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                  <text>•

I Page B a • The Daily Sentinel

Thursda~~ober19,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Hunting section inside today
Area volleyball action, B1

Satunt-,

2000

70s; Low: 40s

•

DetiJils, A3

THE WORLD SERIES

and Yankec'i tm.~~..·ung Ill thl' \V,.&gt;rld s\.'Tit."\
Stcph.Hnt• Nt.•tohcky nf Ankl'ny. lm\.1, rl' . . pnrJd~.,·d \\'lth
wht'n

~he w,\\

"I rhoughl
her CYt''-

hbnk sure

.1

.lskt..·J .lbl)Lit rh~..· Suh\\ "'' St•ru:-.
r:dkmg Jbom .1 .,,llJthYJt.h ~hop." . . ht..• ... 1id, rolltng

\'OU \Wre

low.w ....It tht.: dnwntn\\n
f:.uzzmg .1bom AI .md Ct.:org:t..·

Bw.h .
" I could ctrt• !...·,,

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th~.· p.t . . ,Joll PI tlw t.111' 111 ~t'\\ York. tht·

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own, .1 I\' o..nn .. ultllll-! tltlll
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" If It \\'t'l't' .lll\'h,hh cl~~·. n11~ht l'c llltl'tnlt'd. · lt'IIIL't' I \If''-' I ULL'I"l)

dun JV \ch !.111~ 11 1 thl' t H\'. Th.1t\
]ll"-t ,\ ll'"u\t nj \\ lll ll \ll~ People

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Y,nlkl'l'' .m· tk•tinnch· dlt' tt'.llll of

from Page Bl

more drama to it. New York fans agamst New York fans. Like the A's

In low,\'s fidds (.lf d n.'.uns, f.\rmers .m: ~pt' I H.Itng 12 to 16 hours a d:~y
tlnnking: corn. nut b,l,l'b,lll .

and Giants in 'H9,"
Only a tou ch of sarcas m entered his voice as he said he was rooting

"They

p ~,Tib.l hly h.l\'t'

the.·

l I[\ ..

Bern ie \'.., lh· n n\' - tlwre .1\~o
Tht· Y.uikt't'' ,trc rrymg to
1111ght be ,1 I~H to \\",l td J 111 the become tht· tirst tt'.llll to \Yiu
thn·c " t r.u~ h t World St'rtt"~ ch;lm,:,t.mds.
ptomlnp.., ::.!lilt' o.lkl.md in 1.97~f\.-kr~ \t,n Pt .1Z7.t d.nt'' thl' Pl.lyboy P!Jynt.ltl' of the MdlcnnJum . 7 -J . Tih' lVkr-." l.iq rirk umc in
Y.mkcc:-. 'ur l )t•rt·k k tt•r ILt S bt't'll . I l)Sf1. \\'hc.•n tli l' rcolm ~t:1rrcd
J)"·ight ( :omkn. now pitching
h nk ed w Mis~ Uni\~l'r'.t'.
Thc Y.mkct'S go t .1 d.1y o ff f!.H th(.' Y.lilh't''i.
I he tc.mt~ lllt't \ I X til lit'S 111
Wt•dnt·:-.tLJy tLl re..,L A fl·,\· /\ l ets
p1tchL'rs chrL'\\' .H Silt',\ St.1dnnn. llllc.1 rll'.lt.:llt' pl.ly tim ye.n. w1th til l'
though pill \\'.l\hl'd out .1 full Y.1nkn·~ ,,.llltllllg fpur rune::. . The
n\'.lln· ~ ;1lrc.td\' tcme fmm the
\\'orknut.
d.1yo: \vhen Yankt·c~ owner (~ eo rge
Th~: \\'L't \Yt'.Hhn d\tl J·JothJng
SteJnbrt'Tllln would put extra
to d.unpt•n tlw pbyt:-n' 'ptnts.
c.•mph.t&lt;.,!\ on hc.·.ning dt t' M cts in
"Thi~ IS our c:h.tnc~.· tn get .1
was
pbrl' on tho..· nup." Mt't~ outlic.:ld- ')PflllJ; tr.Hntng g;n n t''i hc
Jghtt•ned
.Iftt•r
R
og(.'f
Clemens
cr J;~y Pityton ~.llli. ''Wht\L'VL'r win~
be~ned PJ .lZza .
.:an watk ;"tro und With rhc1r cln ns
A ....1 n.· .. ult. Mcts m;ma~enu:n t
htg:h .l!ld JlJ\"L' br;1!-!gtng nglw; for
b.lll l h'1\ the Y.tnkcc~ fr&lt;:1111 u~i ng
.1 Inn)!; tun c."
•
"Tht•rt·'rt· \11 0ft' Y.mkn· f. 1m rhc \\"l'tghr roon1 .1t Slw.1 StJdiLllll, .n1 d .ll"-o t\.,rb 1d it~ Ali - St;1rs

pd1m. -.o rh..:-y c.m listen w che game. but I'll

Melcs County's

for the Mers.
'' The Mets b~at th~ Gia11ts, so they musr be the best team in baseball if they beat the Giants," he said. "The Yankees have et~oyed sucn&gt;-Ss for coo long." ·
Craig Ballard, a 34-ycar-old city wnrker who was watering flower&gt;
in dowmown Des Moin ~ . turned off the hose long enough to put one

bl.'t u 's more tl1r Cntt:rtJJllllH~Ilt nr to kt'L'P rh~m aw.1ke," said Bud Becdk of the low.1 St.lll' Umv~.· t ~lt\' E:-.,.[eu,lon o!licc in eastern Pottawart.uuic County.
.
In Los An gl:h.·s - nnw hom!.' tn rhc Dod ge rs, who faced the Yank.:..:-~ m tht• l.1st Suln\'Jy Satl'~ wht•n .;;t1ll 111 Bro ~kly n in ]956 - Jose
han.d over hi s mouth to stltl(.~ a mock yawn.
Cutlt'rrez wa~ pullmg tln Se,lttle to .1dnnn~ to play th e Mets.
" I don 't care about b~scbalL Don't like playing it, don't like watch" I thmk H wo11ld h.I\'L' ho..·o..·n .1 lot more.· iuto..'rl's ling. E:ISt vs. West.'' he
:-.;Hti. "Who c.trt'S ~Hit\ttk of Nn\· Y1 •rk . l'X('t'pl for a transpbntcd New ing it," he s:1id.
Not that lowam .1rc co mpletely tuned out to the World Series.
Ynrka?
jtle Sh:1nnJh:~n, spokc:sman ~for Iowa c-;ov.Tom Vilsack. said he alre.1dy
:' I \\· 1,h they {Y.lllh'o..'" .1nd ~kh) cnu!d both lo~c. tlut. would at l.:ast
know$ he ' ll bt! \'oting tOr Go re, soh~ sheepi shly admittt•d to wat ching
m.tkt· H Jlltl'ft''lill~ till" t'\'L"rYtHit' el~c I rould rJro..· lc:~s about New
· more of Game (J th.m he d1d ofTLlestby\ dt~b.u c.
York ."
"We hJVl' ,, lot l&gt;f work to do, a lot of work as \Vl' get rt"ady for the
Not ~oo With :;x-yc.lr-qld J)l ldgc.'r t:ui ll:rry Speth. who wil l be t(llprest d ~n ti.1l dcction .'' Shannahan s:ud . " Tht~ fot:us slwulJ be on AI
lnwint! the Wnrld Sene' \nt h lm ~u1 1
··· 1 think it\ ne.lt rn h.l,-t.. 1 Sub\\-.ty St' I'IL'' .1g-.l llt," he s.tid . " I rt')ltt.: i'n~ Gort'. ;m d it will be - until S:Itu rday, when t'll be \\'Jtching tlu: base-

btT

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brotht·r ....1nd \l .... tL' I ' " - .1 n\·,llr\'." lw ~.lhL
" I \Hlllld hke tn 't'l' till' (~1.1111'- .llhl the A\ 111 the 'L'ncs." H ~·\t.J d s.1 id.
but tigurc~ Nt'''" Y~Hk dt'\o..T\'t'' rill' hmeligh r. "Nt·w York. thq·'rt· bi g.
I ht'\' lO II1!1l .Uld th.H krnd of .ltlt'nt!llll. 1! '-. 111 rho..·1r blood ."
Added J un Ro d n ~uo ..1 S.1n l·cliKJ,ro lo,Jn uHinT " I think tr .1dds

.

ti·nm tr.wc lin g \\'it}l tht· Y.mkt·e;,'
All-Sr.u-., to thl' g.1mc 111 Arl.uu.1.

l'vkt' GM ' S~cvc Phil lip" nn

W~..·dnc::.d:~y

~.ud

tht•

Y.anh·e~

wou ld be :dlowc d to U ~l' lm
team's wc tght rnn m . wh1ch 1"
im1 Lh.· th1.' Met•; duhhuu:..t·. Aho,
thl' /Vkrs will pmb.1b ly uk c c.u·hb,lttm g pnctTCt' .1t Shl'.l hdi)fc
hc .1ding to Y.mkc c St:nlilllll
· City rr.Jusit otlicr:1is, llll',ltl while. planned tl1 .Hid exrr.1 Nn . .J
trains to tilt' Lt· ....:i t~ gto n An·nue
hnc that wilJ c.Jrry f.ws to Y.nJkL'c
Sradium and .tddninn.JI No. 7
trJins ~)\1 the Flush ing li no..' h1

Slu:,1 'st.nln1111. The routes lllt't't at

( ;nml ( :l'Jltr:ll l i.:rmin:tl .
Y.J n h~l''i

~ccond

h:1 se mJ11

( 'hmk K1wbl.wch Ius bet'n
known to nd c thl· rails up to the
Bn m'\ Don 't lo ok for Pi.tzza.
though
"Thac\ ' 110 ~ ubw.ty ne .1r my
home." t_h r Nrw Jer~ey rcsidcm
. .wl
David E. Kelley may be one of
Fyvush F
_ inkel's biggest fans,
He likell him so much on Picket
Fem·es, he deCided to cast him
in Boslofl Publi£·.

friday's Special

Footlone with Sauce

ft

on~gg¢

Z'ed &amp; it!tt4 "PaU?i4• ?•v«e
~~7~S~?,~
&amp; ~ 7~ ~ '9(Jif, 7~

'9wta, ¥

• ..•
...
..,

POMEROY -The public will have
an unprecedented role in determining
the appearance of the new PomeroyMason Bridge, not only in the design of
the bridge itself, but also in the aesthetics of the area surrounding the new
span.
M emb ers of the Ohio Dep&gt;rtment of

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design was rdayed to the ODOT repre sentatives.
bridge design process.
· Davenport and Nichols said the
Middleport Mayor Sandy Jannarelli memb ers of th e public who had co nand Pomeroy . Mayor John Blacttnar tacted thehl had indicated a verystrong
were also in vited to the mee ting, but· preference for the distinctive cable-my
did not attend.
·
design, one of three. designs which
While the meeting was no t set for the ODOT has proposed.
purpose of discussing the bridge design ,
An informal public poll co ndu cted by
public preference for the cabl e-stay Th e Daily Sentinel also indicated a

Shields to discuss the impo rtance of
low-cost aesthet ic cons ideration s to the

Census
...
estimate
...
.....
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MIDDLEPORT DAIRY QUEEN BRAZIER ·-....-•

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~'This

show; Ohio's population

Dorsey, univer-

sity president.
"The e nroll ment figure is
es pec ially sig-

Census Uurea u esrim;1tes

and th ey leave." said Jefferson ··
County Commissioner Ben
Batenburg. " They can't stay
where there's no jobs for
them."
The largest metropolitan
area increases over 10 years
wen: in the CincinnatiHamilton area, up 14.4 percen t, ~n d Co lumbus, up I 0. 7
p erc em.

The Steubenville area, like
the Youngstown-Warren area

to the no rth , has been hurt by
the loss of steel j obs.
"Wt:: lost our minin g jobs.
They down sized the stee l
industry. Then you lo se all
yo ur spinoff jobs," llat~ nburg
Sal d.

"Due to lack of foresight,
we didn't go for the manufacturing of tlni~h e d products in
. this area for yearS and years."
The populat ion est imates
preview the Cen sus 2000 data
that the state will use .to
redraw Ohio Hou se and Sen ate districts next year.

llat enburg . a R e publican

Please see Census, Page A:S

nifica nt

because all th e
major areas of
enrollment
com munity

LEGENDARY BWESMAN - (Top)
Chicagd' blues legend, Eddy "The
Chief' Clearwater, pictured above,
played to a packed hQIJse Wednesday night at the Court Street Grill in
Pomeroy. Clearwater, who has
played alongside many of the al"time
blues greats, electrified those in
attendance with his soulful singing
and intense style of blues guitar. The.
event was a special concert sponsored by the Pomeroy Blues and Jazz
Society. (Tony M. Leach photo)

college, undergrad uate
versity

uni -

and

The

Ed u ca tion.
expen_e n ced
growth of 212 p e rcent from
last year's tota l st udent t::nro ll -

ment of 25 to thi s fa ll 's enrollment of 78. It is th e only program of'its kind offered to the
targeted pop ulation
of

col-

lege IJ,zd ,, 5.1 perCCIII iiiCI'I't!St' ill Sill-

dent 1'111'!1/llltCIII •II.
tlte freslmtell tllld
sopho.,wre lerwls.

The J:r,zdu,ltt' pmgram .~lwtl'ed

72

t1

vocational
teachers.

"Dr. Ral p h
Shibl ey
lm
th e
grown
program \Jgnificantl y 111
o ne
year.''
D o r~e,y ~aiJ.

rota I.

In

both

trad i-

tional
and
adult ~ t u dents
a re adding to

)II.'Yfl'l/( illCYI'ilSl'.

particularly pleased with the
increa se o f incomi ng litudenrs
at the frt::shmen level from

other enro llm e nr initi at iv es

Galli a,Jackson, M eigs an d Vin counties ."

The co mmunity co ll ege had
a 5. 1 percent increase in stu -

art, granddaughter of Carol McCullough, shrieks in delight as s he
and her grandmother began erecting Halloween decorations at
McCullough's home along Mulberry Avenue. on Thursday afternoon.
The Halloween display is a
reminder that summer has passed
by once again and that fall is in full
bloom . (Tony M. Leach photo)

offered through the School of

Rio Gra nde's ~n c n:a sc m
enrol lm e nt . Th e adult degree
program, Fast Fonvard, \~.'hi c h
began last year, h as 57 'l tu cknt!\.

ton

EEEEKI -(Right) CaroiAnn Stew"

at three off-cunpu~ liites."
The
Career
T~.·c hm cal
Teacher Education prog ram .

CtHIIIIIIIItily

g raduat e stu :dents - showed increases.
"Th e' overa ll in crease is 7. 9
percent ove r last year. I am

dent e nrollmen.t at tbt: fr~s h ­
m en and sop ho more lev!.:ls .
The
gradua t e
program
showt"d a 72 perce nt increase.
"The graduate program's
g rowth
1s
phenomen;1! ,"
Dorsey said . "We no\v otTer
courses over the intcnH:.'t and

enroll ed this fall. A number of
also had increases thi s fall.
"When the tl exibly sc hed uled classes (those beginmng
aft er the 15th day of the 'Jllnrter) arc added at the end of the
qu ar t e r, the f&lt;1 ll enro llm t·nt
figure may become th e highc' t
ln our hi sto ry," Dorst'y }":li d.

' BL1ilding e n ro ll ment

1

h .l'i

rr ul y been a team effort at Ri o
Gr:1nd e. The vmrk is bl·ginning to pay divi JenLk"

Commander defends choice of Yemen for Navy refueling
services in the Yt"mem port.
H e.· wa .., the first \vit ness in a
Co le mer di saster was the be st killed 17 " 'ilor&gt;. " I pass th at two-day he:trmg by rht· Sc na tt:
Annt.•d Servict's Conuninee to
place to refuel Navy sh1ps in ; · bu ck on to· nobody."
rc.:VH'W
bo\v
the
Defl'llS t'
Zinni.
who
retired
e
arli
er
t
hi
s
region full of terrorist "ra ts'
D
epartme
nt
,
State
D
epartm
ent
nests," retired M ar ine Gen. year. was co mnunder in chj ef of
U .S. Central Command in . and ot he r age ncies ca m e tu
Anthony Z inni sai d ThursdJy.
1
LJece mbc r 199R when the Pen- approve u ~e of the port of Aden,
' lt was my de cis ion," the fo rtagon
contracted tOr refuelin g '-It-spite its reputation as ;1 sa fe
mer co mmander of thl' reg1on

WASHINGTON (AI') - Th e
Middle East port where tlte USS

told .:;c nators ;1 week after thl'
bombing iu Aden , Yemen, that

Chamber dinner
Under Construe·
tion. made up of
John Anderson Sr.,
John Anderson Jr. ,
Dave Powers and
Gerald Ke lly, will
provide the enter·
tainment program
at the Me igs Coun·
ty Chamber of
Commerce's annu·
al dinner and
meeting Monday.
The dinner begins
at 5:30 p.m. at
Middl eport Church
of Christ's Family
Ute Center. Local
musician. Van Joh nson will also pe r·
form.

is an increase of 155

Dr. Barry M .

wns of Steubenville and
Youn gstown ro R ep ublican
rongholds of H amilton and
uburban Columbus.

lars t:ducating the students

Two

students more than last year at
this time," sai d

from
li teel

';We spen d millions of dol -

GRANDE -

d ents enrolled in classes for fall
quarter 2000 at the University
o f Rio Grande and R io
Grande Community College.

estimate of the

release d
Friday
;how
Ste ubenville- Weirton, W.Va.,
suffered the biggest · population decline for a metropoli tan area in Ohio, losing 1 percen t from 1998 to I 999 and
6.5 percent over the last I 0

Pie•se see Bridge, Page Al

yc.·a rs after the institution 's
strategic and enrollment pl ans
were implemented, 2,107 stu-

COLUM BUS (AP) -The
.S. Census Bureau'; last

ontinues to shift
emoc ratic-leani.ng

ington , W.Va. Sin,ilar bridges are now 111
the
works
for
Maumt·e
and
Portsmouth .
Morgan sa id a decision on the bridge
design cou1d com e as early as next Fn-

~w:~·~ )~'"-

..._~-odus

~l ibonubrion

strong publi c preferen ce for the cablestay deslgn, which is s1mila r to the
bridge between Pro ctorvill e and Hu nt-

Enrollment up
at Rio Grande

·~

year s.
111

aesthetics ream , led by
Karen Young of the ODOT central
office in Columbus, ODOT District 10
Deputy Director George Collins,
County Manager !lrett Jones, project
engineer Doug Morgan an d other
ODOT personnel met Thursday with
Meigs· Cou nty Commissioner M ick
Davenport and M ason, W.Va. , Mayor
George Nichols and Recorder Sarah

\-,.,'

Speetat..
.
1---~~-------------------------------------------------iJ ~

992-3322

Transportation~s

BY BRIAN J, REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

11

.111d \,1\ d .1 tnl~'lo\\ll uu t~hup 111 t'..'e\\ Yllrk \\I add bt· J U"I ,1\ ~::-..ci tiJlg.
" I i.l\'lng two tt'.\111'1 pl.1y "" ~·h l't'. H do~·,n\ go..•t llllll h b~.·w.:r. I t\ lik~.:

Hometown Newspaper .

Public to have input in bridge's aesthetic design

b .l ll g.liHC' ."

fn·di~lltl'l Bill I h·. . ud rl·l·., lkd I~ JH 1), whcu rlw Oak- ,'
S.111 h .111: l'•&lt; t1 ( ;J.\\lt\ pl.1n· d the 1\.1~ Bnd t;c Wnrld Sent'~.'·

S.1n h .lllc.J"

•

Series ·

~.lid.

October 10, 1000

•

Midwesterners not overly concemed a~out ~subway Series'
DES MOINE:.S, Iowa (AP) - It\ ~omcthtng mo-.t Nt'\\' Yorker'
probJbly cJn't t:nhnm. but not evernult' 1'1 m .1 lfl'll7\' .\bnut the Met'

.Friday

crew of t he USS Cok. i&lt;: 'Why

understan d how these deci,iuns
.m: nude," said the co mmi tt~:t:'s
cha irm an, St'n . John W;1 rn er, R-

the Amcrion govanmem \\'e re
wl· lt &lt;:I WMl' th at terrori~t' 0'1.1.'

Va.

nT he d nc question I kt:l:p
ht•a ring from th e fatmli c-.; of rhc

Yemen?' "
Zi n 111

Yemen

s:ud he- .md rh ...

a~

"Th t' lf

a

tra n ~it

CO.l'&gt;t

lS

rl·~t uf

rout(.'.
;I

'ilCVl' ...

he

Please see Navy, Page A3

Raising the·flag

Today's

Sentinel
Sections Pages

2

h;tven for terror ist s.
. "The Am erican people ~1rc
entitlt'd to know th e facts an d

16

State Rep. John Carey, R-Well·
ston presented a new Ohio flag
to Salisbury Elementary School
in recent ceremonies conducted

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries

Sports
Weather

AS
B4-6
B7
A4
AJ
Bl.-6,8
A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 2-J -I ; Pick 4: 5-ll-5- 1
Buckeye 5: 5-6-9-25-32

W,YA.
Daily 3: 7-7-0 Daily 4: 5-9-.1-7

at the school. On hand to participate in the program was the
honor guard from Drew Webster
Post 39, American Leg ion. A new
American flag was also raised
during tli e program. which was
attended by all students at the
school. Tips on flag 'etiquette
and proper disposal of a flag no
longer in servicable condition
were given by the Legion mem·
bers. (Tony M. Leach photo)

�,
A 2 • The O.lly Sentinel

~rldey,

October 20, 2000

Mdey, October 20, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Actress Jean Peters dead at 73
LaJOLLA. Calif. (AP) -Jean Prtcn, who appeared in 6lms with
Marlon Br.mdo, Roy Millard, Spencer Tracy and other major stan
before marcying billionaire Howard Hughes and leaving Hollywood.
has died of leukemia. She was 73.
Peten, who died last Friday in LaJoUa, was buried Tuesday at Holy
Cro$S Cemetery in Culver City, Calif.
"We had a graveside service, very smaU, wtth family members. No
Hollywood," Peten' sister, Shirley Cook of Carlsbad, Calif., told the
Akron (Oiuo) Beacon Journal.
Peten' break came as a college sophomore when she entered the
Miss Ohio St:&gt;te pageant in 1945. The 19-)'l:ar-old from Canton, was
selected over 250 contatants -and won a screen test at 20th Century

Fox.
Srudio boss Darryl F. Zanuck saw the green-C)'I:d brunette and
quickly signed her to a contract.
.
She appeared in 19 lilms, beginrung with the 1947 movie "Capt:&gt;in
from Castile" opposite Tyrone Power, and including "lt Happens Every
Spring" (1949) with Milbnd, "Viva Zapata!" (1952) with Brando,
, "Niagara" (1953) with Marilyn Monroe, "Pickup on Sourh Srreer"
(1953) with RichardWidmark,"Three Coins in the Fountain" (1954)
with Dorothy McGuire, "Apache" (1954) with Burt Lancaster and
"Broken Lance" (1954) with Tracy.
·

Man confined in mental hospital
COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) - Resentencing for a man who has
pleaded guilty to trying to kill his fourth wife, and has been charged
with murdering his second wife, is on hold until he is considered ment:&gt;lly competent.
U.S. Districr Judge William 0. Bertelsman said Thunday that Albert
Schuholz Jr. would remain in a federal mental hospital until he is
declared sane enough to proceed with a final resentencing. His guilty
plea will stand.
"That's all right," Schuholz, 67, said about another trip to a mental
facility. "I enjoyed it."
"You have strange tastes," the JUdge responded.
Schuholz, who has addresses in Crittenden, Ky., and suburban
Cincinnati, pleaded guilty last year to one of three counts of traveling
in interstate commerce with the intent that a murder be committed.
Prosecuton said Schuholz paid S5,000 to a man to kill his wife,
Norma Schuholz, and her sister, Martha Schomaker, in July 1998. The
killing was not carried out, and the man became an informant.
' Schuholz was sentenced to serve 10 years in prison, but his attorneys
later argued that he was not competenr the enter the guilty plea.
Last November, Schuholz was charged in Ohio with the 1981
deaths of his second wife, Marie, 54, and family friend Starla Burns,
57. Their bodies were found in their northern· Cincinnati apartment.
their throats slashed and their skulls fractured.
.

TRW says it might move out
LYNDHURST (AP)- TRW Inc. chairman Joseph T. Gorman
warned that the company might move out of this Cleveland suburb if
voters reject plans for a Sl45 million, 67-acre development adjacent to
its headquarien.
·
Gorman said Thunday that the company had no immediate plans to
move, but said the company had few business ties to Cleveland and
needed to maximize the value of its property.
The move would cost Lyndhunt about 600 jobs and about a seventh of its income taX revenues, Gorman and TRW spokesman Alan
Melamed estimated.
A measure on the Nov. 7 ballot ask.! voters to rezone part of the
'
property for an upscale shopping center.
"I don't want that to be viewed as a threat," Gorman said. "But it's
a reality someone will have to face down the road. One could imagine selling the headquanen itself' and building condominiums there.
"We ju!l might sell the whole kit and caboodle," he said.
The auto pam, aerospace and information systems company has had
its headquarten at the site since 1985.
Chuck Royer, attorney for Citizens for a Livable Lyndhunt, one of
5everal le'ident groups concerned about the development, said he
wasn't surprised by Gorman's comments.

Shootln1susped hospitalized
DAYTON (AP) - Police say they have not determined a motive
for a series of shootings earlier this week because they haven't been
able to question the gunman who was wounded by police.
"It's still kind of cloudy," Police Lt. John Barnes said of the case.
Anthony Franklin, 31, ofTrotwood, faces felonious assault charges.
He hasn't been arraigned because he underwent surgery Wednesday
and is in serious condition under police guard.
Two women, 29 and 34, suffered three gunshot wounru each, and a
19-year-old man received two wounruTuesday night. They all were in
fair condition, Barnes said Thunday.
Franklin was arrested near the house where the women were shot.
Th~ man was shot at another location.
Shortly before the shootings, Franklin tried to run . down a young
girl in a car, police said. He drove to the house where the man was
shot, then returned .to the house where the women were shot.
A relative of the female victims has said the dispute started over a
child &lt;hared by Franklin and one of the wounded women.

Akron gets reprieve
AKRON (AP) -The city has won a reprieve from a U.S. Census
Bureau proposal to make Akron part of the Cleveland metro region
for statistical purposes.
The suggestion caused an uproar in,Akron, where people feared getring lumped into the Cleveland Metropolitan Statistical Area would
hurt Akron's image.
,
1
The cities are·41 miles apart, and the area betWeen the two has largely developed into suburbs with people commuting in both directions.
Hometown Rep. Tom Sawyer, D-Ohio, said Thursday that the U.S.
Office of Management and Budget has agreed not to implement the
proposal until at least 2002 ..
In the meantime, Sawyer and others in Congress will intrOduce an
amendment asking the Census Bureau to take local opinion~ into
account before lumping citie&lt; together.
Sawyer worried that the proposed change would hurt economic
development efforts by making the city invisible to industries that rely
. .
on government stansncs.
·

.

1Wo sentenced for fraud
CINC INNATi (AP) - Two people were sentenced Thursday in
U.S. District Court for their part in an insurance fraud scheme in
which they were named as beneficiaries of policies that were amended after the policyholder died.
P ro~ccuton 'hlld SS7U,R76 m fraudulent clauw; were suhm1tred ro
L1 fi..• ln'i urancc C orp. of North Am en ca. J 'iU b:,1chary of Cih'lla lmuraqre , Cnrp. of P11t1burgh . and S427.H76 w" p:ud out before the
scheme W:l.' detecred.
J eftfcy Cooper, 29, of C mcinuao was senten ced to two months o f
home detentio n and five years probJtion and ordered ro pay resclrutiOll of$6\ .234

Man asks to represent himself in torture case
FINDLAY, Ohio (AP) - A 23-year-old
man accused of torturing a 13-year-old girl
and then burying her in an underground pipe
may get his wish to act as his own l&gt;wyer.
Nathan Grahan1 interrup!ed his trial 'o n
Thursday and asked that he be allowed to represem himself.
Despite warnings ,from his arrorney and the
judge who both told Graham he was jeopardizing his case, Graham said he was confident
in his abilities .. Graham said he had been
studying law on his own during his time in
jail the last 10 monrhs.
"I know whar I have to say. I know what I
have to do," Graham said.
Graham has pleaded innocent to 16 felony
charges, including attempted murder, kidnapping and rape.
Five others already have been prosecuted in

In several jailhouse interviews, Graham
lhe case and sentenced to prison terms rangsaid
he was present throughout the ocide~ot
ing fron1 rour to 30 )'l:ars. Four are expected
to testifY against Graham, who&lt;faces up to 90 but did not have direct involvement in
assaults. Graham also contenru he saved
years in prison .i f convicted on all counts.
Jurors on Thunday toured the woods where girl's life by returning to remove her
prosecuton say Graham and othen put the pope.
But Fry said Graham helped stuff the
girl in a 3-foot wide pipe that stick.! partially
above ground.
into the pipe and pile a5t 250 pounds
Hancock County Prosecutor Robert Fry concrete and debris ~ ro of her. The
.said during opening statements that Graham was )eli "to basically fre~e t death,"
and the othen repeatedly punched, kicked
Afier Fry's opening st tement. G~~~
and choked the girl at a February 1999 party stood up and asked to serve as his own ]
in Findlay.
His attorney, Spiros Cocoves, told C~~:~~
"Her arms were held back as othen took · Pleas Judge Joseph Niemeyer that . (
turns punching her," Fry said. "She almost decision was contrary to his advice.
turned blue according t«;&gt; one eyewitness."
"I think you're making a
The victim, now 14, was assaulred after she Niemeyer said.
"Your lack of knowledge may unoiernii1n1
starred flirting with the boyfriends of several
women at the party, witnesses said.
your efforts to defend yourself."

COLUMBUS (AP) -A $33 mformation that helps conmillion advertising campaign sumers make informed choices,
funded by electric utilities will Don Mason, a commissioner
encourage Ohioans to learn with rhe Public Utilities Comhow to choose an electricity mission of Ohio, said Thursday.
supplier under a law that takes
The law requires utilities to
.fund the advertising campaign.
effect in January.
The Ohio Electric Choice It is one of the lowest advertistelevision and radio aavertise- . ing ' budgets of any of the 26
ments begin Sunday. The cam- states deregulat~ng their electric
paign, created by urilitie&lt;, regu- industry, said PUCO spokeslators and others, also will woman Lee Ruh.
include newspaper and billboard
Some consumer advocacy
advertisements on the law that groups have criticized the camallows Ohioans to shop around paign, saying it won't reach
for the lowest-priced electricity. poor, elderly and rural Ohioans.
The aru direct people to a They also say it won't emphasize
toll-free number, 1-888-632- the ability of groups or con1314, and the Ohio Electric sumers or entire municipalities
Choice website: www.Ohio- to band together to form a buyElectricChoice.com.
ing pool known as an aggrega·
Lawmakers voted last year to tion.
open Ohio's $11 billion electric
Ohio Partners for Affordable
industry to competition. Under Energy, which represents comderegulation, residential cus- munity action agencies · and
tomers will see lower electric public housing authorities, also
bills but could receove even have criticized utilities for not
greater savings by switching releasing a portion of the adverproviders.
·
tising budget to groups such as
The goal is to provide dear itself.

WASHINGTON (AP)
A
spending bill filled wid1 special
projects for Ohio whisked quickly
thfough the House and Senate on
Thunday, bur three of the state's
lawmakers - all Republicans voted againsr it ..
Sen. George Voinovich said he
was appalled at the rate with which
Congress was burning through the
projected budget surplus. .
"Everybody's pigging out;' he
said. "it's out of control."
Also voring against the bill,
which covered veterans, housing,
space and a variety· of other programs, were Reps. John Kasich of
Westerville · and Steve ·Chabot of
Cincinnati.
All three have persistendy urged
Congress to ·pay more attention to
reducing d1e nation's long-term
debt and less attention to finding
more money for local projects.
"We're probably going to spend
18 percent more than in (fiscal)
year 2000, and in year 200() we
increased domestic discretionary
spending 9 percent over the year

bcfore,"Voinovich said. "We're all
the trough ."
Chabot voted against the soo,ncling biU, even though it
more than $900,000 for the Findlay Market redevelopment proJeCt
in his district, for which he had
'
requested funding approval.
Chabot spokesman Gary Lind~
gren said the congressman cotild
not endorse the bill as a whole. "lt contained $10.9 billion
more than last year, which was a I S
percent increase," he &lt;aid. The bill
also came out of the conference
committee with S6 billion more
than· it had when it passed the
House.
The bill included funding for a
wide array of Ohio projects.
Among the largest were:
• $2.875 million to upgrade the
Dunlap Reservoir and make
1mprovements to the wastewat:er
treatmert plant in Washington
Court House.
• S1.65 million for a storm water
system in the Doan Brook Wate•shed Area.

Lennon

exhibit at

· : DUBLIN- Ge~eva Williamson Gardner, 86, of-Dublin, died Fri~y. Oct. 13, 2000, at Riverside Methodi&lt;t Hospital.
'' Born Jan. 30, 1914, in Pomeroy, she wos the daughter of the late
Phollop C. and Ethel E. Williamson.
' •" She was a real estate broker and owner of G. Gardner Realty and
' Gardner Properties.
·
1 "'· Al?ng woth her parents, she was preceded in death by two sisters,
'Helen W. Bmter and Mary W Black.
•' .. She is survived by her husband of66 years, Robert E. Gardner; a son
· "&gt;rrd daughter-in-hw, Dr. Robert P. and Deborah Gardner of Dublin;
·'t\vo granddaughters, four great-grandchildren, a niece, and a nephew.
• ' Funeral services took · place on Oc&lt;. 17 a&lt; Liberty Presbyterian
Church in DdawJre. Arrangements were handl~d by Schoedinger
'":\'I/Orthington Chapel.
Mernorial contributions can be made to the Shrine Burn Institute,
3229 Burnett Avenue , Cincinn:~.ri, Ohio 45229-3095 or to Liberty
Presbyterian Church, ?ORO Okntangy River Road, Dehware, Ohio
43015.

'''•

projects, and where members of
the public, mcluding civic orga-

Bridge

nizations such as Kiwanis clubs,
garden clubs and artlsts' organ1-

from PageA1
tby.
Ac cording to Young. ODOT
· Director (jordon Proctor has
implemented a strong aesthetics
program.
··, "OOOT will not build ugly
," ~nymore." Young said. "ODOT
' has bu.i lt some of the best road
·. svstems in the Unitt:d States, bm
~ftL'n they look terrible when
.. we're finished, and we all know
Of some of them."
Young said that landscaping,
).jg:hting, .signage, texture and
\1l•pe of piers and orher facilities
:rnd cu lor will all be important
~o n sidcrations in the design of
Projects, including the new

:. Nichols said the cab le-stay
bridge, wirh its potential for
al.'COrJt!Vl.' lighting, could be J
~isual :Hrraction for tounsts , and
~id

th.lt 1t c ould Sl:f\'l' :1~ a cenB·rpit.'CC, Jlung with the Silver
fl11..'1l10rial BridgL' in Gallipohs,
~1r :1 marathon or bike r:1ce .
~ He• '\l;o suggc,tcd ODOT
io nsidn ~~ 'vi:-.itors · p;1r~ing .area
a..nd .;cen ir overlook In t!tthl'r
bomeroy or .Mason.
~ YOung gavt: examples of prO ~ct~ where c:reative l.l!1ds~aping
b ras included in rhc.: design of

CLEVELAND (AP) - With
all due respect to Paul McCartney,John Lennon was the walrus.
He was also a rock 'n' roller, a

poet, a wit, an artist, an activist

grcat-grand~hildren.
Funeral se.rvic~s wtll be held ar 1 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 22, 2000. at

NEW HAVEN. WVa . - Noromn J. Turner. 49. of New H,wen,
W,:Va .. dicJ Tlumd!1y. ()([. 19. 21)(~1 a1 Pleasant Vallev Nursing and
l~hab C~...·nrcr m Pmnr Ple,\SJilt &lt;1ftcr ,1 long illn~s~ .
·
-. Hl' \\'&lt;lS .1 n:t~.· r.m nf the U.S . M:\rin~...· Corps during the ViL'ttum War.
Hl' \Y.l 'i tht• wn of rhc brc J.unes and Lon:n.1 H:m.k·r Turner .md \\',ls
"Pt:I...'CL'lk·J Ill dc.trh by a brother, Dewt.•y Turna.
Sur\'Jnn g .nt: hts wifi..·. lJc:\·crly Roush Turnl'r of NL'\\' HJ\'L'Il. .1 sou.
.j.nnil· Turm.· r .mJ :1 d:~ughtn· knnifl.'r Turm:r. both of Florid.1 ; four 'iiS,1 te,rs: Mon.1 Moore , S('ll;l W1lh;ms ,ll)d C.nnn~c Fox. all of Mitch('ll, Ind .,
~qd Ruth Canniclud of Illinois: ;111d three grandchildren.
. Thc:n: will bl..' no visitation :md no locJI Sl'rVICC .
; :Arrangem~...·nt s are under the ~...iin.-ction of New Haven Funcr;1l
HomL'.
. Memorial comriburions 111:1\' bt• mJdl· tu tht· American Dtabt::tes
A&lt;socia&lt;ion, PO. Box %911, \IJashington, D.C. ~0090-6911.

..

zations rook responsibility for
pbnt~ng and othcnvis.e tending

to th~ spaces once the proje cts
were complete.
The "J" intersection \vhich ht~s
been proposed on the Pomeroy
side of &lt;he bridge would be· a
good place for creative landscaping and other unpovem~nts ! she

noted.
"This is a good opportunity
for rhe communities affected to
have input intO how the bridge
will comp liment the thrc~ com'
the
phySical
· munities ~tnd
appearance of the area," she s&lt;1id.
Dcbbie Fought of the DistriCt

10 ODOT office in M"rietta
said she would be working
dosl'ly in rhc coming months
wah loc.d officials and other
m~mbers of the comlllllllity tu
help g:\thl'l' input on the .ll'SthetIC aspects of the project.

A m~ecing wtll be held

111

Dcccmbcr to otl low th e public
anotht.'r opportunity to share
rhcu· id~·as 011 how tht• bridge
;md art.'a around 1t sh ou ld
appear .

•'·
Brand New 2000 Pontiac

Brand New 2001

~a:·o5·o· ~5J5i:
• Automatic,
• Air Conditioning
• AM/FM Cassette

~
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Brand New 2001

• SFI V-6 Power
• Automatic/Air Conditioning
AM FM Stereo

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ij8:B50:

LOCAL STOCKS

••

• Power Window &amp; Locks
• Remote Keyless Entry
Tilt Steering

Rocky Boots- 4\
AD Shell-60\
Sears - 30

Gannett-51'..
General Electric- 55~ a

jEP- 37'1•

Akzo - 42 \'~~~

1

Harley Davidson- 46 r•
Kmart- 5'~ ...
Kroger- 21 1 ..
Lands End- 25
Ltd.- 24 131,.

!\mTech/SBC - 52' ·.
lshland Inc. - 32\

"T&amp;T- 24'a,.
eank One- 34'\•
laob Evans - 17'~ ..

e5orgWarner- 34'.
ehampion - 3
$harming Shops - 5 '•
C;ity Holding - 6\
fjederal Mogul - 3 ·~..
~irstar- 17 '1;

.

Shoney's - '11 ,
Wai-Mart-- 47~~~
Wendy's -19'r
Worthington- 8!! ,,

Oak Hill Financial- 14't
OVB - 26\
BBT- 28'/,
Peoples -13 '. 1.
Premier-

s\.

Rockwell - 32".,

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

•
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The Daily Sentinel

•

Brand New 2000 Chevy

Brand New 2001 Chevy

:

All New 2001

ij'5:'95f ij'[i50~ •24;950
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• Air Conditioning
• AM/FM Stereo

• Vortec 4300 V·6 Power
• Air Cond., Third Door
Tilt &amp; Cruise

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Our main concern in an stories is to
be accurate . If you know of an error in
; a story, call the newsroo~ at (740)
• 992·2156 .

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The maio ·nUmber is 992 ·2156
Department extentions are :

~

General manager

••

• Ta.ces, Tags, Ti tle Fees extra. Rebate incluQed in sal~ price or new vehicle l1sted wl1ere applicable. ..On approved credll.
On se lected models. N9t respons•ble lor typographical errors. Prices Good October 20th Through October 22nd.

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MIDDLEPORT - D•n Henning of Felicity will appe.r at Ash
Street Church in Middleport
Oct. 28 and 29 &gt;t 7 p.m.
Henning is a recording lrrisl
and music minister, who writes
his own music and rewrites some&gt;
of the old music from rhe 1950s
and 1960s with new Chrim.nbased·lyrics.
He is a full-time worship leader
at First Loye Minisrnes in Chilo,
as well as an evangdist, minister- ·
ing in prisons, schools, akohol
and drug r!!habilitation centers,
:~nd youth camps.
H~ is the producer and engineer a£ Perfect Harmony Productions, a recording studio nc..'ar

MIDDLEPORT- Clarence Edward Fife, 74, Middleport, died following an extended illness on Thurlday, Oct. 19, 2000, at St. Mary's
Hospital in Huntington, WVa.
He was born on March 29, 1926, in Gallipolis and was the son of
the late Albert Fife and Bessie Hood Fife.
He was formerly employed as a car salesman and was a United St:&gt;t&lt;s
Army· veteran ofWorld War II and a member of the Feeney Bennett
Post 128, American Legion.
Along with his parents, he was preceded in death by his wife, Martha
Jean Oiler Fife; two brothers, Raymond and John Fife; three sisters,
Margare&lt; Priddy, Dorothy Vei&lt;h and Marie R.algh. ·
He is survived by three daughters and two sons-in-law,Judy Farley
of Illinois, Jenny and David lair of Columbus, Debbie. and Bob
Maxwell, also of Columbus; four sons and daughters-in-law, Eddie and
Kim Fife of Pomeroy, Gary and Kathy Fife of Middleport, Todd and
Melody Fife of Logan, Scott and Robin Fife of Columbus; two brothen, Lewis and Roscoe Fife; four SISters , Evelyn Matthews, Katherine
Russell, Ermigi aic Russell. Doris Cook; eight grandchiJdrcn and six

Norman Tumer

,

Musician to
appear

Oarence Edward F"lfe

Geneva
. 'Williamson Gardner

~rid.gt' .

Rock Hall
and a husbond .
it's those many sides of the man
who st:&gt;rted the Beatles th&gt;t the
Rock &gt;nd Roll Hall of Fame and
Museum is trying to capture in a
new exhibit opening to the public Friday.
.
Winding through three floors
at the top of the pyramid-shaped
museum, the collection comes
mostly from items saved by
Lennon's widow,Yoko Ono, who
. turned up for a preview Thursday.
The display is the most indepth exhibit the rock hall has
done on one pe~son, but it isn't a
biography of Lennon, who was
born in 1940 and murdered in
1980. Instead, the show is more of
a sprawhn.g tribute, crammed
with drawings. guitars, clothes
and handwritten lyrics.
"The nicest thong about John
is the fact rhat he was a very
inspiring energy in all different
directions," Ono said.
"So &lt;hat people who are in art
school will come here and sec·
John's art work and maybe be
inspired by that. Songwriters,
with his lyrics .:Various people will
be excited in different ways, and
that is what 1 think is exciting and
beautiful."
Some of the material os simply
' memorabilia likely to bring back
waves of nostalgia for Baby
Boomers.
There's the collarless jacket
lennon - along with his bandmates wore circa 1963, the
" Hair Peace" and "Bed Peace"
signs Ono and Lennon hung in
their hotel room during their
1970 "bed- on," and Le nnon's
report cards.
" He has too many o f the 1
wron g ambimms .•nd his en e-rgy
IS too often rwsplaced ,'' a headmaster warned in 1956, about &lt;he
tom e Lennon started playing with
hi&lt; first group.

·-•..
'·

11.

Deregulation campaign 3 Ohio Republicans
will begin on Sunday
oppose
bill

LOCAL BRIEFS

Obituaries

I

I

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Fish~r Funeral Home ln Middkport. Offici;uing

Cincinnati.
Pastor Lt..'S Hayman invites dw

wi.ll be Rt:v. Lcs Hay-

public.

·

I\IJII .

Buri,1l will follow i1~ Gr;n:d Hill CL·mctcry.
Military scrvil:l..'~ will bL· conductt..- d gravc..•sttk• by F~.?ency BL'l11h..'tt
Post 12H, Amaic;1n Legion.
Fri..:mb may ·c,lll on Satun.by. Octobl·r 21. 200(1. frm~1 h-9. p.m . .:tt thl'

Flu shots offered
POMEROY - The Vcteoam
Admini ~ tratHHl Mt•dical &lt;:t:ntL' r
Outr~...·ach T~...·.,m from ( :hilhcmhc
\\'i\1 .1dmimster frel' flu shors ro
..\'Ct~ram currently o..·nrolleJ in V.A .
He ~ilth CarL' at the VA't. rr.1ikr
loc:HL'd dirl..'ctly :~cross from VetL' rans Ml..'mori.ll Hospa:al on O ·ct
23 :md O t t. 25 fr01i1 10 :1 .111. 1111ti\ ·
noon :md 1 until 2 p.m. They will
also be acc epting new cnn.)\lments. Proof of services J"
required.

funL'r.ll home.:.

Navy
from Page A1
said .
Yl't thnc w&lt;ts no bctta &lt;liter-

native for ships that have to refuel while moving to and from the
Persian Gulf, Zinni $aid. lis&lt;ing
some of the other options the
Navy had.
"Sudan' Obviously not," he
said. "Saudi Arabia' Back in

1997, when we were making
this decision, we had just had
two bombings in Saudi Arabi:1.
We lost 24 people.:'
The p&lt;)rt of DJibouti, on &lt;he
Horn of Africa and jus&lt; across
the Gu lf of Aden from Yemen.
had been used. But tha&lt; refueling contract was . ternunated in
about 1997 because the faci li ties
were unsatisfactory :tnd "t h e
threat conditions were far
worse."
That left "options that were
not very good," Zin ni said.
U.S. ontelligencc had no&lt;
dctcct~:d
specific thrt;';lts ro
American interests m Aden, &lt;HH.i
the thrl';H conditions 111 Yemen,
he said, "wert.' acwally bt·tcer
rlun we had cbl·w h ere," including Saudi Arabia.
Zinni told rlw committl"C: that
hl" persmully checked on tht:
refueling arrangeml'nts in a
scr il..'s of \'isits to Adt&lt;n bl't\H'Cll
May 1998 ;~nd May 20110 .
E.1rh time. Zinm s.1id, it W;\~
ckar to him tlut t hl· Yeml·ni
govern m l"nt w:ts sincL're 111
wanting American help 111 co n troll in g its cnastliut: Jnd fighting
tt:rronsm.

He s~,ttd he- \vould oppml..' any
suggestion th,H U.S. withhold
aid from Y~men unkss it is certified to be cooperating in the
invc:sngation of tht.· Cole bomb mg.
In the fJ.scal year that en.ded
Sept . 30, the Uni&lt;cd States gave
Yr.:ml"n roughly SJ nnlhon for
mlbt:l.ry rr.:tining, preparation fin
the planned 2001 election and
removal uf land mines from. its
civil war plus $20 milhon
worth uf wheat flour and other
commodities, the State Department said .
" In the Centr;ll Command
region, there are rats' nests or
havens for terrorists: Afghanistan
\vith the Taliban; Sudan; SomaIta," he said. "We don't need
Yemc;n to become ;aiother one.
We nl·cd to provide evay

incenti\T to makl' surL' d1~\'
don 'r."
Ht:
cmph.1tically deni~d .
ho\\'~o?Ver, th:lt rhl..' milir:try overlooked
~L"cunty
problems
be c.ltlse it wanred to tmprov~
rd:ttions with the government

ofYemen.

"I don't want anyone to think
we cver, ,in ally instance ... took
a risk for tht" purpose of a better
relationship with a country and
put a soldier. sailor. airman or
Marine at risk for that reason."
Zinni said. ''Absolutely not.''
Later in th(' d,ay, in a closed
in a brgely Ocmoc.r.Hl c district,
door session, the FBl upda&lt;ed ~aid the Steltbenvil1c :~rca isn't 111
committcc members on progress
danger of losing a seat, b~1t thl'
it is t~uking in its wvcstigation
populatiOn loss w11l hur&lt; dut
of the Coli' &lt;ragcdy.
. regiOn's representatiu n.
In other developments Thurs-.
"We're gOing to lose the
day:
mfluenti~l impact that a large
- The Navy . announced it
popula~ed area lus on a reprt:recovl"red the l:tst four bodies of
sentative," he said .
sailors killed in the Oct. 12 blast.
He said C leveland, Columbus
Thirteen bodies already had and Cincinnati will continue; to
been flown to th~ United States,
receive the majority of attention
and the fina1 four will be
at the Statehouse .
returned h ome soon.
"Tht.'y deservt' mon: atten - FBI director -Louis Frceh;
tion bccau.sL: of the popubtion.
who was in Yemen for talks with
but nonc of us w:{nt ro b~ forPresident Ali Abdullah Saleh,
gotren about. We all haVl' in fr ,ltoured the crime sce nt:, calling it
stru cture needs.'' he s:t id.
a "tangled mess of metal and
Thl·
fi\'l'-member
Srate
wm:'." Yl"mt:ni officia ls also sent
Apportionmcn[
Bo.1rJ will
another tc:am of tnv&lt;= stigators to
redraw thL' districts for thL· 2001
lll'Jghboring Saudi Arabia.
dt•ctwn. The bo:nd is made..· up
- Thl' Pt'ntagon nauK·d t\\'u
of tht· governor, secrl'tary of
lll('ll to co-chair an ·lllL-kpendent .
stat!..", .tuditnr ~md a lawm.tkl'r
·im·cstig.ltton into tho..· bombing.
from l',ll'h p.uty.
with empb;Jsis OJJ improving
!~ o u r of chost.· ti\'L' bo.ud ~t:ats
~L·cu rit y. Thq: ;1ro..· retirnl Army
.1rc hdd by Republicans, who
&lt;_;cner:ll William C rou ch , whose
will co ntrol the board f(1r the
·Ia~t job was v iet' chief of staff of
the Army, :llld Harold Gehman ,
forml'f comma n der of J oillt
f-orces Com1;1and at the Cole's
home port of Norfolk, Va.
-Atrorney General Janet
Reno wid a uews conference
that tht: United ~tatt'S is doing
Subscribe todav.
all It c:111 ro help. the Yemeni
992-2 I 56 .
Poli c ~..: in tht:ir invest1g~nion. ShL'
would not say whethe-r any
eventual prosecution might take
place in Y~m~n. The United
State:-i apparently has no &lt;~rrange­
ntcnts \Vith Yemen to extradite
suspl..'cts , but could still seek to
prmecute anyune arrested for
involvement in rhe bombing.
-Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon satd the Norwog:ian
heavy-lift ship, the Blue Marlin ,
would likely nq_t arrive 111 Aden
until the end of the month to
pick up tht· damaged Cok :wd
rl'ttll'n 1t to the. I U nite'd Statt:-s.

Census
from PageA1

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

County
Col!!! 1,~!!!lge

Harvest party

planned
PORTLAND -A cunununoty harveS&lt; party woll be held at
Portland .first Church of the
Nazarene Saturday. The hayride
will begin at 4:30 p.m.

EMS log calls
POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs
Emergency
Serv1ces
answered eight calls for assistance
on Thursday. Units responded as
follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
6 :52 a.m., Maples Apt. . Dora
Picrce, treated ;
1:07 p.m., Nc..•w Lnn,1 Road.
a s ~isrcd by
Rutbnd as First
RL"sponder, Genc\·a Shumat.
PleasancValley Hospi&lt;al;
3: 18 p.m .. Eagle Ridg&lt;. ))ora
Hvst.'ll, trL'atl·d;
H:19 p.111 ., Third Strl'..:r. Mary
Roush. H olLer MedJC :tl C!..'ntt.•t:,
11 : 4 (1 p.m . . P.1ge StrL' l't.

Gene\'l('\'l' Ik111n..,ky. PVH .
RACINE
Y:J7 p.m .. 13ro.tJ\,·,Iy An·nuc.
Inez I loll . I' VII. • ·
REEDSVILLE
7: :2/'\ p. m .. St .ltl'

T;1mnly

Cowdery.

Rout !.'

(JH L

()'Blene::ts

M ~ n1ori::d Hos pit:~. l .

I

TUPPERS PLAINS
1 I ::?. f-1 p.m .. Stato..· Routt' 24H ,
motor vehicle act.· t&lt;.k· nt , Charles'
Smith, refused treatment .

I

sc-com1 dt'lade m a ro\v. Democrats hdd the same power rhe
two prcv'iou s dL:' cades.
"Our cnn cern is ~ nd has been
the pro cess. Tlv:n: is" nothing we
c.1n do about thl· population and
how I t 1~ sprc.1d ," said Janice Patterson , pre sident of thl· Le~_gue
of Women Voters of Ohil~. "We
b~lit..•,·~ th t.! rc have been parti san
line s dn\vn r~..: gudlcs s of which
p.1rty Ins bcl'n in power."
Ohio St'crctary of St:1te Kenneth Blackwell ~aid that as in the
past. tht.: (ourts are a check
against anything unconstitutional.
"We'n:· gu1d~d by case law.
We 'rl" guided by principals 1
don't think politics is going to
be :111\' more or ;111y Jc~.., ;1 factor
111 tlus ," hL· said.
Blackwdl· ~·Jid the st:ltt' IS
likcl v to losl' one of its 1CJ se.Jts
in thl· U.S. House of Rt•pr~sen­
t ~lti\·,.·s b&lt;.'Cll\St.' of the pnptd;ltion
~luft nationwide.

\P RING VAII FYCI NEMA

446•4524

OU1fiOJJ[ ,.,l"ll51

11e~ J&lt;'o(~K&lt;::'l/0

7

PI K[

FRI1 0/20/CO • THURS 10/28100

lOX OFFICI Wll1 OPEN AT
6:30 PM 101 MNING SHOWS
2:30 PM FOR MAnNIIS
URBAN LEGENDS (R)
7:10 &amp; 9:10 FRt &amp; SAT
7:10 SUN·THUR

BEDAZZLED (PG13)
7:10 &amp; 11:10 FRI &amp; SAT
7;10 SUN·THURS
MATINEES SAT/SUN 3:10

LADIES MAN (R)
7:20 &amp; 9:20 FRI &amp; SAT
7;20 SUN·THURS
MATINE S SA

MEETTHE PARENTS (PG13)
7:15 &amp;9:15 FRI &amp; SAT
7:15 SUN·THURS
1N
T N ;

DISNEY'S THE KID (PG)
7:00 &amp; 11:15 FRI &amp; SAT
7;00 SUN·THURS
MATINEES SAT SUN 3:00

REMEMBER THE TITANS (PG)
7:00 &amp; 11:30 FRI &amp;. SAT
7:00 SUN· THURS
MATINEES SAT/SUN 3:00

GET CARTER (R)
7;00 &amp; 9:30 FRO &amp; SAT
7:00 SUN-THURS
MATINEES SAT/SUN 3;00

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Published eve ry afternoon. Mondar
through Friday, 111 Court St . Pomeroy.
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Member: The Associaled Press and the
Ohio Newspaper Assoc1 allon.
Postmaster: Send add ress correc l•ons to
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Sl .
Pomeroy, O hio- 457 69

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NOW OPBN

VALLEY WEATHER

Th L· Lll bl.' .l~nn .ibly mtld tL'lllp r.:r.H UI'L' ~

..111d dr\' CtlllditHHl ~ \\'l'l'l.'
c xp ~.·ct&lt;. .' d tn co,1 1tinu l' rhrou ~ h th..\\'L't' h ·nd, rh~· N ~lt\ 011.d \V'c.1thL' t
s~.·1

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p r ~...·~~ ut ~.· ''\ { ~' Il l l t.' ll lL' I"l'li u \'t.'l' tlll'
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'&gt;IHith\\1..'\ t CI'\ )'

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li0111 th t.:

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llltd

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!JI ),

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Extended forecast

\\' 1\l J . . ,

.llhi h i\ \ 'ill~.
! 11\\' IIHllgh t

Tnn l!!;lH .. Mo,rly c k .1r. Lm\·..,
uppn ~o~ tn 1md ) 1h.

S.mm\.1,. mghl
tlw -l !h '
S u 11 d .1y

.1\lu ~d y

Ck.11 I 1m·,
'll\1 111 \'.

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Jl i~!J ~ f1 1;lll the..' lllid (1l l1, Ill

lllld (l(l .... ll 1 11 1\ d

t1 1~
1111d

/ (h,

l u c . . d.\y... In Lrt.'.l~m ~

c 1nud~ .

Low ~ mthL' 40~. 1-Ii gh-. 111 th~· (J( )~ .

Drive Thru For Your Convenience
Ice Cold Beer, PoP, ChiPS, Pizza, Etc,,
OPen Mon. • Sat. I 0 a.m. - I 0 P.m.

Twin Oaks

Convenience Store
34099 St. Rt. 7
Pomero:Y. Ohio

992-5829

I

�,
A 2 • The O.lly Sentinel

~rldey,

October 20, 2000

Mdey, October 20, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Actress Jean Peters dead at 73
LaJOLLA. Calif. (AP) -Jean Prtcn, who appeared in 6lms with
Marlon Br.mdo, Roy Millard, Spencer Tracy and other major stan
before marcying billionaire Howard Hughes and leaving Hollywood.
has died of leukemia. She was 73.
Peten, who died last Friday in LaJoUa, was buried Tuesday at Holy
Cro$S Cemetery in Culver City, Calif.
"We had a graveside service, very smaU, wtth family members. No
Hollywood," Peten' sister, Shirley Cook of Carlsbad, Calif., told the
Akron (Oiuo) Beacon Journal.
Peten' break came as a college sophomore when she entered the
Miss Ohio St:&gt;te pageant in 1945. The 19-)'l:ar-old from Canton, was
selected over 250 contatants -and won a screen test at 20th Century

Fox.
Srudio boss Darryl F. Zanuck saw the green-C)'I:d brunette and
quickly signed her to a contract.
.
She appeared in 19 lilms, beginrung with the 1947 movie "Capt:&gt;in
from Castile" opposite Tyrone Power, and including "lt Happens Every
Spring" (1949) with Milbnd, "Viva Zapata!" (1952) with Brando,
, "Niagara" (1953) with Marilyn Monroe, "Pickup on Sourh Srreer"
(1953) with RichardWidmark,"Three Coins in the Fountain" (1954)
with Dorothy McGuire, "Apache" (1954) with Burt Lancaster and
"Broken Lance" (1954) with Tracy.
·

Man confined in mental hospital
COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) - Resentencing for a man who has
pleaded guilty to trying to kill his fourth wife, and has been charged
with murdering his second wife, is on hold until he is considered ment:&gt;lly competent.
U.S. Districr Judge William 0. Bertelsman said Thunday that Albert
Schuholz Jr. would remain in a federal mental hospital until he is
declared sane enough to proceed with a final resentencing. His guilty
plea will stand.
"That's all right," Schuholz, 67, said about another trip to a mental
facility. "I enjoyed it."
"You have strange tastes," the JUdge responded.
Schuholz, who has addresses in Crittenden, Ky., and suburban
Cincinnati, pleaded guilty last year to one of three counts of traveling
in interstate commerce with the intent that a murder be committed.
Prosecuton said Schuholz paid S5,000 to a man to kill his wife,
Norma Schuholz, and her sister, Martha Schomaker, in July 1998. The
killing was not carried out, and the man became an informant.
' Schuholz was sentenced to serve 10 years in prison, but his attorneys
later argued that he was not competenr the enter the guilty plea.
Last November, Schuholz was charged in Ohio with the 1981
deaths of his second wife, Marie, 54, and family friend Starla Burns,
57. Their bodies were found in their northern· Cincinnati apartment.
their throats slashed and their skulls fractured.
.

TRW says it might move out
LYNDHURST (AP)- TRW Inc. chairman Joseph T. Gorman
warned that the company might move out of this Cleveland suburb if
voters reject plans for a Sl45 million, 67-acre development adjacent to
its headquarien.
·
Gorman said Thunday that the company had no immediate plans to
move, but said the company had few business ties to Cleveland and
needed to maximize the value of its property.
The move would cost Lyndhunt about 600 jobs and about a seventh of its income taX revenues, Gorman and TRW spokesman Alan
Melamed estimated.
A measure on the Nov. 7 ballot ask.! voters to rezone part of the
'
property for an upscale shopping center.
"I don't want that to be viewed as a threat," Gorman said. "But it's
a reality someone will have to face down the road. One could imagine selling the headquanen itself' and building condominiums there.
"We ju!l might sell the whole kit and caboodle," he said.
The auto pam, aerospace and information systems company has had
its headquarten at the site since 1985.
Chuck Royer, attorney for Citizens for a Livable Lyndhunt, one of
5everal le'ident groups concerned about the development, said he
wasn't surprised by Gorman's comments.

Shootln1susped hospitalized
DAYTON (AP) - Police say they have not determined a motive
for a series of shootings earlier this week because they haven't been
able to question the gunman who was wounded by police.
"It's still kind of cloudy," Police Lt. John Barnes said of the case.
Anthony Franklin, 31, ofTrotwood, faces felonious assault charges.
He hasn't been arraigned because he underwent surgery Wednesday
and is in serious condition under police guard.
Two women, 29 and 34, suffered three gunshot wounru each, and a
19-year-old man received two wounruTuesday night. They all were in
fair condition, Barnes said Thunday.
Franklin was arrested near the house where the women were shot.
Th~ man was shot at another location.
Shortly before the shootings, Franklin tried to run . down a young
girl in a car, police said. He drove to the house where the man was
shot, then returned .to the house where the women were shot.
A relative of the female victims has said the dispute started over a
child &lt;hared by Franklin and one of the wounded women.

Akron gets reprieve
AKRON (AP) -The city has won a reprieve from a U.S. Census
Bureau proposal to make Akron part of the Cleveland metro region
for statistical purposes.
The suggestion caused an uproar in,Akron, where people feared getring lumped into the Cleveland Metropolitan Statistical Area would
hurt Akron's image.
,
1
The cities are·41 miles apart, and the area betWeen the two has largely developed into suburbs with people commuting in both directions.
Hometown Rep. Tom Sawyer, D-Ohio, said Thursday that the U.S.
Office of Management and Budget has agreed not to implement the
proposal until at least 2002 ..
In the meantime, Sawyer and others in Congress will intrOduce an
amendment asking the Census Bureau to take local opinion~ into
account before lumping citie&lt; together.
Sawyer worried that the proposed change would hurt economic
development efforts by making the city invisible to industries that rely
. .
on government stansncs.
·

.

1Wo sentenced for fraud
CINC INNATi (AP) - Two people were sentenced Thursday in
U.S. District Court for their part in an insurance fraud scheme in
which they were named as beneficiaries of policies that were amended after the policyholder died.
P ro~ccuton 'hlld SS7U,R76 m fraudulent clauw; were suhm1tred ro
L1 fi..• ln'i urancc C orp. of North Am en ca. J 'iU b:,1chary of Cih'lla lmuraqre , Cnrp. of P11t1burgh . and S427.H76 w" p:ud out before the
scheme W:l.' detecred.
J eftfcy Cooper, 29, of C mcinuao was senten ced to two months o f
home detentio n and five years probJtion and ordered ro pay resclrutiOll of$6\ .234

Man asks to represent himself in torture case
FINDLAY, Ohio (AP) - A 23-year-old
man accused of torturing a 13-year-old girl
and then burying her in an underground pipe
may get his wish to act as his own l&gt;wyer.
Nathan Grahan1 interrup!ed his trial 'o n
Thursday and asked that he be allowed to represem himself.
Despite warnings ,from his arrorney and the
judge who both told Graham he was jeopardizing his case, Graham said he was confident
in his abilities .. Graham said he had been
studying law on his own during his time in
jail the last 10 monrhs.
"I know whar I have to say. I know what I
have to do," Graham said.
Graham has pleaded innocent to 16 felony
charges, including attempted murder, kidnapping and rape.
Five others already have been prosecuted in

In several jailhouse interviews, Graham
lhe case and sentenced to prison terms rangsaid
he was present throughout the ocide~ot
ing fron1 rour to 30 )'l:ars. Four are expected
to testifY against Graham, who&lt;faces up to 90 but did not have direct involvement in
assaults. Graham also contenru he saved
years in prison .i f convicted on all counts.
Jurors on Thunday toured the woods where girl's life by returning to remove her
prosecuton say Graham and othen put the pope.
But Fry said Graham helped stuff the
girl in a 3-foot wide pipe that stick.! partially
above ground.
into the pipe and pile a5t 250 pounds
Hancock County Prosecutor Robert Fry concrete and debris ~ ro of her. The
.said during opening statements that Graham was )eli "to basically fre~e t death,"
and the othen repeatedly punched, kicked
Afier Fry's opening st tement. G~~~
and choked the girl at a February 1999 party stood up and asked to serve as his own ]
in Findlay.
His attorney, Spiros Cocoves, told C~~:~~
"Her arms were held back as othen took · Pleas Judge Joseph Niemeyer that . (
turns punching her," Fry said. "She almost decision was contrary to his advice.
turned blue according t«;&gt; one eyewitness."
"I think you're making a
The victim, now 14, was assaulred after she Niemeyer said.
"Your lack of knowledge may unoiernii1n1
starred flirting with the boyfriends of several
women at the party, witnesses said.
your efforts to defend yourself."

COLUMBUS (AP) -A $33 mformation that helps conmillion advertising campaign sumers make informed choices,
funded by electric utilities will Don Mason, a commissioner
encourage Ohioans to learn with rhe Public Utilities Comhow to choose an electricity mission of Ohio, said Thursday.
supplier under a law that takes
The law requires utilities to
.fund the advertising campaign.
effect in January.
The Ohio Electric Choice It is one of the lowest advertistelevision and radio aavertise- . ing ' budgets of any of the 26
ments begin Sunday. The cam- states deregulat~ng their electric
paign, created by urilitie&lt;, regu- industry, said PUCO spokeslators and others, also will woman Lee Ruh.
include newspaper and billboard
Some consumer advocacy
advertisements on the law that groups have criticized the camallows Ohioans to shop around paign, saying it won't reach
for the lowest-priced electricity. poor, elderly and rural Ohioans.
The aru direct people to a They also say it won't emphasize
toll-free number, 1-888-632- the ability of groups or con1314, and the Ohio Electric sumers or entire municipalities
Choice website: www.Ohio- to band together to form a buyElectricChoice.com.
ing pool known as an aggrega·
Lawmakers voted last year to tion.
open Ohio's $11 billion electric
Ohio Partners for Affordable
industry to competition. Under Energy, which represents comderegulation, residential cus- munity action agencies · and
tomers will see lower electric public housing authorities, also
bills but could receove even have criticized utilities for not
greater savings by switching releasing a portion of the adverproviders.
·
tising budget to groups such as
The goal is to provide dear itself.

WASHINGTON (AP)
A
spending bill filled wid1 special
projects for Ohio whisked quickly
thfough the House and Senate on
Thunday, bur three of the state's
lawmakers - all Republicans voted againsr it ..
Sen. George Voinovich said he
was appalled at the rate with which
Congress was burning through the
projected budget surplus. .
"Everybody's pigging out;' he
said. "it's out of control."
Also voring against the bill,
which covered veterans, housing,
space and a variety· of other programs, were Reps. John Kasich of
Westerville · and Steve ·Chabot of
Cincinnati.
All three have persistendy urged
Congress to ·pay more attention to
reducing d1e nation's long-term
debt and less attention to finding
more money for local projects.
"We're probably going to spend
18 percent more than in (fiscal)
year 2000, and in year 200() we
increased domestic discretionary
spending 9 percent over the year

bcfore,"Voinovich said. "We're all
the trough ."
Chabot voted against the soo,ncling biU, even though it
more than $900,000 for the Findlay Market redevelopment proJeCt
in his district, for which he had
'
requested funding approval.
Chabot spokesman Gary Lind~
gren said the congressman cotild
not endorse the bill as a whole. "lt contained $10.9 billion
more than last year, which was a I S
percent increase," he &lt;aid. The bill
also came out of the conference
committee with S6 billion more
than· it had when it passed the
House.
The bill included funding for a
wide array of Ohio projects.
Among the largest were:
• $2.875 million to upgrade the
Dunlap Reservoir and make
1mprovements to the wastewat:er
treatmert plant in Washington
Court House.
• S1.65 million for a storm water
system in the Doan Brook Wate•shed Area.

Lennon

exhibit at

· : DUBLIN- Ge~eva Williamson Gardner, 86, of-Dublin, died Fri~y. Oct. 13, 2000, at Riverside Methodi&lt;t Hospital.
'' Born Jan. 30, 1914, in Pomeroy, she wos the daughter of the late
Phollop C. and Ethel E. Williamson.
' •" She was a real estate broker and owner of G. Gardner Realty and
' Gardner Properties.
·
1 "'· Al?ng woth her parents, she was preceded in death by two sisters,
'Helen W. Bmter and Mary W Black.
•' .. She is survived by her husband of66 years, Robert E. Gardner; a son
· "&gt;rrd daughter-in-hw, Dr. Robert P. and Deborah Gardner of Dublin;
·'t\vo granddaughters, four great-grandchildren, a niece, and a nephew.
• ' Funeral services took · place on Oc&lt;. 17 a&lt; Liberty Presbyterian
Church in DdawJre. Arrangements were handl~d by Schoedinger
'":\'I/Orthington Chapel.
Mernorial contributions can be made to the Shrine Burn Institute,
3229 Burnett Avenue , Cincinn:~.ri, Ohio 45229-3095 or to Liberty
Presbyterian Church, ?ORO Okntangy River Road, Dehware, Ohio
43015.

'''•

projects, and where members of
the public, mcluding civic orga-

Bridge

nizations such as Kiwanis clubs,
garden clubs and artlsts' organ1-

from PageA1
tby.
Ac cording to Young. ODOT
· Director (jordon Proctor has
implemented a strong aesthetics
program.
··, "OOOT will not build ugly
," ~nymore." Young said. "ODOT
' has bu.i lt some of the best road
·. svstems in the Unitt:d States, bm
~ftL'n they look terrible when
.. we're finished, and we all know
Of some of them."
Young said that landscaping,
).jg:hting, .signage, texture and
\1l•pe of piers and orher facilities
:rnd cu lor will all be important
~o n sidcrations in the design of
Projects, including the new

:. Nichols said the cab le-stay
bridge, wirh its potential for
al.'COrJt!Vl.' lighting, could be J
~isual :Hrraction for tounsts , and
~id

th.lt 1t c ould Sl:f\'l' :1~ a cenB·rpit.'CC, Jlung with the Silver
fl11..'1l10rial BridgL' in Gallipohs,
~1r :1 marathon or bike r:1ce .
~ He• '\l;o suggc,tcd ODOT
io nsidn ~~ 'vi:-.itors · p;1r~ing .area
a..nd .;cen ir overlook In t!tthl'r
bomeroy or .Mason.
~ YOung gavt: examples of prO ~ct~ where c:reative l.l!1ds~aping
b ras included in rhc.: design of

CLEVELAND (AP) - With
all due respect to Paul McCartney,John Lennon was the walrus.
He was also a rock 'n' roller, a

poet, a wit, an artist, an activist

grcat-grand~hildren.
Funeral se.rvic~s wtll be held ar 1 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 22, 2000. at

NEW HAVEN. WVa . - Noromn J. Turner. 49. of New H,wen,
W,:Va .. dicJ Tlumd!1y. ()([. 19. 21)(~1 a1 Pleasant Vallev Nursing and
l~hab C~...·nrcr m Pmnr Ple,\SJilt &lt;1ftcr ,1 long illn~s~ .
·
-. Hl' \\'&lt;lS .1 n:t~.· r.m nf the U.S . M:\rin~...· Corps during the ViL'ttum War.
Hl' \Y.l 'i tht• wn of rhc brc J.unes and Lon:n.1 H:m.k·r Turner .md \\',ls
"Pt:I...'CL'lk·J Ill dc.trh by a brother, Dewt.•y Turna.
Sur\'Jnn g .nt: hts wifi..·. lJc:\·crly Roush Turnl'r of NL'\\' HJ\'L'Il. .1 sou.
.j.nnil· Turm.· r .mJ :1 d:~ughtn· knnifl.'r Turm:r. both of Florid.1 ; four 'iiS,1 te,rs: Mon.1 Moore , S('ll;l W1lh;ms ,ll)d C.nnn~c Fox. all of Mitch('ll, Ind .,
~qd Ruth Canniclud of Illinois: ;111d three grandchildren.
. Thc:n: will bl..' no visitation :md no locJI Sl'rVICC .
; :Arrangem~...·nt s are under the ~...iin.-ction of New Haven Funcr;1l
HomL'.
. Memorial comriburions 111:1\' bt• mJdl· tu tht· American Dtabt::tes
A&lt;socia&lt;ion, PO. Box %911, \IJashington, D.C. ~0090-6911.

..

zations rook responsibility for
pbnt~ng and othcnvis.e tending

to th~ spaces once the proje cts
were complete.
The "J" intersection \vhich ht~s
been proposed on the Pomeroy
side of &lt;he bridge would be· a
good place for creative landscaping and other unpovem~nts ! she

noted.
"This is a good opportunity
for rhe communities affected to
have input intO how the bridge
will comp liment the thrc~ com'
the
phySical
· munities ~tnd
appearance of the area," she s&lt;1id.
Dcbbie Fought of the DistriCt

10 ODOT office in M"rietta
said she would be working
dosl'ly in rhc coming months
wah loc.d officials and other
m~mbers of the comlllllllity tu
help g:\thl'l' input on the .ll'SthetIC aspects of the project.

A m~ecing wtll be held

111

Dcccmbcr to otl low th e public
anotht.'r opportunity to share
rhcu· id~·as 011 how tht• bridge
;md art.'a around 1t sh ou ld
appear .

•'·
Brand New 2000 Pontiac

Brand New 2001

~a:·o5·o· ~5J5i:
• Automatic,
• Air Conditioning
• AM/FM Cassette

~
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Brand New 2001

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AM FM Stereo

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LOCAL STOCKS

••

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• Remote Keyless Entry
Tilt Steering

Rocky Boots- 4\
AD Shell-60\
Sears - 30

Gannett-51'..
General Electric- 55~ a

jEP- 37'1•

Akzo - 42 \'~~~

1

Harley Davidson- 46 r•
Kmart- 5'~ ...
Kroger- 21 1 ..
Lands End- 25
Ltd.- 24 131,.

!\mTech/SBC - 52' ·.
lshland Inc. - 32\

"T&amp;T- 24'a,.
eank One- 34'\•
laob Evans - 17'~ ..

e5orgWarner- 34'.
ehampion - 3
$harming Shops - 5 '•
C;ity Holding - 6\
fjederal Mogul - 3 ·~..
~irstar- 17 '1;

.

Shoney's - '11 ,
Wai-Mart-- 47~~~
Wendy's -19'r
Worthington- 8!! ,,

Oak Hill Financial- 14't
OVB - 26\
BBT- 28'/,
Peoples -13 '. 1.
Premier-

s\.

Rockwell - 32".,

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

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; a story, call the newsroo~ at (740)
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On se lected models. N9t respons•ble lor typographical errors. Prices Good October 20th Through October 22nd.

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MIDDLEPORT - D•n Henning of Felicity will appe.r at Ash
Street Church in Middleport
Oct. 28 and 29 &gt;t 7 p.m.
Henning is a recording lrrisl
and music minister, who writes
his own music and rewrites some&gt;
of the old music from rhe 1950s
and 1960s with new Chrim.nbased·lyrics.
He is a full-time worship leader
at First Loye Minisrnes in Chilo,
as well as an evangdist, minister- ·
ing in prisons, schools, akohol
and drug r!!habilitation centers,
:~nd youth camps.
H~ is the producer and engineer a£ Perfect Harmony Productions, a recording studio nc..'ar

MIDDLEPORT- Clarence Edward Fife, 74, Middleport, died following an extended illness on Thurlday, Oct. 19, 2000, at St. Mary's
Hospital in Huntington, WVa.
He was born on March 29, 1926, in Gallipolis and was the son of
the late Albert Fife and Bessie Hood Fife.
He was formerly employed as a car salesman and was a United St:&gt;t&lt;s
Army· veteran ofWorld War II and a member of the Feeney Bennett
Post 128, American Legion.
Along with his parents, he was preceded in death by his wife, Martha
Jean Oiler Fife; two brothers, Raymond and John Fife; three sisters,
Margare&lt; Priddy, Dorothy Vei&lt;h and Marie R.algh. ·
He is survived by three daughters and two sons-in-law,Judy Farley
of Illinois, Jenny and David lair of Columbus, Debbie. and Bob
Maxwell, also of Columbus; four sons and daughters-in-law, Eddie and
Kim Fife of Pomeroy, Gary and Kathy Fife of Middleport, Todd and
Melody Fife of Logan, Scott and Robin Fife of Columbus; two brothen, Lewis and Roscoe Fife; four SISters , Evelyn Matthews, Katherine
Russell, Ermigi aic Russell. Doris Cook; eight grandchiJdrcn and six

Norman Tumer

,

Musician to
appear

Oarence Edward F"lfe

Geneva
. 'Williamson Gardner

~rid.gt' .

Rock Hall
and a husbond .
it's those many sides of the man
who st:&gt;rted the Beatles th&gt;t the
Rock &gt;nd Roll Hall of Fame and
Museum is trying to capture in a
new exhibit opening to the public Friday.
.
Winding through three floors
at the top of the pyramid-shaped
museum, the collection comes
mostly from items saved by
Lennon's widow,Yoko Ono, who
. turned up for a preview Thursday.
The display is the most indepth exhibit the rock hall has
done on one pe~son, but it isn't a
biography of Lennon, who was
born in 1940 and murdered in
1980. Instead, the show is more of
a sprawhn.g tribute, crammed
with drawings. guitars, clothes
and handwritten lyrics.
"The nicest thong about John
is the fact rhat he was a very
inspiring energy in all different
directions," Ono said.
"So &lt;hat people who are in art
school will come here and sec·
John's art work and maybe be
inspired by that. Songwriters,
with his lyrics .:Various people will
be excited in different ways, and
that is what 1 think is exciting and
beautiful."
Some of the material os simply
' memorabilia likely to bring back
waves of nostalgia for Baby
Boomers.
There's the collarless jacket
lennon - along with his bandmates wore circa 1963, the
" Hair Peace" and "Bed Peace"
signs Ono and Lennon hung in
their hotel room during their
1970 "bed- on," and Le nnon's
report cards.
" He has too many o f the 1
wron g ambimms .•nd his en e-rgy
IS too often rwsplaced ,'' a headmaster warned in 1956, about &lt;he
tom e Lennon started playing with
hi&lt; first group.

·-•..
'·

11.

Deregulation campaign 3 Ohio Republicans
will begin on Sunday
oppose
bill

LOCAL BRIEFS

Obituaries

I

I

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Fish~r Funeral Home ln Middkport. Offici;uing

Cincinnati.
Pastor Lt..'S Hayman invites dw

wi.ll be Rt:v. Lcs Hay-

public.

·

I\IJII .

Buri,1l will follow i1~ Gr;n:d Hill CL·mctcry.
Military scrvil:l..'~ will bL· conductt..- d gravc..•sttk• by F~.?ency BL'l11h..'tt
Post 12H, Amaic;1n Legion.
Fri..:mb may ·c,lll on Satun.by. Octobl·r 21. 200(1. frm~1 h-9. p.m . .:tt thl'

Flu shots offered
POMEROY - The Vcteoam
Admini ~ tratHHl Mt•dical &lt;:t:ntL' r
Outr~...·ach T~...·.,m from ( :hilhcmhc
\\'i\1 .1dmimster frel' flu shors ro
..\'Ct~ram currently o..·nrolleJ in V.A .
He ~ilth CarL' at the VA't. rr.1ikr
loc:HL'd dirl..'ctly :~cross from VetL' rans Ml..'mori.ll Hospa:al on O ·ct
23 :md O t t. 25 fr01i1 10 :1 .111. 1111ti\ ·
noon :md 1 until 2 p.m. They will
also be acc epting new cnn.)\lments. Proof of services J"
required.

funL'r.ll home.:.

Navy
from Page A1
said .
Yl't thnc w&lt;ts no bctta &lt;liter-

native for ships that have to refuel while moving to and from the
Persian Gulf, Zinni $aid. lis&lt;ing
some of the other options the
Navy had.
"Sudan' Obviously not," he
said. "Saudi Arabia' Back in

1997, when we were making
this decision, we had just had
two bombings in Saudi Arabi:1.
We lost 24 people.:'
The p&lt;)rt of DJibouti, on &lt;he
Horn of Africa and jus&lt; across
the Gu lf of Aden from Yemen.
had been used. But tha&lt; refueling contract was . ternunated in
about 1997 because the faci li ties
were unsatisfactory :tnd "t h e
threat conditions were far
worse."
That left "options that were
not very good," Zin ni said.
U.S. ontelligencc had no&lt;
dctcct~:d
specific thrt;';lts ro
American interests m Aden, &lt;HH.i
the thrl';H conditions 111 Yemen,
he said, "wert.' acwally bt·tcer
rlun we had cbl·w h ere," including Saudi Arabia.
Zinni told rlw committl"C: that
hl" persmully checked on tht:
refueling arrangeml'nts in a
scr il..'s of \'isits to Adt&lt;n bl't\H'Cll
May 1998 ;~nd May 20110 .
E.1rh time. Zinm s.1id, it W;\~
ckar to him tlut t hl· Yeml·ni
govern m l"nt w:ts sincL're 111
wanting American help 111 co n troll in g its cnastliut: Jnd fighting
tt:rronsm.

He s~,ttd he- \vould oppml..' any
suggestion th,H U.S. withhold
aid from Y~men unkss it is certified to be cooperating in the
invc:sngation of tht.· Cole bomb mg.
In the fJ.scal year that en.ded
Sept . 30, the Uni&lt;cd States gave
Yr.:ml"n roughly SJ nnlhon for
mlbt:l.ry rr.:tining, preparation fin
the planned 2001 election and
removal uf land mines from. its
civil war plus $20 milhon
worth uf wheat flour and other
commodities, the State Department said .
" In the Centr;ll Command
region, there are rats' nests or
havens for terrorists: Afghanistan
\vith the Taliban; Sudan; SomaIta," he said. "We don't need
Yemc;n to become ;aiother one.
We nl·cd to provide evay

incenti\T to makl' surL' d1~\'
don 'r."
Ht:
cmph.1tically deni~d .
ho\\'~o?Ver, th:lt rhl..' milir:try overlooked
~L"cunty
problems
be c.ltlse it wanred to tmprov~
rd:ttions with the government

ofYemen.

"I don't want anyone to think
we cver, ,in ally instance ... took
a risk for tht" purpose of a better
relationship with a country and
put a soldier. sailor. airman or
Marine at risk for that reason."
Zinni said. ''Absolutely not.''
Later in th(' d,ay, in a closed
in a brgely Ocmoc.r.Hl c district,
door session, the FBl upda&lt;ed ~aid the Steltbenvil1c :~rca isn't 111
committcc members on progress
danger of losing a seat, b~1t thl'
it is t~uking in its wvcstigation
populatiOn loss w11l hur&lt; dut
of the Coli' &lt;ragcdy.
. regiOn's representatiu n.
In other developments Thurs-.
"We're gOing to lose the
day:
mfluenti~l impact that a large
- The Navy . announced it
popula~ed area lus on a reprt:recovl"red the l:tst four bodies of
sentative," he said .
sailors killed in the Oct. 12 blast.
He said C leveland, Columbus
Thirteen bodies already had and Cincinnati will continue; to
been flown to th~ United States,
receive the majority of attention
and the fina1 four will be
at the Statehouse .
returned h ome soon.
"Tht.'y deservt' mon: atten - FBI director -Louis Frceh;
tion bccau.sL: of the popubtion.
who was in Yemen for talks with
but nonc of us w:{nt ro b~ forPresident Ali Abdullah Saleh,
gotren about. We all haVl' in fr ,ltoured the crime sce nt:, calling it
stru cture needs.'' he s:t id.
a "tangled mess of metal and
Thl·
fi\'l'-member
Srate
wm:'." Yl"mt:ni officia ls also sent
Apportionmcn[
Bo.1rJ will
another tc:am of tnv&lt;= stigators to
redraw thL' districts for thL· 2001
lll'Jghboring Saudi Arabia.
dt•ctwn. The bo:nd is made..· up
- Thl' Pt'ntagon nauK·d t\\'u
of tht· governor, secrl'tary of
lll('ll to co-chair an ·lllL-kpendent .
stat!..", .tuditnr ~md a lawm.tkl'r
·im·cstig.ltton into tho..· bombing.
from l',ll'h p.uty.
with empb;Jsis OJJ improving
!~ o u r of chost.· ti\'L' bo.ud ~t:ats
~L·cu rit y. Thq: ;1ro..· retirnl Army
.1rc hdd by Republicans, who
&lt;_;cner:ll William C rou ch , whose
will co ntrol the board f(1r the
·Ia~t job was v iet' chief of staff of
the Army, :llld Harold Gehman ,
forml'f comma n der of J oillt
f-orces Com1;1and at the Cole's
home port of Norfolk, Va.
-Atrorney General Janet
Reno wid a uews conference
that tht: United ~tatt'S is doing
Subscribe todav.
all It c:111 ro help. the Yemeni
992-2 I 56 .
Poli c ~..: in tht:ir invest1g~nion. ShL'
would not say whethe-r any
eventual prosecution might take
place in Y~m~n. The United
State:-i apparently has no &lt;~rrange­
ntcnts \Vith Yemen to extradite
suspl..'cts , but could still seek to
prmecute anyune arrested for
involvement in rhe bombing.
-Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon satd the Norwog:ian
heavy-lift ship, the Blue Marlin ,
would likely nq_t arrive 111 Aden
until the end of the month to
pick up tht· damaged Cok :wd
rl'ttll'n 1t to the. I U nite'd Statt:-s.

Census
from PageA1

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

County
Col!!! 1,~!!!lge

Harvest party

planned
PORTLAND -A cunununoty harveS&lt; party woll be held at
Portland .first Church of the
Nazarene Saturday. The hayride
will begin at 4:30 p.m.

EMS log calls
POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs
Emergency
Serv1ces
answered eight calls for assistance
on Thursday. Units responded as
follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
6 :52 a.m., Maples Apt. . Dora
Picrce, treated ;
1:07 p.m., Nc..•w Lnn,1 Road.
a s ~isrcd by
Rutbnd as First
RL"sponder, Genc\·a Shumat.
PleasancValley Hospi&lt;al;
3: 18 p.m .. Eagle Ridg&lt;. ))ora
Hvst.'ll, trL'atl·d;
H:19 p.111 ., Third Strl'..:r. Mary
Roush. H olLer MedJC :tl C!..'ntt.•t:,
11 : 4 (1 p.m . . P.1ge StrL' l't.

Gene\'l('\'l' Ik111n..,ky. PVH .
RACINE
Y:J7 p.m .. 13ro.tJ\,·,Iy An·nuc.
Inez I loll . I' VII. • ·
REEDSVILLE
7: :2/'\ p. m .. St .ltl'

T;1mnly

Cowdery.

Rout !.'

(JH L

()'Blene::ts

M ~ n1ori::d Hos pit:~. l .

I

TUPPERS PLAINS
1 I ::?. f-1 p.m .. Stato..· Routt' 24H ,
motor vehicle act.· t&lt;.k· nt , Charles'
Smith, refused treatment .

I

sc-com1 dt'lade m a ro\v. Democrats hdd the same power rhe
two prcv'iou s dL:' cades.
"Our cnn cern is ~ nd has been
the pro cess. Tlv:n: is" nothing we
c.1n do about thl· population and
how I t 1~ sprc.1d ," said Janice Patterson , pre sident of thl· Le~_gue
of Women Voters of Ohil~. "We
b~lit..•,·~ th t.! rc have been parti san
line s dn\vn r~..: gudlcs s of which
p.1rty Ins bcl'n in power."
Ohio St'crctary of St:1te Kenneth Blackwell ~aid that as in the
past. tht.: (ourts are a check
against anything unconstitutional.
"We'n:· gu1d~d by case law.
We 'rl" guided by principals 1
don't think politics is going to
be :111\' more or ;111y Jc~.., ;1 factor
111 tlus ," hL· said.
Blackwdl· ~·Jid the st:ltt' IS
likcl v to losl' one of its 1CJ se.Jts
in thl· U.S. House of Rt•pr~sen­
t ~lti\·,.·s b&lt;.'Cll\St.' of the pnptd;ltion
~luft nationwide.

\P RING VAII FYCI NEMA

446•4524

OU1fiOJJ[ ,.,l"ll51

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7

PI K[

FRI1 0/20/CO • THURS 10/28100

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BY THE AS SOCIATED PRESS

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NOW OPBN

VALLEY WEATHER

Th L· Lll bl.' .l~nn .ibly mtld tL'lllp r.:r.H UI'L' ~

..111d dr\' CtlllditHHl ~ \\'l'l'l.'
c xp ~.·ct&lt;. .' d tn co,1 1tinu l' rhrou ~ h th..\\'L't' h ·nd, rh~· N ~lt\ 011.d \V'c.1thL' t
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tlm.·r.J . . . tcr'&gt;

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rnd .w .. Sun1-1y .md \\',lrm . Ht g h ~

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li0111 th t.:

1n n.:. tl y

llltd

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!JI ),

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'

Extended forecast

\\' 1\l J . . ,

.llhi h i\ \ 'ill~.
! 11\\' IIHllgh t

Tnn l!!;lH .. Mo,rly c k .1r. Lm\·..,
uppn ~o~ tn 1md ) 1h.

S.mm\.1,. mghl
tlw -l !h '
S u 11 d .1y

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Ck.11 I 1m·,
'll\1 111 \'.

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Jl i~!J ~ f1 1;lll the..' lllid (1l l1, Ill

lllld (l(l .... ll 1 11 1\ d

t1 1~
1111d

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l u c . . d.\y... In Lrt.'.l~m ~

c 1nud~ .

Low ~ mthL' 40~. 1-Ii gh-. 111 th~· (J( )~ .

Drive Thru For Your Convenience
Ice Cold Beer, PoP, ChiPS, Pizza, Etc,,
OPen Mon. • Sat. I 0 a.m. - I 0 P.m.

Twin Oaks

Convenience Store
34099 St. Rt. 7
Pomero:Y. Ohio

992-5829

I

�•

(

P-inion

PageA4

.:r_h_e_D_ail..:::...y_se_ntin_·_ei_ _ _ _ _ _ _,.....:O=

The Daily Sentinel

F~day.~berlO.lDOO

!he Daily Sentinel

'EMIIIlMd bJ 1941
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-2156 • Fu: 992-2157

Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Chari- Hoeflich

II
I.

· General Manager

CEO

R119&lt;H

R. 'Shawn Lawla
Manqlng Editor

T1R£S

Dl•ne K8y Hill
'
Controller

l.an'y Boyar

Advertlalng Dlrwctor

.-Ill

*"

NATIONAL VIEW

Good tool
School sa ety hotlines
are wort the money
t.
•

'

For both. it's tiretore-tlre.

Back in the good old days, a school yard fight was settled w1th a
knuckle 'andwich. Not anymore. In this day and age, guns and
k_nives and violence have become part of the educational experi-

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

~nce.

As sad and unfortunate as that experien ce is, we are forced to face
its reality.
Doing so has led to a new, important tool: school violence hot
linc:s.
·
In West Virginia, students can alert authorities to potential problems without fear of retribution. Three-fourths of the state's 55
county school systems provide free, 24-hour hot lines that students
cJn call anonymously to report threats, weapons and other problems. Parents also are e ncouraged to use the hot lines.
Already, Raleigh County students and parents have called the
number 14 times to report incidents -just over a month into the
new school year.
The Fayette County school system dealt with 29 calls last yearI 0 on the high school level, eight from middle schools and 11 on
rhe elementary level.
"This is another way we have for children to deal with a situation
..."said Gary' Ray, Fayette County's pupil services schools director.
Once a county receives the information, it is forwarded to the
principal at that school, said Miller Hall, pupil services director for
Raleigh schools.
'
·· . Many counties provide two hot lines, contracting with companies
:. and using a se~ice operated by the state attorney general's con, sumer protection division. The governor's office awatds grants to
help counties pay for the private services.
The Legislature allocated $300,000 this year for the governor's
grant program, and 28 counties have applied for funding. Thirty-five
received graim during the 1999-2000 school year.
Counties are given 8 cents per student, based on net enrollment
for the school year'necond month.
·
Logan County, for instance, received a S2,400 grant for .the 19992000 school year that paid about half the cost of its hot line.
'.'The program we had, Save a Friend, was very successful," said
Bea Orr, director of student ,services. "We were able to intercept
some stuff that was going on with some students as it relates to
adults after school."
Anonymity is crucial to any school hot line's success. Once students learn their identities will not be revealed, they are more willing to report problems, said Libby Hash with the attorney general's
office consumer protection division.
"We seem to be receiving more calls from kids this year. The first
year, they would get home and tell their parents about something.
Now, we're receivmg calls from school from kids calling as incidents
occur," she said.
School violence hot lines aren't the ultimate solution, but they
are, as we said, a tool. And any tool that can have a hand in protecting our children is worth using.- The (Beckley; W !.11.) Register-Ht:r·

aid

·

TODAY IN HISTORY

Mideast violence pre-empted Bush 5 coup
• Texas Gov. George W Bush's communicaand domestic policy questions generally as
tions duector, Karen Hughes. was premature
well as Gore did.
in declaring him the next president after last
After the debate but b efore the explosions
week's debate- but she was made more so
in the Mideast, voters said they would be
by the surge of violence in the Middle East.
equally confident in the two candidates'
All instant polls after the debate conability to handle a foreign crisis.
firmed that Bush won hands-down, but it
Had the medi a not been focused o n the
was an overstatement for Hughes to say Mideast, they might well have fastened onto
as she was overheard doing- that Bush had
Llush 's apparent glee that the killers ofTex.an
clinched the election.
\
Jan1es Byrd will be put to death, obvllting
Other Bush aides say the Texan probably
NEA COLUMNIST
the need for a new state hate-crimes law.
will start this· week with a 5-point lead, up a
Had Gore been more assertive, he may
co uple of points from last week, and they
well have c hallenged Llush o n his support
think Bush is ahead now in crucial states ates his place in history. Bush took that tac k,
for
Pres.ident Clinton's bombing policy in
such as Michigan, Florida, Washington and admitting, "I've been known to mangle a
Kosovo. After the debate, Gore's staff dtd
Oregon, and has narrowed Vice President AI syl-ABBLE or two."
Gore~s lead in Pennsylvania.
Instead, Gore tteated the criticism so seri- point out that Bush praised the bombing
However, they think the campaign is "at ously that he apologized and promised to do decision only after his GOP primary rival,
the point of danger" because Gore is likely better. And promised again. And, with some Sen. John McCain (Arii.) , did so.
to "go thermonuclear" in attacking Bush in exceptions, he was on such good behavior
Bush avoided trouble by generally agreeorder to recapture the initiative.
that he seemed to lack energy and convic- ing with Clinton foreign policy, even to the
Bush's advantage coming out of the tion.
'extent of supporting the abstention on a
debate might have been greater but for the
Gore was at his best when attacking Bush's United Nations resolution condemning vio bombing of the destroyer USS Cole in record in Texas, pointing out that Bush lence that is patently th e responsibility of
Yemen and the lynching of three Israeli sol- might have used his state's surp lu s to raise its Palestinian leader Vasser Arafat .
diers in Ramallah .
ranking in child health care " from 50th to,
Bush advisers say he "has serious doubts"
Those horrible inc iden ts eclipsed the say, 45 or 40 or something better?"
about the abstention, but is reluctant to
debate in next-day media chatter, a crucial
Bush definitely is vulnerable for refusing politicize foreign policy, as he' thinks Clinfactor in cementing public impressions of last year to expand the Children's Health
ton did in the 1992 campaign against his
the televised exchanges. As a result, Gore has Insurance Plan, although he came back with
father.
a better chance to recoup.
the effective counterargument that the
On the other hand, some Jewish RepubliGore was a take-no-prisoners brawler number of uninsured people in the entire
cans were dismayed at Bush's stance and said .
during his debates with former Sen. Bill nation has grown during Gore 1s time as vice
they believed Bush supported abstention to
Bradley (D-N.J.). He was a " fight-for-you" president.
Gore failed to mount his usual righteous- ·curry favor with Arab- Americans in Michipopulist at th e Democratic co nvention. He
was an obnoxious, exaggerating know-it-all ly indignant attack on Bush's opposition to gan. Bush did go out of his way to appeal to
hate crimes and gun control, as well . as the them on a noth er issue, the usc of St!cret tesin the first debate with Bush Oct. 3.
Then , after suffering a week of media haz- govenlor's tax cuts favoring the wealthy. He timony in terrorism trials.
The final debate represented Gore's last
ing - and, no. doubt, sour reviews from hi s also forgot to remind voters that they
focus groups - Gore so overcorrected hi s undoubtedly feel better off than they did big chance to addrt•" an audience of millions. Who was he' The Harry Truman popconduct that he came off in the second eight years ago.
Meantime, Bush seemed entirely at case in ulist? It worked at the convention, after all.
debate as tentative, defen sive, flar , almost
thu debate - and totally demolished the
tranquilized.
I was sure that Gore &gt;would use humor to pre-debate Gore argument that he is a "bab(Morton Kondracke i.&lt; &lt;".wmrivc editor of Roll
bler
and
bumbler,"
handling
both
foreign
·
deflate and deflect charges that he exaggerCall, the ·flewspaper tf Cnl'llol Hill.)
.

Morton
Kondracke

'

~·

Today IS Friday, Oct. 20, the 294th d?Y of 2000. There are 72 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 20, 1973, in rhe so-called "Saturday Night Massacre," special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox was dismissed and Attorney
General Elliot L. Richatd.son and Deputy Attorney General William
B. Ruckelshaus resigned.
On th1s date:
In 1803, the U.S. Senate ratified the Louisiana Purchase.
Ill 1892, the city of Chicago dedicated the World's Columbian
Exposition.
· , In 1903, a joint commission ruled in favor of the United States in
a boundary d~pute between the District of Alaska and Canada.
ln 1944, during World War II, Gen . Douglas MacArthur stepped
ashore at Leyte in the Philippines, 2 1/2 years after he'd said, "I shall
return.
In 1947, the House Un-American Activities Committee opened '
hearinb'S into alleged Communist inPuence and infiltration within
the America.n motion picture industry.
In 1964, the 31st president of the United States, Herbert Hoover,
died in New York at age 90.
In 1967, seven men were conVicted 'in Meridian~ Miss., of violatmg the civil rights of three murdered civil rights workers.
In I %R, former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy married Greek
,hippmg magnate Aristotle Ona"is.
In 1977, three members of the rock group Lynyrd Skynyrd were
killed m the crash of a chartered plane near McComb, Mi".
In 197~. the jDhn f Kenn~dy Library was dedicated in lloston
Ten Y''·'" ago: Three member&gt; of the rap group 2 Live Crew were
acquitted by a Jlii'Y 111 Fort Lauderdale, Fla., of violatmg obscemty
laws with an adult1-only concert in nearby Hollywood the previous
June . The Cmcinnati Reds won the World Senes, 2-1, sweeping the
~).1kl.md A\ in tour games.

tlll\11.

•

BY JOHN CUNNIFF
AP BUSINESS ANALYST

NEW YORK ~ There is terror in those
stock market numbers. Anyone who has ever
rece1ved a margin call knows all abo ut it. They
might try to tell you about it, but th ey' ll probably end up stuttering instead.
Terror vi"itcJ m :my.families during the past
few months, especially those who rolled · the
dic e on a high tech-stock that burned out like
a spent rocket . And very "'pccially those who
borrowed to invest .
It ''\ more common than th e tradaional stati~tin tdl you. Margm cleht, or mon ey borrowed from ' tockbrokcr,, is one of the tradi tion al measurements of market debt. But
money, borrowt'd from home equity isn't.
We have a good idea how much money has
be.cn' borrowed from broke" ~ a grand total
of S250 .7 ~ billion 'from New York Stoc k
Exchange member firm s as of Septemberbut on ly a gue&lt;~•aimate about home equity
loans .
This 11 umcttling enough, but then you
have to wonder how nuny f.1milics took a
flyer on the nurket because they didn't luve
any fdvings but did have a big college tUition
bill looming in tin~ finurc.
·
. Milliom of familic' have no '"vinE\': In fact,
Federal R e,nw fi~mes 'how that in 1998

something like 13 percent of households had
no bank account at all. However, they do have
debts. Aln]ost anyone can borrow today, which
helps explain why the household savin gs rate
ts near zero. ·
OK, some of these families do save in their
own way. They invest m stocks, a particularly
popular pastime over the past decade, when so
many stocks made their investors rich. The
savin gs rate excludes capital gains.
Cap1tal gains are what every household has
been countmg during the market's long
ascent. But capital gains aren't reali zed until
stocks are sold. And many families, expect in g
eve n bigger gains, failed to sell.
In short, when certain stocks fall 50 percent
or 80 percent, as many have, the owners must
send more cash to their brokers. 13ut, havi11g
minimum savings, many can't come up with
more cash. They lose their stocks.
·
A lot besides stocks goes out the window
when that happens: The sense of security that
high-flying stock- provided ; next year's vacation, perhaps; the tuition. Suddenly. umead of
counting winnings life beco me\ a scramble
for survival cash.
The worst scenari o by far is wh&lt;·1i the hou se
itself i' endangered . Home equity loans
bec.une \he norm during the I 'J90s. And , "'

Van Buren
ADVICE

dun in my house with an ,llcoholic. - SEEK ING PEACE IN
tlt.':&gt;.: tht frit.•lldly tJlkL·r; the ont._•
MISSOURI
\Vhl') ·'shut!- down·~ .md tli Jngry
DEAR SEEK I NC PEACE :
.H rhl' world: ,tnJ d1c rt1&lt;.h·.
ob nn:xmu s pt.·r~l) ll \Yho l'lllO- hrsr. conr.ld AI-Anon . Th e,·
oftl:r lllform.Jtlnn .md tmotion ~
notLdly .thu~t.·~ 1111..'.
MMk ·.., f.Jtllotl.., wnrd-, ,\!\'.'' I .11 'uppon to f.untly .mJ frit' JH.i~
lun.· 111..'\"•,:r lut you." l 1hy\l c.d h·. nf .dloholil'. C.1ll 1-lll lll-.'44no ~ but m~·nully I :1 111 bt.'.lt&lt;..:n · 2(,(,(, for lllL'(•ting mfornutill!l ,
1 -~flO-J5(l-t)tJlJ() fnr intrndurrt.•g u L rh .
Wt.• h.tn· till 'o~·ul btl.• be(,\ll~t.· tory !ttcr.Hun:. Thc.:ir Web ~ltl' ~~
\\'\\'\\'.•11 -.111 on. or g.
lh: h.1 . . ru dnnk h ,; f~lrt.' Wt.' ~n
SL'tond. !J~t~.·n to Your chil.ll .IY\Y hcrt.· - .,o I dnn 't .lCl ..._~pr
dren.
Thr..·y h.n·~.· your b~.· .. t
lll\' Jt,Hlon '. \X.'hcn !11.:\ not ,,·u rklll(L'l'l.'~(~ ,H hL',H[
111~. h . : dnnb tJ) }'lTCL'nt of tl11..·
Thnd. -. p~.·.1k to .111 .1ttorney
11 \lll' V:/ulnn rill' l.t\r t\YO \'l'.Jf\, ·
,llld .hk fo.r ,\ tr.lil ·s ~.·p.ll'.ltJO ll .
he·~ h ~~d t\\o DUI tl t.lllotb (drt·,·ing und er ti ll' intlucnn:), .so Tlw ,\tt ornL'y \\:ill prntcct your
fin.1nci.1l iriten:sts.
L' ltlll'r l lH llllL' of hu r thrc l' Lln lFourth, .l~k your hu i:ib:tnd to
drcn llltl\t prn\'itk ht.;, tr.lll Sic ,n-e You must stay in your
pnrt.ltion to ,md from \\'ork .
homL' to protc r t 1t from ftrt.' .
All th ree· kid' '·'" I chould
Thic may appear rn be .1
k'.l\'L' h1111 Thl'\' ion: tltctr f.lthcr.
but do not CllJOY b~.·mg Jruund drao;;tJc 'iOiut ion , but it's the
lnm . M .nk h.l .' one brother, but only way to get hts .lttL'lltJon
the\' don 't ulk bL'CHl SL' of lvL1 rk '~ .1nd flnd pe-ace of mind . Don'c
dnnkint; Bc"dcs the children feel gudty. You deserve to be
happy. respected and safe.
.md me. M.nk l1.1s no o ne else.
DEAR Al.ll.lY: I om 20
~k rct"usl''i to go for trl'atmcnt. H.c promi~~.·~ to ~top )'L':tn o ld ;1nd 111 a long-term
w\th
my
drinking. but Jocm'r. If he tsu't r elo~tlonship
boyfriend. who 1s Jf1. My prob in bc~.L I C.ln't :-.lcL:-p at night
lem is he's· exp'ericncing probbt:l.Ht'c: I'm .1fr~ud lw 'll burn the
lems having seX' with mo. He
house down .
says he loves me too much to
I want MHk ond other lkobe able to have sex . He says he
holio to know that bcs1dcs
almost thinks of me as a c hild .
co mplic.amg rhc1r own lives,
He also told me that the best
they .ue. nuning the lives of JJl
sex he 's ever had was with
the people Hound thc111.
someone he always argued
I have co ncluded that I would
with . Is t hi s norm.l ? - SEXhe happtcr and have: more pea t" C
LESS IN EDMONTON
of mtnd bdng ,1lone m a trailer

SOCIETY NEWS

housing equity rose so also did thl· amount
that eager len ders urged you to 'i'"';d.
That, perhaps, is the worst of the scene, ot
least for now. While hou'd10ld debt burdens
have bren ri sin g, so have hou sing market val ues. As a consequence, dl'bt to asset ratios an~
not as high as in the ea rly 19Hils.
In fact, a study by Federa l Reserve eco nomists suggests that only "a truly mao;sive
decline in the value of hou se hold osset,"'
would be required to bring debt-to-asset
ratios back to tho se 198(h levck
Well , there have been truly ma" ive declines

in some stocks, of course. but the value of
houses seem' rirm for a while. Still, you h a~e
to wonder how much housmg prices ha~'t"
risen bccau~e stockli havL: n.;;en .
Abo~t all that is known for certain " that
homin g prices in the high-tech San Francisco
R1y area have gone through the roof si multaneo usly with ~tock prices, includin~· paychecks denominat~.·d in o;tuL:k optiom.
The study, cited by the Fiu.u1ci.ll M arkets
Center, a pnvatc-~cc tor think tank that m~m ­
iton Fed acttvmt·~ .m~l rc\t:~lrch. found rh.1t ,,
10 pern·nl ri..,e in thl' tot,il . , Jun.· v.1lliL' oflocal
tech tlrms account~ for a 1 to 2 perc em ri'ic in
Jrca housing pru:: es.
It 'a ll ties togcthl'r; one' ,J ffe cl\ till' other.

Responsible Parties Needed to Make Payments on Over
143 Bank Repossessions and Over-aged Inventory
RIPLEY, WV -- Transports of used
cars and trucks seem to be arriving
daily from across the country. Their
cargo is a sore subject for many
banks, but all is not gloom and
doom.
While these cars often represent
huge losses to banks, they are often
sought after deals for bargain
hunters. But these bargains are often
hard, if not next to impossible, to
find. Generally, used car dealers buy
these vehicles at huge discounts and
ret!lil them to the public - often
selling these cars and trucks for top
. dollar.
But that's all about to change. Guy
Sayre, General Manager of Denbigh
Ga.rrett Ford, has just announced
what may be a bargain-hunter's
dream.
"The banks asked us to help," he
explained. "And I think we can."
"This Thursday, Friday;
&amp;
Saturday, October 19, 20 and 21, we
will sell these vehicles and pass the
savings on to our customers."
When pressed for examples, Sayre
replied, "Well here's a 1998 Ranger. .
.With an $87 d,own payment, your
payments are only $189 a month for

48 months at only 8.75 APR on
approved credit."
"The banks want to put these cars
and trucks on the road," said Reggie
Carmichael, Sales Director of
Denbigh Garrett, "and I think they'll
do just about anything to make this

e

Owen Castle, Denbigh Garrett's
Used Car Director, was quoted as
saying, "We want everyone to know
that this is a first-come-first~scrved
sale. At these prices, the really great
buys will go really fast!"
"We're staffing up fonhis event."
"Trade-ins are not a problem,
either. Just bring in your title or
IS
payment book, and w.e'll take care of
the rest."
Castle we.nt on to say, "We are
confident we can arrange financing
come, .
for anyone with a job, even if
they've had credit problems in the
past!"
Guy Sayr.e
Sayre said, "We have a little· bit of
everything to offer. I think if it can
sale a success."
be driven, we have one."
All the cars and trucks will be
Each of these vehicles has been
clearly marked on the window with
inspected, serviced and is ready to
their discounted prices .
go.
"The payments will also be clearly ·
Denbigh Garrett's Used Car Center
marked," added Sayre, "This should
is located at 1-77 -Exit 132 Fairplain,
make shopping for these bargains
WV. For more information about
eyen easier. Customers can expect to · this special event, contact 800-964find a large selection of vehicles and
3673, extension 700.
prices, from top of the line luxury
cars, 4x4s, minivans and sport
utilities to basic transportation. We
have it all!"
Copyris,ht 1997 Ad\lance Marketing Concepts, L.L.C.

.
a bargain"This
hunters dream, with
customers on a firstfirst-served
basis."

alling

Dolls to be judged
I'OM f- RllY - !lolls 111 t h&lt;.· ,lllllLUI clre"- .1 - dull contc·st ,1re to be
J"l'tll'rncd w TIJ,_· F.lfll\L'r~ B.111k Uy No\·. 13 !&lt;!O th.H thL·y c.m bl' JndgcJ,
dt,pLlyL·d f~H· ,\ nmc ..uu.1 then .lUC'tllHlL'd ~)tffor the benefit of the Unitc~.-1 f i111d fnr tvkig' County.
A b,mk ,pt)kL· ~ tll.lll .... lid yc'itlTLLl~· tlut .lll bur rlu~.·~.· oftht: doll s h.we
. 1h·~.· .1~h· go ne our fo r C\l:-&gt;W11l1Jlg. At lynn~.· llHL'tT~tl'd in p.1rtic1p.1ting in
the bL·n~.· tit proj~.:r whid1 h.1:-. bL'L'll CDndu~.·rr..·d by Th~· Eunwrs B:1nk
t~ H· 11\tlrr..· th.1n l f1 Yi..'&lt;l r' is l11VJtcd tl) ~top by the bank ;1\lr\ pick up on~
o f th~.-• dnlb..
Thl' c n~tum1.: d dolls \\'dl be judg~d in six cw:gorit·s \\'Hh pnze~ r,)f
S10'1",1\'Jng:-. ho11d~ gmllg to the winner nft·ac h cncgory, ;md .1 S200
S.l\' lllg\ hPml to the gLIIld prill' \\'\lllll'l'.
Thr..· c.lt~gones fin c~hib1 t ,1\'L' prL'ttic..;t. bnd::!l, crochet, chJr.lrtL' r,
11){) -f :-.tdt• dre~-. .1nd rountrv. Th e Joll.., .ll'L' provided .1nd p.1ttcrn s for
co..,tlJ !ll ~S .uc ,1\'.LtLlbk .It lilL' ,lu nk tl:n thost.' who WJnt to usc them, or
thL' (rc.lton 111,1\' dc . , igll an orig:lll:\1 wol·k of .1rt.
Both the P(; l\lc:ro;· .md G~lltpol!s b,mks .1·nd rhe1Tuppers Pbin s
lh.111 Lh .H l' p arri c ip:~ ting 111 rhc drc~~-J-doll contest.

Fellowship celebrates birthdays
11

There's ·terror in those stock margin calls

PAlO ADVERTISEMENT

Abigail

REED SV ILLE ~ The I :ll!ics Fellowship of the Re edsville Church
of Chrr!:&gt;t met rcccntlv Jt thr...· homt!' of LJ ~:i:l Short at Chest~:r.
"
E!tzabcth SnHth c'a nducred the businc~s m eeti ng. Get wdl and

BUSINESS MIRROR

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL SPORTS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

DEAR AI3BY: I am 55 and
.retired• M) husband. " Mark ," is
·60 and an alcoholic. I want him
to read this letter in your colI've gone through hell putting
up with his alcoholism. He falls
:tskcp with a cigarette still burn m g bNwc..._•n his fingers. He usc:s
tht.• stove. fnrgtts abuut it , and
falls asleep. lie talks to hunself. I
bt.•lteve h.._• has thr('L' pcrson;lh-

I.Arurr u. dt1 Hlitot'.,., wlcotw. TluJ llto11W N lfu 111M JOO wonb. A.U lmm .n rdjccr
lUI ... RcMfl•lfll WI........ .,.., ••,~w... ,.......,.,l+lo .,..w,.,..nm wiU
IN ,_w;siJH.. Ut11n slw..U k i11 f0011 r.nt, Mldru•ilw lnat,
~...Jmu
TluOfittilJtts lqt'lt* lit 1M tolluiUt Nlcn; Uf rltt r.NIIIU.U o/lfu OIUD J~1Ptd.WlUJV
Ca. '• niUorioJ /Jiocnl, 111tlns odurwis• . ~

lo nlili~

Friday,October20,2000

Wife if alcoholic feels
beaten down by life

What cb these W1o have tn COMAOO ?

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Page AS

thinking of yo u" cards were signed for members and friends. Sun-

sh ine b.1b~ we rl' maJe tu be ddJ\'CrL·d to ln'L'z Wilson and· Grace Wi.!b-.:r.
PJ.m.., were nude to dine in Dcn:mbcr at the Pmnt ofView in Parkersbur~. W.Vo.

Bir;hd.rys celebrated at the met:ttng wne Phyllis H erze r and Pat
M.1rtin. They were honored .for their birthdays with cake and icl'
crL'.llll. ~L'P/cd to those named .md members Rose Niday, Mary Alice
ll'"'· M .mne Wh1tcbead , Thclnu Snllth.Jocli Bissell and Darci, Theda
J) ;ub·, El1.1 Osborne. and gne'h Patty Pi ckens ond Mopn Short.

Sayre receives ·award
MASON. \Xl.V:t . -- DL·e :~ nna
Alexi s S.l)TL', flvC -yc.1 r nld d:ltlglltl' r'
' l)f Do_tlJLl .IIIli Kurt s.,yre of
t\1 ,1~0 11, W.VJ., rL'CC IVL'd SL:CO I\d
ru n nl'r-up
111 .
the.
L!ttlc
:\ /l1qn ' 1\11'~ B.ntk D.1ys P.1gc.1m.
\\'hh h \\',1:-. h~.·ld I ll !)oint Pk,l,,l llt,
W.V1.! ) c,ll lll.l JS thr...· gr.mdd.w gilt c.r
t) l s,·\n.l S.i\Tl' of New I Ll\'L'Il;
\A/ V.1· .111 d .J oy.l' L' [\, l.HHIL' I uf ll.1 l' 111 L'

hotographers!
The Daily Sentinel is looking for the
dozen best photos of Meigs County
people, places or events to be used
in a special "YEAR 2001" calendar.
•
Winning photos will be included 1n
the calendar, along with the
photographer's name and town.
Official Rules
1. All photos must be taken by an amateur photographer, 18 years or older, who currently

resides in Meigs County.
2. Photos tD.ust include either Meigs County people, places or evt:nts.
3. Winning and runners-up photos will become the property of the Daily Sentinel.
Photographers of winning and runner-up photos will be asked to sign a release to Ohio Valley
I
Publishing for news and promotional purposes.
4. Photographers of winning photos will be asked to obtain a photo release from any subject in
the photo, other than the photographer's immediate family.
5. All decisions of the judges will be final.
6. The Sentinel reserves the right to reject any photo.

Write name.• address and phone number on the back of photo entries and mail to:

The Daily Sentinel Photo Contest
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Deeanna Sayre

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Suhsc:rihe 1odar. 992-2/ 5o

I

.I

'.._,

'

·'

'

�•

(

P-inion

PageA4

.:r_h_e_D_ail..:::...y_se_ntin_·_ei_ _ _ _ _ _ _,.....:O=

The Daily Sentinel

F~day.~berlO.lDOO

!he Daily Sentinel

'EMIIIlMd bJ 1941
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-2156 • Fu: 992-2157

Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Chari- Hoeflich

II
I.

· General Manager

CEO

R119&lt;H

R. 'Shawn Lawla
Manqlng Editor

T1R£S

Dl•ne K8y Hill
'
Controller

l.an'y Boyar

Advertlalng Dlrwctor

.-Ill

*"

NATIONAL VIEW

Good tool
School sa ety hotlines
are wort the money
t.
•

'

For both. it's tiretore-tlre.

Back in the good old days, a school yard fight was settled w1th a
knuckle 'andwich. Not anymore. In this day and age, guns and
k_nives and violence have become part of the educational experi-

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

~nce.

As sad and unfortunate as that experien ce is, we are forced to face
its reality.
Doing so has led to a new, important tool: school violence hot
linc:s.
·
In West Virginia, students can alert authorities to potential problems without fear of retribution. Three-fourths of the state's 55
county school systems provide free, 24-hour hot lines that students
cJn call anonymously to report threats, weapons and other problems. Parents also are e ncouraged to use the hot lines.
Already, Raleigh County students and parents have called the
number 14 times to report incidents -just over a month into the
new school year.
The Fayette County school system dealt with 29 calls last yearI 0 on the high school level, eight from middle schools and 11 on
rhe elementary level.
"This is another way we have for children to deal with a situation
..."said Gary' Ray, Fayette County's pupil services schools director.
Once a county receives the information, it is forwarded to the
principal at that school, said Miller Hall, pupil services director for
Raleigh schools.
'
·· . Many counties provide two hot lines, contracting with companies
:. and using a se~ice operated by the state attorney general's con, sumer protection division. The governor's office awatds grants to
help counties pay for the private services.
The Legislature allocated $300,000 this year for the governor's
grant program, and 28 counties have applied for funding. Thirty-five
received graim during the 1999-2000 school year.
Counties are given 8 cents per student, based on net enrollment
for the school year'necond month.
·
Logan County, for instance, received a S2,400 grant for .the 19992000 school year that paid about half the cost of its hot line.
'.'The program we had, Save a Friend, was very successful," said
Bea Orr, director of student ,services. "We were able to intercept
some stuff that was going on with some students as it relates to
adults after school."
Anonymity is crucial to any school hot line's success. Once students learn their identities will not be revealed, they are more willing to report problems, said Libby Hash with the attorney general's
office consumer protection division.
"We seem to be receiving more calls from kids this year. The first
year, they would get home and tell their parents about something.
Now, we're receivmg calls from school from kids calling as incidents
occur," she said.
School violence hot lines aren't the ultimate solution, but they
are, as we said, a tool. And any tool that can have a hand in protecting our children is worth using.- The (Beckley; W !.11.) Register-Ht:r·

aid

·

TODAY IN HISTORY

Mideast violence pre-empted Bush 5 coup
• Texas Gov. George W Bush's communicaand domestic policy questions generally as
tions duector, Karen Hughes. was premature
well as Gore did.
in declaring him the next president after last
After the debate but b efore the explosions
week's debate- but she was made more so
in the Mideast, voters said they would be
by the surge of violence in the Middle East.
equally confident in the two candidates'
All instant polls after the debate conability to handle a foreign crisis.
firmed that Bush won hands-down, but it
Had the medi a not been focused o n the
was an overstatement for Hughes to say Mideast, they might well have fastened onto
as she was overheard doing- that Bush had
Llush 's apparent glee that the killers ofTex.an
clinched the election.
\
Jan1es Byrd will be put to death, obvllting
Other Bush aides say the Texan probably
NEA COLUMNIST
the need for a new state hate-crimes law.
will start this· week with a 5-point lead, up a
Had Gore been more assertive, he may
co uple of points from last week, and they
well have c hallenged Llush o n his support
think Bush is ahead now in crucial states ates his place in history. Bush took that tac k,
for
Pres.ident Clinton's bombing policy in
such as Michigan, Florida, Washington and admitting, "I've been known to mangle a
Kosovo. After the debate, Gore's staff dtd
Oregon, and has narrowed Vice President AI syl-ABBLE or two."
Gore~s lead in Pennsylvania.
Instead, Gore tteated the criticism so seri- point out that Bush praised the bombing
However, they think the campaign is "at ously that he apologized and promised to do decision only after his GOP primary rival,
the point of danger" because Gore is likely better. And promised again. And, with some Sen. John McCain (Arii.) , did so.
to "go thermonuclear" in attacking Bush in exceptions, he was on such good behavior
Bush avoided trouble by generally agreeorder to recapture the initiative.
that he seemed to lack energy and convic- ing with Clinton foreign policy, even to the
Bush's advantage coming out of the tion.
'extent of supporting the abstention on a
debate might have been greater but for the
Gore was at his best when attacking Bush's United Nations resolution condemning vio bombing of the destroyer USS Cole in record in Texas, pointing out that Bush lence that is patently th e responsibility of
Yemen and the lynching of three Israeli sol- might have used his state's surp lu s to raise its Palestinian leader Vasser Arafat .
diers in Ramallah .
ranking in child health care " from 50th to,
Bush advisers say he "has serious doubts"
Those horrible inc iden ts eclipsed the say, 45 or 40 or something better?"
about the abstention, but is reluctant to
debate in next-day media chatter, a crucial
Bush definitely is vulnerable for refusing politicize foreign policy, as he' thinks Clinfactor in cementing public impressions of last year to expand the Children's Health
ton did in the 1992 campaign against his
the televised exchanges. As a result, Gore has Insurance Plan, although he came back with
father.
a better chance to recoup.
the effective counterargument that the
On the other hand, some Jewish RepubliGore was a take-no-prisoners brawler number of uninsured people in the entire
cans were dismayed at Bush's stance and said .
during his debates with former Sen. Bill nation has grown during Gore 1s time as vice
they believed Bush supported abstention to
Bradley (D-N.J.). He was a " fight-for-you" president.
Gore failed to mount his usual righteous- ·curry favor with Arab- Americans in Michipopulist at th e Democratic co nvention. He
was an obnoxious, exaggerating know-it-all ly indignant attack on Bush's opposition to gan. Bush did go out of his way to appeal to
hate crimes and gun control, as well . as the them on a noth er issue, the usc of St!cret tesin the first debate with Bush Oct. 3.
Then , after suffering a week of media haz- govenlor's tax cuts favoring the wealthy. He timony in terrorism trials.
The final debate represented Gore's last
ing - and, no. doubt, sour reviews from hi s also forgot to remind voters that they
focus groups - Gore so overcorrected hi s undoubtedly feel better off than they did big chance to addrt•" an audience of millions. Who was he' The Harry Truman popconduct that he came off in the second eight years ago.
Meantime, Bush seemed entirely at case in ulist? It worked at the convention, after all.
debate as tentative, defen sive, flar , almost
thu debate - and totally demolished the
tranquilized.
I was sure that Gore &gt;would use humor to pre-debate Gore argument that he is a "bab(Morton Kondracke i.&lt; &lt;".wmrivc editor of Roll
bler
and
bumbler,"
handling
both
foreign
·
deflate and deflect charges that he exaggerCall, the ·flewspaper tf Cnl'llol Hill.)
.

Morton
Kondracke

'

~·

Today IS Friday, Oct. 20, the 294th d?Y of 2000. There are 72 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 20, 1973, in rhe so-called "Saturday Night Massacre," special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox was dismissed and Attorney
General Elliot L. Richatd.son and Deputy Attorney General William
B. Ruckelshaus resigned.
On th1s date:
In 1803, the U.S. Senate ratified the Louisiana Purchase.
Ill 1892, the city of Chicago dedicated the World's Columbian
Exposition.
· , In 1903, a joint commission ruled in favor of the United States in
a boundary d~pute between the District of Alaska and Canada.
ln 1944, during World War II, Gen . Douglas MacArthur stepped
ashore at Leyte in the Philippines, 2 1/2 years after he'd said, "I shall
return.
In 1947, the House Un-American Activities Committee opened '
hearinb'S into alleged Communist inPuence and infiltration within
the America.n motion picture industry.
In 1964, the 31st president of the United States, Herbert Hoover,
died in New York at age 90.
In 1967, seven men were conVicted 'in Meridian~ Miss., of violatmg the civil rights of three murdered civil rights workers.
In I %R, former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy married Greek
,hippmg magnate Aristotle Ona"is.
In 1977, three members of the rock group Lynyrd Skynyrd were
killed m the crash of a chartered plane near McComb, Mi".
In 197~. the jDhn f Kenn~dy Library was dedicated in lloston
Ten Y''·'" ago: Three member&gt; of the rap group 2 Live Crew were
acquitted by a Jlii'Y 111 Fort Lauderdale, Fla., of violatmg obscemty
laws with an adult1-only concert in nearby Hollywood the previous
June . The Cmcinnati Reds won the World Senes, 2-1, sweeping the
~).1kl.md A\ in tour games.

tlll\11.

•

BY JOHN CUNNIFF
AP BUSINESS ANALYST

NEW YORK ~ There is terror in those
stock market numbers. Anyone who has ever
rece1ved a margin call knows all abo ut it. They
might try to tell you about it, but th ey' ll probably end up stuttering instead.
Terror vi"itcJ m :my.families during the past
few months, especially those who rolled · the
dic e on a high tech-stock that burned out like
a spent rocket . And very "'pccially those who
borrowed to invest .
It ''\ more common than th e tradaional stati~tin tdl you. Margm cleht, or mon ey borrowed from ' tockbrokcr,, is one of the tradi tion al measurements of market debt. But
money, borrowt'd from home equity isn't.
We have a good idea how much money has
be.cn' borrowed from broke" ~ a grand total
of S250 .7 ~ billion 'from New York Stoc k
Exchange member firm s as of Septemberbut on ly a gue&lt;~•aimate about home equity
loans .
This 11 umcttling enough, but then you
have to wonder how nuny f.1milics took a
flyer on the nurket because they didn't luve
any fdvings but did have a big college tUition
bill looming in tin~ finurc.
·
. Milliom of familic' have no '"vinE\': In fact,
Federal R e,nw fi~mes 'how that in 1998

something like 13 percent of households had
no bank account at all. However, they do have
debts. Aln]ost anyone can borrow today, which
helps explain why the household savin gs rate
ts near zero. ·
OK, some of these families do save in their
own way. They invest m stocks, a particularly
popular pastime over the past decade, when so
many stocks made their investors rich. The
savin gs rate excludes capital gains.
Cap1tal gains are what every household has
been countmg during the market's long
ascent. But capital gains aren't reali zed until
stocks are sold. And many families, expect in g
eve n bigger gains, failed to sell.
In short, when certain stocks fall 50 percent
or 80 percent, as many have, the owners must
send more cash to their brokers. 13ut, havi11g
minimum savings, many can't come up with
more cash. They lose their stocks.
·
A lot besides stocks goes out the window
when that happens: The sense of security that
high-flying stock- provided ; next year's vacation, perhaps; the tuition. Suddenly. umead of
counting winnings life beco me\ a scramble
for survival cash.
The worst scenari o by far is wh&lt;·1i the hou se
itself i' endangered . Home equity loans
bec.une \he norm during the I 'J90s. And , "'

Van Buren
ADVICE

dun in my house with an ,llcoholic. - SEEK ING PEACE IN
tlt.':&gt;.: tht frit.•lldly tJlkL·r; the ont._•
MISSOURI
\Vhl') ·'shut!- down·~ .md tli Jngry
DEAR SEEK I NC PEACE :
.H rhl' world: ,tnJ d1c rt1&lt;.h·.
ob nn:xmu s pt.·r~l) ll \Yho l'lllO- hrsr. conr.ld AI-Anon . Th e,·
oftl:r lllform.Jtlnn .md tmotion ~
notLdly .thu~t.·~ 1111..'.
MMk ·.., f.Jtllotl.., wnrd-, ,\!\'.'' I .11 'uppon to f.untly .mJ frit' JH.i~
lun.· 111..'\"•,:r lut you." l 1hy\l c.d h·. nf .dloholil'. C.1ll 1-lll lll-.'44no ~ but m~·nully I :1 111 bt.'.lt&lt;..:n · 2(,(,(, for lllL'(•ting mfornutill!l ,
1 -~flO-J5(l-t)tJlJ() fnr intrndurrt.•g u L rh .
Wt.• h.tn· till 'o~·ul btl.• be(,\ll~t.· tory !ttcr.Hun:. Thc.:ir Web ~ltl' ~~
\\'\\'\\'.•11 -.111 on. or g.
lh: h.1 . . ru dnnk h ,; f~lrt.' Wt.' ~n
SL'tond. !J~t~.·n to Your chil.ll .IY\Y hcrt.· - .,o I dnn 't .lCl ..._~pr
dren.
Thr..·y h.n·~.· your b~.· .. t
lll\' Jt,Hlon '. \X.'hcn !11.:\ not ,,·u rklll(L'l'l.'~(~ ,H hL',H[
111~. h . : dnnb tJ) }'lTCL'nt of tl11..·
Thnd. -. p~.·.1k to .111 .1ttorney
11 \lll' V:/ulnn rill' l.t\r t\YO \'l'.Jf\, ·
,llld .hk fo.r ,\ tr.lil ·s ~.·p.ll'.ltJO ll .
he·~ h ~~d t\\o DUI tl t.lllotb (drt·,·ing und er ti ll' intlucnn:), .so Tlw ,\tt ornL'y \\:ill prntcct your
fin.1nci.1l iriten:sts.
L' ltlll'r l lH llllL' of hu r thrc l' Lln lFourth, .l~k your hu i:ib:tnd to
drcn llltl\t prn\'itk ht.;, tr.lll Sic ,n-e You must stay in your
pnrt.ltion to ,md from \\'ork .
homL' to protc r t 1t from ftrt.' .
All th ree· kid' '·'" I chould
Thic may appear rn be .1
k'.l\'L' h1111 Thl'\' ion: tltctr f.lthcr.
but do not CllJOY b~.·mg Jruund drao;;tJc 'iOiut ion , but it's the
lnm . M .nk h.l .' one brother, but only way to get hts .lttL'lltJon
the\' don 't ulk bL'CHl SL' of lvL1 rk '~ .1nd flnd pe-ace of mind . Don'c
dnnkint; Bc"dcs the children feel gudty. You deserve to be
happy. respected and safe.
.md me. M.nk l1.1s no o ne else.
DEAR Al.ll.lY: I om 20
~k rct"usl''i to go for trl'atmcnt. H.c promi~~.·~ to ~top )'L':tn o ld ;1nd 111 a long-term
w\th
my
drinking. but Jocm'r. If he tsu't r elo~tlonship
boyfriend. who 1s Jf1. My prob in bc~.L I C.ln't :-.lcL:-p at night
lem is he's· exp'ericncing probbt:l.Ht'c: I'm .1fr~ud lw 'll burn the
lems having seX' with mo. He
house down .
says he loves me too much to
I want MHk ond other lkobe able to have sex . He says he
holio to know that bcs1dcs
almost thinks of me as a c hild .
co mplic.amg rhc1r own lives,
He also told me that the best
they .ue. nuning the lives of JJl
sex he 's ever had was with
the people Hound thc111.
someone he always argued
I have co ncluded that I would
with . Is t hi s norm.l ? - SEXhe happtcr and have: more pea t" C
LESS IN EDMONTON
of mtnd bdng ,1lone m a trailer

SOCIETY NEWS

housing equity rose so also did thl· amount
that eager len ders urged you to 'i'"';d.
That, perhaps, is the worst of the scene, ot
least for now. While hou'd10ld debt burdens
have bren ri sin g, so have hou sing market val ues. As a consequence, dl'bt to asset ratios an~
not as high as in the ea rly 19Hils.
In fact, a study by Federa l Reserve eco nomists suggests that only "a truly mao;sive
decline in the value of hou se hold osset,"'
would be required to bring debt-to-asset
ratios back to tho se 198(h levck
Well , there have been truly ma" ive declines

in some stocks, of course. but the value of
houses seem' rirm for a while. Still, you h a~e
to wonder how much housmg prices ha~'t"
risen bccau~e stockli havL: n.;;en .
Abo~t all that is known for certain " that
homin g prices in the high-tech San Francisco
R1y area have gone through the roof si multaneo usly with ~tock prices, includin~· paychecks denominat~.·d in o;tuL:k optiom.
The study, cited by the Fiu.u1ci.ll M arkets
Center, a pnvatc-~cc tor think tank that m~m ­
iton Fed acttvmt·~ .m~l rc\t:~lrch. found rh.1t ,,
10 pern·nl ri..,e in thl' tot,il . , Jun.· v.1lliL' oflocal
tech tlrms account~ for a 1 to 2 perc em ri'ic in
Jrca housing pru:: es.
It 'a ll ties togcthl'r; one' ,J ffe cl\ till' other.

Responsible Parties Needed to Make Payments on Over
143 Bank Repossessions and Over-aged Inventory
RIPLEY, WV -- Transports of used
cars and trucks seem to be arriving
daily from across the country. Their
cargo is a sore subject for many
banks, but all is not gloom and
doom.
While these cars often represent
huge losses to banks, they are often
sought after deals for bargain
hunters. But these bargains are often
hard, if not next to impossible, to
find. Generally, used car dealers buy
these vehicles at huge discounts and
ret!lil them to the public - often
selling these cars and trucks for top
. dollar.
But that's all about to change. Guy
Sayre, General Manager of Denbigh
Ga.rrett Ford, has just announced
what may be a bargain-hunter's
dream.
"The banks asked us to help," he
explained. "And I think we can."
"This Thursday, Friday;
&amp;
Saturday, October 19, 20 and 21, we
will sell these vehicles and pass the
savings on to our customers."
When pressed for examples, Sayre
replied, "Well here's a 1998 Ranger. .
.With an $87 d,own payment, your
payments are only $189 a month for

48 months at only 8.75 APR on
approved credit."
"The banks want to put these cars
and trucks on the road," said Reggie
Carmichael, Sales Director of
Denbigh Garrett, "and I think they'll
do just about anything to make this

e

Owen Castle, Denbigh Garrett's
Used Car Director, was quoted as
saying, "We want everyone to know
that this is a first-come-first~scrved
sale. At these prices, the really great
buys will go really fast!"
"We're staffing up fonhis event."
"Trade-ins are not a problem,
either. Just bring in your title or
IS
payment book, and w.e'll take care of
the rest."
Castle we.nt on to say, "We are
confident we can arrange financing
come, .
for anyone with a job, even if
they've had credit problems in the
past!"
Guy Sayr.e
Sayre said, "We have a little· bit of
everything to offer. I think if it can
sale a success."
be driven, we have one."
All the cars and trucks will be
Each of these vehicles has been
clearly marked on the window with
inspected, serviced and is ready to
their discounted prices .
go.
"The payments will also be clearly ·
Denbigh Garrett's Used Car Center
marked," added Sayre, "This should
is located at 1-77 -Exit 132 Fairplain,
make shopping for these bargains
WV. For more information about
eyen easier. Customers can expect to · this special event, contact 800-964find a large selection of vehicles and
3673, extension 700.
prices, from top of the line luxury
cars, 4x4s, minivans and sport
utilities to basic transportation. We
have it all!"
Copyris,ht 1997 Ad\lance Marketing Concepts, L.L.C.

.
a bargain"This
hunters dream, with
customers on a firstfirst-served
basis."

alling

Dolls to be judged
I'OM f- RllY - !lolls 111 t h&lt;.· ,lllllLUI clre"- .1 - dull contc·st ,1re to be
J"l'tll'rncd w TIJ,_· F.lfll\L'r~ B.111k Uy No\·. 13 !&lt;!O th.H thL·y c.m bl' JndgcJ,
dt,pLlyL·d f~H· ,\ nmc ..uu.1 then .lUC'tllHlL'd ~)tffor the benefit of the Unitc~.-1 f i111d fnr tvkig' County.
A b,mk ,pt)kL· ~ tll.lll .... lid yc'itlTLLl~· tlut .lll bur rlu~.·~.· oftht: doll s h.we
. 1h·~.· .1~h· go ne our fo r C\l:-&gt;W11l1Jlg. At lynn~.· llHL'tT~tl'd in p.1rtic1p.1ting in
the bL·n~.· tit proj~.:r whid1 h.1:-. bL'L'll CDndu~.·rr..·d by Th~· Eunwrs B:1nk
t~ H· 11\tlrr..· th.1n l f1 Yi..'&lt;l r' is l11VJtcd tl) ~top by the bank ;1\lr\ pick up on~
o f th~.-• dnlb..
Thl' c n~tum1.: d dolls \\'dl be judg~d in six cw:gorit·s \\'Hh pnze~ r,)f
S10'1",1\'Jng:-. ho11d~ gmllg to the winner nft·ac h cncgory, ;md .1 S200
S.l\' lllg\ hPml to the gLIIld prill' \\'\lllll'l'.
Thr..· c.lt~gones fin c~hib1 t ,1\'L' prL'ttic..;t. bnd::!l, crochet, chJr.lrtL' r,
11){) -f :-.tdt• dre~-. .1nd rountrv. Th e Joll.., .ll'L' provided .1nd p.1ttcrn s for
co..,tlJ !ll ~S .uc ,1\'.LtLlbk .It lilL' ,lu nk tl:n thost.' who WJnt to usc them, or
thL' (rc.lton 111,1\' dc . , igll an orig:lll:\1 wol·k of .1rt.
Both the P(; l\lc:ro;· .md G~lltpol!s b,mks .1·nd rhe1Tuppers Pbin s
lh.111 Lh .H l' p arri c ip:~ ting 111 rhc drc~~-J-doll contest.

Fellowship celebrates birthdays
11

There's ·terror in those stock margin calls

PAlO ADVERTISEMENT

Abigail

REED SV ILLE ~ The I :ll!ics Fellowship of the Re edsville Church
of Chrr!:&gt;t met rcccntlv Jt thr...· homt!' of LJ ~:i:l Short at Chest~:r.
"
E!tzabcth SnHth c'a nducred the businc~s m eeti ng. Get wdl and

BUSINESS MIRROR

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL SPORTS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

DEAR AI3BY: I am 55 and
.retired• M) husband. " Mark ," is
·60 and an alcoholic. I want him
to read this letter in your colI've gone through hell putting
up with his alcoholism. He falls
:tskcp with a cigarette still burn m g bNwc..._•n his fingers. He usc:s
tht.• stove. fnrgtts abuut it , and
falls asleep. lie talks to hunself. I
bt.•lteve h.._• has thr('L' pcrson;lh-

I.Arurr u. dt1 Hlitot'.,., wlcotw. TluJ llto11W N lfu 111M JOO wonb. A.U lmm .n rdjccr
lUI ... RcMfl•lfll WI........ .,.., ••,~w... ,.......,.,l+lo .,..w,.,..nm wiU
IN ,_w;siJH.. Ut11n slw..U k i11 f0011 r.nt, Mldru•ilw lnat,
~...Jmu
TluOfittilJtts lqt'lt* lit 1M tolluiUt Nlcn; Uf rltt r.NIIIU.U o/lfu OIUD J~1Ptd.WlUJV
Ca. '• niUorioJ /Jiocnl, 111tlns odurwis• . ~

lo nlili~

Friday,October20,2000

Wife if alcoholic feels
beaten down by life

What cb these W1o have tn COMAOO ?

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Page AS

thinking of yo u" cards were signed for members and friends. Sun-

sh ine b.1b~ we rl' maJe tu be ddJ\'CrL·d to ln'L'z Wilson and· Grace Wi.!b-.:r.
PJ.m.., were nude to dine in Dcn:mbcr at the Pmnt ofView in Parkersbur~. W.Vo.

Bir;hd.rys celebrated at the met:ttng wne Phyllis H erze r and Pat
M.1rtin. They were honored .for their birthdays with cake and icl'
crL'.llll. ~L'P/cd to those named .md members Rose Niday, Mary Alice
ll'"'· M .mne Wh1tcbead , Thclnu Snllth.Jocli Bissell and Darci, Theda
J) ;ub·, El1.1 Osborne. and gne'h Patty Pi ckens ond Mopn Short.

Sayre receives ·award
MASON. \Xl.V:t . -- DL·e :~ nna
Alexi s S.l)TL', flvC -yc.1 r nld d:ltlglltl' r'
' l)f Do_tlJLl .IIIli Kurt s.,yre of
t\1 ,1~0 11, W.VJ., rL'CC IVL'd SL:CO I\d
ru n nl'r-up
111 .
the.
L!ttlc
:\ /l1qn ' 1\11'~ B.ntk D.1ys P.1gc.1m.
\\'hh h \\',1:-. h~.·ld I ll !)oint Pk,l,,l llt,
W.V1.! ) c,ll lll.l JS thr...· gr.mdd.w gilt c.r
t) l s,·\n.l S.i\Tl' of New I Ll\'L'Il;
\A/ V.1· .111 d .J oy.l' L' [\, l.HHIL' I uf ll.1 l' 111 L'

hotographers!
The Daily Sentinel is looking for the
dozen best photos of Meigs County
people, places or events to be used
in a special "YEAR 2001" calendar.
•
Winning photos will be included 1n
the calendar, along with the
photographer's name and town.
Official Rules
1. All photos must be taken by an amateur photographer, 18 years or older, who currently

resides in Meigs County.
2. Photos tD.ust include either Meigs County people, places or evt:nts.
3. Winning and runners-up photos will become the property of the Daily Sentinel.
Photographers of winning and runner-up photos will be asked to sign a release to Ohio Valley
I
Publishing for news and promotional purposes.
4. Photographers of winning photos will be asked to obtain a photo release from any subject in
the photo, other than the photographer's immediate family.
5. All decisions of the judges will be final.
6. The Sentinel reserves the right to reject any photo.

Write name.• address and phone number on the back of photo entries and mail to:

The Daily Sentinel Photo Contest
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Deeanna Sayre

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Suhsc:rihe 1odar. 992-2/ 5o

I

.I

'.._,

'

·'

'

�Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

.

'

I

Friday, October 20, 2000

Pomeroy, Mlddtepcirt, Ohio

-tene therapy recipient desperate for testing to resume
COLU MBUS, Ohio (AP) - last year, Donovan Decker became
the first recipient of a gene therapy injection to test the safery of a
pomble treatment for muscular dystrophy. Now he's worried lm
cure won't come soon enough.

The experiment ended abruptly after the death of a teen -age r
who received a different gene therapy treatment.
Decker, of Huron, S.D., suffers from limb-girdle muscular dystrophy, a dtSea&lt;e that mostly damages muscles that stabilize the hip s and
shoulders. The 36-year-old air traffic controller cannot walk long
distances. and h1s co ndition is worsening.
Researchers at Ohio State Universiry Medical Center, in conJllncnon with the University of Pennsylvania, inj&lt;eted the therapeutiC gene into • muscle on the top of Decker's foot on Sept. 3,
199'!. The· injection co ntained • cold virus modifi,,J to carry genes
for a muscle: protem Dt&gt;cker WJ S tnissing bc:cause of a geneti..,.· flaw.
The tnJ ecrion was ~utlicicnt only to test the proct:"durc , not to
unpro1·e Deckn's health . Doctors warned that the procedure ,·o uld
\\'(HSCn has ~ ondation :md put hun in :\ whcdchmr L~J.r ltc r than
e,p,·ned. De cker s.1id. but he r&lt;Cllls feeling h.1ppy ;wd hop,·fu l "
tJkmg SU illL' ,)( ()Oil .
" Lf norhmg: ts done I .1m pr~..·tty much going to b~..· m .1 wl11..·ckluir
Ill, thn._
•t: yt"aro;; .myw.1y." Ut:cka ),ud .
.
Adding to Deck~r ·s urg~..·n cy. four of ht s )C\\.'11 s1bhngs h.l\"C rh~
di'll.'.t\1..'. Hi ~ nnly "i l "'ter \\'Hhom H h,I'\ two lbu~hlt'T'\ \\'t(h MD

AI Hartson

CALENDAR
FRIDAY
POMEIUW
M~..·tgs
Cn~ln tv
C,1ncer lnHt.HI\' L'.
Fnd.l\". I :J O p. m . Veteran~
Mcmori.1l Ho sp1t.11 \."onft'rt'rlCc

room .

ington Isla nd si tL" .
invit~..·d .

Middleport Church of Christ
C,l nd td.ltL'S

MikL~

Az1ngL'I'.
R epublican ui1diJate for
U.S. Congrt:ss to bL· pnnc1pJI
'Pl'akt'r. Those interestl'd in
the

POMEROY
Metgs
Count\' Arthnt i~ Support
Group. 10 to 11 :30 a . m .,
Mc1gs County Multipurpose.
S..;nior Center conferenceroom . Scott Wdls , Dire c tor of
Outreach
at
the
Ccnrml
Oh10
Ch.1ptn.
Arthtiti s
FoundJtJon , to present pru grJlll , " Takin g Control of
Arthriti s."
..;T UPPERS

PLAINS
~omc co min g Jubdcc weekend at St. Paul Unttcd
Methodist Churc h . Tupp e rs
Plain s. Starting Friday, 7 :30
p.m. with the Rev. Ga r y
Carlson. speaker, and special
music by Gary Johnson; SHurday, 7 :30 p.m. Rev. Ke ith
, Rade r to speak, with specia l
m u sic by Cratg H a rri so n ;
!i~u!day, potlu ck di nn e r at
s,JQ p.m , service at 7 :30 p.m
with Rev . Terry Cavanaugh ,
speakl•r , Jnd spcnal mu stc by
Li vtng F;uth Pr ~ll St' Team .

POMEROY
ODOT
Dtstn c t 10 , opt:n houst: ;n
~n ew Meq;s County H1 ghw:1y
\
G.1r.1g~. 10 .1 . 111 . L1ntil noon .
\\'ith progr.1m at

11 :30 ,1.111.'

E.,--cfrt· sh ml'llt \ .lt 1.oon. F.ll·ilily lo c.nc d on S. l-l . 7 llL'Jr
Five PoJtl't-. , .lbour .1 mJ}c
sout h of the n ld ~"ra~c .

STIVERSVILLE
R '\:!\' I V.li sc rvi CL'S, Fnd.Jv. SatU;tby .tnd Sund.1y, 7 p. n~ . e:1ch
evcn1ng . D ,lVe D.1i ln· wil l
speJk FndJy .111d Sunday:
Pau l Goodwtn on Saturday.
SpeCia l mu s1c to tnclude
SJng1ng
from
Goodw1n 's
chltrc h Ill Mari et ta on Saturday. a nd Delivered on Sund.Jy.
POMEROY
Friday's
Fun Food and Fellow ship
prOjC Ct, Friday. God's Neighborho od Esc ape for Teens .
Nutritional foods, free of
c harg~.

n d n -vJolcnt games,
co mputer
programs ,
and

the radio I called the hospital," Decker said. "They told me it was a
"A couple of my sisters •« in· wheelchairs all the time," he said.
.
Docker's mo1hcr, Ruth Weber, found out 21 years ago that five of different type of v~rus and process."
In March, the Food and Drug Administration suspended the tnher children haw MD.
als
at the Universiry of Pennsylvania Institute for Human Gene
" It was very traumatic. You h.we your hopes and dreams for your
kids and I thought they wouldn't be able to do anything," Weber Therapy. Gelsinger's family filed a wrongful death lawsuit against hiS
sa1d. "Which was wrong because they all h a . c excelled in their doctors ond th e umversiry in September.
"The entire gene research industry got shook up. Any studies
lives."
Weber is thankful 'just two of her 20 grandchildren have the dis- co nnected to the University of Pennsylvania were stopp~d," said Dr.
case, but IS worrit•d beca use her youngest 'grandchild. at 19, is hav- Jerry Mendell, chairman of Ohio State's neurology department.
Mendell, who performed the procedure on Decker and th e boy,
mg ptoblems more quickly than expectcJ.
" It's hard to watch them whm I h•ve been able to walk all of my said even those two cases will provide a lot of information .
"We are not back ro square one because we made ,good strides
life. I know wliat they miss." she said. " It's • day-bycJay, minute-bytoword
finding out ho\v much the body accepted the gene th~rapy,"
minute stru ggle for them."
Mendell said. "We w ill have a complete analysis of the whole proSht' is frustr.lti..·d oYer the.:- ha lted r::o;pcrimt!nt.
'' I hop!.!' we on get s t.lrtL~d ag.1in on tht'" tri:tl ~," sbt.• said . "When gram in the next few months to present to the FDA."
The Muscular D ystrophy Association spent $29 million this yea r
things Jrt:' 11Hl\'ing yolir hopl's ~t.'ly higher ... ynur s p1rir~ st~y hightoward tindlllg a cure for the 250,000 Americans with the disease
er.
.md still considl·rs genl' cherapy the must promi stng trt:-.ltmcnt,
D~ l' kL""r \\'.1\ th~ first of .1n l'xpcn..:d !i tx p.trticlp :wrs in thL' Mu sculJr Dystrophy Asson .Hion-t"utllkd cxpn mwm. A 1-t-yc~tr-o ld boy. re~e.uch dir~..·ctor Ronald Schenkcnberger sa id.
Wlule ge1w injl'Cnon ~ .1rl' rc-.tricted, the asso ci.nion IS con ccnwhL)Ill donor:. \\"Ould nor l lh.·nut)·. .1l"o rL'CL' I\'cd .111 lll.JL'rrion .
rr.mng o n othL·r .lVl'llUL'"i such a~ ~tem -ce ll rl'se.nch. h e s.1id.
ThL· tL'Stlllg \\' ,\S Stt)pp~..·d .tftL'r J&lt;.'S"L' Gd ... lllg:L' r, I H. (lf lunon, A nz .,
"Bone nurro\\' rr.lll .;p Llllts likl' the mL·thod \I SL'd to trc.lt
d1 1..'d S~..·pt. 17, 11 ) 1 J~ . ti..n1r d:1y" .lftl'r J Unn·L•nny of Pc.•·nmyl\'Jlll ~l
1c.- ukeml:l - .ll"l' ,! llll' ,\11 \ to introdu ce -. rem cdh to thl.:' body," he
. [L' :llll t11Jt'([L'J .1 gt'l1t' llltO hi\ h\' l,'!" ( 0 COl llb ,H .Ill 111hCI"I{L'd dt ~l'.l~L'.
'"A' ~o~)Jl .t" I hc.trd Jbout t he- i'L'llllSyh·.mLl p.Hil'IH ·s dL·Hh 0\'L'r -..ud . " l k C.lll"~l' H "' IHH .1 Ill'\\' pron: dun: the re~triction" .11"1:.' less_''

b .t ttle ti L·ld preser\',ltlon
is~uc. espe c ially PurtLllld rnide l~ ts ..He urged to .1Uend. ·

SUNDAY
POMEROY
R ev 1v.d
Sunday, Monday and Tue sday.
7 p.m. e.lCh ewning at . the
Enterprise Un1ted Meth o diSt
Chu rc h . Tom Gt!l w tll .be the
spe.1ker.
H :HV('S t
C HESTER
O utreach Ch ur c h, Riebel
Road , Apostle Chuck Clayton from Dillsboro, In d.,
speaker, Sunday, 6 p m. scr-

My thanks to you and
Donnafor your continued
support and loving
prayers"

Mary O'Brien

In Memory
Our Pastor
Joe Sayre

Rev; Gary
Jackson &amp; Family
Danville Holiness Church

Thank you and your
all you've done
our church.
bless you.

Mt. Union Baptist

Ash Street Church

1Believil1q God's Word
standing on it makes you
courageous. Thank You!

'Bradford Church of Christ

With much appreciation.

From the Congregation

the Ca rmel to the Sutton
c hurch avatlJblc .
POMEROY - He IS MinIstrie s pr e~e nttng "Re:1lity
Explosion" a t the Mt . H ermon
United
Brethren
Church, 10:30 to 11 :30 Su nday morning anJ 4 tq 6 p m .
at the Pomeroy amphitheater.
To include drama, mus1c,
ImprovJ sat ions, and

Scott &amp; Lori Kimes

Bradbury Church
of Christ

Allen Medcap

Re. Doug Cox

Middleport Nazarene
We Love You.

75 Pearl Street, Middleport
To our pastor with Deepest
Appreciation.

Congregation of
Middleport Nazarene
Church

Ash Street Church
Always listen to the Holy Spirit
1st, then your heart 2nd.
Thanks for aiL your prayers and

From Your Congregation

William Justis
Portland First Church
of the Nazarene
We appreciate you and
love you very much.

·

Les Hayman

Pastor Rick Rule

Ash Street Church
We are thankful you are our
shepherd.

Racine Baptist Church
With much appreciation
and love.jrom

Racine Baptist Church

Langsvllfe Christian Church
We appreciate your ministry
and help of your family.

Freedom Gospel MlsSiOII
With love al\d)lppreciallon

Langsville Christian

Your Church Family

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Racine Flnt Baptist
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesda y Services· 7:00p.m.
Sliver Run Baptist
Pastor: Steven K. Lillie
Sunday School • lOa.m.
Worship - lla.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Old Bethel Ft;e Will Bapdat Cburch
28601 Sl. Rl. 7, Middleport
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evenin&amp; .7:00p.m.
Thursday Services· 7:00

Hort!onl Chufl'h ol Chrl1t In
Cbri11..n Vnlon
Hartford, W.Va.
Paator:Jim Huyhea
Sunday School • 1 a.m.
Wor1hlp · 9:30a.m .. 7:30p.m.
W!!dnnday Service• • 1:l0 p.m.

Moriah Cburch or God
Mile Hill Rd.rRaclnc
Pastor: Brice Ull
Sul'lda~ School • 9:4!5 a.m.
·
Evenlna • 6 p.m ..
Wedne!tday Servicea . 7 p.m.

Morloh Boptlat
Fourth &amp;r. Main St., Middleport
Paalor: Rev. Ollberl Crail, Jr.
Sunday S&lt;:hool ·9:30a.m .
Worahip • 10:45 a.m.
Antiquity Boptl1t
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m,
Sunday Evenina ·6:00p.m.
Rutland Free Will Boptlll
Salem St. ·
Pastor: Rev, Paul Taylor
Sunday School.- 10 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Chetter
Pastor: Jane Beanie
Wors hip- 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Thursday Services· 7 p.m.
Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worshi p -•9 :30 a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.

Church or God of Prophecy
O.J. While: Rd . off St. Rt 160
Pastor: P.J . Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
·. Worship · 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Lona Bottom
Sunday School· 9:JO a.m.
Worship· I 0:30 a. m.

Congregational

Reedsville
Worship-9 :30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
First Su nday of Month · 7:00p.m. service

Trinity Cburch
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Craig Crossman
Wors hip 10:2.5 a. m.
Sunday School 9:15a.m.

Rutland Nazarene Church

Sacred Hearl Church
You are a boliflre, a llulngjlame.
giving light. Thank You.

Parishioners of
Sacred Heart

RACINE PLANING MILL

Tuppers Plains St. Paul
Pastor: Jane Bell'l ti e
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship· 1U a.m. '
Tuesday Services· 7:30p.m.

K&amp;C JEWELERS
212

Paul Taylor

Lamar O'Bryant

Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church
You are greatly appreciated
and loved

First Southern Baptist Church
'The man we call 15 years ago.
Thanksfor b~lng our pastor"
First Southern
Church

Ash Street Church
Thank youjor your frien dship. your
U'Ords oj wisl'(om. advise. ad
especially you r prayers.
A Methodist baptized In a Church

of Christ

a Baptist Minister

E'.

.
'··

Insurance

Products+
F1nanc1al
Sei"Vices

•
• 1'
•~.EN(.'&amp;;
,.

Bill Quickel 992-66n

Gracious is the Lord.
ancl ril:!hteousi )lea, our
Gocl is merciful.
Psalm 116:5

.•

Jlf

Jl[ill~er
unmt! ;lltome ;3Jnc.
Main Street 264 South Second Ave.•Middleport, OH 45760
740·992· 5141
Bruce A. Fisher · Director

Pqmeroy
'

Fu1111no of·

..

Les Hayman

Purl Cbapol
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.
Pomeroy
Pastor: Rod Brower
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:35 a.m.

Rock Springs
Pastor: Ke1th Rader
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
.,.
Worship · lO a.m.
y~_uth Fellowship, Sunday. 6 p.m.
Rutland
Sunday School· 9:3Q a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School -9: 15a.m..
Worship -10:15 a.m.
SnowYille
Sunday School- 10 a.m;
Worship· 9 a.m.
Bcth1ny
Pastor: Oewayne Stuller
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Wednesday Sero.·ices • 10 a.m.

'

Other Churches
Ad1 Stnot Church
Ash St., Middleport
Pas10r Les Hayman
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Sunday SeNice- 6:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Pastor: Brian HukMss
Sun$1la School· 10 a.m .
ship· 11 a.m.
W nesday 7 p.m.
Coolville United Methodlat Pariah
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Chu~h
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services • 7 p.m.

H•nest OutnaCII Ministries
47439 Reibel Rd., Chesler
Pastors: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Appt Ute Centt!r
•fuii·Gospei Chu rch~
Pastors John&amp;: Pally Wade:
603 Second Ave. Mason
773-5017
Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m .
Wednesdar 7 pm

Christl•n Fellowship Cealcr
Salem St., Rutland
Pastor: Robc:rl E. Musser
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 11:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.
Hobson Christlan Fellowship Church
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Youlh Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service, 7:00p.m.
Faith Full Gospel Church
Lona Botto m ~
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowship service 7 p.m.

Reecbvllle Fellow1blp
Church of the Naurene
Pastor:· Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m .
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Syracuse Church or the Nazarene
'
Pastor Mike Adkins
Sunday S~hool · 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 il.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesd1y Services· 7 p.m .
Pomeroy Church or the N11zarene
Pastor: Jan Lavender
·
Sunday School ·9:30a .m.
Worship. 10:30 a. m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Clirton Tabernacle Churt'h
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School - IU a.m.
Worship. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
New Ure Vkt:ory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH ,
Pastor: Bill Slaten
Sunday Services· 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday· 7 p. m. &amp; Youlh 7 p.m. '

Full Gospel Church of tht Living Savior
Rt.338, Anliquily
Pastor: Jesse Morris
Ass!. PastOr!; : Jim Morris
Services: Saturday 7:30p.m .

God's Temple or Praise
3166.5 McQuire Rd . Pomeroy, Oh io
Pastor: Wayne Balcolm
Services: Thurs. Niles 7:00pm
New church No Sunday service establis,hed.

Pentecostal
Pentecostal Assembly
St. Rt. 124. Racin e
Pastor: William Hoba~k
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesda y Services · 7 p.m.
Middleport Pentecostal
,.,
Third Ave .
,
Pastor: Rev. Chnk Baker
.
. Sunday School . 10 a.m.
.,
E...·ening • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

.,

.,

Presbyterian

Syr-.c\111 Ml11lon

Syracuse First United Presbyterian
Pas10r: Rev. Kr isana Robinson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.

Rev. Mike Thompson,Putor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evenina • 6 p.m .
Wedne¢ay Service· 7 p.m.

Dye1vllle Communlly Chun:h
Sunda~ School-9:30a.m.
Worth(p ·10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Church of the N•urene
PasiOr: Allen Midcap
Sunday School-9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m .
Wednesday Services· 7 ,p.m.
Pastor: Allen Midcap

R~olclng Ute Church
500 N. 2nd Ave ., Middleport
Pastor: Mike Fore man
Pastor: Emeritus I.Jiwrcncc Foreman
Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Sc:rvice5 · 7 p.m .

1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse

Hocldnaporl Church
Orand Street
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worahlp- lla.m.
W•dnuday Sef\lictl • 8 p.m.

Mlddl~:port

Stlnrsville Community Church
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewell
Sunday Services - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Thursday · 7:00p.m .

Faith V.tley Tabernlcte Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmell Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thur~ay Service · 1 p.m.

Hazel Community Chun:h
OffRl.124
Putor: Edsel Han
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wor1hip -10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

N&lt;Jz&lt;Jrene

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev . Blackwood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m .
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Faith Clulpel
923 S. Third Sl., Middleport
Pastor Michael Pangia
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Betbtl Church
Townahlp Rd., 468C
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worahlp • 10 a.m.
Wednuday Servicea • 10 a.m.

TorchChur&lt;h
Co. Rd. 63 ·
Sunday S&lt;:hool ·9:30a.m.
Wor1hip .. 10:30.a.m.

F•lth Fellowship Crusade ror Christ
PasiOr: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Sc:Nict : Friday, 7 p.m.

Harrlsonvllle Pre1byterlan Cburch ·
Worsh ip· 9 a.m.
Sunday School -9:45a.m.
Middleport Pre1byterl1n
Sunday School •·9 a.m.
Wor11hip • 10 a.m.

Sl'venth-Day Adventist
Se"nlb·Day Adventlat
Mulberry Hla. Rd ., Pomeroy
Pa~lor : Roy Lawiri!ky
Saturday Services:
Sabbatt' Schuol - :Z p.m.
Worahlp • 3 p.m.

Mont Choptl Church
Sunday 1c:hool· 10 a.m.
Wor~hlp • 11 1.m.
Wednetday Serv ice· 7 p.m.
Folth Go1pol Church
Lona Botto m
Sunday School • 9:30a.m .
Worohlp • 10:45 a.m., 7,30 p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hennon United Brethren
In Chri•l Chun:h
Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor; Robc:tl Sanders
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wors hip - 10:30 a.m. , 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service~· 7:30p.m.

Mt. Olive Commually Church
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Even in&amp;. 1 p.m.
Wedneday Serv i~;e • 7 p."'.
Unlltd Faith Church
Rl. 7 on Pomeroy By·Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr,
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7 p. m.
, Wednesday Service ·. 7 p.m .
Full Gospel U1Jhlhouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hun1er
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday. 7:30p.m.

Eden Unlled Brethren In Chrlll
2 1/2 miles north of Reedsville
on State Route 124
Paslor: Rev . Robert Markle y
Sunday S~hool. II a.m.
Sunday Worship· !0:00a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service· 7:30p.m.

South Bethel New Testament
Silver Ridge
Paslar: Robe rt Barber
Sunday School- 9 a. m.
Sun, Worsh ip· 10: 10 a.m . , 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service:- 7 p.m .

'
'

INSURANCE

j

Mlntnvllle
Pastor: Bob Robinso n
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

Fairview Dible Church
Letart, W.Va. Rt. 1
Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 7:00p.m .
Wednesday Bible Sludy- 7:00pm.

Cjhorch·announcements spon~ored by these area merchants

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc.

Your Flock.

Alft'td

Father Walter Heinz
Rutland Nazarene
With Appreciation from your
congregation of.

Hoath (Middleport)
Pastor: Rob Brower
Suriday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 11 :00 a.m.

Rlldne

·Pastor : Ja ne Beanie
Sunday Schoo l ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Syracuse Flnt Cburch or God
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m .
Even ing Servites· 6:JO p.m .
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

...

Middleport Community Churth
.57.5 Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School10 a.m.
Evening· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SeNicc · 7:30p.m.

Mela:a Cooperative Parish
Northeaal Cluater

Rutland Churth o!God
Pastor : Ron Heath
Sunday Worsh ip· 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Pa5tor: William Ju~is
Sunday Scbool -10:00 a.m.
Momin&amp; Worship - 10:4.5 a.m.
Sunday Service - 6:30p.m.

East Letart
Paslor: Brilm Harkness
Sunday School · 10 a.m .
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Mt. Olive Vnlted Methodl1t
011124 behind Wilkesville
Paator: Rev. Ralph Spire1
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip'·10:30a.m., 7p.m .
Thunday Scr'&lt;~lcca • 7 p.m.

White's Chapel Wtsle}'aa
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

PordaDd Fl"t Cburda or liM- Nl.l.lnM

Harrlsouvllle Comm1,1alty Church
Pastor: Therq,n Durham
Sunday· 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

Grohom United Mathodlll
Worahlp • 9:30 o.m. (!st.!&lt; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 41h Sun)
Wcdne1day Service • 7:30p.m. '

M~

Rullud Cbvdt or the N...,..e
PuiOr: Rev. Samuel W. Basye

MomlngSmr
Paslor: Dewayne Stuller
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

United Methodist

Chut ell of God

Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Services
t'.-loot Gospel MIJstoa
Bald Knob, Dn Co. Rd. 31
..
Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford
• •
Sunday School · 9:30a.m
Worship· 7 p.m.

The Church or Jesus

St. Paul Lulhenn Church
Corner Sycamore &amp; SecOnd Sl ., Pomeroy
·
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
SundBy School • 51:4.5 a.m.
Wor1hip • 11 a.m.

U111011

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sel"'oliees • 7 p.m.

:The Believen' Fellowship Ministry
New Lime Rd ., Rulland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wedn esday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Our Saviour Lulhtran Church
Walnut and Henry Sis., Ravenswood, W.Va .
Pastor : Da vi d Russell
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m .
Worshi p - II a.m.

Church ol Chrlat
lntenectlon 7and 124 W
Evangelist: Dennis· Saraent •
Sunday Bible Sludy ·9:30a.m.
Wor!hlp: 10:30 1 . m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible S111dy · 7 p.m.

Carletoe lottnleiMMtlloatlotul Cb....,.
Kin,lt&amp;burv R01d
I

SWlday Scllool- 9:30a.m.
Worship - l0:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday ScNic:cs- 7 p.m.

fl•twoodl
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School· 10 a. m.
Worship · 11 a.m.
Foresl Run
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worsh ip • 9 a.m.

CMoler Clltll'dl ., ... N Pastor: Rev. Herben Grate

C•rmei-Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dc:wayne Stuller
Sunday Scliool ·9: 30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed . 7:06p.m.

St. John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Worship · 9:00a.m.
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.

Churdi of ChriiC
Pastor: Justin Campbell
Sunday school9:30 a.m.
Norman Will, superintendent
Sunday worship -10:30 a.m.

Cht 1st ian

t:.~rise

Paslor: Ketth Rader
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
WorshiP' - 9 a.m.

Lutheran

De~:ter

Hllllldt H•ptltt Church
St . Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev . James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship· 11a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sef\llces -1 p.m.

-ry(Sy....,..)
Pastor: Bob Robin10n
Sunday School • 9:4S a.m .
Worship • 11 a.m.
Wednesday Servica ·7:30 p.m.

Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ
or Latter Day Saints
· Portland· Racine Rd.
Pas\or: Jerry Singer
Sunday School -9:30 a. m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.
Wed nesday Services-7 :00p.m.

Christ or Latter-Day Saints
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446· 7486
Sunday School10:20·ll a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11:0.5 ·12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9· 10:.15 s.m.
Homemaking meeljng, lsi Thur!. • 7 p.m.

Reedt•llle Church or Christ
Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School : 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

992-3978

The Congregation of
Faith Full Gospel

Latter-Day Saints

Hemlock Grove Church
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school· 10:30 a.m.
Worship . 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Syracuse

Gospel
With Appreciation and Love from

Laurtl Cllrf free Methodist Church
Pastor: Donuld Balis
Sunday School · 9:JO a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a. m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Langsville Christian Church
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worsh ip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7~30 p.m.

Cabinet Making

Faith F1.11

Hysell Run Holiness Church
Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible: Study and Youlh - 7 p.m.

Hickory Hills Church of Christ
Evangelist Mike: Moore
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m., 6:.30 p.m.
Wednesday Sendces- 7 p.m.

Mill Work

Pastor Steve "'"~;'u

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Churth
15 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev . Doug Cox
Sunday Worship -9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Bradrord Church or Christ
Corner of St Rt 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minisler: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship·- 8:00a.m . , 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:00 p.m.

Sacred Heart Catholic Church
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 9.92·5898
Pastor: Rev. Walte r E. Hei nz
Sat. Con. 4:4.5-S: I S~.in .; ~ass· 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. ·8:45·9.15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass-9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass-8:30 a.m.

Rev. Roger.Willford

Piue Grove Bible Holiness Church
1/2 mile off Rt. 325
Pas1or: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School ·9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wed nesday Service-7:30p.m.

Rutland Church or Christ
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Wor_,ship- 10:30 a.m ., 7 p.m.

Catholic

Robert E. Musser

Rose of Sharon Holiness Churth
Leading Creek Rd. , Rutland
Paslor. Rev . Dewey King
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday wors hip -7 p.m . .
Wednesday prayer meeiing· 7 p.m.

Bndbury Cbun:h or Christ
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m.

M~

··-

~ utl u Lk d!nllvl .It () _10 p 111
~11d thl' fii"L' dq. ~-ll"L' {L',IIll \\"lJI

Pomeroy Flnt Bapllst
East Main St..
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.

Fotwt Run Boptlat
P11tor : Arlua Hurt
Sunday Sehool· 10 a.m.
Worahlp • 1.1 a.m.

........'

Calvary Pllarlm Chapel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Charles McKenzie
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 11 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Tuppers Plain Churth pf Christ
Instrumental
· Worship Service - 9 a.m.
Communion· 10 a.m.
Sunday School· 10:15 a.m.
Youth- 5:30pm Sunday
Bible Sludy Wednesday 7 pm

f•llh Baptlat Church
Railroad St., Maaon
Sunday School ·10 a.m.
Worahlp- 11 a.m., 6 p.m .
Wednctday Servlcea • 7 p.m.

.

r;r.lll ~l'

Rulland First Baptist Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.

Communlly C.urd1
Pas\or: Rev. Amos Tillis
Main Street, Rutland
Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service-7 p.m.

DHvlllt Holi•M Church
31057 Slate Route 325, Langsvlle
Pastor: Gary Jackson
Sunday school · 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service· 7 p.m.

Zioa Church or Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rtl43)
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wo~hip - 10:30 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.
cs

Vlclory H•ptlat lndtpendant
'2l N. 2nd St. Middleporo
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Wol'lhip • 10a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servlcet • 7 p.m.

lism .

rn llon~protlt ~rc1up .. \\ I\lllng
to .ltllllllii H l' lll1..'~·ttl1 ~..~&gt; ,l !Hi
"~jll'l t .d L'\ L'IH\ I h~..· .tknd .!r ~~

Hope Baptist Church (Southera)
570 Grant St., Middlepon
Sunday school · 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Btthlehem Btptilt Church
Great Bend, Route 124, ,Racine:, OH
Pas1or : Daniel Mecea
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 6:00p.m.

Les Hayman

I

Btarwallow Rld&amp;e Cburdl or Christ
Pastor:Terry Stewart
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\'iecs. 6:30p.m.

Mt. Union Bapllst
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday Schoo1·9:45 a.m.
~ Evening· 6:30p.m.
Wednesd11y Servi&lt;:es - 6:30p.m.

Ma1ry Janice
Lavender

Holiness

Keao Cb11l'&lt;b o!Cbrist
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sundily !khool · 10:30 a.m.
. Paslot-Jcffrey Wallace
1st and 3rd Sunday

Moronotlul Baptist Cll•rch
Burlingham • 742·7606
Pastor: John Swanson
Sunday School-10:00a.m.
Morning Service ll:OO a.m.
Evening Service ·6:00 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30 p.m.

Bradbury Church of Christ

cud s. Center open 6 p.m . to
10 :30 p. m . Fricby and Sattltday mghts.

i"n r1 .1!1 p . 111 . \ .ltu t·d.n· .1r t h L·

Baptist

c..~n~a_,.

326 E. Main s't., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bernacki, Rev. Katharin FOSler
Rev. DebQrah Rankin , Oergy
Sunday: Adult EduCition Sunday School JO:lS a.m .
Holy Eucharist 11:00 a.m.
Wednesday: Holy Eucharist 5:00p.m.

Middleport Cbllt&lt;b or Cllrilt
~lh and Main
P"a!itor: AI Hartson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:1.5, 10:30 a.m .; 1 p.m.
Wedm$day Services • 7 p.m.

Uberty Allembly Ill God
P.O. Bo:w: 467, Dudding Lane
Muon, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sundly Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

HyseURun Hollness Church

From your whole
congregation

Groce E - Chord!

Po...,..y WeiUide Cbllt&lt;b ol Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School · 11 a.m.
Worship . IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Assembly of God

Syracuse Church of
the Nazarene

evange-

HARRISONVILlE
Harrisonville Senior Cit izcns, n:gular m e eting, town
ha ll, Monday. I I 30 p.m .
SATURDAY
Blood
pte ss un.· screen1ngs
P OME R OY
Meigs
.Count y Rcr1red Te ac her s ·will be ava da bk
]to;so c latton , S:nurday n oo n at
POMEROY
Wind1ng
:J'rinity Church. Pomeroy.
Trail
Garden
.
Cl11b
,
Monday.
,!l~eakn,
P e rr y Varnadoe,
tJlcig s County
economic 7 :30 p.m . home or Add .ll o u
lewi s Du c·s p .ly.,ble .' T.1ke
~c.:vclopment chrcnor.
J
p l.IIH 'i t o cxch.1ngc.
•
: LO NC: BOTTOM - Mt.
TUESDAY
Dlll.'l' Church . ..'llel11·e red " tD
ling .1r 7 p m . ) ,lturJ.tv .lt t),~.,.
RACINE - RA C () " "'cttng. Tu ~..· .. li.ty. Sc.H Mdl P.1rk.
~hur~h .
r~ ·J (I
p 111 . \\' Jt h -.ou p .1 11d
.:
' SALEM CENTE I\ - '&gt;t.1r ...111 d \\'l c h po r 1u c k .
(~ r .IIJ ~t· 77';-J. .l lhi ~t.ll _lunJ,)r
t~r .lll !.!;L' /'!7~ \\Ill hold .1 Ctli11IIH· ( :ol nlll,tl Il~ 1\ ( .1 It- lllill
~IIU1li~ y Jf.IlJ u\\"L'l'll pHl\ . :1. "\1) I\ )'tlblt\hl'lj ,1, ,l fl"l'l..' '&gt;L' I"\I ll"

Cllurdl at J..., Cbrist
Apotlolk Folth
NewUma Road
Sunday, 10 a.m. and 7:30p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

Rev. Mike Adkins

We love you and appreciate
all that you do

Chltl'dt fiiCIIriol
212W. Main St.
Minister: Neil Proudf001
Sunday Sdlool • 9:30 ra.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Sunday Sthool- 10:30 a.m.
Even in, -7:30 p.m.

Tom Runyon

You are truly appreciated

Ep1scopal

Putor: Jame.!l Miller

Mark Michael

RACINE H o me romJllg. C.nmL'i-Sll tton U n itcd
Methodist C hur ch. C.mncl
.11t1! ll.lsbJn R oJds, S und .n ·.
'! :31 1 a. m . Sunday Sc h oo l:
worship. lll :-1-5 a.m ., picni c
cnry-1 n d1Hne r, 12 :.10 p . m .
Afte r n uo n mu li tcal Sc..'l"\'lCC
fc.Hunng local ch urch t.d t:IH,
lt Sutton Budding begin.ning
at 2 p.m. Wa gon rides from

1

Cllurch of Chnst

C'lhlrdrl.t .leMM ClaiR
,.,k
VanZindl and ward d.

First Baptist Church
Pastor: Mark Morrow
61h and Palmer St:, Middleport
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m .
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

The Danville
Holiness Church

-1

Apostolic

of Bradford Church
of Christ

The Elders, Deacons,
and Deaconess'

\'lCe.

Ministry Coming
POMEROY -The H e Is
Min iStri es will be bringin g
" Reality Explosion" to Meigs
Co unty Sunday. Th e Min istries will be pre se ntin g the
gospe l
of Jesus
Ch ri st
throu g h drama , music, improYisat io n s, a nd
evangdis m
fro m I 0:.'\0 to II :J O a . m . at
t h e Mt. !I ee m on Uni1eJ
Bn:thren Churc h and from -+
rn 6 p .m . .lt the P_o mt:roy
.11 11p hi che;l tL'r

•

First Sou1hem Baptlsl
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
S4,nday School-9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:4S a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7:00 p.m.

We thank God for your
family daily!

Whom we loved
very much.

Les Hayman

Dou! Shamblin

-

The Dilly Sentinel • P1ge A 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

-~

992-3785

.

Racine mower Clinic
2 Factory Trained Briggs
&amp; Stratton Mechanics
Racine, OH
1·740-949·2804

590 East Ma1n Street • Pomeroy, OH 45769
740·992-5444
James R. Acree, Jr. · Director

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES .
214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

NEW HAVEN
FUNERAL HOME

"1/f'e occtpt Prmeed 'Timtsji:rs "

812·1200
Lundy Brown
Director

Regan Brown

~

EWING FUNERAL HOME

Dignity and Service Always
'

Established 1913

992-2121 '

17 4 Layne Street 106 Mulberry Ave.

Pomeroy

Time to clean house? Crow's Family Restaurant

MEIGS MARINE
SALES &amp; SERVICE
42121 Enterprise Rd .
Pomeroy, OH 45769

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

CLASSIFIED SECTION!

992-5432

992-1303

SWISHER &amp; LOiiSE
PHARMACY
..::..

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

.:Always &amp; _'Forcl'cr

We Fill Doctors '
Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

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

992-7028

"'Fio rt,ers for all ocrasrorrs "

9ft Shop

'

.

518 E. Main St. Pomeroy, OH
992-1161

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

-

Office Serulce 6 Supply
I

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

992-6376

�Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

.

'

I

Friday, October 20, 2000

Pomeroy, Mlddtepcirt, Ohio

-tene therapy recipient desperate for testing to resume
COLU MBUS, Ohio (AP) - last year, Donovan Decker became
the first recipient of a gene therapy injection to test the safery of a
pomble treatment for muscular dystrophy. Now he's worried lm
cure won't come soon enough.

The experiment ended abruptly after the death of a teen -age r
who received a different gene therapy treatment.
Decker, of Huron, S.D., suffers from limb-girdle muscular dystrophy, a dtSea&lt;e that mostly damages muscles that stabilize the hip s and
shoulders. The 36-year-old air traffic controller cannot walk long
distances. and h1s co ndition is worsening.
Researchers at Ohio State Universiry Medical Center, in conJllncnon with the University of Pennsylvania, inj&lt;eted the therapeutiC gene into • muscle on the top of Decker's foot on Sept. 3,
199'!. The· injection co ntained • cold virus modifi,,J to carry genes
for a muscle: protem Dt&gt;cker WJ S tnissing bc:cause of a geneti..,.· flaw.
The tnJ ecrion was ~utlicicnt only to test the proct:"durc , not to
unpro1·e Deckn's health . Doctors warned that the procedure ,·o uld
\\'(HSCn has ~ ondation :md put hun in :\ whcdchmr L~J.r ltc r than
e,p,·ned. De cker s.1id. but he r&lt;Cllls feeling h.1ppy ;wd hop,·fu l "
tJkmg SU illL' ,)( ()Oil .
" Lf norhmg: ts done I .1m pr~..·tty much going to b~..· m .1 wl11..·ckluir
Ill, thn._
•t: yt"aro;; .myw.1y." Ut:cka ),ud .
.
Adding to Deck~r ·s urg~..·n cy. four of ht s )C\\.'11 s1bhngs h.l\"C rh~
di'll.'.t\1..'. Hi ~ nnly "i l "'ter \\'Hhom H h,I'\ two lbu~hlt'T'\ \\'t(h MD

AI Hartson

CALENDAR
FRIDAY
POMEIUW
M~..·tgs
Cn~ln tv
C,1ncer lnHt.HI\' L'.
Fnd.l\". I :J O p. m . Veteran~
Mcmori.1l Ho sp1t.11 \."onft'rt'rlCc

room .

ington Isla nd si tL" .
invit~..·d .

Middleport Church of Christ
C,l nd td.ltL'S

MikL~

Az1ngL'I'.
R epublican ui1diJate for
U.S. Congrt:ss to bL· pnnc1pJI
'Pl'akt'r. Those interestl'd in
the

POMEROY
Metgs
Count\' Arthnt i~ Support
Group. 10 to 11 :30 a . m .,
Mc1gs County Multipurpose.
S..;nior Center conferenceroom . Scott Wdls , Dire c tor of
Outreach
at
the
Ccnrml
Oh10
Ch.1ptn.
Arthtiti s
FoundJtJon , to present pru grJlll , " Takin g Control of
Arthriti s."
..;T UPPERS

PLAINS
~omc co min g Jubdcc weekend at St. Paul Unttcd
Methodist Churc h . Tupp e rs
Plain s. Starting Friday, 7 :30
p.m. with the Rev. Ga r y
Carlson. speaker, and special
music by Gary Johnson; SHurday, 7 :30 p.m. Rev. Ke ith
, Rade r to speak, with specia l
m u sic by Cratg H a rri so n ;
!i~u!day, potlu ck di nn e r at
s,JQ p.m , service at 7 :30 p.m
with Rev . Terry Cavanaugh ,
speakl•r , Jnd spcnal mu stc by
Li vtng F;uth Pr ~ll St' Team .

POMEROY
ODOT
Dtstn c t 10 , opt:n houst: ;n
~n ew Meq;s County H1 ghw:1y
\
G.1r.1g~. 10 .1 . 111 . L1ntil noon .
\\'ith progr.1m at

11 :30 ,1.111.'

E.,--cfrt· sh ml'llt \ .lt 1.oon. F.ll·ilily lo c.nc d on S. l-l . 7 llL'Jr
Five PoJtl't-. , .lbour .1 mJ}c
sout h of the n ld ~"ra~c .

STIVERSVILLE
R '\:!\' I V.li sc rvi CL'S, Fnd.Jv. SatU;tby .tnd Sund.1y, 7 p. n~ . e:1ch
evcn1ng . D ,lVe D.1i ln· wil l
speJk FndJy .111d Sunday:
Pau l Goodwtn on Saturday.
SpeCia l mu s1c to tnclude
SJng1ng
from
Goodw1n 's
chltrc h Ill Mari et ta on Saturday. a nd Delivered on Sund.Jy.
POMEROY
Friday's
Fun Food and Fellow ship
prOjC Ct, Friday. God's Neighborho od Esc ape for Teens .
Nutritional foods, free of
c harg~.

n d n -vJolcnt games,
co mputer
programs ,
and

the radio I called the hospital," Decker said. "They told me it was a
"A couple of my sisters •« in· wheelchairs all the time," he said.
.
Docker's mo1hcr, Ruth Weber, found out 21 years ago that five of different type of v~rus and process."
In March, the Food and Drug Administration suspended the tnher children haw MD.
als
at the Universiry of Pennsylvania Institute for Human Gene
" It was very traumatic. You h.we your hopes and dreams for your
kids and I thought they wouldn't be able to do anything," Weber Therapy. Gelsinger's family filed a wrongful death lawsuit against hiS
sa1d. "Which was wrong because they all h a . c excelled in their doctors ond th e umversiry in September.
"The entire gene research industry got shook up. Any studies
lives."
Weber is thankful 'just two of her 20 grandchildren have the dis- co nnected to the University of Pennsylvania were stopp~d," said Dr.
case, but IS worrit•d beca use her youngest 'grandchild. at 19, is hav- Jerry Mendell, chairman of Ohio State's neurology department.
Mendell, who performed the procedure on Decker and th e boy,
mg ptoblems more quickly than expectcJ.
" It's hard to watch them whm I h•ve been able to walk all of my said even those two cases will provide a lot of information .
"We are not back ro square one because we made ,good strides
life. I know wliat they miss." she said. " It's • day-bycJay, minute-bytoword
finding out ho\v much the body accepted the gene th~rapy,"
minute stru ggle for them."
Mendell said. "We w ill have a complete analysis of the whole proSht' is frustr.lti..·d oYer the.:- ha lted r::o;pcrimt!nt.
'' I hop!.!' we on get s t.lrtL~d ag.1in on tht'" tri:tl ~," sbt.• said . "When gram in the next few months to present to the FDA."
The Muscular D ystrophy Association spent $29 million this yea r
things Jrt:' 11Hl\'ing yolir hopl's ~t.'ly higher ... ynur s p1rir~ st~y hightoward tindlllg a cure for the 250,000 Americans with the disease
er.
.md still considl·rs genl' cherapy the must promi stng trt:-.ltmcnt,
D~ l' kL""r \\'.1\ th~ first of .1n l'xpcn..:d !i tx p.trticlp :wrs in thL' Mu sculJr Dystrophy Asson .Hion-t"utllkd cxpn mwm. A 1-t-yc~tr-o ld boy. re~e.uch dir~..·ctor Ronald Schenkcnberger sa id.
Wlule ge1w injl'Cnon ~ .1rl' rc-.tricted, the asso ci.nion IS con ccnwhL)Ill donor:. \\"Ould nor l lh.·nut)·. .1l"o rL'CL' I\'cd .111 lll.JL'rrion .
rr.mng o n othL·r .lVl'llUL'"i such a~ ~tem -ce ll rl'se.nch. h e s.1id.
ThL· tL'Stlllg \\' ,\S Stt)pp~..·d .tftL'r J&lt;.'S"L' Gd ... lllg:L' r, I H. (lf lunon, A nz .,
"Bone nurro\\' rr.lll .;p Llllts likl' the mL·thod \I SL'd to trc.lt
d1 1..'d S~..·pt. 17, 11 ) 1 J~ . ti..n1r d:1y" .lftl'r J Unn·L•nny of Pc.•·nmyl\'Jlll ~l
1c.- ukeml:l - .ll"l' ,! llll' ,\11 \ to introdu ce -. rem cdh to thl.:' body," he
. [L' :llll t11Jt'([L'J .1 gt'l1t' llltO hi\ h\' l,'!" ( 0 COl llb ,H .Ill 111hCI"I{L'd dt ~l'.l~L'.
'"A' ~o~)Jl .t" I hc.trd Jbout t he- i'L'llllSyh·.mLl p.Hil'IH ·s dL·Hh 0\'L'r -..ud . " l k C.lll"~l' H "' IHH .1 Ill'\\' pron: dun: the re~triction" .11"1:.' less_''

b .t ttle ti L·ld preser\',ltlon
is~uc. espe c ially PurtLllld rnide l~ ts ..He urged to .1Uend. ·

SUNDAY
POMEROY
R ev 1v.d
Sunday, Monday and Tue sday.
7 p.m. e.lCh ewning at . the
Enterprise Un1ted Meth o diSt
Chu rc h . Tom Gt!l w tll .be the
spe.1ker.
H :HV('S t
C HESTER
O utreach Ch ur c h, Riebel
Road , Apostle Chuck Clayton from Dillsboro, In d.,
speaker, Sunday, 6 p m. scr-

My thanks to you and
Donnafor your continued
support and loving
prayers"

Mary O'Brien

In Memory
Our Pastor
Joe Sayre

Rev; Gary
Jackson &amp; Family
Danville Holiness Church

Thank you and your
all you've done
our church.
bless you.

Mt. Union Baptist

Ash Street Church

1Believil1q God's Word
standing on it makes you
courageous. Thank You!

'Bradford Church of Christ

With much appreciation.

From the Congregation

the Ca rmel to the Sutton
c hurch avatlJblc .
POMEROY - He IS MinIstrie s pr e~e nttng "Re:1lity
Explosion" a t the Mt . H ermon
United
Brethren
Church, 10:30 to 11 :30 Su nday morning anJ 4 tq 6 p m .
at the Pomeroy amphitheater.
To include drama, mus1c,
ImprovJ sat ions, and

Scott &amp; Lori Kimes

Bradbury Church
of Christ

Allen Medcap

Re. Doug Cox

Middleport Nazarene
We Love You.

75 Pearl Street, Middleport
To our pastor with Deepest
Appreciation.

Congregation of
Middleport Nazarene
Church

Ash Street Church
Always listen to the Holy Spirit
1st, then your heart 2nd.
Thanks for aiL your prayers and

From Your Congregation

William Justis
Portland First Church
of the Nazarene
We appreciate you and
love you very much.

·

Les Hayman

Pastor Rick Rule

Ash Street Church
We are thankful you are our
shepherd.

Racine Baptist Church
With much appreciation
and love.jrom

Racine Baptist Church

Langsvllfe Christian Church
We appreciate your ministry
and help of your family.

Freedom Gospel MlsSiOII
With love al\d)lppreciallon

Langsville Christian

Your Church Family

h.d l

I ilL'rL' \dll bL·

. e l'. l &lt;.'[l(l' .It

7 .Jfl f1

111

.,'
l'Ol,TLANil
R .ill v .1 t
iLltl' p.nk 11 1 Po n l.1111..i. rcg.~rJ­
i_n g thL· pre-.cn·.Jrlnll nf HutT•

n ot dnl~lll'll 1!1 pi-oll!orc •.Jic-..
()l

fund

l tl'lll~
~ p :lCL'

r.ll,L'l~

uf .l ilY t\·j,l'
,lf"L' p nntrd !!lll\· .1-.
pl·nnJt~ .111d ~ .1n nor bl·

gtl.lLlJHL'I..'d to he

pnlltL'd

'&gt;~lL'ClfiL .lll1111lh·r ot d,!\''&gt;

.1

Racine Flnt Baptist
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesda y Services· 7:00p.m.
Sliver Run Baptist
Pastor: Steven K. Lillie
Sunday School • lOa.m.
Worship - lla.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Old Bethel Ft;e Will Bapdat Cburch
28601 Sl. Rl. 7, Middleport
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evenin&amp; .7:00p.m.
Thursday Services· 7:00

Hort!onl Chufl'h ol Chrl1t In
Cbri11..n Vnlon
Hartford, W.Va.
Paator:Jim Huyhea
Sunday School • 1 a.m.
Wor1hlp · 9:30a.m .. 7:30p.m.
W!!dnnday Service• • 1:l0 p.m.

Moriah Cburch or God
Mile Hill Rd.rRaclnc
Pastor: Brice Ull
Sul'lda~ School • 9:4!5 a.m.
·
Evenlna • 6 p.m ..
Wedne!tday Servicea . 7 p.m.

Morloh Boptlat
Fourth &amp;r. Main St., Middleport
Paalor: Rev. Ollberl Crail, Jr.
Sunday S&lt;:hool ·9:30a.m .
Worahip • 10:45 a.m.
Antiquity Boptl1t
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m,
Sunday Evenina ·6:00p.m.
Rutland Free Will Boptlll
Salem St. ·
Pastor: Rev, Paul Taylor
Sunday School.- 10 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Chetter
Pastor: Jane Beanie
Wors hip- 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Thursday Services· 7 p.m.
Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worshi p -•9 :30 a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.

Church or God of Prophecy
O.J. While: Rd . off St. Rt 160
Pastor: P.J . Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
·. Worship · 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Lona Bottom
Sunday School· 9:JO a.m.
Worship· I 0:30 a. m.

Congregational

Reedsville
Worship-9 :30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
First Su nday of Month · 7:00p.m. service

Trinity Cburch
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Craig Crossman
Wors hip 10:2.5 a. m.
Sunday School 9:15a.m.

Rutland Nazarene Church

Sacred Hearl Church
You are a boliflre, a llulngjlame.
giving light. Thank You.

Parishioners of
Sacred Heart

RACINE PLANING MILL

Tuppers Plains St. Paul
Pastor: Jane Bell'l ti e
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship· 1U a.m. '
Tuesday Services· 7:30p.m.

K&amp;C JEWELERS
212

Paul Taylor

Lamar O'Bryant

Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church
You are greatly appreciated
and loved

First Southern Baptist Church
'The man we call 15 years ago.
Thanksfor b~lng our pastor"
First Southern
Church

Ash Street Church
Thank youjor your frien dship. your
U'Ords oj wisl'(om. advise. ad
especially you r prayers.
A Methodist baptized In a Church

of Christ

a Baptist Minister

E'.

.
'··

Insurance

Products+
F1nanc1al
Sei"Vices

•
• 1'
•~.EN(.'&amp;;
,.

Bill Quickel 992-66n

Gracious is the Lord.
ancl ril:!hteousi )lea, our
Gocl is merciful.
Psalm 116:5

.•

Jlf

Jl[ill~er
unmt! ;lltome ;3Jnc.
Main Street 264 South Second Ave.•Middleport, OH 45760
740·992· 5141
Bruce A. Fisher · Director

Pqmeroy
'

Fu1111no of·

..

Les Hayman

Purl Cbapol
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.
Pomeroy
Pastor: Rod Brower
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:35 a.m.

Rock Springs
Pastor: Ke1th Rader
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
.,.
Worship · lO a.m.
y~_uth Fellowship, Sunday. 6 p.m.
Rutland
Sunday School· 9:3Q a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School -9: 15a.m..
Worship -10:15 a.m.
SnowYille
Sunday School- 10 a.m;
Worship· 9 a.m.
Bcth1ny
Pastor: Oewayne Stuller
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Wednesday Sero.·ices • 10 a.m.

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Other Churches
Ad1 Stnot Church
Ash St., Middleport
Pas10r Les Hayman
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Sunday SeNice- 6:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Pastor: Brian HukMss
Sun$1la School· 10 a.m .
ship· 11 a.m.
W nesday 7 p.m.
Coolville United Methodlat Pariah
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Chu~h
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services • 7 p.m.

H•nest OutnaCII Ministries
47439 Reibel Rd., Chesler
Pastors: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Appt Ute Centt!r
•fuii·Gospei Chu rch~
Pastors John&amp;: Pally Wade:
603 Second Ave. Mason
773-5017
Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m .
Wednesdar 7 pm

Christl•n Fellowship Cealcr
Salem St., Rutland
Pastor: Robc:rl E. Musser
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 11:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.
Hobson Christlan Fellowship Church
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Youlh Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service, 7:00p.m.
Faith Full Gospel Church
Lona Botto m ~
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowship service 7 p.m.

Reecbvllle Fellow1blp
Church of the Naurene
Pastor:· Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m .
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Syracuse Church or the Nazarene
'
Pastor Mike Adkins
Sunday S~hool · 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 il.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesd1y Services· 7 p.m .
Pomeroy Church or the N11zarene
Pastor: Jan Lavender
·
Sunday School ·9:30a .m.
Worship. 10:30 a. m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Clirton Tabernacle Churt'h
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School - IU a.m.
Worship. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
New Ure Vkt:ory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH ,
Pastor: Bill Slaten
Sunday Services· 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday· 7 p. m. &amp; Youlh 7 p.m. '

Full Gospel Church of tht Living Savior
Rt.338, Anliquily
Pastor: Jesse Morris
Ass!. PastOr!; : Jim Morris
Services: Saturday 7:30p.m .

God's Temple or Praise
3166.5 McQuire Rd . Pomeroy, Oh io
Pastor: Wayne Balcolm
Services: Thurs. Niles 7:00pm
New church No Sunday service establis,hed.

Pentecostal
Pentecostal Assembly
St. Rt. 124. Racin e
Pastor: William Hoba~k
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesda y Services · 7 p.m.
Middleport Pentecostal
,.,
Third Ave .
,
Pastor: Rev. Chnk Baker
.
. Sunday School . 10 a.m.
.,
E...·ening • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

.,

.,

Presbyterian

Syr-.c\111 Ml11lon

Syracuse First United Presbyterian
Pas10r: Rev. Kr isana Robinson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.

Rev. Mike Thompson,Putor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evenina • 6 p.m .
Wedne¢ay Service· 7 p.m.

Dye1vllle Communlly Chun:h
Sunda~ School-9:30a.m.
Worth(p ·10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Church of the N•urene
PasiOr: Allen Midcap
Sunday School-9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m .
Wednesday Services· 7 ,p.m.
Pastor: Allen Midcap

R~olclng Ute Church
500 N. 2nd Ave ., Middleport
Pastor: Mike Fore man
Pastor: Emeritus I.Jiwrcncc Foreman
Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Sc:rvice5 · 7 p.m .

1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse

Hocldnaporl Church
Orand Street
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worahlp- lla.m.
W•dnuday Sef\lictl • 8 p.m.

Mlddl~:port

Stlnrsville Community Church
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewell
Sunday Services - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Thursday · 7:00p.m .

Faith V.tley Tabernlcte Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmell Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thur~ay Service · 1 p.m.

Hazel Community Chun:h
OffRl.124
Putor: Edsel Han
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wor1hip -10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

N&lt;Jz&lt;Jrene

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev . Blackwood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m .
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Faith Clulpel
923 S. Third Sl., Middleport
Pastor Michael Pangia
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Betbtl Church
Townahlp Rd., 468C
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worahlp • 10 a.m.
Wednuday Servicea • 10 a.m.

TorchChur&lt;h
Co. Rd. 63 ·
Sunday S&lt;:hool ·9:30a.m.
Wor1hip .. 10:30.a.m.

F•lth Fellowship Crusade ror Christ
PasiOr: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Sc:Nict : Friday, 7 p.m.

Harrlsonvllle Pre1byterlan Cburch ·
Worsh ip· 9 a.m.
Sunday School -9:45a.m.
Middleport Pre1byterl1n
Sunday School •·9 a.m.
Wor11hip • 10 a.m.

Sl'venth-Day Adventist
Se"nlb·Day Adventlat
Mulberry Hla. Rd ., Pomeroy
Pa~lor : Roy Lawiri!ky
Saturday Services:
Sabbatt' Schuol - :Z p.m.
Worahlp • 3 p.m.

Mont Choptl Church
Sunday 1c:hool· 10 a.m.
Wor~hlp • 11 1.m.
Wednetday Serv ice· 7 p.m.
Folth Go1pol Church
Lona Botto m
Sunday School • 9:30a.m .
Worohlp • 10:45 a.m., 7,30 p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hennon United Brethren
In Chri•l Chun:h
Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor; Robc:tl Sanders
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wors hip - 10:30 a.m. , 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service~· 7:30p.m.

Mt. Olive Commually Church
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Even in&amp;. 1 p.m.
Wedneday Serv i~;e • 7 p."'.
Unlltd Faith Church
Rl. 7 on Pomeroy By·Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr,
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7 p. m.
, Wednesday Service ·. 7 p.m .
Full Gospel U1Jhlhouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hun1er
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday. 7:30p.m.

Eden Unlled Brethren In Chrlll
2 1/2 miles north of Reedsville
on State Route 124
Paslor: Rev . Robert Markle y
Sunday S~hool. II a.m.
Sunday Worship· !0:00a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service· 7:30p.m.

South Bethel New Testament
Silver Ridge
Paslar: Robe rt Barber
Sunday School- 9 a. m.
Sun, Worsh ip· 10: 10 a.m . , 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service:- 7 p.m .

'
'

INSURANCE

j

Mlntnvllle
Pastor: Bob Robinso n
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

Fairview Dible Church
Letart, W.Va. Rt. 1
Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 7:00p.m .
Wednesday Bible Sludy- 7:00pm.

Cjhorch·announcements spon~ored by these area merchants

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc.

Your Flock.

Alft'td

Father Walter Heinz
Rutland Nazarene
With Appreciation from your
congregation of.

Hoath (Middleport)
Pastor: Rob Brower
Suriday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 11 :00 a.m.

Rlldne

·Pastor : Ja ne Beanie
Sunday Schoo l ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Syracuse Flnt Cburch or God
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m .
Even ing Servites· 6:JO p.m .
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

...

Middleport Community Churth
.57.5 Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School10 a.m.
Evening· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SeNicc · 7:30p.m.

Mela:a Cooperative Parish
Northeaal Cluater

Rutland Churth o!God
Pastor : Ron Heath
Sunday Worsh ip· 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Pa5tor: William Ju~is
Sunday Scbool -10:00 a.m.
Momin&amp; Worship - 10:4.5 a.m.
Sunday Service - 6:30p.m.

East Letart
Paslor: Brilm Harkness
Sunday School · 10 a.m .
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Mt. Olive Vnlted Methodl1t
011124 behind Wilkesville
Paator: Rev. Ralph Spire1
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip'·10:30a.m., 7p.m .
Thunday Scr'&lt;~lcca • 7 p.m.

White's Chapel Wtsle}'aa
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

PordaDd Fl"t Cburda or liM- Nl.l.lnM

Harrlsouvllle Comm1,1alty Church
Pastor: Therq,n Durham
Sunday· 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

Grohom United Mathodlll
Worahlp • 9:30 o.m. (!st.!&lt; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 41h Sun)
Wcdne1day Service • 7:30p.m. '

M~

Rullud Cbvdt or the N...,..e
PuiOr: Rev. Samuel W. Basye

MomlngSmr
Paslor: Dewayne Stuller
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

United Methodist

Chut ell of God

Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Services
t'.-loot Gospel MIJstoa
Bald Knob, Dn Co. Rd. 31
..
Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford
• •
Sunday School · 9:30a.m
Worship· 7 p.m.

The Church or Jesus

St. Paul Lulhenn Church
Corner Sycamore &amp; SecOnd Sl ., Pomeroy
·
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
SundBy School • 51:4.5 a.m.
Wor1hip • 11 a.m.

U111011

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sel"'oliees • 7 p.m.

:The Believen' Fellowship Ministry
New Lime Rd ., Rulland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wedn esday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Our Saviour Lulhtran Church
Walnut and Henry Sis., Ravenswood, W.Va .
Pastor : Da vi d Russell
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m .
Worshi p - II a.m.

Church ol Chrlat
lntenectlon 7and 124 W
Evangelist: Dennis· Saraent •
Sunday Bible Sludy ·9:30a.m.
Wor!hlp: 10:30 1 . m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible S111dy · 7 p.m.

Carletoe lottnleiMMtlloatlotul Cb....,.
Kin,lt&amp;burv R01d
I

SWlday Scllool- 9:30a.m.
Worship - l0:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday ScNic:cs- 7 p.m.

fl•twoodl
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School· 10 a. m.
Worship · 11 a.m.
Foresl Run
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worsh ip • 9 a.m.

CMoler Clltll'dl ., ... N Pastor: Rev. Herben Grate

C•rmei-Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dc:wayne Stuller
Sunday Scliool ·9: 30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed . 7:06p.m.

St. John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Worship · 9:00a.m.
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.

Churdi of ChriiC
Pastor: Justin Campbell
Sunday school9:30 a.m.
Norman Will, superintendent
Sunday worship -10:30 a.m.

Cht 1st ian

t:.~rise

Paslor: Ketth Rader
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
WorshiP' - 9 a.m.

Lutheran

De~:ter

Hllllldt H•ptltt Church
St . Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev . James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship· 11a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sef\llces -1 p.m.

-ry(Sy....,..)
Pastor: Bob Robin10n
Sunday School • 9:4S a.m .
Worship • 11 a.m.
Wednesday Servica ·7:30 p.m.

Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ
or Latter Day Saints
· Portland· Racine Rd.
Pas\or: Jerry Singer
Sunday School -9:30 a. m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.
Wed nesday Services-7 :00p.m.

Christ or Latter-Day Saints
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446· 7486
Sunday School10:20·ll a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11:0.5 ·12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9· 10:.15 s.m.
Homemaking meeljng, lsi Thur!. • 7 p.m.

Reedt•llle Church or Christ
Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School : 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

992-3978

The Congregation of
Faith Full Gospel

Latter-Day Saints

Hemlock Grove Church
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school· 10:30 a.m.
Worship . 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Syracuse

Gospel
With Appreciation and Love from

Laurtl Cllrf free Methodist Church
Pastor: Donuld Balis
Sunday School · 9:JO a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a. m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Langsville Christian Church
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worsh ip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7~30 p.m.

Cabinet Making

Faith F1.11

Hysell Run Holiness Church
Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible: Study and Youlh - 7 p.m.

Hickory Hills Church of Christ
Evangelist Mike: Moore
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m., 6:.30 p.m.
Wednesday Sendces- 7 p.m.

Mill Work

Pastor Steve "'"~;'u

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Churth
15 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev . Doug Cox
Sunday Worship -9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Bradrord Church or Christ
Corner of St Rt 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minisler: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship·- 8:00a.m . , 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:00 p.m.

Sacred Heart Catholic Church
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 9.92·5898
Pastor: Rev. Walte r E. Hei nz
Sat. Con. 4:4.5-S: I S~.in .; ~ass· 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. ·8:45·9.15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass-9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass-8:30 a.m.

Rev. Roger.Willford

Piue Grove Bible Holiness Church
1/2 mile off Rt. 325
Pas1or: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School ·9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wed nesday Service-7:30p.m.

Rutland Church or Christ
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Wor_,ship- 10:30 a.m ., 7 p.m.

Catholic

Robert E. Musser

Rose of Sharon Holiness Churth
Leading Creek Rd. , Rutland
Paslor. Rev . Dewey King
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday wors hip -7 p.m . .
Wednesday prayer meeiing· 7 p.m.

Bndbury Cbun:h or Christ
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m.

M~

··-

~ utl u Lk d!nllvl .It () _10 p 111
~11d thl' fii"L' dq. ~-ll"L' {L',IIll \\"lJI

Pomeroy Flnt Bapllst
East Main St..
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.

Fotwt Run Boptlat
P11tor : Arlua Hurt
Sunday Sehool· 10 a.m.
Worahlp • 1.1 a.m.

........'

Calvary Pllarlm Chapel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Charles McKenzie
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 11 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Tuppers Plain Churth pf Christ
Instrumental
· Worship Service - 9 a.m.
Communion· 10 a.m.
Sunday School· 10:15 a.m.
Youth- 5:30pm Sunday
Bible Sludy Wednesday 7 pm

f•llh Baptlat Church
Railroad St., Maaon
Sunday School ·10 a.m.
Worahlp- 11 a.m., 6 p.m .
Wednctday Servlcea • 7 p.m.

.

r;r.lll ~l'

Rulland First Baptist Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.

Communlly C.urd1
Pas\or: Rev. Amos Tillis
Main Street, Rutland
Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service-7 p.m.

DHvlllt Holi•M Church
31057 Slate Route 325, Langsvlle
Pastor: Gary Jackson
Sunday school · 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service· 7 p.m.

Zioa Church or Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rtl43)
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wo~hip - 10:30 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.
cs

Vlclory H•ptlat lndtpendant
'2l N. 2nd St. Middleporo
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Wol'lhip • 10a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servlcet • 7 p.m.

lism .

rn llon~protlt ~rc1up .. \\ I\lllng
to .ltllllllii H l' lll1..'~·ttl1 ~..~&gt; ,l !Hi
"~jll'l t .d L'\ L'IH\ I h~..· .tknd .!r ~~

Hope Baptist Church (Southera)
570 Grant St., Middlepon
Sunday school · 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Btthlehem Btptilt Church
Great Bend, Route 124, ,Racine:, OH
Pas1or : Daniel Mecea
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 6:00p.m.

Les Hayman

I

Btarwallow Rld&amp;e Cburdl or Christ
Pastor:Terry Stewart
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\'iecs. 6:30p.m.

Mt. Union Bapllst
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday Schoo1·9:45 a.m.
~ Evening· 6:30p.m.
Wednesd11y Servi&lt;:es - 6:30p.m.

Ma1ry Janice
Lavender

Holiness

Keao Cb11l'&lt;b o!Cbrist
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sundily !khool · 10:30 a.m.
. Paslot-Jcffrey Wallace
1st and 3rd Sunday

Moronotlul Baptist Cll•rch
Burlingham • 742·7606
Pastor: John Swanson
Sunday School-10:00a.m.
Morning Service ll:OO a.m.
Evening Service ·6:00 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30 p.m.

Bradbury Church of Christ

cud s. Center open 6 p.m . to
10 :30 p. m . Fricby and Sattltday mghts.

i"n r1 .1!1 p . 111 . \ .ltu t·d.n· .1r t h L·

Baptist

c..~n~a_,.

326 E. Main s't., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bernacki, Rev. Katharin FOSler
Rev. DebQrah Rankin , Oergy
Sunday: Adult EduCition Sunday School JO:lS a.m .
Holy Eucharist 11:00 a.m.
Wednesday: Holy Eucharist 5:00p.m.

Middleport Cbllt&lt;b or Cllrilt
~lh and Main
P"a!itor: AI Hartson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:1.5, 10:30 a.m .; 1 p.m.
Wedm$day Services • 7 p.m.

Uberty Allembly Ill God
P.O. Bo:w: 467, Dudding Lane
Muon, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sundly Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

HyseURun Hollness Church

From your whole
congregation

Groce E - Chord!

Po...,..y WeiUide Cbllt&lt;b ol Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School · 11 a.m.
Worship . IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Assembly of God

Syracuse Church of
the Nazarene

evange-

HARRISONVILlE
Harrisonville Senior Cit izcns, n:gular m e eting, town
ha ll, Monday. I I 30 p.m .
SATURDAY
Blood
pte ss un.· screen1ngs
P OME R OY
Meigs
.Count y Rcr1red Te ac her s ·will be ava da bk
]to;so c latton , S:nurday n oo n at
POMEROY
Wind1ng
:J'rinity Church. Pomeroy.
Trail
Garden
.
Cl11b
,
Monday.
,!l~eakn,
P e rr y Varnadoe,
tJlcig s County
economic 7 :30 p.m . home or Add .ll o u
lewi s Du c·s p .ly.,ble .' T.1ke
~c.:vclopment chrcnor.
J
p l.IIH 'i t o cxch.1ngc.
•
: LO NC: BOTTOM - Mt.
TUESDAY
Dlll.'l' Church . ..'llel11·e red " tD
ling .1r 7 p m . ) ,lturJ.tv .lt t),~.,.
RACINE - RA C () " "'cttng. Tu ~..· .. li.ty. Sc.H Mdl P.1rk.
~hur~h .
r~ ·J (I
p 111 . \\' Jt h -.ou p .1 11d
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' SALEM CENTE I\ - '&gt;t.1r ...111 d \\'l c h po r 1u c k .
(~ r .IIJ ~t· 77';-J. .l lhi ~t.ll _lunJ,)r
t~r .lll !.!;L' /'!7~ \\Ill hold .1 Ctli11IIH· ( :ol nlll,tl Il~ 1\ ( .1 It- lllill
~IIU1li~ y Jf.IlJ u\\"L'l'll pHl\ . :1. "\1) I\ )'tlblt\hl'lj ,1, ,l fl"l'l..' '&gt;L' I"\I ll"

Cllurdl at J..., Cbrist
Apotlolk Folth
NewUma Road
Sunday, 10 a.m. and 7:30p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

Rev. Mike Adkins

We love you and appreciate
all that you do

Chltl'dt fiiCIIriol
212W. Main St.
Minister: Neil Proudf001
Sunday Sdlool • 9:30 ra.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Sunday Sthool- 10:30 a.m.
Even in, -7:30 p.m.

Tom Runyon

You are truly appreciated

Ep1scopal

Putor: Jame.!l Miller

Mark Michael

RACINE H o me romJllg. C.nmL'i-Sll tton U n itcd
Methodist C hur ch. C.mncl
.11t1! ll.lsbJn R oJds, S und .n ·.
'! :31 1 a. m . Sunday Sc h oo l:
worship. lll :-1-5 a.m ., picni c
cnry-1 n d1Hne r, 12 :.10 p . m .
Afte r n uo n mu li tcal Sc..'l"\'lCC
fc.Hunng local ch urch t.d t:IH,
lt Sutton Budding begin.ning
at 2 p.m. Wa gon rides from

1

Cllurch of Chnst

C'lhlrdrl.t .leMM ClaiR
,.,k
VanZindl and ward d.

First Baptist Church
Pastor: Mark Morrow
61h and Palmer St:, Middleport
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m .
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

The Danville
Holiness Church

-1

Apostolic

of Bradford Church
of Christ

The Elders, Deacons,
and Deaconess'

\'lCe.

Ministry Coming
POMEROY -The H e Is
Min iStri es will be bringin g
" Reality Explosion" to Meigs
Co unty Sunday. Th e Min istries will be pre se ntin g the
gospe l
of Jesus
Ch ri st
throu g h drama , music, improYisat io n s, a nd
evangdis m
fro m I 0:.'\0 to II :J O a . m . at
t h e Mt. !I ee m on Uni1eJ
Bn:thren Churc h and from -+
rn 6 p .m . .lt the P_o mt:roy
.11 11p hi che;l tL'r

•

First Sou1hem Baptlsl
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
S4,nday School-9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:4S a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7:00 p.m.

We thank God for your
family daily!

Whom we loved
very much.

Les Hayman

Dou! Shamblin

-

The Dilly Sentinel • P1ge A 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

-~

992-3785

.

Racine mower Clinic
2 Factory Trained Briggs
&amp; Stratton Mechanics
Racine, OH
1·740-949·2804

590 East Ma1n Street • Pomeroy, OH 45769
740·992-5444
James R. Acree, Jr. · Director

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES .
214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

NEW HAVEN
FUNERAL HOME

"1/f'e occtpt Prmeed 'Timtsji:rs "

812·1200
Lundy Brown
Director

Regan Brown

~

EWING FUNERAL HOME

Dignity and Service Always
'

Established 1913

992-2121 '

17 4 Layne Street 106 Mulberry Ave.

Pomeroy

Time to clean house? Crow's Family Restaurant

MEIGS MARINE
SALES &amp; SERVICE
42121 Enterprise Rd .
Pomeroy, OH 45769

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

CLASSIFIED SECTION!

992-5432

992-1303

SWISHER &amp; LOiiSE
PHARMACY
..::..

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

.:Always &amp; _'Forcl'cr

We Fill Doctors '
Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

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

992-7028

"'Fio rt,ers for all ocrasrorrs "

9ft Shop

'

.

518 E. Main St. Pomeroy, OH
992-1161

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

-

Office Serulce 6 Supply
I

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

992-6376

�•

•

Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Hastert seeks to keep loophole ·
WASHINGTON (AP)- House Speaker Denrns Hasrert wants to
use Congress' largest spending bill to delay plans to close a loophole m
the Medicaid law that lets states collect billions in exlr.l doU:m.
The loophole is expected to cost about $2 billton thi.• year alone, a
tourrh of which will go to the Republican speaker's home &lt;rate oflllinois. The $500 million a year lllinois received in exct&gt;ss federal Mc·dICaid payments represents about 10 percent of the state's health care
budget.
The.loophole essentially allows stares to bill the federal government
for 50 percent of the htghest fees allowed even though they contract
with health care providers ro get the services at lower prices. The states
then. pocket the clifference berween the two when they get reimbursement checks fiom the U.S. Treasury.

Tensions high after gunbattle
JERUSALEM (AP) -The Israeli-Palestinian cease-fire faced a emcia! test Friday, with Israel threatening greater force if violence docs
not stop and \vith tensmns high afier a West Bank gunbatde that killed
a Palestinian and an lsrae~ settler.
Israeli police sent reinforcements into Jemsalem's Old City ahead of
Muslim Friday prayers at a key holy site, where riots started Sept. 28
and spread quickly to the West Ba,nk,and Gaza Strip. More than 100
people, most of them Palestinians, have died in the cla.shes.

Study: AIDS vaccine powerful
WASHINGTON (AP) -An AIDS vaccme tested in monkeys fails
keep me animals from becoming infected but p~mpts their bodies
to mount a powerful defense that keeps the clisease in check,
researchers report.
In a study appearing Friday in the journal Science, researchers report
that rhesus monkeys jnoculated with the vaccine, then injected with
AIDS v1rus, developed a strong army of immune system cells that
.lttacked and controlbl the infection.The animals, in etfect, did not
become ill.
The results suggest, but do not" prove, that a similar vaccine developed for humans ang now in the early stages of testing might be effective m controlling HIV, said Dr. Norman Letvin. a Harvard Medical
School professor and senior author of the study. The effectiveness in
humans, however, may take years to determine, he said.
to

New slot machines debut
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Televis10n's Alex Trebek and Regis Philbin,
who know a lot about the games people play, are lending their images
ro interactive slot n1ach.ines.
The new nickd slots incorporate a video screen displaytng the game
show hosts - and allow gamblers to hear their voices beckoning people to try their luck. The slots are among several technologically
advanced machines debuting at the 14th annual World Gaming Congress and Expo this week in the Las Vegas Convention Center.
Analysts say video-enhanced slot machines are the hot trend m the
industry, and that comless. cashless machines are on the horizon.

1Yson ready to retire
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (AP) -Mike Tyson said his first fight m
the United States in a year will be his last.
"This definitely is my last fight;' Tyson said during the Thur;day
night weigh-in for his 10-round match against Andrew Go Iota on Friday night in the Palace of Auburn Hills. It's not the fir;t time Tyson has
said he's through with the sport in which he has been a highly successful and controversial figure since he turned pro in 1985_
There is no guarantee that a Tyson fight will be free of controversy,
but the promoters and Showrime certainly courted controversy by
· selecting Golota as the opponent for Tyson's fir;t pay-per-view bout
since he knocked out Francois Botha in the fifth round on Jan. 16,
1999.

Friday, October 20, 2000

NEW YORK (AP) -AI Gore and George cie&lt; my opponent has put forward in this elecW Bush sparred over tht·ir rival economic tion are not just unfair, they're unsound and
plans Thursday. casting the election as a refer- they would hurt our economy."
endum on national prospenty. "The choice
Bush argued that his plan- with its centercouldn't be clearer," said Gore, Jnd Bush agre.ed piece S1.3 trillion tax cut, new incentives for
- but with a different version of whom to businesses and an option for privately investing
choose.
' some Social Security money - was better
The Democratic vice president urged Amer- suited to extend the nation's expansion.
icans to stay the course after eight years of eco".This election must bring a victory of fieenomic expansion under the Clinton-Gore dorll and i1movation- and a defeat for central
administration. Republican Bush said Gore was planners and bureaucrats," rhe Texas governor
taking undeserved crrdit for good economic told workers at Visioneering, Inc. in Fraser,
times and ridiculed him for "analog thinking in Mich.
'
a cligital world."
The company is a family owned business that
Gore focused on the economy before an makes tools and components for the auto and
audience ofbusiness leaders in New York. Hush aerospace industries.
"Some politicians want to take credit for the
did the ~me at a campaign stop in Michigan.
Bush later traveled to New York where they new economy," Bush said. "But l &lt;lon't see govboth made TV appearances.
ermnent starting new companies, writing new
In his s~eech, Gore called the election, less software, inventing new technology. opening
than three weeks olf, "a choi ce a.' fundamental new factories ."
Gore's New York address was billed in
as prosperity itself."
.. This i~ about more than nun1bers on a advance by aides as a major economic speech.
spreadsheet," Gore said. 'The economic poli- The Bush campaign moved to pre-empt him,

changing the format of his previously scheduled Mtchtgan stop to get hts economic message out.
Gore later joined Senate candidate Hillary
Rodham Clinton and running mate Joseph
Lieberman at a noisy union rally where he
sharpened his eco~omic focus.
."It's about the economy, it's about jobs," said
Gore.
Polling following Tuesday's final debate was
still unsettled. An NBC News poll done
Wednesday showed me . race closing to within
the error margin, while a CNN-USA TodayGallup poll out Thursday showed Bush turning
a pre-debate 6-point lead into a .I 0-point lead,
49-39. Two-thirds of the sample was fiom
before the debate.
Gore generally leads Bush in surveys of confidence in the canclidates' ability to hancUe the
economy, but Bush shrugged off such findings
on Thursday.
He said on CNBC that polls also show peo-.
pie believe he. has "better leadership qualities
and that's what the race is all about."

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP)
Shocked and saddened,

after takeoff Monday night.
Investigators w!th the Nanonal
mqurners prepared to pay their Transportation Safety Board are
last respects to Gov. Mel Carna- trying to determine what caused
han, the victim of a f.,tal plane the crash. Officials said that
crash.
among other factors. they were
Thousands of mourners led by looking into whether problems
President Clinton were expected with a primary attitude indicator,
Friday at a memoriJ) service on used to help maintain level flight,
the Statehouse grounds . Also were to blame.
expected to attend were Vice
NTSB member Carol CarPresident AI Gore and Republi- mody said the investigation could
can Sen. John Ashcroft, who was take up to a year.
being challenged for re-election
On Thursday, the line of
by the two-term Democratic . mourners extended down a
curving mansion sidewalk, lined
governor.
Carnahan's casket, draped in an with flowers and cards left by visAmerican flag, was viewed by an itors.
estimated 8,000 mourners who
A composed Jean Carnahan
filed quietly through the gover- hugged emotional veterans of her
nor's mansion Thursday.
late husband's staff, the first of the
The casket was to be delivered 'throng to pass the casket flanked
to the Statehouse aboard a caJsby honor guards.
son followed by a riderless horse,
The new governor, Roger Wila symbol of a fallen warrior.
son, a·n d his wife, Pat, were
The two-term governor will among the first to enter the manbe buried Saturday in a rural sion, where they embraced Mrs . ·
Ozarks cemetery, along with his Carnahan and paused before the
oldest son Roger, the pilot of the casket.
small plane '!'ho also died in the
Among the mourners were Jim
crash. The third victim was long- and Mary Magers, retired state
time campaign aide Chris Sif- workers from Jefferson Ciry.After
ford, 37:
pausing quietly at the casket, they
Carnahan, 66, his son, 44, and signed a guest book and wiped
Sifford were headed to a Senate away tears.
campaign event when the aircraft
" He was the best governor,
went down near St. Louis shortly JUSt the best," Jim Magers said.

PORTLAND, Maine (AP) A pharmaceutical industry group
.is asking a federal judge to block
Maine's pioneering law ainted at

cutting the cost of prescription
drugs.
The Pharmaceutical R.esearch
and Manufacturers of America,
known as PhR.MA, asked U.S.
District Judge D Brock Hornby
for a preliminary inj unction to
keep the law from taking effect
until a .constitutional challenge is
heard.
The industry group, whtch
represents about 100 U.S. drug
companies, filed the suit on the
eve of the law's effective date in
August.
It contends that the Maine Rx·
Program

is

unconstitutional

because it conflicts with federal
Medicaid law and because it
would regulate transactions outside 'the state - when drugs are
distributed from warehouses
located elsewhere.
"Maine simply has no authority to go beyond its borders,"
industry lawyer Allen Rugg told
the j udge.
But Assistant Attorney General
Andrew Hagler argued that the
good of the law ourweighs any
harm. He said studies found that
the price of the 50 drugs seniors
use most often have increased at

four times the rate of inflation.
For the I 0 most conunonly used
drugs, he said, senior; pay 86
percent more at pharmacies than
the federal government and
other large buyers pay.
"The status quo means that
people will remain sick and will
remain unable to afford the
medinne they need," Hagler
said.
Hornby said during the hearing that he would not issue a ruling Thursday.
The Maine law, the first of its
kind in the nalio~, was enacted
in May and allows price controls
to be imposed in three years if
negotiations don't lead to significant reductions in drug prices ..
Thirty-four . drug companies
have agreed to participate in the
negotiations under the program.
More companies probably are
, interested but are waiting for the
outcome of the lawsuit, said
David Winslow, director of public and legislative alfairs tor the
state Human Services Depart'ment.

"We've done our homework
and We believe we wtll prevail,"
he said.
Winslow said the state planned
to begin signing up individuals
m late November and stort the
program Jan. I.

FRIDAY'S

Prep Sports
Football
SEOAL

SEO

can help VOU gel ahead. • Creating Unique l.llmlng Opportunlti-What can Alabama

•

teach the world? Alabama AloM Unlweilltr, Alii- State University, Jacksonville State University,
and the University ol Montevallo offer degrees and programs found at lew other colleges in the

TVC

ALL

TVC

ALL

Eastern
3-o 7-1
Miller
2-1 7-1
Waterlord
2·1 4·4
Trimble
1·2 4·4
Southern
1·2 3·5
Federal Hocking 0·3 1·7
Friday's Games
Meigs at Vinton County
Trimble at Southern
Eastern at Waterford
Alexander at Wellston
Nelsonville· Yorli at Belpre
Federal Hocking at'Miller
'

Area non-league
ALL

Wahama
3·4
Hannan
1·7
1·7
South Galli a
Friday's Gamea
Hannan at South Gallia
St. Mary's at Wahama

Volleyball

Today'a Match•

Alexander del. Meigs, 15·12, 10·
15, 15-13
Saturday's Matches
· Division II Sectional
at Rio Grande
Meigs v_Jackson, 1:00
Gallia Academy v. River Valley,
2:00
Division IV Sectional
at Alexander
Southern v. Waterford, 5:00
Eastern v. Crooksville, 6:00

technologies into every phase olaatudenra COllege-· • Shaping Global Leadership-In the mrlitary, in the
Dothan and Auburn Unrveralty Montgomery are noted for training military leaders. In fact, both General Henry Shelton.

season. He has a career record of

chairman ot the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and General Michael Ryan, Air Force chiet ot staff. are AUM grad;ates. And the
University of Alabama's nationally ranked techno-M.B.A. program helps business executrves connect with success in the
new economy. • Pioneering Health Care I.-lions-The discoveries.and advances made by ~abama's medical pioneers

112-104 with a 4.27 ERA. Kile
was voted to his third All-Star
team and was the first St. Louis
pitcher in 15 years to win 20

are something everyone can feel goOd about. Reaearchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham recently rnade
international headlines by pinpointing the origin ot the AIDS vlru._and are now moving closer to developing a

gamer,;.

vaccine. Plus the Univer~ty of South Alabama's Bum Centll' Ia a national leader in the development and use
of an~icial skin for burn ~ctims. These renowned health care powarhcHDes also are pursurng new methods

Dodgers sign Hansen
to 1-year deal

of prevention. diagnosis, and treatment for cancer, heart disease, and much more. •'Developing New
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Dave
Hanse n, who hit a recorQ seven
pin ch- hit homers this season,

Technologies-~abama creates the rnatenals to buld 11e1t1r llvel. Auburn ~iversity is responsible

for revolutionary developments In engineering. dellgntng avll)'lhing from stronger bridges
and roadways to more effective car airbap and bulletproof vests. At the high-tectJ
University of ~abama in Huntsville, ICientllts apply their skills to create
hgh-temperature superconductors and promising

signed a one-year contract with

the Los Angeles Dodgers with a
dub option for a seco nd season.

llansen will earn $625,000 next

new medical devices.

season plus incentives.

Hamen hit .289 with eight
homers and 26 l'lBl s in 102
games this year. As a pinch hitter,'
he was 15-of-55 with the seven
hom ers ,md 14 RBis. His 12
career pinch-hit homers with the
D odger~ is a fran chise record.
•

Hulbert leads Tampa .
Bay Classic
11ALM HAR.130R. Fla. (AP) Mike Hulbert , ranked 214th on
the I'GA money list, shot a 7undcr-par 64 to take a two-stroke

lead after the first round of the
Tampa Bay ClaSSic. Scott Gump,
Bob Friend, john Huston, Steve
Pate and Carl Paulson were tied
for seco nd .

.

RIO. GRANDE -This vear's
Division II volleyball sectional
definitely has a local flavor to 11,
with three teams from Gallia and
Meigs cou nties involved.
Meigs , Gallia Academy and
River Valley are three of the four
teams in the sec tional with Ja ckson, the Blue Angels' and R.ai ders'
SEOAL rival , filling out the field.
Meigs (16-4, TVC Ohio q-2)
enters play as the top seed after
winning the TVC Ohio Division
title. The Marauders began the
season with a I O-il record and
have been the poster kids for the
team concept.
"We're very young and those
young ones, especially, are a tightknit group," said Meigs head
coach Rick Ash. "A lot of times

Nelsonville· York 3:0 6-2
Wellston
2·1 4-4
Vinton County 2·1 2·6
Belpre
1·2 4·4
Meigs
1·2 4·4
Alexander
0-3 O-e
Hocking Dlvlaton

The deal with the NL Central
division champions includes a
team option for. 2004 and performan ce bonuses and escalators that
could make it worth up to $32 .55
million for four seasons.
Kile (20-9) had a 3.91 ERA last

nation. Plus the Univerwlly of West AlabM!IIIIeldlng the way In developing a campus that integrates Internet

FROM OVP STAFF REPORTS

TVC
Ohio Division

Louis C.ardinals.

boardroom, and·in your hometown, Alabama can prepara you to take charge of your future. Troy State University

www.thinkalabama.edu

ALL

Jackson
5-0 e-o .
Logan
5-o e-o
Gallia Academy 4·1 6-2
Point Pleasant 3·2 6·2
Athens
1-4 2·6
Warren
1-4 2·6
Marietta
1-4. 2-6
River Valley
0-5 o-e
Frlday'IGamea
Point Pleasant at Gallia Academy
River Valley at Warren
Marietta at Athens
Jackson at Logan

ST. LOUIS (AP) Darryl
Kile, coming olf his first 20-win
season, agreed to a $23 million,
three-year contract with the St.

health care. and IIIIlCh 1110111 at one ol18 ClllllpUSeS. You'll c111conr how outhinking

Marauders
begin
playoffs
Saturday

GHLIGHTS

Kile signs Sll million
. deal with cards .

.and grow Explore the arts and tclenc•, business, engl.-tng, educatkin,

Page 81
Ftttt.y. october 10. 1000

Clinton to lead mourners Dru company tries
at Carnahanls memorial to b ock Maine law

pUblic universities on. &amp;OMNIIIIIrJ VIIand out-of-the-ordinary q,IIIJIIUniiiiiiD 11M!, •~. Clllllle,

.·l

S. leads Preside11t~ Cup, Page 82
~·oll'e.{1e Football Notebook, Page 83
Scoreboard, Page 85
Notebook, Page 88

Core, Bush touting economic plans on circuit

Alabama's

•

The Daily Sentinel

when you have the o1Jer ones

SENIORS HONORED - The TVC Ohio Division champion Meigs
Marauders closed out their regular season with a three set loss to

PREP

and younger ones. they don't mix
well together, but the leadership
from the two seniors and the
youth have blended really well."

Alexander Thursday evening. Meigs honored the seniors before the
game, from left to right are: Shannon Price and Margie Bratton.

Seniors Shannon

V~EYBALL

Maljorie Bratton have p'rovided
solid leadership for the Marauders
this season. Price leads the team
wid1 156 assists, while Bra.tton is
the No. 1 hitter with 118 kills.
Bratton also has a team-best 42
blocks.
Sophomore Mindy Chancey is
second to Price in as(,ists w·ith
115 ..
Sophomore Kaytc Davis has 70
kills and junior Corrie Hoover
has recorded 68.
Freshman Jaynee Davis has 49
kills and 25 blocks.

Meigs falls to Alexander
ROCK SPRINGS - The Tri-Valley
Conference champion Meigs Marauders
dropped an exciting three set match to run nerup Alexander Thursday evening at Larry
R. Morrison Gymnasium.

Even though the Marauder; had already
nailed down the conference title, the -match
was played with the emotion of a title contest. The Spartans won the first contest 1512, Meigs came back and won the second
contest 15-10 before losing the rubber
match 15- 13.
Mindy Chancey Jed Meigs witll 11
puiqts , she was 1~ of 18 servmg and had
seven assists , Kayte Davis added nine points,
Davis was 19 of 19 serving ami had three
kills and one assist.
Katie' Jeffer; added seven points on 17 of
17 serving, Shannon Price added six points
on 16of 16 serving and she added 13 assists.
Corrie Hoover added five points on n1ne of

12 serving and two kills, Nikki Butcher
added rwo points and she was nine of nine
servmg.

Margie Brattori added 13 kills and nine
blocks and Jaynee Davis added seven points
· and chipped in with two blocks.
As a team Meigs was 87 of 90 serving,
they had 25 kills, 21 assists and 11 blocks.
Shannon Price and Margie Bratton closed
out their regular season high school careers
and were honored on senior night before
the game.
Meigs is now 16-4 overall and finished
the TVC as champions with a 14-2 reco rd.
· The Marauders will play Jackso n Saturday at
1 p.m. at the University of Rio Grande in
the Division II sectional.
.
Alexander def. Eastern, 12-15,
15-10, 15-12
EAST MEIGS - ,Alexander Spartans
defeated Eastern (17- 5, TVC 12-4) in three

Price and

sets .12- 15, 15-10 and 15-12 Tuesday.
Alexander had already won th e fim game
of the set prior to the remainder of the
game being blacked out with a transformer
problem.
Kristen Chevalier was 25 for 25 serving
with 18 points and . two aces in a big night
for the senior play-maker. She also was 5 of
5 spiking with four kills, and 33 for 41 setting with nine assists and four blocks.
Senior sidekick Juli Bailey was 11 of 12
spiking with two kills, four blocks and perfe ct setting and serving nights. Amber Baker
was 20 for 30 '&gt;ctting with six aSsists and 8
for 8 serving with two points,
Danielle Spencer was 7 for 7 serving with
three points and 10 of 11 spiking. Cinda
Clifford was 11 tor 14 serving with ni1\e
points and an ace. Shauna Elliott was 3 tor 4

Serving has been one of the

Marauders' strong points thi1 season. The ceam has a co llective
.940 service percentage (930 for
985). Katie Jeffers has the top percentage among individual~ with ~1

.980 average (2 10 of 215). Freshman Nikki Butcher

p;

No. 2

111

that category with a .960 average
(145 tor 151).
River Valley ellters the tou rnament fresh ofr a sweep of Meif,'S

Please see Netters, Page B5

Please see. Playoffs, Page B:Z

Subway Series presents loads of logistical problems
NEW YORK (AP) - This Subway
Series stuff is getting more and rnorc confusing.

1

Just co nsid er what happened Thursday
afternoon at Yankee Stadium. Ccorgc
Steinbrenner was stfolliMg through th e
locker room when he was stopped by a
·
clubhome boy.
" Mr. Steinbrenner! Mr. Steinbrenm.,.l"
he ca lled out to th e New York Yankees
ow ner. "Do we get to go to Shea Stadium?"
The lloss was stumped.
" ! don't ki1 ow," he said. " You'll have to
a~k sonu: one else."

That's still the answer to a lot of logistical questions. lt seems.
Because even though th e two ballparks
arc only 14 minutes apart - with th e
Crand Central Parkway, the Major Dee ~
gan Expressway and the Triboro llridge all
closed to norm al traftlc, ~hat is - this
World Series is presenting all kinds of
problems .
A" in , if Mets star Mike Pi ,tzza wa'nt&lt;; rn
drive directly to Yanke e Staditll11, will th e
Yankees let him park in tlll'ir lot'
There were workouts at both places

J"

the teams prepared for Game I Saturday
night in the Brunx.

The Mets said AI Leiter will pitch the
opener imtcad of Mike Hampton, who
started Game I in the NL playoff series
against San Francisco and St. Louis.
"AI has fulluwed Mike all year and Mike
pitched the last game. so it is Al's turn to

First Team All-TVC
Matt Preston
Belpre
(37.4). Car~on Midkitr- Meigs
(39.6). Jeremy
Bonk1

~1t

SheJ

StJdi~

um.The tacility is lo cated in side· the rYkt1'

For the Yankees. jose Canseco was
added to th c World Series roster after
hein~ left otT in the AL championship
~t: ri cs. Manager Joe Torr~ w:mted an ~.:xtra
bat, especiall y for the middle games at
Shea.
"lt was tough, Jt wa' very rough,"
C;mscco said. '~I've always b(.·cn used to

Thi s summer. Jti:a . Roger CknKil\
beaned 1'1azza, the Mc•ts blocked the Yan kel'S fi·01n ming tl11..' W~o.'Ight room during
intcrkaguc play.
"lr vv;Js all'.;olutl'ly tl1e

Mets ger1l'tJ1

manag~·r

ri~ht th111g lo

do:·

Steve Phillips -;;Hd.

Please see Series, Page B:Z

Stewart carries
Lions past Bucs
TAMPA, Fla. (A P) nmning, the Detrmt

Kec&gt;p

Lions, w l1 o have won tine ...· ot·
tOur g;anH~S ~incc ln-.in g 31 - l t l ID

l10n~ rt't~­

TJmpa Bay .1t the Siln.:rdonH.' on
Sept. 17.
The Uuc"l h,tvc.:.·n 't \HHl -.iJKL'
bcanng Detroit to llllpr&lt;WL' to J(}. Their tOur- g.1rnc Jo..,ing ..,, teak
. is T~11nrJ Uay\ longc't "llhT rh . .·
team startcJ t 1-5 in 1Y9fJ Tony Dunboy's first ye.1r ·" coa&lt;'h.
"I rhink ti:1r thl' fir-;;r rime m

&gt;oneJ. and eventually Jame&lt;
StCwan would find .l chm k in
T~m1p.1 l3ay's armor.
"We know they'n· a great

conference has annoutKed it~

Of(, .

use thl' weight room

clt1hhouse.

ROCK SPRING S - The
Ohio DivisiOn of the Tri- Valley

second t~am all-conftm.:nce han-

ke e~

pitch," Met\ manager Bobby Valentine.

AII-TVC golf
squad
named
20110 all-league go lf team. •
Meigs sm ior C:arson MidkifT
led co-champion M eibos by finishing second in the conference
in scoring behind MVP Matt
Presto n of Belpre.
· -Freshman Jeremy l3anks finished third n1 the conference 111
scorin g to join Miclkiff on the
fint team.
Senior Nick Dettwiller earn ed

playing. I was working h.m! to my rc.tdy."
In the meanriml', both tl':1111S trtl'd to
settle their oft:.the-ficld pl.Jns.
The Metl, for exampk. will kt the Y.m-

team til·fcnsivdy, and tllt·y'n:
going to stop you a number of
timt:,," Stc\vart \aiJ ati:n ru shing

ALL·TVC GOLFERS - Co-champ ion Meigs placed three players on
the Ohio Division golf team. From left to right, Nick Dettwiller, Jeremy Banks and Carson Midkiff.

Meigs (41.2!. Sean McMailm- (·U.S). Nick Detwiller- Meib"
Vinton County (-!2.1), Jared (-l J.S). Pa r Klein -· llelpr&lt;·
Walters- 13elpre (4;l.2),Joscph ' (-l:l.H). j.J&lt;'k Arthur - Wellston
(-l-! .0). I krek !lobo -AlexanNicholas - Wellston (43.3)
Second Team ·
dcr (4-l. l). Julie Hufllnan Justin Applebaum
Belpre Wollston (-l-!.7).

tor 116 yards .lnd three to uchdown" in a 2X.14 vinory over
the Bucc.111eers on Thursday

my life. ' I c~m 't cvt.·n put into
words wh.lt rhi&lt;~ {(.\\Ill IS ti: ..:llllg
1 ight now:· Buo dd\.·n~i\'l' uck-

ni~ht.

"llut you'w got to keep
poundmg ,1\\\l)' bcclu'\c there's
going m bt· little scam . . in thcrt'

lc Warren Sapp &lt;,Jid. "But I think
we'll bt.· .llrig;ht.Wc'\'L' been here

before."

that yo u C.lll get through ... Wt•
Jmt (,tuck with it .mJ didn't give

up on the run."
Stewart scored on

run~ of 4, 4

and I yards. Jnd jason Hanson
kicked two fic:ld gn~tls klr the
'

The B11c~ .Ht' .1 - 4 .1fier 'L'YC!l
gJnH.'S for the \CC&lt;..md -;tr.nght

year. They re,pomlcd by win~ease
I

see NFL, Page B:Z

�•

•

Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Hastert seeks to keep loophole ·
WASHINGTON (AP)- House Speaker Denrns Hasrert wants to
use Congress' largest spending bill to delay plans to close a loophole m
the Medicaid law that lets states collect billions in exlr.l doU:m.
The loophole is expected to cost about $2 billton thi.• year alone, a
tourrh of which will go to the Republican speaker's home &lt;rate oflllinois. The $500 million a year lllinois received in exct&gt;ss federal Mc·dICaid payments represents about 10 percent of the state's health care
budget.
The.loophole essentially allows stares to bill the federal government
for 50 percent of the htghest fees allowed even though they contract
with health care providers ro get the services at lower prices. The states
then. pocket the clifference berween the two when they get reimbursement checks fiom the U.S. Treasury.

Tensions high after gunbattle
JERUSALEM (AP) -The Israeli-Palestinian cease-fire faced a emcia! test Friday, with Israel threatening greater force if violence docs
not stop and \vith tensmns high afier a West Bank gunbatde that killed
a Palestinian and an lsrae~ settler.
Israeli police sent reinforcements into Jemsalem's Old City ahead of
Muslim Friday prayers at a key holy site, where riots started Sept. 28
and spread quickly to the West Ba,nk,and Gaza Strip. More than 100
people, most of them Palestinians, have died in the cla.shes.

Study: AIDS vaccine powerful
WASHINGTON (AP) -An AIDS vaccme tested in monkeys fails
keep me animals from becoming infected but p~mpts their bodies
to mount a powerful defense that keeps the clisease in check,
researchers report.
In a study appearing Friday in the journal Science, researchers report
that rhesus monkeys jnoculated with the vaccine, then injected with
AIDS v1rus, developed a strong army of immune system cells that
.lttacked and controlbl the infection.The animals, in etfect, did not
become ill.
The results suggest, but do not" prove, that a similar vaccine developed for humans ang now in the early stages of testing might be effective m controlling HIV, said Dr. Norman Letvin. a Harvard Medical
School professor and senior author of the study. The effectiveness in
humans, however, may take years to determine, he said.
to

New slot machines debut
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Televis10n's Alex Trebek and Regis Philbin,
who know a lot about the games people play, are lending their images
ro interactive slot n1ach.ines.
The new nickd slots incorporate a video screen displaytng the game
show hosts - and allow gamblers to hear their voices beckoning people to try their luck. The slots are among several technologically
advanced machines debuting at the 14th annual World Gaming Congress and Expo this week in the Las Vegas Convention Center.
Analysts say video-enhanced slot machines are the hot trend m the
industry, and that comless. cashless machines are on the horizon.

1Yson ready to retire
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (AP) -Mike Tyson said his first fight m
the United States in a year will be his last.
"This definitely is my last fight;' Tyson said during the Thur;day
night weigh-in for his 10-round match against Andrew Go Iota on Friday night in the Palace of Auburn Hills. It's not the fir;t time Tyson has
said he's through with the sport in which he has been a highly successful and controversial figure since he turned pro in 1985_
There is no guarantee that a Tyson fight will be free of controversy,
but the promoters and Showrime certainly courted controversy by
· selecting Golota as the opponent for Tyson's fir;t pay-per-view bout
since he knocked out Francois Botha in the fifth round on Jan. 16,
1999.

Friday, October 20, 2000

NEW YORK (AP) -AI Gore and George cie&lt; my opponent has put forward in this elecW Bush sparred over tht·ir rival economic tion are not just unfair, they're unsound and
plans Thursday. casting the election as a refer- they would hurt our economy."
endum on national prospenty. "The choice
Bush argued that his plan- with its centercouldn't be clearer," said Gore, Jnd Bush agre.ed piece S1.3 trillion tax cut, new incentives for
- but with a different version of whom to businesses and an option for privately investing
choose.
' some Social Security money - was better
The Democratic vice president urged Amer- suited to extend the nation's expansion.
icans to stay the course after eight years of eco".This election must bring a victory of fieenomic expansion under the Clinton-Gore dorll and i1movation- and a defeat for central
administration. Republican Bush said Gore was planners and bureaucrats," rhe Texas governor
taking undeserved crrdit for good economic told workers at Visioneering, Inc. in Fraser,
times and ridiculed him for "analog thinking in Mich.
'
a cligital world."
The company is a family owned business that
Gore focused on the economy before an makes tools and components for the auto and
audience ofbusiness leaders in New York. Hush aerospace industries.
"Some politicians want to take credit for the
did the ~me at a campaign stop in Michigan.
Bush later traveled to New York where they new economy," Bush said. "But l &lt;lon't see govboth made TV appearances.
ermnent starting new companies, writing new
In his s~eech, Gore called the election, less software, inventing new technology. opening
than three weeks olf, "a choi ce a.' fundamental new factories ."
Gore's New York address was billed in
as prosperity itself."
.. This i~ about more than nun1bers on a advance by aides as a major economic speech.
spreadsheet," Gore said. 'The economic poli- The Bush campaign moved to pre-empt him,

changing the format of his previously scheduled Mtchtgan stop to get hts economic message out.
Gore later joined Senate candidate Hillary
Rodham Clinton and running mate Joseph
Lieberman at a noisy union rally where he
sharpened his eco~omic focus.
."It's about the economy, it's about jobs," said
Gore.
Polling following Tuesday's final debate was
still unsettled. An NBC News poll done
Wednesday showed me . race closing to within
the error margin, while a CNN-USA TodayGallup poll out Thursday showed Bush turning
a pre-debate 6-point lead into a .I 0-point lead,
49-39. Two-thirds of the sample was fiom
before the debate.
Gore generally leads Bush in surveys of confidence in the canclidates' ability to hancUe the
economy, but Bush shrugged off such findings
on Thursday.
He said on CNBC that polls also show peo-.
pie believe he. has "better leadership qualities
and that's what the race is all about."

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP)
Shocked and saddened,

after takeoff Monday night.
Investigators w!th the Nanonal
mqurners prepared to pay their Transportation Safety Board are
last respects to Gov. Mel Carna- trying to determine what caused
han, the victim of a f.,tal plane the crash. Officials said that
crash.
among other factors. they were
Thousands of mourners led by looking into whether problems
President Clinton were expected with a primary attitude indicator,
Friday at a memoriJ) service on used to help maintain level flight,
the Statehouse grounds . Also were to blame.
expected to attend were Vice
NTSB member Carol CarPresident AI Gore and Republi- mody said the investigation could
can Sen. John Ashcroft, who was take up to a year.
being challenged for re-election
On Thursday, the line of
by the two-term Democratic . mourners extended down a
curving mansion sidewalk, lined
governor.
Carnahan's casket, draped in an with flowers and cards left by visAmerican flag, was viewed by an itors.
estimated 8,000 mourners who
A composed Jean Carnahan
filed quietly through the gover- hugged emotional veterans of her
nor's mansion Thursday.
late husband's staff, the first of the
The casket was to be delivered 'throng to pass the casket flanked
to the Statehouse aboard a caJsby honor guards.
son followed by a riderless horse,
The new governor, Roger Wila symbol of a fallen warrior.
son, a·n d his wife, Pat, were
The two-term governor will among the first to enter the manbe buried Saturday in a rural sion, where they embraced Mrs . ·
Ozarks cemetery, along with his Carnahan and paused before the
oldest son Roger, the pilot of the casket.
small plane '!'ho also died in the
Among the mourners were Jim
crash. The third victim was long- and Mary Magers, retired state
time campaign aide Chris Sif- workers from Jefferson Ciry.After
ford, 37:
pausing quietly at the casket, they
Carnahan, 66, his son, 44, and signed a guest book and wiped
Sifford were headed to a Senate away tears.
campaign event when the aircraft
" He was the best governor,
went down near St. Louis shortly JUSt the best," Jim Magers said.

PORTLAND, Maine (AP) A pharmaceutical industry group
.is asking a federal judge to block
Maine's pioneering law ainted at

cutting the cost of prescription
drugs.
The Pharmaceutical R.esearch
and Manufacturers of America,
known as PhR.MA, asked U.S.
District Judge D Brock Hornby
for a preliminary inj unction to
keep the law from taking effect
until a .constitutional challenge is
heard.
The industry group, whtch
represents about 100 U.S. drug
companies, filed the suit on the
eve of the law's effective date in
August.
It contends that the Maine Rx·
Program

is

unconstitutional

because it conflicts with federal
Medicaid law and because it
would regulate transactions outside 'the state - when drugs are
distributed from warehouses
located elsewhere.
"Maine simply has no authority to go beyond its borders,"
industry lawyer Allen Rugg told
the j udge.
But Assistant Attorney General
Andrew Hagler argued that the
good of the law ourweighs any
harm. He said studies found that
the price of the 50 drugs seniors
use most often have increased at

four times the rate of inflation.
For the I 0 most conunonly used
drugs, he said, senior; pay 86
percent more at pharmacies than
the federal government and
other large buyers pay.
"The status quo means that
people will remain sick and will
remain unable to afford the
medinne they need," Hagler
said.
Hornby said during the hearing that he would not issue a ruling Thursday.
The Maine law, the first of its
kind in the nalio~, was enacted
in May and allows price controls
to be imposed in three years if
negotiations don't lead to significant reductions in drug prices ..
Thirty-four . drug companies
have agreed to participate in the
negotiations under the program.
More companies probably are
, interested but are waiting for the
outcome of the lawsuit, said
David Winslow, director of public and legislative alfairs tor the
state Human Services Depart'ment.

"We've done our homework
and We believe we wtll prevail,"
he said.
Winslow said the state planned
to begin signing up individuals
m late November and stort the
program Jan. I.

FRIDAY'S

Prep Sports
Football
SEOAL

SEO

can help VOU gel ahead. • Creating Unique l.llmlng Opportunlti-What can Alabama

•

teach the world? Alabama AloM Unlweilltr, Alii- State University, Jacksonville State University,
and the University ol Montevallo offer degrees and programs found at lew other colleges in the

TVC

ALL

TVC

ALL

Eastern
3-o 7-1
Miller
2-1 7-1
Waterlord
2·1 4·4
Trimble
1·2 4·4
Southern
1·2 3·5
Federal Hocking 0·3 1·7
Friday's Games
Meigs at Vinton County
Trimble at Southern
Eastern at Waterford
Alexander at Wellston
Nelsonville· Yorli at Belpre
Federal Hocking at'Miller
'

Area non-league
ALL

Wahama
3·4
Hannan
1·7
1·7
South Galli a
Friday's Gamea
Hannan at South Gallia
St. Mary's at Wahama

Volleyball

Today'a Match•

Alexander del. Meigs, 15·12, 10·
15, 15-13
Saturday's Matches
· Division II Sectional
at Rio Grande
Meigs v_Jackson, 1:00
Gallia Academy v. River Valley,
2:00
Division IV Sectional
at Alexander
Southern v. Waterford, 5:00
Eastern v. Crooksville, 6:00

technologies into every phase olaatudenra COllege-· • Shaping Global Leadership-In the mrlitary, in the
Dothan and Auburn Unrveralty Montgomery are noted for training military leaders. In fact, both General Henry Shelton.

season. He has a career record of

chairman ot the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and General Michael Ryan, Air Force chiet ot staff. are AUM grad;ates. And the
University of Alabama's nationally ranked techno-M.B.A. program helps business executrves connect with success in the
new economy. • Pioneering Health Care I.-lions-The discoveries.and advances made by ~abama's medical pioneers

112-104 with a 4.27 ERA. Kile
was voted to his third All-Star
team and was the first St. Louis
pitcher in 15 years to win 20

are something everyone can feel goOd about. Reaearchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham recently rnade
international headlines by pinpointing the origin ot the AIDS vlru._and are now moving closer to developing a

gamer,;.

vaccine. Plus the Univer~ty of South Alabama's Bum Centll' Ia a national leader in the development and use
of an~icial skin for burn ~ctims. These renowned health care powarhcHDes also are pursurng new methods

Dodgers sign Hansen
to 1-year deal

of prevention. diagnosis, and treatment for cancer, heart disease, and much more. •'Developing New
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Dave
Hanse n, who hit a recorQ seven
pin ch- hit homers this season,

Technologies-~abama creates the rnatenals to buld 11e1t1r llvel. Auburn ~iversity is responsible

for revolutionary developments In engineering. dellgntng avll)'lhing from stronger bridges
and roadways to more effective car airbap and bulletproof vests. At the high-tectJ
University of ~abama in Huntsville, ICientllts apply their skills to create
hgh-temperature superconductors and promising

signed a one-year contract with

the Los Angeles Dodgers with a
dub option for a seco nd season.

llansen will earn $625,000 next

new medical devices.

season plus incentives.

Hamen hit .289 with eight
homers and 26 l'lBl s in 102
games this year. As a pinch hitter,'
he was 15-of-55 with the seven
hom ers ,md 14 RBis. His 12
career pinch-hit homers with the
D odger~ is a fran chise record.
•

Hulbert leads Tampa .
Bay Classic
11ALM HAR.130R. Fla. (AP) Mike Hulbert , ranked 214th on
the I'GA money list, shot a 7undcr-par 64 to take a two-stroke

lead after the first round of the
Tampa Bay ClaSSic. Scott Gump,
Bob Friend, john Huston, Steve
Pate and Carl Paulson were tied
for seco nd .

.

RIO. GRANDE -This vear's
Division II volleyball sectional
definitely has a local flavor to 11,
with three teams from Gallia and
Meigs cou nties involved.
Meigs , Gallia Academy and
River Valley are three of the four
teams in the sec tional with Ja ckson, the Blue Angels' and R.ai ders'
SEOAL rival , filling out the field.
Meigs (16-4, TVC Ohio q-2)
enters play as the top seed after
winning the TVC Ohio Division
title. The Marauders began the
season with a I O-il record and
have been the poster kids for the
team concept.
"We're very young and those
young ones, especially, are a tightknit group," said Meigs head
coach Rick Ash. "A lot of times

Nelsonville· York 3:0 6-2
Wellston
2·1 4-4
Vinton County 2·1 2·6
Belpre
1·2 4·4
Meigs
1·2 4·4
Alexander
0-3 O-e
Hocking Dlvlaton

The deal with the NL Central
division champions includes a
team option for. 2004 and performan ce bonuses and escalators that
could make it worth up to $32 .55
million for four seasons.
Kile (20-9) had a 3.91 ERA last

nation. Plus the Univerwlly of West AlabM!IIIIeldlng the way In developing a campus that integrates Internet

FROM OVP STAFF REPORTS

TVC
Ohio Division

Louis C.ardinals.

boardroom, and·in your hometown, Alabama can prepara you to take charge of your future. Troy State University

www.thinkalabama.edu

ALL

Jackson
5-0 e-o .
Logan
5-o e-o
Gallia Academy 4·1 6-2
Point Pleasant 3·2 6·2
Athens
1-4 2·6
Warren
1-4 2·6
Marietta
1-4. 2-6
River Valley
0-5 o-e
Frlday'IGamea
Point Pleasant at Gallia Academy
River Valley at Warren
Marietta at Athens
Jackson at Logan

ST. LOUIS (AP) Darryl
Kile, coming olf his first 20-win
season, agreed to a $23 million,
three-year contract with the St.

health care. and IIIIlCh 1110111 at one ol18 ClllllpUSeS. You'll c111conr how outhinking

Marauders
begin
playoffs
Saturday

GHLIGHTS

Kile signs Sll million
. deal with cards .

.and grow Explore the arts and tclenc•, business, engl.-tng, educatkin,

Page 81
Ftttt.y. october 10. 1000

Clinton to lead mourners Dru company tries
at Carnahanls memorial to b ock Maine law

pUblic universities on. &amp;OMNIIIIIrJ VIIand out-of-the-ordinary q,IIIJIIUniiiiiiD 11M!, •~. Clllllle,

.·l

S. leads Preside11t~ Cup, Page 82
~·oll'e.{1e Football Notebook, Page 83
Scoreboard, Page 85
Notebook, Page 88

Core, Bush touting economic plans on circuit

Alabama's

•

The Daily Sentinel

when you have the o1Jer ones

SENIORS HONORED - The TVC Ohio Division champion Meigs
Marauders closed out their regular season with a three set loss to

PREP

and younger ones. they don't mix
well together, but the leadership
from the two seniors and the
youth have blended really well."

Alexander Thursday evening. Meigs honored the seniors before the
game, from left to right are: Shannon Price and Margie Bratton.

Seniors Shannon

V~EYBALL

Maljorie Bratton have p'rovided
solid leadership for the Marauders
this season. Price leads the team
wid1 156 assists, while Bra.tton is
the No. 1 hitter with 118 kills.
Bratton also has a team-best 42
blocks.
Sophomore Mindy Chancey is
second to Price in as(,ists w·ith
115 ..
Sophomore Kaytc Davis has 70
kills and junior Corrie Hoover
has recorded 68.
Freshman Jaynee Davis has 49
kills and 25 blocks.

Meigs falls to Alexander
ROCK SPRINGS - The Tri-Valley
Conference champion Meigs Marauders
dropped an exciting three set match to run nerup Alexander Thursday evening at Larry
R. Morrison Gymnasium.

Even though the Marauder; had already
nailed down the conference title, the -match
was played with the emotion of a title contest. The Spartans won the first contest 1512, Meigs came back and won the second
contest 15-10 before losing the rubber
match 15- 13.
Mindy Chancey Jed Meigs witll 11
puiqts , she was 1~ of 18 servmg and had
seven assists , Kayte Davis added nine points,
Davis was 19 of 19 serving ami had three
kills and one assist.
Katie' Jeffer; added seven points on 17 of
17 serving, Shannon Price added six points
on 16of 16 serving and she added 13 assists.
Corrie Hoover added five points on n1ne of

12 serving and two kills, Nikki Butcher
added rwo points and she was nine of nine
servmg.

Margie Brattori added 13 kills and nine
blocks and Jaynee Davis added seven points
· and chipped in with two blocks.
As a team Meigs was 87 of 90 serving,
they had 25 kills, 21 assists and 11 blocks.
Shannon Price and Margie Bratton closed
out their regular season high school careers
and were honored on senior night before
the game.
Meigs is now 16-4 overall and finished
the TVC as champions with a 14-2 reco rd.
· The Marauders will play Jackso n Saturday at
1 p.m. at the University of Rio Grande in
the Division II sectional.
.
Alexander def. Eastern, 12-15,
15-10, 15-12
EAST MEIGS - ,Alexander Spartans
defeated Eastern (17- 5, TVC 12-4) in three

Price and

sets .12- 15, 15-10 and 15-12 Tuesday.
Alexander had already won th e fim game
of the set prior to the remainder of the
game being blacked out with a transformer
problem.
Kristen Chevalier was 25 for 25 serving
with 18 points and . two aces in a big night
for the senior play-maker. She also was 5 of
5 spiking with four kills, and 33 for 41 setting with nine assists and four blocks.
Senior sidekick Juli Bailey was 11 of 12
spiking with two kills, four blocks and perfe ct setting and serving nights. Amber Baker
was 20 for 30 '&gt;ctting with six aSsists and 8
for 8 serving with two points,
Danielle Spencer was 7 for 7 serving with
three points and 10 of 11 spiking. Cinda
Clifford was 11 tor 14 serving with ni1\e
points and an ace. Shauna Elliott was 3 tor 4

Serving has been one of the

Marauders' strong points thi1 season. The ceam has a co llective
.940 service percentage (930 for
985). Katie Jeffers has the top percentage among individual~ with ~1

.980 average (2 10 of 215). Freshman Nikki Butcher

p;

No. 2

111

that category with a .960 average
(145 tor 151).
River Valley ellters the tou rnament fresh ofr a sweep of Meif,'S

Please see Netters, Page B5

Please see. Playoffs, Page B:Z

Subway Series presents loads of logistical problems
NEW YORK (AP) - This Subway
Series stuff is getting more and rnorc confusing.

1

Just co nsid er what happened Thursday
afternoon at Yankee Stadium. Ccorgc
Steinbrenner was stfolliMg through th e
locker room when he was stopped by a
·
clubhome boy.
" Mr. Steinbrenner! Mr. Steinbrenm.,.l"
he ca lled out to th e New York Yankees
ow ner. "Do we get to go to Shea Stadium?"
The lloss was stumped.
" ! don't ki1 ow," he said. " You'll have to
a~k sonu: one else."

That's still the answer to a lot of logistical questions. lt seems.
Because even though th e two ballparks
arc only 14 minutes apart - with th e
Crand Central Parkway, the Major Dee ~
gan Expressway and the Triboro llridge all
closed to norm al traftlc, ~hat is - this
World Series is presenting all kinds of
problems .
A" in , if Mets star Mike Pi ,tzza wa'nt&lt;; rn
drive directly to Yanke e Staditll11, will th e
Yankees let him park in tlll'ir lot'
There were workouts at both places

J"

the teams prepared for Game I Saturday
night in the Brunx.

The Mets said AI Leiter will pitch the
opener imtcad of Mike Hampton, who
started Game I in the NL playoff series
against San Francisco and St. Louis.
"AI has fulluwed Mike all year and Mike
pitched the last game. so it is Al's turn to

First Team All-TVC
Matt Preston
Belpre
(37.4). Car~on Midkitr- Meigs
(39.6). Jeremy
Bonk1

~1t

SheJ

StJdi~

um.The tacility is lo cated in side· the rYkt1'

For the Yankees. jose Canseco was
added to th c World Series roster after
hein~ left otT in the AL championship
~t: ri cs. Manager Joe Torr~ w:mted an ~.:xtra
bat, especiall y for the middle games at
Shea.
"lt was tough, Jt wa' very rough,"
C;mscco said. '~I've always b(.·cn used to

Thi s summer. Jti:a . Roger CknKil\
beaned 1'1azza, the Mc•ts blocked the Yan kel'S fi·01n ming tl11..' W~o.'Ight room during
intcrkaguc play.
"lr vv;Js all'.;olutl'ly tl1e

Mets ger1l'tJ1

manag~·r

ri~ht th111g lo

do:·

Steve Phillips -;;Hd.

Please see Series, Page B:Z

Stewart carries
Lions past Bucs
TAMPA, Fla. (A P) nmning, the Detrmt

Kec&gt;p

Lions, w l1 o have won tine ...· ot·
tOur g;anH~S ~incc ln-.in g 31 - l t l ID

l10n~ rt't~­

TJmpa Bay .1t the Siln.:rdonH.' on
Sept. 17.
The Uuc"l h,tvc.:.·n 't \HHl -.iJKL'
bcanng Detroit to llllpr&lt;WL' to J(}. Their tOur- g.1rnc Jo..,ing ..,, teak
. is T~11nrJ Uay\ longc't "llhT rh . .·
team startcJ t 1-5 in 1Y9fJ Tony Dunboy's first ye.1r ·" coa&lt;'h.
"I rhink ti:1r thl' fir-;;r rime m

&gt;oneJ. and eventually Jame&lt;
StCwan would find .l chm k in
T~m1p.1 l3ay's armor.
"We know they'n· a great

conference has annoutKed it~

Of(, .

use thl' weight room

clt1hhouse.

ROCK SPRING S - The
Ohio DivisiOn of the Tri- Valley

second t~am all-conftm.:nce han-

ke e~

pitch," Met\ manager Bobby Valentine.

AII-TVC golf
squad
named
20110 all-league go lf team. •
Meigs sm ior C:arson MidkifT
led co-champion M eibos by finishing second in the conference
in scoring behind MVP Matt
Presto n of Belpre.
· -Freshman Jeremy l3anks finished third n1 the conference 111
scorin g to join Miclkiff on the
fint team.
Senior Nick Dettwiller earn ed

playing. I was working h.m! to my rc.tdy."
In the meanriml', both tl':1111S trtl'd to
settle their oft:.the-ficld pl.Jns.
The Metl, for exampk. will kt the Y.m-

team til·fcnsivdy, and tllt·y'n:
going to stop you a number of
timt:,," Stc\vart \aiJ ati:n ru shing

ALL·TVC GOLFERS - Co-champ ion Meigs placed three players on
the Ohio Division golf team. From left to right, Nick Dettwiller, Jeremy Banks and Carson Midkiff.

Meigs (41.2!. Sean McMailm- (·U.S). Nick Detwiller- Meib"
Vinton County (-!2.1), Jared (-l J.S). Pa r Klein -· llelpr&lt;·
Walters- 13elpre (4;l.2),Joscph ' (-l:l.H). j.J&lt;'k Arthur - Wellston
(-l-! .0). I krek !lobo -AlexanNicholas - Wellston (43.3)
Second Team ·
dcr (4-l. l). Julie Hufllnan Justin Applebaum
Belpre Wollston (-l-!.7).

tor 116 yards .lnd three to uchdown" in a 2X.14 vinory over
the Bucc.111eers on Thursday

my life. ' I c~m 't cvt.·n put into
words wh.lt rhi&lt;~ {(.\\Ill IS ti: ..:llllg
1 ight now:· Buo dd\.·n~i\'l' uck-

ni~ht.

"llut you'w got to keep
poundmg ,1\\\l)' bcclu'\c there's
going m bt· little scam . . in thcrt'

lc Warren Sapp &lt;,Jid. "But I think
we'll bt.· .llrig;ht.Wc'\'L' been here

before."

that yo u C.lll get through ... Wt•
Jmt (,tuck with it .mJ didn't give

up on the run."
Stewart scored on

run~ of 4, 4

and I yards. Jnd jason Hanson
kicked two fic:ld gn~tls klr the
'

The B11c~ .Ht' .1 - 4 .1fier 'L'YC!l
gJnH.'S for the \CC&lt;..md -;tr.nght

year. They re,pomlcd by win~ease
I

see NFL, Page B:Z

�•

•

..
Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Frlda~Octobar20,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

Frlday, October 20, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

;

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

NFL
PRESIDENT'S CUP GOLF

NBA

Co~ch

:u.s. hammers intemational team Cavs handle
GAINESVILLE. Va. (AP) . Amencan player; lud more problems With equ1ptnent md apparel
than the lnternauonal team m the
lint round of the PreSidents Cup
David Duval broke a 7-iron and
couldn't wear the same shm as h1s
teammates. Kirk Tnplett had on
the \\'rong hat
On the cour;e, though. everyone matched and ewrythmg
worked So well, m fact, that the
U .S tcJm went got a sweep that
o;;urpnsc.•d ~.~vc:n thl' man who mJy
h,l\c thou!;ht he'd seen It all m
~-:oil

''In m~ w1IJe-~t drcamo;, I cou]d
not haw expected 3-0," US. opt.un1 Ken Ventun s.~ud .. We h:~d
gn.·.u lihots .H the nght tune.,
A d.ly rh:u bt"g.m wuh J Maon
w.u cbncc• by Ne\\' Zealand's
Mllh.•d C.1mpbdl ended \\'Ith
U S. players &gt;nuhng and congrotuLltlng e.1ch other on the IRth

green Jftcr \vmmng all five of tht."
,llrertutt.·-shot nlJ.tchcs
The war dance was suppos;d to
l,1y down a challenge to the other
SH.h.· - and tt was one che AmerICans eagerly accepted.
"It was bas1cally a shocker,"
lntenutional
captain
Peter
Thomson md "They're all gomg
to pull th&lt;~r socks up and play a
b1t better, with a lower score And
we'll see what happens then"
W1th Ph.il MICkelson and Tom
Lehman setting the early tone by

wmnmg SIX stmght holes on the
front side m their match agamst
Greg Norman and Steve Elkington, the other Amencan pfayer;
seemed to gam confidence as the
day went on.
Three of the matches were
deCided before the 18th hoi&lt;. and
m the other two, the Amencan
pam needed only to n• the final

hole to wm
It rennnded M1ckelson of a
more mtensc: dw of mternatwnJl
co mpc..•tmon on)\' 13 monrhs .tgo
'"It was a smul.u fedmg that \\C
had Sunday at l.m year's Ryder
Cup where tht" tdl·a w.ts wm

those first tOur 11\Jtchc:s. squue
this rhmg ofT and gtve us the

momc:ntul1\ to wm tl'll~ cup;·
Mtckdson ~oud .. By wmmng
dectsl\·dy. Wl' fdt ""'"' gtn.· our
ream a hul~ btt of momc:mum
and confidence"
Rook~e Norah Be~.w, fighnng

nerves of not only playmg on h1s
first nat!onal team but playmg
wah T1ger Woods a&lt; a partner,
notiCed.
"It sort of allowed me to be a
httle mote settled because I was
very nervous for the first few
hole's and for most of the day,"
Begay sa1d. "I was glad to see we
had at least one pmnt"
Begay hardly played l1ke his
nerves were on edge He h1t a 3wood 215 yards over water to the
14th green for a two-putt badie

Play~s

pmnts and 81 kills
Roundmg out the starters for
the RaJd&lt;rs will be oumde hitters
JamJe NJCh.ols and rruddle hmer
81
Cara Butcher. Either setter
and Southern m a m-match Celeste Harnngton or oumde
hitter Shannon Rankin could
earher th1s week.
Semor setter/outSJde hmer take the final starting spot.
Chelsea DeGarmo had been the
Megan Harmon, Jenny White
leader for River Valley (10-12, and Stacy Rankin w tll play key
SEOAL 4-8) on the court all roles . from the bench for R1ver
year She has !52 pmnts and 49 Valley.
In R1ver Valley's 15-3, 16-14
aces, leading the RaJders gomg
mto the postseason.
wm over Galha Academy earher
She was good on 94 percent of thiS season at Chesh~re, Harrmgher ~erves this season •
ton led the Ratders wah nme
DeGmno also has 100 kills and pomts, whtle DeGarmo and
an attack.mg percentage of 097
N1ch ols each had etght
In Tuesday's tn-match at Me1gs,
Wlule DeGarmo has been a
kader, fellow semor Devm Cot- DeGarmo had 23 pomts, \\ h1le
trell h.1s been J grco.1t compliment Cottrell netted 14 for the
wtth her sk1lls on the court
RJJders.
Sr,unng a' .1 m1ddle hnter for
Galha Audemv ( ll-7 SEOAL
the· R .mlers. Cottrdl has 121 6-6) dropped Its last t\\o matches

from Pip

that put he and Woods up for
good after they had lost three
str.ugbt holes to blow a lead to
Erme Els and V!Jay Singh.
Then he calmly stroked an 1ron
onto the 18th green for an easy
two-putt to seal the 1-up wm
It was enough to earn hmt
another pairing With his former
Stanford room111ate m a best ball
match Fnday agamst Sh1gek1
Maruyama and Carlos Franco
"I JUSt got out there and JUS!
rned m matnratn a positiVI.!' mentahty, positive attitude and support T!!;er," Begay sJJd
Woods .lppre::uated It on ,1 day
where he struggled before sulking
a cruCial 20-fnota fur par that
kept the team ,thead on the 16th
hole
"I told hun, 'The jOb's done.
I'm gumg to m.lh· tt."' Woods
s,tid.
Behmd Woods .tnd Begay were
Duval and D,wJS Low til. who
were locked 111 a ught match \\'Jth
Ntrk Pnce and Carlos Franco
Duval was playmg with a borrowed 7-lron after breakmg lm
on a tree, and used It to knock It
mff on the par-3 II th hole.
Duval was ai!O wearing a long
sleeve shtrt instead of the team
umform, whlle Tnplett, who usually wears a floppy hat, got the
wrong baseball-type hat out for
the day
Tnplett and Stewart Cmk, both

of the regular season to Jackson
and Athens, losmg each match m
three games.
The Blue Angels have enJoyed a
solid season despite the recent
setbacks ThiS year marked the
first time m several years that
G AHS defeated Athens The
Angels also knocked off league
heavywe1ghts Logan and Warren
th1s season.
Head coach Garry Adkins has
gotten the most out of hiS group,
whJCh was deCimated by graduation However. the returnmg
semors have provtded strong leadership
"That semor group has b.en a
tremendou.;; group, rt:'ally, as far as

tht"

cohesl\·"-~nr:ss

of them pbymg

togt:'ther :md tht..·m w.mtmg to
shO\\ that the\ Llll pl.1y tngerher
and that thc·y w le,trnt'd the

g.unc:'

Adk111'~

rook~es,

any

played the best golf of

twosome,

makmg

seven

Lakers, 91·84

l&gt;•rd•es m what is an unfanuliar
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
and difficult alternate-shot format
defendmg NBA champ1on Los
for the players.
"He may keep that hat because Angeles Lakers fell to 0-4 m the
they made seven birdies," Venrun preseason as Andre Miller led the
sa1d "I don't think he knows he ! ·Cleveland Cavaliers With 19
had the wrong hat on I wasn't pomts in a 91-84 VIctory Thur;day mght.
gomg to tell hun anythmg."
Kobe Bryant scored 18 pomts
The whitewash was especially
for
the Lakel", who are the only
sweet for a US te:.m that some
had mferred was not ternbly team 111 the league wtthout a VICmrae-srl'd 111 the PresJdents Cup. tory thts preseason Foul-plagued
wluch began only m 1994 as a Shaqutlle O'Neal finished wtth
way to havr,.• a nanonal tc-;un 13 pmnts and eight rebounds m
between Ryder Cups
" I find It very surprmng
bec.mse 1\e neve-r sa1d to .wybod} that I'm not happy to be
here•." Lehman s,nd "And 1t's the

:-.ame for TJgr,.·r Jnd thr..• s.un~.: for
Phil There 's nt&gt;vcr hr..• en Jny
doubt 111 tny nund .1buut my
conmmmt:JH or Phtl's or Ttger's
or Norah's or Jnybody m the rest
of the team ."
For one day, at least, It was a
much different feeling than the
U.S t~am lud two ye,trs ago at
Royal Melbourne, where they
tmled from the opening matches
and suffered a hunnhaung loss, 20
l/2-111 / 2
"We've been lookmg forward
to thiS day," MICkelson sa1d "We
were ready It showed"

Semo r Jessica Donnally leads
the Angels with a serv1e percentage of. 960 She also has a teamhigh 32 aces
C lassmate Cass1e Graham has a
940 serviCe percentage wJth 19
aces, and a 780 dtg percentage,
good for the team lead.
Semor Gretchen Craig IS ued
w1th Graham With a 940 serv1ce
percentage She IS the team leader
m k11ls With 67 and has a teambest 86 blocks.
The tournan1ent opens at I
p m tomorrow wnh No 1 seed
Metgs taking on Jackson Galha
AcaJemy :1 nd R.tver Valley meet
at2pm
The wtnnct s of th~ first two
match.:s will p!J') for the . . cuwnal ntk at 3 30 pIll

....nd

'2.7

NFL
from Page 81
\\ mmng c1ght of thc:1r b.st nml.:'
regular-season games last SL'JSOn
tu timsh Wtth a franchiSe-best II
"ctones and their first NFC
Ccntr.1l title 111 10 year!l.
Tampa Bay led H-0 when tlungs
began to unravel agamst Oetrolt,
wluch has \VOn three consecutive
pmes on the ro.1d to begm a sea"'" tor the first nnw smce 1961
Shaun King threw three mterccpttons M1ke Alstott lost a fumble And the speoal teams wasted
a golden opportumty when Nate
Webster blocked a punt and
RonJe A.trber couldn't recover m
the end zone for what would
haw been a first-quarter touchdo\\11

Inst ead. DetrOit's Ron Rtce
recovered for a safety, cosnng the
Bur&gt; f.-e poult&lt; .md leavmg them

~emt..· \\L'

Jt..' .t lot bl·ttl'l tt..'.llll rl1.1n
our los ing fou1 ~t1.11ght g:.tllll'li, ·
Klllg &gt;.nd 'I chdn t pl.w ·" \\'ell ·"
l m lJp.lblc of pLl\ tng It hurt\
knowmg 1t \\ :1s tll'L'lkd tomght"
Ch,nhe ll,ltch "·" IJ-of-3 1 for
14-l yards .111J no tntcru:poons
Tht:' l3ucs li;lCkc:d lnm St..'VC: ll t11nc:s
boostmg then NFL-le,,dmg
season totJI to 3S - but d1dn 't
forcr: any runwvl!rs
The L1om are 5-0 "hen they
have fewer rurnovers rh.m thL'll
opponents
" We talked all week about outplaymg thetr defense and we dtd,"
SJLd

Cornerb;1ck llr\ ,lllt

&lt;.;l'Wllg

up

(

llllllUte"S

llgauskas had 1 H
pmnts and II rebounds for the
Ctv,tliers (1-3), who never tratled
after takmg a ~ 1-~0 lead on Chns
Gathng's up-in wttll 52 seconds
left m the first half They extended thetr margm to 59-~ 7 with a
16-6 run, capped by a three-pmnt
play by llgauskas w1th five nnnutes kft Ill the third quarter
O'Neal returned to the court
w1th I 0:02 left in the game, but
Clarence Weatherspoon h1t a 17footer, llgauskas made a layup and
Lamond Murray converted a
three-pomt play wJth 6.24 left to
g•ve Cleveland Its b•ggest lead,
75-61.
Los Angeles got as close as 8784 on two free throws by Bryant,
but Miller clmched tt wah a patr

Subscribe today • 992-2 156

'.

TIRED Of JUST HAVING
A JOB? LOOKING
fOR NEW CAREER?

..

. ,•

Wonderf.JI opportun:ltes are avatlable tn Tom Peden Country.
We are expandtng our ne;ilittes and need more sales people.
No expenence is t('lqutred, only a wtlltngness to .ea m,
work as a team and have a strong intt tative.
(Including "'""' 11''9""1 .

Call To Sclledule An Interview:

475 South

Chu r~h

Series
from Page 81
" I probably should've called
Bnan (Ymkees GM Cashman)
beforl' I dtd It rather tban after
Knowmg th~ cmotlons of our
players, I thought there \'lS a
potellttal fnr ,, problem
T~.:nstons have LOokd down to
thL· poult \\hL'Ie nurhu1g\ \\tll
luppen," he ,,lid
lort L' .d~o hopes t·.1lmcr hl'.H.h
\1 ill prt'\,111.
•
" I th111k a\ .1 d!ss~..·n·tu: tn PL'oplc wh.1t's gomg on." he: s.l!d
"Wh4..'1lL'Vt'r you ptck up .1 lll'\\'S.p.lpt..•r. w!utcvt..'r Jl(.'twork you
\\',lie h. th.tt\ .Ill vmt ,,.,. 11 Mtke
g'L'ttlll~

ha

111 thL' )\L',Hi"

' I would ltkc· til bdtc·vc· tim
Wol"ld St.'rlt..''t t!l more .tbnlat compctlttoll md fun tl1.1n .tb&lt;&gt;ut g.:tttlli( CW!l ,l!ld Itl&lt;'ltllll-( l'lllt&lt;," he

than Seattle, the Mets probably
saved up to $500,11011 111 travel
costs Of course, players on both
Sides have had other thmgs to deal
Wl[h thts week
''I've been getting a lot of calls
for uckets, a lot," sJJd Mets reliever John Fra.n co. a New York
nattvc:
YJnkn·~ short\top Oerek Jetr:r
wt:nt to .1 mall on WL·dncsdJy
wnh first b,J..,eln.lll llllO M.lrtlilt..~l
Th~.:\'
h.h.l .1 ft1nnv
t..'IH OlllltL'I \\.lth ,\ f,111 \\ ho ,\\ked
fot .1 11 .H1Wg:r.1ph tor h1~ btotha.
I \lgncd the· b.1ll 111d he· c,nJ. 'I
thtnk th4..· Ml'[\ ..11~ ~mng w kill
\ou. · jL·tcr ..,,ltd
Me.lll\dule, C:hllck Knobhll clt

Lh.•h\\.'r

Th~ ~l't..' omi

to ~'-'t on
,\IJOthL' I .nrpl.uw," ht..• ~.lid . "M;lll.
WI.' h.IV\..' b!,.'i,.'ll dotn~ SO 11\lH.'h

hmllL'

111

th.n w..· don't

b ,l \\'

tr.lWh11g"
,
By ~l.t)'lllg tlw Y111k1't'' whc·t·

lud

,1

llH.'~Ii.lg ...•

h~·

\\,lllt\.'d

" It's a test," [Jahner

~td

"They want to see

how much I can take."
Palmer satd Couch , who already has a metal
screw m his thumb from a high school mjury,
would need ,etther a screw or pm surg1cally
inserted.
The llrowns don't have a bye unu!Week 17,
and because Couch wtll need time to rehabilItate, It's htghly doubtful the team would dress
huu for anorhcr game rhts season
After X-rays taken at the Cleveland C!tmc
revealed the fraLturc. ( :o uch returned (() the
Browns' rrammg f:1c1hry An hour bta, J tL'Jm
offinal pullt·d J Hummer vclud~ up ro the
b:Kk door co t:tkc Couch home
''I'm all 11ght.'' &gt;ald Couc h , wllo md!l,JtcJ
hts surgt..·ry would uke place Fnday
Wtth Couch stdehnc·J mJc·fimtcly, Pedi:C\on
\\' 111 .-..t.1rl Sunt-by\ gamt• .lg.utv.;t dh· Stl'l'ier\ 111
Ptttsburgh P~·dason \\',IS ; tgnL·d on SL·pt 1.
Jtter ba ckup T\· lJt'fllll'r w,ts Io . . r f(H· the yc.1r
wtth .1 ruptwcd Achtlk~· tendon
"Here-\ ;morhe1 opportumty fi&gt;r J pl.l\·l•r to
"'tcp up \\ 1th anodll'J pi.l)er's nu ~for tunl·."
P.dmer li,JH.J "Wu JU~t h 1\.L' co close r.mko;; .m d
m:uth on"
PL·dt.:l~on, JJ. \(.trtl'tl ll lllt..' g~:mtt..'~ tf11 the
Phtbddphl :l Eagles i.lst season. t:ompkttn g

119 of 227 pas~e~ fo1 1,276 Jard'l : m d &lt;;t'\'l'll
TDs . He appeared bndly .Jg&gt;~n&gt;t U.1lt1m ore

prat..Uc~

Cnuth

\\l'llf

1 17- of-21; (pt 1 -HD \·,mJ, .md

Sf..'\'t..'ll totH.: hdown~

thh

~l'.l,Oll

Bur

hl··~

CINCINNATI (AP) In
three weeks as the Cmonnat1
Ben gals head · caoch, DICk
LeBeau has dealt wtth dau ntnig
p&gt;perwork, bruiSed feelings.
mounlmg losses and unexpected
recogmt1on Jround town .
"I was dnvmg down 1-75 m a
traffic pm anJ a guy gets out of
lm car w lule we 'te stopped and
runs back and says, 'Dtck.
LeBeau 1 D1ck LeBeau !"' he sa~d,
laughmg
~ .''1 satd, 'Man, get back m your

~omobtle.'

::;: :'That d1dn 't happen to me
...(i.hen I was a coordmator."
••
:..:-After 26 years as an assiStant
~~th vanous teams, the defensive
.~rdinator
welcomed
the
r:.-fi.,nce
to take ovn when Bruce
'
:~os let qtu t after an 0-3 start.
•:":LeBeau, 63, ISm a to ugh spot
:·The coachmo- staff IS shot t-handi,4..~d. thl' team ts :;tLII wmless, tans
f::ttt..' .tngry ;111J thL•re 's a lmut to
~·\\Jut he Gill do to turn thmgs

.

los'- Snuth d 1dn 't take a well,
scowling on the SJdeltne
Snmh was still downcast
Wednesday whe n he talked to
reporters about 1t for the first

umc.
"It's hiS Jqdgment, hts call,"
Snuth md m a noncomnuttal
tone. "That's what be wants. He';
the head man"
A few nunutes later, LeBca u
walked uuo the tntervte\v room
to begm h1s sessmn wtth
reporters Snuth d1dn't .rea!tze
LeBeau was nearby when a
reporter asked about the~r relatiOnship
"We have a great relatiOnship
He's been stt:atghtforwar,P the
w h ole tunc,'' Sm1th SJ td. ~­
Ll'Beau SJm lcd and got Smtth 's

attcnuon

~"lr{)llJld

"What km d o f rclauonsh tp do
you have wJth the hcaJ coal h i''
Ld3e:lll asked nmchtevously
Sm1th b1oke mto ,1 \11llic,
walked ovt:r and g:lVc hm1 :1
han(_hhake Jnd .tn emb tall' An

~

Jwkw.lrd mou1cnt was ,1\'o!dtJ

•

"

1-k ·, tr} 111 g
H1~ bo ldest nlo\·t..• l.lllll' last
&lt;;Sund,ty 111 l'lttfibutgh, \\ht·n he
j_bcnc h od qu01 terbat k Akt!t Stn tth
~1n the tlmd yuarlt-r of a 15-0

t

P ITTSBURGH (AP) -Asked
Jerome Bettts told hun
~hen an tnJury forced hmJ to fi ll
~n as fullback Sunday for the Pttts,urgh Steelers, Chns Fuamatu•Ma'afala sa td, '"Get out of the
'~~·ay, 11m commg t hrougl1.'"
&gt;' After all, Bettis wasn't about to
:~ lunge Ius runmng sty!~ to
:accommodate a new blocker, and
:f&lt;.&gt;r good reason If tt's worked so
;lar for htm tn h11 e•ght NFL sea:Sons, why change nowt
t~ BettiS, who h:1s revtved the
l'Steders runmng game dtirmg
'(he1r three-game wtnmng ~rreak,
:t.ceds 14 yards Sunday agamst
~lcvcland to become the 15th
:NFL runnmg back to rush for
~9.1100 yards
)&gt; It dot·s n't have qutte the same
;i;mg to 1t "' 10.01111 yard;, anum:beJ l:ktth &lt;.o~dd tC;lch bv rhe uud:(tk of llt..'Xt ~l\1'10!1 tfht·' COlltlllLIL'S
~o ll\11 up y.11d lgl· H hh ldrl't..'r

••,W1Jat

.Now

Easy, comfortable and close to home, the Belpre
Center offers a range of physician refena l pulmonary
testing, occupational heal t h, outpatient laboratory, and
"

BREATHE

I

radiology health services with the same quality and compasSionate care you get from Marietta Memorial Hospital
Phys•c•an services are by appointment only; referral lab

collection and x-ray v1sits arc walk.in at your convenience

j

"

'f'·ll L'

OF THE
Castroenterolo@lst

BE:LPRE

thom.111d \',lid.,; fm .1
~uy "l111 '' 1.., .1 lullb.tlk 111 4..-o\kgL'

:

Dr. Scott Naam

Dr. Franci-1 Lu
Pulmonologtsl

Dr. Cllri.J Polen

Call740-373-0880

Internal J\lecltc me

to schedule an

to schedule an

appo1n~ment

appotntment

Call 740-373-0880
lo scht..-dul~ &lt;m

"Ntlll'

1 ~()(I( ))
~.11d · I

Cnt1cal Care/

Call740-374-&amp;472

lid"'

I" p!JL'liO!l1l'll.l]

lkt tl"

ll L'\l'I \\uu ld h,l\L' thougiH
\\tndd g~t IO 1),0()(1 \'.lld., ..
: Betti~ d1 t\Hk ! 1 .1 ~ p1..,,4..·d tolml'r
'l'_;tecn B,l\ tu l lb1~k fun l .1\l o1 011

;1

appotnlmcnt

mlllllt-', !J\t thl" \L'.\\011
!:1nd ~~ thl· l mnth-lt·IdH i g ll tl\c:
:t_u..,hL'I \V11h H &lt;):-;(, \,lllh. BL'ttl\

:thL•

ll1L'L!

:t1. J1.,
1

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Emn11tt

S1111th

( 1-t _v:;s

~ .n~h), rlunllllll 1\wtll.l' (l~ 01l
~lid\) ,111 d Rhk\· \\lme1.., (lJ~;7

.1

t\ .... h)
126 Lee Street, Belpre,
740-423-9640

OH

thrm\ n

JUSt t\\\1 TDs \\ Hh c1ght llltl'Hl'pllml.., durmg
Ck,·el.md\ tllrtl'llt four-g.m tt" lo.-..111):!: \trcak
Couth \\,h thl· lit\tl~B t.lkt..'lllll .1 J tJ ti. d.1~\
\\hilh mclulkd Mumc~ot.l\ D .ntnt-..· Culpepper~ PhaLH..idph11 '\ Dono\'.111 Ml N.1bb. Cmunnon \ Akth Smith .1nd Ch1ugo 's Cade

McNm\ n -

Jll l.'urrcnt NFL

~ta 1 tt:r \

• Unabk to make whole\Jle
rlnnges ~n m id~l'.tson, LeOcau
has made subtk adj u stments and
tlted to t111p10ve thl' .1tt1tu J c on a

team that has been shut out a
franchtse - recunJ. three tunes
already.
He banned m us1c tn the d rcssmg roon1 dunng the wrek after a
loss The 16-speaker sound system has been stlcnr smce LeBeau
took over
leBcou also has tnmted dn
tnore sp1r1ted pracnces
"The last few weeks, the
tempo has been more upbeat,"
ofTenstve lineman John Jackson
satd. "That's one of the thmgs
he's h"'ped on"
He also warned players that he
was gomg to g•ve backups a
chonce 1f the statters struggled.
Rodney Heath h as replaced
Amell H awkms as a &gt;tartmg cornerback, Smith got temporanly
bcm hc'd last Su n day and Jac kso n
w 1ll start m pia, e of Rod J ones at
left t.1ckle .next Snnd;ry .1g.11mt
l)t..·nver
"We've h.td change at the (01nerb.tck posltton, a changt..~ ;1t
tatk ll' I gul'SS he's JUSt lookmg
fo t a spat k,'' Snuth sa1d. " I guc'ss
that\ the p:ltrern he 's gomg w
set. Gu: ~ nt-eJ to be aw.uc.:· of
th,\t"
T he ch.mge\ h.wt:n't c hangeJ
~

the Olltcomes. The Bengals run
the ball more often under
LeBeau and have kept games
closer, but haven't come close to
wmmng
When Lc·Bcau got the JOb,
general manager M1ke Brown
was
no ncomm'atal
about
w h ether Jt wJs a one-season
:&gt;rrangement LeBeau IS hopmg tt
turns out to be tnore.
" [ rt..'I11C!llbcr rcalh ng sontethmg about Gen
Douglas
MacArthur when he turned 80
and they aslied hun what lm philosophy was," LeBeau ;a1d. "He
sa1d, 'I plan to hw forever and
one of th ese day&gt; I'll probably be
wrong '
" ! plan to coach tim team lt ke
I 'tn gomg w COJCh lt fOrever"
'

'

Notes: Tht• gatnc ag.u nst Dc nw r wasn't a &gt;t'iloutTh ursday, so 11
wo n 't bl' ~hm, n on local tclcvl""" The lkng.t ls how fa1led to
sell out t h ltT (~f rhe1r fi,llr Jegubr-st..'ason gaml.:'s smct' monng
tnro S-k13 nu llJon Pau l Btown
Stad tum
The on ly cc ll out
c.\llll' for the opener ag.unst
Clcvt!and, \\ hen thuu'l.lnds of
Brmvm fath p:-tlkkd the g.HL' to

Griese, Broncos fearful
of winless Bengals
DENVER (AI') Forget
th e fact tlut the Cmn n natJ
Bengals are 0-6, have had more
punts (38) than pomts (37) and
have lost e1ght stra tght games to

the Denver

~roncos

The Bronco\ (4 -3) lllSJst none
of that matters, callmg Cmcmnatl a talented team on the
verge of puttmg 1t all together.
T hey JUSt hope tt doesn't happen on Sunday, when they ventu re Hl,to the new Paul Brown
Stach u m.
"Tht'~ team 1IS ptctty dangaous,
B1oncos quat terback
Bn an G n csc s:ud "It'!'! not ~go1ng
to be dJfficult for m to get up
for thts g.unc We: 'rL' trymg to
get balk on t11ck otll \eh..e'\
WL· 'vc: lud two wms m .1 ro\\
.1mi we're t1 ymg m ger on .1 roll
"We: undlTSt,lnd t h.H tih·
Heng.1ls ha\'l' h.1d [ht:u ba&lt;..k"i to
th e wall for sc:,cr.tl \\L·cb now

Two years ago, we went m there
at 7-ll and I thmk they had won
one game (actually they were 1S), and thev gave u&lt; all we could
handle"
The Broncos ralhed for a late
touchdown to prevatl 33-26 en
route ro wmmng thelf first 13
games and rhea second stratght
Super Bowl t1tlc .
Denver ha~ some cxpcnencc
p1aymg agamst wmlcss teams
tlus ycat
The H10nl m f.1ccd New
Engl.md, then il-4 , on Oct l
and lost 2H-10 1 hL'\ met S,1 11
n.cgo. tht·n 0-'i, the f(&gt;llo" mg
week ,1 nd scr.1perl our :1 21-7

deem on
" I thought It w:-~~ prl'tt\'
cmb.u r.tssJng that \\l' lo!IL w
~O llll'bnth who \\"to.; 0-..J." s.ttl:n·
Ett( Btm\n '\,ud 'Wt: l ,lll t t.1h·
thl'SL' gu,·;; to1 gr.tmed thts
\\«.:L'k

(,~, l lli(J

SATURDAY, OCT. 21 • 10 A.M. TO 10 P.M. •
'LYNE CENTER, UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE

.,,

,,,l .....

~- R emn ~.1bl~ . l krn\
!ull ::e,.1t k \\ ho olil·n I~ 1U llli hllll\l'\1
:blm kutg lor \V.urcr~ \\hell both
;F~.t,cd .1t Nnu~ lhll1t..'

.mJ. OLl.l·

&gt;~on.tlly rode tlw lttb\1',1)' to Y,\11k~..·c..· St,ld!lllll tlu~ lL',lHJll
' L,·r thc'!ll know tr - I'm nnt

loss.

earlter thts season when Couch went out with
a knee InJUry and completed his only pass for
four yards.
''I'm sure we'll do some thmgs d1fferently,"
Pederson md
"But we have to stay w1thm the realm of the
gameplan We're not gomg to change the
whole gamep!an JUSt because the new guy IS
playmg."
Some of the Browns players d1dn't seem to
nottce Couch had been hurt as practiced
ended
·
A few of the players had dropped to a knee
to huddle around Palmer for their post-practice talk as Couch was still bemg exammed by
head tramer Jtm Colello and two as'itsrants
Couch shook lm hand several tunes before
headmg to the locker room HIS hand
appeared to be red and swollen and he wmced
111 p.un .1~ he went through the door\ of the
Browns' rr.unmg facthry
Taylor. who wa~ only .1Ct1v.neJ from rhe
pr.JL£1( l' ;;quad \a~t week, ru shed and rat sed ht s
:~rm tr) mg to blork Cuul h \ p.t~~ '' h~11 he the
lllJUn h.1ppc1wd
· It wam 't .1 dtrt\ pi.l~." l'.l lmt..•t ~.11J '' Th~re
\\J~ IH) nul1~~ It \\,I.., 111 untortun:lre pia~ m

~

to

b.hl'll1.l!t h,,,

M.mh.ltt.'ll,

diSmal 2-14 year.
Losing Couch only presents more problems
and stunts the Browns' growth as a young
team
Palmer's drawn expression and ashen face
were tellmg Signs of the impact of Couch's

LeBeau getting unexpeded recognition as Bengals' head coach

!Pittsburgh's Bettis closing in
!on 9,000 career rushing yards

Street • Ripley, WV .

Now Accepting PatientJ at tbe Center:
sa1d
The Mets plan to meet at Shea
on Saturday, posstbly for some
battmg practiCe, and then bus
over to Yankee Sudnun to dress
Thore Will an early bus around 2
p m EDT, a later one With most
of the players and then one at
6 45 p m for wtves and fanuhes
There \\J-. :1 ch,llllL', howr:ver,
that Pt.uza would head ;tmght
from h1\ Nt..'\\ Jcr~e) h{~illl' tu
Y:-~nkcL~ St.tdltlm Durtng llltetk·.lgUl' pl1y t)ll' Y.wkcL'"' lt..'t hnn
p.uk 111 thl·tr lm - th1~ tlll1l', hL·
\\',1\ tlgurmg on uktng .1 ux1
ThL· Y.lllke~.:.., ,J!,o pl.111ML'd on
t.lktng: .1 bu'i or t\\o w Sht..'.1 Th.Jt
w.t!l. tint..· \\ nh (;,1\111.: 1 &lt;.;t,\rt~o·r
Ancly l'c'tttttc
"Wh,Jt I tlunk lllt&gt;\t ,Jbnllt It I&lt;

BEREA, Oh.io (AP) -Tim Couch's broken
right thumb Wlll take at least six weeks to hea).
It may be too late for the Cleveland Browns'
2000 season to get any better.
Couch, the team's S48 million quarterback
and franchtse player, fractured a bone at the
base of hJS thumb on the final play of practtce
Thursday when he bashed 1t agamst a !mebacker's hand wh1le making a throw.
Couch will 1111ss a nummum of s1x games
and JS hkely ou! for the year
"The last play in practiCe," a dejected
Browns coach Chns Palmer repeated roftly
when mformmg reporters of Couch's devastating mJury
T illS was a sack the Browns couldn't do anythmg to stop, and a loss they couldn't afford ro
take
Wtth team owner AI Len ter and Browm
prcstdent C:~rmt·n Pohcy w~uchmg from the
Sidehne, Couch w.b filllowmg th10ugh on .1
25-yard f;1de p:1~s to rookie Ot.:-nms Northcutt
m the l'nd zont:' "hen ht~ lund bangL·J mto
the lund of lmebackt•r Ry.m Taylor
" It w.t&lt; ,, frc·.tk deal,' ,,ud backup qu,ntclbaLk Doug Pederlion, whn \VIII rt..•pbce Couch
tn rht: st.u·tmg hn'--'LIP
" I broke m\· rhumb rhl· \,l1llL' w.w 111 colll'gt:'
I r's JU;-,t .1 frL·.1k :-~ccdem •·
If lhe llljllf\ ".1s to .lll~ other Browm play l'r, a wonldn 't be norlv .to;; dc\'Jst.ttm~ to the
Browns. who ha\e .t lre.td\ lo .. r thlt..'L' other
otlenst\ c smners to St.'ason-c:ndnn.!; ttlJllrll'~
Couch \V,J&gt; the first pl,t)er sekucd b, the
Browns \vhen thev ruurnL·d to rhl' Nf-L 1~ ;m
expansion team b\t sea~on, .mJ ht..• wa~ tilt..· best
rhmg about the club a" I t stJggcr'"d thtough a

'

Tom Peden Country
1-800-822-0417 • 344-5947

Str,llll

'\l/e~t­

brook, who had two mtclcep[Jons ''Turnovets :lrl' our key
When we get turnovers, we w1n
games
Notes The L1ons defense has
gone 33 consecutJ\e g.unr:s '' nh out allowmg a touchdown on an
opponent '~ opcmng dnve, the
longest acttve streak Ill the NFL
Warn c k Dunn 's 34-yard nlll ,

• Great Benefl 1&gt;

• Work At The f1 Dealership

Tamp.t B.l) \ M:-~H m jonL'\ h.1d
t(lur S:lC b, .1 te.1m 1 ~lord fm one
g.tllle

ON THE COUCH - Cleveland Browns' quarterback Ttm Couch. showen
'here agatnst Balttmore on Oct. 1, wtll mtss the next six weeks
_because of a ~roken thumb recetved dunng practtce on Thursday (AP)

The

The Daily Sentinel

,r lll'J.H!( ,\" scumd

half \\'lth .l llL'Ck

rlif

MORE LOCAL NEWS.MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

ti4..·\d go.tl \\,!.., h1'&gt; l nngt..·~t 111 t\\n
l't'.m tot "l.tmp.t B.11
!lcttott's
Kult \c hull \\'ho Ienis rhe NfL
"ah "tx llltc.:'l c epuum. :'l.1t out the
lol'LO!ld

.

Zydruna~

• l::xcellent Payment Plan
Wtth rh~tr 4..-'tght-p&lt;HlH k.1J
StL'\\,lrt 1n.H..Ie tt 11-a\1 '' 1rl1 .1
tOLH.: hdown run .l!ld t\\O-pn111t
convtrston run Jmt bL·fore tht:.•
half~ then \Lored t\\'lll' Ill rhe tuul
4 2H 35 the• LHlllS pulled ,1\\,JV
from a 1~-14 ne
"Somt' people 1mghr \:1) James
Stewart got the glo1 y," Stewart
s.ud .. Aut no 1t all goL'S to the
otTensl\·c: lml.:' because wharevn I
do, they've don~ thetr work out
there on the f1dd"
Martin Gramat1ca k1cked field
goals of 27, ~J. 50 and 55 yards
for Tampa Bav The l3ucs made
only seve n fiN downs after a first
quarcer m wh1ch they outg~uned
the L1ons 107 -2~
Kmg completed 17 of 3~ passes
for 149 yards Keyshawn Johnson,
who left the game for one play
after Corwm Brown broke up a
pass wtth a h•t that knocked
Johnson's hdmet off. had SIX
relepnon' for 79 yards
''It's very fru'i.tranng m the

of foul shots
~
The Lakers, who started the
preseason 0-3 for the first ume
smce 1983-84, tr.hled 43-40 at
halfume after blowing a 12-pol.tJ;
lead O'Neal p1cked up hJS fot(~
foul w1th J 40 left in the !-tal(,
then was assessed hiS fifth with
7 39 left m the thtrd quarter a.
.n d
Lns Angeles down 47-41.
•
Despite a crowd of15,717 w~
welcomed the Lakers back to St:Cpl\!s Center for the first ume Sl~
they clutched the NBA t1~
coach Ph1l Jackson gave · subst;il~
nal nunutt:'S to several hopefllt;
"ho aren't expected to be on
opr:mng-mght rosta.
:;
Ar ont..• pomt in thl!' scr(~
qu,~rter. Bryant was running ~
flour wtth fc)Llr players who hav¢
yet to play J regular-season NB""
game - Cory Hightower, Mtk~
Penberthy, Stamslav Medwdenk&lt;l
and first-round draft piCk Mark
Madsen
The C avalters, one of four
teams 111 the Lakers' annual pr~­
season tournament, wt11 play
Golden State m the early game of
Fnday
mght's doubleheader
before the Lakers play Seattle.
Warnors beat the SuperSomi:s
117-113 earlterThursday.

out six weeks after practice inj

46714

Phone:

Bettis brought the strength and
stze that are reqmred to p lay fullback wt th h un to th e NFL, then
adapted them 111to a tatlback-typc
style tn w h1ch he doesn't mmd
takmg on tacklers, but prefers to
stdestcp them.
BettiS ha, ru&gt;h ed for at least
1,000 yards 111 all but one season
and all four ofhJS Steelers seasons
W 1th 523 yards 111 s1x games mcludmg only 8 m the season
opener agamst Baltimore he
ah eady ts halfway to hts seventh
I ,000-yard season
Bettis doesn't know tf there wtll
be the chance for another such
sca;on m Pittsburgh At 28, he ts
111 the final season of a $14 ~ million , four-yeat cont1 act Both
stdc.::s would hke to \Vork out .1
dea l that would keep hun '" Pl tt&gt;burgh bl'\'l)!ld rlw~ 'icason. bur
contLJLt t.lib luvc: nor \l't bcgun
Thl· Stcckn d1d s1gn R. ~durd
!\untie\ to .1 1mdll&gt;l'.ll uailtl.lLt
:md 'LL'11lL'd to bt· lc:.llh mg hun ro
1cplitl'lktt 1.., but lhultk\ h .HL'h
h.1~ uottl'n otl dll' bl·nLh, L 111 \ 11 1~
~
'
llllh 1 I

tflllt..' ~ Ill \ L\ g.llllL'~
I

"I JUSt have to wa1t and see
what happens," BettiS sa1d. "But I
know I've sttll got some years left
m me I'm not an over- the-h1ll
runnmg back. I'm not a was hedup runmng back"
Smce finding po runnmg room
m the Steclers' 16-0 loss to Baltimore, BettiS has rmhed for 515
yards m five games Once aga111,
he has been the dnvmg force of
an offense that has not yet developed any conSistency passtng, yet
has been good enough a~ the
Steelers ha;e rebounded after
startmg 0-3
The Steelcrs (3-3) arc favored
to stretch their wmmng streak to
folll on Sund.ty agamst the
Browns (2-5), who have lost thcu
!.1\l ti.ntr g.tnlC!l..
Howt:\'Cr, lkttl s wtll be wlthout
lm le.itl blocke1. ftillb.ICkJon Wn11!,111, out ~or the 'll'.1'10I1 \\ nh .1
frcH ltucd 11ght kg Expl'ctcd to
t.tkc: h1~ pi.He 1~ f-'Ullll.ltll f\,1,1'.d,ll.l. \' lHl h,\d 114..' \ LT pb\·L·d
fullb,Il k
not L'\ l'll 111 \ugh
'll i1uu\
untd ho..: bq~.111 p1 .1l th.lllg th t:lL' d1.111ll g 111111 111 !..&gt;; l,llll\l

'

5th Annual E'astern Athletic Department

GOLF SCRAMBLE
Pine Hills Go~f Course
10:00 a.m. , Sunday Oct. 22, 2000
18 Holes w/ Cart - 550° 0
Blind Draw, $5°0 Mulli an
For ·Any Questions Contact
Kenn Tolliver (740) 985·3994

fi d&lt;ry of pe&lt;~c:v, lovv ond ... litvroc:y
ALL·DAY ADMISSION: $5 or 1 NEW BOOK
FOR INFORMATION, CAL~ 446·2342
SCHEDULED TO APPEAR:
Three Chord Charlie
Author Unknown
The Earthtones
•
The Disast ers
The Vacant s
Filtheology
Shindig
69 Fingers
Human Racist
TDH
Donnie Bogg~

GA-LLIA-

HOSTED BY:
Four Funny Guys and

MaH

.

t.tk.tng dw cub\\',\)'," he· 1.11d

'

•

I

\

I'

�•

•

..
Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Frlda~Octobar20,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

Frlday, October 20, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

;

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

NFL
PRESIDENT'S CUP GOLF

NBA

Co~ch

:u.s. hammers intemational team Cavs handle
GAINESVILLE. Va. (AP) . Amencan player; lud more problems With equ1ptnent md apparel
than the lnternauonal team m the
lint round of the PreSidents Cup
David Duval broke a 7-iron and
couldn't wear the same shm as h1s
teammates. Kirk Tnplett had on
the \\'rong hat
On the cour;e, though. everyone matched and ewrythmg
worked So well, m fact, that the
U .S tcJm went got a sweep that
o;;urpnsc.•d ~.~vc:n thl' man who mJy
h,l\c thou!;ht he'd seen It all m
~-:oil

''In m~ w1IJe-~t drcamo;, I cou]d
not haw expected 3-0," US. opt.un1 Ken Ventun s.~ud .. We h:~d
gn.·.u lihots .H the nght tune.,
A d.ly rh:u bt"g.m wuh J Maon
w.u cbncc• by Ne\\' Zealand's
Mllh.•d C.1mpbdl ended \\'Ith
U S. players &gt;nuhng and congrotuLltlng e.1ch other on the IRth

green Jftcr \vmmng all five of tht."
,llrertutt.·-shot nlJ.tchcs
The war dance was suppos;d to
l,1y down a challenge to the other
SH.h.· - and tt was one che AmerICans eagerly accepted.
"It was bas1cally a shocker,"
lntenutional
captain
Peter
Thomson md "They're all gomg
to pull th&lt;~r socks up and play a
b1t better, with a lower score And
we'll see what happens then"
W1th Ph.il MICkelson and Tom
Lehman setting the early tone by

wmnmg SIX stmght holes on the
front side m their match agamst
Greg Norman and Steve Elkington, the other Amencan pfayer;
seemed to gam confidence as the
day went on.
Three of the matches were
deCided before the 18th hoi&lt;. and
m the other two, the Amencan
pam needed only to n• the final

hole to wm
It rennnded M1ckelson of a
more mtensc: dw of mternatwnJl
co mpc..•tmon on)\' 13 monrhs .tgo
'"It was a smul.u fedmg that \\C
had Sunday at l.m year's Ryder
Cup where tht" tdl·a w.ts wm

those first tOur 11\Jtchc:s. squue
this rhmg ofT and gtve us the

momc:ntul1\ to wm tl'll~ cup;·
Mtckdson ~oud .. By wmmng
dectsl\·dy. Wl' fdt ""'"' gtn.· our
ream a hul~ btt of momc:mum
and confidence"
Rook~e Norah Be~.w, fighnng

nerves of not only playmg on h1s
first nat!onal team but playmg
wah T1ger Woods a&lt; a partner,
notiCed.
"It sort of allowed me to be a
httle mote settled because I was
very nervous for the first few
hole's and for most of the day,"
Begay sa1d. "I was glad to see we
had at least one pmnt"
Begay hardly played l1ke his
nerves were on edge He h1t a 3wood 215 yards over water to the
14th green for a two-putt badie

Play~s

pmnts and 81 kills
Roundmg out the starters for
the RaJd&lt;rs will be oumde hitters
JamJe NJCh.ols and rruddle hmer
81
Cara Butcher. Either setter
and Southern m a m-match Celeste Harnngton or oumde
hitter Shannon Rankin could
earher th1s week.
Semor setter/outSJde hmer take the final starting spot.
Chelsea DeGarmo had been the
Megan Harmon, Jenny White
leader for River Valley (10-12, and Stacy Rankin w tll play key
SEOAL 4-8) on the court all roles . from the bench for R1ver
year She has !52 pmnts and 49 Valley.
In R1ver Valley's 15-3, 16-14
aces, leading the RaJders gomg
mto the postseason.
wm over Galha Academy earher
She was good on 94 percent of thiS season at Chesh~re, Harrmgher ~erves this season •
ton led the Ratders wah nme
DeGmno also has 100 kills and pomts, whtle DeGarmo and
an attack.mg percentage of 097
N1ch ols each had etght
In Tuesday's tn-match at Me1gs,
Wlule DeGarmo has been a
kader, fellow semor Devm Cot- DeGarmo had 23 pomts, \\ h1le
trell h.1s been J grco.1t compliment Cottrell netted 14 for the
wtth her sk1lls on the court
RJJders.
Sr,unng a' .1 m1ddle hnter for
Galha Audemv ( ll-7 SEOAL
the· R .mlers. Cottrdl has 121 6-6) dropped Its last t\\o matches

from Pip

that put he and Woods up for
good after they had lost three
str.ugbt holes to blow a lead to
Erme Els and V!Jay Singh.
Then he calmly stroked an 1ron
onto the 18th green for an easy
two-putt to seal the 1-up wm
It was enough to earn hmt
another pairing With his former
Stanford room111ate m a best ball
match Fnday agamst Sh1gek1
Maruyama and Carlos Franco
"I JUSt got out there and JUS!
rned m matnratn a positiVI.!' mentahty, positive attitude and support T!!;er," Begay sJJd
Woods .lppre::uated It on ,1 day
where he struggled before sulking
a cruCial 20-fnota fur par that
kept the team ,thead on the 16th
hole
"I told hun, 'The jOb's done.
I'm gumg to m.lh· tt."' Woods
s,tid.
Behmd Woods .tnd Begay were
Duval and D,wJS Low til. who
were locked 111 a ught match \\'Jth
Ntrk Pnce and Carlos Franco
Duval was playmg with a borrowed 7-lron after breakmg lm
on a tree, and used It to knock It
mff on the par-3 II th hole.
Duval was ai!O wearing a long
sleeve shtrt instead of the team
umform, whlle Tnplett, who usually wears a floppy hat, got the
wrong baseball-type hat out for
the day
Tnplett and Stewart Cmk, both

of the regular season to Jackson
and Athens, losmg each match m
three games.
The Blue Angels have enJoyed a
solid season despite the recent
setbacks ThiS year marked the
first time m several years that
G AHS defeated Athens The
Angels also knocked off league
heavywe1ghts Logan and Warren
th1s season.
Head coach Garry Adkins has
gotten the most out of hiS group,
whJCh was deCimated by graduation However. the returnmg
semors have provtded strong leadership
"That semor group has b.en a
tremendou.;; group, rt:'ally, as far as

tht"

cohesl\·"-~nr:ss

of them pbymg

togt:'ther :md tht..·m w.mtmg to
shO\\ that the\ Llll pl.1y tngerher
and that thc·y w le,trnt'd the

g.unc:'

Adk111'~

rook~es,

any

played the best golf of

twosome,

makmg

seven

Lakers, 91·84

l&gt;•rd•es m what is an unfanuliar
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
and difficult alternate-shot format
defendmg NBA champ1on Los
for the players.
"He may keep that hat because Angeles Lakers fell to 0-4 m the
they made seven birdies," Venrun preseason as Andre Miller led the
sa1d "I don't think he knows he ! ·Cleveland Cavaliers With 19
had the wrong hat on I wasn't pomts in a 91-84 VIctory Thur;day mght.
gomg to tell hun anythmg."
Kobe Bryant scored 18 pomts
The whitewash was especially
for
the Lakel", who are the only
sweet for a US te:.m that some
had mferred was not ternbly team 111 the league wtthout a VICmrae-srl'd 111 the PresJdents Cup. tory thts preseason Foul-plagued
wluch began only m 1994 as a Shaqutlle O'Neal finished wtth
way to havr,.• a nanonal tc-;un 13 pmnts and eight rebounds m
between Ryder Cups
" I find It very surprmng
bec.mse 1\e neve-r sa1d to .wybod} that I'm not happy to be
here•." Lehman s,nd "And 1t's the

:-.ame for TJgr,.·r Jnd thr..• s.un~.: for
Phil There 's nt&gt;vcr hr..• en Jny
doubt 111 tny nund .1buut my
conmmmt:JH or Phtl's or Ttger's
or Norah's or Jnybody m the rest
of the team ."
For one day, at least, It was a
much different feeling than the
U.S t~am lud two ye,trs ago at
Royal Melbourne, where they
tmled from the opening matches
and suffered a hunnhaung loss, 20
l/2-111 / 2
"We've been lookmg forward
to thiS day," MICkelson sa1d "We
were ready It showed"

Semo r Jessica Donnally leads
the Angels with a serv1e percentage of. 960 She also has a teamhigh 32 aces
C lassmate Cass1e Graham has a
940 serviCe percentage wJth 19
aces, and a 780 dtg percentage,
good for the team lead.
Semor Gretchen Craig IS ued
w1th Graham With a 940 serv1ce
percentage She IS the team leader
m k11ls With 67 and has a teambest 86 blocks.
The tournan1ent opens at I
p m tomorrow wnh No 1 seed
Metgs taking on Jackson Galha
AcaJemy :1 nd R.tver Valley meet
at2pm
The wtnnct s of th~ first two
match.:s will p!J') for the . . cuwnal ntk at 3 30 pIll

....nd

'2.7

NFL
from Page 81
\\ mmng c1ght of thc:1r b.st nml.:'
regular-season games last SL'JSOn
tu timsh Wtth a franchiSe-best II
"ctones and their first NFC
Ccntr.1l title 111 10 year!l.
Tampa Bay led H-0 when tlungs
began to unravel agamst Oetrolt,
wluch has \VOn three consecutive
pmes on the ro.1d to begm a sea"'" tor the first nnw smce 1961
Shaun King threw three mterccpttons M1ke Alstott lost a fumble And the speoal teams wasted
a golden opportumty when Nate
Webster blocked a punt and
RonJe A.trber couldn't recover m
the end zone for what would
haw been a first-quarter touchdo\\11

Inst ead. DetrOit's Ron Rtce
recovered for a safety, cosnng the
Bur&gt; f.-e poult&lt; .md leavmg them

~emt..· \\L'

Jt..' .t lot bl·ttl'l tt..'.llll rl1.1n
our los ing fou1 ~t1.11ght g:.tllll'li, ·
Klllg &gt;.nd 'I chdn t pl.w ·" \\'ell ·"
l m lJp.lblc of pLl\ tng It hurt\
knowmg 1t \\ :1s tll'L'lkd tomght"
Ch,nhe ll,ltch "·" IJ-of-3 1 for
14-l yards .111J no tntcru:poons
Tht:' l3ucs li;lCkc:d lnm St..'VC: ll t11nc:s
boostmg then NFL-le,,dmg
season totJI to 3S - but d1dn 't
forcr: any runwvl!rs
The L1om are 5-0 "hen they
have fewer rurnovers rh.m thL'll
opponents
" We talked all week about outplaymg thetr defense and we dtd,"
SJLd

Cornerb;1ck llr\ ,lllt

&lt;.;l'Wllg

up

(

llllllUte"S

llgauskas had 1 H
pmnts and II rebounds for the
Ctv,tliers (1-3), who never tratled
after takmg a ~ 1-~0 lead on Chns
Gathng's up-in wttll 52 seconds
left m the first half They extended thetr margm to 59-~ 7 with a
16-6 run, capped by a three-pmnt
play by llgauskas w1th five nnnutes kft Ill the third quarter
O'Neal returned to the court
w1th I 0:02 left in the game, but
Clarence Weatherspoon h1t a 17footer, llgauskas made a layup and
Lamond Murray converted a
three-pomt play wJth 6.24 left to
g•ve Cleveland Its b•ggest lead,
75-61.
Los Angeles got as close as 8784 on two free throws by Bryant,
but Miller clmched tt wah a patr

Subscribe today • 992-2 156

'.

TIRED Of JUST HAVING
A JOB? LOOKING
fOR NEW CAREER?

..

. ,•

Wonderf.JI opportun:ltes are avatlable tn Tom Peden Country.
We are expandtng our ne;ilittes and need more sales people.
No expenence is t('lqutred, only a wtlltngness to .ea m,
work as a team and have a strong intt tative.
(Including "'""' 11''9""1 .

Call To Sclledule An Interview:

475 South

Chu r~h

Series
from Page 81
" I probably should've called
Bnan (Ymkees GM Cashman)
beforl' I dtd It rather tban after
Knowmg th~ cmotlons of our
players, I thought there \'lS a
potellttal fnr ,, problem
T~.:nstons have LOokd down to
thL· poult \\hL'Ie nurhu1g\ \\tll
luppen," he ,,lid
lort L' .d~o hopes t·.1lmcr hl'.H.h
\1 ill prt'\,111.
•
" I th111k a\ .1 d!ss~..·n·tu: tn PL'oplc wh.1t's gomg on." he: s.l!d
"Wh4..'1lL'Vt'r you ptck up .1 lll'\\'S.p.lpt..•r. w!utcvt..'r Jl(.'twork you
\\',lie h. th.tt\ .Ill vmt ,,.,. 11 Mtke
g'L'ttlll~

ha

111 thL' )\L',Hi"

' I would ltkc· til bdtc·vc· tim
Wol"ld St.'rlt..''t t!l more .tbnlat compctlttoll md fun tl1.1n .tb&lt;&gt;ut g.:tttlli( CW!l ,l!ld Itl&lt;'ltllll-( l'lllt&lt;," he

than Seattle, the Mets probably
saved up to $500,11011 111 travel
costs Of course, players on both
Sides have had other thmgs to deal
Wl[h thts week
''I've been getting a lot of calls
for uckets, a lot," sJJd Mets reliever John Fra.n co. a New York
nattvc:
YJnkn·~ short\top Oerek Jetr:r
wt:nt to .1 mall on WL·dncsdJy
wnh first b,J..,eln.lll llllO M.lrtlilt..~l
Th~.:\'
h.h.l .1 ft1nnv
t..'IH OlllltL'I \\.lth ,\ f,111 \\ ho ,\\ked
fot .1 11 .H1Wg:r.1ph tor h1~ btotha.
I \lgncd the· b.1ll 111d he· c,nJ. 'I
thtnk th4..· Ml'[\ ..11~ ~mng w kill
\ou. · jL·tcr ..,,ltd
Me.lll\dule, C:hllck Knobhll clt

Lh.•h\\.'r

Th~ ~l't..' omi

to ~'-'t on
,\IJOthL' I .nrpl.uw," ht..• ~.lid . "M;lll.
WI.' h.IV\..' b!,.'i,.'ll dotn~ SO 11\lH.'h

hmllL'

111

th.n w..· don't

b ,l \\'

tr.lWh11g"
,
By ~l.t)'lllg tlw Y111k1't'' whc·t·

lud

,1

llH.'~Ii.lg ...•

h~·

\\,lllt\.'d

" It's a test," [Jahner

~td

"They want to see

how much I can take."
Palmer satd Couch , who already has a metal
screw m his thumb from a high school mjury,
would need ,etther a screw or pm surg1cally
inserted.
The llrowns don't have a bye unu!Week 17,
and because Couch wtll need time to rehabilItate, It's htghly doubtful the team would dress
huu for anorhcr game rhts season
After X-rays taken at the Cleveland C!tmc
revealed the fraLturc. ( :o uch returned (() the
Browns' rrammg f:1c1hry An hour bta, J tL'Jm
offinal pullt·d J Hummer vclud~ up ro the
b:Kk door co t:tkc Couch home
''I'm all 11ght.'' &gt;ald Couc h , wllo md!l,JtcJ
hts surgt..·ry would uke place Fnday
Wtth Couch stdehnc·J mJc·fimtcly, Pedi:C\on
\\' 111 .-..t.1rl Sunt-by\ gamt• .lg.utv.;t dh· Stl'l'ier\ 111
Ptttsburgh P~·dason \\',IS ; tgnL·d on SL·pt 1.
Jtter ba ckup T\· lJt'fllll'r w,ts Io . . r f(H· the yc.1r
wtth .1 ruptwcd Achtlk~· tendon
"Here-\ ;morhe1 opportumty fi&gt;r J pl.l\·l•r to
"'tcp up \\ 1th anodll'J pi.l)er's nu ~for tunl·."
P.dmer li,JH.J "Wu JU~t h 1\.L' co close r.mko;; .m d
m:uth on"
PL·dt.:l~on, JJ. \(.trtl'tl ll lllt..' g~:mtt..'~ tf11 the
Phtbddphl :l Eagles i.lst season. t:ompkttn g

119 of 227 pas~e~ fo1 1,276 Jard'l : m d &lt;;t'\'l'll
TDs . He appeared bndly .Jg&gt;~n&gt;t U.1lt1m ore

prat..Uc~

Cnuth

\\l'llf

1 17- of-21; (pt 1 -HD \·,mJ, .md

Sf..'\'t..'ll totH.: hdown~

thh

~l'.l,Oll

Bur

hl··~

CINCINNATI (AP) In
three weeks as the Cmonnat1
Ben gals head · caoch, DICk
LeBeau has dealt wtth dau ntnig
p&gt;perwork, bruiSed feelings.
mounlmg losses and unexpected
recogmt1on Jround town .
"I was dnvmg down 1-75 m a
traffic pm anJ a guy gets out of
lm car w lule we 'te stopped and
runs back and says, 'Dtck.
LeBeau 1 D1ck LeBeau !"' he sa~d,
laughmg
~ .''1 satd, 'Man, get back m your

~omobtle.'

::;: :'That d1dn 't happen to me
...(i.hen I was a coordmator."
••
:..:-After 26 years as an assiStant
~~th vanous teams, the defensive
.~rdinator
welcomed
the
r:.-fi.,nce
to take ovn when Bruce
'
:~os let qtu t after an 0-3 start.
•:":LeBeau, 63, ISm a to ugh spot
:·The coachmo- staff IS shot t-handi,4..~d. thl' team ts :;tLII wmless, tans
f::ttt..' .tngry ;111J thL•re 's a lmut to
~·\\Jut he Gill do to turn thmgs

.

los'- Snuth d 1dn 't take a well,
scowling on the SJdeltne
Snmh was still downcast
Wednesday whe n he talked to
reporters about 1t for the first

umc.
"It's hiS Jqdgment, hts call,"
Snuth md m a noncomnuttal
tone. "That's what be wants. He';
the head man"
A few nunutes later, LeBca u
walked uuo the tntervte\v room
to begm h1s sessmn wtth
reporters Snuth d1dn't .rea!tze
LeBeau was nearby when a
reporter asked about the~r relatiOnship
"We have a great relatiOnship
He's been stt:atghtforwar,P the
w h ole tunc,'' Sm1th SJ td. ~­
Ll'Beau SJm lcd and got Smtth 's

attcnuon

~"lr{)llJld

"What km d o f rclauonsh tp do
you have wJth the hcaJ coal h i''
Ld3e:lll asked nmchtevously
Sm1th b1oke mto ,1 \11llic,
walked ovt:r and g:lVc hm1 :1
han(_hhake Jnd .tn emb tall' An

~

Jwkw.lrd mou1cnt was ,1\'o!dtJ

•

"

1-k ·, tr} 111 g
H1~ bo ldest nlo\·t..• l.lllll' last
&lt;;Sund,ty 111 l'lttfibutgh, \\ht·n he
j_bcnc h od qu01 terbat k Akt!t Stn tth
~1n the tlmd yuarlt-r of a 15-0

t

P ITTSBURGH (AP) -Asked
Jerome Bettts told hun
~hen an tnJury forced hmJ to fi ll
~n as fullback Sunday for the Pttts,urgh Steelers, Chns Fuamatu•Ma'afala sa td, '"Get out of the
'~~·ay, 11m commg t hrougl1.'"
&gt;' After all, Bettis wasn't about to
:~ lunge Ius runmng sty!~ to
:accommodate a new blocker, and
:f&lt;.&gt;r good reason If tt's worked so
;lar for htm tn h11 e•ght NFL sea:Sons, why change nowt
t~ BettiS, who h:1s revtved the
l'Steders runmng game dtirmg
'(he1r three-game wtnmng ~rreak,
:t.ceds 14 yards Sunday agamst
~lcvcland to become the 15th
:NFL runnmg back to rush for
~9.1100 yards
)&gt; It dot·s n't have qutte the same
;i;mg to 1t "' 10.01111 yard;, anum:beJ l:ktth &lt;.o~dd tC;lch bv rhe uud:(tk of llt..'Xt ~l\1'10!1 tfht·' COlltlllLIL'S
~o ll\11 up y.11d lgl· H hh ldrl't..'r

••,W1Jat

.Now

Easy, comfortable and close to home, the Belpre
Center offers a range of physician refena l pulmonary
testing, occupational heal t h, outpatient laboratory, and
"

BREATHE

I

radiology health services with the same quality and compasSionate care you get from Marietta Memorial Hospital
Phys•c•an services are by appointment only; referral lab

collection and x-ray v1sits arc walk.in at your convenience

j

"

'f'·ll L'

OF THE
Castroenterolo@lst

BE:LPRE

thom.111d \',lid.,; fm .1
~uy "l111 '' 1.., .1 lullb.tlk 111 4..-o\kgL'

:

Dr. Scott Naam

Dr. Franci-1 Lu
Pulmonologtsl

Dr. Cllri.J Polen

Call740-373-0880

Internal J\lecltc me

to schedule an

to schedule an

appo1n~ment

appotntment

Call 740-373-0880
lo scht..-dul~ &lt;m

"Ntlll'

1 ~()(I( ))
~.11d · I

Cnt1cal Care/

Call740-374-&amp;472

lid"'

I" p!JL'liO!l1l'll.l]

lkt tl"

ll L'\l'I \\uu ld h,l\L' thougiH
\\tndd g~t IO 1),0()(1 \'.lld., ..
: Betti~ d1 t\Hk ! 1 .1 ~ p1..,,4..·d tolml'r
'l'_;tecn B,l\ tu l lb1~k fun l .1\l o1 011

;1

appotnlmcnt

mlllllt-', !J\t thl" \L'.\\011
!:1nd ~~ thl· l mnth-lt·IdH i g ll tl\c:
:t_u..,hL'I \V11h H &lt;):-;(, \,lllh. BL'ttl\

:thL•

ll1L'L!

:t1. J1.,
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Emn11tt

S1111th

( 1-t _v:;s

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~lid\) ,111 d Rhk\· \\lme1.., (lJ~;7

.1

t\ .... h)
126 Lee Street, Belpre,
740-423-9640

OH

thrm\ n

JUSt t\\\1 TDs \\ Hh c1ght llltl'Hl'pllml.., durmg
Ck,·el.md\ tllrtl'llt four-g.m tt" lo.-..111):!: \trcak
Couth \\,h thl· lit\tl~B t.lkt..'lllll .1 J tJ ti. d.1~\
\\hilh mclulkd Mumc~ot.l\ D .ntnt-..· Culpepper~ PhaLH..idph11 '\ Dono\'.111 Ml N.1bb. Cmunnon \ Akth Smith .1nd Ch1ugo 's Cade

McNm\ n -

Jll l.'urrcnt NFL

~ta 1 tt:r \

• Unabk to make whole\Jle
rlnnges ~n m id~l'.tson, LeOcau
has made subtk adj u stments and
tlted to t111p10ve thl' .1tt1tu J c on a

team that has been shut out a
franchtse - recunJ. three tunes
already.
He banned m us1c tn the d rcssmg roon1 dunng the wrek after a
loss The 16-speaker sound system has been stlcnr smce LeBeau
took over
leBcou also has tnmted dn
tnore sp1r1ted pracnces
"The last few weeks, the
tempo has been more upbeat,"
ofTenstve lineman John Jackson
satd. "That's one of the thmgs
he's h"'ped on"
He also warned players that he
was gomg to g•ve backups a
chonce 1f the statters struggled.
Rodney Heath h as replaced
Amell H awkms as a &gt;tartmg cornerback, Smith got temporanly
bcm hc'd last Su n day and Jac kso n
w 1ll start m pia, e of Rod J ones at
left t.1ckle .next Snnd;ry .1g.11mt
l)t..·nver
"We've h.td change at the (01nerb.tck posltton, a changt..~ ;1t
tatk ll' I gul'SS he's JUSt lookmg
fo t a spat k,'' Snuth sa1d. " I guc'ss
that\ the p:ltrern he 's gomg w
set. Gu: ~ nt-eJ to be aw.uc.:· of
th,\t"
T he ch.mge\ h.wt:n't c hangeJ
~

the Olltcomes. The Bengals run
the ball more often under
LeBeau and have kept games
closer, but haven't come close to
wmmng
When Lc·Bcau got the JOb,
general manager M1ke Brown
was
no ncomm'atal
about
w h ether Jt wJs a one-season
:&gt;rrangement LeBeau IS hopmg tt
turns out to be tnore.
" [ rt..'I11C!llbcr rcalh ng sontethmg about Gen
Douglas
MacArthur when he turned 80
and they aslied hun what lm philosophy was," LeBeau ;a1d. "He
sa1d, 'I plan to hw forever and
one of th ese day&gt; I'll probably be
wrong '
" ! plan to coach tim team lt ke
I 'tn gomg w COJCh lt fOrever"
'

'

Notes: Tht• gatnc ag.u nst Dc nw r wasn't a &gt;t'iloutTh ursday, so 11
wo n 't bl' ~hm, n on local tclcvl""" The lkng.t ls how fa1led to
sell out t h ltT (~f rhe1r fi,llr Jegubr-st..'ason gaml.:'s smct' monng
tnro S-k13 nu llJon Pau l Btown
Stad tum
The on ly cc ll out
c.\llll' for the opener ag.unst
Clcvt!and, \\ hen thuu'l.lnds of
Brmvm fath p:-tlkkd the g.HL' to

Griese, Broncos fearful
of winless Bengals
DENVER (AI') Forget
th e fact tlut the Cmn n natJ
Bengals are 0-6, have had more
punts (38) than pomts (37) and
have lost e1ght stra tght games to

the Denver

~roncos

The Bronco\ (4 -3) lllSJst none
of that matters, callmg Cmcmnatl a talented team on the
verge of puttmg 1t all together.
T hey JUSt hope tt doesn't happen on Sunday, when they ventu re Hl,to the new Paul Brown
Stach u m.
"Tht'~ team 1IS ptctty dangaous,
B1oncos quat terback
Bn an G n csc s:ud "It'!'! not ~go1ng
to be dJfficult for m to get up
for thts g.unc We: 'rL' trymg to
get balk on t11ck otll \eh..e'\
WL· 'vc: lud two wms m .1 ro\\
.1mi we're t1 ymg m ger on .1 roll
"We: undlTSt,lnd t h.H tih·
Heng.1ls ha\'l' h.1d [ht:u ba&lt;..k"i to
th e wall for sc:,cr.tl \\L·cb now

Two years ago, we went m there
at 7-ll and I thmk they had won
one game (actually they were 1S), and thev gave u&lt; all we could
handle"
The Broncos ralhed for a late
touchdown to prevatl 33-26 en
route ro wmmng thelf first 13
games and rhea second stratght
Super Bowl t1tlc .
Denver ha~ some cxpcnencc
p1aymg agamst wmlcss teams
tlus ycat
The H10nl m f.1ccd New
Engl.md, then il-4 , on Oct l
and lost 2H-10 1 hL'\ met S,1 11
n.cgo. tht·n 0-'i, the f(&gt;llo" mg
week ,1 nd scr.1perl our :1 21-7

deem on
" I thought It w:-~~ prl'tt\'
cmb.u r.tssJng that \\l' lo!IL w
~O llll'bnth who \\"to.; 0-..J." s.ttl:n·
Ett( Btm\n '\,ud 'Wt: l ,lll t t.1h·
thl'SL' gu,·;; to1 gr.tmed thts
\\«.:L'k

(,~, l lli(J

SATURDAY, OCT. 21 • 10 A.M. TO 10 P.M. •
'LYNE CENTER, UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE

.,,

,,,l .....

~- R emn ~.1bl~ . l krn\
!ull ::e,.1t k \\ ho olil·n I~ 1U llli hllll\l'\1
:blm kutg lor \V.urcr~ \\hell both
;F~.t,cd .1t Nnu~ lhll1t..'

.mJ. OLl.l·

&gt;~on.tlly rode tlw lttb\1',1)' to Y,\11k~..·c..· St,ld!lllll tlu~ lL',lHJll
' L,·r thc'!ll know tr - I'm nnt

loss.

earlter thts season when Couch went out with
a knee InJUry and completed his only pass for
four yards.
''I'm sure we'll do some thmgs d1fferently,"
Pederson md
"But we have to stay w1thm the realm of the
gameplan We're not gomg to change the
whole gamep!an JUSt because the new guy IS
playmg."
Some of the Browns players d1dn't seem to
nottce Couch had been hurt as practiced
ended
·
A few of the players had dropped to a knee
to huddle around Palmer for their post-practice talk as Couch was still bemg exammed by
head tramer Jtm Colello and two as'itsrants
Couch shook lm hand several tunes before
headmg to the locker room HIS hand
appeared to be red and swollen and he wmced
111 p.un .1~ he went through the door\ of the
Browns' rr.unmg facthry
Taylor. who wa~ only .1Ct1v.neJ from rhe
pr.JL£1( l' ;;quad \a~t week, ru shed and rat sed ht s
:~rm tr) mg to blork Cuul h \ p.t~~ '' h~11 he the
lllJUn h.1ppc1wd
· It wam 't .1 dtrt\ pi.l~." l'.l lmt..•t ~.11J '' Th~re
\\J~ IH) nul1~~ It \\,I.., 111 untortun:lre pia~ m

~

to

b.hl'll1.l!t h,,,

M.mh.ltt.'ll,

diSmal 2-14 year.
Losing Couch only presents more problems
and stunts the Browns' growth as a young
team
Palmer's drawn expression and ashen face
were tellmg Signs of the impact of Couch's

LeBeau getting unexpeded recognition as Bengals' head coach

!Pittsburgh's Bettis closing in
!on 9,000 career rushing yards

Street • Ripley, WV .

Now Accepting PatientJ at tbe Center:
sa1d
The Mets plan to meet at Shea
on Saturday, posstbly for some
battmg practiCe, and then bus
over to Yankee Sudnun to dress
Thore Will an early bus around 2
p m EDT, a later one With most
of the players and then one at
6 45 p m for wtves and fanuhes
There \\J-. :1 ch,llllL', howr:ver,
that Pt.uza would head ;tmght
from h1\ Nt..'\\ Jcr~e) h{~illl' tu
Y:-~nkcL~ St.tdltlm Durtng llltetk·.lgUl' pl1y t)ll' Y.wkcL'"' lt..'t hnn
p.uk 111 thl·tr lm - th1~ tlll1l', hL·
\\',1\ tlgurmg on uktng .1 ux1
ThL· Y.lllke~.:.., ,J!,o pl.111ML'd on
t.lktng: .1 bu'i or t\\o w Sht..'.1 Th.Jt
w.t!l. tint..· \\ nh (;,1\111.: 1 &lt;.;t,\rt~o·r
Ancly l'c'tttttc
"Wh,Jt I tlunk lllt&gt;\t ,Jbnllt It I&lt;

BEREA, Oh.io (AP) -Tim Couch's broken
right thumb Wlll take at least six weeks to hea).
It may be too late for the Cleveland Browns'
2000 season to get any better.
Couch, the team's S48 million quarterback
and franchtse player, fractured a bone at the
base of hJS thumb on the final play of practtce
Thursday when he bashed 1t agamst a !mebacker's hand wh1le making a throw.
Couch will 1111ss a nummum of s1x games
and JS hkely ou! for the year
"The last play in practiCe," a dejected
Browns coach Chns Palmer repeated roftly
when mformmg reporters of Couch's devastating mJury
T illS was a sack the Browns couldn't do anythmg to stop, and a loss they couldn't afford ro
take
Wtth team owner AI Len ter and Browm
prcstdent C:~rmt·n Pohcy w~uchmg from the
Sidehne, Couch w.b filllowmg th10ugh on .1
25-yard f;1de p:1~s to rookie Ot.:-nms Northcutt
m the l'nd zont:' "hen ht~ lund bangL·J mto
the lund of lmebackt•r Ry.m Taylor
" It w.t&lt; ,, frc·.tk deal,' ,,ud backup qu,ntclbaLk Doug Pederlion, whn \VIII rt..•pbce Couch
tn rht: st.u·tmg hn'--'LIP
" I broke m\· rhumb rhl· \,l1llL' w.w 111 colll'gt:'
I r's JU;-,t .1 frL·.1k :-~ccdem •·
If lhe llljllf\ ".1s to .lll~ other Browm play l'r, a wonldn 't be norlv .to;; dc\'Jst.ttm~ to the
Browns. who ha\e .t lre.td\ lo .. r thlt..'L' other
otlenst\ c smners to St.'ason-c:ndnn.!; ttlJllrll'~
Couch \V,J&gt; the first pl,t)er sekucd b, the
Browns \vhen thev ruurnL·d to rhl' Nf-L 1~ ;m
expansion team b\t sea~on, .mJ ht..• wa~ tilt..· best
rhmg about the club a" I t stJggcr'"d thtough a

'

Tom Peden Country
1-800-822-0417 • 344-5947

Str,llll

'\l/e~t­

brook, who had two mtclcep[Jons ''Turnovets :lrl' our key
When we get turnovers, we w1n
games
Notes The L1ons defense has
gone 33 consecutJ\e g.unr:s '' nh out allowmg a touchdown on an
opponent '~ opcmng dnve, the
longest acttve streak Ill the NFL
Warn c k Dunn 's 34-yard nlll ,

• Great Benefl 1&gt;

• Work At The f1 Dealership

Tamp.t B.l) \ M:-~H m jonL'\ h.1d
t(lur S:lC b, .1 te.1m 1 ~lord fm one
g.tllle

ON THE COUCH - Cleveland Browns' quarterback Ttm Couch. showen
'here agatnst Balttmore on Oct. 1, wtll mtss the next six weeks
_because of a ~roken thumb recetved dunng practtce on Thursday (AP)

The

The Daily Sentinel

,r lll'J.H!( ,\" scumd

half \\'lth .l llL'Ck

rlif

MORE LOCAL NEWS.MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

ti4..·\d go.tl \\,!.., h1'&gt; l nngt..·~t 111 t\\n
l't'.m tot "l.tmp.t B.11
!lcttott's
Kult \c hull \\'ho Ienis rhe NfL
"ah "tx llltc.:'l c epuum. :'l.1t out the
lol'LO!ld

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Zydruna~

• l::xcellent Payment Plan
Wtth rh~tr 4..-'tght-p&lt;HlH k.1J
StL'\\,lrt 1n.H..Ie tt 11-a\1 '' 1rl1 .1
tOLH.: hdown run .l!ld t\\O-pn111t
convtrston run Jmt bL·fore tht:.•
half~ then \Lored t\\'lll' Ill rhe tuul
4 2H 35 the• LHlllS pulled ,1\\,JV
from a 1~-14 ne
"Somt' people 1mghr \:1) James
Stewart got the glo1 y," Stewart
s.ud .. Aut no 1t all goL'S to the
otTensl\·c: lml.:' because wharevn I
do, they've don~ thetr work out
there on the f1dd"
Martin Gramat1ca k1cked field
goals of 27, ~J. 50 and 55 yards
for Tampa Bav The l3ucs made
only seve n fiN downs after a first
quarcer m wh1ch they outg~uned
the L1ons 107 -2~
Kmg completed 17 of 3~ passes
for 149 yards Keyshawn Johnson,
who left the game for one play
after Corwm Brown broke up a
pass wtth a h•t that knocked
Johnson's hdmet off. had SIX
relepnon' for 79 yards
''It's very fru'i.tranng m the

of foul shots
~
The Lakers, who started the
preseason 0-3 for the first ume
smce 1983-84, tr.hled 43-40 at
halfume after blowing a 12-pol.tJ;
lead O'Neal p1cked up hJS fot(~
foul w1th J 40 left in the !-tal(,
then was assessed hiS fifth with
7 39 left m the thtrd quarter a.
.n d
Lns Angeles down 47-41.
•
Despite a crowd of15,717 w~
welcomed the Lakers back to St:Cpl\!s Center for the first ume Sl~
they clutched the NBA t1~
coach Ph1l Jackson gave · subst;il~
nal nunutt:'S to several hopefllt;
"ho aren't expected to be on
opr:mng-mght rosta.
:;
Ar ont..• pomt in thl!' scr(~
qu,~rter. Bryant was running ~
flour wtth fc)Llr players who hav¢
yet to play J regular-season NB""
game - Cory Hightower, Mtk~
Penberthy, Stamslav Medwdenk&lt;l
and first-round draft piCk Mark
Madsen
The C avalters, one of four
teams 111 the Lakers' annual pr~­
season tournament, wt11 play
Golden State m the early game of
Fnday
mght's doubleheader
before the Lakers play Seattle.
Warnors beat the SuperSomi:s
117-113 earlterThursday.

out six weeks after practice inj

46714

Phone:

Bettis brought the strength and
stze that are reqmred to p lay fullback wt th h un to th e NFL, then
adapted them 111to a tatlback-typc
style tn w h1ch he doesn't mmd
takmg on tacklers, but prefers to
stdestcp them.
BettiS ha, ru&gt;h ed for at least
1,000 yards 111 all but one season
and all four ofhJS Steelers seasons
W 1th 523 yards 111 s1x games mcludmg only 8 m the season
opener agamst Baltimore he
ah eady ts halfway to hts seventh
I ,000-yard season
Bettis doesn't know tf there wtll
be the chance for another such
sca;on m Pittsburgh At 28, he ts
111 the final season of a $14 ~ million , four-yeat cont1 act Both
stdc.::s would hke to \Vork out .1
dea l that would keep hun '" Pl tt&gt;burgh bl'\'l)!ld rlw~ 'icason. bur
contLJLt t.lib luvc: nor \l't bcgun
Thl· Stcckn d1d s1gn R. ~durd
!\untie\ to .1 1mdll&gt;l'.ll uailtl.lLt
:md 'LL'11lL'd to bt· lc:.llh mg hun ro
1cplitl'lktt 1.., but lhultk\ h .HL'h
h.1~ uottl'n otl dll' bl·nLh, L 111 \ 11 1~
~
'
llllh 1 I

tflllt..' ~ Ill \ L\ g.llllL'~
I

"I JUSt have to wa1t and see
what happens," BettiS sa1d. "But I
know I've sttll got some years left
m me I'm not an over- the-h1ll
runnmg back. I'm not a was hedup runmng back"
Smce finding po runnmg room
m the Steclers' 16-0 loss to Baltimore, BettiS has rmhed for 515
yards m five games Once aga111,
he has been the dnvmg force of
an offense that has not yet developed any conSistency passtng, yet
has been good enough a~ the
Steelers ha;e rebounded after
startmg 0-3
The Steelcrs (3-3) arc favored
to stretch their wmmng streak to
folll on Sund.ty agamst the
Browns (2-5), who have lost thcu
!.1\l ti.ntr g.tnlC!l..
Howt:\'Cr, lkttl s wtll be wlthout
lm le.itl blocke1. ftillb.ICkJon Wn11!,111, out ~or the 'll'.1'10I1 \\ nh .1
frcH ltucd 11ght kg Expl'ctcd to
t.tkc: h1~ pi.He 1~ f-'Ullll.ltll f\,1,1'.d,ll.l. \' lHl h,\d 114..' \ LT pb\·L·d
fullb,Il k
not L'\ l'll 111 \ugh
'll i1uu\
untd ho..: bq~.111 p1 .1l th.lllg th t:lL' d1.111ll g 111111 111 !..&gt;; l,llll\l

'

5th Annual E'astern Athletic Department

GOLF SCRAMBLE
Pine Hills Go~f Course
10:00 a.m. , Sunday Oct. 22, 2000
18 Holes w/ Cart - 550° 0
Blind Draw, $5°0 Mulli an
For ·Any Questions Contact
Kenn Tolliver (740) 985·3994

fi d&lt;ry of pe&lt;~c:v, lovv ond ... litvroc:y
ALL·DAY ADMISSION: $5 or 1 NEW BOOK
FOR INFORMATION, CAL~ 446·2342
SCHEDULED TO APPEAR:
Three Chord Charlie
Author Unknown
The Earthtones
•
The Disast ers
The Vacant s
Filtheology
Shindig
69 Fingers
Human Racist
TDH
Donnie Bogg~

GA-LLIA-

HOSTED BY:
Four Funny Guys and

MaH

.

t.tk.tng dw cub\\',\)'," he· 1.11d

'

•

I

\

I'

�•
Friday October 20, 2000

Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday October 20 2000

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

1

II
l

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

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NY Me s Le e 6 8 a NY Yankees Pe
e 99 Bpm

Thursday Oct 26
NY Yankees a NY Mes 8 8pm

5

Vanoouve
Coigaoy

NY Yanket3s Cone 4 4 c Neag e 7 7 a
NY Mas BJ ones -6 e 8pm

I

500

2

500

'2

500

2

400
333
LA ake s
0 4 000 2 12
Wednesdays Games
Chart e 99 New e sey 90

Fo

NEED CASH
$2 500 &amp;50 000
ow Mon hy Pym s
day Serv e

Netters

TRANSPORTATION

from Page 81

No ee s Good svs
Fo Appo ntmen
1 877 748-B LL (2455)

pm

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; Vicmlty

See this weekend's edition of the Sunday Tames-Sentinel
for a full recap of tonighfs Tri-County prep football
adion!
Tonighfs Games
Eastern at Waterford
MeiJS at Vinton County
Trimble at Southern

MERCHANDISE
Ae
dep 304 882
304 446 23 5 ea e

a mo

0 e b oo Cen e has pas ons
a a abe o AN s &amp; LPN s a
sh s Fo mo e
o ma on
pease con ac Ja k e Newsome
a 40 992 64 2 o s op by 333
Page S ee M dd epa Oh o an
app ca ton EOE

510

Household
Goods

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

110

Help Wanted

In Memory

FINANCIAL

MILLENNIUM
TELESERVICES

210

EDUCATION

~o gAf~
of nyh Ia

abe o en
304 67 5

Need We And Sep c7 No Down
Paymen Req ed age Se ec
on 0 Homes Ca
800 948
5678

s pleased to announce
the Grand Open ng of
ts Pomeroy cull cen e
We are no v se I ng up

Cfias 'R Mash ]

DECORATION

(}&lt;:)&lt;:)0{){)

n erv ew appo n ments

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

~

INSULATION

for outbound
teleserv ces pos 1 ons
No EXPER ENCE
NECESSARY
Polent a 10 earn up o
$15 hr w h quarterly
salary ev ews
Ful

PHOTOGR APHY
t-anS P oogaphy
5 Ma S
N wope o b s ess
Wedd ngs

Sen s
FamyPoas
Ca o an app n men
3046529

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

UR~ED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECURITY ISS 7
N Fee U essWeWn
888 582 3345

Mu docks Faco yOu e
o Homes
64 Ex 4 C oss anes
Sa e housands A d Day
modesm s bes d
866 88 885

New And Use-d F n u e So e
Be ow Ho da
Kanagua New
Co hes $325 New H de a Bed
So as $350 New B
Beds
Comp e e $200 Good Used
D esse s A d Ches 0 0 awe s
V. e Se G a e M
men s A d
Vases

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

REAL ESTATE

Sta t you ne\A.
ca ce w h us

840

Help Wanted

5505 WEEKLY QRARANTEED
WORK NG FOR HE GOVE RN
MENT FRO' HOME PAR
ME NO EXPER ENCE RE
OU RED
800 46 5 6 E
0

and part t me
pos ons ava lable
3 Sh fts da y w th
flex ble schedu ng
Managemen
Opportun t es
A a lable
Med cal Dental
40 K Pa d Vaca ons
ava abe fo
full nee nployees

Ele~trical

and
Retngerat1on

Ca I 800 929 5753
fo an appo n me
We ook fo wa d lo

eet ng you
au o
P

a e
e

J{e

Buy Sell or Trade

de

3Q Announcements

In the

CLASSIFIEDS!

b ok

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

October

ALL WELCOME'!

�•
Friday October 20, 2000

Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday October 20 2000

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

1

II
l

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

I' PR~.~~!~~~ l
110
Glvee-y Loat
YardSalee
To Do Ada
Mull Be Paid In Advance
TRIBUNE DEAQUNE,
2 00 p m the day bela,.
the ad Ia Ia Nn
Sunday &amp; Mondoy adltlan
2 00 p m Frldey

Help Wanted

210

S2 000 WHKLYI Moiling 400
brochu 111 Sa 1 ec on Gua
an eed Pos age &amp; Supp ts p o
v Cled Rush St I Add essed
S amped Enve ope G CC OEPT
5 Bo• 438 ANT OCH TN
370
438 S a mmtdiatefy

A CASH CASH CASH MORE
CASH STOP WORK NG FOR
OTHERS OWN THE BANK BE
YOUR OWN BOSS NO SELL NG
OCAL 0 SP AY ROUTE 6 B
HAS WK CALL NOW
800
838-8058
FA TO LAY PEPS HERSHEY
SNACK AND SODA VEND NG
ROUTE SSS ALL CASH SUS
NESS$$$ BU LD NG A BUS
NESS THAT S ALL YOURS
SMALL NVESTMENT EXCEL
LENT PROF TS
800 73 7233
EXT4 03

SENTINEL DEAQUNE

1

00 p m the dey bela,.

the ad 1110 run
Sunday &amp; Mondey adltlon
1 00 p m Frldey
BEQ!SIEB QEADLINE.
2 dlya belo,. the od Ia
torunby430pm
Saturdoy &amp; Mandoy
adHian 4 30 Thu,.dey

Dud//.,.. aub~l ta
cluln~ du•lo holldllp"

$450 00 $ 000 00
WEEKLY
Ma ng ~~ t s F om Home No

ewpe tnct ntcnsa y FT PT
He p Needed mmed a t y Ca
Sundance 0 I bu o S
800
889 3U9 EXTENS ON
22

24hrs

teo ded message

800

449-4625 E• $700

ANNOUNCEMENTS

48 OWM 5
Smoke
ke To Mae 35 To 45
a ue Eyed P a ess ona Lady
Rep y To AM PO Box 1 Hen
de son wv 25 DB

Homes lor Sale

me

Plus Week 'j Bonuses
Med call Oenta Bene s
Paid vacations/ Ho da'jSI
Tra n"'J
CALL TODAY
lntoCis on Uanegemtnt
Corporation
888 237 5(!47

30

Announcements

Ex

5

He andez

530

B uner Und
740)441 1492
Ga ~a Co LosNowAa abe On
Ke Road 5 Ac es $29 000 5
Ac es With Pond $35 000 0
Home On 5 Ac es $70 000 Cash
A o G ande 9 Aces $23 000
Cash 0 6 Ac es S 9 000 Cash
Chesh e 6 Ac es $9 000 0 37
At:. es $40 000 Cay Twp 7
Ac es $22 000 'TYcoon Lake
A ea 0 Acres S 2 500
Me19s Co Tuppe Pans XL
PoeBa On6Aces$32000o
GA. es$ 4000 barw o 5Acr
es Paved RoadS 5 000 Au a d
9A. es$2000CoutyWae
On A
Ca Now Fo Maps As Abo
Ou CasnDsou s 20Yea F
g

440

•

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

3

6

3

4

22

0

o

0 23

3

9 17

13
25
19

8 30

0
1

7 16
• 9

Today a Game•
Ph ade ph a a Wash ngton 7 p m
'
U ah vs New Yor\&lt;. a A. bany N V 7 30 p rfl

Mama Dalas 8pm
,
l A Clippe s a ndlana 8 p m
Phoenxa Mnnesoa Bpm
C eve and vs Golde S a e a Los Ange e&amp;

Bpm

0 00
30 2 7
98 224

a

Dodge Shadow whee s &amp; 2

whee co e s $ 0 00 304 882
2 55

900

Tappan H E c en y 90 Gas
Fu naces 0 Fv naces 2 See
Hea Pump &amp; A Cond on ng
Sys ems F ee 8 Yea Wa any
Benne
Hea ng &amp; Coo ng
600 872 5967 www o b com ben

A
STEEL
BU 0 NG
C ea ance 30 36 Was $8 960

NH 30 0 42 PTO HP 4 WO
d
P 0 2 WD 8x2 ans we 0 akes
S400000
NH 4 2 o 4
cb ne 3 500 00

cu

NH 90 Fo age choppe
000
RPM mea ae 590000
Hess
540 A Ba e 4 5 ba es
Va

e Bonanza F nan

G1veaway

Vancouve vs Sa amen o a A bi)Q e qu.
NM 930pm
Seattea LA Lakes
pm
Satu day 1 Games
Boston vs wash ng on a A hmond Va 7

pm

Charlotte a Toro o P m
SanAnono a Hous on 8 30 p m
A ana aM wa kee 830pm
Ponanda De e 9pm

Sunday 1 Game•
da a a E ems

LAC ppers s

e n(l

4 pm
Utah a Ph ade p a 6 30 P
Plwen )( a De o
pm
Mnnesoavs M wa keed S L us 8p 111
Gooe Sae s A a esa SanDege

9pm

Seattea Sacame o 9p n

TRANSAaiONS
e esg
a o eaque

ng
RHP

Easte n Conle ence
Atlantic Dlv s on
GB
L Pet
5 0
00
DO
2
4 0
50
2
3
500 2 2
2
333
3
250 3 12
250 3 12

w

g

PRO HOCKEY

s

a a aoe
KeeesServ eCe e
s R 8 PT P easan &amp; R p ey

Nat onal Hockey League

Ad

Eastern Confe ence
Allan c D v slon
W L TOLPtt GF GA
Pttsbugh
3 2
o
7 20
a
NY Rangers
3 2 0 0
6 8 6
New e sey
2 2
o 5 8
Ph a de ph a
4 2 0
4 8 30
NY sanders
o 3
o
8 2
Northeast D v s on
............ .. 4 0 2 0 10 23
0
0 awa
33
0
925
Boson
33
072225
Mon ea
3300625
Toran o
2300446
Bulfao
Southeast D v s on

BEAUT FUL APARTMENTS AT

.......... .. ~2

Ca o na

Washngon
Tampa Bay
Fo da
Aanta

0

6

0
2

5
3
3

4
6
9
8

22
9
2

02202

9

3

2

3
3

2

0

750
50

"

Lost and Found

S100 Reward

2

3
3

400
250

2
2

67

3

Pc
900

GB

5
Western Conte ence
M dwesl 0 VJS on
W L
4
4
2

2
2

2
2

BOO
500
400
400
250 2
200

2
2
2
2
3

600

3 3 0
6
230
552
0 0
2 0 24
Northwes 0 v s on
020223
52
0
2420

Coo ado
Edmon on

2

600
600
600

2
2

Weste n Confe ence
Cent a 0 v slon
W L TOL Pts GF GA
4
0
9 2
8
42
09243

35

Schools
Instruction

pm

PRO HOOPS

a cond D s

OOO!i 0 900 00

$3 990 40x62 Was $ 4 880
Se
$6 950
50 00 Was
$32 00 Se $ 2 900 Ne e P
Up Bes 0 e
om aoo 388
53
Se

8~

Boston vs Ch cago a Rock ord

Thu Idly 1 Games
P ttsburgh 3 Ottawa 3 e
Man ea 3 P'hadepha3 tie
Wash ngton 5 New Jersey 2
Naahv e 2 De oit OT
S Lou s 7 Lo$ Ange es
Toran o 4 Edmon on
Today's Gamu
Anahe m a Buffa o 1 p m
NY sa des a A ana 730pm
San Jose a Mnnesoa 8pm
Da as a Chcago 630pm
F onda a Coo ado 9 pm
Boson a Cagary 9pm
Satu d•v • G•me•
CaOinaa Mon ea 7pm
A a a a 0 awa 7 p m
Anah e m a Ph ladelph a 7 p m
NY sande sa Wash! gon 7pm
Toonoa Cagary pm
Tampa Bay a New Je say 7 30 p m
coumousa Ptlsb gh 730pm
Buffa oa De o 730pm
Chcagoa s o s epm
LosAngeesa Da as 8pm
San Jose a Naslw e 8 p m
Phoen x a Vancou e 0 p m
S nday s Games
Flonda a M neso a 2 p m
Tampa Bay a NY Ra gers 7 pm
De o a Co mbus 7pm
PhOen )(a Edmon on 8 p m

0 98

720 Trucks for Sale

304 895 38 4

no ma on ead g o he e
u n o go d&amp; oppe o ooch os
n P P easa
Me ndas Ba e
monumen o Ma n S 740 592
5303

•

Wednnd1y 1 Games
Colo ado 5 Columbus
Ca 01 na 3 P ttsDurgh 2
Oa as 2 Sen Jose 1
M nneso a 6 Tampa Bay 5
N v Aange s 4 Chcago 2
Vanoouve 4 Calgary

BUDGET PR CES AT JACK
SO N ESTATES
D e om S289
shop &amp; rno e
2568 Eq a Hous

60

0

0

9
2 2 0 0
TloYO po ms o a win one poll Jo a1eaod
overt me loss

Apartments
for Rent

Do Deay Ca Now 0 e Re
due ons n Adams A hens S
o o And Nob e Coun es Ca Us
Today Fo FREE MAPS
An hony Land Company
801J. 2 3 8365

Aqu a W
Dogs 3 Le

0

2
3 2
2 o

e home no

$8900 One59A. eTac
$5 900

150

5

Danas
4
Los Angeles
3
Ana helm ..............3

74

9 00-5 30

40

0

SanJose

2 Gauge Sho gun
$2 0 sa age 22 A.u orna c $90
Nea y New T ade o P s o
Lea e Message (740}446-9635

Jackson Co 0 eBA eTac

9 Wes S rnsoo A hens
74().592 842
a a y co h ng a Cl househo d
ems $ 00 bag sa e eve y
hu sday Mo day h u Sa u day

NY Jes
ndanapotis
Buffa o ., ...................
New England

Mossbe g

ON Y$

New 0 Yov Th f1 ShOppe

PhOelll)(

PRO FOOl BALL

2 3 a Nv

B Bpm

~

4

•

Oa las 99 Toronto 94
Ottanoo o Attanta 93
New Voril; 00 M waukee B
Thurad1y a Games
Detro 98 Utah 94
Gofden Sta e 1 7 Sean e 3
Ch cago 88 Adan a 78
San An on10 88 M am 85
Hous on 92 Port and 85
Oenve 99 l A C .ppers 89
Ceveand9 LA ake s84

2

Pacific Dhnl on

Miami

NY Me s a NY Yankees 8 p m EST

necessary

2 0 0 10 27

Phoen x 2 Flonda 1 OT

89 ne es Rae
0 A ceaa cePope y
Ga ICICO One235A e a

950

neces

2

Mlflneso a

Wedn•sday Oct 25

AI ea esta e actvert s no n

this newapape s sub ect o
he Fede a Fe Hous ng Act
of 1;e&amp; which makn HHagaJ
o adver1 ae any p el.,ence
mitatlon or d acrlm nat on
based on ece colo el glon
aex 1am a ata us o na ona
o gn o any nentonto
make any such p eference
m tat on or d acrlm na on

50 New Ptls ions Ava abe
mmedae'j
Ea Up To 11 001 Hou

Fu

NV Me s Hamp on 5 0 a NY Yankees
Cemens 38 Bpm
NY Yankees

opportun ty bass

JOSS JOBS JOBS

NY Mesa NY Yankees Bpm
saoy
Sunday Oct 29

Sunday Oct 22

Mes Ree&lt;l

advert sed n hll newapape

Personals

for Rent

tnec

e~ary

Saturday OcL 28

Tuttday Oc 24

a eava abeonanequa

005

Business and
Buildings

420 Mobile Homes
ba a

Th s newe:pape w not
know ng y accep
advert sements o ea esta e
whch s nvloatonofthe
aw Ou eadens a e hereby
n o med ha a dwe ngs

$125 WEEKLY
Mako Monoy
He p ng Peop • Rece ve Gove n
men Re unda F at De a s 24

h

340

Business
Opportunity

Wor1d Se ea
(FOX)
Saturday Oct 21
NY Me s Le e 6 8 a NY Yankees Pe
e 99 Bpm

Thursday Oct 26
NY Yankees a NY Mes 8 8pm

5

Vanoouve
Coigaoy

NY Yanket3s Cone 4 4 c Neag e 7 7 a
NY Mas BJ ones -6 e 8pm

I

500

2

500

'2

500

2

400
333
LA ake s
0 4 000 2 12
Wednesdays Games
Chart e 99 New e sey 90

Fo

NEED CASH
$2 500 &amp;50 000
ow Mon hy Pym s
day Serv e

Netters

TRANSPORTATION

from Page 81

No ee s Good svs
Fo Appo ntmen
1 877 748-B LL (2455)

pm

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; Vicmlty

See this weekend's edition of the Sunday Tames-Sentinel
for a full recap of tonighfs Tri-County prep football
adion!
Tonighfs Games
Eastern at Waterford
MeiJS at Vinton County
Trimble at Southern

MERCHANDISE
Ae
dep 304 882
304 446 23 5 ea e

a mo

0 e b oo Cen e has pas ons
a a abe o AN s &amp; LPN s a
sh s Fo mo e
o ma on
pease con ac Ja k e Newsome
a 40 992 64 2 o s op by 333
Page S ee M dd epa Oh o an
app ca ton EOE

510

Household
Goods

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

110

Help Wanted

In Memory

FINANCIAL

MILLENNIUM
TELESERVICES

210

EDUCATION

~o gAf~
of nyh Ia

abe o en
304 67 5

Need We And Sep c7 No Down
Paymen Req ed age Se ec
on 0 Homes Ca
800 948
5678

s pleased to announce
the Grand Open ng of
ts Pomeroy cull cen e
We are no v se I ng up

Cfias 'R Mash ]

DECORATION

(}&lt;:)&lt;:)0{){)

n erv ew appo n ments

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

~

INSULATION

for outbound
teleserv ces pos 1 ons
No EXPER ENCE
NECESSARY
Polent a 10 earn up o
$15 hr w h quarterly
salary ev ews
Ful

PHOTOGR APHY
t-anS P oogaphy
5 Ma S
N wope o b s ess
Wedd ngs

Sen s
FamyPoas
Ca o an app n men
3046529

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

UR~ED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECURITY ISS 7
N Fee U essWeWn
888 582 3345

Mu docks Faco yOu e
o Homes
64 Ex 4 C oss anes
Sa e housands A d Day
modesm s bes d
866 88 885

New And Use-d F n u e So e
Be ow Ho da
Kanagua New
Co hes $325 New H de a Bed
So as $350 New B
Beds
Comp e e $200 Good Used
D esse s A d Ches 0 0 awe s
V. e Se G a e M
men s A d
Vases

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

REAL ESTATE

Sta t you ne\A.
ca ce w h us

840

Help Wanted

5505 WEEKLY QRARANTEED
WORK NG FOR HE GOVE RN
MENT FRO' HOME PAR
ME NO EXPER ENCE RE
OU RED
800 46 5 6 E
0

and part t me
pos ons ava lable
3 Sh fts da y w th
flex ble schedu ng
Managemen
Opportun t es
A a lable
Med cal Dental
40 K Pa d Vaca ons
ava abe fo
full nee nployees

Ele~trical

and
Retngerat1on

Ca I 800 929 5753
fo an appo n me
We ook fo wa d lo

eet ng you
au o
P

a e
e

J{e

Buy Sell or Trade

de

3Q Announcements

In the

CLASSIFIEDS!

b ok

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

October

ALL WELCOME'!

�•

Page B 6 • The Deily Sentinel

Friday, October 20, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page IS 7
'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

VOUR
CONCRETE
CONNECTION

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

Adult Hoi. Party
F.O .E. Sat. Evening
8pm
Members &amp; Guest
Lone Wolf Band

jNiedican: Supplement; Life Insurance; Buri al
Final Expenses; College, Reti rement.iJj
Em1ergeny Funds; Mortgage;
Medical • Nursing Home
-~·

Attention Eagles Members
Childrens Holl Party
Oct. 22
2 pm
Games, Prizes,
Food, OJ

P/ 8 CONTRACTORS, INC.

Good limes

CONC RETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SEI&lt;.VICES

have a night of fun wiih music by

Residential, Commercial

Three Chord Charlie
Saturday,Oct. 21

Free Estimates
Fully insured

Brian MGrrlson/RadH, Ohio
(740) 985·3948

9pm - 1am

Public Notice

Public Notice

,..OnCE TO TAXPAYERS
Reference : 5715.17
Ohio Revised Code
;Tho Meigs County Board
of Revision hao completed
Ita work of equalization. Tho
lax returns for tax year 2000
have bHn rovlood and tho
valuatlona completed end
are open for public
lnopoctlon In the otflco of

Common Ploaa Court,
Probeta Division
Meigs County, Ohio
(10) 20

the Melge County Auditor,

SHERIFF'S SALE
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER OOCV007

Public Notice

Second Floor, Courthouoo,

Second Street, Pomeroy,

OH 45789 ..
Complalnto agolnot tho
valuatlone , as established
tor tax year 2000 mutt be
made In accordance with
Section 571 5.19 of tho Ohio
Revised Code. Thoae
complaints muot be tiled on
forma which will be
furnished by tho County
Auditor and muat bo tiled In
tho County Auditor's Ofllco
on or bolortl tho 31 at day ot
March 2001 . All complalnta
flied with the county Auditor
will bo hoard by the Board
of Revision In the manner
pi'OVIded by
Section 5715.'19 of tho Ohio
Rev i sed Coda . Nancy
Parker Campbell Meigs
County Auditor
(10) 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 22, 23,
24, 25.26

Public Notice
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS, ,
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ACcounts and vouchers
of ·t ho following nomod
fiduciary has been lllod In
the Probate Court , · Meigs

·county, Ohio lor approval
and settlement.
ESTATE NO. 24905· 151h
Account . ot Jennifer ~ .
Sheela, Guardian of tho
parson and aatata of Oliver
E. Bailey, an Incompliant.

Unleaa exceptlona are
filed thereto, said account
will be set tor haorlng
before oald Court on tho
20th day of November, 2000,

at which limo said account
will bo considered and
continued from day to day
untllllnolly dlopolld of.
Any peraon Interested
may file written exception to

said account or to matters
pertaining to the execution
of the trust, not lass than
live days prior to the dote
set lor hearing.
Robert Buck
Judge

POOUNG AND SERVICING
AGREEMENT DATED
FEBRUARY 1, 1999, SERIES
1999-1 C/0 SUPERIOR
BANK, FSB
PLAINTIFF

P~EAS

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
In pureuance of an Order
of Sale to mo dlrtlcled from
aald Court In the above
antltlsd ae11on, I will oxl&gt;oao
to sale at public auction at
the
Courthouse
on
November 21 , 2000 11 10:00
a. m. of said day, the
following described real

estate:

Situated In tho Townohlp
of Chester, In tho County of
Molgo and State of Ohio,
and odjolnlng tho Vllloge ot

Cheater, Ohio, to-wit:

Terma ot sale: Cash
Jamao M. Soutsby
Sheriff, Mslgs Co.u nty
Stephanie P. Union
Lerner, Sampson &amp;
Rothtu11
120 E. Fourth Street,
8th Floor
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
(513) 241-3100
OH Sup Ct.II0071092
(10) 20, 27, (11) 3

Mm hall , whtch

return\

'iC&lt;mng i._·]ump l -

rl'CCJYL' d

placl' v.mc-.. ,\\ thl' 't'kttulll to

:;r)

ot ~I ) f\p,r -

t h t..' ll'.tgul:.., E,J\l
I~ Lnilt\:r~..·ncL' llll'Lh .l

W i ll

I ) J \'J~ J tlll .ntd wr.:r~..· p1ch·d b\'
11lt'Jllbn~ tu Will the MAC · ;OJ i rlL I III.L'l lt 1n M.u t h .

B .11\ St.Ht'. til L' ttJLlrll.lllh.:llt \\'J illll..' r !.be ,~.:.hOI I. \\' .1\

p1ch·d to\\ 111 til"· r~..1&lt;r I )]\ ' ]\1011. T h~..· C.trdlll.l i ~ h.l\·c
thrn· ..,Llrl\.'1\ rl'tl\111111 .~ ti·on1 l.t'&gt;t 'iL',l'lllll .tnd " ·dl be
kd by I Ilii Hud,k\', nnt: 11! thrt'l' lh'W "·o.H h,· . , 111
rhc k.l~Lil' tiJJ.., ~·c.t J
\t,ill'.

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dll'

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b,· J(~..·nt
Akr(lJI .111cl

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lokdo !Jilt '&gt;lh·t! "l'ton d to B..J] \t .r t L' ..
( .~li lt d o'V l idll )-!;. 111. I.. J ~t\.'111 Mtdll,L;.lll. ·.

f11 th·. \Xrl , r

llllk· V.l

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ll\

"\.!Hlhr ·]ll .\tlil!ll"lll

I ili i \'(/l' ~(l lll M1Lh1~ .1 11

33795 Hil4nJ Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740.742-8015 or
1-877-353-7022

740-992-5232

GALLIPOLIS

992·6142 or
Toll-Free 1-877-804-735

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

"W.elp"

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

740-992-3961
1 mo pd.

-AnY Size Double Hum!-

~'

~Ll:\ ~
,~
, ~~

144 Third Ave.
Gallipolis
446-4995
Tall Free 1-888·745-8847

$229.00*
• Free Installation
• Free in Home Esli niates
Call for Further Details

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.
992-4119

1-800-291-5600

VISIT OUR SHOWROOM ON STATE ROUTE 33
6 MilES NORTH OF POMEROY, OHIO AT COUNTY ROAO 18
• No Dealers or Contractors Please WV #023477

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays

.AlltEL

AT 6:30P.M.

St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per gallJI!
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Main

LINDA'S
PAINTING
" Take th e pain out
of painting·
Let me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6p.m..

Leave Message
Aher 6 pm· 740-985-4180

Phone (740) 593-6671

Lie. # 00-50 " """"

SHHDE

"Ahead in Service"
• Weslern Pride 12% Sweet Feed - 15.25/50 lbs.
•12% Cattle Feed 16.75/100 lbs. ·
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog food 56.75/50 lbs.
• fall fertilizers
35537 St Rt 7

Now Renling
A-J MINI-STORAGE
992-6396
992-2272

Meigs Count y
Fairgrounds
Ocl. I, 2000 · A pr. I, 2001

CALL FOR MORE
INFORMATIO N

949-2033

WANTED
Standi_ng timber larg•·
or small l!·ack,. To p
pri c&lt;'s paid also.
Dozer work.
Free Estimates

Ca ll T&amp; R Loggin g
a h er S:00 p rn

DEPOYS AG
PARTS
All Makes Tractor &amp;

l'arts
Fac tory Authorized
Case- HI Parts
Dealer,;.
[quipsm·nl

1000 St. Rt. 7 S outh
Coolville, OH 45723

740-887-G363

• Remodeling
• Deck s
• Roofing

Ohio 45769

992-1101
8/13

mont

mo d

North
• Q7
.• K 9 8 2

•• T t-1!.2E'5

ONt:.
.. TH IN.G- I'M
~ c.u~ous ABOUT,
"
KAFRAK. ....

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yr~. Local

Ragdol's
Costumes
Creative Costumes
ILII,I'l'l" • &lt; 1,111:-""tl·l,.,

lomtcd in R~tl11nd\ Dept. Store
Mam St. Rt. 124 Open
Thur-Sat Noon-7 pm

theragdol@hotmail.com

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Advertise in
this space for
s1oo per
month.
HILL'S
SELF STORACE

. 1 "-tho night

6

--·

9 -Grandi

10 Church
Clllender

11 Finds the sum
12 Throw

YO'RE
WELCOME,

PARSON

I NT

LUKEY PUT MY l.O.U. IN TH'
COLLECTION lAS KIT I I

West
Pass

22
23

novel

:-

25 Accelerates ....

26--arm•· ~

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
South

19
21

24 Loon Uris ••

•AKQ42

: r:;:;-;=~~::-:----r-----.

North

East

Pass

Pass

27 Rocket· " launching : ..

org.

-~·

test

.. .,.

31 T of TV

.. :

29 Dlatrlct
.. ,
30 Future ~~-lis.'

Opening lead: • 4

37 Hoellh
l'lllorl

38 "He who

hnlbtea

~

"

40 Fl.;;.; splka

Unusual problems
.B

: FRANK &amp; EARNEST
MfOyl, MEOw,
wowlt, Mew. ,
Meow. Pltlt7',

MEOw...

Y I'HtLLIP ALDER

41 Hummua
holder
42 Fruit decaY
43 Dloparogo • ·
45Havoornoel.
46 Frooto
.
4 7 Nonn'o will ·

,.

Last year, a "different" book
was published: "Improve Your 6-+-+Game" by Paul Lamford
. on ·ch•n·~
48 Colorado ••
(Chameleon Books). First, there !.r+-+-1--+-+Indian
.,..
are 10 straightforward problems. J.r+-+-1-+-+50 " Mayday!" ·;
52 Opponent ,
Then come problems 11-40,
53 Not ogetnCt.
which are noticeably harder. L.....J..--1-._..J..-1'
Finally, there are I0 novelties,
nine of which were composed by
CELEBRITY CIPHER Lamford.
by Lula Campo•
,.
For every problem, there is a
Cel~ Clphlr cryptograme are ci'U1ecl from quotation• by larnoua peopta, paat &amp;nd : ~
praMnt. EliCh letter ln the cl~r atandl for another,
, .,
hint printed upside down at the
Today'l clu•: P ~uals H
bottom of the page. The solutions
•'
are overleaf, though six of the
' .
analyses are so lengthy that they
'NRZXV
OILHV
TVIO
~IDH · ZGIJE
·•
are continued at the end of the
book. Also, each of the firsl 40
~HV
EPZV
OHZJEXUJR
IVHA
Cl.' · :
problems concludes with a useful
"
tip . Last, the book is a good valTZI!PZDXVH
PHNGJDV
~
ue. It's an excellent gift for a playPREVIOUS SO~UTION: "II you scratch a great photograph, you lind t.,Q_
lhlngo: 1 painting and a photograph."- Janel Malcolm .
·"
er·· your partner, not you! ··who
,•
thinks he is better than he is.
This is the last "easy" prob.
~~~~--=-~~~,..---- · ··
Jem . You open and close the auction with one weak no-trump,
showing 12- 14 points . (Now reg0 Raarrange
!etten of th.
ular readers will not be surprised
four Krambled words be·
to hear that the book comes from
low to form four simple wards.
England.) West leads a fourth ·
highest spade four, you play low
YELRAY
OT2
Kt ~ • ...,
from the dummy, and ... surprise,
surprise .. East puts up the king.
How do you benefit from this
good fortune?
LIPEM
You should plan Jo collect two
3
spade and fi ve club tricks. However, unless the missing clubs are
D0 DY L
"Remember dear," granny told
splitting 2-2, the su.it will block.
•
1
I
~.
the
new bnde, "we only pass \his ._
5
The solution is to duck at trick
.
.
•
o way but once in a life time , exce pt
"
. one. It doesn 'I matter if East
~:::~~:;::;:::::::;;~:::::_"...:.:,11 you r hu.~band is read ing the... ··,
switches to a red suit, but suppose
· he continues with a second spade.
she chuc kle quoted
You win with dummy's queen,
by fil ling In the mining words
~·
'-......;.1-.-...1.-.J..-.L.-!....-l. you develop
play a club to hand , and cash the
from Jlep No. 3 below.
....
spade ace, discarding a club from
,.
dummy. Finally you run the clubs.
The book is $13 .70 from
"
·www.opengrou·p.com.
'

-·
.

''

'

THE BORN LOSER
;: P"

'·

l ..lU::&gt;\ e.ovctl\
P\ NE:.W \-.IP\\(.11.-

:

Road
Racine, Ohio

'·
•

...

....

.

t t\P\'J£ Of'IE,f-\'(~f- TPi Nll'&lt;tTEft-.1
t-IIJ-.\ETH\11(

T

: : :]

0MC: Of \flDSC.

KP\\'&gt;'100~

(~~ ~

FOC FIIJf. . !

.....
NO ... t MC:N--1 IT
C.O!l\ ~ 1 '1 .95 I

'(C:~EI\?

•.•

• 45771
740-949-2217 .

I

I

t-.,--1-r;l,rrl 1---rl----l

Sizes 5' x 1 0'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM- 8 PM

•

'

The CountrY
candle ShoP

I

" we •,.,. b&lt;u ·k lo our

regultar lwur1 "

• Candle making

supplies

PEANUTS

• Baskets

304-273-0036

740-992-4559

10/4 1 mo

9/1100 1 mo pd

or one
or as ow·as

1:

r,.......,PI""&amp;_I,,.,.~-A'T,-N""TIN_rl-11 ~ ·C~mplete

Tues-Frl10·6
Sat. 10:4

• Wooden crafts

I

'I~1;1;1~~

•

mo. ad.

6 Month
Membership $100
plus tax
with this ad
Ravenswood, INV

DOWN

• 10 7
• 8 7 4

BARNEY

29670 Bashan

IRON CITY GYM

57 Uother-

17V11 2.000 poUnds

39PIIMI

• 10 9 5 2
• J 9 3

I

..•'

1/21 /00 1

56 : '
.=.;'lng

• A 10 6

• AK3
• 7

l Ll§1~

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• RoomAdditions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL ond RESIDENn~L
FREfi: ESTIMATES .

740-992·7599

48
51 Worllp54 Gennon
55 -quickly

South

10 8 6 5
East

e KB
9 A QJ

\
\

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.

1-740•742-7243

'-"-t·--

~·

2~R...,.

• J 9 5 432
• 5 4 3

'\

45 Attthmllk:
c;oc nt (ebbr.)

ment(2wdo.)
20 CIA'I
predecessor
21 Centerpiece

• QJ 6

••
•

'
''
·

10·20.00

~--

41
liaoijhofillV
44 _
,.,_

before
·
Chrlotmas"
2 Cry of pain
28Praloe
32 ExC811 oloolar 3 Ballet
movement
over lunar ye•
4 -do Franco
33 Prtcldy llhrub
5 "Attack, Fldol"
34 hrt of a cap
6 Balance
35 "Let's Moke
unoteodlly
7 Guitar sound
38 Tl'ap
8 -up {Irate)
37 Locate

•

.•

One Hundred Reasons
To Hate Cats

I DON'T KNOW .

Make that two

11M

NOT 50
5UREA80UT

hundred.

To get a current weather
report, check the

T1415 ...

Sentinel

I FRIDAY
~'Your

-----------~~~
Saturday, October 2 1, 2000
You could be the guy or gal
who can build the better mouse·
trap in the year ahead. It'll be your
imaginati on, ingenuity and
resourcefulness that puts you head
and shoulder above others.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0 ct. 23)
You'(e exceptionally susceptible
to fl attery today, and a devious
manipulator will be aware of that,
so take measure to protect your·
self against being used. It could
hap pen qu ite suddenl y. Get a
jump on life by understanding the
influences that' II govern you in
the year ahead. Send for your
Astra-Graph predictions by mail·
ing $2 to Astro-Graph, c/o Jhi '
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Mur·
ray Hill Station, New York, NY
101 56. Be sure to state your
Zodiac sign.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Instead of revealing your se lf·
doubts to competitor today, a bit
of bravado might be called for. If
you don't cover up your fears,
you'll be behind the 8- ball before
you even begin.
SAOIITARI.US (Nov. 23-Dec.
2 1) Don't try to sell ti n idea in
whic h you don' 1 totally trust or

a

Need it dane, g i ~ e us a call
FREE ESTIM ATES
Great Priced on New Homes

992-2753

992·6215

740-992-SOSO
(Ha ndy)

SMITH'S COfiSTRUCTIOfi
• New Hom es
• Garag es
• Sidin g

• Pallo &amp; Ponh Dtdcs
Free Estimates
V.C. YOUNG Ill

vertise our
•
us1ness

Cl 1 mo 4 1100

WINTER
STORAGE.
SPACE.
AVAILABLE.

G RUICE

740-985-3831

• Roofing &amp; Godton
• Yloyl S1dlllg &amp; Palllilg

Mel&amp;• • GaWa COUDtiel

Next to Wai-Mart
10x20 and 10x10

• Verticals • Wood • Minis • Etc

740-992-2269

35215 Boll Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

\ ill\,l e.l·l'ln th t ll:.C

UPTO 70% OFF

• Firewood o light
hauling • T11e &amp; hedge
trimming &amp; removal

Firewood

\\ lfd \\t· .. l \i,lftH•Il 'l\ k~

(Factory Outlet)

Blll~lack

Ball Logging &amp;

R•••h•l

HEAP Voueben aeupted fot

Call Us First Or We &amp;th Lose!
Ask For Mr. Ford
Over 30 Year Experience

11

West

• • - aM!Joos &amp;
• Now Garatts
• Otdrical I PI " I

1.-•

13
t
.....
14 Kook
15 Fonech

,.
f
': ==-...u-

CHESTER

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

1 Olllce 7 Strep-

ALDER

'

DUM LUMBER

St. RT. 24B

ACROSS

PHILLIP

•
''
~

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

cau a: Lell¥e ~

OF

PRODUCTS

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

Dump TrUck Delivery
Meiel ud Gallia Couutlet

1-800- 72-5179or446-9800

The CRAFTY, BLIND SPOT

750 East State' Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

SECURITY·

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

On Maple
Street in
Mason

Beginning
at
the
Southoaat corner of lot
formerly owned by Charley
and Nannle Baumi thence
north along Stole Highway
Route No. 248, a dlotanco of
50 teet to a corneri thence
north 354 111110 a corner of
J . M. Tullia's line: thence ,._ _ _ _ __ . _ . , . . . - - - - - - - - - along aald line 50 toot In a ' I
j
Stop In And See
southwesterly dlroctlon to
the corner of aald Charlie
1
Steve Riffle
and Nannle Baum lot;
!
thence south 354 laotto the
• •
~ Sales Repre se ntative
place of boglnnln~.
Prior
Instrument
Larry Sch e y
ratoroncu: Volume 104 . ~,.
Page 161·162. Property
addraso: 46620 State Routa ·
248
Cheater, Ohio 45720
•
Appraised at $25,000.00

cnnfl'Tt'IICt'

h 11l n\\'cd tn

HOLLY'S
SELF·STORAGE

A~

DEFENDANTS
COURT OF COMMON

p1ckL'd ,ts the tC.llll to hc.H for thL' m en's b.nk~·tball
lhamp iomh 1p 111 d1L' M td-AlncrtClll Confert'llCL'.

\\,1'

· 7/2 2/TFN

our location

on -Ltnn r ~by from Lt\r y~,.·;u\ ~q u aJ, W&lt;.:dnc'id:l\', w.l~

,\1.Jnh.dl

740-992-1671

All ve rtical blinds are made lo o r.ler at

Ohio picked to finish
fifth in East Division
The T h.umknng I kTJ

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

·New Homes
• Garages
· • Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

vs.

GOHEEN, OONALO K., ET

Marshall, Ball
State expeded
to lead MAC
C LE VELANIJ (AI') -

HACJLIHG and
EXCAVfiTIHG

Self-Storage

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

~~~~~T~~~~~ ~~~K,

MAC HOOPS

fo u r ~t.1 rtL'r'i, Jndudtng

.,WICK'SCI

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

11-ie~
High &amp;Dry

,
••
•
•
••

--..

••

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDOII:

.

· believe. Associates will instantly
perceive thi s and wo n't have any
fai lh in you r suggesti ons or con·
cepts.
CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22 -Jan .
. 19) Someone you k.now quite we ll
who always mi smanages his or .
her resources.mi ght lry to put the
tap on you today just when you're
preoccupied with something else .
Don't get caught off guard.
AQUA RI US (Jan. 20- Feb. 19)
If you discover today that parr·
nership arrangement in which
you're involved is more of a lia·
bility than an asset, do something
about it to di ssolve the situation.
It won't ·work without parity.
PISCES (Feb . 20·Marc h 20) It
isn't likely that you' ll accomplish
much today, because you could be
inclined to slack 'off on your
'b'l ' · y
·duties and responst 1 ottes. ou
migh t as well just take the day off.
ARIES (March 21-Apriii 9)A
person you know socially who has
caused you trouble in the past
may cross yo ur path again today.
Stay away fro m him or her.
because history will repeat itself.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Anti cipating the ou tcome of
events in a negative munner today

a

will cau se yo u lo use tac tics or
methods that will be both too cautious and ineffecti ve. Don'l be
your ow n worst enemy.
GEMI NI (May 2 1-June 20)
Anyone with whom you fee l it is
necessary to make an agree ment
today should not be taken at his or
her wo rd alone. Be sure every·
thing is confirmed and promises
are put in writing.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)
Be particularl y carefu l when out
, hoppi ng today thai the qua li ty of
the prod"'; t you're purc hasi ng is
all th at I he manufacture r or fi rm
says it is. You could get stUck with
a lemon.
LEO . (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22)
Ambi valent or wishy-was hy
bchav!Or will serve to greatl y
im pede yo ur progre ss today and
cause you unexpected problems.
Don 't focus on nonessential' ele·
me nts. only on what's necessary.
VIRGO (A ug. 23-Sept. 22)
Petty office politics must be
steered clear of at all costs today.
If you don' t, an associate who
specializes in intrigues will get
you right smack in the middle of
someth ing unpleasant.

'

SCRAM-LETS ANSWEIIS

Ma nila · Trump · Oaken · Crad le ·. IN the DARK
"Why does the Statue of Liberty hold a torch?" tl1e
boy asked . His friend replied , "B eca use you a ren 't sup.
nose lo read IN the DARK ." . .
.

OCTOBER 20 I

�•

Page B 6 • The Deily Sentinel

Friday, October 20, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page IS 7
'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

VOUR
CONCRETE
CONNECTION

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

Adult Hoi. Party
F.O .E. Sat. Evening
8pm
Members &amp; Guest
Lone Wolf Band

jNiedican: Supplement; Life Insurance; Buri al
Final Expenses; College, Reti rement.iJj
Em1ergeny Funds; Mortgage;
Medical • Nursing Home
-~·

Attention Eagles Members
Childrens Holl Party
Oct. 22
2 pm
Games, Prizes,
Food, OJ

P/ 8 CONTRACTORS, INC.

Good limes

CONC RETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SEI&lt;.VICES

have a night of fun wiih music by

Residential, Commercial

Three Chord Charlie
Saturday,Oct. 21

Free Estimates
Fully insured

Brian MGrrlson/RadH, Ohio
(740) 985·3948

9pm - 1am

Public Notice

Public Notice

,..OnCE TO TAXPAYERS
Reference : 5715.17
Ohio Revised Code
;Tho Meigs County Board
of Revision hao completed
Ita work of equalization. Tho
lax returns for tax year 2000
have bHn rovlood and tho
valuatlona completed end
are open for public
lnopoctlon In the otflco of

Common Ploaa Court,
Probeta Division
Meigs County, Ohio
(10) 20

the Melge County Auditor,

SHERIFF'S SALE
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER OOCV007

Public Notice

Second Floor, Courthouoo,

Second Street, Pomeroy,

OH 45789 ..
Complalnto agolnot tho
valuatlone , as established
tor tax year 2000 mutt be
made In accordance with
Section 571 5.19 of tho Ohio
Revised Code. Thoae
complaints muot be tiled on
forma which will be
furnished by tho County
Auditor and muat bo tiled In
tho County Auditor's Ofllco
on or bolortl tho 31 at day ot
March 2001 . All complalnta
flied with the county Auditor
will bo hoard by the Board
of Revision In the manner
pi'OVIded by
Section 5715.'19 of tho Ohio
Rev i sed Coda . Nancy
Parker Campbell Meigs
County Auditor
(10) 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 22, 23,
24, 25.26

Public Notice
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS, ,
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ACcounts and vouchers
of ·t ho following nomod
fiduciary has been lllod In
the Probate Court , · Meigs

·county, Ohio lor approval
and settlement.
ESTATE NO. 24905· 151h
Account . ot Jennifer ~ .
Sheela, Guardian of tho
parson and aatata of Oliver
E. Bailey, an Incompliant.

Unleaa exceptlona are
filed thereto, said account
will be set tor haorlng
before oald Court on tho
20th day of November, 2000,

at which limo said account
will bo considered and
continued from day to day
untllllnolly dlopolld of.
Any peraon Interested
may file written exception to

said account or to matters
pertaining to the execution
of the trust, not lass than
live days prior to the dote
set lor hearing.
Robert Buck
Judge

POOUNG AND SERVICING
AGREEMENT DATED
FEBRUARY 1, 1999, SERIES
1999-1 C/0 SUPERIOR
BANK, FSB
PLAINTIFF

P~EAS

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
In pureuance of an Order
of Sale to mo dlrtlcled from
aald Court In the above
antltlsd ae11on, I will oxl&gt;oao
to sale at public auction at
the
Courthouse
on
November 21 , 2000 11 10:00
a. m. of said day, the
following described real

estate:

Situated In tho Townohlp
of Chester, In tho County of
Molgo and State of Ohio,
and odjolnlng tho Vllloge ot

Cheater, Ohio, to-wit:

Terma ot sale: Cash
Jamao M. Soutsby
Sheriff, Mslgs Co.u nty
Stephanie P. Union
Lerner, Sampson &amp;
Rothtu11
120 E. Fourth Street,
8th Floor
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
(513) 241-3100
OH Sup Ct.II0071092
(10) 20, 27, (11) 3

Mm hall , whtch

return\

'iC&lt;mng i._·]ump l -

rl'CCJYL' d

placl' v.mc-.. ,\\ thl' 't'kttulll to

:;r)

ot ~I ) f\p,r -

t h t..' ll'.tgul:.., E,J\l
I~ Lnilt\:r~..·ncL' llll'Lh .l

W i ll

I ) J \'J~ J tlll .ntd wr.:r~..· p1ch·d b\'
11lt'Jllbn~ tu Will the MAC · ;OJ i rlL I III.L'l lt 1n M.u t h .

B .11\ St.Ht'. til L' ttJLlrll.lllh.:llt \\'J illll..' r !.be ,~.:.hOI I. \\' .1\

p1ch·d to\\ 111 til"· r~..1&lt;r I )]\ ' ]\1011. T h~..· C.trdlll.l i ~ h.l\·c
thrn· ..,Llrl\.'1\ rl'tl\111111 .~ ti·on1 l.t'&gt;t 'iL',l'lllll .tnd " ·dl be
kd by I Ilii Hud,k\', nnt: 11! thrt'l' lh'W "·o.H h,· . , 111
rhc k.l~Lil' tiJJ.., ~·c.t J
\t,ill'.

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dll'

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b,· J(~..·nt
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lokdo !Jilt '&gt;lh·t! "l'ton d to B..J] \t .r t L' ..
( .~li lt d o'V l idll )-!;. 111. I.. J ~t\.'111 Mtdll,L;.lll. ·.

f11 th·. \Xrl , r

llllk· V.l

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ll\

"\.!Hlhr ·]ll .\tlil!ll"lll

I ili i \'(/l' ~(l lll M1Lh1~ .1 11

33795 Hil4nJ Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740.742-8015 or
1-877-353-7022

740-992-5232

GALLIPOLIS

992·6142 or
Toll-Free 1-877-804-735

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

"W.elp"

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

740-992-3961
1 mo pd.

-AnY Size Double Hum!-

~'

~Ll:\ ~
,~
, ~~

144 Third Ave.
Gallipolis
446-4995
Tall Free 1-888·745-8847

$229.00*
• Free Installation
• Free in Home Esli niates
Call for Further Details

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.
992-4119

1-800-291-5600

VISIT OUR SHOWROOM ON STATE ROUTE 33
6 MilES NORTH OF POMEROY, OHIO AT COUNTY ROAO 18
• No Dealers or Contractors Please WV #023477

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays

.AlltEL

AT 6:30P.M.

St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per gallJI!
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Main

LINDA'S
PAINTING
" Take th e pain out
of painting·
Let me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6p.m..

Leave Message
Aher 6 pm· 740-985-4180

Phone (740) 593-6671

Lie. # 00-50 " """"

SHHDE

"Ahead in Service"
• Weslern Pride 12% Sweet Feed - 15.25/50 lbs.
•12% Cattle Feed 16.75/100 lbs. ·
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog food 56.75/50 lbs.
• fall fertilizers
35537 St Rt 7

Now Renling
A-J MINI-STORAGE
992-6396
992-2272

Meigs Count y
Fairgrounds
Ocl. I, 2000 · A pr. I, 2001

CALL FOR MORE
INFORMATIO N

949-2033

WANTED
Standi_ng timber larg•·
or small l!·ack,. To p
pri c&lt;'s paid also.
Dozer work.
Free Estimates

Ca ll T&amp; R Loggin g
a h er S:00 p rn

DEPOYS AG
PARTS
All Makes Tractor &amp;

l'arts
Fac tory Authorized
Case- HI Parts
Dealer,;.
[quipsm·nl

1000 St. Rt. 7 S outh
Coolville, OH 45723

740-887-G363

• Remodeling
• Deck s
• Roofing

Ohio 45769

992-1101
8/13

mont

mo d

North
• Q7
.• K 9 8 2

•• T t-1!.2E'5

ONt:.
.. TH IN.G- I'M
~ c.u~ous ABOUT,
"
KAFRAK. ....

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yr~. Local

Ragdol's
Costumes
Creative Costumes
ILII,I'l'l" • &lt; 1,111:-""tl·l,.,

lomtcd in R~tl11nd\ Dept. Store
Mam St. Rt. 124 Open
Thur-Sat Noon-7 pm

theragdol@hotmail.com

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Advertise in
this space for
s1oo per
month.
HILL'S
SELF STORACE

. 1 "-tho night

6

--·

9 -Grandi

10 Church
Clllender

11 Finds the sum
12 Throw

YO'RE
WELCOME,

PARSON

I NT

LUKEY PUT MY l.O.U. IN TH'
COLLECTION lAS KIT I I

West
Pass

22
23

novel

:-

25 Accelerates ....

26--arm•· ~

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
South

19
21

24 Loon Uris ••

•AKQ42

: r:;:;-;=~~::-:----r-----.

North

East

Pass

Pass

27 Rocket· " launching : ..

org.

-~·

test

.. .,.

31 T of TV

.. :

29 Dlatrlct
.. ,
30 Future ~~-lis.'

Opening lead: • 4

37 Hoellh
l'lllorl

38 "He who

hnlbtea

~

"

40 Fl.;;.; splka

Unusual problems
.B

: FRANK &amp; EARNEST
MfOyl, MEOw,
wowlt, Mew. ,
Meow. Pltlt7',

MEOw...

Y I'HtLLIP ALDER

41 Hummua
holder
42 Fruit decaY
43 Dloparogo • ·
45Havoornoel.
46 Frooto
.
4 7 Nonn'o will ·

,.

Last year, a "different" book
was published: "Improve Your 6-+-+Game" by Paul Lamford
. on ·ch•n·~
48 Colorado ••
(Chameleon Books). First, there !.r+-+-1--+-+Indian
.,..
are 10 straightforward problems. J.r+-+-1-+-+50 " Mayday!" ·;
52 Opponent ,
Then come problems 11-40,
53 Not ogetnCt.
which are noticeably harder. L.....J..--1-._..J..-1'
Finally, there are I0 novelties,
nine of which were composed by
CELEBRITY CIPHER Lamford.
by Lula Campo•
,.
For every problem, there is a
Cel~ Clphlr cryptograme are ci'U1ecl from quotation• by larnoua peopta, paat &amp;nd : ~
praMnt. EliCh letter ln the cl~r atandl for another,
, .,
hint printed upside down at the
Today'l clu•: P ~uals H
bottom of the page. The solutions
•'
are overleaf, though six of the
' .
analyses are so lengthy that they
'NRZXV
OILHV
TVIO
~IDH · ZGIJE
·•
are continued at the end of the
book. Also, each of the firsl 40
~HV
EPZV
OHZJEXUJR
IVHA
Cl.' · :
problems concludes with a useful
"
tip . Last, the book is a good valTZI!PZDXVH
PHNGJDV
~
ue. It's an excellent gift for a playPREVIOUS SO~UTION: "II you scratch a great photograph, you lind t.,Q_
lhlngo: 1 painting and a photograph."- Janel Malcolm .
·"
er·· your partner, not you! ··who
,•
thinks he is better than he is.
This is the last "easy" prob.
~~~~--=-~~~,..---- · ··
Jem . You open and close the auction with one weak no-trump,
showing 12- 14 points . (Now reg0 Raarrange
!etten of th.
ular readers will not be surprised
four Krambled words be·
to hear that the book comes from
low to form four simple wards.
England.) West leads a fourth ·
highest spade four, you play low
YELRAY
OT2
Kt ~ • ...,
from the dummy, and ... surprise,
surprise .. East puts up the king.
How do you benefit from this
good fortune?
LIPEM
You should plan Jo collect two
3
spade and fi ve club tricks. However, unless the missing clubs are
D0 DY L
"Remember dear," granny told
splitting 2-2, the su.it will block.
•
1
I
~.
the
new bnde, "we only pass \his ._
5
The solution is to duck at trick
.
.
•
o way but once in a life time , exce pt
"
. one. It doesn 'I matter if East
~:::~~:;::;:::::::;;~:::::_"...:.:,11 you r hu.~band is read ing the... ··,
switches to a red suit, but suppose
· he continues with a second spade.
she chuc kle quoted
You win with dummy's queen,
by fil ling In the mining words
~·
'-......;.1-.-...1.-.J..-.L.-!....-l. you develop
play a club to hand , and cash the
from Jlep No. 3 below.
....
spade ace, discarding a club from
,.
dummy. Finally you run the clubs.
The book is $13 .70 from
"
·www.opengrou·p.com.
'

-·
.

''

'

THE BORN LOSER
;: P"

'·

l ..lU::&gt;\ e.ovctl\
P\ NE:.W \-.IP\\(.11.-

:

Road
Racine, Ohio

'·
•

...

....

.

t t\P\'J£ Of'IE,f-\'(~f- TPi Nll'&lt;tTEft-.1
t-IIJ-.\ETH\11(

T

: : :]

0MC: Of \flDSC.

KP\\'&gt;'100~

(~~ ~

FOC FIIJf. . !

.....
NO ... t MC:N--1 IT
C.O!l\ ~ 1 '1 .95 I

'(C:~EI\?

•.•

• 45771
740-949-2217 .

I

I

t-.,--1-r;l,rrl 1---rl----l

Sizes 5' x 1 0'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM- 8 PM

•

'

The CountrY
candle ShoP

I

" we •,.,. b&lt;u ·k lo our

regultar lwur1 "

• Candle making

supplies

PEANUTS

• Baskets

304-273-0036

740-992-4559

10/4 1 mo

9/1100 1 mo pd

or one
or as ow·as

1:

r,.......,PI""&amp;_I,,.,.~-A'T,-N""TIN_rl-11 ~ ·C~mplete

Tues-Frl10·6
Sat. 10:4

• Wooden crafts

I

'I~1;1;1~~

•

mo. ad.

6 Month
Membership $100
plus tax
with this ad
Ravenswood, INV

DOWN

• 10 7
• 8 7 4

BARNEY

29670 Bashan

IRON CITY GYM

57 Uother-

17V11 2.000 poUnds

39PIIMI

• 10 9 5 2
• J 9 3

I

..•'

1/21 /00 1

56 : '
.=.;'lng

• A 10 6

• AK3
• 7

l Ll§1~

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• RoomAdditions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL ond RESIDENn~L
FREfi: ESTIMATES .

740-992·7599

48
51 Worllp54 Gennon
55 -quickly

South

10 8 6 5
East

e KB
9 A QJ

\
\

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.

1-740•742-7243

'-"-t·--

~·

2~R...,.

• J 9 5 432
• 5 4 3

'\

45 Attthmllk:
c;oc nt (ebbr.)

ment(2wdo.)
20 CIA'I
predecessor
21 Centerpiece

• QJ 6

••
•

'
''
·

10·20.00

~--

41
liaoijhofillV
44 _
,.,_

before
·
Chrlotmas"
2 Cry of pain
28Praloe
32 ExC811 oloolar 3 Ballet
movement
over lunar ye•
4 -do Franco
33 Prtcldy llhrub
5 "Attack, Fldol"
34 hrt of a cap
6 Balance
35 "Let's Moke
unoteodlly
7 Guitar sound
38 Tl'ap
8 -up {Irate)
37 Locate

•

.•

One Hundred Reasons
To Hate Cats

I DON'T KNOW .

Make that two

11M

NOT 50
5UREA80UT

hundred.

To get a current weather
report, check the

T1415 ...

Sentinel

I FRIDAY
~'Your

-----------~~~
Saturday, October 2 1, 2000
You could be the guy or gal
who can build the better mouse·
trap in the year ahead. It'll be your
imaginati on, ingenuity and
resourcefulness that puts you head
and shoulder above others.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0 ct. 23)
You'(e exceptionally susceptible
to fl attery today, and a devious
manipulator will be aware of that,
so take measure to protect your·
self against being used. It could
hap pen qu ite suddenl y. Get a
jump on life by understanding the
influences that' II govern you in
the year ahead. Send for your
Astra-Graph predictions by mail·
ing $2 to Astro-Graph, c/o Jhi '
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Mur·
ray Hill Station, New York, NY
101 56. Be sure to state your
Zodiac sign.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Instead of revealing your se lf·
doubts to competitor today, a bit
of bravado might be called for. If
you don't cover up your fears,
you'll be behind the 8- ball before
you even begin.
SAOIITARI.US (Nov. 23-Dec.
2 1) Don't try to sell ti n idea in
whic h you don' 1 totally trust or

a

Need it dane, g i ~ e us a call
FREE ESTIM ATES
Great Priced on New Homes

992-2753

992·6215

740-992-SOSO
(Ha ndy)

SMITH'S COfiSTRUCTIOfi
• New Hom es
• Garag es
• Sidin g

• Pallo &amp; Ponh Dtdcs
Free Estimates
V.C. YOUNG Ill

vertise our
•
us1ness

Cl 1 mo 4 1100

WINTER
STORAGE.
SPACE.
AVAILABLE.

G RUICE

740-985-3831

• Roofing &amp; Godton
• Yloyl S1dlllg &amp; Palllilg

Mel&amp;• • GaWa COUDtiel

Next to Wai-Mart
10x20 and 10x10

• Verticals • Wood • Minis • Etc

740-992-2269

35215 Boll Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

\ ill\,l e.l·l'ln th t ll:.C

UPTO 70% OFF

• Firewood o light
hauling • T11e &amp; hedge
trimming &amp; removal

Firewood

\\ lfd \\t· .. l \i,lftH•Il 'l\ k~

(Factory Outlet)

Blll~lack

Ball Logging &amp;

R•••h•l

HEAP Voueben aeupted fot

Call Us First Or We &amp;th Lose!
Ask For Mr. Ford
Over 30 Year Experience

11

West

• • - aM!Joos &amp;
• Now Garatts
• Otdrical I PI " I

1.-•

13
t
.....
14 Kook
15 Fonech

,.
f
': ==-...u-

CHESTER

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

1 Olllce 7 Strep-

ALDER

'

DUM LUMBER

St. RT. 24B

ACROSS

PHILLIP

•
''
~

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

cau a: Lell¥e ~

OF

PRODUCTS

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

Dump TrUck Delivery
Meiel ud Gallia Couutlet

1-800- 72-5179or446-9800

The CRAFTY, BLIND SPOT

750 East State' Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

SECURITY·

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

On Maple
Street in
Mason

Beginning
at
the
Southoaat corner of lot
formerly owned by Charley
and Nannle Baumi thence
north along Stole Highway
Route No. 248, a dlotanco of
50 teet to a corneri thence
north 354 111110 a corner of
J . M. Tullia's line: thence ,._ _ _ _ __ . _ . , . . . - - - - - - - - - along aald line 50 toot In a ' I
j
Stop In And See
southwesterly dlroctlon to
the corner of aald Charlie
1
Steve Riffle
and Nannle Baum lot;
!
thence south 354 laotto the
• •
~ Sales Repre se ntative
place of boglnnln~.
Prior
Instrument
Larry Sch e y
ratoroncu: Volume 104 . ~,.
Page 161·162. Property
addraso: 46620 State Routa ·
248
Cheater, Ohio 45720
•
Appraised at $25,000.00

cnnfl'Tt'IICt'

h 11l n\\'cd tn

HOLLY'S
SELF·STORAGE

A~

DEFENDANTS
COURT OF COMMON

p1ckL'd ,ts the tC.llll to hc.H for thL' m en's b.nk~·tball
lhamp iomh 1p 111 d1L' M td-AlncrtClll Confert'llCL'.

\\,1'

· 7/2 2/TFN

our location

on -Ltnn r ~by from Lt\r y~,.·;u\ ~q u aJ, W&lt;.:dnc'id:l\', w.l~

,\1.Jnh.dl

740-992-1671

All ve rtical blinds are made lo o r.ler at

Ohio picked to finish
fifth in East Division
The T h.umknng I kTJ

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

·New Homes
• Garages
· • Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

vs.

GOHEEN, OONALO K., ET

Marshall, Ball
State expeded
to lead MAC
C LE VELANIJ (AI') -

HACJLIHG and
EXCAVfiTIHG

Self-Storage

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

~~~~~T~~~~~ ~~~K,

MAC HOOPS

fo u r ~t.1 rtL'r'i, Jndudtng

.,WICK'SCI

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

11-ie~
High &amp;Dry

,
••
•
•
••

--..

••

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDOII:

.

· believe. Associates will instantly
perceive thi s and wo n't have any
fai lh in you r suggesti ons or con·
cepts.
CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22 -Jan .
. 19) Someone you k.now quite we ll
who always mi smanages his or .
her resources.mi ght lry to put the
tap on you today just when you're
preoccupied with something else .
Don't get caught off guard.
AQUA RI US (Jan. 20- Feb. 19)
If you discover today that parr·
nership arrangement in which
you're involved is more of a lia·
bility than an asset, do something
about it to di ssolve the situation.
It won't ·work without parity.
PISCES (Feb . 20·Marc h 20) It
isn't likely that you' ll accomplish
much today, because you could be
inclined to slack 'off on your
'b'l ' · y
·duties and responst 1 ottes. ou
migh t as well just take the day off.
ARIES (March 21-Apriii 9)A
person you know socially who has
caused you trouble in the past
may cross yo ur path again today.
Stay away fro m him or her.
because history will repeat itself.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Anti cipating the ou tcome of
events in a negative munner today

a

will cau se yo u lo use tac tics or
methods that will be both too cautious and ineffecti ve. Don'l be
your ow n worst enemy.
GEMI NI (May 2 1-June 20)
Anyone with whom you fee l it is
necessary to make an agree ment
today should not be taken at his or
her wo rd alone. Be sure every·
thing is confirmed and promises
are put in writing.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)
Be particularl y carefu l when out
, hoppi ng today thai the qua li ty of
the prod"'; t you're purc hasi ng is
all th at I he manufacture r or fi rm
says it is. You could get stUck with
a lemon.
LEO . (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22)
Ambi valent or wishy-was hy
bchav!Or will serve to greatl y
im pede yo ur progre ss today and
cause you unexpected problems.
Don 't focus on nonessential' ele·
me nts. only on what's necessary.
VIRGO (A ug. 23-Sept. 22)
Petty office politics must be
steered clear of at all costs today.
If you don' t, an associate who
specializes in intrigues will get
you right smack in the middle of
someth ing unpleasant.

'

SCRAM-LETS ANSWEIIS

Ma nila · Trump · Oaken · Crad le ·. IN the DARK
"Why does the Statue of Liberty hold a torch?" tl1e
boy asked . His friend replied , "B eca use you a ren 't sup.
nose lo read IN the DARK ." . .
.

OCTOBER 20 I

�P-ve B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, October :ZO, 2000

Pomeroy, Mlddl•port, Ohio

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Home field means virtually nothing for Iowa against Ohio State
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) -The
so-cJlled home tidd advantage
me.ms vtrtually norhmg tor Iowa
when Oh10 Stare come\ to

W\\ 11.

The 14th- ranked Buckeyes (5~-1 B1g Ten) enJOV .1 14-S-2
.JJv.mtagt· m Iowa Clry Jnd hJve

1.

uor lost .lt Klnmck Stadium . \ Hl' of
S.uurday'~ t:o ntL'St, smn~ .1 211- 1-l
&gt;etbJck 111 198.&gt; .
Iowa ( 1-6, 1-2) tied Ohi&lt;&gt; St.lte
~ .t-all m 1&lt;JS8 but hJ' lm r the i.ht
t~Jur ho mt• g.uncs 111 the \L'ru.·-. .
Oh1o Sute co.Kh John Coop,·r

sa1d wmnmg stn·aks meJn nothmg

this week for the Buckey&lt;&gt; . who
e&gt;n't alford to take the H .1wkey&lt;&gt;
lightly.
"They're cc•rtamly not the most
talented team we 'II pl.1y. obviously.

They'vt• p!Jy~J .1 lot of good
tt·ams."' Coopa ~Jid. ''l don't
\\'orry JS much .1buur h1\\'J :t:. I do
uur footb::~.ll tt"am.
·'Our pbp.•n .m.· l'tnb.lrrJ\St'd by
the WJY tht•y pbyt·d Ll~t \\'t'ck.''
Minnesota dnwncd tht· Uud;: cyes 29 - 17 m Columhu' J.r.. t S.lt -

urJ.1y wlule Iowa lo&gt;t 31-0 Jt Ill&gt;nms.
"Th111 1\ rhe most ImportJnt

game

for

us to

dat~ ...

Cooper sald.

The key for the H.1wkeyes will
be to avmd turnowrs and givmg
up the big plJy. low.&gt; co.1ch K&gt;rk
Fl·rentz sJid.

Tht_• Hawkeyt•s commlrtl'd a
~cason-high four turno\\·rs ag~1inst

the Illini md were bhtzed for
thrt'e touchdowns

quarter.
"Wt: bche\'t:

Ill

111

thl' st:cond

m iro.;t'l\'t'"i. Wl' .\'t'

week to week:" h e said. " We are
not the type of team that can
co m e out and dominate you in
~howl'd It," '~uJ redslurt freshman
1\.obert Gall&lt;-ry, who has been every aspect . We h ave to be runmoved from tight epd to starring ning on all cylinders."
Ferentz is still searching for ways
nght tackle bt·cause of injuries
to shore up his defense, which is
.tlnng t!u~ front .
Oluo St.ue hneba cker Matt Wil- allowing 6.3 yards per play.
The Hawkeyes are allowing an
helm said the Bu ckeyes cannot
.1fliml to overlook the HawkL'Yes average of 4p5 yards per game Jmt because they've lost six o( I lOth out of 114 Division 1- A
teants.
~even co ntests ~o far.
Their rushing defense is giving
"Especially after the game we
had Satunby. Wt' have to focus up 243 yards per contest. which
just got to put 1t •ll together.
Wt·'w got the talent . We've

Oklahoma's Heu~el, South carolina
Northem
hot in first half of 2000 season
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Stnkt· up" rht· Pndc o f Okb -

honu
M.m.. h111~
B.l11d
"Booml'T ;-'lih.H1 L'r" Wl'lll\ hkl· tht·
.1ppropn.ltt'
yt·s-~

-

It·,

h.h k~ rnun~l

ru IlL' I~ n

,1

.1 1\ll\l t'.

luol..

.H "

ho ·.,

Hry;mt to bL·conw !l1;1Jtll" l'l'llt'J.~t· \
\N'tth n)ach
Bob D.1\'Jc\ JOb hmg111g 011 du.' wuHJlllgl'~t rt,.l.IC h . H1' Linn~ ,liT '2 :) - th e ,rJwnl\ . 'ynr . . r ~r.1rt \lllet'
tir-,t tl\·L· ~.unc:- of tht• ..,e,t~on, the
Ftghnn~ fri"h \\'l'llt :'\-2 - lw,Hmg I iJ ,; (, . Tolt·"_h,, J&gt;Jrhbur~h .md Min T~.·x.l~ A&amp;J\1 . l'mdue .md Sunfurd . • ne~ou .1n· .lllhHI~ Pl'llll Sr.1tl'\
-l. Notn:

b.1rdy

DJIIlL"

lo..;in~

h) bnth Ndw.1 ,k .1 (111
.md MKhlg.IJI \(.ltl' . rhc

hor .md who·, th ll . \\'hll\ brt•.1kmg
through .1111.\ wh~) \ . brl·.1k1n~
duwn .. llld ,,·hu \ . . nll 011 thl' n1.1d
to th~..· n.Hil)JL1l r h.1mptnn,Jup
throu~h the t i r~l lul f of the st'.l"'tlll .

\)\'Cr(ltlll')

WHO ' S HOT
Jo'h Heupel (pn, nouu cc d
I IYP E-1iull) : Nor only h .~&lt; th&lt;·
()klahonu qturrl•rb.H:k lllo\·c d ro
the top of tht· Hc1;,nun Tmphy l i~t.
rhe left\' lu.; tht• rh1rd - r.111kt'd

ltJuld end up 9-1 .111d in .1 Uowl
Ch.11npiom h1p Sene~ g;11 11 L'.
3. Big East Confcr('n&lt;.'c: Th(;' soulled \W;lk IJnk of thl' ~~x m.IJOr
Teagu~~ in th ~ BCS f.unil~· !us Virgmi:1 Tt'ch ,Jt No. 1 .md Mi.uni at
No. 4 in the AI' poll . The Willner

Soonen

6-() t(H t:hr tir:-.t tune .. uJce
1987. He Cl..lmplered 2lJ of J7 p.1ss-

c .. fur 37-J. y.trJs
do\\WI Ill

.111d t\\'0

touch-

b.;r \\'t'L'k ".., .f1-J1

\\'lll ,1{

rhen-No. 1 K :w~.1!i St,lte. A wt:ek
e.1 rli t&gt;r. he JJrt•cte d the Som1cro; ro
.1 63-1-l win on.·r then - No. 11

Texas. Heupel. " ·ho hO&gt; thrown for
I.R\14 vard, onJ 1 I TD,, leads the
Soo ners .1g.1111st No. I Nebrask:1 on
Ocr. 2H, wHh the winner mm•mg
closer to a tl.'ltl onJI tttle shot. If

OU wim, Heupel will be the

ln"h .ut' on their thu·d l(ll.urnb.Jck. too. 111 t'rc,h111.1n Nl.m
Lo \'~.·cduo. I ).tnc ·, JOb .t ppl· .tr~
~.ttt:- ..wd with dtl' \llft p.lrt ot' the
~dtt•dttll' I'L'llUllllllg, thl' irhh (4-2)

of thL Nm·. -l mJtchup between
the Hurric.mcs JnJ Hoki..:s has .1
good ( h.uJ CL' to . piJy for the
nntional title (the H okics nude 1r

to th~ title g.une in '99). Also.
Pittsburgh is 4- 1, Boston Colle ge
4-2 and even Temple has a bowl
shot at -l- J -

the most wins fo r

rhe Owls since 1990.
Honorabl e mention : No. 1 I
TCU (5-0) and running back
LaDami.m Tomlinson, the nation's
leJding rusher: Big 12 Conference

hottest name in college footblll.
1. Somh Carohna: The goal
posts went down twice at Brice-

for havmg three teams -

William~ Stadium, once

the Top 10:

'o pen ing day when coach Lou Holtz's
Gamecocks ended a 21-ganle los011

Nebras-

ka, Oklahoma and Kansa s State in

the

JTtlrt·mcJ!I of lkl;,:miw ~.·on rdm.t ­
t~lr _kr ry S.111dmky .1tfcr J() yc.u·..,?
t~u.trtL·rb.1(k

1-\..l,h.lrd

(:,,..,._·y\
pending lq~.tl probll'm~? Not
t~nough t.tk•llt? l'rob.tbly .1 little of
•111 three.
.1. Tcx.ls &lt;.'n.kh M.H.·k l3ro\\'ll :
Hi s Jee~ s io11 11ot to decide un .1
st:lrtmg: qu :utcrback may be th e:;
re.1~o11 rQc L o n~horn'i .lrt· just 4- '2.
The theory ~Cl' l·l1l'd to be th.tt
~ophumorc Chri~ Simms \\'ould
start. lc.1vc ,hortly therl'.tfter t()r
M~~or Applt'whitt', .md ~omc:ho\\'
it would :dl work it~L'If om .md
Texa~ would wm. WilL \\'111. Well
the 'Horns losr ;u StJnforJ, then
were cmbarr:1sscd by ()kbhonu
63-I.J. After rh.u one, Brown Jpo logized to Texas fans everywhere

for the abysmal effort. Now that
Applewhite, bst season's co-Big 12
ntT~m1ve pb.ycr of 'the year, has
been tabbed the starter, Texas
could finis-h strong enough fi.Jr .1
decent bo\vl game.
4 . B1gTen, SoutheaStern conferences: One week, there were no
SEC teams in the Top 111 - th e
first tii11e th at happ e ned since

bea t Georgia and ended an 18- Right Ill. Can you believe it'
g;unc Southeastern Conference When All-American Sebastian
los ing :\tre.lk. The' (; :l lllt'C &lt;Kk~ (6-. Janikowski left for the NFL, Sem&gt;uoles cooch Bobby Bowden said
1) have &lt;jUab fled t\&gt;r .1 bowl \~·hich would be tht•tr lOrh 111 107
k 1cker would b e the toughe't hole
~t'.\ sons .\rL' r.111kcd No. IS .md to fill. He \\'.1:-. ri!!;ht. Fir~t. frt·~hm.m
Brett Cllnon::: ll l~won the job. but
~tll l h.l\'e a cha11Cr.' to win the:: ~EC
c h :lmpiCm~hip . All rhi.., .1ftcr a tJ.r ,t
,Ill lllJUry . ; idehrll'd hnn earl y on
\ 'C,lr under Holt/ th.H ended 1
·1- ll . M .n( Mllnynn took O\TI' .1 11d
J. Wood\' 1),1m7IL't': In .1 wmd . nm~cd the b1ggl'~t k1 ck of d1L' '&gt;L'.lwow~ The .) - t~HH - 11, l !)( l-pound
'i.m ~t' t~w .1 4 &lt;) - \·.trd cr tlut
.1\1 purpo.,t· rhre.1t I'• npet.lnng ...11kd \\ 1dl' 11gllt .1!'1 flllll' l'xp ircd 111
dw Sc!lllllllk,' '27 - 2-l \ov.. to
C:lc 111~&lt;11l'.., \\'HJL'-OPL'Il otfL'li"L' to
p ni~ C tltll l. Tht· fi t'rh - r.111kni f1gn~
J\1i .lllll
,l rt· 7-ll .111d ntf ro rhe1r hc.;t ~un
Ht• .11~~~ !lll"t'd ,1 ,Jwrr field gcul
~IIICl' their n.1tion.1l -t1tk 'L'.1'&gt;oll nf
l·.1rli~T 111. thL· ~,U ill'. k,l\'in~ hun .1
1t)H I l 1kc Ht'1ipd . I ).lllflln I\ lll l of H. Ju L1 ~t wl't·k\ \\'111 owr J) uk l'.
tlw ~hort Ji,t of Hl'l,lll.\11 lt)IJ- Ch.HJCL c;\\',\ltllt'Y rep !.teed J'Vlu ny on .H id hit 1) of 1) L'Xtr.l pul!ll ., tcndr.T~. H1~ Jcn1ng- do I' thL' rL-.1~nll th-.· TigL:r~ .1rc .1\'cr,\gmg -l .'\ .i)
bm tnl\.;ed :t ,1.7-y.ud field gl),tl
.
poults per game He 1., 'Ixth lttclllpt.
nJtll)ll.Jlly 111 .11! - purpo.,c y.ud~ .1r
~ Penn St.Hl' cn.1ch Joe P.w:r2LJ8J} per g:.Hll!..' 1.271 y.mh no: ElltL'rJilg the w.l"'~Jil. JoeP,a'
lll'l'ded ~l'\'t'll Wim ro p.l~~ · lk.1r
P·'"ing, XI() yJnh rmbmg

th emst'lveo;;·

d cft,•Ju_ling

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.1nd . tt)r .1 (lun~e. tl·\\' ,~1\\' If ~,o m
II I g.
''If yo u 'd .l'&gt;knllll l' i.l\t.July 1t \\'1..'
wo uld lun· 1,1.\rlL'd flllt &lt;1 il \\Ink

straight games to ranked opponents datmg to 1')')8, including
blowout losses to MiJJni and Virgm iJ Tech thr~ -...:.tson.
Tb L' la..;t nme We~t V 1rgtm.l

played ranked oppnnents 111 b.lckto-b;~rk g.1111C~. 1r lo ... r to Virgmia
Tech .md be,lt S\ncme 111 1998.
"Donovan M cN,1bb was suppnsed to beat the tu o u t of m and
w..: rctlly sat dm\'n ;md focused
tl1&lt;1t wcl'k, h.1J .1 gnod g,mw and
won,'' sai d offcnm.:c 1111l'lll.in Tanlll'r Rw.-.dl. ··r re.lll\' bchevl' that
turned our ~c .l ~ t)ll .1round. Wt· arc
111 good o;,Lupe nglu now, but th ts
g::une \VOtdd be trt:lllL'ndnus for

.u Tl' n ne~~ee
lll..,idl' tr.1Lk to
ttt'.d \n dl rlnt'L'
fv\ 111\IL'"ot.l .md
ti.H tlJl' B1 g Tl'll

S.nltn.by. ALibanu
Purdue. \\'ith th t·
the Rm t' Bowl, j..,
\)thn ... ,i11cluding
Nunhwc~tnn.

j..,

IL·.1d
~- /\rill\ '. N,l\")': Annv. tl mkr
lll'W Ltl.lc h 'li:1 d d Berry, ~ ~ ()- (}' .m d

own er\ of .1 I0-g.tm c lo!&gt; in g- ~tiT.tk.
N,I\'Y· u ndl'r co.1c h Clurh c \\/c.nh LTbic. 1~ ( J_: (, f()r th o.: tir ,t tlllll' \lllCt'
II.J&lt;J2 .
Not to worry, though. 0 111..: tt'Jl1l
will not gu \\'!II!c~~ - 1t \ Army n.
NJ\"\' on I k c. 2 .

us."
After four straight games ofless
thJn 27'S yards. Notre D :1me
compile(! o season-hi gh 447 yards
aga1nst Na\'y. rreshman Matt
LoVecchio, the Irish's third quar·
terback this season, wdl malte just
h1s third ~tart on S.1turd.1y.
" [ think I have a lot to 1111pnwc
upon," loVecc hJO s.nd. "There
were some tim es on thi.rd downs
and dunng so ml' -.encs whcrl' [
s,ould have kept a drive ol1ve and
I d1dn 'c"
Wt:"st Virg1111 .1 h.1~ an: raged ju -;t
2--lH yard~ of offcnSL' 111 the List
t\vo game-..

pLl\'lllt:

K -.·m -..;l.ltL'

.111d

thrt·~· ot'

hc~r c;.ltt'H ',\ \ ' t t'.\111 ~.

I 'd h ,l\'t'
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\'l'.\ f l11.'.1d L.'C1.1Ch .Jl!l l I )'('\\t'l
H i' .1Jd t"d. "Hut ~tTJtl~ thnl'
guy' (.'\'cry d.1y. J'tn r1o1 ,Jt tlll:! hnt'
rill'

111

o;, lw ck ...
1\11111lf· \il\1

_:.;;IL',It

tl'.l\11\

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otd' .liT lll'\'l'l 1
,JwLk .n Y\U llll !OJ' 11! tilt·
lt.'.tlll·~ !IIL'd!,l rci(·.J..,r h.lrch· l1.1'
t·n ou ~h room hn .dl \ d tlh· prn
Ll!lbl'.I!Vll

•

l'l't

\VIII p\.1y ~o !Jd Jd~·mc •.1nd h.l\T
good ..,peu.d tl'.lllh .111d try 110t to
bc.lf nur..,t•!v~..·~ on ntl l'11"~t' ··

thrct' odH,'r . pmbt'.\'011 tt'.l!ll'- .. 11\

tt

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Nn\\' 11' tnmpt'IL'' 111

11111 \T, \

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t

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lrL'"'t'l r~.· 1111 .ln, l 1n (ltlh'l \\,1\·, I!
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lmlc ~·oungt'l th .Jn
ll\l!.tl J.l..&lt; ·.dh l l!l ll l' of tlw top ~~uv~
1111 llltt·n,r .1rc 'l'llln l ntd 111.1\'b t·
only rlll'''L' nn dt'it'll\t' ... ,,lid I n·,
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,hnrt hbttlr\ th.ll t\\'n t1.1,tln11,1lh
~

lllt'( Ill .I

&lt; ~~nkn'tli.t' g.an1c Y",LJ
tillld .t nd \X/ IU r. ,J\tll 111
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c;lf('\\.1!

lt't' I r· ·"l'l ot B.ll th\ Ill \X.'.dLh t'
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ll.llh

"\X/l·'rc

and hope for hdp .
Western h as had ,\ l6-d.1y b y- 104 .7. Quortc•rb:&gt;L'k Jdr Wdsh
off sin ce H be.uTol~do , Oluo .md has already p.ml·d f(n 1,.127 y.1 rd~
Marshall in th e, span of \3 days. Jnd se\·c-n TDs .
Tht• Oron cus .tl\o rdy o n .1
Coach Gary D arnell is still trymg to figure out if the rest was stout defen se th:lt ts- sccond- bt·st
in the MAC in v:&gt;rds allowed .
gqod or bad for his team.
"The biggt·~t nnpruvemt·nt
;" We were playing at a high
The rcw.1ni comcs SJtu rday level and we kn ow now that they've ·nude IS on dr:ft.:'nsc,"
when ,Ill of the hard work, all of we're gettin g ready to really get Novak said. ''They're so .1ggrestht' ~llll)llH.:r wo rkou ts and .1 11 of i1i to the tournament. as I ca ll it," sivc. Th~o.·y ,rc coming aftCr you on
tht· \\'inter conditiomng pays off he said. "Because four of our almost every snap. They're not
in .1 nw:mingful game. Northern nexr fi ve games a re division the b1ggest gro up , but oil of them
lllin&lt;ll 5 pbys Western Michigan games and throe of those five are run well , get off the block and
for first pl.1cc in the Mid-Amcr- going to be on the road. And put prcssu rt: on you.
Darnell sa id he\ not a bit su ricJn Confcrencl''s West D1vision . we're going to start otT by play"Our kid s ore excited," said mg one of th e two hottest tean1s prised that the Huskies have
popped into the public's confifth-year N IU coach Joe Novak. in the MAC"
"Obviouslv, we've worked h ard
A wee)&lt; ago, Northern soph o- sciousness as one of the MAC's
to get to tl~is point. We've grown more running back Thomas best teams. I Ie knew it last winup with chest• S('niors. They're Hantmock tied a co n fe rence . rer.
looking forward to it."
record w ith five touchdowns in a
" J'm anxious to see what's
N IU is 4-2 overall and 1-0 in 52-35 win over Akron. Ham - · going to happen," Darnell said." I
the Wc'it , while Western is 5-1 mock scored on runs of I , I.J, 5, told our ream, and It doesn 't take
.md also 1-0 . T he winner will 15 and 34 yards.
Kojak to figure this out. back in
draw a be.ld on being th e divi"I didn't expect the game to February we knew th at our two
sJon 's representative in the MAC be that score," Novak said.
mo st crucial games were Toledo
championship game, while the
Western boasts R obert Sa n- and now Northeni."
timl·~

:md Tt~nnC"''il't' J'i 2-3 with lo~'l'~ to
FluriJ.l, LSU .11\d Gc·mp.&gt;. On

g r,1111 \ .1u m 11 p h, hlll t'llt"': 11 .ltHHl.l i
lh,1111pH111 \ hlp\ .Ul I I)&lt;) 1. '') ..). ' 1)4
.HH.i · ~n . rwn 'l\[)nd pl.l l·t· fim\ h l''
m the ' JJJ\'J•.toll I /\A pl.1yntr~ .11hl

I'rn.,c\

Tlll'rl' \\'t'rl' ,, lot of rough
t~~r th~..· :-.~o.·nio r' on tlw
Northcrll lll11101 ~ fontb:1 1l teai11.
A C t)mbin~.·d r..:L'ord of H-36
[hL' i:Jsr four yt·:u~ - including:
tlw n.ltlon's longc~t losi ng skid of
2 :~ g.1mcs Jlllght h;'l\·c broken
I,Oillt' people . ·

f()rd , wlto IS .1-..·er.1gmg 1 12 ..\
yJrds ,1 game w I bmmock 's

Alab.:mu is J-3 ;lfta opening the
\t'ason r:mkeJ No. 3: No . K FlondJ
lmt to tv1issis'\ippi St:Jtc .md 'i tlll h.t,
Gt'orgia .111d Florid:1 State.· to pb y;

Youngstown State still among unbeatens
Young"'(0\\'11 ~t.Ht· 1.., unbc.ltl.'ll

loser will be forcL·d to win out

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ch.1mp

'

records \vith mcdtocrc offe nses
:111d prnblt:m~ ,n qu.1rtt:rb.ll k .
One of their tlltlbty &gt;treab w1ll
come to Jn end Sa rurd .:ry whl'n
the teams meet Jt Mountamct•r
Field.
Notre Dame Ius !o~t ~evt"n
-.:tra1ght roJd g.Jmt·s, ;l ~c honl
rt•cord, alrhough u bc.1t. N,I\'Y 4:1 14 l.tst week on J n~..·utr .11 ticld in
Orlando, Ha .
West Virginu. wh1ch hop~o.·.., to
gcr a 200th C.1Tt'L' I' \\' lll fnr co:rch
Don Nehlcn, h.&gt;&lt; dropp c·d fi\·e

Westem Michigan
meet·for first place in West Division

Ten teams in the Top 10 for the
fmt time since 1990 . In the SEC,
the usual title suspec t~ arc smpec.:r

Notre·Dame attempts to break
road losing streak at West Virginia
W.Va.
MORGANTOWN.
(AI') - No. 20 Notre Dame and
We&gt;t Virgini.l have compiled 4- 2

MAC

1988: th is week there are no Ilig

WHO'S NOT
1. Florida State kickers: Wide

mg streak;. the second when they

t'Ol14ll!..'l'l'r..,. \\-'h .H\ ' \\TOIIg? ], It

puts them !12th nationally.
The Buckeyes, conversely, are
allowing 308 yards and 14 points
per game, which is third in the
league behind Michigan State and
Minnesota .
Ferentz has a simple gam e plan
for the Hawkeyes, who have lost
14 of their last 15 games. .
"Somebody is going to have to
make some plays ," h e said. "We
have to be clicking on all cylind ers
at all times . That's just got to be
our attitude."

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d ••IJIP ;rdqlli!I.JIIIItil..i'IIIIJIIIIJJI'-·'*'""'/ ·41111···11111111.111'11111!11!@1111'
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October 20, 2000

• •!.. .U. .111!!!-

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="25545">
              <text>October 20, 2000</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="609">
      <name>fife</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="364">
      <name>gardner</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="789">
      <name>turner</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="102">
      <name>williamson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
