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•

.

P~~ge B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Memorial Toumament scores
0\Jtll.IN, Ohio (AP) .- Final scores ond
nmingo Mondly from the S3.1 million Memo&lt;llll
foumomono played on 1111 7,193 yard, par-72
~ulr!leld Vllage Gp1f Club course (o-amaleur):

~
floiiKli!JI
TJOO(Woo.ls, $558,000 ......... 71-63-85·70.269

Emle Elo. $272 ,800 ............... 73~·72-85=274
.luetin Leonard, $272,800 ...... 70-70~-68&gt;274
Mlko Wolr, $148,800 ............. 74-85-68-69&gt;276
Paul Azlngor, $113,150 ......... 72-71-69-68&gt;278
Stove Flesch, $113,150 ......... 76-68~·7o.278
Stew Lowery, $113, 150 ........ 73-66-68·73&gt;278

Fred Coupito, $93,000 ..... ..... 74-69-89-67•279
Hal Sutoon.-$93,000 ..... ......... 71-71-87-70.279
J.P. Hayeo. $80.600 .............. 74-66:71-89&gt;280
Shlgetd MINYIIINI. $80,600 .73-69-68·7o.280
Brad Elder, S71 ,300 .............. 71 ·66-69·73&gt;281
Soon Hoc:h, S58,125..............74-87-7H0•282
Rocco Medlale, $58,125 ....... 73-7HI6-70.282
Olin Browne, S58,125...........• 71-68-72-71 =2B2
Grog Kra", $58.125............... 70.73-66·71 ·282
Chris P_orry, $46,600 ............. 74·70-71-89&gt;283
Stua~ Appioby, $46,500 ....... 76-69-89-89&gt;283
Jay Haas, $46,600 ................ 75-?o-69-89=283
Andrew Magee, $34,844 .......76-71-71-66·284

Tuesday, May 30, 2000
Public Notice

Scott Verplank, $34,844 ........ 71 -72-73-6S.264
Carloa Franco, $34,!1«....... .. 73-71 -70.70·264
Harrison Fmar, $34,844 ...... 66-69-78-71 • 284
811 Glasson. $34 ,844 ............72-66-73-71•264
Gary Nldclaus, $22,669 .. ....... 72-66-74-71 =285
Robt~ Damron, $22.669 .......74-69-71-71• 285
Jeff Sluman, $22 ,669 ............ 73-71 -70-71• 265
Jonathon Kaye, $22,669 .... ... 72-89·72-72=285
Jerry Kllly, $22,669 ............. .. 72-71 -70·72• 285
Larry Mlzt, $22,669 ... .... ....... 74-71 -67-73-:!85
Jim Furyl&lt;, $22,669 ......... .. .....73-70-69·73=285
David Duval, $22,669 ............ 73-89-68·75•285'

STATE OF OHIO
• DEPARTMENT OF
COMMERCE
STATE FIRE MARSHALL
CITATION
Rtf: SIC. 3737.41, ORC.
118 !5!!!!MOIJ0"1 Cltllllon No.
Melga County

:o::~.

Is.~P.Pet.......,

........ 001, Ohlo45780-

Known•the - · ' - ......
_. ..... orop;t- or
the properly dlacrtbed heroin
ond being reapontlblt lor
$49,095.
ure, $33,320.
compliance with tht OHIO
20. (3Bl Chad Little, Ford, 398, $51 ,695.
40. 130) Dave Blaney, Pontiac. 291. engine FilE CODE I I II rtlllll
21 . (41 Elliott Sadler, Ford, 396,$47,470.
failure. $33.315.
.- . nollclllll'lanby glwn
22. (37) Terry Labonte, Chevrolol, 398,
.. , . {26) Scon Pruett, Ford, 148, accident,
1D the ..,.ana ~ nlmtl
$52,605.
$33,310.
23. (27) Joe Nemochek, Chovrolel, 398,
42. (22) Ricky Craven, Chevrolet, 133, art lntcrlbtd obovt, 11
$48,295.
lallowt:
engine failure, $33,305.
24. (33) Kenny Irwin, Chevrolet, 397 ,
On 1111 28th or Marolt, 2000,
43. (3) Bill Elllon, Ford, 122. engine failure ,
$45,440.
$45,202.
Robert Long, Ctrlllllld Fire
25. (11) Jimmy Spencer, Ford, 397, $45,540.
Slr.ty lntptclor, Cerllftcate
26. (24) Robert Pressley, Ford, 396,
Time ot Race: 4 hours, 12 minutes, 23 sec· IS-23~, did lnaptCIIIII
$36,640.
27. (10) Kenny Wallace , Chevrolet, 396, ondS.
ptoperly lc •• 1114 II: 510 """
Margin of VIctory: .573 seconds.
$45,540.
Strlll, Mldfllll crt, OhiO 45780.
Average Speed: 142.640 mph.
28. (32) Wally Dallenbach Jr., Ford, 396,
Slid properly .. IIIIo known
$36,480.
Lead Changes : 25 among 11 drivers
or may be turlhlr dltcrlbltd
29. (29) Geoffrey Bodine, Chevrolet , 396,
Cautions: 7 tor 38 laps.
$44,425.
Lap Leaders: Eamhardt, Jr. 1·7, Elliott 8-9, u:oon a.y CIIIIIIQI wlh ""'
30. (25) Bren Bodine, Ford. 395, $33,905.
Eamhardt, Jr. 10·49, Nadeau 50·64, Gordon 65· apartment obovo gerago

Coca-Cola 600 results

tndongtra 1111 or other

poptlly b y - olwanl or

...-. •a•· and dei1PII8ted
conditiOn, dlftCIIve lllclrlcal
wiring and oqulpmtnl,
defective chlmnoyl, a••
coniiiCtlont, or hilling

.,.,...eorolhar...,.

CIYU pWity: $1,000.00 I

0.X
DETAII.!O DESCRIPnON
01 1111
found ,. ...
OOf ~I)

forth • roa-: T1'IIIW 18 no
ftN IIPIIIIUon btlwMn lhl

opartmenl and garage.
CONCORD, N.C. (AP) - Results Sunday
Exctlllvl aecumulllllon . or
lrom tho NASCAR Wlnaooo Cup Series Cocafllmmllble liqUid 18 IIIONCI In
Cots 600 at lowe'• Motor Speedway with finiSh·
open oonllllntrl.. ll!xctlllw
lng polition, starting poSition In parentheses. dri·
ver, type ol car, tapa completed, reaiJOfl out (II
oocumulaiiOn or combulllble
•!"Y) and mone~ won:
. . . - . DIIRIIw .._,.,.1
1. (21) Ma~ Kanaeth, Ford, 400, $200,950.
condlll- Include Improper
2 . (7) · Bobby Lobonlo, Pontiac, 400 ,
llaxlble corda and optn
$138,600.
nxturM. lmPftiPII' lnllllllaiiOn
3. (15) Dale Eamhardt, Chevrole1. 400,
$103,250.
.
or chimney llue pipe.
4 . (I) Dale Earnhardt Jr, Chavroleo. 400.
Improper lnltallotlon ol
$110,900.
hllpng opperetuo on th•
5. (8) Dale Jarren, Ford , 400, $95,000.
6 . (4) Jeremy Miylleld, Fold , 400, $71 .850.
unoar. IIICCH1d
7. (5) Mike Skinner, Chevrolet, 400 ,
$70,850.
WHEREFORE, put'IWinl to
B. (16) Rusly Wallace, Ford, 400, $64,350.
the IUihortly welld In 1111 by
9. (18) Slave Pori&lt;, Chevrolet, 400, $59.950 .
1111c11on 3737A2 or 1111 Ohio
10. (14) JeH Gordon , Chevrolet, 400 .
31 . (17) J ohn Andrett i, Pontiac. 393, 65, Mavtield 66·68, Stewan 69·70, Nadeau 71 · IDII9B~
Rtvlaed . Code and OAC
$78,950.
$51.380.
112, Mayfield 113·116, Earnhardt t17-1l7,
Section
1301 :7·1·05 (FM·
At
•
r11ull
ol
tuch
1t . (28) Jeff Burton, Ford , 400, $67, tOO.
32 . (43) Mike Bliss, Pontiac, 392, $33,365.
Nadeau 118·131 , Skinner 132·134 , Jarrett 135·
12 . (19) Mari&lt; Martin, Ford, 399, $62.100.
33 . (40) Stacy Compton , Ford, 391 , 135, Earnhardt 136·157, Earnhardt , Jr. 158· 159, examination or lnapectton, 1 105.0)0FC, you ore hereby
13 . (31) Ward Burton, Pontiac. 399 . $36,355.
Nadeau 160-192 . Earnhardt, Jr. 193·221, Jar· CATEGORICAL Rndlng haa ORDERED to abate the
$63, 100.
.
34, (13) Bobby Hamilton, Chevrolet, 391 . ret! 222, B.l.8bonte 223·248. Nadeau 249·259 , been made ao lndlcoltd ond
forth by llldng
14 . 19) Tony Stewart, Pontiac, 399, $62,300 . $41.350 .
Earnhardt, Jr. 260-310, Kenseth 311 ·316, Eam· theltforfl, pui'IUinllo Slctlon the lol owing aorrtcllvo
15. 6) Kevin Lepage, Ford, 399, $57.200.
35. (42) P.J. Jones, Ford , 38 9, $33.345.
hard! , Jr. 3H·362, Gordon 363·365, B.l abonte 3737.43 and 3737.51, OhiO
• 16. (39~ Johnny ·Benson, Pontiac. 399,
- - Wllltln lhlrly ilay1l:
36. (35) Darrell Waltrip, Ford, 386, $33,340. 366-374, Kenseth 375·400.
Struotu11 to be repaired,
$42 .800.
Code, II II
37 . (34) Ke n SchracJer, Pontiac, 371 ,
Point Standings: Bobb_y Labonte 1776, Ward .RIVIIId
17. (20) Ricky Rudd, Ford, 399, $50,395.
$33.335.
Burton 1722, Mark Martin 1695, Dale Earnhardt PROPOSED lhll a civil tom down, demolished, or
18. (12) Michael Waltrip, Chevrolet, 399.
38. (2) Jerry Nadeau. Chevrolet. 357. engine 1693, Jeff Burton 1672. Da le Jarrett 1630, Rusty penally, II any, -be tiMIIId mill-It rtmovltd, and 111
$51 ,275.
failure. $61.925.
Wallace 1578, Jeff Gordon 1539, Ricky Ru:jd agalnat you lor ooch tuch dengeroua ·. condition• be
19 . (36) Sterling Marlin, Chevrolet 398,
39. (23) Rick Mast , Pontiac. 350, engine Iail· 1523, Tony Stewart 1456.
I'IITIIdMid.
viOIIIIon •lndlclltd:
X Slid pnlplrly contlall ol
Tholl MCIIonl or lhe Ohio
t . building or olhtt atructure Rtvlttd
Code (ORC)
pertaining pertlaularly 1D the
which .waa round lo be
Public Notlca
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public No.tlce
ttpeclally lloblo to llrt or IMUinct end proce.tlng ol

ca".:'·

vlolallonl•l ...

=:::;=======r=========T-========:-r-=========1

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Gordon Proctor, Director
Ohio Deportment or
Tronaporll111on, Plalnllll VI
Unknown
Trtntltrlll,
Alelgna, ole. ol lrl Routh,
deceaaed, etc., 11 ol.
Dllendantt.
CASE NO. 00-CV-4143
~UDOE FRED W. CROW Ill.
Th1
U n known
Troneltnea,
Alalgna,
Execulort, Admlnlt111I01'11,
J!tlrt, and Devl1111 ol Ira
Ro~tth, Docea11d, and all
peraona clelmlng by,
ihrough, or under them will
tako notice thotlhty have.
l!l•n named u dlltndtnla
by Gordon Praetor, Dlrlctor
Ohio Deportment or
Trenaportollon,
who
lnalllulod C111 No. OO·CV·
043 now pending In lht
Common Pleas Court ol
Meigs County, Ohio which
It an action to opproprltle
cttleln properly lor
hlghwoy purpoaea, nemoly
. the making, conatructlon, or
Improving ol Stole Route
338, Section 3.5311, end to
llx the velut· ol 1 ald •
property,
The property eoughllo be
appropriated It mort
tptclflcally described as
follows:
Sat Dttcrlptlon(e) ol

Properly Sll Forth on
"Exhibit A" 1118ched hllllo
Purtuonl lo R.C. 183.07
and R. C. 183.08, told
pereona mentioned obove
ehllltakt fUrther nollcllhlll
lhty hiVI 28 daya alltr lh1
compllllon ol Sorvlco by
Publication wllhln which to
ontwer or olhlrwlll dllend
agalnet Plalnllll'a pellllon.
The ortglnel or any auch
anower or other pllldlng
dtlendlng agalnal PlalnUH't
petition mual be llltd with
lht Clerk ol the Common
Pleat Court ol Melgt
County, Ohio, 11 Melga
County Cour1hou11, 100
Eoal Second Slrlll,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789; and,
• copy or ony euch entwer
or other pleading dtlondlng
agalnel Plaintiff'• ptllllon
mutt bt llrvtd upon Merk
E. Hays, Eaq., Aaalallnt
Attorney Gtntral, at 37
Weel Broad Slr111, Suitt
350, Columbue, Ohio 432154132.
A !allure to answer or
olherwleo defend within
aold 28 days will rttull In
Plelnllll, purouanl lo Civil
Rula SS, liking lht court lo
glint a. Judgment by dtlauH
ogalnal eny euch pereon
who lalla to onewer or
Olhtrwl.. dllond.
Gordon Proctor, Director
Ohio Dtpar1menl ol
Tllneportllllon

"EXHIBIT A"
Sltuattd In the township
ol Lllart, County of Mtlge,
Stale or Ohio, end In
Section a, Town 2N, Rona•
12W, end bounded ond
daecrlblclaa lollowa:
Btlifg 1 parcel .o r ill'!d
lying along the Left tide ol
the centerline or 1 aurvey,
mtdt by lht Dtplrlmtnl .ol
Tranaportellon, end being
IOCI1ed within the boundary
pointe ol Percel 18·WD aa
dellntattd upon the
Deparlmtnl
ol
Trantpor1111on'a Rlghi·OI·
Wey pion
MEG-338·
3.539(2.20), Shill e or 11
end rtcordtd on or about
December 12, 18ft, In Plat
Book 17, Page B, In the
recorda ol lht Recorder's
Olllce, Milgt County, Ohio.
The following daacrtbtd
rtal ttlale allualtd In the
VIllage ol Antiquity, In the
County ol Melga, and the
Stale or Ohio ID wit:
Lot No. a In Carillon
Young't
Addition to
Antiquity, Ltltrl Townahlp,
Meigs County, Ohio.
Sold Lot being plelltd In
Recorda or Plllll No, 2 ol
M•lae County Ohio In lhl
Reconlll''a Ollie• or eald
County.
Thle . Parcel wae bated
upon a eurvty ol Stele .
Routt 338 lor lht Dhlo
Dlp~~rtrnenr ol'l'n1~

In 1998, by tho Ohio
D 1 p a rIm e· n I
oI
Traneportatlon under the
eupervlelon ol R. Douglas
Brlgge,
Rtglatared
Surveyor 7388.
P r 1or
1natru ment
Rllertnct: Dlld Book 113.
Page
505,
County
Recorder'• Oltlce.
The Above dtlcrlblcl area
Ia to be deleted lrom
Auditor'•
Pa reel
08·
00578.000.
Owner, lor hlmaell ond
hla helre, txeculort,
admlnlelrlllort, tuccteaort,
end •••lane, rtatrvoa all
exlellng rlghlt or lngrtll
and egre1110 and from ony
rttlduelarea.
(5) 23,30 2TC

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
The tnnual rtport Form
990 PF lor tho Klbbll
Foundation, Bernard v.
Fultz, Tru1111 11 ovollabla
lor public lnepecllon ol
Bemord V. Fultz Law Office,
111·112 Will Second Slrlll,
Pomeroy, OH 45789, during
regular butlne.. houra lor
I periOd Ol 180 daye
1ubeequen1 to publication
oUhlenoUce.
(5) 18, 19, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25,
28, 28, 30, 31 end (8) 1 121c

Staff Varn Sale
Bradbury School
June 1, 2, &amp;3
7:00 ·2:00pm
of baby and
clothes - boy &amp; girl.
Rain or Shinall
Look forward to seeing
you there!!
Women's Auxiliary VMH
White Elephant Sale
Thurs. &amp; Fri. June 1&amp;2
Lot ~side Medical Building ·
Rain In Lobby ·
Donations Appreciated

Public Notice
c~ne or r**PI o11111e oiiiiiiiMI,

condlllonlol Ill forth hlrtln,
at ORDERED, lha CmNO
AUTHORITY may 111 k
ENFORCEMENT puiiUint 1D
lhl OAC lltcllon3737A1(0).
You an turlhlr noHIIIci 111
you 111 lll'lllhd ID an appoal
hMrlng to the Ohio llolnl or
Building Appttle, 6806
'lUlling ROIId, Reynolilaburg.
Ohio 43088, II you requeet
IIUCh ~ng wlthn thirty (30)
days after receipt or thla
olllllon. \'bur reql*l
lhllllncludt tho - l o r tho
lppeol lnd rtllol eoughl. A
copy ol thl1 clllllon lhall be
llllchld to your requell. At
IIUCh '-lng, you may appear
In 1*"011 or by your lllomey
ond you may prtaenl the
evidence and exomlno
wllnnan lor ond IQiinll you.
To
an applllhMrlng,
Mild • wrlllen rtqUH\, along
with a or money order
lor $100.00 mllde peyable to
·~. Sllte or Ohio•· to
tho llddrwaljiiCIIIod above.
Ploall be tdvleed lhll II
you do not
i hM~ng
within thirty
or the

r...-

110

''FREE''

Qualified
Medicare
Beneficiaries Medicaid
(called QMB):

Health Insurance
For
This program covers the
Meigs County payment of your Medicare
Aged and Disabled Part B premium and the co'

Call Today!
1-800-992-2608
Or
992-2117
Meigs County
Department of
Job &amp; Family
.
Services ·
175 Race Street
Middleport, OH
.
45760
•

rt

oppropr1111t leg8l ecllon ..
IUIIIorlzed by lhl Ohio

Rt;lu ~Code.

Wllnllt my tlgnoture 11
Reynoldlburg, OhiO .... 1111h
.-y ol April, 2000. llobtrl R.
Rlloy, 11111111 Fh .......
Thl8 181D Cllllly !hill on lh!t
18th .-y or April, 2000, 11118
Clllllon WAI luued lo the
r11ponalble peroon whoM
narno 11 tnlll'ld on lhl IYDnl
lid.- hereof In lhl follOWing

"*""'·

X • by Certified US Mo.ll

Nlo.(71l00 0520 0017 837411124)
By. Jlrii.,., Mlllllr
For further lnlormotlo~
regilding IIIII clllltlon, oot 1111 II
Mlchotl 0. K1'11ft, Chill qf
Technlcll Servlcee, HOI
Tulllng ROIId, lltvnoldlburll,
OhiO 43008. Phoni: 1&amp;14) 7215480.
CC:
Tim ThompiiQn,
Dlvlalonol Ltgll Coun11l;
Mlchltl 0. Knill. BlniU CIMI;
Chtl Echard, AMIItMI Chief;
Tom Boker, Flrt Solely
lnapoctor Supervl-: RobMI
Long, Fl1'11 Stilly lnapecl,or;
Middleport Flrt Otpei-lnMnl;
'

Help Wanted

..

WANTED: Buckeye Community Services has a
-part-time position available in Meigs County: 33 ·
hrs/wk: 8 am Sat thru 8 am Mon; sleep-over
required. Position requires teaching personal and
community skills to individuals with mental
retardation. · The work environment is informal
and rewarding. The requirements are: high
school diploma/GED, valid driver's license, thrEM!
years good driving experience and adequate
automobile Insurance coverage. B.C.S. offers
comprehensive training in the field of MR;oo:
Starting salary: $5.50/hr. Vacation/sick benefits.
Interested applicants need to specify position of
interest and send resume to: P.O. Box 604
Jackson, OH 45640·0604. All applications ·must
be post-marked by 6/1/00. Equal Opportunity
Employer.
'

RN POSITIONS: The Behavioral Health
Unit (Inner · Reflections) and Skilled
Nursing Facility (SNF) at Veterans
Memorial Hospital have immediate
openings for · part time and full time
Registered Nurses. Geriatric and/or
Psych. experience preferred.
STNA POSITIONS: The Skilled Nursing
Facility has part time openings for State:
Tested nursing Assistants.
·
Those interested, please contact
Human Resources at
(740) 992·21 04 ext. 201
to arrange Interview.

.

.

.

~Q~u:!!a!.!h!.:!"fi.!.!te!::.!do!.......Jiun.ud,ui~..~,y.!lid=l:.lu:!!a!.!lLs__.:;.-~2 A: Medicaid requires a

disability determination
by the ·Social Security
Adn:t.inistration or by the
This program reimburses
Ohio Department of Job
you for the part of the Part ' &amp; Family Services through
insurances(s) and deductibles
B premium that you have
•
D
its :County Medical
you are requtred to make as
part of the ·Medicare already paid which went · Services (CMS).
toward home health care. Q' Wh .
.
Program.
v.
'11
; .
:
at ts the age when I
.ou
wt
recetve .- · a
. const"dere d "Aged"?
.
am
·
Specified Low-Income retmbursement check once a
Medicare Beneficiaries year. The income limits are A: Age 65
'
Medicaid (called SLMB):
higher than QI-1 Medicaid.
Q:What services are covered
by Medicaid?
This type of Medicaid pays Qualified Workin" Disables
_
only for your Medicare· Part Individual (called QWDI):
A: ~y of t~ese services are
B premium.
covered tf they are
medidilly necessary for
This program pays for your
you:
Qualified Individuals
1
Medicare . Part A premium
Doctor Visits
Medicaid (called Q0-1):
only. QWDI can help you if
Hospit~l Care
Immunizations
This · program provides\~ you have lost eligibility for
Substance Abuse
same benefits as SLMB; Title II disability benefits
•
Prescriptions
due to earnings.
however,
the
tncome
Vision
standards are higher than
Dental
those aUowed for SLMB.
Mental Health
'
Other...

May 31,2000

•

·.
Melp County"s

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Volume 51 , Number 2

so cents

'
. I

ER

•
OSIn

Robert Bowers.
On April 22, the acute care inpatient
POMEROY -The emergency room unit closed for the same reason.
at Veterans Memorial Hospital wiU close
Before the March primary election,
·
when voters were asked to suppori a 4'at midnight tonight.
For the first time in more than a half mill levy to support the two departments
century, Meig.; CouQty finds itself with- ~ - which had a projected loss of nearly
out 24-hour emergency room service.
$800,000 this year - Bowers had
Closing of the unit a month earlier warned that if the levy was defeated the
than had been planned became necessary two units would close "no later than July
because of inadequate staffing. Nurses lefi 1."
for other positions, according to CEO
Voters defeated that levy by a vote of
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

3,653 to 2,147.
With the closing of the acute care and
emergency units, services that remain at
VMH are long-term :care, behavioral
health unit, the rural health clinic, and
the home health department.
Approximately 40 jobs are being lost in
the closing of the two units. In addition
to nursing positions, other departments
affected ~re X-ray, lab and switchboard,
which have been operating on a 24-hour
a day basis.
·

While the possibility of adding an
urgent care unit with extended hours in
the evening, perhaps to the Runil Hralth
Clinic, has been discussed, no action has
been taken.
Consolidated Health Systems took
over the operation of the financially troubled county- owned hospital in 1995 in
hopes of turning the operation arou nd.
Since then, according to Bowers, Consolidated and the Holzer Medical Center
have contributed more than $1.3 million

to keep the hospital operating. ,
Gene Lyons, director of the Meig&gt;
County Emergency Medical Service, said
Tuesday night' that the closing of th e
emergency room wi ll have an impact on
the EMS operation.
"We will have. a longer transport time
going to other facilities rather than com ing into VMH, but all of the squads are
aware and hopefully prepared to handle
th e load. We're going to do the best w e
can with what we have," she said.

Officials
appoint
Harrison to ..·
clerk's post

SAR
honors
citizens

BY BRIAN J, REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

OMEROY - Recognizing law enforcement officers for outstanding performance
in the line of duty and
community citizens for contributions to special projects or service
activities is an annual program of
Ewing.; Chapter, Sons of the
American Revolution.
The awards ceremony, a
gram of the~· ·NatiOif;l]~•rStlretety.,..
SAR, was conducted by James
Lo.:hary, . chapter president, and
took place last week at the Meig.;
Museum.
Medals for heroism•were presented to two highway patrolman
for saving a life, ·and meritorious
awards were given · to three office~s for their role in capturing an
eseapee.
State Highway Patrolmen Keith
F,ellure and Robert Jacks were AWARDED CERTIFICATES - Presented meritorious service medals and
the SAR awards ceremony were seated, left, l&lt;eith Ashley for
presented certificates and medals
chapter and recruiting new members, and Myron E. Jones
for heroism.
loelrtinll'ilirld marking Revolutionary soldiers' graves. Attlens County
-They are credited with saving
the life of a driver who suffered a
heart attack on U.S. 35 near Gallipolis last September. The troopers gave cardiopulmonary resuscitation until the Emergency Medical Service arrived. Their actions
were credited with saving the life
of the driver.
·
Medals and certificates were
also awarded to three Athens
County policemen who captured
a man who escaped after being
sentenced to prison in Athens .
Common Pleas Court.
The prisoner fled to the city
parking garage. The three officers
pursued ana used techniques to
prevent the prisoner's escape and
his causing injury to others in the
process.
LAW
- Athens County Common Pleas Judge
Michael WBrd, left, presented law enforCement awards to Chief Security
Pleliu ... SAR,PIIp.U
Officer John Koren and Glen Birchfield for capi:unna 8 prisoner.

More ...
Help With
·M
· · d .. ·
E .·
Q: Who determines whether
. e tcare
. xpenses I am disabled?
.
I

Wednesday

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Commonly asked
Questions:
'

'

dlocnllon, thiNIIMf' PIJnue

'

Help With
Medicare Expenses

Details, A3

this clllllon, logelhlr with
I*IIIIIN, anllllorth below: . lhl clt!ng .ulhortly, lillY· In 11-

TAKE NOTICE lhll Myou do
not tflwct lhe lbabotoliWII or the

Southern alumni award students, A&amp;
Reds win; Blazers extend series, 11

lhuncl~

HIJh: tOs: Low: 105

Medicaid (called Ql-2):

Common Pleas Judge Alan Goldsber'ry, standing left, presented the Good
Citizenship Award to Professor $aundra Sleigtl-Brennan of Ohio University
for her work on a history project; while other awards went to, from left,
Roger W. Hawk, Barbara Jones and Shirley friend, left to right.

HEROISM AWARDS- State Highway Patrolmen l&lt;eith Fellure, center, and
Robert Jacks were presented certificates and medals for heroism at the
Sons of Union Veterans a...iards ceremony. (Charlene Hoeflich photos)

Enviros
upset as top court expands review of clean-air fight
.
'

•

P I - ... Clerk. Pllp AJ

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.

WASHINGTON (AP)-The Supreme
Court' drew gasps from envirorilnentaliSts
and · praise from inliustry . representatives
Tuesday by expanding its review of a. major
clean-air dispute.
·
The justices said they will decide whether
anti-pollution regulations must take the costs
·of .compliance - not jilst health effects inttl account.
At stake is air quality nationwide.
"It's been a bedrock principle of the
Clean Air Act that the amount of pollution
allowed in the air _should depend on how it
affects the health of our children and the
elderly," said Vickie Patton, a lawyer with the
group Environmental Defense. "A decision
by the court to change the long-standing
clean air policy would tip the scales away
from public health concerns and toward the
economic concerns of major polluters."
Lower court rulings dating back to 1980
interpreted earlier versions of the Clean Air
Act. to bar the Environmental Protection

POMEROY Marlen e
Harrison will serve as actin g
clerk of courts until a permanent clerk is appointed by th e ·
Meigs Cou nty Republican
Central Co mmittee.
Harrison was appointed by
Meib'S Cou nty Commissioners
during their regular meeting
on Tuesday morning.
Her appointment was made
after
the
COtnmtsSIOTICrS
accepted .the resignation of
Clerk of Courts ·Larry E.
Spencer, who will leave his
post today after 27 year.• in
office.
Harrison. who wa1 nominated as the Republican cand idate
for the office in the March primary, has served Spencer as
first deputy in the legal department fo r a number of years.
Spencer, who chose not to
seek re-election, has cited
health reasons for his retirement, which he announced last
week.
The R epublican Central
Committee, charged with the
responsibility of appointing
someone to fill Spencer's
Unexpired term, will meet June
5. .
. Betsy Herald Nicodemus is
the Democratic candidate for
clerk of courts.
ln other business, commissioners accepted bids for bituminous materials for the
month of June from Ashphalt
Material s of Marietta and
Middleport Terminal of Gallipolis. The bids will be
referred to County Engineer
Robert Eason.
Commissioners set a public
viewing of Stearns R oad in
Orange Township, which has
been subject to a closing

The nation's highest court last
week agreed to review a ruling
. that blocked the EPA from
enforcing rules it adopted in 199.7
to reduce smog and soot.

The nation's highest court last week
agreed to review a·ruling th.at blocked the
EPA fiom enforcing rules it adopted i'n 1997
to reduce smog and soot. The justices had
granted a Clinton administration appeal that
said the dispute "carries profound ·implications for the health of the American public."
The Chamber of Commerce, American
Agency from considering compli·ance costs
h
tti
ti · 11 ti standards C ts Truckjng Associations, National Association
w en se ng an ~pdo ud Jon . th · os
of Manufacturen and industry represer;ttatives
routmeiy are const ere ater m e process, . h
full hall
d h
. .
~hen implementation plans are formed.
wdardso ~uccess Y c enge t e new stanR b' ..,.
d
1
f&lt;
h. US
m a federal appeals court 61ed a croSs
o m ·.,_,~nra • a awyer or t e •, · appeal raising the compliance-costs issue.
Ch_am~er ~f Com~erce, called Tues~y s
The cross appeal attac~ those portions of
ac~?n ternfic news. .
.
the appeals court ' ruling that freed the EPA
, T~~ publi_c. ~;alth IS . not ~mg unpro- . fiom taking costs into account and rejected
tected, she s:1~d. The clean-au standards at the industry ~ups' contention tliat the airIssue here are_ beyond ;:vhat 1s needed to pro- quality standards were based 9n incomplete
teet the public health.
or poor science.
Cost-benefit analysis, Conrad said, could
The industry groups were joined in their
force federal regulators to make principled chall~nge to the new standards by three
decisions on air qualifY, and prevent adop- states - Michigan, Ohio and West Virginia.
tion of unneeded and unfeasible standards.
Two states - Massachusetts and New Jersey

,

'·

- sided wid~ the EPA in support of the
tougher air-quality standards. The two states,
. antong others in the Northeast, contend that
prevailing winds carcy Midwest pollution to
them.
A ;hree-judge panel of the U.S. Circuit
Court ofAppeals fqr the Disttict of Columbia ruled by a 2-J · vote last year that the
agency ovcr.;tepped ill; authority. The appeals
court panel said the EPA had interpreted the
1990 Clean Air Act "so loos~ly" that it
unlawfully usurped Congress' legislative
power.
,
The full appeals court voted 6-5 in October against reviewing the panel's decision.
The revised air standards limited the
allowable level of ozone, an essential part of
smog, to 0.08 parts per million, instead of the
0.12 paw per million under the old requirement. And states for the fir.;t time were
required to regulate microscopic particulates, or soot, &amp;om power plants, cars and
other sources down to 2.5 microns.

Today's

Sentinel
Paps

2 Sedlons - 16
Calendar

Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Snorts
Weather

AS
B4-6
B7
A4
A3

81-3. 8

A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 7- 4-8 Pick 4: 9-7-3-9
Buckeye 5: S-11-19-20-30

W:VA•
D.uly 3: 4-4-4 Daily 4: 2-9-5-5
C 2000 Ohio Valley 1\ublishing Co.

�Page A 2 • The o.tly Sentinel

•

BUCKEYE BIRIEFS
Youth locked up for rape ..
HAMILTON (AP) - A judge has locked up an 11-year-old boy
who had been placed in home incarceration after being convicted
of sexually attacking a 7-year-old girl.
· Butler County Juvenile Court Judge David Niehaus said Tuesday
he was troubled by probation department reports that the boy and
his parents fail to accept his guilt.
"I'm very conce.rned about the attitude by you an~ your family
that you didn't do anything wrong, even though it's obvious to me
that you did;' he told the boy. ''I'm concerned that it's going to happen again."
· The judge ordered that the boy, convicted of gross sexual imposition on May 2, be evaluated for a lock-up rehabilitation program
at the county juvenile justice center.
··
According to testimony in his rrial, the boy lured the 7-year-old
neighbor girl into a closet in his bedroom on March 24 and sexually assaulted her.
Niehaus will determine the. boy's final sente.nce at ~ hearing on
July 10. That sam~ day, the boy also will be tried on two other gross
'exual imposition charges, one involving i 6-year-old boy and
another involving a 4-year-old girl.
. If the judge places the boy in the county rehabilitation program,
he would remain in the juvenile justice center until he completes
~he program, which usually takes about six months.
, 'Niehaus also could send the boy to the state juvenile detention
system. Completing a sex offender program at a state facility would
.take at least a year, the judge said.The boy could be held there until
he's 21.

Blackwell choosing new director
CLEVELAND (AP) - Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell
.will decide who should be the next director of the Cuyahoga
.County Board of Elections, which was criticized after several problems happened during Ohio's primary election.
.. The board was unable to agree on who should be the new direc,[or after a lengthy meeting Tuesday. So, in accordance with Ohio
law, the secretary of state will make the choice.
The new director will replace William Wilkins who quit three
days after shortages of Republican ballots kept some residents from
voting in the March 7 primary. Officials also found uncounted ballots in boxes after the election.
: Interim director Gwen Dillingham recommend~d in a staff eva!:
-uation that one-third of the board's 106 workers b~ fired, demoted
or retired.

Death penalty looms for susped
NORTHFIELD (AP)- A man charged earlier with manslaughter and released on bond now faces a death-penalty aggravated
murder charge in the killing of his girlfriend.
A Summit County grand jury Thesday indicted Brian Ferko, 26,
.;:&gt;n kidnapping and aggravated murder charges in the death of Lor•ie Freeland. In Ohio, the death penalty can be used against those
found guilty of committing ·a second felony in connection with
jllurder.
, The grand jury's decision came more than a week after Ferko was
arraigned i~ Cuyahoga Fall~ Municip~ Court ,QI.I ~~n~~~gbcer
charge, which carnes a max1mum sentence of 10 years m pmon. ·.
Ferko was rele:Hed Friday from jail after posting $50;000 bond.
His attorney, George Keith, declined to comment Thesday, saying he
:-vas unaware of the Bggravated murder charge.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, May 31, 200!)

.

'

Workers welcome extra plant inonitorinl
PIKETON (AP) - As federal regulators
meet to describe plans for monitoring the
nation's only twO uranium enrichment plants,
workers at one plant say the)&gt; welcome the
extra anention.
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has
scheduled a meeting Wednesday at the U.S.
Enrichment Corp. facility in Piketon to discuss
how US.EC will continue to meet regulatory
·requirements after a series of layoffS later this
sununer.
"Our jurisdiction is safety and environmental issues," NRC spokesman Jan Strasma said
Tuesday. "We plan .to have additional inspections and to monitor the transition of going
from the current work force to a smaller work
force."
The commission met Tuesday evening at the
facility in Paducah, Ky., to answer questions
from the public.

..

State car:'cels many colleges' specialty lice,nse plate~:
COLUMBUS (AP) - Winning
Motor Vehicles.
A 1997 law meant to thin the number of specialty
four national football champi The only California university
plates imposed a 150-plate minimum for colleges.
onships in the 1990s keeps alumni
with a plate is the University of
pride high at Mount Union Col- mark and licensing services for Texas, which has 85 specialtY California at Los Angeles.
·~
lege.
Ohio State.
plaw.;, passed a law Jast year requir. Reducing the number of s!*:_
But not high enough when it
Collegiate plates display a ing groups to either sell a mini- cialry plates in. Ohio won't bother
comes to specialty license plates school logo on the left and the mum of 3,500 plates by 2004 or Senate President Richard finah.,
honoring the -school of 2,000 stu- school name across the bottom.
pay a S15,000 deposit to help cover
Finan, a Cincinnati Republic¥1.
A 1997 law meant to thin the the cost of creating sp~cialty plates.
dents. The state in 1998 canceled
recendy cast the lone vote againSt
Of the state's 41 college specialthe college's plate after Mount number of specialty plates imposed .
approval
of a plate honoring fi~
Union boosters 'failed to buy the the 1SO. plate minimum for ,ol- ty plates, more than halfprobably
.
leges. That led to most of the col- won't make the 3,500' Cutoff, said fighters.
required minimum 150 plates.
"They become meaningles,~ ·
The state has canceled 34 other lege cancellations, according to the Mike Viesca, a spokeSman for the
Finan
said. "It gets to the point
specialty plates since 1998 because Ol)io Department ofPublic Safety. state Department of Transportawhere you don't know whether,it's
of a lack of interest, all belonging
Plates' popularity are cyclical tion.
to Ohio colleges or universities.
and depend on groups' willingness
California, with only eight spe- an Ohio plate or an Indiana plate
"We just couldn't sell enough;' . to market them, said Susan Wittak- cialty plates, requires a 5,000-plate or a Michigan plate or what ·have
minimum, said Evan Nossoff, a ypu. We lose some of the idea of
Dorothy Davis, Mount Union's · er, department spokeswoman.
•
director of alumni and college
Some of Ohio's most popular spokesman for the Department of the plate.
activities, said Tuesday. "You need specialty plates, including Scenic
to keep at it all the time to make it Rivers, Celebrate Kids! and Bald
filii&lt;&gt; 111)1/I.IIH t · &lt; OV&lt;'IJ(j&lt;' for CJll.lftly
work."
·
· Eagle, do well despite a higher,
i'' ''l['l&lt;·, ir1&lt; lt1dinqllim&lt;' wrtl1
Colleges that lost the plates 1,000-plate minimum, she said ·
"It•)) 111.111 I" rl&lt; '&lt; I" drrVIIHJ I&lt;'&lt; ore h .
included 'Biuffion College, Cleve"The key is · these groups are
land State University and the Uni- very interested in proq1oting their
•
B~.,.......,. a.IWICW . . ,.,.
versity of Findlay.
· cause;'Wittaker said.
flll'lllln -WOMaiJII'.twldt
•
Another 24 Ohio colleges still
Ohio has about 80 specialty
l'lftlllfiD\M.. . . tortw--. ........ t/1
have the plates, including Ashland plates, including colleges, environWo ... """ """ .... _ , . . University, Muskingum College mental plates and those honoring
Cll ........ _ _
war veterans.
and Wright State University.
Nllllonwldt ,. On Your Sf*'
Ohio State had the first college
Not all face minimum requirespecialty ·plate in Ohio, in 1992, ments. 1\venry-six Ohio veterans
Nltlonwlcle" ·
and with more than 9,500 plates . last year purchased the specialty
'
lnaurtnce &amp;
.
•-:
.today. doesn't have any problem plate commemorating the U.S.
· Fln,nc:fll S.rviC111
meeting the minimum.
invasion of Grenada. Only three
The plates raise about $250,000 World War I plates were issued.
a year for scholarship!, sill~ ~ck , Other 1111~1 are al!o trying to
Van Brimmer, director of mde· • put the brake; on apeclalty plate!.

----In

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.C

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

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.,

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Units log 10 calls Yard sale planned

I

Earl1lutd1r Wilson

.

•SHADE- Earl Clark "Butch"Wilson, 53, Park Road, Shade, died
SUnday, May 29, 2000 at his residence.
He was born on July 5,1947 i\) Wheeling, W.Va., son of Emma Laudermilt Wilson and the late George C. Wilson . He was a veteran of the
lJ:S.Army and was employed as a parking garage attendant for the city
of"Athens.
' Surviving, in addition to his•mother, are his wife,Jimmie K. Watson;
a brother and sister-in-law, Max W. and Kimberly Wilson; and a sister
alld brother-in-law, Joyce A. and William Hansen.
There will be no funeral service and no calling hours.
· Arrangements are by Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
· Memorial contributions may be made to the American Heart Association, Meigs County Division, Joan Wolfe, rreasurer, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

....

VALLEY WEATHER

Warm and humid Thursday
, •

Highs from the upper 80s to the
lower 90s.
Thursday night.. .Mostly clear.
Lows in the mid and upper 60s.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

, · Damp southerly winds will
produce higher temperatures and
humidities across the tri-county
ania on Thursday, forecasters said.
· 'Skies will be mostly cloudy
tonight with temperatures falling
only into the 60s.
· Warm and humid conditions
are expected on Thursday, the
National Weather Service said.
Highs will be near 90:
·• · Sunset tonight will be at 8:54
p.m. and sunrise on Thursday at
·6:05a.m.

Extended forecast:

Bible school
to begin

Weather forecast:
·. Tonight... Mosdy clear. Lows
60 to 65. Light and variable wind.
• Thursday... Mostly
sunny.

.-.
•• •

:~:
.• • •.

LOCAL STG&gt;CKS

:AEP-35), ·
'Akzo ~ 39'~.
: AmTech/SBC- 44'1.
·Ashland Inc. - 34),
' AT&amp;T-35~

:Bank One- 33~
•Bob Evans - 13'•
: BorgWamer - 40\
·Champion - Zit
:Charming Shops- 6'1t
City Holding- 10
•Federal Mogul - 9'•

iFl!8tar- 25"•1

''FREE''

Commonly asked

· More .••
. Questions:
Help With
•·
E
Q; Who determines whether
M e.dICare
· xpenses .I am .disabled? .
.

Qualified
Medicare
Beneficiaries Medicaid ·
''
Health Insurance (called QMR);
~Q""'uua.,.h"'"''fi..._.te~d,.,.;..--'!I~n~d.,.iy.I.Ji~d~u!U!a~lsL......:-:...· 2 A: Medicaid requires a
Medicaid (called QI-2):
disability determination
For
~y the Social Security
This program covers the
Meigs County payment of your Medicare This program reimburses Administration or by the
Department of job
Aged and Disabled Part B premium and the co- you for the ·part of the Part &amp;Ohio
Family Services through
insurances(s) and deductibles.
B premium that you ·have ·'its County Medical
.you are required to .make ' as
Services (CMS).
part of the Medicare akeady paid: which went
Call Today!
toW&amp;rd home heahh care.
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age when I
"-ou
·wt'll
~·
rece1ve
·a
.
·
am constdered "Aged";~
·
Specified Low-Income reimbursement check once a
'
1-800-992-2608 ·' Medicare 'Beneficiaries year. The income limits are A: Age 65
'
Medicaid
(called
SLMB):
higher than QI-1 Medicaid.
Or
Q: What services are covered
by Medicaid?
992-2117
This type of Medicaid pays · Qualified Working Disables
·
only for your Medicare Part Individual (called QWDI):
A; Any of these services are
·
covered if they are
B premium.
Meigs County
medically necessary for
This program pays for your
Department of Qualified Individuals - 1 Medicare Part A premium you:
Doctor Visits
Medicaid (called Q0-1):
only. Q\YDI can help you if
Hospital Care
Job &amp; F~mily
•
you have lost eligibility for
Immunizations
This
program
provides
the
Services
Substance Abuse
same benefits as SLMB; Title II disability benefits
Prescriptions
175 Race Street however, the income due to earnings.
Vision
standards
are
higher
than
Middleport, OH those allowed for SLMB.
•
Dental
Mental Health
45760
Other...

'

Kmart - 7')•
Kroger - 20'~..

Lands End- 31'·
Ud. -48lo
Oak HUI Financial - 15'•

OVB-27

One Valley- 38').
Peoples - 15'-

Premler -

u

n.

Rockwell - 40%.

I

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w

t

,.

a~temoon, Monday lbro"Jh
111 Court ~.• Pomeroy, Ohio, by lhe

i'Ublishtd every

Priday,
Obio V•lley Publilhins Company., Pomeroy,
Ohio ~!769, Pll. 992·2156. Seoond clau pool·
oje poid II Pomeroy, Ohio.

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1'lte Dally Sentinel, l1 t Court St., Pomeroy,
~io4S769.

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Gannett - 84'!.
General Electric - 51 ),
Ha~ey Davidson - 38),

CIP hearing set

Rocky Boots RD Shell- 61~.
Sears-38'•
Shoney'a -'I.
Wai·Mart - 53
Wendy's -19'·
Worthington- 12~

TUPPERS PLAINS -A public hearing will be held on the
Easter!l Local School District's
Continuous Improvement Plan
on June 13 at 6 p.m. in the high
school cafeteria.

Dally stock repofls !It&amp; 1he

4

p.m. closing quo1es of
trans-

the previous day's

actions, pro.vlded . by
Advesl of Gallipolis.

RUTLAND - Annual Rutland communiry-wide yard sale
will be held on Saturday from 9
a.m.-4 p.m . In conjunction with
the event, the Rudand squad will
grill hot dogs and hamburgers in
front of the Harder cabin.

Museum camp
slated
POM ~ROY Meigs County Historical Society will hold a
day camp for youth finishing the
second, third, and fourth grades
on June 5 and 6 at the Meigs
County Museum, Butternut
Avenue, Pomeroy.
Crafts, skills, games and music
from the early 1900s will be
taught. The camp wiU be held
from 9 a.m.-4 p.m . each day and
the cost is $15 a day which
includes lunch.
Registration is required arid
can be made by phoning th e
museum 992-3801 by Thursday.

Pool hours set

superintendent, will be speaking
each evening. There will be special singing each evening. The
public is invited by Pastor Allen
Mid cap.

Auxiliary will
meet

name of of Rachel Conklin was
omitted from the list of graduating seniors at Eastern High
School.
Her name was not included in
material provided bY the school. .

Enrollment open

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tup•pers Plains VFW Ladies Auxiliary
will meet on· Thursday at 7:30
p.m.

Barbecue set
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department will have
a chicken barbecue on Sunday.
Serving begins at 11 a.m .. at a
cost of $4.50.

Camp set.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Eagle basketball camp Monday through Ju ne 9, grades three
through six, Eastern High School
gymn asium. Participants to
receive T-shirts and awards for
contest winners.
Emphasis of camp, defense,
rebounding, ball handling, shooting, and good rules of the game.
Camp conducted from 9 a.m.noon . Questions
may be
addressed to Coach Howie Caldwell.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Pool opened on Monday.
Hours are Monday through
Saturday from 11 a.m.-5 p.m.,
and Sunday from noon-6 p.m.
General admission costs are $3
for adults and $2 for students,
with children under three admit-·
ted at no cost. Season passes are
$30 for individuals and $60 for
RUTLAND - This morning,
families (up to five members) .
Leading
Creek Conservancy DisPool parties and shelter houses in
General Hartinger Park may be trict began repairing a main line
booked by calling Chris Kelly at water leak on State Route 143.
Service · is temporarily inter992-9240.
rupted. A boil advisory is in effect
for customers on SR 143 from
Smith Run Road to Zion Road,
and Smith Run Road on the SR
MIDDLEPORT - Middle- 143. Boiling should continue
port Church of the Nazarene will
until an announcement that the
be holding revival services
water tests safe to drink.
Wednesday through Sunday. Services will begin at 7 p.m . every
night except Sunday when they
will begin at 6:30 p.m Dr.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Rkhard L. Gordon, district

. POMEROY Community
Outreach Team from the C hillicothe Veterans Administration
Medical Center will enroll veterans into the VA Health Care System of Ohio at the Meigs County Veterans Services Office on
Mulberry Heights in Pomeroy,
each Friday in June from 9 a.m.3 p.m.
Veterans are asked to provide a
copy of their discharge, separation
or DD2 14, spouse's Social Security number and date of birth, the
,date of marriage, date of birth of
dependent children and their
Social Security numbers, infor~
rnation ON income and assets,
and Medicare and Insurance card.
The information is required in
order to complete the application
for health care.
T hose enrolled in the past, who
have not used the VA Health Care
System in the past three yea~
must re-enroll. A nurse will be
available to provide blood pressure, glucose and cholesterol
.
'
scree rungs.

Dance set

Line under repair

Revival this week

Name omitted

TUPPERS PLAINS - Square
danctng ~ith clogging, line and
slow dancing Will 6e held at the
Tuppers Plains VFW Saturday. 811 p.m. True Country will play
and the caller will be Clifford
Longenette.

Meeting set
PORTLAND - A Buffington
Island Civil War Batdefield meta)
detectio n survey presentation will
be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
Meigs Local High School. The
public. is invited.

I

•.
•

HelpWith ··
Medicare Expenses

POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs
Emergency Services
answered 10 calls for assistance on
Tuesday. Units responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
1:14 a.m., North Second
Avenue, Ben Harris, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
7:35 a.m., Lincoln Hill, assisted
by Pomeroy as First Responder,
Steven Lush,VMH;
8:08 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, assisted by Pomeroy as
First
Responder, Katheryn
Hysell,VMH;
12:03 p.m., Bunker Hill, lsiah
Riffle, VMH, Jason Sears, refused
treatment;
2:56 p.m., Carmel Road,
George Circle, VMH;
5:35 p.m., Bone Hollow, Inda
Jeffers,VMH ;
6:24 p.m., Oliver Street, Keith
Day,VMH.
RUTLAND
1:28 a.m., White's Hill Road,
Ter_ry Houser, treated;
12:29 p.m., Meigs Mine 2,
Rick Baisden, Holzer Medical
Center;
6:10 p.m ., Oliver Street,
Heather Brooks,VMH. ·

Friday... Partly
cloudy. A
chance of show~rs and thunderstorms from afternoon on. Highs
from the upper 80s to near 90.
Saturday... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the mid and
upper 60s and highs in the mid
RACINE - Vacation Bible
80s.
Sunday .. Mostly cloudy with a School's Road Rally 2000 " In
chance of showers and thunder- The Race With Jesus" will be
storms. Lows in the lower 60s and held June 5-9, 9:30 a.m.-noon, at
. the First Baptist Church in
highs in the upper 70s.
Racine. For more information
call the chun:h at 949- 286 7 or
949-3131, or the director at 9493025.

SAR

The Dally Sentinel
•

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

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USEC, which has been hurt by falling prices it will be interesting to see what they come up
(or enriched uranium used to fuel nuclear with:"
power plants, plans to lay off 625 workers this
·Dan Minter, union president at the Piketon
summer. The layoffS are to be divided equally . plant, said since -the NRC began regulating the
. berween the plants, a move designed to save plant in 1997 there ltave been 76,000 proce$39 million a year in production costs.
dure changes. He said with all the changes i~ ~
.
About 2,100 people work at the important to l&lt;eep trained workers.
"We have been meeting the safety requirer
Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant in Piketon and 1,700 work at the Paducah Gaseous ments with the staff we have had, but to lose a
Diffusion Plant in Kentucky.The plant in Pike- significant percentage of workers will make it
ton is one of southern Ohio's largest employ- inore of a challenge to meet that goal," he said.
ers.
Company officials said they have discussed
Bill Dimit, a 25-year employee at the Pike- the layoff plans with the NRC and do oot
ton plant, said while safety programs are getting believe worker safety will suffer.
better. he is worried that fewer workers could
"The company has done extensive studies
mean more dangers.
on the effect of the reduction of the work fotce
. " I don't know how they will operate if they ~nd has concluded that the plant will continue
keep doing what they are doing," Dimit said. to operate with the same excellent safery
"The jobs require so much training and with record that it always had," USEC spokes~m_an
people moving into different areas of the plant Elizabeth Bean Stuckle said Tuesday.

....

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

·Wednesday, May 31, 2000

where bomr: canier Krvice Ia a\llillble.
I•

"

Piablltber merves.the d&amp;ht to adjust rates dur·
'-PI lht 1\lb&amp;Wptlon period. Subscdptlon rate
Cbllllfl ma~ be Implemented by ch•nalnJ the
d~ralioa of tile lublerft!doa.

'.
·

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MAIL SUIISCRIPflONS
luldo Melp Coul¥

I' Weeta ................................................. S27.30
2fi W..ta ................................................. SS3.R2
5l W..u ...............................................SIOS.5'6
~.
Rate. O•ttlde Melp Coaaty
I~ Weeto .................................................$l9.ll
:m w..u.................................................$!6.68

s;z w.w ...............................................$109.72
Reader Services
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'. O.r ••I• c:o•cen 11 all ttork:t lt 10 bt
icc•rUe. lf JH ..... of aaerror Ia I 1101')',
Cilllt.e MWII'OHI at (740) 991·2155. We will
C..ecll. yoer llfor••tlcna aad •akt •

,..-ndloa If warna1td.
·
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News Dtplrtme:ntt
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tt:tea•kta••m
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Ceatnl Maupr.......- ................. Ext. 1101
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•••her

Otlltr Sen'lea
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views, which received .national
. recognition. Making the presentation to · Sleigh-Brennan was
Athens County Common Pleas
Judge Alan Goldsberry.
Awarded the Bronze Good
Citizenship Award was Roger
Hawk of Shade, for his work as an
outstanding Lodi Township
trustee .
Hawk does his work despite his
. blindness, which he describes as a
"hindrance rather than a handi-

f1om Pilip AI
,

In presenting the awards,
Athens -Common Pleas Judge
Michael Ward noted that the prisoner was taken back to court
where his sentence was extended.
Honored were Chief Security
Officer John Koren, Deputy Glen
urchfield and Deputy Josh
Braglin-, who W:H not present for
the ceremony.
Professor. Saundra Sleigh-Brennan of Ohio University was given.
a bronze SAR Go.od Citizenship
Award for her work on her local
history project, "Countdown · to .
the Millennium."
.
This involved schools conducting interviews tJf citizens on local
histm;y matters and placing these
on film.
WOUB television has aired a
!6cpart series from these inter-

cap."
The SAR. annually presents an
American Flag Certificate to
selected individuals who show
outstanding patriotism by flying
the flag 24 \lours a day.
Shirley Friend of Pomeroy
received that certificate. She credited her late husband, Richard, for·
beginning the practice. Others
qualifying for the award, but not
present, were Dr. William Cuckler
of Athens, and Robert Rice of
New Marshfield.

Barbara Jones of Oak Hill was
presented the Martha Washington
SAR Award arid medal for her
work il) marking Revolutionary
War graves and in . recruiting
membership for the SAR.
Two SAR Meritorious Service
Awards were presented to members of Ewings Chapter for outstanding work in the chapter.
Myron E. Jones of Oak Hill was
given the award for his work IN
locating Revolutionary soldiers'
graves, ordering new markers
when necessary, setting the 200pound markers, and arranging
ceremonies to dedicate them.
Keith Ashley was also presented
the Meritorious Service Award
for his work at reactivating the
chapter in 1986, for serving five
years as its president, for serving as
the Ohio Society president, and
for his work in recruiting members.
It was noted that he has recruited over 40 members since 1986.

June 12 meeting.

Clerk .

The board also approved the
payment of bills in the amount of
$311,696.22.

frorn PapAl

request, for June 6 at 4:30 p.m.
The board will likely take
action on the closing request at its

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.·
Subscribe today.
992-2156

Present were Commissioners
Janet Howard and Mick Daven~

port.

:

To get a current weather
report, check the

.Sentinel

DNA sought in Jesse James mystery
. GRANBURY, Texas (AP) - Add another chapter
to the legend ofJesse James.
·
Cemetery crewmen, under court orders, moved
aside a headstone Tuesday and dug up the remains of
a man who purportedly claimed he was Jesse James.
DNA tests are planned to see if he was the outlaw.
"This-is certainly a historic day, a historic moment;'
said Steven Reid, an ~ttorney for Jesse Quanah James
and Charles A. James, twO men who claim to be
James' grandsons."We hope it's an -opportunity to prdvide some additional information qn the life and legend of]esse James."
History books say James was shot in the back and

killed by Bob Ford, a member of his own gang, on
April 3, 1882, in St. Joseph, Mo.
But some Granbury residents insist the outlaw survived, assumed the name of ]. Frank Dalton and
moved to the town 25 miles southwest of Fort Worth.
They claim he lived to be 104 and was buried in 1951
under the gravestone that reads 'Jesse Woodson
James", whi~h includes the inscription, "Supposedly
killed in 1882."
A Uriiversity of California anthropologist will per. form a DNA analysis on the remains exhumed Tuesday and compare it to the DNA of Oklahoma City
lawyer Robert Jackson, a known James descendant.

=

........... 111:10,4.111, 7:!1,1:11

BaiEWBJ

7:4&amp;, 8:46

...... n.n.II1Z:41i, Z:46, 4:41, 7'.41. t4t

ROAD 1W

":'

7:4&amp;, 8:ti&amp;

11111i111111111'1.. til, 4:18,7:41, til

......

8:110

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At the Pleasant Valley Wellness Center, we want you to look good
AND feel good. When you purchase rr~onthly memberships for June &amp;July,
get August at no additional charge.
·
For more information on rates or gift certificates, please call our fitness
professionals, (304) 675-7222. .
. ,
..

:

Pleasant Valley :
W II
C t 1
e ness en er 1
(304) 675-7222

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�Page A 2 • The o.tly Sentinel

•

BUCKEYE BIRIEFS
Youth locked up for rape ..
HAMILTON (AP) - A judge has locked up an 11-year-old boy
who had been placed in home incarceration after being convicted
of sexually attacking a 7-year-old girl.
· Butler County Juvenile Court Judge David Niehaus said Tuesday
he was troubled by probation department reports that the boy and
his parents fail to accept his guilt.
"I'm very conce.rned about the attitude by you an~ your family
that you didn't do anything wrong, even though it's obvious to me
that you did;' he told the boy. ''I'm concerned that it's going to happen again."
· The judge ordered that the boy, convicted of gross sexual imposition on May 2, be evaluated for a lock-up rehabilitation program
at the county juvenile justice center.
··
According to testimony in his rrial, the boy lured the 7-year-old
neighbor girl into a closet in his bedroom on March 24 and sexually assaulted her.
Niehaus will determine the. boy's final sente.nce at ~ hearing on
July 10. That sam~ day, the boy also will be tried on two other gross
'exual imposition charges, one involving i 6-year-old boy and
another involving a 4-year-old girl.
. If the judge places the boy in the county rehabilitation program,
he would remain in the juvenile justice center until he completes
~he program, which usually takes about six months.
, 'Niehaus also could send the boy to the state juvenile detention
system. Completing a sex offender program at a state facility would
.take at least a year, the judge said.The boy could be held there until
he's 21.

Blackwell choosing new director
CLEVELAND (AP) - Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell
.will decide who should be the next director of the Cuyahoga
.County Board of Elections, which was criticized after several problems happened during Ohio's primary election.
.. The board was unable to agree on who should be the new direc,[or after a lengthy meeting Tuesday. So, in accordance with Ohio
law, the secretary of state will make the choice.
The new director will replace William Wilkins who quit three
days after shortages of Republican ballots kept some residents from
voting in the March 7 primary. Officials also found uncounted ballots in boxes after the election.
: Interim director Gwen Dillingham recommend~d in a staff eva!:
-uation that one-third of the board's 106 workers b~ fired, demoted
or retired.

Death penalty looms for susped
NORTHFIELD (AP)- A man charged earlier with manslaughter and released on bond now faces a death-penalty aggravated
murder charge in the killing of his girlfriend.
A Summit County grand jury Thesday indicted Brian Ferko, 26,
.;:&gt;n kidnapping and aggravated murder charges in the death of Lor•ie Freeland. In Ohio, the death penalty can be used against those
found guilty of committing ·a second felony in connection with
jllurder.
, The grand jury's decision came more than a week after Ferko was
arraigned i~ Cuyahoga Fall~ Municip~ Court ,QI.I ~~n~~~gbcer
charge, which carnes a max1mum sentence of 10 years m pmon. ·.
Ferko was rele:Hed Friday from jail after posting $50;000 bond.
His attorney, George Keith, declined to comment Thesday, saying he
:-vas unaware of the Bggravated murder charge.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, May 31, 200!)

.

'

Workers welcome extra plant inonitorinl
PIKETON (AP) - As federal regulators
meet to describe plans for monitoring the
nation's only twO uranium enrichment plants,
workers at one plant say the)&gt; welcome the
extra anention.
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has
scheduled a meeting Wednesday at the U.S.
Enrichment Corp. facility in Piketon to discuss
how US.EC will continue to meet regulatory
·requirements after a series of layoffS later this
sununer.
"Our jurisdiction is safety and environmental issues," NRC spokesman Jan Strasma said
Tuesday. "We plan .to have additional inspections and to monitor the transition of going
from the current work force to a smaller work
force."
The commission met Tuesday evening at the
facility in Paducah, Ky., to answer questions
from the public.

..

State car:'cels many colleges' specialty lice,nse plate~:
COLUMBUS (AP) - Winning
Motor Vehicles.
A 1997 law meant to thin the number of specialty
four national football champi The only California university
plates imposed a 150-plate minimum for colleges.
onships in the 1990s keeps alumni
with a plate is the University of
pride high at Mount Union Col- mark and licensing services for Texas, which has 85 specialtY California at Los Angeles.
·~
lege.
Ohio State.
plaw.;, passed a law Jast year requir. Reducing the number of s!*:_
But not high enough when it
Collegiate plates display a ing groups to either sell a mini- cialry plates in. Ohio won't bother
comes to specialty license plates school logo on the left and the mum of 3,500 plates by 2004 or Senate President Richard finah.,
honoring the -school of 2,000 stu- school name across the bottom.
pay a S15,000 deposit to help cover
Finan, a Cincinnati Republic¥1.
A 1997 law meant to thin the the cost of creating sp~cialty plates.
dents. The state in 1998 canceled
recendy cast the lone vote againSt
Of the state's 41 college specialthe college's plate after Mount number of specialty plates imposed .
approval
of a plate honoring fi~
Union boosters 'failed to buy the the 1SO. plate minimum for ,ol- ty plates, more than halfprobably
.
leges. That led to most of the col- won't make the 3,500' Cutoff, said fighters.
required minimum 150 plates.
"They become meaningles,~ ·
The state has canceled 34 other lege cancellations, according to the Mike Viesca, a spokeSman for the
Finan
said. "It gets to the point
specialty plates since 1998 because Ol)io Department ofPublic Safety. state Department of Transportawhere you don't know whether,it's
of a lack of interest, all belonging
Plates' popularity are cyclical tion.
to Ohio colleges or universities.
and depend on groups' willingness
California, with only eight spe- an Ohio plate or an Indiana plate
"We just couldn't sell enough;' . to market them, said Susan Wittak- cialty plates, requires a 5,000-plate or a Michigan plate or what ·have
minimum, said Evan Nossoff, a ypu. We lose some of the idea of
Dorothy Davis, Mount Union's · er, department spokeswoman.
•
director of alumni and college
Some of Ohio's most popular spokesman for the Department of the plate.
activities, said Tuesday. "You need specialty plates, including Scenic
to keep at it all the time to make it Rivers, Celebrate Kids! and Bald
filii&lt;&gt; 111)1/I.IIH t · &lt; OV&lt;'IJ(j&lt;' for CJll.lftly
work."
·
· Eagle, do well despite a higher,
i'' ''l['l&lt;·, ir1&lt; lt1dinqllim&lt;' wrtl1
Colleges that lost the plates 1,000-plate minimum, she said ·
"It•)) 111.111 I" rl&lt; '&lt; I" drrVIIHJ I&lt;'&lt; ore h .
included 'Biuffion College, Cleve"The key is · these groups are
land State University and the Uni- very interested in proq1oting their
•
B~.,.......,. a.IWICW . . ,.,.
versity of Findlay.
· cause;'Wittaker said.
flll'lllln -WOMaiJII'.twldt
•
Another 24 Ohio colleges still
Ohio has about 80 specialty
l'lftlllfiD\M.. . . tortw--. ........ t/1
have the plates, including Ashland plates, including colleges, environWo ... """ """ .... _ , . . University, Muskingum College mental plates and those honoring
Cll ........ _ _
war veterans.
and Wright State University.
Nllllonwldt ,. On Your Sf*'
Ohio State had the first college
Not all face minimum requirespecialty ·plate in Ohio, in 1992, ments. 1\venry-six Ohio veterans
Nltlonwlcle" ·
and with more than 9,500 plates . last year purchased the specialty
'
lnaurtnce &amp;
.
•-:
.today. doesn't have any problem plate commemorating the U.S.
· Fln,nc:fll S.rviC111
meeting the minimum.
invasion of Grenada. Only three
The plates raise about $250,000 World War I plates were issued.
a year for scholarship!, sill~ ~ck , Other 1111~1 are al!o trying to
Van Brimmer, director of mde· • put the brake; on apeclalty plate!.

----In

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LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

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Units log 10 calls Yard sale planned

I

Earl1lutd1r Wilson

.

•SHADE- Earl Clark "Butch"Wilson, 53, Park Road, Shade, died
SUnday, May 29, 2000 at his residence.
He was born on July 5,1947 i\) Wheeling, W.Va., son of Emma Laudermilt Wilson and the late George C. Wilson . He was a veteran of the
lJ:S.Army and was employed as a parking garage attendant for the city
of"Athens.
' Surviving, in addition to his•mother, are his wife,Jimmie K. Watson;
a brother and sister-in-law, Max W. and Kimberly Wilson; and a sister
alld brother-in-law, Joyce A. and William Hansen.
There will be no funeral service and no calling hours.
· Arrangements are by Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
· Memorial contributions may be made to the American Heart Association, Meigs County Division, Joan Wolfe, rreasurer, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

....

VALLEY WEATHER

Warm and humid Thursday
, •

Highs from the upper 80s to the
lower 90s.
Thursday night.. .Mostly clear.
Lows in the mid and upper 60s.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

, · Damp southerly winds will
produce higher temperatures and
humidities across the tri-county
ania on Thursday, forecasters said.
· 'Skies will be mostly cloudy
tonight with temperatures falling
only into the 60s.
· Warm and humid conditions
are expected on Thursday, the
National Weather Service said.
Highs will be near 90:
·• · Sunset tonight will be at 8:54
p.m. and sunrise on Thursday at
·6:05a.m.

Extended forecast:

Bible school
to begin

Weather forecast:
·. Tonight... Mosdy clear. Lows
60 to 65. Light and variable wind.
• Thursday... Mostly
sunny.

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LOCAL STG&gt;CKS

:AEP-35), ·
'Akzo ~ 39'~.
: AmTech/SBC- 44'1.
·Ashland Inc. - 34),
' AT&amp;T-35~

:Bank One- 33~
•Bob Evans - 13'•
: BorgWamer - 40\
·Champion - Zit
:Charming Shops- 6'1t
City Holding- 10
•Federal Mogul - 9'•

iFl!8tar- 25"•1

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Commonly asked

· More .••
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Help With
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Q; Who determines whether
M e.dICare
· xpenses .I am .disabled? .
.

Qualified
Medicare
Beneficiaries Medicaid ·
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Health Insurance (called QMR);
~Q""'uua.,.h"'"''fi..._.te~d,.,.;..--'!I~n~d.,.iy.I.Ji~d~u!U!a~lsL......:-:...· 2 A: Medicaid requires a
Medicaid (called QI-2):
disability determination
For
~y the Social Security
This program covers the
Meigs County payment of your Medicare This program reimburses Administration or by the
Department of job
Aged and Disabled Part B premium and the co- you for the ·part of the Part &amp;Ohio
Family Services through
insurances(s) and deductibles.
B premium that you ·have ·'its County Medical
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Services (CMS).
part of the Medicare akeady paid: which went
Call Today!
toW&amp;rd home heahh care.
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Specified Low-Income reimbursement check once a
'
1-800-992-2608 ·' Medicare 'Beneficiaries year. The income limits are A: Age 65
'
Medicaid
(called
SLMB):
higher than QI-1 Medicaid.
Or
Q: What services are covered
by Medicaid?
992-2117
This type of Medicaid pays · Qualified Working Disables
·
only for your Medicare Part Individual (called QWDI):
A; Any of these services are
·
covered if they are
B premium.
Meigs County
medically necessary for
This program pays for your
Department of Qualified Individuals - 1 Medicare Part A premium you:
Doctor Visits
Medicaid (called Q0-1):
only. Q\YDI can help you if
Hospital Care
Job &amp; F~mily
•
you have lost eligibility for
Immunizations
This
program
provides
the
Services
Substance Abuse
same benefits as SLMB; Title II disability benefits
Prescriptions
175 Race Street however, the income due to earnings.
Vision
standards
are
higher
than
Middleport, OH those allowed for SLMB.
•
Dental
Mental Health
45760
Other...

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Kmart - 7')•
Kroger - 20'~..

Lands End- 31'·
Ud. -48lo
Oak HUI Financial - 15'•

OVB-27

One Valley- 38').
Peoples - 15'-

Premler -

u

n.

Rockwell - 40%.

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111 Court ~.• Pomeroy, Ohio, by lhe

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Obio V•lley Publilhins Company., Pomeroy,
Ohio ~!769, Pll. 992·2156. Seoond clau pool·
oje poid II Pomeroy, Ohio.

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Gannett - 84'!.
General Electric - 51 ),
Ha~ey Davidson - 38),

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Rocky Boots RD Shell- 61~.
Sears-38'•
Shoney'a -'I.
Wai·Mart - 53
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TUPPERS PLAINS -A public hearing will be held on the
Easter!l Local School District's
Continuous Improvement Plan
on June 13 at 6 p.m. in the high
school cafeteria.

Dally stock repofls !It&amp; 1he

4

p.m. closing quo1es of
trans-

the previous day's

actions, pro.vlded . by
Advesl of Gallipolis.

RUTLAND - Annual Rutland communiry-wide yard sale
will be held on Saturday from 9
a.m.-4 p.m . In conjunction with
the event, the Rudand squad will
grill hot dogs and hamburgers in
front of the Harder cabin.

Museum camp
slated
POM ~ROY Meigs County Historical Society will hold a
day camp for youth finishing the
second, third, and fourth grades
on June 5 and 6 at the Meigs
County Museum, Butternut
Avenue, Pomeroy.
Crafts, skills, games and music
from the early 1900s will be
taught. The camp wiU be held
from 9 a.m.-4 p.m . each day and
the cost is $15 a day which
includes lunch.
Registration is required arid
can be made by phoning th e
museum 992-3801 by Thursday.

Pool hours set

superintendent, will be speaking
each evening. There will be special singing each evening. The
public is invited by Pastor Allen
Mid cap.

Auxiliary will
meet

name of of Rachel Conklin was
omitted from the list of graduating seniors at Eastern High
School.
Her name was not included in
material provided bY the school. .

Enrollment open

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tup•pers Plains VFW Ladies Auxiliary
will meet on· Thursday at 7:30
p.m.

Barbecue set
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department will have
a chicken barbecue on Sunday.
Serving begins at 11 a.m .. at a
cost of $4.50.

Camp set.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Eagle basketball camp Monday through Ju ne 9, grades three
through six, Eastern High School
gymn asium. Participants to
receive T-shirts and awards for
contest winners.
Emphasis of camp, defense,
rebounding, ball handling, shooting, and good rules of the game.
Camp conducted from 9 a.m.noon . Questions
may be
addressed to Coach Howie Caldwell.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Pool opened on Monday.
Hours are Monday through
Saturday from 11 a.m.-5 p.m.,
and Sunday from noon-6 p.m.
General admission costs are $3
for adults and $2 for students,
with children under three admit-·
ted at no cost. Season passes are
$30 for individuals and $60 for
RUTLAND - This morning,
families (up to five members) .
Leading
Creek Conservancy DisPool parties and shelter houses in
General Hartinger Park may be trict began repairing a main line
booked by calling Chris Kelly at water leak on State Route 143.
Service · is temporarily inter992-9240.
rupted. A boil advisory is in effect
for customers on SR 143 from
Smith Run Road to Zion Road,
and Smith Run Road on the SR
MIDDLEPORT - Middle- 143. Boiling should continue
port Church of the Nazarene will
until an announcement that the
be holding revival services
water tests safe to drink.
Wednesday through Sunday. Services will begin at 7 p.m . every
night except Sunday when they
will begin at 6:30 p.m Dr.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Rkhard L. Gordon, district

. POMEROY Community
Outreach Team from the C hillicothe Veterans Administration
Medical Center will enroll veterans into the VA Health Care System of Ohio at the Meigs County Veterans Services Office on
Mulberry Heights in Pomeroy,
each Friday in June from 9 a.m.3 p.m.
Veterans are asked to provide a
copy of their discharge, separation
or DD2 14, spouse's Social Security number and date of birth, the
,date of marriage, date of birth of
dependent children and their
Social Security numbers, infor~
rnation ON income and assets,
and Medicare and Insurance card.
The information is required in
order to complete the application
for health care.
T hose enrolled in the past, who
have not used the VA Health Care
System in the past three yea~
must re-enroll. A nurse will be
available to provide blood pressure, glucose and cholesterol
.
'
scree rungs.

Dance set

Line under repair

Revival this week

Name omitted

TUPPERS PLAINS - Square
danctng ~ith clogging, line and
slow dancing Will 6e held at the
Tuppers Plains VFW Saturday. 811 p.m. True Country will play
and the caller will be Clifford
Longenette.

Meeting set
PORTLAND - A Buffington
Island Civil War Batdefield meta)
detectio n survey presentation will
be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
Meigs Local High School. The
public. is invited.

I

•.
•

HelpWith ··
Medicare Expenses

POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs
Emergency Services
answered 10 calls for assistance on
Tuesday. Units responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
1:14 a.m., North Second
Avenue, Ben Harris, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
7:35 a.m., Lincoln Hill, assisted
by Pomeroy as First Responder,
Steven Lush,VMH;
8:08 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, assisted by Pomeroy as
First
Responder, Katheryn
Hysell,VMH;
12:03 p.m., Bunker Hill, lsiah
Riffle, VMH, Jason Sears, refused
treatment;
2:56 p.m., Carmel Road,
George Circle, VMH;
5:35 p.m., Bone Hollow, Inda
Jeffers,VMH ;
6:24 p.m., Oliver Street, Keith
Day,VMH.
RUTLAND
1:28 a.m., White's Hill Road,
Ter_ry Houser, treated;
12:29 p.m., Meigs Mine 2,
Rick Baisden, Holzer Medical
Center;
6:10 p.m ., Oliver Street,
Heather Brooks,VMH. ·

Friday... Partly
cloudy. A
chance of show~rs and thunderstorms from afternoon on. Highs
from the upper 80s to near 90.
Saturday... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the mid and
upper 60s and highs in the mid
RACINE - Vacation Bible
80s.
Sunday .. Mostly cloudy with a School's Road Rally 2000 " In
chance of showers and thunder- The Race With Jesus" will be
storms. Lows in the lower 60s and held June 5-9, 9:30 a.m.-noon, at
. the First Baptist Church in
highs in the upper 70s.
Racine. For more information
call the chun:h at 949- 286 7 or
949-3131, or the director at 9493025.

SAR

The Dally Sentinel
•

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

•

•

USEC, which has been hurt by falling prices it will be interesting to see what they come up
(or enriched uranium used to fuel nuclear with:"
power plants, plans to lay off 625 workers this
·Dan Minter, union president at the Piketon
summer. The layoffS are to be divided equally . plant, said since -the NRC began regulating the
. berween the plants, a move designed to save plant in 1997 there ltave been 76,000 proce$39 million a year in production costs.
dure changes. He said with all the changes i~ ~
.
About 2,100 people work at the important to l&lt;eep trained workers.
"We have been meeting the safety requirer
Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant in Piketon and 1,700 work at the Paducah Gaseous ments with the staff we have had, but to lose a
Diffusion Plant in Kentucky.The plant in Pike- significant percentage of workers will make it
ton is one of southern Ohio's largest employ- inore of a challenge to meet that goal," he said.
ers.
Company officials said they have discussed
Bill Dimit, a 25-year employee at the Pike- the layoff plans with the NRC and do oot
ton plant, said while safety programs are getting believe worker safety will suffer.
better. he is worried that fewer workers could
"The company has done extensive studies
mean more dangers.
on the effect of the reduction of the work fotce
. " I don't know how they will operate if they ~nd has concluded that the plant will continue
keep doing what they are doing," Dimit said. to operate with the same excellent safery
"The jobs require so much training and with record that it always had," USEC spokes~m_an
people moving into different areas of the plant Elizabeth Bean Stuckle said Tuesday.

....

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

·Wednesday, May 31, 2000

where bomr: canier Krvice Ia a\llillble.
I•

"

Piablltber merves.the d&amp;ht to adjust rates dur·
'-PI lht 1\lb&amp;Wptlon period. Subscdptlon rate
Cbllllfl ma~ be Implemented by ch•nalnJ the
d~ralioa of tile lublerft!doa.

'.
·

.

MAIL SUIISCRIPflONS
luldo Melp Coul¥

I' Weeta ................................................. S27.30
2fi W..ta ................................................. SS3.R2
5l W..u ...............................................SIOS.5'6
~.
Rate. O•ttlde Melp Coaaty
I~ Weeto .................................................$l9.ll
:m w..u.................................................$!6.68

s;z w.w ...............................................$109.72
Reader Services
'

'. O.r ••I• c:o•cen 11 all ttork:t lt 10 bt
icc•rUe. lf JH ..... of aaerror Ia I 1101')',
Cilllt.e MWII'OHI at (740) 991·2155. We will
C..ecll. yoer llfor••tlcna aad •akt •

,..-ndloa If warna1td.
·
••
News Dtplrtme:ntt
,..., •I•
ll 992-1155. Deparcmeal
tt:tea•kta••m
.
Ceatnl Maupr.......- ................. Ext. 1101
N_, ...._ _...... -,....- ............ - Ext. 1102 ·
;...-....--.-~.--........... or Ext. 1106

•••her

Otlltr Sen'lea
Advcniiiii ..- ............................. Ext•. l~~
Cirt11lalloii............... - •. ,................. Ext. I
~Adi.-.......- ........ - ....... Ext_IIIIO

views, which received .national
. recognition. Making the presentation to · Sleigh-Brennan was
Athens County Common Pleas
Judge Alan Goldsberry.
Awarded the Bronze Good
Citizenship Award was Roger
Hawk of Shade, for his work as an
outstanding Lodi Township
trustee .
Hawk does his work despite his
. blindness, which he describes as a
"hindrance rather than a handi-

f1om Pilip AI
,

In presenting the awards,
Athens -Common Pleas Judge
Michael Ward noted that the prisoner was taken back to court
where his sentence was extended.
Honored were Chief Security
Officer John Koren, Deputy Glen
urchfield and Deputy Josh
Braglin-, who W:H not present for
the ceremony.
Professor. Saundra Sleigh-Brennan of Ohio University was given.
a bronze SAR Go.od Citizenship
Award for her work on her local
history project, "Countdown · to .
the Millennium."
.
This involved schools conducting interviews tJf citizens on local
histm;y matters and placing these
on film.
WOUB television has aired a
!6cpart series from these inter-

cap."
The SAR. annually presents an
American Flag Certificate to
selected individuals who show
outstanding patriotism by flying
the flag 24 \lours a day.
Shirley Friend of Pomeroy
received that certificate. She credited her late husband, Richard, for·
beginning the practice. Others
qualifying for the award, but not
present, were Dr. William Cuckler
of Athens, and Robert Rice of
New Marshfield.

Barbara Jones of Oak Hill was
presented the Martha Washington
SAR Award arid medal for her
work il) marking Revolutionary
War graves and in . recruiting
membership for the SAR.
Two SAR Meritorious Service
Awards were presented to members of Ewings Chapter for outstanding work in the chapter.
Myron E. Jones of Oak Hill was
given the award for his work IN
locating Revolutionary soldiers'
graves, ordering new markers
when necessary, setting the 200pound markers, and arranging
ceremonies to dedicate them.
Keith Ashley was also presented
the Meritorious Service Award
for his work at reactivating the
chapter in 1986, for serving five
years as its president, for serving as
the Ohio Society president, and
for his work in recruiting members.
It was noted that he has recruited over 40 members since 1986.

June 12 meeting.

Clerk .

The board also approved the
payment of bills in the amount of
$311,696.22.

frorn PapAl

request, for June 6 at 4:30 p.m.
The board will likely take
action on the closing request at its

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.·
Subscribe today.
992-2156

Present were Commissioners
Janet Howard and Mick Daven~

port.

:

To get a current weather
report, check the

.Sentinel

DNA sought in Jesse James mystery
. GRANBURY, Texas (AP) - Add another chapter
to the legend ofJesse James.
·
Cemetery crewmen, under court orders, moved
aside a headstone Tuesday and dug up the remains of
a man who purportedly claimed he was Jesse James.
DNA tests are planned to see if he was the outlaw.
"This-is certainly a historic day, a historic moment;'
said Steven Reid, an ~ttorney for Jesse Quanah James
and Charles A. James, twO men who claim to be
James' grandsons."We hope it's an -opportunity to prdvide some additional information qn the life and legend of]esse James."
History books say James was shot in the back and

killed by Bob Ford, a member of his own gang, on
April 3, 1882, in St. Joseph, Mo.
But some Granbury residents insist the outlaw survived, assumed the name of ]. Frank Dalton and
moved to the town 25 miles southwest of Fort Worth.
They claim he lived to be 104 and was buried in 1951
under the gravestone that reads 'Jesse Woodson
James", whi~h includes the inscription, "Supposedly
killed in 1882."
A Uriiversity of California anthropologist will per. form a DNA analysis on the remains exhumed Tuesday and compare it to the DNA of Oklahoma City
lawyer Robert Jackson, a known James descendant.

=

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·r---------------------------------------. I
:I

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:I

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II

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·l
1

:
1

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.

At the Pleasant Valley Wellness Center, we want you to look good
AND feel good. When you purchase rr~onthly memberships for June &amp;July,
get August at no additional charge.
·
For more information on rates or gift certificates, please call our fitness
professionals, (304) 675-7222. .
. ,
..

:

Pleasant Valley :
W II
C t 1
e ness en er 1
(304) 675-7222

I

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Page A~
Wednesday. May :n. 2000

_:rhe Daily Sentinel

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Chari~•

R. Shawn Lawll
Managing Ed"or

W. Govey
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Diane l&lt;lly Hill

Larry Boyar
Advartlllng Director

Controller

IN.CO~RECT $UV.

~

""'""d

t'RDfiTEEft

OUR VIEW

about upstaging husbands former wife at step-daughter's wedding
Ann
Landers

r----· ----,

I.AIItrs lu tit• tdilur ,.,.. wtlcOMt. Tit., rltNltl "- hu tlul• J00 ftrt.IIYh. A.ll ,.,,,. • rw 111b.j6d
ru Hlrlttt 1/td ,.,, H llt"H a11d ltUiud1 Mllrn•
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Itt pdllllf1d. IAntrl 1lul11111 IH I• 1004 wtt, ..,.,,,., "'""• ,., ,_MIIfln.
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Co. '1 ttlitorltll bo4twl, ~JIIt.U otlrtrwUt ltaNd.

1M

Wednesday, May 31,2000

: Dear Ann Landers: My husband and
~have been married three years. He was
divorced from a previous marriage in
1981. His youngest daughter is getting
married soon. My husband has asked me
riot to wear the gown I had planned to
fl&gt;r this special occasion because I would
qutshin~ his former wife. He '"I hen said.
':Everyone will be comparing you with
ADVICE
~cr, and if you look too good, it will
"mbarrass me and the children."
.
· I am not much younger than the first your best, and if you outshine your preMrs. X, but I watch my weight and exer- decessor, that's HER problem.
cise, and she has let herself go. This is not
Dear Ann Landers: My mother
the first time something like this has passed away after a pamful struggle w1th
come up. His reason for being so con- _ lung cancer. My father was gr1ef-stn_tk_cerned about her feelings is, "She is the en, but my s1bhngs and I were surpmed
;mother of my children." Please com- ~t how soon he \otmd a new companment.- Second Choice in California
1on. The woman ts finanCially comfort• Dear California: Even though Wife able (she doesn't need Dad's money) , but
No. 1 is the mother of his children, his we had never heard of her unul they
· sh ou ld b e Wtt· h you. From now started
to keep company.
IoyaIt1es
D d . . h'
'd
·
d
h b d
· a IS m 1s nu - 70s, very acuve an
' ·
d
on,
onf t gtve
. exce ll ent h ea 1th . M y st'bl'mgs an d 1 are
·
h your us an · any Lprek 111
v1ews o w at you p1an to wear. oo

IN A SUR$1' Ot: CAN~O~, ANt&gt; IN "mE
SVlltiT OF 600P CORPORATE C.ITit.ENSHlP,
WE'RE RENAMtN6 OUR EM~l~NMENTA~LY

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2150 • Fax: 992-2157

The Daily Sentinel

~Reader concerned

The Daily Sentinel
'£sta6(ufrllf in 1948

Page AS

emorial
:Monument to WW II veterans
deserves your support

BIRTH

EASTMAN'S

:As

Memorial D~y observatioru continue, one fact .becomes
:
clear: The ranks of veterans who served in World War II are
•
shrinking.
~
The war ended 55 years ago, but it's the
'
Our only
"Big One" that lingers in our memory.
61ms and television continue to
Itope is . can Books,
explore the conflict, or usc it as a backdrop
be done soon, for historical theory or . entertainment
•
bei'ore the
value. There are still many veterans around
wh9 endured the war and can tell us about
su rvwors pass what it meant to them.
forever firom
Therefore, it seeJru odd there isn't a
national memorial to the more than I mil..
our lives.
lion men and women who were casualties
of American involvement in the- world
: war.
• Monuments already exist in Washington and at Arlington Nation. al Cemetery for those who served in Korea and Vietnam. Until
: recently, there was not·been a movement to establish a memorial for
' World War II.
It has been said in numerous social histories of the postw.lr era
that most veterans wanted to put the conflict behind them, come
home and take their lives off hold. Perhaps they believed they had
done their job, and America's reward WliS to allow them to create
· full lives for themselves and their families.
· That was then. Naw, as we who enjoy the benefits of their sacri. fices 'recall and appreciate what these men and women did for the
:_free world, it is time to build that memorial. Our only hope is it can
: •be done soon, before the survivors pass forever from our lives.
. · Former U.S. Sen. and presidential candidate Bob Dole leads a
. national committee raising funds for just such a memorial. The min. imum cost for putting it up is $100 million; currently, Dole said,
. the fund-rais ing campaign is $15 million short of that goal.
- ~ It's hoped the remainder and more can be raised by this Novem. j;ler so groundbreaking can be held on Veteram Day.
·: When you stop and comider what these people did for our coun. t ry, as well as for the world, $15 million seems a small price to pay.
: ln the richest nation on the planet, is this too much for Americans
: to do as a token of appreciation?
, We think not. Erasing that shortfall by autumn is a goal we should
· all take to heart. Even a small amount from an individual donor
. makes a difference. If national pride means anything, having enough
; money o n hand to start work on the memorial would be an endur: ing tribute to veterans, then and now, who fought to preserve our
: freedom.

:J.'

•••

Contributions Can be sent by check to World War II Memorial
· Fund, American Battle Monument Corrlmission, 2300 Clarendon
Blvd ., ESTE 501 , Arlington,Va. 22201.
'•

..

: TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCI~TEO PRESS

•

• Today is Wednesday, May 31, the 152nd day of 2000. There are
: 214 days left in the year. '
·
: Today's Highlight in History:
On May 31, 1819, poetWaltWhitman wa.&lt; borrt in West Hill, N.Y.
On this date:
• In 1889, more than 2,000 people perished when a dam break sent
: water rushing through Johnstown, Pa.
: In 1910, the Union of South Africa was founded.
: In 1913, the 17th Amendment to the Constitution, providing for
: the popular election of U.S. sertators, was declared in efl'ect.
In 1961, South Africa became an Independent republic.
• In 1962, World War II Nazi official Adolf Eichmann was hanged
• in Israel for his role in the Holocaust.
; In 1970, tens of thousands died in an eat'tllquake in Peru.
In 1976, Martha Mitchell, the enranged wife of former Auorney
: General John N . Mitchell, djed in New York.
: In 1977, the tram-Alaska oil pipeline, three yean in the making,
~ was completed.
·
In 1989, House Speaker Jim Wright, dogged by questions about ·
,
: his ethics, announced he would resign. (Thotnas Foley succeeded
• him.)
:
In 1994, the United States ·announced it was no longer aiming
• long- range nuclear missiles at targets in the former Soviet Union.
~
Ten years ago: President Bush and his wife, Barbara, welcomed
: Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachcv in a cereinony at the White
: Hause. The rwo leaders and their aideo discussed Go:rman reunifica-

: tion.
.:
•
•
:
:
:
:
:
:
'

Today's Birthdays: l?rlnce Rainier of Monuo is 77. Actress Elaine
Stewart is 71. Actor-director Clint Eastwood is 70. Opera singer
Shirley Verret! is 67. Actor Keir Dullu is 64. Singer PtterYarrow is
62. Singer Johnny Paycheck is 62. Former Anglican Church envoy
Terry Waite is 61. Singer-musician Augie Meyers is 60. Actress
Sharon Gless is 57 . Football Hall-of-Farner Joe Namath is 57 . Actor
Torn Derenger is 50. Actor Gregory Harroon is 50. Co median
C hris Elliott is 40. Actor Kyle Secor it 40. Actrcs• Lea Thompson is
39. Singer Corey Hart is 38. Actreu Tony.a Pinkins is 38. ·ltapper
1
DMC is 36. Rapper Kid Frost is 36. Actress Brooke Shields i1 3~.
•

DOUBLE

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

tt

·Investing in health .research pays dividends
Federally sponsored medical resean:h, costing
billions of dollars, has already saved hundreds of
billions of dollars in medical outlays and could
save trillions over time, two new studies indicate.
Reports by Congress' Joint Economic Committee and the advocacy group Funding First
argue that doubling the budget of the National
Institutes of Health over a five-year period
would pay multiple dividends not only in lives
sawd bu.t also in dollars.
The reports were issued as Congress considers whether to stay on track toward doubling
N1H's budget with a $2.7 billion increase for
fiscal2001. NIH 's current budget is $16 biUion.
ProS'pects seem good that the additional $2.7
billion wiD be approved this year, b4t the fiveyear goal could use public endorsements from
Vice President AI Gore and Texas Gov. George
W Bush. So far, they've only made favorable
remarks privately.
As examples of past research success, the JEC
report cited a $71 million research project on
testicular cancer that has produced a 65 percent
cure rate, saving about $180 miUion per year in
medical bills and lost productivity.
A (.,er treatment for blindness caused by diabetes costs $181 million and saves nearly $1.5
billion a year. Medical alternatives to coronary
bypass surgery, developed at a cost of $36 million, are saving between $400 million and $800
million a year, according to the report.
These arc relatively small examples. The J EC
rep'ort figures that antibiotic treatments for
tuben:ulosis save $5 billion a year; the conquest
of polio, S30 billion; antidepressants, $6.5 billion; and ulcer-fighting drugs, $600 million a
year.
Partly because of federally backed I'(.'Search,
the death r:ite from AIDS has fallen by 60 percent. Multi-drug "cocktails" cost up ro $15,000
a year per patient, but hospital treatment for an
advanced AIDS patient can cost SI00,000 a
year.
Tamoxifen, a breast cancer drug, costs $1,050
per victim a year, but the JEC study reported

Morton
Kondracke
NEA COLUMNIST
that the average cost when wonien undergo
surgery or other invasive treatments is $14,000
a year.
TheJEC calculated the direct cost of illness in
the United States - meaning outlays for treatment - at S1.3 trillion and "indirect" costs at
S1.7 trillion, including reduced ability to work
and premalttre death.
"The NIH is fighting this $3 trillion battle
with a budget of just S16 billion,'' said the JEC
report, "less than I percent of annual illness

costs."
Funding First, a group headed by former Sen.
Matk Hatfield, R -Ore., sponsored an ambitious
set of studies d~igned to measure the economic value of th e increased life expectancy rates
produced by medical research.
Using various models, including the amounts
that companies, individuals and governments
will spend to alter th e risk of death , the eco nomists figured that Am ~ricans think it 's worth
between $3 million and S7 million to save a life.
Extrapolating, Funding Firsr concluded that
"increases in life expectancy in JUSt the decades
of the 1970s and '1 980s were worth $57 triftion
to Americaru.The gains associated with the prevention and treatment of cardiovascular disease
alone totaled $31 trillion."
The group also concluded that "medical
research that reduced deaths from cancer by just
one-fifth would be worth $10 trillion to Americans - double the national debt."

FOOD LAND

Cancer is one of the diseases that theJEC list~
ed as among the "coming revolutions in medi·
cine," where research is offering the promise t)f
dccisi ve progress toward cures. Directly and
indirectly, cance r costs the economy about SilO
billion a year.·
I'm particularly interested in another "rcvolution" - in battling degenerative diseases of the
brain, especially Parkinson 's disease, ,which
aflli cts I million Americans and carries an estimated cost ofS3 billion a year. As readers oftliis
column know, my wife suffers from Parkinson's.
~ lH has just issued a report saying that
ptuspects are good that the disease could he
cured within five years if adequate resources
devoted to the research, which is estimated at S1
billion over five years starting with S71 millioh
this year.
ln the process of curing Parkinson's, NIH
reported, progress could be made in conquering
less- umjerstood diseases such as Alzheimer's,
_
Lou Gehrig's disease and spinal injuries.
This year, the Senate appears ready to approve
the S2.7 billion increase for NIH as propo$ed
by Sen. Arlen Specter, R - Pa., and approved by
the Senate Appropriations Conunittee.
T he House Appro priations Committee,
however, is calling for only a $1 billion increase.
la&lt;t year, the House acceded to the Senate
number, and chances are good that the pattern
will be repeated, according to research advocates.
What .happens in fu ture years, however, is
open to question, because two major boosters
of n\edical research, Rep. John,, Porter, R-IU.,
and Sen. Connie Mack, R - Ra., ate both set 10
retire.
Mack, chairman of the JEC and a ooncer survivor. said in issuing his report that "America
landed a man on the moon. We pioneered com"
pu rer techn,ology. America WOJ;l the Cold War.
Now it is time to win the war against the diseases that plague our society." Money can do .!t.

are

(Morton Kot~drackc is exeauive editor of Roll
Call, 1/Je ucwspaper qf Capitol Hill.)

"a thrilling, vicarious taste of everyday life:'
(CBS will air an American version beginning in
July.) Why are these shows and Internet sites so
popular? ·
Maybe it's si mple voyeurism. But maybe ies
something else. Social scientists are finding that
such unremarkable ple;JSures as seeing people
strolling through the neighborhood or listening
to a high-school band on a Saturday afternoon
contribute more heavily to our happiness th an
more predictable factors. such as wealth.
In other words, despite all lurid evidence to
the co ntrary, th ere's a recognition of the extraordinary in the ordinary. Simple tasks done with
style. A diflicult apology offered. A1 report com.plctcd. A convincing lau!il\ to a joke already
hem·d. A presentation on powder post beetles
dcliw rcd.
·
,
"Excellence is an art of inches," writes Cal
St;~te, Fullerton sociologist Myron Oriearu,
quoting a sign he once saw on a bank, in the
introduction to a new online academic publica.tion, "Joumal of Mundane Behavior."
It's not the 6'T3nd gesture that makes a hero,
but a thousand little thing; done right.

UvmJ RymJ is a wlumnist for the San Fratuisco
Chronicle. Smcl comments ro !Jer in care Of this news·
paper'" send her e-mail atjoanryansjgare.com.)

SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

homa
Dear Oklahoma: Are you a new
reader? Don't you know that smoking is
an addiction ? You don't have to visit
your mother if it is too difficult to
breathe in her home. However, please
invtte her to )1ours more o ften . To punish her for her Jddi cti on is cruel. Instruct
Mom that she' is welcome, but that she
must go outside if she needs to smoke.
Problem solved
" A Collection o f My Favorite Gems
of the Day" is the perfect little gift for
that special someo ne who is impossible
to buy for. Send a self-addressed, long.
business-size envelope and a check or
money order for S5 .25 {this includes
postage and handling) tu: Collection,
c/o Ann Landers. P.O. Box · 11562.
Chicago, Ill . (•0611 -0562 (in Ca nada,
$6.25).To find out more about Ann Lan ders and read her past columns, visit the
Crea tors Syndicate web page at
www.creators.com.

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RACINE - Chris and Anita
.Hamm of Racine, announce the
birth of their first child, Colton
,'I)tlor Hamrn, who was born May
4, at St.Joseph's Memorial Hospital.
• He weighed nine pounds, four
ounces and was 21 inches long.
Grandparents are Glenn and
Connie Collins of Pomeroy. Tom
and Linda Hamm of Racine.
Great grandparents are Pauline
Payne of Rutland, Betty Deering,
Flatwoods, Ky., Virgil and Mary
l:lamm of Racine, and Edison and
Evelyn Hollon, Racine.

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LIMIT ONE WITH $10.00 OR MORE ADDITIONAL PURCHASE

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Country Style

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NEW YORK
STRIP STEAK

•••

WEDNESDAY, May 31
RUTLAND - Rutland Vii:
lage Council, special session
Wednesday. An executive session
will be held at 6 p.m. to discuss
'personnel matters and the busi·ness meeting will follow at 7 p.m.
- .PORTLAND Lebanon
·Township trustees, 4 p.m Wednesday, township building.
LONG BOTTOM - Faith
Full Gospel Church, Long Bottom, special services, Wednesday, 7
p.m. Joe Beasly, evangelist. Public
invired.
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Literary Club, Wednesday,
I p.m. at the home of Phyllis
·Hackett, Pickerington. Ltmcheon
to be served by the hostess.
MIDDLEPORT - . Middleport Church of the Nazarene,
revival services, through Sunday, 7
p.m. each evening except Sunday,
.(j•30 p.m.

'·

.

Bob Evans Asst
BRATS and
ITALIAN SAUSAGES

s

s
Lb.

S Quart Pail
United

ICE CREAM
s 98

19 oz. pkg.

Armour Meat HOT DOGS .12 o:z:. 99C

.

'.'

•••

-

THURSDAY,June 1
RACINE- Racine American
I:egion Auxiliary, Thursday, 7:30
p:m., post home.
· RUTLAND
Rutland
Township Trustees, Thursday, 5
p:m at the Rutland Fire Station.
· POMEI~..OY
Public
Emp,loyees Retirement me eting,
Senior Citizens Center, Thursday,
lunch at noon , speaker to follow.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains VFW Ladies Auxiliary,
Thursday, 7:30p.m.

r

'

MANUFACTURER 'S

Colton Tylor Hamm

Age of excess brings appreciation of mutJdane :.
listen to this 9-year-old in my kitchen. First,
My son is standing in the kitchen holding five there's something quietly heroi c in what he's
qote cards on which he has written the main doing. Second, I'm not alone in recognizing it.
Even as th~ popular culture explodes boundpoints about the recent invasion of powder post
beetles on Mission Dolores. He delivers the aries of taste and moderation - or perhaps
information to me haltingly in hi s earnest because of it - we're beginning to see a
fourth-grade voice. Like me, he'd rather eat glass counter-movement: an appreciation of the
than stand in front of people and speak. But he mundane.
Consider the proliferation of Internet sit.,;
practices until bedtime, taking deep breaths
where the sole attraction is watching a regular
now and then to quiet his anxiety.
A5 l listen, l think about Rudy Giuliani 's person get tl1rough the day. There now are
tabloid life and BiD Clinton's, too. l think of the 250,000 people who, with personal Webcams,
families on Jerry Springer ("My Girlfriend Left have drawn back the drapes on their lives for
Me for My Mother!") and shows like "Pets That our viewing pleasure.
One man, profiled in the N ew York Times on
Kill" and a new sports league - XNFL designed to push pro football toward a inodern Sunday,. has cameras rolling in his house 24
version of"Giadiator:' ljust read there soon will hours a day. Though viewers see nothing·mote
be a Broadway musical based on the stranger- exciting than the man talking with his wife in
than~fiction life of Jesse "The Body" Vent\Jra,
the livi~g room or rocking his infant son to
and CBS is set to air "Survivor,'' which will fol- sleep, the site attracts I ,500 hits a daY, In th e first
low the lives of eight people purposely strand- four months of the year, 1,000 people· have
ed on a d=rt island to C\)mpete for the $1 mil- checked out the site more than 100 times each .
lion prize.
A show in the Netherland• called "Big llmthC learly. we live in a time of extremes and er" recorded every word and movement of nine
excesses, when lottery jackpot~ pay out more strangers confined for lOU d.1ys to a hulllc
than the GNP of entire nation.&lt; and thousands rigged with 24 can;teras. and 59 microphones.
of adveniUrers each year risk death to climb Watchi ng the show became a national obses- .
Mou'nt Everest. Yet two things occur to me as I sion. As one observer wryly said, it show offered

ALL THIS WEEK

24 Packs

RYAN'S VIEW

BY JOAN RYAN

found someone who will fill the void in
his life. To do less would be unkind and
shortsighted. Accept his new companion
graciously.Your mother would want you
to do that.
Dear Ann Landers: Please print this
letter for my mother. ' She reads your
~dvice every day, and this might hit
home if she seFs it in your co lumn.
Dear Mom: You wonder why we
don't invite you over very often and why
we rarely visit you. The reason? Cigarettes. You know that we find smoking
intolerable, yet your cigarettes are more
important than having a dose relationship with us. The clothes you give us ·as
gifts are so permeated by the smell of
smoke that we cannot use them. Even
though we don't allow smoking in our
home, you do it anyway, which makes us
angry.
How sad that this disgusting habit is
taking the place of your children and
grandchildren.- H eartbroken in Okla-

still mourning the loss :Of our mother,
and our father is out there having a good
time. The way we see it, he is being disrespectful to her memory.
One of my brothers has shrugged it
off, reconciling himse lf to the situation,
and has invited Dad and his lady friend
to his home for dinner. He figures it's
only a matter of time before they marry,
and that we might as well accept her
graciously. Another brother is upset, and
wants nothing to do with her. I am waffling back and forth, and am looking to
you for guidance.
Is there any set time for mourning a
wife of more than 50 years? - O ut East
Dear Out East: There is no "set
time" for mourning, but I would say
after three months, it is not improper for
a man or woman who has lost a mate to
appear publicly with a "new friend." My
motto is: "Life is for the living.''
I hope you and your siblings will
rejoice in the fact that your father has

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••

•

�•
'

Page A~
Wednesday. May :n. 2000

_:rhe Daily Sentinel

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Chari~•

R. Shawn Lawll
Managing Ed"or

W. Govey
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Diane l&lt;lly Hill

Larry Boyar
Advartlllng Director

Controller

IN.CO~RECT $UV.

~

""'""d

t'RDfiTEEft

OUR VIEW

about upstaging husbands former wife at step-daughter's wedding
Ann
Landers

r----· ----,

I.AIItrs lu tit• tdilur ,.,.. wtlcOMt. Tit., rltNltl "- hu tlul• J00 ftrt.IIYh. A.ll ,.,,,. • rw 111b.j6d
ru Hlrlttt 1/td ,.,, H llt"H a11d ltUiud1 Mllrn•
tm,ltn• ,......., N•
l«11n -.UI
Itt pdllllf1d. IAntrl 1lul11111 IH I• 1004 wtt, ..,.,,,., "'""• ,., ,_MIIfln.
Tltt opillioltl lqraJtd lit llt1 coiMMn Hlfw lrt till CfllflrftiMI q/lltt ~ lWlll1 ht/illlf111
Co. '1 ttlitorltll bo4twl, ~JIIt.U otlrtrwUt ltaNd.

1M

Wednesday, May 31,2000

: Dear Ann Landers: My husband and
~have been married three years. He was
divorced from a previous marriage in
1981. His youngest daughter is getting
married soon. My husband has asked me
riot to wear the gown I had planned to
fl&gt;r this special occasion because I would
qutshin~ his former wife. He '"I hen said.
':Everyone will be comparing you with
ADVICE
~cr, and if you look too good, it will
"mbarrass me and the children."
.
· I am not much younger than the first your best, and if you outshine your preMrs. X, but I watch my weight and exer- decessor, that's HER problem.
cise, and she has let herself go. This is not
Dear Ann Landers: My mother
the first time something like this has passed away after a pamful struggle w1th
come up. His reason for being so con- _ lung cancer. My father was gr1ef-stn_tk_cerned about her feelings is, "She is the en, but my s1bhngs and I were surpmed
;mother of my children." Please com- ~t how soon he \otmd a new companment.- Second Choice in California
1on. The woman ts finanCially comfort• Dear California: Even though Wife able (she doesn't need Dad's money) , but
No. 1 is the mother of his children, his we had never heard of her unul they
· sh ou ld b e Wtt· h you. From now started
to keep company.
IoyaIt1es
D d . . h'
'd
·
d
h b d
· a IS m 1s nu - 70s, very acuve an
' ·
d
on,
onf t gtve
. exce ll ent h ea 1th . M y st'bl'mgs an d 1 are
·
h your us an · any Lprek 111
v1ews o w at you p1an to wear. oo

IN A SUR$1' Ot: CAN~O~, ANt&gt; IN "mE
SVlltiT OF 600P CORPORATE C.ITit.ENSHlP,
WE'RE RENAMtN6 OUR EM~l~NMENTA~LY

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2150 • Fax: 992-2157

The Daily Sentinel

~Reader concerned

The Daily Sentinel
'£sta6(ufrllf in 1948

Page AS

emorial
:Monument to WW II veterans
deserves your support

BIRTH

EASTMAN'S

:As

Memorial D~y observatioru continue, one fact .becomes
:
clear: The ranks of veterans who served in World War II are
•
shrinking.
~
The war ended 55 years ago, but it's the
'
Our only
"Big One" that lingers in our memory.
61ms and television continue to
Itope is . can Books,
explore the conflict, or usc it as a backdrop
be done soon, for historical theory or . entertainment
•
bei'ore the
value. There are still many veterans around
wh9 endured the war and can tell us about
su rvwors pass what it meant to them.
forever firom
Therefore, it seeJru odd there isn't a
national memorial to the more than I mil..
our lives.
lion men and women who were casualties
of American involvement in the- world
: war.
• Monuments already exist in Washington and at Arlington Nation. al Cemetery for those who served in Korea and Vietnam. Until
: recently, there was not·been a movement to establish a memorial for
' World War II.
It has been said in numerous social histories of the postw.lr era
that most veterans wanted to put the conflict behind them, come
home and take their lives off hold. Perhaps they believed they had
done their job, and America's reward WliS to allow them to create
· full lives for themselves and their families.
· That was then. Naw, as we who enjoy the benefits of their sacri. fices 'recall and appreciate what these men and women did for the
:_free world, it is time to build that memorial. Our only hope is it can
: •be done soon, before the survivors pass forever from our lives.
. · Former U.S. Sen. and presidential candidate Bob Dole leads a
. national committee raising funds for just such a memorial. The min. imum cost for putting it up is $100 million; currently, Dole said,
. the fund-rais ing campaign is $15 million short of that goal.
- ~ It's hoped the remainder and more can be raised by this Novem. j;ler so groundbreaking can be held on Veteram Day.
·: When you stop and comider what these people did for our coun. t ry, as well as for the world, $15 million seems a small price to pay.
: ln the richest nation on the planet, is this too much for Americans
: to do as a token of appreciation?
, We think not. Erasing that shortfall by autumn is a goal we should
· all take to heart. Even a small amount from an individual donor
. makes a difference. If national pride means anything, having enough
; money o n hand to start work on the memorial would be an endur: ing tribute to veterans, then and now, who fought to preserve our
: freedom.

:J.'

•••

Contributions Can be sent by check to World War II Memorial
· Fund, American Battle Monument Corrlmission, 2300 Clarendon
Blvd ., ESTE 501 , Arlington,Va. 22201.
'•

..

: TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCI~TEO PRESS

•

• Today is Wednesday, May 31, the 152nd day of 2000. There are
: 214 days left in the year. '
·
: Today's Highlight in History:
On May 31, 1819, poetWaltWhitman wa.&lt; borrt in West Hill, N.Y.
On this date:
• In 1889, more than 2,000 people perished when a dam break sent
: water rushing through Johnstown, Pa.
: In 1910, the Union of South Africa was founded.
: In 1913, the 17th Amendment to the Constitution, providing for
: the popular election of U.S. sertators, was declared in efl'ect.
In 1961, South Africa became an Independent republic.
• In 1962, World War II Nazi official Adolf Eichmann was hanged
• in Israel for his role in the Holocaust.
; In 1970, tens of thousands died in an eat'tllquake in Peru.
In 1976, Martha Mitchell, the enranged wife of former Auorney
: General John N . Mitchell, djed in New York.
: In 1977, the tram-Alaska oil pipeline, three yean in the making,
~ was completed.
·
In 1989, House Speaker Jim Wright, dogged by questions about ·
,
: his ethics, announced he would resign. (Thotnas Foley succeeded
• him.)
:
In 1994, the United States ·announced it was no longer aiming
• long- range nuclear missiles at targets in the former Soviet Union.
~
Ten years ago: President Bush and his wife, Barbara, welcomed
: Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachcv in a cereinony at the White
: Hause. The rwo leaders and their aideo discussed Go:rman reunifica-

: tion.
.:
•
•
:
:
:
:
:
:
'

Today's Birthdays: l?rlnce Rainier of Monuo is 77. Actress Elaine
Stewart is 71. Actor-director Clint Eastwood is 70. Opera singer
Shirley Verret! is 67. Actor Keir Dullu is 64. Singer PtterYarrow is
62. Singer Johnny Paycheck is 62. Former Anglican Church envoy
Terry Waite is 61. Singer-musician Augie Meyers is 60. Actress
Sharon Gless is 57 . Football Hall-of-Farner Joe Namath is 57 . Actor
Torn Derenger is 50. Actor Gregory Harroon is 50. Co median
C hris Elliott is 40. Actor Kyle Secor it 40. Actrcs• Lea Thompson is
39. Singer Corey Hart is 38. Actreu Tony.a Pinkins is 38. ·ltapper
1
DMC is 36. Rapper Kid Frost is 36. Actress Brooke Shields i1 3~.
•

DOUBLE

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

tt

·Investing in health .research pays dividends
Federally sponsored medical resean:h, costing
billions of dollars, has already saved hundreds of
billions of dollars in medical outlays and could
save trillions over time, two new studies indicate.
Reports by Congress' Joint Economic Committee and the advocacy group Funding First
argue that doubling the budget of the National
Institutes of Health over a five-year period
would pay multiple dividends not only in lives
sawd bu.t also in dollars.
The reports were issued as Congress considers whether to stay on track toward doubling
N1H's budget with a $2.7 billion increase for
fiscal2001. NIH 's current budget is $16 biUion.
ProS'pects seem good that the additional $2.7
billion wiD be approved this year, b4t the fiveyear goal could use public endorsements from
Vice President AI Gore and Texas Gov. George
W Bush. So far, they've only made favorable
remarks privately.
As examples of past research success, the JEC
report cited a $71 million research project on
testicular cancer that has produced a 65 percent
cure rate, saving about $180 miUion per year in
medical bills and lost productivity.
A (.,er treatment for blindness caused by diabetes costs $181 million and saves nearly $1.5
billion a year. Medical alternatives to coronary
bypass surgery, developed at a cost of $36 million, are saving between $400 million and $800
million a year, according to the report.
These arc relatively small examples. The J EC
rep'ort figures that antibiotic treatments for
tuben:ulosis save $5 billion a year; the conquest
of polio, S30 billion; antidepressants, $6.5 billion; and ulcer-fighting drugs, $600 million a
year.
Partly because of federally backed I'(.'Search,
the death r:ite from AIDS has fallen by 60 percent. Multi-drug "cocktails" cost up ro $15,000
a year per patient, but hospital treatment for an
advanced AIDS patient can cost SI00,000 a
year.
Tamoxifen, a breast cancer drug, costs $1,050
per victim a year, but the JEC study reported

Morton
Kondracke
NEA COLUMNIST
that the average cost when wonien undergo
surgery or other invasive treatments is $14,000
a year.
TheJEC calculated the direct cost of illness in
the United States - meaning outlays for treatment - at S1.3 trillion and "indirect" costs at
S1.7 trillion, including reduced ability to work
and premalttre death.
"The NIH is fighting this $3 trillion battle
with a budget of just S16 billion,'' said the JEC
report, "less than I percent of annual illness

costs."
Funding First, a group headed by former Sen.
Matk Hatfield, R -Ore., sponsored an ambitious
set of studies d~igned to measure the economic value of th e increased life expectancy rates
produced by medical research.
Using various models, including the amounts
that companies, individuals and governments
will spend to alter th e risk of death , the eco nomists figured that Am ~ricans think it 's worth
between $3 million and S7 million to save a life.
Extrapolating, Funding Firsr concluded that
"increases in life expectancy in JUSt the decades
of the 1970s and '1 980s were worth $57 triftion
to Americaru.The gains associated with the prevention and treatment of cardiovascular disease
alone totaled $31 trillion."
The group also concluded that "medical
research that reduced deaths from cancer by just
one-fifth would be worth $10 trillion to Americans - double the national debt."

FOOD LAND

Cancer is one of the diseases that theJEC list~
ed as among the "coming revolutions in medi·
cine," where research is offering the promise t)f
dccisi ve progress toward cures. Directly and
indirectly, cance r costs the economy about SilO
billion a year.·
I'm particularly interested in another "rcvolution" - in battling degenerative diseases of the
brain, especially Parkinson 's disease, ,which
aflli cts I million Americans and carries an estimated cost ofS3 billion a year. As readers oftliis
column know, my wife suffers from Parkinson's.
~ lH has just issued a report saying that
ptuspects are good that the disease could he
cured within five years if adequate resources
devoted to the research, which is estimated at S1
billion over five years starting with S71 millioh
this year.
ln the process of curing Parkinson's, NIH
reported, progress could be made in conquering
less- umjerstood diseases such as Alzheimer's,
_
Lou Gehrig's disease and spinal injuries.
This year, the Senate appears ready to approve
the S2.7 billion increase for NIH as propo$ed
by Sen. Arlen Specter, R - Pa., and approved by
the Senate Appropriations Conunittee.
T he House Appro priations Committee,
however, is calling for only a $1 billion increase.
la&lt;t year, the House acceded to the Senate
number, and chances are good that the pattern
will be repeated, according to research advocates.
What .happens in fu ture years, however, is
open to question, because two major boosters
of n\edical research, Rep. John,, Porter, R-IU.,
and Sen. Connie Mack, R - Ra., ate both set 10
retire.
Mack, chairman of the JEC and a ooncer survivor. said in issuing his report that "America
landed a man on the moon. We pioneered com"
pu rer techn,ology. America WOJ;l the Cold War.
Now it is time to win the war against the diseases that plague our society." Money can do .!t.

are

(Morton Kot~drackc is exeauive editor of Roll
Call, 1/Je ucwspaper qf Capitol Hill.)

"a thrilling, vicarious taste of everyday life:'
(CBS will air an American version beginning in
July.) Why are these shows and Internet sites so
popular? ·
Maybe it's si mple voyeurism. But maybe ies
something else. Social scientists are finding that
such unremarkable ple;JSures as seeing people
strolling through the neighborhood or listening
to a high-school band on a Saturday afternoon
contribute more heavily to our happiness th an
more predictable factors. such as wealth.
In other words, despite all lurid evidence to
the co ntrary, th ere's a recognition of the extraordinary in the ordinary. Simple tasks done with
style. A diflicult apology offered. A1 report com.plctcd. A convincing lau!il\ to a joke already
hem·d. A presentation on powder post beetles
dcliw rcd.
·
,
"Excellence is an art of inches," writes Cal
St;~te, Fullerton sociologist Myron Oriearu,
quoting a sign he once saw on a bank, in the
introduction to a new online academic publica.tion, "Joumal of Mundane Behavior."
It's not the 6'T3nd gesture that makes a hero,
but a thousand little thing; done right.

UvmJ RymJ is a wlumnist for the San Fratuisco
Chronicle. Smcl comments ro !Jer in care Of this news·
paper'" send her e-mail atjoanryansjgare.com.)

SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

homa
Dear Oklahoma: Are you a new
reader? Don't you know that smoking is
an addiction ? You don't have to visit
your mother if it is too difficult to
breathe in her home. However, please
invtte her to )1ours more o ften . To punish her for her Jddi cti on is cruel. Instruct
Mom that she' is welcome, but that she
must go outside if she needs to smoke.
Problem solved
" A Collection o f My Favorite Gems
of the Day" is the perfect little gift for
that special someo ne who is impossible
to buy for. Send a self-addressed, long.
business-size envelope and a check or
money order for S5 .25 {this includes
postage and handling) tu: Collection,
c/o Ann Landers. P.O. Box · 11562.
Chicago, Ill . (•0611 -0562 (in Ca nada,
$6.25).To find out more about Ann Lan ders and read her past columns, visit the
Crea tors Syndicate web page at
www.creators.com.

COUPON

ASST. FLAVORS

34.5 OZADC

Rocky Top
Soft Drinks

Maxwell House

MASTER BLEND

COFFEE

s 99

Hamm birth

announced

CAN

RACINE - Chris and Anita
.Hamm of Racine, announce the
birth of their first child, Colton
,'I)tlor Hamrn, who was born May
4, at St.Joseph's Memorial Hospital.
• He weighed nine pounds, four
ounces and was 21 inches long.
Grandparents are Glenn and
Connie Collins of Pomeroy. Tom
and Linda Hamm of Racine.
Great grandparents are Pauline
Payne of Rutland, Betty Deering,
Flatwoods, Ky., Virgil and Mary
l:lamm of Racine, and Edison and
Evelyn Hollon, Racine.

Case
LIMIT ONE WITH $10.00 OR MORE ADDITIONAL PURCHASE

Tenderbest
Country Style

s

Wampler

Boneless, Skinless

BEEF BUCKET STEAK

CHICKEN BREASTS

8 88

Lb.

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

Any Si:z:e Pkg

USDA I sekect Boneless

NEW YORK
STRIP STEAK

•••

WEDNESDAY, May 31
RUTLAND - Rutland Vii:
lage Council, special session
Wednesday. An executive session
will be held at 6 p.m. to discuss
'personnel matters and the busi·ness meeting will follow at 7 p.m.
- .PORTLAND Lebanon
·Township trustees, 4 p.m Wednesday, township building.
LONG BOTTOM - Faith
Full Gospel Church, Long Bottom, special services, Wednesday, 7
p.m. Joe Beasly, evangelist. Public
invired.
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Literary Club, Wednesday,
I p.m. at the home of Phyllis
·Hackett, Pickerington. Ltmcheon
to be served by the hostess.
MIDDLEPORT - . Middleport Church of the Nazarene,
revival services, through Sunday, 7
p.m. each evening except Sunday,
.(j•30 p.m.

'·

.

Bob Evans Asst
BRATS and
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•••

-

THURSDAY,June 1
RACINE- Racine American
I:egion Auxiliary, Thursday, 7:30
p:m., post home.
· RUTLAND
Rutland
Township Trustees, Thursday, 5
p:m at the Rutland Fire Station.
· POMEI~..OY
Public
Emp,loyees Retirement me eting,
Senior Citizens Center, Thursday,
lunch at noon , speaker to follow.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains VFW Ladies Auxiliary,
Thursday, 7:30p.m.

r

'

MANUFACTURER 'S

Colton Tylor Hamm

Age of excess brings appreciation of mutJdane :.
listen to this 9-year-old in my kitchen. First,
My son is standing in the kitchen holding five there's something quietly heroi c in what he's
qote cards on which he has written the main doing. Second, I'm not alone in recognizing it.
Even as th~ popular culture explodes boundpoints about the recent invasion of powder post
beetles on Mission Dolores. He delivers the aries of taste and moderation - or perhaps
information to me haltingly in hi s earnest because of it - we're beginning to see a
fourth-grade voice. Like me, he'd rather eat glass counter-movement: an appreciation of the
than stand in front of people and speak. But he mundane.
Consider the proliferation of Internet sit.,;
practices until bedtime, taking deep breaths
where the sole attraction is watching a regular
now and then to quiet his anxiety.
A5 l listen, l think about Rudy Giuliani 's person get tl1rough the day. There now are
tabloid life and BiD Clinton's, too. l think of the 250,000 people who, with personal Webcams,
families on Jerry Springer ("My Girlfriend Left have drawn back the drapes on their lives for
Me for My Mother!") and shows like "Pets That our viewing pleasure.
One man, profiled in the N ew York Times on
Kill" and a new sports league - XNFL designed to push pro football toward a inodern Sunday,. has cameras rolling in his house 24
version of"Giadiator:' ljust read there soon will hours a day. Though viewers see nothing·mote
be a Broadway musical based on the stranger- exciting than the man talking with his wife in
than~fiction life of Jesse "The Body" Vent\Jra,
the livi~g room or rocking his infant son to
and CBS is set to air "Survivor,'' which will fol- sleep, the site attracts I ,500 hits a daY, In th e first
low the lives of eight people purposely strand- four months of the year, 1,000 people· have
ed on a d=rt island to C\)mpete for the $1 mil- checked out the site more than 100 times each .
lion prize.
A show in the Netherland• called "Big llmthC learly. we live in a time of extremes and er" recorded every word and movement of nine
excesses, when lottery jackpot~ pay out more strangers confined for lOU d.1ys to a hulllc
than the GNP of entire nation.&lt; and thousands rigged with 24 can;teras. and 59 microphones.
of adveniUrers each year risk death to climb Watchi ng the show became a national obses- .
Mou'nt Everest. Yet two things occur to me as I sion. As one observer wryly said, it show offered

ALL THIS WEEK

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RYAN'S VIEW

BY JOAN RYAN

found someone who will fill the void in
his life. To do less would be unkind and
shortsighted. Accept his new companion
graciously.Your mother would want you
to do that.
Dear Ann Landers: Please print this
letter for my mother. ' She reads your
~dvice every day, and this might hit
home if she seFs it in your co lumn.
Dear Mom: You wonder why we
don't invite you over very often and why
we rarely visit you. The reason? Cigarettes. You know that we find smoking
intolerable, yet your cigarettes are more
important than having a dose relationship with us. The clothes you give us ·as
gifts are so permeated by the smell of
smoke that we cannot use them. Even
though we don't allow smoking in our
home, you do it anyway, which makes us
angry.
How sad that this disgusting habit is
taking the place of your children and
grandchildren.- H eartbroken in Okla-

still mourning the loss :Of our mother,
and our father is out there having a good
time. The way we see it, he is being disrespectful to her memory.
One of my brothers has shrugged it
off, reconciling himse lf to the situation,
and has invited Dad and his lady friend
to his home for dinner. He figures it's
only a matter of time before they marry,
and that we might as well accept her
graciously. Another brother is upset, and
wants nothing to do with her. I am waffling back and forth, and am looking to
you for guidance.
Is there any set time for mourning a
wife of more than 50 years? - O ut East
Dear Out East: There is no "set
time" for mourning, but I would say
after three months, it is not improper for
a man or woman who has lost a mate to
appear publicly with a "new friend." My
motto is: "Life is for the living.''
I hope you and your siblings will
rejoice in the fact that your father has

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'Pege A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pom~troy,

amzlp
edicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Daughter's
'Greenstick'.fracture
being treated correctly
~' • Question: Our daughter was
~ •:"PIIerblading last week and had a
1&lt; • 1\11. She hurt her shoulder, so we

..• .q&gt;ok her to the emergency room.

.. · 'The doctor thought sh-e might
: have broken. her collarbone, but
,. in the X-ray it only appeared to
; be bent over. Obviously. th~re. is a
d1fference between her lllJUry
•• and a broken collarbone because
: he just put her ~rm in a sling that
: she is to use uinil it fee ls better.
"• What is that difference?
•
Answer: I've learned that talk ~
i!}g
is easy but that a&lt;:tually com•
: municating when we talk can be
: quite difficult. I'll glve you an
: e)(ample: A patient of mine went
tO the emergency department to
•· nave an injury to his lower ann
' treated. When he came to see me
the next day he said, "Thank
:
" goodness I only broke my arm ~ it could have been fractured!"
~ That doctor talked to my patient
~ without communicating very
~ well. You see, we doctors use
r
"fracture" as the "doctor term" to
'' describe a broken bone. Conse~ : quently, any broken bone can also
• • be described as being a fracture.
• ;The two terms have precisely the
., tame meanini&lt;.
.,
Without seeing your daugh,, ,, ter's X-rays, I can't tell you the
= correct "doctor language" to
·.Jescribe her injury.You see, there
: are two similar types of bone
~ injury - fractures, if you will that could be described as "bent
• over." First, you need to think of
~ . a long bone like the collarbone
or those of the ar!"s and legs as
~ bemg smular to a straw. The bone
1
~ • is made of a hard outside with
~
'b
I . .d
~
S01t porous one on t 1e ms1 e.
~
0 ne type o f "b ent over.. 1racture
~
; involves enough force to cause
;· one side of the bone to fail while
;; • the other just bends. This is like
: ' the kink that occurs in a straw
~ when it is bent over the side of a
• cup. The outside of the bend is
•
~ rather smooth while the inside
~ · has a definite kink in it. Doctors
u call this type of injury a "green: stick" fracture, and it is probably
:-. what your daughter has.
•
A related type of injury is
called-a "torus" or "buckle" frac•
" ture. In these fractures, the iniur''; ing force is c\irectly along "the
•

. ..
e
•
•

S

1

length of the bone. The bone
buckles under this force instead
of shattering. This is similar to the
type of deformity created in a
straw when you pop off its paper
wrapper by holding the straw
firmly and slamming its end
straight down on the table at
your favorite fast food restaurant.
The straw often develops a subtle
ring- like bulge below where
your had held it. You've just made
a toru s fracture of the straw.
Both torus and greenstick
fra cture are most cmnnton in
children because their bones have
a bit of "give" or flex:ibility to
them. The bones in those of us
who have finished growing are
more brittle. They tend to break
rather than to bend.
The collarbone, like any other
bone, hurts a great deal when it is
broken. The treatment of the
fracture usually involves placing
the ends of the bone in correct
alignment and limiting the
movement there.This redu ces the
pain and facilitates healing. The
collarbone is an important part of
the shoulder, but its exact shape
isn't that important. Therefore, it
usually isn't necessary to "set" ·it
and apply a cast as is necessary for
fractures of many long bones.
In either a greenstick or torus
fracture the degree of bending
and/ or bulking at the site of
injury is small, so it doesn't need
to be set. Consequently, it only
requires some stabilization to
reduce the pain and allow the
bone to heal properly. In a collarbone fracture in children this is
usually done by wearing a simple
arm sling for a week or two, just
as the doctor recommended for
your daughter. There are other
typ
f fi tu
t th
11
' b es ho rae res 0
e co arone, owever. In rare cases, these
b
ffi · tl
·
can even e su Jcten y senous
h
.
t at prompt _surgery IS necessary
to. pm the pteces back together.
F~rtunately, your daughter's
llljury IS the more common and
more easily treated kind.

- ~

~

..

· "Family Medicine" is a
weekly column. To submit
questions, write to John C.
Wolf, D.o:, Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701. Pa~t, .
columns are available online
at www.fbradio.org/fin:

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOL~

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992-2156

•·
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•~

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"I
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class of 1929.
Also
recogni~ed
and
given a gift was
Mary Shields
Griley
who
came
from
Hawaii.
Guests
of the Alumni
Chris Randolph Association
were the 2000 graduates. Singing
of the alma mater and the benediction by Sayre concluded the
program.
Graduates attending and their
reunion years were:
1930: Wilma Sayre Styer and
Emma Easterday Adams;
·1935: florence Norris Adams,
Ethel Cooper Holter. Mary
Louise McDade Ours, Bernice
Barnitz Carpenter and Eileen
Roush Buck;
1940: George Charles Foster,
Kenneth R . Theiss, Clara &lt;Zirde
Pierce and Cora Miller Bye.rs;
1945: Mildred · Brewer Todd,
Bill Roush, Blondena M. Taylor
Rainer, Myrtle Easterday Holter,
Audrey Hoback Boichyn, Nora
Wolfe Lewis, Anna Stobart
Roush and Charles G. Cecil;
1950: Paul Marr, Lucille
Brewer Lawrence, Della Johnson
Sauer, June Beegle Roush, Barbara McNickle Pierce, Ruth
Bradford Frank, Aaron Wolfe,
El.leen W1"nes Grueser, San1
Ebers bach, Juanita I. Sarson
Justis, Mary Shields Griley, Kath!een Wines Holter, Ruth Ann
Badgley Hill and Barbara Gainer
Norris;
1955: Rebecca Shockey Circle, Lillian Powell Weese, Shirley
Gillilan Simpson, Paul E. Harris,
Phillip Bearhs, Phyllis Adams
O'Brien, Betty Lou Bryson
lllackwood
and
Delores
Kraetuer Wolfe;
1960: Jerry . Dailey, Carole
,Deem Willman, Don C. Weese,
Mary Euler Hill, Joyce
Rice, Bobby Lewis, Louise Fischer Smith, Donna Neville
Fiske, Mary Grace Stobart Cowdery, Becky Ward Wolfe, Mary
Harris Houck, Bob L. Wingett,
Patrida Roush · Pape, Shiela
Young Lott, Richard Schular.and
Dorothy Circle Harden;

BY TONY M. lEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

.."'"•_
..

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~

..

Norris, Judy VanMeter and Eileen Johnson
Spencer, Ike Cartwrigh!.
1951: Grover .Salser, Jc,.
Spencer, Jan
Dorotha
Pearson Salser, Gerald
Hill Norris,
Jill Cod ner Simpson, Eula Roberts Hensler
and Georgann Hartenba&lt;:.h
Lipscomb,
Melvin
Grimmi
..
Lawrence,
1952: John Fisher, Gene Wells.
Loretta Kiser Larry Roush and Gary Gibbs;
Dehmann,
1953: Donna Ward Latkin:s,
Brandon Wolfe Trudy
David Hill and Harold W Circle;
Maslanka,
1954: Madge McNickle
Rhonda Ervin Dailey, Brenda smith,Jane Gilmore Beegle,Aliee
Justis Corder, Irene Cooper Fisher Wamsley, Joyce E. Hart
Murphy, Brenda Holman Stuart, Manuel, Shirley Stobart R()berts
Kathleen Lewis Elmore and and Larry Wolfe;
1956: ·
Eddie Hupp;
Robert E. Beegle, Nancy Shuler
1975: Buddy Ervin,JeffCircle Carnahan and Don Richard
and Paul Glenn Simpson;
Hill;
1957:
Don
1980:· Julie Gibbs Randolph Johnson, June Proffitt Turner,
and Pamela Harden Foreman;
Robert Euler, Claudia Shields
1985 Patty Dailey Lawrence;
Roush and Dwain Sayre;
-,:
1990: Mandy Russell Red1958; Linda Mallory Hill; ··
man, Alisa Willford Caldwell and
1959: Joy Foster Ellis, Nadine
Shelly Sawyers Wozney.
Roush Euler and Shirley JohnNo. n-reunioil class graduates son.
1·
attending were:
1961: Miriam Foster Compli1929: Roberta Sayre Thaxton; ment;
1931:
Mildred
Spencer
1963: Jess w. Wood;
Schuler;
1964: Judy Cozart Pape;
1932:ThereonJohnson;
1967: Steve R. Dailey, Bob
1933: Harold Roush;
Grueser, Darrell Wolfe and Anita
1936: Mary Virginia Easterday Houdashelt Moore;
and Elva Dean Brinker Barnitz;
1968: Charlene Ward Barber
1937: Lillian Hoback Pistole, and Gene Hudson;
Eileen Roush, Paul Sayre and
1969: Darell Norris;
Mary Lew Philson Johnson;
1971 : Dc;&gt;n Sinith;
1939: Wayne Roush and Paul
s· M oore;
1972: Sharon Roush Hupp;·'
1974: David Schuler;
1941 : Carroll Norris;
197 6l Debra Roush G["l'ss;
1942: Waynita Cleek Harris,
1977: Lisa T. Allen Woods;
Martha Lou Watterson Beegle,
1979 , Dennis Wolfe aild
Mary Ruth Canahan Simpson
Cindy Patterson-Wolfe; ,
and Paul E. Beegle;
198 8: Heather Shuler;
1946: Faye Fisher Proffitt,
1991 : Jerry L. Smith;
David Sayre, Billy Joe Spencer,
. 1992: Robin D. Manuel;
Delores Jean Miller Fisher and
1999 , Adam C. Williams and
James C. Circle;
Tara M. Norman.
1948:Virgil R. Norris;
1949: Carl Morris, Carroll
The banquet dinner was preCleek, Howard Ervin, Norman pared and served by students and
r-------------p-ar-en_t_s_o_f-th_e...;j_u_ni_o_r_d_a_ss_._ _

ATTENTION

Ca~son

w·

. enr011ment lOr SCh001'
eare accept'1ng

/GI1ngerbreadH
age program
ccess
ln.U'ddl. eport ' OH. We can only enrol,1'.
p~~~;,~:~;;~v:r:s~:~ia~~~~:.
15 ch1ldren·; Ages are children who
~~:~~eE7J:i~:~:~~~~~;:~r~~~y have completed Kindergarten or ages
~i~;;, i~::e~y!~a~~/~~~~: 6to 12 years of age. Call Alice Jacobs .
Du:~t~O:
for more information at 992•7329, _'

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EXTRA! EXTRA!

COMING FRIDAY, JULY 1, iOOO
The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel Baby Edition is a
Special Edition filled with
·
photographs of local 'kids • @Sies ·
newborn to four years old. The
BABY EDITION will appear in the
July 7th issue. Be sure your child,
grandchild or relative is included .

Is Now Accepting New Patients

Holzer Clinic !!

• Accepts patients with COPD, A.thma, Black Lung &amp; SI"P Disorders
• Perfonna bronchoscopy &amp; blop81H
.

Complete the form below and
enclose a sna,shot or wallet sized
picture plus a 6.00 charge for each
photograph. I mor:e than one child
is m th'picture, enclose an
additional $2.00 per child. !ENCLOSE

~

Dr. S•nfiMI IHvl, completed his Residency at
Marshall University SChool of Medicine,
Huntington, WV. He is Board Certified by·the .
American aoard of Internal Medicine &amp; is Board
~ligible in Pulmonary Medicine.

PAYMENT WITH PICTURE)

To Sdledulfl an Appolnbnent,

call (7 40) 448-51 a1

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The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

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1 Child's Name(s) &amp;Age(s) : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
I Parent's Name:
City&amp; State: - - - - - -.- - - - -.----~---

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Keeping the Promise!

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HURRYI PICTURE D_
E ADLINE 18

Dr. Judah Folkman fraudulently told U.S. patent reviewers that he
discovered tumor-inhibiting properties in a small section of :inangiostatin protein known as Kringle 5, according to the lawsuit filed Tues~I:IIC~GO (AP) -The student was just three courses short of
.earnmg his degree at the Chicago Theological Seminary when he left
day in U.S. District Court in Boston by Abbott Laboratories.
~o work with a minister.
Angiostatin is o.ne of two angiogenesis inhibitors credited to Folk;· ' More than three decades later, he has yet to take those courses.
man's lab at Children's Hospital. EntreMed, a Maryland biotech firm,
.When the studen.t ts the Rev. Jes~e Jackson, the minister was the Rev.
is running clinical trials of both angiosurin and the other drug, endostatin.
'
r-:tar,tm Luther KingJr., and one of those courses was preaching, the
As :cancer fighters, the drugs appear to be especiaUy powetful, at
pr':tdent of ~he s~nunary thought it was high time for a diploma.
.
least in mice and rats. The lawsuit does not affect any of the clinical triHe h~dn t qUite turned mall his sermons:' said seminary President
Susan-Thistlethwalte of Jackson, who left school in 1966. "I laughed
als under way at hospitals around the country.
.a:nd said, 'This i.s a no-bra.iner."'
Abbott Laboratories and one of its researchers, Donald Davidson,
BOSTON (AP)- A pharmaceutical company has sued one of the
- ' Thistlethwaite decided she'd make an offer to Jackson, who was world's top cancer researchers, clahning he and Children's Hospital in are seeking compensation and $10 million in. damages for the "unlaw·.ordamed a Baptut minister in 1968, that would allow him to gradu~te. Boston stole the credit for developing a promising drug that cuts off ful misappropriation of and conspiracy to steal an invention" of a molecule, the lawsuit says.
'Jackson took her up on the offer and Saturday he wiU be awarded his the blood supply to tumors.

'

Drug rights dispute·spurs suit

:· Jury considers
O'Hair case
,·· AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -A jury
has begun deliberations in the
trial of man accused of conspir·ing to kidnap and rob atheist
leader Madalyn Murray O'Hair
and her family, who have been
. missing since 1:995.
Gary P. Karr, 52, faces life in
prison if convicted of a kidnapping and extortion conspiracy in
. ~the disappearance of O'Hair, her
, son Jon Garth Murray and granddaughter Robin Murray O'Hair.
, Deliberations began T11esday and
were to resume today.
In their closing arguments,
Karr's attorneys said prosecutors
had not proved their case.
"You have a right to expect
them to show convincingly,
absolutely what happened,"
~ defense
attorney
Christie
Williams said. "They haven't done
that."
The O'Hairs disappeared from
San Antonio five years ago. Gov:.ernment investigators believe
they were kidnapped, robbed of
.•$500,000 in gold coins and later
:.killed and dismembered. Their
bodies were never found.
; Even if Karr participated in
only some of the alleged plot, he
':1 should
. .
be found guilty, Assistant
• U.S. Attorney Gerald· Carruth

a

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:: HOUSTON (AP) - Guitarist
f.Eddie Van Halen, co-founder of
~ihe rock band that bears his
t name, is to undergo preventative
~ireatment at a noted cancer cen-

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Halen, 43, visited the University
M .D. Anderson Cancer
·t&lt;;:enter in Houston · on Thursday
r~nd plans to begin outpatient
~eatment.
·
~-. Hospital spokeswoman :Jane
:Brust sa.id the California rocker
;cioes not have cancer and has not
fliad it. He will be treated as part
~of an · outpatient clinical trial to
~revent . tongue cancer, and -may
iJ).ave some risk factors for that
!type of disease, Brust said.
Van Halen has been a longtime
.mtoker.
:: Van Halen, who's marrled to
~ness Valerie Bertinelli, co~~unded the band in 1974 with
~is older brother, Alex, o~ drums;
'liass player Michael Anthony and
• ,.
. h
. :,mnger David Lee Rot .
.
•: Their 1978 debut alburn sold
~ore than tO million copies in
e U.S., and another bi_g hit in
~984 with the album "1984."
oth left the group in the midt980s and was replaced by
'ammy Hagar. He left the band in

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LIPTON BRISK..

STORE HOURS
Moaday thru
Sunday

'
• sa1"d •
;• "tt'
we don 't allege Mr. Karr ar;ted

•.~one in this case:' he said. "He
!·did it because he wanted money.
He 'Was greedy. Mr. Karr was part
of this conspiracy." ·
.Although proaecutorl believe
twQ others took part In the
:.alltged achef!le, only Karr, an ex·
: con with Q hiatory o( violence,
: facti charges.
: O'Halr waa conaldered Atnerl·
moat prominent unbeliever
•- a combative foe of all orp·
~nlzed rellaion -when ahe diup·
rpiared ac age 77. Involved in successful court battle! in the 1960s
to remove prayer and Bible read·
Jng from public schools, she rev~led in calling herself the moat
•thated woman in America.
••
~~ Prosecutors dismissed defense
:~Iairns the family may have tled
:th~ country to avoid trouble with
tthe Internal Revenue Service. A
:defense .witness testified last week
~e thought he saw O'Hair in
~~omania in 1997.
·

7 UP, DR.
MUG ROOT BEE

P 0 WEl L 'S

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FRIDAY, JUNE 89, 80001
•

master of divinity degree from the seminary adjacent to the Universi' ty of Chicago.
Jackson was given his remaining course credits in pastoral care,
international relations and preaching after faculty members examined
his writings.
Then there was an oral eKap1inarion of about an hour, primarily on
the theological underpinnings of the death penalry. The examination
was given by an ethics professor.

E:

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Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Dega ee going to Jackson

••••&lt;I '

Baby Edit~on

Santpal Mavi, MD .

Wedne,cfay, May 31, 2000

NATIONAL NEWS IN BRIEF

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

RACINE - "100 Years of
Sports" was the theme of the
annual Racine/Southern Alumni
Association reunion held Saturday night in the Southern High
School gymnasium.
Former athletes and ch erleaders were recognized during
the evening as a part of the program where a history of interscholastic sports at Racine was
given. It all started in 1918 with
the formation of a boys basketball team which played on an
outside court when the weather
permitted and moved into the
armory in Pomeroy for winter
games.
Two scholarships were awarded at the banquet, one to Brandon Scott Wolfe, son of Dennis
and Cindy Patterson Wolfe; and
the other one to Chris Randolph, son of Steve and Julie
Gibbs Randolph. Both are graduates of the Southern 2000 class.
Followed a memorial tribute
to George M. Sayre by Carroll
Clerk, the first annual George
M. Sayre, Jr. Alumni Scholarship
was · presented to Wolfe; The
scholarship was created with
contributions made in his memory.
It was noted that Mr. Sayre,
who died earlier this year, was a
recipient of the distinguished fly"
ing cross while in Vietnam. His
wife, Dorothy, was a guest at the
banquet.
Gordon Fisher, on behalf of
the Alumni Association, presented a scholarship to Chris, son of
Steve and Julie Gibbs Randolph.
More than 300 alumni and
guests gathered for the banquet
and dance planned by a committee of Gordon Fisher, ~hirley
Johnson, Roger Birch, Carla
Shuler and Lisa Woods. The
Invocation was given by Rogt:r
Sayre, Class of 1965.
During the business meeting
conducted by Shirley Johnson,
l'
the resignations of Roger Birch
and Gordon Fisher as members
~A
of the board were accepted, and
a;~
0~~
Junie Beegle Maynard and Tom
1
Weaver were named to fill the
~V.Ll
vacancies. Both Birch and Fisher
indicated they will continue to
be active in planning the ye~rly
event. Johnson asked that graduation program copies be simt to
her so that the alumni files can
be completed.
Appreciation was extended to
Fisher for his work in coordinatShirley Jeffers Lude,
ing the dinner, Birch for placing
the purple and gold flags around Donna Cross Norris, Gary P. ._----~-----------------·~
town with assistance from the
Racine Area Community Organization, and local growers for
the flowers which aecorated the
tables. Dinner music was provid,
ed by Jim Sunquest.
Serving as hosts and hosteSSf;'S
for the evening were Judy
Cozart Pape, Paul Beegle,
Robert E. Beegle and Jane
Gilmore Beegle.
Presented with a gift for
being the oldest graduate present
was Roberta Sayre Thaxton,

Pulmonary/Internal Medicine Physician

At

1

Southem_High School Alumni Banquet held

~

-•

•Wednesday, May 31,2000

Middleport, Ohio

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'Pege A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pom~troy,

amzlp
edicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Daughter's
'Greenstick'.fracture
being treated correctly
~' • Question: Our daughter was
~ •:"PIIerblading last week and had a
1&lt; • 1\11. She hurt her shoulder, so we

..• .q&gt;ok her to the emergency room.

.. · 'The doctor thought sh-e might
: have broken. her collarbone, but
,. in the X-ray it only appeared to
; be bent over. Obviously. th~re. is a
d1fference between her lllJUry
•• and a broken collarbone because
: he just put her ~rm in a sling that
: she is to use uinil it fee ls better.
"• What is that difference?
•
Answer: I've learned that talk ~
i!}g
is easy but that a&lt;:tually com•
: municating when we talk can be
: quite difficult. I'll glve you an
: e)(ample: A patient of mine went
tO the emergency department to
•· nave an injury to his lower ann
' treated. When he came to see me
the next day he said, "Thank
:
" goodness I only broke my arm ~ it could have been fractured!"
~ That doctor talked to my patient
~ without communicating very
~ well. You see, we doctors use
r
"fracture" as the "doctor term" to
'' describe a broken bone. Conse~ : quently, any broken bone can also
• • be described as being a fracture.
• ;The two terms have precisely the
., tame meanini&lt;.
.,
Without seeing your daugh,, ,, ter's X-rays, I can't tell you the
= correct "doctor language" to
·.Jescribe her injury.You see, there
: are two similar types of bone
~ injury - fractures, if you will that could be described as "bent
• over." First, you need to think of
~ . a long bone like the collarbone
or those of the ar!"s and legs as
~ bemg smular to a straw. The bone
1
~ • is made of a hard outside with
~
'b
I . .d
~
S01t porous one on t 1e ms1 e.
~
0 ne type o f "b ent over.. 1racture
~
; involves enough force to cause
;· one side of the bone to fail while
;; • the other just bends. This is like
: ' the kink that occurs in a straw
~ when it is bent over the side of a
• cup. The outside of the bend is
•
~ rather smooth while the inside
~ · has a definite kink in it. Doctors
u call this type of injury a "green: stick" fracture, and it is probably
:-. what your daughter has.
•
A related type of injury is
called-a "torus" or "buckle" frac•
" ture. In these fractures, the iniur''; ing force is c\irectly along "the
•

. ..
e
•
•

S

1

length of the bone. The bone
buckles under this force instead
of shattering. This is similar to the
type of deformity created in a
straw when you pop off its paper
wrapper by holding the straw
firmly and slamming its end
straight down on the table at
your favorite fast food restaurant.
The straw often develops a subtle
ring- like bulge below where
your had held it. You've just made
a toru s fracture of the straw.
Both torus and greenstick
fra cture are most cmnnton in
children because their bones have
a bit of "give" or flex:ibility to
them. The bones in those of us
who have finished growing are
more brittle. They tend to break
rather than to bend.
The collarbone, like any other
bone, hurts a great deal when it is
broken. The treatment of the
fracture usually involves placing
the ends of the bone in correct
alignment and limiting the
movement there.This redu ces the
pain and facilitates healing. The
collarbone is an important part of
the shoulder, but its exact shape
isn't that important. Therefore, it
usually isn't necessary to "set" ·it
and apply a cast as is necessary for
fractures of many long bones.
In either a greenstick or torus
fracture the degree of bending
and/ or bulking at the site of
injury is small, so it doesn't need
to be set. Consequently, it only
requires some stabilization to
reduce the pain and allow the
bone to heal properly. In a collarbone fracture in children this is
usually done by wearing a simple
arm sling for a week or two, just
as the doctor recommended for
your daughter. There are other
typ
f fi tu
t th
11
' b es ho rae res 0
e co arone, owever. In rare cases, these
b
ffi · tl
·
can even e su Jcten y senous
h
.
t at prompt _surgery IS necessary
to. pm the pteces back together.
F~rtunately, your daughter's
llljury IS the more common and
more easily treated kind.

- ~

~

..

· "Family Medicine" is a
weekly column. To submit
questions, write to John C.
Wolf, D.o:, Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701. Pa~t, .
columns are available online
at www.fbradio.org/fin:

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOL~

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Subscribe today.
992-2156

•·
•

•
·•
•~

....
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•

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"I
~

class of 1929.
Also
recogni~ed
and
given a gift was
Mary Shields
Griley
who
came
from
Hawaii.
Guests
of the Alumni
Chris Randolph Association
were the 2000 graduates. Singing
of the alma mater and the benediction by Sayre concluded the
program.
Graduates attending and their
reunion years were:
1930: Wilma Sayre Styer and
Emma Easterday Adams;
·1935: florence Norris Adams,
Ethel Cooper Holter. Mary
Louise McDade Ours, Bernice
Barnitz Carpenter and Eileen
Roush Buck;
1940: George Charles Foster,
Kenneth R . Theiss, Clara &lt;Zirde
Pierce and Cora Miller Bye.rs;
1945: Mildred · Brewer Todd,
Bill Roush, Blondena M. Taylor
Rainer, Myrtle Easterday Holter,
Audrey Hoback Boichyn, Nora
Wolfe Lewis, Anna Stobart
Roush and Charles G. Cecil;
1950: Paul Marr, Lucille
Brewer Lawrence, Della Johnson
Sauer, June Beegle Roush, Barbara McNickle Pierce, Ruth
Bradford Frank, Aaron Wolfe,
El.leen W1"nes Grueser, San1
Ebers bach, Juanita I. Sarson
Justis, Mary Shields Griley, Kath!een Wines Holter, Ruth Ann
Badgley Hill and Barbara Gainer
Norris;
1955: Rebecca Shockey Circle, Lillian Powell Weese, Shirley
Gillilan Simpson, Paul E. Harris,
Phillip Bearhs, Phyllis Adams
O'Brien, Betty Lou Bryson
lllackwood
and
Delores
Kraetuer Wolfe;
1960: Jerry . Dailey, Carole
,Deem Willman, Don C. Weese,
Mary Euler Hill, Joyce
Rice, Bobby Lewis, Louise Fischer Smith, Donna Neville
Fiske, Mary Grace Stobart Cowdery, Becky Ward Wolfe, Mary
Harris Houck, Bob L. Wingett,
Patrida Roush · Pape, Shiela
Young Lott, Richard Schular.and
Dorothy Circle Harden;

BY TONY M. lEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

.."'"•_
..

'I

~

..

Norris, Judy VanMeter and Eileen Johnson
Spencer, Ike Cartwrigh!.
1951: Grover .Salser, Jc,.
Spencer, Jan
Dorotha
Pearson Salser, Gerald
Hill Norris,
Jill Cod ner Simpson, Eula Roberts Hensler
and Georgann Hartenba&lt;:.h
Lipscomb,
Melvin
Grimmi
..
Lawrence,
1952: John Fisher, Gene Wells.
Loretta Kiser Larry Roush and Gary Gibbs;
Dehmann,
1953: Donna Ward Latkin:s,
Brandon Wolfe Trudy
David Hill and Harold W Circle;
Maslanka,
1954: Madge McNickle
Rhonda Ervin Dailey, Brenda smith,Jane Gilmore Beegle,Aliee
Justis Corder, Irene Cooper Fisher Wamsley, Joyce E. Hart
Murphy, Brenda Holman Stuart, Manuel, Shirley Stobart R()berts
Kathleen Lewis Elmore and and Larry Wolfe;
1956: ·
Eddie Hupp;
Robert E. Beegle, Nancy Shuler
1975: Buddy Ervin,JeffCircle Carnahan and Don Richard
and Paul Glenn Simpson;
Hill;
1957:
Don
1980:· Julie Gibbs Randolph Johnson, June Proffitt Turner,
and Pamela Harden Foreman;
Robert Euler, Claudia Shields
1985 Patty Dailey Lawrence;
Roush and Dwain Sayre;
-,:
1990: Mandy Russell Red1958; Linda Mallory Hill; ··
man, Alisa Willford Caldwell and
1959: Joy Foster Ellis, Nadine
Shelly Sawyers Wozney.
Roush Euler and Shirley JohnNo. n-reunioil class graduates son.
1·
attending were:
1961: Miriam Foster Compli1929: Roberta Sayre Thaxton; ment;
1931:
Mildred
Spencer
1963: Jess w. Wood;
Schuler;
1964: Judy Cozart Pape;
1932:ThereonJohnson;
1967: Steve R. Dailey, Bob
1933: Harold Roush;
Grueser, Darrell Wolfe and Anita
1936: Mary Virginia Easterday Houdashelt Moore;
and Elva Dean Brinker Barnitz;
1968: Charlene Ward Barber
1937: Lillian Hoback Pistole, and Gene Hudson;
Eileen Roush, Paul Sayre and
1969: Darell Norris;
Mary Lew Philson Johnson;
1971 : Dc;&gt;n Sinith;
1939: Wayne Roush and Paul
s· M oore;
1972: Sharon Roush Hupp;·'
1974: David Schuler;
1941 : Carroll Norris;
197 6l Debra Roush G["l'ss;
1942: Waynita Cleek Harris,
1977: Lisa T. Allen Woods;
Martha Lou Watterson Beegle,
1979 , Dennis Wolfe aild
Mary Ruth Canahan Simpson
Cindy Patterson-Wolfe; ,
and Paul E. Beegle;
198 8: Heather Shuler;
1946: Faye Fisher Proffitt,
1991 : Jerry L. Smith;
David Sayre, Billy Joe Spencer,
. 1992: Robin D. Manuel;
Delores Jean Miller Fisher and
1999 , Adam C. Williams and
James C. Circle;
Tara M. Norman.
1948:Virgil R. Norris;
1949: Carl Morris, Carroll
The banquet dinner was preCleek, Howard Ervin, Norman pared and served by students and
r-------------p-ar-en_t_s_o_f-th_e...;j_u_ni_o_r_d_a_ss_._ _

ATTENTION

Ca~son

w·

. enr011ment lOr SCh001'
eare accept'1ng

/GI1ngerbreadH
age program
ccess
ln.U'ddl. eport ' OH. We can only enrol,1'.
p~~~;,~:~;;~v:r:s~:~ia~~~~:.
15 ch1ldren·; Ages are children who
~~:~~eE7J:i~:~:~~~~~;:~r~~~y have completed Kindergarten or ages
~i~;;, i~::e~y!~a~~/~~~~: 6to 12 years of age. Call Alice Jacobs .
Du:~t~O:
for more information at 992•7329, _'

•

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'

r

EXTRA! EXTRA!

COMING FRIDAY, JULY 1, iOOO
The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel Baby Edition is a
Special Edition filled with
·
photographs of local 'kids • @Sies ·
newborn to four years old. The
BABY EDITION will appear in the
July 7th issue. Be sure your child,
grandchild or relative is included .

Is Now Accepting New Patients

Holzer Clinic !!

• Accepts patients with COPD, A.thma, Black Lung &amp; SI"P Disorders
• Perfonna bronchoscopy &amp; blop81H
.

Complete the form below and
enclose a sna,shot or wallet sized
picture plus a 6.00 charge for each
photograph. I mor:e than one child
is m th'picture, enclose an
additional $2.00 per child. !ENCLOSE

~

Dr. S•nfiMI IHvl, completed his Residency at
Marshall University SChool of Medicine,
Huntington, WV. He is Board Certified by·the .
American aoard of Internal Medicine &amp; is Board
~ligible in Pulmonary Medicine.

PAYMENT WITH PICTURE)

To Sdledulfl an Appolnbnent,

call (7 40) 448-51 a1

":'i•.
~

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Sa11tpal S. Mavi, MD

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

r-~---------------------~------------------

1 Child's Name(s) &amp;Age(s) : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
I Parent's Name:
City&amp; State: - - - - - -.- - - - -.----~---

Holzer Oink:

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SUBMITIED BY:

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Keeping the Promise!

I

L---------------------~--------------------~
HURRYI PICTURE D_
E ADLINE 18

Dr. Judah Folkman fraudulently told U.S. patent reviewers that he
discovered tumor-inhibiting properties in a small section of :inangiostatin protein known as Kringle 5, according to the lawsuit filed Tues~I:IIC~GO (AP) -The student was just three courses short of
.earnmg his degree at the Chicago Theological Seminary when he left
day in U.S. District Court in Boston by Abbott Laboratories.
~o work with a minister.
Angiostatin is o.ne of two angiogenesis inhibitors credited to Folk;· ' More than three decades later, he has yet to take those courses.
man's lab at Children's Hospital. EntreMed, a Maryland biotech firm,
.When the studen.t ts the Rev. Jes~e Jackson, the minister was the Rev.
is running clinical trials of both angiosurin and the other drug, endostatin.
'
r-:tar,tm Luther KingJr., and one of those courses was preaching, the
As :cancer fighters, the drugs appear to be especiaUy powetful, at
pr':tdent of ~he s~nunary thought it was high time for a diploma.
.
least in mice and rats. The lawsuit does not affect any of the clinical triHe h~dn t qUite turned mall his sermons:' said seminary President
Susan-Thistlethwalte of Jackson, who left school in 1966. "I laughed
als under way at hospitals around the country.
.a:nd said, 'This i.s a no-bra.iner."'
Abbott Laboratories and one of its researchers, Donald Davidson,
BOSTON (AP)- A pharmaceutical company has sued one of the
- ' Thistlethwaite decided she'd make an offer to Jackson, who was world's top cancer researchers, clahning he and Children's Hospital in are seeking compensation and $10 million in. damages for the "unlaw·.ordamed a Baptut minister in 1968, that would allow him to gradu~te. Boston stole the credit for developing a promising drug that cuts off ful misappropriation of and conspiracy to steal an invention" of a molecule, the lawsuit says.
'Jackson took her up on the offer and Saturday he wiU be awarded his the blood supply to tumors.

'

Drug rights dispute·spurs suit

:· Jury considers
O'Hair case
,·· AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -A jury
has begun deliberations in the
trial of man accused of conspir·ing to kidnap and rob atheist
leader Madalyn Murray O'Hair
and her family, who have been
. missing since 1:995.
Gary P. Karr, 52, faces life in
prison if convicted of a kidnapping and extortion conspiracy in
. ~the disappearance of O'Hair, her
, son Jon Garth Murray and granddaughter Robin Murray O'Hair.
, Deliberations began T11esday and
were to resume today.
In their closing arguments,
Karr's attorneys said prosecutors
had not proved their case.
"You have a right to expect
them to show convincingly,
absolutely what happened,"
~ defense
attorney
Christie
Williams said. "They haven't done
that."
The O'Hairs disappeared from
San Antonio five years ago. Gov:.ernment investigators believe
they were kidnapped, robbed of
.•$500,000 in gold coins and later
:.killed and dismembered. Their
bodies were never found.
; Even if Karr participated in
only some of the alleged plot, he
':1 should
. .
be found guilty, Assistant
• U.S. Attorney Gerald· Carruth

a

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:: HOUSTON (AP) - Guitarist
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t name, is to undergo preventative
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Halen, 43, visited the University
M .D. Anderson Cancer
·t&lt;;:enter in Houston · on Thursday
r~nd plans to begin outpatient
~eatment.
·
~-. Hospital spokeswoman :Jane
:Brust sa.id the California rocker
;cioes not have cancer and has not
fliad it. He will be treated as part
~of an · outpatient clinical trial to
~revent . tongue cancer, and -may
iJ).ave some risk factors for that
!type of disease, Brust said.
Van Halen has been a longtime
.mtoker.
:: Van Halen, who's marrled to
~ness Valerie Bertinelli, co~~unded the band in 1974 with
~is older brother, Alex, o~ drums;
'liass player Michael Anthony and
• ,.
. h
. :,mnger David Lee Rot .
.
•: Their 1978 debut alburn sold
~ore than tO million copies in
e U.S., and another bi_g hit in
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oth left the group in the midt980s and was replaced by
'ammy Hagar. He left the band in

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•

ORANGE SLICEr
LIPTON BRISK..

STORE HOURS
Moaday thru
Sunday

'
• sa1"d •
;• "tt'
we don 't allege Mr. Karr ar;ted

•.~one in this case:' he said. "He
!·did it because he wanted money.
He 'Was greedy. Mr. Karr was part
of this conspiracy." ·
.Although proaecutorl believe
twQ others took part In the
:.alltged achef!le, only Karr, an ex·
: con with Q hiatory o( violence,
: facti charges.
: O'Halr waa conaldered Atnerl·
moat prominent unbeliever
•- a combative foe of all orp·
~nlzed rellaion -when ahe diup·
rpiared ac age 77. Involved in successful court battle! in the 1960s
to remove prayer and Bible read·
Jng from public schools, she rev~led in calling herself the moat
•thated woman in America.
••
~~ Prosecutors dismissed defense
:~Iairns the family may have tled
:th~ country to avoid trouble with
tthe Internal Revenue Service. A
:defense .witness testified last week
~e thought he saw O'Hair in
~~omania in 1997.
·

7 UP, DR.
MUG ROOT BEE

P 0 WEl L 'S

t

:i

FRIDAY, JUNE 89, 80001
•

master of divinity degree from the seminary adjacent to the Universi' ty of Chicago.
Jackson was given his remaining course credits in pastoral care,
international relations and preaching after faculty members examined
his writings.
Then there was an oral eKap1inarion of about an hour, primarily on
the theological underpinnings of the death penalry. The examination
was given by an ethics professor.

E:

Send to:

PICTURES IIUITIE IN 8Y FRIDAY
JUNE tJ, 2DOO. PICTURES CAN BE
PICICED UP AFTER JULY 10TH, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7
•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Dega ee going to Jackson

••••&lt;I '

Baby Edit~on

Santpal Mavi, MD .

Wedne,cfay, May 31, 2000

NATIONAL NEWS IN BRIEF

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

RACINE - "100 Years of
Sports" was the theme of the
annual Racine/Southern Alumni
Association reunion held Saturday night in the Southern High
School gymnasium.
Former athletes and ch erleaders were recognized during
the evening as a part of the program where a history of interscholastic sports at Racine was
given. It all started in 1918 with
the formation of a boys basketball team which played on an
outside court when the weather
permitted and moved into the
armory in Pomeroy for winter
games.
Two scholarships were awarded at the banquet, one to Brandon Scott Wolfe, son of Dennis
and Cindy Patterson Wolfe; and
the other one to Chris Randolph, son of Steve and Julie
Gibbs Randolph. Both are graduates of the Southern 2000 class.
Followed a memorial tribute
to George M. Sayre by Carroll
Clerk, the first annual George
M. Sayre, Jr. Alumni Scholarship
was · presented to Wolfe; The
scholarship was created with
contributions made in his memory.
It was noted that Mr. Sayre,
who died earlier this year, was a
recipient of the distinguished fly"
ing cross while in Vietnam. His
wife, Dorothy, was a guest at the
banquet.
Gordon Fisher, on behalf of
the Alumni Association, presented a scholarship to Chris, son of
Steve and Julie Gibbs Randolph.
More than 300 alumni and
guests gathered for the banquet
and dance planned by a committee of Gordon Fisher, ~hirley
Johnson, Roger Birch, Carla
Shuler and Lisa Woods. The
Invocation was given by Rogt:r
Sayre, Class of 1965.
During the business meeting
conducted by Shirley Johnson,
l'
the resignations of Roger Birch
and Gordon Fisher as members
~A
of the board were accepted, and
a;~
0~~
Junie Beegle Maynard and Tom
1
Weaver were named to fill the
~V.Ll
vacancies. Both Birch and Fisher
indicated they will continue to
be active in planning the ye~rly
event. Johnson asked that graduation program copies be simt to
her so that the alumni files can
be completed.
Appreciation was extended to
Fisher for his work in coordinatShirley Jeffers Lude,
ing the dinner, Birch for placing
the purple and gold flags around Donna Cross Norris, Gary P. ._----~-----------------·~
town with assistance from the
Racine Area Community Organization, and local growers for
the flowers which aecorated the
tables. Dinner music was provid,
ed by Jim Sunquest.
Serving as hosts and hosteSSf;'S
for the evening were Judy
Cozart Pape, Paul Beegle,
Robert E. Beegle and Jane
Gilmore Beegle.
Presented with a gift for
being the oldest graduate present
was Roberta Sayre Thaxton,

Pulmonary/Internal Medicine Physician

At

1

Southem_High School Alumni Banquet held

~

-•

•Wednesday, May 31,2000

Middleport, Ohio

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. P-ae A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

- -u -

--

-

• •• •. •

Inside:

Wednesday, May 31, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Major League hll$eball news, Page B2
Knight under control?, Page BJ
NBA playoff update, Page B3
Daily Scoreboard, Page B8
POMEROY - Meigs County Court
Judge Patrick H . O'Brien processed anumh$r of cises last week.
Fined were: Anthony A. Carpenter, Rutland, $30 and. cosu, speed, S25 and cosu,
seatbelt; Lori B. Adams, Huntington, W.Va.,
$25 and costs, seatbelt; Richard E. Kinner,
Jr., Gallipolis, $25 and costs, seatbelt;Albert
E. Lawson, Sr., Long Bottom, $30 and costs,
speed;Jessy W.Voung, Racine, $20 and costs,
failure to control; Krishana P. Robinson,
Middleport, $30 and costs, stop sign; JamiS. Holon, Lancaster, s40 and costs,
'--..I~~Hot!:rf~5 and costs, seatbelt; Jessie M .
Cline,ILo~i&amp;\x&gt;ttom, $30 and costs, failure to
control; Doug Bobb, Pomeroy, $100 and
~osts, six months jail suspended upon the
child having no more unexcused absences,
contributing; Tina Chevalier, Reedsville, six
months jail suspended upon the child havil)g no more unexcused absences, contributing.
Teresa Cook, Middleport, $100 and
costs, six months jail suspended upon the
child having no more unexcused absences.,
contributing; Pamela King, Pomeroy, $100
and costs, six months jail suspended upon
the child having no more unexcused
absences, contributing; Edward King,
Pomeroy, $100 and cosu, six months jail
suspended upon the child having no more
unexcused absences, contributing.

Kimberly Kauff, Racine, $100 and costs,
six months jail suspended upon the condition that the child haw no more unexcused
absence$, comributing; Karen Jones,
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, six months jail
suspended upon the child having no more
unexcused absences, contributing; Cathy
Hanunon, Middleport, $100 and costs, six
months jail suspended upon the child having no more unexcused absences, contributing; Terri Patterson, Syracuse, $100
and costs, six months jail suspended upon
'the child having no more unexcused
absences, contributing; Thomas Lee,Albany,
$100 and costs, six months jail suspended
upon the child having no more unexcused
absences, contributing; Janet Lee, Albany,
$100 and costs, six months jail suspended
upon the child having no more unexcused
absences,. contributing; Mary Bare,
Langsville, $100 and costs, six months jail'
suspended upon the child having no more
unexcused absences, contributing; Herbert
Bare, $100 and costs, six months jail suspended upon the child having no more
unexcused absences, contributing.
james L. Buckley. Reedsville, $15 and
costs, seatbelt;Jessica Evans, Middleport, $30
and costs, failure to stop and yield; Edward
Cozart, Pomeroy, $30 and costs, speed;
Joseph R. Pounder, Columbia, S.C ., $30.
and costs, speeding; Charity S. Lariham,

Ripley, W.Va .. $30 and costs, parked along
roadway; Melanie A. Beckett, Milton,W.Va.,
S20 and costs, failure to stop at stop sign:
Rhonda J. Rogers, Grove City, SIS and
costs, seatbelt; B.C. Smith, Albany, $30 and
costs, failure to control; Adam M . Taylor,
Middleport, $25 and costs, seatbelt; Edward
E. Sarver, II, Syracuse, $30 and costs, speed,
$25 and costs, seatbelt; Arnold N. Spencer,
Coolville, $20 and costs, expired registration.
Megan C. Drummer, Rutland, $30 and
costs, speed; Herbert W Roush, New
Haven,W.Va., $30 and costs, speed; Mark E.
McCarley, Vinton, $91 and costs, inner
bridge overload; Lawrence K. EV:lns, Gallipolis, $248 and costs, inner bridge overload; Ronald E. Titchenell, C leveland, $25
: and costs. seatbelt, $25 and costs, child
restraint.
Joey A. Walker, Letart, W.Va., $30 and
, costs, spe~Jerry E. Reitmire, Pomeroy. $15
and costs, seatbelt; Roy K. Armes, Racine,
$20 and costs, failure to yield; Wayne L.
Miller, Fairfield, $30 and costs, speed; Sara
M. Eades, Rutland, $20 and costs, failure to
control; Ricky .L. Ryan, Warsaw, $30 and
costs, speed; Michael L. Moore, Reedsville,
$25 and costs, seatbelt; Shawn A. Martin,
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., $25 and costs, seatbelt; Larry G. French, Albany, $20 apd costs, ·
left of center; April N. Kimy, Gallipolis, $15

and costs, seatbelt: Bryan C. Roe, Gallipolis,
$20 and cosu, foUowing too dose; Christi- •
na L. Kosteonick. Medina, $30 and costs,
speed: Roger L. Adrian, Dexter, $25 and
costs, seatbelt; Samson Darst, Rutland, $25
and coots, seatbelt; Betty R. Carsey, Middleport, $25 and costs, seatbelt, $20 and costs,
stop sign; Dona14 1;. Lawrence, Jr., Beverly.
$2!} and costs, expired registration; Roy R .
Ocheltree, Buchannan, W.Va., $30 and
costs, speeding; David Adams, Brooklyn,
N .Y., $30 and costs, speeding; Ruth E .
Roush, Racine, $20 and costs, improper
passing; Dustin J. Butcher, Middleport, $25
and costs, seatbelt.
Etic W. Miller, Jane Lew, W.Va., $30 and
costs, stop sign;Willam A. Hall,Austin, Ind. ,
$30 and cosu, speed; ,Elizabeth A. Gloeckner, Pomeroy, $25 and costs, seatbelt;Jason T
Allen, Syracuse, $20 and costs, failure to
yield; Rodney E. Stempert, tittle Hocking,
$30 and costs, speed, $25 and costs, seatbelt;
James D.Jones,Pomeroy,$25 and costs, seatbelt; Robert E. Boring, Pomeroy. $25 and
costs, seatbelt, $20 and costs, impJ:Oper pass.ing; Dewayne R. Fisher, Middleport, $30
and costs, speed; Bryan J Wolfe, Racine, $25
and costs, seatbelt; Bryan K. HoOey,
Reedsville, $25 and costs, seatbelt; Brenda
K. Miller, Belpre, $30 and costs, speed; Roy
D. Greathouse, Newport, $30 and costs,
speed; Larry K. Chorpenning, Marietta, $25

and cosu. seatbelt; Chad M . Clark, Racine,
$30 and coslll, speed; Paul A. Childs, Albany,
$20 and costs, left of center; Jinunie G.
King, Long Bottom, $25 and costs, seatbelt;
Leslie L. Whittington, Jr. , Middleport, $25
and costs, seatbelt; Robert V. Whitlatch,
Powkala, $30 and costs, speed; Jonathon D.
Wyatt, Pomeroy, $30 and costs, speed; Bert
S. Brainard, The Plains, $30 and costs, speed;
Rebecca I. Stine, $30 and costs, speed, $25
and costs, seatbelt; Caseyne Sanford,
Pomeroy, $25 and costi, seatbelt.
.
Jason S. Lawson, Shade, $15 and costs,
seatbelt; Ri.;hard L. Robson, Guysville, $25
and costs, seatbelt; Doris L. Henry, Galli polis, $30 and costs, speed; Juanita V. Wells.
Long Bottom, $20 and costs, failure to
yield; Ronald D. Petry,Jr., Rutland, $25 and
costs, seatbelt; Amanda Wells, Reedsville,
$25 and costs, seatbelt; Travis S. Curtis,
Pomeroy, $30 and costs, speed; Kristi Y.
Stover, Pt. Pleasant, W.Va., $15 . and costs,
seatbelt;Jetfrey R. Bobb, Hamden, $30 and
costs, speed; Dencil G. Campbell, Leon,
WVa., $20 and costs, no rear m4dflaps;
James T. McCoy; Henderson,W.Va .., $25 and
costs, seatbelt; Brittany D. Schroeder, Washington,WVa.,$30andcosts,speed;JamesW
Hanunack, Clifton, W.Va., $50 and costs,
improper taggini, Clarence H. Kidd, Ripley. W.Va., $.3() and costs, fishing without a
license.

Page 8 1
Wednesday, May J1, 1000

WEDNESDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Marauden to host

hoop camp
, ROCK SPRING The
Meigs boys basketbaU camp will
be held on Monday June 12-16,
front 9 am until noon at Meigs
High School's Larry R . Morrison
Gymnasium.
•The camp is for kids entering
grades 3 through 9. Cost of the
camp is $40 and includes five day
of instruction of basketball fundamentals, camp t-shirt and various
prizes. Instructors of the camp
will be made up of the Meigs
High School coaching staff and
players.
For more information contact
Chris Stout at 992-6600 or 9922158.

Blazers win in LA again, trim series lead to 3-2
LOS ANGELES (AP) - T hat homecourt advantage the Los Angeles Lakers
worked so hard to earn with 67 regularseason· victories? Forget it.
In the Western Conference finals, home
i~ where the hurt is.
·
The Portland Trail Blazers bear the Lakers in Los Angeles for the second time in
a row and third time this season Tuesday
night, a convincing 96-88 victory that
forces Game 6 Friday night in Portland.
"Obviously you all don't listen to me
when I talk," Blazers coach Mike Dun- ·
Ieavy said. ''I told you from the very
beginning that I didn 't think there was a
home. court advantage in this series, . I

thought that either team was capable of
winning every game on the other team's
court."
The last four games of the series have
been won by the visitor. The only homecourt win came in La. Angeles in Game
1.
The Trail Blazers, still down 3-2, can
force a deciding Game 7 if they can finally win one at home.
" We just have to wipe out the fact that
we lost two games at home," Portland's
Scottie Pippen said .. "We know in our
hearts that we can outplay them ."
Lakers coach Phil Jackso n said Pippen
shouldn't even have been allowed in the

game. But, even though he played three
quarters with two dislocated fingers on his
left hand, Pippen was in this one in a big
way.
"That's just Pip being a warrior. This is
no time to sit out," teammate Rasheed
Wallace said. "Like the other night when I
hurt my ankle. That team is just too tough
for us to sit out."·
Jackson said he told Pippen he shou ld
have been suspended for a game for
elbowing John Salley in the back of the
head late in Portland's homecourt loss in
Game 4 Sunday.
"He shouldn't have been playing in this
ballgame," Jackson said. " He clearly threw

·softball team reunion
set for July 21
SYRACUSE - On Saturday,
July 29, all former members of
·the Hits and Misses Senior Girls
Softball team and their families
will have an all day reunion at the
Syracuse ball field arid poll.
The park is reserved for the day
and a free pass to swim
be
provided by the team. The team
was organized in 1966 by Kenny
Wiggins and continued for 23
years through the 1988 season. It
is .believed to be the first girls
slow pitch snftball team in· Meigs
· County.
There was over 125 girls on the
te.ams, and if you have any
addresses we would appreciate
your phone caU at 740-992-5002,
so that each player can receive a
l~tter as soon as possible.

..
POMEROY -The following Sargent, Dennis J. Sargent, deed,
land . transfers were recently Olive;
reported by Meigs County
Thomas G . Beegle, deceased,
Recorder Judith A. King:
.
to Harold Lawson, deed, Sutton;
. Larry D. Gindlesberger, Pamela
Robert G. Edwards, to James S.
D. Gindlesberger, to Harry L. Stettler, Pamela S. Stettler, deed,
Ramsey, Joanne J. Ramsey, deed, Olive;
Scipio;
Michael H. Cline, Joyce N.
· Southern Local School Dis- Cline, to James R . Priddy, Sr.,
trict, to Ohio Power Company, Ruth A. Priddy, deed, Middleright of way, Sutton;
port;
' Jamie Barrett, Melissa Barrett,
Robert G. Edwards, to Eric L.
to Columbus Southern Power, Johnson, Sharon R. Johnson,
right of way, Chester;
deed, Olive;
Federal H9cking Local School,
Robert L. Dempsey, deceased,
to Columbus Southern Power, to Mary B. Dempsey, affidavit,
right of way, Rome 1\vp. (Athens Middleport;
County);
John Thomas, Cheryl L.
Eddie Halim, to Adam T. Thomas, to Duane Edward
Ramseyer, Erin L. Nash, ruta T. Abshire, Debra Lee Abshire, deed,
Ramseyer, deed, Bedford;
Salisbury;
Marcella L. Hoy, to Carolyn A.
Juanita L. Spencer, deceased, to
Charles, Carolyn A. Jeffers, deed, Spencer RusseU, affidavit;
Sutton;
William J. Bias, Michael A.
Daisey Mallory, to David J. Reed, to State of Ohio; deed,
BeU, April K. Bell, deed, Scipio;
Letart;
Seldon
R.
Flemming,
William J. Bias, Michael A.
deceased, to Ida Aemming, cer- Reed, to State of Ohio, deed,
tificate, Olive;
Letart;
Ida V. Flemming, to Kathy L.
Janet Coomer Young, Janet R.

Coomer, to State of Ohio, deed,
Letart;
Janet Coomer Young, Janet R.
•
Coomer, to State of Ohio, deed ,
Letart;
Barbara M. Pierce, Clarence
Thomas Wolfe, Rosalie Wolfe. to
State of Ohio, deed, Letart;
to State of
. Barbara M. Pierce,
)
Ohio, deed, Letart;
Mark R . JarreD, Aimee L. Jarrell, to Gary Roush, Teri J. Roush,
deed, Letart;

Bishop of the Roman Catholic
Church, to Jeffers Coal Trucking
and Excavating Inc., deed, Salisbury;
Henry
Norvel
Lauhon,
deceased, to Margaret S. Lauhon,
affidavit, Letart;
Norvel Lauhon, to Susan
Schleder, deed, Letart;
Cecil V. DiUon, Flossie N. Dillon, to LarryV. DiUon, Cynthia A.
Dillon, deed, Olive;
David E. Grueser, Eileen F.

Grueser, to Paul P. Simon, Allie
M . Simon, deed, Salisbury;.
Ralph H . Ballard, Wilma M .
Ballard,.to David A. Ballard, Brenda L. Vandyke, Melvin D. Ballard,
deed, Chester;
Brenda Vandyke,
Rydell
Vandyke, .Melvin D. Ballard,
Sharon Ballard, to David A. Ballard, deed, Chester;
David A. Wolfe, John T. Wolfe,
Marilyn J. Wolfe, to Troy S.
Hoba~k. deed, Letart.

Leona Eblin
Nov•.1.9, 1936 - Nov. 13, 19%
Mother

wiU

The days ·may come and go,
but the times we shared
will always remain.
Daughter Nancy Manley

Let Eieryone Know Your Dad Is Someone Very
Speci~l ~ith A~ather's Day Thank You Tribute
To Be Published In The Daily Sentinel
On ·Friday, June 16th!

I

Syracuse woman wins

at Rlvenide
MASON, W.Va. Craig
Simpkins and Rita Slavin were
the divisional winners of this
year's G.O. Roush Memorial Golf
Tournament held May 28-29 at
the Riverside Golf Cl ub.
Simpkiqs, of Point Pleasant,
won this year's outing with totals
of 59 and 68 (127) to beat Jeff
Goebel of Gallipolis by a single
shot .
Slavin, of Syrac.use, took the
women's division with total$ of
59 and 68 . (127) to defeat joyce
QuiUen of Portland by six strokes.
The tournament is 36 holes
with a I 00 percent handicap. It is
held annually in memory of the
Grant 0. Roush, the father and .
grandfather of Riverside's own-

New time rules for trucken
g•ng mixed reception

I

WASHINGTON (AP) A
government proposal to change the
hours truck and bus driven can
work and to set a mandatory break
time is getting a cool reception
where the rubber meetll the road.
The Transportation Department
is starting a series of meetings across
the country to hear comments on
the proposal. But it's already received
a Oood of responses from truckers.
"You need to get out in the real
world and find out what its really .
like and do some studies on real
people," complained Gmdon Vm
Cleave of Payette, Idaho. ''I'm aU for
making the highways safer, but get
real and do it right. This is the one of
the more stupid things the government has come up with in a long
time."
"Please consider. financiaUy how
you will ruin us drivers and families
by limiting hours of service;· Jady D.
Spell of Covington, La., Wrote to the
department.
And Robert R. Homan of Port
.CI:Jarlotte, Fla., said he believes the
new rules "are more a result of the
desires of the railroads and airfreighters, as these proposals are
designed to hamper the l110'1\mlent
of freight."
But the changes were welcomed
by Michael A. Stewart, who didn't
include a home address in his e-n1ail
comments.
~ ·~ ··vo Feds;' SteWart wrote~ "Don't
knuckle under to the lobbyists,
Make the penalties 10 times more
Ievere than they are now ... Also, you
had better enforce them a whole lot
better than you enforce the rules
now in place."
The proposed changes were
announced last month. Thnsportation Seq:etary Rodney Slater said
they would prevent 2,600 accidents

and as many as U 5 fatalities every

y=.,

The

proposal would e.tablish

'IM:lrk limits for five dilferent classes
of driven, with long-disl;mce operaton aUowed to do no more than 12
hours of driving in a 24-hour period. They would also have to insl211
electronic moniton - black boxes
- on their !nicks to keep tiack of
their work hours. .
·
Current rules,adopted moie than
60 yean ago, say tt:uckm can drive
no more than 10 hours str.Ught, fol10\ved by at least eight hours off. But
they permit up to 16 houn of driving in a day and don't include
required break time as the new rules
do.
The American Trucking Association opposed the change, contending it will require thousands of additional drivers and !nicks to meet
current delivery schedules.
Jackie Gillan of Advocates for
Highway and Auto Safety said ·
aUowing 12 consecutive hours on·
the road would leave driven ·even
more exhausted and Pmmts Against
Tired Thlckm also opposed allowing longer consecutive houn of driving.
A selection of comment! fiom
lrucliers:
• "With a reduction in service
houn comes a direct reduction in
the income of the aftady underpaid
driver, while at the IUile time causing him to spend abotjt 20 percent

more of his time away tiom home:'
Frank X. Neumann, Streator, m.

• "I do not Wl"lcome ihe additioo
of a time data recorder onboard my
vehicle.... What~ next then? Perhaps
a device to monitor the amount of
time a driver actually sleeps." Joseph

F.Tadlock.Anw:illo, Texas.

erS.

.HAP
FAT.HER'S
.
.
·DAY

PICTURE

(YOUR
FATJiER'S
. NAME)

HAPPY
fATHER'S.
DAY

•"

LOVE,
JOHN, JOE, &amp;

YOUR FATHER'S NAME

$~SAN

LOVE,
JOHN, JOE, &amp;
SUSAN

r--------------Circle One: A. 1X3 Greetlng ... $10.00

'

.

UK hoop recruit pes to

trial on dftll charps

----~~--~-------------------~
,.,. 1 X 4 Greeting with Plcture... $13.00

• (PLEASE PFnNT OR TYPE)

' Due t\) bad weather, only 26
entered the tournament. The
prize wirners in this .year's tournament were:
: Men's Division: 1. Craig Simpk)ns 59-68= 127; 2. Jeff Goebel
6:3'-65=128: 3. Andy Anderson •
66-63=129; 4. Rc&gt;bin Phalin 6070=130; 5 . Bob, Mcintosh 6764=13 1; 6. Gary Roush 6766= 133; 7 . Dave Reed 6570=135; 8 . Scott Hussell 6768=135.
Women's Division: 1. Rita
Slavin 66-70= )36; 2. Joyce
Quillen
69-73=142;
Becky
Anderson 73-75=148.

~·

FATHER'S NAME._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;....."""-:-----------'VOUR NAME(S) ._ _ _ _..,.....__.;,..___;___.:..,;;.:;...:._____._____ ___,...._ __
ADDRESS: ________..:________......__------------------.....-CITV I STATE
ZIP·
PHONE:---SE.ND COUPON AND PAYMENT TO: THE DAILY SENTINEL j'FATHER'S DAY"
110 COURT STREE!z POMEROY.~, OHIO 45769
.J

Deadline For This Special Father's Day Tribute is Monday, June 12, 5:00pm.

LA CROSSE, Wis. (AP) .- ·
University of Kentucky recruit
MiChael Southall was bound over
lor. trial on marijuana possession
and delivery charges after waiving
his right to a preliminary hearing.
kentucky coach Tubby Smith
has said Southall could lose his
s~holarship depending on the
outcome of the case.

1

Redsldns sip Green

.1\SHBURN, Va. (AP) Seven-rime Pro Bowl cornerback
Darrell Green signed a five-year,
$10 · million contract with the
Washington Redskins at the age

..
..

o(40 .
•

•.

•

•

Please see Blazers. Pa111 BJ

Fem·andez .
leads Reds

. Hits and Misses

Meigs County land transfers posted by recorder

a cheap -shot elbow to the back of th t·
head and he just got fined $10,000. I
wanted to tell him that h e was a presence
who shouldn't have been there."
In the latest of wl!at has been a bac kand-forth bickering between the player
and his former coach, Pippe n was unimpresserl by Jackson's opinion.
"Phil is not my coach. I' m not li stenin g
to nothing you tell me about Phil. ~ a
good day," he said, then he left th e
postgame news conference.
Wallace was just 7- for- 2'1 !Tom the fidd ,
but scored 22 points, including seven of

CINCINNATI
(AP)
Osvaldo Fernandez has been
the perfect fill-in.
The pitcher who's missed two
years because of elbow surgery
has saved the Cincinnati Reds
in the month of May. Called on
to fill in while No. 1 starter Pete
Harnisch is disabled, Fernandez
has led the Reds to wins in all
four of his ·starts.
He's also gotten better as he
goes along. He retired the last
19 batters he faced Tuesday
night in a 4-2 victory over the
Montreal Expos, his best perfo rmance yet.
.
It might have been best ever.
Fernandez (2-0) allowed only
two. hits in seven innings, ard
. didn't walk a ' batter. Only fo,ur
of the 23 batters he faced got
the ball out of the Infield- five
struck ()Ut and 14 grounded
out.
"Th at guy pitched well ,"
Expos manager Felipe Alou
said. "He's really recovered from
that arm problem he had. He's
like a new pitcher. He's better
now than when he first came
over from Cuba. Whatever the
doctor fixed, you've got to keep
an eye on."
,
Fernandez, 31, led Cuba to
the gnld medal at the 1992
Olympics and defected three
years later. He went I 0-17 in
two seasons for San Francisco
before his elbow problems led
to two operations and kept him
out of the majors for two years.
He failed to make the Reds in
spring training because he
repeatedly worked deep in the
count and had a 5.00 ERA.
·
When
Harnisch went on the
RED HOT FERNA"DEZ - Osvaldo Fernandez of Cincinnati retired the last 19 batters he faced Tuesday
disabled list with a weak shoulto lead the Reds ~o a 4-2 win over Montreal. Fernandez has won all four starts this season. (AP)

THE BOBBY KNIGHT SAGA

Knight confident of his self-control
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP)
- Bob Knight is sure he can
control the infamous temper
that almost cost him his job as
Indiana basketball coac h.
Under university president
Myles Brand's "zero-tolerance"
policy, one more slip could lead
to Knight's immecliate firin'g.
But in an ESPN interview Tuesday night, Knight said he knows
he can behave himself"because I
think I know Bob Khight better
than anybody d0es ."
The ESPN interview with
Roy Firestone and Digger
Phelps, and another interview
earlier Tuesday With a handpicked group of sports writers,
were the first exrensive com. ments from Knight since Brand's
decision May 15 to give him on~
more chance.
"A lot of people have problems wiih temper ... lfl' m really
upset and really mad ,all the time,
then that (anger) controls me,
but I really don 't think that's the
situation,'' Knight said. "In ·most
case.s, I'm pretty good. I've obviously made a mistake here and a
mistake there, but I don't think

those mistakes define the person."
Knight met with Brand for
about two hours on May 14.The
president said the next day he
had been prepared to fire Knight
on the spot, but was persuaded
by the coach that he was sincer~
in bis promise to control his
behavior.
·"I 'had two thoughts in mind
when I went in to see the president," Knight said. "One was our
· players. The players that are here
now have been incredibly S\!pportive of what we do. .. . They
want to play here, they want to
play under this system. The same
thing with the kids who will be
joining this team for the 20000 I season. That meant an awful
lot tq me.
'
"Secondly, it's a .president that
I think was put into a very diffi, cult position, a lot of pressure on
. him, an&lt;\ he gave this an awful
1ot of thought and tried to do
exactly what he thought was
right .
"I asked him if he wanted me
to coach, first of all . And he said
he did. And I said,' And I want to
.

coach .That's exactly what I want
to do. Now what do we need to
do for that to come about?"'
Brand's decision, which also
carried a $30,000 fine and th~ee­
game suspension for Knight, fol lowed an investigation of aUegations that Knight choked former
player Neil Reed during a practice in 1997. During the investigation, other charges surfaced,
including one that Knight
hurled a vase in the direction of
a secretary and attacked a former
assistant coach and the university's sports information. director.
But the Hall of Fame coach
said such flare-ups 'r"ere not frequent and his behavior in 29
years as coach "overall has been
gqod."
" If you took the percentages
of times that I have. really gone
overboard in whatever way, in
whatever circumstances, that's a
pretty small percentage of all the
circumstances I've been in," he
said. "So to me, it's a simple
equation: I have to be able to do
all the time, basically, what I do

PluH- Knlpt, Pap Bl

der, Fernandez got his cha nce.
He's pitched better than anyone anticipated.
"He had a good sinking fastball and a pretty good slider and
a good curve," manager Jack
McKeon said. "He's had darn
good control and that's been a
big plus.
" In the past, he was the kind
of guy who liked to throw a lot
of pitches and nibble and walk a
lot of guys. But he's heen pretty
consistent throwing strikes."
Fifty of his 82 pitches Tu esday
were strikes. After Vladimir
Gu errero's two-out RBI single
in the first, Fernandez didn 't
allow another baserunner.
Fernandez agreed he's doin g
well becanse he 's throwing
strikes and feeling good.
" Actually, I feel better than
before l got hurt,'' Fernandez
said through teammate Alex.
Ochoa, acting as translator. " My
arm feels good. I can throw
from different angles."
Lately, the Expos haven't been
able to hit any pitchers out once
they. get past the first inning.
That's the main reason they've
ldst their last six games, their
worst slide since a seven-game
streak last May.
Montrea] ha.;; scored nine runs
in the first innings of its last
seven games, only four runs in
the other innings.
"We have a good team ," said
Tony Armas (0-3). " People
probably don't think so because
· we're not hitting. We're going to
come around. You look at our
lin eup - from one to eight, it's
a pretty tough lineup. It will

' "'eare 11111 Reds. Plitt B2

Herd fan upset
over parking costs
HUNTINGTON (AP) Longtime MarshaU University
football fan Johnny Dyer says he
is outraged that it wiU cost him
S100 to park in a handicapped
spot at Marshall Stadium for the
2000 season's five home games.
Dyer said he may have to give
up watching the Thundering
Herd from the stand&gt; be cause he
can't afford the ·higher parking
·
fee.
" I couldn't believe it," Dyer
said. "They're certainly getting
out of hand."
1
Dyer said Army and Clemson
University . do not charge fans
for handicapped parking. Ohio
University charges S15 a season
for parking.
Handicapped parking at the
old Fairfield Stadium cost $45 a.
season.
When Marshall Stadium
· opened in 1991, the price rose
. to $56, then jumped to $72 last .
year.
Dyer said he does not expect
Marshall to provide free handi capped parking at the stadium.
But he said $100 for five hom e

games i&gt; too high.
"Because Marshall's always
sold out, they think they can
gouge the citizens,'' Dyer said.
Marshall athletic director
Lance West said the university
raised the price. for all reserved
parking in the stadium lot,
including handicapped spots.
The move was necessary to
cover expenses .
" ! wish we had more parking,
but we don't, and it's at such a
premium that we're trying to do
everything we can to accommodate everyone," West said.
The price hike didn't bother
Dave Adkins , another Marshall
fan. He said the university
should provid e a sufficient number of handi capped parking .
spaces, but all fans should pay
the same price.
Marshall angered other fans in
April when it told longtime sea- ·
son ticket-holders they will have
to donate a minimum $300
annually to the Big Green
Foundation or risk losing their
prime seats to newer fans willing to pay.

�~

. P-ae A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

- -u -

--

-

• •• •. •

Inside:

Wednesday, May 31, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Major League hll$eball news, Page B2
Knight under control?, Page BJ
NBA playoff update, Page B3
Daily Scoreboard, Page B8
POMEROY - Meigs County Court
Judge Patrick H . O'Brien processed anumh$r of cises last week.
Fined were: Anthony A. Carpenter, Rutland, $30 and. cosu, speed, S25 and cosu,
seatbelt; Lori B. Adams, Huntington, W.Va.,
$25 and costs, seatbelt; Richard E. Kinner,
Jr., Gallipolis, $25 and costs, seatbelt;Albert
E. Lawson, Sr., Long Bottom, $30 and costs,
speed;Jessy W.Voung, Racine, $20 and costs,
failure to control; Krishana P. Robinson,
Middleport, $30 and costs, stop sign; JamiS. Holon, Lancaster, s40 and costs,
'--..I~~Hot!:rf~5 and costs, seatbelt; Jessie M .
Cline,ILo~i&amp;\x&gt;ttom, $30 and costs, failure to
control; Doug Bobb, Pomeroy, $100 and
~osts, six months jail suspended upon the
child having no more unexcused absences,
contributing; Tina Chevalier, Reedsville, six
months jail suspended upon the child havil)g no more unexcused absences, contributing.
Teresa Cook, Middleport, $100 and
costs, six months jail suspended upon the
child having no more unexcused absences.,
contributing; Pamela King, Pomeroy, $100
and costs, six months jail suspended upon
the child having no more unexcused
absences, contributing; Edward King,
Pomeroy, $100 and cosu, six months jail
suspended upon the child having no more
unexcused absences, contributing.

Kimberly Kauff, Racine, $100 and costs,
six months jail suspended upon the condition that the child haw no more unexcused
absence$, comributing; Karen Jones,
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, six months jail
suspended upon the child having no more
unexcused absences, contributing; Cathy
Hanunon, Middleport, $100 and costs, six
months jail suspended upon the child having no more unexcused absences, contributing; Terri Patterson, Syracuse, $100
and costs, six months jail suspended upon
'the child having no more unexcused
absences, contributing; Thomas Lee,Albany,
$100 and costs, six months jail suspended
upon the child having no more unexcused
absences, contributing; Janet Lee, Albany,
$100 and costs, six months jail suspended
upon the child having no more unexcused
absences,. contributing; Mary Bare,
Langsville, $100 and costs, six months jail'
suspended upon the child having no more
unexcused absences, contributing; Herbert
Bare, $100 and costs, six months jail suspended upon the child having no more
unexcused absences, contributing.
james L. Buckley. Reedsville, $15 and
costs, seatbelt;Jessica Evans, Middleport, $30
and costs, failure to stop and yield; Edward
Cozart, Pomeroy, $30 and costs, speed;
Joseph R. Pounder, Columbia, S.C ., $30.
and costs, speeding; Charity S. Lariham,

Ripley, W.Va .. $30 and costs, parked along
roadway; Melanie A. Beckett, Milton,W.Va.,
S20 and costs, failure to stop at stop sign:
Rhonda J. Rogers, Grove City, SIS and
costs, seatbelt; B.C. Smith, Albany, $30 and
costs, failure to control; Adam M . Taylor,
Middleport, $25 and costs, seatbelt; Edward
E. Sarver, II, Syracuse, $30 and costs, speed,
$25 and costs, seatbelt; Arnold N. Spencer,
Coolville, $20 and costs, expired registration.
Megan C. Drummer, Rutland, $30 and
costs, speed; Herbert W Roush, New
Haven,W.Va., $30 and costs, speed; Mark E.
McCarley, Vinton, $91 and costs, inner
bridge overload; Lawrence K. EV:lns, Gallipolis, $248 and costs, inner bridge overload; Ronald E. Titchenell, C leveland, $25
: and costs. seatbelt, $25 and costs, child
restraint.
Joey A. Walker, Letart, W.Va., $30 and
, costs, spe~Jerry E. Reitmire, Pomeroy. $15
and costs, seatbelt; Roy K. Armes, Racine,
$20 and costs, failure to yield; Wayne L.
Miller, Fairfield, $30 and costs, speed; Sara
M. Eades, Rutland, $20 and costs, failure to
control; Ricky .L. Ryan, Warsaw, $30 and
costs, speed; Michael L. Moore, Reedsville,
$25 and costs, seatbelt; Shawn A. Martin,
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., $25 and costs, seatbelt; Larry G. French, Albany, $20 apd costs, ·
left of center; April N. Kimy, Gallipolis, $15

and costs, seatbelt: Bryan C. Roe, Gallipolis,
$20 and cosu, foUowing too dose; Christi- •
na L. Kosteonick. Medina, $30 and costs,
speed: Roger L. Adrian, Dexter, $25 and
costs, seatbelt; Samson Darst, Rutland, $25
and coots, seatbelt; Betty R. Carsey, Middleport, $25 and costs, seatbelt, $20 and costs,
stop sign; Dona14 1;. Lawrence, Jr., Beverly.
$2!} and costs, expired registration; Roy R .
Ocheltree, Buchannan, W.Va., $30 and
costs, speeding; David Adams, Brooklyn,
N .Y., $30 and costs, speeding; Ruth E .
Roush, Racine, $20 and costs, improper
passing; Dustin J. Butcher, Middleport, $25
and costs, seatbelt.
Etic W. Miller, Jane Lew, W.Va., $30 and
costs, stop sign;Willam A. Hall,Austin, Ind. ,
$30 and cosu, speed; ,Elizabeth A. Gloeckner, Pomeroy, $25 and costs, seatbelt;Jason T
Allen, Syracuse, $20 and costs, failure to
yield; Rodney E. Stempert, tittle Hocking,
$30 and costs, speed, $25 and costs, seatbelt;
James D.Jones,Pomeroy,$25 and costs, seatbelt; Robert E. Boring, Pomeroy. $25 and
costs, seatbelt, $20 and costs, impJ:Oper pass.ing; Dewayne R. Fisher, Middleport, $30
and costs, speed; Bryan J Wolfe, Racine, $25
and costs, seatbelt; Bryan K. HoOey,
Reedsville, $25 and costs, seatbelt; Brenda
K. Miller, Belpre, $30 and costs, speed; Roy
D. Greathouse, Newport, $30 and costs,
speed; Larry K. Chorpenning, Marietta, $25

and cosu. seatbelt; Chad M . Clark, Racine,
$30 and coslll, speed; Paul A. Childs, Albany,
$20 and costs, left of center; Jinunie G.
King, Long Bottom, $25 and costs, seatbelt;
Leslie L. Whittington, Jr. , Middleport, $25
and costs, seatbelt; Robert V. Whitlatch,
Powkala, $30 and costs, speed; Jonathon D.
Wyatt, Pomeroy, $30 and costs, speed; Bert
S. Brainard, The Plains, $30 and costs, speed;
Rebecca I. Stine, $30 and costs, speed, $25
and costs, seatbelt; Caseyne Sanford,
Pomeroy, $25 and costi, seatbelt.
.
Jason S. Lawson, Shade, $15 and costs,
seatbelt; Ri.;hard L. Robson, Guysville, $25
and costs, seatbelt; Doris L. Henry, Galli polis, $30 and costs, speed; Juanita V. Wells.
Long Bottom, $20 and costs, failure to
yield; Ronald D. Petry,Jr., Rutland, $25 and
costs, seatbelt; Amanda Wells, Reedsville,
$25 and costs, seatbelt; Travis S. Curtis,
Pomeroy, $30 and costs, speed; Kristi Y.
Stover, Pt. Pleasant, W.Va., $15 . and costs,
seatbelt;Jetfrey R. Bobb, Hamden, $30 and
costs, speed; Dencil G. Campbell, Leon,
WVa., $20 and costs, no rear m4dflaps;
James T. McCoy; Henderson,W.Va .., $25 and
costs, seatbelt; Brittany D. Schroeder, Washington,WVa.,$30andcosts,speed;JamesW
Hanunack, Clifton, W.Va., $50 and costs,
improper taggini, Clarence H. Kidd, Ripley. W.Va., $.3() and costs, fishing without a
license.

Page 8 1
Wednesday, May J1, 1000

WEDNESDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Marauden to host

hoop camp
, ROCK SPRING The
Meigs boys basketbaU camp will
be held on Monday June 12-16,
front 9 am until noon at Meigs
High School's Larry R . Morrison
Gymnasium.
•The camp is for kids entering
grades 3 through 9. Cost of the
camp is $40 and includes five day
of instruction of basketball fundamentals, camp t-shirt and various
prizes. Instructors of the camp
will be made up of the Meigs
High School coaching staff and
players.
For more information contact
Chris Stout at 992-6600 or 9922158.

Blazers win in LA again, trim series lead to 3-2
LOS ANGELES (AP) - T hat homecourt advantage the Los Angeles Lakers
worked so hard to earn with 67 regularseason· victories? Forget it.
In the Western Conference finals, home
i~ where the hurt is.
·
The Portland Trail Blazers bear the Lakers in Los Angeles for the second time in
a row and third time this season Tuesday
night, a convincing 96-88 victory that
forces Game 6 Friday night in Portland.
"Obviously you all don't listen to me
when I talk," Blazers coach Mike Dun- ·
Ieavy said. ''I told you from the very
beginning that I didn 't think there was a
home. court advantage in this series, . I

thought that either team was capable of
winning every game on the other team's
court."
The last four games of the series have
been won by the visitor. The only homecourt win came in La. Angeles in Game
1.
The Trail Blazers, still down 3-2, can
force a deciding Game 7 if they can finally win one at home.
" We just have to wipe out the fact that
we lost two games at home," Portland's
Scottie Pippen said .. "We know in our
hearts that we can outplay them ."
Lakers coach Phil Jackso n said Pippen
shouldn't even have been allowed in the

game. But, even though he played three
quarters with two dislocated fingers on his
left hand, Pippen was in this one in a big
way.
"That's just Pip being a warrior. This is
no time to sit out," teammate Rasheed
Wallace said. "Like the other night when I
hurt my ankle. That team is just too tough
for us to sit out."·
Jackson said he told Pippen he shou ld
have been suspended for a game for
elbowing John Salley in the back of the
head late in Portland's homecourt loss in
Game 4 Sunday.
"He shouldn't have been playing in this
ballgame," Jackson said. " He clearly threw

·softball team reunion
set for July 21
SYRACUSE - On Saturday,
July 29, all former members of
·the Hits and Misses Senior Girls
Softball team and their families
will have an all day reunion at the
Syracuse ball field arid poll.
The park is reserved for the day
and a free pass to swim
be
provided by the team. The team
was organized in 1966 by Kenny
Wiggins and continued for 23
years through the 1988 season. It
is .believed to be the first girls
slow pitch snftball team in· Meigs
· County.
There was over 125 girls on the
te.ams, and if you have any
addresses we would appreciate
your phone caU at 740-992-5002,
so that each player can receive a
l~tter as soon as possible.

..
POMEROY -The following Sargent, Dennis J. Sargent, deed,
land . transfers were recently Olive;
reported by Meigs County
Thomas G . Beegle, deceased,
Recorder Judith A. King:
.
to Harold Lawson, deed, Sutton;
. Larry D. Gindlesberger, Pamela
Robert G. Edwards, to James S.
D. Gindlesberger, to Harry L. Stettler, Pamela S. Stettler, deed,
Ramsey, Joanne J. Ramsey, deed, Olive;
Scipio;
Michael H. Cline, Joyce N.
· Southern Local School Dis- Cline, to James R . Priddy, Sr.,
trict, to Ohio Power Company, Ruth A. Priddy, deed, Middleright of way, Sutton;
port;
' Jamie Barrett, Melissa Barrett,
Robert G. Edwards, to Eric L.
to Columbus Southern Power, Johnson, Sharon R. Johnson,
right of way, Chester;
deed, Olive;
Federal H9cking Local School,
Robert L. Dempsey, deceased,
to Columbus Southern Power, to Mary B. Dempsey, affidavit,
right of way, Rome 1\vp. (Athens Middleport;
County);
John Thomas, Cheryl L.
Eddie Halim, to Adam T. Thomas, to Duane Edward
Ramseyer, Erin L. Nash, ruta T. Abshire, Debra Lee Abshire, deed,
Ramseyer, deed, Bedford;
Salisbury;
Marcella L. Hoy, to Carolyn A.
Juanita L. Spencer, deceased, to
Charles, Carolyn A. Jeffers, deed, Spencer RusseU, affidavit;
Sutton;
William J. Bias, Michael A.
Daisey Mallory, to David J. Reed, to State of Ohio; deed,
BeU, April K. Bell, deed, Scipio;
Letart;
Seldon
R.
Flemming,
William J. Bias, Michael A.
deceased, to Ida Aemming, cer- Reed, to State of Ohio, deed,
tificate, Olive;
Letart;
Ida V. Flemming, to Kathy L.
Janet Coomer Young, Janet R.

Coomer, to State of Ohio, deed,
Letart;
Janet Coomer Young, Janet R.
•
Coomer, to State of Ohio, deed ,
Letart;
Barbara M. Pierce, Clarence
Thomas Wolfe, Rosalie Wolfe. to
State of Ohio, deed, Letart;
to State of
. Barbara M. Pierce,
)
Ohio, deed, Letart;
Mark R . JarreD, Aimee L. Jarrell, to Gary Roush, Teri J. Roush,
deed, Letart;

Bishop of the Roman Catholic
Church, to Jeffers Coal Trucking
and Excavating Inc., deed, Salisbury;
Henry
Norvel
Lauhon,
deceased, to Margaret S. Lauhon,
affidavit, Letart;
Norvel Lauhon, to Susan
Schleder, deed, Letart;
Cecil V. DiUon, Flossie N. Dillon, to LarryV. DiUon, Cynthia A.
Dillon, deed, Olive;
David E. Grueser, Eileen F.

Grueser, to Paul P. Simon, Allie
M . Simon, deed, Salisbury;.
Ralph H . Ballard, Wilma M .
Ballard,.to David A. Ballard, Brenda L. Vandyke, Melvin D. Ballard,
deed, Chester;
Brenda Vandyke,
Rydell
Vandyke, .Melvin D. Ballard,
Sharon Ballard, to David A. Ballard, deed, Chester;
David A. Wolfe, John T. Wolfe,
Marilyn J. Wolfe, to Troy S.
Hoba~k. deed, Letart.

Leona Eblin
Nov•.1.9, 1936 - Nov. 13, 19%
Mother

wiU

The days ·may come and go,
but the times we shared
will always remain.
Daughter Nancy Manley

Let Eieryone Know Your Dad Is Someone Very
Speci~l ~ith A~ather's Day Thank You Tribute
To Be Published In The Daily Sentinel
On ·Friday, June 16th!

I

Syracuse woman wins

at Rlvenide
MASON, W.Va. Craig
Simpkins and Rita Slavin were
the divisional winners of this
year's G.O. Roush Memorial Golf
Tournament held May 28-29 at
the Riverside Golf Cl ub.
Simpkiqs, of Point Pleasant,
won this year's outing with totals
of 59 and 68 (127) to beat Jeff
Goebel of Gallipolis by a single
shot .
Slavin, of Syrac.use, took the
women's division with total$ of
59 and 68 . (127) to defeat joyce
QuiUen of Portland by six strokes.
The tournament is 36 holes
with a I 00 percent handicap. It is
held annually in memory of the
Grant 0. Roush, the father and .
grandfather of Riverside's own-

New time rules for trucken
g•ng mixed reception

I

WASHINGTON (AP) A
government proposal to change the
hours truck and bus driven can
work and to set a mandatory break
time is getting a cool reception
where the rubber meetll the road.
The Transportation Department
is starting a series of meetings across
the country to hear comments on
the proposal. But it's already received
a Oood of responses from truckers.
"You need to get out in the real
world and find out what its really .
like and do some studies on real
people," complained Gmdon Vm
Cleave of Payette, Idaho. ''I'm aU for
making the highways safer, but get
real and do it right. This is the one of
the more stupid things the government has come up with in a long
time."
"Please consider. financiaUy how
you will ruin us drivers and families
by limiting hours of service;· Jady D.
Spell of Covington, La., Wrote to the
department.
And Robert R. Homan of Port
.CI:Jarlotte, Fla., said he believes the
new rules "are more a result of the
desires of the railroads and airfreighters, as these proposals are
designed to hamper the l110'1\mlent
of freight."
But the changes were welcomed
by Michael A. Stewart, who didn't
include a home address in his e-n1ail
comments.
~ ·~ ··vo Feds;' SteWart wrote~ "Don't
knuckle under to the lobbyists,
Make the penalties 10 times more
Ievere than they are now ... Also, you
had better enforce them a whole lot
better than you enforce the rules
now in place."
The proposed changes were
announced last month. Thnsportation Seq:etary Rodney Slater said
they would prevent 2,600 accidents

and as many as U 5 fatalities every

y=.,

The

proposal would e.tablish

'IM:lrk limits for five dilferent classes
of driven, with long-disl;mce operaton aUowed to do no more than 12
hours of driving in a 24-hour period. They would also have to insl211
electronic moniton - black boxes
- on their !nicks to keep tiack of
their work hours. .
·
Current rules,adopted moie than
60 yean ago, say tt:uckm can drive
no more than 10 hours str.Ught, fol10\ved by at least eight hours off. But
they permit up to 16 houn of driving in a day and don't include
required break time as the new rules
do.
The American Trucking Association opposed the change, contending it will require thousands of additional drivers and !nicks to meet
current delivery schedules.
Jackie Gillan of Advocates for
Highway and Auto Safety said ·
aUowing 12 consecutive hours on·
the road would leave driven ·even
more exhausted and Pmmts Against
Tired Thlckm also opposed allowing longer consecutive houn of driving.
A selection of comment! fiom
lrucliers:
• "With a reduction in service
houn comes a direct reduction in
the income of the aftady underpaid
driver, while at the IUile time causing him to spend abotjt 20 percent

more of his time away tiom home:'
Frank X. Neumann, Streator, m.

• "I do not Wl"lcome ihe additioo
of a time data recorder onboard my
vehicle.... What~ next then? Perhaps
a device to monitor the amount of
time a driver actually sleeps." Joseph

F.Tadlock.Anw:illo, Texas.

erS.

.HAP
FAT.HER'S
.
.
·DAY

PICTURE

(YOUR
FATJiER'S
. NAME)

HAPPY
fATHER'S.
DAY

•"

LOVE,
JOHN, JOE, &amp;

YOUR FATHER'S NAME

$~SAN

LOVE,
JOHN, JOE, &amp;
SUSAN

r--------------Circle One: A. 1X3 Greetlng ... $10.00

'

.

UK hoop recruit pes to

trial on dftll charps

----~~--~-------------------~
,.,. 1 X 4 Greeting with Plcture... $13.00

• (PLEASE PFnNT OR TYPE)

' Due t\) bad weather, only 26
entered the tournament. The
prize wirners in this .year's tournament were:
: Men's Division: 1. Craig Simpk)ns 59-68= 127; 2. Jeff Goebel
6:3'-65=128: 3. Andy Anderson •
66-63=129; 4. Rc&gt;bin Phalin 6070=130; 5 . Bob, Mcintosh 6764=13 1; 6. Gary Roush 6766= 133; 7 . Dave Reed 6570=135; 8 . Scott Hussell 6768=135.
Women's Division: 1. Rita
Slavin 66-70= )36; 2. Joyce
Quillen
69-73=142;
Becky
Anderson 73-75=148.

~·

FATHER'S NAME._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;....."""-:-----------'VOUR NAME(S) ._ _ _ _..,.....__.;,..___;___.:..,;;.:;...:._____._____ ___,...._ __
ADDRESS: ________..:________......__------------------.....-CITV I STATE
ZIP·
PHONE:---SE.ND COUPON AND PAYMENT TO: THE DAILY SENTINEL j'FATHER'S DAY"
110 COURT STREE!z POMEROY.~, OHIO 45769
.J

Deadline For This Special Father's Day Tribute is Monday, June 12, 5:00pm.

LA CROSSE, Wis. (AP) .- ·
University of Kentucky recruit
MiChael Southall was bound over
lor. trial on marijuana possession
and delivery charges after waiving
his right to a preliminary hearing.
kentucky coach Tubby Smith
has said Southall could lose his
s~holarship depending on the
outcome of the case.

1

Redsldns sip Green

.1\SHBURN, Va. (AP) Seven-rime Pro Bowl cornerback
Darrell Green signed a five-year,
$10 · million contract with the
Washington Redskins at the age

..
..

o(40 .
•

•.

•

•

Please see Blazers. Pa111 BJ

Fem·andez .
leads Reds

. Hits and Misses

Meigs County land transfers posted by recorder

a cheap -shot elbow to the back of th t·
head and he just got fined $10,000. I
wanted to tell him that h e was a presence
who shouldn't have been there."
In the latest of wl!at has been a bac kand-forth bickering between the player
and his former coach, Pippe n was unimpresserl by Jackson's opinion.
"Phil is not my coach. I' m not li stenin g
to nothing you tell me about Phil. ~ a
good day," he said, then he left th e
postgame news conference.
Wallace was just 7- for- 2'1 !Tom the fidd ,
but scored 22 points, including seven of

CINCINNATI
(AP)
Osvaldo Fernandez has been
the perfect fill-in.
The pitcher who's missed two
years because of elbow surgery
has saved the Cincinnati Reds
in the month of May. Called on
to fill in while No. 1 starter Pete
Harnisch is disabled, Fernandez
has led the Reds to wins in all
four of his ·starts.
He's also gotten better as he
goes along. He retired the last
19 batters he faced Tuesday
night in a 4-2 victory over the
Montreal Expos, his best perfo rmance yet.
.
It might have been best ever.
Fernandez (2-0) allowed only
two. hits in seven innings, ard
. didn't walk a ' batter. Only fo,ur
of the 23 batters he faced got
the ball out of the Infield- five
struck ()Ut and 14 grounded
out.
"Th at guy pitched well ,"
Expos manager Felipe Alou
said. "He's really recovered from
that arm problem he had. He's
like a new pitcher. He's better
now than when he first came
over from Cuba. Whatever the
doctor fixed, you've got to keep
an eye on."
,
Fernandez, 31, led Cuba to
the gnld medal at the 1992
Olympics and defected three
years later. He went I 0-17 in
two seasons for San Francisco
before his elbow problems led
to two operations and kept him
out of the majors for two years.
He failed to make the Reds in
spring training because he
repeatedly worked deep in the
count and had a 5.00 ERA.
·
When
Harnisch went on the
RED HOT FERNA"DEZ - Osvaldo Fernandez of Cincinnati retired the last 19 batters he faced Tuesday
disabled list with a weak shoulto lead the Reds ~o a 4-2 win over Montreal. Fernandez has won all four starts this season. (AP)

THE BOBBY KNIGHT SAGA

Knight confident of his self-control
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP)
- Bob Knight is sure he can
control the infamous temper
that almost cost him his job as
Indiana basketball coac h.
Under university president
Myles Brand's "zero-tolerance"
policy, one more slip could lead
to Knight's immecliate firin'g.
But in an ESPN interview Tuesday night, Knight said he knows
he can behave himself"because I
think I know Bob Khight better
than anybody d0es ."
The ESPN interview with
Roy Firestone and Digger
Phelps, and another interview
earlier Tuesday With a handpicked group of sports writers,
were the first exrensive com. ments from Knight since Brand's
decision May 15 to give him on~
more chance.
"A lot of people have problems wiih temper ... lfl' m really
upset and really mad ,all the time,
then that (anger) controls me,
but I really don 't think that's the
situation,'' Knight said. "In ·most
case.s, I'm pretty good. I've obviously made a mistake here and a
mistake there, but I don't think

those mistakes define the person."
Knight met with Brand for
about two hours on May 14.The
president said the next day he
had been prepared to fire Knight
on the spot, but was persuaded
by the coach that he was sincer~
in bis promise to control his
behavior.
·"I 'had two thoughts in mind
when I went in to see the president," Knight said. "One was our
· players. The players that are here
now have been incredibly S\!pportive of what we do. .. . They
want to play here, they want to
play under this system. The same
thing with the kids who will be
joining this team for the 20000 I season. That meant an awful
lot tq me.
'
"Secondly, it's a .president that
I think was put into a very diffi, cult position, a lot of pressure on
. him, an&lt;\ he gave this an awful
1ot of thought and tried to do
exactly what he thought was
right .
"I asked him if he wanted me
to coach, first of all . And he said
he did. And I said,' And I want to
.

coach .That's exactly what I want
to do. Now what do we need to
do for that to come about?"'
Brand's decision, which also
carried a $30,000 fine and th~ee­
game suspension for Knight, fol lowed an investigation of aUegations that Knight choked former
player Neil Reed during a practice in 1997. During the investigation, other charges surfaced,
including one that Knight
hurled a vase in the direction of
a secretary and attacked a former
assistant coach and the university's sports information. director.
But the Hall of Fame coach
said such flare-ups 'r"ere not frequent and his behavior in 29
years as coach "overall has been
gqod."
" If you took the percentages
of times that I have. really gone
overboard in whatever way, in
whatever circumstances, that's a
pretty small percentage of all the
circumstances I've been in," he
said. "So to me, it's a simple
equation: I have to be able to do
all the time, basically, what I do

PluH- Knlpt, Pap Bl

der, Fernandez got his cha nce.
He's pitched better than anyone anticipated.
"He had a good sinking fastball and a pretty good slider and
a good curve," manager Jack
McKeon said. "He's had darn
good control and that's been a
big plus.
" In the past, he was the kind
of guy who liked to throw a lot
of pitches and nibble and walk a
lot of guys. But he's heen pretty
consistent throwing strikes."
Fifty of his 82 pitches Tu esday
were strikes. After Vladimir
Gu errero's two-out RBI single
in the first, Fernandez didn 't
allow another baserunner.
Fernandez agreed he's doin g
well becanse he 's throwing
strikes and feeling good.
" Actually, I feel better than
before l got hurt,'' Fernandez
said through teammate Alex.
Ochoa, acting as translator. " My
arm feels good. I can throw
from different angles."
Lately, the Expos haven't been
able to hit any pitchers out once
they. get past the first inning.
That's the main reason they've
ldst their last six games, their
worst slide since a seven-game
streak last May.
Montrea] ha.;; scored nine runs
in the first innings of its last
seven games, only four runs in
the other innings.
"We have a good team ," said
Tony Armas (0-3). " People
probably don't think so because
· we're not hitting. We're going to
come around. You look at our
lin eup - from one to eight, it's
a pretty tough lineup. It will

' "'eare 11111 Reds. Plitt B2

Herd fan upset
over parking costs
HUNTINGTON (AP) Longtime MarshaU University
football fan Johnny Dyer says he
is outraged that it wiU cost him
S100 to park in a handicapped
spot at Marshall Stadium for the
2000 season's five home games.
Dyer said he may have to give
up watching the Thundering
Herd from the stand&gt; be cause he
can't afford the ·higher parking
·
fee.
" I couldn't believe it," Dyer
said. "They're certainly getting
out of hand."
1
Dyer said Army and Clemson
University . do not charge fans
for handicapped parking. Ohio
University charges S15 a season
for parking.
Handicapped parking at the
old Fairfield Stadium cost $45 a.
season.
When Marshall Stadium
· opened in 1991, the price rose
. to $56, then jumped to $72 last .
year.
Dyer said he does not expect
Marshall to provide free handi capped parking at the stadium.
But he said $100 for five hom e

games i&gt; too high.
"Because Marshall's always
sold out, they think they can
gouge the citizens,'' Dyer said.
Marshall athletic director
Lance West said the university
raised the price. for all reserved
parking in the stadium lot,
including handicapped spots.
The move was necessary to
cover expenses .
" ! wish we had more parking,
but we don't, and it's at such a
premium that we're trying to do
everything we can to accommodate everyone," West said.
The price hike didn't bother
Dave Adkins , another Marshall
fan. He said the university
should provid e a sufficient number of handi capped parking .
spaces, but all fans should pay
the same price.
Marshall angered other fans in
April when it told longtime sea- ·
son ticket-holders they will have
to donate a minimum $300
annually to the Big Green
Foundation or risk losing their
prime seats to newer fans willing to pay.

�'

_'page B 2 • The Dally S.ntl.._l

Wednesday, May 3~, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'

Wednelday, May 31, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

e Dally Sentinel • Page B ~

WEDNESDAY COMMENTARY

NATIONAL LEAGUE

•

Helton's free pass lifts Rockies·past Astros
off Stan Belinda (1-0) .
Tom Goodwin tied it with an RBI single off
f.louston manager Larry Dierker was happy he Marc Valdes (1-1) in the bottom halfofthe eighth
drove in only one run with the bases loaded - even and Perez walked Helton on a 3-2 pitch with the
if it was the game-winner.
bases loaded. Darren Bragg added a two-run single.
"I had some practice taking pitches in the previ· After the Rockies wasted a four-run lead. Helton
put Colorado ahead for good with a bases-loaded - ous three at-bat.," Helton said of the walk. " I was
':"alk in the eighth inning as the Rockies beat the trying to make sure the ball was up in the zone so I
~stros 10-7 on Tuesday night.
.
could hit it in the air."
' "I wouldn't have minded walking him aU five
Lance Berkman homered and drove in a careertimes,'' Dierker said. "Oh",l didn't want to walk him high four runs for Houston, which has lost eight
W.ith the bases loaded, but giving up one run is con- straight road games. Richard Hidalgo went 2-for-3
with three runs scored and is 15- for-31 (.484) in his
~idera bly less than had we gone down the middle."
Helton, who leads the majors with a .420 average, last eight games.
Braves 5, Cubs 2
:vent 1- for- 1 with three walks and a sacrifice fly,
Andres Galarraga robbed Chicago of a run with a
giving him 12 hits in his last 17 at-bats (.706) . He is
great play in the field and homered to spark a threehitting .500 at home (44-for-88). But his third w:~lk was more important than the run sixth inning_for Adanta at Wrigley Field.
Javy Lopez hit a two-run homer and drove in
· '" I'U take whatever works," Helton said. "I proba- another run for the Braves, and Terry Mulholland
bly wouldn't have gotten a hit off that guy (Yorkis (5-4) pitched eight strong innings against his old
Perez) anyway because he's got good stuff and he's t earn.
.
tOugh on lefhe$."
John Rocker started the ninth and was greeted
' Colorado, which led 4-0 and 6-3, fell behind 7-6 with a resounding chorus of boos. Rocker loaded
in the eighth on Mitch Meluskey's two-run single the bases before Mike Remlinger struck out pinchBY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
'The way Color.~do's Todd Helton is hitting,

..
,.lt.

hitter Henry Rodriguez for his fifi\1 save.
Pirates 3, Marlins 2, 10 innings
Brian Giles capped a late comeback with a home
run in the lOth inning off Antonio Alfonseca (1-4)
as Pitt.burgh rallied past Florida.
Reid Cornelius took a shutout' into the eighth
inning, but Pittsburgh scored on Jason Kendall's
RBI double in the eighth and Warren Morris' double in the ninth.
o
Cardinals 6, Diamondbaeks 1
Shawon Dunston hit a grand slam .ino 'the sixth,
then was ejected two innings later. He was called
out at the plate trying to stretch a triple into an
inside-the-park hotne run for visiting St. Louis and
argued the call.
Rick Ankiel (5-2) didn't aU ow a hit until Arizona
pitcher Omar Daal (2-6) reached on a bunt single
with no outs in the sixth.
·
'
Giants 7, Phillies 3
Livan Hernandez (4-5) scattered eight hits in 8 13 innings and had a run-scoring double, and Jeff
Kent and Bill Mueller each homered for host San
Francisco.
Robb Nen got his eighth save, Inducing a gameending double play from Alex Arias.

BY JIM lnKE
1oP SPORTS WRITER

and I've never killed anybody," Knight can be almost charllling. At one point,
replied. Hadn't caused any families to interviewer Roy Firestone depicted
It sound$ straightforward epough.
break up, either, he added with pride.
Knight as some sad, toothless li on, npw
Bobby Knight knows how to behave
What about professional help?
bereft of his claws, too. In a heartbeat, the
most of the time and so he reasons, how
"My wife," he said, practically leaking coach turned the image into something
much harder can it be to behave all the common sense, "is the best anger-man- gallant: an aging warrior relying on guile
time?
agement person I ever saw."
to get by.
"To me," he said, "it's kind of a simple·
How soon before the next blowup?
"It's like guy who· lost his 94 mph
equation."
He didn't know, but was willing to take fastball," Knight said, "and now he's got a
Knight was masterful Tuesday night, odds. Said he was looking into establish- slider ... There are some things you got to
and why not? He was home, sitting cen- ing a lottery so people could bet on the adjust to."
ter circle on a court he made instandy exact hour. And when the moment
And frankly, that's the problem. After
recognizable. Next season was still arrived, the proceeds go directly to the listening to Knight for the better part of
months away, the barbarians all still on Indiana University libra~)'
an hour, we still have no idea how he's
the other side of the moat. For nearly an
"And when it's all said and done," he · going to adjust when the real world
hour, Knight gave almost all the right predicted, "the library will make a lot of intrudes on his little duchy down in
answers, and in a voice so flat and mea- money on this."
Bloomington once more.
sured it could have put the baby to sleep.
Listening to Knight talk, it was easy to
Tuesday's talk was wonderful - as far
·- Anying really "stupid" that Knight imagine how persuasive he must be on a as it went.The questions were tough, but
regretted?
recruiting visit - squashing rumors, one of the TV interviewers, former
"Last night, when my wife asked me to allaying concerns, sharing little confi- Notre Dame coach Digger Phelps, has
go t.o a movie, and I said I'm too tired to dences and more than anything, selling been a pal for decades. And the other,
go."
the kind of loyalty to place and people Firestone, is ESPN's king of schmaltz.
Did any transgression weigh more that is almost ·impossible to find else- . The only tension the hour offered was
heavily on his heart than the others?
where.
whether Knight would be reduced to
"I checked my record this morning
Let him shape the debate and Knight tears, a mysterious effect that Firestone,

Andy Ashby (2-6) gave up six runs in 5 2-3
innings.
Padres 6, Brewers 3
Adam Eaton made a memorable tn'\jor league
debut at San Diego, getting his first big league start,
win, hit, RBI and run.
Eaton allowed three runs and five hits in 5 1-3
inriings, becoming the first Padres pitcher to start
and win his major league debut since Stan Spencer
on Aug. 27, 1998, at Philadelphia. Trevor Hoffinan
pitched the ninth for his 12th save in 13 chances. ·
Jeff D'Amico (2-3) allowed four runs in 5 2.:3
innings.
Mets 10, Dodgers 5
At Los Angeles, Todd Pratt capped a six-run ninth
inning with a pinch-hit grand slam, giving New
·York its fourth win in five games.
_..
With Los Angeles ahead S-4, Todd Zeile hit a
game-tying single off Jeff Shaw (2-3), who blew .a
save for the fifih time in 16 chances.
Terry Adams forced in the go-ahead run with .a
bases-loaded walk to Melvin Mora and Pratt, hitting
for John Franco (2-1), followed with his first career
slam.
·

a

NBA PLAYOFFS

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Jackson &amp; Bird hope Ewing plays

rribe wins game, loses Ramirez for a week
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

·While the Cleveland Indians lost another
player, they won another game. · .
•,:A few hours after learning that All-Star right
fielder Manny Ramirez will miss at least a week
with a strained left hamstring, Cleveland beat
the Anaheim Angels 6-1 Tuesday behind Dave
Burba.
""I've never seen anything like it," said Indians
nianager Charlie Manuel, who himself Jllissed
t'&lt;Vo weeks to have colon surgery. "We had three
guys go down with the same injury running
Oown to first base."
&lt; Ramirez pulled up while trying to beat out a
grounder Monday.
"I heard it pop yesterday," Ralllirez said in a
rare interview. "It was tight all last week, but I
didn't think it was a problem. It's just one of
those things. It's good that it happened now, not
l!!_ter."
'.
'
. : Ramirez could be placed on the disabled list
Coday. The Indians already have seven players ~~~ pitchers- on the DL and have had to make
21 roster moves since May 18 because of
lnJUfleS.
: At Jacobs Field, Burba (5-1) allowed one run
~nd six hits in seven innings, improving to 5-0
(vith a 1.15 ERA against Anaheim.

'. .

"Got to knock on wood again," he said in
Cleveland's clubhouse, swiveling in his chair and
looking for something to rap his knuckles on.
David Justice went 3-for-4 with two RBis,
and Omar Vizquel' had two hits and two steals
for the Indians.
·
Scott Schoeneweis (5-3) gave up all six runs,
just three earned, and eight hits in seven
innings.
Anaheim shortstop Benji Gil made two errors,
Nos. 12 and 13 this season, and third baseman
Troy Glaus had a costly error, his 13th.
Orioles 8, Devil Rays 7
Albert Belle and Cal Ripken Jr. homered and
. drove in two runs apiece as visiting Baltimore
won for the sixth time in seven games.
Belle hit his sixth homer, a two-run shot off
Esteban Yan (2-3) in the first inning. Rlpken's
lOth of the season, ~he 412th of his career, also
came in the first as the Orioles built a 4-0 lead.
Sidney Ponson (3-2) allowed five runs, three
earned, and 12 hits in B 1-3 innings. Mike Timlin struck out pinch-hitter Greg Vaughn for . his
fourth save, completing Tampa Bay's 13th loss in
16 games.
·
Athletics 7, Yankees 4
Chuck Knoblauch hit a leadoff home run, but
· later made yet another throwing error that

helped visiting Oakland overcome a 4-2 deficit,
with Matt Stairs' two-run single putting the
Athletics ahead 5- 4.
Winner Kevin Appier (5-3) and Ramiro Mendoza (5-3) combined to walk 11 in the first five
innings, and neither side was retired in order
until the seventh./
Knoblauch, Derek Jeter and Tino Martinez hit
solo home runs off Appier. Oakland's bullpen
shut out the Yankees in the final four innings,
with Jason Jsringhausen getting his lOth .save.
Tigers 7, Rangers 4
At Detroit, Dean Palmer homered and drove
in five runs, and Brian Moehler (2-3) won for
the first time since April 11, allowing three runs
and seven hits in 5 2-3 innings.
Former Rangers star Juan G.onzalez missed his
second straight game 'with a strained left foot.
Todd Jones got the final out for his 14th save in
15 chances.
Esteban Loaiza (3-3) allowed five runs in the
first two innings.
1\vins 4, Blue Jays 1
Rookie Mark Redman (4-0) allowed one run
and four hits in seven innings as ~.isiting Minnesota won its fourth straight.
· Hector Carrasco, Travis Miller and LaTroy
Hawkins finished the five-hitter, with Hawkins

INDIANAPQLIS (AP) - Let the debates end
right now. Mark Jackson and Larry Bird don't
want to hear any more about the K~icks being
better off without Patrick Ewing.
Acute tendinitis in his right foot kept Ewing
from playing the last two games in the Eastern
Conference finals. The Knicks overcame his
absence to win both times, rying the best-ofseven series 2-2.
That has renewed debate whether the Knicks
are a better team with or without Ewing.
Jackson, a former teamma\e and friend of the
'leteran center, said there is no question.
"When you have one of the greatest centers to
ever play the gam~. one of the biggest hearts to
play the game, a warrior, a great competitor, I
fhink jt js to our benefit not to have rum.,on the
i19or," Jackson said. "The numbers say they're 5-1
against us without him (in the playoffs), but I'll
take my chances."
, Some say the Knicks can run better without
Ewing slowing them down.
"The things they do, they can do those things
)oVith Patrick in the lineup. They choose not to
?nd defer to him," said Jackson, adding that he
hoped Ewing can return to the series.
Ewing's availability tonight will be a game-time
decision.
"It really shouldn't matter who is out on the
court. You pretty much play the same type of
tempo," said Reggie Miller, who had 24 points in
Monday's loss. "We know Patrick is coming back
at some point in this series ... We just have to prepare for that.
·
:' "It's a different look when he's in there, With~ut Marcus Camby being in, there a lot of times
it is open for drives. But when Patrick Ewing
~omes in, he's a great shot blocicer. They go to
him a little more on the offensive end, so we have
be prepared for that."
. New York coach JeffVan Gupdy would barely
discuss Ewing's value to his team Tuesday.
"I've done that enough," he said. ''I'll let the
foolish remain foolish and not even try to educate

getting two outs for his second save.
'·
Kelvim Escobar (4-6) walked se.ven in SIX
innings, giving up three tuns and seven hits.
Red Sox 8, Royals 2
Boston third baseman John Valentin's left leg
crumpled when he went to field Carlos Be[::
tran's .g rounder in the second inning at Fenway
Park. Valentin was taken to a hospital for tests,
but Boston didn't immediately announce. the
·
results.
Trot Nixon, Carl Everett a~d Mike Stanley
homered to lead Boston; and Jeff Fassero (6-1)
allowed two runs and, eight hits · in 6 2 ~3
innings.
'·
Jeff Sltppan (2-5), who came up in the ·Reil
Sox farm system, lasted just 2 2-3 innings!
allowing six runs, eight hits and four walks. ·.,·
White Sox 2, Mariners 1
·'
Jamei, Baldwin allowed four hits in seven
innings to improve to 8-1, and Carlos Lee ana
Ray Durham homered for visiting Chicago .
Paul Al:lbott (1-2) made his first start sine'~
being 'hit in the face by Harold Baines' broke"ri
bat last Thursday in Baltimore, also allowing
four hits in seven innings.
.
Keith Foulke got six outs for his ninth save. ' ·

.,.

)/Vo~lers makes his return for Reds Class A Dayton
'

dub

'

'~ CINCINNATI

(AP) ·- Mark Wohlers had trouble
sleeping Monday night. He kept thinking about his return
to baseball.
··The ·reliever struck out three, walked one and gave up a
.Olo homer in one inning for ihe Cincinnati Reds' Class
A team in Dayton on Monday. It was the first time he'd
il)rown in a game since last June 21, when he tore an
fibow ligament while throwing in a minor league game.
.After months of grueling rehabilitation from recon'
'(tructive elbow surgery, Wohlers finally got to pitch again
Monday and was so thrilled with the results that he could~ 't -get to sleep afterward.
·. ·
'
! "I tried to go to bed about 12 o'clock. I was exhausted,
apt physically but mentally and emotionilly,"Wohlers said
Tuesday. "Around 1:30 I sat up for a litde bit and reflected.
·: "It had been a while since I felt good about what I did
on a mound during a game. I wanted to make sure I didri't forget that feeling, so I soaked it up a little bit."
: Wohlers, 30, hasn't done much on a mound since 1998,
.when he hurt his side and lost his ability to throw strikes
· With Atlanta. He came to the Reds in a trade last year and
suffered the career-threatening elbow injury during a
!Jiinor league rehabilitation assignment.
· The Red$ now believe his wildness was due to a bad
.!!bow ligament that didn't manifest itself until it completely tore last June. Wohlers has been throwing strikes
'

•

during batting practice and had no problelll,' Monday in
his return - 25 pitches, 16 strikes.
"I heard about you;• outfielder Dante Bichette said as
Wohlers walked past him in the Reds' clubhouse Tuesday.
"Don't believe everything you hear;'Wohlers said, smiling.
Everything about it was good for a first time out.
''I'm excited with everything I did;' Wohlers said. "I was
ahead of every single hitter."
The only problem Thesday was a little«stiffness in his
forearm that wasn't a concern.
"My elbow feels great. My shoulder feels great," he said.
"I know it's not anything significant."
Wohlers will pitch again Thursday for Dayton in Grand
Rapids.
1\vo more years .
Backup shortstop Juan.C&amp;stro agreed to a two-year contract extension Tuesday that will pay him _$400,000 each
year.
Castro, 27, came to the Reds in a trade with Los Angeles on April 1 for a player co be named. He was promoted
from Triple-A on April 28, afier Barry Larkin injured his
glove hand.
·
Castro has. hit .214 in 16 games, including 10 starts, and
has not made -an error.
Harnisc:h throwing again
Right-hander Pete Harnisch, on the disabled list with

weakness in the back of the shoulder, began playing catch
again Tuesday.
Harnisch has been limited to exercises to build up his
shoulder since he went on the DL on May '6. Tests on
Tuesday found that he was much stronger.
"His strength was significandy better than 1it was 1hree
and a half weeks ago;• Dr. Timothy. Kremcliek said. "His
shoulder in· all phases is better."
·
If all goes well, Harnisch could resume t~rowing off a
mound in 10 to 14 days,
.
·
Family•ties
_
·
Dante · Bichette has batted .400 in his last nine games
leading up to a day he's been long anticipating- his famify reunion.
' rtt•
Bichette seems ·to do better when his wife and two sons
join him for the summer after school i&lt;its out in Orlando.
Last season, he was hitting .259 with Colorado when his
fa!Jlily joined him for the summer. By the time they
returned to Florida, [)is average was up to .304.
The family was reuinited Monday. Bichet'te thinks it's no
coincidence that he's been hitting better as he's gotten
closer· to being with his family.
"I feel more at ease when they're around me," h~ said
Tuesday. "J hope it helps out a little bit."
He had one of the Reds' five hits, going 1-for-3, in a 42 victory over Montreal on Tuesday.

HOTJ ·
We havt tO",

~hem."

· · Added Miller: "Not knowing if Pat is going to
be playing or not, we still have to establish the
inside presence."
; :Bird grew close with Ewing during Bird's playIng days in Boston.
· · "Patrick is a friend of mine. I want to see him
have an opportunity to do well," said Indiana's
coach. "We want to beat them. I .feel sorry for
Patrick. He's struggled with injuries. If you're
going to get to the championship and win it, you
want to beat the best along the way." '
- . The teams find themselves in the identical situ-

t2", 20" Fans.
Keep Cool thlt

tumrner.
PICKENS
MASON,

Blazen

W.VA.

fromPapBI
"

Red• Note•: An MRl found that Expos
Scott Willianuon relieved and pitched a
perfect eighth, atretching the atreak to 22 starter has torn knee cartilage. He'D likely
Expos retired in order. Montreal then have arthroscopic surgery Wednesday while
loaded the baaes with none out in the ninth reliever Mike Johnson starts in his place ....
l1
•
on a sinpe. an error and a walk.
. Johnson haa ntade nine relief appearances
•
William1on'• wild pitch with Rondell this season, but started 14 games for the
• come.
: Armas is used to getting little offensive White al bat let in a run, but White and Expos over the last three years .... SS Orlanspppon. The Expos ha'\'e scored only seven Guerrero both 1truck out on high fastbalb. do Cabrera was back hi Montreal's starting
Guerrero waved at a shoulder-high pitch lineup Tuesday. He missed a weekend series
runs in his four ttaru.
.
in San Diego due to the death of hil father,
: He matched Fernandez for tix inninp. for strike three.
"They were bad pitches. High pitche1," Jolbert. ... Harnisch resumed playing catch
with both teams lilllited IO two hils. A
throwing error by second baseman Jose Alou said. "I don't think he wanted to Tuesday. If all goe1 well, he could begin
Vidro let in the go-ahead run in the seventh throw them there. He was wild, completely . 'throwing off a mound again in 10-14 days.
... Backup shortstop Juan Castro agreed to a
a)ld Aaron Boone followed with a run-acor- wild."
Lee
Stevtns
fouled
out
to
end
it,
leaving
two-year extension for S400,000 per year.
ipg single for a 3-1 lead. ·
• The Expos had a chance in the ninth with Williamspn ·with his sixth uve in seven ... Ken Griffey Jr. went 0-for-3 with a walk,
chances.
the toughest part of their order up. ·
leaving him in a 4-for-36 slump.

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to

ation as in last year's conference finals: all even
after . four · games with home-court advantage
working in each game.
New York won Game 5 here last year 101-94
and then closed out the best-of-seven series in
Madison Square Garden.
"You really can't go too much on statistics, but
the team that wins Game 5 is pretty much in the
catbird seat," Miller said. "It is a big game for both
teams."
The home team has won all eight games this
season, a trend the Pacers hope to maintain
tonight at Conseco Fieldhouse. Indiana recorded
a league~best 36-5 home mark during the regular
season. In the playqffs, Indiana is 7-2 at home.
"We took care of business at home. They
matched us," Jackson said. "There's no need to
pamc.
This is Indiana's third consecutive trip to the
conference finals arid its fifth in seven years. New
York ousted the Pacers in seven games in 1994
and Orlando eliminated the Pacers in seven
games the following year. Chicago beat Indiana in
seven games in 1998.
"Just because we lose two games, that doesn't
mean we're not determined," said Jalen Rose,
whose 21.3 scoring average in the series leads
Indiana. "We know what it takes to get here. We
just don't know what it's like to get over this
hump and- that's what we're trying to accomplish."
Rose also believes the home coun gives Indiana
an edge.
"I feel like we're the best team in the NBA on
our home floor, and I'm planning on us holding
serve. I don't think there will be a letdown by us
or our fans," he said.
Jackson fou-n d comfort in his team outscoring
New York 49-34 in the second half of Monday's
91-89 loss after trailing by 17 points at halftime.
"We did a good job in the second half. It just
boileq down to playing with effort and being a
step quicker," he said. "There's no reason to be
concerned. Its a greit series. We knew that it
would be a war collling in. Now we get to the
good part, we just have to take care of business in
our building."
Miller anticipated being more aggressive
tonight and when the series returns to New York
for Game 6 on Friday.
"I looked for my, shot a lot in Game 4," said
Miller, who was 9-of-2~ from the field, with five
3-pointers in 13 attempts. "I pretty much look to
do the same thing offensively.... It's best-of-three
right now, and the pressure is back on us tonight
to shift the pressure back on them."

•'

•

eight free throws, and grabbed
10 rebounds. Steve Slllith ,added
l-:1 points, and Arvydas Sabonis
12. l\Yo reserves who barely
flaused a ripple in the series, Brian
(;rant and Detlef Schrempf,
(dded nine· each.
.• Shaquille O'Neal had 31 points
~d 21 rebounds. Ron Harper
,;qded 14 points.
; But it was a rough night offensively for the rest of the Lakers.
: Kobe Bryant was only 4-for~3. scored 17 points and commitltd six turnoVers before fouling
~ut with 4:45 to play. Glen Rice
was 1-for-8 from the field and 0fOr-5 from 3-po!nt range, finishing with four points.
: The Lalters were just 6-for-27

from 3-pnint range and shot 38
percent from the field.
"I thought we played pretty
good defense. We couldn't put the
ball in the basket,'' O'Neal said. "I ·
think we tried to put them away
with all 3s. It's disappointing. We
just have to learn from this."
Bryant sprained his right foot
in the first half, but said it wasn't
a big factor in his game. X-rays
after the 113me were negative.
"If we're going to be a championship team, we have to go
through some adverse situations,''
Bryant said. " .... I think it's good
r10I US,"
Maybe the odds will be better
for the Lakers at the Rose Garden, where they have won three
straight.
,
"We're very comfortable up in
Portland," Bryant said with a
smile.
Trailing 80-67 entering the

fourth quarter, the Lakers mounted one final challenge. Bryant
sank two free throws with 10:02
to play, then scored on a layup
and was fouled, making it 82-7 4
with 9:33 remaining.
O'Neal waved his arms to get
the crowd roaring, but after a
timeout, Bryant missed the free
throw. Grant scored inside and
was fouled by Horry for a threepoint play to boost the lead back
to 87-76, and the Lakers were
finished .
"Even when it started getting
rough out there, we continued to
go with it," Grant said. "We didn't blow up or lose our cool or do
anything to hurt the team."
The Lakers shot 31 perce nt in
the first half, 22 percent in the
second quarter (4-for- 18).
"We always have confidence,"
O'Neal said. "We just got to get
the win and play smarter."

like onions, has on so many of his guests.
Knight wasn't - but there was another reason why he came off so polished.
The live TV session was preceeded by
Knight sitting down with seven print
reporters of his choosing, a rehearsal of
sorts, a chance to hone the material in his
first pub~c appearance since university
president Myles Brand announced
Knight would keep his job.
Make no mistake, the toughest part of
the journey is still ahead. It wiD come in
the form of a referee 's blown call near the
end of a tough winter night, or with a
stupid news conference query afterward.
It might be a sinfully clever student-rooting section take on one of his foibles. It
might even come from one of his own
ballplayers, clueless about his spot on the
floor at first, and then cueless as Knight
approaches, the vein on the side of the
coach's neck throbbing like a lllisplaced
Adam's apple.
·· AU the grief Brand and the rest of the
Indiana braintrust endured for letting
Knight keep the keys to his office was

Chmura to stand trial for sexualt assault
WAUKESHA, Wis. (AP) her testimony. She looked in
Mark Chmura, facing trial for Chmura's direction only when
sexual assault, says · the facts wiD she was cross-examined by his
show he didn't have sex with his attorneys.
The girl testified that she played
17-year-old baby sitter without
her consent at a post-prom party. a drinking game for about an
A court commissioner on Tues- hour with Chinura and GesSert
day ordered the Green Bay Pack- and became drunk. The girl said
ers tight end to stand trial after she, Chmura and others climbed
the girl testified she didn't mug- into a hot tub behind the house.
gle because "it was a small room
Later, she encountered Chmura
and he was a big guy."
outside a bathroom. She testified
Court .Commissioner Gerald he called her name and said,
Janis set an arraignment for June "Come here."
23 for both Chmura and his
"I went over there because he
friend Robert Gessert, who host- was asking me to come over
ed the party at his Hardand home there," the girl testified.
April 9.
Chmura, wearing a towel, took
Gessert, · 43, i~ charged with her . arm and led her into the
third- and fourth-degree sexual bathroom, she said. Chniura shut
assault for allegedly fondling an and locked the door and began
18-year-old wo·man at the parry
kissing her neck and fondling her,
Chmura, 31, is charged with she said.
third-degree sexual assault for
"I was totally shocked,'' she
allegedly having sex with the 17- said.
year-old girl on a bathroom floor . Chmura pulled her down on
at the party.
the bathroom floor and ~ad sex
"I believe that a felony was with her, she testified. The girl
probably committed and it was said she did not say anything durprobably committed by Mr. ing the alleged assault. Then
Chmura;' Janis said.
friends pounded on the door and
Chmura bowed his head and the assauk ended, she said:
The girl said when she left the
held his chin in his hands when·
the ruling was read.
bathroom she was "totally flus" I am here today to tell you I tered" and "not really knowing
am not guilty," he told reporters. what w:~s happening." She then
"I look forward to tl}e day when _ran upstairs.
The 18-year-old testified she
the public hears the rest of the
\vas outside the bathroom door.
story:'
The 17-year-old was mostly
"I heard rusding of clothes. The
composed on the witness stand. door opened," she said. The 17She kept her eyes locked on year-old·"stood there and her eyes
Waukesha County District Attor- filled up with tears."
ney Paul uc
through most of
The girls left the patty together

•

and later went to a hospitaltq he;,
examined.
'
·
Chmura and Gessert could
each face 10 years in prison and'
$10,000 fines if convicted.
Gessert aJ.so.could get up to nine
months in jail and a $10,000 fine
if he is convicted of fourthdegree sexual assault.
Chmura's wife, Lynda, accom~
panied him to the hearing, held
in a standing-room-only cour.•~
room. One woman wore .a
Chmura jersey. Another map
wore a Packers !-shirt.
.
Gerald Boyle, Chmura's attor~
ney, and Martin Kohler, Gessert's
attorney, asked Janis to dismiss th~
charges. They said the criminal
complaint is so filled with lew4
details that neither can get a fair
trial in Wisconsin. ·
Janis denied the requests.

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NOTICE OF SECOND PUBLIC HEARING
The Meigs County Commissioners Intend to apply to the Ohio Department of Development, for fundln
under the FY' 2000 Community Development Block Orant (CD80) Formula Allocation Program, a federally
funded program admlnlsterad by the State. Meigs County is eligible for up to $169,000 of Fiscal Year 2000
CDBO funding, provided the County meets applicable requirements. On April 17, 2000, the County
conducted Its first public hearing to Inform citizens about -the CD80 program, how It may be used, what
activities are eligible, and other Important program requirements.
.
A second public hearing will be held on June 12, 2000 at 10:00 A.M. at the Meigs County Commissioners
office, Meigs County Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio to give citizens an opportunity to review and comment on
the County's proposed CDBO FY' 2000 Formula Allocation projects. ,
Based on both citizen Input and local officials' assessment of the County's needs, the County is proposing
to undertake the following CDBQ activities for Fiscal Year 2000:
ACTIVITY: fire Protection facilities and llqulpment: Salem Township Trustees
Construction of fire facllll}'
CDBQ Funding: $29,000
other Funds: $2,500.00. (Salem Township Trustees)
NATIONAL OBJECTIVIl: ARilA LM I
ACTIVITY: Street Improvements: Middleport Village· Mill Street
CDBQ Funding: $29,000
.
Other Funds: $10,324.00 (Middleport VIllage) o
NATIONAL OBJilCTIVIl: ARilA LMI
ACTIVITY: fire Protection Facilities and Equipment: Sclpo Township
Purchase of Fire Protection Vehicle
•
CDBQ Funding: $12,000
Other Funds: None
NATIONAL OBJllCTIVIl: Area LMI
ACTIVITY: Fire Protection Facilities and llqulpment: Bashan Volunteer fire Department · Purchase
of f'lre Truck Chassis for Tanker
CDBQ Funding: $29,000
Other Funds: $28.2:lJ (Bashan Fire DepartmenULocal Funds)
l'jATIONAL OBJECTIVIl: LMI
ACTIVITY: Public Service · Meigs County Council on Aging
Purchase Two (20 Truck ChassiS/Retrofit Meal Delivery Vehicles.)
CDBQ Funding: $35,000
Other Funds: $4,186 (Meigs COUJ1ty Council on Aging)
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE: Llmlteq Clientele
ACTIVITY: Street Improvements : Chester Township Trustees
Paving various roads In Chester Township
CDBQ Funding: $15,000
Other Funds: $54.204 (Chester Township • Issue II)
ACTIVITY: Administration and fair Housing
CDBQ f'undlng $20,000 (Admin: $10,000- Fair Housing: $10.000)(
Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting on June 12. 2000 to eKpress their views and comments
on the County's proposed CDBO FY' 2000 Formula Allocation Application. Written comments will be
accepted until 10:00 A.M . , June 12, 2000, and may be mailed to the Meigs County Courthouse, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
If a participant will need auxiliary aids (Interpreter, brallled or taped material. asslstlve listening device,
other) due to a disability, please contact Olorla Noes, Clerk, prior to June 12, 2000, at (740) 992-2895 In
order to ensure that your needs will be accommodated.
Janet Howard , Presklt:nt

I

'h

misplaced. The university needed a policy in place to defend itself from potential
lawsuits, and just as important, to make
sure the current ballplayers, incoming
recruits and sympathetic alumni didn't
follow Knight off the end of a short
plank. Now, when the coach goe~ overboard, he does so alone .
AU of that was forgotten for a short
while, as it should be. Knight's slate was
wiped &lt;;Jean, but in one last little test,
Brand gave the marking pencil to Indiana athletic director Clarence Doning~r
and told him to draw up a code of con- .
duct.
.
Knight nearly clocked Doninger last
February, after a tough loss to Ohio State
and the two haven't spoken since.
"But I'm hoping this," Doninger sajd
just before the interview, "is the stan of
the healing process."
He'd better do more than hope.
.
(Editor's note: Jim Litke is the national
sport~ columnist for the Associated
Press. Write to him at jlitkeap.org)

•

,,

·

·

·

·

·

�'

_'page B 2 • The Dally S.ntl.._l

Wednesday, May 3~, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'

Wednelday, May 31, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

e Dally Sentinel • Page B ~

WEDNESDAY COMMENTARY

NATIONAL LEAGUE

•

Helton's free pass lifts Rockies·past Astros
off Stan Belinda (1-0) .
Tom Goodwin tied it with an RBI single off
f.louston manager Larry Dierker was happy he Marc Valdes (1-1) in the bottom halfofthe eighth
drove in only one run with the bases loaded - even and Perez walked Helton on a 3-2 pitch with the
if it was the game-winner.
bases loaded. Darren Bragg added a two-run single.
"I had some practice taking pitches in the previ· After the Rockies wasted a four-run lead. Helton
put Colorado ahead for good with a bases-loaded - ous three at-bat.," Helton said of the walk. " I was
':"alk in the eighth inning as the Rockies beat the trying to make sure the ball was up in the zone so I
~stros 10-7 on Tuesday night.
.
could hit it in the air."
' "I wouldn't have minded walking him aU five
Lance Berkman homered and drove in a careertimes,'' Dierker said. "Oh",l didn't want to walk him high four runs for Houston, which has lost eight
W.ith the bases loaded, but giving up one run is con- straight road games. Richard Hidalgo went 2-for-3
with three runs scored and is 15- for-31 (.484) in his
~idera bly less than had we gone down the middle."
Helton, who leads the majors with a .420 average, last eight games.
Braves 5, Cubs 2
:vent 1- for- 1 with three walks and a sacrifice fly,
Andres Galarraga robbed Chicago of a run with a
giving him 12 hits in his last 17 at-bats (.706) . He is
great play in the field and homered to spark a threehitting .500 at home (44-for-88). But his third w:~lk was more important than the run sixth inning_for Adanta at Wrigley Field.
Javy Lopez hit a two-run homer and drove in
· '" I'U take whatever works," Helton said. "I proba- another run for the Braves, and Terry Mulholland
bly wouldn't have gotten a hit off that guy (Yorkis (5-4) pitched eight strong innings against his old
Perez) anyway because he's got good stuff and he's t earn.
.
tOugh on lefhe$."
John Rocker started the ninth and was greeted
' Colorado, which led 4-0 and 6-3, fell behind 7-6 with a resounding chorus of boos. Rocker loaded
in the eighth on Mitch Meluskey's two-run single the bases before Mike Remlinger struck out pinchBY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
'The way Color.~do's Todd Helton is hitting,

..
,.lt.

hitter Henry Rodriguez for his fifi\1 save.
Pirates 3, Marlins 2, 10 innings
Brian Giles capped a late comeback with a home
run in the lOth inning off Antonio Alfonseca (1-4)
as Pitt.burgh rallied past Florida.
Reid Cornelius took a shutout' into the eighth
inning, but Pittsburgh scored on Jason Kendall's
RBI double in the eighth and Warren Morris' double in the ninth.
o
Cardinals 6, Diamondbaeks 1
Shawon Dunston hit a grand slam .ino 'the sixth,
then was ejected two innings later. He was called
out at the plate trying to stretch a triple into an
inside-the-park hotne run for visiting St. Louis and
argued the call.
Rick Ankiel (5-2) didn't aU ow a hit until Arizona
pitcher Omar Daal (2-6) reached on a bunt single
with no outs in the sixth.
·
'
Giants 7, Phillies 3
Livan Hernandez (4-5) scattered eight hits in 8 13 innings and had a run-scoring double, and Jeff
Kent and Bill Mueller each homered for host San
Francisco.
Robb Nen got his eighth save, Inducing a gameending double play from Alex Arias.

BY JIM lnKE
1oP SPORTS WRITER

and I've never killed anybody," Knight can be almost charllling. At one point,
replied. Hadn't caused any families to interviewer Roy Firestone depicted
It sound$ straightforward epough.
break up, either, he added with pride.
Knight as some sad, toothless li on, npw
Bobby Knight knows how to behave
What about professional help?
bereft of his claws, too. In a heartbeat, the
most of the time and so he reasons, how
"My wife," he said, practically leaking coach turned the image into something
much harder can it be to behave all the common sense, "is the best anger-man- gallant: an aging warrior relying on guile
time?
agement person I ever saw."
to get by.
"To me," he said, "it's kind of a simple·
How soon before the next blowup?
"It's like guy who· lost his 94 mph
equation."
He didn't know, but was willing to take fastball," Knight said, "and now he's got a
Knight was masterful Tuesday night, odds. Said he was looking into establish- slider ... There are some things you got to
and why not? He was home, sitting cen- ing a lottery so people could bet on the adjust to."
ter circle on a court he made instandy exact hour. And when the moment
And frankly, that's the problem. After
recognizable. Next season was still arrived, the proceeds go directly to the listening to Knight for the better part of
months away, the barbarians all still on Indiana University libra~)'
an hour, we still have no idea how he's
the other side of the moat. For nearly an
"And when it's all said and done," he · going to adjust when the real world
hour, Knight gave almost all the right predicted, "the library will make a lot of intrudes on his little duchy down in
answers, and in a voice so flat and mea- money on this."
Bloomington once more.
sured it could have put the baby to sleep.
Listening to Knight talk, it was easy to
Tuesday's talk was wonderful - as far
·- Anying really "stupid" that Knight imagine how persuasive he must be on a as it went.The questions were tough, but
regretted?
recruiting visit - squashing rumors, one of the TV interviewers, former
"Last night, when my wife asked me to allaying concerns, sharing little confi- Notre Dame coach Digger Phelps, has
go t.o a movie, and I said I'm too tired to dences and more than anything, selling been a pal for decades. And the other,
go."
the kind of loyalty to place and people Firestone, is ESPN's king of schmaltz.
Did any transgression weigh more that is almost ·impossible to find else- . The only tension the hour offered was
heavily on his heart than the others?
where.
whether Knight would be reduced to
"I checked my record this morning
Let him shape the debate and Knight tears, a mysterious effect that Firestone,

Andy Ashby (2-6) gave up six runs in 5 2-3
innings.
Padres 6, Brewers 3
Adam Eaton made a memorable tn'\jor league
debut at San Diego, getting his first big league start,
win, hit, RBI and run.
Eaton allowed three runs and five hits in 5 1-3
inriings, becoming the first Padres pitcher to start
and win his major league debut since Stan Spencer
on Aug. 27, 1998, at Philadelphia. Trevor Hoffinan
pitched the ninth for his 12th save in 13 chances. ·
Jeff D'Amico (2-3) allowed four runs in 5 2.:3
innings.
Mets 10, Dodgers 5
At Los Angeles, Todd Pratt capped a six-run ninth
inning with a pinch-hit grand slam, giving New
·York its fourth win in five games.
_..
With Los Angeles ahead S-4, Todd Zeile hit a
game-tying single off Jeff Shaw (2-3), who blew .a
save for the fifih time in 16 chances.
Terry Adams forced in the go-ahead run with .a
bases-loaded walk to Melvin Mora and Pratt, hitting
for John Franco (2-1), followed with his first career
slam.
·

a

NBA PLAYOFFS

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Jackson &amp; Bird hope Ewing plays

rribe wins game, loses Ramirez for a week
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

·While the Cleveland Indians lost another
player, they won another game. · .
•,:A few hours after learning that All-Star right
fielder Manny Ramirez will miss at least a week
with a strained left hamstring, Cleveland beat
the Anaheim Angels 6-1 Tuesday behind Dave
Burba.
""I've never seen anything like it," said Indians
nianager Charlie Manuel, who himself Jllissed
t'&lt;Vo weeks to have colon surgery. "We had three
guys go down with the same injury running
Oown to first base."
&lt; Ramirez pulled up while trying to beat out a
grounder Monday.
"I heard it pop yesterday," Ralllirez said in a
rare interview. "It was tight all last week, but I
didn't think it was a problem. It's just one of
those things. It's good that it happened now, not
l!!_ter."
'.
'
. : Ramirez could be placed on the disabled list
Coday. The Indians already have seven players ~~~ pitchers- on the DL and have had to make
21 roster moves since May 18 because of
lnJUfleS.
: At Jacobs Field, Burba (5-1) allowed one run
~nd six hits in seven innings, improving to 5-0
(vith a 1.15 ERA against Anaheim.

'. .

"Got to knock on wood again," he said in
Cleveland's clubhouse, swiveling in his chair and
looking for something to rap his knuckles on.
David Justice went 3-for-4 with two RBis,
and Omar Vizquel' had two hits and two steals
for the Indians.
·
Scott Schoeneweis (5-3) gave up all six runs,
just three earned, and eight hits in seven
innings.
Anaheim shortstop Benji Gil made two errors,
Nos. 12 and 13 this season, and third baseman
Troy Glaus had a costly error, his 13th.
Orioles 8, Devil Rays 7
Albert Belle and Cal Ripken Jr. homered and
. drove in two runs apiece as visiting Baltimore
won for the sixth time in seven games.
Belle hit his sixth homer, a two-run shot off
Esteban Yan (2-3) in the first inning. Rlpken's
lOth of the season, ~he 412th of his career, also
came in the first as the Orioles built a 4-0 lead.
Sidney Ponson (3-2) allowed five runs, three
earned, and 12 hits in B 1-3 innings. Mike Timlin struck out pinch-hitter Greg Vaughn for . his
fourth save, completing Tampa Bay's 13th loss in
16 games.
·
Athletics 7, Yankees 4
Chuck Knoblauch hit a leadoff home run, but
· later made yet another throwing error that

helped visiting Oakland overcome a 4-2 deficit,
with Matt Stairs' two-run single putting the
Athletics ahead 5- 4.
Winner Kevin Appier (5-3) and Ramiro Mendoza (5-3) combined to walk 11 in the first five
innings, and neither side was retired in order
until the seventh./
Knoblauch, Derek Jeter and Tino Martinez hit
solo home runs off Appier. Oakland's bullpen
shut out the Yankees in the final four innings,
with Jason Jsringhausen getting his lOth .save.
Tigers 7, Rangers 4
At Detroit, Dean Palmer homered and drove
in five runs, and Brian Moehler (2-3) won for
the first time since April 11, allowing three runs
and seven hits in 5 2-3 innings.
Former Rangers star Juan G.onzalez missed his
second straight game 'with a strained left foot.
Todd Jones got the final out for his 14th save in
15 chances.
Esteban Loaiza (3-3) allowed five runs in the
first two innings.
1\vins 4, Blue Jays 1
Rookie Mark Redman (4-0) allowed one run
and four hits in seven innings as ~.isiting Minnesota won its fourth straight.
· Hector Carrasco, Travis Miller and LaTroy
Hawkins finished the five-hitter, with Hawkins

INDIANAPQLIS (AP) - Let the debates end
right now. Mark Jackson and Larry Bird don't
want to hear any more about the K~icks being
better off without Patrick Ewing.
Acute tendinitis in his right foot kept Ewing
from playing the last two games in the Eastern
Conference finals. The Knicks overcame his
absence to win both times, rying the best-ofseven series 2-2.
That has renewed debate whether the Knicks
are a better team with or without Ewing.
Jackson, a former teamma\e and friend of the
'leteran center, said there is no question.
"When you have one of the greatest centers to
ever play the gam~. one of the biggest hearts to
play the game, a warrior, a great competitor, I
fhink jt js to our benefit not to have rum.,on the
i19or," Jackson said. "The numbers say they're 5-1
against us without him (in the playoffs), but I'll
take my chances."
, Some say the Knicks can run better without
Ewing slowing them down.
"The things they do, they can do those things
)oVith Patrick in the lineup. They choose not to
?nd defer to him," said Jackson, adding that he
hoped Ewing can return to the series.
Ewing's availability tonight will be a game-time
decision.
"It really shouldn't matter who is out on the
court. You pretty much play the same type of
tempo," said Reggie Miller, who had 24 points in
Monday's loss. "We know Patrick is coming back
at some point in this series ... We just have to prepare for that.
·
:' "It's a different look when he's in there, With~ut Marcus Camby being in, there a lot of times
it is open for drives. But when Patrick Ewing
~omes in, he's a great shot blocicer. They go to
him a little more on the offensive end, so we have
be prepared for that."
. New York coach JeffVan Gupdy would barely
discuss Ewing's value to his team Tuesday.
"I've done that enough," he said. ''I'll let the
foolish remain foolish and not even try to educate

getting two outs for his second save.
'·
Kelvim Escobar (4-6) walked se.ven in SIX
innings, giving up three tuns and seven hits.
Red Sox 8, Royals 2
Boston third baseman John Valentin's left leg
crumpled when he went to field Carlos Be[::
tran's .g rounder in the second inning at Fenway
Park. Valentin was taken to a hospital for tests,
but Boston didn't immediately announce. the
·
results.
Trot Nixon, Carl Everett a~d Mike Stanley
homered to lead Boston; and Jeff Fassero (6-1)
allowed two runs and, eight hits · in 6 2 ~3
innings.
'·
Jeff Sltppan (2-5), who came up in the ·Reil
Sox farm system, lasted just 2 2-3 innings!
allowing six runs, eight hits and four walks. ·.,·
White Sox 2, Mariners 1
·'
Jamei, Baldwin allowed four hits in seven
innings to improve to 8-1, and Carlos Lee ana
Ray Durham homered for visiting Chicago .
Paul Al:lbott (1-2) made his first start sine'~
being 'hit in the face by Harold Baines' broke"ri
bat last Thursday in Baltimore, also allowing
four hits in seven innings.
.
Keith Foulke got six outs for his ninth save. ' ·

.,.

)/Vo~lers makes his return for Reds Class A Dayton
'

dub

'

'~ CINCINNATI

(AP) ·- Mark Wohlers had trouble
sleeping Monday night. He kept thinking about his return
to baseball.
··The ·reliever struck out three, walked one and gave up a
.Olo homer in one inning for ihe Cincinnati Reds' Class
A team in Dayton on Monday. It was the first time he'd
il)rown in a game since last June 21, when he tore an
fibow ligament while throwing in a minor league game.
.After months of grueling rehabilitation from recon'
'(tructive elbow surgery, Wohlers finally got to pitch again
Monday and was so thrilled with the results that he could~ 't -get to sleep afterward.
·. ·
'
! "I tried to go to bed about 12 o'clock. I was exhausted,
apt physically but mentally and emotionilly,"Wohlers said
Tuesday. "Around 1:30 I sat up for a litde bit and reflected.
·: "It had been a while since I felt good about what I did
on a mound during a game. I wanted to make sure I didri't forget that feeling, so I soaked it up a little bit."
: Wohlers, 30, hasn't done much on a mound since 1998,
.when he hurt his side and lost his ability to throw strikes
· With Atlanta. He came to the Reds in a trade last year and
suffered the career-threatening elbow injury during a
!Jiinor league rehabilitation assignment.
· The Red$ now believe his wildness was due to a bad
.!!bow ligament that didn't manifest itself until it completely tore last June. Wohlers has been throwing strikes
'

•

during batting practice and had no problelll,' Monday in
his return - 25 pitches, 16 strikes.
"I heard about you;• outfielder Dante Bichette said as
Wohlers walked past him in the Reds' clubhouse Tuesday.
"Don't believe everything you hear;'Wohlers said, smiling.
Everything about it was good for a first time out.
''I'm excited with everything I did;' Wohlers said. "I was
ahead of every single hitter."
The only problem Thesday was a little«stiffness in his
forearm that wasn't a concern.
"My elbow feels great. My shoulder feels great," he said.
"I know it's not anything significant."
Wohlers will pitch again Thursday for Dayton in Grand
Rapids.
1\vo more years .
Backup shortstop Juan.C&amp;stro agreed to a two-year contract extension Tuesday that will pay him _$400,000 each
year.
Castro, 27, came to the Reds in a trade with Los Angeles on April 1 for a player co be named. He was promoted
from Triple-A on April 28, afier Barry Larkin injured his
glove hand.
·
Castro has. hit .214 in 16 games, including 10 starts, and
has not made -an error.
Harnisc:h throwing again
Right-hander Pete Harnisch, on the disabled list with

weakness in the back of the shoulder, began playing catch
again Tuesday.
Harnisch has been limited to exercises to build up his
shoulder since he went on the DL on May '6. Tests on
Tuesday found that he was much stronger.
"His strength was significandy better than 1it was 1hree
and a half weeks ago;• Dr. Timothy. Kremcliek said. "His
shoulder in· all phases is better."
·
If all goes well, Harnisch could resume t~rowing off a
mound in 10 to 14 days,
.
·
Family•ties
_
·
Dante · Bichette has batted .400 in his last nine games
leading up to a day he's been long anticipating- his famify reunion.
' rtt•
Bichette seems ·to do better when his wife and two sons
join him for the summer after school i&lt;its out in Orlando.
Last season, he was hitting .259 with Colorado when his
fa!Jlily joined him for the summer. By the time they
returned to Florida, [)is average was up to .304.
The family was reuinited Monday. Bichet'te thinks it's no
coincidence that he's been hitting better as he's gotten
closer· to being with his family.
"I feel more at ease when they're around me," h~ said
Tuesday. "J hope it helps out a little bit."
He had one of the Reds' five hits, going 1-for-3, in a 42 victory over Montreal on Tuesday.

HOTJ ·
We havt tO",

~hem."

· · Added Miller: "Not knowing if Pat is going to
be playing or not, we still have to establish the
inside presence."
; :Bird grew close with Ewing during Bird's playIng days in Boston.
· · "Patrick is a friend of mine. I want to see him
have an opportunity to do well," said Indiana's
coach. "We want to beat them. I .feel sorry for
Patrick. He's struggled with injuries. If you're
going to get to the championship and win it, you
want to beat the best along the way." '
- . The teams find themselves in the identical situ-

t2", 20" Fans.
Keep Cool thlt

tumrner.
PICKENS
MASON,

Blazen

W.VA.

fromPapBI
"

Red• Note•: An MRl found that Expos
Scott Willianuon relieved and pitched a
perfect eighth, atretching the atreak to 22 starter has torn knee cartilage. He'D likely
Expos retired in order. Montreal then have arthroscopic surgery Wednesday while
loaded the baaes with none out in the ninth reliever Mike Johnson starts in his place ....
l1
•
on a sinpe. an error and a walk.
. Johnson haa ntade nine relief appearances
•
William1on'• wild pitch with Rondell this season, but started 14 games for the
• come.
: Armas is used to getting little offensive White al bat let in a run, but White and Expos over the last three years .... SS Orlanspppon. The Expos ha'\'e scored only seven Guerrero both 1truck out on high fastbalb. do Cabrera was back hi Montreal's starting
Guerrero waved at a shoulder-high pitch lineup Tuesday. He missed a weekend series
runs in his four ttaru.
.
in San Diego due to the death of hil father,
: He matched Fernandez for tix inninp. for strike three.
"They were bad pitches. High pitche1," Jolbert. ... Harnisch resumed playing catch
with both teams lilllited IO two hils. A
throwing error by second baseman Jose Alou said. "I don't think he wanted to Tuesday. If all goe1 well, he could begin
Vidro let in the go-ahead run in the seventh throw them there. He was wild, completely . 'throwing off a mound again in 10-14 days.
... Backup shortstop Juan Castro agreed to a
a)ld Aaron Boone followed with a run-acor- wild."
Lee
Stevtns
fouled
out
to
end
it,
leaving
two-year extension for S400,000 per year.
ipg single for a 3-1 lead. ·
• The Expos had a chance in the ninth with Williamspn ·with his sixth uve in seven ... Ken Griffey Jr. went 0-for-3 with a walk,
chances.
the toughest part of their order up. ·
leaving him in a 4-for-36 slump.

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to

ation as in last year's conference finals: all even
after . four · games with home-court advantage
working in each game.
New York won Game 5 here last year 101-94
and then closed out the best-of-seven series in
Madison Square Garden.
"You really can't go too much on statistics, but
the team that wins Game 5 is pretty much in the
catbird seat," Miller said. "It is a big game for both
teams."
The home team has won all eight games this
season, a trend the Pacers hope to maintain
tonight at Conseco Fieldhouse. Indiana recorded
a league~best 36-5 home mark during the regular
season. In the playqffs, Indiana is 7-2 at home.
"We took care of business at home. They
matched us," Jackson said. "There's no need to
pamc.
This is Indiana's third consecutive trip to the
conference finals arid its fifth in seven years. New
York ousted the Pacers in seven games in 1994
and Orlando eliminated the Pacers in seven
games the following year. Chicago beat Indiana in
seven games in 1998.
"Just because we lose two games, that doesn't
mean we're not determined," said Jalen Rose,
whose 21.3 scoring average in the series leads
Indiana. "We know what it takes to get here. We
just don't know what it's like to get over this
hump and- that's what we're trying to accomplish."
Rose also believes the home coun gives Indiana
an edge.
"I feel like we're the best team in the NBA on
our home floor, and I'm planning on us holding
serve. I don't think there will be a letdown by us
or our fans," he said.
Jackson fou-n d comfort in his team outscoring
New York 49-34 in the second half of Monday's
91-89 loss after trailing by 17 points at halftime.
"We did a good job in the second half. It just
boileq down to playing with effort and being a
step quicker," he said. "There's no reason to be
concerned. Its a greit series. We knew that it
would be a war collling in. Now we get to the
good part, we just have to take care of business in
our building."
Miller anticipated being more aggressive
tonight and when the series returns to New York
for Game 6 on Friday.
"I looked for my, shot a lot in Game 4," said
Miller, who was 9-of-2~ from the field, with five
3-pointers in 13 attempts. "I pretty much look to
do the same thing offensively.... It's best-of-three
right now, and the pressure is back on us tonight
to shift the pressure back on them."

•'

•

eight free throws, and grabbed
10 rebounds. Steve Slllith ,added
l-:1 points, and Arvydas Sabonis
12. l\Yo reserves who barely
flaused a ripple in the series, Brian
(;rant and Detlef Schrempf,
(dded nine· each.
.• Shaquille O'Neal had 31 points
~d 21 rebounds. Ron Harper
,;qded 14 points.
; But it was a rough night offensively for the rest of the Lakers.
: Kobe Bryant was only 4-for~3. scored 17 points and commitltd six turnoVers before fouling
~ut with 4:45 to play. Glen Rice
was 1-for-8 from the field and 0fOr-5 from 3-po!nt range, finishing with four points.
: The Lalters were just 6-for-27

from 3-pnint range and shot 38
percent from the field.
"I thought we played pretty
good defense. We couldn't put the
ball in the basket,'' O'Neal said. "I ·
think we tried to put them away
with all 3s. It's disappointing. We
just have to learn from this."
Bryant sprained his right foot
in the first half, but said it wasn't
a big factor in his game. X-rays
after the 113me were negative.
"If we're going to be a championship team, we have to go
through some adverse situations,''
Bryant said. " .... I think it's good
r10I US,"
Maybe the odds will be better
for the Lakers at the Rose Garden, where they have won three
straight.
,
"We're very comfortable up in
Portland," Bryant said with a
smile.
Trailing 80-67 entering the

fourth quarter, the Lakers mounted one final challenge. Bryant
sank two free throws with 10:02
to play, then scored on a layup
and was fouled, making it 82-7 4
with 9:33 remaining.
O'Neal waved his arms to get
the crowd roaring, but after a
timeout, Bryant missed the free
throw. Grant scored inside and
was fouled by Horry for a threepoint play to boost the lead back
to 87-76, and the Lakers were
finished .
"Even when it started getting
rough out there, we continued to
go with it," Grant said. "We didn't blow up or lose our cool or do
anything to hurt the team."
The Lakers shot 31 perce nt in
the first half, 22 percent in the
second quarter (4-for- 18).
"We always have confidence,"
O'Neal said. "We just got to get
the win and play smarter."

like onions, has on so many of his guests.
Knight wasn't - but there was another reason why he came off so polished.
The live TV session was preceeded by
Knight sitting down with seven print
reporters of his choosing, a rehearsal of
sorts, a chance to hone the material in his
first pub~c appearance since university
president Myles Brand announced
Knight would keep his job.
Make no mistake, the toughest part of
the journey is still ahead. It wiD come in
the form of a referee 's blown call near the
end of a tough winter night, or with a
stupid news conference query afterward.
It might be a sinfully clever student-rooting section take on one of his foibles. It
might even come from one of his own
ballplayers, clueless about his spot on the
floor at first, and then cueless as Knight
approaches, the vein on the side of the
coach's neck throbbing like a lllisplaced
Adam's apple.
·· AU the grief Brand and the rest of the
Indiana braintrust endured for letting
Knight keep the keys to his office was

Chmura to stand trial for sexualt assault
WAUKESHA, Wis. (AP) her testimony. She looked in
Mark Chmura, facing trial for Chmura's direction only when
sexual assault, says · the facts wiD she was cross-examined by his
show he didn't have sex with his attorneys.
The girl testified that she played
17-year-old baby sitter without
her consent at a post-prom party. a drinking game for about an
A court commissioner on Tues- hour with Chinura and GesSert
day ordered the Green Bay Pack- and became drunk. The girl said
ers tight end to stand trial after she, Chmura and others climbed
the girl testified she didn't mug- into a hot tub behind the house.
gle because "it was a small room
Later, she encountered Chmura
and he was a big guy."
outside a bathroom. She testified
Court .Commissioner Gerald he called her name and said,
Janis set an arraignment for June "Come here."
23 for both Chmura and his
"I went over there because he
friend Robert Gessert, who host- was asking me to come over
ed the party at his Hardand home there," the girl testified.
April 9.
Chmura, wearing a towel, took
Gessert, · 43, i~ charged with her . arm and led her into the
third- and fourth-degree sexual bathroom, she said. Chniura shut
assault for allegedly fondling an and locked the door and began
18-year-old wo·man at the parry
kissing her neck and fondling her,
Chmura, 31, is charged with she said.
third-degree sexual assault for
"I was totally shocked,'' she
allegedly having sex with the 17- said.
year-old girl on a bathroom floor . Chmura pulled her down on
at the party.
the bathroom floor and ~ad sex
"I believe that a felony was with her, she testified. The girl
probably committed and it was said she did not say anything durprobably committed by Mr. ing the alleged assault. Then
Chmura;' Janis said.
friends pounded on the door and
Chmura bowed his head and the assauk ended, she said:
The girl said when she left the
held his chin in his hands when·
the ruling was read.
bathroom she was "totally flus" I am here today to tell you I tered" and "not really knowing
am not guilty," he told reporters. what w:~s happening." She then
"I look forward to tl}e day when _ran upstairs.
The 18-year-old testified she
the public hears the rest of the
\vas outside the bathroom door.
story:'
The 17-year-old was mostly
"I heard rusding of clothes. The
composed on the witness stand. door opened," she said. The 17She kept her eyes locked on year-old·"stood there and her eyes
Waukesha County District Attor- filled up with tears."
ney Paul uc
through most of
The girls left the patty together

•

and later went to a hospitaltq he;,
examined.
'
·
Chmura and Gessert could
each face 10 years in prison and'
$10,000 fines if convicted.
Gessert aJ.so.could get up to nine
months in jail and a $10,000 fine
if he is convicted of fourthdegree sexual assault.
Chmura's wife, Lynda, accom~
panied him to the hearing, held
in a standing-room-only cour.•~
room. One woman wore .a
Chmura jersey. Another map
wore a Packers !-shirt.
.
Gerald Boyle, Chmura's attor~
ney, and Martin Kohler, Gessert's
attorney, asked Janis to dismiss th~
charges. They said the criminal
complaint is so filled with lew4
details that neither can get a fair
trial in Wisconsin. ·
Janis denied the requests.

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NOTICE OF SECOND PUBLIC HEARING
The Meigs County Commissioners Intend to apply to the Ohio Department of Development, for fundln
under the FY' 2000 Community Development Block Orant (CD80) Formula Allocation Program, a federally
funded program admlnlsterad by the State. Meigs County is eligible for up to $169,000 of Fiscal Year 2000
CDBO funding, provided the County meets applicable requirements. On April 17, 2000, the County
conducted Its first public hearing to Inform citizens about -the CD80 program, how It may be used, what
activities are eligible, and other Important program requirements.
.
A second public hearing will be held on June 12, 2000 at 10:00 A.M. at the Meigs County Commissioners
office, Meigs County Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio to give citizens an opportunity to review and comment on
the County's proposed CDBO FY' 2000 Formula Allocation projects. ,
Based on both citizen Input and local officials' assessment of the County's needs, the County is proposing
to undertake the following CDBQ activities for Fiscal Year 2000:
ACTIVITY: fire Protection facilities and llqulpment: Salem Township Trustees
Construction of fire facllll}'
CDBQ Funding: $29,000
other Funds: $2,500.00. (Salem Township Trustees)
NATIONAL OBJECTIVIl: ARilA LM I
ACTIVITY: Street Improvements: Middleport Village· Mill Street
CDBQ Funding: $29,000
.
Other Funds: $10,324.00 (Middleport VIllage) o
NATIONAL OBJilCTIVIl: ARilA LMI
ACTIVITY: fire Protection Facilities and Equipment: Sclpo Township
Purchase of Fire Protection Vehicle
•
CDBQ Funding: $12,000
Other Funds: None
NATIONAL OBJllCTIVIl: Area LMI
ACTIVITY: Fire Protection Facilities and llqulpment: Bashan Volunteer fire Department · Purchase
of f'lre Truck Chassis for Tanker
CDBQ Funding: $29,000
Other Funds: $28.2:lJ (Bashan Fire DepartmenULocal Funds)
l'jATIONAL OBJECTIVIl: LMI
ACTIVITY: Public Service · Meigs County Council on Aging
Purchase Two (20 Truck ChassiS/Retrofit Meal Delivery Vehicles.)
CDBQ Funding: $35,000
Other Funds: $4,186 (Meigs COUJ1ty Council on Aging)
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE: Llmlteq Clientele
ACTIVITY: Street Improvements : Chester Township Trustees
Paving various roads In Chester Township
CDBQ Funding: $15,000
Other Funds: $54.204 (Chester Township • Issue II)
ACTIVITY: Administration and fair Housing
CDBQ f'undlng $20,000 (Admin: $10,000- Fair Housing: $10.000)(
Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting on June 12. 2000 to eKpress their views and comments
on the County's proposed CDBO FY' 2000 Formula Allocation Application. Written comments will be
accepted until 10:00 A.M . , June 12, 2000, and may be mailed to the Meigs County Courthouse, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
If a participant will need auxiliary aids (Interpreter, brallled or taped material. asslstlve listening device,
other) due to a disability, please contact Olorla Noes, Clerk, prior to June 12, 2000, at (740) 992-2895 In
order to ensure that your needs will be accommodated.
Janet Howard , Presklt:nt

I

'h

misplaced. The university needed a policy in place to defend itself from potential
lawsuits, and just as important, to make
sure the current ballplayers, incoming
recruits and sympathetic alumni didn't
follow Knight off the end of a short
plank. Now, when the coach goe~ overboard, he does so alone .
AU of that was forgotten for a short
while, as it should be. Knight's slate was
wiped &lt;;Jean, but in one last little test,
Brand gave the marking pencil to Indiana athletic director Clarence Doning~r
and told him to draw up a code of con- .
duct.
.
Knight nearly clocked Doninger last
February, after a tough loss to Ohio State
and the two haven't spoken since.
"But I'm hoping this," Doninger sajd
just before the interview, "is the stan of
the healing process."
He'd better do more than hope.
.
(Editor's note: Jim Litke is the national
sport~ columnist for the Associated
Press. Write to him at jlitkeap.org)

•

,,

·

·

·

·

·

�P.age B 4 • Tht Dally Sentinel

Wedneaclay May 31 2000

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

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Delendenta equ ty ol
redemption be lo ac oaed
that e I the parties be
required to enawo aa to
their Into aat n aald
premlaaa o be lo avor
barred from aaaert ng any
lnte eet the e n that a
IIana on ta d prem eee be
marahe od and thai
prlortll.. date m nad that
oa d pram , .. be oold aa
upon eKecullon and the
p oceodo of aald aile be
applied according to law
and for ouch other relief eo
lalu81 aqulllbla
Defondanta
llrat
hare nabova mentioned ara
lurthe not fad that they are
raqu red to anowe oald
Complaint on or before
JUNE 29 2000 wh ch
Inc udaa twenty eight (28)
days from tho laat date of
publication or judgment
may be rende ed u
demanded therein
WELTMAN WEINBERG lo
REI&amp;CO LPA
By Moneta Cope
Attorney for the P a ntlfl
175 S Th rd Street Suite
900
Columbuo Oh o43215
814-228-7272/1.
(513 10 17 24 31

TRANSPORTATION

Pome~oy

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

BOWEN AUCT ON SERV Ce

GARY BOWEN AUCT ONEER
Proc ON kl 0hl9
Feo Market
Jus Across
Hnng onwv

ffWM N\!&gt;'

Shop at home

Buy from the Classifieds!
Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBUC NOTICE
The annual report Fo m
990 PF lor tho K bb o
Foundation ee na d V
Fultz T uotee lo ave able
fo public nopecllon at
Bernard V Fultz Lew Off ca
111 1/2 Watt Second Street

Pomeroy OH 45789 during
egula bus ness hau • fOr

a pe od of 180 dayt
eubeequent to pub cellon
of thla notice
5) 8 19 2 22 23 24 25
26 28 30 3 and (8) 112 tc

2 000 sf Modern Bnck
Professional Office/Retail Space
For Lease Pnme Locat1on on
Pomeroy By Pass
Also 600 sf of Seperate Secure
Warehouse Available
992-795:3-992 6810 992-5404
110

Help Wanted

WANTED Buckeye Commun ty Serv ces has a
part t me post on ava able n Me gs County 33
hrs wk 8 am Sat th u B am Mon sleep over
requtred Pos I on equ es teach ng persona and
commun ty sk lis to nd v duals w th menta
retardation The work env ronment ts nformal
and reward ng The equ rements are h gh
school d ploma,IGED va d d ver s I cense three
yea s good dnv ng expe ence and adequate
automob le nsurance cove age B C S offers
comprehens ve tra n ng n the f e d of MR/00
Start ng salary $5 50 h Vacat on s ck benefits
Interested applicants need to spec fy post on of
nterest and send esume to P 0 Box 604
Jackson OH 45640 0604 A appl cat ons must
be post marked by 6 1 00 Equal Opportun ty
Employer
CLINICAL
SUPERVISOR
Ga a Jackson Me gs
T eatment A e na ve s o St ee C me (TASC)
p og am Fu t me prefe ed bu w cons de Part t me
(Cont actua) Ful t me emp oymen w nc ude county
emp oyee benet ts package L censed ndependent
Soc al Woke (l SW) o L censed P o ess onal C n ce
Counselo (LPCC) equ ed M n mum of two yea s
expe ence wo k ng n a subs ance abuse and/o
cr m nal just ce sett ng p efe ed Du es nc ude but a e
no m ted to perfo m ng camp ehens ve assessments
and rele a s agency mon to ng Qua ty Assurance
eport ng; and ev ew ng case management and
u Ina ysls components Add t ona equ ements Valid
Oh o dr vers cense to u fi ave equ ement Sa ary
negot ated acco d ng o expe ence censu e and
education Send Resumes to G J M Tf.SC P 0 Box
88 Gallipolis OH 45631 o Fax to 740-446-7894 by
June 5 2000 Ga a Jackson Me gs TASC s an Equal
Opportun ty Emp oye unded by he Oh o Oepartment
of Alcohol and D ug Add cl on Serv ces th ough lhe
Ga a Jackson Me gs Boa d o A coho Drug Add ct on
and Menta Heath Serv ces

3sBKlge
740o88ll 2288

304-483 2587
ed P ooga

RENTALS

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

Staff Yard Sale
Bradbury School
June 1 2 &amp; 3
7 00 2 00 pm
Lots of baby and ch 11~"~ """"' 1
clothes boy &amp; g1rl
Ra n or Sh1ne 1
Look forward to see I'JQ
you there 1

REAL ESTATE

W.$ drr

Furnlluro Ajlploncoo
M-Qooda

Anllquot&amp;~a
~2587

Wanted- n... 01' Oldlf RCA 0 tc
TV o uNd 11ugl\ll o Sony ••
I

2 3 fumllu&lt;o CloOtlng ••
0)'1 00 ~ In I 1M II b._ ,miloon W- C!MioRd
IQUfl l

Sa e 0 e S5 000 Ca
565 0 6

888

Rummag e and Bake Sa e
June 1 2 &amp; 3
Thurs Fr &amp; Sat
Sacred Heart Cathol c Church
Pa sh Hal
9 3 00

I 1)'1 1m W h ICCIII Cl dl

pay Cllh 01 Wo I 7•D gog
:138 ....... . . . _

Juno

REPOSALE
Nee lvtd n No Mo ey Oown

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

CI.ASSIFIEDSI

r

1110 IOWI

stn

80

Public Notlca
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNT'l OHIO
RESOURCEBANCSHARES
MORTGAGE GROUP INC
CASE NO t!ICV 114
Pit ntlfl
VI
JACKIE LEE TANNER tltl
Deltndent
Dtftndtnta Jtck t L..
Tenner end Debgb t L

Abal\dontd Mob 1 Home Ban~
Will Dtal 304-73H 02,

Errors nol tht' t.IU1 t of 11lf-' Adverttc.,r, \'nil be adJU'&gt;t&lt;'&lt;l by up to two fi re msert1ons 1f such error lessons t ~e value of the ad . In case where ad contains more than one item o f notice. adj ustments will be made on the
item contau11ng ~rto r Correctio n s wilt b~" made ttu~ fu':- 1 .JIJ,u l.tble ed1t1an

The Daily Sentinel Page B 5

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

2 Famly
some ant ques co ector
tems baby c othes
End of V ne St Rae ne

�P.age B 4 • Tht Dally Sentinel

Wedneaclay May 31 2000

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

Classified Line Ads
Tribune 446-234 2

Sentinel992-2156

Register 67 5-1333

3 papers

(Jver 15 .-1ord1

3cloys
6 days
l0 days
Monthly

15 words or less
1Swords or less
15 words or less
1Swords or less

$7.50

$40 per wd

$10.50

S50 per wd

$14.85
$145/day

S.65 per wd
$07/doy

820 Mobile Homu
for Sale

ANNOUN CEMENTS

005

70

Yard Sale

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Personals
DIABETIC PATENTS

580

Peta for Sate

FED UP WITH THE
RUNAROUND?
Wan A New Home w h No Hu
a[Jo? Ca Fo P a App 0 8

888-5&amp; 0 87

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables
FINANCIAL

AI ea es a e advert s ng n

hts newspape lleubject o
he Fede a1 Fa Hous ng Act
o 968 wh ch makeo ~ ogaJ
o advertise "any pre e ence
mlta lon o d scrimna lon
based on race color ellglon
se;c am a s a us or na lanai
or g n o any ntentlon o

make any such prefefence
Umlta ion o d scrim na 1on
Th s newspape 1M no
know ng y ac ef)l
adver1 semen s fo ea esta e
which s n loalon o the
aw Our eaelers are hereby
n ormed ha a ctNe ngs
ad\1811lsed n h s new•spaii&gt;el ,l
aea a abeonanequa
opportunity bas~

KIT N CA RLYLE ® by Larry Wrlghl

"' ON MY
J.. uNt/11

P#f&gt;Ar: r

Tanner who11 laat known

u&amp;'f

tddreoo lo 107 Devol D vt
IC Mor etta Ohio 45750 •
heroby nat !ltd thtl the
Pltlnt If IIIII 1 Camp a nt of
Forte oaure and Other
Equlllb 1 Rtl tf on October
18 1899 In Coot No 99 CV
114 on property dooc bed

,,u,

J~p.I'-

AYIA'I

N ew

4 W de 3BR 2B A $2
Pe Man h Low down Payma
F tt A F ee De t y
888

928 ~26

New 6•80 3BR 2BA $266 pe
.month Low Down Payme F aa

A

3428

F ee De

oy

New Doub ew de

888 928
3 BA 28 4

4276 pe mon h Low Dow Pay
men F ae A Fe e De e

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

~68-928 ~26

~2 •80
~

Fac o y Aepo Ne e
ed n $49 950
888 69

Now To YouTh n Shoppe
9 Was S maon Athans
74Q-592 842
aua y o n no and ho aet'lod
ems S 00 bag sa • a e v
selay Mo day n u Sa u day
9 00 5 30

'I M ed B eod Puppies 6 Week&amp;
Od Ca A o 530 ~M To GOOG
Home Pho e Numbe 7•a 388
8396

Auction
and Flea Market

S lUlled n the Townsh p
of Rutlend County of
Melgt tnd State of Ohio
tnd dto~rlbed 11 follow•
Lot No 9 of Raw nga
Addition of the VIllage of
Rullend
n Rutland
Townth p Melga County
Oh o and altueted In the
South one hall of the
aouthwnt qua tor of
Stet on No 8 Town No 8
tnd Range 14 of the Ohio
Company 1 Purchaoa ••
ehown n P at Reco d No 3
Ptgl I 7 of the Me ga
County Plat Recorda Said
rea ottate being Perce 1
u recordld n Vo ume 262
Page 347 of the Molga
County Deed Recorda PPN
12-G0039 00
Alto known 11 742 Ma n
Sl,..t Rutland Oh o 45775
and that there rema na due
and ow ng $41 250 oo with
lnterttl at a var able ate
pureuant to the Note and
currently 11 the rate of
10 825% per annum I om
Apr 1 1888 and cotta
that t~tfandanta namad
In the Coinpla nt may have
an lnteroat In uld p opor!Y
the tfo a Plaint If domanda
that II be found to have a
goad va d and aubalat ng
lien on aa d premlaea fo
tho amount ow ng that the
Delendenta equ ty ol
redemption be lo ac oaed
that e I the parties be
required to enawo aa to
their Into aat n aald
premlaaa o be lo avor
barred from aaaert ng any
lnte eet the e n that a
IIana on ta d prem eee be
marahe od and thai
prlortll.. date m nad that
oa d pram , .. be oold aa
upon eKecullon and the
p oceodo of aald aile be
applied according to law
and for ouch other relief eo
lalu81 aqulllbla
Defondanta
llrat
hare nabova mentioned ara
lurthe not fad that they are
raqu red to anowe oald
Complaint on or before
JUNE 29 2000 wh ch
Inc udaa twenty eight (28)
days from tho laat date of
publication or judgment
may be rende ed u
demanded therein
WELTMAN WEINBERG lo
REI&amp;CO LPA
By Moneta Cope
Attorney for the P a ntlfl
175 S Th rd Street Suite
900
Columbuo Oh o43215
814-228-7272/1.
(513 10 17 24 31

TRANSPORTATION

Pome~oy

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

BOWEN AUCT ON SERV Ce

GARY BOWEN AUCT ONEER
Proc ON kl 0hl9
Feo Market
Jus Across
Hnng onwv

ffWM N\!&gt;'

Shop at home

Buy from the Classifieds!
Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBUC NOTICE
The annual report Fo m
990 PF lor tho K bb o
Foundation ee na d V
Fultz T uotee lo ave able
fo public nopecllon at
Bernard V Fultz Lew Off ca
111 1/2 Watt Second Street

Pomeroy OH 45789 during
egula bus ness hau • fOr

a pe od of 180 dayt
eubeequent to pub cellon
of thla notice
5) 8 19 2 22 23 24 25
26 28 30 3 and (8) 112 tc

2 000 sf Modern Bnck
Professional Office/Retail Space
For Lease Pnme Locat1on on
Pomeroy By Pass
Also 600 sf of Seperate Secure
Warehouse Available
992-795:3-992 6810 992-5404
110

Help Wanted

WANTED Buckeye Commun ty Serv ces has a
part t me post on ava able n Me gs County 33
hrs wk 8 am Sat th u B am Mon sleep over
requtred Pos I on equ es teach ng persona and
commun ty sk lis to nd v duals w th menta
retardation The work env ronment ts nformal
and reward ng The equ rements are h gh
school d ploma,IGED va d d ver s I cense three
yea s good dnv ng expe ence and adequate
automob le nsurance cove age B C S offers
comprehens ve tra n ng n the f e d of MR/00
Start ng salary $5 50 h Vacat on s ck benefits
Interested applicants need to spec fy post on of
nterest and send esume to P 0 Box 604
Jackson OH 45640 0604 A appl cat ons must
be post marked by 6 1 00 Equal Opportun ty
Employer
CLINICAL
SUPERVISOR
Ga a Jackson Me gs
T eatment A e na ve s o St ee C me (TASC)
p og am Fu t me prefe ed bu w cons de Part t me
(Cont actua) Ful t me emp oymen w nc ude county
emp oyee benet ts package L censed ndependent
Soc al Woke (l SW) o L censed P o ess onal C n ce
Counselo (LPCC) equ ed M n mum of two yea s
expe ence wo k ng n a subs ance abuse and/o
cr m nal just ce sett ng p efe ed Du es nc ude but a e
no m ted to perfo m ng camp ehens ve assessments
and rele a s agency mon to ng Qua ty Assurance
eport ng; and ev ew ng case management and
u Ina ysls components Add t ona equ ements Valid
Oh o dr vers cense to u fi ave equ ement Sa ary
negot ated acco d ng o expe ence censu e and
education Send Resumes to G J M Tf.SC P 0 Box
88 Gallipolis OH 45631 o Fax to 740-446-7894 by
June 5 2000 Ga a Jackson Me gs TASC s an Equal
Opportun ty Emp oye unded by he Oh o Oepartment
of Alcohol and D ug Add cl on Serv ces th ough lhe
Ga a Jackson Me gs Boa d o A coho Drug Add ct on
and Menta Heath Serv ces

3sBKlge
740o88ll 2288

304-483 2587
ed P ooga

RENTALS

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

Staff Yard Sale
Bradbury School
June 1 2 &amp; 3
7 00 2 00 pm
Lots of baby and ch 11~"~ """"' 1
clothes boy &amp; g1rl
Ra n or Sh1ne 1
Look forward to see I'JQ
you there 1

REAL ESTATE

W.$ drr

Furnlluro Ajlploncoo
M-Qooda

Anllquot&amp;~a
~2587

Wanted- n... 01' Oldlf RCA 0 tc
TV o uNd 11ugl\ll o Sony ••
I

2 3 fumllu&lt;o CloOtlng ••
0)'1 00 ~ In I 1M II b._ ,miloon W- C!MioRd
IQUfl l

Sa e 0 e S5 000 Ca
565 0 6

888

Rummag e and Bake Sa e
June 1 2 &amp; 3
Thurs Fr &amp; Sat
Sacred Heart Cathol c Church
Pa sh Hal
9 3 00

I 1)'1 1m W h ICCIII Cl dl

pay Cllh 01 Wo I 7•D gog
:138 ....... . . . _

Juno

REPOSALE
Nee lvtd n No Mo ey Oown

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

CI.ASSIFIEDSI

r

1110 IOWI

stn

80

Public Notlca
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNT'l OHIO
RESOURCEBANCSHARES
MORTGAGE GROUP INC
CASE NO t!ICV 114
Pit ntlfl
VI
JACKIE LEE TANNER tltl
Deltndent
Dtftndtnta Jtck t L..
Tenner end Debgb t L

Abal\dontd Mob 1 Home Ban~
Will Dtal 304-73H 02,

Errors nol tht' t.IU1 t of 11lf-' Adverttc.,r, \'nil be adJU'&gt;t&lt;'&lt;l by up to two fi re msert1ons 1f such error lessons t ~e value of the ad . In case where ad contains more than one item o f notice. adj ustments will be made on the
item contau11ng ~rto r Correctio n s wilt b~" made ttu~ fu':- 1 .JIJ,u l.tble ed1t1an

The Daily Sentinel Page B 5

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

2 Famly
some ant ques co ector
tems baby c othes
End of V ne St Rae ne

�.

•

"-De B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

,:Wedneaday, May 31, 2000

'

Wednesday, May 31, 2~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

NEA CrOIIWord Puzzle

BRiDGE

CREDrr PROBLEMS???

DIPOYIAG

St11TH•s COnSTRUCTIOn
• New Homes
·• Garages
• Siding

ADM....... Tractor &amp;

992-2753

992-11 01

Factory Authorized
Case-IH Pa11s
DeaJers.
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coo/viii•, OH 45723

.

Mol'ftlal Star Rd. CR JO
.Radne, Ohio
1-740-949-ZIIS

Chester on SR 248

'

IAClHOI• DOZING •IND LOADil• TRUCIUNG • TRINQIIIG
SEPTIC TANKS, LEACH BEDS INSTALLED, WATER-GA

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Construction
New Construction &amp;
Remodeling - Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl Siding·
Roofs - Decks - Ga1·au•.l
Free Estimates

~UDI.

Cellular
Jeff Warner
Ins.
,
992-5479

MYERS PAVING
Henderson,

WV

178-2417 ar 441-1428
Cell Phone 674-3311

Fax 304-675-2457

•Driveways • Tennis Courts
•Parking lots • Playgrounds
·•Roods • Streets
WV Contractors Lie. #003506

-

Dailey
Trucking

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

Dump Truck
Service
Limestone. Gravel
Agricultural Lime
Sand and Dirt

949·2249
Racine, Ohio

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

work.
FrM Estimates
740-992-5050

(Randy)

oO 1 mo. 41 11 Ml

Quahty Window
Systems, Inc.
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-4119 or
1-800-291-5600

1\lnt ,;·s
Cand~ &amp;Crafts
•Fu.relmt •Csdle Refill• ·

.w..•w.rltilt •W'"'~'

9&lt; 143 r:H2.-'?J!J57

"Ahead In Service"
llutrena W811ern Pride 12% Sweet Feed ...................'5.25/50 lb bag
Nu1rena 16% Rabbit Pellets .......... ........................ '6.95/50 lb. bag
Nu1rena Hunters Pride 21% Dog Food .....................'6.75/50 lb. bat"
lllltrena 16% Loyer Crumbels.. .................. :............•S."/50 lb. bag
Nu1rltltl xrot1h Feed ............................................. '6.75/50 lb. bag
Sltade River 12% Conle Feed ............................... 1 6.75/100 lb. bag

Caii740-98S·3831
35537 St. Rl. 7 North

740.992·1671
7/22{TFN

"We're Back"

1-BOG-311-3391

The Appliance

Free E•tinwte•
Contraetors Welcome

Man
Ken Young

YOUNG'S CARPET
INSTALLATIONS
Custom Carpet, VInyl,
Commerdal an Ceruml&lt;
Tile, All Types of
Hardwood Fioortng,
Carpet Binding and
· Restretchlng.
30 Yrs. Exp~rience

P-oy, Olllo

l

· · New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDEIITIAL
' FREE ESTIMATES

New Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting •Plumbing
Free Estimates

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

I
State Route 246
Chester, OH
Eetee Rocket• and Aeeeoeorlee
Traim by Lionel &amp; MTH
K-Line
• Cor;va\'eo Track
Athearn
• Mod"l Power
Atlu
• Lifeline

Land Clearing &amp; : .
Grading
·'

Septic Sy•teltll &amp;

Toll Free

Utililie•

(M r.llevt I

T~OSE TwO A((~
INS~PA,ABL.E. - -

(740) 992-3131

..._

dMfllf Df fllcNtdol ..... fMMII 114 lrf. . I fllr ......... If lllltl
_a..,orL Aporoao .... !lor.......
rtllll- -"'•
bow• •• .,•..,,. ,.,....,, for hit or
..e.na -r ....,.;1 • , •
loao10, dotltot, .... loaoMitaW pHI. TOll ...... ~l.';."11Mo
......." .... ltl""'f iltftn
•
For Information regarding
·
.
Bankruptcy contact:

For Yeur Pet's Netds.
•Bathi~

•Ears
• Nails • Flea Baths
All Breeds
i

Now available
Black &amp; Tan puppies

..,.cy..,
her,.......,

.......

PEOPLES SECURITY'S, UNITED FINANCIAL
.

:,

SERVICES

i'N~OF

~f«5 .

A &amp; D Auto Upho llery -

us, lnl:

Rutland, Ohio
:i
Truck seats. car seats, headliners,&lt;
.'
truck tarps. convertible &amp; VInyl top$!
Four wheeler se&amp;ts, motorcycle seat$,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
~
'
MOI'l • Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

s

(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0$16 .

Y

=·:

:

1 mo pd,

fta AppUanca
Man

LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take t}le pain out
'
of[/aintingLet me do it for you"

Before 6 p.m. ·
l1111ve MesSGge
Alter 6 pm· 614·?85·4180

Ill E.lml

,......,, Ohio

7

Contact Office For Details

!IJI

Dozer For Hire

QUALITY LANDSCAPE

Size - JD 550 G
Rate $50 per hour
Call for minimum

April Showero Bri11g

740·992·7945

May Flowers/!

Are Your Plant Beds
Ready?
Weeding: Mulching:
Pruning:Edging
Planting and Retaining
Walls
Free Estimates

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

't'ruclt

20 Yrs txptrltlct :

&amp;

SON

New Haven

JINIS'

VOU 5E61N STARIN6

BACK DOOR EARLY

FOR
A LONG DAY

AND YOU STARE ALL

IT

UNTIL SUPPERTIME

IN THE MORNING,..
.
I

• 'ToP

·

.

Ren~o"al

•"trtm

.,,

. • S\l.lnl" ;..

·otl""'"~.&lt;

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

"\

~n tih·i,!l Rti!Je
~

'

~,

e'

3NT

Pass

Pass

2t

Norlh
1•

- (l!e daring)

o..P.;.,

1t Athletic

13
NNW
11 Cioll-- diiJ

bUIIdlnge

3•

Pass

East
DbL
Pass'
Pass

Yesterday's and today's deals
are similar: Both are difficult to
get right at the table. Here, you are
sitting East. After the opponents
stagger into. three no-trump, your
partner leads the diamond two:
queen, four, three. Declarer puts
you in with a club. What next?
Which card do you need partner
to hold?
Many
defenders
would
thoughtlessly return a diamond.
Yet then South cruises home. He
knocks . out East's second club
winner, wins the third diamond,
and concedes a trick to East's
spade ace. The defenders get only
four tricks: one spade, one dia·
mond and two clubs.
If East pauses to paint out
South's hand, though, he can picture it almost exactly.
There are only 14 points missing; South surely has (almost) all
of them. For his three-no-trump
bid, South must hold the diamond
king. And from West's fourthhighes~ diamond-two opening
lead, S'outh is k~own to have start·
ed with three diamonds . Stl, plodding away at that suit will get
nowhere. Also, as West advanced
two diamonds bul not two heart s
(which he would have done with
4-4 in the red suits), South is
marked with four hearts. His actual 2-4-3 -4 distribution is no surprise. Much bener is to play partner for the critical heart nine.
At trick three, East switches to
either the mundane heart five or
flashy heart king! And at trick
five, he leads either the heart ·king
to pin dummy's queen or the heart
five. Then, when in with the
spade ace, he cas~es the heart I 0.
After West drops that wonderful
nine, East takes the heart eight t(j
defeat the contracl.

To get a current weather
report, check the

,1'

•

l WEDNESDAY

&lt;.,;,"· ,,.,lJ ..

..·

..

\

..

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CELEBRITY CIPHER

-tor-· . .•

by Luis C.mpoa ·

Celebrity Cipher CIY1&gt;t0g&lt;lnlloow . . . - fnlm ~by-. poopto POIIInd
pt'IMI1t. Eadl-ln tf1l clphor

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Pol~lclan: a pei'80D with whou polltloa you don1 •
1111'": Hyou agtM wl1h him he Ia a l f a - . ' - David Uoycl George
:

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. 0 four ICICitnblod word• be_l,
•
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low to fo1m lour tlmpl• -d1. ·

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IMINGE

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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Nozzl e-l~ound-R1 pen-Vassa 1· SPENDS
I've found a rather simple way to help my son balance his checkbook. I told him he only had to earn rnore
than he SPENDS

MAY31l

'Your

-·
~··

.!'

._.1

'' r,, .
j THURSDAY, June I, 2000

'Birthday

someone you· dislike. The worse
1
Alliances can be strengthened case scenario is likely to happen,
~ irr the year ·ahead in ways that and it could reflect badly on you.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
: could increase benefits and advanUse
your smarts today, and don't
.
ta_ges for you. A friend could be
get
into situations where you
iihe instigator in bringing this
know going in that the odds are
'~ :aJ!out.
stacked against you. It's fooli sh
·~~:GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
~n' t be presumptuous and speak not to wait until you have a more
II¥, anyone today without first get- level playing field.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
:J~g their approval for what you
:·want to say on their behalf. You Unless the group is doing some·
: could catch it both ways. Know thing unethical, immoral or simply foolish , go along with the will
' w:~erc to look for romance and
~ y'ou'll find it. The Astro-Graph of the majority today instead of
(Matchmaker instantly reveals trying to coerce them .into doing
l which signs are romantically per- what you want to do. Be a joiner.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
'Teet for you; Mail $2.75 to Match·
•maker, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Don't take ~ything for. granted
hen making an
$olt 1758, Murray Hill Stailon, today, esp~ l
expensive pur ase. Make certain
lNew York, NY 10156.
it's properly vered with a guar~ CANCER (June 21-July 22)
tyou may find yourself under antee or warranty. •
SAGI'ITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
~orne severe pressures today if
!there are any duties or responsi~ · 21) Be careful today in all part~ilities you failed to take care of nership situations, because the
lin the past. Making additional relationship could become quite
!excuses will only make things complicated if either should take
an opposing stance.
:worse.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
: LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) If at all
:possible,llvoid getting involved in 19) Should you find yourself in
charge of a project !hat Involves
'an
...,., aotjvity today that includes

-·
..

UAI"Lif'ULII::I, OHIO 45831• CHESHIRE, OHIO

$2S· ' pe.~ .:: i:nch

Buy from the Classified&amp;!

wv . ,

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for as: lo·W ' a.s. .

Shop st home...

,

GUIUNTEED
AIR CONDITIONING
SERVICE
(3041 812·2079 i

Adverl'ise yop·r ,-:.l;tusiness

.

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Sentinel

5/22 1 mopd.

. ·:''·'• -

TO ... TO GET TOGETHER

PEANUTS

.'

TREE SERVICE

• Pick up &amp; delivery Service
• Lawnmower &amp; weedeater repair &amp; supplies·
Owner- James A. Pickens
Shop Foreman· Shane Baker

,

~T~H~E~~ro~~E~~~A~T~IM~E-, ~W~H~E~N-~~~~~O~Y~~~N~D-~~ , ~==~~~O~~~~~yv,~,
"'EllERY &amp;OY"!o LIFE
C,iRL .. . ::AHEM!lr ... A
2 YOI.l'Rc
LET"!&gt;
Mt&gt;l A''t&gt;
A '"'o~•N,
H
TAKE A
WH EN H E .. WHEN
. IT...
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WELL, LET ME rUT IT
r ME,O.N ... WHEN THE'C. S INC, .
~NAG&lt;.
ANOTHER WAY ...
THEY .. If THEY DECIDE ~
BRE..._K . ·

I

~/281 mo. pf;

1

740-8411·3608

s:·

•

fbr\·dtl",ii •'io,ri:th

Mike Sharp

111 Tlt'l'tl'l(:, TO TAI.IC.
,..0 YOU ~BOUT IS ...
:7c.HOI&lt;E~'LTHE '81RD!&gt;
• I'.Nt&gt; THE &amp;E.E

740-992-5212 ·,:\I

Senior Citizen
Discount

Hours M-F 9 am - 7 pm
Sat. 9 am • 1 pm

740-949-2804

·-'

IIATE ... ~·AHE!1~:: ... WHAT

I

33795 Hiland Rd;:
Pom~roy, Ohio '

I

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

I

___j

740-985-4141

• • ~

Local • 843-5284

:I BIG NATE
.

I

Residential- decks, kitchens,
bathrooms, custom
Commercial- metal studs
remodeling, handicap access drywall, suspended ceili~gs.
kitchens &amp; baths, wood &amp;
vinyl sidin

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Under Ntw 6w.n t[Jblp

I

k:»&gt;OE~

Long Bottom, Ohio

. ,:

... • • • .... • • ... • • • •

w.

BUILDING

::

Middleport, Ohio 45760

Medicare Supplements; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical• Nursing Home.
llf(.nriBillt
liii".-4TLR-•

MARCUM

•

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St\OCS .. .

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High &amp; Dry~!
Self-Storage!

lnstretl- Professional Strvlce

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Now Renting:

4/19(QO 1 mo pd.

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sri.OE:S,

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c.ro~'\"~1 ~'-~'

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,0.110". . UH_~···-,

.

We Service All Makes
Washers- Dryers
Ranges- Refrigerators
Freezers- Dish Washers

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

ONE MONTH'S RENT FREE
Waters Edge of Syracuse

~ • .. • .. • •

LOOK\~ FOit. ~ CJ:.#of($..Tioa.~ ....,..~===-W-f\1'\-:\'.,..\'ll'E.--?-Irl-E.--,

(740) 592·5025 Athens

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" .,. .. • .,. .. • .,. .,. .,. ... .,. .,. ... ,. .,. .,. .,. .. .,. ,. .,. .,.

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189

!THE BORN LOSER

William Safranek, Attorney ·

M

J&amp;L INSULATION &amp;
Karaoke I
CONSfiUCTION
Vinyl
Siding, Roofing,
Sing-Dance-Party
• : Now Taking Applications for 1 Bedroom
Replacement Windows,
:,
Apartment
ith Miss Mamie in
Seamless Gutters &amp;
,
•
Seniors,
Disabled,
Handicapped
Downspout, Garage room
Annie Oakley's
additions, Pole Building, • : Range, Refrige,rator, AJC. On-Site Laundry,
Karaoke
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
'
Community Room, 24 Hour Maintenance
Decks, Boat Docks,
• Weddings •
' •
Provided
Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Birthdays • Private
; : : ·Call or Come By Our Office Located at
Blown Insulation
Parties
992·2772
' ,
2070 State Route 124 in Syracuse
For All Your Home
Call740·367·7935
:•
. Office Hours
518/1 mo
lmorovement Needs
•'
Monday and Thursday 10 am · 3 pm
rM~O~N"':'UM"':'E"""N"':'t~'A--L-L-IF_E_I_NS_U_R_A_N_C_E_C_d_,. :
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Bulldo•er
S~rvices
•
House &amp; Trailer Sites

740-742-9501

.... ........................................ "'

Free Estimates
Pond estimates
welcome

•

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION

39 Se1181or
Kola-

Opening lead: • 2

BANKRUPTCY

Open For Grooming

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.

37 Actor Gulager

BY PHILLIP ALDER

Free Delivery

(740) 985-3948

.....

Offense to defense .

!5131/ 1 rno pd.

rate
.

•
•
•
•

JAWS II ·

parts

~4!00

Joseph Jacks
740-992-2068

MIKE YOUNG
740·992·1724
PAlYOUNG
740·949.0046

INCLUDIN'

My.ac ·
Poms

••

West

Pass

RtpiGOtiMftl

Albany, Ohio

4119100 1 mo. pd

So11th

R
RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
0
E FREE ESTIMATES••. FULLY INSURED N
T
Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio
R

E

homela""' • 14 Feel a liN
14 lkry In eclvence 55 1'VIIe of "'COI..,,,.bDiot •
15 Door 1*1*
sa F""mhw11 Dry, .. wine
-~~ ~._!·~ 57 Slnilno VOice
20 Royal horMa
· DOWN
23 Domain
1 Sea.- omondll
2e Unit ot Sir
21Niancl
currency
27 Half a dllnce? 3 Actor Baldwin
4 C.rdapot
30Concurred
5 Nahoor ahMp
32 Cuallml-lllled
I Roman 1,051 ·
7 Pulla
34 c:':l2nc~e
I CApital 01
35 AW..
Lolvlot
Fleming
t Work without- 12~
31Fuu

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

Aulo Body Parll
All replacement

cN

Anawerto P•c•1aYI Puzzle

45Hau1•l o.n.- HMe 41 Dotblar'a ~etten

K 1o 3
• Q9 7 6

740·742·8015 or
1·877·353·7022

BACKHOE SERVICES
MASONRY
BOBCAT SERVICES
.

1 ........

t

Quality Driveways, ·
patios, sidewalks
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

~ · CONCRETE

9"uliny 8C .7of!tt

992·1550

• A1

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC.

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS

211} E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts· All Makes

•KQ

992-5776

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE
C/J.II.SSUIFIIEDSI

•AK

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

, Rll Quality

:•
:

SHADE ltiVEit fiG SEtMCE

j

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

• A 9 3

• K 10 8 5
• J 8 5 4

South

~

Dozer

Call T &amp; R Logging
after 8:00pm

• New Homes

• 8 7 4 2
• 9 3 2
• 9 7 6 2

• 4 2

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

Vegetable Plants,
Beddin11 Plants,
HanGing Baskets,
Porch Boxes,
Combination Pots,
Potted Geraniums,
Phlox, Azaleas,
Rhododendrons,
Ulac Trees, Assorted
Shrubs
Open Daily 9·5 ·
Sun 12-S

Norlh
OS-31-00
• J 10 6 5
• QJ
t A Q
•JI0853
East

West

(740) 992-3470;

11&gt;1/0CI 1 .........

Spring Season

"Get in whUe you can, space is limited"

UPS, ROAD BUILDING·LANO CLEARING, HORIZONTAL

n~l/lfn

Syracuse
Now Open For

740-949-7039

ELECTRIC LINES, BASEMENT-FOOTERS, MOBILE HOME

Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM

Your

740·985·4194
1
1

46909 SR 124
Racine
Camping- Fishing - Boa11ng
• Nightly • Weekly • Monthly • Seasonal
Convenience Store/ Bait &amp; Tackle

Hauling •limestone • ,
Grovel• Sand • Topsoil ,;
Fill Dirt • Mul1h •
Bulldozer Servi1es
'

45n1
7 40.949-2217
Sizes 5' x 1o•
to 10' x 30'

40 s....,_.
42 Fable'e 1dn

411 -IIzzy
12 Jimmy c.rter•e 51 Til.- out

EXQIVfiTIHG

Road
Raclna, Ohio

ACROSS
u--

10 Sick

•

HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL
Hy..auhc Hose repairs,
cylinder repairs, oil
Salts· 5 gal. buckets
to SS gal. drums
2 Y, miles, out of

OLD LOCKZ4
CfiMPGJtOUttD
6129/mo.

Uc. II D0-50

T&amp;D .

QuaUty, Variety, Low Prleea • That'• Ual
Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flats $6.60
10" Hanging Baskets $6.60
Wide Assortment of Herbs
Annuals &amp; Perennials in 4" Pots for .94¢ each

I'

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better

7411 Ill-Gill

5117,00 1 0'4,

Sae'a GreenltouH

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
•4 Sales Representative
Larry Schey

AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
per glll)l
~oo.oo Coverall
$500.00 Sterbuist
Progressive top line.

~mentPIU1s

N11d It done, give us a o•ll
FREE ESTIMATES
Ore~t Prloes on New Homtt

HILL'S
~WICK'S C.
SELF STORAGE HfiOLIHG .and
29870 Baahan

Pomeroy Eaglea
Club Bingo On
Thursdays

PAirrS

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

PHILLIP
ALDER .

(;

others for whom you're responsible, spot check the assignments
you have delegated to them. An
error would be blamed on you.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2().Feb. 19)
Jealousy occurs when we believe
someone has something that rightfully should be ours, but it can
cause us to behave in unseemly
ways. Don't fall prey to this enemy today.
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20) If
you attempt to fore~ others into
complian'e today. although peo·
pte may go along with you, they
will resent any unreasonable
restrictions placed on them and
hold you accountable .
ARIES (Murch 21·April 19)
s~ prepared to buck up anything
you say today with substance und
fact: Your views and opinions
stand u good chunc~ of being
challenged by those who don 't
want to hear what you have to say.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Old obligations may catch up with ·
you today, and you could be
forced to face them. Take care of
whatever ii is that is staring you
in the face before you do anything
else.

•

••
•

•

'•

.•
I

·~~~;;~~~;;.;-~~-F~~~~p;,~~~~~;;~~-t~~~~~ .;
•

•

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"-De B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

,:Wedneaday, May 31, 2000

'

Wednesday, May 31, 2~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

NEA CrOIIWord Puzzle

BRiDGE

CREDrr PROBLEMS???

DIPOYIAG

St11TH•s COnSTRUCTIOn
• New Homes
·• Garages
• Siding

ADM....... Tractor &amp;

992-2753

992-11 01

Factory Authorized
Case-IH Pa11s
DeaJers.
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coo/viii•, OH 45723

.

Mol'ftlal Star Rd. CR JO
.Radne, Ohio
1-740-949-ZIIS

Chester on SR 248

'

IAClHOI• DOZING •IND LOADil• TRUCIUNG • TRINQIIIG
SEPTIC TANKS, LEACH BEDS INSTALLED, WATER-GA

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Construction
New Construction &amp;
Remodeling - Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl Siding·
Roofs - Decks - Ga1·au•.l
Free Estimates

~UDI.

Cellular
Jeff Warner
Ins.
,
992-5479

MYERS PAVING
Henderson,

WV

178-2417 ar 441-1428
Cell Phone 674-3311

Fax 304-675-2457

•Driveways • Tennis Courts
•Parking lots • Playgrounds
·•Roods • Streets
WV Contractors Lie. #003506

-

Dailey
Trucking

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

Dump Truck
Service
Limestone. Gravel
Agricultural Lime
Sand and Dirt

949·2249
Racine, Ohio

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

work.
FrM Estimates
740-992-5050

(Randy)

oO 1 mo. 41 11 Ml

Quahty Window
Systems, Inc.
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-4119 or
1-800-291-5600

1\lnt ,;·s
Cand~ &amp;Crafts
•Fu.relmt •Csdle Refill• ·

.w..•w.rltilt •W'"'~'

9&lt; 143 r:H2.-'?J!J57

"Ahead In Service"
llutrena W811ern Pride 12% Sweet Feed ...................'5.25/50 lb bag
Nu1rena 16% Rabbit Pellets .......... ........................ '6.95/50 lb. bag
Nu1rena Hunters Pride 21% Dog Food .....................'6.75/50 lb. bat"
lllltrena 16% Loyer Crumbels.. .................. :............•S."/50 lb. bag
Nu1rltltl xrot1h Feed ............................................. '6.75/50 lb. bag
Sltade River 12% Conle Feed ............................... 1 6.75/100 lb. bag

Caii740-98S·3831
35537 St. Rl. 7 North

740.992·1671
7/22{TFN

"We're Back"

1-BOG-311-3391

The Appliance

Free E•tinwte•
Contraetors Welcome

Man
Ken Young

YOUNG'S CARPET
INSTALLATIONS
Custom Carpet, VInyl,
Commerdal an Ceruml&lt;
Tile, All Types of
Hardwood Fioortng,
Carpet Binding and
· Restretchlng.
30 Yrs. Exp~rience

P-oy, Olllo

l

· · New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDEIITIAL
' FREE ESTIMATES

New Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting •Plumbing
Free Estimates

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

I
State Route 246
Chester, OH
Eetee Rocket• and Aeeeoeorlee
Traim by Lionel &amp; MTH
K-Line
• Cor;va\'eo Track
Athearn
• Mod"l Power
Atlu
• Lifeline

Land Clearing &amp; : .
Grading
·'

Septic Sy•teltll &amp;

Toll Free

Utililie•

(M r.llevt I

T~OSE TwO A((~
INS~PA,ABL.E. - -

(740) 992-3131

..._

dMfllf Df fllcNtdol ..... fMMII 114 lrf. . I fllr ......... If lllltl
_a..,orL Aporoao .... !lor.......
rtllll- -"'•
bow• •• .,•..,,. ,.,....,, for hit or
..e.na -r ....,.;1 • , •
loao10, dotltot, .... loaoMitaW pHI. TOll ...... ~l.';."11Mo
......." .... ltl""'f iltftn
•
For Information regarding
·
.
Bankruptcy contact:

For Yeur Pet's Netds.
•Bathi~

•Ears
• Nails • Flea Baths
All Breeds
i

Now available
Black &amp; Tan puppies

..,.cy..,
her,.......,

.......

PEOPLES SECURITY'S, UNITED FINANCIAL
.

:,

SERVICES

i'N~OF

~f«5 .

A &amp; D Auto Upho llery -

us, lnl:

Rutland, Ohio
:i
Truck seats. car seats, headliners,&lt;
.'
truck tarps. convertible &amp; VInyl top$!
Four wheeler se&amp;ts, motorcycle seat$,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
~
'
MOI'l • Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

s

(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0$16 .

Y

=·:

:

1 mo pd,

fta AppUanca
Man

LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take t}le pain out
'
of[/aintingLet me do it for you"

Before 6 p.m. ·
l1111ve MesSGge
Alter 6 pm· 614·?85·4180

Ill E.lml

,......,, Ohio

7

Contact Office For Details

!IJI

Dozer For Hire

QUALITY LANDSCAPE

Size - JD 550 G
Rate $50 per hour
Call for minimum

April Showero Bri11g

740·992·7945

May Flowers/!

Are Your Plant Beds
Ready?
Weeding: Mulching:
Pruning:Edging
Planting and Retaining
Walls
Free Estimates

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

't'ruclt

20 Yrs txptrltlct :

&amp;

SON

New Haven

JINIS'

VOU 5E61N STARIN6

BACK DOOR EARLY

FOR
A LONG DAY

AND YOU STARE ALL

IT

UNTIL SUPPERTIME

IN THE MORNING,..
.
I

• 'ToP

·

.

Ren~o"al

•"trtm

.,,

. • S\l.lnl" ;..

·otl""'"~.&lt;

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

"\

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~

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Pass

Pass

2t

Norlh
1•

- (l!e daring)

o..P.;.,

1t Athletic

13
NNW
11 Cioll-- diiJ

bUIIdlnge

3•

Pass

East
DbL
Pass'
Pass

Yesterday's and today's deals
are similar: Both are difficult to
get right at the table. Here, you are
sitting East. After the opponents
stagger into. three no-trump, your
partner leads the diamond two:
queen, four, three. Declarer puts
you in with a club. What next?
Which card do you need partner
to hold?
Many
defenders
would
thoughtlessly return a diamond.
Yet then South cruises home. He
knocks . out East's second club
winner, wins the third diamond,
and concedes a trick to East's
spade ace. The defenders get only
four tricks: one spade, one dia·
mond and two clubs.
If East pauses to paint out
South's hand, though, he can picture it almost exactly.
There are only 14 points missing; South surely has (almost) all
of them. For his three-no-trump
bid, South must hold the diamond
king. And from West's fourthhighes~ diamond-two opening
lead, S'outh is k~own to have start·
ed with three diamonds . Stl, plodding away at that suit will get
nowhere. Also, as West advanced
two diamonds bul not two heart s
(which he would have done with
4-4 in the red suits), South is
marked with four hearts. His actual 2-4-3 -4 distribution is no surprise. Much bener is to play partner for the critical heart nine.
At trick three, East switches to
either the mundane heart five or
flashy heart king! And at trick
five, he leads either the heart ·king
to pin dummy's queen or the heart
five. Then, when in with the
spade ace, he cas~es the heart I 0.
After West drops that wonderful
nine, East takes the heart eight t(j
defeat the contracl.

To get a current weather
report, check the

,1'

•

l WEDNESDAY

&lt;.,;,"· ,,.,lJ ..

..·

..

\

..

••'

,,..

.

Phone· ;1992-21 SS

. ·~

,.

.,

"

..

.

...

CELEBRITY CIPHER

-tor-· . .•

by Luis C.mpoa ·

Celebrity Cipher CIY1&gt;t0g&lt;lnlloow . . . - fnlm ~by-. poopto POIIInd
pt'IMI1t. Eadl-ln tf1l clphor

TodJJy's clue: J equaltl G

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Pol~lclan: a pei'80D with whou polltloa you don1 •
1111'": Hyou agtM wl1h him he Ia a l f a - . ' - David Uoycl George
:

'::~:~~~, S©~~lA-.££t.~s· :::: i
_ _....,._;;;_;;- lhllte4 tt, ClAY I. POUAH ....;::......;;:.._...;__
•
Roor10ngo litton of the
. 0 four ICICitnblod word• be_l,
•
j

low to fo1m lour tlmpl• -d1. ·

I

IMINGE

PI I I I

.'

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Nozzl e-l~ound-R1 pen-Vassa 1· SPENDS
I've found a rather simple way to help my son balance his checkbook. I told him he only had to earn rnore
than he SPENDS

MAY31l

'Your

-·
~··

.!'

._.1

'' r,, .
j THURSDAY, June I, 2000

'Birthday

someone you· dislike. The worse
1
Alliances can be strengthened case scenario is likely to happen,
~ irr the year ·ahead in ways that and it could reflect badly on you.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
: could increase benefits and advanUse
your smarts today, and don't
.
ta_ges for you. A friend could be
get
into situations where you
iihe instigator in bringing this
know going in that the odds are
'~ :aJ!out.
stacked against you. It's fooli sh
·~~:GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
~n' t be presumptuous and speak not to wait until you have a more
II¥, anyone today without first get- level playing field.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
:J~g their approval for what you
:·want to say on their behalf. You Unless the group is doing some·
: could catch it both ways. Know thing unethical, immoral or simply foolish , go along with the will
' w:~erc to look for romance and
~ y'ou'll find it. The Astro-Graph of the majority today instead of
(Matchmaker instantly reveals trying to coerce them .into doing
l which signs are romantically per- what you want to do. Be a joiner.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
'Teet for you; Mail $2.75 to Match·
•maker, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Don't take ~ything for. granted
hen making an
$olt 1758, Murray Hill Stailon, today, esp~ l
expensive pur ase. Make certain
lNew York, NY 10156.
it's properly vered with a guar~ CANCER (June 21-July 22)
tyou may find yourself under antee or warranty. •
SAGI'ITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
~orne severe pressures today if
!there are any duties or responsi~ · 21) Be careful today in all part~ilities you failed to take care of nership situations, because the
lin the past. Making additional relationship could become quite
!excuses will only make things complicated if either should take
an opposing stance.
:worse.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
: LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) If at all
:possible,llvoid getting involved in 19) Should you find yourself in
charge of a project !hat Involves
'an
...,., aotjvity today that includes

-·
..

UAI"Lif'ULII::I, OHIO 45831• CHESHIRE, OHIO

$2S· ' pe.~ .:: i:nch

Buy from the Classified&amp;!

wv . ,

·

for as: lo·W ' a.s. .

Shop st home...

,

GUIUNTEED
AIR CONDITIONING
SERVICE
(3041 812·2079 i

Adverl'ise yop·r ,-:.l;tusiness

.

e4

Sentinel

5/22 1 mopd.

. ·:''·'• -

TO ... TO GET TOGETHER

PEANUTS

.'

TREE SERVICE

• Pick up &amp; delivery Service
• Lawnmower &amp; weedeater repair &amp; supplies·
Owner- James A. Pickens
Shop Foreman· Shane Baker

,

~T~H~E~~ro~~E~~~A~T~IM~E-, ~W~H~E~N-~~~~~O~Y~~~N~D-~~ , ~==~~~O~~~~~yv,~,
"'EllERY &amp;OY"!o LIFE
C,iRL .. . ::AHEM!lr ... A
2 YOI.l'Rc
LET"!&gt;
Mt&gt;l A''t&gt;
A '"'o~•N,
H
TAKE A
WH EN H E .. WHEN
. IT...
"'
w r~
, !&gt;W~H·
WELL, LET ME rUT IT
r ME,O.N ... WHEN THE'C. S INC, .
~NAG&lt;.
ANOTHER WAY ...
THEY .. If THEY DECIDE ~
BRE..._K . ·

I

~/281 mo. pf;

1

740-8411·3608

s:·

•

fbr\·dtl",ii •'io,ri:th

Mike Sharp

111 Tlt'l'tl'l(:, TO TAI.IC.
,..0 YOU ~BOUT IS ...
:7c.HOI&lt;E~'LTHE '81RD!&gt;
• I'.Nt&gt; THE &amp;E.E

740-992-5212 ·,:\I

Senior Citizen
Discount

Hours M-F 9 am - 7 pm
Sat. 9 am • 1 pm

740-949-2804

·-'

IIATE ... ~·AHE!1~:: ... WHAT

I

33795 Hiland Rd;:
Pom~roy, Ohio '

I

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

I

___j

740-985-4141

• • ~

Local • 843-5284

:I BIG NATE
.

I

Residential- decks, kitchens,
bathrooms, custom
Commercial- metal studs
remodeling, handicap access drywall, suspended ceili~gs.
kitchens &amp; baths, wood &amp;
vinyl sidin

-1

Under Ntw 6w.n t[Jblp

I

k:»&gt;OE~

Long Bottom, Ohio

. ,:

... • • • .... • • ... • • • •

w.

BUILDING

::

Middleport, Ohio 45760

Medicare Supplements; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical• Nursing Home.
llf(.nriBillt
liii".-4TLR-•

MARCUM

•

~oc::.,

St\OCS .. .

XJ..t.tll\.

: ~====::....:=:::::.....

High &amp; Dry~!
Self-Storage!

lnstretl- Professional Strvlce

•'
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•'
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_....._,,, "NI-..t..K.It';S

SriOE.!l '?

. 1\E,roe,\(

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Now Renting:

4/19(QO 1 mo pd.

•:

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•

St\OPPit•l(,~

sri.OE:S,

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f&gt;.Jo.l'(

W~t-1\t-IG St\OE:~,
c.ro~'\"~1 ~'-~'

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, ,...00 '&lt;00 fl.f&gt;..'IE.

,0.110". . UH_~···-,

.

We Service All Makes
Washers- Dryers
Ranges- Refrigerators
Freezers- Dish Washers

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

ONE MONTH'S RENT FREE
Waters Edge of Syracuse

~ • .. • .. • •

LOOK\~ FOit. ~ CJ:.#of($..Tioa.~ ....,..~===-W-f\1'\-:\'.,..\'ll'E.--?-Irl-E.--,

(740) 592·5025 Athens

A

" .,. .. • .,. .. • .,. .,. .,. ... .,. .,. ... ,. .,. .,. .,. .. .,. ,. .,. .,.

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189

!THE BORN LOSER

William Safranek, Attorney ·

M

J&amp;L INSULATION &amp;
Karaoke I
CONSfiUCTION
Vinyl
Siding, Roofing,
Sing-Dance-Party
• : Now Taking Applications for 1 Bedroom
Replacement Windows,
:,
Apartment
ith Miss Mamie in
Seamless Gutters &amp;
,
•
Seniors,
Disabled,
Handicapped
Downspout, Garage room
Annie Oakley's
additions, Pole Building, • : Range, Refrige,rator, AJC. On-Site Laundry,
Karaoke
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
'
Community Room, 24 Hour Maintenance
Decks, Boat Docks,
• Weddings •
' •
Provided
Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Birthdays • Private
; : : ·Call or Come By Our Office Located at
Blown Insulation
Parties
992·2772
' ,
2070 State Route 124 in Syracuse
For All Your Home
Call740·367·7935
:•
. Office Hours
518/1 mo
lmorovement Needs
•'
Monday and Thursday 10 am · 3 pm
rM~O~N"':'UM"':'E"""N"':'t~'A--L-L-IF_E_I_NS_U_R_A_N_C_E_C_d_,. :
~;~~~: :;:~9

.~

'

Bulldo•er
S~rvices
•
House &amp; Trailer Sites

740-742-9501

.... ........................................ "'

Free Estimates
Pond estimates
welcome

•

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION

39 Se1181or
Kola-

Opening lead: • 2

BANKRUPTCY

Open For Grooming

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.

37 Actor Gulager

BY PHILLIP ALDER

Free Delivery

(740) 985-3948

.....

Offense to defense .

!5131/ 1 rno pd.

rate
.

•
•
•
•

JAWS II ·

parts

~4!00

Joseph Jacks
740-992-2068

MIKE YOUNG
740·992·1724
PAlYOUNG
740·949.0046

INCLUDIN'

My.ac ·
Poms

••

West

Pass

RtpiGOtiMftl

Albany, Ohio

4119100 1 mo. pd

So11th

R
RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
0
E FREE ESTIMATES••. FULLY INSURED N
T
Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio
R

E

homela""' • 14 Feel a liN
14 lkry In eclvence 55 1'VIIe of "'COI..,,,.bDiot •
15 Door 1*1*
sa F""mhw11 Dry, .. wine
-~~ ~._!·~ 57 Slnilno VOice
20 Royal horMa
· DOWN
23 Domain
1 Sea.- omondll
2e Unit ot Sir
21Niancl
currency
27 Half a dllnce? 3 Actor Baldwin
4 C.rdapot
30Concurred
5 Nahoor ahMp
32 Cuallml-lllled
I Roman 1,051 ·
7 Pulla
34 c:':l2nc~e
I CApital 01
35 AW..
Lolvlot
Fleming
t Work without- 12~
31Fuu

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

Aulo Body Parll
All replacement

cN

Anawerto P•c•1aYI Puzzle

45Hau1•l o.n.- HMe 41 Dotblar'a ~etten

K 1o 3
• Q9 7 6

740·742·8015 or
1·877·353·7022

BACKHOE SERVICES
MASONRY
BOBCAT SERVICES
.

1 ........

t

Quality Driveways, ·
patios, sidewalks
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

~ · CONCRETE

9"uliny 8C .7of!tt

992·1550

• A1

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC.

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS

211} E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts· All Makes

•KQ

992-5776

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE
C/J.II.SSUIFIIEDSI

•AK

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

, Rll Quality

:•
:

SHADE ltiVEit fiG SEtMCE

j

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

• A 9 3

• K 10 8 5
• J 8 5 4

South

~

Dozer

Call T &amp; R Logging
after 8:00pm

• New Homes

• 8 7 4 2
• 9 3 2
• 9 7 6 2

• 4 2

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

Vegetable Plants,
Beddin11 Plants,
HanGing Baskets,
Porch Boxes,
Combination Pots,
Potted Geraniums,
Phlox, Azaleas,
Rhododendrons,
Ulac Trees, Assorted
Shrubs
Open Daily 9·5 ·
Sun 12-S

Norlh
OS-31-00
• J 10 6 5
• QJ
t A Q
•JI0853
East

West

(740) 992-3470;

11&gt;1/0CI 1 .........

Spring Season

"Get in whUe you can, space is limited"

UPS, ROAD BUILDING·LANO CLEARING, HORIZONTAL

n~l/lfn

Syracuse
Now Open For

740-949-7039

ELECTRIC LINES, BASEMENT-FOOTERS, MOBILE HOME

Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM

Your

740·985·4194
1
1

46909 SR 124
Racine
Camping- Fishing - Boa11ng
• Nightly • Weekly • Monthly • Seasonal
Convenience Store/ Bait &amp; Tackle

Hauling •limestone • ,
Grovel• Sand • Topsoil ,;
Fill Dirt • Mul1h •
Bulldozer Servi1es
'

45n1
7 40.949-2217
Sizes 5' x 1o•
to 10' x 30'

40 s....,_.
42 Fable'e 1dn

411 -IIzzy
12 Jimmy c.rter•e 51 Til.- out

EXQIVfiTIHG

Road
Raclna, Ohio

ACROSS
u--

10 Sick

•

HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL
Hy..auhc Hose repairs,
cylinder repairs, oil
Salts· 5 gal. buckets
to SS gal. drums
2 Y, miles, out of

OLD LOCKZ4
CfiMPGJtOUttD
6129/mo.

Uc. II D0-50

T&amp;D .

QuaUty, Variety, Low Prleea • That'• Ual
Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flats $6.60
10" Hanging Baskets $6.60
Wide Assortment of Herbs
Annuals &amp; Perennials in 4" Pots for .94¢ each

I'

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better

7411 Ill-Gill

5117,00 1 0'4,

Sae'a GreenltouH

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
•4 Sales Representative
Larry Schey

AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
per glll)l
~oo.oo Coverall
$500.00 Sterbuist
Progressive top line.

~mentPIU1s

N11d It done, give us a o•ll
FREE ESTIMATES
Ore~t Prloes on New Homtt

HILL'S
~WICK'S C.
SELF STORAGE HfiOLIHG .and
29870 Baahan

Pomeroy Eaglea
Club Bingo On
Thursdays

PAirrS

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

PHILLIP
ALDER .

(;

others for whom you're responsible, spot check the assignments
you have delegated to them. An
error would be blamed on you.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2().Feb. 19)
Jealousy occurs when we believe
someone has something that rightfully should be ours, but it can
cause us to behave in unseemly
ways. Don't fall prey to this enemy today.
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20) If
you attempt to fore~ others into
complian'e today. although peo·
pte may go along with you, they
will resent any unreasonable
restrictions placed on them and
hold you accountable .
ARIES (Murch 21·April 19)
s~ prepared to buck up anything
you say today with substance und
fact: Your views and opinions
stand u good chunc~ of being
challenged by those who don 't
want to hear what you have to say.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Old obligations may catch up with ·
you today, and you could be
forced to face them. Take care of
whatever ii is that is staring you
in the face before you do anything
else.

•

••
•

•

'•

.•
I

·~~~;;~~~;;.;-~~-F~~~~p;,~~~~~;;~~-t~~~~~ .;
•

•

�.....

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 8 • The Dally Sentinel

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
Thlll'ldey'l glmM
t.AontriiOI (VIzquez 5·1) at CINCINNATI (Vii·
lone 6·1), 7:35p.m.
.
·St. LOUII (Benea 4·2) IIA~zont (Reynoto 3·
4), 10:05 p.m.

Amerlconi.Mgue

AI.-

lootom Dlvlolon

~..

• •• h

•••••••

~

1k W7
20 .583

Naw Yorlt.. .. .................. ...2B
Toronto .. •.....•.... ................ 27 26 .5011
Bottlmoro.hhh.hhhh•hhh ... 23 26 .469
Tampo Bly .. h···h•h·····h····16 34 .320
Centrll Dlvlllon
Chlcagoh·····hh .. hhh···hh .. 29 22
CLEVELAND ·· ···hh ... h.... 26 22
Kansaa City hh······h ···hh .. 25 25
Minnesota .hhh····hh ... .. h.. 24 28

.587
.5&lt;12
.500
.462

Oatrolt .............................. 18 30 .375

WHtern Oiviilon

11'1

3'·.

s',

9',

.•

....... .h... h.26 26 .500

1 ••

Ariahelm ............ ...... ... ...... 27 25
Tew:aa. ............... .... .......... .26 25

Oakland ..

1\
5
7
,.\

.5.19
.510

Soattlo ... h..... hh•······"····h·26 23 .53 1

•'

1m

1

Tund•y'• •corn

CLEVELAND 6, Anaheim 1
Boston 8, Kansas City 2
Baltimore 8, Tampa Bay 7

Detroit 7,

Te~eas

4

Minnesota 4, Toronto 1
.Oakland 7, .N.Y. Yankees 4
Chicago White 50)1( 2. Seattle 1
Tonight' I gomn
Chicago White Sox (Elejrect 5-2) at Seattle

(.Sole 5·2), 6:35p.m.
Texas (Oliver 1·3) at Detroit (Miicki 2·5), 7:05

p.m.

,

Anaheim (Ethenon 0-0) at CLEVELAND (Fin·
3-4), 7:05 p.m.
Minnesota (Radke 3·5) at Toronto (Wells 8·
2). 7:05p.m.
Oakland (Hereclla 6-3) at N.Y. Yankees (Cone
1·4), 7:05p.m.
Kansas City (Suzuki 1·0) at Boston
(Schourek 2·4). 7:05p.m.
Ballimore (Mussina 2-6) at Tampa Say (Lidte
0·1), 7:15p.m.

l~y

Thurad1y'1 gam. .
Minnesota (Milton 4-1) at Toronto (Castillo 14~ 12:35 p.m.
Kansas City (Fussell 2·2) at Boston (R. Martinez 4-3), 7:05p.m.
Baltimore (Ertckson 2-1) at Tampa Bay
(Rekar 1·2), 7:15p.m.

BATTING: E11tod. Anaheim, .376: E. Mar·
tlnez, Seante, .374; 1. Rodr1auez. Teus • .371 ; A.
Rodriguez, Seattle , .3-'1 ; "laWion, MIMHOta,
.340: Thoma•. Chicago, .339: Posldl, New
Yont, .335.
RUNS: A. Rodriguez. Saanle, 52; C. Deiga·
do , Toronto, 43; Glaul, Anlhelm, -'2: Mondesl,
Toronto, 42; Eratad, Anlhelm, 40; I. Rodriguez,
Teus, ~0; Damon, K1nsa1 City, 37; R. Atomar,
CLEVELAND, 37.
RBI: E. Martinez, Seattle, 57; J11on Gllmbi,
Oakland. 51; M. Ramlrtz, CLEVELAND, 47; M.
vaughn, Anaheim . 47 : A. Rodriguez, Seattle, 46:
M.J. Sweeney, Kan ... City. 45: C. Delgado.
Toronto, « ; C. Everen, Boston, 44.
HITS: E11tad Ananeim, 83: I. Rocsng0ez,
Texas, 72: M. Vaughn, .&amp;.nahelm, 67: Lawton,
Minnesota, 86; G. William•. Tampa Bay, 65; M.J.
Sweeney, Kansas City, s.t: Grieve, Oakland, 53;
C. Oelga(jo, Toronto, 63.
·
OOUBLES : Glaus, Anaheim, 11: Lawron,
Minnesota , 17: Grieve , Oaklanl:t , 16; I.
Rodrtguez. Tells. 16: DeShields , Baltimore, 16;
Oterud, Seattle, 18; Bslle, Baltimore, 16.
TRIPLES: c . Guzman, Minnesota. 7;
Durham, Chicago, 5; T. Hunter, Mlmeaota, 4;
J.A. Valentin, Chlcagp, 4: i are tied with 3.
HOME RUNS: M. Vaugnn. Anaheim. 18;
Jason Glamt», Dakland, 17; C. Delgado. Toronto, 17; Glaus, Anaheim, 16; I. Rodriguez, Te11as,
16: A. Rodriguez. Seattle, 15; .C. Everett,
Boston, 15; E. Martinez, Seattle , 15.
STOLEN BASES: Damon, Kansas City, 16;
DeShields, Ba!Umore , 16: Mondeal, Toronto, 15;
A. Alomar, CLEVELAND, 12; AKennedy, Anahelm, 11 : Febles. Kan51S City, 11: Mclemore,
Seallle, ,, _
PITCHING
decisions): Bektwin, Chicago.
8·1, .889, 3.09, Nelson, New York, 6· 1, .857,
1.57; Fassero, Beaton, 8·1 •. 857, 3.32; P. Mar·
tlnez, Boston, e_-2•.
1.05: D. Wells. Toronto:
8·2, .800, 3.62. Helling, Texas, 7-2, .778, 3.28,
Hudson. Oakland, 6·2, .750, 4.43.
STRIKEOUTS: P. Martinez. Booton, 104; C
Flnle~. CLEVELAND , 74; Clemens, 'New York,
70; Burt&gt;a, CLEVELAND, 65; Hudson, Oaklarid,
60: Noma, Detroit, 59; Musslna, Baltimore, 59.
SAVES: Percival, Anaheim, 15; T.B. Jones ,
Detroit, 14: weneland, Texas, 13; M. Rivera,
New York, 12; Kocl"', Toronto, .tO : D Lowe,
Boston, 10; lsrfr:lghlusen, Oakland, 10.

(?

aoo.

NL !Nderl

Natlonll L11gue

:rum
Atlanta.

BATTING: Helion, Colorado, .420: V. Guer·
rero, Montreal, .380: Plaua, New York, .379;
Vidro, Montreal, .370; Edmonds, St. Louis, .366;
Kendall, Pittsburgh, .354; Alfonzo. New . Vorl&lt;,

Eltt«n Dtvltlon

W L M

......................... 35
New vonc. ........................ 29
Montreat...... ,.................... 25
Ftonda .............................. 24
Philadelphia
..... 18

t6
23
23
29
32 .

.686
.558

.Sl!1
.453
.3fl0

Central Dlvlalon
St. louis .
. .......... 30 21
CINCINNATI .................... 28 22
PiUsburgh .............. .. ......... 22 28
Milwaukea ...... .................. 22 30
Cn~ago ............................ 20 33
Houston ................ :.......... 19 32

.588
.560
.440
.423
.377
.373

Waatarn Dlvltlon
Mzona ........................... 32 19
l..os Angeles ..................... 27 22
COlorado ..........................27 22
San FranciSC0 .................. 2-' 25
san Diego ........................ 23 28

.627
.551
.551
.490
.451

6 •.

"

6~

12
18\l

1.
7'1.
8 ~1

11
11

4
4

7
9

TuUdly'l ICOrel

PIU.t&gt;urgl\ 3, Florida 2 (10)
CINCINNATI4, MO!Itreal2
, Atlanta 5. Chicago Cubs 2
Colorado 10, Houston 7
St. Louis 6, Arizona 1
San Francisco 7, Philadelphia 3
San Diego 6, Milwaukee 3
N.Y. Mets 10, ~os Angeles 5
Today'a g1m11
Atlanta (Giavlne 7-1) at Chicago Cubs
(Tapanl 2-6), 2:20p.m. .
·
Florida (Sanchez 4·3) at Pittsburgh (CordOva
2-4). 7:05 'p.rti.
Montreal (M. Johnson 0·0) at CINCINNATI
(ParriS 2·6), 7:35'p.m
Houston (Lima 1·7) at Colorado (Voshll1-6),
9:05p.m.
.
St. Louis (Hentgen 4-4} at Arizona (Johl'l$0f1
8·1), 10:05 p.m.
·
N.Y. Mats (Hampton 6-4) at Los Angeles
(Brown 4·1), 10:05 p.m.
Milwaukee (Snyder 0.1) at San Diego (lopez
O·H. ,0:05p.m.
Philadelphia (Byrp .1-4) at San Francisco
(Gardner3·2), 10:15 p.m.

.351.

RUNS: Helton, Colorado, 52; Edmonds, St.
Louie, 51; Bagwell, Houston, 47; Bonds, San
Francisco, 46: Green, Los Angeles, 45; Kent,
San Francisco, 43; Kendall , Plt1Btlurgh, 42:
Altonzo, New York, 42; S. Finley, Arizona, 42
RBI: Helton, Colorado, 51 ; S. Flnily, Artzona,
51: Giles. Pittsburgh, SO: S. Sosa, Chicago, SO;
McGwira, St LOu fa , 47; Hidalgo, Houston, 46:
Karros, .Los Angeles, .t8.
.
HITS: Hollon, Colorado. 71; Vldro, Monlreat,
71; v. Guerrero, Montreal, &amp;8; Owens. San
Dir:, 67; E.O. Young, Chicago, 67; Giles, PIUs·
bu , 86; Alfonzo, New York, 66; DeBell, New
Yo , 66.
DOUBLES: E.O. Young, ChiCago, 20; Green,
Loa Angeles, 19; A.B. WhUe, Momreal, 18:
Vldro, Moncraal, 17;-Aifonzo, New YOfk, 17; Clr·
llo, ColoradO, 1e: Zelle, New York, HI.
TRIPLES: Goodwin, COlorado, 7; Reese,
CINCINNATI, 4: Cedeno, Houston, 4; Womack,
Arizona, 4;, Vlna, St. Louis, 4: Biggio, Houtlon,
4; B are tl&amp;d with 3.
HOME RUNS: McGwire, St LbuiS, 20;
Bonds. San Fronclsco. 19: S. Finley, Arizona,
18; Helton, Colorado, 17; Hidalgo, Houston. 16:
Edmonda, StLouis, 1e; s. so ... Chicago, 16.
STOLEN BASES: L. CastHio, FIOriOI, 22:
Goodwin, Coorado, 18: Cedeno, Houlton, 17;
E.O. Young, Chicago, 17;' A-e. CINCINN ...Tl,
15; Qwana, San Diego, 15; Q . VIlli, Ananta,
14
•
.PITCHING (7 do~slons) : Stephenson, St.
.LouiS, 6.0, 1.000, 3.76: Graves, CINCINNATI, 7·
o, 1.000, ~hOO; R.O. Johnson, Ariton a, 8· 1, .889,
1.33: Giovlno, Adlnta, 7·1, .875, 3.10; G. Mad·
dux, o\llanta, 7·1, .875. 2.16: \llilono, CINCIN·
NATI, 8·1. , 657, 3.72; Astaclo, Colorado. 8·2.
.750, 5.35.
.
S~IKEOUTS: A.D. Johnoon, Arlzone, 121;
Aetaclo, Colorodo, 77; Cempstor, Florida, 73;
Ueber, Chicago. 70; BenBOn, Plt1aburgh, 69: G.
MaddUI~: , Atlanta. 69; Person, Philadelphia, 8Ei.
SAVES: Ailonseca, Florida, 15; Blnltez, New
Vorl&lt;. 13: HoHman, San Diogo, 12: Shaw, LOs
Angeles, 11: Rocker, Atlanta, 10: J.. Jimenez.
ColOradO, 9: Veres,·sr.Louis, 9; Aguilera, Chicago, 9.

Northern Dlvlolon

111m

W L l'lol.

Piedmont (Phituee) ... ........ :M
Hickory (Piratoa) ...... ........31
Delmarva (Orloieo) ..........27
GreentDom (Yankees~.....27
Cape Fear(Expoo) ........... 26
Hageratown IBiuaJaya) ...25
Cha~eston, WV(Royalo) .. 15

Knight
from Pap 11
most o(the time now."
: Asked if he needed professional
h•elp to co ntrol his temper, Knight
responded emphatically: "NQ, I
don't."
·, "I've understood for a long time
.,- maybe way back when I W3S
f&gt;l;~ying in high school that
temper i~ a problem for me ,"
Knight sa id. " I think that in many,
lt)an y (. l s~.·s l'vt&gt; conqu t:rt."d it , and
in som\":'" \.",lSt:s I hJvt: n·~ -"
Km ght was asked wh.t t h~
th ought his lega cy Jt lnJi.111.1
would b~.·.

1e
22
25
25
25
26
36

.654
.585
.519
.519
.510

490
.294

,.

Slturday'a gim1
New Jersey at Dallas, 8 p.m.

a
3~

7
7

7&gt;

a',

TRAN~·-- '

I

18'~

Baseball
Amerlc•n League
ANAHEIM ANGELS: Signed INF Kevin
Souther~;~ Dlvl1lon
Stocker.
Ashevma (Rocklas) .......... 29 22 .569
CLEVELAND INDIANS: Assigned RHP
Columbus (lndlant) ......... 29 25 .537
1••
Jared Camp and OF Dave Rj)berts to Buf1110 of
Augusta (Red5ox) ........... 27 26 .509
3
4',
the lntematlonal League. Recaled 38 Ru11ell
Chi rillton, SC(DIIa)'l) ... 25 V &lt;81
Branyan from Buttalo. Activated OF Jalbert
MIICOfl (Bravtl) ............... 25 26 .472
5
5',
Cabrera from the inactive list.
Savannth (Range") ....... 24 28 .462
DETROIT TIGERS: Placed INF Grogg Jel·
CBpl1al Ciry(Meta) ............ 20 31 .392
9
leries on the 15-day disab!.ed list. Recalled C
Ja"llier Caraona rrom Toledo of the International
Tuetday'l .cores
League.
Delmarva 6, Charleston, WV 5
NEW YORK YANKEES: Actllllfted OF FaUx
Hagerstown 4, Cape Fear 1
Jose from the 15-day disabled list. OesJgnatttd
Greensboro 1~ , Charleston, SC 5
OF Lance Johnson lor assignment.
Piedmont 6 , HICkory 2
SEATTLE MARINERS ; Placed RHP Gil
Capltal City 7, Augusta 2
Meche on the 15-day disableJ:tlist , retroactive to
Ashev!Me 4. Cotumbus 3
May 29. Recalled RHP Kevin HOdges from
Macon 7, Savannah 3
Ta coma of the Pacllic Coast League.
TEXAS RANGERS: Voided lhe option of
Tonl~'l g1mt1
RHP Danny Kolb to OklahOma ol the PCL and
Charleston, WV at Delmarva
placed him on tl"'e 15·day disabled list, retroacCape Fear at Hagerstown
tive to May 27 .
Gre8nSboro at Char1eston. SC
National League
Piedmont at Hickory
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS: Placed RHP
Augusta at Capital City
Todd Slottlemyre on the 15-da.y disabled list.
Columbus at Asheville
Re called AHP Vicente Padilla from Tucson of
Savannah at Macon
the .PCL
ATLANTA BRAVES: Purchased the contract
Thursday's games
of RHP Don Wangen trom Richmond of the
Charleston. WV at Delmarva
International l eague.
Cape Fear at Hagerstown
CHICAGO CUBS : Recalled RHP Ruban
GreensbOro at Cflarteston. SC
QuevedO from Iowa of the PCL.
Hickory at Piedmont
CINCINNATI REDS: Agreed to terms with
Augusta al Capital C~y
· SS Juan Castro on a two-year contract exten·
Columbus at Asheville
stan.
Savannah at Macon
NEW YORK METS: Placed SS Roy
Ordonez on the 15-day disabled list. Recalled
INF Melvin Mora trom Norfolk olrhe International League.
SAN DIEGO PADRES: Placed LHP Sle~lng
Hitchcock on the 15-da y disabled list. Oeslgnat·
ed LHP Matt Whisenant for assignment. PurNBA conf•renc• fln1i1
chased the contract of AHP Adam Eaton from
Mobile of the Southem League. Recalled RHP
Tuesday's score
Portland 96 , L.A. Lakers 88; L.A. Lakers lead Rodrigo Lopez from Las Vegas ot the PCL.
Reassigned Ben Oglivie, hlning coach, to Peoria
series 3·2
ot the Artzona League. Named Duane Espy hit·
ling coaCh.
Tonight'• game
Basketbtll
New York at Indiana, 9 p.m.
Natlon•l Batketba/1 Alloc:latlon
NBA: Fined Portland Trail BlazerJ F Scottie
Friday'a gam11
Pippen $10,000 for 1"\lning Los Angeles Laker~ C
Indiana at New York, 7 p.m.
John Sa!ley In the back of the head with a toreL.A. lakers at Portland, 9:30p.m.
arm ln Sunday's Game 4 of the Western Confer·
ence finals.
WNBA otandlngo
ORLANDO MAGIC: Named Paul Preasa~
assistant coach.
·
f5l;
women'• National S~tkatbaH AIIOCI1Uan
.000
!T!Wono ..... ..................
CHARLOTTE STING: Named Chuck Brown
Cleveland ...........................O 0 .000
commentator tor radiO and televlsk)n broadDet.,;1 ................................0 .o .000
casts.
lndlont ........ ..................0 o .000
LOS ANGEcES SPARKS: Waived C Cary
Miami ................................. 0 o .000
Funlcello.
Ortarido ............................. o o .000
Footbtll
Washington ........................ 0 o .000
'•
National FootbiU League
Now Yolk ..........................0 1 .000
DALLAS COWBOYS: Relaased RB Dan
Murphy.
WHtlm Conf1ranca
MIAMI DOLPHINS: Re-signed RB Autry
Houston ............................. 1 o 1.000
Los Angeles ..... ..... ...... ....... o o .000
'•• Denson and WR Robert Baker to one-year con·
'•
tracts.
Mlnnesata .. ........................ 0 0 .000
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS: Waived C8
~
Phoenlx .............................. o o .ooo
.
,
J'Juan Cherry.
· Portlarid ............................. 0 0 .000
PITTSBURGH STEELERS: Released S
~
Sacramento ....................... 0 0 .000·
'\
Travis Davis. Signed S Brent Alexander.
Seanie ................................ 0 o .000
.,,
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS: Signed OL ·
Utah ..... ..............................o · o .ooo·
Raleigh Roundtree to a one--;ear conti'IICt.
WASHINGTON REDSKIN$: SIQnad CB
Tonlght'o gamn
Darrell Green to a five-year contract. Waived T
Ortando at Wftshlng'lon, 7 p.m.
Kareem Ellis.
Cleveland at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
SoCcer
New Vor1&lt;at Phoanlx, 10 p.m.
Major Lllgul SOCCit'
Seanla at Sacramento, 10 p.m.
KANSAS C TV WIZARDS: Signed Q Tony
t:touston1t POntand, 10 p.m.
Meola
Utah at Loe Angelos, 10:30 p.m.
NEW ENGLAND REVOLUTION: Acquired D
Mauricio Wright from the san Jose Earthquekes
· ThuradaY•
tor 0 Mike Burns , 0 Dan Callchman and a 2001
Charlotte' at OrtandO, 7:30p.m.
first-round draft piCk.
Indiana at Miami, 8 p.m.
Minnesota at Utah, 9 p.m.
Colt ego
Houston at Seanla, 10 p.m.
LONG BEACH STATE: Promoted Alan
Knipe from men's associate volleyball coach to
head coach .
NW NAZARENE: Named Keill Kronbargor
women's basketball coach.
PRINCETON: Named Len Ouesnelle hockey coach.
·
NHL Stanley Cup tlnole
SACRAMENTO STATE: Named Carolyn
Jenkins women's basketball coach.
TullldiY'I ICOrl
TUSKEGEE: Named Oliver Jones men's
New Jersey 7, Callas 3; New Jersey !eMs
basketball coacl"'.
series 1·0

~

a problem. It'&gt; JUSt one of those
things. It hum pretty bad. It's good
that it happened n&lt;l\y, not later."
That's how the Indians are dealing with a "remarkable run of
injuries that has forced them co
make 21 roster moves since Mav .
18. Cleveland currently has seve;,
players - six pitchers - on the
disabled list.
"I've never seen anything like
it," said Manuel, who himself
missed two weeks to. have colon
surgery. "We had three guys go
down with the same injury running down to first base."
Ramirez had an MRI on Tues-·
day that revealed a strain. Manuel
&lt;aid he wanted to talk with his
cQaches before deciding whether
to put Ramirez on the DL. He's
also not sure if he wants to bring
up a position player or another
pitcher.
Manuel could only make light
of Cleveland's injury crisis.
"MRI;' he said. "Might be a
good stock. We should check on
it."

Kroger

Kroger
Ketchf.!p
28oz.

k

Kroger
Pork&amp; Beans
15 oz.

Potato
Chips
13.25 oz.

Red, Ripe (20-22 Lb. Avg.)

Whole
elons

,.m..

Ramirez hurts hamstring, may go on
CLEVELAND (AI') - Manny
Ramirez cou ld b~.:ome the
Cleveland Indians' newest c;1sualty.
Ramirez was expected to be
plae&lt;d on the 15-day disabled list
today by · the Indians, who can't
secn1 co go more than 24 hours
without h3ving to either send a
player to the hos!&gt;ital for tests or
bring in a replacement from
Triple-A Buffalo.
Baseball's RBI leader last season
with 165, Ramirez strained his left
hamstring while running to first
base during Monday's game
against the Anaheim Angels.
Indians
manager
Charlie
Manuel said Ramirez will be out
f9r at least 7-10 days, and is leaning toward adding the All-Star
right fielder to the Indians'
lengthy disabled list.
· ·Ramirez pulled up while trying
to beat out a grounder to second
in the eighth inning of Monday's
g:&gt;me.
"I heard it pop," Ramirez said in
a rare interview. "It was tight all
last week, but I didn't think it was

Thuraday'i game
Dallas al New Jersey, B p.m.

SOUIII.Atlantlc Lotguo

lS~day disabled

leading the kagu~ in tr:msactions is not whai the Indians had
in ntind thls season .
"We'll be all right ," said
Ratnirez, who has never been on
the DL in his seve n-year car~cr.
"I've been lucky I guess."
The Indians can't seem to get
through a day ·without making
some kind of move, and Tuesday
they made a few more.
Third baseman Russell Branyan

8-10 Lb. Avg.

Assorted
Chops

list

was rc&lt;"alled from Triple-A Buffalo where he was batting .253 with
](, HRs and 46 RBis in ·H games.
Utlilityma n Jolbert Cabrera was
;1lso accivaud frOn1 the ina ctive
list. He had returned to his home
in Colombia after the death of his '
f~1thcr.

To make room for Branyan and·
Cabrera, right-hander Jared Ca mp
and ou tfiel der Dave Roberts were
optioned to Buffalo.

Assorted Varieties

Doritos
oz.
14.5

Pound

., .

Volunteers honor football
coaching legend with stadium
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Bob Neyland was a thrce.time
coach of the University· of Tennessee footba ll team: 1926- 19.34,
1936-1940 and 1946-1952.
·
In his 21 seasons at Tennessee, Neyland, who guided tile Volunteers to the national championship in 1951, put together a record
of 173-31-12. ·
U1) football stadium is named for Neyland, an Army general
who won the Distinguished Service Cross as a supply, officer in
World War II.

"My legocy has never been any
He said the scrutiny that will
big deal," Knight said. "My legacy come with Brand's rigid policy for
is what comes back to me when I behavior won't make him a differlook in the mirror. I've made mis· ent person,"but there ca n be a diftakcs, I've screwed up .... I know ferent approach . I rhink my wife
what I've given to this gome."
(Karen) is as good at ang&lt;;r man He also said that resigning "was agement as anyone I cou ld i magnever for me mu~h of a valid inc. She's gnt lnagn.cts lnmg up all
optio.n."
over tl1&lt;· house th.tt say, 'The ho"c
Earlier on Tuesday, Knight ·is dead. Get off."' he said.
answered about 40 questions in a
Univcrsit)'
vice
presid ent
70-minutc session with the group Chrisrnpher Simpson said Knight
of reporters and said he can abide selected the reporters fmTm·sday's
by the sa nctions.
sc&lt;Ston.
" I think I canliw within any set
"Coach Knight \\'&lt;llltccl. to h,l\·c·
&lt;lf par.lmCtt•rs. :ts long H my a ~p of reporter! both 1m:ally
mouth ts not taped shut. I th1nk ·'"•.V"annnallY that h,· felt h.1J
vou do lun.· ro b1.· .tblc h) ~pt.:.lk.'' b\.·~.· n rdati\·dy f3 ir . and obj~.·cri\'l'
km~ht ~.tid ..tLrorJmg w on1.· uf 111 thl.'ir ~.· on:r;\g~.-- Simpson 1\,tid.
rh ...- n· pon~.·r ~. Hub~.· rt Mizell of "Thm.~.· .1r~ the one"i lw itl\'itl'd ro
T\1&lt;· ~~ l',·tcr,burg (Fl.t. ) Tunc,. . b,· with tt &lt; tod.ll'."

Assorted Varieties

Kroger
Orange Juice
1/2 Gallon

Simpson said Knight was not
ordered by Brand or anyone else
10 meet with the media.
"The president had asked him
in hi s dealings with the media in
the future to handle thein with
deco rum and oviliry,'' Sin1pson
s.1id. " Based 011 what I just heard
... I think he's off to a wonderful
&gt;tart: We can be 110thing but opti, mi stic."

·

The r.:porccrs who int~rvic:wcd
Knight \\'ere Mizell; l ynn Houser
;m d Mikl· L~:m:.ard of the Hlomn- ·
in~ton H e r.1ld-T.imes: D;tw Kindred of The Sportin~ News;
Willi&lt;llll ( ;ildc.1 of The Washingttul Po.;r: Ur..,ul.1 ltt·d of the New
York Post: .md ll1llY ReeJ of the
Lexi ngwn (Ky.) H,·r.1 ld - l.c.1Llcr. .
\'

r

I

! '

'II

Caffeine Free Diet Coke, Sprite,

Diet Coke or
Cola Classic
6 Pack, 1/2 Liter Bottles
or 12-pack 12 oz. Cans

�.....

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 8 • The Dally Sentinel

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
Thlll'ldey'l glmM
t.AontriiOI (VIzquez 5·1) at CINCINNATI (Vii·
lone 6·1), 7:35p.m.
.
·St. LOUII (Benea 4·2) IIA~zont (Reynoto 3·
4), 10:05 p.m.

Amerlconi.Mgue

AI.-

lootom Dlvlolon

~..

• •• h

•••••••

~

1k W7
20 .583

Naw Yorlt.. .. .................. ...2B
Toronto .. •.....•.... ................ 27 26 .5011
Bottlmoro.hhh.hhhh•hhh ... 23 26 .469
Tampo Bly .. h···h•h·····h····16 34 .320
Centrll Dlvlllon
Chlcagoh·····hh .. hhh···hh .. 29 22
CLEVELAND ·· ···hh ... h.... 26 22
Kansaa City hh······h ···hh .. 25 25
Minnesota .hhh····hh ... .. h.. 24 28

.587
.5&lt;12
.500
.462

Oatrolt .............................. 18 30 .375

WHtern Oiviilon

11'1

3'·.

s',

9',

.•

....... .h... h.26 26 .500

1 ••

Ariahelm ............ ...... ... ...... 27 25
Tew:aa. ............... .... .......... .26 25

Oakland ..

1\
5
7
,.\

.5.19
.510

Soattlo ... h..... hh•······"····h·26 23 .53 1

•'

1m

1

Tund•y'• •corn

CLEVELAND 6, Anaheim 1
Boston 8, Kansas City 2
Baltimore 8, Tampa Bay 7

Detroit 7,

Te~eas

4

Minnesota 4, Toronto 1
.Oakland 7, .N.Y. Yankees 4
Chicago White 50)1( 2. Seattle 1
Tonight' I gomn
Chicago White Sox (Elejrect 5-2) at Seattle

(.Sole 5·2), 6:35p.m.
Texas (Oliver 1·3) at Detroit (Miicki 2·5), 7:05

p.m.

,

Anaheim (Ethenon 0-0) at CLEVELAND (Fin·
3-4), 7:05 p.m.
Minnesota (Radke 3·5) at Toronto (Wells 8·
2). 7:05p.m.
Oakland (Hereclla 6-3) at N.Y. Yankees (Cone
1·4), 7:05p.m.
Kansas City (Suzuki 1·0) at Boston
(Schourek 2·4). 7:05p.m.
Ballimore (Mussina 2-6) at Tampa Say (Lidte
0·1), 7:15p.m.

l~y

Thurad1y'1 gam. .
Minnesota (Milton 4-1) at Toronto (Castillo 14~ 12:35 p.m.
Kansas City (Fussell 2·2) at Boston (R. Martinez 4-3), 7:05p.m.
Baltimore (Ertckson 2-1) at Tampa Bay
(Rekar 1·2), 7:15p.m.

BATTING: E11tod. Anaheim, .376: E. Mar·
tlnez, Seante, .374; 1. Rodr1auez. Teus • .371 ; A.
Rodriguez, Seattle , .3-'1 ; "laWion, MIMHOta,
.340: Thoma•. Chicago, .339: Posldl, New
Yont, .335.
RUNS: A. Rodriguez. Saanle, 52; C. Deiga·
do , Toronto, 43; Glaul, Anlhelm, -'2: Mondesl,
Toronto, 42; Eratad, Anlhelm, 40; I. Rodriguez,
Teus, ~0; Damon, K1nsa1 City, 37; R. Atomar,
CLEVELAND, 37.
RBI: E. Martinez, Seattle, 57; J11on Gllmbi,
Oakland. 51; M. Ramlrtz, CLEVELAND, 47; M.
vaughn, Anaheim . 47 : A. Rodriguez, Seattle, 46:
M.J. Sweeney, Kan ... City. 45: C. Delgado.
Toronto, « ; C. Everen, Boston, 44.
HITS: E11tad Ananeim, 83: I. Rocsng0ez,
Texas, 72: M. Vaughn, .&amp;.nahelm, 67: Lawton,
Minnesota, 86; G. William•. Tampa Bay, 65; M.J.
Sweeney, Kansas City, s.t: Grieve, Oakland, 53;
C. Oelga(jo, Toronto, 63.
·
OOUBLES : Glaus, Anaheim, 11: Lawron,
Minnesota , 17: Grieve , Oaklanl:t , 16; I.
Rodrtguez. Tells. 16: DeShields , Baltimore, 16;
Oterud, Seattle, 18; Bslle, Baltimore, 16.
TRIPLES: c . Guzman, Minnesota. 7;
Durham, Chicago, 5; T. Hunter, Mlmeaota, 4;
J.A. Valentin, Chlcagp, 4: i are tied with 3.
HOME RUNS: M. Vaugnn. Anaheim. 18;
Jason Glamt», Dakland, 17; C. Delgado. Toronto, 17; Glaus, Anaheim, 16; I. Rodriguez, Te11as,
16: A. Rodriguez. Seattle, 15; .C. Everett,
Boston, 15; E. Martinez, Seattle , 15.
STOLEN BASES: Damon, Kansas City, 16;
DeShields, Ba!Umore , 16: Mondeal, Toronto, 15;
A. Alomar, CLEVELAND, 12; AKennedy, Anahelm, 11 : Febles. Kan51S City, 11: Mclemore,
Seallle, ,, _
PITCHING
decisions): Bektwin, Chicago.
8·1, .889, 3.09, Nelson, New York, 6· 1, .857,
1.57; Fassero, Beaton, 8·1 •. 857, 3.32; P. Mar·
tlnez, Boston, e_-2•.
1.05: D. Wells. Toronto:
8·2, .800, 3.62. Helling, Texas, 7-2, .778, 3.28,
Hudson. Oakland, 6·2, .750, 4.43.
STRIKEOUTS: P. Martinez. Booton, 104; C
Flnle~. CLEVELAND , 74; Clemens, 'New York,
70; Burt&gt;a, CLEVELAND, 65; Hudson, Oaklarid,
60: Noma, Detroit, 59; Musslna, Baltimore, 59.
SAVES: Percival, Anaheim, 15; T.B. Jones ,
Detroit, 14: weneland, Texas, 13; M. Rivera,
New York, 12; Kocl"', Toronto, .tO : D Lowe,
Boston, 10; lsrfr:lghlusen, Oakland, 10.

(?

aoo.

NL !Nderl

Natlonll L11gue

:rum
Atlanta.

BATTING: Helion, Colorado, .420: V. Guer·
rero, Montreal, .380: Plaua, New York, .379;
Vidro, Montreal, .370; Edmonds, St. Louis, .366;
Kendall, Pittsburgh, .354; Alfonzo. New . Vorl&lt;,

Eltt«n Dtvltlon

W L M

......................... 35
New vonc. ........................ 29
Montreat...... ,.................... 25
Ftonda .............................. 24
Philadelphia
..... 18

t6
23
23
29
32 .

.686
.558

.Sl!1
.453
.3fl0

Central Dlvlalon
St. louis .
. .......... 30 21
CINCINNATI .................... 28 22
PiUsburgh .............. .. ......... 22 28
Milwaukea ...... .................. 22 30
Cn~ago ............................ 20 33
Houston ................ :.......... 19 32

.588
.560
.440
.423
.377
.373

Waatarn Dlvltlon
Mzona ........................... 32 19
l..os Angeles ..................... 27 22
COlorado ..........................27 22
San FranciSC0 .................. 2-' 25
san Diego ........................ 23 28

.627
.551
.551
.490
.451

6 •.

"

6~

12
18\l

1.
7'1.
8 ~1

11
11

4
4

7
9

TuUdly'l ICOrel

PIU.t&gt;urgl\ 3, Florida 2 (10)
CINCINNATI4, MO!Itreal2
, Atlanta 5. Chicago Cubs 2
Colorado 10, Houston 7
St. Louis 6, Arizona 1
San Francisco 7, Philadelphia 3
San Diego 6, Milwaukee 3
N.Y. Mets 10, ~os Angeles 5
Today'a g1m11
Atlanta (Giavlne 7-1) at Chicago Cubs
(Tapanl 2-6), 2:20p.m. .
·
Florida (Sanchez 4·3) at Pittsburgh (CordOva
2-4). 7:05 'p.rti.
Montreal (M. Johnson 0·0) at CINCINNATI
(ParriS 2·6), 7:35'p.m
Houston (Lima 1·7) at Colorado (Voshll1-6),
9:05p.m.
.
St. Louis (Hentgen 4-4} at Arizona (Johl'l$0f1
8·1), 10:05 p.m.
·
N.Y. Mats (Hampton 6-4) at Los Angeles
(Brown 4·1), 10:05 p.m.
Milwaukee (Snyder 0.1) at San Diego (lopez
O·H. ,0:05p.m.
Philadelphia (Byrp .1-4) at San Francisco
(Gardner3·2), 10:15 p.m.

.351.

RUNS: Helton, Colorado, 52; Edmonds, St.
Louie, 51; Bagwell, Houston, 47; Bonds, San
Francisco, 46: Green, Los Angeles, 45; Kent,
San Francisco, 43; Kendall , Plt1Btlurgh, 42:
Altonzo, New York, 42; S. Finley, Arizona, 42
RBI: Helton, Colorado, 51 ; S. Flnily, Artzona,
51: Giles. Pittsburgh, SO: S. Sosa, Chicago, SO;
McGwira, St LOu fa , 47; Hidalgo, Houston, 46:
Karros, .Los Angeles, .t8.
.
HITS: Hollon, Colorado. 71; Vldro, Monlreat,
71; v. Guerrero, Montreal, &amp;8; Owens. San
Dir:, 67; E.O. Young, Chicago, 67; Giles, PIUs·
bu , 86; Alfonzo, New York, 66; DeBell, New
Yo , 66.
DOUBLES: E.O. Young, ChiCago, 20; Green,
Loa Angeles, 19; A.B. WhUe, Momreal, 18:
Vldro, Moncraal, 17;-Aifonzo, New YOfk, 17; Clr·
llo, ColoradO, 1e: Zelle, New York, HI.
TRIPLES: Goodwin, COlorado, 7; Reese,
CINCINNATI, 4: Cedeno, Houston, 4; Womack,
Arizona, 4;, Vlna, St. Louis, 4: Biggio, Houtlon,
4; B are tl&amp;d with 3.
HOME RUNS: McGwire, St LbuiS, 20;
Bonds. San Fronclsco. 19: S. Finley, Arizona,
18; Helton, Colorado, 17; Hidalgo, Houston. 16:
Edmonda, StLouis, 1e; s. so ... Chicago, 16.
STOLEN BASES: L. CastHio, FIOriOI, 22:
Goodwin, Coorado, 18: Cedeno, Houlton, 17;
E.O. Young, Chicago, 17;' A-e. CINCINN ...Tl,
15; Qwana, San Diego, 15; Q . VIlli, Ananta,
14
•
.PITCHING (7 do~slons) : Stephenson, St.
.LouiS, 6.0, 1.000, 3.76: Graves, CINCINNATI, 7·
o, 1.000, ~hOO; R.O. Johnson, Ariton a, 8· 1, .889,
1.33: Giovlno, Adlnta, 7·1, .875, 3.10; G. Mad·
dux, o\llanta, 7·1, .875. 2.16: \llilono, CINCIN·
NATI, 8·1. , 657, 3.72; Astaclo, Colorado. 8·2.
.750, 5.35.
.
S~IKEOUTS: A.D. Johnoon, Arlzone, 121;
Aetaclo, Colorodo, 77; Cempstor, Florida, 73;
Ueber, Chicago. 70; BenBOn, Plt1aburgh, 69: G.
MaddUI~: , Atlanta. 69; Person, Philadelphia, 8Ei.
SAVES: Ailonseca, Florida, 15; Blnltez, New
Vorl&lt;. 13: HoHman, San Diogo, 12: Shaw, LOs
Angeles, 11: Rocker, Atlanta, 10: J.. Jimenez.
ColOradO, 9: Veres,·sr.Louis, 9; Aguilera, Chicago, 9.

Northern Dlvlolon

111m

W L l'lol.

Piedmont (Phituee) ... ........ :M
Hickory (Piratoa) ...... ........31
Delmarva (Orloieo) ..........27
GreentDom (Yankees~.....27
Cape Fear(Expoo) ........... 26
Hageratown IBiuaJaya) ...25
Cha~eston, WV(Royalo) .. 15

Knight
from Pap 11
most o(the time now."
: Asked if he needed professional
h•elp to co ntrol his temper, Knight
responded emphatically: "NQ, I
don't."
·, "I've understood for a long time
.,- maybe way back when I W3S
f&gt;l;~ying in high school that
temper i~ a problem for me ,"
Knight sa id. " I think that in many,
lt)an y (. l s~.·s l'vt&gt; conqu t:rt."d it , and
in som\":'" \.",lSt:s I hJvt: n·~ -"
Km ght was asked wh.t t h~
th ought his lega cy Jt lnJi.111.1
would b~.·.

1e
22
25
25
25
26
36

.654
.585
.519
.519
.510

490
.294

,.

Slturday'a gim1
New Jersey at Dallas, 8 p.m.

a
3~

7
7

7&gt;

a',

TRAN~·-- '

I

18'~

Baseball
Amerlc•n League
ANAHEIM ANGELS: Signed INF Kevin
Souther~;~ Dlvl1lon
Stocker.
Ashevma (Rocklas) .......... 29 22 .569
CLEVELAND INDIANS: Assigned RHP
Columbus (lndlant) ......... 29 25 .537
1••
Jared Camp and OF Dave Rj)berts to Buf1110 of
Augusta (Red5ox) ........... 27 26 .509
3
4',
the lntematlonal League. Recaled 38 Ru11ell
Chi rillton, SC(DIIa)'l) ... 25 V &lt;81
Branyan from Buttalo. Activated OF Jalbert
MIICOfl (Bravtl) ............... 25 26 .472
5
5',
Cabrera from the inactive list.
Savannth (Range") ....... 24 28 .462
DETROIT TIGERS: Placed INF Grogg Jel·
CBpl1al Ciry(Meta) ............ 20 31 .392
9
leries on the 15-day disab!.ed list. Recalled C
Ja"llier Caraona rrom Toledo of the International
Tuetday'l .cores
League.
Delmarva 6, Charleston, WV 5
NEW YORK YANKEES: Actllllfted OF FaUx
Hagerstown 4, Cape Fear 1
Jose from the 15-day disabled list. OesJgnatttd
Greensboro 1~ , Charleston, SC 5
OF Lance Johnson lor assignment.
Piedmont 6 , HICkory 2
SEATTLE MARINERS ; Placed RHP Gil
Capltal City 7, Augusta 2
Meche on the 15-day disableJ:tlist , retroactive to
Ashev!Me 4. Cotumbus 3
May 29. Recalled RHP Kevin HOdges from
Macon 7, Savannah 3
Ta coma of the Pacllic Coast League.
TEXAS RANGERS: Voided lhe option of
Tonl~'l g1mt1
RHP Danny Kolb to OklahOma ol the PCL and
Charleston, WV at Delmarva
placed him on tl"'e 15·day disabled list, retroacCape Fear at Hagerstown
tive to May 27 .
Gre8nSboro at Char1eston. SC
National League
Piedmont at Hickory
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS: Placed RHP
Augusta at Capital City
Todd Slottlemyre on the 15-da.y disabled list.
Columbus at Asheville
Re called AHP Vicente Padilla from Tucson of
Savannah at Macon
the .PCL
ATLANTA BRAVES: Purchased the contract
Thursday's games
of RHP Don Wangen trom Richmond of the
Charleston. WV at Delmarva
International l eague.
Cape Fear at Hagerstown
CHICAGO CUBS : Recalled RHP Ruban
GreensbOro at Cflarteston. SC
QuevedO from Iowa of the PCL.
Hickory at Piedmont
CINCINNATI REDS: Agreed to terms with
Augusta al Capital C~y
· SS Juan Castro on a two-year contract exten·
Columbus at Asheville
stan.
Savannah at Macon
NEW YORK METS: Placed SS Roy
Ordonez on the 15-day disabled list. Recalled
INF Melvin Mora trom Norfolk olrhe International League.
SAN DIEGO PADRES: Placed LHP Sle~lng
Hitchcock on the 15-da y disabled list. Oeslgnat·
ed LHP Matt Whisenant for assignment. PurNBA conf•renc• fln1i1
chased the contract of AHP Adam Eaton from
Mobile of the Southem League. Recalled RHP
Tuesday's score
Portland 96 , L.A. Lakers 88; L.A. Lakers lead Rodrigo Lopez from Las Vegas ot the PCL.
Reassigned Ben Oglivie, hlning coach, to Peoria
series 3·2
ot the Artzona League. Named Duane Espy hit·
ling coaCh.
Tonight'• game
Basketbtll
New York at Indiana, 9 p.m.
Natlon•l Batketba/1 Alloc:latlon
NBA: Fined Portland Trail BlazerJ F Scottie
Friday'a gam11
Pippen $10,000 for 1"\lning Los Angeles Laker~ C
Indiana at New York, 7 p.m.
John Sa!ley In the back of the head with a toreL.A. lakers at Portland, 9:30p.m.
arm ln Sunday's Game 4 of the Western Confer·
ence finals.
WNBA otandlngo
ORLANDO MAGIC: Named Paul Preasa~
assistant coach.
·
f5l;
women'• National S~tkatbaH AIIOCI1Uan
.000
!T!Wono ..... ..................
CHARLOTTE STING: Named Chuck Brown
Cleveland ...........................O 0 .000
commentator tor radiO and televlsk)n broadDet.,;1 ................................0 .o .000
casts.
lndlont ........ ..................0 o .000
LOS ANGEcES SPARKS: Waived C Cary
Miami ................................. 0 o .000
Funlcello.
Ortarido ............................. o o .000
Footbtll
Washington ........................ 0 o .000
'•
National FootbiU League
Now Yolk ..........................0 1 .000
DALLAS COWBOYS: Relaased RB Dan
Murphy.
WHtlm Conf1ranca
MIAMI DOLPHINS: Re-signed RB Autry
Houston ............................. 1 o 1.000
Los Angeles ..... ..... ...... ....... o o .000
'•• Denson and WR Robert Baker to one-year con·
'•
tracts.
Mlnnesata .. ........................ 0 0 .000
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS: Waived C8
~
Phoenlx .............................. o o .ooo
.
,
J'Juan Cherry.
· Portlarid ............................. 0 0 .000
PITTSBURGH STEELERS: Released S
~
Sacramento ....................... 0 0 .000·
'\
Travis Davis. Signed S Brent Alexander.
Seanie ................................ 0 o .000
.,,
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS: Signed OL ·
Utah ..... ..............................o · o .ooo·
Raleigh Roundtree to a one--;ear conti'IICt.
WASHINGTON REDSKIN$: SIQnad CB
Tonlght'o gamn
Darrell Green to a five-year contract. Waived T
Ortando at Wftshlng'lon, 7 p.m.
Kareem Ellis.
Cleveland at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
SoCcer
New Vor1&lt;at Phoanlx, 10 p.m.
Major Lllgul SOCCit'
Seanla at Sacramento, 10 p.m.
KANSAS C TV WIZARDS: Signed Q Tony
t:touston1t POntand, 10 p.m.
Meola
Utah at Loe Angelos, 10:30 p.m.
NEW ENGLAND REVOLUTION: Acquired D
Mauricio Wright from the san Jose Earthquekes
· ThuradaY•
tor 0 Mike Burns , 0 Dan Callchman and a 2001
Charlotte' at OrtandO, 7:30p.m.
first-round draft piCk.
Indiana at Miami, 8 p.m.
Minnesota at Utah, 9 p.m.
Colt ego
Houston at Seanla, 10 p.m.
LONG BEACH STATE: Promoted Alan
Knipe from men's associate volleyball coach to
head coach .
NW NAZARENE: Named Keill Kronbargor
women's basketball coach.
PRINCETON: Named Len Ouesnelle hockey coach.
·
NHL Stanley Cup tlnole
SACRAMENTO STATE: Named Carolyn
Jenkins women's basketball coach.
TullldiY'I ICOrl
TUSKEGEE: Named Oliver Jones men's
New Jersey 7, Callas 3; New Jersey !eMs
basketball coacl"'.
series 1·0

~

a problem. It'&gt; JUSt one of those
things. It hum pretty bad. It's good
that it happened n&lt;l\y, not later."
That's how the Indians are dealing with a "remarkable run of
injuries that has forced them co
make 21 roster moves since Mav .
18. Cleveland currently has seve;,
players - six pitchers - on the
disabled list.
"I've never seen anything like
it," said Manuel, who himself
missed two weeks to. have colon
surgery. "We had three guys go
down with the same injury running down to first base."
Ramirez had an MRI on Tues-·
day that revealed a strain. Manuel
&lt;aid he wanted to talk with his
cQaches before deciding whether
to put Ramirez on the DL. He's
also not sure if he wants to bring
up a position player or another
pitcher.
Manuel could only make light
of Cleveland's injury crisis.
"MRI;' he said. "Might be a
good stock. We should check on
it."

Kroger

Kroger
Ketchf.!p
28oz.

k

Kroger
Pork&amp; Beans
15 oz.

Potato
Chips
13.25 oz.

Red, Ripe (20-22 Lb. Avg.)

Whole
elons

,.m..

Ramirez hurts hamstring, may go on
CLEVELAND (AI') - Manny
Ramirez cou ld b~.:ome the
Cleveland Indians' newest c;1sualty.
Ramirez was expected to be
plae&lt;d on the 15-day disabled list
today by · the Indians, who can't
secn1 co go more than 24 hours
without h3ving to either send a
player to the hos!&gt;ital for tests or
bring in a replacement from
Triple-A Buffalo.
Baseball's RBI leader last season
with 165, Ramirez strained his left
hamstring while running to first
base during Monday's game
against the Anaheim Angels.
Indians
manager
Charlie
Manuel said Ramirez will be out
f9r at least 7-10 days, and is leaning toward adding the All-Star
right fielder to the Indians'
lengthy disabled list.
· ·Ramirez pulled up while trying
to beat out a grounder to second
in the eighth inning of Monday's
g:&gt;me.
"I heard it pop," Ramirez said in
a rare interview. "It was tight all
last week, but I didn't think it was

Thuraday'i game
Dallas al New Jersey, B p.m.

SOUIII.Atlantlc Lotguo

lS~day disabled

leading the kagu~ in tr:msactions is not whai the Indians had
in ntind thls season .
"We'll be all right ," said
Ratnirez, who has never been on
the DL in his seve n-year car~cr.
"I've been lucky I guess."
The Indians can't seem to get
through a day ·without making
some kind of move, and Tuesday
they made a few more.
Third baseman Russell Branyan

8-10 Lb. Avg.

Assorted
Chops

list

was rc&lt;"alled from Triple-A Buffalo where he was batting .253 with
](, HRs and 46 RBis in ·H games.
Utlilityma n Jolbert Cabrera was
;1lso accivaud frOn1 the ina ctive
list. He had returned to his home
in Colombia after the death of his '
f~1thcr.

To make room for Branyan and·
Cabrera, right-hander Jared Ca mp
and ou tfiel der Dave Roberts were
optioned to Buffalo.

Assorted Varieties

Doritos
oz.
14.5

Pound

., .

Volunteers honor football
coaching legend with stadium
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Bob Neyland was a thrce.time
coach of the University· of Tennessee footba ll team: 1926- 19.34,
1936-1940 and 1946-1952.
·
In his 21 seasons at Tennessee, Neyland, who guided tile Volunteers to the national championship in 1951, put together a record
of 173-31-12. ·
U1) football stadium is named for Neyland, an Army general
who won the Distinguished Service Cross as a supply, officer in
World War II.

"My legocy has never been any
He said the scrutiny that will
big deal," Knight said. "My legacy come with Brand's rigid policy for
is what comes back to me when I behavior won't make him a differlook in the mirror. I've made mis· ent person,"but there ca n be a diftakcs, I've screwed up .... I know ferent approach . I rhink my wife
what I've given to this gome."
(Karen) is as good at ang&lt;;r man He also said that resigning "was agement as anyone I cou ld i magnever for me mu~h of a valid inc. She's gnt lnagn.cts lnmg up all
optio.n."
over tl1&lt;· house th.tt say, 'The ho"c
Earlier on Tuesday, Knight ·is dead. Get off."' he said.
answered about 40 questions in a
Univcrsit)'
vice
presid ent
70-minutc session with the group Chrisrnpher Simpson said Knight
of reporters and said he can abide selected the reporters fmTm·sday's
by the sa nctions.
sc&lt;Ston.
" I think I canliw within any set
"Coach Knight \\'&lt;llltccl. to h,l\·c·
&lt;lf par.lmCtt•rs. :ts long H my a ~p of reporter! both 1m:ally
mouth ts not taped shut. I th1nk ·'"•.V"annnallY that h,· felt h.1J
vou do lun.· ro b1.· .tblc h) ~pt.:.lk.'' b\.·~.· n rdati\·dy f3 ir . and obj~.·cri\'l'
km~ht ~.tid ..tLrorJmg w on1.· uf 111 thl.'ir ~.· on:r;\g~.-- Simpson 1\,tid.
rh ...- n· pon~.·r ~. Hub~.· rt Mizell of "Thm.~.· .1r~ the one"i lw itl\'itl'd ro
T\1&lt;· ~~ l',·tcr,burg (Fl.t. ) Tunc,. . b,· with tt &lt; tod.ll'."

Assorted Varieties

Kroger
Orange Juice
1/2 Gallon

Simpson said Knight was not
ordered by Brand or anyone else
10 meet with the media.
"The president had asked him
in hi s dealings with the media in
the future to handle thein with
deco rum and oviliry,'' Sin1pson
s.1id. " Based 011 what I just heard
... I think he's off to a wonderful
&gt;tart: We can be 110thing but opti, mi stic."

·

The r.:porccrs who int~rvic:wcd
Knight \\'ere Mizell; l ynn Houser
;m d Mikl· L~:m:.ard of the Hlomn- ·
in~ton H e r.1ld-T.imes: D;tw Kindred of The Sportin~ News;
Willi&lt;llll ( ;ildc.1 of The Washingttul Po.;r: Ur..,ul.1 ltt·d of the New
York Post: .md ll1llY ReeJ of the
Lexi ngwn (Ky.) H,·r.1 ld - l.c.1Llcr. .
\'

r

I

! '

'II

Caffeine Free Diet Coke, Sprite,

Diet Coke or
Cola Classic
6 Pack, 1/2 Liter Bottles
or 12-pack 12 oz. Cans

�'

Kroger

White

Bread .
20oz.

Peanut
Butter

',

18oz.

Evelyn Stockdale
Rx Pharmacist

See your Kroger Pharmacists
for more 1nformatlon.

"

\

.Assorted Varieties

•
Assorted Varieties Kroger

Spaghetti
·· sauce
26oz.

Assorted

Kroger
· Kroger ·
Shampoo .\ · . ,·... Maxi Pads .

Kroger .

12-15.2 oz.

Spaghetti

'

.

· Each

...

~·

'•

1 Lb.
•

for .

Krog({Jr
.
·Toothbrushes
·.
.

14-24 Ct.

'

.

' Assorted

•

•

'

''

..

'

.

.\
.. '
'

'

'
.

...
FMV

Kroger

Paper
Towels

Bath
Tissue

'

Single Roll

Plastic, Sheer or Flexible

200 Speed 135 24 Exp.

I

Kroger ·
Bandages

Kroger .
.Color Film
Each

4 Roll

·

30, 40 or 60.Ct.

'

.

Churn Gold
.r ead

'

Kroger
Dental Floss

\

Each

'\

for

Kroger

. 100 Yds.

.

Select Blend

Kroger
~~~···~···-·; .;aCoffee

Refill

34.5 oz.

4001U

Kroger
Baby Wipes

Kroger
Dayhist-D

BOCt.

BCt.

, Kroger
Vitamin E
100 Ct.

I

'

·for
I

I

I

'

.

�'

Kroger

White

Bread .
20oz.

Peanut
Butter

',

18oz.

Evelyn Stockdale
Rx Pharmacist

See your Kroger Pharmacists
for more 1nformatlon.

"

\

.Assorted Varieties

•
Assorted Varieties Kroger

Spaghetti
·· sauce
26oz.

Assorted

Kroger
· Kroger ·
Shampoo .\ · . ,·... Maxi Pads .

Kroger .

12-15.2 oz.

Spaghetti

'

.

· Each

...

~·

'•

1 Lb.
•

for .

Krog({Jr
.
·Toothbrushes
·.
.

14-24 Ct.

'

.

' Assorted

•

•

'

''

..

'

.

.\
.. '
'

'

'
.

...
FMV

Kroger

Paper
Towels

Bath
Tissue

'

Single Roll

Plastic, Sheer or Flexible

200 Speed 135 24 Exp.

I

Kroger ·
Bandages

Kroger .
.Color Film
Each

4 Roll

·

30, 40 or 60.Ct.

'

.

Churn Gold
.r ead

'

Kroger
Dental Floss

\

Each

'\

for

Kroger

. 100 Yds.

.

Select Blend

Kroger
~~~···~···-·; .;aCoffee

Refill

34.5 oz.

4001U

Kroger
Baby Wipes

Kroger
Dayhist-D

BOCt.

BCt.

, Kroger
Vitamin E
100 Ct.

I

'

·for
I

I

I

'

.

�,J ~..t.·_

H....: JOs;

Low~=

Kroger Regular or Maple

Serve 'N Save

Breakfast
Sausage Links

Lunchmeats
11b. Pkg.

Thu

Funeral home awards gift certificate, A&amp;
Guerrero leads Expos past Reds, B1

Details, A3
All Varieties

..

June 1,1000

.-.-J.

Melp ·county's

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

\lulunll' 5 I N"mber J
-

-•

--

.-.;_...._

~~

"'••=-~~- ...

•-

--="

-·•

.

Hometown NewsP.per

'-~~

"""·-~--.r

·---~-·~

•&lt;•

-

-•

•

so Cents
•

- -

·-----------~---•••

•

-

•

•

•-

. '

Strickland eyes drug refonn
Representative addresses
•· elderly Meigs countians

Fish Portions or

Serve 'N Save
Wieners

Kroger
Fish Sticks

BY CNARt.ENE HOIFUCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAff

POMEROY - "It's an awful choice to
have to make - whether to buy needed
l!ledications or buy food, and there's got to be
something we can do about that," said Sixth
District U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland.
Strickland, D-Lucasville, was addressing a
group of elderly Meigs countians gathered at
the Senior Citizens Center Wednesday for the
observance of National Senior Health and
Fitness Day.
.
Drug price disparity and three bills currently under consideration in Congress to les~n
the problems were discussed by Strickland.

12 oz. Pkg.

24 oz. Pkg.

Dole

"First of the Season" Red

/den Ripe

eedless
Grapes

Sananas o
Pound

He said those bills address the issues of
charging senior citizens more than favored
customers, like HMOs and large insurance
companies; prohibiting the reimporting of
drugs purchased fiom American drug companies by overseas wholesalers for resell in the
U.S. at a lower price; and a prescription benefit as a part of Medicare to be available and
affordable to everyone who chooses.
Strickland said that in his congressional district of 14 counties, senior citizens are forced
to pay nearly twice as much as the favored
culto\}lers and substantiaUy more than consumers in other countries for the same drug.
He discusSed the tiered pricing structure
which he aUeges discriminates against senior
citizens who rrtake the single price purchase,
and charged that the practice is unfair to
senior citizens:
"The discriminatory pricing imposes severe

Pound

Alumni
forms fund
to help
schools
COLUMBUS (AP) .
Alumni of an eastern Ohio
school district in trouble acad-·
emicaUy and financially are
building a fund ~o pay for
reading and writing_programs,
. The fund for \he Bridgeport
::.....-Si&lt;empted Yi!l~~ . Schoo~
, , c!'ll'etted' $170,000,
on a S120,000 donation
fiom a California gr:ope farmer
who was raised in the Ohio .,
River town and a $50,000
grant from the state · for
increl11'ing proficiency test
scores.
.. While mo~t districts co~ect
rome private · donations, the
iuhollnt of money already •
raised for s11ch a small district is
rare; said LeeAnne Rogers,
spokeswoman for the ()hio
Department of Education. The
district has 839 students.
AI Scheid, a 1950 alumnus of
Bridgeport High School and
the founder of Scheid Vineyards Inc. in Marina del Ray,
Calif., created the fu!ld a few
months ago after about 20
years of giving money to his
alma mater. Besides his initial
donation, he plans to match
what the community raises up
to a certain amo11nt.
"My attitude is if you've
done weD, do weD," he safd
Tuesday frolll his home in
Pacific Palisades', Calif. "I've
al\vays felt the district has sort
of been in the backwater ·and
that I can help pull it out."
,Under the fun'd, administrators at Bridgeport High
School, Westbrooke lnterme&lt;llate Elementary, and Lansing
frimary ·· Elementary propose
programs to the fund's board of
directors, which then awards
gJ;ants.
. The first program began this
SRring, with about 30 students
being paid for every book they
read from a selected list, and ·
si~ar programs have been
suggested, Scheid said.
:. "Once they get in the habit
oC reading, they keep reading.
A;tyone who can read can succe.ed," lie said.
Administrators haven't been
· able to focus on academic
ihiprovement for their students
because they have been busy
strul¢ing to keep the schools
open through the years, Super~
intendent Mark Matz said
Wednesday.
· District officials blame some
6f their financial problems on
the state's school funding system, which the Ohio Supreme
&lt;;:burr' ruled relies too heavily
oil property taxes.

hardships on the elderly,"' said Strickland,
"because senior citizens have the greatest
need for prescription drugs and the least abil- ·
ity to pay for them."
Strickland Qsed slides to compare the costs
of five prescription drugs in the U.S. with
those in Canada and Mexico.The medications
were Zocor, Prilosec, Procardia, Zoloft and
Norvasc, all widely used by senior citizens.
A chart, prepared with information taken
fiom a study made at Strickland's request,
showed that the average. price differential on
those five drugs which senior citizens in his
district pay is 86 percent higher than Canada,
and 81 percent higher than Mexico. He said
that neither Canada nor Mexico aUow drug
manufacturers to engage in price discrimina,

tion.
.....H -

Dnlp, ..... AJ

DRUG PRICE DISPARI:TY - U.S. Rep. Ted Strickh:lnd discussed prescription drug. price disparity and pending legislation Wednesday at
the Senior Citizens Center. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

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FROM STAFF REPORTS

CHESHIRE - A homeowner education course .for
anyone interested in purchasing a home for the first time
will be offered at Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency,
. 8QJ1LSta.te .Route 7 North;
Cheshire, June 19-23 from 6-9
p.m.
The course. is free and ·follows the Fannie Mae Guide to
Home Ownership.
Classes will cover various
types of mortgages, obtaining a
mortgage, closing, budgeting,
credit reports and home main- ·
tenanc.e.'
Guest
speakers
include attorneys, bank ers,

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Cslifomia

Washington State

'Anjou
Pears

K,.;,ger Sy.l'eet or Cre11my Cole Slcm-,
M11t11ronl S11llld or Must11rd or

A.m erican
Potato Salad
3Lb. Tub

Lb.

• Honey Ham • Hickory Barn
• Oven Roasted Turkey Breast
• Smoked Turkq • Honey Turkq or
• Peppered Tu'"'"""'
Fresh

Glazed Ring
Donuts
Dozen

Italian
This classic loaf is a must with
any lta&amp;n meaL Great for
mouthwatmng Garlic Bread
arul scrvmptious sandwiches.

.• . J

CHECK PRISINTil) .- Accepting a ceremonial check for $8,450 Tom Chlfds, Bob Bowers, Sarah McGrew, Linda King and Paula ·
from Mary Yost, fo~ion representatiVe, for the Senior Citizens fit· Eichinger; and back, Diana Coates, Norma Torres, Rebecca Nelson
ness center were cojlltlon members, from left, Susan Oliver, Yost, l~d Charla Brown. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

Found.~~ion helps fund senior fitness program
'it

BY CIIAN IHE HoEFuctt

improve their physical fitness.
The funds, according to Yost, go for a variShe noted that a portjon of ;dre"ltl'Oney ety of programs besides physical fitness
i POMEROY- A ~nt from a foundation
will also be 11sed to pur.&lt;ibase materials .for including helping disabled children compete
'endowed by Ohio hqlpitals will .help Meigs
. · '·
use in the center.
athletically, assist churches which promote
County senior citizeps .help each other get
Emphasis of the program is to enco~ge good health and identify potential stroke vicmore physically fit. ,,
local fitness activities for older ad11lts.
·•
tims, public health efforts, improved care for
During Wednesday's National Senior
Collaborators c;m the project included Vet- babies and teen parents and provide prescripHealth and Fitness Day observance at the erans Memorial Hospital, Ohio University
tion drugs for uninsured children.
Senior Citizens
the Foundation for
CoUege of Osteopathic Medicine, Meigs
The foundation , said Yost, also provides
Healthy
a check for County Health Department and the Retired
seed
money to start or expand programs to
$8,450 •for the Meigs
Senior Fitness Senior Volunteer Program of Meigs County.
improve local health in communities in
Project. ,
Mary Yost from the foundation was in Ohio,
.
Rebecca Nelson
Pomeroy to present the. check to Tom. Childs
The grants, made possible by Ohio hospiwrote the grant, of Holzer Medical Center.
tals,
are targeted for programs involving hossaid funds will be
train senior volllnThe local grant is one of seven totaling pital efforts to reach beyond traditional
teers to staff ~~~!' Council O!l Aging's fitness, . $56,317 from the foundation for projects
health care delivery and work to improve
center so tliey can help other seniors proposed by hospitals across the state.
community health status.
'
SEN_~!~EL ~S STAFf

lbday's

Sentinel
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s.q- ~: 1-2fl.26-31-40-;4-1

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Daily 3: 9-4-0 Daily 4: 1-2-'1-5
!) 200) Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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insurance agents,· realtors,
extension agents, contractors,
housing authorities, AIJLE ,
JTPA and others who will be
caUed ·upon to present pertinent information to anyone
interested in buying a home.
The course is offered to all,
regardless of age, family situation or income level. Seating is
limited, and those planning to
participate are encouraged to
caD 367-7341 or 992-6629 as
soon as possible to make their
reservation.
Families are welcome and
refreshments will be provided.
Gallia- Meigs CAA's Housing Program, along with Ohio
Valley Bank, is offering the
course in conj11nction with
homes being built in Gallia
and Meigs counties.
These . homes are affordable
to both moderate income and

'Survivor' arrives, bids farewell to first castaway
NEWYORK (AP) ~ And then there were
15 survivors.
A.5 expected, the willing castaways of CBS'
"Survivor" sent one of their party packing at
the end of the reality series' premiere Wednesday night.
Kindly Sonja - a 60-ish m11sician who had
proven not as spry as the others· - became
history in the firlt lap of this end11rance contest staged on a primitive island near Borneo.
But even by the end of the first ho11r, Sonja
had stolen viewers' hearts.
·
"Go get 'em, you guys," she said, gr:ociolls
even in exile.
By the 13th weekly installment, just one
survivor will remain from the original 16 and $1 million richer.
Of course, the audience need not fret. Next
week (which will cover another three days in
the 39-day stay taped earlier this year), viewers will find th'e other characters marooned
right where they left them.

By the 13th weekly
installment,just one survivor
will remain from the original
16 - and $1 million richer.
Among the carefully selected "tribesmen,"
truck driver Susan will likely still be squab~
bling with Richard, a corporate trainer. And
Rudy, a retired Navy SEAL, wiU probably be
bossing.everyone.
"If they listened to me," he tOld the camera
on the first show, "they'd aU have haircuts.
We'd be in formation in the morning."
Then, once again, someone will be voted
. out at the tribal council meeting. And then
there will be 14.
After weeks of buildup, "Survivor" may
have s11rprised viewers by resisting the salacious. or even sinister tone some observers
were dreading. The show focuses on roughing
it in bealltiful surroundings ~ and on the

stresses and strains the participants go
through.
The diverse characters (who are split into
two rival camps) are quickly identifiable and
involving. A few, like biochemist Ramona and
Sean, the doctor with a nipple ring, are also
·
easy on the eyes.
One contestant who is more interesting
than either he or the show's producers might
have preferred is Richard Hatch, who, now
back home in Rhode Island, faced a charge of
second-degree child abuse. Last month, he
1
pleaded innocent to aUegations he abused his
9-year-old son. The boy said he was furced to
go running and his father wrapped his hands
aro11nd his neck to move him along when he
tired.
·
·
"''m good to go, survival-wise," he confidenrly told Wednesday's "Survivor" audience.
"People-wise, it'll be a little more challenging.
But I've got the million-dollar check written
already."

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