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Peele Dl• 6uabq t:imH-6entinel

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SUnday, October

Pomeroy • Middleport • G•lllpolla, Ohio • Point Plnznznt, WY

••
8, 200Cl
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~nds

fnWII ..... Dl
dian (i.e., an adult) in control of
the money until the child reaches
the age of ltllljority in their state.
Whafs great about these kinds
of account!~ is that monies in
.them can be used for anything:from college education to the
.:down pay~ on new cars,
::homes, or whateVer - once the
~hild becomes an adult. There is
:)!so no limit on the amount of
:money that can be invested . in
'"them each year, as there would be
"if you were opening, say, an Edu&lt;ation IRA. On the other hand,
:each year there may be tax conseijuences on the account. Also,
)ome earnings may be .exempt
:from federal income tax, and
:some taxes at the child's or their
yarent's nte.
• • State 529 Plans. Named after
:Zhe 529 section of the Internal .
:Revenue Code, monies in these
).ccounts are earmarked to pay
:expenses at qualified and accredited colleges and institutions.
: One nice thing about "these
programs is that the monies in the
• :accounts can be tnrisferred to
another member of the family. So,
jf the child this account was orig?nally set up for decides not to go
to college, monies can be used to
:"fund another sibling's education·.
: As for taxes on earnings in
: these accounts, they'll be deferred
until the monies are withdrawn.

• Education IRA. Decide to
open an Education IRA and
you're only able to contribute
SSQO per year to it until your
Dl
child is age 18. And eligibility
begins to phase out if your adjust~ be paid. You will then instruct
ed gross income is $95,000, or your employer with respect to the
$150,0090 for those filing jointly. distribution.
When it comes time to take
This sort of "direct rollover"
this money out, earnings will be can be accomplished either by the
taxed as ordinary income. Again, company sending the distribution
if you don't follow the rules directly to the IRA trustee or by
regarding this account, there may having the distribution check
be penalties to pay. Like the 529 ltlllde payable to that institution.
Plans, these accounts are transferYour third choice is to ask for a
able to other family members. check in the amount of the lump
Understand, however, that if sum distribution. If you elect to
you'd like to set up both an Edu- receive the distribution in cash.
cation IRA and a 529 Plan for the your employer is required to
same child, you won't be able to withhold· 20 percent of the
make contributions to both in the amount for taxes.
san1e year.
Thi1 means, for example, that if
For more information about you are due S100,000 in a lump
college education com and plan- sum, you will receive a check for
ning, American Century's nifry
cardboard calculator is free for the
asking by calling (800) 345-2021,
weekdays 7 ·a.m. to 7 p.m. CST.
The Federal Student Financial
Aid Information Center's tollfree number is (800) 433-3243,
weekdays 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. CST, or . problems should not be grazed for
VISlt
their
Web
site, long periods of time.
www.fafsa.ed.gov. To learn more
OSU Extension advises that proabout. the cost of college, check ducers planning to feed corn
out www.collegeboard.org .
residue, should check with their
Dian Vi~"ovich 's most recent books NRCS/SWCD office to make
include "101 Mutual Fund FAQs" sure that such a feeding program is
(Chandler ·House) and "10-Mim•te not in violation of their conser\laGuide to tire. Srock Market" tion plan.
(Macmillan). To learn more about
For information about feeding
mruual funds, visit lrff Web site at; crop residue this fall, call the OSU
www. dianifrmdfreebies.conr.
Extension office at 446-7007.
Ag news
Tobacco producers - The
that specialize m consumer Phase II Tobacco Settlement inforfinance.''
mational meetings are scheduled
Millions of other consumers deal for Monday.
more clirecdy with Associates Fint.
The first meeting will be held at
A young couple, for instance, the Senior Resource Center in
might obtain a home equity loan Gallipolis beginning at 10 a.m.,
through A5sociaies, and an inde- and the second, at Hannan Trace
pendent trucker might rent a trac- Elementary School in Mercerville,
tor trailer through the company's beginning at 8 p.m.
heavy equipment leasing business.
All producers are encouraged to
"By definition, Associates First attend.
isn't trying to be a household
Additional assistance for setname," sald Moshe Orenbuch, an tlement applications will be
analyst at Donaldson Lufkin &amp; Jen- provided by OSU Extension on
rette in New York.
the following days: Oct. 17, 6-8
Apparently, it doesn't need to be. p:m., and Oct. 20,8 a.m.-noon.
The company is expected to have
Both sessions will be held in the
about $1.7 billion in profits this large meeting room at the Ag Cenyear from its global operations, ter, therefore, participants should
which include 2,750 offices in the
United States and 13 other coun.
tries. In 1999, Associates earned
$1.49 billion on revenue of $12.1
billion.
The acquisition by Citigroup
was universally praised by analysts
on the basis that a merger will only
serve to strengthen two already
powerful
entities. Moreover,
because the companies have considerable .overlap, especially in their
consumer finance units, duplicated
services can be eliminated at a cost
savings to the combined company.

Money
flam .....

Bymes
from Pa1eD1

:-----------------------------•

Deal

fromPapDl
: credit card for future purchases.
: The finan cial details of both the
: long-term finance agreement and
: future credit card transactions
: would be handled by Associates
: First Capital.
: "The customer probably h:U no
idea that Associates First lS
involved," said Joe Bruyer, who
, manages a Tractor Supply store in
:Council Bluffs, Iowa.
The same is probably true of the
Texaco, R.ldio Shack or Home
Depot card holder.
In fact, 80 percent of Associates
First's credit card business is done
through partnerships with retailers
that deal directly with consumers,
said company spokes11tan David
Sandor.
"The Associates brand is not
necessarily front and center. It's
usually the partner's name that the
-consumer sees;• Sandor said. "But if
:you're in the oil business, you're·
:probably most competent in mat:ters dealing with energy. so many
:companies prefer C-.J outsource to
:qrganizations like the Associates

Save ABundle

park at the rear of the building and Thursday, most of us away from the
enter through the meeting room. river were anticipating a killing
Producers can also stop by the frost by Sunday. Late ordered and
Extension office anytime for assis- arriving plants, an early frost, and
tance with the application.
every kind of trouble imaginable in
Please call first, to ensure that an
agent will be in the office.
The tobacco banquet is set for
this Tuescby. Dr. Phil Hunter of the
University of Tennessee will be
here .t o address the participat:Jts on
the high incidence of tobacco
viruses this year, as weU as provide
a research and production update.
If you would like to attend,
please call the OSU Extension
office on Monday at 446-7007.
Pepper producen - As of

Volume

Louis W. Cennamo
Local Appointments
For Your Convenience

1-614-221-0888
Will The Lawyer You
Pay Appear In Court
With You?

170 billion
lunches have
been served
through the
National School
Lunch Program,
since it was
enacted by
President Truman ih 1946.
Students are
served lunch,
breakfast, and
sometimes a
snack through
the program ,
many at
reduced or no
cost. Here, children at Middleport Elementary
School lined up
for a chicken
sandwich and
other tempting
foods for their
lunch on Friday.
This week is
National School
Lunch Week.
(Tony M. Leach
photos)

BY KATIE CROW
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

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00 unc

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1·877·345·2880

system. The theme 'is "Team Up
for School Lunch ."
Established in 1946 by Congress . and Pn:s id~llt Harry Truman, the Natioml School LtJnc!t
program has cunrl'ntratcd on
helping children grow and be·
healthy, and most importantly. to
give children the· nutriti\J n they
need to "tay alert in the cia~~ room.
"Nothing is more important in
our national life than the welfare
of our ch ildren, and proper nourishment comes first in attaining
thjs welfare," Truman sa id , in
signing the National School
Lunch Act.
According to the U.S. I lt'p;t rt-

Today begins
National School

Lunch Vf.i&gt;ek ·
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Get 2,000 B
Minute ·or
o .n.e

M

IDDLEPORT
- Pizza, "Tater
Tot:;"
and,
always, fish on Friday. All
of us remember the school
lui1ches of our childhood.

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Audiovox

MVX480

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Today begins National School
Lunch Week to recognize the
National Sc hool Lu nch Program ·
and its role in the public sc hool

Piease see Lunch, Page Al

Clinton speaks to Ohio Democrats by phone

ChiMicoihe
In-Touch Wireleu &amp; Moro
34 Eost Welar
1740)779-6999
Gallipolis
USCC Wai·Mart Koosk
2145 Eastern A.veliue
1740)441·1066

JockiOft
ClmicPiw
408 E. Huron
1740!288.0011

'

New llooton
U.S. Cellulor
New Boston Shopping Center
4010 AhodH Avo.
1740)458-8722 .

Porllmouth
Hilhop Conter
2736 Scioto Trail
1740)355-0058
Wovetty
USCC Woi-Mart Kiosk
900 West Emmit Avenue
1740)947.0069

AIM, OIIM 1M vfllt OM of our Wai-M1rt loc.tlons: New Boston, Jackson.
Fpr your convenience we have over 80 authorized agent locations.

Outside con~ultentl ere IVIileblt upon request.

»id Kena Hudson:\pokeswoman tor the Ohio
Democratic Party.
Supporters still forked over $5,000 per co uple
fi" brunch and $98 a piece for the rally afterward , The Ohio Democrats ~aiscd more than
$375,000 Saturday..1crording tn .1 written st;~te­
ment released aftu the c\..:enr.
Former Sen. Joh n Glenn went fmrn being
there co introduce the president, to being told
he would be the featured speaker, to introducing Clinton when the president called in.

included a fund-raiser for his wife's Senate campaign and remai"ned in Washington thmughout
COLUMliUS- Ohio Democrats said two the day.
·
fund-raisers produced $375,1100 despite Presi"The president has been up early this morndent Clinton canceling his appearance because . ing making telephone calls on the Middl e East,
working on the Middle East," White H ouse
of unrest in the Middle East.
In bctwet:n .Jiscussi ons with members of hi s spokeswoman Nandra Chitre said. "He feels he
national security team and lsraeh Prime Millis- needs to stay in Washington to continue to
ter Ehud llarak and Palestinian leader Ya.sser work on these issues."
Party organizers were already at the Aladdin
Aratar , Clinton 'till l(mnd a few minutes to
Shriners'
Complex in northeast Columbus Sataddress the Ohio Democrats by phone Satururday morning when they got word from the
day.
He also had to scrap a trip to Indiana that White House tha t Clinton couldn't make it,
BY KATE ROBERTS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Classes could resume
Wednesda at school
where roo collapsed
Chillicothe
U.S. Callulor
750 Weotom Ave.
1740)702·4872

'•' ' ('

nt·.

Council OKs
paving bids

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For more Information call:

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Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Number 9S

LUNCH TIME!

I~o You Have Diabetes?

Attorney

s1

Hometown Newspaper

SYRACUSE

t'

ZERO "0"% Finan
$20,000
"0"%
$333.33
"$0"
60 Months

Mel1s County's

a

f¥.e you having trouble controlling
blood sugar with diet and exercise?
You may be eligible to participate in a research
study and receive AT NO COST:
e Active diabetes medication
e Glucose monitoring supplies
e Study related medical care and testing
e Diabetes and nutritional education
A research study is looking for patients who:
e Have been previously diagnosed with diabetes
e Are NOT taking any diabetes medicati~n
e Are 20·78 years of age

Odober 9, lOOO

•

between has ltlllde for challenging year. As for the European corn
borer situation and company
acceptance of ·our product, no
news is good news.

With

Financed .$20,000
9.2(%
Finance Rate
Monthly Payment $(17.50
Finanee Charges $5,050.00
GO Months
Term

Details, A3

$80,000. When you til~ your 'nported as taxable on the 1099. taxes when you file your We
income we return at lhe end of Ill Older to avoid this taxatic;m, the return.
the year, you must pay any addi- full $100,000 must be rolled over. . If you have company stock iit
tional tax due on !he ..distribution
This means you will have to your retirement plan, there afe
(in exceu of the 20 pen:ent )UU a,dd back the 20 percent that was different tax implications you
already paid).
.
withheld to ltlllke the distribution may want to explore before maltIf you were 50 years old or complete. The 20 percent that ing any decision. Se your UX
older as of Jan. 1, 1986, you may was withheld can lhen be "recap- advisor for more details.
;:
be eligible for favonble tax rreat- r d " when the tax return i$ filed
What does all this mean ~o
ment such as 10-year averaging. f!~lhat year.
_people who expect to receiye
Otherwise, taxation at your ordiOr, a portion of your distribu- lump sum distributions? Decinary iQcome tax nte, plus a 10 "tton can be rolled over. If, as in sions about their distributio.ns
pen:ent early wilhdrawal penalty our example, you roll over only will have to be ltlllde before die
may apply.
the $80,000 YoU actually receive, check is acru~lly cut.
::
If you choose .the third option, the $80,000 would' not be subject
It also means that bot" employyou may still roll the distribution to taxes until withdrawn from the ers and employees must be mote
into an eligible receiving plan rollover account.
aware of all the alternatives availsuch as an IRA rollover account
Since the 20 percent or able. Your financial advisor o~n
or another qualified retirement $20,000 that was withheld was provide information on the ~~
plan provided you do so within not rolled over, it will be subject course of action in your individ60 days of the distribution.
to ordinary income tax plus ua] case.
In this case, 100 pen:ent of the penalties, if applicable. You can
(K. Ryan Smith is an investnrtht
distribution, that b the full wid!lpture" the part of the 20 executive with Advest Inc. in its GnlSI 00,000 in our example, will be pen:ent that is not really owed for lipolis '!ffice.)

Monday

Meigs society news and notes, AS · .
Browns, Bengals fall in NFL action, Bl

Tuesd_,-

HIIh:50s;Latw:50S

CLEVELAND (AP) - Classe'
won't resume until at least
Wednesday at East High School,
whc-rt! officials and t'nginl'ers plan
to Cake at least t\VO more days to
investigate the cause of Friday's
g;yii JJia~itllll roof collapse.
" I h.we been meeting throughout the weekend with members
of my "tatf tO determine how,
when .md where classes may
resume for the East High School
co nirmrni ty," Uarbara Hyrd- Uen nc' tt, chief executive of the Cleveland Municipal School District,
"')d Sund:1y.

"We are working hard to
resolve a number of issU~s by
early in the week," sh!! said;t,
6istritt co mn1uni carions 1·1 c hief
William Wendling said il was
unlikely the collapse had any
effect on the rest of the building.
The rest of the school's roof was
designed ditfercnt!y and built
with different m,ltL'na]..,, he '&gt;aiJ.
Five people who were in ;1
room beneath the bl)'l11 ~ufft·rt·d
minor inju ries tfom the c.wc-111,
which occurred JUSt betore noon
Friday alter several days nf heavy
winds and rain .

Please see Clinton, Page Al

Today's

Sentinel
Sections - n

Pages

1

Calendar
Classified•
Comics

A~

B2-4
B~

M

Editorial~

Obituari!,!S
S11orts

A3
Bl, 6

W11~ther

A3

Lotteries
omo
Pick J: (&gt;-11-5; Pick 4: 3-4-0-4
Super Lotto: 1-5--\h- 29-12-40
Kicker: 4-J-4-t)-(,...6

W:YA.
Daily 3: 6- 6-9 Daily 4: 1-3-5-.l
~

't~ ~01~1

Oh111\'Alkv

l*ul•h~hlllt&lt;:-

Cn

C0111tUittt:C.

SYRACUSE- Svracusc Village Counci l mer ,.;irh Robert
Wingett, grants administrator,
during its regular meeting
Thursday, and accepted bids for
the village's paving projects.
The bid for asphalt materials
was accepted from Tom Mayle
&amp; Sons Construction Co .•
Bartlett, in the amount of
$40,475, and a bid for laying the
blackmp was accepted from the
Shelly Co. ofThornville.
Wingett said a grant ha s been
received in the amount of
$49,854, with the vi llage paying
the difference.
Wingett said that the paving
of College Road, :md Fourth
and Sixth streets, will begin
around Oct. 25.
ln other business, council dis- .
cussed liability insu rance, and

Clerk/Treasurer Sharon Cotterill said the t.'Xilitlng pn\icic~ do
not mclude rcpl.trL'IllL'Ilt co.;;t&gt;.
for vehicles insurc·d .
Council wi ll take the matter
under consideration. Cotterill
also dis cussed the
Public
Employees Retirement Systein
with council nwmbcr&lt;;.
Cotterill said she h ad bc,·n
advised th :u dll' berm .1lnng
Roy Jones Road needed imme diate- repair, .wd the m;lttO.:T was
referred to tin· \'i IL1 gl' .. rn:·cl

She added that the water
board has raised water tap fees to
$250.
Trick or Treat night was set
for Oct. 26 from 6-7:30 p.m. A
siren wi ll sound to begin and
end the festivities, and council
discussed and strongly encouraged parents to park their cars
and walk with their children,
rather than drive children from
house to house.
Cou neil cited safety concerns
&lt;lnd urged parents to act responsibly and us~ good se nse when
accompanying their children.
Mayor
Larry
Lavender
encouraged members of th~
ordinance Lommittee to begin
studying ordinances.
Residents were reminded not
to place yard sak signs or any
other signs over street signs.
Lavender asked co uncil to
study the ordin ance on the collection of barhagl' ,md rubbi-;h,
and exptu11ed that Jt will t.tke
two to three month~ before rlw
project could he completed.
Fo llowin~; the me eting, council di~cmo;t&gt;d the garbage onli n;mce, but no action wa" taken.
C.:ounc\1 a}m:.
• Awhorized the · Third
Wednc..;dav Club to U'i.l' the
municip.1\ building (or theJr

Please see Village, Page Al

Doctors turn to rocket
scientists for health help
E.Kh dcvic~· would co ntain .1
monitoring ~y"itL'11l dt.''il ~lll'd t1) computer .-hip to IW&lt;lrJ everYfo ll ow cxpcr im l'nts on tilL' thing th.1t i&lt; happ c·ning wrth ·a
intanational sp.tLl' ,.r,uion could p:tticnt. t!·om bc,hidc: monitor
be rr.msformcd ro &lt;1Ho\\" doctnro, rc.H.lings ro lab fl.''\t results to
accc~s to a p;1ticnt\ cmin· medmedJC;"Jtion Information.
ical history over the Internet.
All till' lllformation would hL··
Doctor&lt; ,l t the· CJe,·dan.d \ent to a co ntinuall y updated .
Chnic are p.1rtnenng \vith co m- database that any of the patimt \
puter expert~ at Ch.·\-el.md's . caregivers co uld t:lp into from
NASA Glenn Rcle"arch Ce nter any loc.:uion around the world
to (:kve'l op the system. -, hey· tlur ha:-. Internet .tCCt'SS.
believe it could reduce medical
The C:"lin ic will apply for ·
mtstakes that krll tem . of· thou - more than $1 million in feder.1l
~.1nds of hosp1tal p.ttil' llt' L'Vcry g r,lllt rnoJH.· y l P devl'iop the
yt.tr and injure nH)l"l' tlun J mil- proJtTt. II the llH •Ih.'Y L"OI11L'S

CLEVELAN!l (AI') -

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lion .
"The idt'.l j., e\..,L'Illi.llly that
ev~ry medical deYin:. in theory.
co uld jack into ,\ll Internet

receptacle." &lt;aid Dr.
Mock! is of the Clinic.

Roger

throu~h.

thl· ~)'litl'lll "'oLild be in
place within two y~..·ars, M.1ckli"'
said.·
Computer .,ciemisr., at NASA

Please see Help. Page Al

Outgoing Miss America earned
raves from homel.ess veterans
)'

BY JOHN CURRAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

rcvic,,-, ti·om .uivoc.ttc'i. 111 the tic\J.
"On C.1pitol HilL in tht· c&lt;Jmmunitics. with our
po~t...,, ,he was just Cmr.tsnc:· . . aid Stl'\'e Thom:-~ .... a
. . pnkL·-.m.m fur thl' American Legmn. tht nation's
l.lrg;l~..,t \'ctcram organization.
In No,·c tnbcr, .Prco;;itkm. &lt;. :lmron ..;,1luted her
dl'ort.., .It ,1 Vctn:ms D.1y t'Vt'llr.
In Fdwtury. she urged Kenwcky l.nvmakers to
~l·ck fl·tkr.ll money for her home ~t.lte 's .)50,()\)()

ATLANTIC CI TY, N.J.- Every conrmder tor
the Miss America crown adopto;; a c~m~c- be it ht er:1cy,AIDS advocacy or Jnoth-.-r sol"ial issue.
Some do so became it's a pagc;mt re-quirement.
Not Heather French, ,t he rciguing !\~iss America
who spent much of her ye,tr lobbying lawmakers for
more support tOr homek•s-; Vt'ter~m;,;. Her p!Jtforlll
ran mu ch deeper tlun pagcJnt protocoL
\'l'tl'f.llh.
"It wasn'tjulit .1 platform fOr me." Fn:nch, 25, rhe . In M arch. "hc ,J..,kl'd th.tt Si:iO,OtlO ofthc·Dcp.utdaughtL'r of a V1rtnam vetl'ran , '&gt;clld Sunday Ill ,m lllL'Ilt of Hou•dll~ and Urb.m Devel opme nt bud get
intc-rvil'\V looking hack on her reign. "Bein~ .1bk to be dL'\'OtL·d tLl hnmdL''' \'l'tt.:r,ul\.
show Amcnca that we haven 't t:tken ore of our Vl't~
In 1\.~ .1~.... lw rod e .1 mnrnn-..,.rk through W.l'ihmg~:r,m~ the w.1y \' c should h.lVe, it w ,t.., vny t'lllotion ton. 1).( ., dunng _.1" 1-\. niJmg rhundcr"' r.lll)' to CO illal."
llll'lll Ol'.H c pn..,n lll'r' of ' ' ,1r .md \'et l'r ,\11\ .. n ll 1111\..,Jng
Appc.1ring ,It ... bdtero,, ..,pct~king to f!;l"UUP' .111d lob - 111 ,il lll1 1l
bying Congn.·..,:-. for hl·ttn progr.1111~ durin ~ hn
2.0,000 - mik -.l-nwmh tnur, fn•n l h c,1rnt'J r.l\'t.'
Please see Veterans, Page Al

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Page A2. • The Dally Sentinel

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Cindnnati bucks national trend in recruitment

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Gays find ads offensive

.,

FAIRFIELD (AP) - A church's planned display depicting
damnation for a gay man who died of AIDS prompted a Christian
radio station to pull the church's ads for the youth event.
Vern B~ldwm, general manager ofWNLT in Fairfield, said ads
placed by Kings Point Church of God in Warren County will be
put on hold until he has a chance to review them upon his return
from Florida on Thursday.
" We're not out to offend anyone," said Baldwin, reached in Fort
Myers, Fla.
The station's decision came days after Stonewall Cincinnati, a gay
rtghts organ ization, c ririozed the ads and the church's " Hell House"
ew nt. The event will run for two weekends beginning next Friday.
Dort·en Cudmk, Stonewall executive director, said she thought
the ad was "blatant gay bashing,"
Baldwin said he was nut bowing to pressure from Stonewall and
lud nm heard from tht• group.
The Rev. Randy Ballard, pastor of the church, said Friday that
• WN LT hdd not contacted him about pulling the ads .
~ "Wt! neVL'r anticipJtcd this at al l - not that we are even cnnsidL't 111~ b.tck.ing down," ht: satd. "But, it i.s a surprising rt!sponsc-. It ccrl.llnh· \\'.ls nne ou r mottvt: t(l offend anyont:.'.' '
The disp b y rs meant to &gt;how teens the effects of sm. B.1lbrd s&lt;t id.
It lllvoln"...1 tour through five sce nes in hdl, including the funeral
ot .t ~-lY 111.111 who has di!.!d of AIDS ; a you ng wOman who has had
.111 .tbortiOJ L ..1 teen who ha &lt;;,_ ro mmirred suicide; a drug overdost~ at
.1 p.1ny: .\lld .1 car crJ'h 111\'oh·ing :l drunken father and his rhildren.
.. We .trc' not s.lytn g .111 hommexu.1ls wtth AIDS dte m hell ," B&lt;tll.tJd ... .~~~..t .''We .lrt• .;;;ho\\' in ~ tht• cffl'c ts of sin- what happens when,
m .1 hypothettc.ll situ.ltton, a homosexu&lt;tl has AIDS.&lt;tmi di~s and has
lhH rt:pcnted thl·ir sins."
Cudm k s.1id Stone\\'.lll wtll not protest the church event but will
..lttcmpt to pbcc "countcr-,IJ&gt;'' With WNLT featuring oth er church
lt·.tders spe.1king of their .tCccptance of g;tys and people with .llterll.ltiw lifestyles.

Many residents without gas
NEWPORT, Ky. (AP) - About 2,200 Cinergy customers who
rely o n natural gas for home heating still did not have service Mond.ty after a weekend of reco rd-cold remperatures in the Cincinnati
.ul!'.L

Comp.my offictals satd that even with crews working 16-hour
d.tys to repair damage from a gas line rupture Thursday, some customers will not have gas until Wednesday night.
( ln Sundav, Cineq,')' revised the number of customers affected by
rhe out.lg&lt; to 3,700. down from 5,000, and tt said gas would be at
lc.ht p.mly resco red to 1,500 homes , businesses and other buildings
OVL'r ltight.

l he ~as !me was broken near N ewport Shopping Center about
~·~() ;i.nL Thu rsday after .1 water main burst. The repair work was
llJJllphcatcd by water in gas hnes that spille~ mto \VJ.ter heaters,
'ti.lVt.'". clotht~ drye rs and fu rnaces.
WJter must be blown out of each appliance and line to re-establrsh 'erv~t·e Cinergy offi cials have told residents the company will
nor b~..· r~...~~ponsible fo r \\'Jtcr damage to in- house appliances.
.. -I ln.;, 1.., ,1 ·cl rcu m stilncc that was not ca used by any negligence of
the' cc&gt;mpJn\·." said St~w Brlsh. C inergy spokesman.
At Mans10n Hill bar and restaurant, O\'Vner Lou Peluso said Sun\.I.Jv h..: ha:\ lost thousands. of dollars.
~
" I w ok a beating this \\'ed,end .because people ain't coming,'' ·
i'du,o s.nd. "1 can't do any foud ."
C'int•rgy ,,ri d it had about 200 workers, including crews from
1'1 ,1\'ton Po\vcr &amp;- Light and indc:p~nd~11t contractors, working to
rc,torc ~nnu:.

Stadium gawkers worry officials
Jl'd

011 g.nllL' d.1y~, bu.H' .nh·hor 111 tilt' Ohio River nc.a Paul Drown
'-.udilllll rh ~:. · \'allt.lgC potllt .l fl(mJs occupants :1 \'ii.!W of game hJgh-

ufthL: ~t.tdntm '.;; huge ciL·ctronic mc~s.:1gc bo.nds.
I' !JL' ~Hnhlt-m is th .u co mmerci al barges sometimes have to stl.!er

:1l!;IJt' 0 11 Olll'

.11 \Mllll,d ; h~.: pk.1surt.· . : r.1tl:.l\vll"C l.1~t w~ek. the Coa~t Gt.tard rect::IVL'd

opcr.ltors .1bout n.•creational boaters
thrnw111g .111e hor m the 1mddk of the navigation lane.
" It·~ "Plllcthmg that's become a new problt::m ," said Coast Guard
l'cm· Oflirer Mike Sorlie. "T hose sco reboards invite people to stop
.1 nd \\',Itch. It never was brought up when tht:: stadium Was being
but!r rlw thts mt ¥h t be a problem ."
.
H.twr ruks requ ire that recreatio nal boats not park in the comllll'mal bne unless they are m diStress, said lt. Robert Bowen of the
( ,,,,,r C:u.1rd's Ctncin.nati stJtion. H e said boaters parked there
nul t !t kcly rcct::J\T \\'armn~~ bL·causc ''I'm sure the rec boater
.t.·,n' t rc.llizc the potenti.d.''
\I ,t_" J udy of suburban Anderson Townshtp, who docked Sunday
,. l'rnnnnati Riverfront Marina on his way to the Bengals' game
,., ttlr lcnncssee. sa1d he tonk his bo at past Paul Brown Stadium on
lhursday and was sta rtled .
" I was like. my God. it's like watching a large-screen TV in your
mnpl.itiHS from

tO\\'

bu,H

lt\'JOg room," he sJid.
Although water Je,·els v:~ry, the river is about 1,000 feet wide at
l'.rul I3rown Stadiu m, and the com mereta l navigable 'Vaterway is
typio lly the 500 to 600 feet in the middle, Bowen satd. Dut boaters
: p;1rk there bcc.1usc 1t prov1des the best v1ew of the Be n gals' scoreboJrd
lluwen s.ml the Coast Gua rd d1dn 't patrol Sunday because the
Ull\l..',l~on.1b lv en id \Vc.ahcr \\',1' tho ught to be deterrent enough. But
)1, 1l1t.' dmd qu.lrter. thnt: \'.t:lt' ~..:ight bo.lt.') ~topPed in the shadow
.or tloc R11Chlmg Su&lt;;;pt'll\l! lfl Hndgl'

Police shoot, kill man
l\ol~ec

' (If l ;\lllUS !AI' )

,hot

.IIlli

kdled a m.u1 dllrutg ,1

..~1! 1ggk wnh four nfllct•r~ e.1rlv \und.1\'
f he ll\.111. Jtknnficd by pnhl'.: .IS R. .1 ndy I h~nnebt.• rgL'I'. .12, w.l~
:d JIUIIg .1 \'Jil m .nL lnng' the ~..lt"·,tT lptmn of onl' th.u .\\'tl~ rl!'poneJ
}tnl~..·n S.1turd.1y An otll(~,.'r tf,!ln\\cd tht• \',111 .md Jskcd for .b.1ckup.
.. I knnL·bcr~n rl'fu . . ed ro ~,uJI over .1nd thL· p.lS-.L'nger, bcg.u1 throw··w~ llhJ~,.'lt&lt;, ollt nf the b.H·k of the \',111·. poli ce ,;rid.
I knlll'l''L'rgn turnc~.l t h ~..· \'ltl .\ long -.o mc r.ulro;.ld tr.lCb on the
· 1

1
\

~~·11th ~IlL· .11Jd lo\\ lrl l 1 .!.! lOUp
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r'

h1ll~

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11·

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.
'·d!t
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ot"\urchome.,.
•tt tl1~.· ~u~pl·l t' Jllto J \\',\rt•hnu"t' Dur·t.d'llcd IHJI.' ofdlL' offin:r~· .g:llll'• .mJ

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J\.lr~Hlg

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f lt~lh t.: ,Ji,;J ,,nd the ·\".lll

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not

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dPIIll'~d(

one be111g

I \ I ! urlt'Y,
\'JDklllL'

~ought

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by poiiCl'.

ed historically black schools to help divet$ify
the number of jobs expected to be open.
The economy is one problem. Would-be the pool of applicants and widely advertised
officers can get safer jobs that pay as much or their interest in candidates over age 35.
The city lifted that age cap earlier this year.
more. On Friday, the federal government
"If we're at a job fair with P&amp;G or Ford or
reported the September unemployment rate
was 3.9 percent, matching a three-decade low. something like that, we don't have a chance,''
The crunch has brought departments from . said Sgt. Tom Waller, who is in charge of
as far away as Los Angeles and Seattle to recruiting for the 1,000-officer force.
"We're dealing w1th kids today in these
recruit in Cincinnati.
Local recruiters had to work harder to high-tech jobs. These old, stable kinds of jobs
combat that, plus the danger questions -jobs where we used to say you were set for
prompted by the death of an officer on duty life - aren't that interesting to them,'' Waller
last month. They visited more colleges, target~ said.

CINCINNATI (AP) -While some cities
are haVlng trouble recruiting potential police ·
officers, the number of people signing up to
rake the written tesr in Cincinnati has gone
up.
More than 1,530 men and women have
signed up to · rake the exam Saturday to join
Cincinnati police. That's 2 I percent more than
last year;s I ,258 an'd the first increase in yean.
The jump comes at a time when ' many
police agencies are seeing declines in candidates. In New York City last month, too few
;. people showed up to take the initial test to fill

Friends, relatives, remember Parts shortages blamed
for plant shutdowns _
slain pregnant woman
KENT (AP) More than
1,000 people filkd a high
school auditorium and dozens
of others waited outside in the
rain at ;1 service to rem ember a
pregnant wotnan whost- killer
cut her baby from her womb.
Theresa Andrews, 23, ~vas
abducted Sept. 27 and shot to
death by a woman she and her
husband had met a few we,eks
earlier while shopping for baby
clothes at Wale Mart.
"In a sinful world where
people have a choice to follow
their own sinful and sometimes

sirkening ways. tragedy will
som~..·timl!s

result," D .lVl' Iannel-

li. a Jehovah's Witnesses religious.

kad~r

to ld

mnurncrs

from Nc\v York,
at

Sunday's

memorial sc rvi c~. "]L'hovah is
not to blame wh,•n bad things
happen

to

good people."

Poli ce say Mi ch elle Htca, 39,
had lied to neighbors, relatives
and even her own husband for
months, telling them she was
1

pregnant .

He said sales of the
LORAIN (AP) -The Ford
Motor Co. said it will halt pro- redesigned Villager and Quest
ductlon at two plants in Lor~in lines is down 34 percent from
County later this month .
A two-wee k. shutdown is last year. "Tl1e minivan market
planned Oct. 16 to 30 at an tends to go for the larger-sized
assembly plant in Avon Lake, modds," Sharkey said. "The
which makes Mercury Villager smaller models have become
and Nissan Quest minivans,
because of declining sales for less popular with consumers
contparcd co last year."
those models.
A Lorain plant will stop pro -.
The Lorain plant employs
duction this week on the
I ,730 people and the Avon
Econoline van for one week
because of parts shortages, Ford Lake plant ha s 2,715 workers,
spokesman Nick Sharkey said. .Sharkey said.

.

New institute hopes to bring doctors, scientists together
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
State University this week will
open a heart and lung research
institute designed to bring physicians and scientists together.
Spectalists often don't meet
on a campus as large as Ohio
State's . Offices for doctors from
the OSU Medical Center's divi sions of cardiology and pulmonary medicine are being
moved mto the new building to •
centralize the univemry's heart
and lung research in one place.
Dedication of the $23.8 million building is set for Friday.
Faculty and staff members began
moving in late last month; the
building is to be occupied by
early Novt'mb~:r.
Rcscnrch at cht' inscitut~..· also
will be closdy tied to ,, S70 mil !ton heart hosptta l that 1s to op,·n
by 2003 in an adjacent buddrn~.
The institute will include II

( ' INCINN ATI (AI') - Jlw Cincinn.tti lkn~als ' new stadiLttn is
~! 1 1\\'111~ \1,'1, n·Jtwn.ll boatr.:r, 111 :1 w .1y that has thl.' Coast G1.t;1rd wor1

Mondl~~oblr8,2000

Pomaroy, Mlddlaport, Ohio

Possible E.
coli outbreak
reported
MEDINA (AP) Another
potentially deadly E. coli outbreak has prompted health officials to close a Hallower:n haunted house at the county fairgrol,lnds where 27 previous cases
were traced .
The Carnival of Horrors
haunted hous~ was closed ThLtrsday because it was being operated
at a fairground s location rece ntly
pinpointed as the likely 'source of
an August ou'tbreak.
Dav1d Baldwin, the county's
health commissioner, said a 12mon th-old was diagnosed at
Medina General . Hospital with·
the same potenti;lly deadly strain
of I;:. coli that infected the patrons
at the county fa ir.
The infant was treated ' and
released. A 10- ye&gt;r- old g1 rl with
E. coli-type symptoms also was
treated and r&lt;•leased, a hospita l
nursing supervisor said. '
H ealth officials suspect th;lt .~t
least one of the two ch ild ren
wenc co the haL;nted hou sl', Daldwm .').l id . non ng dut there may b~
1110rL'

C.lSL'~.

"Th 1 ~ IS

SOlllL'th ln g tf ut

laboratories for work in areas
such as cellu lar and molecular
studies, genetics, robotics, transplantation and blood-ve&gt;Sel for mation .
"The promise of this place is
.phenomenal:' said Nicholas
Flavahan 1 a researChe["l who c·ame
to Ohio State three years ago
from Johns Hopkins University
in Baltimore. ''It has more expertise in vascular biology than
Hopkins has, and this ability to
focus in on the heart and lun g is
kind of unique."
Tht..• instituti.' .tls n will have .1

225-seat auditonum that can be
used for .le ctures, faculty meetings and satellite-linked teleconferences.
Because heart disease is the
nation's No. I killer, specialized
c'enters for heart and lung
research are being developed at
many universities.
"But they are really small and
don't have a lot of resources,"
Flavahan said. "This is one of the
few pJac,•s where you actually
h :w~ an institute."
He said the uniwrmy 's former chief of cardinlo~y. Dr. Pas-

cno kcd me.H or .l!l llll .li ft.·ce~
E.uhcr this WL'L'k. the Ct:ntL'r'
t&lt;1r Dl'il'.l..,l' Cnmrol .111d Prl'\'L'ntH&gt;ll ldl'.l'&gt;l'd .1 rt'pon th.Jt illlked
thL• prC\'IOtl\ t.l~eS tO l'llilt,llll lll .1t-

.md lt'C ll\L'd by fond
vendo r' oYer thl· Ll\t rhree d.1y' nf
the Cur
\\',HL'I'

(

cal Goldschmidt, was largely
responsible for turning the institute from an idea into reality_
Goldschmidt was a laboratory
director at Johns Hopkins when
Ohio State hired him in 1997.
Goldschmidt recruited eight
other Hopkins
researchers,
including Flavahan, for Ohio
State before leaving in the summer to become chief of cardiology at Duke University, whi ch
has the nation's largest he&lt;trt center.
A search committee has been
formed to find a new director
for the instit\lte.
Dr. Michael Grever, chairman
•
of Ohio State's Department&gt;of
Medicine and head of the soaich
conuniuee, said Goldschm!dt
will be replaced by two people
- one taking over tht• institOte
and the otht·r the c.miiold',gy
d1 vision.

."'U'e

Clay
Pomeroy Fire Dept.

.

Floyd c. Hickman
Pomeroy Fire Dept.

Royden
Hawkins

•

Tom Cremeans
Pomeroy Fire Dept.

Steve
Harten bach
Pomeroy Volunteer
Fire Dept.
Pam Hartenbach

Greg ca,,en1ter
Tuppers Plains

Elliah
~spankY

Roush

John Ryan
Hill
Racine Fire Dept.
Bobbi, Katelyn Er
Kaleb Hill

Country Mkt

.Brandi
King
Syracuse Fire Dept.

'

•

Allen Ball
POMEROY - Allen Edward Ball, 98, of 32734 Highlancj Road,
Pomeroy, died on Thursday, Oct. 5, 2000, at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center in Pomeroy.
He was born on Oct. 23, 1901, in Pratts Fork, son of the late
Leonard and Emera Dains Ball. He was a retired carrier for the U.S.
Postal Servic~.
Surviving are his wife, Mattie Keiser Ball, a son and daughter-in-law,
Edward and Hazel Ball, Pomeroy; a daughter, Rita Lewis, Pomeroy;
· four stepchildren and their spouses: Linda and Jeff Workman of Car' penter, Barbara Stahl of Middleport, Charles and Lori Sprouse, Jr.,
Middleport, William and Maria Sprouse, Wallingford, Conn.; three
grandchildren and three great grandchildren; and a number of stepgrandchildren and step-great-grandchildren.
. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his first wife,
~ Ada Bails Ball, his second wife, Freda Warner Ball, his son-in-law. Frank
• Lewis , a stepdaughter and a stepson.
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. today at Ewing· Funeral
Home, with burial to follow at Asbury Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Sunday from 6 to 9 p.m.

'

bitu
Norma Jean Hayman Smith
RACINE- Norma Jean Hayman Smith, 74, Dayton, died Saturday,
Oct. 7, 2000.
She was the daughter of the late Harry and Georgia Haytmn and w&lt;ts
a graduate of R.acine High School, Class of 1945.
.
She was an active participant in the family business making deliveries
for Sears stores in the Dayton area and was a member of Ft. McKinley
United Methodist C hurch and a former member of St. Marks .United
Methodist Church .
Alorig with her parents, she was preceded in death by a sister-in-law ·
and husband, IUthleen and Harry Getter; sister- in-law Gertrude Smith,
cousins Grace Ellis, Ben Philson and Kathleen Philson .
· She is survived by her husband of 47 years, William C. Smith; her
beloved son, William Jeffrey Smith; one sister, Audrey Henry of Jackson;
. a half-sister and her husband, Eleanor and Robert Clark of East Longmeadow, Mass.; three brothers-in-law, Howard and Ruth Smith of Day. ton, James and Connie Smith of Pomeroy, Homer Smith of Louisville,
Ky.; and numerous nieces, nephews and cousins.
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday at Ft. McKinley
.United Methodist Church, Salem Avenue, in Siebenthaler. Officiating
: will be Rev. Katharine Schaefer.
· Graveside services will be at 2 p.m. Thursday at Letart Falls Cemetery
Chapel in Racine.
·
..
· Friends may call Tuesday from 5-8 p.m. at Baker-Hazel Funeral Home
in Dayton.
· Memorial contributions may be made to the Ft. McKinley United
Methodist Church in her memory at www.bakerhazel.com.

Clifford Wooten

Eber
Pickens)r.
Er Senior
Syracuse Fire Dept.
Velessa, Jordan,
Casey Er Trey Pickens

Den1ocraa needed the fundraisers to "compete with the
Republican money machine" in
the stare, said David Leland, Ohio
fromPipA1
Democratic Party cluirnun.
During this campaign, the state
Supreme Court Justice Alice
Robie Resnick, who is up for re- has given S7 .2 million to Democelection, was cut off toward the ratic candidates compared with
end of her speech so Glenn could $22.8 million to Republicans,
according to the Center for
introduce Clinton.
The president recalled how Responsive Politics.
The Washington, D.C.-based
Ohio voters put him over rhe top
for the party nomination at the nonpartisan re~rch group ranks
1992 Democratic National Con- Ohio as 43rd in the nation in
terms ·of money given to Democventionin New York.
"And on election night, when rats, compared with eighth in
Ohio came into the Clinton/Gore Republican donations.
Democrats have lost Ohio but
column, they pronounced me
won the presidency just twice in
president-elect," Clinton said.
Democrats wanted the visit by the last century. No Republican
Clinton, who came to Columbus has won the White I-iousr without
in 1996 for a similar event, to winning Ohio.
Polls show Gore trailing Repubexcite party faithful in the state to
campaign hard for Gore in the lican opponent George W. Bush in
final weeks before the Nov. 7 elec- Ohio by four to five percentage
points.
tion.
• Despite Clinton's absence. the
Clinton carried Ohio in 1992
rally was an opportunity for and 1996 with 40 and 47 percent
Democrats to gear up for the 'elec- of the vote, respectively, but the
tion, sa td Maryellen O'Shaugh- state's Democratic parry has weaknessy, who is running against ~tate ened since.
Republican Rep. l'at'Fiberi for the
Both of Ohio's U.S. senators are
12th Congressional District of Republicans, as are I I of the state's
central Ohio.
19 representatives. The GOP con"It's always good to get togeth- trols both houses of the state Legholds all statewide
er as a parry tO talk about what's at islature anrl
't, '
stake and renew efforts and com- offices except two Supreme Court
mianents," she said .
seats.

Actions filed
POMEROY Foreclosure
actions have been ftled in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
LaSalle National Banlr., Orangeburg, N.Y., against Harlow Willis,
Pomeroy, and by American Business Credit Inc., BaJa Cynwyd,
Pa., against Bill E. Buchanan ,Tuppers Plains, and others; and by
Curt E. Spencer, Albany, against
Victor J. Morris Jr., Langsville.
An judgment action · has been
granted in the court to Conseco
Bank Inc., against Martha Boynton, and others, and by Nationwide Home Mortgage Co., formerly known as Allied Group
Mortgage Co. , against Roger S.
Hook and
. others .

Mormng
St.tr
Unaed
Methodi st Church w11l have its
homecoming Su nday. Wor&lt;hlp
will be held at IO a.m. Sunr.lJy
sc hool at 11 a.m . .1 JillllL'r ;1t
12:30 p.m . fo ll mwrl bv an aflernoon ~ong !IL'n·ice. D ewa\' ne
s'tuttler, pastor. inntc'' th~ pubhc

Seeks divorce

from PapAl

Help

lrom,.pA1

Village
from PapAl

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992-2156

During one appearance, a veteran introduced her by saying:
"She may be Miss America, she
may be a former Miss Kentllcky,
but she's every ve.teran's daughter.''
French, of Maysville, Ky., won
the crown last year whih; studying
fashion design at the University

enforcement S52.88; EMS butld- n1a:1y."
For that reason, some hosp1t;us
ing fund, $3,436.82; total of all ·
already
are makmg procedural
balances, $90,282.87.
Attending were: Donna Peterson, · Mony Wood, Bill Roush,
Katie Crow, and Mike Ralston,
nuintenance supervisor.

•

of Cincinnati.
The. beauty queen says she
won't abandon her cause once
her retgn ends Saturday night at
the 80th annual Miss America
Pageant. She has agreed to write a .
weekly column on veterans issues
for the military newspaper Stars
and Stripes, and serve . as its
ambassador.
But her first priority after surrendering the throne is to marry
Kentucky Lt. Gov. Steve Henry,
46, in Lollisville on Oct. 27.

LOCAL STOCKS

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Ohio Newspaper Association .
Poetmllltr: Send addr.ess correctio ns to
The Dally Sentin el, 111 Court St ..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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AEP- 361J/,.
Akzo -44
AmTech!SBC- SJi,
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AT&amp;T -27'.
Bank~ One - 35 ''r.
Bob- Evans- 17'',.

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TP Distrid to meet
TUPPERS PLAI NS - The
Tuppers Plains Rt·g~&lt;mal Se\\er
Distric t will met 111 regular :-.~:s­
sion, Tuesday, 7 p.m.

Immunization
·clinic set
POMERbY - Meigs County
Health Department will offer an
immumzation clinic Tuesday, 9 to
11 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m ., at tts
office, 112 E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy. Donations are appreciated, but no one will be denied
service.

changes.
Dr. David Bates, chicf of the
division of seneral medicine at
Brigham and Women's Ho1pirnl in
Boston, has led a11 effort chert:
requiring doctors to order dru~
for patients on a compmcr rather
than simply writin11 proscnptit&gt;ns
on paper.
"Making
major
sysr~ms
changes like computeriiing e&gt;rdcring is a big process chmge;· Bates
said. Doctors "are generally wry
resistant to change.''
Changmg the way drub" are
prescribed also would help pharmacists who have trouble readmg
prescription slips. s.ud Dand
Kvan cz, who m.l'nagL·~ ,1bout SO
pharnucists :H the Cl11uc.
NASA is lookin g 3t m:~ m· other
applications for the technologv.
including monitonn ~ thr: he.1lth
of astronaut~ in sp.lCt'. s.ud 11.1\'ld
York, a soHw:1re c n giiJL'L'r who kd
the NASA Glenn team.

VALLEY WEATHER

•

The Daily Sentinel

POMEROY Jum or and
Rita White will entertam at the .
Meigs Senior Citizens Center at
5:30 p.m Th ursday dunng the
dinner hour.

License issued

EMS log calls

Veterans

To entertain.

Homecoming set

POMEROY A marriage
license has been issued in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Jeffrey Scott Darnell, 23, and
Tonya Renee l'halin, 22 .

Lunch

Sunday, 2:30 a.m., Pomeroy
Police Department, Gary H anning,HMC:
9:06 p.m ., Starcher Road ,
Becky Newell . treated;
9:30 p.m., Hill Street, assisted
by Pomeroy, Charb Lomley.
RUTLAND
Sunday, 8:02 p.m., New Lima
Road , auto fire, Charles Lambert
Road , treated .

.

POMEROY - An action for
divorce has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
. Tina Sutton, Portland, against
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - William C. Sutton, Lebanon.
Many youngsters have unhealthy
eating patters and are physically
inactive. In ll'lany schools, junk
POMEROY - Units of the
food both from home ond
Meigs
Emergency
Services
frmh vending machines in lunch
menr of Agriculture, which over- rooms - competes with healthi- answered five calls for assistance
over the weekend. Units respondsees the program, 96,000 schools er choices.
.
The USDA's Food and Nutri- ed as follows:
a day serve up nutritious low-cost
CENTRAL DISPATCH
or free lunches to nearly 27 mil- tion Service, which administers
Saturday,
11:25 a.m., Village
the
school
meals
program
nationlion American children every
ally, has several new initiatives to Manor, Nina Dixon, Holzer
school day.
Public schools and independent help schools answer those chal- Medical Center:
non-profit schools which partici- lenges, and in addition to serving
pate in the National School mid-day meals, most schools,
Lunch Program receive cash sub· including all Meig. County
sidies and donated commodities schools, serve a free breakfast to
from . the USDA for each meal all students. The USDA has also
served: In return, they must serve begun offering an after-school
lunches that meet federal require· snack for some schools with
ments, and they n1u1t offer free or enrichment programs or other Glenn developed the technology
in 1996. The data would be
reduced-price lunches to eligible afier-school activities.
How much does the program 1hieldcd from Internet voyeurs by
children.
But new i11ues face the pro- cost? Congre11 appropriated the same encryption system that
gram now. More children - and $5.46 billion for the progran1 for government allencies use.
Mackli1 said he was not certain
adults - suffer froll'l diet-related Fiscal Year 1999, and SS.\3 billion
hoW many patients, if any, died last
health problems and obesity. for PY '98.
year as a result of medical errors at
the Clinic. Ohio does not require
hospitals to report such errors.
landing;
"There are certainly errors that
Cotterill gave her report of viloccur,"
Mack.lis said: "We don't
lage account balances: general
fund, S 12,097 .27: street construc- know if any of those errors resulttion,
$33,741.48;
highway, ed in the death of a patient. But
$3,601.93; fire
department, we do know there arc some
meetings;
• Discussed the possible repair Sl3,634.HI; water, SlB,269.07; patients who h&lt;tve been injured
or replacement of the municipal pool. Sl.267.H; ~uaranty meter, through medical errors. And if the
building, and refened the matter Ji3,979.37; cemetery, S201.8ll; law answer is ~ven one, then it~ too

ALBANY - Clifford Wooten, 78, of School Lot Road, Albany, died
Saturday, Oct. 7, 2000, at the Veterans Administration Medical Center,
Chillicothe.
Born in Wayne, W.Va. on Jan. 31, 1922, qe was
· the son of the late Isaac and Elizabeth Vanhorn
Wooten. He lived most of his life and was a very
active farmer in Colllmbia Township, Meigs
County. He was a U. S. Army Air Force veteran
of World W:1r II serving in Cassablanca, and a
member of the Albany VFW Post 9893, the
Albany AM Vets 93, and Joseph Freeman American Legion Post 476 ofWilkesville.
He was cared for by his nephew, Donald K .
Wooten , who hv~d in the home and surviv~s
to Councilin&lt;tn Bill Roush for
. L _ __;~z__ __,j along with a sister, lucille Jordan of Huntington,
.
W.Va.; a brother, Donald E. (Phyllis) Wooten of price quotes:
• Pmm•roy: three &lt;tdd,tional nephews, Daniel G . (Brenda) Wooten of · • Approved the purchase of
: Albany, Russell Wooten ofYinron, and David Wooten of Dexter; a niece winterjackets for police officers;
• Approved placing a wind
; Joan Wooten of Long Beach, Calif.; gra~1dnephews, Isaac and Zachary
sock
at the Syracuse· ball field to
,, Wooten of Albany: several other nieces, nephews and collsins, and a speassist emergency helicopters in
cial friend , Margie Allman.
Besides his parent&lt; he was preceded in death by a sister Hazel Wooten
· and a brother, Anderson Wooten.
·· Funeral services will be held Wednesday. Oct. 11, at I p.m. at the
~ Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home. The Rev. John Elswick will officiate and
: burial will be in Ogdin Cemetery with military graveside services by
; Albany Post 9893. Friends may call at the funeral home Tuesday, Oct. I 0,
;2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. ·

Pomeroy Fire Dept.

Katie, Kaleb, Jordan,
Casey Er Trey
Victor Er Vickie Roush

LOCAL BRIEFS

Clinton

·~

4
(Rutlana)

C,ll1

just go on and on w1th pcopJ...:
mf~cting otllers." he ....~i d.
Tile E. col! b.Jct~-· nurn ' ' typlc.llly tr.JIP. mmcd rhrough cont.lllHil.ltL'd Jnnklng w,liL' I, und~r­

L' d

Goldschmidt was a laboratory director at Johns
Hopkins wl1e11 Ohio State hired him in 1997.
Goldschmidt recruited eigl1t other Hopki11s researcl1ers,
;,c/,ding Fla11aha11,for Ohio State before /emling in
the summer to become chief of cardiology at Duke
U11i11ersity, whic/1 has the nation's largest heart cente.r.

,.. _M_o_n~da...;y:..;.'_o_ct~o-bl:r~9~,~2000;.,:,;;...;._==---------:==::====P=ome=r:o:y,:M:I:dd:l:•po=rt,=O:h:lo===::----:-::::-::-~:-...;T:h:e-:D:•:II:y~Sen~t=ln~e=l·_:P..:a:!g:•,:A:,3

Gannett- 51~.
General Electnc - 59'1•
Haney Davidson - 481.
Kmart- 6'1•
Krogar- 21l•
Lands End- 19l.
Ltd . - 23:,
OaK Hill Financial- 15).
OVB -27
BBT- 29~.
Peoples -14
Premier- S'a

Rockwall - 32

Rocky Boots - sl.
AD Shall- 61 ),
Saara- 34

Warmup starts on Tuesday
BY THE ASSOC)ATED PRESS

The tri-county area will bask in
sunshine Tuesday through Friday
as high pressure settles over the
region, the National Weather Service said.
Temperatures will warm up
slowly, with highs around 60 on
Tuesday and near 70 by friday.
Some rain or snow showers
may linger tonight .
Forecast
Today... Cloudy with ram or
snow
showers ... Mainly
this
morning. Highs in the 40s to
lower 50s.
Tonight ... Mostly cloudy with a
few snow showers or rain showers
early. Lows mainly in th e 30s.

mostly
Tuesday... Partl y to
sunny. A little warmer. Highs 111
the 50s to aro und 60. ·
Extended forecast
Wedne sday... M osrlv
&lt;unm·.
Lows in the 30s. •High s in the
upper 50s and lower f,Os.
Thursday... Fair, Low&lt; 111 tltt·
upper 30s to lower 40s. llr ghs rn
the mid and upper 60s.
Friday... Fair.' Low&gt; m the 41ls.
Highs in the upper 60s .1nd !own
70s.

To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel
7

Shoney's -~

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

Wai·Mart- 451,
Wendy's - 19'1•
Worthington-

446·45 24

e•.

01

n ROU1 ! 1S Wf:ST

1~04 JACKSO N I"IK[

FRI10/6/00 • THURS 10/ 12/00

BOX OFFICI WILL OPEN AT

Dally stock reports ara the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's trans·
actions,
provided
by
Advest of Gallipolis .

6:30PM FOR !VINING S~OWS
2:30PM FOR MATINEES

Mother, son go on trial for '79 death
NEWYOR.K (A I') -

For two

d~.?c.ldcs, police .~ay thi.' n.·m.1ins of

M .uicline Car mk lud's .'\-ye;"Jrold d.mghtcr wert• st.tshl·d aw.ty 111
,1 locked bedroom clo~L't.
The wonun .tnd her ~o n
,Jllq;;edly bc.1 t the toddler unconsnou'l.. wr,tppl'd hn body in p!Jsnc Jnd newsp.lpL·rs. thl'n stutTl·d it
111 .1 trunk, which was l.ucr tnoved

to anoth~r apartment .

On Tu~ s d.1y, Carmicil.lel. (,I ,
and her son. Gregory, JH, go on
trial on sel·o nd-dcgrl·~ mur ..kr
ch&lt;trges for th~ I 979 sb ying. If
convictt'd, each fan:s ,J maxinwm
sc:ntenc~: of 2~ n·:'lrs ro li fl' In
pnson .
Th~ pair plea&lt;k·d mtH&gt;rent List
November.

THE KLUMPS (PG13)
(PG)

'

THE ADVENTURES OF ROCKY
&amp; BULWINKLE (PG)

MATINEES SATISUN 3:15

�•
'

Page A2. • The Dally Sentinel

•

Cindnnati bucks national trend in recruitment

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Gays find ads offensive

.,

FAIRFIELD (AP) - A church's planned display depicting
damnation for a gay man who died of AIDS prompted a Christian
radio station to pull the church's ads for the youth event.
Vern B~ldwm, general manager ofWNLT in Fairfield, said ads
placed by Kings Point Church of God in Warren County will be
put on hold until he has a chance to review them upon his return
from Florida on Thursday.
" We're not out to offend anyone," said Baldwin, reached in Fort
Myers, Fla.
The station's decision came days after Stonewall Cincinnati, a gay
rtghts organ ization, c ririozed the ads and the church's " Hell House"
ew nt. The event will run for two weekends beginning next Friday.
Dort·en Cudmk, Stonewall executive director, said she thought
the ad was "blatant gay bashing,"
Baldwin said he was nut bowing to pressure from Stonewall and
lud nm heard from tht• group.
The Rev. Randy Ballard, pastor of the church, said Friday that
• WN LT hdd not contacted him about pulling the ads .
~ "Wt! neVL'r anticipJtcd this at al l - not that we are even cnnsidL't 111~ b.tck.ing down," ht: satd. "But, it i.s a surprising rt!sponsc-. It ccrl.llnh· \\'.ls nne ou r mottvt: t(l offend anyont:.'.' '
The disp b y rs meant to &gt;how teens the effects of sm. B.1lbrd s&lt;t id.
It lllvoln"...1 tour through five sce nes in hdl, including the funeral
ot .t ~-lY 111.111 who has di!.!d of AIDS ; a you ng wOman who has had
.111 .tbortiOJ L ..1 teen who ha &lt;;,_ ro mmirred suicide; a drug overdost~ at
.1 p.1ny: .\lld .1 car crJ'h 111\'oh·ing :l drunken father and his rhildren.
.. We .trc' not s.lytn g .111 hommexu.1ls wtth AIDS dte m hell ," B&lt;tll.tJd ... .~~~..t .''We .lrt• .;;;ho\\' in ~ tht• cffl'c ts of sin- what happens when,
m .1 hypothettc.ll situ.ltton, a homosexu&lt;tl has AIDS.&lt;tmi di~s and has
lhH rt:pcnted thl·ir sins."
Cudm k s.1id Stone\\'.lll wtll not protest the church event but will
..lttcmpt to pbcc "countcr-,IJ&gt;'' With WNLT featuring oth er church
lt·.tders spe.1king of their .tCccptance of g;tys and people with .llterll.ltiw lifestyles.

Many residents without gas
NEWPORT, Ky. (AP) - About 2,200 Cinergy customers who
rely o n natural gas for home heating still did not have service Mond.ty after a weekend of reco rd-cold remperatures in the Cincinnati
.ul!'.L

Comp.my offictals satd that even with crews working 16-hour
d.tys to repair damage from a gas line rupture Thursday, some customers will not have gas until Wednesday night.
( ln Sundav, Cineq,')' revised the number of customers affected by
rhe out.lg&lt; to 3,700. down from 5,000, and tt said gas would be at
lc.ht p.mly resco red to 1,500 homes , businesses and other buildings
OVL'r ltight.

l he ~as !me was broken near N ewport Shopping Center about
~·~() ;i.nL Thu rsday after .1 water main burst. The repair work was
llJJllphcatcd by water in gas hnes that spille~ mto \VJ.ter heaters,
'ti.lVt.'". clotht~ drye rs and fu rnaces.
WJter must be blown out of each appliance and line to re-establrsh 'erv~t·e Cinergy offi cials have told residents the company will
nor b~..· r~...~~ponsible fo r \\'Jtcr damage to in- house appliances.
.. -I ln.;, 1.., ,1 ·cl rcu m stilncc that was not ca used by any negligence of
the' cc&gt;mpJn\·." said St~w Brlsh. C inergy spokesman.
At Mans10n Hill bar and restaurant, O\'Vner Lou Peluso said Sun\.I.Jv h..: ha:\ lost thousands. of dollars.
~
" I w ok a beating this \\'ed,end .because people ain't coming,'' ·
i'du,o s.nd. "1 can't do any foud ."
C'int•rgy ,,ri d it had about 200 workers, including crews from
1'1 ,1\'ton Po\vcr &amp;- Light and indc:p~nd~11t contractors, working to
rc,torc ~nnu:.

Stadium gawkers worry officials
Jl'd

011 g.nllL' d.1y~, bu.H' .nh·hor 111 tilt' Ohio River nc.a Paul Drown
'-.udilllll rh ~:. · \'allt.lgC potllt .l fl(mJs occupants :1 \'ii.!W of game hJgh-

ufthL: ~t.tdntm '.;; huge ciL·ctronic mc~s.:1gc bo.nds.
I' !JL' ~Hnhlt-m is th .u co mmerci al barges sometimes have to stl.!er

:1l!;IJt' 0 11 Olll'

.11 \Mllll,d ; h~.: pk.1surt.· . : r.1tl:.l\vll"C l.1~t w~ek. the Coa~t Gt.tard rect::IVL'd

opcr.ltors .1bout n.•creational boaters
thrnw111g .111e hor m the 1mddk of the navigation lane.
" It·~ "Plllcthmg that's become a new problt::m ," said Coast Guard
l'cm· Oflirer Mike Sorlie. "T hose sco reboards invite people to stop
.1 nd \\',Itch. It never was brought up when tht:: stadium Was being
but!r rlw thts mt ¥h t be a problem ."
.
H.twr ruks requ ire that recreatio nal boats not park in the comllll'mal bne unless they are m diStress, said lt. Robert Bowen of the
( ,,,,,r C:u.1rd's Ctncin.nati stJtion. H e said boaters parked there
nul t !t kcly rcct::J\T \\'armn~~ bL·causc ''I'm sure the rec boater
.t.·,n' t rc.llizc the potenti.d.''
\I ,t_" J udy of suburban Anderson Townshtp, who docked Sunday
,. l'rnnnnati Riverfront Marina on his way to the Bengals' game
,., ttlr lcnncssee. sa1d he tonk his bo at past Paul Brown Stadium on
lhursday and was sta rtled .
" I was like. my God. it's like watching a large-screen TV in your
mnpl.itiHS from

tO\\'

bu,H

lt\'JOg room," he sJid.
Although water Je,·els v:~ry, the river is about 1,000 feet wide at
l'.rul I3rown Stadiu m, and the com mereta l navigable 'Vaterway is
typio lly the 500 to 600 feet in the middle, Bowen satd. Dut boaters
: p;1rk there bcc.1usc 1t prov1des the best v1ew of the Be n gals' scoreboJrd
lluwen s.ml the Coast Gua rd d1dn 't patrol Sunday because the
Ull\l..',l~on.1b lv en id \Vc.ahcr \\',1' tho ught to be deterrent enough. But
)1, 1l1t.' dmd qu.lrter. thnt: \'.t:lt' ~..:ight bo.lt.') ~topPed in the shadow
.or tloc R11Chlmg Su&lt;;;pt'll\l! lfl Hndgl'

Police shoot, kill man
l\ol~ec

' (If l ;\lllUS !AI' )

,hot

.IIlli

kdled a m.u1 dllrutg ,1

..~1! 1ggk wnh four nfllct•r~ e.1rlv \und.1\'
f he ll\.111. Jtknnficd by pnhl'.: .IS R. .1 ndy I h~nnebt.• rgL'I'. .12, w.l~
:d JIUIIg .1 \'Jil m .nL lnng' the ~..lt"·,tT lptmn of onl' th.u .\\'tl~ rl!'poneJ
}tnl~..·n S.1turd.1y An otll(~,.'r tf,!ln\\cd tht• \',111 .md Jskcd for .b.1ckup.
.. I knnL·bcr~n rl'fu . . ed ro ~,uJI over .1nd thL· p.lS-.L'nger, bcg.u1 throw··w~ llhJ~,.'lt&lt;, ollt nf the b.H·k of the \',111·. poli ce ,;rid.
I knlll'l''L'rgn turnc~.l t h ~..· \'ltl .\ long -.o mc r.ulro;.ld tr.lCb on the
· 1

1
\

~~·11th ~IlL· .11Jd lo\\ lrl l 1 .!.! lOUp
·l!·.

r'

h1ll~

.l1

11·

I l~. nl:..-!.·1
.
'·d!t
III II ,!J,
·!l.

ot"\urchome.,.
•tt tl1~.· ~u~pl·l t' Jllto J \\',\rt•hnu"t' Dur·t.d'llcd IHJI.' ofdlL' offin:r~· .g:llll'• .mJ

I

1\'ll.'

ll''lh'

'.
J\.lr~Hlg

.l,,,HJJr. poill"c ~.ud
f lt~lh t.: ,Ji,;J ,,nd the ·\".lll

\\,l'

not

thL·

::1~.-Y

dPIIll'~d(

one be111g

I \ I ! urlt'Y,
\'JDklllL'

~ought

•

~'

,ltld

by poiiCl'.

ed historically black schools to help divet$ify
the number of jobs expected to be open.
The economy is one problem. Would-be the pool of applicants and widely advertised
officers can get safer jobs that pay as much or their interest in candidates over age 35.
The city lifted that age cap earlier this year.
more. On Friday, the federal government
"If we're at a job fair with P&amp;G or Ford or
reported the September unemployment rate
was 3.9 percent, matching a three-decade low. something like that, we don't have a chance,''
The crunch has brought departments from . said Sgt. Tom Waller, who is in charge of
as far away as Los Angeles and Seattle to recruiting for the 1,000-officer force.
"We're dealing w1th kids today in these
recruit in Cincinnati.
Local recruiters had to work harder to high-tech jobs. These old, stable kinds of jobs
combat that, plus the danger questions -jobs where we used to say you were set for
prompted by the death of an officer on duty life - aren't that interesting to them,'' Waller
last month. They visited more colleges, target~ said.

CINCINNATI (AP) -While some cities
are haVlng trouble recruiting potential police ·
officers, the number of people signing up to
rake the written tesr in Cincinnati has gone
up.
More than 1,530 men and women have
signed up to · rake the exam Saturday to join
Cincinnati police. That's 2 I percent more than
last year;s I ,258 an'd the first increase in yean.
The jump comes at a time when ' many
police agencies are seeing declines in candidates. In New York City last month, too few
;. people showed up to take the initial test to fill

Friends, relatives, remember Parts shortages blamed
for plant shutdowns _
slain pregnant woman
KENT (AP) More than
1,000 people filkd a high
school auditorium and dozens
of others waited outside in the
rain at ;1 service to rem ember a
pregnant wotnan whost- killer
cut her baby from her womb.
Theresa Andrews, 23, ~vas
abducted Sept. 27 and shot to
death by a woman she and her
husband had met a few we,eks
earlier while shopping for baby
clothes at Wale Mart.
"In a sinful world where
people have a choice to follow
their own sinful and sometimes

sirkening ways. tragedy will
som~..·timl!s

result," D .lVl' Iannel-

li. a Jehovah's Witnesses religious.

kad~r

to ld

mnurncrs

from Nc\v York,
at

Sunday's

memorial sc rvi c~. "]L'hovah is
not to blame wh,•n bad things
happen

to

good people."

Poli ce say Mi ch elle Htca, 39,
had lied to neighbors, relatives
and even her own husband for
months, telling them she was
1

pregnant .

He said sales of the
LORAIN (AP) -The Ford
Motor Co. said it will halt pro- redesigned Villager and Quest
ductlon at two plants in Lor~in lines is down 34 percent from
County later this month .
A two-wee k. shutdown is last year. "Tl1e minivan market
planned Oct. 16 to 30 at an tends to go for the larger-sized
assembly plant in Avon Lake, modds," Sharkey said. "The
which makes Mercury Villager smaller models have become
and Nissan Quest minivans,
because of declining sales for less popular with consumers
contparcd co last year."
those models.
A Lorain plant will stop pro -.
The Lorain plant employs
duction this week on the
I ,730 people and the Avon
Econoline van for one week
because of parts shortages, Ford Lake plant ha s 2,715 workers,
spokesman Nick Sharkey said. .Sharkey said.

.

New institute hopes to bring doctors, scientists together
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
State University this week will
open a heart and lung research
institute designed to bring physicians and scientists together.
Spectalists often don't meet
on a campus as large as Ohio
State's . Offices for doctors from
the OSU Medical Center's divi sions of cardiology and pulmonary medicine are being
moved mto the new building to •
centralize the univemry's heart
and lung research in one place.
Dedication of the $23.8 million building is set for Friday.
Faculty and staff members began
moving in late last month; the
building is to be occupied by
early Novt'mb~:r.
Rcscnrch at cht' inscitut~..· also
will be closdy tied to ,, S70 mil !ton heart hosptta l that 1s to op,·n
by 2003 in an adjacent buddrn~.
The institute will include II

( ' INCINN ATI (AI') - Jlw Cincinn.tti lkn~als ' new stadiLttn is
~! 1 1\\'111~ \1,'1, n·Jtwn.ll boatr.:r, 111 :1 w .1y that has thl.' Coast G1.t;1rd wor1

Mondl~~oblr8,2000

Pomaroy, Mlddlaport, Ohio

Possible E.
coli outbreak
reported
MEDINA (AP) Another
potentially deadly E. coli outbreak has prompted health officials to close a Hallower:n haunted house at the county fairgrol,lnds where 27 previous cases
were traced .
The Carnival of Horrors
haunted hous~ was closed ThLtrsday because it was being operated
at a fairground s location rece ntly
pinpointed as the likely 'source of
an August ou'tbreak.
Dav1d Baldwin, the county's
health commissioner, said a 12mon th-old was diagnosed at
Medina General . Hospital with·
the same potenti;lly deadly strain
of I;:. coli that infected the patrons
at the county fa ir.
The infant was treated ' and
released. A 10- ye&gt;r- old g1 rl with
E. coli-type symptoms also was
treated and r&lt;•leased, a hospita l
nursing supervisor said. '
H ealth officials suspect th;lt .~t
least one of the two ch ild ren
wenc co the haL;nted hou sl', Daldwm .').l id . non ng dut there may b~
1110rL'

C.lSL'~.

"Th 1 ~ IS

SOlllL'th ln g tf ut

laboratories for work in areas
such as cellu lar and molecular
studies, genetics, robotics, transplantation and blood-ve&gt;Sel for mation .
"The promise of this place is
.phenomenal:' said Nicholas
Flavahan 1 a researChe["l who c·ame
to Ohio State three years ago
from Johns Hopkins University
in Baltimore. ''It has more expertise in vascular biology than
Hopkins has, and this ability to
focus in on the heart and lun g is
kind of unique."
Tht..• instituti.' .tls n will have .1

225-seat auditonum that can be
used for .le ctures, faculty meetings and satellite-linked teleconferences.
Because heart disease is the
nation's No. I killer, specialized
c'enters for heart and lung
research are being developed at
many universities.
"But they are really small and
don't have a lot of resources,"
Flavahan said. "This is one of the
few pJac,•s where you actually
h :w~ an institute."
He said the uniwrmy 's former chief of cardinlo~y. Dr. Pas-

cno kcd me.H or .l!l llll .li ft.·ce~
E.uhcr this WL'L'k. the Ct:ntL'r'
t&lt;1r Dl'il'.l..,l' Cnmrol .111d Prl'\'L'ntH&gt;ll ldl'.l'&gt;l'd .1 rt'pon th.Jt illlked
thL• prC\'IOtl\ t.l~eS tO l'llilt,llll lll .1t-

.md lt'C ll\L'd by fond
vendo r' oYer thl· Ll\t rhree d.1y' nf
the Cur
\\',HL'I'

(

cal Goldschmidt, was largely
responsible for turning the institute from an idea into reality_
Goldschmidt was a laboratory
director at Johns Hopkins when
Ohio State hired him in 1997.
Goldschmidt recruited eight
other Hopkins
researchers,
including Flavahan, for Ohio
State before leaving in the summer to become chief of cardiology at Duke University, whi ch
has the nation's largest he&lt;trt center.
A search committee has been
formed to find a new director
for the instit\lte.
Dr. Michael Grever, chairman
•
of Ohio State's Department&gt;of
Medicine and head of the soaich
conuniuee, said Goldschm!dt
will be replaced by two people
- one taking over tht• institOte
and the otht·r the c.miiold',gy
d1 vision.

."'U'e

Clay
Pomeroy Fire Dept.

.

Floyd c. Hickman
Pomeroy Fire Dept.

Royden
Hawkins

•

Tom Cremeans
Pomeroy Fire Dept.

Steve
Harten bach
Pomeroy Volunteer
Fire Dept.
Pam Hartenbach

Greg ca,,en1ter
Tuppers Plains

Elliah
~spankY

Roush

John Ryan
Hill
Racine Fire Dept.
Bobbi, Katelyn Er
Kaleb Hill

Country Mkt

.Brandi
King
Syracuse Fire Dept.

'

•

Allen Ball
POMEROY - Allen Edward Ball, 98, of 32734 Highlancj Road,
Pomeroy, died on Thursday, Oct. 5, 2000, at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center in Pomeroy.
He was born on Oct. 23, 1901, in Pratts Fork, son of the late
Leonard and Emera Dains Ball. He was a retired carrier for the U.S.
Postal Servic~.
Surviving are his wife, Mattie Keiser Ball, a son and daughter-in-law,
Edward and Hazel Ball, Pomeroy; a daughter, Rita Lewis, Pomeroy;
· four stepchildren and their spouses: Linda and Jeff Workman of Car' penter, Barbara Stahl of Middleport, Charles and Lori Sprouse, Jr.,
Middleport, William and Maria Sprouse, Wallingford, Conn.; three
grandchildren and three great grandchildren; and a number of stepgrandchildren and step-great-grandchildren.
. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his first wife,
~ Ada Bails Ball, his second wife, Freda Warner Ball, his son-in-law. Frank
• Lewis , a stepdaughter and a stepson.
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. today at Ewing· Funeral
Home, with burial to follow at Asbury Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Sunday from 6 to 9 p.m.

'

bitu
Norma Jean Hayman Smith
RACINE- Norma Jean Hayman Smith, 74, Dayton, died Saturday,
Oct. 7, 2000.
She was the daughter of the late Harry and Georgia Haytmn and w&lt;ts
a graduate of R.acine High School, Class of 1945.
.
She was an active participant in the family business making deliveries
for Sears stores in the Dayton area and was a member of Ft. McKinley
United Methodist C hurch and a former member of St. Marks .United
Methodist Church .
Alorig with her parents, she was preceded in death by a sister-in-law ·
and husband, IUthleen and Harry Getter; sister- in-law Gertrude Smith,
cousins Grace Ellis, Ben Philson and Kathleen Philson .
· She is survived by her husband of 47 years, William C. Smith; her
beloved son, William Jeffrey Smith; one sister, Audrey Henry of Jackson;
. a half-sister and her husband, Eleanor and Robert Clark of East Longmeadow, Mass.; three brothers-in-law, Howard and Ruth Smith of Day. ton, James and Connie Smith of Pomeroy, Homer Smith of Louisville,
Ky.; and numerous nieces, nephews and cousins.
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday at Ft. McKinley
.United Methodist Church, Salem Avenue, in Siebenthaler. Officiating
: will be Rev. Katharine Schaefer.
· Graveside services will be at 2 p.m. Thursday at Letart Falls Cemetery
Chapel in Racine.
·
..
· Friends may call Tuesday from 5-8 p.m. at Baker-Hazel Funeral Home
in Dayton.
· Memorial contributions may be made to the Ft. McKinley United
Methodist Church in her memory at www.bakerhazel.com.

Clifford Wooten

Eber
Pickens)r.
Er Senior
Syracuse Fire Dept.
Velessa, Jordan,
Casey Er Trey Pickens

Den1ocraa needed the fundraisers to "compete with the
Republican money machine" in
the stare, said David Leland, Ohio
fromPipA1
Democratic Party cluirnun.
During this campaign, the state
Supreme Court Justice Alice
Robie Resnick, who is up for re- has given S7 .2 million to Democelection, was cut off toward the ratic candidates compared with
end of her speech so Glenn could $22.8 million to Republicans,
according to the Center for
introduce Clinton.
The president recalled how Responsive Politics.
The Washington, D.C.-based
Ohio voters put him over rhe top
for the party nomination at the nonpartisan re~rch group ranks
1992 Democratic National Con- Ohio as 43rd in the nation in
terms ·of money given to Democventionin New York.
"And on election night, when rats, compared with eighth in
Ohio came into the Clinton/Gore Republican donations.
Democrats have lost Ohio but
column, they pronounced me
won the presidency just twice in
president-elect," Clinton said.
Democrats wanted the visit by the last century. No Republican
Clinton, who came to Columbus has won the White I-iousr without
in 1996 for a similar event, to winning Ohio.
Polls show Gore trailing Repubexcite party faithful in the state to
campaign hard for Gore in the lican opponent George W. Bush in
final weeks before the Nov. 7 elec- Ohio by four to five percentage
points.
tion.
• Despite Clinton's absence. the
Clinton carried Ohio in 1992
rally was an opportunity for and 1996 with 40 and 47 percent
Democrats to gear up for the 'elec- of the vote, respectively, but the
tion, sa td Maryellen O'Shaugh- state's Democratic parry has weaknessy, who is running against ~tate ened since.
Republican Rep. l'at'Fiberi for the
Both of Ohio's U.S. senators are
12th Congressional District of Republicans, as are I I of the state's
central Ohio.
19 representatives. The GOP con"It's always good to get togeth- trols both houses of the state Legholds all statewide
er as a parry tO talk about what's at islature anrl
't, '
stake and renew efforts and com- offices except two Supreme Court
mianents," she said .
seats.

Actions filed
POMEROY Foreclosure
actions have been ftled in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
LaSalle National Banlr., Orangeburg, N.Y., against Harlow Willis,
Pomeroy, and by American Business Credit Inc., BaJa Cynwyd,
Pa., against Bill E. Buchanan ,Tuppers Plains, and others; and by
Curt E. Spencer, Albany, against
Victor J. Morris Jr., Langsville.
An judgment action · has been
granted in the court to Conseco
Bank Inc., against Martha Boynton, and others, and by Nationwide Home Mortgage Co., formerly known as Allied Group
Mortgage Co. , against Roger S.
Hook and
. others .

Mormng
St.tr
Unaed
Methodi st Church w11l have its
homecoming Su nday. Wor&lt;hlp
will be held at IO a.m. Sunr.lJy
sc hool at 11 a.m . .1 JillllL'r ;1t
12:30 p.m . fo ll mwrl bv an aflernoon ~ong !IL'n·ice. D ewa\' ne
s'tuttler, pastor. inntc'' th~ pubhc

Seeks divorce

from PapAl

Help

lrom,.pA1

Village
from PapAl

from PageA1

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

During one appearance, a veteran introduced her by saying:
"She may be Miss America, she
may be a former Miss Kentllcky,
but she's every ve.teran's daughter.''
French, of Maysville, Ky., won
the crown last year whih; studying
fashion design at the University

enforcement S52.88; EMS butld- n1a:1y."
For that reason, some hosp1t;us
ing fund, $3,436.82; total of all ·
already
are makmg procedural
balances, $90,282.87.
Attending were: Donna Peterson, · Mony Wood, Bill Roush,
Katie Crow, and Mike Ralston,
nuintenance supervisor.

•

of Cincinnati.
The. beauty queen says she
won't abandon her cause once
her retgn ends Saturday night at
the 80th annual Miss America
Pageant. She has agreed to write a .
weekly column on veterans issues
for the military newspaper Stars
and Stripes, and serve . as its
ambassador.
But her first priority after surrendering the throne is to marry
Kentucky Lt. Gov. Steve Henry,
46, in Lollisville on Oct. 27.

LOCAL STOCKS

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Correction Polley
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. a story, call the newsroom 'at (740)

992·2156 ..

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Mtmtarc The Associate d Press and the
Ohio Newspaper Association .
Poetmllltr: Send addr.ess correctio ns to
The Dally Sentin el, 111 Court St ..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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AEP- 361J/,.
Akzo -44
AmTech!SBC- SJi,
Ashland Inc. - 321,
AT&amp;T -27'.
Bank~ One - 35 ''r.
Bob- Evans- 17'',.

BorgWarner - 36',
Champion- 3
Charming Shops -

5'.

City Holding - 7'.
Federal Mogul - 4'.
Firstar- 19

TP Distrid to meet
TUPPERS PLAI NS - The
Tuppers Plains Rt·g~&lt;mal Se\\er
Distric t will met 111 regular :-.~:s­
sion, Tuesday, 7 p.m.

Immunization
·clinic set
POMERbY - Meigs County
Health Department will offer an
immumzation clinic Tuesday, 9 to
11 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m ., at tts
office, 112 E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy. Donations are appreciated, but no one will be denied
service.

changes.
Dr. David Bates, chicf of the
division of seneral medicine at
Brigham and Women's Ho1pirnl in
Boston, has led a11 effort chert:
requiring doctors to order dru~
for patients on a compmcr rather
than simply writin11 proscnptit&gt;ns
on paper.
"Making
major
sysr~ms
changes like computeriiing e&gt;rdcring is a big process chmge;· Bates
said. Doctors "are generally wry
resistant to change.''
Changmg the way drub" are
prescribed also would help pharmacists who have trouble readmg
prescription slips. s.ud Dand
Kvan cz, who m.l'nagL·~ ,1bout SO
pharnucists :H the Cl11uc.
NASA is lookin g 3t m:~ m· other
applications for the technologv.
including monitonn ~ thr: he.1lth
of astronaut~ in sp.lCt'. s.ud 11.1\'ld
York, a soHw:1re c n giiJL'L'r who kd
the NASA Glenn team.

VALLEY WEATHER

•

The Daily Sentinel

POMEROY Jum or and
Rita White will entertam at the .
Meigs Senior Citizens Center at
5:30 p.m Th ursday dunng the
dinner hour.

License issued

EMS log calls

Veterans

To entertain.

Homecoming set

POMEROY A marriage
license has been issued in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Jeffrey Scott Darnell, 23, and
Tonya Renee l'halin, 22 .

Lunch

Sunday, 2:30 a.m., Pomeroy
Police Department, Gary H anning,HMC:
9:06 p.m ., Starcher Road ,
Becky Newell . treated;
9:30 p.m., Hill Street, assisted
by Pomeroy, Charb Lomley.
RUTLAND
Sunday, 8:02 p.m., New Lima
Road , auto fire, Charles Lambert
Road , treated .

.

POMEROY - An action for
divorce has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
. Tina Sutton, Portland, against
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - William C. Sutton, Lebanon.
Many youngsters have unhealthy
eating patters and are physically
inactive. In ll'lany schools, junk
POMEROY - Units of the
food both from home ond
Meigs
Emergency
Services
frmh vending machines in lunch
menr of Agriculture, which over- rooms - competes with healthi- answered five calls for assistance
over the weekend. Units respondsees the program, 96,000 schools er choices.
.
The USDA's Food and Nutri- ed as follows:
a day serve up nutritious low-cost
CENTRAL DISPATCH
or free lunches to nearly 27 mil- tion Service, which administers
Saturday,
11:25 a.m., Village
the
school
meals
program
nationlion American children every
ally, has several new initiatives to Manor, Nina Dixon, Holzer
school day.
Public schools and independent help schools answer those chal- Medical Center:
non-profit schools which partici- lenges, and in addition to serving
pate in the National School mid-day meals, most schools,
Lunch Program receive cash sub· including all Meig. County
sidies and donated commodities schools, serve a free breakfast to
from . the USDA for each meal all students. The USDA has also
served: In return, they must serve begun offering an after-school
lunches that meet federal require· snack for some schools with
ments, and they n1u1t offer free or enrichment programs or other Glenn developed the technology
in 1996. The data would be
reduced-price lunches to eligible afier-school activities.
How much does the program 1hieldcd from Internet voyeurs by
children.
But new i11ues face the pro- cost? Congre11 appropriated the same encryption system that
gram now. More children - and $5.46 billion for the progran1 for government allencies use.
Mackli1 said he was not certain
adults - suffer froll'l diet-related Fiscal Year 1999, and SS.\3 billion
hoW many patients, if any, died last
health problems and obesity. for PY '98.
year as a result of medical errors at
the Clinic. Ohio does not require
hospitals to report such errors.
landing;
"There are certainly errors that
Cotterill gave her report of viloccur,"
Mack.lis said: "We don't
lage account balances: general
fund, S 12,097 .27: street construc- know if any of those errors resulttion,
$33,741.48;
highway, ed in the death of a patient. But
$3,601.93; fire
department, we do know there arc some
meetings;
• Discussed the possible repair Sl3,634.HI; water, SlB,269.07; patients who h&lt;tve been injured
or replacement of the municipal pool. Sl.267.H; ~uaranty meter, through medical errors. And if the
building, and refened the matter Ji3,979.37; cemetery, S201.8ll; law answer is ~ven one, then it~ too

ALBANY - Clifford Wooten, 78, of School Lot Road, Albany, died
Saturday, Oct. 7, 2000, at the Veterans Administration Medical Center,
Chillicothe.
Born in Wayne, W.Va. on Jan. 31, 1922, qe was
· the son of the late Isaac and Elizabeth Vanhorn
Wooten. He lived most of his life and was a very
active farmer in Colllmbia Township, Meigs
County. He was a U. S. Army Air Force veteran
of World W:1r II serving in Cassablanca, and a
member of the Albany VFW Post 9893, the
Albany AM Vets 93, and Joseph Freeman American Legion Post 476 ofWilkesville.
He was cared for by his nephew, Donald K .
Wooten , who hv~d in the home and surviv~s
to Councilin&lt;tn Bill Roush for
. L _ __;~z__ __,j along with a sister, lucille Jordan of Huntington,
.
W.Va.; a brother, Donald E. (Phyllis) Wooten of price quotes:
• Pmm•roy: three &lt;tdd,tional nephews, Daniel G . (Brenda) Wooten of · • Approved the purchase of
: Albany, Russell Wooten ofYinron, and David Wooten of Dexter; a niece winterjackets for police officers;
• Approved placing a wind
; Joan Wooten of Long Beach, Calif.; gra~1dnephews, Isaac and Zachary
sock
at the Syracuse· ball field to
,, Wooten of Albany: several other nieces, nephews and collsins, and a speassist emergency helicopters in
cial friend , Margie Allman.
Besides his parent&lt; he was preceded in death by a sister Hazel Wooten
· and a brother, Anderson Wooten.
·· Funeral services will be held Wednesday. Oct. 11, at I p.m. at the
~ Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home. The Rev. John Elswick will officiate and
: burial will be in Ogdin Cemetery with military graveside services by
; Albany Post 9893. Friends may call at the funeral home Tuesday, Oct. I 0,
;2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. ·

Pomeroy Fire Dept.

Katie, Kaleb, Jordan,
Casey Er Trey
Victor Er Vickie Roush

LOCAL BRIEFS

Clinton

·~

4
(Rutlana)

C,ll1

just go on and on w1th pcopJ...:
mf~cting otllers." he ....~i d.
Tile E. col! b.Jct~-· nurn ' ' typlc.llly tr.JIP. mmcd rhrough cont.lllHil.ltL'd Jnnklng w,liL' I, und~r­

L' d

Goldschmidt was a laboratory director at Johns
Hopkins wl1e11 Ohio State hired him in 1997.
Goldschmidt recruited eigl1t other Hopki11s researcl1ers,
;,c/,ding Fla11aha11,for Ohio State before /emling in
the summer to become chief of cardiology at Duke
U11i11ersity, whic/1 has the nation's largest heart cente.r.

,.. _M_o_n~da...;y:..;.'_o_ct~o-bl:r~9~,~2000;.,:,;;...;._==---------:==::====P=ome=r:o:y,:M:I:dd:l:•po=rt,=O:h:lo===::----:-::::-::-~:-...;T:h:e-:D:•:II:y~Sen~t=ln~e=l·_:P..:a:!g:•,:A:,3

Gannett- 51~.
General Electnc - 59'1•
Haney Davidson - 481.
Kmart- 6'1•
Krogar- 21l•
Lands End- 19l.
Ltd . - 23:,
OaK Hill Financial- 15).
OVB -27
BBT- 29~.
Peoples -14
Premier- S'a

Rockwall - 32

Rocky Boots - sl.
AD Shall- 61 ),
Saara- 34

Warmup starts on Tuesday
BY THE ASSOC)ATED PRESS

The tri-county area will bask in
sunshine Tuesday through Friday
as high pressure settles over the
region, the National Weather Service said.
Temperatures will warm up
slowly, with highs around 60 on
Tuesday and near 70 by friday.
Some rain or snow showers
may linger tonight .
Forecast
Today... Cloudy with ram or
snow
showers ... Mainly
this
morning. Highs in the 40s to
lower 50s.
Tonight ... Mostly cloudy with a
few snow showers or rain showers
early. Lows mainly in th e 30s.

mostly
Tuesday... Partl y to
sunny. A little warmer. Highs 111
the 50s to aro und 60. ·
Extended forecast
Wedne sday... M osrlv
&lt;unm·.
Lows in the 30s. •High s in the
upper 50s and lower f,Os.
Thursday... Fair, Low&lt; 111 tltt·
upper 30s to lower 40s. llr ghs rn
the mid and upper 60s.
Friday... Fair.' Low&gt; m the 41ls.
Highs in the upper 60s .1nd !own
70s.

To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel
7

Shoney's -~

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

Wai·Mart- 451,
Wendy's - 19'1•
Worthington-

446·45 24

e•.

01

n ROU1 ! 1S Wf:ST

1~04 JACKSO N I"IK[

FRI10/6/00 • THURS 10/ 12/00

BOX OFFICI WILL OPEN AT

Dally stock reports ara the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's trans·
actions,
provided
by
Advest of Gallipolis .

6:30PM FOR !VINING S~OWS
2:30PM FOR MATINEES

Mother, son go on trial for '79 death
NEWYOR.K (A I') -

For two

d~.?c.ldcs, police .~ay thi.' n.·m.1ins of

M .uicline Car mk lud's .'\-ye;"Jrold d.mghtcr wert• st.tshl·d aw.ty 111
,1 locked bedroom clo~L't.
The wonun .tnd her ~o n
,Jllq;;edly bc.1 t the toddler unconsnou'l.. wr,tppl'd hn body in p!Jsnc Jnd newsp.lpL·rs. thl'n stutTl·d it
111 .1 trunk, which was l.ucr tnoved

to anoth~r apartment .

On Tu~ s d.1y, Carmicil.lel. (,I ,
and her son. Gregory, JH, go on
trial on sel·o nd-dcgrl·~ mur ..kr
ch&lt;trges for th~ I 979 sb ying. If
convictt'd, each fan:s ,J maxinwm
sc:ntenc~: of 2~ n·:'lrs ro li fl' In
pnson .
Th~ pair plea&lt;k·d mtH&gt;rent List
November.

THE KLUMPS (PG13)
(PG)

'

THE ADVENTURES OF ROCKY
&amp; BULWINKLE (PG)

MATINEES SATISUN 3:15

�_Th_e_D_ru~·ly_S_en_ti_ne_l________________l~~~~~~~(tll

Pa eA4

The Daily Sentinel

Mon.hy. October t. 1000

•

'L.st41Jilslid In &amp;8

. Dear Ann Landers: Our 8-year-old
son has been asking for a baby bottle.
:fhis has been going on for at least a
year, and my husband and I are at our
wits' end. There has been no recent
trauma in our lives, our marriage is fine,
and we haven't moved or made any big
changes . My son seems to be a normal
lmy, and is doing well in school. I told
him I would write to you about his
request, and he is willing to give some
thought to what you have to say.
Should we give him a bottle and ·
hope it is harmless? Or should we stick
to our guns and keep saying no' -Conce-rned Mom in Iowa
Dear Concerned Mom : We contacted Dr. Joseph Hagan , a pediatrician in
South Burlington,Vt., and the chairperson of the Committee on Psychosocial
· Aspects of Child and Family Health ~
Dr. Hagan soid, based on the information tn your letter, the problem does

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

• Fax: 992-2157

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

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry, Boyer
Advertising Director

~geAS.
Monday, October 9, 2000

Ann says eight-year-old wants bottle for attention

The Daily Sentinel
74~992·2156

Ay ll1e

\

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Utten w tht tditor tur -~tcumt. TMJ should 1H ~n rluut JOO 'llfOnls. AU ltturs An siJJ}HI
w rJilinr GnJ ''"'•U H l-;,,.,d and incllllh wJdnu and trkphont nurbtT. l\'o lllllifnrtlleturs •'iU
bot pwblilhrd. Urrrrs should br in guuJ 14Ule, oddrrnin1 issJiu, n01 twrwMlirits.
Thc- upllfloru uptl'urd m thr rolu111n J.lfJ,., un thr cu1urns1u· uf the Oftio ~'Dlk1 Pwblislling
("u. '_t tditonnl board, unltn otherwisr noth/.

NATIONAL VIEWS
'&gt;

Rotten

Oot sound serious.

According to Dr. Ha gan, many chi!-

Olympics inflexibility adds
up to poor treatment .

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
dren that age display attention-getting
behavior designed to shock adults. It is
possible when your son first asked
about a baby bottle, you reacted in such
an astonished way that he derived
enjoyment from it . He continues to
request the bottle becallse you continue
to react strongly. Your son may also be
asserting his independence by taking a
position in o ppositi on to yours, regardless of what he may actually want.
The solution is to •avoid telling him
"no," and to avoid reacting strongly to
his request, so ~" it loses its ability to

shock. Do not gtve him the bottle.
Ignore hlS request entirdy. Simply say,
"I don't want to talk about that,'' and
change the subject .
Dear Ann Landers: My new husband
was the best man at his close friend 's
wedding last year. He spent several hun ~
dred dollars on a tuxedo and all the
accessories. and treated his best friend
and the ushers to a bachelor's night dinner. I rold him he didn "t need to buy a
wedding gift, since being in the wedding party and spending money on
clothes should be considered his g•ft.
Here's the kicker: My husband and I
were married a few r'nonth!\ ago. We had

a very small wedding, and his brother
was the best man . His dose fri~nd and
wtft' were invited as guests . They did
not give us a wedding gift. When my
husband asked him about it , he said. " I
got you exactly what you got !Ill.' for
my wedding -- nothing!''
Ann ' can this be riglu: Was mv hu sband required to purchase ;1 weddm g

.

• The Gazette, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, "" rile 0/ympin ami dt&gt;p·
i11g:With Olympic offici.1l&lt; painstakingly checking athletes fur pur- .
poseful doping, you would think they could 4uickly excuse an
innocent young woman. All she did "wrong" at the Sydney games
was take an over-the-counter told remedy prescribed by a team
physician.
But no. They &lt;tripped Romania's Andreea Raducan, 16, of the
gold medal she had won in women's all-around gymnastics. They
acknowledged nothing w;ts sinister abom her taking the cold remedy, which caused her to test posJttve tor the banned stimulant,
pseudoepherdrine. Ilut they insisted the Anti-Doping Code "must
b e enforced without co mpromio;;e.''

They ca n't square that wtth the Olymptc Games' supposed found .Jtimf of ~port~m;m~llip .wJ ~ood \vill. Wh at rotten treatment for a
marvelous athlete ....
• The New York Tiines. Oft the t"li!!fl,z.~ra tioll 111 the .\tirldh, East: The
vrolen ce th.lt l!.lS co nvulsed the Middle East since late last week has
g1ven lsradis .md l',ilestintc~ns .1hke a fl· i~ht en ing replav of the bloodshed thJt ..,rJrred the reg1on for ~o m.my years. The que"ition now is
y.. hcther the tlghtmg; will pn)\r rn h~.· ,1 re111 porary "l'tback in tiH•
dnn:· to nuk~ pl'JLl' vr J tt&gt;rllllll.ll poult in negntiatiom. The n:-cem
experic1Ke of ~orthern Ireland mggc'lt~ th ,n , ·in lent mubun.ts neeJ
not upend .l dctr:rmmed dl\)rt tu 'll'ttk &lt;1 prolongt·d cu ntlin, but
haoic \\·ork \\·ill be reqlllred by l ... rat'li. J&gt;ak.,tini,m and American

le aders to saw the Middle F.N peatl' ta lh Tlw cJn begin at the
planned meetin~ m Paris on Wedne,J.ay uf Prime Minister Ehud
Barnk of lsrad.Yasir Arafat, the: Pak:::,tinian \eader, and Secretary nf
1

St:tte Madelcim· Albright.
There mu't b~.· J. quick Ct:'l'i:lti on of vio lence. Mr. Arafat Lmd Mr.
B,1rak -.;hould t.tke urgent me;tst.m: . . to halt the clashes thJt have left
at least 4H (.k,ltLmd hundrni~ \\"Oll mkd . . ..
·

Mr. llJrak mu&lt;r torcd[dlv defend thl' li\'t'&lt; of Israe li so ldi ers and
c1viham undn Jtt,Kk. Uur h·. . IH.'L'd'i .•l"i tJr .1~ pmsible, to avoid o;;endin g troop&lt;;, mt o unnecc'is.lrily co ntl·ont.Jtional positiom and lihould
minimiz~,.· t he me o~- live ammunition. Mr. Barak ;md Mr. Ar;-~f, tr
should j..,sue a jomt cJ ll tOr .m l'llJ to thl' violen ce. ·
Pre&lt;idmt Cltnton ha s made clea r thai he is ready to help res(ram
th e v10lt'nc~ and revive the peace tal b . If the violence end~. &lt;~ccuri­
ty otftciJJ... tfom both liidc'i ~ houiJ di ~·c uo;;&lt;; w&lt;tys to avoid a recurrence
of tlghting. Till' alt~-rnatiYe to rebuilding tru•;t an d communications
is now 011 dcadlv display.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today ts Monday, Oct. 0.the 283rd day of200II.There are 83 days ·
left in the year. Th" is the Columbus Day holiday in the United
States, as well as Thanksgivtng D.1y 111 Canada.
Today\ Hi~hlight in Hi&lt;tory :
On O ct. 9. 195H, Pope Piu&lt; XII died , 1Y years after he was elevated to the p.lp,tcy, (H e was 'ucceeded by Pope John XXIII.)
On tim date:
In I 1&gt;.15, religious di ssident Roger Wtlliams was bamshed from
th e Ma«achmetts Bay Colony.
In 1711 1, th e Co llegiate School of Connecticut -loterYale Univer'ii t y - 'vao;; chartl'red m Ne-w Haven.
In 1776, a gro up of Spamsh missionaries settled in present-day
San Francisco.

In I ~H~. the public was tirst ,ldnutted to the Washington M o nument.

In 1930. Laura Ingalls became thl' tirs~ woman to ily across the
United State&lt; ,lS she completed a nine-slOp JOUrnev from Roosevelt
'
Fi eld, N:Y.. to Glendale. Calif
In 193(), the Rrst ge 11erator at Boulder (IJter Hoover) IJ am began
ttammittmg dcctricity to Ln, Angelc.:..
In 1940. the Eugene O'Neill dr,1111.1 " The lce·nmt Cometh"
opt.•f1 ed ,a the .~vbrtin Beck Thcdtt::r 111 NL'W York.
In 1967. L.uin Amer1c,m gue rr ill.1 \eadl'r C he (;Lil'V&lt;lrJ WJ'i exe-cuted whde a.ttempti ng tu innte rc.. volurion 111 Uolivi&lt;l.
1

ln 1975. ~m·te t ~c1enno;;t AndreJ \ ,tkh ,uov wa' awardt:d th e Nobel
Peace Pri ze.
.
In 1Yrl5 , tht• hi}Kkt.'r' of the Ad u\l c L\u rn crui'it.: liner surn::n

derl'd .1tier th~ sh1p arnved Ill _l'o rt Said. Eh'YPt.
Tt.:n yc..·c~r~ ago: Prc..'Sld cm Bu\h tnld .1 Ill'\\'\ co nt(:rcncc he would
b~ \Villmg to cO mH.kr h1~h c r 11 1COI11L' t;\X LHC'i tOr .the wealthy, but
later .l ppe·,lred to bac k o!T tl l.lt stand.
Ft vt yc..\11"i .1go: Sabot(.'ur-.;· pulkd 21J ~p i h·'l frDm ;.l .;;t.retch of r.-ultoad track. c.1 mlng .•m Alll tr.tk tr,\ill to dl'failm AriiOTl.l; one per'ion
w·.:l~ killed .llld .tbu"ut Jil!) wnc lll.JUred.A. l.l l'drthquah· \vith mag:ni tuJc..· 7.(• 'ih nok the \\T'it lP. l ~t nf f\.1l'\H o, kdl111!!: ~ 1 people..-. AmL' ri Cln\ EJ\,,IJd It I .l'\\ t.., .llH.i LrH L 'X.-' Je \tll ~lu.., .md ( ;cr lliJ n ( :hnsn.me
Nuc..·li~k·m-Volh.trd \\·nn dw f\.obel Pn !t' f{H· lll l'tliune for \tlldll''i of
how gem·.., t ontml l'&lt;i rl )- t' Jllhr yn dt! \·elnpr n ~·nt.
()Ill' \t'.lr .1go· Thl· U n1t ed Autn \);.'prkl'r~ 111d l ·nrd J\1otor Co.
n'.~e h ed

.\

IL'nt.HI\"l' -t~rl'l'llll'tH ~•n .tIll..'\\ lillltl.\d,

ho ur-i ,Jttcr ,t l1.1nd
Cu i nf \\' •rkL'I"'- w.dh·d \ ,tf !Ill' I' •h wh~·n .1 \ fll ~~· d~.·.tdlmc p.i~\l'll. I11
boxJTJg\ tir'r ...1111 nrpncd h.ltdc nf [he 'lL':x~··;, i\l.1rg,ul't !Vbc(;regnr
dl'fl.';lted ! .o J ( ~ho\\" by \\'llllllll~ .tl! tom rollllLh Oil all thrl'c _ludgl·'l·
C~n.l\ Ill ,I pn !ll&lt;HH_HI hl'ld Ill ~\..',ittk .
1

'Tod.l\"".; BlltlhLI\"\ .A\"tor r nthll II JJ~l'l i~ 77

TUPPERS PLAINS Rachael Erin
Markworth celebrated her fifth birthday on
S~pt. 23 with a party at the Tuppers Plains fire

---------------------~-----.,

.,

station.

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Theme was Power Puff Girls with c~p­
cakes, ice cream and punch . being served.
Games were played.
Attending were her mother, Amy, and
brother, Timothy, Pam, Joshua and Ashley
Hager, Kayla Hawthorne, Layla and Kayla
Graham, Savannah Pullins, Maria Sharp,
Rachael Markworth Ja cob Smart, Savannah Pullins, Maria Sharp,
Ja co b Smart, Alex Amos, Ally Hendrix,
Christopher Chaney, and Megan and Max Carnahan.
·
Attending from Parkersburg were Amy and Ian Miller, Nathaneal,
Kayla, Mike and Laura Backus and nephew Cody, and Laurel and
Timothy Stou!Ter. Sending gifts were her great-gtandmother,Virginia
Meeker, Dylan Mil~n , her dad, David Mark worth, and grandparents,
Carl and Cheryl!Markworth of Provo Utah.

Hate crime laws.~ Here's the real message
Potter quot~ detective John Leslie of the New :
York City Police Department:
"! hate these .cases because they become
real mysteries. Everybody jumps on the bandwago n."

In his bountiful acceptance speech,Al Gore
cited as an urgent priority the expansion of

federal hate-crime laws - thereby encouli;.ging even more states to enact 1egi s lati~n that
would impose additional prison .time for socall ed bias crimes.
The most recent hate-crime law was
signed this summer by Gov. George l'ataki of
New York. As he wielded his pen, he made an
astonishing statement. He said tha t if such a
!Jw had been in existence in Germany, it
could have prevented the Holo c tll lt.

Nat
Hentoff
NEA COLUMNIST

Now, in New York State, thn ... e cnn\'icted uf

assault motivated by race. religion. gender,
liexual prt'feren ce or age will litrve .;ub . . t;mtia\1y more years in prison dun tl1to:y wul1 ld havt=
if thdr crin1es had not bet!n com rn.ittcd
because of any of these prejudices.
In llJ?2. a similar law was overturned by
the Ohio Supreme Court (State VI. Wyant)
because "Once the proscribc..' d act is com m itted, the government cnminalizes tht• underlyin~ thought by enhancing the pl'nalty based
on viewpoint. If'the legi'\lature can ~nhanc!=' a
penalty for crunes co mmitted 'by reason of
rac ial bigotry.' why not 'bv reason of opposition to abortion, war. or any othL·r political .or
moral viewpoint'?"

But the next year, the· United States
Supreme Court - in an J\tonishi ngly boneheaded decisiol1 (Wisconsin vs. Mitchell) unanimOusly approved J Wiscon~in h,atecrimcs statue. Writing the decision , C:hiefJusticc William Rehnqui~t gave th~ \&lt;lllll' rationale that all ;JdvorateS of rl1ese laws g ive -

among then .t Sen. Ted Kennedy, the AntiDefamati on League, the camoutlagl·J attorney gen~ral. various gay and l~:sbian organiza-

tions , William J e!Terson Clinton, and, stunningly. the American Civil Liberti e'i Union.
The Chief Justice, on one of his o!T days,

said that these laws are e'pect,lllv nee ded
because biJs crimes .:ll't' " thought to intliLt
gr~ater indi vi dual and soclt:tal harm." Its victims sutler "distinct emotional harms ."

"By putting those crintina1s away for longer
terms. a me ~ sa gl' is se nt tn the conmn1mty say th e supportLTS of hJte - nimc bw,- that
these offenses are particularly oA"'eno;;Jvt· . Thi'i
means , of co urse, th :lt anyone' beaten up by
attacken who arc not doubly puni~hcd by
"bias" laws i~ being told thc1t l1is ur· her
• injurie'i .:l n.:.· of k·ss importance to ~ociL·ty.
Thi~ - th e- Stlpn:mc Court not"w ith-.;t,mding viol.lte" the equal protection uf the
laws guarantct'd by the 14th Amendm ent. But
it looks as though the Senate will pa"'" the
Local Law Enforcement Act of 21100, a bill
that will expand the scope of wlw is comidered a h;ltt': crime
Furthermore, how i" ''biJ'i" d~tnmincd? If,
during a road-r;1ge assault, :1n e:x pleti,·t· tlie s
through the ;t}r, i&lt;; that mfli cicnt evidence for
a longer prison term? In the cle J rl'~t hook 011
this dangerously confused isme ''Hate

Crimes: Criminal Law and Id entity Poli rics"
(Oxford University Press, 199R) - law professor James Jacobs and researcher Kimberly

The subj ective. uncertain ''evidence" in

mwy of these ca~es also leads to a new forn1
of McCarthyism. Alleged bias crimes are
given a great deal of media coverage, and
prosecutors don't w.1nt to lose them
for tt·.tr of bein g voted out of office. So. when
.1 L".l\l' j.., \\'C;tk,lm•c..•sngators on bt: Sl'nt o ut tQ

POMEROY- Kelsey Mark Sauters celebrated his 1Oth birthday recently with a party
at his home on Collins Road, Pomeroy.
He is the son of Charles Mark and
Dianna Sauters, the grandson of Leroy and
Joyce S~uters of Pomeroy, and Delbert and
Loretha Vandevander of Whitmer, W Va . and
the great-grandson of Manda Eastman of
Pomeroy and Lester Dice of Onego, WVa .

"'" 1f tlw defendant has indic.tted prejudiced
beliefs in the past - by •mgazine' he or sh~
is known to read, or remarks made in the local
bar or barber shop.
•
In an Illinoi s case, People vs. Lai11pki11 , {
prosenttor Sll cceS&lt;flllly told the jury about
purport~d racl~t st.tt~ments the defendant hacf
'poken six years before the actual crime fof
which he was on trial!
::
But what if \Oilleone is sent to prison for a"·
long term becal!se it is reasonably dear that
he or she i&lt; indeed bigoted' Thi&lt; still sends ~
me'io;;agL· to a pt·r..,on who has b ee n badly
111Jurcd by an atta cker witl~_o ut a trace of" hi as
- · tlut his or her wounds arc of les~ impOrtance to the· community.
Also, as Caro lin a Cordero Dyer, a L; tm a
lL~ sbia n , noted in Nt:wsday, a "hate crime perpetrator" unlikely to get adeqllate. rehJbilita ti"o n" 111 prison . And, as the years behind bars
inrrea'ic, the pcrpetrJtor's hatred will grow.
Therdore . .l&lt;ks Ms. Dyer, "Wt ll our commu nity be ~a fer when he or .;;hl' i" relea&lt;;ed?"
Ask AI Gore and Joseph Lieberman. Also
ask them aboll t eqllal protection of the laws.
(Nat He11tqff· is a 1tati01wllr rprowned mulwrit)'
"" rlu· First A r1l clldmertt mtd tile Bill of R(~hts.) ·

Kelaey Sautera

Lochary speaks at DAR observance
POMEROY - A program on the Constitution and the Revolutionary War was presented by James Lochary at a recent :meeting of
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the Amcncan Revo lution, held at the Meigs County District Library.
Lochary, a Meigs nativ~ now residing in Ame~ville, is president of
Ewing Chapter, Sons of the American Revolution.
.
Preceding his talk members were gtven a revtew on the htstory of
the Constitlltion Wl'ek observance. It was noted that in 1955
Gertrude S. Carraway, while President General of the National Society DAR, designated September 17-23 as Constitution Week, a desIgnation later adopted by the Continental Congress.
The purposes of the observance and celebration of Constitution
Week, it was explained, are to emphasize the responsibility of ptotecti ng and defending the

Quality remains vital to marketplace success
BY JOHN CUNNIFF

WILTON , Conn.- Do you re call when
the word " quality" was likely to be part of a
co mpany slogan rather than a gua.,ntee- a
goal often sought but not achieved, a
promise made easily and jlllt as easily for-

tors, lawyers, supermarkets, uuiversitie ~ and
lnternet companies.
Qualiry me ans su rvival. It ineans more

He Jho \L:t up the jur.1n fn ~ titutl: to train
L'Xl'nHi VL''i in. th e proc t:dll l"l'~, wh1ch hi s mc-

than JUSt better products , but also less waste,
greater efficiency, better incomes, lower
costs, more profits , lower prices, more sJti sfled customers.
Businesses today usc stand~rdized reports
to disclose financi al re sults, he says, and 21st
ce ntu ry co mpani es will provide standardized
quality achil'vement reports as we.ll.
"Mathematical rclattonship ' will be
l'S tabli ~ h ed bl'twecn qualit y pcrfof1n:.tn ce
and profir, ,'' ht: ~ays, "much in d1c sa me WJY
th at "0C1al re~ponsibility IS now being
ma tched with fin anci:1l - re~u l t~."
Soon, he cxpLum, "th e c.:o . . t at· p oo r quality will beco me par.t of the b,tl:l!t ce d scorecard." ml'd by tinan nal &lt;lluly\t'\, Cfl'dit rating
lirm -.; ,md cump,lnil's co tlsid erin g a l'O !llpany's potential as a busineSs · acq uisiti o n·.
H l' '\l'l'' it as p.:u·t of a lon g evo luti on. Fi rst
l- :lllll' the lndmt ri.tl Revo lu tion, fe,tturing
hi gh qu,I\ity and h1gh COWL 'I hl·n C::l l1l l' ma s.;;
productiun , with nwd erate quality and

cc.:~sor, Jo~t: ph

lowe r ro ... t ~

gotten ?

C ompanies aren't ltkdy to get away with
tt anymore. If the 20th century is remembered as the century of f';rcat produc tion , the
21st. say&lt; Jos eph Juran , will co me lo be
known as the century of quality.
Join t ht: movement or , uffer, hL· 'ays Ill
dlcct, because the high e;t level ot quality "
not an option anymore. but .1 requirem en t o~
marketplace grown intensdy co111pe t1tive
bcc.w\t' o f ,t conve rgenn· of fa ctor-.;.
Juran's V!". ion can't be m in imi ze d , . . in ce he
la crally wrote th e book, th e· "Qll,tht y Con
tro l Handbook," pllb lisl1 ed in 1% I and "i ll
go mg through new editions, clut Jc scr ib~o:;
tht' mathematical bJ 'i is for qua li ty improvem~ntli.

D cPeo, bdin·'l'S w1 ll hcconH:
.,t.md.1nh fnr me .1~ Ur111g rhl' cn tnpl'tlti\'l' lll'.;,"'
u t~ Ul lll iJ.lllll'"' JurJn, to
I'

lK

hU\~' \\lth hi \ lllL'IlH~tl·(j.
l ur.l!l\ \'le\, .. -I n ~ h orr,

C)(, 111

I )cl·c mbL'L

th.H q u.dity
llt1prt1\'l'llll'llt'i .ll"l' the W,l }' tO "Ut VIV,1 J and
protit~ l Nor &lt;ndy f()r co mp;ltlll' \ prl&gt;Viding
1"-

m.tnl!f.ILtUrcd ~oo·d ~, hut &lt;;l'n icl' provid~.·r\
\t l l'!l{lfi c orgcmtZ;HIOil\, ho . . piu l-.. doc -

N ow, hl' ~·:-..: pLum, \VL' .1re 111 :1 rhird eLl of
ri ~;i ng q u.day .tnd f.dlm g coqs. I h" 1'
.ll·cn mph ,hnl b\· pml11ng qu .1 l11 y go,ll.., deep
111to thl· pm lT\~ nf obt.1i11111~ r,l\\ llldtl'J"I.lh ,

up through Pl·ndw tam .111d protl'"- l'\ .uH.i o n
through the mL'\ ul tod .1y"s va~t 111tornurion
rnourcl'\ .
All thl ~ ~~ (JnLtmed. Ill' heill'vc~ . h\' \\'h;lt

he see&lt; as "qu'a!ity drivers," of factors that
compel companies to recognize the quality
imperative. "Today, the proof is inescapable,"
he says.
Broadly speaking, the first driver is overcapacity of goods produced, already evident
in agriculture. He believes that "&lt;ts factorie~
produce more goods than can be sold, qual•
ity hecomes the competitiv~· advantage.''
The second driver is public poli cy. A,
comumer expectations rise, policymakers
mand ate improved quality. not jmt in the
United State:-. but m emerging co untr ie s
anx10m t o ex port their goods.
E-commercc i-.; the third driver. l3mincs~­
es ;m d CO ll\lllJier&lt;; now havt• t:asy and in..,tam
,H.:n·ss to proJuct inform atio n and prirt's,
mc;min g. says D eFeo " qual ity bccoJlll'':&gt; th~o.•
'&gt;lg nill c.~ ant difl"t:reiH.:l' bctWl't:n product.., ."
As he s~c~ it, a big ditTcrcn ce· ex i:o.t ~ in.. tttl t ucks betwee n the online shoppl'r and tl11.·
custonll:r \VIw shop !i at th e lo ca l &lt;;ton:.
" A dis&lt;;t~tisfied store shopper eve ntu all y
rcturn'i , but J frtl\trated online shopper \\1111
log o nto another ~ite and perl{&lt;lps never
Jg.1in~t vi ... it th t· first one," DeFeo 'i.ly~.
Time . . h.tve ckmgcd. h tr more ..,o th.ln
~.· , ·c r. qu.lltty i.., t:'i'iCntiJl to ~-t U l l llp .lllv \
h . .·.tltll ,liJd qJrvi\',d. Not J Lht ,\ l Ltim or.. ,1

(/(1/111

"C111111i{l" 1.~

,1

not, and as a result, the British

were unable to deliver a crushing bl&lt;?w. Washington's retreat
across the Ddaware saved the
Americans from surrender, ht•
said.
Lochary talked about the
that the dramatic turning point
of the w;-~r ca me in 1777 when
British General John Burgoyn~
was forced to surre nder at
Saratoga. The outcome of this
An1erican victory was an
alliance between France aud the

SPEAKER -James Lochary, pres- US that expanded the war into
ident of Ewings Chapters, Sons of an international co nflict. When
the American Revolution, Spoke to the British chose to invade the
members of Return Jonathan South in 1778, their campaign
Meigs Chapter, DAR, during the ended in disaster. French and
recent observance of Constitution American
forces
together
Week.
defeated General Cornwallis at
Yorktown, Va. in October 1781. In March 1782, the British Parliament
chose to end the Revolutionary War.
,
It is difficult, Lochary continued, to discuss the Constitution without first 1nentioning the national fran1ework of government - The
Articles of Confederation. He talked about the adop tion of the Articles of Confederation in 1977, the long debate and delays before final
ratification in 1781.
Lochary also discussed the three Northwe st Ordinance~, 1784,
' 1785 and 1767. He said the 1784 Ordinance prescribed that hw new
statos would be carved out of that regiori; the Ins Ordinance spe lled
out the terms of sale: 640 acre plors at $1 an ;tere; the 1787 o rdtn ance
specified that any territory with 60,000 white males co uld ap ply fur

• 21 years of practicing law in
Meigs County
• Former Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney
• Two time member of the Committee
to Evaluate Ohio State Supreme
Court Candidates 1
• Former member of -the Ohio State
Bar Association·Legat Ethics and
Responsibilty Committee
• Former member of the Qhio
State Bar Association Committee
on Criminal Justice

thl' Holzer Medi cal Center.

of Pomeroy.

Track the progress
of your favorite
team through the

Sentinel

Sports pages!

lms/I!('H rlllcil)'.• f _f(n Till'

. ls.illt'ilrt cd Pn:ss.}

..

\\ ww Lfl';l!o r \.l tHll

MONDAY
RUTLA N D
R utl.md
Township Trw.tcc:-.. J p.m., tire

,l\',l iLtblt.• from Tammy Jonc~. 99'.!.1&gt;74.1 .

stanon.

WEDNESDAY
PAGEVILLE - Scipt o Town 1
; h•p Tru,tecs, 6:30 p.m. WcdneG 0
d.1y. Pa~c\'llle· town hall.

..

53.
Cht!slurc, Mond.ly c\·cmng. dillncr at 6:30p.m . with mcctlllg .lt 7
p.m.
CHESHIRE

-

DAV

"My family and 1think Meigs County Is th'
greatest place to llvel I would be honored
to serve this county as County Court Judge."

~Eie~t
County
.

~ourt

Paid for b the candrdate

,
1 UPPERS PLAINS - '("uppers Plains VFW Ladtcs Auxihary;
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the hall.

CHESHIRE - DA.V. #53 .
located at 28051 State R o utl' 7 Ill
Cheshire will meet o n Monday
with dinner at 6:30 p.m. and the
metting at 7 p.m.

RACINE - R aCi ne Boord of
Public Aff.1irs , 8 p.m . M01tday at
the muni cipa l building.

RUTLANO
Sharon Hol i nL·~~ Ch urc h , rc..'\.J\',11
servi c;eo;; through O cr 1;_ Rc\'

Jack Dolin , &gt;peakl'r..

MlOOLEPORT WldQw~
l'&lt;ilowship, Wedne sday. noon!
Middleport Church of Christ.
Potluck dmner.
The Community Calendar
is published as a free service·
to non-profit groups wishini

to announce meetings and ·
special events. The calendar '

is not designed .to promote '

sales or fund raisers of any '
type. Items are printed only :

TUESDAY
POMEROY
C HOI CE
Home Edu cators, Tuesday, 1 p.m .
at l~oy Oak R~ sort. Informat io n

as space pertuits and cannot~
be guaranteed to be printed.
a specific number of days. :

MORE lOCAl ~EW~.
MORE LOCAL fOLK~.

,,

Subscribe today : 992-2156

..,.,"'~' 4d;' /

.... October is ~
"""'
Pastor
~·
- Appreciation
Month .......:..
/"

-

r,,,

Loyal, Dedicated, On Duty 24
Hours a Day, 7 Days a Week.
Show Your Pastor How Much
You Appreciate Them

Steve Story is your
best choice for
County
Judge.

C raig and

Darst of Middleport and the late
Orval "Cmley" and Betty Wiles

out more Jbout Ann Landt.•p;; .md ri..'Jd
h~..·r p.bt col llmll'l. \·isa the: Crl':Itor~
SnHtJcncw~b
pag~-.·
Jt

/ I

Mary K. Rose , regent presided adt th~ meeting which was folowed
by a grave memorial servtce and a DAR marker was placed on the
graves of Margaret Dutton, Miles Cemetery and Dorthea Fisher,
Sacred Heart Cemetery. A luncheon at Crows preceded the meeting.

Darst
of
Poml:roy
,lnnounn· the birth of a SOli.
Cooper Thom.I~ l"hrst , Au g. 1~ ,lt
He w eighed s~vcn pound s.
Grandparents are Tom and Be ssie

H ow to Dea l Wtth It, H ow to Co nquer
It" will gi \'e you the answ~rs. Send a
... df-Jddn.'\\ed . lo ng , business-SIZe envelo~ll' ;tnd .1 dw&lt;.·k or money order for
53.75 {th1s 111 rludcs posrage and han dlin g) t o. Alcohol. c/o Ann Landers .
I' 0. lle&gt;x 115&lt;&gt;2. Ch •cago. Ill . 606 11l)j(&gt;~ (In C.tnad.I. 'end S4 .'i 'i.) To lind

admissions as :J state.

AnnJ

b o.t~t, h11t .1 \Cllll'Cird ro lw ll\l'd hy em- 1
tolncrs. su ppli L' ''· in vntnrs and ot h n~.

strong

Loyalist support there. but did ·

Cooper Thomas Darst
I'OMElZOY -

help yoursdf or someone you love ?
"Akohohsm: How to R et.:og:n ize lt.

CALENDAR

Constitutio.~n~,~a~n~d~p~r~e~s~er~v~i~n=g~i~t~fo~r;_;p~o~st~e~r·-----------------------------,

BIRTH

BUSINESS MIRROR

An alcohol problem? How can you

My \H'lg ht has alwJy\ bL'L'll .1 \tru~­
glc . I'm about 20 po und .., too lw.n ·y ,It
dn: momt:m :....but I'm workmg: on n I

York , expecting to find

Sauters birthday announced

l'il'&lt;.:tl'd

don't smJle when you say tt.

about my weq;hr. Al my \1\ ll..'r \ 'n·dding. he sa id, "Gee. you look IIkt• you 'rt'
eight months pregna ne··

ity; to understand that the Constitution is a great. heritage and the
foundation of our lives; ana, to study the histoncal evenl&lt; winch
occurred during September 1787.
Lochary's presentation reminded DAR members that at the start
of the American Revolution, both sides had expectanofts that proved
incorrect- the British expected a short war from the mexpenenced
Americans, and the Americans expected the British to abandon a war
fought so far from their home. However, the war dragged on for
seven years.
The speaker said that the British chose initially to invade New

'

and need to know how to handle thlS
pamful muatton . I'm sure my uncle IS
gomg to needle me about my weight
agam --Jewel m Phoenix
Dear Jewel: Be upfront. Tell Uncle
Tact Person ified you don 't want to hear
any more about your weight -- and

tune I vi sit them, nty unde m:~k...·, _1oke~

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
Birthday celebrated

am planmng another Vtslt home soon,

gtft for hlS fnend, even though he was
the best man' Please help us settle thiS
and mform us of the proper euquene.
Even my nmd ·of hon o r thought I was
wrong. I'm devastated. -- Orlando
Bride
Dear Orlando: The best man should
indeed give the coup le a weddmg g•ft.
The groom traditionally gtves hiS ushers and the best man a gtft for servtng
111 the wedding ce rem ony. There are
wedding etiquette books 111 every
library. People who han queSiions
should take the time and trou ble to go
check.
Dear Ann Lander;: I h ve ~.000 mtlcs
away from my famil y. I han: an aum and
uncle whom I love tk:trly, bm c\·ery

J

•

With Much
Appreciation for
Pastor
Les Hayman
From the
+
Congregation j{~\
of.the
Ash Street
Church
Pastor Les Hayman
With Much
Appreciation

fr t
llllJ'I
ft
-

Onlf5.00

the C'o n grc~~non of
th e Ash Street Cllm ch

From

Wl!ltout Picture

Onlf8.00
With Picture

Runs: Friday, October 20. '
Deadline: Friday, October 13

Fill out coupon below and mail or bring payment to:
The Daily Sentinel • Ill Court Street • Pomeroy, OH 4~769
'

.

.

'

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

1Pastor's Name'--------~----­
'Church:_
1Message :_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I
1 -------------------------------~-

IYour Name:: _______________
IAddress: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _---:-:--,. __
•Phone: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Judge

.:,.

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•• All MaJor Credit Cards Accepted

�_Th_e_D_ru~·ly_S_en_ti_ne_l________________l~~~~~~~(tll

Pa eA4

The Daily Sentinel

Mon.hy. October t. 1000

•

'L.st41Jilslid In &amp;8

. Dear Ann Landers: Our 8-year-old
son has been asking for a baby bottle.
:fhis has been going on for at least a
year, and my husband and I are at our
wits' end. There has been no recent
trauma in our lives, our marriage is fine,
and we haven't moved or made any big
changes . My son seems to be a normal
lmy, and is doing well in school. I told
him I would write to you about his
request, and he is willing to give some
thought to what you have to say.
Should we give him a bottle and ·
hope it is harmless? Or should we stick
to our guns and keep saying no' -Conce-rned Mom in Iowa
Dear Concerned Mom : We contacted Dr. Joseph Hagan , a pediatrician in
South Burlington,Vt., and the chairperson of the Committee on Psychosocial
· Aspects of Child and Family Health ~
Dr. Hagan soid, based on the information tn your letter, the problem does

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

• Fax: 992-2157

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

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry, Boyer
Advertising Director

~geAS.
Monday, October 9, 2000

Ann says eight-year-old wants bottle for attention

The Daily Sentinel
74~992·2156

Ay ll1e

\

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Utten w tht tditor tur -~tcumt. TMJ should 1H ~n rluut JOO 'llfOnls. AU ltturs An siJJ}HI
w rJilinr GnJ ''"'•U H l-;,,.,d and incllllh wJdnu and trkphont nurbtT. l\'o lllllifnrtlleturs •'iU
bot pwblilhrd. Urrrrs should br in guuJ 14Ule, oddrrnin1 issJiu, n01 twrwMlirits.
Thc- upllfloru uptl'urd m thr rolu111n J.lfJ,., un thr cu1urns1u· uf the Oftio ~'Dlk1 Pwblislling
("u. '_t tditonnl board, unltn otherwisr noth/.

NATIONAL VIEWS
'&gt;

Rotten

Oot sound serious.

According to Dr. Ha gan, many chi!-

Olympics inflexibility adds
up to poor treatment .

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
dren that age display attention-getting
behavior designed to shock adults. It is
possible when your son first asked
about a baby bottle, you reacted in such
an astonished way that he derived
enjoyment from it . He continues to
request the bottle becallse you continue
to react strongly. Your son may also be
asserting his independence by taking a
position in o ppositi on to yours, regardless of what he may actually want.
The solution is to •avoid telling him
"no," and to avoid reacting strongly to
his request, so ~" it loses its ability to

shock. Do not gtve him the bottle.
Ignore hlS request entirdy. Simply say,
"I don't want to talk about that,'' and
change the subject .
Dear Ann Landers: My new husband
was the best man at his close friend 's
wedding last year. He spent several hun ~
dred dollars on a tuxedo and all the
accessories. and treated his best friend
and the ushers to a bachelor's night dinner. I rold him he didn "t need to buy a
wedding gift, since being in the wedding party and spending money on
clothes should be considered his g•ft.
Here's the kicker: My husband and I
were married a few r'nonth!\ ago. We had

a very small wedding, and his brother
was the best man . His dose fri~nd and
wtft' were invited as guests . They did
not give us a wedding gift. When my
husband asked him about it , he said. " I
got you exactly what you got !Ill.' for
my wedding -- nothing!''
Ann ' can this be riglu: Was mv hu sband required to purchase ;1 weddm g

.

• The Gazette, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, "" rile 0/ympin ami dt&gt;p·
i11g:With Olympic offici.1l&lt; painstakingly checking athletes fur pur- .
poseful doping, you would think they could 4uickly excuse an
innocent young woman. All she did "wrong" at the Sydney games
was take an over-the-counter told remedy prescribed by a team
physician.
But no. They &lt;tripped Romania's Andreea Raducan, 16, of the
gold medal she had won in women's all-around gymnastics. They
acknowledged nothing w;ts sinister abom her taking the cold remedy, which caused her to test posJttve tor the banned stimulant,
pseudoepherdrine. Ilut they insisted the Anti-Doping Code "must
b e enforced without co mpromio;;e.''

They ca n't square that wtth the Olymptc Games' supposed found .Jtimf of ~port~m;m~llip .wJ ~ood \vill. Wh at rotten treatment for a
marvelous athlete ....
• The New York Tiines. Oft the t"li!!fl,z.~ra tioll 111 the .\tirldh, East: The
vrolen ce th.lt l!.lS co nvulsed the Middle East since late last week has
g1ven lsradis .md l',ilestintc~ns .1hke a fl· i~ht en ing replav of the bloodshed thJt ..,rJrred the reg1on for ~o m.my years. The que"ition now is
y.. hcther the tlghtmg; will pn)\r rn h~.· ,1 re111 porary "l'tback in tiH•
dnn:· to nuk~ pl'JLl' vr J tt&gt;rllllll.ll poult in negntiatiom. The n:-cem
experic1Ke of ~orthern Ireland mggc'lt~ th ,n , ·in lent mubun.ts neeJ
not upend .l dctr:rmmed dl\)rt tu 'll'ttk &lt;1 prolongt·d cu ntlin, but
haoic \\·ork \\·ill be reqlllred by l ... rat'li. J&gt;ak.,tini,m and American

le aders to saw the Middle F.N peatl' ta lh Tlw cJn begin at the
planned meetin~ m Paris on Wedne,J.ay uf Prime Minister Ehud
Barnk of lsrad.Yasir Arafat, the: Pak:::,tinian \eader, and Secretary nf
1

St:tte Madelcim· Albright.
There mu't b~.· J. quick Ct:'l'i:lti on of vio lence. Mr. Arafat Lmd Mr.
B,1rak -.;hould t.tke urgent me;tst.m: . . to halt the clashes thJt have left
at least 4H (.k,ltLmd hundrni~ \\"Oll mkd . . ..
·

Mr. llJrak mu&lt;r torcd[dlv defend thl' li\'t'&lt; of Israe li so ldi ers and
c1viham undn Jtt,Kk. Uur h·. . IH.'L'd'i .•l"i tJr .1~ pmsible, to avoid o;;endin g troop&lt;;, mt o unnecc'is.lrily co ntl·ont.Jtional positiom and lihould
minimiz~,.· t he me o~- live ammunition. Mr. Barak ;md Mr. Ar;-~f, tr
should j..,sue a jomt cJ ll tOr .m l'llJ to thl' violen ce. ·
Pre&lt;idmt Cltnton ha s made clea r thai he is ready to help res(ram
th e v10lt'nc~ and revive the peace tal b . If the violence end~. &lt;~ccuri­
ty otftciJJ... tfom both liidc'i ~ houiJ di ~·c uo;;&lt;; w&lt;tys to avoid a recurrence
of tlghting. Till' alt~-rnatiYe to rebuilding tru•;t an d communications
is now 011 dcadlv display.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today ts Monday, Oct. 0.the 283rd day of200II.There are 83 days ·
left in the year. Th" is the Columbus Day holiday in the United
States, as well as Thanksgivtng D.1y 111 Canada.
Today\ Hi~hlight in Hi&lt;tory :
On O ct. 9. 195H, Pope Piu&lt; XII died , 1Y years after he was elevated to the p.lp,tcy, (H e was 'ucceeded by Pope John XXIII.)
On tim date:
In I 1&gt;.15, religious di ssident Roger Wtlliams was bamshed from
th e Ma«achmetts Bay Colony.
In 1711 1, th e Co llegiate School of Connecticut -loterYale Univer'ii t y - 'vao;; chartl'red m Ne-w Haven.
In 1776, a gro up of Spamsh missionaries settled in present-day
San Francisco.

In I ~H~. the public was tirst ,ldnutted to the Washington M o nument.

In 1930. Laura Ingalls became thl' tirs~ woman to ily across the
United State&lt; ,lS she completed a nine-slOp JOUrnev from Roosevelt
'
Fi eld, N:Y.. to Glendale. Calif
In 193(), the Rrst ge 11erator at Boulder (IJter Hoover) IJ am began
ttammittmg dcctricity to Ln, Angelc.:..
In 1940. the Eugene O'Neill dr,1111.1 " The lce·nmt Cometh"
opt.•f1 ed ,a the .~vbrtin Beck Thcdtt::r 111 NL'W York.
In 1967. L.uin Amer1c,m gue rr ill.1 \eadl'r C he (;Lil'V&lt;lrJ WJ'i exe-cuted whde a.ttempti ng tu innte rc.. volurion 111 Uolivi&lt;l.
1

ln 1975. ~m·te t ~c1enno;;t AndreJ \ ,tkh ,uov wa' awardt:d th e Nobel
Peace Pri ze.
.
In 1Yrl5 , tht• hi}Kkt.'r' of the Ad u\l c L\u rn crui'it.: liner surn::n

derl'd .1tier th~ sh1p arnved Ill _l'o rt Said. Eh'YPt.
Tt.:n yc..·c~r~ ago: Prc..'Sld cm Bu\h tnld .1 Ill'\\'\ co nt(:rcncc he would
b~ \Villmg to cO mH.kr h1~h c r 11 1COI11L' t;\X LHC'i tOr .the wealthy, but
later .l ppe·,lred to bac k o!T tl l.lt stand.
Ft vt yc..\11"i .1go: Sabot(.'ur-.;· pulkd 21J ~p i h·'l frDm ;.l .;;t.retch of r.-ultoad track. c.1 mlng .•m Alll tr.tk tr,\ill to dl'failm AriiOTl.l; one per'ion
w·.:l~ killed .llld .tbu"ut Jil!) wnc lll.JUred.A. l.l l'drthquah· \vith mag:ni tuJc..· 7.(• 'ih nok the \\T'it lP. l ~t nf f\.1l'\H o, kdl111!!: ~ 1 people..-. AmL' ri Cln\ EJ\,,IJd It I .l'\\ t.., .llH.i LrH L 'X.-' Je \tll ~lu.., .md ( ;cr lliJ n ( :hnsn.me
Nuc..·li~k·m-Volh.trd \\·nn dw f\.obel Pn !t' f{H· lll l'tliune for \tlldll''i of
how gem·.., t ontml l'&lt;i rl )- t' Jllhr yn dt! \·elnpr n ~·nt.
()Ill' \t'.lr .1go· Thl· U n1t ed Autn \);.'prkl'r~ 111d l ·nrd J\1otor Co.
n'.~e h ed

.\

IL'nt.HI\"l' -t~rl'l'llll'tH ~•n .tIll..'\\ lillltl.\d,

ho ur-i ,Jttcr ,t l1.1nd
Cu i nf \\' •rkL'I"'- w.dh·d \ ,tf !Ill' I' •h wh~·n .1 \ fll ~~· d~.·.tdlmc p.i~\l'll. I11
boxJTJg\ tir'r ...1111 nrpncd h.ltdc nf [he 'lL':x~··;, i\l.1rg,ul't !Vbc(;regnr
dl'fl.';lted ! .o J ( ~ho\\" by \\'llllllll~ .tl! tom rollllLh Oil all thrl'c _ludgl·'l·
C~n.l\ Ill ,I pn !ll&lt;HH_HI hl'ld Ill ~\..',ittk .
1

'Tod.l\"".; BlltlhLI\"\ .A\"tor r nthll II JJ~l'l i~ 77

TUPPERS PLAINS Rachael Erin
Markworth celebrated her fifth birthday on
S~pt. 23 with a party at the Tuppers Plains fire

---------------------~-----.,

.,

station.

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Theme was Power Puff Girls with c~p­
cakes, ice cream and punch . being served.
Games were played.
Attending were her mother, Amy, and
brother, Timothy, Pam, Joshua and Ashley
Hager, Kayla Hawthorne, Layla and Kayla
Graham, Savannah Pullins, Maria Sharp,
Rachael Markworth Ja cob Smart, Savannah Pullins, Maria Sharp,
Ja co b Smart, Alex Amos, Ally Hendrix,
Christopher Chaney, and Megan and Max Carnahan.
·
Attending from Parkersburg were Amy and Ian Miller, Nathaneal,
Kayla, Mike and Laura Backus and nephew Cody, and Laurel and
Timothy Stou!Ter. Sending gifts were her great-gtandmother,Virginia
Meeker, Dylan Mil~n , her dad, David Mark worth, and grandparents,
Carl and Cheryl!Markworth of Provo Utah.

Hate crime laws.~ Here's the real message
Potter quot~ detective John Leslie of the New :
York City Police Department:
"! hate these .cases because they become
real mysteries. Everybody jumps on the bandwago n."

In his bountiful acceptance speech,Al Gore
cited as an urgent priority the expansion of

federal hate-crime laws - thereby encouli;.ging even more states to enact 1egi s lati~n that
would impose additional prison .time for socall ed bias crimes.
The most recent hate-crime law was
signed this summer by Gov. George l'ataki of
New York. As he wielded his pen, he made an
astonishing statement. He said tha t if such a
!Jw had been in existence in Germany, it
could have prevented the Holo c tll lt.

Nat
Hentoff
NEA COLUMNIST

Now, in New York State, thn ... e cnn\'icted uf

assault motivated by race. religion. gender,
liexual prt'feren ce or age will litrve .;ub . . t;mtia\1y more years in prison dun tl1to:y wul1 ld havt=
if thdr crin1es had not bet!n com rn.ittcd
because of any of these prejudices.
In llJ?2. a similar law was overturned by
the Ohio Supreme Court (State VI. Wyant)
because "Once the proscribc..' d act is com m itted, the government cnminalizes tht• underlyin~ thought by enhancing the pl'nalty based
on viewpoint. If'the legi'\lature can ~nhanc!=' a
penalty for crunes co mmitted 'by reason of
rac ial bigotry.' why not 'bv reason of opposition to abortion, war. or any othL·r political .or
moral viewpoint'?"

But the next year, the· United States
Supreme Court - in an J\tonishi ngly boneheaded decisiol1 (Wisconsin vs. Mitchell) unanimOusly approved J Wiscon~in h,atecrimcs statue. Writing the decision , C:hiefJusticc William Rehnqui~t gave th~ \&lt;lllll' rationale that all ;JdvorateS of rl1ese laws g ive -

among then .t Sen. Ted Kennedy, the AntiDefamati on League, the camoutlagl·J attorney gen~ral. various gay and l~:sbian organiza-

tions , William J e!Terson Clinton, and, stunningly. the American Civil Liberti e'i Union.
The Chief Justice, on one of his o!T days,

said that these laws are e'pect,lllv nee ded
because biJs crimes .:ll't' " thought to intliLt
gr~ater indi vi dual and soclt:tal harm." Its victims sutler "distinct emotional harms ."

"By putting those crintina1s away for longer
terms. a me ~ sa gl' is se nt tn the conmn1mty say th e supportLTS of hJte - nimc bw,- that
these offenses are particularly oA"'eno;;Jvt· . Thi'i
means , of co urse, th :lt anyone' beaten up by
attacken who arc not doubly puni~hcd by
"bias" laws i~ being told thc1t l1is ur· her
• injurie'i .:l n.:.· of k·ss importance to ~ociL·ty.
Thi~ - th e- Stlpn:mc Court not"w ith-.;t,mding viol.lte" the equal protection uf the
laws guarantct'd by the 14th Amendm ent. But
it looks as though the Senate will pa"'" the
Local Law Enforcement Act of 21100, a bill
that will expand the scope of wlw is comidered a h;ltt': crime
Furthermore, how i" ''biJ'i" d~tnmincd? If,
during a road-r;1ge assault, :1n e:x pleti,·t· tlie s
through the ;t}r, i&lt;; that mfli cicnt evidence for
a longer prison term? In the cle J rl'~t hook 011
this dangerously confused isme ''Hate

Crimes: Criminal Law and Id entity Poli rics"
(Oxford University Press, 199R) - law professor James Jacobs and researcher Kimberly

The subj ective. uncertain ''evidence" in

mwy of these ca~es also leads to a new forn1
of McCarthyism. Alleged bias crimes are
given a great deal of media coverage, and
prosecutors don't w.1nt to lose them
for tt·.tr of bein g voted out of office. So. when
.1 L".l\l' j.., \\'C;tk,lm•c..•sngators on bt: Sl'nt o ut tQ

POMEROY- Kelsey Mark Sauters celebrated his 1Oth birthday recently with a party
at his home on Collins Road, Pomeroy.
He is the son of Charles Mark and
Dianna Sauters, the grandson of Leroy and
Joyce S~uters of Pomeroy, and Delbert and
Loretha Vandevander of Whitmer, W Va . and
the great-grandson of Manda Eastman of
Pomeroy and Lester Dice of Onego, WVa .

"'" 1f tlw defendant has indic.tted prejudiced
beliefs in the past - by •mgazine' he or sh~
is known to read, or remarks made in the local
bar or barber shop.
•
In an Illinoi s case, People vs. Lai11pki11 , {
prosenttor Sll cceS&lt;flllly told the jury about
purport~d racl~t st.tt~ments the defendant hacf
'poken six years before the actual crime fof
which he was on trial!
::
But what if \Oilleone is sent to prison for a"·
long term becal!se it is reasonably dear that
he or she i&lt; indeed bigoted' Thi&lt; still sends ~
me'io;;agL· to a pt·r..,on who has b ee n badly
111Jurcd by an atta cker witl~_o ut a trace of" hi as
- · tlut his or her wounds arc of les~ impOrtance to the· community.
Also, as Caro lin a Cordero Dyer, a L; tm a
lL~ sbia n , noted in Nt:wsday, a "hate crime perpetrator" unlikely to get adeqllate. rehJbilita ti"o n" 111 prison . And, as the years behind bars
inrrea'ic, the pcrpetrJtor's hatred will grow.
Therdore . .l&lt;ks Ms. Dyer, "Wt ll our commu nity be ~a fer when he or .;;hl' i" relea&lt;;ed?"
Ask AI Gore and Joseph Lieberman. Also
ask them aboll t eqllal protection of the laws.
(Nat He11tqff· is a 1tati01wllr rprowned mulwrit)'
"" rlu· First A r1l clldmertt mtd tile Bill of R(~hts.) ·

Kelaey Sautera

Lochary speaks at DAR observance
POMEROY - A program on the Constitution and the Revolutionary War was presented by James Lochary at a recent :meeting of
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the Amcncan Revo lution, held at the Meigs County District Library.
Lochary, a Meigs nativ~ now residing in Ame~ville, is president of
Ewing Chapter, Sons of the American Revolution.
.
Preceding his talk members were gtven a revtew on the htstory of
the Constitlltion Wl'ek observance. It was noted that in 1955
Gertrude S. Carraway, while President General of the National Society DAR, designated September 17-23 as Constitution Week, a desIgnation later adopted by the Continental Congress.
The purposes of the observance and celebration of Constitution
Week, it was explained, are to emphasize the responsibility of ptotecti ng and defending the

Quality remains vital to marketplace success
BY JOHN CUNNIFF

WILTON , Conn.- Do you re call when
the word " quality" was likely to be part of a
co mpany slogan rather than a gua.,ntee- a
goal often sought but not achieved, a
promise made easily and jlllt as easily for-

tors, lawyers, supermarkets, uuiversitie ~ and
lnternet companies.
Qualiry me ans su rvival. It ineans more

He Jho \L:t up the jur.1n fn ~ titutl: to train
L'Xl'nHi VL''i in. th e proc t:dll l"l'~, wh1ch hi s mc-

than JUSt better products , but also less waste,
greater efficiency, better incomes, lower
costs, more profits , lower prices, more sJti sfled customers.
Businesses today usc stand~rdized reports
to disclose financi al re sults, he says, and 21st
ce ntu ry co mpani es will provide standardized
quality achil'vement reports as we.ll.
"Mathematical rclattonship ' will be
l'S tabli ~ h ed bl'twecn qualit y pcrfof1n:.tn ce
and profir, ,'' ht: ~ays, "much in d1c sa me WJY
th at "0C1al re~ponsibility IS now being
ma tched with fin anci:1l - re~u l t~."
Soon, he cxpLum, "th e c.:o . . t at· p oo r quality will beco me par.t of the b,tl:l!t ce d scorecard." ml'd by tinan nal &lt;lluly\t'\, Cfl'dit rating
lirm -.; ,md cump,lnil's co tlsid erin g a l'O !llpany's potential as a busineSs · acq uisiti o n·.
H l' '\l'l'' it as p.:u·t of a lon g evo luti on. Fi rst
l- :lllll' the lndmt ri.tl Revo lu tion, fe,tturing
hi gh qu,I\ity and h1gh COWL 'I hl·n C::l l1l l' ma s.;;
productiun , with nwd erate quality and

cc.:~sor, Jo~t: ph

lowe r ro ... t ~

gotten ?

C ompanies aren't ltkdy to get away with
tt anymore. If the 20th century is remembered as the century of f';rcat produc tion , the
21st. say&lt; Jos eph Juran , will co me lo be
known as the century of quality.
Join t ht: movement or , uffer, hL· 'ays Ill
dlcct, because the high e;t level ot quality "
not an option anymore. but .1 requirem en t o~
marketplace grown intensdy co111pe t1tive
bcc.w\t' o f ,t conve rgenn· of fa ctor-.;.
Juran's V!". ion can't be m in imi ze d , . . in ce he
la crally wrote th e book, th e· "Qll,tht y Con
tro l Handbook," pllb lisl1 ed in 1% I and "i ll
go mg through new editions, clut Jc scr ib~o:;
tht' mathematical bJ 'i is for qua li ty improvem~ntli.

D cPeo, bdin·'l'S w1 ll hcconH:
.,t.md.1nh fnr me .1~ Ur111g rhl' cn tnpl'tlti\'l' lll'.;,"'
u t~ Ul lll iJ.lllll'"' JurJn, to
I'

lK

hU\~' \\lth hi \ lllL'IlH~tl·(j.
l ur.l!l\ \'le\, .. -I n ~ h orr,

C)(, 111

I )cl·c mbL'L

th.H q u.dity
llt1prt1\'l'llll'llt'i .ll"l' the W,l }' tO "Ut VIV,1 J and
protit~ l Nor &lt;ndy f()r co mp;ltlll' \ prl&gt;Viding
1"-

m.tnl!f.ILtUrcd ~oo·d ~, hut &lt;;l'n icl' provid~.·r\
\t l l'!l{lfi c orgcmtZ;HIOil\, ho . . piu l-.. doc -

N ow, hl' ~·:-..: pLum, \VL' .1re 111 :1 rhird eLl of
ri ~;i ng q u.day .tnd f.dlm g coqs. I h" 1'
.ll·cn mph ,hnl b\· pml11ng qu .1 l11 y go,ll.., deep
111to thl· pm lT\~ nf obt.1i11111~ r,l\\ llldtl'J"I.lh ,

up through Pl·ndw tam .111d protl'"- l'\ .uH.i o n
through the mL'\ ul tod .1y"s va~t 111tornurion
rnourcl'\ .
All thl ~ ~~ (JnLtmed. Ill' heill'vc~ . h\' \\'h;lt

he see&lt; as "qu'a!ity drivers," of factors that
compel companies to recognize the quality
imperative. "Today, the proof is inescapable,"
he says.
Broadly speaking, the first driver is overcapacity of goods produced, already evident
in agriculture. He believes that "&lt;ts factorie~
produce more goods than can be sold, qual•
ity hecomes the competitiv~· advantage.''
The second driver is public poli cy. A,
comumer expectations rise, policymakers
mand ate improved quality. not jmt in the
United State:-. but m emerging co untr ie s
anx10m t o ex port their goods.
E-commercc i-.; the third driver. l3mincs~­
es ;m d CO ll\lllJier&lt;; now havt• t:asy and in..,tam
,H.:n·ss to proJuct inform atio n and prirt's,
mc;min g. says D eFeo " qual ity bccoJlll'':&gt; th~o.•
'&gt;lg nill c.~ ant difl"t:reiH.:l' bctWl't:n product.., ."
As he s~c~ it, a big ditTcrcn ce· ex i:o.t ~ in.. tttl t ucks betwee n the online shoppl'r and tl11.·
custonll:r \VIw shop !i at th e lo ca l &lt;;ton:.
" A dis&lt;;t~tisfied store shopper eve ntu all y
rcturn'i , but J frtl\trated online shopper \\1111
log o nto another ~ite and perl{&lt;lps never
Jg.1in~t vi ... it th t· first one," DeFeo 'i.ly~.
Time . . h.tve ckmgcd. h tr more ..,o th.ln
~.· , ·c r. qu.lltty i.., t:'i'iCntiJl to ~-t U l l llp .lllv \
h . .·.tltll ,liJd qJrvi\',d. Not J Lht ,\ l Ltim or.. ,1

(/(1/111

"C111111i{l" 1.~

,1

not, and as a result, the British

were unable to deliver a crushing bl&lt;?w. Washington's retreat
across the Ddaware saved the
Americans from surrender, ht•
said.
Lochary talked about the
that the dramatic turning point
of the w;-~r ca me in 1777 when
British General John Burgoyn~
was forced to surre nder at
Saratoga. The outcome of this
An1erican victory was an
alliance between France aud the

SPEAKER -James Lochary, pres- US that expanded the war into
ident of Ewings Chapters, Sons of an international co nflict. When
the American Revolution, Spoke to the British chose to invade the
members of Return Jonathan South in 1778, their campaign
Meigs Chapter, DAR, during the ended in disaster. French and
recent observance of Constitution American
forces
together
Week.
defeated General Cornwallis at
Yorktown, Va. in October 1781. In March 1782, the British Parliament
chose to end the Revolutionary War.
,
It is difficult, Lochary continued, to discuss the Constitution without first 1nentioning the national fran1ework of government - The
Articles of Confederation. He talked about the adop tion of the Articles of Confederation in 1977, the long debate and delays before final
ratification in 1781.
Lochary also discussed the three Northwe st Ordinance~, 1784,
' 1785 and 1767. He said the 1784 Ordinance prescribed that hw new
statos would be carved out of that regiori; the Ins Ordinance spe lled
out the terms of sale: 640 acre plors at $1 an ;tere; the 1787 o rdtn ance
specified that any territory with 60,000 white males co uld ap ply fur

• 21 years of practicing law in
Meigs County
• Former Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney
• Two time member of the Committee
to Evaluate Ohio State Supreme
Court Candidates 1
• Former member of -the Ohio State
Bar Association·Legat Ethics and
Responsibilty Committee
• Former member of the Qhio
State Bar Association Committee
on Criminal Justice

thl' Holzer Medi cal Center.

of Pomeroy.

Track the progress
of your favorite
team through the

Sentinel

Sports pages!

lms/I!('H rlllcil)'.• f _f(n Till'

. ls.illt'ilrt cd Pn:ss.}

..

\\ ww Lfl';l!o r \.l tHll

MONDAY
RUTLA N D
R utl.md
Township Trw.tcc:-.. J p.m., tire

,l\',l iLtblt.• from Tammy Jonc~. 99'.!.1&gt;74.1 .

stanon.

WEDNESDAY
PAGEVILLE - Scipt o Town 1
; h•p Tru,tecs, 6:30 p.m. WcdneG 0
d.1y. Pa~c\'llle· town hall.

..

53.
Cht!slurc, Mond.ly c\·cmng. dillncr at 6:30p.m . with mcctlllg .lt 7
p.m.
CHESHIRE

-

DAV

"My family and 1think Meigs County Is th'
greatest place to llvel I would be honored
to serve this county as County Court Judge."

~Eie~t
County
.

~ourt

Paid for b the candrdate

,
1 UPPERS PLAINS - '("uppers Plains VFW Ladtcs Auxihary;
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the hall.

CHESHIRE - DA.V. #53 .
located at 28051 State R o utl' 7 Ill
Cheshire will meet o n Monday
with dinner at 6:30 p.m. and the
metting at 7 p.m.

RACINE - R aCi ne Boord of
Public Aff.1irs , 8 p.m . M01tday at
the muni cipa l building.

RUTLANO
Sharon Hol i nL·~~ Ch urc h , rc..'\.J\',11
servi c;eo;; through O cr 1;_ Rc\'

Jack Dolin , &gt;peakl'r..

MlOOLEPORT WldQw~
l'&lt;ilowship, Wedne sday. noon!
Middleport Church of Christ.
Potluck dmner.
The Community Calendar
is published as a free service·
to non-profit groups wishini

to announce meetings and ·
special events. The calendar '

is not designed .to promote '

sales or fund raisers of any '
type. Items are printed only :

TUESDAY
POMEROY
C HOI CE
Home Edu cators, Tuesday, 1 p.m .
at l~oy Oak R~ sort. Informat io n

as space pertuits and cannot~
be guaranteed to be printed.
a specific number of days. :

MORE lOCAl ~EW~.
MORE LOCAL fOLK~.

,,

Subscribe today : 992-2156

..,.,"'~' 4d;' /

.... October is ~
"""'
Pastor
~·
- Appreciation
Month .......:..
/"

-

r,,,

Loyal, Dedicated, On Duty 24
Hours a Day, 7 Days a Week.
Show Your Pastor How Much
You Appreciate Them

Steve Story is your
best choice for
County
Judge.

C raig and

Darst of Middleport and the late
Orval "Cmley" and Betty Wiles

out more Jbout Ann Landt.•p;; .md ri..'Jd
h~..·r p.bt col llmll'l. \·isa the: Crl':Itor~
SnHtJcncw~b
pag~-.·
Jt

/ I

Mary K. Rose , regent presided adt th~ meeting which was folowed
by a grave memorial servtce and a DAR marker was placed on the
graves of Margaret Dutton, Miles Cemetery and Dorthea Fisher,
Sacred Heart Cemetery. A luncheon at Crows preceded the meeting.

Darst
of
Poml:roy
,lnnounn· the birth of a SOli.
Cooper Thom.I~ l"hrst , Au g. 1~ ,lt
He w eighed s~vcn pound s.
Grandparents are Tom and Be ssie

H ow to Dea l Wtth It, H ow to Co nquer
It" will gi \'e you the answ~rs. Send a
... df-Jddn.'\\ed . lo ng , business-SIZe envelo~ll' ;tnd .1 dw&lt;.·k or money order for
53.75 {th1s 111 rludcs posrage and han dlin g) t o. Alcohol. c/o Ann Landers .
I' 0. lle&gt;x 115&lt;&gt;2. Ch •cago. Ill . 606 11l)j(&gt;~ (In C.tnad.I. 'end S4 .'i 'i.) To lind

admissions as :J state.

AnnJ

b o.t~t, h11t .1 \Cllll'Cird ro lw ll\l'd hy em- 1
tolncrs. su ppli L' ''· in vntnrs and ot h n~.

strong

Loyalist support there. but did ·

Cooper Thomas Darst
I'OMElZOY -

help yoursdf or someone you love ?
"Akohohsm: How to R et.:og:n ize lt.

CALENDAR

Constitutio.~n~,~a~n~d~p~r~e~s~er~v~i~n=g~i~t~fo~r;_;p~o~st~e~r·-----------------------------,

BIRTH

BUSINESS MIRROR

An alcohol problem? How can you

My \H'lg ht has alwJy\ bL'L'll .1 \tru~­
glc . I'm about 20 po und .., too lw.n ·y ,It
dn: momt:m :....but I'm workmg: on n I

York , expecting to find

Sauters birthday announced

l'il'&lt;.:tl'd

don't smJle when you say tt.

about my weq;hr. Al my \1\ ll..'r \ 'n·dding. he sa id, "Gee. you look IIkt• you 'rt'
eight months pregna ne··

ity; to understand that the Constitution is a great. heritage and the
foundation of our lives; ana, to study the histoncal evenl&lt; winch
occurred during September 1787.
Lochary's presentation reminded DAR members that at the start
of the American Revolution, both sides had expectanofts that proved
incorrect- the British expected a short war from the mexpenenced
Americans, and the Americans expected the British to abandon a war
fought so far from their home. However, the war dragged on for
seven years.
The speaker said that the British chose initially to invade New

'

and need to know how to handle thlS
pamful muatton . I'm sure my uncle IS
gomg to needle me about my weight
agam --Jewel m Phoenix
Dear Jewel: Be upfront. Tell Uncle
Tact Person ified you don 't want to hear
any more about your weight -- and

tune I vi sit them, nty unde m:~k...·, _1oke~

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
Birthday celebrated

am planmng another Vtslt home soon,

gtft for hlS fnend, even though he was
the best man' Please help us settle thiS
and mform us of the proper euquene.
Even my nmd ·of hon o r thought I was
wrong. I'm devastated. -- Orlando
Bride
Dear Orlando: The best man should
indeed give the coup le a weddmg g•ft.
The groom traditionally gtves hiS ushers and the best man a gtft for servtng
111 the wedding ce rem ony. There are
wedding etiquette books 111 every
library. People who han queSiions
should take the time and trou ble to go
check.
Dear Ann Lander;: I h ve ~.000 mtlcs
away from my famil y. I han: an aum and
uncle whom I love tk:trly, bm c\·ery

J

•

With Much
Appreciation for
Pastor
Les Hayman
From the
+
Congregation j{~\
of.the
Ash Street
Church
Pastor Les Hayman
With Much
Appreciation

fr t
llllJ'I
ft
-

Onlf5.00

the C'o n grc~~non of
th e Ash Street Cllm ch

From

Wl!ltout Picture

Onlf8.00
With Picture

Runs: Friday, October 20. '
Deadline: Friday, October 13

Fill out coupon below and mail or bring payment to:
The Daily Sentinel • Ill Court Street • Pomeroy, OH 4~769
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----- --- ---------- ------

1Pastor's Name'--------~----­
'Church:_
1Message :_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I
1 -------------------------------~-

IYour Name:: _______________
IAddress: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _---:-:--,. __
•Phone: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Judge

.:,.

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•• All MaJor Credit Cards Accepted

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,.... AI • The Dally Sentinel

NATIONAL BRIEFS
•

Teadcer convidecl of abusing boys
WI liTE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP)- A forma fifth-grade teacher ha&lt;
b.-en convtcted of sexu~Uy ahusmg rwo boys who s.ud he crepr mro
their bunk beds after rhrn father mv11ed hun to 'pend the mght.
Steven Nowicki was found gmlry Sunda1· of 22 counts of sodomy,
-.,xnal abuse and endangenng chlldrc'll
Wesrche&lt;rrr County Judge Man ~11111 h ordrred l\:m1'1ckl Jaded
withnut ba1l until he is sentL'nc.:d n!,."\t month. Ht' f.1ct;s up to j()
Y'-'JO in p1 1~on.

••Tht."st."

young boys told lhL' truth .mU J\ .l n·,ulr. thh cnmihal \\Ill meet his pumshment:· Dl..,[n. t .1\ttnrn c:y Jcanmc P1rr~, ~JH.l.
lktense .ltlorney John Mang1ai.Jrd1 luJ 11o1 dc'&lt;ided whether to
3prcal. He s.aid JUrors told hn11 "tht&gt;n: was too much ev1dence for
the defense· to overcome."
Child ahuse is ternble, Mangllbrru sa1J, ··but it's e1·en more ternble In cunncr somebody of 11 1f thev d1dn 't do it."
Nowicki. who WJS tht" 10-\\."Jr-uld bov\ rc.:Jrhrr. hJd bel'll mvilt.•d lo the- t'.unily's homt; tl.tr ~ :\'~,.-,, Yt".lr&lt; I \'C pJrry. Thr..· fJthr..~r kt
Nu\\'Jrki ~pe nd tht• lllgh r ~kl'hin·~ ·Jlt \\ .. h too drunk to dnvc:
hr;JVL'

Inside:

Monday, October 9, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NFL Notebook, Page B5
Daily Scoreboard, Page B6

McCain gives campaign finance refonners a boost
LOS ANGELES (A P) - Sen. John McC.un
turned a national spothght on campaign finance
~dorm this year, and feUow polioaans aren't rhe
only ones tf)ong to capu:ilize on 1t m November.
Refonn advocates put campa1gn finance
melSures on the Noo.•. 7 ballot 111 four SL"""
mdudmg C:iliforrua, whe"' Pmp&lt;lSitllln 34
am!S to limit campaign donatmns .md &gt;pending
1n J state where unlinutt•d, ~conJ-;,emng campa~gru are rhe norm.
I nitianves in Oregon and Missoun would
allow for uxpa)'Cr-tunJed campaigns - whKh
voter; ha1-e traditionally ""'sted. Since 1996.
publicly funded s)'Stems haw been adopted in
McCain state of Anzona, plus Maine. Massac husens and Vermont.
W1sc&lt;&gt;nsin mters will lx' asked in an adlisorv referendum if they want stnctcr c.11np.ngn

s

fin;~nc.

laws.
"I think voters' disgust over tlus issue has
risen to new hetghrs. How could 1t not'\VIuch
ITUkes '"ry fernie ground for these inioanves;·
said EUen Miller, president of Public Campaign,
a Washmgron-based group pushing rhe Oregon
and M1ssoun measures .

McCain plugged reform after leaving rhe
ptt'Sidennal race, reproaching his te Uow Repubhcan,Texas Gov. Georgt'W Bush, for refusing to
ban soft money from the race.
·
Vice !'resident AI Gore agreed to a ban, but
got crmnzed for fund-rming practices M cCain
said "deblSed the it!Stitutioru of governmem."
McCain has not endor;ed any of the baUot
measurt.."S. Bur reforn1 advocates say his anention
to the ISsue could make a d1fference.
Chagnned opponenrs agree.
"1 thmk thar the public is wry frustrated by

Page 81

the current system. The pubhc nuy be wtlhng
to subsarute any S)'Siem to deal 111th dm frustration," said John DtLorenzo, an attorn., fighting Oregon's Measure 6 as leader of No Taxpayer Handours to Pohncians.
Under Measure canrudates coul~ get public funds by ra~&gt;ing a certJln number of $5
donations from Oreg(·m rt·sidc:nts and agreeing
to hm.its on \\•ho may contnbutc. Miniinum
· numbers for $5 contributions range from 200
for House racL'S to 3,000 for governor.
If a candidate's opponem does not opt for
restrictions, that candidate could get as much as
three rimes the lmut in tnatching: funds.
The Oregon Pohtical Accountability Campa1191 behind Me.lwre 6 rmed S4~7 ,605
rhrnugh July 7.Thc opposttinn \V.lS only r..:ccntly orgamzed .md 110 6gun·.., \\"Cre ,lVailabk·.

MonUy, Octabar !t, 1000

u:

MoNDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Sports
Football
SEOAL
SEO

ALL
Jackson
4-0 7-0
logan
4-0 7-0
Gallia Academy 4-0 6-1
Point Pleasant 2-2 5-2
Athens
t·3 2-5
Warren
t-3 2-5
0-4 t-6
Marietta
River Valley
0-4 0· 7
Friday's Garnae
Gallia Academy 35, Athens 0
Point Pleasant 17, Warren 0
Jackson 4t. River Valley 6
Logan 48, Marietta 0
Thls Waek"a Garnae
logan at Gallia Academy
Athens at Point Pleasant
River Valley at Marietta
Warren at Jackso~

h.l11h.'.

Nowte kl. 37 ..ldnllttt•d l'ntt'l'!ll; .J.
tht.· b.nhnHHll bm nnh to hl· .. It,\\ 11 .n
ctmg lhn~•• J t"i·lr l .Hpt"rllll! bt:JH.~.nb my t~·~,·r .u;,l [ tlmuglu. 'Tlu~ I\ gnnd
l'lltltl gh tllr me;" h~..~ ~11d.
The bny" sJ.it.l ht• firsr molt'\(L'll the ,-.;_\·t'Jr-old. rh~.·n clllub~.·d ro
th~ 1&lt;1-v~.&lt;r-old's uppor bunk .
Al -.n. DNA t'Xpt"ns ~~ud they tound ... dJ\'.1 on the 10-y~..·.lr-old th.lt
w.1s .JinHtst Ct" rcainly NowJck1\.
Tht• d~,•fcnsl! la\vyt"r suggt'\,tt·d dJJt No\nt-kJ's "iJhn h.1d bt•t.·n t.'olll·t·tt•d 111 J 'Pinoon dunng the p.1n'· .111d U'-t'd to frJmc h1m
l,ro~~.·c u tors scotft·d .u th.l( rh~.·on

'

Power outage strands shoppers
CHICAGO (A P) - Stuck Jr,m·bnJ~cs tr&gt;ppcJ ,,,ilboats, de,·aton. "it::~ lled between floors, and the: Jcp,urely WL't'kt&gt;nd cnmnmt&lt;.'
turnt·d into a rush-hour tr.:tffic sn.nl when .t 7-sqtlare-mile arc-,1 of
tht• n.aion 's third Jarg'est city was plunged mto darkness.
The power outage lWt'r most of downtnwn L1Sted abnur six hours
Sunday, stranding tourists, shoppers and &gt;ports fans and lea,•ing some
I 2,000 customers without power.
Tourists ltke Shetla Br:mson .md her thr~._'l' daughters. vtsning from
Midland, S.D. had now her&lt; to go"' tt'lllf'el.llllr"&gt; dropped into the
40s on a blustery October day,
.. It\ cold Jnd \\'e 'rc hungry." Branson :-.,llli. ··\Vc don't know where
tu bt-gin lonking for som(._·whcrc th.a ·~ ' · '~''''' Ir'~ Jn Jd\'l'mure."
The blatkout occurred after a new urdllt brc,JktT !.'aught tire Jnd
C!'tploded.
Pohce on foot tried to direct pedestrians and motorists through a
tnazc of darkened traffic signals. In some ar~as. mmnrist~ drovl' up
un sidt"walks to reach side stn.'t'ts 111 .111 effort to cst:apc the mcs~.
"Thank (;od this happened on .1 Sundav," said Officer Thomas
Donegan, a police spokesman.
The massive blackout ca ugh t Comm:m\\·t·.11th Edison by surpnsc..·.
Ren·ut upgrades by rhe unhry tn111p.llly. co~ ting St.0 bJIIJOn.
included a circuit brc.1kt&gt;r for JH&gt;Jdmg 'ILh h ~~\Trt· \t'TYILt' Hlft•rruptinn~ .

''The eqlllpmrnt we mstallt•d should h.wc bob ted th1~ ouugc. bLit
s~ud Pam Strobt.:l. a ComEJ ,.,c~: presJdL'nt. .. I h~.·rc.' :lrL'
ru•w L"ontrols that should have prc\'t'ntcd thi~."

it did not.''

De Niro.
charming
After El Nino and La Nina,
climatologists face 'La Nada' .in ·Meet the Parents'
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Floods m Southern Californi.1'
131amc· it on E.l Nino. Drought
from rht" Grt~.lt Plamo;; ro rhe
Southeast' Sounds hke L1 Nina.
Ncf\·ous climatL~ foft"cJsters? Must
be " La Nada."
For the first timl" in three ye.us.
the tropical Pacific Ocean isn 't
run,ning unusuJlly hOr or cold,
and the neutral conditions an:
leaving climatologists with fewer
p1eces of the puzzle. Gone are the
heady days of confident predictions months into the fumre.
"There comes a time when
you have to admit your understanding is not complete and not
to o;;ay more than you know,". said
W,lhom Patzert, an oceanographer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. " It's hard after three years
ofbemg a hotshot. It's really hard."
Unlike El Nmo and La Nma
years. nothing appears strong
~nough to donunatc the complex
cliuure s·isrem.
Tholt nu:ans th~ dTect~ of r~la ­
tn·dy small tOrct·s such as thl'
moJ'&gt;tllrt' of an mdt\'idual ~to rm
could JctL'rilllllt' wheth~.·r an 3rca
IS wetter or drier or warmer or
cooler than usual.

.. So the tOrec ast problem
becomes much more difficult.
much n1on.· Lh.tlknging:," SJtd Vernon Kousky, .1 rt•scarch mcteoroloqist with d1t' Nanonal Oceanic
anJ Attnosp henc Administration 's
Climate PrcdJction Cemer.
"Wl' don't anticipatr that .we
will have such a high .level of skill
as we had in recent years,'' he said.
Forecaste-rs are having to focus
on historical records and weaker
signals from the oceans for hints
to the upcoming stormy season
and beyond.
For the record , climarologi m
predict a shghtly warmer-thannormal winter for much of the
United States. They're less n·rtain
about ~he Northern border states,
where decisions must be made on
whether to stock up on home
heating oil and road salt. .
During El Nino years like the
winter of 1997-98, westwardblowing trade winds weaken,
.1llowing a mass of warm water in
rhe wt~stern ~qu.unna l P.Kific to
flow easrw'ard rnwud South
America . Sei! o;; nrface (cmpe ratures
can surge a~ much J::. \..J. degrees

above normaL

LOS

ANGELES

MoYit" -goe~

(AI')

-

ga\'C a fine re cep-

tion for the bt.•trothal com~.·dy

•· Meet the Parenrs ," hdpmg to
hft Hollywood om &lt;&gt;f the boxoffice doldrums.

Th&lt;· farce about a jittery
prospccuvc son-m-la\\' (Ben
Stiller) and hi' girlfriend's hardnosed, overprocecti\'c fJther
(R obert De Niro) d,·burcd as the
weekend's top film with $29.1
million, accordmg to studio e~ti­
mates Sundav.

It WJS a record weekend for an
October opening. beating the
S17.2 million taken in by "Antz"
two years ago. "Meet the Parents" also was a record opening
for both De &lt;Niro and Stiller.
Denzel Washington's footbaU. coac hing flick "Remember the
Tit.1ns.'' last weekend's No. I
film. bdd sohdly at second place
with $19.6 million, pushing its
tOtal to S46.2 nnllwn in 10 Jays.
''GL'r Carter," the h1t -man
tlick starnng Sylvester Stallone,
&lt;&gt;pmed .H No. 3 with S6. 7 milIt on The anunatcd " Oi gimon:
The Mtme" debllted 111 fifth
place with S4.1 million.
" Meet the Parents" had a

strong ~\'·e r.1ge of S 11 .1 J1 .1 (hL·.Hn ·Ill 2/• \4 ClllCill.lS. '' R.clllt'll1bcr the Tum;· added 836 the.Jrcr-.. 111 It\ \L'tond \\'L'ckend ..1\·crJb'lll~ £1.~57 111 2,701 loc.'Jtions.
H nUn\'mld cx~.·cu tt\'C:S were
rc!Jc,·cd at havmg two strong
film.;; 111 .1 \(nglc \Vct:kcnJ after J

TVC

string of di.;;appointing debuts.
The· m·crall box office was down
fi&gt;r the 11th sm1ght weekend
compared to la~t yea r, but the
dedme was much smaller than
the 20 and JO percent drops the
industry hld experienced in
recmt weeks. The top 12 films
grossed S77 milhon, down jusr
4.2 pcrcl.•m tram the same pen od b.,t n·.11
"These twn films are really
rc:im·1gorJ.ting the mar~ctpbcc. I(
Wl' stJrt ~L't'ing O(hcr films stac k
ll(J 111 thb rJngL', we'll gl't some
dtpth .It thl· box uffilc:· ~,1id Paul
I )l.·rg.lr,J bedun. prc~1dcnt 0f boxotlice tracker Exhibitor Reb-

Ohio Division

Nelsonville-York
Wellston
Belpre
Vinton County
Meigs
Alexander

TVC

ALL

2·0
2-0
1-t

5-2
4·3
3-4
1·6
3-4
0· 7

H

0-2
0·2

Hocking Division
TVC

ALL

Miller
2-0 7-0
Eastern
2·0 6·t
Southern
H
3·4
Waterford
H
3-4
0·2 3·4
Trimble
Federal Hocking 0·2 1-6
Friday's Games
Nelsonville· York 35. Meigs 7
Miller 53, Southern 21
Eastern 63, Federal Hocking 8
Vinton County 27, Alexander 20
Wellston 45, Belpre 22
Waterford 20, Trimble .t4 OT
This Week's Games
Meigs at Alexander
Southern at .Waterlord
Miller at Eastern
Wellston at Nelsonville-York
Federal Hocking at Trimble .
Belpre at Vinton County

uons .
"Meet d-ll' P.Irt'nt&lt;&gt;" threcror
\\",l\ ll!Kert.Hn about

J.n· R. ),Jl h
th~.· flhn\

The Daily Sentinel

~Ut.t:L'\S

until -he
w~n.dwd H wah .1 p.tying crowd
at .1 ·Lo~ Angele~ theJ.t~ r and saw
the p()l\ttivt.• n:.lt.:tJon.

Area non-league

'

ALL .

Wahama
3-3
Hannan
t·6
South Galtia
1·6
Friday's Games
Wahama 60, Gilmer County 13
Guyan Valley 36, Hannan 0
Today's Game
South Gallia 40, Gauley Bridge
26

Whether your looking to work or

This Week's Games
South Gallia at Clarksburg Notre
Dame
Buffalo-Putnam at Wahama
Meadow Bridge at Hannan

to play. John Deere has the nght

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How They Fared

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your summertime easy.

No. 1 Logan (7-0) del: Marietta.
48-0
No. 2 Portsmouth (7 -0) del. Miami
Trace, 62-26
No . 3 Parkersburg (7·0) del.
Hoover, 75·22
No . 4 Jackson (7·0) del . River
Valley, 4t-6
No. 5 Ironton (6·1) del. Coal
Grove, 51-0
No . 6 Gallipolis (6·1) del. Athens.
35·0
No. 7 Fort Frye (6·1) lost tp
Beallsville. 28-t3
No.8 Point (5-2) del.. Warren, 17·
0

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• Automatic transmission

No . 9 Miller (7-0) del. Southern.
53·21
No . 10 Eastern (6-1) def. Federal
Hocking, 63-8
Others
Ross SE (6-1) def. Piketon, 14-10
Cheshire Naval Academy (7 -0)
del. South Nebraska Polytechnic
Institute, 3·0

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Saturday's Match
Cross lanes Christian del. South
Gallia, 15· 10, 15-7
Today's Matches
South Webster at • Ohio Valley
Christian. 6:00
River Valley al Marietta, 5:15
Tuesday's Matches
Gallia Academy at Jackson. 5:15
Ohio Valley Christian at River Valley, 5:30
Trimble at Southern, 5:55
Easlern at Waterford, 5:55
Meigs at Nelsonville· York. 5 :55
Thursday's Matches
Gallia Academy at Athens, 5:t5
logan at River Valley, 5:15
Rock Hill at South Gallia, 5:30
Southern at Eastern. 5:55
Alexander at Meigs, 5 55
Ohio Valley Christtan a\ Ironton St.
Joe, 6:00
Saturday's Match
Federal Hocking at .South Gallia,
Noon

Golf

Tuesday's Match
Gallia Academy at Div1s1on I Dis·
trict Tournament, Apple Valley Golf
Club at Mount Vernon. 10:00

Titans.run past Bengals
CINCINNATI (AP) - ·
Eddie George turned the
Cincinnati Bengals into roadkilL
On one han doff after another, George put his head down
and left the Paul Brown Stadium grass littered with runover Bengals wondering what
it· was going to take to finally
take him down.
They never came up with an
answer. George carried a
career-high 36 times {or I BI
yards Sunday as the injurydepleted Tennessee Titans
stayed on track with a 23-14
victory.
"He just keeps hammering
away," Bengals coach Dick
letleau marveled. "We were
having a heck of a time getting
him on the ground. We were
getting to him, but he was getting yards after the first hit and
yoo can't allow rhat to happen."
The Bengals (0-5) gave him
an opening to do jus! about
anything he wanted. George's
only bad moment was a fumble into the end zone that prevented the Titans (4-1) from
putting it away early.
Instead, they rallied from a
14-10 halftime delicit by letring George do most of the
work for a beat-up offense
missing two srarting linemen
and its top two receivers.
" It was · vintage Eddie," said
tight eud Frank Wycheck, who
had season highs with seven

Please see Bengals, Pllp 86

B. Labonte
wins at
Concord

80-YARD RUN - Bengals running back Corey Dillon (28) and offensive lineman Brock Gutierrez celebrate Dillon~s 8Q.yard touchdown run against Tennessee. (AP)

Yanks-M's, Mets-Cards i'n LCS wars
Apple playo(f sweep of the Bay Area.
The Yankees, forced to tly acmss the
OAKlAND - The Yanki:es, tired of
being eulogized as over- the - hill champions, country early .Sunday morning to finish the
broke out of their offensive malaise for a' seri es with the A's, headed back to New
half-inning and then barely held on to York late Sunday night to prepare for Tuesdefeat the Oakland Athletics 7-5 in a deci- day night's AL championship series opener
against the Seattle Mariners.
sive Game 5 of their AL division series.
The wild card Mariners were 6-4 against
The Yankees, trying to become the first
the
Yankees this year:
team to win three straigh t World Series tides
Yankees starter Andy Pettine was pulled
since the 1972-74 A's. wrapped up their
after
3 2-3 innings, but the New York
series hours after the New York Mets completed their ouster of the San Francisco bullpen picked him up. Playing for keeps,
manager Joe Torre even brought in Orlando
Giants in an NL division series.
;, A lot of people were trying to say that Hernandez for his first pro relief appearour run was over, but you're not going to ance.
Rivera got the final five outs for his 16th
beat us that easily," Derek Jeter said. "We're
postseason
save, breaking the record he had
still the champs until someone beats us."
Chuck Knoblauch's return to the lineup shared with Dennis Eckersley since Friday
sparked a six-run first inning, and the night.
Knoblauch, back in his accustom ed leadmaligned New York bullpen came through
off
spot after being benched for three
with 5 1- 1 scoreless innings, leading the
Yankees to victory and completing a Big games, had two smgles, a stolen base, an lUll
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

and a run scored in tht' inmng;.The big bloW
was a three-run double by Martinez ofr the
center-field wall that Terrence Loi1g broke
m on.

Oakland t;nally woke up in the second
inning, getting Randy Velarde 's two-run single. An RBI double by Chavez in the third
pulled the A's within three runs.
David Justice homered in the follrth to
give New York a 7-3 lead, but Oakl;ind got
two more in the fourth on sacrifice flies by
Jason Giambi and O)medo Saenz- knocking out Pcttittc ~ the winner in' New York's
4-tl victory in Gamt' 2 but ineffective Sunday on three days' rest.
The A's h.id the tying nins on base in the
fourth and .the tying run at the plate in the
sixth, eighth and ninth 1nnings. but tailed ro
score.
Mets 4, Giants 0

CONCORD, N .C (AP) Bobby Labonte doesn't like to
talk about the championship. Bur
as he doses in on it, everyone
seems to ask him about it.
He moved a step closer to winning his first Winston Cup tide
Sunday when he won his fourth
race of the season and opened up
the biggest lead this year in the
pomts race.
"Until we get handed something or sent somerhing in the
mail signed, sealed and delivered,
·we've stiU got a lot to worry
about and a lot to go," Labonte
said. "That's why we don't talk
about the points race."
Instead, the usual businesslike
Labonte whispered inside jokes ro
crew chief Jimmy Makar as the
two laughed together in celebration of the outcome of the UAWGM Quality 500.
.
"When. you win you have fun,
and when you have fun you win,"
Labonte said. "We're just enjoying
life right now. It's not going to be
like this forever, so we'll enjoy it
while it lasts."
Labonte won by persuading
Makar to give him four fresh tires
on the final pit stop 25 laps before
the finish Sunday,
r
Leader Jeremy Mayfield was
only taking tWO tires, but Labonte
still wanted four- thus resulting
in a longer pit stop.
13ut the gamble paid off when
he motored his Pontiac past Mayfield with six laps to go 10 beat
the Ford to the finish line at
Lowe's Motor Speedway by 1.166
seconds.
Makar never doubted his dri- •
ver's decision to take on four new
tires, ~._·vcn though five of the cars
racing ill the Top 111 took only
two.
"He's a great linlc r;\ce car driver, he never gives up," Makar
said. "He's always rhinking, always
digging, he just never gives up on
anything."
With the win, Labonte opened
the lead to 252 points. He needs
only to finish ninth or better in
each of the remaining five races
td win the championship regardless of bow any other driver does .
Mayfield finished second. and
was followed by Ricky Rudd.
Tony Stewart and Mark Mart111 in
a race that had a season-h1gh 46
lead changes among 13 drivers .
The track record for lead

Please see MLB, Page B5

Please see NASCAR. Page B5

Bobcats . Arizona rallies to defeat Cleveland, 29-21
bully
Buffalo
TEMI'E, Ariz . (1\P) - Down
14-11 to Clevd:mJ earlv in the

second quarter, thl' .A ri zona
Cardinals h(._\1Jxi.the boo~ ti·tlill ,1

home crowd that had seen this
kind of thing way too many
times.

BY BUTCH COOPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

A sputtering: fran ch i~t: see med
e mb Jrr;t ~sing loss.
Uu t Michad Pntman got (he
running game g;oing:.j.l kc Plumm er moved tlw ball t luou~h the
air w1thout a11y co~tly mi stakes
and the defense· tightened as the
Cardimls rallied to be.11 the
Browns Sunday, 29-21.
"Thcrt' would be ;m ;nvfullot
of reams that would have
headed for :m

ATHENS -It was a muchneeded win for Ohio University on Saturday.
The Bobcats, coming otT
·Mid-Ameri ca n Conference
losses to Akron and Western
Michigan, were in search. of
their first league win against
visiting Buffalo.
Ohio jumped out to a 21-7
halftime lead on its way, to a
42-20 victory over th e l!ulls as
Chad Brinke r ran for a pair of ·
touchdowns and lbynald Ray
ran for a touchdown and
caught one.
"Our kids worked really
hard and really needed the
win," jaid Ohio coach Jim
Grobe. "They needed something positive to happen . lt
wa~ nice to see some smiles in
the lo cker room after a game

thrown up rheir rail ,mJ tos\~d 1t

in , and they tlidn 't do that." Arizona coJch Vince.: Tobtn ·said.
"That's certain lv -.omethiug to
build on."
Pittman, '\tarong- 111 pL1n· of
first-round drat\ p1ck Thoma1
Jones tOr the firllt nme th_l, 'iealon, rushed for lll7 y.mh in 16
carrie~. His puni.;hing 'ityk SL't
th e to ne t(Jr the comcb.Kk.
"I just try to energizt' th(.'
tL~am,'' Pnrm,u1 "i,ud. " I gm·~"

for a change."

l3ufl":llo. in it~ second se;1son
of MAC football, h.1d an
opportunity to take the tir&lt;t
lead of the game with the ball
Please see Ohio, Page 86

.

COME AND GET IT -Cleveland quarterback Tim Couch hands off to
running back Marc Edwards during the game against Arizona. (AP)

they jusr ii.·ed otr n1e ."
The Cmhn.1h (2-.\) s\t'.lthered t\\l) rlii"I,(WCI"o. OllL' 1.111 ,1
kickotr rrturn and .mnthLT on .1
punt return, dut "iet up t\\tl nf
(]l-,·cbnd's tnuchdowll\.
Plummer. 111 hi' 'tl'.llil(.''-t

•

game of the seaso n, completed
17 of Jll P·'""' ti1r 171 yards,
including touchJown passt·s of
5J and 5 yards to Frank Sanders.
He was not intercepted
Plummer, who threw 2~
inten.:e pti~ns last o;;cason, hasn't
thrown any in his last two
gam eo;;.

.. There have been somt· real
bonehead plays that I'm rrymg
to eliminate;· he "aid. "I'm j ust
trying to play quarterback the
wa)' you are suppost~d to play it."
Cary Blanchard added field
goals of 36, 47 and 2S yards as
the Cardinal i (2-3) scored on
five consccuti\'c possession) in
the seco nd and third quarters to
take a 26-14 lead.
Cleveland (2-4) lost i" third
l11

a

rO\V.

Rnok1l'

Tr.t\·i~

Prennce, start-

ing 111 pl.tCL' uf lllJnrcJ Errict

Rhett , rushed tor 97 yards 111 2H
Glrnc\ &lt;mJ score d all of the
Browns· tonc hdowns on runs of
I. 1 ;md 6 y,ml\. Prentice had 511
v.trd~ on 1.1 c1rriL''&gt; in tilt.' tlrlit

qu.1rrcr.
W1th c1~ht utll·n\IH' player.,
on rht· ll~]urt·d h"t. Pn..·ntice\
pt•rfnrlll.llltT wa-. .1 hn~ht \pur
on .l dJ-.,lppllllltmg .1ftrrnoon t~lr
thL' Brl)\\ n-.

"If

\\l'

gt·t

th,Jt ti·m n him

Please see Browns, Pa1e B5

'-

�•

,.... AI • The Dally Sentinel

NATIONAL BRIEFS
•

Teadcer convidecl of abusing boys
WI liTE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP)- A forma fifth-grade teacher ha&lt;
b.-en convtcted of sexu~Uy ahusmg rwo boys who s.ud he crepr mro
their bunk beds after rhrn father mv11ed hun to 'pend the mght.
Steven Nowicki was found gmlry Sunda1· of 22 counts of sodomy,
-.,xnal abuse and endangenng chlldrc'll
Wesrche&lt;rrr County Judge Man ~11111 h ordrred l\:m1'1ckl Jaded
withnut ba1l until he is sentL'nc.:d n!,."\t month. Ht' f.1ct;s up to j()
Y'-'JO in p1 1~on.

••Tht."st."

young boys told lhL' truth .mU J\ .l n·,ulr. thh cnmihal \\Ill meet his pumshment:· Dl..,[n. t .1\ttnrn c:y Jcanmc P1rr~, ~JH.l.
lktense .ltlorney John Mang1ai.Jrd1 luJ 11o1 dc'&lt;ided whether to
3prcal. He s.aid JUrors told hn11 "tht&gt;n: was too much ev1dence for
the defense· to overcome."
Child ahuse is ternble, Mangllbrru sa1J, ··but it's e1·en more ternble In cunncr somebody of 11 1f thev d1dn 't do it."
Nowicki. who WJS tht" 10-\\."Jr-uld bov\ rc.:Jrhrr. hJd bel'll mvilt.•d lo the- t'.unily's homt; tl.tr ~ :\'~,.-,, Yt".lr&lt; I \'C pJrry. Thr..· fJthr..~r kt
Nu\\'Jrki ~pe nd tht• lllgh r ~kl'hin·~ ·Jlt \\ .. h too drunk to dnvc:
hr;JVL'

Inside:

Monday, October 9, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NFL Notebook, Page B5
Daily Scoreboard, Page B6

McCain gives campaign finance refonners a boost
LOS ANGELES (A P) - Sen. John McC.un
turned a national spothght on campaign finance
~dorm this year, and feUow polioaans aren't rhe
only ones tf)ong to capu:ilize on 1t m November.
Refonn advocates put campa1gn finance
melSures on the Noo.•. 7 ballot 111 four SL"""
mdudmg C:iliforrua, whe"' Pmp&lt;lSitllln 34
am!S to limit campaign donatmns .md &gt;pending
1n J state where unlinutt•d, ~conJ-;,emng campa~gru are rhe norm.
I nitianves in Oregon and Missoun would
allow for uxpa)'Cr-tunJed campaigns - whKh
voter; ha1-e traditionally ""'sted. Since 1996.
publicly funded s)'Stems haw been adopted in
McCain state of Anzona, plus Maine. Massac husens and Vermont.
W1sc&lt;&gt;nsin mters will lx' asked in an adlisorv referendum if they want stnctcr c.11np.ngn

s

fin;~nc.

laws.
"I think voters' disgust over tlus issue has
risen to new hetghrs. How could 1t not'\VIuch
ITUkes '"ry fernie ground for these inioanves;·
said EUen Miller, president of Public Campaign,
a Washmgron-based group pushing rhe Oregon
and M1ssoun measures .

McCain plugged reform after leaving rhe
ptt'Sidennal race, reproaching his te Uow Repubhcan,Texas Gov. Georgt'W Bush, for refusing to
ban soft money from the race.
·
Vice !'resident AI Gore agreed to a ban, but
got crmnzed for fund-rming practices M cCain
said "deblSed the it!Stitutioru of governmem."
McCain has not endor;ed any of the baUot
measurt.."S. Bur reforn1 advocates say his anention
to the ISsue could make a d1fference.
Chagnned opponenrs agree.
"1 thmk thar the public is wry frustrated by

Page 81

the current system. The pubhc nuy be wtlhng
to subsarute any S)'Siem to deal 111th dm frustration," said John DtLorenzo, an attorn., fighting Oregon's Measure 6 as leader of No Taxpayer Handours to Pohncians.
Under Measure canrudates coul~ get public funds by ra~&gt;ing a certJln number of $5
donations from Oreg(·m rt·sidc:nts and agreeing
to hm.its on \\•ho may contnbutc. Miniinum
· numbers for $5 contributions range from 200
for House racL'S to 3,000 for governor.
If a candidate's opponem does not opt for
restrictions, that candidate could get as much as
three rimes the lmut in tnatching: funds.
The Oregon Pohtical Accountability Campa1191 behind Me.lwre 6 rmed S4~7 ,605
rhrnugh July 7.Thc opposttinn \V.lS only r..:ccntly orgamzed .md 110 6gun·.., \\"Cre ,lVailabk·.

MonUy, Octabar !t, 1000

u:

MoNDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Sports
Football
SEOAL
SEO

ALL
Jackson
4-0 7-0
logan
4-0 7-0
Gallia Academy 4-0 6-1
Point Pleasant 2-2 5-2
Athens
t·3 2-5
Warren
t-3 2-5
0-4 t-6
Marietta
River Valley
0-4 0· 7
Friday's Garnae
Gallia Academy 35, Athens 0
Point Pleasant 17, Warren 0
Jackson 4t. River Valley 6
Logan 48, Marietta 0
Thls Waek"a Garnae
logan at Gallia Academy
Athens at Point Pleasant
River Valley at Marietta
Warren at Jackso~

h.l11h.'.

Nowte kl. 37 ..ldnllttt•d l'ntt'l'!ll; .J.
tht.· b.nhnHHll bm nnh to hl· .. It,\\ 11 .n
ctmg lhn~•• J t"i·lr l .Hpt"rllll! bt:JH.~.nb my t~·~,·r .u;,l [ tlmuglu. 'Tlu~ I\ gnnd
l'lltltl gh tllr me;" h~..~ ~11d.
The bny" sJ.it.l ht• firsr molt'\(L'll the ,-.;_\·t'Jr-old. rh~.·n clllub~.·d ro
th~ 1&lt;1-v~.&lt;r-old's uppor bunk .
Al -.n. DNA t'Xpt"ns ~~ud they tound ... dJ\'.1 on the 10-y~..·.lr-old th.lt
w.1s .JinHtst Ct" rcainly NowJck1\.
Tht• d~,•fcnsl! la\vyt"r suggt'\,tt·d dJJt No\nt-kJ's "iJhn h.1d bt•t.·n t.'olll·t·tt•d 111 J 'Pinoon dunng the p.1n'· .111d U'-t'd to frJmc h1m
l,ro~~.·c u tors scotft·d .u th.l( rh~.·on

'

Power outage strands shoppers
CHICAGO (A P) - Stuck Jr,m·bnJ~cs tr&gt;ppcJ ,,,ilboats, de,·aton. "it::~ lled between floors, and the: Jcp,urely WL't'kt&gt;nd cnmnmt&lt;.'
turnt·d into a rush-hour tr.:tffic sn.nl when .t 7-sqtlare-mile arc-,1 of
tht• n.aion 's third Jarg'est city was plunged mto darkness.
The power outage lWt'r most of downtnwn L1Sted abnur six hours
Sunday, stranding tourists, shoppers and &gt;ports fans and lea,•ing some
I 2,000 customers without power.
Tourists ltke Shetla Br:mson .md her thr~._'l' daughters. vtsning from
Midland, S.D. had now her&lt; to go"' tt'lllf'el.llllr"&gt; dropped into the
40s on a blustery October day,
.. It\ cold Jnd \\'e 'rc hungry." Branson :-.,llli. ··\Vc don't know where
tu bt-gin lonking for som(._·whcrc th.a ·~ ' · '~''''' Ir'~ Jn Jd\'l'mure."
The blatkout occurred after a new urdllt brc,JktT !.'aught tire Jnd
C!'tploded.
Pohce on foot tried to direct pedestrians and motorists through a
tnazc of darkened traffic signals. In some ar~as. mmnrist~ drovl' up
un sidt"walks to reach side stn.'t'ts 111 .111 effort to cst:apc the mcs~.
"Thank (;od this happened on .1 Sundav," said Officer Thomas
Donegan, a police spokesman.
The massive blackout ca ugh t Comm:m\\·t·.11th Edison by surpnsc..·.
Ren·ut upgrades by rhe unhry tn111p.llly. co~ ting St.0 bJIIJOn.
included a circuit brc.1kt&gt;r for JH&gt;Jdmg 'ILh h ~~\Trt· \t'TYILt' Hlft•rruptinn~ .

''The eqlllpmrnt we mstallt•d should h.wc bob ted th1~ ouugc. bLit
s~ud Pam Strobt.:l. a ComEJ ,.,c~: presJdL'nt. .. I h~.·rc.' :lrL'
ru•w L"ontrols that should have prc\'t'ntcd thi~."

it did not.''

De Niro.
charming
After El Nino and La Nina,
climatologists face 'La Nada' .in ·Meet the Parents'
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Floods m Southern Californi.1'
131amc· it on E.l Nino. Drought
from rht" Grt~.lt Plamo;; ro rhe
Southeast' Sounds hke L1 Nina.
Ncf\·ous climatL~ foft"cJsters? Must
be " La Nada."
For the first timl" in three ye.us.
the tropical Pacific Ocean isn 't
run,ning unusuJlly hOr or cold,
and the neutral conditions an:
leaving climatologists with fewer
p1eces of the puzzle. Gone are the
heady days of confident predictions months into the fumre.
"There comes a time when
you have to admit your understanding is not complete and not
to o;;ay more than you know,". said
W,lhom Patzert, an oceanographer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. " It's hard after three years
ofbemg a hotshot. It's really hard."
Unlike El Nmo and La Nma
years. nothing appears strong
~nough to donunatc the complex
cliuure s·isrem.
Tholt nu:ans th~ dTect~ of r~la ­
tn·dy small tOrct·s such as thl'
moJ'&gt;tllrt' of an mdt\'idual ~to rm
could JctL'rilllllt' wheth~.·r an 3rca
IS wetter or drier or warmer or
cooler than usual.

.. So the tOrec ast problem
becomes much more difficult.
much n1on.· Lh.tlknging:," SJtd Vernon Kousky, .1 rt•scarch mcteoroloqist with d1t' Nanonal Oceanic
anJ Attnosp henc Administration 's
Climate PrcdJction Cemer.
"Wl' don't anticipatr that .we
will have such a high .level of skill
as we had in recent years,'' he said.
Forecaste-rs are having to focus
on historical records and weaker
signals from the oceans for hints
to the upcoming stormy season
and beyond.
For the record , climarologi m
predict a shghtly warmer-thannormal winter for much of the
United States. They're less n·rtain
about ~he Northern border states,
where decisions must be made on
whether to stock up on home
heating oil and road salt. .
During El Nino years like the
winter of 1997-98, westwardblowing trade winds weaken,
.1llowing a mass of warm water in
rhe wt~stern ~qu.unna l P.Kific to
flow easrw'ard rnwud South
America . Sei! o;; nrface (cmpe ratures
can surge a~ much J::. \..J. degrees

above normaL

LOS

ANGELES

MoYit" -goe~

(AI')

-

ga\'C a fine re cep-

tion for the bt.•trothal com~.·dy

•· Meet the Parenrs ," hdpmg to
hft Hollywood om &lt;&gt;f the boxoffice doldrums.

Th&lt;· farce about a jittery
prospccuvc son-m-la\\' (Ben
Stiller) and hi' girlfriend's hardnosed, overprocecti\'c fJther
(R obert De Niro) d,·burcd as the
weekend's top film with $29.1
million, accordmg to studio e~ti­
mates Sundav.

It WJS a record weekend for an
October opening. beating the
S17.2 million taken in by "Antz"
two years ago. "Meet the Parents" also was a record opening
for both De &lt;Niro and Stiller.
Denzel Washington's footbaU. coac hing flick "Remember the
Tit.1ns.'' last weekend's No. I
film. bdd sohdly at second place
with $19.6 million, pushing its
tOtal to S46.2 nnllwn in 10 Jays.
''GL'r Carter," the h1t -man
tlick starnng Sylvester Stallone,
&lt;&gt;pmed .H No. 3 with S6. 7 milIt on The anunatcd " Oi gimon:
The Mtme" debllted 111 fifth
place with S4.1 million.
" Meet the Parents" had a

strong ~\'·e r.1ge of S 11 .1 J1 .1 (hL·.Hn ·Ill 2/• \4 ClllCill.lS. '' R.clllt'll1bcr the Tum;· added 836 the.Jrcr-.. 111 It\ \L'tond \\'L'ckend ..1\·crJb'lll~ £1.~57 111 2,701 loc.'Jtions.
H nUn\'mld cx~.·cu tt\'C:S were
rc!Jc,·cd at havmg two strong
film.;; 111 .1 \(nglc \Vct:kcnJ after J

TVC

string of di.;;appointing debuts.
The· m·crall box office was down
fi&gt;r the 11th sm1ght weekend
compared to la~t yea r, but the
dedme was much smaller than
the 20 and JO percent drops the
industry hld experienced in
recmt weeks. The top 12 films
grossed S77 milhon, down jusr
4.2 pcrcl.•m tram the same pen od b.,t n·.11
"These twn films are really
rc:im·1gorJ.ting the mar~ctpbcc. I(
Wl' stJrt ~L't'ing O(hcr films stac k
ll(J 111 thb rJngL', we'll gl't some
dtpth .It thl· box uffilc:· ~,1id Paul
I )l.·rg.lr,J bedun. prc~1dcnt 0f boxotlice tracker Exhibitor Reb-

Ohio Division

Nelsonville-York
Wellston
Belpre
Vinton County
Meigs
Alexander

TVC

ALL

2·0
2-0
1-t

5-2
4·3
3-4
1·6
3-4
0· 7

H

0-2
0·2

Hocking Division
TVC

ALL

Miller
2-0 7-0
Eastern
2·0 6·t
Southern
H
3·4
Waterford
H
3-4
0·2 3·4
Trimble
Federal Hocking 0·2 1-6
Friday's Games
Nelsonville· York 35. Meigs 7
Miller 53, Southern 21
Eastern 63, Federal Hocking 8
Vinton County 27, Alexander 20
Wellston 45, Belpre 22
Waterford 20, Trimble .t4 OT
This Week's Games
Meigs at Alexander
Southern at .Waterlord
Miller at Eastern
Wellston at Nelsonville-York
Federal Hocking at Trimble .
Belpre at Vinton County

uons .
"Meet d-ll' P.Irt'nt&lt;&gt;" threcror
\\",l\ ll!Kert.Hn about

J.n· R. ),Jl h
th~.· flhn\

The Daily Sentinel

~Ut.t:L'\S

until -he
w~n.dwd H wah .1 p.tying crowd
at .1 ·Lo~ Angele~ theJ.t~ r and saw
the p()l\ttivt.• n:.lt.:tJon.

Area non-league

'

ALL .

Wahama
3-3
Hannan
t·6
South Galtia
1·6
Friday's Games
Wahama 60, Gilmer County 13
Guyan Valley 36, Hannan 0
Today's Game
South Gallia 40, Gauley Bridge
26

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This Week's Games
South Gallia at Clarksburg Notre
Dame
Buffalo-Putnam at Wahama
Meadow Bridge at Hannan

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No. 2 Portsmouth (7 -0) del. Miami
Trace, 62-26
No . 3 Parkersburg (7·0) del.
Hoover, 75·22
No . 4 Jackson (7·0) del . River
Valley, 4t-6
No. 5 Ironton (6·1) del. Coal
Grove, 51-0
No . 6 Gallipolis (6·1) del. Athens.
35·0
No. 7 Fort Frye (6·1) lost tp
Beallsville. 28-t3
No.8 Point (5-2) del.. Warren, 17·
0

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No . 9 Miller (7-0) del. Southern.
53·21
No . 10 Eastern (6-1) def. Federal
Hocking, 63-8
Others
Ross SE (6-1) def. Piketon, 14-10
Cheshire Naval Academy (7 -0)
del. South Nebraska Polytechnic
Institute, 3·0

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Saturday's Match
Cross lanes Christian del. South
Gallia, 15· 10, 15-7
Today's Matches
South Webster at • Ohio Valley
Christian. 6:00
River Valley al Marietta, 5:15
Tuesday's Matches
Gallia Academy at Jackson. 5:15
Ohio Valley Christian at River Valley, 5:30
Trimble at Southern, 5:55
Easlern at Waterford, 5:55
Meigs at Nelsonville· York. 5 :55
Thursday's Matches
Gallia Academy at Athens, 5:t5
logan at River Valley, 5:15
Rock Hill at South Gallia, 5:30
Southern at Eastern. 5:55
Alexander at Meigs, 5 55
Ohio Valley Christtan a\ Ironton St.
Joe, 6:00
Saturday's Match
Federal Hocking at .South Gallia,
Noon

Golf

Tuesday's Match
Gallia Academy at Div1s1on I Dis·
trict Tournament, Apple Valley Golf
Club at Mount Vernon. 10:00

Titans.run past Bengals
CINCINNATI (AP) - ·
Eddie George turned the
Cincinnati Bengals into roadkilL
On one han doff after another, George put his head down
and left the Paul Brown Stadium grass littered with runover Bengals wondering what
it· was going to take to finally
take him down.
They never came up with an
answer. George carried a
career-high 36 times {or I BI
yards Sunday as the injurydepleted Tennessee Titans
stayed on track with a 23-14
victory.
"He just keeps hammering
away," Bengals coach Dick
letleau marveled. "We were
having a heck of a time getting
him on the ground. We were
getting to him, but he was getting yards after the first hit and
yoo can't allow rhat to happen."
The Bengals (0-5) gave him
an opening to do jus! about
anything he wanted. George's
only bad moment was a fumble into the end zone that prevented the Titans (4-1) from
putting it away early.
Instead, they rallied from a
14-10 halftime delicit by letring George do most of the
work for a beat-up offense
missing two srarting linemen
and its top two receivers.
" It was · vintage Eddie," said
tight eud Frank Wycheck, who
had season highs with seven

Please see Bengals, Pllp 86

B. Labonte
wins at
Concord

80-YARD RUN - Bengals running back Corey Dillon (28) and offensive lineman Brock Gutierrez celebrate Dillon~s 8Q.yard touchdown run against Tennessee. (AP)

Yanks-M's, Mets-Cards i'n LCS wars
Apple playo(f sweep of the Bay Area.
The Yankees, forced to tly acmss the
OAKlAND - The Yanki:es, tired of
being eulogized as over- the - hill champions, country early .Sunday morning to finish the
broke out of their offensive malaise for a' seri es with the A's, headed back to New
half-inning and then barely held on to York late Sunday night to prepare for Tuesdefeat the Oakland Athletics 7-5 in a deci- day night's AL championship series opener
against the Seattle Mariners.
sive Game 5 of their AL division series.
The wild card Mariners were 6-4 against
The Yankees, trying to become the first
the
Yankees this year:
team to win three straigh t World Series tides
Yankees starter Andy Pettine was pulled
since the 1972-74 A's. wrapped up their
after
3 2-3 innings, but the New York
series hours after the New York Mets completed their ouster of the San Francisco bullpen picked him up. Playing for keeps,
manager Joe Torre even brought in Orlando
Giants in an NL division series.
;, A lot of people were trying to say that Hernandez for his first pro relief appearour run was over, but you're not going to ance.
Rivera got the final five outs for his 16th
beat us that easily," Derek Jeter said. "We're
postseason
save, breaking the record he had
still the champs until someone beats us."
Chuck Knoblauch's return to the lineup shared with Dennis Eckersley since Friday
sparked a six-run first inning, and the night.
Knoblauch, back in his accustom ed leadmaligned New York bullpen came through
off
spot after being benched for three
with 5 1- 1 scoreless innings, leading the
Yankees to victory and completing a Big games, had two smgles, a stolen base, an lUll
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

and a run scored in tht' inmng;.The big bloW
was a three-run double by Martinez ofr the
center-field wall that Terrence Loi1g broke
m on.

Oakland t;nally woke up in the second
inning, getting Randy Velarde 's two-run single. An RBI double by Chavez in the third
pulled the A's within three runs.
David Justice homered in the follrth to
give New York a 7-3 lead, but Oakl;ind got
two more in the fourth on sacrifice flies by
Jason Giambi and O)medo Saenz- knocking out Pcttittc ~ the winner in' New York's
4-tl victory in Gamt' 2 but ineffective Sunday on three days' rest.
The A's h.id the tying nins on base in the
fourth and .the tying run at the plate in the
sixth, eighth and ninth 1nnings. but tailed ro
score.
Mets 4, Giants 0

CONCORD, N .C (AP) Bobby Labonte doesn't like to
talk about the championship. Bur
as he doses in on it, everyone
seems to ask him about it.
He moved a step closer to winning his first Winston Cup tide
Sunday when he won his fourth
race of the season and opened up
the biggest lead this year in the
pomts race.
"Until we get handed something or sent somerhing in the
mail signed, sealed and delivered,
·we've stiU got a lot to worry
about and a lot to go," Labonte
said. "That's why we don't talk
about the points race."
Instead, the usual businesslike
Labonte whispered inside jokes ro
crew chief Jimmy Makar as the
two laughed together in celebration of the outcome of the UAWGM Quality 500.
.
"When. you win you have fun,
and when you have fun you win,"
Labonte said. "We're just enjoying
life right now. It's not going to be
like this forever, so we'll enjoy it
while it lasts."
Labonte won by persuading
Makar to give him four fresh tires
on the final pit stop 25 laps before
the finish Sunday,
r
Leader Jeremy Mayfield was
only taking tWO tires, but Labonte
still wanted four- thus resulting
in a longer pit stop.
13ut the gamble paid off when
he motored his Pontiac past Mayfield with six laps to go 10 beat
the Ford to the finish line at
Lowe's Motor Speedway by 1.166
seconds.
Makar never doubted his dri- •
ver's decision to take on four new
tires, ~._·vcn though five of the cars
racing ill the Top 111 took only
two.
"He's a great linlc r;\ce car driver, he never gives up," Makar
said. "He's always rhinking, always
digging, he just never gives up on
anything."
With the win, Labonte opened
the lead to 252 points. He needs
only to finish ninth or better in
each of the remaining five races
td win the championship regardless of bow any other driver does .
Mayfield finished second. and
was followed by Ricky Rudd.
Tony Stewart and Mark Mart111 in
a race that had a season-h1gh 46
lead changes among 13 drivers .
The track record for lead

Please see MLB, Page B5

Please see NASCAR. Page B5

Bobcats . Arizona rallies to defeat Cleveland, 29-21
bully
Buffalo
TEMI'E, Ariz . (1\P) - Down
14-11 to Clevd:mJ earlv in the

second quarter, thl' .A ri zona
Cardinals h(._\1Jxi.the boo~ ti·tlill ,1

home crowd that had seen this
kind of thing way too many
times.

BY BUTCH COOPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

A sputtering: fran ch i~t: see med
e mb Jrr;t ~sing loss.
Uu t Michad Pntman got (he
running game g;oing:.j.l kc Plumm er moved tlw ball t luou~h the
air w1thout a11y co~tly mi stakes
and the defense· tightened as the
Cardimls rallied to be.11 the
Browns Sunday, 29-21.
"Thcrt' would be ;m ;nvfullot
of reams that would have
headed for :m

ATHENS -It was a muchneeded win for Ohio University on Saturday.
The Bobcats, coming otT
·Mid-Ameri ca n Conference
losses to Akron and Western
Michigan, were in search. of
their first league win against
visiting Buffalo.
Ohio jumped out to a 21-7
halftime lead on its way, to a
42-20 victory over th e l!ulls as
Chad Brinke r ran for a pair of ·
touchdowns and lbynald Ray
ran for a touchdown and
caught one.
"Our kids worked really
hard and really needed the
win," jaid Ohio coach Jim
Grobe. "They needed something positive to happen . lt
wa~ nice to see some smiles in
the lo cker room after a game

thrown up rheir rail ,mJ tos\~d 1t

in , and they tlidn 't do that." Arizona coJch Vince.: Tobtn ·said.
"That's certain lv -.omethiug to
build on."
Pittman, '\tarong- 111 pL1n· of
first-round drat\ p1ck Thoma1
Jones tOr the firllt nme th_l, 'iealon, rushed for lll7 y.mh in 16
carrie~. His puni.;hing 'ityk SL't
th e to ne t(Jr the comcb.Kk.
"I just try to energizt' th(.'
tL~am,'' Pnrm,u1 "i,ud. " I gm·~"

for a change."

l3ufl":llo. in it~ second se;1son
of MAC football, h.1d an
opportunity to take the tir&lt;t
lead of the game with the ball
Please see Ohio, Page 86

.

COME AND GET IT -Cleveland quarterback Tim Couch hands off to
running back Marc Edwards during the game against Arizona. (AP)

they jusr ii.·ed otr n1e ."
The Cmhn.1h (2-.\) s\t'.lthered t\\l) rlii"I,(WCI"o. OllL' 1.111 ,1
kickotr rrturn and .mnthLT on .1
punt return, dut "iet up t\\tl nf
(]l-,·cbnd's tnuchdowll\.
Plummer. 111 hi' 'tl'.llil(.''-t

•

game of the seaso n, completed
17 of Jll P·'""' ti1r 171 yards,
including touchJown passt·s of
5J and 5 yards to Frank Sanders.
He was not intercepted
Plummer, who threw 2~
inten.:e pti~ns last o;;cason, hasn't
thrown any in his last two
gam eo;;.

.. There have been somt· real
bonehead plays that I'm rrymg
to eliminate;· he "aid. "I'm j ust
trying to play quarterback the
wa)' you are suppost~d to play it."
Cary Blanchard added field
goals of 36, 47 and 2S yards as
the Cardinal i (2-3) scored on
five consccuti\'c possession) in
the seco nd and third quarters to
take a 26-14 lead.
Cleveland (2-4) lost i" third
l11

a

rO\V.

Rnok1l'

Tr.t\·i~

Prennce, start-

ing 111 pl.tCL' uf lllJnrcJ Errict

Rhett , rushed tor 97 yards 111 2H
Glrnc\ &lt;mJ score d all of the
Browns· tonc hdowns on runs of
I. 1 ;md 6 y,ml\. Prentice had 511
v.trd~ on 1.1 c1rriL''&gt; in tilt.' tlrlit

qu.1rrcr.
W1th c1~ht utll·n\IH' player.,
on rht· ll~]urt·d h"t. Pn..·ntice\
pt•rfnrlll.llltT wa-. .1 hn~ht \pur
on .l dJ-.,lppllllltmg .1ftrrnoon t~lr
thL' Brl)\\ n-.

"If

\\l'

gt·t

th,Jt ti·m n him

Please see Browns, Pa1e B5

'-

�Monda)~ October 9, 2000

Page B2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomero~

Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B3

•

•
•
•

NFL

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BY THE AS SOC ATED PRESS

It was a Sight all too fam!lm for the
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Quarterback Vmny Testaverde wmhed
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crowd fell s lent and the Jets watched
then playoff hopes d1ss1pate w th each

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Testaverde who tore an Achtlles ten
don m the Jets first game last year and
mused the rest of the season pmched a
nerve when he was htt m the neck and
left shoulder by Pmsburgh lmebacker
Jason G1ldon JUSt as h&lt; threw the ball on
New Yorks first play from scnmmage
Sunday
I had th1s p nched nerve for about
thr&lt;&lt; ve&lt;ks but t 'asn t as severe as 1t IS
10 v Testa- rd&lt; sa d aft&lt;r tl e J&lt;ts St f.
fered t1 &lt; r fim loss th s seaso1 ?( 3 to
th St&lt;ele s
He h t 1 e r gilt o 1 th exact spot
1&lt; staverd dd d My hoi l ft stde
fro 1 the sh lder to h ha d vent
1 1 1b It o as bad but 1 y ha d IS st 11
u b as I sp ak
The lJ rv sn t 1 early as ser ous as last
years s as
end&lt;r and Testaverd hopes
to pia) next Su day at New Eng! nd
Ta 'P Bay \as at M mesota o Men
dav 1gl St lou s Dallas a d Kansas
C t:) vere off th s veek
The Steelers (2 3) held Ray Lucas Tes
f;lv&lt;rde s back p to 99 yards pass ng and

forced fiiUr New York turnovers
prov1ded the msp~ratlon and the dcfen~e
Peyton Manmng was 31 of. 54 for 334
The way I feel IS one of those beep scored twice to help Msarru earn ttl yards but he also threw three ntercep
words first year Jets coach AI Groh md fourth consecutive v1cto~
tlons for the VISiting Colts (3 2)
I 11 say the word f you want but you 11
The Dolphms (5 1) clinched the VIC
Uon1 31 Packera 24
have to beep It out
tory when cornerback Sam Madison
Brett Favre 2 7 at the S1lverdome w1th
Kardell Stewart fiUmg m for m;ured returned a fumble 20 yards lOr a score 20 mtercepnons fumbled tWICC and
starter Kent Graham was 17 of. 26 for w1th 4 45 left Trace Arnutrong had 3 threw three mtercepnons to g1ve Detroit
140 yards converted 10 of 18 thml
I /2 of M1anu s SIX sacks and forced two Its seventh home wm over Green Bay (2
down plays and completed passes to e1gh1 fumbles
4) m the Packers lm etght regular season
recetvers
VISiting Buffalo (2-3) lost 11s third con
VISits
Kent Graham • our starter and as secuttve game all to AFC East teanu
Charlie Batch threw for 199 yards and
soon as he s ready he II play Pittsburgh
Raideu 34 49ara 28, OT
three TDs for the L10ns (4 2)
coach BtU Cowher satd KordeU played
Ttm Brown caught a 31 yard pass front
Sasnt1 31 Bean tO
vell but no tfs ands or b ts Its a dead R1ch Gannon m overt me as Oakland
Jeff Blake threw three touch do vn pass
mue Kent ts the starter
won at San Franc1sco
es and ran for 66 yards R1cky Wdhams
Brown had seven catch&lt;&gt; for 172 yards had 128 yards rushmg on 30 cames and
Jero J&lt; Betus added I 07 rush ng yards
a1 d the first touchdo vn on the ground and two touchdown~ n a game that was New Orleans defense had five sacks a 1d
aga st the Jets th s season as P ttsburgh uarr&lt;d by 1ussed opportumt e nustak&lt;s three mtercepuons
a 1d llliSCl es 11cludu g ~ pa1r of n ssed
\O 1 ts seco 1d stra ght after thre losses
N&lt;\\ Orleans
3) COl troUtd th ball
Redskms 17 Eagles 14
field go Is by Sebama~ Ja ukowsk1 that for mor&lt; than 38 unutes a 1d ts d&lt;fe lS&lt;
M chael Husted k eked a 2-1 yard field could have gl\&lt;11 the Ra1dm (4 I) th
d1d1 t allow the B&lt;ars (I ') a
~ s ve
goal th fo r s&lt;co ds I ft H t&lt;ted vho Vlctory &lt;arb r
to 1chdo v 1 at Sold &lt;r F ld
had th v 1 g k ck
o e t 1 &lt; for
Th&lt; v 1 1g TD ca1 1e afi&lt;r Wade
Gtants 13 Falcons 6
1
W sh1 gto 1 I st ve&lt;k
ss d rwo fi ld R ch&lt;y s ) yard attel pt for San Fra
Ro 1 Dayne scored th&lt; o ly touch
go Is rl &lt;
the ga
c sco (? -!) vas blocked by A nhony down o a 2 yard run l&lt;ss tha 1 fiv 1
Darrell Green s&lt;t up tl
v 1 mg k ck Dorsott
1tes 11to the ga11&lt; and the bl tz g Ne v
for W11h ngto 1 (-t ?) by n r eptmg
Patrsou 24 Colts 16
York defe l5e 1 ade 1t stand up
D01 o-a McNabb s pass a d rcturnmg 1t
M chad B shop thre'
-14 yard TD
New York (4 ?) knocked ou Aria ta
33 yards to Ph Jaddpl as 19 Ph lade!
pass to Tm ) S1 1 nons on the th al play of quarterback Chns Chandler and !1 uted
ph
(3 3) had b&lt;at&lt; Wash gto 1
th&lt; first half a 1d Ore v Bledso&lt; thr&lt;w the Falcons (? 4) to 13 yards rushmg
mne of ts last 10 at V&lt;t&lt;rans Stad u 1
two TD passes as Ne" Engla 1d (2 4) The \US t ng G~ants snapped a t vo gan e
Dolphms 22 Bills 13
von Its sec nd straight after four losses to losmg streak and handed Atlanta ts th1rd
For 1 er B&lt; ffalo star Th r na 1 Th01 us ope 1 the season
stra ght loss

Ca Now Fo Maps We
F anceO PoperttsW hA
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Cleveland coach Chns Palmer
sa1d
Mac Cody muffed a fan catch
attempt of a Cleveland punt and
the Browns Lenoy Jones recov
ered at the Cardinals 24 Three
plays later PrentiCe scored on a 6
yard run to cut the lead to 26 21
w1th 12 43 to go
Pass nterference and roughmg
the passer penalnes both on th1rd
down kept Ar zonas final sconng
dnve al ve P ttman s 19 yard r n

Panchen 26 Seahawks 3
Carobna (2 3) bolted to a 20 pomt
halft1me lead under new offenSive coor
dina tor Richard WtUlamson and got four
field goals fron new placektcker Joe
Nedney m a 26 3 VICtory over Seattle
Seattle s swuch at quarterback d1dn t
go as well Brock Huard nude hiS first
career start m place ofJon l{jtna but viS
1ttng Seattle (2 4) was I mlted to 209
total yards and 11 first do vns
Broncos 21 Chargers 7
Bnan Gnese threw thr« touchdo vn
pass~s t "110 to Ed McCaffrey to cap
24 yard dnves follow ng nt&lt;rcepnonsas Denv r kept San D &lt;go v less
The v s t ng Bro cos (3 3) had los
th&lt; r pre\IOUS t vo ga s both a M I
H gh Stad um
Th Chargers ( ) 6) r
ff to
:vo st s art s nc~ I s g 11
a ro
t
tart th&lt; 197J s aso 1
Ravens 15 Jaguars 10
Matt S owr k ck d fi fi&lt; d goa s a l
tl e Raw s (' 1)
p
h t a
&lt;c rd s x u ov to g &lt; Ja k
lie a
thr&lt;e game los g st k for tl fi st t
s nee 1996
Jacksoov lle (' -!) lost ' l o
sec It v v ks for th fi st t
995
expans on cason

set up Blanchard s 28 yard field
goal that made t 29 ? 1 w th
three rmnutes to go
I m upset about th s gan e
because we were n a s tuat on
where 1f we play smart football
you get a chance to wm the
game Palmer sa d If we don t
nake those two penalt es we
would have got the ball back and
had a chance to w n the game
In all four th1rd down penalties
kept Ar zona scormg dnves ahv~
n the game A hold ng penalty
also null fied a long run by quar
terback T m Couch the last t me
the Bro vns had the ball
Cleveland wanted to " n the
gan e v th a ball control offe1 se

We were try ng o vea the
out keep the d&lt;fe se on the
field and t backfir d o us
Palmer sad
Ar zona entered tl e game
ranked 30th n rush ng o t of 31
NFL team Clev l d a ?8 h
But the Card nals
tga ed the
Browns on the g ou d -16 I 04
Co ch con pleted 1I uf ??
passes but for on!) 138 jards and
no touchdo vns
They d dn t bl z at al
Couch sa~d It vas l &lt;xac
oppos e of vha ve had prepa ed
for I vas expect g he 1 to
come after 1 e all day b
h )
played exa 1) d fr. en

no

MLB
fromPIIpB1
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seaso1 h st ry Su day s the
New York M&lt; s el
nated th&lt;
San F a c sea G a1 ts v1th a 4
0 v n 1 Ga 1e 4 of th&lt;lr Nl
diVISIOn ser es
At that tine I was not help
ng the ballclub Jones sa1d of
h s t vo week tr p to Tnple A
Norfolk m June After expen
encmg the playoffs last y&lt;ar
and not be ng a part of It I ,
vanted to cone back n the
best shape and have a great
year
Jones limned the Gunts to a
clean fifth mmng double by
Jeff Kent as the w1ld card Mcts

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By p tch ng th firs o
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sh to t n tl e pas e
Bosto s J 1 lo bo g be t S
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tl n OJor had theH ag ca
s&lt;aso
d v th
vh per "
p t b&lt; a se Ba y Bo ds
sa
postsea o bus aga n
Bonds droppd to 0 :&gt;
playoff senes three v th
Pmsb rgh t" o v th the G a
- w th a 196 batt g average
()Verall Fm ngly th thr e
11 te MVP 1 ad~ the fina ou
~f th&lt; ser es h tt ng a fly ball
~ c~ntcr field that left h11 3
for 17 aga nst the Mets
Joles struck out Bonds on a
h1gh fastball to e 1d the first
drawmg an ovat1on fro 11 a
crowd ready for another cele
brauon
t

In the

CLASSIFIEDSI

hand because hundreds had
been thrown away after fuhng a
quahty control telt But each
team had the standard n ne sets
of mes when the green flag
dropped
The abu 1dance d d oth ng
to help Mayfield vho chose
not to se the extras o the
final p t stop
It was a last 1 1ut dec
s o 1 M yfidd sa d W ~ It
l ars o
hke th r v r
the le d lap tl
t f guv
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don t go yo r ay
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�Monda)~ October 9, 2000

Page B2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomero~

Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B3

•

•
•
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NFL

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BY THE AS SOC ATED PRESS

It was a Sight all too fam!lm for the
New York Jets
Quarterback Vmny Testaverde wmhed
in pam on the Giants Stadium turf the
crowd fell s lent and the Jets watched
then playoff hopes d1ss1pate w th each

F om Flen To Own low Down
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Soonso 8d By

Testaverde who tore an Achtlles ten
don m the Jets first game last year and
mused the rest of the season pmched a
nerve when he was htt m the neck and
left shoulder by Pmsburgh lmebacker
Jason G1ldon JUSt as h&lt; threw the ball on
New Yorks first play from scnmmage
Sunday
I had th1s p nched nerve for about
thr&lt;&lt; ve&lt;ks but t 'asn t as severe as 1t IS
10 v Testa- rd&lt; sa d aft&lt;r tl e J&lt;ts St f.
fered t1 &lt; r fim loss th s seaso1 ?( 3 to
th St&lt;ele s
He h t 1 e r gilt o 1 th exact spot
1&lt; staverd dd d My hoi l ft stde
fro 1 the sh lder to h ha d vent
1 1 1b It o as bad but 1 y ha d IS st 11
u b as I sp ak
The lJ rv sn t 1 early as ser ous as last
years s as
end&lt;r and Testaverd hopes
to pia) next Su day at New Eng! nd
Ta 'P Bay \as at M mesota o Men
dav 1gl St lou s Dallas a d Kansas
C t:) vere off th s veek
The Steelers (2 3) held Ray Lucas Tes
f;lv&lt;rde s back p to 99 yards pass ng and

forced fiiUr New York turnovers
prov1ded the msp~ratlon and the dcfen~e
Peyton Manmng was 31 of. 54 for 334
The way I feel IS one of those beep scored twice to help Msarru earn ttl yards but he also threw three ntercep
words first year Jets coach AI Groh md fourth consecutive v1cto~
tlons for the VISiting Colts (3 2)
I 11 say the word f you want but you 11
The Dolphms (5 1) clinched the VIC
Uon1 31 Packera 24
have to beep It out
tory when cornerback Sam Madison
Brett Favre 2 7 at the S1lverdome w1th
Kardell Stewart fiUmg m for m;ured returned a fumble 20 yards lOr a score 20 mtercepnons fumbled tWICC and
starter Kent Graham was 17 of. 26 for w1th 4 45 left Trace Arnutrong had 3 threw three mtercepnons to g1ve Detroit
140 yards converted 10 of 18 thml
I /2 of M1anu s SIX sacks and forced two Its seventh home wm over Green Bay (2
down plays and completed passes to e1gh1 fumbles
4) m the Packers lm etght regular season
recetvers
VISiting Buffalo (2-3) lost 11s third con
VISits
Kent Graham • our starter and as secuttve game all to AFC East teanu
Charlie Batch threw for 199 yards and
soon as he s ready he II play Pittsburgh
Raideu 34 49ara 28, OT
three TDs for the L10ns (4 2)
coach BtU Cowher satd KordeU played
Ttm Brown caught a 31 yard pass front
Sasnt1 31 Bean tO
vell but no tfs ands or b ts Its a dead R1ch Gannon m overt me as Oakland
Jeff Blake threw three touch do vn pass
mue Kent ts the starter
won at San Franc1sco
es and ran for 66 yards R1cky Wdhams
Brown had seven catch&lt;&gt; for 172 yards had 128 yards rushmg on 30 cames and
Jero J&lt; Betus added I 07 rush ng yards
a1 d the first touchdo vn on the ground and two touchdown~ n a game that was New Orleans defense had five sacks a 1d
aga st the Jets th s season as P ttsburgh uarr&lt;d by 1ussed opportumt e nustak&lt;s three mtercepuons
a 1d llliSCl es 11cludu g ~ pa1r of n ssed
\O 1 ts seco 1d stra ght after thre losses
N&lt;\\ Orleans
3) COl troUtd th ball
Redskms 17 Eagles 14
field go Is by Sebama~ Ja ukowsk1 that for mor&lt; than 38 unutes a 1d ts d&lt;fe lS&lt;
M chael Husted k eked a 2-1 yard field could have gl\&lt;11 the Ra1dm (4 I) th
d1d1 t allow the B&lt;ars (I ') a
~ s ve
goal th fo r s&lt;co ds I ft H t&lt;ted vho Vlctory &lt;arb r
to 1chdo v 1 at Sold &lt;r F ld
had th v 1 g k ck
o e t 1 &lt; for
Th&lt; v 1 1g TD ca1 1e afi&lt;r Wade
Gtants 13 Falcons 6
1
W sh1 gto 1 I st ve&lt;k
ss d rwo fi ld R ch&lt;y s ) yard attel pt for San Fra
Ro 1 Dayne scored th&lt; o ly touch
go Is rl &lt;
the ga
c sco (? -!) vas blocked by A nhony down o a 2 yard run l&lt;ss tha 1 fiv 1
Darrell Green s&lt;t up tl
v 1 mg k ck Dorsott
1tes 11to the ga11&lt; and the bl tz g Ne v
for W11h ngto 1 (-t ?) by n r eptmg
Patrsou 24 Colts 16
York defe l5e 1 ade 1t stand up
D01 o-a McNabb s pass a d rcturnmg 1t
M chad B shop thre'
-14 yard TD
New York (4 ?) knocked ou Aria ta
33 yards to Ph Jaddpl as 19 Ph lade!
pass to Tm ) S1 1 nons on the th al play of quarterback Chns Chandler and !1 uted
ph
(3 3) had b&lt;at&lt; Wash gto 1
th&lt; first half a 1d Ore v Bledso&lt; thr&lt;w the Falcons (? 4) to 13 yards rushmg
mne of ts last 10 at V&lt;t&lt;rans Stad u 1
two TD passes as Ne" Engla 1d (2 4) The \US t ng G~ants snapped a t vo gan e
Dolphms 22 Bills 13
von Its sec nd straight after four losses to losmg streak and handed Atlanta ts th1rd
For 1 er B&lt; ffalo star Th r na 1 Th01 us ope 1 the season
stra ght loss

Ca Now Fo Maps We
F anceO PoperttsW hA
0 Percen Add On Ca.ah Pri as

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Ouoed

fromPIIpBI

MOBilE HOME OWNERS

310 Homoa lor Sale

n

560 Pets lor Sale
--------

URGENTLY NEEDED p 11m1
donor~

oa n 135 10 $45 1o 2 o 3

hou I Wllk Y Ca St I Tee 740
592 885

Tappan H E c ency 90% Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu naces 2 See
Hea Pump &amp; A Co d on ng
Sys ems Fee 8 Yea Wa an y

Be

4

e s Hea ng &amp; Coo ng

800 872 5967 www orvb comltJen

every week we ll be pleased
Cleveland coach Chns Palmer
sa1d
Mac Cody muffed a fan catch
attempt of a Cleveland punt and
the Browns Lenoy Jones recov
ered at the Cardinals 24 Three
plays later PrentiCe scored on a 6
yard run to cut the lead to 26 21
w1th 12 43 to go
Pass nterference and roughmg
the passer penalnes both on th1rd
down kept Ar zonas final sconng
dnve al ve P ttman s 19 yard r n

Panchen 26 Seahawks 3
Carobna (2 3) bolted to a 20 pomt
halft1me lead under new offenSive coor
dina tor Richard WtUlamson and got four
field goals fron new placektcker Joe
Nedney m a 26 3 VICtory over Seattle
Seattle s swuch at quarterback d1dn t
go as well Brock Huard nude hiS first
career start m place ofJon l{jtna but viS
1ttng Seattle (2 4) was I mlted to 209
total yards and 11 first do vns
Broncos 21 Chargers 7
Bnan Gnese threw thr« touchdo vn
pass~s t "110 to Ed McCaffrey to cap
24 yard dnves follow ng nt&lt;rcepnonsas Denv r kept San D &lt;go v less
The v s t ng Bro cos (3 3) had los
th&lt; r pre\IOUS t vo ga s both a M I
H gh Stad um
Th Chargers ( ) 6) r
ff to
:vo st s art s nc~ I s g 11
a ro
t
tart th&lt; 197J s aso 1
Ravens 15 Jaguars 10
Matt S owr k ck d fi fi&lt; d goa s a l
tl e Raw s (' 1)
p
h t a
&lt;c rd s x u ov to g &lt; Ja k
lie a
thr&lt;e game los g st k for tl fi st t
s nee 1996
Jacksoov lle (' -!) lost ' l o
sec It v v ks for th fi st t
995
expans on cason

set up Blanchard s 28 yard field
goal that made t 29 ? 1 w th
three rmnutes to go
I m upset about th s gan e
because we were n a s tuat on
where 1f we play smart football
you get a chance to wm the
game Palmer sa d If we don t
nake those two penalt es we
would have got the ball back and
had a chance to w n the game
In all four th1rd down penalties
kept Ar zona scormg dnves ahv~
n the game A hold ng penalty
also null fied a long run by quar
terback T m Couch the last t me
the Bro vns had the ball
Cleveland wanted to " n the
gan e v th a ball control offe1 se

We were try ng o vea the
out keep the d&lt;fe se on the
field and t backfir d o us
Palmer sad
Ar zona entered tl e game
ranked 30th n rush ng o t of 31
NFL team Clev l d a ?8 h
But the Card nals
tga ed the
Browns on the g ou d -16 I 04
Co ch con pleted 1I uf ??
passes but for on!) 138 jards and
no touchdo vns
They d dn t bl z at al
Couch sa~d It vas l &lt;xac
oppos e of vha ve had prepa ed
for I vas expect g he 1 to
come after 1 e all day b
h )
played exa 1) d fr. en

no

MLB
fromPIIpB1
NEW YORK (AP)- Bobb}
J J n&lt; v I dar d the t tl h
1 d tea 1
t s pia d

Pt Pleasant
&amp; VICinity

ft r b

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent

$70
40

SEIIVICES

810

IAIIMINT

U1'1COM Onl II mt QUI antll
LOCI 1ft IMOII lu Mflhtd II

tab lhld i75 01 a4 H I (740)
448 0870 800 al7 0178 Aog
"'Wale p ool ng

11110

p t
d four
It r a
or i&lt;ag e
1 Ill
J es 1 ade
a1 e
for
If a d c rvtd u t a
plac
play ff lor
Jo 1 s thr v th s xth co
plete g 1 e one httter n post
seaso1 h st ry Su day s the
New York M&lt; s el
nated th&lt;
San F a c sea G a1 ts v1th a 4
0 v n 1 Ga 1e 4 of th&lt;lr Nl
diVISIOn ser es
At that tine I was not help
ng the ballclub Jones sa1d of
h s t vo week tr p to Tnple A
Norfolk m June After expen
encmg the playoffs last y&lt;ar
and not be ng a part of It I ,
vanted to cone back n the
best shape and have a great
year
Jones limned the Gunts to a
clean fifth mmng double by
Jeff Kent as the w1ld card Mcts

·NASCAR
fromPipB1
changes was 47 set m 1974

and the prev1oul season h1gh
'as 30 at Atla lta Motor Speed

MERCHANDISE

way m March
Jeff Burton fin shed s1xtl to
fhp spots With o~Ie Eamlmdt
1 the race to catch Lnbo te 1
the standmgs Ean h rdt o v
ilurd fln shed 11th t fall 15K
p liS bchmd labo t
S 1 e of o r cl &lt; t
p tit s did t l &lt;
g d
d1d s l" 1 all) I '
d y s
o be tl
k~ I b
&lt; tl
l
ld b
k

JET
AERA ON MOTORS
Aepa ed New &amp; Aebu n S ock
Ca Ron E a s 800 53 9528

TRANSPORTATION

FINANCIAL

210

Buy, Sell or Trade

Bualne11
Opportunity

CAREER

OPPORTUN TY
ERS Ea n up o
$45K y Fu
1
g PC eq d
688 660 6693 E)[ 4402

MED CAL B

Two tlecl oom mob e ~om e no
pes 740 992 5856

New &amp; Used Fu n u e
New 2 P e~e
ng com Su ea

$399 Buy So

~

aoo

e speed
ad as
ck 7 o

Rob
V&lt;
ch
o
0
h t
I &lt; bo to
k d
G d r
0 0

g

M

k

lZ

t

0

I&lt;
t

0

J

b1g break
d dn
&lt;
truck o
Do
bot
o b g o
re red h
fi
before Kc t s do bl o
tura s l ead do
I l
I ne
The G ts
c
the tina 18
n ng
ser es

t

rVe
fi d

Iss
h

ot

Hom•
Improvements
WATI~PAOOP NO

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

g !dt o t

von tl
fi na h&lt;et;
so
1&lt; er es to vo1d a cross
d a d~ IS v
co try tr p
Ga e J
Sa 1 Fr c sea
By p tch ng th firs o
I t
sh to t n tl e pas e
Bosto s J 1 lo bo g be t S
l
s
tl
~67 Wo d
S r s Jo s g w N
Y k
t
dy
ffb~r
1 e NlCS n St
W d sd y Tl Me
1
C dn s
s
Th C nts ()7 (- ') v o ti
I e l v h t1 &lt; bes r&lt; o d
tl n OJor had theH ag ca
s&lt;aso
d v th
vh per "
p t b&lt; a se Ba y Bo ds
sa
postsea o bus aga n
Bonds droppd to 0 :&gt;
playoff senes three v th
Pmsb rgh t" o v th the G a
- w th a 196 batt g average
()Verall Fm ngly th thr e
11 te MVP 1 ad~ the fina ou
~f th&lt; ser es h tt ng a fly ball
~ c~ntcr field that left h11 3
for 17 aga nst the Mets
Joles struck out Bonds on a
h1gh fastball to e 1d the first
drawmg an ovat1on fro 11 a
crowd ready for another cele
brauon
t

In the

CLASSIFIEDSI

hand because hundreds had
been thrown away after fuhng a
quahty control telt But each
team had the standard n ne sets
of mes when the green flag
dropped
The abu 1dance d d oth ng
to help Mayfield vho chose
not to se the extras o the
final p t stop
It was a last 1 1ut dec
s o 1 M yfidd sa d W ~ It
l ars o
hke th r v r
the le d lap tl
t f guv
ver g
g t p t
o W
~
k f)O p
J
I t tr k p s t
r

tl
l

tt

h

1 to
( oc d) ar pr
loads of
st rt

I

tl

g

o

(
dycar
t ll} tl
0 gl
I ght ot hav

0

J rrtt

b

t

d

0

yo&lt; work hard
good race c r
don t go yo r ay
Ha car was hea
a1 d was towed fl
rett who tr I d
25 po ts b ~
sh d 41 th
d
by "\88
W th o ll fi
ng l
sh t at c tc l
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)a

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h

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g

tl

g

�Monday, October

Page ~ • The Dally Sentinel

.

9, 2000

' Monday, October 9 2000

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

The Dally Sentinel • Page B5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'

~·

OOP

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword

. . . . ..., lartlnel

••tftiii.UD

PHILLIP

II I •

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264

Aerobics Class
Royal Oak Resort
Beginning Tues. Oct. 1Oth
6:30 pm $3.00 class

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Eme~geny Funds; Mortgage;
~
Major Medical • Nursing Home
_..,_. _ _ .

now PARTinG OUT

~~
High 81. Dry

1.fft ....
1H9TayiiiAIR2
1919 Cldllllc fleetwood

1HI ford T1nlndfrblrd 1!190 ford lkrost« Uan
1992 fonl flplftl'
1993 ford Taurus
1994 Ford !Ianger P/U

,PJ

Classes every Tues &amp; Thur.

ALDER
SECU

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

fOR mORt InfO. PlEASt CAll

1a-ot-oo

North
• J 5
• 8

e4

• J
•AKQJ6~4

West

East

• 8 6 4
• A J 9 5

• 10 9 3 2

t

¥ K 2
• 96 ~ 3

A K 10 2

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILLUMITATION

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
(Revised Code, s.ctlont
3501.t1 (G), 5705.19, 5705.25)
NOTICE It hereby given

(Revised Code, Secllono

3501.11 (G), 5705.19,
5705.25)
NOTICE Ia hereby given
that lq pursuance of a
Reaotulton of the Board of
Township Truo1oea of the
Townehlp of Olive,
Roedeville, Ohio, pa..ed on
the . 18th day of Auguet,
2000, thoro will bo
submitted to a vote of the
people ol aatd aubdlvlslon

at a General ELECTION to
be held In the Township of
Olive Ohio, at the regular
placea of voting thoreln, on
the 7th day of November,

2000, the question of
levying a tax, In excess or

the ten mill limitation, lor
the benefit of Olivo
Township tor the purpoae

of:

Road

Maintenance

Including dust control .
Said tax baing A renewal

of a tox ol1 mill ·
At a rata not exceeding 1

(one) mille lor each one
doller of valuation, which
amounts

($0.t0)

to

tor

Ten

cents

each

one

hundred dollars of valuation

Cllllllnlltd,

Reasonable Prices

Reeolutlon of lht Board of
Townthlp 'Truttett Ql tho
of

FREE Estimates.

Rutland

Rut11nd, Ohio, potoed on
lht 3rd d1y of July, 2000,
there will be eubmltted to 1
vote of tht people of e1ld
aubdlvlalon at a General
ELECTION to be hold In tho
Townehlp of Rutland Ohio,
day of November, 2000, the
ciueetlon of levying a tax, In

Certified in Meigs,
Athen5 and
Washington Countii!S.
Your QuAlity 24-Hour
Chlldcare Services

(one) mille for a·a ch one

open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
otsald day.

o'clock A.M. and remain

By order of the Board of

742-7405

~~

passed on the 19th day of

June, 2000, there will be
submitted to a vote of the

people of said subdivision
at a General ELECTION to
be held In the Township of
Racine, Ohio, at the regular
places of voting therein, on
the 7th day of November,

2000, the question ol
levying a tax, in excess ol

·rho ten mill limitation, lor
tho benefit of Racine VIllage
c~rrent

being

QUALITY WINDOW ~YSTEMS 1 INC.
992·4119

1·800·291-5600

.VISIT OUR SHOWROOM ON STATE ROUTE 33
6MILES NORTH OF POMEROY, OHIO AT COUNTY ROAD 18

A

.. Q

BISSELL IUILD.ERS Jf:,WICK'S Clj
INC.
. HfiOLIHG and :
New Homes • Vinyl

'

' 740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

0

=
-=

EXCfiVfiTIHG

-

Hauling • Umeslone e
Grovel• Sand eTopsoil •

Fill Dirt• Mulch e
Bulldozer Services

(740) 992-3470:

-

morith.

Stop In And ,See

•

day of November, 2000, the
question of levying a tax, In
excess of the tei1 mill
limitation, for the benefit of
purpose of: Malntalnllig and
operating cemeteries.
Said tax being A renewal

Road
Racine, Ohio

45771
740-949-2217
Sizes

5' x 10'

to 10' x 30'

HE WAS THE
KID AT
50CCEt&lt;. CAiiP

Hours

ONL.'I'

7:00AM- 8 PM
1/21/oo 1 mo. od.

WITH FIVE

O'CLOCK

Larry Schey

-.. ...

hundred dollars of valuaUon

lor live (5) years.
The Polls lor .said
Election will apon at 6:30

lor live (5) years.
The Polls lor said
Election Will open at 6:30
o'clock A.M. and remain
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
oleald doy.
By order of tho Board of
Electlono of Meigs County,
Ohio
John N. lhle, Chairman

Rita o. Smith, Director
Dated Sopttmbor 6, 2000
(10) 9, 18, 23,30 4TC

FREE
YARD SALE
SIGN

•
750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

f.o:Jtland, Or.lo

Truck seats, ::ar seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convert:ble &amp; vtnyl tops.
Four wheeler s.:ats, motorcycle s -~ats, ,.
boat covers, carpets, ::tc.
Mon - F~·i 8:30 -

youu SAvE MoNEY
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

~--~_:AN:D~TH:M~'S;ND~B~UL~LI~

VINYL REPLACEMENT

All Types of Business

-Any Size Double Hung·

11401 881-3224
1-800-828·0212
P/B CONTRACTORS, INC.

DECORATION ..
INSULATION ..

MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercial
Free Estimates
Fully Insured

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

$229.00*
• Free lnstalhitlon
' Free In Home Estimates
Call for Further Details

QUftliTY WinDOW

svsnms, me.

992-4119
1-800·291·5600
VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
ON STATE ROUTE 33 6
MILES NORTH OF
POMEROY, OHIO, AT
COUNTY ROAD 18
•No Dealers or Contractors
Please WW023477

SELLERS CONSTRUCTION
o

OR-A
VACATION ...

WINOOWS

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

• Remodeling

• Garages

·Decks

• Siding

• Roofing '

'

•

992·2753

'

13 1 mo d

LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take the pain out
of paintingLet me do it for yo(t"

Meigs County
Fairgrounds
Oct. I, 2000 ·Apr. 1, 20()1
CALL FOR MORE
INFORMATION '
'

949-2033

'

992·1101

WINTER
STORAGE
SPACE
AVAILABLE

'

DEPOYS AG
PARTS

An Make. Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
'
Deale.,.

Need It done, glt/8 us a call
FREE ESTIMATES
Gnat Priced on New Homu

1·•·1

OFFICE EXPRESS
BUSINESS SERVICES

CONCRETE

CATION ...

• New Homes

Over 40 yra experience

Support Services

Get yours
to v

SMITH'S COtiS"mOCTIOri

s:oo·

·(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916

wltb ad!

' 740-985-3831

Phone (740) 593-6671

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc

Advertise in
this space for
$100 per
month.

SERUICE

"Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% Sweet feed • 55.25/50 lbs.
e 12% Cattle feed 16.75/100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog food 56.75/50 lbs.
• fall fertilizers

Sales Representative

At a rata not exceeding 1

one

HOE RIUER

Steve Riffle

Lebanon Township lor the

hundred dollars of valuation

open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
oloold day.
By order of tho Board of
Elections of Meigs County,
Ohio
John N. lhla, Chairman
Rill D. Smith, Dlroc)or
Dated Soptombor 6, 2000
(10~ 8, 16, 23, 30 4TC

space for
$50 per

29670 Bashan

SHADOW .

voting therein, on the 7th

(one) mills lor each one
dollar of valuation, which
amounts to Ten cents
($0.10) lor each one

o'clock A.M. and remain

in this

HILL'S
SElF STORACE

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
'
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
'
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per ga"ll'
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst '
Progressive top line.
Lie. # 00·50 11119/lfo

at the regular places of

(throe) mills for. each one
dollar of valuation, which
amounts to Thirty cents

Advertise

Cellular ,
Jeff Warner In's.
992-5479

vote of the people of sold
subdivision at a General
ELECTION to be held In the
Township of Lebanon Ohio,

of a tax ol1 mill

~=-~

su~.Cio10d

*No Dealers or Contractors Please WV #023477

.AlltEL-

Townehip Trustees of the ·..
Township of Lebanon
Portland'~ Ohio, passed on ·
the 30th day of June, 2000, '' 1
there will be submitted to a 1

replacement tax of 3 mills
At a rate not exceeding 3

01 _.1

Phona 740.'949·2804
Ownsr .Jim Plcktnt
Mechanic- Bill Jonoo '
~.~;~~~.:rta:.
r · tcktn

Siding • New Garages
'
• Replacement Windows
I
• Room Additions
I
I
• Roofing
' COMMERCIAL and RESIDENT~l\l
FREit ESTIMATES .
I

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6 p.m. •
leave Message
Aher 6pm· 740-985-4180

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coo/viii•, OH 45723

WANT D

The

Free Eit1mates
Call T&amp; R Logging
aftet· 8:00pm
740-992-5050

.,
••

A K Q 7
Q 10 7 3
Q8 7 4
2

targets

2 Court order

3 Facilitate

4 Printer's
measures
5 Cal. box

Caesar

39 _A ima-

18 Edible tuboir
20 - accompli
2t Actor
Borgnine
22 Jot&gt;-seeker's

9 Twitches

6 Coqau7 Paradises
8 Free-lancer's
encl.

37 Comedian

West
Pass
· Pass

North

11 Machine gun
12 Small French

bagpipe
13 Spoil

handout

23 Flbor plant
24 Singing bird
25 Ancient

t•
2•
Pass

Italian 1amlly

27 Editor's

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

order

28 Anglo-Sax""
serf
29 - -do-well
31 One looueola
oowspapor

144 Third Ave. Gallipolis '

•

.

46 Cartoonist

Goldberg

47 Rat--·-

48 Journallol
Ernla-

so Encountered.
52 And soon
(abbr.)

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created !rom quotations by famous people. past and
present Each let1er 1n 1he clpMr stands lor another.

Today's clue:£ equals Y

'XD

VXFBIY ,

XDKVW

NJYBMVN

SYYW

ZNH

HMIVXAYBYH

SYDXBY

VXCFJSFI,

NCPNEI

SYYW

SFK

ZFIZYH

MK

ZNH

FG.'

YRNW
YINB
PRE\'IOUS SOLUTION: "I was dressed by a man who evidently had read his
lnslructions In Braille: -

Bene Davis, or her first screen lest.

WOlD
GAM I

K L1E

1

r l_
1·

1

~

B Y0 EN

I I' ·I

-r:--,.-,--r-l- m

I I

A little

boy visited a farm for the

f~rst 11rne. He was standmg

by a
lamb and cried, "Hey, this
..__,____...__....._........__._ · lamb IS made from a - - · . - - -.·:
f-·

~small

ANVYIL '

I'"__,I'"'G,....,I-TI7::--II..-.. .

j

o

.

I-·'-~
co,pl••• •h• chuckle quo••d
.
.
_
_
_
_
.
by filling in the missing W(lrds
L-....1...--IL-..L........I.-L-...J you de\lelop from lfep No. 3 below .
oft PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS I

~ IN THESE SQUARES

oft UNSCRAMBLE LEITERS TO
U GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Naught · Onion - Nifty· Depict- FINANCING
My son and daughter-i n-law cou ldn't afford to put new
!tie 1n thetr new home They say they already nave wall
to wall FINANCING

OCTOBER 9l

'Birthday

scapegoat. Overcome your mis Tuesday, Oct. I 0, 2000
Your career potential could be take by reviewing the joh and fig·
"' a few levels higher in the year a uring out what went \vrong .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
' head than it has been in the past.
19)
Try to keep your comments to
·: However, you must take care not
.' to expect more from a situation yourself today , because should
' they come out a bii 100 caustic
:'than you should.
. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) and judgmental, those who were
:Don't add any more straws to an your friends may be rethinking
:atready. heavily laden camel's their opinion of you.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
.'back. A person who is doing a fine
iob for you will do worse should Be on guard that a high-pressured
,you put any addit.ional pressure on peddler doesn't coerce you into
:lhis person. Trying to patch up a parting with funds you shouldn 't
for something you don't even
·broken romance~ The Astro;~raph Matchmaker can help you want. Your sales resistance might
be at a very low· ebb today.
understand what to do to make the
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
relationship work. Mail $2.75 to
Matchmaker; c/o this newspaper, This might not be a good day for
l&gt;.o. Box . l758, Murray Hill Sta- teaming up with others, because
partnership arrangements. aren't
lion, New York, NY 10156.
apt to work out too well for you.
• SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Try to do things unaided if possi·Instead of attempting to assume
ble.
fhe head honcho role with a group
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
bf friends today, go along with the
Unfortunately,
the only time
majority. If you don't, you could
you'll be willing to assist anoth.' ~uickly find yourself outside
er
today is if it's your idea. You
looking in.
may not take too kindly to anyone
, SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
who does the asking. Be gracious
:21) Should you fail at something
in each case.
~ou're attempting to do today,
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
tlon't start looking around for a

'•

,

53 Swiss river

'Your

.

• Verticals • Wootl
• Minis • Etc

'

college
44 - -bltty

•.

location

Advertise our business
on this page or one nlonth for
as low as $2S
Phone 992·21 SS

exclamatlon

38 Lion's homo
40 Combine . •
41 Singer
McEntire
42 Calfee cup
43 Carolina

IMONDAY

•

UP TO 70% OFF .

·888-7 5·88

BY PHILLIP ALDER
This is the day on which we
celebrate Christopher Columbus'
voyage to these parts . He was
born in Genoa, and apparently his
given name was Cristoforo
Colombo. So, here's a deal from
an Italian pair tournament in
Abano , which my atlas tells me is
west-southwest of Venice .
To test yourself, cover the East
and South hands. Defending
against three no-trump, you lead
the diamond ace: jack, three, four.
What now?
At most tables, North opened
and closed the auction with a
. gambling three no-trump, showing a solid seven- or eight-card
minor with no side ace, king or
void. The correct defensive
approach against this bid is to try
to win the first five tricks. So, it
is "nonnal" to lead an ace; with·
out an ace, attack with a king.
Therefore, the Easts led the heart'
king, which worked well . West
encouraged with the nine, and a
second heart from East all owed
the defense to take the first five
tricks : three hea11s and two diamonds.
With the South hand hidden.
though. it was much more diffi cult. East's lowest diamond
denied the queen: Butwhich card
· did East have , the spade ace or
hea11 king, as an entry for a diamond return through South's
queen?
At the table. West. a national
champion. swttchcd 10 a spade.
However, South immediately
claimed II black-s uit tricks for a
top. A heart switch would have
been much more successful -- and
that is the correct defense. If East
has the hean king , success . is
instant. Yet if East has the spade
ace, declarer can run only eight
tricks (one heart and seven clubs).
The contract still dies .

Sentinel

·,.,

(Factory Outlet)

re

1 Destroyer's

27 o.c. hotshot
30 Bearllke
32 Sleeping·
sickness 11V
34 Nabbed
35 Playwright
O'Neill
36 COmpass pt.

To get a current weather
report, check the

·'

All vertical blind• are
made to ordel' at our

all

DRINKING

••

CRAFTY,
BLIND SPOT

446-4995

l J.IATE

OF A HO::•E

10/4 1 mo.

(Randy)
1m . 11 1 o

10/911:0

6 Month
Membership $1 00
plus tax
with this ad
Ravenswood, WV

304-273-0036

Dozer work.

PEANUTS

IRON CITY GYM

74N87-8383

Standing-timber large
or small track,. Top
prices puid al~o.

26 Had a snack

The ocean blue

Public Notice

Council ol the Village o1
Racine, Racine, Ohio,

each

-Anll Size Double Hunl!-

Call for Further Details

Mums, Indian
lAPI,Ies, APPle
Gift Items, Subs, .
llnat:M! Sitlce, Ice Cream.
l;Bll(oll:na. Summer Sauslll!e. Beef"'"""
· M-F 10-7 Sat 10-6 Sun- Closed

ResoluUon of the VIllage

lor

Open Mon·frlll-6; Sat. 9-4

Rutland, Ohio

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
NOTICE OF El.EC'riON ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION '
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
(Revised Code, Sections
(Revised Code, Sections
3501.11 (G), 5705.19,
3501.11 (G), 5705.19, 5705.25)
5705.25)
,,
NOTICE Is hereby given
NOTICE Is hereby given that In pursuance of a
that In pursuance ot a Reaolutlon of the B9ard ot t~

($0.30~

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

;/1100 I ~pd_

15 lnt't. agcy.
55 Arabian
16 Sault- Marie
kettledrum
17 Dawn goddess 56 Russian veto
19 Robin's home 57 Greek Island
20 Sword lighters
23 Make a vow
DOWN

33 Mild

Stratton trained
,
machanlcl
We service mowers,
chainsaws. tillers.
generators, snowblowers, :
weedeatera, pick·UP and ~
delivery available on ~
request.
·

740-992-4559

51 -parlor
54 Received

Opening lead: • A

Featuring two Brfgge &amp; ,

* Free in Home Estimates

.

Public Notice

tax

•

RACINE MOWER CLINIC :

1-800-272-5179or446-9800

o'clock A.M. and remain

(10) 9, 16, 23, 30,.4TC

Said

Mete• a o.wa counuee

* Free Installation

Elections of Meigs County,
Ohio
By order of the Board of John N. lhle, Chairman
Elections of MeigS County, .Rita D. Smith, Director
Dated September 6, 2000
Ohio
John N. lhle, Chairman
(10) 9, 16, 23, 30 4TC
Rita D. Smith, D~rector

for the purpose of:
Expenses

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yro. Local

1t
3 NT

•

open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
olaald day.

Dated September 6, 2000 .

South

V.C. YOUNG 111992·6215 ;

HEAP vouebert aecepted for

preceding
· month

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

.•·'

Free Estimates

Sat. 104
• Candle making
eupplles
• W&lt;!oden crafts
• Baskets

'

• Patio &amp;Parch Doob

Firewood
3112111 Ball Run 'Road
Pomeroy. Ohio 411789

"W.elp"

Over 30 Year Experience

740-667-6329

dollar of valuation, which
amounts to Ten cants
($0.1 0) lor each one
hundred dollars of valuation
lor live (5) yoaro.
Tho Polio lor said
Election will open at 6:30

Ball Logging &amp;

"we're back to our

TUppers PlAins

exceu of the ton mill
limitation, lor the benefit of
Rutl1nd Township lor tho
purpote of: Fire Protection.
Sold tax bolng A renewal
of o tiiX oil mill
At 1 rote n0t exceeding 1

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

Call Us First Or We 5oth LOse!
Ask f'or Mr. Ford

regular hour• ••
Tues-Frl 1 O·S

• New Goroots
·
• lloctrkool ' PloooooWag
• Raellnt &amp; Goott.ors
• VlooyiSWiot &amp; Palottlot

*Lean Jleuafe

992-6142 &lt;!r
Toll·l"ree 1·877-804· 7311

The CountrY
Candle ShoP

Stau Route 7,

M . and O&amp;llla Countlet
Clll

..

•
•
•
•

• 1- adolliooto &amp; Roo10 • 1

Dump Truek DellwetJ

GALLIPOLIS

7/22/TFN

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

voting therein, an the 7th

"JuRNPIKE
OF

740-992-1671

30

at lhe regular placaa of

lor three (3) years.
Tho Polls lor aald
Election will open at 6:30

~Garages
• Complete '
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

Simington
Ultllmt Warnnty
local Conlllelol

that In purau-.nce of a
Townahlp

• New Homes

• 10 9 8

South

YOUNG'S .
CARPENTER SERVICI'

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

49 In 1he

Jacqueline -

• 7 3

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

46 Queen
Latlfah's music

14 Actress

BAUM LUMBER ·
ST. RT. 248
CRISftll

740-992-5232

740-992·1506

1 like augsr

6 Sleeveless
garment
collisions

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"
Protect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
collections, legal papers, investment records, photo
albums,
cameras,
household
inventory
an(!
sentimental items will be safe.
For more information call

Self-Storage

40 Spoke
42 Chow 45 "Opal" end

ACROSS

10 Distant planet
12 like some

PRODUCTS

Puz~le

V1k1ngs (lNe)

Complying to the social dictates
of others wi II not go over too well
with you today. You could be too
set in your own ideas to go along
with the majority.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Stepping out of character today
and trying to bully your way
through a situation that involves
another will have only one result:
a hostile reaction .
CANCER (June 21 -.lttly 22)
Should you have io deal with a
person today whose basic ideas
confli ct with yours. an ugly dc,cl opment cou ld arise if either pari)
tries to impose his or her views on
the other.
LEO (July 23 -Aug . 22) No
business dealt hat is too one-sided
will work f01' any length of time.
The only way you're going 10 get
a lot out of a deal is to give a l ot
in the first place .
VIRGO (Aug. 2~ - Sept. 22)
Find a way out of a situation
today that makes you feel com·
pelted to take a position that 's diametrically opposed to your mate's
way of thinking. Nothing will be
gained . Be flexible .

Rose (Cl)

..

�Monday, October

Page ~ • The Dally Sentinel

.

9, 2000

' Monday, October 9 2000

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

The Dally Sentinel • Page B5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'

~·

OOP

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword

. . . . ..., lartlnel

••tftiii.UD

PHILLIP

II I •

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264

Aerobics Class
Royal Oak Resort
Beginning Tues. Oct. 1Oth
6:30 pm $3.00 class

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Eme~geny Funds; Mortgage;
~
Major Medical • Nursing Home
_..,_. _ _ .

now PARTinG OUT

~~
High 81. Dry

1.fft ....
1H9TayiiiAIR2
1919 Cldllllc fleetwood

1HI ford T1nlndfrblrd 1!190 ford lkrost« Uan
1992 fonl flplftl'
1993 ford Taurus
1994 Ford !Ianger P/U

,PJ

Classes every Tues &amp; Thur.

ALDER
SECU

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

fOR mORt InfO. PlEASt CAll

1a-ot-oo

North
• J 5
• 8

e4

• J
•AKQJ6~4

West

East

• 8 6 4
• A J 9 5

• 10 9 3 2

t

¥ K 2
• 96 ~ 3

A K 10 2

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILLUMITATION

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
(Revised Code, s.ctlont
3501.t1 (G), 5705.19, 5705.25)
NOTICE It hereby given

(Revised Code, Secllono

3501.11 (G), 5705.19,
5705.25)
NOTICE Ia hereby given
that lq pursuance of a
Reaotulton of the Board of
Township Truo1oea of the
Townehlp of Olive,
Roedeville, Ohio, pa..ed on
the . 18th day of Auguet,
2000, thoro will bo
submitted to a vote of the
people ol aatd aubdlvlslon

at a General ELECTION to
be held In the Township of
Olive Ohio, at the regular
placea of voting thoreln, on
the 7th day of November,

2000, the question of
levying a tax, In excess or

the ten mill limitation, lor
the benefit of Olivo
Township tor the purpoae

of:

Road

Maintenance

Including dust control .
Said tax baing A renewal

of a tox ol1 mill ·
At a rata not exceeding 1

(one) mille lor each one
doller of valuation, which
amounts

($0.t0)

to

tor

Ten

cents

each

one

hundred dollars of valuation

Cllllllnlltd,

Reasonable Prices

Reeolutlon of lht Board of
Townthlp 'Truttett Ql tho
of

FREE Estimates.

Rutland

Rut11nd, Ohio, potoed on
lht 3rd d1y of July, 2000,
there will be eubmltted to 1
vote of tht people of e1ld
aubdlvlalon at a General
ELECTION to be hold In tho
Townehlp of Rutland Ohio,
day of November, 2000, the
ciueetlon of levying a tax, In

Certified in Meigs,
Athen5 and
Washington Countii!S.
Your QuAlity 24-Hour
Chlldcare Services

(one) mille for a·a ch one

open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
otsald day.

o'clock A.M. and remain

By order of the Board of

742-7405

~~

passed on the 19th day of

June, 2000, there will be
submitted to a vote of the

people of said subdivision
at a General ELECTION to
be held In the Township of
Racine, Ohio, at the regular
places of voting therein, on
the 7th day of November,

2000, the question ol
levying a tax, in excess ol

·rho ten mill limitation, lor
tho benefit of Racine VIllage
c~rrent

being

QUALITY WINDOW ~YSTEMS 1 INC.
992·4119

1·800·291-5600

.VISIT OUR SHOWROOM ON STATE ROUTE 33
6MILES NORTH OF POMEROY, OHIO AT COUNTY ROAD 18

A

.. Q

BISSELL IUILD.ERS Jf:,WICK'S Clj
INC.
. HfiOLIHG and :
New Homes • Vinyl

'

' 740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

0

=
-=

EXCfiVfiTIHG

-

Hauling • Umeslone e
Grovel• Sand eTopsoil •

Fill Dirt• Mulch e
Bulldozer Services

(740) 992-3470:

-

morith.

Stop In And ,See

•

day of November, 2000, the
question of levying a tax, In
excess of the tei1 mill
limitation, for the benefit of
purpose of: Malntalnllig and
operating cemeteries.
Said tax being A renewal

Road
Racine, Ohio

45771
740-949-2217
Sizes

5' x 10'

to 10' x 30'

HE WAS THE
KID AT
50CCEt&lt;. CAiiP

Hours

ONL.'I'

7:00AM- 8 PM
1/21/oo 1 mo. od.

WITH FIVE

O'CLOCK

Larry Schey

-.. ...

hundred dollars of valuaUon

lor live (5) years.
The Polls lor .said
Election will apon at 6:30

lor live (5) years.
The Polls lor said
Election Will open at 6:30
o'clock A.M. and remain
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
oleald doy.
By order of tho Board of
Electlono of Meigs County,
Ohio
John N. lhle, Chairman

Rita o. Smith, Director
Dated Sopttmbor 6, 2000
(10) 9, 18, 23,30 4TC

FREE
YARD SALE
SIGN

•
750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

f.o:Jtland, Or.lo

Truck seats, ::ar seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convert:ble &amp; vtnyl tops.
Four wheeler s.:ats, motorcycle s -~ats, ,.
boat covers, carpets, ::tc.
Mon - F~·i 8:30 -

youu SAvE MoNEY
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

~--~_:AN:D~TH:M~'S;ND~B~UL~LI~

VINYL REPLACEMENT

All Types of Business

-Any Size Double Hung·

11401 881-3224
1-800-828·0212
P/B CONTRACTORS, INC.

DECORATION ..
INSULATION ..

MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercial
Free Estimates
Fully Insured

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

$229.00*
• Free lnstalhitlon
' Free In Home Estimates
Call for Further Details

QUftliTY WinDOW

svsnms, me.

992-4119
1-800·291·5600
VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
ON STATE ROUTE 33 6
MILES NORTH OF
POMEROY, OHIO, AT
COUNTY ROAD 18
•No Dealers or Contractors
Please WW023477

SELLERS CONSTRUCTION
o

OR-A
VACATION ...

WINOOWS

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

• Remodeling

• Garages

·Decks

• Siding

• Roofing '

'

•

992·2753

'

13 1 mo d

LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take the pain out
of paintingLet me do it for yo(t"

Meigs County
Fairgrounds
Oct. I, 2000 ·Apr. 1, 20()1
CALL FOR MORE
INFORMATION '
'

949-2033

'

992·1101

WINTER
STORAGE
SPACE
AVAILABLE

'

DEPOYS AG
PARTS

An Make. Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
'
Deale.,.

Need It done, glt/8 us a call
FREE ESTIMATES
Gnat Priced on New Homu

1·•·1

OFFICE EXPRESS
BUSINESS SERVICES

CONCRETE

CATION ...

• New Homes

Over 40 yra experience

Support Services

Get yours
to v

SMITH'S COtiS"mOCTIOri

s:oo·

·(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916

wltb ad!

' 740-985-3831

Phone (740) 593-6671

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc

Advertise in
this space for
$100 per
month.

SERUICE

"Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% Sweet feed • 55.25/50 lbs.
e 12% Cattle feed 16.75/100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog food 56.75/50 lbs.
• fall fertilizers

Sales Representative

At a rata not exceeding 1

one

HOE RIUER

Steve Riffle

Lebanon Township lor the

hundred dollars of valuation

open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
oloold day.
By order of tho Board of
Elections of Meigs County,
Ohio
John N. lhla, Chairman
Rill D. Smith, Dlroc)or
Dated Soptombor 6, 2000
(10~ 8, 16, 23, 30 4TC

space for
$50 per

29670 Bashan

SHADOW .

voting therein, on the 7th

(one) mills lor each one
dollar of valuation, which
amounts to Ten cents
($0.10) lor each one

o'clock A.M. and remain

in this

HILL'S
SElF STORACE

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
'
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
'
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per ga"ll'
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst '
Progressive top line.
Lie. # 00·50 11119/lfo

at the regular places of

(throe) mills for. each one
dollar of valuation, which
amounts to Thirty cents

Advertise

Cellular ,
Jeff Warner In's.
992-5479

vote of the people of sold
subdivision at a General
ELECTION to be held In the
Township of Lebanon Ohio,

of a tax ol1 mill

~=-~

su~.Cio10d

*No Dealers or Contractors Please WV #023477

.AlltEL-

Townehip Trustees of the ·..
Township of Lebanon
Portland'~ Ohio, passed on ·
the 30th day of June, 2000, '' 1
there will be submitted to a 1

replacement tax of 3 mills
At a rate not exceeding 3

01 _.1

Phona 740.'949·2804
Ownsr .Jim Plcktnt
Mechanic- Bill Jonoo '
~.~;~~~.:rta:.
r · tcktn

Siding • New Garages
'
• Replacement Windows
I
• Room Additions
I
I
• Roofing
' COMMERCIAL and RESIDENT~l\l
FREit ESTIMATES .
I

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6 p.m. •
leave Message
Aher 6pm· 740-985-4180

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coo/viii•, OH 45723

WANT D

The

Free Eit1mates
Call T&amp; R Logging
aftet· 8:00pm
740-992-5050

.,
••

A K Q 7
Q 10 7 3
Q8 7 4
2

targets

2 Court order

3 Facilitate

4 Printer's
measures
5 Cal. box

Caesar

39 _A ima-

18 Edible tuboir
20 - accompli
2t Actor
Borgnine
22 Jot&gt;-seeker's

9 Twitches

6 Coqau7 Paradises
8 Free-lancer's
encl.

37 Comedian

West
Pass
· Pass

North

11 Machine gun
12 Small French

bagpipe
13 Spoil

handout

23 Flbor plant
24 Singing bird
25 Ancient

t•
2•
Pass

Italian 1amlly

27 Editor's

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

order

28 Anglo-Sax""
serf
29 - -do-well
31 One looueola
oowspapor

144 Third Ave. Gallipolis '

•

.

46 Cartoonist

Goldberg

47 Rat--·-

48 Journallol
Ernla-

so Encountered.
52 And soon
(abbr.)

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created !rom quotations by famous people. past and
present Each let1er 1n 1he clpMr stands lor another.

Today's clue:£ equals Y

'XD

VXFBIY ,

XDKVW

NJYBMVN

SYYW

ZNH

HMIVXAYBYH

SYDXBY

VXCFJSFI,

NCPNEI

SYYW

SFK

ZFIZYH

MK

ZNH

FG.'

YRNW
YINB
PRE\'IOUS SOLUTION: "I was dressed by a man who evidently had read his
lnslructions In Braille: -

Bene Davis, or her first screen lest.

WOlD
GAM I

K L1E

1

r l_
1·

1

~

B Y0 EN

I I' ·I

-r:--,.-,--r-l- m

I I

A little

boy visited a farm for the

f~rst 11rne. He was standmg

by a
lamb and cried, "Hey, this
..__,____...__....._........__._ · lamb IS made from a - - · . - - -.·:
f-·

~small

ANVYIL '

I'"__,I'"'G,....,I-TI7::--II..-.. .

j

o

.

I-·'-~
co,pl••• •h• chuckle quo••d
.
.
_
_
_
_
.
by filling in the missing W(lrds
L-....1...--IL-..L........I.-L-...J you de\lelop from lfep No. 3 below .
oft PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS I

~ IN THESE SQUARES

oft UNSCRAMBLE LEITERS TO
U GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Naught · Onion - Nifty· Depict- FINANCING
My son and daughter-i n-law cou ldn't afford to put new
!tie 1n thetr new home They say they already nave wall
to wall FINANCING

OCTOBER 9l

'Birthday

scapegoat. Overcome your mis Tuesday, Oct. I 0, 2000
Your career potential could be take by reviewing the joh and fig·
"' a few levels higher in the year a uring out what went \vrong .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
' head than it has been in the past.
19)
Try to keep your comments to
·: However, you must take care not
.' to expect more from a situation yourself today , because should
' they come out a bii 100 caustic
:'than you should.
. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) and judgmental, those who were
:Don't add any more straws to an your friends may be rethinking
:atready. heavily laden camel's their opinion of you.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
.'back. A person who is doing a fine
iob for you will do worse should Be on guard that a high-pressured
,you put any addit.ional pressure on peddler doesn't coerce you into
:lhis person. Trying to patch up a parting with funds you shouldn 't
for something you don't even
·broken romance~ The Astro;~raph Matchmaker can help you want. Your sales resistance might
be at a very low· ebb today.
understand what to do to make the
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
relationship work. Mail $2.75 to
Matchmaker; c/o this newspaper, This might not be a good day for
l&gt;.o. Box . l758, Murray Hill Sta- teaming up with others, because
partnership arrangements. aren't
lion, New York, NY 10156.
apt to work out too well for you.
• SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Try to do things unaided if possi·Instead of attempting to assume
ble.
fhe head honcho role with a group
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
bf friends today, go along with the
Unfortunately,
the only time
majority. If you don't, you could
you'll be willing to assist anoth.' ~uickly find yourself outside
er
today is if it's your idea. You
looking in.
may not take too kindly to anyone
, SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
who does the asking. Be gracious
:21) Should you fail at something
in each case.
~ou're attempting to do today,
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
tlon't start looking around for a

'•

,

53 Swiss river

'Your

.

• Verticals • Wootl
• Minis • Etc

'

college
44 - -bltty

•.

location

Advertise our business
on this page or one nlonth for
as low as $2S
Phone 992·21 SS

exclamatlon

38 Lion's homo
40 Combine . •
41 Singer
McEntire
42 Calfee cup
43 Carolina

IMONDAY

•

UP TO 70% OFF .

·888-7 5·88

BY PHILLIP ALDER
This is the day on which we
celebrate Christopher Columbus'
voyage to these parts . He was
born in Genoa, and apparently his
given name was Cristoforo
Colombo. So, here's a deal from
an Italian pair tournament in
Abano , which my atlas tells me is
west-southwest of Venice .
To test yourself, cover the East
and South hands. Defending
against three no-trump, you lead
the diamond ace: jack, three, four.
What now?
At most tables, North opened
and closed the auction with a
. gambling three no-trump, showing a solid seven- or eight-card
minor with no side ace, king or
void. The correct defensive
approach against this bid is to try
to win the first five tricks. So, it
is "nonnal" to lead an ace; with·
out an ace, attack with a king.
Therefore, the Easts led the heart'
king, which worked well . West
encouraged with the nine, and a
second heart from East all owed
the defense to take the first five
tricks : three hea11s and two diamonds.
With the South hand hidden.
though. it was much more diffi cult. East's lowest diamond
denied the queen: Butwhich card
· did East have , the spade ace or
hea11 king, as an entry for a diamond return through South's
queen?
At the table. West. a national
champion. swttchcd 10 a spade.
However, South immediately
claimed II black-s uit tricks for a
top. A heart switch would have
been much more successful -- and
that is the correct defense. If East
has the hean king , success . is
instant. Yet if East has the spade
ace, declarer can run only eight
tricks (one heart and seven clubs).
The contract still dies .

Sentinel

·,.,

(Factory Outlet)

re

1 Destroyer's

27 o.c. hotshot
30 Bearllke
32 Sleeping·
sickness 11V
34 Nabbed
35 Playwright
O'Neill
36 COmpass pt.

To get a current weather
report, check the

·'

All vertical blind• are
made to ordel' at our

all

DRINKING

••

CRAFTY,
BLIND SPOT

446-4995

l J.IATE

OF A HO::•E

10/4 1 mo.

(Randy)
1m . 11 1 o

10/911:0

6 Month
Membership $1 00
plus tax
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Ravenswood, WV

304-273-0036

Dozer work.

PEANUTS

IRON CITY GYM

74N87-8383

Standing-timber large
or small track,. Top
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26 Had a snack

The ocean blue

Public Notice

Council ol the Village o1
Racine, Racine, Ohio,

each

-Anll Size Double Hunl!-

Call for Further Details

Mums, Indian
lAPI,Ies, APPle
Gift Items, Subs, .
llnat:M! Sitlce, Ice Cream.
l;Bll(oll:na. Summer Sauslll!e. Beef"'"""
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ResoluUon of the VIllage

lor

Open Mon·frlll-6; Sat. 9-4

Rutland, Ohio

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
NOTICE OF El.EC'riON ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION '
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
(Revised Code, Sections
(Revised Code, Sections
3501.11 (G), 5705.19,
3501.11 (G), 5705.19, 5705.25)
5705.25)
,,
NOTICE Is hereby given
NOTICE Is hereby given that In pursuance of a
that In pursuance ot a Reaolutlon of the B9ard ot t~

($0.30~

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

;/1100 I ~pd_

15 lnt't. agcy.
55 Arabian
16 Sault- Marie
kettledrum
17 Dawn goddess 56 Russian veto
19 Robin's home 57 Greek Island
20 Sword lighters
23 Make a vow
DOWN

33 Mild

Stratton trained
,
machanlcl
We service mowers,
chainsaws. tillers.
generators, snowblowers, :
weedeatera, pick·UP and ~
delivery available on ~
request.
·

740-992-4559

51 -parlor
54 Received

Opening lead: • A

Featuring two Brfgge &amp; ,

* Free in Home Estimates

.

Public Notice

tax

•

RACINE MOWER CLINIC :

1-800-272-5179or446-9800

o'clock A.M. and remain

(10) 9, 16, 23, 30,.4TC

Said

Mete• a o.wa counuee

* Free Installation

Elections of Meigs County,
Ohio
By order of the Board of John N. lhle, Chairman
Elections of MeigS County, .Rita D. Smith, Director
Dated September 6, 2000
Ohio
John N. lhle, Chairman
(10) 9, 16, 23, 30 4TC
Rita D. Smith, D~rector

for the purpose of:
Expenses

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yro. Local

1t
3 NT

•

open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
olaald day.

Dated September 6, 2000 .

South

V.C. YOUNG 111992·6215 ;

HEAP vouebert aecepted for

preceding
· month

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

.•·'

Free Estimates

Sat. 104
• Candle making
eupplles
• W&lt;!oden crafts
• Baskets

'

• Patio &amp;Parch Doob

Firewood
3112111 Ball Run 'Road
Pomeroy. Ohio 411789

"W.elp"

Over 30 Year Experience

740-667-6329

dollar of valuation, which
amounts to Ten cants
($0.1 0) lor each one
hundred dollars of valuation
lor live (5) yoaro.
Tho Polio lor said
Election will open at 6:30

Ball Logging &amp;

"we're back to our

TUppers PlAins

exceu of the ton mill
limitation, lor the benefit of
Rutl1nd Township lor tho
purpote of: Fire Protection.
Sold tax bolng A renewal
of o tiiX oil mill
At 1 rote n0t exceeding 1

Special Finance Department
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regular hour• ••
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·
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*Lean Jleuafe

992-6142 &lt;!r
Toll·l"ree 1·877-804· 7311

The CountrY
Candle ShoP

Stau Route 7,

M . and O&amp;llla Countlet
Clll

..

•
•
•
•

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Dump Truek DellwetJ

GALLIPOLIS

7/22/TFN

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

voting therein, an the 7th

"JuRNPIKE
OF

740-992-1671

30

at lhe regular placaa of

lor three (3) years.
Tho Polls lor aald
Election will open at 6:30

~Garages
• Complete '
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that In purau-.nce of a
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• 10 9 8

South

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FOR SALE

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Jacqueline -

• 7 3

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

46 Queen
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14 Actress

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740-992-5232

740-992·1506

1 like augsr

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ACROSS

10 Distant planet
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PRODUCTS

Puz~le

V1k1ngs (lNe)

Complying to the social dictates
of others wi II not go over too well
with you today. You could be too
set in your own ideas to go along
with the majority.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Stepping out of character today
and trying to bully your way
through a situation that involves
another will have only one result:
a hostile reaction .
CANCER (June 21 -.lttly 22)
Should you have io deal with a
person today whose basic ideas
confli ct with yours. an ugly dc,cl opment cou ld arise if either pari)
tries to impose his or her views on
the other.
LEO (July 23 -Aug . 22) No
business dealt hat is too one-sided
will work f01' any length of time.
The only way you're going 10 get
a lot out of a deal is to give a l ot
in the first place .
VIRGO (Aug. 2~ - Sept. 22)
Find a way out of a situation
today that makes you feel com·
pelted to take a position that 's diametrically opposed to your mate's
way of thinking. Nothing will be
gained . Be flexible .

Rose (Cl)

..

�...
Page Bl• The Dilly Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, October 9, 2000

•

TODAY'S SCOREBO,ARD
6. Ollio Sl ..............................S~ 1.377
... s-1 1,35 7
8 Ol&lt;lahoma . ... ... ......... .... .5·0 1,336

Nl at Al, 8 p.m ., If necessa'Y

Sunday, Oct. 2t
NL at Al, 8 p.m . EST. II necessary

PROFOUIIW'

...

Friday,

Ellt

W L TPII. PF PA

OCt. I

Suath 2, Chago 1, Seattle wifl.S series 3-o
OMtlnd va. New York

-y.OCt.3 '

Wtdneldly. Oct. 4
Now Vori&lt; • • Oaldond Q

Friday, Oct. &amp;

New 't'Ofk 4. Oaldand 2

Slturdty, Oct. 7
Oakland 11 . New York 1

Sundoy, Oct. I

New YMI 7, Qakland 5, New Yort&lt; wins

.series 3·2
NMionlllleag~

kn Fr111GIKG n. New York
Wednesday. Oc:t. 4

Thursdey, Oct 5
New Vortc 5, san Francisco 4, 1o •nnings
.
Saturday, Oct. 7
New York 3, San Francisco 2. 13 1r"l01ngs
Sunday, Oct. 8
New York 4, San Francisco 0. New York wins
senes 3· 1

va. Atlanta

Tuuday, Oct. 3
St. l ouis 7. Allan1a 5

Thuraday, Oc:t. s
S1. l ouis 10. Allanta 4
Seturday, Oct. 7
51. louis 7, Atlanta 1, St. Louis wins senes

J.O
LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES

American La1gue
(NBC)

. TUaday, OCt. 10

Sealtte at New Yoril:. 8:12p.m.
Wednetday, Oc:t. 11
Seattle at New York, 4:09p.m.
Friday, OCL 13
New York ar Seattle, 8:12 p.m.

-oy.oet. 1•

New YOfk al Seattle. 7:4'2 p.m
SUnday, Ocl1S
Nvw Vorll at Seattle, 4:09p.m., it necessary
'IUooclly, 0Cl17
Seame a1 New Vorte:, 8: 12 p.m., it necessary
WedMiday, Oct 18
Seanle at New York, 8:12p.m., if necessary
National Ll-sJue

(FOX)
Wlldi'IHday, Oc:l. 11

New York al Sl. Louis, 8:18p.m.
Tlturoday, OCt. 12
New York at St. Louis , 8:18p.m.

Seturdey, Oct. t•

Sl. louiS at New Yorf(, 4:18p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 15
St. Louis •t New York, 8 p.m.
Monday, Oct. 16
St. Louts at New York, 8:18p.m . 1f neces·

Mry

a

Wednesday, Oc:t. 1
New York at Sl. louis, 4:18 p.m ., if neces·

Pittsburgh .........
2
Cleveland ................... 2
Jac ksonville ..
. 2
C1nc1nnati .................0
West
Oaklar'ld ...................... 4
Kansas C1ty .................. 3
Denver ..
.3
Seatlle . .. ............... 2
San Diego ..................... 0
NFC

...,

Thursday, Oct. 1i
New York al St Louis. 8:18p.m ., if neces ~

National league at American league, 8 p.m

Sunday, Oct. 22
Nl at AL, 8 p.m.
Tue.day. Oct. 24
AI.. Bl NL, 8:18 pm
Wadneaday, Oct. 25
Alat Nl, 8:18 p.m
Thursday, Oet. 26
.AL at NL, 8.1 9 p.m . 1! necessary
Saturday, Ocl . 28

Ohio
rill' Ohio 15-\'.l rd IHh.' on

lh~o· op~.· ning dnn:- of the g.lme
that mrtod "" thL· llutT.1lo J5 .

Bulls \\'t: n.:: ~top p L'd o n
thii-d- .uhl-nl ll.' . but Bu tr1lo kl l· kn
~kntt Kdln lhl ,..,~,. d thl' 31-\'ard
Thl'

fld&lt;l ~o.1! .lt tompt .lS tho ball. hot
till· ll'ft upnghrs of th o goal post
.tt th e 9:14 mJrk of tho o penin g

\'!'hen the

tir~t

o 400

th l' tir\t

P•JJ nt.-. \\L:rl·

put on the ~c ort•bo .trd .
( lh io sophom o re qu arte rback
I lnntrdl ].1 ckson fo und fe ll o\\
~orhomore joe Mohle r for a .JOyard score.
The pass marked Jac kso n's only
completion on the mght . The
~phomore qu arterbac k, th o ugh .
wnuld lea d ht s t l'.1 111 on the
gttlund with 14 carries for 13'1

yanls.
"In every football ga m e we re
rrying to take what they're going

.Bengals
from Page 81
catches for 68 yards.
In .1ddit io n to the 181 yards
tus.hi ng-- the r h inl-h 1 ghe ~ t tot.ll
nf hi'i care ~..· r - George CJught
three passes for 33 yards . The
Tita ns ran 77 plays Jn d he got
tht• b.tll on 19 o f them.
(;t.'H f~C ,\(COll llt ed for 1\-t
y.uds. 111 a ll - ont.• morl' th :u 1 the
lkng.th ma n.lgrd .1s a t~.n n .
' 'W·. :\·~,.· got guys likt: Ed dlt' and
w.._· · b d tt:n~ in them,'' .... 11J Stl'\L'
M t N .c1 r. who \\'.1~ 11J- of-3 1 fo r
2.1H y.1rds with .cn i ntl.'n c ptt ~ ll,l
th .1t \\',ts rl.'turned fo r .1 tm H. h tlown'. ··wl · \'l. ~or t n ~t.l\' w nh
him . We knt.·w in th~· l' nd \ Yl'
ws.•rt• go m g to \\' t ',l r 1 he n ' dl'\\' 11
.ts. l on ~ ;Jc. ,,.e ~n·.-,· d \\ ·• 11 r1Jo..'

1 0 .80014 1 lOB
0 .600 117 93
0 500 173 137
0 .333 94 132
0 000 93 177

2
3
4
6

.. ..... .4 2
4 2
......... 3 3
.. .. .. 2 3
....... 2 3
Central
......... 4 0

0 1.00 95

91
96
87

0 .500 13S
0 .400 100 129
0 .400 112 148

71

. 4 2 0 .6671 15 120

... 3 2 0 .600 127 67
..... 2 4 0 333 117 111
I 5 0.1 67 85 161
West
St.LOUIS
. 5 0 01.00 217 145
Carohna
......... 2: 3 0 400 104 76
2 3 0 .400 86 92
New Orleans .
..... 2 4 0 .333 10 1 172
Atlanta
San FranCISco .......... .. ... 2 4 0 .333170 193
Sunday '• Gamas
Miamt 22 , BuHalo 13
New oneans 31 , Cl'1icago 10
Pittsburgh 20, N.Y. Jets 3
Oelroit 31 , Green Bay 24
Jennessee 23, Cincinnati 14
New England 24 , Indianapolis 16
Washlngton-17, Philadelphia 14
N.Y. Giants 13, Atlanta 6
Denver 21 : San Otego 7
Oakla nd 34 , San Francisc o 28. OT
Carolina 26, Seattle 3
Arizona 29, Cle11eland 21
Baltimore 15, Jackson'lille 10
Op ~ n : Kansas City. Danas, St Louis
Monday's Game
Tampa Bay at Minnesota. 9 p m
Sunday, Oct. 15
Dallas al N.Y. Gtants, 1 p.m .
Atlanta at St. Louis . 1 p.m.
San Diego at Buffalo, 1 p.m .
Baltimore at Wash ington, 1 p m.
Oakland at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
Carolina at New Orleans, 1 p.m .
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m.
Cle11eland at Denver, 4:05 p.m.
Indianapolis at Seattle, 4:05p.m.
N.Y. Jets at New England, 4:05p.m.
Philadelphia at Arizona, 4:15p.m.
San Francisco at Green Bay, 4 : 15p.m.
Minnesota at Ch1cago, 8 20 p.m
Ope'h date games: Miami. Detroit, Tampa

ea,

Monday, Oct 16
Jacksonville at Tennes see. 9 p·.m.

/COWGE FOOIBALL I
The Top Twenty Ftve i ea ms 1n The Associat·
ed Press college 1ootball po ll, with first-place
votes in parentheses. records through Oct. 7,
lotal points based on 25 poirits lor a first-pla c e
vote thro ugh one point tor a 25th-place vot e
and ranKing 1n the prJ:Jvious poll:
W·L Pts. Pvs.
1 Nebrnska (67)
5·0 1.771
2
2. Kanset s S1 (3) .
6-0 1,640
4
3 Vlf!J inla Tech (1 1
5·0 I 627
3
4 M1a n\1
4 - 1 1.507
7
5 Cl emson
6·0 1.491
5

~,ud c; 1obe.

" DtJntrl' ll
, \\'a~ :~hie w n 111 dlL' o pu on pn.:t ty
d Tcc tJ \\: ly. lJ ~,.·l". tll :&gt;.l' of th.H. we
d idn 't nee d tt.) th rn\\. rh ~· b.tll."
l~ utl:tl n scn tTd tJI 1 tiJ L' fo ll m \'ln g
dn\'l' \\' llL' Il .Jn~..· h~.·~..·dy 111et ul1
With And re ForJ~.· on .1 ( J t .:y.1rd

sco rin); p.1 ss
111

\Y t th

rh c opL'Illn g

.1J' S L'l ond~ left

tjl i .lrtl' l'.

f rl.'t.· d y \\,h J7-fu r-J 1 Ill thl.' ,ltf
ljlr ~(12 ' '.l nb. and two tOtll: hdown~.

O hio did;, ·, ta ke too mu c h
tun c 111 th e "econd qu.trter to
rL'gJm the kad .1s ju nmr t;ul b.Kk
j.111ll'l Andenon pu 1h hed on~.· tn
lrulll ti\l· y.t rd~ ,our .n rht• II :(l(J
mark .
Raynald R a\' got the Bobcats
o n th~..· bo.1rd ,lgatnl.ne 111 the first
ln lf \\'it h a 20 yard &lt;compcr to
g ive Ohi o ,i 21-7 load .
Th ~:.· last m inute and a h alf
wo uld provi de t·he m ost excite "'""' of the g.nm for th e 17,000plu~o 111 .1ttenJan c ~.· .

Afte r the l:lob.1cts defe nsJ held
th e Bulls o n fo ur downs and o ut
o n th eir next drive. Jac ks~ n was
in terce pted by Buffa lo's Troy

Y;u1cl'y T hi gpen were out wtth
tnj tned lumstnn gs ;'l lld tac kl e
Bw l f lo pkins was sideli ned by J
spr.lllll'll ankle .
When guard Bruce M atth ews
\Vt:nt ou r w it h a )ptain cd knee in
the SL'r ond qu ~ rter, the offen se
w,1.., !Jmpmg along.

\\ l'fl '

the

l ' l l'l\ t'n

O ti ll' l

b.lll
&lt; .11·1

to

I'L',l~Oil" Ill
(ic n r g~.·.

9
12
13
14

.. .................... 5.Q

982
862
785
776
725

16

14 Georgla ........................, ... .4· 1
19
15. Mississippi St. ............... 4-1
20
18 SOuttlem MISS ............... .. .. 4- 1
17
17. Northwestem ................... 5·1 632
22
18. Mlchigan ... ...... ........ ........... 4·2 614
6
19. Auburn.............................. 5·1
457
15
20. Notre Dame ..... ................ .3-2 322
25
21. Purdue ................... ........... 4·2 315
22. Arizona ... ........... .... ....... ..... 4· 1 267
26 1
23
23. Oregon St ............. ........ ....4·1
24. South Carolina .. ....... ........ 5-t
239
11
25. Texas .................... ............ ,3·2 124
Others receiving voles: N c. State 112. Mississippi 92, Arizona St. 53. Soulhem Cal 34, W.
Michigan 18, Colorado St. 15, Mmnesota 10.
Temessee 10, Iowa St. 8. Pittsburgh 6, Memphis 2, Air Force 1, Alabama 1, LS U 1, Texas
Tech 1. Wisconsin 1.

Thll AP Top 25

How They Fared
How !he top 25 teams in The ASSociated
Press' co llege football poll fared this week:
No. 1 Florida Stale (5· 1) lost to No, 7 Miami
27-24. Next· vs. Duke, Saturday
· No . 2 Nebraska (5·0) beat Iowa State 49-27
Ne~Ct : al Te•as Tech, Saturday.
No . 3 Virginia Tech (5-0) beat Temple 35· 13.
Next: vs . West Virginia , Thu rsday.
No . 4 Kansas State (6{)) beat Kansas 52·
13. Next liS. No. tO Oklahoma. Saturda y.
No . 5 Clemson (6-0) beat Nor1h Carolina
Slate 34 -27. Nel(t: \IS_ Maryland . Saturday
No 6 Michigan (4·2 ) 1osl to Purdue 32·3 1
NeJct: vs. lnd1ana , Saturday.
No. 7 Miami (4· 1) beat No. 1 Florida State
27·24. Next: at Temple, Oct. 2 1.
No 8 Ohio State (5-Q) beat No 24 W1 scon·
s1n 23·7. Next: vs. Minnesota. Saturday.
No. 9 Oregon (4· 1) did not play. NeMt: at No .
18 Southern Cal , Saturday
No. 10 Oklahoma (5-0) beat No. 11 Texas
63· 14. Ne•t at No. 4 Kansa s Stale, Saturday.
No. 11 TeKas (3-2) lost to No. 10 Oklahoma
63-14. Nel!l: at COlorado, Saturday.
No. 12 Florida (5·1) beallSU 41 ·9. Next. vs.
Auburn . Saturday.
No. 13 Washington (4· 1) beat No. 23 Oregon State 33-30. Next at Arizona Slate, SatCJ r·
day.
No. 14 TCU { 5-Q) beat Hawail41-21 . Next:
at Tu lsa. Oct. 21.
·
No. 15Aubum (5· 1) 1ostto No. 20 Mississippi State 17·10. Next: at No. 12 Florida, Satur·

oay.
No. 16 UCLA (4 · 1) did not play. NelCI: at Cal llom ia, Saturday.
No. 17 Southam MISSissippi (4 · 1) beat
South Florida 41 · 7. Ne)(t: at Tulane , Saturday.
No. 1B Sou them Cal (3·2) lost to Arizona 31 ·
f5. Next· vs. Oregon, Saturday.
No. 19 Georgia (4-1) beat No. 21 Tennessee
21·10. Nel!l: vs. Vanderbilt, Saturday.
No. 20 MISSISSippi State (4·1) beat No. 15
Auburn 17· 10. Next at LSU, Oct. 21.
No. 21 Tennessee (2·3) lost to No. ·19 Gear·
gia 21 -10. Nelrt: vs. Alabama, Oct. 21 .
No. 22 Northwestern (5·1) beat Indiana 52·
33. Next:'vs . Purdue, Saturday.
No. 23 Oregon State (4· 1) lost to No. 13
Washington 33·30. Ne.KI : vs. Stanford.
No. 24 Wisconsin (3·3) lost to No . 8 Qh(O
State 23-7. Neld: at Mie,1'11gan State, Satu rda y
No. 25 Notre Dame (3-2) beat Stanford 2014 Next vs . Navy, Saturday.

Major College Football Seores

EAST
Albany. N.Y. 52 , Sl. Fra ncis. Pa . 7
Boston College 55 Connecticut 3
Brown 44, Fordham 17
Buckne ll 24, Georgetown, 0 C 10
C.W. Post 20, Monmouth, N.J. 7
Colgate 34, Pnnceton 6
Columbia 47, Lafayette 22
C o m~tt 29, Harvard 28
Fair1ield 56, Si ena 28 ..
Holy Cross 34 ·Penn 17
lana 39, St Pe ter's 7
La Sa lle 23, Can1sius 10
Leh1gh 42, To wson 21
Massachusetts 2 1. North eastem 16
Robert Morns 43, Sl. John's, NY 6

Syracu$t 24, Pil1sburvh 17, OT
Wagner 35 , Stony B&lt;ook 9
Wast VIrginia 28, ktaho 16

Cup Series race at Lowe'&amp; MQtor SpeedWay
with fl nish1ng position, starting posldon (In
parentheses), driver, type of c ar, laps COfllPtet·
ed, reason out (ii any) and money won:
1. (2) Bobby Labonte, Pontiac, 334,
$220,700.
2. (10) Jeremy Mayfield, Fold, 334, $89,550.
3. (81 Ricky Rudel, Ford, 334, $104,950.
4. (11) Tony Stewart, Pontiac, 334, $84,650.
5. (8) Mark Martin, Ford, 334, 170,250.
6. (38) Jon BuM11, Ford. 334. $75,300.

Yale 24, baf1mouth 14

SOIITH
Alabama 51. 35, Jackson St. 24
Appalachian Sl. 18, Furman 17
Bethune-Cookman 41 , DeJa ware St. 20
Charleston Southam 28, JaekSOnv!ne 22
Clemson 34, N.C. State 27
DavidSon 38, Morehead St. 31
Dayton 42, Auslin Peay 7
Delaware 24, Richmond 17
ETSV 20, Tile Citadel 7
Elon 41 1 Gardner-Webb 11
Flonda 41 , LSU 9
Georgia 21 , Tennessee 10
Georgia Soulhem 42, w. Carolina 24
Grambllng$1.12, FloridaA&amp;M 10
James Madison 57, ViHanova 23
Louis11llle 38. UAB 17
McNeese St. 37, Stephen F.Austin 6
Memphis 17, East Carolina 10
Miami 27, Florida St. 24
Middle Tennessee 49, Louisiana Tec h 21
Mississippi 35 , Arkansas St. 10
MlssiSstppi St. 17, Au bum 10
Murray St. 49, Tenn.·Martin 3
N. Carolina A&amp;T 33.. Morgan St. 6
Norfolk Sl. 24, S . Carolina St. 2 1, 20T
Nortnwestem St. 24 , Troy St. 17
Sam Houston St. 26. Jacksonville 51. 23
South Carolina 20, Kentucky 17
Southam Miss. 41 . Soulh Florida 7
Southem U . 31 , Alabama A&amp;M 20
Tennessee Tech 31, SE Mis souri 6
Tulane 38 , Louisiana-lafayette 37
Vanderbilt17, Wake Forest 10
Virginia 3 1, Maryland 23
Virginia Tech 35, Temple 13
w K e ntuc~y 6, E Kentucky 3
Wttliam &amp; Mary 26. Rhode Island 16
Wolford 45, VMI 28

"T hJt's th e typ e of offe nse we
arc," G eo rge s:1 id . "We \Va nted to
kee p the ball , run the cloc k an d

wc.u o ut th e guys up fro n t.''

(12 ) Ward

10.

Burto n ,

Po1nts leaders. Bobb~ Labonte 4405, Jeff
Burton 4 153, Dale Earnha rdt 4147, Date Jarrett
40 17, Tony Stewan 39n, Ricky Rudd 3972.
Mark Mar1Jn 3848, Rusty Wallace 3808, Ward
Burton 3565, Jeft GordOn 3564.

National Hocker League
Ea1tern Conference
Allsntlc Dlvtalon

W L

Pontiac, 334,

11 . (37) Date Eemhard'l, Chewolet , 334,

$58,750.
12. ( 16) Kevin Lepage, Ford, 334, $44,600.
13. (4 2) Kun Busch, Ford, 33-4, $42, 600.
14. (21) Joe Nemechek. Chevrolet 334,

$45,800.
15. (4 ) J1mmy Spencer, Ford . 334, $46,300.
16. (23) Elltott Sadler, Ford. 334, $40,500.
17. {11 ) Rick Mast, Pontiac, 334, $27,000.
18 . (28) John Andretti , Pontiac. 334 ,

$43,000.
19. ( 13) Dale Earnhardt Jr, Che11rotet, 334,

$34,390.
20 . ( 18 ) Mike Skinner. Chevrolet, 333,

$39.685.
21 . {22) Rusty Wallace, Ford, 333, $44 ,420.
22. (1 4) Micha el Wa!lnp , Chevrolet, 333,
Chewolet, 333.

$34,640.
24 . (19) Bobby Hamilton, Chevrolet , 333,
$34 ,400
25. (20) Ken Schrade r. Pontiac , 332 .
$26, 570 .
26 (33) Andy Hous1on, Chevrolet. 332.

29. (43) Ted Musgrav e. Chevrolet, 328.
30. (34 ) Darrell Waltrip, Ford, 325, $25,970.

3 1. (4 1) Sterling Marlm. Chevrolet. 32 1,

$33,370
32. (3 1) Brel18odine, Ford, 31 6, $22,270 .
33. (24) Wally Dallenbach Jr, Ford, 302 ,
accident, $24,7,0.
34 . (7) Bill Elliott, Ford, 267, engine failure ,

$30,765.
35. P5) Robert Pressley, Ford, 238, acci· '
dent, $22,135.
36. (3) Jerry NadeaU, Chevrolet. 232, acc ident, $40,015.
· 37. (32) Kenny Wallace, Chevrolet. 185,

$30,100.
38 . (25) Robby Gordon, Ford, 184, ac cident.

$22,090.
39. ( 1) JeH Gordon, Chevrolel , 170 , accident, $65,980.
40. {5) Dale Jarrett, Fo rd , 158, accident,

.

41 . (27) Jetf Fuller, Ford, 115, engine failure.

$22,070.
42. (36) Hut Stricklin, Ford, 59, llibration,
$22,065.
~3 . (30) Mike Bliss , Ponliac. 5, acctdenl,
$22 ,064.

8

N.V. Rangers ........ t
PhKade lphla ..... 1

0 0

0

2

2

1

0 0
2
Pinsbu rgh .......... 1
0 0
2
NV. Islanders .......0 0 1 0
t
Northeut Division
4
Buffa lo ............. 2 0 0 0
Bo ston ....
1 0 1 ·0
3
3
0 11a wa ... . .. ... 1 0 1 0
2
Toronlo
1 0 0 0
0
...... o. 2 0 0
M ontreal
Southeast Division
Ca rolma
... 0 0 t 0
Florida .....
...... 0 0 0 1
Tampa Bay
.. 0 1 1 0
Washlflgtcn .. ...... 0 1 1 0
Atlanta
... 0 1 0 0 0
Western Conferen~e
Central Division

7

8

4

4

3

3

9
9
7
2
4

5
5
5
0
10

1
1

.... 2

3

3

3
7
4

4

8

1

2

7

.. 1

. .0
. 0

...0

0

9
'

2

0

4 12

1

0

3

3

2

2

0

2

3

3 ..

0

0
0

3
2

4
7

0
Q

0

0

0

Ti me ol Race: 3 hours, 44 l'ninules, 57 sec·
onds.
Margi n of Victory: 1 166 seconds
Average Spfffld: 133.630 m ph.
Lead Changes· 46 among 13 dri11ers.
Cautions: 9 for 51 laps.
La p Leaders: Bobby Labonte 1, JeH Gordon
2. Jerry Nadeau 3-34, Labonte 35, Ted Musgrave 36, Labonte 37·38, Ricky Rudd 39-40.
Labonte 4 1·42. Jeremy Mayf1 eld 43·45, Rusty
Wallace 46 -47, May f1eld 48-58, Wallace 59·77.
Da le Earn hardt 78· 8 1, Jeff Burton 82 -97 .
Labonte 88, Ea rnhardt 89- 114, Labonte 115·
116, Earnhardt 117, Labo nte 118-13 1, Earnhardt132·140, Rudd 141-149, Earnhardt 150·
152, Labonte 153, Eamhardt 154· 162, Labonte·
163, Earnhardt 164- 167, Rudd 169-17d, Stew·
art 171·184, Labonte 185·188, Earnhardt 189·
190 . S tewart 191·202, M ay fi eld 203 -213 ,
· STewart 214, Mayfield 215. Rudd 2 16·244 ,
Stewart 245. La bonle 246, Jimmy Spencer
247, M att Kenseth 248, Kevin L epage 249 -250.
Auc:ld 251 ·273 Ste wart 27 4 , Audd 275 -306,
Stewa rt 307. Mayt1 eld 308-327, Lal:lOnte 328 ·

13

BAS'KETBALL
National Baskelball Association

MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES-51gned C
Sharone Wnght
NEW JERSEY NETS- Waived F Peter Cornell.
NEW YORK KNICKS- Waived G John
Celestand and F Slephen Howard .
PHILADELPHIA 76ERS- Released F Darnell Rob1n son
SEAITLE SUPEASONICS- Wnived 0 Ed
Stokes and G James Robi nson.
TOR ONTO
RA.PTOR S-R eleased
F
Kendrick Spruel and F Jaco b Jaacks.

FOOTBALL
Nallonal Football League
INOIANf\POLI S COL TS-Wa11;ed RB Paul
Sl110ldS A1Jrlert 01- Tim Rtc'ld er PlACed RB
Chuk18 "-l\1oukor1ev O!l 1!11:: Hl/tJrEH.J list

.

.

.,..

·''

=~

't.

,. . . '

:.:&gt;&lt; ,,..

.:· ,.

..

QualityQu-e
r-----------------, r-----------------,
1 wheel alignment 1
.

ott)!Wr servi(xl

!$2495 $4995 !
1

2-wheel

4-wheel

I

I CHeck and adjust camber and toe. Additi,onal parts I .
I and labor may be requ~red on some vehicles . I

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

'·

I

tires

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

for census

MIDDLEPORT

sought
BY BRIAN

TRAP BUilDER- Jim Unruk displays a trap that he just completed constructed in his wbrkshop along East Main Street in

,I

j

lkng.1k

l'l

•.n·1

J,l ttl' I

1\''-'Ll,L:Jit,L:

;

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11d'

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\.\t•'r~· ~11111g

'IIlli.

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p1

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but

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l'\•."1'\'

ro d o

Pomeroy. Along with humane traps, Unruk also makes steel
cages for a variety of pets. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Traps snare wildlife in humane fashion
BY TONY M. lEACH

,.

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

OMEROY-lfyou'reperplexed abo11t either locating
a comfortable home for
your pet or wanting to 'safely catch a wild 'animal, one
local man might have a solution to your
problems.
Jim Unruk, owner of Rainbow
Cages, has been building and selling a
variety of humane traps and cages for
more than 20 years from his workshop
along East Main Street in Pomeroy.
Unruk produces a number of traps
.and cages that he sells to customers in
the tri-state area, as well as customerss
in North Carolina, South Carolina and
Tennessee.
, "It seems that I can:t build them fast
enough," said \..Wlr.uk, as he looked over

Jim Unruk, owner of Rainbow
Cages; l1as been building and

P

Jelling a variety, of humane

.

REED

traps and cages for more than
20 years .from his workshop
along East Main Street i11
Pomeroy.
one of his finished traps on Monday
morning.
"The demand for the cages, especially in the rabbit industry, has been quite
overwhelming," he added.
· According to Unruk; prices for the
traps and cages range betwe.en S15-$40,
depending on the size and shape that
the customer prefers.
"The cages are perfect for individuals who have pets such as rabbits or

guinea pi~," said Unruk. "And if you
want to catch an animal, the live traps
are the mo&amp;t hunune way to do sO?'
' Unruk, who originally lived in
Kansas, began making cages and live
traps in 1979 when his children became
involved in 4- H.
"When the kids joined 4- H , they
needed several cages for their projects,''
said Unruk . "The more cages that we
bought, the more expensive it got."
"So, after that, I decided to start constructing my own cages," added Unruk.
Unruk usually makes three to five
cages or trJps at a time to increase productivity and to have a number of them
in stock for customer selection. Special
orders are also available upon request.
For information, or to purchase a
cage or live trap, call 992-1023.

MIDDLEPORT -Volunteers will be recruited to help complete Middleport's village-wide
census. Mayor Sandy lannarelli discussed' the sta"
tus of the village head cqunt during Middleport
Village Council's regular meeting on Monday
evening.
The village decided last summer to conduct a
local census so that local figures could be used to
challenge figures from the U.S. Census, which
was conducted this year.
Customers who visited Middleport's water
department were asked to complete a short survey form asking the number of residents at each
address .
According to lannarelli, approximately 90 percent of the homes in Middleport have been
counted, and now volunteers who are willing to
conduct the rest of the census door-to-door are
being sought to survey the 100 to 150 homes
which remain uncounted.
Census figures arc important in applying for
government grants and other assistan ce, and
results of the local effort will be compared with
the U.S. Census figures in the event that a challenge is initiated when U.S. C.ensus ftgures are
released.
Councilman Stephen Houchim suggested that
any volunteers carry identification credentials,
and lannarelli indicated that she would approach
the membership of Rejoicing Life Church for
assistance.
Last night, representatives of. the church presented the village with a framed print of the
Continental Congress, and offered their assistance
to the village, and lanna.relli said that she would
contact them about the census project.
In other business, council tabled action on a
· propos ed resolution which would change the
language in a policy setting forth a $5 water
improvement fee for village residents.
Currently, $5 is assessed for each property, but
the proposed change would assess $.'i per household, so that apartment complexes and oth er

Please see Coundl, Pap AJ

Ohio gets an early taste.of Old Man Winter
BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Winterlike temperatures invaded Ohio on
Monday, jump-starting furnaces, putting a
dent in the soybean crop and giving fruit
f.'lrmers a scare.
·
Temperatures dipped below freezing in
Akron, Mansfield and C olumbus. And lakeeffect snow showers were reported in the
northernmost parts of the state.
Furnaces across the statt: wokt: up from
their sun1mer slumber, with some dangerous
results.
In the Dayton area, members of two families were taken to th e hospital after being

exposed to carbon monoxide fumes from
faulty furnaces.
Two children, ages 2 and 5, were treated at
Children's Medi cal Center and released after
inhaling fumes at their grandmother's Dayton home. Two more children and two
adults were treated at Kettering Medical
Center and released after breathing fumes at
their home in suburban Jefferson Township.
A few thousand acres of late- planted soybeans wen: lost because of the frost , which
hit before the beans were mature, said Steve
Proc haska, C rawford County extension
agent for Ohio State University.

He said corn, wheat and hay crops should
recover as lm~g as warmer weath er arrives by
the end of the week.
Corn growers rely on warm, sunny
weather to dry out the corn in the field so it
can be harvested and processed. If the corn
has to remain in the field too long, he said,
farmers risk having· the sralks break and the
cobs fall before they can be picked.
The cold snap also got the attention of
fruit growers.
Dan Sinunons, who operates Peace Valley
Orchards near the northeast Ohio community of Rogers, said the temperature th ere

dipped to 31 degrees , just 4 degrees above
the freezing point for apples.
"It was definitely a scare. But there was
really no damage," said Simmons, who has
225 acres of apple trees.
He said 75 percent of his apple crop has
been picked. However, he said low temperatures could threaten th e rest by freezing the
stems, causing the apples to fall off the trees.
Ope rators of Valley Vin eyards near the
southwestern Ohio village of Morrow said
th e chilly weather did not pose a probl em
because most of the grap es at the 60-acrc
vineyard have already been harvested.

'

Gideons presentation

Buckeye women
have option to prisoiJ

.J

..

'.

n

J.

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

I

t advertised price on the some tire. 1
I We feature all majo r brands: Goodyear, F1r6stone , I
I General , Michelin, Brldgeslone, Continental , UNIROYAL , 1
BF Goodrich. Moun11ng and balanc1ng may be extra .

Protesters worried
·about ammonia
leak

Please see Gavin, Pale AJ

I We will meet or beat any competitor's I
L.

'

Helpers

drous ammonia.
"They (Gavin) said that they
can't use anything else because
it hasn't been used on such a
large scale .. . yet either has
anhydrous am1nonia."
Despite the protests, Gavin
officials said the open house
itself was very suc cessful and
offered food, plant tours, pony
rides, tree seedlings and several
giveaways. Hundreds attende&lt;!
with curiosity and left in awe
at how electricity is made.
Plant Manager Duayne
Phlegar spoke to many concerned citizens, explaining
how the installation of Selective Catalytic Reduction will
assist in reducing th e NOx, the

'"

C e nt ~

Gavin
addresses
concerns

CHESHIRE American
Electric PdWer's Gavin Plan's
open house· Saturday was
greeted by interested onlookers and angry protesters.
. One such protester, Ron
Hammond, lives with his chil,dren and works in Cheshire .. right in the line of fire 1" he
·said.
"I don't think our concerns
regarding the ammonia have
:.:Ver been heard," Hammond
~_aid . "1 understand that they
:~n't continue to pollute the
)ir with the NOx (nitrogen
:cixides); but I don't think they
;can sacrifice a whole village."
· Hamrnond 's con cerns are
:the possibility of a leak and or
&lt;.n ammonia slip and the fact
.there are several schools so
dose to the plant.
"Any minor or major leak
would affect all three schools,
and I can't see how a Shelter in
Place can be effective. I don't
see how we can seal .up our
homes; we have elderly people
that live . alone and they can't
respond quick enough."
What can Gavin tell , Hammond and the other protesters
and concerned residents that
would make them feel better?
"They can tell me they are
going to use aqueous ammonia
or urea pellets. They do in a
plant in Maryland," Hammond
said.
·Just this past week l:laltimore Gas and Electric worked
with tbeir community and listened to their concerns and
decided to not go ahead with
their plans to use the anhy-

:You,have
Saturday off.
Exac
why
.
. ..; :r :.·:···:i&lt;·i
&lt;;~::&lt;-.
. ,&gt; ; &lt; •

so

BY KRIS DoTSON
OVP NEWS STAFF

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

. :'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Vulunw '&gt; 1. Numlll'r 'IIJ

L T OL Pts GF GA
4 10
6
·1 0 0
2 7
7
1 0 0
1 0 0
2 5
5
1 0 0
2 4
4
0 3
5
1 0 0

I

Hometown Newspaper

4

TRANSAaiONS

Race Statistics

Air Force 27, Navy 13
Ari zona 31 , Soulhern Cal 15
Arizona St. 30, Califo rnia 10
Cal Pory-SLO 41 , St. Mary's, Cat. 20
Colorado St. 17. New MelCICO 14
E. Washington 20, Montana St. 14
Idaho St. 28, N An zona 2 1
Montana 24. Sacrame nl o St. 20
New Me)( ico St 42, Army 23
Portland St 40, Hofstra 35
Sah Diego 38, Cent. Connecticut St. 20
San Diego St. 34, Wyoming 0
UNLV 38, Ne11ada 7
Washinglon. 33, Oregon St. 30
Washington St. 42, Boise St. 35

2

P11ciflc Division
.2 0 o o
4
8
2
Anahe tm
.1 1 0 0
2 4
6
Los Angeles
1 1 0 D
2
7
6
Dallas ..
. ... 0 1 1 0
1 3
5
San Jose
........ 0 1 0 D
0
1
4
(Two pOin ts lor a win, one point lor a tie and
overtime loss.)
Saturday' s Games
OUawa 3, Da llas 1
Buftalo 5, Los Angeles 3
N.Y. Rangers 2. Altanta 1
Boston 5, Ph1ladelph1a 1
·Toro nto 2, Montreal 0
Was hington 3. Carolina 3. tie
Chicago 5, Columbus 3
Colorado 1, Edmontoll I , tie
Phoenix 4, Minnesota 1
Pittsburgh 3, NashVI lle 1
Sunday's Games
St. LOUIS 5, Anaheim 1
Vancou11er 5, Tampa Bay 4
Today's Gamea
Florida at Boston, 1 p m.
l os Angele s al Columbus. 7 p.m.
Dallas at Toronto, 7:30p.m .
Tuesday's Games
Dallas at Carolina, 7 p.m.
Edmont On at Montreal, 7·30 p .m.
Colorado at Calgary, 9 p.m .

$33,870

FAR WEST

0

Ph oeni~C

$22,670

o

0

Vancou vet
Edmonton
Coloraao
Calgary
Minnesota

27. (4 0) Terry Lab onte , Che11rolet, 33 1,
$40,770.
29 . (29) Da ve Blaney, Ponllac. 329.

$48,175.

0

Northwest Diviaion

$22.870

MIDWEST

Melp County's

TOLPio. GF GA

Ne wJersey ........ 1

W
.2
St. LOU IS .
Chicago ..
~ . 1
Delf Oit ..
.. 1
Na sh11 ille
.. 1
Columbus ' ....... 0

$34,925 .

Al\ron 27, Bowling ·Green 2 1
Alb1on 24, Butter 23
Ball Sl. 15, Miami (Ohio) 10
Cincinnall48 , Houslon 31
Drake 54, Valparaiso 7
E . Illinois 33 , Tennessee St. 19
Iowa 21 , Michigan St. 16
Kansas St. 52, Kansas 13
Kent St. 24, Cent. Michigan 21 , 20T
Minnesota 25, Penn St. 16
Missouri 24 , Oklahoma St. 10
N. Illinois 40; UCF 20
Nebraska 49, Iowa Sl. 27
Nonhwestem 52 , Indiana 33
Notre Dame 20, Stanford 14
Ohio 42 , BuMalo 20
.Ohio St 23, Wisconsin 7
Purdue 3?. Michigan 31
SW Missouri St. 24, Indiana St. 7
Toledo 42, E Mich1gan 14
W. Illinois 42. S. Hllnois 17
Youngstown St. 14, Illinois St. 12
SOUTHWEST
Arkansas 52. Louisiana -Monroe 6
Colorado 26, Te)(as A&amp;M 19
Oklahoma 63, Texas 14
,
Prairie View 25, Alcorn St. 22
SW Texas 25, Nicholls St. 0
San Jose St. 35 , SMU 10
TCU 41, Hawaii 21
Te)(as Southam 21 , Ark.-Pine BluH 18
Te•as Tech 28, Baylor
UTEP 40, Tulsa 7

•

PRO HOcKEY

$68,100.

23. (35) Dick Trtckle,

October 10, 2000

334

$43,000.
, 9. (26) Matt Kenseth, Ford , 3:34, SSO, 100.

NASCAA·UAW·GM Quality 500 Results
CHARLOTTE. NC. (A PI - Res ul!s S1,1nday
of lhe UAW-G M Quality 500 NASC AR Winsto n

Smah , w ho l"l'mrne d rilL' b.tl l to
the Oho o 19-\',nd li ne.
'
Frcl' dy pro ct..'t'Lkd ro gL' t rhL·
Bull-. to th e 7-y.l rd !Jtll' bl' fo rc hL•
\\',ls p1c kcd off by Ohio _j un ior
~.1 (L" t \ ' C hris l.,ondon J t .t11L' rwo
\\'Jt h :\() SL'Co nds le ft 111 h&lt;..· tlr..,t
luI f.
" I think Dontrdl w.ts JU ~ r rr yin g to 111.1 kt: ~;. omc.:-thin g h.1 pp e n
i1 nd put it out thcrt' and got it
p!Ch.·d :md ru n b.1 c k." s.1id Grobl'
nf J;u: ks~ n 's inr e rcept t: d pa ss.
"Tlu nk go o dn ess C hri &lt; London
made a play."
A p:~ ir of t&lt; m ch d nwn ru m bv
Bnnkcr 111 rhe third qtt.lrt n g;l\'~·
O h10 a JS-7 k Jd go ing in to th e
fourth .
Brinker fin ished wi th 73 yard s
o n I S carri es.
Also for th e Bobcats (3-3,
MAC East 1- 2), Jo e Sherrill had
57 yards on 10 tarries and !'.. tto rso n fin ished with 13 carrie~ for.
SO y&lt;rds.
O hio wtll be at Kent State o n
Saturday with a 2 p.m. ki ckoff.
Buffalo (1- 5, MAC East 1-2)
p!Jys host to Ball State.

Details, A3

7 . (39) Stelle Part, Chevrolet, 334,$55, :350.
8. (9) Johnny Benson, Pontiac , 334 ,

AUTO RACING j

Th ey held th e ball for 41 minutes par tly becJusc George was
so goo d, partly because ,th e Be nga ls' offe nse w.1s Jgain so bad.
EM c..:pr for G L'o rgc. th.1t h.
The ll c ngal s scored their t hird
" He 's a bog, physical guy," sJid .md fou rt h touchdowns of th e
M.ttt ht.'\\'5. w h ose strea k of 202 sea 'ion on Corey D illon's 80-yard
c on ~o..·c utJ v~.· :ott.wts IS jeopudized
run and I )arryl W oll iaom ' JC1 - y"rd
b i...' Clll\L' nf t hl' k llL' l ' lll]llr\'. " 1
l lltL' r cL'p tlon return . O ther than
don 't L'm·y , d d L· mt\'L b.J( k... ..1n d th .1t. then.· \\".1 ~ not h ing .
l tLH.'h,H ken. ~. ·~ p cu. tll ~ LIIL' 111 t he
T hey f. 11 k•d to get a firs r down
t hn d .1.11d fourth l j L\ , l rfl'l''. h.t\'lll g
0 11 L' I ght of th en· 12 po..,st·~-.iom .
to t.1t.. L· ht111 do \\ 11 111 tht• np L' n Aklh S1n1th comp k tcd 1O- ur2J
ti,·ld
l~ ll- ."{~ y .1rd~ .tnd l o~t .1 tl nnbll· on
· .. 1 '111·~ \l' l ,. ' lml' { I) our Hi l'. d ,\· ~ .l l' k , .II H.i Ud lon m.uugc.:d ott ly
g .11 111. I k lud I Hl l ,,1rd ~o ,111d \\L'
I .1 y.nd.., nn h1~ o thl' l 1-l l,\1 rio .
~.nnr!,·I I L' d th o..· h,lllll' I hH·~ \\hll
" I d o n't L'\'L' Il kn n \\ w h;t t o '·1Y
ho..·\ 111 .lb(\\ l t ..
t 1g iH now:· ..,,11d t&lt;~p d1 .Jtl: p l l k
1 1,1, t1r,r 1!111-\',1!\l Pdn \X.'.Jrrt ~.. k. \\'ho lu d llllL'
1'1 h t,
' I I \.JnJ.,
"\\ 't• ~.1\' thl.'
•I

fiJ l l'l'

R

78

4 0 .333 113 128
5 0 .000 37 128

~uu .' '

gin·

84

65
78

4 0 .333 85 131

Minnesota
Detro it .... .
Tampa Bay ..... ..
Green Bay
ChiCago

to g l\:c us,"

from Page 81

tJU;trtl' r

~

106

The AP Top 25

(FOX)
Saturday, Oc:t. 21

I ll

3

0 .667 101
0 .667 t04

WORLD SERIES

rs.·nm!.
It w asn 't until la te

51

98
4 0 .333 103 107

N.Y. Gtants .........
Washingt on
Philadelphia .......
Arizona
Callas

sary

011

1
2
3

o 833 112
o aoo 91
0 .600 135
o .400 86

East

San FrAnciSCO 5, New Yortl 1

Sl loult

1

Central
Baltlrl10re ...................... 5 1 o 833 125
Tennessee ................... .4 1 0 .800 104

O.k.lancl 5, New YD111: 3

•

Miami ... .
. ........ 5
N.Y. Jets ...................... 4
Indianapolis .................. 3
&amp;lffalo .
.. ....... 2
New England ................. 2

10

10. Florida ... r
..... .. 5· 1 1,068
11 . Washington .................... .4· 1 1,035
12 TCU ......

AFC

8
1

9. Oregon .... .................... ....... 4-t 1,140

13. UCLA ................................4· 1

National Footblll Lugue

'llloodoy, OCL 3
8aente7, ChlcogO 4, 10 !Mings
Wsdi 1'1)', Oct. 4

Seattle 5, ChlcogO 2

1 Florida St.

Tuesday

Meigs society news and notes, AS
Vikings edge Bucs on 'MNF', B1

Wedn•diY
HIJh: '70s; Low: 301

..

.,:,

Pastor John Elswick, middle, presents Gideons International represent&lt;;~lives Bob Miller, left, and Oris Sm~h. right, with a $600 check for the purchase of 500 New Testament Bibles that will be distributed throughout
Nigeria, Russia and India. the donated money was collected from a walk·
a-then that was sponsored by the Freewill Baptist Church and the youth of
Poplar Ridge. (Tony M. Le~h photo)

it J.L·,

It rl 11~ \\'1.'L'·k.'

1t I IC\'l' l h .1p pt.' l l \ "

P1 ckl' n" .t nd

,.

...

f!
l'

WARREN (AP) - Wo men
convicted of crim es in five
n o rtheast Ohio counties have an
alte rnative to a · Marysville
prison as a place to ~ erve their
sentences-.
A recently completed wing at
th e Co mmuni ty Base d C orrection Facili ty here se rves wom en
from Portage, Trumbull, Ashtab·ula, Geauga and Lake counties.
Th o N orth east Ohio Community Alternative Prog ram
originally was created fo r male
offenders abo ut three years ago
as a dive rsio n progra m th at
judges bd iew will be nefit those
co nvicted
of
n o nvio le nt
fd omes.

judges wanted to all ow
women the same opportunit ies,
said Anthony Noday, de puty
program director.
•'State officials reali zed (th ey)
cannot build enough prison&lt; to
ho use all of those convicted of
crim es, so it came up w ith a
program which may wo rk to
reduce th e number wh o are sent
to pri so n and later return ," h e
said .
•
" We want to change th ~ir
behilvio rs," Noday said.
Progr am
parti cipants are
requi red to wo rk 12 hours eac h
day on programs that include
substance abuse counselin g and

Please see Prison, Pa1e Al

,.

Toclay's

Sentinel

2 S1dlons- 12 Paps
Calendar
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Lotteries
OIDO
Pick 3: 5-7-3; Pick 4:2-3-9-7
Bu~ 5:9-14-15- 16-30

W,YA,
Daily 3: 3-t\-4 Daily 4: 6-il-01-5

Rutland .man
dies in·aash
FROM STAFF REPORTS

RUTLAND A Rutland
man died as th e result of injuries
suffered in a fo ur-wheeler acc ident on Monday.
Howard Birchfield, 75 , wa s
fo und dead o n · hi s property in
Rutland. According to the M eig;
Co unty SheritT's . Department,
offi cers were notified by the Rutland EM S Mo nday nighf that a
to ur- wh eeler
acc ide nt
had
occured o fT Sal em Street in Ru tland .
Once officers arrived on th C
scene aro und 8:38 p.m .. th ey
found the Rutl and EM S and fire
department atte nding to Birc hfiel d.
'
According
to re port&lt;, Birchfield

Please see Cr•sh, Pace AJ

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