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                  <text>Page B 6 • The Daily Sentinel

SPORIS: WVU fears O~·io option, Bl

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
encourages.your
support of these area
businesses who make
this page possible.

Meigs County's

Friday

Hometown Newspaper

'

50 cents • September 7, 2001 • Vol. 52, No. 16

OnIV

Family

All Times Eatern
• C.r artsman Truck , Kroe;8r 200
a p.m . · Thursday • ESPN2

Restaurant
I

•

Busch Sarles, Autollte Fram 260
8 p .m. · Friqay • TN T
·!I Wln•ton Cup, Chevy Monte Carlo 400

Featuring
Kentucky
Fried Chicken

7:30 p.m. · Satu rday · TNT

•

228 Main St.

··

2001 POINTS STilNDINGS

WINITON C...

Pomeroy, Ohio
Drlve-Thru Window

992-5432

•· ····--

UOCH

1 . Jeff Go•dc.J. 3 . 706
2. Rrcky Rudd , 3.366
3. S\erlms Mi!•lrn 3,230

Hcv..-. Ha•viCk, 3,8&lt;19

Jue Rullman. 2.T45

J11wo Keller, 3,533

Scolt lliii!S , 2 ,7 3:2

WINSTON CUP
What: Ct'1evro1et MCinte
Ca r~ o

400

Where: Richmond [Va .)
Intern ational Raceway (. 75mi le track ). 400 laps/300
miles
· Where : Green flag drops at
8 p.m .. Saturdav
DefendlnC cl'lamplon : Jeff
GO! don
Qualifying record: Jeff
Gordon. Chevrolet. 126.499
mph, May 15 , 1999

9 . ~o~ev•n Harv• ck, 3,055
10. Jollnrt,o Benson, 2,964

Jac~ SP1agu'h. :J .125
3.452
Trav1s Kvapil . 2 ,641
Elton Sawyer, 3,1::: 7
R1cky Hend,.Ck, 2.615
Mllo.e McLaughlin, 3,084Ted M lls gra~e. 2.593

Oldd Lltue, 2,931 '
Kenn~ ~ Hace.

.

•

TOP TEN

1. (1) Jell Gordon
2. (2) Ricky Rudd

~way

...
good enough
to catch Gordon
3. (5) Ton.- Stewart
Miraculously avoided crash
to ftnlah fourth
4. (6) Sterlln&amp; Marlin Now third In points
5. (3) Kevin Harvlck

Sllp-slldlnc

Seventh Isn't

Eighth Isn't bad for

a rookie

at Darlington
6. ( 4) Dale Jarrett
Yet another hard-luck race
7. (7) Bobby Labonte Fine third-place finish
8 . (8) D. Earnhardt Jr. Left a few others In his wake
9. (-t Ward Burton· Gave' Oodgeltl ~econd . vlctory
10. (9~ Rusty Wallace Has never won at Darlington

FROM LAST WEEK

but the Buscn Grand
National race at Darlington
DARLINGTON. S.C. - After
Raceway will tie
the 52nd Southern 500 had
remembered more for a
been comple ted, driver Ward series of unfortunate, wack)!
Burton and owner Bill Davis
and macabre Incidents that ·
almost defy belief.
arrived In the press bolt
waxing poetic about the
For instance, on the 20th
glories of grand old
lap, Winston Cup regular
Da rlington Hacewa~ .
Steve Par~ was knocked out
If love and re spect for
or the race m a crash that
Darl ington had anyth tng
occurred under caution.
substantial to do with wh o
And after the race was
wins th e -Southern 500. " ---co" •';:;e:;r,7.roSokie Scott Wimmer
Button wou iCI win It every
created another scene whe n
year.
he ·cras hed into the Ford of
Burton does not win it
Greg Biffle. which was not
every year - Sunday's
even the car he apparently
was aiming at. Wi mmer.
victory in NASCAR's oldest
angry at Jeff Green for a
superspeedway event was
hi s f1 rst - but he has won
late-race incie!e nt , drove too
two of the la st four races
hard onto the apron in a
contested here. His first
damaged car, which
Darlington victory was the
ca reened violently Into
Mall.com 400, hele! on
Biffle's car and destroyed it.
March 19, 2000 .
" Mr. Darby (Busch Series
director John) and Mr.
Tr iplett (NASCAR operations
BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL
'director Kevin) were not ver y
DARLINGTON , S.C.- Jeff
happy wi th me.~ Wimmer
Burton held o ff Elton Sawyer
sa1d . "Nei ther were Mr.
in a battl e ot Ford drivers
Biffle and Mr. Roush (owner
that ended the Sou th
Ja ck) ."
carolina 200 on Saturday,
WINSTON CUP

•

FEUD OFTHE WEEK

••••••••••••
Dc~r

By his own admission ,
the transition from racing
winged sprint cars on dirt
to heavy stock ca rs on ·
asphalt has been difficult
for Dave Blaney, but
Blaney has made steady
progress in his NASCAR
career.
Although he comp~ted in
' a single Win ston Cup race
seve n years earlier. Bla ney
was 36 years old when he
became a regular on
NASCAR's premier circu it.
As a racer in general,
howe-Jer. Blaney Is hardly
inell perienced . When he
won the USAC Sii"Jer
Crown championship in
1984 , he was, at the time,
the series' youngest
champion. In a,..single
season, 1997, Blaney won
the prestigious Knmcvllle
(Iowa) Nationals, Eldora
(Ohio) aM Gale! Cup
sprint-car races . He was
the World of Outlaws
champion in 1995.

It '.1' ptl illlat-sli t:N id:•u
lim!' lm.•· 11m n·r urril'('l/.

Hometown: Born i n
plonehlp 111·1-. ·
Sharon, Pa ., grew up in
Hartford, Ohio
in NASCAR after 15 years
Crew chief: Doug
. in spri nt cars, I'm finally
Rar 'olph
·
gettln&amp; comfortab le in
Car: No. 93 Amoco
knowing what stock cars
Dodge Intrepid. owned by
need to go faster every
week.~
Bill and Gait Davis
CBJHr t tttlstlct: 64
When you were youn1er,
·starts, 0 wins, 0 top.5
did you ever think you
fi ni shes, 6 top-10
would race atock cart
finishes , 0 poles, almost
full time? • for me - having
$3 million In ea rniniS
grown up in open-wheel
Flrata: Sta rt (Oct. 25,
cou ntry in Ohio- the
1992 , at Rockingham.
pOssibility always seemed
N.C.), pole (none), win
more likely that, as I had
(none )
more success In the USAC
Oeacrlbe the procr•••
and WOrld of Outlaws
·of th•~ team . · we're j ust
sprint-ca r r8nks. racing jn
beginning to shOw signs
the Indianapolis 500 would
as a tea m that we can run be a more ttkely caree r
at th e front every week
destination than ending up
with the new Dodge
where I am: racing al
Intrepi d. After starting late Daytona, Ch3rlotte,

Talladega aM Indianapolis
In stock cars. Before Bill
Davis gave me the chance
to make th e mDit'e to
NASCAR in 1998, most of
the rac ing I h ad done was
on di rt , altho ugh I had
driven a half-dozen ARCA
series races and some
USAC Silver Crown Series
eve nts th roughout the

• HOT: Jeff Gordon has
finished eighth or bener
In the last seven races .

Fan Tips

1980s.'
Do .-ou feel at home now
In the 1tock c•,.?
" Because the tim.e I've
spen t In NASCAR has been
r~lattve l y short co mpared
to a lot of the euys we race
around e~~ery week, I seem
to still be learning abOut
these cars al a pretty
con siste nt pace.·

• NOT: Dale Jarrett
continues to bleed
points .

an ~o uoa ~tJe~ "£
·t; L.S6't u1Jii)Jea 'lj:Jna -~

l&lt;~IOJ I\94 ::&gt;

SHiMSNY

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8.
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ca
CJ

• fWd Lorenzen ~- oniJ
the biC IICII durin&amp; htl
spectecular career.
.._nMarchaa.
1964, and May 9, 1984,
Lorenzen wvn ..,.,., race
he entered. Hit atraak

began with vlctorlt• In
AtiM'Itl and Bristol,
TtAII., then another
NAICAA: race at North

WHkooboro, N.C.
Lorennn then switched
to the old USAC drcult to
outduel PllrHIM Jones In
a road race If:

lndlanepoUa Raceway
Park . The final victory In
his str.tk wa• the Rebel
300 at Darllntton, S.C.

•

AROUND THE GARAGE

· :-: CREWOfliiWIB

Expect rules to change for Talladega restrlctor·plate race
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

fihJcttl'l."'-' spnilcr and a 2'-J/32 (inch)
n:~trie tor plute ," said Ray Evcmhnm. who own s the Dc.'ll..ige~ dri\·en
DAR LINGTON. S.C.- ·nx•pre- by B1 1l Ellion and Ca"':y Atwood .
vail ing \ ' io.:\\ , ha~l on NASCAR", '111cn we 11\liVcJto a 718-irKh plate
acrodymm1k 1NinJ: Ia!&gt;! \leek at and rMl rnofspoiler.Ormuyllcitwus
Talladt'g;J, 1\ thai Wiu•lnu Cup em• the rlll~r wHy 111\JUnd . Ar1ywuy. '-'"l"
will go mln tht: llCXl mce 111 Tallatlc- tried 1111r..e l'Oinbi nutlon!&gt; mkllnoked
!/-11 lml.;iug a lut like Bu~it Gmnd lll how the y 11fti."\."led th1.: cur ~IIlli-.:
Nmionult'tlr:..
'
NASCAR &lt; •ffidai~ U!&gt;t.-d 20-lup
und 1.'\-htp 14')\itm~. allnwin10 the
dri \·o..-r..tn tlb)&gt;l'l'\' ~' the v ariou~ ucn._
Jynamlt:·plalc conlhilto1t inn' 11t n11.:eIike sillllllitlllS. NattlrJIIy. tho..•nllidu l
lir'll: j, thai rw del·i ~inn~ huvc h.-en

malk
"We ~tark... l in tlx· mnminp u. ith a

'

''I kind of liked this,' " Marlin "&lt;lid. BoUine.1ltc: Nu. 29 !Cam fXtllidP&lt;JI " We 've run good here in the pa.~t. cd with OJvc Marcisas drivcr.
We ju:o.t would like to gel it to when:
"We r.:ou iUn 't haw !eumo..-d the
we c;m get out from umlcr every - lhinJ;S we did in a ~ inglc-car lc~ t or
body
in the wind tunnel or Uyno-tyjA!
"Nnw we mu.~ l be prcc 1~ with lo.!.•K" ~aid Win_
-.ton Cup Series
()'.lr•p;L,~ iug. . It's nuta~ ca.\y In p;l'~ :t' din."ttor G:JI'\• f'iclsoo . "We nt.'Ctled ll
it Wit.\, I I hit ~ mad; illnnlt.' dillicult to p;~~.:k nt·cars.ttl help us CIOiain all that
lhL' ~· hut }'II'J h;,ve thlll r.:nmml."
we did.
tmck .... Spt."e(bii'CI\'Ul thc I'AJmph
Dri\'Cr., par11npu1ing in the li!• l
''llle itk:lr wu~ to make the cum:nt
mngc in Chc puch."
were: RustyWuii:K.'I!. Kevin lqxlgc . tiCru· puck~,ge more etlicient and to
Arter \!U\' h .-.c~'inn. N,\ SCAR Bill Ellit.'!lt .J,•hruw Bcn)o!lll . Mic had tkJ "''· w~· changl-d the plate ,jzc.
otlida l ~. tcnm nK"mhcn. m1d di-ivcn. Wuluip, Tt)llYStc.:V&lt;ut , I:: Ilion S.K.IIcr. rcnr spnilcr an~lc and removed the
gmhcn.:J fnr 1111 infurmai wlli I'Ill n._,w W:111.l8u11CJ11 .Jcny N;K.b lu .Jimmy ~i 1· Ucncctor on the roof. At one
o..'O~eh ICit tb: lk: r~ll'plalc comhiuauon~· SpciK'Cr. Rkky
RLKid. JOt." pui nt. we even had the!- team~ usc' a .
worked . Fm \1111\e , liko: Sterling Nr.:lllL"t;ld . Ken S...·hr:klcr. StcrlinJ! o;.'tJmbin:~tion that wa~ •imilur to the
M
• ar Im. lh c cnmh'
_u;:tllflfl t' h1H\J!(!l, Murlin. John Andrctli . Btk.'hh:ll acn•·p&lt;tdagl" the NASCAR l)u..ch
vmrkcJ \\-ell.
J on..-~. Btlbby Hamilton and Todd &amp;•ric~ L'UIT\:1\[f y UM.'i•."

• No Dod&amp;• had won at •
Oarllnaton Raceway In
more than 30 yeara

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Place Your Business's Ad here

--·-- ---

Hlp: 80s

Sentinel

Details, A2

Calendar
Classjfjeds
Comics
Editorials

Sl
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1\)
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Obituaries

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Sports

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992-2155

'IOday's

2 Sedlons - 12 Pllps

...

IQ.
Q.

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I

ate future.
Bob and Lucille Rhod es,
alo?g . with Kuscma, pose
with the Golden Tornado
plaque that will hang at the
schooL The plaque displays
the r names of Southern
alumni and others who have
donated $100 toward the
purchase of the new. playground equipment.
Anyone is interested in
becoming a Golden· Tornado, can contact Sam Hawley
at 992-7483 or Wendy Hill
at 949-2206.

BY TONY M. I.EAcit
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Solutions
on how to stop motoris~
from speeding throu gh the
Pomeroy Parking Lot were
examined during Thursday's
Village Co uncil meeting. '
Councilman Bryan Shank,
speaki ng on behalf of the
safety co mmittee, repo rted
to council its' solutions on
how to stop vehicles from
accelerating through the
parking lot to bypass stop
light' on Main Street.
,
The topic was brought up
at council's last meeting and
the safety committee . was
assigned to investigate the

Tony Wlch Photos

Ridenour
Supply

Raceway.

Call The Daily Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Debbie Call

tudents at Southern
Elementary
took a break from
classes Wednesday
- - .. afternoon to frqlic
on the school's colorful new
playgrou~d equipment, purchased with donations from
Meigs County residents and
businesses.
Principal
Michaela
Kuscma said the addition of
another playground is being
discussed and more pie ces of
equipment are .expec ted to
be purchased in the immedi-

See us for Your Stlhl"
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

Chester

office in Marietta;

K.okosing's bid was $1.5
million below ODOT's official · estimate for the constru ction, coming in at S13.9
million. Seven other firms,
including the second-lowest
bidder, Elmo Greer &amp; Sons,
London , Ohio, also' bid on
the project.
.
The · third phase is the
"middle" phase of the project, connecting the first and
second segments, from
Morning Star Road ·to Port-

Please -

Prol~ AJ

parking lot
speeding solution

TIME To FROLIC

MIIHJ:.
-.........

St. At 248

•
Collins, deputy director of
the Ohio Department of
Transportation's District 10

(;i-1-ta-Ekle$

'&lt;

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until Tommr l-'dwln
and 1'111 "'Cat Crew "
helped W•rd Burton win
the Southern 500.
AI Burton uld ·
afterw•rd, • driv•r
Clnnot come from 37th
poattlon on the at•tlnc
&amp;rid without help from
l'lla crew, and Btldwln
tnd r;omptny were
•uperlatlve.
1
. The v~tory WBI
Burton'&amp; third of hll
Wlnaton Cup care., •nd
IICOnd at D•rllnaton

"'tt

CD

·C

(615) 832-1171 .

••••••••••

POMEROY - Kokosing
Construction Co., Coh.pllbus; ha; been aw~rded the
bid for the third and final
phase of the Ravenswood
Connector highway project.
Bids on the five-mile co nstr uc tion
project
were
opened in Columbus on
Wednesday, said George

--f n

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CD,i

• rom Gillispie has put
together a book that will be
meani ngful to fans of the
late Dale Earnhardt. titled "I
Remember Dale Earnhardt:
Personal Memories and
Testi monials to Stock CarRacing 's Mo st Beloved Dr iver,
As Told by the Peo ple Who
Knew Him Best." The
hardcove~ book se lls fo r
$18.95 and Is published by
Cumberlan d House
Publi shing of Nashville, Tenn.
Typical of the re mi niscences 1S a quote from
driver Bobby Hamilton : • J've
been mad at Earnhardt so
many tim es because of the
things he 's Clone to me and
other competitors . But the
one thing ! always loved
about him was that he was
the only true racer that I've
ever known . He was there to
race. It didn't maKe all)'
difference what the
circumstances were."
The book is now in stores,
or il may be ordered by
ca llmg Cumber land House at

1 . Before Dale Earnhardt in 1990. who
was the last driver to win the Winston Cup (th en
Grand National) title in a black car?
2 . What make of cer did Ned Jarrett drive to .the
championship In 1961?
3 . WhO won the first race i n a Matador?

way.~

:Oiit.l?.lll!t.!;lji!Wfl

&lt;

ln,Li~;;~,,d 1;;',j"c"j,;· ll iirdl---'l ~0~·~:::_

•••••••••••

••••••••••••
Who's Hot ...
Who's Not

c
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Sr. every time: she
, pid:ed op 11 book or puper. Put the ·
bou k or paper down because it's
going 10 he there. And it \ th.:rt for 11
goOO reu ~on : He was NA.SCA'k'li
grrate&gt;t driver ever, and this i5 the
w~v we fan s tlDnor nnd motrrn his
lc11~lng uS ~o soon. The lo.&gt;s of 111!
these NASCAR dri vr:r. is rwi nftil

Stacy Compton vs. Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Com pton was high ly critica l of Junior following a
Southern 500 crash. "There 's 42 cars out the're yo u can
race with and one you can't ." Compton said. "That's the
th ird time the (No.) 8 car hit me today. He finally
accomplished what he was trying to do and took me
out. It's the best car I've had all year.· Responded
Earnhardt : "I felt like Stacy got up underneath in the
corner.... I don 't feel like 1 was at fault there ."
N4SCAR Thla Week 's Monte Dutton &amp;lVII hll
opinion: · Junior Earnhardt (that's what he said recently
he prefers to be ca lled I is an aggressive young Clrlver.
Hi s fans probably wou ldn't want him to be any other

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

~ ' llnJI'

D~lc E~rnha rd t

and they wi ll he

Award of third
phase completes
bidding process

·I

I have ncve1 re spondctlto Dny-

PUBUC . MEETlNG - About 200 people filled the Meigs · High
School cafeteria last night to express their opinions about the Meigs
County Board of Health's proposed ban on public smoking. The
board will vote on the proposal next week. (Brian J. Reed photo)

Kokosin has
lowbid or·
stage ~ project

...

. Lhing heforr until now. 'and I wo11ld
like to respond :o (the pr"rson) ""'ho
, !&lt;tHted .•he ,..·as ~ick of hearing 11blM

Children: Emma 1101.
- . .......,._,...,._,.,_~Ryan-~ 7-), Erin-(3}.-------~...;•~~ He w._a. Weltd fill OUtiMn P-ild ~ ~

see Opinions, A3

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Dcur NASCAR This Week.

.1011n Clork/NASOOI ms Wee~~

Please

3

I

Ase: 38
Wife : Usa

cion.
Only three members of the board were
present last night: Jim Clifford, JoAnn
Crisp and Ann Haning.
In addition to providing a forum for
those on both sides of th e issue, last night's
meeting also served as a final public hearing on the measure. The board of health
conducted a first hearing on the proposal
in July, and aq:ording to the department's
tobacco prevention coordinator, Tracey

t:

NASCAR Th i ~ Week ,

1 rc:ttl a re~dcr\ itle:t ~billl l having
the driv.:n; lllllkt ull ri_~lltturn &gt; und g.ll
the nppo~ile d1n:ction for one rJL)!. So
l !hOUIJhl I ll'lltlkl ~hure nl )' i:.lc~ .
EV('I\ thuugh o~ le Jurn:u i~ n ' l my
fa1·orite drive r, lrh ink th~ l'Ummcrciab atx111t him tllclnj! the u ..s truck
un: ~mus ifig . So why not make h1m? I
think it wnuld he fun fl'lf NASCAR ro
h11ve wmr kind of uhibirion rtlte or
~J mtthing wtltre the driver~ drhe
ttleir ~ pu nsor 's trud\: Jurrc lt can
dri1-c the UI'S trudc ldf Gordon can
drl\e n Pcp• i truck . Bubby L:nbunte
crm d ri\~ un \nttr!illlle Bane ric~ uuck ,
etc. 't think il would be good for t~
•punwrs und lots or fun for the dn\'•
crs ~nd fnl'!s. The onl r rhing I'm not
~un: ubout is Wan! Burttm. Wuui!J he
have to drive u CAT".'
r\mundu Cruh
Chf!l lrr, lll.

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR Thi s Week

Torres.
The Meigs County Board of Health
will, on Sept. 12, determine the fate of a
proposal which would criminalize smoking in all enclosed public spaces and outside within 20 feet of an entrance to a
public building. The ban would outlaw
smoking in restaurants, bars, retail stores,
and other privately-owned businesses, as
well as public buildings. It also establishes
fines of up to $500 for those who violate
the ban, and charges local deputies and
police officers with enforcing the restric-

r

Your
Turn
Lllltn Front O.r Reader,

Winston Cup Sertes

• .,

• NASCAR This -Week writer Mo.nte Dull on ra~ks the
top 10 drillers heading into this weekend's race . Las t
week's rank1ng IS In parentheses .

.

Dave .Blaney

RICk CrEJWtor\J. ,; ,:;s 1

Coy G1bbs } l76

2.B1B

UP ON THE CIRCUIT

International Raceway (.75 Marlin's record .
mlle track) , 250 laps/ 187 .5
CRAnSMAN TRUCk
miles
1997
Notable: Tony Stewart won
When : 8 p:m., Friday
Wh•t: Kroger 200
at R1chmond earlier this year.
Defendln&amp; champion: Jeff'
Where·: Richmond (Va.)
i n the Pontiac Excitement
Burton
' Internationa l Raceway (.75·
400, and this track was also
Qualltylnl recotd: Matt
mite track ), 200 laps/ 150
tt'le site of the first of
Kenseth, C'hevrolet , 125. 780 miles
·
Stewa rt 's 12 career victories . .mPh. May 4. 2001
When: B p.m ., Thursday
... Rusty Wallace Is the active
Race r•cord : Kenny
Quallfylj,l record: Ron
leader In victo rie s with six.
wallace, Fore!. 104.928 mph, Hornaday, Chevrolet.
Sept. 8, 1995
121. '!26 mph, Sept . 4, 1997
BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL
Notable: Kenny Wa!lace
R•c• record: Bob
has won fo ur times at this
What: Autolite Fram 250
Keselowskl, Dodge, 104 .167
track, one less than Mprrk
Wher~ : Rictlmond (Va.t
mph , Sept. 4. 1997

Greg BrHte. 3,471

8. Botloy Lat:Jome, ~- 11 r
7. D. [arnna rd\ Jr . 3.079 TOrl'f Rames. 3,0 59
leu)' Cook, :2.584
I . Husty wallace . 3,060 J1mmle Johnson. 3,!J27 Denms Setze1, 2, 446

POMEROY -Those on the side of a
proposed smoking ban, who feel that second-hand smoke is a danger, and opponents who maintain that the proposed
legislation is a violation of their rights,
presented their positions on the proposed
ban at a public meeting at Meigs High
School on Thursday evening.
About 200 people attended the meeting, which was conducted by Meigs
County Health Commissioner Norma

Race record: Da le Jarrett.
Ford, 109.047 mph, Sept 6 ,

Jl"lf Gr~~&amp;o ,

" · Dale Janett. 3.2 15
5. Tony Stewart, 3.2 10

•

~OM lNG

www.mydailysentinel.com

Public airs ban concems
BY BRIAN J. REm
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Crow's

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Weather

L-:IOS

Lotteries

A5
OHIO ·
82·4 Pick): o-1-o; Pick 4: 3-9-4-o
85 Bnme,.e 5: 13-15-1&amp;27·35
M
A3 W.VA.

81.3.6 Deily 3: 9-1-Q Dlllily 4: 3-6-1·7
A2 e 200t Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

problem and ide ntify possible sol utions.
Shank presented a drawing
of the parking lot to council
memb ers and suggested that
the upp er and lower
entrances be changed to
exits only and that several
parking spaces be realigned
to accommodate the onedimensional Oow of traffic.
"The new configu ration
would eliminate motorists
from speedin g through the
entrances and . hopefully
make th e . area safer for
pedestrians," said Shank.
After deliberating on the
cmruruttee's fi ndings, council

Please sti Coundl. AJ

·court orders end ,to decade-old lawsuit
COLUMBUS (AP) - The state
worked to estimate the exact cost of the
Ohio Supreme Court's decision to end a
decade-old c..,o urt fight over school funding.
· •'
The court's 4-3 decision on Th,ursday,
whi ch did not specify a complete dollar
amount, said additional spending would
meet the constitutional test created in the
court's two previous school-fund)ng

opmmns.
The coalition of schools th at brought
the laws~it in 199 1 estimated the court
wants lawmakers to spend $1.2 billion
over the next two years.
Senate Republicans, frustrated with the
court's ruling, estimated it could cost
O hi o almost twi ce as much and said the
state doesn't have the money.
ChiefJusti ce T homas Moyer on Thurs-

day night said justices believed ihe cost
would be $300 million to $400 million
annually.
The co ur t ordered the state to recalculate how it determines the amount each
school district receives to pay for the
basic education of .a stud ent. The court
also ordered the state to speed up funding
meant to close the gap between poor and

Please see Lawsuit. A3

Support Group
The Holzer Medical Center Diabetes Sypport Group will meet
Sunday, Septem~r 9 from 2:00 ~ 4:00 pm
MEDICAL CENTER
in the Hospital's French 500 Room.
This month's topic: ''Traveling Tips"
Discover the Holzer Difference
All are welcome!
www.holzer.org
For more information, call

:a:

(740) 440·5080

- -·-

r

'

'

�_PageAl

the Bend·

The Daily Sentinel

::F-ri_d_a~y~,Se~p_t_.7~·-2~0~01~·~--------------------~~------~P~o=m:e~r!o!~~M:I~d~d~le~p~o~rt:·~O~h~lo~-----------------------T~h~e~D~al~ly~S~e~n~t~ln~e~I:·~Pa~g~e~A~3

•

FrldiiJ. September 7, 2001

LOCAL STOCKS

Bisexual husband says some secrets need not be shared
•

DEAR ABBY: I am intrigued by
women who find phone numbers in
· their husband's pockets or wonder
why they are out late. My advice:
Unless you think you're in danger of
losing · your husband, leave well
enough alone.
I have been a happily married man
for more than 25 years. For the last
10 years,! have had a male lover who
is :~lso married. Neither of us intends
to leave our families. What would my
wife gain if she happened to stumble
o n this? She would destroy her life,
my life, our kids' lives, rny lover's life,
his family's lives - and nothing
would be gained. - BISEXUAL
IN NEW JERSEY
DEAR "BI": While we all know
that some marriages are •• arrangements," those kinds of relationships
should be entered into with everyone's eyes wide open. Secrets of the
kind you have described are not

Abigail
Van '
Buren
ADVICE
healthy for pa·rtnerships.
You ask what your wife would
gain if she were to learn the truth'
She would gain the abiliry to de cide
for herself if she wants to spend the
rest of her life sharing her husband
with another person, rather than
having the decision made for her.
Whether her answer is yes or no, she
would be making an informed
choice. She deserves the right to do
so.
DEAR ABBY: I would like to

thank my father-in-law for all of the
lessons he's tau ght my husband:
Thank you for abandoning your
girlfricud and newborn son 28 years
ago. It has taught him to be a conscientious father to our children.
Thank you for leaving them in
poverry. It taught him to work hard
for the things he truly wants.
Thank you for never taKing him
fishing. or hunting. It taught him to
spend qualiry time with our daughters .
Thank you for returning to their
lives when he was 17, only to cheat
on his q~otber four years later. It has
made our marriage stronger.
Thank you for visiting us three or
four times in the past seven years. It
taught him to appreciate his mother
more.
Finally, thank you for never being a
role model. It has taught my husband
to be a better man.- GRATEFUL

WIFE IN MINNESOTA
DEAR GRATEFUL WIFE:
Although the lessons your father-inlaw taught your husband may have
been inadvertent, it appears your
mate took the negatives of his fragmented relationship with his father
and turned them into positives. Your
open letter demonstrates the lasting
effect of examples we set by our
behavior.
.
DEAR ABBY: My parents do
not listen to anything 1 have to say.
They think my problems are not as
important as theirs. I try to tell them
what's going on in my life, but they
don't hear me. Because of this, I no
longer tell my parents anything. 1 tell
my best friend and her mother. My
fri.end's mom listens to my problems
and helps · me handle them - no
matter how small they are.
My parents do not know anything
about me. They never will, until they

Federal Mogul- 1

Akzo-43

Gannett-64

n

AmTechSBC- 41~
Ashland Inc. - 42l.
·. AT&amp;T -18~
BankOne-34

decide to listen to what I have to say.
My advice to all parents is to LISTEN TO YOUR CHILDREN. It's
not that hard. Your kids just might
have important "secrets" you know
nothing about because you didn't
take the time to listen. - A TEEN
NEEDING TO TALK IN OHIO
DEAR TEEN: Sociologists and
psychologists have interviewed teenagers about their c~ncerns, and a
subject that is mentioned again and
again is the fact that some parents are
too busy or preoccupied to listen. I
have received many letters from
other teen-agers that contain the
same message as yours. They wants
parents who will listen and at least let
them explain. Kids desperately need
to be understood and to have parents
who will stand beside them, not over
them.

.

SOCIETY NEWS &amp; NOTES
Dan and Fonda Rapp Writt; Debbie Little and
Rapps host Thomas,
Danielle, Michelle Christopher Parker, Severn,
and Heather all ofWheelers- Md .; Keith and Carol
reunion
burg;Jackie Rapp Nave, chil- Marple, Lost Creek, W.Va. ;
CAMDEN-ONGAULEY, W.Va. - Larry and
Linda Rapp, at their summer
home
in Camden-OnGau ley, hosted th e third consec utive
Banks
reuniori
recently.
The reunion was attended
by desendants, relatives and
friends of Homer Holly
Banks and families.
Attending were Cona rd
and Thelma Banks Belcher,
Statesville, N.C.; H oward and
Dottie Banks, C harleston
Heights, S.C.; Larry and
Linda Banks Rapp, Racine;
Jack and Alice Banks Elliott,
Colo nial Beach, Va; Butch
and . Sharon Banks Dean,
Largo, Fla.; Butch and Bonnie
Banks Lightfoot, Pomeroy;
Wayne and Jane Banks, Syracuse; and Albert and Sandy
Banks, ·Pomeroy.

dren Kayla and Ryan of
Rac in e; Holley and Kris
McCutcheon Elliott, Becky,
Holley, and Maggie, Stafford,
Va .; Cheryl and Jimmy
Crowder, Racheal and James,
Buena Vista, Va .; Deane and
Joy Maurer Elliott ofWoodbridge,Va.
Bradley, Alexis and Joshua
Schwab, Largo, Fla.; Jerry and
Kelli Lightfoot, Pomeroy;
Stephanie and Tim Fife of
C heshire; Lacy Banks· Workman and Jeremy Banks; Stanley and Charlene Gillespie
Boyd, Fayetteville, W.Va.;
James and Mary Lou banks of
Powellton, W.Va.; Vicki Miles
of Powellton, W.Va. and
Heather Gray of Sod, W.Va.
William Elliott, Dixie,
W.Va.; Bill and Roxie Rapp,
Okeechobee, Fla.; 'George
Holter, Racine; J.p.. and Jean

Deadline
approachlftl

rives listing at least three references with one being an
i!\StruCtor; a Current photO•
!IPPh for publicity, and the
ruune and address of the college
attending.
All applicants will be evaluated on grade point average and
compliance of requirements,
with consideration of extra
curricular activities and career
objectives.
Applications are to be mailed
to the MCRT Scholarship
Committee, c/o ·of Joan
Corder, 297 Wright Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769.

POMEROY - The deadline for applying for the Meigs
Counry Retired . Teachers'
scholarship is Sept. 25.
Applicants must be a resident
of Meigs County and a junior
or senior curi-encly enrolled in a
college, majOring in education,
with at least a 2.5 grade point
average.
Applications must include a
current college transcript
showi ng the two previous years
of credits and grades, a resume
of activities and careen objec-

Jerry, Ashley and Chris Fields,
Pomeroy; and Jenny Royse,
Wheelersburg.
Conard Belcher opened
with prayer A poem was
compo&lt;ed and read by Alice
"Dearly
Elliott
called
Beloved."
Dan Thomas grilled food,
Larry Rapp provided three
C hristmas trees, Cheryl
Crowder provided games for
the children, which included
swimming, a game of golf
and a pinata.
Several joined in playing
volleyball and touch football.
The adults enjoyed door
prizes, a raffie and a game of
"Chinese Christmas."
Racheal, Alexis and Ja~es
entertained by 1inging The
Pepsi Song'' a1 taught by
Larry Rapp.

'lheAhles
entertain pests
\

POMEROY Carolyn
and Augustin Montanez of
Puerto Rico and Shawn Montanez of Cincinnati spent two
weeks recendy here with her
parents,Jean and Tom Ables of
Pomeroy. Other recent visitors
with Mr. and Mrs. Ables were
Pauline Rowgh,, Mr. and Mrs.
John Rowgh and son, Johnnie
of Weston, W. Va.; Agnes
Michaelson, Mr. and Mrs.
Aubray &amp;bury of Charleston,
W:Va. and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Smith of Sissonville, W.Va.

Efforts honored
EFFORTS HONORED Kenny Wiggins, program
manager for the Meigs
County Recycling and Litter
· Control program and
Michael Canfield, chief of
the Ohio Department of Natural Resources Division of
Recycling and Litter Control,
presented Meigs Middle
School's scie nce club advisor Krista Johnson , with a .
plaque honoring the clubUs
efforts in gathering recyclable materials. The club
collected 23,500 pounds of
recyclables from office
papers, newsprint, cartons
· and o_ther sources at the
school. (Contributed photo)

. THANK YOU

People's
Bank
For Purchasing

My Reserve
Champion
Chickens
The
. At
'
Meigs Co. Fair

~~

LOCAL EVENTS
The Community Calendar Iii
published as a free service tci
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and ape·
clal events. The calendar Ia
not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed only
as apaca permits and cannot
be guaranteed to be printed a
specific number of days.

church 163rd annual homecomIng Sunday. Guest speaker
David Cougar with special
singing by Higher Calling. Din·
ner at 12:30; service at 1:30·
p.m. Morning services, Sunday
sctiool at 9:30 and preaching at
10:30 a .m. Church located on
County Road 53, Coolville.

SATURDAY
•
POMEROY - Burlingham
Modern Woodmen, dinner, 6:30
p.m. Saturday at the hall. Camp
to furnish, meat, dessert and
drinks. Those attending are to
take a covered dish. Family and
friends invited.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Retired Teachers, Saturday,
noon , luncheon at the Chester
Courthouse. Parking on hill.
Program, Bicentennial Commis·
sion representallv~ on upcom·
lng evenis and activities In
Southeastern Ohio. Reserva·
tlons, 992·321 4, 949·2601, or
985·3890.
SUNDAY
ALFRED - Orange Christian

pers Plains Regional Sewer
District, regular meeting, Tuesday, 7 p.m.

POMEROY - Meigs CountyOhio Bicentennial Committee,
Monday, 4:30 p.m. Monday at
the Meigs Museum. Committee
members urged to attend to further plans for bicentennial proRACINE - Hill reunion Sun· jects.
·
day, 1 p.m. Star Mill Park In
Racine.
POMEROY - Bedford Town·
ship Trustees, regular meeting,
MONDAY
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the town hall.
RUTLAND - Rutland Town·
ship Trustees. Monday, 5 p.m.,
POMEROY - Meigs County
fire station.
Chamber of Commerce, lun·
cheon, Tuesday. Overbrook
POMEROY·- The Belles and Center, Middleport, noon. Guest
Beaus Square Dance Club will speaker, Elizabeth Schaad of
begin dance lessons Monday at
Edward Jones Investments, on
ttie Royal Oak Resortrecreation
fluctuations
of the stock market.
center. Classes will be held lrom
7:30 to 9 p.m. and the first two
WEDNESDAY
sessions will . be free. Couples
REEDSVILLE
- Olive Townare Invited to participate. Due to
ship
Trustees,
special
meeting,
the highway construction,
Wednesday,
·
7
p.m.
township
entrance to the park Is by taking
Wlpple Road to Pine Grove building on Joppa Road. Dis·
cusslon on renewal of the cable
Road to the entrance.
television franchise with Adel·
phla Cable Co., and residents
TU!SDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS
Tup· with complaints or problems.

BURLINGTON, Vt. (AP)
- One person can make a
difference, Sen. James Jeffords
told students at the Universiry
ofVermont. ·
Jeffords compared his decision to leave the· Republican
Parry to choices students will
face in college and in life, and .
he encouraged them always to
challenge themselves.
"You will be confronted
with choices of self-interest or
peer pressure, or .Choices of
personal values, convictions
and concern for others," he
said Tuesday. " Each of us m.ust
co ntinually challenge our
ideas and convictions, and
co ncern for others. Each of us
must continually challenge
our ideas and o urselves.
"When you face decisions,
ask yourself, 'How does this fit
with my heartfelt convictions?"'
Jeffords said his decision to
leave the Parry was painful
because he was knew it would
disappoint some supporters
and cost so me colleagues their
committee chairmanships.

Holzer Clinic
welcomes
•

Dr. Craig Dodrill
Ophthalmologist

Wend(s - 28),

Lands End - 3n
Lid. -13

Daily stock reports are

the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous

OVB-25
BBT- 36),

day's transactions , provided by Smith Partners

Peoples- 20~

atAdvest Inc.

from PageA1
' rich school systems.
The couit agreed to bow
out of the case, saying the
addit10na l spen ding would
bring the system into compliance.
House and Senate lawmakers, th e Department of Education and Gov. Bob Tafi: were
all preparing estimates of the
Senate President Richard
Finan, a suburban Cincinnati
Republican,.said Thursday the
only two options for finding
additional 'money - a tax
increase or a massive spending
cut- weren't feasible.
House
Speaker\ Larry
.Householder, a Glen{ord
Republican, said he was basking in the state's victory and
wouldn't speculate on addi tional costs.
"They said it was constitutional, they dismi;sed the case,
there's · a couple of things we
nee d to address," he said
Ttiursday. "Until I know
exacdy what the figure is, I'm
not going to worry about out
'reaction."
· The case began when a
coalition of more than 500
school districts sued in rural
. southeast Ohio, saying the
state's method of fundi11g
. schools did not equally serve
' : rich and poor districts.

· -Proclamation

'-"tletnM cl L4dfes
(AU. YOIJ'I'H)

Start Your

Englnesl
. .
Middleport Church of.Christ
FLC Parking Lot
September 9. 2001
4- 6pm

,

Mng yoor fritoncllll
_eon .r ttw Mnt: fO

"' pra1 Gil toWGI d the pi to win the

prlu for which God hu cal..t -

lw&lt;a-..-.d Ill Christ .r..U... Phil. 3: 14

Thursday, Pomeroy Mayor John Blaettnar signed a proclamation declaring the week of Sept. 17-23 as Constitution Week.
Purpose of Constitution Week Is to emphasize the responslbll·
lty of protecting and defending the Constitution, as well as preserving ,It lor posterity. Pictured with Blaettnar· Is Abbie Strat·
ton, Regent of Retum Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
the American Revolution . (Tony M. Leach photo)

OWNERS
SERVICE***
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***

The Daily Sentinel

NEED YOUR ~FIRESTONE
WILDERNESS AT" TIRES REPLACED
ONDER THE FORD TIRE RECALL7

IJrDJ

To schedule an
appointment call

IXIT I l l
RIPLIY. Wv

'

Holzer Main Clinic
(7 40) 446-5421
Holzer Clinic Meigs
(740) 992-0060

Holzer Clinic Jackson
(740) 395-8873

Craig H. Dodrill, MD joins l,loker Clinic from
Summt~ Heallh

System

(Akron C/Jy Hosp/Jal) in .Akron, OH.

Ask fOr our Hrvlce de•artment for dltalll.

· QualitJ.Care
'

. , }fOUl " ' llfcw

'

LOCAL BRIEFS
EMS runs
POMEROY Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered six calls for assistance on Thursday. Crews
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:05 a.m., Rocksprings
Road, Linda Russell, treated;
7:36 a.m. , Rocksprings
Rehabilitation
Center,
Gertrude Bass, Holzer Medical Center;
I :27 P:!1!1/· • East Main Street,
Francis Haggy, Pleasant Valley
Hospital;
3:39 p.m ., HM C Clinic,
Diane Paulsen, O'Bieness

should have to share someone
else's second- hand smoke n
Eskew said. "Non-smoke~s
have a right to . breathe clean
air. 11
O 'Dell , no oppoS!tlon was
The issues raised at last
voiced at that time.
night's meeting did not end
Some last night suggested a · y;ith the issues of public
compromise, while others health, or the rights of smokPageA1
were clearly galvanized in ers versus the rights of nontheir opinions o n the issue.
smokers. Instead, the econom- agreed to purchase four, I 0
"I hope we can agree to ic impact of the proposed ban mph speed signs, and place
disagree," Torres said in estab- and the rights of a non-elect- them at various locatioris on
lishing guidelines for last ed body like the board of the lot.
night's hearing. "Nobody is health to enact a wide-rangVoting against the decision
going to change anyone's ing piece of legislation were was ·Counci lm an
Larry
mind here tonight."
also discussed.
Wehrung.
·
Dottie Turner of Pomeroy,
"What I have a problem
Council added that if the
a realtor who practices in her with," said New Haven, W.Va . signs do not reduce speeding
own building in downtown resident Lowell Rogers, "is through the lot, then the safeMiddleport, said last night that non-elected bureaucrats try- ry committee's plan will be
a petition drive initiated by ing to tell a small business . "seriously reconsidered."
opponents of the proposed owner what he or She cannot
Shank also made a proposal
legislation has yielded signa- do."
to change the area in front of
tures of approximately 3,700
Ron Eastnun of Pomeroy the office of Dr.' Harold
Meigs Counry adults, and the agreed: "This is a republic," Brown into a single handisignatures of 400 to 500 oth- Eastman said. "No bureaucra- capped-only parki ng space.
ers from WestVirginia,Athens, cy can make laws and enforce Council agreed and approved
Gallipolis and other commu- · them."
Shank's proposal.
nities as far as Columbus.
Among the other comPolice Chief Mark Proffitt
The petitions were ·placed ments made last night:
requested about S2,200 for
in convenience stores, restau• Donna Hawley, Middle- th e purc hase of various
rants, and other public places.
port: "I hope we can reach a . equipment and services to be
. "If you don't believe that compromise on this issue."
used by the police departthe signatures on these peti- · • Julie Dillon, Pomer~y: ment.
tions are legitimate and valid, "You do not have a right to
T he list includes both parts
you'll find out how legitimate kill me with your second hand and labor for one of the
they are the next time you try smoke."
department's cruisers, two
to pass a levy," Turner said. "I
• Joyce Ward, Pomeroy: "I'm rechargeable flashlights, three
have the right to do what I going to take my money flashlight cones, two bulletwant to do on my own prop- where I, as a smoker, am wel- proof protection vests, a
erty.'1
come."
restraining belt and leg irons,
• Roger Manley, Sr., Mid- first aid kits, three gallons of
Pomeroy's
Margeurite
Eskew, on the other hand, said dleport: "Smokers have their paint, and labor to board up
last night that she is unable to rights, as long as they don't the Elmhurst Tavern· on
' Spring Avenue.
go to bingo games and other affect my health."
social events because the sec• David Ganim, American
Council approved
the
ond-hand smoke she bre~thes Cancer Sociery representative: expenditure;- request- and
at those events aggravates her "The health of the communi- informed Proffitt to begin
respiratory proplems, which ty should supersede anyone's ordering
equipment and
she blames on a long-time right to smoke."
contacting var ious laborers.
smoking habit.
If passed next week, the
In other matters, co uncil
"I don't care if people smoking ban will go into accepted a bid of $69,739 by
smoke, but I don't feel that I effect in October:
Stonegate Construction for
repair work to be performed
on a section of roadway
between Save-A-Lot and the
Middleport corporation 'line.
Other bids considered were
$73,500 by Maiden &amp; Jenkins
Construction; $77,866.95 by

~mPageA1

Council
from

Later that same night,
another set of eyewitnesses,
OVP NEWS STAFf
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. traveling in a 1957 Chevy,
- David Grabias of Sinema was reportedly chased by the
Productions is looking for a creature in the TNT area of
local farmhouse and a 1957 Mason Counry. Hence Grabi'Chevrolet to use in his as' need to locate a running,
"Mothman" documentary.
licensed 1957 Chevy.
"I need just your rypical
If anyone is interested in
farmhouse, ·just something providing their properry for
older with a field and maybe use in the film , leave a mesa barn," Grabias said. "We'll sage for Grabias at the Lowe
probably be filming in the Hotel or e-mail him at sineevening after dark sometime ma@ mindspring.com
next week for an hour or
two. If one day is better for
them, we can , work around
that."
Grabias plans to film out- · IJoi~~::;:
side the house and just inside
the front door to interpret
Newell Partridge's sighting of
the red-eyed monster at his
Salem, W.Va., home on Nov.
15, 1966.

Memorial Hospital.
POMEROY
3: 49 p.m., Ohio 124, assisted by Central Dispatch as
First
Responder,
Lewis
Humphreys, HMC.
REEDSVILLE
12:35 p.m .. Ohio 124, Phyllis Hetzer, Camden"Clark
Memorial Hospital.

Road oiMen
R.AC INE - Ohio Department of Transportation District I 0 reports that O hio 124
is now · open without restrictions in Meigs Counry.

D.V. Weber Construction; and
$80,726.80 by Shelly Co. ·
· Mayor John
Blaettnar
informed coun cil that Main
Street will be closed Monday
due to repair work being performed by the Ohio Department of Transportation. The
work will st retc h from
Sycamore Street to Butternut
Avenue and eastbound traffic
will be diverted through the
parking lot and westbound
traffi c through Second Street.
Blaettnar said
parking
meters along both sides of
Main Street will be hooded
on Sunday night, and that
repair work is estimated to
last for five to six hours.
Blaettnar also reminded
cou ncil. that the village has a
1-milllevy on Nov. 6's general election ballot, which, if
passed, would take care o f
upkeep costs for Beech Grove
Cemetery and eliminate individuals from having to pay
an nual maintenance dues.
Council also:
. • accepte~ the mayor's
report,
which
to taled
$14,262.96;
• accepted the police
department's parking · meter
report for . the month of
August. The total received was
$1,955.50;
• approved•:m amendment
to Ordinance 6 77 creating
the .position of assistant clerk
of courts;
• approved ~ resolution to
submit an application to the
Ohio Works Commission to
proceed with the search for
grant monies needed for the
village's proposed new water
treatment plant.
In ·open discussion, Councilman Victor Young inquired
abo ut progress 'on pothole
. fepairs 3r0d the elimination of
blocked drains throughout
the village.

Bv PAM WtWAMSON

w... yOur f-ll&amp; rae&amp; dcrthut

•,...

Ooil·iions

'

Farmhouse and '57 Chevy
sought for documentary

QANT CARNIVAL

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Correcllon Polley
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to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom

al (740) 992-2156.

News Departments
The main number is 992.·2156.

Department extentions are::

Ophthalmology
I

It cited districts where students had inadequate supplies
in buildings with leaky roofs
and bad plumbing.
The coalition's director said
Thursday's decis ion was a
"blu eprint for mediocrity"
that would help only a few
children.
"There's a large unfinished
agenda that inust be addressed
to make this system viable,"
said William Phillis, executive
director of the Coalition for
Equity and Adequacy of
School Funding.
The state wanted to fully
fund a $500 million program
to close gaps . betwee n rich
and poor districts by 2006.
The court ordered the full
funding in place by July 2003.
That could mean the state
· would have to pay an additional $300 million over two
yeats in the next budget cycle
beginning in 2003.
The Supreme Court had
previously ruled the state's
school-funding system had
' created disparities between
· rich and poor districts by
relying too much on local
property taxes.
A5 an example, last year just
$990 in local properry taxes
were raised to pay for each
student attending schools in
rural Meigs Local School District. By contrast, residents in
wealthy Solon in suburban
Cleveland raised $7,494 per
student from local taxes.

______________

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PEO.PLE
Sen. James
Jeffords

Sears-41 Y
,

Harley Davidsoo - 46

Evans- 20}4
Elot'gWamer- 51~
. Champion - 3
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: Clly Holding - 11
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Dear Abby is written by Pauline
Phillips and daughter jeanne Phillips.

AD Shell- 55~

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AEP-47
Arch Coal - 1

highway from Five Points to
Morning Star Road.
Deaver Excavating .Co. of
Canton
is the contractor on
PapAl
the first segment, which
land Road. It involves the involves seven miles of highconmucticm of only one way from the Ritchie Bridge
bridge- at Counry Road 28' at Ravenswood, W.Va., to
-and a total of 4.9 miles.
Portland Road near Racine.
The Columbus firm is
The Ravenswood Connecalready on the site of the tor is a "Super Two" highway
Rave1tsWo0d Connector, hav- - a two-lane highway with
ing been awarded the bid for limited access built on a fourthe second phase earlier this way h1ghway right of way.
summer. That phase, involving
Projected completion date
the construction offour miies on the third phase is June 15,
of new highway, takes the 2004.

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•

FrldiiJ. September 7, 2001

LOCAL STOCKS

Bisexual husband says some secrets need not be shared
•

DEAR ABBY: I am intrigued by
women who find phone numbers in
· their husband's pockets or wonder
why they are out late. My advice:
Unless you think you're in danger of
losing · your husband, leave well
enough alone.
I have been a happily married man
for more than 25 years. For the last
10 years,! have had a male lover who
is :~lso married. Neither of us intends
to leave our families. What would my
wife gain if she happened to stumble
o n this? She would destroy her life,
my life, our kids' lives, rny lover's life,
his family's lives - and nothing
would be gained. - BISEXUAL
IN NEW JERSEY
DEAR "BI": While we all know
that some marriages are •• arrangements," those kinds of relationships
should be entered into with everyone's eyes wide open. Secrets of the
kind you have described are not

Abigail
Van '
Buren
ADVICE
healthy for pa·rtnerships.
You ask what your wife would
gain if she were to learn the truth'
She would gain the abiliry to de cide
for herself if she wants to spend the
rest of her life sharing her husband
with another person, rather than
having the decision made for her.
Whether her answer is yes or no, she
would be making an informed
choice. She deserves the right to do
so.
DEAR ABBY: I would like to

thank my father-in-law for all of the
lessons he's tau ght my husband:
Thank you for abandoning your
girlfricud and newborn son 28 years
ago. It has taught him to be a conscientious father to our children.
Thank you for leaving them in
poverry. It taught him to work hard
for the things he truly wants.
Thank you for never taKing him
fishing. or hunting. It taught him to
spend qualiry time with our daughters .
Thank you for returning to their
lives when he was 17, only to cheat
on his q~otber four years later. It has
made our marriage stronger.
Thank you for visiting us three or
four times in the past seven years. It
taught him to appreciate his mother
more.
Finally, thank you for never being a
role model. It has taught my husband
to be a better man.- GRATEFUL

WIFE IN MINNESOTA
DEAR GRATEFUL WIFE:
Although the lessons your father-inlaw taught your husband may have
been inadvertent, it appears your
mate took the negatives of his fragmented relationship with his father
and turned them into positives. Your
open letter demonstrates the lasting
effect of examples we set by our
behavior.
.
DEAR ABBY: My parents do
not listen to anything 1 have to say.
They think my problems are not as
important as theirs. I try to tell them
what's going on in my life, but they
don't hear me. Because of this, I no
longer tell my parents anything. 1 tell
my best friend and her mother. My
fri.end's mom listens to my problems
and helps · me handle them - no
matter how small they are.
My parents do not know anything
about me. They never will, until they

Federal Mogul- 1

Akzo-43

Gannett-64

n

AmTechSBC- 41~
Ashland Inc. - 42l.
·. AT&amp;T -18~
BankOne-34

decide to listen to what I have to say.
My advice to all parents is to LISTEN TO YOUR CHILDREN. It's
not that hard. Your kids just might
have important "secrets" you know
nothing about because you didn't
take the time to listen. - A TEEN
NEEDING TO TALK IN OHIO
DEAR TEEN: Sociologists and
psychologists have interviewed teenagers about their c~ncerns, and a
subject that is mentioned again and
again is the fact that some parents are
too busy or preoccupied to listen. I
have received many letters from
other teen-agers that contain the
same message as yours. They wants
parents who will listen and at least let
them explain. Kids desperately need
to be understood and to have parents
who will stand beside them, not over
them.

.

SOCIETY NEWS &amp; NOTES
Dan and Fonda Rapp Writt; Debbie Little and
Rapps host Thomas,
Danielle, Michelle Christopher Parker, Severn,
and Heather all ofWheelers- Md .; Keith and Carol
reunion
burg;Jackie Rapp Nave, chil- Marple, Lost Creek, W.Va. ;
CAMDEN-ONGAULEY, W.Va. - Larry and
Linda Rapp, at their summer
home
in Camden-OnGau ley, hosted th e third consec utive
Banks
reuniori
recently.
The reunion was attended
by desendants, relatives and
friends of Homer Holly
Banks and families.
Attending were Cona rd
and Thelma Banks Belcher,
Statesville, N.C.; H oward and
Dottie Banks, C harleston
Heights, S.C.; Larry and
Linda Banks Rapp, Racine;
Jack and Alice Banks Elliott,
Colo nial Beach, Va; Butch
and . Sharon Banks Dean,
Largo, Fla.; Butch and Bonnie
Banks Lightfoot, Pomeroy;
Wayne and Jane Banks, Syracuse; and Albert and Sandy
Banks, ·Pomeroy.

dren Kayla and Ryan of
Rac in e; Holley and Kris
McCutcheon Elliott, Becky,
Holley, and Maggie, Stafford,
Va .; Cheryl and Jimmy
Crowder, Racheal and James,
Buena Vista, Va .; Deane and
Joy Maurer Elliott ofWoodbridge,Va.
Bradley, Alexis and Joshua
Schwab, Largo, Fla.; Jerry and
Kelli Lightfoot, Pomeroy;
Stephanie and Tim Fife of
C heshire; Lacy Banks· Workman and Jeremy Banks; Stanley and Charlene Gillespie
Boyd, Fayetteville, W.Va.;
James and Mary Lou banks of
Powellton, W.Va.; Vicki Miles
of Powellton, W.Va. and
Heather Gray of Sod, W.Va.
William Elliott, Dixie,
W.Va.; Bill and Roxie Rapp,
Okeechobee, Fla.; 'George
Holter, Racine; J.p.. and Jean

Deadline
approachlftl

rives listing at least three references with one being an
i!\StruCtor; a Current photO•
!IPPh for publicity, and the
ruune and address of the college
attending.
All applicants will be evaluated on grade point average and
compliance of requirements,
with consideration of extra
curricular activities and career
objectives.
Applications are to be mailed
to the MCRT Scholarship
Committee, c/o ·of Joan
Corder, 297 Wright Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769.

POMEROY - The deadline for applying for the Meigs
Counry Retired . Teachers'
scholarship is Sept. 25.
Applicants must be a resident
of Meigs County and a junior
or senior curi-encly enrolled in a
college, majOring in education,
with at least a 2.5 grade point
average.
Applications must include a
current college transcript
showi ng the two previous years
of credits and grades, a resume
of activities and careen objec-

Jerry, Ashley and Chris Fields,
Pomeroy; and Jenny Royse,
Wheelersburg.
Conard Belcher opened
with prayer A poem was
compo&lt;ed and read by Alice
"Dearly
Elliott
called
Beloved."
Dan Thomas grilled food,
Larry Rapp provided three
C hristmas trees, Cheryl
Crowder provided games for
the children, which included
swimming, a game of golf
and a pinata.
Several joined in playing
volleyball and touch football.
The adults enjoyed door
prizes, a raffie and a game of
"Chinese Christmas."
Racheal, Alexis and Ja~es
entertained by 1inging The
Pepsi Song'' a1 taught by
Larry Rapp.

'lheAhles
entertain pests
\

POMEROY Carolyn
and Augustin Montanez of
Puerto Rico and Shawn Montanez of Cincinnati spent two
weeks recendy here with her
parents,Jean and Tom Ables of
Pomeroy. Other recent visitors
with Mr. and Mrs. Ables were
Pauline Rowgh,, Mr. and Mrs.
John Rowgh and son, Johnnie
of Weston, W. Va.; Agnes
Michaelson, Mr. and Mrs.
Aubray &amp;bury of Charleston,
W:Va. and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Smith of Sissonville, W.Va.

Efforts honored
EFFORTS HONORED Kenny Wiggins, program
manager for the Meigs
County Recycling and Litter
· Control program and
Michael Canfield, chief of
the Ohio Department of Natural Resources Division of
Recycling and Litter Control,
presented Meigs Middle
School's scie nce club advisor Krista Johnson , with a .
plaque honoring the clubUs
efforts in gathering recyclable materials. The club
collected 23,500 pounds of
recyclables from office
papers, newsprint, cartons
· and o_ther sources at the
school. (Contributed photo)

. THANK YOU

People's
Bank
For Purchasing

My Reserve
Champion
Chickens
The
. At
'
Meigs Co. Fair

~~

LOCAL EVENTS
The Community Calendar Iii
published as a free service tci
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and ape·
clal events. The calendar Ia
not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed only
as apaca permits and cannot
be guaranteed to be printed a
specific number of days.

church 163rd annual homecomIng Sunday. Guest speaker
David Cougar with special
singing by Higher Calling. Din·
ner at 12:30; service at 1:30·
p.m. Morning services, Sunday
sctiool at 9:30 and preaching at
10:30 a .m. Church located on
County Road 53, Coolville.

SATURDAY
•
POMEROY - Burlingham
Modern Woodmen, dinner, 6:30
p.m. Saturday at the hall. Camp
to furnish, meat, dessert and
drinks. Those attending are to
take a covered dish. Family and
friends invited.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Retired Teachers, Saturday,
noon , luncheon at the Chester
Courthouse. Parking on hill.
Program, Bicentennial Commis·
sion representallv~ on upcom·
lng evenis and activities In
Southeastern Ohio. Reserva·
tlons, 992·321 4, 949·2601, or
985·3890.
SUNDAY
ALFRED - Orange Christian

pers Plains Regional Sewer
District, regular meeting, Tuesday, 7 p.m.

POMEROY - Meigs CountyOhio Bicentennial Committee,
Monday, 4:30 p.m. Monday at
the Meigs Museum. Committee
members urged to attend to further plans for bicentennial proRACINE - Hill reunion Sun· jects.
·
day, 1 p.m. Star Mill Park In
Racine.
POMEROY - Bedford Town·
ship Trustees, regular meeting,
MONDAY
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the town hall.
RUTLAND - Rutland Town·
ship Trustees. Monday, 5 p.m.,
POMEROY - Meigs County
fire station.
Chamber of Commerce, lun·
cheon, Tuesday. Overbrook
POMEROY·- The Belles and Center, Middleport, noon. Guest
Beaus Square Dance Club will speaker, Elizabeth Schaad of
begin dance lessons Monday at
Edward Jones Investments, on
ttie Royal Oak Resortrecreation
fluctuations
of the stock market.
center. Classes will be held lrom
7:30 to 9 p.m. and the first two
WEDNESDAY
sessions will . be free. Couples
REEDSVILLE
- Olive Townare Invited to participate. Due to
ship
Trustees,
special
meeting,
the highway construction,
Wednesday,
·
7
p.m.
township
entrance to the park Is by taking
Wlpple Road to Pine Grove building on Joppa Road. Dis·
cusslon on renewal of the cable
Road to the entrance.
television franchise with Adel·
phla Cable Co., and residents
TU!SDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS
Tup· with complaints or problems.

BURLINGTON, Vt. (AP)
- One person can make a
difference, Sen. James Jeffords
told students at the Universiry
ofVermont. ·
Jeffords compared his decision to leave the· Republican
Parry to choices students will
face in college and in life, and .
he encouraged them always to
challenge themselves.
"You will be confronted
with choices of self-interest or
peer pressure, or .Choices of
personal values, convictions
and concern for others," he
said Tuesday. " Each of us m.ust
co ntinually challenge our
ideas and convictions, and
co ncern for others. Each of us
must continually challenge
our ideas and o urselves.
"When you face decisions,
ask yourself, 'How does this fit
with my heartfelt convictions?"'
Jeffords said his decision to
leave the Parry was painful
because he was knew it would
disappoint some supporters
and cost so me colleagues their
committee chairmanships.

Holzer Clinic
welcomes
•

Dr. Craig Dodrill
Ophthalmologist

Wend(s - 28),

Lands End - 3n
Lid. -13

Daily stock reports are

the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous

OVB-25
BBT- 36),

day's transactions , provided by Smith Partners

Peoples- 20~

atAdvest Inc.

from PageA1
' rich school systems.
The couit agreed to bow
out of the case, saying the
addit10na l spen ding would
bring the system into compliance.
House and Senate lawmakers, th e Department of Education and Gov. Bob Tafi: were
all preparing estimates of the
Senate President Richard
Finan, a suburban Cincinnati
Republican,.said Thursday the
only two options for finding
additional 'money - a tax
increase or a massive spending
cut- weren't feasible.
House
Speaker\ Larry
.Householder, a Glen{ord
Republican, said he was basking in the state's victory and
wouldn't speculate on addi tional costs.
"They said it was constitutional, they dismi;sed the case,
there's · a couple of things we
nee d to address," he said
Ttiursday. "Until I know
exacdy what the figure is, I'm
not going to worry about out
'reaction."
· The case began when a
coalition of more than 500
school districts sued in rural
. southeast Ohio, saying the
state's method of fundi11g
. schools did not equally serve
' : rich and poor districts.

· -Proclamation

'-"tletnM cl L4dfes
(AU. YOIJ'I'H)

Start Your

Englnesl
. .
Middleport Church of.Christ
FLC Parking Lot
September 9. 2001
4- 6pm

,

Mng yoor fritoncllll
_eon .r ttw Mnt: fO

"' pra1 Gil toWGI d the pi to win the

prlu for which God hu cal..t -

lw&lt;a-..-.d Ill Christ .r..U... Phil. 3: 14

Thursday, Pomeroy Mayor John Blaettnar signed a proclamation declaring the week of Sept. 17-23 as Constitution Week.
Purpose of Constitution Week Is to emphasize the responslbll·
lty of protecting and defending the Constitution, as well as preserving ,It lor posterity. Pictured with Blaettnar· Is Abbie Strat·
ton, Regent of Retum Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
the American Revolution . (Tony M. Leach photo)

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SERVICE***
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The Daily Sentinel

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appointment call

IXIT I l l
RIPLIY. Wv

'

Holzer Main Clinic
(7 40) 446-5421
Holzer Clinic Meigs
(740) 992-0060

Holzer Clinic Jackson
(740) 395-8873

Craig H. Dodrill, MD joins l,loker Clinic from
Summt~ Heallh

System

(Akron C/Jy Hosp/Jal) in .Akron, OH.

Ask fOr our Hrvlce de•artment for dltalll.

· QualitJ.Care
'

. , }fOUl " ' llfcw

'

LOCAL BRIEFS
EMS runs
POMEROY Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered six calls for assistance on Thursday. Crews
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:05 a.m., Rocksprings
Road, Linda Russell, treated;
7:36 a.m. , Rocksprings
Rehabilitation
Center,
Gertrude Bass, Holzer Medical Center;
I :27 P:!1!1/· • East Main Street,
Francis Haggy, Pleasant Valley
Hospital;
3:39 p.m ., HM C Clinic,
Diane Paulsen, O'Bieness

should have to share someone
else's second- hand smoke n
Eskew said. "Non-smoke~s
have a right to . breathe clean
air. 11
O 'Dell , no oppoS!tlon was
The issues raised at last
voiced at that time.
night's meeting did not end
Some last night suggested a · y;ith the issues of public
compromise, while others health, or the rights of smokPageA1
were clearly galvanized in ers versus the rights of nontheir opinions o n the issue.
smokers. Instead, the econom- agreed to purchase four, I 0
"I hope we can agree to ic impact of the proposed ban mph speed signs, and place
disagree," Torres said in estab- and the rights of a non-elect- them at various locatioris on
lishing guidelines for last ed body like the board of the lot.
night's hearing. "Nobody is health to enact a wide-rangVoting against the decision
going to change anyone's ing piece of legislation were was ·Counci lm an
Larry
mind here tonight."
also discussed.
Wehrung.
·
Dottie Turner of Pomeroy,
"What I have a problem
Council added that if the
a realtor who practices in her with," said New Haven, W.Va . signs do not reduce speeding
own building in downtown resident Lowell Rogers, "is through the lot, then the safeMiddleport, said last night that non-elected bureaucrats try- ry committee's plan will be
a petition drive initiated by ing to tell a small business . "seriously reconsidered."
opponents of the proposed owner what he or She cannot
Shank also made a proposal
legislation has yielded signa- do."
to change the area in front of
tures of approximately 3,700
Ron Eastnun of Pomeroy the office of Dr.' Harold
Meigs Counry adults, and the agreed: "This is a republic," Brown into a single handisignatures of 400 to 500 oth- Eastman said. "No bureaucra- capped-only parki ng space.
ers from WestVirginia,Athens, cy can make laws and enforce Council agreed and approved
Gallipolis and other commu- · them."
Shank's proposal.
nities as far as Columbus.
Among the other comPolice Chief Mark Proffitt
The petitions were ·placed ments made last night:
requested about S2,200 for
in convenience stores, restau• Donna Hawley, Middle- th e purc hase of various
rants, and other public places.
port: "I hope we can reach a . equipment and services to be
. "If you don't believe that compromise on this issue."
used by the police departthe signatures on these peti- · • Julie Dillon, Pomer~y: ment.
tions are legitimate and valid, "You do not have a right to
T he list includes both parts
you'll find out how legitimate kill me with your second hand and labor for one of the
they are the next time you try smoke."
department's cruisers, two
to pass a levy," Turner said. "I
• Joyce Ward, Pomeroy: "I'm rechargeable flashlights, three
have the right to do what I going to take my money flashlight cones, two bulletwant to do on my own prop- where I, as a smoker, am wel- proof protection vests, a
erty.'1
come."
restraining belt and leg irons,
• Roger Manley, Sr., Mid- first aid kits, three gallons of
Pomeroy's
Margeurite
Eskew, on the other hand, said dleport: "Smokers have their paint, and labor to board up
last night that she is unable to rights, as long as they don't the Elmhurst Tavern· on
' Spring Avenue.
go to bingo games and other affect my health."
social events because the sec• David Ganim, American
Council approved
the
ond-hand smoke she bre~thes Cancer Sociery representative: expenditure;- request- and
at those events aggravates her "The health of the communi- informed Proffitt to begin
respiratory proplems, which ty should supersede anyone's ordering
equipment and
she blames on a long-time right to smoke."
contacting var ious laborers.
smoking habit.
If passed next week, the
In other matters, co uncil
"I don't care if people smoking ban will go into accepted a bid of $69,739 by
smoke, but I don't feel that I effect in October:
Stonegate Construction for
repair work to be performed
on a section of roadway
between Save-A-Lot and the
Middleport corporation 'line.
Other bids considered were
$73,500 by Maiden &amp; Jenkins
Construction; $77,866.95 by

~mPageA1

Council
from

Later that same night,
another set of eyewitnesses,
OVP NEWS STAFf
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. traveling in a 1957 Chevy,
- David Grabias of Sinema was reportedly chased by the
Productions is looking for a creature in the TNT area of
local farmhouse and a 1957 Mason Counry. Hence Grabi'Chevrolet to use in his as' need to locate a running,
"Mothman" documentary.
licensed 1957 Chevy.
"I need just your rypical
If anyone is interested in
farmhouse, ·just something providing their properry for
older with a field and maybe use in the film , leave a mesa barn," Grabias said. "We'll sage for Grabias at the Lowe
probably be filming in the Hotel or e-mail him at sineevening after dark sometime ma@ mindspring.com
next week for an hour or
two. If one day is better for
them, we can , work around
that."
Grabias plans to film out- · IJoi~~::;:
side the house and just inside
the front door to interpret
Newell Partridge's sighting of
the red-eyed monster at his
Salem, W.Va., home on Nov.
15, 1966.

Memorial Hospital.
POMEROY
3: 49 p.m., Ohio 124, assisted by Central Dispatch as
First
Responder,
Lewis
Humphreys, HMC.
REEDSVILLE
12:35 p.m .. Ohio 124, Phyllis Hetzer, Camden"Clark
Memorial Hospital.

Road oiMen
R.AC INE - Ohio Department of Transportation District I 0 reports that O hio 124
is now · open without restrictions in Meigs Counry.

D.V. Weber Construction; and
$80,726.80 by Shelly Co. ·
· Mayor John
Blaettnar
informed coun cil that Main
Street will be closed Monday
due to repair work being performed by the Ohio Department of Transportation. The
work will st retc h from
Sycamore Street to Butternut
Avenue and eastbound traffic
will be diverted through the
parking lot and westbound
traffi c through Second Street.
Blaettnar said
parking
meters along both sides of
Main Street will be hooded
on Sunday night, and that
repair work is estimated to
last for five to six hours.
Blaettnar also reminded
cou ncil. that the village has a
1-milllevy on Nov. 6's general election ballot, which, if
passed, would take care o f
upkeep costs for Beech Grove
Cemetery and eliminate individuals from having to pay
an nual maintenance dues.
Council also:
. • accepte~ the mayor's
report,
which
to taled
$14,262.96;
• accepted the police
department's parking · meter
report for . the month of
August. The total received was
$1,955.50;
• approved•:m amendment
to Ordinance 6 77 creating
the .position of assistant clerk
of courts;
• approved ~ resolution to
submit an application to the
Ohio Works Commission to
proceed with the search for
grant monies needed for the
village's proposed new water
treatment plant.
In ·open discussion, Councilman Victor Young inquired
abo ut progress 'on pothole
. fepairs 3r0d the elimination of
blocked drains throughout
the village.

Bv PAM WtWAMSON

w... yOur f-ll&amp; rae&amp; dcrthut

•,...

Ooil·iions

'

Farmhouse and '57 Chevy
sought for documentary

QANT CARNIVAL

Reader Services
Correcllon Polley
Our main concern in all stories is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom

al (740) 992-2156.

News Departments
The main number is 992.·2156.

Department extentions are::

Ophthalmology
I

It cited districts where students had inadequate supplies
in buildings with leaky roofs
and bad plumbing.
The coalition's director said
Thursday's decis ion was a
"blu eprint for mediocrity"
that would help only a few
children.
"There's a large unfinished
agenda that inust be addressed
to make this system viable,"
said William Phillis, executive
director of the Coalition for
Equity and Adequacy of
School Funding.
The state wanted to fully
fund a $500 million program
to close gaps . betwee n rich
and poor districts by 2006.
The court ordered the full
funding in place by July 2003.
That could mean the state
· would have to pay an additional $300 million over two
yeats in the next budget cycle
beginning in 2003.
The Supreme Court had
previously ruled the state's
school-funding system had
' created disparities between
· rich and poor districts by
relying too much on local
property taxes.
A5 an example, last year just
$990 in local properry taxes
were raised to pay for each
student attending schools in
rural Meigs Local School District. By contrast, residents in
wealthy Solon in suburban
Cleveland raised $7,494 per
student from local taxes.

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highway from Five Points to
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Deaver Excavating .Co. of
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the first segment, which
land Road. It involves the involves seven miles of highconmucticm of only one way from the Ritchie Bridge
bridge- at Counry Road 28' at Ravenswood, W.Va., to
-and a total of 4.9 miles.
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The Columbus firm is
The Ravenswood Connecalready on the site of the tor is a "Super Two" highway
Rave1tsWo0d Connector, hav- - a two-lane highway with
ing been awarded the bid for limited access built on a fourthe second phase earlier this way h1ghway right of way.
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Charlea W. Govey
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Friday, Sept. 7, 2001

Friday, September 7, 1001

HE
IUJ06RAPHED
A BALL
IN CURSIVE.

Utters 101M ldhor 11/'f w•lc01111. Tllt1 tllou/4 .~ ln1 1111111 300 wonb. A.U lltl#n
tuW 'dJ«I

to «&lt;iibtl ud Mini N rlpd aiUIIultuk tJJI.dntttmd kl~plwll• IIMmiHr.

No MIUifiiM llttm wUJ H pUIIJIIId. uam thoMid H irt rood ,.,,,. llddnuin1
.fnuu1 lUll ~nONJliJUs.
1'111 opiiUDIII UfH'tiiN ill tl" cDIMiflft

••low tiN
Pllblhllln1 Co. '.r tditorial board, .,,.,., otlln-wiJ• ttoiM.
Ql'f

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SYracuse CountrY Market

investment accounts ....
Things are not as bleak as the commission suggests, and personal investment accounts wouldn't do much to keep Social
Security healthy.--·
... Social Security's trustees are required by law to peer far
into the future, and they're required to be conservative in their
. guesses .about what lies ahead. That means they .are likely to
underestimate income while overestimating payouts .... The
point is that the numbers being worked with are not an errorproof guide to the future, but only estimates ....
The White House's response is that if Congress had not
ducked acting on Social Security no commission would have
been needed. Fair enough, except that Bush is determined to
see some payroll taxes diverted to personal investment
accounts, an idea all of his commissioners arc pledged to support. So far, though, neither they nor Bush has explained how
cutting Social Security's income would make the system
stronger. If anything, that would only serve to bring closer the
dark day of reckoning the commission warns about.

TODAY IN H+STORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, Sept. 7, the 250th day of2001 .There are I 15 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 7, 1940, Nazi Germany began its initial "blitz" on Lon-don during World War II.
On tlris date:
In 1825, the Marquis de Lafayette, the French hero of the American Revolution, bade farewell to President John Quincy Adams at
the White House.
In -1901, the Peace of Beijing ended the Boxer Rebellion in
China. .
In 1936, rock legend Buddy Holly was born Charles Hardin
Holley in Lubbock, Thxas.
In 1963, the National Professional Football Hall of Fame was
dedicated in Canton, Ohio.
In I %9, Senate Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen died in
Washington, D.C.
In 1977, the Panama Canal treaties, calling for the United States
to eventually turn over control of the waterway to Panama, were
signed in Washington.
In 1977, convicted Watergate conspirator G. Gordon Liddy was
released fiom prison after more than four years.
In 1979, the Entertairunent and Sports Programming Network
(ESPN) made its cable television debut.
In 1986, Desmond Tutu was installed as the first black to lead the
Anglican Church in southern Africa.
In I 998, St. Louis Cardinal Mark McGwire equaled Roger
Maris' single-season home run record as he hit number 61 during
a game against the Chicago Cubs.
_
Ten years ago:The European Commuriity opened a peace conference in the Netherlands aimed at bringing peace to Yugoslavia.
Monica Seles won the U.S. Open in NewYork, defeating Martina
Navratil ova 7-6, 6-1.
Five years ago: Isabel Correa became the 40th person known to
have died In the presence of Dr. Jack Kevorkian, less than a day after
police burst into a Michigan motel room, interrupting a meeting
between Kevorkian and Correa. Rapl?er Tupac Shakur was shot
and mortally wounded on the Las Vegas Strip; he died six days later.
One year ago: A jury in Coeur D'Alene, Idaho, awarded $6.3
million to - a woman and her son who were attacked by Aryan
Nations guards outside the white supremacist group's north Idaho
headquarten.
Today's Birthdays: Heart surgeon Dr. Michael DeBakey is 93.
Producer-~ctor Elia Kazan is 92. Pianist Arthur Ferrante is 80.
Sen. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaij, is 77.Jazz musician Sonny Rollins
is 71. Blues singer Little Milton is 67. Actor John Philip Law is 64.
Singer Alfa Anderson (Chic) .is ~5. Singer Gloria Gaynor is 52.
Rock singer Chrissie Hynek (The Pretenders) is 50. Actress Julie
Kavner is 50. Actor Corbin Bernsen is 47. Rock music;an Benmont Tench (rom Petty &amp; the Heartbreakers) is 47. Pianist Michael
Feinstein is 45. Singer MatgOt Chapman is 44. Actor Tom Everett
Scott is 31 . Rock musician Chad Sexron (31 1) is 31.Actress Shan~
non Elizabeth ("An1erican Pie") is 28. Actor Devon Sawa is 23.
Thought for Today:"People do not live in the present always, at
one with it. They live at all kinds of and manners of distance from
it, as difficult to measure as the course of planetS. Fears and traumas
make their JOUrneys slanted, peripheral. uneven, evasive."- Anais
Nin, American writer (1903-1977).

J3en
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Take his word for it: psychic predictions are cff-base

Plagenz

9-6

EVIIIIII&amp;WIIl...
Illlilt !IIIllS ... 3'IIIISt

SAINTS AND SINNERS

George

Mon • S.l

740-949-2217

The unfortunate headline on the
hit the age-dependency problem long
before America does. If taking in more
Department of Commerce press release
asserts "Census Bureau Projects Douimmigrants is the answer, Europe will
bling of Nation's Population by 2100."
soak up immigrants first. Meanwhile,
The accompanying story states that
fertility rates are in free-fall in the Less
"middle-level assumptions" indicate that
Developed Countries (LDCs), as those
the number of Americans will grow
nations modernize and urbanize. Mexifrom 273 million in 1999 to 571 million
can rates, for example, have dropped
in the year 2100.
from 6.8 to 2.5 since 1965, and they're
still falling. There are already about 25
I bet that won't happen, but it'&lt; fine if
it does.
LDCs with fertility below the replaceCOLUMNIST
ment rate of 2.1 children per woman.
Statistics often take on a life of their .
own, particularly when they come with
The calculations are tricky, but the 0.4
the imprimatur of the Census Bureau, a explanation and, I think, adjustment. The million annual immigration difference
federal agency that is highly respected, new Census- data are clear, well struc-' between 2010 and 2030 onward could
and deservedly so. This one can be Seen tured a~d user-friendly. But projections well add up to between 50 million and
as the keystone number in the official are only as good as the assumptions that I 00 million Americans, counting offAmerican demographic edifice. Sooner go into ,diem. This set has at least two spnng.
or later it will be used by school boards, that warrant skepti cal scrutiny: fertility
Now, all these calculations, upside and
sewer districts, zoning boards, federal and immigration.
downside, are quite speculative. In fact, as
agencies and businesses. Most volubly, it
Tli e current total fertility rate of is sound Census Bureau practice, the
is the statistic that will be babbled upon Americaqs of Hispanic origin is 2.9 chi!- middle-level assumptions are bracketed
by leading cause group activists of right dren petl 'woman. The current rate of. by "high" and "low" ones, whi ch range
and left. In this case, al~, y~u ~ay rest non-Hi~p~nic whites (so-called Anglos) from 1.2 billion and climbing in 2100, to
assured tli~t antt- llnnngranon mega- is about 1.8. :Under the theory of demo-' . 283- million'&gt;:mi:l "shri'n)&lt;:ing. With ·~uch .
P.hone~. wdl _ broadcast th e data as graphic 'tonve~gence, th~ projecti?ns· broad ranges in play, it would seem pruproof thau.mrmgratJ.oru hould. be-cut.-assume thad::mno rates wlll .bebeadrng dent to call the fertility and immigration--'-back, or cut off. Environmentalists will downward toward 2.1 children per rates that are now prevalent "middle," or . '
tell you that mo;e people cause more wom an by 2100, while An glo rates will "medium," or " most likely." On future
immigration and fertility, the new Cenpollunon an~ were gemng more peo- . be heading upward toward 2.1.
ple. Yuck! Its Pat Buchanan dressed as
That is likely ,only half- right. Latino sus projections do not do this.
And so, school board•, sewer commisthe Jolly Green Giant!
rates will come down; they already are
. . First, not to worry. In 1900; the Amer- down among second- and third- gener- sions, corporations, boards of education,
tcan populatton was 76 mtllton. By ation Latino families. But there is no federal agencies and businesses will start
2000,-the pop~lation alm?st quadrupled. convincing reason to think that Anglo planning for eventualities that likely will
At the same ttme, A~enca became the rates will go up 13 percent, as the pro- never eventuate. And so, the caterwaulers
most P'?sperous ana_ most mflu_enual jections indicate.The Bureau says survey of right and left will increase the volume
country m the world, Its people hvmg m data of "birth expectations" portend of their caterwauls
to what effect
ever-larger (t.e., less- crowded) reStdennal such a rise. But that's nothing more than remains to be seen.
spaces, with pollution !ates headed polling data, which have been unreliable.
downward, m a nauon sttll among the In fact, Anglo fertility has been at about
(Bei1 Wattenberg, a smior fellow at the
most sparsely populat~d ~n the world. 1.8 or below for a quarter of a century. American Enterprise Institute, is the host: ·
And now there are projecttons of a dou- The seemingly minuscule difference of essayist of the PBS special "The First Meabling over the next full century, not a abuut three-tenths of a child could mean mred Cenwry" and co-author of a new book
quadrupling. If the Bureau is correct, somewhere around 70 million fewer of th e same title. He is the host of the weekAmerica will grow at half its recent Americans than projected for 2100.
ly public televisiorl program "Think Tank."
. speed.
. .
Because of catastrophically low fertili- You may send comments to him via e-mail:
But the proJecuons deserve. further ty rates in recent decades, Europe will Watmailaol.com.)

At the beginning of the new millennium, one of the supermarket tabloids
·asked an international panel of .psychics
to predict the course of world events in
the year 2000.
I clipped the story in order to check
the accuracy of their forecasts.
A seer fium India said "A visitor fium
outer space will be welcomed by the
president to the White House:'Wrong.
A Brazilian psychic predicted that "a
COLUMNIST
new safe cigarette will be developed by a
major- U.S. tobacco company using flavored, dried herbs. By 2001 , tobacco- Edgar Cayce (pronounced "Casey") said
filled cigarettes will be a thing of the we all have psychic powers that allow 'us
past."Wrong.
to tap hidden wisdom.
Cayce's own psychic powers included
A leading Mexican psychic, who is said;
to have· predicted the Waco disaster, the ability to diagnose illnesses and to
announced that there would be a new prescribe treatments for patients he never
pope- a German cardinal- by the end · saw. H e also gave "life readings" for peoof 2000. Wrong.
ple while in a trance. He told th em of past
"A cure for Alzheimer's will be found incident&lt; not only in their present life, but
before Christmas of the year 2000," pre- in their previous lives as well. He is
di eted· an Italian psychic. Another crystal responsible for th e modern interest in
ball that needed dusting.
reincarnatiop.
A local hypnotist volunteered his serWhat happened? Well, nobody's perfect. On one occasion in 1950, according vices and Cayce accepted. While in a
to Lewis Drummond's new book "The hypnotic trance, he diagnosed his own
Evangelist" (W Publishing, .2001 }, l:lilly ailment and prescribed the treatment for
Graham said that C hrist would return to it.
Earth within two years.
Cayce was soon besieged by sick peeThis doesn't mean these distinguished pie who wanted to try his diagnostic and
men were not good psychics. Psychics do curative treatments. R ecipients were
other ,things besides forecast ~ f!Jture. often hundreds of mil es away. They mere-

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• Los Angeles Times, 011 Bush's Social Security commission.:
President Bush's commission on Social Security reform has a
long way to go if it hopes to forge a national consensus on how
to keep the system solvent. The interim report adopted by the
16-member bipartisan panel drew heavy fire for what critics
say is its panic-inducing exaggeration of Social_Security's problems and its bias toward diverting some payroll taxes to personal

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New Patients 'Welcome

WATTENBERG'S VIEW

Karen's Greenhouse

Meigs Co.
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DR. MARGIE LAWSON, D.D.E.

Social Security commission
has its work cut out for itself

The Daily Sentinel• Page A 5---- ·

;. 1~~#~~~]r(~Jt,~~~~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~:rr.~,#~

PageA4

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

General Manager

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

H~'f"'4tde

.

ly mailed their inquiries -to Cayce who,
twice a day, would- lie down on the
couch, loosen his tie and shoelaces, and ·
· go into a self-inquced trance. His wife
would read the patients' letters to him, _
and . his secretary would take down
Cayce's remarks.
Jess Stearn, in his best-selling biography
of Cayce tided "The Sleeping Prophet"
(Bantam Books, I 990) , ~rites, "I talked
with a doctor from Harvard Medical
School who checked on what Cayce had
to say. His feeling was that the man was
about 95-percent right in his diagnoses."
Some psychics claim to be able to put
the living in touch with those who have
died and are now living in the great
beyond.
On his deathbed in 1926, the magician
Harry Houdini told his Wif~ ·that he
would \ry to get in touch with Iter fiom
the other world. Every year for t0 years,
on· the anniversary of his death, Rosabelle
would sit before a portrait of him and listen for his words - which never came.
' Houdini had been unsuccessful in a
similar experiment after .his mother died in 191.'\. He went to a medium whci ._,
claimed to ·have contacted his mother.
But the disembodied voi ce spoke with an
Oxford accent. The only language his
mother spoke was Yiddish.

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At The tall Festival!

Racine

ART HILL GREENHOUSE
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at the Fall Festival!

Have fun

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949-2078

• Groceries • Gas
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3322 SR 124 • Racine, Ohio

7

740-992-3978

(George R. Plagenz ·is a columnist for
Newspaper Enterprise Association.)
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re

740-949-2330

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewla
Managing EdHor

Charlea W. Govey
Publllh!lr
Charlene Hoeflich

Friday, Sept. 7, 2001

Friday, September 7, 1001

HE
IUJ06RAPHED
A BALL
IN CURSIVE.

Utters 101M ldhor 11/'f w•lc01111. Tllt1 tllou/4 .~ ln1 1111111 300 wonb. A.U lltl#n
tuW 'dJ«I

to «&lt;iibtl ud Mini N rlpd aiUIIultuk tJJI.dntttmd kl~plwll• IIMmiHr.

No MIUifiiM llttm wUJ H pUIIJIIId. uam thoMid H irt rood ,.,,,. llddnuin1
.fnuu1 lUll ~nONJliJUs.
1'111 opiiUDIII UfH'tiiN ill tl" cDIMiflft

••low tiN
Pllblhllln1 Co. '.r tditorial board, .,,.,., otlln-wiJ• ttoiM.
Ql'f

COIIUIUIU

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NATIONAL VIEW

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740-949-2700

RACINE DENTAL CLINIC

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Is Census iriformation
for
2000
entirely
accurqte?
-

Pomeroy 992-5813
Middleport 992-5713
Corne &amp; visit the
Eastern 985-3747
library at the
Racine 949-8200 Racine FaU Festival

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SELF STORAGE

SYracuse CountrY Market

investment accounts ....
Things are not as bleak as the commission suggests, and personal investment accounts wouldn't do much to keep Social
Security healthy.--·
... Social Security's trustees are required by law to peer far
into the future, and they're required to be conservative in their
. guesses .about what lies ahead. That means they .are likely to
underestimate income while overestimating payouts .... The
point is that the numbers being worked with are not an errorproof guide to the future, but only estimates ....
The White House's response is that if Congress had not
ducked acting on Social Security no commission would have
been needed. Fair enough, except that Bush is determined to
see some payroll taxes diverted to personal investment
accounts, an idea all of his commissioners arc pledged to support. So far, though, neither they nor Bush has explained how
cutting Social Security's income would make the system
stronger. If anything, that would only serve to bring closer the
dark day of reckoning the commission warns about.

TODAY IN H+STORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, Sept. 7, the 250th day of2001 .There are I 15 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 7, 1940, Nazi Germany began its initial "blitz" on Lon-don during World War II.
On tlris date:
In 1825, the Marquis de Lafayette, the French hero of the American Revolution, bade farewell to President John Quincy Adams at
the White House.
In -1901, the Peace of Beijing ended the Boxer Rebellion in
China. .
In 1936, rock legend Buddy Holly was born Charles Hardin
Holley in Lubbock, Thxas.
In 1963, the National Professional Football Hall of Fame was
dedicated in Canton, Ohio.
In I %9, Senate Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen died in
Washington, D.C.
In 1977, the Panama Canal treaties, calling for the United States
to eventually turn over control of the waterway to Panama, were
signed in Washington.
In 1977, convicted Watergate conspirator G. Gordon Liddy was
released fiom prison after more than four years.
In 1979, the Entertairunent and Sports Programming Network
(ESPN) made its cable television debut.
In 1986, Desmond Tutu was installed as the first black to lead the
Anglican Church in southern Africa.
In I 998, St. Louis Cardinal Mark McGwire equaled Roger
Maris' single-season home run record as he hit number 61 during
a game against the Chicago Cubs.
_
Ten years ago:The European Commuriity opened a peace conference in the Netherlands aimed at bringing peace to Yugoslavia.
Monica Seles won the U.S. Open in NewYork, defeating Martina
Navratil ova 7-6, 6-1.
Five years ago: Isabel Correa became the 40th person known to
have died In the presence of Dr. Jack Kevorkian, less than a day after
police burst into a Michigan motel room, interrupting a meeting
between Kevorkian and Correa. Rapl?er Tupac Shakur was shot
and mortally wounded on the Las Vegas Strip; he died six days later.
One year ago: A jury in Coeur D'Alene, Idaho, awarded $6.3
million to - a woman and her son who were attacked by Aryan
Nations guards outside the white supremacist group's north Idaho
headquarten.
Today's Birthdays: Heart surgeon Dr. Michael DeBakey is 93.
Producer-~ctor Elia Kazan is 92. Pianist Arthur Ferrante is 80.
Sen. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaij, is 77.Jazz musician Sonny Rollins
is 71. Blues singer Little Milton is 67. Actor John Philip Law is 64.
Singer Alfa Anderson (Chic) .is ~5. Singer Gloria Gaynor is 52.
Rock singer Chrissie Hynek (The Pretenders) is 50. Actress Julie
Kavner is 50. Actor Corbin Bernsen is 47. Rock music;an Benmont Tench (rom Petty &amp; the Heartbreakers) is 47. Pianist Michael
Feinstein is 45. Singer MatgOt Chapman is 44. Actor Tom Everett
Scott is 31 . Rock musician Chad Sexron (31 1) is 31.Actress Shan~
non Elizabeth ("An1erican Pie") is 28. Actor Devon Sawa is 23.
Thought for Today:"People do not live in the present always, at
one with it. They live at all kinds of and manners of distance from
it, as difficult to measure as the course of planetS. Fears and traumas
make their JOUrneys slanted, peripheral. uneven, evasive."- Anais
Nin, American writer (1903-1977).

J3en
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949-2682

Sunday

50447 SR124 • Racine, Ohio

noon-4

(fonnerly Baer's Mkt) • 2434 Second St. • Syracuse . .,.

Deli items available - Ham Salad. Cheese
SPread. Chicken Salad
TrY our steaks. too!

992-6913
· New Owners: Melissa &amp; Donna Grueser

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~RACINE
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gFALL F'ESTIVA~
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Parade ................ ~ •............................. l 0:00
Outdoor Plumbing Co..................... 11 :00
Crowning of Queens ....................... 11 :45
Alexis Hlll ......................•................... ll :50
Auction - Uoyd Middleton Doll ...... 12:00
, Swlnglng,Senlors..... ;........................ 12: 15

-owlgrrt-lcenhower.-.........................~ .. 1·"'"-~0
Northwest Territory ............................. 2:00
Outdoor Plumbing Co....................... 3:00
Surefire ............................................... 4:00
Northwest Terrltory............................. 5:00
Surefire ....•..•.......•.•............•................ 6:00

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RACINE BARBER SHOP
4th Street Racine, Ohio

Take his word for it: psychic predictions are cff-base

Plagenz

9-6

EVIIIIII&amp;WIIl...
Illlilt !IIIllS ... 3'IIIISt

SAINTS AND SINNERS

George

Mon • S.l

740-949-2217

The unfortunate headline on the
hit the age-dependency problem long
before America does. If taking in more
Department of Commerce press release
asserts "Census Bureau Projects Douimmigrants is the answer, Europe will
bling of Nation's Population by 2100."
soak up immigrants first. Meanwhile,
The accompanying story states that
fertility rates are in free-fall in the Less
"middle-level assumptions" indicate that
Developed Countries (LDCs), as those
the number of Americans will grow
nations modernize and urbanize. Mexifrom 273 million in 1999 to 571 million
can rates, for example, have dropped
in the year 2100.
from 6.8 to 2.5 since 1965, and they're
still falling. There are already about 25
I bet that won't happen, but it'&lt; fine if
it does.
LDCs with fertility below the replaceCOLUMNIST
ment rate of 2.1 children per woman.
Statistics often take on a life of their .
own, particularly when they come with
The calculations are tricky, but the 0.4
the imprimatur of the Census Bureau, a explanation and, I think, adjustment. The million annual immigration difference
federal agency that is highly respected, new Census- data are clear, well struc-' between 2010 and 2030 onward could
and deservedly so. This one can be Seen tured a~d user-friendly. But projections well add up to between 50 million and
as the keystone number in the official are only as good as the assumptions that I 00 million Americans, counting offAmerican demographic edifice. Sooner go into ,diem. This set has at least two spnng.
or later it will be used by school boards, that warrant skepti cal scrutiny: fertility
Now, all these calculations, upside and
sewer districts, zoning boards, federal and immigration.
downside, are quite speculative. In fact, as
agencies and businesses. Most volubly, it
Tli e current total fertility rate of is sound Census Bureau practice, the
is the statistic that will be babbled upon Americaqs of Hispanic origin is 2.9 chi!- middle-level assumptions are bracketed
by leading cause group activists of right dren petl 'woman. The current rate of. by "high" and "low" ones, whi ch range
and left. In this case, al~, y~u ~ay rest non-Hi~p~nic whites (so-called Anglos) from 1.2 billion and climbing in 2100, to
assured tli~t antt- llnnngranon mega- is about 1.8. :Under the theory of demo-' . 283- million'&gt;:mi:l "shri'n)&lt;:ing. With ·~uch .
P.hone~. wdl _ broadcast th e data as graphic 'tonve~gence, th~ projecti?ns· broad ranges in play, it would seem pruproof thau.mrmgratJ.oru hould. be-cut.-assume thad::mno rates wlll .bebeadrng dent to call the fertility and immigration--'-back, or cut off. Environmentalists will downward toward 2.1 children per rates that are now prevalent "middle," or . '
tell you that mo;e people cause more wom an by 2100, while An glo rates will "medium," or " most likely." On future
immigration and fertility, the new Cenpollunon an~ were gemng more peo- . be heading upward toward 2.1.
ple. Yuck! Its Pat Buchanan dressed as
That is likely ,only half- right. Latino sus projections do not do this.
And so, school board•, sewer commisthe Jolly Green Giant!
rates will come down; they already are
. . First, not to worry. In 1900; the Amer- down among second- and third- gener- sions, corporations, boards of education,
tcan populatton was 76 mtllton. By ation Latino families. But there is no federal agencies and businesses will start
2000,-the pop~lation alm?st quadrupled. convincing reason to think that Anglo planning for eventualities that likely will
At the same ttme, A~enca became the rates will go up 13 percent, as the pro- never eventuate. And so, the caterwaulers
most P'?sperous ana_ most mflu_enual jections indicate.The Bureau says survey of right and left will increase the volume
country m the world, Its people hvmg m data of "birth expectations" portend of their caterwauls
to what effect
ever-larger (t.e., less- crowded) reStdennal such a rise. But that's nothing more than remains to be seen.
spaces, with pollution !ates headed polling data, which have been unreliable.
downward, m a nauon sttll among the In fact, Anglo fertility has been at about
(Bei1 Wattenberg, a smior fellow at the
most sparsely populat~d ~n the world. 1.8 or below for a quarter of a century. American Enterprise Institute, is the host: ·
And now there are projecttons of a dou- The seemingly minuscule difference of essayist of the PBS special "The First Meabling over the next full century, not a abuut three-tenths of a child could mean mred Cenwry" and co-author of a new book
quadrupling. If the Bureau is correct, somewhere around 70 million fewer of th e same title. He is the host of the weekAmerica will grow at half its recent Americans than projected for 2100.
ly public televisiorl program "Think Tank."
. speed.
. .
Because of catastrophically low fertili- You may send comments to him via e-mail:
But the proJecuons deserve. further ty rates in recent decades, Europe will Watmailaol.com.)

At the beginning of the new millennium, one of the supermarket tabloids
·asked an international panel of .psychics
to predict the course of world events in
the year 2000.
I clipped the story in order to check
the accuracy of their forecasts.
A seer fium India said "A visitor fium
outer space will be welcomed by the
president to the White House:'Wrong.
A Brazilian psychic predicted that "a
COLUMNIST
new safe cigarette will be developed by a
major- U.S. tobacco company using flavored, dried herbs. By 2001 , tobacco- Edgar Cayce (pronounced "Casey") said
filled cigarettes will be a thing of the we all have psychic powers that allow 'us
past."Wrong.
to tap hidden wisdom.
Cayce's own psychic powers included
A leading Mexican psychic, who is said;
to have· predicted the Waco disaster, the ability to diagnose illnesses and to
announced that there would be a new prescribe treatments for patients he never
pope- a German cardinal- by the end · saw. H e also gave "life readings" for peoof 2000. Wrong.
ple while in a trance. He told th em of past
"A cure for Alzheimer's will be found incident&lt; not only in their present life, but
before Christmas of the year 2000," pre- in their previous lives as well. He is
di eted· an Italian psychic. Another crystal responsible for th e modern interest in
ball that needed dusting.
reincarnatiop.
A local hypnotist volunteered his serWhat happened? Well, nobody's perfect. On one occasion in 1950, according vices and Cayce accepted. While in a
to Lewis Drummond's new book "The hypnotic trance, he diagnosed his own
Evangelist" (W Publishing, .2001 }, l:lilly ailment and prescribed the treatment for
Graham said that C hrist would return to it.
Earth within two years.
Cayce was soon besieged by sick peeThis doesn't mean these distinguished pie who wanted to try his diagnostic and
men were not good psychics. Psychics do curative treatments. R ecipients were
other ,things besides forecast ~ f!Jture. often hundreds of mil es away. They mere-

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• Los Angeles Times, 011 Bush's Social Security commission.:
President Bush's commission on Social Security reform has a
long way to go if it hopes to forge a national consensus on how
to keep the system solvent. The interim report adopted by the
16-member bipartisan panel drew heavy fire for what critics
say is its panic-inducing exaggeration of Social_Security's problems and its bias toward diverting some payroll taxes to personal

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29670 Bashan Road • Racine, Ohio

General Dentistry
Hours by appointment
New Patients 'Welcome

WATTENBERG'S VIEW

Karen's Greenhouse

Meigs Co.
District Public · ·
Library

DR. MARGIE LAWSON, D.D.E.

Social Security commission
has its work cut out for itself

The Daily Sentinel• Page A 5---- ·

;. 1~~#~~~]r(~Jt,~~~~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~:rr.~,#~

PageA4

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

General Manager

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

H~'f"'4tde

.

ly mailed their inquiries -to Cayce who,
twice a day, would- lie down on the
couch, loosen his tie and shoelaces, and ·
· go into a self-inquced trance. His wife
would read the patients' letters to him, _
and . his secretary would take down
Cayce's remarks.
Jess Stearn, in his best-selling biography
of Cayce tided "The Sleeping Prophet"
(Bantam Books, I 990) , ~rites, "I talked
with a doctor from Harvard Medical
School who checked on what Cayce had
to say. His feeling was that the man was
about 95-percent right in his diagnoses."
Some psychics claim to be able to put
the living in touch with those who have
died and are now living in the great
beyond.
On his deathbed in 1926, the magician
Harry Houdini told his Wif~ ·that he
would \ry to get in touch with Iter fiom
the other world. Every year for t0 years,
on· the anniversary of his death, Rosabelle
would sit before a portrait of him and listen for his words - which never came.
' Houdini had been unsuccessful in a
similar experiment after .his mother died in 191.'\. He went to a medium whci ._,
claimed to ·have contacted his mother.
But the disembodied voi ce spoke with an
Oxford accent. The only language his
mother spoke was Yiddish.

";alt ";u&amp;.«at"

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740-949-351 0

.--.

RACINE OPTOMETRIC CLINIC
'.

Melanie A. Weese, O.D.

~···.

'"

At The tall Festival!

Racine

ART HILL GREENHOUSE
Have a Great Time
at the Fall Festival!

Have fun

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•

740-247-2664

HILL'S
CITGO
SR 124 Racine, Oh
740-949-3099

Open 7 days per.week
50638 SR 338 • A Ia Grove Ohio

949-2078

• Groceries • Gas
• Fishing Tackle . ·
•llue Bait
• Deer Check Station
• Pop • Snacks • ·Pizza
• Hot .Sandwiches
•Ammo
• Deer Slugs

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Racins Planing MHI

ROSE'S

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6th Street Racine, OH

''Complete line of hardware"

to thP ~ ~ II ~r~~tiv::J I!

Third Street • Racine, Ohio

,_

Ron 6 n;ncy1

3322 SR 124 • Racine, Ohio

7

740-992-3978

(George R. Plagenz ·is a columnist for
Newspaper Enterprise Association.)
.

re

740-949-2330

EXCA ATIMG

.. -

Wagner

'

"Come on

the fall FestlllCII"

=:~

�r u.u-.''"''· ••••wW•c.: e.AJ• h...,.,,•. .,.
Sunday SdKJol lO amMomml wors.h.Jp II am Evening - 7 pm
Wednci'ky 7 p.m.
Cb urtb or Jnu Cltrist Apo~tolic
Vanl.andl. and Ward Rd.

Jopp11
'~
Puwr. Bob RmJolph1
Worship • 9:Lf"a-m.
Sunday School -1 _0:30 a.m.

Churth of God ot Pnlpht&lt;-y
O.J. Wh ite Rd.off SI. Rt.l 60
Pll61or: P.J. Cha pman
Sunday Scln&gt;l - 10 a.m.
Wnnhip - II a.m.
Wednesday Strv icu - 7 p.m.

Loua'llottom

( "a tho lk

Pastor· JameJ Mill er
Sunda}' School - 10:30 a.m.

Sacrtd Heut Catholic Churdl
161 Mulberry 1\\ 't ., Pomeroy, 992-5898
P~Utor. Reto'. Walter E. Heinl
Sat Ctm. 4 : 4~ " 5 : 15p.m.; Millis- .5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. - 8 :45- IJ: \ ~ a.m .
Sun. Mass · 9:30a.m.
Dailey Ma s~ - lkJO a.m.

Eveninj - 7:30 p.m.
Rher Valley

Aposlohc Woohtp Center
1!73 S. l rd Ave., Middl eport
Kevin Konkle, PastcwSunda:;. 10 a.m. and 6:00p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.; Youth Fri. 7:30p.m.

Apostolic F'aith
Lima Road
Sunday. 10 il.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m
Ne ~o~.·

Pomrroy ChUrt'h of Christ
;! \ 2 W. M1110 St

L• btrt y Assembly or God
P.O. l:klx 467. Dudding Lam:
Mason, W.V11.

Little Crttk Baprl!;t Church
Price Hollow Rd., Rutland
Pastor: John Swanson
Sunday S.:hool - 10:00 a.m,
Morni ng Service I I :00 a.m.

Middleport C hu rch or Chrisl
~th and Main
P~ s t or: AI Hanson
Youth Mim ~t c r: Bill Fruzier
Sunday School - ~U O a.m.
Wnl"i hip- K:\5. IO:JIIa.m., 7 p.m
WedncWay Services- 7 p.m.

Evening Service · 6:00 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.

Hope Baptist Church (Southern)
:'iiO Gram St., Middl epor1
Sunday ~hool- 9:30a.m.
Worship . I I a.m. and 6 p.m.

Ke'no Church of Christ
Worship - ':1:30 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Pusmr-Jeffre y Wall ace
Isl and 3rd sUnday
'
Be~~~ r w~tllow Ridge Churth of Chri5t
Pastnr:Teny S1ewan
Su nday Schoo l .9:30a.m.
Worship - IO:JO a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Serv ices · 6:30p.m.

Wednesday Sef'olice • 7 p.m.
Rullud Flnt Ha peisl Chun:h

;e .

Sunday S choo l ~ 9:30 a.m.
Worship - !0:4:'i a.m.

Pomcl'(ly Fint Baplisl
·Ea.~! Main St.
Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m.
First Southern Baptist
41 872 Poin~·ruy t'ikc
Pa.~ lm : E. Lamar O' Hryam
Sunday Schoo l · 9:30a.m
wOrship - 10:45 a.m.. 7:00 p.m
Wednesday Servir;es- 7:00 p.m.

Zion Church of Christ
f&gt;omeroy, Harri so nville Rd. (RI.I 4])
P:t St0r: Roger Watson
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wtnship - IU:JO a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Fil'!il Raplist Chun:h

Tupptrs Plain Churt'h of Christ
Inslnuncntal
Worship Service- Ya.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sundoy School - 10:15 a.m
Youth- S:JO pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Pas1or: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St. , Middlepon
Sunday School · 9: IS a.m.
Worsh ip - !0:15a.m.. 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.
Racine Flnt Baptlsl
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School.- 9:30 a.m.
Worshi p - I 0:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

;.

.Sih·e r Run Baptist
Pastor: Steven K. Little
Sunday School - IOa.m.
Worship.- ll a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednes day Services- 7:00p.m.
MI. Uniou Baptist

Pas10r : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Even ing · 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday s~rvic es - 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem Baptist Churt'h
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastur : Dtllliel Mecca
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Su*y Worshi p· 10:30 a.m
Wednesday Bible Study· ti:OO p.m.
Old Bethel F~e Will Bapll~l Church
2860 1 St. Rt. '7. Middlcpon .
Sunday School • I0 ll.m.
Evening - 7:00p.m.
Thursday·Servil: es-;--'7 :00

Bradbury Chun:h of Christ
Pastor: Jim Eaton
39558 IJ r~~db u ry Road, Middleport
Sundlly School - 9:30 a. m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Rutland Churth of Christ
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wor!ihip · 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Bradford Chun=h of Christ
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbu ry Rd.

Minister: Doug Shamblin '
YOuth Mini ster: Bil.l Aml&gt;erger
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
WOrship · 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:00p.m.
Hills Chun=h of Christ
Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a. m.. 6:30p.m.
Wedne,day Services· 7 p.m.

Vlttory Baptist lndtpendtnl
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pas tor: James E. Keesee
Worship · lO~t. m. , 7 p.m.
Wedn esday Services - 7 p.m.

De"ler Church of Christ
Pastor: Nathan Rob inson
. Sund ay SChool 9:30 a.m.
Norman Wil l, superintendent
Sunday worship - 10:30 11.m.

Faith Baptist Church
Rai lroad St., Mason
Sunday Sc hool - 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a. m.• ti p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Chun=h of Chrlsl
lntcn;ccl ion 7 aml l24·W
Evange list: Denn i~ Sargent
Sunday Bi ble Sludy - 9:30a.m.
Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wedncstluy Bible Study · 7 p.m.

Antiqully Baptist
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wurship - 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evening· 6:00 p.m.
Pastor: Mark McComas
Rutland FrH WID Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Thylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wedn esday Servio.:s - 7 p.m.
Setond Baptist Churth
. Ravenswood. WV
Pasto r: David W. M cC I ~ in

992·3978

Dan'o'JIIe Holin~ Churrll
31057 S111te Route 325. Langsvlle
r astor: Gary Jackson
Sunday school · 9:30 a.m.
Sunday WOJshi p • 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m
Wednesday prayer service- 7 !).m.

Community ol Christ
Pflnland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Michae.J Duhl
Sunday School · 9;30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

Rose of Sh•ron Holiness Chun=h
Leading Creek Rd .. Rutland
Pas tur: Rev. lkwcy King
sUnday sehoul - 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayH meeting- 7 p.m.

Pomeroy
P11stor: Rod Brower
WOJshi p - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:35 a.m.

Hysell Run HoUness Churdl
Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursda y Dible Study and Youth ~ 7 p.m.

77 3 - ~ 017

Abundant G111ce R.F. I.
Pastor Teresa Davis
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Faith Full G011pe:l Chun=h
· L.ong Douom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wo'l'llhip - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.
Friday . fellowship se rvice 7 p.m.

Bethany
Pastor: Oewayne Swtler ·
Su'nday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Wednesday Scrvk.-es • IP a.m.

The Bellenn' Fellowship Mlnilltry
New Lime Rd., Rutland
PaStor: Re v. Margaret J. Robinson
Serv ices: Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, 2:30 p.m.

Cannti.Sullon
Ca1111et &amp; Ba..;han Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Saints

The Churtb of Jesw
Christ or Latter-Day Solnts
St. Rt. \60, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School t 0:20.1 I a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood II :05· 12:00
"' • "'· noon
Sacramenl Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeling, lst Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Morni1111S1ar
Plllltor: DewRyoc Stut1c.r
Sund11y School - II 11.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Harrl10nvtUe Community Cllureb
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesdily - 7 p.m.

~'

•

--"--~

l .ulheran

,Pustor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Won hip - 9 a.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

St. John Lulhtran Church
Pine Grove
Wors hip - 9:00o.m.
Sunday Schoo! · 10:00 a. m.

(.;oolvllle Unhed Melhodlsl Parish
Pastur: Helen Kline
Coolville Ch;1rch
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
, Tuesday Services - 7 p.m.

St. Paul L_ulheran Church
&amp; Second St., Pomeroy

~umer Sycamore

Sunday School · 9:4S a.m.
Worship · I I a.m.

Township Rd .. 468C
Sunday School ~ 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
We4nesday Services - 10 a. m.

l nill'd \ll'lhodisl
Grallam Uolted Melhodisl
Worship- 9:30 a.m. (] st &amp;. 2nd Sun).
7:30p.m. (3ni &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Hartford Church of Christ in
Christian Union
Hanford, W.Va.
t'astor:Jim Hughes
Sunduy Sc hool - II n.m.
Wo r~hip · 9:30 a,m., 7:30p.m. .
Wednesday Sel'\•ices- 7:30p.m.

Mt. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 bci1ind Wilkesv ille
Pastnr: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Serv ices - 7 p.m.

( 'hurch of( ;od
Mt. Moriah Churth of God
Mile Hill Rd .. Rac ine
PIL'itor: Brice Uu
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Eveni ng · 6 p. m.
Wednesday Serv tces - 7 p.m.

Mlllgs CooperatJve Parish
Northeast Clusler
Alfred
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - II n.m., 6:30 p.m.

Rutland Churfb of God
Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesd11y Services - 7 p.m.

'\atan'lll'
M5ddleporl Chun::b of lht Nuamte
Pastor: Allen Midcap
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor.;hi p - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedne sday Sm •ices • 7 p.m.
Pu tor: Allen Midcap

Chattr
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursdoy Services - 7 p.m.

Syratusc First Church ot God
Apple and .Second Sts.

iht!dsl'llle Fellowship
Olurch of the Nazarene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck

Pomeroy

t?
---·

lllloco I. Fhloo· Dlroctar
190 lAst . .
•-·~ OH 41769

sk.. •

74G-992-5444

992·3785

l\eal ~~tate

748-992-5141

216 E. Second Pomeroy
740.992-3325
Marketing Prctllell"tY

~-~ R. Au11, Jr.- Diredor

Brogan-Warner
.INSURANCE
SERVICES

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
"We Fill Doctors'
~fescriptions

992-5130
Pomeroy

NEW HAVEN

EWING FUNERAL
HOME

l 'nill•d llrl'lhrl'n
'

United Faith Chun:h
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robcn E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School · .9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.
FuU Goepel Ugbthouse
3304.5 Hiland Road, Pflmeroy
Pastor:- Roy Homer
Sunday &amp;:hool - 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday &amp; 11mf1i'lay - :7:30p.m.

l

I

' :

992-2955

Pomeroy

lng'et's Carpet

~Lit u1 Mnd yot~' thoughft with JIIOefll ~It·

740-992·2844

740-992-6298

.

,onv FLOWER SHOP I .:Always &amp; 'Forever ·

9ift Sfiop

106 BUTIERNUT AVE.

992·6454

'Flowers for all occasions'

5181;!. Main St.

Pomeroy, OH

992-1161

~'1

Office SErvlcep Supply
FUNERAL HOME
169 N 2nd Ave.
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
"We accept Preneed Transfers"
Dlgnl~::b~l:;;'~;~ways
Middleport, OH
992-7075
~iddleport, OH
82 82
172
Lundy Brow~ . ~egan Brown
992·2121
992•7028
=~d~~e!:':.~hAve.
992-6376
~~~~~~A~v:•~-_:~~~L.......~..~........L.~~~~~~....~.J~
.;;;~~~
SNOUFFER FIRE&amp;
SAFETY SALES &amp;
SERVICE

......

....'
•.

.

.

•

.......

- There will
be a course offered in the
Jackson; Ohio area for anyone
int.e rested in officiating Ohio
high school basketball.
For more information, contact Jim Derrow at 384-5069
-r..~ - by
- e-mail
a t
jsd14@bright:het;
Mike
Rome at 286- 2482 or
kaboobi@bright.net; or Chad
Jenkins at 286-1064.
The registration deadline is
September 22.

nger leads at
canadian Open

"'
•·

Eden United Brethren in Cltrist
2 112 miles n.orth of Reeds'!ille
on Slate Rout e 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School · 11 ~t . m .
,
Sunday Worship - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00 p.m.•
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youlh Service . 7:30p.m.

W. Main St., Pomeroy

Po~OY,OH

JACK~ON

I

In Chrisl Chun=h
Teu~ Community off CR 82
.Pastor. Roben Sanders
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

"Featuring Kentucky Fried
Chicken"

992-5432

coune offered

Stventii·Day Ad'o'enllst
Mulberry Hts. Rd .. Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Ser.~ices:
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
W()rsiJip · 3 p.m.

:rnul'!; Family Restaurant

214 5oollo Soctool An. • Mld.opan, OH 45160

212 E. Main Street

.:1.

Hoops officials'

Salem Community Churtb
Lievina Road, West Qllumbia, W.Va.
Pastor: Clyde Fellllli
Sunday School 9:30 am
Sunday evening sef\'ice 6 pm
Wednesday service 7 pm

Sc'" 'lllh -ll.ll \cllt·nli ' l

Mt. Olive Communil)' Church
Pastor: Lllwreoce Bush
Sunday Sehoul - 9:311 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedncday Service· 7 p.m.

Torth Churth
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Today'a Gamaa
Wahama at Eastem
Buffalo-Putnam at Hannan
Southern at South Gallia
Rock Hill at Oak Hill
Riverside al Ripley
Roane Co.at Ravenswood

Mlddieport Pmbylerian
Sunday School · 9 a:m.
Worship · IOa.m.

Faith Gollpel Church
L.ong Bottom
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.

Hudr.ingport Chun:h
Grand Street
Sunday ~hool • 10 a.m.
Worship - II a. m.
WedneMia)' ServiCes- 8 p.tn.

Non-league .

H•rrllonvllle Pmbylerlan Ctlurth
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sun'iiay School • 9:45 a.m.

Morse Chapel Chul"('h
Sunday school • I0 ~ m .
Wonhip • II a,m.
Wednc5day Service- 7 p.m .

..

'•

Penttcoetal Auembl~
St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pll!ltor: Wllllum Hob11ok."
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Bobcat rushing game scares WVU
M O R G ANTOWN. WVa. (AP) Tailga ters at West Virg inia's home
opener with O hio will have plenty to
talk about on Saturday.
It's new W VU coach Rich
R odriguez's fi rst ho me game, and for
the first ti me in person , most will see
his snazzy offense that spreads the field
and doesn't huddle.
O n the other side is O hio"s op tion
attack, w hicl) is a crowd~pleas i ng
game of keepaway. T he cloc k- eatin g
offense rarely involves a passing play
· and could have fans back at th eir cars
and camp ers coo king another batch of
bratwu q ts qui cker than they had
expected.

"When we played an optio n team at
Wisco nsin, the game we nt li ke that.':
said first-yea r West Virginia defensive
coordinator Phil Elmassian, snapping
his fin gers. '" It was over , in 2 1/ 2
hours. I was railgating at 2:45 for a
noon game.
'"The goal is to get ou r team the ball
eight ti mes, because the option team &gt;
are goin g to ch ew the clock."
For West Virgin ia, the question ts
how m any chances will it have tO
score. Th e Mountainee rs' only touch-·
down drive in a 34- 10 loss at Doston
C ollege last week was I yard after
th ey recovered a fumbl e.
Several other chances end ed w ith

MONTREAL (AP) - .Tiger
Woods wasn 't interested in
revenge at Royal Montreal Golf
Club, only a chance to win
another Canadian Open. He
took care ofboth matters with a
S-under-par 65 that gave him a
share of the lead.
Returning to the course
where four year.; ago he missed
his only cut as a professional,
WOods """ rarely in trouble and
capped off a nearly flawless
round by hitting a 5-iron to 6
feet on No. 18.
He """ joined at 65 by Jim
McGovern, Matt Gogel and
rookie Michael Muehr, three
guys who have not finished bet~
ter than fifth on the PGA Tour
this year.

NEWYORK (AP) - For the
first time in 14 years, replacements will be on the field for
NFL games. Replacement officiak.
The NFL referees' union
rejected the league's larest contr.lct of!er, and replacement officiak will work at least the opening weekend of the regulai'sea-

son.
The NFL Referees' Association executive board uhanimously rejected the offer presented
Wednesday. Tom Condon, who
represents the officiak, infonned
]elf Pash, the league's lead negollator, of the vote in a letter.
· The league is proceeding on a
week-by-week basis, but with .no
new talks scheduled, the 112
replacement officials and six
league supervisors likely will
work games beyond this
weekend.

Please see Ohio, 83

to put away
the Pirates, 8~6
PITTSBURGH (Af') Danny Graves likes th e company he 's keeping.
Graves pitched a perfect
ninth for his 25th save, and
Ken Griffey Jr. hit a two-run
double in the. seventh inning
as the Cincinnati Reds overcam e a five - run deficit to beat
th e Pittsburgh Pirates 8-6
Thursday night.
Graves joined John Franco
as .the only Reds reliever to
have three consecutive seasons"
with at least 25 saves.
"That's pretty cool,'' Grave s
said. "John Franco is second
all- time in saves, and to be
mentioned along with him is a
pretty good accomplishment."
The Reds got 6 2- 3 score_ Je,;s-inntings from four relieversafter starter Jose Acevedo was
knocked out in the third. ·
'"That's been the area that's
been most consistent for us,"
Cincinnati' manager Bob
Doone said of his bullpen.
"For a long time, we were fir st
or second in ERA."
Cincinnati kept the Pirates
fr'lm winning their fourth
· consec utive game, which
would have matched their best
streak this season.
WJth the score tied 5, 5,
Rich Loiselle (0-1 ), making
his first major leagu e appearance since July 21, gave up an
HOLY COW, STOLEN BASE- Cincinnati's Pokey Reese steals second in the fourth inning infi eld single to Todd Walker
Thursday. Attempting the tag is shortstop Jack Wilson. (AP)

to open the seventh.
Adam Dunn walked, and
Griffey drove in both runners
with a double down the leftfield line. Pokey Reese added
a sacrifice fly.
Jim Brower (7 -9) got the
win with three innings of
one-hif relief.
Pirates starter Dave Williams
had a S-0 lead after three
innings, but couldn't hold it.
The rookie gave up five runs
in th e fourth, three unearned
because of second baseman
Warren Morris' fielding error.
Dunn singled to open the
fourth and went to third when
Morris couldn't handle Sean
Casey's grounder. Aaron
Boone, Dmitri Young and
R eese- hit- Gonsecutive- runscoring singles, and Walker
chased Williams with a tworun single.
Acevedo gave up five runs
in 2 1-3 innings. Chad Hermansen opened the first with
a double and scored on a single by Aramis Ramirez.
Williams added an RBI
double in the second.
Casey's two- base error on
Morris' hard grounder to first
base helped the Pirates score
three runs in the third. Jason
Kendall had an RBI single.
Ramirez singled in the seventh off Scott Sullivan and
sc0 red on Kendall's single.

PREP ROUNDUP

Lady Marauders
·improve to 4-0

CLOSING IN San Francisco
Giants' Barry
Bonds swings
for his 60th
home run of the
season off Ari·
zona Diamond·
backs' Albie
Lopez in the sec·
ond inning
Thursday at
Pacific Bell Park
in San Franc is·
co. (AP)

BY DAVE H,t.RRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

ROCK SPRINGS -The M eigs Marauders. under th e
direction of Coach Rick Ash ran their overnll and TVC
record to 4-0 Thursday evening by defeating Wellston 151, 15- 7 at Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
·
Jaynee Davis led the Lady Marauders with eight points
cin 11 of 11 serving and two kills. Mindy Chancey added
seven points on I0 of I0 serving, one kill and four assists,
Kayte Davis added five points on six of seven serving
with two kills.
Katie Jeffers added four points on six of six serving, two
kills and two assists, Corrie Hoover chipped in with three
points on six of six serving and one assist, Nikki Butcher
added three points on six of seven serving. Ch rissy Miller
added three kills and one block and Tirzah Dodson had

one assist.·
The Little Marauders kept their record perfect with a
15-1,15-7 win over the Rockets.
The Marauders will ho1t Trimble in a TVC match on
Tuesday evening, junior varsity action gets underway at
5:55.
.

Meigs falls to Wahama
MASON - Wahama defeated Meigs and Point Pleasant in a tri-golf match Thursday afternoon played on th e
Blue Tees on the front nine at Riverside Golf Course.
Wahaina had a 165, followed by Point Pleasant with a
171 and M eigs carded a 196. Nathan Fowler ofWahama
and Robbie Williamson of Point Pleasant were co- n.l atch

Please see Prep, 83
'I

.' . . .

day."
It won't be easy fro m the opening
kickoff. WVU's defense is decimated
by injury. It has not only worked with
several new players at di fferent positions this week, but it has to defe nd a
different type o f offense.
"It"s tough to learn in a week. Just
cover a gap," said linebac ker Kyle Kayden . " We just need to tac kle, espec ial~
ly with option ball .You have responsibility and if everybody does it it is
very easy to make the play. But 'if one
gu y messe&lt; up, that's wh en the big
plays hap pe n."'

Reds rally Jate

Bonds hits No. 60 in win
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

At 60 and counting, Barry
Bonds is heading to the per~ ·
feet place to cnase home- run
history.
Hello, Coors Field!
Bo nd s b ecam e th e fifth
player to reach baseball's oncemagic mark . hitting N o. 60 as
the San Francisco Giants beat
NL West-leadin g Arizon a 9- 5
Thursday night.
" That on e was impressive. I
couldn 't believe it,'' ht said
~fter his drive at Pacific Dell

·~1
'

turnovers and missed field goals.
"'We were pretty close to breaking a
couple big plays," said qu arterback
Brad Lewis. " I 31T1 sure th roughout th e
seaso n those will come. T he offense
drove the whole ti me."
So did O hio in a 31-29 loss at
Akron . T h e Bobcats amassed 339
rushing yard&lt;, averaging 5. 7 ya rds per
rush.
WV U's defense al lowed 325 yards
rushing at DC.
"One of the ha rdes t thin gs to do on
defe nse is the open- fiel d tackl e,'" sa id
West Virginia coac h R ich R o,d ri guez.
" We have to open- fiel d tackle ve ry
wdl o n Satu rday or it will be a long

Today'e Games
Wahama at Eastern
River vatley al Meigs
Southam at South Gallia
Jackson at Vinton County
Waverly at Wellston
Miller at Bema Union
Trimble al SE Ross
Fairfield Union at N-YOII&lt;
Waterford at Frontier
Athens al Alexander
Zane Trace a1 F. Hocking
Belpre at Fort Frye

GGd's Teraple or Praise
31'665 McQuire Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
Pastor: Wayne Balcolm
Services: Thurs. Nltcs 7:00pm
New church No Sunday service
established.

Dyu'?Jie Community Churdl
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - !0:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Belbel Cbuodl

TVC

Pastor: Rev. Krisana Rubinson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- I I a.m.

Hazel Community Church
OffRt. 124
Pnstor: Ed~el Hart
Sunday Sc hool · 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

W.Va.

Pastor: David Russe ll
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.

Ironton at Gallia Academy
River Valley at Meigs
Jackson al Vinlon County
Hamilton TWP at Marietta
Zanesville at Logan
Athens at Alexander
Warren at Parkersburg So.

Sy"""" Flnt llnlled Presby~&lt;rlon

SyracWJe Mission
1411 Bridgem1111 St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thmnpson,Pas1or
Sunday ~hool • 10 •.m.
Evening • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Racine
Pastor: Brian Hartness
Sunday School . 10 a.m.
Won;hip - II a.m.
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Today's Games

N. Marion at P.Pteasanl

Services: Saturday 2:00p.m.

Fallh NaUeJ TabemM;Ie. Churth
Bailey Run Road _,_
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Sef\'ice • 7 p.m.

EutLetart

SEOAL

FuU Gospel Chu~h of lhe Living
Savior
Rt.338, Antiquity
Pastor: Jesse MOrri s

Middleport Communlly Churth
575 Pearl Sl., Middleport
PastOr: Sam Anderson
Sunday_S,chooiiO a.m.
., E-.:ening ·7:30p.m. ..
Wednesday Service · ' :30 p.m.

•.

Prep football

New LICe VIctory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
P11stor: Bill Statei.
Sunday Se rvices- 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

923 S. Third St., Middlepnn

Snowvlll(:
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.

Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Churth
Pastor: Donald Balis
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Worship - \0:30a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:00p.m.

&lt;"hrislian l nion

Cllhori 'Dibernacle Chun=h
Clifton , W.Va.
SUnday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Se rvice - 7 p.m.

Serv ice time: Sunda y 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 7 prn

Salem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday Sc hool - 9:15a.m.
Worship- 10:15 a.m.

HIGHLIGHTS

Re:joiclna Lite Chun::b
500 N. 2nd Ave.. Middleport
Pastor: Mike FOreman
Pastor. Emeri lus Lawrence Foreman
Worship-- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

"Full-Gospel Church"
Pasion John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Secoo.l Ave. MliS(In

Rutland
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
' Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services • 7 p.m.

WHieyan Bible Hollnm Chun'h
75 Pearl _;it., Middl,epon.
Pas lor: Re.... Dou&amp;Cox
Sunday Worship - 9:30p.m.. 7: 30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30 p.m .

FRIDAY's

Slivers'o'Wt Community Cburch
P.d.Stor: Wayne R. Jewe ll
Sunday Servica • 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00 p.m.
Thursday - 7:00 p.in.

HantSI Oulreach Ministries
47439 Reibel Rd. , Oll!ster '
Pastors: Rev. Mory and Harold Cook
Sunday Services: 10 11..m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednu day Services· 7 p.m.

Rock Sprlnp.
Pastor. Keith Rader
Sunday School - 9:15 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday- 6 p.m.

Friday, September 7,1001

Letart, W.Va. Rl . I
Pastor. Bri1111 May
Sunday School · 9:30 a..m.
Wocship . 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 7:00 p.m.

A.HBJH! Life Center

Pine Grove Bible Holiness Church
112 mi le ofT Rt. 32:5
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30 H.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p. m.

Page 81

Cal'o'ary Bible Churt'h
Pomero)' Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blad:wood.
Sunday School · 9:30·a.m.
Wnnhi p 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service • "1:30 p.m.

· Ash Street C.hurdl
Ash St .. MiddlcponSunday Sc hool - 10:00 11..m.
Sunday Servict · 6:00p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00 p.m.

The Daily Sentinel

AL Roundr~p, Page BJ
Skyline honors Clingan, Page B6

Faith FtUowsblp Cruade for Cbrht
Pastor: R:C'o'. Franklin Dicke ns
Service : Friday, 7 p.m.

( ltlll'r ( 'hurdll's

Pearl Chapel
Sunday School -9 a.m.
Worsh ip - 10 a.m.

Inside:

Fal"lew Bible Cburdl

Portt.nd First Chun-h ot the Nazartnt
Paslor. Will iam Justis
Sunday &amp;:hool · 10:00 a.m.
Morning WoriDip - 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Service · 6:30 p.m.

MlnenJ'o'IUe
Pastor. Bob Robinson
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worsh ip · 10 a.m.

Cal'o'ary Pilgrim Ch•pel
Harri1&gt;0nviJ!e Road
Pastor: Charles McKcnzil:
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Worship - I I a.tJ, , 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

214 E. Main

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville. Ohio
740·667-3110

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wol'$hip- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Heath (Middleport)
Pastor: Rob Brower
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - II :00 a.m.

I

Whllt'l Cbapd Waleyu
Coolvi lle Road
Jlastur: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Won~hl p - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

R:utlaOd Church ot lbt Nuaren~
Pa.~I Qr: Rev. Samuel W. Basye

FortSt Run
Pastor: Bob Rohinson
Sunday Sc hool - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 11.m.

Our Sa'o'inur Luthen~n Church
Walnm and Henry Sts., Rav~~ swnod,

RACINE PLANING MILL
Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

Main Street: Ru1lnnd
Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m.
Sunday Scrvice- 7 p.m.

Lanyl'o'llle Chrllltian Chul'(h
•·
• Pastor: Robert Musser
St~nda)' School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship~ l 0: 30. 1l. m....:Z: 30.. p . m ~-------Wednesday Service 7 ~ 30p . m .
Keednllh! Church of Chrlsl
Postor: Philip Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30 a.m.
Worship Serv ice: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Mt. Moriah Bapdsl
Fourth &amp;.. Main St. , Middlcpon
Pastor: Rev. GilDen Craig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 u.m.

1
PMmr. Rev. Amos Till is

Lalll' r-Da~

Wedntiday ServiL-es - 7 p.m.

Flalwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

~kkory

Hillside Baptist Church
St. Rt. 143 jusl off Rt. 7
Pastor: Re ~·. lames R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday Unified Servic e
Worship - 10:30a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7 p.m.

Forest Run Bapllst
Pastor : Ariu s Hun
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wor~ hip - II a.m.

Jlolinl'ss

•vy

F....ro. GoopdMIAioo
Uald Knob, oo Co. Rd . J l
Putor: Rev. Raser Willford
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

Cbt:stcr Churt'h of' the Nazartne
Pastor: Rev. He:rbe rt Gra te
Su!day School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · II a.m.. 6 p.m.

Enterprist
Pastor: Keith Rade r
SuDday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a. m.

Sunday SdlOOl aad
Holy Eucharist 11 :00 a.m.

Pomeroy We5l'iide Churt'h or Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday 5(:hool - II a.m.
Worship · IOa.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

B a pti~t

•

'
326 E. Main St.. Pomeroy
Re v. JIUIIC s Bernacki, Re.... Kalharin .Foster

Mi.n\ster: Ant hony Morris
Sund~ y School - 9:30 am.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.,"6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pas!or. Neil Tennant _.Sunday Sc!rvkes- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

y

Grace EplliCOpal Church

e

Kinpbwy Rood

Pa.stor. JIll la'lleftdet
Sunday ScbQOI . 9:30l.m.
Worship . I 0:30a.m. aod 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scn·k-es • 7 p.m.

CtolraJ Chu;tn
Asbury (Syracuse)
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Worship - I I a.m.
~e&lt;lnesday Strvi.ces • 7:30p.m.

y Q.... • •

Pa!tor: Robert Vance
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
WonJUp Service I0:30a.m.
No Sunday 0( Wednesday Nig.ht SeNioei

Pomtrvy Cburcll ol the NIIZP'toe

1\lpptn Plaiu St. Paul
Pltstor: Jane lkMtie
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
1\tiday Se!'Yices · 7:30p.m.

' tY"-&amp; ( '

Souda 8etbcl New Ttstuleat
su . .cr Ridat
Pwur. Robert: Suber
Sund.ly School - 9 a.m.
Sun. Wonhip - 10:10 a. m., 6p.m.
Wednesday Sen-icc - "' p.m.
Carlet01 lnten~ottt&lt;NJ~hlatloul Churdl

Syr-Kme Cbu~b ol thc NIIU~mE
Pauor M1ke Adkins
Suoday School - 9:30 a..m.
Worsbip · I0:30a.m.. 6p.m.
Wednesday Service~ - 7 p.m.

Rttdn ilk
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - I0:lU a,m.
Fin1Sul\day of Monlh - "1 :00 p.m. service

Triniry Churtb
•SecQOd &amp; lynn, Pomeroy
Pllstoc Re~·. CraiJ Crownan
Worship 10;23 a.m.
Sunday School 9:15 a.m.

Uemlotk Gre..,t Chriniu Churth
Pastor: RLchard Nease
Sunl.4y Sdlooi~ 10:30 a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m.
Bible SIUd}'· 7p.m.

Sunda y School · 9:30 t.m.
WorWp • 10:4 5 ua .. 7 pm .
Wcdnt5dly Servkc~o · 7 p.m.

Sunday School · '1:30 a.m.
Woo;h.ip ; I0:30 a.m.

( 'onun•ualiona
l
,... ...

( "hlll"l"h or ( 'hrisl

C hun:b ot J esw~ C hrilit

I

Pastor: Rev. DavKt Russell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
E~·enlng Servicei· 6:30 p.m.
Wedne'iday ServicH - 6;30 p.m.

I

.

Park . "It's been a pretty go od

On Thursday night at
Coors. Los Angeles and ColBonds has 21 games left to orado combin.ed for six home
break Mark M cGwire's record runs in th e badgers' 9- 5 vicof 70 hom e runs in 1998. Th e . t o~y.
Giants' Star isn't sure he can
Th e Giants pulled within I
catch Dig M ac.
1/ 2 games of Arizona for the
14
This is a pennant race," he division lead · and moved one
said. " There's not going to be percentage point behind
that many chances."
C hi cago (or the wild card.
Friday ni gh t, Bonds and
Bonds hit No. 60 in the
Giants begin a three-ga111e Giants' l41st gam e, one game
series against last-place C ol- faster than M cGwire did in his
orado in a prim e home-run
haven .
Please see NL.. 83 .

year.

l

�r u.u-.''"''· ••••wW•c.: e.AJ• h...,.,,•. .,.
Sunday SdKJol lO amMomml wors.h.Jp II am Evening - 7 pm
Wednci'ky 7 p.m.
Cb urtb or Jnu Cltrist Apo~tolic
Vanl.andl. and Ward Rd.

Jopp11
'~
Puwr. Bob RmJolph1
Worship • 9:Lf"a-m.
Sunday School -1 _0:30 a.m.

Churth of God ot Pnlpht&lt;-y
O.J. Wh ite Rd.off SI. Rt.l 60
Pll61or: P.J. Cha pman
Sunday Scln&gt;l - 10 a.m.
Wnnhip - II a.m.
Wednesday Strv icu - 7 p.m.

Loua'llottom

( "a tho lk

Pastor· JameJ Mill er
Sunda}' School - 10:30 a.m.

Sacrtd Heut Catholic Churdl
161 Mulberry 1\\ 't ., Pomeroy, 992-5898
P~Utor. Reto'. Walter E. Heinl
Sat Ctm. 4 : 4~ " 5 : 15p.m.; Millis- .5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. - 8 :45- IJ: \ ~ a.m .
Sun. Mass · 9:30a.m.
Dailey Ma s~ - lkJO a.m.

Eveninj - 7:30 p.m.
Rher Valley

Aposlohc Woohtp Center
1!73 S. l rd Ave., Middl eport
Kevin Konkle, PastcwSunda:;. 10 a.m. and 6:00p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.; Youth Fri. 7:30p.m.

Apostolic F'aith
Lima Road
Sunday. 10 il.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m
Ne ~o~.·

Pomrroy ChUrt'h of Christ
;! \ 2 W. M1110 St

L• btrt y Assembly or God
P.O. l:klx 467. Dudding Lam:
Mason, W.V11.

Little Crttk Baprl!;t Church
Price Hollow Rd., Rutland
Pastor: John Swanson
Sunday S.:hool - 10:00 a.m,
Morni ng Service I I :00 a.m.

Middleport C hu rch or Chrisl
~th and Main
P~ s t or: AI Hanson
Youth Mim ~t c r: Bill Fruzier
Sunday School - ~U O a.m.
Wnl"i hip- K:\5. IO:JIIa.m., 7 p.m
WedncWay Services- 7 p.m.

Evening Service · 6:00 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.

Hope Baptist Church (Southern)
:'iiO Gram St., Middl epor1
Sunday ~hool- 9:30a.m.
Worship . I I a.m. and 6 p.m.

Ke'no Church of Christ
Worship - ':1:30 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Pusmr-Jeffre y Wall ace
Isl and 3rd sUnday
'
Be~~~ r w~tllow Ridge Churth of Chri5t
Pastnr:Teny S1ewan
Su nday Schoo l .9:30a.m.
Worship - IO:JO a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Serv ices · 6:30p.m.

Wednesday Sef'olice • 7 p.m.
Rullud Flnt Ha peisl Chun:h

;e .

Sunday S choo l ~ 9:30 a.m.
Worship - !0:4:'i a.m.

Pomcl'(ly Fint Baplisl
·Ea.~! Main St.
Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m.
First Southern Baptist
41 872 Poin~·ruy t'ikc
Pa.~ lm : E. Lamar O' Hryam
Sunday Schoo l · 9:30a.m
wOrship - 10:45 a.m.. 7:00 p.m
Wednesday Servir;es- 7:00 p.m.

Zion Church of Christ
f&gt;omeroy, Harri so nville Rd. (RI.I 4])
P:t St0r: Roger Watson
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wtnship - IU:JO a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Fil'!il Raplist Chun:h

Tupptrs Plain Churt'h of Christ
Inslnuncntal
Worship Service- Ya.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sundoy School - 10:15 a.m
Youth- S:JO pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Pas1or: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St. , Middlepon
Sunday School · 9: IS a.m.
Worsh ip - !0:15a.m.. 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.
Racine Flnt Baptlsl
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School.- 9:30 a.m.
Worshi p - I 0:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

;.

.Sih·e r Run Baptist
Pastor: Steven K. Little
Sunday School - IOa.m.
Worship.- ll a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednes day Services- 7:00p.m.
MI. Uniou Baptist

Pas10r : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Even ing · 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday s~rvic es - 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem Baptist Churt'h
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastur : Dtllliel Mecca
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Su*y Worshi p· 10:30 a.m
Wednesday Bible Study· ti:OO p.m.
Old Bethel F~e Will Bapll~l Church
2860 1 St. Rt. '7. Middlcpon .
Sunday School • I0 ll.m.
Evening - 7:00p.m.
Thursday·Servil: es-;--'7 :00

Bradbury Chun:h of Christ
Pastor: Jim Eaton
39558 IJ r~~db u ry Road, Middleport
Sundlly School - 9:30 a. m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Rutland Churth of Christ
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wor!ihip · 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Bradford Chun=h of Christ
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbu ry Rd.

Minister: Doug Shamblin '
YOuth Mini ster: Bil.l Aml&gt;erger
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
WOrship · 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:00p.m.
Hills Chun=h of Christ
Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a. m.. 6:30p.m.
Wedne,day Services· 7 p.m.

Vlttory Baptist lndtpendtnl
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pas tor: James E. Keesee
Worship · lO~t. m. , 7 p.m.
Wedn esday Services - 7 p.m.

De"ler Church of Christ
Pastor: Nathan Rob inson
. Sund ay SChool 9:30 a.m.
Norman Wil l, superintendent
Sunday worship - 10:30 11.m.

Faith Baptist Church
Rai lroad St., Mason
Sunday Sc hool - 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a. m.• ti p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Chun=h of Chrlsl
lntcn;ccl ion 7 aml l24·W
Evange list: Denn i~ Sargent
Sunday Bi ble Sludy - 9:30a.m.
Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wedncstluy Bible Study · 7 p.m.

Antiqully Baptist
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wurship - 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evening· 6:00 p.m.
Pastor: Mark McComas
Rutland FrH WID Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Thylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wedn esday Servio.:s - 7 p.m.
Setond Baptist Churth
. Ravenswood. WV
Pasto r: David W. M cC I ~ in

992·3978

Dan'o'JIIe Holin~ Churrll
31057 S111te Route 325. Langsvlle
r astor: Gary Jackson
Sunday school · 9:30 a.m.
Sunday WOJshi p • 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m
Wednesday prayer service- 7 !).m.

Community ol Christ
Pflnland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Michae.J Duhl
Sunday School · 9;30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

Rose of Sh•ron Holiness Chun=h
Leading Creek Rd .. Rutland
Pas tur: Rev. lkwcy King
sUnday sehoul - 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayH meeting- 7 p.m.

Pomeroy
P11stor: Rod Brower
WOJshi p - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:35 a.m.

Hysell Run HoUness Churdl
Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursda y Dible Study and Youth ~ 7 p.m.

77 3 - ~ 017

Abundant G111ce R.F. I.
Pastor Teresa Davis
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Faith Full G011pe:l Chun=h
· L.ong Douom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wo'l'llhip - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.
Friday . fellowship se rvice 7 p.m.

Bethany
Pastor: Oewayne Swtler ·
Su'nday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Wednesday Scrvk.-es • IP a.m.

The Bellenn' Fellowship Mlnilltry
New Lime Rd., Rutland
PaStor: Re v. Margaret J. Robinson
Serv ices: Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, 2:30 p.m.

Cannti.Sullon
Ca1111et &amp; Ba..;han Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Saints

The Churtb of Jesw
Christ or Latter-Day Solnts
St. Rt. \60, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School t 0:20.1 I a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood II :05· 12:00
"' • "'· noon
Sacramenl Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeling, lst Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Morni1111S1ar
Plllltor: DewRyoc Stut1c.r
Sund11y School - II 11.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Harrl10nvtUe Community Cllureb
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesdily - 7 p.m.

~'

•

--"--~

l .ulheran

,Pustor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Won hip - 9 a.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

St. John Lulhtran Church
Pine Grove
Wors hip - 9:00o.m.
Sunday Schoo! · 10:00 a. m.

(.;oolvllle Unhed Melhodlsl Parish
Pastur: Helen Kline
Coolville Ch;1rch
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
, Tuesday Services - 7 p.m.

St. Paul L_ulheran Church
&amp; Second St., Pomeroy

~umer Sycamore

Sunday School · 9:4S a.m.
Worship · I I a.m.

Township Rd .. 468C
Sunday School ~ 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
We4nesday Services - 10 a. m.

l nill'd \ll'lhodisl
Grallam Uolted Melhodisl
Worship- 9:30 a.m. (] st &amp;. 2nd Sun).
7:30p.m. (3ni &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Hartford Church of Christ in
Christian Union
Hanford, W.Va.
t'astor:Jim Hughes
Sunduy Sc hool - II n.m.
Wo r~hip · 9:30 a,m., 7:30p.m. .
Wednesday Sel'\•ices- 7:30p.m.

Mt. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 bci1ind Wilkesv ille
Pastnr: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Serv ices - 7 p.m.

( 'hurch of( ;od
Mt. Moriah Churth of God
Mile Hill Rd .. Rac ine
PIL'itor: Brice Uu
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Eveni ng · 6 p. m.
Wednesday Serv tces - 7 p.m.

Mlllgs CooperatJve Parish
Northeast Clusler
Alfred
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - II n.m., 6:30 p.m.

Rutland Churfb of God
Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesd11y Services - 7 p.m.

'\atan'lll'
M5ddleporl Chun::b of lht Nuamte
Pastor: Allen Midcap
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor.;hi p - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedne sday Sm •ices • 7 p.m.
Pu tor: Allen Midcap

Chattr
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursdoy Services - 7 p.m.

Syratusc First Church ot God
Apple and .Second Sts.

iht!dsl'llle Fellowship
Olurch of the Nazarene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck

Pomeroy

t?
---·

lllloco I. Fhloo· Dlroctar
190 lAst . .
•-·~ OH 41769

sk.. •

74G-992-5444

992·3785

l\eal ~~tate

748-992-5141

216 E. Second Pomeroy
740.992-3325
Marketing Prctllell"tY

~-~ R. Au11, Jr.- Diredor

Brogan-Warner
.INSURANCE
SERVICES

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
"We Fill Doctors'
~fescriptions

992-5130
Pomeroy

NEW HAVEN

EWING FUNERAL
HOME

l 'nill•d llrl'lhrl'n
'

United Faith Chun:h
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robcn E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School · .9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.
FuU Goepel Ugbthouse
3304.5 Hiland Road, Pflmeroy
Pastor:- Roy Homer
Sunday &amp;:hool - 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday &amp; 11mf1i'lay - :7:30p.m.

l

I

' :

992-2955

Pomeroy

lng'et's Carpet

~Lit u1 Mnd yot~' thoughft with JIIOefll ~It·

740-992·2844

740-992-6298

.

,onv FLOWER SHOP I .:Always &amp; 'Forever ·

9ift Sfiop

106 BUTIERNUT AVE.

992·6454

'Flowers for all occasions'

5181;!. Main St.

Pomeroy, OH

992-1161

~'1

Office SErvlcep Supply
FUNERAL HOME
169 N 2nd Ave.
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
"We accept Preneed Transfers"
Dlgnl~::b~l:;;'~;~ways
Middleport, OH
992-7075
~iddleport, OH
82 82
172
Lundy Brow~ . ~egan Brown
992·2121
992•7028
=~d~~e!:':.~hAve.
992-6376
~~~~~~A~v:•~-_:~~~L.......~..~........L.~~~~~~....~.J~
.;;;~~~
SNOUFFER FIRE&amp;
SAFETY SALES &amp;
SERVICE

......

....'
•.

.

.

•

.......

- There will
be a course offered in the
Jackson; Ohio area for anyone
int.e rested in officiating Ohio
high school basketball.
For more information, contact Jim Derrow at 384-5069
-r..~ - by
- e-mail
a t
jsd14@bright:het;
Mike
Rome at 286- 2482 or
kaboobi@bright.net; or Chad
Jenkins at 286-1064.
The registration deadline is
September 22.

nger leads at
canadian Open

"'
•·

Eden United Brethren in Cltrist
2 112 miles n.orth of Reeds'!ille
on Slate Rout e 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School · 11 ~t . m .
,
Sunday Worship - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00 p.m.•
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youlh Service . 7:30p.m.

W. Main St., Pomeroy

Po~OY,OH

JACK~ON

I

In Chrisl Chun=h
Teu~ Community off CR 82
.Pastor. Roben Sanders
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

"Featuring Kentucky Fried
Chicken"

992-5432

coune offered

Stventii·Day Ad'o'enllst
Mulberry Hts. Rd .. Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Ser.~ices:
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
W()rsiJip · 3 p.m.

:rnul'!; Family Restaurant

214 5oollo Soctool An. • Mld.opan, OH 45160

212 E. Main Street

.:1.

Hoops officials'

Salem Community Churtb
Lievina Road, West Qllumbia, W.Va.
Pastor: Clyde Fellllli
Sunday School 9:30 am
Sunday evening sef\'ice 6 pm
Wednesday service 7 pm

Sc'" 'lllh -ll.ll \cllt·nli ' l

Mt. Olive Communil)' Church
Pastor: Lllwreoce Bush
Sunday Sehoul - 9:311 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedncday Service· 7 p.m.

Torth Churth
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Today'a Gamaa
Wahama at Eastem
Buffalo-Putnam at Hannan
Southern at South Gallia
Rock Hill at Oak Hill
Riverside al Ripley
Roane Co.at Ravenswood

Mlddieport Pmbylerian
Sunday School · 9 a:m.
Worship · IOa.m.

Faith Gollpel Church
L.ong Bottom
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.

Hudr.ingport Chun:h
Grand Street
Sunday ~hool • 10 a.m.
Worship - II a. m.
WedneMia)' ServiCes- 8 p.tn.

Non-league .

H•rrllonvllle Pmbylerlan Ctlurth
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sun'iiay School • 9:45 a.m.

Morse Chapel Chul"('h
Sunday school • I0 ~ m .
Wonhip • II a,m.
Wednc5day Service- 7 p.m .

..

'•

Penttcoetal Auembl~
St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pll!ltor: Wllllum Hob11ok."
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Bobcat rushing game scares WVU
M O R G ANTOWN. WVa. (AP) Tailga ters at West Virg inia's home
opener with O hio will have plenty to
talk about on Saturday.
It's new W VU coach Rich
R odriguez's fi rst ho me game, and for
the first ti me in person , most will see
his snazzy offense that spreads the field
and doesn't huddle.
O n the other side is O hio"s op tion
attack, w hicl) is a crowd~pleas i ng
game of keepaway. T he cloc k- eatin g
offense rarely involves a passing play
· and could have fans back at th eir cars
and camp ers coo king another batch of
bratwu q ts qui cker than they had
expected.

"When we played an optio n team at
Wisco nsin, the game we nt li ke that.':
said first-yea r West Virginia defensive
coordinator Phil Elmassian, snapping
his fin gers. '" It was over , in 2 1/ 2
hours. I was railgating at 2:45 for a
noon game.
'"The goal is to get ou r team the ball
eight ti mes, because the option team &gt;
are goin g to ch ew the clock."
For West Virgin ia, the question ts
how m any chances will it have tO
score. Th e Mountainee rs' only touch-·
down drive in a 34- 10 loss at Doston
C ollege last week was I yard after
th ey recovered a fumbl e.
Several other chances end ed w ith

MONTREAL (AP) - .Tiger
Woods wasn 't interested in
revenge at Royal Montreal Golf
Club, only a chance to win
another Canadian Open. He
took care ofboth matters with a
S-under-par 65 that gave him a
share of the lead.
Returning to the course
where four year.; ago he missed
his only cut as a professional,
WOods """ rarely in trouble and
capped off a nearly flawless
round by hitting a 5-iron to 6
feet on No. 18.
He """ joined at 65 by Jim
McGovern, Matt Gogel and
rookie Michael Muehr, three
guys who have not finished bet~
ter than fifth on the PGA Tour
this year.

NEWYORK (AP) - For the
first time in 14 years, replacements will be on the field for
NFL games. Replacement officiak.
The NFL referees' union
rejected the league's larest contr.lct of!er, and replacement officiak will work at least the opening weekend of the regulai'sea-

son.
The NFL Referees' Association executive board uhanimously rejected the offer presented
Wednesday. Tom Condon, who
represents the officiak, infonned
]elf Pash, the league's lead negollator, of the vote in a letter.
· The league is proceeding on a
week-by-week basis, but with .no
new talks scheduled, the 112
replacement officials and six
league supervisors likely will
work games beyond this
weekend.

Please see Ohio, 83

to put away
the Pirates, 8~6
PITTSBURGH (Af') Danny Graves likes th e company he 's keeping.
Graves pitched a perfect
ninth for his 25th save, and
Ken Griffey Jr. hit a two-run
double in the. seventh inning
as the Cincinnati Reds overcam e a five - run deficit to beat
th e Pittsburgh Pirates 8-6
Thursday night.
Graves joined John Franco
as .the only Reds reliever to
have three consecutive seasons"
with at least 25 saves.
"That's pretty cool,'' Grave s
said. "John Franco is second
all- time in saves, and to be
mentioned along with him is a
pretty good accomplishment."
The Reds got 6 2- 3 score_ Je,;s-inntings from four relieversafter starter Jose Acevedo was
knocked out in the third. ·
'"That's been the area that's
been most consistent for us,"
Cincinnati' manager Bob
Doone said of his bullpen.
"For a long time, we were fir st
or second in ERA."
Cincinnati kept the Pirates
fr'lm winning their fourth
· consec utive game, which
would have matched their best
streak this season.
WJth the score tied 5, 5,
Rich Loiselle (0-1 ), making
his first major leagu e appearance since July 21, gave up an
HOLY COW, STOLEN BASE- Cincinnati's Pokey Reese steals second in the fourth inning infi eld single to Todd Walker
Thursday. Attempting the tag is shortstop Jack Wilson. (AP)

to open the seventh.
Adam Dunn walked, and
Griffey drove in both runners
with a double down the leftfield line. Pokey Reese added
a sacrifice fly.
Jim Brower (7 -9) got the
win with three innings of
one-hif relief.
Pirates starter Dave Williams
had a S-0 lead after three
innings, but couldn't hold it.
The rookie gave up five runs
in th e fourth, three unearned
because of second baseman
Warren Morris' fielding error.
Dunn singled to open the
fourth and went to third when
Morris couldn't handle Sean
Casey's grounder. Aaron
Boone, Dmitri Young and
R eese- hit- Gonsecutive- runscoring singles, and Walker
chased Williams with a tworun single.
Acevedo gave up five runs
in 2 1-3 innings. Chad Hermansen opened the first with
a double and scored on a single by Aramis Ramirez.
Williams added an RBI
double in the second.
Casey's two- base error on
Morris' hard grounder to first
base helped the Pirates score
three runs in the third. Jason
Kendall had an RBI single.
Ramirez singled in the seventh off Scott Sullivan and
sc0 red on Kendall's single.

PREP ROUNDUP

Lady Marauders
·improve to 4-0

CLOSING IN San Francisco
Giants' Barry
Bonds swings
for his 60th
home run of the
season off Ari·
zona Diamond·
backs' Albie
Lopez in the sec·
ond inning
Thursday at
Pacific Bell Park
in San Franc is·
co. (AP)

BY DAVE H,t.RRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

ROCK SPRINGS -The M eigs Marauders. under th e
direction of Coach Rick Ash ran their overnll and TVC
record to 4-0 Thursday evening by defeating Wellston 151, 15- 7 at Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
·
Jaynee Davis led the Lady Marauders with eight points
cin 11 of 11 serving and two kills. Mindy Chancey added
seven points on I0 of I0 serving, one kill and four assists,
Kayte Davis added five points on six of seven serving
with two kills.
Katie Jeffers added four points on six of six serving, two
kills and two assists, Corrie Hoover chipped in with three
points on six of six serving and one assist, Nikki Butcher
added three points on six of seven serving. Ch rissy Miller
added three kills and one block and Tirzah Dodson had

one assist.·
The Little Marauders kept their record perfect with a
15-1,15-7 win over the Rockets.
The Marauders will ho1t Trimble in a TVC match on
Tuesday evening, junior varsity action gets underway at
5:55.
.

Meigs falls to Wahama
MASON - Wahama defeated Meigs and Point Pleasant in a tri-golf match Thursday afternoon played on th e
Blue Tees on the front nine at Riverside Golf Course.
Wahaina had a 165, followed by Point Pleasant with a
171 and M eigs carded a 196. Nathan Fowler ofWahama
and Robbie Williamson of Point Pleasant were co- n.l atch

Please see Prep, 83
'I

.' . . .

day."
It won't be easy fro m the opening
kickoff. WVU's defense is decimated
by injury. It has not only worked with
several new players at di fferent positions this week, but it has to defe nd a
different type o f offense.
"It"s tough to learn in a week. Just
cover a gap," said linebac ker Kyle Kayden . " We just need to tac kle, espec ial~
ly with option ball .You have responsibility and if everybody does it it is
very easy to make the play. But 'if one
gu y messe&lt; up, that's wh en the big
plays hap pe n."'

Reds rally Jate

Bonds hits No. 60 in win
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

At 60 and counting, Barry
Bonds is heading to the per~ ·
feet place to cnase home- run
history.
Hello, Coors Field!
Bo nd s b ecam e th e fifth
player to reach baseball's oncemagic mark . hitting N o. 60 as
the San Francisco Giants beat
NL West-leadin g Arizon a 9- 5
Thursday night.
" That on e was impressive. I
couldn 't believe it,'' ht said
~fter his drive at Pacific Dell

·~1
'

turnovers and missed field goals.
"'We were pretty close to breaking a
couple big plays," said qu arterback
Brad Lewis. " I 31T1 sure th roughout th e
seaso n those will come. T he offense
drove the whole ti me."
So did O hio in a 31-29 loss at
Akron . T h e Bobcats amassed 339
rushing yard&lt;, averaging 5. 7 ya rds per
rush.
WV U's defense al lowed 325 yards
rushing at DC.
"One of the ha rdes t thin gs to do on
defe nse is the open- fiel d tackl e,'" sa id
West Virginia coac h R ich R o,d ri guez.
" We have to open- fiel d tackle ve ry
wdl o n Satu rday or it will be a long

Today'e Games
Wahama at Eastern
River vatley al Meigs
Southam at South Gallia
Jackson at Vinton County
Waverly at Wellston
Miller at Bema Union
Trimble al SE Ross
Fairfield Union at N-YOII&lt;
Waterford at Frontier
Athens al Alexander
Zane Trace a1 F. Hocking
Belpre at Fort Frye

GGd's Teraple or Praise
31'665 McQuire Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
Pastor: Wayne Balcolm
Services: Thurs. Nltcs 7:00pm
New church No Sunday service
established.

Dyu'?Jie Community Churdl
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - !0:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Belbel Cbuodl

TVC

Pastor: Rev. Krisana Rubinson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- I I a.m.

Hazel Community Church
OffRt. 124
Pnstor: Ed~el Hart
Sunday Sc hool · 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

W.Va.

Pastor: David Russe ll
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.

Ironton at Gallia Academy
River Valley at Meigs
Jackson al Vinlon County
Hamilton TWP at Marietta
Zanesville at Logan
Athens at Alexander
Warren at Parkersburg So.

Sy"""" Flnt llnlled Presby~&lt;rlon

SyracWJe Mission
1411 Bridgem1111 St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thmnpson,Pas1or
Sunday ~hool • 10 •.m.
Evening • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Racine
Pastor: Brian Hartness
Sunday School . 10 a.m.
Won;hip - II a.m.
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Today's Games

N. Marion at P.Pteasanl

Services: Saturday 2:00p.m.

Fallh NaUeJ TabemM;Ie. Churth
Bailey Run Road _,_
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Sef\'ice • 7 p.m.

EutLetart

SEOAL

FuU Gospel Chu~h of lhe Living
Savior
Rt.338, Antiquity
Pastor: Jesse MOrri s

Middleport Communlly Churth
575 Pearl Sl., Middleport
PastOr: Sam Anderson
Sunday_S,chooiiO a.m.
., E-.:ening ·7:30p.m. ..
Wednesday Service · ' :30 p.m.

•.

Prep football

New LICe VIctory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
P11stor: Bill Statei.
Sunday Se rvices- 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

923 S. Third St., Middlepnn

Snowvlll(:
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.

Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Churth
Pastor: Donald Balis
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Worship - \0:30a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:00p.m.

&lt;"hrislian l nion

Cllhori 'Dibernacle Chun=h
Clifton , W.Va.
SUnday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Se rvice - 7 p.m.

Serv ice time: Sunda y 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 7 prn

Salem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday Sc hool - 9:15a.m.
Worship- 10:15 a.m.

HIGHLIGHTS

Re:joiclna Lite Chun::b
500 N. 2nd Ave.. Middleport
Pastor: Mike FOreman
Pastor. Emeri lus Lawrence Foreman
Worship-- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

"Full-Gospel Church"
Pasion John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Secoo.l Ave. MliS(In

Rutland
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
' Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services • 7 p.m.

WHieyan Bible Hollnm Chun'h
75 Pearl _;it., Middl,epon.
Pas lor: Re.... Dou&amp;Cox
Sunday Worship - 9:30p.m.. 7: 30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30 p.m .

FRIDAY's

Slivers'o'Wt Community Cburch
P.d.Stor: Wayne R. Jewe ll
Sunday Servica • 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00 p.m.
Thursday - 7:00 p.in.

HantSI Oulreach Ministries
47439 Reibel Rd. , Oll!ster '
Pastors: Rev. Mory and Harold Cook
Sunday Services: 10 11..m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednu day Services· 7 p.m.

Rock Sprlnp.
Pastor. Keith Rader
Sunday School - 9:15 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday- 6 p.m.

Friday, September 7,1001

Letart, W.Va. Rl . I
Pastor. Bri1111 May
Sunday School · 9:30 a..m.
Wocship . 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 7:00 p.m.

A.HBJH! Life Center

Pine Grove Bible Holiness Church
112 mi le ofT Rt. 32:5
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30 H.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p. m.

Page 81

Cal'o'ary Bible Churt'h
Pomero)' Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blad:wood.
Sunday School · 9:30·a.m.
Wnnhi p 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service • "1:30 p.m.

· Ash Street C.hurdl
Ash St .. MiddlcponSunday Sc hool - 10:00 11..m.
Sunday Servict · 6:00p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00 p.m.

The Daily Sentinel

AL Roundr~p, Page BJ
Skyline honors Clingan, Page B6

Faith FtUowsblp Cruade for Cbrht
Pastor: R:C'o'. Franklin Dicke ns
Service : Friday, 7 p.m.

( ltlll'r ( 'hurdll's

Pearl Chapel
Sunday School -9 a.m.
Worsh ip - 10 a.m.

Inside:

Fal"lew Bible Cburdl

Portt.nd First Chun-h ot the Nazartnt
Paslor. Will iam Justis
Sunday &amp;:hool · 10:00 a.m.
Morning WoriDip - 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Service · 6:30 p.m.

MlnenJ'o'IUe
Pastor. Bob Robinson
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worsh ip · 10 a.m.

Cal'o'ary Pilgrim Ch•pel
Harri1&gt;0nviJ!e Road
Pastor: Charles McKcnzil:
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Worship - I I a.tJ, , 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

214 E. Main

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville. Ohio
740·667-3110

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wol'$hip- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Heath (Middleport)
Pastor: Rob Brower
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - II :00 a.m.

I

Whllt'l Cbapd Waleyu
Coolvi lle Road
Jlastur: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Won~hl p - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

R:utlaOd Church ot lbt Nuaren~
Pa.~I Qr: Rev. Samuel W. Basye

FortSt Run
Pastor: Bob Rohinson
Sunday Sc hool - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 11.m.

Our Sa'o'inur Luthen~n Church
Walnm and Henry Sts., Rav~~ swnod,

RACINE PLANING MILL
Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

Main Street: Ru1lnnd
Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m.
Sunday Scrvice- 7 p.m.

Lanyl'o'llle Chrllltian Chul'(h
•·
• Pastor: Robert Musser
St~nda)' School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship~ l 0: 30. 1l. m....:Z: 30.. p . m ~-------Wednesday Service 7 ~ 30p . m .
Keednllh! Church of Chrlsl
Postor: Philip Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30 a.m.
Worship Serv ice: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Mt. Moriah Bapdsl
Fourth &amp;.. Main St. , Middlcpon
Pastor: Rev. GilDen Craig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 u.m.

1
PMmr. Rev. Amos Till is

Lalll' r-Da~

Wedntiday ServiL-es - 7 p.m.

Flalwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

~kkory

Hillside Baptist Church
St. Rt. 143 jusl off Rt. 7
Pastor: Re ~·. lames R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday Unified Servic e
Worship - 10:30a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7 p.m.

Forest Run Bapllst
Pastor : Ariu s Hun
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wor~ hip - II a.m.

Jlolinl'ss

•vy

F....ro. GoopdMIAioo
Uald Knob, oo Co. Rd . J l
Putor: Rev. Raser Willford
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

Cbt:stcr Churt'h of' the Nazartne
Pastor: Rev. He:rbe rt Gra te
Su!day School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · II a.m.. 6 p.m.

Enterprist
Pastor: Keith Rade r
SuDday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a. m.

Sunday SdlOOl aad
Holy Eucharist 11 :00 a.m.

Pomeroy We5l'iide Churt'h or Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday 5(:hool - II a.m.
Worship · IOa.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

B a pti~t

•

'
326 E. Main St.. Pomeroy
Re v. JIUIIC s Bernacki, Re.... Kalharin .Foster

Mi.n\ster: Ant hony Morris
Sund~ y School - 9:30 am.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.,"6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pas!or. Neil Tennant _.Sunday Sc!rvkes- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

y

Grace EplliCOpal Church

e

Kinpbwy Rood

Pa.stor. JIll la'lleftdet
Sunday ScbQOI . 9:30l.m.
Worship . I 0:30a.m. aod 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scn·k-es • 7 p.m.

CtolraJ Chu;tn
Asbury (Syracuse)
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Worship - I I a.m.
~e&lt;lnesday Strvi.ces • 7:30p.m.

y Q.... • •

Pa!tor: Robert Vance
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
WonJUp Service I0:30a.m.
No Sunday 0( Wednesday Nig.ht SeNioei

Pomtrvy Cburcll ol the NIIZP'toe

1\lpptn Plaiu St. Paul
Pltstor: Jane lkMtie
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
1\tiday Se!'Yices · 7:30p.m.

' tY"-&amp; ( '

Souda 8etbcl New Ttstuleat
su . .cr Ridat
Pwur. Robert: Suber
Sund.ly School - 9 a.m.
Sun. Wonhip - 10:10 a. m., 6p.m.
Wednesday Sen-icc - "' p.m.
Carlet01 lnten~ottt&lt;NJ~hlatloul Churdl

Syr-Kme Cbu~b ol thc NIIU~mE
Pauor M1ke Adkins
Suoday School - 9:30 a..m.
Worsbip · I0:30a.m.. 6p.m.
Wednesday Service~ - 7 p.m.

Rttdn ilk
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - I0:lU a,m.
Fin1Sul\day of Monlh - "1 :00 p.m. service

Triniry Churtb
•SecQOd &amp; lynn, Pomeroy
Pllstoc Re~·. CraiJ Crownan
Worship 10;23 a.m.
Sunday School 9:15 a.m.

Uemlotk Gre..,t Chriniu Churth
Pastor: RLchard Nease
Sunl.4y Sdlooi~ 10:30 a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m.
Bible SIUd}'· 7p.m.

Sunda y School · 9:30 t.m.
WorWp • 10:4 5 ua .. 7 pm .
Wcdnt5dly Servkc~o · 7 p.m.

Sunday School · '1:30 a.m.
Woo;h.ip ; I0:30 a.m.

( 'onun•ualiona
l
,... ...

( "hlll"l"h or ( 'hrisl

C hun:b ot J esw~ C hrilit

I

Pastor: Rev. DavKt Russell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
E~·enlng Servicei· 6:30 p.m.
Wedne'iday ServicH - 6;30 p.m.

I

.

Park . "It's been a pretty go od

On Thursday night at
Coors. Los Angeles and ColBonds has 21 games left to orado combin.ed for six home
break Mark M cGwire's record runs in th e badgers' 9- 5 vicof 70 hom e runs in 1998. Th e . t o~y.
Giants' Star isn't sure he can
Th e Giants pulled within I
catch Dig M ac.
1/ 2 games of Arizona for the
14
This is a pennant race," he division lead · and moved one
said. " There's not going to be percentage point behind
that many chances."
C hi cago (or the wild card.
Friday ni gh t, Bonds and
Bonds hit No. 60 in the
Giants begin a three-ga111e Giants' l41st gam e, one game
series against last-place C ol- faster than M cGwire did in his
orado in a prim e home-run
haven .
Please see NL.. 83 .

year.

l

���Friday, Sept. 7, 2001
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

\

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

,. ALLEYOOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 5
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PROTECTION
AGENCY AND THE
OHIO WATER
DEVELOPMENT
AUTHORITY'S
- VIl;I;AGE CAPITAi;IMPROVEMENT
FUND (VCIF).
BE IT RESOLVED
· BY the Council ot the
Village of Pomeroy,
Melga County, Ohio:
SECTION 1: That It area, and
Ia neceaury to
WHEREAS, The
conatruct a waler Village of Pomeroy
treatment plant lor and aurroundlng area
lhe heallh, aalety and hae a critical need for
welfare
of . the such Improvements,
realdenla of lhe and
VIllage of Pomeroy,
WHEREAS,
Ohio.
Pomeroy Ia eligible to
SECTION II: That Ia apply for up to
It necaaaary lo apply $800,000 In CDBG
lor approval of a loan lunda to benefit
from the VIllage primarily low ancl
Capital Improvement moderate Income
Fund.
houeeholde. .
SECTION Ill: That
NOW THEREFORE,
lhe Mayor of lhe BE IT RESOLVED by
VIllage of Pomeroy, the Village Council of
OhiO, be and II Pomeroy to aubmlt
hereby authorized to an application to tha
requeat from lhe State of Ohio far an
VIllage
Capital FY 2002 CDBG Water
lmprovemenl Fund and Sanitary Sewer
the
oum
ot Program In order to
$50,000.00.
conatruct a Waler
SECTION IV: That Treatment Plant.
the
method of
BE IT FURTHER
repayment of moneya RESOLVED by the
loaned from the VIllage Council of
VIllage
Capital Pomeroy that tha
Improvement Fund Village will comply
be ao lollowa:
with tha raqulred
1) Full amount auurancea If the
upon financ ing for CDBG aaalatance Ia
the coriat r uctlon · approved.
project.
Pauad thla 20th
2) If the pt'Ojeot II day cf Auguat, 2001.
not financed within
twa yaare from the Kethy Hyltll, Clark
date of award, .
repayment ohall be John W. Blaettnar,
made In ouch equal Mayor
annual ·lnatallmente
(not e~ceedlng tan) (8) 24, 2001
and on auch ·date •• (8) 7, 2001
eat forth In the 2tc
Agreement between
OEPA, OWDA and the
Public Notice
VIllage for the loene.
3) that the Villaga'o
SHERIFF'S BALE
REAL ESTATE
dealgnated
repayment aourca
ehall be from Ita
CA$E NO. OOCV148
Wallr Fund.
4) If the project Ia
Flrater Benk, N.A.
financed
after
ebmt Star Bonk, N.A.,
paymanta
have
Plelntlff
atarted, the balance
va •.
of the loan ahall be
Kelly J. Gwinn·, et·al,
repaid Immediately.
Del8ndan11
Paaaed thlo 20th
day al Auguot, 2001 .
Court of Common
Pleaa, Melge County,
Kathy
Hyaell,
Ohio
Clerk/Treuurer
In pureuince of an
John W. Blaettnar, Order of Sale to me
Mayor
directed from aald
·c ourt In the above
(8) 24, 2001
entitled action, I will
(9) 7, 2001
expoae to oale at
2tc
public auction at the
Courthouse
an
10125101 at 10:00 a.m.
Public Notice
of aald day, the
following daacrlbed
RESOLUTION NO.
realeatate:
14.01
Situated In the
VIllage of Pomeroy, In
A RESOLUTION TO
• the County of Melga,
SUBMIT THE

· Dance the night away
at Meigs Senior Center.
6:30 • 9:30, Sept. Bth.
Music by George Hall
$8.00 per person

Mason
Dance
Sat. Night 9-1
Music by Rt. 33
for members &amp; guests

and State·of Ohio:
Situate In the E11t
part ·Of Fraction No.
17, Town No. 2, and
Range No. 13 and
bounded
and
described •• follows:
beginning at the
Sautheaal corner of a
half
acre
lot
heretofore dllded to
Barbara Neutzllng by
V.B. Horton and S.W.
Pomeroy; thence
North 87 degrllt
East 250 feel; thence
North 80.5 dagr11a
Eaat 50 fill; thlnca
North 44.5 degrees
Watt 225 faat; thence
South 71 degree•
Waet 82 feat to said
, Barbara Neutzllng'a
Northeaal earner;
thence South 18
dagreae Weal 188
faat to the place of
beginning, contelnlng
of an acre.
SAVE AND
EXCEPT the coal and
other mlnerale In the
premltll and the
right to mine the
aama
without
lncumberanca to tha
aurfaca and all ways
and rlghte of waya
along eny mlnaral
aeama for Mining
purpoaaa ara hereby
r11erved to V.B.
Horton and
Pomeroy.
SUBJECT to . all
legal . . . amanta,
lea11a, and rights o.f
way of record.
Prior lnatrument
refarencaa: Vcluma
23, Page 103.
Property addreaa:
25
Anna Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45788.
Appraleed
at:
$10,000.00.
Terme of aale: Cash

RESOLUTION NO.
13.01 ·

.ae

s.w.

James M. Soulaby
Sheriff, Meigs County
Carlo• S. Ramlra.z,
Lerner, Sampson &amp;
Rothfuss, 120 E.
Fourth Street, 8th
Floor, Clnclnattl, Ohio
45202
(513) 241-3100
OH Sup. Ct. M0087732
(9) 7, 14, 21 , 2001

A RESOLUTION
ADOPTING AN ANTI·
DISPLACEMENT AND
RELOCATION
ASSISTANCE PLAN
FOR CDBG
PROGRAMS

KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERllME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
nME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 99.1%
OF DAMACIINO
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

Windows • Room
Additions • Rooftng

COMMERCIAL and RESIDEIIIIIL

(8) 24, 2001
(8) 7, 2001·
2tc

...............

ltrllllllltll
11-IIWUI'I
lilt ........ C88l
llltiiiJ'IWOrlll.

...............
...
...........

lllrctftrllll ...

..

ff'.G~&lt;&gt;I

814849·2202

Rtclne,Ohio

992-5soa
M·r

Umestonel ·
SeRiara DIIC-11
mutnpte~Mt~

Dla:aunts

t'M 601N6 TO SE IN A RACE
TOMORROW .. I WONDER WAAT I
S~OULD EAT SEFORE THE RACE ..

1G·Ii:IITatll-fll.

..........

SIII:IJ-12:18

c.............

• New Oerag..

• Remodeling
Electrlclll: Plumbing ...
• Rooting I Outtora
• VInyl Siding • Painting
• Petlo and Porch Dtck1

Free Estimates

V. .c. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

1

1D SU66EST A
TUNA SANDWICI-I ..

1

IF 't'OU RE 601N6 TO 6E .
IN A RACE, ALWA'tS EAT
SOMETHING T~AT SWIMS FAST

DOWN

restricting East to the
spade ace. And if East
discards on all the dianio nds, . so does
South . .At trick 12,
East and South will
each have a pair of
trumps and South survives.
I think this is hard
to realize , but East

38 Calendar
box
38 -VIncent
Peale
39 Woodwind
player
40 Harveoto
42 Necklace
unHa
44 Shaeo
and 48 That thfng'o
so Female
sandpiper
52 Hindu
cymbala
53 Medical
auHix

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Cellllrlly Cipho1 CIVptogroma aro oreatod !rom quolaliono by lamoua

people, pitt and preunt. Each lerter in the cipher stands for another.

Today's clue: L squels P

'YA'N

OKA

B

CYJW·WSOZE'N

F YN

ZBLJSYO
UPA

AK

AFZ

UZNA

WYOZ

R K U

A K

AZXFOYMPZ,

AZJJ

FYN

TSH

NAKEH

FZ

XSG.'-

GYXFKJN

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The modem composer Is a madman
who perslata In manulacturlng an article which nobody wants.'
- (Compollr) Arthur Honegger

.

.

lHAl DAILY

WORD

PUULU

GAM I

O Recrrange

letters

cf

the

four scrarnbled words be·
lew to form fou r limple words .

r-~~~~..,......,...--.

r--,-H· 'TU_G_.,T:--Ar::-T...--1

I
I
.
I'
1
I
~·~·~~·=~-=~·=~·--'
2

I
.

I

THL I G

13

.

I" I I
·

·

·

I '( 0 N L I

I I I ~g~· th~~yh~~s~:;~ ~e~~~ng~~~~~~

5
· lead a fourth heart.
.,. wrong . The salesman smiled ,
From the bidding,
C R I N A0
Would you consider · • • - - - - South knows that 1-..,..~,--,..--,.-,.--i your name?
7 I
Ia I I ~ Complole lhe chuckle quoled
West is out of hearts.
1. . . . . . V by IUU ng in the missing words
And if South discards,
yo u d~ve lop h om slop No . 3 below.
he is gambling that ·
PRINT NUMBERED
West has neither the
LETTERS IN SQUARES
eight nor nine of
f) UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
spades. Instead, he
FOR ANSWER
·
will assume trumps
SCRAM-LETS _ANSWERS
are splitting 3-2. He
Intone -Fount- Ranch - Queasy- NOT my SO N
will' ruff in hand and
A
college student called home and asked, Would you
cash a~ top trump -prefer
one million dollars or a ·call from your penniless
arid go down . East
son?
'Mthout
hesitation the dad replied , I hope this is
gets two trump tricks
NOTmv SON .
.
after all .

l

I

8

I

Pu~nps : Furnaces
Air
: Refrigeration
$2,500 (change out old system)
$1,700 (add AJC to gas furnace)

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"
Complall Una ol8ulllvan•o Orcomlng SUpplies
Sulfur Colltad Urea, bulk only, $121.00 par ton
til% all Ill Prlallrt Hcrea and Uvntock Equip.
1JI.10.10AII Purpcea Fertilizer $4.5015011
8,000 Boler Twine S1UQ/IIale
11,000 Iller 'tWine $21.-le

••••• Rlnr Ag lace, laG
35537 St. Rt7 N• Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone: 740·985·3831 • Fax 740-985-3851

TREE SERVICE
Tap • Trtm • R81110Vtll

'Your
'Birthday

CON
PROJECT?

S;1turday, St:pl. ):l, "2001
Getti ng~ involved in a
intcrc~tin g

WE CAN HELP
'

¢
''

GRAVEL
SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT
METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REWIRE

DELIVERY AVAILABLE
NO JOB ToO LAROE OR SMALL

Bucket 1e1~.¢:e

VC'rf

enlcrprise m;ty oc-

cur for yOu in the Y"tlr ahead.

If you have Lhc patience ro

•

wait things .ou t lt may turn
into ~ profitabk Sl'l·o nd 5o urcc
of i HCOIJIC .
VIRGO (Allg. 23-S,pt. 22)
-- D o what you C311 tn help
~o rueonc you know whose
li ft: i~ full of comp licatio 11s.
but think twice before you
open your waUct and give this
person an unsecured Joan .

Trying to pMch up a broken
romanc e? The A stFo~Graph
Ma'Chmakcr can hdp you understand what to do to make
th e relationship work. Mail
$2.75 to Match maker. c/o th i!i
ncw~paper. , P.O. Dox )(, 7,
Wickline . OH 44U92-0iro7 .

LlllRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) -

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room AddHiona 1

l'au

~~~:d ~COtr:~~~s ~~sJ

'PEANUTS

WOLFE HOME
MAINTENANCE

·TRI-COUOTY
TRHOSPORT

l

FIII/WI_ I _
Pom•roy, Ohio

I'IWI

Pau

~

IS~t~~~EI~ f-~~~;_J

I

WUTIIIUE
WBUIIIIP

.YOUNG'S

.......1,. .....
......., 11'1

UC.f.\T ,._~Ill£. Qlt&gt;Of The. TWI-lfl •.

Advertise ·
inthis space
for $100 per
month
217 EaSI SecC nd St1eat

740-949-152.1

w.

,..

..

"HtiPI!it Y01110 Rtcovlr Y0111/n~tlllltnt"

I 2 City In
Germany
19 "I think,
23 Actor Mineo 1 motabollam
24 Solar dlak
therefore 2 Shoutor
"
25 Actor
3 Stilt.
22 Radio
O'Neal
upln
technique
2701advance
29 Lair
24 Poler
4 Help
31 Joyful cry
26 Tallld
32 Shelheep 5 Droop
amphibian
6 Snow toys 28 Go by waler
33 Roman
7 Over·
dozen
3D Wllhout
bearing
34 Get ready
reoaon
wom1n
to llah
34 Minor
. 37 Lettarm•n'a 8 Me. Sumac
perish
9 52, Ramen
oHiclal
rlvol
10 Inherent
35 Male
40 Hameu
II Caught
aviator
pert

·

Snodgrass' Upholstery

740-992·7599

or

••

THE BORN LOSER
'OT~ PEOPLE lCOK fOR Tfl( ~

TIUCliiiG • fliNCHING

FREE ESTIMATES
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

....

SINCE 1964

BUILDERS INC.

!A

In yesterday's deal a
defender tapp ed declarer to death, so that
W est's fourth trump
be cam e the setting
trick. Today's layout
looks similar -- but is ·
•••ii ..gfwt..-w.diffe,r.ent. The trump
suit is identical, ex·
ccpt that East has the
four-card holding, not
West; and the defenders begin with three
rounds of hearts. Declarer ruffs and starts
to draw trumps . If
East ducks until the
third round, when
dummy is playing its
last spade, East can
l ~ad a fourth heart to
promote his final
trump. Boring!
Well, not quite . In
yesterday's layout, de clarer had no re course.
Today,
though, when West
discards on the second
round of spades,
r..,:;t:~~:.!;!!:!!:~~J South turns his atten ;;
tion elsewhere. He
takes one club trick
(or two with this lay, l LOOK. ~If'£ TU~t-El. P..T \\\(
out), otherwise East
Q.IC Of TI\E.. UC*IT I
can pitch both his.
clubs on the dia. monds and ruff a club
winner late in the
play. Then declarer
runs the diamonds .
What does East do on
the third round of
diamonds? If he ruffs
low, declarer overruffs
and plays out his
ncrs ,

BARNEY

IACIHCI: • DOZING • END lOADER •

BISSELL

Pab

Pw

•mount

43 Holds up
45 Attention
46 Ceuatlc
atuff
47 Pooh 's pel
48 Hove a high
regard lor
51 KIM of
po54 Dlahes
55 Twilled
linen lobrlc
56 Feola
57 lncllnea

book

Ehl

BY PHIWP ALDER

WINDOW
SYSTEMS

992"'3194
992·6635

Nllftb

A variation

OUALITY

--

_

Wut

Opening lead: • 7

FAITH IIULL GOSPIL CHURCH
ROU'rl 114, LONG BGnOM, OHIO

(lD'xlD' 610'x20')

WHEREAS, the
Village of Pomeroy Is
participating In the
Free Estimat~s
Community
&amp; Insured
Development Block
Paint, Flooring,
(CDBG) Program; and
~ WHEREAS, thlala 1
Electrical, Plumbing
raqulramant of the
All Home Neede
CDBG Program that
each participant
develop and adapt an ·
Owner:
Anti·Diaplacement
and
Relocation
Charlie Wolle
A11latance Plan;
NOW THEREFORE,
BE IT RESOLVED by
the Council nf the
VIllage of Pomeroy,
Ohio;
·
SECTION 1: That
the Council hereby
• NawHomaa
adopta an Anti·
• Siding
Dlaplacamant and
• Roofing
llalacatlan
• Remodeling
A. . latanaa Plu,
• Garage•
whlah Ia lnoorparatad
• Addltlmio
herein by reference
• Deck•
and made a part
• Home Flapolra
hereof, the 1ame ••
Fr ee Estim ates
though fully rewritten
haraln.
740-992-1101
. Paued thl·a 20th
992-2753
day of August, 2001 .
Kathy Hyaall, Clerk
John
Blaettnar,
Mayor

t •

10:30- Preaching
Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve. 7:00

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

• Replac~ment
Public Notice

, .

••

For mort inforllllllion, -come to our church silt.
Sunday 9:30- Sunday School; ~

New Homes • Vin11
Siding • New Garages
Public Notice

.. ..... ,. ,.

..••

Callia, Mason, ond Meigs Couati"'
WV 005176

MANlEYS
SELF STORAGE

t It
. ,,

Vulnerable: North·S&lt;Kilh

h\1"

Licensed and ll\•ured

FIRST COME,
FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT
· REGUlARlY
$321.00 PER JOINT

-·

Y AKIOI~

Dealer: South

R&lt;oidenlial Commen:illl New Construction
.Soda Senice Installation
Sperialiri111 in Sheet Mdal Dut!Work
"Tnne' Sot.. &amp; Senice For

Llc•nH 153009580

WHEREAS, the
State of Ohio through
the Ohio Department
of Development has
Fiscal Year 2002
funds available tor
Water Syetema aa
part
of
the
Community
Development Block
Grant
(CDBG)
Program, and
WHEREAS , tha
Village of Pomeroy
has
made
a
commitment
to
undertake
construction of a
Water
Treatment
Plant to benefit the
realdenta of Pomeroy
and surrounding

'

• Nearly 2000 years experlance.
• Works on Sundays.
·
• Always Available.

441 Beech St.

&amp;A ll~

,
JJ'T
ltSZ
ltSJ2

• Ql
t A Ill
• K Q J It

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION

J E RRY 'S
U SE D
COMPUTERS

~ut

.
Y
t
.

"

· •NewHomea
·Garages

KQJTJ

AI

&amp; KQJtOI

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Coohllll•, OH 4$723

992-9158

APPLICATION FOR
FY 2002
COMMUNITY
DEVELOPMENT
BLOCK GRANT
WATER AND SEWER
COMPEMIVE
PROGRAM

I

t

Wut

•

m Hrud Th Slop A '1lun.t~

740-992-1671

74o-9112

Cellular

IJJ.i,..

6111 AniiiUII

111117 II

•

41 Small

1 Detour
around
7 Raportar'o
recognnlon
13 A'nllilna
14 Ammonli
compound•
15 Halvy
hammer
16 Makes
lmpuq
17 Swl11 p111k
18 Mcne unn
20 Had •
IMICk
21 Pertoll

• tn

ELITE MECH&lt;\NICAL CONTRACTORS

All Makes Thactor &amp;

ACROSS

6 T42

Rocky R. Hupp. Agent
Box 189
M1ddleporl. Oh10 45760

.Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

NDTIC
A RESOLUTION
DECLARING IT
• NECESSARY TO
CONSTRUCT A
WATER TREATMENT
SYSTEM IN THE
VILLAGE OF
POMEROY, AND
AUTHORIZING THE
APPLICATION FOR
PRELIMINARY I
DETAIL
ENGINEERING
FUNDS FROM THE

Spout

MONUMENTAl liFE INSURANCE CO.

• Complete

PUblic Notices In Newspapers.

RESOLUTION NO.
12.01

Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down
FTH EstfmBIH

TYIInPIIIII

S.nlng Oblo and W.V.
wv oll031712

JONES'

1.,....

Ill I II 111111111.

Hauling • Umestone
• Gnvel Sand •

Howardl.
Writesel

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIF

Fully lnaurlld

~!!!=~==~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!

- E~pecially those career
moves yOu beli eve to be
~ h oo-ins need to be double

checked today before you put
them into action . There's a fl y
in the ointment that could
tmn out quite tostl y.
SCO I~i'I O (Oct . 24-Nov .

22) - Optimism ca n be a coumu crivc :met, while \Yishful
thinkin~ is !lclf-dcstmctiv". Be
l·:ucful t odt~y to distinguish

•
bct\VC('Il the two.
SIIGITTAR IUS (Nov. 23Dcc. 2 1) -· N o matter how
nlllch bcttl'r Cfju ippcd you
· believe you arc, don't grab the
manage rial reigns ff.o m the
hands of anotll!.'r. It may be
th:H uob o dy can cont rol
events and you could end up
embarr:m~d .

CArRI CORN (0". 22Jan . 19) _... Just bc~.:ausc -sonu.&gt;body fl:u111ts the trappings o(
power, do n't be int11111dated
by it tod;ty. Ch an ces are it is
all a fac:~d c . designed to get
you in a subservient pmition .
AQUARIUS (Ja n. 20-Fcb .
19) -· Ado pting the 111otto of
"Jon' t do today w hat can be
put o tT un til later" nnll d p 11t
yo u beh ind the eight balL
Unfortunately, the "later" to
which · you refer m ig ht be

now.
PI SCES (Feb. 20-M&lt;rch 20)
:. All you 'U ge t out Of ga m bling today is th e role of
~weetcning the pot fot otlum .
Even if you're holding aces,
you could be going llp against

. a m:tigh t flmh .

..

· ARIES (Much 2 1-April I ~)
- O uc of th e wurst thinbrs you
"could do today is to pa wn ofr

onto others matters you hop('
t o co nclu de . Cht~nccs arc
they'll not be up to th e task
and co uld make ;'I mess of
thin g&lt;&gt;.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Ow ni ng up t o your
Own shortcomings could . be

rtn exCcpllOIU lly difficult thing
for yo u to do today. However, b)r not adm!tritlg t o
· them, you mJy take on sonic-

thing way beyond your abil.. icy .
.
GEM INI (Moy 21-June 20)
.. :. Thl· urge tu splurge may b~:
far too powL:rful for )'!!':I ll to
h:md!L: w day om:e yo u :~!low
it to ~ct the upp er hand. Un fo rtunatdy , your credit (':trd!&gt;
cou ld get quitl.' a workout.
C AN C ER . UllllC 21 -jllly

22) -- If you're

dosin~

a1;y

big deal 10day, you 'd be wise
tO ~ 1 t back and take anoth er
IO(Jk at ~ 11 the detaih . Wlut
y()u overlook COllld prove to
be \'l'l")' u!llucky for you.

LEO Uui)' 23-Au~. 22) ••
Ukc the ro:~d to Hadt·~ yo u
nuJ;:ht be try ing to
~ome

p.1VC

out

g:ood Intentions . All the

frc~h

brick and mortar you aJ'pl y won't hold li P if you
make pn :niscs you t:an't deliver .

Pometoy. Ohio
I

.
.
'

•

�Friday, Sept. 7, 2001
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

\

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

,. ALLEYOOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 5
BUDOI

••
•••

ALDER

f'dtrt

Hauling &amp;

CIEx:i

P/B

·CINNIFS

&lt;ONTRAOOIS, INC.

CllliCIIE

• Racine, Ohio 45771

•llliflllllll

740-985-3948
CONCIETf/BLOCK/BRICI
• Foottn, Wall!!, Step1 •

Toj.ooil • Fill Dirt

RtplacementJ, • Walks

• Mulch

and Drivrs • Stencil
Crete Free EJtlmlles

Flot Work.

Bulldozer Services

Min.
11.11.1

Tree Service
• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding .

• ·Bucket Truck

3-0

CONSTRUC110N
Fr.. eaUmatea,

lnaured
Specialize In new
oonltni.ctlon, •
remodeliD&amp; plumblaa.
electrie~~l, home main·
tenaJ.lce, and repair
pon:hes, &amp; dfCks.
Owner

Charles A. Dill

Pllont 992·7445
Ctll OM 591-9254

&amp;6'1-6329

-

11-~~
High &amp; Dry

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

Self-Storage

EltcavatlDJ[ •

General
CoutractiDJ

ana

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Dozer
Backhoe
Septic s,..teme
UtWtle.
NewHomee

740-992.-5232

992-7943

•

LAMM'S
CONSTRUOION

fnM

•I*&amp;MStJ•·rnn ntlflrll

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

Specializing In
roofing, plumbing,
drywall,
remodeling,
additions 1 dlckl
Freentlmates
10 yrs. experience
In the buelne..
References
available. Ownar:
Terri Lamm

ltrltlltcll ......

-llnUM2.81• .........

•

'ENVIRg~~ENTAL

949-1405
• 591·5011

Medicare Supplemetll; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental. Retirement.
Pension &amp; 40 I K Roll overs;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

· DIPOYIII
PIRft
Equipment Parts

EXP02001

Factory Authorized

Case-IH Parts
Dealers
1000 St. Rt. 7 South

,. ...,.....

Your Right to Know,
Delivered Right to Your Door.
O lrloNI..,,'f/lfi#W,.A i:SIKillliult

. '

MdpCOIIItyF~

September 15th &amp; 16th

Middleport, OH
Free eallmatas
on repalres,
ln·homa service
available 24 houra,
uaad syatema 388
and up, uaed
hardware and
software.

PROTECTION
AGENCY AND THE
OHIO WATER
DEVELOPMENT
AUTHORITY'S
- VIl;I;AGE CAPITAi;IMPROVEMENT
FUND (VCIF).
BE IT RESOLVED
· BY the Council ot the
Village of Pomeroy,
Melga County, Ohio:
SECTION 1: That It area, and
Ia neceaury to
WHEREAS, The
conatruct a waler Village of Pomeroy
treatment plant lor and aurroundlng area
lhe heallh, aalety and hae a critical need for
welfare
of . the such Improvements,
realdenla of lhe and
VIllage of Pomeroy,
WHEREAS,
Ohio.
Pomeroy Ia eligible to
SECTION II: That Ia apply for up to
It necaaaary lo apply $800,000 In CDBG
lor approval of a loan lunda to benefit
from the VIllage primarily low ancl
Capital Improvement moderate Income
Fund.
houeeholde. .
SECTION Ill: That
NOW THEREFORE,
lhe Mayor of lhe BE IT RESOLVED by
VIllage of Pomeroy, the Village Council of
OhiO, be and II Pomeroy to aubmlt
hereby authorized to an application to tha
requeat from lhe State of Ohio far an
VIllage
Capital FY 2002 CDBG Water
lmprovemenl Fund and Sanitary Sewer
the
oum
ot Program In order to
$50,000.00.
conatruct a Waler
SECTION IV: That Treatment Plant.
the
method of
BE IT FURTHER
repayment of moneya RESOLVED by the
loaned from the VIllage Council of
VIllage
Capital Pomeroy that tha
Improvement Fund Village will comply
be ao lollowa:
with tha raqulred
1) Full amount auurancea If the
upon financ ing for CDBG aaalatance Ia
the coriat r uctlon · approved.
project.
Pauad thla 20th
2) If the pt'Ojeot II day cf Auguat, 2001.
not financed within
twa yaare from the Kethy Hyltll, Clark
date of award, .
repayment ohall be John W. Blaettnar,
made In ouch equal Mayor
annual ·lnatallmente
(not e~ceedlng tan) (8) 24, 2001
and on auch ·date •• (8) 7, 2001
eat forth In the 2tc
Agreement between
OEPA, OWDA and the
Public Notice
VIllage for the loene.
3) that the Villaga'o
SHERIFF'S BALE
REAL ESTATE
dealgnated
repayment aourca
ehall be from Ita
CA$E NO. OOCV148
Wallr Fund.
4) If the project Ia
Flrater Benk, N.A.
financed
after
ebmt Star Bonk, N.A.,
paymanta
have
Plelntlff
atarted, the balance
va •.
of the loan ahall be
Kelly J. Gwinn·, et·al,
repaid Immediately.
Del8ndan11
Paaaed thlo 20th
day al Auguot, 2001 .
Court of Common
Pleaa, Melge County,
Kathy
Hyaell,
Ohio
Clerk/Treuurer
In pureuince of an
John W. Blaettnar, Order of Sale to me
Mayor
directed from aald
·c ourt In the above
(8) 24, 2001
entitled action, I will
(9) 7, 2001
expoae to oale at
2tc
public auction at the
Courthouse
an
10125101 at 10:00 a.m.
Public Notice
of aald day, the
following daacrlbed
RESOLUTION NO.
realeatate:
14.01
Situated In the
VIllage of Pomeroy, In
A RESOLUTION TO
• the County of Melga,
SUBMIT THE

· Dance the night away
at Meigs Senior Center.
6:30 • 9:30, Sept. Bth.
Music by George Hall
$8.00 per person

Mason
Dance
Sat. Night 9-1
Music by Rt. 33
for members &amp; guests

and State·of Ohio:
Situate In the E11t
part ·Of Fraction No.
17, Town No. 2, and
Range No. 13 and
bounded
and
described •• follows:
beginning at the
Sautheaal corner of a
half
acre
lot
heretofore dllded to
Barbara Neutzllng by
V.B. Horton and S.W.
Pomeroy; thence
North 87 degrllt
East 250 feel; thence
North 80.5 dagr11a
Eaat 50 fill; thlnca
North 44.5 degrees
Watt 225 faat; thence
South 71 degree•
Waet 82 feat to said
, Barbara Neutzllng'a
Northeaal earner;
thence South 18
dagreae Weal 188
faat to the place of
beginning, contelnlng
of an acre.
SAVE AND
EXCEPT the coal and
other mlnerale In the
premltll and the
right to mine the
aama
without
lncumberanca to tha
aurfaca and all ways
and rlghte of waya
along eny mlnaral
aeama for Mining
purpoaaa ara hereby
r11erved to V.B.
Horton and
Pomeroy.
SUBJECT to . all
legal . . . amanta,
lea11a, and rights o.f
way of record.
Prior lnatrument
refarencaa: Vcluma
23, Page 103.
Property addreaa:
25
Anna Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45788.
Appraleed
at:
$10,000.00.
Terme of aale: Cash

RESOLUTION NO.
13.01 ·

.ae

s.w.

James M. Soulaby
Sheriff, Meigs County
Carlo• S. Ramlra.z,
Lerner, Sampson &amp;
Rothfuss, 120 E.
Fourth Street, 8th
Floor, Clnclnattl, Ohio
45202
(513) 241-3100
OH Sup. Ct. M0087732
(9) 7, 14, 21 , 2001

A RESOLUTION
ADOPTING AN ANTI·
DISPLACEMENT AND
RELOCATION
ASSISTANCE PLAN
FOR CDBG
PROGRAMS

KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERllME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
nME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 99.1%
OF DAMACIINO
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

Windows • Room
Additions • Rooftng

COMMERCIAL and RESIDEIIIIIL

(8) 24, 2001
(8) 7, 2001·
2tc

...............

ltrllllllltll
11-IIWUI'I
lilt ........ C88l
llltiiiJ'IWOrlll.

...............
...
...........

lllrctftrllll ...

..

ff'.G~&lt;&gt;I

814849·2202

Rtclne,Ohio

992-5soa
M·r

Umestonel ·
SeRiara DIIC-11
mutnpte~Mt~

Dla:aunts

t'M 601N6 TO SE IN A RACE
TOMORROW .. I WONDER WAAT I
S~OULD EAT SEFORE THE RACE ..

1G·Ii:IITatll-fll.

..........

SIII:IJ-12:18

c.............

• New Oerag..

• Remodeling
Electrlclll: Plumbing ...
• Rooting I Outtora
• VInyl Siding • Painting
• Petlo and Porch Dtck1

Free Estimates

V. .c. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

1

1D SU66EST A
TUNA SANDWICI-I ..

1

IF 't'OU RE 601N6 TO 6E .
IN A RACE, ALWA'tS EAT
SOMETHING T~AT SWIMS FAST

DOWN

restricting East to the
spade ace. And if East
discards on all the dianio nds, . so does
South . .At trick 12,
East and South will
each have a pair of
trumps and South survives.
I think this is hard
to realize , but East

38 Calendar
box
38 -VIncent
Peale
39 Woodwind
player
40 Harveoto
42 Necklace
unHa
44 Shaeo
and 48 That thfng'o
so Female
sandpiper
52 Hindu
cymbala
53 Medical
auHix

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Cellllrlly Cipho1 CIVptogroma aro oreatod !rom quolaliono by lamoua

people, pitt and preunt. Each lerter in the cipher stands for another.

Today's clue: L squels P

'YA'N

OKA

B

CYJW·WSOZE'N

F YN

ZBLJSYO
UPA

AK

AFZ

UZNA

WYOZ

R K U

A K

AZXFOYMPZ,

AZJJ

FYN

TSH

NAKEH

FZ

XSG.'-

GYXFKJN

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The modem composer Is a madman
who perslata In manulacturlng an article which nobody wants.'
- (Compollr) Arthur Honegger

.

.

lHAl DAILY

WORD

PUULU

GAM I

O Recrrange

letters

cf

the

four scrarnbled words be·
lew to form fou r limple words .

r-~~~~..,......,...--.

r--,-H· 'TU_G_.,T:--Ar::-T...--1

I
I
.
I'
1
I
~·~·~~·=~-=~·=~·--'
2

I
.

I

THL I G

13

.

I" I I
·

·

·

I '( 0 N L I

I I I ~g~· th~~yh~~s~:;~ ~e~~~ng~~~~~~

5
· lead a fourth heart.
.,. wrong . The salesman smiled ,
From the bidding,
C R I N A0
Would you consider · • • - - - - South knows that 1-..,..~,--,..--,.-,.--i your name?
7 I
Ia I I ~ Complole lhe chuckle quoled
West is out of hearts.
1. . . . . . V by IUU ng in the missing words
And if South discards,
yo u d~ve lop h om slop No . 3 below.
he is gambling that ·
PRINT NUMBERED
West has neither the
LETTERS IN SQUARES
eight nor nine of
f) UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
spades. Instead, he
FOR ANSWER
·
will assume trumps
SCRAM-LETS _ANSWERS
are splitting 3-2. He
Intone -Fount- Ranch - Queasy- NOT my SO N
will' ruff in hand and
A
college student called home and asked, Would you
cash a~ top trump -prefer
one million dollars or a ·call from your penniless
arid go down . East
son?
'Mthout
hesitation the dad replied , I hope this is
gets two trump tricks
NOTmv SON .
.
after all .

l

I

8

I

Pu~nps : Furnaces
Air
: Refrigeration
$2,500 (change out old system)
$1,700 (add AJC to gas furnace)

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"
Complall Una ol8ulllvan•o Orcomlng SUpplies
Sulfur Colltad Urea, bulk only, $121.00 par ton
til% all Ill Prlallrt Hcrea and Uvntock Equip.
1JI.10.10AII Purpcea Fertilizer $4.5015011
8,000 Boler Twine S1UQ/IIale
11,000 Iller 'tWine $21.-le

••••• Rlnr Ag lace, laG
35537 St. Rt7 N• Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone: 740·985·3831 • Fax 740-985-3851

TREE SERVICE
Tap • Trtm • R81110Vtll

'Your
'Birthday

CON
PROJECT?

S;1turday, St:pl. ):l, "2001
Getti ng~ involved in a
intcrc~tin g

WE CAN HELP
'

¢
''

GRAVEL
SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT
METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REWIRE

DELIVERY AVAILABLE
NO JOB ToO LAROE OR SMALL

Bucket 1e1~.¢:e

VC'rf

enlcrprise m;ty oc-

cur for yOu in the Y"tlr ahead.

If you have Lhc patience ro

•

wait things .ou t lt may turn
into ~ profitabk Sl'l·o nd 5o urcc
of i HCOIJIC .
VIRGO (Allg. 23-S,pt. 22)
-- D o what you C311 tn help
~o rueonc you know whose
li ft: i~ full of comp licatio 11s.
but think twice before you
open your waUct and give this
person an unsecured Joan .

Trying to pMch up a broken
romanc e? The A stFo~Graph
Ma'Chmakcr can hdp you understand what to do to make
th e relationship work. Mail
$2.75 to Match maker. c/o th i!i
ncw~paper. , P.O. Dox )(, 7,
Wickline . OH 44U92-0iro7 .

LlllRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) -

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room AddHiona 1

l'au

~~~:d ~COtr:~~~s ~~sJ

'PEANUTS

WOLFE HOME
MAINTENANCE

·TRI-COUOTY
TRHOSPORT

l

FIII/WI_ I _
Pom•roy, Ohio

I'IWI

Pau

~

IS~t~~~EI~ f-~~~;_J

I

WUTIIIUE
WBUIIIIP

.YOUNG'S

.......1,. .....
......., 11'1

UC.f.\T ,._~Ill£. Qlt&gt;Of The. TWI-lfl •.

Advertise ·
inthis space
for $100 per
month
217 EaSI SecC nd St1eat

740-949-152.1

w.

,..

..

"HtiPI!it Y01110 Rtcovlr Y0111/n~tlllltnt"

I 2 City In
Germany
19 "I think,
23 Actor Mineo 1 motabollam
24 Solar dlak
therefore 2 Shoutor
"
25 Actor
3 Stilt.
22 Radio
O'Neal
upln
technique
2701advance
29 Lair
24 Poler
4 Help
31 Joyful cry
26 Tallld
32 Shelheep 5 Droop
amphibian
6 Snow toys 28 Go by waler
33 Roman
7 Over·
dozen
3D Wllhout
bearing
34 Get ready
reoaon
wom1n
to llah
34 Minor
. 37 Lettarm•n'a 8 Me. Sumac
perish
9 52, Ramen
oHiclal
rlvol
10 Inherent
35 Male
40 Hameu
II Caught
aviator
pert

·

Snodgrass' Upholstery

740-992·7599

or

••

THE BORN LOSER
'OT~ PEOPLE lCOK fOR Tfl( ~

TIUCliiiG • fliNCHING

FREE ESTIMATES
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

....

SINCE 1964

BUILDERS INC.

!A

In yesterday's deal a
defender tapp ed declarer to death, so that
W est's fourth trump
be cam e the setting
trick. Today's layout
looks similar -- but is ·
•••ii ..gfwt..-w.diffe,r.ent. The trump
suit is identical, ex·
ccpt that East has the
four-card holding, not
West; and the defenders begin with three
rounds of hearts. Declarer ruffs and starts
to draw trumps . If
East ducks until the
third round, when
dummy is playing its
last spade, East can
l ~ad a fourth heart to
promote his final
trump. Boring!
Well, not quite . In
yesterday's layout, de clarer had no re course.
Today,
though, when West
discards on the second
round of spades,
r..,:;t:~~:.!;!!:!!:~~J South turns his atten ;;
tion elsewhere. He
takes one club trick
(or two with this lay, l LOOK. ~If'£ TU~t-El. P..T \\\(
out), otherwise East
Q.IC Of TI\E.. UC*IT I
can pitch both his.
clubs on the dia. monds and ruff a club
winner late in the
play. Then declarer
runs the diamonds .
What does East do on
the third round of
diamonds? If he ruffs
low, declarer overruffs
and plays out his
ncrs ,

BARNEY

IACIHCI: • DOZING • END lOADER •

BISSELL

Pab

Pw

•mount

43 Holds up
45 Attention
46 Ceuatlc
atuff
47 Pooh 's pel
48 Hove a high
regard lor
51 KIM of
po54 Dlahes
55 Twilled
linen lobrlc
56 Feola
57 lncllnea

book

Ehl

BY PHIWP ALDER

WINDOW
SYSTEMS

992"'3194
992·6635

Nllftb

A variation

OUALITY

--

_

Wut

Opening lead: • 7

FAITH IIULL GOSPIL CHURCH
ROU'rl 114, LONG BGnOM, OHIO

(lD'xlD' 610'x20')

WHEREAS, the
Village of Pomeroy Is
participating In the
Free Estimat~s
Community
&amp; Insured
Development Block
Paint, Flooring,
(CDBG) Program; and
~ WHEREAS, thlala 1
Electrical, Plumbing
raqulramant of the
All Home Neede
CDBG Program that
each participant
develop and adapt an ·
Owner:
Anti·Diaplacement
and
Relocation
Charlie Wolle
A11latance Plan;
NOW THEREFORE,
BE IT RESOLVED by
the Council nf the
VIllage of Pomeroy,
Ohio;
·
SECTION 1: That
the Council hereby
• NawHomaa
adopta an Anti·
• Siding
Dlaplacamant and
• Roofing
llalacatlan
• Remodeling
A. . latanaa Plu,
• Garage•
whlah Ia lnoorparatad
• Addltlmio
herein by reference
• Deck•
and made a part
• Home Flapolra
hereof, the 1ame ••
Fr ee Estim ates
though fully rewritten
haraln.
740-992-1101
. Paued thl·a 20th
992-2753
day of August, 2001 .
Kathy Hyaall, Clerk
John
Blaettnar,
Mayor

t •

10:30- Preaching
Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve. 7:00

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

• Replac~ment
Public Notice

, .

••

For mort inforllllllion, -come to our church silt.
Sunday 9:30- Sunday School; ~

New Homes • Vin11
Siding • New Garages
Public Notice

.. ..... ,. ,.

..••

Callia, Mason, ond Meigs Couati"'
WV 005176

MANlEYS
SELF STORAGE

t It
. ,,

Vulnerable: North·S&lt;Kilh

h\1"

Licensed and ll\•ured

FIRST COME,
FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT
· REGUlARlY
$321.00 PER JOINT

-·

Y AKIOI~

Dealer: South

R&lt;oidenlial Commen:illl New Construction
.Soda Senice Installation
Sperialiri111 in Sheet Mdal Dut!Work
"Tnne' Sot.. &amp; Senice For

Llc•nH 153009580

WHEREAS, the
State of Ohio through
the Ohio Department
of Development has
Fiscal Year 2002
funds available tor
Water Syetema aa
part
of
the
Community
Development Block
Grant
(CDBG)
Program, and
WHEREAS , tha
Village of Pomeroy
has
made
a
commitment
to
undertake
construction of a
Water
Treatment
Plant to benefit the
realdenta of Pomeroy
and surrounding

'

• Nearly 2000 years experlance.
• Works on Sundays.
·
• Always Available.

441 Beech St.

&amp;A ll~

,
JJ'T
ltSZ
ltSJ2

• Ql
t A Ill
• K Q J It

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION

J E RRY 'S
U SE D
COMPUTERS

~ut

.
Y
t
.

"

· •NewHomea
·Garages

KQJTJ

AI

&amp; KQJtOI

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Coohllll•, OH 4$723

992-9158

APPLICATION FOR
FY 2002
COMMUNITY
DEVELOPMENT
BLOCK GRANT
WATER AND SEWER
COMPEMIVE
PROGRAM

I

t

Wut

•

m Hrud Th Slop A '1lun.t~

740-992-1671

74o-9112

Cellular

IJJ.i,..

6111 AniiiUII

111117 II

•

41 Small

1 Detour
around
7 Raportar'o
recognnlon
13 A'nllilna
14 Ammonli
compound•
15 Halvy
hammer
16 Makes
lmpuq
17 Swl11 p111k
18 Mcne unn
20 Had •
IMICk
21 Pertoll

• tn

ELITE MECH&lt;\NICAL CONTRACTORS

All Makes Thactor &amp;

ACROSS

6 T42

Rocky R. Hupp. Agent
Box 189
M1ddleporl. Oh10 45760

.Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

NDTIC
A RESOLUTION
DECLARING IT
• NECESSARY TO
CONSTRUCT A
WATER TREATMENT
SYSTEM IN THE
VILLAGE OF
POMEROY, AND
AUTHORIZING THE
APPLICATION FOR
PRELIMINARY I
DETAIL
ENGINEERING
FUNDS FROM THE

Spout

MONUMENTAl liFE INSURANCE CO.

• Complete

PUblic Notices In Newspapers.

RESOLUTION NO.
12.01

Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down
FTH EstfmBIH

TYIInPIIIII

S.nlng Oblo and W.V.
wv oll031712

JONES'

1.,....

Ill I II 111111111.

Hauling • Umestone
• Gnvel Sand •

Howardl.
Writesel

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIF

Fully lnaurlld

~!!!=~==~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!

- E~pecially those career
moves yOu beli eve to be
~ h oo-ins need to be double

checked today before you put
them into action . There's a fl y
in the ointment that could
tmn out quite tostl y.
SCO I~i'I O (Oct . 24-Nov .

22) - Optimism ca n be a coumu crivc :met, while \Yishful
thinkin~ is !lclf-dcstmctiv". Be
l·:ucful t odt~y to distinguish

•
bct\VC('Il the two.
SIIGITTAR IUS (Nov. 23Dcc. 2 1) -· N o matter how
nlllch bcttl'r Cfju ippcd you
· believe you arc, don't grab the
manage rial reigns ff.o m the
hands of anotll!.'r. It may be
th:H uob o dy can cont rol
events and you could end up
embarr:m~d .

CArRI CORN (0". 22Jan . 19) _... Just bc~.:ausc -sonu.&gt;body fl:u111ts the trappings o(
power, do n't be int11111dated
by it tod;ty. Ch an ces are it is
all a fac:~d c . designed to get
you in a subservient pmition .
AQUARIUS (Ja n. 20-Fcb .
19) -· Ado pting the 111otto of
"Jon' t do today w hat can be
put o tT un til later" nnll d p 11t
yo u beh ind the eight balL
Unfortunately, the "later" to
which · you refer m ig ht be

now.
PI SCES (Feb. 20-M&lt;rch 20)
:. All you 'U ge t out Of ga m bling today is th e role of
~weetcning the pot fot otlum .
Even if you're holding aces,
you could be going llp against

. a m:tigh t flmh .

..

· ARIES (Much 2 1-April I ~)
- O uc of th e wurst thinbrs you
"could do today is to pa wn ofr

onto others matters you hop('
t o co nclu de . Cht~nccs arc
they'll not be up to th e task
and co uld make ;'I mess of
thin g&lt;&gt;.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Ow ni ng up t o your
Own shortcomings could . be

rtn exCcpllOIU lly difficult thing
for yo u to do today. However, b)r not adm!tritlg t o
· them, you mJy take on sonic-

thing way beyond your abil.. icy .
.
GEM INI (Moy 21-June 20)
.. :. Thl· urge tu splurge may b~:
far too powL:rful for )'!!':I ll to
h:md!L: w day om:e yo u :~!low
it to ~ct the upp er hand. Un fo rtunatdy , your credit (':trd!&gt;
cou ld get quitl.' a workout.
C AN C ER . UllllC 21 -jllly

22) -- If you're

dosin~

a1;y

big deal 10day, you 'd be wise
tO ~ 1 t back and take anoth er
IO(Jk at ~ 11 the detaih . Wlut
y()u overlook COllld prove to
be \'l'l")' u!llucky for you.

LEO Uui)' 23-Au~. 22) ••
Ukc the ro:~d to Hadt·~ yo u
nuJ;:ht be try ing to
~ome

p.1VC

out

g:ood Intentions . All the

frc~h

brick and mortar you aJ'pl y won't hold li P if you
make pn :niscs you t:an't deliver .

Pometoy. Ohio
I

.
.
'

•

�.Friday, Sept. 7, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Skyline Speedway honors 60's racing legend Mack Clingan
Bv ScoTT WoLFE
0\IP CORRESPONDENT

''Titis is til&lt;' !&gt;est little
dirt ll'olCk in America. I
,,, g/,td the )!.OOd Lord
ga11e me thr cl~t~nce 10
come l~orck and see tllis
place another tiulf. I
have a lot '!fgre&lt;lt

STEWART- Aug. 31 w~'
Mack C lingan night at Skyline
Speedway in Stewart, the place
that the legendary racer dominated in the early to midJ960s, and later as a car owner
with driven such as Dean
Mast, Jim Fizer, Doc Dawson III J:IIIOI'iCS from ill'l'l'."
and most recognizably Steve
Ungar.
Racer Mack Clingan
At one point Steve Ungar,
now nf Belpre, and son Rick cancer in .his ot her lung. H owUngar both drove Clingan cars. eYer, his sp irits coul d not have
Hilton Wolfe Jr. and family been higher at the tribmc.
ofRacin.e were part of the cer:
It was if he had just climbed
emonies to honor Clingan," and om of the Long Brothers Spealso participated in a breakfast cial after one of his many vicwith . the 79-year old racing tories.
" l raced here when it didn 't
lege nd.
"This is the best li ttle dirt pay much of anythi ng .. , not
track in America ," C ling:Jtl like the races today," Clmgan
proudly stated of Skyline, eyes said. " Of course it didn't cost as
gleaming in the August South- much, eitht'r. Cars then j ust
cost a fraction of what they do
ern Ohio sun.
"I am glad the good Lord now.
"I have raced all over the
gave me the cha nce to come
back and see this place another coun try but this is the finest
time. I have a lo t of great mem- irack I've ra ced on. And I've

M&lt;"Guire. Harold McGilton,
"Also. you h~Vl' to alwJys Jim Fizer, Paul Barnes, and
w;mt to be the bt~t to succeed." Frankit&gt; Btirris - to n:une :1
Clingan bog.nt racing at the few.
old Sportsman Speedway with
C li ng:m was accom panied
ll'r thl· next c.i.ty.

beat me, an d (Clingan
paused)
he did beat me."
man who once dominated this
As the crowd chu ckled,
~peed way for many, many years.
offered some advice.
Clingan
This man literally owned this
"Som etimes sonleone will
track. He was the one to beat.
just
be better than you. Yolt'll
• "As a kid, I watched this man
win many races here and at find that in hfe and you just
other tracks in the area, arid have to work harder the next
many of you have h:id this same time.''
The bo unty C lingan was
pleasure. For those of you who
talking
about went to Herman
didn't get to see him race, you
missed seeing one of America's Wise of Atlanta, who. had a
greatest drivers. I introd uce to winged super modified No. 77.
you the legen dary Mack Clin- Wise late r drove a regular
to

sprint car and even went raci ng

gan."
You could have heard a pin
drop when Clingan stepped to
the microphone. Every driver
focused a respectful eye toward
the elder champion and time
stood still.
'
Clingan., suffering from
lung cancer, has had open heart
surgery, has had one lung
removed and is now battling

USAC · (Uni ted States Auto
Club) later in his career.
"If you really enjoy racing,
find a 'way to keep doing it,
Clingan said. "You have to have
something in your life to enj oy,
and it is a whole lot better than
tippin' the bottle every Friday
an d Saturday night, and in most
cases you feel a whole lot bet-

grandd;1Ughters.

Although he wasn't in the

Stt've

Ungar was to be on hand, but cock-pit Aug. 25 was another
Ungar's wife suffered a stroke victory for Mack Clingan at

at mid-week and he

SPORIS

MONEY

Rail excursions

Prep football
action results

Bossard Memorial
Library receiveS
grant

was

Skyline Speedway.
unable to attend.
~very llltemion of JUSt being a
Clingan &lt;till resides in his
And the crowd cheered one
to Skyline by his wife Charcar owner. Ht' canH.~ away that
night with his first victory as J letw, daughter Lisa, and his hometown of Cleveland . last time.
drivt'r back in 1951, driving J

•

tmts

'3') Furd coupe he and a friend

J;iving ·TrtJst S~minar. ·

had put together.
The friend failed to tmke the
grade in qualifYin g and the heat
and after Mark oflered a few
suggestions, the short-Jived dri ver said, "All right, you're the
Mack won the consy , and

Oh io V.lllc•y Puhli,hin);: (o.

to go faster so these guys
behind me don't run over
me.'' H e did, and also went on

C.111ipuli .. • l'cmwmy • l~t . l'll'il .. illll • \l'I'IPmho•r '-'. llllll

Time... to EXPO!

Get The Facts
At This FREE

reme mbers thinking, " I have

Ea~To

to ·win th e feature.
Clingan was hooked and
from thar time on he was THE .
driver. Mack drove open wheel cars of all types on both
asphalt and dirt, but his prefer-

Understand
Educational
Seminar

en ce was din. His main love

became sprint cars, where he

Kevin L. Pottmeyer

Engineering

Engines

About 75 SEIU District
1199 bargaining unit memGALLIPOLIS - Pickets bers at Scenic Hills struck
remain in place at the Aug. 31 following a 52-4
entrJnces to a local nursing vote, said Carol Young, orgahome after a bargammg ses- nizer for SEIU, which repreSion between Its manage-.__ sents 18,000 wo rkers in
· ment and workers represent- O hio, West Virginia and Kened by Servite Employees tucky who are mostly
International Union failed to employed in the health care
field.
end a week-old strike.
Scenic Hills Nursing Ccnill
SE JU 's district office in
ter man agem ent sa id . th e Columbus announced a press
fac ility
remain s
staffed conference will be sl&lt;lged ·at
arou nd the clock so res ident~ the strike site Tuesday at 2
"co ntin ue to receive the high p.m. District President Dave
quality care that is a standard R egan is expected to speak:
Young said a bargaining
ai: o ur facility,u said Integrated
Health Services spokesman session Thursday at Lowe
Hotel in Point Pleasant,
Robert Gill.
IHS, based in Sparks, Md., W.Va., failed after she said
operates Scenic Hills; a 100- Scenic Hills management
bed facility th at opened on asked for more concessions.
Young said initially a twoBuck Ridge R oad in August

t

Safeway spo nso rship carried
Clingan to 3 I ':'ins circa 1966.
That year Lou Blaney and
the Long Brothers of Quaker
City ordered Alfater C hassis
for their chassis of choice. Both

Presented for any family who would like to:
Keep control of their money and keep others from deciding their wishes.
Avoid the expense, delay and publicity of probate.
Avoid court control of their estate.
Protect their moriey and family if they should become disabled.

teams won many races, but

Clingan was recognized as on e
of the winningest drivers in
the nation chat season. ·
By the time Clingan had
landed th e Long Brothers ride,
he had alre~dy had a stellar
career. When Larry Dicbon
vacated the No. 55 Clingan
was the logical choice to fill
the cockpit. It was du ring this
time that torr id battles were
waged between C lingan , J.D.
Leas, Steve Ungar, Wayne

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This seminar is directed not only at the multi-f!lillionaire, but also toward the
AVERAGE FAMILY- people who sincerely care about how their hard-earned
money and valuables will be handled in the future.

Tuesday, sept. t t

Reservations requested but not required
Our office is located at 407 Second St., Marietta
_Call740-373·7784 or 800-745-6441
Intended for educational purposes only.

7 • a::sopm ·
HolldaJ Inn • 450 Pike St.

Gallipolis, Ohio

1981.

CREATIVE- A square piece of material with a face painted on it and then filled with straw pulled to the center and tied makes
a great scarecrow head . Here , Lee-Anna Hudson of Pomeroy looks over one that has been completed in preparation for makIng one herself for the EXPO contest. (Charlene Hoeflich photos)

reg10n .

TIMESSENTINEL STAFF

The event's main goals are to
promote the family, examine .
the benefits of living in a rural
area with access to larger towns,
identifYing the region's past,

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S-Series Pickup

314 Ton Heavy Duly 4x4 LongiJeC

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ments, analyze the importance
of local businesses - · namely
the area's productive agricultur- .
al firms (dairy, cattle, greenhouse, veget&lt;~ble, and field
crops), discuss the multirude of
clubs, activities and talents of the
citizenry, and discover ways to
utilize the historic attributes of
Meigs, Mason, Gallia and
Athens counties.
contests. ·
The annual event, which
Planned activities begin at 10
originated six years ago, was a.m. ancl consist of new car and
driveformed by a group of con- truck displays, a classic
cerned citizens, and members of in, an antique car show, a petting
the Big Bend Antique Trac- zoo, wildlife mount displays, an
tor/Equipment Club and antique tractor pull, live musical
Meigs County Senior Fair entertainment, flower arrange.lloard, whose goal · was to ment and open dahlia shows, a
(lCCel)tuate the positive attribuk make-your-own · scarecrow
. es of living within the Big Be~ contest, a rock climbing wall,

car

Hlp: 80s
LOJF. lOs

2001 Chevy

2001 Chevy

2001 Buick Le5abre

Cavalier Sedan

Lumina Sedan

Impala 5edan

Custom Sedan

•Au.omatic, Air Conditioning
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gardening classes, and a plethora
of other interesting happenings.
· ~o included will be a veget&lt;~ble display that showcases the
area's longest ear of corn, tallest
stalk of corn, largest diameter
sunflower, and largest pumpkin
or squash.
Quilt enthusia.rs will have the

opportunity to . view a myriad
of colorful bedspreads during
the quilt display/show, which
will be held inside the Senior
Fair Building. The first 'place
quilt will garner $50; second ·
place, $40; third place, $30;
fourth place, $20; and fifth place,

Please see Big Bend. AI

POMEROY The
P.resident of Meigs Co un ty's Board of Co unty
Commissioners has asked
the co unty Board of
H ealth w rec ons id er a
proposed ban on smokin g

in public.
At FridJy 's regula r commi ssio n ers' meeting, J eff
Thornton read a s tate~
m ent:
'' Five years ago, I wanted

to have prayer before th e
co mmis sio n ers' meeting,

arrd was told it was ill egal
and that the com mi ssion -

ers would b e sued. It was
my right to pray, so I d1d.

and

non-smokers

have

rights. Prop erty owners
and taxpayers certainly
·
have rights.
"Whil e smoking is bad
for one's health , it is a
cho ice. Government must
re member they arc here to

se rve th e people. While
the healt h department is
needed, and has great programs , I would advise
th em to discontinu e the

plan of action for a smoking ban ."
' Thornton ~ and Commissioners J im

Sh eets an d

Mick Davenport, attended
a publi c meeting on
Thursday, . whi ch allowed

Please see Ben. A&amp;

the featured speaker;' Rio Grande Preoident Barry M. Dorsey announced.
"His remarks about Rio Grande's role in
higher educa tion in Ohio will set the tone
for the cOnvocation ."

Musical selections ftom the university's
Grande Chorale will punctuate an agenda
of testi mony from faculty, st1ff, board
members .and students about th e impor-

tance of Rio Grande in th eir Jives.

Dr. Linda Sigismondi, president of the
Faculty Association, will lead a trio of dulcimer pe rformers who include Kara

Lewis, director of the Madog Center for
Welsh Studies, and Roy Moses, one of the
basketball players .who played with the legendary Bevo Francis.
A 6:30 p.m. Alumni Memorial Bell
Tower dedication will follow the convoca-

Please see Rio. AI

Hol•er Medical Equip1111ent, Inc.

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SCARECROW CREATIONS - Friday afternoon, children at
NET, an outreach program of the Meigs Cooperative
Parish, practiced how to make scarecrows under the direction
of Dee Rader, standing, and Mars Kitchen . The children will be
entering the competition at the Big Bend Town and Country
EXPO next weekend.

.~od's

'
RIO GRANDE
- "Still Changing
Lives After 125 Years" is the theme for the
University ofR.io Grande's 125th an niversary celebration on Thursday, which starts
at 2 p.m. with a convocation i~ the John
W Berry Fine and Performing Arts Center.
"We are pleased that Roderi ck G. W
C hu, chanceUor of the Ohio Board of
Regents, has accepted our invit&lt;~tion to be

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Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries · .

BY BRIAN

TIMES-SENTINEL· STAFF

. "Our county was founded on God and country.
We pledge liberty and justice for all . That. is freedom. Smqkers have rights

University of Rio Grande celebrates·125 years

Details, A3

2001 Chevy

Offi«al urges
health board to
withdraw proposal

present an d future achieve-

Now that last month's Meigs
County Fair is a fading memory, Rocksprings Fairgrounds
will once again reverberate with
activity as the 20Ql Big Bend
Town &amp; Country EXPO takes
center stage next Saturday and
Sunday for a weekend full of
musical entertainment, commercial exhibits and various

Brand New 2002 Chevy
Trailblazer LS 4 Door 4x4

lbomton voices
smoking ban ,

BY TONY M. LEActt

OCK
SPRINGSIt's
EXPO
time again.

Piuse see Stltke, AI

-J~,O~~SitiOIIlO--, ·-­

:l.T-r'-'•-next ·. weekend

Brand New 2001 Ponllac
Sunllre Sun &amp; Sound

KEVIN KELLY

TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

First City Estate Planning, Inc.

and

Vul \r• . Nn '\II

8T

Gregory A. Gentry

sponsored by:

Special No. 55 of Don and
Dean Long. The br illiant
Omaha Orange and White
Alfater Chassis with Miles

sJ.25

Scenic Hills
strike enters
second week

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~1,950*

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- -

driver."

won a lot of.races here."
ories from here."
enjoyed the most success.
"Once
they
paid
a
guy
$500
At the drivers' meeting,
Mu ch of that success ca me
track promoter Al Harshbarge r to co m·e from Atlanta, Gt'orgia aboard the Long Brothers

introduced Clingan as "the

two

TEMPO

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