00am · 6 pm
SG~day I 0 00 a m. to 4 .00 p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992 2955
E. Ma1n
Fnendly Serv1ce
Pomeroy, Oh
Week
'till 9

VALLEY WEATHER

5'·

The bill is HR. 4205
On the Net:
Bill
text:
http :/ / thomas.loc.gov
· '
National Economic Coun cil ·
report on co mpen s&lt;~t ion issUeS:·
http: / I www.eh.doe.gov/bene-:
fits
Paper,
Allied - Indus t ri al ,
Chemical and Energy Workers
International
Union :
http :/ /www.paceu nion .co m

From The Shenandoah Valley
•
• Golden Delicious • Red Delicious • Rome •
• Ida Red • melrose • macintosh

Pharmacy

· POMEROY Donald Hampshire "Bumper" Craig, &amp;6, of · member of Racine Village CounPomeroy, formerly of Point Pleasant, West Virginia, died on Sunday, cil. He is a former member and
..O~tober 1, 2000 at his residence.
Born December 27, 1933 in Point Pleasant, he was the son of the officer of the Racine Volunteer
,late Sylvester and Mary Elizabeth Craig, and was a retired employee of
th~ Village of Pomeroy for Mode.rn Sanit;,tion Service Corporation .
He also attended Paint Creek Baptist Church in GaUipolis.
' Along with his parents, he was preceded in death by three brothers,
Gilbert M . Craig Sr., Sidney Craig and William Craig.
He is survived by two ' sisters and brothers-in-law, Laurena and
Claude Thompson, tnd Nettie aud Edgar Baxton, aU of Columbus; a
brother and sister-inclaw, Marvin and Connie C raig of Pomeroy;·two
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Chance of rain 50 percent.
sisters-in-law, Hazel Craig of Parkersburg, West Virginia, and Charlotte
Cool Canadian air being
Friday... Turning cooler. A
Craig of Gallipolis; a special friend, R ebecca Thom'pson of Pomeroy; pulled into the region by a high chance of showers or drizzle until
and several nieces and nephews.
·
pressure system will · lower tem- mid-morning, otherwise VJriable
.Services will be held at 2 p.m. on Saturday, O&lt;tober 7, 2000 at peratures in the tri-counry area cloudines.. Highs . in the lower
E:low- HusseU Funeral Home in Point Pleasant- Officiating will be the Friday and Saturday.
60s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
R.ev. Arius Hurt. Burial wiU follow at Lone Oak Cemetery in Point
Under partly cloudy skies,
Friday night. .. Partly clo udy
Pleasant.
.
highs on Friday will be mostly in with a chance of showers. Lows in
. ·· The family will receive friends one hour prior to the service.
the 60s. Then, on Saturday, the the mid 40s.
mercury isn't likely to climb out
Extended forecast:
of the 50s,' the National Weather
Saturday... Brisk and co lder
with a chance of showers. Highs
Service said.
Sunset tonight will be at 7:07 in the lower 50s.
a!'d sunrise on Friday at 7:34 a.m.
Sunday. .. Continued brisk and
Weather forecast:
chilly with a chance of showers
Tonight ... Cioudy with scat- during the day. Dry at night.
tered showers. A chance of a Morning lows in the mid 30s.
Highs only in the upper 40s.
POMEROY - Brittany Nichole Limbert, 2-month old daughter thunderstorm until midnight.
Monday.. .Partly cloudy. MornLows 55 to 60. Southwest wind 5
of Brian Lambert andTammyWright:both ofPomeroy,died onTues- .
to IS mph shifting to the north- ing lows in the mid 30s. Highs
tlay, Oct. 3, 2000 in Holzer Medical Center.
west during the predawn hours . near 50.
She was born on Aug. 4, 2000 in Gallipdlis.
Surviving in addition to her parents are three sisters, Augusta Wright,
Aria! Wright and Abbygail Lambert of Pomeroy, a brother, Brian Lam-·
bert Jr., Pomeroy; maternal grandparents, Tammy and Terty R.usseU of
Point Pleasant, WVa ., and Calvin and Brenda Wright of Wilkesville; AEP - 38
Gannett _:.__ 507.
Rocky Boots - 5
paternal grandparents , Charles and Carol Lambert of Rutland ; great- Akzo - 44'General Eleclric - 59~
AD Shell - 61l.
Harley
Davidson
49~
Sears33
AmTech/SBC51~
grandfather, Franklin Wright of Hamden; great-grandmother, Irene
Ashland Inc. - 33'•
Kmart-5'·
Shoney's
-'·
Shuster of Columbus; and several aunts and uncles.
Kroger·- 21,_
AT&amp;T- 29'),
Wai-Mart - 46lo
Lands End - 20Y.
Wendy's - 19'o
Services will be held 11 a.m. Friday in Willis Funeral Home, Gal- BankOne - 37
Ltd. - 23.,.
Worthington - 91.
lipolis, with the Rev. Ted Russell officiating. Burial will be in Pine Bob Evans - 18~
Oak Hill Financial - t sl.
BorgWamer - 37).
Grove Cemetery,Vinton. Friends may call at the funeral home on Fri- Champion - 2~
Daily stock reports are the
OVB-27
BBT -30'1,
4 p.m. closing quotes of
Charming Shops- 5').
d~y fiom 9- 11 a.m. '
CHy Holding - 6 ),
Peoples - 1d
the previous day's trans·
actions, provided by
· Federal Mogul =:n~~ll ' 5;2~
Advest of Gallipolis.
Firstar- 20
sell Wood to tak e down the
remainder of the stru cture.
Clarke said demolition will also
impact a nearby building owned
from Page AI
by Bob Ri chards .
\Vhen a large backhoe arrived to
"Our positi on is, these two
clear the building's remains.
owners have to figure out what to
Gallipolis volunteer firefighter do; · Clarke said. "It's in thei~
Jo• Carter agreed to ride the hands."
back hoe's "buc ket" up- to the
The 200 block of Third
aparttnenr, where he tl;'ied to lure remained blocked this mornin g.
DANVILLE, Ky. (AP) - AI gap he holds over th e two-term
Sissy to the door. Un s u ~cessful, Th e street section was roped off Gore and George. W. Bush are_ Texas governor. But the vice
C'l)'ter entered the apartme nt.
by police soon after the collapse.
sticking with the strat egies that , president turned off some voters
·. Abu") five tense minutes passed
"We don't want to take a marked their first debate, . t)l e · with constant int erruptions and
before he emerged wi th th e chan.ce on anyone getting hurt,"
R.epubhca11 o n the attack, the off-camera antics· his heJvy sighs
blon&lt;;le-ai1d-white dog t ucked Clarke said.
d
'1 n 1
D emocrat playin g nice. Both
o . h
.I .k
punctuate seve ra uus 1 answers.
under his arms like a football.
Ciry Engineer Randy Breec h courses are traug t w1t 1 ns .
"I h. k f
•
d b
. A cheer went up among the
·
· to
t m 1. you re .a e ate
was unavailable for co mm cnt ,this
M 1·u·ton s o f VIewers
tune d Ill
,
\vorkers, and a tearful D o nna
their
televised
clash
over
taxes,
coach,
Gore
did
everythmg
you
r~
mormng.
Cox, Sissy's owner, retrieved her
Clarke
compliment ed 1the Medi ci" "· abortion and Gore's trained to do, but he looked a litpuppy.
response of police, firefighters and character. But an alysts say the first tie strain ed and strid ent," sa id
Carter also managed to save
local contra ctor J.P. Holl ey in debate may have minimal imme- Terry Madonna , a po liti ca l scien$1 ,000 from a chest in a downdiate impac~ on the politiCJ! land- tist at Millersvill e Universiry in
responding to the collapse.
stairs apartment.
Pennsylvania, a key state th at
Clarke said officials called Hol- scape.
"We went two-for-two," said
That wou ld be good news for turn ed toward Gore in Septemley after the collap se to .clean
EMS D irector Terry Reed.
the
vice president, who came in ber.
"Wc'r~ very, very thankful thi s debris off the street and take
with an edge in the state-by-state
down the remainder of the wall.
Bush looked pre,id ential in
happened in th e daytime in stea d
ra ce for electoral votes. Bush
"I'd
like
to
comp
liment
him
on
style and substance, a relief to votof night, when residents were
needs to take advantage of every
hi
s
swift
respome,"
C
larke
said.
"I
ers who wondered whether he
asleep," said Police C hi ef Roger
thought the guy was very skillful chance to persuade Ameri cans to was fit for the job. But attacks o n
Brandeberry.
vote for ch ange in a time of peac e
"There would have bee n some in hJndlin g the situation."
Gore's character, a cor nersto ne of
and
prosperiry, ana lysts say.
The coUapse occurred near a
f:Italitie s," he added.
Gore appears to be playing it Bush's election strategy, co uld rub
Gallipoli s officia ls co ntinu ed section of Court Street ravaged
safe, though polls show the popu- some voters the wrong way.
monitoring th e bu ilding's condi- by major fires in the 1990s. A
1993 blaze destroyed the Womel- lar vote split and his electoral lead
tion today.
fragile. The Texas governor is
City Manager E.V. Clarke Jr. dortf and Thomas hardware
assuming the role of scrappy
said the city was cmisulting with building at T hird and Court,
underdog.
S91icitor Douglas Cowles on irs w hich was later razed. Another
"Bush didn't make a particu p 0 sition in preserving safe ry and stru c t~re further down Court was
larly good case for changing th e
if the ciry can direct own·e r R.us- demolished following a 1996 fire.
administration. He didn 't look
awful , he didn't lose anything, but
this wasn't the kind of performance that moved hin1 ahe ad,"
said John Green , political scientist
at the Universiry of Akron in
Ohio, ~ battleground state that
Subscribe today.
Gore is keeping tight .
Green and others said nobody
will know the full impac t of the
§ebate for a few days, unti l voters
. digest follow-up media reports
and ~1l k to fri ends and colleagues.
t,. Though theif messages were
1(11Changed,
both campaigns were
(USPS 213-960)
~ igh tly adjusting th eir electoral
Ohio Valley Publishing Co ..
Published every afternoon, Monday
1:n:tp plans after the debate.
through Friday, 11.1 Cour1 St., Pomeroy,
Correction Policy
Ohio. Second-class postage paid at
Gore planned to begin adverPomerov.
Our main concern in all stories is to
tising in his ho me state of Ten be accurate. If you know of an error in M8mber: The Associated Press and the
Oh1a
Newspaper
Assoc1ation
nessee and renew his ad campaign
a story, cal! the newsroom at (740)
Postmaster: Send address corrections to
992·2156 ..
in West Virginia in recognition of
The Daily· Sentinel, 111 Court. St .,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
ll_ush's inr~ads ii1 two states he·
News Departments
lfGfMIS: Iiiii CUI lffl 7:20 9:45
hacl hoped to have wrapped up.
Subscription rates
The main number is 992-2156.
IS&lt;Ispens!!HorrorfiM~I) Jomil~ M'!frlsoo,lmetta a; •.,
By carrier Qr motor roufe
'
Bush, meanwhile, \y:ts airing
Department extentlons are:
One week
$2
Showing Fridlr at 7:2il I 9:45
ads in Nevada, a state he had
One month
'$8 .70
Ext. 1101
General manager
RG IT ON
7:30, 9:55
Oneyaar
$104
hoped to haw fi~1i1ly in his corDally
50
cents
iColred~
K10101
Ounsl,
Jesse
B~~'l.~
Gabliele
Uilon
Ext.
1102
News
ner by this stagt·. Republicans say
Subscribers not desiring to pay the carri·
Showing Frldlr at 7,.., &amp;9:45
may remit in advance direct to The Daily
he may soon substantial ll y
Ext. 1106 er
or
Sentinel. Credit will be given carrier each
in crease the siZL' of his media
week . No subscription by mail permitted iM
Other services
areas where home earner service is avail·
across the country. Hi s
cJmpa1gu
able.
Ext.
1104
latest ad, due for release T hursday,
Advertising
Mail
subscription
~ is dL·scribcd: by :1ides as a "visio n
Ext. t103
Circulation
Inside Meigs County
spot" tlut outlines his governing
13 Weeks
$27 30
Ext. 1100 26 weeks
$53 82
Classified Ad s
pl1ilosophies.
5~ Weeks
$'05 56
The dcbat~ cou ld tu r n out to
To send e-mail
Rates outside Melgg County
be· a mixed blessing.
13 Weeks
$29,25
galtribune@eurekanet. com
26 Weeks
$56.68
Gore proved the best debater
$109.72
52Weeks
and drove home the experience
ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

LOCAL STOCKS

The Senate later approved :.a·
tneasur,e granting $200,000 In·
compensation from the fcd~ral
government, plus health benefits,
to workers who had been
exposed to ' r.1 dia tion , silica drberyllium, and who e~ther Hlffer
from or have died fmm silicosis,'
beryllium disease 9r a rJdioget1ic'
cancer.
Workers have given accounts'
of breathing clouds of dangero us
dust; being issued no protectiv~
clothing at snes
ha ndlins
radioactive materials; or being
issued
radianon-measuring
badges empty of essential film.

')Pumpkin for Yuor Jac:k-0-lanterns
Bob's Is fullg stocked wNh...
• Baled Straw • mini Pumpkins • Indian Corn Cnnr'llr
• foddershocks • more fall Decorating Items.

r--arl Pansies

and is serving in his 19th year as a

Brittany Lambert

•Gardenme
On
Over
To
Bob's·
•••
and Decorating Center Hnd find the perfect ..u.-;:._. . .,
,c:r,•. ,~..,·llar(ly

faomPapAl

Fire Depanment, a founding
member of the Racine emergency squad, and worked as a
teacher and principal in the
Southern Local School District
for 41 years.
He is marned to the former
Jane Gilmore Taylor, and they
have three daughters.

Highs will plunge on Friday

Speaker q,uestions whether compensation cost estimate is too low·
WASHINGTON (AI')
H ouse Speaker Dennis Hastert
exp re ssed doubts Wednesday
abo ut whe!'thcr h1s own l~xp~rts'
csti.matc of a si'k worh·rs' compl'nsanon plan is too low.
House leaders already h.we
stymied the Senate-approved
pl.m because they say th ey fear
the paynwnts will bt• too expcn-

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

-

•
l

,,

'

SWISHER LOHSE

'I~

.

.

OPEN Monday thru Friday
8:00 am - 9:00 pm
Saturday 8 am· 6 pm
Sunday 10 am- 4 pm

·I

Portage Cgunty Coroner Roger Marcial
said a tissue sample also was takrn from
Theresa Andrews during her autopsy for use
in helping in the identification' of her as the
baby's mother.
The week-old boy, found late Monday in
the house of MicheUe Bica, 39, remained in
good condition at R obinson Memorial
lfospita! Wednesday. Theresa Andrews, 23;
was found buried in Bica's garage.
Nicholas Phillips, Jon Andrews' lawyer,
said the family expected the babY to be
released Thursday. Wednesday evening, about

I

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•
nes

Judge rules EPA illegally Ohio officials knew
about license problem~
punished investigator

Serving You Since 1946
with Quality Prescription
Service at
Competitive Prices
We Honor most Third Party
Prescription Plans

v~nJors m th1~ areJ dun11g thl'

Thursday, October 5, 2000

s.

heparalions begin for

Columbia Gas
raising rates

I

200Q

Ohio

Page A 2 • 'The Dally Sentinel

THE

OF

THE WATCHER (R)
7:10 SUN-THURS
Starting Friday:
Meet the Parents

Remember th,e Titans
,Nurse

, 520 W.

~lain

St.- Pmueroy

Nl'ar the Mnson Bridge

Phone 7-10-992-2588
Vinton 740-388-8603
Gallipolis 740·446·0852

�•

PageA4

~

·:· The Daily Sentinel

lhunday. October s. 1000

.

'E.sttlillslid ill ~
111 Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio
·Fax: 992-2157

PROMISE
NOT TO
LEAVE OUT

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene HoeHich
General Manager

R. Shawn Lewis·
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Dear Ann Landers: I love my mother a lot, but she has hurt my feelings, and
this isn't the first time. Please tell me
what I should do about her lack of consideration. Maybe I am being too critical.
Ten years ago, iny grandfather sent me
:a letter letting me know he planned to
"give me an opal ring. When my Mom
went to visit him, he asked her to bring
the ring back for me. The next time I saw
her. she was wearing it. She then gave me
a ring that had no sennmental value
whatsoever. I was Ver y upset by this, bm
I said nothing.
·Now, tt has happened again . My greataunt gave Illt! a set of crystal glassware
several years ago. and my parents stored tt
in their hom~. Unfortunately, it was\nlsplac,-d, and my mother could not find it.
Two weeks ago. Mom called to say she
had found the crystal glassware. but tt
looked so lovelv itl her china cabmet that
she wJs go~ng to ~ccp it.

... AND .I

74~992·2156

ANY

DETAILS.

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

l

n,,

IAuen to 1he rdillW an wdcOJM.
sltould bll1n rh411f JO() wonb. AU kMrr .n Sl4bjtct
to ~dilin1 4Nl "'"$/ M $t&amp;ned ant/ induM Gddnu 1111d tekphoM niUJihr. No •ruiJMd Wtten will
bt publislled. Uatn sllouut ~ in goN Ulste, ~ni!IK in11.u, 11ol pusonaJjtUs
Tht upinWnJ u,rTSJtd in 1M ~:uiMIIIrr b.low tltwdlt OOIUtiiSIIIf of tht Ohio ValhJ PubliJhint
Co. 's nlillJrUil &amp;otud, u.11kn OlhtrwUt noled.

NATIONAL VIEWS

um

It's no t quite that simple.
Gore now says h1s off-key paean to the "union !abe( was an
attempt it a JOke before a fnendly audtence. A review of the videotape gtvcs plau sibtliry to that explanation ... And Gore was m fact a
member of a Hou se energy subcomm.ittee when the oil reserve, cre ated symboh ca lly m 1975 witho ut any money, was finally·funded for
th e tir5t rime .
H yperbole in ·polittcs is nuthmg new. Ne tther tS the game of
.e xaggeratmg the other side's supposed mistakes ....
G ore should be on notice .The sure way to stop the attacks on his
creJtbllity,fatr or unfatr, ts to resist the temptation to engage m c~m­
paign shorth and, overstateme nt or hyperbole and even deadpan

(Gender ca'nyon' marks support for Bush, Gore
President Al Gore and Texas Gov.
George W. Bush head into their O lympic
finals - the decisiVe debate season - runnin~ nearly dead eve n, although both sides
agree that the recent momentum is with
Bush.

Morton
Kondracke

Gore c;me roaring out of the Democratic

National Convention, then profited from two
weeks of Bush's stumbling and pulled mto a
polling lead averagil1g between 5 and 8
points.
NEA COLUMNIST
Uut in the past 10 days, after Bush regained
hts footing and Gore stumbled. Bush has
pulled back to even 111 most polls and shghtly
Drug AdministratiOn's approval of the aborahead in some. Although the lead is statisticalnon drug, RU-486.
ly instgnificant, the movement ts 5 to I0
Media attentwn t~nds to focus on the
points pro-Bush.
female sid e of the gender gap, but Anna
What's particularly imeresttng - especia lGreenberg of Ha rvard's Kennedy School of
ly as a guide to the candt.dates' debate strate- .
Government points o ur that th e llemucratsf
gies- is the wtdeni ng of the traditional genmaJOt problem in recent elections is that they
der gap into a gender canyon. Gore leads
have been able to capture o nly .about a thtrd
among women by 7 to 14 points, and Bush
of the white male vote.
leads among men by 13 tO 22 points, dependMeantime, if Repubhcans are capabl e of
ing on the poll.
getting half or better of th e white female vote
The Los Angeles Times poll shows Gore
-GOP Hou se candidates took 54 percent in
ahead, 49 to 42, among women, but has Bush
1998 - they can win nation al elections.
trouncing him among men, 56 to 34. Gallup
Greenberg dtd not want to talk about
has Gore wtth a 14- pomt advantage among
Gore's strategy because h er fath er, Stan
women . and Bush a 20-point lead among
Greenberg, is Gore's pollster, but she said the
men ..Jhe Voter. com Battleground survey puts
key to cuttin g down the GOP lead among
Gore up 9 points among women, and Bush
men is to redu ce their sense - dt!minant
up 13 potnts among men.
smce the late I '!60s - that they are paying
Top strategtsts for both Bush and Gore say
taxes for programs wh ich do not benefit
that on E lection Day Gore needs a doublethem .
digtt VICtory among women to counterbalWhtte males benefited from the G I btU, she
ance a probable 12- to 15-point lead among
pointed out, and identified with the Democmen.
ratic Party. She suggested that Democratic
Gore strategrsts say they will try to hold
programs suc h as lifetime le,arning, JOb
Bush to a 10-point lead among men, while
retraimng and coll ege tax credits could help
beattng hm1 by at least that much among
wi.n them back.
women, who wtll probably make up 52 perA Gore strategist (not Greenberg) said the
cent of the electorate.
vtce president ts ta rgeting senior men - who
Bush strategrsts say thetr man wtll wm the
now favor Bush by 2 tu I , according to the
election if he can carry a majonty of wh ite
L.A. Times - by emphasizing prescription
women (thereby holding Gore to a singledrug, retirement and Social Security prodigit lead among all women) and if he can
grams.
carry men by 12 to 15 ,potnts.
·
The message that "Bush ts for the few" will
Bush's plan may be complicated if women
appeal to rmddle- class men, the Gore atde
are turned offby his cnticism of the Food and

satd. Gore's emphasis on paymg off the debt
may appeal to younger men , he added.
Bush and Gore ate running even among
smgle men , according to the L A . Ttmes,
whereas Preside nt Clmton carried the group
by large margins in 1992 and 1996.
Gore plans to target that gruup wtth a
below-the-radar-screen campaign identlfymg
Bush as a ngh t-wingcr on social issues such as
abortion.
Meanttme, Bush is pursuing the strategy
that Anna Greenberg suggests has been working for Republicans lately- emp hastzing tax
cuts (for men) md appealing to white women
by pen1stently demonstranng an mterest in
improving edu catton.
Bush 's newest line of attack, accusmg Gore
of favoring a gov~rnment buildup not seen
since the Great Society, seems designed to
bolster ht&lt; lead "'nang men
Most of the issue&lt; voters say ate tmporta nt
to them - health: Soctal Security, education
-are Hwomen's issues," in which Gore leads.
H e's not doing badly on "men's issues" like
taxes and leadership, eith er, altho ug h Bush
leads by miles on st rengthenin g the military.
All thi s seems to give Gore an advantage.
But as one Bush strategist pointed out, in
1'IHIJ. l'restdent Jimmy Carter led on all tssue
tests except taxes and the mtlitary, and Ronald
Reagan won in a landslide.
What coums on Elecnon Day ts not gender or issues, of course, but electoral votes.
Gore strategists think their man ts doing fine
in the b.mlegrouncl states of Mtchigan, where
unions arc strong; Ohio, where Democratic
polls show Gore up by 5 points among
Democratic voters; and Flonda, which is dead
even.
Bush aides contend that thetr man is well
ahead in Ohio, but concede that the race is
even in Mi c htgan, Florida, Washington, Orego n anJ Wisconsin.
"These states all will follow the national
trends," sa1d a Bush adviser, opttmisttcally.
Those trends, however, are likely to be deeply
affected by the debates.

ARDS is little
known but

serious disorder
Question: I got o ut of the
h ospital five months ago after
having ,adult res pita tory distress
syndrome
(ARDS).
Even
though thts terrible illness
str ikes 150,000 p eople eve ry
year, most people have never
heard of lt . Even my .family doc•
tor d tdn 't know much about lt.
Please let your readers know
about ARDS.
Answe.r: Adult Respiratory
· Distress Syndrome, also called
Acute Respiratory Distress SyndrOJne or ARDS , ts :1 seve re
breathing dtsorder It strikes
• between 100,000 and 150.000
people m the Umted States each
yeJr, so it is uncommon but it

certa111ly

no t a rar!! d1sord.er.
Any time you en counter rhc
word '\yndromt\ " you shou ld
think of a grottptng of symptoms
rarhcr rhan :111 mdtv1dual dtscase .
ARDS is .1 good examp le. T he
label ts applted to those svt th J
spectfit group of .1hnnrmal Xray, EKG .md blood test results
that busi c.tlly mean th e lu ngs arc
not· able to supply suffictetu
oxygen for the body. The oxygen defica then produces symptoms we can all re cognize shortness of breath, a fast breath, mg heart rate and a f.tst heart
rate.
ARDS can resul t from a
number of causes Co nun on
examp les are a blood-borne
infe ction called septi cemia,
inhalation of toxtc, substa nces, a
comphcatJon of pneumonia,
near drowmng, or from inhaling
vomit, alcohol or other substances that don't belong 111 tbe
lungs Trauma to th e lu ng, such
as 1111ght occ~r m an auto acci- ·

(Murton Kv~tdrackc is cxemtt11e editor &lt;&gt;{ Roil
·
Call, tltc newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

Ghosts cif Kennedy, Nixon hover around debates

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

In 1941 . form er Supreme Co urt Jusnce Louts D. Urand ei&gt;- the
fiN Jew~&lt;h mem ber of th e na n on's htgh est court - died in Wash1Tlt,rt:ml .n .tge H4
In 1953. Earl War ren was sworn 111 as th e 14th ch tefjustice of the
U nited States. succeedmg Fred M .Vmson.
In I% 2. th e Beatles ' first ht t, " Love M e Do," was released in th e
United Kingdo m .
In 1Y70, Bri m h trade comm11sio ne r James R1chard Cross was kid n.tpped m C an ada by ;nil1tant Qu'c hcc separ.ttsts: he was rel eased th e
follow mg D ece mber.
In I 'll&lt;6, Am cn can Eugene .H.tScnfus was captured by Sa nd1111St.1
..,n]dJt'r"' .1tier the we.lpn n'i pla ne he \.\ ',1"1 tlymg 111 wa&lt;&gt; )hot down over
-;o uth ern N ic.t rahruJ.
·
In 1\JHH . Democ rat Lloyd Bentsen la mbasted R epubh c.Hl Dan
Qu ayle d unn g the1r vtce pre'ld en m l debate. tel ling Quayle. "Se ru-

tor, vo u'n.· no l.tr-k Kenn edv.''
1,·, I'IH'! . .1JU ry 111 C hJrk;tte. N .C.. w nvtctcd te nn er PTL e~.11l ge­
list ] 1111 B.tkl. cr o f u11 ng lm ,telev!StOII show to defraud fo ll owers.
• kn vL'.lT\ .Jgo. A•Jurv 111 &lt; : nl l lllJ J. Jtl .uq umt'd J JJ Jrt1 ga llery .md lt"•di rn tlll .o f ob'&gt;n:ni ty ch.t rgt''i "t l'lll l11111 !; f ro 111 .u-1 ex h1bit of -.e.xudll v
• g r.tph tc plwtogra phs by R obert ,\1.t f'plctltorpe.

Ann , I feel ·that my mother ls · riot
being fait to me, but [ don 't know how
to handle it. -- Susan in Michigan '
Dear Michigan : Look in a rearv1ew
nurror and see if there is a sign o n your
back that says "KICK ME." If t here is no
sign, smnebody is kicking, you because
they know they can get away wnh it.
T h;l[ pe"r~ on IS your mother -- and I
wonder how m.my others. You're an ..~asy
t.lrgct.
First. t he n0xt timl.' you sec your

Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

'HARDBALL'

Jggre"'\O r n atJLm"i

ADVICE

John C. Wolf, D.O.

·•

V~e e

hum o·r.

Today 11 Thursday. Oct. 5, th e 279th day of2000.There are H7 days
left in the ye,u.
. Tod.1y's Htghh ght tn Htstory ·
On O ct. 5, 1947, President Truman dehvered the first televised
W lnte I lo use •ddress.
&lt;l n th iS ,date:
In I H30, the 21 st president , Ch este r Arthur, was born tn Fatrficld,
Vt.
In I ~'J 2 . th e [)alton G ang. notorio us for its trai n robberies , was
pr.tltit al ly wt ped o ut willi e attemptmg to rob a patr of banks 111 Coffeyvt lk Kan.
In 1\137. PreSident Frankltn R oosevelt call ed for a "quarantine" of

Ann
Landers

ami/p
edicine

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

.,

mtan .

October s. 1000

This means r&lt;gular checkups and whatever dental procedures are necessary w
preserve your teeth and keep your ~ms
healthy. If you don't do these thmgs,
you're destined to pay a big price for the
neglect. Trouble that star,ts in the m?uth
could poison your entire body. Don t let
this happen to you -- or anyone you care
about
What can you give the person who
has everything' Ann Landers' booklet,
"Gems," is Ideal for a nightstand or coffee ta~le. "Gems" is a collecnon of Ann
Landers· nwst requested poems and
essays. Send a self-addressed, long, buSIness-size envelope and a check or money
order for $5 .25 (thts includes postage and
handling) to: Gems, c / o Ann Landers ,
P.O. Box 11562, Chtcago, Ill. 60611 0562. (In Canada, send $6.25 .) To find
out more about Ann Landers and read
her past columns. vislt th e Cn~ator~ Syndicate wt!'b page at \\·\Vw.creJtors.conl:

riers , and we cannot afford the cost of
regular dental care.
TeU me, Ann, ifVtagra is cover~d by
insurance, why is dental coverage so hard
to find' And those pol,ines that do cover
a tnp to the dentist ·are often inadequate
and stingy. A single root canal can use up
all the avatlable coverage for an ennre
family.
l 'do not understand why health care
doesn't include teeth. It's about time
insuran~carners realized that good
dental ca
an save a lot of grief and
other xpenses down the road . Please tell
them so, Ann.-- Mary in Sound Beach,
N .Y.
Dear Sound Beach: Thanks for
revtsiting a subject that I have been
kvetchmg about for a long time. Dental
coverage should be· part of every tnsurance pacbge. Your teeth can be your 32
best friends. If you take good care of
them. rhey should iast as long as you ltve.

mother, hand the substitute ri'ng to her
· and say, "Thanks for the loaner. And now
I would like my grandfather's opal ring.
He wanted me to have it. It belongs to
me." Be firm about it.
Then, tell your mother you are so glad
she found the crystal glasses your greataunt bequeathed to you because you are
plannmg to entertain one of these days
and the crystal glassware will look great
o n -your table. Let her know you '11 come
over wtth a stack of newspapers and will
wrap them for her because it's too btg a
job for her to do alone. Then, DO IT!
Dear Ann Litnders: You rec~ntly
printed a column saying dental health
should be a pnonty because we now
know that neglected teeth ca n cause a
host of serious health problems. I agree
r ompletely. The trotible, however. is
NOT that people cannot find a good
dennsr. it's that most of us do not h.we
dental cover:1ge from our insu rJncc car-

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

Cuba's prison mentality
forces desperate acts
• The Post and Courier, Charleston, S.C., on jleei11g Citbmd
rercwit~,{l political t1,;;y/r~m: The two fanuhes rhat made an epic escape
from Cuba - wtth nine out of-the I 0 men , women and children
aboard a tiny crop-duster plane almost miraculously survtving a
crash uno the ocean -merit political asy lum. The U.S. Immigration and Naturahzanon Service should let them all stay 111 the United St:ltcs. thus ensure that they are not entangled m another heartbreaking tug-of-war like that fought betwern Communist Cuba
and the Cuban eXJk community over 6-year-bld Elian Gonzalez.
By bnngmg all the &gt;urvtvors of the plane crash ro Key West, the
C oast Guard ·made the f.1nulies eligible for a~ylum under the C uban
Adju stment A~t. whtch grants that right to any Cu ban fl eeing the
C amo regime who manages to set foot on U.S. so li . ·
In ,111 nffiual note the Cuban government has descnbed the fltght
as an " act of piracy." a descnption at odds wtth reality. But it " f.11r
warnmg th at tf the escapees were to be sent back to Cuba, they
wou ld be severely pumshed for trying to escape the clutches of Castro. ...
.
As lo ng as Castro continues to deny Cubans the nght to travel
abroad . effectively mamtaining Cuba as a prison tsland, Cubans w ho
mk thetr !tves without endangering others when they seek freedom. deserw to be granted polttical asylum tf they succeed in
reaching U.S. sot!.
• USA Today, 011 Gores loose ltps: What's the harm in a littl e
hyperbole' AI Gore ts qUJckly findmg out The vice preSident's
lome ness on details, whether talking drug pnces, oil supp!tes or lullabies. threatens to make him his own worst enemy in his quest for
the presidency...
The l:lush campa!gn &lt;e tzed the opportumry to feed tts central
campaign theme: that Gore, like Prest dent C linton, can't be trusted .
Earlier G o re assertions about creating the Internet and inspinng the
1 ~711 romanttc novel Love Story supported the story line.
With poll; showing that Republicans tml Democrats tn pubhc
contidcncc for dealing with many top tssues SoCtal Secunty, health
care and 'the like the idea ts to make a genenc argument for change
by tying the vtce prestdem to an outgoing president renowned for
· his skill at di, sembling and who hed opeply about an affatr with an

Page AS

Mother continues to keep ·daughters sentiments

GORES OOWNFALL ....

The Daily Sentinel

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

the Bend

The Daily Sentinel

BY CHRIS MATTHEWS

AUST IN,Texas -Jack Kennedy sa1d he ft&gt;lt
sorry for Rtchard Ntxon because his 1960
debating partner did not know w ho he was and
therefore was forever trying to decide "which
Nixon " to be.
On the e~e ofTuesday"s maugur.l debate of
21!011, George W Bush displays a similar contempt for rrval AJ Gore.
"Yo u have a candtdate that can be all thmgs
to all people, someone who ts willing to change
perceptions," he told me last week. "That m

itself makes voters nervou s."
In th11 important detail, the Texas governor's
view of Gore parallels Kenn edy 's o f Ntxon.
l3ush sees the vice president as a man so dwkw.ard about lm own tdenticy that he must plead
fo r acceptmn::, not on the ~trcngth of hi ~ own
vtews and phil osophy, but by pa11dering to the
cou Jury'.; clec.;toraJ constituencJ e~.
I recall Bush's reacti on to th e Gore dcclara-.
non to a Mextcan-Am en can group earlier in
the campaign that, sin ce ht s first grandchtld was
bo rn o n the Fo urth of July. h e hoped his next
would he born on Ctnco de Mayo.
" He's a beaut," Bmh gt inned, rdishm g the
exposure of so naked a claim to ethnic sympa'thy. Will lm sheer m ntempt for Gore. be th e
llepublican nomim.:t:'s arm or when he goes
J \~ u c
.1

by m u e t h l 'i week With a m a n mfi)r llh:d by

dec.tdc o n Capitd Hill , th e n enh anced by

c1ght years .~~ VJCc president?
If sn, Bush w tl l need tt. AI C o re is. even by
l'lll'lllY ,lClOU il t'i, .Ill llllnm chm g studen t of the

political game. As a freshn1en congr~ssman in
the early 1980s, he became the House's recognized expeCt on the use of state- of- the-art technology to catalog and idcnt1fy voters back
horne. Go~e was the go-to guy on hoyv a Member of Congress cou ld computerize his consttcuency, SOrting Out the pro-lifers from the
pro-chmcers, th e t-,'1m owners from the gun
opponents, etc.
Go re has been equally zealous in complering
his other political homewo rk. When a new ethmc facttoi1 becomes fat en ough for market rec;JI a ce rtain Buddhtst temple' - Gore is
a!nong the firo;t to learn of it. If tiH~ n:\ a new
way to explot t the fund - raising laws, rest assured
Gore knows abour ir.
His surcnt:ss of the matenal , pol ittcd as \\'ell
as subsran[lve-, ·and lno; rcllsh for the game are
Gore's best weapons i1 1 TueslLly\ debate What
he lacks in easy charm. lw nlJkes up for m
attentlVt'llt'SS. If m meth111 g neec.:ls learni ng, he
Will have learned tt.
In this detail, it's not llu1h w ho matches the
JFK moJd but Gore.
Jack Kenn edy W.ts, hke AI c;o re. ·' rclentlcSI
self-tmprover. He studi ed spced-re.tding. ltstened to Chu rc hill \ speeches .md barked like .1
seal to strengthen Ius voice. H e drove hnml'lf tn
undero.;t md ethm c .md gl'ogrJphi c voting p.lt tans . Before anyone e.\10e,
hired .1 poll-,rer ro
hl.'lp him match hi ~ in ~"i~.tgc: to ( UITt'n t votL'r

Jll'

nmcerns.

Whr:n it came; tim e fi.Jr t ht: "Crc.rt I &gt;c ba te,"
It \\'&lt;1~

Ken nt·dy who \huwed up a Wl'L· k L'.trl) to

grill chrector Don Hewm about camera angles
and other techni,cal facto" .
Expect Gore to be equally prepared. Watch ing him camp;:ugn in recent weeks, we can see
already his gmwing comfort m publt c settmgs.
Forget the cigar-store Indian of yore. Tod,ty's
(~o re is in In s best poss1blc shape - physically,
psychologi cally and political1y. Expect hnn ~o
e nter the Tuesday debate room loaded for bear.
As always Ill hrr; c u eer, AI Gore will arrive
•
I
knowing what he needs to know. And that
mcludes a clearly developed strategy.

BIRTHDAY

' :

.

"

'
.

dent, or comp li ca tions of a broken leg can also cause ARDS.
ARDS is a very serious illness. The initial symptom is a
mild shortness of breath that can
progress to a near fatal condtnon
111 minutes or H nuy take
ho u rs About 40 perce·n t uf those
who h ave tt die from th e condition, but th e death rate can
range from 15 to 90 percent,
dependtng largely upon the
underlymg cau se, age of the VICtint, and whether or not orga ns.
other than the lungs begin to
fa il. Obvtously, survival is also
influenced by how qtuckly the
person gets to ao mtenslve/cntical care umt.
One of th e essenttal compon ents of tre.ament for those
w tth ARDS is t ht' use of a ve ntihtor.- a m~chanical deVice
th at takes over the work of
breathtng In addtnon. a prompt
and aggrt=ssJve seZtrch for rhe
underlying c aus~ must be
undt;&gt;rtJkl.'n . Assunung that rhc
undcrlymg Clll Sl' IS H.iennfied
and corrected. th~ person wi ll
ne ..·d to stay on thr..' ventibtor for
one to t lu~.'~ weeks.This is J very
stressful tlll1t' for rhc p11t1ent, Ius
o r or loved one!'! .mJ also for the
physicians bec.ul\c of the larg•'
number of thin gs thH can sttll
gq wrong.
(1bvmusly, you Jre one of the
~urVJVOr~ of ARDS. That '!'~ good
news ~'An addtttonal bright point
is that most who survtve ARDS
eventu all y make a c ompkce
re covery
"Family Medtcine" is a weekly column . To subn11t questions,
wrtte to john C. Wolfe, D.O ..
Ohio UniverSity Colleg~ of
Osteopathtc
Med tctne ,
Grosvenor Hall , Ath e ns, Ohw
45701. Pa st co lumns are available
· o nline
at
www. fhradio .org/ fm

re-cnactnu:nt later th1s month.
The camp voted to change its 200 1 Memori al Day ceremomes.
MIDDLEPORT-- Donations to pay for an appeal of th e re cent In stead of havmg them at the C1v1l Wa 'r statue in Pomeroy, the
ruhng jn the Me1gs County Com mon Pleas Court agamst th e su tt cetemo nies will be moved to Mt. Olive Cemetery, Long Bottom ,
that sought to prevent the destruction of the Buffington Island to dedicate the marker to t he third and final Meigs County ConCrvil War ba ttlefield are are being soh cited.
gresstonal Med~l of Honor wmn~r of the Ctvtl War, Abraham BarThe Brooks-Grant Ca mp 7 So ns of Umon Veterans of the Civil nnger.
War m eellng recen tly at H op e BaptiSt C hurch an nex voted to ask
Kei th Ashley reported that all resoluttons of the camp that
for donations from local citize ns and veterans' groups to P&lt;~Y for
passed the Ohio Department were also passed at the national
the appeal. Anyone wishing to donate may se nd a check payable
encampment m Lansing, M tc h .
to the camp to James Mourmng, Treasure r, 600 Grant Street, MidMt chael Trowbridge, ' camp commander, presented a program
dleport~ Ohto 45760. It was noted that prior to thts t1me most of
on Civil Wac chaplains. H e was dressed 111 reproduction Union
the litigation expense h as been handled by the Meigs Co unty
chaplain's clothing. H e discussed their religious duties as well as ,
Historical Society.
their duties m battle til tending the wounded. Many soldiers fearAlso, dtscussed was a ·recent vtstt to Me~gs County by Sen
mg b eing killed in battle would give thetr cards and dice to the
Mtchael De Wine in Met gs County where th e battlefield issu e was
chaplams so that these items constdered evil would not be sent
ratsed and th'e se nator ~gree d to look into it.
home to their famihes. Some chaplains even had guns for I;Jattle,
It wa·s note d th at Gov. Bob Taft after bein g contacted to meet
1t was 'repor ted.
wah the camp but had referred the matter to t~e state historical
The camp will join with the Maj. Daniel McCook Circle No
preservation office.
R ep. Ted Strickla nd's office has also been contacted by the 104 Lad1es of the Grand Army· o f the Repubhc for a Thanksgtvgro up asking for a Congresstonal investiga tion of the Huntin gton mg dinner Oil Nov. 21 at Hope Baptist Church annex . The
District U. S. Army Corps of Engineers due to allege d violations potluck dinner is in honor of Pres. Lmcoln's first proclamation of
of federal regulattons in the issuance of th e nuning permit. No Thanksgiving, and the camp wi ll furnish th e turkey.
action o n the request ha s been taken, it was reported.
The rccem decision of the National Park Service to change the
thrust of tts mtsS\on regardmg Civil War battlefield parks was disPOMEROY - Again this year Ewing C h apter, Sons of the
cussed. It was po inted out in th e disc ussion t h at untt I ;ece nt ly t h e
battles that the •pa rks preserve were interpreted by the parks as to Am erica n Revolution. a re local sponsors of the National Soetety's
th e strategies a nd outcomes of t he battles they honor. Now. George S. and Stella M . Kmght Es&gt;ay Contest for h1gh schoof
accordtng to th e Sons of Umo n Veterans , the Nattonal Park Ser- JUmors and seniors.
v 1ce is trying to interp ret the enure C ivil War at eac h battlefield
James Lochary, president of the local chapter, stressed that the
by stanng tbe cause of the Civil War tO be slavery, whtch ts n ot contest is open to all students attendtng publtc, paro chiai , pnvat e.
o r accredi ted home sc hoo ls 1n Gallia, Athens, Meigs , Wa&gt;hington ,
accepte d by many h isto nan s. '
The camp passed a resolution to send to Congress asking that and Morgan Cou nties. The topic is "The U .S Constitution · Does
the Nattonal Park Servtce rewrn to mterprenng o nl y th e battles tt Sta nd the Test of Tim e."
that the parks preserve .
The wmner of rhe narwnal contest wdl re c ~Jve S7 .500, a
Myron ,'11 d Barbara Jones were ct&gt;m m ended on their work at plaque and a trip to the NSSAR Headquarters 111 Louis,·ille.Y. The
[h e rec~nt ma rkmg of the grave of Umon soldi er, Sloan Brum- wi nning ess;~y \Vlll also be submitted ro the SAR N :n'ioiul Mag:1field, in Ga llt a County. Sloan's son, Stanford Brumfield. is a mem- ztne fort~Jubltcation . On th~ state le vel. the wmncrs Will be aw.~td ­
ber of th is c.unp as ,, real so n . He wos prc·sent for the ce remon y at ed $30, S200, .tnd 5100 for first. second .tnd thtrd place ..s respc·cthe age of 92 along "ith hts family. The camp provtded Civil WJr ttvelv.
mu sic, rifle squad, refreshments. The camp 1s now prl'panng to
The contc:s[ 1s fo~ an o ri gm al t''iS,lY of 500- 750 words wntten.
mark the grave of M esc ha ck Walker at Snowball Hill Ce m etery in tn E ngl ish. They w ill be judged fo r histoncal accuracy. d.mty of
Syrac u se at I p.m. Sa t urday. October 1-+. The public is tnvited
th ough t, org.tnization and proven toptc, grammar . .s pelling and
Members were treated to see the rosters of Compa ny F, 174t h documentatton., T here is a•hst of 15 sources whteh arc to be used
O h10 Volunteer lnf:m try w hose captain. Ephriam C. Carson is the tn researc h.
anccsto r .of our Meigs Co unty Common Pl t•as JUdge. Other items
T he deadline for th e contest tS jan. 20.
for vtewmg Ill eluded the roste r of th e Army of the C umberland:
Contest rules. gu idelines. and the resource list may be obtained
an anginal Ctvil War Sp ringfield rifle, original handcuffs used on from Lo c hary, at 740-448-7269 ; Tad Cu ckler, 740- 594 . 9 115 , or
Union soldi ers a t Andersonvtlle Pmon, and a reproductto n of the 740- - 593- 50 27 The mformatton may be obtam ed by mat! by
book by Dr Thomas Barton, Sy racuse, o n the history of the 4th sending a NO. 10 self-addressed , stamped envelop to james
We st Virg inia Infantry. Information was also presented on the Lochary, 18660 State Route 550, Amesvtlle, Ohw, 45711 .
Rev. J. M. R ife. first en h stee for the Unwn army tn Me1gs CounLast year's wmner of the Ewmgs Chapter contest was Ryan
ty.
Thacker \vho attends Sout h Gallia High School. Her ess.1y ts postPlans were made for the camp to provide an mformation booth ed for rcv1ew on the web site of Ewings C hapter,
at the genealogical fatr at Spencer, WVa., on Sept . 30. It also had www.frognet. net / -assar /

SAR to sponsor essay contest

mer for the C1111p was en hsted.
The camp nmv has books on the entire Umon rosters for West

- - - - - ._ - - - - - - - - ·- - - . .
rR . t T w· A
I
egis er .1.0 Ill
I

VtJ;~~11 ~~~;~~~~dth~e~~1v~~~;~ reported

I MASON

a booth at th e Meigs Co unty Expo where a po tential new drum-

re-et:actment and tactical

even~ that

on the recent Civtl War

they attended at

Car~ex : .

o1sHN;:;:~ ~!.~!~~N~!~!!.! E
1

-NO IQUIPMINT TO BUY-

:1

50TH

$5~~09 Gs.,:~.~.t~~.: ~r.,
,

\

.l);l~ZJ~}i~aytime)
I

loo

FRII Stantlard P•ofeulonal ln•tallatlon
SIGN UI'111DA)'. OIIE·TIME ACTIVATION F£E OF 149.99
lndu. . ld IMIIttt't P'-t ,.,_ent.

.

(Chri.1 1\ l!itrlnws, (hi~/ {!f the Stm f ·mHnsto E Y, /111- ,
m' r:1 I t {ufrr'll ~/ ,11 1 Bw·c,nl, 1~ "''·'' o( ' 1 /-fttrdl•r~ W' 011
C/\'BC ,md ,\ IS/'dJC u1l!lt•'lrm~ttci.,. '17tc 1999 cdifl orr '!f uH!Irrlhrr/1" . ll't1.i fHd!lisltt'd /')' '/ ilw lwc•'w
r

Jos hua Daughe rty. s on of Jtm a nd
Paula Wmebre nne r-Da ugherty, ee l·
.e brated h•s fou rth birthday on
Aug. 21 at the homes of ht s grand·
pare nts w•th Bl ue 's Clues parttes
on la ter dates .
He itves tn Mason. W.Va. wtth
hi s parents, his s iste r, Da nte ll e.
and brothe r. Jose ph .
He ts the grand son of Go rdon
a nd Susa n Wtne brenne r of Syr~
cuse and Fred Da ugherty of Potnt
Pleasa nt, W.Va . a nd th ~?)a t e Juan •·
ta Daugher ty. He is the gra nd son
of Erne sti ne Zu s pa n of Mason.

M.,.,...--- _.........,....,

ow-.,.....Dftt'_,~
'fti ..

~-..w..AIK'CI"DftAI~t

~

-

Furniture &amp; Jewelry, Inc.

--·--

···IQ5!Gto!!.ocotlil~"

. D401112-Zt"

.... ...I

1- :::~
.._._ .. '"!!

1

tificate

"

_,

I

State

I
I

Zip

Cet'!lfict~le'Jier Flllnily P•r Month. M~sl be 18 Yeal""

I
I

1

I
1

..:O.EI'OAI (); iSfeD

'Jllilu;. One Gill

_

tQ ~~ter. No' purcb~e ne&lt;f~ry. i;tJree (3)~50Gift CertiOcates 1
I to~t-Oider
'f1i, "givC~~ bway moDthly. t;;n ~ettlfi~tes to'l&gt;e applied to new purchase
1 mlly. Ci'ltutot be used aiUO pa~ailent an a •Muon~umiture chnrg&lt; or I

I

"-'1--lllltiMIIt., 12 ~~.

:

1
1
1 3 91~"~ertil1cates Given Away Monthly 1
r

IAitdress ' '
le-t

......1_,_
_... .........
....,Olill ........
...... _,. .......

FURNITURE'S II

Y e a r C e l e b r a t i o n·

INarite · ·

Wh o wil l em erge the rl;'cogm z~ d winn ei in
this lim debate of 20(KJ?
.
Amwer. T he candtdate w ho deploys hi s as$ets
to g r~Jtco.;t advantage.
If llush i ~n o res Go re .md t.llks to th e Anl't'ric.m votet 'about hi s upbeat philosophy ~nd
cO mrnitnl ent to ,1 fnll -opportumty society, as he
chd m ht&lt; Phtladclphia acceptance spe ec h, he
w ill do well.
If Gore av01 do; try 111 g to show up Uu ~i h , but
ti.Jcmeo.; imte;1d on rh e real-hte roncen b of peo~
ple . .1'\ he d1d in hi o.; Lo\ Angd cs :.tcc~;.·ptan ce
1pcech, he wtll do we ll.
·
If both rn t:n do wh.1t I've suggeo.; ted. thi ~ t-ir"; t&lt;
dcb.tte will be a contest, not of words, but of
purpOIO L'

Hook.1 )

IS

'·
@
/ ..

Ferry, W.Va Gerald Ccowfo rd reported on hiS attendan ce at the
re, enactment at Somerset, and his plans to attend the Greenfield

Civil War Sons seek aonations
for preservation battle

I
I
1
1
I
I
I

layaway acc"ou 0t. Moll to P.O. Box 408, Mason, WV 25260 or bring to
Mason FurJiiture 2nd Street, Mason, WV. All entries must be received
by O&lt;t. J 1. 2000. Drawing November I, '2000. Winners will be notified
and names posted at the store. Mason Furniture employees and
family members are ineligible.

'

1
I
I
I
1
I
I

Dean Newell- Mason, WV
Harriett Laudermilt ·Racine, OH
Darrell Petry- New Haven, WV ·
Watch For Oct. Winners In Our
November Newspaper Ad.

I

:

lOJOO

L--------------·-~u

"

�•

PageA4

~

·:· The Daily Sentinel

lhunday. October s. 1000

.

'E.sttlillslid ill ~
111 Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio
·Fax: 992-2157

PROMISE
NOT TO
LEAVE OUT

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene HoeHich
General Manager

R. Shawn Lewis·
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Dear Ann Landers: I love my mother a lot, but she has hurt my feelings, and
this isn't the first time. Please tell me
what I should do about her lack of consideration. Maybe I am being too critical.
Ten years ago, iny grandfather sent me
:a letter letting me know he planned to
"give me an opal ring. When my Mom
went to visit him, he asked her to bring
the ring back for me. The next time I saw
her. she was wearing it. She then gave me
a ring that had no sennmental value
whatsoever. I was Ver y upset by this, bm
I said nothing.
·Now, tt has happened again . My greataunt gave Illt! a set of crystal glassware
several years ago. and my parents stored tt
in their hom~. Unfortunately, it was\nlsplac,-d, and my mother could not find it.
Two weeks ago. Mom called to say she
had found the crystal glassware. but tt
looked so lovelv itl her china cabmet that
she wJs go~ng to ~ccp it.

... AND .I

74~992·2156

ANY

DETAILS.

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

l

n,,

IAuen to 1he rdillW an wdcOJM.
sltould bll1n rh411f JO() wonb. AU kMrr .n Sl4bjtct
to ~dilin1 4Nl "'"$/ M $t&amp;ned ant/ induM Gddnu 1111d tekphoM niUJihr. No •ruiJMd Wtten will
bt publislled. Uatn sllouut ~ in goN Ulste, ~ni!IK in11.u, 11ol pusonaJjtUs
Tht upinWnJ u,rTSJtd in 1M ~:uiMIIIrr b.low tltwdlt OOIUtiiSIIIf of tht Ohio ValhJ PubliJhint
Co. 's nlillJrUil &amp;otud, u.11kn OlhtrwUt noled.

NATIONAL VIEWS

um

It's no t quite that simple.
Gore now says h1s off-key paean to the "union !abe( was an
attempt it a JOke before a fnendly audtence. A review of the videotape gtvcs plau sibtliry to that explanation ... And Gore was m fact a
member of a Hou se energy subcomm.ittee when the oil reserve, cre ated symboh ca lly m 1975 witho ut any money, was finally·funded for
th e tir5t rime .
H yperbole in ·polittcs is nuthmg new. Ne tther tS the game of
.e xaggeratmg the other side's supposed mistakes ....
G ore should be on notice .The sure way to stop the attacks on his
creJtbllity,fatr or unfatr, ts to resist the temptation to engage m c~m­
paign shorth and, overstateme nt or hyperbole and even deadpan

(Gender ca'nyon' marks support for Bush, Gore
President Al Gore and Texas Gov.
George W. Bush head into their O lympic
finals - the decisiVe debate season - runnin~ nearly dead eve n, although both sides
agree that the recent momentum is with
Bush.

Morton
Kondracke

Gore c;me roaring out of the Democratic

National Convention, then profited from two
weeks of Bush's stumbling and pulled mto a
polling lead averagil1g between 5 and 8
points.
NEA COLUMNIST
Uut in the past 10 days, after Bush regained
hts footing and Gore stumbled. Bush has
pulled back to even 111 most polls and shghtly
Drug AdministratiOn's approval of the aborahead in some. Although the lead is statisticalnon drug, RU-486.
ly instgnificant, the movement ts 5 to I0
Media attentwn t~nds to focus on the
points pro-Bush.
female sid e of the gender gap, but Anna
What's particularly imeresttng - especia lGreenberg of Ha rvard's Kennedy School of
ly as a guide to the candt.dates' debate strate- .
Government points o ur that th e llemucratsf
gies- is the wtdeni ng of the traditional genmaJOt problem in recent elections is that they
der gap into a gender canyon. Gore leads
have been able to capture o nly .about a thtrd
among women by 7 to 14 points, and Bush
of the white male vote.
leads among men by 13 tO 22 points, dependMeantime, if Repubhcans are capabl e of
ing on the poll.
getting half or better of th e white female vote
The Los Angeles Times poll shows Gore
-GOP Hou se candidates took 54 percent in
ahead, 49 to 42, among women, but has Bush
1998 - they can win nation al elections.
trouncing him among men, 56 to 34. Gallup
Greenberg dtd not want to talk about
has Gore wtth a 14- pomt advantage among
Gore's strategy because h er fath er, Stan
women . and Bush a 20-point lead among
Greenberg, is Gore's pollster, but she said the
men ..Jhe Voter. com Battleground survey puts
key to cuttin g down the GOP lead among
Gore up 9 points among women, and Bush
men is to redu ce their sense - dt!minant
up 13 potnts among men.
smce the late I '!60s - that they are paying
Top strategtsts for both Bush and Gore say
taxes for programs wh ich do not benefit
that on E lection Day Gore needs a doublethem .
digtt VICtory among women to counterbalWhtte males benefited from the G I btU, she
ance a probable 12- to 15-point lead among
pointed out, and identified with the Democmen.
ratic Party. She suggested that Democratic
Gore strategrsts say they will try to hold
programs suc h as lifetime le,arning, JOb
Bush to a 10-point lead among men, while
retraimng and coll ege tax credits could help
beattng hm1 by at least that much among
wi.n them back.
women, who wtll probably make up 52 perA Gore strategist (not Greenberg) said the
cent of the electorate.
vtce president ts ta rgeting senior men - who
Bush strategrsts say thetr man wtll wm the
now favor Bush by 2 tu I , according to the
election if he can carry a majonty of wh ite
L.A. Times - by emphasizing prescription
women (thereby holding Gore to a singledrug, retirement and Social Security prodigit lead among all women) and if he can
grams.
carry men by 12 to 15 ,potnts.
·
The message that "Bush ts for the few" will
Bush's plan may be complicated if women
appeal to rmddle- class men, the Gore atde
are turned offby his cnticism of the Food and

satd. Gore's emphasis on paymg off the debt
may appeal to younger men , he added.
Bush and Gore ate running even among
smgle men , according to the L A . Ttmes,
whereas Preside nt Clmton carried the group
by large margins in 1992 and 1996.
Gore plans to target that gruup wtth a
below-the-radar-screen campaign identlfymg
Bush as a ngh t-wingcr on social issues such as
abortion.
Meanttme, Bush is pursuing the strategy
that Anna Greenberg suggests has been working for Republicans lately- emp hastzing tax
cuts (for men) md appealing to white women
by pen1stently demonstranng an mterest in
improving edu catton.
Bush 's newest line of attack, accusmg Gore
of favoring a gov~rnment buildup not seen
since the Great Society, seems designed to
bolster ht&lt; lead "'nang men
Most of the issue&lt; voters say ate tmporta nt
to them - health: Soctal Security, education
-are Hwomen's issues," in which Gore leads.
H e's not doing badly on "men's issues" like
taxes and leadership, eith er, altho ug h Bush
leads by miles on st rengthenin g the military.
All thi s seems to give Gore an advantage.
But as one Bush strategist pointed out, in
1'IHIJ. l'restdent Jimmy Carter led on all tssue
tests except taxes and the mtlitary, and Ronald
Reagan won in a landslide.
What coums on Elecnon Day ts not gender or issues, of course, but electoral votes.
Gore strategists think their man ts doing fine
in the b.mlegrouncl states of Mtchigan, where
unions arc strong; Ohio, where Democratic
polls show Gore up by 5 points among
Democratic voters; and Flonda, which is dead
even.
Bush aides contend that thetr man is well
ahead in Ohio, but concede that the race is
even in Mi c htgan, Florida, Washington, Orego n anJ Wisconsin.
"These states all will follow the national
trends," sa1d a Bush adviser, opttmisttcally.
Those trends, however, are likely to be deeply
affected by the debates.

ARDS is little
known but

serious disorder
Question: I got o ut of the
h ospital five months ago after
having ,adult res pita tory distress
syndrome
(ARDS).
Even
though thts terrible illness
str ikes 150,000 p eople eve ry
year, most people have never
heard of lt . Even my .family doc•
tor d tdn 't know much about lt.
Please let your readers know
about ARDS.
Answe.r: Adult Respiratory
· Distress Syndrome, also called
Acute Respiratory Distress SyndrOJne or ARDS , ts :1 seve re
breathing dtsorder It strikes
• between 100,000 and 150.000
people m the Umted States each
yeJr, so it is uncommon but it

certa111ly

no t a rar!! d1sord.er.
Any time you en counter rhc
word '\yndromt\ " you shou ld
think of a grottptng of symptoms
rarhcr rhan :111 mdtv1dual dtscase .
ARDS is .1 good examp le. T he
label ts applted to those svt th J
spectfit group of .1hnnrmal Xray, EKG .md blood test results
that busi c.tlly mean th e lu ngs arc
not· able to supply suffictetu
oxygen for the body. The oxygen defica then produces symptoms we can all re cognize shortness of breath, a fast breath, mg heart rate and a f.tst heart
rate.
ARDS can resul t from a
number of causes Co nun on
examp les are a blood-borne
infe ction called septi cemia,
inhalation of toxtc, substa nces, a
comphcatJon of pneumonia,
near drowmng, or from inhaling
vomit, alcohol or other substances that don't belong 111 tbe
lungs Trauma to th e lu ng, such
as 1111ght occ~r m an auto acci- ·

(Murton Kv~tdrackc is cxemtt11e editor &lt;&gt;{ Roil
·
Call, tltc newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

Ghosts cif Kennedy, Nixon hover around debates

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

In 1941 . form er Supreme Co urt Jusnce Louts D. Urand ei&gt;- the
fiN Jew~&lt;h mem ber of th e na n on's htgh est court - died in Wash1Tlt,rt:ml .n .tge H4
In 1953. Earl War ren was sworn 111 as th e 14th ch tefjustice of the
U nited States. succeedmg Fred M .Vmson.
In I% 2. th e Beatles ' first ht t, " Love M e Do," was released in th e
United Kingdo m .
In 1Y70, Bri m h trade comm11sio ne r James R1chard Cross was kid n.tpped m C an ada by ;nil1tant Qu'c hcc separ.ttsts: he was rel eased th e
follow mg D ece mber.
In I 'll&lt;6, Am cn can Eugene .H.tScnfus was captured by Sa nd1111St.1
..,n]dJt'r"' .1tier the we.lpn n'i pla ne he \.\ ',1"1 tlymg 111 wa&lt;&gt; )hot down over
-;o uth ern N ic.t rahruJ.
·
In 1\JHH . Democ rat Lloyd Bentsen la mbasted R epubh c.Hl Dan
Qu ayle d unn g the1r vtce pre'ld en m l debate. tel ling Quayle. "Se ru-

tor, vo u'n.· no l.tr-k Kenn edv.''
1,·, I'IH'! . .1JU ry 111 C hJrk;tte. N .C.. w nvtctcd te nn er PTL e~.11l ge­
list ] 1111 B.tkl. cr o f u11 ng lm ,telev!StOII show to defraud fo ll owers.
• kn vL'.lT\ .Jgo. A•Jurv 111 &lt; : nl l lllJ J. Jtl .uq umt'd J JJ Jrt1 ga llery .md lt"•di rn tlll .o f ob'&gt;n:ni ty ch.t rgt''i "t l'lll l11111 !; f ro 111 .u-1 ex h1bit of -.e.xudll v
• g r.tph tc plwtogra phs by R obert ,\1.t f'plctltorpe.

Ann , I feel ·that my mother ls · riot
being fait to me, but [ don 't know how
to handle it. -- Susan in Michigan '
Dear Michigan : Look in a rearv1ew
nurror and see if there is a sign o n your
back that says "KICK ME." If t here is no
sign, smnebody is kicking, you because
they know they can get away wnh it.
T h;l[ pe"r~ on IS your mother -- and I
wonder how m.my others. You're an ..~asy
t.lrgct.
First. t he n0xt timl.' you sec your

Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

'HARDBALL'

Jggre"'\O r n atJLm"i

ADVICE

John C. Wolf, D.O.

·•

V~e e

hum o·r.

Today 11 Thursday. Oct. 5, th e 279th day of2000.There are H7 days
left in the ye,u.
. Tod.1y's Htghh ght tn Htstory ·
On O ct. 5, 1947, President Truman dehvered the first televised
W lnte I lo use •ddress.
&lt;l n th iS ,date:
In I H30, the 21 st president , Ch este r Arthur, was born tn Fatrficld,
Vt.
In I ~'J 2 . th e [)alton G ang. notorio us for its trai n robberies , was
pr.tltit al ly wt ped o ut willi e attemptmg to rob a patr of banks 111 Coffeyvt lk Kan.
In 1\137. PreSident Frankltn R oosevelt call ed for a "quarantine" of

Ann
Landers

ami/p
edicine

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

.,

mtan .

October s. 1000

This means r&lt;gular checkups and whatever dental procedures are necessary w
preserve your teeth and keep your ~ms
healthy. If you don't do these thmgs,
you're destined to pay a big price for the
neglect. Trouble that star,ts in the m?uth
could poison your entire body. Don t let
this happen to you -- or anyone you care
about
What can you give the person who
has everything' Ann Landers' booklet,
"Gems," is Ideal for a nightstand or coffee ta~le. "Gems" is a collecnon of Ann
Landers· nwst requested poems and
essays. Send a self-addressed, long, buSIness-size envelope and a check or money
order for $5 .25 (thts includes postage and
handling) to: Gems, c / o Ann Landers ,
P.O. Box 11562, Chtcago, Ill. 60611 0562. (In Canada, send $6.25 .) To find
out more about Ann Landers and read
her past columns. vislt th e Cn~ator~ Syndicate wt!'b page at \\·\Vw.creJtors.conl:

riers , and we cannot afford the cost of
regular dental care.
TeU me, Ann, ifVtagra is cover~d by
insurance, why is dental coverage so hard
to find' And those pol,ines that do cover
a tnp to the dentist ·are often inadequate
and stingy. A single root canal can use up
all the avatlable coverage for an ennre
family.
l 'do not understand why health care
doesn't include teeth. It's about time
insuran~carners realized that good
dental ca
an save a lot of grief and
other xpenses down the road . Please tell
them so, Ann.-- Mary in Sound Beach,
N .Y.
Dear Sound Beach: Thanks for
revtsiting a subject that I have been
kvetchmg about for a long time. Dental
coverage should be· part of every tnsurance pacbge. Your teeth can be your 32
best friends. If you take good care of
them. rhey should iast as long as you ltve.

mother, hand the substitute ri'ng to her
· and say, "Thanks for the loaner. And now
I would like my grandfather's opal ring.
He wanted me to have it. It belongs to
me." Be firm about it.
Then, tell your mother you are so glad
she found the crystal glasses your greataunt bequeathed to you because you are
plannmg to entertain one of these days
and the crystal glassware will look great
o n -your table. Let her know you '11 come
over wtth a stack of newspapers and will
wrap them for her because it's too btg a
job for her to do alone. Then, DO IT!
Dear Ann Litnders: You rec~ntly
printed a column saying dental health
should be a pnonty because we now
know that neglected teeth ca n cause a
host of serious health problems. I agree
r ompletely. The trotible, however. is
NOT that people cannot find a good
dennsr. it's that most of us do not h.we
dental cover:1ge from our insu rJncc car-

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

Cuba's prison mentality
forces desperate acts
• The Post and Courier, Charleston, S.C., on jleei11g Citbmd
rercwit~,{l political t1,;;y/r~m: The two fanuhes rhat made an epic escape
from Cuba - wtth nine out of-the I 0 men , women and children
aboard a tiny crop-duster plane almost miraculously survtving a
crash uno the ocean -merit political asy lum. The U.S. Immigration and Naturahzanon Service should let them all stay 111 the United St:ltcs. thus ensure that they are not entangled m another heartbreaking tug-of-war like that fought betwern Communist Cuba
and the Cuban eXJk community over 6-year-bld Elian Gonzalez.
By bnngmg all the &gt;urvtvors of the plane crash ro Key West, the
C oast Guard ·made the f.1nulies eligible for a~ylum under the C uban
Adju stment A~t. whtch grants that right to any Cu ban fl eeing the
C amo regime who manages to set foot on U.S. so li . ·
In ,111 nffiual note the Cuban government has descnbed the fltght
as an " act of piracy." a descnption at odds wtth reality. But it " f.11r
warnmg th at tf the escapees were to be sent back to Cuba, they
wou ld be severely pumshed for trying to escape the clutches of Castro. ...
.
As lo ng as Castro continues to deny Cubans the nght to travel
abroad . effectively mamtaining Cuba as a prison tsland, Cubans w ho
mk thetr !tves without endangering others when they seek freedom. deserw to be granted polttical asylum tf they succeed in
reaching U.S. sot!.
• USA Today, 011 Gores loose ltps: What's the harm in a littl e
hyperbole' AI Gore ts qUJckly findmg out The vice preSident's
lome ness on details, whether talking drug pnces, oil supp!tes or lullabies. threatens to make him his own worst enemy in his quest for
the presidency...
The l:lush campa!gn &lt;e tzed the opportumry to feed tts central
campaign theme: that Gore, like Prest dent C linton, can't be trusted .
Earlier G o re assertions about creating the Internet and inspinng the
1 ~711 romanttc novel Love Story supported the story line.
With poll; showing that Republicans tml Democrats tn pubhc
contidcncc for dealing with many top tssues SoCtal Secunty, health
care and 'the like the idea ts to make a genenc argument for change
by tying the vtce prestdem to an outgoing president renowned for
· his skill at di, sembling and who hed opeply about an affatr with an

Page AS

Mother continues to keep ·daughters sentiments

GORES OOWNFALL ....

The Daily Sentinel

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

the Bend

The Daily Sentinel

BY CHRIS MATTHEWS

AUST IN,Texas -Jack Kennedy sa1d he ft&gt;lt
sorry for Rtchard Ntxon because his 1960
debating partner did not know w ho he was and
therefore was forever trying to decide "which
Nixon " to be.
On the e~e ofTuesday"s maugur.l debate of
21!011, George W Bush displays a similar contempt for rrval AJ Gore.
"Yo u have a candtdate that can be all thmgs
to all people, someone who ts willing to change
perceptions," he told me last week. "That m

itself makes voters nervou s."
In th11 important detail, the Texas governor's
view of Gore parallels Kenn edy 's o f Ntxon.
l3ush sees the vice president as a man so dwkw.ard about lm own tdenticy that he must plead
fo r acceptmn::, not on the ~trcngth of hi ~ own
vtews and phil osophy, but by pa11dering to the
cou Jury'.; clec.;toraJ constituencJ e~.
I recall Bush's reacti on to th e Gore dcclara-.
non to a Mextcan-Am en can group earlier in
the campaign that, sin ce ht s first grandchtld was
bo rn o n the Fo urth of July. h e hoped his next
would he born on Ctnco de Mayo.
" He's a beaut," Bmh gt inned, rdishm g the
exposure of so naked a claim to ethnic sympa'thy. Will lm sheer m ntempt for Gore. be th e
llepublican nomim.:t:'s arm or when he goes
J \~ u c
.1

by m u e t h l 'i week With a m a n mfi)r llh:d by

dec.tdc o n Capitd Hill , th e n enh anced by

c1ght years .~~ VJCc president?
If sn, Bush w tl l need tt. AI C o re is. even by
l'lll'lllY ,lClOU il t'i, .Ill llllnm chm g studen t of the

political game. As a freshn1en congr~ssman in
the early 1980s, he became the House's recognized expeCt on the use of state- of- the-art technology to catalog and idcnt1fy voters back
horne. Go~e was the go-to guy on hoyv a Member of Congress cou ld computerize his consttcuency, SOrting Out the pro-lifers from the
pro-chmcers, th e t-,'1m owners from the gun
opponents, etc.
Go re has been equally zealous in complering
his other political homewo rk. When a new ethmc facttoi1 becomes fat en ough for market rec;JI a ce rtain Buddhtst temple' - Gore is
a!nong the firo;t to learn of it. If tiH~ n:\ a new
way to explot t the fund - raising laws, rest assured
Gore knows abour ir.
His surcnt:ss of the matenal , pol ittcd as \\'ell
as subsran[lve-, ·and lno; rcllsh for the game are
Gore's best weapons i1 1 TueslLly\ debate What
he lacks in easy charm. lw nlJkes up for m
attentlVt'llt'SS. If m meth111 g neec.:ls learni ng, he
Will have learned tt.
In this detail, it's not llu1h w ho matches the
JFK moJd but Gore.
Jack Kenn edy W.ts, hke AI c;o re. ·' rclentlcSI
self-tmprover. He studi ed spced-re.tding. ltstened to Chu rc hill \ speeches .md barked like .1
seal to strengthen Ius voice. H e drove hnml'lf tn
undero.;t md ethm c .md gl'ogrJphi c voting p.lt tans . Before anyone e.\10e,
hired .1 poll-,rer ro
hl.'lp him match hi ~ in ~"i~.tgc: to ( UITt'n t votL'r

Jll'

nmcerns.

Whr:n it came; tim e fi.Jr t ht: "Crc.rt I &gt;c ba te,"
It \\'&lt;1~

Ken nt·dy who \huwed up a Wl'L· k L'.trl) to

grill chrector Don Hewm about camera angles
and other techni,cal facto" .
Expect Gore to be equally prepared. Watch ing him camp;:ugn in recent weeks, we can see
already his gmwing comfort m publt c settmgs.
Forget the cigar-store Indian of yore. Tod,ty's
(~o re is in In s best poss1blc shape - physically,
psychologi cally and political1y. Expect hnn ~o
e nter the Tuesday debate room loaded for bear.
As always Ill hrr; c u eer, AI Gore will arrive
•
I
knowing what he needs to know. And that
mcludes a clearly developed strategy.

BIRTHDAY

' :

.

"

'
.

dent, or comp li ca tions of a broken leg can also cause ARDS.
ARDS is a very serious illness. The initial symptom is a
mild shortness of breath that can
progress to a near fatal condtnon
111 minutes or H nuy take
ho u rs About 40 perce·n t uf those
who h ave tt die from th e condition, but th e death rate can
range from 15 to 90 percent,
dependtng largely upon the
underlymg cau se, age of the VICtint, and whether or not orga ns.
other than the lungs begin to
fa il. Obvtously, survival is also
influenced by how qtuckly the
person gets to ao mtenslve/cntical care umt.
One of th e essenttal compon ents of tre.ament for those
w tth ARDS is t ht' use of a ve ntihtor.- a m~chanical deVice
th at takes over the work of
breathtng In addtnon. a prompt
and aggrt=ssJve seZtrch for rhe
underlying c aus~ must be
undt;&gt;rtJkl.'n . Assunung that rhc
undcrlymg Clll Sl' IS H.iennfied
and corrected. th~ person wi ll
ne ..·d to stay on thr..' ventibtor for
one to t lu~.'~ weeks.This is J very
stressful tlll1t' for rhc p11t1ent, Ius
o r or loved one!'! .mJ also for the
physicians bec.ul\c of the larg•'
number of thin gs thH can sttll
gq wrong.
(1bvmusly, you Jre one of the
~urVJVOr~ of ARDS. That '!'~ good
news ~'An addtttonal bright point
is that most who survtve ARDS
eventu all y make a c ompkce
re covery
"Family Medtcine" is a weekly column . To subn11t questions,
wrtte to john C. Wolfe, D.O ..
Ohio UniverSity Colleg~ of
Osteopathtc
Med tctne ,
Grosvenor Hall , Ath e ns, Ohw
45701. Pa st co lumns are available
· o nline
at
www. fhradio .org/ fm

re-cnactnu:nt later th1s month.
The camp voted to change its 200 1 Memori al Day ceremomes.
MIDDLEPORT-- Donations to pay for an appeal of th e re cent In stead of havmg them at the C1v1l Wa 'r statue in Pomeroy, the
ruhng jn the Me1gs County Com mon Pleas Court agamst th e su tt cetemo nies will be moved to Mt. Olive Cemetery, Long Bottom ,
that sought to prevent the destruction of the Buffington Island to dedicate the marker to t he third and final Meigs County ConCrvil War ba ttlefield are are being soh cited.
gresstonal Med~l of Honor wmn~r of the Ctvtl War, Abraham BarThe Brooks-Grant Ca mp 7 So ns of Umon Veterans of the Civil nnger.
War m eellng recen tly at H op e BaptiSt C hurch an nex voted to ask
Kei th Ashley reported that all resoluttons of the camp that
for donations from local citize ns and veterans' groups to P&lt;~Y for
passed the Ohio Department were also passed at the national
the appeal. Anyone wishing to donate may se nd a check payable
encampment m Lansing, M tc h .
to the camp to James Mourmng, Treasure r, 600 Grant Street, MidMt chael Trowbridge, ' camp commander, presented a program
dleport~ Ohto 45760. It was noted that prior to thts t1me most of
on Civil Wac chaplains. H e was dressed 111 reproduction Union
the litigation expense h as been handled by the Meigs Co unty
chaplain's clothing. H e discussed their religious duties as well as ,
Historical Society.
their duties m battle til tending the wounded. Many soldiers fearAlso, dtscussed was a ·recent vtstt to Me~gs County by Sen
mg b eing killed in battle would give thetr cards and dice to the
Mtchael De Wine in Met gs County where th e battlefield issu e was
chaplams so that these items constdered evil would not be sent
ratsed and th'e se nator ~gree d to look into it.
home to their famihes. Some chaplains even had guns for I;Jattle,
It wa·s note d th at Gov. Bob Taft after bein g contacted to meet
1t was 'repor ted.
wah the camp but had referred the matter to t~e state historical
The camp will join with the Maj. Daniel McCook Circle No
preservation office.
R ep. Ted Strickla nd's office has also been contacted by the 104 Lad1es of the Grand Army· o f the Repubhc for a Thanksgtvgro up asking for a Congresstonal investiga tion of the Huntin gton mg dinner Oil Nov. 21 at Hope Baptist Church annex . The
District U. S. Army Corps of Engineers due to allege d violations potluck dinner is in honor of Pres. Lmcoln's first proclamation of
of federal regulattons in the issuance of th e nuning permit. No Thanksgiving, and the camp wi ll furnish th e turkey.
action o n the request ha s been taken, it was reported.
The rccem decision of the National Park Service to change the
thrust of tts mtsS\on regardmg Civil War battlefield parks was disPOMEROY - Again this year Ewing C h apter, Sons of the
cussed. It was po inted out in th e disc ussion t h at untt I ;ece nt ly t h e
battles that the •pa rks preserve were interpreted by the parks as to Am erica n Revolution. a re local sponsors of the National Soetety's
th e strategies a nd outcomes of t he battles they honor. Now. George S. and Stella M . Kmght Es&gt;ay Contest for h1gh schoof
accordtng to th e Sons of Umo n Veterans , the Nattonal Park Ser- JUmors and seniors.
v 1ce is trying to interp ret the enure C ivil War at eac h battlefield
James Lochary, president of the local chapter, stressed that the
by stanng tbe cause of the Civil War tO be slavery, whtch ts n ot contest is open to all students attendtng publtc, paro chiai , pnvat e.
o r accredi ted home sc hoo ls 1n Gallia, Athens, Meigs , Wa&gt;hington ,
accepte d by many h isto nan s. '
The camp passed a resolution to send to Congress asking that and Morgan Cou nties. The topic is "The U .S Constitution · Does
the Nattonal Park Servtce rewrn to mterprenng o nl y th e battles tt Sta nd the Test of Tim e."
that the parks preserve .
The wmner of rhe narwnal contest wdl re c ~Jve S7 .500, a
Myron ,'11 d Barbara Jones were ct&gt;m m ended on their work at plaque and a trip to the NSSAR Headquarters 111 Louis,·ille.Y. The
[h e rec~nt ma rkmg of the grave of Umon soldi er, Sloan Brum- wi nning ess;~y \Vlll also be submitted ro the SAR N :n'ioiul Mag:1field, in Ga llt a County. Sloan's son, Stanford Brumfield. is a mem- ztne fort~Jubltcation . On th~ state le vel. the wmncrs Will be aw.~td ­
ber of th is c.unp as ,, real so n . He wos prc·sent for the ce remon y at ed $30, S200, .tnd 5100 for first. second .tnd thtrd place ..s respc·cthe age of 92 along "ith hts family. The camp provtded Civil WJr ttvelv.
mu sic, rifle squad, refreshments. The camp 1s now prl'panng to
The contc:s[ 1s fo~ an o ri gm al t''iS,lY of 500- 750 words wntten.
mark the grave of M esc ha ck Walker at Snowball Hill Ce m etery in tn E ngl ish. They w ill be judged fo r histoncal accuracy. d.mty of
Syrac u se at I p.m. Sa t urday. October 1-+. The public is tnvited
th ough t, org.tnization and proven toptc, grammar . .s pelling and
Members were treated to see the rosters of Compa ny F, 174t h documentatton., T here is a•hst of 15 sources whteh arc to be used
O h10 Volunteer lnf:m try w hose captain. Ephriam C. Carson is the tn researc h.
anccsto r .of our Meigs Co unty Common Pl t•as JUdge. Other items
T he deadline for th e contest tS jan. 20.
for vtewmg Ill eluded the roste r of th e Army of the C umberland:
Contest rules. gu idelines. and the resource list may be obtained
an anginal Ctvil War Sp ringfield rifle, original handcuffs used on from Lo c hary, at 740-448-7269 ; Tad Cu ckler, 740- 594 . 9 115 , or
Union soldi ers a t Andersonvtlle Pmon, and a reproductto n of the 740- - 593- 50 27 The mformatton may be obtam ed by mat! by
book by Dr Thomas Barton, Sy racuse, o n the history of the 4th sending a NO. 10 self-addressed , stamped envelop to james
We st Virg inia Infantry. Information was also presented on the Lochary, 18660 State Route 550, Amesvtlle, Ohw, 45711 .
Rev. J. M. R ife. first en h stee for the Unwn army tn Me1gs CounLast year's wmner of the Ewmgs Chapter contest was Ryan
ty.
Thacker \vho attends Sout h Gallia High School. Her ess.1y ts postPlans were made for the camp to provide an mformation booth ed for rcv1ew on the web site of Ewings C hapter,
at the genealogical fatr at Spencer, WVa., on Sept . 30. It also had www.frognet. net / -assar /

SAR to sponsor essay contest

mer for the C1111p was en hsted.
The camp nmv has books on the entire Umon rosters for West

- - - - - ._ - - - - - - - - ·- - - . .
rR . t T w· A
I
egis er .1.0 Ill
I

VtJ;~~11 ~~~;~~~~dth~e~~1v~~~;~ reported

I MASON

a booth at th e Meigs Co unty Expo where a po tential new drum-

re-et:actment and tactical

even~ that

on the recent Civtl War

they attended at

Car~ex : .

o1sHN;:;:~ ~!.~!~~N~!~!!.! E
1

-NO IQUIPMINT TO BUY-

:1

50TH

$5~~09 Gs.,:~.~.t~~.: ~r.,
,

\

.l);l~ZJ~}i~aytime)
I

loo

FRII Stantlard P•ofeulonal ln•tallatlon
SIGN UI'111DA)'. OIIE·TIME ACTIVATION F£E OF 149.99
lndu. . ld IMIIttt't P'-t ,.,_ent.

.

(Chri.1 1\ l!itrlnws, (hi~/ {!f the Stm f ·mHnsto E Y, /111- ,
m' r:1 I t {ufrr'll ~/ ,11 1 Bw·c,nl, 1~ "''·'' o( ' 1 /-fttrdl•r~ W' 011
C/\'BC ,md ,\ IS/'dJC u1l!lt•'lrm~ttci.,. '17tc 1999 cdifl orr '!f uH!Irrlhrr/1" . ll't1.i fHd!lisltt'd /')' '/ ilw lwc•'w
r

Jos hua Daughe rty. s on of Jtm a nd
Paula Wmebre nne r-Da ugherty, ee l·
.e brated h•s fou rth birthday on
Aug. 21 at the homes of ht s grand·
pare nts w•th Bl ue 's Clues parttes
on la ter dates .
He itves tn Mason. W.Va. wtth
hi s parents, his s iste r, Da nte ll e.
and brothe r. Jose ph .
He ts the grand son of Go rdon
a nd Susa n Wtne brenne r of Syr~
cuse and Fred Da ugherty of Potnt
Pleasa nt, W.Va . a nd th ~?)a t e Juan •·
ta Daugher ty. He is the gra nd son
of Erne sti ne Zu s pa n of Mason.

M.,.,...--- _.........,....,

ow-.,.....Dftt'_,~
'fti ..

~-..w..AIK'CI"DftAI~t

~

-

Furniture &amp; Jewelry, Inc.

--·--

···IQ5!Gto!!.ocotlil~"

. D401112-Zt"

.... ...I

1- :::~
.._._ .. '"!!

1

tificate

"

_,

I

State

I
I

Zip

Cet'!lfict~le'Jier Flllnily P•r Month. M~sl be 18 Yeal""

I
I

1

I
1

..:O.EI'OAI (); iSfeD

'Jllilu;. One Gill

_

tQ ~~ter. No' purcb~e ne&lt;f~ry. i;tJree (3)~50Gift CertiOcates 1
I to~t-Oider
'f1i, "givC~~ bway moDthly. t;;n ~ettlfi~tes to'l&gt;e applied to new purchase
1 mlly. Ci'ltutot be used aiUO pa~ailent an a •Muon~umiture chnrg&lt; or I

I

"-'1--lllltiMIIt., 12 ~~.

:

1
1
1 3 91~"~ertil1cates Given Away Monthly 1
r

IAitdress ' '
le-t

......1_,_
_... .........
....,Olill ........
...... _,. .......

FURNITURE'S II

Y e a r C e l e b r a t i o n·

INarite · ·

Wh o wil l em erge the rl;'cogm z~ d winn ei in
this lim debate of 20(KJ?
.
Amwer. T he candtdate w ho deploys hi s as$ets
to g r~Jtco.;t advantage.
If llush i ~n o res Go re .md t.llks to th e Anl't'ric.m votet 'about hi s upbeat philosophy ~nd
cO mrnitnl ent to ,1 fnll -opportumty society, as he
chd m ht&lt; Phtladclphia acceptance spe ec h, he
w ill do well.
If Gore av01 do; try 111 g to show up Uu ~i h , but
ti.Jcmeo.; imte;1d on rh e real-hte roncen b of peo~
ple . .1'\ he d1d in hi o.; Lo\ Angd cs :.tcc~;.·ptan ce
1pcech, he wtll do we ll.
·
If both rn t:n do wh.1t I've suggeo.; ted. thi ~ t-ir"; t&lt;
dcb.tte will be a contest, not of words, but of
purpOIO L'

Hook.1 )

IS

'·
@
/ ..

Ferry, W.Va Gerald Ccowfo rd reported on hiS attendan ce at the
re, enactment at Somerset, and his plans to attend the Greenfield

Civil War Sons seek aonations
for preservation battle

I
I
1
1
I
I
I

layaway acc"ou 0t. Moll to P.O. Box 408, Mason, WV 25260 or bring to
Mason FurJiiture 2nd Street, Mason, WV. All entries must be received
by O&lt;t. J 1. 2000. Drawing November I, '2000. Winners will be notified
and names posted at the store. Mason Furniture employees and
family members are ineligible.

'

1
I
I
I
1
I
I

Dean Newell- Mason, WV
Harriett Laudermilt ·Racine, OH
Darrell Petry- New Haven, WV ·
Watch For Oct. Winners In Our
November Newspaper Ad.

I

:

lOJOO

L--------------·-~u

"

�•

•

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, October 5, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Bench donated

Field~.

A Chinese Christm.h \\',1\ .~so Cll_ll&gt;yed with winuLT'i 111 tht• dr:l\\'111~ bwlt; Thelnia Belch er. Holl ev Elhott. Ryan Nave' .md Roxie

R .1 pp.

Phorogr.1ph..,
Tht• t:undy of M.1n· E. F~.·rr:.· don.HL'd

\\'t'TL'

t3kcn .111d g.tlllt'S

\\'Cn..'

pbyt·d.

Ladies of G.A.R. meet

b~11ch ttH· the pJt!O .ml~)uf
Veter.lll" !vh'nlt)ri.tl llosptt.ll•Extended C.trt· F.t l' iliry In her 111L'tllory
Tut·~d.Jy. 1Vl.t~.., FcrtY dted rhcn..' ~.m Jt.dy 2. Thl· b..:th.h \\' a~ dcdi l..'.t,t~.· d in
a brH.'f m~nwn .1l ~c.:-rvirt: .md rl'fi·eshmt.'nt.., \\'l'rl' \t'f\'L'd by f.lJHily
member~ . H~re otli..' of 1V1is:- F~.· ttv'~ fn~nd s ·.u th~.:.· Ltn!Jt\'. l bncttl' Sm cbir. enjoys simng on rhc bt..•nch·. Sunding .m.· cwn· 0f the donon. ,is.1

MI!)DLEPORT- Plans to .mist with the Oct. 14 grave m.1 rking
of Union Pr)v.Jte Mes,1ck Walk~..·r nr Snowball Hill Ccmt:tl'rV were
mack \d&gt;en the Maj. Daniel McCook' Circle No. l 04 Ladies. of the
(;rand Army of the Republic met re cently in Middleport.
The group will asSist wah ~erving refrt•sh ments to th ose attending
ters to Miss Fettv. Eileen H1ll .md Phdl" C.,dlc. (Ciurlcm· Hodhrh
the 1 p.m. grave marking.
photo)
Pl.ms were also made to p:trti cipatc with the- Sons of Union Vetcr·':" 111 celebrating Pres. Lincoln's first declar~tion ofThanksgiving by
hosting a poth1ck dmner af the next meeting at 6:.30 p.m ., Tuesday,
Nov. 21. Prmpective members will be invited to attend.
RACINE- Donations of$500 to the St.Jr Mill Park Board for the
Whitney Ashley presided at the meeting Juring which time it was
new restroom fund and S21JO t&lt;l the Cross Mill / Racine Museum f'und
noted thor Emma Ashley had attended the national convention in
were _nlJde when Ranne Area Community Orgamzanon met recentLansmg,
Mich. It was noted that an application for membership has
ly.
been received from Sarah Anderson ofTenne ssee.
Kathryn H,lrt pre,ided at thc me-eting durmg which time the g-roup
Jo Cummings, patriotic instructor, gave a report on the U S. Flag
approved .the purchase of Chmtmas Jeror.Jt1nns for the v1llage. Lilh.111
Code instructing membe" on proper Oag ettguctte. Jean Hilton. a
Weese, Marv Baii,John Holm an and Larry Wolfe were named to serve
n~tionaily known Civil War dance c:tllcr, offered to provide Civil War
on th~ selection committee.
dance mu sic and instruction for next ye-ar's Ohio Department
A report wt~s gt\·en _o n the success of the cunnnuniry f.11l y~rd ~Jll'
encampment. The Ohio presich:nt will be contacted to offer the serand Jt was noted rhat the proceeds from tlut s.1k .md one hdd in the
\'tces
spnng will be U&gt;eel toward the Southern 1-hgh School Scholarship
A resolution was presented to the 'm embers to oppose the c hange
Fund. Five SSOO scholarships mll be .1\v,irdcd to members of the
of the National Park Service in interpreting the battles of their t1vll
Southern Clm of 2111 11.
War battle parks to n1terprctation of the causes of the Civil W1r. MemAppr"h·utwn \\"JS t'XtctH..ied to vo\umt·cr~ who a..,..,l~ted .H the Mt'J~
bers felt that such a change would detract from the history of th e batCounty Fa1r gJrcsmcluclmg He.llher .mJ Mark Aller,. Gay Ann Burke,
des. The resolunon was pa~scd. ·
•
Damon, .fisher, john Fisher. Kris H;uris, P:wll-larrts,Tin::t Ht:,vitt , Jm
Members
were
urged
\O
attend
the
Buffington
Island Batclefield
Hill, Suzanne Evans. Slmky and Rollie ~tewlrt. ,md Larry Wolfe.
L1Jiy or 2 p.m .. Saturday. C'i"ct. 21, at the P"'k at Portland. PnlitJciam will
Prayer pn.:( _
t·ding a dmnn \V,l~ gin·n hy Nancy Carnahan. R.eporrs
be a ~ ked to come a.nd speak m support. M1ke Azinger, ca ndidate for U.
were gin·n by LJI!un \X/cesr..·, ~L'cretary. ,mJ D.tk I i.lrt. tre.1~urer 111 th~..·
S. rcprtscnt:ttive, has Jlrc:tdy promist·cl. to attend. The circle \\illl :-t~sist in
absence of" Ann Zn·kk·. Thl' plcd ~c w .idJou rn rhc meeting \\".1"1 ll'd by
..,ervin g refreshments to th o~t,:' attt'ndin g.
Hart, and the next mceling w,1, ,1 1111\)lltKed fc&gt;J l)Lt. ~..J.
Emma Ashley rcportl·d pJrtitip.lting in .1 summ er ennchmeiH progr!l lll for Me1gs Loc.tl fifrh grJdt'l"'i on the C1vil W.1r. She dC'momtr;ltt•d ch)thn1 g .1nd lll..,l0111S of C: 1nl W:tr nvili.m women :md ~.·xpl.:qncd
rhe lldnblu p·s c ndu rt·d ..
POMEROY - De,cend.lllt ' ul ll umcr fl nllev 1\.mb held .1
A progr,tm on C1\·il \~l.1r rh.1pL111h by ~ons of Union Vctcr.llb c.tmp
rcunmn rt•u•m .L[ thl· 'ummn hn!nt· ot"l Jrty .1nd i111d.t R.1pp Ill ( ·.uLt co mnun(kr, Mtclul'l Tro\\'hrldgt'. ~)f GJihpoli"&gt;. \\",1~ pn:'"L'ntt•d for tlw
d~: n-n n - ( ; ,Jlt lt-v. \\'. \ ',1.

RACO approv!!s donations

Banks reunion held in West Virginia

l)fti t er~ to

bt· elct (t•d

PU I'vH- IU lY l' bRI will
moc;&gt;t Thur-.d,l\". I p.m .. 11 the Scmnr
CttJzcn..,

l~ud tLng

HARRI~ONV!Ill:

•

-

ll.•r-

Ne1gh bo rlluml

d.ay. Ct.'nter

tt) Jttcmi.

FRIDAY
POMEROY cmby\ fim:
food ,m d tcllm,·. , h1p Jt Cod\
E:-,~l.!p~ tiJr Tcn&lt;:.·Fno pen from G p.m to
10:30 p.m 011 Fnd.ty Jnd Saturchy
nights . NutntHJtiJ.l food.., a\·;Hlable
free of ch.1tgc. tens cln pby nonvtolem. gan1C'S. comptltcr progr.m1s.
and c.m.i'i free of charge m the cenIS

ter' bramc room.
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER. Sw
Grange 77K wJl meet 111 l'l:~uL"·
SI.!SSton. ~aturd.l~~ wlth :1 potlut k
supp~r .n f&gt;:J!J p.m fC)llnwcd hy ,1

992-2156

rl',n m·J llc l.ndgt' 411. f&amp;AJ\1 ..,t.ltt'd
Illl't'tlng, S.1rurd.ty. 7·30 p.m. Dcgrl·c
work t(&gt;llu\\"l'd h,· rdl·t·'lilllll'll t"

SUNDAY
IU\CINE - Apostle llok Lulfman \\"ill "PcJk .It rhc Porti.md
R.H me· ll'"nch of IUDS Church
Stnlcby .It 111:311 .l. lll.A pocluck din :
ner willtollmv.The pubhc is invit~d

The Conununiry Calendar
is published as a free service
ro non-profit groups wishing

SALEM CENTER- The second birthday of Kadynn Allman
was observed with a parry at her
home in Salem Center. The parry
theme was a mix of all her favorite
characters including Barney., Blue's
Clues, Rugrats and teletubbies.
Several friends and family members were present for the party.

Katlynn Allman

OES Grand Chapter
session to be held
The Grand Chapter of Ohio Order of the· Eastern Sur will hold its
Ill th a unfJJ! Gr.mJ S~..·~~mn in Battelle Hall , the ( )hio CenttT, Columbus, commencing Friday. October 1.\ .md adjourning Sunday, October
15. Wnrthv (;f"nd Matron Carol L. Kautlinan. of Plain Ctty, and Worthy Gr.wd P.mon Glen M. Plare. of Spencerville. will preside over the

.:woo "Sing a New Song'' ~~ssi on.

All Dinettes

a

2 Chair, 4 Chair and 6 Chair

Starting at $1 79.00

We want your photo$!

WHITE, CHERRY, OAK

ON SALE NOW!!

The Sentmel welcomes your photographs. Here are a few gu1dehnes for

no larger than 8 ' 10
• PolanOd·type photos are discouraged s1ncc they do not re product
well on newspnnt
N When subm1tt1ng d1g1tal photos. be s,urf; the unJgl~'&gt; lrt: ~.J\~:cl &lt;~S
h1gh-resolut1on. ~""llgh-qu"ail ty J_P[G files.
.
• Advcmtll\-tYJ..lf' photograp t 1~ m~ d1scour:J~,('d itH :a thPir tmiO'.H~ ','ll:".
wh tch do not transl1te well :o 'lhY~P·liJL•r cc~IL.1nt' 4rJ·.antLx tvpr r·•·g'
tNes nrc not ,v:r.eplt(l
• Lasm·.vntcrwmts .-:.• Jrgrtc1l11" l&lt; ~r·c, .1r• -1, 0=11 H'' I It, th•·-, I) r1 ,t
reproduce well on newspnnt.
•
• Plc&lt;Jsc IJe sure illl subjl~cts u: photog1.1pll~ ;m· clr· 1rly rdu1t1f1t ·I or1
the back ot the photograph or or .-.m o~ttd hed st"H.C'l of p.wer

·

'This ycJr, the Ill th Grand Ses:-.ion will open informally at 4 :30 p.m .
in Battelle Hall. This informal session is ope n to non-members. The
formal opening of thi s Gr.md Chapter session will take place at 6:30
p.m. The Grond Chapter Banquet will commence at 6 p.m. in the
Hayes Ballroom of the Ad,1m's M"'k Hotd on Saturday, October 14.
Those who wish to attend the Grand Banquet should contact chairman M ary Ryan at 614-882-768.3.
A Vesper Service will be held at 9 a.m. Sunday. October 15 in Battelle Hall. A brunch will follow the service in the Delaware and
Franklin rooms . Those who wish to attend the brunch should call
chainmn Marcia Hey.der at &amp;14-529-163 1.
Installation of the Grand officers ..for the year 200 I will close this
Grand Chapter Session on Sunday, October 15 .
The Order-of the Eastern Star i1 a benevolent, educational and social
organiz;ttion of men and women with close ties to the Masonic Fraternity. The nearly SO,IJOO members in Ohio are con}mitted to helping fight disease and suffering as well as providingscholarships to students in rehgwus training. Grants are givf'n annually to institutions and
individuals around_ the state . ln 1999, these grantl were nearly
$135.000. More than $31.000 was collected for cancer research and
cancer p:Hicnr 3ssistan cc. The Ohio H ea rt Association received about
$29,000 from donatiom, mdividual projects and chapter sunshine collcctiom. Approximately $75,000 of Eastern Star Tf"ining Awards for
Rehgious Leadership (ESTARL) was given to 71 college and seminary
studen ts.
All Eastern Star members are cordially invited and are sincerely
encouraged to attend the 111 th Grand Session of the Grand Chapter
of Ohio, Order of the Eastern Star.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
992-2156

To offer story suggestions, report latebreaking news and offer news tips

·WASHINGTON (AP)
Care for some sugar? The gov' ernment has plenty on hand now
. that processors have turned over
· nearly a million tons rather than
·try to sell it themselves at a loss.
.. The sugar was held as collateral under federal price-support
loans. Proci'Ssors are allowed to
forfeit the sugar ra1her than repay
the loans when domestic prices
fall below the loans' value, as they
have this year.
The Agriculture Department
said Wednesday that more than
804,000 tons, worth S321 million, were forfeited to the government this week. Another
155,000 tons were surrendered
earlier. ·
Since th&lt;' early 1980s, USDA
h." avmdeJ forfeitures by keeping imports 1ow enough to stabilizc domestic prices, but prict"s
IlJ\T b~:en d riven down this year
because of big increas"' in US.
·
d
r
pro d uctwn an other .actors.
, Some of the government's
sugar, about 290,000 tons, will be '
given to farmers who have
pledged to destroy an equivalent
·amount of this year's crop in a
program to reduce the surplus.
The department hasn't decided
. what to do with the rest, said
spokeswoman
Mary
Beth
Schultheis.
The department purchased
· 141,000 tons of sugar this spring
in a finde effort to prop up prices
and avoid the forfeitures. That
sugar, plus the forfeited amount,
. brings the government's total
stock to 1.1 million tons.

.Man confesses to
slayings

consistent with our
value objectives."

).

sharehold~

Inquiry targets
radal profiUng
NEW YORK (AP) -A federal probe has determined that
an elite undercover unit of the
Police Department eo gaged in
racial profiling while conducting
an aggressive campaign of street
searches, The New. York Times
reported Thursday.
. The inquiry began just \veeks
after the 1999 shooting death of
Amadou Diallo, an unarmed
African immig(Qnt killed by four
members of the Police Department's Street Crime Unit.
The U.S. attorney's office is
meeting wirh the mayor's office
to try to negotiate changes that
would avert a lawsuit, the newspaper reported.
If talks fail, the Justice Department could go to court and ask a
judge to order broad changes in
the operations of the unit and
.
bl
. h b
d al
posst e overstg t y a 6c- er
monitor.
Prosecutors based ·their findings on ·a statistical analysis of the
people searched by the ,,.nit's
officers because: they were suspected of committing crimes or
carrying guns. The analysis determined that blacks •nd Hispanics
were disproportionately singled
out, the Times reported.
The Street Crime Unit,
deployed in high-crime areas, has
been seen by the NYPD as one
of the chief reasons violent crime
has fallen in the city.
But the unit's performance and
conduct came under inten&gt;e
scrutiny after the Diallo shooting. Although the four officers
were acquitted, the NYPD has
significantly reorganized the
unit.
The investigation follows a 2year federal probe into allegations of po~ce brutality after
Abner Louima was tortured in a
Brooklyn station house in 1997.
Negotiations with the mayor's
office foUowing that probe began
· over a year ago and have yet to be
concluded.

GRAND JUNCTION, Colo.
(AP) A 67-year-old man
dymg of cancer has confessed to
killint; his wife and two children
nearly 22 years ago, and to killing
another wife, authorities said.
Robert M. Spangler was
'arrested Tuesday at the home he
shared with his fourth wife. He
was being held without bail in
Mesa County.
Nancy Spangler, 45, the couple's son David, 17, and daughter
Susan. 15. were found dead in
tbt•ir home south of Denver in
December 1978.
MOBILE, Ala. (AP) - The
Nancy Spangler was found in
oldest Episcop~l congregation in
the· bas~ment with a suicide note
Alabama has voted to break away
Jnd a handgun nearby, and the
from the church to protest its
children were foimd in their
recognition .of gay and other
bedrooms. The deaths w~rc ruled
relationships outside of marriage.
a Jouble murder-suicide.
Members of Christ Church
Investigators teopened the case
voted overwhelmingly Sunday to
whe1'1 they learntd in 1994 that
Robert Spangler's second and affiliate with the Anglican Misthird wives also died under suspi- sion in America, whose bishops
cious circumsta'nces, one fron1 a are under the authority of arch·~drug overdose and one in a faU at bishops of the Province of
..:Grand Canyon National Park in Rwanda and the Province of
South East Asia.
~ Arizona.
Gay issues have created a rift
. . Authorities now say Spangler
-'staged the murders of hi's first between hbera] and conservative
~wife and two children, and con- Episcopalians and in other
' •fessed to pushing one of his denominations. Delegates to the
" wives over the edge of the Grand Episcopal General Convention
in July declared the church
: canyon.
,: . An Dfficer said Spangler has should support unmarried coubeen given only a few weeks to . ples in monogamous relation• ~ve, and that may have played a ships honoring religiou·s values .
..-.tole
m hts co nfession .
A spokeswoman for AMIA,
' .
based in Pawleys lsland, S.C., said
they have 17 congregations in at
least 13 states, including six in the
South.

Congregation
breaks away

Wamer Music.
....,. EMI deal oft

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

su bmi SSions.
• Color photographs are accepted. proy1ded th ey are 1n focus and have
good contrast Ncgat1ves also are accepted: howev~r. please mclude a
pnnt along w1th the nega11ve.
t
• B~ack·and-whlte photographs are accepted, prov1ded they are 1n toe us
and have good contrast Ncgat1ves also are accepted: however. please
mclu.de ·a pnnt along w1th the negat1ve.
• Standard s1ze sl1des are fCcepted. prov1ded they are Hl f_ocus and
have good contrast
• Submitted photos should be no smaller than standard wa11.9t srze t1nd

sugar surplus

Birthday celebratd

The Sentinel News Hotline

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR
THURSDAY
IVIIIJ!JLL!'ORT -- b.lllt;e·lme·
( ' luptcr 172. Thur~d.1y. 7:3~ I p n1.

USDA copes wilh

members.

Po1neroy:jc-rry F1dds. Pon11.·roy.

Georg~.· Holter, Ri cinc; Kart.'n, Corey, Jeretniah and Z.1cl1Jry
Prop st, Fr.mklin. WVa.; Bill and Roxie Rapp. Camden-on-G.wley,
WV,J.: .md Raymond .mel Lucille ·r:.ckett, Bridgeport, W.Va.
Conrad Belcher had the praytT. An original poem .was read by Alice
Ell! on tn nwmory of Homer Lhnks. Songs were sung by Odrhn Jnd
Thdnu lklcher.Joy Elliott .md Bill .md Roxi e Rapp .
An atlruon was hdd \\'ith gifts donatl·d by the guest!' wirh Rox it•
R,tpp .•t~-.J~tt·d by Phil Schw.1b. dmpg rhe auctiont:-t·ring.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NATIONAL BRIEFS

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
Attending the reuruun we(e Conard and Thelma Banks Belcher.
State1v1lle, N.C.; Howltd and Dottie Banks, Charleston Heights, S.C.;
Lury and Lmda Banks Rapp. Racme; J:ck and Alice Banks Elliott,
Colonial Beach, Va.; Butch and Sharon Banks Dean, Largo, Fla.
Butch and Bonnie Banks Lightfoot, Pomeroy.; Wayne and Jane
Banks, Syracuse; Albert and Sandy Banks of Pomeroy; Dan, Fonda,
Danielle, Michelle a'nd Heather Thomas, Whedersburg;Jackie Rodenbaek, Kayla and Ryan, Racine; Kris. Becky and Holley Elliott, Stafford,
Va.
Dale Elliott. Colonial Beach.Va .;Jimmy, Cheryl, Rachael and James
Crowder. Buena Vista ,Va.; Dean and Joy Elliott, Woodbridge,Va.; Brian
and' Sandi Rem hart, Largo. Fla .; Phil. Kim, Bradley, Alexis and Joshua
Schwab, Largo, Fla.
Jerry Lightfoot. Pomeroy; Kelli L1ghtfoot, Pomeroy; David Hanks,
Syracme; Lacy Workman, Pomeroy;Jeremy Banks. Pomeroy;James and
Mary Banb, l'owdlton, WVa.;Johnny Barley, Rudand;Arminta Bishop, Summersville, W.Va.; Bob and Christma ,D~y. Pomeroy; Rick and
Sonya Cole. Craigsville, W.Va.; Wilham I;':IImtt, Dixie. W.Va.; Ashley

• Thursday, October 5, 2000

T.L. Boyne
England-Corsair

LA-Z-BOY
Sleepers

Starting at

t...,r
~·~

$499.00
SOLID, PLAIN, FLOWERS,
MULTICOLORED

MASON

LONDON (AP) EMl
Group PLC and Time Warner
.lnc. said Thursday they had with•.drawn their proposal t!) combine
EM! Music with Warner Music
, (:;roup in the face of opposition
'.from the European Commission,
but wou'ld connnue talks on
Spm e kind of joint venture.
:. The Commission had opposed
xhe dl rs 20 billion combinatio n,
\vhich would reduce the number

""of maj0r music compames from
Jive to four.

,Dixie Chicks triumph at Music Association awards
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Despite a litde
history made by Tim McGraw and Faith Hill
at the Country Music Association awards, the
night and the year belonged to the Dixie
Chicks.
'
The trio .from Texas was named best entertainer and best vocal group on Wednesday, and
took home awards for best album for "Fly" and
video for "Goodbye Earl."
The awards come the year the multimillion
selling act toured for the first time as a headliner.
"We want to thank every person who

WORCESTER. Mass. (AP) A' fire official denied a government report Wednesday that two
, of the six firefighters killed in a
December warehouse fire had
rushe&lt;,l into the abandoned building without notifying th~1r commanders.
The report issued Wednesday
by the National Institute of
Occupational Safety and Health
also said bad radio commumcations
hampered firefighters
efforts.
The Dec. 3 fire started when a
homeless couple living in the
warehouse knocked over a candle
during a fight. Two firefighters
searching the building for people
possibly trapped inside became
lost, and four more firefighters
went in to find them. All six firefighters died in the blaze.
It was the worst loss of life
among firefighters in a building
fire in America in more than 20
years. ·President C linton and Vice
President A! Gore joined 40,000
mourners at the memoria] serVICe.

Deputy Fire Chief Gerard Dio
on Wednesday denied that two
firefighters cited in the report had
faHed to inform their conunanders that they were entering the
building. Dio, who headed the
department's own inquiry, said its

WASH INGTON (AP) -Antismoking groups said Wednesday
they. want R.J. Reynolds Tobacco
Co. to stop test-marke ting its
experimental cigarette after an
independent study found that
Eclipse, touted as safer .than ordinary cigarettes, poses many of the
.ame health risks.
The company refused, said its
testing supports the claip1s, and
questioned the conclusions of the
study commissioned by the state
of Massachusetts, contending they
were drawn from limited data.
RJR says Eclipse, which heats
rather than burns tobacco, delivers
80 percent fewer carcinogem tlun
typical "ultralight" cigarettes and
"may present· less risk of cancer
associated with smoking."
Several anti-smoking groups
said the claim was misleading
because some of the cigarettes
used for comparis.o n are not cotnmercially available.
"There is no such thing as a
safer cigarette," said M . Cass
Wheeler, chief executive officer of
the American Heart Association.

"Ho\\it:vt'r

a ny

conccs~ions

lh.ll arc ultinl.ltl'ly m:1dL'

IHU!'lt

be

complete radio transmissions
show the .two firefighters wert'
told ·go inro the warehouse.
"The report doesn't take into
.tecounr the emotions of the fin:fighters at the Sct' n e," sai d Jlml's F.

Lyons, \vhose son, Jay. wa1 killed.
''There are two firelighters nussing. When panic sets 111 , men
become desperate."
Manslaughter charges filed
against the homele~&lt; couple who
started the bbze were dropped
last month.
The safety panel did not identifY the two firefighters it ~aid
entered the building without
telling commanders, but it said
they were among the six who
died.
Its report also said firefighters
were confused about the layout of
the six-story warehouse . because
of poor inspection and planning
before the fire.
In a series of safety 'recommendations, "the safety panel said
vacant buildings should be carefully checked with warning sign&gt;
of specific dangers posted at
entrances, call ed for more elaborate planning to _m anage peno~­
nel at fire scenes. and urged use of
a special safety commander when
necessary.

Wheeler said RJR 's promotion "is
cynically calculated to deceive the
public about the true nature of
Eclipse and the dangers it continues to pose to smokers."
The Massachusetts 'tests found
that , compared with RJR's low-tar
Now King Size· Hard Pack ultralights, Eclipse has 734 percent
more acetaldehyde and 475 percent more acrolein, two cancer..
causing agents.
Two of the most potent carcinogens, l3enzo(t~)pyrine, or BaP,
and NNK, werr found at roughly
the same levels as in Brown &amp; ·
Williamson's Carlton King Size
Soft Pack and Eclipse, but were far
lower in Now King Size.
GaryT. Burger, RJR's executive
vice president of research and
development, said the "comporisons do not. in any way, change
the fact that an extensive battery
of ~ciemific .tem indicates that

WASHINGTON

(A I') -

Hc:1ring ::1 ctsc in which womt·n
were arrestt•d from rhe1r ho~pit:tl
beds, Supn:mc.; Court jmucl'~

Wednesday v1goromly debated
whedwr hospn.1ls c.m tt'\t prL·gnant women fur drug li\L' .111d
turn the results on:·r to police.
"This is being done• formedical purposes," suggested Ju stice
Antonin Scalia. "The pohce didn't show up at the hospit.ll and
say. 'We'd like to find a way to
bu~t your patients."'
But Justice Ruth BaJer Gmsburg sa1d she di'd . not s~e how
arresting women after they gavt'
birth would protect the fetus. the
primary concern of a South
Carolina public hosp1tal. "I
looked at the (hospital) consent
form; it doesn't say anything
about police," she said.
Women treated at the Medical University of South Carolina contend that t.he hospital's
former cocaine-testing policy
violated preguant patients' priva cy and their constitutional protecnon agamst unreasonable
searches.
The women "were searched
by their doctors for evidence of
cnn1cs and then arrested. seven
of them right out of their hospital beds," said Pri.ciUa Smith, the

b\.vvcr fur the \\·nmen
~ucd.

The
lw..,ptul\
.ltro rn tt~.
R.oberr Hood. s,ud th1..• \\'Ol1H;fl
\\;ere J.Hl~·d " nt&gt;t o nly f\)r rhc tllt-~
g.1l lJ&lt;.,t' of the drug hut f(n whJ~
thev \\'J..'rt' doing f\ ) tht'Ir child ... •.
. Wt: arc trying ~0 ~top J womi~
from domg u-rt·pJr,lbk-. m.~j~,,..
_harm to ht·r chi\J in uter~)."
'· LJw cnfinu·mcnt \Y.lS nor
the ptu pmc of t\w., thm g ,lt .111,"
H&lt;&gt;od added.
A feJer;~] .1ppe.d.., cour,t
upheld rhc tl'S[ ~ a~ Jegmma·u.·
efforts to reduce t rac k cocHnt•
use by prcgn:.tn[ women.
The Supreme Court\ rulmg,

expectt·d by July. could determine whether the ho~pltJI reinstates the policy or whether
other hospitals cmmder Jdopt~
ing sin1ilar tactic~.
,
Ten· \vom cn who ~ ucd the
Charleston 11ospital in I 903 ~aid
testing pregn:1nt · women for
drug; and giving the resultl to
police violated rhe Con..,titution 's Fourth Amendment.
which gener;~lly rcqui rt'S that
sea rc h es be authonzcd by court
warrant or based· on n..·asonabk
suspiCion that a crime- hJ~ been

com nUtted.

Eclipse cigarettes may present
smokers with less 1isk of certain
smoking-related di~t•ases than
other cigar~ttcs."
R.JR began te·st-marketing
Edipse on April I'!, only in the
Dallas-Fort Worth arc•o. and tildl
will continue, Spokesman St'th
Moskowitz ~aid.
Dr. Gregory Connolly ,of the·
Mass:tchusetrs Tobacco Cmltrol
Proj~ct _ said he would urge :Jtto rneys general to investigate
whether R.JR is viohting the 1998
agreement that prohibirs ogarcnc
tnakers from misrep resen tin g IIIt'
health risks of their produc·t. The .
t~greemenr settled a multi~t:ttc b\\"suit against the tobacco industry.
Because Eclipse heats mste11d of
burns its tobacco, RJR cla ims the
cigarctrc releases nicotine, glycerin, carbou monoxide and othcr
toxins Jt lower levels th:tn typic;~!
cigarettes.

M:urhew Mytr~. pn·"llkll t nl
the Campaigll for Tub ;Kco-Frc~·
Kid~. s:1id the M.l~)I,Jrhuwn.., ..,tml:
poim.., co rht• !lt'l'd fiH· Conwt·~~ to

givt' th~,;.· Food .md l )rug AdnJII\1~-·
rr.1·tion tht· pn\\"n to l"l'gul.ttt·
tob'.ILTO. Thl· Supn'lllt' ( :\&gt;llrt

rub! i11 M.1rd1 tlw the I I lA

~cLordmg to

the U.S ( :c mcr~

for I )tSL'a"c Contrt&gt;l .111d l'rl'\"t'll - '
tion, L.Hdin\',Jo;,nd.n d1w.ht' .1nd
CJJl(t'l" ,KCO llJH t{H 7lJ fll' l"l"l'J 11 of
rhe more th.m 400.(10(1 ..,1nu km b~
n:Lttcd dc.uh~ 111 the Unac~l ~t.Jtc,,
t' .1C

h

\"l' .11.

011 the "lc't:
lt.J. Reyn okl&lt;.. ( :n. I l"flp,c "Itt'.
http / / www....·l hp'-t'.I"Jrr COl) 1
C ,u np.ngn t"o1 Iol~.llUl hL't'
K1ds : hrtp:/ / tob.tLt"ntl·c~· ktd.., lll".l!
Ament ,liJ c .lllCn Soc. lL't\""
http: //ww\\.t,llll cJ.()J"g

before graduating. When fame
hit. he received an honorary
doctorate from there.

On Columbus Day, Monday, October 9
our offices will be open regular banking hours.

l. '

Coli for the olllce

ns~resr you.

B•nk·ay Phone .TDD Ont,
1-100474..123
37&amp;-7123
•malladdrt~aa : bllnk@peopiHbancorp.com
wtballe: www.peoplttblnco'l).com

'

.111

drug.

out of Boston University a year

J'l//your 6n3ncial needs, a//m one place·.

1,,, kl

,\urhority to rq.;u l.ltt' toh.~ L"to ,1~
itdd JCtiv~,;.·

Jason Alexander was kicked

in person, at convenil'nt ATMs, hy phone or on the internet.

Call 992·2198

-·

You've Got
Connections!

992-2156

delivered directly to
, your door

·.

Activists want R.J. Reynolds 'better' cigarette off market:

News Ho.Iine
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline

•.•.•..,.,.

..

Firefighters run into building Pregnant women being~
without permission
tested for drug use
::

Peoples
Banka

EM !.
"We h,l\·e been, and will con- . , ..
timtc to be, fkxibk Hl rL·Spond1J1g: ro rht' Europc.111 ~ommJs­
"'Jon \ concerns.

!P

••

to pursut• solutio ns simultane-

Europe .md the U.S.,''

r»Y

'

Of course, you've always got connection~ to Peoples Bank

'i..Jid . Eric N1coh, ci1JirtnJn of

know who to hug. Can l hug somebody'" '
From the aud1cnce McCraw threw her a
hug, just minutes after wmmng hiS award aQd
calling Hill "my soul mate. my w1fe. who's
•
inspiration."
•'
••
Two songs that have raised eyebrows
Nashville were acknowledged.
•
Alan Jackson and George Strait won t~
best vocal collaboration award for"Murder ~
Music Row." The song accuses the coun~
rnusic industry of killing the traditional coufO!•,
try music tha~ n1ade its nan1e .

bought a ticket to our show," Dixie Chicks
lead singer Natalie Maines said.
McGraw won the best male vocalist award,
and his wife Hill won best female vocalist. It
was the first time a husband and wife won
those awards the same year.
"I would rather not have won it if Faith
hadn't won it," McGraw said.
Hill and McGraw, who won the vocal event
award together in 1997, thanked each other
from the stage of the Grand Ole Opry House.
"I feel so alone," Hill said while accepting
her trophy."My husband 's not out here. I don't

&gt; The compan ies said they
·Would ,contJnuc di scu~sio n s in
hope of finding a ro111bin.ltion
.1ccept;1bk to rqp.1laror\;.
, "The withdr.l\vol of ou r appliCation :-.!lows additional time to
;l',l'i..,l''&gt;\ regulator~· umcerm anJ
Mtl';;ly tn

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 'J

Angela Ward
&lt;;::l icnt Service Manager
Registered Reprcscntaliw
0vcr 15 Years Scr~&lt;ing Clients

RAYMOND JAMES
FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.
John C. Miller, CFP
Branch Manager
,311 Fourth Street. Maricl ta, OH 45750
Phone 740-376-9
800-726-~412
1
I\Ward@RJFS.com
'

�•

•

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, October 5, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Bench donated

Field~.

A Chinese Christm.h \\',1\ .~so Cll_ll&gt;yed with winuLT'i 111 tht• dr:l\\'111~ bwlt; Thelnia Belch er. Holl ev Elhott. Ryan Nave' .md Roxie

R .1 pp.

Phorogr.1ph..,
Tht• t:undy of M.1n· E. F~.·rr:.· don.HL'd

\\'t'TL'

t3kcn .111d g.tlllt'S

\\'Cn..'

pbyt·d.

Ladies of G.A.R. meet

b~11ch ttH· the pJt!O .ml~)uf
Veter.lll" !vh'nlt)ri.tl llosptt.ll•Extended C.trt· F.t l' iliry In her 111L'tllory
Tut·~d.Jy. 1Vl.t~.., FcrtY dted rhcn..' ~.m Jt.dy 2. Thl· b..:th.h \\' a~ dcdi l..'.t,t~.· d in
a brH.'f m~nwn .1l ~c.:-rvirt: .md rl'fi·eshmt.'nt.., \\'l'rl' \t'f\'L'd by f.lJHily
member~ . H~re otli..' of 1V1is:- F~.· ttv'~ fn~nd s ·.u th~.:.· Ltn!Jt\'. l bncttl' Sm cbir. enjoys simng on rhc bt..•nch·. Sunding .m.· cwn· 0f the donon. ,is.1

MI!)DLEPORT- Plans to .mist with the Oct. 14 grave m.1 rking
of Union Pr)v.Jte Mes,1ck Walk~..·r nr Snowball Hill Ccmt:tl'rV were
mack \d&gt;en the Maj. Daniel McCook' Circle No. l 04 Ladies. of the
(;rand Army of the Republic met re cently in Middleport.
The group will asSist wah ~erving refrt•sh ments to th ose attending
ters to Miss Fettv. Eileen H1ll .md Phdl" C.,dlc. (Ciurlcm· Hodhrh
the 1 p.m. grave marking.
photo)
Pl.ms were also made to p:trti cipatc with the- Sons of Union Vetcr·':" 111 celebrating Pres. Lincoln's first declar~tion ofThanksgiving by
hosting a poth1ck dmner af the next meeting at 6:.30 p.m ., Tuesday,
Nov. 21. Prmpective members will be invited to attend.
RACINE- Donations of$500 to the St.Jr Mill Park Board for the
Whitney Ashley presided at the meeting Juring which time it was
new restroom fund and S21JO t&lt;l the Cross Mill / Racine Museum f'und
noted thor Emma Ashley had attended the national convention in
were _nlJde when Ranne Area Community Orgamzanon met recentLansmg,
Mich. It was noted that an application for membership has
ly.
been received from Sarah Anderson ofTenne ssee.
Kathryn H,lrt pre,ided at thc me-eting durmg which time the g-roup
Jo Cummings, patriotic instructor, gave a report on the U S. Flag
approved .the purchase of Chmtmas Jeror.Jt1nns for the v1llage. Lilh.111
Code instructing membe" on proper Oag ettguctte. Jean Hilton. a
Weese, Marv Baii,John Holm an and Larry Wolfe were named to serve
n~tionaily known Civil War dance c:tllcr, offered to provide Civil War
on th~ selection committee.
dance mu sic and instruction for next ye-ar's Ohio Department
A report wt~s gt\·en _o n the success of the cunnnuniry f.11l y~rd ~Jll'
encampment. The Ohio presich:nt will be contacted to offer the serand Jt was noted rhat the proceeds from tlut s.1k .md one hdd in the
\'tces
spnng will be U&gt;eel toward the Southern 1-hgh School Scholarship
A resolution was presented to the 'm embers to oppose the c hange
Fund. Five SSOO scholarships mll be .1\v,irdcd to members of the
of the National Park Service in interpreting the battles of their t1vll
Southern Clm of 2111 11.
War battle parks to n1terprctation of the causes of the Civil W1r. MemAppr"h·utwn \\"JS t'XtctH..ied to vo\umt·cr~ who a..,..,l~ted .H the Mt'J~
bers felt that such a change would detract from the history of th e batCounty Fa1r gJrcsmcluclmg He.llher .mJ Mark Aller,. Gay Ann Burke,
des. The resolunon was pa~scd. ·
•
Damon, .fisher, john Fisher. Kris H;uris, P:wll-larrts,Tin::t Ht:,vitt , Jm
Members
were
urged
\O
attend
the
Buffington
Island Batclefield
Hill, Suzanne Evans. Slmky and Rollie ~tewlrt. ,md Larry Wolfe.
L1Jiy or 2 p.m .. Saturday. C'i"ct. 21, at the P"'k at Portland. PnlitJciam will
Prayer pn.:( _
t·ding a dmnn \V,l~ gin·n hy Nancy Carnahan. R.eporrs
be a ~ ked to come a.nd speak m support. M1ke Azinger, ca ndidate for U.
were gin·n by LJI!un \X/cesr..·, ~L'cretary. ,mJ D.tk I i.lrt. tre.1~urer 111 th~..·
S. rcprtscnt:ttive, has Jlrc:tdy promist·cl. to attend. The circle \\illl :-t~sist in
absence of" Ann Zn·kk·. Thl' plcd ~c w .idJou rn rhc meeting \\".1"1 ll'd by
..,ervin g refreshments to th o~t,:' attt'ndin g.
Hart, and the next mceling w,1, ,1 1111\)lltKed fc&gt;J l)Lt. ~..J.
Emma Ashley rcportl·d pJrtitip.lting in .1 summ er ennchmeiH progr!l lll for Me1gs Loc.tl fifrh grJdt'l"'i on the C1vil W.1r. She dC'momtr;ltt•d ch)thn1 g .1nd lll..,l0111S of C: 1nl W:tr nvili.m women :md ~.·xpl.:qncd
rhe lldnblu p·s c ndu rt·d ..
POMEROY - De,cend.lllt ' ul ll umcr fl nllev 1\.mb held .1
A progr,tm on C1\·il \~l.1r rh.1pL111h by ~ons of Union Vctcr.llb c.tmp
rcunmn rt•u•m .L[ thl· 'ummn hn!nt· ot"l Jrty .1nd i111d.t R.1pp Ill ( ·.uLt co mnun(kr, Mtclul'l Tro\\'hrldgt'. ~)f GJihpoli"&gt;. \\",1~ pn:'"L'ntt•d for tlw
d~: n-n n - ( ; ,Jlt lt-v. \\'. \ ',1.

RACO approv!!s donations

Banks reunion held in West Virginia

l)fti t er~ to

bt· elct (t•d

PU I'vH- IU lY l' bRI will
moc;&gt;t Thur-.d,l\". I p.m .. 11 the Scmnr
CttJzcn..,

l~ud tLng

HARRI~ONV!Ill:

•

-

ll.•r-

Ne1gh bo rlluml

d.ay. Ct.'nter

tt) Jttcmi.

FRIDAY
POMEROY cmby\ fim:
food ,m d tcllm,·. , h1p Jt Cod\
E:-,~l.!p~ tiJr Tcn&lt;:.·Fno pen from G p.m to
10:30 p.m 011 Fnd.ty Jnd Saturchy
nights . NutntHJtiJ.l food.., a\·;Hlable
free of ch.1tgc. tens cln pby nonvtolem. gan1C'S. comptltcr progr.m1s.
and c.m.i'i free of charge m the cenIS

ter' bramc room.
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER. Sw
Grange 77K wJl meet 111 l'l:~uL"·
SI.!SSton. ~aturd.l~~ wlth :1 potlut k
supp~r .n f&gt;:J!J p.m fC)llnwcd hy ,1

992-2156

rl',n m·J llc l.ndgt' 411. f&amp;AJ\1 ..,t.ltt'd
Illl't'tlng, S.1rurd.ty. 7·30 p.m. Dcgrl·c
work t(&gt;llu\\"l'd h,· rdl·t·'lilllll'll t"

SUNDAY
IU\CINE - Apostle llok Lulfman \\"ill "PcJk .It rhc Porti.md
R.H me· ll'"nch of IUDS Church
Stnlcby .It 111:311 .l. lll.A pocluck din :
ner willtollmv.The pubhc is invit~d

The Conununiry Calendar
is published as a free service
ro non-profit groups wishing

SALEM CENTER- The second birthday of Kadynn Allman
was observed with a parry at her
home in Salem Center. The parry
theme was a mix of all her favorite
characters including Barney., Blue's
Clues, Rugrats and teletubbies.
Several friends and family members were present for the party.

Katlynn Allman

OES Grand Chapter
session to be held
The Grand Chapter of Ohio Order of the· Eastern Sur will hold its
Ill th a unfJJ! Gr.mJ S~..·~~mn in Battelle Hall , the ( )hio CenttT, Columbus, commencing Friday. October 1.\ .md adjourning Sunday, October
15. Wnrthv (;f"nd Matron Carol L. Kautlinan. of Plain Ctty, and Worthy Gr.wd P.mon Glen M. Plare. of Spencerville. will preside over the

.:woo "Sing a New Song'' ~~ssi on.

All Dinettes

a

2 Chair, 4 Chair and 6 Chair

Starting at $1 79.00

We want your photo$!

WHITE, CHERRY, OAK

ON SALE NOW!!

The Sentmel welcomes your photographs. Here are a few gu1dehnes for

no larger than 8 ' 10
• PolanOd·type photos are discouraged s1ncc they do not re product
well on newspnnt
N When subm1tt1ng d1g1tal photos. be s,urf; the unJgl~'&gt; lrt: ~.J\~:cl &lt;~S
h1gh-resolut1on. ~""llgh-qu"ail ty J_P[G files.
.
• Advcmtll\-tYJ..lf' photograp t 1~ m~ d1scour:J~,('d itH :a thPir tmiO'.H~ ','ll:".
wh tch do not transl1te well :o 'lhY~P·liJL•r cc~IL.1nt' 4rJ·.antLx tvpr r·•·g'
tNes nrc not ,v:r.eplt(l
• Lasm·.vntcrwmts .-:.• Jrgrtc1l11" l&lt; ~r·c, .1r• -1, 0=11 H'' I It, th•·-, I) r1 ,t
reproduce well on newspnnt.
•
• Plc&lt;Jsc IJe sure illl subjl~cts u: photog1.1pll~ ;m· clr· 1rly rdu1t1f1t ·I or1
the back ot the photograph or or .-.m o~ttd hed st"H.C'l of p.wer

·

'This ycJr, the Ill th Grand Ses:-.ion will open informally at 4 :30 p.m .
in Battelle Hall. This informal session is ope n to non-members. The
formal opening of thi s Gr.md Chapter session will take place at 6:30
p.m. The Grond Chapter Banquet will commence at 6 p.m. in the
Hayes Ballroom of the Ad,1m's M"'k Hotd on Saturday, October 14.
Those who wish to attend the Grand Banquet should contact chairman M ary Ryan at 614-882-768.3.
A Vesper Service will be held at 9 a.m. Sunday. October 15 in Battelle Hall. A brunch will follow the service in the Delaware and
Franklin rooms . Those who wish to attend the brunch should call
chainmn Marcia Hey.der at &amp;14-529-163 1.
Installation of the Grand officers ..for the year 200 I will close this
Grand Chapter Session on Sunday, October 15 .
The Order-of the Eastern Star i1 a benevolent, educational and social
organiz;ttion of men and women with close ties to the Masonic Fraternity. The nearly SO,IJOO members in Ohio are con}mitted to helping fight disease and suffering as well as providingscholarships to students in rehgwus training. Grants are givf'n annually to institutions and
individuals around_ the state . ln 1999, these grantl were nearly
$135.000. More than $31.000 was collected for cancer research and
cancer p:Hicnr 3ssistan cc. The Ohio H ea rt Association received about
$29,000 from donatiom, mdividual projects and chapter sunshine collcctiom. Approximately $75,000 of Eastern Star Tf"ining Awards for
Rehgious Leadership (ESTARL) was given to 71 college and seminary
studen ts.
All Eastern Star members are cordially invited and are sincerely
encouraged to attend the 111 th Grand Session of the Grand Chapter
of Ohio, Order of the Eastern Star.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
992-2156

To offer story suggestions, report latebreaking news and offer news tips

·WASHINGTON (AP)
Care for some sugar? The gov' ernment has plenty on hand now
. that processors have turned over
· nearly a million tons rather than
·try to sell it themselves at a loss.
.. The sugar was held as collateral under federal price-support
loans. Proci'Ssors are allowed to
forfeit the sugar ra1her than repay
the loans when domestic prices
fall below the loans' value, as they
have this year.
The Agriculture Department
said Wednesday that more than
804,000 tons, worth S321 million, were forfeited to the government this week. Another
155,000 tons were surrendered
earlier. ·
Since th&lt;' early 1980s, USDA
h." avmdeJ forfeitures by keeping imports 1ow enough to stabilizc domestic prices, but prict"s
IlJ\T b~:en d riven down this year
because of big increas"' in US.
·
d
r
pro d uctwn an other .actors.
, Some of the government's
sugar, about 290,000 tons, will be '
given to farmers who have
pledged to destroy an equivalent
·amount of this year's crop in a
program to reduce the surplus.
The department hasn't decided
. what to do with the rest, said
spokeswoman
Mary
Beth
Schultheis.
The department purchased
· 141,000 tons of sugar this spring
in a finde effort to prop up prices
and avoid the forfeitures. That
sugar, plus the forfeited amount,
. brings the government's total
stock to 1.1 million tons.

.Man confesses to
slayings

consistent with our
value objectives."

).

sharehold~

Inquiry targets
radal profiUng
NEW YORK (AP) -A federal probe has determined that
an elite undercover unit of the
Police Department eo gaged in
racial profiling while conducting
an aggressive campaign of street
searches, The New. York Times
reported Thursday.
. The inquiry began just \veeks
after the 1999 shooting death of
Amadou Diallo, an unarmed
African immig(Qnt killed by four
members of the Police Department's Street Crime Unit.
The U.S. attorney's office is
meeting wirh the mayor's office
to try to negotiate changes that
would avert a lawsuit, the newspaper reported.
If talks fail, the Justice Department could go to court and ask a
judge to order broad changes in
the operations of the unit and
.
bl
. h b
d al
posst e overstg t y a 6c- er
monitor.
Prosecutors based ·their findings on ·a statistical analysis of the
people searched by the ,,.nit's
officers because: they were suspected of committing crimes or
carrying guns. The analysis determined that blacks •nd Hispanics
were disproportionately singled
out, the Times reported.
The Street Crime Unit,
deployed in high-crime areas, has
been seen by the NYPD as one
of the chief reasons violent crime
has fallen in the city.
But the unit's performance and
conduct came under inten&gt;e
scrutiny after the Diallo shooting. Although the four officers
were acquitted, the NYPD has
significantly reorganized the
unit.
The investigation follows a 2year federal probe into allegations of po~ce brutality after
Abner Louima was tortured in a
Brooklyn station house in 1997.
Negotiations with the mayor's
office foUowing that probe began
· over a year ago and have yet to be
concluded.

GRAND JUNCTION, Colo.
(AP) A 67-year-old man
dymg of cancer has confessed to
killint; his wife and two children
nearly 22 years ago, and to killing
another wife, authorities said.
Robert M. Spangler was
'arrested Tuesday at the home he
shared with his fourth wife. He
was being held without bail in
Mesa County.
Nancy Spangler, 45, the couple's son David, 17, and daughter
Susan. 15. were found dead in
tbt•ir home south of Denver in
December 1978.
MOBILE, Ala. (AP) - The
Nancy Spangler was found in
oldest Episcop~l congregation in
the· bas~ment with a suicide note
Alabama has voted to break away
Jnd a handgun nearby, and the
from the church to protest its
children were foimd in their
recognition .of gay and other
bedrooms. The deaths w~rc ruled
relationships outside of marriage.
a Jouble murder-suicide.
Members of Christ Church
Investigators teopened the case
voted overwhelmingly Sunday to
whe1'1 they learntd in 1994 that
Robert Spangler's second and affiliate with the Anglican Misthird wives also died under suspi- sion in America, whose bishops
cious circumsta'nces, one fron1 a are under the authority of arch·~drug overdose and one in a faU at bishops of the Province of
..:Grand Canyon National Park in Rwanda and the Province of
South East Asia.
~ Arizona.
Gay issues have created a rift
. . Authorities now say Spangler
-'staged the murders of hi's first between hbera] and conservative
~wife and two children, and con- Episcopalians and in other
' •fessed to pushing one of his denominations. Delegates to the
" wives over the edge of the Grand Episcopal General Convention
in July declared the church
: canyon.
,: . An Dfficer said Spangler has should support unmarried coubeen given only a few weeks to . ples in monogamous relation• ~ve, and that may have played a ships honoring religiou·s values .
..-.tole
m hts co nfession .
A spokeswoman for AMIA,
' .
based in Pawleys lsland, S.C., said
they have 17 congregations in at
least 13 states, including six in the
South.

Congregation
breaks away

Wamer Music.
....,. EMI deal oft

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

su bmi SSions.
• Color photographs are accepted. proy1ded th ey are 1n focus and have
good contrast Ncgat1ves also are accepted: howev~r. please mclude a
pnnt along w1th the nega11ve.
t
• B~ack·and-whlte photographs are accepted, prov1ded they are 1n toe us
and have good contrast Ncgat1ves also are accepted: however. please
mclu.de ·a pnnt along w1th the negat1ve.
• Standard s1ze sl1des are fCcepted. prov1ded they are Hl f_ocus and
have good contrast
• Submitted photos should be no smaller than standard wa11.9t srze t1nd

sugar surplus

Birthday celebratd

The Sentinel News Hotline

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR
THURSDAY
IVIIIJ!JLL!'ORT -- b.lllt;e·lme·
( ' luptcr 172. Thur~d.1y. 7:3~ I p n1.

USDA copes wilh

members.

Po1neroy:jc-rry F1dds. Pon11.·roy.

Georg~.· Holter, Ri cinc; Kart.'n, Corey, Jeretniah and Z.1cl1Jry
Prop st, Fr.mklin. WVa.; Bill and Roxie Rapp. Camden-on-G.wley,
WV,J.: .md Raymond .mel Lucille ·r:.ckett, Bridgeport, W.Va.
Conrad Belcher had the praytT. An original poem .was read by Alice
Ell! on tn nwmory of Homer Lhnks. Songs were sung by Odrhn Jnd
Thdnu lklcher.Joy Elliott .md Bill .md Roxi e Rapp .
An atlruon was hdd \\'ith gifts donatl·d by the guest!' wirh Rox it•
R,tpp .•t~-.J~tt·d by Phil Schw.1b. dmpg rhe auctiont:-t·ring.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NATIONAL BRIEFS

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
Attending the reuruun we(e Conard and Thelma Banks Belcher.
State1v1lle, N.C.; Howltd and Dottie Banks, Charleston Heights, S.C.;
Lury and Lmda Banks Rapp. Racme; J:ck and Alice Banks Elliott,
Colonial Beach, Va.; Butch and Sharon Banks Dean, Largo, Fla.
Butch and Bonnie Banks Lightfoot, Pomeroy.; Wayne and Jane
Banks, Syracuse; Albert and Sandy Banks of Pomeroy; Dan, Fonda,
Danielle, Michelle a'nd Heather Thomas, Whedersburg;Jackie Rodenbaek, Kayla and Ryan, Racine; Kris. Becky and Holley Elliott, Stafford,
Va.
Dale Elliott. Colonial Beach.Va .;Jimmy, Cheryl, Rachael and James
Crowder. Buena Vista ,Va.; Dean and Joy Elliott, Woodbridge,Va.; Brian
and' Sandi Rem hart, Largo. Fla .; Phil. Kim, Bradley, Alexis and Joshua
Schwab, Largo, Fla.
Jerry Lightfoot. Pomeroy; Kelli L1ghtfoot, Pomeroy; David Hanks,
Syracme; Lacy Workman, Pomeroy;Jeremy Banks. Pomeroy;James and
Mary Banb, l'owdlton, WVa.;Johnny Barley, Rudand;Arminta Bishop, Summersville, W.Va.; Bob and Christma ,D~y. Pomeroy; Rick and
Sonya Cole. Craigsville, W.Va.; Wilham I;':IImtt, Dixie. W.Va.; Ashley

• Thursday, October 5, 2000

T.L. Boyne
England-Corsair

LA-Z-BOY
Sleepers

Starting at

t...,r
~·~

$499.00
SOLID, PLAIN, FLOWERS,
MULTICOLORED

MASON

LONDON (AP) EMl
Group PLC and Time Warner
.lnc. said Thursday they had with•.drawn their proposal t!) combine
EM! Music with Warner Music
, (:;roup in the face of opposition
'.from the European Commission,
but wou'ld connnue talks on
Spm e kind of joint venture.
:. The Commission had opposed
xhe dl rs 20 billion combinatio n,
\vhich would reduce the number

""of maj0r music compames from
Jive to four.

,Dixie Chicks triumph at Music Association awards
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Despite a litde
history made by Tim McGraw and Faith Hill
at the Country Music Association awards, the
night and the year belonged to the Dixie
Chicks.
'
The trio .from Texas was named best entertainer and best vocal group on Wednesday, and
took home awards for best album for "Fly" and
video for "Goodbye Earl."
The awards come the year the multimillion
selling act toured for the first time as a headliner.
"We want to thank every person who

WORCESTER. Mass. (AP) A' fire official denied a government report Wednesday that two
, of the six firefighters killed in a
December warehouse fire had
rushe&lt;,l into the abandoned building without notifying th~1r commanders.
The report issued Wednesday
by the National Institute of
Occupational Safety and Health
also said bad radio commumcations
hampered firefighters
efforts.
The Dec. 3 fire started when a
homeless couple living in the
warehouse knocked over a candle
during a fight. Two firefighters
searching the building for people
possibly trapped inside became
lost, and four more firefighters
went in to find them. All six firefighters died in the blaze.
It was the worst loss of life
among firefighters in a building
fire in America in more than 20
years. ·President C linton and Vice
President A! Gore joined 40,000
mourners at the memoria] serVICe.

Deputy Fire Chief Gerard Dio
on Wednesday denied that two
firefighters cited in the report had
faHed to inform their conunanders that they were entering the
building. Dio, who headed the
department's own inquiry, said its

WASH INGTON (AP) -Antismoking groups said Wednesday
they. want R.J. Reynolds Tobacco
Co. to stop test-marke ting its
experimental cigarette after an
independent study found that
Eclipse, touted as safer .than ordinary cigarettes, poses many of the
.ame health risks.
The company refused, said its
testing supports the claip1s, and
questioned the conclusions of the
study commissioned by the state
of Massachusetts, contending they
were drawn from limited data.
RJR says Eclipse, which heats
rather than burns tobacco, delivers
80 percent fewer carcinogem tlun
typical "ultralight" cigarettes and
"may present· less risk of cancer
associated with smoking."
Several anti-smoking groups
said the claim was misleading
because some of the cigarettes
used for comparis.o n are not cotnmercially available.
"There is no such thing as a
safer cigarette," said M . Cass
Wheeler, chief executive officer of
the American Heart Association.

"Ho\\it:vt'r

a ny

conccs~ions

lh.ll arc ultinl.ltl'ly m:1dL'

IHU!'lt

be

complete radio transmissions
show the .two firefighters wert'
told ·go inro the warehouse.
"The report doesn't take into
.tecounr the emotions of the fin:fighters at the Sct' n e," sai d Jlml's F.

Lyons, \vhose son, Jay. wa1 killed.
''There are two firelighters nussing. When panic sets 111 , men
become desperate."
Manslaughter charges filed
against the homele~&lt; couple who
started the bbze were dropped
last month.
The safety panel did not identifY the two firefighters it ~aid
entered the building without
telling commanders, but it said
they were among the six who
died.
Its report also said firefighters
were confused about the layout of
the six-story warehouse . because
of poor inspection and planning
before the fire.
In a series of safety 'recommendations, "the safety panel said
vacant buildings should be carefully checked with warning sign&gt;
of specific dangers posted at
entrances, call ed for more elaborate planning to _m anage peno~­
nel at fire scenes. and urged use of
a special safety commander when
necessary.

Wheeler said RJR 's promotion "is
cynically calculated to deceive the
public about the true nature of
Eclipse and the dangers it continues to pose to smokers."
The Massachusetts 'tests found
that , compared with RJR's low-tar
Now King Size· Hard Pack ultralights, Eclipse has 734 percent
more acetaldehyde and 475 percent more acrolein, two cancer..
causing agents.
Two of the most potent carcinogens, l3enzo(t~)pyrine, or BaP,
and NNK, werr found at roughly
the same levels as in Brown &amp; ·
Williamson's Carlton King Size
Soft Pack and Eclipse, but were far
lower in Now King Size.
GaryT. Burger, RJR's executive
vice president of research and
development, said the "comporisons do not. in any way, change
the fact that an extensive battery
of ~ciemific .tem indicates that

WASHINGTON

(A I') -

Hc:1ring ::1 ctsc in which womt·n
were arrestt•d from rhe1r ho~pit:tl
beds, Supn:mc.; Court jmucl'~

Wednesday v1goromly debated
whedwr hospn.1ls c.m tt'\t prL·gnant women fur drug li\L' .111d
turn the results on:·r to police.
"This is being done• formedical purposes," suggested Ju stice
Antonin Scalia. "The pohce didn't show up at the hospit.ll and
say. 'We'd like to find a way to
bu~t your patients."'
But Justice Ruth BaJer Gmsburg sa1d she di'd . not s~e how
arresting women after they gavt'
birth would protect the fetus. the
primary concern of a South
Carolina public hosp1tal. "I
looked at the (hospital) consent
form; it doesn't say anything
about police," she said.
Women treated at the Medical University of South Carolina contend that t.he hospital's
former cocaine-testing policy
violated preguant patients' priva cy and their constitutional protecnon agamst unreasonable
searches.
The women "were searched
by their doctors for evidence of
cnn1cs and then arrested. seven
of them right out of their hospital beds," said Pri.ciUa Smith, the

b\.vvcr fur the \\·nmen
~ucd.

The
lw..,ptul\
.ltro rn tt~.
R.oberr Hood. s,ud th1..• \\'Ol1H;fl
\\;ere J.Hl~·d " nt&gt;t o nly f\)r rhc tllt-~
g.1l lJ&lt;.,t' of the drug hut f(n whJ~
thev \\'J..'rt' doing f\ ) tht'Ir child ... •.
. Wt: arc trying ~0 ~top J womi~
from domg u-rt·pJr,lbk-. m.~j~,,..
_harm to ht·r chi\J in uter~)."
'· LJw cnfinu·mcnt \Y.lS nor
the ptu pmc of t\w., thm g ,lt .111,"
H&lt;&gt;od added.
A feJer;~] .1ppe.d.., cour,t
upheld rhc tl'S[ ~ a~ Jegmma·u.·
efforts to reduce t rac k cocHnt•
use by prcgn:.tn[ women.
The Supreme Court\ rulmg,

expectt·d by July. could determine whether the ho~pltJI reinstates the policy or whether
other hospitals cmmder Jdopt~
ing sin1ilar tactic~.
,
Ten· \vom cn who ~ ucd the
Charleston 11ospital in I 903 ~aid
testing pregn:1nt · women for
drug; and giving the resultl to
police violated rhe Con..,titution 's Fourth Amendment.
which gener;~lly rcqui rt'S that
sea rc h es be authonzcd by court
warrant or based· on n..·asonabk
suspiCion that a crime- hJ~ been

com nUtted.

Eclipse cigarettes may present
smokers with less 1isk of certain
smoking-related di~t•ases than
other cigar~ttcs."
R.JR began te·st-marketing
Edipse on April I'!, only in the
Dallas-Fort Worth arc•o. and tildl
will continue, Spokesman St'th
Moskowitz ~aid.
Dr. Gregory Connolly ,of the·
Mass:tchusetrs Tobacco Cmltrol
Proj~ct _ said he would urge :Jtto rneys general to investigate
whether R.JR is viohting the 1998
agreement that prohibirs ogarcnc
tnakers from misrep resen tin g IIIt'
health risks of their produc·t. The .
t~greemenr settled a multi~t:ttc b\\"suit against the tobacco industry.
Because Eclipse heats mste11d of
burns its tobacco, RJR cla ims the
cigarctrc releases nicotine, glycerin, carbou monoxide and othcr
toxins Jt lower levels th:tn typic;~!
cigarettes.

M:urhew Mytr~. pn·"llkll t nl
the Campaigll for Tub ;Kco-Frc~·
Kid~. s:1id the M.l~)I,Jrhuwn.., ..,tml:
poim.., co rht• !lt'l'd fiH· Conwt·~~ to

givt' th~,;.· Food .md l )rug AdnJII\1~-·
rr.1·tion tht· pn\\"n to l"l'gul.ttt·
tob'.ILTO. Thl· Supn'lllt' ( :\&gt;llrt

rub! i11 M.1rd1 tlw the I I lA

~cLordmg to

the U.S ( :c mcr~

for I )tSL'a"c Contrt&gt;l .111d l'rl'\"t'll - '
tion, L.Hdin\',Jo;,nd.n d1w.ht' .1nd
CJJl(t'l" ,KCO llJH t{H 7lJ fll' l"l"l'J 11 of
rhe more th.m 400.(10(1 ..,1nu km b~
n:Lttcd dc.uh~ 111 the Unac~l ~t.Jtc,,
t' .1C

h

\"l' .11.

011 the "lc't:
lt.J. Reyn okl&lt;.. ( :n. I l"flp,c "Itt'.
http / / www....·l hp'-t'.I"Jrr COl) 1
C ,u np.ngn t"o1 Iol~.llUl hL't'
K1ds : hrtp:/ / tob.tLt"ntl·c~· ktd.., lll".l!
Ament ,liJ c .lllCn Soc. lL't\""
http: //ww\\.t,llll cJ.()J"g

before graduating. When fame
hit. he received an honorary
doctorate from there.

On Columbus Day, Monday, October 9
our offices will be open regular banking hours.

l. '

Coli for the olllce

ns~resr you.

B•nk·ay Phone .TDD Ont,
1-100474..123
37&amp;-7123
•malladdrt~aa : bllnk@peopiHbancorp.com
wtballe: www.peoplttblnco'l).com

'

.111

drug.

out of Boston University a year

J'l//your 6n3ncial needs, a//m one place·.

1,,, kl

,\urhority to rq.;u l.ltt' toh.~ L"to ,1~
itdd JCtiv~,;.·

Jason Alexander was kicked

in person, at convenil'nt ATMs, hy phone or on the internet.

Call 992·2198

-·

You've Got
Connections!

992-2156

delivered directly to
, your door

·.

Activists want R.J. Reynolds 'better' cigarette off market:

News Ho.Iine
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline

•.•.•..,.,.

..

Firefighters run into building Pregnant women being~
without permission
tested for drug use
::

Peoples
Banka

EM !.
"We h,l\·e been, and will con- . , ..
timtc to be, fkxibk Hl rL·Spond1J1g: ro rht' Europc.111 ~ommJs­
"'Jon \ concerns.

!P

••

to pursut• solutio ns simultane-

Europe .md the U.S.,''

r»Y

'

Of course, you've always got connection~ to Peoples Bank

'i..Jid . Eric N1coh, ci1JirtnJn of

know who to hug. Can l hug somebody'" '
From the aud1cnce McCraw threw her a
hug, just minutes after wmmng hiS award aQd
calling Hill "my soul mate. my w1fe. who's
•
inspiration."
•'
••
Two songs that have raised eyebrows
Nashville were acknowledged.
•
Alan Jackson and George Strait won t~
best vocal collaboration award for"Murder ~
Music Row." The song accuses the coun~
rnusic industry of killing the traditional coufO!•,
try music tha~ n1ade its nan1e .

bought a ticket to our show," Dixie Chicks
lead singer Natalie Maines said.
McGraw won the best male vocalist award,
and his wife Hill won best female vocalist. It
was the first time a husband and wife won
those awards the same year.
"I would rather not have won it if Faith
hadn't won it," McGraw said.
Hill and McGraw, who won the vocal event
award together in 1997, thanked each other
from the stage of the Grand Ole Opry House.
"I feel so alone," Hill said while accepting
her trophy."My husband 's not out here. I don't

&gt; The compan ies said they
·Would ,contJnuc di scu~sio n s in
hope of finding a ro111bin.ltion
.1ccept;1bk to rqp.1laror\;.
, "The withdr.l\vol of ou r appliCation :-.!lows additional time to
;l',l'i..,l''&gt;\ regulator~· umcerm anJ
Mtl';;ly tn

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 'J

Angela Ward
&lt;;::l icnt Service Manager
Registered Reprcscntaliw
0vcr 15 Years Scr~&lt;ing Clients

RAYMOND JAMES
FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.
John C. Miller, CFP
Branch Manager
,311 Fourth Street. Maricl ta, OH 45750
Phone 740-376-9
800-726-~412
1
I\Ward@RJFS.com
'

�.

•

'

0

Page A a • The Dally ~ntlnel

Inside:

Thursday, October 5, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

gerating to make a point," satd Bush.
Bush pointed to comments Gore made about a d!saster inspection
mp. and using an example of'\ Florida schoolgirl forced to' stand in a
crowded classroom.
~
The girl did have to stand- bu,t only for the 6r;st day of class when
there were nor enough desks in the room, not longer as Gore implied.
And the vice president rud not actually accompany the head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency on a trip to Texas, as he claimed,
but did make his own trip to see the damage.
"It's another in a disturbing pattern of the lrice president simply
making things up," said spokeswoman Karen Hughes. Running mate
Otck Cheney weighing in that he 'Y"s "puzzled and saddened" by what
he saw as. the latest GOre '' misrepresentations."

While Bush sought

focus on character, Gore sa1d the key campaign wue is who would benefit most from rival campaign proposals.
"Will we use our prosperity to enrich not just the few, not just in
some areas, but all of our families and all of the counrry?" Gore asked.
"We need an all-out, concerted effort to make sure that the prosperity
endures and spreads and takes in all of our people."
Gore planned a visit to a child care facility to talk about his plans to
broaden child care tax breaks.
Bush also was talking about children's issues in Michigan where aides
said he would stress the need for businesses to use flex tin}~ to give parents more time at home, as well as use of software filters on computers
so they can control where their children go oil the Internet.

Even staunchest supporters don't always ag1 ee

• WARREN ' (AP) - During a
20-minutt." .1ddn:~s to thousand!!
gatht-red 111 downtown. Vtct"
Prestdem AI (;ore dtdn 't dwell
on hts d,•b.lte wtth George W.
Bush thL' nH;ht b!..·forl' 111 Boston.
'' I thought Jt was l £: rt'Jt
debate:· Gurt· &gt;.m! Wednesday of
t'he Tut• sdJ\' tugh t tell'\'iS('d

REYNOLDSBURG (AP) The Legislature is currently
It's hard to find a more rock- 'discussing rem~dies to the
solid Republican audience than Supreme Couri ruling, but
at J George W Bush rally in thiS Republican Gov. Bob Taft and
eastern suburb of Columbus.
majority Republican leaders 111
However, not all of the 1,000 the House and Senate haw all
mpporters who attended the but ruled out a tax in crease to
rally for the GOP presidential pay for them. One of those leadnominee agree with him all of ers, House Speaker Jo Ann
the? time.
Davidson, calls Reynoldsburg
The subject ofBush's visit on home.
Wednesday \v:IS education, an
So " ' hile Bush calls for more
ISsue chat. affects Ohio students, money for charter schools parents and taxpayers because of taxpayer-funded alternatives to
a stare Supreme Court ruling public schools and more
that found Ohio's school-fund- money for vouchers to send
ing system unconstitutional.
public school students to private

'THuRsDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Sports

schools, even some of the GOP
faithful raise fOncerns.
" It's a hard call because the
state of Ohio is undergoing refunding of the public school ~ys­
tem itself, said Bill Chovan of
Co lumbu s, a Bush supporter
who is the parent of an ISmonth-old boy.. " l:lut I think
there nr:eds to be more accountability of the public schools."
Education was one of the top
three concerns of Ohio voters
polled lase month by the University of Cincinnati. The other two
top concerns were health care
and the economy.

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

I

-said it \Vas a sign of desptTJtion f(Jr
Bush, the Repubbcan presidential
llO!lllnee, to go af[er President Clinton - by indirection, nor by name
- while questioning Gore's character and disputing his credibility.
Cheney effectiwly started it back
at the Republican National Convention, saying Gore was trying to
shed Clinton baggage bur char it
was impossible to see one without
thinking of the other.
Gore chose not co counreratt:tck
on the character issue in the debate
in Boston, and as he camp;ugned
Wednesday, although he made a
point of reminding voters agam that
he is running as his own man and
wants.ro be judged for who he is.
Bush campaign officials on
Wednesday ' challeng~d several of
Gore's debate statements, including
his tale about a Florida high school
sntdent who had to stand because
there weren't enough desks for her
overcrowded science class. She did,
but orily for t~e first day of class.
Republicans said it was a fresh
example of Gore 's ''embellishmenc;;
and exaggerations.

•

"--

• 21 years of practicing law in
Meigs County
• Former Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney
• Two time member of the Committee
to Evaluate Ohio State Supreme
Court Candidates
• Former member of the Ohio State
Bar Association Legal Ethics and
Responsibilty Committee
• Former member of the Ohio
State Bar Association Committee
on Criminal Justice

"My ·family and I thlnJl Meigs County Is the
greatest place to live! 1would be honored
to serve this county as ..c·ounty Court Judge."

~Elect

County Court Judge
Paid for b .the candidate

Eastern's road to playoffs goes through Stewart
BY ScoTT WOLFE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDEt'IT
EAST MEIGS - Eastern continues its
pursuit of a postseason berth Friday with
a trip to Stewart to m~ Feder;il Hockmg.
Eastern (5- 1, TVC 1- 0) has won four
consecutive games and checks in at No. 6
this week in rhe OHSAA's Division VI,
Region 23 state computer ratings.
If the playoffs were to begin today, the
Eagles would play Newark Car\l.plic in a.
first-round contest.
Assuming that Miller (6-0, TVC 1-0),
· ranked No.9 in the state AP poll and third
in the Division V, Region 19 computer
ratings, continues to win, the Eagles could

alford a loss to the Falcons and still sustain
a playoff bid.
.
However, Coach head coach Scott
Christman is not a statistic watcher. He is
thinking all "W"'s at this point, one game
at a time. He knows anything can happen
and four weeks still remain .
No Meigs County team has ever made
the playoffs. Not even the undefeated
1981 Eastern Eagle team which was
ranked 4th in the scare with Arch Rose at
the helm. That, of course, was under the
old selection process in the pre-computer
ranking days.
"1 was really happy with the win (Friday)," head coach Scott Christman said. "I
thought the line played well again and our

backs ran hard.
Lyons npde his left and saw nothing but
"R.ight now we have to take care of sideline as he won a footrace to the endbusiness and win our remaining games zone.
and not worry about what the other
That made the score 13-0 instead of a
teams are doing,'' he added. "As a ream we potential tie or Trimble lead. Previously,
canit afford a let down against anyone we Lyons grabbed a seven-yard pass from
play."
Garret Karr for the initial score.
At Eastern last week, the Eagles broke
Garrett Karr has emerged as a mature,
open a close game and thumped Trimble, .very poised quarterback in just his junior
34-6. A moment~m-changing intercep- season. Karr rushed for two touchdowns
tion return of 100 yards to paydirt by and passed for two others while connecjunior Chris Lyons may have been the dif- tion on 4-of-6 passes for 47 yards.
ference in the game.
Eastern enjoyed so much success in Its
With 3:41 left before the half, Trimble running game, that Karr didn't need to
appeared to have scored a potential game utilize his passing skills more than minityiiJg touchdown, but the line judge called
Please see Eastern Pllp 81
'the pass incomplete.• On the next play,

Giants bum
New York

Others receiving votes: Ross
Southeastern (1 ); Cheshire
Naval Academy (1)

To be eligible for The OYP 10, a
team must allhar: a.) be from

the Mason-Gallla-Malgs area;
b.) be a local conference ment•
ber; or c.) play at least one
game agalnat local teams.

Football
TVC
Ohio Dlvlolon
TVC

·

White Qua£ity

TVC

.

From $699 to $1499
YOUR CHOICE RING OR PENDANT

One Carat Diamonds

From $1999·to $4999

Necklaces - Bracc\c\s

SAVE SO%- 70%
rrom Monult~clurcr s ft cloll rncc~

14K Gold and l OK Go\d
lnc\udinq All ~EW
.-Uo\ian Go\d Designs! -"

One Carat Diamond
Solitaire Ring or Pendant
Only 41n Stock • -Reg '3000

SEOAL
SEO

Sofitalns
Re9 . Sale
1/4CARAT......... 1~ ........... '299
1/2 CARAT......... •~ ........... 1699
1CARAT ............ 1 ~0 ........ 11999

DIAMOND EARRINGS
R~

Sale

1/4CARAT......... '~ ............. '75
1/2 CARAT......... '~.: .......... '388
1CARAT* .......... syw ........ 11350

ALL

Jackson
3-0 6-0
Logan
3-0 6-0
Gallia Academy 3·0 5-1
Point Pleasant 1-2 4-2
Athens
1·2 2-4
Warren
1-2 2-4
Marietta
0-3 1-5
River Valley
0-3 0-6
Friday's Games
Athens at Gallia Academy
Warren at Point Pleasanl
Jackson at River Valley
Logan at Marietta

•

$1999
DIAMOND RINGS

DIAMOND PENDANTS

ALL

Miller
1·0 6·0
Eastern
t -0 5-1
Southern
1-0 3-3
Trimble
0-t 3·3
Waterford
0-1 2-4
Federal Hocking 0-t t-5
Friday's Games
Nelsonville-York at Meigs
Miller at Southern
Eastern at Federal Hocking
Vinton County at Alexander
Wellston at Belpre
.
Waterford at Trimble

Half Carat Diamonds·

Choose From
Hundreds In Stock

ALL

Nelsonville-York 1-0 4·2
Belpre
1-0 3-3
Wellston
1-0 · 3-3
Meigs
0-1 3-3
Alexander
0-1 0-6
Vinton County
0-1 0-6
•
Hocking Dtvlalon

Our Holiday Diamonds are here/
A Huge Selection .of
Fine Diamonds All Sizes!

'

Steve_Story is yo
best choic.e for
t Judge.

lhunday. Odoll1r 5. 2000

Team
Prev. Yotea
1. Logan
49 (4)
2
2 . Portsmouth
•44 (1)
3. Parkersburg
3
39
4. Jackson
4
36
'1
5. Ironton
32
6. Gallipolis
7
22
7. Fort Frye
5
19
14 '
8. Point Pleasant 6
9. Miller
11
8
10. Eastem
9
8

·Lieberman, Cheney follow leaders in debate
will sic at a table \vtth moderator
Bernard Shaw of CN N, is to seek
support for the men at the top of
their tickets.
Lieberman's biggest assets may
be a 'manner that at times allows
him to criticize without appearing
to, his experience in debating on
the Senate floor and his sense of
humor, analysts say.
Cheney's adwntagcs include an
authoritative manner, his own years
as a congressman and ,h.ts experience running the Pentagon during
the Persian GulfWar.
Lieberman sai(l it should be a
"good, healthy debate.
"We have very different voung
records in Congress," said Lieberman, who has spent the past three
days at debate camp 111 Kentucky.
"We have wry different ideas about
the future."
Cheney, who ran through his
fourth mock debate Wednesday in
Wash ington, said he wants to luw
" J convcrs..1tion 'Xith t~ Amcric.m
people. It's Important th.1t rhey get .1
louk at me."
After \\'.Hch111g the1r k-.Hk'l"s'
dl'bat&lt;' Tuesday night. Lieberman

Page.Bl

to

Gore promotes plan to help middle-class families

DANVILLE. Ky. (AP) - Dick
Cheney and Joseph Lieberman
square off in a campaign debate
Thursday night to sell their White
House tickets, their own leadership
credentials- and perhaps deal with
the echoes of scandal raised and dismissed by their bosses two nights
earlier.
After days uf practtce. the
Repubhca.n and I )emocr3t:J.C vice
prcstdcnt:J.al nominees meet hen· at
Centre College tor their one, 911minute deb.1te of the camp•tgn.
Vice PrestdemAJ Gore andTexao;
Gov. George W Bush ha\·c two
presidential debates before them, on
Ocr. II 111 Wm;ton-Salem. N.C.
and O ct. 17 m St. Lmm.
An es.tmutcd 46 .5 mill.Ion people watched Tuesda,·s Bush-Gore
debate, according tll Nteben Med10 .
Rese.trch. Fewer Vll'\Vero; ,'\l"e
expected to tune m for CheneyLieberman since the:.' understudies
generally Jttract less &lt;lttcntton then
the men \Vho wam to be president.
Fb r L1ebernun. the Connecticut
senator. J nd Cheney. the !ormer
defense '\ecret.lt;.', the aim of the
talk-show style debate, where they

•

'

'

The OVP

person after watching Tuesday gc:t into an ;ngument," sht' said.
m g ht\ debate. Weazel satd he
E.ulier in the day, Gore spoke
\\'J~ swayl'd by rhe de batt.• to vot~
With a handiul of students at a
for Gon:.
Youngstown State Uni\'crsity
.. It solidifies what I'd been
bookstore.
clunking:· sa id Weazd. who sup He t..•mphasized the imporports Gore's plan s 6 t"or Son.tl
Secu nty .t nd prescr iption drug tmct' of expanding Head Start.
recruiting I DO,OOIJ new t&lt;'achcove rage .
.
~vent .
Wettzd also said he was ers. n:duong clas ~ room sizes .md
Gore spoke· Jt !e'ngth .tbout impressed by Gore's d~:mt·anor L~reatmg tax deductions for coJhis S500 bilhon plan to help dunng the de bare when he ·was lc:ge tuition .
middle-class famtli~s. Ht• drew c riti cized by Bush.
" We've got to focus on maklm btggesr applause when he
" Between the t~vo. he was the
told th e predominantly pro- more presidentiJI. He presented ing college more accessibk:·
Union crowd that he was m favor hunsdf better," Weitzel satd of Gore said in the bookstore as hiS
wife, Tipper, stood by.
of eliminating , repl:icemenr . Gore.
workers for tho se on srnke and
Glona McGahee, a worker at
Introducing her husband Ill
raising the minimum wage .
the nearby General Motors auto • thiS northeastern Ohio DemocAfter rhe speech. dozens of plant Ill Lordstown, said she felt ratic stronghold, Mrs. Gore said
protesters oppostng U.S. aid to Gore showed good restraint durshe has carried a buckeye .in her
ISrael .c hanted whtle members ing the debate.
camera bag for luck ever since
ftom a local northeastern Ohio
"] felt Bush looked l1ke an
firefighters'
umon
yelled, tdior. He wasn't answe ring t.he 1992, when Gore and Bill Clin''U.S.A."
questions. All he wanre&gt;i to do mn won here. "This year, the
Bob Weitzel, 61, of Warren, was talk about how Gore was a Buckeye State is gmng to bring
said he wanted co see. Gore in baq person. He just wanted to us luc k again," she predicted.

I

Marshall- W. Michigan preview, Page B2
MLB playoff round14p, Page B5
Daily &amp;oreboard, Page BB

Gore, Bush trade shots in duel of battlegrounds
GRAND RAPIDS. MICh. (AP) - Al Gore and George W Bush are
mtensttylng their struggle for battleground sWing states, with Gore
hammenng at his nval's ta'x proposals and Bush focusing on· credtbility.
Still sharpening differences drawn at thetr first debate, both were
stumping m Michigan Thursday after nuking separate campaign forays
into Ohio on Wednesday.
Gore tsstubborrily sucking to his insistence that Bush would fritter
away the budget surplus on tax breaks for the r.ich at the same rime he
tou.ts hiS own care tax credtt proposal.
Bush also was set to talk abo}lt children's issues in Michigan as he
contmues ro underscore "exaggerations and embellishments .. that he
says call Gore's character into question.
"ThiS IS a man - he's got a record, you know, of sometimes exag-

The Daily Sentinel

Sofitaire.s
Re9
· Sale
1/4CARAT.........•~ ........... 1299
1/2CARAT.........1 j,W) .......... 1699
1CARAT ............ • 9........ 11999

Area non-league
ALL

Wahama
2·3
Hannan
2·4
South Gallia
0-6
Friday's Games
Wahama at Gilmer County
Hannan at Guyan Valley
Saturday's Game
Gauley Bridge at South Gallia

Over $5 Million of diamonds
alone have been sold by
Acquisitions.
To our loyal customers tri the
past decade ...

Meigs whips Vinton Co.
ROCK SPRINGS -The beat
keeps going for the Meigs volleyball team as the Marauders swept
Vinton County in two games
Wednesday., )
Meigs (14-2, TVC 13-1) won
rhe first cont est 15- 5 and then
shut out the Vikings in the second

Thank You

15-0.

. • No Additional DIKoun!• Avallab)e

OPEN
9:30- 5:00 Dally
9:30 - 6:00 Monday
9:30- 7:00Frlday
9:30 - 4:30 Saturday

/

"Vinton County didn't play
well ," Marauder coach Rick Ash
said. "We served w ell and did
what we needed to do to win rhe
game. We were ab le to keep the
ball in play and Vinton County
made the mistakes."
Kayte Davis led the Marauders
with 10 points, she was 12-of-17
serving with two kills. Katie Jeffers scored nine points and was
11-of-11 serving, Nikki 13urcher
added seven points and was 8-for8 serving.
Mindy Chancey added thret'
points and was 3-for-3 se rving.
Corrie Hoover score d one point
and was two of two with one kill.
Shannon Price added three assists.
Jaynee Davis added three kills.
Margie Bratton added three kills
and two blocks.

THANK YOU, THANK YOUI - San Francisco pitcher Livan Hernandez doffs his hat to the Pacific Bell
Park faithful as he leaves the field. (AP)

'

Southem meets
No. 8 Miller squad
BY ScoTT WOLFE

Overall , Miller outrushcd
Waterford
3 14 yards to 195.
'
RACINE - Southern plays
The Miller otTensive machine,
host to one of the top Division powered by Cox, has picked up
V · schools in the state of Ohio where it left off last year. The
when undefeated Miller, ranked 'state-ranked
Falcons Qexed
third in the region computer their muscle early in defeating
ratings and eighth m the Divi- the Southern Tornadoes 46-0
sion V state poll, comes to town lase year at Miller High School.
this Friday night.
Miller was playoff bound and
Miller returns a lineup chat number one in region 23 at 7-1.
consists. of most of the players while Southern fell to 2-6.
from last year's playoff team.
Jhe very first play of that
Returnees include Clifton gan1e was a bad omen for the
Cox, who already has I ,000 Tornadoe s as j unior running
yards this season and is working back Randy Nelson scrambled
on his second thousand. Cox 75 yards on the opening k'ickcarried 29 times for 268 yards in otT for a 6-11 Miller lead.
Miller's 27-20 win over WaterCox ran 20 rimes for 158
ford.
yards for Mill er, while Downey
Miller (6-0, TVC 1-0) scored had J 6 carries for 56 yards.
all 27 Of its points in rhe first
At\the half, Southern, whtch
quarter, then had to tight tooth- lined up in a run and shoot
and-nail to re pel a Wildcat offense, was 11-for-28 passing
comeback.
for 116 yards and three first
Miller's . Randy Nelson had downs . Ironically, Miller had
rwo carries for 48 yards and rwo just five first dowm. Overall,
catches for 43 yards and a qu,arterback Jon athan Evans
touchdown. Nelson is a threat to completed 14-of-35 passes for
break the big play, not only
Please see Southern, Pll&amp;e 81
rushing, but as a receiver.
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

I

•

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) only a few questions at his lock!:larry Bonds wore a broad smi le er before leaving with his young
when he stepped into the on- son. He blames the media 'for
deck circle in the first inning.
blowing his postseason struggles
He might have had an inkling out of proportion.
"I don't want to ger into the
his playoff lu ck was about to
change.
past. That's history," Bonds said.
Bonds, the three-time MVP "We're starting over here."
whose career has ·been defined
Bonds couldn't have inugby regular-season prowess and , ined a new stare much berrer
postseason futility, kicked off his than this. His two-out tripl~ latest playoff appearance with an which came after he .t ook a
RBI triple and a key single in close 2-2 pitch - during San..
the San Francisco Giants' 5-1 Francisco's
four-run
third
lrictory over the New York Mets inning ricocheted crazily off the
in the opener of their NL series. wall in right, scoring Mueller
For Bonds, a 2, for-3 perfor- and setting the table for Burks'
mance was an early answer to three-run homer.
his cr itics. H e hit .200 in four
That was all Hernandez need-..
previous sea!;ons in the playoffs, ed. He pitched strong into the
bm he had the fourth multihit eighth inni ng before handing
playoff game of his career.
the game over to setup man
· "You should stop dwelling Felix Rodriguez and tloser
about the past with !:larry,'' Jeff Robb Nen.
Kent said. "This is a new team
"Livan was phenomenal. He's
and a new year."
be•n doing it for us now for
If its firs~ playoff game is any quite awhile," Bonds said.
indication, chis new team has "You've got to go ~ith your big
what it takes to win in October. dog in the big games, and it's
Livan Hernandez held the Mets him.''
to five hits for 7 2-3 innings,
Bonds also singled in the tim
and- Ellis Burks hit a three-run to keep a rally going. He even
homer as the Giants gave man- stole Sj:cond base after being
ager Dusty Baker and Pacific . walked in the seventh inning
Bell Park their first postseason Wednesday.
.
.
wms.
"(Bonds) was very focused
But none of the Giants gave and determtned and poised:'
particular credit for the win co Baker said. "He just played his
one player. Kent said Bonds' normal game .... H e hit the ball
standout game was no rnort good three times, and he got a
important than Billy Mueller co uple of hits. It we&lt; JUS! a
getting two hits or 13urks' Barry Bonds-type game."
homer. This is a team . We don't
While all of the Giants' stars
dep~i1d on just one or two lived up to their hilling. Nt·w ·
guys."
York\ mo\ r unportam playe rs
· Atier tlie game, Bonds didn 't.
esch ewed a trip to the postgame
Please see NLDS, Page 88
interview i·oont and Jnswered

'

Meigs battles N-Y Friday night
111Jury knocked him out in the
middle of the se'a&lt;on. SophoPOMEROY MeiJ,,''S will more Jason Meade, the coac h's
end its three-ga me home stand son, has played well in relief of
this Friday. evening,with a TVC him.
·
contest against. the Nl'lsonvill eAt t a ilb ~1c k is 'lt' nior Jo-;h
York Buckeyes in the annual Stalder, who was an All -TVC
ho1ncco ming cont~st.
selection. Junior Chase Ellicm
Th e Maraltders (3-J, TVC Il- seeing also ·i, seeing lots of pbyl ) are coming of a 'lou[;h 16-8 ing time. Another offc11sive
lms last week aganm Well&lt;ron .
threat is all scate flanker R yan
The 13uckeycs (4-2, TVC 1-0) Horrocks who set the ~e h oo \
,Jre coming ofr a 15-14 win over re-cord fo r rec~ pti ons bst st:.l\0 11.
Vinton County last Friday when
On ddi.:n &gt;&lt;· the 13uckeyes
Jasper Bateman nailed a 36-yard return most of their sta rters .
field goal late in the game.
They play o ut of .1 4-4 set.
Nelwnville- York is ranked
Meigs is led on the ~round by
i!ith in the latest OHSAA Divi- Jeremy R oush and Chri, Jetli:rs .
sio n V. Region 1Y comp uter Roush leads Me t;," with 4 \II
rankinhrs, which WL'rt.' rck.Hcd yards on 40 c.uTi&lt;•s. Jcfli:n lm
Wednesday.
been impressive ti-olll hls full -·
The 13uckeyes are coac hed by back spot gainip~ 345 y.mls o n
Kevin Meade who i~ in hi s just 69 urries.
eighth season. Meade h:" led hi ~
Tys6n Lee has a)so been seeing
team to a SY-23 record overall, time at tailback de&lt;ptte battlin ~
including several TVC titb .md injuries. Lee has carrkd 2J times
state playoff appearances. Nel- for. 54 yards.
so nvill e-York fini&gt;hed last &gt;Cason
Wingback Adam 13ullington
at 4-6 after goi ng 211-4 the pre-· has s.hown [h at he c,m pi(k up
VlOUS tWO \l'.lSOIH.
tough yard~ when ncc(kd, ·
The Buckeyes have been play- l3u1Jington h.t\. earned 21 times
ing with rwo qu.trterbacks for lor 159 yarcb .
rnmt of the seaso n . I-l tltl'Tl1,m W&lt;t'l
Sophomore Kvlc H .1n11an ha s
the '\tJrter last c;ea\on until .ttl played well ,It qLurterback c"omBY DAVE HARRIS

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

pleting .1.1 of 81 for 356 yards
and

a

rouchdown.

Hannan '.;;

favorite
r.ugetli Jrc Adam
llulh11gto ll and M.1tt Stewart.
Bullington Ins I 9 catches for
15() yard .... ~ te\V;lrt 1u ~ 1~ receptions for 179.
Th e M cil(s defense has be en
play111g got\ t! .11l season . They
have kept the maroon J nd gold
in all bu[ one o f the game.;, that
being the lms to ~; r:m..· power
Newark C.1tholic.
Among- rho'c k .tdmg tlll·
Marauder . defense .trL' Den c k
Miller, Bulhnf,'1:Cln, Mm Srewart,
R oss Stewart, Ju stin Gilmor1:,
].11on R oskr.Jctli.:rs. ll1lly Soulsby, Romh. Jusnll R llbso ll .
Ke11n edy, Urando11 ' ll obb .md
Zach Boli11. Bolin ln.\ 1\vo interceptions on the year and
13ullingto n and Fackler o11e
'each.
" We fed tlut we arc evenlv
matched with" Nclson,illc~
York," Marauder coad1 Mtke
Chancev 1.1id. "The game wtll
come down to who m .tke"i the
fewt·st mi,t.tkcs .md who execute."
KickotT ts 7:JII p.m.
wtrh
honw comi ng activities getting
undcn".lY .1round 7 p.m.

�.

•

'

0

Page A a • The Dally ~ntlnel

Inside:

Thursday, October 5, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

gerating to make a point," satd Bush.
Bush pointed to comments Gore made about a d!saster inspection
mp. and using an example of'\ Florida schoolgirl forced to' stand in a
crowded classroom.
~
The girl did have to stand- bu,t only for the 6r;st day of class when
there were nor enough desks in the room, not longer as Gore implied.
And the vice president rud not actually accompany the head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency on a trip to Texas, as he claimed,
but did make his own trip to see the damage.
"It's another in a disturbing pattern of the lrice president simply
making things up," said spokeswoman Karen Hughes. Running mate
Otck Cheney weighing in that he 'Y"s "puzzled and saddened" by what
he saw as. the latest GOre '' misrepresentations."

While Bush sought

focus on character, Gore sa1d the key campaign wue is who would benefit most from rival campaign proposals.
"Will we use our prosperity to enrich not just the few, not just in
some areas, but all of our families and all of the counrry?" Gore asked.
"We need an all-out, concerted effort to make sure that the prosperity
endures and spreads and takes in all of our people."
Gore planned a visit to a child care facility to talk about his plans to
broaden child care tax breaks.
Bush also was talking about children's issues in Michigan where aides
said he would stress the need for businesses to use flex tin}~ to give parents more time at home, as well as use of software filters on computers
so they can control where their children go oil the Internet.

Even staunchest supporters don't always ag1 ee

• WARREN ' (AP) - During a
20-minutt." .1ddn:~s to thousand!!
gatht-red 111 downtown. Vtct"
Prestdem AI (;ore dtdn 't dwell
on hts d,•b.lte wtth George W.
Bush thL' nH;ht b!..·forl' 111 Boston.
'' I thought Jt was l £: rt'Jt
debate:· Gurt· &gt;.m! Wednesday of
t'he Tut• sdJ\' tugh t tell'\'iS('d

REYNOLDSBURG (AP) The Legislature is currently
It's hard to find a more rock- 'discussing rem~dies to the
solid Republican audience than Supreme Couri ruling, but
at J George W Bush rally in thiS Republican Gov. Bob Taft and
eastern suburb of Columbus.
majority Republican leaders 111
However, not all of the 1,000 the House and Senate haw all
mpporters who attended the but ruled out a tax in crease to
rally for the GOP presidential pay for them. One of those leadnominee agree with him all of ers, House Speaker Jo Ann
the? time.
Davidson, calls Reynoldsburg
The subject ofBush's visit on home.
Wednesday \v:IS education, an
So " ' hile Bush calls for more
ISsue chat. affects Ohio students, money for charter schools parents and taxpayers because of taxpayer-funded alternatives to
a stare Supreme Court ruling public schools and more
that found Ohio's school-fund- money for vouchers to send
ing system unconstitutional.
public school students to private

'THuRsDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Sports

schools, even some of the GOP
faithful raise fOncerns.
" It's a hard call because the
state of Ohio is undergoing refunding of the public school ~ys­
tem itself, said Bill Chovan of
Co lumbu s, a Bush supporter
who is the parent of an ISmonth-old boy.. " l:lut I think
there nr:eds to be more accountability of the public schools."
Education was one of the top
three concerns of Ohio voters
polled lase month by the University of Cincinnati. The other two
top concerns were health care
and the economy.

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

I

-said it \Vas a sign of desptTJtion f(Jr
Bush, the Repubbcan presidential
llO!lllnee, to go af[er President Clinton - by indirection, nor by name
- while questioning Gore's character and disputing his credibility.
Cheney effectiwly started it back
at the Republican National Convention, saying Gore was trying to
shed Clinton baggage bur char it
was impossible to see one without
thinking of the other.
Gore chose not co counreratt:tck
on the character issue in the debate
in Boston, and as he camp;ugned
Wednesday, although he made a
point of reminding voters agam that
he is running as his own man and
wants.ro be judged for who he is.
Bush campaign officials on
Wednesday ' challeng~d several of
Gore's debate statements, including
his tale about a Florida high school
sntdent who had to stand because
there weren't enough desks for her
overcrowded science class. She did,
but orily for t~e first day of class.
Republicans said it was a fresh
example of Gore 's ''embellishmenc;;
and exaggerations.

•

"--

• 21 years of practicing law in
Meigs County
• Former Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney
• Two time member of the Committee
to Evaluate Ohio State Supreme
Court Candidates
• Former member of the Ohio State
Bar Association Legal Ethics and
Responsibilty Committee
• Former member of the Ohio
State Bar Association Committee
on Criminal Justice

"My ·family and I thlnJl Meigs County Is the
greatest place to live! 1would be honored
to serve this county as ..c·ounty Court Judge."

~Elect

County Court Judge
Paid for b .the candidate

Eastern's road to playoffs goes through Stewart
BY ScoTT WOLFE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDEt'IT
EAST MEIGS - Eastern continues its
pursuit of a postseason berth Friday with
a trip to Stewart to m~ Feder;il Hockmg.
Eastern (5- 1, TVC 1- 0) has won four
consecutive games and checks in at No. 6
this week in rhe OHSAA's Division VI,
Region 23 state computer ratings.
If the playoffs were to begin today, the
Eagles would play Newark Car\l.plic in a.
first-round contest.
Assuming that Miller (6-0, TVC 1-0),
· ranked No.9 in the state AP poll and third
in the Division V, Region 19 computer
ratings, continues to win, the Eagles could

alford a loss to the Falcons and still sustain
a playoff bid.
.
However, Coach head coach Scott
Christman is not a statistic watcher. He is
thinking all "W"'s at this point, one game
at a time. He knows anything can happen
and four weeks still remain .
No Meigs County team has ever made
the playoffs. Not even the undefeated
1981 Eastern Eagle team which was
ranked 4th in the scare with Arch Rose at
the helm. That, of course, was under the
old selection process in the pre-computer
ranking days.
"1 was really happy with the win (Friday)," head coach Scott Christman said. "I
thought the line played well again and our

backs ran hard.
Lyons npde his left and saw nothing but
"R.ight now we have to take care of sideline as he won a footrace to the endbusiness and win our remaining games zone.
and not worry about what the other
That made the score 13-0 instead of a
teams are doing,'' he added. "As a ream we potential tie or Trimble lead. Previously,
canit afford a let down against anyone we Lyons grabbed a seven-yard pass from
play."
Garret Karr for the initial score.
At Eastern last week, the Eagles broke
Garrett Karr has emerged as a mature,
open a close game and thumped Trimble, .very poised quarterback in just his junior
34-6. A moment~m-changing intercep- season. Karr rushed for two touchdowns
tion return of 100 yards to paydirt by and passed for two others while connecjunior Chris Lyons may have been the dif- tion on 4-of-6 passes for 47 yards.
ference in the game.
Eastern enjoyed so much success in Its
With 3:41 left before the half, Trimble running game, that Karr didn't need to
appeared to have scored a potential game utilize his passing skills more than minityiiJg touchdown, but the line judge called
Please see Eastern Pllp 81
'the pass incomplete.• On the next play,

Giants bum
New York

Others receiving votes: Ross
Southeastern (1 ); Cheshire
Naval Academy (1)

To be eligible for The OYP 10, a
team must allhar: a.) be from

the Mason-Gallla-Malgs area;
b.) be a local conference ment•
ber; or c.) play at least one
game agalnat local teams.

Football
TVC
Ohio Dlvlolon
TVC

·

White Qua£ity

TVC

.

From $699 to $1499
YOUR CHOICE RING OR PENDANT

One Carat Diamonds

From $1999·to $4999

Necklaces - Bracc\c\s

SAVE SO%- 70%
rrom Monult~clurcr s ft cloll rncc~

14K Gold and l OK Go\d
lnc\udinq All ~EW
.-Uo\ian Go\d Designs! -"

One Carat Diamond
Solitaire Ring or Pendant
Only 41n Stock • -Reg '3000

SEOAL
SEO

Sofitalns
Re9 . Sale
1/4CARAT......... 1~ ........... '299
1/2 CARAT......... •~ ........... 1699
1CARAT ............ 1 ~0 ........ 11999

DIAMOND EARRINGS
R~

Sale

1/4CARAT......... '~ ............. '75
1/2 CARAT......... '~.: .......... '388
1CARAT* .......... syw ........ 11350

ALL

Jackson
3-0 6-0
Logan
3-0 6-0
Gallia Academy 3·0 5-1
Point Pleasant 1-2 4-2
Athens
1·2 2-4
Warren
1-2 2-4
Marietta
0-3 1-5
River Valley
0-3 0-6
Friday's Games
Athens at Gallia Academy
Warren at Point Pleasanl
Jackson at River Valley
Logan at Marietta

•

$1999
DIAMOND RINGS

DIAMOND PENDANTS

ALL

Miller
1·0 6·0
Eastern
t -0 5-1
Southern
1-0 3-3
Trimble
0-t 3·3
Waterford
0-1 2-4
Federal Hocking 0-t t-5
Friday's Games
Nelsonville-York at Meigs
Miller at Southern
Eastern at Federal Hocking
Vinton County at Alexander
Wellston at Belpre
.
Waterford at Trimble

Half Carat Diamonds·

Choose From
Hundreds In Stock

ALL

Nelsonville-York 1-0 4·2
Belpre
1-0 3-3
Wellston
1-0 · 3-3
Meigs
0-1 3-3
Alexander
0-1 0-6
Vinton County
0-1 0-6
•
Hocking Dtvlalon

Our Holiday Diamonds are here/
A Huge Selection .of
Fine Diamonds All Sizes!

'

Steve_Story is yo
best choic.e for
t Judge.

lhunday. Odoll1r 5. 2000

Team
Prev. Yotea
1. Logan
49 (4)
2
2 . Portsmouth
•44 (1)
3. Parkersburg
3
39
4. Jackson
4
36
'1
5. Ironton
32
6. Gallipolis
7
22
7. Fort Frye
5
19
14 '
8. Point Pleasant 6
9. Miller
11
8
10. Eastem
9
8

·Lieberman, Cheney follow leaders in debate
will sic at a table \vtth moderator
Bernard Shaw of CN N, is to seek
support for the men at the top of
their tickets.
Lieberman's biggest assets may
be a 'manner that at times allows
him to criticize without appearing
to, his experience in debating on
the Senate floor and his sense of
humor, analysts say.
Cheney's adwntagcs include an
authoritative manner, his own years
as a congressman and ,h.ts experience running the Pentagon during
the Persian GulfWar.
Lieberman sai(l it should be a
"good, healthy debate.
"We have very different voung
records in Congress," said Lieberman, who has spent the past three
days at debate camp 111 Kentucky.
"We have wry different ideas about
the future."
Cheney, who ran through his
fourth mock debate Wednesday in
Wash ington, said he wants to luw
" J convcrs..1tion 'Xith t~ Amcric.m
people. It's Important th.1t rhey get .1
louk at me."
After \\'.Hch111g the1r k-.Hk'l"s'
dl'bat&lt;' Tuesday night. Lieberman

Page.Bl

to

Gore promotes plan to help middle-class families

DANVILLE. Ky. (AP) - Dick
Cheney and Joseph Lieberman
square off in a campaign debate
Thursday night to sell their White
House tickets, their own leadership
credentials- and perhaps deal with
the echoes of scandal raised and dismissed by their bosses two nights
earlier.
After days uf practtce. the
Repubhca.n and I )emocr3t:J.C vice
prcstdcnt:J.al nominees meet hen· at
Centre College tor their one, 911minute deb.1te of the camp•tgn.
Vice PrestdemAJ Gore andTexao;
Gov. George W Bush ha\·c two
presidential debates before them, on
Ocr. II 111 Wm;ton-Salem. N.C.
and O ct. 17 m St. Lmm.
An es.tmutcd 46 .5 mill.Ion people watched Tuesda,·s Bush-Gore
debate, according tll Nteben Med10 .
Rese.trch. Fewer Vll'\Vero; ,'\l"e
expected to tune m for CheneyLieberman since the:.' understudies
generally Jttract less &lt;lttcntton then
the men \Vho wam to be president.
Fb r L1ebernun. the Connecticut
senator. J nd Cheney. the !ormer
defense '\ecret.lt;.', the aim of the
talk-show style debate, where they

•

'

'

The OVP

person after watching Tuesday gc:t into an ;ngument," sht' said.
m g ht\ debate. Weazel satd he
E.ulier in the day, Gore spoke
\\'J~ swayl'd by rhe de batt.• to vot~
With a handiul of students at a
for Gon:.
Youngstown State Uni\'crsity
.. It solidifies what I'd been
bookstore.
clunking:· sa id Weazd. who sup He t..•mphasized the imporports Gore's plan s 6 t"or Son.tl
Secu nty .t nd prescr iption drug tmct' of expanding Head Start.
recruiting I DO,OOIJ new t&lt;'achcove rage .
.
~vent .
Wettzd also said he was ers. n:duong clas ~ room sizes .md
Gore spoke· Jt !e'ngth .tbout impressed by Gore's d~:mt·anor L~reatmg tax deductions for coJhis S500 bilhon plan to help dunng the de bare when he ·was lc:ge tuition .
middle-class famtli~s. Ht• drew c riti cized by Bush.
" We've got to focus on maklm btggesr applause when he
" Between the t~vo. he was the
told th e predominantly pro- more presidentiJI. He presented ing college more accessibk:·
Union crowd that he was m favor hunsdf better," Weitzel satd of Gore said in the bookstore as hiS
wife, Tipper, stood by.
of eliminating , repl:icemenr . Gore.
workers for tho se on srnke and
Glona McGahee, a worker at
Introducing her husband Ill
raising the minimum wage .
the nearby General Motors auto • thiS northeastern Ohio DemocAfter rhe speech. dozens of plant Ill Lordstown, said she felt ratic stronghold, Mrs. Gore said
protesters oppostng U.S. aid to Gore showed good restraint durshe has carried a buckeye .in her
ISrael .c hanted whtle members ing the debate.
camera bag for luck ever since
ftom a local northeastern Ohio
"] felt Bush looked l1ke an
firefighters'
umon
yelled, tdior. He wasn't answe ring t.he 1992, when Gore and Bill Clin''U.S.A."
questions. All he wanre&gt;i to do mn won here. "This year, the
Bob Weitzel, 61, of Warren, was talk about how Gore was a Buckeye State is gmng to bring
said he wanted co see. Gore in baq person. He just wanted to us luc k again," she predicted.

I

Marshall- W. Michigan preview, Page B2
MLB playoff round14p, Page B5
Daily &amp;oreboard, Page BB

Gore, Bush trade shots in duel of battlegrounds
GRAND RAPIDS. MICh. (AP) - Al Gore and George W Bush are
mtensttylng their struggle for battleground sWing states, with Gore
hammenng at his nval's ta'x proposals and Bush focusing on· credtbility.
Still sharpening differences drawn at thetr first debate, both were
stumping m Michigan Thursday after nuking separate campaign forays
into Ohio on Wednesday.
Gore tsstubborrily sucking to his insistence that Bush would fritter
away the budget surplus on tax breaks for the r.ich at the same rime he
tou.ts hiS own care tax credtt proposal.
Bush also was set to talk abo}lt children's issues in Michigan as he
contmues ro underscore "exaggerations and embellishments .. that he
says call Gore's character into question.
"ThiS IS a man - he's got a record, you know, of sometimes exag-

The Daily Sentinel

Sofitaire.s
Re9
· Sale
1/4CARAT.........•~ ........... 1299
1/2CARAT.........1 j,W) .......... 1699
1CARAT ............ • 9........ 11999

Area non-league
ALL

Wahama
2·3
Hannan
2·4
South Gallia
0-6
Friday's Games
Wahama at Gilmer County
Hannan at Guyan Valley
Saturday's Game
Gauley Bridge at South Gallia

Over $5 Million of diamonds
alone have been sold by
Acquisitions.
To our loyal customers tri the
past decade ...

Meigs whips Vinton Co.
ROCK SPRINGS -The beat
keeps going for the Meigs volleyball team as the Marauders swept
Vinton County in two games
Wednesday., )
Meigs (14-2, TVC 13-1) won
rhe first cont est 15- 5 and then
shut out the Vikings in the second

Thank You

15-0.

. • No Additional DIKoun!• Avallab)e

OPEN
9:30- 5:00 Dally
9:30 - 6:00 Monday
9:30- 7:00Frlday
9:30 - 4:30 Saturday

/

"Vinton County didn't play
well ," Marauder coach Rick Ash
said. "We served w ell and did
what we needed to do to win rhe
game. We were ab le to keep the
ball in play and Vinton County
made the mistakes."
Kayte Davis led the Marauders
with 10 points, she was 12-of-17
serving with two kills. Katie Jeffers scored nine points and was
11-of-11 serving, Nikki 13urcher
added seven points and was 8-for8 serving.
Mindy Chancey added thret'
points and was 3-for-3 se rving.
Corrie Hoover score d one point
and was two of two with one kill.
Shannon Price added three assists.
Jaynee Davis added three kills.
Margie Bratton added three kills
and two blocks.

THANK YOU, THANK YOUI - San Francisco pitcher Livan Hernandez doffs his hat to the Pacific Bell
Park faithful as he leaves the field. (AP)

'

Southem meets
No. 8 Miller squad
BY ScoTT WOLFE

Overall , Miller outrushcd
Waterford
3 14 yards to 195.
'
RACINE - Southern plays
The Miller otTensive machine,
host to one of the top Division powered by Cox, has picked up
V · schools in the state of Ohio where it left off last year. The
when undefeated Miller, ranked 'state-ranked
Falcons Qexed
third in the region computer their muscle early in defeating
ratings and eighth m the Divi- the Southern Tornadoes 46-0
sion V state poll, comes to town lase year at Miller High School.
this Friday night.
Miller was playoff bound and
Miller returns a lineup chat number one in region 23 at 7-1.
consists. of most of the players while Southern fell to 2-6.
from last year's playoff team.
Jhe very first play of that
Returnees include Clifton gan1e was a bad omen for the
Cox, who already has I ,000 Tornadoe s as j unior running
yards this season and is working back Randy Nelson scrambled
on his second thousand. Cox 75 yards on the opening k'ickcarried 29 times for 268 yards in otT for a 6-11 Miller lead.
Miller's 27-20 win over WaterCox ran 20 rimes for 158
ford.
yards for Mill er, while Downey
Miller (6-0, TVC 1-0) scored had J 6 carries for 56 yards.
all 27 Of its points in rhe first
At\the half, Southern, whtch
quarter, then had to tight tooth- lined up in a run and shoot
and-nail to re pel a Wildcat offense, was 11-for-28 passing
comeback.
for 116 yards and three first
Miller's . Randy Nelson had downs . Ironically, Miller had
rwo carries for 48 yards and rwo just five first dowm. Overall,
catches for 43 yards and a qu,arterback Jon athan Evans
touchdown. Nelson is a threat to completed 14-of-35 passes for
break the big play, not only
Please see Southern, Pll&amp;e 81
rushing, but as a receiver.
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

I

•

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) only a few questions at his lock!:larry Bonds wore a broad smi le er before leaving with his young
when he stepped into the on- son. He blames the media 'for
deck circle in the first inning.
blowing his postseason struggles
He might have had an inkling out of proportion.
"I don't want to ger into the
his playoff lu ck was about to
change.
past. That's history," Bonds said.
Bonds, the three-time MVP "We're starting over here."
whose career has ·been defined
Bonds couldn't have inugby regular-season prowess and , ined a new stare much berrer
postseason futility, kicked off his than this. His two-out tripl~ latest playoff appearance with an which came after he .t ook a
RBI triple and a key single in close 2-2 pitch - during San..
the San Francisco Giants' 5-1 Francisco's
four-run
third
lrictory over the New York Mets inning ricocheted crazily off the
in the opener of their NL series. wall in right, scoring Mueller
For Bonds, a 2, for-3 perfor- and setting the table for Burks'
mance was an early answer to three-run homer.
his cr itics. H e hit .200 in four
That was all Hernandez need-..
previous sea!;ons in the playoffs, ed. He pitched strong into the
bm he had the fourth multihit eighth inni ng before handing
playoff game of his career.
the game over to setup man
· "You should stop dwelling Felix Rodriguez and tloser
about the past with !:larry,'' Jeff Robb Nen.
Kent said. "This is a new team
"Livan was phenomenal. He's
and a new year."
be•n doing it for us now for
If its firs~ playoff game is any quite awhile," Bonds said.
indication, chis new team has "You've got to go ~ith your big
what it takes to win in October. dog in the big games, and it's
Livan Hernandez held the Mets him.''
to five hits for 7 2-3 innings,
Bonds also singled in the tim
and- Ellis Burks hit a three-run to keep a rally going. He even
homer as the Giants gave man- stole Sj:cond base after being
ager Dusty Baker and Pacific . walked in the seventh inning
Bell Park their first postseason Wednesday.
.
.
wms.
"(Bonds) was very focused
But none of the Giants gave and determtned and poised:'
particular credit for the win co Baker said. "He just played his
one player. Kent said Bonds' normal game .... H e hit the ball
standout game was no rnort good three times, and he got a
important than Billy Mueller co uple of hits. It we&lt; JUS! a
getting two hits or 13urks' Barry Bonds-type game."
homer. This is a team . We don't
While all of the Giants' stars
dep~i1d on just one or two lived up to their hilling. Nt·w ·
guys."
York\ mo\ r unportam playe rs
· Atier tlie game, Bonds didn 't.
esch ewed a trip to the postgame
Please see NLDS, Page 88
interview i·oont and Jnswered

'

Meigs battles N-Y Friday night
111Jury knocked him out in the
middle of the se'a&lt;on. SophoPOMEROY MeiJ,,''S will more Jason Meade, the coac h's
end its three-ga me home stand son, has played well in relief of
this Friday. evening,with a TVC him.
·
contest against. the Nl'lsonvill eAt t a ilb ~1c k is 'lt' nior Jo-;h
York Buckeyes in the annual Stalder, who was an All -TVC
ho1ncco ming cont~st.
selection. Junior Chase Ellicm
Th e Maraltders (3-J, TVC Il- seeing also ·i, seeing lots of pbyl ) are coming of a 'lou[;h 16-8 ing time. Another offc11sive
lms last week aganm Well&lt;ron .
threat is all scate flanker R yan
The 13uckeycs (4-2, TVC 1-0) Horrocks who set the ~e h oo \
,Jre coming ofr a 15-14 win over re-cord fo r rec~ pti ons bst st:.l\0 11.
Vinton County last Friday when
On ddi.:n &gt;&lt;· the 13uckeyes
Jasper Bateman nailed a 36-yard return most of their sta rters .
field goal late in the game.
They play o ut of .1 4-4 set.
Nelwnville- York is ranked
Meigs is led on the ~round by
i!ith in the latest OHSAA Divi- Jeremy R oush and Chri, Jetli:rs .
sio n V. Region 1Y comp uter Roush leads Me t;," with 4 \II
rankinhrs, which WL'rt.' rck.Hcd yards on 40 c.uTi&lt;•s. Jcfli:n lm
Wednesday.
been impressive ti-olll hls full -·
The 13uckeyes are coac hed by back spot gainip~ 345 y.mls o n
Kevin Meade who i~ in hi s just 69 urries.
eighth season. Meade h:" led hi ~
Tys6n Lee has a)so been seeing
team to a SY-23 record overall, time at tailback de&lt;ptte battlin ~
including several TVC titb .md injuries. Lee has carrkd 2J times
state playoff appearances. Nel- for. 54 yards.
so nvill e-York fini&gt;hed last &gt;Cason
Wingback Adam 13ullington
at 4-6 after goi ng 211-4 the pre-· has s.hown [h at he c,m pi(k up
VlOUS tWO \l'.lSOIH.
tough yard~ when ncc(kd, ·
The Buckeyes have been play- l3u1Jington h.t\. earned 21 times
ing with rwo qu.trterbacks for lor 159 yarcb .
rnmt of the seaso n . I-l tltl'Tl1,m W&lt;t'l
Sophomore Kvlc H .1n11an ha s
the '\tJrter last c;ea\on until .ttl played well ,It qLurterback c"omBY DAVE HARRIS

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

pleting .1.1 of 81 for 356 yards
and

a

rouchdown.

Hannan '.;;

favorite
r.ugetli Jrc Adam
llulh11gto ll and M.1tt Stewart.
Bullington Ins I 9 catches for
15() yard .... ~ te\V;lrt 1u ~ 1~ receptions for 179.
Th e M cil(s defense has be en
play111g got\ t! .11l season . They
have kept the maroon J nd gold
in all bu[ one o f the game.;, that
being the lms to ~; r:m..· power
Newark C.1tholic.
Among- rho'c k .tdmg tlll·
Marauder . defense .trL' Den c k
Miller, Bulhnf,'1:Cln, Mm Srewart,
R oss Stewart, Ju stin Gilmor1:,
].11on R oskr.Jctli.:rs. ll1lly Soulsby, Romh. Jusnll R llbso ll .
Ke11n edy, Urando11 ' ll obb .md
Zach Boli11. Bolin ln.\ 1\vo interceptions on the year and
13ullingto n and Fackler o11e
'each.
" We fed tlut we arc evenlv
matched with" Nclson,illc~
York," Marauder coad1 Mtke
Chancev 1.1id. "The game wtll
come down to who m .tke"i the
fewt·st mi,t.tkcs .md who execute."
KickotT ts 7:JII p.m.
wtrh
honw comi ng activities getting
undcn".lY .1round 7 p.m.

�..
Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

PREP FOOTBALL

MARSHALL FOOTBALL

Devils, Bulldogs meet Friday night Quarterbacks in the spotlight_ again
BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPOR~EDITOR

.

GALLIPOLIS
Gallia Academy hopes to celebrate homecoming with its 11th consecutive victory over Athens Friday night
· when the Bulldogs visit Memonal Field.
The Blue Devils (5-1. SEOAL
·3-0) have won four &lt;traigh t games
and are deadlocked with Jackson
Jnd Logan for the top spot in the
SEOAL standings. The lronmen
. {h~O, SEOAi.. 3-0) play at River
Y.rlley tomorrow, whdt' Logan (6II, SEOAL 3-0) heads to Marierta.
Gallia Academy leads the alltime series with Athens 34-32
Wllh three ties. H owevn. the Blue
Dev ils have dominated the annual contest over the past 10 ·seamns. The b st victory for Athens
came in 1988 when the Bulldogs
'hu t o ut the Devib. 13-0.
Gallia Ac'ademy has won the
last 10 games by anve rage sco re of
.l5-10. The Blue Devils have regIStered two shutouts during that
sp an and have held Athens under
10 points six times.
The Gallipolitans spoiled the
Bolldogs' homecooung last season
by thumping Athens, 39-7.
Despite the recent run of suece~ Gallia Academy head coach
Drent Saundei&gt; is cautious heading into friday's game, due mainly to the fact that Athens has
'hown some improvement over
last year.
"[ think Athens is a better team
than they were last year," Saunders said. "Even against Logan last '
week, they came out and played
real hard.We've watched the Jack&lt;On tape and they played them
real good the first half. They've
!(Ot some pretty good size."
The Bulldogs' veteran front five
nn offense, a group of seniors
whic h averages 213 'po unds pe r
rn::m, has oPened up soine ni ce
pathways fo r St"nior running
bJcks Shawn Hewitt (5- 10 , 160
lhs.) and Jason Sparhawk (5-b,
170 lbs.) this season.
Hewitt, the veteran tailbac k
who rushed for a care er-high 270
yards against River Valley, has
ga ined 575 yards on 71 carries.
He has scored nine rushing .
touchdowns and has thrown a
touchdown pass.
Sparhawk, who moved from
tailback to fullback following an
ankle in,un.·
' ·' against Mei&lt;&gt;&lt;,
o- has

rushed for 290 yards and one
touchdown on 54 carries.
Sparhawk rushed for 114 yards m
the wm over Rtvcr Vall ...·y rwo
weeks ago.
"The Hewitt bov •nd the
Sparhawk boy arc real good rm1ners.'' Saunders said. "Hewitt
CS,Pecially, I'm in;presscd with
him."
Senior quarterback David Fulks
(6-0, 1~0 lbs.) has thrown for 326
yards this year, wuh half nf his 22
completion' going to classmate
Les Clmnphn (6-5 , 210 lbs.).
Champlin illS ca ught It balls for
40 yards and two touchdowns.
Fulks has completed 22-oi~SlJ
passes with two interceptions.
Fulks i's also th o pullter and pbcekicker for Ath ens (1-S,SEOAL 12) .
''1 thmk they're (Athens) a team
you can't nllke mi sta kes against
early in the game," Saui)ders sajd.
" If they get a little mome ntum,
they're going to be tough to' beat.
It seems like after they get down
a little bit, they go Oat reo] quick.
"Like Coach McPhail, a coach
who used to be up there before,
used to say, th ey just haven't
learned how tO win," he added.
"But Athens has won a co.uple of
games this year and I'm ~ure
they're coming down here thinking they're going to give us a
good game. We 're just gomg ~o
have score when we should and
not turn the ball over."
Timely scoring has been one of
the. benchmarks for Gallia Academy's success to this point in 2000.
In closely contested games against
Meigs and Warren, the Blue Devils came up with touchdowns in
key Situations to secure wins in
both contests.
Junior Tony Moore returned a
·punt 57 yards against 'Meigs that
gave the Blue Devils a 12-0 halftime lead in a game that GAHS

leads the Devils with 59 tackles.
Semor Jon Lawhorn has 45 and
JUlllor Dobby Jones has 42 tackles.
Senior J.T. Spencer-Howell has
3b tackles. Junior Nick Reed has
35 tJcklcs and JUnior Joel Elliott
has 33.
Spenc·er-Howell and junior
, Nathan KISkis have accounted for
seven of the Blue Devils' 12 sacks.
Spencer-Howell has foui, while
Ki skis has three.
·
The' Blue Devils have recorded
four interceptions, led by junior
Justin North with two picks.
J ones and junior Josh Perry have
the other two.
OtTensively, Simmo~s continues
to be the most effective weapon
the Blue Devils possess. The
sc mor has rushed for 605 yards
and nine touchdowns on 81 carries, including a career- best 204
ya rds at Warren .
Jones has 20? yards and four
scores on 33 carries. Senior Allen
Skinner has rushed for 131 yards
and one touchdown on 16 carnes.
Altogether, the Blue Devils
have piled up 1,100 yards rushing
with 15 touchdowns.
Gall!a Academy's passing ga.m e
suffered a setback Tuesday when
senior tight end Jeff Mullins re.injured a stress fracture that sidelined him for nearly a month
before the season started. He
nussed the season opener against
Meigs, but played in the last five
games. Prior to the re-aggrava-.
tion, Mullins had a team-high
eight receptions for 115 yards and
two touchdowns.
Fellow senior Dustin Deckard
steps in for Mullins tomorrow.
Deckard. who has played mainly
at split end, has five receptions for
a team- high ,141 yards. He has
also caught two touchdowns.,
r,rry and Lawhorn have also

evcnutally won , 18-6.
Senior Ike Simmons broke otT a

been major contributors to the
passing game this season. Perry

h2-yard tou chdown run again st
Warren late in that game as the
Blue Devils defeated the Warriors, 23~ 14.
The Blue Devil defeme had-also
'come tip with big pbys to keep
GAl· IS in .the win column . Gall ia
Academy ha s held opponents
tmdcr 200 yards of total ofJ'cnse
per game (192.2) and is surrc.ndering JUSt 11 points per outing
with one shutout.
J umor
· ]me b ac k·cr N IC
· k M era 1a

has caught four balls for 120 yards
and two touchdowns, while
Lawhorn has five catches for 91
yards and a team-high three
scores.
Junior David Brodeur has
shown a penchant for making the
big play with his arm this season.
He has completed 29-of-60 passes for 586 yards and eight touchdowns with three interceptions.
Game time Friday is set for
7 :30 p.m.

1!1ursday, October 5, 2000

Thursday, October 5, 200(i

as Herd meets Western MIChigan

.•••
.....
..

·:.'
•••
:·:
••• •
:-..• :
.• .

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

•

.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Once again the quarterbacks
for Marshall and Western Michigan are the talk of the MidAmerican Conference.
This time their names aren't
Chad Pennington and Tim Lester.
Marshall's Byron Leftwich and
Western's Jeff Welsh had the top
performances of their careers last
week to put their teams in fii&gt;t
place in their respective divisions.
Welsh has ihe Bioncos {4-1,20 Mid-American West) off to
their best start in six yea!&gt; heading into Thursday night's game &gt;t
Marshall (2-2, .1-0 MAC East).
Both Welsh and Leftwich were
on the sidelines in last December's MAC ch&gt;mpionship game
when Lester staked Western to a
23-0 lead, only to watch Marshall
storm back.
Pennington, Marshall's Heisman Trophy finalist, threw a 1yard TD toss with four seconds
left to give the Herd a 34-30 win.
"Last year"s heroes are gone,"
Leftwich said. "That makes every~y a candidate this year. Hopefully the hero will be on our side
like it was last year."
Welsh - whose older brother,
John, will start for Idaho at West
Virginia on Saturday - will be
on national television for the first
time. Big crowds and TV lights
are something the junior doesn't
think about.
"Everyone's emotions are going
to be ~ little higher, but you've
just got to block that out and play
like we've always be~n playing;'

he said. .
In five starts, Welsh Ius thrown
for 1,206 yards and six roucl!downs and is completing 59.5 of
his passes.
Despite completing 23-of-33
passes for 332 yards in a · 23-10
win over Ohio, Welsh isn't looked
up to by Mmhall's players as
much as his predecessor, who set
17 school and six MAC offensive
records.
"Lester was their quarterback
and now it's, uh,. some dude
named Walsh? Yeah, that sounds
right," cornerback Danny Derricott said.
"I can see him, but I just don't
know his name," said defensive
lineman Jimmy Parker.
Leftwich tried to keep things in
pei&gt;pective.
"A lot of people around here
may riot know who their quarterback is:· Leftwich said. "Hopefully our defense will know by
Thursday."
A sophomore, Leftwich has
removed some ohhe doubt over
his ability to continue a long line
of quality quarterbacks that
includes Pennington, last year's
Heisman Trophy Jinalist.
Leftwich threw for 378 yards
and three scores in a 47-14 win
over Buffalo last week. He ranks
No. 1 in the MAC in passing efficiency and Welsh is second.
For the season, Leftwich has
thrown for 1,030 yards •nd nine
touchdowns and is completing 63
percent of his passes.
Although he failed to maintain

'
the nation's longest winni'!g
streak - which was snapped et
18 games in a loss at Michigal)
Sute Leftwich has sh'o..i~
many of Pennington's skills.
·,
"It's Chad Pennington &gt;bou~2
inches taller ond maybe a yi!:Ir
behind as far as running t~&lt;
. offense," said Western MichiS!'n
coach Gary Darnell . "He's certairuy got the arm and he's certainly got the feet. It's on ly a nlltter of time with that guy as far as
finding the comfort zone."
Leftwich threw just 11 passes in
1999 before an ankle injury and
tonsillitis ~ earned him a medic:U
redshirt.
.
Marshall went 12-0 in the reg•
ular season, won the Motor City
Bowl for the second straight time
and finished lOth in the final
Associated Press poll.
Darnell figures it's not going:to
be easier ~his tin1e against M3r~
shall.
"They lead the league in scoring," he said. "The way I figute.
they're scoring more than a pOjni
a minute. We're going to p:lay
them 60 minutes. That doe~n ~
sound too good to me."
·,
Marshall has a 33-game win•
ning streak at home, the longest
in Division I-A. Thursday's crowd
at 40,000-seat Marshall Stadiu.m
is expected to approach the conference record of 36,36 I set by
Western Michigan last month.

•

. . . .,.... . . . . '

., •

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio State hopes to contribute
around $20,000 to the long-term
care of Penn State football player
Adam Taliaferro.
The university will donate $1
for each program sold at Ohio
State's home game Oct. 14 against
· Minnesota, Ohio State officials
said this week.
Taliaferro suffered a bruised
spinal cord in the fourth quarter
of the Penn State-Ohio State
game on Sept. 23 in Col~mbus.
He underwent dccotnpression
spinal fusion surgery Sept. 25 at
Ohio State University Medical
Center and has since been trans-

- · · N.C. 21054

A" TltnH

1:05 p.m. • Saturday • TBS
Wlnoton Cup, UAW-GM 500
1:05 p.m. • Sunday • TBS
• Crllfllm.,. Truck, O'R&lt;tllly 400
8 p.m. • OCt. 13 • ESPN
•

'

a.

e.

CHESHIRE - They arc two
teams that have relyed on th eir
ru nning games all seaso n .

The on.Jy differen ce 1s o ne is
tmbeaten and the other is in

search o f th~lr first win of the
year.

When Jackson visits River Valley on Friday, expect a great deal
of yardage to be racked up on the
ground.
The Jronmen are ranked third
m the latest Division I11, R egion '
12 OHSAA prep football compu ter ratings behind No. 1
Portsmou th and No. 2 Dayton
C hanunade-Julienne.
Jackson is also tied for 12th
w ith Millersburg West H olmes in
the latest Division 1ll Associated
.Press state football poll.

b1en

so.

"-

m

()

:t::

m
.c

FALLING

CARPET
-~~,b~,

( $6!JJL

Southe·m

ern compiled 141 first 11.11f vards
to Federal Hocking\ &lt;~1)-nt't
· yard~.

from Page Bl

Southe rn

!53 yards.
In last week's win over Federal
!l ocking, South~rn ·, Joe Cornell
1..,1 the Tornadoes wrth 88 yards
(1 11
19 carries fand o ne tou chdown, while Matt Ash carried I 1
times fo r 65 yard1, and Brice H ill
.;,cuHpered 46 ya rd s on .two carrn:" for one touchdown.

Sou the rn dominated the first
half. overcoming pena ltte'\ and

;111

·•ggressive
Federal
Hocking
defense.
He hind a good llllX of p ;l',..,lllg,
reverses, Jnd power run ... ~outh

(3 -.'1, TVC:

I-ll)
scored firo;t on .1 Cornell fou ryard run .lt thl' (1:2:! m.trk of the
first lJUarter after Andrew Coff-

man blocked .l pun t to· set up
good field positil'n for Southern.
Joe Cornell rmhed for li\.·l· yards
theft A~h took t\vo carne' for 11
yards.
A I-cdcral !locking off-,ides
took the b.III to the four yord line,
where Corndl )Hlllched 1t 111 for
the &lt;;eore.

ll r.mdon I II II
tnterCl·pt!Oil and 1~ - y.trd rl'turn,
Following

a

r.111 thl' re\· er~e for
twcnty --l lrlL' ya rd~ .111d "i.outhern\
Bnce I ftll

sq:ond sco re at the 11:40 mark o f
tl~t: seco nd period.
Ea rly in the fourth quarter,
Federal 1narCh(.;d iJ1sidc th e
Southnn 15-y;nd line.
A huge ~econ d down defensive
stand fot=- Sout hern se t the to ne

tOr

completion of Fcdcr:1l's

th l'

pos~c~~10n ~t s

TonHny R oberts and

·l.lr:rndon Pierce caug ht Cody Hall
behind the line of &lt;;crimmagC for
two-y;!nl loss.
Th ,lt set up ,1 pJssing situation.
where . Andrew Cofftnan and

.1

'fyler Lmlc pressured quJrtcrback
StcV!..' R 1ch.:~rds for .1n inc.:omplete
p.1ss,_ theo SHS pre&lt;;-.lrfL' 111 th e

h.Kktield

'iet up .1 mo ml' ntum
mtcn:l'ption.
SoutJH·rn then Jtl.' up som e

thwarting

clock wi~h a Corne ll -Ash running ga1ne that netted three first
downs, three penalty Oags, and an
Ash punt on the ninth play of the
drive.
·
Southern's defense th en made a
huge stand, holding Federal to
three downs and out.
The series began with a sack of
Rich ards by th e Coffman / Little

John Doe
Fire Dept.

Attach This Coupon to Your Photo and Mail Or Bring,
Wilh Your Payment to:

con necti o n.

The Tornad oes then pu shed for
another sCore and ran ·o ut the
clock in the process, securing an
excifing 14-6 homeco ming victory.
Jonathan Evans had two inte rceptions and Brandon Hill one.
Matt Ash led the Southern
defense with 14 tackles.

The Daily Sentinel'

'

•

'

Somehow monOCOfl a top 10

Hot •• a flrecra~ker

3. (2) Jotf Burton
4. (4) Date Eamhardt

Third place lon't bad
Can't quite get thot
eecand victory
Made up a few point•
Another tOp five
Missed the setup
Bound to win eventually
Loat the Martlnavllle magic
FeU back to Earth

·

BUSCH GRANO NATIONAL
AND CRAFTSMAN TRUCK
The two series were off last
week. The Busch series heads
to Concord , N.C .. for Saturday's
All Pro Bumper to Bumper 300
at Lowe ·s Motor Speedway. The
Tr.JJ.ck serle~i&amp; off this .week
at'ld wUI retuJO. to action Oct. ·
13 with tt:te'O'Rellly 400 ot
Texa:; Motor Speedway.

mile trBCk)

• Format: 200 laps/300 miles

• Rae. record: Ma~ Martin,
Fo&lt;d, 155.996 '"""· May 25, 1996
• Notable: Mark Martin leads

track)

all Busch Series drivers with six
victories at Concord .•.. FOfd

miles (400 kilometefs)
• Defendlnc c.._.pion: Jay
Sauter

It's one of Andrettl's better tracks, one where he has won,
but he was consldetably frustrated by the difficulty or getting
In and out of the ptts on Martinsville's narrow; curved pit
road .
·You can't &amp;et to the front with pit road.· sal4,Andrettl,
whO started 28th and fin ished 13th. •pit road needs to be
about 20 feet wider like a regular Winston Cup Pit road so
when you beat a auy out of the pits, you beat him out ot the
pits . Instead, you end up ell the way In the bac~.
·we iot crashed one t ime on pit road and had to came
back and fix H. and go all the way to the back. ~SCAR has
to widen pit road...
•
NASCAR Tbl1 Week's Monte Dutton &amp;IVtl hit opl~lon:
• This problem did not e~~:lst when the track had · ~ack-stretch
pits, and the present configuration was enacted because
drivers wanted to eliminate the disacwantage ot pitting on
\he back stretch . Sometimes you better think lorlg and hard
about what you ask for ... because you might J~ get tt. •

&amp;

• QuaUfrlne record: Jay

Busch victories here ... . TMre

605 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

Busch race at Charlotte - the
1985 Miller 400.

• Race record: Jay Sauter,

Chevrolet. 132.430 mph,

Oct. 15, 1999

CRAmMAN TRUCK

••••••••••••

- PROfilE -

Your
Tum
rn. O.llatl•n

Ken Schrader

Linin

Dear NASCAR This Week,
wall;:hcd moa;t of the Winston Cup
races for five years. Yet I never
recall hearing any of the announce~:plain who's responsible for

ers

keeping track of what po:sitian and

whal lap each driver is on. Is it a
crew member or a Winston Cup
official who does thi57

William Lynn
Zanesville, Ohio
Modern sroring is a combination
of having a computerized system
and iJ5ing the old manual system, in
which each team provides a scorer
to work under NASCAR supel'\ti·
sion, as a backup.

Konldw 7

rookie ol tho )'oar

award. But the bel'
rookie eeaaon miJ have
~:r occurred tile prlvloua
~·•• (!lnd lnapked the
award) when C.llfornlan
Panch wan aiJC

Marvin

racaa.

By Monte.Dutton

NASCAR This Week
Ken Schrader, one of the mare versatile
and active drivers In the Winston Cup Series.
has found the going increasingly tou"gh in
recent seasons.
At the beCinnina: of the season, Schrader
replaced retired Ernie lrvan In the Pontiac
fielded by MB2 Motorsports {Jerry Nadeau
was the team's Interim driver during the final
part of 1999}. The team e~~:paneled to two
cars when It aiJsarbed the No. 10 Pgnt lac
driven by Johnny Benson during the season's
secon(ll'lalf.

The addition or Benson may be beginning
to reap dividends far Schrader, whOse 10thplace finish at New Hampshire International
S~edway on S(!pt. 17 was hls best since a
ninth In the season-opening Dartona 500.
H••town: Fenton,

Mo.

awned by Nelson Bowers, Read Morton and
Tom Beard
Wile: Ann
Chfldren: Dorotny Lynn (10), Sheldon
Bradley (4)
Crew chief: Sammy Johns

Car•• statltt.lcl: 486 starts, 4 wins. 64
top-five llnishes.171 top-10 finishes. 23
poles. almost S15 5 million In earnings
Firsts: Start {Jul~ 14 , 1984, at Nashville.
Tenn.), pole (March 27, 1987, at Oartington),
victory (July 31. 1988, at Talladega)
What happened to hold down the team•a
performance this y•ar? ·we io\ kind of
caught off guard at the start of the year. We
didn't e11pect to have a ton ot problems as
far as getting going and be ing more competitive than we were at the start or the
season. We 've been going through a lot or
wowing pains. The addition of Johnny
Bensan, (crew chief) James 1nce and the
No. 10 Pontiac to our stable. I believe, has
been a lot of help.~

What do you think abOut the 2001

schedule? "I've been doing this tor a while
now, since '85. and I don·t see where a lot
of stuft has chaneed. It was 29.races when
1 started and, obviously, we're up to 36 nert
year, but It's all the new places since I
started with the series. Now we go to
PhOenix, Wl!ltklns Glen, Texas, and now this
year wHh Chicago and Kansas City. Being
born and rafsed near St. Louis, I'm very
excited abaut going to Chicago and Kansas
City. That's getting close to home.·

Paint schemes are usually de ·
signed or approved by a team's
spon!or. As a result, it would be
difficult for NASCAR to have such
an official polk~.

X
Dear NASCAR This Week.
Aflc'r thts weekend's race at
LoudOII, ttlere were seve ral comments about the Jack of compel it ion . To quote Dale Earnhardt,
"Thi~ is nut Winston Cup tacing."
In light of th e events of earlter
!h is year a1 Loudon, I think ht
missed the point of running restric·
tor platu.
No one got killed!
. AI) the teams had the same handicap with the rules chang.e. For
on..-e I ·would like for a dr1ver of
Mr. harnhardt's caliber to accept
·~ his performance at a race withoul
blaming someone else. Enough
whining, please . Thank you for
your timr .
Chris llayslett
Rivtrsidc , Cal1f.

••••••••••••

Who's Hot....
Who's Not

• HOT: Tony Stewart has won
two straight races for the third
time in.hls young career. He's
fifth in points.
• NOT: Jeremy Mayfield has
finished 35th or worse In his
last siK races. He has slipped
to 25th In the standings.

1. Who won the first NASCAR-sanctloned
race at Martinsville. va.?

2. When did Martinsville start holding 5Q0-1ap races?
3. Who was the first Rookie of the Year?
" 8~61 Ul SUIIIOl::l .&lt;uo~s '£
:009 !?IU!'aJII\ &lt;J~l UOM J3)je9 ;pns
U3~M '9S6t 'Z '6V6l 'Sl ' ldas 'UOJA8 pa1::1 't
SH3MSN'f'

••••••••••••

·
The Nat ional Stock C.ar Racrng
NFI d
Commission upheld penalties i,;sued ent," Gordon ~id . "I fell like there still bigger than the NBA.
• an
-'
ck.M
t
..
...hasn
't
be
en
one
that's
been
ovn·
NHL"
by N ASCAR to He, ... n · Go•..,.......s
·
d · turnetly et. Likel said,-thedccision
" ltwouldn'tsurpr1se mctnsec
an dr e"G ordon foIIowmg or on s
·
R' h --'
ha s been m~r.lc ."
employmenl double in Ihe next
S ept. 9 VIctory
at IC monu.
·u
II A
·
decade," LMS prcst cnr - . .
What a surpnse.
:0:
"1-lumpy
"
Whe~ler sa1'd . "'Mnror·
·
ordun - not tCI ment1on many
h
o1her General Motur5 driYers A IIEFTY CHUNK OP MONEY: !&gt;pOrts will be for thi ! area whn11 e
· esium Dr. John E. Con'naughton, econom- motmn
· ·pft:,ure
· ~ 1n
· du'' ry I&gt;forSo"&gt;h
used an ·•unapproYed" magn
u
•
·
· o f •~ rn ('alifornia in the next decade."
manifold. The Win.~ron Cup Series' ics professor at the U mvers1ty
·
C 1
Ch 1
· 1
rule book doe5 not ban such a part North aro rnaar ol\e, esttma e5
· ·
f
·
nor require it to be made of a ceJ1ain the economiC 1m pact o ra~.:mg !l.t
ON E To R';"' MEM\JER: Mark
alloy, hut commissioners Jack Hous· Lowe's M otor .Spee d way as
· th e ' ou o• M,,,,.,, ....
&lt;• ldom 1HII k5 his vi&lt;:toric$ in
by, Lcs Richler an d Gear..,. Silber· S276•4I 9,4·'&lt;9 annua 11 y m
mann ruled unanim ous ly•-th at the ties of CabarnJ), Iredell and M ec k • orde1 of Slgnr 'orc.1rrce or I'mportance •
· but he admollcd reccnrly of his ui 1
Penalt y must be upheld because ' thc lcnburg.
change from aluminum was not
" In Nol1h CMolina, motorspons i5 umph carl1er thos year &lt;It Martin ~v illc

.---------------------------.

Jeri'/ w~~bee

!'Department - - - - - - - - - - - -

111::~1~ Your N a m e - - - - - - - - - - - -

461 South Third Middleport, Ohio

(740) 992-2196

'

Dear NASCAR Th is Week,
I Jead a question not long ago
about retiring numbers when a driver din. I told my husband about
the question, an.d he said they
should reti1e th e paint scheme of
the car that he drove. I also think
that would be a greal idea.
Amy Evans
Amarillo, Tun

.-----CUp----'t--1.1511.

formally subm itt eU to NASCAR · still the bigge.~t sport as f;u as
headquaners and was not approved economic 1mp1ct," C onnaughton
by NASCAR."
said. "Even w1th th e mfluK of other
" I didn't e~pect anything differ· professiona l sporls, motorsports_is

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

. Domino's
Pizza

=-:

Commission shoots down Hendrick Motorsports' appeal
racorCI• dote back only
to 1958, wh•n ~ l)epn
awardlnC an annual

·

Sauter. Chevrolet. 179.718
mph, June 10. 1999

has been only one 4()().mlle

• ·-·~ AROUNOTHEGARAGf - -

• NASCAR'o rookie

,

•Fonnft: 167 laps/250.5

and Pontiac eich have 10

• Detendln&amp; champion:
Michael Waltrip

AIO: 45
cr.· No. 36 M&amp;M's Pontiac Grand Prix,

w. N!artlnsvtlle Sp&amp;lldway

Name of F i r e f i g h t e r - - - - - - - - - -

L----------------------~

conquering the 'cine track on
which same figured he was
least capable of winning.
During his rookie season,
1999. Stewart had all sorts of
misadventures at Martinsville ,
and as recently as Friday, when
he set a track record and won
the pole, Stewart called the
track "the M&lt;ISt difficult one }
I've ever had to conquer."
Because he also won the
previous week .at Dover, Del.,
and eight events over the past
two sea"sons, Stewart is
obviously the hottest driver Of'l
the Wlnstor Cup circuit.
No one else-has won more
than five over that period .

· · FIUO Of THE WEEK ~- ·

1

1
1A d d r e s s - - - - - - - - - - - - 1

•WUt: All Pro Bumper to
Bumper Auto Parts 300
•WHn: 1:05 p.m .• Saturday
• Mtert: Lowe's Motor
Speedway, Conoo«!. N.C. (1.5-

• Wllere: Te~~.as Motor Speedway. Forth Worth (1.5-mne

mph, Oct. 7, 1999

fROM lAST WEEK

111 Court Street Pomeroy, OH

1 Phone#-------~---

Check out the OVP 10 in today'sedition of the Daily Sentinel!

Used Cars &amp; Trucks

'De~f.tJ;

Show gour support and appreciation
r---!~~~~r~~~!~~~~!~---

-18).3)6-

BUSCH GRAND NAnONAL

•When: 8 p.m .. Oct. 13

I have been a fan and have

2. (5} Tony Stewart

John Andret6

"

~~

'

MOl Houlton. l.2U
JXII Spfagut. 3.CM9
Joe RWt/nln, 2,918
Oenrjs Setzef. 2,929
5le;wt GIISIOn'l, 2,926
Ran~tt TOlsma. 2.908
BrYII'I Reffntl, 2.818

1. (1) Bobby Labonte

•

10a:=
N
Ill

' .

\.,

KI.W"t Busdl, 3,2&lt;48

at Talladega this spring.

•What: O'Reilly 400

• QualtfJin&amp; reeord: Matt

Kenseth, Chevrolet, 177.328

TOP TEN

MARTINSVILLE, va . ..:... Tony
Stewart left Martinsville
Speedway a happy man Indeed .
Not because he loved the
track more than any other, not
because he won the race. but
because he did not expect to
Win here .
Stewart started an the pole,
but he had never won from tliat
. position before . Besides. going
fast around the .526-mile track
fat a lap atone Is one thil'l£.
Going fast ror 500 laps, and
going faster from that distance
than Oale Earnhardt. Jeff
Burton, Ricky RI,Jdd and Jeff
Gordon- all former Martinsville
winners- was something ·
Stewart had been not at all
confident he could achieve.
Before Sunday, Stewart had
considered Martinsvill e a
mystery of Agatha Christie
proportions. He couldn"t tell
heads or tells when he .tried to
master the ancient track on
race day.
It all changed Sunday and. as
a result, Stewart became the
season's biggest winner by

PRICES

$7 ·f~ tB
, J·

Jimmie Johnson, 2,121

WINSTON CUP

()

Only

'

cesey Atwood . 2.786

Wlii'G Bl.l't.OI'I, 3,431

,

...J
"0

'3f/i,eef.tJ;

/ /· ,, t ,,, )';\ \ ·.
. ,, 1~~ ad ;
wlth'or .
without photo

Olltid Green, 2,892

8. ( 9) Ricky Rudd
9. ( 8) Mark M•rtln
10. (10) Johnny Bonoon

-

6Months
Same as

Salute gour fauorite fireman and/or
fire Department with an ad on our
fire Preuention Page mondag,
October 9th.

.

AlokJ ROOd, 3,797

5. ( 3) Dalo Jarrott
6. ( 7) Jeff Gordon
7. (61 Ruaty Wallace

:::&gt;li;o
N.2!.9-

.

Ron Hofnadfl', 3,271
Elton s-y.r, 3,246
Rll'lett LaJoie. 3,063

Tony Stew.,, 3.812

Grea Bif11e. 3.573
Mille Wlllaoll, 3,283

laps/501 miles

-~Jeff
Gordoo
.
• Qllllllfytn&amp; IKdrd: Dale
Earnhardt Jr., Chevralet,
186.034 mph, May 24. 2000
' • Race rROrd: .lel't'Gattn OeJ.
0&lt;111.1999

race a year ago, Goroon did not
win a&amp;aln until the DieHard 500

• We~ly ranklngs by NASCAR This Week Writer Moote Dutton.
Last week's ranking Is in parentheses.

8.
'C Q. a: .!!!

).t'

Todd Bodine. 3,581
Kll¥11'1 IW'M.k. 3.~

•

.. ·0

I

JatOn Keller, 3.&amp;4..

7. Rus~ Wltllll(.8 . 3.703

J:

''

:..tf Grun . C,160

I. Marti M•tln, 3.593
t. Jeff Gordon, 3,513

Raiders ready to battle undefeated lronmen
in rushing, David Swisher led the
While Tipton only has 229
lronmen on the ground last week yards in the air this season, he has
against Point Pleasant.
432 yards rushing.
Swisher (6~2, 206) had 14 carAs of now, Jackson remains as
ries for 86 yards and a touc hdown only one of two SEOAL teams
in Ja ckson's 19-14 win over the that are undefeated in overall play
Dig Blacks.
this season. Logan is the other
On the season, Swisher has 497 undefeated team.
yards total rushing yards.
For River Valley, this will mark
Also for Jackson, Curtis Green the second to last home game of
had a stron g outing against Point the season.
Pleasant as he accumulated 64
The Raiders have Marietta and
yards on eight rushes, including a Warren on the road the next coutouchdown run.
ple of . weeks before returning
While the Ja ckson ground Jjome to meet Logan in the last
game i' the strength of this team. . week of the season on Oct. 27.
they had to defeat Point Pleasant
Ja ckson will play host to Warren
on a pass play last week.
next week, before facing Logan
A 19-yard pass from Ryan Tip- and Gallia Academy in key conton to llryn Williams in the clos- ference matchups the following
ing ~econds of the second quarter, two weeks .
),r.tve the honmen the decisive 1914 advantage.

2000 POINTS STANDINGS

·Bobt!Y LllbOnte, o1,225
2. Ollt ElmM'Ck. C.012
J. )e4r Burton. 3,99a
4. Deft J..-ett. 3,9U

1..

• Whit UAW-G'M Quality 500
• When: 1:05 t).m., Sunda)'
• Whtrl: Lowe's Motor
S - . Ccr&lt;ord. N.C. 11.5mile tlad&lt;l
·

• Formlt: 334
.c,

--- -· •

•Nol*e: After wiMinJ this .

WINSTON CUP

All Pro Bumpor to Bumpor 300

RIVER VALLEY V. JACKSON
The Raiders (0-C&gt;, SEOAL 0-.1)
have
led .111 &lt;;ea~on by se nior·
Jared
ylor. a 3-foot-11, 11&gt;0
pound , il b'ack : Last week, against
another SEOAL powe r in Gallia
Academy, Taylo r ran th e ball I ~
.times for 61 ya rd s in a'41-0 loss.
On the season , the se nio r tailback has 637 on 129 carries for
4.9 yards a carry and one touchdown .
Senior fullba ck Clark Walker
(6!1,205) had 20 yards on six carries for R iver Valley aga inst the
Blu e Devrls.
The lron m en {6~0, SEOAL 30) have th ree players who give
their team a balanced running
arra ck.
TJ Mu stard (5-10,. 185) leads
Jackson's trio With 637 yards on
96 carries.
While Mu sta rd leads hiS team

-m _

ON THE SCHEDULE

I

• Butch Qqnd Nltlonlll,

'

BY BUTCH COOPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

Tlllo-

2100LF--

·-c::Q)

ferred to a hospital in the
Philadelphia area that is closer to
his home in New Jersey.
Penn State announced last
Thursday that a fund liad been
established for Taliaferro's longterm care. Penn State is assisting
with expenses beyond th9se covered by family, university and
NCAA catastrophic injury insurance programs.
(Editor's note: Contributions to
the Taliaferro fund may be sent
to: Adam Taliaferro Fund. c/o
University Developri&gt;ent Office,
The Pennsylvania State University, One Old Main, University
Park, Pa. 16804,)
'

'k•

Mfte:

NASCA!~
C/Olbo--

'

Buckeyes ·lend a hand to fallen Lion

The Daily S8ntlnel • Page B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

°

a

&gt;:

Speedway, "AI the time, it feh like
the bigge~t win of my career."
A strategic move by crew chief
Jimmy Fennig gave Martin his sec·
ond \'lctonr at a track he admits is not
,,, ,,,:,'~. lie pitied on the 411 1h
'I
~
of .SOO l•ps and never had. to r~tnrn
to
~
the pi rs again . Everyone else did.
" I w•s doing all I could at the
1-g,·,,,,,·
na~ of the rare try;·· "' to con ....
se rve the car and I he brakes," Mllr1in

h,·,

rcc~~;lled .

··1 wasn't
riding around
•

wilh a bunch of'e~~:tra'l eft. Once we
got th e lead, man , I just ran like a
dog. That wu all I co uld do, mnd I
.
wms hoping to get a top· IO f1msh,
but nobody else came. I ~ue~ w e,
had the right ~ tup at the end.... The
on\:5 that arc the most fun to win are
h
- d,
..
1 co nes you o1 cvcr expc ... e o wm .

SIIHJ.:.
www.tdbluu.com

See us for Your Stihl•
Power Tools &amp; .
Accessories

Ridenour
Supply
St. Rt. 248
Chester 985 -3308

• · • •• • I I • I. I •

Fan Tips

CPU

• Brad Paisley. one of Arista
Records' hottesl acts, will sing
the National Anthem Mfore the
Oct. 22 Pop Secret Microwave
Popcorn 400 at North Carolina
Speedway. near Rockingham .
The 27 - ~ear-old West VIrginian reached No. 1 on the
count ry charts with h1S secopd
single, "He Didn't Have to Be."
and he was recently voted
' "Best Future Star or the Grand
Ole Opry· by an rndustry
magazine.

.u
~~­
~~
110 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone 992-1135
E-Mailjmas@frognet,net
www.performanceupgrades.com

:-: CREW OF TH£ WEEK
• It

wu yet another
week for Tonr

masterfut

Stewart's crew, led by

Ore&amp; Ztpadelll.

The team put Stewart

on the track nrtt after
hll ftnal pit 1top and
more than made up for
an earlier atrate&amp;lc error
that cauted Stewart to
fade nearlr out of the top

MEIG
MARINE

10.

Sales &amp;Service

For Joe GibbS Racine;
In eaneral, H't been a
phenomenal rear.

2121 Enterprise Rd

one driver, Bobby
Labonte, lead• the 'polnt

Pomeroy, OH 45769

ltandlnp, and the oth41r,
Stewart, hll won the

mott

1-740-992-1303

race~.

---------------------------------.

....
0

Place Your Business's Ad bere

"'z
0

~
:::T

Call

(0
(0
1\)

The Daily Sentinel for details
Dave Harris ·or Matt Haskins
992-2155

Ill
&lt;I&gt; ·

0
0

::l

c.

1\) &lt;I&gt;~
Q) •
3::
1\) · c.
I

(J1

c.
&lt;I&gt;

"0

' ' '

[1~1]

0

;:1-

0

:X:

·. I II

rl

II
!
I

I

�..
Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

PREP FOOTBALL

MARSHALL FOOTBALL

Devils, Bulldogs meet Friday night Quarterbacks in the spotlight_ again
BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPOR~EDITOR

.

GALLIPOLIS
Gallia Academy hopes to celebrate homecoming with its 11th consecutive victory over Athens Friday night
· when the Bulldogs visit Memonal Field.
The Blue Devils (5-1. SEOAL
·3-0) have won four &lt;traigh t games
and are deadlocked with Jackson
Jnd Logan for the top spot in the
SEOAL standings. The lronmen
. {h~O, SEOAi.. 3-0) play at River
Y.rlley tomorrow, whdt' Logan (6II, SEOAL 3-0) heads to Marierta.
Gallia Academy leads the alltime series with Athens 34-32
Wllh three ties. H owevn. the Blue
Dev ils have dominated the annual contest over the past 10 ·seamns. The b st victory for Athens
came in 1988 when the Bulldogs
'hu t o ut the Devib. 13-0.
Gallia Ac'ademy has won the
last 10 games by anve rage sco re of
.l5-10. The Blue Devils have regIStered two shutouts during that
sp an and have held Athens under
10 points six times.
The Gallipolitans spoiled the
Bolldogs' homecooung last season
by thumping Athens, 39-7.
Despite the recent run of suece~ Gallia Academy head coach
Drent Saundei&gt; is cautious heading into friday's game, due mainly to the fact that Athens has
'hown some improvement over
last year.
"[ think Athens is a better team
than they were last year," Saunders said. "Even against Logan last '
week, they came out and played
real hard.We've watched the Jack&lt;On tape and they played them
real good the first half. They've
!(Ot some pretty good size."
The Bulldogs' veteran front five
nn offense, a group of seniors
whic h averages 213 'po unds pe r
rn::m, has oPened up soine ni ce
pathways fo r St"nior running
bJcks Shawn Hewitt (5- 10 , 160
lhs.) and Jason Sparhawk (5-b,
170 lbs.) this season.
Hewitt, the veteran tailbac k
who rushed for a care er-high 270
yards against River Valley, has
ga ined 575 yards on 71 carries.
He has scored nine rushing .
touchdowns and has thrown a
touchdown pass.
Sparhawk, who moved from
tailback to fullback following an
ankle in,un.·
' ·' against Mei&lt;&gt;&lt;,
o- has

rushed for 290 yards and one
touchdown on 54 carries.
Sparhawk rushed for 114 yards m
the wm over Rtvcr Vall ...·y rwo
weeks ago.
"The Hewitt bov •nd the
Sparhawk boy arc real good rm1ners.'' Saunders said. "Hewitt
CS,Pecially, I'm in;presscd with
him."
Senior quarterback David Fulks
(6-0, 1~0 lbs.) has thrown for 326
yards this year, wuh half nf his 22
completion' going to classmate
Les Clmnphn (6-5 , 210 lbs.).
Champlin illS ca ught It balls for
40 yards and two touchdowns.
Fulks has completed 22-oi~SlJ
passes with two interceptions.
Fulks i's also th o pullter and pbcekicker for Ath ens (1-S,SEOAL 12) .
''1 thmk they're (Athens) a team
you can't nllke mi sta kes against
early in the game," Saui)ders sajd.
" If they get a little mome ntum,
they're going to be tough to' beat.
It seems like after they get down
a little bit, they go Oat reo] quick.
"Like Coach McPhail, a coach
who used to be up there before,
used to say, th ey just haven't
learned how tO win," he added.
"But Athens has won a co.uple of
games this year and I'm ~ure
they're coming down here thinking they're going to give us a
good game. We 're just gomg ~o
have score when we should and
not turn the ball over."
Timely scoring has been one of
the. benchmarks for Gallia Academy's success to this point in 2000.
In closely contested games against
Meigs and Warren, the Blue Devils came up with touchdowns in
key Situations to secure wins in
both contests.
Junior Tony Moore returned a
·punt 57 yards against 'Meigs that
gave the Blue Devils a 12-0 halftime lead in a game that GAHS

leads the Devils with 59 tackles.
Semor Jon Lawhorn has 45 and
JUlllor Dobby Jones has 42 tackles.
Senior J.T. Spencer-Howell has
3b tackles. Junior Nick Reed has
35 tJcklcs and JUnior Joel Elliott
has 33.
Spenc·er-Howell and junior
, Nathan KISkis have accounted for
seven of the Blue Devils' 12 sacks.
Spencer-Howell has foui, while
Ki skis has three.
·
The' Blue Devils have recorded
four interceptions, led by junior
Justin North with two picks.
J ones and junior Josh Perry have
the other two.
OtTensively, Simmo~s continues
to be the most effective weapon
the Blue Devils possess. The
sc mor has rushed for 605 yards
and nine touchdowns on 81 carries, including a career- best 204
ya rds at Warren .
Jones has 20? yards and four
scores on 33 carries. Senior Allen
Skinner has rushed for 131 yards
and one touchdown on 16 carnes.
Altogether, the Blue Devils
have piled up 1,100 yards rushing
with 15 touchdowns.
Gall!a Academy's passing ga.m e
suffered a setback Tuesday when
senior tight end Jeff Mullins re.injured a stress fracture that sidelined him for nearly a month
before the season started. He
nussed the season opener against
Meigs, but played in the last five
games. Prior to the re-aggrava-.
tion, Mullins had a team-high
eight receptions for 115 yards and
two touchdowns.
Fellow senior Dustin Deckard
steps in for Mullins tomorrow.
Deckard. who has played mainly
at split end, has five receptions for
a team- high ,141 yards. He has
also caught two touchdowns.,
r,rry and Lawhorn have also

evcnutally won , 18-6.
Senior Ike Simmons broke otT a

been major contributors to the
passing game this season. Perry

h2-yard tou chdown run again st
Warren late in that game as the
Blue Devils defeated the Warriors, 23~ 14.
The Blue Devil defeme had-also
'come tip with big pbys to keep
GAl· IS in .the win column . Gall ia
Academy ha s held opponents
tmdcr 200 yards of total ofJ'cnse
per game (192.2) and is surrc.ndering JUSt 11 points per outing
with one shutout.
J umor
· ]me b ac k·cr N IC
· k M era 1a

has caught four balls for 120 yards
and two touchdowns, while
Lawhorn has five catches for 91
yards and a team-high three
scores.
Junior David Brodeur has
shown a penchant for making the
big play with his arm this season.
He has completed 29-of-60 passes for 586 yards and eight touchdowns with three interceptions.
Game time Friday is set for
7 :30 p.m.

1!1ursday, October 5, 2000

Thursday, October 5, 200(i

as Herd meets Western MIChigan

.•••
.....
..

·:.'
•••
:·:
••• •
:-..• :
.• .

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

•

.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Once again the quarterbacks
for Marshall and Western Michigan are the talk of the MidAmerican Conference.
This time their names aren't
Chad Pennington and Tim Lester.
Marshall's Byron Leftwich and
Western's Jeff Welsh had the top
performances of their careers last
week to put their teams in fii&gt;t
place in their respective divisions.
Welsh has ihe Bioncos {4-1,20 Mid-American West) off to
their best start in six yea!&gt; heading into Thursday night's game &gt;t
Marshall (2-2, .1-0 MAC East).
Both Welsh and Leftwich were
on the sidelines in last December's MAC ch&gt;mpionship game
when Lester staked Western to a
23-0 lead, only to watch Marshall
storm back.
Pennington, Marshall's Heisman Trophy finalist, threw a 1yard TD toss with four seconds
left to give the Herd a 34-30 win.
"Last year"s heroes are gone,"
Leftwich said. "That makes every~y a candidate this year. Hopefully the hero will be on our side
like it was last year."
Welsh - whose older brother,
John, will start for Idaho at West
Virginia on Saturday - will be
on national television for the first
time. Big crowds and TV lights
are something the junior doesn't
think about.
"Everyone's emotions are going
to be ~ little higher, but you've
just got to block that out and play
like we've always be~n playing;'

he said. .
In five starts, Welsh Ius thrown
for 1,206 yards and six roucl!downs and is completing 59.5 of
his passes.
Despite completing 23-of-33
passes for 332 yards in a · 23-10
win over Ohio, Welsh isn't looked
up to by Mmhall's players as
much as his predecessor, who set
17 school and six MAC offensive
records.
"Lester was their quarterback
and now it's, uh,. some dude
named Walsh? Yeah, that sounds
right," cornerback Danny Derricott said.
"I can see him, but I just don't
know his name," said defensive
lineman Jimmy Parker.
Leftwich tried to keep things in
pei&gt;pective.
"A lot of people around here
may riot know who their quarterback is:· Leftwich said. "Hopefully our defense will know by
Thursday."
A sophomore, Leftwich has
removed some ohhe doubt over
his ability to continue a long line
of quality quarterbacks that
includes Pennington, last year's
Heisman Trophy Jinalist.
Leftwich threw for 378 yards
and three scores in a 47-14 win
over Buffalo last week. He ranks
No. 1 in the MAC in passing efficiency and Welsh is second.
For the season, Leftwich has
thrown for 1,030 yards •nd nine
touchdowns and is completing 63
percent of his passes.
Although he failed to maintain

'
the nation's longest winni'!g
streak - which was snapped et
18 games in a loss at Michigal)
Sute Leftwich has sh'o..i~
many of Pennington's skills.
·,
"It's Chad Pennington &gt;bou~2
inches taller ond maybe a yi!:Ir
behind as far as running t~&lt;
. offense," said Western MichiS!'n
coach Gary Darnell . "He's certairuy got the arm and he's certainly got the feet. It's on ly a nlltter of time with that guy as far as
finding the comfort zone."
Leftwich threw just 11 passes in
1999 before an ankle injury and
tonsillitis ~ earned him a medic:U
redshirt.
.
Marshall went 12-0 in the reg•
ular season, won the Motor City
Bowl for the second straight time
and finished lOth in the final
Associated Press poll.
Darnell figures it's not going:to
be easier ~his tin1e against M3r~
shall.
"They lead the league in scoring," he said. "The way I figute.
they're scoring more than a pOjni
a minute. We're going to p:lay
them 60 minutes. That doe~n ~
sound too good to me."
·,
Marshall has a 33-game win•
ning streak at home, the longest
in Division I-A. Thursday's crowd
at 40,000-seat Marshall Stadiu.m
is expected to approach the conference record of 36,36 I set by
Western Michigan last month.

•

. . . .,.... . . . . '

., •

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio State hopes to contribute
around $20,000 to the long-term
care of Penn State football player
Adam Taliaferro.
The university will donate $1
for each program sold at Ohio
State's home game Oct. 14 against
· Minnesota, Ohio State officials
said this week.
Taliaferro suffered a bruised
spinal cord in the fourth quarter
of the Penn State-Ohio State
game on Sept. 23 in Col~mbus.
He underwent dccotnpression
spinal fusion surgery Sept. 25 at
Ohio State University Medical
Center and has since been trans-

- · · N.C. 21054

A" TltnH

1:05 p.m. • Saturday • TBS
Wlnoton Cup, UAW-GM 500
1:05 p.m. • Sunday • TBS
• Crllfllm.,. Truck, O'R&lt;tllly 400
8 p.m. • OCt. 13 • ESPN
•

'

a.

e.

CHESHIRE - They arc two
teams that have relyed on th eir
ru nning games all seaso n .

The on.Jy differen ce 1s o ne is
tmbeaten and the other is in

search o f th~lr first win of the
year.

When Jackson visits River Valley on Friday, expect a great deal
of yardage to be racked up on the
ground.
The Jronmen are ranked third
m the latest Division I11, R egion '
12 OHSAA prep football compu ter ratings behind No. 1
Portsmou th and No. 2 Dayton
C hanunade-Julienne.
Jackson is also tied for 12th
w ith Millersburg West H olmes in
the latest Division 1ll Associated
.Press state football poll.

b1en

so.

"-

m

()

:t::

m
.c

FALLING

CARPET
-~~,b~,

( $6!JJL

Southe·m

ern compiled 141 first 11.11f vards
to Federal Hocking\ &lt;~1)-nt't
· yard~.

from Page Bl

Southe rn

!53 yards.
In last week's win over Federal
!l ocking, South~rn ·, Joe Cornell
1..,1 the Tornadoes wrth 88 yards
(1 11
19 carries fand o ne tou chdown, while Matt Ash carried I 1
times fo r 65 yard1, and Brice H ill
.;,cuHpered 46 ya rd s on .two carrn:" for one touchdown.

Sou the rn dominated the first
half. overcoming pena ltte'\ and

;111

·•ggressive
Federal
Hocking
defense.
He hind a good llllX of p ;l',..,lllg,
reverses, Jnd power run ... ~outh

(3 -.'1, TVC:

I-ll)
scored firo;t on .1 Cornell fou ryard run .lt thl' (1:2:! m.trk of the
first lJUarter after Andrew Coff-

man blocked .l pun t to· set up
good field positil'n for Southern.
Joe Cornell rmhed for li\.·l· yards
theft A~h took t\vo carne' for 11
yards.
A I-cdcral !locking off-,ides
took the b.III to the four yord line,
where Corndl )Hlllched 1t 111 for
the &lt;;eore.

ll r.mdon I II II
tnterCl·pt!Oil and 1~ - y.trd rl'turn,
Following

a

r.111 thl' re\· er~e for
twcnty --l lrlL' ya rd~ .111d "i.outhern\
Bnce I ftll

sq:ond sco re at the 11:40 mark o f
tl~t: seco nd period.
Ea rly in the fourth quarter,
Federal 1narCh(.;d iJ1sidc th e
Southnn 15-y;nd line.
A huge ~econ d down defensive
stand fot=- Sout hern se t the to ne

tOr

completion of Fcdcr:1l's

th l'

pos~c~~10n ~t s

TonHny R oberts and

·l.lr:rndon Pierce caug ht Cody Hall
behind the line of &lt;;crimmagC for
two-y;!nl loss.
Th ,lt set up ,1 pJssing situation.
where . Andrew Cofftnan and

.1

'fyler Lmlc pressured quJrtcrback
StcV!..' R 1ch.:~rds for .1n inc.:omplete
p.1ss,_ theo SHS pre&lt;;-.lrfL' 111 th e

h.Kktield

'iet up .1 mo ml' ntum
mtcn:l'ption.
SoutJH·rn then Jtl.' up som e

thwarting

clock wi~h a Corne ll -Ash running ga1ne that netted three first
downs, three penalty Oags, and an
Ash punt on the ninth play of the
drive.
·
Southern's defense th en made a
huge stand, holding Federal to
three downs and out.
The series began with a sack of
Rich ards by th e Coffman / Little

John Doe
Fire Dept.

Attach This Coupon to Your Photo and Mail Or Bring,
Wilh Your Payment to:

con necti o n.

The Tornad oes then pu shed for
another sCore and ran ·o ut the
clock in the process, securing an
excifing 14-6 homeco ming victory.
Jonathan Evans had two inte rceptions and Brandon Hill one.
Matt Ash led the Southern
defense with 14 tackles.

The Daily Sentinel'

'

•

'

Somehow monOCOfl a top 10

Hot •• a flrecra~ker

3. (2) Jotf Burton
4. (4) Date Eamhardt

Third place lon't bad
Can't quite get thot
eecand victory
Made up a few point•
Another tOp five
Missed the setup
Bound to win eventually
Loat the Martlnavllle magic
FeU back to Earth

·

BUSCH GRANO NATIONAL
AND CRAFTSMAN TRUCK
The two series were off last
week. The Busch series heads
to Concord , N.C .. for Saturday's
All Pro Bumper to Bumper 300
at Lowe ·s Motor Speedway. The
Tr.JJ.ck serle~i&amp; off this .week
at'ld wUI retuJO. to action Oct. ·
13 with tt:te'O'Rellly 400 ot
Texa:; Motor Speedway.

mile trBCk)

• Format: 200 laps/300 miles

• Rae. record: Ma~ Martin,
Fo&lt;d, 155.996 '"""· May 25, 1996
• Notable: Mark Martin leads

track)

all Busch Series drivers with six
victories at Concord .•.. FOfd

miles (400 kilometefs)
• Defendlnc c.._.pion: Jay
Sauter

It's one of Andrettl's better tracks, one where he has won,
but he was consldetably frustrated by the difficulty or getting
In and out of the ptts on Martinsville's narrow; curved pit
road .
·You can't &amp;et to the front with pit road.· sal4,Andrettl,
whO started 28th and fin ished 13th. •pit road needs to be
about 20 feet wider like a regular Winston Cup Pit road so
when you beat a auy out of the pits, you beat him out ot the
pits . Instead, you end up ell the way In the bac~.
·we iot crashed one t ime on pit road and had to came
back and fix H. and go all the way to the back. ~SCAR has
to widen pit road...
•
NASCAR Tbl1 Week's Monte Dutton &amp;IVtl hit opl~lon:
• This problem did not e~~:lst when the track had · ~ack-stretch
pits, and the present configuration was enacted because
drivers wanted to eliminate the disacwantage ot pitting on
\he back stretch . Sometimes you better think lorlg and hard
about what you ask for ... because you might J~ get tt. •

&amp;

• QuaUfrlne record: Jay

Busch victories here ... . TMre

605 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

Busch race at Charlotte - the
1985 Miller 400.

• Race record: Jay Sauter,

Chevrolet. 132.430 mph,

Oct. 15, 1999

CRAmMAN TRUCK

••••••••••••

- PROfilE -

Your
Tum
rn. O.llatl•n

Ken Schrader

Linin

Dear NASCAR This Week,
wall;:hcd moa;t of the Winston Cup
races for five years. Yet I never
recall hearing any of the announce~:plain who's responsible for

ers

keeping track of what po:sitian and

whal lap each driver is on. Is it a
crew member or a Winston Cup
official who does thi57

William Lynn
Zanesville, Ohio
Modern sroring is a combination
of having a computerized system
and iJ5ing the old manual system, in
which each team provides a scorer
to work under NASCAR supel'\ti·
sion, as a backup.

Konldw 7

rookie ol tho )'oar

award. But the bel'
rookie eeaaon miJ have
~:r occurred tile prlvloua
~·•• (!lnd lnapked the
award) when C.llfornlan
Panch wan aiJC

Marvin

racaa.

By Monte.Dutton

NASCAR This Week
Ken Schrader, one of the mare versatile
and active drivers In the Winston Cup Series.
has found the going increasingly tou"gh in
recent seasons.
At the beCinnina: of the season, Schrader
replaced retired Ernie lrvan In the Pontiac
fielded by MB2 Motorsports {Jerry Nadeau
was the team's Interim driver during the final
part of 1999}. The team e~~:paneled to two
cars when It aiJsarbed the No. 10 Pgnt lac
driven by Johnny Benson during the season's
secon(ll'lalf.

The addition or Benson may be beginning
to reap dividends far Schrader, whOse 10thplace finish at New Hampshire International
S~edway on S(!pt. 17 was hls best since a
ninth In the season-opening Dartona 500.
H••town: Fenton,

Mo.

awned by Nelson Bowers, Read Morton and
Tom Beard
Wile: Ann
Chfldren: Dorotny Lynn (10), Sheldon
Bradley (4)
Crew chief: Sammy Johns

Car•• statltt.lcl: 486 starts, 4 wins. 64
top-five llnishes.171 top-10 finishes. 23
poles. almost S15 5 million In earnings
Firsts: Start {Jul~ 14 , 1984, at Nashville.
Tenn.), pole (March 27, 1987, at Oartington),
victory (July 31. 1988, at Talladega)
What happened to hold down the team•a
performance this y•ar? ·we io\ kind of
caught off guard at the start of the year. We
didn't e11pect to have a ton ot problems as
far as getting going and be ing more competitive than we were at the start or the
season. We 've been going through a lot or
wowing pains. The addition of Johnny
Bensan, (crew chief) James 1nce and the
No. 10 Pontiac to our stable. I believe, has
been a lot of help.~

What do you think abOut the 2001

schedule? "I've been doing this tor a while
now, since '85. and I don·t see where a lot
of stuft has chaneed. It was 29.races when
1 started and, obviously, we're up to 36 nert
year, but It's all the new places since I
started with the series. Now we go to
PhOenix, Wl!ltklns Glen, Texas, and now this
year wHh Chicago and Kansas City. Being
born and rafsed near St. Louis, I'm very
excited abaut going to Chicago and Kansas
City. That's getting close to home.·

Paint schemes are usually de ·
signed or approved by a team's
spon!or. As a result, it would be
difficult for NASCAR to have such
an official polk~.

X
Dear NASCAR This Week.
Aflc'r thts weekend's race at
LoudOII, ttlere were seve ral comments about the Jack of compel it ion . To quote Dale Earnhardt,
"Thi~ is nut Winston Cup tacing."
In light of th e events of earlter
!h is year a1 Loudon, I think ht
missed the point of running restric·
tor platu.
No one got killed!
. AI) the teams had the same handicap with the rules chang.e. For
on..-e I ·would like for a dr1ver of
Mr. harnhardt's caliber to accept
·~ his performance at a race withoul
blaming someone else. Enough
whining, please . Thank you for
your timr .
Chris llayslett
Rivtrsidc , Cal1f.

••••••••••••

Who's Hot....
Who's Not

• HOT: Tony Stewart has won
two straight races for the third
time in.hls young career. He's
fifth in points.
• NOT: Jeremy Mayfield has
finished 35th or worse In his
last siK races. He has slipped
to 25th In the standings.

1. Who won the first NASCAR-sanctloned
race at Martinsville. va.?

2. When did Martinsville start holding 5Q0-1ap races?
3. Who was the first Rookie of the Year?
" 8~61 Ul SUIIIOl::l .&lt;uo~s '£
:009 !?IU!'aJII\ &lt;J~l UOM J3)je9 ;pns
U3~M '9S6t 'Z '6V6l 'Sl ' ldas 'UOJA8 pa1::1 't
SH3MSN'f'

••••••••••••

·
The Nat ional Stock C.ar Racrng
NFI d
Commission upheld penalties i,;sued ent," Gordon ~id . "I fell like there still bigger than the NBA.
• an
-'
ck.M
t
..
...hasn
't
be
en
one
that's
been
ovn·
NHL"
by N ASCAR to He, ... n · Go•..,.......s
·
d · turnetly et. Likel said,-thedccision
" ltwouldn'tsurpr1se mctnsec
an dr e"G ordon foIIowmg or on s
·
R' h --'
ha s been m~r.lc ."
employmenl double in Ihe next
S ept. 9 VIctory
at IC monu.
·u
II A
·
decade," LMS prcst cnr - . .
What a surpnse.
:0:
"1-lumpy
"
Whe~ler sa1'd . "'Mnror·
·
ordun - not tCI ment1on many
h
o1her General Motur5 driYers A IIEFTY CHUNK OP MONEY: !&gt;pOrts will be for thi ! area whn11 e
· esium Dr. John E. Con'naughton, econom- motmn
· ·pft:,ure
· ~ 1n
· du'' ry I&gt;forSo"&gt;h
used an ·•unapproYed" magn
u
•
·
· o f •~ rn ('alifornia in the next decade."
manifold. The Win.~ron Cup Series' ics professor at the U mvers1ty
·
C 1
Ch 1
· 1
rule book doe5 not ban such a part North aro rnaar ol\e, esttma e5
· ·
f
·
nor require it to be made of a ceJ1ain the economiC 1m pact o ra~.:mg !l.t
ON E To R';"' MEM\JER: Mark
alloy, hut commissioners Jack Hous· Lowe's M otor .Spee d way as
· th e ' ou o• M,,,,.,, ....
&lt;• ldom 1HII k5 his vi&lt;:toric$ in
by, Lcs Richler an d Gear..,. Silber· S276•4I 9,4·'&lt;9 annua 11 y m
mann ruled unanim ous ly•-th at the ties of CabarnJ), Iredell and M ec k • orde1 of Slgnr 'orc.1rrce or I'mportance •
· but he admollcd reccnrly of his ui 1
Penalt y must be upheld because ' thc lcnburg.
change from aluminum was not
" In Nol1h CMolina, motorspons i5 umph carl1er thos year &lt;It Martin ~v illc

.---------------------------.

Jeri'/ w~~bee

!'Department - - - - - - - - - - - -

111::~1~ Your N a m e - - - - - - - - - - - -

461 South Third Middleport, Ohio

(740) 992-2196

'

Dear NASCAR Th is Week,
I Jead a question not long ago
about retiring numbers when a driver din. I told my husband about
the question, an.d he said they
should reti1e th e paint scheme of
the car that he drove. I also think
that would be a greal idea.
Amy Evans
Amarillo, Tun

.-----CUp----'t--1.1511.

formally subm itt eU to NASCAR · still the bigge.~t sport as f;u as
headquaners and was not approved economic 1mp1ct," C onnaughton
by NASCAR."
said. "Even w1th th e mfluK of other
" I didn't e~pect anything differ· professiona l sporls, motorsports_is

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

. Domino's
Pizza

=-:

Commission shoots down Hendrick Motorsports' appeal
racorCI• dote back only
to 1958, wh•n ~ l)epn
awardlnC an annual

·

Sauter. Chevrolet. 179.718
mph, June 10. 1999

has been only one 4()().mlle

• ·-·~ AROUNOTHEGARAGf - -

• NASCAR'o rookie

,

•Fonnft: 167 laps/250.5

and Pontiac eich have 10

• Detendln&amp; champion:
Michael Waltrip

AIO: 45
cr.· No. 36 M&amp;M's Pontiac Grand Prix,

w. N!artlnsvtlle Sp&amp;lldway

Name of F i r e f i g h t e r - - - - - - - - - -

L----------------------~

conquering the 'cine track on
which same figured he was
least capable of winning.
During his rookie season,
1999. Stewart had all sorts of
misadventures at Martinsville ,
and as recently as Friday, when
he set a track record and won
the pole, Stewart called the
track "the M&lt;ISt difficult one }
I've ever had to conquer."
Because he also won the
previous week .at Dover, Del.,
and eight events over the past
two sea"sons, Stewart is
obviously the hottest driver Of'l
the Wlnstor Cup circuit.
No one else-has won more
than five over that period .

· · FIUO Of THE WEEK ~- ·

1

1
1A d d r e s s - - - - - - - - - - - - 1

•WUt: All Pro Bumper to
Bumper Auto Parts 300
•WHn: 1:05 p.m .• Saturday
• Mtert: Lowe's Motor
Speedway, Conoo«!. N.C. (1.5-

• Wllere: Te~~.as Motor Speedway. Forth Worth (1.5-mne

mph, Oct. 7, 1999

fROM lAST WEEK

111 Court Street Pomeroy, OH

1 Phone#-------~---

Check out the OVP 10 in today'sedition of the Daily Sentinel!

Used Cars &amp; Trucks

'De~f.tJ;

Show gour support and appreciation
r---!~~~~r~~~!~~~~!~---

-18).3)6-

BUSCH GRAND NAnONAL

•When: 8 p.m .. Oct. 13

I have been a fan and have

2. (5} Tony Stewart

John Andret6

"

~~

'

MOl Houlton. l.2U
JXII Spfagut. 3.CM9
Joe RWt/nln, 2,918
Oenrjs Setzef. 2,929
5le;wt GIISIOn'l, 2,926
Ran~tt TOlsma. 2.908
BrYII'I Reffntl, 2.818

1. (1) Bobby Labonte

•

10a:=
N
Ill

' .

\.,

KI.W"t Busdl, 3,2&lt;48

at Talladega this spring.

•What: O'Reilly 400

• QualtfJin&amp; reeord: Matt

Kenseth, Chevrolet, 177.328

TOP TEN

MARTINSVILLE, va . ..:... Tony
Stewart left Martinsville
Speedway a happy man Indeed .
Not because he loved the
track more than any other, not
because he won the race. but
because he did not expect to
Win here .
Stewart started an the pole,
but he had never won from tliat
. position before . Besides. going
fast around the .526-mile track
fat a lap atone Is one thil'l£.
Going fast ror 500 laps, and
going faster from that distance
than Oale Earnhardt. Jeff
Burton, Ricky RI,Jdd and Jeff
Gordon- all former Martinsville
winners- was something ·
Stewart had been not at all
confident he could achieve.
Before Sunday, Stewart had
considered Martinsvill e a
mystery of Agatha Christie
proportions. He couldn"t tell
heads or tells when he .tried to
master the ancient track on
race day.
It all changed Sunday and. as
a result, Stewart became the
season's biggest winner by

PRICES

$7 ·f~ tB
, J·

Jimmie Johnson, 2,121

WINSTON CUP

()

Only

'

cesey Atwood . 2.786

Wlii'G Bl.l't.OI'I, 3,431

,

...J
"0

'3f/i,eef.tJ;

/ /· ,, t ,,, )';\ \ ·.
. ,, 1~~ ad ;
wlth'or .
without photo

Olltid Green, 2,892

8. ( 9) Ricky Rudd
9. ( 8) Mark M•rtln
10. (10) Johnny Bonoon

-

6Months
Same as

Salute gour fauorite fireman and/or
fire Department with an ad on our
fire Preuention Page mondag,
October 9th.

.

AlokJ ROOd, 3,797

5. ( 3) Dalo Jarrott
6. ( 7) Jeff Gordon
7. (61 Ruaty Wallace

:::&gt;li;o
N.2!.9-

.

Ron Hofnadfl', 3,271
Elton s-y.r, 3,246
Rll'lett LaJoie. 3,063

Tony Stew.,, 3.812

Grea Bif11e. 3.573
Mille Wlllaoll, 3,283

laps/501 miles

-~Jeff
Gordoo
.
• Qllllllfytn&amp; IKdrd: Dale
Earnhardt Jr., Chevralet,
186.034 mph, May 24. 2000
' • Race rROrd: .lel't'Gattn OeJ.
0&lt;111.1999

race a year ago, Goroon did not
win a&amp;aln until the DieHard 500

• We~ly ranklngs by NASCAR This Week Writer Moote Dutton.
Last week's ranking Is in parentheses.

8.
'C Q. a: .!!!

).t'

Todd Bodine. 3,581
Kll¥11'1 IW'M.k. 3.~

•

.. ·0

I

JatOn Keller, 3.&amp;4..

7. Rus~ Wltllll(.8 . 3.703

J:

''

:..tf Grun . C,160

I. Marti M•tln, 3.593
t. Jeff Gordon, 3,513

Raiders ready to battle undefeated lronmen
in rushing, David Swisher led the
While Tipton only has 229
lronmen on the ground last week yards in the air this season, he has
against Point Pleasant.
432 yards rushing.
Swisher (6~2, 206) had 14 carAs of now, Jackson remains as
ries for 86 yards and a touc hdown only one of two SEOAL teams
in Ja ckson's 19-14 win over the that are undefeated in overall play
Dig Blacks.
this season. Logan is the other
On the season, Swisher has 497 undefeated team.
yards total rushing yards.
For River Valley, this will mark
Also for Jackson, Curtis Green the second to last home game of
had a stron g outing against Point the season.
Pleasant as he accumulated 64
The Raiders have Marietta and
yards on eight rushes, including a Warren on the road the next coutouchdown run.
ple of . weeks before returning
While the Ja ckson ground Jjome to meet Logan in the last
game i' the strength of this team. . week of the season on Oct. 27.
they had to defeat Point Pleasant
Ja ckson will play host to Warren
on a pass play last week.
next week, before facing Logan
A 19-yard pass from Ryan Tip- and Gallia Academy in key conton to llryn Williams in the clos- ference matchups the following
ing ~econds of the second quarter, two weeks .
),r.tve the honmen the decisive 1914 advantage.

2000 POINTS STANDINGS

·Bobt!Y LllbOnte, o1,225
2. Ollt ElmM'Ck. C.012
J. )e4r Burton. 3,99a
4. Deft J..-ett. 3,9U

1..

• Whit UAW-G'M Quality 500
• When: 1:05 t).m., Sunda)'
• Whtrl: Lowe's Motor
S - . Ccr&lt;ord. N.C. 11.5mile tlad&lt;l
·

• Formlt: 334
.c,

--- -· •

•Nol*e: After wiMinJ this .

WINSTON CUP

All Pro Bumpor to Bumpor 300

RIVER VALLEY V. JACKSON
The Raiders (0-C&gt;, SEOAL 0-.1)
have
led .111 &lt;;ea~on by se nior·
Jared
ylor. a 3-foot-11, 11&gt;0
pound , il b'ack : Last week, against
another SEOAL powe r in Gallia
Academy, Taylo r ran th e ball I ~
.times for 61 ya rd s in a'41-0 loss.
On the season , the se nio r tailback has 637 on 129 carries for
4.9 yards a carry and one touchdown .
Senior fullba ck Clark Walker
(6!1,205) had 20 yards on six carries for R iver Valley aga inst the
Blu e Devrls.
The lron m en {6~0, SEOAL 30) have th ree players who give
their team a balanced running
arra ck.
TJ Mu stard (5-10,. 185) leads
Jackson's trio With 637 yards on
96 carries.
While Mu sta rd leads hiS team

-m _

ON THE SCHEDULE

I

• Butch Qqnd Nltlonlll,

'

BY BUTCH COOPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

Tlllo-

2100LF--

·-c::Q)

ferred to a hospital in the
Philadelphia area that is closer to
his home in New Jersey.
Penn State announced last
Thursday that a fund liad been
established for Taliaferro's longterm care. Penn State is assisting
with expenses beyond th9se covered by family, university and
NCAA catastrophic injury insurance programs.
(Editor's note: Contributions to
the Taliaferro fund may be sent
to: Adam Taliaferro Fund. c/o
University Developri&gt;ent Office,
The Pennsylvania State University, One Old Main, University
Park, Pa. 16804,)
'

'k•

Mfte:

NASCA!~
C/Olbo--

'

Buckeyes ·lend a hand to fallen Lion

The Daily S8ntlnel • Page B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

°

a

&gt;:

Speedway, "AI the time, it feh like
the bigge~t win of my career."
A strategic move by crew chief
Jimmy Fennig gave Martin his sec·
ond \'lctonr at a track he admits is not
,,, ,,,:,'~. lie pitied on the 411 1h
'I
~
of .SOO l•ps and never had. to r~tnrn
to
~
the pi rs again . Everyone else did.
" I w•s doing all I could at the
1-g,·,,,,,·
na~ of the rare try;·· "' to con ....
se rve the car and I he brakes," Mllr1in

h,·,

rcc~~;lled .

··1 wasn't
riding around
•

wilh a bunch of'e~~:tra'l eft. Once we
got th e lead, man , I just ran like a
dog. That wu all I co uld do, mnd I
.
wms hoping to get a top· IO f1msh,
but nobody else came. I ~ue~ w e,
had the right ~ tup at the end.... The
on\:5 that arc the most fun to win are
h
- d,
..
1 co nes you o1 cvcr expc ... e o wm .

SIIHJ.:.
www.tdbluu.com

See us for Your Stihl•
Power Tools &amp; .
Accessories

Ridenour
Supply
St. Rt. 248
Chester 985 -3308

• · • •• • I I • I. I •

Fan Tips

CPU

• Brad Paisley. one of Arista
Records' hottesl acts, will sing
the National Anthem Mfore the
Oct. 22 Pop Secret Microwave
Popcorn 400 at North Carolina
Speedway. near Rockingham .
The 27 - ~ear-old West VIrginian reached No. 1 on the
count ry charts with h1S secopd
single, "He Didn't Have to Be."
and he was recently voted
' "Best Future Star or the Grand
Ole Opry· by an rndustry
magazine.

.u
~~­
~~
110 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone 992-1135
E-Mailjmas@frognet,net
www.performanceupgrades.com

:-: CREW OF TH£ WEEK
• It

wu yet another
week for Tonr

masterfut

Stewart's crew, led by

Ore&amp; Ztpadelll.

The team put Stewart

on the track nrtt after
hll ftnal pit 1top and
more than made up for
an earlier atrate&amp;lc error
that cauted Stewart to
fade nearlr out of the top

MEIG
MARINE

10.

Sales &amp;Service

For Joe GibbS Racine;
In eaneral, H't been a
phenomenal rear.

2121 Enterprise Rd

one driver, Bobby
Labonte, lead• the 'polnt

Pomeroy, OH 45769

ltandlnp, and the oth41r,
Stewart, hll won the

mott

1-740-992-1303

race~.

---------------------------------.

....
0

Place Your Business's Ad bere

"'z
0

~
:::T

Call

(0
(0
1\)

The Daily Sentinel for details
Dave Harris ·or Matt Haskins
992-2155

Ill
&lt;I&gt; ·

0
0

::l

c.

1\) &lt;I&gt;~
Q) •
3::
1\) · c.
I

(J1

c.
&lt;I&gt;

"0

' ' '

[1~1]

0

;:1-

0

:X:

·. I II

rl

II
!
I

I

�Page 8 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday October 5, 2000

.

Thursday, October 5, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PLAYOFFS

'

Yanks, Ks even up; Seattle takes 2-0 lead on ChiSox
All Peraonal
Announcement
G!waWIIy loot Found
Yord SoiH ond Wontod
To Do Ado
Muat Be Paid In Advanco
JI!JBUNE DEAQUNE.
2 00 p m the day before
the ad Is to run
Sunday Monday odltton
2 00 p m Frtday
SENTINEL PEAQUNE
1 00 p m the day before
the ad is to run
Sundoy Monday odltlon
1 00 p m Frldoy
REGISTER QEAQUNE.
2 daya before the ad Ia

70

Yard Sale

a

a
a

180 Wanted To Do

Pt Pleasant

230

510

Professional
Services

App ances

ARE YOUR CREO T CARD BILLS
OVERWHELM NG YOU?? FREE
DEBT CONSOL OAT ON can

&amp; VIcinity
MaMaw Roush s Va d Sale
Sa Oc 7 along R 33 North ol
Mason wv many terns

g ato s Up To 90 Days Gua
anleeCI We Se New Maytag Ap
p ances F ench C y May ag
74Q-446 7795

monttl y paymen Reduce n e
es avo d a e cha gps &amp; s op
ha ass men L censed bonded
Non p ol 800 288 633 e1
5

-.... s...

Recond I dned

Wastltfl Orye s Ranges A:el

canso da e you b s n o one

Oc1 5&amp;6

Household
Goods

OAKLAND Cahf (AP) Andy Pettllte stood on the
mound talkmg to himself and
mentally blockmg o 1t a stadium
full of screammg fans
That mental mtenmy " partly
why he has been so successful m
the postseason and he needed
every b1t of that focus Wednesday

www goiOcoas com

Ani ques AI 62 Leon Baden

mght as he p1tched the strugghng
New York Yankees back Into thelt
playoff senes •boamst the Athleucs
Petmte allowed five hits n 7 2
3 scoreless nn figs surv vmg a
goofY pratfall by second baseman
Lu s SoJO a d the Yankees defeat
ed the Oakland As 4 0 to ne
the r best of. five AL dw s on

senes at 1 1
He focuses and gets himself m
this trance I guess you can say
and he does a lot of talking to
h1mself He has meetmgs w1th
h1m self o 1 the mound very
often Yankees manager Joe Torre
md Most of the time he s
locked m and he was tomght

gh on Dunham Ad 1 4 on
gr-. e ec s o e m c ow a e &amp;
msc
m e

80

Auct1on
and Flea Market

Card of Thanks

lo unby430pm

We would I fit to tlianfi

Saturday &amp; Monday
4 30 Thuredoy
Clud//M&amp; IU/Jjfi:l to

od~lon

r• eryone for tlie~r
fimd ltss flowers
cards &amp; plione calls
dunng tlit deatfi af o tr
brotfier ]a eli. Lance
We want to tfianR.
pastors &lt;Teresa Lmda
&amp; Wayne for tfie f. nd
vords tfie JYaz.arene
wome 1 m d tfie
'Eva :gebcnl vomrn of
Little J{ocfi. ng for tfie
food and :M f.c of
Wfi1te 'Fu era/ J{on e
m Cool• lie
&lt;Tiie .Lance 'Fam1ly Joe
&amp; &lt;Tiielma Roger &amp;
'Berd e :M lie &amp; 'Dot
J 1dy &amp; 'Da111d

cl18ng• due to holldor-

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personals

FINANCIAL

New To YouTh f1 Shoppe
9 Wes S mson A F'lens
740 592 842
Qua y co h ng and ho seho d
ems $ 00 bag sa e e e y
hu sday Monday h u Sa u day

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

9 00.5 30

40

Gtveaway

110

Help Wanted

NT

Tired of staring at the same four
walls, find everything you need
in the Classlfleds.

Call 740·992·2155 to place
your classified ad.

Miscellaneous
Merchandise
METAL BU LD NGS Does you
.aea e sh p no wo k o you We
ha e compel ve p ces &amp; NO
dea e sh p ees Ca
o a ee
b ochu e E Do ado Bu dng Sys
ems 800 279 4300

TRANSPORTATION

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

70

v

Need We And Sep c? No Down
Pay men Aequ ed a ge Se ec
on 0 Homes Ca
800 948
5678

Yard Sale
Galhpohs
&amp; VICinity

H ge n en o 0 scoun I? ces
On V ny Sk ng Doo s W nd
ows Ancho s Wa e Hea e s
Pumbng &amp; Eec ca Pa s Fu
naces &amp; Hea Pumps Benne s
Mob e Home Supp y 740 446
94 6 www OIYb comlbeflnett

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECURITY ISS?
No Fee Unless We W~n

BSB 582 3345

$505 WEEK Y GUARANTEED
WORK NG FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EXPER ENCE RE
QU RED
800 48 5 6 EXT

X0

Tappan H E c en y 90 Gas
F naces 0 F aces 2 See
Hea Pump 11o A Cond on ng
Sys ems F ee B Yea Wa an y
Hea g &amp; Coo ng
Ben e
BOO 8 2 596 www orvb co nJben

sex am flSBuso na ona
o gno any nemon o
make any such p e e Sl"!ce
m aiono dsc mna on

4

Coun y A dge Sa e y Open F
day B da k Sa u day 8 5 30
B earl D e Ao s C n amon
Ao s Co ee Cake Ange ood
C.a es Pes CooK es Nood es &amp;
Wago Whee Donu Dea e s
We come Wa h Fo S gns On
4
App o• rna e y
5 M es
Wes 0 Ga po s On A cha ds
Road

The pl yoff senes moves to
New York for Came 3 on Fnday
n ght With Oakland s Tm1 Hud
son (20 6) facmg Orlando Her
nandez (I2 13)
Pettllte "ho has had some of
hiS best perfor1 a ces n the post
season sa~d he s always talked to
h1mself dunng games - mostly
to remmd h1mself abo t p1tch ng
mechamcs
Obv ously I feel 1ke I get a
I ttle more locked m m playoff
games he md You try to see
the p1tches You try to see them
before you nake the pitch
Pettltte s perfor nance and a
radically reva uped New York
1 neup helped the two time
defend1ng World Ser es champ!
ons snap an e ght game losmg
streak The Yankees dended by
cr tics as over the hill champ10ns
also ended a 10 game road losmg
streak
We ve bee1 down We ve been
on a ternble skid Pettltte sa1d I
hope this will get u• gomg This IS
a b1g game for us obvwusly
We ve really been strugghng
Glenallen H ll m tlie hneup as
part ofTorre s effort to shake up a
nonbund offense broke up a
scoreless game w th an RBI sm
gle and SoJO followed w11h a
two run do 1ble as the Yankees
scored three m the Sixth
The hits by H ll and SoJO came
with two outs and mmed ately
after an mtent anal walk to strug
gling Paul 0 Ne ll who has not
had an extra base hit smce Sept
6 After the left handed 0 Ne1ll
walked nght es H1ll and SaJO
connected off nght hander Kevm
App1er
H1ll was I for 12 m the post
season before that s 1gle
0 Ne1ll s been there so 1 any
t mes n the past and come t p
w1th b g htts for them As 1 an
ager Art Howe sad We knew
he d been str ggl ng but we d d
n t want to let h1 1 beat s Gle
nalle1 d d
Torre denoted 0 Ne1ll fro n
th No 3 spot 11 the battmg
order to No 6 fo he first time all
year He also d opped t suallead
off nan Cl ucJ&lt;: Knobla ch f om
the start• g 1neup 1 oved D rek
Jeter t p a spot to leadoff and
11oved Jorge Posada up fro 11 No
7 to No 2 H ll took Knoblaucl s
spot at les gnated hitter
Pettltte vho 11 Yankees o vner
George Ste1 bre1 ner wanted to
trade to Ph Iadelph a n July 1999
before be ng talked out of t by
Torre has had some of h s best
perforn ances n the postseason
He beat Atlanta s John Sn oltz
1 0 m the p1votal Ga ne 5 of the
1996 World Scr es and also
p tched sl utout ball n the 1998
Ser cs cl ocher aga nst San D1ego
If th s ser es return to Oakland
for a declSlve fifth game Torre
sad hiS pttcher would be Pett tte
He s tough he s tough I e
doesn t get a lot of attentiOn
because you have h gh profile
people on the club Torre said
Petutte was helped by double
plays m the first and seventh

mn ngs
He survtved a strange e1ghth
mnmg play that almost aliQwed
the As back m the game W1th
two outs a runner on second and
the As down 3 0 Terrence Long
h!t a routme grounder to SoJOwho fielded the ball but caught
hiS r ght foot on hiS left shoelace
as he started to throw and fell
w thout releas ng the ball
That left rum ers on first and
thud and Mar a o R1vera
replaced Pett tte R vera got
Randy Velarde to h1t a tr cky hop
grounder that thud baseman
Scott Bros us was able to bare
I and m t me to throw out
Velarde
We may be us1 1g Velcro
tomorrow Torre sa d of SOJO s
stu nble I sa d Oh my God
when I saw him fall You don t
laugh when the ty ng runs com
mg to the plate We d dn t really
laugh at LuiS unt 1 we got out of
that mmng and then we asked
h1 n all kinds of ntereStlng ques
nons
As SOJO trotted to the bench
after the 11 n &gt;g teammates
yelled Don t fall down'
Manners 5 Whtte Sox 2
CHICAGO (AP)
Lou
Pm ella won t diVulge Seattle s
pnching plans to the tean that
led the lllaJOrs Ill sconng this sea
so 1
That approach by the Mar ners
111anager 1S working and they re
headed home to Safeco F1eld
w1th a 2 0 lead m their d1v S!On
ser es
If the Ch1cago Wh te Sox want
to av01d a sweep they ll need to
figure out how to mprove on a
3 for 23 perfor 1 ance w1th run
ners m sconng post on
They need to htt a Seattle
bullpen that s p tched 10 scoreless
mn ngs and allowed JUSt three
h ts And they need to get some
h ts out of Frat k Thomas v. ho IS
0 for 7 1 tl e fi two ga 1 es
We have a spec fJ c ga 1 e plan
I can t talk about that P n ella
sa d follo v ng W&lt; dncsday s 5 ~
v cto ry ovot the Wh te Sox vho
av raged s x r ns thts s ason
wh 1 w nn ng a 1 AL b s 95
games
Wev bee for nate to sl ut
the 1 do v You re not gong o
find better hitters
Ga 1e 3 IS 1 Seat le on Fnday
We don t want to get n a
sl gg g atch w tl the WI te
Sox I don t klow 1f t s the 11
struggl ng or were n akmg o r
pitches Alex Rodnguez sa d
Its been a I tde of both
Seattle s wm Wed esday fea
t !fed 3 I 3 h1tless mmngs by
Mar ncr rehcvers a go ahead
homer by Jay Buhner and superb
defe s ve
play
by
Mark
McLe o re
It all p ts the Wlute Sox near
a1 early x t although they d1d
have a 1llaJO league best 49 32
na k on tl e road th s season and
von fout of s x at Safeco F1eld
We ve never been m th1s sJtu
at on 0 ? gomg to a teams home
field b t we 1ave played good

baseball there Ch1cago manager
Jerry Manuel sa1d
We won 95 games and feel we
can find a way to Will three
more
Paul Abbott gave up five hits
and two runs m 5 2 3 mmngs to
wm m his first postseason appear
ance m a pro career that beg3n m
1985
Relievers Arthur Rhodes Jose
Mesa and Kazuhuo Sasal&lt;t didn t
allow a hlt the rest of the way
To tell you the truth we re not
surpmed But we also know they
could turn 1t on at any mmute
Rhodes sa1d
Abbott who began the season
m the bullpen not allowmg the
Wh1te Sox hitters to have an
advantageous count 1s cruClal
That s what they want they
want you to throw some pitches
they want to see what you have
he sa d That s what they ve done
most of the year - take a walk
get some guys on base They
make thmgs happen
So t s Important to make sure
you get ahead of them
The Wh1te Sox stranded e~ght
runners g vmg them 18 n the
first two games Chicago s 3 4 5
h1tters Thomas Maggho
Ordonez and Carlos Lee - were
a combmed 0 for 9 Wednesday
after go ng 2 for 13 1 1 the open
er
I sense they are pressmg so ne
what Manuel md
Thomas an MVP cand1date
who h t 43 homers and drove m
143 runs dunng the season came
up w1th runners at first and sec
ond m the seventh but flied out
agamst Mesa for the second out
Mesa deflected Ordonez s shot
through the box and McLe uore
made a spectacular dtv ng stop
He somehow fl1pped the ball to
Rodr guez JUS beatmg Jose
Valent n n a close play for a force
to end another Ch ago threat
Bul 1ers 400 foot blast n the
fourth off losmg p tcher M ke
Suotka gave Seattle a 3 2 lead
R ckey
Henderson
v.alked
1 ov d up on a sacr fice a d stole
third n tl e fifth H th scored
on Rodr guez s slo v roller to
th rd as Herbert P ry 1 c rd to
go to fJ st nstead of home
The Mar ners added an nsur
a1 e

n

the

1

I

wl e

Big showdown in WVIAC this week
150

Schools
Instruction
SERVICES

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NG

PARALEGA GRADED C\JRR C
UM App o eo nome s udy
A 0 dabe S
e 890 FREE
CATA OG
800 826 9228 o
B ACKSTONE SCHOO
OF
LAW PO Bo
0 49 Oepa
me AM Da as X 5 0 449

u

230

630

RENTALS

Professional

Livestock

FendS a

G

Co

JET
AEflAT ON MOTORS
Aepa ed New &amp; Aebu n so k
Ca Ao E ans
800 53 9 28

HOME FORECLOSURES $0
DOWN NO CREO T NEEDED
TAKE OVER LOW PAYMENTS
CAL NOW 800 8 0 280 ex

39 0
4X 0 3 bed com

MERCHANDISE

840

D

e

ego abe

Electrical and
Refrigeration

CHARLESTON WVa (AP)
- It would have been d ffic It
before the season to put West
V rgm a
Un vers ty Tech s
footba ll tea 1 o th s e level
as Sl cpherd s
Sh pherd af er all I d been
p eked by West V rg n a Con
C ence coacl1es to v
ts
fo rtl stra g t I g e t tie
WVU Te I a )Car ago we1
1 10 yea ago a d snapp d a
3? ga 1e los &gt;g s t ak n ts
sea on ti ale Th
Galle
Bears have von th e tr ght
ga es for the first
t
at
1 ast a de ad
That • a t" t w st n t
co ch M k Spr gston a1d
I s d ffere
Ou k ds have
played well
The par ty n the leag e
tl s y ar
b I evable Tl er
are a nu bcr of tea 1s that ca
Vll 1t Shcpher I 1 a&gt; o be b at
for a 1ybo iy to v n t
Tech (3 ' WVIAC 1 0) vII
get that I c vi
Sl p
1 e rd (3 I I 0)
o 1 s to
M o , tgo
y o S t rd 1 It
ark tl fJ t I o
o t s f
tl year forTe I
•

There a e s g
I at Shep
herds do 1 nance could be
u der attack Th
Ran s
squeaked bv Co co d a I one
?4 2? bst week
If anythmg the problen s he
v. tl n Shepherds def 1 se
Co cords Tyler Hull hre v fo
three tot chdo v" n the fin I
s ve
1 tes
nd Shepherd
vo
only bee se Cot cord
fa led o
t vo
xt a po t
att~

Count) H1gh JU&gt;l 6 n
ago
on&gt;laugl t I kel)
Tl
fran
bot! oft
occ
Sl cph i
1 ar b k
Go do
p obably ' 11
T I fit H 11 g
f 0
I) levo
S
0 d
tl

onths

w11
nscs

Joel
g VC
h lp
vi o
II n

1pts

If Sl pie J I ad tro bl w th
1-1 II vho co pie d 78 of
47 pass s for 343 y ds ~ t
ccrta Iy w 11 ha
a to gl
t ' c "' tl T&lt;eh s Er Sm tl
I a 34 ?7 v n o cr Fa
1 01 t State S
rday S th
?~ of 50 pass s for
a d tl ec to ch
also o d o
9

s
ha

s

k
t I

fc I

Jus go to
g
on
lc
xt
c tr
ga
d a d S 1th vl o
g a i tat d tro l I e ll to

r over
to v 1

st
t

E

ga

c

tl s d
TI at otl i Sl p 1crd a d s
S 1th I as
t
E
th 0 v
pt 0 s h s

v ar
No 1
D v Slon II
total offe1 sc
th 33? y rds

1

McLe 1 o e dre a two out valk
Raul Ibanez s ngled and M ke
Ca ero 1 s ogled Cameron for
edy of tl e Wh te Sox had two
k y I s a1d a stole base 1
G e 1
Tbe Whtte Sox got consecut ve
dot bles fro 11 the r fi st t vo I t
tees Ray Durhan and Valent n
but aga n th e b1g h tters behind
the 11 cotldn t produce
W th Vale mn at third after a
steal Tho nas fl1cd out After
Ordonez walked Abbott got Lee
o a popup and Paul Kon rko on
a short co 1ebacker Abbott threw
out K01 erko even after fall ng
do v1 field ng t
I feel bad
because I m lettmg a lot of people
do vn Thomas S&gt;~d

0

vi

has

t

~

In o h
g
S t da\
h
o t State (1 3
l) s at
Gle1 II S ate (? 3 1 ) West
L l tv (3 I
) s at Con
or I ? 3 ( )
t West V J
g
W I ya ( 4 0 1)
at
W st V r~
Si t ( 4
1)

•

�Page 8 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday October 5, 2000

.

Thursday, October 5, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PLAYOFFS

'

Yanks, Ks even up; Seattle takes 2-0 lead on ChiSox
All Peraonal
Announcement
G!waWIIy loot Found
Yord SoiH ond Wontod
To Do Ado
Muat Be Paid In Advanco
JI!JBUNE DEAQUNE.
2 00 p m the day before
the ad Is to run
Sunday Monday odltton
2 00 p m Frtday
SENTINEL PEAQUNE
1 00 p m the day before
the ad is to run
Sundoy Monday odltlon
1 00 p m Frldoy
REGISTER QEAQUNE.
2 daya before the ad Ia

70

Yard Sale

a

a
a

180 Wanted To Do

Pt Pleasant

230

510

Professional
Services

App ances

ARE YOUR CREO T CARD BILLS
OVERWHELM NG YOU?? FREE
DEBT CONSOL OAT ON can

&amp; VIcinity
MaMaw Roush s Va d Sale
Sa Oc 7 along R 33 North ol
Mason wv many terns

g ato s Up To 90 Days Gua
anleeCI We Se New Maytag Ap
p ances F ench C y May ag
74Q-446 7795

monttl y paymen Reduce n e
es avo d a e cha gps &amp; s op
ha ass men L censed bonded
Non p ol 800 288 633 e1
5

-.... s...

Recond I dned

Wastltfl Orye s Ranges A:el

canso da e you b s n o one

Oc1 5&amp;6

Household
Goods

OAKLAND Cahf (AP) Andy Pettllte stood on the
mound talkmg to himself and
mentally blockmg o 1t a stadium
full of screammg fans
That mental mtenmy " partly
why he has been so successful m
the postseason and he needed
every b1t of that focus Wednesday

www goiOcoas com

Ani ques AI 62 Leon Baden

mght as he p1tched the strugghng
New York Yankees back Into thelt
playoff senes •boamst the Athleucs
Petmte allowed five hits n 7 2
3 scoreless nn figs surv vmg a
goofY pratfall by second baseman
Lu s SoJO a d the Yankees defeat
ed the Oakland As 4 0 to ne
the r best of. five AL dw s on

senes at 1 1
He focuses and gets himself m
this trance I guess you can say
and he does a lot of talking to
h1mself He has meetmgs w1th
h1m self o 1 the mound very
often Yankees manager Joe Torre
md Most of the time he s
locked m and he was tomght

gh on Dunham Ad 1 4 on
gr-. e ec s o e m c ow a e &amp;
msc
m e

80

Auct1on
and Flea Market

Card of Thanks

lo unby430pm

We would I fit to tlianfi

Saturday &amp; Monday
4 30 Thuredoy
Clud//M&amp; IU/Jjfi:l to

od~lon

r• eryone for tlie~r
fimd ltss flowers
cards &amp; plione calls
dunng tlit deatfi af o tr
brotfier ]a eli. Lance
We want to tfianR.
pastors &lt;Teresa Lmda
&amp; Wayne for tfie f. nd
vords tfie JYaz.arene
wome 1 m d tfie
'Eva :gebcnl vomrn of
Little J{ocfi. ng for tfie
food and :M f.c of
Wfi1te 'Fu era/ J{on e
m Cool• lie
&lt;Tiie .Lance 'Fam1ly Joe
&amp; &lt;Tiielma Roger &amp;
'Berd e :M lie &amp; 'Dot
J 1dy &amp; 'Da111d

cl18ng• due to holldor-

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personals

FINANCIAL

New To YouTh f1 Shoppe
9 Wes S mson A F'lens
740 592 842
Qua y co h ng and ho seho d
ems $ 00 bag sa e e e y
hu sday Monday h u Sa u day

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

9 00.5 30

40

Gtveaway

110

Help Wanted

NT

Tired of staring at the same four
walls, find everything you need
in the Classlfleds.

Call 740·992·2155 to place
your classified ad.

Miscellaneous
Merchandise
METAL BU LD NGS Does you
.aea e sh p no wo k o you We
ha e compel ve p ces &amp; NO
dea e sh p ees Ca
o a ee
b ochu e E Do ado Bu dng Sys
ems 800 279 4300

TRANSPORTATION

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

70

v

Need We And Sep c? No Down
Pay men Aequ ed a ge Se ec
on 0 Homes Ca
800 948
5678

Yard Sale
Galhpohs
&amp; VICinity

H ge n en o 0 scoun I? ces
On V ny Sk ng Doo s W nd
ows Ancho s Wa e Hea e s
Pumbng &amp; Eec ca Pa s Fu
naces &amp; Hea Pumps Benne s
Mob e Home Supp y 740 446
94 6 www OIYb comlbeflnett

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECURITY ISS?
No Fee Unless We W~n

BSB 582 3345

$505 WEEK Y GUARANTEED
WORK NG FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EXPER ENCE RE
QU RED
800 48 5 6 EXT

X0

Tappan H E c en y 90 Gas
F naces 0 F aces 2 See
Hea Pump 11o A Cond on ng
Sys ems F ee B Yea Wa an y
Hea g &amp; Coo ng
Ben e
BOO 8 2 596 www orvb co nJben

sex am flSBuso na ona
o gno any nemon o
make any such p e e Sl"!ce
m aiono dsc mna on

4

Coun y A dge Sa e y Open F
day B da k Sa u day 8 5 30
B earl D e Ao s C n amon
Ao s Co ee Cake Ange ood
C.a es Pes CooK es Nood es &amp;
Wago Whee Donu Dea e s
We come Wa h Fo S gns On
4
App o• rna e y
5 M es
Wes 0 Ga po s On A cha ds
Road

The pl yoff senes moves to
New York for Came 3 on Fnday
n ght With Oakland s Tm1 Hud
son (20 6) facmg Orlando Her
nandez (I2 13)
Pettllte "ho has had some of
hiS best perfor1 a ces n the post
season sa~d he s always talked to
h1mself dunng games - mostly
to remmd h1mself abo t p1tch ng
mechamcs
Obv ously I feel 1ke I get a
I ttle more locked m m playoff
games he md You try to see
the p1tches You try to see them
before you nake the pitch
Pettltte s perfor nance and a
radically reva uped New York
1 neup helped the two time
defend1ng World Ser es champ!
ons snap an e ght game losmg
streak The Yankees dended by
cr tics as over the hill champ10ns
also ended a 10 game road losmg
streak
We ve bee1 down We ve been
on a ternble skid Pettltte sa1d I
hope this will get u• gomg This IS
a b1g game for us obvwusly
We ve really been strugghng
Glenallen H ll m tlie hneup as
part ofTorre s effort to shake up a
nonbund offense broke up a
scoreless game w th an RBI sm
gle and SoJO followed w11h a
two run do 1ble as the Yankees
scored three m the Sixth
The hits by H ll and SoJO came
with two outs and mmed ately
after an mtent anal walk to strug
gling Paul 0 Ne ll who has not
had an extra base hit smce Sept
6 After the left handed 0 Ne1ll
walked nght es H1ll and SaJO
connected off nght hander Kevm
App1er
H1ll was I for 12 m the post
season before that s 1gle
0 Ne1ll s been there so 1 any
t mes n the past and come t p
w1th b g htts for them As 1 an
ager Art Howe sad We knew
he d been str ggl ng but we d d
n t want to let h1 1 beat s Gle
nalle1 d d
Torre denoted 0 Ne1ll fro n
th No 3 spot 11 the battmg
order to No 6 fo he first time all
year He also d opped t suallead
off nan Cl ucJ&lt;: Knobla ch f om
the start• g 1neup 1 oved D rek
Jeter t p a spot to leadoff and
11oved Jorge Posada up fro 11 No
7 to No 2 H ll took Knoblaucl s
spot at les gnated hitter
Pettltte vho 11 Yankees o vner
George Ste1 bre1 ner wanted to
trade to Ph Iadelph a n July 1999
before be ng talked out of t by
Torre has had some of h s best
perforn ances n the postseason
He beat Atlanta s John Sn oltz
1 0 m the p1votal Ga ne 5 of the
1996 World Scr es and also
p tched sl utout ball n the 1998
Ser cs cl ocher aga nst San D1ego
If th s ser es return to Oakland
for a declSlve fifth game Torre
sad hiS pttcher would be Pett tte
He s tough he s tough I e
doesn t get a lot of attentiOn
because you have h gh profile
people on the club Torre said
Petutte was helped by double
plays m the first and seventh

mn ngs
He survtved a strange e1ghth
mnmg play that almost aliQwed
the As back m the game W1th
two outs a runner on second and
the As down 3 0 Terrence Long
h!t a routme grounder to SoJOwho fielded the ball but caught
hiS r ght foot on hiS left shoelace
as he started to throw and fell
w thout releas ng the ball
That left rum ers on first and
thud and Mar a o R1vera
replaced Pett tte R vera got
Randy Velarde to h1t a tr cky hop
grounder that thud baseman
Scott Bros us was able to bare
I and m t me to throw out
Velarde
We may be us1 1g Velcro
tomorrow Torre sa d of SOJO s
stu nble I sa d Oh my God
when I saw him fall You don t
laugh when the ty ng runs com
mg to the plate We d dn t really
laugh at LuiS unt 1 we got out of
that mmng and then we asked
h1 n all kinds of ntereStlng ques
nons
As SOJO trotted to the bench
after the 11 n &gt;g teammates
yelled Don t fall down'
Manners 5 Whtte Sox 2
CHICAGO (AP)
Lou
Pm ella won t diVulge Seattle s
pnching plans to the tean that
led the lllaJOrs Ill sconng this sea
so 1
That approach by the Mar ners
111anager 1S working and they re
headed home to Safeco F1eld
w1th a 2 0 lead m their d1v S!On
ser es
If the Ch1cago Wh te Sox want
to av01d a sweep they ll need to
figure out how to mprove on a
3 for 23 perfor 1 ance w1th run
ners m sconng post on
They need to htt a Seattle
bullpen that s p tched 10 scoreless
mn ngs and allowed JUSt three
h ts And they need to get some
h ts out of Frat k Thomas v. ho IS
0 for 7 1 tl e fi two ga 1 es
We have a spec fJ c ga 1 e plan
I can t talk about that P n ella
sa d follo v ng W&lt; dncsday s 5 ~
v cto ry ovot the Wh te Sox vho
av raged s x r ns thts s ason
wh 1 w nn ng a 1 AL b s 95
games
Wev bee for nate to sl ut
the 1 do v You re not gong o
find better hitters
Ga 1e 3 IS 1 Seat le on Fnday
We don t want to get n a
sl gg g atch w tl the WI te
Sox I don t klow 1f t s the 11
struggl ng or were n akmg o r
pitches Alex Rodnguez sa d
Its been a I tde of both
Seattle s wm Wed esday fea
t !fed 3 I 3 h1tless mmngs by
Mar ncr rehcvers a go ahead
homer by Jay Buhner and superb
defe s ve
play
by
Mark
McLe o re
It all p ts the Wlute Sox near
a1 early x t although they d1d
have a 1llaJO league best 49 32
na k on tl e road th s season and
von fout of s x at Safeco F1eld
We ve never been m th1s sJtu
at on 0 ? gomg to a teams home
field b t we 1ave played good

baseball there Ch1cago manager
Jerry Manuel sa1d
We won 95 games and feel we
can find a way to Will three
more
Paul Abbott gave up five hits
and two runs m 5 2 3 mmngs to
wm m his first postseason appear
ance m a pro career that beg3n m
1985
Relievers Arthur Rhodes Jose
Mesa and Kazuhuo Sasal&lt;t didn t
allow a hlt the rest of the way
To tell you the truth we re not
surpmed But we also know they
could turn 1t on at any mmute
Rhodes sa1d
Abbott who began the season
m the bullpen not allowmg the
Wh1te Sox hitters to have an
advantageous count 1s cruClal
That s what they want they
want you to throw some pitches
they want to see what you have
he sa d That s what they ve done
most of the year - take a walk
get some guys on base They
make thmgs happen
So t s Important to make sure
you get ahead of them
The Wh1te Sox stranded e~ght
runners g vmg them 18 n the
first two games Chicago s 3 4 5
h1tters Thomas Maggho
Ordonez and Carlos Lee - were
a combmed 0 for 9 Wednesday
after go ng 2 for 13 1 1 the open
er
I sense they are pressmg so ne
what Manuel md
Thomas an MVP cand1date
who h t 43 homers and drove m
143 runs dunng the season came
up w1th runners at first and sec
ond m the seventh but flied out
agamst Mesa for the second out
Mesa deflected Ordonez s shot
through the box and McLe uore
made a spectacular dtv ng stop
He somehow fl1pped the ball to
Rodr guez JUS beatmg Jose
Valent n n a close play for a force
to end another Ch ago threat
Bul 1ers 400 foot blast n the
fourth off losmg p tcher M ke
Suotka gave Seattle a 3 2 lead
R ckey
Henderson
v.alked
1 ov d up on a sacr fice a d stole
third n tl e fifth H th scored
on Rodr guez s slo v roller to
th rd as Herbert P ry 1 c rd to
go to fJ st nstead of home
The Mar ners added an nsur
a1 e

n

the

1

I

wl e

Big showdown in WVIAC this week
150

Schools
Instruction
SERVICES

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NG

PARALEGA GRADED C\JRR C
UM App o eo nome s udy
A 0 dabe S
e 890 FREE
CATA OG
800 826 9228 o
B ACKSTONE SCHOO
OF
LAW PO Bo
0 49 Oepa
me AM Da as X 5 0 449

u

230

630

RENTALS

Professional

Livestock

FendS a

G

Co

JET
AEflAT ON MOTORS
Aepa ed New &amp; Aebu n so k
Ca Ao E ans
800 53 9 28

HOME FORECLOSURES $0
DOWN NO CREO T NEEDED
TAKE OVER LOW PAYMENTS
CAL NOW 800 8 0 280 ex

39 0
4X 0 3 bed com

MERCHANDISE

840

D

e

ego abe

Electrical and
Refrigeration

CHARLESTON WVa (AP)
- It would have been d ffic It
before the season to put West
V rgm a
Un vers ty Tech s
footba ll tea 1 o th s e level
as Sl cpherd s
Sh pherd af er all I d been
p eked by West V rg n a Con
C ence coacl1es to v
ts
fo rtl stra g t I g e t tie
WVU Te I a )Car ago we1
1 10 yea ago a d snapp d a
3? ga 1e los &gt;g s t ak n ts
sea on ti ale Th
Galle
Bears have von th e tr ght
ga es for the first
t
at
1 ast a de ad
That • a t" t w st n t
co ch M k Spr gston a1d
I s d ffere
Ou k ds have
played well
The par ty n the leag e
tl s y ar
b I evable Tl er
are a nu bcr of tea 1s that ca
Vll 1t Shcpher I 1 a&gt; o be b at
for a 1ybo iy to v n t
Tech (3 ' WVIAC 1 0) vII
get that I c vi
Sl p
1 e rd (3 I I 0)
o 1 s to
M o , tgo
y o S t rd 1 It
ark tl fJ t I o
o t s f
tl year forTe I
•

There a e s g
I at Shep
herds do 1 nance could be
u der attack Th
Ran s
squeaked bv Co co d a I one
?4 2? bst week
If anythmg the problen s he
v. tl n Shepherds def 1 se
Co cords Tyler Hull hre v fo
three tot chdo v" n the fin I
s ve
1 tes
nd Shepherd
vo
only bee se Cot cord
fa led o
t vo
xt a po t
att~

Count) H1gh JU&gt;l 6 n
ago
on&gt;laugl t I kel)
Tl
fran
bot! oft
occ
Sl cph i
1 ar b k
Go do
p obably ' 11
T I fit H 11 g
f 0
I) levo
S
0 d
tl

onths

w11
nscs

Joel
g VC
h lp
vi o
II n

1pts

If Sl pie J I ad tro bl w th
1-1 II vho co pie d 78 of
47 pass s for 343 y ds ~ t
ccrta Iy w 11 ha
a to gl
t ' c "' tl T&lt;eh s Er Sm tl
I a 34 ?7 v n o cr Fa
1 01 t State S
rday S th
?~ of 50 pass s for
a d tl ec to ch
also o d o
9

s
ha

s

k
t I

fc I

Jus go to
g
on
lc
xt
c tr
ga
d a d S 1th vl o
g a i tat d tro l I e ll to

r over
to v 1

st
t

E

ga

c

tl s d
TI at otl i Sl p 1crd a d s
S 1th I as
t
E
th 0 v
pt 0 s h s

v ar
No 1
D v Slon II
total offe1 sc
th 33? y rds

1

McLe 1 o e dre a two out valk
Raul Ibanez s ngled and M ke
Ca ero 1 s ogled Cameron for
edy of tl e Wh te Sox had two
k y I s a1d a stole base 1
G e 1
Tbe Whtte Sox got consecut ve
dot bles fro 11 the r fi st t vo I t
tees Ray Durhan and Valent n
but aga n th e b1g h tters behind
the 11 cotldn t produce
W th Vale mn at third after a
steal Tho nas fl1cd out After
Ordonez walked Abbott got Lee
o a popup and Paul Kon rko on
a short co 1ebacker Abbott threw
out K01 erko even after fall ng
do v1 field ng t
I feel bad
because I m lettmg a lot of people
do vn Thomas S&gt;~d

0

vi

has

t

~

In o h
g
S t da\
h
o t State (1 3
l) s at
Gle1 II S ate (? 3 1 ) West
L l tv (3 I
) s at Con
or I ? 3 ( )
t West V J
g
W I ya ( 4 0 1)
at
W st V r~
Si t ( 4
1)

•

�.

..

•

•Thursday, October 5

ThuniCiay, October 5, 2000

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

-

........,.........
.....
..., ........
.................,.

t

2000

1o-coll

7

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSVRANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189

hldtlla••r

Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264
.

Racine fire Dept.
Chicr&lt;en BBQ

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

Sunday- October 8th
Serving Begins at 11:00 a.m.

Star Mill Park Board
Bake Sale
Sat. Oct. 7th in front of
Home National Bank
Racine

PHILLIP
ALDER

Replacement
Windows

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Reinodell ng
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

Certalnteed,
Simington
Uletlme Warntnty
local Contractor

949-4900

Reasonable Prices
FREE Estimates

16" 3-item pizza

740-992-1671

$8.99

7/22/TFN

Aerotiics Class
Royal Oak Resort
.Beginning Tues. Oct. 1Oth

The CountrY
Can.dle ShoP

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

6:30pm $3 .00 class
Classes eve Tues &amp; Thur.

11

State Route 7,

tl!e're bark to mu

. regular ltoun''

Tuppers Plains
Certilie~

Chicken &amp; Rib BBQ
Sunday- October Bth
· Syracuse Village Hall
Serving starts at 11 am $4.50
Sponsored by Syracuse VFD

- Tues-Frl 10-6
Sat. 10.4
• Candle making
supplies
• Wooden crafts
·Baskets

in Meigs,

Athens and

Washington Counties.
Your Quality 24-Hou~
Childcare Services
740-667-6329

740-992-4559
9/1/00 1 mo pd

Public Notice
Public Notice
NOTICE OF ROAD CLOSING to withdraw the above
collateral prior to sale.
(TEMPORARY),
Further, The Farmers Bank
PORTION OF SALEM
Rutland, Ohio
and Savings Company
SCHOOL LOT ROAD
Mums, Indian
reserves the right to reject
(MEIGS COUNTY HOAD
any or all bids submitted .
N0.1)
•APt,les. APPle
The above described
LOCATED IN
NORTHWESTERN MEIGS collateral will be sold "as isGift Items. Subs.
where "IS",
with
no
COUNTY, OHIO,
em:ade Salf1:e. Ice Cream, Amllsf
AUTHORIZEO BY OFFICE expressed or implied
warranty
given.
Please
call
OF THE MEIGS COUNTY,
II'B:olot!na, Summer Sausal!e,
for an appointment to view ,
OHIO, ENGINEER,
142-1405
or Inspect the collateral
POMEROY, OHIO
PUBLIC NOTICE Is herein prior to day of sale. •
M-F 10-7 Sai 10-6 Sun' Closed
For further Information,
given that TEXAS EASTERN
contact Sheila Buchanan at
TRANSMISSION
CORPORAT I 0 N,
·by 992·2136.
~rr===============il
authorization contained In (1 O) 4, 5, 6, 3 tc
Utility Permit No. 00·15
dated August 9 , 2000,
· Public Notice
laouad by tho Office of the
Meigs County Engineer,
PUBLIC NOTICE
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
must
A
viewing
of McKelvey
undertake certain natural

6Qci0

t

·
t

9:00.a.m. with the hearing ~·
portion of Salem School Lot at
to be at 10:00 a.m. in the
Road (County Road No. 1) Commissioner's off tee for ·
In the vicinity of 30531 the purpose of closing the' !
Salem School Lot Road In remaining portion of the :

work across and beneath a

northwestern Meigs County,
Ohio. The maintenance
work will necessitate the
closing of a portion of the
aforementioned County
Road from 7:00 a.m. ,

street.

for two consecutive weeks
In a newspaper of neneral
circulation In Meigs County,

Ohio. ·
OFFICE OF THE MEIGS
COUNTY ENGINEER
Robert H. Eason, P.E. P.S.
34110

Fa/~

grounds Road

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(9) 28, (10 5
Public Notice
on . Satu.rday, October 7,
2000, at 10:00 a.m., a public

sale will be held at 211 West

Second Street, Pomeroy,
Ohlo 1 The Farmers's Bank
and
Savings
Company
extended
parking
lot
(beside
Powell 's
Super
Valu), to sell for cash the
following collateral:

- Sales Representa(ive

Public Notice

Larry Schey

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
In Re: Change of Name of
Teena Ranee McKnight to ·
Teena Ranee Rose.

Case No. 30800
NOTICE OF HEARING ON
CHANGE OF NAME •
Applicant hereby gives

FOR mORE InfO. PlEASE CAll

740-992-1506

•'

1:~

Hig~ 81.

SECURITY '

Dry

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

S~lf-Storage
33795 HilAnd Rd.

Change pf Name in the
Probate Court of Meigs

Counly. Ohio , requesting

the change of name of
Teena Ranee McKnight to
Teena Ranee Rose.
The hearing on the

application will be hold on

the 6 day of November, 2000

at 1:30 p.m. In the Probate
County of Meigs County,

•

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Phone (740) 593-6671

flllll

Teena Ranee McKnl.ght
Applicants Signature

Company,

(10) 5

CLA.SSIFIED...

P.O. Box 214
Address
. T.P., Ohio 45783 ,
• Cily, State, Zip

.

'
( THE EA.SY WA.Y TO SUO~
'

F.:Jtland, Ohio

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

!Zl

·(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916 -

Advertise in
this space for
. $25 per
month.
P/8 CONTRACTORS, INC.
CONC RETE
1\.1 . \~0NRY

f!ACKIIUI·

DECORATION ...

S~RVICES

BOflCAI' SFRVICES
Residential, Commercial
Free Estimates
Fully Insured
Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio

(740) 985-3948

INSULATION ..

fiND IT ALL IN THE CLASSIFIED$!

Non

1'1'. R'l'. 248

740 992 5232
~

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

1URNPIKE
OF

Dump Tnu:k DeUvcry
Meta:• and Oallla Coaatie•
cau a: te.ve Meteqe

GALLIPOLIS

992-6142 or
Toll-Free 1-877-604·735.

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

Ball Logging &amp;
Firewood
35215 Ban Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

•AK953

CHES'I'IR

West

East

•AJ9 .73
• 64z

• 10 8. 2
• K J 8 5

"W.elp"

WINTER
STORAGE
SPACE
AVAILABLE

Call Us. First Or We Both Lose!
Ask For Mr. Ford
Over 30 Year Experience

1-800-272-5179or446-9800
Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

Meigs'County ·
Fairgrounds .
Oct. I, 2000 ·Apr. 1, 2001
CALL FOR MORE
INFORMATION

OFFICE EXPRESS
BUSINESS SERVICES
All Types of Business

Support Services

[1401 661-3224
1-800-828-0212

949-2033

WANTED

LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take the pain out
of painting-Let me db it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6 p.m. ·
Leave Message .
· Aher 6 pm-740-985-4180

BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)
All vertical blinds ore
made lo oa•der nt our

location

UPTO 70% OFF

INC.

Standing ,timber large
. or· small tracks. Top
prices paid also.
Dozer work.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIOENTI~L
FREfi ESTIMATES

Free Estimates
CnU T&amp;l{ Logging
after 8:00pm
740-992-5050
(Randy )
oo 1 mo. 4

The CRAFTY.

BISSELL BUILD.ERS

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

11100

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Blngq On
Thursdays
AT 8:30P.M.
Main€(
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per gal¥
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
. Progressive top line.
Lie. # 00-50 111101tt"

.

VINYL REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
, ·Any Sin Double Hung-

$229.00*
· • Free lnstallallon
' Free In Home Estimates
Call for Further Details.

QUIILITY WinDOW

svsnms, me-.

992-4119
1-800-291-5600
VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
ON STATE ROUTE 33 6
MILES NORTH OF
POMEROY, OHIO, AT
COUNTY ROAD 1B

•N•w'*m
• lltc!rkal Plunololng
•Vl•t

SHUX-- I WANTED HIM.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomero , Ohio 45769

SMITH'S COfiSTROCTIOfi
• New Homes
• Garages
• Siding

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

,Need it done, give us a call
FREE ESTiMATES
Creat Priced on New Homes

992-2753

'
'

992-1101
a

13 1 mo d

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Autlwrized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 St. Rt. 7 South

Coolville, OH 45723

74D-a7.0383

s~rvice mowers,
chalnsaws, tillers,
generators , snowblowers,
weedeaters, pick-up and
delivery available on
requeat.

Open MQn-Frl 8-6; Sal. 9-4'
Sun. Cloaod
Phone 740-949-2804
Owner ..Jim Pickens

Mechanic· Bill Jonea
Parts Mor -Tamra Picken•

~@::,WICK'S.
HAOLIMG and
EXCAVATIMG
Hauling • Limestone •
Gravel • Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Servii8S

•
10- .S

•

~

'
•'

(740) 992-3470

UP 1~

r

~

U':i\f.t-1
C.EO OF n\l~
C.OM.PI-Jol'(lf T~ONE. Ti-4.1t-10
l WOt-1'\
.
1\':i ~roTI~M. ~

OKP..Y, GUYS,
LET'S
REHEARSE!

..,

AND 11\Y f(&gt;..\\\f.i!.,
Wi-4.0 W(&gt;..~
•
C.fO &amp;.fORE. f'\t:. 1 I'JV'..Jl-\.!'.1''

Tol£.U:n::

IT

.

I E1Ti-4.EIZ..i

EXCUSE 1'\E, BUT CAN

WE HAVE A LITTL.E.
ENTHU,IAfol'l HERE 7
WE'RE NE\/ER ~N&lt;;. TO
RoCKET TO ~E TOP
OF THE CHARTS WI~
TH-.T ATTITUDE'

1r---

:

,.
'' PEANUTS

~------------~~

.
'

IF I WE~E IN CHARGE
OF THE WORLD, I'D
~~~E~VER'&lt;THIN6'

THAT WOULDN'T 6E EASV ..
W~ERE WOULD '(OU START ?

I

I D START WITH '{OU!

6 Month
Membership $100 '
plus tax
with this ad
Ravenswood, WV

Advertise
your business
'

for as low as 25
.one

1 Freahwater
21 onv.. porpoise
Holmea
25 Moot by chance 2 1492 ship
3 Aetreaa
(2 wdt.l
Deboroh28 Roof edgoa
4 Workere'assn.
32 Notched, llko
5 Guido's high
note
33 Not fresh
34 Bundle maker
6 Rat, e.g.
L!..I~~:.J..:.
7 --earand ...
35 Family car
8 Court divider 10 "Cat on-36 Forw1nl
9 Turn the page
Tin Roof"
37 Ferocious
(abbr.)
11 Depend (on)
39 'cruel rotgn
•

_......

8 7 4

Last year, Eddie Kantar put out
two excellent books: "Modem
Bridge Defense" and" Advanced
Bridge Defense" (Master Point
Press). Now, through the same
publisher, both h~ve been re!eased
on CO-ROMs. The basic text is
identical, yet while working out
the answers, you cannot peek at
the fuJI deal. The first covers
defensive basics, so is at an intermediate level. (There's no such
thing as beginners' defense.) The
second concentrates primarily on
counting, planning and inferences
-- Iaugher stuff.
Here is a deal from the former
disk. Look only at the West and
North hands. Against three notrump, ~ou lead the spade seven:
queen, eight, six. Declarer calls
for the diamond I 0: eight, seven,
king . What do you do now 0
East cannot win trick one, so
how should he signal? This is
Kantar's rule: If dummy wins
trick one with the ace or Ring,
third hand signals attitude, whereas if dummy wins with the queen
or lower, third hand gives count.
So, East's spade eight is 'a count
card, showing two or four. If East
had only two, South would have
begun with .K-10-x-x and would
have run trick one around to his
hand. So, East began with four
spades. Put your spade ace onto
the table to drop declarer's king,
t]len run the rest of the suit for one
down.
I couldn't help thinking, using
Kantar's rule, that it was lucky
that dummy didn't have the spade
king and declarer the queen.
The CO-ROMs cost $56.90
each, including shipping (compared with $22.95 each for the
books) . Order from Baron Barclay Bridge Supplies at (800)
274-2221.

To get a current weather
report, check the

IRON CITY GYM •

1014 1 mo.

DOWN

BY l'HILLIP ALDER

•

We

304•273-0036

18 Germ•n one
20 Ntullcal rope

From the book

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

.

DEPOYS AG
PARTS

1 O"ker
7 To tome ••tent .a Of medicine
12 wct•-1
51 so- part
13 Motet
54 LJ&amp;nctocorotlon
property
14 u.ss ktn&lt;t on15 Sudden rolcl . 541 Type of tdtolor
18 Actor Pet..-- 57 Lobo
I~~,;,

Opening lead: • 7

DUTY

Advertise in
·this space for
$100 per
month.

740-985-3831

•

FER t WEEKS' .JURY "'"

22 yr•. Local

1101100 1 mo. nd.

· • Western Pride 12% Sweet feed - 15.251 50 lbs.
• 12% Cattle feed 56.7 51100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog food 56.75/50 lbs.
• fall fertilizers

Answer. to Prevloua Puzzle

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
South West North East
I NT
Pass 3 NT
AU pass

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

Please V'N#023477

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

•

• RDDII';j L GulltrS
o!Jog &amp; Painting
• Pat I. Porch Dtcks
Free Estimates

29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45n1
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM- 8 PM

"Ahead in Service"

41 For
« Tom - Jlft'Y
45 Cushion

ACROSS

•

•

t ·AQ.J78

HILL'S
·' SELF STORACE

SHHDE RIUER HG SERUICE

• 8 2

• QJ 6
• K 6
• A Q 9'

• Room ad4ilfono LR.....tohnt

Featuring ~o Brlggo &amp;
Stratton trained
mechonlco

K 53
10 2

South

CARPENTER SERVICE

*No Dealers or Contractors

SELLERS CONSTRUCTION

•

YOUNG'S

HEAP Voucben accepted for
Meip a: G.Uia Countlet

IIH~-00

• Q 5
• 10 7 3
• 10 9 4

7

I

35537 St Rt 7 North

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • Plus, Inc

located at Pomeroy.
Teena Ranee McKnight
Typed or Printed Name

,

17 Swlaa rlv•

BAUMLUMBER

Pomeroy, Ohio
7

PRODUCTS

Protect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
collections, legal papers, investment rec9rds, photo
albums, cameras, household inventory and
sentimental items will be safe.
For more information·call

notice to all i nterested
parties that the applicant

PS,

Pomeroy, Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at this sale, and

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle

Power
Windows, Cruise, Remote
Mirrors.
The Farmers Bank and

Savings

1916 ford Uon
mg Togota mRZ
1989 Cadillac fleetwood
1990 ford Thunderbird
1990 ford nerostll' Uon
1992 ford Explorer
• 1993ford Taurus
1994 ford Ranger P/U

992-5479

anend.
(10) 5, 12, 2TC

1995 Ford F150 4x4 Truck
1FYEF14Y6SLB58127
PB,

Cellular.
Jeff Warner Ins.

Anyone who Is

has flied an App"catlon lor

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE Is hereby given that

4-Spaed,

1

..AiliiEL

Interested In the closing of
th\8 street Is welcome to

Monday, October 9, 2000
until 5:00 p.m., Tuesday,
October 10, 2000.
This Public Notice shall
be published once a week

now PARTinG OUT

t

Racine Pizza Express

Street In L.e~anon Township
will be held on October 16,

I

NEA Crossword Puzzle

CAU. OUI OffiCI II "2-2155

gat pipeline maintenance

•

LEYOOP

IULUTII IOARD
1

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

l

'

Sentinel

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created !rom quotalions by famous people, past and
present. Each letter in the cipher stilnds for anottl8r.
Today's clue: Y equals L

'SLP

CVBBGPBR

PBPOSPI

ZLGOL

VR X G BG EF
VEl • EM

VBP

EMS

TP· S

OVE

RVT

SM

F'P E G K R :

NKBSLPB.'

'~:!:~:~'

cooperation you now need can be
Friday, Oct. 6, 2000
You are apt to achieve your swayed lo your cause. Stay on
' greatest successes in the year message.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
. : ahead at the very times when you
19)
Concentrate all your efforts ··
may feel everything is going
: against you. The lesson to learn is . today on an area that promises
material returns. Substantial
: never give up .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) The financial rewards can be gar.exa mple you set today will act as nered. so it behoov«s you to focus
.an eye-opener to a disagreeable in this realm .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
:old friend on ho:.V to look for that
:which is good in people instead of · Don't be hesilant to take the .
:dwelling on that which is bad. Get reigns today in a social involve•a jump on life by understanding ment with your friends. You !lave
·the influences that' ll govern you the leadership .abilities to steer
:in the year ahead. Send for your your companions through a testy
:Astro-Graph predictions by mail- situation.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) A
:ing $2 , to Astro-Graph, c/o this
grateful
friend might be trying to
:newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Mur;ray Hill Station, New York, NY find a way to repay you today for
: I0156. Be sure to state your an old favor you did for him or
her. Be a gracious receiver of
·Zodiac sign .
: SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. .22) whatever gesture is made.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
:Keep your mind riveted on the
Use
your analytical attributes
:end results you desire, and it will
'help you overcome any obstacles today to make sure you do not
,you encounte r today that may overlook any personal advantages
'temporarily serve to impede your you can gamer in situations that
have escaped detection of others ..
progre''·
SAGITTARIUS (Nov .. 23-Dec. The benefits are there .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
2'1) When y'ou pr~scnt your case
1
'today. 'if you cmphu&gt;ize the facts It 's your nature to give more than
anu not the frill&gt;. &gt;Omeone whose is asked of you, but don't feel

JVE

0

Rearrange

WOlD

ldlted

~r ClAY I. POllAN

l•tt•ra of th•

four Krombled words below to farm four 1lmplli word1.

PRIPEZ

I I' I I· I

I
2

WORNE
3

1111

p RA T M

~~

"It's okay (o think about being
a politician ," the dad told his son .
"but remember, governmenls are
known to leak - - - - the - - - "

I

1 1 1

I

[..:~i-1 ~r: -~-,U~r-E=- I,. . . . . jiE)

t;:~--,,.,-TosrsTj--1.:0

.

_
~
'---'---JI..-...L...-1---l~

---r.-1

t, -

.;.,O

...-L..-J.-..1.-.L._..__--'·

@

0

Complete "the chucUe

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS 1
IN THESF 'QUARES .
UNSCRAMBlE tEllERS

FOR ANSWER

~teq

by filling lr1 the miaiag ..ards
you de¥1!JioP from step No. 3 below

I' I' I"

I I I I

SCRAM-lEiS ANSWERS

,,

I'

I'

I I I
.

Quench - Borax - Peppy · ReiJSIJ PRICE

My frugal aunt ta.ught me how to spend my money
. wisely . She sa:d that the quality is remembered long af·
ter you forget the PRICE

.

OCTOBER 5 I:;

Debale (Live) (CC)

obligated to make concessions to
anyone if your better judgment
warns yotl thai you won't be given parity in return.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) A
pasl negative experience has
taught you a valuable lesson
which can now be applied in a
positive manner. You'll have all
the right answers and make all the
right moves today.
CANCER (June 21-Julv 22) It
will be smart today to keep an
ambitious un:Iertaking under your
hal. Do what yo u can not 10
expose your intenti ons until
you've had ample time to get
them in place and working for .
you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A relati onship that is tl1l&amp; ch too importalll to be ignored must be given
priority treatmenl loday. Be sure
to include your friend in any
social arrangements you make at
this time.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
You don't have to do anything in
a flamboyant manner today to get
noticed by your contemporaries.
It'll be your effectiveness that
wins you their respect and admiration .

YKIZGF

co© 1\JUlA- ~ t--l.----trs· .....

~'Your

-----~w~-·

NV B

CPPSLMJPE
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The most beautiful thing in the world is of course
the world ltsaH."- Wallace Stevens
'
'

ITHURSDAY
'·

' S LKR

(CC)

�.

..

•

•Thursday, October 5

ThuniCiay, October 5, 2000

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

-

........,.........
.....
..., ........
.................,.

t

2000

1o-coll

7

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSVRANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189

hldtlla••r

Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264
.

Racine fire Dept.
Chicr&lt;en BBQ

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

Sunday- October 8th
Serving Begins at 11:00 a.m.

Star Mill Park Board
Bake Sale
Sat. Oct. 7th in front of
Home National Bank
Racine

PHILLIP
ALDER

Replacement
Windows

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Reinodell ng
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

Certalnteed,
Simington
Uletlme Warntnty
local Contractor

949-4900

Reasonable Prices
FREE Estimates

16" 3-item pizza

740-992-1671

$8.99

7/22/TFN

Aerotiics Class
Royal Oak Resort
.Beginning Tues. Oct. 1Oth

The CountrY
Can.dle ShoP

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

6:30pm $3 .00 class
Classes eve Tues &amp; Thur.

11

State Route 7,

tl!e're bark to mu

. regular ltoun''

Tuppers Plains
Certilie~

Chicken &amp; Rib BBQ
Sunday- October Bth
· Syracuse Village Hall
Serving starts at 11 am $4.50
Sponsored by Syracuse VFD

- Tues-Frl 10-6
Sat. 10.4
• Candle making
supplies
• Wooden crafts
·Baskets

in Meigs,

Athens and

Washington Counties.
Your Quality 24-Hou~
Childcare Services
740-667-6329

740-992-4559
9/1/00 1 mo pd

Public Notice
Public Notice
NOTICE OF ROAD CLOSING to withdraw the above
collateral prior to sale.
(TEMPORARY),
Further, The Farmers Bank
PORTION OF SALEM
Rutland, Ohio
and Savings Company
SCHOOL LOT ROAD
Mums, Indian
reserves the right to reject
(MEIGS COUNTY HOAD
any or all bids submitted .
N0.1)
•APt,les. APPle
The above described
LOCATED IN
NORTHWESTERN MEIGS collateral will be sold "as isGift Items. Subs.
where "IS",
with
no
COUNTY, OHIO,
em:ade Salf1:e. Ice Cream, Amllsf
AUTHORIZEO BY OFFICE expressed or implied
warranty
given.
Please
call
OF THE MEIGS COUNTY,
II'B:olot!na, Summer Sausal!e,
for an appointment to view ,
OHIO, ENGINEER,
142-1405
or Inspect the collateral
POMEROY, OHIO
PUBLIC NOTICE Is herein prior to day of sale. •
M-F 10-7 Sai 10-6 Sun' Closed
For further Information,
given that TEXAS EASTERN
contact Sheila Buchanan at
TRANSMISSION
CORPORAT I 0 N,
·by 992·2136.
~rr===============il
authorization contained In (1 O) 4, 5, 6, 3 tc
Utility Permit No. 00·15
dated August 9 , 2000,
· Public Notice
laouad by tho Office of the
Meigs County Engineer,
PUBLIC NOTICE
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
must
A
viewing
of McKelvey
undertake certain natural

6Qci0

t

·
t

9:00.a.m. with the hearing ~·
portion of Salem School Lot at
to be at 10:00 a.m. in the
Road (County Road No. 1) Commissioner's off tee for ·
In the vicinity of 30531 the purpose of closing the' !
Salem School Lot Road In remaining portion of the :

work across and beneath a

northwestern Meigs County,
Ohio. The maintenance
work will necessitate the
closing of a portion of the
aforementioned County
Road from 7:00 a.m. ,

street.

for two consecutive weeks
In a newspaper of neneral
circulation In Meigs County,

Ohio. ·
OFFICE OF THE MEIGS
COUNTY ENGINEER
Robert H. Eason, P.E. P.S.
34110

Fa/~

grounds Road

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(9) 28, (10 5
Public Notice
on . Satu.rday, October 7,
2000, at 10:00 a.m., a public

sale will be held at 211 West

Second Street, Pomeroy,
Ohlo 1 The Farmers's Bank
and
Savings
Company
extended
parking
lot
(beside
Powell 's
Super
Valu), to sell for cash the
following collateral:

- Sales Representa(ive

Public Notice

Larry Schey

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
In Re: Change of Name of
Teena Ranee McKnight to ·
Teena Ranee Rose.

Case No. 30800
NOTICE OF HEARING ON
CHANGE OF NAME •
Applicant hereby gives

FOR mORE InfO. PlEASE CAll

740-992-1506

•'

1:~

Hig~ 81.

SECURITY '

Dry

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

S~lf-Storage
33795 HilAnd Rd.

Change pf Name in the
Probate Court of Meigs

Counly. Ohio , requesting

the change of name of
Teena Ranee McKnight to
Teena Ranee Rose.
The hearing on the

application will be hold on

the 6 day of November, 2000

at 1:30 p.m. In the Probate
County of Meigs County,

•

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Phone (740) 593-6671

flllll

Teena Ranee McKnl.ght
Applicants Signature

Company,

(10) 5

CLA.SSIFIED...

P.O. Box 214
Address
. T.P., Ohio 45783 ,
• Cily, State, Zip

.

'
( THE EA.SY WA.Y TO SUO~
'

F.:Jtland, Ohio

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

!Zl

·(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916 -

Advertise in
this space for
. $25 per
month.
P/8 CONTRACTORS, INC.
CONC RETE
1\.1 . \~0NRY

f!ACKIIUI·

DECORATION ...

S~RVICES

BOflCAI' SFRVICES
Residential, Commercial
Free Estimates
Fully Insured
Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio

(740) 985-3948

INSULATION ..

fiND IT ALL IN THE CLASSIFIED$!

Non

1'1'. R'l'. 248

740 992 5232
~

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

1URNPIKE
OF

Dump Tnu:k DeUvcry
Meta:• and Oallla Coaatie•
cau a: te.ve Meteqe

GALLIPOLIS

992-6142 or
Toll-Free 1-877-604·735.

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

Ball Logging &amp;
Firewood
35215 Ban Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

•AK953

CHES'I'IR

West

East

•AJ9 .73
• 64z

• 10 8. 2
• K J 8 5

"W.elp"

WINTER
STORAGE
SPACE
AVAILABLE

Call Us. First Or We Both Lose!
Ask For Mr. Ford
Over 30 Year Experience

1-800-272-5179or446-9800
Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

Meigs'County ·
Fairgrounds .
Oct. I, 2000 ·Apr. 1, 2001
CALL FOR MORE
INFORMATION

OFFICE EXPRESS
BUSINESS SERVICES
All Types of Business

Support Services

[1401 661-3224
1-800-828-0212

949-2033

WANTED

LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take the pain out
of painting-Let me db it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6 p.m. ·
Leave Message .
· Aher 6 pm-740-985-4180

BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)
All vertical blinds ore
made lo oa•der nt our

location

UPTO 70% OFF

INC.

Standing ,timber large
. or· small tracks. Top
prices paid also.
Dozer work.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIOENTI~L
FREfi ESTIMATES

Free Estimates
CnU T&amp;l{ Logging
after 8:00pm
740-992-5050
(Randy )
oo 1 mo. 4

The CRAFTY.

BISSELL BUILD.ERS

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

11100

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Blngq On
Thursdays
AT 8:30P.M.
Main€(
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per gal¥
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
. Progressive top line.
Lie. # 00-50 111101tt"

.

VINYL REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
, ·Any Sin Double Hung-

$229.00*
· • Free lnstallallon
' Free In Home Estimates
Call for Further Details.

QUIILITY WinDOW

svsnms, me-.

992-4119
1-800-291-5600
VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
ON STATE ROUTE 33 6
MILES NORTH OF
POMEROY, OHIO, AT
COUNTY ROAD 1B

•N•w'*m
• lltc!rkal Plunololng
•Vl•t

SHUX-- I WANTED HIM.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomero , Ohio 45769

SMITH'S COfiSTROCTIOfi
• New Homes
• Garages
• Siding

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

,Need it done, give us a call
FREE ESTiMATES
Creat Priced on New Homes

992-2753

'
'

992-1101
a

13 1 mo d

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Autlwrized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 St. Rt. 7 South

Coolville, OH 45723

74D-a7.0383

s~rvice mowers,
chalnsaws, tillers,
generators , snowblowers,
weedeaters, pick-up and
delivery available on
requeat.

Open MQn-Frl 8-6; Sal. 9-4'
Sun. Cloaod
Phone 740-949-2804
Owner ..Jim Pickens

Mechanic· Bill Jonea
Parts Mor -Tamra Picken•

~@::,WICK'S.
HAOLIMG and
EXCAVATIMG
Hauling • Limestone •
Gravel • Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Servii8S

•
10- .S

•

~

'
•'

(740) 992-3470

UP 1~

r

~

U':i\f.t-1
C.EO OF n\l~
C.OM.PI-Jol'(lf T~ONE. Ti-4.1t-10
l WOt-1'\
.
1\':i ~roTI~M. ~

OKP..Y, GUYS,
LET'S
REHEARSE!

..,

AND 11\Y f(&gt;..\\\f.i!.,
Wi-4.0 W(&gt;..~
•
C.fO &amp;.fORE. f'\t:. 1 I'JV'..Jl-\.!'.1''

Tol£.U:n::

IT

.

I E1Ti-4.EIZ..i

EXCUSE 1'\E, BUT CAN

WE HAVE A LITTL.E.
ENTHU,IAfol'l HERE 7
WE'RE NE\/ER ~N&lt;;. TO
RoCKET TO ~E TOP
OF THE CHARTS WI~
TH-.T ATTITUDE'

1r---

:

,.
'' PEANUTS

~------------~~

.
'

IF I WE~E IN CHARGE
OF THE WORLD, I'D
~~~E~VER'&lt;THIN6'

THAT WOULDN'T 6E EASV ..
W~ERE WOULD '(OU START ?

I

I D START WITH '{OU!

6 Month
Membership $100 '
plus tax
with this ad
Ravenswood, WV

Advertise
your business
'

for as low as 25
.one

1 Freahwater
21 onv.. porpoise
Holmea
25 Moot by chance 2 1492 ship
3 Aetreaa
(2 wdt.l
Deboroh28 Roof edgoa
4 Workere'assn.
32 Notched, llko
5 Guido's high
note
33 Not fresh
34 Bundle maker
6 Rat, e.g.
L!..I~~:.J..:.
7 --earand ...
35 Family car
8 Court divider 10 "Cat on-36 Forw1nl
9 Turn the page
Tin Roof"
37 Ferocious
(abbr.)
11 Depend (on)
39 'cruel rotgn
•

_......

8 7 4

Last year, Eddie Kantar put out
two excellent books: "Modem
Bridge Defense" and" Advanced
Bridge Defense" (Master Point
Press). Now, through the same
publisher, both h~ve been re!eased
on CO-ROMs. The basic text is
identical, yet while working out
the answers, you cannot peek at
the fuJI deal. The first covers
defensive basics, so is at an intermediate level. (There's no such
thing as beginners' defense.) The
second concentrates primarily on
counting, planning and inferences
-- Iaugher stuff.
Here is a deal from the former
disk. Look only at the West and
North hands. Against three notrump, ~ou lead the spade seven:
queen, eight, six. Declarer calls
for the diamond I 0: eight, seven,
king . What do you do now 0
East cannot win trick one, so
how should he signal? This is
Kantar's rule: If dummy wins
trick one with the ace or Ring,
third hand signals attitude, whereas if dummy wins with the queen
or lower, third hand gives count.
So, East's spade eight is 'a count
card, showing two or four. If East
had only two, South would have
begun with .K-10-x-x and would
have run trick one around to his
hand. So, East began with four
spades. Put your spade ace onto
the table to drop declarer's king,
t]len run the rest of the suit for one
down.
I couldn't help thinking, using
Kantar's rule, that it was lucky
that dummy didn't have the spade
king and declarer the queen.
The CO-ROMs cost $56.90
each, including shipping (compared with $22.95 each for the
books) . Order from Baron Barclay Bridge Supplies at (800)
274-2221.

To get a current weather
report, check the

IRON CITY GYM •

1014 1 mo.

DOWN

BY l'HILLIP ALDER

•

We

304•273-0036

18 Germ•n one
20 Ntullcal rope

From the book

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

.

DEPOYS AG
PARTS

1 O"ker
7 To tome ••tent .a Of medicine
12 wct•-1
51 so- part
13 Motet
54 LJ&amp;nctocorotlon
property
14 u.ss ktn&lt;t on15 Sudden rolcl . 541 Type of tdtolor
18 Actor Pet..-- 57 Lobo
I~~,;,

Opening lead: • 7

DUTY

Advertise in
·this space for
$100 per
month.

740-985-3831

•

FER t WEEKS' .JURY "'"

22 yr•. Local

1101100 1 mo. nd.

· • Western Pride 12% Sweet feed - 15.251 50 lbs.
• 12% Cattle feed 56.7 51100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog food 56.75/50 lbs.
• fall fertilizers

Answer. to Prevloua Puzzle

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
South West North East
I NT
Pass 3 NT
AU pass

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

Please V'N#023477

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

•

• RDDII';j L GulltrS
o!Jog &amp; Painting
• Pat I. Porch Dtcks
Free Estimates

29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45n1
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM- 8 PM

"Ahead in Service"

41 For
« Tom - Jlft'Y
45 Cushion

ACROSS

•

•

t ·AQ.J78

HILL'S
·' SELF STORACE

SHHDE RIUER HG SERUICE

• 8 2

• QJ 6
• K 6
• A Q 9'

• Room ad4ilfono LR.....tohnt

Featuring ~o Brlggo &amp;
Stratton trained
mechonlco

K 53
10 2

South

CARPENTER SERVICE

*No Dealers or Contractors

SELLERS CONSTRUCTION

•

YOUNG'S

HEAP Voucben accepted for
Meip a: G.Uia Countlet

IIH~-00

• Q 5
• 10 7 3
• 10 9 4

7

I

35537 St Rt 7 North

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • Plus, Inc

located at Pomeroy.
Teena Ranee McKnight
Typed or Printed Name

,

17 Swlaa rlv•

BAUMLUMBER

Pomeroy, Ohio
7

PRODUCTS

Protect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
collections, legal papers, investment rec9rds, photo
albums, cameras, household inventory and
sentimental items will be safe.
For more information·call

notice to all i nterested
parties that the applicant

PS,

Pomeroy, Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at this sale, and

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle

Power
Windows, Cruise, Remote
Mirrors.
The Farmers Bank and

Savings

1916 ford Uon
mg Togota mRZ
1989 Cadillac fleetwood
1990 ford Thunderbird
1990 ford nerostll' Uon
1992 ford Explorer
• 1993ford Taurus
1994 ford Ranger P/U

992-5479

anend.
(10) 5, 12, 2TC

1995 Ford F150 4x4 Truck
1FYEF14Y6SLB58127
PB,

Cellular.
Jeff Warner Ins.

Anyone who Is

has flied an App"catlon lor

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE Is hereby given that

4-Spaed,

1

..AiliiEL

Interested In the closing of
th\8 street Is welcome to

Monday, October 9, 2000
until 5:00 p.m., Tuesday,
October 10, 2000.
This Public Notice shall
be published once a week

now PARTinG OUT

t

Racine Pizza Express

Street In L.e~anon Township
will be held on October 16,

I

NEA Crossword Puzzle

CAU. OUI OffiCI II "2-2155

gat pipeline maintenance

•

LEYOOP

IULUTII IOARD
1

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

l

'

Sentinel

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created !rom quotalions by famous people, past and
present. Each letter in the cipher stilnds for anottl8r.
Today's clue: Y equals L

'SLP

CVBBGPBR

PBPOSPI

ZLGOL

VR X G BG EF
VEl • EM

VBP

EMS

TP· S

OVE

RVT

SM

F'P E G K R :

NKBSLPB.'

'~:!:~:~'

cooperation you now need can be
Friday, Oct. 6, 2000
You are apt to achieve your swayed lo your cause. Stay on
' greatest successes in the year message.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
. : ahead at the very times when you
19)
Concentrate all your efforts ··
may feel everything is going
: against you. The lesson to learn is . today on an area that promises
material returns. Substantial
: never give up .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) The financial rewards can be gar.exa mple you set today will act as nered. so it behoov«s you to focus
.an eye-opener to a disagreeable in this realm .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
:old friend on ho:.V to look for that
:which is good in people instead of · Don't be hesilant to take the .
:dwelling on that which is bad. Get reigns today in a social involve•a jump on life by understanding ment with your friends. You !lave
·the influences that' ll govern you the leadership .abilities to steer
:in the year ahead. Send for your your companions through a testy
:Astro-Graph predictions by mail- situation.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) A
:ing $2 , to Astro-Graph, c/o this
grateful
friend might be trying to
:newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Mur;ray Hill Station, New York, NY find a way to repay you today for
: I0156. Be sure to state your an old favor you did for him or
her. Be a gracious receiver of
·Zodiac sign .
: SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. .22) whatever gesture is made.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
:Keep your mind riveted on the
Use
your analytical attributes
:end results you desire, and it will
'help you overcome any obstacles today to make sure you do not
,you encounte r today that may overlook any personal advantages
'temporarily serve to impede your you can gamer in situations that
have escaped detection of others ..
progre''·
SAGITTARIUS (Nov .. 23-Dec. The benefits are there .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
2'1) When y'ou pr~scnt your case
1
'today. 'if you cmphu&gt;ize the facts It 's your nature to give more than
anu not the frill&gt;. &gt;Omeone whose is asked of you, but don't feel

JVE

0

Rearrange

WOlD

ldlted

~r ClAY I. POllAN

l•tt•ra of th•

four Krombled words below to farm four 1lmplli word1.

PRIPEZ

I I' I I· I

I
2

WORNE
3

1111

p RA T M

~~

"It's okay (o think about being
a politician ," the dad told his son .
"but remember, governmenls are
known to leak - - - - the - - - "

I

1 1 1

I

[..:~i-1 ~r: -~-,U~r-E=- I,. . . . . jiE)

t;:~--,,.,-TosrsTj--1.:0

.

_
~
'---'---JI..-...L...-1---l~

---r.-1

t, -

.;.,O

...-L..-J.-..1.-.L._..__--'·

@

0

Complete "the chucUe

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS 1
IN THESF 'QUARES .
UNSCRAMBlE tEllERS

FOR ANSWER

~teq

by filling lr1 the miaiag ..ards
you de¥1!JioP from step No. 3 below

I' I' I"

I I I I

SCRAM-lEiS ANSWERS

,,

I'

I'

I I I
.

Quench - Borax - Peppy · ReiJSIJ PRICE

My frugal aunt ta.ught me how to spend my money
. wisely . She sa:d that the quality is remembered long af·
ter you forget the PRICE

.

OCTOBER 5 I:;

Debale (Live) (CC)

obligated to make concessions to
anyone if your better judgment
warns yotl thai you won't be given parity in return.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) A
pasl negative experience has
taught you a valuable lesson
which can now be applied in a
positive manner. You'll have all
the right answers and make all the
right moves today.
CANCER (June 21-Julv 22) It
will be smart today to keep an
ambitious un:Iertaking under your
hal. Do what yo u can not 10
expose your intenti ons until
you've had ample time to get
them in place and working for .
you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A relati onship that is tl1l&amp; ch too importalll to be ignored must be given
priority treatmenl loday. Be sure
to include your friend in any
social arrangements you make at
this time.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
You don't have to do anything in
a flamboyant manner today to get
noticed by your contemporaries.
It'll be your effectiveness that
wins you their respect and admiration .

YKIZGF

co© 1\JUlA- ~ t--l.----trs· .....

~'Your

-----~w~-·

NV B

CPPSLMJPE
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The most beautiful thing in the world is of course
the world ltsaH."- Wallace Stevens
'
'

ITHURSDAY
'·

' S LKR

(CC)

�•

.

•
Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

.--

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, October 5, 2000

TOD'A Y' ·S SCOREBOARD
u• llondly, Ocl t
Atlanta al St. Louis, 4:07 p.m (ESPN} or

8:18pm .

(FOX),~ flOC05S8l)'

~.OclH

NL at AL. 8 p.m., 1 n«:

(becon1&lt;15 nigiW

ary

Sunday. Ocl 2t

glll18 WGianls·Mots ~ over)

NL a1 Al., 8

AIAOionco
LEAQ\IE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES

DMSION SERifS
American l.Mg~.~e
Chlc_n._le
Tuoodoy, 0&lt;:1. 3
Seallle 7. Chicago 4. 10 1Mif1g5

F~doy,

(NBC)

Ocl 8

Chicago (BakhMn 14-7) at Seattle (Sele 11·

10), 4:07p.m (ESPN)

Slturd•y, Oct. 7

Cnicago

essary

at seanle. 4:18pm. (FOX), If nec-

Sundliy, Oct. I
Seanle at Chicago, 4:07 p.m. (ESPN) or 8
p.m. (FOX), rf necessary (8 p m. if Giants-Mats
ana A1t11ellcs-Yankees are over)
Oakland v•. N.,.. Yorit
Tue~ay, O&lt;:t. 3
Oakland 5, New vane a

Oaldand-New YOO. winner at Chicago OR
Seattle a1 OakJand-New Yon.. winnEH, 8;15 p.m.
. . W-Ildly, Oct. 11
-.oakland-New York winner at Chicago OR
Seattle a1 Oakland-New York winner, 4:15 p.m.
F~doy, CCI. 13
Chicago at Oakland-New Yortl: winner OR
Oakland-New York w1nner at Seattle, 8:15p.m.
S.turday. Oct. 14
Cl'llcago at Oakland-New York Wlnnw OR
Oakland-New York winner at Seattle, 8:15p.m.
Sunday,Oct. 15

Chicago at Oakland-New York WlnneJ OA
Oakland-New York WIMer at Seattle, 4:15p.m.,
It necessary
•
Tuesday, Oct. 17
OMiand-New Vane winner a1 Cl'licago OR
~eattla at Qakland-New York winnEtf. 8: t5 p.m.,
if necessary

WtdnNday, Oct. 4
Oct 8

Oakland' (Hudson 20·6). at New York (Hernandez 12-13}, 8:08p.m . (NBC)

Sllturday, Oct. 7
13·8), 7:38p.m. (NBC)
~

New York at Oakland, B p.m. (FOX}, it nec-

essary
Nllflonal LNgue
San Fnmclaco va. New Yortl:

Wtdneaday, Oet. 4
San Francisco 5, New York 1, San Francis·
co leads series 1-0

Tnurtd•w. Oet. 5
New York (Leiter 16-8) at San Francisco
(Estes 1&gt;6), 8:18p.m. (FOX) ·
S.turday, Oct. 7
San Frarn:isco (Oniz 13·12) at New York
(Reed 11-5), 1:07 p.m. (ESPN) or 4:18p.m.'
(FOX) (Dacoma! 4:18 p.m. if White Solt·
Mariners is a sweep)
sunday, 0&lt;:1. a
San Francisco at New Yon&lt;, 4 :07 p.m.
(ESPN) or 8 p.m. (FOX), if necessary
(becomes n~ht game If Athletics-Yankees is
over)
Mond•y, Oct. g
New Yortt at · San Francisco, 8:1 9 p.m.
(FOX), ~ necOS$8ry
·

St. Louie va. Atlllntl
Tut:.S•y, Oet. 3
St. Louis 7, At!anta 5, St. Louis teads sariaJ

(FOX)
Wad'nuctay, Oet. 11
St. Louis-Atlanta winner at San Francisco
OR New York 81 Atlanta·St. Louis winner. 8:18
p.m.
Thuraday, Oct. 12
Sl. Louis-AII81118 winner at San Fra.lcisco
OR New York at Atlanta-St . Louis winner, 8:18

P.m. •

Thurlday, Oct. s
Atian1a (Giavine 21-9) at St. LoUs (Kite 20·
9). 4:07 p.m. (ESPN)
Slturd!IY, Oct. 7

St. Louis (S1epnenson 16-9, An.Benes 12-9

or Hentgan 15-12) at AtJanta {Ashby 12· 13),
1:07 p m. (ESPN)
Sunday,~.a

St. Louis at Atlanta, 1:07 p.m. (ESPN) orB
. p.m. {FOX), ".necessary (becomes hight game
if all orher senes are O\ier)
·

·

S.turday, Oet. 14
San Francisco ·at 51. Louis-Atlanta winner
OR St. louJs-AIIanta w1nner at New York. 4:18
p.m.
'
Sunday, Oct 15
~n Fi'ancisco at St. Louis·Atlanta winner
OR St. Louis-Atlanta winner at New York, 8
p.m.

•

Mond!IY, Oet. 18
San FranCisco a1 St. Louis-Atlanta winner
OR St. Louis-Atlanta winner at New York, 8:1 8
p.m.r if necessary
Wtdnelday, Oct. 1a
St. Louis-Atlanta winner at San Francisco
OR Naw York at Atlanta-St. Louis winner, 4:18
p.m .• if necessary
· Thunlda~~.1t
St. Louls·Atlanta winn« at San Francisco
OR New Y&lt;nk at Atlanta -St. Louis winner, 8:18
p.m., ~necessary

Kansas City 1, ColoradO o
WodneM1y, Stpt. 20
Kansas City o, Colorado o, lie

Sunday, Sept. 24
Kansas City 3, Colof'ado 2, Kansas.City wins
series 7-1 .

Lol An~l . (!l) vs. T1mpo Boy (4)
Thuradlly, SepL 14
Los A.ngetes 1, Tampa Bay 0
w~c~neect•v. sept_ 20
Los Angeles 5, Tampa Bay 2, Los Angeles
wins series 6-0
Ntw Engl1nd (7) vt. Chlc1ga (2)
Friday, Sept. 15
Chicago 2, Naw·England 1
Tulldoy, Sept. 1t
New England 2, Cnicago t
Friday, Stpt. 22

ALatN1.8:1 Bp.m.

Wednelday, Oct. 2e
Ala1NL,8:18p.m.
Thuractay, Oct. 25
Alai NL, 8:18p.m.. if necessary

from Page 81
Mets starter Mike Hampton , 90 previously aga1nst the Giants,
couldn't get out of the sixth
~ mning. He allowed six hits and
. five·runs and walked three , and
reliever Turk Wendell bailed him
out of a bases-loaded jam in the
sixth with two strikeouts.
'' It just boils down to I made
basically one mistake (against
Burks), and it cost me," Hampton
said. 'T m not ashamed of anything. I pitched my best." .
Edgardo Alfonzo, Mike Piazza
and Robin Ventura - the Mets'
3-4-5 hitters ·- ·went hitless in
their first nine at-bats. Piazza , a
career .21 1 hitter in the playoffs,
was 0-for-3.
The Mets' outfielders spent
extra time Tuesday studying the
eccentric dimensions of Pac Bell,
but it didn't help right fielder

Wut
Oakland ......................... 3
Kansas Cily ....................3
Denver ....... ...................2
Seattle ........................... 2
San Diego ......................0

t . Piqua (1) ..............................5·1

Chicago 6, New England 0, Chicago wins
series 8-3
New York·New JerMy t3) va. Dall11 (4)

Frlday, Sept. 15
New York·New JEHsey 2, Callas 1, OT
Wednesday, Sept. 20

New York·New Jersey 2, Dallas 1, New
York-New-Jersey wins series 6-0

Semifinal Round
Kana11 City va. Loa Angeln
. Friday, S1pt. 28
Los Angeles 0, Kansas City a, tie, series tied

•,

TUelehly,Oet.3
Los Angeles 2, Kansas City 1, OT, Los Angeles leads series 4· 1 .
Friday, Oct. S
Los Angeles at Kansas City, 8:30p.m.
p

Chicago VI. N.w York-New J•eey
Tulldoy. Sept. 28
Chicago 3, New York-New Jersey 0
S.turdly, S.pt. 30
New YOlk-New Jersey 2. Chicago O, series
tied 3·3

NFC

Eaol
NY. Giants .....................3 2 0.800 88

85

Philadelphia ..................3 2 0 .600 121

10

o 1.00

95

71

Oelroit ......................... :.3 2 0 .600 84
Tampa Bay ............... ~o .... 3 2 0 .600127

08

Greeneay ......................2 3 0 .400 93

.md .111 Jggrl'~­

FedL'ral f hxk111g defense. ·
Needs ca rried eight times for
22 yards. Federal\ lone score

"iiVC

67

eo

Chicago ........................ t • 0 .200 75 130

Weat

51. Louis ......................... 5 o o 1.00 211 1o15
Atlan1a ...... .. ................... 2 3 0 .400 95 159
San Francisco ............... 2 3 0 .400142 159
Carolina ........ ..... ............ 1 3 0 .250 78 73
N.ew Or1Mns .................. 1 3 0 .250 55 82
Sund.y'a Gam•
Buffalo at Mia.,ml, 1 p.m.,
New Orleans at Cl'li~go, 1 p.m.
Pittsburgh at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m.
Greefl Ba~ at Detroit, t p.m.
Toonessee at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.
Indianapolis at New England, 1 p.m.
Washington at Philadelphia, 1 p.m.
. N.Y. Giants at Atlanta, 4;05 p.m.
Oenver'Bt San Diego, 4:15p.m.
Oaklarw:l a\ San Francisco, 4:1 !5 p.m.
Seanle at Carolina, 4:15p.m.
Clevetand at Arizona , 4:15p.m.
Baltimore at JacMsonville, 8:20 p.m.
Open:
St. LOuts

for a tie. The winner In the quaner and semifinals will be the first team to reach or exceed
frve points. The third game of a series will be
decided by penalty kicks if eacn game has
ended In a tie or If the series is t -1-1.)

(c&lt;;t lVI tiL'"·

Game tJillt;_ ~~ 7.30 p.m.
cral Hocking.

Jt

FL·d-

=ev:

9. L.oulsv!He Aquinas .................5·1

86
10
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11.

10.Ironton (1) •.•.•.........••.•.....•••.. 5·1

WetHngton (1) 39. 12. Cin. Wyoming 28. 13.
Chlgrln Falls 23. 14. Utica 12.
,·
DMSIOHV

I. Amlnda·Ciaarcreek (18) ...... 5·1

2. ~ Center (8) .................6.0
3. Cdl. Ready (2) ................... 5.0

4.

AI' Stitt P.-.p Footblll Poll

at Washington, D.C., 1:30 p.m.
(Note: Tl'lree points tor a win and one poinl

88
Olmsted Fill• (1) ..... .••.........8.0
65
Others receMng 12 or _more points: 11 .

Colt. BeechcrOII (1) 57. 12. Amllersl 40. 13.
Tol. Rogen (1) 38. 1•. Cln. McNdlo,.s 18. 15.
Tltfln Colum'"-n (t) 17. 18. Panna H1s. Holy
Nama 18. 17. TOI. St. Francis 14.
DIVISION Ill
t . Portomouth (25) ..... .•........•...6.0
342
2, M&lt;Connetaville Morgan (2) .. 6.0
211
213
3. Aleron Hoben (2) ..... .••...........5·1
4. Sunb\i'Y Big Walnut (2) ........ 8-Q
2C8
s) Omrllle (1) ...•.•............•.....•..• 5·1
110
6. Colt. Watterson .................... 5·1
166
71Day. Cham ..Jullonne (t) ...... 5·1
154
8. "Canton Calli. (2) ·········· ........ 5·1
·131
9;ii.Quloville (1) •.•....•................. 5·1
63
t~lbon Beaver Local (1) ......6.0
56
Others receiving 12 or more polnls: 11 .
39 . 12. (lie) Miltenburg w. Holmes,
J
38. 14. Ottawa-Giandorl 31. 15. Win.
tet'1vUie Indian Creek 29. 16. Gallipolis 23. 17.
Canton South 21. 18. New RiChmond 20. 19
a.tott w. Brancl113. 20. Copley 12.
DIVISION IV
'
I. S.ndusky Porl&lt;lns (21) ......... 6.0
338
2. Germantown valley View (3)6.0
298
3. Youngs. Ursuline (4) ............. 6-0
269
4. Coshocton (3) ...................... 6-o
210
5. N'I\Varl&lt; Ucking Valley (4) ... .. 8.0
204
8. Olivo. VASJ (1) .................... 6.0
201 ·
1. Allron Manchester (1 ) ........... 5·1
119
8. Cotdwator ...............:...........•. 5·1
113

3 -o :400 91 108
5 0 .000 86 158

Friday, OCt. S

Sunday, Oct. 15

262
243
232
209
154
135
98

3 0 .400152 130

COW MBUS, Ohio (AP) -

How a stale

panel of spans writers and broadcasters rates
Ohio high school foot baH Jeams In the fourth of
eight weekly Associated "Press polls for 2000,
b~ OiiSAA divisions, with won-tom record and
total points (flrtt-place votes In parenth~ee):
DMSIONI

eAiitton 1;zf····· ......................6-0

5. •lion ualaw {1) ............ 6.0
6. MO&lt;ral Rldgodale (2) ............6.0
7. St. Henry (1) .........•.......•....... 5·1
8. H. .lock Miller .....................8.0

300
265
252
214
167
t 49
147
86

- 'i:'~ew~·~·Acad~~!.my~;~
i
· 12sj;~~
·isi:~
:~
or more
:~~;~~~~~~2~~~:~~;~
, 4.
Shenan;
Rocldord
11.Bev~

John·
Par!&lt;way 22.
I Hawklil 18.
Newcomer·
WOIIIrtcijti.. ~lo) Sulliva~ Black Rr..tr, Atwater

17.

W-L.

DIVISION VI

········~ ~

St. Jolvl'a (32) ........ 8-0

Ca1h.

.
7

Hometown Newspaper

BASEBALL

55

Carlos Rosario Rodriguez.

CIC slates
ceremony
for business

SAN DIEGO PAOREs--De&lt;tlned 1o exer-

cise their option on OF Tony Gwynn. Sent INF
Gabe Atvarez, tNF Greg laRocc;,a, INF Joe
Vitiello, OF Pete Tucci and AHP Todd Erdos to
La• Vegas ollhe PCL
BASKETBALL
Nltlonal B. .ketball Auoelatlon
LOS ANGELES I.AKERS-SignOd G Shawn

Flaspart.
MINNESOTA TIMBERWOL\IES-Signed F

L.aPhOnso Ellis.
NEW JERSEY NETS-Named Aaron Harris
assistant director of public relations.
WASHINGTON WIZARDs-Released G·F
Dennis Scott.
~OOTBALL

Natlofl•l Football Le~~gue
INOIANAPOUS COLTS-SignOd RB Paul
Shields. Waived WR Joey Kent Signed OL Tim
Ridder to the practice squad.
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS-Signed DE
Paul Spicer from lhe practice squad and DE

'

MIAMI DOLPHINS-Signed LB Tommy
Hendrk:+:s to the prac1ice squad . Released WR
Brian Alford .
TENNESSEE 'IJITANS-Signed WR Chris
Jackson and WR Andy McCullough.

BY TONY M. lEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Community Improvement Corp. will be holding a
special ribbon-cutting ceremo~
ny next week and atmol!ncti the
identity of the employer moving into the new telecommunications building in Pomeroy.
The ceremony will be Thursday at I 0 a.m. in front of the
new 10,000 square-foot ofrlce
facility, located on the property
of the former Excelsior Saltworks along East Main Street.
Representatives from the new
telecommunications company
will be present at the ribbon
cutting to discuss its operation
and to announce hiring plans.
Elected officials and community leaders who helped spear-

HOCKEY
National Hockey League
NHL-Suspended Anaheim F Paul ~riya
one game for a Slash on Minnesota F Aaron
Gavey In a preseason game on Sept. 29 and
Edmonton D Brad Norton three games for
putting l'lls hands on an official in a preseason
game against Calgary on Sept. 30.
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS&lt;-ReasslgnOd
D Deron Quint to S~racuse of the AHL. RW
Mike Maneluk to Chicago of the IHL and C Brett
Hamins and 0 Bert Aobertsson to Houston -of
the IHL. Placed C Espen Knutsen on injured
reserve, retroactive to Seflt. 20.
LOS ANGELES KINGs-Assigned 0
Philippe Boucher to Manitoba of the IHL
NEW YORK RANGER5-Signed 0 Mike

Mottau.

PHOENIX COYOTES-Signed LW Brad
Ralph to a three-year contract Assigned F

Ram2i Abid and F Ryan Lauzon to Springfield
of lheAHL
SAN JOSE SHARKS-Released C Ron
Sutter ana o Rudw Poeschek. Assigned LW
Doug Friedman to Worcester of the AHL, G
Johan Hedberg to Mllnitoba of the IHL, and G
Mlkka Kiprusoft to Kentucky ol1he AHL

•

•
• ••

e Nina arrives
FROM STAFF REPORTS

OMEROY - A large group of
local residents and business peopie gave a warm welcome to the
"Nina" and its crew on Thursday
as the replica of Christopher
Columbus' ship arrived here for a weeklong stay.
Pomeroy Mayor John Blaettnar and
Councilman John Musser, who coordinated
the Nina'~ visit, were arnong those who
greeced the ship's captain and crew, as many
others lined the promenade and amphithe~ter for the ship's arrival .
:; The s!up is a replica of Columbus' favorite
ship, which led the Pinta and the Santa
Maria across the Atlantic on the explorer's
first trip to the New World. It is a "caravel,''
and was constructed in Valenca, Brazil, using
only adzes, hand saws and chisels.

··
,'

LINCOLN

Mercury~

'

so ( '•nt•

.·

·p
~. ~

Middlepcrt • Pomeroy, Ohio

•

Nallonll L.oogut

374

ffi

ford·Huthor·ized factor Clearance

October I, 2000

231
199
t tl8

Volume 51 . Number !!4

Jomo Cousins to the practice squad.

Friday

•

;~to~ocitEY'e 171

PHILADELPHIA PHILUE5-Signod

.

Z14

~--

,.

head the project will also be in
attendance at the ceremony.
"We are very excited that this
day has come," said Economic
Development Director Perry
Varnado~. "We have been getting so many caDs about when
the facility is going to be open."
"We encourage everyone to
come ·out and meet Meigs
County's newest employer," said
Varnadoe.
The' business, expected to
provide 200 new jobs for Meig;
countians, should be in full
· operation sOtnetime in the near
future once minor construction
efforts are finalized.
"The telecommuni cations
firm will begin moving in vari ous
. computer equipment and

Pleese -

CIC. Pep AJ

Lawmakers may cap fees for
copies of medical records

In December 1991, the ship left Brazil and
sailed to Costa Rica on a 4,000-mile
unescorted maiden voyage to take part in
the filming of"\492;' a motion picture starring Gerard De(l':lrdieu.- Since- tl'letr, ;t ha~ "
visited nearly 3QO ports in the U.S., as a "sail. museum.''
mg
Tours of the ship will be offered during its .
stay here. A. small admission price of $4 for
adults, $3 for senior citizens and $3 for students, will be charged for the walk-aboard
shelf-guided tour, every day during the
ship's visit.
The ship will be open from 9 a.m. to 7
p.m:
Group rates are also available for tours.
Those tours can be arranged by contacting
(284) 495-4618. The cost for the group
tours is $3 per person for a minimum of 15
people.

8Y

JOIDI I'(OIAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS 'I«~ITER

Ohio lawmakers next month
could set maximum fees for
copies of medical records, after
years oflawsuits by patients who
accused hospitals and recordhandling companies of overcharging for copies.
.
Both sides said Thursday they
can live with the compromise
legislation.
The bill allows a $15 charge
for a records search, $1 per page
for the first 10 pages, SU cents
each, for pages 11-50 and 20

.

cents for .ach page thereafter.
Ohio lawyecs say sam~ medical records companies have
charged patlents'lawyers $32 .90
f~r two pages, $120.30 for 76
pages and $61 .40 for 28 pages.
State law now require,; hospi tals to main.t ain medical records
and provide copies to patients
but does not regulate a fee for
those copies nor require one.
Advocates for patients say that
means no fees are allowed. Hospitals said ft~es are necessary to
cover the expense of storing and

Pluse- '-·Pep AJ

·aob Evans Fann Festival celebrates 3oth birthday this year
FROM STAFF REPORTS

: RIO GRANDE -

.The year was

t971.

from Page

co t~ling pet1.1lt1t.'~

.._Ilion

~o.

Eastem

came in the third quarter after
Steve R ic hards intercepted a
Jonathan Evans pass and ran it
81
ba ck 40 yards to the ten yard line.
Eric Needs punched it in on a 5minimally.
yard run tljree plays later at the ·
Lyons caught two passes for 17 8:46 mark for the sco re.
yards. Ben Holter had one ·catch
A bad snap turned into a Matt
f&lt;_&gt;r 17 yards nd R.J G1bbs caught Dillinger to Richards two- point
one ball for 13 yards.
play, but the play was nullified for
Brad Willford led the rushing an illegal receiver downfield, the
game with 126 yards on 24 car- score 14-6.
ri es in his fourth 100-yard game
Federal 's· somew hat struggling
of the season. Willford has been offense came to life two weeks
the Eastern work horse m must- ago in its lone win ·aver winless
have situattons and is compli- Alexander, gaini ng 241 yards
mented by R.J. G1bbs and Karr overall (120 rushing an,! 121 pass- .
with his running ski lls.
in~ .
·
K;!rr had 73 ya rds ru shing.
Clint Sears scored Federal's first
Cacy Faulk has also done well in touchdown in the secon d quarter
the bac kfield, and Jeremy Con- with a 60-y~rd p:iss from Steve
nolly has been another force in Ri,c hards .. Seth Qllum then added
the rece1ving ranks as wdl.
,
a one-yard TD run to' his 30-yard
Last week, Eastern had 261) rushing game. while Ri chards
total yards whtle hold in g Tmnblc added a ·nirie-yard run to a 37to just 70 overall.
yard gamo. ·
Federal Hockin[: (1-'i, TVC IlNeeds added the last touc hl ) lost to Southern last week in a down on a 20-yard ru n as he
battle between fJther and ')Q tl . e merged as the leading Lance r
Lan cer
head
coach
Dave rusher with 'i7 yards on 10 carRichards saw his club drop . a ril's.
decision to son Rusty Richards,
Tht::
co mnJon
opponent
the new head man at Southern.
between Fcd~ral and EasttiJn is
Eric Needs led Federal Hock- Wahama. \l",(ahama defeated Feding with a 16 rush fqr 48 yard . eral 56-1.2, while Easte rn defeated
effort and Federalis lone touch- Wahama by a 50~ l2 count.
down . Southern compiled 141
Eastern io.; also out to avenge b st
first lialf yards to Federal Hock- year's· Joss, w hen the sen ior- laden
mgis 20-net yards. Southern Lancers w!upped Eastern 44-0 to
cjomwatcd the fiN half. Ol;:er- spoil the E.1glcs' homecommg

7. Covington ...........................8-0
129
8 . TOIOIIIO (2) ............................6-0
123
t . McDonald ............•.. ..............5-1
73
10. Caroy . ... ...
. ..... .......6·0
38
Others receiving 12 or more points: ,1 .
McCQcnb 32. 12. E. camon 31 . 13. Newaric

126
105

I 0 .750 109 80
2 . 0 .600 117 93

Central
Minnesota ................... ..4 o

,.

NLDS

1118

7. Solon ............. ....................... 6.0
B. Conlon Gltn 0111 •........•....... 6-0
t.
PI!Ty .......... ......... ,8-0
10. Cln. Colontln (1) •............8-0 54

2. ~ (2) ..•.••...................8.0
3. NMas McKinloy (4) ................ 8-o
4. Avon Like (4) ..................... ..6.0
5. Mlryl1lil,. (3) ...............•........6.0
8. Cola. OeSalos (3) ................. 5·1
Jacksonville ...................2 3 o .400 103 113
Pi11sllurgh .......•.............. 1 3 0 .250 64 75 , 7. Aleron Buchtel (3) ......•..•.......5·1
' 8. Tnonton Edgtwood ...............5·1
Cincinnati ......................0 4 o.000 23 tO!

1. Cleve. Sl. Ignatius (35)

Derek Bell. Bonds' triple caromed
so sharply -that Bell sprained his
right ankle while trying to
reverse direction.
Hernandez wasn't dominant ,
but he p,i cked up where he left off
in the postseason three years ago."
Hernandez, tli.e NLCS and World ·
Series MVP in 1997 while leading' the Florida Marlins to the
title, retired the Mets' fir st seven
hitters and pitched out of two
jams, allowing his only run on a
· sacrifice fly in the third.
He improved to 5-0 in the
playoffs.
"When you go to the playoffs,
you've got to play hard," Hernandez said. "A lot of players play 15,
20 years waiting for this chance.
When I go out, I say, 'I want to
throw good, I want· to win my
game."'
San Francisco scored first 'on
Kent's RBI groundout after
Bonds singled in the first inning.
New York tied it up on Jay Payton's sac rifice fly in the third.

5. Portsmouth Nolte Dame . &amp;-0
8. Cuyahoga H1s. ....•..........•. ...6-0

e

Washing1on ........ ••......... 3 2 0 .800 87 B2
Dallas ............................2 3 0 .400 112 148
Arlzona .......................... t 3 0.250 71 toe

Chlmplontl'llp

Satun:ley, Oct. 21
Nationai League at American League, 8 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 22
NL at Al, 8 p.m.
·
Tuudlly, Oct 24

8......lion 'NIIIlii!QIOI• ••.•...... 5-1

198
1to

Barti!T'IOre .......................4 1 0 .800 t 10 55
Tennessee .....................3 1 0 .750 81 &amp;4
Cleveland ....•.......... ....... 2 3 0 .400 64 104

S.turdly, S.pt 18

1-,

0 1.00 88

New York-New Jersey at Chicago, B p.m.
WORLD SERIES
(FOX)

1-()

~

c-

P'-" Gllnc1

Qual141rftnal Round
(-lng In,._.,._)
(II- KonHI City (1)

NaUonal League

Oakland (Zito 7&lt;-4) at New York (Clemens

Sunday, Oct. I

llljot l..olgul -

'Oakland-New York winner at Chtcago OR
Seattle a1 Oakland-New Ycxk winner, 8:15p.m.,
if necessary ·

282

256

88
0 .800 110 31
Othera receiving 12 Of more poinls:
1t.l.Dgon 43. 12. Troy 27. 13. Cin. Elder 12.
0 .7~ 118 82
DIYIItoll II
o.500 13 111~
i. Youngo. Chlnoy (14) ........... 6.0
321
0 .200 78
1

N.Y. Jour ......................... 4 0
Mleml ........... ........ .•..•.••. 4 I
IndianapoliS ................... 3 1
Bu11alo ..........•.......•.•......2 2
Now England .................. 1 4
Central

Wednesday, Oct. 11

New York 4, Oaklancl o, senes tied 1 · 1
F~dlly,

Eut
W L Tl'tl. PI' 1'1\

T'UMdlly, Oct. 10

&amp;ea.nle 5, ChiCltQO 2, Seattle leads sflfies 2·

0

MC

Amorlcln L.ooguo

Wod~.Ocl4

(1) ....................8-0
Altinglon (t) ......••.......e-o
•. PlckllinfiiOn .........................8-0

s. s,......, Hill. ..........................e-o

p.m. EST, Wnectssary

'

281

2. Cln. -

3.

208

'

Voices of Praise to perform, AS
Herd's home winning streak ends, Bl

Hllh: !lOs; s.tu~
Law: ,..
Details, A3.

2. Maria Stein Marion LOcal (1)8-0
3. Mogodort (3) .......................8-0
4. No&lt;wllk S1. Paul .•.•.•............6-0

.

The 26th Amendment lowered the
voting age in the U.S. to 18, "All in the
Family" and "Masterpiece Theater" made
their television premieres, first class
postage increased to 8 cents, soft contact
lenses received FDA approval, and a new
tradition was beginning at Bob Evans
Farm in Rio Grande.
That was the year when Dab Evans
Farms . began what would become · an
annual celebration of the harvest season,
inviting friends and neighbors "down on
the farm" to experience the rural Amer-

ica of yesteryear.
It's a tradition that will celebrate its
30th anniversary this year, Oct. 13-15,
when tens . of thousands gather for 't he
Dab Evans Farm Festival and continue to
take a glimpse into that past -which the
:Bob Evans Farm seeks to preserve.
The first Bob Evans Farm I;estival featured a craft tent with less than a dozen
local artisans and demonstrators. Today,
the event has grown into one that
requires more· than 15 tents housing the
works of more than 150 traditional
crafters and demonstrators.
Everything from hand-woven haskets,
to wood turning, quilting, spinning ' and

Parade winners

11le jirst Bt•b E1 1111S rarrll I·l·sti
l'al.fi•atllred a m?ft 1e11t uritlr lt·ss
·than a dozen /om/ artisa11s aud
demouslrators.1ioday, till· Cl't'llt Ira.~
xrowu iulo 0111' that rt•qrrires 11/(ll'f
tlrau 15 /('Ills "••rt.&lt;irr.\1 till' ,.,,.J,:.,
~(mort' tlr.11r t.iO tmditiorr,i/
m!fiei'S ,md dmromtmtors
1

weaving, glass blowing, Shaker boxes,
hard-carved fishing lures and dolls, pottery, candle dipping, leatherwork and
blacksmithin~ can be seen at the festival,

.'

Today's

Sentinel

2 Sections- 12 Peps
Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS
B2-4
BS
A4
A3
Bl. 6
A3

Lotteries
D. HOURS: MON. • FRI. 9-7; .

401•446·9800 800-272-5179

The Meigs County Tourism Board presented trophies to the float
who participated In Saturday's Stemwheel Riverfest 2000 parade.
ners were: Driving Division, Rrst Place, Xi Gamma Epsilon Sorority; 5ecq}(l
Place, Ca~eton School and Meigs Industries; Walking Division, Rrst
Meigs High School Band and Aag Corps; Second Place, Valley View Far~n\s.
Pictured above are, from left, are Judy Williams, Gina Pines. Patty Picketl$,
Xi Gamma Epsilon Sorority; Jennifer Gt'Sy, Andy ste1n, Ca~eton School aii1d
Meigs Industries; and Melinda Morns, Meigs County Tourism Board associate. (Tony M. Leach photo)

OIDO
Pick 3: 7-2-3; Pick 4: 3-M-9-2

Buckeye 5:11-18-1 9-20-3 1

\1\YA,
[)oily 3: 5-2-5 Daily 4: 8-4-5-9

when; many of t)1e items are n1adc using tOr n1ore than a decade continue to draw
tools and techniqu es nearly forgotten large crowds.
Musical entertainment still features
today.
ln addition to the crafts, old-fashioned .local artists and has expanded to includ e
farm demonstrations like corn shelling, renowned groups like The Rarely Herd.
hay baling, wheat threshing, sheep shear- Jerry Weawr's Goodtimes jazz Dand and
ing, cow milkmg and horseshoeing arc the Original Briarhoppers.
still alive and well on the farm.
The three-day fL'Stival, billed as "a
N ew entertainment at the festival weekend of fun for friends and family of
indudes a team of"square dancing trac - all ages," invites visitors to enjoy the simtors'' and the HOPE 11..iders equine- ple pleasures of the pioneer homestead ,
mounted drill team, . which performs said Farm Manager Ray McK.inniss.
musi cal routines on horseback.
"It's a unique event that celebrates traOld favorites like the Hank Peters dition and offers a nostalgic journey into
Lumbeljack Show and the Reno Family
Please He FesllvliL Pap Al
Horseshoe Pitchers that have returned

Feds move to close Medicaid
loophole used by states
Senate Finance Commi ttee C hairman William
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Roth, who has so ught administration action for
WASHINGTON -TI~e government issued pro- months, accused the White House of "stepping
posed f'egulations Thursday to close a loophole in backward."
M edicaid rul es that has let 20 states reap billions of
"The regulation permi~ the scam to continue
excess federal dollars from the health care program while only modestly attempting to contain its magfor the poor. Critics say the pra ctice threatens to nitude," the Delaware Republican said, adding that
cost taxpayers $127 b1llion over th e next 10 yea~&gt;.
the regulations. may even "spur greater abuse ·in th t·
"However well-intentioned some states may have · Medicaid program ."
been, the practice today clearly constitutes an abuse
"The American taxpayer who pays the bills
. of the Medicaid system," said Health and Human should not stand for it," Roth sai~ .
Services Secretary Donna Shalala. "Sl&gt;ltes and the
States involved are Alabama, Californi a, Illinois.
federal government must operate th e Medicaid pro- lndJan a, Iowa, Kansas, Massachusetts, Michigan,
gram in a fi scally sound manner that serves both Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Mexico, New
Medicaid patients and the taxpayers who support York , North Carolirp, North Dakota , Oregon,
the program ."
' Penmylvania, South Carolina. Tennessee, Washin g-Hut th e govrrnmt"nt's proposal did littl e to eas~
Pleese - Loophole, Pep AJ
Republican cnti cism.
BY JANELLE CARTER

".

'

,I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="444">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9883">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="25507">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="25506">
              <text>October 5, 2000</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="108">
      <name>craig</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="178">
      <name>lambert</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
