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Sundly, October 15, 200I:t

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point PIMunt, wv

P9 08• 6ul1Mp ~•n·6tnlinel

pVB joins injnsurance company purchase
ffiOM STAff REJIORI'S

GALLIPOLIS -ohio Wky Bane Corp. has joined
fun:cs widt dte holding companies of three Ohio
~ and one fiom lndiam to purchase half-ownership in Profinance Holdings Corp., OVB officiols

OVB has jointd in the venturt with
Eaton Natiotaal Batalr &amp; Trust Co.,
Ddaware County Bat~lr and Ohio Heritage Bat~k in Ohio, atad First Batak of
'
Richmond, I11d.

Hlp: 701; LoW: 401

•

Money
faCWII .... DI

Delaying retirement benefits beyo11d 65
until age 70 avill also increase the size
-· ofthe be11ejit due to a credit provided
~ by the Soda/ Security Administration
for such patience.

Details, A3

Melp County's

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
-ANY SIZE DOUBLE HUNG-

ac n v tsr

**

PrOmise -. a no npro fi t group
al so known as tht· Alliance fo r
Youth and its ch air man ,
retire d Army Gen . C ol in Pow"As a society. we must work

together to gu ide eac h child to
become a well - roun ded individual and cont rib uting citize n," she said , "by infusing character development into every
e ducati o nal in stituti o n 's dail y
school n~ lture."
Uaraquio. 24, of Ho nolulu,
knows something abo ut bein g
we ll-ro unded.
T he elem enta ry schoo l

•

faih'IIPIIpDl

·200'0 ~

AT,PW; PL,

t~:ac h c r

..

4

ovcrcun e stage fri ght, a

disdain for pageants and an
umucccSiful pair of tr ies at the
Mi ss Hawaii title en route to
capturi nt; a SSO,OOO coll ege
scho la rship wi th her victo ry
S.a urday night.
·
Uaraquio, whose parents arc
Filipino, s:1id she didn't feel like
~ pioneer afte r beco ming th e
fi nt woman of Asian-Amer ican
heri tage to w in th e crow n .
" It doesn't matte r what
(ancestry) you are. It matters
w hat you arc o n the inside," she
T he eighth of IU children,
slw is a grad ual£ of the Uni versity of Hawaii at Manoa who
work s as a physical education

f1omPapDI

instructor and athl eti c directo r

at Holy Fam•ly Cath oli c Academy in Honolulu .

•••

•••

necr fam 1ly which settled in Rutland,
lligley w.J&lt; born in I H23 and lived most of

POINT AND CLICK- Norma Hawthorne of the Meigs County District Public Lib rary staff ass ist s Delores
Frank and Frances Reed master the basics of Windows 95. The Ree dsville wome n were pa rt icipants in a
basic computer class offered last week by the library system . A more adva nced c lass wil l be offered early
next year. (Brian J . Reed photo)

Library class offers computer-basics

H er parents own an exter -

minating company called Abl e
Ter mite Control.
hT hey have a pest control

com pany beca use they have 111 ·
kid,," , he la ughed.
13ar&lt;llJlli o ... aid sh e began
t·ntering pageants at

help finance college.

POMEROY -

The personal
co mputer is alm ost unavoidable in

Tile p11pi/s ra1igedjrom young students 10 senior
citizens a11d everyone i11 ~etll'e-en, all anxious to

learn more about the personal C(llliputer and 11011' to
2 1st cC ntury societ):, and fo r those ·
r " fl. n d
to w l10 111 "'tcon," " J e1rag
make the computer work to their btnt;{lt.
'~ web page" are still just vague
tec hno-terms, it's n ot too late to students to se ni or Citlzens an d tan ce from the o:perK
everyon e in between , all arLxio us to
Matso n 'laid Frichy tlte introdlKlearn the basics.
Th e Meigs Co unty District learn more. about the personal tory co ur,.,es ate just the b.eguming
Public Library, through staff mem- com puter and how to make the tOr those t'aga to learn mort·. The
computer work to their be nefi t.
li brary will offL·r ~l mo re intl'fl llCbe rs Jo hn M atson. Norma
of
d i:u e cla'is early next year, ,md lll.lY
Beginn
ing
with
the
basics
Hawthorne and Darlene Hosc har,
offered 16 90-m inute classes on "mo use handlin g/' to m asteri ng repeat ,m l..'arlicr cl.1ss about tht'
the very basics ofWindows 95, and the "do uble cl ick" :md beyond, th e 1mer net.
The cla'c!st•&lt;; werl' otlen..·J ti·el' ,n
dass moved at a comfo rtable p ace,
concluded the classes o n Friday.
w ith plenty of one-o n-o ne ass is- t lte ma in library iu Ponkroy.

rl'portl'd tlut the \ong: \\',1\ "rncd our ,It the next (Ountry
d,I1Kl' .111d w;l\ rl'ceived with thulllil'rou-, .1ppLn1\e and widc-t·ycd
It

w,t\

The ~ong'-; popuLulty gr~w ova th~ year\ "J nd was eve ntu,1\ly pro-

claimed the "Cowboy National Anthem" hy 1'\..oy R ogers and was
reponed to be rht' f,lvoritt· ..;ong of thL· btl' FrJ n!.Jin D. Roo".cvdt.
SL·vcral hi,wri~Ul\ h:1VL', ,uu lyzcd thl· 'iOilg ;111d have co ncluded th.at
''Home On ThL' RJnge'' i~. in C1cr, referring to rh~ hills of MelbY&lt;\
C(HJIIty, p.trtiLuiJr!y l tutl~u1d. ;tnd th;lt 1UIL' Vt·rse .tpphed illrl·ctly to tilL"
.lrl'.l, wht• rl' ,It the tillll' "butiilo. the dt•t:r nnd dlL' .mtdopc Wl..'rl· .til
indigc nom to the loolit~·."
Tlut \'l"J~t·, which h imprintt'd in till'lllinds of~u m.my pcopk. is 3'1
t()llow~:

''()h gil'c /Ill',, /r(ll/lf ll'lww the h'!fl;dll
11 7ten· tlfl1 dt'IT t~ud rill' ,,wl'fotn' Jd't)',

/'(111"',

117uTI' .'Adtllll is heard,, di.it!lllll~~il~l( u'mti,
.--l11d rh{' .\l·m·s !I if 1/tlt dourlr ,,1/ d11r •·

Please see Honor, Page Al

The pupils ranged from young

Ohio State considering tuition hikes

&lt;~ge

18 to

C O LU M BUS (AP) -

O hio State Uni-

versity offi cials arc, consid eri ng tuitio n

increases which co uld total as m uch as 57

Ohio State sap it lll't'ds the cxtr,r S30 mil/iou 1111 &lt;'.l:i'IIIJlfion ro the
tuition cap would brirrg SO· it nm prnmc its missiou ••f baomi11g more

awdemicaliJ' dite. But sltlft' lull'lll&lt;lkns 111iglrt IH· rlllll't'
, the rai.&lt;1's mig!rt •1/li·o wllstitiH'IIts.
1

pe rcent over the n ext five yea rs, a newspa-

per reported.
T he Colum bus Dispa tch sa~d Saturday it
had obtained m em os that say annual
tu itio n for OSU 's in-state stud ents co u ld
reach ·$6,880 by 2005. Tuitio n for the
2000-01 school year was $4,.\83, putting
O hio State eighth .111 10ng the state's I J
ptl blic fo u r-year coll eges in term s wf co~t.
U nder O hio law, tuition innl' JSC&lt;; at

2000

T h e memos cited by thl' tlcwsp,lpcr said
univers ity ad mi ni strat ors arc con:-.idning
charging studc·nt&lt; an c·xtr:l $'!110. divided
ovn tO ur or five yt.".\rs. plu)i t he nonn.1 l
;mnual increases.

W illiam

J.

Sh kurti. Ohio St.ltc 's sc·nior

statc-rdat~d

coll eges are limi te d to () per- · vke president fo r busincs~ and fin.mcc. s,lid
cent a year. Uut th e uni versity has asked th e the tuition figu res in the mcmm could
Leg i'\lature fo r a tem porar y exem ption to d nngc ht'ca usc univ1..:rsity l1 rc'l!dt..'llt

Todays
l Sections - 1l Pages

2001
LEGACY L SEDAN
•

ilou•

W ill i.1m f. Kirw:111 dnc~ not \\:lilt H~ LIN'
tuition Jnon· th.m I!J PL'H't'llt ,1 yc,tr.
"When .dl the 'mokc· ck.m. thi, j, &lt;till ,,
trcmctH.Iou~ \',l hlt'." Shkurtl ,,tid. " If -;tudent-;' Lhoicl' j, to ti11d rh~.· ~..·hl'.Ipc\t tllltion
in tht· 'lt.ltl' ot· ( )]nu. thcy't\' lllH going tn
tlnd it ht·f~..·. But if th . .·Jr t hnin· h to tind
the br: . . t l'th!c.Hion th~..·y c.111 lind t(n the

doll.1r. I th111k thi . . t~o ~nil
ly ~tttr;JCt1\'t' cll~llet'."

~t)ing

to he

,I

( ))llo ~t.HI..' \,1\'\ 1C

nct·do; the extra $.10
1111llt on .111 r..'Xt'tnptlon to thl' tu ition cap
\\'nuld hrin~ ~o If C.lll pur . . ue Jts mi'isinn of
bt't'OJllliJ~ JI IOrt' ,Jc.Hkmic.Illy elite. But
~r.Hc Lt\\'lll.tkl'f" mi~ht he nw ~·L· intent on
ho\\' tht· r.I ht~" nnglu atrt'ct co nstituents.
· ';lr (the L'\1..'111prion) will be: a prohkm
t()r '-Oilll' 11\L'lllbt'l'~. ht'(:\ll\1..' Wl' put ;1
ruinon l&lt;Ip 10 the budget. ,md rlK only rl·a... oll \\'t' ~;1\'t' lltll\'t'r~ltlt''~ for c~cccdtn~ tht·
L·.1p W.l~ tf rJwn· \\':l~ .1 Crt"l'i Oil L.1111pm.'·
. . . nd IZt·p Kt'\'111 .J (."ou).!:hllll. R-C~g;t
I .Ilk lh.IInll,lll nf rilL' 1-loU'\l' hi!-,rft'G· ~·duci­
tion \ ubcnn11 Hittl..'l'. 'Tm nor . . urc rht· '~lrll-

rt".tl -

Please see TUition. Page Al

Study finds widesprea~ .
lying, ·cheating among teens
'

.

C ale ndar
C lassifieck
C omics
E ditQrials
Obit uari es
S12orts

PW, PL, TILT, CRUISE, FIJLLY
LOADED

NOW

~Cifl~~

1001
lliDUCID UP TO

irrlt'lll 1111

'

th ~n restri t.:ri'on.

Sentinel

LEGACY GTSEDAN

WAS$23,749

h.tnj~).

c-nthmi~t.;,m"

FROM STAFF REPORTS

Eastern homecoming court

noel RIO RED, PWR SUNROOF,
nLT, CRUISE, LOADED

hi'i ,\dult lite in that sm.tll community~
Higley .md his wife mowd from Rutland to Kansas in the spring
of IH72. H e owm:d a homeste:h.l on Ul·avcr Creek in Smith County.
and hi" tlL'&lt;lrt'St neighbor \\\l~ D;tn Kcll)~ .1 tMtive of Virginia and •
accompli1hed banJO player.
Accordin!-'; to wrinl'n JLCmtnt!-,- Higkv wrote the word~ to " H ome
&lt;.)n The ll:mge" ,mJ then took thl:lll · OVLT to Kdly's cabin, wht'fe
Kelly ~Kcc.:mu,ut·d H1gky\ worJs with musK tlut he picked from hit;

said.

Funds

root system.
Air dry the rooting structures
for seven to I0 days to form a
protective skin in a warm, dry,
breezy, shaded location, like a
te see our bare woods reclothed garage or barn. Cut off the excess
in green.
leafy tops as you are drying them.
Make sure' you mark you plants
If you want a better lawn next as to variety. When dried down,
spring, rake off this fall's leaves. place the plants in sand, sawdust
(,.ayers of tree leaves over the lawn or peat moss 6lled baskets pr dark
reduces the grass' ability to pho- plastic totes. Place in cool, below
tosynthesize and store carbohy- 50 degree but above freezing
drates.
storage.
Fewer carbohydrates in the
As you harvest your tender
gl-ass plant may result in starva- perennials or divide older plantitiOn if the winter is long, cloudy n~. share your bounty with other
apd wet. Starved plants are more gardenen. O ct. 19 is the annual
sQSceptible to early spring diseases Mei~ County Fall Perennial
li,ke snow molds and root rots.
Plant Exchange being held at the
•If yo'! haven't taken a soil sam- Mei~ County Senio r Citizens
ple, an early November applica- · Center.
This semi-annual event is spontlon of a balanced fertilizer IJ.S
, ,unds of 14- I 4- 14 or 5 pounds sored by the center and Ohio
cif I 9- I9- 19 per I ,ooO square State University Extension 's Masfeet) will boost grass growth both ter Gardeners. As usual, two
exchanges will be held.
n.o w and in early spring
The first will be held from
It's time to dig up your tender noon to 1 p.m. and the second
perennials su ch as dahlias, cannas, exchange from 4:45 to 5:45 p.m .
caladium, tuberous begonias and · A short program on " Caring For
Your Perennials" will be given by
gladioli.
:_Only in the most protected the Master Gardeners before each
s(tes near a building or during a exchange (H• 11 :30 a. m. and
mild winter will some of the ten- 4:15-4:45 p.m.).
Remember, even if you have
der perennials survive being left
no
plants or seeds to exchange,
i;. the soil. Use a spading fotk if
a\tailable and carefully dig up you are invited · to participate and
mother plants with as much of take some new perennials for
your home. Bring cutti n ~ and
the root system as possible.
· The root systems contain over- slips of ho use ho ld plants to
exchange. H ope to see you there !
~ intering structures such as bulbs
(Hal Knern 1 is Meigs Co ut~ t y ~
(~ maryllis), rhizomes (ca nnas),
tub ers (dahlias) or fleshy stems Extension agent for agriwlturt and
( Marguerite' sweet potato). After nat"ral re&gt;ources, Ohio Stalt Univ&lt;r·
digging, wash off soil from the sity.)

Bicentemnal Comm i...... ion and t he Ohio
Hi'itoncal Snrit·ty, will be l'recteJ near the
1-i.lrJn log rahi11 on Main Street near the
R utl.wd Ci\'ic Centl'r.
Thl.' Jl',t end.111t t~f a Meig-:. County pin

dl.

992-4119 1-800-291-5600

•

RUTLAND -The Meih" County 111:111 who wrote the classic folk
song "Home On The R.m!'e" " being honon:d for Ohio's 21KJth
birthday wah on f lhio hisrorica l m.1rkcr in his hometown of Rutland.
Dr. Urt'Wiit('r 1-hgk·y VI, a phy'iKtan .md 11urgL·on who was said to
have ;1 "love tOr music and the soul of a
· poet,'. wa'i nmmtuted for a marker by 'th&lt;.'
Rutland Friendly Gardeners Club.
Tlw nwker, awarded by the Oh10

to

enlist th e help of America's

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.

AT

TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

ter ~d ucation ." Sh e h o pes to

Call lor Further Details

II

BY TONY M. lEACH

teac hing little ki ds to
Baraqulo
grow , into
dece nt. bala\Ked people through "charac-

At

so Cents

Marker.
to honor
son
r

ATLANTIC C IT Y, NJ. (AP)
- The last Miss America spent
her year rallyi ng the ca u&lt;e o f
veterans. H er successor is lwping one such patriot .will help
her champion the stru ggle of a
you nger audience.
M iss America 2001 Angela
Perez
Baraquio
wants
to
devo te her
yearlo ng
as
retgn
beau ty
queen-cum-

Dl

•

Hometown Newspaper

AsianAmerican
wins Miss
America

~es

•

Odober 16, 2000

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51. Number 1oo

...

Fannen

Monday

•

earning ~ars will be replaced in
the benefit equation with a current high credit year. These highsaid.
er
benefits will then shrink the
The holding co11"lp21ries, Stonehenge Oppoi1Unity
catch- up period.
arl b fi be'
b'
Fund LLC and the management of Century Surety
"By working together, we are able to achieve
Delaying n:tirement benefits ~ Y . en.• ~
mg su ~ect to when to take benefits is impracti~.
Co. funned Profinance to buy Centuiy Surety from more," he added. "This is proven by this acquisition,
beyond 65 until age 70 will also mcblston m mcome and p:unfully cal. Depending upon an individ.-:.:
CBIZ, a Cievdand-bised firm.
ual's circumstances, it might malttone that OVBC could not have undertaken alone. We •
th. .'
fi'L be fi d
taxed.
, .: _ d
OVB has joined with Eaton National Bank &amp;:Trust are now tillcing about ways to leverage our combined mcrease e SIZe o we ne t ue ·• 0 th th
1
more
sense to begin taking ben ... '
to a credit provided by the Social ·
n e o er nan • a ower age.
Co., Delaware County Bank and Ohio Heriuge Bank resources in other ventures under the power pennitSecurity Administration for such 62 ~ene~t may mean that the tax- fits as soon as possible regardless
in Ohio, and Fint Bank of Richmond, Ind.
ted by newly-enacted federal legislation."
payif: will not meet the "com- of the net economic benefit in
patience.
Century Surety is a Columbus insurance underThe acquisition is believed to be the lint since pasFurth.r, for those born after bind! income" threshold for ben- the future.
writer and reinsunnce company handling specialty sage of the Gramm-Leach-BWey Act, the financial
This brief article is no substi1937 who choose to begin efits inclusion.
c~ fur builden risk, employment practices, gen- modernization legishtion that allows financial instituEmpirical studies have been tute for a careful consideration of
receiving benefits at age 62, the
eral liability and other lines.
ilone
which generally arrive at . your unique personal situation.
tions to invest directly in insurance companies.
reduction- in- benefits penalty is
In addition to a return on their investment, the
Under this new legishtion, there is huge potential
the )arne conclusion. Early bird Before making any significant
investon also hope to assist the company~ exparision for creating new products and services while remain- further stiffened from 20 percent collectors are ahead of the game retirement planning or tax strateto an eventual 30 percent in
.into new areas by offering products that can be uti- ing an independem community bank.
2022. The hare Will feel the tor- fur about 12 to 15 yean, and then gy, consult' your financial planner,
lized by the banks in the future.
are left behind the higher benefit attorney or tax advisor, as appro-OVBC owns three subsidUries.These include Ohio toise closing even quicker.
"We are witnemng the first steps in a new era of Valley Bank, with 16 offices in Ohio and West VirTaxation of benefits may also collector. Thus, where a person is priate.
growth for independent community banks," said ginia; Loan Central, with four consumer finance comin good health and foresees
OVBC President and Chief Executive Officer Jelli-ey pany offices in Ohio; and Jackson (Ohio) Savin~ enter the pictun:. Poor timing of another 10 years-plus of retireaar Cdldwell, CFP, is branch
Social Security and other income
.
·E .Smith.
Bank.
ment life, it is probably better to managn at RAymond ]dmts Fin4nmay result in a good portion of
defer taking benefits until normal dal &amp;niices, 441 &amp;cond Avr., Gal•
n:tirement age.
lipoli&gt;, 446-2125 or 1-800-487Snell of the University of Ken- sessions listed above.
tubers for both fall and spring
Of coune, a univenal rule for 2129, mrmber NASD and SIPC.)
tucky is due to address Gallia
Bulb exchange Having planting. Literatun: on the care of
County producers this winter 'at trouble finding the right types of bulb plants will be available at the
the annual meeting. With a little bulbs this fall? The OSU Master library as well as the Extension
Lam Pll&amp;e
luclr., the situation and outlook Gardenen are sponsoring a bulb Office.
Increased pool stocks, world will remain hopeful and provide exchange on Oct. 21 from 10
a•nnifer L. Byrnts is G41/i4
over supply of burley, and politi- . some small relief to this troubled a.m . to noon at the Dr. Samuel L. County~ Exteruion agtntfor agriculcal uncertainty are not the only . indwtry.
Bossard Memorial Library.
ture and natural resources, Ohio Stat•
reasons why producers have
Ag news
This is an opportunity for gar- University.)
experienced i dramatic loss in
Tobacco settlement appli- · deners to bring in bulbs in
'
quota over the past few yean.
cations due Oct. 20 - There exchange for other quality bulbs
In · response to price incn:ases will be two help sessions for from around the community.
associated with rising excise taxes growen and 'quota owners who Items. to be exchanged may be
and the national tobacco settle- need assistance completing their bulbs, corms, rhizomes, and
(304} 075-1333 (7«1} 446-1342 (7«1} 991-.1156
ment, a I 0-12 pen::ent decline in tobacco settlement applications.
The first is this Tuesday, 6-8
cigarette consumption since 1997
p.m.,
and Oct. 19, 4-7:30 p.m .
has also contributed to the loss in
FREE INSTALLATION
both ai the Ag Center's back
quota.
FREE IN HOME ESTIMATES
Increasingly, domestic manu- meeting room. Those seeking
Nationwide", w. go the extra mile to Uv.
facturers are making cigarettes assistance are encourage to park
you
money.
That's why ~ offer a variety or auto
from less U.S. burley and mon: of in the rear of the building and·
premium
dlacounta,
Including our multi-car
the cheaper, imported burley enter through the 11\Ceting room
discount,
our
safe
dilver
dl~nt, alrbag dlstobacco. Furthermore, the move- door.
countand more.
These will not be educational
ment of U.S. cigarette production
Call us and ~tan saving money today.
overseas · has also affected the meetings, but rather an opportunity for one-on-one assistance.
quota in recent years.
Nationwide Is On Your Sldff'
Canceled -The tobacco setFinally, a strong U .S. dolbr and
wealter foreign economies have tlement application help session
Pomeroy
JEFF WARNER
reduced exports by mon: than 40 originally scheduled for Oct. 20,
Nationwide"
113 W. 2nd Streot
has been canceled. For assistance,
percent since 1996:
992-5479
Insurance &amp;
VISIT OUR SHOWROOM ON STATE ROUTE 33
Tobacco economist Dr. Will please plan to attend one of the
Financial Services
8 MILES NORTH OF PoMEROY, OHIO
AT COUNTY ROAD 18
In 1987, dte bank acquired
Please
through purchase, the Tuppers
Plains branch, and in 1994 introduced the first ATM in the county.
A major expansion took place in
that plans were made to construct
. a new bl!i(ding for the banking 1996 with the opening of a new
operation. Property between Sec- bank in Gallia County located on
ond and Main near Butternut Upper River Road in Gallipolis.
Reflecting on the growth and
Avenue was purchased, seven
expansion of the bank he now
buildin~ were torn down, and in
1968, construction began on a heads 1 Reed n:cited his late father's
philosophy - "You can't measure
modern bank building.
:It offered among its many ser- success by what you take out of
vtces Mei~ County's first drive- the community, but how much
youput mto 1t.
tl!rough window banking.
That philosophy through the
·The move from tht: bank's origof the current president
leadership
i.ial location on Court Street to
2h W. Second St. took place on remains very much a part of the
bank's program today.
Kpril1, 1969.

Save on auto insurance.

Society news and notes, AS
Vikings, Rams remain unbeaten, 11

Wednesday

~~~~~~~--------~~~==~==~~~~==~~------------~~~--~~~

•

W~a th ~r

AS
B2- 4
BS

A:l:
A3
. B1,6
A3

Lotteries
Jamie Hupp, top row, with escort Joey Taylor, is pictured with fellow queen candidates and her homecoming court. Pictured are. front left. Rachel Elliott and
Adam Wolfe . freshman attendant and escort. and front right, Jennifer Goeglein
and Bradley Brannon, sophomore attendant and escort; second rrm, from left,
· Nicole Phillips and Jason Kimes, junior attendant and escort; Amber Baker
and Josh Kehl. candidate and escort; Krisl en Chevalier and Josh Clark, candidate and escort; Cinda Clifford and Chad Nelson, candidate and escort; and
Shawna Elliott and Dustin Kebler, candidate and escort. In fro nt are Samuel
Collins and Kiana Osborne, crown bearer and ftower girl. (Brian J. Reed photo)

·'

O HIO
Pick 3: 7-ll-K; Pick 4: .1-.1-&lt;l-.1

W.YA .
Daily 3: Y-7-2 Daily 4: ~-1-.l-6

LOS AN( ;J::U.:S. C1hf (A I')
11;1tion\ high . . chnol \tudcm~ hL· .1 lot. chc.H ,tIll! .wd
m.my ~ho\\' up t(x cLJ~.., drunk, ,JLU1rd1ng to prt'hlll·

inary rl..·~ult'i of a n,JtioJl\\ 1dt' tl..'t'll L h.1r,1l rn ~llhlv
iTil':;-,cd Mo11day.
s~\'1..'11 in j() 'intlkllt&lt;; ~llr\l'ycd ,ldlllittl'd ~·!Jc.lli11g
on .1 test .1 t ka"t ont-c in tlw p.ht yc.1r. ,111d lll'.lrk h.df
s.tid tllt'V h.1d don1..' ~o mort' th,111 \)IKl'. ,Jt" cording to
the 001;protlt Jt)\eph &amp; Edn.t j&lt;:.J\l'ph~ on Jn,titut~· nf
Ethics.
''Thi~ d,lt.l rt'Vl\l l~ ,\ lwk 111 tht· mor.tl O/(lllL'.'' ,,nd
M1clucl Jo~eph . .on,, to under .1111.l prnltkllt ()t th~,.·
I kl Rl' y-h.I,cd or~.lllll.ltlOll.
On tlw mht•r h.md. tht• rt''ltdr~ \H'I\' nor '1~n1li
c.mtlv \\Ur\L' (h.m 011 tlw Ll't tl''-1 111 11) 1JX
the tir\l
tilllc .th.Jt has h,q'JH.'nL·J ... in1 t' tilt' ~mup lwg.tn ll'~l
M.lrllU

itig

Ill 1 ()&lt;)~.

'•Tht' g~od

JmL'ph,on

~.1id.

llt'\\ &lt;; .lppt'.lr~ th.11 II\ pt·.lkl'll."
"The b.lll IlL'\\~ 1~ th.lt 1t\ lun1 ihl\

h!J.:h.''
I hl' "ltl'J'''n ( ·.mJ llll tht• bhJL"'i (,f /\mcnon
Ynurh·· t~ltllld th .n IJ~ J'LTCt'm tlt. rhc :··U)o(\ ~tudcnt~
~un·l·yed l1nl ftl dll'u· p.m.:nr" 111 th~o.· p.1,t YL'.tr. Sn·l'lll~ u~ln JWH L'lH ~.IH l tht'\' h.1d '!it'd to .1 re ,K hn.
.111d lllOIT th,111 oth· m.!i.Jur ..,,ud they \\'1-ltild lie l O g~.·r
.t

Jnh
Ne,u-1\-

·
OllC.:

111

'li~

'

\!Hdl'llh ..,,lid thev h.1d -.hmvn

t l.t" drunk .11 lt-.1~1 (llHl' Ill dw p,1~t )'l'tlL
'-'1xry Ti,Ldlt pt:rn·nt ,ldn lltrcd thn· h11 ~mneont'

up for

.mgtY Nl',Jrh lul t' - 4·7 pncl'nt
~;11d th~,.·, l·ot!ld get ,I gt111 1t'rhn \\;llltl'd tu.
.lo,t·plholl ' hi tlw n:~tdt' ,ltllnlllltl'd t\) the ti.H

ht'l .lll'll' tht'\" WCI"l'

t\1r .1 "tn\.1( L't1C~t.l1l" 111\-oktng '· kid . . \\'hn
dnnk If\ (H ... ro lnt 'l&lt;'lllt'\)llt' wht'll they're .mgr!.
\\ lw 111.1\ ht· drunk .H ~t·l!&lt;wl wht·n they do It .mJ
\\ lw Llll JJ..,n ~t·t tht•n h .111d' on .1 gun."

11tt11.l

Plea.se see Study, Page Al

�•

Page A2 • The Dally Sentinel

Report: Legislators are banks for candidates

BUCKEYE . BRIEFS
People stealing ginseng herb

AKRON (AP) -Whtle donations to sute unlinuted amounts on television advertising
candidates are limited by a campaign finance for candidat~.
reform law, legislators have been acting as
None of the $10 million-plus that has been
"banks," gtvmg unlimited amounts to their distributed is taken from a legislator's W2g~.
caucus and political parties, the Akron Beacon
Ncrt all lawmakers act as banks, and some
Journal reported.
banks are bigger than others.
lndtviduals and political action conm1ittees
More than 20 current lawmakers have given
can gtve a maximum of $5,000, based on the more than $100,000 each from their cam1995 law that limits contnbution amounts.
. patgns to caucuses, local and st&lt;tte parries or
But several lawmakers have been collecting .other legislative candidat~ since 1995.
more frequent donations of smaller amounts
Richard Finan, R-Cincinnati. has been
from many of the same supporters, the 'bea- Senate prestdent si.nce 1997, and Jo Ann
con Journal reported Sunday.
Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg, has been House
Wnh legislative banks, the campaign com- speaker since 1995. Neither needs money to
mittee or bank contributes the donation&gt; to be reelected.
·
another candidate, party or legislative caucus,
Yet Davidson bas raised $1.1 million since
the newspaper said.
1995 and bas 'given away more than 94 cents
Since 1995, legislative banks have collected of every dollar contributed to her. Finan has
$8.2 nnllion in contnbuqons for the four leg- given away more than 97 percent of what he
islative caucuses, $1.1 million for other leg- has collected.
islanve candidates and at least $948,000 for
Most of their money has been moved to the
state aa1d county political parties.
caucus campatgn funds they control.
The process also allows caucuses to spend
The Ohio House Republican Campaign

CLEVELAND (AP) - People are searching, digging and stealmg in southern and eastern Oh10 for wild ginseng, a medtcmal herb
that trades for up to $400 a pound, a newspaper reported.
State officials say Ohio's woodlands yield an average of about
~.800 pounds of gmseng a year "Sangers"- a word denved from
the hill country pronunciation of gin-sang - unearthed about
12,000 pounds m 1992, the best harvest to date.
With ginseng's populanty, many complam about thieves thro!'ghout Appalachian said Mike Taylor, a state wildlife officer in Athens,
in a stoty published Monday m The Plam Dealer.
"They are all complauung their patches get robbed," said Taylor,
who has .made about a dozen arrests so far this year. "You've got
people who slide m, dig It and shde out, they 're gone. What's the
mcemive? Money.You're talking tax- free, ta.'&lt;-exempt money."
Ohio is among the top five producers of ginseng m the country
About 90 percent of all cultivated ginseng comes from central Wisconsm _

Monday, October 16, 2GOO-

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

The Umted States exports hundred' of tons a year, mostly to
Chma.
··
Commeroal gmse ng farmmg IS expenSive and demandmg
because plants take years to culttvate, sml has to be stenhzed and it
doesn't fetch nearly the amount of money as Its wild counterpart
Ohio has already seized this year about 9,500 dned roots that
were poached from secluded tracts owned by coal compames or off
federal land in the Wayne National Forest.

Committee has raised $10.1 million from
1995 through the pnmaty m 2000. The
Republican Senate Campaign Committee
took m $7.7 million during the same period.
Democrats also use the legislative banking
system but raise less money - about $1 for
every $5 raised by legislative Repubhcans because they have been the minority party
since campaign finance reform went mto
effect.
Legislative leaders were banks before the
campaign finance reform law. Former House
Speaker Vernal Riffe held birthday parties
each year to raise large amounts of money to
spend on Democratic legislative candidates m
election years.
.
The banks have caused opposition between
lawmakers and lobb}'lsts in Columbus.
Thomas Green, a Columbus lobbyist who
heads the Ohio Lobbying Associatton, satd
legislators hold frequent fund-ratsers m
Columbus instead of raising money in their
local districts.
·

Clerk of Courts pioneers Teachers' union finds
electronic election filing loophole in cameaign .

Police arrest third susped
NEW CASTLE, Pa. (AP) - Pohce arresred a thtrd man m the
death of a 12-year-old Ohio g1rl found dead 111 Lawrence County,
about one mile from the Ohio border. last week.
Perry Sam Rtcoardt, 20, of Struthers, was arrested Sunday and
cha rged wtth honucide in the death of Shannon Letgh Kos of
Youngstown.
1\(,o other men from Struthers were arrested Saturday Wilham
George Monday, 21. and Davtd Chnstophet Garvey, 20.
Both were arrested m Lawrence County and charged wtth cnmmal homtcide and abuse of a corpse. Police said they believe the two
men tned to burn the gtrl's body after she died.
All three suspects were being held m Lawrence County Jatl without bond
Ricctardt was arratgned Sunday. before Mount Jackson DIStrict
Justtce J.V. Lamb. Monday and Garvey were arraigned Saturday.

CINCINNATI
(AP)
Lawyers soon will be able to file
legal documents in Hamtlton
County courts withOut lugging
boxes of paper to Cincinnati.
Instead, they can send them over
the Internet with the click of a
mouse
Clerk of Courts Jim Cissell says
he expects the system to be up by
the first of the year.
''(Cyberspace) is where hfe is
gomg to be in the next few
years," Ctssell satd. "It JUSt happens that we're the first office to
do 1t in the state of Ohio."
Lawyers will ' have to reg1ster
with CISsell's office to send documents
"To me, this is a miracle what'
he's domg," Ctncmh~ti attorney
Ttm Snuth said. 'This IS the n!ost
advanced clerk's office in the
world .. there's no gomg over
there and standing 111 line. What
could be better&gt;"
lnittally, the system wtll accept
elecrronic filings only in Common Pleas civil· and some
Domesttc Relattons cases. Once
the bugs are worked out, tt will
be expanded to include felony
critninal cases and all other Gl~es.
The electronic transmiSSions of
the lawsuits which wtll be
encrypted or "scrambled" so they

nience of those who want paper
or those who have to feel the
paper in thetr hands," Ctssell said.
Those wanting to use the system will receive a sign-on name
and password. Besides providing
the sender access to t"e system, it
also allows Cissell's office to trace
any computer virus to the sender.
When the electromc filing is
made, Cissell's staff wtll review it
to make sure it has been properly filled out and filed by the
sender and check to be sure all
the pages have been received. If
not, the filing will be returned usmg e-nml to the sender
with an explanation on why it
was. reJected ~
The move allows Cissell to
automate several portions of the
filing process.
· Now: when a suit is filed, the
paperwork is scanned mto a
compu~er
and later placed
through a machine that microfilms it.
With the cybersuits, those steps
will be elimmated - as will the
need for millions of square feet of
space to store the paper documents.
The Ohto Supreme Court IS
watchmg Cissell's efforts, hoping
to use hiS program as the model
for cyberfiling across the state.
can't be read 1f the transmissions
Last year, CISSell received the
are intercepted will then Computerworld
Smithsonian
become the offictal documents of Award m the Government and
the case.
Non-profit Orgamzations cate"The only time there Will be gory for his work in computerizpaper entries is for the conve- ing court records

Student finds ss,ooo
OXFORD (AP)- When freshman Adam Stricker found S5,000
i.n tliree rain-soaked envelopes 111 a Miami Umvemty parking lot,
he thought it was some sort of"Candtd Camera" stunt.
"At first I thought somebody was watching me. I thought 1t was
some type of game," he satd
Stricker, 18, ofTrotwood, turned in tht• money wtthout hesttatton. Later, he found ou t it had been lost by a Miamt professor.
"It was rammg, 1 was rushmg l got to the office and noticed it
(miSSing) tmmediately and started gmng back (to the parkmg lot),"
&lt;atd Ben Voth, an associate professor of commumcations.
The money was for trtps by Mtamt 's forenstcs team, which Voth
advises.
"I just had to take acuon nght away;· Stricker said. "I went ahead
and turned the money in instead of asking (friends) what to do.
They m1ght have tned to pressure me mto keepmg lt. I wanted to
do the right thing."
Stncker satd he was on hiS way to hiS dornutory room Oct. 5
when he found the money.
· "! kmd of had different thoughts running through'my head .. but
turned it m immediately," Stncker sa1d. "! d1dn't feel hke l was
domg anything extra speoal. It wasn't my money, and it was a lot of
money to take from 'omebody."
Voth satd Stncke r's action was "mcred1bly ethical."
'Tm thrilled that Adam d1d what he did,"Voth saJd

Cincinnati to honor mayor
CINCINNATI (AP) - The City plans to honor Th'eo dore M
Gerry, Its fim black mayor, by havmg his body he tn state at C1ty
!;jail.
: Berry, 94, d1ed Sunday at a nurstng home in suburban Lovdand
~uneral plans were pendmg. but mayor C harhe Luken was making
arrange ments to have· Berry's body lie in state.
: " I thmk 1t would be fittmg," Luken satd. "Ted Berry IS one of the
§rca test Cmcmnatians of all time. He led our city to a better place
1j1 the area of CIVIl nghts."
. Berty, who was born Ill Maysv ille, Ky., was pronunent m local
Rolmcs for four decades. He served as prestdent of the local
NAAC P chapter and was the first black asSistant Hanulton County
prosecutor before winnmg a seat on City CounCil m I ~49.
: He had council terms tn the 1950s and 1960s before servmg as
the City's first black mayor from 1972-75, when counc tl members
dect ded among th emselves v..ho would get the largely cc re momal
JOb.
.
" He brought hope," satd Manan Spencer, the first black woman
elected to Ctry Council. " He brought fatth in a system that many
people had lost fatth m."

contribution limttation

AKRON (AP) -The state's
largest teachers union has created three pohtical acuon committees and can donate more
money than what is limited by
a campaign finance reform law,
the Akron Beacon Journal
reported.
The 0 hto Education Association has given as much as
$7,500 through the primary
election to candidates running
for the Ohio House and Senate. The amount exceeds ·the
contribution limit for one calendar year and is three times
the amount allowed m an election cycle.
Based on a 1995 law that limits contribution amounts, individuals and PACs can donate
only $2,500 in a primary election and $2,500 m a general
election.
The new law also prohibits
organizations from creating
multiple PACs.
But the three PACs that the
OEA operates are legal, union
president Michael Billirakis
told the newspaper for a Monday story.
The umott, which represents
118,000 teachers, contributes
from its origmal committee and
an OEA Crisis Fund PAC th.at
was created m August 1995.
The OEA created the thtrd
PAC, the Pohtical Contributing
Entity PAC, after a proviston of

the 1995 law was challenged
and overturned in state and
federal courts. The provlSlon
prohibited unions from using ·
dues for political activity.
The ongmal PAC raises
money from union memben
who have indicated that they
want money from thetr pay"
checks going to the fund The
new PAC receives money from
th.e OEA's treasury. wluch IS
funded by uniot;t dues
]. Curtis Mayhew, Secretary
of State Kenneth Blackwell's
cantpaign finance admimstrator, said the three PACs are
legal, perhaps due to the lack of
clarity in the law.
"You can have multiple
PACs, but you will share a contribution limit if you are affihated, but affihatton is hard to
prove," Mayhew sat d.
Mayhew said affiliation is
based on the people headmg
the PACs and not the orgamzation, busmess or umon behmd
them.
Laura Yeomans, 'an Ohto Citizens Action spokeswoman, said
the OEA and simtlar organizations should be limited to operating one PAC.
"If one organizataon can
operate muluple PACs, giving
at the maximum contnbunon
hmits, contnbution limits will
have no meaning," Yeomans
said.

Columbus man trained sailor killed in blast
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Jonathan Dugan has fend memories of the
tune he served on the USS Cole. But he knows
that if he was s~ll part of the ship's crew, he
could have been killed.
Dugan, 23, of Columbus was a hull-maintenance tcchmcian on the navy destroyer. The
sailor he tramed as hts replacement, Kenneth
Clodfelter, of Mechansvtlle, Va., was k1lled
Thursday when an apparent terronst bomb
blew a hole m the Cole's hull.
The engineenng shop in wluch Dugan
worked IS JUSt down the passageway from
Engine Room No. I, where the exploSion tore
a hole in the ship's hull while it was refueling in
a Mtddle Ea.stern port.

98 Degrees' Lachey weds
CINC INNATI (AP)- Smger Drew Lac hey of98 Degrees married hiS longtime glflfnet;td over the weeke~d.
Lachey, 24, marned Lea Dellecave dunng an unpubhCized cere•;1ony Saturday at a Pre,bytenan church downtown . Dellccave, 24,
I&gt; a choreographer and onstage dan cer for the band.
The couple g rew up m Cmcmnatt and have known each other
'.IIICC the fifth grade, the bnde's mother, Cern Dellecave, told The
( ·lnnnnati Enqlllrer for a story pubhshed Monday.
The couple attended Cmcmnatt's School for the Creative and
Pcrfo rrmng Arts, as dtd fellow band members Justm Jcffre and NICk
Lac hey, Drew's brother

''I'm thmking of the poor 18-year-old kid I
trained to take over my job;' Dugan said of
Clodfelter. "He was a real good kid. He was a
country boy from down in the South- he had
a good heart."
One of Dugan's friends, Marc Nieto, an
engmeman second class from Fond du Lac,
Wis., also was killed.
"We hung out together all the time on the
ship," Dugan '"1d. "He would do oddball things
to make you laugh. One ttme I was on the
phone talking to my mom, and he came into
the room and started JUmptng up and down on
the bed tn his underwear. That's the kind of
thing he would do."
After leaving the Navy, Dugan returned ·to

Rare plane gives athlete
2nd career as barnstormer

Veteran gets Medal of Honor

COLU MBUS (AP) - When
people ask, "How's the weather
up there'" the former basketball
player offer, to let them sec for

P IQUA (AP) - A Vtetnam vete ran who Oew more · than J(IIJ
llelicopter rescu~ 1111\~lons over an etgpr-month pcnod will posthumously recetvc the Medal of Honor.
·
Congress last week approved the national's h1ghcst mthtary tnbute for Air Force AlTman lst Class Wilham H Pitsenbarger
On Apnl II , 1966, Pit1cnbarger made his last tnp down the helicopter rescue hoist mto the Jungle durmg fierce fighnng near C:un
My, cast of Saigon, to help ptnncd-down Army '"u,dt1r1.
\
Ptrsenbarger, of P1gua, sravcd hchmJ \\hen TLiitliC Jttcmpts had to
be Jbandoned after the hu\.t.:rJlif-!; ht·!Jl!lJHl'T Wl'. l11t hv l'llt' lll Y fire.
Credited Wtth savtng llll1t lt'l.·c.,, he !tht Ill~ o'' 11.
He had been .,hot fnu1 1 , 111 tLc m~ht-lnng f n l1ght between
,,l,liC th.tn 400Vtct ( ong 1 It rnhtT .md I q Apll'rl&lt;.lll '.o ld1e n By
h.Jttle's end, 101\ were kdl ed or wounde·ti
"He knew s-'lut the hell w" go111g on
what could lupr en to
hint, and still he dtd it . f-Ie had been dm\n th11t rope IIJ.Iny tiltH's
into the JUilgle," md Henry O ' lleirnc

rhen1selvcs.
The 6-foot-l 0-mch Rob Lock
spends hiS tune these days barnstortmng the Mtdwe1t, giVIng
rides in hiS I ')29 b1planc.
"That\ the problem when
you 'n; 111 professional sports." satd
Luck, who ome played for the
NBA's Los Angdes Clippers.
"You're 30 years old, and your
resume IS only this lon g," he s:ud,
holdmg his thumb an mch from
hiS forefinger. "What are you
good .1t?"
The answer, for Lock, was "nymg."
HaS f.nher taught avJatlon

r

mechamcs for 31 years before
rettring a year ago.
"So it's in my blood," he said.
Lock stumbled upon hts
btplane, a rare New Standarcl D25, 111 1990.
" I was playi ng basketball in
Italy at the tune. l told my dad, tf
he found a biplane I could fit m,
to buy lt. I'm so tall, I can't fit in
lllOSt."

The New Standard filled the
btU . One of the roomiest biplanes
ever butlt, the vehicle was
deSigned especially for ptlots called barnstormers - who flew
from town to town g1vmg ndes
and pcrformmg &lt;tunts. .
The plane scm four paymg
passengers instead of th e usual
one or two.

Columbus, his hometown He and Ius wtfe,
Shana, are expecting their first child in Januaty.
As a member of the Cole's ongmal crew tn
1996, he said he feels special ties to the slup.
"You commissioned it; you're the ones who
made the modifications that made it wprk; you
always feel attached to it," he said. "That's my
baby."
At least three Ohio sailors suffered mjuries in
the USS Cole blast.
Mark Hawki.ns, a cluef gunnery mate fran;
Alliance m northeast Oluo, suffered a senous
but not life-threatening leg 111jury Hts wife,
Melinda Hawkins, who lives m Virginia 13each,
Va., had to wait until early Friday morning for
word on her husband's condition.

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Monday, October 16, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

•parents,' Titans' fend
Off slate of new

Honor

The marker is being funded
through the Longaberger Legacy
lmoat:J.vc , a cnntpettove grant proAI
~ram that pays for two-thtrds of
each marker, wh1le local sponsors
Ohio's historical marker pro- pay for the remaining thud.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The smce midsummer thar HollyCOOLVILLE- Mtlfred A. Holman, 83, of Coolvtllc died on Sun- gram IS administered by the Ohio
Members of the Rutland
betrnthal
comedy "Meet the wood scored an increase tn revday. Oct. 15, 2000 at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospttal 111 Parkers- Histoncal Soctety and began in Fnendly Gardeners Club collected
burg, W.Va .
'
1953 as part of the state's sesqut- $5(XJ fmm local busmesses to help Parents" is settling in for a enues over 1999 With a weak
lengthy engagement at theaters
slate of films, the industry was in
. F~neral arrarrgements wtll be announced by Whtte Funeral Home e&lt;ntennial celebration ..
p:f\&lt; the required local cost for ·
The
movie,
co-starring a box-office funk throughout
Ill Coolvtlle.
Between 1953 and !998, about secunng: the Jn.arker.
Robert De Niro and Ben Sttller, August an~ September ·
300 markers were placed around
Once it is in place, and that
topped thf box office for a secStudtos are countmg on ~
the state. As a result of the btcen- probably will not be until next
ond '&gt;t ratght weekend with continued upturn over the next
cennial , chere are 'now more than summer! a ceren1ony will be held $21.3 nulhon 111 ttcket sales,
couple of months, when some of
400, wtth another 200 to 300 to officially dedtcate the marker ac~ording to studio estimates
their biggest releases htt theaters .
motorists may take State Route 7 expected by 2003.
and recogmzc the man It honors .
Sunday.
Debuts between late October
or Coimry Roads 25 and 26 to
"Mt.&gt;et the Parents•' raised Its
and the end of th~ year mclude
TUPPERS PLAINS The bypass the construction.
total gross to. $59 nulhon in I 0
"Book of Shadows . Blm Witch
have thiS problem."
Eastern LocJl Board of Education
days of release
2"; "Charlte's Angels" ; " Dr
The survey. conducted thiS
Will hold a reb'l.llar meeting ~t
Denzel Washington's gndiron
St."uss'
How the Gnnch Srolc
year. mvolvcd students in grades . fl1ck , " Remember the Tttans ,"
6 30 p.m Wednesd ,1y at the
nmc through 12 m both pubhc WH in St'con d place for the sec- Chnstmas'', ' 102". f);~inlatlJilS";
AI
POMEROY Units of the
admm1str.1t10n bu1ldmg 111 Tup.md pnYatL' sch ools. P:unCJpaung ond \Veekt&gt;nd 111 J row With a Tom f-lanks' "Cast Away":
pl'rs Pbms ·
M~tgs
EmL'rg~nty
Sl'TVICL'S
Jose•p hson stopped &gt;hort (&gt;f schools lunded om :-.urveys wtth S 13.5 nul !ton gross. The mov1e " What Women Want" \\'lth Md
;tnswt.·n:d 13 calls f01 assistance
on.·r the Wtl'kcnd. Umts respond- :~sstgmng bl.une to J pnrtJCular 57 qucliuons ch.lt stud~nts. coulJ '"" nude S6-+ 7 nullton 111 17 G1bson and Hden Hum .l!ld
"Utlbrcak;~blc," \yhtch rctt..·.tms·
gaHtp, but hl' s.Hd p:~rcnts , leJL h- 'lUbllllt ,lJlllll)'lllOLISiy
ed .\S foil ems.
days
Th-.· rc . . u\to;; lud .1 m.u gm of
t..'i''l .111d co.Kht..·s nt..'t'd to p;~y sp~­
CENTRAL DISPATCH
A ru'h of m·w films bunched Bruce Wtllt s with M N1ght
L'ITOr
of
plm
of
lllllltl..,
3
pl"r·c
.
.
·ntci.ll
.Ht~..•ntton
bt•C.ltlSC
tbt'Y
h.l\'
t
..'
S.nurJ.l\·, I ~~ a m , Lynn
up bdund the holJo\'crs. open- Shyamalan, who \\'l'otc .md
POMEROY
rhe
oo Street. M.try G,u nc~. Plt.-.1s.mt V.1l~ the must ~tg ulfil.ll1t llltt'Lll tions .tg~..· poult'~
utg \\"ith dt'l't' nt but unspcctacu- dJrcn . .·d "Tht• Stxch Seme ··
\\'tth
y(nJng..,tc:r~
.
rilL'
l11gh
\Chool
rt''lLllt
.....
1long
Ahn~ / M.ttl\1"1..' Dn\·L·r ch~~ .,pon "Wh,·n tltt lwltd.1n roll
le•y Hospital;
l.tr number\.
\\'lth
''I'm
JhH
o;
,n·mg
rJt~n·
.tn.·n't
thu'&gt;t'
fm
1mddle
o;;duml...,
..,orcd by tht.· Amcnc.m AssoCJ ,l.\round.
tt's going to bc .1 frt't'') 07 .un , Ogdm Kn .1d ..lS&lt;.;JI;ft•d
The
s.Jt.unc~~.onspnJl)'
wiJI
bc
IIKiLh
..
Jc..d
ill
,l
Sl'r
lt'S
of
'lOlllC
nut
thc1c
domg
thl'lr
best,"
twn of Rct!rt.•d Pa~ons :1nd tht.• by Rutl.HH.I. En·rc·tt Hutton .
thnlln " Lo st Souls,'' scarrmg for-,1ll There'll be' two 01 three·
three
fim[..,
rqHnto;
ro
he
Jeii.•.Jst..•
d
h
.
.
·
'did
"Bm
If
.ill
three.•
\\t..'rt..•
rvt\..·ig~ County Counnl Oil Agmg.
l'VH;
Wumn.l H. . yder .md' 13cn Chap- blockbustt..•rs . opl'mng t..'\ c 1, .
d01ng
then
best.
\\'1..'
wouldn't
I.Hcr
th1~
\'l'.H.
Inc \nil be hdd Oct. 2~-2'i from
Su1~d;ly, 2 01 ' .1m.· Union
1m. debuted 111 thnd place w1th Wt:ekcnd:· s:nd Robl'rr But..k'&gt;Ill a m to 2 30 p m at the Sentor Avcnth.', C.uoluH.' H.. t·cvcs, PVII:
baum of Reel Source· In c.
SS ~ mt!lwn
Citizens Cl'llter
9·12 a m , N:\ulbt•rry Avt'lllll',
"The I:adtes Man," stanmg wh1ch tracks the box office
The L'Jg-ht-h~H~I
cla~~toom Edith Darton. l'VH;
In lmuced rele ase, rhe Britt"&gt; h
T1m Me.1dows 111 a big-screen
refresher counc wlll n:fine t'X!StI 0:5~ a.m., Lynn Street. Milt.1kc Lm }uo; womamzmg "Sa·wr- film "Billy Elliot," about a boy 111
mg dnv mg skills and discuss .1ge dred Arnold , Holzer Med~eal
eby Ntght L1ve" character. a nuning town who bucks tradirebted changes that may affect Ce nter;
opened at No ~ wtth SS 7 nul- tion to study ballet, had a
lion ...
12:17 p.m .. Happy Hollow, Leta
dnvmg sktlls. Cost of the class ts
prOilllStllg U.S. debut. The 1110VIC
PORTSMOUTH, Va (A I') :lttack 1.\st \\'t..•ck .tt a Yemcm port
"The Contender" debuted in opened in 10 che aters w1th
S l 0, With a certificate of comple- McKmght, PVH;
2 09 p.m., Beech Street, Mar- Lougc Gunn needed a place to
None of the lllJUred has a It:: - tifth pla ce wnh S5.5 mtlhon . $220,000 for an unpresstve
tion awarded to ,til who complete
garet Nun, PVH;
lame·nt the death of his son, threatening mjury, and doctors The drama about a viCe prest- S22,000 average per theater. By
the class
5
17
p.m.
South
Third
Street.
Cherone
Gunn, one . of the 17 t..'xpcctcd some to be released from Jcnttll nom1nce caught m a sex comparison, "Lost Souls" had a
For inform:ltlon, tnntan Ahet:
satlors k1lled 111 the USS Cole bfa,t
the lmsp1tal Monday
scandal 'tars Joan Allen, Jeff $4,263 average in I, 970 theaters
Wamsley,
AARP
volunteer Bnb F1fe, HMC.
"We
have
33
very
tired,
very
"When.
you'tc
111
pam
like
that
l3ndges and Gary Oldman.
POMEROY
instructor, at 992-2\61.
Esttmated ttcket sales for FnThe retssue of"The Exorcist" day through Sunday at North
Sunday. 5:16 p.m., Beech you think you need a shot of hungry. but wry happy sailors," satd
Street, Donme Edwards, HMC
cognac, but what I really needed Capt Martin Snyder, the semor came m at No.6 Wt\h $5.4 •mi.- American theaters , ac cordmg to
RUTLAND
was a shot of the church," he sa.td as attending
phySician
at
the lion It expanded to 1,655 the- Exhibttor Relattons Co. Inc
Saturday, 12 ·04 p.m , State Ius son was reincmbered at the Portsmouth Naval Hospital where aters, an mcrease of 505. The
Ftnal figures were to be released
Route . 124, Shane Napper, Basilica ofSt Mary of the Immacu- the 30 mole and three female sailors film has taken m $30 7 tmlhon
Monday.
POMEROY
Culvert O'Bleness Memonal Hospital;
in just over three weeks.
late Conception 111 Norfolk, where were taken
1 "Meet the Parents," $21.3
replacement work will be perRobert Altman's latest film,
2·40 p.m. Sand Ridge, assme&lt;!._ he was chnstened 22 years ago.
Soon after the C-141 medical
nul.h on.
formed on Texas Road (C. R. 82) by Cen.tral Dtspatch, Edtth Welch,
The memonal serviCe for Sea- transport plane landed from Ger- "Dr T and the Women," was
2 "Remember the Titans ,".
by the Meigs County Depart- treated,
man Cherone Louis Gunn was held man}'t relatives raced across the tar- No. 7 with $5.2 million. The
S13.5 nullion.
ment of Transportation on
Sunday, 12 ·26 p m., Whites Hill Sunday, the same day of the return mac to embrace the battered crew comedy stars RIChard Gere as a
3. "Lost Souls," $8.4 millton. ,
Wednesday and Thursday from Road, Arthur Miller, HMC.
of his 33 sh1p mates who were mt::mbers , who came ouc one by gynecologist struggling with the
4. "The Ladtes Man ," $57
many women in his hfe.
8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m .
SYRACUSE
injured m the suspected. terrorist one to a steady ring of applause.
"These were all mtddle-of- nulhon .
The road wtll be opened after
Sunday, 11 :55 a m., Lmcoln
5. "The Contender," S5 .5
the-road debuts, but I thtnk
3.30 p.m. on both days aqd Heights, Audrey Backus, PVH.
everyone expected tha; 'Meet mtllion.
6 "The ExorCISt," $5.4 milthe Parents' would donunate the
Dox office again," satd Paul Der- bon .
7 "Dr. T and the Women,"
garabedtan,
preStdem
of
Sity tend to favor the plan to.-' /
$5.2
nullion.
Exhibitor RelatiOns Co. Inc. ,'
nu.k.e wconung -studen ts pay )
8. "Get Carter," $2 7 nullton
which trncks movH:' attt:nd;-tnct'.
more
9 (tie). "Almost Famous." S2 3
Overall, the top 12 films
'' It\ not f;n r to s;~Jd le the
AI
grm&gt;ed S75. 7 nullton, up 6 5 nulhon.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tud.ty P.1 rrlv doudy H1ghs 111
· freshmen. but 1f they r.use· the
9 (t1e). "Best 111 Shm\. · S2 .1
j1l'flL'Jlt ftolll tht· ~.l&lt;tlH' \\t..'ekend
mon Jt l)hm St.tte qualifies .1s a tuttH)ll ·on -.·verybody, thr.:y'rc
A cloudy. Lonl ,md r.Hny day Js rhc lowc1 70;;
.1 ycJr .lg~&gt;. It. w.1s the first tunc null ion .
. "
To1ughr 13....·conHng cloud\·
r n~1~
gomg · ro bt• more ltkdy to lost• fiH·c cast for the tri-co~mty rl'g!On
An .tltnn.ltt' pbn would olde1 stuLkm-.,:· 'l.ud Tun W111g. Tucslby. but 11 \\on 't !.1:-.t lung. the Ch.u1ce of 1.1111 Lmn ...J.j to 50
N.m01ul Wc.nhc1 St'l ,.,.._.t• s.ud.
clurg-.· 'it.lt11.hrd tUJtlon mcrc .lsC~ 2-L ;~ · s . .·nJor hl..,tnry lllJ_JOr.
Tut;cby .. Cloudy R.11n hkdy.
' "Y"tl'lll p.~S.Si ng Htglh .nnund 7fl
for curn.·1 H ~tudcm.;; .md hlgherA
In\\"
prt..•ssur~
Mikt~ · Ro l hnn. ! &lt;J.•1 bu s tncs~
th.m - ltollll.ll 1111.. l l.'.l ~cs for' mcomto tht..· . . ou th ~)f thL· tcgron wdl
Extended forecast
llUJOr, -,,lid h1 ght•r frc-.,hm.lll
Subscribe today.
Tul''iti.ty
111ght Mmt ly cloudy.
mg \tttd-.·nt)i.
produce
tht..·,
r.ltn
I
hgh
tt..'mper.ltumon might C.1llse .1 d1vt• 1011
E1ther optml_l ·1" likl'l) to Clll'll' b~t\\'C:C:ll cl.t:-.sc:-.. " It will just 111.1kc: tUIT'i Will be Ill th e uppt..'l l!h to A L h.llli..l' of r. 1111 Low:, lli tht..• ...J.()"
Wcd11c:-.d.1\ .. A ch,mcc of shuwproblcJ!l~.
the: frc:shm.ln cbss mort..' chtc:. low ()( '"
Thr.: m-.·mos s;l!d chargu1g dJf- They've· alrc'.1dy r.Hsc·d the ACT
Thc r.1111 \\'ill mm·t..• out of the L'I'"'. I hghs 111 the ()(b
fermg fllltJnn r.1tr.:~ would be h.ud (Amencan Co ll ege Tt..•st) suue 1cgton Wcdnc,tby..md f:11r sk1c"
r hund.l\' F.ur Lows tn rhc.•
to justtfy. \\ hile chor~mg .til stu~~~\ (-!Jghl IJC',II 711.
,IJ'C expeltt..•d the rt..'~t of thL' \\LTk.
rcqlllrcment~ for them,' ' he s.nd
dr.:nts :1 r.Hc th:H Ius Increased by
Fnd .1y.. F.1ir. Lo\\' 111 the ~Os
Mr11 th.l C.ll bnd. Ulll\'"L'rstty fim: c.lstcr'l s.ud
more th.1n (, percent annually
Forecast
H1ghs 711 to 7'i
' '!CC provost and dc:\11 of undcrcould be perce1ved as unfatr qy
gr;-tdllJte studlt..'S, s~nd ~he f:tvorcd
~tudcnts now :fttendmg Oh1o
n smgle tumon for undcrgr:tduSwe, The DISpatch reported.
Jres
"Current &gt;tudents would sttll
She s;ud higher tmtlon would AEP- 38'l.e
Gannett - 52',,
Rocky Boots - 5
be paytng Significantly more than
This Sunday in...
General Electnc - 57
RD Shell - 62 ~.
c.mablc thc umn·rsitv to create an Akzo - 43J, ·
\\'har they would be paying when
AmTech/SBC - 50 \
Harley Davidson -+- 44\
Sears - 31 ·~
Kmart - 5'~ ~
Shoney's - \2
they fim enrolled and would not "cxc1ttng challenge" that would ~i~~~ 1;~.,, -n·,
Kroger - 21 '!1,•
Wai·MM- 45
bnng
Ohto
State
closet
to
its
goal
share propomonately 111 the ben 0
1
Lands
End
20
Wendy's- 19'•
Bank
One
33
.&amp;
of"unprovmg the ~tudent expenc-fits," one memo s.l!d.
Ltd - 21",,
Worthmgton- 9
Bob Evans - 17 ~,~
ence
.
BorgWarner
33
,~
O,ak
H1ll
Fi~anc
1
al
14',
Another memo sa1d a smglc
Daily stock reports are the
OVB- 26 •
"I do thmk we wJnt to do Champion - 2\
tUitiOn rate would challenge umBBT- 28',
Charm1ng Shops - 5~.6
4 p m clOSing quotes of
vcrslty deans to co me up \Vit·h some speCI.ll thmg~ for the olde1 C11y Holding - 6',6
the prev10us day's transPeoples - 13'·•
Premter- 5'l
actions.
prov1ded by
cxtr.ts fm upperclassmen so they students who nught say, 'ThiS Federal Mogul - 4
F1rstar16 '~.,.
Rockwell - 32' -.e
Advest
ol
Gallipolis
c.tn fed they're gettmg more for (tuition increase) may make
thtngs better later- but I'm here
their money
'l1U :Meigs County Cfiam.Der of Commerce Presents
Students .tlready at the univcr- now;" Garland satd

from Page

Mildred A. Holman

LOCAL BRIEFS

Board to meet

Study

EMS log 13 calls

from Page

1

Mature driving
class to.be offered

Families welcome battered Cole .
sailors;.others mourn losses

Culvert work set
to begin

VALLEY WEATHER

Fair ·skies to return

TUition
from Page

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
992-2156

MoneySmart

Lo~ns 6

omen
m

LOCAL STOCKS

\15

..

1

,

1

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gallrlbune@eurekanet com

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

To offer sto~ suggestions! report latebreaKing news and offer news tips

"'Ten qreat ;)ears of Progress"
.flwniversa'"!l Cefe6ration
' 1990-2000
(jenera{ '13usiness :Meting
:Miaafeport Cfr.urcfi of Cfr.rist
~amily Life Center
:Monaay Octo6er 23, 2000
5:30 - 9:00pm

Mon. Oct, l6th thru Thurs. OcL l9th
Doors Ope~ Al6:JO PM MoL '""' Fri.
**~~**

111 CONIINIII .
1M!.

T

n nnm T

lOST IIW

111 LAiiJ MAN
Al1tlliT FAMIUS
OOBlN

'i'

7

"T

'11""

RMMB8111f m

Speciaf quest Speaf:sr
'Two 'Time Jieisman 'Tropfr.y Winner
:Me. 5l.rcfr.ie yriffin
of tfie Dfr.io State 'University

6:50, 9:45
6:501 9;45
7:30, 9:55
7:40.S:45
6:55, 9:40
7;00, 9:35
7:oo, 9:4o

'Tu:f:sts $25.00

*

*P..'•- A,.j "'7'- 'ltlui*
r.lfT THE PAlmS ~ 7:20, 9;50
IIIIANlfmfliD!t ~ 7:25, 9:55
liT CMlBI "'"'::)' 7:30, 9:55

.91.vai!a6fe a~ t!U Cfiainber office or
6y ca[fing (740} 992-5005
'Dress
. . - '13usiness Jl.ttire .
ALMOST FAMOUS (A) '
7:0Q SUN-THURS ••

All AGES, All TIMES $4.00

J

�•

Page A2 • The Dally Sentinel

Report: Legislators are banks for candidates

BUCKEYE . BRIEFS
People stealing ginseng herb

AKRON (AP) -Whtle donations to sute unlinuted amounts on television advertising
candidates are limited by a campaign finance for candidat~.
reform law, legislators have been acting as
None of the $10 million-plus that has been
"banks," gtvmg unlimited amounts to their distributed is taken from a legislator's W2g~.
caucus and political parties, the Akron Beacon
Ncrt all lawmakers act as banks, and some
Journal reported.
banks are bigger than others.
lndtviduals and political action conm1ittees
More than 20 current lawmakers have given
can gtve a maximum of $5,000, based on the more than $100,000 each from their cam1995 law that limits contnbution amounts.
. patgns to caucuses, local and st&lt;tte parries or
But several lawmakers have been collecting .other legislative candidat~ since 1995.
more frequent donations of smaller amounts
Richard Finan, R-Cincinnati. has been
from many of the same supporters, the 'bea- Senate prestdent si.nce 1997, and Jo Ann
con Journal reported Sunday.
Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg, has been House
Wnh legislative banks, the campaign com- speaker since 1995. Neither needs money to
mittee or bank contributes the donation&gt; to be reelected.
·
another candidate, party or legislative caucus,
Yet Davidson bas raised $1.1 million since
the newspaper said.
1995 and bas 'given away more than 94 cents
Since 1995, legislative banks have collected of every dollar contributed to her. Finan has
$8.2 nnllion in contnbuqons for the four leg- given away more than 97 percent of what he
islative caucuses, $1.1 million for other leg- has collected.
islanve candidates and at least $948,000 for
Most of their money has been moved to the
state aa1d county political parties.
caucus campatgn funds they control.
The process also allows caucuses to spend
The Ohio House Republican Campaign

CLEVELAND (AP) - People are searching, digging and stealmg in southern and eastern Oh10 for wild ginseng, a medtcmal herb
that trades for up to $400 a pound, a newspaper reported.
State officials say Ohio's woodlands yield an average of about
~.800 pounds of gmseng a year "Sangers"- a word denved from
the hill country pronunciation of gin-sang - unearthed about
12,000 pounds m 1992, the best harvest to date.
With ginseng's populanty, many complam about thieves thro!'ghout Appalachian said Mike Taylor, a state wildlife officer in Athens,
in a stoty published Monday m The Plam Dealer.
"They are all complauung their patches get robbed," said Taylor,
who has .made about a dozen arrests so far this year. "You've got
people who slide m, dig It and shde out, they 're gone. What's the
mcemive? Money.You're talking tax- free, ta.'&lt;-exempt money."
Ohio is among the top five producers of ginseng m the country
About 90 percent of all cultivated ginseng comes from central Wisconsm _

Monday, October 16, 2GOO-

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

The Umted States exports hundred' of tons a year, mostly to
Chma.
··
Commeroal gmse ng farmmg IS expenSive and demandmg
because plants take years to culttvate, sml has to be stenhzed and it
doesn't fetch nearly the amount of money as Its wild counterpart
Ohio has already seized this year about 9,500 dned roots that
were poached from secluded tracts owned by coal compames or off
federal land in the Wayne National Forest.

Committee has raised $10.1 million from
1995 through the pnmaty m 2000. The
Republican Senate Campaign Committee
took m $7.7 million during the same period.
Democrats also use the legislative banking
system but raise less money - about $1 for
every $5 raised by legislative Repubhcans because they have been the minority party
since campaign finance reform went mto
effect.
Legislative leaders were banks before the
campaign finance reform law. Former House
Speaker Vernal Riffe held birthday parties
each year to raise large amounts of money to
spend on Democratic legislative candidates m
election years.
.
The banks have caused opposition between
lawmakers and lobb}'lsts in Columbus.
Thomas Green, a Columbus lobbyist who
heads the Ohio Lobbying Associatton, satd
legislators hold frequent fund-ratsers m
Columbus instead of raising money in their
local districts.
·

Clerk of Courts pioneers Teachers' union finds
electronic election filing loophole in cameaign .

Police arrest third susped
NEW CASTLE, Pa. (AP) - Pohce arresred a thtrd man m the
death of a 12-year-old Ohio g1rl found dead 111 Lawrence County,
about one mile from the Ohio border. last week.
Perry Sam Rtcoardt, 20, of Struthers, was arrested Sunday and
cha rged wtth honucide in the death of Shannon Letgh Kos of
Youngstown.
1\(,o other men from Struthers were arrested Saturday Wilham
George Monday, 21. and Davtd Chnstophet Garvey, 20.
Both were arrested m Lawrence County and charged wtth cnmmal homtcide and abuse of a corpse. Police said they believe the two
men tned to burn the gtrl's body after she died.
All three suspects were being held m Lawrence County Jatl without bond
Ricctardt was arratgned Sunday. before Mount Jackson DIStrict
Justtce J.V. Lamb. Monday and Garvey were arraigned Saturday.

CINCINNATI
(AP)
Lawyers soon will be able to file
legal documents in Hamtlton
County courts withOut lugging
boxes of paper to Cincinnati.
Instead, they can send them over
the Internet with the click of a
mouse
Clerk of Courts Jim Cissell says
he expects the system to be up by
the first of the year.
''(Cyberspace) is where hfe is
gomg to be in the next few
years," Ctssell satd. "It JUSt happens that we're the first office to
do 1t in the state of Ohio."
Lawyers will ' have to reg1ster
with CISsell's office to send documents
"To me, this is a miracle what'
he's domg," Ctncmh~ti attorney
Ttm Snuth said. 'This IS the n!ost
advanced clerk's office in the
world .. there's no gomg over
there and standing 111 line. What
could be better&gt;"
lnittally, the system wtll accept
elecrronic filings only in Common Pleas civil· and some
Domesttc Relattons cases. Once
the bugs are worked out, tt will
be expanded to include felony
critninal cases and all other Gl~es.
The electronic transmiSSions of
the lawsuits which wtll be
encrypted or "scrambled" so they

nience of those who want paper
or those who have to feel the
paper in thetr hands," Ctssell said.
Those wanting to use the system will receive a sign-on name
and password. Besides providing
the sender access to t"e system, it
also allows Cissell's office to trace
any computer virus to the sender.
When the electromc filing is
made, Cissell's staff wtll review it
to make sure it has been properly filled out and filed by the
sender and check to be sure all
the pages have been received. If
not, the filing will be returned usmg e-nml to the sender
with an explanation on why it
was. reJected ~
The move allows Cissell to
automate several portions of the
filing process.
· Now: when a suit is filed, the
paperwork is scanned mto a
compu~er
and later placed
through a machine that microfilms it.
With the cybersuits, those steps
will be elimmated - as will the
need for millions of square feet of
space to store the paper documents.
The Ohto Supreme Court IS
watchmg Cissell's efforts, hoping
to use hiS program as the model
for cyberfiling across the state.
can't be read 1f the transmissions
Last year, CISSell received the
are intercepted will then Computerworld
Smithsonian
become the offictal documents of Award m the Government and
the case.
Non-profit Orgamzations cate"The only time there Will be gory for his work in computerizpaper entries is for the conve- ing court records

Student finds ss,ooo
OXFORD (AP)- When freshman Adam Stricker found S5,000
i.n tliree rain-soaked envelopes 111 a Miami Umvemty parking lot,
he thought it was some sort of"Candtd Camera" stunt.
"At first I thought somebody was watching me. I thought 1t was
some type of game," he satd
Stricker, 18, ofTrotwood, turned in tht• money wtthout hesttatton. Later, he found ou t it had been lost by a Miamt professor.
"It was rammg, 1 was rushmg l got to the office and noticed it
(miSSing) tmmediately and started gmng back (to the parkmg lot),"
&lt;atd Ben Voth, an associate professor of commumcations.
The money was for trtps by Mtamt 's forenstcs team, which Voth
advises.
"I just had to take acuon nght away;· Stricker said. "I went ahead
and turned the money in instead of asking (friends) what to do.
They m1ght have tned to pressure me mto keepmg lt. I wanted to
do the right thing."
Stncker satd he was on hiS way to hiS dornutory room Oct. 5
when he found the money.
· "! kmd of had different thoughts running through'my head .. but
turned it m immediately," Stncker sa1d. "! d1dn't feel hke l was
domg anything extra speoal. It wasn't my money, and it was a lot of
money to take from 'omebody."
Voth satd Stncke r's action was "mcred1bly ethical."
'Tm thrilled that Adam d1d what he did,"Voth saJd

Cincinnati to honor mayor
CINCINNATI (AP) - The City plans to honor Th'eo dore M
Gerry, Its fim black mayor, by havmg his body he tn state at C1ty
!;jail.
: Berry, 94, d1ed Sunday at a nurstng home in suburban Lovdand
~uneral plans were pendmg. but mayor C harhe Luken was making
arrange ments to have· Berry's body lie in state.
: " I thmk 1t would be fittmg," Luken satd. "Ted Berry IS one of the
§rca test Cmcmnatians of all time. He led our city to a better place
1j1 the area of CIVIl nghts."
. Berty, who was born Ill Maysv ille, Ky., was pronunent m local
Rolmcs for four decades. He served as prestdent of the local
NAAC P chapter and was the first black asSistant Hanulton County
prosecutor before winnmg a seat on City CounCil m I ~49.
: He had council terms tn the 1950s and 1960s before servmg as
the City's first black mayor from 1972-75, when counc tl members
dect ded among th emselves v..ho would get the largely cc re momal
JOb.
.
" He brought hope," satd Manan Spencer, the first black woman
elected to Ctry Council. " He brought fatth in a system that many
people had lost fatth m."

contribution limttation

AKRON (AP) -The state's
largest teachers union has created three pohtical acuon committees and can donate more
money than what is limited by
a campaign finance reform law,
the Akron Beacon Journal
reported.
The 0 hto Education Association has given as much as
$7,500 through the primary
election to candidates running
for the Ohio House and Senate. The amount exceeds ·the
contribution limit for one calendar year and is three times
the amount allowed m an election cycle.
Based on a 1995 law that limits contribution amounts, individuals and PACs can donate
only $2,500 in a primary election and $2,500 m a general
election.
The new law also prohibits
organizations from creating
multiple PACs.
But the three PACs that the
OEA operates are legal, union
president Michael Billirakis
told the newspaper for a Monday story.
The umott, which represents
118,000 teachers, contributes
from its origmal committee and
an OEA Crisis Fund PAC th.at
was created m August 1995.
The OEA created the thtrd
PAC, the Pohtical Contributing
Entity PAC, after a proviston of

the 1995 law was challenged
and overturned in state and
federal courts. The provlSlon
prohibited unions from using ·
dues for political activity.
The ongmal PAC raises
money from union memben
who have indicated that they
want money from thetr pay"
checks going to the fund The
new PAC receives money from
th.e OEA's treasury. wluch IS
funded by uniot;t dues
]. Curtis Mayhew, Secretary
of State Kenneth Blackwell's
cantpaign finance admimstrator, said the three PACs are
legal, perhaps due to the lack of
clarity in the law.
"You can have multiple
PACs, but you will share a contribution limit if you are affihated, but affihatton is hard to
prove," Mayhew sat d.
Mayhew said affiliation is
based on the people headmg
the PACs and not the orgamzation, busmess or umon behmd
them.
Laura Yeomans, 'an Ohto Citizens Action spokeswoman, said
the OEA and simtlar organizations should be limited to operating one PAC.
"If one organizataon can
operate muluple PACs, giving
at the maximum contnbunon
hmits, contnbution limits will
have no meaning," Yeomans
said.

Columbus man trained sailor killed in blast
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Jonathan Dugan has fend memories of the
tune he served on the USS Cole. But he knows
that if he was s~ll part of the ship's crew, he
could have been killed.
Dugan, 23, of Columbus was a hull-maintenance tcchmcian on the navy destroyer. The
sailor he tramed as hts replacement, Kenneth
Clodfelter, of Mechansvtlle, Va., was k1lled
Thursday when an apparent terronst bomb
blew a hole m the Cole's hull.
The engineenng shop in wluch Dugan
worked IS JUSt down the passageway from
Engine Room No. I, where the exploSion tore
a hole in the ship's hull while it was refueling in
a Mtddle Ea.stern port.

98 Degrees' Lachey weds
CINC INNATI (AP)- Smger Drew Lac hey of98 Degrees married hiS longtime glflfnet;td over the weeke~d.
Lachey, 24, marned Lea Dellecave dunng an unpubhCized cere•;1ony Saturday at a Pre,bytenan church downtown . Dellccave, 24,
I&gt; a choreographer and onstage dan cer for the band.
The couple g rew up m Cmcmnatt and have known each other
'.IIICC the fifth grade, the bnde's mother, Cern Dellecave, told The
( ·lnnnnati Enqlllrer for a story pubhshed Monday.
The couple attended Cmcmnatt's School for the Creative and
Pcrfo rrmng Arts, as dtd fellow band members Justm Jcffre and NICk
Lac hey, Drew's brother

''I'm thmking of the poor 18-year-old kid I
trained to take over my job;' Dugan said of
Clodfelter. "He was a real good kid. He was a
country boy from down in the South- he had
a good heart."
One of Dugan's friends, Marc Nieto, an
engmeman second class from Fond du Lac,
Wis., also was killed.
"We hung out together all the time on the
ship," Dugan '"1d. "He would do oddball things
to make you laugh. One ttme I was on the
phone talking to my mom, and he came into
the room and started JUmptng up and down on
the bed tn his underwear. That's the kind of
thing he would do."
After leaving the Navy, Dugan returned ·to

Rare plane gives athlete
2nd career as barnstormer

Veteran gets Medal of Honor

COLU MBUS (AP) - When
people ask, "How's the weather
up there'" the former basketball
player offer, to let them sec for

P IQUA (AP) - A Vtetnam vete ran who Oew more · than J(IIJ
llelicopter rescu~ 1111\~lons over an etgpr-month pcnod will posthumously recetvc the Medal of Honor.
·
Congress last week approved the national's h1ghcst mthtary tnbute for Air Force AlTman lst Class Wilham H Pitsenbarger
On Apnl II , 1966, Pit1cnbarger made his last tnp down the helicopter rescue hoist mto the Jungle durmg fierce fighnng near C:un
My, cast of Saigon, to help ptnncd-down Army '"u,dt1r1.
\
Ptrsenbarger, of P1gua, sravcd hchmJ \\hen TLiitliC Jttcmpts had to
be Jbandoned after the hu\.t.:rJlif-!; ht·!Jl!lJHl'T Wl'. l11t hv l'llt' lll Y fire.
Credited Wtth savtng llll1t lt'l.·c.,, he !tht Ill~ o'' 11.
He had been .,hot fnu1 1 , 111 tLc m~ht-lnng f n l1ght between
,,l,liC th.tn 400Vtct ( ong 1 It rnhtT .md I q Apll'rl&lt;.lll '.o ld1e n By
h.Jttle's end, 101\ were kdl ed or wounde·ti
"He knew s-'lut the hell w" go111g on
what could lupr en to
hint, and still he dtd it . f-Ie had been dm\n th11t rope IIJ.Iny tiltH's
into the JUilgle," md Henry O ' lleirnc

rhen1selvcs.
The 6-foot-l 0-mch Rob Lock
spends hiS tune these days barnstortmng the Mtdwe1t, giVIng
rides in hiS I ')29 b1planc.
"That\ the problem when
you 'n; 111 professional sports." satd
Luck, who ome played for the
NBA's Los Angdes Clippers.
"You're 30 years old, and your
resume IS only this lon g," he s:ud,
holdmg his thumb an mch from
hiS forefinger. "What are you
good .1t?"
The answer, for Lock, was "nymg."
HaS f.nher taught avJatlon

r

mechamcs for 31 years before
rettring a year ago.
"So it's in my blood," he said.
Lock stumbled upon hts
btplane, a rare New Standarcl D25, 111 1990.
" I was playi ng basketball in
Italy at the tune. l told my dad, tf
he found a biplane I could fit m,
to buy lt. I'm so tall, I can't fit in
lllOSt."

The New Standard filled the
btU . One of the roomiest biplanes
ever butlt, the vehicle was
deSigned especially for ptlots called barnstormers - who flew
from town to town g1vmg ndes
and pcrformmg &lt;tunts. .
The plane scm four paymg
passengers instead of th e usual
one or two.

Columbus, his hometown He and Ius wtfe,
Shana, are expecting their first child in Januaty.
As a member of the Cole's ongmal crew tn
1996, he said he feels special ties to the slup.
"You commissioned it; you're the ones who
made the modifications that made it wprk; you
always feel attached to it," he said. "That's my
baby."
At least three Ohio sailors suffered mjuries in
the USS Cole blast.
Mark Hawki.ns, a cluef gunnery mate fran;
Alliance m northeast Oluo, suffered a senous
but not life-threatening leg 111jury Hts wife,
Melinda Hawkins, who lives m Virginia 13each,
Va., had to wait until early Friday morning for
word on her husband's condition.

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Monday, October 16, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

•parents,' Titans' fend
Off slate of new

Honor

The marker is being funded
through the Longaberger Legacy
lmoat:J.vc , a cnntpettove grant proAI
~ram that pays for two-thtrds of
each marker, wh1le local sponsors
Ohio's historical marker pro- pay for the remaining thud.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The smce midsummer thar HollyCOOLVILLE- Mtlfred A. Holman, 83, of Coolvtllc died on Sun- gram IS administered by the Ohio
Members of the Rutland
betrnthal
comedy "Meet the wood scored an increase tn revday. Oct. 15, 2000 at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospttal 111 Parkers- Histoncal Soctety and began in Fnendly Gardeners Club collected
burg, W.Va .
'
1953 as part of the state's sesqut- $5(XJ fmm local busmesses to help Parents" is settling in for a enues over 1999 With a weak
lengthy engagement at theaters
slate of films, the industry was in
. F~neral arrarrgements wtll be announced by Whtte Funeral Home e&lt;ntennial celebration ..
p:f\&lt; the required local cost for ·
The
movie,
co-starring a box-office funk throughout
Ill Coolvtlle.
Between 1953 and !998, about secunng: the Jn.arker.
Robert De Niro and Ben Sttller, August an~ September ·
300 markers were placed around
Once it is in place, and that
topped thf box office for a secStudtos are countmg on ~
the state. As a result of the btcen- probably will not be until next
ond '&gt;t ratght weekend with continued upturn over the next
cennial , chere are 'now more than summer! a ceren1ony will be held $21.3 nulhon 111 ttcket sales,
couple of months, when some of
400, wtth another 200 to 300 to officially dedtcate the marker ac~ording to studio estimates
their biggest releases htt theaters .
motorists may take State Route 7 expected by 2003.
and recogmzc the man It honors .
Sunday.
Debuts between late October
or Coimry Roads 25 and 26 to
"Mt.&gt;et the Parents•' raised Its
and the end of th~ year mclude
TUPPERS PLAINS The bypass the construction.
total gross to. $59 nulhon in I 0
"Book of Shadows . Blm Witch
have thiS problem."
Eastern LocJl Board of Education
days of release
2"; "Charlte's Angels" ; " Dr
The survey. conducted thiS
Will hold a reb'l.llar meeting ~t
Denzel Washington's gndiron
St."uss'
How the Gnnch Srolc
year. mvolvcd students in grades . fl1ck , " Remember the Tttans ,"
6 30 p.m Wednesd ,1y at the
nmc through 12 m both pubhc WH in St'con d place for the sec- Chnstmas'', ' 102". f);~inlatlJilS";
AI
POMEROY Units of the
admm1str.1t10n bu1ldmg 111 Tup.md pnYatL' sch ools. P:unCJpaung ond \Veekt&gt;nd 111 J row With a Tom f-lanks' "Cast Away":
pl'rs Pbms ·
M~tgs
EmL'rg~nty
Sl'TVICL'S
Jose•p hson stopped &gt;hort (&gt;f schools lunded om :-.urveys wtth S 13.5 nul !ton gross. The mov1e " What Women Want" \\'lth Md
;tnswt.·n:d 13 calls f01 assistance
on.·r the Wtl'kcnd. Umts respond- :~sstgmng bl.une to J pnrtJCular 57 qucliuons ch.lt stud~nts. coulJ '"" nude S6-+ 7 nullton 111 17 G1bson and Hden Hum .l!ld
"Utlbrcak;~blc," \yhtch rctt..·.tms·
gaHtp, but hl' s.Hd p:~rcnts , leJL h- 'lUbllllt ,lJlllll)'lllOLISiy
ed .\S foil ems.
days
Th-.· rc . . u\to;; lud .1 m.u gm of
t..'i''l .111d co.Kht..·s nt..'t'd to p;~y sp~­
CENTRAL DISPATCH
A ru'h of m·w films bunched Bruce Wtllt s with M N1ght
L'ITOr
of
plm
of
lllllltl..,
3
pl"r·c
.
.
·ntci.ll
.Ht~..•ntton
bt•C.ltlSC
tbt'Y
h.l\'
t
..'
S.nurJ.l\·, I ~~ a m , Lynn
up bdund the holJo\'crs. open- Shyamalan, who \\'l'otc .md
POMEROY
rhe
oo Street. M.try G,u nc~. Plt.-.1s.mt V.1l~ the must ~tg ulfil.ll1t llltt'Lll tions .tg~..· poult'~
utg \\"ith dt'l't' nt but unspcctacu- dJrcn . .·d "Tht• Stxch Seme ··
\\'tth
y(nJng..,tc:r~
.
rilL'
l11gh
\Chool
rt''lLllt
.....
1long
Ahn~ / M.ttl\1"1..' Dn\·L·r ch~~ .,pon "Wh,·n tltt lwltd.1n roll
le•y Hospital;
l.tr number\.
\\'lth
''I'm
JhH
o;
,n·mg
rJt~n·
.tn.·n't
thu'&gt;t'
fm
1mddle
o;;duml...,
..,orcd by tht.· Amcnc.m AssoCJ ,l.\round.
tt's going to bc .1 frt't'') 07 .un , Ogdm Kn .1d ..lS&lt;.;JI;ft•d
The
s.Jt.unc~~.onspnJl)'
wiJI
bc
IIKiLh
..
Jc..d
ill
,l
Sl'r
lt'S
of
'lOlllC
nut
thc1c
domg
thl'lr
best,"
twn of Rct!rt.•d Pa~ons :1nd tht.• by Rutl.HH.I. En·rc·tt Hutton .
thnlln " Lo st Souls,'' scarrmg for-,1ll There'll be' two 01 three·
three
fim[..,
rqHnto;
ro
he
Jeii.•.Jst..•
d
h
.
.
·
'did
"Bm
If
.ill
three.•
\\t..'rt..•
rvt\..·ig~ County Counnl Oil Agmg.
l'VH;
Wumn.l H. . yder .md' 13cn Chap- blockbustt..•rs . opl'mng t..'\ c 1, .
d01ng
then
best.
\\'1..'
wouldn't
I.Hcr
th1~
\'l'.H.
Inc \nil be hdd Oct. 2~-2'i from
Su1~d;ly, 2 01 ' .1m.· Union
1m. debuted 111 thnd place w1th Wt:ekcnd:· s:nd Robl'rr But..k'&gt;Ill a m to 2 30 p m at the Sentor Avcnth.', C.uoluH.' H.. t·cvcs, PVII:
baum of Reel Source· In c.
SS ~ mt!lwn
Citizens Cl'llter
9·12 a m , N:\ulbt•rry Avt'lllll',
"The I:adtes Man," stanmg wh1ch tracks the box office
The L'Jg-ht-h~H~I
cla~~toom Edith Darton. l'VH;
In lmuced rele ase, rhe Britt"&gt; h
T1m Me.1dows 111 a big-screen
refresher counc wlll n:fine t'X!StI 0:5~ a.m., Lynn Street. Milt.1kc Lm }uo; womamzmg "Sa·wr- film "Billy Elliot," about a boy 111
mg dnv mg skills and discuss .1ge dred Arnold , Holzer Med~eal
eby Ntght L1ve" character. a nuning town who bucks tradirebted changes that may affect Ce nter;
opened at No ~ wtth SS 7 nul- tion to study ballet, had a
lion ...
12:17 p.m .. Happy Hollow, Leta
dnvmg sktlls. Cost of the class ts
prOilllStllg U.S. debut. The 1110VIC
PORTSMOUTH, Va (A I') :lttack 1.\st \\'t..•ck .tt a Yemcm port
"The Contender" debuted in opened in 10 che aters w1th
S l 0, With a certificate of comple- McKmght, PVH;
2 09 p.m., Beech Street, Mar- Lougc Gunn needed a place to
None of the lllJUred has a It:: - tifth pla ce wnh S5.5 mtlhon . $220,000 for an unpresstve
tion awarded to ,til who complete
garet Nun, PVH;
lame·nt the death of his son, threatening mjury, and doctors The drama about a viCe prest- S22,000 average per theater. By
the class
5
17
p.m.
South
Third
Street.
Cherone
Gunn, one . of the 17 t..'xpcctcd some to be released from Jcnttll nom1nce caught m a sex comparison, "Lost Souls" had a
For inform:ltlon, tnntan Ahet:
satlors k1lled 111 the USS Cole bfa,t
the lmsp1tal Monday
scandal 'tars Joan Allen, Jeff $4,263 average in I, 970 theaters
Wamsley,
AARP
volunteer Bnb F1fe, HMC.
"We
have
33
very
tired,
very
"When.
you'tc
111
pam
like
that
l3ndges and Gary Oldman.
POMEROY
instructor, at 992-2\61.
Esttmated ttcket sales for FnThe retssue of"The Exorcist" day through Sunday at North
Sunday. 5:16 p.m., Beech you think you need a shot of hungry. but wry happy sailors," satd
Street, Donme Edwards, HMC
cognac, but what I really needed Capt Martin Snyder, the semor came m at No.6 Wt\h $5.4 •mi.- American theaters , ac cordmg to
RUTLAND
was a shot of the church," he sa.td as attending
phySician
at
the lion It expanded to 1,655 the- Exhibttor Relattons Co. Inc
Saturday, 12 ·04 p.m , State Ius son was reincmbered at the Portsmouth Naval Hospital where aters, an mcrease of 505. The
Ftnal figures were to be released
Route . 124, Shane Napper, Basilica ofSt Mary of the Immacu- the 30 mole and three female sailors film has taken m $30 7 tmlhon
Monday.
POMEROY
Culvert O'Bleness Memonal Hospital;
in just over three weeks.
late Conception 111 Norfolk, where were taken
1 "Meet the Parents," $21.3
replacement work will be perRobert Altman's latest film,
2·40 p.m. Sand Ridge, assme&lt;!._ he was chnstened 22 years ago.
Soon after the C-141 medical
nul.h on.
formed on Texas Road (C. R. 82) by Cen.tral Dtspatch, Edtth Welch,
The memonal serviCe for Sea- transport plane landed from Ger- "Dr T and the Women," was
2 "Remember the Titans ,".
by the Meigs County Depart- treated,
man Cherone Louis Gunn was held man}'t relatives raced across the tar- No. 7 with $5.2 million. The
S13.5 nullion.
ment of Transportation on
Sunday, 12 ·26 p m., Whites Hill Sunday, the same day of the return mac to embrace the battered crew comedy stars RIChard Gere as a
3. "Lost Souls," $8.4 millton. ,
Wednesday and Thursday from Road, Arthur Miller, HMC.
of his 33 sh1p mates who were mt::mbers , who came ouc one by gynecologist struggling with the
4. "The Ladtes Man ," $57
many women in his hfe.
8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m .
SYRACUSE
injured m the suspected. terrorist one to a steady ring of applause.
"These were all mtddle-of- nulhon .
The road wtll be opened after
Sunday, 11 :55 a m., Lmcoln
5. "The Contender," S5 .5
the-road debuts, but I thtnk
3.30 p.m. on both days aqd Heights, Audrey Backus, PVH.
everyone expected tha; 'Meet mtllion.
6 "The ExorCISt," $5.4 milthe Parents' would donunate the
Dox office again," satd Paul Der- bon .
7 "Dr. T and the Women,"
garabedtan,
preStdem
of
Sity tend to favor the plan to.-' /
$5.2
nullion.
Exhibitor RelatiOns Co. Inc. ,'
nu.k.e wconung -studen ts pay )
8. "Get Carter," $2 7 nullton
which trncks movH:' attt:nd;-tnct'.
more
9 (tie). "Almost Famous." S2 3
Overall, the top 12 films
'' It\ not f;n r to s;~Jd le the
AI
grm&gt;ed S75. 7 nullton, up 6 5 nulhon.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tud.ty P.1 rrlv doudy H1ghs 111
· freshmen. but 1f they r.use· the
9 (t1e). "Best 111 Shm\. · S2 .1
j1l'flL'Jlt ftolll tht· ~.l&lt;tlH' \\t..'ekend
mon Jt l)hm St.tte qualifies .1s a tuttH)ll ·on -.·verybody, thr.:y'rc
A cloudy. Lonl ,md r.Hny day Js rhc lowc1 70;;
.1 ycJr .lg~&gt;. It. w.1s the first tunc null ion .
. "
To1ughr 13....·conHng cloud\·
r n~1~
gomg · ro bt• more ltkdy to lost• fiH·c cast for the tri-co~mty rl'g!On
An .tltnn.ltt' pbn would olde1 stuLkm-.,:· 'l.ud Tun W111g. Tucslby. but 11 \\on 't !.1:-.t lung. the Ch.u1ce of 1.1111 Lmn ...J.j to 50
N.m01ul Wc.nhc1 St'l ,.,.._.t• s.ud.
clurg-.· 'it.lt11.hrd tUJtlon mcrc .lsC~ 2-L ;~ · s . .·nJor hl..,tnry lllJ_JOr.
Tut;cby .. Cloudy R.11n hkdy.
' "Y"tl'lll p.~S.Si ng Htglh .nnund 7fl
for curn.·1 H ~tudcm.;; .md hlgherA
In\\"
prt..•ssur~
Mikt~ · Ro l hnn. ! &lt;J.•1 bu s tncs~
th.m - ltollll.ll 1111.. l l.'.l ~cs for' mcomto tht..· . . ou th ~)f thL· tcgron wdl
Extended forecast
llUJOr, -,,lid h1 ght•r frc-.,hm.lll
Subscribe today.
Tul''iti.ty
111ght Mmt ly cloudy.
mg \tttd-.·nt)i.
produce
tht..·,
r.ltn
I
hgh
tt..'mper.ltumon might C.1llse .1 d1vt• 1011
E1ther optml_l ·1" likl'l) to Clll'll' b~t\\'C:C:ll cl.t:-.sc:-.. " It will just 111.1kc: tUIT'i Will be Ill th e uppt..'l l!h to A L h.llli..l' of r. 1111 Low:, lli tht..• ...J.()"
Wcd11c:-.d.1\ .. A ch,mcc of shuwproblcJ!l~.
the: frc:shm.ln cbss mort..' chtc:. low ()( '"
Thr.: m-.·mos s;l!d chargu1g dJf- They've· alrc'.1dy r.Hsc·d the ACT
Thc r.1111 \\'ill mm·t..• out of the L'I'"'. I hghs 111 the ()(b
fermg fllltJnn r.1tr.:~ would be h.ud (Amencan Co ll ege Tt..•st) suue 1cgton Wcdnc,tby..md f:11r sk1c"
r hund.l\' F.ur Lows tn rhc.•
to justtfy. \\ hile chor~mg .til stu~~~\ (-!Jghl IJC',II 711.
,IJ'C expeltt..•d the rt..'~t of thL' \\LTk.
rcqlllrcment~ for them,' ' he s.nd
dr.:nts :1 r.Hc th:H Ius Increased by
Fnd .1y.. F.1ir. Lo\\' 111 the ~Os
Mr11 th.l C.ll bnd. Ulll\'"L'rstty fim: c.lstcr'l s.ud
more th.1n (, percent annually
Forecast
H1ghs 711 to 7'i
' '!CC provost and dc:\11 of undcrcould be perce1ved as unfatr qy
gr;-tdllJte studlt..'S, s~nd ~he f:tvorcd
~tudcnts now :fttendmg Oh1o
n smgle tumon for undcrgr:tduSwe, The DISpatch reported.
Jres
"Current &gt;tudents would sttll
She s;ud higher tmtlon would AEP- 38'l.e
Gannett - 52',,
Rocky Boots - 5
be paytng Significantly more than
This Sunday in...
General Electnc - 57
RD Shell - 62 ~.
c.mablc thc umn·rsitv to create an Akzo - 43J, ·
\\'har they would be paying when
AmTech/SBC - 50 \
Harley Davidson -+- 44\
Sears - 31 ·~
Kmart - 5'~ ~
Shoney's - \2
they fim enrolled and would not "cxc1ttng challenge" that would ~i~~~ 1;~.,, -n·,
Kroger - 21 '!1,•
Wai·MM- 45
bnng
Ohto
State
closet
to
its
goal
share propomonately 111 the ben 0
1
Lands
End
20
Wendy's- 19'•
Bank
One
33
.&amp;
of"unprovmg the ~tudent expenc-fits," one memo s.l!d.
Ltd - 21",,
Worthmgton- 9
Bob Evans - 17 ~,~
ence
.
BorgWarner
33
,~
O,ak
H1ll
Fi~anc
1
al
14',
Another memo sa1d a smglc
Daily stock reports are the
OVB- 26 •
"I do thmk we wJnt to do Champion - 2\
tUitiOn rate would challenge umBBT- 28',
Charm1ng Shops - 5~.6
4 p m clOSing quotes of
vcrslty deans to co me up \Vit·h some speCI.ll thmg~ for the olde1 C11y Holding - 6',6
the prev10us day's transPeoples - 13'·•
Premter- 5'l
actions.
prov1ded by
cxtr.ts fm upperclassmen so they students who nught say, 'ThiS Federal Mogul - 4
F1rstar16 '~.,.
Rockwell - 32' -.e
Advest
ol
Gallipolis
c.tn fed they're gettmg more for (tuition increase) may make
thtngs better later- but I'm here
their money
'l1U :Meigs County Cfiam.Der of Commerce Presents
Students .tlready at the univcr- now;" Garland satd

from Page

Mildred A. Holman

LOCAL BRIEFS

Board to meet

Study

EMS log 13 calls

from Page

1

Mature driving
class to.be offered

Families welcome battered Cole .
sailors;.others mourn losses

Culvert work set
to begin

VALLEY WEATHER

Fair ·skies to return

TUition
from Page

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
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omen
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LOCAL STOCKS

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Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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To offer sto~ suggestions! report latebreaKing news and offer news tips

"'Ten qreat ;)ears of Progress"
.flwniversa'"!l Cefe6ration
' 1990-2000
(jenera{ '13usiness :Meting
:Miaafeport Cfr.urcfi of Cfr.rist
~amily Life Center
:Monaay Octo6er 23, 2000
5:30 - 9:00pm

Mon. Oct, l6th thru Thurs. OcL l9th
Doors Ope~ Al6:JO PM MoL '""' Fri.
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111 CONIINIII .
1M!.

T

n nnm T

lOST IIW

111 LAiiJ MAN
Al1tlliT FAMIUS
OOBlN

'i'

7

"T

'11""

RMMB8111f m

Speciaf quest Speaf:sr
'Two 'Time Jieisman 'Tropfr.y Winner
:Me. 5l.rcfr.ie yriffin
of tfie Dfr.io State 'University

6:50, 9:45
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*P..'•- A,.j "'7'- 'ltlui*
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.91.vai!a6fe a~ t!U Cfiainber office or
6y ca[fing (740} 992-5005
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ALMOST FAMOUS (A) '
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All AGES, All TIMES $4.00

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�PageA4

_h_e_D_ai~ly_S_en_ti_~_I__,____________~·~~~~~~~C)II

T

October .16, 2000 ·

Mond.y, October 16, 1000

®'JON fettr ~ ~.-rauihv~ ,_ ~,tr
+iuL.Me

The Daily Sentinel

Hope repeatedly springs eternal for bride on number 12
DEAR ABBY: Is there any kind of
. interrupt the lives of our extend~...·d fanulegal limit or restnmon on t~e number
ly to have them attend another wedding
Llf times a person can be married and
that may end up in divorce soonL'r rather
divorced?
than later, as her II other marria!,''" d1d.
I have three daughters, ages 30, 27 and
Your thoughts, please.-- MOTHER OF
~5.Th c oldest and youngest are both colTHE "BRIDE"
lege graduates, have great careers and are
P.S . .During a wedding, when the ·
still single. My middle da(,ghter dropped ,
preacher asks if there is anyone present
o ut of high schoo l when she was 16 to
who knows why this man and woman
ADVICE
ge t married . We were opposed, but she
should not be united m holy matrimony,
was determined. "Lana" works JS a wait'"''hat docs that mean? Is someanc..actualress in a . resta urant/ bar. She has been
She says she wants all of our extended ly expected to stand up anq obJcc't? I
married and di~orced 11 times.
family to be invited, because it is her obJect, but I doubt it will do any good.
Lma and h~r newt•st boyfriend are boyfriend's fint wedding -- and she
DEAR MOTHER: Your daughter
~mng to get married . It ha s been only
claims it will be h&lt;•r lm. ~e 'vc heard appears to be a ~uper salesperson . lt defies
rhrl'L' months si nce she divorced hn last
that several times bcforc.)·Het boyfriend belief that somt'ont: with any degree of
hushJnd. She llJ s known this new is p&gt;ying •II the weddin!i expenses; how- intelligence would marry ;1 person with
boyfriend for only a few weeks. He is 38 ever, neither I nor her .;;istn~. who wJll Lana 's marital history aft er such J shorr
YL'.Ir~ old and h:ts a good bliSiness. This have to travel a great distance, .1re e:tgt.·r engagenH:.'nt and no prcmJJJt.ll coun-,d\\'i ll be- Lana's 1:!tb marrlagc.
to attend. I will -- but I do not want to ing. There is either a sucker borll e\'L'TV

~llslid 1111.!148

•
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio .

•

74D-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157
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Abigail
Van Buren

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
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R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor
Diane Kay Hill
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1.-~nen to tht&gt; rJito~r arr IH'fcOIHt' Thn \huu/J Itt k1.1 rh1m .If)()' rnm/s. All letlrn ort l-ub~cl

w tlliting 11NI mustlw ~iRnt'lf dlld inrltMll' mltlrn~ und tl!lt&gt;phum• r11.unbrr. .'1/o llnJi}ltwtlll'tttn

tull

bt publisl.,d. Lrrren shi)'U/d IHt irt f;!lltld tasrr, addrt'lsinJl ••!iurs. ,ut ~rumalilit&gt;l .
Tht&gt; upinions txpreurd in till' rol11nm bf-111!4' art' thr nmlt'f!\11~ uf fllr" Oh''' l 'a l/l',f P11blishinll
ntht&gt;r,.i.~t• ''"rtll.

Cu.'s rditurilJIIHHJrJ, t.mlt-n

NATIONAL VIEWS

Celebrate

SOCIETY NEWS AND NO'TES
Grange learns about
legislative issues

• The Dallas MOrning News, tlll s;1 ftmg to .\liloseFir, hefltl to tlu•
peoples demoqacy: Slobod,m Milo«·vic didn't fall. He was pulled
down . He wa&gt; pulled down by the quiet vote of the Yugoslav people.And when the ptigiJi,tic lea der reftM·d to accept defeat. the people got louder. taking to the meet&gt; to validate their votes. The clear
majority winner of the pre..,idential election la~t month, Vojislav
Kostunica, now -;hut~ld cOn\ul!date hi~ control.
~lt'nt'

Thur..,d.ty and Friday in 13dgrade was reminiscem of one played nut not .;o long ago in other Eastan European c;tpi,t&lt;t J~ \\·here . . unilarly bran· citizens marched for democratic

HENTOFF'S VIEW

tfeedoms.
•
The tal.eover of the p.nli.unent building by the Yugoslav peop le
was . . ymbobc. Even more llllporr.lllt \V,1~ their capturing the goventmt·nt-run medi,L

Nader ruris for president not to win, but educate

As tht• new president. Mr. Ko.. . runica ha-; promised tlut tl-om now
on statt: tdeYi&lt;~ion will b~:.· Of."'L'Il to diHC.ring viewpoints. Free ~pct·ch
and pres~ .trt' h·ys to nuking &lt;.k mocra(y work. And thi~ naSC\.'Ilt
d~morr:ll~y \u-; much \\'Ork tn do .... The rq.!;ion's crhni( rivalri es
nuy not be on~r. Fort'l ~ll tro~...&gt;p~ rcnuin in Kosovo. And the furun·
of M'tHlti...'11cgro .ts p;ut ofYugo~l.wu I\ in deb:ttc.
()nee .1 lq~HHH ~ltt' gnvnnmt·nt i~ lmt.tllt-d. Yugo~Ll\·ia e m bt•
crfthr~Ked .1nd ,uJcd by it" t"ltllow n..ttlon'i . To ·thc Ypgosla\' people . .
..:ongratula.tiom. The Free World l·ckbrat('~ with you.
• The Claremore (Okla.) Progress, Oil tile vH&lt;igct .&lt;llrJ!IIIs: During their first debate Tuesday night , both Vice President Ai Gore and
Texas Governor Gt'o r ~e 'J./. Bu-;h referred nver ;md over to the $~ I
trillion surp lus the coumry i-. goin~ to h.l\'l' 'o med,Iy. W'ho Jn th e'ie
two binh think thev &lt;~rc kiddinl:?
The U. S. gon·rn;1'ter;t ;.., not 'guin~ to have ;:1ny"·hne llL\lr a $~I
trillion .;;u rplus m long a'i \\'l' h,I\'L' R. L'pre'il'llt .ltt\'l.''- ;md Sen.1tor-;
who 5penJ our money \\'itl1 littlt• nr llllr tlw'nghr for tomo rrow.
Any halfway bright m ~mager of ,l IHJLI'-l'hold budget knnw-. tl1.1t
you can't create 'iA.Vin~'"'i while rnntmuin~ to "pend mnnl'y you h;J\'L'
not yet received .
Wlnlc our prest'llt pre ... ident ,md dw Repuhliran -contmlleJ Congress claim they want to bridle ft'lk·ral "retid in~ and tha t their munbcr one priori ty j..; paying dmvti rill.' n.Jt-ion ,d debt. they ro minul" tn
slop out the pork .
Se n ator~ anJ Hou ~t: lllt: 111bn-. of hnth pulitir;tl parties have hL""cll
adding speci,t! econom ic den· lnpm ertt projt·ct-., ;;;ciemific rese .m.: h
iriitiative:-. 1 \Vater project-; .111d utltl.'r L''\~lC!l'-l'\. rn rbeir hnnte di:-.tnch
tqtaling billioll'i of dnll,u·-.. \\ hdl· \le;idf, . , t\y t bJllHilg tn -.t.uHl ral l fur
tiKaJ CO!l\Cl'\\lti 'illl. ...
:AnLt wh'y Jo tiH·y blo\\ uur Jnont·~ hkl' tim~ P.1rty ~lL'1...'d. :-nll:y
w:.1m to return to th e1r di-.tnrf'i ,l!1J utuh,J~ilL'dlv t.lkL" nt:Jit li.H
bimging the pork h.1Lk homL". l·nlk.;,. they .uen'r ht•mn. Thcy .Hl'
s liort ~ighteJ, ~elt"-~cn-Jng, gret'd\· r h.J rl.1t.ln.., whn .1re .1 hn1g.1rin~ t he11
r~o;pom'ihilitit:'i toward the lo'ng-tL'f111 necLh uf our natiun.
:If e1ther Core or Hush I'L'ally believe thl'rt· \\'lil o.,nmed:ty he J $21
trjllion su1 plm in the tCd\.'r,ll tre.t'itlry. then \W Joubt if either one i. .
if!tdligent enough to bt' prt'~ILknt .

No one in
presidential
expens him
ident of the

told m"t' durin~ Jn intervit•w 'iOun after he
'entered the rac e-·- rL'lllL'mbers \Ill influ ential
"outsider' ' who determinedly kept runnmg
for the presidency.
Norn1an Thmnas ca mpaign ed for our
highe1t o ffi ce o n t he Socia li st Party ticket in
every dection from 192H to 194R. H e was
not an especially c harimutic figure. but for
m.1ny independent voter~ Thomas \Va~ a
"co nscie nce" canJidatt·. He rai~cd io;sues that
we re downplayed or entirely ignored by the
major- party candidates. Norman T homas ran
to educate- not to win.
Indeed , over all those yean, he did have a
c~n sid erable effect. As Web ster\ American
l:liographi« reports: "Hi&gt; deeply felt &lt;ocial
concern..,'' \Vere retlecteJ in spc.::cific legi-,la tive goa ls. And ''ma ny of his pi-upu-,,J!o;; - for
low-i ncome housin g, the fivl'- day wo rk
w~ek, minimum wage h\.v~ ,md ril e abo li tion
of child labor- ultiin .n~...· l y found their \~'ay
imo il'gislJtion."
I thought of Norman Th o m.11 when I
heard Ralph Nader, on CNN, quote Jusnce
Louis l:lrandeis of the United State1 Supreme
C:ourt: "Wt: can have' :1 democratic '\Ot"icty or
we can have a co ncc mr:uion of great wea lth
in the hands of a lew. We can't have both."
That is Nader's core message, and he
expects to run on it again in 20114. All he
nced1 is 5 percent of the vote thts YL'ar to get
$12 . milli o n tn, federal matching funds four
y~ars fi-om now. Ht.: In' a good chance of
reac hing that goal.
Nader is worrying Gore supporters. In
more and more states, then.· is an increasing
number of registered independent voters.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

:Tod.1y 11 Mond.ly, ll ct. llo. the 2YIIth d.ty of 21ll11 1. T here ,Ire 76
d:ty1 left 111 the ye.lf.
;Today"&gt; H1,;hilt(ht 111 H ~&lt;to ry :
·On Oct. 16, I K5~. abohnonllt John l:lrown led a grollp of about
2(:) men m a r~11J on Harper\ Ferry.
Un tht l dace:
.(n l79J, durmg th L' French Revolunon. Queen Marie Antoinette
was behe,Jded.
.
In fYJ6, Mar~afl'f S,mgrr opened the tir~r birth control clinic. in
New York c ',ty.
,
In 194.1 , Chic.1~o M :,1yor Edward J. Kell y officially opened tl1e
nty\ nt'\.V ~ ub'-'''IY "Y~tL' Ill dunng c1 t l'I'L'Illllll)' .It ~he State .md Madi ~on &lt;;treet .;,tatinu.
In 19-th . \ (J :'-Jui \\'M crimin~1h nmde nJned during tlw Nun:mberg tri ;ll'i l\rre h.lllgeJ.
In 1Yfi2. th l' Cub.1n llli '-l, de ni\t'i bq!.lll ''" Prco;;ident Kennl'dy \\',1~
IJlformed th.1t n..'Ultlll.ll\'\J iltl.' photngr.tph., lud re\·ealed the pre ~­
t•uce of mi..;;.; ile h ,JW'i 111 Cub.t.
In 19(l4 , Chn1:1 dcton. tted It"&gt; tlr..,t .1to 111H.. bomb.
In 1964, H&lt;trolJ \'(;'il'ion of' th e labur P.u'ty dS\tllnL'd oflic~...· .l'i
prinw mini'itt'r &lt;~f f ; rc,l t Brit.llll. ~ u ccced u1g Comervati\'e Sir Ale~..·
f1ouglr1'i - H oml·.
In \9711. Anw;t r S;Jd.tt w, l, d c..'ctvd prt·.., ide nt &lt;lf Egypt. 'i\Jcc~...·c dtng
tht" latl' (; ,tm ,J l AhdL"I N.1~~cr.
In I'J7H. 1illl" Co ll q.;e ut'(.:.ml111.d ' ot'the R01n .l!l C.1thohc Church
choo;;e ( ~Jniin,J ! K.1rul Wn)tyl.I to lx· thL· !l1...'\\' pope he took rhc n.llllL'
' John i'.ml II.
In Jf)t-{ 7_ .I )H, 2 -hour dr.ull ,l 111 MJdl.lnd. ri.."\.,1\, l.'lhinl h.ipplly ,)\
rco;;Cue r~ frel'd Jn-.Ju 1\lh ( 'lurL' .. 11 1 1l-:-month-nld g:nl tr.lppt·d Ill ,tn
ab:wdnlled \\ l' II
Ten yc.1r" .1 ~0: Sm· IL' t [&gt;t L''-ldcnt i\11k h,1d \. _( ;orhc~thn -.uhmmnl
tn.the "i{J~'lt"t lq.~ J ..,l.ttllrL' .1 'ir,Jkd-h. tr k pL1n tu tr,Jmf;&gt;l"lll the Sm 'll' t
econon1v ru ,, ti-t'L'. lll.Jrh·t .;,yqL·ql ( 111\IL'd! .J ll 'i!i..."\'L' M.trtlll .Ln d h1~
w di: , ,\ct;.L''-" V tLto f· J;~ Ten n.tnt .· \'l'i lt t'd t\ Llll.'rl r.111 (; 1-. i 11 S.1ud 1 A r.l hl ,l.
fh e ClllcinnatJ Rl'ds hL',lt th L· (hkl.1ml A\. 7--!l'r,~ .g, lliH ' one' ()t'rh~...·
World &gt;cm·c .
'

..

tht' Green Party- including its
candidate, Ralph Nader to be swor n in as the next presUnited States. l:lut N ,1der - as

h~...·

TODAY IN HISTORY

.

mtnute, or her fiance IS a termmal opn- between commumtics than there has
nust.
been m the last century. Its purpose was
Smce your daughter's fiance IS paying to n:veal if there were any impediments
for the wedding. th ey may invite to the union, such as the bride having
whomever they wish. It's up to the rdabeen pledged to someone 'else, or the
uves to decide whether or not to attend
the 12th wedding. However, if they sent groom· already bemg married. Another
only their good wishes, I wouldn't blame 1mpediment might be that they were
close blood relatives. Today, no one is
them .
Unfortunately, there is no hmit on the expected to voice an objccuon .
number of tinlcs a person can be nlJrFor an excellent guide to becoming
ried. Let's hope your daughter docsn 't go a better conversationalist and a more.
for a baker's dozen ..
attracuve pcrso n,ord.cr " How to Be PopTo address the question s m your I~S .: ular.·· St·nd a bu-.Jnl''i\- \17t:d , sdfAsking whether there is anyone present
' addressed en\'dope. plu s check or money
who knows why this man Jnd woman
sho uld not be umted in holy matnmony order for S3 .CJ5 (S4.'i0 111 Canada) ro·
, is ;1 holdover from times when there · Dea1 Abby i'npubnty Booklet, P.O. Box
H7. Mount Morri &gt;. IL (,l ll'i4- 11447 .
W\.'Tt' no phones, travel wa~ chfficult, and
thl..'rc was Lu lt' ss commumcaoon (Pomgl'" included )

•

Free "World welcomes
Milosevic's departure

The p,tssion,He

Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

Nat

Hentoff
NEA COLUMNIST .
A11d among an as yet unquantifle9 number
of traditiunal Democrats, d1 e Gore- Li eh erman ticket ha~ not ign ited hearts and souk
Also, there are many you ng outsiders ~vho,
until now, have not voted in significa nt nun} bers, but do have vigorous social concernsas evidenced by ·re ce nt demonstrations
against the ex ploitation of Thi rd World
workers by Anlt:-rican companies, and for
eco nomic ju~tin· here f9r tho se not enjoying
the bocH n i'n~ t'L"onomy - . ~md they are
JllJily.
The New York Time~ is urgently pushing
the Gore candidacy in i t~ ed itorials. In one
lead edi torial, it \ternly upbraided Nader for
being a spo il er.Jt·«e J ackson- who recently received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from the prt.•sident, whom he servt:s as a
~piritual adviser nonetheless has bitt erly
attacked Nader for offeri ng voters the liberty of anoth er choice in the forthcoming
elections.
On Aug. 20,Jackson, on his reglllar Sunday
CNN televi\ion show, confronted Nader.
Jackson was no match foe that indepe ndent
contender - either in inte ll ectual depth or
in his abi lity to counter Nader's responses to
the argument that he wi ll seriou sly harm the

powerless if he is the cause of Gore's defeat.
"The Democratic Party has decayed,"
Nader said, looking straight at the Rev. Jack so n . "Eve n yo u h ave been margi11aliz ed." ·
The Democratic platform thiS year made
that clear, as reported in the news sccti 011 of
th e July 30 New York Times :
s supporting universal hea lth
atorium on th e death penalty,
p
s against corporatiom t hat pay
low wages, tougher rules fl.&gt;r internatiom.ll
trade. and bettn h'ealth care for pri so ners
were withdrawn or oversvhelmingly defeated
... also voted down was in creased spending
for t he poor. Gore delegate Tom I Iayden said
t he platform had f.1iled to ad dre&gt;.~ the challe nge of R alph Nader."
But Jesse Jackson m owd to d imi nish
Nader on one of th e Green )larry candidate's
special C\)ncerns. He showed a TV clip of
e n v .in) nn H:pta l i~t Robert Kennl'dy Jr. attack ing Nc1dt&gt;r's cand ida cy as " ,1 hugl' threat to
the env1ron ment."
..
Unilltnmdated, Nader pointed out that in
the eigh t yea r1 of the c:Jinton - (;ore admin istrfltJOn~li t t1e has been dum: to dt·al with the 'J
expo;;url' of'' low-mcome AmL'ricans, including minorities, to high lead-poisoning and
ost hm a levels."
Nader toldjockson he had recently been in .,
H artford, Conn., where " the Democrats ,
co ntrol the city co unci1 and thl' executive
bran ch . Forty perce nt of the c hild ren in th e
inner city arc atllicted with asthma. I asked
the people there what the Democrats had
done for _thcm. The answer wa.;; 'nothing."'
For once, J esse Jackson had nothmg to say.

RACINE - A look at the gun control and other legi,l.iti VL' tssu~s was
uken by R .K tne Grange at .1 recent meeting.
There was a discussion on S.B. 2099 in d1e U.S. Se nate which, accordmg to the the grange h::glslatiw agent, would req uire aU citiZL'IlS to re-g1:-.tt.·r their g\-111S on their federal incOme tax forms. A resolution opposing
the bill was unanimously passed by the metnbers and will be sent to
Congre~~·
Concern about Issue I asking for a S400 million bond issue that will
.1ppe&gt;r on the Ohio ballot was also discussed . Though the bill seeks to
presen·e farmJ:md, nlJny other items have been put into it dealing with
depressed JrCJS in cities and sw;unp1and preservation .
It was reported that the information currently does not .i ndi cate how
much would go fo r actual farm preservation. Also, it was pointed out that
no information is av;ulable on how the state will repay the money and
thL: interest on it though it does say there will be no increase in taxes.
The gr.mge wi ll look for more information on the bill before election.
Grange members asked about the bill m Co ngress seeking to take
away th e CongressLOnal charter of the Boy Scouts because of tl)ei r
beliefs. The legislative director repo rted that the bill received o nly a
dozen votes for it. H owever, it wa.&lt; no ted that the United W.1y is looking
to withdraw support from the scouts.
"The gra nge recently presented a package of resolutions to state and
Congre&gt;mmal reprr·sentatlves .. Only Ohio R e p. Jo hn Carey has replied
to these at this time, H was reported.
In be half of members of the g range, Geraldine Cross presented
Rachel Ashley with a sweeper as a wedding gift for her upcoming marriJge in December.
The g range conducted a planning meeting for the grange year. Its
annual haynde and wiener roast will be held Oct. 2l.The annual·pig-ina-pokc au ction is tentatively set for Nov. II pending approval of the auction~cr. Participation in the annual Racine Flower Festival was approved
JS '''a~ the selection of an annual community citizen's award to be given
next Juhe. The baking contest will be held at the March meeting and
other contests will be judge in Scptenibcr.
Jt.'Jll AlklrL'. sec retary. presented a letter from the National Grange,lbout its 11L'\\" "Visions 2000" program. The program is dt!signed to
tmpn:we loc.1l grange activities and comnmniry work . C huck Yost, master. wW .1ppro.1c h the Mc·igs County Po mona Grange about p&gt;rticipatin~ in th~...· prngr:uu.

CALENDAR

A picturL' of grJng~.· officers was t.1ken for thL· upnm1ing nl'\\' Melt,"'
Coumy History book'. Emma Ad.mb WJS rL·ported ilL Emma Ashk·y.lccturcr, prest:•ntcd .1 pmgram on .1pplt'~ . lnfi)rnJ,ll ion re g.mhng pl.mtmg and
c.m.· of appk rr~.·es was gi,·~.,·n. A quiz on apple knowledge was won by
Mary K.1y Yost.

Riverview gardeners
eled new officers
REEDSVILLE - New officers were installed by Maxine Whitehead, retiring president, at a rl"ccnt meeting of the Riverview Garden
Cl ub held at the home• of Ruth Ann Balderson, With M ary Ali ce l:l!Se
and Betty Boggs as co- hostesses.
Whitehe;Jd presented carnations and po cket boo k pad\ to each of
the new officers, Ruth Anne Balderson, president; Marilyn H an num ,
vice president; Janet Connolly, sec retary, and Delores Frank, treasurer.
Balderson then presented Whitehead wtth a mum in appreoiation
of her work for the club.
Whitehead presided at the meetmg which opened with singmg of
"F~r the Beauty of the Earth", the club creed, "Who M akes a Gar~
den" and prayer by Delores Frank.
Plans were discussed for the tulip bulb proj ect for Easter n Elementa ry School. Whitehead. Balderson, Margaret Cauthorn, Wcndi
H an num , Frances Reed, Nancy Wachter. and Margaret Grossnickle
serve on the committee.
·The Christmas party was set Cor Dec. I4 at the Whitehead home.
Plans were made to cat out at lJJVino's m Williamstown, W.Va. on
Oct. 26.
New officers were installed by WhiteheJd, the outgoi ng president .
She presented the following offi.cers with carnations and pocket book
pads : Rutb Anne ll 1lf\erso n, presidt• nt; MJnlyn Hannum, vice prcsident;Jmet Connolly, secretary, and Delores Fr:mk, treasurer.
Balderson prcsentedW hitche&gt;d with a mum in apprt'CIOtion of her
work for the club.
Roll call was answe red by members te lling a schoo l m~mory. For
the program, members di scussed tht·ir g;Jrdenlng problems. or to ld of
how successful they wen~.
Refft.'shments were ~1!./,ed to the abo\·c-nam i..~d .md to Ell a
Osborne, Gr.tci..' Weber and j;JlliCL' Young.
Janet Con nolly won the: door prize.

MONDAY
POMEROY Womc·n oC
Worth mt.·cting. C1. .l0 p . m . Mon dJy. at tht.· Pomcroy L1br.uy.
V1ckJe Roush Ln -,pe.Jk.
POMEROY
Count\'
meeting of Meigs Cou nty Garden Club\, Mqnday, 7 p.m at
the Meigs County Museum .
Rutternut Avl..' .. Pomeroy.
POMEROY
Me1gs
County Right to L1fe, Monday.
7:30 p.m. at [he Pome rov
L1brary.
LETART- l:etart Townsh1p
Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m. at the
office building.
RACINE - Ra cin e Village
CounCil wtll meet in recessed
session l\1onday 7 p.111 . Jt the
muniCipal building.
POMEROY - Community
Outreach Team , Chillicothe VA
Medical . Center. will be in
Pomeroy, O ct. 16-19 and Oct .
23-25, in trailer behind Veterans
Memorial Ho spital. I 0 a.m. to
2:30p.m . eac h day, to enroll vet. erans mro the VA H ealch C:uc
System.

O srcop ,tthH· J\'h 'd ll.lllt.'. \\'lll t.dk
on the di~L' .l'iL'. Thu-.c \\ tth lupu ~
.md !lbmmy.tlgl .l 111\'lti...'d.

POMEROY
County Ani~ .liJ S A~ soc Jation .
"P"'t·Ja! mee ring , Tm."sday, (,_.)()
p.m H the Pomeroy Library.
Purpo~e tn di s( USS ·desig:n of'
new \ycbpagL·.
POMEROY
Me1gs :
C.nun ty Artis :l11 S Ao;;o;;oci.Hion,. ·
(1:10 p.m .. Pomeroy Libr;uy, to
discuss de:-.ign of nl'W webpage.
All artisans who are not included in the Association's c:a alog
but wish to be are urged to
attend the meeting.
WEDNESDAY
MIIJDLEPORT Middleport Literary Club. 2 p.m .
Wednesday. home of June Kloes ..
Middlepon, Jeanne Bowen to
revJC\\' .. Queen LuCia"' by E. F .
Ben so n.

TUESDAY
POM EROY
Lupu s/ Fi bromy .1 lg Ja Support
Group, Tuesday, (J :.lO ro H p .m ..
cafeteria , Veter.1n s Memot1.1l
Ho spital.
Pomeroy.
S:~rah
M cG rn\·, .trthr itJ~ prugr:un
dJrcctor ;lt OU Co lle ge of

WELLSTON -·The Board-'
of Du·ec tors of the Galli.a!Jackson / Mctg~ / Vmton Solid WastL'.
J\1atl.1gt'mt'nt D1~ trict \\'ill meet
on w~...·dnc ::. J.w .1 [ 7:30 a.m. at
the bo.trd i.) ffil.'e l!l Wellston.
LI-s t

\\'L'L'k \

llll'l'[lllg

Dtrl'ct(H l.t11Ct' \Xlthnn .

DUbllc univetSities Dfllr exbaoniiiiiiiY VIIand out·of·the·ordinal'f oppuotunllles to learn, 11ICOitld, aealll,
and gcow. ExDiore lhe Ills and ICiencel, business,

~

educ:IUon,

heaMh cate, and mudl more at one ol18 campuses You'll tlllctNw IMM tu thin~ng
can help you get ahetltL • Creating Unique Learning OpportuniU-What can Alabama

•

•

teach ll1e world? Alalll011 AIM University. Albans State UniverSity, Jacksonville State Univetsity,
and the University of Mantnallo offer degrees and programs found at few other colleges in the
nalion. Plus the Univelllly of W81t Allbama Is leading lhe war In developing a camDUs that integrates lntemet
technologies inlo evel'f ph-

of a student's college care«. • Sllap1ng Global Leadership-In lhe mi lital), in the

boatdroom, and in yout hometown, Alalllma can prepare you to lake charge of youtluture. Troy Stale University
Dothan and Auburn University MontgomlrJ are noted for ttaining mililary leadeiS In lact. both General HenlY Shelton.
chairman of the Joinl Chiefs of Staff, and General Michael Ryan. Ail Force chief ol stall. ate AUM graduates. And the
University of Alabama's nationally ranked techno-M.B A. program helps business executives connect with success in the

(Na t Hent o.!J is a 11atiorwlly YCIIDII'tted aHthority
em tlte First Art~clldwellt a11d tilt' Bill o( Rights.)

new economy. • Pioneering Health Care lmovatlons-The discoveries and advances made by Alabama 's med1ca1 pioneers
. are something everyone can feel good about Restarchets at Ihe UniverSity of Alabama at Birmingham recently made

'

intemational headlines by DiODOinling the origin of the AIDS vlru-and are now moving closer to developing a

BUSINESS MIRROR

Forecaster believes the bottom has been reached
BY JOHN CUNNIFF

NEW YORK - There arc people w ho
cho'b~e to live dangerou sly rock rlimbers,
.;;tunt pilots, trapeze rtrti~t-.. A;1d Rohert Moirow of Bradenton , Fla. , ~tuck market fbrecaster.
.

Asked in the m1dst of last Thursday's 300point-plus plunge in the Dow Jones industri.11 average whether he remained confident
that 1tock1 would rise strongly through the
re1t of the year, Brad~ntnn, Fb.-bo;ed Morrow replied, " Oh yes. Ce rtainly."
In March he predicted that the market
wou ld would flSi..' inttn:a rl y 'itll111ller and then
begin de clining in~ o October, :tfi:er wh ich it
· \VOt!ld begin a year-long ao;ccnt.
The ~pc c 1fi ~ numben were not a~ Morrow,
\Vho works tOr mstitmional clicm~. had cnvi. \loned. I k expected the Sundard &amp; Poor's
:;po inde~ to bottom o ut in O ctober at 1.46H,
hut it"''" umln I,.HII as he spoke Thursday.
lie UJIIU'dl'\ lhl' int L'lll,lt )' nf'tlw ;;cllotTsurpno.;cd h1n1. but hi v direction .md rimmg w~t'l
n11 the 11urk.
Morrow mJkcs II&lt;\ d.lilll to 1nt:lllihility !)f cour-.,e. nobody C.lll ;md not .dl hi..; t'.Uhn fiHTCI\t~ a a· n n rill' publw record . But few

of his genre are as willing to take ~uch risk to
their reputations.
He stands by the same bullish numbe rs he
issued seven months ago.ily November 2110 1,
he expects the S&amp;P index to be at I ,876
pointS: the Dow industrials at I4,777 and the
Nasdaq at 5,2 42 to 5,897.
Stating specifi cs is not common among the
forcpsting fraternity, which love s soft. subjective numbers as intensely as politicians love
soft mont!y. Uut Morrow, a former engineer
with 37 international patents to his name,
wouldn't have it any other way. '
He ~~ almost cnmpdled to be.: specific ,as, fur
example, one must be in analyzing vibrations
of large machinery, which happens to be his
field of engine ering expertise.
Complex machmcs emjt vibration patterns
that cJn ~ uggc~o,t safety or sig:na1 dange-rs, and
-;imilarl y, rherc an:: marketpla ce vibrations
emitted by human and fimmcial behavior that
a ~ki l1ed .maly'it can mterpret. That\ the ba~l"
o t· :.1 sy~tem Morrow has been working with
t()r more tlun two dl':cadcs.
He (Oncetks 1t"s unorthodox, so he insi~ts
on hemg o n record wi~h h i~ views.
l11 Nm·t·• nhl'f I'JHO , for c·xamplc , he toltf

..

vaccine . Plus lhe University of South Alabama's Bum Center Is a national leader in lhe development and use

www.th·inkalabama.edu

ol artificial

s~n

'

for bum viclims. These tenowned health care powa1louses also are pursuing new methods

of prevention, diagnosis, and treatment lot cancer, heart disease, and much more. • Developing New
Technologies-/&gt;Jabama creates the materials to build better IIvas. Aubum UnivetSity is respons1ble
for revolutional'f develoDments in engineering, d81lgnlng everything Irom slronger bndges

Money magazine readers that a bull market
would commen ce in Augmt 1982 at an S&amp;l'
index of IOO.It began in August at 98.7. He's
been eve n more aCcurate, sometimes less so.
If his current forecast is off the mark , he
says, it will be m the specific numbers, rather
than in the tm1ing. And he isn't at all worned
about short-term events. The Nasdaq, Dow
an d S&amp;P, he says, signal "buy."
And a. year from now? A hear 1narker.
"A reJl bea r market," he says, mea ning one
unlike th e six-week decline in 1987 and the
short- lived bears in 1990 and 1994. He foresees " decline that might last a year, with tl&gt;c
Dow Jones and S&amp;P averages tailing 25 percent and the Nasdaq sufrering an horrendous
plunge of 38 pecccnt to 50 percent.
A sho ck, that is, to those who ;1rt·n t prepared, a bear market that perh,1ps most of
today's investors hav~ never t'Xpenet1ccd. A
lud market that newcomers mig)u not be
endowed \.vith patien ce to \.'tH..iurc.
A b~....,lr, howeve r, that old -tilller'l know will
i.'VC'ntually txpm::.j liSt as ce rtainly Js bu11markct&lt; do:

and roadways 1o more ellective cat ai1bags and bullatprool vesls. At the h1giHech
Univetsity of /&gt;Jabama 1n Huntsville, sclanllsts apply their skills 10 creanl
h~IHemDeratute

suDerconductotS and Dromising

new medical devices.

1

(/oltll C1111 11 iU.is a f,liSincss 1.11111lyst_lln T1tr A.I"S(lPress.)
/
·

rll1f('t/

..

CJn-

celnl duL' ro the LI ~...k of .1 yuorum . .ll'Lording to EXL'l.'lltJ\·c

Alabama's

.,

\\",IS

.

.

�PageA4

_h_e_D_ai~ly_S_en_ti_~_I__,____________~·~~~~~~~C)II

T

October .16, 2000 ·

Mond.y, October 16, 1000

®'JON fettr ~ ~.-rauihv~ ,_ ~,tr
+iuL.Me

The Daily Sentinel

Hope repeatedly springs eternal for bride on number 12
DEAR ABBY: Is there any kind of
. interrupt the lives of our extend~...·d fanulegal limit or restnmon on t~e number
ly to have them attend another wedding
Llf times a person can be married and
that may end up in divorce soonL'r rather
divorced?
than later, as her II other marria!,''" d1d.
I have three daughters, ages 30, 27 and
Your thoughts, please.-- MOTHER OF
~5.Th c oldest and youngest are both colTHE "BRIDE"
lege graduates, have great careers and are
P.S . .During a wedding, when the ·
still single. My middle da(,ghter dropped ,
preacher asks if there is anyone present
o ut of high schoo l when she was 16 to
who knows why this man and woman
ADVICE
ge t married . We were opposed, but she
should not be united m holy matrimony,
was determined. "Lana" works JS a wait'"''hat docs that mean? Is someanc..actualress in a . resta urant/ bar. She has been
She says she wants all of our extended ly expected to stand up anq obJcc't? I
married and di~orced 11 times.
family to be invited, because it is her obJect, but I doubt it will do any good.
Lma and h~r newt•st boyfriend are boyfriend's fint wedding -- and she
DEAR MOTHER: Your daughter
~mng to get married . It ha s been only
claims it will be h&lt;•r lm. ~e 'vc heard appears to be a ~uper salesperson . lt defies
rhrl'L' months si nce she divorced hn last
that several times bcforc.)·Het boyfriend belief that somt'ont: with any degree of
hushJnd. She llJ s known this new is p&gt;ying •II the weddin!i expenses; how- intelligence would marry ;1 person with
boyfriend for only a few weeks. He is 38 ever, neither I nor her .;;istn~. who wJll Lana 's marital history aft er such J shorr
YL'.Ir~ old and h:ts a good bliSiness. This have to travel a great distance, .1re e:tgt.·r engagenH:.'nt and no prcmJJJt.ll coun-,d\\'i ll be- Lana's 1:!tb marrlagc.
to attend. I will -- but I do not want to ing. There is either a sucker borll e\'L'TV

~llslid 1111.!148

•
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio .

•

74D-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157
•

•

Abigail
Van Buren

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

1.-~nen to tht&gt; rJito~r arr IH'fcOIHt' Thn \huu/J Itt k1.1 rh1m .If)()' rnm/s. All letlrn ort l-ub~cl

w tlliting 11NI mustlw ~iRnt'lf dlld inrltMll' mltlrn~ und tl!lt&gt;phum• r11.unbrr. .'1/o llnJi}ltwtlll'tttn

tull

bt publisl.,d. Lrrren shi)'U/d IHt irt f;!lltld tasrr, addrt'lsinJl ••!iurs. ,ut ~rumalilit&gt;l .
Tht&gt; upinions txpreurd in till' rol11nm bf-111!4' art' thr nmlt'f!\11~ uf fllr" Oh''' l 'a l/l',f P11blishinll
ntht&gt;r,.i.~t• ''"rtll.

Cu.'s rditurilJIIHHJrJ, t.mlt-n

NATIONAL VIEWS

Celebrate

SOCIETY NEWS AND NO'TES
Grange learns about
legislative issues

• The Dallas MOrning News, tlll s;1 ftmg to .\liloseFir, hefltl to tlu•
peoples demoqacy: Slobod,m Milo«·vic didn't fall. He was pulled
down . He wa&gt; pulled down by the quiet vote of the Yugoslav people.And when the ptigiJi,tic lea der reftM·d to accept defeat. the people got louder. taking to the meet&gt; to validate their votes. The clear
majority winner of the pre..,idential election la~t month, Vojislav
Kostunica, now -;hut~ld cOn\ul!date hi~ control.
~lt'nt'

Thur..,d.ty and Friday in 13dgrade was reminiscem of one played nut not .;o long ago in other Eastan European c;tpi,t&lt;t J~ \\·here . . unilarly bran· citizens marched for democratic

HENTOFF'S VIEW

tfeedoms.
•
The tal.eover of the p.nli.unent building by the Yugoslav peop le
was . . ymbobc. Even more llllporr.lllt \V,1~ their capturing the goventmt·nt-run medi,L

Nader ruris for president not to win, but educate

As tht• new president. Mr. Ko.. . runica ha-; promised tlut tl-om now
on statt: tdeYi&lt;~ion will b~:.· Of."'L'Il to diHC.ring viewpoints. Free ~pct·ch
and pres~ .trt' h·ys to nuking &lt;.k mocra(y work. And thi~ naSC\.'Ilt
d~morr:ll~y \u-; much \\'Ork tn do .... The rq.!;ion's crhni( rivalri es
nuy not be on~r. Fort'l ~ll tro~...&gt;p~ rcnuin in Kosovo. And the furun·
of M'tHlti...'11cgro .ts p;ut ofYugo~l.wu I\ in deb:ttc.
()nee .1 lq~HHH ~ltt' gnvnnmt·nt i~ lmt.tllt-d. Yugo~Ll\·ia e m bt•
crfthr~Ked .1nd ,uJcd by it" t"ltllow n..ttlon'i . To ·thc Ypgosla\' people . .
..:ongratula.tiom. The Free World l·ckbrat('~ with you.
• The Claremore (Okla.) Progress, Oil tile vH&lt;igct .&lt;llrJ!IIIs: During their first debate Tuesday night , both Vice President Ai Gore and
Texas Governor Gt'o r ~e 'J./. Bu-;h referred nver ;md over to the $~ I
trillion surp lus the coumry i-. goin~ to h.l\'l' 'o med,Iy. W'ho Jn th e'ie
two binh think thev &lt;~rc kiddinl:?
The U. S. gon·rn;1'ter;t ;.., not 'guin~ to have ;:1ny"·hne llL\lr a $~I
trillion .;;u rplus m long a'i \\'l' h,I\'L' R. L'pre'il'llt .ltt\'l.''- ;md Sen.1tor-;
who 5penJ our money \\'itl1 littlt• nr llllr tlw'nghr for tomo rrow.
Any halfway bright m ~mager of ,l IHJLI'-l'hold budget knnw-. tl1.1t
you can't create 'iA.Vin~'"'i while rnntmuin~ to "pend mnnl'y you h;J\'L'
not yet received .
Wlnlc our prest'llt pre ... ident ,md dw Repuhliran -contmlleJ Congress claim they want to bridle ft'lk·ral "retid in~ and tha t their munbcr one priori ty j..; paying dmvti rill.' n.Jt-ion ,d debt. they ro minul" tn
slop out the pork .
Se n ator~ anJ Hou ~t: lllt: 111bn-. of hnth pulitir;tl parties have hL""cll
adding speci,t! econom ic den· lnpm ertt projt·ct-., ;;;ciemific rese .m.: h
iriitiative:-. 1 \Vater project-; .111d utltl.'r L''\~lC!l'-l'\. rn rbeir hnnte di:-.tnch
tqtaling billioll'i of dnll,u·-.. \\ hdl· \le;idf, . , t\y t bJllHilg tn -.t.uHl ral l fur
tiKaJ CO!l\Cl'\\lti 'illl. ...
:AnLt wh'y Jo tiH·y blo\\ uur Jnont·~ hkl' tim~ P.1rty ~lL'1...'d. :-nll:y
w:.1m to return to th e1r di-.tnrf'i ,l!1J utuh,J~ilL'dlv t.lkL" nt:Jit li.H
bimging the pork h.1Lk homL". l·nlk.;,. they .uen'r ht•mn. Thcy .Hl'
s liort ~ighteJ, ~elt"-~cn-Jng, gret'd\· r h.J rl.1t.ln.., whn .1re .1 hn1g.1rin~ t he11
r~o;pom'ihilitit:'i toward the lo'ng-tL'f111 necLh uf our natiun.
:If e1ther Core or Hush I'L'ally believe thl'rt· \\'lil o.,nmed:ty he J $21
trjllion su1 plm in the tCd\.'r,ll tre.t'itlry. then \W Joubt if either one i. .
if!tdligent enough to bt' prt'~ILknt .

No one in
presidential
expens him
ident of the

told m"t' durin~ Jn intervit•w 'iOun after he
'entered the rac e-·- rL'lllL'mbers \Ill influ ential
"outsider' ' who determinedly kept runnmg
for the presidency.
Norn1an Thmnas ca mpaign ed for our
highe1t o ffi ce o n t he Socia li st Party ticket in
every dection from 192H to 194R. H e was
not an especially c harimutic figure. but for
m.1ny independent voter~ Thomas \Va~ a
"co nscie nce" canJidatt·. He rai~cd io;sues that
we re downplayed or entirely ignored by the
major- party candidates. Norman T homas ran
to educate- not to win.
Indeed , over all those yean, he did have a
c~n sid erable effect. As Web ster\ American
l:liographi« reports: "Hi&gt; deeply felt &lt;ocial
concern..,'' \Vere retlecteJ in spc.::cific legi-,la tive goa ls. And ''ma ny of his pi-upu-,,J!o;; - for
low-i ncome housin g, the fivl'- day wo rk
w~ek, minimum wage h\.v~ ,md ril e abo li tion
of child labor- ultiin .n~...· l y found their \~'ay
imo il'gislJtion."
I thought of Norman Th o m.11 when I
heard Ralph Nader, on CNN, quote Jusnce
Louis l:lrandeis of the United State1 Supreme
C:ourt: "Wt: can have' :1 democratic '\Ot"icty or
we can have a co ncc mr:uion of great wea lth
in the hands of a lew. We can't have both."
That is Nader's core message, and he
expects to run on it again in 20114. All he
nced1 is 5 percent of the vote thts YL'ar to get
$12 . milli o n tn, federal matching funds four
y~ars fi-om now. Ht.: In' a good chance of
reac hing that goal.
Nader is worrying Gore supporters. In
more and more states, then.· is an increasing
number of registered independent voters.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

:Tod.1y 11 Mond.ly, ll ct. llo. the 2YIIth d.ty of 21ll11 1. T here ,Ire 76
d:ty1 left 111 the ye.lf.
;Today"&gt; H1,;hilt(ht 111 H ~&lt;to ry :
·On Oct. 16, I K5~. abohnonllt John l:lrown led a grollp of about
2(:) men m a r~11J on Harper\ Ferry.
Un tht l dace:
.(n l79J, durmg th L' French Revolunon. Queen Marie Antoinette
was behe,Jded.
.
In fYJ6, Mar~afl'f S,mgrr opened the tir~r birth control clinic. in
New York c ',ty.
,
In 194.1 , Chic.1~o M :,1yor Edward J. Kell y officially opened tl1e
nty\ nt'\.V ~ ub'-'''IY "Y~tL' Ill dunng c1 t l'I'L'Illllll)' .It ~he State .md Madi ~on &lt;;treet .;,tatinu.
In 19-th . \ (J :'-Jui \\'M crimin~1h nmde nJned during tlw Nun:mberg tri ;ll'i l\rre h.lllgeJ.
In 1Yfi2. th l' Cub.1n llli '-l, de ni\t'i bq!.lll ''" Prco;;ident Kennl'dy \\',1~
IJlformed th.1t n..'Ultlll.ll\'\J iltl.' photngr.tph., lud re\·ealed the pre ~­
t•uce of mi..;;.; ile h ,JW'i 111 Cub.t.
In 19(l4 , Chn1:1 dcton. tted It"&gt; tlr..,t .1to 111H.. bomb.
In 1964, H&lt;trolJ \'(;'il'ion of' th e labur P.u'ty dS\tllnL'd oflic~...· .l'i
prinw mini'itt'r &lt;~f f ; rc,l t Brit.llll. ~ u ccced u1g Comervati\'e Sir Ale~..·
f1ouglr1'i - H oml·.
In \9711. Anw;t r S;Jd.tt w, l, d c..'ctvd prt·.., ide nt &lt;lf Egypt. 'i\Jcc~...·c dtng
tht" latl' (; ,tm ,J l AhdL"I N.1~~cr.
In I'J7H. 1illl" Co ll q.;e ut'(.:.ml111.d ' ot'the R01n .l!l C.1thohc Church
choo;;e ( ~Jniin,J ! K.1rul Wn)tyl.I to lx· thL· !l1...'\\' pope he took rhc n.llllL'
' John i'.ml II.
In Jf)t-{ 7_ .I )H, 2 -hour dr.ull ,l 111 MJdl.lnd. ri.."\.,1\, l.'lhinl h.ipplly ,)\
rco;;Cue r~ frel'd Jn-.Ju 1\lh ( 'lurL' .. 11 1 1l-:-month-nld g:nl tr.lppt·d Ill ,tn
ab:wdnlled \\ l' II
Ten yc.1r" .1 ~0: Sm· IL' t [&gt;t L''-ldcnt i\11k h,1d \. _( ;orhc~thn -.uhmmnl
tn.the "i{J~'lt"t lq.~ J ..,l.ttllrL' .1 'ir,Jkd-h. tr k pL1n tu tr,Jmf;&gt;l"lll the Sm 'll' t
econon1v ru ,, ti-t'L'. lll.Jrh·t .;,yqL·ql ( 111\IL'd! .J ll 'i!i..."\'L' M.trtlll .Ln d h1~
w di: , ,\ct;.L''-" V tLto f· J;~ Ten n.tnt .· \'l'i lt t'd t\ Llll.'rl r.111 (; 1-. i 11 S.1ud 1 A r.l hl ,l.
fh e ClllcinnatJ Rl'ds hL',lt th L· (hkl.1ml A\. 7--!l'r,~ .g, lliH ' one' ()t'rh~...·
World &gt;cm·c .
'

..

tht' Green Party- including its
candidate, Ralph Nader to be swor n in as the next presUnited States. l:lut N ,1der - as

h~...·

TODAY IN HISTORY

.

mtnute, or her fiance IS a termmal opn- between commumtics than there has
nust.
been m the last century. Its purpose was
Smce your daughter's fiance IS paying to n:veal if there were any impediments
for the wedding. th ey may invite to the union, such as the bride having
whomever they wish. It's up to the rdabeen pledged to someone 'else, or the
uves to decide whether or not to attend
the 12th wedding. However, if they sent groom· already bemg married. Another
only their good wishes, I wouldn't blame 1mpediment might be that they were
close blood relatives. Today, no one is
them .
Unfortunately, there is no hmit on the expected to voice an objccuon .
number of tinlcs a person can be nlJrFor an excellent guide to becoming
ried. Let's hope your daughter docsn 't go a better conversationalist and a more.
for a baker's dozen ..
attracuve pcrso n,ord.cr " How to Be PopTo address the question s m your I~S .: ular.·· St·nd a bu-.Jnl''i\- \17t:d , sdfAsking whether there is anyone present
' addressed en\'dope. plu s check or money
who knows why this man Jnd woman
sho uld not be umted in holy matnmony order for S3 .CJ5 (S4.'i0 111 Canada) ro·
, is ;1 holdover from times when there · Dea1 Abby i'npubnty Booklet, P.O. Box
H7. Mount Morri &gt;. IL (,l ll'i4- 11447 .
W\.'Tt' no phones, travel wa~ chfficult, and
thl..'rc was Lu lt' ss commumcaoon (Pomgl'" included )

•

Free "World welcomes
Milosevic's departure

The p,tssion,He

Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

Nat

Hentoff
NEA COLUMNIST .
A11d among an as yet unquantifle9 number
of traditiunal Democrats, d1 e Gore- Li eh erman ticket ha~ not ign ited hearts and souk
Also, there are many you ng outsiders ~vho,
until now, have not voted in significa nt nun} bers, but do have vigorous social concernsas evidenced by ·re ce nt demonstrations
against the ex ploitation of Thi rd World
workers by Anlt:-rican companies, and for
eco nomic ju~tin· here f9r tho se not enjoying
the bocH n i'n~ t'L"onomy - . ~md they are
JllJily.
The New York Time~ is urgently pushing
the Gore candidacy in i t~ ed itorials. In one
lead edi torial, it \ternly upbraided Nader for
being a spo il er.Jt·«e J ackson- who recently received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from the prt.•sident, whom he servt:s as a
~piritual adviser nonetheless has bitt erly
attacked Nader for offeri ng voters the liberty of anoth er choice in the forthcoming
elections.
On Aug. 20,Jackson, on his reglllar Sunday
CNN televi\ion show, confronted Nader.
Jackson was no match foe that indepe ndent
contender - either in inte ll ectual depth or
in his abi lity to counter Nader's responses to
the argument that he wi ll seriou sly harm the

powerless if he is the cause of Gore's defeat.
"The Democratic Party has decayed,"
Nader said, looking straight at the Rev. Jack so n . "Eve n yo u h ave been margi11aliz ed." ·
The Democratic platform thiS year made
that clear, as reported in the news sccti 011 of
th e July 30 New York Times :
s supporting universal hea lth
atorium on th e death penalty,
p
s against corporatiom t hat pay
low wages, tougher rules fl.&gt;r internatiom.ll
trade. and bettn h'ealth care for pri so ners
were withdrawn or oversvhelmingly defeated
... also voted down was in creased spending
for t he poor. Gore delegate Tom I Iayden said
t he platform had f.1iled to ad dre&gt;.~ the challe nge of R alph Nader."
But Jesse Jackson m owd to d imi nish
Nader on one of th e Green )larry candidate's
special C\)ncerns. He showed a TV clip of
e n v .in) nn H:pta l i~t Robert Kennl'dy Jr. attack ing Nc1dt&gt;r's cand ida cy as " ,1 hugl' threat to
the env1ron ment."
..
Unilltnmdated, Nader pointed out that in
the eigh t yea r1 of the c:Jinton - (;ore admin istrfltJOn~li t t1e has been dum: to dt·al with the 'J
expo;;url' of'' low-mcome AmL'ricans, including minorities, to high lead-poisoning and
ost hm a levels."
Nader toldjockson he had recently been in .,
H artford, Conn., where " the Democrats ,
co ntrol the city co unci1 and thl' executive
bran ch . Forty perce nt of the c hild ren in th e
inner city arc atllicted with asthma. I asked
the people there what the Democrats had
done for _thcm. The answer wa.;; 'nothing."'
For once, J esse Jackson had nothmg to say.

RACINE - A look at the gun control and other legi,l.iti VL' tssu~s was
uken by R .K tne Grange at .1 recent meeting.
There was a discussion on S.B. 2099 in d1e U.S. Se nate which, accordmg to the the grange h::glslatiw agent, would req uire aU citiZL'IlS to re-g1:-.tt.·r their g\-111S on their federal incOme tax forms. A resolution opposing
the bill was unanimously passed by the metnbers and will be sent to
Congre~~·
Concern about Issue I asking for a S400 million bond issue that will
.1ppe&gt;r on the Ohio ballot was also discussed . Though the bill seeks to
presen·e farmJ:md, nlJny other items have been put into it dealing with
depressed JrCJS in cities and sw;unp1and preservation .
It was reported that the information currently does not .i ndi cate how
much would go fo r actual farm preservation. Also, it was pointed out that
no information is av;ulable on how the state will repay the money and
thL: interest on it though it does say there will be no increase in taxes.
The gr.mge wi ll look for more information on the bill before election.
Grange members asked about the bill m Co ngress seeking to take
away th e CongressLOnal charter of the Boy Scouts because of tl)ei r
beliefs. The legislative director repo rted that the bill received o nly a
dozen votes for it. H owever, it wa.&lt; no ted that the United W.1y is looking
to withdraw support from the scouts.
"The gra nge recently presented a package of resolutions to state and
Congre&gt;mmal reprr·sentatlves .. Only Ohio R e p. Jo hn Carey has replied
to these at this time, H was reported.
In be half of members of the g range, Geraldine Cross presented
Rachel Ashley with a sweeper as a wedding gift for her upcoming marriJge in December.
The g range conducted a planning meeting for the grange year. Its
annual haynde and wiener roast will be held Oct. 2l.The annual·pig-ina-pokc au ction is tentatively set for Nov. II pending approval of the auction~cr. Participation in the annual Racine Flower Festival was approved
JS '''a~ the selection of an annual community citizen's award to be given
next Juhe. The baking contest will be held at the March meeting and
other contests will be judge in Scptenibcr.
Jt.'Jll AlklrL'. sec retary. presented a letter from the National Grange,lbout its 11L'\\" "Visions 2000" program. The program is dt!signed to
tmpn:we loc.1l grange activities and comnmniry work . C huck Yost, master. wW .1ppro.1c h the Mc·igs County Po mona Grange about p&gt;rticipatin~ in th~...· prngr:uu.

CALENDAR

A picturL' of grJng~.· officers was t.1ken for thL· upnm1ing nl'\\' Melt,"'
Coumy History book'. Emma Ad.mb WJS rL·ported ilL Emma Ashk·y.lccturcr, prest:•ntcd .1 pmgram on .1pplt'~ . lnfi)rnJ,ll ion re g.mhng pl.mtmg and
c.m.· of appk rr~.·es was gi,·~.,·n. A quiz on apple knowledge was won by
Mary K.1y Yost.

Riverview gardeners
eled new officers
REEDSVILLE - New officers were installed by Maxine Whitehead, retiring president, at a rl"ccnt meeting of the Riverview Garden
Cl ub held at the home• of Ruth Ann Balderson, With M ary Ali ce l:l!Se
and Betty Boggs as co- hostesses.
Whitehe;Jd presented carnations and po cket boo k pad\ to each of
the new officers, Ruth Anne Balderson, president; Marilyn H an num ,
vice president; Janet Connolly, sec retary, and Delores Frank, treasurer.
Balderson then presented Whitehead wtth a mum in appreoiation
of her work for the club.
Whitehead presided at the meetmg which opened with singmg of
"F~r the Beauty of the Earth", the club creed, "Who M akes a Gar~
den" and prayer by Delores Frank.
Plans were discussed for the tulip bulb proj ect for Easter n Elementa ry School. Whitehead. Balderson, Margaret Cauthorn, Wcndi
H an num , Frances Reed, Nancy Wachter. and Margaret Grossnickle
serve on the committee.
·The Christmas party was set Cor Dec. I4 at the Whitehead home.
Plans were made to cat out at lJJVino's m Williamstown, W.Va. on
Oct. 26.
New officers were installed by WhiteheJd, the outgoi ng president .
She presented the following offi.cers with carnations and pocket book
pads : Rutb Anne ll 1lf\erso n, presidt• nt; MJnlyn Hannum, vice prcsident;Jmet Connolly, secretary, and Delores Fr:mk, treasurer.
Balderson prcsentedW hitche&gt;d with a mum in apprt'CIOtion of her
work for the club.
Roll call was answe red by members te lling a schoo l m~mory. For
the program, members di scussed tht·ir g;Jrdenlng problems. or to ld of
how successful they wen~.
Refft.'shments were ~1!./,ed to the abo\·c-nam i..~d .md to Ell a
Osborne, Gr.tci..' Weber and j;JlliCL' Young.
Janet Con nolly won the: door prize.

MONDAY
POMEROY Womc·n oC
Worth mt.·cting. C1. .l0 p . m . Mon dJy. at tht.· Pomcroy L1br.uy.
V1ckJe Roush Ln -,pe.Jk.
POMEROY
Count\'
meeting of Meigs Cou nty Garden Club\, Mqnday, 7 p.m at
the Meigs County Museum .
Rutternut Avl..' .. Pomeroy.
POMEROY
Me1gs
County Right to L1fe, Monday.
7:30 p.m. at [he Pome rov
L1brary.
LETART- l:etart Townsh1p
Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m. at the
office building.
RACINE - Ra cin e Village
CounCil wtll meet in recessed
session l\1onday 7 p.111 . Jt the
muniCipal building.
POMEROY - Community
Outreach Team , Chillicothe VA
Medical . Center. will be in
Pomeroy, O ct. 16-19 and Oct .
23-25, in trailer behind Veterans
Memorial Ho spital. I 0 a.m. to
2:30p.m . eac h day, to enroll vet. erans mro the VA H ealch C:uc
System.

O srcop ,tthH· J\'h 'd ll.lllt.'. \\'lll t.dk
on the di~L' .l'iL'. Thu-.c \\ tth lupu ~
.md !lbmmy.tlgl .l 111\'lti...'d.

POMEROY
County Ani~ .liJ S A~ soc Jation .
"P"'t·Ja! mee ring , Tm."sday, (,_.)()
p.m H the Pomeroy Library.
Purpo~e tn di s( USS ·desig:n of'
new \ycbpagL·.
POMEROY
Me1gs :
C.nun ty Artis :l11 S Ao;;o;;oci.Hion,. ·
(1:10 p.m .. Pomeroy Libr;uy, to
discuss de:-.ign of nl'W webpage.
All artisans who are not included in the Association's c:a alog
but wish to be are urged to
attend the meeting.
WEDNESDAY
MIIJDLEPORT Middleport Literary Club. 2 p.m .
Wednesday. home of June Kloes ..
Middlepon, Jeanne Bowen to
revJC\\' .. Queen LuCia"' by E. F .
Ben so n.

TUESDAY
POM EROY
Lupu s/ Fi bromy .1 lg Ja Support
Group, Tuesday, (J :.lO ro H p .m ..
cafeteria , Veter.1n s Memot1.1l
Ho spital.
Pomeroy.
S:~rah
M cG rn\·, .trthr itJ~ prugr:un
dJrcctor ;lt OU Co lle ge of

WELLSTON -·The Board-'
of Du·ec tors of the Galli.a!Jackson / Mctg~ / Vmton Solid WastL'.
J\1atl.1gt'mt'nt D1~ trict \\'ill meet
on w~...·dnc ::. J.w .1 [ 7:30 a.m. at
the bo.trd i.) ffil.'e l!l Wellston.
LI-s t

\\'L'L'k \

llll'l'[lllg

Dtrl'ct(H l.t11Ct' \Xlthnn .

DUbllc univetSities Dfllr exbaoniiiiiiiY VIIand out·of·the·ordinal'f oppuotunllles to learn, 11ICOitld, aealll,
and gcow. ExDiore lhe Ills and ICiencel, business,

~

educ:IUon,

heaMh cate, and mudl more at one ol18 campuses You'll tlllctNw IMM tu thin~ng
can help you get ahetltL • Creating Unique Learning OpportuniU-What can Alabama

•

•

teach ll1e world? Alalll011 AIM University. Albans State UniverSity, Jacksonville State Univetsity,
and the University of Mantnallo offer degrees and programs found at few other colleges in the
nalion. Plus the Univelllly of W81t Allbama Is leading lhe war In developing a camDUs that integrates lntemet
technologies inlo evel'f ph-

of a student's college care«. • Sllap1ng Global Leadership-In lhe mi lital), in the

boatdroom, and in yout hometown, Alalllma can prepare you to lake charge of youtluture. Troy Stale University
Dothan and Auburn University MontgomlrJ are noted for ttaining mililary leadeiS In lact. both General HenlY Shelton.
chairman of the Joinl Chiefs of Staff, and General Michael Ryan. Ail Force chief ol stall. ate AUM graduates. And the
University of Alabama's nationally ranked techno-M.B A. program helps business executives connect with success in the

(Na t Hent o.!J is a 11atiorwlly YCIIDII'tted aHthority
em tlte First Art~clldwellt a11d tilt' Bill o( Rights.)

new economy. • Pioneering Health Care lmovatlons-The discoveries and advances made by Alabama 's med1ca1 pioneers
. are something everyone can feel good about Restarchets at Ihe UniverSity of Alabama at Birmingham recently made

'

intemational headlines by DiODOinling the origin of the AIDS vlru-and are now moving closer to developing a

BUSINESS MIRROR

Forecaster believes the bottom has been reached
BY JOHN CUNNIFF

NEW YORK - There arc people w ho
cho'b~e to live dangerou sly rock rlimbers,
.;;tunt pilots, trapeze rtrti~t-.. A;1d Rohert Moirow of Bradenton , Fla. , ~tuck market fbrecaster.
.

Asked in the m1dst of last Thursday's 300point-plus plunge in the Dow Jones industri.11 average whether he remained confident
that 1tock1 would rise strongly through the
re1t of the year, Brad~ntnn, Fb.-bo;ed Morrow replied, " Oh yes. Ce rtainly."
In March he predicted that the market
wou ld would flSi..' inttn:a rl y 'itll111ller and then
begin de clining in~ o October, :tfi:er wh ich it
· \VOt!ld begin a year-long ao;ccnt.
The ~pc c 1fi ~ numben were not a~ Morrow,
\Vho works tOr mstitmional clicm~. had cnvi. \loned. I k expected the Sundard &amp; Poor's
:;po inde~ to bottom o ut in O ctober at 1.46H,
hut it"''" umln I,.HII as he spoke Thursday.
lie UJIIU'dl'\ lhl' int L'lll,lt )' nf'tlw ;;cllotTsurpno.;cd h1n1. but hi v direction .md rimmg w~t'l
n11 the 11urk.
Morrow mJkcs II&lt;\ d.lilll to 1nt:lllihility !)f cour-.,e. nobody C.lll ;md not .dl hi..; t'.Uhn fiHTCI\t~ a a· n n rill' publw record . But few

of his genre are as willing to take ~uch risk to
their reputations.
He stands by the same bullish numbe rs he
issued seven months ago.ily November 2110 1,
he expects the S&amp;P index to be at I ,876
pointS: the Dow industrials at I4,777 and the
Nasdaq at 5,2 42 to 5,897.
Stating specifi cs is not common among the
forcpsting fraternity, which love s soft. subjective numbers as intensely as politicians love
soft mont!y. Uut Morrow, a former engineer
with 37 international patents to his name,
wouldn't have it any other way. '
He ~~ almost cnmpdled to be.: specific ,as, fur
example, one must be in analyzing vibrations
of large machinery, which happens to be his
field of engine ering expertise.
Complex machmcs emjt vibration patterns
that cJn ~ uggc~o,t safety or sig:na1 dange-rs, and
-;imilarl y, rherc an:: marketpla ce vibrations
emitted by human and fimmcial behavior that
a ~ki l1ed .maly'it can mterpret. That\ the ba~l"
o t· :.1 sy~tem Morrow has been working with
t()r more tlun two dl':cadcs.
He (Oncetks 1t"s unorthodox, so he insi~ts
on hemg o n record wi~h h i~ views.
l11 Nm·t·• nhl'f I'JHO , for c·xamplc , he toltf

..

vaccine . Plus lhe University of South Alabama's Bum Center Is a national leader in lhe development and use

www.th·inkalabama.edu

ol artificial

s~n

'

for bum viclims. These tenowned health care powa1louses also are pursuing new methods

of prevention, diagnosis, and treatment lot cancer, heart disease, and much more. • Developing New
Technologies-/&gt;Jabama creates the materials to build better IIvas. Aubum UnivetSity is respons1ble
for revolutional'f develoDments in engineering, d81lgnlng everything Irom slronger bndges

Money magazine readers that a bull market
would commen ce in Augmt 1982 at an S&amp;l'
index of IOO.It began in August at 98.7. He's
been eve n more aCcurate, sometimes less so.
If his current forecast is off the mark , he
says, it will be m the specific numbers, rather
than in the tm1ing. And he isn't at all worned
about short-term events. The Nasdaq, Dow
an d S&amp;P, he says, signal "buy."
And a. year from now? A hear 1narker.
"A reJl bea r market," he says, mea ning one
unlike th e six-week decline in 1987 and the
short- lived bears in 1990 and 1994. He foresees " decline that might last a year, with tl&gt;c
Dow Jones and S&amp;P averages tailing 25 percent and the Nasdaq sufrering an horrendous
plunge of 38 pecccnt to 50 percent.
A sho ck, that is, to those who ;1rt·n t prepared, a bear market that perh,1ps most of
today's investors hav~ never t'Xpenet1ccd. A
lud market that newcomers mig)u not be
endowed \.vith patien ce to \.'tH..iurc.
A b~....,lr, howeve r, that old -tilller'l know will
i.'VC'ntually txpm::.j liSt as ce rtainly Js bu11markct&lt; do:

and roadways 1o more ellective cat ai1bags and bullatprool vesls. At the h1giHech
Univetsity of /&gt;Jabama 1n Huntsville, sclanllsts apply their skills 10 creanl
h~IHemDeratute

suDerconductotS and Dromising

new medical devices.

1

(/oltll C1111 11 iU.is a f,liSincss 1.11111lyst_lln T1tr A.I"S(lPress.)
/
·

rll1f('t/

..

CJn-

celnl duL' ro the LI ~...k of .1 yuorum . .ll'Lording to EXL'l.'lltJ\·c

Alabama's

.,

\\",IS

.

.

�P~~ge A6

• The Dally Sentinel

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Clinton set to reopen talks
SHARM EL-SHEU{, Egypt (AP) - President Chmon and other
world leaden undertook an uphill drive Monday to quell violence
on the Wen Bank and in Gaza and prod Israeli Prime Minister Ehud
Barak and Palestinian leader Vasser Arafat to reopen pe.ce talks.
Wtth a little more than three months left in his pre&lt;idency, Clinton st;ilJ. hopes to mediate a peace accord between Israel and the
Palesbmansttfor this emergency summit, though. the most optinusbc oudoo_k IS for a truce and a date for new negotiations. Amid
mtensc; secunty, Barak was first to arrive, stepping onto a red carpet
after hiS lsraeh Jet touched down at this Egyptian Red Sea spa. The
first order of business was a meeting with the host, Egyptian PreSIdent Hosni Mubarak.

Women march against-poverty
WASHINGTON (AP) - Women fium around the world
marched Sunday and shouted "Shame!" at the World Bank and rhe
International Monetary Fund buildings in a protest against world
poverty and the mistreatmem of women.
Several thousand marchers fium Africa, Asia and the Americas
chanted in a cacophony of languages their support for equal rights
for women and their opposition to domestic violence. The WashIngton rally was a culminating event of the World March ofWomen
2000, which began in March in Geneva. The movement 's international delegation planned to meet Monday with IMF and World ·
Bank officials to seek greater debt relief and improved lending for
poor countries.
The same group will meet with U.N. Secretarv General Kofi
Annan on Tuesday to present him with petitions signed by 2 million people serking an end to violence against women.

Marchers converge on D.C.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Following the call of Nation of Is!.m
leader Louis Farrakhan, thousands were convergmg on the capital
Monday for the first Million Family March on the National Mall.
The march comes on the fifth anniversary of the Million Man
March, which was also spearheaded by Farrakhan, who has been
accused of anti-white and anti-Semitic semiments.
But unlike the 1995 event, which was aimed at black men, people of all fatths and races were invited to participate in the march by
Farrakhan, who has been trying to make ,hiS image more mainstream of late. Organizers declined to say how many people they
expect, but they told city offiCials to prepare for more than I nullion.

Kate Winslet bears child
LONDON (AP) - Kate Winslet will have to make more room
in her lifeboat fium now on.
The "Titanic" star and her newborn daughter Mia are doing great
and mom hopes to leave the hospital Monday, a publicist for the
British actress said Sunday. Mia - who weighed 8 pounds, 9
ounces, when she was born Thursday at a London hospital -is the
first child for 25-year-old Winslet and her husband, Jim Threapleton.
The couple met in 1997 on the set of the British film "Hideous
Kinky;• in which Winslet starred and Threapleton, 26, 'served as
assistant director. They married the next year.

Bush, Gore prepping for final debate
w:

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - George
Bwh
and AI Gore are sunu!.tmg town hall-style
meetings as practice fur their third debate
Tut)day, the presidential rival&lt; last face-to-face
showdown before a final sprint to Election
Day.
The format isn't his favorite, but Texas Gov.
Bush was nor considering major strategy shifts
as he practiced answering questions, perched
on a stool in the governor's mansion and taking questions from aides, campaign officials
said Sunday.
His advisers believe the Republican nominee's laid-back style and comfort level with
foreign and domestic isSues have paid off in the
polls, which show the race essentially even.

Daily Scoreboard, Page 86
Kamas City wins MLS Cup, Page 86

corporate and government handling of auto safety matters.
"When this year began,
nobody would have believed the
number of safety protections that
are on the president's desk couJd
be achieved," said Rep. Ed
Markey, D-Mass.
Legislation that President Clinton is expected to sign will bring
major changes to government
investigations of safety defects, the
auto industry's relationships with
federal regulators and testing
requirements for tires and vehicles.

HIGHLIGHTS
Andrade wins
Vegas Classic
LAS. VEGAS (AP) Billy
Andrade beat Phil Mickelson by a
stroke in the lnvensys at Las Vegas
Classic.
The $765,000 first pnze
dwarfed the $187,027 Andrade
won all year, and moved him
from worrying about making
enough money to retain his PGA
Tour card to wondering if he can
make the top 30 and get in the
lucrative Tour Championship.
Andrade (68) held olf Mickelson, who birdied the final hole for
a 66. Jonathan Kaye finished in a
ric with Stewarr Cink for third
after tying the TPC Summerlin
record with a tO-under 62.

target for Cheney this week. He
will pwh Bush's proposal to let
younger workers put about onesixth of their Social Security payroll taXes into private accounts
that they would own and concrol.
Cheney has likened these
accounts to 401 (k) retirement
plahs that many Americans have.
through their employers. The
Bush campaign contends the
accounts will earn a higher rate of
return - perhaps as much as 6
percent annually. based on histor- .
ical stock market performance,
compared with about 2 percent
that Social Security earns.

Inkster rallies to
win Samsung title
VALLEJO. Calif. (AP) - Juli
Inkster dosed with a 3-under 69
10 beat Annika Sorenstam by four
srrokes in the Sarnsung World
Championship.
Inkster finished her 25th career
victory at 14 under, tying the
tournament record on a Hiddenbrooke «?urse that baffied most
of the elite field of 20 players.
Inkster earned $152,000 for her
third World Championship in
four years.
Sorensram also shot a 69. Pat
Hurst (73) was third at 284, and
Karrie Webb (70) followed at

Poll: Six in 10 say prescriptions 'very important' issue
WASHINGTON (AP) Prescription
drugs have been potent medicine in this year's
presidential campaign and a majority of
Americans etther take them regularly or have
someone in their family who does, an Associated Press poll says.
Nearly six in I 0 Amerinns say they or
someone in their family takes such medicines
regularly, the poll found. The same proportion
consider prescription drugs a "very important" issue in their vote for president.
Mary Jane Byrd of Alturas, Fla., said she and

'

her husband have managed to pay for their
many prescriptions so far, but " there will
come a time when it will eat up our savings."
"We're also concerned for a lot of other
people who are older than us and just on
Social Security," said Byrd, 53. She noted that
her mother has to live hours away so she can
be closer to a health maintenance organization that will cover her drug costs.
Two-thirds of people over 55 - one of the
most active voting groups - consider prescription' drugs very important in their vote,

according to the poll conducted for the AP by
ICR of Media, Pa.
Four of· five people with incomes below
$15,000- a group less likely to vote- consider the issue very important. Women wen~
more likely than men and blacks were more
likely than whites to feel that way.
Asked what issue was tnost important in

Thorpe captures
Gold Rush crown
LT133 Lawn Tractor

SACRAMENTO, Calif (AP)
- Jim Thorpe won his second
o;;tr&lt;tight tournam~nt, shooting a
6-under for a two- o;;troke victory
in the Senior l'GA Tour\ Gold
!tush Classic.
Thorpt:,
who
won
the
Tr,msamerica Cha1npionship last
wt·ek for his first .;;enior titl~. finIshed wirh a 2 1-umler I '15 total,
the lowest score this ytar. He

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Please see Ben1als, Pille 83

NEW YORK (AP) - With
Mighty Mat: once ag.·dn reduced
ro bcJng a &lt;ipectator, the New
York Mets moved Wl[htn one
win of wrapping up their half of
a Subway Seril"s.
New York pounded St. Louo&gt;
JCe Darryl Kile with a record five
dotthle.., in a four-run first inning
and Mark McGwire didn't swing
the bat lor the third tim~ this
..eries as th e Mets bcat the: Cardinals 111-6 Sunday nig;ht for a 3-1
k.tJ in the NL championship
" He's the X-factor of X-fac~ors." Ml'ts manager Bobby Valen -

tine said of M cGwirc-, who can
only pi nell hit bee a. use of t.endiniti.., in hi) right kne('. " There were
&lt;1 tCw time~ he was standing there
lurking in th e wings. l' m .glad we
kept h im on the bench."
The Met' got some help fmm
Cardinals manager Tony La R.ussa
- whose e\'ery move backtlred
- a&lt;:&gt; McG\.vire waited with the
bat m hi-; hands three .times in the
.. ixth inning a'\ the tylng run came
to the plate.
The Mets will try to keep Big
Mac on the sidl'i inc again in
Monday\ Game 5 as th~;;y attt·mpt
to finish off the Cardinals. Only
t:ight tt'alm haVL' cvt:r come back

ON THE RUN - Be ngals rookie Peter Warrick makes a catch during Sunday's 15·0 loss to the Steelers at Three Rivers Stadium. (AP)

fi·o m a .l-1 ddicit in a besr-ofsevc n Sl' n L'~.
"Wt: 'n.:. '27 good oms away from
lwing in the World Series," said
Ckndon Rm ch, \Vho · pitched
· thr~ l' o;cord~.·ss i1111in~ for tht"
\\'Ill.

Alon ~

Spain wins
Dunhill Cup

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PITTSBURGH (AP) For the Pit!¥Jurgh Steelers, it's
looking a lot like 1976. For the
Cincinnati Bengals, it's looking a lot like 1999 and 1998
and 1997 and ...
The Steelers changed quarterbacks Sunday, an uncommon switch for a team riding a.
three-game winning streak.
The move didn't help much
although Kent Graham found
Hines Ward on a 77-yard
touchdown pass play on the
second play ITom scrinmuge.
So, unable to throw, the
Steelers relied on their defense
and running game - a familiar mix for them - to beat the
bewildered
winless
and
Cincinnati Bengals 15-0 and
get back to .500 after starting
0-3.
.
"It's been a lot of work, but
we can't stop. here," Wa.rd said.
"We've still got a lot of sea.son
left."
That must be a discouraging
thought for the Bengals (0-6),
who have scored only 37
points all season.
· The last time the Steelers (33) mounted such a comeback
after a bad start was 1976.
when they finished 10-4 after
opening 1-4. They had five
shutouts during a nine-game
winning streak in which they
allowed only 28 points.
Then, quarterback Terry
Bradshaw's injury
forced
coach Chuck Noll to use

2H6.

deciding how to vote, 23 percent said education, which usually leads such lists. Moral values was second, followed by Social Security
and Medicare.

$T, ANDREWS, Scotland (AP)
~ Saved by Miguel Angel Martin'.;; curling, 50-foot putt on the
I Hth hole-, defending champion
Sp:1in beat South Africa 2- 1 in
the final of the Dunhill Cup.
Martin's putt forced · a playoff that
Spam won wln~n David Frost
mi'iseJ a J-tOot putt on the first
extra bole.

to play, John Deere has the right

Mets beat
up Cards
in Game 4

M ONDAY'S

Swift action expected on Chenet now aiming his .
Capital Hill on auto safety campa1gn at younger voters
WASHINGTON (AP) - In
the congressional equivalent of a
blink of an eye, lawmakers
approved the most sweeping auto
safety legislation in decades.
lr took barely two nwmhs from
the time Bridgestone / Firestone
Inc. announced a massive tire'
recall- amid reports of 101 traffic deaths in the United States -for Congress to pass the legislation. Such a rush to action during
an election year marked by bitter
partisanship showed how important lawmakers felt it was to
respond to public outrage over

Page 81
Monday. October 1&amp;, 2000

"He's approaching it very similarly to the scores of town hall meetings.
On Monday, the vice president was holding
way he approached the other two debates;'
an hourlong mock town haD- plus at least 30
said Bush campaign spokesman Ari Fleischer.
"We expect the questions that will be asked minutes of review and critique afterward will be similar to the ones he gets at town haD with 23 "real people" debate coaches, a group
meetings on the campaign trail;' Fleischer said. that Gore caJled "our happy band:'
"We'll have fun," he a..sured the citizen
"Those events are the best practice for him:•
advisers
who greeted him on the wet, foggy
On Monday, Bwh p!.nned to tweak President Clinton with a nlly in. his home s~ate of St. Louis tarmac Sunday night.
After his aggressive and sigh-filled approach
ArkarlSas on the way to St. Louis for the
in the first debate with Bush was criticized,
debate.
Gore
muted his style in their second match up.
Gore, meanwhile, arrived in that city Sunday
night and was preparing for the debate format Now, his strategists are debating whether Gore
that advisers say is his strongest - honed dur- was too intent in the second debate on being
ing years spent representing Tennessee in Con- likable and let Bwh get away with misrepre- ·
gress and answering questions fium voters in senting aspec_ts of his Texas record.

JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) -With
jwt three weeks until Election
Day, Dick Cheney is ~an
appeal to younger voters, pitching retirement savings accounts
and taX cuts in a campaign swing
through battleground Slates.
The Republican vice presidential nominee was kicking off the
week MQnday at a 'Christian college in Missouri before heading
to florida, where he'll tour the
state by bus and watch Tuesday
night's debate between running
mate George W. Bush and Vice
Pre&lt;ident AI Gore.
Voters aged 20 to 40 are the

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

Monday, October 16,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

I

AvBIIRIJie at

FORT WORTH, Texas (AI')
Sc&lt;&gt;tt Goodyear won the
f1o;teo;t r:1ct: i1i lRL history as
Buddy Lazier took the season
championship by finishing fourth
in the Excite 50(1 at Texas Motor
Speedway.
Ltzier needed to finish 14th or
better to win th,· title and S1 milli on. He had seven top- I 0 finisht:s in the .nin e races.
Coodyear beat Eddie Cheever
Jr. bx 11.14 seconds for his forst
victory of th e year and third of
hi ~ carl'cr.
Th t; average winning speed \Vd ~
175. 27(, mph , breaking the IRL
record of 169.1 82 set by Scott
Sh~rp at Texas on June 1 I.

•••••
Fax M eib'&gt; County sports news
to the Daily ·sentinel at 9Y22157. Email loca l sports items to
gJltribunc@eurt·kanct .co m .
Cont;1ct sport\ ed itor Andrcw
Carter ar 9n-52H7, ext. 21.
I

•

A-Ro9's single powers Mariners
SEATTLE (AP) - Alex Rodriguez hasn't left the Seattle Mariners JUSr yet, and
they haven't finished with the New York
Yankees, &lt;.~irher.
The New York Yankees had surged ahead
on Luis Soja's two-run double, and it
s~emed like their path to a third straight
World Series trip needed just five more
lllllll1gs.

Then AR.od woke up the Mariners and
sent this AL championship series back to the
Bronx.
Rodriguez hit a go-ahead, two-run single
otT Jeff Ndson, and Edgar Martinez and
John Olerud followed with consecutive
homers, all in a six-pitch span. The
Mariners' 6-2 win Sunday pu ll ed them to
3-2 in the· best-of-seven series, which
resumes Tuesday night on the East Coast.
.. We just want to get it to Gamr: 7 and
extt:nd it, somehow, some way, and m:tke it
a little difficult on these New Yorker&gt;,"

Earnhardt
wins at
Talladega

Rodriguez said.
He is eligible for free agency after the
World Series and the 25-year-old shorrstop
is likely to become the· sport's highest-paid
player. The possibility that Sunday would lw
his final game in a Mariners uniform jolted
him li ke a jug full of java .
" I think last night, for thL· fir~t time, it hit
me," he said. "I had a hard time· sleeping "
1itt1e bit, becauo;e, you know, you might be
facing the end, and you don't know really
what the future holds for llll' .... This could
be, maybe, it.''
A four-time All-Star, l~odriguez &gt;OUnLkd
skittish about leaving rhe Emerald City.
"My _mom," he said, " Ius always told me,
'Sometimes, it's not grct'nt:r on tilt' other
side.'''
On the other sid~ of the Satcco Field, the
Yankce·s dn.·sst·d and n·turncd to Nnv York
with Orlando Hernandez ready to ftce John
Halama in Game 6 Tut.'~d&lt;lY night and And)r

Pettitte in reserve for :1 St'Vl'mh g:~mt•, if
needed, thL" t~lllnwing day.
;'I \un: like our chann~s, ln ~ ic a lly be cause
w~ havt" two of our best going."' Yankee . .
manager Jot' Torre s.tid." Hopdi..illy. on ly one
is enough.''
Rodriguez undeP.tuod that he might
have pushed otr rh~.· l.'nd only by ont· gallle.

Hc:rnanda i-; 7-0 \Vith a 1.2:2 EI~A in poqsc..·ason play.
HO\v will H.. o J r igul'Z prcp;m. :?
'' Pr.ty a lot, t(lr o ne," he s.1id.
In I ~05, the M.1rirwr&lt; lmt the fim two
games at Yankl'e Stadium, then won tlnLT
o;traighr at the KingdonH: to tah· tht•Jr lil"-itround "L-ries J-~.

Thio; tillle, they llltl\l \\in in Nn\ York .
·' All ofth~.· prc~\Ul't' j.., 011 them:· l\1.1rincr..,
m::tn ager I n11 Pinicll.l .... ud.
"Wc'rL' iJl .1 110 lmL' .. itu.ltion." Ok·n1d

1Il Jl J Tl

P:".

"Hc't. been so great thi, ye.1r. It

unmti.d.'' La Russa said.
It shouldn't have been consid-

\\'JS

ering KilL·\ 0\\'11 history and tht'
n·sult~ of other pi tc hers going on
~hort TL''it 111 riK' past two postsL·a~on..;. Nine t im~.:'" managers lnvc
brought &gt;tarters back ~arly L~lght tltllL''i on thrL'L' days' rest anJ
mll· l' nn only t\\'o and the
n·,uJt.., :llT di..,.l..;tmus . The pitchers
.ore 11-4 woth a '17.SI ERA and
thL· tl',llllS h,IVt' lost seven of the
Jlllll'

g.lllll'~.

"Th.1t h.1' uuthing to dn with

Please see NLCS, Page B6

Please see ALCS, Page- Bl

Griese leads Broncos past Browns
ll ENV F." (AI' ) l\n .11o
(; rJC\l'\ banner d.1~ h .•d qnh
Ollt: hulllllll'l' lllnlllL'liL

Atln ~u~slll~ !i..lr .W-l y:uLh in
tile fir~t !ulf ,tl onl' .md thl"ll\\'lllg
In' thml rnuchdm\ 11 p.t . . ~ l.1fl' in
tile third lJll,trtl'L ( ;rtl'\l' '' ,,..._
rL'IHO\l'd ti·om th~.· g,JlllL.
'' j rold tht'lll 011 the . . idl'il11L',

TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP)Tc,om owner Richlfd Childress has insisted for years that
Dale Earnhardt .&lt;.;an see the air
while · driving a race car in
those
hug~. fast
packs
NASCAR is known for.
Ewn though Earnhardt
always rejects th:1t as a reason
for 'his prowe&gt;S at Talladega
Superspecdway and Daytona
Internati onal Speedway, he is
easily the tiwst o;uccessful driver ' ar both of NASCAR\
biggest and fastest tracks.
And Sunday's victory in the
·Winston 500 on Talladega's
~.M-mtle oval made Childress' theory look good to a lot
of people.
"You're at Ta1lad egtl, thinking you'v4..' got a shot to. win
the race, and he's just rhc master," sttid runner-up Kenny
Wallace. " He pull&gt; down and
he's got a guy behind him that
pu~hes him to the win."
Even Earnhardt himself.
now winner of 10 Winston
Cup races here and 12 in Daytona, w;~s impreo;sed with thi'

!!'lease see NASCAR. Pare 83

with not using tht: grcatholllt' run hitter in the game,
La Russa's de cision to bring Klle
back on three days' rest didn't
work e•ithcr. Kilc. who had been
4-H with a (&gt;.66 El\.A in his 1.1
appL'aLtllCL'" with three days
hcrwn·n l..t:-trts, allowed seven run ...
.1nd 1.:ight hits 111 rhr~.·e-plu..,

~..:~t

'You'n· t.tkmg

lliL' our ,1mt \\'la·n
I'm ,t,lrtin!; ·tO h.I \.'L' fu11. I llL;._,d
~.lllll'~ like th1~ ."' l;rll'''-' ..,;tJd

.tft..:r lt-. tdm ~ t h l' 1km t•r Bmnco:-. tn .1 44 -10 rotnp .on·r the

( :kvcl.111d

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on

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Surh g.lllll'.., .nl' hL·cmn'lll!;
CO IIllliOilpLlcc t(\r th l' thmi-yc.lr

pro.

wh~l i~

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p.t . . "L'I .tnd \Yhn h,l, thnl\\ n t~)J'
more rlun .;!HI ,.,11'd, nn rhrt'l'
()(l,I\IOll..._ ll1 1" ~l':l\tlll.
\\.'lth 1.72! 1 uJd~.(;nt'\l', who
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hel'.l\1"1( nf
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clr!ll.l~t.' 111 l11 '\hP11hkr. \'i \\II p.ICt'
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rcconl. t'dl~Nn~ thl' ~.0."\ 11 \)(
Jnlm [h\,1\ 111 I'JIJ .~

,d\,,IY" ulkint!, ;Jbnur thi-;.
qu.lrtcrb .Kk \ h ot and tlut qu,\rtcrh.ll·k\ hot. I kno\\' f(Jr &lt;l filn
th.n H n.111 CrJL'"l' j, ihH . •md

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\'I.' I')' t(lrtllll.lll.:' in tlw w:1y
Ill'\ pl.i)lllg."
' ]JrmKm co,H·h Mike Shan,lll.lll ..,,nd the Bm\\ m ·' pi.Jvnl .m
l'l~ht-llL\11 ti·o nt,' "OII I ~'timc'..,

niiiL'. rn·ing to

t.1kc

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Of,pPrtlllli l y tn \ll,lkt' "Ollll' big
pl.1y~ . .md Bn ~111 rook &lt;H..1v.nlt.l~l'
ufit."
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p .t~"L'' .md fini...,Jll'd wHh J.)(l
\ .H\k w1th 110 JlltlTCl'pri.ol l\.
111.., Cl1-\.n·d p.t..., to l:.d
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pl.l)' 1)·01 11 \lTlti111Ll~L' 'l.'t up ,I
licl,t ~,&gt;,tl h\ jN&gt;It Hom.

Attn Limm 111~ .1 .lh-y,lnkr t(~
!\.h·(',JtlrL'\. c;l'll''L' (onnccte J
''it h Snnth nn ~~ :::!.::!-y.~rd ... co rin ~
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qu.lnL'l'. M{)lllL'llt' btt:r, ·hl' hit
Sn11rh .lg.un 01 1 .\ 17 -youdL•r to
111.1kc II

17-J.

Cnl'"l' tnmpll'tcJ ~l\'c p.1~sco;

lhLll1 dnL·.., "1\lrprp,.
'-'" llll' bt: l.•lll"L' o!. h1' \\ork

rn 'L't up Ll.ull·.., 45-y.mi tleld
~o.1l Jmt hdi.)I'L' the lulf.

1.'th1c." ~.11d \\ H.k l'l't.L'in·r Rud
Snliril, who l-.1ughr .ill thtTc l)(

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L'd (lllll (() h.l\~'l' -l iJ~I \ctld\ ,l!ld

COUCH CRUNCH - · Browns quarterback Tim Couch feel s t11e crunch
from Denver linebacker AI Wilson. (AP)

rhcy·r~_·

\t'\'l'll tlltllhd~)\\ n . . hhl.l).

"1 loul .uound the IL·.l;.;lll' .tnd

the Bn)wn... cut the*
~ktil·tt t'o ~ti-J () L'.llh Ill the
thml qu.u-tLT on T1m Couth's .1' .1nl tl)urhdown p.l.,.... to l raVI\

..,

Please see Browns, Page Bl

�P~~ge A6

• The Dally Sentinel

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Clinton set to reopen talks
SHARM EL-SHEU{, Egypt (AP) - President Chmon and other
world leaden undertook an uphill drive Monday to quell violence
on the Wen Bank and in Gaza and prod Israeli Prime Minister Ehud
Barak and Palestinian leader Vasser Arafat to reopen pe.ce talks.
Wtth a little more than three months left in his pre&lt;idency, Clinton st;ilJ. hopes to mediate a peace accord between Israel and the
Palesbmansttfor this emergency summit, though. the most optinusbc oudoo_k IS for a truce and a date for new negotiations. Amid
mtensc; secunty, Barak was first to arrive, stepping onto a red carpet
after hiS lsraeh Jet touched down at this Egyptian Red Sea spa. The
first order of business was a meeting with the host, Egyptian PreSIdent Hosni Mubarak.

Women march against-poverty
WASHINGTON (AP) - Women fium around the world
marched Sunday and shouted "Shame!" at the World Bank and rhe
International Monetary Fund buildings in a protest against world
poverty and the mistreatmem of women.
Several thousand marchers fium Africa, Asia and the Americas
chanted in a cacophony of languages their support for equal rights
for women and their opposition to domestic violence. The WashIngton rally was a culminating event of the World March ofWomen
2000, which began in March in Geneva. The movement 's international delegation planned to meet Monday with IMF and World ·
Bank officials to seek greater debt relief and improved lending for
poor countries.
The same group will meet with U.N. Secretarv General Kofi
Annan on Tuesday to present him with petitions signed by 2 million people serking an end to violence against women.

Marchers converge on D.C.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Following the call of Nation of Is!.m
leader Louis Farrakhan, thousands were convergmg on the capital
Monday for the first Million Family March on the National Mall.
The march comes on the fifth anniversary of the Million Man
March, which was also spearheaded by Farrakhan, who has been
accused of anti-white and anti-Semitic semiments.
But unlike the 1995 event, which was aimed at black men, people of all fatths and races were invited to participate in the march by
Farrakhan, who has been trying to make ,hiS image more mainstream of late. Organizers declined to say how many people they
expect, but they told city offiCials to prepare for more than I nullion.

Kate Winslet bears child
LONDON (AP) - Kate Winslet will have to make more room
in her lifeboat fium now on.
The "Titanic" star and her newborn daughter Mia are doing great
and mom hopes to leave the hospital Monday, a publicist for the
British actress said Sunday. Mia - who weighed 8 pounds, 9
ounces, when she was born Thursday at a London hospital -is the
first child for 25-year-old Winslet and her husband, Jim Threapleton.
The couple met in 1997 on the set of the British film "Hideous
Kinky;• in which Winslet starred and Threapleton, 26, 'served as
assistant director. They married the next year.

Bush, Gore prepping for final debate
w:

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - George
Bwh
and AI Gore are sunu!.tmg town hall-style
meetings as practice fur their third debate
Tut)day, the presidential rival&lt; last face-to-face
showdown before a final sprint to Election
Day.
The format isn't his favorite, but Texas Gov.
Bush was nor considering major strategy shifts
as he practiced answering questions, perched
on a stool in the governor's mansion and taking questions from aides, campaign officials
said Sunday.
His advisers believe the Republican nominee's laid-back style and comfort level with
foreign and domestic isSues have paid off in the
polls, which show the race essentially even.

Daily Scoreboard, Page 86
Kamas City wins MLS Cup, Page 86

corporate and government handling of auto safety matters.
"When this year began,
nobody would have believed the
number of safety protections that
are on the president's desk couJd
be achieved," said Rep. Ed
Markey, D-Mass.
Legislation that President Clinton is expected to sign will bring
major changes to government
investigations of safety defects, the
auto industry's relationships with
federal regulators and testing
requirements for tires and vehicles.

HIGHLIGHTS
Andrade wins
Vegas Classic
LAS. VEGAS (AP) Billy
Andrade beat Phil Mickelson by a
stroke in the lnvensys at Las Vegas
Classic.
The $765,000 first pnze
dwarfed the $187,027 Andrade
won all year, and moved him
from worrying about making
enough money to retain his PGA
Tour card to wondering if he can
make the top 30 and get in the
lucrative Tour Championship.
Andrade (68) held olf Mickelson, who birdied the final hole for
a 66. Jonathan Kaye finished in a
ric with Stewarr Cink for third
after tying the TPC Summerlin
record with a tO-under 62.

target for Cheney this week. He
will pwh Bush's proposal to let
younger workers put about onesixth of their Social Security payroll taXes into private accounts
that they would own and concrol.
Cheney has likened these
accounts to 401 (k) retirement
plahs that many Americans have.
through their employers. The
Bush campaign contends the
accounts will earn a higher rate of
return - perhaps as much as 6
percent annually. based on histor- .
ical stock market performance,
compared with about 2 percent
that Social Security earns.

Inkster rallies to
win Samsung title
VALLEJO. Calif. (AP) - Juli
Inkster dosed with a 3-under 69
10 beat Annika Sorenstam by four
srrokes in the Sarnsung World
Championship.
Inkster finished her 25th career
victory at 14 under, tying the
tournament record on a Hiddenbrooke «?urse that baffied most
of the elite field of 20 players.
Inkster earned $152,000 for her
third World Championship in
four years.
Sorensram also shot a 69. Pat
Hurst (73) was third at 284, and
Karrie Webb (70) followed at

Poll: Six in 10 say prescriptions 'very important' issue
WASHINGTON (AP) Prescription
drugs have been potent medicine in this year's
presidential campaign and a majority of
Americans etther take them regularly or have
someone in their family who does, an Associated Press poll says.
Nearly six in I 0 Amerinns say they or
someone in their family takes such medicines
regularly, the poll found. The same proportion
consider prescription drugs a "very important" issue in their vote for president.
Mary Jane Byrd of Alturas, Fla., said she and

'

her husband have managed to pay for their
many prescriptions so far, but " there will
come a time when it will eat up our savings."
"We're also concerned for a lot of other
people who are older than us and just on
Social Security," said Byrd, 53. She noted that
her mother has to live hours away so she can
be closer to a health maintenance organization that will cover her drug costs.
Two-thirds of people over 55 - one of the
most active voting groups - consider prescription' drugs very important in their vote,

according to the poll conducted for the AP by
ICR of Media, Pa.
Four of· five people with incomes below
$15,000- a group less likely to vote- consider the issue very important. Women wen~
more likely than men and blacks were more
likely than whites to feel that way.
Asked what issue was tnost important in

Thorpe captures
Gold Rush crown
LT133 Lawn Tractor

SACRAMENTO, Calif (AP)
- Jim Thorpe won his second
o;;tr&lt;tight tournam~nt, shooting a
6-under for a two- o;;troke victory
in the Senior l'GA Tour\ Gold
!tush Classic.
Thorpt:,
who
won
the
Tr,msamerica Cha1npionship last
wt·ek for his first .;;enior titl~. finIshed wirh a 2 1-umler I '15 total,
the lowest score this ytar. He

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Please see Ben1als, Pille 83

NEW YORK (AP) - With
Mighty Mat: once ag.·dn reduced
ro bcJng a &lt;ipectator, the New
York Mets moved Wl[htn one
win of wrapping up their half of
a Subway Seril"s.
New York pounded St. Louo&gt;
JCe Darryl Kile with a record five
dotthle.., in a four-run first inning
and Mark McGwire didn't swing
the bat lor the third tim~ this
..eries as th e Mets bcat the: Cardinals 111-6 Sunday nig;ht for a 3-1
k.tJ in the NL championship
" He's the X-factor of X-fac~ors." Ml'ts manager Bobby Valen -

tine said of M cGwirc-, who can
only pi nell hit bee a. use of t.endiniti.., in hi) right kne('. " There were
&lt;1 tCw time~ he was standing there
lurking in th e wings. l' m .glad we
kept h im on the bench."
The Met' got some help fmm
Cardinals manager Tony La R.ussa
- whose e\'ery move backtlred
- a&lt;:&gt; McG\.vire waited with the
bat m hi-; hands three .times in the
.. ixth inning a'\ the tylng run came
to the plate.
The Mets will try to keep Big
Mac on the sidl'i inc again in
Monday\ Game 5 as th~;;y attt·mpt
to finish off the Cardinals. Only
t:ight tt'alm haVL' cvt:r come back

ON THE RUN - Be ngals rookie Peter Warrick makes a catch during Sunday's 15·0 loss to the Steelers at Three Rivers Stadium. (AP)

fi·o m a .l-1 ddicit in a besr-ofsevc n Sl' n L'~.
"Wt: 'n.:. '27 good oms away from
lwing in the World Series," said
Ckndon Rm ch, \Vho · pitched
· thr~ l' o;cord~.·ss i1111in~ for tht"
\\'Ill.

Alon ~

Spain wins
Dunhill Cup

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PITTSBURGH (AP) For the Pit!¥Jurgh Steelers, it's
looking a lot like 1976. For the
Cincinnati Bengals, it's looking a lot like 1999 and 1998
and 1997 and ...
The Steelers changed quarterbacks Sunday, an uncommon switch for a team riding a.
three-game winning streak.
The move didn't help much
although Kent Graham found
Hines Ward on a 77-yard
touchdown pass play on the
second play ITom scrinmuge.
So, unable to throw, the
Steelers relied on their defense
and running game - a familiar mix for them - to beat the
bewildered
winless
and
Cincinnati Bengals 15-0 and
get back to .500 after starting
0-3.
.
"It's been a lot of work, but
we can't stop. here," Wa.rd said.
"We've still got a lot of sea.son
left."
That must be a discouraging
thought for the Bengals (0-6),
who have scored only 37
points all season.
· The last time the Steelers (33) mounted such a comeback
after a bad start was 1976.
when they finished 10-4 after
opening 1-4. They had five
shutouts during a nine-game
winning streak in which they
allowed only 28 points.
Then, quarterback Terry
Bradshaw's injury
forced
coach Chuck Noll to use

2H6.

deciding how to vote, 23 percent said education, which usually leads such lists. Moral values was second, followed by Social Security
and Medicare.

$T, ANDREWS, Scotland (AP)
~ Saved by Miguel Angel Martin'.;; curling, 50-foot putt on the
I Hth hole-, defending champion
Sp:1in beat South Africa 2- 1 in
the final of the Dunhill Cup.
Martin's putt forced · a playoff that
Spam won wln~n David Frost
mi'iseJ a J-tOot putt on the first
extra bole.

to play, John Deere has the right

Mets beat
up Cards
in Game 4

M ONDAY'S

Swift action expected on Chenet now aiming his .
Capital Hill on auto safety campa1gn at younger voters
WASHINGTON (AP) - In
the congressional equivalent of a
blink of an eye, lawmakers
approved the most sweeping auto
safety legislation in decades.
lr took barely two nwmhs from
the time Bridgestone / Firestone
Inc. announced a massive tire'
recall- amid reports of 101 traffic deaths in the United States -for Congress to pass the legislation. Such a rush to action during
an election year marked by bitter
partisanship showed how important lawmakers felt it was to
respond to public outrage over

Page 81
Monday. October 1&amp;, 2000

"He's approaching it very similarly to the scores of town hall meetings.
On Monday, the vice president was holding
way he approached the other two debates;'
an hourlong mock town haD- plus at least 30
said Bush campaign spokesman Ari Fleischer.
"We expect the questions that will be asked minutes of review and critique afterward will be similar to the ones he gets at town haD with 23 "real people" debate coaches, a group
meetings on the campaign trail;' Fleischer said. that Gore caJled "our happy band:'
"We'll have fun," he a..sured the citizen
"Those events are the best practice for him:•
advisers
who greeted him on the wet, foggy
On Monday, Bwh p!.nned to tweak President Clinton with a nlly in. his home s~ate of St. Louis tarmac Sunday night.
After his aggressive and sigh-filled approach
ArkarlSas on the way to St. Louis for the
in the first debate with Bush was criticized,
debate.
Gore
muted his style in their second match up.
Gore, meanwhile, arrived in that city Sunday
night and was preparing for the debate format Now, his strategists are debating whether Gore
that advisers say is his strongest - honed dur- was too intent in the second debate on being
ing years spent representing Tennessee in Con- likable and let Bwh get away with misrepre- ·
gress and answering questions fium voters in senting aspec_ts of his Texas record.

JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) -With
jwt three weeks until Election
Day, Dick Cheney is ~an
appeal to younger voters, pitching retirement savings accounts
and taX cuts in a campaign swing
through battleground Slates.
The Republican vice presidential nominee was kicking off the
week MQnday at a 'Christian college in Missouri before heading
to florida, where he'll tour the
state by bus and watch Tuesday
night's debate between running
mate George W. Bush and Vice
Pre&lt;ident AI Gore.
Voters aged 20 to 40 are the

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

Monday, October 16,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

I

AvBIIRIJie at

FORT WORTH, Texas (AI')
Sc&lt;&gt;tt Goodyear won the
f1o;teo;t r:1ct: i1i lRL history as
Buddy Lazier took the season
championship by finishing fourth
in the Excite 50(1 at Texas Motor
Speedway.
Ltzier needed to finish 14th or
better to win th,· title and S1 milli on. He had seven top- I 0 finisht:s in the .nin e races.
Coodyear beat Eddie Cheever
Jr. bx 11.14 seconds for his forst
victory of th e year and third of
hi ~ carl'cr.
Th t; average winning speed \Vd ~
175. 27(, mph , breaking the IRL
record of 169.1 82 set by Scott
Sh~rp at Texas on June 1 I.

•••••
Fax M eib'&gt; County sports news
to the Daily ·sentinel at 9Y22157. Email loca l sports items to
gJltribunc@eurt·kanct .co m .
Cont;1ct sport\ ed itor Andrcw
Carter ar 9n-52H7, ext. 21.
I

•

A-Ro9's single powers Mariners
SEATTLE (AP) - Alex Rodriguez hasn't left the Seattle Mariners JUSr yet, and
they haven't finished with the New York
Yankees, &lt;.~irher.
The New York Yankees had surged ahead
on Luis Soja's two-run double, and it
s~emed like their path to a third straight
World Series trip needed just five more
lllllll1gs.

Then AR.od woke up the Mariners and
sent this AL championship series back to the
Bronx.
Rodriguez hit a go-ahead, two-run single
otT Jeff Ndson, and Edgar Martinez and
John Olerud followed with consecutive
homers, all in a six-pitch span. The
Mariners' 6-2 win Sunday pu ll ed them to
3-2 in the· best-of-seven series, which
resumes Tuesday night on the East Coast.
.. We just want to get it to Gamr: 7 and
extt:nd it, somehow, some way, and m:tke it
a little difficult on these New Yorker&gt;,"

Earnhardt
wins at
Talladega

Rodriguez said.
He is eligible for free agency after the
World Series and the 25-year-old shorrstop
is likely to become the· sport's highest-paid
player. The possibility that Sunday would lw
his final game in a Mariners uniform jolted
him li ke a jug full of java .
" I think last night, for thL· fir~t time, it hit
me," he said. "I had a hard time· sleeping "
1itt1e bit, becauo;e, you know, you might be
facing the end, and you don't know really
what the future holds for llll' .... This could
be, maybe, it.''
A four-time All-Star, l~odriguez &gt;OUnLkd
skittish about leaving rhe Emerald City.
"My _mom," he said, " Ius always told me,
'Sometimes, it's not grct'nt:r on tilt' other
side.'''
On the other sid~ of the Satcco Field, the
Yankce·s dn.·sst·d and n·turncd to Nnv York
with Orlando Hernandez ready to ftce John
Halama in Game 6 Tut.'~d&lt;lY night and And)r

Pettitte in reserve for :1 St'Vl'mh g:~mt•, if
needed, thL" t~lllnwing day.
;'I \un: like our chann~s, ln ~ ic a lly be cause
w~ havt" two of our best going."' Yankee . .
manager Jot' Torre s.tid." Hopdi..illy. on ly one
is enough.''
Rodriguez undeP.tuod that he might
have pushed otr rh~.· l.'nd only by ont· gallle.

Hc:rnanda i-; 7-0 \Vith a 1.2:2 EI~A in poqsc..·ason play.
HO\v will H.. o J r igul'Z prcp;m. :?
'' Pr.ty a lot, t(lr o ne," he s.1id.
In I ~05, the M.1rirwr&lt; lmt the fim two
games at Yankl'e Stadium, then won tlnLT
o;traighr at the KingdonH: to tah· tht•Jr lil"-itround "L-ries J-~.

Thio; tillle, they llltl\l \\in in Nn\ York .
·' All ofth~.· prc~\Ul't' j.., 011 them:· l\1.1rincr..,
m::tn ager I n11 Pinicll.l .... ud.
"Wc'rL' iJl .1 110 lmL' .. itu.ltion." Ok·n1d

1Il Jl J Tl

P:".

"Hc't. been so great thi, ye.1r. It

unmti.d.'' La Russa said.
It shouldn't have been consid-

\\'JS

ering KilL·\ 0\\'11 history and tht'
n·sult~ of other pi tc hers going on
~hort TL''it 111 riK' past two postsL·a~on..;. Nine t im~.:'" managers lnvc
brought &gt;tarters back ~arly L~lght tltllL''i on thrL'L' days' rest anJ
mll· l' nn only t\\'o and the
n·,uJt.., :llT di..,.l..;tmus . The pitchers
.ore 11-4 woth a '17.SI ERA and
thL· tl',llllS h,IVt' lost seven of the
Jlllll'

g.lllll'~.

"Th.1t h.1' uuthing to dn with

Please see NLCS, Page B6

Please see ALCS, Page- Bl

Griese leads Broncos past Browns
ll ENV F." (AI' ) l\n .11o
(; rJC\l'\ banner d.1~ h .•d qnh
Ollt: hulllllll'l' lllnlllL'liL

Atln ~u~slll~ !i..lr .W-l y:uLh in
tile fir~t !ulf ,tl onl' .md thl"ll\\'lllg
In' thml rnuchdm\ 11 p.t . . ~ l.1fl' in
tile third lJll,trtl'L ( ;rtl'\l' '' ,,..._
rL'IHO\l'd ti·om th~.· g,JlllL.
'' j rold tht'lll 011 the . . idl'il11L',

TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP)Tc,om owner Richlfd Childress has insisted for years that
Dale Earnhardt .&lt;.;an see the air
while · driving a race car in
those
hug~. fast
packs
NASCAR is known for.
Ewn though Earnhardt
always rejects th:1t as a reason
for 'his prowe&gt;S at Talladega
Superspecdway and Daytona
Internati onal Speedway, he is
easily the tiwst o;uccessful driver ' ar both of NASCAR\
biggest and fastest tracks.
And Sunday's victory in the
·Winston 500 on Talladega's
~.M-mtle oval made Childress' theory look good to a lot
of people.
"You're at Ta1lad egtl, thinking you'v4..' got a shot to. win
the race, and he's just rhc master," sttid runner-up Kenny
Wallace. " He pull&gt; down and
he's got a guy behind him that
pu~hes him to the win."
Even Earnhardt himself.
now winner of 10 Winston
Cup races here and 12 in Daytona, w;~s impreo;sed with thi'

!!'lease see NASCAR. Pare 83

with not using tht: grcatholllt' run hitter in the game,
La Russa's de cision to bring Klle
back on three days' rest didn't
work e•ithcr. Kilc. who had been
4-H with a (&gt;.66 El\.A in his 1.1
appL'aLtllCL'" with three days
hcrwn·n l..t:-trts, allowed seven run ...
.1nd 1.:ight hits 111 rhr~.·e-plu..,

~..:~t

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lliL' our ,1mt \\'la·n
I'm ,t,lrtin!; ·tO h.I \.'L' fu11. I llL;._,d
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.tft..:r lt-. tdm ~ t h l' 1km t•r Bmnco:-. tn .1 44 -10 rotnp .on·r the

( :kvcl.111d

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pro.

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p.t . . "L'I .tnd \Yhn h,l, thnl\\ n t~)J'
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()(l,I\IOll..._ ll1 1" ~l':l\tlll.
\\.'lth 1.72! 1 uJd~.(;nt'\l', who
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rcconl. t'dl~Nn~ thl' ~.0."\ 11 \)(
Jnlm [h\,1\ 111 I'JIJ .~

,d\,,IY" ulkint!, ;Jbnur thi-;.
qu.lrtcrb .Kk \ h ot and tlut qu,\rtcrh.ll·k\ hot. I kno\\' f(Jr &lt;l filn
th.n H n.111 CrJL'"l' j, ihH . •md

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\'I.' I')' t(lrtllll.lll.:' in tlw w:1y
Ill'\ pl.i)lllg."
' ]JrmKm co,H·h Mike Shan,lll.lll ..,,nd the Bm\\ m ·' pi.Jvnl .m
l'l~ht-llL\11 ti·o nt,' "OII I ~'timc'..,

niiiL'. rn·ing to

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Of,pPrtlllli l y tn \ll,lkt' "Ollll' big
pl.1y~ . .md Bn ~111 rook &lt;H..1v.nlt.l~l'
ufit."
.. c;,1nc co111pll·tcd I 1) of .H
p .t~"L'' .md fini...,Jll'd wHh J.)(l
\ .H\k w1th 110 JlltlTCl'pri.ol l\.
111.., Cl1-\.n·d p.t..., to l:.d
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pl.l)' 1)·01 11 \lTlti111Ll~L' 'l.'t up ,I
licl,t ~,&gt;,tl h\ jN&gt;It Hom.

Attn Limm 111~ .1 .lh-y,lnkr t(~
!\.h·(',JtlrL'\. c;l'll''L' (onnccte J
''it h Snnth nn ~~ :::!.::!-y.~rd ... co rin ~
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Sn11rh .lg.un 01 1 .\ 17 -youdL•r to
111.1kc II

17-J.

Cnl'"l' tnmpll'tcJ ~l\'c p.1~sco;

lhLll1 dnL·.., "1\lrprp,.
'-'" llll' bt: l.•lll"L' o!. h1' \\ork

rn 'L't up Ll.ull·.., 45-y.mi tleld
~o.1l Jmt hdi.)I'L' the lulf.

1.'th1c." ~.11d \\ H.k l'l't.L'in·r Rud
Snliril, who l-.1ughr .ill thtTc l)(

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L'd (lllll (() h.l\~'l' -l iJ~I \ctld\ ,l!ld

COUCH CRUNCH - · Browns quarterback Tim Couch feel s t11e crunch
from Denver linebacker AI Wilson. (AP)

rhcy·r~_·

\t'\'l'll tlltllhd~)\\ n . . hhl.l).

"1 loul .uound the IL·.l;.;lll' .tnd

the Bn)wn... cut the*
~ktil·tt t'o ~ti-J () L'.llh Ill the
thml qu.u-tLT on T1m Couth's .1' .1nl tl)urhdown p.l.,.... to l raVI\

..,

Please see Browns, Page Bl

�Monday October 16 2000

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

NASCAR
from PageB1

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0 a y o h ng and house o d
ems $ 00 bag sa e e e y
fhu sday Monday h u Sa day
0}00530

FREE GRANT MONEY
Neve
Repay Bus ness Educa on Home
Pu hase Repa s Debs T ave
AaseachWnesA ssMed
ca and Mo e
800 242 0363
Ex
903
www g an s do

720 Truckalor Sele

Enc DIU 81 No Paymtnt Un

200
Paymtnto Sta t ng a
$89 00 pt mOI\Ih A c ad
Oua ties Ca t BOD 251 0843

NH TS90 70 PTO HP 4WD
24x24 pu 11 command ans wet
ctu en duo remotesl29 500 00

v

Ve
Spac ous 2 Bed ooms 2
Foo s CA
f2 Bah Fuly Ca
peed Adu Poo &amp; Baby Poo
Pa o S a $365 Mo No Pe s
ease Pus Secu y Depos Re
qu ed Days 740 446 348
E en ngs 740 36 0502 740
44&amp;0 0

740)446-4784

Aunt A Lookt Good Bo• 1\IPt
Bid Fo St I 0 T ldl Fo A
Ca"""ll 0 Anl(740)2eo-te24

ALCS
from Page 81

NH 4 2 04 cu a condOs
cb ne 13 500 oo
NH 790 Fo age choppe 1000
RPM mea ae
590000
Hess on 540 R Baa 4x5 ba es
OOOt 0 900 00

l Do
"\ 1 ag I 1St th s
ball I b I dot t th ktleresa
vi I I
f p p tl
ull
b bl t
~
I

s

ava able
Keefers Serv ce Cen e
ST AT 87 PT Peasan&amp; Rpey

Rd

98 Fo d Range
S4900 97
Fo d Range
Ex ended Cab
$5900 97 Chevy S 0 P ckup
$4700 95 Dodge Oako a Extend
ed Cab SLT Package
oaded
$4600 95 Ford Range $3000
88 Fo d B onco N ce $3900

B&amp;D Au o Sa es H ghway
Noh 740~5

304 895 3.!!74

60

t h w Fr d h
(

b

992 7458

Doc o a e by co espondence
based upon p o educa on and
sho s udy ou se Fo FREE n
o ma on book e phOne C AM
BA DGE STATE UN VERS TY

FINANCIAL

0

0

i d "
ecord b
We I ad o
ha ces a d d d
t g t t
JOb do e Th y I ad
he r ch ce to and go the h t
a1d I ul 0 N 11 akn o t for a
p h I te fo tl e seco d t

TRANSPORTATION

mto loft field
Mart nez vho h t a cot 1e
fro 1 beh11d grand sla 1 otT Nel
son on Aug ?9 folio ed by d
mg a ? ( p tch abou 0 r&lt; vs
deep to the center fi ld bl I
rs At d 01 r td robb d of
ho 1 e ru 1 a 1 11 1 ng arl r I
Bet eW II a 1 s pdl d a ball back
owr the c
r field~ ce put an
o1 pt I
gl fi ld

11 five ga1 1es
Seattle \htch scored five runs
11 the first four ganes of the
s r es got five u s
the fifth
alo
the
g g tod by Mark
Mel 1 ores 40 foot bu u Sl gle
L p th th rd base I n
A 1d tl Man 1 rs d dn t
1
tak b tt g p ct
W&lt; J st g lo s~;
d played
tl ga
We v I ad go d esults
v th that Pm ella sa d
D
v Neagl
vh lo t to
Ga a
tl e ope
th
ss t:d
I fo th alk of h gan to
R ck y H nderso
M1k (a ncron sac nfi ccd a 1d
""[; e brought
N !so 1 to face
Rodr g ez de c d g a to valk
h a d p• ch to Mar ez
Its d pc dng on hov )OU
v t to bu n your hand Torre
s d Do vo va to use dry ce
or do y u vant o e fi e
ARod I 1ed N !sons first p tch

seats

It happ 1 d q ck sad N I
so 1
ho allo \ed J st t vo
ho
sd
g the gula s a o
Idd
1 ke good p t
e
Ne ' York load d th ba e
the seve t th before Arthur
Rhodes t ck out Jo g Posada
and thre v a ailed h d st ke for th seco 1d t n c 1 h
re
- past Glenallen H ll 'ho I t
fo 0 Ne II
No
Edga Ma
z
d
vc hav a I ttlc 1 o
u

710 Autos lor Sale
550

Need We And Sap c? No Down
Paymen Requ ed La ge Se ec
on 0 Homes Ca
800 948

Building
Supplies

SO DOWN CARS As ow as $29
mo Po ce mpou ds and epos
sass ons 24mos@ 9 9
o
800
9 300

Bengals

4 3

s

from Page 81

5678

MERCHANDISE
PH 0 TOG A A P HY
ManS P oogaphy
5 Ma n S
Now open o bus ness
Wedd ngs
Sana s

510

men

w de $499
mon

a

rook e
guart b ck
Mk
Kruzc k 1 ostly to hand ofT
Co3Ch B II Co vher
t r sort g
)Ct o ucl a ba c syste1 1 but
1 L st be vonde ng f I s ofTe e
1ll
r g t otT the grou d
Co vher sta ted Graha aga n
n
efTa t to g t h ball down
I g Kardell Ste :v
field s
cou dn t do even vh e go ng 17
of 43 n oad \Jctones over the
Jag s d Jets B t afte Gral a
sta t d 6 o 7 fo I 1 ) ards
co pi d a I e e of h s xt
6 pa e
d
J
ed
St
B
lk
I

Household
Goods

Between A hens and Pome oy 2
&amp; 3 bed oom mob e homes
$260 S300 740 992 2 67

Fam y Po a
Ca o an appo
304 675 2 9

YOUR OWN BOSS NO SE NG
LOCAL 0 SPLA
AOU E 6 8
HAS WK CA l NOW
800

d
ALCS

c

Earnhardt sa1d
Those three
Chevrolets worked to&amp;ether and
went to the front
After n ovtng ahead of the
pack Earnhardt then had to con
tend with the two Andy Petry
Ractng dnvers beh nd h m
Earnhardt beat Wallace s Chevy
to the hne by about two car
lengths He has now won three of
the last four races here and fin
shed th rd n April n the Tallade
ga 500
Thu vtctory was a nch one
earmng the wmner S1 13~ YOO
1nclud ng a S1 milhon bonus
from the senes sponsor

800 964 83 6

Business
Opportunity

OTHERS OWN THE BANK BE

York for
s' d )
five
fi 8

985 Chevy 4x4 305
bed ne
ex as 33
ad a s
$4900 080 e abe uck 740

Gtveaway

A CASH CASH CASH MORE
CA.SH STOP WORK NG FOR

Ne

Vans &amp; 4 WOs

EARN YOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
au CKLY Bache o s Mas e s

210

At the end ofbp 186 he trailed
Ch1ldress Racmg teammate Mtke
Skmner Dale Earnhardt Jr and
Labo He By the one the lead
pack got back around to the fin
sh I ne Earnhardt was n the lead
JUst ahead of hiS son
As the leaders began the final
lap Dale Jr w1ggled and slowed
JUSt enough to hold up the 1ns1de
lane and let hJS father Wallace and
Joe Nemechek get a httle breath
mg room on the field
He gave a lot of the credit for
the vtctory to Wallace and
opportun ty to mn the race I was
JUst trymg to get up front to get a Nemechek who helped push
hm1 to the lead
top 10 or get back m con
h::ntlon
Thats how I won the race

NH 3010 42 PTO HP 4 WD nd
PTO 2 WO 8x2 trans we b akes
$ 400000

Va ue Bonanza F na nc ng

OAT ON

30 Announcements

810 Farm Equipment

77 Fo d Ton P clllup Oua
WhH I 5 Spood Now T N Now
RtbU It Mo 0 A Of 0 NIW PI I

Ta a Townhouse Apa men.ts

Personals

9 35

540 Mlecellaneout
Merchandlae

ATTENTION HOMEOWNERS
0 IPily Homat Wan t!j 0 V n~
S d ng Ftep aetmtnt w ndowt

2905

Back A CIOs ng

m a on

40

540 Mlscellaneout
Merchandise

95 Oakwood JBR 2 Ba h 2
Po ches C A To a E ac c
$20 000 No Land $1000 Cash

FREE DEBT CONSO
App ca on w se
Paymen s o 65%

Labonte for what would be a drowned out the roartng engme~
the season
After contending for mo&lt;t of record e1ghth Wmston Cup as the black and oronge No 3
the 188 lap race Ea nhardt fell cha, p onsh1p found h1mself Chevrolet sudde 1ly began sl c ng
v ct n to the sh1ft ng fortunes of 15th for the re&lt;tart on lap 174
tl rough trafli c
In heavy traffic - ofte long
a race tn wh ch up vards of ?5
1 was very lucky To thmk we
lmes
of
speedmg
cars
runmng
cars were constantly battlmg tn a
could be 18th five laps from the
three w de on the 33 degree e1 d and v n I ke that s beyond
pack at the front of the field
There were 49 lead changes banked oval - Earnhardt sl pped ne Earnhardt sa d with a shake
to 23rd and was sull 18th five laps of hiS head As the day went on
among 21 dnvers
ve moved back and forth
After the leaders pmed dunng fr()m the end
5ut the roar of the 140 000 Nobody had a dom nant car that
the last of three caut10n per ods
spehator&lt; stand ng and hollermg could stay up front
111 the race the 49 year old Earn
Whe we "ere beh nd there
hardt chasmg sertes leader Bobby for thetr longtuue hero aln ost
1t d dn t look I ke we had the

;:~7.~==:~~~~!!!!!"r==::::=::::=~~~=-r:==========-t-==========:'1

Of (304 )882

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

latest VICtory
The lntm 1dator who loudly
procla ms to dishke the horse
power sappmg plates used for
uore than a decade at the two b g
tracks had to come from far
beh1nd m a very short time to get
h s 76th career wm and second of

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

The Dally Sentinel • Page 83

Pomerov,. Middleport Ohio

Monday October 16 2000

down on y
now 800

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC A SECURITY ISSI'?
No Fee Un ess we Will

888 582 3345

838 8058

ld

~ t t ~

Really Ak I vas pia) ng so 1 e
pretty good football LeBeau
sa d There vere &gt;on ball tl a
veren t caught and he asn t get
t ng e ough t e I van ted to see
fweco llge a p kfr n adf
ferent guy No o e a d
vas
go ng to be easy
But ca t poss bl) be th ha d
to score The Bengal
II don
have a second half couchdo 1
and have bee 1 nutseo ed 65 3
att I alft e Tl ey d d co
these ond half Sunday- fa he
Stcelcrs as l nebacke Jo v Po ter
v&lt;.: e a Steekrs record
T l e Be 1gals also set a teal sacked M tchell n th end zone
e ord too v th the r th rd for a safct:)
S 11 th
talk
h
l
lo
The C c nnat
by o tras
shut M tel ell
q te b
I63 NL g
too d
th

Co vie sad We weren t real
ace ra e at Jmes
N e ther vas Akli Snuth the
NFls lo vest ated passet He
v 1 t fro bad to vorse to d e
bench gm1g 10 of ?O for 97
yard before g v ng vay to Scott
M tchell vho va 4 of 16 for 39
yards and t vo J erc~pt on
So fut le vere the offenses fo l
o v g Wa d s touchdo vn catc h
ha the vo tea s co b ned for
1? punts a 1d 01 lv ?7 p ss co 1
plet ons Jo h M1llers 12 punts

g

JET
AEAAT ON MOTORS
Aepa ed New &amp; Rebu
S ock
Ca Ron E a s

Th s newspape WI no
know ng y ac ep
adverl sements a ea as a e
whch s nvoa onottt1e
aw Ou eade s a e he eby
n o med ha a dwe ngs
ad erl sod n h s ewspape
a e ava abe on an equa
opportunity bass

REAL ESTATE

31 0 Homes lor Sale

New And U ed F
u e So e
Be w Ho day
Ka ag a New

G a e Mo umen

Adopt A
Pet

And

Vases

)

I)

0

GALLIA COUNTY
DOG SHELTER

810

Home
Improvements

Pd b Ant11al Wollart

Ready

Stay on lhe

cutting stlgtll ••

~E~0; 0B~~~

SERVICES

TODAY
Te

e And ack Ruase
And Pu e Pup!) es
To Go Had ShO s

A yea has passed s nee
he day
God cam e to take; you
home to sta)
Seems ke on y yes c day
We d s and laugh and
akandpay

Hav ng o be ou of you
home
You las yea v.a on of

0

Read the
Classified Ads

Aug 25 1920
Oct 16 1999

740 379-2563

SO

OW

There was no h n g o

oak fo wa d o
Just a no he

omo ow
You loved o

oneso

KIT N CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
11~

Special Thanks
to Chud Ohllnoer
and Racine G4n Club
from
Paul VanCooney

e

30 Announcements
a e a d

s ng a ong
W h the

ve se you o ed

so dea

Professional
Services

You e no alone n
heaven

$$$ NEED CASH

I

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment

RENTALS

New 644 N H ound ba e 4x5
ba e command net w ap o twine
cotl $ 8 000 used on y 200
o 1 $ 3 500 Andy 5 g e 304
937 20 8

•

C

In Memory

PLEASE CALL

Aa

e p

backup D tro
d to sp al
of a I g
o
ba k f
:ts nact v
d foot
o I g e vt

Olhtn Available
• I Beagle Male 2 Yr old
• I Terrier Mix I Monlh old

•

r

JU f t'S

ONLY$ 7 900
a kson Co One 8 Acre lia
$8 900 One 5 9 ACIB Tra

C ossed

I

g back ""[; r 11
k Ho ard ( f.
d I cd
tl

HOURS2 5M F
441 0207

230

s

t

lnventort Sale
Ga aCo One235Aceliac

$505 WEEKLY GRAAANTEEO
WORK NG FOR HE GOVERN
t&gt;JENT FROM HOME PAR
ME NO EX PER ENCE RE
OU RED
800 46 5 6 E

b

0

k

Bo

CHEAP AS DIRT

800.213 8365

0

from Page 81

Co has $325 New H de a Bed
So as $350 New Bu k Beds
Comp e e $200 Good Used
D esse s And C es 0 D awe s

We Sa

~lib

Browns

LOWER

$5 900 Don De a Ca Now
0 he Red c 10ns n Adams
A hens S ooAndNobeCo n
es Ask Abo Ou Fa
C ea ance Ra es
Ca Us Today Fo FREE Maps
An hony Land Co L d

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

800 53 9528

Fo d F 250 2000 2 WO Powe
S oke

me

oaded 6 speed 24 000
740 3 9 2205

E

s nsh ne su ound you

he e
Sad y n ssed by
daugh e Ka en Bake

LEAN HOUSE
WITH THE
IUISS~IFJ

ow

Fo happ ne s a d

~

~ &amp;Fany~

NOTICE
GUN SHOOT
Forked Run
Sportsman s Club
Beginning Friday
October 20 2000
700PM

ALL WELCOME'!

$1~~

IN6 1'"oO
l-1-1
~~e'!.:,t1'f.-:f&lt;.- ~ .:::11T

Y•v CHI.,.
fo

AU61t~l(.

~
OUfl.

PAI)qHI61!

�Monday October 16 2000

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

NASCAR
from PageB1

611"-'-

~--m.
Gtv11war
Loat • Found
Yll'd $11101 And Wem.d
To Do A*
MUit Ill Plklln AdVa"""

110

Help Wanted

150

Schools
Instruction

230

Prolesstonal
Services

$FREE CASH NOWS f om
wea hy lam teS un oad ng rm ens
o do as ohepmnmze he
axes W e mmedaev Wnd
a s 4542 EAST TROP CANA
AVE 20
AS VEGAS NEVA
DA89 2

mtBUNE DfADUNE
2 00 p m lite day bela,.
ille lei 1110 Nn

Sunday • Mond•y lelltton
2 00 p m. Friday

NEED CASH
$2 500 • 50 000
Low Monthly Pym s
day 5erviC8
No ee us Good SVS
Fo Appo ntmenl
1 817748-B ll (2455)

SENDNEb QfAQUNE
1:00 p m lite day bela,.

lhe lei 1110 Nn
Sunday • Monday lelllton
1 00 p m. Friday
REQIS'IJA Df!DUNE
2 'leyo bolaro lite lei Ia
10 run by4 30 p m
Sllvrday • Mond•y
ldfiiOII• 4 30 Thumlay
. _ , _ IUb}«l 10
. , . , . due 10 lloltdlyo

4x72 Sun1hlne Mob e
Home E11ce en cond t on To a
Eec te 2Bedoom 2 Ban Ga
den Tub Cen a PJC K tchen s
and Laund v Room reductd
$17 000 negot lble 304-882 2180

BEAUT FUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PR CES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Wes wood
D e om $289 o S370 Wak o
shop &amp; moves Ca 740 44,ij
2568 EQua HOUSing Oppo Ulllty

CENT VE
www deb ccs o g Ca
85 Oex 29

New To 'r'ou Th tt Shoppe
9 Wes Stimson A hens
740 592 842
0 a y o h ng and house o d
ems $ 00 bag sa e e e y
fhu sday Monday h u Sa day
0}00530

FREE GRANT MONEY
Neve
Repay Bus ness Educa on Home
Pu hase Repa s Debs T ave
AaseachWnesA ssMed
ca and Mo e
800 242 0363
Ex
903
www g an s do

720 Truckalor Sele

Enc DIU 81 No Paymtnt Un

200
Paymtnto Sta t ng a
$89 00 pt mOI\Ih A c ad
Oua ties Ca t BOD 251 0843

NH TS90 70 PTO HP 4WD
24x24 pu 11 command ans wet
ctu en duo remotesl29 500 00

v

Ve
Spac ous 2 Bed ooms 2
Foo s CA
f2 Bah Fuly Ca
peed Adu Poo &amp; Baby Poo
Pa o S a $365 Mo No Pe s
ease Pus Secu y Depos Re
qu ed Days 740 446 348
E en ngs 740 36 0502 740
44&amp;0 0

740)446-4784

Aunt A Lookt Good Bo• 1\IPt
Bid Fo St I 0 T ldl Fo A
Ca"""ll 0 Anl(740)2eo-te24

ALCS
from Page 81

NH 4 2 04 cu a condOs
cb ne 13 500 oo
NH 790 Fo age choppe 1000
RPM mea ae
590000
Hess on 540 R Baa 4x5 ba es
OOOt 0 900 00

l Do
"\ 1 ag I 1St th s
ball I b I dot t th ktleresa
vi I I
f p p tl
ull
b bl t
~
I

s

ava able
Keefers Serv ce Cen e
ST AT 87 PT Peasan&amp; Rpey

Rd

98 Fo d Range
S4900 97
Fo d Range
Ex ended Cab
$5900 97 Chevy S 0 P ckup
$4700 95 Dodge Oako a Extend
ed Cab SLT Package
oaded
$4600 95 Ford Range $3000
88 Fo d B onco N ce $3900

B&amp;D Au o Sa es H ghway
Noh 740~5

304 895 3.!!74

60

t h w Fr d h
(

b

992 7458

Doc o a e by co espondence
based upon p o educa on and
sho s udy ou se Fo FREE n
o ma on book e phOne C AM
BA DGE STATE UN VERS TY

FINANCIAL

0

0

i d "
ecord b
We I ad o
ha ces a d d d
t g t t
JOb do e Th y I ad
he r ch ce to and go the h t
a1d I ul 0 N 11 akn o t for a
p h I te fo tl e seco d t

TRANSPORTATION

mto loft field
Mart nez vho h t a cot 1e
fro 1 beh11d grand sla 1 otT Nel
son on Aug ?9 folio ed by d
mg a ? ( p tch abou 0 r&lt; vs
deep to the center fi ld bl I
rs At d 01 r td robb d of
ho 1 e ru 1 a 1 11 1 ng arl r I
Bet eW II a 1 s pdl d a ball back
owr the c
r field~ ce put an
o1 pt I
gl fi ld

11 five ga1 1es
Seattle \htch scored five runs
11 the first four ganes of the
s r es got five u s
the fifth
alo
the
g g tod by Mark
Mel 1 ores 40 foot bu u Sl gle
L p th th rd base I n
A 1d tl Man 1 rs d dn t
1
tak b tt g p ct
W&lt; J st g lo s~;
d played
tl ga
We v I ad go d esults
v th that Pm ella sa d
D
v Neagl
vh lo t to
Ga a
tl e ope
th
ss t:d
I fo th alk of h gan to
R ck y H nderso
M1k (a ncron sac nfi ccd a 1d
""[; e brought
N !so 1 to face
Rodr g ez de c d g a to valk
h a d p• ch to Mar ez
Its d pc dng on hov )OU
v t to bu n your hand Torre
s d Do vo va to use dry ce
or do y u vant o e fi e
ARod I 1ed N !sons first p tch

seats

It happ 1 d q ck sad N I
so 1
ho allo \ed J st t vo
ho
sd
g the gula s a o
Idd
1 ke good p t
e
Ne ' York load d th ba e
the seve t th before Arthur
Rhodes t ck out Jo g Posada
and thre v a ailed h d st ke for th seco 1d t n c 1 h
re
- past Glenallen H ll 'ho I t
fo 0 Ne II
No
Edga Ma
z
d
vc hav a I ttlc 1 o
u

710 Autos lor Sale
550

Need We And Sap c? No Down
Paymen Requ ed La ge Se ec
on 0 Homes Ca
800 948

Building
Supplies

SO DOWN CARS As ow as $29
mo Po ce mpou ds and epos
sass ons 24mos@ 9 9
o
800
9 300

Bengals

4 3

s

from Page 81

5678

MERCHANDISE
PH 0 TOG A A P HY
ManS P oogaphy
5 Ma n S
Now open o bus ness
Wedd ngs
Sana s

510

men

w de $499
mon

a

rook e
guart b ck
Mk
Kruzc k 1 ostly to hand ofT
Co3Ch B II Co vher
t r sort g
)Ct o ucl a ba c syste1 1 but
1 L st be vonde ng f I s ofTe e
1ll
r g t otT the grou d
Co vher sta ted Graha aga n
n
efTa t to g t h ball down
I g Kardell Ste :v
field s
cou dn t do even vh e go ng 17
of 43 n oad \Jctones over the
Jag s d Jets B t afte Gral a
sta t d 6 o 7 fo I 1 ) ards
co pi d a I e e of h s xt
6 pa e
d
J
ed
St
B
lk
I

Household
Goods

Between A hens and Pome oy 2
&amp; 3 bed oom mob e homes
$260 S300 740 992 2 67

Fam y Po a
Ca o an appo
304 675 2 9

YOUR OWN BOSS NO SE NG
LOCAL 0 SPLA
AOU E 6 8
HAS WK CA l NOW
800

d
ALCS

c

Earnhardt sa1d
Those three
Chevrolets worked to&amp;ether and
went to the front
After n ovtng ahead of the
pack Earnhardt then had to con
tend with the two Andy Petry
Ractng dnvers beh nd h m
Earnhardt beat Wallace s Chevy
to the hne by about two car
lengths He has now won three of
the last four races here and fin
shed th rd n April n the Tallade
ga 500
Thu vtctory was a nch one
earmng the wmner S1 13~ YOO
1nclud ng a S1 milhon bonus
from the senes sponsor

800 964 83 6

Business
Opportunity

OTHERS OWN THE BANK BE

York for
s' d )
five
fi 8

985 Chevy 4x4 305
bed ne
ex as 33
ad a s
$4900 080 e abe uck 740

Gtveaway

A CASH CASH CASH MORE
CA.SH STOP WORK NG FOR

Ne

Vans &amp; 4 WOs

EARN YOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
au CKLY Bache o s Mas e s

210

At the end ofbp 186 he trailed
Ch1ldress Racmg teammate Mtke
Skmner Dale Earnhardt Jr and
Labo He By the one the lead
pack got back around to the fin
sh I ne Earnhardt was n the lead
JUst ahead of hiS son
As the leaders began the final
lap Dale Jr w1ggled and slowed
JUSt enough to hold up the 1ns1de
lane and let hJS father Wallace and
Joe Nemechek get a httle breath
mg room on the field
He gave a lot of the credit for
the vtctory to Wallace and
opportun ty to mn the race I was
JUst trymg to get up front to get a Nemechek who helped push
hm1 to the lead
top 10 or get back m con
h::ntlon
Thats how I won the race

NH 3010 42 PTO HP 4 WD nd
PTO 2 WO 8x2 trans we b akes
$ 400000

Va ue Bonanza F na nc ng

OAT ON

30 Announcements

810 Farm Equipment

77 Fo d Ton P clllup Oua
WhH I 5 Spood Now T N Now
RtbU It Mo 0 A Of 0 NIW PI I

Ta a Townhouse Apa men.ts

Personals

9 35

540 Mlecellaneout
Merchandlae

ATTENTION HOMEOWNERS
0 IPily Homat Wan t!j 0 V n~
S d ng Ftep aetmtnt w ndowt

2905

Back A CIOs ng

m a on

40

540 Mlscellaneout
Merchandise

95 Oakwood JBR 2 Ba h 2
Po ches C A To a E ac c
$20 000 No Land $1000 Cash

FREE DEBT CONSO
App ca on w se
Paymen s o 65%

Labonte for what would be a drowned out the roartng engme~
the season
After contending for mo&lt;t of record e1ghth Wmston Cup as the black and oronge No 3
the 188 lap race Ea nhardt fell cha, p onsh1p found h1mself Chevrolet sudde 1ly began sl c ng
v ct n to the sh1ft ng fortunes of 15th for the re&lt;tart on lap 174
tl rough trafli c
In heavy traffic - ofte long
a race tn wh ch up vards of ?5
1 was very lucky To thmk we
lmes
of
speedmg
cars
runmng
cars were constantly battlmg tn a
could be 18th five laps from the
three w de on the 33 degree e1 d and v n I ke that s beyond
pack at the front of the field
There were 49 lead changes banked oval - Earnhardt sl pped ne Earnhardt sa d with a shake
to 23rd and was sull 18th five laps of hiS head As the day went on
among 21 dnvers
ve moved back and forth
After the leaders pmed dunng fr()m the end
5ut the roar of the 140 000 Nobody had a dom nant car that
the last of three caut10n per ods
spehator&lt; stand ng and hollermg could stay up front
111 the race the 49 year old Earn
Whe we "ere beh nd there
hardt chasmg sertes leader Bobby for thetr longtuue hero aln ost
1t d dn t look I ke we had the

;:~7.~==:~~~~!!!!!"r==::::=::::=~~~=-r:==========-t-==========:'1

Of (304 )882

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

latest VICtory
The lntm 1dator who loudly
procla ms to dishke the horse
power sappmg plates used for
uore than a decade at the two b g
tracks had to come from far
beh1nd m a very short time to get
h s 76th career wm and second of

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

The Dally Sentinel • Page 83

Pomerov,. Middleport Ohio

Monday October 16 2000

down on y
now 800

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC A SECURITY ISSI'?
No Fee Un ess we Will

888 582 3345

838 8058

ld

~ t t ~

Really Ak I vas pia) ng so 1 e
pretty good football LeBeau
sa d There vere &gt;on ball tl a
veren t caught and he asn t get
t ng e ough t e I van ted to see
fweco llge a p kfr n adf
ferent guy No o e a d
vas
go ng to be easy
But ca t poss bl) be th ha d
to score The Bengal
II don
have a second half couchdo 1
and have bee 1 nutseo ed 65 3
att I alft e Tl ey d d co
these ond half Sunday- fa he
Stcelcrs as l nebacke Jo v Po ter
v&lt;.: e a Steekrs record
T l e Be 1gals also set a teal sacked M tchell n th end zone
e ord too v th the r th rd for a safct:)
S 11 th
talk
h
l
lo
The C c nnat
by o tras
shut M tel ell
q te b
I63 NL g
too d
th

Co vie sad We weren t real
ace ra e at Jmes
N e ther vas Akli Snuth the
NFls lo vest ated passet He
v 1 t fro bad to vorse to d e
bench gm1g 10 of ?O for 97
yard before g v ng vay to Scott
M tchell vho va 4 of 16 for 39
yards and t vo J erc~pt on
So fut le vere the offenses fo l
o v g Wa d s touchdo vn catc h
ha the vo tea s co b ned for
1? punts a 1d 01 lv ?7 p ss co 1
plet ons Jo h M1llers 12 punts

g

JET
AEAAT ON MOTORS
Aepa ed New &amp; Rebu
S ock
Ca Ron E a s

Th s newspape WI no
know ng y ac ep
adverl sements a ea as a e
whch s nvoa onottt1e
aw Ou eade s a e he eby
n o med ha a dwe ngs
ad erl sod n h s ewspape
a e ava abe on an equa
opportunity bass

REAL ESTATE

31 0 Homes lor Sale

New And U ed F
u e So e
Be w Ho day
Ka ag a New

G a e Mo umen

Adopt A
Pet

And

Vases

)

I)

0

GALLIA COUNTY
DOG SHELTER

810

Home
Improvements

Pd b Ant11al Wollart

Ready

Stay on lhe

cutting stlgtll ••

~E~0; 0B~~~

SERVICES

TODAY
Te

e And ack Ruase
And Pu e Pup!) es
To Go Had ShO s

A yea has passed s nee
he day
God cam e to take; you
home to sta)
Seems ke on y yes c day
We d s and laugh and
akandpay

Hav ng o be ou of you
home
You las yea v.a on of

0

Read the
Classified Ads

Aug 25 1920
Oct 16 1999

740 379-2563

SO

OW

There was no h n g o

oak fo wa d o
Just a no he

omo ow
You loved o

oneso

KIT N CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
11~

Special Thanks
to Chud Ohllnoer
and Racine G4n Club
from
Paul VanCooney

e

30 Announcements
a e a d

s ng a ong
W h the

ve se you o ed

so dea

Professional
Services

You e no alone n
heaven

$$$ NEED CASH

I

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment

RENTALS

New 644 N H ound ba e 4x5
ba e command net w ap o twine
cotl $ 8 000 used on y 200
o 1 $ 3 500 Andy 5 g e 304
937 20 8

•

C

In Memory

PLEASE CALL

Aa

e p

backup D tro
d to sp al
of a I g
o
ba k f
:ts nact v
d foot
o I g e vt

Olhtn Available
• I Beagle Male 2 Yr old
• I Terrier Mix I Monlh old

•

r

JU f t'S

ONLY$ 7 900
a kson Co One 8 Acre lia
$8 900 One 5 9 ACIB Tra

C ossed

I

g back ""[; r 11
k Ho ard ( f.
d I cd
tl

HOURS2 5M F
441 0207

230

s

t

lnventort Sale
Ga aCo One235Aceliac

$505 WEEKLY GRAAANTEEO
WORK NG FOR HE GOVERN
t&gt;JENT FROM HOME PAR
ME NO EX PER ENCE RE
OU RED
800 46 5 6 E

b

0

k

Bo

CHEAP AS DIRT

800.213 8365

0

from Page 81

Co has $325 New H de a Bed
So as $350 New Bu k Beds
Comp e e $200 Good Used
D esse s And C es 0 D awe s

We Sa

~lib

Browns

LOWER

$5 900 Don De a Ca Now
0 he Red c 10ns n Adams
A hens S ooAndNobeCo n
es Ask Abo Ou Fa
C ea ance Ra es
Ca Us Today Fo FREE Maps
An hony Land Co L d

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

800 53 9528

Fo d F 250 2000 2 WO Powe
S oke

me

oaded 6 speed 24 000
740 3 9 2205

E

s nsh ne su ound you

he e
Sad y n ssed by
daugh e Ka en Bake

LEAN HOUSE
WITH THE
IUISS~IFJ

ow

Fo happ ne s a d

~

~ &amp;Fany~

NOTICE
GUN SHOOT
Forked Run
Sportsman s Club
Beginning Friday
October 20 2000
700PM

ALL WELCOME'!

$1~~

IN6 1'"oO
l-1-1
~~e'!.:,t1'f.-:f&lt;.- ~ .:::11T

Y•v CHI.,.
fo

AU61t~l(.

~
OUfl.

PAI)qHI61!

�Page B4 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, October 16,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

... .,.. ............
. . AW, llltllil

..................
...............
.,
CI&amp;LIIUmiiOIID

PHILLIP
ALDER

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

OffiCI. tH-2111

MEIGS COUNTY FARM
BUREAU ANNUAL MEETING

Tues. Ocl. 17, 7:1oPM at
Meigs Senior Citizen Center,
Adults $5.50 Child $3.50
EnlertainmentDwight Icenhower,
. Door Prizes

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
Final Expenses; College, Retirement,IJJ
LIE;mc:rgc:ny Funds; Mortgage;
Medical• Nursi Home
-~·

Quality Driveways,
Patios, Sidewalks.
25 years experience
Free Estimates

SECURITY·

I Pr·otact your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
1COIIIectiorts, legal papers, investment records, photo
cameras, household Inventory and
sentimental ilems will be sale.
For more information call

33795 HiiRnJ Rd.
Pommry, Ohio

740-742-8015 or
1-877-353-7022

PRODUCTS

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"
• 7 3
•AI09542
• 10 7 4
• 8 3
Easl
52
•KJ1086

ROBOTMAN

BAUMLDMBIR
S'r. R'r. 248
CBES'I'EII

740-992-5232

AQ9
K QJ 6

Certalnteed,
Simington
Ufetlme Warranty
Loca IContractor

Public Notice

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Coil) plete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

URNPIKE

Dump Trutt Delivery
Me~ ADd OalUa Cowlticl

GALLIPOLIS

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

"W.elp"

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

Rag dol's
Costumes

. ••

••

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS .
-AnY Size Double Hun!!-

$229.00*

*

BISSELL BUIL,ERS

*

INC.

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.

992·4119
1-800-291-5600
VISIT OUR SHOWROOM ON STATE ROUTE 33
MILES NORTH OF POMEROY, OHIO AT COUNTY

!lla,ltrSa-ce. Ice Cream,

,.

740·992·7599
.

r

• 4

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

OF
CfU • Leave Meu&amp;fe
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
Section 5715.19 of the Ohio
992-6142 or
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
Revised Code . These
Toli-Ffee 1-877·604·735
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
complaints must be filed on
(Revised Code, Sections
Ball Logging &amp;
forms which will be
3501.11 (G), 5705.19,
furnished by the County
Reasonable Prices
Firewood
5705.25)
Auditor and must be flied In
FREE Estimates
35215 Ball Run Road .
NOTICE Ia hereby given the County Auditor's Office
that In pursuance of a on or before the 31st day of
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-992-1671
Rooolutlon of the Board of March 2001. All complaints
30
HEAP Voucben accepted for
7/22/TFN
Township Trustees o1 the fllod with tho county Auditor
Meta:• a; Gallla Cotur.11et
Township
of
Olive, will be heard by the Board
Reedsville, Ohio, passed on of Revision In the manner
the 18th day of August, provided by
2000, there
will be Section 5715.19 of tho Ohio
Call Us f1rst Or We Both Lose!
submitted to a vote of the Revised Code. Nancy
Ask For Mr. Ford
people of said subdivision Parker Campbell Meigs
at a General ELECTION to County Auditor
Over 30 Year Experie:nce
State Route 7,
be hold In tho Township of (10) 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 22, 23,
Creat ive Cost um es
• t t
' '
Tuppers Plains
Olivo Ohio, at the regular 24,25,26
I l.q'l''""' • t, 11•· -. t.:r"
p_taces of voting tharaln, on
\\ ,)d \\,· ,] "-.ltlilll \I \ k,
Certiliod in Meigs,
the 7th day of November,
Public Notice
\ 11111 ; ' l 1·&gt;111111 -'
Alhensand .
2000, the question of
located
in Rutland's Dept. Siote
NOTICE
OF
ELECTION
ON
Washington Counties.
levying a tax, in e)(cess of
TAX
LEVY
IN
EXCESS
OF
Ma1n
Sl.
Rl 12&lt;1 Open
tho ten mill limitation, lor
Your Quality 24-Hour
THE TEN MILL UMITATION
the benefit of Olive
Thur -S.1t NooP-7 pm
· Childcare Services
(Revised Code, Sections
Township for the purpose
1-740•742•7243
740-667-6329
of: Road Maintenance 3501.11 (G), 5705.19, 5705.25)
NOTICE
Is
hereby
given
Including dust control
t lw r t.l Cj(1 olu 11 II Dl ITT&lt;.lil cor' 1
Said tax being A renewal that In pursuance of a
Resolution of the Board of
of a tax ol1 mill
At a rate not exceeding 1 Township Trustees of the
Free Installation
(one) mills for each one Township of Rutland
Rutland,
Ohio,
passed
on
dollar of valuation, which
Free in Home Estimates
amounts to Ten cents tho 3rd day of July, 2000,
there
will
be
submitted
to
a
($D.10) for each one
New Homes • Vinyl
Rutland, Ohio
Call for Further Details
hundred dollars of valuation vote of tho people of oald
Siding • New Garages
subdivision at a General
for three (3) years.
Mums, Indian
ELECTION to be held In the
• Replacement Windows
The Polls lor said
• At•ol~'s - APPle
Election will open at 6:30 Township ol Rutland Ohio,
• Room AddHions
at
the
regular
places
of
o'clock A.M. and remain
• Roofing
Gift
Items,
Subs,
opsn until 7:30 o'clock P.M. voting therein, on the 7th
COMMERCIAl and R!SIDENTI~L
day of November, 2000, the
Amlsl
of said day.
FREii ESTIMATES .,
By order of the Board of question of levying a tax, In
:Bolloi111a, Summer Sausa!!e.
Elections of Meigs County, excess of the ten mill
6
ROAD
18
limitation, for the benefit of
Ohio
742-1405
.
• No Dealers or Contractors Please WV #023477
Rutland Township lor the
John N. lhle, Chairman
(NO SUNDAY .CALLS)
~.,.. M·F 10-7 Sat 10-6 Sun- Closed
purpose of: Fire ProJection.
Rita D. Smith, Director
Said
tax
being
A
renewal
Dated .September 6, 2000
(1 0) 9, 16, 23, 30 4TC
of 1 not
mill exceeding 1 r:======~========================::::::;t
of At
a tax
a rate
Pomeroy Eagles
(one) mills lor each one
Public Notice
dollar of valuation, which
Club Bingo On , •
amounts to Ten cents
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
Thursdays
($0. t 0) lor each one
29670 Baahan
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
AT6:30 P.M.
hundred
dollars
ol
valuation
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
Road
lor live (5) years.
(Revised Code, Sactlons
Main St.,
Racine,
Ohio
The
Polls
for
said
3501,11 (G), 5705.19,
Pomeroy, ojf·
Election will open at 6:30
45771
•
5705.25)
Paying $80.00
o'clock A.M. and remain
NOTICE Is hereby given
740-949-2217
per ga"l"
that In pursuance of a open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
Sizes 5' 10'
of said day.
Resolution of the VIllage
$300.00 Coverall
By
order
of
the
Board
of
to 10' x30'
Council of the VIllage of
$500.00 Starburat
Elections of Meigs County,
Racine, Racine , Ohio,
Hours
Progressive top line. · ·
pa88ed cin the 19th day ot Ohio
~
7:00AM·
8 PM
.
June, 2000, there will be John N. lhlo, Chalrma
Lie. II 00-50 11!11!tln ·
Rite
D.
Smith,
Director
submitted to a vote of the
Dated September 6, 2000
people of said subdivision
ci-----'"-----.----'--------. ~~~~~
at a General ELECTION to (10) 9, 16, 23, 30 4TC
Bill Slack
be held In the Township of
!
·
Stop
lri
And
See
Racine, Ohio, at the ragullr
• Firewood •
•
Steve Riffle
places of voting therein, on
&amp;
the 7th day of November,
Public Notice
".Sales
Representative
200D, the question of
trimming &amp;
1
levying a tax, In excess of
Larry
Schey
740-992-2269
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
the ten mill limitation, for
1
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
the benefit of Racine VIllage
1
for the purpose of: Current
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
{Revised Code, Sections
Expenses
Said taK
being
A 3501.11 (G), 5705.19, 5705.25)
NOTICE Is hereby given
replacement tax of 3 mills
750 East State Street Phone (740) 593-6671
At a rate not exceeding 3 that In pursuance of a
Athens, Ohio 45701
(three) mills for each one Resolution of the Board ol
dollar of valuation, which Township Trustees of the
l~=3~5~53~7;;;;;.;;;;.~~-~
amounts to Thirty cents Township of Lebanon , '------=-==.:::...:..:.::.&lt;L:::..:.=~=-==.....1 '"
($0.30) for each one Portland, Ohio, passed on
hundred dollars of valuation the 30th day of June, 2000,
A
D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc
there will be submitted to a
for five (5) years.
The Polls for said vote of the people of said
n:Jtland, O~.io
Election will open at 6:30 subdivision at a General
Truck seats, ::ar seats, headliners,
o'clock A.M. and remain ELECTION to be held In the
• New Homes
• Remodeling
truck tarps, c&lt;-.nvert:ble &amp; VInyl tops,
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M. Township of-,Lebanon Ohio,
•
: AD Makes Tranor &amp;
of said day.
at the regular places of
• Garages
• Decks
Four
wheeler
seats,
motorcycle
s::ats,
.
,
By order ot tho Board of voting therein, on the 7th
Equipment Parts
• Siding
• Roofing
· boat covers, carpets, etc.
Elections of MeLgs County, day or November, 2000, the
Fanory Auttr,orized
question of levying a tax, In
Ohio
'
Mon .. f'~·i 8:30- 5:00
John N. lhle, Chairman
excess of the· ten mill
l
Case-IH Parts
Over 40 yra expertence
limitation, for the benellt of
Rita 0. Smith, Director
I'
Dealers.
Lebanon Township for the
Dat~d September 6, 2000
(10) 9, 16, 23, 30 4TC
purpose of: Maintaining and
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
operating cemeteries.
Coolville, OH 45723
Said tax being A renewal
Public Notice
740-887.0383
of a ta)( of 1 mill
13 1 mo d
At a rate not exceeding 1
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
(one) mills for each one
Reference; 5715.17
OFFICE EXPRESS
VINYL REPLACEMENT
dollar of valuation, which
Ohio Revised Code
BUSINESS
SERVICES
WINDOWS
The Malgs County Board amounts to Ten cents
A ll Types of Business
of Revision has completed ($0.1 0) lor each one
·Any Size Double HungStanding timber largi·
Support Service s
Its work of equalization. The hundred dollars of valuation
"Take
the
pain
ott!
or Rnwll h·a cks. Top
(5)
years.
for
five
tax returns for tax year 2000
The Polls for said
have been revised and the
of
paintingprices vuid also.
• Free lnslallation
valuations completed and Election will open at 6:30
do
it
for
you"
Let
me
• Free In
Estimales
Meigs County
are open for public o'clock A.M. and reri1aln
Interior
. Inspection In the office of open until 7:30 o'clock P.l'lf.
Call lor Further Details
Fairgrounds
Free EstI mates
CONTRACTORS,
the Meigs County Auditor, of said day.
.
FREE
ESTIMATES
Oct,
I,
2000
·Apr.
1,
2001
Call T &amp; H Logging
Second Floor, Courthouse,
By order of the Board of
CONCRt TE
Before 6p.m. ·
Second Street, Pomeroy, Elections of Meigs County,
CALL FOR MORE
aflt•t· 8:00pm
OH 45769.
Ohio
MA SON RY
leove Messoge
INFORMATION
992·4119
740-992-5050
Complaints against the John N. lhle, Chairman
BAC KII Of: SE RVICES
Alter 6 pm· 740-985-4180
valuations, as established Rita 0 . Smith, Director
1-800-291-5600
(Handy )
for tax year 2000 must be Dated September 6, 2000
VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
BO £l CAT SE RVI CES
d 1 mo &lt;1 11 0
made In accordance with (10) 9, 16, 23, 30 4TC
ON
STATE
ROUTE
33
6
Residential, Commercial
MI~ES NORTH OF
Free Estimates
POMEROY, OHIO, AT
Fully Insured
COUNTY ROAD 18
""No Dealers or Contractors
B1ian Morrison/Racine, Ohio
Please W'/#023477

• 8 3
tAQJ83
•AKQ76

• Room ocldlflons &amp; Ronoodthng
• Ntw Garages
• lltdrl11l &amp; Plltllblng
• RooflnJ &amp;Gulfon
• VIAll Sldlng·&amp;Paloflng
• Patio &amp; Porm Dtdcs
Free Estimates
V.C. YOUNG

Soulb

3 NT

ur

992·6215

WHEN IS UNK
SNUFFY COMIN'
HOME FER

22 yrs. Local

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

•

Open Mon-Frl 8-6; Sat. 9-4
Sun. Closed
Phone 740-949-2804
owner .Jim Pickens
Mechanic· Bill Jones
Parta Mar •Tamra Plckentl

NO, YOV, Nf)CT J..lfE GeT f
JtJDtlfl&gt; J..11Ce AL£. Tt-lf
. . ~~. . . ~tsr. wE C,Af'I'T

STAMP YOV,
t-IANP TO

JlhWICK'S • .
HAOLiftG and .
EXCfiVfiTI ftG

ti~T

,,..,._IACIC IN.
~rHE

BORN LOSER .
BUT l'l&lt;\ NO\

. U::t.DTO&amp;t-&lt;OCC.\S\Vt. ...

l Tt\11'\\( .

N-I'&lt;M0~ 1

" k'-"'"

"

"

/C);;:-',4),

I
I

I~
~

!BIG NATE

..

SHftOf RIUfR

''Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% Sweet feed - 5.25 I 50 lbs.
• 12% Cattle feed 6.75/100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog food 6.75/50 lbs.
• fall fertilizers

r·

The CountrY
Candle ShoP

Ught
hauling • Tree hedge
removal

"we're back to our
regular hour• "

Tues-Frl 10-6
Sat. 10-4
• Candle making
supplies
• Wooden crafts
• Baskets

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per

740-985-3831

month.

&amp;

SMITH'S CONmtUCTIO"

·(740) 742·8888
! YTS41 1·888-521·0916

l140J 661-3224
1-800·828-0212

P/8

INC.

.

[jiJ

$229.00*

Need it done, ghte us a call
FREE ESTIMATES
Great Priced on New Homes

992-2753

WINTER
STORAGE.
SPACE.
AVAILABLE.

QURUTY WinDOW
SYSTEmS, IDC.

949-2033

DECORATION ...
INSULATION ...

SELLERS CONSTRUCTION

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

LINDA'S
PAINTING

'
'

WANTED
Dozer work.

Home

(740) 985-3948

992·1101

DEPOYSAG
PARTS

PEANUTS
T~E BE~T

740-992-4559

JELLY DOU6~NUT I

EVER TASTED!

JELLY DOU6HNUT5 MAKE
'(OU FEEL 600D ALL OVER ..

WHEN NOTHING IS 6000
FOR YOU, YOU I-lAVE TO
P~ETEND TH~ EVER'f'TI-IING
IS 600D FOR 'f'OU!

911100 1 mo pd

304·273·0036
10/41

BLIND SPOT
(Factory 04tlet)
All v•~r·ti&lt;'itl blinds nrc
mndf' to order at our
locutioll

. UP TO 70% OFF
• Verlit~ uls • Wootl
• MiniM • Et•~

144 Third Ave. Gallipolis

446-499S
.1911 Free 1-888·745·8847

Phone 992·21 55

Pass

East

3•

Pass

To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel

9
10
11
13
18

FamilY. mem.
"Real· ending- :
Print units
~
Qualm
Dickensbased
musical
19 TV's
Geraldo20 Sailed
22 Actress
Gilda23 Fall guy
24 Worked hard
25 Cert[fy
27 Opp. of SSW ·
32 David
'
Sarnoff's co.
34 Statements . ·
35 Is In store for
39 Small'wave
43 Double-road
Instruments
45 " Three
blind - .. .'' :.
47 Tiff
48 Boxingvictory abbr. •
49 Nahoor sheep
50 -or miss ·
52 Turkish title
53 Groove
54 Goller's
gadget

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CelebritY Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people. past and
present. Each letter in the cipher stands for another.
Today's clue: M equals Z
' OCUDGPUOO
0 A N

C B

T

P 0

TG

GFO

T .A
BCCGXTII

GWTPA . '

ICV

ICOPAR

IPRFG

G V A A D I

CAJCUPAR
JCTJF

GFO

FCIGM,

TBGDW

T

ODTOCA .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'd just like to do one more memoriible film of some ·. ·
kind , a film that aspires to something.~- (75·year-old) Paul Newman
:

IHAI DAILY
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Rearrange

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WORD
GAM I
~y CLA~Y!.:;R·~~,;~;:;;;;~;;::;;;:;;;:.--

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low to form four simple words.

NISNKY

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~s=u=R=Y=T~~~~ veritecollege
roommate had a fasaying that he confused
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16 C) Complete the chuckle quoted
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PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

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UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER
SCRAM·L~TS

ANSWERS
Drowsy- Video- Lathe- Flabby - OF the WAY
A new colleague enler.ed the bosses office and read
this sign hanging on the wall : "Lead, Follow , Or Geit
Out OF the WAY ."

I MONDAY
~qour

-'Birthday

_
. ------------

mo. p

The CRAFTY,

Advertise our business
o~ this page ·. or one,month for
. · as low as $2S

Pass

North
Pass

This week, to get a jump on the
Christmas buying season, let's
look at the best of the recent
·
bridge books.
I am a fan of David Bird's
books, especially those about the
monks of St. Titus. The latest is
"Saints and Sinners" (Master
Point Press). Yet there are two
majol{· differences between this
book and the previous six. This
one has been written by Bird
around difficult deals supplied by
the Australian Tim Bourke. And
each of the 21 chapters contains
three or four quiz questions in
boxes, so that you can tesl yourself before reading the text. The
recommended answers, with
scores, are in an appendix.
Brother Anthony, a Eustacian
si lent-order monk, makes · an
appearance, sitting North here.
Parlnering someone who never
bids adds an extra dimension-- to
both sides.
The Abbot (West) assumed
South had lhe spade king and a
long minor for his three-no-trump
overcall . · He decided to lead a
heart, selecting the queen in case
East had the ace. If so, East would
overtake and return a spa&lt;le. However, Brother Adam (South) look
full advantage. After winning
wilh dummy's heart ace, he ran
the diamond I0, carefully
unbl ock ing hi s eight. When•
West's nine dropped, declarer
finessed the diamond seven, took
a third diamond finesse, and end·
ed with II tricks, which was a top
in the pairs event.
The Abbot was appalled.
"What was three no-trump?"
"The Unusual No-trump,
showing both minors."
"You play the Unusual Notrump with a Eustacian partner?"
The book is $17.95 postpaid
from Baron Barclay Bridge Supplies. Call (800) 274-2221 lo
order.

IRON CITY GYM
6 Month
Membership $100
plus tax
with this ad
Ravenswood, WV

t•

BY PHILLIP ALDER

Featuring two Brlgga &amp; ,
Stratton trained
"l
machanlcs
We service mowers,
chainsaws, tillers,
generators, snowblowers, ·
weedeaters, pick-up and - •
delivery a\lailable on
·:

x

West

Product parade

SUPPER?

RACINE MOWER CLINIC .

Hauling • Limestone • .
Grovel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992-3470

ot

Opening lead: ??

Pomeroy, Qhlo

request.

6 Earlier form
a word
7 Sincere
8 Cut of meat

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West

HILL'S
SELF STORACE

.AlltEL

EDUCATION ...

• 7
t K 6 52
• J 9 4

• 9
10 5 2

South

Windows
Public Notice

"-~~
High 8l Dry
Self-Storage

YOUR
CONCRETE
CONNECTION

40 Gels older
41 "Aweoomel"
1 Slooplng42 Auto racer
slckn- fly
Andrettl
7 .._ Dln•more" 44 NYC summer
12 Swimming
hrs.
13 Es""'rn
45 -tal
philosophy
46 Nonprofit TV
14 Typs of street 48 Casual top
15 Arm joints
51 Mod paintings
16 Actor
(2 wdo.)
Alastalr 55 New York team
t7 Lodge
56 Part of NFL
18 Globe
57 Author Joyce
21 Actor Greene
Carol23 R.R. depot
58 Huge house
26 "The- King"
28 Is a shrew
DOWN
29 Small child
1 Explosive lnlts.
30 Tennis player
2 Carpenter's
Landi
tool
31 -Motor City"
3 WWII area
33 Experienced
4 Shooter
person
marbles
36 "Many" king
5 Symbol of
37 Bsforo (poet.)
slowness
38 Jug
ACROSS

Tuesday, Oct. 17, 2000
erode today if she or he suspects
Your possibilities for fulfilling you ' re a manipulator Be honest
your objectives in the year ahead about your actions.
look bener than they have for
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
some lime, but you must not 1alk 19) Cooperation and team spirit is
about your plans until they are a a must today if you hope to make
fail accompli.
productive gains in your work
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Pur- endea~ors. Without proper
suing forbidden fruit today could instructions, the assembly line
.create complications for you with could break down.
:far reaching effects. If you
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)
·become enthralled with someone . 'You could be tempted to change
who is already spoken for, respect horses in midstream today when
that union. Trying to patch up a an enticing but untested new
broken romance? The Astra- provider opens up for you .
Graph Matchmaker can help you Chances are that if you do so it
understand what to do to make the would be a mistake.
relationship work. Mail $2.75 to
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) If
Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper, your spouse or roommate is a bit
P.O . Box 1758, Murray Hill Sta- grumpy today, instead of reacting
in kind, try to be a bit more tolertion, New York , NY 10156.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ant than usual. Kindness is the
Even if it's with a friend you substance that sweetens the soul.
ARIES (March 21-April I 9)
know very well, get all important
essentials down in writing before Someone with whom you're
putting together a substantial busi- closely involved will take you at
)less arrangement
your word today and expect you
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. to do what you promised. It is
2 1) The relationship with some- imperative that you do so.
one you deem to be an ally and in
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) If
accord with your purposes could you have a day of ups and downs

financially today, it will be due to
your extravagance nol matching
up to your earning capacity. Be
more diligent.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Youngsters under your charge
could expect what you do for
them today to become a standard
practice . The example you set will
be important. Don't be too harsh ,
nor too lenient.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Stick strictly to sincerity today,
becau se any form of subterfuge or
mai11pula1ion will be dis cerned
and have th e opposite effect' you
desire.
LEO (Jul y 23 -Aug . 22) Even
1hough you usually try to get good
mileage from the dollars you
spend toLia y, at some point you
might gel carried away. Make it a
poilll not to buy what you don 't
need.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep,t. 22)
There 's a possibility you could .
waste most of your time on a person you th111k can do you some
good and hardl y notice a pal who
can come through for you until it's
far too late in the game to help.

at Tennessee Titans {Live) {CC)
jPart 1ol2)

�Page B4 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, October 16,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

... .,.. ............
. . AW, llltllil

..................
...............
.,
CI&amp;LIIUmiiOIID

PHILLIP
ALDER

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

OffiCI. tH-2111

MEIGS COUNTY FARM
BUREAU ANNUAL MEETING

Tues. Ocl. 17, 7:1oPM at
Meigs Senior Citizen Center,
Adults $5.50 Child $3.50
EnlertainmentDwight Icenhower,
. Door Prizes

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
Final Expenses; College, Retirement,IJJ
LIE;mc:rgc:ny Funds; Mortgage;
Medical• Nursi Home
-~·

Quality Driveways,
Patios, Sidewalks.
25 years experience
Free Estimates

SECURITY·

I Pr·otact your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
1COIIIectiorts, legal papers, investment records, photo
cameras, household Inventory and
sentimental ilems will be sale.
For more information call

33795 HiiRnJ Rd.
Pommry, Ohio

740-742-8015 or
1-877-353-7022

PRODUCTS

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"
• 7 3
•AI09542
• 10 7 4
• 8 3
Easl
52
•KJ1086

ROBOTMAN

BAUMLDMBIR
S'r. R'r. 248
CBES'I'EII

740-992-5232

AQ9
K QJ 6

Certalnteed,
Simington
Ufetlme Warranty
Loca IContractor

Public Notice

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Coil) plete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

URNPIKE

Dump Trutt Delivery
Me~ ADd OalUa Cowlticl

GALLIPOLIS

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

"W.elp"

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

Rag dol's
Costumes

. ••

••

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS .
-AnY Size Double Hun!!-

$229.00*

*

BISSELL BUIL,ERS

*

INC.

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.

992·4119
1-800-291-5600
VISIT OUR SHOWROOM ON STATE ROUTE 33
MILES NORTH OF POMEROY, OHIO AT COUNTY

!lla,ltrSa-ce. Ice Cream,

,.

740·992·7599
.

r

• 4

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

OF
CfU • Leave Meu&amp;fe
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
Section 5715.19 of the Ohio
992-6142 or
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
Revised Code . These
Toli-Ffee 1-877·604·735
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
complaints must be filed on
(Revised Code, Sections
Ball Logging &amp;
forms which will be
3501.11 (G), 5705.19,
furnished by the County
Reasonable Prices
Firewood
5705.25)
Auditor and must be flied In
FREE Estimates
35215 Ball Run Road .
NOTICE Ia hereby given the County Auditor's Office
that In pursuance of a on or before the 31st day of
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-992-1671
Rooolutlon of the Board of March 2001. All complaints
30
HEAP Voucben accepted for
7/22/TFN
Township Trustees o1 the fllod with tho county Auditor
Meta:• a; Gallla Cotur.11et
Township
of
Olive, will be heard by the Board
Reedsville, Ohio, passed on of Revision In the manner
the 18th day of August, provided by
2000, there
will be Section 5715.19 of tho Ohio
Call Us f1rst Or We Both Lose!
submitted to a vote of the Revised Code. Nancy
Ask For Mr. Ford
people of said subdivision Parker Campbell Meigs
at a General ELECTION to County Auditor
Over 30 Year Experie:nce
State Route 7,
be hold In tho Township of (10) 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 22, 23,
Creat ive Cost um es
• t t
' '
Tuppers Plains
Olivo Ohio, at the regular 24,25,26
I l.q'l''""' • t, 11•· -. t.:r"
p_taces of voting tharaln, on
\\ ,)d \\,· ,] "-.ltlilll \I \ k,
Certiliod in Meigs,
the 7th day of November,
Public Notice
\ 11111 ; ' l 1·&gt;111111 -'
Alhensand .
2000, the question of
located
in Rutland's Dept. Siote
NOTICE
OF
ELECTION
ON
Washington Counties.
levying a tax, in e)(cess of
TAX
LEVY
IN
EXCESS
OF
Ma1n
Sl.
Rl 12&lt;1 Open
tho ten mill limitation, lor
Your Quality 24-Hour
THE TEN MILL UMITATION
the benefit of Olive
Thur -S.1t NooP-7 pm
· Childcare Services
(Revised Code, Sections
Township for the purpose
1-740•742•7243
740-667-6329
of: Road Maintenance 3501.11 (G), 5705.19, 5705.25)
NOTICE
Is
hereby
given
Including dust control
t lw r t.l Cj(1 olu 11 II Dl ITT&lt;.lil cor' 1
Said tax being A renewal that In pursuance of a
Resolution of the Board of
of a tax ol1 mill
At a rate not exceeding 1 Township Trustees of the
Free Installation
(one) mills for each one Township of Rutland
Rutland,
Ohio,
passed
on
dollar of valuation, which
Free in Home Estimates
amounts to Ten cents tho 3rd day of July, 2000,
there
will
be
submitted
to
a
($D.10) for each one
New Homes • Vinyl
Rutland, Ohio
Call for Further Details
hundred dollars of valuation vote of tho people of oald
Siding • New Garages
subdivision at a General
for three (3) years.
Mums, Indian
ELECTION to be held In the
• Replacement Windows
The Polls lor said
• At•ol~'s - APPle
Election will open at 6:30 Township ol Rutland Ohio,
• Room AddHions
at
the
regular
places
of
o'clock A.M. and remain
• Roofing
Gift
Items,
Subs,
opsn until 7:30 o'clock P.M. voting therein, on the 7th
COMMERCIAl and R!SIDENTI~L
day of November, 2000, the
Amlsl
of said day.
FREii ESTIMATES .,
By order of the Board of question of levying a tax, In
:Bolloi111a, Summer Sausa!!e.
Elections of Meigs County, excess of the ten mill
6
ROAD
18
limitation, for the benefit of
Ohio
742-1405
.
• No Dealers or Contractors Please WV #023477
Rutland Township lor the
John N. lhle, Chairman
(NO SUNDAY .CALLS)
~.,.. M·F 10-7 Sat 10-6 Sun- Closed
purpose of: Fire ProJection.
Rita D. Smith, Director
Said
tax
being
A
renewal
Dated .September 6, 2000
(1 0) 9, 16, 23, 30 4TC
of 1 not
mill exceeding 1 r:======~========================::::::;t
of At
a tax
a rate
Pomeroy Eagles
(one) mills lor each one
Public Notice
dollar of valuation, which
Club Bingo On , •
amounts to Ten cents
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
Thursdays
($0. t 0) lor each one
29670 Baahan
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
AT6:30 P.M.
hundred
dollars
ol
valuation
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
Road
lor live (5) years.
(Revised Code, Sactlons
Main St.,
Racine,
Ohio
The
Polls
for
said
3501,11 (G), 5705.19,
Pomeroy, ojf·
Election will open at 6:30
45771
•
5705.25)
Paying $80.00
o'clock A.M. and remain
NOTICE Is hereby given
740-949-2217
per ga"l"
that In pursuance of a open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
Sizes 5' 10'
of said day.
Resolution of the VIllage
$300.00 Coverall
By
order
of
the
Board
of
to 10' x30'
Council of the VIllage of
$500.00 Starburat
Elections of Meigs County,
Racine, Racine , Ohio,
Hours
Progressive top line. · ·
pa88ed cin the 19th day ot Ohio
~
7:00AM·
8 PM
.
June, 2000, there will be John N. lhlo, Chalrma
Lie. II 00-50 11!11!tln ·
Rite
D.
Smith,
Director
submitted to a vote of the
Dated September 6, 2000
people of said subdivision
ci-----'"-----.----'--------. ~~~~~
at a General ELECTION to (10) 9, 16, 23, 30 4TC
Bill Slack
be held In the Township of
!
·
Stop
lri
And
See
Racine, Ohio, at the ragullr
• Firewood •
•
Steve Riffle
places of voting therein, on
&amp;
the 7th day of November,
Public Notice
".Sales
Representative
200D, the question of
trimming &amp;
1
levying a tax, In excess of
Larry
Schey
740-992-2269
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
the ten mill limitation, for
1
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
the benefit of Racine VIllage
1
for the purpose of: Current
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
{Revised Code, Sections
Expenses
Said taK
being
A 3501.11 (G), 5705.19, 5705.25)
NOTICE Is hereby given
replacement tax of 3 mills
750 East State Street Phone (740) 593-6671
At a rate not exceeding 3 that In pursuance of a
Athens, Ohio 45701
(three) mills for each one Resolution of the Board ol
dollar of valuation, which Township Trustees of the
l~=3~5~53~7;;;;;.;;;;.~~-~
amounts to Thirty cents Township of Lebanon , '------=-==.:::...:..:.::.&lt;L:::..:.=~=-==.....1 '"
($0.30) for each one Portland, Ohio, passed on
hundred dollars of valuation the 30th day of June, 2000,
A
D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc
there will be submitted to a
for five (5) years.
The Polls for said vote of the people of said
n:Jtland, O~.io
Election will open at 6:30 subdivision at a General
Truck seats, ::ar seats, headliners,
o'clock A.M. and remain ELECTION to be held In the
• New Homes
• Remodeling
truck tarps, c&lt;-.nvert:ble &amp; VInyl tops,
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M. Township of-,Lebanon Ohio,
•
: AD Makes Tranor &amp;
of said day.
at the regular places of
• Garages
• Decks
Four
wheeler
seats,
motorcycle
s::ats,
.
,
By order ot tho Board of voting therein, on the 7th
Equipment Parts
• Siding
• Roofing
· boat covers, carpets, etc.
Elections of MeLgs County, day or November, 2000, the
Fanory Auttr,orized
question of levying a tax, In
Ohio
'
Mon .. f'~·i 8:30- 5:00
John N. lhle, Chairman
excess of the· ten mill
l
Case-IH Parts
Over 40 yra expertence
limitation, for the benellt of
Rita 0. Smith, Director
I'
Dealers.
Lebanon Township for the
Dat~d September 6, 2000
(10) 9, 16, 23, 30 4TC
purpose of: Maintaining and
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
operating cemeteries.
Coolville, OH 45723
Said tax being A renewal
Public Notice
740-887.0383
of a ta)( of 1 mill
13 1 mo d
At a rate not exceeding 1
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
(one) mills for each one
Reference; 5715.17
OFFICE EXPRESS
VINYL REPLACEMENT
dollar of valuation, which
Ohio Revised Code
BUSINESS
SERVICES
WINDOWS
The Malgs County Board amounts to Ten cents
A ll Types of Business
of Revision has completed ($0.1 0) lor each one
·Any Size Double HungStanding timber largi·
Support Service s
Its work of equalization. The hundred dollars of valuation
"Take
the
pain
ott!
or Rnwll h·a cks. Top
(5)
years.
for
five
tax returns for tax year 2000
The Polls for said
have been revised and the
of
paintingprices vuid also.
• Free lnslallation
valuations completed and Election will open at 6:30
do
it
for
you"
Let
me
• Free In
Estimales
Meigs County
are open for public o'clock A.M. and reri1aln
Interior
. Inspection In the office of open until 7:30 o'clock P.l'lf.
Call lor Further Details
Fairgrounds
Free EstI mates
CONTRACTORS,
the Meigs County Auditor, of said day.
.
FREE
ESTIMATES
Oct,
I,
2000
·Apr.
1,
2001
Call T &amp; H Logging
Second Floor, Courthouse,
By order of the Board of
CONCRt TE
Before 6p.m. ·
Second Street, Pomeroy, Elections of Meigs County,
CALL FOR MORE
aflt•t· 8:00pm
OH 45769.
Ohio
MA SON RY
leove Messoge
INFORMATION
992·4119
740-992-5050
Complaints against the John N. lhle, Chairman
BAC KII Of: SE RVICES
Alter 6 pm· 740-985-4180
valuations, as established Rita 0 . Smith, Director
1-800-291-5600
(Handy )
for tax year 2000 must be Dated September 6, 2000
VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
BO £l CAT SE RVI CES
d 1 mo &lt;1 11 0
made In accordance with (10) 9, 16, 23, 30 4TC
ON
STATE
ROUTE
33
6
Residential, Commercial
MI~ES NORTH OF
Free Estimates
POMEROY, OHIO, AT
Fully Insured
COUNTY ROAD 18
""No Dealers or Contractors
B1ian Morrison/Racine, Ohio
Please W'/#023477

• 8 3
tAQJ83
•AKQ76

• Room ocldlflons &amp; Ronoodthng
• Ntw Garages
• lltdrl11l &amp; Plltllblng
• RooflnJ &amp;Gulfon
• VIAll Sldlng·&amp;Paloflng
• Patio &amp; Porm Dtdcs
Free Estimates
V.C. YOUNG

Soulb

3 NT

ur

992·6215

WHEN IS UNK
SNUFFY COMIN'
HOME FER

22 yrs. Local

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

•

Open Mon-Frl 8-6; Sat. 9-4
Sun. Closed
Phone 740-949-2804
owner .Jim Pickens
Mechanic· Bill Jones
Parta Mar •Tamra Plckentl

NO, YOV, Nf)CT J..lfE GeT f
JtJDtlfl&gt; J..11Ce AL£. Tt-lf
. . ~~. . . ~tsr. wE C,Af'I'T

STAMP YOV,
t-IANP TO

JlhWICK'S • .
HAOLiftG and .
EXCfiVfiTI ftG

ti~T

,,..,._IACIC IN.
~rHE

BORN LOSER .
BUT l'l&lt;\ NO\

. U::t.DTO&amp;t-&lt;OCC.\S\Vt. ...

l Tt\11'\\( .

N-I'&lt;M0~ 1

" k'-"'"

"

"

/C);;:-',4),

I
I

I~
~

!BIG NATE

..

SHftOf RIUfR

''Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% Sweet feed - 5.25 I 50 lbs.
• 12% Cattle feed 6.75/100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog food 6.75/50 lbs.
• fall fertilizers

r·

The CountrY
Candle ShoP

Ught
hauling • Tree hedge
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To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel

9
10
11
13
18

FamilY. mem.
"Real· ending- :
Print units
~
Qualm
Dickensbased
musical
19 TV's
Geraldo20 Sailed
22 Actress
Gilda23 Fall guy
24 Worked hard
25 Cert[fy
27 Opp. of SSW ·
32 David
'
Sarnoff's co.
34 Statements . ·
35 Is In store for
39 Small'wave
43 Double-road
Instruments
45 " Three
blind - .. .'' :.
47 Tiff
48 Boxingvictory abbr. •
49 Nahoor sheep
50 -or miss ·
52 Turkish title
53 Groove
54 Goller's
gadget

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CelebritY Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people. past and
present. Each letter in the cipher stands for another.
Today's clue: M equals Z
' OCUDGPUOO
0 A N

C B

T

P 0

TG

GFO

T .A
BCCGXTII

GWTPA . '

ICV

ICOPAR

IPRFG

G V A A D I

CAJCUPAR
JCTJF

GFO

FCIGM,

TBGDW

T

ODTOCA .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'd just like to do one more memoriible film of some ·. ·
kind , a film that aspires to something.~- (75·year-old) Paul Newman
:

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UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER
SCRAM·L~TS

ANSWERS
Drowsy- Video- Lathe- Flabby - OF the WAY
A new colleague enler.ed the bosses office and read
this sign hanging on the wall : "Lead, Follow , Or Geit
Out OF the WAY ."

I MONDAY
~qour

-'Birthday

_
. ------------

mo. p

The CRAFTY,

Advertise our business
o~ this page ·. or one,month for
. · as low as $2S

Pass

North
Pass

This week, to get a jump on the
Christmas buying season, let's
look at the best of the recent
·
bridge books.
I am a fan of David Bird's
books, especially those about the
monks of St. Titus. The latest is
"Saints and Sinners" (Master
Point Press). Yet there are two
majol{· differences between this
book and the previous six. This
one has been written by Bird
around difficult deals supplied by
the Australian Tim Bourke. And
each of the 21 chapters contains
three or four quiz questions in
boxes, so that you can tesl yourself before reading the text. The
recommended answers, with
scores, are in an appendix.
Brother Anthony, a Eustacian
si lent-order monk, makes · an
appearance, sitting North here.
Parlnering someone who never
bids adds an extra dimension-- to
both sides.
The Abbot (West) assumed
South had lhe spade king and a
long minor for his three-no-trump
overcall . · He decided to lead a
heart, selecting the queen in case
East had the ace. If so, East would
overtake and return a spa&lt;le. However, Brother Adam (South) look
full advantage. After winning
wilh dummy's heart ace, he ran
the diamond I0, carefully
unbl ock ing hi s eight. When•
West's nine dropped, declarer
finessed the diamond seven, took
a third diamond finesse, and end·
ed with II tricks, which was a top
in the pairs event.
The Abbot was appalled.
"What was three no-trump?"
"The Unusual No-trump,
showing both minors."
"You play the Unusual Notrump with a Eustacian partner?"
The book is $17.95 postpaid
from Baron Barclay Bridge Supplies. Call (800) 274-2221 lo
order.

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Windows
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High 8l Dry
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YOUR
CONCRETE
CONNECTION

40 Gels older
41 "Aweoomel"
1 Slooplng42 Auto racer
slckn- fly
Andrettl
7 .._ Dln•more" 44 NYC summer
12 Swimming
hrs.
13 Es""'rn
45 -tal
philosophy
46 Nonprofit TV
14 Typs of street 48 Casual top
15 Arm joints
51 Mod paintings
16 Actor
(2 wdo.)
Alastalr 55 New York team
t7 Lodge
56 Part of NFL
18 Globe
57 Author Joyce
21 Actor Greene
Carol23 R.R. depot
58 Huge house
26 "The- King"
28 Is a shrew
DOWN
29 Small child
1 Explosive lnlts.
30 Tennis player
2 Carpenter's
Landi
tool
31 -Motor City"
3 WWII area
33 Experienced
4 Shooter
person
marbles
36 "Many" king
5 Symbol of
37 Bsforo (poet.)
slowness
38 Jug
ACROSS

Tuesday, Oct. 17, 2000
erode today if she or he suspects
Your possibilities for fulfilling you ' re a manipulator Be honest
your objectives in the year ahead about your actions.
look bener than they have for
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
some lime, but you must not 1alk 19) Cooperation and team spirit is
about your plans until they are a a must today if you hope to make
fail accompli.
productive gains in your work
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Pur- endea~ors. Without proper
suing forbidden fruit today could instructions, the assembly line
.create complications for you with could break down.
:far reaching effects. If you
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)
·become enthralled with someone . 'You could be tempted to change
who is already spoken for, respect horses in midstream today when
that union. Trying to patch up a an enticing but untested new
broken romance? The Astra- provider opens up for you .
Graph Matchmaker can help you Chances are that if you do so it
understand what to do to make the would be a mistake.
relationship work. Mail $2.75 to
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) If
Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper, your spouse or roommate is a bit
P.O . Box 1758, Murray Hill Sta- grumpy today, instead of reacting
in kind, try to be a bit more tolertion, New York , NY 10156.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ant than usual. Kindness is the
Even if it's with a friend you substance that sweetens the soul.
ARIES (March 21-April I 9)
know very well, get all important
essentials down in writing before Someone with whom you're
putting together a substantial busi- closely involved will take you at
)less arrangement
your word today and expect you
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. to do what you promised. It is
2 1) The relationship with some- imperative that you do so.
one you deem to be an ally and in
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) If
accord with your purposes could you have a day of ups and downs

financially today, it will be due to
your extravagance nol matching
up to your earning capacity. Be
more diligent.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Youngsters under your charge
could expect what you do for
them today to become a standard
practice . The example you set will
be important. Don't be too harsh ,
nor too lenient.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Stick strictly to sincerity today,
becau se any form of subterfuge or
mai11pula1ion will be dis cerned
and have th e opposite effect' you
desire.
LEO (Jul y 23 -Aug . 22) Even
1hough you usually try to get good
mileage from the dollars you
spend toLia y, at some point you
might gel carried away. Make it a
poilll not to buy what you don 't
need.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep,t. 22)
There 's a possibility you could .
waste most of your time on a person you th111k can do you some
good and hardl y notice a pal who
can come through for you until it's
far too late in the game to help.

at Tennessee Titans {Live) {CC)
jPart 1ol2)

�Page B6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, October 16, 2000

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
4 2 0 667 115 120

DetrOit

Glean Bay
ChiCago
~ .. Chomtllonohlp

SoriH

!Jea111e

6 0 01 00 26~ 174
3 3 0 500 110 98

New Orleans
Carolina

TUMdoV, Ocl10
2, New Vorl&lt; 0

2 4 0 333 110 100

Atlanta
San Franctsco

Wodneodoy, Oct 11
New York 7, 5eattle 1

2 5 0 286 130 2T7
2 5 0 286 198 224
Sunday '• Gamet

N Y G1ants 19 Dallas 14

. Frldoy, Oct. 13

St L0u1s 45 , Atlanta 29

New York 8, Seante 2
Slturday, Oct. 14

New York 5

W.a1

Sl LOUIS

American LMgue
(NBC)

Buffalo 27 San Otego 24 , OT
Washington 10, Baltunore 3
Oakland 20, Kansas C1ty 17

~attle

0
Sunday, Oct. 1$
Seattle 6, New Vorl&lt; 2. New York leads

New Orleans 24 Carotma 6
P1ttsburgh 15, Clnc1nnali 0

senes 3-2

Denver 44 Cleveland 10
IndianapoliS 37 Seattle 24
N Y Jets 34 New England t7
Phlladelph~ 33. Anzona 14

Tuoodov. 0c1.11
Seattle (Halama 14-9) at New York {Hernan-

dez1 2· 13),8 12pm.

Wodnosdoy, Ocl18
Sea tHe at New YOI'k, 8 12 p m , If necessary

Green Bay 31 San Franosco 28
M1nnesota 28, Ch1cago 16

National League
(FOX)
Wednesday, Oct. 11
New York 6. St LOUIS 2

Open M1aml, DetrOit, Tampa Bay
Today 'a Game
Jacksonville at Tennessee 9 p m
Thursday 's Games
OetrOII at Tampa Bay 8 20 p m

Oc:t. 12

Thur~ay,

Sunday, Oct 22
Anzona at Dallas . 1 p m
New Orleans at Atlanta 1 p m

New York 6 St LOUtS 5
Slturday, Ocl. 14
St LOUIS 8 New York 2
Sunday, Oct 15
New York 10 St Lows 6, New York leads

Denver at C1nc1nnatl 1 p m
New England at lnd1anapohs 1 p m
St LOUIS at Kansas C1ty 1 p m
Chicago at Ph1ladelph•a 1 p m
Tennessee at BaltlffiO!I3 1 p m
San Franc1sco at Carotma 1 p m
Buffalo at M1nnesota 1 p rn
Seattle at Oakland, 4 05 p m
Cteyeta nd at Pittsburgh 4 05 p m
WAshmglon at Jacksonville 4 15 p rn
Open San D1ego N V G1ants Green Bav
Monday. Oct 23
Mlam• at N V Jets 9 p m

senes 3·1

Monda~.

Oct. 16
St LoUis (Hentgen 15-12) at New York
(Hampton 15-10), B 18 p m
Wednesday, Oct. 18
New York at St LOUIS 4 18 p m 11 neces-

S8'Y
Thuraday, Oct. 19
New York at St LOUIS, 8 18 p m

How They Fared
How the top 25 teams m The Assoctat ecf Press college loothall poll fared th1s
week
No 1 Nebraska (6-0) beat Texa s Tech
56-3 Next vs Baylor, Saturday
No 2 Kansas State (6 1) lost to No 8
Oklahoma 41 ·3 1 Next vs Texas Tech ,
Saturday
No 3 V1rg 1n1a Tach (6 0} beat west Vtr ·
g1n1a 48·20 Thursday Next at Syracuse ,
Saturday
No 4 M taml (4-1) d1d not play Next at
Temple . Saturday
No 5 Clen'lson (7·0) bea t Maryla nd 35 ·
14 Nex t at North Ca rol1na , Saturday
No 6 OhiO State (5· 1) lost to M1nneso
Ia 29· 17 Next at Iowa , Saturday
No 7 Ftoflda State (6 1) beat Duke 63·
14 Nexl vs V1rgm 1a Satu rday
N o 8 Ok lahoma (6-0) beat No 2
Kansas State 41-31 Next ~s No 1
Nebras ka , Oc t 28
No 9 Oregon (5 t} beat South ern Cat
28·17 Next vs Anzona Sa turcta y
No 10 Flor~da {6-1} beat No 19 Auburn
38·7 N e~e t vs No 14 Georgta. Oct 28
No 11 Washmg ton (5· 1) beat A.nzona
State 21 !5 Ne)Ct vs Call l orn•a . Satur ·
day
•
No 12 TCU (5·0) d1d not play Next a t
Tulsa Saturday
No 13 UCLA (4-2) lost to Call l ornta 46 ·
38 30T Next vs Oregon State . Satur·

3 3 0 500 150 97
3 4 0 429148 139
0 143 101 189
' 6

Tampa Bay

11 neces-

"'Y

day

._____P_R_O_SOC
_ C_
ER___JI !COLLEGE FOOIBALL I
Major League Soccttr
Champ1onahlp
Sunday; Ocl 15
at Walhlngton , D.C.
Kansc,s C1ty 1 Chtcago 0

The Top Twenty F111e teams m The Assoc.at·
ed Press college lootball poll w1th f1rSt·place
votes 1n parentheses records through Oct 14
total po1nts based on 25 pomts tor a t~rs t·place
vote through one poul t lor a 25th -place vote
and rankmg m the prev1ous poll

W·L

National Football league
r.FC
East
W L TPio. PF
5 1 0 833 112

Mlam1
NY Jets
lnd1anapol1s

Pr.
51

5 1 0 833 125 103

4 2 0 667 172 130
3 3 0 500 113 122

Bullalo

2 5 0 286 120 141

New England

Central

4 1 0 BOO 104

Tennessee
BalhmOfe
Pittsburgh
Jacksonville
Cleveland
Clncmnat1

5
3
2
2

2 0 714 128
3 0 500 99
4 0 333 113
5 0 286 95

78

75
78
128
175

0 6 0 000 37 143
Weat

5
4
3
2
0

Oakland
Denver •
Kansas City
Seattle
San D•ego

I
3
3
5
7

0 833 161 125
0 571 217 147
0500134 113
0 286 1.18 169
0 000 1,17 204

NFC

Eut
WLTPc1PFPr.
5 2 0 714 120 105
52 0714114 99
4 3 0 571 168 101
2 4 0333114 162

NY G11~nts
Washington
Ph•ladelph•a
A.nz ona

2 4 0333126167

Dallas

Pts Pvs

6 0 1770
6·0 1 656
6·0 1 603
4- 1 1,546
7 0 1 523
6-1 1 439
5·1 1,290
6-1 1 242
5·1 1 147
6·1 1,118
5·0 1 042
5·1
898
4 1 865
5·1
854
5·1
845
5·2 737
5·2 586
6· 1 517
5· t
493
4·2 458
5 1 378

1
2
3
4
5
6

Nebraska (66)
V1rgmta Tech (1)
Oklahoma /4)
Mtam1
Clemson
Flonda Sf
7 Oregon
8 Florida
9 Wash1ngton
10 KansasSt
11 TCU
12 Georgta
13 MISSISSIPPI St
14 OhtO St
15 Southern Mtss
16 MIChigan
t7 Pu rdue
18 SouthCarol1na
190regonSt
20 Notre Dame
21 AriZona
22 Mtnnesota

5·2

23 UCLA

4-2

1

3
8
4

No 22 Ar1zona (5!1) be{lt Washmgton
Sta te 53· 47 30T Next_ at No 9 Oregon ,
Sa turda y
No 23 Oregon State (5·1) bea t Stan·
lord 38 6 Nex t at UCLA . Sa turday
No 2 4 South Carollna (6· 1) beat
Arkansas 27· 7 Ne)Ct at Vanderbilt Satur.

Major College Football Scores
Er.ST
Boston Coll ege 20, Syracuse 13
Bucknell 42 Lafayette 30
Colgate 23 Co rnell 16
Dartmouth 31, Holy Cross 14
Duquesne 44 George town D C 20
Fa trl• eld 24, St Peter's 10
Leh1gh 45, Harvard 13
Mansi 27 tona 7
Massac husetts 33, Ma.ne 10
Monmou th N J 41 St Fran c1s Pa 6
Penn 43 , Columb1a 25
Pnnce ton 55 Brown 28
Rhode Island 7, James Mad1son 6
Richm ond 3 1 New Hampsrme 10
Roc hes ter 34 CaniS! US; 28 20T ..
Sacre d Heart 23 S tony Brook 6
Temple 48, Rutgers 14
Towson 38 Howard 6
V1llano.,.a 34 , Northeastern 20
Wagner 24, Cent Connecttcut St 7
Ya le 24 , Fordham 17
SOUTH

6
16
18

21
24
23
20

22

227

13

The AP Top 25

6 0 0 1 00153 110

day

No 25 Tex as (4·2) beat Co lorado 28·
14 Next VS MISSOUri , Saturday

7
9
1a
11
2
12
14
15

210

No 20 Notre Dame (4·2) beat Navy 4 5·
14 Next at West V1rgm1a Saturday
No 21 Purdue (52) beat No 17 North
western 4 I ·28 Next at W1scons1n Satur·

oay

5

24 NC State
51
183
25 Northwestern
5·2 14Q
17
Others rece1v1ng votes Tellas 134 Auburn
74, Colora do St 25 Iowa St 19 W M1Ch1gan
16. Attzona St 10 Tennessee 9, Alabama 5,
Toledo 4 A1r Force 2 Pittsbu rgh 2. LOUISVIlle 1
W•scons1n 1

Central
M1nnesota

day

The AP Top 25

·j PRO FOOl BAIL

No 14 Geo rg 1a (51) beat Vanderb1l t
29- 19 Next at Kentucky Sa turd ay
No 15 M1SSISS1pp1 Stal e (4· 1) d1d no t
play Next at LSU Satu rday
No 15 Sou thern MISSISSIPPI (5 1) bea t
fulane 56·2 4 Nex t at Ho uston Saturday
No 17 Northwestern 15 2) lost to No
2 t Purdue 41 28 Next at Mtnnesota Sa l ·
urday
No 18 M1ch1gan (5 21 be at tndtana 58 ,
0 Ne~tt vs M1chtgan State Saturday
No 19 Auburn (5-2) lost to No 10 Flon
da 38 7 Next vs Louas1ana Tech Satur·

14
20

Atabam! 4 5 Ml sslssjppl 7
Alabama A&amp;M 30, Morris Brown 24
Bethune-Cookman 42 , S Carolina St

I
I
I

667
500
500

1 2 333
0 2 000

112

Char tone
Ch•cago
Indiana
Milwaukee
Toronto
A11ama
DetrQtt
Cle11elarl1

EaaMrnCon~

Allantlc Divlelon

W L T OL Plo. OF OA
Pittsburgh
NewJersey
N.Y Rangers
Ptuladetphia
NY Islanders

28
Georgra Tech 52 Wake Forest 20
Grambli ng S t 24 . Ark - Pme Bluff 17
Hampton 47, Nortolk St 19
Jackson St 64 , MVSU 20
LSU 34 , Kentucky 0
Lou1s1ana Tech 48 , Lo uis•ana -La layette

onawa
Boston
Buffalo
Toronto
Montreal

3
2

1
1

2
1

1
3

o a

6 15
4 13

a 0
0 0
4 11
1 a 3 14
.. 0 2 1 0
1 5
Northea•t DMalon
3 0 I 0 7 14

... 3210
2

2 0

0

2 2 0 0
. 2 3

0

0

2

0

Southe111t Dfvlelon
Carohna
Tampa Bay
Flarida
\Yash1ngton
Atlanta

lOUISVIIIB 38, CinCi nnati 24
McNeese Sl 28, Jacksonville St 0
Middle Tennessee 28 , LouiSiana-Monroe 0
Morgan St t 2 . Sa11annah S t 6
N Carolina A&amp; T 30 Flonda A.&amp;M 10
N C State 38 North C arolina 20
Northwestern S t 27. Nicholls St 2 1
Sou th Carolma 27 Arkansas 7
So uthern M1ss 56 . Tulane 24
Tennessee St 33 Tenn ·Martm 6
Te)Cas Southern 16. Alcorn St 13
UAB 13 Memph iS 9
UCF 34 E Kentucky 3
W Kentucky 17 Tenn essee Tech14
Wolfo rd 4 0 W Carolina, 31
MIDWEST
Ball St 33 E M.1Ch1gan 14
E lll tno1S 48 Murray S l 7
llhno ts 31 , Iowa 0
IIIIOOIS St 21 Indiana S l 0
Kansas 38, MISSOUri 17
M1am1 (O hto) 24 B owlmg Green 10
M• ch tgan 58 India na 0
Minnesota 29. OhiO St 17
N 111mo1s 52 Akron 35
Noire Dame 4 5 Navy 14
OhiO 44 , Kent St 7
Ok lahoma 41 Kansas St 31
Purdue 41 , Northwestern 28
Robe rt Mo rns 17 Dayton 13
S lllmots 35 Drake 23
Toledo 4 2 Marsha ll 0
ValparaiSO 33, Butler 7
W IllinOIS 14 , SW MISSOUfl St 10
W1sconsm 17, M1ch1ga n St 10
YounQsto wn St 28 N Io wa 24
SOUTHWEST
Alabama St 51, Pra1r1e V1ew 21
Iowa St 33 O klahoma St 26
Nebraska 56, Texas Tech 3
Sa m Houston St 52, Stephen F Austm

1

,

4

. 1 2 1 0
0
0

1
3

1
2

7 18
4 11
4 6
4 15
11

12
9
10
21

" .0 2 1 0

12
9

19
9

Edmonton
Colorado
Va ncoU\Ier
Calgary
Minnesota

a o

g

19
15

2 3 0 0

17
14
18
12

18
12

8

17

0 4

4

1 0

Pacific Oivialon
Phoemx
4 1 0 0
8 21
Dallas
3 2 1 o 7 15
Los Angeles
3 2 I 0
7 28
SanJose
2 1 0 0
4 8
Anaho•m
1 2 o 1 3 8
Two po1nts tor a wm one poml for a he
overt1 me loss
Saturday's Games
Montreal 5, Ch•cago 4, OT
Ottawa 4 Toronto 0
Calgal)' 2 N Y Islanders 0
New Jersey 4, Anaheim 2
Pittsburgh 8 N Y Rangers 6
Dallas 3, Washington 0
Nashville 2, Carof•na 1
Col orado 3. Columbus 1
VancoU\fer 4 Buffalo 0
Phoemx 6, Ph1ladelphta 3
San Jose 5, Boston 2
Sunday's G•mea
Edmonton 5, Minnesota 3
Calgal)' 4. Detrotf 2
Tampa Bay 5, Atlanta 2
Ch1cago 2. Columbus 1
Pl1oen1x 6. LOS Angeles 5
Today'• Games
Anaheim at NY Rangers , 7 p m
Toronto at Vancouver, 10 p m
Tueaday'a Games
Ottawa at Phltaoetphm. 7 p m
Co lorado at Washmgton, 7 p,m
Buffalo at Montreal. 7 30 p m
Anahe1m at NY Islanders, 7 30 p m
New Jersey at Atlanta, 7 30 p m
St LOUIS at DetrOit, 7 30 p m
Los Angeles at Nashville, 8 p m
Boston at Edmonton, 9 p m

41

Te~oeas

A&amp;M 24 Baylor 0
Utah St 17, North Te&gt;eas 12
Fr.R WEST
AH Force 51, Wyommg 34
AriZOna 53 Washington St 47 30T
BOISe St 41 , E Washtngton 23
Cal Poly-SLO 52, W New MexiCO 10
C alifOrnia 46 UCLA 38 , OT
Co lorado St 20, UNLV 19
Dav1dson 27 San D1ego 13
Fresn o St 58 Nevada 21
Haw au 30, SMU 15
Ida ho 4 2 Arkansas St 25
Montana 34 , CS Northndge 30
New MAXI CO St 42 Tulsa 28
Oregon 28 , So uthern Cal 17
O regon St 38, Stan ford 6
Portland Sl 59, Idah o St 21
Sacra me nl o St 24. Montana Sl 13
St Marys Cat 71 , Menlo 34
Texas 28 . Colo rad o 14
UC Dav1s 56, S Utah 20
U TEP 47, San Jose St 30

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1 667

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tlw NFL \\'1lh otl~·nse the W11~
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go .tl ll l'l'Lkd as rhe \'j./Jztrd-. be.lt
the Ch1CJgo Fne 1 ~11 Sund.1\ lo
w111 the1r first MLS Cup Th,• \'IC~
tory co mplctt"d a turnaround
from .1n H-1 4 sc:.1son a y~:.tr .1go
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NLCS
from Page Bl
10

Kile o.;,nd " If you make: good
pitc hes, It doesn't nutter 1f you 'rc
prtchrn g on o ne d~ys' rest I d1d11 't
nuke good pitches"
Bur bec&gt;use Bobby J Jon'es
f.ued lmk better wrth stx days ofl"
smcc h1s one-hit shu to ut ag.-unst
SJn Fran cisco, the C.Jrdma l ~
•toyed 111 t he game Jonel ollowed
~lX run s and stx hits m four-plu s
lt ,

inmngs
St. Lotus

Rusch

111

h.1d

a shot abra 1mr

thl' 'i t xth utntn g 1

but

first bascnun Todd Zelle made .1
b1g defe m1vc pL1y R .1y LJ nkford
led off WJth .1 Single. but M e G~
wm: JU~t w.nchl'd a.~ FernJndo
'l.m s ,md J J) I )rC\\ \\L'rl' rcttrl'LI
" I felt !th· \\l' d gL·t o n e mon.:
!,'11)' on b.1s~ .md tbl'fl' \\.1\ll't
Wllllg to bL· .1 \\ ,l\' w ,1\ o1 d huu :·

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thou gh t .1 bout g"l\' ltl ~ 1t .1 -. hnr ·
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" It \\(Hlld h.l\L' lll.ILk It ,1 lot
more l'X LJ{]l1g tf Ill' lud nor lll.h.k
thl· pl.w,"V.lkntJi h' -..11d
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out '' 1th the Nc\\' Ynt k Jc r~ Atr ~ l

wtrc l1t.'\'l'r go t a c b:~n cl' to b.n.
leavmg hun 0-for-- 1 '' 1t h o ne
mtenuo nal walk 111 four g:1 m cs
' I was go n na wa1t for thc tymg
run , to co me tu dtL' plcttl'" L1
Ru ~s&lt;1 saH.l " If, the rymg run ca me
tip, he was tn thcr~ ,.
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t\\o runner-. on

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Paqul'ttc grounded Ollt to e nd thL·
th rell
Edg.mlo Alfonm l1.1d ch1d ed
hts tl' ;~ mmates for thor loo . . c pl.ty
111 Game 3 They rc,pon ckd 111
Game 4.
'
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thre e ru ns .md drm't' 111 rwo for
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2

POMEROY fJom eroy V1llage
Council d1scussed th e construwon of a
new water treatm ent plant Monday
dUJing Its regular mee ting .
Council voted to authonze V1llage
Admmmrator John Anderson to begin
advertising fo r cnginccrmg proposals
on a new water treatment facility to b e
located near the well field 1n Syracuse.

Co un cil co ntmued a d 1\CU'\'ilOI1 abo ur
a n ew roof on the old Juni or H1 gh
Building which sits along Mam S1reer
becau se of water leakage and genera l
d et erioration
It was estlmJtcd It would be chea per
for the village to re-roof the ltru ct urc
u;stead of tearing 1t down.
C.ounCil dis cussed the iss ue JnJ
dee1ded to deh berate un the matter .1t a

Mayor Jo hn 131acttnar said the new
fac!Iity would clean around 800,000
gallons of water per day and would
likely cost more than $1 rmlhon.
"This new treatm ent plant w1ll be a
good expan sion to our current water
proJects," Blaettnar said. "O n ce every~
thmg IS 111Stalle d and connected,
Pomeroy's water quality will b e on an
unp arallel ed leveL"

111

and

.t nd got

Wast11ngton vs New York fit Hart1ord Conn

7 30 p m
Toronto vs Philadelphia at Chapel H1ll N C .
7 30 p m
Tuesday 's Games
Dallas at Oetr011 7 3a p m
New Jersey at Orlando 7 30 p m
lnd1ana at Mmnesota 8 p m
WaShington at Chicago, 8 30 p m
Sea ttle at Houston 8 30 p m
Cleyeland at Utah 9 p m
Phoen1x at L A Lakers at Anaheim Cah1
10 30 p m
Portland at LA Ctrppers 10 30 p m

TRANSAtnONS
BASKETBr.LL

National Basketball Anoci1tlon
BOSTON
CEL TICS -St gned
Jason M1 sk;m

. CLEVELAND

G

CAVALIERS -

R e lea sed G Wlll1e Burton and G
Khal1d Reeves
FOOTBr.LL
National Football League
SEAT T LE SEAHAWKS - Acttvated
C·G Ra bbl e Toback lrom th e phys •ca ll y-unable-to - per t orm ltst
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
BOSTON
BRU I N S-Recal led
G
Kay Whitmore from P r ovtde n ce o f
the AHL
TAMPA BAY LIGHTN ING - Ac fl va t ·
ed D Sergey Guse11 from 1n1ured
rese rv e

GB

~cu r~

C!ty C h1 efs owner Lumr Hunt
Hunt pas sed up th e C hrds~Oak­
land RJ~de•s gJmc to Jltcnd th L·
MLS Cup and '' ltllt'~s one of lw.,
b1 ggL'St v1ctoneo;; SJn cc th e C htd"s
upset the Mmn cso ta Vtkmg~ 111
the 1970 Super Bo\\'1 1 &lt;~ en n th,·

between the AFL .tnd Nil
''Th L· te rhc -.pnt t w, t, c~t.lh ­
iJ ,hL· d I h.H 111 .tde L'\ ·cryt h mg
L'\'L' tl. ~~2." I tum •.t td " l'h t\ ,.., .1
d1 fkrL'Ilt b.1t!lc The h.tttk here J\
.lg.un ' t th'-· btlll nile~ t\ll I ki L'. th L·
b.Htic ,·, lO 'L'il [IL kL h . .

l't~ht

'

OUTSTANDING
WOMEN - These
women, repre·
sentmg a numt&gt;er
of professions 1n
the local community, where hon·
ored at a luncheon ot&gt;servmg
World Rural
Women's Day on
Monday. They are,
1-r, Susan Oliver
for serv1ce. Char·
lene Hoeflich for
t&gt;usmess, Mary
O'Bnen for professionalism, Dawn
Kopec for agnculture, and Mary
O'Bnen for the
arts. (Bnan J.
Reed photo)

BY BRIAN

h 1'

Agb Jy,ltW

hon1cr of the
~cnc~ .mJ fou 1th of h 1~ pL&gt;~t­
~L'. I ~Pn &lt;..1rcer m.tdc tt H ~} ITt
1he founh Wdl Cbrk haJ lut .1
'(l in ,!Jot tn r "'t L ot\1\ 111 t h L· tup
SL'COlH.l

P LVZ.l \

r-----------------,
r-----------------,
wheel alignment
'I
tires
· 1I
95
We will meet or beot any competitor's
l$2495 $40
l
4-w~el
advertised price on the some tire. :
1

I

1 2-wheel

JCheck and ad;ust camber and toe Additional parts
1 and labor may be required on some vehicles .

1
I

1

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

I

:

I

We feature ali major brands GoOdyear, F1restone
General, Michelin, Bridgestone, Con tmental, UNIROYAL.
BF Goodnch Mountmg and balancmg may be extra

1
I

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

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C HAR LESTON, W.Va . (A P)
Ladybug, !Jdybug, fl y away
homt·.
That \ the urgm f( uf Wect V i r~
gmtans whose hotn L''i h ave been
invaded 111 recent LLrys by the
multi colored p e''' With bl.ll'k
T he bu~ norm ,L ily ct.lft l ook~
ing for sh elter when fall 's e.1rly
fro sts h it , but tins yc·Jr, the insects
appear ~Jmp.11 1t , said Berry
C. ru tchfi d d, an l't lt o m o loglst
wit h the state Dcpartlllent of
Agnculture.
There's no way of calcu l.rtmg
the numbe1 of huf," that have
ta"ia_·n w mg and drL~ c lmgm~ to
our!stde wa llc; or h .1vc m y"tcrtously appeared mSidc on wmdow1,
wall' .md ceilmgs .
" You 're talk1n g millions, 1f not
b1lhons," Crutchfiel&lt;-1 ,,mi.

band. Roger, own &gt;nd operate
A&gt;rdvark Sound The Gdmores
also prese nt the1r App .dacl11an
muSic program in schools and at
events throughout the region .
•
Charlene
H oefli ch
of
Pomeroy, general m,mJger ofThe
Daily Sentinel, 111 the area of business. H oeflich . who h as been ge n ~
eral n1 anager of tht' newspaper
sin ce 1989, began her career wnh
The Ath ens M esse nger 111 1959.
• Da" n Kopec, w ho operates o
1\.utl.md-are a fm n wah her hu s~
bonJ, Tony, 111 the arc• a ofagm ul ~
turc. The m other of f1vc, Kopec IS
active m .1 numbcr o f con m1unity
o rgam zannns.
• M ary O'Brien of Syracu&lt;c·,
th e asml ant pm1c1pal at M e1g«
M1ddle School. m the ,\lea
p ro~
fcS'mnalism. O'Bn en .Jufted
•
ca reers 111 !9HH, after I 4 years 111
the nursmg profe ss10n.

m

The Inse c ts , .1crually called
mulncolored AS!~Il L1dy beetles,
are native to Chma. T hey were
rell';,ed Ill tht" United St.ltl'S 111
the early I'JK fls to h elp couthern
pe can growero.; n mtrol the pecan
Jphtd T h e tns ccts .1Tl' now com mon throughout t h ~..· E.lstern
Umted St.lte,,
"Th e fi r~t cst,,bi!SII cd popula~

tion wa" fm111 d .

111

1YHH m

Louimna." Crutc hfi eld sa~ d
"T hey then spread throughout
the Umrcd StJtcs and \Wrl' cstab~
il &lt;lwd m West V11g"'' " by I Yn."
Dunng: the ~pnt1g and 'lll tllmer, the beetles .n·e h .1ppy to hvc
111 ttec top~. l',ttlng aph1Js, mites

a11d any other insl'Ct they em
overpower, ,,ud Orutch tlcld.
In the (,,II , the bec' tles flock to

'

supplemenl
to t h e vol un tee r
'lJ ti.tJ ~
w in c h oper~
.1 t c thro u ghou t th t: coun ty.
llurge«

RURAL
WOMEN'S DAY
- Gina Pellegnno
P1nes, director of
the Me1gs Center
of the Un1versity
of R10 Grande,
standmg, gave
th e keynote
address at Monday' s World Rural
Women' s Day luncheon. (Bnan J.
Reed photo)

• SLISan Ohver of R .\l 111e, the
l'Xl'Cutivc di recto r of rhe M L'Ig'
Co unty C::ouncil on Agmg. fi1r
her co ntnbutt on to scr vtCl' In
Jddmon to her work w1th the
MCCaA and the Me1gs County
Multipurpose Scmor Center,
Ohwr h as held ,, 11Umbcr of
reg10nal ;md ~t.Jtc- k vl' l ofTi tl''&gt;
rcbtmg to rhe .1gmg, find reo.;nfil'd
before th e U.S Sc11a1c 011 the
Older Amcn c&gt;n s Act

Sentinel
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AS
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Comics

A4

Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

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Pick 3: O~ l ~ l; Pick 4: _,__(,~9 7
Buckeye 5: 1-L\~ 1 5~ 1'1~23

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Please see Honored, Page A3

hil t

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John

,Jnd rlHl'&gt;l' ,lrtL' lllhJJg the lun cheon , .md dJscu..,,cd' rlll: 1111p01 ~
t.lll u:· of thl'\1..' pro tL·~~IO!i.l l
women to thl'n pl'l:r~ 111 th'-· rur.1l

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L} Oil'i , Pru\l'Lllllllg Attolll l'\

wo 111en honon·d

rill'

S.dcs, In c of
Lo udon vtlle.
w.ts
the
apparc11t lo w
J)I(Jde l , Wit h .I
h~tl
111
the
amount
of
$69,773. Other h~tl1 were
t nc!vcd fro m
1\·nn ( ',ltl'
l'v1cJEal P roUuct~ o l' Ndn. 111
the ~ll1\ 0I11lt of S71l,7!1ll .. 111d
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W 1n1cr l'.1rk. !!.1 .. 111 tile

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2 Sections - 12 Pages
Calendar
Classifieds

G m.1

H L·arse

Ulldvr

Amlm/,mce Sales, I11c. of
L011d01111ille, was the
appamrt law Mdder, with
a hid iu tire '"'""lilt '!f
$69,773. Otlur bids wm·
rccfir'L'd (rom Pt•urr Care
,'\1edical Pradr1cts af
Niles, in the ammml af'
$70,700, aud Wlll't'ied
Coaclr llrdustrii·s o_f
1Viuta Pin·k, Fla., irl
till' amo1111t of $76,954.

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MIDDLEPORT Five out~
st.mdmg Mdgs Co unty women
from a vancty of profesSions, reprcse ntmg ru ral women everywhere, were honored for then
Jccomphshments M on day dunng
a Rural Wom en's Day lun cheo n
at the Umvcrstty of R 10 Grande's
Me1gs Ce nter
'
The Me1gs County Prosecu ting
Attorney's Office. th ro ugh the
Vict1m s AssJ'ltan cc Prog ram .mtl
Y10lcn cc Against Wom en pro~
gram, Jnd the URG M e1gs C en ter, sponsored the awa1ds lun ~
cheon , wh1ch h onored the fol ~
lowmg women
• M ary G1lmore of ·Pomeroy,
for her cuntnbution to the J rts.
Gtlmorc ts "ec rctary for the
Pomeroy
office
of
the
Athens/ Meigs Edu cJtio n&gt;l Se r~
vtce Center, .mJ sht' and her hus-

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SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

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nnd on .1 t\\ o- run doubll' b)
7ede 1nd .1n RBI Sin gle hy

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POMEROY ll"h for J
new amb u lantt" WL'rl· opt'lll'J

honored on World
Rural Women's Day
BY BRIAN

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SEN TINEL NEWS STAFF

Out~tanding women

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Met ' Jhe"d 3 ~ 2 qn New York\
fourth str.ught double AgbJ)'Jill
scored Ventura With a two-o ut
double - the Mets' record fifth
on Lhc Jn nmg No team m LCS
pb y hJd ever had more tlun four
cxtr:~-b .tse h1ts m J!l mmng
"We cam e our more :~ggre'l­
stvc." ~;ud P1Jzza, who has broken
h1" po stst:a~o n struggle~ by gomg
(J~fm ~ 1J w11h fiw 1U3I s 111 t he
se nes . "\Ve we re dctenmnL' d to
get b&gt; ck 111to bJI!game "
N ew York w.1sn 't done Jg.un..,t

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Commissioners
open bids·for
new ambulance

Denver vs Milwaukee at Lextng ton. Ky . 7

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Atlanta vs Boston at Spnngfletd Mass . 7

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later dare
In oth t:r bu stness, counci l c.hlil'U\\ed
the Gavin Plant 's proposed six 60.011(1 gallon anhydrous a mmom a tanb to b,·
con~tru c tc..:d m
ne1ghbonng Galha
Counry Concern s of tht:! "wor\t-casl'
scena r1o " were brough t up JS well a&lt;
the po s&lt;~bllity of businesses pas"ng up
Melb"&gt; County becaUie of the close
proxtmny of [h e aforelll l"ntlutu:J

Today's Games

13

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dl\'L' d

so Cents

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

BY TONY M. LEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

1 112

1--h 1-.to ~tOIIL hkm 111 thl' H(Hh
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Pomeroy council mulls new water plant

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N•llonal Basketball Association

3

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Seattle
LA Clippers

7

PRO HOOPS

Orlando

1

2

Saturday' a Games
Charlotte 113 Atlanta 92
PhlladelphiB 84 . washm9ton 80
Mtam1 85 New Jersey 79
Toronto 113 Cleveland 108 OT
Ortancto 118, Detroit 92
Ch1cago 107 , Denver 104
Houston 9a San AntoniO 84
Mttwaukee 9 1 Sacramento 89
LA Chppers 86 Vancouver 78
Sunday' s Games
Dallas 96 San Anton.o 91
lnd1ana 92. Sacramenlo 83
Phoenix 105 Vancouver 94
Portland 101 Golden S tate 83

.,

Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
W L Pet.

2

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667
667
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3 1 1 0 7 16 10
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2 2 0 1 5 13 17
2 3 0 0 4 14 13

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HQuston
Denver
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Utah

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Central Dl\llsion
W L TOL Pia OF OA

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Nashville
Chicago
Detro1t
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1

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Midwest Division

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2 7 10
2 8 16
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1
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Kansas City makes early goal·stand in MLS Cup,\fictory over Chicago
WASHINGTON (AP) - Thrs
worst-to-first thmg 1s gl'ttm g to
be .1 luba for the stJ te of Mr s~

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1 112
2

C.ntr1l Division

Chattan ooga 27. VMI 14
Cle mson 35. Maryland 14
Delaware 28 , W1lliam &amp; Mary 17
East Caro tma 42, Army 21
Elan 43 , Samford 21
Flonda 38. ,6,uburn 7
Ftonda ~ t 63. Duke 14
Furman 33. The Citadel 7
Georgra 29, Vanderbilt 19
Geocg1a So uthern 34, Appalach•an St

14

2
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New Jersey
Washington
M1am1
Boston

Odober 17,2000

•

2 0 1 00

Philaoelphla

Charleston Southern 42 , Austin Peay

Meigs netters win TVC title a1

Details, A3

New Vol'll;

Utah 21 , San Otego St 7
Washington 21 Arizona St 15
Weber Sl 12, N Anzona 10

Tuesday

Society news and notes, As

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