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                  <text>LEXUS • .LEXUS • LEXUS
FRESH: 25 USED LEXUS
FORMER LEXUS LEASE CARS

c.

LOVE

Ohio Lottery .

Braves,
Marlins cop
second wins

Pick 3:
648

Pick 4:
07532

•

Super Lotto:

Clear tonight, Jaw In
the 40s. Friday, aunny,
high In upper 70s.

~23-34-3~39~

Sports on Page 4

963148

VE TOYOTA

LEXUS

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~. 411, NO. 118

:A:ELS&amp;MORE

2 Sectlono, 18 Pogn, 35 . -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 2, 1997

01197, Ohio Yalloy Publishing Company

I-ll
~~

AUrOMATIC, LS PACKAGE,
TI&amp;.T. CRUISE, AWM. ·

"-·~
.

AOennen~.~

GOP chairman won't join Taft-Blackwell fight
By JOHN McCARTHY
Associated Prass Writer
COLUMBUS- The Ohio Republican Pany holds all of the statewide
administrative offices, and state Chairman Roben Bennett would like to keep
it that way.
·
.
But Bennett said Wednesday that he's not jumping into the fight to keep
Treasurer Kenneth Blackwell from running for governor.
Bennett attended a news conference where another incumbent, Auditor
James Petro, announced that he no longer was considering a run for gover·
nor and will run instead for re-election.
.
..
.
. Secretary of State Bob Taft announced last year that he will run for governor, and he has secured the support of Gov. George Voinovich and many
.of the state's 88 county GOP chairmen. Voinovich cannot run for a third consecutive tenn.
·Blackwell has been traveling the state. raising money and getting to know
the party faithful. He has said he 's interested in a campaign for governor,
. but he hasn't ruled out a re-election bid either.
• Blackwell said some Republicans have pressured him about running for

re-election, but that won't deter him.
Bennett said he would prefer that there be no primary for governor because
such a race would iap pany resources, but he'llletTaft and Blackwell fight
it~
.
.
"I think Bob Taft and Ken Blackwell have a message for Ohio voters,"
Bennett said.
,
Blackwell said Wednesday that he was hoping for a three~way primary,
figuring that Petro's cash-strapped candidacy would have been forced to concentrate on his stronghold in Cleveland.
.
"I figured for every one vote he took from me, he would take four from
Bob," he said. "Now, I'll have to work doubly hard ... to cqmpensate for
the fact that Bob Taft will probably be able to outspend me 2-1."
Petro endorsed Taft last year but began considering his own run for governor once Blackwell entered the race.
"I always kept the provision that in a free-for-all primary, I'd have to look
at my options, and that's exactly what I did," Petro said.
' Petro said Wednesday that he still supports Taft and expects him to beat

Blackwell should there be a primary for governor.
"[ don't believe having tWO people in the race will diminish Bob's
chances," he said.
Taft said Petro has done an excellent job as auditor and deserves re-election.
"I think it's good news for the voters of Ohio and it's good news for the
Republican Pany," he said.
Ohio Democratic Pany Chairman David Leland said he didn 't think Petro
was ever a serious candidate for governor. He pointed to the popular belief
that Taft made a deal with GOP leaders in 1990 to step out of Voinovich's
way to the Statehouse in exchange for their suppon in 1998. Republicans
deny that such a deal existed.
''I'm sure he was part of the backroom deals that produced the Taft coronation,.~ Leland said.
· Democrat Lee Fisher, a former attorney general, is the only Democrat to
announce a candidacy. But Toledo businessman Bruce Douglas is considering a run for the Democratic nomination.

--Construction underway- 'Teen Fair' teaches youth
how to live healthier lives .
I

H Clft IUDI4 . . . 4114 LT
LEA,._"--~-

AIR, 350 arN., LDADED,

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400 EIIII10N. MITO.,

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......

Repair of a slip on Legion- Teriace In
Pomeroy which occurred In March following
heavy rains Is underway. The work Is being
done by Jeffers Excavation with funds from the
Federal Emergency Management Agency.

t5 IINII414

IIPHD, AIR, \14 ENG.,\
•AI..UM. WHEELS,

:

....................... - 114,996

ITBP BY a• VIlli
UTIIIIY liT
5 TAHOES

Framing for the ratalnlng wall wae going Into
place Wednesday afternoon In preparation far
pouring concrete. Tha .raad has been cloead
since the slip occurred.

Ho.use erupts in partisan cat fight
WASHINGTON (AP) - House
. members went home for the Jewish
holidays in a decidedly unfeslive
mood, with the two parties accusing
each other of using the religious
observance to further political gains.
While Jewish members eager to
get home in time for the start of New
Year services watched the clock.
Republicans and Democrats locked in
a standoff over some supposedly noncontroversial bills until well into the
afternoon.
"Whoever said God is not
mock~d has never read the rules of
ihc Hou.•e of Represeillatives." said
Rep. Barney Frank, D·Mass.
It was a bitter end to a bad week
in which Republicans chastised
Democrats over repeated delaying
tactics and Democrats charged
Republicans with discriminaling
against Hispanics in a disputed California election .
Wedn esday's squabble was over
usually noncontroversial bills called
"suspensions." Once u week, the
House takes ur a package of such
measures that require little debate.
usually pass by voice vote and
require a two-thirds majority if a roll

3 EXPLORERS

2 SUBURBANS 16 S-10 BLAZE
54 RUNNERS
3 JIMMYS
6 GRAND
2 TRACKERS
CHEROKEES .1 BRONCO
4 CHEROKEES 1 PASSPORT
2 WRANGLERS

call is demanded.
But Democrats complained that
Republicans don't let their suspensions get to the floor, and protested on
Monday by demanding roll call votes ·
on 15 bills. The GOP leadership put
off those votes until 12:30 p.m .
Wednesday, a move Democrats
charged was aimed at pressuring
them to give in when they wanted to
adjourn early for the Jewish holiday.
They escalated their protest by
voting down each of the bills.
Never before, said Rep. George
Miller, D-Calif., has the majority party "intentionally placed a block of
votes in the way of any of the religious holidays."
.
Rep. Jack Kingston, R-Ga ..
responded to the Democratic protest
by handing out lists contending
Democrats had delayed the business
of the House 24 times over a three·
week period in September by asking
for largely meaningless votes.
"Both sides have some stubborn·
ness, " said Rep. I! en Gilman, one of
three Republican Jews in the House,
who was eager to leave for his home
in New York. "Wc'r.: telling the lead·
ership we ought to resolve this peace-

Gallia County man, 40,
killed in one-car wreck
95 Clft 4141/4

""";Jc::',·ALUM
310 E~.,PfMNDOWS, P
. Wf'tlilt:l8,
=~
'20,440
IIILVERADO.

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An investigation continued today into a one-vehicle accident that killed
a Gallipolis man and injured another Wednesday night.
The Galli a-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reponed that ~us·
sell Gothard. 40. was pronounced dead at the scene of the crash by Gal·
lia County Coroner Dr. Daniel H. Whiteley.
Charles Baird, 36, Gallipolis, was taken to Holzer Medical Center by
the Gallia County EMS. He was admitted and listed in stable condition
today, a hospital spokesperson said. ,
Troopers said the vehjcle was northbound on County Road 3 (Bulaville Pike) around 8: 15 p.m. when it slid._off the right side of the road, struck
an embankment and ovenumed. It then came to rest on its side in a ditch.
The crash ejected Gothard from the vehicle, the patrol said.
The investigation is being handled by the patrol and the Gallia County Prosecuting Attorney's offtce. Alcohol appears to be involved in the
crash, the patrol said.
Troopers were at 1hc &gt;ecne of the crash this morning gathering additional details. It wa' not immediately clear who drove the vehicle when
the accident occurred. ,1ccording to lhe patrol.
""
Gothatd's body was later released to the Willis Funeral Home for
arrangements. The accident marked the founh traffic fatality of the year
in Gallia County investigated by the patrol.

fully," he said.
Finally, around 3 p.m., arter six
bills were defeated in noisy votes and
Democrats had rejected several
attempts by Anney to end the session,
the appeals of Jewish members from
both sides won out and the House
was adjourned.
The panisan faceoff came just six
months after an unprecedented retreat
in Hershey, Pa., when lawmakers
from the two panies. joined by their
families, made a conscious effort to
get to know each other in the inter~
est of making the House a friendlier
and less combative place.
Rep. David Skaggs, D-Colo., who
organized the Hershey retreat,
hlamed leaders from both parties for
not living up to their promises to
fOOperate more in solving problems.
"This could have been avoided if the
leadership held regular meetings and
built a few bridges rather than widening the gap."
Democrats said they plan to return
to work Monday ready to resume the
battle unless Republicans meet some
of their demands. "If they want
peace ~nd order and tranquility m ~
House, there must be some gove,
said Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga.

and during our planning for Women's
By JENNIFER RICHTER
Health Month in 1995, we started the
OVP News Staff
Students from Meigs, Mason, Gal- Teen Fair," said Casteel.
A total of 21 ctisplays in two buildlia, Jackson and Vinton counties visited the Gallia County Junior Fair- · ings concentrated on health-related
grounds throughout Wednesday as issues. Each display differed in the
pan of the Holzer Medical Clinic kind of information provided. The
Pediatric Unit's project to teach youth displays included •issues such as:
proper dental hygiene, beauty tips,
how to live healthier lives.
.The Tee~ Fair emphasized a non- pregnancy facts, drug and alcohol
smoking, drug-free lifestyle. This is services, auto safety, healthy food
the third year that Ho~Er has spon- choices. emergency service'l, .date
sored the educational and informa- rape, breast care awareness, smOking,
tional day for area students.
stress and other medical information.
.. At llle.S)le~lfj Offl~ diaplllY,, SJ!t.
to'e""'Brownutg, wltli help 'from
students up to the
in high Deputy Michael Smith and Special
school. Holzer employees welcomed Deputy Chris Gill, showed students
students from Mei&amp;s. Oak Hill, Gal- how special equipment is used, such
lia Academy, Eastern and Southern as a breathalyzer, safety stick and
high schools, along with students proper gun safety. Information about
from Buckeye Hills Career Center the DARE program and pamphlets
and junior high schoolers from Well- about various safety tips were avail~
ston.
able for the students,
Nancy Casteel. chairperson for the
Ron McWilliams from the SouthTeen Fair, explained how the event easi Ohio Emergency Medical Serstaned.
vice talked to students about proper
"We realized the need for more CPR and other medical procedures
health education for our area teens that should be followed. A video

Pearl High students were
mingling, ·then .terror struck
PEARL. Miss. (AP)- Distraught could find. He shot at me and· hit the
over a breakup with his girlfriend, I(). staircase," freshman Mark Wilkerson
year-old Luke Woodham tucked a said. saw fragments going everyrille under his trench coat and head- where."
ed for school. The girl was the first
After Woodham's former girlto fall, witnesses said, and then he friend was hit, three young men and
started shooting "anybody he could five young women were also shot,
find."
p6iicc said.
When the shooting was done, two
,"People were coming out of
studeniS were dead and seven others , everywhere. It's a sight I don't ever
were wounded. Back home, about a . want to sec again," said senior Tony
half-mile away, Woodham's mother Johnson, who helped move some of
lay dec .. Po lie~ say the I Oth-grader , the wounded students.
stabbe her to death with a kitchen
Freshman Casey King said Woodknife Wednesday morning. then ham talked to at least one of the
drove h.er car to school.
wounded. "He apologized, said he
&lt;!
Buses were just arriving and hun- was sorry and was not shooting anydreds of students were milling about body in panicular."
a crowded atrium at Pearl High
"People were laying everywhere
School before classes when Wood- bleeding," said freshman Nathan
ham allegedly pulled out the gun and Henry. "I didn't heat cries.• Everystarted blasting. The shots sent terri- body looked dead."
fied students screaming and diving
Woodham. a chubby sophomore
for cover.
.
who excelled in·an, was fleeing when
"He was shootmg anybody he an assistant principal rammed his car

:·t

.
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into Woodham's mother's vehicle lo
stop him.
Woodham was arrested and
.
charged with murder and aggravated
assault. Authorities said he could
have his firsi court appearance today
in this working-class town. of 22.000
JUSt outside Jackson.
Killed in the rampage were 16ycar-old .Christina Menefee, who had
dated Woodham, and 17-year-old ·
. Lydia Kaye Drew. Mary Woodham.
, a 50-year-old d1vorccd receptionist.
had apparently been slashed to death
with a kitchen knife. polic-e said.
Choking back tears. Police Chief
Bill Slade said Woodham had written
a detailed note describing how " he
felt he 'd been wronged" by Menefee.
A school yearbook photo sho'f" a
serious-looking. Woodham with
shoulder-length brown h~ir and wirerimmed glasses. He was described as
a good, well-behaved student.
Continued on page 3

Patrol trying to reduce number of crashes on highway
PORT CLINTON - Trucker Bob
~eynolds said he's going to be on the
lookout for the State Highway Patrol
when he drives on state Route 2.
He knows the patrol will be targeting speeders and tailgaters as it
tries to cut the number of crashes on
a deadly stretch of the road in nonhwest Ohio.
Reynolds, 44, of Toledo, just
hopes-troopers don't single out truck
drivers.
''I'm afraid they're going to stan
pulling us over for no reason,"
Reynolds said Wednesday. "That's
just going to tie up traffic and create
problems out here."
The patrol's move comes two
months after six Detroit-area people
died in an accident on Route 2 near
this Ottawa County city.
"We are very concerned about the
increasing number and severity of

crashes occurring bn state Route 2,"
patrol Capt.' Ronald Hoeft 1 said
Wednesday. The stretch is con,sidered
dangerous because the highway is
narrow and heavily traveled and has
many turns.
Over the next six months, troop:
ers will look for drivers who speed.
follow too closely behind other vehicles and fail to yield, he said. They
also will randomly stop truckers for
safety inspections.
.
Signs will be placed every five
miles along the highway to remind
drivers that tbe 40-mile stretch from
Toledo to Pon Clinton has been
declared a Target Enforcement Area.
The patrol conducted a similar
program elll')ier this year on U.S. 24
between Toledo and the fndiana bor~
der. Tbe number of traffic accidents
dropped 23 percent, compared with
the same period in 1996, the patrol

•

.'

. showed how different emergencies
are handled through the proper training.
Then, at the Bcauti Control Cosmetics. Unit Director Bobbi Hood
talked with several young ladies
about makeup. cleansers and color
charts. Free samples of lipsti&gt;k were
available for the students.
Jean Curtis, a Gra.duation Reality
And Duai·Rolc Skills (GRADS)
teacher from Buckeye Hills Career
Center. showed the students the proper way to care for an infant.
· , Sl1e warned api"'' lhrowiq a
blftJy1n ltlt jill' lillln'ftll.'ltfng11te-m tbat
are two cau1es of shaking haby syndrome. Cunis also did an experiment
to show how harmful smoking is to
a fetus. She asked that students
spread the word about her message to
others in order to protect the life of
babies.
River Valley students displayed
their FHA project on Stress Management. One of the representatives,
MC!issa Donley, explained the importance of stress mana2cmcn1 for not
Continued on page 3

said.
"Our objective is to ultimately
make state Route 2 safer for travel bv
raising the awareness of drivers to the
dangers that face them every day,"
Hoeft said.
The Ohio Trucking Association
supports the patrol's initiative -as
long as it's applied fairly, said Tom
King, the group's executive vice
president. The group represents about
I ,000 truck companies.
He said the state's decision to raise
tolls on the Ohio Turnpike has
encouraged some truck drivers to
look for other routes, such as Route
2.
King said people should not lose
sight of other issues regarding the
highway, including the lack of lefttum lanes and delays in widening the
road. ·
Hoeft said commercial trucks

have been involved in about one of

every five traffic ~ccidents on Route
2 in the past five yaars. He said truck
drivers have been at fault for about SO
perc.ent of those traffic accidents.
"The problem is obvious." Hoeft
said
Police said trucker George Croom
was at fault in the deadly Aug, 19
·accident on Route 2. His lawyer has
denied the allegations.
Croom. 59. of Cleveland, has
been charged with aggravated vehic·
ular
homicide.
involuntary
manslaughter and aggravated vehicular assault.
Croom's tractor-trailer hit the rear
of a slow-moving lanker truck and
then collided head-on with two vans.
One was .carrying the Detroit-area
teeri'=~to Cedar Point amusement
park in
dusky. Eight people were
injured.

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Poineroy • Middleport, Ohio

Commentary
.

P.ge 2 .
Thuraday, October 2,

Friday, Oct. 3
Aci:uWeather" forecast for

Real fundin scandal i'nvolves union·s

The Daily Sentinel

-- should trigger
Sen. Fred Thompson, R-Tenn., have to he presumed innocent.
. By Morton Kond111cke
appointment of· a says his Governmental Affairs ComBut what the three were charged
While
Cong'
i
W,
s
sional
investiga'£sta6tuliti in 1948
special
prosecumillee
may
look
into
umon
moneywith
and pleaded guilty to is serious
tors and the melfia are fixated on
tor,
who
then
laundering
the
week'
after
next
-stuff.
White House phone calls and elu111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
could investigate after it's spent months developing
According to Davis's guilty plea,
stve Asian connections, the cam614-112-2156 • Fax 992-2157
any
and
all no solid ~vtdence of Democratic a Clinton/Gore offictal (believed to
patgn scandal that could blow up the
Democraut fund- fund-raisin\ illegahty and . has be McAuliffe) proposed that the
Democratic P11rty " union-based
ratsmg misdeeds. turned lately tp intellectual dtsqutSt· Teamsters gtve $500,000 to state
; The guilty pleas last week of
The guilty pleas lions on campaign finance reform.
Democratic parties and 'other party
. three assoctates of Teamsters presion
Sept.
18
of
Washington
political
Rep.
Dan
Burton,
R-Ind.,
IS
startif the DNC got Democratic
entities
dent
'
Ron
Carey
suggest
that
the
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
I Democratic National Commmee, consultant Martm Davis, telemar- ing down the same road as Thomp- donors to give S100.000 to Carey's
I the AFL-CIO. Whtte House atdes, keter Michael Ansara. and Carey son, delving into the acttvities of re-election campaign.
ROBERT 1.. WINGETT
It's illegal for any union money
' varwus liberal groups, and 1996 campaign manager Jere Nash identi- Asian-American fund-raisers CharPubllther
to be used to affect the outcome of a
• Clinton/Gore re-election campaign fy the liberal activist group Citizen lie Trie and John Huang.
However, hearings into unton umon election, but the government
: offictals were involved m multiple Action, the AFL-CIO. and t.he
National Council of Senior Cttizens activities are planned by Reps. Pete charged that Trumka, the AFL; tllegal money-laundenng schemes.
MARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
as
participants in laundering opera- Hoekstra, R-Mich., and Harris CIO's treasurer, authorized payment
Those who have been interController
Gtntral Manager
. vtewed by federal Investigators, lions.
Fawell. R-111.. of the Education and of S150,000 in federation funds to
Congresstonal
Republicans, the Workforce Commiuee in mid- Citizen Act10n, wh1ch then paid
' according to press reports, include
$100,000 of Carey campaign btlls.
former Whtte House deputy chtef of while railing at 1996 union activi- . October.
Trumka ts a close ally' of
The media, too, have been slow
staff Harold Ickes; former. Clin- ties, have been slow to grasp the
Sweeney,
whose ongmal election as
opportumty
m
the
Teamsters
case
to
on
the
uptake.
ton/Gore fmance chatrman Terry
AFL-CIO
president over Thomas
Repubhcans suspect that if the
McAuliffe: the DNC's former chatr, embarrass thetr enemies.
Instead, they have seized upon Christian Coaliuon or the National Donohue in 1995 was decided by
man and two finance cha1nnen; and
AFL-CIO president John Sweeney the slender reed of fund-ratstng calls Rtne Assoctatton were implicated in support from Carey's Teamsters
·In a ciQsed meeting at the AFLand secretary-treasurer Rtchard from government property -- an felomes as the AFL-CIO and Citizen
offense never prosecuted unless Action have been, a medta CIO's contenuon in Plllsburgh this
Trumka.
If evtdence emerges that Ickes government employees arc heing avalanche would have ensued. It's week, S.Weeney has tried to clean up
the union's image by declaring ils
·and McAuliffe were mvolvcd in solictted -- as the basts for thetr hard to argue the contrary.
money-laundering, thiS case -- far demand that Attorney General Janet
Of course, except for Davis. opposiuon to poliucal soft money.
But in a closed union executive
more than White House phone calls Ren? appomt a spectal prosecutor.
Ansara and Nash, those tmplicated
By WALTER R. MEARS
commtllee meeting, former DonoAP Special Correspondent
hue supporters reponedly demanded
WASHINGTON - A real doozte or a fight , Prestdent Chnton calls his
to know from Trumka and Sweeney
dt spute wtth congressional Republicans over education It" one m which he
how the $150,000 was gtven to Citiand his opponents all claJm to be shunnmg politics at the schoolhouse door.
~ENO TAKES ACTION
zen Action without consullation
But the rhetonc does not mask the parttsan confrontation mvolved m the
With union presidents.
I HAVE
three-stded struggle over national tcsung. government vouchers for private
Federal mvesugators reportedly
OIWEl'ED A30-llKf
school educauon. and no-stnngs federal aid to schools.
REVIEW FGLltiWED
arc checkmg whether AFL-CIO
Clmton IS campatgning for the first, adamantly opposes the others.
llVA 90-DAV
donations to Cittzen Act tOn amountPm.IMINARY STUll\'
He IS pushmg for nauonal sc hool tesung to learn how chtldrcn m the
ed to $1.5 million. of whtch
FI'£CCD!ill SYA4!&gt;· DAI
fourth grade are doing in readmg. and m the etghth grade m math After
$450.000 went to Carey.
Pe!RAW INillJ«'(,
months of trymg- 11 was part of his State of the Union program - he's up
At a mmimum, this TcalllstcrFOU.OWI!t6
agamst a House bamer A bloc of liberal Democrats opposed to testing as
AFL-DNC-Chnton-Gorc scandal is
AN tNi1oOIICIURY
unfatr to dtsadvantaged ctty schoolchildren JOined Repubhcans to approve a
120-~Y
going to deeply embarrass the
IIMS'Il6ATIOII
ban on spend•nR for tesun~.
Democratic Party and the union
AFTERW111C1f ...
Repltbhcan leaders are making thetr educauon stand on school choice,
movement. It could send famous
thetr Utle for the use of vouchers or federal tax breaks to help parents send
people to jail, trigger appointment o't'
cll•idren to private schools tf they want. ·
a spec tal prosecutor, and at last wake
And the Senate narrowly approved a measure that would transform eduup Americans to the need for camcation aid mto no-stnngs grants directly to school distrtcts, instead of passpaign finance reform.
ing the money through federal and state agenc1es.
(Morton Kondraeke is execuClmton is threatemng to veto appropnattons btlls carrymg the test ban,
tive editor of Roll Call, the news·
unrestricted block grants m place of school atd under federal guidelines, or,
paper of Capitol Hill.)
probably, a first-step pnvate school voucher system in Washington, D.C.
Mutual dtsclatmers notwithstanding, these are ISsues sure to echo next
year m congressional elecuon campaigns. Education ts a pohttcal tssue. It
should be, because tt major concern of the voters. and because electiens are
the way they say what they want done
The federal role m public schooling has been dtsputed since the Great
Soctety ongtns of education •atd from Washtngton. It sull ts, butlt mto
debates over block grants bypasstng the Department of Educatton, and about
likely to happen, but n's red-meal children to go
They constitute a massi~e hreak
By Ben Wattenberg
Clinton's plan for nat tonal tests.
code
for
major
tax
reform
,
No
politito
printe
or
wtth the concept of the rule of law.
How can it he that conservative
'l'bll.li!ll. ~ 10, J,qW!Ijc'!l. ~· if&gt;.\_reform ~ would 110 ideas are ascendant evcrywhen=. -but oian soeo wrong by beating up on religious
Gingrich &lt;nys that if the Democratic
paSt federal and.state b'ureaucractes tlla add regulatOry stri~gs and siphon
perpetrators aren't pumshcd, then
conservauve political parttcs keep the IRS (which tnes to enforce the schools. It's a
away money.
laws
the
very
same
politictans
pass).
solid
tdea,
polttictans,
unafra1d of lhe consclosmg nattonal elections? (United
I In Chnton 's descnpuon, th~t measure would abandon the most successquences, wtll behave even more
States, England. Canada, France -- lt's a pantcularly good less-govern- destgncd to
ful nattonal efforts to strengthen schools and instead " throw all of our educravenly. Gingnch has had&gt;hiS own
with_ Germany quttc posstbly ready ment conservattvc Iheme, even make falimg
cation funds mto a pot and dtstrtbutc 11m an arburary way . "
problems ~tth campa1~n finance
to go plop ) Can anythmg he done though whatever GOP plan surfaces public schools
Rtval accounts of the test plan soWld that way, too. A needless expenmcnt
wtll
be
denounced
by
Democrats
as
better
by
and
so has former Rcpuhltcan
abouttt ? Such were some of the key
that would "'astc money and eventually threaten local control of the pubhc
anu-needy
and
pro-greedy
putting
them
Nattnnal
Committee Chatrman
questions that genetically gloomy
schools, Republican foes contend. Chnton calls 11 csscnual to measure how
Second pomt· "No d1Scrim1na- under compel·
Haley Barbour. But Newt ts nghl ,
conservatives were askmg themwell pubhc school pup1ls arc domg m the baSics. although its reach would
the 1996 vaolat10ns were not tnvtal
selves last weekend at the first meet- tion agaanst any Amcrtcan." Ginp lliVC pressure
he limned
Wattenberg
Fmally, Gingnch prupnscs hts
mg of t!Je InternatiOnal Conservative grich satd that Rep Charles tn tmprove It
Hcs been prcssmg the ISSue all year. so far SIX states and 15 cuy school
Canady's
long-stalled
CIVJI-nghts
dtffcrcnttatcs;
the
mo-.
vocal
oppoown
hrand ol campa1gn ltn:tncc
Congress. held tn Washmgton.
dtstncts have said they would parttctpate Chnton stresses that the tests
Newt Gmgnch 1s a conscrvauvc. h1ll w1ll come to a House vote by siuon comes fmm teachers' unions. rclnrm. He hclicvcs that frccdnin of
would he voluntary "with no mandated consequences"" for nunkmg.
l&gt;ut he ts anythtng hut a glndm-hall. spring. Canady, R-Fia .. proposes a typtcally workmg thrnugh the speech trumps all else. and that we
The tnconststency between vual and voluntary is a ptllittcal necessity;
Gtngnch has a strategy. (Too many federal verst on of Caltlornta 's Democratic Party. Alas, many con- should spend more money on clccthere 's no way Congress would stand for mandatory nattonaltcstmg. Indeed.
of them. some say ) Ltke most ol us, ProposttJOn 209 which nutlawcd servauves have ,recently tarntshcd uons. not less Amcncans, mcludmg
oproncnts of the Chnton plan argue that 11 ts a hrst step toward a federal
he tends to rc-ltve, rcvtvc and reline state-sponsored preferences tn cdu· their crcdcnttals on school 1m prove- vcty nch ones. ought to he ahle to
school cumculum to fit the tests
past tnumphs Accor&lt;!Jp~ly. on the cation and htring: Surveys show that men! by opposmg even Clinton's gtvc as much money as they want to
"They say it's a federal rower grab." Clinton replies " It isn't. The tests
third anmversary '(';! the Contract 70 percent to KO percent of Amen- amended proposal for voluntary a candtdatc. provtdcd only that the
arc voluntary. No state, no school dtstrtct has to paructpatc.'"
cans approve of such a reversal of n~tional testing m Enghsh and math. contnbuuon IS rcrortcd tmmcdiatcly
At the same time, he wants a commitment to riat10nal education stan- Wuh Amcrtca, he latd out lor a revcrsc-discrimmation. But liherals.
Pmnt No 5 deals wnh pcnsmns on the Internet In the current chreceptive ICC audJCncc a dcstgn for
dards.
wllh
a
large
black
voting
base.
have
Gmgnch'
wants Rcpul&gt;licans to mate, this is a guaranteed sell what seems to he a 1998 Contract.
great dtfficulty wtth tl. If nothmg champion the tdcjl that retirees wtll dcstrucuvc loser. No one's perfect
wnh tntcrnauonal apphcauons.
Sttll, ahog.,thcr, Gmgrtch's
Gtngrtch satd that a new conserv- else, II differentiates. Gmgnch and get bigger penstons tf some nr thctr
the
Republicans
have
dalhed
on
thts.
Soctal
Sccurtty
funds
arc
mvestcd
'".
scvcn_pmnl conservative program
ative ~lance mu!'it he stmplc. under~
,.standahle. and cheerful -- and must fearing that they will he regarded as the great green growth machtnc ot has "P· zesl and content. It draws
vtvtdly stress us dtffcrencc from lib- nasty to mmortttcs. Gmgrtch now Amcrtcan busmcss. Agatn. liherals lines hetwccn hhcrals and conservaeral tdeas Moreover, and of wt•cal says thts can he demonstrated as ~rc nervous about even partial prtva- ltvcs It mcludcs many ISsues that
uzattOn ol Soctal Sccurtty. But 1t's Amcrtcans should he talkmg about.
tmportance, tl must he early Other- false hy hJS next proposal.
Wh1ch
IS:
'"Progress
wuhout
an
tdea that 1s npc. When every It could help boost Gmgnch's botWISe, during the political Ofl·scason,
the liberal medtattlts the dtalogue to preference," spectfically m the Amcrtcan is a shareholder, it could tom-dwelling poll ratings. And on
.
the left. Gingnch 's first Contract realm of cducatton Every student go a long way toward cndtng the thc•ctghth day, he rested.
was promulgated about one month shout&lt;' he able to go to a school that '"we" vs "they" mcntahty that put- . Ben Wattenberg, a senior felbefore the elecuon. Thts one. as and lS sate and diScipltned. says Newt sons the nngomg economic dia- low at the American Enterprise
Institute, is the author of "Values
if 11 develops. would surface about That student should learn. English, Iogue.
Next, Gtngnch wants to cxplam Matter Most" and is the host :of
one year before the electt6ii". Newt the language ofopportunlly The ful crum of all thiS IS school cho1c~ . w Amencans that the cumpatgn the weekly publk television pro·
offered seven points.
\
The first ts· "Abohsh the Internal probably tn the form of pubhc finance scandals now unfolding arc gram "Think Tank."
Revenue Scrvtcc " Now, that's not vouchers allowmg underpriVIleged not, as too often portrayed, tnvml

Po·l itics at the ·
schoolhouse door

Pointing to a new contract

Barry's World

•

•

.

Oday In history
Bll The As_,ciated Preu
~Today is l'llursday, Oct. 2. the 275th day of 1997. There arc 90 days left

in the year
! Today 's HtHhlight m History .
On Oct. 2. 1967, Thurgood Marshall was sworn mas an assoctatc JUSltcc
or the U.S. Supreme Court, he was the first black appomtcd tb the nation s
hi t~hest court. I
·
.
' On thts d•~ r.
In 1780, f!llltSh spy John Andre was han ged m Tappan , N.Y.
IIn 1835. lht! first battle of the Texas Revolution took place as Amcr1can
scrtlers defeatl&lt;l a Mexican cavalry ncar the Guadalupe Rtvcr.
·In 1869, 31it•ci!l a!¥1 spintual leader Mohandas K. Gandht was born in
Pwbandar, In ia.
'-"'"'In 1890, e p~cdian Oroucho Marx was born m New York
In 1919. P ~sident W•l5on suffered a stroke that left h1m parttally paraty,cd.
· In 1~1 . rl1~an armies began Operation Typhoon - an all-out dnve
a'•inst trfosc~~In 1944. Ni!Zi troops crushed the 2-month-old Warsaw Uprising, during
wfli&lt;:h a1 qu~,-million people were ktlled.
' In 19~0. ti"IFcomtc strip "Peanuts," created by Charles M. Schulz, was
fitP pubJislled tn nine JICWSptpcrs.
In 19~8, t"11former french colony of Guinea tn West Africa proclaimed
it~ indeJII'ndenF•

'

-

--~- ~

- - --

--

from around the world," says category, it is well he low that of this else in the world they 'd like to. What
By Dian Vujovlch
If you're a fan of htgh -y1eidmg Ramirez, prcstdcnt and CEO of year 's highest-pcrformtng global investors often forget, about before
global bond funds , never forget that MFR
Advtsors . . - - - - - - - - - - - - . mcomc
funds. sockmg their money mto global
lhcs_e income-producmg products "Some of the coun"We've
been Through Sept II , the bond funds is that any changes m a
tries we've been
don 1alii!C'ilorm altke.
average
global country's currency can make a btg
Mana Fibnni Ramirez has been tnvolved In are hurt by a rising mc_omc fund had a dip-crcncc in the fund 's total return .
in the- investment arcn_a for more Greece and Brazil, dollar "
says total return of 1.5L / " We 've been hurt by a nstng dol'
percent The MFR lar," say• Bruce Jensen, chief tnvestthan 30 years, w1tjl mtcrests tn and for a long ttme
Jensen, Global Htgh Ytcld mcnt officer at MFR
- research and global cconomtc fore- thcy' vc performed Bruce
Jensen said that if the US. dol lor
casting F1 ve years ago, s~c estab- very well, deliver- clfteJ investment Fund's total return
tng
to
OUr
chents
was
2.58
percent
IS
going
Up agamstthe CUrrencies of
~!Shed her own linn. MFR Advtsors.
what
we've
been
officer
at
MFR.
The
top
performers
the
countncs
represented m a fun&lt;l's
whtch not only spectalt zcs tn
scek1ng,
whtch
IS
a
Morgan
Stanley
's
portfoho,
then
the fund 's perforresearch but al so in the money man World Fund . up mance wtll suffer. On the other
agement and brokerage business. hi gh degree of
16.65 percent;. the Allmnce Glo~ul hand, 1fthc dollar is losmg value, t~c
Today. MFR offers three fund s to the tncomc."
Some of the other places thts Dollar Fund, up 14 IK percent , and fund will perform heucr.
,
pubhc -- an cmergmg markets to~l fund
is
investing·
its
assets
include
the
Alliance
North
Amcncan
GovIf
there's
a
lesson
tn
all
this,
11
is
return fund , a global asset allocauon
Denmark,
Canada
and
the
Un1ted
emmcnt
Income
Fund,
up
12.68
perto
do
your
homework
he
fore
ydu
•
fund and a global htgh-y teld fund.
buy For the global bond fu~d
(Fot more mformat10n about MFR States There are even some Polish cent
Why such a difference in global mvestor, that means find out which
funds, co?tact your broker or mv.st- bonds with y•elds of about 16 percent in the portfolio.
mcomc fund returns' It all boils countncs your fund mvests tn arid
ment advtscr )
While
you
w1ll
find
both
h1ghdown
to these four factors ; Where in learn the rclationshtp between ttic
The MFR Global High Yteld
quality
and
high-y1eldingjunk
bonds
the
world
a fund 's money ts invest- dollar and that country 's currency :
Fund ( f~rmerly the Secunty .Giobal
Dian Vujovich is the author af
AggresSive Bond Fund) has heen in thts portfolio, Ramirez says the cd , changes in bond pnccs, the
average
quality
rattng
of
the
bonds
movements
of
tnterest
rates,
and
"Straight
Talk About Mutual
around for about 2: 112 ~ears , and
the
fund
IS
about
a
triple-B.
a
ratcurrency
nuctuations
Funds"
and
"Straight Talk AboUt
m
has about 30 secunttes tn tts portfomg
she
considers
investment
grade.
Unlike
domestic
bond
funds
that
Investing
for
Your RetireJMnt,:'
ho. Its _performance smce tnceptton
While this year's performance for only investtheir money m U.S. aov- both of whkh are publilbed b)'
places tttn the top quantlc ~f funds
thei
MFR Global Htgh Yteld Fund ts ernment, corporate or tax -free McGraw HUI. Send questions to
wtl~ th~ same Investment obJ~llve.
above
the average for the 150 differ- bonds, global bond funds can mvest her In care of this newspalper, oi
. Th1s fu~d ts bastcally loolung to
ent
funds
tn Lipper's Global Income tn the United States and anywhere via e-mail at MisMutualaol.com:
mvest tn htgh-y1eldmg mstruments

'

Jeannie Z. Smith
O~jcan "Jeallnie" Zahl Smith, 66, of Berrien Springs, Mich., formerly
of Metgs County, died Wednesday, Oct I, 1997 at her residence.
Born on March 6, 1931, she was the daughter of the late Aaron and Mildred Zahl of Pomeroy.
She is survived by he~ husband, Leo K Smith of Berrien Springs; two
sons and daughters-m-law, Kenneth and Kathy Smith of San Diego, Calif.,,
and Sam and Mary Sm!Lh of Bluffton; two dau&amp;lter~ and sons-in-law, Bar·ll'ara and Mac MeGuckm of Hespena, Calif., and Betty and Clint Mettler of
S!. Joseph, Mich.; one grandson and two granddaughters; a sister-in-law and
brother-in-law, Helen and Harold Blackston of Pomeroy, and several meces
and nephews.
Funeral services will he held Saturday mommg at the Allred Funeral
Home in Berrien Springs.
-

IND.

•lcolumbuslao"

I

Clair Dale Stansbury
Clair Dale Stansbury, 70, of Groveport, formerly of Carpenter, died on
Tuesday, October I, 1997, at h1s restdence, followmg an extended illness.
He was born on May 28, 1927, son of Golden Cleland Stansbury of
Albany and the late Asa Dale Stansbury. He was a graduate of Columbia
High School, a retired school custodian for Groveport Schools, and a member of the Groveport Presbytenan Church
Surviving are his wtfe, Loutse Hanmg Stansbury; a son, Robert Stansbury of Columbus; two daughters and sons-in-law, Carla Mae and Fred
Peleckaha, Cocoa Beach, Fla., and Julie and Ken Fox, Ohetz, a brother, Larry Stansbury, Reynoldsburg; a sister, Wanda Oxley, Pomeroy: and four grandchildren.
Bes1des his father, he was preceded m death by a brother, Jerry, and a
sister, Eileen Gryctko.
Services will be held on Monday at II a.m. at the Groveport Presbyternoon shower north .. .Otherwise fair. ian Church. Friends may call at the Myers Funeral Home, 587 Mam Street
Lows middle 50s to around 60 Highs in Groveport, on Saturday from 7 to 9 p.m and Sunday from 2 to 4 and 7
in the 70s
lo 9 p.m
Sunday... Fair. Lows in the middle
40s to lower 50s. Highs from the
upper 60s northeast to the mtddle 70s
far south.
Continued frpm page 1
ery Serv1ces Inc
Monday ... Fair. Lows in the upper only young people, but persons of all
"It has been very successful ," satd
40s and lower 50s Highs in the 70s ages.
Casteel "I thmk we have a vanety of
except around 80 far south
Each year, the Holzer organize{s health information available Our
try to vary the diSplays depending on aim ts tf we help one or two ktds to
what recetves positive feedback or ts not start smokmg or have health
specifically asked for the nex1 year
problems, then we were successful "
"Our hope is to" promot~ better
Besides bemg a proJeCt of the
health prachces for the youth in our Holzer Chmc Pedtatnc Untt, support
area," satd Casteel. "We beheve IS also gtven by the Matermty Famtmillion to state Democratic parties tn youth need positive role models and ly Unit an&amp; volunteer serv1ces The
the 1994 elecuon so the slate organt- exposure to good health practices to committee that plans for the event,
zatwns could pay for adverttsing know what IS a healthy lifestyle."
startmg m Jan4ary, Includes Karen
campaigns that indtrectly helped reThis year changed shghlly from Hill, Rhonda Datley, Cheryl Frazter,
elect Prestdent Clinton, the newspa- past years m that entertatnment from Mananne
Campbell, , Teresa
per satd.
Rockin' Reggie Robtnson kept the' McClaskey, Marsha Shriver, Dawn
Investigators are examintng these students occup1ed whtle wattmg to Halstead and Nancy Casteel.
"issue ads ," which might be thtnly move through the dis!IJ,ay areas
"We have gollcn a really good
veiled candtdate advertisements for
Contests in hula hooping, twtst, response back from the students and
the Clinton-Gore campa12n
and hmbo entertamed the kids Sev- teachers," satd Casteel . "We will
eral of the students even got thetr have had approximately 2,000 stufavorite songs played upon request. dents viSit our fatr dunng our three
Robmson spread an anu-drug, vto- years of hostmg the Teen Health
'
lence and dnnking message through Fatr."
Hog market trend for Thursday his musical selections. He 1s
steady
employed through the Health RecovSummary of Wednesday's auctions at Galhpolls and Mt. Vernon.
~dged
Hogs: steady.
Butcher hols: 47.75-52.00.
Cattle steady to strong.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The expected to remain at 4 9 percent,
Slaughter steers choice 64.50numher
of new claims for jobless ncar a 24-year low. Analysts contend
~ -75 ; select 60.00-64.50.
Slaughter hetfers: chotec 63.00- benefits inched up b)'- I ,000 last that means job creauon conunues to
week, the first advance in a month, match labor force growth
66.50; select 59 50 and down.
The four-week average of new
Cows: steady to I 00 higher; all but remamed at a level that analysts
weekly
JObless claims fell last week
for
say
renecls
contmued
demand
cows 43.25 and down.
to
308,7
50, down 4,250 from
Bulls steady; all bulls 45 00 and workers
313
,000
a
week earlier It was the
New applicanons for unemploydown.
Veal calves: steady; choice 130.00 ment msurance totaled a seasonally lowest level since 308,500 during the
and down.
'
adjusted 308,000, the Labor Depart- pertod ended Aug. 16.
~
Many
analysts
prefer
to·
track
tH
ment
said
today.
Sheep and lambs: . steady; ch01cc
less-voiattle
four-week
average
It was the first gam smce clatms
wools 85.00-90,00, choice clips
84.00-89.50; feeder lambs 94 00 and edged up 2,000 dunng the week end- because 11 smooths out the spikes in
ed Aug. 30 During the next three the weekly repons.
down; aged sheep 57.00 and down
Dunng the week ended Sept. 20,
weeks, they fell by 13,000, 4,000 and
36
slates and territqnes reported
I ,000, respectively
Many analysts had expected a decltnes and 16 registered gains
slightly larger 4,000 increase last The state data is reported a week latweek. They say that a claims level er than the nauonaltotals.
ter said.
below 320,000 ts consistent wtlh a
States wtth the largest drops were
'"I thought my ktds were safe
tight employment Situation.
North Carolma, 2,920, South Carohhere," said Robin Rhodes, whose 16Economist Lynn Reaser of Barnell na, 2,893; New York, I ,921 ; Mtchtyear-old son, Michael, was in the atriBanks Inc of Jacksonvtlle , Fla .. satd gan, 1.900. and Kentucky, 1,204.
um at the time of the shooung. "He the low clatms level " underscores
The btggest mcreases were in
keeps hearing the shots go through tautness of labor markets."
Texas, 2,696, Cahforma, 2,151; Orehts head."
The unemployment rate for Sep- gon, 1,882 , Mtssoun, 1,618, and
Distrtct Atiorney John Kitchens tember, to be released Friday, ts
Vtrgtnta,,7f5.
satd he was disappotnted he cannot
seek the death penalty against Wood- Jones gets new lawyers; conservative group
ham In MisSJSsippt , that sentence
to! raise funds for,sult
apphes only to murders committed tn Is planning _
connectiOn wuh another cnme, hke
Her prevtous lawyers, Joe CamSAN MARINO, Calif. (AP) robbery, burglary or rnt~e . Woodham,
Paula Jones has new lawyers who marata and G1lbert DaviS, wtthdrcw
if convicted, could receive a maximade u clear they are prepared to from lhe case after a diSagreement
mum sentence of life m pnson wtth·
take President Chnton to court over over a settlement. They had worked
out parole
on the case for three years.
"This may be the case that gets sex harassment allegattons, and a
The Dallas law firm spectall7.es 1n
conservative group will pay the bill.
the law changed." Kuchens satd.
environmental
and employment law
The Dallas law firm of Rader,
and
has
conservative
tics
Campbell, Ftsher &amp; Pykc has taken
Donovan
Campbell,
one of the
her case, Mrs Jones announced
Wednesday through her spokes- firm's attorneys, volunteered at The
woman, Susan Carpenter-McMillan. Rutherford lnstllute to defend Texas'
Am Ele Power .................... A5"1•
"Thts law firm is wtlling to go to anlt-sodomy law and the nght of a
Akzo ......................................
h•gh school basketball team to hudtrial," Carpenter-McMtllan satd
AmrTech ...............................68'·
dle
and rectte the Lord 's Prayer after
Mrs. Jones also revealed that The
Aehland 011 ........................... 54'o
AT&amp;T ..................................... 44'1o Rutherford Institute of Char- games.
Mrs Jones sa1d she felt comfortlouesville, Va , a conscrvauve group,
Bank One ..............................57).
able
wtth the Dallas firm
Bob Evana ..................... ,...... 19~
wiU.raise money to pay fru:.the legal
8,org-Wamer ...,.......................59
representation
Champion ............................. 18'~
Charm Shpt ............................
City Holding ..........................39'o
Federal Mogul .......................38

Today's weath~r forecast
Obio
Tonight...Partly cloudy north.
Clear south. Lows from the middle
· 40s northeast to the lower 50s far
south.
Friday.. Partly cloudy northeast. •
Mostly sunny elsewhere. Highs from
near 75 northeast to around 80 far
~uth.
Extended forecast
Saturday... A chance of an after-

'Teen Fair' teaches...

Justice Department probes
Democrat's money transfers
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Justice Department ts mvestigating
whether the Democratic Party illegally transferred campaign donations
to state parties in order to skirt federal limits on prestdential campatgn
' spending, The New York Times satd
- · today.
The Democrauc Nauonal Committee qutetly transferred at least $32

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS - Indiana-Ohto
direct hog prices at selected buying
points Thursday as provtded by the
US. Department of Agnculture Mar. ketNews:
Barrows and gtlts: steady to weak;
demand moderate to light wtth a
moderate movement.
U.S. 1-2. 230-266 lbs. country
points 48 00-49.00, few 49.50; plants
49.00-50.50, few 48 50.
u.s. 2-3, 230-260 lb&lt;. 45.00. 48.50; 210-230 lbs. 41.00-45.00.
Sows: steady.
U.S. 1-3 300-400 lbs 35 0036.00; 400-500 ibs. 36.00-39.00;
500-600 lbs. 39.00-42.00, few over
600 lbs. 41.00-42 00, few 43 00.
Boars; 35.00-36.00, few 37.00.
Estimated receipts: 33,500.
Prices from Producers Lt vcstock Association·

Jobless claims
higher
la·st week for first time in a month

Pearl High .School student...
Continued from page 1
Weepmg students gathered tn
small groups outside the school,
where the Hag was lowered to halfstaff. Some youngsters held hands
and prayed A makeshtft memortal
' was piling up, stuffed ammals and
: nowers latd gently in tribu(e to their
fallen classmates.
Students and teachers were told
. they could seek counsehng at the
~chool on Fnday. Classes will resume
Monday.
"We've ~ot a lot ofheahng to do.
., Pearl's stron~ and I know we'll come
back from thts," Mayor Jimmy FosI

The Daily Sentinel";
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November 4 gencr;
a1 clecuon may now request apphcauons from the Meigs County Board
of Elections during regular business hours, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
Monday througll Friday.
The board office will also be open on Saturday, November 1, from
9 a.m. until noon for those who wish to cast absentee ballots in the
office.

Meigs Court news
Marriage licenses
Dissolution sought
. Marriage licenses have been
An action for dtssoluuon of marissued in Metgs County Probate riage has been filed m Metgs CounCOI)rt to Orley Yore, Jr., 59, and Jo ty Common Pleas Court by Todd S
Ann Strausbaugh, 50, both of Syra- Cundiff, Rae me, and Connte L. Cuncuse, Robert Eric Milhron, 28, diff, Racme.
Racine, and Lauric Susanne Wayland, 26, Pomeroy; Rtcky Lee Yost, Judgment rendered
Jr., 18, Rutland, and Rebekah Dawn
An order for foreclosure m the
amount
of $17 ,085 51 has been filed
Karr, 17, Middleport, and Gary
M1chael Johnson, Sr., 44, Racine, and m Metgs County Court of Common
Jean Ann Louden, 40, Thurman.
Pleas to Home Nat•onal Bank agamst
Kevtn C Knapp

Meigs announcements
Supper announced
The 15th annual Bissell-Seckman
chih-soup supper will be held Oct II
with servmg to begin at 6 p.m
Auxiliary to meet
Pomeroy Eagles Auxtliary w•ll
meet on Tuesday at 7.30 p.m.
Seminar to be presented
The Fanh Full Gospel Church at
Long Bottom wtll be the locattOn of
a three-day semm~r with Btble
teacher, Mary Diamond, 7 p m.
Thursday (today) through Saturday
The semmar ts bemg hosted by the
Ladies Ministry. The publtc IS mvlled to attend.
Fall Cllrnival planned
A fall carnival will he held at the
Lyne Center, ' Untversity of Rw
Grande, Saturday, noon to 8 p.m. for
all ages. Games, cake walks. haunt-

Gannett .................................1

Goodyear ..............................69~
Kmart .................................... 14'1.
Linda End ...............................3'.4
Limited .................................. 24),
Oil( Hill Finl .......................... 19'4

One Valley .......................... .37"/o
Peoples ................................. 38'~
~ Fln1 ...............................20'1.
Rockwell ............................... 55'1o
RD/Shell ...............................li1'1.
Shoney'e .................................n
Star Bank .............................46'1.
Wendy's ...............................21'1.
Worthlnglon ............................ 20

OHIO RIVER BEAR

1f1 oFF

-·-·-

Stock raporte are the 10:30
1.m. quote1 provided by Adwll
of Galllpolie.

Co.

\

Trustees to meet
Orange"Townshtp Trustees wtll
meet Tuesday 7 30 p.m a1 the home
of clerk OSJe Foil rod
Council sets session
Racme Vtllage Counctl wtll meet
at 7 p m Monday at the munictpal
butldmg.
Gospel sing announced
A gospel sing wtll he held at the
Hobson Christian Fcllowshtp Church
Saturday, 7 p m Smgers wtllmcludc
the Beaver Famtly, Jubtlee Tr10,
Martie Short, and Andrew Toops
Trustees meting
The Lerru-t Townshtp Trustees wtll
meet Monday, 6 p m at the office
butldmg.

Student of psychic forces worries

about bad karma if named juror
DENVER (AP) -A woman who
stud1es psychtc phenomena says she
doesn't helieve she can Stt m Judgment of Oklahoma City bombing sus- ·
pect Terry Nichols because it would
harm her karma.
The woman, a Boulder restdcnt,
also told U.S. District Judge Richard
Matsch she would noufy him if she
rece1ved any clear messages whtle
serving as a juror.
Respectfully, -Matsch sa1d, "I
don't know what we would do with
tt," but agreed that would be the best
procedure.
The . woman was questioned
Wednesday after Matsch slopped
telling prospectiVe Jurors m Terry
Ntehols' trial they could change
statements made ear her on Jury ques-

today
Nichols, 42, could get the death
penalty tf convtctcd of murder and
con"sptracy m the bombmg of the
Alfred P Murrah Federal Buildmg,
whtch ktllcd 168 people and 1njurcd
more than 500 others. McYetgh was
convicted tn June of the same charges
and sentenced to di e.
The Boulder woman said the
death penalty "ts somcthmg I struggle wtth a lot now lthmk my htgher duty is spiritual m nature and I feel
that it would be unfair of me to judge
that snuation PCrsonallv"

IIOnnmrcs about their v1cws on the

April 19, 1995. bombing
Maisch also agreed to handle
some debate over dJsquallfytngjurors
in open court, instead of the closedcoun procedure used tn codefendant
Ttmothy McYctgh's trial Both
changes were made at the defense's
request.
1ury selection was to contmuc

FACE/OFF"
ONE EVENING SHOW
STARTING FRIDAY
HARRISON FORD IN

AIR FORCE ONE "
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
446-0t23

.

'

]resh Cut Arrangements
e

Silk • Pilgrim Glass • Crafts
e Personalized Crocks
.
e Beaumont Pottery
• Lean.!)lg Tree Cards
e Love Lite Candles

BURGUNDY

&amp; BRASS
Racine

Pearl &amp; Third
949-ROSE (7673)

•Dws 110t l~tdiiM /ayAIINIJI
Middleport

barrel races, food

'Florals &amp; Gifts

Storewide*
204 N. Second Ave.

hou~e .

Meigs County Emergency Ser- treated at scene;
vices units answered seven calls for
12:28 p.m.,. Plum Street, Glen
assistance on Wednesday.
Grueser, to Pleasant Valley Hospital ,
I :28 p.m. State Route 7, Bnttany
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12 28 a.m.. asststed by Rutland, to Young, Veter ns.
Salem Street, Wtlham Cundtff, Vet- ~~~~Miu;:]!lomT
erans Memorial Hospital;
12:59 p.m, Holzer Mc1gs Chmc,
3:43a.m., North Second, Donald Dons Ramsburg. Holzer Medtcal
Stemmctz, Veterans:
Ccn(er,
4.35 a.m., asststed by Mtddleport,
6:14 .m.. Metgs Juntor High
North Second, Dustin Nicole Smith, School, Becky Zurcher, Holzer.

an.

5'-

ed

Meigs EMS has seven calls

Sto(:ks

OVB ••.••••:...............................35'1)

brief--

Ae~!~~!~~?c~~!~~!!~J:!.~he

conditions and

MICH.

Global ·funds: A world of difference
•

~-Local

OHIO Weather

1117

The Dilly Sentinel • P1ge 3

Talerlora
992~

�The Daily Se

Sports
Orioles, Marlins
&amp; Braves notch
playoff victories

:puts
-splkers
12th
In Division IV -

By BEN WALKER
getting all~ press and everybody
AP Baseball Writer
was talking li.ke Mike Mussina was
Once again, the Baltimore Orioles chopped liver," Davey Johnson said.
made short work of the Big Unit.
"I said, 'Man, I wouldn't bet against
Manager Davey Johnson stacked Mike.' I mean, he's been the best
his lineup with righties, benching pitcher in baseball over the same
Rafael Palmeiro, Roberto Alomar period." ·
and B.J. Surhoff, then watched the
With the score tied at I, Johnson
Orioles rough up Randy Johnson and started the fifth by walking Jeffrey
the Seattle Mariners 9-3 Wednesday Hammonds and Mike Bordick .
'•
night in Game I of their AL division
Brady Anderson, the only lefty in
sene s.
the starting lineup, followed with an
Overpowering against most every- RBI single and Eric Davis singled
one else. Randy Johnson is merely home two runs. Davis was .caught .
mortal against the Orioles. He lasted stealing, but Geronimo Berroa homejust five innings this time and left red.
down 5-1.
Marlins 7, Giants 6
The 20-game winner has faced
Florida got a lucky bounce to win
Baltimore fourtimes this year and is in its last at-bat for the 26th time,
0-3, with the Mariners also dropping most in the majors. The Marlins won
his no-decision. Overall, he's 3-81ife- their playoff opener 2-1 a day earliSCOOPS GROUNDER -The Atlanta Bravaa'
time, his only losing record to an er on Edgar Renteria's two-out single
Javy Lopez runs by Houston ahortatop RickY
opponent.
in the ninth.
Gutierrez as Gutierrez scoo.,. up a ground bell
"I don't know, maybe I've got a
Gary Sheffield. who homered carIn the eighth Inning of Wedneadey nlghfe
phobia or something about the Ori- lier, started the ninth with a single off
ales," Johnson said. "Tell all the Sal- Roberto Hernandez and stole second
timore Orioles to go and put on without a throw. After· Bobby Bonilanother jersey." ,
Ia walked, Alou singled up the mid- ·
The Atlanta Braves and florida die to break an 0-for-8 postseason
Marlins, meanwhile, are making slump.
quick work of their best-of-5 NL
Center fielder Dante Powell
playoff•. Even before Johnson threw appeared to have a play at the plate,
the first pitch of the evening at the but his throw horne hit the back of the
Kingdome, both the Braves and Mar- mound and popped high in the air,
!ins held 2-0 leads.
allowing Sheffield to score easily.
Florida, for the second day in a
The Marlins came from behind to
row. won with its final swing. Moi- win for the 45th time this season,
ses Alou 's RBI single with no outs in overcoming deficits of 1-0, 3-2 nnd
the bottom of the ninth inning beat 4-3. Florida also rallied to win Game
the San Francisco Giants 7-6.
· I.
Atlanta moved within a win of
San Francisco took advantage of
reac.hing its sixth straight league two errors to score a run in the ninth,
'
championship series by routing tying it a\ 6.
Houston 1"3-3.
Bonilla had three hits, homered
This afternoon, the Orioles and and-drove in three runs. Barry Bonds
Mariners were set to play Game 2. had two hits and drove in two runs
Tonight, the New York Yankees try to for the Giants.
extend their 1-0 lead over the CleveGame 3 will be Friday night at
land Indians.
San Francisco.
Even though Johnson struck out
Braves 13, Astros 3
two in the first inning, his command
After playing close games against
seemed to be off and his fastball Houston all season, Atlanta enjoyed
appeared inconsistent.
a blowout.
A crowd of 59,579, the largest
The . Braves took advantage of
ever to watch baseball at ·he King- eight walks by Mike Hampton.
dome, saw Johnson aive up five runs includins four straight with two outs
&lt;

• ,'

__j
National League divisional playoff game In
Atlanta, wh- the Braves' 13-3 victory gave the
defending NL champlona a 2-o lead In the beat·
of·flva series. (AP)

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

' ........... .......

""

.. . . ttah t'"""&amp;tG.fOIIOe home the

only three strikeouts.
go-ahead run.
"His control was off today,"
Tom Gla.vine, like Greg Maddux
Mariners manager Lou Piniella said. a day earlier, shut down the Astros'
"He was behind on the count to qui~ _ "Killer Bs." Craig Biggio, Derek
a few hitters. Randy wasn't sharp. It Bell and Jeff Bagwell, !he top three
was just one of those days."
hitters in the Houston .order, are a
Mike Mussina, however, was in combined 1-for-25 with no RB!s in.
complete control. The Orioles ace the series.
pitched seven innings and allowed
Jell Blauser hit a three-run homer
five hils, including home runs by for Atlanta. For the first time in 13
Edgar Martinez and Jay Buhner. meetings between the teams this seaMussina walked none, struck out nine son, the game was decided by more
and improved to 9-J lifetime against than t'I'O runs.
the Mariners.
Game 3 is Friday at the
"I was happy the Big Unit was Astrodome.

•

.'

.

I'

..
•

'i·
l•Ji',.•·.

'·'

'

-·-A~t'

FIRES TO FIRST - After retiring the Florida
Marlins' Kurt Abbott at aecond base, San Fran·
cisco. ·ahortetop Jose VIzcaino throw• to flrat
baae In an attempt to complata the double play
In the first Inning of Wednelday night's Nation·

all.ellgua divisional playoff com.t In Miami. The
Merlina' 2·1 victory gave the first-time playoff
contanclara a 2-o lead In the best-of-five series..
.
(AP)

Yanks &amp; Tribe to resume AL playoff series tonight
I

.By'TOM WITHERS
Just a few months ago, Wright was ed, but that's the thrill of competiNEW YORK (AP) -A Yankee pitching for Double-A Akron. And no tion," said Wright, 8-3 during the regStadium crowd can eat up a rookie offense to the Rubber City, but it ain't ~ Jar '!'•son. "Playing baseball at the
like it devours hot dogs. Tonight, New York.
hi'ghest level, and in the playoffs in
Jarel Wright is on the menu.
Wrig"t's mound opponent, Andy New York is the thrill of a lifetime.
Wright, a 21-year-old right-hander · Pettitte. knows the kid is in for a night It's an awesome feeling."
with a 95 mph fastball ·and the poise he' ll never forget.
Both clubs took the day off
of a seasone4 veteran, will start for
"The Yankees tradition. The fans. Wednesday following their 8-6
the Cleveland Indians in Game 2 of Our lineup. It will be impossible for slugfest Tuesday night when the
their AL playoff series against the someone in his situation 10 ignore all Yankees hit a record three straight
New Yorl&gt; Yankees.
that stuff," Peuiue said .
home runs in the sixth inning.
The Indians are sending out
Wright, who was 7-0 this season
Indians manager Mike Hargrove
Wright, the son of former major ' following an Indians loss, says he's said he would start Bip Roberts in left
league pitcher Clyde Wright, hoping ready for it all.
field for Game 2 against the lefthe can even the best-of-fi,Ye series.
"I'm human and I'm going to handed Pettine, and that Tony FerGame 3 is Saturday in Cleveland.
, have nerves. I' m nervous and excit- nandez would play second. He also
10

Coach Don Jackson's Eastern vol'leyball team was ranked 12th in the
state with a 15-1 overall record in this
' week's Ohio Volleyball Coaches Poll
listed Wednesday in Tht Daily Senline/.
Ironically, neighboring Southern
:was ranked 13ih in Division IV, the
third year in a row Southern has broken into the top 20 under voach
Howie Caldwell.
Eatern leads Waterford by one
game in the Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division race and can clinch
.the league crown outright next Thursday against Miller. Waterford is cur.
rently 16-3 overall.
Eastern has already clinched a
share of the Hocking crown by
defeating Trimble Tuesday. The great
turnaround from last year, coupled
with last year's end-of-the season
[success and sectional championship
puts Jackson in the driver's seal for
Coach of the Year honors.

·RedSWant "'
money if new
stadium isn't
ready by 2002
1

•

-

el -

said he was toying with the idea of
starting r~ht-handed hitting Kevin
Seitzer at first base over Jim Thome.
New York manager Joe Torre said
he was still undecided about what
changes, if any, he would employ.
However, he did say he would stick
with David Cone to start Game 4
despite the righl·hander's bad outing
in the opener, when he fell behind 50 in the first inning.
"After the first inning, we were a
liule concerned if he was OK," Torre
said of Cone, sidelined for neariy six
weeks with shoulder tendinitis. "But
in ·the second and third innings, he

·-

had good velocity and threw some
good fastba~So it was just one bad
inning."

·

New Yo(k is hoping to give
Wright a few bad innings of his own.
The Yankees have never faced -him
and have only hccn able to rely on
scouting reports and videotape to get
a look at the kid's stuff.
Torre says sometime patience is
the key when a bauer ha.~ never seen
a pitcher before.
"I anticipate a time or two through
the lineup, it might take us that long
to get a feel for him," Torre said.
(See PREVIEW on Page 5)

CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Cincinnati Reds want Hamilton
County lo pay penalties if a new stadium isn't ready for the 2002 season,
according to a proposal obtained by
The Cincinnati Enquirer.
.
'
The Reds' latest proposal for a
Inew ballpad&lt; includes fewer rent pay' rnents and nearly $34 million in guaranteed revenues dwing the middle I0
years of a 30-year lease. the paper
reported taday.
1
, The proposal .~as faxed Sept. 19
to a Chicago law nrm working with
Hamilton County on stadium negotiations. It was obtained Wednesday by .
the Enquirer through an Ohio public
.records request.
The proposal asks $300,000 for .
;every game the team does not play in
the new stadium in 2002, the paper
reported. Payments would increase
by 10 percent for every missed game
in 2003, and another I0 percent for
every missed game every year after
that.
The proposal · includes more
,demands than the team's last prolposal; which Hamilton County Com,missioner John Dowlin called
!"ridiculous."
; "This is more advantageous to the
:Reds than the deal we had turned.
1~own and Jess advantageous to the
_!taxpayers," Dow lin said. "From my
stahdpoint, it's. time to say, 'Get
·real....
.
A call_to the Reds' spokesman
Wednesday evening was not
answered.
Hamilton County voters approved
a one-half cent sales tax increase to
build new stadiums for the Reds and
the Cincinnati Bengals. The Bcngals
have negotiated a lease, and preliminary work has begun on their stadi'urn, but the Reds and the county have
·not been able to agree on a site for a
second stadium.

Future pRies

AtfnnlA (Smoll:r: 1~· 12) I'll Hou11011 (Rcynnldl
9· 10), 4:01p.m. (ESPN) '

'

AL division series

s.......,

Baltimore .._ Seatdo
·

1-0

WtdandlfiKen
9, Scaule ~; Bnhimon' Wadi ICfin

Bahimo~

' ·

F-7

A.llantu(NeaJle

20-~)at

Houston. 1:07 p.m., ir

SYn;CIIIJ, Od. 5
Allunta&amp;u Houunn. I :07 p.m.. ir neceUlU)'

IESPNl

Baltimore (Erid.tod 16--7) at Scauk (Moyer
(ESPN)

s.•...,

Sault {fnucro 16·9l a1 Baltimore (Key lft.10). 4:JOp.m. (Foll
-,,0«-5
Seattle at BaltimMe, 4:01 p.m., i( nece•••'Y

.

M....J.Oct.6
Seanle at B11lli1110Jc. 4·07 p.m..

1r AeeetW')'

(ESPNI

Oenland • ._ New York
Clt.veland

1

(Wrict! :.'t~ New Yoft (Prfrlue

Rorida7 , Sanfranciko6 :

2..()

(Wel~~m at Clew:lllld (NIIY

Nn Yottt
1~10), JJ?p.m. (HBC)

~,Od.J
~vdand.7 : J9pm..irMm~ary

(fol)

,.....,. Ort. '
!"'ew YoR 1111 ~lind. 1: II p.m.. ir nectu.y
(Fo~)

•
NL division series
Atlaolll n. Houoton

I
I
I
0
0

DniiM ...... ...... ............

FrW.y
Florida {Fernandez 11·12 ) at Son Frurn;!fco
( A.IvMtt4-3). 8:01p.m tNBC)
SacurdloJ
Florida ($oundm 4-6) at S111n Franc1tc0. II :07
p.m.• if Del:eflllr)' (ESPN)
·
Sunct.y, OcL 5
Florida at San Franci~eo. II :07 p.m., if neccJ'"l' IESI'Nl

Hockey

.
w t 1 , .....
Ad...U J3 , Houaon l; Atlaml ladlaeria 2..0

_k m

EASTERN CONFERENCE
x- ·· ..
lll. Cil ~a

r_e.

oo

Wuhinaton ...................... , I 0 0
NcwJa'ICy ............... ...... 0 0 0

N.Y. IIIMdetl .................. 0 0 0
N.Y. Ran.... .....................0 Of 0
Florida ............................... 0 I 0
~.....

2

J

1

1

2

l

4
-4

0
0
0

0
0
0

0
0
0

0

I

)

IJhrW.

BuiT•Io ............................... 1 0 0

2
2
1
0
2

2

l

I

2
2
J

0
4

l'hoc!niA ut St. Louii, M:)O p.m.
Colorado al CaiJ:ury, ~p . m .
Ddroil Ul Edmontlln, 9 p.m.
.,· AnAheim. vs. Vruw:nuwu at Tukyn, II p.m.

I 0 0

2

1 0 0

2
1
0
0

J
6
l
2
I

0

1

oo

l

P~teitk Dlridoft
Edmon1on..
' ......... I 0 0
Color.xkJ .......................... 0 0 I
Lol Angeles, ......................0 0 1
Anaheim ................... ........ 0 0 0
Vancouver ,........................0 0 0
CalgMy ............................ 0 I 0
Sa.nJme.
......... 0 I 0

Baseball

N•tlonal Lnaue
COLORADO ROCKU:.S . Numcd Jny Alves
rubhc ftlnlions tlire,lnr.

2

J
-4

0
0

.1
2
J
0
0

0

I

)

0

)

~

2
I
I

Wedneiday'siCCires
Lot Aogelel ), Pi111b\lt"Jh 3 (lie)
Ouawa l, Motmeall (tfe)

O.llu 2. Colcndo 2 (tie)
Detroit J, Calpry I
Pboeni11. 6, Chic:11o 2
l!dmonlon '· San Jote J

Toalpt'o pme
l.o1 Abplc111 Bolton, 7:)() p.m.

Frklay'op.Pitt*"&amp;h a1 Cwollna, BOp tn.
N.Y. Iahwwtm• N.Y. Ranam. 7::'()p.m.

Ottaw11 11 Philadelphia, 1:)0 p.m
BuffW a1 Wuhin1ton, 7:;l0 p.m
New leriC)' at Tamp~ Ba~ . 7 : ~ p.m,

"

I

2

6

)

2
)

0

0

•

Baoketball
NM""-1 lultllt&amp;ll AIIOdJIMan
ATLANTA HAWKS: Silln&amp;:d G Wnltllr Bnntl

nnd F Jar~ Pridt"lt.
CHICAGO BUU..S: S11ncd G Dame Culabnu.
F Borit GomM!. Q Ru•ty LaR..e, F Kurnc:l DaviU, F
DWIIJI'IC Whitftcld allll C Eric Qi.nanld IUOriC·)'CIIr
contractS.
DENVER NUGGETS: Traded F Antun1 o
MeOyeu 10 the Phoeni .. Suns fQr 11 minimum uf
tiRe firi~-rOu.nd and IWO ~mtd-roulkl tlrnlt picks.
Siped F Eri.:: Willi11101.

DETROIT PISTONS. SiJ-.1 F·C Don Reid 10
• multiyear contract and F
Charlet 0 ' BaDnon. ·

S~;ot

Pollard and F

MIAMI HEAT: Si&amp;ned F Ben OaYis and G
Malcolm Huckaby.
MINNEASOTA TtMBEltWOLVES' AJ'eed
to temu witb F KcYin Olllllelt a. • til.-year c:On·
lrJICI,

HEW YOIIK KNICKS' Sii/ICII 0 l'ole M,.,..

- PHOENIX SUNS: Trldca 0 Wea~y Penon
and G Tony Ou.mu ro the Cleveland Cavafien ror
• nn~-roundPick no earlier thin 2000.

VANCOUVER GRIZZUES, Sianed F Muk
'HeMicUO.. F Dtvkl Boom. C Al~n Ou and G
Urterial Green.
WASHINGTON WIZARDS: SiJned C Eric
r1)eir tralalnt CAmp mJttr.

~knrr 10

FootbaU
Notlooo!P-tlA-

D1miels to 1hc: pnlj,:d~,;.: ~qultd
DENVER BRONCOS: S!~ll!.'t.l K S ~nn lh:nllcy
10 the rtaclicr lq!Jid W:uvt!d LR Hllh•ry Ru!ll'r
MIAMI DOLPHINS: Sign~!d LU Mike Cmw·
l"ord und FB Jim Kltl~ . S1~111..'ll OT Rt1n Cullm~ hi
lhepr:.:li~·uquod.

Transaction s

WLI&amp;Iif!JA

Philadelphia J, Floridn I
Tamp;:~ Bay 4, CIIOiina2
WuhinJtOD 4, Toronto'1
Buffalo l , St. 1Aui1 I

NUL standings

Phit.detphia ....................... I 0 0
7 ........................ t

I
I
I
0
0

Cmlral DMRon
~

Chic"go ......
.b I 0
Fiorid.11tnchw~e 1 -StLouis .....
0 I 0
Toronto .......................... o· T 0

FulurtpiiiH

I8.7). 8:13 p.m. (RIA)

. NewYort ..

0
0
0
0
I

Wtdnnday'ucon

Todo7

!ESPN)

-·-

Oetrott ............... ...........
P~ni~ .
..., .. _ .

San Fnndsco 1;1. Jilorid8

Futurepmn

........ 0
........ 0
....... 0
.......0
. ....0

WESTERN.CONFERENCE

M\.'ftNI)' (ESPN)

·

17 - ~l.4 :07 p.m

Mnntrenl .
Onuwn ....
Pimburgh
BOtilon .....
Car.olinu ..

CINCINNATI BENGALS: Sl1ned WR Juan

.

Garnett &amp; T-wolves
ink record six-year,
$121M contract

•

•

By RON LESKO
paid fbr the franchise in 1995, just
MINNEAPOLIS (AP)- Need a three months before the Wolves used
loan, Shaq Daddy7 Talk to Da Kid. · the fifth overall pick to draft Garnett
Kevin Garnett surpassed Shaquille out of Chicago's Farragut Academy
O'Neal as the owner of the richest High School.
contract in professional sports histo"It's not about the loot," sajd Garry Wednesday, agreeing with the nett, who turned down a $103.5 mil" Minnesota Timberwolves on a six- lion offer in early August.
year extension worth more than S121
The Wolves managed to get Garmillion .
·nett to sign without an "opt-out"
The deal, which two reportS priced clause, a provision which would
as high as $125 million, surpassed have allowed him to leave before
O'Neal's seven-year, $120 million 2004, when the extension expires.
contract with the Lakers in terms of
"(Taylor) has shown me the comtotal value, annual value and shock mitment on his pan, so I showed him
value.
that I'm committed on my part," Gar"We all had sticker shock on the nett said.
whole thing, that's easy to say," said
In between playful shoulder
Kevin McHale, Minnesota's vice . bumps with McHale during a news
president of basketball operations.
conference, Garnett said the pressure
· The Wolves believe Garnett will of his astronomical deal wouldn't
be worth it, even thiJIIgh he is just change his carefree approach to the
two seasons remq&gt;;eiYfrorn high game he adQres.
school and has yet 10 prove he can
"Like I've told Kev since I've
· consistently dominate a game lilce been here from day one, I want to be
the best in what I do," Gamel! said.
O' Neal or Michael Jordan.
Jordan has the richest single-sea- "Not only as a player, but as a person deal at an estimated $36 million son.( think there's plenty of room for
for the 1997-98 season.
me to grow in bolh areas. I want the
"We pul Kevin in the category of sky, atfd I'm not going to stop until!
'future elite player,' " McHale said. ' reach the top."
"We signed a deal !hat's going to pay
With a personality as refreshing as
h1m hke thai. I know Keym, ~nd he's his skills are amazing, Garnett quick- .
,such a great guy and w1th hts work ly became a fan favorite in Min- ·
·ethic, he's going to ·achieve that. And nesota. He assumed the role of the
as ~e achieves that, we're going t~ slate's most popular active at_hlete
ach1eve a lot of tremendous thmg~.
when the Twins' Kirby Puc kelt was
The ~olves, who set a franch1se forced to retire last year when he lost
·record w1th a 40-42 record and lhe1r the vision in his right eye.
first playoff berth last season, have
Gamel! seemed perilously close to
put tremendous faith in their 21-year- L leaving, especially when the ncgotiold star.
ations turned bitter in August when
While neither side would confirm Taylor~ent public with Fleisher's
the exact contract figure. agent Enc rejectionb141n!'briginal offer.
Fleisher called it "a precedent-setThe Wolves had until II p.m.
ling" pact and acknowledged it · CDT Wednesday to sign Garnell to
eclipsed O'Neal's. The SrarTribune an extension or he would have
lind the Saint Paul Pioneer Press become a free agent at the end of the
rep{)rted it at $125 million.
upcoming sea.~on. That probably
That made the deal as much as would have rneamthe Wolves would
$37 million more than Glen Taylor have lost the player around whom

'J"ENNESSUE- OILERS: Si11.nct.l TE Joutk.'!l
K1..'Ch11n ami WR Nnlc .'ilnglctun

M~ ·

Hockey
N1Honul Hodl.tJ Ltllaue

CAROLINA HURRIC/\NI:S. Sitcncd KW
NF.W ORLEANS SAINTS: Sli!nl.&gt;tl S CllriN
Kevin 01ncc:n In a nnc·yc:u cnntrut:l clh:ll., inn
thmugh the IWK-W !iell~on, untJ F Kevin llruwn In
Hewitt to u on.e-reur con1rnct~ Sif!uctl OE l&gt;uulk!
A5hmnn, DB Ear l.tulc nod WR G"unn1ud Twyncr
a une·ycllf cuotrm;t.
'
NEW Jl::R~l¥ UEVII ~'\: Assi~tR~.:d G Richnrtl
lo the practice squad.
NEW YORK JETS. 1\~rcc,J tu h:rmJ wid1 CR
Shulmi!lril lo Fori Wnync of tl~ IHL. Pluccd I)
"111"0" Glenn on aliY~)'Cill"~:omract cxlcn~iun ,
.. ~heltlon Sooruy untJ C Sc!Jd Rrylin un inj\)rctl n.:·
NEW YORK GIANT!i : SijtDCll RO Erric Pc ·
w:rvc.
gram.
NI~W YORK RANGI~ RS . A s~i~t n~ d C Chri~·
OAKLAND RAIOERS : Sii\1\\!d ~E Aunt.lrny
tiun Oube al\d 0 GcoiT Smnh w HartruriJ nl llu:
8r&amp;K:c.
AHL

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

Kings and Penguins begin
season
with
3-3
deadlock
-

By ALAN ROBINSON
. displaying a glaring inability to score
PITI'SBURGH (AP) - Mario rarely seen during the Lemieux era,
Lemieux surprisingly showed up for they had only one goal in the final 57
Pittsburgh's season opener. Unfortu- 112 minutes.
nately for the Penguins, he was only
Jaromir Jagr had three assists and
a spectator.
rookie forward Alex i Morozov
His former teammates spent most scored the first goal of his NHL
of the nillht acting as if they expect-.· career, but the Penguins didn't score
ed their just-retired star 10 exit his after Hatcher tied it at 3 with a powluxury box, put on his skates and er-play goal at14:31 of the seeond
. score the goal they needed to beat the period.
Los Angeles Kings.
"Everybody's going to have lo
They never got it. Not from make up for (Lemieux's) scoring,"
Lemieux
or anyone else. •
Hatcher said. " The guys who have
KEVIN GARN~TT
The Kings had the second-worst played with him for five, six, 'seven
they are building their future .
power-play last season and the worst years, it's going to take a while to get
"I'm glad it's over," Garnett said. road record. But, proving it is a new used to him not being here. Sure, it'~
"You don't know what this is like." season. they went 3-for-5 with the going to be different"
Another important part of the man advantage to tie the Penguins 3- . . The Kings, winless in two games
negotiations, according to Garnell 3 Wednesday night in iheir season against Pittsburgh last season, cer·
· tainly noticed.
and .Aeisher, was making sure t~e opener.
contra~! was structured to give the
. Garry Galley, returning to the.
"I thought at the start they were a
Wolves the flexibility to build a con- Kings after a 10-year absence, scored little tentative, but that's to be undertender around their centerpiece.
a pair of first-period power play goals stood," Galley said. "They have a
Point guard Stephon Marbury, to make it 2-2 after Pitts~(f';~ had new coach and a new system, and
who also is represented by Fleisher, opened a two-goal lead in
~rst 7 they're not going to be the same team
and All-Star forward Tom Guglioua 112 minutes.
without Mario. That's a big change
"Last year, this team would have and so is a coaching change."
both will be up for new contracts next ·
summer. ,.
,
gotten a little frustrated with that (2The Penguins seem to be adjust"I've totd Eric, make sure we can adeficit)," Galley said. "But the atti- ing quickly to new coach Kevin Condeal off it," Garnell said. "I think the tude was really good. I was pretty stantihe's more disciplined defensive
deal is structured to do that."
impressed."
style, noticeably tightening up after
An agile, fluid seven-footer, GarKevin Hatcher scored twice for Luc Robitaille's power-play goal put
nett became a starter midway through the Penguins, who were 2-for-7 on the Kings ahead 3-2.
"We're going to have to play that
the 1995-96 season and developed the Lernieux-less power-play. And,
enough last season to make the AllStar game as an injury fill-in. He
averaged 17 points, eight rebounds
and two blocks, helping the Wolves
to their breakthrough season. ,
Even though Houston swepl the
Wolves in three games, they established themselves as one of the By KEN RAPPOPORT
Canadiens 2, Senators 2 ,
NBA's most promising teams. Most AP Hockey Writer
Igor Kravchuk scored a shortof that promise fell on Garnell's
With all the changes going on in handed goal with 10:32 remaining in
shoulders.
the NHL this season, things certain- regulation as visiting Ottawa lied
"The expectations are going to he ly haven 'I changed with Dominik' 1Monlreal.
.~
big," teammate Doug West said. "I Hasek.
Kravchuk. a Russian defenseman
want to go furt.her than just the playHasek picked up where he left off acquired in an offseason trade that
offs now. I wa.nt to go to the next as the league's MVP last season, sent Steve Duchesne to St. Louis,
step. And I think (Garnett) realizes making 33 saves as the Buffalo also assisted on Sergei ~ohok's
the expectations that will be on him, Sabres beat the St. Louis Blues 3-1 power-play goql at 7:2sof the tirsl
and I guess he's willing to live up to in one of I0 season openers Wednes- period.
day night.
Stephane Richer scored both goals
them.''
"The same old tricks," teammate for Montreal, playing its first game
Dixon Ward said of Hasek. "He under coach Alain Vigneault. Montreal goalie Andy Moog mailc 28
doesn't surprise us anymore.''
Hasek, who last season became saves and Ottawa's Damian Rhodes
the first goaltender Since Jacques stopped 23 shots.
Stars 2, Avalanche '2
Plante in 1962 to be named the
NHL's MVP, stopped several pointEd Bel four, making his debut for
blank chances.
Dallas after leaving San Jose a.~ a free
(twice).
"I thought we outplayed them, agent, made 29 saves in the Stars' tic
"Mait definitely fits in that
outgunned them ·and just couldn't
group," Fry said about Sherman, who . buy one," aaid the Blues' Brett Hu\\ with Colorado.
1
ranks second nationally in passing
who was blanked on six shots.
efficiency with a 185.3 rating.
The Sabres made it a successful
The last time the Hawkeyes went
debut for Lindy Ruff, one of eight
to' Columbus, in 1995, they were
coaches who started with new teams
pummeled 56-35. The Buckeyes
Wednesday. The coaches had a comraced to a 56-0 halftime lead and bined 4-2-2 record.
stymied Sherman and the Haw keyes.
Hasek's best stop of the night
"Being a sophomore, I was kind
might have been a pad save on Hull,
of new to everything," Shennan
. who skated in alone at 6:20 ,o f the
said. "We just got off on the wrong
third. The; Buffalo goaltender made
foot and they took advantage of every
II saves in the final period.
situation that they could. Now, we're
"The last period we needed
a beuer team than we were back
Hasek,'' Ruff said. "I ihink it's a givthen."
en every night that you're going to
Sherman was asked if Saturday's get a huge effort from him." ·
clash will be his biggest game as a
Miroslav Satan, Jason Dawe and
Hawktye .
()ixon Ward scored for the .Sabres. AI
"I guess at -this point in time, Macinnis seared for St. Louis.
yeah. I would have said Penn State
Elsewhere, it was Tampa Bay 4,
(was) as big, last year at this time," Carolina 2; Philadelphia 3, Florida I;
he said. ".This is a great opponunity. Washington 4, Toronto I; Montreal 2,
They do a Jot of things to try to con- Ottawa 2; Dallas 2, Colorado 2;
·&gt;
fuse a quarterback, but I'm confident Detroit 3, Calgary I; Phoenix 6,
in my ability to have some success
Chicago 2; and Edmonton 5, San
against them."
Jose 3.
Lightning 4, Hurricanes 2
At Tampa Bay, Carolina lost its
debut, game in the NHL as Dino Ciccarelli had two goals and an assist for
problems," J~kson said. "Thai's
the Lightning.
something they need to kno,w."
Mikael Renberg also had two
Seventh-ranked Ohio State faces
goals for Tampa Bay, the second into
No. II Iowa in Columbus on Saturan empty net with 31 seconds left.
day. Both teams are 4-0.
Keyin Dineen and Nelson Emerson
Many football players and other
scored for the Hurricanes, who
Ohio Stale athletes were at a frater-moved to North Carolina.[•:&lt;l!ll Hartnity party Saturday night at the Rivford, Conn.
\
er Club in Columbus. Police respondCiccarelli, 37, has 588 goals and
ed to reports of a disturbance and 575 assist,s in his 18-year career with "
gunfire in the parking lot, and arrestMinnesota, Washington, Detroit and
ed Rambo and another student.
Tampa Bay.
Jackson picked up the freshman
Flyers 3, Panthers 1
wide receiver from the Franklin
Chris Gratton, the former Tampa
County jai I after Rambo posted bail.
Bay center who signed a five-year,
The players say Rambo was sin$16.5 million contract with Philadelgled out and did nothing to create the
phia, had a goal and an assist as the
problem.
·
Flyers beat visiting Florida.
·
Columbus police Cmdr. Rick
Dainius Zubrus and Pal Falloon
Crosby said: "I don ' t believe anyone
also scored and Ron Hextall made 23
was singled out because they were i\n
saves in the Flyers' ·first game under
OS1J atfilcte," as the university's athcoach Wayne Cashman.
letics department has implied.
Rob Niedermayer scored for the
"We're going to sit down with coach
Panthers, who got 26 saves from John
(J&lt;lhn) Cooper and tell him this is
Vanbiesbrouck, including one on -.
why we did what we did."
Trent l~.latt's penalty shot
Jackson said athletes should be
Capitals 4, Maple Leafs 1
allowed to allend such a meeting.
At Toronto, Bill Ranford and Olaf
Rambo, whose · trial date in
Kolzig combined to make 35 saves
Franklin County Municipal Court
and Washington scored four firsthad not been set, remains a n\ernber
period goals against the Maple Leafs.
of the team.
Jaroslav Svejkovsky, a Czech for-Sports brlefs- ward celebrating his 21st birthday,
1 opened the scoring on a power play
BIISJ'ball
:at
3:07, and Joe Reekie, Joe Juneau
NEW YORK (AP) ..:.__Texas slugI
and
Richard Zednik added goals for
ger Juan Gonzalez won the AL Play'the
Capitals.
Igor Korolev scored for
er of the Month award while Seaule's
Jeff Fassero took Pitcher of the Toronto.
Ranfard, who made 16 saves in
Month honors.
the
opening period, did not return for
Gonzalez hit .337 with 10 home
the
second period after being struck
runs and 26 RB!s, scored 20 runs and
went 32-for-95. F'assero was 3-1 in the groin by Per Gustafsson 's shot.
with a 1.98 ERA in 41 innings, struck Kolzig made II saves in the second
period and eight in..the third.
out 30 and walked 13. ·

By GREG SMITH
northwest IOWJI who has led the
IOWA CITY, Iowa (APJ - The Hawkeyes to a 4-0 mark and will
Ohio State defense is tough all right, march them into·Ohio Stadium for a
but Iowa quarterback Matt Sherman showdown against No. 7 Ohio State
has faced more adversity in his own (4-0).
"Quarterback is not just throwing
back yard than he'll see from II
Buckeye defenders this Saturday at the ball," Sherman said. "It's getting
the-guys_ in the right frame of mind.
Columbus.
He has the highest -winning per- It's handing the ball off. It's ealli~g
centage of any quarterback under the right plays at the right time."
Sherman, who connected on 12 of
coach Hayden Fry - higher even
than Chuck "Long, the Heisman Tro- 22 passes for 194 yards and two
phy runner-up in 1985- while guid- touchdowns in a 38-10 win over Illiing the lith-ranked Hawkeyes to a nois 1~1 week, says he's done listen23-7 mark since he became a starter ing to his critics.
late in the 1994 season.
"I don't play this game for those
He is currently the Big Ten Con- people. I play it for my family, my
ference's leader in passing efficien- friends, my teammates and coaches.
cy, hilling,48 of78throws (61.5 per- If those people are happy with me,
cent) for 804 yards, 10 touchdowns then I know I'm doing something
and just two interceptions.
right," he said.
But for some reason, fans can't get
There isn't a bigger suppter than
off his back. He overthrows too Fry.
many open receivers, they say. He
Fry has been at Iowa since 1979.
doesn't have a strong.arm, others From 1983 through 1991, Hawkeye
quarterbacks were chosen first-team,
argue.
Ten seven times. The names
all-Big
Fry and Sherman are 'l'YStified
how anyone can be critical of a fifth- include Long (three times), Chuck
year senior from tiny St. Ansgar in Hartlieb (twice) and Mau Rodgers

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
State quarterback Stanley Jackson
wants Columbus police to realize that
the school's athletes want to avoid
run-ins with .the Jaw.
"What we want to do is get some
kind of relationship with the ol'ficers," he said Wednesday. "Maybe
gel them to come down on campus
and just sit down and maybe grab
some pizza just so they can build
some kind of bond with us,"
Jackson's comments followed the
arrest early Sunday of teammate
Ken-Yon Rambo, who was charged
with disorderly conduct, resisting

arrest and drug abuse.
A meeting between athletes and
the police sounds like a good idea,
Columbus police Commander Paul
Denton told the Dayton Daily News.
"Personally, I would be open to
that," he said. "Anything like this to
start re-establishiAg trust would be
positive and beneficial, I believe."
~ackson said a meeting could
change officers' perception of Ohio
State athletes.
,
"We want them to know we're
respectable young men and we're try:
ing to be good citizens in our society
and that we're not ·out there to create

Game 2 preview... &lt;Continued from Page

4)

Hargrove, who decided to use · childhoods running around in major
Wright Game 2 ahead of Charles league clubhouses and ballparks . II
Nagy, was asked if he was nervous gives them a definite edge on other
about sending the Indians' star of the players.
"It's ~ tremendous advantage,''
future out into such a pressurepacked environment. ·
· Hargrove said. "They gel use to big
, "(would be, if that rookie wasn't league life, the big league game. They
Jaret Wright," he said. "But I have have a relatively short adjustment
yet to see him be intimidated by any period. They have tremendous talent,
.$ituation he's been in, and we've put but they do have a leg up."
;him in situations especially in August
That would explain Wright's conand September where he pitched fidence and his willingness to throw
:very big games for us."
inside to back hitters away. Hargrove,
Wright was in the Indians' dugout who played with Clyde Wright, joked
Tuesday night when the Yankees had that he still isn't sure where the kid
their home fans going wild with their got his fastball. though.
"His dad was a very confident
I Stunning comeback.
person,
an extrovert, and I see the
"I saw il last night," he said.
'!New York filled to the top. People same things in Jaret," Hargrove said.
going crazy. It )"ill probably test to "Being exposed to the big league life,
I believe, has a lot to do with his
tbe
all that I can take."
belief
in himself ihat I saw in his dad.
grove says Wright's maturity
can
ed to growing up in a base· But I see a lot better stuff than I did
ball family, jusllike Ken Griffey Jr. in hi~ dad."
and Sandy Alomar did, spending

sea:

way, We still have some gnoat offensive talent but, for this team to succeed, we have to play a little more
fundamentally sound than in years
past," goaltender Tom Barrasso said
after stopping 26 of 29 shots. "We're
still going to give up some chances,
but we used to give up 38-40 shots
every single night We won't be able
to do that this year. I think the guys
!&lt;now that and they're COillmitted to
that.''

Barrasso missed the final 4 112
months of last season with an injured
shoulder and still hasn 't won in six
starts since Game 5 of the Eastern
Conference finals against Floric4a in
May 1996.
"I'd give him an A." Constantine
said.
BJlt the Penguins never could get
their o(fense - or their fans - into
the game. The non-sellout crowd of
14,879 was theater-like quiet at
limes, with the biggest ovation occurring when Lemieux was spotted in a
private box.
Although the announced crowd
was 2,000 under capacity, the Civic
A'rena appeared to be about twothirds full, a possihle reflection of a
steep price hike. The Penguins' average ticket pric~6 is the NHL's
highest.
.

•

S-abres beat Bluf!s 3-1; Oilers,
Capitals &amp; Panthers also win

Iowa's Sherman leads Big Ten
in passing, but critics still rip him

Jackson seeks ·t o meet with Columbus police

Scoreboard
Base ball

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,

'

-

Greg Adams gave Dallas a 2-1
lead at 2:21 of the third period and
Colorado's Jon Klemm tied it at 3:27.
Dallas' Mike Modano and Colorado's
Valeri Kamensky also scored. Colorado's Patrick Roy made 24 saves.
Red Wings 3, Flames 1
At Calgary, Brendan Shamihan
and Martin Lapointe each had a goal
and an assist and . Chris Osgood
made 25 saves as Detroit opened its
Stanley Cup title defense with a victory over Calgary.
Doug Brown also scored for the
Red Wings. Jarome Iginla scored for
Calgary, playing its first game under
coach Brian Sutter.
·Coyotes 6, Blackhawks 2
Jeremy Roenick had a goal and
two assists to lead the Coyotes in Jim
Schoenfeld's coaching dellut in

�' • I • The O.lly,Senllnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thu...-y, October 2, 1917

1

·Ohio Stat@ &amp; Iowa to collig~ hi battle of unbeat8ns Saturd'ay ·
lly RICHARD
ROSENBLAn

AP FootbiH Wrllilr
Let the Big Ten shakedown begin.

Jbe first blow will be struck Sat·

urday 11 Ohio Stadium, where No. II
lowa(4-0) plays No. 7 Ohio State (4O). ln the coming weeks, No. 2 Penn
State, No. 6 Michigan and No. 12
Michigan State likely will find themselves in a similar situation if they
stay unbeaten.
Iowa has been overpowering
BB';inst a bunch of weaker opponents,
while Ohio State has been less than
impressive against more acceptable
foes.
"We've accomplished our goals,
even beyond that," Iowa coach Hayden Fry said. "We've scored more
points and moved the ball better than
anticipated."
..
.
Says Buckeyes linebacker Andy ·
Katzenmoyer: " I think thai we have
improved in the last four games. We
have a tough season ahead of us with
Michigan, Penn State and the other
Big Ten team·s, so"! think we have
gotten to a point where we are ready
to take them on ."

They stan against the Hawkcyes,
who lead the nation with 55.3 poiniS
and 567.7 yards per game.
Tavian Banks is the nation's leading rusher with 835 yards and 12
touchdowns, while Matt Sherman is
second in passing efficiency- 48. of-78 for 804 yards and 10 touchdowns. Five of Tim Dwight's 16
calches have gone for touchdowns,
while Tony Collins is averaging 24.3
yards per punt return.
While big plays have heen a big
reason 'for Iowa ouiSCoring its four
opponents' 221-46. Ohio State coach
John Cooper says that's not Fry 's
style.
"You got the wrong impression of
Hayden Fry. You know, ol' tricky
Hayden with a bsg of tricks up his
sleeve," Cooper ·said. "He beats you
with good solid football .. His teams
don't get a lot of stupid penalties or
have a lot of turnovers. You don't
coach 402 games and win 226 without knowing how to coach." .
Ohio State counters with the quar- .
terback duo of Stanley Jackson and
Joe Germaine, who have combined
for 866 yards and seven touchdown

passes, and a de(ense led by the bardhitting Katzenmoyer, whose trUnching tackle on Missouri quarterback
Corby Jones midway through the UJC-/
ond qulll1er last week was the turnr
ing point in Ohio State's 31 -10 win.
Here are the picks:
Arkonsas (plus 36)
at No. 1 norida
Beating 'Barna is one thing, the
OatO(S are a different animal.• ...
FLORIDA 52-10.
No. l Penn State
.&lt;minus l5 1.12) at Dllnois
L1ons QB Mtke McQueary throws
for Big Ten .best 247.7 yards per
game.... PENN STATE 42-7.
No. 17 KIIDSIIS State
(plus 21) at No.3 Nebraska
Make that 29 wins in a row over
K-State . .. . NEBRASKA 42-14.
Miami (na.) (plus 22)
at No.4 norida State
Hurricanes have lost their punch.
... FLORIDA STATE 38-10.
No. S North Carolina
(miqiiS 25)
at'J;'oxas Christian
Tar Heefs" defense No. I, allowing 197.8 yards per game .... NORTH

CAROLINA 31-0.
No.6Micbipa
(llllma 20) atlndW.a
Hoosiers coach cam Cameron
comes up .wich a few tricks.
MICHIGAN 27-19.
. No. 11 [owa (plus 4)
at No. 7 Oblo State
Tavian Banks meets Buckeyes
linebacker Andy Katzenmoyer. Ouch.
... OHIO STATE 34·24.
No. I Auburn (minus 7)
at Soutll Carotina
Are Tigers looking too far ahead
to Aorida .... AUBURN 28-17.
Mississippi (plu 26)
atNo.9ThnA week off has Peyton and Vols
ready to win again .... TENNESSEE
45-13.
No. 25 Arizona State
(plus 15) at No. 10 Washington
Huskies OK with QB Marques
Tuiasosopo if Brock Huard unable to
start . ... WASHINGTON 35-10.
Minnesota (plus 24)
at No. 12 Mlcbi1an State
Sedrick Irvin's running keeps
Spartans rolling. ... MICHIGAN
STATE 41-13.

.By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correlpondent
The Meigs Marauders will try and
end tbeir two game losing streak Friday evening when they travel to
Wellston to play the Oolden Rocl\ets
in the Tri-Valley Conference opener
for both teams.
Both team's will head into the contest with 3-2 records. Wellston
dropped a 49-15 decision to Jackson
in the season opener, then came back
the next week and defeated
Portsmouth Notre Dame 35-6. The
Golden Rockets then dropped a 2726 contest to Unioto before defeating
Oak Hill 7-0 and Federal Hocking
50-18.
Meigs on the other hand opened
up the season 3-0, before dropping
the last two games to Tolsia (W.Va.)
23-20 and Wheeling Cen1ral (W.va:)
21-14. The latest West Virginia state
rankings ·have both teams state
ranked. Tolsia is third in Class AA,
while Wheeling Central in rated lied
for 14th.

WNB~ grants expansnion franchises to~Detroi t, .Washington ·o.c.
isn 't even a given: The franchises dent Val Ackerman, Pistons star Orlando, Aa.
were granted on the condition they Orant Hill, Tina Thompson of the
Despite healthy skepticism ahout
each secure pledges for atleast3,000 WNBA champion Houston Comets the league's prospects ·befon: its stan,
season tickets before Nov. 10.
and Phil Guarascio of General the WNBA drew more than I millibn
To Pistons president Tom Wilson, Motors 'Corp., the league's official fans over the summer as the eight
that mandate shouldn't be worrisome. automoti v~ sponsor.
teams averaged 9,669 spectators a
'His reason : Unconfinned reports
The additions of Jhe two fran- game. That turnout was more than
in recent weeks that Detroit would chises - to be operated by the Pis- double the league's j,reseason proget an expansion club already have tons and Washington Wizards jections, Ackerman said.
drawn inquiries ahout tickets, which bring to 10 the number of teams in
"We believe that the events of this
he said would range from $5 to $20 the league that completed its first sea- summer demonstrate beyond a doubt
under league guidelines.
son in August. The WNBA expects to the tremendous potential that ·exists
" lt's.a vent~re we 're really exit: add two addition~) teams in 1999, for the future of the WNBA," Acked ahout," he said during a news con- Ackerman said.
erman said.
'
ference also featuring WNBA presiDetroit and Washington heat out
If the NBA Bosrd of Governors

endoms the expansion, the champi·on Houston Comets would switch to
the five-team Western Conference,
joining Los Angeles, Phoenix, Sa menlo and Utah. The new teams
would become part of the Eastern
Conference with NewYo.t, Charlotte
and Cleveland.
"We're glad to be jumping on the
bandwagon," Wizards president
Susan O'Malley said during a separate news conference Wednesday in
Washington.
Ackerman said it's still unclear
how the two.teams will be stocked or

would have gone in a different direction."

The Nuggets, coming off the second-worst season in franchise history at 21 -61, receive three first-round
and two second-round picks plus
cash. The Cavaliers, who acquired
All-Star forward Shawn Kemp from
Seattle last week, give Denver a firstround pick no earlier than 2000 and
receive Person and Dumas from the
Suns.
"After the trade we made last
week, we felt we needed .to protect

our inside game by acqumng a
perimeter shooter," said Cavaliers
general mll!'ager Wayne Embry, who
gave Clevefand its best outside threat
since Mark Price.
McDyess, the No. 2 pick in the
1995 draft, averaged 18.'3 points and
7.3 rebounds in his second season. He
will make about $2.8 million in the
final year of his contract.
The 23-year-old rattled rims Jllld
gained national fame by .averaging
30.5 points and 18 rebounds in the
199S NCAA tournament withAiaba-

Wellston is coached by Larry
Blackstone, who is entering his second season piloting the Golden Rockets. Wellston finished S-S last season
with two big wins at tlie end of the
year to finish at .500. W~llston first
defeated perennial state power
Newark Catholic. then defeated Vinton County 7-0 to close out the season. The win over Vinton County
enabled the Marauders to tie the '
Vikings for the Qhio Division's cochampionship.
Wellston has scored 16S points on
the year and is averaging 33 points a
game. On defense the Oolden Rockets has given up I00 points and average of 20 a game.
In !he win last week over Federal
Hocking, the Rockets jumped out to
an early 21-6lead afterthe first period and was never threatened. Wellston posted 297 yards rushing the
11rst half alone. The Oolden Rocket
ground attack rolled up an impressive
456 yards on 69 carries for the

game. c
Wellston·was led on the ground by
Matt Hallen a 5-9, 16S-pound senior
who rushed for"154 yards on 24 carries. On the season Hatten has rushed
for426 yards on 63 carries. Wellston
for the season is led by Matt
Kendrick a 5-6, 145-pound senior
who has rushed for 567 yards in 61
carries including 109 in nine carries
last week.
At quarterback for Wellston is 6foot, 165-pound senior Mall Phillips.
Phillips last week was one of live for
23 yards, that pass went to Chris
·Hutchinson.
Meigs is coming oll'thc 21 -14loss
at home to Wheeling Central. The
Marauders fell behind early and
fought back to within a touchdown,
with the hall as time was running
down. But Meigs W:Jtllnahlc lo conic
up with the tying sci!te.
Last week for the first time the
Marauders had problems gelling' their
running attack going. Meigs was only
able to muster S9 yards on the

Southern slates battle with

who will coach them, but an expan· si n draft is likely. $he also said one
expansion team probably would gel
Nikki McCray, a 1996 Olympian who
was the MVP of the rival ABL last
.cason while averaging about 20
poi11ts for the league champion
Columbus Quest. McCray agreed to
join the WNBA last month.
·
Detroit was one of the original
markets targeted by the WNBA
before its inaugural season, but officials with the Palace of Auburn Hills
decided to wait and sec how the
league fared.

rna. He hoped to be drafted by Dal- • reportedly $123 niillion with Minlas two years ago so he could play nesota on Wednesday, 0' Neal, Alon·
with point guard Jason Kidd, now zo Mourning and Juwan Howard.
with the Suns.
·
The Suns, who must pay guard
"I would like to think we're on the Kevin Johnson about $8 million for ·
doorstep, knocking," Phoenix gener- one more season and also signed free
al manager Bryan Colangelo said. I agents Clifford Robinson and Tom
"We now have to build it into a title Chambers, will have salary cap room ·
contender.,,
to deal with McDyess next summer.
First, the Suns have to give
"We've all decided that it's in our
McDyess the money Denver would best interest as a team and in the best
not. Only four players in the NBA interest oithe player to wait until next
have contracts worth $100 million ~ummer to talk about a new conGarnell, who signed a six,year deal tract," Colangelo said.

"Beeda newspaper
with your kids
every day, and just
watch them get .
rapped up in their
future."
I bet

'

when

I was

pretty young. And

for ·Sat.urday night

er the early punches like it did
After much success on the ground either Joe Dillon, Jcrrod Bohb or Wes
against Hannan lo be successful. early in the season, especially during Crow lifting for the other· position .
The Tornadoes must maintain their its three game win streak, Southern Seniors hris Buchanan and Ahc
peak ·level of enthusiasm to counter was limited lo just 20 yards rushing · Rach w· I play defensive end, while
the cross county rivals , and make the last week.
. Wcs Sanders and Jeremy Kchl will
Freshman quarterback Jonathan share duties at sal"ety.
fundamental bread-and-butter plays
Inside linebackers will he Steve
in the trenches. 0 f f c n s i v e I y, Evans connected on nine of 21 aerials
for
112
yards
and
a
touchdown.
Durst
and Nate Radford who were
Southern will have to he patient, not
putting itself in position where it is With no ground game and Wahama's both there last season, while Bill
always a passing situation. Michael quick secondary, SHS threw I&lt;1ur Schultz will also get some time in
Ash must get some support in the interceptions. Wahama Coach Ed that position. Steve Durst, a dclcnsive
Southern backfield, because Eastern Cromley said. "Evans can throw the leader for Eastern last year wuh K9
already has his number and you can football; but I think we never really tackles also had 79 as a sophomore.
At outside lincha~.:kcr will he
bet he's going down evory play. gave him much time to throw the
senior Shaun Lung and Beau Bailey,
Adam Cummings, a good runner ball."
Jason Writcscl and Josh Davis making his dchut m this position . At
himself, is also one of the best lead
have
been instrumental in the SHS corners will he Man Bissell and
blockers in the TVC. He is a key in
offense
and arc prime targets for Adam Sanders. a three year man
the SHS ground game .
there.
,
This week, Southern will dawn Evu .. s.
On 'lhc line,. Suuthcrn's· Jess~.: Lit ~
DUrst, also the rcturn'ing quancr~
new game shoes. Why'! .Because the
·old ones were shot full of holes lasl tie has been a stronghold both offen- · back ha.• hccn lighting knee problems
week, when the Tornadoes turned the sively and delcnsively. DeiCnsivcly, and misscd)asl week's game.
AI any rate,lhrnw nul the records.
ball over four times, and four times probable dclensi·ve starters arc Ji&gt;Sh
Wahama turned those into scores. Ervin and Derek Smith at ends, It's a whole new season . It's EasternEastern wasn't quite as. bad last week, Tyson Evans and J~ssc Lillie at tack- Southern day Saturday across Meigs
les, Ryan Hill, Adam Cumings, and Cuunty and also the Tri-Valley Conso they'll patch the old ones.
, An early Eastern·scort could have Buster Penix at inside line hackers. ference opener.
Saturday's game time is 7:30 in
made it 20-8 early on, but Eastern Matt Rime and Jason Writescl at
·in:;:c;.:.._ _ _ _ _,...._ __
fumbled on the four yard line on lirst Outside linchackers, Mike Ash at .:,:R:::;ac:;:.
end,
Josh
Davis
at
corncrhac~.
split
and goal. Earlier in the season.
CLASSmEDS
against Waliama Eastern had the ball and ,Malt Dill at Cornerback.
For Eastcm, defensive starters
inside the ten three limes and misREIIL nMI SIMRL
include Josh Hager at tackle with
fired for turnovers.

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The Mar,mder ground attack is led
by 5-10, 200-pound sophomore
Justin Roush. Roush has gained 491 '
yardsin81 cmies(6.1)and6-2, 180pound senior Mall Williams.
Williams has gained 369 yards on 86
carries for 4,3 yards a pop .
Brad Davenport is coming off a
career best 164 yard performance
through the air. He was 14 of 23 with
1wo touchdowns. For the season, the
senior is 33 of 58 for 524 yards.
Jeremiah Bentley leads all
receivers with 13 catches for 170
yards . John Davidson has caught
eight for 117 yards and Chad Hanson
eight for II 0. Hanson pulled in a
LEADING GROUND ATTACK - Sophomore fullback Ju.tln
career hcst six catches for 86 yards
Rou1h (24), ehown above pulling away from a River Valley player
last week.
earlier thle -•on, leads the Marauder rushers. Roush ha• picked
"Wellston is a very physical footup 491 yarda In 81 cerrlea for th!i year.
ball team . Their kids . play really
hard," Marauder coach Mike have three running backs that run the week ." ~
Chancey said ahout this week's oppo- ball very well. I'm very conlident that
Kick-off for this week's TVC
nent. "They arc very good up f~ont, my kids will be ready to play this opener is 5:30 from Wellston .

...

heads and -.yonder what's waiting out

I started

carries.

t ·Historic

parents sometimes shake their .

there for kids. Plenty.

ground last week (2.4 yards) on 37

Ea~tern

Jesse Maynard posted career num- and Josh Broderick had a big stop on
By SCOTT WOLFE
bers. Evans rushed 26 times for 177 the third down play, then Abc Rach
Sentinel Col'l'ftpondent
On Saturday night, the ancient yards and a touchdown, while catch- and Broderick stood Chapman up on
rivalry between two Meigs County ing five passes for 65 yards, and reg- the fourth down for a yard loss short
Schools continues, as Eastern visits istering nearly 275 all-purpose yards. of the touchdown.
Jeremy Kehl broke the century
Southern in the battle of Meigs Maynard completed 13 of 18 passes
mark
with I0 catches .for I09 yards.
County at Roger Lee Adams Memo- for 112 yards, twa touchdowns, and
no interceptions, while also scoring Matt Bissell was J4-26 passing for
rial Field in Racine at 7:30 p.m.
Unlike last' year, when hoth clubs a touchdown on a quarterback keep- 119 yards.ln rushing Josh Hager had
were virtually in the same boat with er. Maynard bolstered his passing 7-32; Shaun (.ong 7-23; and Adam
1-3 overall marks, Southern is 3-2 in slats which as of Friday, ranked Sanders 11-2 I.
Eastern's defense was led by Abc
one of its best starts ever and Eastern third in the area.
Somewhat overshadowed by Rach with 14 tackles, Shaun Long
is slumping at 0-S.
Both teams take a similar Southern's success was Easterner eight, Man Bissell seven, Nate Radapproach to this week's game. Both Adam McDaniel's third 100-yard ford live, and Travis Adams with an
coa£hes agree that mistakes or lack of game of the year; a 21 for 142 yard interception. Radford and Jason
mistakes will ligure in the games out- effort that yielded one touchdown. Warner had fumbleJrecoveries .
Eastern's main problem is consiscome. Both teams are coming off big Statistically, Evans and McDaniel
losses, Southern 34-8 to Wahama and had quite a ~ce for the game's top tency. Three good plays then a bad
Eastern 34-8 to Buffalo.
rushing honors throughout the con- one kills the momentum. Eastern is
not consistently bad a~ the record
Last year in 1996 the Southern test.
Tornadoes scored the game's first
Last week against Buffalo, Jason suggests, Defense has been good to
touchdown and never looked .back Chapman rushed for over I00 yards . great at times, but has spent much of
enroute to a dazzling 31-20 Tri- Val- · and scored three touchdowns in lead- every gamt on the field.
Southern, however. has shown a
· ley Conference Hocking Division ing the Buffalo-Putnam Bisons to a
win over.the Eastern Eagles at East 34-8 win over the Erunern Eagles in lol of balance. The Tornadoes arc too,
Shade Stadium.
the last of non-league football bouts at limes, are susccptihle to giving up
Southern became 1-0 in the TVC .at Shade River Stadium . The win lil't- the big play as many of their high
and holding a 2-4 mark, while East- ed Buffalo to 2-3 and Eastern scores suggest, but to their advantage
they have an offense that at times can
ern dropped to 0-1 and 1-5.
remained winless at 0-5.
Outstanding individual perforEastern's greatest moment came just run right over you .
Again, Southern will have to
mances highlighted the game, as when they survived a gallant fourguard against
the big play and delivSouthern seniors Jamie Evans and play goal line stand. Nate Radford ....
'

Nuggets trade McDyess to Suns; Cavaliers g·et- Person &amp; Dumas
By KEN BERGER
Dumas from the Su.ns in the threeotEVELAND (AP) - Antonio way deal.
McDyess wanted to join an exclusive
''I was willing to stay in Denver,
club reserved for people like but they traded me and gave me no
Shaquille O'Neal and Kevin Garnett. choice," said Me Dyess, entering his
The Denver Nuggets said fine, just third season and seeking a six-year
put it on somebody else's tab.
contract worth more than $100 milThe Nuggets refused to make lion .
McDyess the NBA's newest $100
"Antonio wasn't the fr
million man. trading the flamboyant player we were lbo ·
o
fo.Ward to Phoenix on Wednesday million," Nuggets ic president
for a host of draft picks. Th~ suddenly Allan Bristow said. "If we felt he
daring Cleveland Cavaliers received warranted that kind of money and
auards Wesley Person and Tony was the big piece to the puzzle, we

Tht Dally Sentinel• Page 7

Meigs to take on Wellston Friday

No.l3 LSU
losing streak since 1963 .... STAN(mtnu 1! 1.12) at VaDderbllt
FORD 31-21.
With QB Herb Tyler and RB
Cecil Collins, who needs Kevin
No. 21 Alabama
Faulk. ... LSU 44-14.
(mlnua 6 1.12) at Kentntky
Mlaalt(()blo) (plus 19 1.12)
Tim Couch and Wildcats getting
at ftlo. 14 Vlrpaia Teeh
closer to the big illY•· but.
Hokies could be headed for unde- ALABAMA 34-21.
feated season .... VIRGINIA TECH
Citadel (no line)
28-13.
at No. 23 Air Force
No. 15 W•hJnaton State
Blane Morgan a fine replacement
(mlaua 7 1.12) at Oreaoa
Could be reminiscent of last year's for brother Beau .... AIR FORCE 2855-44 win by. Cougars, with a twist. 7.
... OREGON 41-38.
Hollllan (plus 24 112)
at No. :U UCLA
No. 21 Texas A&amp;M
Skip
Hicks
has UCLA back on
(plua 3) at No. 16 Colorado
·Is QB John Hessler the answer for winning track .... UCLA 45-17.
Buffaloes? ... COLORADO 35-24.
Utah State (plus 15 1/2)
at
No. 24 Brigham Youna
Mbt.llppl State
(Friday)
(plliJ 11) at No. 19 Georgia
BYU averaging just 17 points per
Georgia looking to go 4-0 for first
game
. ... BYU 27-10.
lime since 1982. ... MISSISSIPPI
STATE 24-23 . .
Last week: 17-1 (straight); 9-8-1
Notre Dame (minus 1)
(spread)
at No. 20 Stanford
Season: 71-14 (straight); 46-34-1
Irish try to avoid first four-game · (spread)

1

ByJIMSUHR
AUBURN HfLLS, Mich. (AP)Professional women 's baskelbsll in
Detroit is the game, but what's the
«arne?
The answer could come within
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Motor City and Washington would
join the fledgling WNBA next season.
Choosing the team mascot and
logo accompany other unknowns for
a Detroit expansion club thai itself

Pomeroy ~ Middleport, Ohio c

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The Daily Sentinel

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ThUI'Idly, October 2, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ttnirsday, October 2, 1997

;)"~ion Screening Day time
Ann
Landers

1917, LDI AAfda 'l1llcll:
S)11dic1tc and CltiiMI
s,•~

Dear Ann Landen: Last year,
you printed a column about National Depression Screening Day. It listed signs of depression and urged
readers to call the bot-line number if
they or a loved one showed those
signs. If I hadn't read that column,
my friend would still be struggling
in her own personal hell.
When I looked at the symptoms
you listed, I recognized her immedi·
ately. I called the bot-line number in
your column and found out where
the nearest screening site was. I
knew it would he hard to g~t my
friend to leave her home. but I persisted and practically dragged her to
the free screening at our local mental health center.
That was a turning point for her.
She now has a renewed spirit and is
filled with anticipation and the hope
of a better life. She and I have .

tunately, more .!'t•n 40,000
depn:ssed people Iilli themselves
every year.
.
.
This year, Nllll.onal Depresston .
Screening Day wtll . be Thursday,
Oct. 9. The program ts free, and no
participant need give his or her
name. •
Last year, over 85,000 people
attended National · Depression
Screening Day II 2,800 sites across
the country. More than 70 percent
were referred for a full evaluation.
For those who may be experiencing symptoms of depression or
know someone who is, please call
the toll-free number that has been
set up especially for my readers. It is
1-800-242-2211 (TrY for the hearing impain:d is 1-800-855-2880).
These numbers are available staning
today, and you will ~told the toeation of the screening site in your
area. The lines are open 24 hours a
day.
Screening participants will hear
an educational presentation and
have the opportunity to take an
anonymous, written screening test,
pick up educational brochures and

By NANCI HELLMICH

used in the supplements.
herbs."
European scientists have studied jt
USA TODAY
Mark Blumenthal of tbe AmeriThe popularity of St. John's wort, for years; the National Institutes of
The herb St. John 's wort is sud- can Botanical Council. a nonprofit ~r hypericum perforatum. has 'grown Health are designing a research prodenly in such demand that corrwa- research and.educalion group, says with recent publicity.
ject ~h it in the USA.
rlies are scrambling to find enough some suppliers have stock on hand,
It's the subject of the best-selling
8\Jt some ex pens are worried that
plants to use in the supplements.
but others have none ill all.
book "Hypericum &amp; Depression" people might also be using St.
So far, store supplies of the herb,
Terry Lemerond, president of by Harold Bloomfield (Prelude, John's won for weight loss, even
touted as a natural anti-depressant, Enzymatic Therapy in Green Bay, $7.95) and others and is featured in though there's no scientific evidence
haven 't been affected.
Wis., which mak.~;,~&gt; St. .John's wort ·'~iracle Cures" by Jean Carper to suppon doing sp.
't has been hard to get supplements, say~ ' the demand for (HarperCollins, $25).
. The herb is one of the main ingreplants tha are of sufficient quality to the herb has increased'.' JQO-fold'' in
Some expens, including Blumen- dients in a relatively new weight·
produce"
standardized product, · the past three monLI)s_,...__
\ ·
thal, are convinced the herb is effec- loss product sold by Nutri/System
·says Nata e Koether of Madis
And John TrolJV of General tive for the treatment of depression, centers and health food stores.
Botanicals. in Hackensack, N.J., Nutrition . Centers says it is now probably because ,it works on seroIt's called herbal fen-phen, after
which processes the raw material "clearly m our top three or four tonin and other brain chemicals. the diet drug duo fenfluramine and

to get help

meet i~dividually ~ith a. clinician
for a brief scrcentng mterv1ew. Anyone who appears, to haY~ symptoms
of deprcSSIO~ _wtl! ~ directed to •
treatment f~ihty tn his or her &amp;rea:·
If you think you see yourself 1n
today's column, don't fail to follow
through.
.
.
If you have a fnend or loved one
who may . be depressed, please do
whatever 1s ne:cessary to get h~m .
. her to a scrcerung s1te. Deprcsston IS
nothtn~ to be as~ed of. The II"""' I
news ;s that tt can be treated.
')"oday s column could change your
hfe.
,
I love my readers and ~on t want
to lose any of you, espec1ally not to
an dlness that IS ~table, Once
agam, the number 1s 1-800-2422211. ,If you feel depressed, make
that call NOW. It could be the most
1mponant ~all you w11l ever make.

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ONLY 17,000 mi.

Rondo for flute and Irish penny
whistle with the Huntington POPS
and the Concen Under the Stars ill
Toledo. He is featured in the awardwinning public television documentary NEW MUSIC.
.
Leo Welsh, the recipient of the
prestigious Pickens-Queen. Award
for. excellence in· teaching at Marshall University, is a professor of
guitar and coordinator of theory. He
has most recently SP.peared with the
Larry Parsons Chorale and with the
Cantori di Montani at the Piccolo
Spoleto Festival in Charleston, S.C.
Last year's solo performance on the
Charleston Chamber Music series
brought this praise from the
Charleston Daily Mail, "Mr. Welsh
is an accomplislted "interpreter of
style and grace Precise pitches and
well-mannered aniculation allowed
the music to fill the enormous hall
and sin• songs of seraphim."
serea;ims will incltile 'ffimtmfj"
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orchestra, ·comrnc;montinl the 25th
This is a must-see night Ill the
anniversary of the Huntington Ariel Theatre. Tickets will be sold at
Chamber Orchestra..This past sum-- 'the door.
mer he performed Kessler's Gaelic

Alii can do is cry
Because all I see

My grandpa was a great man, as J
remember,
But tragic struck my family day
in September.
·
I remember going to the hospital
tp visit him

Send questions to A.nn Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,

But I can't remcmher much ,

because if so dim .
I can close my eyes and see his
face

Calif. 90045

I wish that he would still be here ,
So that I could gel rid of all my
fear.
When I go to my grandma's
I wish thai he would still be there,
But then I began to think
That he is with me everywhere.
When I look at my grandma

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in understandable terms, so there is
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no mis~communication.
. Use ''f' messages that explain
your feelings, consequences, behaviors, and desired changes, instead
of'You" messages that criticize,
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opposed to "You never take me with

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BY BECKY BAER
Melgl County Extenllon Agent together. Stay away from the idea of
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coming to Meigs Library
Doctor Eldoonie and his Magic
Medicine will be at the Meigs County Public Library in Pomeroy Saturday presenting shows and entenaining from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Eldon D. Wigton of Sunbury, is
an old iime medicine man, traveling
about curing everyday blues with his
special magic medicine. His halfhour,shows to be presented several
'times during the day all-have educational themes.
He will be appearing with his
1929 Model A Ford medicine
wagon.
Doctor Eldoonie has performed
throughout the United States, Canada, Europe and AsiL He has done
six engagements at the Easter egg
roll on the White Houae lawn.

The entenainer has been featured

in P.M. magazine, and has performed on Entenainment Tonight,
and the Joan Rivers show. He has
also been on television in Seoul,
Korea,
His name is in the Guinness Book
of Records for being the world's
fastest magician performing 225
magical acts within two minutes.
The magician received both his
bachelor and master degrees in education from Ohio State University.
The 30-year performer has been re&lt;:opized by the Ohio House of Representatives for his educational
themed programs which have dealt
with safety, drugs, science, and
selection of associates.

Golden Rule Sunday Sch·ool class meets
Renwb were 1iven by aevenl ,next meetin,. The Riebe Is ~Viii host
members
in relation to the readin1. the meeting in October, and the
clus of the Middlepon Pint Baptist
Walbums will host the December
the
secretary's
1q101t wal &amp;iven.
Church met recently 11 the c.ptain's
meeting.
House for a meeting hosted by the
June Kloes, pr:esident, conducted
owners, Marilyn and John Fulu.
Ocssens of pie and cake were
the business meetin1 during which
served
by Marilyn and John Fultz
time
v.nous
Christmas
projects
Mrs. Fulu had devotions reading
and
their
son, Marc Fulu to Past~
•A Boy's Leuon in Things Eternal: were discussed.
Mark
Moqpw
who gave the blessby Marion F. Ash.
Plans will be finalized ,at the ing, Randall and Carolyn ~avis,
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1'hC Oolden Rule Sunday School

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1994 FORD

Lawrence and Barbara Eblin, Manning and June Kloes, John and
Glenna Riebel. Rev. ·Rankin Roach,
Dale and Marjorie Walbum, and a
guest, Marc Fult'z
Mr. and Mrs. Fultz took the
members on a tour of the Captain's
House.

1992 CHEVY

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AM,/FM CIH, PS, PB,
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is not designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type . Items arc
printed as space permits ami cannot
be guaral)tced to run a spcci ri c num-

ber of days.

$9949

THURSDAY
SYRACUSE - Meigs Republi can Committee. 7:30p.m. Thursday,
Carleton School. Syracuse. All
Repubhcans welcome.

199

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1992 FORD

1991 CHRYSLER

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The Community Calendar is published as a·free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting and special events. The calendar

TAURUS

$8949

Mark Cron Edition, .
auto, AJC, tilt, crutae,
j,ower, clean toedad.

He is m Heaven

With Jesus Christ our Lord.

This p~cm is dedicated to
may grandfather, Richard Roush.
By Nikki Roush
Pomeroy

Danielle · King

celebrates her
fourth birthday
Danielle Nicole King, daughter
of Tony and Stephannie King Q[
Middleport, celebrated her fourth
birthday on Aug. I.
The party, hosted by her parents,
had a 101 Dalmatian theme and was
held at General Hartinger Park in
Middleport.
Attending were her grandmother,
Ruby King, grandparents, John and
Gina Thomas, Whitney and Caitlyn
Thomas, Betty Ann, Cody and Tristen Wolfe, Emily Johnson, Frankie
Stewan. and Amanda Well.
. Sending gifts were her grandmother. Paula Ashley, Amy and
Matthew Yonker, Jeremy King,
Robin Gilispie, Gary and Kristen
King; great-grandparents, Ann and
Jim Thomas, Bob and Virginia
Arbaugh. Rachacl Jennings, Mary
Wingett, Nancy, Greg. Bobby and
Samantha King, Albert and Joe
Loftis, Jane Bergman and Becky

phentermine.
eating.
Fenfluramine was pulled from
He says it may help depresse&lt;l
the market two weeks ago because it people who binge, but he doesn't
was linked to hean problems. '
recommend it for the chronically
Herbal Ien-phen, which also con- obese.
tains the herb ephedra, helps to conMost expens agree there 's no
trol appetite, says JosepJt. DiBar- hard evitftnce (be: herb works for
tolomeo of Nutri/System. But it's dieters . Says Blumenthal of the
the combination of the two herbs ~merican Botanical Council: "One
that · makes this product work, he of the down~ides of its widespread
says.
Pollo,ilarity is people will see it as a
Bloomfield, a psychiatrist i~ ~uilall and s!aM using it in ways the
Mar, Calif., says he has been getting "'!lientific literature doesn't supcalls from patients wondering if they port. "
·
•
can use St. John's won to treat binge

First birthday party observed
by Alyssa "Raeann Deemer
' Alyssa Raeann Deemer, daughter
of Chris and Corissa Deemer "or
Syracuse celebrated her first birthday recently with. a party hosted by
her grandparents. Bob and Marilyn
Deemer.
A buffet luncheon was served. A
Tiny Toon's Adventure theme was
carried out in the cake, balloons and
other decorations. Attending were
her parents, her paternal grandparents, her maternal grandparents
Mike and Marie Mulford; and her
maternal grandmother Cathy Thorla,
and her great-grandmother Elizabeth
Bailey.
Kevin Deemer, Travis and Jonas
Hart, Chat)da Mulford. Mark Russell, Gordon, Lina and Jeremy Fisher, Marvin "and Eleanor McKelvey,
' George Schneider, Bob and Katie
Crow, Alison Allen, Mark, Teresa
DANIELLE NICOLE KING
and Todd Davis, Amy Hill ,
Johnson, and great-great grandfa- Clarence, Louise and Jeff Frank,
Pam Theiss, Andrea Theiss, Tyltir
ther, T. A. Riley.
McVey an Ruella Crow.
Sending gifts were Luciana
Alderman of Friedburg, Germany;
great-grandparents Bob and Kathryn
Get There", Florence Spencer and Meredith of Phoenix, Ariz., stepSandra Nassar sang "Te.n Thousand grandparents Monty and Paula Han.
Years" with Marilyn R6binson at the Carl and Waltra~d Deemer, Jim and
piano.
Darla Thomas. John, Kila and David
Alfred Boyles. Philip Boyles. Frank and Scott Hannin,g.
John Taylor J?avid ·Barringer, Gary
Johnson, and Lloyd Dillinger, sang
"When We All Get to Heaven" dedicated to Warren Bentz, 95, who
~attending the homecoming.
Pastor Hausman closed the program by reading from I John 4 and
speaking of God's love for all. Other
churches represented were Marietta,
Belpre, Calvary Community, TupWS P.lai!ls, St. Paul. Tuppers Plains
Christian, Long Bottom, Reedsville,
Coolville, Hemlock Grove, Chester,
Orange Christian, Pomeroy Trinity.
Keno, Torch, Redbrush, Beta
Chapel, and Reedsville Nazarene.
Besides the 7S local residents
attending coming from a distance
were Kathy, Nicole, and Kyle fusman, The Plains; Warren and Garnet
Bentz, Glouster: Charles and Phyllis
Bentz. Lancaster; Mike Weber and
Jessica Wood, Gallipolis; Gerald
and Norma Swartz, Reno; Eleanor
Boyles, Roben and Janet Robinson,
Belpre.

and working for the cooperative

parish were given. Van Meter had
the prayer calendar and chose Jocelyn Roper, deaconess at Theological
Seminary in Springfield. Members
signed a birthday card for her.
During the social hour. Poole
served sandwiches, fruit salad, nuts
and cookies to those mentioned and
to Nina Robinson and Thelma Henderson. Next meting will be Oct. 21
at the church with Manha Elliott as
program leader and Sarah Caldwell
as hostess .

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......................
Alfred personals
Alfred United Methodist Church
and the community extend sympathy to Joe Niayhcw and family on
the death of his son, Terry Mayhew,
Columbus.
Nina Robinson visited Norma
Jean and Gcrlj)d Swartz, Reno, and
attended the celebration of Sand Hill
UNC's I 25th anniversary. A chicken
barbecue and program were
enjoyed.
Sarah Caldwell acco mpanied
Ben and Dol')$ Ewing and Beth

Acree on a recent trip to Indiana.
They visited Thelma Ploughe and
son ~~ Tipton, Ind.

Annual homecomin1 of Alfred
Church observed
'
The Alfred United Methodist
Church held its annual homecoming
on Sept. 21 with regular morning
services, a basket dinner and afternoon services.
Pastor Sharon Hausman gave
grace before the dinner. Afternoon
services •were led by SJ!.n~l' ~~~ ­
suPQ!iJI!IIIndell.t1• Lloydjtli llinger, the
Alfred choir sang, "It Could Happep
in a Moment," Janice Kuhn sang
"I'm Satisfied" and "Joy to the
Lord." Carolyn Taylor gave a reading, "How Was Your HeanAttack?",
and piano~olos.
Dillinger read a history of the
church. He noted that three build:
ings have stood on the present site, a
frame church that burned, a block
church , and the present church.
Gertrude Robinson sang "Tell Me
His Name Again." Eleanor and
Philip Boyles sand "When We All

-Community Calendar--

4X4, VI, air cond,PS, PB, AM/FM caas, 3rd.

1993 MERCURY

Every though he is gone,
I know that he is up above,
And that in our hearts
He will always be loved.
He is in ~ ·betier place
Where I know he suffers no
more,

.

Nellie Parker led Jhe pledge pro, gram, "What Gifts Can We Bring"
when Alfred United Methodist
Women met at the church on Sept.
16.
She led in the absence of Sarah
Caldwell who had set up the worship center with a ,cross, colorful
packages. and candles.
All attending read and disc~sed
the many gifts we can bring, and
checked the gifts of the spirit page.
All agreed that using various gifts
and working together is the ·best
way.
Business meeting opened with
prayer by FJorence Ann Spencer and .
the reading of the UMW purpose.
Secretary Manha Poole and treasurer Osie Mae Follrod gave their
reports, 31 friendship calls were
reported, and money for two blankets and individual kits were given
for the Festival of Sharing.
The nominating committee ,
Spencer and Charlotte Van Meter,
reported that same slate of officers
for next year.
Five star giving was di sc ussed
with final decisions to be made at
the next meeting. Reports on gifts t&amp;

·SUNROOF

Time Out For Tips

listen to the other person's viewpoint. Make sure that you clearly
state yours. Be open-minded and
willing to see things differently. Try
to empathize by putting yourself in
their place.
5. Examin~ other solutions.
Together think of as many different
gossibilities that could resolve the
problem as you can. Don',t criticize
each other's ideas, but evaluate the
consequences of each alternative. in
an unbiased manner.
6. Arrive at the best solution for
·everyone involved. As. was stated
earlier, the solution should be one
where each pany "wins." Commit to
followins-through with the resolution once it has been determined.
7. Evaluate. After some time has
passed, check to make sure that the
solution is working. Revise it if it is
necessary.
·
These simple steps can help
resolve conflicts in fair and peaceful
ways. If people work hard to seule
their differences in a · calm and
respectful fashion·, then their relationships should develop and nourish.

•
The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

AlfredUnited Methodist Church news notes·

power, luther.

1995 FORD

Is loneliness in her eyes.

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Corner~---

MY GRANDPA

Concert to feature m·u$iC of Bach

Every family is going to have
conflicts. Since we all bring different experiences, beliefs, and values
to our relationships, it is only natural that we see things from different
perspectives.
Wha! can we do to keep these differences to a minimum? Ho't' cap
we resolve our conflicts so that
everyone is satisfied? He,re are
seven steps that will help us get
along better with each other.
I. Try to treat the other person
with tespect. This may he hard, but
if yo\1 refrain froni name calling,
then you can each get to the problem, instead of becoming defensive.
2. Confront the .situation. Find a
time and place where you· can caeh
talk about the problem that will he
·non-threatening to both of you.
Don't let the agaravation fester until
there is an actual explosion.
3. ;Identify the problem. Sometimes we argue about things that
really aren't the root of the problem,
We seem to skin the issue. To
resolve the conflict, you should
specifically describe the dissension

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

It is such a wann embrace.

Everyone remembers Johann
Sebastian Bach. the monument of
18th century baroque music, but
often forgotten are several of his
sons were also composers and
whpse renown in their day often
exceeded that of their father.
''The Magic Aute and Guitar" a
program offered by guitarist Leo
Welsh and flutist Wendell Dobbs at
the Ariel Theatre on Saturday, Octoher 4 at8 p.m.. presents the music of
not only the father, but also that of
his two sons - Carl Philip Emanual
Bach, the ,oldest son, and Johann
Christian Bach, often called "London Bach" who exercised an important influence on the.young Mozan:
Wendell Dobbs has been a pro·
fessor of Aute at Marshall University since 1985. He performed in the
Kennedy Center with harpist
Lawrence Odom in 1995 as pan of a
world premiere of Katherine .
Hoover'sDI!ICes and 'JIIrliilons'fot

•

Herb in demand as 'natural anti-depressant'

B rfheBeDd
sprqd the exciting news to many
other depression sufferers and. let
them know that just one phone call
Jlllde the difference.
Please tell your readers when
National Depression Screening Day
will take place this year so their
loved ones can get the help they
need. Thank you so much, Ann, on
behalf of my friend and others like
her.•• Peggy in Atlanta
Dell' l'egy: Depression strilces
17 million Americans each year, and
Jess than half of them receive the
treatment they need. This is tragic
because more than 80 percent of
people with depression can he treated successfully with medication,
psychotherapy or a combination or
both.
Common symptO!IIS include a
persistent, sad, anxious or "empty"
mood, difficulty sleeping, changes
in appetite and loss of pleasure in
acti•·ities that were once enjoyable.
'Depressed people often have difficulty concentrating and may experiencc feelings of hopelessness, help.Iessness and guilt. Many have
thoughts of death or suicide. Unfor-

•

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day through Sunday. Speakers, by officers conference at 7:15 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT - Homecoming
Harold and Mary Cook. Special and regular meeting at 8 p.m. Final ,
singing; Friday; Laura Guthrie and . plans for chicken barbecue to be at. the Ash Street Freewill Baptist
Church Sunday, 5 p.m. Bring covSally Johnso n. Saturday, the Keams held on Oct. 5.
ered dish. Pastor Leslie Hayman
·Family. Sunday. Delivered . Services
7 p.m. Friday and Saturday; 6 p.m. SUNDAY
invites the public.
Sunday.
HEMLOCK GROVE - Home- .
. RACINE- CPR clinic at Southcoming, Hemlock Grove Church,
. RUTLAND - Rutland Town- Sunday, morning worship, 9:30 em High School, I p.m. Sunday for
ship Trustees, Thursday, 6:30p.m. at a.m.; Sunday school, 10:30 a.m., anyone needing CPR certification
the Rutland Fire Station.
carry-in dinner, 12:30 p.m. at the including all area coaches.
Grange hall.
.SATURDAY
MONDAY
CARPENTER Columbia
SALEM CENTER Star
SALEM CENTER
Star
Township
Board
of
Trustees,
MonGrange 778 and Star Junior Grange Grange• 778 will hold its anpual
878, regular session, Saturday, chicken barbec\le, Oct. 5, II a.m. day, 7:30p.m. at the fire station.
potluck supper, 6:30 p.m. followed until 2 p.m.

LONG BOTTOM - Faitb Full
Gospel Church Ladies Ministries.
three-day seminar, 7 p.m. beginning
Thursday, ni ghtly 7 p.m. Bible
teacher Mary Desmond.

Quality Furniture Plus
1·800·200-4005 or 614·667•7388

POMEROY )._ PERI group tun- .
chcon meetin ~ Thursday at noon.
POMEROY -

Hospice volun-

teer training . each Thursday in
October, 7 to 9 p.m. at the Hospice

Office, Veterans Memorial Hospital.

POM!tROY - Rita White, keyboard and Jumor White. bass to
entertain at the Senior Citit.cns Cen -

ter, Pomeroy, lllursday, 6:30 p.m.
Old time favorites to he featured . No
admission l'hargc .

FRIDAY
MARIETI"A
Dead line for
submitting applicati ons for the Obi((_
Public, Works 'Di strict 18, Issue 2.
Round 12 fundin g, Friday . 5 p.m.
Submit to Buckeye Hill s-Hocking
Valle y, Re gion al Development District. Route I . Box 299-D. Marietta.
45750.
CHESTER sc r vi~.:eS

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creators of sleep fitness
·~

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�•

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It's Howdy Doody time- what's the bid?
.

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P)n rit 11b TbeD'"tiY'Pt!o•i' -

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(II

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

Thuradaly, Octal* 2,1997

(

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· By LARRY McSHANE
Asloclated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Once, the
phrase "It's Howdy Doody time"
signaled an idyllic half-hour of children's television.
Fifty years after America's first
visit to Doodyville. those same
words have come to mean "Get out
your checkbook."
Vintage memorabilia from the
classic kiddie show goes on the auction bJock this month, with everything on sale from an Air-0-Doodle
Rocket Beanie (minimum bid $200)
to an original Howdy marionette
(minimum $5,000. expected to bring
$25,000).
There's already extraordinary
interest in the auction of I04 Howdy
collectibles, and Roger Muir, executive producer of the shOw, is not surprised.
. "The Howdy Doody alumni are
in their late 40s or 50s," Muir said
Wednesday from his New Hampshire home. "If you get within that
range, I know there's an awful lot of
interest."
:
The auction marks the 50th
anniversary of the show. which featured Howdy and company - host
"Buffalo Bob" Smith, friends Clarabell the Clown, Flub-A-Dub and
Phineas T. Bluster - and cntertain.ed children from 1947-60.
Muir and Smith cleared out pans
of their Doodyville collections for

the auction. So did Lew Anderson,
who played Clarabell from 1954-60,
and Scott Brinker, the show's prop
man and marionette maker.
Muir contributed the Howdy
marionette, one of three original
dolls dating back to the 1950s. "The
most imponant piece of television
memorabilia ever to be publicly
sold," assens the auction catalog.
Muir's "Photo Doody" was used
for Howdy's publicity shots and
public appearances.
The other two dolls are not on
the market: a stand-in named "Double Doody" that sits in the Smithsonian Institution. and the on-air
Howdy that sits under Plexiglass in
Smith's Nonh Carolina home.
"People ask me, 'What Howdy's
wonh?"' Smith said Wednesday. "I
ask them. 'What would you sell your
son for?'"
Less valuable but still inviting are
Chief Thundenhud's headdress and
tomahawk. Buffalo Bob's two-piece
Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade
outfit with red suede fringe and a
~atching red leather and suede belt,
and the handwritten lyrics and score
for "It's Howdy Doody Time."
The style of the auction. being
held by Leland's of New York, is
unusuaL

·=~

,!~L

?~

...-.......'

...,;
~

~ iwt

·.

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•

. A color test pattern for the. "Howdy Doody Show" showing Howdy's h~d, will be auctlonecj by Leland'a tn. Naw YOrk.

·

Bids by phone and by mail will
be accepted until 9 p.m. on Oc\. 24,
when the auction ends with no live
bidding. The first day of bidding

""' .
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was Wednesday.
Smith said the continued interest
in Howdy 'Doody is rewarding. And

he's not sure if any cftoday's kiddie
icons will have Howdy's staying
power. ·

"I don't know," he said with a
laugh, "if there's going to he a 50th
anniversary for the Ninja Thnles."

Bidding Information: Leland's,
36 E. 22nd St., N.Y., N.Y., 10010.

..
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thunlday,October2,1997

Government presse~ stil·l
churning out.flawed $50s
WASHINGTON (AP) - · The duced and are likely to continue to be
: government continues printing produced."
Rep. Michael Castle, R-Del.,
: ~flawed copies of the redesigned $50
chairman
of the panel, said, "It
· b despite the printing asency's
s~ems
clear
that a brand. new note
attempts to fix them, congressional
must be free of flaws if it is to gain
'nvestigators ~aid todax.
•
Also. far more of the notes made public acceptance and ensure public
this summer may have imperfections confidence."
The redesigned $50 note, due 10
than officials first acknowledged,
said Bernard L. Ungar of the Gener- stan circulating Oct. 27, features an
al Accounting Office, Congress' enlarged off-center portrait of
watchdog ami.
Ulysses S. Grant. the nation's 18th
A spot check Tuesday of notes president. Like the new $100 bill
printed after changes in procedures · before it, the redesigned $50 is
aimed at correcting printing problems loaded with features designed to foil
found fl~ws in 12 percent of bills counterfeiters.
stored at the Treasury Dcpanment's
One feature, fine concentric lines
Bureau of Engraving and Printing in 'around Grant's ponrait, apparently
also is foiling government printers.
Washington, Ungar said.
_
Larry Felix, a spokesman for tlie
TWo percent of the freshly printed notes checked at th~ Federal . Bureau or Engraving and Printing,
Reserve Bank of Richmond were said last week im estimated 30 milflawed, he said in testimony prepared lion of 150 million notes printed in
for the House Banking monetary sub- June, July and' August had small
committee. ·
breaks in some of the lines around the
Ungar said the checks- of I ,664 portrait because printing plates
notes in Washington and I ,000 in weren't retaining quite enough ink.
He said the plates were adjusted
Richmond - weren't statistically
representative enough to develop a and notes produced since early Sepgood estimate of the latest overall 1 tember did not contain the imperfection.
e"cr rate.
The GAO contends that 217.6 milHe said, Bureau of Engraving and '
. Printing "officials acknowledged that lion of the new $50 bills were prosome imperfect notes still are pro- duced over the summer, and a check

Some defiant Navajo families still fighting
Hopis in land dispute - ·compromise fails
By MATI' KELLEY
battle and sign 75-year leases with The Hopis - whose name · means meeting with federal mediators in
Associated Press Writer
the Hopi Tribe. allowing them to "peaceful"- never fought the U.S. 1991 to hammer out a solution.
BIG MOUNTAIN, Ariz. (AP)- stay. but under Hopi jurisdiction.
government, but the Navajos did.
Their agreement allows the Navajo
Pauline Whiresinger grabs a fistful
But Whitesinger and residents of
After being rounded up by the families to lease 3-acre home sires
of copper-colored din in her wrin- 13 other ·Navajo hcmesites have Army and forced to a concentration and 10-acre farm sites.frcm the Hopi
kled hand and releases it to the wind. refusi.J. The Hopi Tribe has given camp in New Mexico, the Navajos Tribe. · •
speaking defiantly in Navajo. ·
them three years to either sign leas- signed a treaty in 1868 that gave
Just what will happen at the end
She points in every direction to es or leave.
. them a reservatiQn ·east of Hopi ter- of tbe 75-year leases is still unclear.
explain why she never will leave
But even for the families who ritcry. In 1882, President Chester Honyumptewa says the Hopi Tribe
rhis land and never will sign a docu- have signed the leases, the 'decades Anhur granted the Hopis a 2.5 mil- probably would be willing to renew
ment acknowledging that it belongs of distrust are difficult to overcome. lion-acre reservation encompassing the leases, but doubts that many
to the Hopi Tribe.
"You grew up to not like the the three mesas where most Hopi Navajos would want to remain by
She gestures toward the graves of Hopis because of the things tha~ lived.
then.
her ancestors. She explains that Big went on," says Betty Tso, a Navajo
The Navajo population expiOded
"There aren't too many young
'Mouniain - a wide, pine-dotted who grew up near·Big Mountain and over the next decades, however, and people cut there," he says. "There's
ridgeline behind her - is sacred. heads the group of families who Congress responded by expanding nothing to do cut there."
She delcribeo howe kloows"' ·
have aiped leases. "But since the Navajo resef'iaticn until it comTso saya·the nextaeneratiops will
herbs to chew when she is ill
we've been working with the Hopi pletely surrounded the Hopi reserva- decide whether to stay'cr to leave.
which prayers to sing to give thanks Tribe we have a better dialogue lion in 1934.
"It's up to them to renew the
here.
between Ill'· We are beginning to
By the· l960s,the Hopi Tribe had leases," she says. "We're not lock·
Speaking through an interpreter,
derstand eath other."
exclusive control of only 651.000 _ .ing them into one ty(ltl of lifestyle,".
she tells what happened when cffiClayton Honyu19ptewa is head of acres of their reservation. The other
The Navajo families had until
cials of the Hopi Tribe anrived:
"' - ihe _Hopi land management office. 1.8 million acres were designated as March 31 to sign the leases or be
"They told us. 'If you don't sign, His office is filled with maps. Maps a "Joint Use Area" to be shared by declared trespassers. But the Hopi
we're going to handcuff you 'and showing how the NavajO reservation the two tribes. ·
Tribe decided tQ wait until 2000 to
take you away.'
grew and the Hopi reservation
Neither side was satisfied by the begin forcibly evicting tbe resisters,
"I told them, 'If you come 10 my shrank after both were created in the compromise. so in 1974 Congress Honyumptewa says.
home, I have a gun and I'll shoot late 1800s. Maps showing some of passed a law to equally divide the
"They have three years. If they
you.'
the three-acre homesites leased to "joint usc" land between the two don't like it, they can always
tribes - stranding hundreds of move," Honyumptewa says. "The
"You're go[!ig to have to shoot Navajo families.
me to get me out of here."
"We want to have control over all Navajos and Hcpis on land awarded Hopi tribal members. a lot of them,
The defiant Whitesingcr is one of of our reservation, and we don't 'to the opposite tribe.
opposed it. They say, 'Why do we
an aging and dwindling number of havethat right now," Honyumptcwa
The law offered money and land want Navajos still on cur land?'
Navajos still fighting the Hopi Tri.be says. "I don't think there's any other to relocate Hcpis and Navajc·s who
"We say to the Navajos. 'We've
and the .federal government over Indian tribe in the United ~tates that found themselves on the wrong side really bent over backwards for you
remote areas of high desert that both doesn't have control over all of their of the panition. and the relatively guys. 'Qtis is _!he best we can do.
tribes claim as their own.
- reservation."
small number ofHopis on the Nava- This is our final offer. Take it or
A compromise reached last year
The Navajo and Hopi have lived jo side have moved. So have hun- leave it."'
For Belly Tso, the main reason
• was supposed to end the long and side-by-side in what is now ncnh· dreds of Navajos, but hundreds more
bitter dispute. Most or the Navajo eastern Arizona for centuries, refused to leave.
why· she eventually decided lo sign
families living in this area have a,lthcugh they have vas!ly different
~epresentatives of the Navajo
was one of the biggest sticking
agreed to end tbeir decades-long languages. cultures and religions. families and the Hopi Tribe began points of the dispute: religion.

a

•

"We had' to stay on the land to
practice our religion," Tsc says. "If
we decided to go, who would look
after the sacred sites?"
Whitesinger has similar reasons
for not signing a lease -lo stay on
the land where her ancestors arc
buried. Many Navajos who have
· been relocated have become alcoholies. and others have tried to
return, Whitesinger says.
"Is that the reason the government wants me to move, to make me
an alcoholic?" Whitesinger asks.
Tl)e Hopis also have religious
reasons to oppose the settlement, for
the land includes shrines and areas
where eaglefare captured for use in
religious ceremonies.
"The agreement hasn't been
completely accepted (by the Hcpis).
The prophecies say the Navajo will
take themselves out of there evenrually," Honyumptewa says.
The accommodation agreement
also has widened rifts among the
Navajos on Hopi land. splitting the
families , between signers and
·

The -students .and

Lola Barber, 98, honored at ·
Qinner in Long Bottom ·
f.ONG BO'M'OM --Lola Barber,
98, the eldest pber or a six gener4jion family, was honored al a
I'C&lt;Jf'nt dinner l!eld at the Long Bottm, Communitr Center.

bel, Hebron; Mrs. Kate Miles of
Florida; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
(Beryl) Barker, and numerous
grandchildren, great-grandchildren
and great-great grandchildren.

fdrs. Barber has seven children
livjng and thrct deceased, 21 grand·
children. JS ,ereat-grandchi ldren,
and 29 great-gpeat-grandchildren.

Also attending were Jim
Rcwler of Painesville, Crystal Barber. Evelyn Hoffman, Forest and
Jean Linton, Rich and Inez Boring
and son, Randy. Renee Banrinaer,
and Carol Barber.

,A.nending !lie dinner were Mr.
and Mrs. Gecrte (Peg) Buckley, Mr.
and Mrs. Willlen (Gladys) Barber,
Mt. and Mrs. Kenneth (Betty) B¥I

Cla11ifieda

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5 PM ·8 PM
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Carper's Nurnrles
Weaam ConstruC\IOn
Kroger
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Blum Lumber
Ed Ramsburg

n the United States more

than 250,000 people

•

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••
614-423·2073
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•• 2906 WAshington Blvd.

Dlltpls Sperl rt
of~e
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~:ompulcr

crashes

since July.
.
During the breakdowns - there
- ·-- were-three-last month - 1hc lwo Rus. sians and one American on board had
let switch ciT most of the station's systems to save power. Each time, it look
a day or two to fix the problem.
The new computer. which passed
ap its initial tests. was installed
iljSide the station while an American

and a Russian took a spacewalk out- was to retrieve flypaper-like panels
side the 250-mile-high Atlantis-Mir from Mir's docking tunnel. The four
panels, covered with cosmic lint and
complex.
Scott Parazynski and Vladimir dings from micrometeorites, had
Titov scaled the 15-foot orange dock- been attached to the tunnel last year
ing tunnel linking the spacecraft to to study the debris thai flies past Mir.
atlach the 120-pound stopper. intend- · The men latched the suitcase-sized
ed for future repairs·of a Mir module cx.periments into the~ shuule's cargo
ruptured in June when il was hit by bay for the trip back to Eanh, scheda cargo ship. Future spacewalkers uled for Sunday.
Also aboard will be one of Mir's
could use the funnel-shaped plug to
cover a hole that would be left if they worn:oul central computers. Techniremoved a solar panel smashed in the cians will analyze it to find out why
it repeatedly malfunctioned .
collision.
Besides the new computer and the
Before Parazynski could begin
plug.
Mir also got a fresh American
working outside, he had to ditch one
of his three tethers because he cculd- crew member with Atlantis' a"ival.
n't get it to retract once it was David Wolf began a four-month mis!
unreeled. Twenty feet of the cctd sion and became the srxth American
swayed and looped, and .flight con- to live on the outpost.
Wi II NASA go through with its
trollers were concerned it could get
plans lo send one final American to
caught on equipment.
.
They suggested Parazynski forget Mir in early 1998?
"We
will
continue
to
assess
things
about his 55-foot-long cord and
instead use his two 3-fool-lcng teth- through Dave's mission and look at
ers to move about like a mountain the situation on board," Culbertson
climber during the five-hour space- said.
"It would take a failure of some
walk. It was a more exacting process
- hocking one tether and then the son to change our current assessment.
; whtch tS very good right now," he
01hcr to the spacecraft.
Parazynski and Titov's first task said.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The extinction of plants and animals, he
Sierra Club. the nation's largest envi- . said.
The Sierra Club's ballot will ask
rpnmental organization, is about to
ltek onto contentious territory: immi- members if they want to remain neutral or whether the club should have
gration.
a
policy "thai continues 10 advocate
The group's 500.000 members
an
end ro U.S. popvlalion growth al
~1ill vote on whether to end a neuthe
earliest possible time through
lflllity policy by endorsing a reduction in immigration as a way to slow reduction in natural increase (births
minus deaths). bul now also through
U.S. popularion.growth.
Why would an organization ded- reduction in net immigration (immilt:ated to protecting America's wild- gration minus emigration)."
It's a position some in the club
l!mds take on immigration? Overpopulation. which " happens to have approached reluctantly.
"This is a nasty, polarized debate
q~derlie all environmental issues,"
in
our
society, one of the reasons our
e~plained longtime Sierra Club memdirectors didn't want to get involved
~er Alan Kuper, who fought to bring
in the issue," said Carl Pope, e&gt;ecuq~e issue to a vote now scheduled for
live
director of the Sierra Club.
~larch.
Advocates
of immigrants· rights
Immigration feeds overpcpula~on, and that increases traffic jams . say opposing immigration won't
~lr pollution. water shonages and • help, that overpopulation is the result

mm
..

Ru1111n 81tronaut Vladimir Tltov will niaka
their way to the Mlr apace ltltlon to sat up
repair equipment for future UM by the Mlr crew.
(AP)

$ierra Club to vote on whether to incorporate

: Belpre, Ohio 45714

••
••
•••
••
•• •
•••
•••

WASHINGTON (AP) ~ Con- expenses" to be!ter ensure that mon- (going) to enriching a small group of
gressional leaders are sticking by ey meant for children's health actu- trial )awyers."
·
their determination to see that ally is spent for that purpose.
Gingrich also said Congress wanU;
"Cenainly among the Republi- to ensure thai tobacco legislation does
lawyers don't drain off too much of
the money in a multi-billion-dollar cans there was a strong feeling that not create a black market for cigaliterally billions of dollars, maybe , relies, and he said the president's
tobacco deal.
. House Speaker Newt Gingrich. R- $100 billion, is at stake," Gingrich drug policy adviser should be asked
Ga., said Wednesday he will ask that told repcners. "That could be spent to design an anti-addiction program.
4 lawyers' compensation be capped at · on health in general and on children's
a "reasonable hourly fee, plus · health in panicular ... rather than just

after a series of

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SPACE CENTER. Houston (AP)
- ,With the addition of a new main
computer and a giant stopper, Russia's Mir space stat&gt;cn limped along
more gracefully today lh~n it has in
recent weeks.
Cosmonauts and astronauts made
the improvements Wedlllfsday both
insid~ and outside the rundown station.
"It's cenainly healthier now. We
h~ve a newly checked cut computer
o~ board," 'said Frank Culbenscn.
director of NASA's shuttle-Mir pro- '
gram.
'
The computer. which is needed to ·
.. k~ep Mir's solar panels pointing
' · tt,ward the sun, was brought up by
•. space shuttle Atlantis last weekend

l..

•••

Mail scams target of new crackdown

Smoother sailing: Mir gets new
computer, big plug for repairs

staff of Bradbury Elementary

O'Dell Lumber
Vallay Lumber
Vaughan's IGA
Mitch Meadows
Quality Farm and Flaat
Super America
Jim Rickman
Bob's Market

of I ,200 notes at the Federal Rtserve
Bank of Philadelphia found 56 percent did not meet the central bank's
standard for circulation. Ungar said
45 percent of I ,000 notes inspected
.at the Federal Reserve Bank of Rich· mend don't meei the standard.
Treasury Department officials
have maintained the flawed bills still
are usable. Fe9eral Reserve officials
are wo"ied they could confuse the
public ~ause promotional materials
specifically advise scrutinizing the
fine lines as a way of determining
authenticity.
Castle said he's concerned "about
the appearance that some may have
thought that a production of 20 percenl or htgher rate of imperfect noles 1
was good enough for government
work.''
"It is clearly not acceptable for
. U.S. currency,': he said.
. T~easury and Federal Reserve
PROMISES CRACKDOWN· WIICOIIeln Attar·
federal, state and local law enforcer• have
officials hope to 4ectde what to do by
nay General James Doyle holds a mailing while
Joined 1,500 prlvale HCtor volun'-1 In a cam·
the end of the year. The GAO said
meeting reporters In Waahlngton Wadneeclay
palgn to thwart direct mall scams. (AP)
Federal Reserve cffic1als ccns1de~ 11
during a news conference to announce that
unh~ely .that all can ctrc~late. They re
locking mto how much 11 would cost
to tnspect .tbe btlls tn the flawed
batches. Automatic equipment at !he
Bureau of Engraving and Printing
WASHINGTON (AP)- Federal, · They included misrepresentations attorneys general. the National Assoworks only on sheets of bills and the . state and local law enforcers and that a mailing was from the gcvern- ciation of Anorneys General and the
sheets in question already have been · · 1,500 private &gt;ector volunteers ment, deceptive claims that• con- American Association of Retired Percut into individual bills.
launched a campaign Ieday to thwan sumers have won something. mis- sons have formed a strike ferce to
direct mail scams that cost senior cit- representations that consumers have collect and review direct mail for
izens and other consumers millions of unclaimed assets, phony billing future actions.
The AARP, also announced at the
dollars a year.
scams, bogus advance-fee credit card
news conference a "Project Senior
In kicking off the campaign, offi- offers and false contest claims.
cials announced 190 law enforcement
"Today. we're announcing a four- Sting," where unsolicited mail is
actions against fraudulent direct mail pronged, federal-state, public-private turned over to law enforcement agenschemes, including one that used over i~itiative. to target the scammers who cies.
200 different business names and use the mails to con consumers," said
"Finally, in conjunction with the
bilked consumers cut of$100 million Jodie Bernstein, director of the iU.S. Postal Inspection Service and
annually.
Bureau of Consumer Protection al the the Yellow Pages Publishers AssociThe scams targeted in the sweep Federal Trade Commission.
ation, we're launching a consumer
conned 'consumers with a range of
In addition to the law enforcement ·~ education campaign to help condecepti.ve claims.
actions, Bernstein said the FfC, . sumers and small businesses spot
Postai 1Inspecticn Service. 25 state 'mail fraud ," Bernstein said.
•

BEGINS SPACE WAlK· American aatronaui
Scott Parzynakl work1 with hll tether 11 he
beglna a five-hour apace walk from the apace
shuttle Atllntls Wldn81dly. Parzynskl and

would like to thank the foUowing for their
support of our School Beautification Project.
Without your help this project wi&gt;uld not have
been possible.
'

Employment certification . Shop at home...
• •
available at B.H.C .. C.
Buy fr.om the Class1f1eds!

Bpckeye Hills Career Center is address the current and future needs
• offering a new training and employ- of business/industry in . soft skill.·
areas such as communications,
ment opportunity staning Oct; 13.
The Pre-employment Cenifica- teamwork, math, wellness, personal .
tion Training Program will be ccn- development and safety.
Technical areas such as quality,.
d~tcted Monday through Thursday
assurance methods, computer literafrom 6to 10 p.m. each night
•
Available to the underemployed cy and work simulations will also be
• as well as the unemployed, com· emphasized. Students will be ceni- ·
plcters of this 120-hour program fled in First Aid and CPR and be
will ~te a pool of certified entry more computer literate.
Applicants for this program must
level employees who are capable of
rncetinl the demands of a quality meet the following requirements:
Wllfk team environment, . while Be an adult with ahigh school diploblllldins a standard for lifelong ma or GED; agree to drug testins;
ICIIflling in the workplace. Success- have a valid driver's license.
This 120-hour training· program
ful completers of this program will
is
free
to a] I qualified applicant~. For
h''IC the cp~unity to inrerview
more
information
call Adult SerwlfJI higher paying local induslries
vices
at
614-245-5334,
Ext. 209.
in O•llipolis and Jackson for possibll' entry level production positions. Non-traditional applicants are
This concentrated program will encouraged to apply.

resisters.
"When we (signers and resisters)
meet, we hug, we shake hands, bu!
we don't talk about the land dispute," Tsc says. "If we talk, we talk
about our sheep and goats and our
children. There's that underlying
unccmfcnable feeling- people trying to not say anytlting to hun the
feelings of the other."
B,ut despite the problems, both
Hopi tribal officials and Navajo
si.gners say they're ·committed to
making the solution work.
"We've finally reached a point
where this is a resolution. This is the
best that we have,". Honyumptewa
says.
"We don't know if this will
resolve the issue. But we're here to
implement the law."

Sentinel

The Qally Sentinel• Page 11·

)

of wasteful U.S . consumption levels.
Public Notice
The Olin TDWIIIIhlp
True!HI will Hll II public
auction on the ~th d1y ot
Octoblr, 1817 II tO:OO a.m.,
et 1M townahlp garage on
Joppl ROid, the following

Sertarest

sa9~;·n $139~·
Reg.

Sale

$259

$129

$499

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Reg.

.Full Ea. pc
Queen sel

$369

Perfect :Sietepe
Chaparral Elite

Serta ~erfect
Sleeper111
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pc.

Reg ..

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Queen set
King set

$669
$899
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Anderson'sIiiii

Auctioneer will be 1.0 •
McCoy.

For more lntormatlon
contact 1ny of 1111 Olive

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FURNituRE &amp; APPLIANCE

ManhiDurat

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Ph. 814-37Mt41
(I) 18, 25, (10) 2 3 tc

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tiM Mhwils;s at~.,._ ta

ly - . - A l A to
NASc.tD., ......... foftow.
tnt In . . too pt ot drtvtrt
""" -lladtn, tho .... Alan

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Ito lallocl "' _ , . ltll1lng
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ACIE: 33

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CHILDREH:Nono
CAR: No. 19 Pennzoi OOdgo

I. Emit IMIII (8)

-111on

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No let-up ·

s. Dolo- PI

7.Dole--(7)
Ellort Is 111era
1. B11 ~ 111

Ram. owned by Kurt Aoolwig.
HOMElOWN: Born 111"&lt;1 , _
In Peideb1 and South Btnd,

.NoiCUall
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I. "~My~
(I)

CUJ'fl !'M 'flllUCk -

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utceo""' clllngo

alballnco
e.~ llucld lSI
Has regrouped

Aug. :II

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ITW D1Wb1w 400, ~. MI.JI.

Ml:ull* Dew Soubrn 500, Dlrllnglon
Nlwlllii.,...63DD, Uiudon, N_H.

Slpt.21 ~500. tbw
S.. 21 ,..._IIDD,Mirlli •
Oct I
UAW.QM Cutlly 500, a.not1t
Oct , 2 s.r. Dletwd 1500
Ocl 12

Oct. 211
HoY. 2
HoY. Ill
HeY. 2'J

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"eor-a, N.C.

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expect more 11 D'IIINIM

n.na ill COUI'Ie.•

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HOW IIUCH DID IT 11£A!110
YOU 10 BE THE DIWER

C,_,_,.,. . . -I

""'-~ winnor 11 1my

Jun1&gt; an R.'

L.Molll of -llon,lllt

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LEAD TO YOUR DECIIION
TO GIVE JIAICIR A Tll'(f
1ild I 1101 - IIIII Mil"*""
~ lnd left 10 """"'and
lry 1hil, 1 -........ fill lilce I

WltO ClAVE DODGE 1111
•I'NT TRUCK VICTOR't J '11
- nlco 10 do 1hot lor IIIII

poclgo _

_.,. lanolhls q&lt;Jid&lt;ly ·
Tha finlt pan "'1ho ......
but
can aee, there have been a lot
more ,...._lolely 111"&lt;11

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-IJ'IU,..

1111-.- 25011

,_""""" I woiOd mlol a
raca, bu11hon I didn1 111r.t1tlo
_ , OOdgo- be in

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dld-k-lllko10
-~-·.....,.... " . poollon 1o be
do1ho1. 'lllu _..
leo a lotlnd you giYe up a lot
I you'ro "'-' u a blg-1lme
r~r-..· 'lllu
orr
lnd you 111&lt;1 a good _ , Ro6mot llong. 'lllu

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OPENER W1TH THE fEELING Of WIN ..JG AT to70. •t

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ally lo ]ull.-yo - ' I I
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be _ _ . , . _ _

-$200.000"-

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DWtMI1500, Taillldegll
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DA um IKIO, F'h:mx
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.,.. Ul" 100 - " ' . . .
""'1bnj -~~ yru

poleo,21op-.7top101.

W. ......

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WHY I UIE ~ ~::,~k&gt;n·

RECORD: 111 ...,., 1 wtl, 0

Pontiac ol the -

-.......................
-·-c... . Aug. 17

Ind., -

to. Word IUitan (Unrwnlledl

ON THE SCHEDULE

...,..... _ .. _AIIMii»IIJPIIdiA'-olollncl,_;;;j;b;

SPOUSE: Suo.

..Thoy- Oll-

-honor
--likeNelllomotl.

1alnly - · plul k'JIIao a
10 be bed 10 a

10. 'lllu ...,.10 win
,... m VINfeww..,.... you're
corlp8titiij on. E....-yone
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... 11'1 funny how 11111go -

DUIIOfi'\Mi'ne. 11'1 alllbcul
being in 1ho rigli ...... 111he
rigiUnt.'

no- 1_,a chlmpl0!11hip, 100, lor me, lor 1110

FEUD OF THE WHK

o - Molonporta
Wrtter Monte Dutton ....
hie optnlan: ·w the Fora

IIIII lOp

tllmS ClOrMnc8 themaelvas

-IIONIM-- ·~
·ouo · ~

~&amp;Ida ~Ind..:!:._,
.... . _

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

. . . . ., IUIII1i
.
....

NI\ICMdaa"*' . . . cM.

_The
1997 Winston Cup sdleciule

.

~~_.IIID.Ib....,_,._lr'd

~"'"'•· , a •win In&amp; .,.ocell m
Japan. The ldledule be&amp;ins (ofli·
ciaJJy) on Sunday F~b. 1!! witb
.500 •1 -~ (•ffi

.u~. _Da-·
,........

~,.,.,.
SllcmC.CU»rl.tnlta
TiiNM111111oal'lhllltI
111111,rllftiCI Fod't ~

' I e.,_

0 I•

aolly) 011 Nov. 8 a1 Alllnlo
M- Speedway.

t't:h~~

Frombtainnin&amp;loendthere
nf-v-FoiTw.
are 42 weekends, 37 of which are
--~~~~::~:~~-;taken
up by events. The open
weekends are M1rch 14 and JS, ·
_

t

·-------------------------------·
I

I
I
I
I
I
.I

April I land 12. May 9and 10,
~~ly 18 and 19 ilnd Oct. 17 and,

The

.cries will rtce in 17 allies
(Florida. Nonh l!uolina,

in the rum-one granclslandson
Fr~y ~uring Winston Cup
qualafy•n~ .

.=~~ ro oloall offocer,
Fdr. 8, w~h lhe Bud ~ool. il N"'idl, CJeoraio, Soorll Carolina, I •-...~"hl'heboapras bo•, one
ends( noffi .
"·
anUivu.., .. IS
OlftStnctor
u_, 2.1 1~lyR)?" -:..'Unli:Y~
Tennessee, Tuas. Virginia,
along 10 cheer the stock car
btaint (ullOft"odally) on Sunday

""'"• ental

~-~..,-

...._

NASCAR-~--11-.:,_,-..., ..Pll

AJablma,. California. Dc:llware,
Michigan, Pennsylvania, New

Hampshire, Indiana, New York

_.,~

lnuArizona}andrwocounUie&amp;

(Unilcd Soa1euild Jopan~
VH, WE'VE GOT APROII-

LEM:MIIIinsvilletecurityoffi·

cers ura;ently radioed the llack's

oenlral communication• tawer for
advice on deaJin~r with .......J.Iem
•
Y'"""

racers

The.

of he
.
praera: t reptde

caused I problem when nearby

fansdemandcdlbatitbeevicted.

Aalonliog., ttack otrodal~ 111e
·"no p&lt;UIIiowed" rule had never
Qeforebecn' oked
,
inv
lodeal With
1 snake
AND. WHILE YOU'
THEn•, Bri
RE
.u:.:
stol Molor Speed-

memberoftheSpeedwayMOIOr

sports lnc. sroup. will otrer swO
and SJOO
•
K&amp;SOn

tacketsto fw

for the trad's four most popular
evcnll: Moore's Snacks lSO

FoodCity.500,Food01 2So
and Oood • .500 '111&lt; fly
,Y ~ ·t· h ,.::: _,
racaarein pn,t e
rsan
A~~200
•
Uckells.dis -.
~nted
~33 KUOn
over lhe combined
prace of lacketato 1he four events.

I

...

-·ttiJID
~~~~~¥+
(;IIIJIJ!O
f'" ............••.••• ........ a$2').11' i
·----------------------Klllt 12

FAST FAMILY FUNII

•

Pill Ope -4:30
OMoo
.,:)0
Hat Lopo • 7:00
.........:00

In pori "' the """' .. ...

,J,IIIy ~=:&amp;..,
COiiipiii.... .W.. llal: of 1111 thl
- . t 1 bouncing llOUnd IIIII

T•·-·

W1noton Cup Series. Mot1
lmpleulvo, lhe origin ot lho
rumcw illltad In Pll&amp;ltf nee i1

........

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-4277

All Major Brands
Reasonable Rates

Stereo, Toolt , Fireplace

.Manool,, Loll of Iliac. and ,.,•.,.

FridaW Oct 3, aam. Trinity United
Methadlsl Church Porter. Oh.

R.,.._il!oMSale.

24 Hr. Emergency

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Service

SAYRE
TRUCKING

Howard L. Wrltesel

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching .
Umestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
Reasonable Rates

Gutters
Downspouts

MobUe lome Furnaces
and Heat Pumps
ffhMJifllf.

Gutter. Cleaning

Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Joe N. Sayre
614-7'47.::11

949-2168
st1Mfn

RADIATOR REPAIR
Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators
Oxy • Accetl Regulator Repair
State Certified Welder
Stick • Tig • Aluminum Welding

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

- Easy Bank Financing 00
Furnaces '28 a month
I Haat Pumps Installed *3800 a monlh
Free Estimates
(Pa~ments based on approved credit)'

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VICinity

BUIIG 8 COOLING
Serving Southeastern OH 8, VN
t-80().872-5967
1391 Saftord School

614 u&amp; 94t6

OH

CELLULAR PHONES
~60°

---

20 Yrs. Exp. • ln9, Owner: Rick Johnson

v.

675·5737
Cash or Check W/10
or Loss of

potnlo: nII dlngorcuo '&gt;

pul 100 much Q-ICO In 1ho
NASCAR """"'111111, bocouH t
lot cl I orlglnl1eo In IOIJrtltl

wllh 1holr own ~ But on
an Internet gone wild with
unou-.rt WC!go, lhlo Ilia
II falr1y lllj)Orelble.
. .

Free Estimate•

In loving memory of

LEONA
WISE
who passed away
Oct. 2, 1988.
The rolling stream ol
time !Iowa qn
But still t~e vacant
chair
Rec:alls tile love, the
voice, the smile,
Of mother, who once
all there.
The flowers 'we lay
upon your grave
May wither &amp;lTd decay,
But the love •we have
lor you, dear,
Will never lade away.
Sadly missed by:·
Phil, ShlrJey and
Don Wise,
Rosalee Wise

Rt. 21 at the Rlpley-Falrplaln Exit 1132

Come See Us For All Your
Parts and
Service Needs

5 Family Yard Salt Oct 1,2,3.
Garage Sal" 0c1. 3rd. 1 4111, 11- 5, Naal Road. 9-7 Follow al~. 1o10
On 4923 Bladen Road. 1 ~~~ Oft .::"'..:'::."'"::.·- - - - - - Route 218 On Lafl, AJC, Tlrea, 7-Family yard ule. Inside Union

F\aher Woodbu~nar, Houtahold Hall next k) Poat Otbca\n Hart·
Clolhel,l~-. 814·2~1484 .
ford WV. Rain or Shlno. Fri O&lt;t 3.

Gargo S8Ui 41 Chilic:otho Rd. 1·2· llom-&gt;4pm.
3-4 Lo11 of Clothet. Rain or Stine.

Communications

"
JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE
113 W. 2ND ST.

.

(Ume Ston•
Low Rates)

WICKS
HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992·3470

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
UN SHOOT
RIDAY, OCT. 3
7 P.M.

JURDAY, OCT. 4 AT
MIDDLEPORT FIRE
DEPARTMENT, 11 TO 2
RENEGADE

Laurie's ~ustom
Cakes

Appearing Friday 8:00· 12:00

Fill

992-6194

·Pick up dlscardtd
appliances. batteries,
many metals &amp;
motor blocks.
814-992-4025 B am-11 m

Reopening for full
time business

Thlngur•-·tnttoe

WWTADS

Specializing in
wedding, anniversary
•and birthday cakes.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Yard Sale: O&lt;l 3/d, l 4111, 9 To ~
3 112 UUas Out 218. Bab~
Clothes. Baby Cradle, Furniture,

Sale. Sacred Heart

Church Parloh Hall.
Ave. Thlir-Fri-So~

All Sizel Of Clothing I Sweallf's,
Witten Cake Pana, Old Dishes,

Househol,d lttmt &amp; Miac. All

RACINE GUN
CLUB
Gun Shoots
Starts Sunday
Sept. 28 at

1:00pm
12 gauge modified
Limited
637 a'ack Bore
680 Front

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Addition•
·Newaaraa••
•Eioctrlcal It Plumbing
•Roollng
•Interior It Exterior
Painting
Alao Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)

Public Notice
Public Notice _
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
N01'1CE Ia hereby given . NOTICE Ia hereby glvan that
that on Saturday, October 4, on Saturdey, October 4•
1997, at to:oo e.m., 1 public "1997, at tO:OO a.m., a public
aale will bohtld 'at 211 Weat aale will tie held at 40418
V.C. YOUNG Ill
Second Street, Pomeroy, Laurel Cliff Rood, Pomeroy,
Ohio,
to
eoll
tor
caeh
the
992-6215
Ohio, to aell for cUh the
following
calletorel:
Pomeroy,
Ohio .
following collote1'111:
t9110 FORD F150 4lC4
. 1979 FO!lD MUSTANG
8F03W482243
IFTEF104YOLNII43e24
The Fermtra Bank and
Thl Farmtrl Bank ond . . - - - - - - - - - .
Company,
Saving• Company, Pomt· Savtnga
pomeroy,
Ohio,
reurvaa the
MY PLACE
roy, Ohio, r111rvee the.right
to bid at thlo ulo, ond to right to bid at thlo Nil, and
Handcraftttl
withdraw the above to withdrew the above
prior
to
aalt.
colletoral
collateral prior to ule.
Prtjtcts
Further. The Fermera Bank Further, The Formera Bank
and
Savlngo
Compony
and Savlnua Company
Swilgs, Benches,
ruorveo the ri1Jhl to raloct reatrvll tiM right to ro)ect
any or all blda oubmlttld.
TaiHs, Misc. lt~ms
ony or all bid a oubmlttod.
Further,
the
above
Further, the obova collot·
34718 St. Rt. 7
collatoral will be oold In the
t~ol will be told In the
condition
It
lo
In,
with
no
condition It li ln. with no
Ph. 9854198
upreae or Implied war· ••11{~11 or .Implied
Y
..
r ,._..,...._.
warrontlaa given.
rantleo given. .
For further Information,
...,.,.wftlat......
For further lnlormellon,
confect
11m etll85-4289.
contact Tim o1 f85-129t.
~...-"
(10)1,2,33tc
(101 t, 2, 3, 3tc

Waad

·,

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

L-------"'

· POMEROY
EAGLES CLUB
•

Yord Sole 73 Spruce Sl 0&lt;1.
. 11-5 Furrituro, Clothot, Gu

John Willlama, Owner
Uceneed Electrician
Work G1111ranteed
Free Estimates
Providing Quality
Rllldentlal Service.

• Stump Grinding

Auction Conductea by
Rick Pearson Auctlol'! Co. #66
W.V. State Farm Museum

~: Oullo adl1a buo. A'

Bus. Phone(304)372'3673
1·80Q-964-FORD

Dave Harris Ext. 104 or Don Antle Ext. 105
For More Information

flld11Y.IIondty ocllllon
• 10:00 un. llluolay.

614-949-3060

• Top • Trim • Removal

Ripley, WV 26271

Call992·2155

101olllil.llunday
-·2:00p.m.

CORPORAL ELECTRIC

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631·

DEMIIGB GARRE'IT INC,

I

tho day -re1ha oc1

Dally Rd., Racine

a Auction

-

Advertise on thi~ page

I
I

-- -

.A~TENTIONADVERTISERS!!

lloPaldtn..._co.
DfADUiiE: 2:00p.m.

Honest Reliable
Quality Service
(614) 843-5440

Remodeling

· Fax:'304-n3·5861

m.

ntn.l _ , ~ .......

-

Phone: 614:992-2406

Locllted off
112 at the w.
State Farm
llo'ueeum bealde Maaon COunty Felrgrounds.
Quilts, rugs, comforter, First Day of Issue 3¢ stamps,
f&lt;merican Eagle Silver Dollar, Western Yellowstone
Sketches, Marshall Yearbook 1954, H.H.S. 1956,
c:hain saw, sculpture raccoon, crafts, lee shirts, Pt.
f'leasant WV throw, bean pot, eros~ cut saw, one
man saw, &amp; others, blue dutch .b~lls, Christmas tins,
fleW disc tower, wine rack, Pyrex dishes, console
p)lor TV, exercise bike, sev. new Hems, Avon, dolls,
c:ars, trains, chess set &amp; more.
.
All items have been donated by local businesses &amp;
· Individuals. All proceeds go to WV State Farm
ft1useum Library Fund.
'I

Jey..d'•

Sp&lt;edwoy,
Bri1101 Mooor Sp&lt;edwoy, lbo a

250 Condor Sireet
Pomeroy, Ohlo.45769
A Dlvlslim on Nichols Metal; INc.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1997
3:QO P.M.

RAaNG 011 THE WEB

way willac:tuall have season
tic:keli for ils 1 ~ races on sale
this week II Oarlollt Motor

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine. &amp; Welding Shop

PUBLIC
AUCTION·

IIIII tti·
son,
Bir:ldo molnllllnod
... poollion "1ho poln1110nd·
logo. hi oou1d ... win ogoln. 1hll

-

a.m.·

Monday-Friday· 8:00
4:30p.m.
Satun;lay • 8:00 a.m. - 12 noon

AU. Yanl -lluot

• Dryel$ • Dishwashel$

Pomeroy, Ohio
t-800-291·5800

(614) 446-4759

·-""""" .... -~ .. .. ...
--~~~~~-280.

"'11011318 1M '~US I " ' · - P1M0 'C

oi='!r':
:_.,
..':Jr::- .,lrvan
..... ~ is the v. ogi Berra of auto racing. w.orld
-==~VI

the Bobby Isaac Motorapons Program. _For more information, call
~k Davis at (704) 327- ?(KK), nt.

-·Oro
bu1-.. -"

_..,had one top-10
-11114-.

Steel SaleS, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement

Public Sale

110M 81 Mofwoe, Wuh., and

Matila....

AROUND THE GARAGE 1_,.

•~USA...,.__.
~lllrio.aNo. 15

Dar NASCAR Race Fan,
The program is available . at
Catawba Valley Cosnmunit)' College in Hickory, N.C., and is called

i-;
the Crd1man
TI'UCK
Sttltl,
Rldllllr:ldo
__
.,.._

.

2/12/IWn

Miocl

.

Ga-.

WHO'S HOt. Elierlng

FROM THE ARCH IYES:

99~-6611

Jllllll of till Wlik

-·-

lhld.a fourth of an lnellla
going to blat them, Rprobably will. What's dona i8 dMe.
opae&lt;lwli)OI,Iddlng a quarllr· They- keep plugging
Inch to the Monte c.r.o·a ,_ ft"i ond no!·let the rule
apoler _ , . ltke giftwrap on chlnge become a dlatraoGonlon'a Chlmpioooahlp.
Uon."

'·

555 Park St.
Middleport

• tlatton - · 2500 E. frank·
lin Blad.,
N.C. 2811114

15 " 1111rlllght

-..w~ng

Valley
Lumber&amp;
Supply Co.

WMI&lt; Your Tum, C/O The

IIIlO'S IIOT- WIIO'S IIOT
WHO'IIIOt. Kan
SCilr- had flnlollid In

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Complete Machine Shop Senlce Fabrication

H YOU've got a q-tlon cir t
oommtnl, WI'Ha: HASCAll Thla

WHO'S HOT - WHO'S NOT .

1998 Martin Street

(No Sunday Calls)

"""'and lor·Penr1ZOII.'

-DID YOU BECOME A

r80II Ia

Ford w. NASCAR:
With two of ito T'hunderblod
dtlvn chMing Jell Gonion
for I championllllp, the Blue
CMol bralnerullemelll a rat In
the 111011- Whiten Cup
rule cNnge. Willi live to go, .. ollhlm Cl1'11Up8&lt;·

morning when they mentioned a
new enain«ring class in Hickory,
N.C. This class wu to teach about
the technical setup of the atoct car
and how to IUne lhc sw.pension in
these em. AI 1he dme I was not
ab}e lo act the number lftey pve,
and have nol been able lo wnllct
anyone in thai uea lo get a hold of
somcoDt in this program . I have
tried to call Charlotte Motor Speed·
way since the program said lhe~
were • bia sponsor in 1his school;
however, tbey wen: unable 10 &amp;ive
me any leads. What I need 11 the
lllme and number of this ~ In
Hickory so I can find out how to
register for thiJ clw. I am cum:nlly
enrolled at Wrighl Stale Unive11ity
in Daytona, Ohio, majoring in bloi?IY aiiCI pre-med axarses. I am very
anterested in being involved in thi'
sppn if you could help me. Thanks!
Brton Smith
Piqua, Ohio

wv Wl3477

131 Third Avenue, Frldar Only,
T.V.. Sto&lt;ta. Crofts. Toys. Loll Of

• Ranges • Washers

"Build Tour Dream"

614-992·7643

"Inside NASCAR" on Sunday

TO MY U.. - · 1001110

-CIOwnt
...
llo """ ....
.. hod
In ...........MM.

""'" Manto 0u110n 1.u1

5»1... couch, Refrigerator, large Large yatd talt, turnilurt, bookl
men's jean's, womena clolhee: 1 QlauWart, roult 7 n..r

•Refri~ors

M&amp;J

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Rpoflng
C6MMERCIAL 4nd RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Dar NASCAR This Week:
I am writing you becat&amp; I am seri·
OU5Iy inlerested in 1he racing sport
A few weeb blck, I was watclilng

_ . , Rualy-. Tocl
..•• II"'W end Johnny 8lno

Custom Homes

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

renev,: 1heir orders immediately
after the c:ondusion of each year's
rae. It may well already be 100 late
10 get tickets fw the 1998 race. II
\\lould be wise to write immedia1ely
10; Brickyard 400 Tickets, lndi·
anapoli! Motor Speedway, P.O.
Box 2A906, Speedway, Ind. 46224.

8pMd ••• ac'F1Iatl otw;;lu.
rnigiiCIId to Norlh Clrolnllo

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

7/22/lln

the mosl scarce in motorsports.
Current ticket holders are urged to

tt 0 Court St.
892-4119

(614) 949.21104

985-4473

Dear NASCAR Race ~an:
Bri&lt;kyud 400 tickeos ""' among

Clltf.,ln 1tn.

TOP 10
w~ roniUnga by NASCAR Tl1lo week't ranking ;.1n pa~anth M .
1. J.tl Gonion (1)

State Route 338 • At Vine • Racine, Ohio

FREE
ESTIMATEES

Obertln, OH

,,
-~-·~·
llolnoo, ... 1... _

FROM LAST WEEK
WINSTON CUP: Rain
Elliott also ranking In the
forced postponement of the top fove.
Hanes 500 to Monday
CRAFTSMAN TRUCK
morning and past NASCAR SERIES: Rick Bickle, In
This Week's deadline.
a Chevrolet, held olllhe
Ward Bu~oo and Marl&lt;
Fords of Ernie lrvan and
Martin l!la~ed oo the front . Mike Blias In the Hanea
row of the mce at historic
250 at Martinsville Speed·
Martinsville Speedway.
way. The victory was
Jeff Burton held off
. Bickle's third ol the season.
Bobby Hamilton and then The series point leader,
Dale l:arnhardt to grbb his Jack Sp~ague, was
third win of the seilson,
Involved In a late crash
with Jeff Gordon and Bill
and limped home 10th.

,, ........ ,_.011...

..........
Rol,__.,.

ClwyMr Col poe ellen II tnt
NAICJO.R VldOiy In 20_.
wMn hi wan C.&amp;..,... TNCk
....... wtnl:lll-70 8p I 1&amp;1J
I n - . II!&gt;- on llly24.
lloii_IIICI_, a Win-

5. Mb 81111, 2,?115
• . .Jnvnoj ......,., 2.8&amp;2
1. Rlak C..., 1.8'7
II . •
SU.,1,102
• . c:tu:llc ao.n. ~~

a . aon~.a.022

t . Tid..,.._, 2,810

Spr.gui, 3.0111

3Ron~,U02

4. PNI P.-.cM. 3.11!11
5. Eloa s.llr, 3,1311
I. . . . Mc:I..&amp;CII'IIIn. 3, 1at
1. 8lalnOI.IOnll. 3.0157

7 . . . . . _ . ., , .. .
I . Blll9olt, :JJI 11

-

..,

Tony Raines

~_ASK lHE QtJ!!S'T10NS

Dar NASCAR Thio Week:
I would like 10 give some rclali\oes
11cketi forlhe Brickyan:l 400 (1998)
u Chrislmu gifts. Could you tell
me where I should write tnd by
what dale they need be ordertd'1
M,., Wm. Newmann

IIIICAIIIIIIITony

a. Rich B!:*J-, 2.eee
.... . FUtmwt. 2,117

2. Todd Bodnl. 3,825

S. S...Pirk. U'IB

~

PROFILE

10. ..,.. Sdlt, 2,831

Dave Harris
Ext.1Q,4 or
Don Riffle
Ext. 105
For More
Information

Appliance Repair
Service

••FACTORY
DmECT
PRICES''
Quality Window Systems

Briggs &amp;'Siraf1on: Master Service Technklail

Call 992·2156

•wnrM C~ UAW.QM Quality 500

I 991 POINTS STANDINGS

ac:ro*' rrom Pine Grove Rd.

Big 5 Fomlly Yard Solo Friday • SSoo~m~ll~fllr~'1Q~Ior~-~-1 ~ar~IO.:._~~
Sol Tlmo H . An11quo llodroom •

e.

Bob's

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

IJutdoor Power E;elpm1111 Assodallon: CeriHied .2 Cyclt

ON
THIS PAGE

AU timet and ltationa provideO by 1VE Web site.
, _ - 10 CNinge. Cllocl&lt; ywr IOeOIIOMingS.

5 FarrMr Yard Solo: Friday, • Sal·
urday. pcoober 3rd, • 41h, 1 112 Lar~ podo Ollt- Thurldoy, Fri·
MioBIIowEu"""'OnRauto7.
day, Saturday, 41123 SR 124

FrH E1tlmate•

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

· •Mowers •Chain Saws •Weedeatere •Authorized
Dealer For:
•Brlgga &amp; Stratton •MTD •Murrey •McCollough
•EchO •Ryobl •Roper •Rally ·Hydro Gear
ANDOTHERSI

St. At. 248
Chester 985-3308

On TV Alln.- e....m

')'()II()

Driveways, utllltlea,
land clearing,
eeptlc systeme.
Hauling Umeetone

oizioa 4. 14. 2niiH Nat111 at Sl· .:c....,.:.::::.:.:
· Oc10==bor::..3::..•;:..4.:·- - vor Bridgo on SlaiO Rl 7,

Parts and Service!!

Ridenour
Supply

THIS
WEEK

j

Slt11

mo. pd.

I•CINE MOWER CLINIC

Accessories

St. Rt. 248 Chester
985 3301

4 Fanily: cto..... Furrituro, Mite.
Thura, Fri.·Sat, 1· 5. Gtorgtl
C70111! • 112 rriltln&gt;rn 7

See us for Your

•

Power Tools &amp;

IAUMLUMIER
.

MuchMortl

10/2~

OCilS. lJAW.GII Cluolly 1100
WHIM: Ct.-. MoiDr Spud a , eon-

cord, N.C.

1117fi71

Clalhet.
Int., Crallt, Plut Slzea, Much.

Houae &amp; Trailer

Houra:
7:00 e.m. thr!J 4:00 p.m. Mondey thru Frldey

Athens, Ohio

From

1102-3838

LUMP AND STOKER COAL
H.E.A.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED
DELIVERY AVAILABLE

Attorney AI Law
(614) 592·5025

EICAVATIIIG
&amp; TRUCKING

STATE ROUTE 124
Approximately 1.4 inllu eaat of Route 32.
WELLSTON, OHIO
614-384-6212

Attorney William Safranek

985 4422

'IIIIWWM...,.IOii"'CUP-

MINING

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of financial
obligations and arrange a fair distribution ~~
assets. Debtors In bankruptcy may keep
•exempt" property lor their personal use. This
may include a car, a house, clothes, and
household goo&lt;ls. ,
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

Dirt • Sand

HE WINSTON CUP CIRCUI

-UP:

The Dally Sentinel• Page 13

Thursday, October 2, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

...... ..

Priceo To Gol Lota
005
Personals.
====~=.,-,=:-I
wsya!

:-LIVE PSYCHICS 1 (!N 1, 1·900·

Of

Givaa·
'

Sale 22UI Jackson Ava.

~~~~~~~~!·~7.

________

Oct 3rd, 4111, Knick Knack~ Dish· I•
32Q·1045 Exl. 4821, S3.89 Par 81 , Clolhll, &amp; Anoiqu 11 , Qallia 80
Auction
Min. Mull B• 18 Yra. Serv·U, Counly. Gun Club, Buckridga
and Flea Market
:,81::;9..:;·84;;;5-8434:.;::::;:;_
·
Road, ACIOII from Scank: HiiiL
40
Giveaway
Ocoober 1 ,~ 2nd, 3rd; 9 am-?; 55 Crawford's Fin Marq~ Hinder-

-----1

1.,..--,-...,.....,----

Garfield Ave., Rain canceled. .

1yr. old Bloodhound to goad
home, would m~ke good hunting
dog. 814-4&gt;08-3810.

aon, WV. Everfday G·l. Crafla,
a~tiques. tools, •ppllancea, lur·
Telephone pionelt' yard sale- e20 n1ture, toys. varaery. 30•·175·
Tt'in:l Av....,a, Friday, 0&lt;:10ber 3.
5.40&lt;.
'

Pomeroy1

2 Black Puppies, 2 Otange Kit·
and White Kinen

1

11n1, ~ ~-:l

(t14)

18

3 Refrlgora- 1 runs. 2 doosn\
mull lake all three . 304·885·
3821.

4 kiHena. very playhll. to good
homes.~" ••"·33e0.
--

Full blooded.-......~
female German
Sh..,..,... ..
.....
00.·87!HI157.

numt.

Lost and Found
Lott 1 yaor old G - Ra•lovl&lt;.

Rica Run Rd., Coalville vicinity,
answera to •Hone~·. 114·887·
0074.

Loot Block s- 100 10 100 lba..
lost between Bulaville pk.&amp;
Bunce Rd. (814) 046-11204

lost: Sconlah tamier mix, black

w.whloo lool ond na1, rod oollor,
Rochptlngt Rd. viclnl1y, 814·

m-e531 .
70

Yard 5ale
Gallipolis

&amp; VIcinity

I

au&lt;tion aorvico. Licensed
168,0hio • Well Vlrtlnlo, 304·
773-5785 0. 00.-773-5447.

All Yard Saln Muat Be Plld In .;....c_ _:;..::::.:._..;_:;=-Advanea. Deadline: 1:00pm the We'll Sell Your Stuff! Rl~erslde
s(?oa~ ·i~"Ro:.0~u 1iol. 7Crahl.
• 211.Books.
Toys,
day b1 Iore th1 1 d I1 I 0 run,
Sunday &amp; Monday edition ·
E S 8
1·00pm Friday
, oc. top. y

1

·

AKC Rouweilar with papers, upto-ciOIO tllotl, or614-CIG2·2333.
2 112 Y• old mole,
at•-0112·2'328
...-~-'"" 10 .,._...country

Middleport
&amp; Vlclnhv

Riel!! Pearson Auction Company,
full time auctiDneer, complete

.

4

eul-448·2:211 Open I

Four family &gt;~ard aale, 45959 SR 1:;~::.=:;~.:..::~..,.-12.C, Racine,' Friday &amp; Saturday. t'

Gom-Spm.

Friday/ Saturday, 2 family yard
sale, first road to lvll oil W1pple
Rd., Five Pointa.

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

· Thul'lday, October 2, 1997

The Dally Sentinel• Page15

BRIDOI:

NEA

31 Neither animlll

PHn.LIP
ALDER
320 Mobile Homes

&amp;8811

W.ntod: Dog Shocking Collor,

114 4il 251(

Pomer~·

ro,, bedroom, atove

and refrtgeratar, w/Wiaher and

-

dryor hookup, HUD opprovod,
1475/mo., rolertnett, ""•1112•

E1.1J'L0Yr.1l N r
SERVICES

Small 2 8adroorn HouM In Eur•

kt SoCurlly Dapool~ Rtltrtnetl
Required 1271 por monlh col~

(et•)3B' 21580

Two bodroom houoo ond ono
btdroom _,.,..,, In Middleport.
814-11112-2178.

contempt

•

14 SlendM

llnlol

~ ~0 OJ "S ee-AOI. .. •
:Sin' eifOC5: A FIFCERAr:i ··LIS'1aJ60 1C eRf/'rr li\JSIC:.' .
A1e lfJ A aJtt ACIJ r:H
TAU(S) Ael1Jf UFE.. ·
I&gt;W I ~1-JT" ~ .

MER CHA NDISE

1"·--------510
Household

emm. .

Goods
304-&amp;7S-3438.

Otubb'l Plano- lUning .........
Problema? NHd lllntd? Col 111e
plono Dr.1144111121 •

dl-.

100·
Appllonceo:
Rtcondltlontd Hobarl Wilder, gu
Wuhoro, Dryoro, Alngto, Rtfrl· ltod on ltllltr, 12,100 Firm, or
graton, 80 Day Gu•rant.. l ·may uadt lor good plck·UP.
French City Morltg, 814·441· (1141311-2lel
77D5.

cylinder, automatic, ,.front whHI

2 Btdroom Mo~r.
,
Available torl\!ll.
·:w,,ic'Cimo:
$200 Oopoalt, Roltrenceo,
441-1778.
Dlocounl lloblle Homo Parlo &amp;
Acctuorltt, VInyl Skirting
$211.85, Anchort ts.OO, Awnlogo, Dooro, Wlndowo, Plumblne
SuppiiH, Wttor HH!Mo, Furr...

2bodroom, Ill tloc~tc. cenlrll air,
largo Ia~ good elton cond., Now
Hoven, U4Dimo. 304-882·2481

BARNEY
1Det F-150 Ford ••4, Excolltnl
CondiUon, Asking 13,000, Ope~
To D1torl, et._2•W758.

1DS7 Ford F-150 300, 1 Crindor,
Shor- 4x•. 4 Spood, .3,1100;
1DSD FOfd Rongor 4P, Shor!btd
3' Lift RoiAior Bruah Guard, AID·
mlnum Whoolo, 4 Crllndt],
13,700,614-4411-2124. .
'

Bunk Bodo Comp, 1225; Sola &amp;

Codar BR 1711D; Oak Curio Cab.
I 1so: Pantry, Mo&gt;lcon Bllnkoll,
lndilnl, EIC. . ,

GOODY II

WHILE YO'RI OUT
I'~L USE TH' TABLE FER

WOULD YOU
LIKE TO
EAT OUT
TONIGHT,

MY C:ARD PARTY II

MAW?

Round brnklloll 11~ 4 cholro ..
Tappan gao IIOVt. 2 Iampo.

a a, flbarglua Stapa, Call I U44&amp;-8418 -·Supply. 1381
RJwr Vl.w In Kanauga,
Salford School Ad, Oolllpollo, BeauMful
2 Bedrooms, Unfurnlthed, Air
Ohio.

htuoo, blltmtn~
loL 304·
17fl.4304 or 304-e75-1Dte.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

••n

Conditioned, No Pall, Deposit, : SOft On All Carpel l Vinyl, Mol·
Doublowlclt rt-po _., llvtd In, References, Fotter'a Moblla lahan Carpatt, Route 1 Notth,
814-4o18-7444.
must Mil, no rHIOI'IItH offer ,. Ho... PVII. 61 .... 1-G161.
lullll. 30&lt;-755-7181.
Utad kllchan cablnlll w/atalnlrlu lloel oink, lablolop &amp; 511.
onack bar, good cond, birch linloll, $700. 304-11112-2&lt;20.

Sporting
Goods

Block, brick, aowor pl:r,oo, wind·
740 Motorcycln
OWl, llnlela. elc. Cfau • Winters.
Rio Grondo, OH Call 114·2•5·
1D8B 304-175-81871hor
Dodgo Oyn111y, vtry
good 12,400. (114)
5121.
oond
5pr!\

~~18~8~1~4~X~4~~~t~Ba:y:ou:

560

Pe1s for Sale

A GrDDm Shop ·Pet GroDmklg.
Featuring Hjdro Bath. Don
lhttla. 373 Gtorgoo CrHk Rd.
ll .. olol8.0231.

AKC Cocktr Soonlol pupplto, oil
colors, •1 SOH. 3o4-D37-2731·

11n Ford Taurua stallonwogon,
111~ ~m lltrto
cu-. lharp, tkCOIItnt oondl·
lion il!lldt and OUI, U•DS, 814•

IID2 Kowaukl 4P Bayou Excotltnl Condlllon, Aoklnfi $3,250,
1::11:,::4_::4::41:,:1;::015=3:..-----~
tiiD7 aooex. Llko lltw Lola Qf
Ex1ru, t3,250 Phone I 14·44•·
1868 Covoller RIS 87,000 Milto, 8855 Or Loovt Mtuagt, 814·
111811 Cavalier 112,000 Milts, IDS7 441-IIDS.
Corolco Four Door 105.000 Mlloo,
750 Boats &amp; Motors .
Cook MoiOro 814-44e-0103

maroon. cruiM,

112..-. .

.

AKC Daberman Pupplaa, 11 Ill·
4•8·8818 Coy or et•·258-IDI3 't888 Chevy Barouo OT, ecyl,
Art.l5 pm and on VJael•*
61pd, IUO roof, lm·fm CIIMllt,
$3,DD5 080. 304-&amp;75AKC Gorman Shtplwnd pu,.._i, 77,000ml.,
2031 ... !pm. •
lwko old, 111 thOII I wormtd.
1200'11. 30&lt;-8~.
I D88 Ford Ttmpo, 1WO door, two
ownan,
lull alz•d 1p1r1, bodr
AK,C Golden Rolrl ..or Puppln, good, strong
engine, priced to
S200 Maloo: S225 Ftmaleo. Slro ooll- 11000, with CD ptowor,
&amp; Com on Prtmloto 11•·251- 11200, I14·D411·3DD8 IHYt mot11181.

AKC Rtgllltrod, OFA Ctr~fltd,
black and chocalalt Lab pupploo
for 1111, hiYI had flrlt lhOII,
$300, 81 ..!82-3885- 5pm.

llltt Chtvtroltt Coprlct Lg. Ill·
Uon WOgan, 84,7111 Mllol. Eacol.
Condlton, Loadtdl Coil: (IU)
441-DD24

•2411.

.

SchnauzM, miniature, chaqtlon,
grandtjre, AKC, thota, wormed,
groomad, aloo Toy Pol\jllto,
blac~1 al1o whltll, 11 lll·l173o104.

570

Baldwin Acrooonlc plano, oplnol
11.400.304-175-2481.
Bundr ouophont, uood, oood
lor boQinntro, ,ood cond., 1175.
304-773-5150.

0111.

Ln~Jt

Kimball plano wlblnch, ....
oond, 11.700.304-175-1474.
Gllbranson organ lor tale, 114·

8411-2111.

Yahlme IUOphonl,
iko_,
_ _ _ _3y,.. Old,
~Aill.l

Slll'f'l lf S

&amp; I IVf SlOCK

'

deck, Wl.lk·OYI baaeman1, many

tlltll, Sandhill Rd ·or Union
Campground 10 Slloofrtl Rd ..
Appolnlmtnll Only! 304-882H22.-

830

COUNTRY HOMI'

ONI ACIIEI,

Llvtltock

12 year otd qutrllf horll Bay,
good wlih kldt. 11011 ond -.
t1500, ....742•1050. ·

MINI IOWN. OHKJ.

1 111,.1 From Proclovlllt, 3,400
84 FL Ll•lng Artl, 2 Story, 3
ltd_,., 2 112 llalho. Flnltlltd
laomon~ Flroploce, Llkt Now, 4
Ytoro Old 1175,000, 814·U3·

2 Rtels- ·Outrlor Hor-. II

'iMro Old. Sorrtl Mart, 11.200: •

'INr Old CIIM!nul M... tiOO, Or
Polr For I1,800,11HSI-13117.

2D24,0r81&lt;-143-~

•

YES, MA'AM ..T~AT' S
M'( D06 OUTSIDE ..

1

Pass

4•

CARS FOR •1001 Trucka, boolo.
•·whttltrl, motor homll, futnl·
lure, altctronlca, camputer1 ttc.
by FBI, IRS DEA. Availoblt your
area now. Coli 1·800·513-4343
Ext 5-0388
111110 · liDO Cotl For '100111
SoatdAndSold
locally Thlt llonlh.
Truclll, 414'1, EIC.,

1-800-122-2730. X :11101.

,.,

e•tr11, A·1 c:ondl·

s.w.. .

'

10 WordS of
Ulldtt·
llandlng
11' Hearing

orpn1

24 Extenelvt
25Singtt

lNT
AU pass

Fltzgentld

21 Ponil-

(1f91ti

21 !loOk ••.,.,
21 Cornell or
Pound

The greatest
thrill ·

au.r,...
~~~~33111110311

-•rng
lngreclltnl
3101rblll

31SIIp::t

41 Ree-d
43 a......(a(ab)
44 Captblt of
(2 welt.)

45 f:raur-nca
.. Swinging
llrldt
48 Scandlnavlen
capital

4DTel.--

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lule Campos
Celebl'ity Ciphe1 cryplograme arw~ crltiHd t•om qugtaiJOOI by IM'IOUt~. piS\ and pr...m
E~ leftt1 .nthe cipher at•ncts !Of nolher. TOO.Y• diM. 0 ~ R

'M' L Z

C .TTCNFMZ

AFHZ

F N

. ~

F M' N

UZVML,

VCM

C H

RFZNZA.
FVUFHHZOZVPZ.'-'
ZAFZ
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Whenever I'm askGd what college I aHended, I'm
lempted to reply, 'Thornton Wilder.'"- Garson Kanin.

•

'::~:~' S@tl&lt;l\lA-~£~s·
HIIH loy CLAY I. fiOI1AH
'
.
_
leltaro of
a
....
• four ocrambltd -rda

low to form four llmplt

·-d•.

K YT 0 N T

1

........

lho
be-

11111

I

R UH YR

2

I IIP
_,o~,_:o:

1-...:U:......,Y..:.H:.,.:..T

'Bridge
I I I _ theHusbandgame wife,
that gets more
T A K p E C
shins bruised th~n - • - - • -!" .
~.,.;I~1;.,5,.:;1.:-.:;1:.,6.!:.,1--j e
1

1~

to

is

only

WELL, HE DOESN T
LIKE BEIN6 ALONE
ALL DA'( ...

L_.I...-1-.L...J.-.J.-.J

1

NO. ~E LL JUST
WAIT FOR ME OUT
TI-l ERE ON T~ FRONT
STEPS .. IoiErLL FIND
SOMETJ.l1N6 TO DO..

by f1lling in the miuing 'NOI'ds
you ·develop from step No.. 3 below.

A PRINT NUM8UEO lfTTUS IN
~
THESE SQUARES

. . UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS I
V
TO G!T ANSWER
· •

I• I

•

•

II

SCRAM LITS ANSWERS

8r ACool Col And Cll&lt;dd)ull/lo
So.inrs ~ l/lo Cloui(«&lt;1 Sec'*".

Creamy - Guide · Lolly· Beetle - MEET IT
One down and out fellow to his pal: 'I lhink our ship
would come in much quicker if we swam out to MEET
IT.'

OCTOBER2l

lTHURSDAY

' ~=~~=======:=· not tic .reluctanr

llon.N.OOO. .... 742-2887.

I Ente1111Ancllrl0n

20 ACireta Coce
22 Prfllel'l 1181

I DDS Plymoutl1 Nton Rod 4 Door1
Sparr, With 30,000 Mllto, In Excollonl Condldon, 110.000. Doyo:
eu-367·5055, Evtnlnga: 814·
24!&gt;-$221.

air, c••••n•.

limn
I Skin opening
7 Armadillo

Opening lead: • K

11192 Chtvy Lumlno, 3.1 Mullipqn
v..e engine, air, dlr, crulae, amlfm
lltreo cuatnt, IYtomatlc, 4
door, now ilrOO. 01111 cr.on In and
ou~ I3IID5. 814-DII2.aa24.

c•

By Ownor : BI·Ltvtr on 1 ocro,
3bl:droomt, 3c barha, coYtrtd

·~Jdlng .

Complete tho chud&lt;lo quoted

Budget Price Tranamlaalana,
Utod IRtbull~ All Typeo, Ovtr
10,000 Tranamlellonl, Acceu
RornonulaciUrod 11o1n Shal1t For
18D1 Thundttblrd, red, •unroof, Standord Tranomloolon
All
new Michelin drea, 3.8 VI. 304- 1ipoo, llol-246-5177 '
875-SSDS.
Now gao ltnko, 1 ton truck
1881 Toyota MR 2, rodtblack In· &amp; ndlaiDIO. D &amp; II Au-.
terior, 55K mlloo, ou10molic, olr, Rlplow.
wv. :S0.-372-3833 ., 1ornrlm co-lie, flrol 15000 080, b-213-1328.
'
recovered thtf1, nice car, lt4·
DD2-5431 al1or 4pm.
790

Cradlt Probltmo? Wt Con Help.
Ganttal Home Main·
E••r. Bonk Financing For UHd ltntnco- Polndng, •lnyl oldlng,
Vth clts, No Turn DOwno, Call ... _ , , dooll, wlr-1, bolht.
111 0 Farm Equipment
Vldllt. eu ue :zee1.
mollllo homo ropoir ond moro. For
1rtt 11dmo1t 0111
114-DD21848 IN Ford lriCIOr, 12,500, UpiOn Ulod Carl RL 12-3 Mlltl 8323.
et._W-3221 .
South ol Loon, WV. Flnandng
Do nolftl wlntor Clb:h you whhMUIIj F t -·r185 Dleltl El· t.::-:::=:,·::304-4:::;:51-~I:::OII:::,.
. ..,....,... out
dtlning your -111 LM U!
colltnl CGI\dltlon 110,500 720 li'Uckl for
do II .., you Ill Call tor lrH tl~·
(814)441-23!8
mtln 8-5 30•·175-2174, ahor
'113 'Chtvy 11 1011 w.L, IUIOmo~c, 5pm 114·441-2200. Superior

Ueuage, 01•·387-

4 U..lllrMnn

5 Gada-, at

2 Pmlx lOr plent
3 lltlltlng to
pro(KIIIn

A 6 4

-PEANUTS

Acc.tlotln

Conoolt Plano. Rtopontlblo part~ wanted to m•~• low monthly
paymentt on piano. Sea Locally.
Caiii·II00-~1211.

'

t Sllldt of blue

MuSICII

lnltrumtnti

Area,

1181 Suaruo Pro 275XL, taao
Boo~ 150 HP, Evonrudt lnlnrdtr,
Will Stll Balow WholoUit, H..
All Acceooorltt lnckrdlng Cov•-

At&lt;C Rt81ttortd Cocktr Spanltl
pupplto, 1200. tlloll ond worrntd,
014-11112-7371.

Old EngNth---Shtphtrd··-ChoW,
7wko. old, 111 aho11 &amp; wormod,
hnlthj &amp; hoppy. 125. 30._176-

2 Hou'"' 2 Trolloro a Loll, 1 2
Lo•. Good For Atnlllo, Cllollirt

11 .. 251-8270.

1gag Pondac BonnovUit Loodod, (814~7
I1,2SO: 1887 Chevy Allro Von, Boa! I RV Storogt Available
~oadtd, 12.200, Both Art Nice·
Lorgo 2 Old Slorlgo Bulfdll:'ll
080 814-441-o584.
Locatod In Wllkt•lllt Areo; et4•
1DD0 o~s Cudaoo oupromo, Lid· 431·203&amp; E-.go.
ltd, Leather Saata, CD, 6GK, E•· .
760 Auto Partl &amp;
colon! oondl•on 814-4411-4222

Forming, Tho Righi Pew Training
Ctnltr, CaP •••,•48·188• For
..... ~lion.

310 HomH for 8811

18DD Playllmo Boot &amp; Troller II
Ft. SO HP, Evonrude, OulbotNI,
Nlct Boat Alklng $5,000, 090

AKC Roo. Ronwolltr pupploo,
12wkl old, dec.law1 remDVed,
tails dock•d. ahotl &amp; wormed.
$200oL304-&amp;82-2531.

Dog. Obedience Cl11111 Now

'FAMilY DIIEAII HOUSE'
done, frH aatlmattt. llftUmt Hugo olbr, 2 batl1 homo, loatwtno
guaranltt. IOyro on jOb uporl- all new 111 thra1.1gh flrepla;e,
.,_ 304475-21•5.
aaare of the artaec:urlty awatem.
12.•DIIIdown. $341.54 1* rnonfl.
Only ot
REAL ES TAll

tan Ronoor 373V t8' 12 -2•Y
Trolling Molar, 150 XP Evlnrudt
Outboard, $S,IIl0, 11 ..1D:Z.2770.

11188 Hyundal Exotl, good . - ,
lion lnoldo lnd ou~ no ru~ 1815.
8 I &lt;-D82-1182._

CFA Riallltrtd Hlmtlayon Por·
elan Klntna, Wormed, &amp; Sholl,
Falhtro Rod Romod Pain~ 814·
387-7705.

Uvlngatan'a b1Mman1 ·wattf·
pteofing, 111 blaement rtptlra

for 881e

AKC Huokltl Molo. Whllt WJih
·aruo e,..: 11115Bronca u, 4
$2,000,814-411 .27.

wo.

fHNTAI S

- ' " Clllalltr 5:30pm.

DOWN

Looking for a quotation including
one particular word, I chose one from
Ralph Waldo Emerson: "By necessity, by proclivity, and by delight, ·we ·
all quote." Well, which word was I
searching for•
·
,
In 1oday's deal. how would you
play in four heans af1er East has
opened with a weak no-trump showing 12- I4 high-card points? West
starts the defense with the club king.
club queen and club nine, which you
ruff.
This deal was played at lasl year's
Queen's Binhday. Weekend Congress
in Canberra. (Yes, despite being independenl, Auslralia still commemorates 1he Queen's official birthday in
June. She wa.' actually born April 21,
1926.} II was shown 10 me by Len
Dixon. a leading player and journalist in the Australian capilal.
South had three losers (one spade
and two clubs), so had Ul play the diamonds for no losers. Yet East was
marked with the diamond queen.
Why'!
Because· declarer was missing
only 17 high-card points. and West
had already produ.:ed five : his cluh
honors. Before com milling himself in
diamonds. declarer drew lrumps with
his king-queen. What now'l
As Easl had only 1wo hearts, he
presumably had a. least three diamonds. (Few players open one notrump with 4-2-2·5 or 5-2-2-4 distribution.) So. playing ,to drop the
queen was futile. Instead, declarer
played a trump to dummy and called
for I he diamond jack. When East covered wrlh the queen. declarer won
with his ace and played a diamond to
dummy's nine. As the backward
finesse had worked, declarer claimed
his contract
Naturally, Soulh took delight in
his performance.
I

rHOrd player wuadlo. Washer &amp;
dryer. Odd piactL Five room

520

·A J 6 4

By Phillip Alder

I

Aou1t 7 Soulh, Craim City •
Opon II'S, Sol &amp; SUn

Troller, In Village 01
No Peto, t3001Mo ..
Rafertnctt RaAFTEII I

t

2¥

1887 Chevy 4WO, iii4Ton
HoovyDury; 1185 Ford Ft54:
1815 Chtvy SID; Wood Burntr.
e••·4•e-o3•7. 814·441·7378
Evoringa
'

Chow 12411: 4 Country Pint 'Mit,
Banch &amp; 3 Chalro $235; 7 Pc.

57 Dolort1 - lllo
&amp;I Adam'a
giHdaon

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East
South
Weal North Eul

drlvo, approx.
otr, 111. crulol,
-~~~~~§~~:_::_~
dteo,
120,000IIIYfm.
mltl,4lookl
oood and dtpendoblt, laooo,
814·D85 1142.,.... , _ . .

1884 Jotp Hord Top Now Wench
Now Tirol, Ntw Paint IDS5 Oldo
'II Oldo Dollll aa, 3800 onglnt, Hollldoy
Condlilon, 814·
POWtr, clean, runt good, $3500, 251 122' Good
Ol'lt4-260-t417.
814-Dolll-2877.
1DM GUC V-1, Standtnd, S,oob
On Rabulll Englnt, Ntw TlrH,
12.500, 080 1!04-175-44113.

-·

KQ i 2
75
Q8 3

• 10 5

•aa ChtvroiOl Corolca, 4 door, 4

2 Bodroomo, Vln!On AIH, SIOvt,
Rolrleorator, Wator &amp; Troth Paid,
Now Carpet, Vtry Ntal &amp; Cloon,
1215/Mo., Pluo Dopoll~ 81._38&amp;-

•
•
•
•

Soulb
• J7
¥KQ9832

•

710 Autos for Salt

155 -ltlld ptpptr
155 Civil wrong

Eul

Weal
• 10 6 4 3
• 10
• 10 7 5 2
• KQ98

1111\f!SI'On fAT lOll

'88 Ford Muo1ong GT, 5 apeod,
Hural thih8r, Flown.•• eKhauat,
ilnltd wlndowo, now pohll, ounrool, 5 1t1r rima, loaded, very
l~lrp, UIOO 090, 814·24731101.

1ST TIME BUYERSI E-2 FINANCING. 2 or 3 bedrooms, aroond l200'mo t-1100-251·5070.

52LNnlngTtllt
53 lallevt - not

Nlct roller lolln -pOrt, .. 1~
ablo lor onr olrt, ony hookupo,
doH 10 IU&gt;rH ond oc:hoofo, nico
neighborhood, 81+8112-2311.

2 rtlrlgorotors: 1 whlto 140, 1
gold ISO. Couch and chtlr 175.

Puzzle

4011uft-42 Coni-ion

MII'Chllldlle

ond rtlrtoorotor. dtpoolt roqulrod,

no lnoldt- 814-8112-30110.

•

43 Worthy of
bllngrtpNied
47 In a One
50 Hol,.lylll
51 l!lpr8ttlon at

- n Aihtno ond PomtfOJ, call
814 385 13117.

Two bodroom houH with atovo

Anewer eo ,, ... ,

ftOI'lilgltlble

540 MIICIIIIIIIIOUI
Mobile home till available b•·

Puzzle

CrOIIWOrd

24-Nov.
nor bashful
•
ASTRO-ORAPH
requesting what is righlly yours. Just
demands will evoke a just response.
so
he hold:
BERNICE
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc.
BEDEOSOL 21) Some infonnation you now posscss .:ould provide you with exrra
politi.:nl leverage within your organiLalion . Usc ir with caution.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. t9)A
husi ness associate might impose
upon you for a favor today. Try to be
helpful. because you 'll be sowing
Friday. Oct. 3, 1997
seeds for your own harvest later.
LIBRA (Sept. 23:0c1. "23) Give
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. l9) II
serious rhought today to beller or~a- will benefit you loday 10 associale
nization of your personal affarrs. wilh people whose knowledge and
What you hope to do is achievable. melhods you admire, What you learn
but yoo must be methodical and from !hem now, you may usc larcr.
patient Get a jump on life by underPISCES (Feb. 20-M arch 20)
sranding rhe influences rhat govern Watch for subtle changes today that
you in the year ahead. ~nd for ,your :ould pur you ar an advantage fin anAstro-Graph predictions today by :ially. You will have to do some
mailing s2 and SASE 10 Astrp· je1ec1ive work "to pul il all together.
Graph. c/o 1his newspaper, P.O. Box
ARIES (March 21 -April 19)
1758, Murray Hill •Sial ion, New foday, if neg01iiting a significant
York, NY 10156. Be sure 1o stale . matter, take the long-range view.
your zodiac sign.
. Think of rhe effects it will usher m
•

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where your tomorrows arc conccrned.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Small annoyances !hat gene rare friclion between you and a co-worker
should. be brought 10 Jlle surface
today. Exposure could produce constructivc results .
GEMINI (May 2) .June 20.) Sue,
cessful dealings toda depend upon
how you evaluate you
and olhers. For besl results. sec eve one as
an equal.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
Household tasks you've been
neglecting won't be a thorn in your
side ioday. You will enjoy work 1ha1
lelf' you accomplish something producrive.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your ideas
.will C81T}' more weight 1han you may
rea_lize today. What you effcr, others
will take IO hean. so don 'I make
impulsive slalemcnls.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepr. 22) Where
your commercial interests are concemed. you slwuld do well for yourself today. Do not be afraid to bargain
for a deal.

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LEXUS • LEXUS • LEXUS
FRESH: 25 USED LEXUS
FORMER LEXUS LEASE CARS

. ••.s

LOVE

LE

indians win,
even series with
NY Yankees

'

Pick 3:
506
Pick 4:
8223
Buckeye 5:
5-12-16-31-37

· Sports on Page 4

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YOTA

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, October 3, 1997

C1117, Ohio Valley Publllhlng Company

..,.·.

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AUe':''

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IIDDitllllr

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel Correspondent
Clerkffreasurer Janice Zwilling was honored·for 20 years of dedicated service at Thursday night's nieeting of Syracuse Village Council. To
commemorate the occasion, Mrs. Zwilling was presented with a plaque,
· nowers and cake.
During the business session. council met with Linda Bondurant, marketing
·manager for General Refuse Service. and Frank Zuspan of Modem Sanitation, regarding refuse services..
·
Council, at present time, is served by Modern Sanitation. General Refuse
Services 'operates in West Virginia, Ohio and Kentucky.
A recent water break on Third Street (State Route 124) brought up the

USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS • ·USED TRUCKS •

·'

issue of lights that are needed for emergency use when there is a water break
after dark ..Larry Lavender, council president, stated that safety equipment.
such as vests, wands, and gloves, is needed for work at night. Council
approved the purchase.
A new water line and storm drain is to jJe plal:ed on Third Stree.t (State
Route 124) from the Margaret Cotterill property to the area across the highway from Hubbard's Greenhouse. Larry Ebersbach, water board member,
and other members of the water board members are to obtain estimates for
the CO'\f of laying the line. lo1e water board must also retain an engineer to
evaluate the condition of the water tower.
.
Mayor George Connolly expressed his thanks to tho•e who helped with
the recent paving in the upper end of the village. ·
.

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IAWISIII .liT SIJ

WllH -LEA 2 TOJ:HOOSE FROM, WOULD
MAKE NICE CHRIIT1IAS

=~MnoooAT ... ·-· ,, 51500

l1Mt Blg Bend Stemwheel
Festival Is und.arway In
Pom.roy. Boats from acro11
the . area began arriving
Wadnudly IMIIIIng, Including
1!111 P.A. Denny, top, which will
offer public plaaaure cruises
through Saturday night. The
first pa11anger1 on board the
P.A. Denny ware clients and
Wlff at the Carleton School
and Meigs Industries, pictured
hare es thay left the boat following their crulaa · Thuraday
morning. Last night, the Melga
County Chamber of Commerce held a moonlight cruise
aboard the boat. Vendors and
concessionaires were senlng
up their .booths yesterday In
preparation for the crowds
expected to converge on the
levee area today and tomorrow. A few early arrivals, left,
were checking out the various
craft and novelty booths on
Thursday afternoon as boats
continued to dock along the
levee. Festivities kick In to
high gear on Friday, and continue through Saturday. Fireworks on Friday night will
cloaa the show.

BTIPIY
.5 TAHOES

2 SUBURBANS
54 RUNNERS
6 GRAND
CHEROKEES
4 CHEROKE~S
2 WRANGLERS

2 SICtlona, 12 P-vea, 35 centa

A Gannet1 Co. NIWiplper
'

UTIUR liT
. 3 "EXPLORERS ;,
16 ·. S,..1. 0 BL.A2E·RS
.. '
3' JIMMYS
2 ·TRACKERS
1 BRONCO .
'
1 PASSPORT
1 AMIGO

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1111&gt;£.=.
PIWI
, PIWliKS, AWM. WHEELS,

:,:;:=:.:. . .,. . . . . -

POINT PLEASANT - A state
board has postponed action on the
appeal of an air permit for the proposed Apple Grove Pulp and Paper
mill until December. according to a
story in today's Charleston Gazette.
The s·tate Air Quality Board
delayed action until after Dec. 16, the
.deadline set for Parsons &amp; Whittemore, Inc. to show it still plans to go
through with the $1 billion project.
Parsons &amp; Whinemore is the parent
company of the proposed Mason
County mill.
Lawyers for the state Division of
Environmental Protection and environmental groups who challenged the
permit filed a motion last week askmg for the schedule for filing legal
briefs to be pushed back.
The original schedule called for
briefs. to be filed in October and
November.

120,440

OPEl
D.fiL
SAT.9-6

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URG branch campus in Meigs
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
A stack of over I,200 completed
survey fonns were delivered to the
president of the University of Rio
Grande on Wednesday, representing
the interest of the people of Meigs
County in having a branch operation
in Meigs County.
Meigs County Economic Development Director Ron McDade personally delivered the surveys, which
had been placed in area businesses. to
Dr. Barry Dorsey at lhe URG campus. The surveys, which sampled residents about the types of services they
would be interested in receiving from
the college, were solicited following
a public meeting concerning the prohe¥·"'at the Moi~• County
~ ••,;m Cef,ttr last month.
McDade said that I ,226 surveys ·
were completed and returned to his
office, to his surprise and to the surprise of officials at the university.
McDade had expected that no more
than 500 surveys would be returned.
The fate of the proposed branch
campus may be determined as early
SURVEYS DELIVERED • Ron McDade, Meigs County's Ecoas October 18, when the universitY's
nomic
Development Director, hand-delivered over 1,200 surveys
board of trustees meet. McDade said
to University of Rio Grande Preeident, Dr. Barry Dorsey, on
that he has been invited to attend the
Wednesday.
The surveys express.interest in a branch campus
meeting. and will make a presentation
of the University in Meigs County.,
. ,to the trustees in favor of the proposaL
invited Dr. Dor~ey and other univer- o( community support in promoting
McDade said that he thinks the sity officials lo review proposed sites the hranch and supponing the efforts
board will vqte in favor of !he branch for the branch. According . 10 of!community leaders.
at that time.
'
"I appreciate very much the coopMcDade, six proposed sites arc being
"I think they will act on the mat- considered in the event that the unj- eration and support of all those who
ter at their meeting, although they versity's board moves forward with' have ' completed the surveys or who
may not do it in my presence, " the branch. The locations of those attended the community meeting,"
McDade said. "I think it will be a proposed sites have not been McDade said. "It's been very helpful
positive decision in our ravor because announced, although the former to us and it sends a strong message
of the good response we had at the Holzer Clinic building in Middleport to university oflicials that Meigs
public meeting and through the 'sur- has been discussed publicly as a pos- County is interested in their presence
here ."
veys."
.
sible location.
In ihe meantime, McDade has
McDade stressed the imponance

.

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Pay phone rates could change next week
CINCINNATI (AP)- You might
need a few more coins to make calls
from some of Ohio's approximately
100,000 pay phones starting nc.t
week.
The Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio is warning consumers that
the cost of making calls from pay
phones could go up as soon as ne&lt;l
week:
.
The federal Telecommunications

Mason County Pulp Mill's air
permit appeal is postponed
t5 Clll. 41411•1111
AIJ!2, AIR, 300 ENG.,

Trick or treat was set for Thursday, October 30 from 6 to 7 p.m. The siren
will sound to begin and end the activities.
The Mayor's report of lines collected was accepted in the amount of
$1.197.00.
Tim Gillilan, police chief. reported that he had issued 12
Citations, served one summons and two warrants. Councilman Mony Wood
asked that ·a representative of the lire department meet with council at the
next meeting.
,
Clerk's balances were reponed as follows: general fund, $34,555.26; street
construction, $29,775.48; highway, $4,962.02; fire. $12,476.83; . water.
$10,691 .66; pool, $6,649.68: guarantee meter. $3, 121.07; cemetery. $95.65;
total, $102.327.65.
Als'o attending were Donna Peterson. Bill Roush and Katie Crow.

,----Festival·begins-----. Surveys· reflect an interest in

1

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Zwilling honored by Syracuse
Village
Council
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Claar tonigh,, low In
the 50s. Saturday, sunny,
high in the I!Os .

\lol. 48, NO. 111

98 510 EXTENDED
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/URlMATIC, L8 ~. • ' $15~
:: i7,
AIR, nLT, CRUI8E. ALUM,. '::
•
WHI!ILS l MORE
•
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Ohio Lottery

DEP attorney Tom Zerbe, 1n an in proceeding with the p.rl)ject. Car:
motion on hchalf of his frey said 10 meet that standard he will
agency and the environmental require the company to obtain a
groups. said the permit would prob· legal interest in the mill site and apply
ably be thrown nut on Dec. '16.
for the corps permit.
In that case, he said, tiling legal
Air board members met Friday
briefs would be a waste of time and and .voted unanimously to postpone
resources for the state and the envi· the matter until Dec. 16, according to
ronmental groups.
an order entered Monday.
DEPDirector John E. Caffrey has
In the order, board lawyer Becky
threatened to revoke the mill air per- Charles states that the DEPmust notimit unless Parsons &amp; Whittemore fy the board if it becomes apparent
showed more interest in the project. the penni! will not be revoked Dec.
The company said in January Ihat 16.
the project was on hold . Parsons &amp;
Gov. Cecil Underwood said last
Whine more allowed its option on the week he thinks the mill project is
mill site in Apple Grove to expire and probably aead. He said the state is
hasn't applied for a permit required wasting ,its resources to waiting for
by the U.S. Anny Corps of Engi- the company to deplde whether to
neers.'
build the milL
~
Under. state ·law, Caffrey must
"I have to assume ... they aren't
revoke the permit on Dec. 16 if the going through with the project,''
company doesn't show "good faith" Underwood said:

Act of 1996' called for the market
competition to,helr ' t prices for pay
phone calls, starting Tuesday.
In Ohio, I he price charged for a
local call from a pay phone is capped
at 25 cents .
The new rules will allow pay
phone owners to depart - up or
down- from the currcm pricC.
'"There will be cCrtain companies
that will increase their rates. hut I

believe you'll sec certain areas where there's lot of competition where the rates will go down ," said
HnwarcJ.Mcistcr, president of Amcr1Call. a Cleveland company with 400
pay phones m Ohio.
Greg Hart, president of the Pay
Phone Association of Ohio, said the
. 50 companies in his organization arc
looking rorward to fair competition

---.New development·--

unusu~l joint

NEW DEVELOPMENT - Development of
Apple Tree Etiii!IIB nesr Tuppers Plains contlnuaa. Craws !rom Nichola and.Wright of HuntIngton, W.Va. were paving a street In the new
I •

subdivision on Wednesday. Two araasare now
under development, according to owner Frank
Herald.
·

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