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Society news and notes, AS
Eastern wins.sectional volleyball title, B1

WtdftlldiiJ
HIJh_: lOI; Low: 501

Details, A3

Tuesday
Odober 24. 2000

·•
Mel1s County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51. Number 106

Council OKs
$560,000
water well
project

Commissioners
u~e consideration
of cable bridge

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NE:NS STAFF

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFf

MIDDLEPORT Plans
to proceed with a construction
and engineering loan of up to
$560,000 for a new water well
field were approved by Middleport Village Council during
Monday's regular meeting.
Becky Hayes and Jay Shutt
of Floyd Browne Associates,
the village's consulting and
engineering firm, met with
council to discuss plans to
improve the system. ~nd to
outline the financial package
required to complete the project.
The village has begun to

Page Eight- The Dally Sentinel, Drug Free Edition, October 23, 2000

Get To
Your
Child
Be ore
The
Pressure
Does
Peer pressure. We've
all experienced it.
Remember how hard
. was to say " no ,
1t
when you were a kid,
even if it meant doing
something you knew
was wrong?
Young people today
admit that pressure to
use drugs is intense.
As a parent, it's your
job to give your child
the facts about the ·
dangers of drug
abuse.
Talk to your kids. Get
to them before the
pressure does.

neenng.
That loan would not be
payable for five years, and
could ultimately be "rolled
over" into any loan obtain ed
for construction of the new
well field.
"The idea is that you will
never make . an interest payment or a principal payment
on this particular loan," Shutt
said, '~because in five years, it
should be added directly to the
construction loan."
The project is estimated to
cost $2 million to complete.
Sh utt said that the Board of
Public Affairs , which oversees
public works in the village, has
begun to negotiate for land for
the new well field.
Council authorized Mayor
Sandy lannarelli to enter into
an engineering contract with
FBA and to execute necessary
loan documents to get th e project underway.
.
Construction on the new
water project is · expected to
begin mmetime in 2002, Shutt
said.
Shutt also reported that the
village's final report to the
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency on its sewer sys-

. tem characterization has been
completed and will be sent to
the EPA right away.
Th at docunknt outlines

Please see Project, Page Al .

The

D~ily

Sentinel

Meigs Chamber discusses-growth at dinner
BY TONY M. lEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

MIDDLEPORT - Opportunities for growth and the power
of leadership were discussed
when the Meigs County Cham. ber of Commerce hdd its anm~al

ty and prescription drugs while
the governors talked with resi'dents imide the faci li ty.
On Monday, Democrats held

•

"'I11c dw.a.W_er 's l•arJ
ll'o rk t llld d1•temritratiorr
, ,,, f' l'lldua.l results tlrat
all o( At figs Corrrll)'
.•lrlllr[J bt• f'YOild of"

dinner and business meeting
Monday at the Middleport
Church of Christ Family Life
Center.
The theme of the dinner, "Ten

Bruce Reed
of the Meig&gt;o County Chamber of
Cmnmrrcc. addressed those in
attendan ce about the expecta-

Great Years of l)rogress," high -

tions of the organiz:ttion during

lighted the curre n t and past
accomplishments of the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce
over the last decade.
Bru ce Reed, the first president

its early years of formation, and
how the chamber has gruwn
throughout the years.
"It is quite amazi ng to see how
much this organization has grown

}in~

its c~n.£_epti.9.P· Qver ten yearS

ago," said Reed. "When \ve first
began, a handful of individual s
realized th&lt;H a unified county
voice was despemdy needed to
att.tin economic prosperity within dw county."
'"Tlw chamber's hard work and
Jc..•tcrlllitJation has produ ced
rc•sults that all of Meib'&gt; County
sho uld be proud of." he added.
Current Chamber President
S.teve Story indi ca ted that the
sucn.·ss of the chambn was due in

p:1rr to "mcrcdible volunrcc..·rism"
an,d '' unhindcn~·d pc.'rsr.-:verance"

Please see Chamber, Page Al

Tourism board to host Halloween cruise at Amphitheater
cruise se t to take pb cc 7 tO ·
10:30 p.m. aboard the Rub,le&lt;'
POMEROY - One doesn't "Pa rty Uarge Stt·rnwhcekr" and
have to visit a haunted house or will include rcfrcshnJents, a ca.;; h
local cemetery to find an a$SOrt- bar, and "oldies'' entcruinnH:nr
ment of witches, ghosts, ghouls hy WYVK '12.
and goblins - they just have to
Ac co rding to Karin Johnson,
show up at the Pomeroy River- Meib" County Tourism IJo ard
side Amphith ea ter this Saturday.
director, this year'" cvc m \Vill be
"The Cruise To Nowhere," bigger than last y·ear"s and should
' which is being sponsored by the · be jmt as successful.
Meigs County Tourism Board, is
''La~t year's crui'\c W::t'l \'l'ry
a Hallowe e n masquerade dan ce well received and particip.1tion
BY ToNY M. LEACH

. SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

,.

for lon g- term care, Snc1al Securi-

~·

GUEST SPEAKER - Football great Archie Griffin spoke to a large audience Monday at the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce annual meeting and dinner held at the Middleport Church of Christ Family Life Center.· Griffin spoke about the importance of priorities and how not to quit when faced with adversity. (Tony
M. Leach photo)
'

GOP govemors ~ur Ohio
WESTERVILLE (AP) - Supporters of Democratic Vice President AI Gprc are shadowing the
four Republican chief executives
who are touring Ohio on behalf
of fellow Gov. George W Bush of
Texas.
t;ovs. Jim
G eringe.r
of
Wyon\ing, Jim Gilmore of Virginia, George Ryan vflllinois and
Don Sundquist ofTennessee wok
th eir campaign fron1 a suburban
Cincinnati private school to a
carL' center for the elderly in suburban Columbus on Tuesday.
Some se niors pl&lt;Jnned to he
out'iide the care center passing
out information on Gore's plan ·

Family Services.
The resolutions modified the
POMEROY
Meigs unit cost in a contract between
Co'untr
Commissioners the JFS and the Gallia-Meigs
approved a reso lution recom- Community Action Agen cy
mending the cable-stay design from 50 cents per mile to 75
for the new l&gt;omeroy-Mason cents for their Title XX transBridge during their regular portation
co ntract;
added
meeting Monday.
$100,000 in wage subsidies in
The Ohio Department of the JFS contract with the cou nTransportation has unveiled ty
economiC
development
three potential designs for the office, for a total of $36 I ,332;
new bridge, and has asked for · and added $676 in training fund s
public input into which design into the JFS ~ontract for subis preferred by the public.
stanct abuse services with
ln addition to the cable-stay ACCESS to Human Resource
design, trus.;; and arch alternatives Development.
have also been offered. Artists'
The Meigs County Board of
renderings
of
Elections conthe three bridge 4 rwl dc~ ig11 derision tacted the comdesigns
were
missioners about
fi·t~m ODOJ iH
recently
pubthe disposition of
Columlms i.s &lt;'X/H'flt' &lt;l
lished in The
an old Wheeldex
Daily Sentinel.
tiS l'dl'/j' &lt;I~ ·J · J'id,l)'.
rotary tile used
ODOT has
for voter registranoted repeatedly
tion information
that the ultimate decision on a unril recently.
bridge design will be the
T~e machine, now considered
agency's, but ODOT DistriCt 10 obsolete, will not be used m the
D eputy Director George Collins board's new offices in the counhas urged public particip'ation in ty annex, and the board will disthe sdection process.
pose of it.
Commissioner M ick I );lVenThe commissioners agreed to
port, who introduced the reso- contact the Litter Control and
lution, attended an aesthetics . Recycling liffice abo ut the dismeeting last week where the posal of the machine.
bridge designs and other aesThe bo,ard approved transfer;
thetic considerations connected of fund' 'and other appropriato the project wet:e disc.ussed.
tiO'n5 adjustm.e nu as ~ubmitted
The commissioners will take by the ·county court, county
public input on the design pro- treasurer and board of elections.
posals through Thu10day, and
The commissione" also:
Davenport urged those with a
• Approved the co unty's
prefe·rence to make a recom- membership in the Appala chian
mendation in writing.
Task Force. a multi -ni unty
Pomeroy and Middleport vil- group which works with the
la ge offices will also acce pt Governor's Office of Appalachia
input. Davenport said. Respons- and Appalachian Ohio legislaes will be proVICied to 0 IJOT.
tors, at a cost of $1 00;
A final design decision from
• Approved payment of bills
ODOI in Columbu s IS expect- in the amount of $39H,737.90,
ed as early as Friday.
with 208 entries.
In other business, tlw co mPresent, in addition to Davmissioners approved three re~m­ enport, wert&gt; Commissioner
lutions on behalf of the Meigs Janet Howard and Clerk Gloria
County Department ofJobs and Klees.

Ji

consider a new ·water source
since it was ~evealed that v.&lt;ater
fium its "Well Four" was contaminated - at relatively low
levels - of two volatile organic compounds, dichlorethylene
and trichlorethylene.
The Ohio Water Development Authority is the source
for a planning loan of up to
S6 I 6,000 which has been
approved for the project.
According to Shutt, the loan
cou ld cover $217,000 in estimated cost for test drilling, and
$343,000 fo~ design and engi-

so cents

news conferences in Cincinnati
and Columbus to dispute Bush's
claims of adnllnistrattve success in
Texas.
' "Gov. Bush . ca lls himself a
reformer with results, yet his
record in TeXas demonstrates a
record of repeat ed fai lures," .Jim
Berman, a former Texan, saiJ in
Col Ltmbus.
Th e GOP gover nor,;; ' m essage
at the Marva Collins Preparatory
School in Silverton was that Bush
has direct experience overseeing
edu cational refo rm .
They said Bush would share
dcci~ion -making
power ~· with
states, rather than Ci..' n tr:-~ li zc
authority in Washington.
" We wan[ a partllL'r 111 the
White House, not a dictator,"

Please see GOP. Page Al\

I

was incrL•dihlc," o;aid Johnson .
""EVt·n though dfl·ssing up was
oprional. 1)() percent of rhmc
who had attcrH.kd were in full
COStllllll'."

"The "tt'rnwhecler, which
so m e may recogn tzc dS one. of
thl' boats tlltlt help., trarl'IJ--mrt
touri't' to .md fi·om Blc nnl'rhassctt Island in Parkersburg, W Va ..
ha'-. :1 p:1rry b;1rge att;'lc hed ro it'l
hull .111cl cui hold up tu .1110
pcopk" ,Iclcled .Johmon.

"The boat also has two open best costumes of the- evening.
air decks. which should add to with the first plan· winner
dll' excitement of the nighttime reaiving $250 c 1&lt;h : second
activiticli,'' ~he said.
place $151) cash: ,md third place
In conjunction with the ·a $511 gi ti certifi cate.
cruise, WYVK 92 will have a
Boarding pa'le&lt; are $15 per
co ntes t this week where a H al- penon .md a11.' .lvai! Jble at the
loween· questton will be asked Meigs County Chamber of
on the air and one lucky listen - Commerce. on West MJin
cr. wllo answ~;: rs the que.stwn Street, Pom eroy.
co rre ctly, will win a free ticket
There an: a limited number
to .lttcnd the e-vent.
Prizes )VIII be awarded for th_,.
Ple.a se see Cruise. Page Al

Census says mo·re moms returning
Sentinel to labor force with infant at home
Today's

l Sections- 11 Pages
Cal~ndar

Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
S11orts

AS

B2-4
BS

A4
A3

Bl,6

Weath~r

A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 3-2-0; Pick 4: li- 1-5- 1
Buckeye 5: 3-i&gt;-7-25-34

W.VA.
Daily 3: H-9-.l Dally 4: ll-5 -4-2

WASI IIN&lt;:lON (AI') Kirsten R m&lt; gave
birth to her ~eroml child \L'VI.'Il \\'l'l'h &lt;l go anl.l.l w.1~
h,tck .H \Vork .1... ~oon ,\, 'lht' g:or hnme fi"'m the hospit.ll.
ll 1 hl't\\'1.'1.'11 ch .lll!!:lllJ!; Ji,lpLT\ .111d baby t.1lk, Ro\s
run.., .1 bu . . llH.'"&lt;; out of her W.un.·n , Mich., home that
hdp' worlo.ing moth\..'l"i lih· hn~elf fi nd .lltt.Tnative
arrdJ Jgt:JJH:JJts. to· h.1L1nre JOb rc~tponsibilitics with
flmlly.
A Cen'u' Bure.m report m1tTuesday showc; more
n1oLhcr\ like R.n.,., .ll'l' rcturmng tn thl' Jal1or force

\\'Jthm ~I year of gi,·ing birth . And when lhcy do go
b.Kk to work, it's more· likely 011 ,\ tiiii-!I;mL' rather
than part time h:t"ii'l.
Thi' dnt'&gt;n 'r lllL':tn , though, ri1Jt .tll thC'\l' '"'omen
,lrl' '~PL'nding ·HI- hour \Yt'1.:b in .lll otlic~.· cubidc
\\ hik Lhen children . . a Ill dclY l.lrl.'. In thi.;, ught labor
market, mote t~mployer" .trL' oHI:rmg tle~iblc work.
s c h~lhil~, 1.md bl·ndlr"' to tH'\V mom~. ;md other"! rtre

·'

1.11','1'''

i1/.w•,~;

/,,·, &lt;~ld.J•'"· ./i, I It

•n H.rf ''' .&lt;t,nl l~t•r /,,,,,,,.._,_,,
lf,,flll II'- ,,, I·, 11 ( 'l&lt;'•lllilll~ ,,,, '"
rp,·; tt'C lllt'!S

working fi·om home.
.. Working mothcrc.; c:ltr romtn.md it, bccaust!
there \ &gt;uch a shor tage of good qualified candidate s
that employers need to starr thinking about what
(candidates) arc lookin g for," said Ross.
Despite likin g hor old JOb, she left in May to start
ht•r h11 smes~. Womens-Work, LLC , rl'arhing out to
otht..T \VOtnCn.

million women who h~\'t.' birrh tium
July 1'197 through Jun e 1998, about SC) percent
rctu~ncd to the work force wtthin .1 yt·Jr, Censu~
estimates show. Th:n compare~ with 3 1 pcrrellt 111
I 976, the year the Ce nsus Bureau bc~\11 trac king
tilL'. dat.t. and 5 I percent in I 987.

t)f th1.'

"

3.(l

�Tuesday, ,October 24,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 2 • The O.lly Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
TOLEDO (AP) - Repubhcan pll5idential nominee George W.
Bush plaru to make a return visit to the Toledo area Th unday, his
fint trip to Ohio since Oct. 4 .
.
A campaign spokesman said on Monday that details of the visit
had not been finalized, but indicated that an evening rally was being
planned.
Patrick Kriner, chairman of the Lucas County Republican Party,
said the visn means Bush is airmng to build support outside his
political base. Lucas County. and Toledo in particular, is heavily
Democratic.
Bush, the Texas governor, will arrive in Toledo after a day of campaigning m Pennsylvania. Bush also visited suburban Toledo in late
August.

Retired Amish editor dies
SUGARCREEK (AP) - George R. Smith, who retired earlier
thiS year afier 7 4 yean as national editor of the weekly Amish commuruty newspaper the Budget, died Sunday. He was 93.
He worked for 80 yean for the Budget, which is mailed weekly
to 10,000 subscrtbers m Oh1o and to 10,000 out-of-state subscribers from the paper's headquarten in the heart of northeast
Ohio's Anush country.
Smith w1ll be burted Wednesday following a service at the
Shanesville Luther.n Church in Sugarcreek, located about 75 llllles
south of Cleveland.
"George was a walking encyclopedia of knowledge about the
Amish;' said Fanme Erb-Miller, who took over the au ties of national eduor when Smith retired. "Whenever we had a queStion, we
would JUSt call George, and he always had the answer. It's gomg to
be sad not havmg h1m there anymore."
Sm1th started in the print room of his father's newspaper at the
age of 13. In 1936, when his father was named postmaster of Sugarcreek, Smith took charge of the paper.
He rehed on a a network of 400 volunteer "scribes" to report the
everyday news of AmiSh fanulies and communities around the
world.
"Each year we send them a stack of stamped envelopes and a pad
of wrmng paper," Erb-Miller sa1d.
, ,
"They write the reports of what is happemng in their conmlumty and send 11 to us. We have a staff of 11 people who rake rhe
reports every week and type them into the paper. We don't edit for
conrent,jusr length. So what the people wnte IS what we print."
Sn11rh sa1d if the Budget didn't have 500 names on its front page,
he was disappointed. When one Amish family vmts another, readers
are told not only what they had for dinner, but what was diScussed
at the table.
Snmh renred fiom the busmess Side of the family-owned newspaper m 1968 and sold the paper to two employees in 197 4.

Students nailed for sign theft
NORTH BALTIMORE (AP) - A h1gh school teacher who
wanted hiS class to get a sense of grassroots polincs msread found
out his students were stealing political yard signs.
Ttmothy Jackson, a government teacher and assiStant prmc1pal at
North Baltimore High School, located about 35 miles south of
Toledo, suspects about 100 of the 125 or so political signs that were
brought to class were stolen by about 10 students.
Jackson offered his students extra credit for visiting political campaign offices and told them to get buttons or signs to show they had
made the VISil'i.
He made it clear the students were nor ro remove signs from
yards.
"I made 11 a pmnt, and now I'm so glad I d1d," Jackson satd.
He knew there was a problem when he started getting calls about
mJSsmg yard Signs. Some students were confronted by homeowners.
Jackson returned the signs and apologized to anyone who called
or reported sign thefts.
North Baltimore Police Chief Gerald Perry said he wasn't interested m chargmg anyone. He asked that the signs be returned.
None of the students were disCJphned m school.
"I think they've learned a lesson they'll never forget and, if anything, they've become more involved in the election process than
they ever would have," Jackson said.

Police wound woman driver
FAIRBORN (AP) -A woman who was dnving erratically and
whtl refused to stop for a police officer was wounded by the office r, pohce said.
\
Rhonda Lucas, 33, of Fairborn, was released fiom M1ami Valley
Hospttal on Monday after being treated for mulnple gunshot
wounds, hospital spokeswoman Nancy Th1ckel sa1d
Pohce Sgt. Terry Barlow said officers mvestigating reports of reckless dnvmg attempted ro stop Lucas' car Sunday evening but rhe
vehicle circled the block at least four nmes as police blocked the
roads \Vlth their crmsers.
Sgt. Rodney Myers, one of two officers at the scene, fired ,several
shots mto the veh1cle when 11 appeared the dnver mtght be atmmg
for hts cru iser, Barlow sa1d
The llnver contmued Circlmg the block, and Myers fired a second
round of shots mto the vehicle,.Barlow said. The car then colhded
wlth a p~ekup truck.
No charges have been filed, Barlow sa1d.
Myers, 34, was placed on pa1d admimstrative leave Monday pendmg an internal investigation.
"Oif the top, tr appears (Myers) perceived the dnver as a threat, as
dtd several other people," Barlow S31d.
"In a sttuanon hke thiS, you have to look mro what the officer
perceives as a threat at the time, and what a reasonable person would
have done."

Judge delays statute challenge
C INCINNATI (AP) -A court challenge of Ohio's concealed
weapons· law has been postponed until December
Hanulton County Common Pleas Judge Robert Ruehlman
delayed a tnal, wh~eh was scheduled to begin Monday, because
attorneys for the City of Cmcmnao are askmg the Oh1o Supreme
Court to intervene
City lawyers want the Supreme Court to allow them to bnng m
addJttona llawyers from out of stare. Ruehlman rejected the request,
· :bur the city is appeahng hJS decision. Ruehlman set a new trial date
of Dec. 4.
Ruehlman previously refused to dJSnuss the suit, wl&gt;1ch clauns
Ohio's concealed weapons law is unconstitutional because 11 doe~
not allow ord1nary C1ttzem; to carry guns for protecnon. Four
Cmcmnauans arc challenging the law.
The diSpute began m July, when the four plamtiffs sued every
pollee agency 1n Han11lton County They cla1med tpey need to
carry gum for protection 'and asked the JUdge to bar police from
Jrrcstmg them
Ruehlman temporanly blocked Ciucmnau pohce and Ham1lrtln
County shenff's officers from enforcmg the law. A s'atc appeals
court latet hfred the restncuon on enforcement

plan a protest of the government's .failure to
shut down the incinerator.
They were particularly critical of Gore,
even though he agreed with the ombudsman
report, including the recommendaoon for a
six-month shutdown.
"I strongly urge the EPA to take swift
action to fulfill the olnbudsman's recommendations," said a written statement from Gore.
"It's a very carefully cr.fted response to
look good without actually doing good," said
Rick Hind of Greenpeace.
The incinerator foes have tried several times
to turn the WTI facility into a pres1dential
cantpaign issue.
They held UJl sigt15 at some of Gore's campaign appearances, and got close enough to
shout slogans during at least one of those. But
111 general they were kept on the .fringes at the
vice president's appearances 111 Ohio.

William Binning, chairman ofYoungstown
State Uruvenity's pohtical sc1ence department, said Gore's record on the incinerator
doesn't seem to have turned hJS Democratic
base against him.
"There are some bad feelings toward Gore
because of it by the environmental groups in
the state, but by and large, I think it's just kind
of setded into the background," Bmning said.
Soon after his election in 1992, Gore Issued
a p~ss release promising to stop the incinerator because it sits on the riverbank and near an
elementary school.
La!er, the adnunismoon said Its hands were
tied by a deCision made in the waning days of
the Bush adllllmstration.
Swearingen said she thinks environmentally
minded voters m other states would reward
Gore if he made a bold demand for action ar
WTI.

LOCA.L BRIEFS

5

New EPA tests don't pacify environmentalists
WASHINGTON (AP) - Environmental
activists were not pacified on Monday by the
EPA's pledge to send air quahty experts to
East Liverpool, .Ohio, for new tests at a hazardous waste Incinerator.
Several environmental groups complained
that the Von Roll Waste Technologies Industries incmerator should have been shut down,
as the EPA's ombudsman recommended.
"It seems like they made a snap decision,"
said Jennifer O'Donnell of Ohio Ciozen
Action.
Terri Swearingen of Chester, W.Va., who
lives across the Ohio River fiom the plant,
descnbed henelf as amazed and baflled.
"We've been down this road before," she
said. "Eight yean ago, AI Gore pledged to stop
this incinerator. Where's the actmn?"
O'Donnell and Swearingen sa1d they were
headmg to Washington to help Greenpeace

•

Robert Roy Hannon
CATLETTSBURG, Ky. - Robert Roy Harmon, 67, Catlettsburg~
d1ed Saturday, Ocr 14,2000 in King's Daughters Medical Cenrer,Ashland , Ky.
He was the son of the late Gerald K and Rebecca Harmon and was
a retiree of the U.S. Anny.
He \s survJVed by hJS wtfe, Pat Harmon; two sons and a daughter- mlaw, R ay Dean and Treasa Harmon of Catlettsburg, and Robert Allen
Hannon of Columbus, two daughten and sons-m-law, Angela and
John Spires of Rutland, and Amta and Moe HaJivand1 of Marysville;
five brothers, Clyde B., Raymond B. and ElliS D. Hannon, all of
Catle ttsburg, French B Harmon of Louisville, Ky., and Walter H . HarllJOn of Pomt Pleasant, WVa., three sisters, Virginia Lyons of Daytona
Ilcach, Fla , Amy Thompson of Hunrmgton ,WV. Va., and Norma Jean
WhtrL' of Ocala, F-la.; and mne grandchildren and three great-grandeh1ldren.
Sen•1ces were held Wednesday, Ocr 18 , 2000 at Ki glorc &amp; Colher
Funcr J! H ome 111 Catlettsburg, Ky.
A full mdn:uy bunal followed the serviC eS 111 Harmou Ce metery 111
Kentttcky.

Inspectors find school
Voters in Ohio's swing
counties see similarities buses not road worthy
between Bush, Gore ·
OAK HARBOR(AP)
Standing next to a pair of I 00pound pumpkins, retired farmer
Carl Hellllninger chuckled as he
sized up AI Gore and George W
Bush.
·
"They just say the same stuff
over and over;· the undecided
voter said. "As far as I'm concerned what they say now doesn't mean too much. It's what they
do after the elecoon."
Henuninger said he bases hiS
opmions of the preSidential candidates partly on the11 predecesro~.

r

"It's a toss-up. Clinton seems
to be domg a fair JOb," Hemllllnger s:ud. "And Bush, well, hJS
dad did a good job."
Being a .swing voter rather than
loyal to one party IS not unusual
in this part of northern Ohio.
Ottawa County JS among seven
out of 88 counties in Ohio that
voted for the Winner m every
presidential election since 1964.
The others .are Hockmg,
Lawrence, Metgs, Perry, Scioto
and Vmton counties.
All are predominandy rural and
share core conservative values.
None . are particularly wealthy,
and many of their residents rely
on government programs for
health care and JObs. All rely on

factones and farms to drive their
econonues.
' John Moore, who farms about
500 :lfreS m Ottawa County, says
he's disappomted that both candidates have wd litde about what's
important to hlDl - agriculture.
He says Gore and Bush are forgetting that agriculture could
anS\ver rhe nan on's fuel questions.
Talk of drilling for more oil m
Alaska, as Bush proposes, JSn 't
necessary, Moore says.
"Why are they even going up
there when you can make diesel
fuel out of soybeans and ethanol
out of corn&gt;" Moore asked.
"We've got fuel right 111 our
backyard. Why aren't we using
our local products?"
Moore, 49, said Bush will get
his vote.
"Gore scares n1e," he said.
"He's roo much of an envuonmentalist."
Bush seems more honest,
Moore added.
"I guess I like a man who tells
you everything nght up from:· he
said.
A single JSsue also nught make
the difference for HeDllninger.
"I'm a hunter. I believe in
owning a gun and Gore doesn 'r,"
he said. "Where would this country be without guns?"

TOLEDO (AP) -Bad brakes
and worn tires are JUSt a few of
the problems that school bus
mspectors find each year, The
Blade reported.
,
About one of every I 0 school
buses m northwest Ohio fa1led
safety 1nspecnons l~st year and
either had to be repaired or taken
off the road, accordmg to mspection reports
Statewide, the fa1lure rate was
10 percent for the 21,463 buses
mspecred. The buses transported
I .3 million students.
Still, inspectors say school buses
are generally 111 good shape.
"For the most part, the buses
are weU kept," Jerry Hernandez,
an inspector with the State Highway Patrol, told The Blade for a
story Sunday.
The patrol inspects all school
buses at least twice each year before school starts and during
rhe school year.
State inspectors check school
buses for more than 100 Items,
looking at brakes, steering, seats,
exhaust systems, hghrs, flash~rs.
warmng buzzers, and emergency
exits.
"We are going to find problenls, and we do," Hernandez sa1d.
"We are rhe checks and balances.
We have problems, but they are
taken care of.''
More than 20 school systems m
northwest Ohio w1th 10 buses or

Kathleen VanMeter
CLIFTON. WV.1 - Kathken F. VanMeter, St. Chfton, d1ed Fnd.tv,
Oct 20, 2fl0il .It Juh.t\ Pcr&gt;onal C.11c Home 111 Chfton
She \\'1~ .1 nurs~...·'s attk .1t Veter:J.n:-. Memon.1l Ho~p HJ I 111 Pomcrov
Slw was the d.Jt'!;htcr of the l,ltc H .lfry DamL'l .111d M.wd B Stew.lrt
VanMt'tL'r
Sur;·,vmg Jre .1 d.111ghrer. Kathy D.tlron of Rml.tnd . ,, so n . Robert W
VJnMeter Jr nfPmm Pleas;mr,WVa :md e1ght gt.m dcluldrt.:' ll and four
g rc .1t -g r.111dch 1ld re tl.
In addition to hl'r paH.'nt~. slu: w.l!) prcu·dcd 111 d~:1th by her sisters,
luc y Johmon and Joseph me Knopp. and three brothers. l eo nard Van'
Meter, IZalph Van Mater and R.1ymond St&lt;'Wart
SerVICe&lt; were held on Monday, Oct
21l01l Ill Fogclsong Funeral
H o me m Maso n, W.Va ., w1th D en ms Falb, Tttll&lt; Lehman and Snnon
Dean oflictanng. Bunal was 111 Grah::~m CL'mctery in New Haven.
WVa

more had 25 percent or more of
the~r buses fail 111itial inspecnons,
according to the newspaper. lr
revtewed more than 3,300
1nspection reports m 18 counties.
Problems mcluded bad brakes,
holes 111 the floor, worn nres,
leakmg sreenng systems and
burned-our bulbs ·on emergency
hghts.
Buses flagged for repam must
be rechecked by inspectors.
Most repairs were made wtrhm
a day or two of the mspectton,
and the maJonty of buses were
qmckly returned to service.
"Just because we certifY the
bus doesn't mean 11 's a done deal,"
said Trooper J J. Reyes, who
mspects buses.
"The· dnvers need to do da1ly
pre-trip mspecrions aJ]d re11 rhw
mechamcs to stay on top of
thmgs."
School bus transportation 1s
one of the safest forms of transportation m the country, according to rhe National H&lt;ghway
Traffic Safety Administration.
On average, 11 passengers
younger than the age of 19 d1e m
school-bus related crashes eou::h
year.
In northwest Ol11o, no bus passengers d1ed m 210 acCJdenrs m
1999, according to the Oh1o
Department of Pubhc Safety.
S1xty-two bus passengers were
injured.

n.

Helen White
POMEROY - Helen Wh1te, 86 , Woodsfield , formerly of the
Bashan commumry m Me1gs County, d1ed l&gt;unday, Oct 22, 2000 Ill
Woodsfield Nursmg and Rehab Center 111 Woodsfield.
Born Dec 10, 1913111 Pursley, WVa ., daughter ofihe late Ira and
Ora Eggu1s Kyle, she was a homemaker.
Mrs Wh1re IS surv1ved by a son and daughter-m - law, Jerry and Sue
White of Belpre; a son, Norman •W hite of Woodsfield; a daughter,
Mona Marcmko ofWoodsfield; and 10 grandcluldren, 18 great-grandchildren, three great-great-grandchildren; and several meces and
nephews
She was also preceded m death by her husband , Wilham Whtte, and
two SISters and two brothers
Serv1ces w1ll be Wednesday at 11 a m. m White-Moqum Funer.tl
Home in Coolville. Burial w1ll be 10 the White Cemetery at Bashan.
Fnends may call at rhe funeral home from 6-8 tomght.

hiS spokeswoman, Lmda Shafran, m Ch~eago
"What's on the ballot IS the future of our
country, not my silly show."
The' Monday announcement drew much
criticiSm from the Republican 111cumbent,
Rep. Bob Ney, of St. Clamville, who Guthne
JS rrymg to unseat 111 rhe 18th CongressiOnal
District.
"While I'm working hard ... for workmg
fa011hes, Marc Gurhne IS rurnmg this CongresSional race 111to a Circus sideshow by
bnngmg Jerry Sprmger mro the area," Ney
sa1d.
Ney said he does not beheve Spnnger represents the values of people m the dmnct and

Paralyzed son laments
father's possible parole
BARBERTON (AP) -Andy
Saviers was about 8 months old
and m hiS mother's arms when he
was shot and paralyzed by his
father.
HIS mother died m the shoormg
in October 1978. Now 22, Saviers
faces the possibility that his father
will be paroled from pnson.
Sav1ers doesn't hesitate to tell
anyone why he IS 111 a wheelchair.
"Because my real father k.iUed my
mom and I was in her arms and he
shot. me, too"

He doesn't know, or want ro
know, his father, Greg SaV!ers, who
confessed 10 walting in an o!d
house across from hiS parents'
home m Ravenna and shooting his
wtfe and child With a high-powered nfle.
Hope Savters had taken Andy
and !liS 3-year-old brother, Josh, to
see their grandparents that day. She
and Greg Sav1ers hod separated m
Apnl 1978, when Andy Sav1ers
was about 2 D]Onths old
Greg Saviers was given consecuove sen tences of seven to 25 years

for shooong hJS son and IS years to
life 111 prison for hiS w1fe's death
Through good behavior, he
moved from a max1mum secun ty
prison in LucasVIlle to a mirumum
secunty one 111 Chilhcothe. He
could learn as soon as Tuesday tfhe
will be released any time soon.
A conmlitree meeting in closed
sesSion wtU recommend e1ther that
he be kept m pmon or released to
a halfway house on i furlough. If
the recommendaoon is for a furlough, the parole board wtll vote
on 1t mthin a week.

Juvenile held
ROCK SPRINGS - A gtrl IS
bcmg he ld 111 conJunctton With a
Monday morning assault at Me1gs
1-hgh Sehoul
Meigs County Prosecutor John
Lentes sa1d the juvemle was
brought to rhe Me1gs County
Shenff's Office after allegedly
assaulting another g1rl whlle students were outs1de of the school
due to a bomb threat at the
school.
The VICtim was taken by medical helicopter to Grant Medical
Center m Columbus for treatment of head Injuries. A felomous
assault charge has been filed,

Chamber

Dinner planned

Deadline set

CHESTER - A baked steak
dmner w1ll be served at· the
POMEROY - The Sentinel's 13J&gt;han fire house on County
deadline for rece1vmg letters to Road, 28, Sunday, from 11 a.m. to
the ed1tor concerning the Nov. 7. 1.30 p.m. The dmner is sponsored
elewon IS 5 p.m. Wednesday ThiS by rhe Bashan Lad1es Aux1hary
deadhne will allow candidates
ttme to answer any Issues raised
by readers pnor ro rhe elewon,
said R . Shawn LewiS, Sentinel
POMEROY - A pubhc testmanagmg ed1ror.
mg of eqUJpmcnt at the: Me1gs
County Board of Elections w11l
take pla ce at 3 p 111 Wednesday.
The tcsttng ts done m preparanon
SYRACUSE Wildwood for Election Day.
Garden Club will mec·t Wednesday, 1 p 111 :lt the home of s~n
Roush, Church Street, Syracmc.

Public testing

Club to meet

be smging at the Laurel Chff Free
Methodist Church ar I p.m. Sunday

Harvest Day
POMEROY H arvest Day
celebration will take place "r the
Laurel ChiT Free MethodiSt
Church on County RoJd 22
Mormng worsh1p w1ll be hdd
at 10 a.m. foUowed by dmner at
11 30 a m. A sung fest wah
Dehvered will begm at 1 p m
Pasto r Dan Bales mv1res the public.

Gospel sing

POMEROY - A ~mpd 'ing
wall bt.• held at 2 p m ~unda\ ;H
the l'oplar R1dge F1 c' L'\\'Ill B.1pmt
Church lnc."ed oiT l ll11o )j-l on
MIDDLEPORT -The .t)1nu- · Poplar Rtd~e Road brtlwn V"
.tl han·l'o.,t celdxanon wdl be hc:ld sds, Procla tm , c;Jurvl.tnd . .1nd
,It rho n._,'JOICtng l1ft' Chcm:h 111 U~!ill'\'cr:-. w11l be -,ull..;tng John
M1ddlcpmt Fnd.1y. r...1ll-9 p.m
Eb.\\ ll k. p.l~tur. Ill\ Jt'-'" lhL' publt &lt;.
rh crc..• wdl be free fond :ltHJ
g,1111c~ "1th pnzes. Children
lwtWl'l'l1 th e .Igl'"' of tl1rel· ,mJ 13
,trL' Jll\ atcJ to .lttend bv Pastor
BASI-IAN - Tn ck ,,r trc.n ,\III
Mikt.:' rot l'lllJll cmd the congreg."lbe held .H 1-l."hJn. h~k IZ.\ckc
uon nf R cjotcmg L1fc Church
.t nd the B.JShan IZ.o ,t d l l t t )II I&gt; ·
7 p m Refre ~hml'lll \ "Ill bL·
sc:rve d at thL' fill' hou'L' .lhL·rwanh.
POMEROY - Free flu shots
wt!l be given Jil \'eter:mo., \vho arl'
' Ullcntly enrolled 111 the VA
Health Care at th e VA trader
MIDDLEPORT
A gm1w l
. located duccrl y across from Veterans M cmonal Hospital , Wednes- smg Will be held Sund.n· at I; ~ll
Lby, from I 0 a m. to noon and 1 p m at the Middlep ort Church of
the Nazarene. Mu&lt;~ c wd l be by
pmro2pm
The VA M ediCal Center Our- Mercy The pubhc " umred ro
Rea ch Team from Clull1corhe attend by . Pastor Allen M1dcap.
Refreshments w1ll be se rved the
w1ll be .1dnumstenng the shots
They wdl also be accepted new smg 111 the fellowship h.dl.
enrollments. Proof of serviCe will
be reqtured

Celebration set

Dinner set
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppell l'bm&lt; Sqn.td xr. \\'Ill 'pomor
a t11ck or trL'.1t dmna on Oct. 3! I,
-t -X p m .H rhcTuppn~ Pl.11n . , rue
Jl&lt;.1ltsl'.
The menu will LOmt..,t of ..,oup
bl~.m danncr .H SJ, ~oup bc.m-.,
cornbread , hotdogs, . and bt'\ c• .tgcs. Th~rc wtll kid ~ g.1mL·~. co'lmme Judg1ng .md pnLc.., Hlllltl'lhatdy followmg t11Ck or tre.lt to be
held from 6-7 p m

Trick or treat

Flu shots

Sing announced

Auxiliary to meet
RACINE - Ranne Ameucan
Legwn Aux1hary wtll meet Jt the
legwn home on Thursday at 7
pm

Leaf pickup
MIDDLEPORT MlddleportVillage w1ll bcgm leafp1ckup
on Tuesday, weather pennitung.
Leaves should be placed 10 p1les ar
curbSide. P~ekup will beg10 at
Fruth Pharmacy on North Sec-

to start 10
He also
record 31
and held

Trick or Treat

To sing
POMEROY -

four Rose Bowl games
rushed for a NCAA
srra1ght 1DO-yard games
the NCAA record for

Dehvered will

POMEROY - Tn ck at Treat
1n Pomeroy wdl be observed
from 6-7 p.m. on Thursday

Projects
from,.pA\

Showers to end Wednesday

LOCAL STOCKS

1

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sound Investment plan is always a
good idea.
Fonunately, one of the best things
in life is free-an initial consultation
with a Raymond .fames Financil'l
Advisor.

Cruise

.

The Daily Sentinel

from Page AI

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7.10 SUN·THUR

•

BEDAZZLED (PG 13)

The four ,lll' .1111011~ 1&lt;J
RL·puhhl.lll govl'IllOI~ \\ho .lt l'
tr.n·L·ling rhc coum1) ro pt'nlllotL'
Bush':-. ptl'"ldcntJ.ll c...llllp.ugn.
" I th111k th.tt the Bmh L.Jillp.ugn I\ t1Sl11g t.:'VCr\' t.lCtlC tJut
thl·y 1..111 tn make ~Loll' then guv':-.

7:10 SUN·THURS

LADIES MAN. (R)

,.to.. tnt rou..,:· .,,ud Dl'fttck Cl.ty,
(;me\ ptco..JlkntJ,tl'
c.tmp.tl~ll 111 Oh1n "We .nc dmng
n:t' wl'il 111 tht' st.ltl', .llld dw. 1..,

dltl' Ltol

7

URBAN LEGENDS (R)

c;l'l'lllgl'l .... ltd

nf

'

'
•

ond Avenue

Lentes said.
The assault mndenr was unrelated ro the bomb threat, he sa1d.

VALLEY WEATHER

that Guthrie "1s showmg how left wing and
desperate he's become."
Springer, who was a C111c111nan relevmon
news anchor before he starred his Chicagobased talk show, resigned from the Cmunnari
C1ty Council 111 1974 after adnutung in federal court that he wrote penonal checks to
pay prostitutes.
He later returned to pohnc,s and was elected as Cincinnati's mayor.
Randy Borntrager, Guthne's campa1gn
spokesman, said Guthrie isn't concerned that
the election w1ll be affected by the controversy rhar has swirled around Spnnger and his
show.

Dianna lawson. CFS
F~nenr,,.l Advitor

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains-Chester Water Distnct
w1ll have a planned water serv1ce
interruption in Orange Townshtp,
from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m . Wednesday on rhe followmg roads: west
SJde of Ohio 7 in Tuppers Plains
from the mdusrnal park to .the
old Hawk's Service Station,
mcluding all customers west of
Tuppers Plains on Ohw 681 to
Flora.
The SJde roads w1ll mclude
Kaylor Road, £1berfeld Road,
Owl Hollow Road on Ohio 681
SJde, Boothe Road, Tucker Road,
Mudsock Road, Guthne Road,
Woods Ru~d , Carr Road and
Henderson Road
Customer~ on the Be:uwa llow
pumpmg sta uon are asked to conS&lt;."'rvc \V:ttc..~r to preserve serv1ce,
and customers ,1long U.S 50 and
its sadL' ro.td!i should Lonservc
w.1tcr Js wdl. mcluding Lonndge ,
Guysv11le,
Stewart
.\11d
C"naanvJlk
After wJtcr st·rvtCl' ts rt:sto rl'd , a
boil adv.,ory wtll be Ill effect, .1nd
l UStomcrs should bot! :t11 WJt~r
t(lr hum.w consumption for .lt
lea st thn."l" mmutL'!'i The advJsOJ y
Will be in dTect unnl further
nonce

from PapAl

Yotl\t• !;ot Conm·rlions

Plouo

Outage set

Counnlman Bob Rob1nson
urged counCil membe rs to allow
busmess owners the opt1on of
obtaining 5erv1ce through the
a.veraging 6.13 yatds pero carry.
contract, but oth~...~r counctl memand that ventures such as the new
He is currently the associate
how the the v1llage's combined bers utdJCared that tlw Lmt of
US. 33 Corndor ProJeCt and d~recror of athletiCS at Oluo State.
storm sewer and samtary sewer
Tuppers Plains lndustnal Park IS
Gnffin &lt;'xpressed lm gratitude svstcms Jn..· h1d out, how much provtdmg st'rVlCe to busmesscs
through the contr"ct \\ould bkc·ly
sohd proof of the continuing With the chamber for sclectmg
\~ater JS diSCharged 11110 the Oluo
mcreasc: the cost tn rc.:sJdL'I)[JJ]
efforts rhar the chamber IS n_,ak- h1111 as their guest spL•aker alld
R1vcr and the quahry of that dJSmg to put Me1gs County on the: Joked w1rh the crowd "bout tilL'
c.:ustotners
lh.tr~cd w&lt;ltcr
Chance of ram SO percent.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
map
Hustncss cu sto Jill'l' .uc not
current st.nu-; of (') hto St:lte footShurr .1!«&gt; s.nd that the ,·,[l.tge's
Wednesday. Mostly cloudy
Showers w.Il lmge1 in the InR ece•vmg rhe D.IVId P. B.tker ball te.J m.
JL'qLIHCd
to usc the vdl.t~c's rL·fu'L'
SH1.1lllll hft smion project wdl
county arl':l through Wednl'sd:ty, with a t:hanet• of ~ howt:rs H1ghs
Aw:tt d fm her c:xcdk·ncL' 111 ass tstOn .1 more scnou s note," Gltf- !tkt"!v gn to bid 111 l'.trl) De cem- St' r\.I Cl' prOVldt:T, .llh.f lll,l\ ~elect
the Nat1011Jl We:~thcr Scn'IC&lt;.' 111 the lower 70s Ch::mce of r.nn
mg thl' chamber 111 tmprovmg fin ~poke of the tm porr.mn.~ of ber Th t.:' \·t!l.tgl' IS seck 1n g fundm g fron1 a numbct nt IICl'll"~L'd
.10 pctlL'I\t
sa1d
Mctgs County was dumber fam1ly, L·Juc.ltwn .md how on~ 's thJough the Commumty Oc\·l'i- provtdt.•rs
Wedn es;iay
mght Pa1rly
H1gh tempe• at urc·s wtll be
.membet Patty PH: ken~
Houd1111 S sh.u ni \\Jth LOUI1Ltl
p.u-uopatJl)Jl m at hlcnc ~ c.m bt• ~ .upmcnt Block Gr.mt p.1o gt.tm to
clou d) Lows 111 the lower 51ls
around . 70
Cl1.1mb.:t mentbt·rs Sue MJtson
cnmpktc tlw work
.l letter fi·mn :1 Ivliddkpnrt 1 c.:-..1Extended forecast:
tru e hfe lc~ ~o n
0\·ermghr lows w.Il 'be m the
.md Roscoe M11ls also rece1 ved
R
L·pJL·,e
nt.JtJvcs
of
the
EPA
dcnt pr.11Hng the .,trl'l'l Lkp.u rThursday Partl y
cloudy
"A gallic l•ke t(Jotb,,ll rc.tllv
Slh
,nV:tJds for thelf outgomg ,tnd
\·t~Ht.'d
the
niLigc
fm
.m
JI1Jllt,ll
H1
ghs
70
to
70,
11\l'llt t( H reCCJH wnrk nn l-l ,mnltCJt...hcs you how to gL't up when
Sunset ton•ght '"II be at 6 31)
ded tcltc d servtct' to rhe co mmu ul~PL'o..."tJon
rece
ntly,
.mJ
itlso
vtsHFnd.1 y . i'"rrly
cloudy
A
:mci Stlllr! St.:' on \X/t.:'di1l'Sd,ly Jt 7 34
you \.:t' bcl'll knoLkL·d duwn ." o.;, lJ d
ron Suc~t .111d ~htlll r1.Ht1 th
ni t;.'.
cd
thl'
propmnl
well
field
loGlLh.tnCL'
of
~hm\e
t
~
dunng
tht.:'
Jill
G11flin "And.tmt hkc footb.tll. ill~·
A\•c::mtl'
Followmg the award presentatl () 11
mght Low~ 47 to 51 ,md htgh s 111
Weather forecast:
c.:Jn be \Tty tough.,
I l mtclnm :-.:11d th .ll o..."\tl.t polh c
uou , tht.:' .wdu:nce was mtroducr:d
Counul held the fiJSt re.td111g
the nud C.Os
To m ght Cloudy
w1th
.1
"Howe\ cr. pttUitlll'" ,ltl' \\ h.H
ot1icL'ts \\111 be on dut\ durutg
to footb .tll great and featured
011 .1 ll'snlunon thlt would ln y
S"rurday P.u-tly cloudy and
cha.n Le of ~ hoWCJ S AICJS of r~)g
makb o~ 11 indJndu.d S li (Ccssfi.~ 01
Tn ck or Trc 1t ~Hl I h111 . . d.n .111d
tltt~ cxJ~tt11g monthly SS w.Hcr
after midm ght Lows 111 the mH.l Loolt.: r Low~ 111 th e m1d 40s Jnd guest IOPL'dkc.::r Archtc: Graffin
not SLIC(L'~sful" .tddo...·d Cnffin
urged t c..,t dl'nr~ to bL· &lt;.Htti~Hl..,
Gnt1in, \vho rccc tvcd :1. numunpro\·l'menl fee to rcsid('nts tn
h1ghs .tround (,()
SOs I •ght Jnd v.m.tble \\'lnd
"Once
pnot
HH'S :md got!~ Jtc ~L'L
ber of aw:uds stemmtng from hts
nHllti-fmttly .1partmcnt comp lex- \\lule dtnlllg durlllg lhL' l'\l'llt
norh1ng
1
~
unattauubk
"
RcsJdcm~ \\l'tL' uJgl'd to \"Otc
days Jt Oluo Stare Umvemty and
l'" til rh.: \dbgc
Gtaffin
Jho
spoke
of
the
thrcl'
111 fl\-ot of th e 1 t:llL'\\ .11 '1( thl' nl hi s mnc-ycJt c.necr with th e ·
1 he fl'l' JS now ch,llgl'd for
Ds
of
succt.:"ss;
dc,Jrc,
dcJH
.mlHl
l'.llh \\,Her l1ll'll't. but \\111 be bge \ . . t rl'ct !tght kn· on N~1\· 7
C munn.1t1 Btngals, WJS a thtt.:'e:tnd
dctcnmn.uwn.
&lt;l~
well
.1s
the
clurg:L d to e,1( h hou..,t.•hold under
Rocky Boots - 5
nme All-Amencm at Oh1o State.
Pook1 noted tlut th·· lL'llll' Gannett - 53'"
AEP- 38'•
AD Shell - 61 s.,,
General Electnc - 49".
Akzo ~ 42',
tmportann·
of
not
quitting
''hen
rhc Il l'\\ puliq' 1Counnlm:tn Bob tcn· rrustl'L's wdl llll'l't c.It h
wmmng the He\.snun Trophy 111
Harley Dav1dson - 45 .a ,l
Sears- 29
AmTechiSBC -54',
f.1ced
w1th
"dvcrSJty
Ponkr \'l)tc d .lg.unst the me.tsurl', month on the fir.., I \&gt;',.'t· ~ llll' ..,d 1y .ll
both 1974 .tnd 1975
Kmar1 - 5'\s
Shoney's - ·~~
,
Ashland Inc - 32) ~~~
Enter
t:11111l1L'llt
for
the
l'VL'lll
Wai-Mart - 46s• •·
Kroger - 2Q'',o
.111d Lounul membt.:'r C.Hh) Scott 7 r m , .11 , di.Jge I,,J!l
AT&amp;T- 27 ~
He rushed for a cuccr 5,5H&lt;J
Wendy's - 19\
Lands End - 24
Bank One- 33
was
prm•Jdcd
by
Vm
Johnson
.md
:tb,t
uncd tt-~)m the \'otl'
y.nds and help ed the Buckeyes
Coultul .th.u
Ltd - 23',
Worthtngton - 9:.
Bob Evans - 17J,
the
Under
Cons
tructiOn
Barbc'l'ThL'
tH.:w
pol1cy
1:-.
~ct
to
nke
CJptun.'
fnur
13tg
TL'
n
tttlcs
Oak H11f Fmanc1al- 14'.
BorgWarner- 34",~
• App10vni tr.111~kt~ t,t" fund-,
Dally stock reports are the
OVB- 26
Champton - 2l.
dTed w tth the _1 ,11\lt.ll y w.ucr
He IS the only B1g Ten player shop QLurtct .
f01 the pohce dcp.lrtllll'llt .tnd tltc
4 p m clostng quotes at
BBT ~ 28\
Charmtng Shops - 5',
bdllllg PL'IJOd . .
the
prev1ous
day's
trans-.
Peoples13'l
C1ty Holdmg - 6 ,
dep:trnncnt:
Premter- s•~
act1ons
provtde d
by
Council Prcs1dent Stephen
Federal Mogul - 3'.
• Approved p.t~ lliCIH 11f bill~ 111
Rockwell - 40~ e
Advest of Gallipolis ·
F1rstar - 175 111
Hockmg College 111 Nclsonv•ll,• H ouchms, \\ho prt'~H.kd at dlt.' tbc .mJmtnt nf S1 1.0C l").:·, 7
and .m mtern Jt the tourhlll lllL'l'lJIIg 111 IJilll;lH.~lh'~ absence,
Al&lt;&gt;o prc~cnt \'-l'l~ L('"lttJllil
board, wdl be 111 full H"llmw,·n 1skCd COliiKtlllll'11lbl'r&lt;; W re\'Jl'" mcmbcn Ro~ct l'vbnln 1nd l"l.\l'
co . . tumt' Tue~day VtSJttug loc.ll ,1 proposed contr.tct for rc~udcnual
1cfuse "'-'r\' ILL', w l11ch wdl be CwtJzdm\ o.;kv ,1nd C' le t k Ht v .111
busmcsscs to sell ttckct~ and ro
Sw.lllll
JWJrded l:ltL'I th1s VCJl
(USPS 213·960)
o f uckcts &lt;lV~u lablc for the event dl!)tnbutc tlycr~ annoutKmg the
Oh1o Valley Publishing Co.
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Pomeroy
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Jerry Springer to stump for ~congressional candidate
COLUMBUS (AP) -TeleviSion talk-show
host Jerry Spr111ger will h11 the campa1gn trail
this weekend in eastern Ohio to rally support
- and money - for an old fnend and fellow
Democrat who's running for Congress
Spnnger, host of The Jerry Springer Show
and a former mayor of C111c111nat1, plans to
speak at events 111 Zanesv1lle, Bridgeport and
Steubenville to raise money for Marc Guthrie,
who Springer has known for 20 years.
Guthrie IS the only a,andidate for whom
Spnnger " campa1gmng.l
"Marc Guthrie would be a great representative for the distnct. Any way I can be of
help, I will be," Spnnger sa1d Monday through

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday,October24,2000

•

�••
•
'.rh_e_D_ai~Iy_s_en_ti_ne_I________________()~~IRIC»R

Pag A4
Tuesclay,Octoberl4,1000

'Estt~Stlshd i1f, 1M~

~

746-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

-~-

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager
J.•~tun

w the t!ditor an

DEAR ABBY: l was a single mother
throughout my only child's early years, I
had no financial or moral support from
the child's father. Luckily, I had a good
job that enabled me to take good care of
my daughter, I did not believe in giving
my child a stepfather, so I remained single, My daughter had a good religious
education. loving home, a dedicated and
adoring mother, vacations, the best
schools, health care, etc. We enjoyed a
wonderful and loving relationship,
However,' as soon as my daughter
became a teen-ager, she decided to stop
calling me "Mother,'' She insisted on
addremng me by my first name because
I was her "friend," For years, we have had
numerous di~cussmn'i on that subject -me explaining my unhappiness, sh~
insistmg on using my fir~t name and
1gnnring my hurt fedinbrs . I never wanted to be rdl!rrL•d tQ JS onr.: of her many
friends, I wnnted to be called .. Mother,''

St., Pomeroy, Ohio

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

larry Boyer
Advertising Director

'

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Wfkom~. Thn lihmdd IH ku lluJ11 3lKJ

ttrDt'fb. AU ktten dl'f ntb,#rr
w tditinx and 1r11nl be siJnnl ,.,.a ind.Wr ~n anJ t11kphont ,..,.,.,_,_No tuuifnl!'d ktun will
lk p11blillttll. l.tners shouMI bt in tood uuu. Gddrtni"' iJSI.ItS, Mt ptnolllllitier.
Th" upinioru rxprrl'l 'I!'J i" tht rollmm MliJw an tht COIUtiUIU of tlu Ohio Valle1 Publisllint
, Co.·, tdiroNI ho4hl. unku 01/urwise lltHni.

BUCKEYE STATE VIEW

Stumping

• f0rCI1C t'."

T.Jft h.1s been a f(Uest ,Jt fund-raisers or ,o thcr candidate appearanu:~ ~2 timl'~ this year ;md plans more stops and some television

~l dYt'rtl~l'IIH~m ~ ao;; tht• No\'. 7 electiUil .tpproaches, Kellems said.
''The more· time vou spend with leaders and people who will be
in the lcgi1l.Jttm'. the better underst,mding you have of each o th er
and the better undcrstamling you have of what the state's priorities
~ art·:· Kt·lit'm" ..,_,Jd.
_ Gc:orgt· Voino\·ich, vvhose rwo tt'rtns preceded Tat{, also camp.ligned tor tell ow Republicans, but not to the extent that Taft has,
sa,id Mike Dawson,Voinovich's former spokesman and adviser who
n&lt;&gt;w fltls those roles for US. Mike DeWine,Voinovich moved from
,the Statehouse to the 'Senate in 1999.
l&gt;awson said !hat after a Vmnnvich-led ticket swept Republicans
into all rill' statew id e nonjudicial oflices and into control of both
Housel of the Legis!,Jture in 1')94.VoinovJch worked to ke ep th ose
officeholders thers',
,
, "We ;ned tu re&gt;pond the best we could to the reque$ts of the
presicknr of the· Senate and the speaker of the H ouse," Dawson sa id ,
"Obviou-;ly. yo u \Vant to have majoritiL's in the House and Senate
and thts&lt; .liT people you work with day in and day out,"
_ C.n1d1datel get mort· than IUOI)ey, too, from Taft's support, said
R ep, L1rry Householder, a Glenford Republican whD is in line to
bun me 1peaker next 'year should he win re-election and the
Republic.ms nuintain their majority, currently 59-40, Taft appeared
at .111 Au~LIIt fuml-r;mer for Householder,
"For the candidote, 1t\ certain ly helpful to have the governo r
t'OI1Je int(&gt; their district, It veritic•s to the local ~ommunity th at th e
person i1 going to be able !O go to Columbus and get something
d11ne." Householder &gt;aid,
It\ not .liw,1ys helpful. Not all ofTaft's ca ndidates won their prinmies. Rep, Jim l:luchy of Greenville had the support of Taft, Senate President Rich.Jrd Finan. R-Cincinnari, and most of the Columbus c;op establi&gt;hment m his primary for the state Senate seat h eld
b) Robert Cupp of Lima , Cupp cannot serve next year because of
t~rm

limit\.

l:lut Rep, Jim Jordan of Urbana beat Buchy handily by portuy111~ Bu chy "' a darling of the Columbus insiders and h imself as a
hardworkin_g cJnd1date of the people in his district, H e used Buchy's
fund-raiser. at which Taft appeared, to help win his, campaign ,
.
·,"We knew going in to the whole race that the folks in Columbul weren't going to 'be on our team," Jordan said. "Then there
eomes a day and you wake up and say, 'I hope everybody in the
world endorses my opponent,' It played into our message"
. Jordan said he holds no animosity toward any of those involved
111 the lluchy campaign because it was just part of politics, He said
he appreciated the congratulatory calls he got from Taft and Finan
and that Fnun has been helping him raise money for the Nov, 7

:c!t'ction.

i

T.1ft cut lii1 losses ar1d will welcorne Jordan to the Senate should
:11t' \\'111 hP; race &lt;l~ expected, Kellems 'laid.
1
"You c,m't win every race," Kl'llems said.'(That\ part ofth~ price
leadership,"- 7711' Associated Press

:or

iTODAY IN· HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Tod,Jy "Tuesday. Oct, 24, the 29Hth day of200!LTherc are' 68 days
Jeft in the year,
: Tocl.1y's Hi f(hlight in HIStory:
; On Oct, 24. I ~45. the United Nations qtlicially came into exiSi:enu~ ,\.., I t~ ch.!rt cr took dfclt.
•
: On thili d.tte:
· In I5,'7,J.mc Seymour, the th1rd wifo of England's Kin g H en ry
:V 111. died 12 d.1ys after giving birth to Prince Edward, late r King
hhv.~rd VL
• In 1Hr, 1, the tir'it tr:Imcontm.L'nta! telegraph message was sent a&lt;;
311\tice Stt·phcn J ,Field of Cahforni.1 mnsmitted a telegram tO l'rel)dent Lmcoln ,
,
• In I 'Jil I . Ann.1 !:chon I,wlur, ,, 4.1 -yc.~r -old "'dow, became the first
per,on to -;urvlvl' going over Niag,tr,t F,d]o;; i11 a b.~rre!.
In I 1).1'1. nylon 1tocku'f\' were so ld publicly for the first time,. In
W1l11nngton. Del.
In I 1!1'!, Benny c;oodman .111d lm orcheltra reco rded their Signalure theme. "Let\ {),l!Kc," tor Columbta Rt•ronh in N e{vYork.

ADVICE
At 49 years old and married (no children), she has lived .lout-of-town for
many years and her attitude is cold and
distant. Her friends are the center of her
liCe, How do you explai? such treatment'
I now have the bpporrunity to
become a foster mother to a child, I
would msist that this child call me
"Mother,'' Unfortunately, I fear that my
desire to be ca lled .. Mother" is bost•d only
on the longing to be b lled that by my

Own child . UndL'r such cin::umstancc:s,

Pomeroy girl named
Miss Congeniality

LOCKSOX

People along the campaign trail might start thinki'ng that Ohio
, lm returned to the 1950s, when governors last served two-year
' Gov. Bob Taft isn't up for re-election for another two years, but
he h.IS hit the trail hard this year,
' Taft i&gt; campa1gning for stare Issue 1, the bond proposal to clean
i•p indusrnal sites and acquire public green space, as well as stump. ing for local school .levies and for legislative candi dates around the
state,
· A candidate'&gt; gratitude and maybe some political IOUs are not
•the only thing; the governor gets our of the appearances. He's also
ehjoying himself. spokesman Kevin J&lt;ellems sa id last week.
' ' " I k e•~oys retail politics, He enjoys being at events and hearing
directly from peoph: ... who are involved in their communities;'
Kellems s.Jid, "Governor Taft relishes his opportunity to make a dif-

Abigail
Van Buren

should I go ahead and bring this young
child into my home, maybe making h er
unhappy and leaving myself vulnerable
for another disappointment in life? -DISAPPOINTED
MOTHER
IN
FLORIDA
DEAR DISAPPOINTED MOTHER: I don't kt1ow what happened
between you and your daughter, but it
seems you and she have very different
perspectives on her childhood and the
nature of your relationship. Perhaps it's
time for you to suggest to her that you
both sit down and have a heart-to-heart
conversation about those perspectives,
Under no ClrcunlStances should you
take a child into your home for the reasons you have stated, It would be grossly
unfair to the child ,
DEAR ABBY: I recently overheard a
t·onver~ation
between two young
\VOn\cn in their 20s. Tht:-y wert! lamenting the foct tlut they smile too much

because of cultural and social conditioning, They seemed to feel they must be
" tougher" to succeed in the business
world,
\
Abby. I have had a varied- career as a
museum manager, an office coordinator
for a law firm and a property manager for
a 33-story building, I was a competent,
inteUigent student in school, but by no
means at the top of my class, I have a fine
arts degree and reasonable computer
skills.
A short time ago, I walked out of a
new job because I didn't like the way my
employer screamed at people. Within
three days, I had three job offers, (I hadn't even begun to look for new employment,) The r&lt;ason' I smik
When someone walks into my offiCe,
I smile and greet the person pleasancly,
Whether that someone is my boss, a
client, co-worker, wndor or cleaning
hdy, I smile and am pleasant, I say please,

thank you, and apologize for my mistakes, One el!lployer said, "It's easier to
train a snUler to use Excel than to teach
a computer-literate sourpuss to smile. In
the final analysis, it comes down to
choosing whom I want to spend my day
with."-- SONYA IN SEATTLE
DEAR SONYA: I agree. A smile is
definitely an asset not only in the business world, but in social situations as weU,
The young ladies you overheard have ,a
lot to learn about interpersonal relation'ships if they think smiles are to be used
sparingly, Smiles make people feel good
and open many doors,
To order "How to ,Write Letters for
All Occasions," send a busine.s-sized.
self-addressed envelope, plus check or
money order for $3 ,95 ($4,50 in Canada)
to: Dear Abby, Letter Booklet, P,0 Box
447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447 ,
(Postage is included,)

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

Tif.t isn't mnnin~ but
he's helping a tot
tt'rtll~.

Tuesday, October,24, 2000

Mother called by any other name doesn't sound as sweet

The·Daily Sentinel
111 Court

·the Bend

The Daily Sentiil.el

Page AS

Failing to catch Texas Gov, George W, Bush in
the poUs,Vice President AI Gore is unsheathing
the Democrats' favorite weapon of last resort
against Republicans - Social Security,
Gore lacks a coherent plan of his own to save
the retir&lt;ment system from eventual bankruptcy, so he is launching an all-out ,blitz' on Bush's
proposal to allow younger workers to mvest
part of their Social Securiry taxes in private
markets,
The Democratic National Comm ittee
broadcast ads in 10 sratc·s last week attacking
Bush's plan and held prc·ss conference; and
other cvent'i in 14 states.
DNC Chairman Joe Andrew said !:lush
thought h e could "grab the third rail ofAnwrican politics," but " he Jid11't realize we hadn't
turned the electricity on ycc"
Andrew's statement was virtually an admission that, when the

g&lt;;~in~

getS rough for

Democrats. they resort to ,accusing Republicans
of menacing SociaJ SeCurity. the gnvtrnment's
most popular program,
PqUs indicate that Gore has fai led to catch up
to Bush smce their third debate l.11r week,
Thursday's Gallup poll showed !:lush's lead
widening to 10 points, Bush pollsters say they
think he leads by 5 points nationally and that
GOP track1ng polls show him ahead by more
than the margin of error in several battleground
states, including Michigan, Missouri, Washington and Oregon,
They also claim that Bush leads, but within
the margin of error, in Florida and Wisconsin,
and is narrowing Gore\ lead in Penn sylvani;1
and California, Gore's California chairman has
confirmed that the race is tightening there,
Bush's Social Security plan , uiweiled in May
but not wdl. explained since thm, is an attempt
to deal with the fact accepted by most economiSts that the retiremenr of the baby-boom
generation is a burden that the Social Security
system cannot bear without significant benefit
cuts, tax increases or major reform.
The number of n:tirces is set to nearly double in the next 30 years, fium 45 million to 83

Gore~

Social Security plan?

Morton
Kondracke
NEA COLUMNIST •
million, and the number of workers being teexed
to proVIde bendits fo r eac h sen ior will r:,ll from
three to two.
According to thL· govrrnml'nt trustee&lt;; who
uversec Social Sl.:'rurity, at current bendit and
revenue levels, tl1e system will have a surplus tor
15 years- figured at $2,4 tti'11ion for th e next
Ill years - but in 2015 it will st,JI't paying out
more tlnn it takt'-.. in.
The system will l)e dr&gt;1ined ot· funds in 21137,
building huge deficits after that -· estimated at
up to $8 trillion by 2075,
Gore's answer to the problem is to assert that
through fiscal frugality he can pay down the
nation's non-Social Security debt of $4:1i trillion by 2012 and then credit to Social Security
the interest saved by nor borrow ing that money,
, He claims this w ill extend the solvency nf
Social Security to 2054, He has no Iong-nm
proposal to keep the system solvent, and the
idea of crediting interest has been hooted at as
double counting even by HJ&lt;m y Democr:Jt&lt;;.
The best non-partisan analoto.''Y I've heard for
Core's plan com,·s from Dan Crippen, director
of the Cong1-essional Budget Office, who told
me in May, "It's hke if I go to the Price C lub
and the ch eckout guy says, 'You jus t saved $50
by •hopping here.' If I say, 'So credit the $50 to
my credit card,' he'd laugh.~~
.
To keep the system solvent by trad1 t1&lt;mal
means requi re~ one or more of the following: an
increase in payroll taxes (as h as happened often
before) from the cLirrent 12,4 pe~ccnt to I 7

"'Y

(Ainrro11 Ko/1(/mrke is exewtil'e ulitnr nf Roll

Call, tlw r11wspnpcr .j' Capitol Hill)

\

RYAN'S VIEW

A columnist's good deed goes bad
Another read er called to say she had
received a letter from a girl in Ugancfa asking
fur money for schoolin g, I told her about the
previous calls and su ggested she put a stoppayment on her check for the cows. She
decided to close the account altogether, vowing angrily never to give money to help, anyone agam .
Now a neighbor has just call ed tD
a
~omputer - supphe.;; comp:1ny in New Hampsh ire received a $6.,600 check signed by her to
purchase 20t I I lP 1Inkjet Origi11al cartridges
lor the Kidda Tradin g Company in Kampala,

"'Y

U~anda.

photll' C.llh to thl' V,lrioU\ u~~mtb
· cumpanie-, L'lthn went UIJ;lll '\Wt'rt'd or did not

My

go through. I'm w,I itin~:; to hear back from the
State DepJrtnH:nt ,tbout tra cking down whoever is do ctor mg the checks_
A 1c;nn like this reaches bhond a handful of
' '
lnnk ,\Cc:ou nts. I wonder hovv lllilllY cltt·ck~
hd\1t: bec11 ·altcrcJ .mJ thw. how m~my COW\
wlll IH.'\'t'r be boug-ht. And I worry. when
,tno tlwr · t:.lll tf.1r help got:"i Ollt. how m,llly
pt•ople will dl.'lidl' Jll'm 't \\orth rlH· rrouhlt..•.
(/cJd/1 U.ym1 l:J" 11 itl/umnisl_/tll tilt' S1111 Fn1Hll.' 1tl

Chrtllu'tlc·. Scm/ (\ll/1/llfiiiS
llflfiSJ!•I[IU
vr
sc ud

joa 11 ry.m (il;,l~(/ It'. (tlll r.)

tc1

Iter ifl a1re

her

t!( tlu .-.

('-11/rlil

,

an

percent in 2037, a 30 percent benefit cut or an
extension of the retirement age,
Instead, Bush has picked up a reform id eapartial privanzation -backed by sever.1l moderate Democrats, including Scm, Daniel flarrick
Moynihan (NY), Bob Kerrey (Ncb), John
Breaux (La,) and Chuck Robb (Va.),
The concept also has the support of the centrist Democratic Leadership Council and was
backed by its chairman, Sen, Joe Lieberman
, (Conn ,), who recanted his position when he
hec:mH_
; Gore's runnin g 111.1te.
The theory behind sud1 a plan 11 th ,lt IIH&gt;ney
invested in private nurkets,, will return .111 .wer~l bl' of(, percent plT yc;1r in:-.te.1d of 2 percL· tH
e~1rncd by govt.Til lll l'nt hnndo, , therchy rcdtlltllg
the drain on Social Security,
T he problem i" th.lt whc11 younger vvorkn'
invest part of their tax money - 2 pnccnt o!·
· the 12 percent in Jnost plans- it can't be paid
out to 1.:urn:nt rctirt:es.
That's the ba&gt;is of the Ut·nwcratl' •.Jleg'lt""'
rhar !Jush hos promised $ 1 trilhon in )&lt;Jci:Ji
Security rcvcnUt.'"i bo~h to rctirl'L'~ and to \"-'Orkt·rs, "W,hich promi&gt;c will he break?",, I lc·mucratic ad a&gt;ks,
Hy adopting wor,.t-casc as.;;umptinns about
Bush's plan, the Go[(' ca111pa1f\n '""Ttl it will
st~rt depkting the Soci.1l Security surpllll in
2\105 instead uf 21115 aml n:nder the sy\Cetn
bankrupt by 2023 Instead of 2()37
.The Bush ca01paign coullters that, with a
$2A trillion &lt;Jlrplus, Soc ial Security cJ n a!lord .1
$I trillion short~,)) - althongh aid es also
thl' ~ystent 1 nay requir(' a "bridge l&lt;)an ·· fil) lll thl·
government ,uuund 20.10.
They al1o adn 1it thJt it 111.1y be lll'c'essary to
relh~t c Suci.il Sl'curity benefits by ~on H.: portion
of th t' extra mont')' workers earn in tht' ~rock
market.
Bush is' bein~; punished for not having adeljllatcly explained his pmgr:im over the past &lt;IX
months.
llut that beats having no plan at alL

Aftet a vis it to Kenya this summer, I wrote she was, in fact, purchasing office equipm ent
a co lum n describing how the drought had for a company in Kampala, Uganda, T h e
decimated the cattle of the Samburu tribe, 1 check number matched the one she ha.d used
gave an addres~ in Kenya where n.:aJcrs cou ld to buy seven cows. Th e Francomb'es' nart'le
send S40 to buy a cow for a fam ily there, I had and the dollar amount had been bleached our
no idea at the time how much good ,md how and replaced,
much trouble th~ colunm would create!
Then lldl from MDdesto called, H IS bank
A few weeks after it ran, I received an e- fl agged a check in the amount of $5,460,
mail from Rocky Francombc, who has been made out to an automobile company in New
coordinating the fund -r.1isi ng cflort in Kenya, York, I he bank noticed that the date on the
" I have , been up lulf the night opening check put it w,ildly out of sequence with the
envelopes from your wonderful re.Jders, It's rest of hi s checks, and fhat it was for a ilmch
unbelievable - $H.600' We will open an higher amount rhan muaL Payment on the
account so the mo.n ey can t&gt;arn intcrec;r ac; we check was stopped.
wait for the rains to return and can buy the
A day later, ,J couple in Morro Bay told me'
they got a call from an office supply company
cows,"
Since rhen, the total has reached n1ore rh;m , in Vienna,Va,, diflerent from the company the
$12,001), Like Rocky, I was touched by the woman in M endocino had beard from, The
t:xtraorJinary genero..,ity reader~ ~ h owl·d cou ple's S40 check m [he Francomhes hJd
toward people so far removed !rom their own been changed to $9,700 and was accompalives, It rc1nforced my belief that, given ,, ni ed by a cover letter requesting purchase of
chance, most of us are willing to help,
250 HI' Inkjet Origina l Cartridges for GK
Then, about 10 days ago, I be!lan gctnng lmernational in Kampala. Uganda,
the phone calls that made me wondn if thi1
(ThisVirgini.J comp.my lud .drc.Jdy tilled an
good deed had turned into a lllt;htm.lle,
order fur a diffnenr compa ny 111 Kampa!" lor.
A woman who hve&lt; ncar Mcmlonnn called 2SO HP c.mridw·s With a $1 0,0()(1 check that
to say that ,an office-supply company in Vir-,' cleared. l3ur th~ .Morro Bay couple's check
ginia had a check from her in tlu.' amotmt of was flagged bct.LU~c there were: imufticicnt
$9,h0tJ,The company wanted to confir m tll.lt funds to cover it ,)

CHESTER - The death of Elizabeth Hayes, 66-year member of
Chester Council, Daughter of America, was noted during the recel)t
meeting of the Past Coun cilors Club held at the halL
·
It was noted that Mrs, Hayes was the last charter member of the
Council organized in 1934,
,
Esther Smith presided at the meeting which opened with scripture
from John, the Lord's Prayer, and the pledge to t~e Amencan Fl~g,
Members answered roll call by telling something they like about fa!J.
A Christmas dinner and parry was planned for Dec 13 at 6 p,m, at
th e Masonic building in Chester, There will be a gift exchange of $3,
Auxiliary member s of the Masons will serve the dinner. Officer's
reports were given by Thelma White, secretary, and Charlotte Grant,
trea su rer, A thank you note was, read from the Esther and Scottie Smith
families,
Marcia Keller thanked the club for a g1ft and cards received while
ho spitalized, Excepts from an old secretary's book were read by Smith
specifically pertai'!ing to when the club was organized on June 9,
1949,
•
The organizing officers were Elizabeth Hayes, president; Clarke
Allen, viCe president; Pearl Hayes, secretary; Hattie Frederick, treasurer; Sadie Trussell, sentinel, and Essie Warner and Goldie Wolfe, program
committee, At that time meetings were held at the home s of members , Cadie Wickham was district deputy and helped organize the club
for Chester CounciL All of mentioned members now are deceased, it
was noted.
Coming to the meeting in Halloween costuming were Jo AFln
Ritchie,
Jean Welsh, Ruth Smith, Opal Hollon, Erma Cleland, Betty
Mabel Brace to Martha Lou Beegle, Mattie Beegle, G\adys Sterrett,
Edna Knupp, Thelma Walton, Hnd M cKelvey. Mary Cleek, Evelyn Young, Laura Mae Nice, Esther Smith, and Mary Jo Barringer, Others
Foreman, Luis Sterrett. Sarah Neighler, Emeline Sayre, Mattie Teaford, there were Opal Eichinger, Margaret Aniberger, Goldie Frederick,
Martha Studer, Sheila Thei1s, Jan et Theiss, Blonde11a Rainer, Edie Mary K Holter, Ella Osborne, lnzy Newell, MarCi a Keller, Thdmu
Hubhard, Fran Sayre, Mon a Neace, Linda Russell , Kas. Bisseii-Seck- White, Charlotte Grant, Mary Jo Barringer, Guests were Richard
. man, Letha Proffitt,Jo Lee. Melissa Smith, Kathryn Hart and a guest, White and Sandra White,
Refreshments served by the hostess, Games were conducted by
Haley BisselL
A silent auction was h eld folloWing refreshments. Next meeting will Frederick and Amberger; door prizes were won by Smith, Ambergtr,
be Nov, 9 with Rainer and Neigler to have the program and refresh- Keller and Holter, Refreshments were served by hostesses, Jo Ann
Ritchie and Ella Osborne,
ments.
RACINE- Plan s for a second bake sale after the first one brought
in more tllJn $523 were made when the Sonshine Circle of Dorcas
Bethany Church met recently at the church,
A second bake sa le w1ll be held on Nov, I 8, Dunng the meeting
conducted by Lois Sterrett, at was vote to send a monetary donation
to Enc Johnston , so n of ·a mi ssionafy, who ' had be en .injured in
autontobik accident.
Officers' rqiorts were given by kathryn Hart and Melissa Smith,
secretary and tre.surer, Sterrett read an article titled "The Message of
H ands" from the book "Bo mmcrangJoy" by Barbara Johnson, She also
read scripture frum Psalms
Thank you notes were read from Ronald and Betty Hart and Ellen
Arnott, Mary Cleek reported' that cards of sympathy had be e n sent to
Gertrude Neigler, Nancy Cam pb ell , Linda Turley, Mrs. John Southern,
Jo Lee, and Bill Hayman,
Cards of encouragement were signed for Ann Boso, Vicki Boso,
Mary ~tobart, Richard Jon es, Ellen Arnott , Ethel Orr, Maria Delgato,
Raymond Proffitt, Donna Hill,Jane Beegle, Katie Hill, Robert Fisher,
Chary Cardero, Anna Lee Tucker, Pauline Wolfe, Carrie Manuel
Roush, Edison Brace, Mildred Parsons, Gordon West, David Grindstaff, Mildred Ihle, Wilma Ballard, Martha Stutler, Mary Easterday,
Betty Johnson, Don Hupp, Doug Circle, Lizzie Wood,Jo Lee, and Barbara Pierce,
Mildred Hart presented the program add read an article "Discover
New Lands," She read from scriptures Gen, ,12 and 2 Cor, 9, Hart read
"What My Kids Sec,'' Refreshments were served by Mildred Hart and

j .

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

What exactly is

Past Councilors Club meets

Sonshine Circle plans fund raiser

df

POMEROY - Gillian Wilt of Pomeroy was first runner- up and
Miss Congen iality at the Paul Bunyan Show held at Hocki ng College,
Nelsonville Oct 7,
Kelby Laude rba ck of Nelsonville was named Miss Paul Bunyan
Show Queen during ceremo nies, She is a business management student at H ocking College, Jen ni fer Salyer of Kingston, an office adminJstr.ttion student , was second runner-up.

Widow's Fellowship meets
MIDDLEPORT Members of the Widow 's Fellowship mer
recently at the M iddle po rt C hurch of Christ for a potluc k lun cheo n,
Devotions were given by Helen Bodimer and the program by Eileen
Bower, Tra.vehng prize was won by Helen Hood, The November
meeting will be a Thanksgiving planned potluck at the church on
Nov, 10.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

SOCIAL SECURITY

Kids or grandkids
without insurance.
There is help.
BY VALREA THOMPSON
SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER , ATHENS

Parents and grandparents know
how important i( IS for child ren
ttl g'row up strong and h ea lthy,
' l:lut nnnv families ca n't afford
health in;urance tor their ch ildren, In fact. over 1 I million children in the Umrcd States have no
h ealth insurance.
But there is help' Every state
now Ius a program ro provide
free o r low-cm t health insurance
for kids, These programs , cover
regular check- up s. immunizations, prescription dr)l!,'l. dental
care, vision and hearing tesnng,
hospital vi~its and more, And
these programs "re nor JUSt for the
poor, They provide h eal th insur.li1Ct' to fami li e'i w ith average
mcomcs \vho cannot afford
hl·alth imun n~c.
The appl icMion ~roccss is simple. Families ca n frequently
rL·c ...·ive au appli c.ttion rhrough
thl' nuil ,wd ~nnply rl'turn it onct·
1t IS

TUESDAY

lies to find out abo ut these pro~
grams, Keepmg kids hc .llthy is a
community concern!

RACINE - RACO meeting,
l iJcsd.1y, Star Mill Park , 6 :30 p,m
with so up .1nd &lt;;an dwi ch potluck.

Retirement options
On October I , Social Security
bt•gan the second ye.n, of automatic mai lin gs of per's ona lized
Social Sc:curidty St.Itemcnts to
workers age: '25 and older who an~
not already receiving monthly
benefits based on thL'lf own
record, An additional fmanCial
planning tooLThinking or· Retirin g' Consider Your Options, will
be in se rted into this year' s mailmgs fo r people at least 55 years
old,

POMEROY- Immunization
clinic, Meigs County Hc.tlth
Departmenr, cllll'ldoy, 9 to I I :LnL
and I to 3 p, m ,Take children's shot
record~t. C hildn:n must acco mpamed by parent/ legal h'Uardian ,

Wins C-10 award
Social Security has won a prestigious award , from C IO MagazineQa "2000 C I0-100 Honoree"Qgiven, to the "best of the
best" for excelling
in customer
.
"
service and customt'r relationship
management.

RACINE Special meeting
of the Pomcroy-Racn1e Lodge
164, F&amp;AM , work in E,A, degree,
7 p,m, Tuesday,
POMEROY- Relay fin Life
2001 planning session, 6 p,m.Tuesday at the Meigs County Library,
Pomeroy, Date and location to be
detcnnined, chairm en to be
appointed ,

p,m,, home of Sara
Church Str&lt;et, Syracuse,

THURSDAY
POMEROY
Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Ph1
Sorority, St Paul Lutheran
C lwrch, Thursday 6:30 p,nL social
room, Martha McPhail and Mar~rt•t Stewart, hostesses.
REEDSVILLE Rlvervicw
Garden Club, dinner at Davixtci's
111 Wilbamstown. W, Va, Thursday,
Mt'mber~ to meet J t the Whitehead home at 5:30 p,nL
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
Post 9053 meeting at Tuppers
Plains. Thursday, 7:30 p,m, Special
draw1ng.

MIDDlEPORT · - Mei gs
County Churches of Christ
Women's Fellowship, Thursday, 7
p,m, at the Bradford Church ,
Bradbury C hurch to have devotions; missionary n~port on N~w
H ope Ministnes by PoUy Russell.
program a brown bag w piece by
Carolyn Nicholson, Nominating
comnuttee will report.
MIDDLEPORT Sleepy
Hollow hayride and parry. sponsored by Feeney Bennett Post 128.
American Legi on, tQ begin at
dusk, Middleport Ma rina area,
Refreshments, hot dogs, donuts,
coffee. cider and hot chocolate,
Business or organizatlon interested
111 settlng up a station for the ride,

or

Duro-Last Roofing, Inc.

Jn~ur.ultl' Al'lo.Jf you know ~)th ..·r

Lhlidrcn whn .m.· Without IH:altb

designed to promote sales or fund
raisers of any type. Items are

printed only as space pertniu and
cannot be guaranteed to be printed a specific number of days. ,

-:..;;..--

5:30-8:00
Ages0-12
Games
Start at 5:30 P.m.
!
Costume Judeine at 6:30P.m.
Trick or Treat from 7:00 • 8:00 P.m.

Tlckel for QOmes on sale al the door.
• All proceeds Qo lo residents Christmas r,und.

&gt;.!;"1'.1 Ill\,

.

The

GAMESt PRIZESf COSTUME JUDGING

m find out .ll)(llH you r
\t.ltc\ pr&lt;;gr:un S1mply cJll tlw
toLl-tiw' m11nber I-H77-K IIJS:'&gt;JOW (1-H77-543-7C&gt;C&gt;'J), Ynu
wJI] \w .llltO\ll.ltlt,d \y lOllllr...'Ctl.' J
w thl.' apprupri.ttc ,Jgcncy 111 ynur
~t.Ht· . Ur. vou em vi~oit rhc lnrt·rllt't ~Hl', \~'\\'\Y. lll~llrCkJd~llO\\'. gO\' ,
to find our num.' ,1bou t tht'\l' pm,

The Cotntl1W1ity Calendar is
published as a free service to nonprofit
groups
wishing to
announce meetings and special
events.
calendar is not

Fr,day, October 27th

Flat or Low Sloped Roofs,
Single-ply roofing system eliminates leaks.

[t 1~ t'&lt;JW

~ If ,·our thddrt·n or ~r.llH.khilllrt•n do nnr h.1\·e hl.',Jlth lll..,Ur.11 Kl.', pk'.l'l' eli\ ((l ~L'l' If they C.lll
ljlLihfy for tlec l)r low -(o..,t h c,llth

FRIDAY
POMEROY God's NET.
open Friday and Saturday, 6 to
10:30 p.m at center's mom on
Main Stree-t in Pomeroy. Nutritional foods free, non.-vJ01cnt
games. computer programs and
cards free of charge ,

Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center's
Annual

WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE - The Wildwood Garden Club, Wednesday, 1

tilled out.

conta ct Russ Mozingo, 7-12-2094,

Roush ,

"

Bake Sate
BHot Doe Sate
ean So.ap Sale

Your Authorized Duro-Last Rooting Contractor

Home Creek Enterprises
.Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-7943'
740-992-7953

111'ltll.lll ll', l' lKOllr.lgl· thl'lr f.\1111 -

•

KSPRINGS

~~..............

_

!

-..,;:;,:;;'"--~-REHABILITATION CENTER

36759 RockSprings Rd. * Pomeroy, Ohio* 992-6606

�•
•

•

••
~A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

•
Tuesday,October24,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Daily Scoreboard, Page B6

Meigs

Eastern

Southem

Wahama

Page 81
'IUeuy, Cktoller 14, 1000

II

TuEsDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS

LEO'S CRUISE &amp;TRAVEL
Boyles places 19th

at wfbiaington

tf47~l
111 W. 2nd St.
·Pomeroy, OH

740-992-4233
1-800·795-1110

&amp;
:1·U•j_!I
1: Ci t;.·0 •• !

·Meigs
Football2000

Southern
Football2000

Aug. 25 ........Gallia Academy ................. Away
Sept. 1.........Athens ............................. HOME
Sept. B.........River Valley ....................... Away
Sept.16 .... .... Newark Catholic .............. .. Away
Sept 22 ........ Fairland ...... ,.................... HOME
Sept29 .... ... .Wellston .......................... HOME
Oct. 6.......... Nelsonville·York .............. HOME
Oct. 13 ........ Alexander .......................... Away
Oct. 20 ........ Vinton County ................... Away
Oct. 27 ........ Belpre ............................. HOME

Aug. 25 ........ Ciay County,WV................ Away
Sept. 1......... Portsmouth East... ............ Away
Sept. B......... South Gallia .................... HOME
Sept.15 ........Alexander ........ :................. Away
Sepi22 ........Wahama.......................... HOME
Sept29 ........ Federal Hocking..............HOME .
Oct. 6.......... Miller ..... .......................... HOME
Oct. 13 ........ Waterford .......................... Away
Oct. 20 ........ Trimble ............................HOME
Oct. 28 ........ Eastern ............................. Aw:~v

Eastern
Football2000

Wahama
Football2000

Aug. 25 ........ South Gallia ................... HOME
Sept. 1......... Fort Frye ........................... Away
Sept. B.........Wah am a............................Away
Sept.15 ........ Parkersburg Catholic .......HOME
Sept 22 ........ Hannan, WV ..................... Away
Sept 29 ........ Trimble ............................ HOME
Oct. 6.......... Federal Hocking ................ Away
Oct. 13 ........ Miller ............................... HOME
Oct. 20 ........ Waterford .......................... Away
Oct. 28 ........ Southern ......................... HOME

Aug. 26 ........ Williamstown ..................... Away
Sept. 1......... Federal Hocking .............. HOME
.Sept. B......... Eastern ........................... HOME
Sept.15 ........ Ravenswood ..................... Away
Sept 22 ........ Southern ........................... Away ·
Sept 29 ........0PEN
Oct. 6 .......... Gilmer County ...................Away
Oct. 13 ........ Buffalo-Putnam ............... HOME
I
Oct. 20 ........ St. Mary's ........................ HOME
Oct. 27 ........ Wirt County ....................... Away

Be HaPPY
BUY TurnPike
Buy American

·•

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"

Ohio University
·Football 2000

Ingel' s
Electronics
Radio Shac~
Dealer
-\

106 N. Sec. Ave.
Middleport. OH
1-740-992-2635
Man, Tues, Wed, Fri 9· S:OO
Thurs 9·12, Sot. 9·2:30

Good Luck
To '
All
Area
'
Teams
We recognize Ylur enorts
10 be 1111 best YOU Cll be,.
and WISh you lite best lhls
seasonI

"The area's best selection
of Athletic footwear"

219 N. Second Ave. Middleport

Jerry
Bibbee
Ford
I

461 S. Third Ave.
Middleport, OH

992-2196
1-877-322-6720
www.jerrybibbee.com

win

·onal title

~l!!lt'~olll

Sept. 2. ........ .At Iowa State .................... 11 :30

Sept. 9......... At Minnesota ....................... 1:30
Sept. 16 ....... TENNESSEE TECH ........... 7:00
Sept.23 ........ AKRON ...............................2:00
Sept30 ........At Western Michigan .......... 1:00
Oct. 7.......... BUFFALO ........................... 7:00
Oct. 14 ........ At Kent State ................ ...... 2:00
Qct. 21 ........ CENT. MICHIGAN .............. 2:00
Oct. 28 ........ Open
Nov 4..........At Miami .............................. 1:00
Nov. 11 ........ At Bowling Green ................ 1:30
Nov. 1B.': ...... MARSHALL ........................4:0o

Cleveland
Football2000
Sept. 17..... PITISBU.RGH .................... 1:00
Sept.24 ........ at Oakland .......................... 4:15
Oct. 1......... BALTIMORE ....................... 1:00
Oct. 8.......... at Arizona ............................ 4:15
Oct. 15 ........ At benver ............................ 4:05
Oct. 22 ........ at Pittsburgh ....................... 1:00
Oct. 29 ........ CINCINNATI ...... :................ 1:00
Nov 5......... N.Y. GIANTS ....................... 1:00
Nov. 12 ........ NEW ENGLAND ................. 1:00
Nov. 19 ........ At Tennessee ...................... 1:00
Nov. 26 ........ at Baltimore .............. ,......... 1:00
Dec. 3.......... at Jacksonville ................... .4:15
Dec. 10.: ..... PHILADELPHIA .................. 1:00
DEC. 17 ...... TENNESSEE ...................... 1:00
Dec. 24 ........ 0pen Date

·Cincinnati
Football 2000
Sepl.24 ........ at Baltimore ........................ 1:00
Oct 1........... MIAMI ................................ 4:05
Oct. B.......... TENNESSEE ...................... 1:00
Oct. 15 ........ AI Pittsburgh ....................... 1:00
Oct. 22 ........ DENVER.. .. ..................... 1:00
Oct. 29 ........ At Cleveland ....................... 1:00
Nov 5......... BALTIMORE ....................... 1:00
Nov. 12 ........ At Dallas ........................... .. 1:00
Nov.'19 ........ at New England .................. 1:0Q...,
Nov. 26 ..... PITISBURGH .................... 1:00
Dec. 3.........ARIZONA ............................ 1:QQ,
Dec. 10 ........ atTennessee ...................... 1:00
Dec. 17. .....JACKSONVILLE ................. 1:00
Dec. 24 ........ at Philadelphia .................... 1:00

Sales &amp;
Service
42121 Enterprise Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

1-740-992-1303

.- ~

(J, . . '

'

MEIGS
MARINE

Ohio State
Football 2000

Sept. 2......... FRESNO STATE... .............. TBA
Sept. 9......... At Arizona ........................... TBA
Sept. 16....... MIAMI of OHIO ................... TBA
Sept.23 ........PENN STATE ......................TBA
Oct. 7.......... At Wisconsin ....................... TBA
Oct. 14 ........ MINNESOTA ...................... TBA
Oct. 21 ........ At lowa ................................TBA
Oct. 2B ........ AI Purdue ............................TBA
Nov 4.......... MICHIGAN ST.. .................. TBA
Nov. 11 ........ AIIIIinois ............................. TBA
Nov. 1B ........ MISHIGAN ..........................TBA

3rd St. Racine
740-949-2210
Syracuse
740-992-6333

WILMINGTON -The University. of Rio Grande cross
country team rebounded from a
poor performance at the AllOhio Championships last week.
The Redmen produced a third
place finish (liS points) out of 18
teams despite the fact that
Michael Hendershot! and fresh man David Kerns did not compete at Fall Classic at Wilmington
College.
'Tim Sykes was Rio 's rop finisher (1Oth) with a time 26:46.
Freshman Matthew Boyles (Eastern H.S.) continues to improve
and impress finishing 19th
(27 :21).
Other Redmen results: Scott
McNutt, 28th (27:39), Derick
Reynolds, 29th (27:40), Chad
Kincaid, 37th (27:51), Denny
Hammond, 38th, (27:51) Josh
Fogle, 41st (28:05), Anthony
Richards, 53rd (28:21) and Derek
Baker, 60th (28:34).
Cedarville won the event with
17 points and th e host school,
Wilmington was second with 77
points. O ther AMC schools in the
meet were Tiffin (8th , 230 points)
and Shawnee State (9th, 234
points).
Sergio R eyes, of Cedarville, was
the individual winner with a time
of 25:25.
There were 160 runn ers in the
men's race.
On the women's side Rio
Grande finished 6th (220 points)
out of 18 teams. Amanda Wolfe
was the top finisher for the 1'-edwomen (14th) with a ti me of
20:07. Katy Henson was 42nd
(21 :23), Tiffany Fogle was 58th
(21 :48), Tenessa George was 69th
(22:06) and Pam Smith finished '
74th (22:2 1).
'
Cedarvi ll e also wo n th e
women's meet with 25 points. ·
Han over College was second
(74), Wilmington was third (96).
Centre College was 4th ( 122) and
Franklin College was fifth (140).
Titlin was ninth (250) and
Shawnee State was 1Oth (272).
Erin Matson of Hanover was
the wornen's individual winn er
with a time of 18:38.
There were 137 competi tors in
the women's race.
Rio will host the Mini-Meet
Friday at 4:30 at the Stanley Field
Co mplex.

'

.·.

Redwomen fall
at taylor toumey

Marshall
Football 2000 Aug. 31 ........ SE MISSOURI ST .............. 7:00
Sept. 9.........At Michigan State .............. Noon
Sept. 16 ....... Open
Sept.23 ........ At North Carolina ................ 6:00
Sept30 ........ BUFFALO ........................... 7:00
Oct. 5.......... W. MICHIGN ...............8:00 ESP
Oct. 14 ........ AIToledo ............................. 7:00
Oct. 21 ........ KENT STATE ...................... 3:30
Oct. 28 ........ At Akron .............................. 7:00
Nov 4.......... AI Bowling Green ................ 1:30
Nov. 11 ........ MIAMI ................................. 7:00
Nov. 18 ........ AI Ohio ................................ 4:00

Pittsburgh
Football 2000
Sept.24 ........ TENNESSEE .. .'................... 1:00
Qct 1........... At Jacksonville .................... 1:00
Oct. B.......... at N.Y. Jets ......................... 1:00
Oct. 15 ........ Clf'&lt;GINNATI ....................... 1:00
Oct. 22 ........ CLEVELAND ...................... 1:00
Oct. 29 ....... At Baltimore ........................ 1:00
Nov 5.......... at Tennessee ...................... 1:00
Nov. 12 ........ PHILADELPHIA .................. 1:00
Nov. 19 ........ JACKSONVILLE. ................ B:35
Nov. 26 ........ at Cincinnati ........................ 1:00
Dec. 3...... OAKLAND .......................... 1:00
Dec. 1O........ at N.Y. Giants ...................... 1:00
')ec: 16 ........ WASH (Sat) ..................... 12:30
Dec. 24 ........ at San Diego ..................... ..4':05

Crow' s Family
Restaurant
Featuring·
Kentucky
Fried Chicken

228 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Window
Phone

Office
Service
&amp; Supply
137 -( N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376
Good Luc((
1o AU Area
1ea~s!!

RIO GRANDE - The University of Rio · Grande volleyball
team had a three-match winning
streak snapped in the Fall Classic
held at Taylor University this
weekend.
The
Redwomen
dropped all four matches they
played.
Rio Grande (14-22) lost to
Taylor in the first match on Friday, 15-4, 15-3 and 15-2. The
Redwomen gc·nerated very little
offense ~gaimt Taylor. Jun ior
Andrea Brown posted seven ki lls
and seven digs and senior Alisha
Flesher h ad six kills.
Rio then lost to Trevecca 15-3,
15-13, 15-17, 15-12. Brown registered I 6 kills, while Flesher and
freshman Rebecca Wierwille
added 1iJ each.
Sophomore
Mana Robers had eight digs and

fi\re serve aces lt&gt;r the Rio Grande
attack.
Junior Kathy Potts added 12
dibrs, Flesher nine and sophomore
Stac'ey Mervis eight . Freshman
Laura Ondera. who entered last
week ti ed for the top spot in the
American Mideast Conference in
blocks per game. posted eight in
this match. Sophomore Jessica
Wheeler added five blocks.
Rio lost to St. Ambrose next,
15- 8, 15-4, 15-8. Robers had the
big march for the Redwomen
with six kills, II digs and four
blocks. Fbher added six kills and
Brown had 10 dib"·
The R edwomcn lost to Michigan-Dearborn team. in its final
match of the tournament, losing
in five games I 5-11, 9-15, 2-15,
18-16 and 14- 16.

. SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

ALBANY - The Eastern
Eagles wasted little time in
establishing a winning tempo
as they claimed a sectional
championship
win
over
Crooksville in two sets 19"and 15-6 Saturday.
"This win was for Don ..
(Jackson)," said Eastern head
coach Paulllrannon. "We dedicated this season to him and
we are going to ride it out tor
him. We're not 100 percent
yet, but the last two games
have been the best of the season.
"Tournament time is when
you want to come on strong
and we are just getting there."
Juli Bailey started the game
off with a booming kill to
establish Eastern's first serve,
then IJanieUe Spencer served
six straight points. T he sixth
point came on another 600ming kill by Bailey. Eflstern
rolled to an 8-0 lead before
Crooksville put its first ~o in ts
on the board .
.
C rooksvill e came back to
cut the deficit to 8-4, but Eastern outscored the Ceramics 72 going down the stretch.
Whitney Karr, Tammy 13issell,
and Kristen Chevalier aU had
kills in th e rampage, while
C inda Clifford and Amber
Baker scored t wo each and
. Bissell, Spe ncer, and C1bbs
each had one. Gibbs served up
game-point for the win.

Please see Eastern, !'ace B&amp;

TVC crown
FROM OVP STAFF REPORTS

HIGH FLYlN' EAGLE - Shauna Elliott of Eastern spikes the ball during the Eagles victory over
Crooksville in the Division IV sectional tournament at Alexander. (Scott Wolfe photos)

Archj~ .Griffit:l
BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

visits Meigs County

HeisntJn trophies, spoke un the
topic of sticcess and how to
attain it. H e said that that the key
t o su ccess is based in desire,
w hich breeds dedication and
leads to determination.
Gr iffi n cited his parenr- , a
junor high cou nselor, two coaches (his high school coach at Eastmoor and osu· head coach
Woody Hayes) , as well as Jesus
C hrist as the mosr influential
people in his life.

MIDDLEPORT- One of the
legendary figures of coll ege football was the
keynote speaker at the Meib"
County Chamber of Commerc~·s ann u:1l
banquet M onday.
Former Ohio
State supersta r
Gr iffin also co mmented on the
Archie Gntlin ·c hanges in college footba ll from
Griffin
spoke
to
a hi s day to th e present.
packed house
" I would say the biggest
that gath ered at the Middlp ort chang&lt;' is the size and speed of
C hurch of Christ's family life the athletes," he said. "They're
center.
~
coming in now bigger, f 1ster, LEGEND TO LEGEND - Former ABC sports commentator Dave
Gri flln, a two-time AIJLAmcri Diles (left) and former Buckeye football great Archie Griffin share
Please see Griffin. Page 86 a moment during last night's banquet. (Andrew Carter photo )
can and the onJy man tot'in two

.....--=,....---,

NFL

J-E-T-S rally

ALBANY -The Meigs girls'
eros!'. country team captured the
TVC championship in relatively
easy fashion last week at Lake
Snowden.
Ashley Thootas and Beatrice
Morgan finished 1-2 in the standings to pace the Marauders.
Thomas' winning time was
22:43, while Morgan posted a
time of 23:36.
Emi ly Story placed seventh
with a time of 24:41 and Andrea
Burdette was ninth, finishing in
25:26.
Brandi Thomas completed the
course in 25:35 to take 13th
place. Jessica Preast placed · 23rd
with a time of 31 :51.
The Meigs girls tallied 22
points, while. Alexander had 41
points to finish a distant second.
Vinton County placed third with
59 points.
Southern had two athletes in
the race. Racheal Marshall finished 21st with a time of 30:44.
Bethany Amberger placed 24th
with a time of 34:04.
Jason Stanley and Brandyn
Bumgardner placed among the
top 15 to lead the Meigs boys to
a third-p lace finish in the team
standings.
The Marauders amassed 85
points.
Stanley placed II th with a time
of 20:14, and Bumgardner finished 14th with a time of20:31.
Matt Williamson came in 2 1st
place with a tim e of :32. D erek
Johnso n came in 22nd place,
posting a time o£21:4:..
Derrick Bolin placed 25th with
a time of 2 1:55. Michael Stacy
cam e in 30th place with a time of
22:42.
Southern placed fifth with a
team score of 109. Chad Hubbard
was the top Tornado finisher,
pla ci ng 18th w ith a time of
21: 12.
Jeff C ircle cam e in 19th with a
time of 21: 14. J eremy Fishe'
placed 26th with a time of 21 :56.
Macy Rees finished 28tl! with a ·
time of 22:32. Garrett Kiser
placed 3 1st with a time of23:15.
Vinton County won th e boys
team tid e with a score of 26.
Waterford was second with 73
pomrs.
Alexand er pla ced fourth with
94 points and Miller was sixth
with 118 points.

Zl

southern falls in sedional play

to nip
Dolphins

BY Scon WOLFE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

ALllANY - The Waterford
Wildcals spotted the Southern
Tornadoes one game, but
re~ in ed composure to win the
last two ,md the match, 13- IS',
15-6, 15-13, Saturday in Divi-

EAST RUTHERFORd),
N.J (AP) - Move over Houdini. Make room, David Copperfield .The New York Jets are
in the magic business, too.
What the Jets are doing this
year might be unrivaled in
NFL history. '
Certainly
what
they
achieved Monday night in a
40- 37 victory over the Miami
Dolphins would have made
any great magician ·proud.
Trai li ng .lll-7 after three
quarters agams't a defense that
had allowed 51 points and
thr~e touchdown~, entering
the game , the Jets scored a
franchise-record 30 points in
13:07 to force overtime.
John Hall kicked a 40-yard
field goal to win it, giving the
Jets (6-1) sole possession of the
AFC East lead and a tie with
Tennessee and Oakland for the
AFC's be1t record.
uThis might he the greatest
comeback I've ever seen,"
Wayne Chrebet said after

Please see NFL. Page 86

Meigs girls

capture

BY Scon WolfE

•

·..-

Eagle~
.

CROSS COUNTRY

Slon

Southern's Tiffany Williams (front) and
Rachel Chapman prepare for the serve . (Scott Wolfe photii')

INTENSE TORNADOES -

IV secnonrl.l tournament

play. ·
Miller defeated WatcJford for
the Sectional Championship in
the last game of the evening,
while Eastern won the opposing
bracket and Sectioml crown.
Maggie Wainright 'and Terri
Huck scored seven straight
points for a 7- 2 lead in the first
game, but Kati Cummin s scored
six straight to give Southern a H7 lead .
Fallon Roush added another
as Emily Stivers added four
straight in Southern's' string of
1 I unanswered point\ 'Cummins had three booming kills for
scores. Roush had a kill and
Stivers added an ace in the
drive .
Traci Huck worked in a
Waterford score, but Fallon
Roush and Emily Stivers combined tor a point apiece in
Southernis I 5-t\ win.
Apparently, the first game
blowout took all the wmd from
Southern's 'Ji!s as the Tornadoe1

tloundered to an 0-7 start in the
o;;econd game.
Rachel Chapman and Fallon
Roush each added two scores,
th.en Hu ck added one for an t-l4 WHS lead .
Stacey Mil)s scored a point for
an 8-5 tally, but then Wainnght
went on a "'coring drive that
gave Waterford a 13-5 advantage.
Southern missed three scoreless opportunities to get back in
the game, but fell at the finJSh
15-6.
Macyn Ervin gave SHS a 1-0
lead in the third game. Then
after Waterlonl tied Chapman 's
ace and other single score put
SHS ahead .1- 1.
Huck tied it at 3 -3, then
Cummins put SHS up by one
more before Rachel Cunningham tied it at 4-4.
Freshman Deanna Pullins put
Southern up 7-4, then after a
Wate1ford score, Stacey Mills
added two for a 9-5 SHS lead.
'I'hen Southern stumbled.
Alana Miller put across five
~pmning serves that Southern
knocked into the net, forcing an
SHS time with the sc.orc tied at
9-9. .
Miller scored another point ·
Please see

Southern, Pap IX

I .

'
I

'

�Tuesday

October24

2000

P1ge B 2 • The Dilly Sentinel
Public Not4ce

Public Notice

Public Notice

IN THE COMMON PLEAS

COURT OF IIEIGS COUNTY.
OHIO
"\
CASE NO IOCJ.GIIf
'-'-JUDGE FREDW CROWII
Gordon Proctor Director
Ohio
Department or
TrenaportaUon Plllntln v
Unknown
Helra
AllP_,.I
Announcement,

GlvN-Y Lost &amp; Found
Y1rd Salol ond wanted
ToDoAdto
Mull Be Pold In Advance
MIBUNE QEAQUNE

2 00 p m the day before
the od lo to r1111
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ATTENTION ALL STUO£NTS

avll-

W.havo200 lObS
immo&lt;!ia &lt;*/
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CalC l odar
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low Mon hly Pym s

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Giveaway

Bltuatad In the
Rutland Co11r1ty
Stata o1 OhiO Pitt
No 7 of Original
Townahlp, town IN Aanga
14W ot The Ohio Company'•
PurchaM tnd bounded and
dllcllbld ulollowl
Elting t pan:tt of lind lying
on tho 1111 aide of tho
conttrllne of a turvay mada
for the Department ol
Tranoplratlon ond bolng
locotld whhln tha boundary
1io:~;.oi; ;P;d••rctl No &amp;-WD ••
1,
upon
the
a p a r m1 n t
o1
Trlnopoo talloo1~ right-of -y
plan MEG 124 12 52 and
r~rded In Env1lop1 18
pogo B oflhl racordl of lhl
Recordera Offici Melga

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So as $350 New Bunk Beds
Comp e ~ $200 Good Used
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740 367 0280

520

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Pomeroy Middleport

1

County Ohio

H Ia underatood that Hid
perctl of larld contain• 0.11111
acrea more or Ina lncluelvl
of the preaant road which
occuplaa 0000 ICI'H more or
leu
1'hl above dHCrlbld area II
not a part of any currently
aaalgned AudHor a parcel

2Year

Male
Australian Mrx
Me1gs County
Shelter

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

....1Na 1'11011- ~upon
•~~~MY of II* RoiM 12C tor
the Ohio Department of
ll'anaportatiOII In lett by
l'1nlcbllnll: PtCIII and 81rDul,
Inc., ..-the dhaiiDn of C
Wlllam Faual, I, P.l. No. 7711
Pnor ~ """"~e~e
Deed look •
P~t~ 110
Melga C011nty Recorder •
Olllol
OwMI lor hlmaell and hla
hllrl
IXIOIItOrt
admlnlllrllore aiiCOeHOrl
and ttalgna reMrvlt all
IXItllng rlghtl ollngNM tnd
ograaa to and from any
rllldllll-.
Purauant to Civil A11l1
12(A)(1)
llld peroona
monllonld abDVt ahlll take
fllrlhtr notlct lhll !My havl
28dly8lftlrthe-IPIIIIonof
tha $ervlca by Pubi101110n
within which to anewor or
otherwlao daltnd agalnat
Plalnllll't pelltlon.
ThllorlglnaloiiUChor other piNdlng damldlng
lglllnll Plalltdtr• pollllon mull
ba ftled with the Clerk of the
Common P1eu Cowtof Mllgl
Cou~ Ohio 11 100 Ellt
Second Strtet. ~0 IIOX 151
Porntroy, Ohio 457811 and a
copy or ony ouch tnawer or
other pleading defending
aglllniiPialntlfl'lpetltlonmUIII
ba NNid upon Mark E Haya
Eaq
A..latant Attornty
Genarel 11 37 South High
Slrlll, Sulll :ISO Columbua
Ohlo43215-4132
A failure to 1nawer or
otherwise doland within uld
28 daya will raeullln Plalntllf
purauant to Civil Aula 55
aaklng the court to grant a
judgment by default agalnll
any ouch peraon who Iaiii to
a..- or Dfl*w!N dallnd
Gordon Proctor
Director Ohio Department of
Tranaportalion (10)17 &amp; 24

ag1lnll Plalntln a petition
mua1 ba Iliad with the
ot
the
Pleu Court of
Melgl County: Ohio et 100
Eat Second lllrell. 1'10 Box
151 Pomaroy Ohio 457et
end 1 copy o1 any ouch
an- or other pleedlng
......Sing ogtlnll P11lntlff •
Pllltlon mull ba aarvld upon
. . . E. Hliya, !*! ...... lint

IN 'nil! COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS COUN'1'Y.
0110
CASE NO (»CV.()82
JUDGE FRED W CROW I
Gordon Proctor Dlroclor
Ohio
Department
of
ll'ln1portat1on Plalntlft v.
OWnn o1111e,...
property altUatld on M1ln
IINit (liMa Aouti12C) wt....
It PIIDI DVtr the Utile
L.lldlng Craek, A1111and Mllal
Cotlnl)l
OhiO
thaTr
ll'antllrtll
Aallgnl,
l!xtolltora Admlllhibtlld,
Htlra lnd Devl- and all
poraona claiming ~ through
or under tham at tl
Delandan1a.
LECIAL NOTICE FOR
PUBLICATION PURSUANT 10
A C 113.07 (1Wo lnMt1tona)
ThiUnlcMMIOwneraolthe
real 11ft11M1tY llltull8d on Mtln
a- (SmW Aoutt 124) whore
II pa•••• over tha Little
Loading Craek, Rulllnd Mtlgl
Cou~
Ohio
their
Tr 1 n a I 1 r u 1
Aulgna,
Executor• Admlrtbihhn,
Htlra and Devl-a ond oil
periiHIII claiming~ through
or under them will taka notice
lhll they,_ baan named 11
dolondanto by Gordon.
~
Director Ohio
Depertment or Trantportlllon
who lnllltuted Can No ooc:v.o92 now pending In the
Convnon P1eu Court or M11ga
~ Ohio which Ia an
ICIIDn to approprllll certain
proporty for highway
purpoMe.llllllllylhl INII&lt;Ing
con.truct1ng or Improving of
"'loull and Section noo.• and
to fix the value of aald

u.--

AIIDI'MV o.nor.r, II 37 Boulh
High .lltreet

580

710

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Merchandise

Autos for Sale

A 1111ure to 1ntwer or
olhero'IIM dallnd within uld
28 dlyl wll rMUM In Plalnllft
purauant to Civil Rule 1111

liking the court to grant 1

judgment by daf1u~ IQIInet
any ouch poraon who lalla to
-olhlrwllt dallnd

Gonion Proctor

Director Ohio Depertmlnt ol
Tr1INpoltallon
(10)17&amp;24

property

The property sought to be
appropriated Ia more
apaclllcally described 11
lollom
SEE DESCRIPTION(S) OF
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EXISTING ACCESS RIGKT'S

Situated In the VIllage of
Rutland County of Meigs
of Ohio pert of Section
No 8 of Original Rutland
Township Town 6N Range
14W of The Ohio Company a
Purchall and bounded and
delcrlbed as folloWs
Being a parcel of land lying

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~~~;;~;;;;;;::-lr;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~.r:~~='!~==:::::~==-+==~==~~~~
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SOCIAL SECUA TV 1551?
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and candy $9 995
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POSTAL JOBS $48 323 00 y
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800 429 3660 ex
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mechan ._com

$925 WEEKL.Y
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He p g Peop e Re e e Go e n
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800
449 4625 Ex 5 00

aw Ou reade s a e he eby
n o med ha a dwe ngs
advert sad n h s newspape
aeava abeo anequa
opportun y bass

REAL ESTATE

FEDERAL POSTAL JOBS
Up o S a 24 nou H ng o
299; et CA to app ca on e11
am na on no ma on FeCit a
H t Fu Btnt 1
800 S98
C&amp;OC ex ena on !I 6 sam epm
CST

CHEAP AS D AT
nees Rae
On A Clea an e P ope ty
Ga aCo One235A alia
ON Y$ 900
Jackson Co One 8 A e T a
$8900 One59Ace"fiac
$5 900
Don De ay Ca Now 0 he Re
du lions n Adams A hens s
o o And Nob e Coun es Ca Us
Today Fo FREE MAPS
Anthony Land Company
1-800 213 8365
wwW • eland com

Herpea EverCLR

89~

Slops He pes Outbreaks
96'o Success Ra e
To F ee 1 677 EVERCLR
nlo www eve clr com

JET
AERAT ON MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; Aebu n s ock
Ca Ron E a s BOO 537 9528

SERVICES

810

HOME BASED BUS NESS P T
OR FIT Wo k on o oH you com
pUJe w h an n e na o a compa
ny Se you own au s Ex e en
nco me Fu suppo
www Be
BassF ee com

TRANSPORTATION

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NG
Uncond ana e me gua an ee
o a e e ences u n shed Es
ab shed 975 Ca 24 H s 740
4 6 0870
BOO 287 0576 Rog
esWaepoong

C1 0 e 01 Ou Adv. 1 ng
ConeuensWeCa Pee
HI 1 ~ W1 bs sean D)' a mol
paoplt

3 tltd

oom

1 a bt h

T eAme a Com
Marke pace

a gt ram

Y OOm W IPIICI 2 Ql lt'tiOhtd

Ql IQI C I NtW Hl'oltn 108 000
)40 ,., 8001 304 112 015

IHNIAI S
Electrical and
Refrigeration

Wou d vou tit p uud 0 11 n
s oooooaouo S3oooou 1

JYO k ng

om Mmt

you d dn
800

II n S3000 II Wll~ Cl

187 801

201
Contact

Joanna Costanza
How To S.vo Up To S 00 00 On
You Mo gtgt Paymtn I Cl To
0 do Book o 1 Fo $40 00
740)148~878

or 'llllll o11r webtltt:
www.amerlcancommunl\yclaollled.oom

�Page 84 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesda~October24,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesda~October24,2000

...........
1•

....... T

ALLEYOOP

IJTP

..

...

•trul

1

IIIII

CONSTRUCTION
WORKERS NEEDED
Electrical / Plumbing Sklllo a Plus
740-992-7943
740.992-5404
7 40.992-6820

that In purauance of a

Resolution of tho Village
Council of tho VIllage of
Middleport, Middleport,
Ohio, passed on the 24th
dey of July, 2000, there will
be oubmlttod to a vola of
tho people ol oald
subdivision at a General
ELECTION to be hold In tho
lo'Uiago ol Middleport, at tho
regular places of voting

therein, on the 7th day ol

November,

2000,

~Qtt~BiaE

CQNf!tECTIQN

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local843-5264

Quality Driveways,
Patloa, Sldewalka.
25 years experience
Free Estimates

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
Final Expenses; College, Retirement,t;Jj
1!3--UlEmergeny Funds; Mortgage;
~
Medical •
Home
-""""--·

Public Notice
Section 5715.19·of tho Ohio
Rovloecl Code. Tho ..
complaints muot be flied on
lor me which · will bo
lurnlehod by tho County
Auditor and muet be lllod In
tha County Audttor'a Office
on or btloro the 31st day ol
March 2001. All eomplalnto
lllod with the county Auditor
will be hoard by the Board
of Rovlolon In tho manner
provided by
Section 5715.111 ollhe Ohio
·Revlood Code. Nancy
Porker Campbell Molgs
County Auditor
(10) 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 22, 23,
24,25,26

P/ 8 CONTRACTORS, INC.
CONCRETE
MASQNRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercial
Free EAitlmatea
Fully Insured
lfiln Mtrrlson/Radat, OW.
(740) 985-3948

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

At a rate not eJCceedlng 1

(o"e) mills for each one
dollar ol vetuallon, which
amounts to Ten ce"ts
($0.10) lor each one

hundred dollars of valuation

lor live (5) years.
The Polls lor aeld Election
will open at 6:3a o'clock
A.M. end remal" open until
7:30 o'clock P.M. ol said
day.
By order ol the Board ol
Elections ol Metgo County,
Ohio
John N. lhla, Chairman
Rita D. Smith, Director
Dated September 6 2000
(10110, 17, 24, 31 4TC
Publl.c Notice
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
Relorenco: 5715.17
Ohio Revised Code
Tho Molgo County Board
of Revision has completed

Its work of equalization. Tho

tax returns for tax year 2000

have been revised and the
valuatlona completed and
are open for public
lnapactlon In the office of

tho Malgo Counly Auditor,

Second Floor, Courthouaa,
Second Straat, Pomeroy,

OH 45769.
Complaints agalnat the

valuation•, aa established
for tax year 2000 muat be
made In accordance with

The annual election of the

Board ol Directors lor the
Meigs County Agricultural
Society Will be held at tho
Socrotary'a olllco at the

·• Sales Representative
Larry Schey

r-

75o East State $(reel
· fairgrounds,
Monday,
·
Athens,
Ohio 45701
November · 6, 2000. The
polls will bo open !rom 5:00
-"A Better
p.m. to 9:00 p.m. on
Election Day.
, The election ohall be by
Bill Slack
ballot. Bollots must be
• Firewood • Ught
marked with an "X"
oppootto tho ·nome to be
hauling e Tree &amp; hedge
counted. Tho caotlng ol
votoa lor dlrectoro by
!rimming &amp; removal
proxl.. Ia not to bo
7 40-992-2269
permitted.
Only ruldenta of Molga
County
holding
LINDA'S
momborohtp certlllcottt lor
at leaot t5 dayo bolore tho
PAINTING
date ol tho otoctlon may
vote.
"Take
the P.ain out
Mombero of the aoclety
of paintingmust declare their
candidacy lor tho olllce of Let me do it for you"
Director of tho oocloty by
Interior
llllng with tho S•crot0 ry
Dabble Watson, 42455
FREE ESTIMATES
Woodo Road, Coolville, OH
Before 6 p.m. ·
45723, a petition olgnod by
10 or more membere of the
society who ere re1ldante of

(10)10,17,24 3TC

(\

CHECK THE
WANT ADS FIRST!

HO'ME

IMPROVEMENT

fired of staring at tho same four
Wfl!lls, find everything you need
In tho Cla .. lflods.

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

WANTED

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
I
Thursdays
'
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
'
Paying $80.00
'
per ga"JP
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie. # 00-50 11!1Mfn
~~~~~~~

740-985-3831

"

1000 St. Rl. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

992·1 H)l

8 13 1 mo d

3~

if
~i

·~ ~
~

~'

THE 'BORN LOSER
'I Nff.DTOOC.~~':&gt;ISTI\tol\ ~
ru:~
~(W~I.

\0

lo Utlr

740-992-4559
9/ 1/001 mopo

PEANUTS
I CAN'T BELIEI/E ALL TI-lE
HOU~S I'IJE WASTED WAITIH6
FOR THE SCI-IOOL BUS ...

1-lAIJE I DISCOVERED SOMETI-IIN61

'·

'

..

------f§~-----'

I

mont

-Or as ow as

\

• Remodeling
. • Decks
• Roofing

Need It done, gl~e 111 a call
FREE ESTIMATES
Great Priced on New Homu

. ..

•

.

74D-187-G388

SMITH'S CONSTROCTION

lit

ABOIJT ~Ow MAtiY
tiUNP,tP·TtiOV.fANI&gt;
P~OPL.t OIJ~
OP#ti#ON
F.tnt.rtNTS! ,

I

rf'grrlur hours ..

DEPOYSAG
PAR,.S

'

T~L.L. vs TtiAT PA,T AGAIN

The CountrY
Candle ShoP

d1m .41100

Oct. 1, 2000 -Apr. 1, 2001

'

BIG NATE

Do11tr work.
Free Estimates

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parls
Factory Autt.orized
Case-IH Paz1s
Dealen.

'

1121100 1 mo. nd.

..

,)

one

Nol1b
2•
4•
5 NT
Pass

•

47 ~, ••g.

18 View

54 Typo of _ ,

46 ~ ..11 Drenchocl
51 Sund8y111',..
17 "Ciaallc:" otart
Mdlon

chiltr

20 Comodlon

c..ur

55 Terrllo&lt;lal

21 AngJo.Suon

division

Hff
23 HouM wing

511 Polnlod
we1p ona
57 Cavael-

24.25 Fonner

RullianNior

DOWN

27-29 Uncle (Sp.)
31 -malton
32 Scomp

1 Typo of eteak
2 Actor Borvnlne
3Ciawa

4 -cleJenelro
5 --rule

Wednesday, Oct. 25, 2000
You can benefit greatly from
several people wilh whom you've
establi shed meaningful relationships. The'y will prove to be as
lucky for you as you'll for be
them.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22),
You might be told something in
confidence today that wtll be of
immense help to you. Your bene·
factor means it to be for your ears
on ly, so keep it under wraps as
you go about your business. Scor'
pio, treat yourself to a birthday
gift. Send for your Astra-Graph
predictions for the year ahead by
mailing $2 and SASE to AstraGraph, c/o this newspaper. P.O,
Box 1758, Murray Hill Station,
New York, NY 10156. Be sure to
state 'your Zodiac sign.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) The right companions can
prove to be exceptionally l~cky
for you today, so select ass\)ctates
who arc striving for bigger and
better things in which you can
share.
.1
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
· 19) Something you're involved in

that you thought l1ad sparse poten.t ial may prove to be quite substantial tod ay when you put a new
(WISt Oil it .
AQUA Rl US (Jan 20-Feb 19)
Events and circumstances today
could expose yotlto a large social
circl e where you can make new
friends and contacts. More then
one of them wi ll prove to offer
new oppor1unities.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Lady Luck will be working on
your behalf today to produce
gratifying results, so it behooves
you to set your goals high and
establish meaningful objectives.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Because you'll instinctively put
yourself in the other guy's shoes
when dealing with others today,
associates will appreciate it when
they can work with you on a one·
on-one basis.
TAURUS (April 20·May 20)
Regardless of the size of an
assignment or task, If you put
forth your best efforts today, your
yield will be far more significant
than you can imagine . .

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Regardless of the group with
which you're involved today, you
will not go unnoticed. You'll be a
wonderful standout without being
an extrovert.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
Your hunches and perceptions
regardin g the outcome of what·
ever it' is you're involved in today
may be more accurate than usual
and prove to be quite lucky for
you.
LEO (July 23 -Aug. 22) The
key to success today is not to
think in limit ed terms . Elevate
you r sights and 'isualize the very
best that could happen.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Make issues lhat involve your
career or financial wherewithal
your pri tm1ry concern today,
because you could be luckier than
usual. Play to win . ·
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Be
imaginative and expectant, and
believe in your ~or•ceptiot1S today.
You'll l1ayc hcttcr than average
chances for success. Lady Luck
favors everything you create.

I

&amp;Thick

7Coaatela ComadiM

(generally)

Phlllpo

Easl
2•
Pass
Pass
Pass

To succeed at the top level of
bridge requires as much time and
effort as at any sport. True, you
don 't need to goon 20-mile training runs, like marathon entrants- and the Bermuda Marathon
coincided with our world championships on that island last January. Still, those who put in the
time to discuss their bidding
methods will see the benefit in
their results. One such pair is Chip
Martel and Lew Stansby, who
have won three world titles
together. They did very well on
this deal against Italy.
First, look only at the NorthSouth hands. Where would you
like to end? What is your auction
to get there? And how would you
plan the play after a spade lead?
The Italian pair stopped in
four no-trump. Here, Martel
(South) started with two clubs,
strong. artificial and forcing.
There were five natural bids: four
spades was a control-bid (cue-bid)
expressing slam interest. Then
Stansby made two excellent
~ hoices . First, his jump to ftve noplayable in a suit other than
hearts. And when Mm1el offered
clubs, Stansby passed.
Six hearts cannot make after a
spade lead. and might fail on a
different star1. Seven clubs , which
is a good.contract. unluckily goes
down on all leads -- the red-suit
breaks are lethaL
Mar1el found the way horne in
six clubs. He won trick one with
the diamond ace and ducked a
spade. Winning the diamond
return with dummy's king, he
played a spade to his ace, ruffed
his last spade in .the dummy,
drew trumps, and claimed.

vert1se our

Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00pm
740'992-5050
(Randy)

Wesl
Pass
3•
Pass
Pass

trump suggested that his hand was

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

46 Compno pt.

9 llaldng pll
10 SCUIIIo

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM- 8 PM

"u,., 'rt• IJfu·k

dl-

15 BcwiCLdld
(2 wdo.)

11

PlajAilght

12

E. . . . DoiiUy

•

•

1!1 Otd22 Having
lunch

••

26 Edges

.. ~

24!Miplng

28 Wonloof
den..l

30Fran-·
34 Exbemely'

r

~
•

r.:.t :

or- .

35
36 Typo of liiOc:k

Work pays off

45771

304-273·0036
.

• J 3
• 10 7

740.949-2217

6 Month
Membership $100
plus tax
..
with this ad
Ravenswood, WV

"Ahead in Sen/ice"
• Western Pride 12% Sweet feed - 15.25 I SO lbs.
•12% Cattle feed 16.75/100 lbs:
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog food 16.75150 lbs.
• fall fertilizers

7 Gain-

Opening lead: e 10

29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio

IRON CITY GYM

DE RIUER HG SERUICE

ALL
CURED UP It

SUDDEN~·I'M

\

HILL'S
SELF STORACE

~- P•wla • P1.la:zle,

_ . t . e.g.
37 Smoll , _

:~.
40 Kllchenl • .,_

BY PHILLIP ALDER

.

...

•

"

u---)

DOC tl ALL OF TH'

FREii: ESTIMATES .

Standing timber large
or small tracks. Top
prices paid also.

Meigs County
Fairgrounds

992-2753

WV #023477

Soulb
2•
2NT
4•
6•

COMMERCIAL ond R!SIDENTW.

Advertise in
this _space for
s1oo per
month. ·

1-800·291·5600

A·J MINI-STORAGE
992-6396
992·2272

HEADACHE

NUSS II SET UP TH
. OPERATtN'

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

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

-

DOC Ill GOT
A TERRIBLE

740·992·7599
'

33 "Agnu.-"
34Paat-

Vulnerable: Nortb-South
Dealer: South

BISSELL BUILI}ERS
INC.

I

•QJ. I096
• Q J 7 3

• A 7 4

.

i

• K 8 2
• 4
• 10 9 8 6 4 2

•A9
• A Q 5
•AKJ54

22 yn. Local

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
' • Replacement Windows
I
• Room Additions
I
r
• Roofing

li:asl

Soulb

Pomerqy, Ohio

.

West

.932

992·6215

HEAP VOIICbUI accepted for
lleJCI a Ga1lll CouaUel

Now Renting

SPACE
AVAILABLE

• New Homes
• Garages
• Siding

311215 Ball Run Road

10/4 1 mo

L...-------1

949-2033

Ball Logging &amp;
Firewood
Pomeroy, Ohio 411769

St Rt 7 North

leave Message

CALL FOR MORE
INFORMATION

Toll-Free 1·877-604-735

• Free Installation
• Free in Horne Estimates

*No Dealers or Contractors Please

.. 5 3
•KI08652
• K7
.. Q 8 6

• Eltclrfnll. Pitnolllng
• loollnll &amp; Gtolttn
• VInYl Sl... &amp; Polootlag
• Pltlo I. Porch Dtcb
Free Estimates
V.C. YOUNG Ill

992·6142 or

$229.00*

992-4119

Phone (740) 593-6671

I
Molgo County, at loaat 7 Alter 6 pm· 740-985·4180
de yo before tho annual '
election of dlroctoro Ia hold.
Only regularly nominated
candldatoe who have met
WINTER
tho tiling requtromanto will ·
STORAGE
be ollglblo' lor tho election
aa director.

• • - Hdlllans &amp; R-"llng
• New Cim'og11

cau a LeiTe lleuq:e

~~
~ Call for Further Details
QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.

Steve Riffle

~

~

Dump Trudl DdiV"'l'
Melp and Gall.la COUallel

·Anll Size Double Hunl!·

992-5479

LEGAL NOTICE'

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

UINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Cellular
Jeff Warner 'Ins.

r .•

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

1-800-272-5179or446-9800

.ALltEL

Public Notice

740-992-5232

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

UPTO 70% OFF

No

IAUMLUMBER
1,.. R,.. 248
CHEI'I'ER

' W.elp"

~

PRODUCTS

Protect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
collections, legal papers, investment records. photo
albums, cameras. household inventory and
sentimental items will be sale.
For more inforl)1ation call

.Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy.? Credit Problems?

The CRAFTY, BLIND SPOT

1

SECURITY

ACROSS
t Set of four

t3 Cook lloWiy In 40 Finger Joaolit
liquid
41
- · •.g.
14 Nol
43 Wllclelllllll
o-epiHMto 45-a...-

'THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

OF

7/22/TFN

NOTICE OF ELECnON ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
EXpenses.
THE TEN MILL UMITATION
Said ta•. being A renewal
(Ravlaod Code, Sectlono
of a tax ol1 mill
3501.11 (G), 5705.19, 5705.25)
· At a rate not exceeding 1
NOTICE le hereby given .
(one) mille lor each one that In pursuance of a
(740) 992-3470
dollar ol valuation, which Reoolutlon ol tho VIllage
amounts to Ten cants Council ol tho VIllage ol
($0.1 O) lor each one Syracuse, Syracu1a, Ohio,
hundred dollars or valuation paoood on tha 3rd day of
lor live (5) years.
Auguat, 2000, there will be
Tho Polls lor said submitted td a vole of the
Elsctlon will open at 6:30 people ol oald aubdlvlalon
o'clock A.M. and remain at a General ELECTION to
(Factory Outlet)
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M. be held In the Vlllega ol
All vertical blind8 are made to order at
olsald day.
Syracuse, at the regular
By order of the Board of places o1 voting therein, on
our location
Elections ol Meigs County, the 7tH day of November,
2000, tho quoatton ol
Ohio
levying a tax, In excese of
John N. lhle, Chairman
the ton mill limitation, lor·
Rita D. Smith, Director
• Vertical8 • Wood • Minis • Etc
the benellt of Village of
Dated September 6, 2000
Syracuse lor the purpose
(10) 10, 17, 24,31 4TC
ol: Fire Prolectlon.
144 Third Ave. Gallipolis 446·4995
A replacement ol a tax ol
Toll Free 1·888·745·8847
Public Notice
1 mill.
At a rate not exceeding 1
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON (one) mills lor each one
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF dollar ol valuation, which
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION amounta to Ten cants
(Aavlsod Coda, Sections
($0.1 0) lor each one
3501.11 (G), 5705.19, 5705.25) hundred dollars ol valuation
NOTICE Ia hereby given lor live (5) yeara.
that In pursuance of a
The Polio tor oatd Election
Resolution of the Board of will open at 6:30 o'clock
Township Trustees of the A.M. and remain open until
Town•htp of Satom, 7:30 o'clock P.M. ol oatd
Langovme, Ohio, passed on dey.
tho 26th day ol Juno, 2000, . By order ol tho Board ol
there will be submitted to a Elections ol Molgo County,
vote ol tho people ol sold Ohio
'.
subdivision at a General John N. thto, Chairman
ELECTION to be hold In tho Rita D. Smith, Director
Township ol Salem Ohlo,.at Ootid September 6, 2000
the regular places of voting (10) 10, 17, 24, 31 4TC
.
therein, on the 7th day of
November,
2000,
the
Stop In And See
question of levying a tax, In
limitation, lor tho bonellt ol
Salem Tow"shlp lor the
purpose ol: Fire Protection.
Said tax bet"g A renewal
ol a tax ol1 mill

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

GALLIPOLIS

Hauling • limeslone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fi!.l Dirt o Mulch •
Bulldozer Services

excess of the ten mill

Self-Storage

ALDER

URNPIKE

• New .Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compart~
FREE
ESTIMATES ,
74().992-1671

HfiOLinG and
EXCAVATinG

Public Notice

~;&lt;~
High 81. Dry

740-742-8015 or
1-an-353-1022

~WICK'Sfl

tha

qutttlon ol levying a tax, In
excoas of tho ton mill
limitation, lor tho benefit ol
Middleport Vlloga lor tho
purpooa ol: Curr~nt

YOUR

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

CMI.

Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF •
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
(Revised Code, Sacttono
350t.t1 (G), 5705.19, 5705.25)
NOTICE lo hereby given

PHU,UP

UFE

.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDOII:

IIUIIIIIOIII
... Ill

The Dally. Sentinel • Page B 5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos •
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotattons by famous people, past and
present Each let1er In the cipher stands for another.
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SCMYBXAP
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Jogging Is good lor your logs and your feet It's also
vary good lor the ground. II makes it leal roeedod.'- C.M. Schulz

_ _ _ _..:....__ lolltotl

,

NUMBERED
LEITERS IN SQUARES

To get a current weather
report, check the

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWERS
Gimlet- Quake; Waxen- Lackey-· CAKE MIX

Sentinel

The new bride asked the city engineer what. the elevation was of her new home. She needed to know so
she could follow the directions for her CAKE MIX!

�Tuesda~October24,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 6 • The Daily Sentinel

HIJh: 70S: Low: 501

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
0 1 0 000 117 204
NFC
Eaot
WlTPc:IPF

Wast•wtot•
(FOX)
Soturdoy, Oct 21
NY Y o - 4, N.Y Mets3. 12""""115
Sundoy, Oct 22
N.Y Yankoos 6, NY Mots 5, NY Yoni&lt;-

--y.

1ood Mries 2.()

N.Y Vank•s (Hernandez 12-13) at NY
l.lets(Rood 11·5), 6 18 p m
Oct 25
N.Y. Yankees (Neagle Hl al N Y M91S IB J
Jooos 11-Gl. 8:18pm.
Thundoy. Oct 26
NY Yankees at NY. Mats, 818 p m . If necessary
Soturday, Oct. 28
N.Y Mets at N Y Yankees, 8 p m , tf necessary
Sunday, Oct 20
N Y Uets at N Y Yankees. 8 p m EST, 11
recessary

I iiRo

~

W l TPta. PI' PA
lndlanapolts

M1amt
Buffalo
New England

T\tnnessee
Batttmore
Ptttsburgl'1
C~eland

Jactcson\ltlle
Ctnc1nnah

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

857
714
71 4
429
250
857
625
571
250
250
143

165
202
149
140
143

140
153
91
153
171

145 97
134 89
121 78
95 197
142 190
68 164

Weat
6 1 0 857 192 128

Oakland

120 105
181 110
174 174

Green Bay
Tampa Bay
Chic.lgo

3 4 0 .429148 139
3 4 0 429 164 125
, 7 0 125 110 202
Woot

St loos

New Drleans
Carolina

6 1 0 .857 296 228
....... 4 3 0 571 131 n7
.... 3 4 0 429 144 116

A11an1a
2 6 0 .250 149 238
San Frar'ICISCo
2 6 o 250 214 258
'ThUf.l;daw-'a Ga"*l
Deuo« 28, TBIT1J&lt;l Bay 14
Sunday'a Gamu
DallaS 48, Anzona 7

Eullm Coi•fa•tca
AtiMtlcDMoion

Phlladelprua

Kansas City

4 3 0 571 188 147

Denve1
Seattle

4 4 0 500238 178
2 6 0 25'0 121 200

4
.3
3
1

2
2
3
3

1
1
0
2

0
0
0

o·

9
7
8
4

25
20
17

20
19
20
19

... . 1

5

2

0

4 21

34

25

Varp.zver at
Anahetm ar

231162023

Atlontic Divlolon
W L

DetrOit
Nashville

5
5

2
3

1
0

0
1

2
5

1
0

0
1

6

0

1

Open San 018Q0, N Y G1ants, Green Bay
Mond•y'e Game
NY Je1S 40. M~nu 37. OT
Sunday, Oct. 251
Carolina at Aflanta. 1 p m

Chteago ..

4
2

Columbus

1

Cu"tC1nnati at Cleveland. 1 p m

Calgal'f

11 25
11 24
9 15
5 16
3 13

.6 0
5 2
5 2
3 5
1 5

DetrOit at Indianapolis 1 p m
Green Bay at M1am1. 1 p m
Minnesota at Tampa Bay. 1 p m
New YOfk Jets at BuffalO, 1 p m
Pittsburgh at Baltimore , 1 p m
St. Lou1s at San FranC1sco. 4 05 p m
New 011eans at Anzona . 4 05 p m
Phlladelph1a at New Vortc. G1ants. 4 OS p m
Jacksonville at Dallas, 4 15 p m
Kansas C1ty at Seattle, 4 15 p m
Oakland at San D•ego. 8 20 p m

M1nnesota

2
2
0
0
2

0 14 28
0 12 27
1 11 29
0 6 17
0
4 15

.2
1
1

. Milwaukee

31

12
23
24

20
25

6 1 1 0 13
6 2 1 0 13
4 2 1 2 n
4 4 2 0 10
4 2 0 0
8
a w1n, one po~nt lor

29
26
26
38
17
a lie

18
17
29
33
13
and

overt1me loss
Monday'a Game
Los Angeles 5, Anahe1m 4. OT

GB

1 .800 1 1/2
2 .667
2
3 500
3
4 .333
3 .250
4

o.n-.

Dolla• at
9 p.m.
f'NiaOelpl1ia at Utall, 9 p.m
PhoeniX at Vancowef, 10 p.m.

Ch1cago

3

3

Toronto

3

Cleveland

.1
1

4 .429
4 .200
6

Midwest Divlaton
W L
San Anton10

utah
Denver
M•nnesota
Vancouver

5
4

....v.noouver at Golden State, 10 p.m.
• Saaamento at Seattle, 10 p.m.

Nllttonal P1of teional ~ Le~~gue

143

Pet

1 833
667

2

3
3
. 2
2

3 500
3 .500
4 333
4 333
.... 1 5 167
Pacific Dlvltlon

American COnference

112
1

500 1 1/2

Western Conference
Dallas
Houston

Toronto at ChartOIIe, 1 p.m.
W.ohinglon vs. New Yori&lt; at Uniondale,
.V.. 7:30 p.m.
·
Milwlt.*88 81 CFiicag01 8:30p.m.
. ~hia at San Anlonlo, 8 :30pm

200 4 112

2 .667
3 571

Atlanta

'n

Sotunloy. Oct 28
Detroit at llaltimol8
Klntas Ci1y a1 BYftalo
Harriii&gt;Jrg ., Clellelard
Milwaukee 11 Pl1iladolphla

•

2

3

•
GB
1

2
2

3
3
4

THE CHA·M PIO·NS

W
Baltimore .. .
.. ... 1
Philadelphia .
1
North Carolina ,................ 0
Buf1al0 ........................... 0
Cleveland
....... o
Harrisburg ..
. ........... 0

,

~

Pet.

0
o
0
1
1
1

1.000
1.000
.000
.000·
.000
.000

GB
1/2
1

1
1

National Conr.rence
W
Toronto .
. ........ 2
KansasCtty .
.. ............ 1
DetrOit
... 0
Edmonton .
.. ........ ___ o
Wichila
............. 0

l
Pet
0 1 000

GB

1 .500
0 .000
o 000
0 .000

1
1
1
1

Milwaukee

1

. : . ........ 0

BASEBALL
ArnarteM L.ugue
BALTIMORE ORIOlES-An"'unced they
wHI no1 pick up the option lor RHP Pat Rapp.

000

1 112

LOS ANGELES DODGERS-Fired Jim
Benedict, minor teague pitehiOQ ooordinatOf,
and Phil Favia and Marty Mater, scouts
Announced Julio Sarmiento. meOa relations
CllredOf, wonl return next season
PITTSBURGH PIRATES-Named Lloyd
McCienOOn manager
BASKElBAlL
National Balketi*l AAOCiatlon
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS-Waived G
Johnny Hemsley
FOOTBAlL
N1tional Football Lugue
ARIZONA CARDINALS-Fired Vince lOOn.
coach Namect Dave McGmms intenm coaCh
CAROLINA PANTHERS-Placed DE Chuck
Smith on injured reserve Claimed OT Melv•n
Tuten ott wa1vers from the Denver Broncos
GREEN BAY PACKERS - Ae-s~gned OT
Barry Stokes
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS - Waived CB
Shad Criss
.
,
MIAMI DOLPHINS-Acttvated WR 0 J
Mc0utfl8 from the phys1caUy unable to perform
list Wa1veCILB MIChaet Hamtllon
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS -S19ned lB
Maugaula Tu1tele lo practice squad
HOCKEY

National Hockey league
WASHINGTON CAPITALS - Signed
Chns Stmon to a two-year contract

.Griffin

( fromPa~B1

stronger. I think it's due to the
sop histicated weight programs
that high schools have now.
''I'd say' the other thing is that
offenses are really spreading the
field," he added. "It makes it
much more diffcult on the
defense, and that's why you· see
higher scoring games."
The two-time Heisman winne r
said he has no doubts another
player can accomplish the feat at
some point.
"I've always said that if I can do
it, there's always someone out
there thal can do it," Gnffin said.
"Michaei'Vick has a shot at it.
Somebody can do it."
Griffin,said that today's college
players face a .different type of
pressure than players in his day.

"There's pressure all the time,"
he said. " But, the media is a little
more intense I think. Because of
that, I think the pressure's more.
Still. as a college kid, as a college
athlete at a big university, you live
your life in a fish bowl.
And you've got to live your life
in a way that people will be
proud, and you've got to do
things that your tean1n1ates ,
coaches, your school , everyone
can be proud."
When asked about this year's
Buckeye football tea m , Griffin
spoke with pride.
"Still got a lot of work to do,
bur they've done a bang- up job. If
th is team can focus one game at a
time, I think they can be very
successful."
Griffin's visit :1lso served as a
reunion of sorts with fanner
ABC sports commentator Dave
Diles, a Middleport native. Diles
was Griffin's biographer.

Southem

SECTIONAL CHAMPIONS- Front row. Amber Baker and Kristen Chevalier. Second row. left to right. Kayla Gibbs, Cinda Clifford. Tiffany HOI'
IOn and Janet Calaway Back row. left to 'nght, trainer Dan Clouse, Juli Hayman. assistant coach Sarah Clifford, Danielle Spencer. Shauna
~lliott, Whitney Karr, Tammy Bissell, Kass Lodwick. Juli Bailey .and head coach Paul Brannon. (Scott Wolfe photo)

Eastem

scored four stratght, then c .nda
Chfford added game-point for

from Page Bl

" Everyone did then part," said
BrJnnon. '' The setters set .1s well
as Jnyon~ live ever seen. It
reminded me of Juli (Hayman)
and Stephanie (Evans), two of the
sc hoolis best setters. They put the
ball where it needed to be and we
were able to grt some back row
sp1kes.
"When we make nustakes is
· when son1eqne trtes to . do too
much," Brannon added. "Tonight,
eve ryone stayed within their
game and played their role. It was
a total team effort.
' 'I'd like to take this thing

: Eastern

~u pn s tar

Knsten

c;:hcvalicr mcd her m agic to give
EHS ·a 6-0 lead in ~he 'econd
~ame. Chcv,tlicr sav~..· d up .m J Ct'
in the drJVt' then locked tn on a
!!reat . all-&gt;round floor game.
Crooksvtlle ca me back to 6-3 ..bu.t
Spencer added three of her own.
The Ceramics added two but
~astern went on a 6-1 run to end
the game at 15-6 .
Baoley had J ktll m the dnve,
while Amber Bake r scored a key
~oint off a Lodwick dmk. Baker

NFL
from Page B1·
· catc hing two TD passes from
Vinny Testaverdo, who had fou r
t1[ hi~ five sco rin g pas;cs 10 the
f9urth quarter from a hurry- up
offense in which he oiled the
Plays. "It was kind of like we
p)ayed two games.
· " It dtd hurt us to be m the
lOcker ruom Jt hJlftimc wonderIfl g, 'What em \VC do•· Then \\'C
6'(1 out thl'rc ,1 nd we 're 111.lk1n g
pl.1ys \vhcn Wl' 1ilost h.n·e to ." .
· Su ch ,ls Tc s til\-~ Jde hnttng Lw.,.L:famu:s Col t"~ fo 1 ,1 JO-yt~IJ ~t.ou:.
d1t..' rookll' \ first NFl rouchJ;own ; ftndmg rookH: Jt.·rmJJnc
Wi~,;gms for a !-ya rd TD. Iu s fim
pro score; th rowlllg to Chn:bl't
fnr 14 yards to tlt' H .H JO w 1t h
3.·5) to go; then cnn n ~..•c [!llg \\'lth
Jf)O-pound Jumbll Ell •ott on .1 .1y.ud tackle-eligible pl.1v to n c 1t .It
YJ With ~1 secon d' left
" It took fOre\Tr. lt ''·'' hkl' tl ll ll'

the wtn.

stood still," Elliott md of his
score, the flrst pass he's ever
ca ught.
By then, perhaps half of the
original crowd of 78,389 had .
gone home, and who knows how
many viewers at home had tuned
out. They missed spmetlung not
even the great Houdmi could
have co nJured up
What was billed as a prim etime showdown for the AFC East
lead .looked like a hYnuliating
rout for 45 nnnutes. Jay Ftedler
looked ltke. Dan Marmo, Lamar
Smi th had TD ru m of (J8 &lt;1nd 3
v.1tds ;u1d Olmdo Mare ki cked
th ree field ~,;mls for M t,l illi (5-2).
But the Jets c.tms· b.Kk for the
third ttme th1s 'ca~on m th e
fourrh qu.ntcr. 111 tht' mo sr '\t..'l1"·"~ ­
tl onJ I style .
'' Mmnt..·sot.l .111d St. L olll~ gt..•t
pL·opk down .md keep pu..,hmg
on,'' Dolphtm co rnerb,Jck S.1111
M .tdllion li.,ud " Wt• Lhdn 'r do th.1t

We JUSt backed down"
Or they w.:rc ~tt..',1 111rol k d .
NL'\\' Yurk h,ui 20 tint do\\ ll~

111

(tour umcnt) at least two more
ga mes . That is when we \vould
meet Frankfort Adena (one of tlw
teams Eastern lost to o e.uly in the
season.
Bailey was 7 for 10 spikmg
with four kills and one block .
Chevalier had six points, two
aces. was 9 for 9 serving. 4 of (J
sp ikm g with three kills, and I (J for
21 setting with four sets for kil'is.
C hevalier also had two blocks.
Bake'r had seven points, was 1()
for I 0 serving, 13 for 17 setting
and had five sets for kills. Spencer
had 10 points, was 12 of 13 servmg, 3 for 7 sptking and I for I
setting.
Cinda C lifford had three points

a11d wa~ 3 fo r 4 serving:.
T:11mny Bissell had three points.
She wos 6 for 6 serving. 5 for 5
spiking with one kill, and one
block. Kayl.t Gtbbs had o ne point
.md w:-.s .1 for J serving.
Km loihvick was 5 for 5 spikmg with two kills, I of I setting,
and had two blocks. Whitney
Karr was .1 for 4 spikin g with one
kill and was 2 for 3 settin g with
two blocks.
Easte rn advances to the district
tournament at Northwest High
Sc hool in McDermott Saturday
at 2 p.m.
..
The Eagles face TV C Hocking
rival Mill er. The teams split their
season series this. year.

the fourth period to one for
Miami. It was the first time since
1981, when Atlanta dtd it, that a
team scored 30 points or more in
a fourth quarter.
And it was the second time in ·
the NFl's prime-time spotlight
this season that the Jets won so
improbably they be&lt;1t Ns'w
England in Game ~ almost the
same way. But that ga me endt:d
far eJrlicr than this one, whJCh
stretched until I :20 a.m. EDT
"I thought New En~l.md w.1s .1
great co meb:tck , but thi ~ w.1~
;ncreJ•bk" Chrebcr ,,ud. "We '
took 1t upo,n ou rsch·c, ,1nd 11t.1dc
tht..• plays wht..·n w~ h.1d to. It w .1~

got to car ry two people on your
back, you carry two people.That's
how a family works."
This was a dysfunctional. family
for most of the night. The
thou ght of stretching their winning streak over Miami to five
games ~cemed ridi culous when
the fourth quarter began and the
stands st:trtcd emptying.
" It's a 's hock," said Fiedler,
whose pa sses lost steam as the Jets
st..·izt..•d the tnomentum . "This
whole locker room ts stunneCi.Wc
tbou~ht we had a handle on ic."
ThL'y ce rtainly seemed to .
Mumi g.tined 207 yards in th~
op~o.'ltjng 15 minutes. the most by
·"')' N fL te.1m m the tl rst period
thi~ ~L'&lt;J ~ on . It took th~ jt..'ts until
X:(~-+ i mo the 5t&gt;cond qur~rter to

.

b'11t

r.::ilL'ck

.tt 1ulft1m~..:?,

.md

,,·~..·

Ljcudni to !jl) out swi ng1ng."
M •.1t-cus Colc mJn lud t\\ ' O
Jmcrcl'pnons in t!w O\'l'rt inll' ,ll H.i
tlncL' for the g.tme. He fumbk·d
.1\\',\)' hi' first pickoff, but hi, 'econJ led to H.tll 's \\'Inning ki ck .
" H ow \W do It doe~n 't nutter."'
Cole man s.11&lt;.l. " Uu t nothmg L'\'t..'ll
co me~ dost..· to th1s. WL''re Jl l~t
pl.lymg r·or e.IC h other. If vou'\'s•

rc:g:t ~ tcr .1

first down.

But by the s·nd. N~wYork 's victory wemed lll eVHablt'.

" I 've lll'\'L'r bel!'n .tssociated
\\' l t h ,\·bu n ch of guys who want
to win t(n ~..·ach otHer .md comt'
togt·tht·r umkT .ldvt·nity." Cnk·111.1 11 ,,ud ;' lr \ .tm.17!1l g."

LW

Slturday'e Gamu
Philadelphia 16, H~rrisburQ 4

Roush was 7 to r 9 servi ng with
four points. 13 of 18 spikin g and
31 for 37 setting. Cumnuns \\'JS 9
of 1~ st•rv~ng with seven points
Page
.md (J for II spikin g with a kill .
for a Waterford lead. but then Stin·rs was 6 for H serving wtth
SHS recovered and Sttvers tied it · five point~ ,l!ld 6 of (J spiking.
Mill~ w.l!'l ') for 9 ~·cn·mg \\"lth
at 10- 10.
Waterford regained the serve five poinr.:;, and was H f( &gt;r H spik on a Terri Huck kill, then the ing with three kills. M,cyn En·in
southpaw · Wainright notched wJs 4 fo r 5 :-L-rving .li H.i 29 of YJ
three stra ight poi11ts is SHS start - settin g- w1th four assi~ts. Ch.1pnun
ed to feel the pressure, the score was 1J for I J se rving with SL'Vt'n
point\ .111d I (, of 111 spikin g with
13,10 WHS .
C h apman kept her cool in a kill. De.111.1 Pullim w,s 7 for 7
tying the game 13-13 but Terri serving with thn.'c points :md 4
Huck served u p the next two for 4 settmg.
points fo r the Waterford win.

from

Bl

Carleton SchooV Meigs
Industries

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

E~'3fJ~t·

NOW DPBN

Drive Thru For Your Convenience
Ice Cold Beer. PoP. ChiPs. Pizza. Etc•••
OPen Mon.- Sat. 10 a.m•.- 10 P.m.

Twin Oaks

Convenience Store
34099 St. Rt. 1
Pomeroy. Ohio

992-5829

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Volume 51, Number 107

so Cents

NoUonlf I.Nguo

•

4

4
4

Detro1t
Indiana

Pacific Division
PhOenix
Dallas
Anahe1m
Los Angeles
San Jose
Two po~nts tor

0

Pel..
1 00

Centr•l Dtvlaion
...4 1 .800
5 2 714

cnartone

Northweal Division
Colorado
Edmonton
Vancouver

3

M1am•

13
21

13
27

.. . .•
.•

Boston .
Washington
New Jersey

W L TOL Pto GF GA
St LOUIS

6

Orlando
New York
PhdaOOiphlll

at Milwaukee

MelpCount(s

J

Eatlrtm Contwenc.

Southeaat Dtv'-'on

Horriobuly

Toron10 81 Wtdlilo

w•••dar'eGamee

Cetltral Dtvlelon

San Francisco 16
Mmnesota 31 . Butrato 27
Dakland 31 , Seattle 3
P1Usburgh 22, Cleveland 0
Wastlington 35, JaCksonville 16

5 .286 2 112

llol···o....

Now Vori&lt; 11 New Jersey, 7:30 p m.
~

Odober 25, 2000

tO

F~,Oc:t.

~·­

Atlanta at
Nashville at

2 2 2 0 . 6 16 16
133162026
washingtOn
241052528
Tampa Bay
0 2 2 2
4 9 17
Florida
0 3 3 0 3 18 24
Atlanta
WHtem ConfeNnCe

C•I'\C:innati 31, Denver 21

2

Minnesota VI. Ctlartotte at Greensboro,
N.C., 7:30p.m.
~- ol Delroit, 7:30p.m.
Orlando at Miami , 1 :30 p m.

4 3 0 0
8 14 16
341072128

Toronto
Boston
Buftalo

333

TOIOOIO 17. Miwoul&lt;oe

Bootonlf AtlarU. 7:30p.m.

8:30p.m.

.4 0 3 0 11 29 16
431092727

Montreal

..................... 2

4

~~
1
1

Toronl09t,I-.,.IIO
113
~ 118, LA. Laket! 111

Northelet Divlalon

011awa

.... 2

Mets beat Yanks, 11

Details, A3

Orlando 117. -

New J"""Y a1 Florida. 7:30pm.

Carol1na

New Orleans 21 , Attanta 19

LA . ~

Minnesota at TOI'"onto, 7:30p.m.

W L TOLPtl. GF GA
Prttsburgll
New Jersey
NYRange&lt;1 ..
NY. lslardors

-

Caro/11'18 at BuftaiO, 1 p.m.
San Jose al ColutOOus, 7 p m
onawa •• Prttsbll'gh, 7:30 p m
Ta,..,a Bay at Detrod. 7 ·30 p.m.

121 210

Tennessee 14, Baltimore 6

LN9U.

6 1
5 2
5 2
3 4
2 6
Centr-'
6 1
5 3
4 3
2 6
2 6
1 6

149 115

Control
7 0 01 .00 184 137
5 2 0 714 143 134

;

M•mesota at Montreat, 7:30pm
Vai"'CCWfff at NuhWie. 8 p m
11 Calgary, 9 p.m
W'eds
,.,., GamN

PA

Wednesday

AS

Kansas City 18, ~aiO 10 SlM1day Game

Slcr..- . ... . ..... .. 4 2 .667
~: · ............
~ ~
- . . ....................... 3 3 .500
Ponlnl ........................ 33500

11 NY Rangon, 7 p m

san JoN at carotina, 7 p.m.

T,.,_.. at W.sl1inglon. 9 p. m

Carolina~ .

AFC
East

NY Jets

M1nnesota ...

~

-y.Oc:t.30

tnd•anapoiiS 30. New England 23
Kansas C1ty 54, St. LOUIS 34
PhMadelptua 13, Chicago 9

FOOIM1 1.

National Football

l'hl1adelp/11a

Datlas
Anzooa
De~on

- y. Oc:t. 24

6 2 0 750
5 2 0 714
5 3 0 625
.. 3 4 0 429
2 5 0 286

NY Giants

-y·· -

Open Dele c~. Denver. New Englard

.
(
d
Soc1ety news an notes,

lh•~

Parents express safety concems
Bv CHAM£NE

HOERJCH

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Parents critical of the handling of Meigs Middle School students following a bomb threat last week met with
Meigs Local Board of Education members
Tuesday to discuss the issue.
The discussion, heated at times, dealt prirnarify with the students being taken from the
school to the nearby stadium, where they
were reportedly required to sit in the sun on
the bleachers, were not served lunch, had limited access to water, and were not allowed to
leave with their parents.
'
In response to questions from Chris Harter,

spokesman for the parents, Superintendent
Bill Buckley explained that at the time, there
seemed no other option but to take the kids
to the stadium .
He said ,the normal procedure in a bomb
threat is to call in the buses and take the stude nts home.
However, that day, Buckley said eight buses
had been used to take students to the Bob
Evans Farm Festival. That meant there were
no buses available tp tal&lt;e the. students home
at that time.
" If we could have sent the kids horrie, we
would have, but we didn't have that option,"
said Bu ckley.

He said un ch was nor served because he
thought it was "not appropriate to ask anyone
to go back into the building," although he said
school personnel did go back in to get mcd-.
ication.
Harter said a student asked about walking to
Vaughan's to get something to eat and wa&lt;
told to "shut up and sit down."
Buckley said he knew nothing about that.
He was asked by anothe r parent whether
the school and the board were taking the matter of the bomb threats seriously 'or if they
were assuming that the threats were just a

Please see Concems, Page A3

ODOT inspection

Meigs
Local Board
approves
staff hirings
BvC!wuNE~
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY Additional
staff was hired and two resignations accepted when the Meigs
local Board of Education met
Tuesday night in the board
office.
Hired by unanimous vote
were James Count~,; , Lawson
Higgins, Pcarlic Jewell and Gerald Matthews as substitute custodians;Traci Houd&lt;helt as an aide
to a handicapped student; and
Manha Radabaugh as an English
second language tutor at a rate of
$15 an hour, five hours a week.
Also hired by ihe board with
board member Roger Abbott
abstaining was Travis Abbott as
boys reserve basketball coach,
pending the completion of certifi cation requirements.
The resignations of Tammy
DeLong as an aide in the Meigs
High School · severe behavior
handicapped class and Greg Dee!
as a special education teacher at
Meigs Middle School and
reserve football coac h were
accepted.
The board gave approval for an
overnight field trip requested for
VICA to attend the local officers
training in Columbus Thursday
· and Friday, and approved the
information te ~hnology course
of study as recommended by the
Athens-Meigs ESC and Meigs
Local Teachers.
Superintendent Bill Buckley
reported that another meeting
with the architects on the new
elementary school will be held
soon. He said that the design
development is ahead of schedule and that the pi.ns are now.
down to details of finish ing.
Treasurer Mark E. Rhonemus
reported the status of the selfinsurance program, announced
payment of$3,675 for a duplicator maintenance agreement for
the year, and acknowledged
grant monies fiom SchoolNet in
the amounts of $4,000 and
$86,000; fiom Tech Prep f&lt;lr
interactive media, $30,000, electronics networking, $30,000, and
industrial engineering, $30,000
and the Continuous Improvement Implementation grant of
$27,000.
The board approved a contract
with the state auditor for the
audit of the district's financial
statements for fiscal year 19992000, at)d moved to establish an
audit committee consisting of
, tf'le five members of the board,
the superintendent and treasurer
to meet on an as- needed basis.
Attending the meeting were
Buckley and . board members,
Scott Walton, Wayne Davis, Norman Humphreys. Roger Abbott
and Jolm Hood.
The next regular meeting was
set for Nov. 16. due to a scheduling conflict.

.,......__,., DISCUSSING
SAI'UY-Con..
cerns about the
Meigs Middle
School bomb
threat. where the
students were
taken when evac·
uated , and how
they were treated
by the staff were
aired at Tuesday's meeting of
the Meigs Local
Board of Educ&amp;
tion. Chris Harter
was spokesperson for the
group. (Cha~ene
Hoeflich photo)

United Fund
opens 2001
appeal
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

READY FOR WINTER - Oh io Department of Transportation staff began winter equipment inspections
Tuesday afternoon to make sure that the department's trucks, snow plows, loaders and radio communi .
cators are in good working order for the upcoming winter weather. Citizens were invited to attend the
inspections to view the ODOT equipment. paid for with tax dollars. and meet the drivers who operate it.
(Tony M. Leach photos)

Pomeroy youth faces charge
FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY - A Pom eroy youth has been
charged in an Oct. 12 bomb threat at M eigs Middle
Sc hool in Middleport. ;
Meigs County Prosecutor John Letltes said that
Josh Grant, 12, Pom eroy. has be en charged with
makmg a report of a bomb threat. .
According to Lentes, • the incident invo lved the
discovery of a message written inside a bathroom
stall at the middle sc ho ol. The tnes~age indicated
that a bomb was to go off on the morning of the
following school day.
A number of children were questioned and Grant
was identified as th e culprit . Once in custody, Grant
confessed to writing the message and indicated that

A IIJIIBIIer of c!Ji!drl'll ll'l' n •JIIt'$1i•'lll'd
and Gmut rvas identijinl as thl' utlprit.
011ce i11 cJtstody, Gra11t COI!(esud to
writiu,l/ tl~e messa.l/&lt;'. and indicated ''''''
tlure ll'as, iu}w . 1111 IH!IIIII.
there was, in fact, no bomb.
"Appan::n t1y the youth's motive was to get a day
off from schoo l," said Lenres. "We can't stress
enough the importance uf a situation such as this.
With the number of bomb threats that the county
has recently been experiencing. you can't disc redit
anyone of t hem as being a hoax."

Please see Youth.· Page A3

Agencies receiving funding.
through the United Fund must
' POMEROY - The United be non - profit under the
Fund for Meigs County will 501 (C)(3) tax rode, and make
kic k off its 2001 campaign with annual prese ntations to the
a Thursday morning breakfast.
fund's board of tru stees.
This is the organization's sevThe agencies also submit
enth campaign, with a fund- financial reports throughout
raising goal of $30,000 for the funding period.
2001.
Amon g the agencies rece ivThe United Fund is a non- ing funding for the 2000 camprofit organization which pro- paign year \vere: H o lzer Hosvides fundi ng for a number of pice, Serenity House. the Meigs
local charitable organizations M en 's Shel.rer, Community
and public service agencies.
Assault Preven tion program.
Patty Pi c kens of Pom eroy is the Meigs Cou nty Humane
the
hon Society, Galorary
lia-Mcigs
"Flu· l uttrd l·rtlltl
chairmdn
Co mmunity
for
th e
&lt;.IIIIJ'·i(~rr ,, .t _~;rc,l/
Action
200 I camAgen cy,
0/!J.l&lt;lllllllit)'./•li J'&lt;'Ojl{&lt; Iii
paign, and
tMeif,"S Coun will
b e 11111' ((1/1/lllrfllif] l&lt;l ''1'1'' r " ty Council on
111111:/tl'" 11( \!IC·/
!tmong t he
Aging/ ItS VI'.
speakers at
"~'1!•1111- 11iom .r11d
·God 's
NET
tomorrow's
and the Umh
breakt:tst,
ed M ethodist
to be held
Cooperative
Patty Pickens
at
the
Parish.
the
Meigs
Meig&gt;&lt; County
County
Pioneer ;.m J
Multipurpose Senior Cent er.
Historical Socie ty, and ,~rca lloy
"The United Fund ca mpaign Scout troops.
is a great opportunity for peoThe United Fund also mainple in our community to sup- tains an emergency. funU to
pore a number of g reat organi - hel p tho'\e who encount('r ;m
zations and agencies," Pickens immediate need.
said.
Many area emp loyers ,tllow
"Not on ly is it an effective for direct payroll dedu ction s for
and conven ient way to offer United fum] contr ihutJDIH,
support, but it's important to ~nd onc-timl' gifts are also
remember that the United accepte~. Th ose who wish to
Fund has no affil iation with contribute to the Fund may
oth e r fund - raising programs , 'iO send their check&gt; to The U nirevery penny collected stays cd Fund for M eigs County, .P.O.
here · in th e co unty wh e re it's 13ox 414, Middleport, Ohio
needed the most," she added .
45760.

'

Buckeye Rural .awaits
Sentinel deregulation's impad
Todays

2 Sections - 16 Pages
Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
S11orts
Weather

AS
B4-6

87
M
A3

Bl-3,5,8
A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick l: 9-9-6; Pick 4: fi-8-7-5
Buckeye 5: 1"27-.l l-.14-..\(J

W.VA.
Daily 3:

~-5-2 Daily

4: 7-6-1-J

FROM STAFF REPORTS

RIO GRANDE Ohio
rural electric coop eratives' "wait
and see" approa ch to deregulation
is acceptable to 13uckeye Rural
Electric Cooperative, which pro-.
vides service to nine .:;outhcrn
Ohio counties~
Buckeye Rural, based ncar Rio
Grande, serves more than 17,500
customers in portions of Athens,
Gallia, Jackson , Lawrence, Meigs,
Pike, Ross, Scioto and Vinton
counties.
General Manager Mi cha el
Bull ock rold more than 411 0
cooperative membersh ip .tttend-

ing the fl'CL' Ilt amlllal tll t..'l..:tin~ .lt
lluckeye Hilb Career Ccmcr that
cooperatives want to dcwrminc if

deregulation otTers any savinb" o.r
advantages to th e ir m e mbers.
" Th ese advantages would nc:ed
to be substantial to outwe igh the
cosc of Ohio's ck ccric cooperatives opting in ~i ti ce thcrt' wou ld
be an initia l sra nup cost of $.3.2
milliorl. and $1.6 milli on eac h
year JS adininistrative costs
statewide," llullock exp lained.
Buckeye r~ural would face a
cost of S150,000, he added.
For the first year of dere!jula. tion - beginning Jan. I, 200 I ()hio's cooperatives will "vl'ry
cardiill y" study the imp.1ct on
other power compa ni e"· indud.ing 111\'CStor-oWnL'd -.. American

. Please see Impact. Page A3

RE-ELECTED - Re-elected to terms on the Buckeye Rural Elect~ic
Cooperative board of trustees at the recent annual meeting were.
from left, Dennis Bl;:;keman , Everette Holcomb and David R. Lester.
(Contributed photo)

-·

r •

•I

'

•

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