<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7853" 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/7853?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-18T16:05:28+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18266">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/d0b0db94f4e6761af3d33d344a48ef78.pdf</src>
      <authentication>be0b8a9e3535b18d45025c05cedd97ab</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="25508">
                  <text>•

.

•
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

�'

•
'

'
Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

.,
'

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Mead moves concern staff
CHILLICOTHE (AP) - A multimtllion-dollar plan to modermze operations at the Mead Paper plant in this sou~hern Ohio
city is rnaking workers nervous.
The company plans to invest in, the No. 12 paper-maki g
mach~ne over the next four year&lt;, eliminating the four othe
maclun~s currently m operation. Mead estimates it will spend as
much as $40 million in the lirst year of the prOJeCt.
About 2,200 workers are employed at the plant.
Jeff Dutton, vice president of Mead Paper's O h10 operations,
satd the goal is to sim plify the operation and cut manufacturing
costs. Dutton SJ.ld he did not know what effect the move will
haw on jobs.
Greg Pickerrell, president of the labor uni on that represents the
workers, satd the employees fear there may be a loss of JObs.
"Anytime you see some thing like that, .. . it's gm ng to make
fo lks J littk nervous," said Pickerrdl.

Blame put on neighbor
MANSFIELD (AP) - A man claimed hi s .not her was literallv
ScarL·J to deJth by a netghbor who hr..· s.lH.t sicked hts Jog on he;.
But poli ce said th e death Wednesday of M•rgarc·t Franklin, 61.
.tlthnugh it followed a confronta tion betwt.&gt;en her and hL·r nL•ig:hbor's dog. was an unfortun:He- acci d cnr.
franklin died JUst minutes aftt'r c.1lhng l) 1 l w rl'port sht• h:~J
been Jtt.tcked by the dog. ·
An auwpsy pcrform~J. Thursd,1v fuund the t"J USL' of death to bl'
he.ut-rdat~d. Ri chland County. Coront..•t Paul Jones said the
woma n hadn't be ~n bttten by the dog.

The neighbor told po li ce the dog go t lo ose· accidentally while
h ~ and another man

\VC!re

working in hi s gar:1ge. ·

An o ther neighbor ca llc&lt;J io r an ambubn cc after finding
Fran klin unconsno us on her fron.t yard.
Franklin's son, Hurti ce Nolan. blames the dog-ow ner for his

mother's death.
·
'
" He harassed her, he thre atened he r and he finally scared her to
deJth," Nolan said.
•
Another son, George Franklin , said the re was a history of bad
blood with the n e1g hbor.

Driver gets probation
. COLUMBUS (AP) - A driver who punched a pedestrian
who had co mplained about his loud muSic, causi ng him · to fall,
hit his head and die, hos received a suspended four-year prison ·
·senrence.

Franklin County Co mmon Pleas Judge John Connor said
Thursday he did not believe Samuel Bagley, 23, intended to kill
Wilham Vo lk, 64, of Columbus.
Co nn o r did order Bagley to spe nd six months in the co unty jail
work-releaSe program . And he told him to undergo anger manageme nt counseling .

Bagley pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter on Aug. 15.
Last October, Volk reportedly yelled at Bagley about the music
from h is sport utility vehtcle and may have tapp.e d the back of the
truck with his can e.
.
1
Bagley got out of hi s vehicle, began to argue and punched Volk
m the face-, ca u si ~ g Vo lk to hit hi s he-a d on the pavement, wltncss~s ~aid. Volk died the next day.'
Bagley or igi nally wJ.s c hargt" d with involuntary m anslaughter
and fdomous assau1t. Unde r a plea ag reement, th t" assault charge
,,.,1&lt;; dropped and the m anslaughter charge WJS reduced from a

first-degree felony ro a third-degree fd011)'.
'
."'There was just one punch thrown." s:1 iJ assistant prnsec utoij.lmcs Lo\Vt\ "And it w.tsn't Mr. B.tgll'~"'s intL'IH ro kill Mr. Yolk.
T lur \ why we d ro ppe d the o ne ch.1rgt:' and rt.·duccd tht· other."

'

Teen will be tried as adult

.'

C HARDON (AP)- A teen-age· girl alleged ly in\'O iwd 111 the
robbery :1nd fatal sh ooting of ;1 gac; ~t:~twn cll'rk \\'111 be tn cd .lS
.111 ,Jd u lr. J C.g.ug:1 Co unty Ju vt•mk Court judge ruled Thur'iday.
Judge CharlL"s H enry ordered thJt Jill H older. l H. bl' tncd .1s .1 n
adult for her alleged parttGp.ttioo; 111 the death of Damd k
. Kovacic, who was kill ed Feb. I H.

( '.

Holder, 17 , at the time: of the crilllt', cou ld face a hfe sente nce
If COil\'l ct Cd.

She is being held in jail on $750.!11)() bond.
'N'esky Pt:'arson, 20, an d Marcus Moorer, 15. have pl~aded
gudty to the murdclr and have 'accepted liic terms wah chances

''

of parole i1! 33 to 43 years tf they test1fy aga in st Holder.
Poh cc said Moorer shot Kovacic, 19, with a stolen .38-caliber
snu b-nosed revolver as he, Pearson and Holder robbed tli&lt; Clark
Oil stati On about IS miles east of Clevelan d.
I
Po lice anJ prosecutors said Pearson o rchestrated the' cr ime,

Moo rer pulled the trigger and Holder drove the getaway car.
A 17- year-old fn e nd of Kovacic )Vas shot twice and wounded
~ in

lhe same attack .

-Teachers approve contrad
SI'RINGF IEL D (AP) - Teachers in the city sc hool district
have approved a conmct that will g1ve them an 11 .5- percent pay
raxse over th e' next two years.
Of the 531 teachers wh o voted Thursday, 409 supported the
contract and 122 opposed it.
" Quite frankly, 1 tho ught 1t would be closer than that , becau;e
a lot of peopl e here d1dn 't have a whole lot of information roday,"
'tio • 1.11d Scott Adair, presrdent of the 760- member Springfield Edu':1.

Associa ti on .
f hc co ntra ct. wl nd1 \ \ ' &lt;1 &lt;; d eve loped 111 fivr: months o f ncgouat l nm anJ un de r t h L· tlln..·:~t ot .1 tcac ht.: rs' stnkc, wllf boost ~ tarun g
tr.:;u. h c r&lt; p.1 y from the u nn..· rn $24 ,)1 ~ ro S2fi, 1J3l bv th e e nd of
dw 2f HJI-02 ~c h ool yc.1 r. To p-sca k tl" .l Ch t• rs \V lth I:. ,ye.ln ~ x. p~ ­
ri t· nct' and a lll;J'&gt; tcr ''i dr.: g: ree will \C L' an ltl crL' JSL' fro m S-+4 .0 ~ 7 to
S-I X,X98.
"
Tht,' raise ~ w·i\1. ( O~ t t11L· .,c hool d !stn Lt\ gc nt•r.li fund .1 bo ut S7
million . N.o :-r dd1tion.1l t.lXL'" are ll l' l'd l' d to p.1y fo r th em . .,c]w o l
L.lt JOn

: ufii l"u h

h.l\'l' ~.wJ

\cho n! \ trp l'fl JH c n deiH \L nrr Sp e 1n \, nd h L' \\",1\ ll,,: ]I !-dH t.: d thL'
.. 1.

...

OIHI".llt p .lw•.' d

\ O)t dh· hehi ild H ."' ~ pl'.H~ \,li d
1\ ·re St ephc m, .1 re.Hb 11g ft".It hn ,1{ \ c h .IL'k l .r'v1 Hidl c \t lwo l.
\'O t l' d fo r thl' LO Jltr.l( t.
" I thou g ht It,,.,\, a f.ur propm.1 l.'" h . .· \.lld ·· 1 rl11 nk It l h ..'t.:dL· d [ l )
he p .l &lt;; c;eJ 111 order to put up ,1 l l lllt l' d f r n rH ttl P·'"" th e ho nd ]r.:,·y
~n \\\.' r.tn h.l\'t..' nc:w o;,rhoo lli.'.
1~\lll' 21, l) IJ rhc Nm 7 h .l ll ()t \\"Otdd !".11\l' s.lt) 11nlltnJl lqc.tl h· fm
! ''1!\l\ l(l"] ··• ]!nod [q ',id)t
II, r ,·
II' 1)1·

" r he bo ud

• TL'I

I~

n l tilt.." S l fJ:) Jl llllloll t.lh,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Friday, October 6, 2000

~ Friday, October

e,

2000.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Women·met weeks before their deaths
RAVENNA (AP) -The woman accU!ed
of killing a pregnant woman for her baby may

Wednesday night as the woman he and his
wife met at the store.
have stalked h~r after a c hance encounter in
Neighbors and police said Bica told peo,early September, investigators said.
ple, until early September, she was pregnant
· Michelle Bica, who police say tricked her with a girL Bica later said results of an ultrahusband, fanuly and neighbors into b.;,lieving sound revealed she actually was expecting a
she was pregnant, met Ther~sa Andrews , 23, boy, and her due date changed from Sept. 6 to
while shopping for baby clothes at Wal- Mart. · Sept. 20.
Investigators theorize that Bica, 39, then
During what was initially considered a ranbegan to stalk Andrews and stopped sta lking dom and polite 100nversation, Bica and
another woman. That speculation is based on Andrews began talking about their pregnanthe timing when Bica switched rhe gender of cies, McCoy said. Bica told the Andrewses
the child she claimed to be carrying.
where she and her husband lived in Ravenna ,
Police C hief Randall McCoy said Thursday and the Andrewses shared that they lived
that Andrews' widower, Jon, identified Bica on nearby.

Prosecutor Victor Vigltu cc i satd baby Oscar
Andrews probably was delivered Sept. 27, the
day Andrews disappeared in Ravenna , a Ctty of
about 12,000 some 30 miles so uth east of
Clev~land.

OsGar left a Ravenna hospital Thursday
with his presumed fath er to stay with family.
DNA tests were given to confirm the identity of the infant's parents. Officials were awaiting the results Friday.
Andrews had paged her husband ,at w~'rk
the day she disappeared and said a woman h.ad
called inquiring about a vehicle- th ey w~:rc

trying to sell.

ActivistS, say judge's ruling ·
spotlights problems at Ohio

Ameritech to pay more than
S3
to customers ·

CO LUMBUS (AI') A
Judge's ruling that Ohio 's Envi-

COLUMBUS
(AP)
Ameritech Ohio will pay more
than $3 million in credits to its

roumcntll Prote ction Age ncy
\\Tongly re moved the head of an
1m·c:stig:mo n into co ntamination
clt two sc hools shows that the
agency can 't be crusted to enforce
environmental laws, activists said

patd vacatio n which Jayko had to
take to appe.u in court.

Carol Hester, spo keswo man for
the Ohio EI'A called Phalen's ruling "wrong" and s:1id the state

will app eal.
"To use th e whisd~blower law,
you have to dcmonsri-ate thlt
_there's bl"en illegal activity on the-

Thursday.
" Here we have a federal judge part of the agency that was
saying all the things we've said on · reported 'by the 'employee," Hesthe record about the massive, te-r said.
ongoing cover~ up at the OEPA,"
"There's no proof that there
said Stmona Vaclavikova, program
was any illegal acti-:ity. Mr. Jayko
director for Ohio C itizen Action.
made recomm.endations on what
Administrative law Judge
his thoughts were on what we
Thomas E Phalen Jr. ruled this
should sample for. Management
week that the state must reinstate
made a different d ecision . That's a
Paul Jayko to his position as site
professional differen ce of opincoo,dinator for the investigation
ion," H ester said.
at the River Valley schools in
Marilyn WaH, conservation
Marion County, 40 miles notth
chair for the Sierra Club's Ohio
of Columbus." .
Chapter
called Phalen's ruling a
' .,;Jayko was taken o ff that project
in June 1998 and suspended f&lt;Jr Hs tinging indi c tmen t" of the
.
I 0 days after agency officials Ohio EPA.
She pointed to the judge's
accused him of drinking alcohol
on the job and padding his statements that the agen cy misexpense a cco unt. His attorney, represented health threats to the
Dennis Muchnicki , saidJayko was public at River Valley schools and
assigned to minor projects and told its employees to continue to
give 'the message that there was
"busy work . "
, Phalen ruled that the allega- no evidence linking the sites to
tions againstJayko were unfound- ·'leukemia.
'~This leads me to discredit the
ed and that he is protected under
a federal whistle-blower law. entire policy of the OEPA manBesides back pay 'and damages, a·g ement as such a misrepresentathe agency must also pay Jayko's tion of the Mari on investigaattorney's fees and restore 30 days tion .." Ph alen wrote.

Ohio State
announces
$750 million
academic plan
CO LUMB US (A P) -

St:ltl' University

cu sto ml!rs for bad tdephon~
sc rvt c~ .

Ameritech nearly do ubled
its initial otTer for credits after

PUCO spokc;\\'mll.111 Beth

being press ured by th ~ Pubhc
Utilities Commission of Ohio.

Gianfororo said Am~ritt.:ch's
n : po rt is under review bur

The credits and fee waivers

seem s to show improvL·mcnt . .

will go through bill; to. cusJame s. C. Smith, Am entcc h
tomers who were without ser- ·
Ohio vice prl' stdent for regu.ia-·
v-ice for three days or more
from August 1998 through July tory, said in a letter that service·
1999. Credits also will go to levels are "still not where we
those who did not receive or

want them to be. I cx pl~ct to

who were delayed requested
repam or installation during

see continued progress in the
weeks and months ahead "as \~'C

the same time.

"We have every intention of
complying with that order and
sending out those credits. anhe
earliest
opportunity,"
Amerite ch spokesman Dave
Pacholczyk said Thursday. '
PUCO
also
ordered
Amerit ec h ·to co ntribute S2
million to a customer-service

fund that totals $5.7 million. (J
w~s not known Thursday how
the fund .mon ey would be
spent.
Amer ite c h

to

PUCO it has improved its service response time since Sept.

14 -

the day before the com-

pany announ ce d plans to hire·,

transfer and shift thousands of
new service te c hni cian s to
Ohio and oth.e-r state s it sl..'rvcs.

step up our

h~ting

and trainn,1g

of n ew employees.''

On July 20, th e com mission
found Amerit ec h guilty o f
122,500 violations of the state's
n~mimum teleph o ne standards.
POCO re ceive d abou t dou ble the number of co mplai.iits
for August and early September
compared to each of the previous two years .

In July, the PUCO ordered
the company to spend $8.7
million to satisfy c u st omer
complaints . The age ncy al.s u
gave the comp any tR monihs
to improve st·rVi ce or face

ano thn

$ 122.5

million

penalties.

sagg
...............

Lane·

Marie N. Domigan

111

Loophole

After a numb&lt;r of other states
began taking advantage of the
loophole in the last year, the govermncnt wrote states ui July asking them to stop the pra ctice.
Use of the loophole cost the
government nearly $2 billion in
fiscal year 2000 t~at ended last
Saturday, the admini!tration said.
The Congressional Budget Office
recendy estimated that more than
$127 billion would be lost over
the next decade unless the practice is ended.
Here's how the loophole works:
The Medicaid program is a joint
project, with the federal government paying at least 50 percent of
the costs. States with proportionately larger poor populations get a
larger share from the federal gov-

from PapAl

ton and New Jersey.
The states would not feel any
immediate crunch from the regulations, which would phase out
the extra payments over five years.
·No funding would be cut in the
current fiscal year that began Oct.
1.
In addition, federal officials
would continue a higher payment
level for public hospitals, which
often serve considerably more
lower-income
patients .· The
administration also said it would
support legislation to . increase
payments to both public and pri·vate hospitals by $10 billion over ernment. States set the amount
10 years.
they will pay health providers, but
States and health-care providers the federal government provides a
have 30 days to comment on the cap for payments.
Under the loophole, a state
proposed rule. A final regulation
could list the cost of services at
will be published afterward.
"We recognize that states will · the maximum rate a local or
need time to adjust to these county-owned facility charges,
changes," said Michael Hash, act- billing the federal government for
ing . administrator of the Health half, even though the state has
Care Financing Administration, arrangements with the providers
which runs the Medicaid pro-· to pay less than the maximum
gram, But, he added, "By making rate.
States used the additional feder·these changes, we will help to preserve the public trust in the Med- al reimbursements fot a variety of
icaid program, which provides purppses.While some devoted the
health-care services to millions of · extra money entirely to · health
Americans."
services, federal officials said oth- '
- Several states apparendy used ers used it to reduce state debt and
the loophole unchecked for years. pay f? r unrelated programs.

Lane
according to Bank President Paul
Reed , who is also president of the
CIC.
The Ohio Department of
Development, Meigs Cl C, Metgs

CIC

Ohto

.liHlOU rKcd

-----·---·---·--·
111-

.

plan Thursday that includes pro-

I ::.:~~~~~~5' 'IIJIIII,II

:

g rams officials hope wtll improve
the school's stat.m as a rese;u ch
in stitution.
"We have never had a plan -

Cheoselrom our large "IN STIICI"
selecuon or special order
vour own color cholcel

ning process that goes beyo nd a
year out," said Elizabeth Co nlisk,
Ohio Sta te's spokeswoman." This

BUY OlE llfiE®
~~
nu PIICE ANIIR'TIIl

is a much more co mprehensive

effo rt and it ts really designed as
a bluepri nt to help m focus our
re sources in arc:.s where they ca n

s1c•o

make the most difference.''

O hi o State currently is the
20th-bes t researc h university in
the nation~ a classification that
puts it in the second tier of
research imtitutions, Co nlisk

other infrastructural equipment

County

'ometime next week," added Var-

Farn1ers Bank have all played •ignificant roles in landing the project, which will help boost the
local economy and lower unemployment.
A reception and tour of the
facility is scheduled to follow the

Oadoe. "Right now we .a.re in the

tina! stages of paving the parking
~rea."

' The cost of the project is S3
~1illion, with S I million coming
from fin ancing to rhe CIC from
' farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.,

AmTech/SBC. - 53l.
Ashland Inc. - 32'1.
AT&amp;T- 28'4
Bank One - 37~

Kroger- 21 ~

Lands End - 20%

ljorgWamer - 37\

Ltd. - 24~.
Oak Hill Financial -

Champion -

OVB- 27

17~

tt.

Charming Shops - 5°/w

BBT- 30'/o

City Holding - 6')•

Peoples- 14\
Premier -

19~..

Sears - 33),

Shoney's -l,
Wai-Mart - 46~-.~
Wendy's - 20l&lt;
Worthington - 9

15').

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

5 14

Rockwell- 32\

uJty \\ ho
tll \ 111

h .l \"l'

then

12 f.lC-

the h1 ghc .,t hnn -

field~ ..l!Hl hl nn g ..H

lc•.to.;r ti \·L· t o 1(} \\"O IIH.'Il ,\lld fin·
to ]I I ll l l i H HHI L' ' Ill hr gh- JcH:l
f.J l lllty po ~ ltl \l tl ' L'.1c h Yl',n t( )r
fin· )\'.l r~.

- Upgr.1d1ng tec hn olOb'"'J.' .wJ
c nh.l llL" Jil g th ~· .lppe ,ll".l ilr l.' o f
C llllf.H I \ C l l_dJtJ c~ .1nd g ro und~ .
IZ L'n" lltlll g,

l l..'t,llll l llg

11 ]1'1111

.._:1 I I

,tl'-k

Iii,,

Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern In all stories is to

be accurate. It you know of an error in

a story, call the newsroom at (740)
992-2156 ..

News Departments

.I

The

1-\.t'lTlllrlllg ,It ka ~t

'Ill\

'llldlll{\

.lll d

1lh

copying records.
The House passed the bill '!2-1
in September. Sen. Louis Blessing,
R-Cincinnati, who has tried for
years, to pass legislation limiting
fees charged for medical records',
said he expects Senate approval in
November.
" I think it should be lower;'
Blessing said of the fee schedule.
But, he added, "It's better than
nothing ."
The legislation is based on
Noven1ber's settlement - of a.
Cleveland lawsuit filed in 1994.
It requires hospitals or medical
records companies to provide one
free copy to state agencies including the Ohio Bureau ofWorkers'
Compensation, Industrial &lt;:;ommission and Department of Job
and Family Services . Free copies
also must be given to patients or
their representatives who see k the

re co rds to support Social Security
claim filings.
Hospitals and the companies
they hire to stan:, retrieve and
copy medical records gen~r;t.Uy
have providl"d those reco rds fi·ee·
to P"hysicl:ms for continuing med-

main

number

is

992·2156.

~

Department ext6ntions a'e:
Gener111 manager

Ext. , , o,

Newo

Ext . 1102

or

Ext. 1106

Other services
AdvorttolnQ

Ext. 1104

Ctrculotlon

Ext 1103

Ctooolflod Ado

Ext. 1100

To send e-mail
galtri bune ® eurek anet. com

(USPS 21 3-1160)
Ohio Valley Publilhlng Co.
Published every afternoon. Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St , Pomeroy,
Oh10. Second-class postage paid at
Pomeroy.
MemtMr: The- Associated Press and the

Ohio Newspapeil\ssoclalion.
Pottmular: seljkt address corrections to
The Dally Sef'lin~. 111 Cou"rl. St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 _ ~
.

Subscription rates
By c a r
or J
m r r roule

Oneweek
One monlh
Oney..r

$2
$8.70
.,
$104 ·
Dally
50 cents
Stbscribers not desiring to pay the carrier may remit in advanue d1racl to The Oatly
Sentinel Credit W1!1 be g1ven carrier each
week No subscription by mail perm1lled In
areas where home carrier service JS avail·
able

Mail
subscription .
lntlde
County
M~o•

13 weeks
26 weeks

$27 30'
$53.62

52 Weeks

$105 56

Ratel oulllde Meigs County
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks '

$29 25
$56 68
$109.72

POMEROY - A judgment
has been issued in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to Farmers
Bank &amp; Savings Co., against
Brian K. Edington, and others.
A default judgment has been
issued to Beneficial Mortgage
Co. of Ohio against Daniel S.
Black, and others.

License issued
POMEROY - A marriage
license has been issued in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to
Clifford Scott Thomas III.. 22,
Pomeroy, and Michelle Dawn
Oldaker, 22, New Haven, W.Va.

we've looked for legislation. We
have a monopoly situation ."
The legislation is intended to
be a cap, so the fees charged could
be less, Nolder and Yost said.
At least 40 states have tried to
regulate, or enacted legislat10n, to
co ntrol medical records fees.
In states that require " reason-

able fees," their laws range from
no pitce guidance to 75 cents per
page. Texas allows an upfront fee
of $30 plus per- page c,osts, whil e

costs.

Festival
from Page AI

For information about the festival, visitors may call 1-~00-994FARM or visit the web site at

www. bobevans.com . Adm..ission to
the festival is $3 per person and
parking is free. - ,
The Bob Evans Farm was home
to Bob Evans, founder of Bob
Evans Farms In c., and his wife
Jewd for nearly 20 years. They
raised their six children in the
ttrgc, brick farmhouse now known
as the Homestead. The Homestead, once • a stagecoach stop and
an inn, is now on the National
R egister of Historic Places.

.
Negotiators agree to
.

'

S3.5 billion in farm aid
election-year aid.
House and Senate negotiators

ter payments would be needed to
compensate for losses that are not
covered by insurance".

year.

.

The legislation includes $1.!&gt; billi on for paymCn~~ to farmers
·whose crops \vcre des[royed by
drought or d.tntaged by drseasc,

POMEROY - The offi ce of
vice. The elementary school will ·the Meigs County Board of Elecdismiss at I :05 p.m., and the high tions will be closed on Monday
school at I :20 p.m.
m obse rva nce of Columbus Day.

EMS log calls
POMEJtOY - Units of th e
Meigs
Emergency
Services
answered seven calls for assistance

CENTRAL DISPATCH

cle accident,Valerie Nottingham,
refused treatment, Joshua Riffie,

O ' Bieness Memorial Hospital; ·
. 9 :49p.m., Ohio 681, Christina
Ooten, St . Joseph's Memorial
HospitaL

.carleton festival
SYRACUSE
Carleton
School will hold its fall festlval on
Oct. 28 from 5 to 9 p.m.

$490 1mllmn to livt&gt;~tock produc ers \vim [mt pa\ture to thi~ sum nu..~r's dry Wl',lthcr anJ S471 mil lion for d:ury pnces to compem.Ht'
for fJUing nulk pri ct: s.
Most farmt.:rs ha\r""t.~ t:njoy~d good
weather this yt\lr, bul !ieveral states,
indudmg Ncbr:tska, Kansa~. Texas
and Gt·orgm, h.wc been gomg
through a sewre drought . Agricul rture Secretary l),m GltcknMn has

e&gt;timated tlut $1 .1 btllion in dim-

Temperatures wilJ take a nosedive across the t ri- county area
over the weekend and some snow
showe rs arc possible, the National

Weather Servtce sa1d.
High temp eratures on Saturday

will be in the 50s as cold Canadian air sweeps into the state.

Lows tonight will be mostly in
the 40s.
Sunset tonight \yill be at 7:06
and sunrise on Sat~rday at 7:35
a.m .

Weather forecast:
Tonight .. .'Partly cloudy and
colder. Lows 41 to 46. Northwest
. wind 5 to 10 mph.
Saturday: .. Partl y cloudy and

SPRING VAI UY CIIJEMA
'&gt;

1&gt; 1 1

[£

1'&lt; \'II rT

7

446 •4524 1.1 )Jfo&lt; ~'tlNPI~t
FRI10/8100 • THURS 10/12/00

lOX OFFICI WILL OPEN AT
6:30 PM FOR EVENING SHOWS
2:30 PM FOR MATINIIS
SCARY MOVIE (R)
7 : 10&amp;9~0FRI&amp;SAT

' 7:10 SUN-THUR

BRING IT ON (PG13)
,

7:00 &amp; 9:00 FRl &amp; SAT
7:00 SUN,THUAS

NURSE BETIY (R)
7:D0-9:30 FAt &amp; SAT
7:00 SUN-THURS
MATINEE 3:00

MEET THE PARENTS (PG131
7:15 &amp; 11:15 FRI &amp; SAT
7:15 SUN-THURS
MATINEES SAT UN 3:15
NUTIY PROFESSOR 2:
7:10 &amp; 9:10 FRI &amp; SAT
~10 SUN·THUAS
MATINEES SATI$UN 3:10

Anniversary
LENA!
Love,

Perfomance set
POMEROY -

Mount Her-

mon U i1ited Brethren Church in

Pomeroy will be presenting
"R eality Explosion" from the H e
Is Ministries on Oct. 22 . Th e
group wtll be performing drama,
music, improvisation and evange-

lism at th e church on Wickham
Road at I 0'30-11 :30 a.m. and at
Riverfront
the
Pomeroy
Amphitheater from 4- 6 p.m.

Dinner planned
. MIDDLEPORT - · Hobson
Christian Church will have a
spaghetti dinner as a youth fund raiser on Saturday from noon to 5
p.m . at the American Legion
Annex in Middleport. Donations
will, be accepted.

Revival services
POMEROY - Revival service will be held at Mount Hermon United Bre~hren in Christ
Church, Wednesday through Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Dr. E.R . Moore
of ce ntral Florida Will be the
evangelist and there will be special sin g ing each service. The
churc h is located on Wickham

R oad, just off Texas Road, in the
R obert

Texa s
Commllnity.
Sand ers is pastor.

Snow showers a-re possible

THE KLUMPS (PG13)

40th

('-;

VALLEY WEATHER

apple and potato farmers.

Th e :ud come1 on top of$15 billmn in f.um assistance th:.t 'Congrl'~~ approvt·d t' .lrlic'f this year.

invited .

profes sional development inser-

Other provisions in the bill:

m o hair pmduct:-rs.

The me~sage wil1 cen ter around

Office to dose

• $·138 million in subsi dies to

• $58 million to compensate citon Thursday put the money in an
S80 billion appropriations bill tthat rus growers for diseased trees.
• $20 million for cranbe rry
· will fund operauons of the Agn=&gt;
" culture Department and Food and grower ~.
• $20 nullion for wool and
Drug Administration over tbe next

LITTLE HOCKING - The
C hurch of C hrist at Little Hocking will have a gospel meeting
Oct,.22 to 26. Jim Rankhorn of
Ripley, W.Va ., will be the featured
speaker. Bible study will be held
at 9:30 a.m., worship at 10:30
a.m. and worship at 6 p.m . Service will be held a t 7 p.m., M onday through Thursday.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Local, Schools will dismiss
early on Oct. II due to a staff

Pennsylvania anJ Mi ssouri allow

$15 initial fees plus per-page

Gospel meeting

Early dismissal

10:34 a.m., Rocksprings
ation.
Rehabilitation Center, Donna
But they have sometimes Smith, Holzer Medical Center;
charged outrageous fees when
3:10p.m., Ohio 7, motor vehithey suspect a patient or patient's cle accident, Edna Hensie, Helen
.lawyer might plan to use the Heaton, refused treatinent;
records to sue hospitals or doc5:01 p.m., Bridgeman Street,
tors, officials of the Ohio Acade- James Eakins, HMC
my of Trial Lawyers ·said.
·
RUTLAND
Patie'lts had nowhere else to go
8:14 p.m., Langsville, assisted by
but the hospitals or record com- Central Dispatch, Anna Bareswilt,
panies when seeking copies, their Pleasant Valley Hospital.
lawyers said.
SYRACUSE
"We support the bill," said
8:28 p.m., Third Street, assisted
Connie Nolder, director of gov- by Cenual Dispatch , Tracey
ernm ental. affairs for the Ohio R.iggenback, treated.
Academy of Trial Lawyers . "We
TUPPERS PLAINS
believe that there are abuses out
3:10p.m., Ohio 7, motor vehithere . .. That's the reason that

MIDDLEPORT '- Widows'
Fellowshtp will meet on Oct. 13
at noon at the Middleport
Church of Christ. Those attending should take a covered dish for
the poduck meal.

the theme: Re storing the Ne w
Testament C hurch, The public is

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON (AP)
Farmers who produce everything
from avocados to milk would benefit from a $3.5 billion package of

The Daily Sentinel

state of Ohio," Conlisk said.

-

&amp;om Page AI

ical care, said spokeswoman Mary
Yost of the Ohio Hospttal Associ-

•

1

edu cated and tramed studen ts
and prepare them fur jobs in the

111 (.\,lll d l· .

Fees

chance to appreciate it."

Rocky Boots - 5 ~.
AD Shell- 61

To meet

on Thursday. Units responded as
follows:

that otherwise might not have the

tion that will graduate ve ry wellc

Ohio State \Vants to recruit
.md rl'tain "world-class" faculty
mcmbc n"jl"c nha JH~e- the quJlity of
th e tcJr hing .md learmng cnvlHHllllCIHS, .J nd creJtt: a more
dJ VCTSt.; lllli V t:l"~ lty (0 lllll1U11ity
Tu lli ~'L' t t ho~ (' go:tls, o ffi c i:~l s
pLtn 1-+ IH.,' \\" initTfl tiVt'\. Tho~l'

Friends may call at Willis Funeral Home Ill Gallipolis on Sunday,
October 8, 2000 from 5-9 p.m.
Pallbearers will be Tommy Meadows, Gene Canaday, Ronnie
Wright, Steve Henderson, Dave Rankin, Bill Wamsley, Mike Ru sse ll
and Jeff Maynard .
Honorary pallbearers are Brothers of Local No. R(l.
In lieu of flowers , the family has requested that donations c•n be
made to the Paige A. Humphreys Jr, OSU Scholarship, in care of Ohio
Valley Bank, 420 Third Avenue, P.O. aox: 240, Gallipolis, Ohio 4563 L

the past;' he said. "For 30 years, the
festival has preserved the rural her-

Gannett - 51 ~
General ElectrK: - 59,.
Harley Davidson - 48
Kmart - 5'4

Akzo- 45 ~..

Firstar -

Information age,
. Ohioans needs a top-tier institu.-

Jonathan Kollmann officiating. Burial wiU be in C entenary Cemetery.

announcement.

LOCAL STOCKS

Fedetal Mogul - 4~

thi~

and

GALLIPOLIS - Paige Anderson Humphreys Jr. , 49, of Gallipolis,
died Wednesday, October 4, 2000 at his residence.
Born January 27, 1951 in Covington, Virginia, he was the son of
Paige A. Humphreys Sr., who preceded him in death in 2000, and
Minnie E. Crosier Humphreys, who preceded him in death in 1997.
He was the business manager for the Insulators Union Local No. 80
in Charleston, West Virginia,
He was a member of Grace United Methodist Church in Gallipolis,
Elks Lodge No. 107 in Galli poLs, Insulators Local No. 80 in
Charleston, the Builder and Construction Trades (AFL-CIO) ofWest
Virginia and Ohio, and the National Boards for the Insulators and
Pension Health Care Fund.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded i'n death by a sister, Barbara McCalla, in 1992.
Surviving are his wife, Linda J Maynard Humphreys. whom he married June 28, 1974; a daughter and son-in-law, Jamie Leigh and Gary
Lee Harrison of Gallipolis; a daughter, Meghan Lynn Humphreys, of
the .home; a son, Eric Paige Humphreys of Porneroy; grandchildren,
Devin Paige Humphreys of Pomeroy, and Gage Andrew Harrison of
Gallipolis; a sister and brother- in -law, Li.nda and Bill Wamsley; and his
stepmother, Juanita Humphreys of Pomeroy.
•
Services will be 10 a.m . o n Monday, October 9, 2000 in Grace United Methodist Church, with Pastor Robert D. ln!&gt;ra m and Pastor

itage of this area for 'generations

Bob Evans -

said .

comnuss10ners

- - ...L

AEP- 36'•

Court issues
judgments

Paige Andenon Humphreys Jr.

POfMMJ:lROY- Marie 1'1· Domigan, 80,Jacksonville, N,C., former1y o
e1gs County, died Friday, Sept. 30, 2000.
She was the daughter of the late R.B. Nelson and Haze Whitt Nel·son.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Roy Domigan; and
two brothers, ]Uchard B. and James L
She is survived by two sons and d:iughters-in-law, Charles "Skip" ~nd
Dtanna Dotrugan. of Coolville, and John A. and Catherine Domigan of
Woodbndge, Va.; a daughter and son-in-law, Cindy and Daniel Midkiff ofJacksonville, N.C; two sisters, Helen King of Bidwell, and Klthleen Pauley of Greensboro, N.C.; two sisters-in-law Marii Kenton of
Paris, Ky., and Kay Ragland of Lexington, Ky.; six g;andchildren and a
great-grandchild; and several nieces and nephews.
Gravestde services willbe Sunday at 2:30 p.m . at the Cherry Ridge
!=emetery, Pomeroy.
· · : Memorial donations nuy be given to the Cherry Ridge Cemetery,in care of Alberta Hysell, 43315 Frank .Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769,
Arrangements are by White Funeral Home in Coolville.

from Page A1 -

a
five-vear
S750-million
academ
ic
'

" In

report e d

LOCAL BRIEFS

•

HOwever, Am!..!ritc c h reprc~ent:~tivt.•s told ~omc (ll&lt;;tmners
last we~kend that th e~r :,cn·ict•
might be restored 111 tluc~.· d,ly'&gt;.
but it could t.l k l· tbn· l" \\"eeb .

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

REMEMBER THE TITANS (PG)
7:00 &amp; 9:30 FRI&amp; SAT
7:00 SUN, THURS
MATINEES SATI$UN 3:00

ALMOST FAMOUS (R)
7:00 &amp; 9:30 FRI &amp; SAT
7:00 SUN-THURS
MATINEES SAT.SUN 3:00

THE ADVENTURES OF ROCKY
aULWINKLE (PG)
MATINEES SAT/SUN 3:15

much cooler. Highs 48 to 53.
Saturday night.. .Mostly cloudy
with

:1

chanc~

of rain showers.

Lows in th e mid 30s .
Extended forecast;
Sunday: .. Mostly cloudy with a
chance of rain o r snow sh owers
e;~rly,

then a chance of showers.
N o snow accumulation expected .

Highs in the nud and upper 40s .
Monday... Mostly cloudy. A
cha nce of rain o r snow showers
during the day. Lows in the tmd
30s and highs in the upper 40s.

�'

•
'

'
Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

.,
'

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Mead moves concern staff
CHILLICOTHE (AP) - A multimtllion-dollar plan to modermze operations at the Mead Paper plant in this sou~hern Ohio
city is rnaking workers nervous.
The company plans to invest in, the No. 12 paper-maki g
mach~ne over the next four year&lt;, eliminating the four othe
maclun~s currently m operation. Mead estimates it will spend as
much as $40 million in the lirst year of the prOJeCt.
About 2,200 workers are employed at the plant.
Jeff Dutton, vice president of Mead Paper's O h10 operations,
satd the goal is to sim plify the operation and cut manufacturing
costs. Dutton SJ.ld he did not know what effect the move will
haw on jobs.
Greg Pickerrell, president of the labor uni on that represents the
workers, satd the employees fear there may be a loss of JObs.
"Anytime you see some thing like that, .. . it's gm ng to make
fo lks J littk nervous," said Pickerrdl.

Blame put on neighbor
MANSFIELD (AP) - A man claimed hi s .not her was literallv
ScarL·J to deJth by a netghbor who hr..· s.lH.t sicked hts Jog on he;.
But poli ce said th e death Wednesday of M•rgarc·t Franklin, 61.
.tlthnugh it followed a confronta tion betwt.&gt;en her and hL·r nL•ig:hbor's dog. was an unfortun:He- acci d cnr.
franklin died JUst minutes aftt'r c.1lhng l) 1 l w rl'port sht• h:~J
been Jtt.tcked by the dog. ·
An auwpsy pcrform~J. Thursd,1v fuund the t"J USL' of death to bl'
he.ut-rdat~d. Ri chland County. Coront..•t Paul Jones said the
woma n hadn't be ~n bttten by the dog.

The neighbor told po li ce the dog go t lo ose· accidentally while
h ~ and another man

\VC!re

working in hi s gar:1ge. ·

An o ther neighbor ca llc&lt;J io r an ambubn cc after finding
Fran klin unconsno us on her fron.t yard.
Franklin's son, Hurti ce Nolan. blames the dog-ow ner for his

mother's death.
·
'
" He harassed her, he thre atened he r and he finally scared her to
deJth," Nolan said.
•
Another son, George Franklin , said the re was a history of bad
blood with the n e1g hbor.

Driver gets probation
. COLUMBUS (AP) - A driver who punched a pedestrian
who had co mplained about his loud muSic, causi ng him · to fall,
hit his head and die, hos received a suspended four-year prison ·
·senrence.

Franklin County Co mmon Pleas Judge John Connor said
Thursday he did not believe Samuel Bagley, 23, intended to kill
Wilham Vo lk, 64, of Columbus.
Co nn o r did order Bagley to spe nd six months in the co unty jail
work-releaSe program . And he told him to undergo anger manageme nt counseling .

Bagley pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter on Aug. 15.
Last October, Volk reportedly yelled at Bagley about the music
from h is sport utility vehtcle and may have tapp.e d the back of the
truck with his can e.
.
1
Bagley got out of hi s vehicle, began to argue and punched Volk
m the face-, ca u si ~ g Vo lk to hit hi s he-a d on the pavement, wltncss~s ~aid. Volk died the next day.'
Bagley or igi nally wJ.s c hargt" d with involuntary m anslaughter
and fdomous assau1t. Unde r a plea ag reement, th t" assault charge
,,.,1&lt;; dropped and the m anslaughter charge WJS reduced from a

first-degree felony ro a third-degree fd011)'.
'
."'There was just one punch thrown." s:1 iJ assistant prnsec utoij.lmcs Lo\Vt\ "And it w.tsn't Mr. B.tgll'~"'s intL'IH ro kill Mr. Yolk.
T lur \ why we d ro ppe d the o ne ch.1rgt:' and rt.·duccd tht· other."

'

Teen will be tried as adult

.'

C HARDON (AP)- A teen-age· girl alleged ly in\'O iwd 111 the
robbery :1nd fatal sh ooting of ;1 gac; ~t:~twn cll'rk \\'111 be tn cd .lS
.111 ,Jd u lr. J C.g.ug:1 Co unty Ju vt•mk Court judge ruled Thur'iday.
Judge CharlL"s H enry ordered thJt Jill H older. l H. bl' tncd .1s .1 n
adult for her alleged parttGp.ttioo; 111 the death of Damd k
. Kovacic, who was kill ed Feb. I H.

( '.

Holder, 17 , at the time: of the crilllt', cou ld face a hfe sente nce
If COil\'l ct Cd.

She is being held in jail on $750.!11)() bond.
'N'esky Pt:'arson, 20, an d Marcus Moorer, 15. have pl~aded
gudty to the murdclr and have 'accepted liic terms wah chances

''

of parole i1! 33 to 43 years tf they test1fy aga in st Holder.
Poh cc said Moorer shot Kovacic, 19, with a stolen .38-caliber
snu b-nosed revolver as he, Pearson and Holder robbed tli&lt; Clark
Oil stati On about IS miles east of Clevelan d.
I
Po lice anJ prosecutors said Pearson o rchestrated the' cr ime,

Moo rer pulled the trigger and Holder drove the getaway car.
A 17- year-old fn e nd of Kovacic )Vas shot twice and wounded
~ in

lhe same attack .

-Teachers approve contrad
SI'RINGF IEL D (AP) - Teachers in the city sc hool district
have approved a conmct that will g1ve them an 11 .5- percent pay
raxse over th e' next two years.
Of the 531 teachers wh o voted Thursday, 409 supported the
contract and 122 opposed it.
" Quite frankly, 1 tho ught 1t would be closer than that , becau;e
a lot of peopl e here d1dn 't have a whole lot of information roday,"
'tio • 1.11d Scott Adair, presrdent of the 760- member Springfield Edu':1.

Associa ti on .
f hc co ntra ct. wl nd1 \ \ ' &lt;1 &lt;; d eve loped 111 fivr: months o f ncgouat l nm anJ un de r t h L· tlln..·:~t ot .1 tcac ht.: rs' stnkc, wllf boost ~ tarun g
tr.:;u. h c r&lt; p.1 y from the u nn..· rn $24 ,)1 ~ ro S2fi, 1J3l bv th e e nd of
dw 2f HJI-02 ~c h ool yc.1 r. To p-sca k tl" .l Ch t• rs \V lth I:. ,ye.ln ~ x. p~ ­
ri t· nct' and a lll;J'&gt; tcr ''i dr.: g: ree will \C L' an ltl crL' JSL' fro m S-+4 .0 ~ 7 to
S-I X,X98.
"
Tht,' raise ~ w·i\1. ( O~ t t11L· .,c hool d !stn Lt\ gc nt•r.li fund .1 bo ut S7
million . N.o :-r dd1tion.1l t.lXL'" are ll l' l'd l' d to p.1y fo r th em . .,c]w o l
L.lt JOn

: ufii l"u h

h.l\'l' ~.wJ

\cho n! \ trp l'fl JH c n deiH \L nrr Sp e 1n \, nd h L' \\",1\ ll,,: ]I !-dH t.: d thL'
.. 1.

...

OIHI".llt p .lw•.' d

\ O)t dh· hehi ild H ."' ~ pl'.H~ \,li d
1\ ·re St ephc m, .1 re.Hb 11g ft".It hn ,1{ \ c h .IL'k l .r'v1 Hidl c \t lwo l.
\'O t l' d fo r thl' LO Jltr.l( t.
" I thou g ht It,,.,\, a f.ur propm.1 l.'" h . .· \.lld ·· 1 rl11 nk It l h ..'t.:dL· d [ l )
he p .l &lt;; c;eJ 111 order to put up ,1 l l lllt l' d f r n rH ttl P·'"" th e ho nd ]r.:,·y
~n \\\.' r.tn h.l\'t..' nc:w o;,rhoo lli.'.
1~\lll' 21, l) IJ rhc Nm 7 h .l ll ()t \\"Otdd !".11\l' s.lt) 11nlltnJl lqc.tl h· fm
! ''1!\l\ l(l"] ··• ]!nod [q ',id)t
II, r ,·
II' 1)1·

" r he bo ud

• TL'I

I~

n l tilt.." S l fJ:) Jl llllloll t.lh,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Friday, October 6, 2000

~ Friday, October

e,

2000.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Women·met weeks before their deaths
RAVENNA (AP) -The woman accU!ed
of killing a pregnant woman for her baby may

Wednesday night as the woman he and his
wife met at the store.
have stalked h~r after a c hance encounter in
Neighbors and police said Bica told peo,early September, investigators said.
ple, until early September, she was pregnant
· Michelle Bica, who police say tricked her with a girL Bica later said results of an ultrahusband, fanuly and neighbors into b.;,lieving sound revealed she actually was expecting a
she was pregnant, met Ther~sa Andrews , 23, boy, and her due date changed from Sept. 6 to
while shopping for baby clothes at Wal- Mart. · Sept. 20.
Investigators theorize that Bica, 39, then
During what was initially considered a ranbegan to stalk Andrews and stopped sta lking dom and polite 100nversation, Bica and
another woman. That speculation is based on Andrews began talking about their pregnanthe timing when Bica switched rhe gender of cies, McCoy said. Bica told the Andrewses
the child she claimed to be carrying.
where she and her husband lived in Ravenna ,
Police C hief Randall McCoy said Thursday and the Andrewses shared that they lived
that Andrews' widower, Jon, identified Bica on nearby.

Prosecutor Victor Vigltu cc i satd baby Oscar
Andrews probably was delivered Sept. 27, the
day Andrews disappeared in Ravenna , a Ctty of
about 12,000 some 30 miles so uth east of
Clev~land.

OsGar left a Ravenna hospital Thursday
with his presumed fath er to stay with family.
DNA tests were given to confirm the identity of the infant's parents. Officials were awaiting the results Friday.
Andrews had paged her husband ,at w~'rk
the day she disappeared and said a woman h.ad
called inquiring about a vehicle- th ey w~:rc

trying to sell.

ActivistS, say judge's ruling ·
spotlights problems at Ohio

Ameritech to pay more than
S3
to customers ·

CO LUMBUS (AI') A
Judge's ruling that Ohio 's Envi-

COLUMBUS
(AP)
Ameritech Ohio will pay more
than $3 million in credits to its

roumcntll Prote ction Age ncy
\\Tongly re moved the head of an
1m·c:stig:mo n into co ntamination
clt two sc hools shows that the
agency can 't be crusted to enforce
environmental laws, activists said

patd vacatio n which Jayko had to
take to appe.u in court.

Carol Hester, spo keswo man for
the Ohio EI'A called Phalen's ruling "wrong" and s:1id the state

will app eal.
"To use th e whisd~blower law,
you have to dcmonsri-ate thlt
_there's bl"en illegal activity on the-

Thursday.
" Here we have a federal judge part of the agency that was
saying all the things we've said on · reported 'by the 'employee," Hesthe record about the massive, te-r said.
ongoing cover~ up at the OEPA,"
"There's no proof that there
said Stmona Vaclavikova, program
was any illegal acti-:ity. Mr. Jayko
director for Ohio C itizen Action.
made recomm.endations on what
Administrative law Judge
his thoughts were on what we
Thomas E Phalen Jr. ruled this
should sample for. Management
week that the state must reinstate
made a different d ecision . That's a
Paul Jayko to his position as site
professional differen ce of opincoo,dinator for the investigation
ion," H ester said.
at the River Valley schools in
Marilyn WaH, conservation
Marion County, 40 miles notth
chair for the Sierra Club's Ohio
of Columbus." .
Chapter
called Phalen's ruling a
' .,;Jayko was taken o ff that project
in June 1998 and suspended f&lt;Jr Hs tinging indi c tmen t" of the
.
I 0 days after agency officials Ohio EPA.
She pointed to the judge's
accused him of drinking alcohol
on the job and padding his statements that the agen cy misexpense a cco unt. His attorney, represented health threats to the
Dennis Muchnicki , saidJayko was public at River Valley schools and
assigned to minor projects and told its employees to continue to
give 'the message that there was
"busy work . "
, Phalen ruled that the allega- no evidence linking the sites to
tions againstJayko were unfound- ·'leukemia.
'~This leads me to discredit the
ed and that he is protected under
a federal whistle-blower law. entire policy of the OEPA manBesides back pay 'and damages, a·g ement as such a misrepresentathe agency must also pay Jayko's tion of the Mari on investigaattorney's fees and restore 30 days tion .." Ph alen wrote.

Ohio State
announces
$750 million
academic plan
CO LUMB US (A P) -

St:ltl' University

cu sto ml!rs for bad tdephon~
sc rvt c~ .

Ameritech nearly do ubled
its initial otTer for credits after

PUCO spokc;\\'mll.111 Beth

being press ured by th ~ Pubhc
Utilities Commission of Ohio.

Gianfororo said Am~ritt.:ch's
n : po rt is under review bur

The credits and fee waivers

seem s to show improvL·mcnt . .

will go through bill; to. cusJame s. C. Smith, Am entcc h
tomers who were without ser- ·
Ohio vice prl' stdent for regu.ia-·
v-ice for three days or more
from August 1998 through July tory, said in a letter that service·
1999. Credits also will go to levels are "still not where we
those who did not receive or

want them to be. I cx pl~ct to

who were delayed requested
repam or installation during

see continued progress in the
weeks and months ahead "as \~'C

the same time.

"We have every intention of
complying with that order and
sending out those credits. anhe
earliest
opportunity,"
Amerite ch spokesman Dave
Pacholczyk said Thursday. '
PUCO
also
ordered
Amerit ec h ·to co ntribute S2
million to a customer-service

fund that totals $5.7 million. (J
w~s not known Thursday how
the fund .mon ey would be
spent.
Amer ite c h

to

PUCO it has improved its service response time since Sept.

14 -

the day before the com-

pany announ ce d plans to hire·,

transfer and shift thousands of
new service te c hni cian s to
Ohio and oth.e-r state s it sl..'rvcs.

step up our

h~ting

and trainn,1g

of n ew employees.''

On July 20, th e com mission
found Amerit ec h guilty o f
122,500 violations of the state's
n~mimum teleph o ne standards.
POCO re ceive d abou t dou ble the number of co mplai.iits
for August and early September
compared to each of the previous two years .

In July, the PUCO ordered
the company to spend $8.7
million to satisfy c u st omer
complaints . The age ncy al.s u
gave the comp any tR monihs
to improve st·rVi ce or face

ano thn

$ 122.5

million

penalties.

sagg
...............

Lane·

Marie N. Domigan

111

Loophole

After a numb&lt;r of other states
began taking advantage of the
loophole in the last year, the govermncnt wrote states ui July asking them to stop the pra ctice.
Use of the loophole cost the
government nearly $2 billion in
fiscal year 2000 t~at ended last
Saturday, the admini!tration said.
The Congressional Budget Office
recendy estimated that more than
$127 billion would be lost over
the next decade unless the practice is ended.
Here's how the loophole works:
The Medicaid program is a joint
project, with the federal government paying at least 50 percent of
the costs. States with proportionately larger poor populations get a
larger share from the federal gov-

from PapAl

ton and New Jersey.
The states would not feel any
immediate crunch from the regulations, which would phase out
the extra payments over five years.
·No funding would be cut in the
current fiscal year that began Oct.
1.
In addition, federal officials
would continue a higher payment
level for public hospitals, which
often serve considerably more
lower-income
patients .· The
administration also said it would
support legislation to . increase
payments to both public and pri·vate hospitals by $10 billion over ernment. States set the amount
10 years.
they will pay health providers, but
States and health-care providers the federal government provides a
have 30 days to comment on the cap for payments.
Under the loophole, a state
proposed rule. A final regulation
could list the cost of services at
will be published afterward.
"We recognize that states will · the maximum rate a local or
need time to adjust to these county-owned facility charges,
changes," said Michael Hash, act- billing the federal government for
ing . administrator of the Health half, even though the state has
Care Financing Administration, arrangements with the providers
which runs the Medicaid pro-· to pay less than the maximum
gram, But, he added, "By making rate.
States used the additional feder·these changes, we will help to preserve the public trust in the Med- al reimbursements fot a variety of
icaid program, which provides purppses.While some devoted the
health-care services to millions of · extra money entirely to · health
Americans."
services, federal officials said oth- '
- Several states apparendy used ers used it to reduce state debt and
the loophole unchecked for years. pay f? r unrelated programs.

Lane
according to Bank President Paul
Reed , who is also president of the
CIC.
The Ohio Department of
Development, Meigs Cl C, Metgs

CIC

Ohto

.liHlOU rKcd

-----·---·---·--·
111-

.

plan Thursday that includes pro-

I ::.:~~~~~~5' 'IIJIIII,II

:

g rams officials hope wtll improve
the school's stat.m as a rese;u ch
in stitution.
"We have never had a plan -

Cheoselrom our large "IN STIICI"
selecuon or special order
vour own color cholcel

ning process that goes beyo nd a
year out," said Elizabeth Co nlisk,
Ohio Sta te's spokeswoman." This

BUY OlE llfiE®
~~
nu PIICE ANIIR'TIIl

is a much more co mprehensive

effo rt and it ts really designed as
a bluepri nt to help m focus our
re sources in arc:.s where they ca n

s1c•o

make the most difference.''

O hi o State currently is the
20th-bes t researc h university in
the nation~ a classification that
puts it in the second tier of
research imtitutions, Co nlisk

other infrastructural equipment

County

'ometime next week," added Var-

Farn1ers Bank have all played •ignificant roles in landing the project, which will help boost the
local economy and lower unemployment.
A reception and tour of the
facility is scheduled to follow the

Oadoe. "Right now we .a.re in the

tina! stages of paving the parking
~rea."

' The cost of the project is S3
~1illion, with S I million coming
from fin ancing to rhe CIC from
' farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.,

AmTech/SBC. - 53l.
Ashland Inc. - 32'1.
AT&amp;T- 28'4
Bank One - 37~

Kroger- 21 ~

Lands End - 20%

ljorgWamer - 37\

Ltd. - 24~.
Oak Hill Financial -

Champion -

OVB- 27

17~

tt.

Charming Shops - 5°/w

BBT- 30'/o

City Holding - 6')•

Peoples- 14\
Premier -

19~..

Sears - 33),

Shoney's -l,
Wai-Mart - 46~-.~
Wendy's - 20l&lt;
Worthington - 9

15').

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

5 14

Rockwell- 32\

uJty \\ ho
tll \ 111

h .l \"l'

then

12 f.lC-

the h1 ghc .,t hnn -

field~ ..l!Hl hl nn g ..H

lc•.to.;r ti \·L· t o 1(} \\"O IIH.'Il ,\lld fin·
to ]I I ll l l i H HHI L' ' Ill hr gh- JcH:l
f.J l lllty po ~ ltl \l tl ' L'.1c h Yl',n t( )r
fin· )\'.l r~.

- Upgr.1d1ng tec hn olOb'"'J.' .wJ
c nh.l llL" Jil g th ~· .lppe ,ll".l ilr l.' o f
C llllf.H I \ C l l_dJtJ c~ .1nd g ro und~ .
IZ L'n" lltlll g,

l l..'t,llll l llg

11 ]1'1111

.._:1 I I

,tl'-k

Iii,,

Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern In all stories is to

be accurate. It you know of an error in

a story, call the newsroom at (740)
992-2156 ..

News Departments

.I

The

1-\.t'lTlllrlllg ,It ka ~t

'Ill\

'llldlll{\

.lll d

1lh

copying records.
The House passed the bill '!2-1
in September. Sen. Louis Blessing,
R-Cincinnati, who has tried for
years, to pass legislation limiting
fees charged for medical records',
said he expects Senate approval in
November.
" I think it should be lower;'
Blessing said of the fee schedule.
But, he added, "It's better than
nothing ."
The legislation is based on
Noven1ber's settlement - of a.
Cleveland lawsuit filed in 1994.
It requires hospitals or medical
records companies to provide one
free copy to state agencies including the Ohio Bureau ofWorkers'
Compensation, Industrial &lt;:;ommission and Department of Job
and Family Services . Free copies
also must be given to patients or
their representatives who see k the

re co rds to support Social Security
claim filings.
Hospitals and the companies
they hire to stan:, retrieve and
copy medical records gen~r;t.Uy
have providl"d those reco rds fi·ee·
to P"hysicl:ms for continuing med-

main

number

is

992·2156.

~

Department ext6ntions a'e:
Gener111 manager

Ext. , , o,

Newo

Ext . 1102

or

Ext. 1106

Other services
AdvorttolnQ

Ext. 1104

Ctrculotlon

Ext 1103

Ctooolflod Ado

Ext. 1100

To send e-mail
galtri bune ® eurek anet. com

(USPS 21 3-1160)
Ohio Valley Publilhlng Co.
Published every afternoon. Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St , Pomeroy,
Oh10. Second-class postage paid at
Pomeroy.
MemtMr: The- Associated Press and the

Ohio Newspapeil\ssoclalion.
Pottmular: seljkt address corrections to
The Dally Sef'lin~. 111 Cou"rl. St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 _ ~
.

Subscription rates
By c a r
or J
m r r roule

Oneweek
One monlh
Oney..r

$2
$8.70
.,
$104 ·
Dally
50 cents
Stbscribers not desiring to pay the carrier may remit in advanue d1racl to The Oatly
Sentinel Credit W1!1 be g1ven carrier each
week No subscription by mail perm1lled In
areas where home carrier service JS avail·
able

Mail
subscription .
lntlde
County
M~o•

13 weeks
26 weeks

$27 30'
$53.62

52 Weeks

$105 56

Ratel oulllde Meigs County
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks '

$29 25
$56 68
$109.72

POMEROY - A judgment
has been issued in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to Farmers
Bank &amp; Savings Co., against
Brian K. Edington, and others.
A default judgment has been
issued to Beneficial Mortgage
Co. of Ohio against Daniel S.
Black, and others.

License issued
POMEROY - A marriage
license has been issued in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to
Clifford Scott Thomas III.. 22,
Pomeroy, and Michelle Dawn
Oldaker, 22, New Haven, W.Va.

we've looked for legislation. We
have a monopoly situation ."
The legislation is intended to
be a cap, so the fees charged could
be less, Nolder and Yost said.
At least 40 states have tried to
regulate, or enacted legislat10n, to
co ntrol medical records fees.
In states that require " reason-

able fees," their laws range from
no pitce guidance to 75 cents per
page. Texas allows an upfront fee
of $30 plus per- page c,osts, whil e

costs.

Festival
from Page AI

For information about the festival, visitors may call 1-~00-994FARM or visit the web site at

www. bobevans.com . Adm..ission to
the festival is $3 per person and
parking is free. - ,
The Bob Evans Farm was home
to Bob Evans, founder of Bob
Evans Farms In c., and his wife
Jewd for nearly 20 years. They
raised their six children in the
ttrgc, brick farmhouse now known
as the Homestead. The Homestead, once • a stagecoach stop and
an inn, is now on the National
R egister of Historic Places.

.
Negotiators agree to
.

'

S3.5 billion in farm aid
election-year aid.
House and Senate negotiators

ter payments would be needed to
compensate for losses that are not
covered by insurance".

year.

.

The legislation includes $1.!&gt; billi on for paymCn~~ to farmers
·whose crops \vcre des[royed by
drought or d.tntaged by drseasc,

POMEROY - The offi ce of
vice. The elementary school will ·the Meigs County Board of Elecdismiss at I :05 p.m., and the high tions will be closed on Monday
school at I :20 p.m.
m obse rva nce of Columbus Day.

EMS log calls
POMEJtOY - Units of th e
Meigs
Emergency
Services
answered seven calls for assistance

CENTRAL DISPATCH

cle accident,Valerie Nottingham,
refused treatment, Joshua Riffie,

O ' Bieness Memorial Hospital; ·
. 9 :49p.m., Ohio 681, Christina
Ooten, St . Joseph's Memorial
HospitaL

.carleton festival
SYRACUSE
Carleton
School will hold its fall festlval on
Oct. 28 from 5 to 9 p.m.

$490 1mllmn to livt&gt;~tock produc ers \vim [mt pa\ture to thi~ sum nu..~r's dry Wl',lthcr anJ S471 mil lion for d:ury pnces to compem.Ht'
for fJUing nulk pri ct: s.
Most farmt.:rs ha\r""t.~ t:njoy~d good
weather this yt\lr, bul !ieveral states,
indudmg Ncbr:tska, Kansa~. Texas
and Gt·orgm, h.wc been gomg
through a sewre drought . Agricul rture Secretary l),m GltcknMn has

e&gt;timated tlut $1 .1 btllion in dim-

Temperatures wilJ take a nosedive across the t ri- county area
over the weekend and some snow
showe rs arc possible, the National

Weather Servtce sa1d.
High temp eratures on Saturday

will be in the 50s as cold Canadian air sweeps into the state.

Lows tonight will be mostly in
the 40s.
Sunset tonight \yill be at 7:06
and sunrise on Sat~rday at 7:35
a.m .

Weather forecast:
Tonight .. .'Partly cloudy and
colder. Lows 41 to 46. Northwest
. wind 5 to 10 mph.
Saturday: .. Partl y cloudy and

SPRING VAI UY CIIJEMA
'&gt;

1&gt; 1 1

[£

1'&lt; \'II rT

7

446 •4524 1.1 )Jfo&lt; ~'tlNPI~t
FRI10/8100 • THURS 10/12/00

lOX OFFICI WILL OPEN AT
6:30 PM FOR EVENING SHOWS
2:30 PM FOR MATINIIS
SCARY MOVIE (R)
7 : 10&amp;9~0FRI&amp;SAT

' 7:10 SUN-THUR

BRING IT ON (PG13)
,

7:00 &amp; 9:00 FRl &amp; SAT
7:00 SUN,THUAS

NURSE BETIY (R)
7:D0-9:30 FAt &amp; SAT
7:00 SUN-THURS
MATINEE 3:00

MEET THE PARENTS (PG131
7:15 &amp; 11:15 FRI &amp; SAT
7:15 SUN-THURS
MATINEES SAT UN 3:15
NUTIY PROFESSOR 2:
7:10 &amp; 9:10 FRI &amp; SAT
~10 SUN·THUAS
MATINEES SATI$UN 3:10

Anniversary
LENA!
Love,

Perfomance set
POMEROY -

Mount Her-

mon U i1ited Brethren Church in

Pomeroy will be presenting
"R eality Explosion" from the H e
Is Ministries on Oct. 22 . Th e
group wtll be performing drama,
music, improvisation and evange-

lism at th e church on Wickham
Road at I 0'30-11 :30 a.m. and at
Riverfront
the
Pomeroy
Amphitheater from 4- 6 p.m.

Dinner planned
. MIDDLEPORT - · Hobson
Christian Church will have a
spaghetti dinner as a youth fund raiser on Saturday from noon to 5
p.m . at the American Legion
Annex in Middleport. Donations
will, be accepted.

Revival services
POMEROY - Revival service will be held at Mount Hermon United Bre~hren in Christ
Church, Wednesday through Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Dr. E.R . Moore
of ce ntral Florida Will be the
evangelist and there will be special sin g ing each service. The
churc h is located on Wickham

R oad, just off Texas Road, in the
R obert

Texa s
Commllnity.
Sand ers is pastor.

Snow showers a-re possible

THE KLUMPS (PG13)

40th

('-;

VALLEY WEATHER

apple and potato farmers.

Th e :ud come1 on top of$15 billmn in f.um assistance th:.t 'Congrl'~~ approvt·d t' .lrlic'f this year.

invited .

profes sional development inser-

Other provisions in the bill:

m o hair pmduct:-rs.

The me~sage wil1 cen ter around

Office to dose

• $·138 million in subsi dies to

• $58 million to compensate citon Thursday put the money in an
S80 billion appropriations bill tthat rus growers for diseased trees.
• $20 million for cranbe rry
· will fund operauons of the Agn=&gt;
" culture Department and Food and grower ~.
• $20 nullion for wool and
Drug Administration over tbe next

LITTLE HOCKING - The
C hurch of C hrist at Little Hocking will have a gospel meeting
Oct,.22 to 26. Jim Rankhorn of
Ripley, W.Va ., will be the featured
speaker. Bible study will be held
at 9:30 a.m., worship at 10:30
a.m. and worship at 6 p.m . Service will be held a t 7 p.m., M onday through Thursday.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Local, Schools will dismiss
early on Oct. II due to a staff

Pennsylvania anJ Mi ssouri allow

$15 initial fees plus per-page

Gospel meeting

Early dismissal

10:34 a.m., Rocksprings
ation.
Rehabilitation Center, Donna
But they have sometimes Smith, Holzer Medical Center;
charged outrageous fees when
3:10p.m., Ohio 7, motor vehithey suspect a patient or patient's cle accident, Edna Hensie, Helen
.lawyer might plan to use the Heaton, refused treatinent;
records to sue hospitals or doc5:01 p.m., Bridgeman Street,
tors, officials of the Ohio Acade- James Eakins, HMC
my of Trial Lawyers ·said.
·
RUTLAND
Patie'lts had nowhere else to go
8:14 p.m., Langsville, assisted by
but the hospitals or record com- Central Dispatch, Anna Bareswilt,
panies when seeking copies, their Pleasant Valley Hospital.
lawyers said.
SYRACUSE
"We support the bill," said
8:28 p.m., Third Street, assisted
Connie Nolder, director of gov- by Cenual Dispatch , Tracey
ernm ental. affairs for the Ohio R.iggenback, treated.
Academy of Trial Lawyers . "We
TUPPERS PLAINS
believe that there are abuses out
3:10p.m., Ohio 7, motor vehithere . .. That's the reason that

MIDDLEPORT '- Widows'
Fellowshtp will meet on Oct. 13
at noon at the Middleport
Church of Christ. Those attending should take a covered dish for
the poduck meal.

the theme: Re storing the Ne w
Testament C hurch, The public is

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON (AP)
Farmers who produce everything
from avocados to milk would benefit from a $3.5 billion package of

The Daily Sentinel

state of Ohio," Conlisk said.

-

&amp;om Page AI

ical care, said spokeswoman Mary
Yost of the Ohio Hospttal Associ-

•

1

edu cated and tramed studen ts
and prepare them fur jobs in the

111 (.\,lll d l· .

Fees

chance to appreciate it."

Rocky Boots - 5 ~.
AD Shell- 61

To meet

on Thursday. Units responded as
follows:

that otherwise might not have the

tion that will graduate ve ry wellc

Ohio State \Vants to recruit
.md rl'tain "world-class" faculty
mcmbc n"jl"c nha JH~e- the quJlity of
th e tcJr hing .md learmng cnvlHHllllCIHS, .J nd creJtt: a more
dJ VCTSt.; lllli V t:l"~ lty (0 lllll1U11ity
Tu lli ~'L' t t ho~ (' go:tls, o ffi c i:~l s
pLtn 1-+ IH.,' \\" initTfl tiVt'\. Tho~l'

Friends may call at Willis Funeral Home Ill Gallipolis on Sunday,
October 8, 2000 from 5-9 p.m.
Pallbearers will be Tommy Meadows, Gene Canaday, Ronnie
Wright, Steve Henderson, Dave Rankin, Bill Wamsley, Mike Ru sse ll
and Jeff Maynard .
Honorary pallbearers are Brothers of Local No. R(l.
In lieu of flowers , the family has requested that donations c•n be
made to the Paige A. Humphreys Jr, OSU Scholarship, in care of Ohio
Valley Bank, 420 Third Avenue, P.O. aox: 240, Gallipolis, Ohio 4563 L

the past;' he said. "For 30 years, the
festival has preserved the rural her-

Gannett - 51 ~
General ElectrK: - 59,.
Harley Davidson - 48
Kmart - 5'4

Akzo- 45 ~..

Firstar -

Information age,
. Ohioans needs a top-tier institu.-

Jonathan Kollmann officiating. Burial wiU be in C entenary Cemetery.

announcement.

LOCAL STOCKS

Fedetal Mogul - 4~

thi~

and

GALLIPOLIS - Paige Anderson Humphreys Jr. , 49, of Gallipolis,
died Wednesday, October 4, 2000 at his residence.
Born January 27, 1951 in Covington, Virginia, he was the son of
Paige A. Humphreys Sr., who preceded him in death in 2000, and
Minnie E. Crosier Humphreys, who preceded him in death in 1997.
He was the business manager for the Insulators Union Local No. 80
in Charleston, West Virginia,
He was a member of Grace United Methodist Church in Gallipolis,
Elks Lodge No. 107 in Galli poLs, Insulators Local No. 80 in
Charleston, the Builder and Construction Trades (AFL-CIO) ofWest
Virginia and Ohio, and the National Boards for the Insulators and
Pension Health Care Fund.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded i'n death by a sister, Barbara McCalla, in 1992.
Surviving are his wife, Linda J Maynard Humphreys. whom he married June 28, 1974; a daughter and son-in-law, Jamie Leigh and Gary
Lee Harrison of Gallipolis; a daughter, Meghan Lynn Humphreys, of
the .home; a son, Eric Paige Humphreys of Porneroy; grandchildren,
Devin Paige Humphreys of Pomeroy, and Gage Andrew Harrison of
Gallipolis; a sister and brother- in -law, Li.nda and Bill Wamsley; and his
stepmother, Juanita Humphreys of Pomeroy.
•
Services will be 10 a.m . o n Monday, October 9, 2000 in Grace United Methodist Church, with Pastor Robert D. ln!&gt;ra m and Pastor

itage of this area for 'generations

Bob Evans -

said .

comnuss10ners

- - ...L

AEP- 36'•

Court issues
judgments

Paige Andenon Humphreys Jr.

POfMMJ:lROY- Marie 1'1· Domigan, 80,Jacksonville, N,C., former1y o
e1gs County, died Friday, Sept. 30, 2000.
She was the daughter of the late R.B. Nelson and Haze Whitt Nel·son.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Roy Domigan; and
two brothers, ]Uchard B. and James L
She is survived by two sons and d:iughters-in-law, Charles "Skip" ~nd
Dtanna Dotrugan. of Coolville, and John A. and Catherine Domigan of
Woodbndge, Va.; a daughter and son-in-law, Cindy and Daniel Midkiff ofJacksonville, N.C; two sisters, Helen King of Bidwell, and Klthleen Pauley of Greensboro, N.C.; two sisters-in-law Marii Kenton of
Paris, Ky., and Kay Ragland of Lexington, Ky.; six g;andchildren and a
great-grandchild; and several nieces and nephews.
Gravestde services willbe Sunday at 2:30 p.m . at the Cherry Ridge
!=emetery, Pomeroy.
· · : Memorial donations nuy be given to the Cherry Ridge Cemetery,in care of Alberta Hysell, 43315 Frank .Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769,
Arrangements are by White Funeral Home in Coolville.

from Page A1 -

a
five-vear
S750-million
academ
ic
'

" In

report e d

LOCAL BRIEFS

•

HOwever, Am!..!ritc c h reprc~ent:~tivt.•s told ~omc (ll&lt;;tmners
last we~kend that th e~r :,cn·ict•
might be restored 111 tluc~.· d,ly'&gt;.
but it could t.l k l· tbn· l" \\"eeb .

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

REMEMBER THE TITANS (PG)
7:00 &amp; 9:30 FRI&amp; SAT
7:00 SUN, THURS
MATINEES SATI$UN 3:00

ALMOST FAMOUS (R)
7:00 &amp; 9:30 FRI &amp; SAT
7:00 SUN-THURS
MATINEES SAT.SUN 3:00

THE ADVENTURES OF ROCKY
aULWINKLE (PG)
MATINEES SAT/SUN 3:15

much cooler. Highs 48 to 53.
Saturday night.. .Mostly cloudy
with

:1

chanc~

of rain showers.

Lows in th e mid 30s .
Extended forecast;
Sunday: .. Mostly cloudy with a
chance of rain o r snow sh owers
e;~rly,

then a chance of showers.
N o snow accumulation expected .

Highs in the nud and upper 40s .
Monday... Mostly cloudy. A
cha nce of rain o r snow showers
during the day. Lows in the tmd
30s and highs in the upper 40s.

�1

.:.:Th:::e..:::D=ai:Liy..::Se::.:n=tin=e:..I_ _ _ _ _ _ _.....;0=

PageA4

P-inion

Frtd.y, Odollar I, 2001

Ann advises couple to get some marriage counseling

The Daily Sentinel
~iiJ/.94$

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

QUICK- RUN m"
MY QPP0£1TION r

740-992·2156 ·Fax: 992-2157

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

Geueral Manager

\

'

R. Shewn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

.

Diane Kay Hill

'

Controller

OHIO VIEWS

Dou

.

•

'

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

1oday is Friday, Oct. 6, tlie 280th day of 2000. There are R6 days
left in the year.
Today\ Highlight in History:
On · Oct. 6, 1927. the era of ta lking pictures arrived wi th the
opening of"The·Jazz Sin ger," sta rr ing AI Jolson. a movte wh tch featured both sdent and sound-synchromzed scenes.
On this date:
In IHR4. the Naval War College was e;tablished in Newport, R.I.
In 1H89 , the Moulin Rouge in Paris first opened its doors to the
public.
·
In 1891 , Charles Stewart Parnell, th e "Uncrowned Kmg of Ire'.•
land," died in Bnghto n, Enwand.
i'n 1939. in an address to the Reichstag .. AdolfHidcr denied having ·any intention of war agaimt Fmn,ce and Britain. . .
.
•
In 1949. Presi dent Truman signed the Mutual Defense Assistance
Act, totaling S1.3 billton in military aid to NATO coumncs.
In 1973, war erupted in the Middle Ea&gt;t al Egypt and Syria
attacked Israel dunng the Yom Ktppur holiday
In 1979, Pope John Paul II , on a week long U.S. t.our, became the
first pontiff to vim the White House, where he was recetvcJ by President Carter.
In 19H 1, Egyptian Presid ent Anwar Sad at was shot to death by
extremists while reviewing a m1htary parade.
In 1983, Cardmal Terence Cooke, the &lt;pmtual head of the Archdiocese of New York, died at a~e 62.
· In 1989, actress Bette Davi&lt; died 1n Neuilly-1ur-Scine. F"nce, at
•
.
. . .
age ~1.
Ten years ago: Prc.,;ident Bu&lt;h vetoed ."opgap 1pcndmg le!(t slatton
passed by C.ongre\S following the collapse of a deficl!-reducing budget agreement. The ~pace shutde Di'icovery b la ~ted ofT on J. f~ur-day
mission.
.
F·tve years ago: Boemg ( :o.'s largc~t group of umon workers w~m
on a 61J-day strike J.ftcr votmg down a ne\'..r three-year contract ofler.
President C hnton dehvcred .111 address m wh1ch he defended h1s
stewardship of US fure1gn poltcy and 1poke out •K'timt wlut hnatd
was a spreading mood of i'iolatiomc;Jn .
.
One year ago: In Mexlco, furiouc; raim !ient ~wn llen nven mgn1g
through the streets of the Gulf coast ctty ofVlllahermosa JnCI came?
mudslide\l; dozens of deaths wen: n:portcJ 111 eastern Mex1co 'i
coastal mountalll range.,. T}je NFL .nv~irdcJ m nt::\'1/&lt;..''if. frJnchJ\l· w
· Houst6n instead of Los Angel eo;;, le.wing tht.: "~t.'tOIH.I- I.uge'it fV mJrke·t 111 the nat1on without a fnnthall ll"&lt;llll .

..

Dear Ann Landers: Last week, my
husb•nd and I were on our way to a
restaurant to meet some of my . relatives
for lunch . The restaurant is about two
hours away from our house.
"Dwight" was doing at least 65 mph
in a 35 zone. I calmly asked him to please
slow down. Instead, he sped up to pass
&lt;ame bi cyclists on the side of th e road.
We then came to a curve where several
motorists have been killed in the past few
years. He kept his foot on the gas pedal.
I was terrified that his reckless driving
would get us both kiUed. FinaUy, I said,
"If you cannot slow down , stop the car,
nnd let me out.'·'
• : Dwight immediately turned the car
~round, went back to ou.r house, and ·told
ij:te to get out of the car. I begged him
not to make me miss the luncheon. I told

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
hint how important it was for nte to
spend time with these relatives, some of
whom I had not seen in months. Dwight
s.aid nothing. He simply got back in the
cn and drove to the restaurant -- by
himself. I had no way of getting there, so
I was stuck at home. Dwiglit not only
had lun ch with my relatives, he also went
along wi th· them to visit my grandmorh-

er, who has not been feeling weU .
I was so furious when Dwight
returned that I told him to leave the
house and never come back. We have
been married 12 years -- this is my second marriage. Right now, I hate him. He
is basicaUy a good pcm&gt;n, but this is not
the first time he has behaved in an immature manner, and I've had it. Am I just too
angry to see str:iight? I'm ofraid if I forgive him, he wiU do it again. If he truly
loved me, why would he treat me like
this? Please tell me what to do. -Angry
in North Carolina
·
Dear North Carolina: You two are in
desperate need of marriage counseling.
and Dwight could use some sessions on
anger man:1gcment. Yes, I know co~\nsd­
ing costs money, but your marriage and
Dwight's mental health need propping up

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
Voices of Praise
concert Sunday

Return iffunds says
program was ·unsuccessful
• The' (Youngstown) Vindicator: Despite a $~.2billion federal program to ensure that millions ofAmcrlc;1~1 c hi~dret_l would _ger
health msurancc. 40 states· will lose a large share ot the IT allocation
b~cause, in many CdSes, buretlucrdts just cou ldn 't gt.•t eligible children
~ro~.
.
We wish we cou ld believe th&gt;t every child in Denver. say. ha;
health insurance. but we doubt it.
· · It's certainly not true 111 Oh10, or most of the rest of the country
-\Y ht~ re coo many kids are still under-immunized, or are u ~ mg hospt'tal . emergt"nry rooms bc:-cm se their famili~ s have no pnmilry care
physician.
.
.
,
.
The states which will lose tundmg had plenty of excuses: 111
some, it took a Yt'ar or m ore to start getting chlldren enrolled ; oth.ers complained chat the program was too rigi~ . Whatever t~e reasons. we are guite su re that the bureaucrats ma~mg ~h e m do n t have
to worry abo ut their health care or chat of the!T children .
• The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer:Wou ld )'0'! let you r 9-year-old
'watch a slasher disembowel voung women with an 'o utstzed tee
hook? Columbi a Tristar figur~d enough of yo u would. That's why
they interviewed 50 kids, ages 9 to 11, to help develop the gory
sequel 'to " I Kn ow What You Did last Summer."
Violent entertainment sells, and those already wealthy from making and marketing it want to grow richer still by selling it to prepubescentAmerka.That's th~ damning evldenc:e drawn by the New
York Times from documents detailing the marketing strategies of
C::olumbia, MGM /United Artists and ))isney o!Ehoot Hollywood
Picrures.
: It has to stop. Parents must rosolve to stand as th e t1o odwalls
between their children and th e torrent of trash bt'ing propelled their
way.
; • Sandusky Register: "Entitlement."
. .
.
: That's the word a R epubli can leader used, expl am111g hts relucGmce to create a fund w recompense workers 111 nuclear weapon,s
plants who b~came ill as a resu lt of being exposed to the less-than~ealrhy matenals that make up a nuclear warhead.
.
l There's word of a compromic;e, or at leao;t th ere wa'i u np l talk s
between the White Ho use and the opposi te parry 111 Congress
~&lt;tered out this week. Naturally. both sides see k to pursue polit ical
advantage in this pre&lt;idential elec tio n year, and there's stil l h ope.
· But "entitlement " is an unfortunate word to use when talking
a!&gt;out making things right for people who are arguably the last ca&gt;uaitles o f the Cold War. Th e country owe'i them J chance to recover
tpeir health , or at leasr-a chance at comfort for whateve r mne
rtmains to them.

By tile lend

The Daily Sentinel

THINK TANK

Europe is choking Qn its economic centrism
BY KARL ZINSMEISTER
La~·t wt&gt;ek. some America n mlnor lea:gl1ers

whipped the C uban baseball titan&lt; , underdog
Norway beat the favored American women in
socce r, and little Denmark rebuffed the
mighty European central planners.
This b.st event was not an Olympic resulr.
It was much mo re important than that. It was
the o utco m e of a referendum in Denmark
(total po pulati o n 5 million) on whether that
·co untry should givt• up its own currency and
fold its economy (and mu ch of its politics and
social life) into the more-than-300-millionpenon European Union. .
For some time now. European agglomeration has looked inevitable. Beginning with
the idea that war wnuld be lt"S likely if
Eu rope's national boundanes faded away, the
pan-European crusade has more recently garnered enthusiasm from centralizers who see
the big plann ing bureaucracies based in Brussels and Strasbo urg :ts handy tools for govern ment mampulation of economic and soc ial
policy.
As the unificati on. bandwagon rol\l;,fl
thro ugh the l_990s, only so me British and
Scat1dinavian.r skeptics were left re sisting th e
Euro and arguing for national sovereignty. In
De-nmark , the gove rnme nt was vigOrously in
favor o f conglomerati on . But the bigger-isbetter idea made so me peop1e wary, and a
coalition of Daneo; rJnging from co nserva ti ve
free-marketer; to li bera l Greens lJsh~d back
ln defense of sclf-dctennin atio n. In a coun trywide vote, a clear majority of the publi c
turned dO\vn the Euro.
Thi'i defeat m ay have 'iometh ing to do with
the way the Euro has performed sin ce it w;P~
lau'nched. In January 19'!9, II Europ ean
nations centrali zeJ th t:ir economic policies
and beg;:m the process of rt'tirin g their francs,
deutsche nurks, lira , etc., in favor of the Euro.
Since then,' the new currency has wmbled, c;o
far losing a quarter of irs value.

That is a reflection of economic problems
in the countries now under the sway of the
European Central Bank. Long accustomed to
p o liti ca l direction of rhc:ir eco nomi es,
Europe's politiciam have merely dabbl ed at
economi c deregulation over the. last decade.
U nemp loyment rem ain s stuck above 9 percent m th e 11-nation Euru zonl· · (ver su s 4
percent in the U.S.). Growth chronically lags
US. levels by a co upl e of percentage points.
Two percent less annual grmvth than
Ameri ca may not sound · like so mu ch . Dut
consider: If that differential continuos for just
20 more years, instead of th e European Uni o n
being roughly th e same size as the US. economica1ly (as measured in gross domestic
product), the U.S. will be 60 perce nt ri cher.
Havin g resisted the free market gospel much
more th an their trans-Atlantic partners, Europeans now find themselves stuck in the slow ·
la ne.
,
One exception co EUrope's tepid econ o m ic performanc e has been· the Irish. Irelandwhtch I vt&lt;it regularly. including this summ er
- is an economy o n fire. As recently as th e
late 1970s, when I attended college in Dublin,
th e coumry was still a ~\nd of developing
nation. Today, after t\vo decades of red-hot
growth , the Iri sh, stunningly, enjoy a per capita in come high er rha rl the Germ am.
·
How has Ireland bc·come a "Celtic nger" (a
Ia Hong Kong. Taiwan and Singapore. the earlier "tiger" economies in Asia)' Simple: Dy
clinging for dear life to the coattails o f the
American econo my. The Irish have basically
set themselves up as a free enterp rise zone for
U.S. companies wanting ;:1 base in Europe,
rolling out J business'-fri endly red carpet.
The governmen t also mimicked Ame ric an
growth policies in som e important areas chopping taxes and reducing .regulations.
M ore than in other parts of Europe, Irish
en trcp rc n cu~~ studied and th en cloned so m e
of America's hypercapitalic;t airlin es, energy

companies, con1munications businesses an&lt;f ·
computer finl1s . lrclJnd's snl a'ihingly success.- . .
ful Ryanair, for instance. is a direct kn ock-off
of Dallas-based Southwest Airline&lt;.
.
Ireland has done this while procl ai ming its
fea lty to the European Unio n (w hi ch admitredly made man y Irish farmers wealthy with
its lavish agricultural subs idies). The real·
engine of Ireland 's economic ad,·ance.
though , has been its warm embrace of lear~
and super-compt:"titivt· Amnkan high - tech ;
manUfacturing and service businesses.
Across •he rest of Europe, meanwhile. older
formulas of government planning. subsidies
and controls (they now call it "rationalization" or "market unification" ) persist stubbornly. Germany stiU indulges its creaky labor
umons, the French sti ll insist o n 'propping up
nationalized industrie5 , and bureaucrats in
E. U. headquarters now dictate everything
from the temperatures at which beer may be
sold to th e hou~s th at busin esses can stay
open.
If they are smart, more Europeans will
rebel ag~inst this reo nomic finagling, which is'
c;tifling their ·economic· vigor. They can do
that by si1eaking nrdre Arneri can- style capital- .
ism into their econo my as the Irish have. And .
they can do that by saying "No" to further
cen tralization of Europe's economies through
the European Umon, as the Oan es did.A cou.-.
pie years ago, the British and th e Swedes were;
in a lonely position as the sole holdou~
against surrender ing their moneiary and cui~
tural independence to the bureaucrats of the;
European Union .
·
Increasingly. they loo k rather wise.

(Karl Zi,lsmcisrer is cdiror i11 dli~f of1711' !I mer~
icau Enterprise, a ~Mtiimal '"a,~azine &lt;;_( politicS,:
busil'!ess arul mlturc, wwm ThfAml'rl((lflEHtcr-:.
prise.ctufl)
.•

Niceness has become a thing of our societys past
But we don't care. Geo rge W. Dush doesn't :

dpol~gi7e tOr his ciudc remark about a New ~

George R.
Plagenz
NEA COLUMNIST

York Tim es reporter. H e is sorry on ly that the :
mi croph ones were on when he said it. As for :
the man and woman in th e street, rh ey are noc. :
offended. They feel what Bush said ''made.:
him seem human."
:;
Nobody want'i to bt' considered nice any-··
more. There is a littl e game you can play to:
prove this to you rse lf. Players arc asked to:
think of their favorite color and then to write:
down three adjectives describt!lg that colo r. :
In the gam~ I played, people chose ad;ec~
tives hke warm , vibrant, exc iting. sexy imd
fashion able. Your answers are sd.id to mdicate'
qu alities you think other people sec· in you. ·
Then pia""" are asked to list three adjec- :
tiYes describ.ing their ideal pet. Tim is '&lt;Ii&lt;l to:
c;how h O\v you SC\.' yourself. There were:
answers lik e frisky, cuddly. friendly. play(ul, ·
i ntdligenc' and responsive.
Nice didn't show up on anybody's lists,:
l~ading to the con clusion th.tt nice isn't how:
we S\.'&lt;.' oursclvt's or how '''t' w:tnt other'i lo ·

that tou~h guys like Humphrey
Uogart and Edward G. Robinson n~:v('·r u sed
foul langu age. Did those tilms lack realism
be caust" nobody cur,cd? ·
In his book on Dolton , Lucius Beebe
devmcd a ~ection to the poet H enry
Wadsworth Longfellow. "Everything aboLit
him was nice," "i.1 1d lkcbc, "h ie; manncrc;, hi-.
tac;tc, his Urattle Street houc;r: 111 Cambridge
and mmt of hi'i vt·Tse-,.''
But . nicrnl'"i"i im't 'iomething wt· prize
o;t'e us.
roJay. We havt· g1ven up one nJCc thing .tfter
Ou r era " do,e r to baseball player-ma nag-:
,mother in our socit'ty. CS&gt;ur 'pecch and mal1er Leo Durocher ("Nice guys finish last"): ·
ncr'i Jre umpcJ~ably uncouth . We have
·than to Lon!(fdlow. ,
turned Hlto .1 natJon of slobs lcKking .my cl ;t\"i
fGe(l~{!t' R. Pla,(!W&lt;: 1.:1 ,, col1ommt ~~r i\ 'cwspa
or t•lcg.liKt'.
'
Years -

Chapter elects
new officers

on the current poor pay of U. S.
military resulting in many taking
retirement and the resulting poor
effect it is having on military preparedness.
Lochary announced the Ohio
S.A.R. Board of Management
meeting at Marietta at the
Lafayette Hotel, and the memorial service for the Dattle of Pt.
Pleasant to be held at 2 p.m., Sunday at Tu Emli Wei Park in Pt.
Pleasant.
ln legislative affairs, the fhapter
approved a resolution asking that
Congress cease allowing any new
memorials on the Mall in Washington, D.C., so that the beauty
can be preserved and the emphasis on th~ Washington Monument
not lessened.
The resolution also asks that
Congress create a park somewhere else in the District of
Columbia for additional memorials . The chapter also discussed
Senate Bill 2099, which seeks to
require the registration of all guns
on federal income tax fonns.
The chapter also discussed the
information provided by Rep. Ted
Strickland regardi ng tpe intention
of the National Archives to
quadruple tl1e cost of pension
records on veterans of early
American War:s. The increased
costs have temporarily been halted, but Rep. Strickland indicated
Congress has no power over the
National Archives even though
Congress ha s the 'power to cut or
add funds for the Archives.
,
The chapter is now proct!ssing
six new applications. The next
mc"eting will be the anniversary of
the chapter. A picture of the officers is planned for ~he upcoming
county hi story.

I

PLAGENZ 'S VIEW

Th e ' ca ption on the Newsweek magazine
cover-"itory on talk-~how h os te~s Rosie
O'Donnell read&lt; "Nice I&lt; Back."
.
Unfortunately. it's an old cover.
The language 011 the Rosie O'Donnell
show thc~e days 1~ :l"i ta'itdess as it ca n he tastele~s a~· in vulgar.Tasteless as in you wou ld n't believe it. Ta'\telesc; a.;; in maybe wo should
call in the ccmors.
A guest on the Late Show with David Lercerman. lookm g back on the girls ht" met
wht:n he ca mL' to co llege, 'laid, "They came in
both refint'd and n:gu lar."
They sttll do. Sad to say, there are more of
the regtdar than 'tf;c rcfin~d these days. Li sten
to so me of them carry on a c:onver&lt;;ation if
yo u have any doubt.
Women got into swearing in earnest as a
re'iult of the fcmini'it movement. Anything
men could do, wornt.•n could do. lc went furtha. Any man who would swe;Jr in from of
other men but not in the prestnce of a
woman was accmcd df bcmg scx1st .,
1Now. refinement and good taste in ~pccch
have virtu~lly di qppt.•Jred arnong both
men and women.
The movie producns' positJon i~ that vulgarity adds tht• rc,di~m thJt the: public want\.
Uut I don't recall tlut 1t ho ther~d Jnybne in
the 1'1.111s and I'J41 ls - Hollywood's l;olden

Oak Hill, veterans' afl'airs and
Revolutionary graves; Michael
Worley of New Marshfield, web
master.
MIDDLEPORT - . Voices of
Margaret Parker, director of the
Praise (VIP) will present a praise Meigs County Museum and presooncert 'called, "I'm Smellin' Cof- ident of the Meigs County Pio~e" at Middleport Church of neer and Historical Society gave a
Christ Family Life Center at 7 history of the Society established
p.m. Sunday. .
1876. She s:rid it was orij:i~ally a
VIP is an auditioned perform- pioneer society n:quiring a meming ensemble from Kentucky ber to be SO years old and a 20Christian CoUege, Gr.~yson, Ky. year resident of the county before
The nine me1nbers are from vari- they could become a member:
ous locatiom including Ohio,
Record.s show Alonzo V. HowPennsylvania, !Uinois, . Kentucky, eU establishing the first museunt
ai1d Michigan. Jessica Wheeler of in the courthouse in 1957 with
the Dexter area is part of the the current property on Butternut
group.
Avenue being purchased primari- ·
The vocalists are all members of ly with funds from the Herscher
Kentucky Christian CoUege con- Foundation. Partial funding for ·
cert choir which tours twice a the museum comes through the
year, has six f!'COrdings, and has Meigs County Commission .
performed four times on the" stage
Parker commented on history
at Carnegie Hall in New York books in the museum, mentionCity.
ing the Larkin history of 1908,
. The public is invited to attend and more recent history books
the program where a free will including the 1979 and 1986 ones
offering will be takeil. For infor- with plans for a third companion
mation, contacts can ,be made book in 2001. She said ~hat Meigs
with the church at ~92-2914.
County is only one of t\vo counties in the U. S. to publish three
history book s in the last 25 years.
She told of the tourism dollars
brought in by the museum due to
history
research ln the library
· POMEROY - New officers
there,
the
award-winning Yesterwere elected at a recent meeting
of Ewings Chapter, Sons of the year Program, the annual reenactAmerican R evo lution held at the ment of the Civil War ar Portland,
and o ther programs.
Meigs Museum .
It was noted during the meet. Elected were James Lochary of
Amesvi lle, presidell!; Keith Ashley ing that the chapter plans to have
of Rocksprings, secretary/ regis- p;1~ade units in upcoming Vctcrtrar; William Decgle of GaUipolis, ans' Day parades in Gallipolis,
Po me my. and Athens. Judge Alan
tt1"a ~ urer ; James Hanna of 0Jk
Hill, chaplain; Roy Holter of Five Goldsberry of Athens is in charge
Points, historian; Myron Jones of of getting the units for the
parades. A discu ssion \YaS also held ·

4

per Entcrpri.&gt;(' /l _~_,.(,ria rian .)

.

Aday of pec~ce, low and ... literacy

Wanted: Local bands
to perform in daylong
benefit concert.
·When: Saturday, Oct. 21
from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Where: The University of
Rio Grande
Why: To benefit "Gallia ·
Reads: Make a Difference"

GA-LLIA-

was told they couldn't see me. I thought I
"""s family and not "company." I was
called "selfish," and told ! .should put the
children's needs ahead of my own. I
couldn't believe my em. I have always
been there for my daughter when she had
marital difficulties. I baby-sat a lot, and
helped out whenever there was an iUne&gt;s
or they had financial problems.
Am I wrong to feel hurt? My daughter
says she loves me, but I'm beginning to
wonder. Any ideas?-- Boca Raton, Fla.
Dear Boca: It sounds like there were
lots of frayed nerves as a result of
much going on that weekend. Family
get-rogethers can do that. Cool it. Let
things settle doy.on. Call your daughter
and sug_t;est a Sunday supper together, and
don't bring up the past. Titile is the best
healer.

too

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
The Community Calendar is published as a
free service to non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special ev~nts. The
calendar is not designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items are printed
only as space permits and cannot be guaran~
teed to be printed a specific number of days.

HARRISONVILLE - 1-brrisonville Lodge 411,
F&amp;AM statc·d meeting, Sawrday, 7:30 p.m. Degree
work followed by refreshments.
' TUPPERS PLAINS - Square dance,VFW,.8- 11.
True Country, Clifford Lo ngenette as caUer.

SUNDAY

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Friday's fun, food and fellowship
at God's Neighborhood Escape for Tens Friday.
Center is open fro m 6 p.m to 10:30 p.m on Friday
and Saturday nights. Nutritional foods available free
of charge, teens can play non-violent games, computer programs, and cards free of charge in the center' game room .
RUTLAND Rose of Sharon Holiness
Church, revival through O.~;t. 15 , 7 p.m., with Rev.
Jack Dolin.

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER- Star Grongc 778 will meet
in regular session, Saturday, with a potlu ck supper at
6:30p.m. followed by a meeting at 7:30p.m.

RA&lt;;:INE - Aposcle Dale Luffman wiU speak ·~t
the Portland Racine Branch of RLQS Church Sui!~
day at I 0:30 a.m . A potluck dinner will follow. The
public is invited to attend.
POMEROY - Homecoming will be held Suti~
day at the Carleton Church, Kingsbury Road. Dif!·
ner will be served at noon and the program wjU
begin at I p.m .

MONDAY
RUTLAND
p.m., fire station.

...

Rutland Township Trustees, 5

CHESHIRE - D.A.V: #53, locataed at 2805.1
State Route 7 in Cheshire wiU meet on Monday
with dinner at 6:30 p.m. and the meeting at 7 p.m.

,.

. MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS; subscribe today. 992-2156 ..

2000 Olds Bravada

2000 Chevy

4 Door All Wheel Drive

2000 Chevy

Blazer LS 4 Door 4x4

Impala Sedan

123'950* 120'95

~7,950*

.
• CD System/Keyless
Entry
• Fully Power Equipped
Tilt, Cruise, Alum. Wheels

• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• 'n it &amp; Cruise
• Aluminum Wheels

• Power Seat/CO System
• Power Window &amp; Locks
• Tilt &amp; Cruise

2000 Oldsmobile

1999 Che~y

Intrigue Sedan

Monte Carlo LS Coupe

2000 Chevrolel
Cavalier Sedan

.

.

~5,950* ~3,950* ~0,950*
Power Seat, Windows &amp; Loc:Ksl
AM/FM CD &amp; Cassette
Keyless Entry

• CD System/Alum. Wheels
• Power Windows &amp;Locks
• Till &amp; Cruise

• Automatic
• Air Conditioning
• Tilt &amp; Cruise

VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT: www.tompeden.com

To sign up or for
information, ·call (7 40)
446-2342, ext. 18.

Rwley·Fanplaln

Wesl Virginia's #1 Chevy. Pontiac, Bui ck, Olds.
And Cuslom Van Dealer.
CHI¥1110LI1'

~

Deadline for bands
to enter is 5 p.m. Oct. 13.

-- big time. Please get the help you need.
This is no do-it-younelf project.
Dear Ann La11den: I live 20 minutes
from my daughter, and have not seen her
in ihree weeks. She has a job and works
hard, but I don't think that is the reason .
There must be more to it.
Last weekend, my gr;~ndson and his
wife came to town to attend a Sarurday
wedding. They stayed at ~g!uer's
house and were to return home late Sunday ofternoon . I was told I \vouldn't be
able to sec my grandson because he
would be very tired, having stayed 'up late
at the wedding. Also, my daughter said she
and her husband are taking weekend
rbsst.&gt;s in order to improve rheir job status, and they were not up to receiving
company.
Still, I was deeply disappointed when I

~£A-DS

WnL.IlHIH

'

1 ,,,

:~~
, .,,,,I ....

••• , (&gt;

CZ) OldSmobile
w

!'•

08000 Ollllll D13 I 00

ro

EJut !32

--

Fit 21 Churctl Sntt!

CN.rlef.lon

•
Monday- Saturday 9 am • 9 pm
Sunday 1 pm - 8 pm

• T~xes. Tags, lille Fees &amp;Kit a Pnces Good Oct~r 6th Through October 6th. Nol ~~~spotlsib!e lor IYJXI9'aDhicaterrors:

,I

�1

.:.:Th:::e..:::D=ai:Liy..::Se::.:n=tin=e:..I_ _ _ _ _ _ _.....;0=

PageA4

P-inion

Frtd.y, Odollar I, 2001

Ann advises couple to get some marriage counseling

The Daily Sentinel
~iiJ/.94$

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

QUICK- RUN m"
MY QPP0£1TION r

740-992·2156 ·Fax: 992-2157

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

Geueral Manager

\

'

R. Shewn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

.

Diane Kay Hill

'

Controller

OHIO VIEWS

Dou

.

•

'

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

1oday is Friday, Oct. 6, tlie 280th day of 2000. There are R6 days
left in the year.
Today\ Highlight in History:
On · Oct. 6, 1927. the era of ta lking pictures arrived wi th the
opening of"The·Jazz Sin ger," sta rr ing AI Jolson. a movte wh tch featured both sdent and sound-synchromzed scenes.
On this date:
In IHR4. the Naval War College was e;tablished in Newport, R.I.
In 1H89 , the Moulin Rouge in Paris first opened its doors to the
public.
·
In 1891 , Charles Stewart Parnell, th e "Uncrowned Kmg of Ire'.•
land," died in Bnghto n, Enwand.
i'n 1939. in an address to the Reichstag .. AdolfHidcr denied having ·any intention of war agaimt Fmn,ce and Britain. . .
.
•
In 1949. Presi dent Truman signed the Mutual Defense Assistance
Act, totaling S1.3 billton in military aid to NATO coumncs.
In 1973, war erupted in the Middle Ea&gt;t al Egypt and Syria
attacked Israel dunng the Yom Ktppur holiday
In 1979, Pope John Paul II , on a week long U.S. t.our, became the
first pontiff to vim the White House, where he was recetvcJ by President Carter.
In 19H 1, Egyptian Presid ent Anwar Sad at was shot to death by
extremists while reviewing a m1htary parade.
In 1983, Cardmal Terence Cooke, the &lt;pmtual head of the Archdiocese of New York, died at a~e 62.
· In 1989, actress Bette Davi&lt; died 1n Neuilly-1ur-Scine. F"nce, at
•
.
. . .
age ~1.
Ten years ago: Prc.,;ident Bu&lt;h vetoed ."opgap 1pcndmg le!(t slatton
passed by C.ongre\S following the collapse of a deficl!-reducing budget agreement. The ~pace shutde Di'icovery b la ~ted ofT on J. f~ur-day
mission.
.
F·tve years ago: Boemg ( :o.'s largc~t group of umon workers w~m
on a 61J-day strike J.ftcr votmg down a ne\'..r three-year contract ofler.
President C hnton dehvcred .111 address m wh1ch he defended h1s
stewardship of US fure1gn poltcy and 1poke out •K'timt wlut hnatd
was a spreading mood of i'iolatiomc;Jn .
.
One year ago: In Mexlco, furiouc; raim !ient ~wn llen nven mgn1g
through the streets of the Gulf coast ctty ofVlllahermosa JnCI came?
mudslide\l; dozens of deaths wen: n:portcJ 111 eastern Mex1co 'i
coastal mountalll range.,. T}je NFL .nv~irdcJ m nt::\'1/&lt;..''if. frJnchJ\l· w
· Houst6n instead of Los Angel eo;;, le.wing tht.: "~t.'tOIH.I- I.uge'it fV mJrke·t 111 the nat1on without a fnnthall ll"&lt;llll .

..

Dear Ann Landers: Last week, my
husb•nd and I were on our way to a
restaurant to meet some of my . relatives
for lunch . The restaurant is about two
hours away from our house.
"Dwight" was doing at least 65 mph
in a 35 zone. I calmly asked him to please
slow down. Instead, he sped up to pass
&lt;ame bi cyclists on the side of th e road.
We then came to a curve where several
motorists have been killed in the past few
years. He kept his foot on the gas pedal.
I was terrified that his reckless driving
would get us both kiUed. FinaUy, I said,
"If you cannot slow down , stop the car,
nnd let me out.'·'
• : Dwight immediately turned the car
~round, went back to ou.r house, and ·told
ij:te to get out of the car. I begged him
not to make me miss the luncheon. I told

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
hint how important it was for nte to
spend time with these relatives, some of
whom I had not seen in months. Dwight
s.aid nothing. He simply got back in the
cn and drove to the restaurant -- by
himself. I had no way of getting there, so
I was stuck at home. Dwiglit not only
had lun ch with my relatives, he also went
along wi th· them to visit my grandmorh-

er, who has not been feeling weU .
I was so furious when Dwight
returned that I told him to leave the
house and never come back. We have
been married 12 years -- this is my second marriage. Right now, I hate him. He
is basicaUy a good pcm&gt;n, but this is not
the first time he has behaved in an immature manner, and I've had it. Am I just too
angry to see str:iight? I'm ofraid if I forgive him, he wiU do it again. If he truly
loved me, why would he treat me like
this? Please tell me what to do. -Angry
in North Carolina
·
Dear North Carolina: You two are in
desperate need of marriage counseling.
and Dwight could use some sessions on
anger man:1gcment. Yes, I know co~\nsd­
ing costs money, but your marriage and
Dwight's mental health need propping up

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
Voices of Praise
concert Sunday

Return iffunds says
program was ·unsuccessful
• The' (Youngstown) Vindicator: Despite a $~.2billion federal program to ensure that millions ofAmcrlc;1~1 c hi~dret_l would _ger
health msurancc. 40 states· will lose a large share ot the IT allocation
b~cause, in many CdSes, buretlucrdts just cou ldn 't gt.•t eligible children
~ro~.
.
We wish we cou ld believe th&gt;t every child in Denver. say. ha;
health insurance. but we doubt it.
· · It's certainly not true 111 Oh10, or most of the rest of the country
-\Y ht~ re coo many kids are still under-immunized, or are u ~ mg hospt'tal . emergt"nry rooms bc:-cm se their famili~ s have no pnmilry care
physician.
.
.
,
.
The states which will lose tundmg had plenty of excuses: 111
some, it took a Yt'ar or m ore to start getting chlldren enrolled ; oth.ers complained chat the program was too rigi~ . Whatever t~e reasons. we are guite su re that the bureaucrats ma~mg ~h e m do n t have
to worry abo ut their health care or chat of the!T children .
• The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer:Wou ld )'0'! let you r 9-year-old
'watch a slasher disembowel voung women with an 'o utstzed tee
hook? Columbi a Tristar figur~d enough of yo u would. That's why
they interviewed 50 kids, ages 9 to 11, to help develop the gory
sequel 'to " I Kn ow What You Did last Summer."
Violent entertainment sells, and those already wealthy from making and marketing it want to grow richer still by selling it to prepubescentAmerka.That's th~ damning evldenc:e drawn by the New
York Times from documents detailing the marketing strategies of
C::olumbia, MGM /United Artists and ))isney o!Ehoot Hollywood
Picrures.
: It has to stop. Parents must rosolve to stand as th e t1o odwalls
between their children and th e torrent of trash bt'ing propelled their
way.
; • Sandusky Register: "Entitlement."
. .
.
: That's the word a R epubli can leader used, expl am111g hts relucGmce to create a fund w recompense workers 111 nuclear weapon,s
plants who b~came ill as a resu lt of being exposed to the less-than~ealrhy matenals that make up a nuclear warhead.
.
l There's word of a compromic;e, or at leao;t th ere wa'i u np l talk s
between the White Ho use and the opposi te parry 111 Congress
~&lt;tered out this week. Naturally. both sides see k to pursue polit ical
advantage in this pre&lt;idential elec tio n year, and there's stil l h ope.
· But "entitlement " is an unfortunate word to use when talking
a!&gt;out making things right for people who are arguably the last ca&gt;uaitles o f the Cold War. Th e country owe'i them J chance to recover
tpeir health , or at leasr-a chance at comfort for whateve r mne
rtmains to them.

By tile lend

The Daily Sentinel

THINK TANK

Europe is choking Qn its economic centrism
BY KARL ZINSMEISTER
La~·t wt&gt;ek. some America n mlnor lea:gl1ers

whipped the C uban baseball titan&lt; , underdog
Norway beat the favored American women in
socce r, and little Denmark rebuffed the
mighty European central planners.
This b.st event was not an Olympic resulr.
It was much mo re important than that. It was
the o utco m e of a referendum in Denmark
(total po pulati o n 5 million) on whether that
·co untry should givt• up its own currency and
fold its economy (and mu ch of its politics and
social life) into the more-than-300-millionpenon European Union. .
For some time now. European agglomeration has looked inevitable. Beginning with
the idea that war wnuld be lt"S likely if
Eu rope's national boundanes faded away, the
pan-European crusade has more recently garnered enthusiasm from centralizers who see
the big plann ing bureaucracies based in Brussels and Strasbo urg :ts handy tools for govern ment mampulation of economic and soc ial
policy.
As the unificati on. bandwagon rol\l;,fl
thro ugh the l_990s, only so me British and
Scat1dinavian.r skeptics were left re sisting th e
Euro and arguing for national sovereignty. In
De-nmark , the gove rnme nt was vigOrously in
favor o f conglomerati on . But the bigger-isbetter idea made so me peop1e wary, and a
coalition of Daneo; rJnging from co nserva ti ve
free-marketer; to li bera l Greens lJsh~d back
ln defense of sclf-dctennin atio n. In a coun trywide vote, a clear majority of the publi c
turned dO\vn the Euro.
Thi'i defeat m ay have 'iometh ing to do with
the way the Euro has performed sin ce it w;P~
lau'nched. In January 19'!9, II Europ ean
nations centrali zeJ th t:ir economic policies
and beg;:m the process of rt'tirin g their francs,
deutsche nurks, lira , etc., in favor of the Euro.
Since then,' the new currency has wmbled, c;o
far losing a quarter of irs value.

That is a reflection of economic problems
in the countries now under the sway of the
European Central Bank. Long accustomed to
p o liti ca l direction of rhc:ir eco nomi es,
Europe's politiciam have merely dabbl ed at
economi c deregulation over the. last decade.
U nemp loyment rem ain s stuck above 9 percent m th e 11-nation Euru zonl· · (ver su s 4
percent in the U.S.). Growth chronically lags
US. levels by a co upl e of percentage points.
Two percent less annual grmvth than
Ameri ca may not sound · like so mu ch . Dut
consider: If that differential continuos for just
20 more years, instead of th e European Uni o n
being roughly th e same size as the US. economica1ly (as measured in gross domestic
product), the U.S. will be 60 perce nt ri cher.
Havin g resisted the free market gospel much
more th an their trans-Atlantic partners, Europeans now find themselves stuck in the slow ·
la ne.
,
One exception co EUrope's tepid econ o m ic performanc e has been· the Irish. Irelandwhtch I vt&lt;it regularly. including this summ er
- is an economy o n fire. As recently as th e
late 1970s, when I attended college in Dublin,
th e coumry was still a ~\nd of developing
nation. Today, after t\vo decades of red-hot
growth , the Iri sh, stunningly, enjoy a per capita in come high er rha rl the Germ am.
·
How has Ireland bc·come a "Celtic nger" (a
Ia Hong Kong. Taiwan and Singapore. the earlier "tiger" economies in Asia)' Simple: Dy
clinging for dear life to the coattails o f the
American econo my. The Irish have basically
set themselves up as a free enterp rise zone for
U.S. companies wanting ;:1 base in Europe,
rolling out J business'-fri endly red carpet.
The governmen t also mimicked Ame ric an
growth policies in som e important areas chopping taxes and reducing .regulations.
M ore than in other parts of Europe, Irish
en trcp rc n cu~~ studied and th en cloned so m e
of America's hypercapitalic;t airlin es, energy

companies, con1munications businesses an&lt;f ·
computer finl1s . lrclJnd's snl a'ihingly success.- . .
ful Ryanair, for instance. is a direct kn ock-off
of Dallas-based Southwest Airline&lt;.
.
Ireland has done this while procl ai ming its
fea lty to the European Unio n (w hi ch admitredly made man y Irish farmers wealthy with
its lavish agricultural subs idies). The real·
engine of Ireland 's economic ad,·ance.
though , has been its warm embrace of lear~
and super-compt:"titivt· Amnkan high - tech ;
manUfacturing and service businesses.
Across •he rest of Europe, meanwhile. older
formulas of government planning. subsidies
and controls (they now call it "rationalization" or "market unification" ) persist stubbornly. Germany stiU indulges its creaky labor
umons, the French sti ll insist o n 'propping up
nationalized industrie5 , and bureaucrats in
E. U. headquarters now dictate everything
from the temperatures at which beer may be
sold to th e hou~s th at busin esses can stay
open.
If they are smart, more Europeans will
rebel ag~inst this reo nomic finagling, which is'
c;tifling their ·economic· vigor. They can do
that by si1eaking nrdre Arneri can- style capital- .
ism into their econo my as the Irish have. And .
they can do that by saying "No" to further
cen tralization of Europe's economies through
the European Umon, as the Oan es did.A cou.-.
pie years ago, the British and th e Swedes were;
in a lonely position as the sole holdou~
against surrender ing their moneiary and cui~
tural independence to the bureaucrats of the;
European Union .
·
Increasingly. they loo k rather wise.

(Karl Zi,lsmcisrer is cdiror i11 dli~f of1711' !I mer~
icau Enterprise, a ~Mtiimal '"a,~azine &lt;;_( politicS,:
busil'!ess arul mlturc, wwm ThfAml'rl((lflEHtcr-:.
prise.ctufl)
.•

Niceness has become a thing of our societys past
But we don't care. Geo rge W. Dush doesn't :

dpol~gi7e tOr his ciudc remark about a New ~

George R.
Plagenz
NEA COLUMNIST

York Tim es reporter. H e is sorry on ly that the :
mi croph ones were on when he said it. As for :
the man and woman in th e street, rh ey are noc. :
offended. They feel what Bush said ''made.:
him seem human."
:;
Nobody want'i to bt' considered nice any-··
more. There is a littl e game you can play to:
prove this to you rse lf. Players arc asked to:
think of their favorite color and then to write:
down three adjectives describt!lg that colo r. :
In the gam~ I played, people chose ad;ec~
tives hke warm , vibrant, exc iting. sexy imd
fashion able. Your answers are sd.id to mdicate'
qu alities you think other people sec· in you. ·
Then pia""" are asked to list three adjec- :
tiYes describ.ing their ideal pet. Tim is '&lt;Ii&lt;l to:
c;how h O\v you SC\.' yourself. There were:
answers lik e frisky, cuddly. friendly. play(ul, ·
i ntdligenc' and responsive.
Nice didn't show up on anybody's lists,:
l~ading to the con clusion th.tt nice isn't how:
we S\.'&lt;.' oursclvt's or how '''t' w:tnt other'i lo ·

that tou~h guys like Humphrey
Uogart and Edward G. Robinson n~:v('·r u sed
foul langu age. Did those tilms lack realism
be caust" nobody cur,cd? ·
In his book on Dolton , Lucius Beebe
devmcd a ~ection to the poet H enry
Wadsworth Longfellow. "Everything aboLit
him was nice," "i.1 1d lkcbc, "h ie; manncrc;, hi-.
tac;tc, his Urattle Street houc;r: 111 Cambridge
and mmt of hi'i vt·Tse-,.''
But . nicrnl'"i"i im't 'iomething wt· prize
o;t'e us.
roJay. We havt· g1ven up one nJCc thing .tfter
Ou r era " do,e r to baseball player-ma nag-:
,mother in our socit'ty. CS&gt;ur 'pecch and mal1er Leo Durocher ("Nice guys finish last"): ·
ncr'i Jre umpcJ~ably uncouth . We have
·than to Lon!(fdlow. ,
turned Hlto .1 natJon of slobs lcKking .my cl ;t\"i
fGe(l~{!t' R. Pla,(!W&lt;: 1.:1 ,, col1ommt ~~r i\ 'cwspa
or t•lcg.liKt'.
'
Years -

Chapter elects
new officers

on the current poor pay of U. S.
military resulting in many taking
retirement and the resulting poor
effect it is having on military preparedness.
Lochary announced the Ohio
S.A.R. Board of Management
meeting at Marietta at the
Lafayette Hotel, and the memorial service for the Dattle of Pt.
Pleasant to be held at 2 p.m., Sunday at Tu Emli Wei Park in Pt.
Pleasant.
ln legislative affairs, the fhapter
approved a resolution asking that
Congress cease allowing any new
memorials on the Mall in Washington, D.C., so that the beauty
can be preserved and the emphasis on th~ Washington Monument
not lessened.
The resolution also asks that
Congress create a park somewhere else in the District of
Columbia for additional memorials . The chapter also discussed
Senate Bill 2099, which seeks to
require the registration of all guns
on federal income tax fonns.
The chapter also discussed the
information provided by Rep. Ted
Strickland regardi ng tpe intention
of the National Archives to
quadruple tl1e cost of pension
records on veterans of early
American War:s. The increased
costs have temporarily been halted, but Rep. Strickland indicated
Congress has no power over the
National Archives even though
Congress ha s the 'power to cut or
add funds for the Archives.
,
The chapter is now proct!ssing
six new applications. The next
mc"eting will be the anniversary of
the chapter. A picture of the officers is planned for ~he upcoming
county hi story.

I

PLAGENZ 'S VIEW

Th e ' ca ption on the Newsweek magazine
cover-"itory on talk-~how h os te~s Rosie
O'Donnell read&lt; "Nice I&lt; Back."
.
Unfortunately. it's an old cover.
The language 011 the Rosie O'Donnell
show thc~e days 1~ :l"i ta'itdess as it ca n he tastele~s a~· in vulgar.Tasteless as in you wou ld n't believe it. Ta'\telesc; a.;; in maybe wo should
call in the ccmors.
A guest on the Late Show with David Lercerman. lookm g back on the girls ht" met
wht:n he ca mL' to co llege, 'laid, "They came in
both refint'd and n:gu lar."
They sttll do. Sad to say, there are more of
the regtdar than 'tf;c rcfin~d these days. Li sten
to so me of them carry on a c:onver&lt;;ation if
yo u have any doubt.
Women got into swearing in earnest as a
re'iult of the fcmini'it movement. Anything
men could do, wornt.•n could do. lc went furtha. Any man who would swe;Jr in from of
other men but not in the prestnce of a
woman was accmcd df bcmg scx1st .,
1Now. refinement and good taste in ~pccch
have virtu~lly di qppt.•Jred arnong both
men and women.
The movie producns' positJon i~ that vulgarity adds tht• rc,di~m thJt the: public want\.
Uut I don't recall tlut 1t ho ther~d Jnybne in
the 1'1.111s and I'J41 ls - Hollywood's l;olden

Oak Hill, veterans' afl'airs and
Revolutionary graves; Michael
Worley of New Marshfield, web
master.
MIDDLEPORT - . Voices of
Margaret Parker, director of the
Praise (VIP) will present a praise Meigs County Museum and presooncert 'called, "I'm Smellin' Cof- ident of the Meigs County Pio~e" at Middleport Church of neer and Historical Society gave a
Christ Family Life Center at 7 history of the Society established
p.m. Sunday. .
1876. She s:rid it was orij:i~ally a
VIP is an auditioned perform- pioneer society n:quiring a meming ensemble from Kentucky ber to be SO years old and a 20Christian CoUege, Gr.~yson, Ky. year resident of the county before
The nine me1nbers are from vari- they could become a member:
ous locatiom including Ohio,
Record.s show Alonzo V. HowPennsylvania, !Uinois, . Kentucky, eU establishing the first museunt
ai1d Michigan. Jessica Wheeler of in the courthouse in 1957 with
the Dexter area is part of the the current property on Butternut
group.
Avenue being purchased primari- ·
The vocalists are all members of ly with funds from the Herscher
Kentucky Christian CoUege con- Foundation. Partial funding for ·
cert choir which tours twice a the museum comes through the
year, has six f!'COrdings, and has Meigs County Commission .
performed four times on the" stage
Parker commented on history
at Carnegie Hall in New York books in the museum, mentionCity.
ing the Larkin history of 1908,
. The public is invited to attend and more recent history books
the program where a free will including the 1979 and 1986 ones
offering will be takeil. For infor- with plans for a third companion
mation, contacts can ,be made book in 2001. She said ~hat Meigs
with the church at ~92-2914.
County is only one of t\vo counties in the U. S. to publish three
history book s in the last 25 years.
She told of the tourism dollars
brought in by the museum due to
history
research ln the library
· POMEROY - New officers
there,
the
award-winning Yesterwere elected at a recent meeting
of Ewings Chapter, Sons of the year Program, the annual reenactAmerican R evo lution held at the ment of the Civil War ar Portland,
and o ther programs.
Meigs Museum .
It was noted during the meet. Elected were James Lochary of
Amesvi lle, presidell!; Keith Ashley ing that the chapter plans to have
of Rocksprings, secretary/ regis- p;1~ade units in upcoming Vctcrtrar; William Decgle of GaUipolis, ans' Day parades in Gallipolis,
Po me my. and Athens. Judge Alan
tt1"a ~ urer ; James Hanna of 0Jk
Hill, chaplain; Roy Holter of Five Goldsberry of Athens is in charge
Points, historian; Myron Jones of of getting the units for the
parades. A discu ssion \YaS also held ·

4

per Entcrpri.&gt;(' /l _~_,.(,ria rian .)

.

Aday of pec~ce, low and ... literacy

Wanted: Local bands
to perform in daylong
benefit concert.
·When: Saturday, Oct. 21
from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Where: The University of
Rio Grande
Why: To benefit "Gallia ·
Reads: Make a Difference"

GA-LLIA-

was told they couldn't see me. I thought I
"""s family and not "company." I was
called "selfish," and told ! .should put the
children's needs ahead of my own. I
couldn't believe my em. I have always
been there for my daughter when she had
marital difficulties. I baby-sat a lot, and
helped out whenever there was an iUne&gt;s
or they had financial problems.
Am I wrong to feel hurt? My daughter
says she loves me, but I'm beginning to
wonder. Any ideas?-- Boca Raton, Fla.
Dear Boca: It sounds like there were
lots of frayed nerves as a result of
much going on that weekend. Family
get-rogethers can do that. Cool it. Let
things settle doy.on. Call your daughter
and sug_t;est a Sunday supper together, and
don't bring up the past. Titile is the best
healer.

too

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
The Community Calendar is published as a
free service to non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special ev~nts. The
calendar is not designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items are printed
only as space permits and cannot be guaran~
teed to be printed a specific number of days.

HARRISONVILLE - 1-brrisonville Lodge 411,
F&amp;AM statc·d meeting, Sawrday, 7:30 p.m. Degree
work followed by refreshments.
' TUPPERS PLAINS - Square dance,VFW,.8- 11.
True Country, Clifford Lo ngenette as caUer.

SUNDAY

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Friday's fun, food and fellowship
at God's Neighborhood Escape for Tens Friday.
Center is open fro m 6 p.m to 10:30 p.m on Friday
and Saturday nights. Nutritional foods available free
of charge, teens can play non-violent games, computer programs, and cards free of charge in the center' game room .
RUTLAND Rose of Sharon Holiness
Church, revival through O.~;t. 15 , 7 p.m., with Rev.
Jack Dolin.

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER- Star Grongc 778 will meet
in regular session, Saturday, with a potlu ck supper at
6:30p.m. followed by a meeting at 7:30p.m.

RA&lt;;:INE - Aposcle Dale Luffman wiU speak ·~t
the Portland Racine Branch of RLQS Church Sui!~
day at I 0:30 a.m . A potluck dinner will follow. The
public is invited to attend.
POMEROY - Homecoming will be held Suti~
day at the Carleton Church, Kingsbury Road. Dif!·
ner will be served at noon and the program wjU
begin at I p.m .

MONDAY
RUTLAND
p.m., fire station.

...

Rutland Township Trustees, 5

CHESHIRE - D.A.V: #53, locataed at 2805.1
State Route 7 in Cheshire wiU meet on Monday
with dinner at 6:30 p.m. and the meeting at 7 p.m.

,.

. MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS; subscribe today. 992-2156 ..

2000 Olds Bravada

2000 Chevy

4 Door All Wheel Drive

2000 Chevy

Blazer LS 4 Door 4x4

Impala Sedan

123'950* 120'95

~7,950*

.
• CD System/Keyless
Entry
• Fully Power Equipped
Tilt, Cruise, Alum. Wheels

• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• 'n it &amp; Cruise
• Aluminum Wheels

• Power Seat/CO System
• Power Window &amp; Locks
• Tilt &amp; Cruise

2000 Oldsmobile

1999 Che~y

Intrigue Sedan

Monte Carlo LS Coupe

2000 Chevrolel
Cavalier Sedan

.

.

~5,950* ~3,950* ~0,950*
Power Seat, Windows &amp; Loc:Ksl
AM/FM CD &amp; Cassette
Keyless Entry

• CD System/Alum. Wheels
• Power Windows &amp;Locks
• Till &amp; Cruise

• Automatic
• Air Conditioning
• Tilt &amp; Cruise

VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT: www.tompeden.com

To sign up or for
information, ·call (7 40)
446-2342, ext. 18.

Rwley·Fanplaln

Wesl Virginia's #1 Chevy. Pontiac, Bui ck, Olds.
And Cuslom Van Dealer.
CHI¥1110LI1'

~

Deadline for bands
to enter is 5 p.m. Oct. 13.

-- big time. Please get the help you need.
This is no do-it-younelf project.
Dear Ann La11den: I live 20 minutes
from my daughter, and have not seen her
in ihree weeks. She has a job and works
hard, but I don't think that is the reason .
There must be more to it.
Last weekend, my gr;~ndson and his
wife came to town to attend a Sarurday
wedding. They stayed at ~g!uer's
house and were to return home late Sunday ofternoon . I was told I \vouldn't be
able to sec my grandson because he
would be very tired, having stayed 'up late
at the wedding. Also, my daughter said she
and her husband are taking weekend
rbsst.&gt;s in order to improve rheir job status, and they were not up to receiving
company.
Still, I was deeply disappointed when I

~£A-DS

WnL.IlHIH

'

1 ,,,

:~~
, .,,,,I ....

••• , (&gt;

CZ) OldSmobile
w

!'•

08000 Ollllll D13 I 00

ro

EJut !32

--

Fit 21 Churctl Sntt!

CN.rlef.lon

•
Monday- Saturday 9 am • 9 pm
Sunday 1 pm - 8 pm

• T~xes. Tags, lille Fees &amp;Kit a Pnces Good Oct~r 6th Through October 6th. Nol ~~~spotlsib!e lor IYJXI9'aDhicaterrors:

,I

�•

Friday, October 8, 2000
: Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Law111akers ad to reserve decline in food stamps.

:Birth control shot
approved·

conspiracy co comnut grand larceny. a m1sdem.:anor.
They were accused of [1elping
conviCted murderer Rick Tabish
Wi\\1 IIN(;H)N (AP)
dig up Buuon's $7 nuUton Sliver
: l he ~ood and Drug Adnums: ll.!lmn .tppnwt..•d .1 ne-w form of fortune two days after his Sept.
b11 th lnntrol fhur'id.l\'. a 17, 1998, death .
Tabish, 35, and 28-year old
;nHmr~~ · 'hot ro f'rt.~v~.:nt prcgSandy Murphy were convit·ted
·n.-tlll\ .
luncllt.·. m.ldt..· by Ph.trmaci&lt;J in May pf killing Binion a~d
·(.lnp. of Pl'.tp.u:k. N.J.. IS mon: plotting to ste,JI his fortune.
.. dun 99 pt"IT t"nt dll·ftn'r when Both are ~t"rving life sentences.
''nllh.'n gee the \hut onn.· c:verv
Stewn Wadkin&gt; and John B.
IIHIIIth. LOII)P·lll~' 'tllLfl t..''\ (011Joseph pleaded no contest to
' lt11..lo•.'d
ronspiracy to commit extortion,
tht' H &gt;A C.lUtton~ d tlur also a mistlemeanDr. Prosecutors
"nl11t..'ll ca nnot go longt..•r tlun
,l.ccust."d tht·m of concocting an
q d.t\' Hc..·tWt.'t'll . . htlt-.. or thl'\"
extortion plot with Tabish
\\til lll't.: d .1 pr~..·gn . tn&lt;.'\ ' t~..: ~t
agam~t a sand pit OWilL'l' two
J,._·t~'IC 1h1..• _llt..' Xt lllJCtflOil. fiH"
months befort' Bimon di ...·d.
,fl~ '!" lllth[ l't..' .idllHlll\kTt..'d b\· ,l
Ntltll' of rh ...· Kn1r dd~·nd.l!lts
Ill· d1 ~~ ,.\11.: J'll~\·Hkr
"l..'lltt.'llll'd
Thursd.J\'
f.tced
I u 1cllt.· 1'- .lll .t lh.· rn..ttt\\' tt)
durg-L·~ rd.Hl·d to B111101l \ mur:.IIHI!It' ll l]l' LLihJt..• lOil-ll.h.·t.•pt t\'L~
: .dk:l I &gt;q'P-Pnl\·~..·r.l tii.H l.t;.t... der All tour mu"t pL'rforlll ~()(I
hntJI'\ nf COIHilltllll{\ ' \L'I'\'I ll' ll!'
·il~lo..l' llliHHll\ Llkt_• ll L\ 11\ htrth
p.w .I S2 .111111 flllc'
: •"ltild 111!J.... Jt \\\llk\ rlrnHIIIh ,]
"'
l.1lw.h .md Murphy .tlrL'.lliy
•'111\'IILIIIIIIJ l l t tho..' lh'II)H)\)t_'\
h.t\'L' lo~t nne hid fi 1r .1 lh 'W rn.1l.
~ il'::l"l\11 .mo.. I L'"tlll~t'll ·
I tllll'lk "il~Htlo..l bo..· un rhl· 111.11 - Ina pl.11t to .tppe.tl

.

l•\ tl w

kl·t

s.-;-

~)11 h l

,,,,r

.md

t.'IHI ot rhL· W.l r.

"'1\ll. l'h .ll ll l.l-

,1

Kn,nn

, 1.1 " l ',,k,·\\\.!llll.l!J

l-.Ji hltl

'.I hi

1 11!1L' ik ' n-.1 .... lpprtl\". .·d b.l~l:d
.1111 . d. 11.1 1i·o111 .1 Lillll l.d "ttllh.· of
\.! 1 f.) "''llll..'ll .H -42 ~ lt l'.~ Ill the
.L'1mcd \ur,_·, . Thl..' ,tudy . . omJ'.IIl' d ji .ltlL' Il{&lt;., £-lklll ~

l

lllll'iic [t)

:t!J,,..,,_. llll ( )rthu - Nu~·um.., '7, 7.
:·1 l'tlllllllnn h1nh o..ll!Hnll pill
I hl· -s; '.\&lt; ll llo..'ll uktng
~L un . .·lk h.lll nn UJllntcnded
·j'lt 't~JLlllL i t.'"· rhou~h th en: \\\.T L'
: ' '"'' .nnll! J ~ rho..·
1.=!1 \\'OI1ll'll
·u,tn ~· the or.1l ronrr.Jl'L' ptl\'1. '
I=)

·.I tiL'!

:

CL

\t't)JllL'll

Jt·..,

nf Ll"t'

t.tklllg till' (O ilt!.l LL' p-

..,t;l l lun; nwnthl\·
n·,·k-.. There .dso is ,1
:q(]lcJ... ll'l urn Ill nn1Lwo n. u~ual ­
lt\ \.' tli! L'l fHHJ

•Jil l' ll\tru.d

:h · \\ 11hm t\\o tu t~ ~ur months,
.J&gt;Iu rm.ll u ~.n d }\lolL' th.m 50
:pcncr lt of Ll~t'r\ he r.J m t~

:n.uH wuh ur ~tx mo nth~

:n ng

preg-

oi qult-

Lun c ll~..·.

Lederle recalls
arthritis drug

•
•

WASil i NCrUN 1AP)
: l·h,· drugm:~h'I ESJ LcJerk
:.t ll!H1UI1ce~l "1 hur..,d.w rh:H it ~~
:ll'l.tll11 rg -l- .2 tndlhm. ~-.q~~u lt·., ol
. til ~.·
lrthrHJ'
dru!.! t'tn dob c
1
., l'1. ,1\l~l' tfll'\' .1\'l,' 1 ;l llf.lllll!l.HL'd
"Hll .llliHfr n dill).!. th ,lt lO U!d
't.lllw Irk-tin~.· lt1..' lllll ~ p1obkm,
'Ill 'lllllt' p .ttH..'tlt~

I he lll.IIHd.rl tlllll
~ll'l .!II , rll.'l'i' Pill' lor
of

:,'11)1ljl):;_2

:I.IJlqljl·~

lllltl lb~..·r

rntllq.';LIIIl

lll!f

\1\l'~~ Ill
•. 1rtlnrt1' ,111d 11.1111 JIL;Jl.f \ ~L'llll'tlr
: I h. . L. lp ~ld~,., \\'1.. 1t dr,lrihutl'd
till·

11t

1hll!..:;

~

I hl·

•1,

~.lid

l l)lllp.lqy

thL'

nnumrn.1tL'd durrn.IJJui.JLll rrc \\rth rlw dtu~

·crPL!nl.h \\' 1'
•Jil).'

t

d~tltll!nl h~.·~l.r~'l

t~

bt

ot

krJP\\ 11

hlor1Jdl' ..1 type

bc t.J hln~.. kL·r

J ' .1

.tfi.Jt

1'

:h 1giJ

t~l~~~)~ l prc~ . . un·

ll'l'lj

\\'Hh

p .i l!L' III I,

l1 \

.tn o.. lt-t'r Uin

'llt',ltt,jiOlJ\L'Ill~
IJn, '• Hlt.t l lllJJ ,ltlo JI
1 111· L 1

llJ.lY "m

~.·~. c.HI~L· ~·e nom o r life -

;th tt'.llt' I IJJI_l~
.,~ lttt'llt"

'&gt;!1 \t•

dfL'l(\

\\'Jr h undn h

~rlll•iPHllb.·

11 1g

ri.L' lt' 111p.tn)r

l ilt' vt•~&lt;lrlLil ~~

I ll

ht"&lt;trl
"·ud .

wh! [C ca p-

J

( lj'l'lJ)l'\ Ill the COIHamJ -

.,\llll

Ln

wtth
:")fl!l" 1111 \Ill\' L'nd .1nd ".19911 "
·r'\'l'l ')(,(1~ .. \Ill rhL" o th er en d.
·rl.lll'd

.HL' Jll.lrh· d 1!1 n:J

ll h· L o!llp .ln~ 11rgcd' patlt'n [s
tn •t•1p uking tht·~c c.lp'lu lcs Jlld
·( 11
o nt.Hr dJLtr plurm.lctst nr
dnl lOL
• "We l' th . OU t.lgC p.ltH'fltS who
..uc r lit JL' tltk uk1ng l' Wdobc to
.t.lk1..· llllllll'LiJ.ltl' ,l l tlOII," , \ )r.
Plll l l'&lt;p I dt• Vtlll' of I edc rlc \. lltl
Lll .1 \t.ltL'Jncnt " II rhc lor numhn l lllllOt he dL'[CI'Jl llllL'd, It
,IJnuld he '"" ll llll'd to lw frolll
-tlur IN ..
I '.Hil'lll

MIAMI (AP) -· Tholi&gt;&lt;mcb of
pcopk rt·m.tined wnhnur pown
.md hundreds uf ~t.tllcd \'t'hlLil'~ .
~.lt on sti\1-tloodt:d ru.H.Jw,ty~
ThurHby .1s Solnh Florrd.1
bcg.m dryrng out .Jfter :1 t\\'oday storm dumped more than
IS mchcs of rain.
Most schools w~r~ open, bur
IS :-.tayni shut wah flooded
grounds or no · power. Tlte state
of emergency intposed by Gov.
.Jeb Bu~h renuined iu effect.
President Clinton declared four
counw.·s disaster are:as. digible
for tederal hdp. James Lee Witt,
dirL'ctor of the Fednal EmL'rgency Management Agency, is
ro vtsir the region Friday.
Mianu-Dade County officials
reported more than 93,000
h~mes and an u nknowp number of businesses stood in flooded neighborhoods and two people were killed by the storm.
"Mother Nature, J lot of
hardworking pe ople and a lot of
pL11nps arc getting us b:Kk to
.. \OillL' \l'I15L' of norm.1lcy," said Lt
I ou1e hTn.md~..·z of rht..· MI:tmt1),tJe fii'L'- lZL'\C lll' /)ep.lrtlllt..' tlt .
St.ltt' Jgriculwre otfJCI;l]S s;ud
J\.1J .H lli - J),u..le . f.1rnwr) suffncd

crop lo\~~·s . The
~ll\ ' t'f!Jor · relc.l&lt;;l'd SlOO,fHJ() 111
~t .I IL' fumh [{) .J\\1\r t~lflll\\'Ol'h'l'\,
:-. uddL·nly &lt;Hit nf \\'ork lk'L' ;1LI~L' of
111

tlnodmg.

.

(

About 2.(l(J() homl's :llld bu~t -

'"~ l.llJ I 1])\\ ld l...'.

..

Flooding lingers
in Florida

S.)fiO 111dlton

(Ill ll'[tl lll

\\'Jthout power.
Flond.1 Po\\'er ,mJ Ltght rt..' port-

!lt' \\l''l rL'lll,l1!1l'd

Spoknlll.lll Bill S\\'.lllk \:t id
m .l ll\ of thuo,e Wl'TL' sern:d bv
'
'
buncd lrnl'~ .1 nd rL'Storlllg all
po\\'l'I might ta kl' d:.1ys . At it~
\\'ont. the flooding left a.bour
9~.000 cu~tnmer~ without scr-

L'd.

V!Ct'.

Tht• ~torm moved well into
the Atlantic O cean Thursd1y
where tt ... rrengthent•d .111d
bc:rJml' 'fropical Swrm Leshc :ts
su"tamed winds re ac hed 39
mph . Forecasters say it coulJ
readt IJcrmuda thi s we-ekend
but 1s n~Jt expt•crcd .ro become :1
hurrirane ..

WASHINGTON (AP) Food stamp
recipients could own a better car and live in
htgher-cost housing under an agreement by
co ngressional negotiators that may add
900,000 families co the nation's food scamp
rolls.
Participation in the program has dropped
by a third over the past four years, partly
because of the booming economy, but the
governn1ent estimates one in I 0 Americans is
still hungry or threatened by hunger.
"The rising tide that has affected most of
our country has not affected all," Rep. James
Walsh, R-N .Y., said.
The looser eligih11ity reqmrements were
included in an agriculrural spending bill that a
House-Senatt~ conference committee finlsh~d
Thursday. The bill now goes to the Hous&lt;' and
s,·nate for tina! approval.

rA PE CANAVER AL. Fl.1.
n~fure l.lUIH.-hi ng DISCOVt'ry,
-~AI' ) Spore shu ttle Discm·- NASA Jlso W;lntS to understand
l'ry\ ~1ght to rhe intc.:.•rnarional what c.m se d ;1 bolt nlJlfuncrion
~ ~pact&gt; M.ltion has bee-n postponed
on the last space shuttle flight.
until next week be(:aust&gt; of a The problem occmred during
1l nggish v,dve and suspect bolt&lt;.
Atlantis ' liftoff on Sept. 8, but
NASA called off Thursday was discovered only Wednesday.
mght's launch because of IastWhile
Jnalyzing
film
111intlte conce rns over bo l[s on returned
to Earth
aboard
the external fud · tank. A valve Atlantis two weeks ago, engiproblem found later in the shut- neers noticed that one of the
rll•'s nuin propul sion system three bolts between Atlantis and
delayed hftoff until at least Mon- the external fuel tank did not
day.
ll'tract properly eight mtnutes
The valve, which controls the into the flight. Photographs
flow of fuel, appeared to be slu g- showed 2 114 inches of the 14gish during iuutmt' operations. inch bolt sticking out on the
Workers will have to enter Dis- t.lllk.
covery's engine cmnpartment tO
N~SA wants to determine,
check the valve; to replace it, if. among other things, whether the
ne cessa ry. will rake three days.
bolt nulfunctmn poses a danger.
This 10Uth space shuttle flight At worst, a protruding bolt
is a crucial space station con - could ca use the separated tank
struction mission . NASA, how - to tumble and slam mtu the ·
ever, is in no rush.
shuttle.
"We think it's prude,nt to
" I think the word you use
stand down;' shuttle manager would be 'catastrophic,"' satd
James Halsell said. " In other Halsell, himself a shuttle pilot . "I
.words, we do not want to get' go woul9 not want to expose astrofever."' ·
,lnauts to that risk."

:

I \! I 1:dvrk

~11

\\\t'til A\\~r . . t

;trd

!

the

l"

SAN FRANCISCO (A I') ~ club will waive the fcc fur thl'
Just becau~L' one- Intt..'rlll't com- fir st month and guar:~ntcc tht•m
p.my offering n:Jme-your-own- · the 10 percent d1scount through
pntl' g;~soh tl l' failed docs not the r&lt;'st of the year. The gas dismean the .co ncl'pt it!-.el f h as couJH drops to 5 pcrCL'J1t below
t111kcd .
the pump pn cc for :tll Cardub
So say L'XL'CutiVL'S .It C.tr- membc:rs- i 11 . .100 I .
duh.nml. \\'htch hl' g.1n h.rwkm g
" It's our \\':\\' of h t· lpill g
I 0 pc'I'CL'll t ~.1\·ing:-i on g.1~uliue restore co nsumer co nfidcn cL'
purch_.ISl'S O\'l..'r rhc lntcrilct just and trust in e-CO !lllll L'n. e hmi ,\ few Wl't·ks before WcbHo.L1SC nes s to deliver on thL·ir prollli ~­
Club, a li censee of Pri ccl inL·.com cs:' s,ud l.arclub CEU Michael
thar IS gu,mg out of bu~incss. But London,
~o m \..~ .m.t ly.., ts lwliL'\'L' the busiBut per su:1Ji ng P riccl inc
11L'~~ model of comp ,m1eo, hkc
WebHouse's mcmbcr ~. · to con C .ud ub and Pri cdinc rt· m.lin~ tinu e buymg their gas online
unpnlVL'Il.
won't be e:1sy, said Hc;~th Tl'rry .
Ncvt· rthdcss, Carclub ~:1.ys it an e-commercc ,HlJ. lyst for
IS going strong · ;111d hqpes to
Credit Suis)e FirSt Boston in San
p1ck up lots of new bminess Francisco.
from its online rival 's failure:.
"When customers get burned
San Francisco-based Carclub, in a situation like thi s, a lot of
ba c ked by an assortment of well - th e m will JUSt w.:dk away
known corpo rations, plans to because they don't \vant to de :~\
give :1ny of Pri c ehne Web- with the hassle, especi.Jily when
H ouses roug.hly 2 millio n lll e m - they're dealing with a co mmodbers a bonus for signin g up for ity like gasuhne," said ·Jerry.
Carclub 's $5 . Y9-a-month ser£-commerce analyst Tom
Vice.
Courtney of Bane of America
••
Under the promotion, Car- SecuritieS thinks CJrclub will

October7 &amp;8

l !lllll'

P1nd1h 1~

( •'1)'"1 d]''ll

I=Rfl

Last 2

[ntl!ttainml!nt
~otg.hum Making.

sentenced
I I
I r.d,

#tJ, 1tlr

I

•t

!Jt.r

•'It"

I

llhl

l'~lll'

t\ IIIIIIHltll. till'
., •'rlld,JirJ·· rw1rrt· kd

1t

1{]fill lli
Ill·. [' 1
111111 Ill '•\Phl!J,
lind I• lUI' del
.. I J.i\ lll f\,l.1rr~~ ·n

{ \tl'

\ld1•t ;•It 1d!·d

1 1)\Ill' (

,l' Ill j

lill'!H IIl )-:td
\l.illh

I

have better luck than WcbHou se
if Its ofTer 1s nJmpt•llmg enough.
" People who like luuking for
deals aren't going to stop just
because :1 company goes out of
b u :-. in~..·s ~ ... Courtney sa id. "They
w.1nt to co ntinue ~aving nHmey."
WebHousc, which &gt;o ld bo th
g.tSl)liiK and groceries. w.t~ st,Ht. .:d h\' PricL'ilne · founder Jay
W,,Jker. Walker ,.ud Wl'bl-louse,
which will shut down over the
next ()() days. ''r.in out of ctp!tal,
nor out of customers."
Btn Ken Cassar, a st;n ior rcuil
~lltalyst for the Internet research
fir;11 Jupitn Communicnions,
sa id the business model of com-

Open House

rch Service at 9:00 a.

4Miles North of Point Pleasant, WV, Fairgrounds

11llllo.:~ 1

,ln

OCTOBER 1-7, 2000

•
•'
"

Saturday, October 7, 2000
10

a.m. until 2 p.m.

To add t? the festivities, WRYV-FM (101.5 on the
FM dral)wrll be broadcasting live from the plant
tomorrow morning.
.Please join us tomorrow between· 10 a.m. and
2 p.m. and see firsthand how electricity is produced,
See one of bur control rooms and find out how a
cooling tower works,

,.,_ AMIII,ICAN ..
liilif f&amp;ICFRIC
POWIR

www. a~p. com

'

.

•

•

The Following Businesses Are Proud To Salute
The Many Boys and Girls Throughout Meigs County
Who Are Working Hard Through 4-H To ·Become
Our Future Leaders of TomorrowiH

SPONSORED BY THESE AREA BUSINESSES

•
"
,~------------------~~~----------------------r-------~-------------,
•

'

Sunday Morning

•

The sy~te111 dol'S not work i-s
\Veil on sm:dlcr - til'ket ltl'IIIS,
bL•ou~e consumt.·rs are rL~ quir0d
to do too much work rll jusrity
the "avin~s. ht: o;aid .
'"Travel 11uy well be the only
category it w&lt;;t~ks in." C.:1ssJr
said.

Gavin Plant

.1 nd 1\lr (_ ll.l v l

/1\J

4'

,.

pames like Pricdine ,;11d Car~
club may not be the magic
charm Wall Street once behevcd.
"l certainly do not believe
that it wdl revolu tm mze rL' ta. tl
pricing as we know 1t, which ls
really wlnr th~· Hurkcrs thought
:1 y. .·.u .tgo," ht• s.1id,
·

Gavin Plant is located on Ohio Route 7 at Cheshire
Ohio, Casual dress is recommended- no open-toed
shoes, please.

\I '

J, t'l

1·111'11

Appll! Buttl!t &amp; Cidl!t Making
Countty Kitchl!n ,Will bt! OPffJ!

Ant~'l'll.l!l

ot

pound in its tread and a differer(t
belt design than the ATX tir"
mclucled . in the recall .
'
The tire is designed "to allow
you to limp to your nearest scr:.
vice station.'' she said ... It's nOt
part of the recalled universe. It!s
a different tire ."
'
Except for the ones used as
spa reo;;, Rridgestone I Fires tone
In c. is recalling 6.5 million tires
linked to 10 I deaths and over
400 injmics: all ATX and ATX
II tires in a ~ certain size - .P235/75R I 5 as well :is
Wilderness AT ttres in that size
made 111 Decatur, Ill.
Ford is still using Wildernels
AT tires from Bridgestone/Firestone planes other than Decatljr
as standard equipment on its
Ford Explorer/Mercury Mountaineer sport utility vehicle a~d
on its Ranger pickups. But
Ranger pickups also come with
a full-size temporary spar~,
stored under the pickup bed,
and SOJUe of those sp01res a~
Firestone ATX tires.
•

Priceline WebHouse's collapse fuels online riva(

t h l.' .ttl~·....t

·gcttl' l'l t Ullil

.r

had a di!Terent rubber con~

We'll be offering plant to~Jrs, info~mative displays
health screenings by members of the Holzer Medicai
Ce_nter staff, food and refreshments, activities for
chrldren and fun for aiL

l .lh.nr,l!P!l n

IJ\1\IPII

1

DETROIT (AI') Some
new ford Ranger pickups .1re
bl'ing equipped with a IS-inch
Firestone ATX as a spare- but
llridgeston c/ Firestone In c. said .
it is structurally different from
the 15-mch ATX tires bl'ing
recJIJed .
The National Highway Traffic Safety Admmistratioh said if
the tirr: does lu ve a Ji ffLrt'nt
construction, the-re is nothing
\\'rong with using it as a spare
beca use it is marked "Temporary
Usc Only," and customers are
warned not to use it for Inore
than 50 miles and not to drive
faster than 50 mph.
"We have no indication
there's a safety issue," Ford
spokesman Mike Vaughn satd
Thursday. "If somebody wants
to come up with data that
there's ap issue 'wah spare tires,
we'll deal with it, but we want
to focus on replacing the bad
tires on the road.v
Bridgestone/Firestone
Christine
Karbowiak
said
Thursday that the ATX spare

Tomorrow's the day- the day
for Gavin Plant's open house!

-~ 1) (J

j

t

"This is JUSt keeping pace with the ttme~.
The changes in the food stamp program
would cost taxpayers an estimated S1. 5 billion No one is trying to overindulge folks," sai(i
Rep, Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn .
· •
over the first five years.
already
are
allowed
to
set
their
ow(l
States
Since 1996, enrollment has dropped to
fewer chan 17 million people living in 7.3 limits on car values when It comes to welfac~
. payments, known as "J;emporary Assistance fa)"
million households.
"This just makes sensible policy for food Needy Families. In many states, the limit
stamp families," said Shirley Watkins, the Agri- ranges from $7,000 tb $9,000.
Congress eliminated the cap on shelte.r
culture Department's undersecretary for food
costs in 1993 but reinstated it in an ovechat!l
and nutrition services:
Food stamp recipients currently may not of the nation's welfare programs in 1996. ._
Rep. Jack Kingston, R-Ga., opposes!
have a car worth more than $4,650 or housing costs of more than $275 a month. The car changing the eligibility restrictions , saying )t
allowance has been raised just $150 since was a "tremendous expense" that damaged t]Je
"delicate" compronuse· ·that lawmakers
1977.
The legislation would allow srates to set reached during the 199() welfare overhaul. :
Changing the eligibility requireme'I1ts is no
their own limits for ca r valu~ and would raise
the housing limit to S340 over the next five , guarantee, however, that families will sign up
years and then index it to the rate of inflation.. for the benefits.

Launch off until Monday
Ford Ranger _equipped·
because of valve problems with Firestone spare

.o.:d ,hu,t.::• t&lt;l ! l'lkrk \J, t.tlllllg I
}'I il

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 7

Friday, October 6, 2~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NATIONAL BRIEFS

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Valley lumber &amp; Supply

992·6611

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The Shoe Place And Locker 219
992·5627

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

K&amp;C Jewelers
992·3785

"'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

POMERO.Y
992·5444

Home National ·aank
RACINE
949·2210

SYRACUSE
992·6533

Baum Lumber

Je~elry

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Ewing Funeral Home

CHESTER, OHIO

985·3301

Ridenour Supply

POMEROY, OHIO

STATE ROUTE 248
CHESTER, OHIO
985·3308

Downing·Childs·"'ullen·Mu~ser

Crow's Family Restaurant

992·2121

992·2432

Insurance
992·2342

Fisher Funeral Home
MIDDLEPORT
992·5144

992·2635

POMEROY, OHIO

Quality Print Shop
992·3345

Ingels Furniture and

POMEROY OHIO

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
992·2955

~OMEROY,

OHIO .

Shade River Ag Service
985·3831

St. Rt. 7 N

Sugar Run Mills
992·2115

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

Fruth Pharmacy
992·6491

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Farmers Bank

·Acquisitions
992·6250

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY

949·2136

''YOUR BANK fOR LifE"
GALLIPOLIS

44 ·226'

TUPP~RS PLAINS

985·3161

�•

Friday, October 8, 2000
: Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Law111akers ad to reserve decline in food stamps.

:Birth control shot
approved·

conspiracy co comnut grand larceny. a m1sdem.:anor.
They were accused of [1elping
conviCted murderer Rick Tabish
Wi\\1 IIN(;H)N (AP)
dig up Buuon's $7 nuUton Sliver
: l he ~ood and Drug Adnums: ll.!lmn .tppnwt..•d .1 ne-w form of fortune two days after his Sept.
b11 th lnntrol fhur'id.l\'. a 17, 1998, death .
Tabish, 35, and 28-year old
;nHmr~~ · 'hot ro f'rt.~v~.:nt prcgSandy Murphy were convit·ted
·n.-tlll\ .
luncllt.·. m.ldt..· by Ph.trmaci&lt;J in May pf killing Binion a~d
·(.lnp. of Pl'.tp.u:k. N.J.. IS mon: plotting to ste,JI his fortune.
.. dun 99 pt"IT t"nt dll·ftn'r when Both are ~t"rving life sentences.
''nllh.'n gee the \hut onn.· c:verv
Stewn Wadkin&gt; and John B.
IIHIIIth. LOII)P·lll~' 'tllLfl t..''\ (011Joseph pleaded no contest to
' lt11..lo•.'d
ronspiracy to commit extortion,
tht' H &gt;A C.lUtton~ d tlur also a mistlemeanDr. Prosecutors
"nl11t..'ll ca nnot go longt..•r tlun
,l.ccust."d tht·m of concocting an
q d.t\' Hc..·tWt.'t'll . . htlt-.. or thl'\"
extortion plot with Tabish
\\til lll't.: d .1 pr~..·gn . tn&lt;.'\ ' t~..: ~t
agam~t a sand pit OWilL'l' two
J,._·t~'IC 1h1..• _llt..' Xt lllJCtflOil. fiH"
months befort' Bimon di ...·d.
,fl~ '!" lllth[ l't..' .idllHlll\kTt..'d b\· ,l
Ntltll' of rh ...· Kn1r dd~·nd.l!lts
Ill· d1 ~~ ,.\11.: J'll~\·Hkr
"l..'lltt.'llll'd
Thursd.J\'
f.tced
I u 1cllt.· 1'- .lll .t lh.· rn..ttt\\' tt)
durg-L·~ rd.Hl·d to B111101l \ mur:.IIHI!It' ll l]l' LLihJt..• lOil-ll.h.·t.•pt t\'L~
: .dk:l I &gt;q'P-Pnl\·~..·r.l tii.H l.t;.t... der All tour mu"t pL'rforlll ~()(I
hntJI'\ nf COIHilltllll{\ ' \L'I'\'I ll' ll!'
·il~lo..l' llliHHll\ Llkt_• ll L\ 11\ htrth
p.w .I S2 .111111 flllc'
: •"ltild 111!J.... Jt \\\llk\ rlrnHIIIh ,]
"'
l.1lw.h .md Murphy .tlrL'.lliy
•'111\'IILIIIIIIJ l l t tho..' lh'II)H)\)t_'\
h.t\'L' lo~t nne hid fi 1r .1 lh 'W rn.1l.
~ il'::l"l\11 .mo.. I L'"tlll~t'll ·
I tllll'lk "il~Htlo..l bo..· un rhl· 111.11 - Ina pl.11t to .tppe.tl

.

l•\ tl w

kl·t

s.-;-

~)11 h l

,,,,r

.md

t.'IHI ot rhL· W.l r.

"'1\ll. l'h .ll ll l.l-

,1

Kn,nn

, 1.1 " l ',,k,·\\\.!llll.l!J

l-.Ji hltl

'.I hi

1 11!1L' ik ' n-.1 .... lpprtl\". .·d b.l~l:d
.1111 . d. 11.1 1i·o111 .1 Lillll l.d "ttllh.· of
\.! 1 f.) "''llll..'ll .H -42 ~ lt l'.~ Ill the
.L'1mcd \ur,_·, . Thl..' ,tudy . . omJ'.IIl' d ji .ltlL' Il{&lt;., £-lklll ~

l

lllll'iic [t)

:t!J,,..,,_. llll ( )rthu - Nu~·um.., '7, 7.
:·1 l'tlllllllnn h1nh o..ll!Hnll pill
I hl· -s; '.\&lt; ll llo..'ll uktng
~L un . .·lk h.lll nn UJllntcnded
·j'lt 't~JLlllL i t.'"· rhou~h th en: \\\.T L'
: ' '"'' .nnll! J ~ rho..·
1.=!1 \\'OI1ll'll
·u,tn ~· the or.1l ronrr.Jl'L' ptl\'1. '
I=)

·.I tiL'!

:

CL

\t't)JllL'll

Jt·..,

nf Ll"t'

t.tklllg till' (O ilt!.l LL' p-

..,t;l l lun; nwnthl\·
n·,·k-.. There .dso is ,1
:q(]lcJ... ll'l urn Ill nn1Lwo n. u~ual ­
lt\ \.' tli! L'l fHHJ

•Jil l' ll\tru.d

:h · \\ 11hm t\\o tu t~ ~ur months,
.J&gt;Iu rm.ll u ~.n d }\lolL' th.m 50
:pcncr lt of Ll~t'r\ he r.J m t~

:n.uH wuh ur ~tx mo nth~

:n ng

preg-

oi qult-

Lun c ll~..·.

Lederle recalls
arthritis drug

•
•

WASil i NCrUN 1AP)
: l·h,· drugm:~h'I ESJ LcJerk
:.t ll!H1UI1ce~l "1 hur..,d.w rh:H it ~~
:ll'l.tll11 rg -l- .2 tndlhm. ~-.q~~u lt·., ol
. til ~.·
lrthrHJ'
dru!.! t'tn dob c
1
., l'1. ,1\l~l' tfll'\' .1\'l,' 1 ;l llf.lllll!l.HL'd
"Hll .llliHfr n dill).!. th ,lt lO U!d
't.lllw Irk-tin~.· lt1..' lllll ~ p1obkm,
'Ill 'lllllt' p .ttH..'tlt~

I he lll.IIHd.rl tlllll
~ll'l .!II , rll.'l'i' Pill' lor
of

:,'11)1ljl):;_2

:I.IJlqljl·~

lllltl lb~..·r

rntllq.';LIIIl

lll!f

\1\l'~~ Ill
•. 1rtlnrt1' ,111d 11.1111 JIL;Jl.f \ ~L'llll'tlr
: I h. . L. lp ~ld~,., \\'1.. 1t dr,lrihutl'd
till·

11t

1hll!..:;

~

I hl·

•1,

~.lid

l l)lllp.lqy

thL'

nnumrn.1tL'd durrn.IJJui.JLll rrc \\rth rlw dtu~

·crPL!nl.h \\' 1'
•Jil).'

t

d~tltll!nl h~.·~l.r~'l

t~

bt

ot

krJP\\ 11

hlor1Jdl' ..1 type

bc t.J hln~.. kL·r

J ' .1

.tfi.Jt

1'

:h 1giJ

t~l~~~)~ l prc~ . . un·

ll'l'lj

\\'Hh

p .i l!L' III I,

l1 \

.tn o.. lt-t'r Uin

'llt',ltt,jiOlJ\L'Ill~
IJn, '• Hlt.t l lllJJ ,ltlo JI
1 111· L 1

llJ.lY "m

~.·~. c.HI~L· ~·e nom o r life -

;th tt'.llt' I IJJI_l~
.,~ lttt'llt"

'&gt;!1 \t•

dfL'l(\

\\'Jr h undn h

~rlll•iPHllb.·

11 1g

ri.L' lt' 111p.tn)r

l ilt' vt•~&lt;lrlLil ~~

I ll

ht"&lt;trl
"·ud .

wh! [C ca p-

J

( lj'l'lJ)l'\ Ill the COIHamJ -

.,\llll

Ln

wtth
:")fl!l" 1111 \Ill\' L'nd .1nd ".19911 "
·r'\'l'l ')(,(1~ .. \Ill rhL" o th er en d.
·rl.lll'd

.HL' Jll.lrh· d 1!1 n:J

ll h· L o!llp .ln~ 11rgcd' patlt'n [s
tn •t•1p uking tht·~c c.lp'lu lcs Jlld
·( 11
o nt.Hr dJLtr plurm.lctst nr
dnl lOL
• "We l' th . OU t.lgC p.ltH'fltS who
..uc r lit JL' tltk uk1ng l' Wdobc to
.t.lk1..· llllllll'LiJ.ltl' ,l l tlOII," , \ )r.
Plll l l'&lt;p I dt• Vtlll' of I edc rlc \. lltl
Lll .1 \t.ltL'Jncnt " II rhc lor numhn l lllllOt he dL'[CI'Jl llllL'd, It
,IJnuld he '"" ll llll'd to lw frolll
-tlur IN ..
I '.Hil'lll

MIAMI (AP) -· Tholi&gt;&lt;mcb of
pcopk rt·m.tined wnhnur pown
.md hundreds uf ~t.tllcd \'t'hlLil'~ .
~.lt on sti\1-tloodt:d ru.H.Jw,ty~
ThurHby .1s Solnh Florrd.1
bcg.m dryrng out .Jfter :1 t\\'oday storm dumped more than
IS mchcs of rain.
Most schools w~r~ open, bur
IS :-.tayni shut wah flooded
grounds or no · power. Tlte state
of emergency intposed by Gov.
.Jeb Bu~h renuined iu effect.
President Clinton declared four
counw.·s disaster are:as. digible
for tederal hdp. James Lee Witt,
dirL'ctor of the Fednal EmL'rgency Management Agency, is
ro vtsir the region Friday.
Mianu-Dade County officials
reported more than 93,000
h~mes and an u nknowp number of businesses stood in flooded neighborhoods and two people were killed by the storm.
"Mother Nature, J lot of
hardworking pe ople and a lot of
pL11nps arc getting us b:Kk to
.. \OillL' \l'I15L' of norm.1lcy," said Lt
I ou1e hTn.md~..·z of rht..· MI:tmt1),tJe fii'L'- lZL'\C lll' /)ep.lrtlllt..' tlt .
St.ltt' Jgriculwre otfJCI;l]S s;ud
J\.1J .H lli - J),u..le . f.1rnwr) suffncd

crop lo\~~·s . The
~ll\ ' t'f!Jor · relc.l&lt;;l'd SlOO,fHJ() 111
~t .I IL' fumh [{) .J\\1\r t~lflll\\'Ol'h'l'\,
:-. uddL·nly &lt;Hit nf \\'ork lk'L' ;1LI~L' of
111

tlnodmg.

.

(

About 2.(l(J() homl's :llld bu~t -

'"~ l.llJ I 1])\\ ld l...'.

..

Flooding lingers
in Florida

S.)fiO 111dlton

(Ill ll'[tl lll

\\'Jthout power.
Flond.1 Po\\'er ,mJ Ltght rt..' port-

!lt' \\l''l rL'lll,l1!1l'd

Spoknlll.lll Bill S\\'.lllk \:t id
m .l ll\ of thuo,e Wl'TL' sern:d bv
'
'
buncd lrnl'~ .1 nd rL'Storlllg all
po\\'l'I might ta kl' d:.1ys . At it~
\\'ont. the flooding left a.bour
9~.000 cu~tnmer~ without scr-

L'd.

V!Ct'.

Tht• ~torm moved well into
the Atlantic O cean Thursd1y
where tt ... rrengthent•d .111d
bc:rJml' 'fropical Swrm Leshc :ts
su"tamed winds re ac hed 39
mph . Forecasters say it coulJ
readt IJcrmuda thi s we-ekend
but 1s n~Jt expt•crcd .ro become :1
hurrirane ..

WASHINGTON (AP) Food stamp
recipients could own a better car and live in
htgher-cost housing under an agreement by
co ngressional negotiators that may add
900,000 families co the nation's food scamp
rolls.
Participation in the program has dropped
by a third over the past four years, partly
because of the booming economy, but the
governn1ent estimates one in I 0 Americans is
still hungry or threatened by hunger.
"The rising tide that has affected most of
our country has not affected all," Rep. James
Walsh, R-N .Y., said.
The looser eligih11ity reqmrements were
included in an agriculrural spending bill that a
House-Senatt~ conference committee finlsh~d
Thursday. The bill now goes to the Hous&lt;' and
s,·nate for tina! approval.

rA PE CANAVER AL. Fl.1.
n~fure l.lUIH.-hi ng DISCOVt'ry,
-~AI' ) Spore shu ttle Discm·- NASA Jlso W;lntS to understand
l'ry\ ~1ght to rhe intc.:.•rnarional what c.m se d ;1 bolt nlJlfuncrion
~ ~pact&gt; M.ltion has bee-n postponed
on the last space shuttle flight.
until next week be(:aust&gt; of a The problem occmred during
1l nggish v,dve and suspect bolt&lt;.
Atlantis ' liftoff on Sept. 8, but
NASA called off Thursday was discovered only Wednesday.
mght's launch because of IastWhile
Jnalyzing
film
111intlte conce rns over bo l[s on returned
to Earth
aboard
the external fud · tank. A valve Atlantis two weeks ago, engiproblem found later in the shut- neers noticed that one of the
rll•'s nuin propul sion system three bolts between Atlantis and
delayed hftoff until at least Mon- the external fuel tank did not
day.
ll'tract properly eight mtnutes
The valve, which controls the into the flight. Photographs
flow of fuel, appeared to be slu g- showed 2 114 inches of the 14gish during iuutmt' operations. inch bolt sticking out on the
Workers will have to enter Dis- t.lllk.
covery's engine cmnpartment tO
N~SA wants to determine,
check the valve; to replace it, if. among other things, whether the
ne cessa ry. will rake three days.
bolt nulfunctmn poses a danger.
This 10Uth space shuttle flight At worst, a protruding bolt
is a crucial space station con - could ca use the separated tank
struction mission . NASA, how - to tumble and slam mtu the ·
ever, is in no rush.
shuttle.
"We think it's prude,nt to
" I think the word you use
stand down;' shuttle manager would be 'catastrophic,"' satd
James Halsell said. " In other Halsell, himself a shuttle pilot . "I
.words, we do not want to get' go woul9 not want to expose astrofever."' ·
,lnauts to that risk."

:

I \! I 1:dvrk

~11

\\\t'til A\\~r . . t

;trd

!

the

l"

SAN FRANCISCO (A I') ~ club will waive the fcc fur thl'
Just becau~L' one- Intt..'rlll't com- fir st month and guar:~ntcc tht•m
p.my offering n:Jme-your-own- · the 10 percent d1scount through
pntl' g;~soh tl l' failed docs not the r&lt;'st of the year. The gas dismean the .co ncl'pt it!-.el f h as couJH drops to 5 pcrCL'J1t below
t111kcd .
the pump pn cc for :tll Cardub
So say L'XL'CutiVL'S .It C.tr- membc:rs- i 11 . .100 I .
duh.nml. \\'htch hl' g.1n h.rwkm g
" It's our \\':\\' of h t· lpill g
I 0 pc'I'CL'll t ~.1\·ing:-i on g.1~uliue restore co nsumer co nfidcn cL'
purch_.ISl'S O\'l..'r rhc lntcrilct just and trust in e-CO !lllll L'n. e hmi ,\ few Wl't·ks before WcbHo.L1SC nes s to deliver on thL·ir prollli ~­
Club, a li censee of Pri ccl inL·.com cs:' s,ud l.arclub CEU Michael
thar IS gu,mg out of bu~incss. But London,
~o m \..~ .m.t ly.., ts lwliL'\'L' the busiBut per su:1Ji ng P riccl inc
11L'~~ model of comp ,m1eo, hkc
WebHouse's mcmbcr ~. · to con C .ud ub and Pri cdinc rt· m.lin~ tinu e buymg their gas online
unpnlVL'Il.
won't be e:1sy, said Hc;~th Tl'rry .
Ncvt· rthdcss, Carclub ~:1.ys it an e-commercc ,HlJ. lyst for
IS going strong · ;111d hqpes to
Credit Suis)e FirSt Boston in San
p1ck up lots of new bminess Francisco.
from its online rival 's failure:.
"When customers get burned
San Francisco-based Carclub, in a situation like thi s, a lot of
ba c ked by an assortment of well - th e m will JUSt w.:dk away
known corpo rations, plans to because they don't \vant to de :~\
give :1ny of Pri c ehne Web- with the hassle, especi.Jily when
H ouses roug.hly 2 millio n lll e m - they're dealing with a co mmodbers a bonus for signin g up for ity like gasuhne," said ·Jerry.
Carclub 's $5 . Y9-a-month ser£-commerce analyst Tom
Vice.
Courtney of Bane of America
••
Under the promotion, Car- SecuritieS thinks CJrclub will

October7 &amp;8

l !lllll'

P1nd1h 1~

( •'1)'"1 d]''ll

I=Rfl

Last 2

[ntl!ttainml!nt
~otg.hum Making.

sentenced
I I
I r.d,

#tJ, 1tlr

I

•t

!Jt.r

•'It"

I

llhl

l'~lll'

t\ IIIIIIHltll. till'
., •'rlld,JirJ·· rw1rrt· kd

1t

1{]fill lli
Ill·. [' 1
111111 Ill '•\Phl!J,
lind I• lUI' del
.. I J.i\ lll f\,l.1rr~~ ·n

{ \tl'

\ld1•t ;•It 1d!·d

1 1)\Ill' (

,l' Ill j

lill'!H IIl )-:td
\l.illh

I

have better luck than WcbHou se
if Its ofTer 1s nJmpt•llmg enough.
" People who like luuking for
deals aren't going to stop just
because :1 company goes out of
b u :-. in~..·s ~ ... Courtney sa id. "They
w.1nt to co ntinue ~aving nHmey."
WebHousc, which &gt;o ld bo th
g.tSl)liiK and groceries. w.t~ st,Ht. .:d h\' PricL'ilne · founder Jay
W,,Jker. Walker ,.ud Wl'bl-louse,
which will shut down over the
next ()() days. ''r.in out of ctp!tal,
nor out of customers."
Btn Ken Cassar, a st;n ior rcuil
~lltalyst for the Internet research
fir;11 Jupitn Communicnions,
sa id the business model of com-

Open House

rch Service at 9:00 a.

4Miles North of Point Pleasant, WV, Fairgrounds

11llllo.:~ 1

,ln

OCTOBER 1-7, 2000

•
•'
"

Saturday, October 7, 2000
10

a.m. until 2 p.m.

To add t? the festivities, WRYV-FM (101.5 on the
FM dral)wrll be broadcasting live from the plant
tomorrow morning.
.Please join us tomorrow between· 10 a.m. and
2 p.m. and see firsthand how electricity is produced,
See one of bur control rooms and find out how a
cooling tower works,

,.,_ AMIII,ICAN ..
liilif f&amp;ICFRIC
POWIR

www. a~p. com

'

.

•

•

The Following Businesses Are Proud To Salute
The Many Boys and Girls Throughout Meigs County
Who Are Working Hard Through 4-H To ·Become
Our Future Leaders of TomorrowiH

SPONSORED BY THESE AREA BUSINESSES

•
"
,~------------------~~~----------------------r-------~-------------,
•

'

Sunday Morning

•

The sy~te111 dol'S not work i-s
\Veil on sm:dlcr - til'ket ltl'IIIS,
bL•ou~e consumt.·rs are rL~ quir0d
to do too much work rll jusrity
the "avin~s. ht: o;aid .
'"Travel 11uy well be the only
category it w&lt;;t~ks in." C.:1ssJr
said.

Gavin Plant

.1 nd 1\lr (_ ll.l v l

/1\J

4'

,.

pames like Pricdine ,;11d Car~
club may not be the magic
charm Wall Street once behevcd.
"l certainly do not believe
that it wdl revolu tm mze rL' ta. tl
pricing as we know 1t, which ls
really wlnr th~· Hurkcrs thought
:1 y. .·.u .tgo," ht• s.1id,
·

Gavin Plant is located on Ohio Route 7 at Cheshire
Ohio, Casual dress is recommended- no open-toed
shoes, please.

\I '

J, t'l

1·111'11

Appll! Buttl!t &amp; Cidl!t Making
Countty Kitchl!n ,Will bt! OPffJ!

Ant~'l'll.l!l

ot

pound in its tread and a differer(t
belt design than the ATX tir"
mclucled . in the recall .
'
The tire is designed "to allow
you to limp to your nearest scr:.
vice station.'' she said ... It's nOt
part of the recalled universe. It!s
a different tire ."
'
Except for the ones used as
spa reo;;, Rridgestone I Fires tone
In c. is recalling 6.5 million tires
linked to 10 I deaths and over
400 injmics: all ATX and ATX
II tires in a ~ certain size - .P235/75R I 5 as well :is
Wilderness AT ttres in that size
made 111 Decatur, Ill.
Ford is still using Wildernels
AT tires from Bridgestone/Firestone planes other than Decatljr
as standard equipment on its
Ford Explorer/Mercury Mountaineer sport utility vehicle a~d
on its Ranger pickups. But
Ranger pickups also come with
a full-size temporary spar~,
stored under the pickup bed,
and SOJUe of those sp01res a~
Firestone ATX tires.
•

Priceline WebHouse's collapse fuels online riva(

t h l.' .ttl~·....t

·gcttl' l'l t Ullil

.r

had a di!Terent rubber con~

We'll be offering plant to~Jrs, info~mative displays
health screenings by members of the Holzer Medicai
Ce_nter staff, food and refreshments, activities for
chrldren and fun for aiL

l .lh.nr,l!P!l n

IJ\1\IPII

1

DETROIT (AI') Some
new ford Ranger pickups .1re
bl'ing equipped with a IS-inch
Firestone ATX as a spare- but
llridgeston c/ Firestone In c. said .
it is structurally different from
the 15-mch ATX tires bl'ing
recJIJed .
The National Highway Traffic Safety Admmistratioh said if
the tirr: does lu ve a Ji ffLrt'nt
construction, the-re is nothing
\\'rong with using it as a spare
beca use it is marked "Temporary
Usc Only," and customers are
warned not to use it for Inore
than 50 miles and not to drive
faster than 50 mph.
"We have no indication
there's a safety issue," Ford
spokesman Mike Vaughn satd
Thursday. "If somebody wants
to come up with data that
there's ap issue 'wah spare tires,
we'll deal with it, but we want
to focus on replacing the bad
tires on the road.v
Bridgestone/Firestone
Christine
Karbowiak
said
Thursday that the ATX spare

Tomorrow's the day- the day
for Gavin Plant's open house!

-~ 1) (J

j

t

"This is JUSt keeping pace with the ttme~.
The changes in the food stamp program
would cost taxpayers an estimated S1. 5 billion No one is trying to overindulge folks," sai(i
Rep, Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn .
· •
over the first five years.
already
are
allowed
to
set
their
ow(l
States
Since 1996, enrollment has dropped to
fewer chan 17 million people living in 7.3 limits on car values when It comes to welfac~
. payments, known as "J;emporary Assistance fa)"
million households.
"This just makes sensible policy for food Needy Families. In many states, the limit
stamp families," said Shirley Watkins, the Agri- ranges from $7,000 tb $9,000.
Congress eliminated the cap on shelte.r
culture Department's undersecretary for food
costs in 1993 but reinstated it in an ovechat!l
and nutrition services:
Food stamp recipients currently may not of the nation's welfare programs in 1996. ._
Rep. Jack Kingston, R-Ga., opposes!
have a car worth more than $4,650 or housing costs of more than $275 a month. The car changing the eligibility restrictions , saying )t
allowance has been raised just $150 since was a "tremendous expense" that damaged t]Je
"delicate" compronuse· ·that lawmakers
1977.
The legislation would allow srates to set reached during the 199() welfare overhaul. :
Changing the eligibility requireme'I1ts is no
their own limits for ca r valu~ and would raise
the housing limit to S340 over the next five , guarantee, however, that families will sign up
years and then index it to the rate of inflation.. for the benefits.

Launch off until Monday
Ford Ranger _equipped·
because of valve problems with Firestone spare

.o.:d ,hu,t.::• t&lt;l ! l'lkrk \J, t.tlllllg I
}'I il

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 7

Friday, October 6, 2~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NATIONAL BRIEFS

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Valley lumber &amp; Supply

992·6611

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The Shoe Place And Locker 219
992·5627

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

K&amp;C Jewelers
992·3785

"'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

POMERO.Y
992·5444

Home National ·aank
RACINE
949·2210

SYRACUSE
992·6533

Baum Lumber

Je~elry

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Ewing Funeral Home

CHESTER, OHIO

985·3301

Ridenour Supply

POMEROY, OHIO

STATE ROUTE 248
CHESTER, OHIO
985·3308

Downing·Childs·"'ullen·Mu~ser

Crow's Family Restaurant

992·2121

992·2432

Insurance
992·2342

Fisher Funeral Home
MIDDLEPORT
992·5144

992·2635

POMEROY, OHIO

Quality Print Shop
992·3345

Ingels Furniture and

POMEROY OHIO

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
992·2955

~OMEROY,

OHIO .

Shade River Ag Service
985·3831

St. Rt. 7 N

Sugar Run Mills
992·2115

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

Fruth Pharmacy
992·6491

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Farmers Bank

·Acquisitions
992·6250

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY

949·2136

''YOUR BANK fOR LifE"
GALLIPOLIS

44 ·226'

TUPP~RS PLAINS

985·3161

�•
•

•

~

,
Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Mkl91aport. Ohio

Friday, October e, 2000

The Daily Se11tinel

'

Col'le11e Football Notebook, ~ge 82
MLB: Mets even series, Page 85
PGA: 4-uuy tie for Michelob lead, Page 88

•

Page 81

/

-y

Apostoltc

,. ••.,. Od • • 1,1010

Church of Chnst

Cboordl ol J...., Cllriol ~
V1nZ.ndt and ward
Putor: James Miller
Sunday School· 10:30 o.m.
Ennina · 7:3U p.m.

d.

C.IO'dloteuut

212 W. Main St.
Miniltc:r: Neil Proudfoot

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a. m., 6 p.m.
Wedntsda)' Srrvicts -1 p.m.

Churdl ot Jeou Cbriot
Aposlolk Foltb
New Lima Road

Pomeror WestsNk Church or Cllrbt
33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School- II a.m.
Wurship · !Oa.m., 6 p.m.

Sundll)'; lO a.m. and 7:30 p.m.

W ednesday. 7:30p.m.

Eptscopal

Middlopo11 Cbllr&lt;h orCbriJt
Srh and Main
Ptsror ~ AI Hart50n
Yourh Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday Sdlool · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Uberty lwtmbly or God
P.O. Box 461, Dudding lane
Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sunday Services- IO:(XJ a.m. and 1 p.m.

Baptist

Keu Churt'h of Chrirt
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday Xhool · 10:30 a.m.
Pastor·Jeffn:y Wall&lt;~cc
1st and 3rd Sundiy

Maruatha Baptisl Cburth
Burli(l&amp;ham • 742-7606
Paslor: John Swanson
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.
Morning Service 11 :00 a.m.
E11ening Servi~ . ti:OOi}.m.
Wednt:sUay Sen• ice . 7:30p. m.
.Hope Raplill Churcb (Soulhtrn )
570 Grnnt SL, Middleport
Sunday school . 9:JO a.m.
Wurship- 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednc5day Stf'•ice · 7 p.m.

Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rtl-43)
Pastor : Roger Warson
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday ScNicts · 1 p.m.

Rutland Flnt lhtplist Church
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worsl1ip • 10:4.5 a.m.

Tuppers Plain Church of Chrisl
1nsrrumental
Worship Service· 9a.m.
Communion- 10 a.m.
·Sunday SdlOOI • 10:15 11.m.
Youth· 5:30 pen Sunday
Bible S!udy Wednesday 7 pm

Pomrro, Fint Baptist
East Main St.
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · IO:JO a. m.

Flnl Southern B•f.tist
41872 Pomero)' P1ke
Paslor: E. lamar O'Bryanl
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:4.5 a:m., 7:00p.m.
Wcdne5day Services - 7:00 p.m.

Bradb1ry Chuf'C'h of Christ
Pao;tor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wor:sbip · 10-30 a.m.
Rutland Church or Christ

'
Fint Baplbiil Ch11rth
Pa5tor: Mark Monow
6th Rnd Palmer Sl., Middleport
Sunday School - 9:1.5 a. m.
Worship ·.]0:15 a_.m .. 7:00p.m.
Wednt•sday Servu:e- 7:00p.m.
•

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wors hip· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Bradrord Church of Christ
Corner of St. Rr. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
You!h Minister: Bi!J Amberger
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m .
Worshtp ·8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:00p.m.

Racine First Raptlsl
Pa ~ l nr:

Rick Ruk
School - t,J·JO am .
Wvr)oh•p - l0:4U J.m .. 7:00 p.m.
Wcdno.:sUay Servin·~- 7:()() p.m.
Sunda~

•

Hltkory Hills Church of Christ

Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School - 9 3.m.
Worship · lO a.m.,-6: 30 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Sliver Run Bllpti51
Pastor Slc\'1~11 K. Lill!tSunday s,·hool · Hhl.m.
Wunhip • I !a.m .. 7:00p. m.
Wednesday Scr..,ice~- 7:00p.m.

Lana:svillr Christian Church
Sunday School -9:30a. m.
Wor.;hip • J0:30 a.m., 7:30p.m .
Wednesday Servitt 7:30p.m.

Mr. Union Daplisl
Pastor : Joe N. Savre
Sunday School- 1):45- 11.m.

•
•

Evening -6:30p. m.
Wo.:d ntsday Snvi..:cs- 6:3(1p.m.

Hemlock Groft Church
Pastor: Gene: Zopp
Sunday school - 10:30 a.m.
Wo~hip · 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Btthlthrm Baptist Churth
Great lknd, Route 124, Racine, OH
Paslor : Daniel Mccta
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Sunday Wo"'hip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study -6:00p.m.

Rmlsville Churt'b or Christ
Pastor: PhiliP. Sturm
Sunday Sch~l : 9:30a.m.
Worsh~p Service: 10:3(] a.m.
Bible Srudy, WcdneAday, 6:30p.m.

O&amp;d Bethel Fret WUI Blptl1t Ch1"Ch

28601 St. Rt. 7, MUldlepolt
Sunday School- 10 a.m. · ·
Evtning · 7:00 p.m.
Th~r.tday Services. 7:00

Church of Christ
7 and 124 W
Evangelist; Dennis Sargcnl
Sunday Dible Study· 9:30a.m.
Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 7 p.m.
lntersc~;:tion

Vlc1ory Baptlstlndepcndant
S2S N. 2nd Sr. Middleporr
Pastor: Jame~ E. Keesee
Worship · lOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Harttord Chun:h ofChrlslln
Christian Union
Hartford, W.Va.
Pmuor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School· II a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne~ay Services. 7:30p.m.

Faith B•ptlst Church
Railroad St., Mason
Sundlr School . 10 a.m.
Worsh1p • 1.1 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services_. 7 p.m.

Fortlt Run Baptltt
Pastor : Arh.1s Hun
Sunday School~ 10 a.m.
Worship. 11 a.m.

'

'

Antiquity Bapt111
Sunday School • 9;30 a.m.
" Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evening - 6:00p.m.

s,ncuse Flnt Churc:h of God

Sacred Heart Catholic Church
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pa.'ltor: Rev. Waher E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4:4.5-5:15p.m.; Mass· ..5:30 p.m.
Sun . Con. -8:45~9:1S a.m.~
Sun. Mass · 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass . 8:30a.m.

Congregational
Trinity Churt ..
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy

Pastor: Re11: Craig Cros.-.man
Worship 10:25 a.m.
Sunday School 9:1S a.m.

Flatwoods

Putor: Ktith RatSer
Sunday School-tO a.m.
Won.hip - 11 1.m.

FonstRu
Pastor: Bob Robinson

Putor. Rev. Herllcn o,..,
Sunday Sc:bool· 9:30 ,_.._ •
Wonbip- lh.m., 6 p.m.
Wedncsdly Servica • 1 p.m.

I

••

.._c_.,
... N _
Pasror: Rev. Samuel W.

Worship· 9a.m.

Heatla (Middltpon)
Pastor: Rob Brower
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wot'51!ip • 11:00 a.m.
Mloenv•
Pastor: Boti Robinson
Sundi&gt;: School • 9 a.m.
WorShip~ 10 a.m.
· Pearl Chapel
Sunday School· 9a.m.
Wordtip ~ 10 a.m.

Ro. of Sbaroa HoU•m Chun=h

leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m,
Wednesday prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

Pomtroy
Pator: Rod Brower
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School~ 10:3~ a.m.

Pine Gron Bible Hollneu Claurth
l/2 mile off Rr. J2S
Pastor: Re11. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School. 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7:JO p.m.

Roc:k Sprtap
Pa51or: Keith Rader ·
Sunday School· 9:1~ a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.
y_outh Fellowship, Sunday· 6 p.m.

WHieyan Bible Hollnus Churcb
75 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Worship · 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service ; 7:30p.m.

Rutlaad
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m.'
1hursday Services - 7 p.m.

Hysell Run Hollnm Churcb
Re)l. Mart Michael
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study and Youth· 7 p.m.

Salem Ce•ter
Pastor: Ron,fictce
Sunday School. 9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:1.5 a.m.
SDowYIUt
Sunday School ·10 a.m.

LluRI Cliff Fret Methodist Church
Pastor; Donald B3lis
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Worship- 9 a.m.

Betlwof
Pas10r: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday Sch.ool- 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.
Wednesday Sc:tviccs.- 10 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Reoraanlzed Church of Jesus Christ
or Latter Day Saints
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Singer
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.
1'hc Church or Jrsw
. Christ of Lallcr~Day Saints
Sl. Rr. HiD, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School 10:20.11 a.m.
Relief Sociely/Priesthood 11 :05- l2:00 noon
Sacramt:::nt Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemakins meetins, 1st Thurs.• 7 p.m.

Sunday Sdlool · 9:30a.m.
Wol"lllip -10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Ponlud.Fint Cluon:ll ., ... Nuarne

773-S0t7

Servta: time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
We~nesday 7 pm

Faith Chapel
923 S. Third St., Middleport
Pastor Michael Pangio
Sunday senrioe, 10 a.m.
Wednesday scryice, 7 p.m.
Cbriltila Feilowtblp &lt;;:enler
Salem Sl., Rutland
Paslor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship. li:1S a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.
Hobtou c•riJIIOJt FelloWJhlp Cburdl
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Youlh Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service, 7:00p.m.

Foilh Full Goopel Church
Long Bouom
Pastor: Ste11e Reed
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday ·1 p.m.
Friday· £ellowsh1p service 7 p.m.

Momiaa Stu
Pastor: Dcwayne SIUI!er
Sunday School- 11 a.m.
Worship· JO a.m.

HanisoaYille Commuully Cbun:b
P11sror: Tbcron Durham
Sunday· 9:30a.m. ,and 7 p.m •
Wednesday -7 p.m.
Middlll!port Communlly Cllun::h
515 Pearl St., Middlepon
Pastor: Sam Andel'50n
Sunday ScboollO a.m.
Evenin1 • 7;30 p.m.
Wednesday Service_,.. 7:30 p.m.

St. John Lulhenn Church
Pine Gro'-'C
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Worship· 9:00a.m.
Sunda)' School . 10:00 a.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkncu.
Sunday School ·10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Our Saviour Lutheraa Church

Coolville U•ited.Methodist Parish
Pasror: Helen Kline

Faith Valley Tabemade Ghurrh
•
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmell Rawson
Sunday E11ening 1 p.m.
Thursday Ser11ice- 7 p.m.

Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pasror: David Russell
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.

Coolville Churdl
Main &amp; Fihh St.

Sunday School . 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services- 7 p.m.

St Paul Lutheran Churth
Corner Sycamore &amp; Sec:vnd St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School~ 9:45a.m.
Worship· II a.m.

Bethel Cburth
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship. 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services. 10 a.m.

United Methodist

Hoekln1port Church

Gnham Uailed Methodist
Worship· 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7o30 p.m. (3rd &amp; 41h Sun)

Grand Sbect
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
• Worship - II a:m.
Wednesday Sef\lices- 8 p.m.

Wednesday Scr11ice. 7:30p.m.
Mt, Olive United M•thodlst
Of£ 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School. 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10·:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services· 7 p.m.

Ton:h Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m. ·

Nazarene

Mi!!lgs Cooperallvt Parish
Northeast Clusltr

Middlrpor1 Cburch oftht N~t
Pastor: Allen Midcap
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Pastor: Allen Midcap

Allred

Pastor: Jane Bcatlie
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· I I a.m., 6:30p.m.
Chesler

Pastor: Jane BCattie
Worship · 9 a.m,
Sunday S&lt;:hool - 10 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Rttdnllle Fellowship
Church oflht Naunne
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolp h
Worship· 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

Syncuse Churcb of lbc Nuarea~
Pastor Mike Adkins
.Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- IO:JO a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servic:er . 1 p.m.

Long Bottom
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Warship ·10:30 a.m.
Rerdnille
Worship· 9:30a.m.
Sunday School. lO:JOa.m.
First Sunday of Monrh- 7:00p.m .. service

Pomeroy Chun:h or lbll! N•unnll!
Pas!or: Jan Lavender
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -1 p.m.·

Tuppcn Plains SL Paul
Pastor: Jane Beanie
Sunday SchoOl • 9 a.m.
• Worship· 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services· 7·30 p m

Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Synaruw Mls1&amp;oa

ML Olin Community Cburth
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Evening. 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service . 7 p.m.
United Faith Church
Rt 7 on Pomeroy By· Pass
Pastor: Re11. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School. 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.
Full Gospel I.JplhollJf
33045 Hiland Rvad, Pomemy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
EvcninJ 7:30p.m.
Tuesday&amp;: Thursday-7:30 p.m.

,.
~·

..

,

~­

'..'·'

:

•·

Paslor: Wayne R. Jewell
Sunday Sc:IVices- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Thursday· 7:00p.m.

p

99;.~;~~

l

Syracuse

992~3978

"-' ./' ~

Racine mower Clinic

Davia-Quickel Agency Inc.

JNSIJRAN
.
CE .

Jl[ill~er Jlf uneml ~Otne .Jlnc.
212 E. Main Street 264SouthSecondA"e. ·Midd~port,oH 45760

.. .

·

~'!~~~

2 Factory Ttai,ned Briggs

~_:;::•

&amp; Stratton Mechanics

Racine, OH
1• 74 0·94 9·2804

seM:e•

iENf:Jt..~ ... •

Bill Qulckel992-66n

Call unto me, ana 1 will
answer thee, ana shew
thee great and mighty
things, which thou

lcnowest not:.
fer. 33:3

sooE...::::,:~~:~,::o~H•s769
Jaines;~::~oirector

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES $.~21

E M

4 · ain

EWING FUNERAL HOME

"'lf1e nccept 'Pmll'rt! •Tro11.1ja&gt; ..

Established 1913

182·8200

992-2121

.~

Regan Brown

Dignity and SerVice Always

174 Lay.ne Street 106 Mulberry Ave.

'

Ro:joldn1 Ure Cburcb
S00 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
P85tor: Mike Foreman
Pastor. Emerilu:s Lawrence Foreman
'
Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

'.·

Clll'lon Tabmladt Cbun:h

Oifton, W.Va.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service. 1 p.m.

Pomeroy

Crow's Family Restaurant

CLASSIFIED SECTION!
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'

I ngel' s Carpet
169 N 2nd. Ave
Middleport, OH

992-7028'

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
992-7075
172 North Second Ave.
Middlepart, Oh '

Jackson
logan
Gallia Academy
Point Pleasant

/\!hens
' Warren
Marietta
River Valley

A-

;

'

..

..

Presbyterian
Paslor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday SChool- 10 a.m.
Worship · lla.m.

5-1
1·2 4·2
1·2 2·4
1·2 2·4
0-3 · 1-5
0-3 0-6

non-league
2·3
2·4
0-6

voi~ll

Thuraday a Mltchea
Ohio Valley Christian del. South
Gallia, 15-7, 13·15, 15-11
Gallia Academy del. Marietta, 8·
15, 15-5, 15·11
Athens del. River Valley, 15-8, 15·

2

•

••

Middleport Prtlbyteriaa
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wvrship · 10 a.m.

,,
,,

Seventh -Day Adventi st

"

Stvealh·Day Ad•tntllt
Mulberry His. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy lawinsky
S.Sturday Services:
Sabbath School • 2 p.m.
, WorJhip • 3 p.m. ,

,,
•••

-

...

.,

United Brethren
MI. Hll!rmon United Brtthrm
In Chrll:t Church
Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7:3~ p.m.

•
•.,

..

r

Eden United Bnthren In Chri11
2 '1/2 miles north of Reedsville
on S.tate Route 124
Pastor: ~e11. Rober! Markley
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
Sunday Wo11hip • 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7:JO p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service . 7JO p.m.

-

MEIGS MARINE
&amp; SERVICE
42121 Enterprise Ad.
SALES

992-6376

3-0

. · Wahama, at Gilmer County
Hannan at Guyan Valley
Saturday'a Game
Gauley Bridge at South Gallia

Wednesd~y Sc~icct~. ·._7:00 p.m.

137-C N. 2nd Ave. r'
Middleport, OH

6-0

Todliy'a Gamea

Mkldltpo_rt hntKOitll
·
Third Ave.
Pu10r: Rev. Clark Btkcr
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evcnin&amp;- 6 p.m.

Offlte Sei'ulce 6 Supply.

6-0

Waharria
Hannan
South Gallia

Pentecostal Assembl7
St. Rt 124, Racine
. Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday ScOOol· 10 a.m.
• E11enlng- 7 p.m.
Wedne~ay Services. 1 p.m.

992-1161

ALL

3·0
3·0

ALL

Pentecostal

'

SEO

Athens at Gallia Academy
Warren at Poini Pleasant
Jackson at River Valley
' Logan at ~arietta

God's Ttmplll! or PniiH
"'"
31665 McQuire Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
Pastor: Wayne Balcolm
•
Services: Thurs. Niles 7:00pm
New church No Sunday !ll!rvice established.

S18 E. Main St. , Pomeroy, OH

5-1
3-3
3-3
2-4
1·5

Todliy'a Gamea

•

9ift Slif!JJ

ALL
!Hl

SEOAL

..

!Always &amp; 'Forever

4·2
3·3
3-3
3-3
0-6
0-6

Todliy'a O.mea

•

Pomeroy flower Shop
106 Butternut flue.
Pomeroy, OH 992-6454

AU.

Nelsonville·York at Meigs
Miller at Southam
Eastern at Federal Hocking
. · Vinton County at Alexander
· Wellston at Belpre
. Watertord at Trimble

Full Gospel O.ui-d. of lbt Uvlnc Sador ""
Rt338, Antiquity
Pastor; Jesse Morris
Assl. Paslors: Jim Morris
Services: Saturday 7:30p.m.

Pom;~~-~~0~5769

1.()

Trimble
0-1
0-1
Watertord
Federal Hocking 0-1

New Urt Vldory Cnla'
·•
3773 Georaes Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services· 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday· 7 p.m. &amp; Youlh 7 p.m.

992;,5432

"'Fiotvers for all occasions"

1-0
1-0

' Southern

!

. South Belbcl Nll!w Ttstlmeat
Silver Ridse
Paslor: Robert Barber
Sunday School . 9 a.m.
Sun. Worship· 10:10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.

Clean out your basement 'Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken"
or attic with the help of the 228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

Prescriptions
992:2955
Pomeroy

992·5130 Pomeroy

NEW
HAVEN
FUNERAL HOME
.Lundy Brown
,. . ,..,,..., r

~------~-~.~------

740-992'5141

Time to clean house?

TYC
. Miller
. Eastern

•

~~ -,..,
..
eeme,ts
SP,onl!loretrby
•
•
a.:ea
nierehants
~·
K&amp;C' JEWELERS
..
.. "' .
.
. ,
. .
.
RACINE PLANING MrLL
·Mill Work
Cabinet Making

" · Nelsonville-York 1-0
Belpre
1-0
WellSton
1.()
0-1
Meigs
Alexander
0-1
Vinton County
0-1
Hocldng Dlvlalon

StlvenTOic Commuitr Cb•rdl

HarrlsonYIIIe Prtsbytetian Cbu~h
Worship· 9 a.m.
Sunday School· 9:45a.m.

Foilh Gospol Churdl
Long Bottom
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:4.5 a.w., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m:

TYC

Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
SUnday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30p.m.

Ham Community Church

Mol1f Chapel Churc•
Sunday school· 10 a.m.
Worship. 11 a.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

TVC
Ohio Dlvlelon

Colvory Blblt Cburdl

Syracun Fint Unikd Presbyrertu

Dynville Communlly c ·hun::h
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worahlp • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

' ''

Faith Fello,oblp CIWtlde l'or Cbriot
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Re11. Mike: Thompson,Pastor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.
Off Rt.l24
Pa!ltor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m ., 7:30p.m .

FoodMI

Scrvke - 7 p.m.

Fatr.lewBibltC.orclt
lellrt, W.Va. Rt. J
Put«: Bri1n May
Sunday School- 9:30 l .ftl.
Worship - 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Srudy · 7:00p.m.

ure

Appt
c..ter
"Full-Gospel O.urdl"
Pastors John .t. Patty Wade
603 Scmnd A'It:. Muon

Prep Sports

Pumr: Rev. Phillip lUdenour
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

lfarv... Otolna&lt;b Mla47439 Reibel Rd., Cbcsler
Pastors: Re\'. Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. It 6 p.m.
Wedncaday Sc:rvic:c1 • 1 p.m.

'I'IH: a.n...,.· Fellow,.lp Mlabtry
J'llcw Lime Rd., Rulland
Paslor: Re11. MargarctJ. Robinson
Scl"\'ices: Wcdncsduy, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30 p.m.

-

a....t Wal&lt;yM

Coolville Road

W~netday

East Letart
Brian Harkness
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship. 9 a.m.
Wednesday~ 7 p.m.

Luth e ran

w•~ot·o

Pastor: William Justis
Sundly Sc:booJ -10:00 1.m.
Momina Worship- tO:•-' a.m.
Sunday Service - 6:30p.m.

Aaii-C.urdl
Ash St., Middlcpor1
Pastor Les Hayman
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Sunday Servia:~ 6:00p.m.
Wednei5day Servia:~ 7:00p.m.

HIGHLIGHTS

PIStol: Rev. Roser Willford,
Sundly Sc:hool- 9:30a.m.
Worahip- 7 p.m.

Wednesday Service~- 7 p.m.

Oth er Ch urches

FRIDAY'S

,_c_.MBald Knob, Oft Co. Rd. 3t

Cannei-Suuoa
Carmel &amp; Baslum Rds.
Racine, Obio
Pastor: Dcwaync Stutler
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Won.hip- 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Pa~tor:

Cerleto. J.aa 1 om' d "Cltardl
Kin~rv ROid
/
Putor. Robert Vance
Sunday Sd!ool· 9:30 o.m.
Worship Service 10:30 o.m.
No Sunday"' Wednooday NiJhl Services •

Buyc

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

C•lvaiJ' Pllarim Chapel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Charles Mckenzie
Sund'y School9:30 a.m.
Worship · ll a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedne~ay Service - 7:00p.m.

Chun:h of God or Prophecy
OJ. While Rd. off St. Rr. 160
Paslpr: P.J . Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship· II a.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Catholic

Worship - 9 a.m.

Duvillc Holinm Church
J 1057 Slate Route 32.5, Lanpvlle
Pastor: Gary Jackson
Sunday 5Chool- 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship· 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer seNice • 7 p.m.

Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Re11. Da11id Russell
Sunda)' School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evenina Ser11ices- 6:36p.m.
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.

Rullaad Free Will Baplllt
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 Lm.

coea. . .ity Churdt

ML Moriah Churdt of God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: Brice Utt
s~nday School . 9:45a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Rutland Church of God
Pastor: Ron Heath
S~nday Wvrship • 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Ser.dces. 7 p.m.

Ea~ri·

Pastor: Kctth Rader

Pa!tot: Rev. AmoJ Tillis
Main Strce~, Rutland
Sunday Worship-10!()() a.m.
Sunday Servicc-7 p.m.

Church of God

ML Moriab Baptist
Fourth&amp;. Main St, Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School'- 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.

.,

Holt ness

Dexter Cburtb or Chrtsl
PastQr: Justin Campbell
Sunday school 9:30a.m.
Norman Will, superintendent
Sunday worship - 10:30 a. m.

Hillside Baptisl Church
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School . 10 a.m.
Wo~hip - lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Putor.IIOb RoiNnson
Suftday Scbool- P:•s a.m.
Worship· lla.nt.
Wednesday Servicel-1:30 p.m.

Sunday: Aduh Education Sunday School 10: IS a.m.
Holy ,Eucharist 11:00 a.m.
Wednesday: Holy Eocharist.S:OO p.m.

Btarw .. low RJdtt Churtb of Chritl
Paslor:Terry Stewart
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wtdnesday Services - 6:30 p.m.

~CIIonloii ... N -

Alboor&gt; (S,_)

GnceE-Cbun:•
326 E. Mtht Si, Pomeroy
Rcll . James Btrnacti, Rev. Ktthlrin FOSler
Rn. Deborah Rankin, aeray

WeUnesday Services· 7 p.m.

A ssembly of God

c.&amp;nl~

,

Federal Hocking del. Southern, 9·
15, 15-11, 15-12
Eastern del. Trimble, 15-5, 15-8
Saturday•• Match
South Gallia at Cross Lanes
Christian, 10:00
·
Monday"a Matchn
South Webster at Ohio Valley
• Christian, 6:00
River Valley at Marietta, 5:15

Cross Countrv
MMl

Saturdlly"a
Rio Grande inv~ational, 10:00

U.S. Olympians
compete af Qatar meet
DOHA, Qatar (AP)
Qlympic triple gold medalist
Marion Jones was ·tired but triumphant at I oq meters. ending
her season with a S150,000 payday.
Angelo Taylor, also slower than
his Olympic winning time,
gained enough points from his
victory in the 400-meter hurdles
to finish atop the men's 2000 season standings in the IAAF Grand
Prix.
Jones was too far behind to
overtake Norwegian javelin gold
medalist Trine Hattestad for first
in the women's standings.
Hattestad, who had gained
bonus points with two world
records this season, finished with
I lO points to 104 for Jones. Gail
Devers also had 104, but a
tiebreaking formula gave Jones
the $100,000 second prize and
Devers the $50,000 third prize.
Five Olympic champions were
beaten in the season-ending
event, although it was no upset in
the women's 100-meter hurdles,
where Devers, the three-time
world champion, rebounded from
the hamstring injury that·stopped
her in the Olympics.
Others who didn't match their
Olympic success .were American
pole vaultqr Nick Hysong, second
to German Tim Lobinger; Russia's Sergey Klyugin , fifth in the
high jump, where countryman
Vyacheslav Voronin won; Belarus'
Ellina Zvereva, second to Gern)any's Franka Die~zsch in the
women's discus, and Algerian
Nouria Merah -Ilenida.

Westem thumps Marshall
HUNTINGTON, WVa.
(AP} - Marsh:ill no longer
has a stranglehold on tht )'est
of the Mid-American Conference.

~ec~~~~~Jt:~~~~:! t~~
ran for I 40 of his 203 yards
after halftime as Western
, Michigan beat Marsh:ill 30- I 0
on Thursday night, ending the
Herd's Division !-A-best
home winning streak at 33
gamts.
Marsh:ill lost a conference
game for first time since October 1998, a streak of 12 games.
"This was a chance for us to
be seen by the whole country,"
Wtstern Michigan's Steve
Neal said. "Marshall's not the
only good team in the MAC
now."
The Broncos (5-1, 3-0 MidAmerican) avenged a 34-30
,loss to Marsh:ill in last year's
conference
championship
game in Huntington.
'"To me, there was no
redemption factor involved.
We just focused like it was any
other game," Western Michigan coach Gary Darnell said.
The Herd (2-3, I-1) had not
lost at home since the Division
·1-AA championship game in
1995 against Montana. The
Herd rejoined Division 1-A in
· I 997. Top-ranked Florida State
now has Division 1-A's longest
home and overall winning
streaks at 3 I and I 5 games.
'Tve never lost here," said

.......... Herd, Pip 82

RUN, BYRON, RUN- Marshall quarterback Byron Leftwich (7) fights to escape from a Western Michi·
gan defensive player during the Herd's 30.10 losl&gt; in Huntington. {AP)

Eastern sweeps Trimble; Southern falls
BY ScoTT WOLFE

setting. Kass Lodwick was 2-for-3 spiking 12.
with a kill and Tiffany Hensley was 0-for-1
Southern's Fallon -Roush was 42-for-55
EAST MEIGS - Eastern defeated Trim- servmg.
setting with four assists and two kills, going
ble 15-5 'a nd 15-8 to remain atop the Tri- ·
Overall Eastern (15-4, TVC I 1-3) was 20-for-20 serving with 13 points. Kati
Valley Conference Hocking Division stand- 30-of-47 with nine aces, 25-for-34 spiking Cummins was 19-for-23 spiking with six
ings Thursday night.
with seven kills, 38-of-46 setting with seven kills and three blocks, while going 9-for-9
Kayla: Gibbs led Easrern with a 13- I 6 ~ssists, and had one block.
serving with two points.
serving night with 14 points and two aces,
Eastern remained undefeated at the
Deana Pullins was 8-for-9 serving with
while Danielle Spencer was 9-for-1 I with reserve level at 1 1-0 after claiming 15-13 eight points, and Rachel Chapman was 13nine points and five aces. Tammy Bissell and and 15-13 wins. Aly«a Holter led the for-13 serving with four aces and 1 1-of-14
Cinda Clifford each had two points with an young Eagles with seven points.
spiking.
ace. Janet Ridenour had two points.
Eastern goes to Waterford Tuesday.
Macyn Ervin was 39-for-48 setting with
, Juli Bailey was 5-for-8 spiking with three
Federal Hocking def. Southern, 9one assist. Stacey Mills was 4-for-5 serving
kills and was 3-of-4 setting with an assist.
and 13-for-16 spiking with two blocks and
15, 15-11, 15-12
Kristen Chevalier was 2-for-2 spiking and
STEWART - Southern dropped a Tri- a kill. Tiffany Williams was 13-for~1 4 spikI 7-of- I 9 setting with two assists. Amber Valley Conference volleyball contest to sec- mg.
Baker was 12-for- I 6 setting with four assists ond place Federal Hocking (10-6) in three
Tiffany Bissell led Federal Hocking with a
and one serving point.
14-for-15 serving night and 14 points. Fossets Thursday night .
Sara Clifford was 2-for-3 spiking with a
Southern (7-7,TVC 7-9) won the open- sitt had eight points, Slusher had five and
kill and 3-for-4 setting. Whitney Karr was ing game of the match 15-9, then dropped Springer had seven.
4-for-5 spiking with a block and 3-for-3 the last two in close decisions 15-l I and 15Southern hosts Trunble Tuesday.
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

Junior, Jeter
up for
Clemente

ST. LOUIS (AP) - One
more victory, and the St. Louis
Cardinals will pay off a 4-year"
old debt.
In· 1996, the. Cardinals were
one game away from the World
Series before the Atlanta Braves.
overcame a 3-l deficit by
outscormg them 32-1 in the
next three games. After whipping another Braves ace in a 104 Game 2 victory Thursday, the
Cardinals are. poised to advance
ag:un.

35

"I think we're showing right
now that we can play good
baseball and beat teams that
think they're going to beat us,"
said Jim Edmonds, who tied a
division series record with three
doubles and had two RBI ~.
"Hopefully, we can get it done."
The Cardinals have only three
players left from the 19% team ,
Ilut manager Tony La Russa
won't let them forget what happened.
"We recognize this is a three. win St"ries, not a two - win
series," La Russ;~ said. " Nobody
is celebrating."

I'

Clemanta. ,... BS

MADISON, Wis. (AP) -The
24th-ranked Wiscoruin Badgen,
who dropped 20 spots in the poll
after an NCAA sc•ndal and backto-back losses, are out to turn
things around the way they did a
year ago: by beating No. 8 Ohio
State.
The Buckeyes led 17 ..() at halftime last season, but Wisconsin
scored on eight straight possessions for a 42-17 triumph that
propelled the Badgen to another
Rose Bowl title and sent Ohio
State spiraling to its first nonbowl season in 12 years.
The circumstances leading to
Saturday's showdown at Camp
Randall Stadium are much the
same.
Just like last year, the Badgers
(3-2, 0-2 Big Ten) are coming off
two. straight losses, including one
to Michigan, that ruined their
national ti tie aspirations.
Behind a much improved
junior quarterback Steve Bellisari,
the Buckeyes (4-0, 1-0) are highly ranked and riding high, just
like they .were a year ago before
the Badgers handed them their
worst home .lpss since 1967.
But the catalyst for the comeback - Heisman Trophy winner
Ron Dayne - is now plowing
through defenses for the New
York Giants.
The Buckeyes, who have scored
five defensive touchdowns and
have a league-high IS sacks, aren't
exactly doing flips, however.
Dayne's replacement, Michael ·
Bennett, leads the nation with a
208.5-yard rushing average.
"Watching him on TV, he
might be even be more dangerous
than Ron Dayne," Buckeyes cornerback David Mitchell said.
Bennett, a world-class sprinter,
needs to gain 166 yards rushing
Saturday to becom1e just the ninth
player in NCAA history to reach
1,000 yards by his fifth start.
"You don't want to let him get
into the open field," Ohio State
coach John Cooper concurred." I
don't think you want to get into a ·
foot race with Bennett."
Bennett was one of 26 Badgers,
who served staggered suspension•
handed down by the NCAA last
month for receiving unadvertised
shoe discounts.
·
Last week, the Badgers finally
had their roster intact. Ilut they
bungled their way through a lo"
to the Wolverines with the kind

Plein ... OSU, Pip 82

Cards rap Braves, take 2-0 series lead

NEW YORK (AP) - Ken
Griffey Jr. and Derek Jeter
head the list of nominees
releas~d Thursday for the
Roberto Clemente Award.
. Major League Baseball
announced the 30 nominees,
one from each team, for the
award presented annually to
the player who combines outstanding skills on the field
with devoted work in the
community.
Three players were nominated by each team, before
local panels of community
representatives selected one
nominee to represent the club.
A · panel of baseball dignitaries including Vera Clemente
and Commissioner Bud Selig
will select a winner from the
final list of nominees. The
winner will be announced
before Game 3 of the World
Series, scheduled fdr Oct. 24.
John Hancock will make a
donation to the winner's local
charity of choice as w~ll as a
donation to the Roberto
CJemente Foundation in the
PI• ... -

Buckeyes
meet
Wisconsin

WHAT A RELIEF - St. Louis reliever Matt Morrison celebrates after
the Cardinals defeated the Braves in the NLDS. {AP)

.

They haVe some reason to celebrate considering the W.y they
treated Greg Maddux and Tom
Glavine. Maddux lasted only
four innings in a 7- 5 loss on
Tuesday and Glavine suffered

•

through his shortest outmg in
255 appearances, giving up
seven runs in 2 1-3 innings.
The Cardinals were 6-for-12
against Glavine, who finished
the regular season with 14
scoreless innings. He hadn't
been chased this quickly sinc'e
lasting two innings in a 7-5 loss
to Los Angeles on Aug. 19,
1993.
Glavine's only worse postseason outing was a two- inning
stint in Game 6 of the 1992
NLCS against Pittsburgh in
which he allowed eight runs . St.
Louis' three left-handed hitters
·were.4-for-6 with a horner, two
doubles and five Rllls against
him.
"It wasn't good," Glavine said.
"Everything I threw in there,
they hit."
Maddux and Glavinc, who
have combined. for six N L Cy
Young awards, have given up 12
earned runs in 6 t -3 innings tor
a 17.05 ERA.
"It's hard to beliexe what
you'n- seeing with the way these
two games have gone 1" pitching
coach Leo Mazzone said ... We 1rt!
so spoiled with the great pitch ing we've had over the years."
Will Clark overcame a 2-ll,

Pluu ·~ NLDS, Pltp as '

'

�•
•

•

~

,
Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Mkl91aport. Ohio

Friday, October e, 2000

The Daily Se11tinel

'

Col'le11e Football Notebook, ~ge 82
MLB: Mets even series, Page 85
PGA: 4-uuy tie for Michelob lead, Page 88

•

Page 81

/

-y

Apostoltc

,. ••.,. Od • • 1,1010

Church of Chnst

Cboordl ol J...., Cllriol ~
V1nZ.ndt and ward
Putor: James Miller
Sunday School· 10:30 o.m.
Ennina · 7:3U p.m.

d.

C.IO'dloteuut

212 W. Main St.
Miniltc:r: Neil Proudfoot

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a. m., 6 p.m.
Wedntsda)' Srrvicts -1 p.m.

Churdl ot Jeou Cbriot
Aposlolk Foltb
New Lima Road

Pomeror WestsNk Church or Cllrbt
33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School- II a.m.
Wurship · !Oa.m., 6 p.m.

Sundll)'; lO a.m. and 7:30 p.m.

W ednesday. 7:30p.m.

Eptscopal

Middlopo11 Cbllr&lt;h orCbriJt
Srh and Main
Ptsror ~ AI Hart50n
Yourh Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday Sdlool · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Uberty lwtmbly or God
P.O. Box 461, Dudding lane
Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sunday Services- IO:(XJ a.m. and 1 p.m.

Baptist

Keu Churt'h of Chrirt
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday Xhool · 10:30 a.m.
Pastor·Jeffn:y Wall&lt;~cc
1st and 3rd Sundiy

Maruatha Baptisl Cburth
Burli(l&amp;ham • 742-7606
Paslor: John Swanson
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.
Morning Service 11 :00 a.m.
E11ening Servi~ . ti:OOi}.m.
Wednt:sUay Sen• ice . 7:30p. m.
.Hope Raplill Churcb (Soulhtrn )
570 Grnnt SL, Middleport
Sunday school . 9:JO a.m.
Wurship- 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednc5day Stf'•ice · 7 p.m.

Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rtl-43)
Pastor : Roger Warson
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday ScNicts · 1 p.m.

Rutland Flnt lhtplist Church
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worsl1ip • 10:4.5 a.m.

Tuppers Plain Church of Chrisl
1nsrrumental
Worship Service· 9a.m.
Communion- 10 a.m.
·Sunday SdlOOI • 10:15 11.m.
Youth· 5:30 pen Sunday
Bible S!udy Wednesday 7 pm

Pomrro, Fint Baptist
East Main St.
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · IO:JO a. m.

Flnl Southern B•f.tist
41872 Pomero)' P1ke
Paslor: E. lamar O'Bryanl
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:4.5 a:m., 7:00p.m.
Wcdne5day Services - 7:00 p.m.

Bradb1ry Chuf'C'h of Christ
Pao;tor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wor:sbip · 10-30 a.m.
Rutland Church or Christ

'
Fint Baplbiil Ch11rth
Pa5tor: Mark Monow
6th Rnd Palmer Sl., Middleport
Sunday School - 9:1.5 a. m.
Worship ·.]0:15 a_.m .. 7:00p.m.
Wednt•sday Servu:e- 7:00p.m.
•

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wors hip· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Bradrord Church of Christ
Corner of St. Rr. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
You!h Minister: Bi!J Amberger
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m .
Worshtp ·8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:00p.m.

Racine First Raptlsl
Pa ~ l nr:

Rick Ruk
School - t,J·JO am .
Wvr)oh•p - l0:4U J.m .. 7:00 p.m.
Wcdno.:sUay Servin·~- 7:()() p.m.
Sunda~

•

Hltkory Hills Church of Christ

Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School - 9 3.m.
Worship · lO a.m.,-6: 30 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Sliver Run Bllpti51
Pastor Slc\'1~11 K. Lill!tSunday s,·hool · Hhl.m.
Wunhip • I !a.m .. 7:00p. m.
Wednesday Scr..,ice~- 7:00p.m.

Lana:svillr Christian Church
Sunday School -9:30a. m.
Wor.;hip • J0:30 a.m., 7:30p.m .
Wednesday Servitt 7:30p.m.

Mr. Union Daplisl
Pastor : Joe N. Savre
Sunday School- 1):45- 11.m.

•
•

Evening -6:30p. m.
Wo.:d ntsday Snvi..:cs- 6:3(1p.m.

Hemlock Groft Church
Pastor: Gene: Zopp
Sunday school - 10:30 a.m.
Wo~hip · 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Btthlthrm Baptist Churth
Great lknd, Route 124, Racine, OH
Paslor : Daniel Mccta
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Sunday Wo"'hip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study -6:00p.m.

Rmlsville Churt'b or Christ
Pastor: PhiliP. Sturm
Sunday Sch~l : 9:30a.m.
Worsh~p Service: 10:3(] a.m.
Bible Srudy, WcdneAday, 6:30p.m.

O&amp;d Bethel Fret WUI Blptl1t Ch1"Ch

28601 St. Rt. 7, MUldlepolt
Sunday School- 10 a.m. · ·
Evtning · 7:00 p.m.
Th~r.tday Services. 7:00

Church of Christ
7 and 124 W
Evangelist; Dennis Sargcnl
Sunday Dible Study· 9:30a.m.
Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 7 p.m.
lntersc~;:tion

Vlc1ory Baptlstlndepcndant
S2S N. 2nd Sr. Middleporr
Pastor: Jame~ E. Keesee
Worship · lOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Harttord Chun:h ofChrlslln
Christian Union
Hartford, W.Va.
Pmuor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School· II a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne~ay Services. 7:30p.m.

Faith B•ptlst Church
Railroad St., Mason
Sundlr School . 10 a.m.
Worsh1p • 1.1 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services_. 7 p.m.

Fortlt Run Baptltt
Pastor : Arh.1s Hun
Sunday School~ 10 a.m.
Worship. 11 a.m.

'

'

Antiquity Bapt111
Sunday School • 9;30 a.m.
" Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evening - 6:00p.m.

s,ncuse Flnt Churc:h of God

Sacred Heart Catholic Church
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pa.'ltor: Rev. Waher E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4:4.5-5:15p.m.; Mass· ..5:30 p.m.
Sun . Con. -8:45~9:1S a.m.~
Sun. Mass · 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass . 8:30a.m.

Congregational
Trinity Churt ..
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy

Pastor: Re11: Craig Cros.-.man
Worship 10:25 a.m.
Sunday School 9:1S a.m.

Flatwoods

Putor: Ktith RatSer
Sunday School-tO a.m.
Won.hip - 11 1.m.

FonstRu
Pastor: Bob Robinson

Putor. Rev. Herllcn o,..,
Sunday Sc:bool· 9:30 ,_.._ •
Wonbip- lh.m., 6 p.m.
Wedncsdly Servica • 1 p.m.

I

••

.._c_.,
... N _
Pasror: Rev. Samuel W.

Worship· 9a.m.

Heatla (Middltpon)
Pastor: Rob Brower
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wot'51!ip • 11:00 a.m.
Mloenv•
Pastor: Boti Robinson
Sundi&gt;: School • 9 a.m.
WorShip~ 10 a.m.
· Pearl Chapel
Sunday School· 9a.m.
Wordtip ~ 10 a.m.

Ro. of Sbaroa HoU•m Chun=h

leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m,
Wednesday prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

Pomtroy
Pator: Rod Brower
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School~ 10:3~ a.m.

Pine Gron Bible Hollneu Claurth
l/2 mile off Rr. J2S
Pastor: Re11. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School. 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7:JO p.m.

Roc:k Sprtap
Pa51or: Keith Rader ·
Sunday School· 9:1~ a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.
y_outh Fellowship, Sunday· 6 p.m.

WHieyan Bible Hollnus Churcb
75 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Worship · 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service ; 7:30p.m.

Rutlaad
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m.'
1hursday Services - 7 p.m.

Hysell Run Hollnm Churcb
Re)l. Mart Michael
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study and Youth· 7 p.m.

Salem Ce•ter
Pastor: Ron,fictce
Sunday School. 9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:1.5 a.m.
SDowYIUt
Sunday School ·10 a.m.

LluRI Cliff Fret Methodist Church
Pastor; Donald B3lis
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Worship- 9 a.m.

Betlwof
Pas10r: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday Sch.ool- 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.
Wednesday Sc:tviccs.- 10 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Reoraanlzed Church of Jesus Christ
or Latter Day Saints
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Singer
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.
1'hc Church or Jrsw
. Christ of Lallcr~Day Saints
Sl. Rr. HiD, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School 10:20.11 a.m.
Relief Sociely/Priesthood 11 :05- l2:00 noon
Sacramt:::nt Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemakins meetins, 1st Thurs.• 7 p.m.

Sunday Sdlool · 9:30a.m.
Wol"lllip -10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Ponlud.Fint Cluon:ll ., ... Nuarne

773-S0t7

Servta: time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
We~nesday 7 pm

Faith Chapel
923 S. Third St., Middleport
Pastor Michael Pangio
Sunday senrioe, 10 a.m.
Wednesday scryice, 7 p.m.
Cbriltila Feilowtblp &lt;;:enler
Salem Sl., Rutland
Paslor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship. li:1S a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.
Hobtou c•riJIIOJt FelloWJhlp Cburdl
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Youlh Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service, 7:00p.m.

Foilh Full Goopel Church
Long Bouom
Pastor: Ste11e Reed
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday ·1 p.m.
Friday· £ellowsh1p service 7 p.m.

Momiaa Stu
Pastor: Dcwayne SIUI!er
Sunday School- 11 a.m.
Worship· JO a.m.

HanisoaYille Commuully Cbun:b
P11sror: Tbcron Durham
Sunday· 9:30a.m. ,and 7 p.m •
Wednesday -7 p.m.
Middlll!port Communlly Cllun::h
515 Pearl St., Middlepon
Pastor: Sam Andel'50n
Sunday ScboollO a.m.
Evenin1 • 7;30 p.m.
Wednesday Service_,.. 7:30 p.m.

St. John Lulhenn Church
Pine Gro'-'C
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Worship· 9:00a.m.
Sunda)' School . 10:00 a.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkncu.
Sunday School ·10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Our Saviour Lutheraa Church

Coolville U•ited.Methodist Parish
Pasror: Helen Kline

Faith Valley Tabemade Ghurrh
•
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmell Rawson
Sunday E11ening 1 p.m.
Thursday Ser11ice- 7 p.m.

Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pasror: David Russell
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.

Coolville Churdl
Main &amp; Fihh St.

Sunday School . 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services- 7 p.m.

St Paul Lutheran Churth
Corner Sycamore &amp; Sec:vnd St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School~ 9:45a.m.
Worship· II a.m.

Bethel Cburth
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship. 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services. 10 a.m.

United Methodist

Hoekln1port Church

Gnham Uailed Methodist
Worship· 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7o30 p.m. (3rd &amp; 41h Sun)

Grand Sbect
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
• Worship - II a:m.
Wednesday Sef\lices- 8 p.m.

Wednesday Scr11ice. 7:30p.m.
Mt, Olive United M•thodlst
Of£ 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School. 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10·:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services· 7 p.m.

Ton:h Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m. ·

Nazarene

Mi!!lgs Cooperallvt Parish
Northeast Clusltr

Middlrpor1 Cburch oftht N~t
Pastor: Allen Midcap
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Pastor: Allen Midcap

Allred

Pastor: Jane Bcatlie
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· I I a.m., 6:30p.m.
Chesler

Pastor: Jane BCattie
Worship · 9 a.m,
Sunday S&lt;:hool - 10 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Rttdnllle Fellowship
Church oflht Naunne
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolp h
Worship· 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

Syncuse Churcb of lbc Nuarea~
Pastor Mike Adkins
.Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- IO:JO a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servic:er . 1 p.m.

Long Bottom
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Warship ·10:30 a.m.
Rerdnille
Worship· 9:30a.m.
Sunday School. lO:JOa.m.
First Sunday of Monrh- 7:00p.m .. service

Pomeroy Chun:h or lbll! N•unnll!
Pas!or: Jan Lavender
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -1 p.m.·

Tuppcn Plains SL Paul
Pastor: Jane Beanie
Sunday SchoOl • 9 a.m.
• Worship· 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services· 7·30 p m

Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Synaruw Mls1&amp;oa

ML Olin Community Cburth
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Evening. 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service . 7 p.m.
United Faith Church
Rt 7 on Pomeroy By· Pass
Pastor: Re11. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School. 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.
Full Gospel I.JplhollJf
33045 Hiland Rvad, Pomemy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
EvcninJ 7:30p.m.
Tuesday&amp;: Thursday-7:30 p.m.

,.
~·

..

,

~­

'..'·'

:

•·

Paslor: Wayne R. Jewell
Sunday Sc:IVices- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Thursday· 7:00p.m.

p

99;.~;~~

l

Syracuse

992~3978

"-' ./' ~

Racine mower Clinic

Davia-Quickel Agency Inc.

JNSIJRAN
.
CE .

Jl[ill~er Jlf uneml ~Otne .Jlnc.
212 E. Main Street 264SouthSecondA"e. ·Midd~port,oH 45760

.. .

·

~'!~~~

2 Factory Ttai,ned Briggs

~_:;::•

&amp; Stratton Mechanics

Racine, OH
1• 74 0·94 9·2804

seM:e•

iENf:Jt..~ ... •

Bill Qulckel992-66n

Call unto me, ana 1 will
answer thee, ana shew
thee great and mighty
things, which thou

lcnowest not:.
fer. 33:3

sooE...::::,:~~:~,::o~H•s769
Jaines;~::~oirector

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES $.~21

E M

4 · ain

EWING FUNERAL HOME

"'lf1e nccept 'Pmll'rt! •Tro11.1ja&gt; ..

Established 1913

182·8200

992-2121

.~

Regan Brown

Dignity and SerVice Always

174 Lay.ne Street 106 Mulberry Ave.

'

Ro:joldn1 Ure Cburcb
S00 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
P85tor: Mike Foreman
Pastor. Emerilu:s Lawrence Foreman
'
Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

'.·

Clll'lon Tabmladt Cbun:h

Oifton, W.Va.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service. 1 p.m.

Pomeroy

Crow's Family Restaurant

CLASSIFIED SECTION!
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'

I ngel' s Carpet
169 N 2nd. Ave
Middleport, OH

992-7028'

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
992-7075
172 North Second Ave.
Middlepart, Oh '

Jackson
logan
Gallia Academy
Point Pleasant

/\!hens
' Warren
Marietta
River Valley

A-

;

'

..

..

Presbyterian
Paslor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday SChool- 10 a.m.
Worship · lla.m.

5-1
1·2 4·2
1·2 2·4
1·2 2·4
0-3 · 1-5
0-3 0-6

non-league
2·3
2·4
0-6

voi~ll

Thuraday a Mltchea
Ohio Valley Christian del. South
Gallia, 15-7, 13·15, 15-11
Gallia Academy del. Marietta, 8·
15, 15-5, 15·11
Athens del. River Valley, 15-8, 15·

2

•

••

Middleport Prtlbyteriaa
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wvrship · 10 a.m.

,,
,,

Seventh -Day Adventi st

"

Stvealh·Day Ad•tntllt
Mulberry His. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy lawinsky
S.Sturday Services:
Sabbath School • 2 p.m.
, WorJhip • 3 p.m. ,

,,
•••

-

...

.,

United Brethren
MI. Hll!rmon United Brtthrm
In Chrll:t Church
Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7:3~ p.m.

•
•.,

..

r

Eden United Bnthren In Chri11
2 '1/2 miles north of Reedsville
on S.tate Route 124
Pastor: ~e11. Rober! Markley
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
Sunday Wo11hip • 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7:JO p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service . 7JO p.m.

-

MEIGS MARINE
&amp; SERVICE
42121 Enterprise Ad.
SALES

992-6376

3-0

. · Wahama, at Gilmer County
Hannan at Guyan Valley
Saturday'a Game
Gauley Bridge at South Gallia

Wednesd~y Sc~icct~. ·._7:00 p.m.

137-C N. 2nd Ave. r'
Middleport, OH

6-0

Todliy'a Gamea

Mkldltpo_rt hntKOitll
·
Third Ave.
Pu10r: Rev. Clark Btkcr
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evcnin&amp;- 6 p.m.

Offlte Sei'ulce 6 Supply.

6-0

Waharria
Hannan
South Gallia

Pentecostal Assembl7
St. Rt 124, Racine
. Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday ScOOol· 10 a.m.
• E11enlng- 7 p.m.
Wedne~ay Services. 1 p.m.

992-1161

ALL

3·0
3·0

ALL

Pentecostal

'

SEO

Athens at Gallia Academy
Warren at Poini Pleasant
Jackson at River Valley
' Logan at ~arietta

God's Ttmplll! or PniiH
"'"
31665 McQuire Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
Pastor: Wayne Balcolm
•
Services: Thurs. Niles 7:00pm
New church No Sunday !ll!rvice established.

S18 E. Main St. , Pomeroy, OH

5-1
3-3
3-3
2-4
1·5

Todliy'a Gamea

•

9ift Slif!JJ

ALL
!Hl

SEOAL

..

!Always &amp; 'Forever

4·2
3·3
3-3
3-3
0-6
0-6

Todliy'a O.mea

•

Pomeroy flower Shop
106 Butternut flue.
Pomeroy, OH 992-6454

AU.

Nelsonville·York at Meigs
Miller at Southam
Eastern at Federal Hocking
. · Vinton County at Alexander
· Wellston at Belpre
. Watertord at Trimble

Full Gospel O.ui-d. of lbt Uvlnc Sador ""
Rt338, Antiquity
Pastor; Jesse Morris
Assl. Paslors: Jim Morris
Services: Saturday 7:30p.m.

Pom;~~-~~0~5769

1.()

Trimble
0-1
0-1
Watertord
Federal Hocking 0-1

New Urt Vldory Cnla'
·•
3773 Georaes Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services· 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday· 7 p.m. &amp; Youlh 7 p.m.

992;,5432

"'Fiotvers for all occasions"

1-0
1-0

' Southern

!

. South Belbcl Nll!w Ttstlmeat
Silver Ridse
Paslor: Robert Barber
Sunday School . 9 a.m.
Sun. Worship· 10:10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.

Clean out your basement 'Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken"
or attic with the help of the 228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

Prescriptions
992:2955
Pomeroy

992·5130 Pomeroy

NEW
HAVEN
FUNERAL HOME
.Lundy Brown
,. . ,..,,..., r

~------~-~.~------

740-992'5141

Time to clean house?

TYC
. Miller
. Eastern

•

~~ -,..,
..
eeme,ts
SP,onl!loretrby
•
•
a.:ea
nierehants
~·
K&amp;C' JEWELERS
..
.. "' .
.
. ,
. .
.
RACINE PLANING MrLL
·Mill Work
Cabinet Making

" · Nelsonville-York 1-0
Belpre
1-0
WellSton
1.()
0-1
Meigs
Alexander
0-1
Vinton County
0-1
Hocldng Dlvlalon

StlvenTOic Commuitr Cb•rdl

HarrlsonYIIIe Prtsbytetian Cbu~h
Worship· 9 a.m.
Sunday School· 9:45a.m.

Foilh Gospol Churdl
Long Bottom
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:4.5 a.w., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m:

TYC

Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
SUnday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30p.m.

Ham Community Church

Mol1f Chapel Churc•
Sunday school· 10 a.m.
Worship. 11 a.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

TVC
Ohio Dlvlelon

Colvory Blblt Cburdl

Syracun Fint Unikd Presbyrertu

Dynville Communlly c ·hun::h
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worahlp • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

' ''

Faith Fello,oblp CIWtlde l'or Cbriot
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Re11. Mike: Thompson,Pastor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.
Off Rt.l24
Pa!ltor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m ., 7:30p.m .

FoodMI

Scrvke - 7 p.m.

Fatr.lewBibltC.orclt
lellrt, W.Va. Rt. J
Put«: Bri1n May
Sunday School- 9:30 l .ftl.
Worship - 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Srudy · 7:00p.m.

ure

Appt
c..ter
"Full-Gospel O.urdl"
Pastors John .t. Patty Wade
603 Scmnd A'It:. Muon

Prep Sports

Pumr: Rev. Phillip lUdenour
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

lfarv... Otolna&lt;b Mla47439 Reibel Rd., Cbcsler
Pastors: Re\'. Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. It 6 p.m.
Wedncaday Sc:rvic:c1 • 1 p.m.

'I'IH: a.n...,.· Fellow,.lp Mlabtry
J'llcw Lime Rd., Rulland
Paslor: Re11. MargarctJ. Robinson
Scl"\'ices: Wcdncsduy, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30 p.m.

-

a....t Wal&lt;yM

Coolville Road

W~netday

East Letart
Brian Harkness
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship. 9 a.m.
Wednesday~ 7 p.m.

Luth e ran

w•~ot·o

Pastor: William Justis
Sundly Sc:booJ -10:00 1.m.
Momina Worship- tO:•-' a.m.
Sunday Service - 6:30p.m.

Aaii-C.urdl
Ash St., Middlcpor1
Pastor Les Hayman
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Sunday Servia:~ 6:00p.m.
Wednei5day Servia:~ 7:00p.m.

HIGHLIGHTS

PIStol: Rev. Roser Willford,
Sundly Sc:hool- 9:30a.m.
Worahip- 7 p.m.

Wednesday Service~- 7 p.m.

Oth er Ch urches

FRIDAY'S

,_c_.MBald Knob, Oft Co. Rd. 3t

Cannei-Suuoa
Carmel &amp; Baslum Rds.
Racine, Obio
Pastor: Dcwaync Stutler
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Won.hip- 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Pa~tor:

Cerleto. J.aa 1 om' d "Cltardl
Kin~rv ROid
/
Putor. Robert Vance
Sunday Sd!ool· 9:30 o.m.
Worship Service 10:30 o.m.
No Sunday"' Wednooday NiJhl Services •

Buyc

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

C•lvaiJ' Pllarim Chapel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Charles Mckenzie
Sund'y School9:30 a.m.
Worship · ll a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedne~ay Service - 7:00p.m.

Chun:h of God or Prophecy
OJ. While Rd. off St. Rr. 160
Paslpr: P.J . Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship· II a.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Catholic

Worship - 9 a.m.

Duvillc Holinm Church
J 1057 Slate Route 32.5, Lanpvlle
Pastor: Gary Jackson
Sunday 5Chool- 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship· 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer seNice • 7 p.m.

Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Re11. Da11id Russell
Sunda)' School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evenina Ser11ices- 6:36p.m.
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.

Rullaad Free Will Baplllt
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 Lm.

coea. . .ity Churdt

ML Moriah Churdt of God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: Brice Utt
s~nday School . 9:45a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Rutland Church of God
Pastor: Ron Heath
S~nday Wvrship • 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Ser.dces. 7 p.m.

Ea~ri·

Pastor: Kctth Rader

Pa!tot: Rev. AmoJ Tillis
Main Strce~, Rutland
Sunday Worship-10!()() a.m.
Sunday Servicc-7 p.m.

Church of God

ML Moriab Baptist
Fourth&amp;. Main St, Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School'- 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.

.,

Holt ness

Dexter Cburtb or Chrtsl
PastQr: Justin Campbell
Sunday school 9:30a.m.
Norman Will, superintendent
Sunday worship - 10:30 a. m.

Hillside Baptisl Church
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School . 10 a.m.
Wo~hip - lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Putor.IIOb RoiNnson
Suftday Scbool- P:•s a.m.
Worship· lla.nt.
Wednesday Servicel-1:30 p.m.

Sunday: Aduh Education Sunday School 10: IS a.m.
Holy ,Eucharist 11:00 a.m.
Wednesday: Holy Eocharist.S:OO p.m.

Btarw .. low RJdtt Churtb of Chritl
Paslor:Terry Stewart
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wtdnesday Services - 6:30 p.m.

~CIIonloii ... N -

Alboor&gt; (S,_)

GnceE-Cbun:•
326 E. Mtht Si, Pomeroy
Rcll . James Btrnacti, Rev. Ktthlrin FOSler
Rn. Deborah Rankin, aeray

WeUnesday Services· 7 p.m.

A ssembly of God

c.&amp;nl~

,

Federal Hocking del. Southern, 9·
15, 15-11, 15-12
Eastern del. Trimble, 15-5, 15-8
Saturday•• Match
South Gallia at Cross Lanes
Christian, 10:00
·
Monday"a Matchn
South Webster at Ohio Valley
• Christian, 6:00
River Valley at Marietta, 5:15

Cross Countrv
MMl

Saturdlly"a
Rio Grande inv~ational, 10:00

U.S. Olympians
compete af Qatar meet
DOHA, Qatar (AP)
Qlympic triple gold medalist
Marion Jones was ·tired but triumphant at I oq meters. ending
her season with a S150,000 payday.
Angelo Taylor, also slower than
his Olympic winning time,
gained enough points from his
victory in the 400-meter hurdles
to finish atop the men's 2000 season standings in the IAAF Grand
Prix.
Jones was too far behind to
overtake Norwegian javelin gold
medalist Trine Hattestad for first
in the women's standings.
Hattestad, who had gained
bonus points with two world
records this season, finished with
I lO points to 104 for Jones. Gail
Devers also had 104, but a
tiebreaking formula gave Jones
the $100,000 second prize and
Devers the $50,000 third prize.
Five Olympic champions were
beaten in the season-ending
event, although it was no upset in
the women's 100-meter hurdles,
where Devers, the three-time
world champion, rebounded from
the hamstring injury that·stopped
her in the Olympics.
Others who didn't match their
Olympic success .were American
pole vaultqr Nick Hysong, second
to German Tim Lobinger; Russia's Sergey Klyugin , fifth in the
high jump, where countryman
Vyacheslav Voronin won; Belarus'
Ellina Zvereva, second to Gern)any's Franka Die~zsch in the
women's discus, and Algerian
Nouria Merah -Ilenida.

Westem thumps Marshall
HUNTINGTON, WVa.
(AP} - Marsh:ill no longer
has a stranglehold on tht )'est
of the Mid-American Conference.

~ec~~~~~Jt:~~~~:! t~~
ran for I 40 of his 203 yards
after halftime as Western
, Michigan beat Marsh:ill 30- I 0
on Thursday night, ending the
Herd's Division !-A-best
home winning streak at 33
gamts.
Marsh:ill lost a conference
game for first time since October 1998, a streak of 12 games.
"This was a chance for us to
be seen by the whole country,"
Wtstern Michigan's Steve
Neal said. "Marshall's not the
only good team in the MAC
now."
The Broncos (5-1, 3-0 MidAmerican) avenged a 34-30
,loss to Marsh:ill in last year's
conference
championship
game in Huntington.
'"To me, there was no
redemption factor involved.
We just focused like it was any
other game," Western Michigan coach Gary Darnell said.
The Herd (2-3, I-1) had not
lost at home since the Division
·1-AA championship game in
1995 against Montana. The
Herd rejoined Division 1-A in
· I 997. Top-ranked Florida State
now has Division 1-A's longest
home and overall winning
streaks at 3 I and I 5 games.
'Tve never lost here," said

.......... Herd, Pip 82

RUN, BYRON, RUN- Marshall quarterback Byron Leftwich (7) fights to escape from a Western Michi·
gan defensive player during the Herd's 30.10 losl&gt; in Huntington. {AP)

Eastern sweeps Trimble; Southern falls
BY ScoTT WOLFE

setting. Kass Lodwick was 2-for-3 spiking 12.
with a kill and Tiffany Hensley was 0-for-1
Southern's Fallon -Roush was 42-for-55
EAST MEIGS - Eastern defeated Trim- servmg.
setting with four assists and two kills, going
ble 15-5 'a nd 15-8 to remain atop the Tri- ·
Overall Eastern (15-4, TVC I 1-3) was 20-for-20 serving with 13 points. Kati
Valley Conference Hocking Division stand- 30-of-47 with nine aces, 25-for-34 spiking Cummins was 19-for-23 spiking with six
ings Thursday night.
with seven kills, 38-of-46 setting with seven kills and three blocks, while going 9-for-9
Kayla: Gibbs led Easrern with a 13- I 6 ~ssists, and had one block.
serving with two points.
serving night with 14 points and two aces,
Eastern remained undefeated at the
Deana Pullins was 8-for-9 serving with
while Danielle Spencer was 9-for-1 I with reserve level at 1 1-0 after claiming 15-13 eight points, and Rachel Chapman was 13nine points and five aces. Tammy Bissell and and 15-13 wins. Aly«a Holter led the for-13 serving with four aces and 1 1-of-14
Cinda Clifford each had two points with an young Eagles with seven points.
spiking.
ace. Janet Ridenour had two points.
Eastern goes to Waterford Tuesday.
Macyn Ervin was 39-for-48 setting with
, Juli Bailey was 5-for-8 spiking with three
Federal Hocking def. Southern, 9one assist. Stacey Mills was 4-for-5 serving
kills and was 3-of-4 setting with an assist.
and 13-for-16 spiking with two blocks and
15, 15-11, 15-12
Kristen Chevalier was 2-for-2 spiking and
STEWART - Southern dropped a Tri- a kill. Tiffany Williams was 13-for~1 4 spikI 7-of- I 9 setting with two assists. Amber Valley Conference volleyball contest to sec- mg.
Baker was 12-for- I 6 setting with four assists ond place Federal Hocking (10-6) in three
Tiffany Bissell led Federal Hocking with a
and one serving point.
14-for-15 serving night and 14 points. Fossets Thursday night .
Sara Clifford was 2-for-3 spiking with a
Southern (7-7,TVC 7-9) won the open- sitt had eight points, Slusher had five and
kill and 3-for-4 setting. Whitney Karr was ing game of the match 15-9, then dropped Springer had seven.
4-for-5 spiking with a block and 3-for-3 the last two in close decisions 15-l I and 15Southern hosts Trunble Tuesday.
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

Junior, Jeter
up for
Clemente

ST. LOUIS (AP) - One
more victory, and the St. Louis
Cardinals will pay off a 4-year"
old debt.
In· 1996, the. Cardinals were
one game away from the World
Series before the Atlanta Braves.
overcame a 3-l deficit by
outscormg them 32-1 in the
next three games. After whipping another Braves ace in a 104 Game 2 victory Thursday, the
Cardinals are. poised to advance
ag:un.

35

"I think we're showing right
now that we can play good
baseball and beat teams that
think they're going to beat us,"
said Jim Edmonds, who tied a
division series record with three
doubles and had two RBI ~.
"Hopefully, we can get it done."
The Cardinals have only three
players left from the 19% team ,
Ilut manager Tony La Russa
won't let them forget what happened.
"We recognize this is a three. win St"ries, not a two - win
series," La Russ;~ said. " Nobody
is celebrating."

I'

Clemanta. ,... BS

MADISON, Wis. (AP) -The
24th-ranked Wiscoruin Badgen,
who dropped 20 spots in the poll
after an NCAA sc•ndal and backto-back losses, are out to turn
things around the way they did a
year ago: by beating No. 8 Ohio
State.
The Buckeyes led 17 ..() at halftime last season, but Wisconsin
scored on eight straight possessions for a 42-17 triumph that
propelled the Badgen to another
Rose Bowl title and sent Ohio
State spiraling to its first nonbowl season in 12 years.
The circumstances leading to
Saturday's showdown at Camp
Randall Stadium are much the
same.
Just like last year, the Badgers
(3-2, 0-2 Big Ten) are coming off
two. straight losses, including one
to Michigan, that ruined their
national ti tie aspirations.
Behind a much improved
junior quarterback Steve Bellisari,
the Buckeyes (4-0, 1-0) are highly ranked and riding high, just
like they .were a year ago before
the Badgers handed them their
worst home .lpss since 1967.
But the catalyst for the comeback - Heisman Trophy winner
Ron Dayne - is now plowing
through defenses for the New
York Giants.
The Buckeyes, who have scored
five defensive touchdowns and
have a league-high IS sacks, aren't
exactly doing flips, however.
Dayne's replacement, Michael ·
Bennett, leads the nation with a
208.5-yard rushing average.
"Watching him on TV, he
might be even be more dangerous
than Ron Dayne," Buckeyes cornerback David Mitchell said.
Bennett, a world-class sprinter,
needs to gain 166 yards rushing
Saturday to becom1e just the ninth
player in NCAA history to reach
1,000 yards by his fifth start.
"You don't want to let him get
into the open field," Ohio State
coach John Cooper concurred." I
don't think you want to get into a ·
foot race with Bennett."
Bennett was one of 26 Badgers,
who served staggered suspension•
handed down by the NCAA last
month for receiving unadvertised
shoe discounts.
·
Last week, the Badgers finally
had their roster intact. Ilut they
bungled their way through a lo"
to the Wolverines with the kind

Plein ... OSU, Pip 82

Cards rap Braves, take 2-0 series lead

NEW YORK (AP) - Ken
Griffey Jr. and Derek Jeter
head the list of nominees
releas~d Thursday for the
Roberto Clemente Award.
. Major League Baseball
announced the 30 nominees,
one from each team, for the
award presented annually to
the player who combines outstanding skills on the field
with devoted work in the
community.
Three players were nominated by each team, before
local panels of community
representatives selected one
nominee to represent the club.
A · panel of baseball dignitaries including Vera Clemente
and Commissioner Bud Selig
will select a winner from the
final list of nominees. The
winner will be announced
before Game 3 of the World
Series, scheduled fdr Oct. 24.
John Hancock will make a
donation to the winner's local
charity of choice as w~ll as a
donation to the Roberto
CJemente Foundation in the
PI• ... -

Buckeyes
meet
Wisconsin

WHAT A RELIEF - St. Louis reliever Matt Morrison celebrates after
the Cardinals defeated the Braves in the NLDS. {AP)

.

They haVe some reason to celebrate considering the W.y they
treated Greg Maddux and Tom
Glavine. Maddux lasted only
four innings in a 7- 5 loss on
Tuesday and Glavine suffered

•

through his shortest outmg in
255 appearances, giving up
seven runs in 2 1-3 innings.
The Cardinals were 6-for-12
against Glavine, who finished
the regular season with 14
scoreless innings. He hadn't
been chased this quickly sinc'e
lasting two innings in a 7-5 loss
to Los Angeles on Aug. 19,
1993.
Glavine's only worse postseason outing was a two- inning
stint in Game 6 of the 1992
NLCS against Pittsburgh in
which he allowed eight runs . St.
Louis' three left-handed hitters
·were.4-for-6 with a horner, two
doubles and five Rllls against
him.
"It wasn't good," Glavine said.
"Everything I threw in there,
they hit."
Maddux and Glavinc, who
have combined. for six N L Cy
Young awards, have given up 12
earned runs in 6 t -3 innings tor
a 17.05 ERA.
"It's hard to beliexe what
you'n- seeing with the way these
two games have gone 1" pitching
coach Leo Mazzone said ... We 1rt!
so spoiled with the great pitch ing we've had over the years."
Will Clark overcame a 2-ll,

Pluu ·~ NLDS, Pltp as '

'

�•

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, October 6, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

COLLEGE FOOTBALL ROUNDUP

Ball State's long fall
from MAC prominence
BYTHEASSOCIATEDPRESS

Just four short y_ears ago, the
Ball State Cardibals were in the
midst of an eight-game winning
&lt;trelk .thai would carry them to a
Mid-American
Conference
chanip ionship and a trip tp the
Las Vegas Bowl.
These days Ball State isn't playmg for titles, trophies or national
recognition.
"Ri•&gt;ht
now, we're in a situation
~
\Vht•re we're looking for a win,"
coach Bill Lynch saJd.
Ball State, one of the most
fcJred reanu in the MAC in the
1'I'IOs, has the dubious distinction
of own ing the nation's longest
losing spiral 21 ,.ga mes and
counting heading into Saturday's
gJme at Mian)i University.
How did things plummet so far
and so fast?
"J don't think I can put my finger on it," Lynch said. "We lost
some very, very good players to
graduation. The next year we had
a .500-type team. Then we just
didn't do as good a job of replacing some really good players at
certain spots."
The Cardinals lost five games in
a row nudway through the 1997
season, but rebounded to win
their last four. But since the 1998
opener against South Carolina,
BaU State has won one of its last
26 games. The only victory was
an 18-13 home victory over
Northern Illinois two years ago
th1s week.
''I'm not making any excuses,"

Herd.
fromPageB1
Ilob Pruett, Marshall's fifth-year
coach. ·" It's certainly disappointing, but it's not the end of the
world ."
· Marshall and Western could
end up playing again for the confr.:n·nce title in Dece mber in
Huntington. Th~ two teams ar~
determined by wins against team s
within the division. Western is in
the West DiviSion and Marshall is
in tho East.·
• In last · year's MAC champlpnship game in Huntington,
Western Michigan blew a 23point lead in the sec ond half and
lost on Chad Pennington's !-yard
J'D toss with four seconds left .
Marshall tried to work another
miracle Thursday night.
• Down 24-7, an I !-yard punt
gave Marshall the ball at the Western 26. Ilyron ' 1Le(twich then htt
Na~e Poole with a 10-yard TD
pass with 7:14left..
A minute later, Marshall's Larry
Davis picked up Sanford's fumble
~nd returned to the Western 38,
but Lanier Washington dropped
hi s second pass of the game at the
goal line and Leftwich's next pass
was intercepted in the end zone
on the following play.

fa~

Lynch said."We let it
off
where it shouldn't be. We're the
ones who have got to get it
turn ed around."
It is clc.or there has been a fallotr
in talent. But the schedule ha s
al&lt;o con&lt;pircd a!,&gt;ainst the Cardinals. This year, with games against
Florida and Kansas State, Boll
State's sc hedule JS ranked the
fourth toughest iu all of Division ·
I- A.
Lynch was ai1 ultrasucct'ssful
coach at Butler, going 36-12-3 in
five seaso ns. His pedigrc•e includes
stirns as Jll offensive whiz on the
staffs of the USFL Orlando
Renegades and at Northern lllinois, Ball State and Indiana before
he took over for Pau l SchULiel
after the 1994 season.
He had almost inm1~diate suecess, going 7-4 his first year in
Muncie despite the Cardinals'
only two MAC losses conung by
a total of eight points.
·
The 1996 season began slowly,
with three losses, but the Cardic
nals then started the streak that
took them to the MAC title
before losing by a field goal to
Nevada in the Las Vegas Bowl.
After a 5-6 showing the next
year, the results on the field have
deteriorated. A year ago, the Cardinals only came within a touchdown of one team.
Lynch now fights bad luck aad
bad memories.
"What happens is, you get in a
situation like this and somelhing
bad happens early in a game, it's

·Western then drove the length
of the field, with Sanford scoring
on a 39-yard run.
Marshall outgained the Broncos 414-407, but the Herd turned
the ball over three times on
downs in Western Michigan territory, twice inside the 10.
A week after throwing for a
career-high 378 yards against
Buffalo, LeftWich was 19.:of-40
for 264 yards.
UndL'r consr:~.nr pressure behind
J banged-up offensive line, Leftwich mi ssed 11 of his first 15
passes, many on overthrows and
drops.
·
Leftwich hmt hi s left ankle
when he was sacke d by Jason
Babin with 6:32 left in the third
quarter. Leftwich left for one play.
"We noticed he was hurt, so we
went after him more," linebacker
Terrence Moore said. "We just
tried to tighten the choke hold
on him as the ganle went on."
Marshall's three points in the
·first half were its fewest · this season.
On Western's opening drive,
Jeff Welsh threw toward Corey
Alston in double coverage. Chris
Crocker intercepted at the Marshall 30 and returned to the Western 42.
On the next play, Washington
dropped a pass at the 2 and Marshall settled for JR. Jenkins' 26-

toughtobounceback," hesaid.
"Our staff has hcen a part of any
number of championship teams at
a lot of levels, When you're on a
winning streak and things are
going well and you encounter
any adversity early iri a game. you
bounce back and there you go."
Lyn ch said the losing is no
more painful for him because his
Ball St;tte- career began so well .
""'
we :~re w here we arc,"l1c. s:n'd .
"You spend too much time
rcOecting on things like that and
and you're not going to get out of
the situation."
' Lynch remains breezy, polite
and upbeat in a conve,rs:~.tion
before a mjdweek practice, even
when confronted with the most
diflicult of questions.
llut it is also clear he is troubled
by his program's demise.
· "We're a better football team
than this," he said: "I'm not going
to point one thing out and I'm
not going to point any fingers. We
let ourselves get into this."
In addition to the matchup .
between Ball State (0-4) and
Mianu (3-2) in ·oxford, Ohio,
other MAC games Saturday find
Kent Stale (0-5) at Central
Michigan (1-4), Akron (3-2) at
Bowling Green (1-4), Buffalo (!4) at Ohio (2-3) and Toledo (4-1)
at Easlern Michigan (1-4).
Outside the conference, Ceotral Florida (3-2) travels to
Northern Illinois (2-2).

something good and bad
The scenario will be vague- about us ."
ly the same a s it was lwo years
'The~e's a lot good about the
ago wh en the University of Flyers .
Da y ton plays at Au stin Pe ay
To begin with, they're averon Saturday.
aging 38 points and almost
The Flyers were heavily 300 rushing yards a game.
favor ed when they traveled to
They, began defense of their
Clarksville, Tenn ., to play Pioneer football League title
·Austin Peay in 1998 .
a week ago wah a 43-26 win
The Governors were not over Buder.
only winlt&gt;ss in four ga mes,
The starting backfield of'
they had lost 'their bst 13 tailback Jermaine
Bailey,
contests.
quarterback Kelly ·Spiker and ·
Fin:~ I score: Austin Peay 21,
fullback David George ts
Dayton 17.
averaging 6.3 yards a carry.
Now the Fly~r s are 4-1, and
They rank second, fourth
Austin Peay i~ 0-4 and has and fifth , respec.tively, in the
lost its last eight games.
PFL in rushing.
Hit's an ominous feeling
"No one has broL1ght a runbecause it's the same as it was ning attack against us like
the last \lme we Went down we'll see Saturday," Schmitz
there," Dayton coac h Mike said. "I was really impressed
Kelly said. "We were unde- by Kelly Spiker. This is the
feated and they hadn't won."
best flyer offense we've
A year ago, the Flyers pum- seen."
meled the Governors 49-21 at
The Dayton-Austin Peay
home.
match is a sneak peek at the
"We 're a better football future of the PFL.
team than the one that came
Austin Peay is one of four
to Welcome Stadium last teams
(Morehead
State,
year," Austin Peay coach Bill Davidson and Jacksonville are
Schmitz ·said.
the others) that will join the · ·
Exhibit A is last week's 28- far-flung PfL next year.
24 loss to Jacksonville in ·
In other games involving
which the Governors fumbled Ohio colleges on Saturday,
the ball away seven times.
Ohio State visits Wisconsin in
"We had nine fumbles and the Big Ten while Akron is at
still had a chance to win," Bowling Green, Buffalo at
Schmitz said. "That says Ohio, Ball State at Miami,

yard field goal.
Welsh then drove the Broncos
80 yards in ftve plays, capped by •
his 8-yard TD toss to Neal, who
became .the second MAC player
with 200 career rect'ptions.
Western's 286 yards rushing·
were· second this season to the
295 it had agamst Indian a State
on Sept. 16.
"Tonight the key was the
offensive line," D:nnell said.
"They blocked incredibly well for
Robert , especially in the seco nd
half."
·
Sanford also had a patr of !yard TD runs. A 45-yard punt
return by Josh J3ush set up his first
TD for a 14-3 lead midwly
through the third quarter.
"We didn't have a big (halftime)
lead thi~ year. We treated like it
was tied at the ha lf, arid we just
knew we had to OL1tperform
them in the second half," Sanford
said.
After Brad Selent kicked a 32yard field goal, Sanford's second
TD early in the fourth quarter
gave the Broncos a 24-3 lead.
Pruett was so frustr;).ted over his
running game that he sent in
third-string ruhning back Gladstone Coke to start the second
half. Marshall· finished with 90
yards rushing, the third time it has
been held under 100 yards this
season.

•

Kent State at Central Mi ch igan, and Toledo at Eastern
·Mi c hi gan in the Mid-American Conference .
Ci ncinnati . plays
Houston in Confcn.~nce USA
with Youngstown State at lllinoi.s State in the Gat~:way
Cun(erence, and. lndian:~.polis
at Findlay, anrl Ashland a t
Hill sda le in th e Great Lakes
In tercoll eg iJ.te.
Ohio Conference action
finds
Baldwin -Wa ll ace
Heidelb erg, Mu !;kingum at
Capita), M :~.ril'tLl Jt Mou 'n t
Union, Ohio No rth ern .at
Otterbein , J.nd Wilmington 'at
John Carroll.
In the North Coast Co nference, Denison .visits Wiitehberg, Earlham is at Ohio Wesleyan, Waba sh is at Wooster,
and Allegheny travels to
Hiram.
Mount St. Joseph goes to
Bluffton, and Defiance is host
to Hanover in the ·Heartland
Conference, while Malone
entertaim Geneva, Tiffin is 'a t
St. Francis , and Walsh is 'at
Tri - State in the Mid-States
Football Association's Eastetn
League .
The lone non-conference
game has former North Coast
Conference rivals Kenyon
and Case Reserve meeting 'in
Cleveland .

Brand New 2000 Pontiac

Brand New 2001

Brand New 2000 Pontiac

~7]50* ~5:0;50~ &lt;~'3]'50*
• Automatic
• Air Conditioning
Power Windows &amp;

• SF! V·6 Power
• Automatic/Air Conditioning
AM FM Stereo

from Page Bl

•

All New 2001
Pontiac Aztek SRV

Brand New 2001 Chevy

• 5300 V·8/ Automatic
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
I Cruise,

• Ultimate .Recreational Vehicle
• V-6 Power/Keyless Entry
/CD &lt;:vctAm

• Air Conditioning
• CD System,Aium.Wheels
Tilt &amp; Cruise

828,950* 824,850 ~2:950*
'Taxes. Tagii, Title Fees

e~r~.

Rebate

~~luded in sale price of new vehicle hsted where appllcaiJie. "On a~rO\Ied credit.

On selected models. Not responsible lor typographical errors. Prices Good O~tober 6th Through October 8th.

,.,._.

• 3 M~ea

CHIYIOUT

WIUal THill

'

•··••'

·~'

"","""•'••••ul• orl

g~mes.

:So, what's the problem'

Q

N.Y.Jtll .........................4 0 01.00 18

Mlemi ...... .. .... ............... .• 1 0 .800 110 38

'Tholmay. Oct. 12
St. Louls-AIIanta winner a1 San Francisco
OR New York tst Atlanta-St. Louts wi'lner, 8:1B

lndianapolos ...................3 1 0 .750 119 82
t!utlalo ...........................2 2 0 .500 73 78
New England .................. 1 4 0 .200 N 91

p.m.

,
Sawrdly, 0&lt;1. 14
San Fnllldsco at 51. LOuiS·Atlanta wlnnef
OR St Louis-Atlanta wiMef at New York , • :18
p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 15
San Francisoo a! St. louis-Atlanta winner
OR St. Louis-Atlanta winner at New Yofk, 8
p.m.
Mondoy, Oct. 18
San Francisco at St. Louis-Atlanta.. winner
OR $1. Louis-Atlanta winner at New York, 8:1 8
p.m.. if necessary
Wedneld1y, Oet. 1 B
St. Louts-A11anta winner at San FranciSco
OR New Yori&lt; at Atlanta-St. Louis winner, 4:18
p.m., if necessary
Thur.day, Oct. 11
St. Louis-Atlanta winner al San Francisco
OR New YorX at Atlanta-St. Louis winner, 8:1 8
p.m., if necessary.

lhinks \hat migh1 be his problem.
Hawkins looks good in practice, o
Friday, Oct. e
then seems to try too hard in
Chicago (Baldwin 14-7) al Seattle (5ele 1110), 4:07p.m. (ESPN)
games.
So1Urdoy, Oct. 7
"''ve had players who for whatChicago at Seanle, 4:18p.m. {FO)(), if nec.
ever reason aren't as productive in ess~
Sunday, Oct. I
a game as they are on the practice
Soanle at Chicago, 4:07 p.m. (ESPN) or 8
p.m.
(FOX) , if necessary (8 p.m. if Giants-Mats
field," LeBeau said. "Eventually, and Athletics-Yankees
are oveJ)
they learn to do that. I think we
Oakland vs. New York
have several young players who
Tueadly, Oct. 3 • '
are in !hat category.
Oaldand 5, New Yof'll: 3
Wtdneadey, Oct. 4
"It's been my honest appraisal
Now Yol1&lt; 4, Oakland 0, series tied 1-1
WORLD SERIES
Friday, Oct. 5
thai they just try so doggone hard
(FOX)
Oakland (Hudson 20·61 at N,ew York {Herthat they don't let their natural nandez 12-13), 8:08p.m. (NBC)
Saturday, Oc.t. 21
National League at American League, 8 p.m.
Salurd•y. Oct 7
ability perform for them."
Sunday, Oct. 22
Daklancl (lito 7 ·4) at New York (Clemens
Hawkins reluctantly admits that 13-8), 7:38 p.m. (NBC)
NL at AL. 8 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 24
Sunday, Oct 8
•night be the problem.
AL at NL. 8:18p.m.
.
New YOlk at Oakland, 8 p.m. (FOX), if nec"I think perhaps, maybe;' he essary
Wednesday, Oct. 25
AL at NL. 8:18p.m.
said. "You want to go out and
Thursday, Oct. 26
Natlon1ILeague
perform so weU. There's a lot of
AL at NL. 8:18p.m., if necessary
San Franclac:o va. New York
Saturday, Oct. 28
Wedne1d1y, Oct. 4
pressure on us as a team and as an
NL at AL 8 p.m., if necessary
San FrancisDJ 5, New York 1
Sunday, Oct. 29
organ.i2ation. You want to turn it
Thursdlly, Oct. 5
NLatAL 8 p.m. EST, if necessary
New
Yor11:
5,
San
Francisco
4,
10
innings,
around so bad and sometimes you series tied 1-1
can press and you don't get t~
S1turday, Oct. 7
San Francisoo (Ortiz 13-12) at New York
result you want."
·
(Read 11 -5), 1:07 p.m. (ESPN) or 4:~8 p.m.
Major League Soccer
The entire secondary has got" (FOX) (becomes 4:1 8 p.m. if ' White Sott·
PlayoH Glance
Mariners is a sweep)
tel) poor results. The Ben gals have
Ou•rterflnal Round
Sunday, Oct. I
tSeldlng In pilrlntheHs)
San Francisco at New York, 4:07 p.m.
three inlerceptions, all by lineKansaa City 7, Col0111do 1
(ESPN) or 8 p.m. (FOX), (beoJmes night game
backers. Opponents are convert- if Athletics-Yankees is over)
Kansas City 1, Coforaclo 0
Kansas City 0 , Colcrndo O, tie
Monday, Oct. g
ing 46 percent of their thirdKansas City 3, Colorado 2
New YOM&lt; at San Francisco, 8:18 p.m.
down plays, most in the American (FOX), if necessary
Lo• Angelea I, Tamp11 Bay 0
Conference.
Los Angeles 1, Tampa Bav 0
• Sl. louis VI. Atlanta 6
"That's one of !he more imporLos Angeles 5, Tampa Bay 2
Tutadly, Oct. 3
St. Louis 7, Altanta 5
tant statistics - getting off the
Chicago I, New Engllnd 3
Tburoday, Oct. 5
.
field," cornerback Tom Carter
c"""'go 2. New England 1
Stlot!is tO, Atlanta 4, St. Louis leads series
New England 2, Chicago 1
said. "If we can get off 1he field a 2.0
Chicago 6, New England 0
Saturday, Oct 7
little betler this week, il will
StLouis (Stephenson 16-9, An.Benes 12-9
New YorkwNew
I, ba1111 0
or Hentgen 15·12) at Attanta (Maddux 19·9 or
improve our chances."
New Yor11:-New Jersey 2, Dallas 1, OT
Millwood 10-13), 1:07 p.m. (ESPN)
Now York-New Jersey 2, Dallas 1
Although Hawkins is likely lo
•Sunday, Oct. 8
St. Loois at Allanta, 1:07 p.m. (ESPN) or 8
keep his starting job this Sunday p.m. (FOX), if necessary (beoomes night game·
Semlnnal Round
Kane.. City va. LOa Angeln
against Tennessee, backup Rod- if all other series are over}
Frlday, 8tpl. 211
Monday, Oct. e
ney Heath could get more playLos Angeles o, Kansas City o. tie
Attanta at St. Louis, 4:07 p.m. (ESPN) cr
'
Tuesday. Oct. 3
ing time. Both of them realize the 8:18p.m. (FOX), if necessary (becomes night
Los Angeles 2. Kansas City 1, OT, Los Ange·
game if Giants·Mets is over)
position is in flux.
les leads series 4-1
Frldoy, 0&lt;1. e
LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
"There's a pressure in everyLos Angeles at Kansas Cily, 8:30p.m.
American League
thing you do;' Hawkins said. "You
(NBC)
Chk:ago vs. New York--New J•rs•y
Tuesday, Oct. 10
can't let the pressure affect you. If
Tue&amp;dl~ Sept.25
Oakland-New Yor1c winner at Chicago OR
you try and yon come up short Seattle at Oakland-New York winner, 8:15 p.m.
Chicago 3, New Yort-New Jersey 0
Saturd1y, Sept. 30
WM!nelday, Oct. 11
and you stay down, that's what
New Yori&lt;-New Jersey 2, Chicago o. series
Oakland-New Yori&lt; winner at Chicago OR
hurts you."
tied 3-3
'
Seatt1e at Oakland-New VOfk winner, 4:15p.m.
Friday, Oct. I
Friday.
Oct.
13
Notes: The Tennessee ga1ne
Chk:ago at 08k1and-New York wlnner OR ·' New York-New Jersey at Chicago, 8 p.m.'
didn't sell out by 1 p.m. ~!)I[ Oakland-New York winner at Seanle, 8:15p.m.
Championship
Saturdav, Oct. 14
.
Thursday, so it won't be shown
Sunday, Oct. 15
Chicago at Oakland-New York winner OR
at Washington, D.C., 1:30 p.m.
on local lelevision. The llengals · Oakland-New York winner at Seanle, 8:15p.m.
(Note: Three points for a win and one point
Sunday, Oct 15
are having problems filling their
for a tie. The winner in the quarter and semifi·
Chicago at Oakland-New York winner OR
new sta.dium. The inaugural game Oakland-New York winn~r at Seattle, 4:15p.m., · na!s wiU be the first team to reach or eKCeed
five points. The third game of a series will be
·
at Paul Brown Stadium drew a If necessary Tuuday,
decided by penalty kicks if each game has
Oct. 17
ended in a lie or if the series is 1-1·1.)
Oakland-New York winner at Chicago OR
sellout crowd of 64,006 fans,
Seattle at Oakland-New VorX.winner, 8:15p.m.,
many of them rooting for the . if necessary
Wednesday, Oct. 18
Cleveland Browns. The last two
Oakland-New York winner at Chicago OR
games have f.1iled to sell out .... Seattle at Oakland-New Vork winner, 8:15 p.m.,
RT Willie Anderson was upgrad- if necessary
National Football League
ed to probable for Sunday's game.
Nalional Le.agua
AFC
(FOX)
He's got a sore right knee.

PRO SOCCER

Temessee ..................... 3
Cleveland ......................2
J~nville ................... 2
-bol'gn ...................... 1

PRO FOOTBALL

Ktvl~

Johnson, Browns wide receiver

"We've only played five games
and anything can l]appen the rest
of the season," he said. "We're not
even half way through, so I'm not
worded."
Johnson was Cleveland's top
playmaker last year, but subtract a
79-yard catch against Pittsburgh
in Week 3 from his stats, and
Johnson is averaging only 8. 7
yards per reception.
_ And he's coming off his worst
pro gantc - two rece ptions, 11
yards -last week against the Baltimon.~ Ravens.
"I just didn't get any balls last
week," Johnson said. "lt happened. It happens to the best of
them, and I'm not going tO make .
a big rleal out of it. I'm sure I'll
have ·a much better week thi s
Wet'k than l~st week."
, That could be to11gh task si nce
John son will likely be covered·

this Sunday by All- Pro cornerback Aeneas Williams when the
Browns visit the Arizona Cardinals.
Johnson was one of the
Browns' few bright spots in 1999
as the team staggered through Jts
2-14 expansion seaso n.
He' and Couch quickly developed • a che1nistry, giving the
Browns a passing combii):Ition for
the fu turc.
"He had an L'xcdlt&gt;nt year la~t
year and he was so meon e Tim
h;1d a gre:-~t feeling for,'' s:1id
Browns coach C hri s J&gt;a!ml.:'r.
"The si tua tion now is th;H w~.··1c
mon! talented and ~·c spt·eading the ball aro11nd more. Kcvi11
h:1s bec0me more :~.ccompllshcd
as a receiver. It hasn't translated
imo a big g:~me fOr him yet. btlt it
WiJI CQI11l' With tillll'."
Palmer m,1de johtl :-.Oll a pet

•

TOLL FREE 1·800·822·0417 • 372· 2844 • www.tompeden.com
"

•

•

992-2156

1
2
3
3
5

so

0 .750109
0 .600111

Eu1

~Giam~ ....................3 2

93
0 .400152 130
0.400 9t t06

88

o.600 t21
o.600 87
o .400 112

Detroit ........................... 3 2 o .600 84

96

Tampa Bay ..................... 3 2 0 .600 t27
Green Bay ...................... 2 3 0 .400 93
Chicago ......................... 1 4 o .200 75
Wast
St.Louis ......................... s o 01.00211
Auanta ........................... 2 3 o.400 95
San Francisco ................ 2 3 0 .400 142
Carolina ........................ 1 3 0 .250 78
New Orleans .................. 1 3 0 .250 55
Sunday'• Games
Buffalo at Miami. I p.m.
• New Orleans at Chicago, 1 p.m.
Pinsbufgh at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m.
Green Bav at Detroi1, 1 p.m.
Tennessee 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.
Denver at San Diego, 4:t5 p.m.
Oakland at San Francisco, 4:1 5p.m.
Seattle at Carolina, 4:15p.m.
Cleveland at Arizona, 4:15p.m.
Baltimore at Jacksonville, 8:20.p.m.
Open: Kansas City, Dallas, St. Louis
Monday'• Game
Tampa Bay at Mnnesola, 9 p.m.

67
80
130
145
159
159
73
82

BASEBALL
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES- Released OF
Trenidad Hubbard.
·
National League
CHICAGO. CUBS-Sent C M1ke Mahoney
outright to Iowa ol the PCL.
CINCINNATI REDS-Activated 38 Aaron
'Boone and C Eddie Taubensee !rom the SO-day '
disabled lis). Sent INF Chris Sexron. INF Mike
Bell, OF Brooks Kieschnick, RHP Sco" "NNn·
chester and AHP Larry Luebbers outright to

Louisville.

Sundoy, Del. 15

Minnesota at Chicago, 8:20 p.m.
Open: Detroft, Miami, Tampa Bay

~

Mondoy, 0&lt;1. 11
Jacksonville at Tennessee, 9 p.m.
J

PRO HOCKEY
Eastem Confarence

Allanuc Dlvlllon
w L T OL Pta. OF QA
Philadelphia ......... 1 0 0 0
2 6
3
New 4Br5f!Y ........... 0 0 0 0
0 0
0
N.Y. lslanders ........ O 0 0 0 0 0
0
N.Y. Rangers .........o 0 0 0
0 0
0
P!ttsbwgh .............0 0 0 0
0 0
0
Northeaat DJ&gt;.,j\alon

2
1
1

0
0

•• •
• 0•
2

0
0

0

0

·o

0
0

0
0
0

0
0
0

2

4

3

0
0
0

0

0

0
2
I

0
0
4
4

1
0
0

2
0
0

2
0
0

0
0

FLORIDA MARUNS-Announcec:IINF Chris
C6pinski and OF Mark Smith declined their
outright assignments to Calgary of the PCL and
elected free agency. Sent AHP Joe Strong and
AHP Brian Edmondson outright to Calgary.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS--Signed ' C
Chad Kreuter to a two-year oontrac.1.
,
MONTREAL EXPOS--Assigned LHP Sc_ott
Forster, RHP Felipe Ura, RHP Jeremy Powell.
~HP Brad Rigby, RHP Juk&gt; Sanlana, RHP
Yovanny Lara, C Yohamy Valera and lf..IF
Tr!ICe Coquillene to Ottawa of the lntemallonal

League.
NEW YOAf&lt; METS-Ciaimed AHP Jason
Middlebrook off waivers from the San DieQo
Padres and added him to the roster. Designal·
ed INF·OF Mark Johnson for assignment.

National Hockey LMgue

0
0

0

Wastarn Confaranca

SAN DIEGO PADRES-Sent lNF-OF John
Roskos, RHP Stan Spencer and RHP Domingo
Guzman outright to Las Vegas of the PCL.
BASKETBALL
National Baake1blll A..oc:iatlon
DALLAS MAVERICKS-Signed F Ace
Custis.
\NOlANA PACERS-Signed C Tefry Mills.
Released G Jaquay Walls, G Gerald Brown and
C Trevor Winter.
LOS ANGELES CUPPEAS-Suspenc:led C
Keith Closs, due to a laCk of physical condition-

ing.
MIAMI HEAT - Signed C Ike Nwankwo and
F Mario Bennett.
NEW YORK KNICKS-Waived G Vernon
Maxwell.
WASHINGTON WIZARDs-Signed F Harvey'Grant.
FOOTBALL
,
National Football league
,
GREEN BAY PACKERS-Re-signed S-CB
Jason Moore to tM active rosier from the prac·
tlce squad . Re-signed LB Chris Gizzi to the
practice squad.
'
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS--Signed F8
Charles Kirby lo lhe active roster and WR Yo
Murphy to the practice squad.

'

F:~~
'

Salute your fauorite Fireman and/or
fire Departme.nt with an ad on our
fire Preuention Page monday,
October gth.
Only

'7.00
1x2 ad ·

with or

without photo

John Doe
Fire Dept.

Show your support and appreciation
to our braue firefighters.

"It's just a growing process. Last
year was only my seco nd year
starting at wick receiver in my
whok enti1•e career. I'm s~i ll get-

r---------~------------,
1 Attach This Coupon ·to Your Photo and Mail Or Bring 1

bL~tter.

With Your Payment to:

"There w:~.s no pressllrc l:lst
year. Now after you've had a pretty good year, you 'rt' expectl!d to
come back and h:~.vc anmher one.
One ga me ic; pot going to dict:~.tc
anytlung I have confidence 111
lll.)'SC'lf anci my tL':l.IHlll:ttL'S."

The Daily Sentinel
1

111

I Name of Firefighter

Court Street Pomeroy, OH

1

I

1

I
I

I

I

I Department

I

I

I.

I

I

1 Your Name

I

1Address------------- 1

~~~~~~1 Phone #

llr-

I

1

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

•

!

PCL

San Francisco at Green Bay, 4:15p.m.

Central 01\jlslon
Detroit .. ,............... 1 0 0 0
· Columbus .............0 0 0 0
Nashville .............. 0 0 0 0
Chicago ................ 0 1 0 0
St. Louis ................ o I 0 0
Northwest Dlvlslon
Colorado .............. 0 0 1 0
Edmonton
....... 0 0 0 0
Minnesota .... , ..... 0 0 0 0

.

COLORADO ROCKIES-E"lercised their
option on INF Terry Shumpert. Sent RHP .Gio·
vanni Carrara, OF K&amp;;!fin Gitlbs, !NF Betvani
Martinez, OF Car10s Mendoza and LJ-iP David
Moraga outright to Colorado Springs of the

Cleveland a1 Denver, 4:05p.m.
Indianapolis at Seanle, 4:05p.m.
New Yonc Jets at New England, 4:05p.m.
Philadelphia at Arizona, 4:15 p.m.

Buffalo .................. t 0 0 0
Bost()n ..................0 0 1 0
Onawa .................0 0 1 0
Montreal ............... 0 0, 0 0
Toronto ................ 0 0 0 0
Souttleasl Division
Atlanta ..................0 0 0 0
Carolina ............... 0 0 0 0
Florida ..................0 0 0 0
Tampa.Bay ... ,........ 0 0 0 0
Washington .......... 0 0 0 0

4
6

I TRANSAOIONS ' I

Atlanta at St. Louis, 1 p.m.
Baltimore at Washington, 1 p.m.
caroHna a1 New Orieans, 1 p.m.
Cincinnati at Pinsburgh, 1 p.m.
Dallas at New York Giants, 1 p.m.
Oakland at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
San DieQo at Buffalo, 1 p.m.

I

3
3

frtdlly'a Ganwa

0.000 86 156

o .600

0
0

Los Angeles at WaShingtOn, 1 p.m.
Montreal at New Jersey, 7:30 p.m.
N.Y. lslanden. at Tampa Bay, 7:30p.m.
vancouvEif at Florida, 7:30p.m.
Detroit at Edmonton, 9 p.m.
Minnesota a1 Anahe1m, t0:30 p.m.
St. Louis at San Jose, 10·30 p m.
Nashville vs. Pit1sburgh at Tokyo, midnigtrt
Saturday'• a.m..
Los Angeles at Buffalo, 7 p.m.
Monlreal at Toronto, 7 p.m
Dallas at Ottawa, 7 p m.
Boston at Philadelphia , 7 p m.
Washington a't Carolina. 7 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Atl&lt;~nta . 7 p.m.
ChiCago at Columbus, 7:30p.m.
Colorado at Edmonton, 10 p .m.
Minnesota at PhOeniw, tOp m.
Nashville vs . Pi"sburgh at Tokva. midnigf:!1
Sunday'a Games
St. Lou1s at Anaheim, 4 p.m.
Vancouver at Tampa Bay, 6 p.m.

85
70
82
148
o .250 71 108
_
Minn9'SOta ........ , ............ 4 0 01.00 95 71

delphia ..................3 2
WaShington ...................3 2
~lias ............................2 3
zona .......................... 1 3
Central

0
0

OVfrtime loss.
Thureday't Garnet~
Philadelphia s. ·V31"1C()lNer a
t!utlalo • . Chicago 2
Ottawa 4, Bosloo 4, tie
Oelroi14, Calgaty 3
Phoerix 4, St. Louis 1
.

NFC

our.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL SPORTS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
The Daily Sentinel
S~tbscribe today.

81 54
64 104
103 113
14 75

Wo11
Oaldand ......................... 3
KansasGity ., .........:........ 3
~et' ..........................2
~nte ............... ............ 2
San Diego .. ,...................o

fi)GOOO~

Monday· Saturday 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday 1 pm , a pm

0 .750
0 .&gt;100
0 .400
0 .250

Cincinnati ......................(). 4 0.000 23 105

project last year.
He recognized Johnson's talent,
and on several occasions, Palmer
puUed the young receiver into his
office to point out what be was
doing wrong.
·
"He hasn't graduated from thai
school;' Palmer said. "He does
visit the principal's office regularly."
How often?
"Less than last year," Palmer
said. "We just talk about the game
and .~ow to get better. He's doing
fine.
jOhnson's numbers may not
show it, but he feels he's a much
better receiver than a year ago.
Hi s pass routes are crisper and he's
thinking less a"nd reacting 1nore.
" l think I'm 3 lot bdter," said
Johnson, a quarterback at SyraCuse before converting to wide-

ting

1
3
3
3

1 0
1, 0

PoclflcPI'&lt;&gt;erix ................ 1 0 0 0 2' •
1
Dallas ...............0 o 1 0
1 2
2
Anaheim ...............0 Q 0 0
0 0
0
Los Angeles .......... 0 0 0 0 0 0
0
SanJose ...............o o o o o o · O
Two points for a win, one point ror a tie and

Contnl
Baltiroore .......................4 1 0 .800 110 55

J.....,.

"I don't pay lin}' attention to that. If I get the ball or
not, I'm still going to ger our rlrere and work lwrd and
,~ood things will happen. Winniug solves everyrlring.
When tou lose, tl111t's ll'hcu }'IIU have pro!Jlems."

116

p.m.

OldsmObile

West Virginia's J1 Chevy, Pontiac, B1lick, Olds,
And Cuslom Van Dealer. .

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today.
992-2756 .

-.-

Rl 21 Churth Str&amp;el 1

1 -- ,~

Chtcogovo.STuMday,Oct.3
Soallle 7, Chicajjo 4, 10 Innings
Wtdnooday, OCt. 4
SeatUe 5, Cticago 2. Seattle leads series 2-

Colglty ................0
\l'anoouver ............ 0

W L TPta. PF PA

BROWNS NOTEBOOK

: BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Kevin
Johnson has a little Keyshawn
J&lt;&gt;hnson in him.
: Not enough, though, that he's
~ing to start screaming for Tim
Qouch to start throwing him the
damn football.
: Even though his numbers are·
dOwn this . year, compared to his
record-setting rookie year, Kevin's
not about to write a book like
Keyshawn, whose "Jus! Give Me
t~e Da11111 Ball" hit the shelves
following his rookie season with
the New York Jets.
Kevin Johnson set rookie
records with the Cleveland
Browns last season and .Jed all
NFL first-year wide receivers
with 66 catches for 986 yards and
eight touchdowns.
: "I don't pay any attention to
that," Johnson said Thursday. "If I
get the ball or not, I'm still going
to get out there an.d work hard
and good things will happen.
Winning solves everything. When
ypu lose, that's when you have
ptoblems."
:Johnson leads the Browns with
H receptions for 218 yards thi s
s.;ason, but he has yet to have p
breakout game and has not gotten
i11to the end zone in the first five

• Automatic
• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Cassette

Brand New 2001 Chevy
Silverado LS Ext. Cab 4x 4

Louis-AIIama w1mor at San , _
OR N-Vodr at Allanla-St. Louis winner, 8:18

DMStOH SERIES
Amortcon t..gue

.....

w.dt111 ,.,., Oct. 11

sr.

Kevin Johnson continues to take
leadership role with Cleveland

OS.U

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCALFOLKS.

CINCINNATI (AP) _ On
the first play of the season, cornerback AnreU Hawkins lined up
m man-to-man coverage on
Cleveland's David Patten.
Browns
quarterback Tim
Couch saw it, called an audible
and threw over Hawkins' head
.
'
turmng .the first play in Paul
Brown Stadium into a 65-yard
completion.
It was a bad start for Hawkins
and it hasn't gotten any better.
The Cincinnati 8engals are 0. 4, new head coach Dick LeBeau~
is talking about lineup changes
and Hawkins is on the spot heading into a game Sunday against
Tennessee.
If he doesn't start playing better, he could be playmg less.
"I don't think I've played my
best and I don't think we've
played our best as a 1eam, no matter how you approach it,"
Hawkins said. "We have a lol of
growing to do. It's be~n said over
and over. When it's going to happen, I don't know."
·
Haw]&gt;ins could be running out
of lime to grow up.
A second-round draft pick
from the University of Cincinnati
in 1998, Hawkins immediately
became a starter. As expected, he
was inconsistent as a rookie, when
he made three interceptions and ·
knocked down 17 passes.
There wasn't muchprogress las!
year, when he failed to get an
interception and was limited for
. half the season by a sprained ankle
. and shoulder.
Before this season began, coach
Bruce Coslet singled out
Hawkins as one 'o f the players
who needed to make big strides.
So far, he hasn't.
Last Sunday against Miami ;
Hawkins missed a tackle on
Lamar Smith's 18-yard touchaown run that put the Dolphins
a'head at the start of 1he second
half. His 34-ya'rd pass interference
penalty set up another touchtlown as the Dolphins pulled
;tway to a 31-16 win.
· '.'! practice hard," Hawkins said.
!'Jt's frustrating to get into the
&amp;~me and not be able to make the
plays and be all t~at I want [O be.
You want to perform so well."
:: LeBeau, who look over when
~oslet quit afler an 0-3 start,

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

TODAY'S SCOREB.OARD

.

'

.,

scratching the surface," he just want to put tog e ther a
said. "We're still kind of com plete game and walk off
feeling our way around a feeling good about what we
little bit."
did and what we accom~
A third straight Big Ten plished."
of n{Jst a kcs that are us.ual- title is probably out of
Like they d1d a year ago. at
ly Honed out against non~ reach for the lladgcrs.
Ohio Stadium.
. conference cupcakes.
Teams with two conferThe Buckeyes,• coming off
"We haven't h ad the luxu- ence losse s h ave won or a bye week, haiAe othe r
ry of hav1ng ~ first game," shared
the
co nference notions.
~oach !:larry Alva1ez said.
championsh1p
jull
four
''W!s co n sJn
obviously
"We haven't had the same times.
ca nnot :~.fford to lo"'t.': anothpeople together for a long ·
"Everyone keeps talking er game," Coop~.:r ~aid. "If
CIIOUgiJ time."
about end of the year stuff we go to Madi so n ;Jnd win
ll cnnet t sa id the Badgers :~.nd whL're you're going to th :H g:~.me, then co me hom e
\.vdl eventually live up to finish :~.nd bowl gam~c; anci for . our IH'Xt on..:, I'm not
thl'Jr
prcsc:~.son
bliling, all that stuff anrl th e P"r ,'.' c; ayl ·llg' wL:'ll be 111 g6od
when tht'Y wctc r:~nkcd quarterb ac k ··
llrooks ~hape, but it ' ll be .1 good
founh 111 the nation ·.
Bollinger said. "Th.H's not ~ituatJOll."
'' I
think
we're
still really a conce rn to us. We

Hawkins on the
hot seat in Cincy
'

·

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

;"'o&amp;nerOy, _Middleport, Ohio

BENGALS NOTEBOOK

Flyers set to battle Austin
Peay; Bearcats entertain
Cougars in C-USA action
.

Frida~ Ckrtobfr8, 2000

.•

�•

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, October 6, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

COLLEGE FOOTBALL ROUNDUP

Ball State's long fall
from MAC prominence
BYTHEASSOCIATEDPRESS

Just four short y_ears ago, the
Ball State Cardibals were in the
midst of an eight-game winning
&lt;trelk .thai would carry them to a
Mid-American
Conference
chanip ionship and a trip tp the
Las Vegas Bowl.
These days Ball State isn't playmg for titles, trophies or national
recognition.
"Ri•&gt;ht
now, we're in a situation
~
\Vht•re we're looking for a win,"
coach Bill Lynch saJd.
Ball State, one of the most
fcJred reanu in the MAC in the
1'I'IOs, has the dubious distinction
of own ing the nation's longest
losing spiral 21 ,.ga mes and
counting heading into Saturday's
gJme at Mian)i University.
How did things plummet so far
and so fast?
"J don't think I can put my finger on it," Lynch said. "We lost
some very, very good players to
graduation. The next year we had
a .500-type team. Then we just
didn't do as good a job of replacing some really good players at
certain spots."
The Cardinals lost five games in
a row nudway through the 1997
season, but rebounded to win
their last four. But since the 1998
opener against South Carolina,
BaU State has won one of its last
26 games. The only victory was
an 18-13 home victory over
Northern Illinois two years ago
th1s week.
''I'm not making any excuses,"

Herd.
fromPageB1
Ilob Pruett, Marshall's fifth-year
coach. ·" It's certainly disappointing, but it's not the end of the
world ."
· Marshall and Western could
end up playing again for the confr.:n·nce title in Dece mber in
Huntington. Th~ two teams ar~
determined by wins against team s
within the division. Western is in
the West DiviSion and Marshall is
in tho East.·
• In last · year's MAC champlpnship game in Huntington,
Western Michigan blew a 23point lead in the sec ond half and
lost on Chad Pennington's !-yard
J'D toss with four seconds left .
Marshall tried to work another
miracle Thursday night.
• Down 24-7, an I !-yard punt
gave Marshall the ball at the Western 26. Ilyron ' 1Le(twich then htt
Na~e Poole with a 10-yard TD
pass with 7:14left..
A minute later, Marshall's Larry
Davis picked up Sanford's fumble
~nd returned to the Western 38,
but Lanier Washington dropped
hi s second pass of the game at the
goal line and Leftwich's next pass
was intercepted in the end zone
on the following play.

fa~

Lynch said."We let it
off
where it shouldn't be. We're the
ones who have got to get it
turn ed around."
It is clc.or there has been a fallotr
in talent. But the schedule ha s
al&lt;o con&lt;pircd a!,&gt;ainst the Cardinals. This year, with games against
Florida and Kansas State, Boll
State's sc hedule JS ranked the
fourth toughest iu all of Division ·
I- A.
Lynch was ai1 ultrasucct'ssful
coach at Butler, going 36-12-3 in
five seaso ns. His pedigrc•e includes
stirns as Jll offensive whiz on the
staffs of the USFL Orlando
Renegades and at Northern lllinois, Ball State and Indiana before
he took over for Pau l SchULiel
after the 1994 season.
He had almost inm1~diate suecess, going 7-4 his first year in
Muncie despite the Cardinals'
only two MAC losses conung by
a total of eight points.
·
The 1996 season began slowly,
with three losses, but the Cardic
nals then started the streak that
took them to the MAC title
before losing by a field goal to
Nevada in the Las Vegas Bowl.
After a 5-6 showing the next
year, the results on the field have
deteriorated. A year ago, the Cardinals only came within a touchdown of one team.
Lynch now fights bad luck aad
bad memories.
"What happens is, you get in a
situation like this and somelhing
bad happens early in a game, it's

·Western then drove the length
of the field, with Sanford scoring
on a 39-yard run.
Marshall outgained the Broncos 414-407, but the Herd turned
the ball over three times on
downs in Western Michigan territory, twice inside the 10.
A week after throwing for a
career-high 378 yards against
Buffalo, LeftWich was 19.:of-40
for 264 yards.
UndL'r consr:~.nr pressure behind
J banged-up offensive line, Leftwich mi ssed 11 of his first 15
passes, many on overthrows and
drops.
·
Leftwich hmt hi s left ankle
when he was sacke d by Jason
Babin with 6:32 left in the third
quarter. Leftwich left for one play.
"We noticed he was hurt, so we
went after him more," linebacker
Terrence Moore said. "We just
tried to tighten the choke hold
on him as the ganle went on."
Marshall's three points in the
·first half were its fewest · this season.
On Western's opening drive,
Jeff Welsh threw toward Corey
Alston in double coverage. Chris
Crocker intercepted at the Marshall 30 and returned to the Western 42.
On the next play, Washington
dropped a pass at the 2 and Marshall settled for JR. Jenkins' 26-

toughtobounceback," hesaid.
"Our staff has hcen a part of any
number of championship teams at
a lot of levels, When you're on a
winning streak and things are
going well and you encounter
any adversity early iri a game. you
bounce back and there you go."
Lyn ch said the losing is no
more painful for him because his
Ball St;tte- career began so well .
""'
we :~re w here we arc,"l1c. s:n'd .
"You spend too much time
rcOecting on things like that and
and you're not going to get out of
the situation."
' Lynch remains breezy, polite
and upbeat in a conve,rs:~.tion
before a mjdweek practice, even
when confronted with the most
diflicult of questions.
llut it is also clear he is troubled
by his program's demise.
· "We're a better football team
than this," he said: "I'm not going
to point one thing out and I'm
not going to point any fingers. We
let ourselves get into this."
In addition to the matchup .
between Ball State (0-4) and
Mianu (3-2) in ·oxford, Ohio,
other MAC games Saturday find
Kent Stale (0-5) at Central
Michigan (1-4), Akron (3-2) at
Bowling Green (1-4), Buffalo (!4) at Ohio (2-3) and Toledo (4-1)
at Easlern Michigan (1-4).
Outside the conference, Ceotral Florida (3-2) travels to
Northern Illinois (2-2).

something good and bad
The scenario will be vague- about us ."
ly the same a s it was lwo years
'The~e's a lot good about the
ago wh en the University of Flyers .
Da y ton plays at Au stin Pe ay
To begin with, they're averon Saturday.
aging 38 points and almost
The Flyers were heavily 300 rushing yards a game.
favor ed when they traveled to
They, began defense of their
Clarksville, Tenn ., to play Pioneer football League title
·Austin Peay in 1998 .
a week ago wah a 43-26 win
The Governors were not over Buder.
only winlt&gt;ss in four ga mes,
The starting backfield of'
they had lost 'their bst 13 tailback Jermaine
Bailey,
contests.
quarterback Kelly ·Spiker and ·
Fin:~ I score: Austin Peay 21,
fullback David George ts
Dayton 17.
averaging 6.3 yards a carry.
Now the Fly~r s are 4-1, and
They rank second, fourth
Austin Peay i~ 0-4 and has and fifth , respec.tively, in the
lost its last eight games.
PFL in rushing.
Hit's an ominous feeling
"No one has broL1ght a runbecause it's the same as it was ning attack against us like
the last \lme we Went down we'll see Saturday," Schmitz
there," Dayton coac h Mike said. "I was really impressed
Kelly said. "We were unde- by Kelly Spiker. This is the
feated and they hadn't won."
best flyer offense we've
A year ago, the Flyers pum- seen."
meled the Governors 49-21 at
The Dayton-Austin Peay
home.
match is a sneak peek at the
"We 're a better football future of the PFL.
team than the one that came
Austin Peay is one of four
to Welcome Stadium last teams
(Morehead
State,
year," Austin Peay coach Bill Davidson and Jacksonville are
Schmitz ·said.
the others) that will join the · ·
Exhibit A is last week's 28- far-flung PfL next year.
24 loss to Jacksonville in ·
In other games involving
which the Governors fumbled Ohio colleges on Saturday,
the ball away seven times.
Ohio State visits Wisconsin in
"We had nine fumbles and the Big Ten while Akron is at
still had a chance to win," Bowling Green, Buffalo at
Schmitz said. "That says Ohio, Ball State at Miami,

yard field goal.
Welsh then drove the Broncos
80 yards in ftve plays, capped by •
his 8-yard TD toss to Neal, who
became .the second MAC player
with 200 career rect'ptions.
Western's 286 yards rushing·
were· second this season to the
295 it had agamst Indian a State
on Sept. 16.
"Tonight the key was the
offensive line," D:nnell said.
"They blocked incredibly well for
Robert , especially in the seco nd
half."
·
Sanford also had a patr of !yard TD runs. A 45-yard punt
return by Josh J3ush set up his first
TD for a 14-3 lead midwly
through the third quarter.
"We didn't have a big (halftime)
lead thi~ year. We treated like it
was tied at the ha lf, arid we just
knew we had to OL1tperform
them in the second half," Sanford
said.
After Brad Selent kicked a 32yard field goal, Sanford's second
TD early in the fourth quarter
gave the Broncos a 24-3 lead.
Pruett was so frustr;).ted over his
running game that he sent in
third-string ruhning back Gladstone Coke to start the second
half. Marshall· finished with 90
yards rushing, the third time it has
been held under 100 yards this
season.

•

Kent State at Central Mi ch igan, and Toledo at Eastern
·Mi c hi gan in the Mid-American Conference .
Ci ncinnati . plays
Houston in Confcn.~nce USA
with Youngstown State at lllinoi.s State in the Gat~:way
Cun(erence, and. lndian:~.polis
at Findlay, anrl Ashland a t
Hill sda le in th e Great Lakes
In tercoll eg iJ.te.
Ohio Conference action
finds
Baldwin -Wa ll ace
Heidelb erg, Mu !;kingum at
Capita), M :~.ril'tLl Jt Mou 'n t
Union, Ohio No rth ern .at
Otterbein , J.nd Wilmington 'at
John Carroll.
In the North Coast Co nference, Denison .visits Wiitehberg, Earlham is at Ohio Wesleyan, Waba sh is at Wooster,
and Allegheny travels to
Hiram.
Mount St. Joseph goes to
Bluffton, and Defiance is host
to Hanover in the ·Heartland
Conference, while Malone
entertaim Geneva, Tiffin is 'a t
St. Francis , and Walsh is 'at
Tri - State in the Mid-States
Football Association's Eastetn
League .
The lone non-conference
game has former North Coast
Conference rivals Kenyon
and Case Reserve meeting 'in
Cleveland .

Brand New 2000 Pontiac

Brand New 2001

Brand New 2000 Pontiac

~7]50* ~5:0;50~ &lt;~'3]'50*
• Automatic
• Air Conditioning
Power Windows &amp;

• SF! V·6 Power
• Automatic/Air Conditioning
AM FM Stereo

from Page Bl

•

All New 2001
Pontiac Aztek SRV

Brand New 2001 Chevy

• 5300 V·8/ Automatic
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
I Cruise,

• Ultimate .Recreational Vehicle
• V-6 Power/Keyless Entry
/CD &lt;:vctAm

• Air Conditioning
• CD System,Aium.Wheels
Tilt &amp; Cruise

828,950* 824,850 ~2:950*
'Taxes. Tagii, Title Fees

e~r~.

Rebate

~~luded in sale price of new vehicle hsted where appllcaiJie. "On a~rO\Ied credit.

On selected models. Not responsible lor typographical errors. Prices Good O~tober 6th Through October 8th.

,.,._.

• 3 M~ea

CHIYIOUT

WIUal THill

'

•··••'

·~'

"","""•'••••ul• orl

g~mes.

:So, what's the problem'

Q

N.Y.Jtll .........................4 0 01.00 18

Mlemi ...... .. .... ............... .• 1 0 .800 110 38

'Tholmay. Oct. 12
St. Louls-AIIanta winner a1 San Francisco
OR New York tst Atlanta-St. Louts wi'lner, 8:1B

lndianapolos ...................3 1 0 .750 119 82
t!utlalo ...........................2 2 0 .500 73 78
New England .................. 1 4 0 .200 N 91

p.m.

,
Sawrdly, 0&lt;1. 14
San Fnllldsco at 51. LOuiS·Atlanta wlnnef
OR St Louis-Atlanta wiMef at New York , • :18
p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 15
San Francisoo a! St. louis-Atlanta winner
OR St. Louis-Atlanta winner at New Yofk, 8
p.m.
Mondoy, Oct. 18
San Francisco at St. Louis-Atlanta.. winner
OR $1. Louis-Atlanta winner at New York, 8:1 8
p.m.. if necessary
Wedneld1y, Oet. 1 B
St. Louts-A11anta winner at San FranciSco
OR New Yori&lt; at Atlanta-St. Louis winner, 4:18
p.m., if necessary
Thur.day, Oct. 11
St. Louis-Atlanta winner al San Francisco
OR New YorX at Atlanta-St. Louis winner, 8:1 8
p.m., if necessary.

lhinks \hat migh1 be his problem.
Hawkins looks good in practice, o
Friday, Oct. e
then seems to try too hard in
Chicago (Baldwin 14-7) al Seattle (5ele 1110), 4:07p.m. (ESPN)
games.
So1Urdoy, Oct. 7
"''ve had players who for whatChicago at Seanle, 4:18p.m. {FO)(), if nec.
ever reason aren't as productive in ess~
Sunday, Oct. I
a game as they are on the practice
Soanle at Chicago, 4:07 p.m. (ESPN) or 8
p.m.
(FOX) , if necessary (8 p.m. if Giants-Mats
field," LeBeau said. "Eventually, and Athletics-Yankees
are oveJ)
they learn to do that. I think we
Oakland vs. New York
have several young players who
Tueadly, Oct. 3 • '
are in !hat category.
Oaldand 5, New Yof'll: 3
Wtdneadey, Oct. 4
"It's been my honest appraisal
Now Yol1&lt; 4, Oakland 0, series tied 1-1
WORLD SERIES
Friday, Oct. 5
thai they just try so doggone hard
(FOX)
Oakland (Hudson 20·61 at N,ew York {Herthat they don't let their natural nandez 12-13), 8:08p.m. (NBC)
Saturday, Oc.t. 21
National League at American League, 8 p.m.
Salurd•y. Oct 7
ability perform for them."
Sunday, Oct. 22
Daklancl (lito 7 ·4) at New York (Clemens
Hawkins reluctantly admits that 13-8), 7:38 p.m. (NBC)
NL at AL. 8 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 24
Sunday, Oct 8
•night be the problem.
AL at NL. 8:18p.m.
.
New YOlk at Oakland, 8 p.m. (FOX), if nec"I think perhaps, maybe;' he essary
Wednesday, Oct. 25
AL at NL. 8:18p.m.
said. "You want to go out and
Thursday, Oct. 26
Natlon1ILeague
perform so weU. There's a lot of
AL at NL. 8:18p.m., if necessary
San Franclac:o va. New York
Saturday, Oct. 28
Wedne1d1y, Oct. 4
pressure on us as a team and as an
NL at AL 8 p.m., if necessary
San FrancisDJ 5, New York 1
Sunday, Oct. 29
organ.i2ation. You want to turn it
Thursdlly, Oct. 5
NLatAL 8 p.m. EST, if necessary
New
Yor11:
5,
San
Francisco
4,
10
innings,
around so bad and sometimes you series tied 1-1
can press and you don't get t~
S1turday, Oct. 7
San Francisoo (Ortiz 13-12) at New York
result you want."
·
(Read 11 -5), 1:07 p.m. (ESPN) or 4:~8 p.m.
Major League Soccer
The entire secondary has got" (FOX) (becomes 4:1 8 p.m. if ' White Sott·
PlayoH Glance
Mariners is a sweep)
tel) poor results. The Ben gals have
Ou•rterflnal Round
Sunday, Oct. I
tSeldlng In pilrlntheHs)
San Francisco at New York, 4:07 p.m.
three inlerceptions, all by lineKansaa City 7, Col0111do 1
(ESPN) or 8 p.m. (FOX), (beoJmes night game
backers. Opponents are convert- if Athletics-Yankees is over)
Kansas City 1, Coforaclo 0
Kansas City 0 , Colcrndo O, tie
Monday, Oct. g
ing 46 percent of their thirdKansas City 3, Colorado 2
New YOM&lt; at San Francisco, 8:18 p.m.
down plays, most in the American (FOX), if necessary
Lo• Angelea I, Tamp11 Bay 0
Conference.
Los Angeles 1, Tampa Bav 0
• Sl. louis VI. Atlanta 6
"That's one of !he more imporLos Angeles 5, Tampa Bay 2
Tutadly, Oct. 3
St. Louis 7, Altanta 5
tant statistics - getting off the
Chicago I, New Engllnd 3
Tburoday, Oct. 5
.
field," cornerback Tom Carter
c"""'go 2. New England 1
Stlot!is tO, Atlanta 4, St. Louis leads series
New England 2, Chicago 1
said. "If we can get off 1he field a 2.0
Chicago 6, New England 0
Saturday, Oct 7
little betler this week, il will
StLouis (Stephenson 16-9, An.Benes 12-9
New YorkwNew
I, ba1111 0
or Hentgen 15·12) at Attanta (Maddux 19·9 or
improve our chances."
New Yor11:-New Jersey 2, Dallas 1, OT
Millwood 10-13), 1:07 p.m. (ESPN)
Now York-New Jersey 2, Dallas 1
Although Hawkins is likely lo
•Sunday, Oct. 8
St. Loois at Allanta, 1:07 p.m. (ESPN) or 8
keep his starting job this Sunday p.m. (FOX), if necessary (beoomes night game·
Semlnnal Round
Kane.. City va. LOa Angeln
against Tennessee, backup Rod- if all other series are over}
Frlday, 8tpl. 211
Monday, Oct. e
ney Heath could get more playLos Angeles o, Kansas City o. tie
Attanta at St. Louis, 4:07 p.m. (ESPN) cr
'
Tuesday. Oct. 3
ing time. Both of them realize the 8:18p.m. (FOX), if necessary (becomes night
Los Angeles 2. Kansas City 1, OT, Los Ange·
game if Giants·Mets is over)
position is in flux.
les leads series 4-1
Frldoy, 0&lt;1. e
LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
"There's a pressure in everyLos Angeles at Kansas Cily, 8:30p.m.
American League
thing you do;' Hawkins said. "You
(NBC)
Chk:ago vs. New York--New J•rs•y
Tuesday, Oct. 10
can't let the pressure affect you. If
Tue&amp;dl~ Sept.25
Oakland-New Yor1c winner at Chicago OR
you try and yon come up short Seattle at Oakland-New York winner, 8:15 p.m.
Chicago 3, New Yort-New Jersey 0
Saturd1y, Sept. 30
WM!nelday, Oct. 11
and you stay down, that's what
New Yori&lt;-New Jersey 2, Chicago o. series
Oakland-New Yori&lt; winner at Chicago OR
hurts you."
tied 3-3
'
Seatt1e at Oakland-New VOfk winner, 4:15p.m.
Friday, Oct. I
Friday.
Oct.
13
Notes: The Tennessee ga1ne
Chk:ago at 08k1and-New York wlnner OR ·' New York-New Jersey at Chicago, 8 p.m.'
didn't sell out by 1 p.m. ~!)I[ Oakland-New York winner at Seanle, 8:15p.m.
Championship
Saturdav, Oct. 14
.
Thursday, so it won't be shown
Sunday, Oct. 15
Chicago at Oakland-New York winner OR
at Washington, D.C., 1:30 p.m.
on local lelevision. The llengals · Oakland-New York winner at Seanle, 8:15p.m.
(Note: Three points for a win and one point
Sunday, Oct 15
are having problems filling their
for a tie. The winner in the quarter and semifi·
Chicago at Oakland-New York winner OR
new sta.dium. The inaugural game Oakland-New York winn~r at Seattle, 4:15p.m., · na!s wiU be the first team to reach or eKCeed
five points. The third game of a series will be
·
at Paul Brown Stadium drew a If necessary Tuuday,
decided by penalty kicks if each game has
Oct. 17
ended in a lie or if the series is 1-1·1.)
Oakland-New York winner at Chicago OR
sellout crowd of 64,006 fans,
Seattle at Oakland-New VorX.winner, 8:15p.m.,
many of them rooting for the . if necessary
Wednesday, Oct. 18
Cleveland Browns. The last two
Oakland-New York winner at Chicago OR
games have f.1iled to sell out .... Seattle at Oakland-New Vork winner, 8:15 p.m.,
RT Willie Anderson was upgrad- if necessary
National Football League
ed to probable for Sunday's game.
Nalional Le.agua
AFC
(FOX)
He's got a sore right knee.

PRO SOCCER

Temessee ..................... 3
Cleveland ......................2
J~nville ................... 2
-bol'gn ...................... 1

PRO FOOTBALL

Ktvl~

Johnson, Browns wide receiver

"We've only played five games
and anything can l]appen the rest
of the season," he said. "We're not
even half way through, so I'm not
worded."
Johnson was Cleveland's top
playmaker last year, but subtract a
79-yard catch against Pittsburgh
in Week 3 from his stats, and
Johnson is averaging only 8. 7
yards per reception.
_ And he's coming off his worst
pro gantc - two rece ptions, 11
yards -last week against the Baltimon.~ Ravens.
"I just didn't get any balls last
week," Johnson said. "lt happened. It happens to the best of
them, and I'm not going tO make .
a big rleal out of it. I'm sure I'll
have ·a much better week thi s
Wet'k than l~st week."
, That could be to11gh task si nce
John son will likely be covered·

this Sunday by All- Pro cornerback Aeneas Williams when the
Browns visit the Arizona Cardinals.
Johnson was one of the
Browns' few bright spots in 1999
as the team staggered through Jts
2-14 expansion seaso n.
He' and Couch quickly developed • a che1nistry, giving the
Browns a passing combii):Ition for
the fu turc.
"He had an L'xcdlt&gt;nt year la~t
year and he was so meon e Tim
h;1d a gre:-~t feeling for,'' s:1id
Browns coach C hri s J&gt;a!ml.:'r.
"The si tua tion now is th;H w~.··1c
mon! talented and ~·c spt·eading the ball aro11nd more. Kcvi11
h:1s bec0me more :~.ccompllshcd
as a receiver. It hasn't translated
imo a big g:~me fOr him yet. btlt it
WiJI CQI11l' With tillll'."
Palmer m,1de johtl :-.Oll a pet

•

TOLL FREE 1·800·822·0417 • 372· 2844 • www.tompeden.com
"

•

•

992-2156

1
2
3
3
5

so

0 .750109
0 .600111

Eu1

~Giam~ ....................3 2

93
0 .400152 130
0.400 9t t06

88

o.600 t21
o.600 87
o .400 112

Detroit ........................... 3 2 o .600 84

96

Tampa Bay ..................... 3 2 0 .600 t27
Green Bay ...................... 2 3 0 .400 93
Chicago ......................... 1 4 o .200 75
Wast
St.Louis ......................... s o 01.00211
Auanta ........................... 2 3 o.400 95
San Francisco ................ 2 3 0 .400 142
Carolina ........................ 1 3 0 .250 78
New Orleans .................. 1 3 0 .250 55
Sunday'• Games
Buffalo at Miami. I p.m.
• New Orleans at Chicago, 1 p.m.
Pinsbufgh at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m.
Green Bav at Detroi1, 1 p.m.
Tennessee 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.
Denver at San Diego, 4:t5 p.m.
Oakland at San Francisco, 4:1 5p.m.
Seattle at Carolina, 4:15p.m.
Cleveland at Arizona, 4:15p.m.
Baltimore at Jacksonville, 8:20.p.m.
Open: Kansas City, Dallas, St. Louis
Monday'• Game
Tampa Bay at Mnnesola, 9 p.m.

67
80
130
145
159
159
73
82

BASEBALL
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES- Released OF
Trenidad Hubbard.
·
National League
CHICAGO. CUBS-Sent C M1ke Mahoney
outright to Iowa ol the PCL.
CINCINNATI REDS-Activated 38 Aaron
'Boone and C Eddie Taubensee !rom the SO-day '
disabled lis). Sent INF Chris Sexron. INF Mike
Bell, OF Brooks Kieschnick, RHP Sco" "NNn·
chester and AHP Larry Luebbers outright to

Louisville.

Sundoy, Del. 15

Minnesota at Chicago, 8:20 p.m.
Open: Detroft, Miami, Tampa Bay

~

Mondoy, 0&lt;1. 11
Jacksonville at Tennessee, 9 p.m.
J

PRO HOCKEY
Eastem Confarence

Allanuc Dlvlllon
w L T OL Pta. OF QA
Philadelphia ......... 1 0 0 0
2 6
3
New 4Br5f!Y ........... 0 0 0 0
0 0
0
N.Y. lslanders ........ O 0 0 0 0 0
0
N.Y. Rangers .........o 0 0 0
0 0
0
P!ttsbwgh .............0 0 0 0
0 0
0
Northeaat DJ&gt;.,j\alon

2
1
1

0
0

•• •
• 0•
2

0
0

0

0

·o

0
0

0
0
0

0
0
0

2

4

3

0
0
0

0

0

0
2
I

0
0
4
4

1
0
0

2
0
0

2
0
0

0
0

FLORIDA MARUNS-Announcec:IINF Chris
C6pinski and OF Mark Smith declined their
outright assignments to Calgary of the PCL and
elected free agency. Sent AHP Joe Strong and
AHP Brian Edmondson outright to Calgary.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS--Signed ' C
Chad Kreuter to a two-year oontrac.1.
,
MONTREAL EXPOS--Assigned LHP Sc_ott
Forster, RHP Felipe Ura, RHP Jeremy Powell.
~HP Brad Rigby, RHP Juk&gt; Sanlana, RHP
Yovanny Lara, C Yohamy Valera and lf..IF
Tr!ICe Coquillene to Ottawa of the lntemallonal

League.
NEW YOAf&lt; METS-Ciaimed AHP Jason
Middlebrook off waivers from the San DieQo
Padres and added him to the roster. Designal·
ed INF·OF Mark Johnson for assignment.

National Hockey LMgue

0
0

0

Wastarn Confaranca

SAN DIEGO PADRES-Sent lNF-OF John
Roskos, RHP Stan Spencer and RHP Domingo
Guzman outright to Las Vegas of the PCL.
BASKETBALL
National Baake1blll A..oc:iatlon
DALLAS MAVERICKS-Signed F Ace
Custis.
\NOlANA PACERS-Signed C Tefry Mills.
Released G Jaquay Walls, G Gerald Brown and
C Trevor Winter.
LOS ANGELES CUPPEAS-Suspenc:led C
Keith Closs, due to a laCk of physical condition-

ing.
MIAMI HEAT - Signed C Ike Nwankwo and
F Mario Bennett.
NEW YORK KNICKS-Waived G Vernon
Maxwell.
WASHINGTON WIZARDs-Signed F Harvey'Grant.
FOOTBALL
,
National Football league
,
GREEN BAY PACKERS-Re-signed S-CB
Jason Moore to tM active rosier from the prac·
tlce squad . Re-signed LB Chris Gizzi to the
practice squad.
'
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS--Signed F8
Charles Kirby lo lhe active roster and WR Yo
Murphy to the practice squad.

'

F:~~
'

Salute your fauorite Fireman and/or
fire Departme.nt with an ad on our
fire Preuention Page monday,
October gth.
Only

'7.00
1x2 ad ·

with or

without photo

John Doe
Fire Dept.

Show your support and appreciation
to our braue firefighters.

"It's just a growing process. Last
year was only my seco nd year
starting at wick receiver in my
whok enti1•e career. I'm s~i ll get-

r---------~------------,
1 Attach This Coupon ·to Your Photo and Mail Or Bring 1

bL~tter.

With Your Payment to:

"There w:~.s no pressllrc l:lst
year. Now after you've had a pretty good year, you 'rt' expectl!d to
come back and h:~.vc anmher one.
One ga me ic; pot going to dict:~.tc
anytlung I have confidence 111
lll.)'SC'lf anci my tL':l.IHlll:ttL'S."

The Daily Sentinel
1

111

I Name of Firefighter

Court Street Pomeroy, OH

1

I

1

I
I

I

I

I Department

I

I

I.

I

I

1 Your Name

I

1Address------------- 1

~~~~~~1 Phone #

llr-

I

1

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

•

!

PCL

San Francisco at Green Bay, 4:15p.m.

Central 01\jlslon
Detroit .. ,............... 1 0 0 0
· Columbus .............0 0 0 0
Nashville .............. 0 0 0 0
Chicago ................ 0 1 0 0
St. Louis ................ o I 0 0
Northwest Dlvlslon
Colorado .............. 0 0 1 0
Edmonton
....... 0 0 0 0
Minnesota .... , ..... 0 0 0 0

.

COLORADO ROCKIES-E"lercised their
option on INF Terry Shumpert. Sent RHP .Gio·
vanni Carrara, OF K&amp;;!fin Gitlbs, !NF Betvani
Martinez, OF Car10s Mendoza and LJ-iP David
Moraga outright to Colorado Springs of the

Cleveland a1 Denver, 4:05p.m.
Indianapolis at Seanle, 4:05p.m.
New Yonc Jets at New England, 4:05p.m.
Philadelphia at Arizona, 4:15 p.m.

Buffalo .................. t 0 0 0
Bost()n ..................0 0 1 0
Onawa .................0 0 1 0
Montreal ............... 0 0, 0 0
Toronto ................ 0 0 0 0
Souttleasl Division
Atlanta ..................0 0 0 0
Carolina ............... 0 0 0 0
Florida ..................0 0 0 0
Tampa.Bay ... ,........ 0 0 0 0
Washington .......... 0 0 0 0

4
6

I TRANSAOIONS ' I

Atlanta at St. Louis, 1 p.m.
Baltimore at Washington, 1 p.m.
caroHna a1 New Orieans, 1 p.m.
Cincinnati at Pinsburgh, 1 p.m.
Dallas at New York Giants, 1 p.m.
Oakland at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
San DieQo at Buffalo, 1 p.m.

I

3
3

frtdlly'a Ganwa

0.000 86 156

o .600

0
0

Los Angeles at WaShingtOn, 1 p.m.
Montreal at New Jersey, 7:30 p.m.
N.Y. lslanden. at Tampa Bay, 7:30p.m.
vancouvEif at Florida, 7:30p.m.
Detroit at Edmonton, 9 p.m.
Minnesota a1 Anahe1m, t0:30 p.m.
St. Louis at San Jose, 10·30 p m.
Nashville vs. Pit1sburgh at Tokyo, midnigtrt
Saturday'• a.m..
Los Angeles at Buffalo, 7 p.m.
Monlreal at Toronto, 7 p.m
Dallas at Ottawa, 7 p m.
Boston at Philadelphia , 7 p m.
Washington a't Carolina. 7 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Atl&lt;~nta . 7 p.m.
ChiCago at Columbus, 7:30p.m.
Colorado at Edmonton, 10 p .m.
Minnesota at PhOeniw, tOp m.
Nashville vs . Pi"sburgh at Tokva. midnigf:!1
Sunday'a Games
St. Lou1s at Anaheim, 4 p.m.
Vancouver at Tampa Bay, 6 p.m.

85
70
82
148
o .250 71 108
_
Minn9'SOta ........ , ............ 4 0 01.00 95 71

delphia ..................3 2
WaShington ...................3 2
~lias ............................2 3
zona .......................... 1 3
Central

0
0

OVfrtime loss.
Thureday't Garnet~
Philadelphia s. ·V31"1C()lNer a
t!utlalo • . Chicago 2
Ottawa 4, Bosloo 4, tie
Oelroi14, Calgaty 3
Phoerix 4, St. Louis 1
.

NFC

our.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL SPORTS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
The Daily Sentinel
S~tbscribe today.

81 54
64 104
103 113
14 75

Wo11
Oaldand ......................... 3
KansasGity ., .........:........ 3
~et' ..........................2
~nte ............... ............ 2
San Diego .. ,...................o

fi)GOOO~

Monday· Saturday 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday 1 pm , a pm

0 .750
0 .&gt;100
0 .400
0 .250

Cincinnati ......................(). 4 0.000 23 105

project last year.
He recognized Johnson's talent,
and on several occasions, Palmer
puUed the young receiver into his
office to point out what be was
doing wrong.
·
"He hasn't graduated from thai
school;' Palmer said. "He does
visit the principal's office regularly."
How often?
"Less than last year," Palmer
said. "We just talk about the game
and .~ow to get better. He's doing
fine.
jOhnson's numbers may not
show it, but he feels he's a much
better receiver than a year ago.
Hi s pass routes are crisper and he's
thinking less a"nd reacting 1nore.
" l think I'm 3 lot bdter," said
Johnson, a quarterback at SyraCuse before converting to wide-

ting

1
3
3
3

1 0
1, 0

PoclflcPI'&lt;&gt;erix ................ 1 0 0 0 2' •
1
Dallas ...............0 o 1 0
1 2
2
Anaheim ...............0 Q 0 0
0 0
0
Los Angeles .......... 0 0 0 0 0 0
0
SanJose ...............o o o o o o · O
Two points for a win, one point ror a tie and

Contnl
Baltiroore .......................4 1 0 .800 110 55

J.....,.

"I don't pay lin}' attention to that. If I get the ball or
not, I'm still going to ger our rlrere and work lwrd and
,~ood things will happen. Winniug solves everyrlring.
When tou lose, tl111t's ll'hcu }'IIU have pro!Jlems."

116

p.m.

OldsmObile

West Virginia's J1 Chevy, Pontiac, B1lick, Olds,
And Cuslom Van Dealer. .

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today.
992-2756 .

-.-

Rl 21 Churth Str&amp;el 1

1 -- ,~

Chtcogovo.STuMday,Oct.3
Soallle 7, Chicajjo 4, 10 Innings
Wtdnooday, OCt. 4
SeatUe 5, Cticago 2. Seattle leads series 2-

Colglty ................0
\l'anoouver ............ 0

W L TPta. PF PA

BROWNS NOTEBOOK

: BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Kevin
Johnson has a little Keyshawn
J&lt;&gt;hnson in him.
: Not enough, though, that he's
~ing to start screaming for Tim
Qouch to start throwing him the
damn football.
: Even though his numbers are·
dOwn this . year, compared to his
record-setting rookie year, Kevin's
not about to write a book like
Keyshawn, whose "Jus! Give Me
t~e Da11111 Ball" hit the shelves
following his rookie season with
the New York Jets.
Kevin Johnson set rookie
records with the Cleveland
Browns last season and .Jed all
NFL first-year wide receivers
with 66 catches for 986 yards and
eight touchdowns.
: "I don't pay any attention to
that," Johnson said Thursday. "If I
get the ball or not, I'm still going
to get out there an.d work hard
and good things will happen.
Winning solves everything. When
ypu lose, that's when you have
ptoblems."
:Johnson leads the Browns with
H receptions for 218 yards thi s
s.;ason, but he has yet to have p
breakout game and has not gotten
i11to the end zone in the first five

• Automatic
• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Cassette

Brand New 2001 Chevy
Silverado LS Ext. Cab 4x 4

Louis-AIIama w1mor at San , _
OR N-Vodr at Allanla-St. Louis winner, 8:18

DMStOH SERIES
Amortcon t..gue

.....

w.dt111 ,.,., Oct. 11

sr.

Kevin Johnson continues to take
leadership role with Cleveland

OS.U

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCALFOLKS.

CINCINNATI (AP) _ On
the first play of the season, cornerback AnreU Hawkins lined up
m man-to-man coverage on
Cleveland's David Patten.
Browns
quarterback Tim
Couch saw it, called an audible
and threw over Hawkins' head
.
'
turmng .the first play in Paul
Brown Stadium into a 65-yard
completion.
It was a bad start for Hawkins
and it hasn't gotten any better.
The Cincinnati 8engals are 0. 4, new head coach Dick LeBeau~
is talking about lineup changes
and Hawkins is on the spot heading into a game Sunday against
Tennessee.
If he doesn't start playing better, he could be playmg less.
"I don't think I've played my
best and I don't think we've
played our best as a 1eam, no matter how you approach it,"
Hawkins said. "We have a lol of
growing to do. It's be~n said over
and over. When it's going to happen, I don't know."
·
Haw]&gt;ins could be running out
of lime to grow up.
A second-round draft pick
from the University of Cincinnati
in 1998, Hawkins immediately
became a starter. As expected, he
was inconsistent as a rookie, when
he made three interceptions and ·
knocked down 17 passes.
There wasn't muchprogress las!
year, when he failed to get an
interception and was limited for
. half the season by a sprained ankle
. and shoulder.
Before this season began, coach
Bruce Coslet singled out
Hawkins as one 'o f the players
who needed to make big strides.
So far, he hasn't.
Last Sunday against Miami ;
Hawkins missed a tackle on
Lamar Smith's 18-yard touchaown run that put the Dolphins
a'head at the start of 1he second
half. His 34-ya'rd pass interference
penalty set up another touchtlown as the Dolphins pulled
;tway to a 31-16 win.
· '.'! practice hard," Hawkins said.
!'Jt's frustrating to get into the
&amp;~me and not be able to make the
plays and be all t~at I want [O be.
You want to perform so well."
:: LeBeau, who look over when
~oslet quit afler an 0-3 start,

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

TODAY'S SCOREB.OARD

.

'

.,

scratching the surface," he just want to put tog e ther a
said. "We're still kind of com plete game and walk off
feeling our way around a feeling good about what we
little bit."
did and what we accom~
A third straight Big Ten plished."
of n{Jst a kcs that are us.ual- title is probably out of
Like they d1d a year ago. at
ly Honed out against non~ reach for the lladgcrs.
Ohio Stadium.
. conference cupcakes.
Teams with two conferThe Buckeyes,• coming off
"We haven't h ad the luxu- ence losse s h ave won or a bye week, haiAe othe r
ry of hav1ng ~ first game," shared
the
co nference notions.
~oach !:larry Alva1ez said.
championsh1p
jull
four
''W!s co n sJn
obviously
"We haven't had the same times.
ca nnot :~.fford to lo"'t.': anothpeople together for a long ·
"Everyone keeps talking er game," Coop~.:r ~aid. "If
CIIOUgiJ time."
about end of the year stuff we go to Madi so n ;Jnd win
ll cnnet t sa id the Badgers :~.nd whL're you're going to th :H g:~.me, then co me hom e
\.vdl eventually live up to finish :~.nd bowl gam~c; anci for . our IH'Xt on..:, I'm not
thl'Jr
prcsc:~.son
bliling, all that stuff anrl th e P"r ,'.' c; ayl ·llg' wL:'ll be 111 g6od
when tht'Y wctc r:~nkcd quarterb ac k ··
llrooks ~hape, but it ' ll be .1 good
founh 111 the nation ·.
Bollinger said. "Th.H's not ~ituatJOll."
'' I
think
we're
still really a conce rn to us. We

Hawkins on the
hot seat in Cincy
'

·

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

;"'o&amp;nerOy, _Middleport, Ohio

BENGALS NOTEBOOK

Flyers set to battle Austin
Peay; Bearcats entertain
Cougars in C-USA action
.

Frida~ Ckrtobfr8, 2000

.•

�Friday, October 6, 2008

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, October 6 2000

•&gt;
••
•

,.,.__........
a
611P1teonel

Yard Sale

70

Gtv•wa• 1.oat Found
YardS..... ond Wontod
To Do Ada
ll...t Be Paid In Advanco
TBIMINE QEAQUNE
2:00 p m lhl day beloN
lhe ad loto run
Sunday Monday edition
2:00 p m Friday
SENJINEL Pf&amp;DIJNE
1 OOpm lhldaybef019
lhe od loto run
Sunday a Monday odltlon
1 00 p m Friday
REQ"IJB QEADUNE
2 clay8 beloN 1he ad lo
to run by4 30 p m

150

110

Schools
Instruction

210

31 o Homes for Sale

Business
Opportunity

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Ga a Counly 25 Aerts Wooded

230

a

H s de 500
8 ack op Roac
Frontage Su rouoded By Nattona

Professional
Sarvlces

Fo es
$25
435-5590

$$$

937

~~~~i~;;-;;;;;;;;:-s;;;~

r•KE YOUR PICK
New Hunting Uind

P ke Coun y Seve a T ac s To
Choose Fo m Rang ng n 5ac
3 ac w h Access To Pub c
Hun ng
Sc o o Coun y sac 36ac T ao s
P ced To Se
oca ed Between
McDermott and Otway
Hock ng Coun y Aec ea ona
Res;ideO m P ope ty n Th ee 0
e en Loca ons Some W h Ac
cess To PubliC Hun ng
A hens County 2 ac •Hac
T ac s Fu 0 W d e Enhan eel
W hScencPahs Caes Nau

"Oeedl/nH .Ubj«IIO
-loholldllyo

Pe111onals

1::::.:::.:.:.:.::::..:::...:;:::;.:____

On~ 0 lOs loft 304 736-7295

Saturday .. Mondoly

005

000 080

Look ng To Buy A New Home?
Don t Have and? We Do Hu ry

odltlon- 4 30 Thurwdoy

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Apartments
for Rent

MaMaw Roush s Va Cl Sa~
Sa Oc 7 along R 33 Nonh o
Mason WV many ems

80

FAEEOATING
www S NGLES rom

Auction
and Flea Market

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PLAYOFFS

11m

MerchandiSe

••
••

slam smgle last year 1 1 the NL
champtonshtp ser es aga nst
Atlanta New York cant seem to
stmply wm 111 the postseason
Bemtez
Closer Armando
caused uch of the drama when
he allowed J T Snows pmch htt
hmter ofTPanfic llcll Parks bnck
wall 10 nght field blowmg a
three run New York lead n the
1 nth
Stuff l ke tlm seems to happe
to the Mets S4td Darryl Ha til
ton who scored the go al ead
run Last year you al vays vo
dercd what crazy tl g "'" go ng
to happen 1 ext I s I ard o the

Stuff lrkc tins seons to l111ppm

fa IS and Its hard on us {but) t s
great when we wm
Starter AI Letter donn tared the
G a Its for etgl t excellent nmngs
but was reduced to a che rleader
tl e lOth after Ben tez fa1ied yet

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

RENTALS

Qua y c o h ng anct nousehO Cl
hems S oo bag sa e e e y
Thu sday Monday 1'1 u Sa u day

lnllrrlor!Extedpr Painting mgbl!e
hDIIH! rogf• barn• gyfbu!!dlngt
and tin roqf1 E11.pe enced F ee
Es rna es Re e en es (304)895

9 Q0.5 30

40

Giveaway

Ta a Townhouse Apa mens
Ve y Spa ous 2 Bed ooms 2

3981

995 GMC Sonoma p ckup spe

ca

paCkage a ca pe clean n
s de and ou
ke new 60 000
m es p ce nego abe 1•0 949
2069

Floors CA
12 Ba h Fu y Ca
peed Adu Poo &amp; Baby Poo
Pa o S a $365 Mo No Pe s
Lease P us Sec ry Oepos Re
qu ed Days 740 446 3•8
E en ng s 740 367 0502 740
4460 0

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Sy acuse mmeo a e occupancy
2 bed oom Muse on arge corne
o
kcl'lenwhsoe&amp;etg
e a o d a ge aund y oom
$350 pe momn 74Q-992 243

$
$33 HOUR GOVERNMENT
JOBS H A NG NOW
PA 0

Galllpolls
&amp; VIcinity

TRA N NG

FULL BENEF TS

CAL MON FR
-4625 .. 5600

800 449

420 Mobile Homes

New T es
S 800
OBO
740 36 7256 be ore pm o a
' 6pm

Motorcycles

Busmess
Opportunity
TRANSPORTATION

2 New CJ Jeep F on
Hoods
er!ngs 304-6 5 564

Qne ea Sea

710 Autos for Sale

JET
AEAA ON MOTORS
8epa ed New &amp; Rellu n S ock

Cal Ron E ans

aoo 53 9528

LOWER

X 0

hrst nmng d fie "1 I a tlucc
run hotter He also co 1ected ofl
Glav10e on Aug 4 m I s first
ho 1 e at bat s nc JO n g tl c
Card als
Ca lo Her a dez I o ho
cd n tl c second nd p ch l
te Matk MeG v re co ected s
p ncl h tt~ n I c etghtl ofT
M ke R 1 g
Only tl se and NL playoff
1 atchup of?O ga e w nners was
a blo vout v tl
e C rd als
le d g 8 ? aft
fo
n b"

Clemente
from Page 81

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

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECUR TY ISS 1
No Fee Un ess We Wn

on 0 Homes Ca

s
Be tez startl'd the 1Oth but
gave up a s tgle to Ar ando
R as Mets manager Bobby Vale
nne called for Franco the 40
year old former closer vi o ha
been v th the team s nee 1990
longer than any other playe&lt;
Franco kept the ball m the
nfield and ended thmgs dramat1
ca lv bv throwmg a called third
t ke past Bonds a curvebaU that
hooked JUSt over the mSJde cor
1
Bonds who d1dn t speak to
reporters after rhe game flung his
bat
protest as the Mets who
cored all fivt of thetr runs wHh
t vo outs celebrated
Franco a d Bet tez w appcd

86 Toyola 4114

FINANCIAL

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORK NG FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EXPER ENCE AE
OU RED
800 48 5 6 EX T

aga n 1 tl c post aso Le t vas
01 e of I e first players o t of I c
dugo t vhe Franco got tl fi st
postseason sav of h s 16 ) a
career
I feel bad for An 1 do H
bee 1 ther for us all y ar Lc t r
sad Do sntse like v dot
easy bur hat "til hop fi lly bu ld
momentu 11 for Gan e 3
The ser es co 1t1 u s Sarurday
at Shea Stadtu 1
W th Bonds and J tf Ke tt o 1
base a d New York leadmg 4 1
w th o e out n the n ntl Sno v
launched the first pmcl h t
ho ne of h s career The ball I t
the fac ng of tl e walkway over
nght field a 1d landed maybe 2
feet to the left of the fo l pole
When 1 htt tt I JUS! hoped l
stayed fatr
Snow sa d
Of
course none of that natt rs r ght
now
As the Gtants fans went w ld
Bemtez s shoulders sagged 1 lto an
all too fanuhar pose He llo ved
three game dec d ng ht s he
1997 AL champ onsltp er
while he was ~h Baltu tore
mcludmg a ~me v 1 mng
sertes.-end ng ho ner by Cleve
lands Tony Fernandez tl at broke
up an 11th mmg scorele s t e

from PageBl

Household
Goods

for Rent

210

}&lt;IIi

NLDS

MERCHANDISE

510

tire Met&lt; L I.&lt; I

Darryl HamiHon of New York

800-2 3-8365
wwwa andcom

740-592 842

111

I ve been tn a lot of lurd mu
auom I m not seated by noth
mg Ben tez satd Irs not easy
Its very hard I JUSt try to relax
aiddo 1YJOb
Fel x Rodnguez o te of the
ga 1 e s top setup men for Sa 1
Fra ctsco th s season had a n ght
that 1 l&lt;lde llemtez s look good
He llo"ed a two run hm er by
Edgardo Alfonzo m the n nth that
looked I ke nothmg more rhan
msurance at t1 e tm1e
Rodr guez was sull on the
1 o 1d nth lOth when Ha rul
tot who m ssed nea ri) four
mo 1ths of the season vnh an
arrhm c I fr toe I 1ed the boll to
nght center for a double Payton
folio vcd w th a short s ngle that
bro ght ho te Hon tlto
W. kne v we were go g to
get at other chance to go up there
and s v ng the bats Payto satd
Fortu tately It \\orked out for

) on alu ap womler&lt;d u har .razy llung WIL.&lt; ~OIIl..l to
llappe11 mxt Its hard on the (.1n• and 11 s hard 11n "'
(hut) tt s great whtu we 11111

An hony land Co L d

NeW To You Thnft Shoppe
9 Wes Snmson A.lhens

BOO 948

56 8

na 11~ of the w mer
In ad l t on to C nc m au s
Gnffi y the otl e no 1 nees fro11
the NL ncl d L s Gonzalez
(Ar zona)
A In w
Jo e
(Atlanta) Kev n Tapa 1 (Ch cagb

aaa ss2 3345

Card of Thanks
SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIC n ly

p FT

each other m a Joyous hu11 on thJ
field
•
Tomght was my turn to pte~
Armando up He s pte ked me up,
Franco sad
:
The Gtants lost home fieiO
advantage after nanager Dusrt
Baker made a costly deciS on 1~
the lOth
,
He could I ave gone to th~
bullpen for closer Robb Nen bl.ll
the double swttch would havl
taken nght fielder Ell s Burks ott
of the gao e Baker ltd 1 t wanr t~
lose Burks b t so he trustetf
Rodnguez
•
Unt I de late nn tg dra ttatlql!
rhe game 'as do 1111ated by Le
er He p tchcd 4 ? 3 httle"
1 mngs
l(
one stretch a td
appeared po sed to g t I s fir;t
postseaso v 1 s nc 1993
After allo v 1g a run m the second mmng Letter h ld the G ants
h liess fro 1 the th rd until the
e1ghth He d dn r allow another
ru mer to reach second base until
the mnth
The Gtants lost starung pitcher
Shawn Estes m the hird mmng
when he sprained h s left ankle by
Jat mung t nto second base He
was called safe on the play then
was tagged out vhen he left the
base Ktrk Rueter filled Ill
adnurabl) with 4 1 3 scoreless
mmngs
T tmo Perez had a two run sm
gle m the second for New York
San Franc sco got a run n the
second on Burks RBI double

"

•

f-

Darryl K lc 1n.1k.ing Ins second
postseason start hm ted the
Rraves to two runs and four h ts
1 seven l mngs
You s w the K le th ts been
rc so
ny 11 nes th s ye r La
R s a sa d of Kile vho struck
ou SJX a d walked t vo Aga nst
a really great tea 1 he J s sh t
th 11 do vn
Ch pp r Jo 1cs I ad a lUll s n
g at d Dr an Jordan drov 1 a
r
w th a groundout 11 t first
a Ktl struggled w th h s co trol
n [ afte At dres Gala ragas tWO
o doubl Kite ret r d 13 bat crs
aro"
The Draves d dn t score aga!P
t I A tdr v Jones ho r d and

Bnan Jordan had an RBI s n~
off Mtke T mlm m the e gl th
We stunk
Ch1pper Jones
sad The offic atmg stunk The
only th ng that d dn 1 st nk W&gt;S
t1 e Card nals
Tl e B aves a c n danger of
fa I ng to akc I e NL chan p
o tsh p er es for the fir t t e
s nee 1990 Tl ey I ead ho 1 c
hop 1 g
l er M ddu o tl re
days rest o Kevm Mtll vood (HJ
13) Ca I Vtn Ga IC 3 0 S
Iy
ot fume Fteld Garret Stephen
sot (16 9) IS I kely to st t fo the
Ca d n Is.
Ch pper Jona&lt;
Hopefully
s d a cha 1ge of see 1 y v 11
help

C bs) Todd Helto 1 (Colorado)
Cl tf Floyd (Fior da) B lly Wag
r (Houston) Gary Sheffi ld (Los
Angeles) M rk Lor ta (M va u
ke ) Steve Kline (Mm t &lt;al) AI
Le
(N v Yor Mets) Jasot
K dall (P ttsburgh) Scott Rolen
(Ph Ia I lp ) Darryl Kile {St
Lou ) JefTKent (San Fra c sco)
The Yank es Jeter JO ed 1 y
Mo Vaugh (Anahe 1 ) M ke

Muss na (Ba it o c) T
field (Bostot) Ray
(Ch cago Wh e Sox) 0 ar
V zquel (Cleveland) Bobby H g
gmson (Detro t) Jer 1 a ne Dye
(Kansas C1ty) Ron Coomer
(Mmnesota) Jasot G1amb1 (Oa ~
land) Jay Buhner (Seattle) Fred
McGr ff (Tampa Bay) Royce
Claytm (Texas) and Carlos Del
gada (Toro 1to)

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia hereby g ven lhol
on Saturday October 7
2000 at 10 00 a m a public
sale will be held et 211 Weal
Second Street Pomeroy
Ohio The Farmers a Bank
Savlngo
Company
and
extendad
perking
lot
(!aside
Powell •
Supar
Volu) to sell lor cuh tho
following collaleral
1995 Ford F150 4X4 Truclc
1FYEF14V6SLB58127
4 Speed PB PS Power
Windows Cruise Remote
Mlr ora
The Farmers Bank and
Sevlngo
Compeny
Pomeroy Ohio reeervn the
lghtlo bid ollhlo ulo and

REAL ESTATE

Public Notice

Public Notice

to wlthdrtw the above

ptoplfl'f lo aalofiOWO
A 1999 Honda Scrambltr
500 4 wheeler
Serial
114XAB!l!OA2X211 993 o

collalera prior to eale

Further The Farmer~ Bank
and Sevlngo Company
reaorvoa lhe right to re(ect
any or all b do oubmlftld
The above d11crlbed
collateral will be aold 10 lowhere Ia
with
no
oxpreuod or Implied
warranly glvon PI•••• call
lor on appointment to view
or lnopecl the collateral
p lor to day of tale
For further Information
contacl Shalla Buchanon al
992 2136
(10)4 56 3tC

Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE

30

Announcements

BINGO

HOME

B g ya d n e Sa u day 9 3
Rid o d one m e No h o a
g ounds on o d SA 33 women s
boy'&amp; cto h ng co lee bles books
v deos c a supp es Bean es
oso msc

in the

CLASSIFIEDS'

FOREC OSURES SO
DOWN NO CREO T NEEDED
TAKE OVER OW PAYMENTS
CA

NOW 800 8 0 280

$1 000.00
1979 Chovrolot pickup
lruck IDICCD149F398337
Ohio Corllllcoto of Tlllt
11Sml89181 $200 00

11188 Chovrolel p ckup

lrUC:It.

1011GCBS14EG2108809 Ohio
Certificate
of
Title

1530008"519 $300 00

The peroonal property
cannot be oold lor leu lhan
two-th rda of the appraised
value •
TERMS OF SALE
Cash

ondayolule
10{8)

By vlrtuo of o Writ of

Exoc:utlon and Court Onlors 1o

Buy, Sell or Trade

,

~

,

CAL FOR \'OUR FREE MAPS

30 Announcements

1,

s•

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) there s one more amazm chapter
n the New York Mets wild play
off hiStory
Jay Payton s RBI s ngle 10 the
lOth mmng and John Francos
ga e endmg stnkeout of Bar y
JJo ds lifted Ne v York to a 5-4
vK ory over the San Franctsco
G ants on Thursday mght
Bt t the Mets d dn t even thetr
dt tston senes at I 1 w thout
:mother dose of the postsea~o 1
th,catncs that seen to follow
the 1 everywhere
October
Fro 1 the 69 Mets trade t tle
u to Rob 1 Ve tura s grand

:540 Miscellaneous

,'•
•

,.••

a Wa e a s And Un Que Rock

FormatiOOS Ge You S Today
Ga a Coun y ONLY One T ac
LEFT 34ac Fa S28 000 0 he
Pope y A so Ava abe hough
au Southe n OhiO

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

e11

Buy, Sell or Trade
in the

39 0
964 2'i'OO Fo d T a

good and

5 6 2389

n g ad

CLASSIFIEDS'

AMERICAN LEGION
POST 467 RUTLAND,
OHIO GUARANTEED
60 AGAME OVER
80 PEOPLE 80 A
GAME OVER 99
PEOPLE 99 00 A
GAME STARBURST
$200000 AND
COVERALL
MOM &amp; WED DOORS
OPEN AT 4 30
GAMES START AT 6 30

tho She II ol Me gs Counly
Ohio
ssued out or the
Comrpon Plea&amp; Court ol Meigs
County Oh o n the caee ol
Poop aa Bank ng &amp; Trust
Company R a ntlft va Erlc J
Hankla Dofendanl upon a
Judgment llleroln rendered
bolng CoH No QO.CV-69 In
uld Court, will on.. lor ule
al the front door of the
Courthou•e In Pomeroy
Molga Counly Ohio on 1ha
18th day of Octoba 2000 at
10 00 a m the fo ow ng
goods and chatte a
A
eomp e1e descr pt on of the

Public Notice
PUBliC NOTICE
The V liege of Rut and will
take sealed bids on an
approx matoly
18x18
wooden atructurt building
There 11 1 minimum bid ol
S20&lt;1 Bldo will be accepted
until Oclobar 17 2000
Aller the bid Ia reworded
the paraon ahall have two
weeks lo move th•
structure oil ot VIllage
property
(9) 22 29
(10) 6 3TC

�Friday, October 6, 2008

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, October 6 2000

•&gt;
••
•

,.,.__........
a
611P1teonel

Yard Sale

70

Gtv•wa• 1.oat Found
YardS..... ond Wontod
To Do Ada
ll...t Be Paid In Advanco
TBIMINE QEAQUNE
2:00 p m lhl day beloN
lhe ad loto run
Sunday Monday edition
2:00 p m Friday
SENJINEL Pf&amp;DIJNE
1 OOpm lhldaybef019
lhe od loto run
Sunday a Monday odltlon
1 00 p m Friday
REQ"IJB QEADUNE
2 clay8 beloN 1he ad lo
to run by4 30 p m

150

110

Schools
Instruction

210

31 o Homes for Sale

Business
Opportunity

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Ga a Counly 25 Aerts Wooded

230

a

H s de 500
8 ack op Roac
Frontage Su rouoded By Nattona

Professional
Sarvlces

Fo es
$25
435-5590

$$$

937

~~~~i~;;-;;;;;;;;:-s;;;~

r•KE YOUR PICK
New Hunting Uind

P ke Coun y Seve a T ac s To
Choose Fo m Rang ng n 5ac
3 ac w h Access To Pub c
Hun ng
Sc o o Coun y sac 36ac T ao s
P ced To Se
oca ed Between
McDermott and Otway
Hock ng Coun y Aec ea ona
Res;ideO m P ope ty n Th ee 0
e en Loca ons Some W h Ac
cess To PubliC Hun ng
A hens County 2 ac •Hac
T ac s Fu 0 W d e Enhan eel
W hScencPahs Caes Nau

"Oeedl/nH .Ubj«IIO
-loholldllyo

Pe111onals

1::::.:::.:.:.:.::::..:::...:;:::;.:____

On~ 0 lOs loft 304 736-7295

Saturday .. Mondoly

005

000 080

Look ng To Buy A New Home?
Don t Have and? We Do Hu ry

odltlon- 4 30 Thurwdoy

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Apartments
for Rent

MaMaw Roush s Va Cl Sa~
Sa Oc 7 along R 33 Nonh o
Mason WV many ems

80

FAEEOATING
www S NGLES rom

Auction
and Flea Market

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PLAYOFFS

11m

MerchandiSe

••
••

slam smgle last year 1 1 the NL
champtonshtp ser es aga nst
Atlanta New York cant seem to
stmply wm 111 the postseason
Bemtez
Closer Armando
caused uch of the drama when
he allowed J T Snows pmch htt
hmter ofTPanfic llcll Parks bnck
wall 10 nght field blowmg a
three run New York lead n the
1 nth
Stuff l ke tlm seems to happe
to the Mets S4td Darryl Ha til
ton who scored the go al ead
run Last year you al vays vo
dercd what crazy tl g "'" go ng
to happen 1 ext I s I ard o the

Stuff lrkc tins seons to l111ppm

fa IS and Its hard on us {but) t s
great when we wm
Starter AI Letter donn tared the
G a Its for etgl t excellent nmngs
but was reduced to a che rleader
tl e lOth after Ben tez fa1ied yet

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

RENTALS

Qua y c o h ng anct nousehO Cl
hems S oo bag sa e e e y
Thu sday Monday 1'1 u Sa u day

lnllrrlor!Extedpr Painting mgbl!e
hDIIH! rogf• barn• gyfbu!!dlngt
and tin roqf1 E11.pe enced F ee
Es rna es Re e en es (304)895

9 Q0.5 30

40

Giveaway

Ta a Townhouse Apa mens
Ve y Spa ous 2 Bed ooms 2

3981

995 GMC Sonoma p ckup spe

ca

paCkage a ca pe clean n
s de and ou
ke new 60 000
m es p ce nego abe 1•0 949
2069

Floors CA
12 Ba h Fu y Ca
peed Adu Poo &amp; Baby Poo
Pa o S a $365 Mo No Pe s
Lease P us Sec ry Oepos Re
qu ed Days 740 446 3•8
E en ng s 740 367 0502 740
4460 0

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Sy acuse mmeo a e occupancy
2 bed oom Muse on arge corne
o
kcl'lenwhsoe&amp;etg
e a o d a ge aund y oom
$350 pe momn 74Q-992 243

$
$33 HOUR GOVERNMENT
JOBS H A NG NOW
PA 0

Galllpolls
&amp; VIcinity

TRA N NG

FULL BENEF TS

CAL MON FR
-4625 .. 5600

800 449

420 Mobile Homes

New T es
S 800
OBO
740 36 7256 be ore pm o a
' 6pm

Motorcycles

Busmess
Opportunity
TRANSPORTATION

2 New CJ Jeep F on
Hoods
er!ngs 304-6 5 564

Qne ea Sea

710 Autos for Sale

JET
AEAA ON MOTORS
8epa ed New &amp; Rellu n S ock

Cal Ron E ans

aoo 53 9528

LOWER

X 0

hrst nmng d fie "1 I a tlucc
run hotter He also co 1ected ofl
Glav10e on Aug 4 m I s first
ho 1 e at bat s nc JO n g tl c
Card als
Ca lo Her a dez I o ho
cd n tl c second nd p ch l
te Matk MeG v re co ected s
p ncl h tt~ n I c etghtl ofT
M ke R 1 g
Only tl se and NL playoff
1 atchup of?O ga e w nners was
a blo vout v tl
e C rd als
le d g 8 ? aft
fo
n b"

Clemente
from Page 81

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

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECUR TY ISS 1
No Fee Un ess We Wn

on 0 Homes Ca

s
Be tez startl'd the 1Oth but
gave up a s tgle to Ar ando
R as Mets manager Bobby Vale
nne called for Franco the 40
year old former closer vi o ha
been v th the team s nee 1990
longer than any other playe&lt;
Franco kept the ball m the
nfield and ended thmgs dramat1
ca lv bv throwmg a called third
t ke past Bonds a curvebaU that
hooked JUSt over the mSJde cor
1
Bonds who d1dn t speak to
reporters after rhe game flung his
bat
protest as the Mets who
cored all fivt of thetr runs wHh
t vo outs celebrated
Franco a d Bet tez w appcd

86 Toyola 4114

FINANCIAL

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORK NG FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EXPER ENCE AE
OU RED
800 48 5 6 EX T

aga n 1 tl c post aso Le t vas
01 e of I e first players o t of I c
dugo t vhe Franco got tl fi st
postseason sav of h s 16 ) a
career
I feel bad for An 1 do H
bee 1 ther for us all y ar Lc t r
sad Do sntse like v dot
easy bur hat "til hop fi lly bu ld
momentu 11 for Gan e 3
The ser es co 1t1 u s Sarurday
at Shea Stadtu 1
W th Bonds and J tf Ke tt o 1
base a d New York leadmg 4 1
w th o e out n the n ntl Sno v
launched the first pmcl h t
ho ne of h s career The ball I t
the fac ng of tl e walkway over
nght field a 1d landed maybe 2
feet to the left of the fo l pole
When 1 htt tt I JUS! hoped l
stayed fatr
Snow sa d
Of
course none of that natt rs r ght
now
As the Gtants fans went w ld
Bemtez s shoulders sagged 1 lto an
all too fanuhar pose He llo ved
three game dec d ng ht s he
1997 AL champ onsltp er
while he was ~h Baltu tore
mcludmg a ~me v 1 mng
sertes.-end ng ho ner by Cleve
lands Tony Fernandez tl at broke
up an 11th mmg scorele s t e

from PageBl

Household
Goods

for Rent

210

}&lt;IIi

NLDS

MERCHANDISE

510

tire Met&lt; L I.&lt; I

Darryl HamiHon of New York

800-2 3-8365
wwwa andcom

740-592 842

111

I ve been tn a lot of lurd mu
auom I m not seated by noth
mg Ben tez satd Irs not easy
Its very hard I JUSt try to relax
aiddo 1YJOb
Fel x Rodnguez o te of the
ga 1 e s top setup men for Sa 1
Fra ctsco th s season had a n ght
that 1 l&lt;lde llemtez s look good
He llo"ed a two run hm er by
Edgardo Alfonzo m the n nth that
looked I ke nothmg more rhan
msurance at t1 e tm1e
Rodr guez was sull on the
1 o 1d nth lOth when Ha rul
tot who m ssed nea ri) four
mo 1ths of the season vnh an
arrhm c I fr toe I 1ed the boll to
nght center for a double Payton
folio vcd w th a short s ngle that
bro ght ho te Hon tlto
W. kne v we were go g to
get at other chance to go up there
and s v ng the bats Payto satd
Fortu tately It \\orked out for

) on alu ap womler&lt;d u har .razy llung WIL.&lt; ~OIIl..l to
llappe11 mxt Its hard on the (.1n• and 11 s hard 11n "'
(hut) tt s great whtu we 11111

An hony land Co L d

NeW To You Thnft Shoppe
9 Wes Snmson A.lhens

BOO 948

56 8

na 11~ of the w mer
In ad l t on to C nc m au s
Gnffi y the otl e no 1 nees fro11
the NL ncl d L s Gonzalez
(Ar zona)
A In w
Jo e
(Atlanta) Kev n Tapa 1 (Ch cagb

aaa ss2 3345

Card of Thanks
SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIC n ly

p FT

each other m a Joyous hu11 on thJ
field
•
Tomght was my turn to pte~
Armando up He s pte ked me up,
Franco sad
:
The Gtants lost home fieiO
advantage after nanager Dusrt
Baker made a costly deciS on 1~
the lOth
,
He could I ave gone to th~
bullpen for closer Robb Nen bl.ll
the double swttch would havl
taken nght fielder Ell s Burks ott
of the gao e Baker ltd 1 t wanr t~
lose Burks b t so he trustetf
Rodnguez
•
Unt I de late nn tg dra ttatlql!
rhe game 'as do 1111ated by Le
er He p tchcd 4 ? 3 httle"
1 mngs
l(
one stretch a td
appeared po sed to g t I s fir;t
postseaso v 1 s nc 1993
After allo v 1g a run m the second mmng Letter h ld the G ants
h liess fro 1 the th rd until the
e1ghth He d dn r allow another
ru mer to reach second base until
the mnth
The Gtants lost starung pitcher
Shawn Estes m the hird mmng
when he sprained h s left ankle by
Jat mung t nto second base He
was called safe on the play then
was tagged out vhen he left the
base Ktrk Rueter filled Ill
adnurabl) with 4 1 3 scoreless
mmngs
T tmo Perez had a two run sm
gle m the second for New York
San Franc sco got a run n the
second on Burks RBI double

"

•

f-

Darryl K lc 1n.1k.ing Ins second
postseason start hm ted the
Rraves to two runs and four h ts
1 seven l mngs
You s w the K le th ts been
rc so
ny 11 nes th s ye r La
R s a sa d of Kile vho struck
ou SJX a d walked t vo Aga nst
a really great tea 1 he J s sh t
th 11 do vn
Ch pp r Jo 1cs I ad a lUll s n
g at d Dr an Jordan drov 1 a
r
w th a groundout 11 t first
a Ktl struggled w th h s co trol
n [ afte At dres Gala ragas tWO
o doubl Kite ret r d 13 bat crs
aro"
The Draves d dn t score aga!P
t I A tdr v Jones ho r d and

Bnan Jordan had an RBI s n~
off Mtke T mlm m the e gl th
We stunk
Ch1pper Jones
sad The offic atmg stunk The
only th ng that d dn 1 st nk W&gt;S
t1 e Card nals
Tl e B aves a c n danger of
fa I ng to akc I e NL chan p
o tsh p er es for the fir t t e
s nee 1990 Tl ey I ead ho 1 c
hop 1 g
l er M ddu o tl re
days rest o Kevm Mtll vood (HJ
13) Ca I Vtn Ga IC 3 0 S
Iy
ot fume Fteld Garret Stephen
sot (16 9) IS I kely to st t fo the
Ca d n Is.
Ch pper Jona&lt;
Hopefully
s d a cha 1ge of see 1 y v 11
help

C bs) Todd Helto 1 (Colorado)
Cl tf Floyd (Fior da) B lly Wag
r (Houston) Gary Sheffi ld (Los
Angeles) M rk Lor ta (M va u
ke ) Steve Kline (Mm t &lt;al) AI
Le
(N v Yor Mets) Jasot
K dall (P ttsburgh) Scott Rolen
(Ph Ia I lp ) Darryl Kile {St
Lou ) JefTKent (San Fra c sco)
The Yank es Jeter JO ed 1 y
Mo Vaugh (Anahe 1 ) M ke

Muss na (Ba it o c) T
field (Bostot) Ray
(Ch cago Wh e Sox) 0 ar
V zquel (Cleveland) Bobby H g
gmson (Detro t) Jer 1 a ne Dye
(Kansas C1ty) Ron Coomer
(Mmnesota) Jasot G1amb1 (Oa ~
land) Jay Buhner (Seattle) Fred
McGr ff (Tampa Bay) Royce
Claytm (Texas) and Carlos Del
gada (Toro 1to)

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia hereby g ven lhol
on Saturday October 7
2000 at 10 00 a m a public
sale will be held et 211 Weal
Second Street Pomeroy
Ohio The Farmers a Bank
Savlngo
Company
and
extendad
perking
lot
(!aside
Powell •
Supar
Volu) to sell lor cuh tho
following collaleral
1995 Ford F150 4X4 Truclc
1FYEF14V6SLB58127
4 Speed PB PS Power
Windows Cruise Remote
Mlr ora
The Farmers Bank and
Sevlngo
Compeny
Pomeroy Ohio reeervn the
lghtlo bid ollhlo ulo and

REAL ESTATE

Public Notice

Public Notice

to wlthdrtw the above

ptoplfl'f lo aalofiOWO
A 1999 Honda Scrambltr
500 4 wheeler
Serial
114XAB!l!OA2X211 993 o

collalera prior to eale

Further The Farmer~ Bank
and Sevlngo Company
reaorvoa lhe right to re(ect
any or all b do oubmlftld
The above d11crlbed
collateral will be aold 10 lowhere Ia
with
no
oxpreuod or Implied
warranly glvon PI•••• call
lor on appointment to view
or lnopecl the collateral
p lor to day of tale
For further Information
contacl Shalla Buchanon al
992 2136
(10)4 56 3tC

Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE

30

Announcements

BINGO

HOME

B g ya d n e Sa u day 9 3
Rid o d one m e No h o a
g ounds on o d SA 33 women s
boy'&amp; cto h ng co lee bles books
v deos c a supp es Bean es
oso msc

in the

CLASSIFIEDS'

FOREC OSURES SO
DOWN NO CREO T NEEDED
TAKE OVER OW PAYMENTS
CA

NOW 800 8 0 280

$1 000.00
1979 Chovrolot pickup
lruck IDICCD149F398337
Ohio Corllllcoto of Tlllt
11Sml89181 $200 00

11188 Chovrolel p ckup

lrUC:It.

1011GCBS14EG2108809 Ohio
Certificate
of
Title

1530008"519 $300 00

The peroonal property
cannot be oold lor leu lhan
two-th rda of the appraised
value •
TERMS OF SALE
Cash

ondayolule
10{8)

By vlrtuo of o Writ of

Exoc:utlon and Court Onlors 1o

Buy, Sell or Trade

,

~

,

CAL FOR \'OUR FREE MAPS

30 Announcements

1,

s•

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) there s one more amazm chapter
n the New York Mets wild play
off hiStory
Jay Payton s RBI s ngle 10 the
lOth mmng and John Francos
ga e endmg stnkeout of Bar y
JJo ds lifted Ne v York to a 5-4
vK ory over the San Franctsco
G ants on Thursday mght
Bt t the Mets d dn t even thetr
dt tston senes at I 1 w thout
:mother dose of the postsea~o 1
th,catncs that seen to follow
the 1 everywhere
October
Fro 1 the 69 Mets trade t tle
u to Rob 1 Ve tura s grand

:540 Miscellaneous

,'•
•

,.••

a Wa e a s And Un Que Rock

FormatiOOS Ge You S Today
Ga a Coun y ONLY One T ac
LEFT 34ac Fa S28 000 0 he
Pope y A so Ava abe hough
au Southe n OhiO

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

e11

Buy, Sell or Trade
in the

39 0
964 2'i'OO Fo d T a

good and

5 6 2389

n g ad

CLASSIFIEDS'

AMERICAN LEGION
POST 467 RUTLAND,
OHIO GUARANTEED
60 AGAME OVER
80 PEOPLE 80 A
GAME OVER 99
PEOPLE 99 00 A
GAME STARBURST
$200000 AND
COVERALL
MOM &amp; WED DOORS
OPEN AT 4 30
GAMES START AT 6 30

tho She II ol Me gs Counly
Ohio
ssued out or the
Comrpon Plea&amp; Court ol Meigs
County Oh o n the caee ol
Poop aa Bank ng &amp; Trust
Company R a ntlft va Erlc J
Hankla Dofendanl upon a
Judgment llleroln rendered
bolng CoH No QO.CV-69 In
uld Court, will on.. lor ule
al the front door of the
Courthou•e In Pomeroy
Molga Counly Ohio on 1ha
18th day of Octoba 2000 at
10 00 a m the fo ow ng
goods and chatte a
A
eomp e1e descr pt on of the

Public Notice
PUBliC NOTICE
The V liege of Rut and will
take sealed bids on an
approx matoly
18x18
wooden atructurt building
There 11 1 minimum bid ol
S20&lt;1 Bldo will be accepted
until Oclobar 17 2000
Aller the bid Ia reworded
the paraon ahall have two
weeks lo move th•
structure oil ot VIllage
property
(9) 22 29
(10) 6 3TC

�•

•

Friday, ·October 6, 2000
Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, October 6, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

HOW

RaCine Fire Dept.
Chicken BBQ

now PARTinG OUT

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264

1-T-1112

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

Sunday- October 8th
Serving Begins at 1t :00 a.m.
Chicken &amp; Rib BBQ
Sunday- October 8th
Syracuse Village Hall
Serving starts a! 11 am $4.50
Sponsored by Syracuse VFD

Ctllllntted,
Ufe11mt War11nty
Local Conlrlctor

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

Reasonable Prices
FREE Estimates

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

regular houn ~'

Tues-Frl 1D-6
Sat. 10-4
• Candle making
supplies
• Wooden crafts
• Baskets

M·F 10-7 Sat 10-6 Sun- Closed

Hobson Christian Church
Youth Fund Raiser
Spaghetti Dinner Oct. 7th.
.

.AliiU\

Old Legion Hall Middleport
•

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

Public Notice

the Director of Ohio EPA.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Beginning October 11,
NOTICE OF RECEIPT OF
2000, copies of the
401 APP~ICATION AND
application of the
PUBLIC HEARING
Public Notice Is hereby certification and technical
given that the Ohio support Information may be
Environmental Protection Inspected at Ohio EPAAgency (Ohio EPA) Division DSW, P.O. Box 1049,
of Surface Water (DSW) hes Columbus, Ohio 43216-1049
received an application ror, by first calling (614) 644- ,
and has begun to consider 2001. Applications can be :
whether to issue or deny, a made available at Ohio EPA
Clean Water Act Section 401 District Offices by calling

992-5479
•

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle

. Sales Representative

the same number.

Ohio EPA will hold a
public Information session lli'-

-

Larry Schey

and public hearing relative

&gt;"' .......
13.6 miles of .the existing to Issues of lower water
U.S. Route 33 between quality on November 29,
Athens and Darwin. The 2000 at 6:3o PM . at tho
application was submitted Athens
School 750 East State Street Phone (740) 593-6671
by the Ohio Department of Auditorium,High
1 High School . Athens, Oh 1.0 45 70 I
Transportation, 1980 West Drive, The Plains , Ohio
Broad Street, P.O. Box 899, 45780. The public hearing
"A Better 111a Eve
Columbus. Ohio 43126· will end when all Interested ~ '-----·...:..;;..;;;..=;;.;.......;"'~''-"-""-'-"-.....;.-'----'
Q899. The project begins at parties have had an

to provide

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc

U.S. 50 In Athens and testimony related to the
projects.

procoeds South for 13.6

All interested persons are
en11tled to attend or be
represef!ted and give
written or oral comments on

the proposed project and all

persons who do so may, at

the · discretion of the
officer,

be

questioned by others
present. The purpose ofthe
quality of West Br~mch hearing Ia to obtain
Shade River, Middle Briinch additional Information that
Shade River and Pratt's will be considered by the
BranCh, the ir unnamed Director of Ohio EPA, prior
result In degradation to, or
lowering of, the water

tributaries and adjacent
wetlands. The review of the

application

will

be

conducted, and a decision
whether to grant or deny
the application will
be
made , In accordance wjth

374·5·t ·05 ,

an

antidegradatlon review of

the appl ic ation

will

be

conducted before deciding
whether to allow a lowering

of the water quality. Other
alternatives resulting

In

lesser or no degradation or
lowering of the water
qualiJy will be considered

Written

comments must be received

Attention:
Permits
Processing Unit, P.O. Box

All Types of Business
SUpport Services

·Any Size Double Hung·

l140J 661-3224
1·800-828·0212

' Free Installation

by the Ohio EPA·DSW,

after this date may not be

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC.

considered as part of the
official record of the
hearing.

Persons wishing to t;te on

Ohio EPA's Interested '
parties mailing list for thla
project, or wiah to submit
comments for Ohio EPA's
consideration In reviewing

(D) of the 43216·1049 by the close of

AntidegradHtlon
Rule
(effectl,ve as of May 1, 1998),

business on December t,

CO:'-/CRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercial
Free Estimates
Fully Insured

Brian Morristin/Raclne; Ohio
(740) 985-3948

llolCo """ o.Jila Coualleo

OF

c.uar.e..e.._

GALLIPOLIS

992-6142 or
ToO-Free 1-877·604-73

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

Ball Logging &amp;:

. . ...

WINDOWS

$229.00*
• Free In Home Estimates
Call lor Further Details

ounuw wmoow

svsnms, me.
992·4119

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

. _. 10 v e 4

·-.

I'M

...

HE'S TALKIN'
ELVINEY
AN' SHE'S

:

THAT'S TH' ONLY TIME
HE CAN GIT A WORD IN
EDGEWISE

NOT

22 yro. Local

It

RACINE MOWER ~••n•~

request.

Mon·Frt U; Sat.
Sun. Clol8d
Phone 740.94&amp;-2804

ANIMAL
~TVPIO~ /NC.

Op~~n

HfiOLI"G anel
EXCAVATinG.
Hauling • Umestone •
Grovel• Sand • Topsoile
Fill Dirt• Mukh •
Bulldozer Services

FREit ESTIMATES

740·992·7599

• No Dealers or Contractors Please WI! #0234 77

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thurtdeys

: THE BORN LOSER

·.p:

~

; YOU f\1&gt;-VWT tlW-1 Wl\1\fl(XJ)I~

: E.NOU61-\ FW"\ '(OJR f'i\'{(f\W.~

....

YOU NEED TO CO~U':I&amp;JIE ~

1\00ITIOW&gt;.i... ~3% 7:'JTO 5RI~

.._..~TI-\I.SYE~

(740) 992-3470

'"'I

YO$. WITf\f\CX..0\1\\G UP
TO ~0 1 .--.-:::--&lt;.

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE
29870 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
7 40-949~2217
Sizes 5' x 1O'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM

AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per QBI1JIII
$300.00 Coverall
·$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie. # 011-50 11MMn

TH IS IS
WHY
ARE \olE
lNG SQ.IGS

STUPID~

HAT ,._t&gt;:E

...LREADY

Flt.MOU!;,?

1/W!!!! 1 mocP!J•

SHHDE RIUER ftG SERUICE

Advertise in ...
this space for
s100 per
month.

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

• fall fertilizers

740-985-3831
Pomero , Ohio 45769

MAKES '(OU THINK
'I'OU HAVE THE ANSWERS
FOR EVER't'THING 1
WMMI

W~T

ABOUT THE REST OF
U5?HOW DO 't'OU THINK '(OU'RE
GOING TO KEEP THE RE5T OF US
FROM EXPRESSING A~ OPINION ?

• New Homes
• Garages
• Siding

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

' All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Autlmrized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.

Need It done, glt1e us a call
FREE ESTIMATES
Creat Priced on· New Homes

992·2753

992·1101

e 13 1 mo

1000 St. Rt. 7·Soufh
Coolville, OH 45723

74. . .7-8381

WINTER
STORAGE
SPACE
AVAILABLE
Meigs County
Fairgrounds
Oct. l, 2QOO ·Apr. I, 2001
CALL FOR MORE

, IN;~~~~~N

LINDA'S ·
PAINTING
"Take the pain ora
of pai,.tingLer me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

Before 6p.m. leove Message
.\her 6 pm-740·985-4180

WANTED
Standing tim her large
or "mall tracks. Tup
t•ri&lt;:es 1•uid also.
Dozer work.
Free Estimates
Call T&amp; R Logging
afti'l' 8:00pm
740-992 -5050
(Randy)

304-273-0036
mu

The CRAFTY,
BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)
All ver tic al blinds are
made lo order at our
location

UP TO 70% .0FF

'

__11Q 1 mo. q 11100

• Verticals • Wood
• Minis • Etc

144 Third Ava. Galllpohs

446·4995

'rot

·888-

·8

Advertise our business
.on this page or one month for
~ as low as $25
•

1

p one 992·21 Jrs
•

..

·

Pass

66

J~....................................................-.-J L-....................~~~~~~~----~~~~--------~----~........................_,.~

II A Stooge

54 SIHplngak:kneu fty

55 Writer

Hemlngwer .

58 Keen-Wtttad

Big 24 Woodtn pine

57 Uses the oven

25 Math course

27 Uke rorm.l
-Ia

DOWN

:~ ....

I Amaunto2 Pronuncl.tton

33

4 Teleacrap

.

32 Ken

_..

blue

3-counttr

1 Abounds
7 Hlncleted

a Gumt

5 "YIIckl"

9 8 5

Wes t

North

East

1 Pass . Pass ·
tNT· 5 a
SNT
Pa'5
6•
6•
All pass
Db I.

Opening lead: • 4

Sentinel

IRON CITY GYM
6 Month
Membership $100
plus tax
with this ad
Ravenswood, INV

10

To get a current weather
report, check the

.

DEPOYSAG
PAR7S

10 8 7 6

• A 7 3

PHILLIP ALDER
it is supposedly better to be
lucky than good -- especially at
the bridge table. Yet if you can be
lucky and good, that makes an
unbeatable combination. The
most successful team over the lasl
' 15 years ·or so is Nick NickeiiDick Freeman, Jeff Me'CKS'trothEric Rodwell , and Bob Hamman,
partnered first by Bobby Wolff
and now by Paul Soloway. They
won the Orb is Bermuda Bowl in
January, but only after surviving
a quarterfinal scare against Italy.
In the other room, the Italian
South made five spades exactly
for plus 450.
Here, after Nickell (South)
opened four spades, the Italian
West o.vercalled four no-trump to
show at least 5-5 in the minors,
not an obvious choice with such
a weak hand. East's five notrump was an attempt to invite a
grand slam in case his partner
" had the tickets."
Nickell bid six spades as a twoway action. If East-West could
make six diamonds, it would be a
cheap sac rifice. Yet if North had
the right ha nd (ace-do ubleton of
hearts and the spade ace, for
example) , six spades might even
make. ·
Six spades looked destined 10
finish one down, ,yet Nickell 's
guardian angel was working overtime. Nickell ruffed the diamond
lead, drew trumps, and playe9 a
heart to dummy 's ace. East
dropped the jack' And on the next
heart, East contributed hi s queen'
As Nickell claimed, East noticed
that he didn't have two diamond
sevens after all, that one ~as the
heart seven. Plus 1210 gave Nickell's team 13 international match
points, and they wo~ by eight
instead of perhaps losmg by 16.

mechanics
We service mowers,
chainsaws, tillers,
generators•, snowblowers,
weedeaters, pick-up and •
delivery available on

COMMERCIAL and RBIDOOI~l

A

17 LictnM plllle

-

BY

Futurtng two Brlgga 6
Strai!Dn trained

VISIT OUR SHOWROOM ON STATE ROUTE 33
6MilES NORTH OF POMEROY, OHIO AT COUNTY ROAD I8

SMITH'S COff5mOCTIOff

43 lllntd'ltncl8
45 ~ RIIICI
41 I'Kan, e.g.
47SidU
41flesl
51 tt.lrplece

Lucky and good

HOME

Owner .Jim Picken•

35537 St Rt 7 North

,.._

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

Mechanic- Bill

Advertise
in this .
space for
$50 per
.month.

37
term
40 Debauchee
41 Comedl8n
PhilipS

•rtrve~a'

• 8

BARNEY

,

992·6215

....... o.Jila Coualloo

1-800-291·5600

t

• K

South

Pomeroy, Ohio

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing

• Q J 7

.

Free Estimates
V.C. YOUNG Ill :

HEAP Voucben accepted for

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.

Eall
.. 9 5

Weal
.. 7

South
• K Q J 10 4 3 2.

-Any Size Double Hunr!·

992-4119

a

20 r\ng«
21 Chop 23 Cellfomle'a

• Q9 3

I

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Please VN#0234 77

,740·696·1176
or 740~696-1233

A 88
• A 6 2

" 4 3
tKJ542
•KQJ52

•looflog&amp;Gotllrl
• Vllyl Slolog ' ,.....,.
• Patio &amp; Por.. DoGs

35215 BaU Run Road

to-tHO

a

•llodrkoll '!:-'' t

1-800-272-5179or446-9800

SELLERS CONSTRUCTION

CLASSIFIEDS!

Nort

• · - 1~ilfloos &amp;I •1 t i.J
•llnr ......

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

•N9 Dealers or Contractors

·Custom Garages • Roofing ·
• Concrete Work • Decks
• Additions

,
......

YOUNG'S
•
CARPENTER SERVICE

·Firewood

"W.elp"

2ooo.
'apply or may be granted by (10)61TC

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SHOP THE

and -

10/41

VINYL REPLACEMENT

review process .
DSW, Attention: Permits
No exclusions or waivers, Processing Unit, . P.O. Box ·
as outlined by paragraph 1049, Columbue, Ohio

· 3745·1 ·05

IIDI

OFFICE EXPRESS
BUSINESS SERVICES

the application ehould do
by lhe Ohio EPA during the so In writing to . Ohio EPA·

·

f1:•tland , Ohio
Truck seats, ::ar seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats. r:notorcycle seats.,.
· boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon • F;·i 8:30 • s:oo
Over 40 yrs experience

·(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916

1049, Columbus, Ohio
Chapters 3745·1 end 3745· 43216·1049 by the close of
32
of
the
Ohio business on December 1,
Administrative Coda (OAC). 2000. Comments received
In accordance with OAC

Dump Truck Deltoa]&gt;

to any further action on the

application.

~

; • : •

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

Rutland, Ohio

Dance Sat. Night 9-1
Music by Rt. 33
Members &amp; Guests

presiding

.

: ' ; t,

BISSELL IUIL~ERS
INC.
Mums, Indian
lAPIIIes. APPle
Gift Items, Subs,
Sarlce, Ice Cream, 11m11~
DIOi!na. Summer Sausali!e, Beef Jerkll
742·7405

1

...

BIDII LDIIBIR
1'1'. RT. 141,
caa 1u

740-992-5232

140·992·1506

l4=::·
•

ACROSS

1&amp;~

collections, legal papers, investment records, photo
albums. cameras, household Inventory and
sentimental items will be sale.
For more information call

9/1100 1 mo pd

VFW of Mason

Number for this application
is 199700188.
The discharges from this
activity, if approved, would

1Pr,otB&lt;ct your guns. family heirlooms, coin

740·992-4559

"Good Times"
Come out and Party with
"Pipe Dope"
Sat. Night Oct. 7th
9 pm to 1 pm

Meigs Counties.
The
Huntington District Corps of
Engineer's Public Notice

fOR ffiORf InfO. PlfASf CAll

uu:e 're baclc to our

Thppers Plains
Cerlilied in Meigs,
Athens and

Racine Pizza Express
'949-4900
16" 3-item pizza
$8.99

miles to Darwin, Athens and

SECURITY'
PRODUCTS
·
'THE MOST muSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

33795 Hiland &amp;1.
Pollln'O'J&gt; Ohw

1!194 hrd Ringer P/U

The CountrY
Candle ShoP

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE
State Route 7,

Classes every Tues &amp; Thur.

opportunity

PHILLIP
ALDER

14 "St~-· pi
15 c..trw

SeU-Storage

1"Z fi!JII fll!lllllf'
1!193for.r-

7/22/fFN

6:30 pm $3.00 class

the U.S. 33 Interchange with

1"' Clllll1t flftt111d
lMI f«11l T1111'1""
1MI hrd lleml• Utn

740-992·1671

Aerobics Class
Royal Oak Resort
Begir,ming Tues. Oct. 1oth

Certification for a project to
place fill material In
conjunction with the
relocation of approximately

~~~
High&amp; Dry

1. . . . . .

MEA Crossword Puzzle

7 Actor - 13 Come Into -

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
Simington

.

w~

GOT IN'TO
TH' CAVE!

IIWniiOIII

Public Notice

BRIDGE

GO •we '0.
FOoZV!
TEl.l. '£It

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7 .

OOP

letYMr•n I l1r II
..........t II

12:00-5:00

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'•

by Luis Campos
·'

Celeblily Cipher crypi01Jtam&amp; are created from quotations by tllmOUS -·~¥_" and
present. Each tetter in the clphe~ stands tor another.
.

Today's clue: A equals U

.(

•o

MJD

TPWDDWT

WNOTWFZVB

swzzw

TJNOD,

#' •• , -

"

COD

OF

SPJOVVW. '

YL

CWP

LOPDZ

HUGANT

I: 1 I I! I I
2

NINOO

I

FI

~~

I l'
I

6

1.

II

r

o

NT Y

17
.

I. I_ ':'
.~

I

My son
daughter-in-law
couldn't afford to put new tile in
their new home. They say lhey
already have wall to wall · - - -- - - .

I

T 1 or E c
1--r--riiiiO'
allogll-."1

f t CompleJo lho chuckle quoted

V by fJIHng In the missing words
L-....1..-L-..1........1-.L......J vou devetop from step No. 3 below.

~ PRINT NUMBERED 11

t;:P LEITERS

A
V

UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

•

FORI

.

1 r 1 I' I' I' I' I
I II II I I II
I~

3

5

SCflAM.I.ETS ANSWERS
·z,pper- Owner- Tramp- Woeful - FROM t~.e TOP

"It's okay to think about being a pohlician, the dad
told his son, "but remember, governments are known to
leak FROM the TOP."

OCTOBER 6l

Mystenes
(CC)

••

MCY

lAM I

•

'

RJF

WOlD

•·'
when in the employ of another,
because good work will not go
unnoticed-- nor unrewarded. It'll
give you pride in your achievements.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Should you he called upon today
to step in and manage a development where another has losl con trol , don't be hesitant to take on
the role. You 'II do a dynamite job.
CANCER (June 21-July 22&gt;
When you concentrate on the end
results today. you're not apl to
walk away di sappointed This
includes both tan gible and intan gible invol w ment.s
.
- LEO (July 2.1-Aug . 22&gt; Your
ideas and innovations could be so
outstanding thai you could find
yourself being copied where you
go today . As the old saying goes,
"Imitation is the sincerest form of
llattery."
.
VIRGO 1Aug. 23-Sept. 221
Even though this is a weekend
day. it has the potential to be both
a .profiuible and productive day
for you . Focus on endeavors that
portend these possibilities.

J

ilKPWWF
ZWDZ .
.
PREVIOUS SO~UTION : "The barriers are not yet erected which can say to
aspirin~ genius: 'Thus far and no further."- Ludwig van Beethoven

'Your
'Birthday

dominating figure among your
·. Saturday, Oct. 7, 2000
... Because you' re not likely to peer group. whe.ther you want to
tepeat old mistakes, it opens the be or not.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
way in the year ahead for Lady
)
J,.uck to be quite available when 19 You' re apt lobe quite lucky 111
you' ll need her the most. It looks mosl'endeavors today, but perhaps
your best possibiliti es he wllhlll
!ike a good year.
: LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) If your financ;al affairs. Operate m
Your logic tells you something this realm when opportuntly
chancy looks good, it might be knocks.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Worth taking a calculated risk on
it, so long as it's nothing danger- It behooves you to be very atlentive to what others have to say
i!u s. You could be rather lucky
today. Trying to patch up a broken today, because some type of inspiromance? The Astra-Graph rational message may have a proMatchmaker can help you under- found effect upon your present
,4and what to do to make the rela- circumstances.
PISCES (Feb: 20-March 20)
tlonship work. Mail $2.75 to
Once
you start to poke around , it's
rii!atchinaker, c/o this newspaper,
Ito. Box 1758. Murray Hill Sta- very likely you'll uncover the
answers you're seeking. Your fac tfon , New York, NY 10156.
: SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ulties for research, probing or
~on ' t wait for others to call on deteetinll.. are very keen today.
~ u to do something today. Make · ARIES (March 21-April 19)
t~ e overture yourself. Shanng People with whom you have reatime with people you really like sons to team up with today will
c~n prove to be a pleasurable prove to be extremely lucky for
you. They will offer exactly what
c~peri e n ce .
you need to realize your hopes
~ SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec
2:1) Bcc au' c yo u project a charis- and expectat•ons.
(April 20-Mi.ly 20)
i,.;a toda y that ·"'Y
'· "Follow my PutTAURUS
forth your best efforts today
l ~)lll , .. yo u arc likely to be a most

sa

PWJT

CJT

0 F 0 Z P A. K Z 0 Y F D

I FRIDAY

•

...

CELEBRITY CIPHER

�•

•

Friday, ·October 6, 2000
Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, October 6, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

HOW

RaCine Fire Dept.
Chicken BBQ

now PARTinG OUT

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264

1-T-1112

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

Sunday- October 8th
Serving Begins at 1t :00 a.m.
Chicken &amp; Rib BBQ
Sunday- October 8th
Syracuse Village Hall
Serving starts a! 11 am $4.50
Sponsored by Syracuse VFD

Ctllllntted,
Ufe11mt War11nty
Local Conlrlctor

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

Reasonable Prices
FREE Estimates

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

regular houn ~'

Tues-Frl 1D-6
Sat. 10-4
• Candle making
supplies
• Wooden crafts
• Baskets

M·F 10-7 Sat 10-6 Sun- Closed

Hobson Christian Church
Youth Fund Raiser
Spaghetti Dinner Oct. 7th.
.

.AliiU\

Old Legion Hall Middleport
•

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

Public Notice

the Director of Ohio EPA.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Beginning October 11,
NOTICE OF RECEIPT OF
2000, copies of the
401 APP~ICATION AND
application of the
PUBLIC HEARING
Public Notice Is hereby certification and technical
given that the Ohio support Information may be
Environmental Protection Inspected at Ohio EPAAgency (Ohio EPA) Division DSW, P.O. Box 1049,
of Surface Water (DSW) hes Columbus, Ohio 43216-1049
received an application ror, by first calling (614) 644- ,
and has begun to consider 2001. Applications can be :
whether to issue or deny, a made available at Ohio EPA
Clean Water Act Section 401 District Offices by calling

992-5479
•

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle

. Sales Representative

the same number.

Ohio EPA will hold a
public Information session lli'-

-

Larry Schey

and public hearing relative

&gt;"' .......
13.6 miles of .the existing to Issues of lower water
U.S. Route 33 between quality on November 29,
Athens and Darwin. The 2000 at 6:3o PM . at tho
application was submitted Athens
School 750 East State Street Phone (740) 593-6671
by the Ohio Department of Auditorium,High
1 High School . Athens, Oh 1.0 45 70 I
Transportation, 1980 West Drive, The Plains , Ohio
Broad Street, P.O. Box 899, 45780. The public hearing
"A Better 111a Eve
Columbus. Ohio 43126· will end when all Interested ~ '-----·...:..;;..;;;..=;;.;.......;"'~''-"-""-'-"-.....;.-'----'
Q899. The project begins at parties have had an

to provide

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc

U.S. 50 In Athens and testimony related to the
projects.

procoeds South for 13.6

All interested persons are
en11tled to attend or be
represef!ted and give
written or oral comments on

the proposed project and all

persons who do so may, at

the · discretion of the
officer,

be

questioned by others
present. The purpose ofthe
quality of West Br~mch hearing Ia to obtain
Shade River, Middle Briinch additional Information that
Shade River and Pratt's will be considered by the
BranCh, the ir unnamed Director of Ohio EPA, prior
result In degradation to, or
lowering of, the water

tributaries and adjacent
wetlands. The review of the

application

will

be

conducted, and a decision
whether to grant or deny
the application will
be
made , In accordance wjth

374·5·t ·05 ,

an

antidegradatlon review of

the appl ic ation

will

be

conducted before deciding
whether to allow a lowering

of the water quality. Other
alternatives resulting

In

lesser or no degradation or
lowering of the water
qualiJy will be considered

Written

comments must be received

Attention:
Permits
Processing Unit, P.O. Box

All Types of Business
SUpport Services

·Any Size Double Hung·

l140J 661-3224
1·800-828·0212

' Free Installation

by the Ohio EPA·DSW,

after this date may not be

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC.

considered as part of the
official record of the
hearing.

Persons wishing to t;te on

Ohio EPA's Interested '
parties mailing list for thla
project, or wiah to submit
comments for Ohio EPA's
consideration In reviewing

(D) of the 43216·1049 by the close of

AntidegradHtlon
Rule
(effectl,ve as of May 1, 1998),

business on December t,

CO:'-/CRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercial
Free Estimates
Fully Insured

Brian Morristin/Raclne; Ohio
(740) 985-3948

llolCo """ o.Jila Coualleo

OF

c.uar.e..e.._

GALLIPOLIS

992-6142 or
ToO-Free 1-877·604-73

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

Ball Logging &amp;:

. . ...

WINDOWS

$229.00*
• Free In Home Estimates
Call lor Further Details

ounuw wmoow

svsnms, me.
992·4119

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

. _. 10 v e 4

·-.

I'M

...

HE'S TALKIN'
ELVINEY
AN' SHE'S

:

THAT'S TH' ONLY TIME
HE CAN GIT A WORD IN
EDGEWISE

NOT

22 yro. Local

It

RACINE MOWER ~••n•~

request.

Mon·Frt U; Sat.
Sun. Clol8d
Phone 740.94&amp;-2804

ANIMAL
~TVPIO~ /NC.

Op~~n

HfiOLI"G anel
EXCAVATinG.
Hauling • Umestone •
Grovel• Sand • Topsoile
Fill Dirt• Mukh •
Bulldozer Services

FREit ESTIMATES

740·992·7599

• No Dealers or Contractors Please WI! #0234 77

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thurtdeys

: THE BORN LOSER

·.p:

~

; YOU f\1&gt;-VWT tlW-1 Wl\1\fl(XJ)I~

: E.NOU61-\ FW"\ '(OJR f'i\'{(f\W.~

....

YOU NEED TO CO~U':I&amp;JIE ~

1\00ITIOW&gt;.i... ~3% 7:'JTO 5RI~

.._..~TI-\I.SYE~

(740) 992-3470

'"'I

YO$. WITf\f\CX..0\1\\G UP
TO ~0 1 .--.-:::--&lt;.

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE
29870 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
7 40-949~2217
Sizes 5' x 1O'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM

AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per QBI1JIII
$300.00 Coverall
·$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie. # 011-50 11MMn

TH IS IS
WHY
ARE \olE
lNG SQ.IGS

STUPID~

HAT ,._t&gt;:E

...LREADY

Flt.MOU!;,?

1/W!!!! 1 mocP!J•

SHHDE RIUER ftG SERUICE

Advertise in ...
this space for
s100 per
month.

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

• fall fertilizers

740-985-3831
Pomero , Ohio 45769

MAKES '(OU THINK
'I'OU HAVE THE ANSWERS
FOR EVER't'THING 1
WMMI

W~T

ABOUT THE REST OF
U5?HOW DO 't'OU THINK '(OU'RE
GOING TO KEEP THE RE5T OF US
FROM EXPRESSING A~ OPINION ?

• New Homes
• Garages
• Siding

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

' All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Autlmrized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.

Need It done, glt1e us a call
FREE ESTIMATES
Creat Priced on· New Homes

992·2753

992·1101

e 13 1 mo

1000 St. Rt. 7·Soufh
Coolville, OH 45723

74. . .7-8381

WINTER
STORAGE
SPACE
AVAILABLE
Meigs County
Fairgrounds
Oct. l, 2QOO ·Apr. I, 2001
CALL FOR MORE

, IN;~~~~~N

LINDA'S ·
PAINTING
"Take the pain ora
of pai,.tingLer me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

Before 6p.m. leove Message
.\her 6 pm-740·985-4180

WANTED
Standing tim her large
or "mall tracks. Tup
t•ri&lt;:es 1•uid also.
Dozer work.
Free Estimates
Call T&amp; R Logging
afti'l' 8:00pm
740-992 -5050
(Randy)

304-273-0036
mu

The CRAFTY,
BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)
All ver tic al blinds are
made lo order at our
location

UP TO 70% .0FF

'

__11Q 1 mo. q 11100

• Verticals • Wood
• Minis • Etc

144 Third Ava. Galllpohs

446·4995

'rot

·888-

·8

Advertise our business
.on this page or one month for
~ as low as $25
•

1

p one 992·21 Jrs
•

..

·

Pass

66

J~....................................................-.-J L-....................~~~~~~~----~~~~--------~----~........................_,.~

II A Stooge

54 SIHplngak:kneu fty

55 Writer

Hemlngwer .

58 Keen-Wtttad

Big 24 Woodtn pine

57 Uses the oven

25 Math course

27 Uke rorm.l
-Ia

DOWN

:~ ....

I Amaunto2 Pronuncl.tton

33

4 Teleacrap

.

32 Ken

_..

blue

3-counttr

1 Abounds
7 Hlncleted

a Gumt

5 "YIIckl"

9 8 5

Wes t

North

East

1 Pass . Pass ·
tNT· 5 a
SNT
Pa'5
6•
6•
All pass
Db I.

Opening lead: • 4

Sentinel

IRON CITY GYM
6 Month
Membership $100
plus tax
with this ad
Ravenswood, INV

10

To get a current weather
report, check the

.

DEPOYSAG
PAR7S

10 8 7 6

• A 7 3

PHILLIP ALDER
it is supposedly better to be
lucky than good -- especially at
the bridge table. Yet if you can be
lucky and good, that makes an
unbeatable combination. The
most successful team over the lasl
' 15 years ·or so is Nick NickeiiDick Freeman, Jeff Me'CKS'trothEric Rodwell , and Bob Hamman,
partnered first by Bobby Wolff
and now by Paul Soloway. They
won the Orb is Bermuda Bowl in
January, but only after surviving
a quarterfinal scare against Italy.
In the other room, the Italian
South made five spades exactly
for plus 450.
Here, after Nickell (South)
opened four spades, the Italian
West o.vercalled four no-trump to
show at least 5-5 in the minors,
not an obvious choice with such
a weak hand. East's five notrump was an attempt to invite a
grand slam in case his partner
" had the tickets."
Nickell bid six spades as a twoway action. If East-West could
make six diamonds, it would be a
cheap sac rifice. Yet if North had
the right ha nd (ace-do ubleton of
hearts and the spade ace, for
example) , six spades might even
make. ·
Six spades looked destined 10
finish one down, ,yet Nickell 's
guardian angel was working overtime. Nickell ruffed the diamond
lead, drew trumps, and playe9 a
heart to dummy 's ace. East
dropped the jack' And on the next
heart, East contributed hi s queen'
As Nickell claimed, East noticed
that he didn't have two diamond
sevens after all, that one ~as the
heart seven. Plus 1210 gave Nickell's team 13 international match
points, and they wo~ by eight
instead of perhaps losmg by 16.

mechanics
We service mowers,
chainsaws, tillers,
generators•, snowblowers,
weedeaters, pick-up and •
delivery available on

COMMERCIAL and RBIDOOI~l

A

17 LictnM plllle

-

BY

Futurtng two Brlgga 6
Strai!Dn trained

VISIT OUR SHOWROOM ON STATE ROUTE 33
6MilES NORTH OF POMEROY, OHIO AT COUNTY ROAD I8

SMITH'S COff5mOCTIOff

43 lllntd'ltncl8
45 ~ RIIICI
41 I'Kan, e.g.
47SidU
41flesl
51 tt.lrplece

Lucky and good

HOME

Owner .Jim Picken•

35537 St Rt 7 North

,.._

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

Mechanic- Bill

Advertise
in this .
space for
$50 per
.month.

37
term
40 Debauchee
41 Comedl8n
PhilipS

•rtrve~a'

• 8

BARNEY

,

992·6215

....... o.Jila Coualloo

1-800-291·5600

t

• K

South

Pomeroy, Ohio

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing

• Q J 7

.

Free Estimates
V.C. YOUNG Ill :

HEAP Voucben accepted for

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.

Eall
.. 9 5

Weal
.. 7

South
• K Q J 10 4 3 2.

-Any Size Double Hunr!·

992-4119

a

20 r\ng«
21 Chop 23 Cellfomle'a

• Q9 3

I

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Please VN#0234 77

,740·696·1176
or 740~696-1233

A 88
• A 6 2

" 4 3
tKJ542
•KQJ52

•looflog&amp;Gotllrl
• Vllyl Slolog ' ,.....,.
• Patio &amp; Por.. DoGs

35215 BaU Run Road

to-tHO

a

•llodrkoll '!:-'' t

1-800-272-5179or446-9800

SELLERS CONSTRUCTION

CLASSIFIEDS!

Nort

• · - 1~ilfloos &amp;I •1 t i.J
•llnr ......

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

•N9 Dealers or Contractors

·Custom Garages • Roofing ·
• Concrete Work • Decks
• Additions

,
......

YOUNG'S
•
CARPENTER SERVICE

·Firewood

"W.elp"

2ooo.
'apply or may be granted by (10)61TC

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SHOP THE

and -

10/41

VINYL REPLACEMENT

review process .
DSW, Attention: Permits
No exclusions or waivers, Processing Unit, . P.O. Box ·
as outlined by paragraph 1049, Columbue, Ohio

· 3745·1 ·05

IIDI

OFFICE EXPRESS
BUSINESS SERVICES

the application ehould do
by lhe Ohio EPA during the so In writing to . Ohio EPA·

·

f1:•tland , Ohio
Truck seats, ::ar seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats. r:notorcycle seats.,.
· boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon • F;·i 8:30 • s:oo
Over 40 yrs experience

·(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916

1049, Columbus, Ohio
Chapters 3745·1 end 3745· 43216·1049 by the close of
32
of
the
Ohio business on December 1,
Administrative Coda (OAC). 2000. Comments received
In accordance with OAC

Dump Truck Deltoa]&gt;

to any further action on the

application.

~

; • : •

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

Rutland, Ohio

Dance Sat. Night 9-1
Music by Rt. 33
Members &amp; Guests

presiding

.

: ' ; t,

BISSELL IUIL~ERS
INC.
Mums, Indian
lAPIIIes. APPle
Gift Items, Subs,
Sarlce, Ice Cream, 11m11~
DIOi!na. Summer Sausali!e, Beef Jerkll
742·7405

1

...

BIDII LDIIBIR
1'1'. RT. 141,
caa 1u

740-992-5232

140·992·1506

l4=::·
•

ACROSS

1&amp;~

collections, legal papers, investment records, photo
albums. cameras, household Inventory and
sentimental items will be sale.
For more information call

9/1100 1 mo pd

VFW of Mason

Number for this application
is 199700188.
The discharges from this
activity, if approved, would

1Pr,otB&lt;ct your guns. family heirlooms, coin

740·992-4559

"Good Times"
Come out and Party with
"Pipe Dope"
Sat. Night Oct. 7th
9 pm to 1 pm

Meigs Counties.
The
Huntington District Corps of
Engineer's Public Notice

fOR ffiORf InfO. PlfASf CAll

uu:e 're baclc to our

Thppers Plains
Cerlilied in Meigs,
Athens and

Racine Pizza Express
'949-4900
16" 3-item pizza
$8.99

miles to Darwin, Athens and

SECURITY'
PRODUCTS
·
'THE MOST muSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

33795 Hiland &amp;1.
Pollln'O'J&gt; Ohw

1!194 hrd Ringer P/U

The CountrY
Candle ShoP

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE
State Route 7,

Classes every Tues &amp; Thur.

opportunity

PHILLIP
ALDER

14 "St~-· pi
15 c..trw

SeU-Storage

1"Z fi!JII fll!lllllf'
1!193for.r-

7/22/fFN

6:30 pm $3.00 class

the U.S. 33 Interchange with

1"' Clllll1t flftt111d
lMI f«11l T1111'1""
1MI hrd lleml• Utn

740-992·1671

Aerobics Class
Royal Oak Resort
Begir,ming Tues. Oct. 1oth

Certification for a project to
place fill material In
conjunction with the
relocation of approximately

~~~
High&amp; Dry

1. . . . . .

MEA Crossword Puzzle

7 Actor - 13 Come Into -

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
Simington

.

w~

GOT IN'TO
TH' CAVE!

IIWniiOIII

Public Notice

BRIDGE

GO •we '0.
FOoZV!
TEl.l. '£It

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7 .

OOP

letYMr•n I l1r II
..........t II

12:00-5:00

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'•

by Luis Campos
·'

Celeblily Cipher crypi01Jtam&amp; are created from quotations by tllmOUS -·~¥_" and
present. Each tetter in the clphe~ stands tor another.
.

Today's clue: A equals U

.(

•o

MJD

TPWDDWT

WNOTWFZVB

swzzw

TJNOD,

#' •• , -

"

COD

OF

SPJOVVW. '

YL

CWP

LOPDZ

HUGANT

I: 1 I I! I I
2

NINOO

I

FI

~~

I l'
I

6

1.

II

r

o

NT Y

17
.

I. I_ ':'
.~

I

My son
daughter-in-law
couldn't afford to put new tile in
their new home. They say lhey
already have wall to wall · - - -- - - .

I

T 1 or E c
1--r--riiiiO'
allogll-."1

f t CompleJo lho chuckle quoted

V by fJIHng In the missing words
L-....1..-L-..1........1-.L......J vou devetop from step No. 3 below.

~ PRINT NUMBERED 11

t;:P LEITERS

A
V

UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

•

FORI

.

1 r 1 I' I' I' I' I
I II II I I II
I~

3

5

SCflAM.I.ETS ANSWERS
·z,pper- Owner- Tramp- Woeful - FROM t~.e TOP

"It's okay to think about being a pohlician, the dad
told his son, "but remember, governments are known to
leak FROM the TOP."

OCTOBER 6l

Mystenes
(CC)

••

MCY

lAM I

•

'

RJF

WOlD

•·'
when in the employ of another,
because good work will not go
unnoticed-- nor unrewarded. It'll
give you pride in your achievements.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Should you he called upon today
to step in and manage a development where another has losl con trol , don't be hesitant to take on
the role. You 'II do a dynamite job.
CANCER (June 21-July 22&gt;
When you concentrate on the end
results today. you're not apl to
walk away di sappointed This
includes both tan gible and intan gible invol w ment.s
.
- LEO (July 2.1-Aug . 22&gt; Your
ideas and innovations could be so
outstanding thai you could find
yourself being copied where you
go today . As the old saying goes,
"Imitation is the sincerest form of
llattery."
.
VIRGO 1Aug. 23-Sept. 221
Even though this is a weekend
day. it has the potential to be both
a .profiuible and productive day
for you . Focus on endeavors that
portend these possibilities.

J

ilKPWWF
ZWDZ .
.
PREVIOUS SO~UTION : "The barriers are not yet erected which can say to
aspirin~ genius: 'Thus far and no further."- Ludwig van Beethoven

'Your
'Birthday

dominating figure among your
·. Saturday, Oct. 7, 2000
... Because you' re not likely to peer group. whe.ther you want to
tepeat old mistakes, it opens the be or not.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
way in the year ahead for Lady
)
J,.uck to be quite available when 19 You' re apt lobe quite lucky 111
you' ll need her the most. It looks mosl'endeavors today, but perhaps
your best possibiliti es he wllhlll
!ike a good year.
: LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) If your financ;al affairs. Operate m
Your logic tells you something this realm when opportuntly
chancy looks good, it might be knocks.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Worth taking a calculated risk on
it, so long as it's nothing danger- It behooves you to be very atlentive to what others have to say
i!u s. You could be rather lucky
today. Trying to patch up a broken today, because some type of inspiromance? The Astra-Graph rational message may have a proMatchmaker can help you under- found effect upon your present
,4and what to do to make the rela- circumstances.
PISCES (Feb: 20-March 20)
tlonship work. Mail $2.75 to
Once
you start to poke around , it's
rii!atchinaker, c/o this newspaper,
Ito. Box 1758. Murray Hill Sta- very likely you'll uncover the
answers you're seeking. Your fac tfon , New York, NY 10156.
: SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ulties for research, probing or
~on ' t wait for others to call on deteetinll.. are very keen today.
~ u to do something today. Make · ARIES (March 21-April 19)
t~ e overture yourself. Shanng People with whom you have reatime with people you really like sons to team up with today will
c~n prove to be a pleasurable prove to be extremely lucky for
you. They will offer exactly what
c~peri e n ce .
you need to realize your hopes
~ SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec
2:1) Bcc au' c yo u project a charis- and expectat•ons.
(April 20-Mi.ly 20)
i,.;a toda y that ·"'Y
'· "Follow my PutTAURUS
forth your best efforts today
l ~)lll , .. yo u arc likely to be a most

sa

PWJT

CJT

0 F 0 Z P A. K Z 0 Y F D

I FRIDAY

•

...

CELEBRITY CIPHER

�•

•

•

P~~ge II • '"" o.lly Sentinel

.

n
••

PGA

Murphy in four-way tie for Michelob Championship lead ~

day

•

"I fed like I am playing some of my best golfiight
now," he said after finishing his round with a 25-foot
pun for birdie on the ~60-yard, par-4 ninth hole, the
most difficult hole in the opemng round.

No. 156, and time is running out for both of them
to climb into the top 125 and retain their pbying
privileges without having to head back to qualifying
·
school.
"I putted awesome," Beckman said after his -23putt round, which included 30-footers for birdies
three holes apart on the front side.
"Basically, I was trying to 2-putt both of them,
and they went in," he said. "Sometimes when you
don't try to make them, you make d-iem."
Damron seemed somewhat mystified by his play,
coming as it did on the course where he withdrew
in frustration after making the cut in 1998. •
"Traditionally, I've had a lot of trouble reading
putts here," Damron said, explaining that two years
ago he left certain he wouldn't figure the greens
oui. "Today, every putt seemed to do what I thought
it would do."
Early on, Pate and Hayes seemed destined to have

Murphy was I under at the turn, but said hitting
a 2-iron within 3 f~et on rhe par-3 second hole, his
11th hole, "kind of got me excited."
He followed with two straight birdies and then
another at No. 9 that tied him with Robert Damron, Steve Pate,J.P Hayes and Cameron Beckman.
Others, however, including two of the biggest
names in the field, struggled on the 6,853-yard
River Course at Kingsmill, where the humidity was
high and !J'mperatures were in the upper 80s.
Norah Begay Ill had two double-bogeys and shot
76 in his first round ever as a defending champion,
the wor.;t first round for a defender here. And twotime winner David Duval, coniing off a victory in
last week's Buick Challenge, was 3 over after four
holes before rallying for a 70.
Begay and Duval, though, don't have their future
at stake.
·
Beckman IS No. 149 on the money list, Murphy is

Jackson 41, River Valley 6

Gallia Academy 35, Athens 0

Nelsonville-York 35, Meigs 7

Frtdlly, October 8,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (AP) - Sean ,Murphy's
year on rhe PGA Tour h;u included a lot of distractions. There was a laws~it against a sponsor, the
death of his grandmother and a flood in his house.
"I feel like I had more forest fires going than the
state of Montana there for a while," Murphy said
Thursday after shooting a S-under-par 66 to grab a
share of the first-round lead in the Michelob Championship.
·:Most of them have been put out now."
And now, recently engaged and trying to turn
around the string of poor play that has caused him
to miss the cut in 14 ofhis lastl8 events, Murphy is
feeling better abour life -and he showed it Thurs-

Eastern 63, Federal Hocking 8

•

the lead to themselves. Going out in the third grou~
they put their 66s up and remained clear of the fiel4
until the three late finishers joined them.
::
Hayes, who played wirh Pate, was 1 under at thO
turn before hitting a 3-irdn close on No. 2, begin~
ning a stretch of four birdies in six holes.
:;
"It was nice to at least have somebody rha t I call:
watch make some putts and know that it could bci
done," Hayes said. ~·sometimes you wonder if it can
b~. done if the guy you are playing with isn't doin~

.

Details start on
PageB1

.

Miller 53, Southem 21

Point 17, Warren 0

Highs: 40s Lows: 30s

Guyan Valley 36, Hannan 0

Wahama ~. Gilmer County 13

DebllllonPIIpM

•

•

tmes

1.25

5

If.

Keith Clearwater, who gained his spot in the field
Wednesday, was at 6 7 with Frank Lickliter, BiOi
Andrade, Kevin Sutherland and Perry Moss.
1
Curtis Strange, a Kingsmill resident who has neve~
won here in 19 starts, opened with three consecu..:
rive birdies, but faded to a 70. It was his first round
under par in his last six over the 6,853-yard layout!

Ohio Valley Publishing co.

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pl Pleasant • October 8, 2000

Lentes responds
to special prosecutor notice

•

•

.

•

OHSAA

'

Association members to vote on limiting transfers!
.•

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)- It
took Pat Diulus two st:asons to
turn the dormant girls basketball
program at Regina High' School
into a sute chain pion.
He did it with hard work, a
knack for molding , talent mto a
cohesive unit ani:! something
schools often bendit from transfer students.
Ohio's open enrollment law
allows students living in one
school distnct to go to school in
another. But schools that feel
slighted by losing star athletes are
pushing for change.
Representatives from each of
the Ohio High School -Athletic
Association's 81 5 member schools
are voting this month on a set of
bylaw changes that would force
student-athletes to sit out a full
season if they transfer to another
school after they begin the ninth
grade. Exceptions would be made
for transfers prompted by a school

closing or family move.
If a majority approves, the
changes would take effect Aug. 1,
200 I - making things a linle
tougher for student-athletes who
will have to judge what opportunity is best for them before they
reach high schooL
"Our member schools that we
serve have pretty much come
across loud and clear that there's a
lot of concerns student-athletes
are jumping schools, particularly
as juniors and seniors," said John
Dickerson, an OHSAA assistant
comnusstoner.
The Legislature enacted open
enrollment in 1990, hoping it
would force educators to improve
acaden1ic programs to become
rnor,: competitive.
Some say it has put a burden on
athletic programs - in public
and private schools - by forcing
coaches to recruit out of fear of
losing the best players in their dis-

trier. OHSAA member schools
are not permitted to recruit :lthletes.
Dale Creamer, principal of
Brookville High School and a
vice president on the OHSAA
board, sa1d a survey showed that
1,000 students , transferred from
one school to another for athletic
reasons last year.
"Most wanted to play for a better team or have a better chante
at a college scholarship," he said.
The bylaw change could have a
profound impact on coaches like·
Diulus. Four of his five starters
from last season also played for
him at Garfield Heights Trinity,
where he won girls state basketball titles in 1990, 1994 and 1996.
But Diulus said a rule change is
needed to create parity am 0 ng
high school teams, even if it
means some schools will no
longer be dominant.
"When we left, right away a lot

of kids transferred over, and been recruited by Washington
there's no question that if that High and was, therefore, meligirule was in effect two years ago it ble. Scott's family sued and got a
would have been a problem," preliminary court order allowing
him to play last season.
Diulus said.
State Sen: Eugene Watts, who's
Scott earned Division I AllOhio
special mention hon'ors and
had run-ms with the OHSAA
before over low academic eligi- a scholarship to Akron, while the
bility requirements for a-thletes, OHSAA placed Massillon Washsaid new bylaws could conflict ington on probation · and forced
the school to forfeit any playoff
with open enrollment.
" I think when you're trying to game receipts until 2002.
develop better competitive modIn July the fifth District Court
els and give parents more choices, of Appeals upheld Common Pleas
th!S kind of goes against the Judge Richard D. Reinbold Jr.'s
grain," Watts said. He added, ruling in the case. Earlier this
"Why shouldn't a gifted athlete month, the judge issued a gag
go where they think they can get order, preventing the parties from
- better coaching, for example?"
discussing the case while negotithe OHSAA is in a legal fight ating a settlement.
with the parents of Jessie Scott, a
Before the ruling was issued on
football player who transferred Sept. 15, the lawyer for the Scotts
from Massillon Perry to Massillon said the case hadn't been settled
Washington in January 1999 in because Scott's parents thought
the middle of his junior year.
the OHSAA's bylaws regarding
The OHSAA ruled Scott ·had athlete transfers were ambiguous.

.

"Why does the association ·
choose to pursue ~omeone lik~
Jessie Scott when we see othe~
students transfer to other schoo ls~

There's no consistency," sai_q
lawyer Beth Raies. "I do thin~
that· there is a problem dealing
with high school athletes char
attempt to transfer and treating
them different than other stu•
dents who wish to transfer."
:;
OHSAA Associate . Commis~
sioner Deborah Moore sai4
changing the bylaws will makC
the rules uniform for everyone. ;:
"People are fed up with trans~
fers for athletic reasons. They,
don't believe most of the transfer}
are for edUcatiomil purppses," sh~
said. "Tightening up the transfer
rules is meant as a remedy to tbi•
thing. If athletics is important to
you, you must decide by grade
nine."

Steelers go back to basics with BetJis to .beat Jags ;

f

PITTSBURGH {AP) - The
Bettis, 28, doesn't want to leave
Pittsburgh Steelers went back to Pittsburgh -"Hey, it's a running
basics to get their first victory of back town," he said - but the
the season. To do that, they went Seeders have not made a big push
back to Jerome Bettis.
to re-sign him.
Bettis, in the last year of his
"It's sad, because every justificacontract and seemingly in danger tion they use (to judge a running
of being phased out uf the. offense back) is based on statistics, and it's
when traming camp Started, has
not fair to judge a running back
re-emerged as the player that b~sed just on. ~tatlstics ," Bc:ttis said
defd1ses must contain to stop the of the talk that his career is on the
Steelers' offense.
downlide .
''I'm not a wa&lt;hed-up player,"
When the Stcder" wt..·re winsaid Bettis, who wa~ expected to ning, his statistics ( 1.431 yards in
split time with Richard Huntley 1996. I,C.hS yard1 111 .l ~97) wore
at running back but instead has far better than the last two seagotten most of the carries .
sons, when he gained slightly
· Bettis was a seemingly forgot- more than 1,000 yards cJCh year
ten man in thl' Steclers' offen!'le on teams that went 7-9 Jnd 6-10.
lm season. despite rushing for
Coincidence' Not re;~lly. With
more than I .000 yards for a Kordell Stewart unable to throw
fourth consecutive year. In a sea- consistently in 1998 and !999,
. son that reflected the 6-10 team defenses frequently stockecl c1ght
he played for, Bettis had only two defenders aroLmd the line of
100-yard' games and was held · scrimnta.gc to take away the one
under SO yards five t1mes.
reliable element of the Steelers'
This season, Bettis already had offeme, B~ttis' runmng. ,
one 100-yard game (133 yards,
''I'm just like any other running
ohe touchdown) against Cleve- back; if I can't get td the line of
land and nearly had another one scrimmage, I'm not going to be
(97 yards, two touchdowns) in the able tO' help you," Bettis said. "But
~teelers' first victory, 24- 13 Sun- if I can get to the line- of scrim"
day at Jacksonville. He also had 77 mage, well .. ."
yards and a touchdown two
Bettis reahzes his future in
weeks ago against Tennessee.
Pittsburgh is uncertain, but he is
With 315 yards and four touch- convinced he still has a future downs, BettJs IS ahead of his pace maybe four or five more seasons
of a year ago of 232 yards and no -in the NFL.
touchdO\vns throu gh four games.
" I still consider myself one of

the better running backs in the
..,¥illlle," said. Bettis, who has rushed
for ·more than 1,000 yards in all ·
but one of his sewn NFL seasons,
However, if this is his last year.
in Pittsburgh, at least he's going
out running . .The Seeders (1-3)
rushed for 209 yards against Jacksonville and, as the on ly NFL
team Wtthout J touchdown pass,
an: rdying on th~::ir runmng gante
as much as they did when they
were winning consistently.
"We've made a cmmnitment co·

run the ball. and it is a beautiful
thing," Bettis ;aid. "There were
times (against Jacksonville) that I
wasn't touched until I was well
past the lin e of scrimmage."
Of course, running against the
New York Jets (~-0) on Sunday
might not be quite as easy, especially if Kent Graham or Stewart
- coach Bill Cowher sti ll hasn't
SJid who will start at quarterback
- can't get the ball downfield.
The Jets haven't allowed a rushing touchdown or a run longer

than 16 yards this season.
-·
"They know how to stop the
run," Bettis said. "We might not
get a lot of big plays, but we've
got to stay with the run because
we're going to haVe to· be able to
run the ball to be successful
there."

With

ZERO "0"% Finan. .&amp;--·
Monthly Payment

Finanee Charges
Term

$20,.
9.24%
•
$417.50
$5,050.00
60 Months

$20,.

,,_ ,._.,"' Apprcciatloni
Pastor
LcsHayman

"0"%

$333.33 .
"$0"
60 Months

From the
Congregation

Putor Lea Hayman
With Much

Appreciation

t

BOXING

.

· Arum, Kushner banned from fi,~
HURRY... SELECTION LIMITED
matches in Atlantic City
T Applies to 2000 Model Bonnevilles, Grand Ails,
.

.

EAST NEWARK , NJ (AP) Bob Arum and Cedric Ku shner
could be banned from sr.1gmg
boxing- macche-. 111 Atla1Hi c City if
stJtt.' ~:pmin g rl'g uLJt ~n ' .1g rcc
th c1 r . tdiJII \~ JOil "l o f hrdwn· nuke
t hem unflt f( w

o,_. l '.Jt!n

Arum and Kushna It S Nov. 1 meenn g.

as soon as

I ' 11]1 1·

:

rt

I

,

1

BY BRIAN J. REED
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

of the·
Ash Street
· Church

Bv

TONY M. lEACH
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

OMEROY
Images of swashbuckling pirates
and courageous
adventurers were conjured
up over the weekend as
the Nina, a replica of the
ship first used by C::hristopher Columbus during his
1492 voyage to North
America, docked at the
Pomeroy Levee fqr a
week-long visit.

P

Pomeroy Mayor John Dlaettnar
and Councilman · John Musser,
who coordinated the \'Jina's visit,
were among those who greeted
the ship 's captain and crew on
Thursday afternoon, as spectators
lined
the promenade
and
amphitheater, hoping; to catch a
glimpse of the famous replica.
Iluilt in Bahia, Brazil by the
Columbus Foundation, the Nina
is an exact rep lie~ of a Columbus
era " caravel," a Portuguese ship
type used by Collii\Jbus andother
early explorers. The ship was built
entirely by hand and employed

+

designs and construction · tech- . -~r;;:;~~~;
niques dating back"to the 15rh ,I

1

The ship, 93.6 feet in length,
was designed by John Patrick
Sarsfield and Jonathan Morton
Nance, and cost around $500,000
to build.
The replica has been touring
continually since 1992 as a "sailing museum" to educate the public and school children about sailing ships of this era. ·
"We always get an excellent
turnout," said Ed Schneider, second mate aboard the Nina. "Most
individual&gt; won't pass up an
opportunity to see such a unique
vessel."
"People are always asking if
this is the actual size of the original,': added Schneider. "I feel that
history books don't offer a realistic perspective of the size of these
ships. The small size, I believe,
'really showcases the hardships
that sailors of this time had to
endure."
Unlike the harsh living conditions that were prevalent on most
ships ·of the era, the replica is
equipped with more modernized
amenities, such as World War 11style pipe berths for the crew to

Mill

HISTORY LESSON - Ed Schneider, second mate aboard the Nina,
delivers an oral presentation Friday morning to students of Metgs
Local High School. While in port. thl) general public will have access
to the ship, for a walk-aboard, self-guided tour. (Tony M. Leach photos)
sleep in, ~n icebox which holds believed you."
"This has really been an
1,000 pounds of ice and a small
incredible experien ce," added
propane stove for cooking.
O'Meara.
"One that I will never
"It's a good deal of hard work,
c
..
but 'i t . is also a tremendous target.
The Nina replica was featured
amount of fun," said crewman
john O'Meara. "If I was told 20 in the production of the film
years ago that I would be part of
the Nina's crew, I wouldn't have
Please see Nina, Page Al

MHS homecomi.ng court

Good Morning!

Onl~5.
Bowling Green State and Miami University enjoyed a rainbow oyer their
soccer game Friday. (AP photo)

Flll out coupon below and
The
Daily Sentinel • Ill
,..

~lasslfleds

1---------------------------------,Your Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___
IAddress:, _________________________

1Phone: _______________

Cll!3
D)·7
1n1ert

Calendars

:Mcssagc: ______~----------

County
~~··-* '"'dge
. ..

"homec oming" them e.
It has been I 0 years smc e
RIO GRANDE - "A celecomments
were made that led
bration of success" is how Jake
Bapst, coordinator for the Ohio• to OACHE's creation.
Past board members will be
Appalachian Center for Higher
Education , describes the seventh joining current board members
annual OACHE conterence and others in a disruo.;sion about
Oct. 19-21 at the University of OACHE 's programs, trom conRio Grande/Rio Grande Com- ducting rhe Access and Success
study and the form al creation of
munity College.
"] particularly appreciate the OACHE to present activities.
" I am so pleased former board
work being done by so many
members
will be joining us for
local school distncts to make
sme that Appalachian students this homecoming Conferenc t&gt;."
have an in centive ro cnminue to said Dr. Lynn Willett, president
succeeJ and move toward high- of Mu skin gum Are.1 Technical
er education," said llapst, who is C.ollegc and a founding m emlwr
also director of Rio Grande 's niOACHE .
"Their participation speaks to
Media Center :111d ProJeCt
tht&gt;ir tru e love and con cern for
CHAMP.
the Ghio Appalachian region.''
More than 25 breakout sesWillett said. "] invite everyone
s i on~ are on the ag;cnda .and can
wh o ha~ e.ver attended an
be previewed on the OAC:HE
OAC HE conferen cl' to jOin m
web site. WW\\.'.oach~-.o rg . A speon thi ~ "Pl' lld l occl sio n ."
cial fe;-~tun· of rhi"' yl· ,u \ confC rPlease see OACHE, Page Al
ence is wh;1t organi zers ca ll the

I.

Grand Prixs, Montanas, Regals and Centuries.
LIMITED TIME OFFER

POMEROY -Just prior to
a Friday deadline, Meigs County Prosecutor John Lentes filed a
response to Judge Fred W. Crow
lll's notice of intent to appoint a
special prosecutor to investigate
Lentes' handling of a drug case.
Lentes now says that Crow
cannot act further on the case
until a ruling is issued from the
Ohio Sup.reme Court on documents. that Lentes filed earlier
this week.
The response comes almost
two weeks after Crow filed the
immunity from · any fur tht:r
notice, alleging "possible crimicriminal prosecution , and . a' h e
nal activity" in the way that
PleaSe see Lentes, Page Al
Lentes handled the forfeiture of

FROM STAFF REPORTS -

CiAHS homecoming court

i~~

personal and real property in ~
drug forfeiture case against Fre?
Priddy, and the disposition a.id
return of that prop erty as thr
result of the settlem ent of a sub~
sequent civil suit filed by Priddy
and his wife, Barbara.
As a term of that agreement,
p ersonal property was to be sold
to satisfy federal and state
income tax debt , and the real ·
property was to be retain ed by
the county.
Crow, in his 11 ·-page docu.
ment, filed Sept. 27, alleged I G
individual points of misconducl
on Lentes ' part, including allegations that the county illegally
paid Priddy's $13 ,000 fine using
.forfeiture· money, that personal
property was improperly sold,
that Lentes offered Priddy
unconditional and perm anent

OACH E to stage
conference .at URG

century.

'Cburcb: ________________~-----------

Plo..,t'( lltor' ,l'ikl'd rhl' ( -,J'I. t llo
C o ntrol Co nHlH S\l o n to rt.:vokc
the li cen 5es, ba ~ t.· J wn t c~ nm o n y
th 3t Arun1 JIHi Km hnn g.J\'t: dur-

l

that Crow must
await ruling

•Pastor's Name__________-'-----

· ll n.: n -.&lt;.: ~

' • I. .

From the Congregation of
the Ash Street Church

~ntes Y~naintains

_______ _

hthJ il r..' \'

ing IBF head Bob Lee's tr1.&gt;l
Th l' co mmlli'ilo n co11 ld cn no;; ld-

Graham again practiced with
the starting offense Thursday, and
is likely to get the start Sunday,
although Cowher said, "He still
isn't 100 percent yet."
Stewart, as he did Wednesda~
also took some snaps with the
starrers.

Save ABundle
Financed
Finance Rate

SHIP
EXAMINATION
- Dorris Arnold
and Stacy
Wood, juniors at
Meigs Local
High School,
examine a
"ship's boat"
aboard the
.,
Nina, an
authentic repli·
· ca of Christopher Columbus·
caravel, which
is in Pomeroy
' this week for a
six-day visit.
Because of the
absence of constructed docks
in the New
World, a "ship's
boat" provided
the only transportation to
shore from the
anchored mother ship.

Ship replica creates waves of excitement

.

Vol. 35, No. JJ

_ _ _ __

---" '- -- -.-----------•• All Mlljor Credit Cards_ Accepted

THE QUEEN AND HER COURT - Senior Gretchen Qraig (fourth from _leff) was named
Galli a Academy's 2000 homecoming queen during the annual ceremomes held Fnday at
Memorial Field . Pictured from left to right are Dustin beckard, Jod1 Merry, Ike Stmmons,
Craig, Alle n Skinner, Jamie Allie, Nick Tipple, Heidi Cody, Matt Bush and Jenmfer Eblm.
(Doug 1ShiRiey photo)

•

'

Comics
Editorials
M!lneJ
Obituaries
SJ!Orls
Stocks .
Tem)!D

M
~1

AS
81·8
~1

Cl-8

C 2000 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

MHS HOMECOMING COURT- Making up the MHS homecoming court were, from left.
Derric~ Bolin, who escorted Shannon Price ; Adam Shank, who escorted Cara Ash; queen
Andrea Krawsczyn, escorted by Nick Dettwiller;, Tiffany Quails, escorted by Carson Midkiff; and Bethany McMillin, e scorted by Ian Story. Flower girl was Allison Dettwiller and
the crown bearer was Jacob Dunn . (Charl e ne Hoeflich photo )

'

•

�</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="25510">
            <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="25509">
              <text>October 6, 2000</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4393">
      <name>domigan</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1088">
      <name>humphreys</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="35">
      <name>nelson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
