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•

Pege D8 • 6unbap Q!:lmt•·&amp;tnltntl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Referendum set on tobacco leas
USDA announced that a referendum 'viii be
conducted to determine whether burleytobacco producers favor or oppose the lease and
transfer of quota acros.&lt; county lines within the
state. The referendum w1ll be conducted by
mail ballot during the period Oct. 23-27.
Persons eligible to vote in a refi-remlum will
be the producers who were engaged in the production of the crop in 2000. The person may
have been engaged in any of the (ollo\ving
capacities: farm operator. own&lt;r"operator, cash
tenant, landlord of a share tenant, share tenant,
share cropper. A producer who leases and transfers a tobacco quota to another farm is considel:f(i engaged in the production of the crop and
is eligible to vote.
The term "engaged in the production"
includes planting a crop even though the crop
is nor harvested, if the crop was not harvested

RIO GRANDE - A resolution of appreciation to a veteran
employee was approved at the
recent· meeting of the Gallia-Jackson-Vinton Joint Vocational Board
of Education.
Tom Ruth was honored by the
board for 23 years of service to the
district.
The board also approved on first
reading an amendment to its policy on evaluation of the superintendent, and agreed to enter into
agreement Wlth the Ohio School
Board Association for provision of
a_ Level II employee benefit analySIS survey.
.
The list of advisory committee
members and their terms was also
approved, and the board accepted
the donation of maple hardwood
from Merillat Industries.
The board also accepted Cogentrix • Energy Corp.'s Uackson
County Power LLC) proposal for

Harris
ftomPapDI

Farm Service Agency office at 111 Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis. Ohio; or caft 1-800-391-6638 mother was very iU with c2ncer
or 446-~687.
and she needed a job with flexiThe United States Department of Agricul- ble hours to be able to take her
ture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in its pro- mother for treatments.
grams on the "basis of race, color, national origin,
"The regulars have really kept
us
going over the years," Harris
sex, religion. age. disability, political belids and
marit.ll o~ family statu~. (Not all prohibited said. "'There is re2lly not a lot of
bases apply to all programs.)
reason to be oh Main Street now,
Persons with disabilities wh~ require alterna- but we have been 2ble to keep
tive means for conununication of program our doors open because of them.
information (braille, large print, audiotape, etc.)
"My dream is to see this town
should contact the USDA Office of Communi- pick back up. It used to be really
cations at 202-720-5881 (voice) or 202-720- busy down here. When you
7808 (TDD).
would walk out the door you
To file a complaint, write the Secretary of would have to w2it your turn to
Agriculture, U. S. Department of Agriculture, walk out onto the sidewalk."
Christmas is a very special time
Washington D.C., 20250, or call 202-720-7327
(voice) or 202-720-1127 (TDD).
at Harris'. For the last 31 years,
Harris, her employees and mem- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - b e r s of her family, have prepared
wants Ohio farmers to know that holiday meals and provided a
there is more than $2 million in small present for those who ·are
guaranteed loan monies available alone on Christmas Eve.
to help expand or purchase farmfrom Page Dl
ing operations. Monies have been
Most plants have descriptions of used by farmers to acquire land,
payment in lieu of property taxes, how large they grow, flower to construct hydroponic greenand approved compensation for color, fruit size and color and fall houses, to purchase processing
the tre&lt;~Surer.
color. Ultimate plant size is equipment, to construct new falIn personnel matters, the board:
important -to ensure sufficient lowing-nurseries to raise hogs
NEW YORK (AP) - Stock
• Accepted the hourly resigna- space is allowed for future growth and to expand a milking parlor.
tion of Star Smith, UROG assistant between the plant and your
prices
rose for a second straight
A revolving loan fund within
project coordinator, effec.tive Oct. home.
rhe Ohio Depattment of Devel- ·day Friday as bargainChunring
16.
.Dig a hole twice as wide as the opment guarantees up to 40 per- investors extended a broad rally in
,
.
• Employed David Pouzar as a root. ball or container. According cent or $200,000 -- whichever is technology stocks.
substitute teacher in HVAC and to . university research, over 80 less -- of a loan by a private finanThe advance, the first time
electronics.
percent of a plant's nutrient-col- cial institution to a farmer. Farm- since Labor Day that Wall -Street
• Approved part-time ho;)llr]y leering roots arc loc~ted in the ers pay no more than 5 percent put together back-to-back rallies,
conrracts for April Duncan as . top 8-10 inches of soil. Make sure interest on the guaranteed por- helped the market rebound from
U~OG/STW coordinator, and
soil slopes away from your house's tion for terms up to I 0 years. a turbulent week that included
Doug Hughes as Saturday physical foundation. Stake trees to assist in Interested farmers should contact Wednesday's 433-poim intraday
education coordinator.
keeping the tree upright even their financial institutions or · call plunge in the Dow Jones indus• Employed Wilbur McCormick during a wind storm and prevent Family Farm Loan Guarantee trials. This was also the first time
as physics instructor.
root damage. Water in your new . Program hotline, (614) 995-1490. in seven \~eeks that the major
. • Employed Gary Skidmore as a planting. Be prepared to water in
(Harold H. Knem is tire Meigs indexes all posted a weekly
·
•
substinne bus driver.
case we have a dry f.1ll.
Comlly agriwlwral &amp; 11atural advance.
After spending the early part of
In the Adult Center Division, '
• • •
resoHrcrs agent, Ol1io State Uw'versiFriday's
session in negative terri-·
the board: .
The Family Farm Loan Guar- ry Extemiou.)
tory, the Dow recovered to close
• Approved the fire service antee Program is still available to
up
83.61 at 10,126.59. For the
instructor, HVAC ·and refrigerant assist Ohio farmers. Ohio Agrirecovery programs.
culture Director Fred L. Dailey

Hlp: lOs; LOw: 50S

Funds

"I give them dinner, a small gift
and a meal to take home with
them for Christmas," Harris said.
"It starred out small. but I have
opened it up to all those who are
alone. I really enjoy the happiness
they show during that time as
well as watching my father, who
is 80, serve meals.
"I couldn't go home to have
family Christmas dinner knowing
my customers were by them-

Volurn .. ~o. Numb~r 105

Markets dose higher, extend
rally in technology stocks

from PageD1

(3V4) ()75-1333

f74fJ) 44fl-2.l4l (740) 992-2J5fl

week, tht• Dow roS&lt;' 34.41.
Broader indi c:ltors w~rc Jiso
higher. The Nasdaq composite
rndex ro&gt;e 64 .54 to J.4RJ.l4 , givhigh-tt._•ch domtnated

index a 16(&gt; .."17-point Cld1·.u1c&lt;" l~r
the week. Th&lt;· St.mJHd and
Poor"s 500 index wa&gt; up H. 17 at
l.J%. 93, g11•ing the Sl\:1' a weekly gam of ]1 .7(&gt;.
"Most of the b:1d news I S out
of the way. We "rc having a rally
based on &gt;tocks bet ng a&gt; cheap as
they've been in a long time," s:tid

Barry llerman, head trader for
Robert W. Baird 1\: Co.
Technology Issues continued
their upward trek. lifting the Nasdaq

/

an extended shelf life, allowing
them to be tramported around
the world without spoiling.
The potential of these foods,
and the many more that are likely to be developed in our lifetime,
will enhance our quality of life.
BuDding Notice
You might think that some of
these products will only be availI 57.1 3.17 Duty to notify county auditor of
able in the distant future . Actually,
improvement costing over $2000"; entry for
examination
many foods today have been
enhanced through technology.
To enable the county auditor to determine the value
Seedless fruits and vegetables
and location of buildings and other improvements,
were not always seedless, and milk
any person, other than a railroad company or public
has been fortified with additional
utility whose real property is valued for taxation by
vitamins.
the tax commis.s ioner, that constructs any building or
Through ~gricultural biotechother Improvement costhig more than two-thousand
nology, we have made these foods
dollars upon any lot or land within a township or
more functional. Th e developmunicipal corporation not having a system of building
registration and Inspection shall notify that the
ment of other products such as
building or Improvement has been completed or Is In
these can happen at an amaztng
process of construction. The notice shall be in
speed.
. Functional foods may repre- · WTiting, shall contain an estimate of the cost of the
building or improvement, shall describe the lot or
sent the n1ost dramatic shift ever
land
and its ownership in a manner reasonably
in how we look at food . In a
calculated to allow the county auditor to Identify the
growing and developing world,
lot
or tract of land on the tax list, and shall be served
affluence is often expressed by the
upon the county auditor not later than sixty days
amount and type of food we conafter construction of the building or improvement has
..
sume.
commenced.
Research and development of
Upon the discovery of a building or Improvement
functional foods is a direc t result
that
has been constructed but of which the county
of our desire to lead healthier
auditor has not been notified as required by this
lives. Foods that offer the promise
section,
the county auditor shall appraise it and place
of postponing or preve nting
it
upon
the
tax list and duplicate at its taxable value,
debilitating disease and dietary
deficiencie s w ill been seen as 1 together with a penalty equal to fifty percent of the "
amount of taxes that would have been charged again•t
r common practice in the con,ling
the building or 'llnprovement from "the date of
years.
construction to the date of discovery had the county
Functional foods will address a
auditor been notified of its construction as required
multitude of human. plant and
by this section.
•nimal maladies that currently
The county auditor, or his de"puty, within reasonable
only medicine can help. Tec hnol houra, , may enter and fully examine all buildings and
ogy will continue to provtde us
Improvements
that are either liable to or exempt from
with the knowledge and expertiSe
taxation by Title LVII (57) of the Revised Code.
necessary to enhance our lives
and provide us wnh produ ctstha t
LARRY M. BETZ
will raise our standard o f hvm g.
GALLIA..COUNTY AUDITOR
One thing is for &gt;urc - fu nctiontl
446-4612
al foods wtll change the way we
look at eating'

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DAYTON (AP) The
· growth of charter schools in
Dayton could provide state
lawmakers with a model to
study what effect the widespread growth of alternative
schools has on public education, a newspaper reported
Sunday:
Charter school advocates
rank Dayton as the fastestgrowing market in the . state.
About 2,800 students have
enrolled in the city's 12 char. ters in the last three years more than any other Ohio city.
All but two school districts
in Montgomery County lost
students and money to charter
schools this year. And students
in Greene, Miami and Warren
counties have signed up for a
distance-learning school, The
Dayton Daily News said.
"Competition is rough and
hopefully it will improve the
Dayton Public SchoDis," Gov.
Bob Taft said. "I don't think
charter schools are a magic
bullet. But if we can learn from
charter · schools, that's a good
thing . It's an experiment worth
undertaking."
Supporters
of
charter
schools say they provide a relief
to public schools' financial
problems, bureau&lt;:racy and
restrictive union rules. Charter
·schools are publicly funded ,'
privately operated schools free
from some state regulations.
"I could rtot accomplish the
same goals in Dayton Public
Schools that I l?elieve I can
accomplish here because of the
constraints,'.' said Pat Love,
principal of Dayton View
Academy.
Love was principal ofWogaman Elementary School for
the past six years and was a 24year city school district
employee. But she said the
freedom of charter schools
lured her away.
"What we're doing here
may not be any better than
what a school in the district is
offering, but we're all on the
"» me page here," she said.
Critics find fau lt with the
system because charter schools
drain money and resources
from already strapped public
schools. And critics said a lack
of state oversight has driven
down proficiency test scores
- lower last year in Dayton
• charter schools than city public
schools.
Charter schools in Dayton
cost the city schools about $7.5
million last year. This year, officials expect to lose $16.3 mil-

PieiSe see School. Pa1e A:S

2000

2000

Grand J»a·ix lUoutan a Va n
4Dr

From

S J 1.,!)00
2 In Stock

HJ!J7 lll:•zt•t•
4 Dr, 4x4, Loaded!

·S 15.!)00

Front &amp; Rear Air

From~

19.,900
In Stock

L(~Saln•t
3 In Stock
13,000 Low ~Iiies

2000

Good folo r
Sl'lt•t•tion!!
•

See Bob Cook,
I !)!t!J Sunfirt•s
Brett Epling,
Z &amp; 4 Dr, SHARP!!
Don Carter,
Jim Coehran or
810,!)00 Greg
Smith Today!!

so Cents

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Schools in
Dayton could
provide state·
model

Money

Smith

Hometown Newspaper

..

'

am Smitlr is orgalliZational dircc·

Odober 23, 2000
•

Melp County"s

In addition to those who don't
have anywhere else to go, Harris
also invites local law enforcement
for dinner because there are not a
lot of other places open.
When reflecting back over her
nearly 32 years on Main" Street,
Harris said, "Time &amp;oes by so fast
because things are so busy.
"'It has been a lot of hard work,
but I love people. It will be really
hard to give it up when I'm ready
to retire, but I can't do these
hours forever."

mg thL'

Monday

•

selves."

before altering your withdrawal designations with· an IRA rhan
schedule. Many people who retire you can with your employer's
early want to receive their distri- plan.
fromPageD1
butions from their companyNearly everyone's dream is to
sponsored plan because they are · retire early. But it can become a
age 50 you begin t.lking periodic . familiar with how the plan works. nightmare if you don't carefully
early withdrawals that quality for Although this may appear to be plan with your financial· consulannultization, you must continue the simplest option, rolling over . rant how you will receive distribthem until you are 59 1/2.
the ;users into an IRA can give ll(ions from your retirement fund
If you don't start the with- you more control over how your without paytng unnecessary
dfilwals until you turn 58, you money is invested and more flex- . penalties.
would have to continue them for ibiliry on how you may withdraw
(Tit is article was provided by A. G.
at least five years from the date of your funds. You also generally can Edwards &amp; SoHJ, l11c., member
the first payment, or until age 63, be more creative with beneficiary SIPC.)

tor for the Athem-Gallia-Lmm·""'
!=arm B11rea11.)
·

Special drug free section inside today
Meigs win sectional volleyball title, 11

Tu•cllrr: R..n

Details, A3

for reasons beyond the producer.&gt; control. A
farm ownn whme tobacco was not raised or
lea.&lt;ed IS not digible to vote. A farm owner
whose tobacco allotment and quota" produced
by another per.&gt;on on the owner's farm through
a fixed cash rem arrangement is NOT considered engaged in the production of the crop and
is not eligible to vote.
'
The ballots were mailed Oct. 1H . If you did
not receive J ballot and you meet the eligibility
mles stated above please .contact the office. ALL
BALLOTS MUST BE POSTMARKED OR
RETURNED TO THE OFFICE BY OCT.
27.
If more than 5(1 percent of the producer.&gt; voting in the state are in favor, lease and transfer of
burley quota across county lines within the state
will be in effect beginning with the 2001 crop.
For information contact the Gallia-lawrence

Vocational Board honors
longtime employee

.

Sunda~~ober22,2000

Karr named Meig~

County ~erson
of the Year
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS· STAFF

POMEROY - Pomeroy businessman Horace W. Karr has been
named Meigs County's Person of the Year, and will be hon.ored
Thursday by the Southeastern Ohio Regional Council during irs
Person of the Year Banquet.
Karr was selected a&gt; Meigs County's honoree by the Board of Directors of the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce.
Chamber President Steven L. Story said
Friday that Karr has the distinction ~fbeing
the SEORC\ only two-time honoree. He
was also the county's Person of the Year in

1973.

and this land is too sacred for that
purpose," Ashley said.
"I'm . sure that Ohio in its
bicentennial planning and the
federal government can come up
with the funds. The challenge
now is to get legislatut.&lt;. to tlo
sotnethi.ng."
At the heart of the matter is a
dispute cpncerning land associated with the July 19, 1863 Battle
of Buffington Island, during
which raiding Confederate Gen.
John Hunt Morgan and about
2,000 cavalrymen met and were

Karr is a 1946 graduate of Chester High
School. He founded Karr Construction Co.
in 1963, ~fter having worked for Harry E.
MiUer Co., and forming Miller-Karr Co. in
1959.
Karr
His firm constructe~ a number ofbuildings
for Ohio University and Marietta College,
General Telephone Co., and built a number of school buildings and
hospitals throughout Southeastern Ohio.
He is also the owner of Royal Oak Farms, and founded Royal
Oak Resort near Pomeroy after constructing a number of campgrounds, including Forked Run State Park and Old Man's Cave.
An avid hunter and fisherman, Karr currently serves as chairman
of the Ohio Wildlife Council with the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
He is an active member or' the Board of Directors of the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce and a board member of the Meigs
County Community Improvement Corp.
His involvement in local economic development efforts prompted the board to name him Person of the Year, Story said.
"His most recent effort.;; to improve the econon1i c climate of
Meigs County made him the natural choice," Story said. "'It was a
unanimous choice for the board, and no other name was even con sidered.
"He hal been as vocal an advocate for the U.S. Route 33 corridor completion as anyone on the SEORC Highway Committe'&lt;".
which he has served well.
"It was (Karr's) efforts with the CIC which helped to bring about
the prompt construction of thF new building which is now m-c ll pied by Millennium Telecommunications. The full extem of hi &lt;
efforts are largely unknown except by a few member&lt; of the CI C'"
Karr also made arrangements to modify the· former Our Lady of

Ple1se see Rilly, Pa1e A3

Please see K1rr, Pa1e A3

RAUY FOR THE CAUSE- Keith Ashley of the Sons of Union Veterans called on the 40 or so people gilth·
ered at Portland Park Saturctay to promote the battlefield preservation movement through a letter-writing
campaign to legislators.

Supporters rally to save battlefield
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

PORTLAND -"This has to
be saved, it is a national site," said
Keith Ashley, addressing about 40
supporters for preservation of the
Buffington Island Civil War battlefield Saturday 01- Portland Pari&lt;.
The meeting was held by the
Sons of Union Veterans to bring
supporters up to date on what is
happening with the. sire, what can
be done about the pending gravel removal by Shelly Materials,
Inc., and to set forth a plan of
involvement for organizations
and individuals.

''.\l&lt;"(f.!.i Ct111111)' h,l.• git•en
it,\ IH'llj' ltl dh .....
,

,"'"!'""in,
IS /tl(J

•ttcl tlris land

.~.IITt' J .j(JY (/r;l(

.

Jllllf"'· ('. "
Kallh A!lhla.y

1

Ashley "called on the supporters
to go out . to therr friends and
neighbors and ask them to send
letters to rheir repn:sentatives in
an effort to secure funding to buy
the land owned by Shelly.
"'Meigs County lias given its
heart to the gravel companies,

Seniors to paint fqr Make a Difference Day
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY About 50
are expected to put
on their paint clothes and
report to the · Senior Citizens
Center Saturday to work on the
Meigs County Council on
Aging's Make a Difference Day
project.
Plans have been made io
paint the community and conference rooms as well as several
of the hallways as a first step in
a general facelift at the Center.
Funding for the work has
come from the Wal- Mart Foundation, which made a donation
of S I ,000 toward the project.
Patty Pi ckens, activity director, said community organizations, along with 4- H groups.
volun~ccrs

Petting Zoo

have ·been invited to participate
iri the project. Make a LJifference Day was founded by USA
Weekend Magazine and the
Points of Light Foundation 10
years ago. It has priority status
with Ohio's First Lady Hope
Taft whose philosophy is
''vounteerism makeli a differ-

12

PmiNG zoo - More
than 267 Meigs County kindergarden chil·
dren and first-graders
participated in a pet·
ting zoo Friday at
Meigs
Local
High
School. The children
had the opportunity to
interact with different
kinds of animals, such
as dogs. pheasants,
cows, horses, and rabbi\S. as well as touring
the school's green·
house. Salem Center
students Chelsea Deel
lmd Megan Dyer are
seen here observing a
baby lamb in its pen.
The event was sponsored by the s.chool's
FFA students.(Tony M.
Leach photo)

ence in the lives o( those we
serve, fosters the personal connections so important to
healthy communities and active
citizenship, and adds meamng
and purpose to the lives of
those who serve.''
"Make a Difference Day uses
locally designed proj ecrs to
mobilize volunteers to make a
difference in their comm.u nitit::s~" said Pickens, who noted
the service project is a great
way to give back while giving
chi ldren the opportunity to
learn more about their community.
Pickens said volUnteers are
still needed and asked anyone
willing to , help
anytime
between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. Sat- ·
urday call her at 992-2161.

~.

,

;...,
1
. '

"H-1- .&lt;IYC thr cite&lt; k.1 rllltl
lla/anas. H t' "'"'~'
pl'!lblcms, /1111 i/rq• .m;
wre of"
.t&lt;tkt'll
.
.
Jerry Hernandez

"We are going to find problems, and we do," Hernandez said.
"We are the checks and balances.
We have problems, but they are
taken care of."·
The patml inspects all Ohio
school buses at least twice annually - before school starts and during the school year. Last year, the
patrol inspected over 21 ,000
school bus" th at transported I .3
million student&lt;.
State inspc'Ctor; check school
hme' for more than 1011 items
o;uch .1~ br:lkl'o:;, Stt"ering, rust, scats.
exhaust systt'ntS, lights. flashers,

,

.......,._,~,

i'·~,.;;'

•

'

PROJECT- A chec)&lt; for $1,000 from the Wai-Mart Foundation presented here by Leah Nutter, community involvement chairman at the
Mason Wai-Mart Store, to Patty Pickens. activity director for the Meigs
County Council for Aging, will provide the funding for the Make a Difference Day project at the Meigs Senior Center.

percent of buses fail inspedion

TOLEDO (AP) - About 12
percent of the school buses
checked in an 18-county region
of northwest Ohio failed inspections or had to be retired, The
Blade reported.
"'For the most part, the bu.ses
are well kept," Trooper Jerry Hernandez, an inspector with the
State . Highway Patrol, told the
newspaper in a story published
Sunday.
More than 20 area school sys·
term with fleet&lt; of 1() buses or
more had 25 percent or more of .
their buses fail initial inspections,
according to the nevvspaper's
review of more than 3,3(Xl inspection rcport'i .
l'mblems included bad br:tkes,
hoks in the flo or. worn tires, leaking stl'l'ring 'iystems .1ml burnedout bulbs.

•

-.
-.. ...

warning bu:z;zers, and emergency
exits. They also look for recalk
Parents such as Daphne Rame}'·
who h&lt;Js t\&gt;vo son" who rirle Tolt"do &lt;ehool buses, appreciate bus
safety eflorts.
"I feel ~cry comfortable with
them riding to sc hool," she said. "I
think they arc secure and ~1fe on
the buses."
School bus transportation is
one of the safest forms oi transport.ltion in the country, according to the National HighwayTraf6c Safety Administration .
Each year, about 440,( XXl public school buses travel about 4..\
billion miles to tramport 2.L i million childl\'n to and finm school
and school-rd.rted activrtics. On
.w~ragL-. 11 pas"!cngl'r'\ youn gL~r
titan the a~e of 1') die rn school bu~ l_·dat~·d rfil'ihc:.., t'ach year.

· Today's

Sentinel
1 Sections - 11 Pages
Cal~ndar
Classifi~d~

Comics
Editorials
Obitua[i~s

S~orts

Weather

AS
B3-4
BS
A4
A3
B1,3,6
A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick J: 9-1-2; Pick 4: 2-'l-1-7
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W.VA,
Daily J : 5- 4-2 Daily 4: 4-H-.\.7

�..

Monday, October 23, 2000

'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

\

PegeA2•The

BUCKEYE BRrEFS

Police pose as teen-age girls
in lntea net chat rooms

Jury selection begins
in slaying ·

·Man suspected of 1980 bombing ·
to .be sentenced for storing explosives
CLEVELAND (AP) -Twenty
years after the bombing of the
Turkish Mission, across the street
from the United Nations in New
York, the man fedefal prosecutors
say is responsible soon will ·be
sentenced on explosives charges.
Mourad Topalian has crusaded
. for Armenian causes and has
demanded that Turks be held
responsible for killing 500,000 to
a nullion Armenians in 1915 .
Topalian, 57, a fo'r mer Cuyahoga
Community
College
adnlinistrator, was first accu!ed of
the Oct. 12, 1980 New York
bombing in an indictment filed a
year ago.
He pleaded guilty last spring to
an explosives charge and a
weapons charge in federal court
after investigators linked him to a
storage unit in suburban Cleveland where, four years ago, they
found I00 pounds of decaying
dynamite and guns.
. In preparing for Topalian's sentencing next month. prosecutors
have detailed their evidence of his
.involvement in the bombing,

which includes DNA analysis;
billing receipts and information
from other Armenians, The Plain .
Dealer reported Sunday.
Topalian denies that he is a ter- ·
rorist. His lawyer ..)'! prosecutors
are trying to smear him with allegations they could not prove and
had drofli&gt;ed as part of his plea
agreemehi .
1
"It's unconscionable that they
would bring up New York," said
Mark J. Geragos, Topalian's attorney. "It's just not true, and they

know it."

U.S. District Judge Ann Aldtich
is scheduled to sentence Topalian
on Nov. 9, He could get up to 37
months in prison.
Since his plea, Topalian has
made several appearances in areas
with · large Armenian-American
populations, including Detroit,
Boston and Los Angeles, raising
money for his defense and serving
as a marryr for Armenian causes:
"When he pleaded guilty, it
wu almost a festive occasion,"
said Bruce Fein, an adjunct scholar at the Assembly of Turkish

American Associations. "All
along, he wore the indictment as
a badge of honor."
Although it happened 85 years
ago and is unknown to most
Americans, the Thrks' !tilling · of
thousands of Armenians during
World War I is still am emotional
issue for some people.
But federal prosecutors say
Topalian's case is not about international politics.
"This investigation did not
focus on Mourad Topalian
because he was Armenian or a
voice for the Armenian cause,"
Prosecutor Thomas J. Gruscinslci
wrote in a court filing . "It focused
on him because he callously
stored for 16 years stolen high
explosives in · such a careless and
negligent manner."
Investigators now say the Turkish Mission bombing occurred
just four Clays after Lucy Topalian,
· the· suspect's wife, who was never
charged, rented a storage unit.
The explosives had been stolen
from a mine in Kalkaska, Mich .,
according to court records.

E~EPA ombudsman recommends testing
:~~at
-. Von Roll hazardous waste incinerator
.

-: WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Environmental Protection
: :Agency will follow an ombuds: ;man's recommendation to test an
: •East I.:iverpool, Ohio, hazardous
: ·waste incinerator, but not his sug••gestion to close it for at least six
months.
Ombudsman Robert Maron, an
.EPA official working indepen.dently, has been reviewing the safery and emissions standards of the
:Von Roll Wa~te Technologies
Industries incinerator since Janu~

::u.s.

The air monitoring will test tor
lead and other metals, and take
about two months to complete, he
said.
WTI spokesman Raymond
Wayne said new tests are nat necessary.
"The EPA has spent millions of
dollars already inspecting,our faciiity," he said. "All the questions have
been answered and them some. We
have been the most heavily studied
and thoroughly investigated facility
of our kind in the country."

On Sunday, the company said it
stands ready to explain to the
ombudsman again "where the fallacies in his apalysis occurred."
Vice President AI Gore, through
spokesman Jim Kennedy, said he
i.vill continue to urge the EPA to
follow the ombudsman's recommendations.
During a presidential campaign
stop in December 1992, Gore
spoke out against the WTI incinerator because it sits on the riverbank
and near an elementary school.

·ary.
• Martin, in a preliminary report,
-recommends shutting down the
.plant, co nducting a trial burn to
.measure its ability to properly dis_pose of waste, and preparing a new
.ri)k assessment.
• The EPA wiU reqture the new
trial burn and amend the risk
assessment based on the results, said
Timothy Fields Jr., EPA a.&lt;Sistant
.adnlinistrator. But instead of closing til e incine"\tOr, the EPA will
.do an air quality test, he sa id.
"We arc resp onding to that reconm!cndation by bnnging together a team of national experts from
Ed1son, N.J., to appropriate air
momtoring," Fields S3ld.
·

Carleton SchooV Meigs
Industries

1.)

In the sentencing stage of the crlminal proceeding
against Mr. Priddy, the Prosecuting Attorney urse&lt;f that
the Court find that Fred Priddy wu indigen~ i.e. without
funds to hire an attorney and without funds to pay a tine,
and that no fine should be levied again!! him. The Court
disagreed and fined Mr. Priddy the maximum amount of
SI 5,000.Shonly theroafter, the Dofendant's fine was paid
for by the Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney's Office.
The Court has never heard of this happening before; and
Ohio law prohibits using forfeited moneys to pay fines.
Later, during Priddy's Civil appeal, a$ IS,OOO cash
appeal bond was posted and countless ($50,000 would
be a conservative estimate) must have been spent on
anomey fees., which would indicate that Mr. Priddy was
not indigent.

2.) AI Dofendant Priddy's plea of guilty hearing, for

Why did Fred Priddy consent to lransfer the vehicles .to
the Meigs County Commissioners? Were lhere prom1ses
and/or threats? There are no records, to this C,ourt 's
knowledge. of any coun hearings. What happened to
these vehicles? Are these vehicles now titled to the
Meigs County Commissioners?
'
The second entry (Exhibit B) transferring 22 cars to
the Board of County Commissioners says. '"with the
constnt oflhe Defendant, Fred Priddy". yet neither hi s
signature not initials are on the entry iridicating consent.
Both County Court entries say transfer in conjunction
with a forfeiture. There has been no forfeiture .
Were these cars provided to and used by the Meigs
.County Prosecuting Attorney and members of his staff,
members Of the Sheriff's Department, members of the
area Dn,ig Task Force or any other county agency? If so,
under what authority?

possession of marijuana, the Meigs County Prosecutina

Attorney indicated that the Defendarn would not be

10.) Shortly after Defendant Priddy's arrest. the ncosecutor 1

pre~ a deed wherein the Defendant:s family
members.deeded away real estate valued in excess of
Prosecuting Attorney knew about.
The Court
$100,0000.00. (See exhibit C) Property is usually plao:ed I
asked the Prosecutor to put on record what were the
in the Meigs County Board of Commissioner's names,
specific. crimes th8t were not going to be prosecuted.
The Prosecuting Anomey refused to state the specific
but not in this instance. Why? What was the
crimes. The Court refus~ to accept the plea. Then,
consideration for the transfer of one hundred thousand
after a short recess. the Prosecutor advised the Court
dollm plus (SI 00,000.00+) real estale'
(rather than list the crimes) that the Defendant would nol
be prosecuted for any other crimes, regardless of
11 .) From initial publicity, it appears thC Prosecutin g
whether or not the Prosecutor now kneW of them and
Attorney was going to forfeit Defendant 's assets . Then
tliat could even include the crime of murdtr.
at the first civil hearing, the Cour1 learned there was no
forfeiture action. The Prosecuting Attorney then
3.) At the Defend~nts sentencing hearing. the Court was
indicated that there was an "agreement in lieu of
advised by the Prosecuting Attorney that the criminal
forfeiture". Exactly what an "agreement in lieu ol
case had absolutely nothing to do with any asset
forfeiture" is, is not known to the Coun. It i ~ a term of
forfeiture. This seemed far fetched.
first impression.
·
Then at the civil hearings, the Prosecutor stated that
At later times, the Court was advised that the
the confideration for the vast amount of asset being
agreement was between a man, without counsel, giving
turned over ro the Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney's
up $500,000.00 and a Prosecuting Attorney who has the
office by the Defendant was that additional criminal
power of the State behind him. Incredibly, the
charges would not be brought against certain person(s).
agreement was not in writing. This strains credibi lity,
It concerns the Coun that the Prosecutor has failed to ·
especially when the ProsecUting Attorney, .while under
put in writing his version as to what the full and
oath, could not or would not fully detail or explain the
complete oral agreement was between the owner of the
oral agreement. Specifically, the Prosecuting Attorney
assets and the Prosecuting Altorney taking the assets.
could not or would not fully enumerate all the asse ts that
This is especially true when the value of the alleged
the Defendant was giving the state.
.
''oral agreement" has been estimated to be one half
All agreements must have COfiSideration given by both
million dollars ($500,000.00).
sides· What was the Prosecuting Attorney's
There was no forfeiture in 'State Y Fjfe. Case No.
consideration? If the consideration was that the
9JCR23. Yet, the State may have received over two
Prosetutina Attorney would not file cer1ain criminal
hundred thousand dollars ($200,000.00) in assets from
charaes or would not file against cer1ain persons, then
the Defendant, Robert D. Fife, for some unknown '
this agreement should be fully disclosed and
· consideration.
investigated.
What charges the Prosecutor is or is not goin&amp; to file
Jl is elementary that to have an agreemeul, all terms
against someom! in congectlon with some Wlknown quid
thereofmuat be full)l disclosed and known to both
p\-o quo flies in thdace of evetything that is jusund
parties.
rtasonable about Jaw.
12.) The forfeiture statutes provide a mechanism for Court
4.) Although ordered, no one has provided a complete
protection of people from unlawful seizure by State
wrinen inventory as to what was taken, and under what
officials. The Prosecuting Attorney has suggested that
authority; what assets were sold and tp whpm and for
claims be submined to the prosecutor. There is no such
what price; how such prices were determined and by
protection when 1he Prosecuting Anomey himself
what authority; exactly how much cash money was
decides individual claims. It is the Prosecuting Anorney
'seized from Mr. Priddy and precisely what has been
who controls the seized property and benefits from the
returned to Mr. Priddy or other members of his family.
retenlion of said property. The Coun is in receipt of

charged or prosecuted for any other crimes that the

S.) It is unclear and has not been eKplalned why certain
properties such as:

A) Real estate where Defendant resided
B)
C)

Real estate in other states

Cattle
D) Farm Equipment
E) Jewelry
F) Motor Vehicles

many wrinen claims allegins improper sel.zure of
property and denial of Individual rights. (See allached
Larry Wright Affidavit marked Exhibit "D")
How can people make claims when the assels are not
fully described? Does anyone know whal jeWelry is

6.) Under what and whose authority did the Prosecutor seize I 4.) The parties' Memorandum or Agreement filed in "case
and dispose of cenain ajsets? A herd of canle was sold
Number 99 CV 059 states that all mallers shall be
for S I0 000 by the Prosecuting Attorney without bid or
disclosed to and approved by this Judge at the conclusion
app.rais~l, and without advertisement. Who owned the
of Case Number 99 CV 059. This has not been done.
cattle? .Was there a seco1ld herd? If so, what happened
Funher, the Defendant 's wife's bond money
to the second herd? Under what authority could the
($ 15,000.00) and the Prosecuting Attorney's fine money
Prosecuting attorney sell the cattle? Why wasn't the sale
(S I 5,000.00) is still being held by the Meigs County
advertised? Who selected the buyer? How was the
Clerk. Said moneys were not disposed of by the
buyer selected? Who received and what happened to the
voluntary dism.issal .
moneys received from the sale?
15.) In summary, it appears the ProsccutingAttomey
7.) Likewi se, 1,000 cars titled in unknown names were sold
preferred to dismiss Case Number 99CV059, ralh cr than
by the Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney for $47.00
answer the Court 's questions pursuant to his han dli ng of
each. The very same questions as above need to be
the confiscation/seizure of assets. This, along with the
answered. It is the Courts understanding that the sale
Prosecuting Attorney's refusal to answer a Court's
was again, a private sale, without advertisemenl,
question "on advice of counsel"
appraisal, and without bid. Who determined the value
(5th Amendment Right) causes the Court to issut= this
and to whom the vehicles were to be sold.
order.
The Co urt was never provided an adequate description
or"the veh icles sold . It is not unreasonable to expect to 16.) In an unrelated m~tter, the Meigs County Prosecuting
know the make, model, condition; mileage of each and
Attorney has made the eleclion to be a full-time
every vehicle, yet to the Court's knowledge, this has not
· Prosecuting Attorney. This would prohibit him from
been provided to anyone.
representing private clients with their personal matters ..
The Prosecuting Attorney has recently represented
8.) Were there two vehicles (a Porshe and a school bus) that
private individual s in private l):latters before this Court
were pulled out of the 1,000 car sale and sold personally
This action appears to be either a viola! ion or law or an
toil Pomeroy businessman for $47 ,00 each? If so, why.
ethical violation.
by whom, and under what authority? Also, the same
questions as above 'pply. Who now owns and/or has
possession of said vehicles?
·
An additional concern on the part of the Court is the
In sum, the voluntary dismissal by the panies in Civil
matter of the transfer of68 automobiles contained in two
Case Number 99CV059, though it depri ved !he Cpurt of
County Court entries. (See attached eKhibit marked A &amp;
jurisdiction to act in that case, shall not thwart the
B)
Cour1's objectives nf protecting public interest. The
Forfeiture matters, by law are under the jurisdiction of
Cour1 suspects that the Prosecutor and others have
the Common Pleas Court. There were no forfeiture
breached the public trust by their conduct related lo Cao;c
actions filed in the Common Pleas Court. However, both
Number 99CV059 and
the criminal and the civil actions between the panics
99CA.008, and that investigati on of possible crim inal
were in the Common Pleas Court. Therefore it is
activity is warranted. It is for these reasons, that the
questionable whether County Court had the jurisdiction
Court has chosen to initiate the process of appointing an
to cause the transfer of said v.ehicles.
i~dependent, special prosecuting a«omey to investiga te
In the first of two entries filed in County Coun,
Prosecutor Lentes.
application was made and orders issued to transfer 46
vehicles to the Meigs County Board of Commissioners.
IT IS SO ORDERED
.
-..,
The model, condition, mileage and value were not
evident.
·
Were these ve hicles in Fred Priddy's name or others?

********* ** * *

/~}F~.Ef~

Thursday, October 26, 2000
10:00 am to 2:00 pm

&amp;~'3fl~l

THANK YOU FOR TAKING THE TIME

llefeated. by a Union fore&lt; of
,about 8,000 soldiers. The clash is
SYRACUSE --James Shelton "Runt" Eakins, 47, of Syracuse died considered Ohio's only Civil War
Sunday at his residence after a long 1llness.
&gt;batde.
B?rn on J~ne 4, 1953, he was the son of the late James Edward .. The struggle to preserve the
Eakins and Dtmple LouiS&lt;' Patterson Eakins. He was employed as a saw . battlefield has been going on
mill worker at the Ohio Pallet. He was a member of The Mission at since 198.7 . Shelly Materials, Inc . .
Syracuse_and served m the U. S. Army.
.
. has received a permit to operate a
SurvJVmg are h1s w1fe,Teresa Kay Hunt Eakins; two sons, James L~e , gravel mine on the 486 acre site.
and Joseph Ray Ealcms. and three daughters, Stacy Renee, Tara Mane- Construction is underway and
and Sarah Lynn Eakins, all of the home in Syracuse; five brothers ando ' the steel mooring cells have
a SIS_ter-m-law, William Eakins. Ronnie Eakins, Charles Eakins, Larry, already been installed on the
Ealc!ns, Tom and Marlene Eakins; M1ke Eakins, all of Pome_roy; and barge loading facility which is
three Slsters, Norma Eakms, Charlotte Eakms and Regma Eakms, all of critical to removing gravel.
Pomeroy; and several meces and nephews . .
.
In his talk, As~ley pointed out
In addmon to h1s parents, he was preceded 111 death by a mter, Char- the state does not require mining
lene Eakms.
permits, that "there are no preserGrdvcsid c· se rvi ces will be held Tuesday at 9 am. at letart Falls vation laws in Ohio," but charged
CemL·tery. The Rev. Mike Thompson will officiate.
that the U.S. Corps of Engineers

Mary Emily Shaffer
WILKESVILLE - Mary Emily . Shaffer, 79, Wilkesville, died at
O'tikn c&lt;s Memorial Hospital in Athens Saturday, Oct. 21, 1000.
Born on M:trch 1:3. 192 1, she \va&lt;; thl' d:mg:hter of the bt\! Dcnzd
\md F,·m Kn.1pp Hill .
·
· She ""'" preceded 111 death by ha husband, Ed Shaffer in 195!!: and
two st.,te rs.
Survh·mg :m..· rwo som, H c: rbcrt SlufiCr, Sr., Wilkesville; and Loren
""Buddy" (£\&gt;.1) ShatTer of Fr&gt;nklin; a daughter. Macil Holling. head of
WcJJ, tml; eight grandc hildren; H great-grandchildren; and five sisters;
Marth a I ·" "P of Columbus. Cathe rine' Polsley and Gra ce L~as both
of Chillicnthc: Uirche Hill of North Carolina, an d lizzie Hill of lndi.l llil .

Gr.we~Idl' ~l'r-vice!-. w ill be held Wednt=sday, 1 p.m . in the Standish
Cemetery in Mei g&gt; County. Friends may call at the McCoy-Moore
Fun e-r.1l H ome in Vinton , Wcd_nesday, 11 a.m to 1 p.m .

1'0 lUW&gt; TinS LENGTHY ENTRY. WE

KNOW IT IS LENGTliY, BUT YOU NOW KNOW THE TRUTH. YOUR PATIENCE
IN READING IT SHOWS YOUR INTJREST IN. YOUR LOCAL, AS WELL AS,
NATIONAL GOVERNMENT. WE TIL\NK YOU FOR TAKING THE TIME.
THE MEIGS COUNTY REPUBLICAN EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

before issuing a permit "did not
legally follow , the process because
tht:-re was ·no de[ermination as to
I impact on t he area ."
,
ne
The nnning company b~gan
·moving a\lead with plailS for the
operation in Le.banon Township
last year after reaching ail agreement with th~ Ohio Historic
Preservation Office and the U. S.
Army Corps of Engineer.. Under
that agre.ment, Shelly will set
aside the 40 acres known as the
" bloody ground," where some of
the heaviest fighting reputedly
occurred, and give it to Ohio for

COOLVILLE
H elen White, 84, of Woodsfield, formerly of
Bashan, died Sunday, Oct 22, 2000 at Woodsfield Nursing and Rehabilitation Cente r in Woodsfield. Arrangement will be announced by
White Funeral Home in Coolville .

•

nes
Elizabeth Lyons
POMEROY - Elizabeth Lyons, 78, ofTuppers Plains, died on Saturday, Oct. 2 1, 1000 at St. j ose ph's H ospital in Parkersburg, WVa., following a brief illness.
·
She was barn July 5, 1922 in Long Bottom, daughter of the late
Stanlev and Ulah Smith Swan. She was a homemaker, a member of the
Tuppc'r~ Plains C hri stian Churc h, a m ember of th e Order of Eastern
Star of Guysville, and a member of the Rose Garden Club ofTuppers
Pl ains.
Survivmg an.: h~..:·r husb:md of 53 years, Lindsey Lyons; two sons and
daughtc·rs-in-law. Lamar and Shirley l yons ofTuppers Plains arid Lindsey and Carol Ann Lyons Ill of Mineral Wells. WVa .; a daughter and
son-in -law, Lyndall and Lawrence Hasbargen of Parkersburg, WVa.; six
grindchildrcn: Kent Hasba rgen, Lamar Lyons II, Chris Lyons, Lynette
Gainer. K.!t".l Allo:n, and lo: ann Lyons; two step grandch!ldren, Kim
Adams and L11a McBrtde; .md two great grandsons, Bryce and Devyn
Ga iner.
Funeral 'ervico:s will be held on Tuesday at I p.m . at White Fttncral
Home ill Coi1lville with R,·v.Terry Stewart offlciating. Bttrial will follow in tho: S.l!ld Hill Ce m,·to:ry in Long Bottom.
Friends may ca ll .1t the funeral home on Monday fron1 3 to 5 p.m.
.md 7 to 9 p.m

to improve Meig&lt; County and to
bring prosperity here," Story said.
""The award is much deserved."
PageAl
Karr and his wife, the former
Dorothy Holter, have twa daughLoretto Chu rch building 111 Tup- ters, Twila Karr Buckley and Jane
pers Plain s so it could be used by Ann Karr Aanestad , and two sons,
Betlin Industries, a umform man- Ray and Tom, who have continufacturer which now e-mploys 19 ued the fam ily co nstructio n busipeople. .
ness as Wesam Construction.
Srur v said Karr nude a personThe Person of the Year Banal plecige to sec ure the loan used
quet, an annual event since 1968,
bv the C IC to purchase the Tupp~rs Pl:uns industrial site. and the will be held at . Ramada Inn in
site has be en viewed and lS st!ll Nelsonville. T ickets are $25 and
being viewed by J number of may be purchased from the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce.
prospective employers.
"These :1rl' just th~ m ost rece nt· The social hour begins at 6 p.m.,
selfless efforts that Karr has made an d the banquet at 7.

Karr

from

(USPS 213·Deo)

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Ohlp V•lley Publlahlng Co.
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52

lion .
Clint Satow, director of the
Ohio Community School Center
- . a statewide charter school
advoca~y group - believes many
conc~rns will subside as charter
schools become more established.
11
You can't look at one year's
test scores and say this is how a
school is doing," he said. "The
developers said in their contracts
they would perform to a certain
level and they have to be held to

VALLEY WEATHER

Rain coming back to area
cloudy. Highs in the lower 70s.
Tonight ... Cloudy. A chance of
rain. Lows 50 to 55.
!uesday. .. Cloudy. A chance of
rain. Highs from the mid 60s.

. BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Stprm douds are moving back
into the region after an extended
period of sunny and dry conditions .
An approaching cold front will
bring rain to the area tonight and
Tuesday, the N;uional Weather
Service said .
And the chance of showers will
.exist, on and off, through the
remainder of this week.
Lows tonight will be in the 50s.
Highs on Tuesday will.by 65-75.

Extended forecast
Tuesday night ... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of r01in . Lows in the
mid 50s .
Wednesday... l'artly to mostly
sunny. Highs 65 to 70 .
Thursday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showe(s .. Lows ncar 50.
Highs 65 to 75.
Friday... Pardy cloudy. A chance
of showen . Lows near 50. Highs
65 to 70 .

Forecast
Today... Partly cloudy in the
morning ... Becoming
mostly

'

PORTLAND -Trick or Treat
in Portland will be observed from
6 to 7 p.m. on Thursday. Those
participating should turn on their
porch ligh"

Neighbomoocl
Watch
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Neighborhood Watch
will hold an informational and
educational open house at the
Middleport Church of Christ
Family Life Center on Sunday
from 4 to 6 p.m. In case of
inclement weather, the ewnt will
be held inside the Center.
Police Chief Bruc~ Swift will
be on hand to answer quttstions,
offer suggestmns and help identify problems in town. Edu,ational
materials will be handed "out and
refreshments will be served.

Sleepy Hollow set
MIDDLEPORT FeeneyBennett Post 128, American
Legion, will sponsor its annual
Sleepy Hollow hayride on Oct.
26, beginning at dusk. In addition
to the hayride through the Middleport Marina area, refreshments
of hot dogs and doughnuts, coffee, cider and hot chocolate will
be served. Those businesses or
organizations interested in setting
up a station for the ride should
contact Russ Mozingo at 7 422094.

Activities planned
at God's NET
POMEROY - Area teens are
urged and invited to participate
in activities at "Friday's Fun, Food
and Fellowship" at ~od's Neighborhood Escape for Teens. Nutritional foods will be available, free
of charge, for snacking, while
teens are at the center. Teens can
play non-violent games, computer programs and cards free of
charge in the center's game room,
on Main Street in Pomeroy. Pool
tables are available for teem to
use . The center is open from 6
until 10:30 p.m. on Friday and
Saturday nights .

Relay for Life
plannina
POMEROY- A kickoff event
for Relay for Life 2001 of the
American Cancer Society will be

AEP-37 111"

Gannen -

Akzo -42 ).
AmTech/SBC -sol,
Ashland Inc. - 32l,
AT&amp;T-27
Ba.nk One -

33~.

'"'

17~•
BorgWarnsr- 33~.

Bob Evans -

Champion- 2%
Charming Shops- 5'1•
City Holding - 6).
Federal Mogul Firstar- 17lo
·

3'·

52~.

Gontral Elaclrlc.:.. 52),
Hartly Davidson- 47
Krnart -s% ,
Kroger- 21
Landa End- 24
Ltd. - 23~.
Oak Hill Financial - 14 ~
OVB -26),
BBT-26%
Peoples- 13),
Premier- 5'"
RockWell - 35'1,

held Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the
Meigs County Library in the
basement meeting room. The
date, location of the relay, project
ch:~~rmen, comm1ttees and team
recruitment will be discussed.
Snacks will be served.

Depression
Awareness
POMEROY -. Depression
Awareness Month
will be
observed on Oct. 27 from I 0 to
11 a.m. at Veterans Memorial
Hospital conference room . The
event is sponsored by Inner
Reflection s Behav10ral Health
Unit . Reservations arL' w be
made. Refreshments will be
servttd.

EMS answers
14 calls
POMEROY -Units of Meigs
Emergency SerYices answered 14
calls for :.sslst:mce ova the W("l'kend ..
Units responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:31 a.m ., Saturday, Hill St.,
Harold Will , H o lzer Medi ca l
Center:
2:04 p.m., Pa rkimcm Rd., Asl~­
ton Bush, Pleasont Valley Hospital ·
'
.
9:38p.m., Page St.,Lola Barber,
Pleasant Valley;
12:4-6 a.m., Sunday, with
Pomeroy units, Pomeroy/ Mason
Bridge, no patient tceated ;
4:50 a.m., Broadway St., Middleport, Sue Watson, Holzer ;
9:19 a.m. , S.R. 1.24, Virginia
Salser, Holzer;
• 1:35 p.m., Mill St., Middleport,
Mildred Riley, Pleasant Valley
Hospital;
5 p.m., Country M obile Home
Park, assisted by Pomeroy,
·Michael Clay, treated;
7:52 p.m., assisted by Racine
unit, Annette Tucker, Jackson
General Hospital;
10:14 p.m., Limberger Ridge
Rd., Dale Baker, Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital.
RUTLAND
6:55 p.m., at Columbia Twp.
station, Tina Booth , O'Bleness
·
Memorial Hospital;
2:18 a.m., Salem St., Rutland.
assisted by Central Dispatch,
Clarence Owensby, Holze r Medical Center;
6:14 p.m ., assisted by Central
Dispatch, Union Avt:., P um~:roy,
Roy O'Ddl, Holzer.

TUPPERS PLAINS
2:34 p.m., Sunday, S.R . 7. Jane
Fick, Holzer Medi cal Center.

Crime down in complex.
but violations questioned

CLEVELAND (AP) - Legal
experts and resid•nts of a lowincome housing complex on the
ciry's east side question whether
civil nghts have been violated
through securiry guards ' efforts to
curb crime there.
Rocky Boota- 51.
After the federal government
AD Shell - 62).
Soars- 30
last year took over the 484-unit
Shoney'a-~
1
Rainbow Terrace apartments, the
Wai-Mart- 46 1•
Wendy's - 19,,
guards made more than I 00 arrestS
Worthington- 9
of drug dealers and weapon-carryDally stock reports are the ing suspects in the first week.
4 p.m. closing quotes of
The guards, who carry 9 mm
the previous day's transhandguns
and dress in SWAT
actl0t1S, provided by .
Advest of Gallipolis.
team uniforms with bulletproof
veSts, now average three arrests a
week, according to La Garda Security. Guards regularly demand
1dentification and search anyone

LOCAL ISTOCKS

KENTON (AP) - More than a
century after it ,....., built, the Hardin
County Armory is becoming a gathering place for the conununiry once

agam.
County conuni.&lt;Sionet5 bought it
from the state in 1997, then sold it to ·
a conununity group for S1 . It had
been aba11daned since 1991 . .
Tho: Hardin County Armory
R~..-stor.l cion Foundltion has rcnov~lt­
,·d the buildi ng's front portion and
con~rtcd it into offi.CL' span:-.Work~rs
an; now putting a llL'\V nx1f o\'CJ' th~ .
fi1rmcr ballroom, which should
reopen by 11L':..."t summer a~ a nl'\\"
C(JI1Ullt11 1it)' (CI1[Cf.

In 1995, the Leg;slatltrc authorized

Mail subsaiptioil
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

from PapAl

LOCAL BRIEFS

v.,rho looks ''suspi cious."
"I see a hell of a lot of improwment here;· sa id Nancy Pi&lt;rce,
who used to carry a .38-caliber
gun in her bra for protection
when sh&lt; washed clothes in the
laundry roon\.

Ohio armories being restored

The Daily Sentinel
through

that level. We have to give them a
chance."
Rep. Ray Miller, D-Columbus, worries that some children
won't get an adequate education
if charter schools and public
schools end up competing for
students. He said charter schools
are only meant to be an alternative to public schools.
"There are so many people
being taken advantage of," Miller
said. "The children are nothing
more than guinea pigs. This is an
experiment and some children
may end 1,1p losing valuable time
in their development."

School·

Helen White

already in possession of the State?

13.) Who has the unknown vast amount of property?
Where is it located? What, if any, assets are missing?
were set apart and not seized, or seized and not returned. ·
Wh~t, if any, safeguards are in place?

f1amPIIItA1

'

James Shelton 'Runf Eakins

Columbus police armted Bryan houn after the
shooting. Police said he told them they had the
wrong guy.
"I didn't shoot the cop," Bryan ~portedly said. "I
was there . I didn't pull the trigger:"
. Bryan's lawyers, Jeffrey Saffold and James McDonnell, considered aslcing that the trial be moved out
of Cleveland because of media coverage of Leon's
death. But they decided to try to seat a jury here
first.
Assistant Cuyahoga County Prosecutor David
Zimmerman said testimony in the trial could last up
to a month .

COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio State University
officiah pledged to track down the individuah
responsible for a bottle-throwing, fire-starting• disrurbaace near the campus early Sunday.
William Hall, interim vice piesidem for student
affairs, later Sunday visited a house where the trou- '
· ble allegedly began and talked to the residents, who
· · said they tried to stop people from throwing botdes
at police.
·
"We intend to follow up and hold those individuals accountable," HaD said.
Three people were arrested as officers used wOoden bullets to break up what a police spokesman
·called a "riotous" parry.
"Drunken panygoers began throwing botdes at
XENIA (AP) -Since setting up their sting operpolice, flipped a 1992 Saturn on its top and attempt- ation in April, police posing as teen-age girls in
ed to set the car on fire, smashed windows in other Internet chat rooms have arrested eight men who
cars and set furniture on fire," Columbus Police· Sgt. apparently thought they had made a date to .have
Earl Smith said in a news ~elease.
sex.
At least 40 officers responded to the disturbance
The two most recent arrests were of men from
on East 13th Avenue.
Texas and Massachusetts.
Three officers were struck by botdes, including
Eugene Kellogg, 55, of Carrollton, Texas, has been
one officer who suffered a cut, and two cruisers indicted on a charge of atte~pted corruption of a
· were damaged, Smith said.
minor, a fifth-degree felony. He will be arraigned
The names of the three people who were arrest- Nov. 2 in Greene Counry Common Pleas Court.
ed were not available.
Roderick E. Parker, 42, of Whitman, Mass., was
Officers fired wooden projectiles known as arrested Friday. He is being held in the Greene
"lcnee-lcnoclcers" to disperse the crowd, which at
Counry jail awaiting an appearance Monday in
one point was estimated at 500 people.
Xenia Municipal Court on a charge of attempted
corruption of a minor.
Police said Kellogg flew from Texas to Columbus
on Oct. 5, rented a car and drove to Shawnee Parle,
the place detectives olleged he agreed to meet the
CLEVELAND (AP)- A group of 100 prospec- "girl" he met on the Internet.
"He tf1.ought his date was going to be getting out
tive jurors was called for the start of jury selection
of
school at that time. He was going to pick her up,"
today in the trial of a man charged with killing a
Lt. Dan Donahue said. .
ciry police officer last June.
Kellogg was released Oct. 5 after posting $2,500
Quisi Bryan, 29, of Cleveland, was charged with
aggravated murder and weapons counts in the death bond.
Police said Parker !l.ew to Dayton on Friday.
of Patrolman Wayne Leon, 32, who was shot at
point-lilank range at a service station during a traf- Detectives arrested him after he arrived in a cab at a
Xenia motel. where. he allegedly arranged to meet
fic stop June 25. ·
the "girl."
Bryan could get the death penalty if convicted.

Rally

..,'•,

pmervation.
The Meigs County Historical
Society and the Sons of Union
Veterans objected to the agreement because they said it would
lead to "saving 40 acres and
destroying the .rest of the batde6&lt;ld." An action was filed in an
effort to stop the permit process
from going forward but was later
dismissed by the court.
At the rally Edd Sharp of Dayton, who serves on the Ohio
Bicentennial Commission and is
president of the Buffington Island
Preservation Committee talked
about plans for marking the trail
of Morgan's Raid in 2003 as a
part of the Ohio Bicentennial's
ob!ervance. He also reported
efforts are co ntinuing toward
finding money with which to
buy a section of the batdefield.
Aho speaking briefly at the
rally was Michael Azinger, candidate for the U. S. House of Representatives. He promised that if
elected he would "work along
with Keith Ashley to save this battlefield ."
"By preserving this bmlefidd
you are preserving a sense of what
w~ are for future generations. If
we don't remembt!r our history,
we will lose that definition. I am
conunitted to America, and have
an unbending determination to
preserve this battlefield," he concluded.

the s.1k of N.ttmn:tl Guard armorit-s
deemed

Ul111l'(t'SSary

b l.'G1l!Si.'

~l1 rinking ttlllitary 1\.~IVl'S . Tht'

of

st.1tL'
has sold I H armoriL'S since 1996. Fiw
mol\.' are for s.tlc, but no buyers haw
been f&lt;mnd. Loc:tl b'lJVt'nm1cn~ gnr

I

..

.

first dibs, then they

were put on

the

auction block.

MORE LOCAL NEWS .

NOW DPBN

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. 1
Pomerov. Ohio
99~·5829

�0
___ P-Inion

.:r
.:..h_e_o_ai..;!..ly..;.s_en_tin_e_I_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
..
' .

The Daily Sentinel

'

Monday. October n. 1000

Cktab•2J,

Smaller people should be more understanding offat folks' struggles
Dear Ann Landers: You recently
published yet another letter from someone who griped about sitting next to a
fat person on a plane. Jlknow all about
the problem, because I AM that fat per·so n. Does the thin complainer know I
am embarrassed that I am in his way, and
avoid traveling because of it' I am not fat
on purpose, nor do I stay fat just to irri- ·
tate people on planes.
I was fat at age 5. and when I was 8, my
mother put me on diet pills. All my .
father's relatives are large people, but my
mother was pretty and slim, and she didn't know what to make of a fat child.
When my younger sister turned out to
be a fat child, too, the problems compounded. We were constantly told by our
parents that no one would ever love us if
we didn't lose weight. They talked about

IAM

QUALIFIED.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor ·

PubUsher

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

J

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Utt~n w tiN ,ditor ~~n ..,.,ko•e. ThiJ Jl•ouJd bf ltu tt\an: .JDO won&amp;. Alllllil" .,. sdj«:f
,. UJtin61Uf1/ •Nit IH ririiH ud irtcluM tllldn11 Mil •Mr/NJ• "Uihr. No 11JUiri'IH ,_.,.will

1M fiUIUINd. /.4thn Jllauirl ~ in food 14M, IIIMhftiU., iuas, lltJI ~··
Th• a,illiofiS •xprnsfii
c:W.,,.,. Nluw.,.. ,.. (OIQ.,.IIU of d.. Oltio

Co. '1

in,.,
tdiloritJJ IJoord. •nkn olh,,..;u 1Wkd.

•

•

v.a, P·~

NATIONAL VIEWS
'

Gratitude

(lAltER.

Too ciften, it's not given
to those serving overseas
• Austin (Texas) American-Statesman, on USS Cole bombing:
In the photograph , the gashes on the young woman's face are visible, as is the swollen eye, as is the smile of homecoming.
Kesha Stidham. a 19-year-old sailor from Leander, arrived back
in the United States over the weekend, and her battered face
adorned the front page of this newspaper. She was one· of 33 sailors
wounded in the apparent terrorist bombing of the USS Cole in
Yemen who were healthy enough to return to their home port of
Norfolk. Central Texas welcomes her home to the United States, to
a reunion with her family. But this homecoming will be ' remembered as a bittersweet time for all Americans.There is relief and gratitude for those who survived, grief and gratitude for those who died
in the devastating explosion .... One out of every six crew. menibers
was injured or killed. ...
.
· Stateside we are left with many questions about the identity of
the bombers, their motive and the possible retaliation by the Unit~d States. The only cettainty can be found in the last words ofTim
Gauna t 1 his mother in what was reported as their last telephone
conversation: " Mama," he said, "we're in dangerous waters."
· While ordinary Americans go about their day-to-day lives, the
i11en and women of our armed forces - young people like Kesha
Stidham and Tim Gauna - are navigating those dangerous waters
for our collective security. Too 'seldom we say thank you.
: • USA Today, on swir~g voters unswayed: With the presidential
1Rebates complete, AI Gore and George W Bush plunge into the last
1
·days of the presidential campaign today still struggling to convince critical swing voters that they embody both characteristics the
public wants in its presidents: competence and likability.·...
Rather than deciding the race, the debates seemed to exacerbate
nagging doubts about each man's vulnerabilities.
The Texas governor proved he could stand on the same stage as
Gore. But he displayed troubling' holes in his knowledge of U.S.
commitments abroad and fumbled notably in responding-to attacks
on his record in Texas.
·
Th e vice president raised renewed questions about a revolvingdoor public image by coming off as imperious and condescending
at the first debate, then timidly f.1iling to take advantage of openings
in the second. And he provided GOP spinmeisters with new grist
to 'needle him about careless storytelling ....
With time running out, this election is likely to come down to
the gut feelings of voters who aren't entirely comfortable with their
choice. If so, the question for the next 20 days is which .candidate
can appear more presidential, a trait that both men so far -find eluSlve.

'to

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday. Oct. 23. the 297th day of 2000. There are 69
days left in tli.e year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 23 , 1983,24 1 U.S. Marines and sailors in lebanon were
killed in a suicide truck-bombing at Beirut International Airport; a
near-simultaneous attack on French forces killed 58 paratroopers.
On this date:
In 1864, forces led by Union Gen. Samuel R. Curtis defeated
Confederate Gen. Stirling Price's army in Missouri.
In 1910, Dlanche S. Scott became the first woman to make a solo,
publi c ai rplane flight, reaching an altitude of 12 feet at a park in Fort
Wayne, Ind.
In 1915,25,000 women marched in New York City, demanding
the right to vote.
In 1942, during Worl~ War U,Britain launched a major offensive
against Axis forces at El Alamein in Egypt.
In 1'-144. the World War II Rattle ofleyte Gulf began.
In 1946, the U.N. General Assembly convened in New York for
the first time, at an auditorium in Flushing Meadow.
In 1956, an anti"Stalinist revolt that was subsequently .crushed by
Soviet troops began in Hungary.
•
In 1973, President Nixon agreed to turn White House tape
recordings requested by the Watergate special prosecutor over to
Judgejohn J. Sirip..
·
In , 980, the resignation of Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin was
announced.

In 1987, the U.S. Senate rejected, 58-42, the Supreme Court
nomination of Robert H. Dark.
Ten years ago: I )elicit- reduction negotiatlons continued between
the White House and congressional leaders. President Bush, campaigning in New England, blamed the Democratic-controlled Congress for the budget impasse.
·
Five years ago: President Clinton met with Russian President
Boris Yeltsin in Hyde Park, N.Y.: the leaders agreed that Russi~n
troops would help enforce peace in Hmnia, but remainec\ deadlocked on the issue of NATO command. A jury in Houston conVIcted Yolanda Saldivar of murdering TejJno singing star Selena.
One year ago: Sixteen members of the Ku Klux Klan held a Silent
rally in New York City as· thomands of counter-demonstrators •
jeered them .The New York Yankees won the lim game of the World
Se"ries, beating the Atlanta Braves, 4-1 . (The Yankees went on to
sweep the series.)

~ C4t01Ho'\11

Ann
Landers
'----

ADVICE

our weight to others in front of us. I was
teased mercilessly at school, and never
had a social life as a teenager.
I have joined TOPS (Take Off Pounds
Sensibly) and Weight Watchers, tried
every fad diet and food exchange program you can name. taken expensive and
dangerous · drugs, and exercised until I
dropped from exhaustion. I spent $1,000

92 years old

stahler@luse.net

.•

Page~

The Daily Sentinel

•

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74G-992-2156 ·Fax: m-2157

Charlene Hoeflich
G-al Manager

ge

OTHER DEBATE EXA56ERATIONS •••

~-1946

Charles W. Govey

~

1

ed next to me, I make it • point ro hug
the window, turning as far as I can sometimes almost sideways - to nuke
that person more comfortable.
Smaller people should try to be more
understanding, and thank God every
time they can buy clothes off the rack
and slip into 3f\Y seat, anywhere. And
please, never tell a l:irge woma11, "But you
have such a pretty face.'" - Any Girl,
Any City
Dear Friend: You are not "any" girl.
You are a sensitive woman who has written an extremely moving letter that a
great many overweight people will relate
to. Thank you for educating millions of
readers today. Because you took the time
to write, countless people will be more
compassionate about the large individuals they encounter in their daily lives.

Dear Ann Landers: This is about the
woman who became pregnant, even
though her husband did not want another child. I hope he reads this.
When my wife bec~me pregnant, · I
blamed her for "letting it happen." Once
our son was born, he instantly became
the most wonderful , loveable child on
the planet When' she became pregnant a
second time, I thanked God for giving
me the greatest gift on eartlt, even
though that child, too, was unplanned.
I love my children with all my heart,
and cannot imagine my life without
them.- Michael in Mt. Vernon, N.Y.
Dear Mt~ Vernon: You and hundreds
of others who wrote to express the same
sentiment. I can tell you that millions of
unplanned children have turned out to
be life's greatest blessings.

COMMU.NITY CALENDAR
The Community Calendar
POMEROY - Free flu shots Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
POMEROY - Leona Myers
is published as a free service for veterans enrolled in VA Health Sorority, St. Paul Lutheran will observe her 99th birthday on
to non-profit groups wishing Care, at VA trailer across from Vet- Church, Thursday 6:30 p.m. social Wednesday, Oct. 25. Cards may
to announce meetings and · erans Memorial Hospital, I 0 a.m. room. Martha McPhail and Mar- be sent to her at th e Pomeroy
special events.
until noon and 1 to 2 p.m., garet Stewart, hostesses.
Nursing and Rehabilitation CenThe
calendar
is
not Wednesday same time&lt;. Proof of
ter. 36759 Rocksprings Road.
designed to ptoniote sales or se rv1cc required . Enrollment
Pomeroy, 45769.
fund raisers of any type. applications also accepted.
Items are printed only 'IS
space permits and cannot be
guaranteed to be printed a
RACINE- RACO meeting,
specific number of days.
Tuesday, Star Mill. Park, 6:30 p.m.
The Sentinel welcomes your photographs. Here are a few guidelines for v
with soup and sandwich potluck.

ft110f•..,

HENTOFF'S VIEW

CARD SHOWER

Debate coverage missed too many poirzts
• The reverence accorded Jim Lehrer acclaimed by his colleagues as "America's
moderator" - is not only unmerited, but is
also the basic reason that the televised presidential debates never get to many of the key
issues in the campaign. But Lehrer is not
solely to blame, because the horde of
reporters covering the candidates all these
months also fail to ask many of the questions
Lehrer omits.
In a tribute to Lehrer in The Washington
Post, even Tim Russert of "Meet the Press"
- who is far superior to Lehrer in the depJh
of his research and the precision of his follow-up questions said that Lehrer's
"steady, methodical style is perfect.'" Only
Jack Shafer, deputy editor of Slate, preferred
candor to genuflection. Said Shafer of Lehrer:
"He's so inside Washington . He's so
plugged into a civil, placid, friendly unaggressive Washington that it speaks poorly of the
political prQcess and the press in general that
this is the guy who gets picked to moderate
the debates.'"
Shafer could also have derided many of the
commentators throughout the media- from
newspaper Op-Ed pages to the constant
brouhaha on cable television. The latter
"experts"' can be very aggressive; but they,
too, ignore vital issues.
During the foreign-policy section of the
second televised presidential debates, Lehrer
did not ask any questions about the candidates' views on the increased relentless
repression in China of. people who simply
advocate democracy. Nor was there any reference to the imprisonment and beatings of
Catholic priests who refuse to reject the Vatican for the "official"' Chinese Church.
The most vicious violator of human rights
in Africa is Sudan, whose government in the
north raids black Christian and animist villages in the south.,. enslaving the women and
children. Meanwhile, the Sudanese air force
bombs hospitals and black Christian schools

on a liquid diet, which took two years to
repay on my credit cards. I have lost (and
gamed) hundreds of pounds, •nd have
had my thyroid checked repeatedly. I am
genetically predisposed to be big, and it's
a source of grief daily for me that plane
seats, restaurant boothst amusement park
rides, movie theater seats. furniture and
even cars are designed for smaller people.
I eat moderately, avoid junk food, do
not binge, and walk three miles a day. I
swi m twice a week, take the stairs instead
of the elevator, and park my car far away
so I have to walk further. I am not lazy,
nor am I a glutton .•! rarely travel by plane
because I cannot afford the wider firstclass scats, nor can I pay for two tickets in
coach . I board ea rly and pray that no one
will have to sit next to me . because I
know I'm a problem. If someone is seat-

TUESDAY

ence did bring the subject up.
Neither candidate was asked about the
increasing Judgments by lower federal courts
that affirmative action - as cu~rently prac- "'ticed and encouraged by the Chnton-Gore
adnlinistration - is un constitution al bt:cause
it violates the 14th Amendment's ''equal protection of the laws." We ought to know what
the next president intends to do if th e
Supteme . Court strikes down affirmative
NEA COLUMNIST
action.
Bush has accused Gore of engag i11g in class
in the south. Shouldn't President Gore or warfare. But class divisions in this co unt ry arc
President Bush say something about that? getting deeper. and that subj ec t was not
The present incumbent is silent. So was Jim addressed in the debates. As the Sept. 27 issue
Lehrer.
of Education Week reported:
In all the questions about education,
'"The fact that poverty rates have
Lehrer did not note that despite the Supreme increased so sharply among chi ldren of nonCourt's 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education college graduares ought to l:&gt;c particularly
decision - declaring all segregated public disturbing in a ;ociety where 70 perc ent of
schools unconstitutional · - there are more young children h.ave pare nt~ without ,! co lsegregated public schools now than in 1954.
lege degree,' says Neil !len nett, director of"the
Do Bush and Gore have any ideas on how to
deal with the nation's segregated schools? National Ce nter for Children in Povnty."
Bur again, how m :lll y of ti JL".;t' qu t•&lt;.,tinn..;
Lehrer didn't ask.
Both candidates talk about keeping the have been raised by the rcportns wh&lt;J .11e
. booming economy going. But a Sept. 8 Unit- . constantly with th e presidcn ti .1l ondid.Jts·s'
ed States Agriculture Department study - · as Thomas Jefferson Selid th.lt dm cx pc ri111cm 111
reported in the !'Jew York Times - reveals constitutional democraLy wou ld o11ly \\ork ir
that "more than 21 percent 6f all black peo- the ci tizens were sutlle icntly in fnnn&lt;.·d to
ple went hungry or lived on the edge of vote intelligently ftn thcJr rcpn..'~t·nt;ltive~o.
hunger in 1999, the highest percentage of any The press, he sai d, I"" to be the pc·op k \
racial group. A large percentage of Hispanics, means of infonn~ tim1 .
20.8 percent, face d a similar sicuation."
The press saved. Clinton 's pres idency by
What would President Bush or President
failing to fUcu~ on hi~ se rial vm l.1tion \ ot· thl'
Gore do about that? Lehrer didn't ask.
Constitution,
thereby leading .l ll uninlurna:d
Both Gore and Bush are vigorous supporters of capital punishment, but there is grow- public to keep his popularity high duri11 ~ the
ing evidence that some people on death row impeachm e nt proceedin gs. On ce m o rL', durwere deprived of elementary due process in ing these presidt.:ll ti.l1 cJ mp .l i gt l ~. thl' ~Ht''~"~·
their trials; indee d, some . have been proven like Lehrer, mis~cs too many poittt'\.
innocent sliortly before they were sc heduled
to be executed. Lehrer let that one pass. too.
(Na t Hcut&lt;?U. is a llllfitJtutll)' rmoii'IIC'd llldhorif)'
During t.he last debate, a m ember.of the audi- 011 tl1e First AmCIIdiiiCIIt """ tf~t· Hill ,~(I! (~ftts.)

MONDAY

submissions:

HARRISONVILLE Harrisonville Senior Citizens, regular
meeting. town hall, Monday,
11 :30 p.m . Dlood pressure sc reenings will be available.

POMEROY -· Immunization
clinic, Meigs County Health
Departmenr, Tuesday. 9 to 11 a.m.
and I to 3 p.m. Take children's
shot records . Children must
·.accompanied by parent/legal
POMEROY - Winding Trail guardian.
Garden Club, Monday, 7:30 p.m .
home of Addalou Lewis. Dues
payable. Take plants to exchange.
POMEROY- Preceptor Beta

Nat
Hentoff

THURSDAY

Clara Baer of Racine recently celebrated her 92nd birthday at the
home of her son, Bill Baer. Family members, including Morgan Baer,
pictured here with her great-grandmother, and friends joined in the eel·
ebration.

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Despite the good time~, bad feelings still qrise
BY. JOHN CUNNIFF
pension plans - the more they want more. entertainers and the litigators.
But that's on ly part of the problem, and it
NEW YORK -There was a time not
The baby boomers ages 4:i-54 aren't the
long ago- but mu ch forgotten -when may not be the e mployees ' fault. The rest of only ones who might fed that way. The
people were content to have a job. Like in the problem is that somebody in another study found the next largest decline in satis1982, when 10.7 million people couldq't company· doing the sa me work is getting faction was· among the 35-44 .1gc ~roup,
find work and the jobless rate was 9.7 per . double the incom e, with benefits thrown in. o nce the most sati sfied workers ill th e coun~
ce nt.
In material terms, never have a few been try.
Things have changed . The rate of unem- getting so mu ch more than others, literally
Significantly, th e ·greatest level ofjvb satployment was just 3:9 percent of the labor .millions of dollars more , and never have isfaction was found among Ge!'Jt:raiion Xc rs
force in September. Many of those who their fabul ous incomes been more publi- ages 25 to 35 years, whe re you' ll fi11d a COil :
made up the percentage were simply biding c ized and thus more envied .
· cc:ntration of workers benefiting tflli"n th~
their times between jobs. Many employers
The Conference l:lo ard study found that
ex traordinary talen t soarch of the I ~Jl!Os ,
complained of labor shortages.
baby boomers are the most unh appy group
· It is among this group tha t the sudde11
But, signs of the time: In the midst of an of workers, th eir job sat isfaction level fallin~
fort unes of a few stand o ut so ,t.1rk ly and in
eco nomic boom punctuated by rising in the past five years trom 57 percent to less
enviable . cOntra~t to the i~L·omcs c~lrtH'J by
incomes and growing opportunities, workers than 47 percent.
contemporaries, and cspt·cially to tht·
are growing increasingly dissatisfied with
. Members of this group, as is known,
their jobs.
include parents stressed by big mortgages on i nc omes of those who cou ld .be rht'lr parWhen the threat of layoffs loomed large, homes more expensive than they ever ents.
Opportunity knocks' tor the young toJay.
as in the early 1980s, workers were satisfied thought they'd own, tuition costher than
Even
so, wh ile satisf;:H.: tiou of (;cllt'ratioll
JUSt to hold on to what they had . Bul as they ever imagined and retirement looming .
Xers measured higher than ""Y other "IF
opportunities rose and security became a ahead.
given, dissatisfaction rose too.
The biggest irritant, however, may be the category, it also declined to 55.6 ptTccm
The findings were confirmed in a study feeling of pover.ty w he n matched against the from 58 .1 percellt five years ago.
You might understand this ckcli11e better
for The Conference Board, which made sta- affiuent familie1 tbcy see pictu red in the
tistical comparisons with a 1imilar study f1ve popular magazines, the six- figure salaries when you pick up your 11ewspaper one d,,y
years ago. It found that barely half of Amer- offered graduates of prestige business and and read ,(bout Olll' of those tt'l'n ~ agl' phl' ~
icans. are happy with• their jobs.
law schools and the news about dot.coni nom~ earning a hu~c 111(01111..' doin~ no t hin t~
At fir$t glance, the &gt;uggestion •rises that 1nillionaires.
more than hacking .1hou1 011 .1 l ompult.'l".
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Or, . from companng their incomes with
more an employer gives promotions, the 'sudden fortunes of the high-tech crowd,
ljofm CurmiJr is r1 ''11 Si111 '.'i'\ r/Pilll )'sl .!;". Flw
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Page A8 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, October 23, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NATIONAL BRIEFS
One dead in propane blast
LONGVIEW, Texas (AP) - A tanker truck carrymg 8,000 gallons of liquid propane exploded and bum ulto flames, forcing the
evacuation of nearby homes and killing at least one. Another person
was seriously mjured and a rhtrd was missing.
A fire was still burmng Monday mornmg, and police feared that
&gt; nearby propane tank holding as much as 30,000 gallons of fuel
could also explode. Some 200 residents hvmg wnhin three miles of
the Martin Resource Management Corp. yard in East Texas· were
o ut of their homes for a second day.
The tanker e&gt;&lt;pluded Sunday as the IS-wheeler was transferring
its load of propane. Witnesses said a line exploded, then the ranker
truck caught fire and there was a second, larger blast.
"I thought it was thunder at first, and then I turned around and
the truck exploded," said Dean H ensley. whose family owns 80 acres
next to the plant. "The two guys in becween the truck and the storage tank were completely gone. They never got our."
Gregg County Fire Marshal Jerry Pierce said it could take as long
as 30 hours to burn off the fuel, and evacuees would not be allowed
to rerurn to their homes until then.
"The safest way to fight tllis - and mo~r environmental- is to
let it burn," Pierce said. "There is no way to fight it until we know
the cause and vo1unte involved."

Reports: AT&amp;T may split
NEW YOIU&lt; (AP) - Board members of AT&amp;T Corp., the
nation's largest long-distance telephone service and cable television
' provider, intend to consider d1viding the company into four distinct
businesses, according to reports.
Th.e split would create business, broadband, consumer and wireless divisions, The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal
reponed in Monday's editions. The· board meets Monday.
The company's biggest' and most profitable unit, the Business Services department? which caters to corporate customers. would
become the new AT&amp;T and would create brand-licensing arid
commercial agreements with the three other businesses.
AT&amp;T officials declined to commclll on the proposed plan.
If the plan, called Project Grand Slam, is approved, an announcement could be nude as early as Wednesday. Other options the board
were to consider include leaving AT&amp;T intact or spinning off one
or more new businesses.
Under the split-into-four proposal,AT&amp;T's wireless and cable TV
operations would become separate cmnpanies over the next one to
two years.

Govemors,·Bush stump in battleground states:
Ilia Gov.Tom Ri~ said on CBS"' Early Show"
Monday.
As they sketched stntegies for the final two
weeks, l:lush opted a challenge in some states
reliably Democratic in past elections.
For his part, the vice president planned to
focus "relenrlessly"· on the issues in the campaign's dosing days, including a series of seven
policy speeches in which he hopes to draw a
coritrast with Bush on matters ranging 6om
education to the environment.
"This is not a race for prom king, this is a
race for the presidency," said Gore spokesman
Chris Leh.ane.
To pur a human face on his effort, Gore will
meet each morning in small settings with typical voters to underscore his points. He was

PORTLAND. Ore. (AP) - AI Gore is
purring the faces ofindiVJdual voters m h.1s camP"!9' wlule George W. Bush hiL&lt; d1e road With
fellow governors as the two prestdential candidates wage an electoral chess march in a handful of states likely to serde d1e race.
Both were looking to energize their base and
compete for a shrinking number of undecided
voters. Gore worked overtime to fire up union
workers and black voters, whuc Texas Gov. Bush
showcased the support of GOP statehouse colleagues.
The gpvernors arc visiting 25 states ''to take
Governor Bush's message to the grass roots,
energize the troops, because we think at the end
of the day, a lot of this is going to be about
rurnout in the batrleground states," Pennsylva-

beginninjl the effort Monday in Portland with
businesswoman Heather Howitt.
"It's families like these who understand wh2t
is at stake in this election," Gore. said in renurks
prepared for the event. "They know about choices because they make them on behalf of
their fanlllies every day."
Can1paign aides said Hovvitt was able to starr
her own beverage business because of the solid
economy, and the meeting with her was setting
the stage for a policy speech later Monday in
which Gore planned to contrast his competing
economic views with Bush's.
In 90 news conferences in 23 states, most of
them on Monday, Democrats were releasing a
tO-minute video attacking Bush's record on
health care, the environment and education.

Verbal settlement reached in Comedy reigns at theaters
Bridgestone/Fire~tone lawsuit with •Meet the Parent$' ,:
NEW YORK (AP) - Relatives of a Texas couple who died
after a tire blew out on their
sport-utility vehicle have reach.ed
a verbal settlement with. Bridgestone/Firestone in the first product liability lawsuit scheduled for
trial since the company's August
tire recall.
Details of the settlement, which
;vas first reported in The Wall
Street Journal in Monday's editions, were not disdosed .
&lt;
Ryan Anthony Guillen, 21, and
his sister, Kimberly Guillen, 18,
sued the tire manufacturer last

November after their mother and
stepfather were killed when their
Ford Explorer crashed May 30,
1999.

Nidia and Patricio Leal died
when a Firestone tire unraveled,
sending the vehicle skidding into
a ditch near Brownsville, Texas.
In a telephone interview· with
The Associated Press late Suqday,
Robert J. Patterson;· a lawyer for
the siblings, confirmed that a verbal settlement \vas reached Friday.
He refused to elaborate.
·
"We finalized it Friday,
although it's just verbal at this
poim,",he said from his home in
Corpus Christi, Texas. " I really
can't talk about the details but
we've been ta,lking for a while."
Bridgesrone/Firestone spokeswoman Jill Hratina confirmed an
agreement was reached bu t
declined any further comment.

LOS ANGELES (AP) Audiences went to "Meet the
Parents" and were bemu sed by
"Bedazzled" as the box office
rurned. healthy after a midsummer slump.
·
The Robert de Niro and Ben
Stiller comedy "Meet the Parents" was the N o. I movie for a
third weekend with $16.3 million in ticker sales, according to
studio estimates Sunday. Its total
take climbed to $81 million in
j ust 17 days.
" Bedazzled," starring Brendan Fraser as a man who sells his
soul to Satan (Elizabeth Hurley),
debuted in second place with
$13.7 million.
T he tearjerker "Pay It For-

ward," starring Kevin Spacey,
flelen Hunt and Haley Joel
Osment, premiered at No. 3
with $10.2 million. The movie
centers on a boy who develops a
plan to spread good deeds.
Despite its star power, it bare-ly edged out Denzel Washington's "Remember the TitanS:'
which held strong with $ 10 million for four th place.
The football drama has ral&lt;.en
in $77.4 million in just over
three weeks.
. ."Pay It Forward" received
mixed reviews, with 1nany critics faulting it as maudlin and
manipulative. But studio executives were pleased with the
debut.

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The Daily Sentinel

Daily Scoreboard, Page BJ
NFI roundup, Page B6

Page 8 1
MonUy, October 1], 1000

MONDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS

Yankees take 2~0
lead
over
Mets
after
6-5
)
w
in
.
NEW YOIU&lt; (AP) -

The flashpoint

was the jagged barrel of a bat, not a bean-

U.S. wins

Presidents Cup
GAINESVILLE, Va. (AP) The Americans got their revenge
in the Presidents · Cup and gave
captain Ken Venturi the perfect
ending to his career.
Hammered and humiliated in
Australia two years ago, the
American team played inspired
golf from the opening match and
turned the tables on the lnternariona] team.
Notah Begay closed out the
matches with a 1-up victory over
Relief Goosen, giving the Americans the biggest rout ever in the
Presidents Cup- 21 112-10 1/2
- and their largest margin · of
victory in any cup since a ISpoint win in the 1967 Ryder
Cup.
Tiger Woods beat Vijay Singh
2 and I to finish 3-2, his first winning record in ream competition.
Leading 14- 6 going into the
12 singles matches, Davis Love lll
clinched the cup with a 4-and-3
victory over Ernie Els, who'
• became the first player in the
Presidents Cup to lose all five
matches.

ball.
And even after the New York Mets
nearly puUed off one of the greatest
comebacks in World Series history, Game
2 was still all about Roger Clemens and
Mike Piazza.
The Yankees withstood the Mets' fiverun rally in the ninth innjng f9r a 6-5 win
Sunday night and a 2-0 lead. Questions
about the game were practically irrelevant
because only one mattered: Did Clemens
try to hit Piazza with the bar, or did he
just throw it in his direction?
Clemens wound up pitching eight
shutout innings and leading the Yankees to

their record 14th straight World Series
victory. Bur when the benches emptied in
the very first inning, it was clear this Subway Series had a definite mean streak,
fueled by a beaning that was far 6om forgotten.
"There was no intent." Clemens said
repeatedly. "l was fired up and emotional
and flung the bat toward the on-deck circle where the batboy was. I had no idea
that Mike was running.
·"I guess it came close to him," he said.
''!- came back into the dugout and I said
I've got to get control of my emotions and
calm down."
Asked about the play, Yankees manager
Joe Torre snapped, uncharacteristically:

"Let's try to analyze it: Why would he
throw it at him? So he could get thrown
out of the game in the second game ofthe
World Series? Does that make any sense to
anybody? Somebody answer me."
The umpires agreed and did nor eject
Clemens. But Mers reliever John Franco
wasn "t so sure it was innocent.
"I think he knew what he was doing all
along and is coming up with excuses," he
said.
Said Piazza: "It was just so bizarre."
"Wh'en he threw the bat, I basically
walked out and kept asking him what his
problem v.ias," Piazza said. "He really had
no response . .
"I was trying to figure out whether it

Marauders
defeat Raiders
to advance
Meigs defeats
Jackson in
semifinal play

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Sedional
Champions
THAT CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM -

Huston captures
Tampa Bay Classic

Meigs adde d another honor to its
growing li st of accolades th is
s e as on, winning the Division II
s ectiona l . tourn a me nt at Rio
Grande ove r the weeke nd . The
Maraude rs (18·4) defeated Jack·
so n a nd River Valley in a pair of
three-game thrill ers to earn a s lot
in the dis trict tourna me nt. wh ich
will be held Saturday at the Un iversity of Rio Gra nde 's Newt Ol iv·
er Are na. The Me igs te a m is s ha n
in the upper photo' fo llowing its
victory ove r River Valley. In the
lower photo, Mindy Chancey is
shown setting the ball for Corrie
Hoover during the match again st
Jackso n. (Butch Coo per &amp; And rew
Carter photos)

-

Irwin. Trevino tie
in Hawaii
KAANAPALI, Hawaii (AP) - .
Hale Irwin tied Lee Trevino for
the Senior PGA Tour VICtory
lead, closi ng with a 6-under 65
for a four-stroke victory over Joe
Inman in the Kaanapali Classic.
The three-time U.S. Open
champion has four victorieS this
season and 29 in six seasons. Irwin
• had a 15-under 198 total. Inman
shot a 67.

Harrington wins
Euro PGA
MADRID, Spain (AP) - Ireland's Padraig Harrington won
his second PGA European Tour
title of the year, closing with a 2under 69 for a 17 -under 267 total
and a two-stroke victory over
Scotland's Gary Orr (66) in the
Tun::spana Masters.

3pk

BY BurcH CooPER
AND ANDREW CARTER

MOBILE, Ala. (AP) - Kar rie
Webb won her seventh lPGA
title of the year and wrapped up
the Player of the Year Award, beating Dottie Pepper in a playoff in
the AFLAC Champions. Webb,
wh.o shot a 6'9 fo r IS-under 273
total, won with a tWo-putt par on
the first extra hole.
. Webb earned $ 122,000 to lift
her re'ord total to SI ,815,053.
The Australian star has 13 victories in two years, the most irl. a
24-month stretch on the LPGA
since Nancy Lopez won 17 m
1978-79.
Pepper closed with a 6 7.

PALM HARBOR, Fla. (AP)
-· Joh.n Huston overcame a fourshot . deficit w ith a 6-un der-par
65 to beat Carl Paulson by three
strokes in the Tampa Bay Classic.
Huston, who earned his sixth
PGA Tour win and fi rst in two
years, had a 13-under 27 1 total.
Paulson shot a 72.

Davenport beats
Venus
UNZ, Austria (AP) - lindsay
Davenport ended Venus Williams'
35-match winning stteak, a run
that lasted more than four
months, going back to th.e French
Open.
navenport won 6-4, 3-6, 6-2
in th~ final of the $535,000 Generali Ladies Open.

was intentional or nor. 1 was going ro ask
him.lf it was, then obviously he really had
no response," he said. ··1 was more shocked
and confused than anything."
So was Mets manager Dobby Valentine,
who said he was watching the foul ball
Piazza hit and did not see Clemens' reaction.
.. It is one of thost' crazy situation'\ thar
seems to happen to New York teams."
Valentine said.
Piazza seemed to unleash all his fury in
the nimh, hitting a two-run homer of!'
reliever Jeff Nelson. Jay Payton later hit a
three-run homer off M ariano Rivera to
make it 6-5 with r\llo outs, but lt.ivera
struck our Kurt Abbott to end it.

HIGH SCHOOL VOLLEYBAL L SECTION ALS

Webb wins
LPGA title

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Inside:

Jarrett ge,ts first .
win at Rockingham
. ROCK INGHAM, N.C. (AI')
- A second straight ch.ampionship is out of the question,
bur rh.at doesn't mean Dale Jarrett and his team don't h.ave a
goal in mind.
Todd Parrot~. Jarrett's crew
chief since 1996, helped the driver celebrate his.first race victory in eight months Sunday, then
said, "We've got a little bit of
pride on th.e line here.
"We haven 't finished our of
the top three (in points) since
we've had this team together, so
these last three races we're going
to fight hard to try to get back
into that position."
After Jarrett pull~d away from
Jeff Gordon _at the end of the
Pop Secret Popcorn 400 to
record h.is first victory at North
Carolina Speedway _ hi&lt; first
win since the season-opening
Da tona 500 on Feb. 20 _ the '9
y ·
·
'1
defendmg Wm stu n Cup c mnp
c
d 1·
lf c
1 ·
h
mun
mnse 10urt 1 111 t e
.
.
.
d
1:1
bb
stan d mgs. trat 1mg 1ea er o Y
Labonte by a convmcing 330
pmn t~.

But, with ra ces in Pho enix,

Dillion breaks rushing mark
Bengals defeat
Broncos for first
winof season

Homestead, Fla., and Atlanta
remaining, Jarrett is behind
rh.ird-place Jeff Durton by just
79 points and is with.in 129 of
runn.er-up Dale Earnhardt.
"I'm disappointed that we
can't get ourselves a championship baftle because the last
few years we've been kind of
accustomed to that and, truly,
that 's a lor of fun," Jarrett said.
"But I also know that every year
can't be. like last year, so we JUSt
keep working hard trying to get
our race team betier."
They certainly gnt everything
right Sunday as Jarrett, Parrott
and the crew of the No. 88
Robert Yates Racing Ford kept
making adjmrments until the
car came out of the final pit stop
in front for the first rime all day.
Jarrett led the final 43 of 393
laps on the track . where he had
fimshed second SIX tm1es m hJS
last mne starts, beatmg Gordon
. b 2 197
h. fi ·
to t c 1111511 1me y .
-secd
l
c II
· h
on s - nea r y a ru srra1g th 1 107 ·1
1
away on 1 e ·
-ml e ova·

CINCINNATI
(AP)
Corey Dillon tllmbled intu the
end zone, popped to his feet and
tossed away the ball before teammates engulfed him, celebrating
the Cincinnati Ben gals' first win
m their new stadium.
Had he known he'd just made
h.istory, Dillon would have never
let go of that ball .
Dillon 's 41-yard touchdown
run clinched a 31-2.1 victory
over th e befuddled Denver
Broncos on Sunday and left him
\vith 278 yards - an NFL single-game record .
Once he returned to the sidelin e and learned of the record , an
incredulous Dillon fell to his
knees and said a prayer in
tharibgivi11g while teammates
dumped icy water on hi&lt; back.
" Mayb e when I sit down after
the season it will hit me ,.bur now
I don 't know what to tell you, I
really don 't," Dillon said.
So many one-in-a-generation

.
Please see Jarrett. Paie 86

,.

'

RIO GRA NDE
The
Meigs volleyball team advanced
to regional play with wins over
Jacksmi and River Vall ey in sectional tournament actjon on Saturday.
In the sectio nal title match
against the Raiders, Meigs took
the first game 15-7, but fell in
th.e second game 15-5. ·
In the third game, River Valley
took an 11-7 lead on solid serving an d upfrunt play by Chelsea
DeGarmo.
T h.at's when rh.e Marauders
took control of the game.
W ith solid passing and good
defensive p lay, Meigs cut the
Raiders lead to 11-10.
T he R.aiders regained control
of the co ntest on good serves by
Nicole Watkins to rake a 13- 1U
atvantage.
Mindy Chancey then stepped
up with five straigh t serves as
Meigs took a 14-13 lead.
Upfront play, though, by DeGarmo and Devin Cottrell prevented Meigs fi-om getting that fina l
point.
Both teams battles with a 15all tic hanging in rh.e balan ce. A
spike by Margie Bratton and
serving by Sh.annon Pri ce gave

the Marauders the 17-15 win.
"River Valley's got a tremendous team," said Meigs coach
Rick Ash. "We made a littl e
adjustment on Devin Correll's
hjtting; which helped us alor.
Ourrwo middle hitters . Qaynee
Davis and Kayte Davis) and
Margie Bratton were the difference in tbe game."
Kayte Davis led the Marauders
with nine points, wh.ile Price and
Chancy each had eight points.
Bratton was dominating up
fi:onr with 12 kills for Meigs (184) in the win.
"Right at rh.e end, t~cy made
the plays wh en they had to and
they made the plays at th.c net ,"_..--'
said Ash. "We had 'everal kev
blocks on the comeback."
·
DeGarmo led the R aid ers (II. 13) with 16 kllls.
DeGarmo also had nine points
and four aces. Cottrell added 11 1
poitm , two aces and four kill s.
"We're more of an offensive
team and· they're more of a
defensive team." said River vallev
coach ~harron Vannoy. "Defens~
won today."
In the first semifinal of th.e
afternoon, Bratton had 12 kills
and Chancey had 12 points as
Meigs defeated Jackson, 15-9,
12-15, 15-3.
Katie Jeffers added 10 points
and Price had 1 I assists for th.e
Marauders in the win.
In the second '\emitinal, River
Valley defeated Gallia Academy
15-12, I 5-10
DeGarmo and Cottrell each
had seve n kills, while Jami e
Nichob \Cored lllll t' points,

NEW RECORD -

Corey Dillon of Cincinnati rushed for 278 yards
Sunday to set a new single-game NFL record. (AP)
things happened on a delightfully warm and wacky ta ll .lfternoon that l)i.llon 's pmtgamc
daze w," undcr&gt;t.m,dable.

The

lkn~als

( 1-6) !o(Ot thc·ir

t"ir\t \1irtory in li..J~Ir gJmc... at

Paul Brown Sta&lt;hum cwn
though they gaw up 51lll yard&lt;.

�Monday October 23 2000

Page B2 • The Dally Sentinel

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In the Motter of
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s.m_.

Melgo COUnty Ohio
Account• ond voucho,.
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llduclory hoa been lllld In
tho Proboto Court Molga
County Ohio lor opprovol
oild oetttement.
ESTATE NO 285110- Sixth
Account ol Lindo M
ForohH Guardlon ol tho

540 Miscellaneous

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Instruction

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lilljor Collp Foatl:llllcarw
Almy 21 Tlllanl 17

- 5 6 C0mo1140
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Unle•• exception• are
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before sold Court on tho
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at which time Hid account
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and

continued lrom doy to dey
until finally dlspolld ol
Any poraon lntorootod
may fllo wrltton oxceptlon to
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Common Plaao Coun.
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Molgo County Ohio

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LSU 45 Mss sslpp Sl 38 OT
Manilla 34 Kent Sl 2
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NorthwM em S 37 MCNHII S 34
Richmond 7 Maine 6
Sou h Carol na 30 vanderbilt 4
Sou h Flofldo « Lllortv 8
SOutham U 30 Aloom St 4
S epllan F loustln 27 Nicho II St 20
Tennessee 20 A abama o
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VMI40 Chartes on Soulhom 7
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w CaroNna 4 Chananooga 38
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LI'N TOP OF THE
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A Scenic Hill toLL Our LPN Poollions eo ..
An exBonei11PidlagtTha rc.A S 2!11 Hour SMI Oilf..,nllll F0&lt;
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Hou sl W. $ 401 Hou Porfect
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Advancemen TWO POSI
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Public 8ale and AUCUon

Dorothy G
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...... go

New 1b ""' Thri~ S1q&gt;pt
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40-592 842
Qua y ckl h ng and housei'IO d
ems S 00 bag sa e ave y
hu sday Monday h Sa u day
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TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

Public Notice

(10) 23

Careers Ck)Se To Home
cal TOda)l 7~36
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Reg 090-05- 27ol8

lng am Ba ga Company W Se
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The Dally Sentinel • Page 83

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

o

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Pon a

393

8 9 Wad Burto Po a 393 $50 900
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$45 600
Q 7
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$49 500
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28 25 B en Bod n8 Fo d 39 $24 5
27
2 Je ry Nadea
Che o e 390
$35 87!
28 30 Andy Hous o Fa d 389 $24 375
:2Q
Jeemy Mayea Fo d 38

S5 1100
30
3
eng1n1
32

40 Sco P ue Fa d 386 $24 5 s
4.2 Oe 1 Ma c s Che o e 370
a u 1 $23 925
43 Csn Long Fo d 3 $26 900
3~
23 S e ng MO!II n Che o e 328
134675
3~ 37 01 e Ea ha d
Che o e 30
ICC din $33 1550
3S 20 M Chi I Wa p Chi o e 295
ang1n1 • u e $34 425
36 8 Kt LIPIQI Fo d 253 I denl
$33 875
37 3 Co a Wa p Fo o 93 e g I
aut$23325
38 32 Te ·v L.aben e Che ae
9

ICC den $4 27S
3Q 34 Jmmy Spe ce Fed
4 ace
don S3 225
40 5 Male Mann Fed
4 ace den
$4 50
4
4 ~obby Go do Fo d 54 .!ICC
don S23 00
42 2.2 Da ll Baney Pan e
5 e g ne
$23 050
43
0 Kenny Wa 1 e Che o 8
4
eng ne 1 u e $30 994

. u.

�.

Pege B4 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, OCtober 23, 2000

.,

Rocky R. Hu.p_p, Agent
Box 189

Middleport, Ohio 45760
· Local 843-5264

Advertise your
message

IM!edicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
Final Expenses; College, Retirement,iZJ
Funds; Mortgage;
~
Medical •
Home
.__,_...,....

$8.00 colum n inch weekdays
$10.00 column inch Sundays

VOUB

~ ieelllift9
High BL ·Dry

CONCRETE
CONNECTION
au.tlty Drtvewaye,
Patlo1, SklewaiQ.
25 yeers uperlence
Free Eatlmatea

Self-Storage

SECURITY
"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

33795 HiilmJ RJ.
Prmuroy, Ohio

740-742-8015 or
1-&amp;n-353-7022

I Pont•rl you r guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
legal papers, investmen1 records, photo
albums
cameras
household
inventory
and
senti~ntal items' wiil be safe.
For more information call

IccollectioniS,

4 A Q8 3
"'~a s 4
.. .1.86.
.. a. 2

DUM LUMBER

n. n. 141

740-992-5232

· CBEI'I'III

ISN4 •

.. a •s.s

ROBERT BISSELL
COIISTIUCTIOII

P / BCONTRACTORS, INC.

Public Notice

Public Notice

IIOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
111E TEN MILL UIIITAOON
(RoviiOd Code, SoC1Iont
3501.11 (G), 5705.19,
5705.25)
NOTICE II hereby given

that In purauance of a
·H..olutlon of tho Board at
lownehlp Truattta' of the
Towna'h lp
of Olive ,
RHdevllle, Ohio, piiiHd on
tho 18th doy or Auouot.
2000, thoro will bo
1ubmiHed to a vote of the
people of uld aubdlvlalon
11 o Gonorol ELECTION to
be hold In the Townohlp ot
Olivo Ohio, at tho rogulor
place. of voting therein, on
the 7th day of November,
2000, tho quootlon ot
levying I tax, In IXCHI Of
the ten mill limitation, for
the benerlt of Olive
Townahlp for the purpoae
Qt : Road Maintenance
.Including duat control
Seld tax being A renewal
ofo tax ol1 mill
At a rate not exCMdlng 1

(one) milia for each one
dollar of valuation, which
1mounta to Ten canta
(SO. 10) for 11ch one
hundred dollara or velu.Uon

for thrn (3)

yaer~.

The Palla for said
Election will open 11 6 :30
o'clock A.M . and remain
open until 7:30 a'ctock P.M.
of ..ldday.
By order of the Board of
Election• of Melga County,
Ohio
John N. lhle, Chairmen
Rita D. Smith, Director
Dated Septembe~ 6, 2000
(10) 9, 16, 23, 30 4TC

Section 5715.11 ol tho Ohio
Rovi iOd Code. Thooo
complolnto muot be filed on
lormo which will bo
tumlahed by the County
Auditor ond muot bo fllod In
tho County Audltor'o 0111ce
on or before tho 31ot doy of
Morch 2001 . All complolnto
fllod wHh tho county Auditor
Will bo hoord by tho Boord

or RevlaJon In the manner
provided by
Soctlon 5715.11 altho Ohio

.f'evleed

Code.

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL UIIITATION
(RoviHd Coda, Soctlona
3501 .11 (G), 5706.t9,
5705.25)
NOTICE lo hereby given
that In purauence of 1
Reaol utlon of the VIllage
. Council of the Village of
Raci ne, Racine, Ohio ,
paoood on tho 19th doy ot
June, 2000, tl'!ere will be
aubmiHed to a vote of the
poop .. ot oald oubdlvlolon
at a General ELECTION to
be. held In the Township of
Racine, Ohio, at the regular
places of voting therein, on
the 7th day of November,
2000, the question of
levying a tax, In exceee of
the ten mill limitation, for
the benefit of Racine Village
tor the purpose or: Current
Expenses
Said tax
being A
replacement tu of 3 milia
At a rate not exceeding 3
· (three) mills for each one
dollar of valuation, which
amounts to Thirty centa
($0 .30 ) lor each one
hundred dollare of valuation
for five (5) v··~· ·
The Palla for said
Election will open at 6:30
o ' clock A .M. and remain
open until 7:30 o 'clock P.M.
of said day.
By order of the Board or
Election• of Melge County,
Ohio
John N. lhle, Chairman
Rb D. Smith, Dlroctor
Doted September 6, 2000
(1 0) 9, 16, 23, 30 4TC

Public Notice
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
• Reference: 5715.17
Ohio Rov lo~d Codo
The Melga County Board
of Fievlalon hal completed
tt8 work of equalization ..The
tax retume for tax year 2000
have b .. n revlaad and the
veluatlona completed and
ar t
open 1or pu blic
tnepectlon In the office of
the Melga CoUnty Auditor,
Second Floor, Courthouee,
Second Street, Pomeroy,
OH45769.
Complelnta agalnet t h1
vafuatloneo ae eatabllahed
tor tax yeer 2000 muet be
made . In accordance with

•New Homes

_ -

OF

• Gerages
• COmplete

Fully lnaunld
. ..... Mlrrlsii/Ridlt, OWt

(740) 985·3948

24, 25, 26

Public Notice
• NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
111E TEN MILL UMITATION
(RoviiOd Code,
3501.11 (0), 5705.1i, 5705.25)
NOTICE lo IMroby glvon

s.cuon.

that In purauanot of a

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

Ball Logging &amp;
Firewood

740 992·1671

"We Can Help"

7122/TFN

••

"fiCIUNG
EXCfiVfiTING

• I \\

All vertical blinds are made to order at
our location

UPTO 70% OFF

of tht ten mill
limitation, for the benefit of
Rutland Townahlp for the
purpon of: Are Protoctlon.

• Vertical.e • Wood • Minis • Etc

Said lox bolng A ron·OWIIII
ota tax ol1 mill
At 1 rate not exctedlng 1

144 Third Ave. GampoDs 446·4995
TaU Fru 1·888·745·8847

IXCIII

. The

Poll a

for

Eloctlon will opon ot 6:30
o ' clock A.M. and rom,ln
opon until 7:30 o ' clock P.M.
of Hid day.
By order of the Board of
Eloctlono of Molgo County,
Ohio

'.. 1

!,

;rl ~ ' '' .1111' • [J.. &lt;"·I ) Io1i·

I ll ' ', :1 ',J

I'll

V.C.. YOUNG Ill :

992·6215

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.
1·800-291-5600

VISIT OUR SHOWROOM ON STATE ROUTE 33
6 MILES NORTH OF POMEROY, OHIO AT COUNTY ROAD 18
• No Dealers or Contractors Please WV #023477

992-5479

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On.
Thuntdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,

HILL'S
SELF STORACE

Pomeroy,OH
Paying .$ 80.00
per ga"l"
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progressive top line.

45771
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours

Lie. 11 oo-so

22 yn . Local

n~e)!

BISSEll BUILDERS
INC. -

Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL UMITATION
(Ravtaed Code, Sections
3501 .11 (0), 5705.19, 5705.25)
NOTICE lo hereby given
that In pursuance of a
Reaolutlon of the Board or
Townehlp Truateee of the
Township of Lebanon
Portland, Ohio, palled on
the 30th day of June, 2000,
there will be submitted to 1
vote of the people of aald
aubdlvlalon at a General
ELECTION to bo hold In tho
Township of Lebanon Ohio,
at the regular places of
voting therein, on the 7th
day of November, 2000, the
queaUon of levytng 1 tax, In
excttl of the ten mill
limitation, for the benefit of
Lobonon Townohlp lor tho
purpooo of: Molntolnlno ond
operaUng ctmtttrlu.
Said tax being A renewal
ola lox ol1 mill
At a rate not exceeding 1
(one) mille for tach one
dollar of valuation, which
amounts to · Ten centa
($0 .10) lor ooch ono
hundred dollar• of veluatlon
l or flvo (5) yooro.
The Polle for aald
El,atlon will open at 6 :30
o 'clock A.M. and remain
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M .
of aald day.
.
By ordtr of the Board of
Eloctlono o1 Moloo County,
Ohio
John N. lhle, Chairman
Rita D. Smith, Director
Doted Soptombor 8, 2000
(1 0) 9, 18, 23, 30 4TC

CHECK THE

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"

Bill Slack

° Firewood .; Ught
hauhg o Tru &amp; hedge
tr111mlng &amp; removal

740·992-2269

LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take the pain out
of paintingLet me do it f or you

IJ:;

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing

Brtdg.e l'~;;s A~aii PII !i~.es. llr+-+ in four- Gllt!lll-oriQs.: th11
besl· b1d, best-&lt;ltftl!ld®. and bestphty~u : duals of tht~ y®r, and th~

FREtt ESTIMATES '

bllbl

740·992·7599

"f&lt;\(),J l Kt«ll-4 I~~ •\l'\UII\1'.

r'IR5 GoefREY '

""-SN'T

M~'t'.

C ull T&amp;R Logging
a ft er 8:00 pm
740-992:5050
(Rand y)

· Before 6 p.m. ·
Leave Message
Alter

6pm· 740·985·4 I80

.

.

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

,._r-': .",. ,.~~ ·,:·''

Meigs County
Fairgrounds

.,

SMITH'S COHSTROCTIOH .
• Garages

• Decks

• Siding

• Roofing

SCORE

992·1101

8131 mo

one

•ttelol"t"

J

P6i RJ--II"of!'S
101.- Ll FIN. tl

\1.11-lii:RE ,
.J r:

!T N T\&lt;1.6.
•« rN( '""",

) wwtu

ii 1:"-

rt-+E.

KitS.

KJl.P'

1&gt;811'1,

t&lt;.'c'k '' &gt;h oJI•al gam&lt;tbo:&lt;.'l!U~ uf hr ~

MiiJd~dJ Ill it

hrJ&lt;Jeu JiwroouJ surt
l)l't.:hu e1 mu~t ltJt,C oue heart
.utJ t"o d ub u rc·k,o&lt;. So, n ~pj-..:ars

"""" ~.- - Ka!ila&lt;lfl9 ~rn

1'QP~tltS. .

fP.\11'

~R

.'

Pf!li~IOVS $01,1,/TIQII:

T~Fit

"Plain

R.t&lt;lt,

II'Ji.'ll'

~K.'iBL

N, . K&lt; •

~R·~

II'BitiJ .

Zll

~ lol., &lt;!'

w~ " ' -

QB"J

II. -It It

"'11&lt;4 'IQQul """' lflO!l

~~..

.

dr 13~llc•

lc'UIIJ ' "'"~ li.'
lt...J
tfw dul&gt; k w g . ltll!JW..il~ll:l~ Jr Lkl
lt..l O" t:thJ\.) k \1\tttll thi..' Ji.'1! diUJ
..; v.tt iJ,.' hl.'J t il.)

thtt

t.h.JUh.litJ l!VwlJ'

' '' "' ~.•ut.l! . rlliitkuo~

OFF ICI!

JII)~'TI(!?

ile

ltud a ch~"

IUt.lUJ 1\..lJ-.L.'I , W\."Ul\~1..;11 J t.h.'~l)\?'la{,t;'

'.\

101IL'T 'S !

\ ftc:t wtnmug \.\&lt; tlh the Jaa·

-./)('t

Uh..llld Ji,:tt.

ht:'

tu t..:~~t.·d

Lhl..'" -..paJt.:'

4ueeu . H ~&gt;v. e\ el . U il&gt;Urpr~&gt;JUgl:o .
~~ ' ~ " 111' c&gt;penJn ~ l:&gt;r&lt;l l:: a.,( ;w·c•·

Tues-Fri 10-6
Sat. 10-4

jUl'c'&lt;.i

• Candle making
supplies
• Wooden crafts
• Baskets

t~

k tng.

'r.b~o

wr)LUlU&lt;'&lt;.i

v&gt;~ tll til&lt;.&gt;

dianKli11.14W&lt;m.
dt:d.#"'' at~·k~d
tt!Uil.li;)ti. but WI llo(illUIIl8 Wltb. hll&gt;
ac·ot , d~ 1:1\--!lu ~lu,li Jmt li"Jl 'll~l' Wl.
l&lt;tw.l wi tl:t "' dub aud 1'1'-'oti' '"' a
hr1al l ~

PEA\l.TS

740-992-4559
9' 1100 1 mu pd

SOMEDA'&lt; THERE'S 60!N6 TO
BE A MONVMENT ISE,AN&amp;! '1'00
KNOW WAAT WILL 8e ON IT? .

• TillS IS

WlolW SAI..LY iltOWN

1.1/ASTeO 1'\olE 15E5T 'f'EAAS

OF 148 £!FE WAITIN6 F~

'' 51-lE COIJLO 14A'Ie.SJ.EI'T
ANO'TJ.IS: TEN MIN!.ITES! ''

clidll1\lllclrvf~

.::c

t'" two dJJwO

To rget a cummt weath~r
repQI\ check the

Sentinel
---

(MONDAY

- ----- - --·

-----li1 =-~ ------

...

There's al\\3)5 a pnce 10 f"l)
for fu l fi l ling one's ambili,ms.and
tfl the \ear ahead. th . tl me~ms
applying more effonthan usual
gel "hal you reall) 11 ant. HarJ
"ork pays large di 1 idcnds.

.

I''

SCORPIO (.Oct 24-'lo' . 22) It

may take a whole lol of pattencl'
and 1olerance to deal 11 11h a sen ·
silive friend ioda) . Ho11e1er, b)
bolstering up his or her ego. )Oll
may achieve an imponant break-

lhrough for yourself. Trying 10
palch up a broken romance ? The
AslrO ·Graph Malc hmaker can
he'lp you uriders1and what lo dow
make the reialionship work . Marl
$2 .75 lo Malchmaker, c/o this
10156.

•

r~-tft

TEAC:KERS Lt,,;: '1'01.1
&amp;trrr1El': TKAI-I 1'1

T Q ~HOW OF~ ANI&gt;'

newspaper, P.O . Box 1758_. Mur;
ra) Hi ll Sial ion, New YorL N)

'

~ ~ ~ {l.l..l..

'10 1-f ONl.'( .._iKKD IT

SAGITIA R I US (Nov. 23 · Dcc .
11) Take on I hose tasks or assig n·

Meed It d~ne, give us • call
FREE ESTIMATES
Cmt Priced on New Homtl

992·2753

'

'M.NIW rwe ~fll5Wst m
'ICUR atOM Olla~TIOol ~

h ours"

•

740887.al88

NolO n,IE 5 1 (1&lt;.~i'II&lt;'G
P'AAT IS , IT '&gt;

~~

'

1000 St. Rt. 7 Soutl!
Coc/v/1/o, OH 46723

• Remodeling

: (C'lFECE!l~T1GN ')--..:~

Drone
or'aS ow as

· All Maltes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Ptu1s
Factory Autlrorh:ed
Case-IH Ptu1s
Dealero.

c.ooo

&lt;ii\JE ME A
E.""-~
t; l AA YOU ALREA D"T'

If} u ur

·n
~~ m'i .

DIPOYSAG
PARTS

• New Homes

n•g llltlr

·- 1-\p,B,
lt. ·GrH _,
IIER"r

G l l'o.J.

,O.li:T 'CLES Of

~----=--

.: .- , """·.

JltTl.

IF~!)

Q-F ,II'

pu~h ....,~.,., u Ul ~,,It t.'\.'UI'I..' \\.(;st

TPIE SC&gt;IOOL SUS ... ''

USine:SS

1m . 4 11

WINTER
STORAGE
SPACE
AVAILABLE

The Country
Candle ShoP
"we'rt! luH·I.·

-ro .

•AT tFY TH£

•

Dozer work.

"•Jrth 's threu·dub JUillf/ &lt;.'lrebuJ " ,'llllqd 4 1111.\CU m i ~ ovet
here ' l l111'&lt;t no odw w.hy J, 'haw mg louH.&gt;nd ' " l'll\Jit for purtner's
' lilt With 'Ollie~· IQ [&gt;Otllfb- South

'011 11

BIG \ATE

vert1se our

To p

TFF~

Z.L

pt ~) j)\J~ lU &amp;Jil . bu1 ttol 1111\J\,lS!'&gt;Jbll.t

•

prices p aid also.

Fr" Estimates

949-2033

Tired of •t•rlng •t th• oame four
wall~, find •••rythlng you nHd
In th• Cla.. lfletlo.

or small tracks.

'ffitJ:£5.....

· ~PTT~MT

thut he w1JI get ltome i ~ h&gt;t gu=·
"' tJ1e trump ' Uit c· orr&lt;:&lt;:tl~ Soulh
wil l (li &lt;Jbilbl ~ 'lal'l wUJl thc JUd{ ,
1...'1.'\t t:u.:J by thl.!' 4ut::~tu . k.ing- .:m J
o.~c~ U u the o;t!\.'t.'UJ I\.1UilJ , l'h: muN
11 11~'"' I: oN. for t h~·IJlllll · ottJJug~

304-273-0036

Standing timb er large

an ~xcelleOI

newsp&gt;t}ll:r &lt;:tJIUI!l01&gt; bo:&lt;.'l!Ui'&gt;U they
are too ~ompltc'll l t!d.
';trll. l et'~ huve a kl\lk at '-01llc
ot th » '&lt;'&gt;lr ·&lt;; CU!IlJiqale$. Here '"
an rmugtrrunvc &lt;Jcten:.e by S!elio
d1 Bello. from I taly.

r&lt;.tc.'

10/4 1 mo

WANTED

hy a junu)l·.

snugs~ 0 L'Cllllt01lOII~.

1\ I&gt;IIP 1,1-lll't:

6 Mo'nth
Membership $1 oo
plus tax
with this ad
Ravenswood, WV

740-985-3831

A·J MINI-STORAGE
992·6396
992-2272

perf011Tillll\.'tl'

Fin!t. in t1!1lQr~ . llul ttllll'e are two

· (NO SUNDAY CALLS)

IRON CITY GYM

CE

Now Renting

International

awa rds

COMMERCIAl and R!SIDEim\l

7:00AM- 8 PM

,,,_

6129/mo.

Interior

CALL FOR MORE
INFORMATION

IMPROVEMENT

"

l! lllll~ll' i)oi,QIIII,

E~ery y~r•. th~t

Road
Racine, Ohio

"Ahead in Service"
• WestemPrlde 12% Sweet Feed· s5.25/50 lbs.
•12% CaHie feed s6.75/100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Prl!k Dog food s6.75/ SO lbs.

Phone (140) 593-667

~

INNtll•

29870 Bashan

• fall Fertilizers

FREE ESTIMATES

Oct. I , 2000 .. Apr. 1, 2001

HCJME

•

~

OJI&lt;lninlt 111!1(1; .. ~

GAME QFl" IN
TH' TIMID

ST..,T£

HOE RIUER

11-.

CALLED OUR

' LANO T~ F INP-l

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representa.tive
Larry Schey

I'IIOM
t ....
Plwo

W&lt;&gt;H o I
""'""
llliH·
'Dll.i 3 ....

Pomeroy, Ohio

I pill

!r, t·n.rtl corn

Dtlalll!'l w~ .

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month.

Call for Further Details

992-4119

·

Vuln~~lh

.

deal rs overlooked&lt; anu' the 1\oJJI nt:ls. art: usuall~ unsurla!Jie for

• Free Installation
* Free in Home Estimates

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins .

John N. lhle, Chalnnan
Alto D. Sm~h. Dlroctor
Doted Soptombor 8, 2000
(10) 9, 16, 23, 30 4TC

, ,,

1-740•742•7243

-'llltQ

aald

:!

1 C.,

:.1.tr1:&gt;1 H1 1' '.:U:&gt;,•n

11H ·• ,1 .ti&lt;l'

amounta to Ten cente
($0 .1 0) tor ooch ono
hundred dollare of valuation
lor nvo (5) yoore.

[ .·, ~ :11,

UINVL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
-An11 Size Double Hunit-

The CRAFTY. BLIND SPOT

voting therein, on the 7th
day- ot November, 2000,
quootlon of lovytng·o tax, In

..

.. " ~ lll' 9 4.
.... lOll

• Yloyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio &amp; Ponh Dods

ror

Cr·cati vc Co &gt;tumc s

"""

"'Jl~ 1' 62

• llt&lt;lrlcol &amp; l'!omlblng
• Roofing &amp; Gutters

lleJ&amp;IIoOolllaCowot...

1-800-272-51 9or446-9800

Hauling o Umestone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsot1•
All Dirt• Multh •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992-3470

• 10011 odolltloo!• &amp; Roinodolin1
•NtwGor-

Free E stimates

Ragdol's
Costumes

'"'A 9" 7 4

CARPENTER SERVICE

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
III.AP vow:b... accepted

""'
" 9" 3
..~p

YOUNG'S.

352i5 Ball Run Road

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

Re.alutlon of the Board of
Townahlp Truateea of the
Townohlp of Rutlond
Rutlond, Ohio, ~·!~~-~!' J
lho 3rd doy of
..-------------------,
thoro will bo
to
vote of tht people of Nld
aubdlvlalon at 1 Oentr~~l
ELECTION to bo hold In tho
(Factory Outlet)
Townohlp of Rullond Ohio,

at the regular placea of

cau•LePex~

GALLIPOLIS

Remodeling

Fret Eatlmates

.

Tncl
,.._,.
...
OollloCoaAU..

992-6142 or
ToU-Free 1-677·604·735

N1ncy

Porhr Compboll llolgo
County AudHor
(10) 18, 17,18,19, 20, 22, 23,

(one) milia for each one
dollar of valuation, which

Public Notice

CONCRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES
Rnldentlal, Commtrdll

FIREWOOD .
FOR SALE

"i'neons 10day that ~ou lnoughl
were loo 1ough or' distasteful.
What you cou lctn :1 stomac-h
before won't seem so hnd today.
, CAPR ICORN (IJec. 22-.Jun .
: 19) Deeds cnn spcnk volumes
whnl words c-nn11n1 convey, so If
vou' V&lt;' hnd n hnhl tl me lclll nwthe
llllc you loi'C hmv much she lll' h~

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I J ill~.'\ tSepl 2.\ o,·t 211
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.mCII911wn y&lt;•ur
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111 ake 11 amnii sucrlflc'e llldny un
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pass thiS w~y bLJ t once "' a hie tv~ e., c»pt 11 I &lt;'U' 11L"
bar-d os read1ng the ROAO MA f'

.

�Monday, October 23, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

P-ae B8 • The Dally Sentinel

NFL ROUNDUP

Rams no longer unbeaten, Titans defeat Ravens
. ·.

BY TliE ASSOCIATED PRESS

... ·

Defendmg Super Bowl champwn St.
Louis IJ;»t quarterback Warner (broken
nght pinkie),last year's MVP, for perhaps
a momh. Marshall F.IUlk , the 1999
Offensive Player of the Year, bru1seJ h1s
shoulder in the Rams' first loss this sea.mn, 54-34 at Kansas Cicy.
Warner. the league's leading passer, was
hurt when the ball h1t h1&gt; finger on a
snap.leadmg to a fumble thatK1n sas C1ty
(4-3) recowred .

'Tm going to be

.1t

Cowboys 48, Cardinals 7

-

In Dallas' most lops1ded win since
1980, Emmitt Smith rushed for l 12 yards
and scored once, whil~ Chris Warren had
twil TDs. Wane McGaricy's 59-yard punt
return also keye.hhe Cowboys (3-4).
Arizona (2-5) endured its worst defeat
since 1981. The Cardina ls have dropped
11 straight regular-season games in Texas
Stadium.
·

Saints 21, Falcons I 9
More Ricky Williams as the visiting
Saints (4-3) won their third in a row.
WiUiams rushed for more than 100
yards for the. fifth straight game, getting
156 and scoring three touchdowns . The
Saints also had six sacks in surpassing last
year's victory total.
Atlanta (2-6) nearly tied the game
when Chris Chandler threw a 33-yard
touchdown pass to Ter.1nce Mathis. But
Chandle~'s pass fc:H a 2-polnt cnnvt'r)ion
went through the lunds of Reggie Kelly
at the goal !me.

home praymg to

try co gee back next week." W.uner s.tid.
"I'm not s.tymg: I'm gmng- to h~..~

O\It

for

four we~ks. I'm gomg to b~..· b.Kk .1\ .. oon
.~s I pusstbly t· ..m ..md I hop~..· ·1t \ next
week. If not llr..'Xt \\'eck. ti1l.' \\'1..'1..'k Jti:t•r
tlut."

The Chief!!

.;...:~..m~·J

thctr 'mo..,t pome,

c\·er Ill thet~ ~9 \tW'iU II\ .1r Arrowht·ad
\t,nlium. They kd the R .lnh \(&gt;-1) 20-0
.tf(t" r 011t" qLIJf[l!'f.

Kimble Andc.·rs ~(tm..·d t\\'o tnu~·.h­
and rushed for 1I~~ nn.k

.

Sten· MrNJ Lr w.ls JUSt 1 1-llf-2 1 for
ill! yards ,ll B.Jlttmm&lt;". llut the· R ,twm

&gt;IXth straight. ·
. Randall Godt[cy had two of tour
mterceptmns . returmng DilL' 24 y.ud~ tor
.1

touchdown

as the Tit;~ns took soll' pos-

sc·ssion of the AFC Cemnl lc.1d .

Raiders 31, Seahawks 3
Tyrone Wh~atle)· h,td .1 orc·er-h1gh
t )6 yaids on 15 c.trnes, mcludmg J
cueer-longcst 80-yJrd toL~chdown run
tor the host Raiders (6-1). H.1c h Gannon
h.1d sconng: passes of 16 .HH.i 9 y.uds and
miting Se.tttle (2 -6) allowed Oakhnd to
rush tor ~05 yards after also letting lnd•;m.lpPli~ surp.1ss t h e . ~ 00-y.Jrd m.ul .1
week earlier.

...

Panthers 34, 49ers 16
PanthCrs
coJch
Gcorgl' Selft-rc
improved to -l-0 over hi s former team as
Steve Beuerlcm threw for 309 yards and
.t hree touchdowns. The win gave· host
Carolina (3--1) a season swoop owr the

·~

Titans 14, Ravens 6
(5-3 ) have;:-n't goU~;.'n mto tht.• c:nd zone: 111
four gJm~s. so wht•n Ml·Na(r found
Randy Thonus for J 9-\·.trd TD toss. it
wJs enough for TennL'Iisec (()-1) ro \nn 1l\

'

.

d(l\\ ' llS

.

.

,,

'

.

~~~"'( •.

-19ers.
SACKED- Kansas City linebacker Lew Bush (51) sacks ' St. Louis quarterback Kurt Warner (13) during the first quarter of the
Chiefs· 54·34 victory over the Rams. It was the first loss on the season for St. Louis.(AP)

Redskins 35,Jaguars 16
Hu,trd left with a concussion aud
Albert Connell lud a c.m·a J ay with
K1tn.1. despite h1s · i1tiury, tinished up.
.211
yards ill receptions. and three toUchColts 30, Patriots 23
After visiting New England (2-(•) con- down' as \"1/.l shin~,'ton (t&gt;-2) won its fifth
trolkd the gamt' into the fourth ~u:trtcr. stmght and hn~tJacksom·•lle (2-6) lost its
lnd1anapohs (5-2) rallied for 16 ponm. fj ft h j II ,I TO\\'.
Connell c.JUght scoring pl&gt;S&lt;'S of 11 ..49
Pc.:yton MJnuing threw ;-~ 1-rJrd TD p.1ss
to Edgerrin J.unes following TD passes of and 77 y,trds from Ur.td Johnson, who
78 and 51 vard~ co Marvin Harrisnn . threw for 26'J. Stephen Da\'is ran for 114
y.uds :md two touchdowns.
James finiShed with 124 yards rushing.
Fred Taylor had 124 y.trds rushing for
But :tftcr avoi9ing injuries through s1x
g.Jill~::., the Colts lo~t their top draftC't', Jacksonville. but Mark Brunell was
sacked six times to bring his lcague-lc&gt;dRob Morris, perhaps for the seaso·n.

ing total to 38.

Vikings 31, Bills 27
Anderson kicked a 21-yard field goal
with 1:04 remaining to break George
Bl:mda's scoring mark. The 41-year-old
Anderson scored 11 points Sunday.
Randy Moss made a spectacular 39yard touchdown catch with les; than four
minutes remaining as Mlnnesot~ came
back at home .
Doug Flutie, subbing for the injured
Rob Johnson, was 28-of-43 for 294 yards
and a touchdown for Buffalo (3-4).

The Niners (2-6) got two TD passes
from Jeff Garcia, the league leader in that
department with 21. But G3rcia also had
his string of 150 throws without an
i'nterception snapped by Mike · Min ter,
who returned it 30 yards for a TD.

Eagles 13, Bears 9
Donova n McNabb th rew for 207 yards
and a touchdown ,os Philaddphia (5-3)
matched last ye&gt;r's win ·totaL
M cNown separated h1s left should er
when he was driven hard into the &gt;rtificial turf at Veterans Stadium by Mike
caldwell in . the second quarter.
McNown 'Yas 6-of-9 for 49 y&gt;rds, and
was sacked twice as C h icago fell to 1-7.

----------~----------------------------------

Pittsburgh defense shuts

where we thought we were really home free and the
last 30 laps they blew us away.
"When I looked up and saw he had p&gt;ssed Ricky
back there, I was thinking, 'Uh, oh, what's going to
happen this time?' But we had made the right decisions. It was nice to be able to beat Jeff."
Gordori said hi s crew made major adJustments on
tbe last pit stop "and the car c;une to life.
"But then it fell off after a little while. If I could
have got ahead of DJ. it might have been a differ-

Jarrett

down Couch-less Cleveland

from Page 81

The race was slowed in the late laps by a fire in the
pits that injured a crewman and two track firefighttoo."
ers and brought out the last of nine caution flags.
Following that caution, Gordon drove past Ricky
As difficult, perhaps. as it is for
Rudd to take second place and challenge Jarrett
the Seeders to score?
They have been linutecl to four moments after th~;.· green flag catne out for the start
·
touchdowns in tlue~ g.1mc.;; and, of lap 354 .
It was Gordon who beJt him in two of those secas coach Bill Cowher like' ~o s.ty,
Sunday's effort wa"i no Ptc.tsso. ond-place finishes . The 1997 spring race was parti cThey were hdd to a lont: tdut:hularly frustrating for Jarret t, who dominated only to
down for (he ~t·conJ COiht'Cutln' s~;.·c Gordon race: past in the: final stage s.
game, prompting .l third qu.u:tn"I rhink in some ~f those times past we le11rned
back change "'ill(L' th~ i.ltL' d.ty~ of ~lH ll&lt;...' thtng~ frottl Jdf Gordon and his tean1," Ja rrc u
tf~llfllllg CJ illp.
...ud . ''They Gllt~hr m ;1 le&lt;.;~on tlu t one d ay for sun:,
Out: Kem (;r.th.llll. ,,·hu

ent story, but h e was definitely quicker there at the

end."
Earnhardt, trymg desperately to cat ch Labonte in
their championship dueL fa iled to takl: advantage of
what could have been a huge break.
Labonte lost a lap when he p1tted with a Jeflating
tire just four laps before . 1 c:~ ution tbg brought out
by the fire Ill Matt Kl'n~t:th \ p!t allowed the re~t uf
the leaders to mJke th ~;.·ir fin.ll s top~ under Cllltion.

.

I

.

EASTERN, MEIGS, AND SOUTHERN
DRUG FREE WEEK
'OCTOBER 23-30, 20QQ,

ret u rned l.J\t WL'L'k ti·onl .1 hip
lllJLtTy,

chen \\'.ts y.lllh·d .1 tfa

\tarting .l-uf- 12 for

-H1

y.ud . .

Sund,,y.
In : Kordc\1 Srew.tn. \dm will
\itJrt Sunday 111
B.tlttmorL'
dcspae goi ng 7-of--IJ for 7 4

yards in a mist.th·-frL't' but

UIHL'-

nnrk.thle ouong.

"I'm not trying to Jerk .lnybndy .uound,'' Cowht"r .-. .11d .
''I'm JUSt trymg to do w lut\ 111
tht.' b est intcrc ~t of thi s tc.tm .
\Ve wcrcn ' t re:~l ..,Jurp rhn)\nng
the footb.1ll."
That mu se change :md soon.
sa1d Jcromc Bettis. who rw.hed
for 105 y:trds on 33 carries and
STUFFED- Pittsburgh's Jason Gi ldon (92) sacks Cleveland quarter·
back Doug Pederson during the Steelers' 22·0 win over the Browns.
(AP).

PITTSI:lURGH
(AP)
Appropria~dy enough 111 th eir
final season 111 Three R:ivcrs Stadium, the Pmsburgh Steelcrs are
reawakening memorie S of some
of the greatest stars to play there:
Greene and La mbert. Ham and
Blount.
I
Even if their otTcme is renumscent of son1e far lilffercnt time-. 111
the riverside co ncrete shell : those
of Mark Malon e, Todd Blackledge
and David Wo odley in the notso-good 1980s.
The Steelers' defense shut out
co nsecutive opponent~; for the
first time ;;mcc.: the Stt.·d Curt.un
w:ts dommant 111 1tJ7(J, be.H1ng:
the
,hart-handed Cle,·el.lltd
Urowns ~~"-0 ~und .1y fnr rhL'tr
t{mrth con..,cctttt\·e \'l~o·ton·.

"'Vfk· \\'l're pl.lytng t~1r ,J·,flurnut

f1ght from the

Odhoffcn
~;hut

out

~t.ut." K111H1 \.(JII

~.11J ot .1 dd~·n.-..~..· tlut
CrnCJllll,ltl' ' 15-fl l.1~t

'vc:ck . ''Th1 "

thrcL' intercept icln~ in an offcn~e
tha.t generated o nly 104"'yards and
five first downs .
" l t's awful." wide re ce1ver
Kevin Johnson SJJJ.
Th e consecutive sh utouts are a

first for th~;.· Stcdcn since they
beat Tampa Bay -12-0 and Houston 21-0 to finish the I '&gt;76 regula.r ~cason. Th;~t yeJr, the Steelt!n
had five sh utouts and allowed
only 26 pmnt' - probably the
greatest stretc,h of defense in NFL
h1~W ry dunng a seaso n-ending tllnc-g.lmc winnmg streJk .

the NF I . And \\'e ~l1d
[L',l)tl W1..' l .lll 't ... t.llld."
Al-.n .. 1

tl', llll

r hr0L' Rtn·r~ :
Bruwn~.

.tg.un"t

.l

th.lt on ·t \t.md

Ill'\\'

I hrcc

It

lho\\.11~ 0 1

R.t\'t·r ~

nld

11..''11Lllll\

(')L'\.L' J.JIId ·~ JlL'nOII ,rl holhl' nf
ho1101' I JL·..,pJt~;.' .l [(1-li up\~;.'[
ndon·

pl.tys ..
Unl~ss

,htk. the: l~tn\\'11\ tin1..,hed =i-~-t.

PL'&lt;'pk· , \\'t'.l~

Brown ~

utlltnrm..,, rh,l t
Brown s (~-(J), \\ rth out
quart~rb.1 ck

their fifth
t'r'ion

111 .1

he
IIIJUrt'd

1\

[

{"ourh. l,1..,r
row ,1.., I )n\Jg: 1\·d-

Tilll

threw .tor fd

\'.trd~

.l th.l

"'We CJI\'t beJt the playotl-c.ll lber teams (Bal.tnnorc and Ten 11C.$See) that wt"'vc got ·w pl.ty
this way.'' he s.1id. " W~,.··ve got"to
be able to move the footb,1ll.
We've got to do a lot bette r
offcnsivdy and m&gt;tch the

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

dcfeme."

The Brown s were no m atch

FQr a Steclers

dt·fcn~c

ha~

that

•

yielded 199 yards passing and 17
tlrst downs the bsr rwo wceb.
albeit to admittedl y dre adful
offenses.
Pcdt:rson luJ only on~: pr.lcncc :-~s :-~ .-..cute r :~fter Coud1
broke lw~ thumb, .md hl' looh·d
"The Stel'lcr\ .He the tt'dlll thJt ' ir. rhm\\'mg 1mt:rccp t1om rh,u
111\Tnted lurd-no~t·J footb,tll," tllrn'...'d IntO thn:c of Kn..,
~o,aft-ry Lec Flnwl'r\ 'l.ud. "A n y time
Brnwn\ fi\--L' fi eld go.1k
\\HI ... hut nut tl..',ltll'l two \\'t'1..'k' Ill
Pttt ~lnngh \ only touchLhm rL
,1 row. H ·~ .1 h1g .JtT onlph..,llllll..'rlt 111 on li ~:mo;' 1-y.ml run . ll l.JLk tl

1' the NFI
ltld penpic arc! gmng co 11\0H' t hl· b.dl hut
we know we're go111g to m.tkc

thn:'IC

I LIKE ME DRUG FREE--, Learning and
having fun doing it are Amanda Miller and
Renee Stewart.

no\v lu::. (120 y;ird~ 111 hi" 1.1\t ~i:x
games.

Ll"t \'~o'.lr rh.n ~t.Jrtcd Par...billglr ()Jl ..\ "l'.l\{)l\-l'lldlt1~ 1-7

) () .... () HI thL' \C1..011d

qu.utl'r

bt't HI'&gt;L' uf ro1.lkil' I Ll11k l•otl'M\
::14-y.nd punt rl..'ttlt'l\. !'l'LJlllrcd
()lily .! 1~-y.1 1d dnn·. A l]UL'..,tl o 11.1 bk
n lll gh 111 g-th L'-p ,1 ~"l'r
pcn ,lity \)11 lt11L' b.ll kcr ' J.lnllr
Mt!kr nn .l thnd- do\\'n \r~,.•\\' .11 t
llltolllpkuon

kept

\n~ \n~rl· Liotn g, \\l.Jll't 1.\Hildn·t

\\dllw d11li Lult.

1 2-wheel
4-wheel
1
I Check and adjust camber and toe. Additional parts I
I and labor may be required on some vehicles. I

1 advertised price on the same tire. 1
I We feature aH major brands: Goodyear, Firestone, I
1 General, MiChelin Bndgestone, Conlinental, UNIROYAL, I

L-----------------~
;-----~-----------,
gS preventative
1
1$

-----------------~
r-----------------,
1$1995
1

38

maintenance.
package

1
I

In all tire•: Vlsualv ln1pect •1thaust syatem; Check
I
I pr.esS\Jre
oPeration of horn, eJ&lt;Iertor tamp1, turn egnlte , •nd hazard w11nlng

_____ _

Jllghts: cneck belts and hO!Iel : Check wlnd1hhtld wiPtr QPtratlon;
Inspect hall sr'lalt (II eq41pped) Cheek and lubricate 11oerlng,

I..,.accldental llnka~ and parta, where applicable, Dleaelvehlelet may
I be eKira .

L.

BF Goodrich. Mounting and balancing may be extra.

Motorcraft
Fast Lube

I
1
I • Service includes up to 5 quarts ofl
I Motorcraft oil and new Motorcraft oil filter ·I

I Perform Multi·Polnt Vehitle inspection •I
I Check and fill necessary fruids • At! In 291
1minutes or less • Diesel vehicles may bel
, extra.

~-----------------~

~

DON'T BE A NUT-- This .door prepared by the
Eastern second grade class of Martie Baum was a
winner in the door decorating contest. "You're nuts
if you take drugs• was the theme.

.. , \\,1~ Ullllfi.Ht.lhk \\ lth \\ ILlt
gt'(

n11e (\t.ldlll tll .l. H

:'

r-----------------,
r-----------------,
t•1res
wheel alignment 1 I . .
.,I
1
!$2495 $4995 ! l We will meet or beat any competitor's I

Serv~ tncl udes up lo 6 quarts ol Motorcran an new Mot01cratt 011 1
I ·!titer
• Aotale and Inspect 4 tires • Perlorm m ulti·polnt lnapediOn:
J tnspec1 brake syl1em; Check and !til all fluide ; Check 1nd 1djusl alr I

1

.

go mg.

f 111, \\,\\ .1 drtfi l t1\t \.l'lllll' {()
p\.1,. 111:· l o.ll h Chrt.., P.llmt·r " But
ti ll'\. h,l\'C thL' Ill.'\\'

r-.f: .•::-:~·.:~·.··.?;;";.·.·:=:~:~~,.~:·;;.~r.;.... ~ ...._.

the dir\·~o·

rh l'r~·

( th111k Wht'J1

"'

..

1

1
1

.Wd.

.lllyihtllg

l!;Olllg."

~uy 111 the

BE DRUG
of 2000
a
DiffErence" was the theme of the display of
Teen Institute at the Meigs County Fair.

l'l'l\t'I..,PII

....1rd " I don't knn\\ t! tlut.

tlw new
'' h.1r ··

TOO COOL TO DO DRUGS- These Eastern
students, Hailey Cline, Kass Lodwick, Chrissy
Gregory. Stacy Smith, and Emily Brock w~re
·really cool in their brightest shirts on ·outshme
drug day."

huddle

"·I'
rll

QualityOzre
.,.._

THE DAILY SENTINEL
MONDAY; OCTOBER 23, 2000

•'

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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="25552">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
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      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="25551">
              <text>October 23, 2000</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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      <name>eakins</name>
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    <tag tagId="313">
      <name>hill</name>
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    <tag tagId="1247">
      <name>lyons</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="258">
      <name>shaffer</name>
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    <tag tagId="3001">
      <name>swan</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="241">
      <name>white</name>
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</item>
