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Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuelday, June 20, 200Q..

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

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

TMm

Edlom Dlvlolon
W· L Pet.

GB
....... ..................... 42 27 .11011
Now Ylllll ........................37 29 .581 3 1/2
Montrlllli .......................... 35 31 .530 5 1/2
Flarida ............................. 33 37 .471 9 1/2
Phitodetphia .................... 27 40 .403
14
81. LoUis....................... ....39 28

574

Ploy~~~noo

M-ea ....................... 28 40 .420 10 1/2

(BHI-of•7)

Houston ... ....................... 25 43 .368
W•et Dtvteton
Arizona ........................ ...40 28 .580

1.a

w.dnelldey, June 7
L.A. Laket's 104, Indiana 87

Colorado .........................37 27 .578
LOs AnQ.;ot .................. .. 36 31 .537

112
3

LA. Lakers1t1 , tndianat04

Montree12, Plttaburgh 1
Milwaukee 2, Florida o
Pniladelphla 5, Attanta 2
Arlzone 3, San Oiego 2
Todly.. G•mH
Pittsburgh (Benson 5·5) a1 Monlreol (Johnson 2·1), 7:05p.m.
Milwaukee ~oodard 1·5) at Flotlds (Dempstar 7-4), 7:05p.m.
Phlladaph~ (Byrd 1-5101 N.Y. Mats (Hamp·
!on 6·5), 7:10p.m.
COIOIOdo (AIIoc!O W) at Clnctnnllt (For·

· - 2.0), 7:311 ~.m.

Chlcaeo Cuba (Tapanl 4-1) ot Atlanta (Mill·
wood 4-1), 7:40 p.m.
•
LOs Angelos (Brown 6·2) a1 Houo1on (Hott 3·
7). B:05 p.m.
San Francisco (Ortiz 3-8) at St. L.Dula (Ankil~l
5-3), B:to p.m.
san Diogo (Tollborg D-Ol at Arizona (S!onle·
myro 8-4). 10:05 p.m.

a.,..

c=:
. . . . . . . . .. . . .
c

G8

.5&lt;7

.538 1/2 ·
.529
1
.448 6 1/2
.412
9

24 .652

,, .530 11/2

34 .493 10 112
40 .429 15 1/2
38 .405 1e 112
Weal Dlvltlon
Oakland ..........................40 29 .590
Seatlle .......................... ..37 30 .552
2
Anaham ........................ 35 33 .515 4 1/2
Texas .... .............. ............ 31 38 .453
B
M-oy'o Gomoo
N.Y. Yankees 22, Boston 1
Chicago WhRo Sox Clovelond 1
Tampa Bay 10. Seat11e 3
08kland 13, Baltimore 12, ·10 Innings
Onl~ games scheduled

e,

Todliy'• GarMI
BBI1imore {Penson -'-3) at Oakland (Hudson
7·2). 3:35p.m.
Detroit ~oaver 3-11) 81 T9'D"IO (Carpemer
6·5), 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Peffi1ta B-3) at 8oston (P.Mar·

!Inez 9-2), 7:05_p.m.
Clovolond (Brower 1-1) II Chlcogo Whfto

lox (llrotlla M), 1:08 p.m.

MIM_,. (Rodman 4·2) at Teau (Rogoro
S.5), B:35 p.m.

''

Mayfield 23-26, Wallace 27-37, Mike Skinner
38·53 , Tony Stewart 54·73, Skinner 74. Mayfteld 75-n, Stowan 78, IMIUaoe 78-t OB, Stowart 107-109, Dele Earnhardt 110. Jeff Bunon
111-112, Mark Martin 113, Kevin Lepage 114,
Kyle Peny tHi-118, wauaca 117· 162, Stewan

win series 4-2

Alll'l!ft D 'A I'ING

Poinl S!andlneo: 8obby Lebonlo-2240. Dale
Earnl'lardt-2183, Dale Jarrett-212!5, WaJ'd Bur-

Pocono 500 Atauttl

ton-2096, Jeff Burton·20UI, Rusty Watlac•
1899, Tony Stowan-1 976, Rld&lt;y Rudd-1 875,
Mark Menl~·1858, Jeff Gordon-1B74.

LONCl POND, Pa ..(AP) - ResuRs Monday
from the Flooono 500 NASCAR Wlnaton Cup

Series race at Pocono Raceway ~h flnlahlng

poshion, starting position (In parentheses), driver, type o1 car, ~~ oompleted, reason out (tf
any} and money won:
1. (22) Jeremy Mayfield. Ford, 200,
$121,020.
2. (4) Oakl Jarrell, Ford, 200, $131,520.
3. (3) Ricky Rudd, Ford. 200, S95,B70.

BASEBAll
Amerte~~n

Tampa Bay (Trachsel H) at Seat11e (Abbon ·
3·2), 10:05 p.m.
• Kansas Clly (S&lt;Ippan 2·5) at Anaham
(Cooper 2-2) , 10:05 p.m.
Wodn-y'o OlmM

LMau•

BOSTON REO SOX- Placed OF Troy
O'leary and LHP Jeff Fasaero on the U!i&lt;lay
disabled list Acilvoted RHP Bryce Florio lrom
the 15-day dilbolad list. Rooallad RHP Rob
Stfl.nifer from P~ueket of the International
League. Optioned INF Connie Sadlor 10 Pawtucket. Purchased the conl:mct of OF Curtis
Pride horn Pawtucket. Oatlgno1ed INF Andy
Shoats lor aaslgnmern.
Cl.EVELANO INDIAN8-Agreed 10 1erms
wilh OF Konnelh Folsom, OF Rashad EldrMlge,
L.HP Adam Co• and LHP VICIOI Klolno. SIQnod
OF Robllfl Womack and C Mike Ernst to rnnor

6. (9) Tony S1owart, Ponllac, 200, $73,480.
7. (8) Jeff Bllnon, Ford , 200, $67,015.
B. (5) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 200, $64,765.
e. (7) Mike Skinner, Che,okll, 200,
$5&lt;,285.
. 10. (1 ) Rusty Woilace, Ford, 200, $76,990.
11 . (28) Robert. Pressley. Ford, 200,
$51,4e5.
12. (14) Torry Lebonla, ChevroiOI, 200,
$55,415.
13. (11) 8obby Lebon1e, Pontiac, 200.
$55,965.
14. (29) Man Kenselh, Ford, 200. $48,885.

teague cantracts.

OAKLAND ATHLETIC8-Agroed to Ierma

wl1h SS Freddie Bynum, RHP Kyle Crowoil,
RHP LOuis McCall, OF Matt Bowser, LHP Math-

ew O'Brien, C John Suomi, RHP Dan Jackson,
RHP Slephen Flschet, RHP Tylef Gilpatrick, OF
Joe Cirone, RHP Rich Rodarmel and 28 Josh

15. (27) Steve Park, Chevrolal , 200,

348.765.
16. (30) Ellion Sadler, Ford, 200, $49,065.
17. (37) Chad unle, Ford, 200. $46,465.
1B. (19) Ken Sohrl\dOf, Pontiac, 200,
S311,065.
18. (15) Dale Earnhardl Jr, Chevrolet, 200,
$44,015.
20. (28) Jerry Nadeau, Chevrolet, 200.

Hoffpauir. Signed Paul DePodeeta, assiMam
general manager, to a three-year contract .

&amp;Ktenslon.
TORONTO BlUE JAY8-Agroed 10 terms
with RHP Mark Eichhorn and anlgned him Ill
Ounedin ol the Flo&lt;Mle S181e League.
Notional Looguo
PHILADElPHIA PHilliE8-Agreod to
terms with L.HP Ryan Carter and assigned him
to Batavia of the New Vane-Penn Laague. .
Agreed 1o 1em1s with IIHP KaRh Bucktro1, 1B
Ca~os Rivera and C Mar1&lt; MoAobans and
assigned them to the Phlllles of the Gulf Coast
League.
SAN DIEGO AADRE8-Agreed 10 terms
LHP Mark PhiiNps. P..chased 1he contrac1 of
RHP Brian Tollberg from Las V&amp;ga5 of the
Pacific Coast League. Sanl RHP Rodrigo
Lopez outright to Las Vegas.
SAN FRANCISCO G1ANT8-Agreod 1o
torms wl1h RHP Manhew Faaa, RHP Lilke
Anderson, RHP CHad Aahlock, RHP Jason
Farmer, RHP Elgin Graham, RHP Kyle Groos,
RHP Jim Harrelson, RHP Jackson Marl&lt;en,
LHP Daniel Padgen, RHP Rafael Riguelro,
RHP Todd Uual, C Jamos Lilnoford, INF
Bryan Gann, 1NF Manhew Koallne, INF Edwin
Maldonado, INF EllloR, S1rankman, OF Bryon
Carter, OF Jason EHison, OF JaiOI"' Pekar, OF
Adam Shabala, OF Mark Walker, OF Nicholas
Willong and aoalgned !hem 10 Salem-Kalzsr of
th8 Northwes1 League. Agreod 1o 1em1o wl1h
RHP Jeffrey Clark, LHP Ryan Hannaman and
OF Dania Trumble. ·
.

$48,890.

21 . (2) JohnAndreni, Ponllac, 199,$55,365.
22. (31) Sterling Ma~ln, ChevroiOI, 199,
$48,665.

23. (24) Kenny Wallace, Chevrolet, 199,
$48,740.
24. (40) Geolfrey 8odlne, Chevrolet, 199,
$44,390.
25. (38) Kenny trwln, Chevrolet, 199,
$44,515.
26. (18) Kevin Lepage, Ford , 199, $43,865.
27. (32) Ward Bunon , Pon11ec, t99,
$50,515.
28. (42) Ed Berrier, Ford, 196,$32,365.
29. (43) Dave Marcls. Chevrolet, 197,
$32,190.
30. (35) Oa'e 81aney, Ponllac, 195,
$32.040. .
31 . (41 ) Scot1 Pruotl, Ford,104, $32,390.
32. (20) Brett Bodine, Ford, 1B2, enginelall,

33. (36) Mike 81iao, Pont~c. IB1, accldom,
$31 ,540.
34. (21) Johnny Banson , Pon11ac, 179,
enelne failure, $34,466.
35. (13) Rick Maot, Pootlac, 179,$31,190.

.
d"
1mpresse
.
•
Bryant had 26 points and
rebound$ in an erratic 8-for-27
shooting performance, alternatiilg
sublime shots with clunkers. Qe
will have much better memor=es
of his performance in Game ~,
when he stepped in for a fouldlout O'Neal and scored eigft
. points in overtime of Los AnSfles' victory.
•
"I'm numb. I'm just nu~
right now," th..- 21-year-~
Bryant said. "I didn't know cham-pagne burned this much when it
gets in your eyes."
t
Rice, a free agent who corl-'
plained ·about his role during tfle
finals arid may have been playing
his last game for the Lakers, h{d
16 points, including tbree ~pointers.
&lt;

Pocono
ftumPap81
"That Earnhardt, he got me
·agai n," Mayfield remembered
thinking to himself. "I've done
that three or four times. I'm not
going to do that again."
Make way for "The New
Intimidator."
Dale Jarrett was among those
who understood the fire within
Mayfield and joked .about Earnhardt's aggressiveness.
"We all know he wouldn't have
done that if he had been in the
car behind;' Jarrett said. "II would
be hard for that guy to say anything."
Earnhardt ~id little about the
contact in the fourth turn at
Pocono International Raceway, a
tap just a quarter-mile before he
would have taken the checkered
flag for his 76th career victory.
But he drove up alongside
Mayfield on the cooldown lap,
put his arm out the window and
extended a finger.
"I told him he was No. t;•
Earnhardt said of the gesture.
Although ~ admits his contact
decided the outcome of the race,
Mayfield felt justified because
Earnhardt was holding him up

not running a smooth line.
' "I never hit him first," Mayfield
~d. "He got loose first."
. That wasn't the way Richard
~~dress saw it.
• 'He just knocked him out of
1 tlu way to win," Earnhardt's car
o.;;ner said. "That's juot racing.
'P.ere'll be another day."
Mayfield said he saw a few
~bs-up signs from crew
members of other teams as he
rc&gt;f* by on the way to Victory
Circle.
t-he
only · thumbs-down
expression came from a fan
behind the pit wall. He threw a
can,9fbeer at Mayfield's Ford, but
misled.
~· it was a profitable day for
Earnhardt, who fell to fourth
before regaining control of his
Chevrolet. He picked up .41
po~J on series leader Bobby
Laoonte and now trails by just 57
in his bid for an unprecedented
eighth Winston Cup championship.
"You don't ever have a win
until the checkered flag falls:•
Earnhardt said." All in all, it was a
good day. We gained some points
on Labonte."
So,Qid series champion Jarrett,
whose second-place finish in a
Ford left him third in the standings; 1_\11 5 points behind the

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Help With
Medicare Expenses
Qualified
Beneficiaries
(called QMB):

Medicare
Medicaid

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

insurances(s) and deductibles
you are required
to make as
'
part
of the. Medicare
Program.
.

Call Today!
1~800-992-2608

Or
992:-2117

Meigs County
Department of
L Job &amp; Family
Services
175 Race Street
Middleport, OH
45760

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Specified
Low-Income
Medicare
Beneficiaries
Medicaid (called SLMB):
This type of Medicaid pays
only for your Medicare Part
B premium.

More ...

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BY BRIAN

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ness.

....,.,,

PIHH- Jobs, Plip .AI

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This program provides the
same benefits as SLMB;
however,
the
income
standards are higher than
those allowed for SLMB.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

' CON$TRUCT10N TQ
- The former Excelsior Saltwolks proper·
ty on Pomeroy's East Main Street wll! be the Site of a telecommuni·
cations business to locate here thi's fall . Meigs County Community

,.

BY TONY

M. WCit

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

""'·
'"

~Q.,..u:::a~li~fi~e~dt--I~nuduiVl..LI.UIIdt.mu~a~al..s"""
·'·':-----2 A: Medicaid requires a
Medicaid (called QI-~),;
disability determination
..
by the Social Security
iJ :J
f;j
Administration or by the ~
This program reimburses
Ohio Department of Job. ;
you for the ·part of ~e Part &amp; Family Services through ; ·
B premium that you have
its County Medical
.. '
Services (CMS).
already paid whic~ went
. ..
'
toward home heal.;tJ: care. Q Wh . th
· h
..
:
at ts e age w en I
will
You
recetve
a
.
,
am constdered
''Aged"?
...
reimbursement check once a
year. The fncome liqrlts are A: Age 65
higher than QJ-1 Medicaid.
Q: What services are covered
,,
..
,
by Medicaid? ,
••
~lified WorlcinK :Disables
•
Individual (catted QWDI); · A: Any of these services are
•
•
...
·
·
covered if they are
medically necessary for
•
••.,
This program pays for your
you:
!&gt;
.
Medicare Part A premium
Doctor Visits
•
·•••
only. QWDI can h,elp you if
•
Hospital Care
••
•
Immunizations
you have lost eligibility for
• ••
' '
J.t
·Substance Abuse
Title II disabili(f, benefits
.«
Prescriptions
due to earnings.
•.•
Vision
•••
,,.•.
Dental
..
...
Mental Health
.....
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Other...
.....
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employ 200 people. (Brian J. Reed photo)

RACINE - A frog jumping contest, parade, and
live entertainment will be offered to the public during
~cine's "C~lebrating July 4th In 2000" holiday celebration at Star Mill Park.
.
Festivities will be8in with a parade at 10 a.m., and
will start on Ehn Street and finish at Southern High
School:
.
A $75"and $50 saving; bond will be awarded to the
best three floats in the religious category, and a $100,
$75 and $50 saving; bond will go to the first three .
place winners competing in the patriotic category.
· A prize of$15, $10, and $5 will be awarded to the
~est three decorated bicycles, and walking units
awards of $25, $20, and $15 will also be presented.
The best tractors in the parade will be judged as
well as the best horse entries.
•
All awards for the parade will be given out at noon.
Racine VFD will have a chicken barbecue dinner
st;lrting at 11 a.m., and karaoke will be provided by
Golden Melodies Productions on the stage at noon. A
children's group from Racine Baptist Church will also
perform later that afternoon.
·
. Musical entertainment will be part of the festivities
when the band Never on Thursday hits the stage at 4
p;m., followed by Country Pride Express at 6 and 8
p.m., and Harvest Time at 7 and 9 p.m.

alleged neglect case

Racine Area Commltnity Organization will hold its
Seventh Annual Frog Jumping Contest for all to enjoy
at the park that afternoon.
·
Each participant may ~ ither provide his/ h~r own
frog or rent one for' $3. The registration fee for the
Junior Division, ages one to 15, is $3, while the fee for
the Senior Division, ages 16 and over•. is $5.
Each individual nlay enter as many frogs as they
want, but must pay a registration for each frog that is
entered.
·
Prizes for the Junior Division are $40 for first place,
$25 for second place, and $30 for third place. Prizes
awarded for the Senior Division are $100 for first
place, $75 for second place, and $50 for third place.
Rules 'for the frog jumping contest will be posted at
the park.
·
Big Bend Farm · Antiques Club. will have various
tractors on display after the parade along with tractor
games starting at 2:30p.m. Awards will be presented at
4 p.m. .
'
Craft space is still available at the park for the celebr-•tion and is $10 for a 10-foot space and $15 for a
20-foot space. Anyone wanting to reserve·a space may
contac~ Krista at Home National Bank by calling 9492210.
The .festivities will end with a fireworks extravaganza in the park at 10 p.m.
For informatipn, contact Dale Hart at 949-~656. '

Census: ·Poor school
districts don't refl'ect
increase in spending

Sentinel

1 Sadloo• - 141 Peps

, WASHINGTON (AP) - In West Philadelphia,John Barry
Elementary School is falling apart: leaky roofs, fau lty heating,
cramped class.rooms.Twenty minutes away in the Pennsylvania suburbs, Radnor Township is building a $30 million elementary school, designed for small class sizes and ne,w_com~
· puters.
· .
. . ·
Despite 4j)parent prosperity- a record $307 .5 btlhon for
the nation's schools to spend says the Census Bureau "- the
rwo systems remain in different worlds. Radnor spends about
$13,000 per student; Philadelphia spends ·about $6,000
because state laws still require districts to raise nearly half then
funds from taxing local wealth.
"Property taxes are not the way to do it," said Elmore
Hunter, whose 7-year-old son Carlos will be heading to
third-gr:~de at Barry. "When you have a lot of abandoned

AS

Calender
Classifieds
{;omics

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• Editorials
Obituaries
'Sports'
,. Weather

A4

~

B7

A3
Bt-3. 8
A3

Lotteries
·OHIO

~

.

.I

Pick 3: 6-8-4; Pick 4: 7- 1-3--9
J!uckeye 5: 1-13--14-Zl-33

.

~
~ 3: 5-8-6 Doily 4: 8-3-9-9
I

C 2000 Ohio Valle)\ Publi,hing Co.

Plean IH Schools, Plip AI

.,

FROM STAFF REPORTS

· Charla

L~ttle,

age unre-

MIDDLEPORT - A neglect
charge has been filed in Meig; ported, was charged TuesCounty Juvenile Court against a day in juvenile court Middleport woman, whose · as an adult - witlt the
young son was found wandering
neglect charge.
a Middleport street on Sun&gt;f;ly.
A spokesman for the Meigs the street, the child was reportedCounty Prosecuting Attorney ly in the care of a ba~itier,
said Wednesday that Charla Little, Crystal Gheen, who had taken
age unreported, was charged him to a third party's home, but
Tuesday in juvenile court - as an no charges relating to the inciadult- with the neglect charge. dent have been filed against
Norm VanMeter of Middlepo!'l Gheen.
said that he saw the child walking
Gheen has been charged with
along North Second Avenue on escape and a p.umber of other
Sunday morning, and took him charges in an unrelated incident,
to the Middleport Police Depart- an assistant prosecuting attorney
ment.
said today.
The year-old child was plated
Meig; County Department of
in the custody of his maternal Children's Services will work
grandmother, the prosecutor's · with Little to s~cure proper day
spokesman said, and was later care for the child and employment for herself, the spokesman
returned to Little's custody.
At the time he was found on said.

POMEROY -Jobless rates
in southern Ohio counties
continued to fall during May,
the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services reported.
Gallia and Meig; counties
were among several that noted
an,Qther decline in unemployment during the month.
" Gallia posted a jobless rate of
6.1 percent, down seven-tenths
of a percent from 6.8 in April.
Meig;, which was at 10.2 percent in April, feU five-tenths of
a percent to 9.7 the following
month.
OBES estimated that out of
a work force of 15,300 in Gallia, 900 people were without
jobs in May. For Meigs, 800
were out of work from an esti~
mated labor pool of7,700.
Declines were also seen in
Athens County, which had 4
percent. unemployment in
May, .down four-tenths of a
11ercent from April; Jackson,
5.8 pe.rcent, down three-tenths
of a percent; and Vinton, 9.9
percent, down 1.6 percen~.
Lawrence County ~aw its
joblessness increase, from 8.2
percent in April to 8.6.
· Meig;, Lawrence and Vinton
were among nine counties
with jobless rates at or above 7
percent last month, OBES
reported.
The others, all in southern
Ohio, included Hocking, Morgan, Adams, Guernsey, Scioto
and Monroe.
Statewide, unemployment
was 4 percent, up 1 percent
from the 26-year low posted in
April. Interim OBES Administrator ' Wayne Sholes partly
attributed an increase in
employment during May to
the hiring of census enumerators.
"Ohio's unemployment rate
rose only fractionally in May,
continuing to reflect the state's
healthy economic environment," he said.
"The highlight in employment statistics was, again, the
hiring of large numbers of
census workers.
"Federal
gov~rnment
employment in Ohio jumped
11,800 over the month, more
than off-setting scattered losses
in services and manufacturing," he added.

Point man scores on •Millionaire'

Today's

I

~

-

Improvement Corp., with financing from Farmers Benk, will construct

s 10,000 square-foot bulldiiJg on the site. The firm Is expected to

Racine announces July 4th festivities Charges filed in

Help With:,·;
•
E
·
.
:
L
Q: Who determines whethe~ :
M e dlCare XpeuSeS I am disabled?
.
..

'I

REED

The total project investment
will be approximately $3 million,
with $1 million coming from
financing to the CIC from Farmers Bank &amp; Saving.; Co., according to Bank President Paul Reed,
who also serves as president of the
CIC.
That financing will be used for
the purchase and _preparation of
real ·estate and construction of a
metal building to house the busi-

•

'

J.

years,"

- ~

Qualified Individuals Medicaid (called Q0-1):

Meigs
jobless
rate
falling

POMEROY - Construction
has begun on a new building in
P,omeroy that will house a
telecommunications business.
Meigs County Community
Improvement
Corporation
announced Tuesday that the
10,000 square~foot office facility
will be located on the former
Excelsior Saltworks property on
East ·Main Street.
"The new employer, in the
telecommunications industry, will
reveal their identity this fall upon
completion of the building," a
CIC news release said. "This will
be the largest neY( jpb creation
project in the county in over 20

, "".
' •. ·-.
ff·f'.,r

Commonly asked ·.
Qu'e stions:

.

so Cents

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

1111\.•

'j •

Hometown Newspaper

Telemarketing
firm under
construction

.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
,.

June 21, 2000

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51. Number 17

leader. Labonte, who won bqih
races last year at Pocono, ov~­
came an early mechanical pro~lem to finish 13th.
"
The win was the third forM . field, a 31-year-old driver 'fro~
Owensboro, Ky., who got ~Xis
breakthrough victory in this ~e.
in 1998.
,: •
The race continued a pattern~f
ups and downs for Mayfielp•.
whose team has been penaliztd:
twice this season for rules viol:f-~
tio~. _He lo~ 151 poi~ts and se~:·
positions m the Wmston Cg:p:;
chase for one violation, and ·Ji)s :
team was. fined for another ~r·
he won in April in Fontana, CaU:f...
Mayfield also challenged eigh "
days ago in Brooklyn, Micll_. . leading for 85laps before blowifitr
·an engine.
:; ::
On Monday, he beat Jarrett ISy'::
.58.1 seconds. Third was JarreW ~
teammate, Ricky Rudd.
: :
Tony Stewart, seeking his trur&amp;.
straight victory, finished sixth ;n:;
his Pontiac, immediately behind ;
the Ford of Mark Martin. .. . ~ •;
The race was run on Monday
after rain caused only the se~nd:
postponement - and first iii:2t
years - since Pocono begal},
holding NASCAR events ilf
1974.
~
· ..,
·;
;· '•

'(,

'I
..

Melp County's

':

·~

Details, A3

•

~•

·"

184, Eamhardt 185-199, Mavfleld ;.,ouu.

flU IU ""'-1

ure, $31 ,7.W.

i:

163-164, Earnhardl t65, Lopago 188, Jerry
Nadeau 167, Bran Bodine 188·1!._1_. Stowan

~..--o:--:-c=o:::--:-:-------.,

5. (6) Mark Man:in, Ford, 200, $71 ,565.

Central OMolon

45
nd .......................35
Kansas Clly .. ......... .. .......33
Mlnneso18 ....... .... ............30
Delran .............................28

Wodn-y, Juno14
LA. LakMS 120, Indiana 118, OT
Frtd•y, June 11
Indiana 120 , LA. Lskef1 B7
Uond~, June UJ
L.A. Lakws 116, lndlana 111, L.A. L.akers

$87,495.

E11tern DIVIIIon

L Pet.

Sunday, Juno 11
lndiai"'A 100, LA. L8kers 91

4. (16) Dale Earnhardt, Chevrole1, 200,

Pit1sburgh a! Mon!real, 7:05p.m.
Chlcaoo Cubs a1Allarta, 7:05p.m.
Milwaukee at Aorlda, 7:05p.m.
Philadelphia at N.Y. Meta, 7:10p.m.
COlorado 11 Cincinnati, 7::18 p.m.
Los Angeles at Houston, 8:05 p.m.
San Francisco at StLouis, 8:10p.m.
San·Dlego at Arizona., 10:05 p.m.

29
30
33
37
40

43. (12) Mk:haal Waltrip, CtMwrolet: , 35,

engine failure, $38,150.
Roco Dlgoot
Race Statistics: nme ot Race· 3 houri, 34
minutes, 41 seconds.
Margin of Vlcfory: .581 aeconc:fs.
A'erago Speed: 130.741 mph.
Lead Changes: 24 among 11 drivers.
caution laps: !5 for 17 laps.
Lap Leaders: Rusly Wollace 1-22, Jeremy

Frkloy, Junoe

S.n Francisoo .................. 33 32 .508
5
San Ologo ........................ 30 36 -"'' 9 112
Monclliy'e C1amee

eo.

35. (251 Bill Ellion. Ford, 1 onglnt 1111U&lt;O,
$41 ,200.
3e. (17) waay Dollanbaoh .If., Ford, 158,
at:eident, $30,575.
40. (33) Bobby Hamllon, ChtMolot, 154,
engine !allure, S311.425.
41. (23) Kyle Potty; l'ontlac, 144, engine fall·
Uf8, $38,300.
42. (10) Joe Nemeohel&lt;, ChevrOlet, 127,
engine failure, S311.225.

'

=.;·::::: :::: :: : : : :: ~g

TMm
W
Now York .... ..................... 35
8ooton ...........................35
Toromo ............................ 37
Bahlmote ...............,.... .. ..30
Tampa Bay .......................28

$33,825.

PRO HoOPS.

Clnclnnod .......- ...........32 35 A71 11/2

w~c~n..oay·•

35. (34) Jimmy ~. Ford, 171, onglnt
1aiiU&lt;O, $41;9110.
37. (30) S1aoy Campion, Ford, 175,

Detroit 11 Toromo, 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Yonkeeo at 8oo1on. 7:05p.m.
Clovolancl at Ch~ WhRo Sox, 1:01
p.m.
Mimesota at Texaa. 8:315 p.m.
Tompa Bay 11 Sootllo, 10:05 p.m.
Ballimore at Oakland , 10:05 p.m.
Kansas Clly at Anaheim, 10:05 p.m.

Cenlral OMolon

NBA

a look of pure joy after he buried
a 3-pointer with 8:23 left to giye
Los Angeles a 94-90 le~d.
fnwn Pllp 81
O'Neal was fouled on three
straight baskets early in the perifinal three games in the serif!! od, but he missed all three free
despite allowing the Pacers tb' throws as Indiana desperately
score 116.3 points per game m1 hung on. Minutes later, he had
them. Instead of buckling down· consecutive rebound dunks that
on defense, Los Angeles simplyr: sent Ute laid-back L.A. fans into a
outscored the Pacers with inside ' frenzy. ·
baskets from O'Neal and a sur- j "I didn't know if we could realprising proficiency from outside. ly learn a lesson after not closing
The Lakers had to score 37~ teams out over and over again,"
points in the fourth quarter to said forward A. C. Green, the link
finally shake Indiana.
berween the Lakers' title teams of
Robert Horry, Glen Rice and 1988 and 2000.
Rick Fox all hit critical !are )' "But once they started to smell
jumpers as Los Angeles matched ~the championship, they started
Indiana . shot for shot. Fo.x, who playing defense. To see these guys
muted his own scoring abilities to really rally around each other and
help the Lakers chase a title, wore mature in the playoffs, I'm very

Wednesday

Meigs society highlights, A&amp;
Reds ~nap losi.ng streak, B1 .

lhu~

Hlp: IDs; Low: tot

BY MICHELE CARTER
REGISTER NEWS STAFF

.

Stewart a11d ltis wife, Dee,
jl
' ew to New York for three
•
•
days last week for the .taptng
of Sunday's show. Whtle they
were in the Big Apple, his
mother and father, James,
went to Powell Ohio to
•
'
'
babystt granddaughters
Danielle, 4, and Katherine,
8 months.

POINT PLEASANT - Pomt •
Pleasant High 'School Class of 1980
graduate James Gregory Stewart did
his hometown proud Sunday evening
as he walked away with .S32,000 ,?.n
"Who Wan~ To Be A Millionatre.
"We're just all very proud," mother
Lois Stewart said from her Point
Pleasant home . today. "We're just
thrilled."
Stewart and his wife, Dee, flew to
New York for three days last week for He called the number that appears at
the taping of Sunday's · show. While the end of the show and answered a
they were in the Big Apple, his series of questions, which started the
mother and father, James, went to ball rolling. When he was selected,
Powell, Ohio, to babysit granddaugh- according to his mother, he went the
ters Danielle, 4, and Katherine, 8 next week for the filming.
His mother said Stewart told bet,
months.
Stewart was selected for the show "It's a lot different sirting in the chair
following three round~ of questions. · than it is watching it on television. I'D
'

"'

never say 'you dummy' again."
"He said they really had a good
time and it was a great experience,"
she added.
When asked how she felt while
watching her son in the "big chair,"
. Mrs. Stewart said it was not as nervewracking watching because they
already knew the amount of money
he won, even though they were not
allowed to tell.
In Powell, she said granddaughter
Danielle was ~xcited Sunday night
when she saw her parents on televi ~
sion and she waited anxiously for
Regis Philbin to 'say her name on the
air. After that, she decided she would
go to bed.
Stewart, a graduate of Ohio State
University. works for American Air~
lines and is self-employed as . a
painter.
'.
I

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�·...•

Wednesday, June 21, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
B••s strikes two women

•

CLEVELAND (AP) - 1\Vo women were seriously injured when
a bus struck them as they crossed a downtown stieet.
Batban Pfenning, 40, of Clevebnd, and Patricia Connors, 64, of
Fairview Park, were hit and pulled beneath a Laketran bus Thesday.
They were both in serious condition early Wednesday at MetroHealth Medical Center.
Laketran is Lake County's transit system.
~It happened so fast;• said witness David Hill, who was walking
a few feet behind the women. "They flinched, but they couldn't get
out of the way in time."
The 40-foot-long bus dragged the women 17 feet before it
stopped. Hill ran to Connors and tried to comfort her. He held her

hand.
"I got so shaken up when I saw it," said Hill, t'tleveland Municipal Court bailiff. "The lady whose hand I was holding was going
into shock. I started talking to her. She grabbed my collar and I told
her, 'You'te going to make it.' "
Other people used a belt :aS a tourniquet to stop Pfenning's badly
mangled leg from bleeding.
Witnesses told police the "Walk" signal was on when the two
women crossed West 3rd Street. Meanwhile, Karen K. Albright, the
driver of the Laketran bus, was trying to turn left onto the street.
A Cleveland police spokeswoman said the results of the investigation would be turned over to city prosecutors to determine
whether charges will be filed.

Woman Inmate commits suicide
DAYTON (AP) -A woman conVicted in the stabbing and robbery of a cabdriver in the Dayton subutb of Fairborn has committed suicide.
Carol Ann Bell, 20, died Friday at the Ohio Reformatory for
Women in Marysville, state prison officials said. She had been serving a 15- to 50-year sentence for the stabbing :nd robbery of
Charles Fultz on June 26, 1996.
·
Bell pleaded guilty in November 1996 to attempted murder, kidnapping and aggravated robbery. She would have been eligible for
parole in December 2006.
.
A corrections officer found Bell hanging fiom a bedsheet in her
cell about 9 p.m. Friday, said Joe Andtews, spokesman for the Ohio,
Department of Rehabilitation and Correction.
About 2:30 a.m. on June 26, 1996, Fultz picked up Bell and two
friends, Randy Fabian and Haig Barcelona, at a SuperAmerica gas
station and convenience store.
Fultz told police that Bell directed him to a street in Fairborn.
When they arrived, Fultz told the three they owed him $9.50.
Instead, they pulled his seat belt against his neck. Fabian and
Barcelona stabbed him repeatedly with 6-inch steak knives, while
Bell pulled his hair and scratched his face, Fultz said.
The trio took $I 05 from Fultz ·a nd then left him to die: Fultz
pounded his horn as he drove down the street, and a retired police
detective came out of his home and called 91 1.

Wednesday, June 21, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Plglt A 2 • The Deily Sentinel

•

Alumni groups take high-tech route
(AP) Logo - stamped coffee mugs, key
chains and pens just don't do tb.e job anymore for college alumni groups trying to
keep graduates - and their potential donations - connected to their alma maters.
Colleges are offering graduates free or discounted Internet and e- mail services to try
to foster school spirit, build online communities, provide resources and raise money.
Schools regularly distril?ute trinkets to
alumni to remind them of their college
years, but "there's only so many you can give
out;• said Jeff Peters, assistant ditector of
alumni relations at the University ofToledo.
"The idea is if we can help them remember their good experiences, maybe they'll
remember their university and give back
what they can, when they can;' Peters said.
Some universities, like the University of
Toledo, contract with Internet companies for
software packages that include discounted
rates for Internet Service ProvidefS, screen
savers, e-mail accounts · and online portals

designed specifically for each school's alumni.
Others, such as Ohio State University and
Ohio University, are building the beginnings
of online communities on their own .
Those twO schools gave this year's graduates free e- mail forwarding services that
allow them to keep their college e-mail
addresses for life. Both plan soon to expand
the service to include all alumni.
Ohio Univenity plans to add other services to give its graduates the same type of
electronic services the Internet companies
provide, said Ralph Amos, assistant vice president and executive ditector of alumni relations. Those services will be paid for using
private money raised through the alumni
association.
Offering any kind of electronic service to
graduates makes sense because they have
been connected to the lntern~t and used email for most of their educational careers
said Wayne McDaniel, executiVe director of

House fire victims remembered

I

COLUMBUS (AP) -Three children wete laid to rest Tuesday,
three days after they were killed in a house fire that authorities
belie¥e was started by a 17-year-old boy.
About 100 people attended funeral services for Christine Grennell, 4, her brother Clu:istopher, 2, and sister Cassie, 11 !l'Onths.
Bagpipes were played as a salute to the childten who wete laid to
rest in three small, white coffins. 1\vo coffins were coveted in pink
flowers for Christine and Cassie and one in blue for Christopher.
Their mother, 38-year-old Cynthia Campbell, could not attend
the service. She suffered second-degree burns over about half of her
body in the fire and was in serious condition in Ohio State University Medical Center. Campbell escaped the burning house by
jumping from an upstairs window.
Tim Murray, Campbell's brother, said he taped the funeral service
so she could watch it later. Family members hope that she will be
refeased from the hospital by the .e nd of next week.
Pastor Tim Oldfield offered assurances about the childten to
mourners at Potters House Chu~h of God.
"Christine and Christopher and Cassie ate. safe;• Oldfield said.
"They're happy, and they are well:'
Police believe the fire that killed the childten started from sparks
from a firework that Mitchell Sexton Jr. thtew into the home.
Sexton was artested Saturday night and charged with three counts
of involuntary manslaughter and one count of felonious assault.
Neighbors said Sexton was upset with someone staying at the house
and threatened to set it on fire.

Finn sued for lllepl openitlon
COLUMBUS (AP) -A Florida-based credit company that was
operating illegally in Ohio didn't deliver ctedit cards it promised to
consumers who paid an a~ce fee, according to a lawsuit filed
Tuesday by Ohio Attorney General Betty Montgomery.
The lawsuit accuses James C. Holecek IV, of Clearwater, Fla., of
not having a permit to operate The Holecek Co. in Ohio ana failing to deliyer services for which consumen already had paid.
Montgomery's office teceived several complaints from consumers
who said Holecek called them and offered them credit cards that
could be obtained by sending him a 5299 advance fee. Those consumers said they sent the money, but newr received the credit cards.
Holecek ha.s an unlisted phone number and could not be teached
for comment.

..

•
1
':

the University of Florida's alumni association.
McDaniel's college is one of more than 60
nationwide
that
worked
witliJ
zUniversity.com to offer software pac kages
to graduates.
• •!
· "We hope -there will be some financial
rewards down the road, but that's not the
· main reason we got into this. We want to
have better connectivity with our graduates,"
he said.
Subscribers can have their alma mater's •
portal as their start page each time they log
onto the Internet. The portal provtdes campus news, e-mail directories, chat ~oms ~IJd ·
other services. Users can custortuze tlietr
page to include general news, sports, weat!t~l
er, finance, travel and shopping.
· '1
The colleges don't' pay for the services,
The costs are covered from revenue frQ'fn'
advertisements on the portals. The com!l.anies and colleges divide any profits based p~
percentages agreed to within contracts. ·: .If
'~...~

Board to debate closing.uranium enrichment plan~~
Uranium mining in the Urtitj
·H
ed States has declined becatAse
1
there's less demand. There'$ o'rifY.
one company that converts raw
uranium for use by the enrich-ment plant\, and it describes itself
as in trouble.
The deal that made USEC an
investor-owned company jias
been under attack on Capitol
.•
Hill.
Some lawmakers have accustlili
the company of deliberately ti1'""
ing to push its debt-to-earningf
ratio low enough to get a E!aa!
ctedit rating and close a plant; ~n
allegation the company reje~~e~
as false.
,'.
Other lawmakers have dire~t~sJ,
their criticism at the Clinton
administration for failing to k~ep
close enough tabs on the pri:v~
tized company.
:

WASHINGTON (AP)
Company spokeswoman Eliza- two nuclear complexes but transWith a depressed world market beth Stuclde also raised the possi- ferred its uranium· inventory to
and bleak stock numbers as back- bility that the board of directors USEC. The company operates the
drops, the U.S. Enrichment Corp. might not make a quick decision. plants, sells the finished uranium
board was to meet Wednesday to It's possible that the meeting at to electric power plants and acts
decide whether one of the USEC's headquarters in suburban as the middleman for worldwide
nation's two uranium enrichment Maryland may not conclude until sales of uranium recycled frorn
former Soviet warheads. It is the
plants should be closed.
Thursday, she said.
USEC already has indicated
About 1, 900 people are world's ~st supplier offuel for
that il wants to close a plant, employed at the Portsmouth civilian nuclear power plants. .
Questions about the financial
iriforming the government earlier · Gaseous Diffusion Plant in Ohio
this week !hit the company's bad and about 1,700 at the Paducah success of, .USEC have implicacredit rating . can activate an Gaseous Diffusion Plant, but ~25 tions beyond the two communiescape clause in the agreement people at the two plants ate bemg ties with j9bs on the line. ·
The government does not
requiring both the Kentucky and laid off in July.
Ohio facilities to remain open
Months of poor credit, low want to become dependent on
until 2005.
stock prices and insufficient prof- other nations for either bombThe company, which used to its have made it clear some drastic grade uraqjum - in the event
be part of the government, gave action would be needed to turn there ever ~gain is a need to make
no indication of whether its around the companY, a former . more of that - or for the lewer
board was more inclined to shut government enterprise spun off grade of uranium used by power
down the enrichment plant at in a $1.9 billion stock deal in pbnts, since about a fifth of the
Paducah, Ky., or its sister plant at 1998.
. nation's ele~tricity is generated
The government still owns the that way.
Piketon in southern Ohio.

Guilty plea expeded In sllylnc
NEW PHILADELPHIA (AP) - ' A inan accused of killing a teen
and trying to rape her friend last month plaiii to plead guilty to the
charges to avoid a trial that Would further traumatize the victims'
families, the Thscanwas County prosecutor said.
Matthew Vaca, 27, reached a deal last week to plead guilty during
his arraignment pbnned for Wednesday in the stabbing death May
23 of Elizabeth Reiser, I 7, of Dover, and the attempted murder and
attempted rape of her friend, accordirig to Prosecutor Amanda Spies
Bornhorst:'
The prosecutor said she plans to ask for the maximum prison sentences on each count, which means Vaca could spend the rest of his
life in prison. Vaca was expected to be sentenced next week.
Bornhorst said she decided apinst ukina for the death penalty
after consulting with the victims' fami!iet.
Vaca told invettiptors that be offered Reiser and her friend $20
for a ride home fiom the New Towne Mall in New Philadelphia,
about 70 miles south of Cleveland.
He said he then forced them to drive to a hayfield in Auburn
Township, where Reiser was stabbed to death. Her mend was tied
to the car's steering wheel and later thrown off a.15-foot railroad
tresde in Dover when Vaca failed in an attempt to rape and strangle
.
her, authorities reported.
Vaca's mother, Sheila, Davis said her son, the father of three children between the ages of 9 months and 5 years, is reconciled to
spending his life in prison. She said he wants to spare the victims'
families further anguish by having the case go to trial.

,

CINCINNATI (AP) - Gannett Co. Inc., the owner o( The
Cincinnati .Ilnquirer, has asked a
court to dismiss a lawsuit filed
against the · company by the
newspaper's former editor.
In court papers filed in Washington, D.C., Gannett argued that
Lawrence K. Beaupre's recent
lawsuit against the company is an
attempt to deny his responsibility
for a seriea. of I 998 articles critical of Cliiquita Brands . International Inc. The articles were later
tenounced by the newspaper.
The coJDpany contends that
Beaupre,, who was then the
newspape~·s editor, was the
"princip'!i decision maker" who
oversaw tlte articles, the Enquirer
reported Wednesday.
Beaupre filed the lawsuit
apinst the company in April.
Beaupre's lawsuit claims Gannett
officials· misled him, made him a
scapegoat and ruined his teputation in order to protect themselves and the company.
His suit, which seeks unspecified damages, alleges that top
Gannett officials closely supervised work on the articles and

••
••
•
:
•
•
:
•

Specialist

•

1 Anyone wh.o h~s trouble hearing or understanding conversation is invited tol
a FREE hearing test to see ff this pr_obiem can be heiP.&amp;d. Bring thls 1
• have
coupon with you for your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•

Mary T. Clalk

then blamed Beaupre when
problems arose after publication.
. Beaupre said Thesday that he
was not surprised by the company's response.
,:r
"They know very well -~h~
damage they caused, the damage~
they inflicted on myself and ·m1
family;• Beaupre said. "This is
their attempt to put the best face·
on their unconscionable actions."
The company says Beaupre is
I•
distorting the facts and that Gannett did nothing to damage his
reputation or career.
· . ;}
The banana company corn!.
plained that the articles about iff
business practices contairiea
quotes from the voice-mail box$
of Chiquita executives. At th'
time, the paper explained tfW:
tapes of the voice mails we~
obtained from a source witLlli
the company.
•. ,
Later, the lead reporter .on ih.
articles admitted in court that.hl
had illegally accessed Chiquj.t~
voice-mail system. Th~ reporte
Michael Gallagher, lied to edil
tors, denying he had accessed .t'l).~
system ditecdy, the Enquirer sai,

•

seminar for area attorneys,
"Advanced Topics in Family
POMEROY - Units of the Law;• on July 25:
The course will provide six
Meigs
Emergency
Services
hours
of CLE credit.
answered six calls for assistance on
Advanced
registration
is
l;'~sday. Units responded as fol- ·
advised,
by
calling
1-800-232loi.vs:
. ·.
7124.
. CENTRAL DISPATCH
,' 11:56 a.m., HMC Clinic, Dale
Riffie, Holzer Medical Center;
, ~:43 p.m., Eagle Ri~ge, assisted
HARRISONVILLE - The
by Racine, Dora Hysell, HMC.
· •·· ·
POMEROY
regular meeting of the Har. 6:18 a.m., Middleport Police risonville Senior Citizens MooDepartment, Mike Taber;
~ day has been canceled, but the
M
·
t
are asked to come
·55
Vill
6 . a.m.,
age anor, ass1s - women
hall
h dto the
ed b s cuse, Eddie Gorden, town
at 11. a.m. t at ay to
.t t yd· yra . ·
· prepare for a yard sale.
Th
.th .
'b
rea e •
S
d d Mulb
. ose WI ttems to contn ute
9 34
er- are asked to take them to the hall
: a.m., ec.on an
~Georg~ Hams Sr., Pleasant Val- or call 742-7290 .dB 742-3182.
ley Hospttal.
Proceeds from the sale will go
RUTLAND
. . ....,..:,. · Pres.byk towa rd the H armo,..-we
12:54 p.m., VMH, Mary Clar • terian Church and ' 't he Senior
dead on arnval.
Citizens.
,,

aass set
· 'MIDDLEPORT - Ohio State
Bar Association Continuing Legal
Education Institute, in cof\iunction with the Meigs County Bar
Association, will ·spoQsor a legal

'.

.:MORELOCALNEWS.
LOCAL FOLKS.
.MORE
'
.

·· The Daily Sentinel
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Rltn Oullklt Mtlp Cou•tJ
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26·W..u .................................. ........ ..... .. S56.68
· l2 WcckJ ......... ........ ................. .............$1119.72

btiing constructed in 'Gallia and
·..;·.
....
Meigs County
•••

Re,1der StHvtccs

Opportunities are limited and on a first con\~'
first serve basis according to eligibility

G.aUia·- Me.i

'•

..
·~

o.r • • t'encern In 111 atoriea h to be
II JOU know or •• emr hi I Aory.
:olldll •warDOIR 11 (740) 991:~21!5. We will
'clleck ro•r laror•atlon ancl 1111kt •

"',.

•• I
I

..

cau NowIff II

I

Tel: 740·367·7341 or
740·992·6629

ftrnc:don It Wltnldtcl,

New• O.,.rtmenh

:&lt;

,.. oollo na•ber Is "~·~1!5, Dcpon...nt
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ffewa .......................:......................... EJ:L lltl

A.t..rtiii... ...~.:::.~....... Ed. ll04

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•

ct~~rllte.

;. ..............- ............. ,..,_ .............. or Ex1,1106

Home OWnel'llhiP. Education Cl- will be held Monday, 6/26/00 througti; . •
8/'JC/00 from 8:00 prn at the Cheshire Office, 8010 SR 7 N, Cheshire.
You must call to reHrve a eeat and attend to quality.

Ice aeam $0dal
scheduled
BASHAN Bashan Ladies
Auxiliary will have an ice cream
social on June 30.

VALLEY WEATHER
Zelman wants parents
·more involved in schools
Dry conditions in forecast
.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Par- too much time getting levies
ents must become more passed, can concentrate on runinvolved in their children's edu- ning their districts, she said.
cation and it's up to schools to Local taxes currently provide
persuade them, Ohio's schools a!)out 5 I percent of the money
superintendent told lawmakers for public schools.
considering a response to the
" I Want our superintendents
state SupreDJe Court's latest to be education leaders and not
school funding ruling.
fund-raisers;• she said.
Susan Tave Zelman told the
The committee of eight
Joint Comtnittee on School House members ~nd eight senFunding and Accountability on ators held its second meeting
, Tuesday that pare nts, especially, since being appointed last
need to better understand the month. Besides Zelman, th'e
standards their children must panel heatd from the nonpartimeet to succeed.
san Legislative Budget Office.
·•How do we communicate Staffers from that office
those standards to our parents, . explained the current structure
to our teachers, to our stu- of school funding and the ·hisdents?" Zelman said . .. We need tory of taxes related to schools.
to do a better job letting parents
David Brunson is assistant
know what we expect."
director of the budget office.
The Supreme Court ruled on He said the funding formula is
~ay II that Ohio's funding
designed to help poor districts
formula remains too reliant on get better footing against their
local property taxes. However, it higher-wealth neighbors. The
also emphasized that account- system provides more state aid
ability from students, teachers for districts whose property
and school districts is impor- taxes cannot support an adetant.
quate ·education program, he
Rep. Robert Corbin, a Day- said.
ton Republican and a member
"You look at 10, 12 years
of the committee, said parental ago and you 'd see the lowestaccountability is a problem in wealth districts were the lowurban districts, though Zelman est-spending districts. That's no
added the problem exists in longer the case;• Brunson said.
rural districts as well.
Lawmakers are looking for a
"Where we have high remedy to the court's ruling,
expectations, primarily in sub- which came three years after it
utban district\, we have excel- initially found the funding syslent educational programs," tem did not provide a "thorCorbin said.
. ough and efficient" education
Zelman also said ·districts are as mandated by the Ohio Connot doing enough for teacher stitution.
development, pointing out that
The state responded with a
some districts spend less than 1 series of new laws that provided
percent of their budgets on more money for school conthose programs. She said at least struction and operations and
2 percent of school dollars made students and districts
should be set aside for teacher more accountable.
development.
The court, in its May 11 rulThe prol?lems don't stop in ing, said the state had taken sigthe classroom, Zelman said. It's nificant steps toward a solution
essential that the state become but did not do enough. It gave
the primary source of funding lawmakers until next June to
so superintendents, who spend come up with a remedy.

LOC,AL STOCKS
Alczo-40,,
50'· Sears- 31
4n.
AEP-33~

AmTech/SBCAshland Inc. - 35~
AT&amp;T-34
Bank One - 28'/,
Bob Evans - 14.,,
BorgWamer- 35l.
Champion - 3
Charming Shops- 5)o
City Holding- 6,.
Federal Mogul- 10'1,
Flratar - 2Vo

'Gannett - 61
General Electric Ha~ey Davidson - 34'•

Kmart-7'1.
Kroger - 19,,
Lands End- 32'·
Ud.- 21-,,
Oak Hill Financlal-14~
OVB-27'1.
One Valley- 33~
Peopl08 - 15\
Premier-S~

·Rockwell - 32'o

BY TH E I&lt;SSOCIATED PRESS

The tri -county area will be
getting some relief from the
stortlly weather after anothe r
round of thunderstorms tonight.
Fair skies are forecast fo r
Thursday through Saturday, the
National Weather Service said.
Highs will be in the 80s and
overnighr lows in the 50s.
Sunset tonight will be at 9: 04
p.m. and sunrise on Thursday at
6:04a.m .
Weather forecast:

Schools
from PapAl
houses and vacant lots, where are
you supposed to get the fund.
f"
mg.
Overall gains from school
spending, advocates warn, will be
lost if states don't level the playing
field between rich and poor
school district\.
"If we don't create a fair funding system, we are going tq hurt
today and we are going to hurt
tomorrow," said Rep. Chaka Fattab, a Philadelphia Democrat
who wants changes. "We have to
take these states to task on this

issue."
The money allocated to schools
nationwide has increased 30 percent from 1991-92 to 1996-97,
according to the latest schoolfinance figures from the Census
Bureau, released Tuesday.
Spending was $307.5 billion in
the 1996-97 year, up from $236.3
billio11 in 1991-92 according to
the bureau's analysis of local. state
and federal records. The average
spent per-student nationwide was
$5,873, up from $5,001 spent in
1991• 92.
Yet the school-funding pie is
essentially divided the same way it
was nearly a decade ago.
The federal government's share

Omtlotlon.-..... ;lf...... . . ...........-.!&gt;&lt;1. 1183
fl'NIIIod Adi ............................ ~... Ed.lltlO

.,

••

Jobs

••

Rocky Boots- 5),
RDShell-62
'~"
Shoney•s - '•
Wat·Mart - 54l.
Wendy's - 18).
Worthington -11'~•

Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

·. .

SINGLE COPY PRICE

Home
Ownership ·

•

. MIDDLEPORT - Mary T. Clark, Middleport, died on Tuesday,
June 20, 2000 at the extended care unit ofVeterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
·
·
.She was born on November 9, I 922 in Crown City, and was the
daughter of the late Alva Thornton and Bessie Houck Thornton.
· .She was employed at jmperial Electric in Middleport for 20 years.
.She is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Sue and Abe Grueser
of Rudand; three grandchildren, Syndi Little ofMason, West Virginia,
Bob Spires of Warner Robins, Georgia, and Kip Grueser of Rutland;
five great- grandchildten, Jeremy Jones of Mason, West Virginia,
Michelle Weaver of Middleport, Ryan and Dylan Spires of Warner
R?bins, Georgia, and Tristan Theiss of Pomeroy; and two niFFeS and
n~hews.
·
Services will be held at 1 p.m. on Friday, June 23, 2000 at Fisher
F~neral Home in Middleport. Officiating will be the Rev. Keith
R~der and burial will follow in Graham Station Cemete.cy. New
~aven,WestVirginia. Friends may call on Thursday, June 22,2000 from
7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

if

•

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COUPON
FREE HEARING TESTS
1M 11tt1l1 Melis/..11• CMIIIIeslly
HEARING AID CENTER •
•
friday, JUII 23, 2000
••
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••
224 lilt Mall, P0111roy
9:00 • lloon
••
Call Toll Free1-800-634-5265 for an Immediate
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The testa will be given by a Ucensed Hearing Aid
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Obituaries

.,
'

Yard sale on tap

Gannett asks·court to dismJs~~
scliool'voucher arguments lawsuit by former editor
_...,
the Constitution by allowing
the use of public money to support religious schools.
"Government money is not
supposed to go to support sectarian institutions," Marvin E.
Frankel, a lawyer for opponents,
told the appeals court.
Charmaine
and
James
Thomas of Cleveland, whose
daughter attends a Christian
school through the program,
said after the hearing that the
tax money is their money and
they should have the right to
decide whether their child goes
to school.
Ceaira Thomas, 7, has been
in the pfllgram three years and
is getting A's and B's, Charmaine Thomas said.
"We didn't send our child to
a private school because of the
religion," she said. "We chose a
private school because of the
quality of the education."
Ohio lawmakers created the
voucher system in response to
concern about the quality of
education at Cleveland's public
schools.
However, U.S. District Judge
Solomon Oliver in Cleveland
ruled in December that the
program is unconstitutional
because most of the 56 schools
that receive money for taking
voucher students have a religio~s affili\ition.

LONG BOTTOM- Estherla Powell, 70, Long Bottom, diedTuesdiy,June 21,2000 in Holzer Medical Center.
Arrangements will be announced by Ctemeens Funeral Home,
Racine.

,. Units log 6 calls

A~~ls co-h~an
.

Eslherta Powell

LOCAL BRIEFS

'

·'
CINCINNATI (AP) -The
state's school voucher program
is legal because parents can
choose between religious and
·secular schools, lawyen for participating families told a federal
appeals court.
· They asked the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals 01:1 Thesday to reject a federal judge's
ruling that the tuition program
is an unconstitutional mixture
of government and religion.
"The parents have complete
choice, because they're in the
driver's seat:' said Edward B.
Foley, a lawyer from the Ohio
attorney general's office whQ
defended the vouchers program.
Appeals Judges Eugene Siler
Jr., Eric Clay and James Ryan
did not say when they will rule.
.Their decision is likely to be
appealed to the U.S. Supreme
Court, both sides said.
The voucher program, which
operates only in Clevebnd, just
completed its fourth year. Lowincome parents receive up to
$2,250 per child in state-funded
tuition payments to send their
children to private schools.
The program, wl)ich involves
about 3,600 students, continues
to accept new students while ·
the ruling is appealed.
Attorneys for voucher opponimts say the program violates

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Meigs recorder posts land transfers
POMEROY - The following land transfers
Edith E. BurneU, William R. Hughes, Margaret
were recently reported by Meigs County Hughes, to Norma J. Grueser, Jerry J. Grueser,
Recorder Judith A. King:
judge entry, Sutton;
Robert S. Burdette, Sharon R . Burdette, to StuMax E. Pickett, Gloria A. Pickett, to Lewis 0.
art W. Pullins, Susan K. •Pullins, deed, Salisbury;
Pickett, Judy A. Pickett, deed , Letart;
Jon T. Mugrage, to : Samantha D. Mugrage,
William Pooler,jr.,to William David Krawsczyn,
Columbus Southern Power, easement, Chester;
Jeffifer M. Krawsczyn, deed, Chester;
Wisteria Incorporated,• to Columbus Southern
Donald Pigott, to Michael Koren, deed, Olive;
Power, easement, Scipio; ·
.
Willard F. Boyer, Nettie Boyer, Nettie M . Boyer,
Alex 0. Thio,Jane Thio, to Victor L. Hoalcraft, to Willard F. Boyer, Nettie M. Boyer, Arthur Barry
Angela S. Hoakraft, deedrScipio;
Boyer, Brenda D. Prater, deed, Pomeroy;
Paul A.n thony Davis, ·April Davis, Joseph W.
Robert C. Snodgrass, Emma J. Sn~dgrass, to
Davis, Jr., to Paul Anthony Davis, April Davis, Maureen T. Burns, deed, Rutland;
deed, Bedford;
Dorothy M. Bobrof, to Jeri L. Topy, Stanley D.
Paul Anthony Davis, April Davis, Joseph W. Bobrof, Dorothy M. Bobrof, deed, Olive;
Davis,Jr.,to Bill M. Weavers, Jr., Sondra D. Weaver,
Kimberly S. Lee, Jimmy Lee, to Wayne Pauley;
deed, Bedford;
Cathy L. Pauley, deed, Salisbury;
.
Paul Anthony Davis, April Davis, Joseph W.
Roger Gay Toney, to Brenda G. Ladeaux, Shelia
Davis, Jr., to Joseph W. Davi~Jr., deed, Bedford;
Jane Cash, Josephine L. Hill, deed, Chester;
Vicki L. Wheeler, to Randy A. Wheeler, deed,
Excelsior Salt Works Inc., to Meigs County
1
Letart;
Community Inc., deed, Pomeroy;
Winifred A. Marcinko, to Winifred A. Marcinko
Mary E. Buck, deceased, Fritz Buck, deceased, to
Revo., trust;
'
Robert E. Buck, affidavit, Pomeroy/Letart;
Winifred A. Marcinko, to }Yinifred A. Marcinko,
Robert G. Graham, Ruth A. Graham, to Robert
Joseph D. Marcinko, deed, Olive;
G. Graham, Ruth A. Graham, deed, Bedford;
Crystal E. Simpson, to Daniel M. Dodson, VirRobert G. Graham, Ruth A. Graham. to Robert
ginia Wolfe, deed, Middlepott;
G. Graham, Ruth A. Graham, deed, Bedfotd;
Jean Lama Moore, deceased, Katherine Jean
Robert G. Graham, Ruth A. Graham, to Robert
Moore, deceased, to Constan~e C. Smith, certifi- G. Graham, Ruth A. Graham, deed, Chester;
.
cate, Middleport;
v
Robert G. Graham, Ruth A. Graham, to Bed. Constance C. Smith, James.. N. Smith, to Con- foro, deed. Bedford:
stance C. Smith,James N. Smith, deed, Middleport;
Kathryn L. Wilde Meredith, Kathryn L. WilderRoscoe Mills, Sandra J. Mills, to Timothy A. muth, Robert J. Meredith, to Roscoe Mills, Sandra .
Curfman, Brenda K. Curfman, deed, Sutton;
J. MiUs, deed, Pomeroy / Salisbury;
Lois Province, deceased, to Margaret L. Biggs,
Harry H. Walburn, deceased, to Aunda K. Klein,
Diana L. Davidson, certificate,.Salisbury;
certificate, Middleport.
Essie Hicks, Susan Hicks, to Columbus Southern
Power, right of way, Sutton;
Howard R . Ervin, Nancy R. Ervin, to C~lumbus
Southern Power, right of way, Sutton;
Louise Eshelman, deceased, to Robert Boring,
deed, Scipio;
Adam C. Martin, to John C. Harmon, deed,
Pomeroy;
Wenda Williamson, to Suzanne M. Greif, deed,
Orange;
Home National Bank, to Edward D. Dunn, Ba~­
Subscribe today. ·
bara D. Dunn, deed. Lebanon;

•

from Page A1
The telecommunications company will invest an additional $2
million in computer equipment
and other infrastructure needed
to make the business operationaL
Reed confirmed Tuesday that
CIC originally planned to develop
land
beneath
the
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge for this
new business, but ODOT's
announced plaos to purchase the
land for the construction of the
· new bridge - to be constructed
just down river from the existing
bri,dge - thwarted those plans,
and the Excelsior property was
then chosen.
Once construction on the
building has been completed,
Reed said, the Ohio Department
of Development will offer loan
funding to the CIC to retire the
debt for the building itself, which
the CIC will, in turn,lease to the
company.
"Essentially, the Ohio Department of Development will help
Meigs County develop jobs;•
Reed said.
"We have something here that's
more valuable than roads, more
valuable than technology, and
that's our people," Reed said.
"This company has identified that
we have the viable labor .force
that is necessary' to make this a
worthwhile project."
Reed said that he feels that this
new company will likely create a

~~

~

••••

740·753·3400

MOVIES

************
Located At 33

• •

-; M1nut1"'

NMrn

is about 7 percent; the states contribute 49 percent. And the rest
comes from local tax coffers.
Funding critics say poorer districts will never have a chance to
catch up.
Disparities extend to the state
level, Census figures show. The
top spenders per-pupil - New
·Jersey, New York, Alaska, Connecticut - also draw some of the
highest state tax revenues. ·
Districts have sought remedies
in federal and state cot~rts . New
York, Philadelphia and Kansas
systems have filed federal lawsuits
over school funding.
The Ohio State Supreme
Court in May gave the state a
year to fix a system that forces
schools to rely on local taxes.
Ohio, which spent $5,897 per
pupil in 1996-97, will contribute
$10 billion toward fixing every
schoolhouse, he said.
"This is something that must
be solved," said Scott Milburn,
spokesman for Gov. Robert Taft.
"If you have the money and you
have the will power, you can get
things going."
Henry Duvall, spokesman for
the Council of Great City
Schools, a group of urban educators, says underlying formulas
must be fixed: "When . you ralk
about setting higher standards
across the board for everyone, the
field is not level.''

Reed conjirmed 1i1esday
tlrat CIC or(cinally
planned lo de,,efop laud
beneath the
Pomemy I Mason Bridge
for tl1is t1ew business, ,hilt
ODOT's amloum:ed plans
to purchase tlu land for
the constmctiotl of the
new bridge.
"domino effect" in terms of
attracting other busin.esses, ·and
that any new businesses will
begin competing with higher
wages and benefit packages in an
attempt to attract and maintain a
quality workforce .
Reed did not indicate what the
starting wages for workers at the
telecommunications company
would be.
"This company chose Meigs
County for the facility because of
the positive labor situation, the
advanced high speed teleconunu- •
nications capacity, and the commun\ty effort to land the project,",
the news release said.
"This is great news for the ,
county," Reed said.

Subscribe today.
992-2156

10

~· ~

~·

Ton ight ... Partl y cloudy. A
chance of showers and thundersto rms. Lows 60 to 65.
Thu rsday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the lower to mid 80s.
Thursday night. .. Fair. Lows
mid 50s to the lower 60s.
Extended forecast:
Friday... Fair. Highs 75 to 85.
Saturday.. .Fair. Lows near 60.
Highs in the 80s.
,
Sunday.. .A chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Lpws in the
60s. Highs in th e 80s.

at Atflrn-.;

...... Ftr ~~~., ........ n.., -121111

The Daily Sentinel
MORE LOCAL NEWS:
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
992-2156

STARTS FRIDAY 8/23100

CHICKEN RUN (Q)
MYSELF &amp; IRENE

All AGES , All TIMES 84 .00

�·...•

Wednesday, June 21, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
B••s strikes two women

•

CLEVELAND (AP) - 1\Vo women were seriously injured when
a bus struck them as they crossed a downtown stieet.
Batban Pfenning, 40, of Clevebnd, and Patricia Connors, 64, of
Fairview Park, were hit and pulled beneath a Laketran bus Thesday.
They were both in serious condition early Wednesday at MetroHealth Medical Center.
Laketran is Lake County's transit system.
~It happened so fast;• said witness David Hill, who was walking
a few feet behind the women. "They flinched, but they couldn't get
out of the way in time."
The 40-foot-long bus dragged the women 17 feet before it
stopped. Hill ran to Connors and tried to comfort her. He held her

hand.
"I got so shaken up when I saw it," said Hill, t'tleveland Municipal Court bailiff. "The lady whose hand I was holding was going
into shock. I started talking to her. She grabbed my collar and I told
her, 'You'te going to make it.' "
Other people used a belt :aS a tourniquet to stop Pfenning's badly
mangled leg from bleeding.
Witnesses told police the "Walk" signal was on when the two
women crossed West 3rd Street. Meanwhile, Karen K. Albright, the
driver of the Laketran bus, was trying to turn left onto the street.
A Cleveland police spokeswoman said the results of the investigation would be turned over to city prosecutors to determine
whether charges will be filed.

Woman Inmate commits suicide
DAYTON (AP) -A woman conVicted in the stabbing and robbery of a cabdriver in the Dayton subutb of Fairborn has committed suicide.
Carol Ann Bell, 20, died Friday at the Ohio Reformatory for
Women in Marysville, state prison officials said. She had been serving a 15- to 50-year sentence for the stabbing :nd robbery of
Charles Fultz on June 26, 1996.
·
Bell pleaded guilty in November 1996 to attempted murder, kidnapping and aggravated robbery. She would have been eligible for
parole in December 2006.
.
A corrections officer found Bell hanging fiom a bedsheet in her
cell about 9 p.m. Friday, said Joe Andtews, spokesman for the Ohio,
Department of Rehabilitation and Correction.
About 2:30 a.m. on June 26, 1996, Fultz picked up Bell and two
friends, Randy Fabian and Haig Barcelona, at a SuperAmerica gas
station and convenience store.
Fultz told police that Bell directed him to a street in Fairborn.
When they arrived, Fultz told the three they owed him $9.50.
Instead, they pulled his seat belt against his neck. Fabian and
Barcelona stabbed him repeatedly with 6-inch steak knives, while
Bell pulled his hair and scratched his face, Fultz said.
The trio took $I 05 from Fultz ·a nd then left him to die: Fultz
pounded his horn as he drove down the street, and a retired police
detective came out of his home and called 91 1.

Wednesday, June 21, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Plglt A 2 • The Deily Sentinel

•

Alumni groups take high-tech route
(AP) Logo - stamped coffee mugs, key
chains and pens just don't do tb.e job anymore for college alumni groups trying to
keep graduates - and their potential donations - connected to their alma maters.
Colleges are offering graduates free or discounted Internet and e- mail services to try
to foster school spirit, build online communities, provide resources and raise money.
Schools regularly distril?ute trinkets to
alumni to remind them of their college
years, but "there's only so many you can give
out;• said Jeff Peters, assistant ditector of
alumni relations at the University ofToledo.
"The idea is if we can help them remember their good experiences, maybe they'll
remember their university and give back
what they can, when they can;' Peters said.
Some universities, like the University of
Toledo, contract with Internet companies for
software packages that include discounted
rates for Internet Service ProvidefS, screen
savers, e-mail accounts · and online portals

designed specifically for each school's alumni.
Others, such as Ohio State University and
Ohio University, are building the beginnings
of online communities on their own .
Those twO schools gave this year's graduates free e- mail forwarding services that
allow them to keep their college e-mail
addresses for life. Both plan soon to expand
the service to include all alumni.
Ohio Univenity plans to add other services to give its graduates the same type of
electronic services the Internet companies
provide, said Ralph Amos, assistant vice president and executive ditector of alumni relations. Those services will be paid for using
private money raised through the alumni
association.
Offering any kind of electronic service to
graduates makes sense because they have
been connected to the lntern~t and used email for most of their educational careers
said Wayne McDaniel, executiVe director of

House fire victims remembered

I

COLUMBUS (AP) -Three children wete laid to rest Tuesday,
three days after they were killed in a house fire that authorities
belie¥e was started by a 17-year-old boy.
About 100 people attended funeral services for Christine Grennell, 4, her brother Clu:istopher, 2, and sister Cassie, 11 !l'Onths.
Bagpipes were played as a salute to the childten who wete laid to
rest in three small, white coffins. 1\vo coffins were coveted in pink
flowers for Christine and Cassie and one in blue for Christopher.
Their mother, 38-year-old Cynthia Campbell, could not attend
the service. She suffered second-degree burns over about half of her
body in the fire and was in serious condition in Ohio State University Medical Center. Campbell escaped the burning house by
jumping from an upstairs window.
Tim Murray, Campbell's brother, said he taped the funeral service
so she could watch it later. Family members hope that she will be
refeased from the hospital by the .e nd of next week.
Pastor Tim Oldfield offered assurances about the childten to
mourners at Potters House Chu~h of God.
"Christine and Christopher and Cassie ate. safe;• Oldfield said.
"They're happy, and they are well:'
Police believe the fire that killed the childten started from sparks
from a firework that Mitchell Sexton Jr. thtew into the home.
Sexton was artested Saturday night and charged with three counts
of involuntary manslaughter and one count of felonious assault.
Neighbors said Sexton was upset with someone staying at the house
and threatened to set it on fire.

Finn sued for lllepl openitlon
COLUMBUS (AP) -A Florida-based credit company that was
operating illegally in Ohio didn't deliver ctedit cards it promised to
consumers who paid an a~ce fee, according to a lawsuit filed
Tuesday by Ohio Attorney General Betty Montgomery.
The lawsuit accuses James C. Holecek IV, of Clearwater, Fla., of
not having a permit to operate The Holecek Co. in Ohio ana failing to deliyer services for which consumen already had paid.
Montgomery's office teceived several complaints from consumers
who said Holecek called them and offered them credit cards that
could be obtained by sending him a 5299 advance fee. Those consumers said they sent the money, but newr received the credit cards.
Holecek ha.s an unlisted phone number and could not be teached
for comment.

..

•
1
':

the University of Florida's alumni association.
McDaniel's college is one of more than 60
nationwide
that
worked
witliJ
zUniversity.com to offer software pac kages
to graduates.
• •!
· "We hope -there will be some financial
rewards down the road, but that's not the
· main reason we got into this. We want to
have better connectivity with our graduates,"
he said.
Subscribers can have their alma mater's •
portal as their start page each time they log
onto the Internet. The portal provtdes campus news, e-mail directories, chat ~oms ~IJd ·
other services. Users can custortuze tlietr
page to include general news, sports, weat!t~l
er, finance, travel and shopping.
· '1
The colleges don't' pay for the services,
The costs are covered from revenue frQ'fn'
advertisements on the portals. The com!l.anies and colleges divide any profits based p~
percentages agreed to within contracts. ·: .If
'~...~

Board to debate closing.uranium enrichment plan~~
Uranium mining in the Urtitj
·H
ed States has declined becatAse
1
there's less demand. There'$ o'rifY.
one company that converts raw
uranium for use by the enrich-ment plant\, and it describes itself
as in trouble.
The deal that made USEC an
investor-owned company jias
been under attack on Capitol
.•
Hill.
Some lawmakers have accustlili
the company of deliberately ti1'""
ing to push its debt-to-earningf
ratio low enough to get a E!aa!
ctedit rating and close a plant; ~n
allegation the company reje~~e~
as false.
,'.
Other lawmakers have dire~t~sJ,
their criticism at the Clinton
administration for failing to k~ep
close enough tabs on the pri:v~
tized company.
:

WASHINGTON (AP)
Company spokeswoman Eliza- two nuclear complexes but transWith a depressed world market beth Stuclde also raised the possi- ferred its uranium· inventory to
and bleak stock numbers as back- bility that the board of directors USEC. The company operates the
drops, the U.S. Enrichment Corp. might not make a quick decision. plants, sells the finished uranium
board was to meet Wednesday to It's possible that the meeting at to electric power plants and acts
decide whether one of the USEC's headquarters in suburban as the middleman for worldwide
nation's two uranium enrichment Maryland may not conclude until sales of uranium recycled frorn
former Soviet warheads. It is the
plants should be closed.
Thursday, she said.
USEC already has indicated
About 1, 900 people are world's ~st supplier offuel for
that il wants to close a plant, employed at the Portsmouth civilian nuclear power plants. .
Questions about the financial
iriforming the government earlier · Gaseous Diffusion Plant in Ohio
this week !hit the company's bad and about 1,700 at the Paducah success of, .USEC have implicacredit rating . can activate an Gaseous Diffusion Plant, but ~25 tions beyond the two communiescape clause in the agreement people at the two plants ate bemg ties with j9bs on the line. ·
The government does not
requiring both the Kentucky and laid off in July.
Ohio facilities to remain open
Months of poor credit, low want to become dependent on
until 2005.
stock prices and insufficient prof- other nations for either bombThe company, which used to its have made it clear some drastic grade uraqjum - in the event
be part of the government, gave action would be needed to turn there ever ~gain is a need to make
no indication of whether its around the companY, a former . more of that - or for the lewer
board was more inclined to shut government enterprise spun off grade of uranium used by power
down the enrichment plant at in a $1.9 billion stock deal in pbnts, since about a fifth of the
Paducah, Ky., or its sister plant at 1998.
. nation's ele~tricity is generated
The government still owns the that way.
Piketon in southern Ohio.

Guilty plea expeded In sllylnc
NEW PHILADELPHIA (AP) - ' A inan accused of killing a teen
and trying to rape her friend last month plaiii to plead guilty to the
charges to avoid a trial that Would further traumatize the victims'
families, the Thscanwas County prosecutor said.
Matthew Vaca, 27, reached a deal last week to plead guilty during
his arraignment pbnned for Wednesday in the stabbing death May
23 of Elizabeth Reiser, I 7, of Dover, and the attempted murder and
attempted rape of her friend, accordirig to Prosecutor Amanda Spies
Bornhorst:'
The prosecutor said she plans to ask for the maximum prison sentences on each count, which means Vaca could spend the rest of his
life in prison. Vaca was expected to be sentenced next week.
Bornhorst said she decided apinst ukina for the death penalty
after consulting with the victims' fami!iet.
Vaca told invettiptors that be offered Reiser and her friend $20
for a ride home fiom the New Towne Mall in New Philadelphia,
about 70 miles south of Cleveland.
He said he then forced them to drive to a hayfield in Auburn
Township, where Reiser was stabbed to death. Her mend was tied
to the car's steering wheel and later thrown off a.15-foot railroad
tresde in Dover when Vaca failed in an attempt to rape and strangle
.
her, authorities reported.
Vaca's mother, Sheila, Davis said her son, the father of three children between the ages of 9 months and 5 years, is reconciled to
spending his life in prison. She said he wants to spare the victims'
families further anguish by having the case go to trial.

,

CINCINNATI (AP) - Gannett Co. Inc., the owner o( The
Cincinnati .Ilnquirer, has asked a
court to dismiss a lawsuit filed
against the · company by the
newspaper's former editor.
In court papers filed in Washington, D.C., Gannett argued that
Lawrence K. Beaupre's recent
lawsuit against the company is an
attempt to deny his responsibility
for a seriea. of I 998 articles critical of Cliiquita Brands . International Inc. The articles were later
tenounced by the newspaper.
The coJDpany contends that
Beaupre,, who was then the
newspape~·s editor, was the
"princip'!i decision maker" who
oversaw tlte articles, the Enquirer
reported Wednesday.
Beaupre filed the lawsuit
apinst the company in April.
Beaupre's lawsuit claims Gannett
officials· misled him, made him a
scapegoat and ruined his teputation in order to protect themselves and the company.
His suit, which seeks unspecified damages, alleges that top
Gannett officials closely supervised work on the articles and

••
••
•
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•
•
:
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Specialist

•

1 Anyone wh.o h~s trouble hearing or understanding conversation is invited tol
a FREE hearing test to see ff this pr_obiem can be heiP.&amp;d. Bring thls 1
• have
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••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•

Mary T. Clalk

then blamed Beaupre when
problems arose after publication.
. Beaupre said Thesday that he
was not surprised by the company's response.
,:r
"They know very well -~h~
damage they caused, the damage~
they inflicted on myself and ·m1
family;• Beaupre said. "This is
their attempt to put the best face·
on their unconscionable actions."
The company says Beaupre is
I•
distorting the facts and that Gannett did nothing to damage his
reputation or career.
· . ;}
The banana company corn!.
plained that the articles about iff
business practices contairiea
quotes from the voice-mail box$
of Chiquita executives. At th'
time, the paper explained tfW:
tapes of the voice mails we~
obtained from a source witLlli
the company.
•. ,
Later, the lead reporter .on ih.
articles admitted in court that.hl
had illegally accessed Chiquj.t~
voice-mail system. Th~ reporte
Michael Gallagher, lied to edil
tors, denying he had accessed .t'l).~
system ditecdy, the Enquirer sai,

•

seminar for area attorneys,
"Advanced Topics in Family
POMEROY - Units of the Law;• on July 25:
The course will provide six
Meigs
Emergency
Services
hours
of CLE credit.
answered six calls for assistance on
Advanced
registration
is
l;'~sday. Units responded as fol- ·
advised,
by
calling
1-800-232loi.vs:
. ·.
7124.
. CENTRAL DISPATCH
,' 11:56 a.m., HMC Clinic, Dale
Riffie, Holzer Medical Center;
, ~:43 p.m., Eagle Ri~ge, assisted
HARRISONVILLE - The
by Racine, Dora Hysell, HMC.
· •·· ·
POMEROY
regular meeting of the Har. 6:18 a.m., Middleport Police risonville Senior Citizens MooDepartment, Mike Taber;
~ day has been canceled, but the
M
·
t
are asked to come
·55
Vill
6 . a.m.,
age anor, ass1s - women
hall
h dto the
ed b s cuse, Eddie Gorden, town
at 11. a.m. t at ay to
.t t yd· yra . ·
· prepare for a yard sale.
Th
.th .
'b
rea e •
S
d d Mulb
. ose WI ttems to contn ute
9 34
er- are asked to take them to the hall
: a.m., ec.on an
~Georg~ Hams Sr., Pleasant Val- or call 742-7290 .dB 742-3182.
ley Hospttal.
Proceeds from the sale will go
RUTLAND
. . ....,..:,. · Pres.byk towa rd the H armo,..-we
12:54 p.m., VMH, Mary Clar • terian Church and ' 't he Senior
dead on arnval.
Citizens.
,,

aass set
· 'MIDDLEPORT - Ohio State
Bar Association Continuing Legal
Education Institute, in cof\iunction with the Meigs County Bar
Association, will ·spoQsor a legal

'.

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LOCAL FOLKS.
.MORE
'
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·· The Daily Sentinel
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ct~~rllte.

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Home OWnel'llhiP. Education Cl- will be held Monday, 6/26/00 througti; . •
8/'JC/00 from 8:00 prn at the Cheshire Office, 8010 SR 7 N, Cheshire.
You must call to reHrve a eeat and attend to quality.

Ice aeam $0dal
scheduled
BASHAN Bashan Ladies
Auxiliary will have an ice cream
social on June 30.

VALLEY WEATHER
Zelman wants parents
·more involved in schools
Dry conditions in forecast
.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Par- too much time getting levies
ents must become more passed, can concentrate on runinvolved in their children's edu- ning their districts, she said.
cation and it's up to schools to Local taxes currently provide
persuade them, Ohio's schools a!)out 5 I percent of the money
superintendent told lawmakers for public schools.
considering a response to the
" I Want our superintendents
state SupreDJe Court's latest to be education leaders and not
school funding ruling.
fund-raisers;• she said.
Susan Tave Zelman told the
The committee of eight
Joint Comtnittee on School House members ~nd eight senFunding and Accountability on ators held its second meeting
, Tuesday that pare nts, especially, since being appointed last
need to better understand the month. Besides Zelman, th'e
standards their children must panel heatd from the nonpartimeet to succeed.
san Legislative Budget Office.
·•How do we communicate Staffers from that office
those standards to our parents, . explained the current structure
to our teachers, to our stu- of school funding and the ·hisdents?" Zelman said . .. We need tory of taxes related to schools.
to do a better job letting parents
David Brunson is assistant
know what we expect."
director of the budget office.
The Supreme Court ruled on He said the funding formula is
~ay II that Ohio's funding
designed to help poor districts
formula remains too reliant on get better footing against their
local property taxes. However, it higher-wealth neighbors. The
also emphasized that account- system provides more state aid
ability from students, teachers for districts whose property
and school districts is impor- taxes cannot support an adetant.
quate ·education program, he
Rep. Robert Corbin, a Day- said.
ton Republican and a member
"You look at 10, 12 years
of the committee, said parental ago and you 'd see the lowestaccountability is a problem in wealth districts were the lowurban districts, though Zelman est-spending districts. That's no
added the problem exists in longer the case;• Brunson said.
rural districts as well.
Lawmakers are looking for a
"Where we have high remedy to the court's ruling,
expectations, primarily in sub- which came three years after it
utban district\, we have excel- initially found the funding syslent educational programs," tem did not provide a "thorCorbin said.
. ough and efficient" education
Zelman also said ·districts are as mandated by the Ohio Connot doing enough for teacher stitution.
development, pointing out that
The state responded with a
some districts spend less than 1 series of new laws that provided
percent of their budgets on more money for school conthose programs. She said at least struction and operations and
2 percent of school dollars made students and districts
should be set aside for teacher more accountable.
development.
The court, in its May 11 rulThe prol?lems don't stop in ing, said the state had taken sigthe classroom, Zelman said. It's nificant steps toward a solution
essential that the state become but did not do enough. It gave
the primary source of funding lawmakers until next June to
so superintendents, who spend come up with a remedy.

LOC,AL STOCKS
Alczo-40,,
50'· Sears- 31
4n.
AEP-33~

AmTech/SBCAshland Inc. - 35~
AT&amp;T-34
Bank One - 28'/,
Bob Evans - 14.,,
BorgWamer- 35l.
Champion - 3
Charming Shops- 5)o
City Holding- 6,.
Federal Mogul- 10'1,
Flratar - 2Vo

'Gannett - 61
General Electric Ha~ey Davidson - 34'•

Kmart-7'1.
Kroger - 19,,
Lands End- 32'·
Ud.- 21-,,
Oak Hill Financlal-14~
OVB-27'1.
One Valley- 33~
Peopl08 - 15\
Premier-S~

·Rockwell - 32'o

BY TH E I&lt;SSOCIATED PRESS

The tri -county area will be
getting some relief from the
stortlly weather after anothe r
round of thunderstorms tonight.
Fair skies are forecast fo r
Thursday through Saturday, the
National Weather Service said.
Highs will be in the 80s and
overnighr lows in the 50s.
Sunset tonight will be at 9: 04
p.m. and sunrise on Thursday at
6:04a.m .
Weather forecast:

Schools
from PapAl
houses and vacant lots, where are
you supposed to get the fund.
f"
mg.
Overall gains from school
spending, advocates warn, will be
lost if states don't level the playing
field between rich and poor
school district\.
"If we don't create a fair funding system, we are going tq hurt
today and we are going to hurt
tomorrow," said Rep. Chaka Fattab, a Philadelphia Democrat
who wants changes. "We have to
take these states to task on this

issue."
The money allocated to schools
nationwide has increased 30 percent from 1991-92 to 1996-97,
according to the latest schoolfinance figures from the Census
Bureau, released Tuesday.
Spending was $307.5 billion in
the 1996-97 year, up from $236.3
billio11 in 1991-92 according to
the bureau's analysis of local. state
and federal records. The average
spent per-student nationwide was
$5,873, up from $5,001 spent in
1991• 92.
Yet the school-funding pie is
essentially divided the same way it
was nearly a decade ago.
The federal government's share

Omtlotlon.-..... ;lf...... . . ...........-.!&gt;&lt;1. 1183
fl'NIIIod Adi ............................ ~... Ed.lltlO

.,

••

Jobs

••

Rocky Boots- 5),
RDShell-62
'~"
Shoney•s - '•
Wat·Mart - 54l.
Wendy's - 18).
Worthington -11'~•

Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

·. .

SINGLE COPY PRICE

Home
Ownership ·

•

. MIDDLEPORT - Mary T. Clark, Middleport, died on Tuesday,
June 20, 2000 at the extended care unit ofVeterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
·
·
.She was born on November 9, I 922 in Crown City, and was the
daughter of the late Alva Thornton and Bessie Houck Thornton.
· .She was employed at jmperial Electric in Middleport for 20 years.
.She is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Sue and Abe Grueser
of Rudand; three grandchildren, Syndi Little ofMason, West Virginia,
Bob Spires of Warner Robins, Georgia, and Kip Grueser of Rutland;
five great- grandchildten, Jeremy Jones of Mason, West Virginia,
Michelle Weaver of Middleport, Ryan and Dylan Spires of Warner
R?bins, Georgia, and Tristan Theiss of Pomeroy; and two niFFeS and
n~hews.
·
Services will be held at 1 p.m. on Friday, June 23, 2000 at Fisher
F~neral Home in Middleport. Officiating will be the Rev. Keith
R~der and burial will follow in Graham Station Cemete.cy. New
~aven,WestVirginia. Friends may call on Thursday, June 22,2000 from
7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

if

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FREE HEARING TESTS
1M 11tt1l1 Melis/..11• CMIIIIeslly
HEARING AID CENTER •
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Obituaries

.,
'

Yard sale on tap

Gannett asks·court to dismJs~~
scliool'voucher arguments lawsuit by former editor
_...,
the Constitution by allowing
the use of public money to support religious schools.
"Government money is not
supposed to go to support sectarian institutions," Marvin E.
Frankel, a lawyer for opponents,
told the appeals court.
Charmaine
and
James
Thomas of Cleveland, whose
daughter attends a Christian
school through the program,
said after the hearing that the
tax money is their money and
they should have the right to
decide whether their child goes
to school.
Ceaira Thomas, 7, has been
in the pfllgram three years and
is getting A's and B's, Charmaine Thomas said.
"We didn't send our child to
a private school because of the
religion," she said. "We chose a
private school because of the
quality of the education."
Ohio lawmakers created the
voucher system in response to
concern about the quality of
education at Cleveland's public
schools.
However, U.S. District Judge
Solomon Oliver in Cleveland
ruled in December that the
program is unconstitutional
because most of the 56 schools
that receive money for taking
voucher students have a religio~s affili\ition.

LONG BOTTOM- Estherla Powell, 70, Long Bottom, diedTuesdiy,June 21,2000 in Holzer Medical Center.
Arrangements will be announced by Ctemeens Funeral Home,
Racine.

,. Units log 6 calls

A~~ls co-h~an
.

Eslherta Powell

LOCAL BRIEFS

'

·'
CINCINNATI (AP) -The
state's school voucher program
is legal because parents can
choose between religious and
·secular schools, lawyen for participating families told a federal
appeals court.
· They asked the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals 01:1 Thesday to reject a federal judge's
ruling that the tuition program
is an unconstitutional mixture
of government and religion.
"The parents have complete
choice, because they're in the
driver's seat:' said Edward B.
Foley, a lawyer from the Ohio
attorney general's office whQ
defended the vouchers program.
Appeals Judges Eugene Siler
Jr., Eric Clay and James Ryan
did not say when they will rule.
.Their decision is likely to be
appealed to the U.S. Supreme
Court, both sides said.
The voucher program, which
operates only in Clevebnd, just
completed its fourth year. Lowincome parents receive up to
$2,250 per child in state-funded
tuition payments to send their
children to private schools.
The program, wl)ich involves
about 3,600 students, continues
to accept new students while ·
the ruling is appealed.
Attorneys for voucher opponimts say the program violates

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Meigs recorder posts land transfers
POMEROY - The following land transfers
Edith E. BurneU, William R. Hughes, Margaret
were recently reported by Meigs County Hughes, to Norma J. Grueser, Jerry J. Grueser,
Recorder Judith A. King:
judge entry, Sutton;
Robert S. Burdette, Sharon R . Burdette, to StuMax E. Pickett, Gloria A. Pickett, to Lewis 0.
art W. Pullins, Susan K. •Pullins, deed, Salisbury;
Pickett, Judy A. Pickett, deed , Letart;
Jon T. Mugrage, to : Samantha D. Mugrage,
William Pooler,jr.,to William David Krawsczyn,
Columbus Southern Power, easement, Chester;
Jeffifer M. Krawsczyn, deed, Chester;
Wisteria Incorporated,• to Columbus Southern
Donald Pigott, to Michael Koren, deed, Olive;
Power, easement, Scipio; ·
.
Willard F. Boyer, Nettie Boyer, Nettie M . Boyer,
Alex 0. Thio,Jane Thio, to Victor L. Hoalcraft, to Willard F. Boyer, Nettie M. Boyer, Arthur Barry
Angela S. Hoakraft, deedrScipio;
Boyer, Brenda D. Prater, deed, Pomeroy;
Paul A.n thony Davis, ·April Davis, Joseph W.
Robert C. Snodgrass, Emma J. Sn~dgrass, to
Davis, Jr., to Paul Anthony Davis, April Davis, Maureen T. Burns, deed, Rutland;
deed, Bedford;
Dorothy M. Bobrof, to Jeri L. Topy, Stanley D.
Paul Anthony Davis, April Davis, Joseph W. Bobrof, Dorothy M. Bobrof, deed, Olive;
Davis,Jr.,to Bill M. Weavers, Jr., Sondra D. Weaver,
Kimberly S. Lee, Jimmy Lee, to Wayne Pauley;
deed, Bedford;
Cathy L. Pauley, deed, Salisbury;
.
Paul Anthony Davis, April Davis, Joseph W.
Roger Gay Toney, to Brenda G. Ladeaux, Shelia
Davis, Jr., to Joseph W. Davi~Jr., deed, Bedford;
Jane Cash, Josephine L. Hill, deed, Chester;
Vicki L. Wheeler, to Randy A. Wheeler, deed,
Excelsior Salt Works Inc., to Meigs County
1
Letart;
Community Inc., deed, Pomeroy;
Winifred A. Marcinko, to Winifred A. Marcinko
Mary E. Buck, deceased, Fritz Buck, deceased, to
Revo., trust;
'
Robert E. Buck, affidavit, Pomeroy/Letart;
Winifred A. Marcinko, to }Yinifred A. Marcinko,
Robert G. Graham, Ruth A. Graham, to Robert
Joseph D. Marcinko, deed, Olive;
G. Graham, Ruth A. Graham, deed, Bedford;
Crystal E. Simpson, to Daniel M. Dodson, VirRobert G. Graham, Ruth A. Graham. to Robert
ginia Wolfe, deed, Middlepott;
G. Graham, Ruth A. Graham, deed, Bedfotd;
Jean Lama Moore, deceased, Katherine Jean
Robert G. Graham, Ruth A. Graham, to Robert
Moore, deceased, to Constan~e C. Smith, certifi- G. Graham, Ruth A. Graham, deed, Chester;
.
cate, Middleport;
v
Robert G. Graham, Ruth A. Graham, to Bed. Constance C. Smith, James.. N. Smith, to Con- foro, deed. Bedford:
stance C. Smith,James N. Smith, deed, Middleport;
Kathryn L. Wilde Meredith, Kathryn L. WilderRoscoe Mills, Sandra J. Mills, to Timothy A. muth, Robert J. Meredith, to Roscoe Mills, Sandra .
Curfman, Brenda K. Curfman, deed, Sutton;
J. MiUs, deed, Pomeroy / Salisbury;
Lois Province, deceased, to Margaret L. Biggs,
Harry H. Walburn, deceased, to Aunda K. Klein,
Diana L. Davidson, certificate,.Salisbury;
certificate, Middleport.
Essie Hicks, Susan Hicks, to Columbus Southern
Power, right of way, Sutton;
Howard R . Ervin, Nancy R. Ervin, to C~lumbus
Southern Power, right of way, Sutton;
Louise Eshelman, deceased, to Robert Boring,
deed, Scipio;
Adam C. Martin, to John C. Harmon, deed,
Pomeroy;
Wenda Williamson, to Suzanne M. Greif, deed,
Orange;
Home National Bank, to Edward D. Dunn, Ba~­
Subscribe today. ·
bara D. Dunn, deed. Lebanon;

•

from Page A1
The telecommunications company will invest an additional $2
million in computer equipment
and other infrastructure needed
to make the business operationaL
Reed confirmed Tuesday that
CIC originally planned to develop
land
beneath
the
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge for this
new business, but ODOT's
announced plaos to purchase the
land for the construction of the
· new bridge - to be constructed
just down river from the existing
bri,dge - thwarted those plans,
and the Excelsior property was
then chosen.
Once construction on the
building has been completed,
Reed said, the Ohio Department
of Development will offer loan
funding to the CIC to retire the
debt for the building itself, which
the CIC will, in turn,lease to the
company.
"Essentially, the Ohio Department of Development will help
Meigs County develop jobs;•
Reed said.
"We have something here that's
more valuable than roads, more
valuable than technology, and
that's our people," Reed said.
"This company has identified that
we have the viable labor .force
that is necessary' to make this a
worthwhile project."
Reed said that he feels that this
new company will likely create a

~~

~

••••

740·753·3400

MOVIES

************
Located At 33

• •

-; M1nut1"'

NMrn

is about 7 percent; the states contribute 49 percent. And the rest
comes from local tax coffers.
Funding critics say poorer districts will never have a chance to
catch up.
Disparities extend to the state
level, Census figures show. The
top spenders per-pupil - New
·Jersey, New York, Alaska, Connecticut - also draw some of the
highest state tax revenues. ·
Districts have sought remedies
in federal and state cot~rts . New
York, Philadelphia and Kansas
systems have filed federal lawsuits
over school funding.
The Ohio State Supreme
Court in May gave the state a
year to fix a system that forces
schools to rely on local taxes.
Ohio, which spent $5,897 per
pupil in 1996-97, will contribute
$10 billion toward fixing every
schoolhouse, he said.
"This is something that must
be solved," said Scott Milburn,
spokesman for Gov. Robert Taft.
"If you have the money and you
have the will power, you can get
things going."
Henry Duvall, spokesman for
the Council of Great City
Schools, a group of urban educators, says underlying formulas
must be fixed: "When . you ralk
about setting higher standards
across the board for everyone, the
field is not level.''

Reed conjirmed 1i1esday
tlrat CIC or(cinally
planned lo de,,efop laud
beneath the
Pomemy I Mason Bridge
for tl1is t1ew business, ,hilt
ODOT's amloum:ed plans
to purchase tlu land for
the constmctiotl of the
new bridge.
"domino effect" in terms of
attracting other busin.esses, ·and
that any new businesses will
begin competing with higher
wages and benefit packages in an
attempt to attract and maintain a
quality workforce .
Reed did not indicate what the
starting wages for workers at the
telecommunications company
would be.
"This company chose Meigs
County for the facility because of
the positive labor situation, the
advanced high speed teleconunu- •
nications capacity, and the commun\ty effort to land the project,",
the news release said.
"This is great news for the ,
county," Reed said.

Subscribe today.
992-2156

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~· ~

~·

Ton ight ... Partl y cloudy. A
chance of showers and thundersto rms. Lows 60 to 65.
Thu rsday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the lower to mid 80s.
Thursday night. .. Fair. Lows
mid 50s to the lower 60s.
Extended forecast:
Friday... Fair. Highs 75 to 85.
Saturday.. .Fair. Lows near 60.
Highs in the 80s.
,
Sunday.. .A chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Lpws in the
60s. Highs in th e 80s.

at Atflrn-.;

...... Ftr ~~~., ........ n.., -121111

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CHICKEN RUN (Q)
MYSELF &amp; IRENE

All AGES , All TIMES 84 .00

�Page A4·:·
Wednesdllf. June 21. 2000 - •

~IJ the

_rh_
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1.11 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

., I I

740-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govay

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

CRA(JIED AGAIN !

Diane K1y Hill
Controller

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~-IT
CRAQIEP~N!

1)\NG-Il

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertlalng Director

'1!1
Lflffn to till lllllor tlfl wdtOiflt. Th11 11wMhl Ill l111 tltlJN 300 wordl. llfl ltlttrs .,., IMbjul
1o ~~ tJitd Jfttdl bt slti'IH «"'f /11cllllft adJIN11 tu1d U~pAou IIIWIIIbllr. No ~~.rif~ttd lt lltn wiJJ
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Tile opiniotu txpnnd be tht toiMmlt bdow art tilt ctmltlllltl of tilt Olti(l V•Utl PMblbllin1
Co. ~ NJtoriaf hotJrd, Ullftls otlmw/.11 f!lotd.

,.
.'

OUR VIEW

Unique

:

'

Annual coriference offers
valuable lesson to youth
Outside of managing our own fin ances, how much do we really
·
understand about th e economy&gt;
The evening news usually devotes a portion of its coverage to
Wall Street's performance for the day, and a list of major stocks and
dosing quotes are provided. There are whole chanhels devoted to
financial news. It supports th e old saying, "America's business is
business.''

The conference
is also another
component
that makes
this region
unique- .
and worthy of
discovery by
our neighbors
in Ohio and
Uilst Virginia.
(

,I

On the average, we have some understanding of how our free market economy
works. Yet stock results, the impact when
the Federal Reserve increases the prime
rate, and even the pricing strurture of
items we buy every day are more complex.
An example is the current outrage .over
the increase in gas prices. When you go
below the surface, the reasons why a visit
to the pump are higher are varied and
motivated by numerous factors.
We know we have to pay the price, and
hope somehow the expense of gas and
grocery store items will eventually fall.
That's why an endeavor like the American Free Enterprise and Leadership Conference, under way this week at University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Commu-

nity College, is valuable.
For high school students, the current and future consumers of our
country, the conference ·offers an intense look at how a free market
economy works.
.
This is accomplished not only by lecture, but through practical
application. Based on what they learn, students develop a product,
form their own corporations and market.l heir offerings.
It's an exercise in education that's been conducted at Rio Grande
each sununer for the past 28 years, and one we applaud because the
more than I 00 local srudents who attend each year walk away with
a deeper understanding of how the system works.
Jerry Mossbarger, director of Rio Grande's Loren M. Berry Center for Economic Education- a co-sponsor of the conferencesaid that although another Ohio college has launched a similar seminar, the local conference remains "relatively unique."
':We do know the concept is; and the conference's longevity rept6ents a tribute to its founder, Carl Dahlberg, and Mossbarger's
p~edecessor,Jerry Gust. Its continuing success is to be found in publi~ education's faith in the program, and in the number of individu:fl and business donations that keep attendance free of charge.
•The conference is also another component that makes this region
uftique - and worthy of discovery by our neighbors in Ohio and
West Virginia.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

lroday isWednesday,June 21, the 173rd day of2000.There are 193
clays left in the year.
·:I'oday's Highlight in History:
:On June 21, 1788, the U.S. Constitution went into effect as New
H~pshire became the ninth state to ratifY it.
pn this date:
In 1834, Cyrus Hall McCormick received a patent for his reaping
machine.
ln 1932, heavyweight Max Schmeling lost a tide fight by decision
to Jack Sharkey, prompting Schmeling's manager, Joe Jacobs, to
exclaim: "We was robbed!"
In 1945, during World War ll,American soldiers on Okinawa found
th~ body of the Japanese commander, Lt. Gen. Mitsuru Ushijima, who
had committed suicide.
In 1948, the Republican national convention opened in Philadelphia. ·
In 1963, Cardinal Giovanni Battista Montini was chosen to succeed
the late Pope John XXIII; the new pope took the name Paul VI.
In 1964, civil rights workers Michael H. Schwerner,Andrew Goodman and James E. Chaney disappeared in Philadelphia, Miss.; their
bodies were fourrd buried in an earthen dam six weeks later.
In 1973, die Supreme Court ruled that states may ban materials
found to be obscene a(cording ro local standards.
In 1982, a jury in Washington, D.C., found John Hinckley Jr. innocent by reason of insanity·in the shootings of President Reagan and
three other men.
In 1985, scientists announced that skeletal remains exhumed in
Bt:JZil were those of Nazi war criminal Josef Mengele.
In 1989, the Supreme Court ruled that burning the American flag
as a form of political protest is protected by the First AmendltJent.
Today's Birthdays: Cartoonist AI Hirschfeld is 97 .Actress Jane Russell i5 79.Actress Maureen Stapleton is 75.Actor Bernie KopeU is 67.
Actor Monte Markham is 65. Singer O.C. Smith is 64.Actor Ron Ely
is 62. Actress Mariette Hartley is 60. Comedian Joe Aaherry i5 59.
Rock linger-musician Ray Davies (The Kinks) is 56. Singer Brenda
Holloway is 54. Actress Meredith Baxter u 53. Actor Michael Gross is
53_Country singer Leon Everette is 52 . Rock musician Joey Kr.uner,
(Aerosmith) is 50. Rock musician Nils Lofgren is 49. Actress R obyn
Douglass is 47. Actor Robert Pastorelli is 46. Cartooni$1 Berke
Breathed is 43. Cou ntry singer Kathy Mattea is 41.

Wednesday. June 11.2000

Reader requests reprint of column that saved husband's life

The Daily Sentinel

•

Bend

Page AS

Dear Ann Landers: I am enclosing a
column you printed several years ago
that actually changed my life. I never
thanked you for it, and would like to do
so now. My husband would not admit
he was an alcoholic until he read your
list of questions. He has been sober for
22 years. Please print those questions
again. - South Bend, Ind.
Dear South Bend: I've receive d
several requests to rerun that column,
and do sq with pleasure. Thanks to aU
who asked. l'fere it is:
The National Council on Alcoholism
and Drug Dependence has compiled a
list of questions to help a person determine whether he or she has symptoms
of alcoholism. Here they are:
1. Do you occasionally drink heavily
after a disappointment, a quarrel or
when the boss gives you a, hard time?
2. When you have trouble or feel
under pressure, do you drink more
heavily than usual?

ADVICE
3. Have you noticed you are able to
handle more liquor than you did when
you first started drinking?
·4. Did you ever wake up the " morning after" and discover you could not
remember part of the evening before,
even though friends say you didn't pass
out?
5 . When drinking with other people,
do you try to have a few extra drinks
when others will not know jt?
6 . Are there times, when you feel
uncomfortable if alcohol is not avail-

able?
promises you have made to yourself
7. Have you recently noticed that about controlling or cutting down on
""hen you begin drinking, you are in your drinking? ·
more of a hurry to get the first drink
16. Have you ever tried to control
than you used to be?
your drinking by changingjobs 9r mov8. Do you sometimes feel a little ing to a new location?
guilty about your drinking?
17. Do you try to avoid family or
9 . Are you secretly irri tated w hen close friends while you are drinking?
family or friends discuss your drinking?
18. Are you having an increasing
10. Have you noti ced an increase in number of fi nancial and work problems?
19. Do you some times have the
the frequency of your memory blackouts?
shakes in the morning and find it helps
11 . Do you often find that you wish to have a little drink?
to continue ·drinking after your friends
20. Do you eat very little or irregusay they have had enough?
larly when you are drinking?
12. Do you usually have a reason for
2 I. Do you get terribly frightened
the occasion when you drink heavily?
after you have been drinking heavily?
13.When you are sober, do you often
22. After periods of drinking, do you
regret thing.; you have done or said ever see or hear things that aren't there?
Those who answer yes to several of
while drinking?
14. Have you tried switching brands the questions from 1 through 8 may be
or following different plans for control- in the early stage of alcoholism. Addiling your drinking?
tional affirmative answers to several of
15. Have you often failed to keep the questions from 9 through 22 may

For 'Blonde Bombshell,' life
was .great on-screen, but not off
•

RUSHER'S VIEW

Case for the .death penalty grows stronger

'

L

.
Opponents of th e death penalty think
they're on a rolL Although polls indicate that
the American people still favor the death
penalty by a wide margin, irs foes shrewdly
changed their strategy ,recently. They have
seized on a few developments, which (they
contend - quite mistakenly) strengthen their
case.
On the contrary, the case for th e death
penalty has actually been made more persuasive than ever by those very developments.
For years foes of the death penalty have
insisted that it doesn't, in fact, deter the crimes
(usually particularly aggravated murders) for
which it is ordinarily imposed. They have
argued that a penalty of life imprisonml)nt
withbut possibility of parole is as great a deterrent, or even greater.
And nobody sentenced to death ever lacked
some excuse that warranted commutation.
Either his father had abused him as a child, or
his mother drank during pregnancy (fetal alcohol syndrome), or his IQ was that of a borderline moron, or he had recently found Jesus, or
his lawyer was incompetent, or some juror
now regretted voting for his convictjon.
By and large the American people never
bought any of these arguments.The reputation
of life without parole as something severe and
terrible dissipated dramatically when it was
revealed during the 1988 presidential campaign that the Democratic candidate, Massa-·
chusetts Governor Michael Dukakis, was in
the habit of granting weekend pas~es to these
unlucky souls - one of whom, Willie Horton, seized the opportunity to rape a Maryland
housewife and beat her husband to a pulp.
But a .couple of months ago, Illinois governor George Ryan , a Republican and a supporter of the death penalty, declared a morato-

William
Rusher
NEA COLUMNIST
rium on furth er executions in his state because
doubts had been raised concerning the guilt of
a number of residents of death row.The media,
who of course share the usual liberal bias
against the death penalty: seized on this as a
monumental breakthrough, and the anti-death
penalty lobby trotted out it&gt; new argument:
Untold scores, or hundreds, of prisoners on
death rows around the country are about to be
executed although they are as pure and innocent as the driven snow. America was on the
verge of killing, and no doubt had already
killed, innocent human beings. This proved a
more persuasive argument when rested in the
polls. though a large majority still continu es to
favor the death penalty.
Two m;tior lines of argument have been
advanced in support of the new contention.
One is that the new scientific technique of
DNA testing, where that is possible and relevant, can establish the guilt or innocence of a
defendant with math ematical certainty. (That
is whY President Clinton stopped lying about
Monica Lewinsky and admitted having had an
"inappropriate" relationship with her - his
semen was found on her dress.) A number of
prisoners convicted of rap e and murder have

been spared the death penalty because their.· _,
DNA did not match that of the perpetrator. - .
That is all to the good, but the argument , cuts two ways: DNA cari (and has) been used
to establish the guilt 'of'a defendant beyond a &gt;
reasonable doubt. In those cases, it actually _r
reinforces the argument for the death penalty, :,.
by eliminating all doubt.
..- ,
The second line of argument is based on a . ,
recent study by Columbia University law pro-,· .
fessor James Lie~man, which found that 68., ...
percent of death sentences handed down . ,
between 1973 and 1995 were reversed on. . ;
appeal. The desired inference is that gross . '
errors were committed at trial in two-thirds of
those cases, leaving us to wonder whether our. .'
system of criminal justice isn't somehow fatal- . ..
ly flawed at the trial level.
But it is more reasonable to attribute the
reversals to a determination, on the part of the .. ..
appellate courts, to treat capital cases with the . .
most scrupulous care, resolving all doubts in .,
favor of the defendants. Thus regarded, the
Liebman study is actually an involuntary tribute to the caution with which the American .
j udicial system approaches the task of con- _•
demning anyone to death .
.
And the proof of the pudding is this: For aU .
their passion, opponents of the death penalty ,
. are unable to point to a single case, in modern American law, in which an innocent man or ;
woman. was actually put to death. Unfortu- , .
nately, there are scores of cases of people mur- .. ,
dered by ex-convicts who escaped the death
penalty for earlier crimes, thanks to the misplaced sentimentality of foes of the death
penalty.
'

..

(William A . Rusher is a Distingllished Fellow of. ·'
the Claremont Institutefor the Study of Statesman· _
ship and Political Philos~phy.)
: .'

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

'.

RED GREEN'S VIEW

Possession chain
The food ~h ai n has bee n in existenc~ for
millions of years and works well. I think we
should apply the same approach to our levels
of conspicuous consumption. We need a possessiQtl chain - a table that shows us the
order of acquiring produ cts and se rvi ces.

For example, you start with a toaster and
then in time you move up to a toaster oven
and then eventually a· microwave. Starting
with a microwave is in conflict with the la~s .
of nature and will lead to unhappiness and
badly burnt popcorn.
·
Likewise, if you live in a $25,000 home, you
shouldn't. be driving a $30,000 car.
It will only make you unhappy or make the
person you live with unhappy, which will
eventually affect you through the Trickl eDown Theory.
Here's a rough guide to show you the order
in which men should spend their mon ey -.
home, car, boat, motorcycle, snow machine,
riding 11IOWer, Seadoo, bush buggy, hovercraft,
backhoe, helicopter, new suit, divorce lawyeF.

It's interesting
Over the years, the phrase ' kind of' ·has
made its way into our vernacular. While the
meaning of the phrase is not completely clear,
1 think you have to use it with caution . Here
are a list of questions for which the answer
'kind of' is inappropriate:
• Do you love me?
• Do you swear to tell the truth· and noth ing but rite truth?
• Are you pregnant?
• Do you have a job?
• Does this car belong to you?
• Did you, pay your income tax?
• Are you a doctor?
• Have you been faithful ?

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

•••

.I . _1
"

.

•f

• Are you the father of this child?

,.

Survival of fittest
I like to watch boxing on television. I like ·.:
the raw confrontatior of it. But if eit)ler of the · 1
combatants gets cut or hurt, I immediate!{ "
feel awful and change the channel.
·
.' · .
I'd never want to watch ·a fight live. And ' :
when people ask me what I like about box_. ·· :
ing, I have to admit it's the best example of ·:
one of nature's basic laws - survival of the '
'
fittest.
But now I'm thinking that law needs to be
changed. Survival of the fittest is fine for a · '
one-on-one battle, but when it's part of a' ''
round-robin tournament that could conceiv- ''· ·
ably be expanded to include everyone in the,..
world, you'd end up with one sole survivor: -··
One Earth person who, although being of ~
supreme physical and mental capability, would'
not be able to procreate.
'
·"
Since survival of the fittest in its ultimate ·'
form is politically incorrect and leads to the ·
end of the human race, I suggest we change it · '
to "temporary setback of the less fit'.'- who,
are probably nicer people for it.
Quote of the Day: "In my life, the only ··
things that have gune up iq value are love,' n
frie ndship and sleep." - Red Green
· :·

(Red Green is the star of "The Red Green ·
Shout," a television series seen in the U.S. on PBS "
and in Canada on the CBC Network, and the '•
a11thor oj"The Red Green Book" and "Red Green. ·,
Talks Cars: A LAve Story.")
"

"

°

:a,

"'

at the hall .

WEDNESDAY,june 21
TUPPERS PLAINS -A special meeting, Tuppers Plains
Regional
Sewer
Distri r ·
Wednesday, 6 p.m. Ban issue and
general purpose to be discussed.

•••

THURSDAY, June 22
POMEROY- Meigs County
Cancer Initiative meeting to
meet Thursday at 10:30 a.m. at
the Veterans Memorial Hospital
conference room. Volunteers
needed.
SYRACUSE Carleton
College Board ofTrustees, annual meeting, Thursday, 7 p.m.,
home of Bob Wingett, College
Road, Syracuse.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p,m.

POMEROY - Meigs County Churches of Christ Women's
Fellowship, Thursday, 7 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Church of Christ.
Middleport to have devotions;
Amber Finley to speak on osteoporosis, arthritis and fibramyalgia;
missionary report will be given
on Christian children's home in
Wooster.
POMEROY - Caring and
Sharing Support Group, Thursday, I p.m. at Meigs Senior Center. Dr. Scott Smith, speaker on
summertime stress.

C ARPENTER - Carpenter
Baptist C hurch, State Route 143
will meet at 10:30 a.m. Sunday.
"Earthen Vessel will provide
music with Pastor John Elswick ·
to speak.

•••

MONDAY,June 26
POMEROY - Veterans Service Commission, 7:30 p.m.
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the
office, 117 Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy.

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
HARRISONVILLE - Har- non-profit groups wishing to.
risonville Grange, annual inspec- , announce meetings and special events. The calendar is
tion, Friday, 7:30 p.m at Scipio
not designed to promote
fire building. Racine Grange
sales
or fund raisers· of any
members to be guests.
type. Items are printed only ..
as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to be printed
SUNDAY, june 25
a specific number of'days. - .

•••

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
'

Subscribe today.
992-2156

EXTRA! · EXTRA!
COMING FRIDAY, JULY 7, 2000
The Daily Sentinel

Baby Edition

'fh

Men are at their best when they're in trouble
I don't know whether this is just a male
thing, but I find I do my best work and make
my best efforts when I'm in trouble.
When everything's going well and I'm
cruising, I just let it all slide. But as soon as my
boss is making threatening noises or my wife
pulls out her suitcase or the police start nosing around, well, that's when I get it together.
I'm also nicer when I'm behind the eight
ball. When things are going well, I get arrogant because to me that 's what success is aU
about.
Why do we have such a strange behavioral
pattern? I think when you boil it all down, it
stems from the inner conflict of being congenitally lazy but not wanting to look like an
idiot.
That's why competition works. It's not
about winning. ·
It's about the fear of losing and letting the
world in on your secret regarding your personal proficiency and work ethic. They say if
you want to get something done, take it to
· someone who 's busy. I say if you want to get
something done, take it to someone who's in
deep trouble.

ARCADIA, Calif. (AP)
Paramount if you stay with the
show a year." She agreed.
Betty Hutton, exuberant star of
Hollywood musicals and comeIt was at this pqjnt in the interdies of the 1940s and early 1950s,
view that Hutton suddenly burst
doesn't like to watch her old
into song:
"Then I went to Hollywood
movies:
"It isn't the movie I'm looking
· and got a movie part.
at. Professionally, my career was
· I did everything I could, but
g~t. But never was ti)e scene
you'd hardly call it art ....
offstage great for me. I had a lot .
From the start I tried to please .
of problems in my personal life."
the crowd.
The Hutton story remains one
So I couldn't sing good, but
of ·the classic examples of the
· boy, I sure sang loud!"
destructive side · of Hollywood
She laughed heartily and
Batty Hutton
explained . the ditty had been
stardom. She has seen it aU: four
unhappy marriages and four bitwritten for her nightclub act by
going to take us away fiom her."
ter divorces; b etrayals by pro ducher favorite songwriters, Ray
ers and studio bosses; bad career
The small family left town Evans and Jay Livingston.
'~with the police in back of us"
choices; an alcoholi·c mother; and Oed to Detroit.
.
' Starting in 1940, the movies
emotional and physical collapse;
came in di7mng
succession, all in
r...
(Years later, Betty Hutton and
- 1•
bankruptcy; estrangement uum
starring roles with such favorites .
her children.
Fred Astaire made a publicity tour as William Holden, Bob Hope,
·
d for their film "Let's Dance;' and
But unlike Judy Garland an
Dorothy Lamour, Fred MacMurshe took her mother along. The
ril
b
th
Ma · yn Monroe o eonray, Bing Crosby. Victor Mature. .
~.o, th ~" k 'd
f
first stop was Lansing, where
Meanwhile, she was making hit
sume d u 7 e uoir 51 e o · star·
H
· d
dozens of police on motorcycles
dom - Betty utton survtve· .
records, includiqg million-sellers
She attn'butes t hat to the gw'd- led a motorcade. "At least they are "His Rocking· Horse Ran Away"
in fiont of us this time;' her
ance of a Ca tholic priest in Newand "Doctor, Lawyer, Indian
·
I , w h ere she live d 10 mother cracked.)
Chief." Her publicity billed her as
port, R ..
unglamorous circumstances for
In Detroit, Mabel foiUld a job the "Blonde Bombshell:'
25
with Chrysler, but the pay w:asn 't
years7.9
H
.
h
enough to support her and the
Hutton's favorite movie was
At
,
u tton retams er
the Preston Sturges comedy clas·
h two .,.; rls. Betty augmented their
blonde aUure. H er f:ace 1s
smoot ,
.,sic "The Miracle of Morgan's
· has th
h ky income by sin&lt;&gt;in. g· on streeth er vmce
e same us
.,.
Creek." DeSy!va, her mentor and .
corners and in bars frequented by
qu ality tha t rna de her so adept at
now studio boss, discouro""d her
·-..deli'vering come dy lines an d b eIt- her mother, who had become an from making it, arguing
that .
"M
· alcoholic.
ing out raucous songs like
urEddie Bracken would be the
"
d "D
"When I mentioned that I
octor,
maior star. "I don't care," she said.
der, He Sai d .an
.. Sh
·
wanted to be. a star, niy mother
"
f
I
di
Chi
Lawyer, n an
e·
e even
"I love the script, and I love that
·
d
·
thi
thought
I
was
nuts,"
Hutton
sang a £iew 1yncs ur10g
s
1 don't hav"' to sing:.·
·
h
h ·
ft recalled. "I lhought if I became a
~
interVIew - t aug m a so
Her greatest opportunity came
·
fi
di
f
star and got us out of poverty. she
votce or an au ence o one.
with the only film she made away
· fl
d siJ
would quit . drinking. ' I didn't
The memor1es
from Paramount, "Annie Get
owe ea Y·
some bringing raucous laughter, know (alcoholism) was a disease; y,
G ..
others causing her voice to grow nobody did. There was no A.A. · our un.
then."
Irving Berlin's biggest hit,
hi h
d Eth 1 M
heavy and her eyes to water. She
was staying for a couple of nights
Betty quit school after the w c starre
e
erman on
with friends in this Los Angeles ninth grade to tour with a small . Broadway, had been bought by
band. She entered an amateur MGM for the studio's singing
suburb, on t he way back to her
land B G rland
. ut a
Palm Springs home fiom Atlanta, contest in Detroit and won a job star, Judy Gar
where she taped an appearance singing with the orchestra alVin- was gomg · through a difficult
for the Thrner Classic Movies cent Lopez, who gave her a new peri?d, and after filming the
bl h
1
name - Hutton. Sister Marion mus1cal numbers she .~ fired.
ca c ~ne .
be . i . visited her during a Boston Hutton was the only smgmg star
nMisahga hg10s hn engage
. ment and Betty learned who could fit into the buckskin
B.attleeC reeuttok
,
c ., w ere s e
•
rb f h. b ·
A ·
that
a
new
\bandleader
named
ga
o
t
e
o1sterous
nme
1921
b
F
b
26
Sh
· e
·· .
0 ld
was orn on e . ,
never knew her father· whoever Glenn Miller was looking for a · a ey.
he was, he didn't ~rry het vocalist. She convinced Lopez to
Yes what could have been her
mother, Mabel. Mabel had been let her sister go on for her that ~rowm~~ achievement turned
married to a man named Thorn- night - "we had only oiie dress 10to a rughtmare. Th7 ;_as.t and
·
B tty between us and she wore it" crew resented the o~di!r taking
b urg, and t he gt'rl b ecame
e
•
·
h Ia of h · -'-"'' J d
·
Betty
had
an
Marion
who
also
adopted
the
t
e P ce
u Y·
Th
bu
J une
oro rg.
'
"Th • t etr
· wuung
I till
•
older siste!io Marion Thornburg, name Hutton,- was liired ,.by
~~~ a p1cture
s
~ant
who would become Marion Miller on the spot.
lo~k, at, ~utton ~c~~ wt~ a
Hijtton, a singer with Glenn
New York had never se~n al)y~ rendual bttterness. I didn t realize
Miller's band. Left alone with two one quite like Betty Hutton. She they would be that cruel. On the
yopng daughters, Mabel proved pen11aded Lopez to abandon his set nobody spoke ~o me. They litresourceful, if on the wrong side slow-tempo · dance music and erally turned. the1r ~acks, They
or'the law.
adopt the p~rful· rhythms of also put me m a dressmg 109m
"My mother ran: a 'blind pig' swing, which fit the Hutton style. nght aboVe Judy. And Ilov~d her.
·10 La ·
Michigan" Hutton Audiences at•Billy Rose's Casa Later when we talked m Las
ns10g,
•
y,
h
'd 'B
I
said using the Prohibition-era Manana nightclub were astoundegas, s e saJ • etty, . never
rer'~ for a place that sold booze. ed by her unlimited energy and could .h.~~ done that p1cture, I
"Most of the customers were raucous comedy. After a year, she hated 11.
men. It scared me so when the left the band and became a sin~e
Hutton returned ~o Paramen woUld go on the make for act.
mount and made one p1cture she
1
Hutton
scored
another
hit
on
loved:
"The Greatest
.gh
d
her. Ireally got ft1 rene . _sang
Ea h" Sh
d d Show
c
il on
B
·
· ds If h
d Broadway in "1\vo for the Show;•
rt .
e astoun e
ec
·
h
k
ro ta e t e1r nun
er, an
D Mill b learnin all of the
.e
e Y
g.
they'd throw money on the 8oor and the Hollywood offers began.
•
'd
·
k
·t
Th
h
w
I
She
decided
to
stay
in
New
York
trapeze
.
work
for
her
role as the
1
d
I
;~,n
piC 1 up.
a s o
'ali
k
h
fi
I
I did
for a supporting role to Ethel aen st"
•
e~~F~~~e ~r:::f 3 u~tili Merman in "Panama Hattie." On
Buddy DeSylva had suffered a
was 7, we had a house where .she opening night, she says, Merman stroke, an~ Hutton lost the
made her own beer and bathtub decreed that Betty's big number beloved ~ude to .her ca~er. T~e
gin and sold it. She had two men would be dropped from the show. new studio baSICs gave er su working for her, and the police
Hutton protested to the pro- standard scnpts, and she patd to
caine and arrested them. My ducer, songwriter Buddy DeSyl- have her contract canceled. By
mother grabbed me and my sister va, who replied: "Betty, I'D tell 1952, her film career ~ over
and we went out the back door you something n\)body knows. (she mad~, one more~ Spnng
and into the snow.... 'She hid out I'm becoming head of Para- Reumon, a soaper With Dana
because the authoriiies were mount srudio.I will bring you to Andrews in 1957).

indicate th e middle to final stages of
alcoholism. For information about alcoholism, contact the National Council
on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence,
12 West 21st St.. New York, N.Y. 10010
(www.ncadd.org), or call 1-800-NCACALL (1 - 800-622-2255) .
P.S.: To those readers who wonder if
l am talking spe~ifically to YOU, yes, I
am . Get 111bving.
Ann Landers' booklet, "Nuggets and
Doozies," has everything from the outrageously funny to the poignantly
insightful. Send a self-addressed, long,
business-size envelope and a check or
money order for $5.25 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Nuggets, c/ o.
Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
Ill. 60611-0562. (In Canada, send
$6.25.) To fi nd out more about Ann
Landers and read her past columns, visit
the Creators Syndicate web page at
www.creators.com.

The Daily Sentinel Baby Edition is
a Special Edition filled with
photogra~hs of local kids • a_ges
newborn to four Y,ears old. The
BABY EDITION will appear in the
July 7th issue. Be sure your child,
grandchild or relative is Included.
Complete the form below and
enclose a snaf:shot or wallet sized
picture plus a 6.00 charge for each
photograph. I more than one child
Is in the picture, enclose an
additional $2.00 per child. (ENCLOSE
PAYMENT WITH PICTURE)

PICTURES MUST IE Ill IY
MONDAY JUliE t6, 2000. PICTURES
CAll IE PICKEl UP linER JULY 10TH,

... ·----..

Send to:

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

------------------~-------------------,

Child's Name(s) &amp;Age(s) :

I

1 Parent's Name:----,..------ - - - - - -- - - - - - 1 City &amp; State: ______.=-:-:-=-=-:-:-::::-=-:-:-:-:::-:-=-:-:::=--::-:-::::-:-::::-:-::-:-:-:--:--1
****THE ABOVE INFORMATION WILL BE USED IN THE AD****
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I
I
I PHONE No.: - - - - - - - SUBMITIED B Y : - - - - - - - -

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HURRYI PICTURE DEADLINE 18
MONDAYJUNE28,20001

I

'

�Page A4·:·
Wednesdllf. June 21. 2000 - •

~IJ the

_rh_
· e_D_
· a_ily::....,_Se_n_tin_e_I_ _
, ....;._....__·

•

'Esta61ulid in 1948

' ''•
•'

1.11 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

., I I

740-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

..

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govay

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

CRA(JIED AGAIN !

Diane K1y Hill
Controller

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~-IT
CRAQIEP~N!

1)\NG-Il

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertlalng Director

'1!1
Lflffn to till lllllor tlfl wdtOiflt. Th11 11wMhl Ill l111 tltlJN 300 wordl. llfl ltlttrs .,., IMbjul
1o ~~ tJitd Jfttdl bt slti'IH «"'f /11cllllft adJIN11 tu1d U~pAou IIIWIIIbllr. No ~~.rif~ttd lt lltn wiJJ
,, pMhlidltd. Utttrl •lwuld,
rulrlnnf"' "'""'· ItcH JHmnurl/JI,.,

"'rotH!""''·

Tile opiniotu txpnnd be tht toiMmlt bdow art tilt ctmltlllltl of tilt Olti(l V•Utl PMblbllin1
Co. ~ NJtoriaf hotJrd, Ullftls otlmw/.11 f!lotd.

,.
.'

OUR VIEW

Unique

:

'

Annual coriference offers
valuable lesson to youth
Outside of managing our own fin ances, how much do we really
·
understand about th e economy&gt;
The evening news usually devotes a portion of its coverage to
Wall Street's performance for the day, and a list of major stocks and
dosing quotes are provided. There are whole chanhels devoted to
financial news. It supports th e old saying, "America's business is
business.''

The conference
is also another
component
that makes
this region
unique- .
and worthy of
discovery by
our neighbors
in Ohio and
Uilst Virginia.
(

,I

On the average, we have some understanding of how our free market economy
works. Yet stock results, the impact when
the Federal Reserve increases the prime
rate, and even the pricing strurture of
items we buy every day are more complex.
An example is the current outrage .over
the increase in gas prices. When you go
below the surface, the reasons why a visit
to the pump are higher are varied and
motivated by numerous factors.
We know we have to pay the price, and
hope somehow the expense of gas and
grocery store items will eventually fall.
That's why an endeavor like the American Free Enterprise and Leadership Conference, under way this week at University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Commu-

nity College, is valuable.
For high school students, the current and future consumers of our
country, the conference ·offers an intense look at how a free market
economy works.
.
This is accomplished not only by lecture, but through practical
application. Based on what they learn, students develop a product,
form their own corporations and market.l heir offerings.
It's an exercise in education that's been conducted at Rio Grande
each sununer for the past 28 years, and one we applaud because the
more than I 00 local srudents who attend each year walk away with
a deeper understanding of how the system works.
Jerry Mossbarger, director of Rio Grande's Loren M. Berry Center for Economic Education- a co-sponsor of the conferencesaid that although another Ohio college has launched a similar seminar, the local conference remains "relatively unique."
':We do know the concept is; and the conference's longevity rept6ents a tribute to its founder, Carl Dahlberg, and Mossbarger's
p~edecessor,Jerry Gust. Its continuing success is to be found in publi~ education's faith in the program, and in the number of individu:fl and business donations that keep attendance free of charge.
•The conference is also another component that makes this region
uftique - and worthy of discovery by our neighbors in Ohio and
West Virginia.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

lroday isWednesday,June 21, the 173rd day of2000.There are 193
clays left in the year.
·:I'oday's Highlight in History:
:On June 21, 1788, the U.S. Constitution went into effect as New
H~pshire became the ninth state to ratifY it.
pn this date:
In 1834, Cyrus Hall McCormick received a patent for his reaping
machine.
ln 1932, heavyweight Max Schmeling lost a tide fight by decision
to Jack Sharkey, prompting Schmeling's manager, Joe Jacobs, to
exclaim: "We was robbed!"
In 1945, during World War ll,American soldiers on Okinawa found
th~ body of the Japanese commander, Lt. Gen. Mitsuru Ushijima, who
had committed suicide.
In 1948, the Republican national convention opened in Philadelphia. ·
In 1963, Cardinal Giovanni Battista Montini was chosen to succeed
the late Pope John XXIII; the new pope took the name Paul VI.
In 1964, civil rights workers Michael H. Schwerner,Andrew Goodman and James E. Chaney disappeared in Philadelphia, Miss.; their
bodies were fourrd buried in an earthen dam six weeks later.
In 1973, die Supreme Court ruled that states may ban materials
found to be obscene a(cording ro local standards.
In 1982, a jury in Washington, D.C., found John Hinckley Jr. innocent by reason of insanity·in the shootings of President Reagan and
three other men.
In 1985, scientists announced that skeletal remains exhumed in
Bt:JZil were those of Nazi war criminal Josef Mengele.
In 1989, the Supreme Court ruled that burning the American flag
as a form of political protest is protected by the First AmendltJent.
Today's Birthdays: Cartoonist AI Hirschfeld is 97 .Actress Jane Russell i5 79.Actress Maureen Stapleton is 75.Actor Bernie KopeU is 67.
Actor Monte Markham is 65. Singer O.C. Smith is 64.Actor Ron Ely
is 62. Actress Mariette Hartley is 60. Comedian Joe Aaherry i5 59.
Rock linger-musician Ray Davies (The Kinks) is 56. Singer Brenda
Holloway is 54. Actress Meredith Baxter u 53. Actor Michael Gross is
53_Country singer Leon Everette is 52 . Rock musician Joey Kr.uner,
(Aerosmith) is 50. Rock musician Nils Lofgren is 49. Actress R obyn
Douglass is 47. Actor Robert Pastorelli is 46. Cartooni$1 Berke
Breathed is 43. Cou ntry singer Kathy Mattea is 41.

Wednesday. June 11.2000

Reader requests reprint of column that saved husband's life

The Daily Sentinel

•

Bend

Page AS

Dear Ann Landers: I am enclosing a
column you printed several years ago
that actually changed my life. I never
thanked you for it, and would like to do
so now. My husband would not admit
he was an alcoholic until he read your
list of questions. He has been sober for
22 years. Please print those questions
again. - South Bend, Ind.
Dear South Bend: I've receive d
several requests to rerun that column,
and do sq with pleasure. Thanks to aU
who asked. l'fere it is:
The National Council on Alcoholism
and Drug Dependence has compiled a
list of questions to help a person determine whether he or she has symptoms
of alcoholism. Here they are:
1. Do you occasionally drink heavily
after a disappointment, a quarrel or
when the boss gives you a, hard time?
2. When you have trouble or feel
under pressure, do you drink more
heavily than usual?

ADVICE
3. Have you noticed you are able to
handle more liquor than you did when
you first started drinking?
·4. Did you ever wake up the " morning after" and discover you could not
remember part of the evening before,
even though friends say you didn't pass
out?
5 . When drinking with other people,
do you try to have a few extra drinks
when others will not know jt?
6 . Are there times, when you feel
uncomfortable if alcohol is not avail-

able?
promises you have made to yourself
7. Have you recently noticed that about controlling or cutting down on
""hen you begin drinking, you are in your drinking? ·
more of a hurry to get the first drink
16. Have you ever tried to control
than you used to be?
your drinking by changingjobs 9r mov8. Do you sometimes feel a little ing to a new location?
guilty about your drinking?
17. Do you try to avoid family or
9 . Are you secretly irri tated w hen close friends while you are drinking?
family or friends discuss your drinking?
18. Are you having an increasing
10. Have you noti ced an increase in number of fi nancial and work problems?
19. Do you some times have the
the frequency of your memory blackouts?
shakes in the morning and find it helps
11 . Do you often find that you wish to have a little drink?
to continue ·drinking after your friends
20. Do you eat very little or irregusay they have had enough?
larly when you are drinking?
12. Do you usually have a reason for
2 I. Do you get terribly frightened
the occasion when you drink heavily?
after you have been drinking heavily?
13.When you are sober, do you often
22. After periods of drinking, do you
regret thing.; you have done or said ever see or hear things that aren't there?
Those who answer yes to several of
while drinking?
14. Have you tried switching brands the questions from 1 through 8 may be
or following different plans for control- in the early stage of alcoholism. Addiling your drinking?
tional affirmative answers to several of
15. Have you often failed to keep the questions from 9 through 22 may

For 'Blonde Bombshell,' life
was .great on-screen, but not off
•

RUSHER'S VIEW

Case for the .death penalty grows stronger

'

L

.
Opponents of th e death penalty think
they're on a rolL Although polls indicate that
the American people still favor the death
penalty by a wide margin, irs foes shrewdly
changed their strategy ,recently. They have
seized on a few developments, which (they
contend - quite mistakenly) strengthen their
case.
On the contrary, the case for th e death
penalty has actually been made more persuasive than ever by those very developments.
For years foes of the death penalty have
insisted that it doesn't, in fact, deter the crimes
(usually particularly aggravated murders) for
which it is ordinarily imposed. They have
argued that a penalty of life imprisonml)nt
withbut possibility of parole is as great a deterrent, or even greater.
And nobody sentenced to death ever lacked
some excuse that warranted commutation.
Either his father had abused him as a child, or
his mother drank during pregnancy (fetal alcohol syndrome), or his IQ was that of a borderline moron, or he had recently found Jesus, or
his lawyer was incompetent, or some juror
now regretted voting for his convictjon.
By and large the American people never
bought any of these arguments.The reputation
of life without parole as something severe and
terrible dissipated dramatically when it was
revealed during the 1988 presidential campaign that the Democratic candidate, Massa-·
chusetts Governor Michael Dukakis, was in
the habit of granting weekend pas~es to these
unlucky souls - one of whom, Willie Horton, seized the opportunity to rape a Maryland
housewife and beat her husband to a pulp.
But a .couple of months ago, Illinois governor George Ryan , a Republican and a supporter of the death penalty, declared a morato-

William
Rusher
NEA COLUMNIST
rium on furth er executions in his state because
doubts had been raised concerning the guilt of
a number of residents of death row.The media,
who of course share the usual liberal bias
against the death penalty: seized on this as a
monumental breakthrough, and the anti-death
penalty lobby trotted out it&gt; new argument:
Untold scores, or hundreds, of prisoners on
death rows around the country are about to be
executed although they are as pure and innocent as the driven snow. America was on the
verge of killing, and no doubt had already
killed, innocent human beings. This proved a
more persuasive argument when rested in the
polls. though a large majority still continu es to
favor the death penalty.
Two m;tior lines of argument have been
advanced in support of the new contention.
One is that the new scientific technique of
DNA testing, where that is possible and relevant, can establish the guilt or innocence of a
defendant with math ematical certainty. (That
is whY President Clinton stopped lying about
Monica Lewinsky and admitted having had an
"inappropriate" relationship with her - his
semen was found on her dress.) A number of
prisoners convicted of rap e and murder have

been spared the death penalty because their.· _,
DNA did not match that of the perpetrator. - .
That is all to the good, but the argument , cuts two ways: DNA cari (and has) been used
to establish the guilt 'of'a defendant beyond a &gt;
reasonable doubt. In those cases, it actually _r
reinforces the argument for the death penalty, :,.
by eliminating all doubt.
..- ,
The second line of argument is based on a . ,
recent study by Columbia University law pro-,· .
fessor James Lie~man, which found that 68., ...
percent of death sentences handed down . ,
between 1973 and 1995 were reversed on. . ;
appeal. The desired inference is that gross . '
errors were committed at trial in two-thirds of
those cases, leaving us to wonder whether our. .'
system of criminal justice isn't somehow fatal- . ..
ly flawed at the trial level.
But it is more reasonable to attribute the
reversals to a determination, on the part of the .. ..
appellate courts, to treat capital cases with the . .
most scrupulous care, resolving all doubts in .,
favor of the defendants. Thus regarded, the
Liebman study is actually an involuntary tribute to the caution with which the American .
j udicial system approaches the task of con- _•
demning anyone to death .
.
And the proof of the pudding is this: For aU .
their passion, opponents of the death penalty ,
. are unable to point to a single case, in modern American law, in which an innocent man or ;
woman. was actually put to death. Unfortu- , .
nately, there are scores of cases of people mur- .. ,
dered by ex-convicts who escaped the death
penalty for earlier crimes, thanks to the misplaced sentimentality of foes of the death
penalty.
'

..

(William A . Rusher is a Distingllished Fellow of. ·'
the Claremont Institutefor the Study of Statesman· _
ship and Political Philos~phy.)
: .'

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

'.

RED GREEN'S VIEW

Possession chain
The food ~h ai n has bee n in existenc~ for
millions of years and works well. I think we
should apply the same approach to our levels
of conspicuous consumption. We need a possessiQtl chain - a table that shows us the
order of acquiring produ cts and se rvi ces.

For example, you start with a toaster and
then in time you move up to a toaster oven
and then eventually a· microwave. Starting
with a microwave is in conflict with the la~s .
of nature and will lead to unhappiness and
badly burnt popcorn.
·
Likewise, if you live in a $25,000 home, you
shouldn't. be driving a $30,000 car.
It will only make you unhappy or make the
person you live with unhappy, which will
eventually affect you through the Trickl eDown Theory.
Here's a rough guide to show you the order
in which men should spend their mon ey -.
home, car, boat, motorcycle, snow machine,
riding 11IOWer, Seadoo, bush buggy, hovercraft,
backhoe, helicopter, new suit, divorce lawyeF.

It's interesting
Over the years, the phrase ' kind of' ·has
made its way into our vernacular. While the
meaning of the phrase is not completely clear,
1 think you have to use it with caution . Here
are a list of questions for which the answer
'kind of' is inappropriate:
• Do you love me?
• Do you swear to tell the truth· and noth ing but rite truth?
• Are you pregnant?
• Do you have a job?
• Does this car belong to you?
• Did you, pay your income tax?
• Are you a doctor?
• Have you been faithful ?

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

•••

.I . _1
"

.

•f

• Are you the father of this child?

,.

Survival of fittest
I like to watch boxing on television. I like ·.:
the raw confrontatior of it. But if eit)ler of the · 1
combatants gets cut or hurt, I immediate!{ "
feel awful and change the channel.
·
.' · .
I'd never want to watch ·a fight live. And ' :
when people ask me what I like about box_. ·· :
ing, I have to admit it's the best example of ·:
one of nature's basic laws - survival of the '
'
fittest.
But now I'm thinking that law needs to be
changed. Survival of the fittest is fine for a · '
one-on-one battle, but when it's part of a' ''
round-robin tournament that could conceiv- ''· ·
ably be expanded to include everyone in the,..
world, you'd end up with one sole survivor: -··
One Earth person who, although being of ~
supreme physical and mental capability, would'
not be able to procreate.
'
·"
Since survival of the fittest in its ultimate ·'
form is politically incorrect and leads to the ·
end of the human race, I suggest we change it · '
to "temporary setback of the less fit'.'- who,
are probably nicer people for it.
Quote of the Day: "In my life, the only ··
things that have gune up iq value are love,' n
frie ndship and sleep." - Red Green
· :·

(Red Green is the star of "The Red Green ·
Shout," a television series seen in the U.S. on PBS "
and in Canada on the CBC Network, and the '•
a11thor oj"The Red Green Book" and "Red Green. ·,
Talks Cars: A LAve Story.")
"

"

°

:a,

"'

at the hall .

WEDNESDAY,june 21
TUPPERS PLAINS -A special meeting, Tuppers Plains
Regional
Sewer
Distri r ·
Wednesday, 6 p.m. Ban issue and
general purpose to be discussed.

•••

THURSDAY, June 22
POMEROY- Meigs County
Cancer Initiative meeting to
meet Thursday at 10:30 a.m. at
the Veterans Memorial Hospital
conference room. Volunteers
needed.
SYRACUSE Carleton
College Board ofTrustees, annual meeting, Thursday, 7 p.m.,
home of Bob Wingett, College
Road, Syracuse.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p,m.

POMEROY - Meigs County Churches of Christ Women's
Fellowship, Thursday, 7 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Church of Christ.
Middleport to have devotions;
Amber Finley to speak on osteoporosis, arthritis and fibramyalgia;
missionary report will be given
on Christian children's home in
Wooster.
POMEROY - Caring and
Sharing Support Group, Thursday, I p.m. at Meigs Senior Center. Dr. Scott Smith, speaker on
summertime stress.

C ARPENTER - Carpenter
Baptist C hurch, State Route 143
will meet at 10:30 a.m. Sunday.
"Earthen Vessel will provide
music with Pastor John Elswick ·
to speak.

•••

MONDAY,June 26
POMEROY - Veterans Service Commission, 7:30 p.m.
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the
office, 117 Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy.

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
HARRISONVILLE - Har- non-profit groups wishing to.
risonville Grange, annual inspec- , announce meetings and special events. The calendar is
tion, Friday, 7:30 p.m at Scipio
not designed to promote
fire building. Racine Grange
sales
or fund raisers· of any
members to be guests.
type. Items are printed only ..
as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to be printed
SUNDAY, june 25
a specific number of'days. - .

•••

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
'

Subscribe today.
992-2156

EXTRA! · EXTRA!
COMING FRIDAY, JULY 7, 2000
The Daily Sentinel

Baby Edition

'fh

Men are at their best when they're in trouble
I don't know whether this is just a male
thing, but I find I do my best work and make
my best efforts when I'm in trouble.
When everything's going well and I'm
cruising, I just let it all slide. But as soon as my
boss is making threatening noises or my wife
pulls out her suitcase or the police start nosing around, well, that's when I get it together.
I'm also nicer when I'm behind the eight
ball. When things are going well, I get arrogant because to me that 's what success is aU
about.
Why do we have such a strange behavioral
pattern? I think when you boil it all down, it
stems from the inner conflict of being congenitally lazy but not wanting to look like an
idiot.
That's why competition works. It's not
about winning. ·
It's about the fear of losing and letting the
world in on your secret regarding your personal proficiency and work ethic. They say if
you want to get something done, take it to
· someone who 's busy. I say if you want to get
something done, take it to someone who's in
deep trouble.

ARCADIA, Calif. (AP)
Paramount if you stay with the
show a year." She agreed.
Betty Hutton, exuberant star of
Hollywood musicals and comeIt was at this pqjnt in the interdies of the 1940s and early 1950s,
view that Hutton suddenly burst
doesn't like to watch her old
into song:
"Then I went to Hollywood
movies:
"It isn't the movie I'm looking
· and got a movie part.
at. Professionally, my career was
· I did everything I could, but
g~t. But never was ti)e scene
you'd hardly call it art ....
offstage great for me. I had a lot .
From the start I tried to please .
of problems in my personal life."
the crowd.
The Hutton story remains one
So I couldn't sing good, but
of ·the classic examples of the
· boy, I sure sang loud!"
destructive side · of Hollywood
She laughed heartily and
Batty Hutton
explained . the ditty had been
stardom. She has seen it aU: four
unhappy marriages and four bitwritten for her nightclub act by
going to take us away fiom her."
ter divorces; b etrayals by pro ducher favorite songwriters, Ray
ers and studio bosses; bad career
The small family left town Evans and Jay Livingston.
'~with the police in back of us"
choices; an alcoholi·c mother; and Oed to Detroit.
.
' Starting in 1940, the movies
emotional and physical collapse;
came in di7mng
succession, all in
r...
(Years later, Betty Hutton and
- 1•
bankruptcy; estrangement uum
starring roles with such favorites .
her children.
Fred Astaire made a publicity tour as William Holden, Bob Hope,
·
d for their film "Let's Dance;' and
But unlike Judy Garland an
Dorothy Lamour, Fred MacMurshe took her mother along. The
ril
b
th
Ma · yn Monroe o eonray, Bing Crosby. Victor Mature. .
~.o, th ~" k 'd
f
first stop was Lansing, where
Meanwhile, she was making hit
sume d u 7 e uoir 51 e o · star·
H
· d
dozens of police on motorcycles
dom - Betty utton survtve· .
records, includiqg million-sellers
She attn'butes t hat to the gw'd- led a motorcade. "At least they are "His Rocking· Horse Ran Away"
in fiont of us this time;' her
ance of a Ca tholic priest in Newand "Doctor, Lawyer, Indian
·
I , w h ere she live d 10 mother cracked.)
Chief." Her publicity billed her as
port, R ..
unglamorous circumstances for
In Detroit, Mabel foiUld a job the "Blonde Bombshell:'
25
with Chrysler, but the pay w:asn 't
years7.9
H
.
h
enough to support her and the
Hutton's favorite movie was
At
,
u tton retams er
the Preston Sturges comedy clas·
h two .,.; rls. Betty augmented their
blonde aUure. H er f:ace 1s
smoot ,
.,sic "The Miracle of Morgan's
· has th
h ky income by sin&lt;&gt;in. g· on streeth er vmce
e same us
.,.
Creek." DeSy!va, her mentor and .
corners and in bars frequented by
qu ality tha t rna de her so adept at
now studio boss, discouro""d her
·-..deli'vering come dy lines an d b eIt- her mother, who had become an from making it, arguing
that .
"M
· alcoholic.
ing out raucous songs like
urEddie Bracken would be the
"
d "D
"When I mentioned that I
octor,
maior star. "I don't care," she said.
der, He Sai d .an
.. Sh
·
wanted to be. a star, niy mother
"
f
I
di
Chi
Lawyer, n an
e·
e even
"I love the script, and I love that
·
d
·
thi
thought
I
was
nuts,"
Hutton
sang a £iew 1yncs ur10g
s
1 don't hav"' to sing:.·
·
h
h ·
ft recalled. "I lhought if I became a
~
interVIew - t aug m a so
Her greatest opportunity came
·
fi
di
f
star and got us out of poverty. she
votce or an au ence o one.
with the only film she made away
· fl
d siJ
would quit . drinking. ' I didn't
The memor1es
from Paramount, "Annie Get
owe ea Y·
some bringing raucous laughter, know (alcoholism) was a disease; y,
G ..
others causing her voice to grow nobody did. There was no A.A. · our un.
then."
Irving Berlin's biggest hit,
hi h
d Eth 1 M
heavy and her eyes to water. She
was staying for a couple of nights
Betty quit school after the w c starre
e
erman on
with friends in this Los Angeles ninth grade to tour with a small . Broadway, had been bought by
band. She entered an amateur MGM for the studio's singing
suburb, on t he way back to her
land B G rland
. ut a
Palm Springs home fiom Atlanta, contest in Detroit and won a job star, Judy Gar
where she taped an appearance singing with the orchestra alVin- was gomg · through a difficult
for the Thrner Classic Movies cent Lopez, who gave her a new peri?d, and after filming the
bl h
1
name - Hutton. Sister Marion mus1cal numbers she .~ fired.
ca c ~ne .
be . i . visited her during a Boston Hutton was the only smgmg star
nMisahga hg10s hn engage
. ment and Betty learned who could fit into the buckskin
B.attleeC reeuttok
,
c ., w ere s e
•
rb f h. b ·
A ·
that
a
new
\bandleader
named
ga
o
t
e
o1sterous
nme
1921
b
F
b
26
Sh
· e
·· .
0 ld
was orn on e . ,
never knew her father· whoever Glenn Miller was looking for a · a ey.
he was, he didn't ~rry het vocalist. She convinced Lopez to
Yes what could have been her
mother, Mabel. Mabel had been let her sister go on for her that ~rowm~~ achievement turned
married to a man named Thorn- night - "we had only oiie dress 10to a rughtmare. Th7 ;_as.t and
·
B tty between us and she wore it" crew resented the o~di!r taking
b urg, and t he gt'rl b ecame
e
•
·
h Ia of h · -'-"'' J d
·
Betty
had
an
Marion
who
also
adopted
the
t
e P ce
u Y·
Th
bu
J une
oro rg.
'
"Th • t etr
· wuung
I till
•
older siste!io Marion Thornburg, name Hutton,- was liired ,.by
~~~ a p1cture
s
~ant
who would become Marion Miller on the spot.
lo~k, at, ~utton ~c~~ wt~ a
Hijtton, a singer with Glenn
New York had never se~n al)y~ rendual bttterness. I didn t realize
Miller's band. Left alone with two one quite like Betty Hutton. She they would be that cruel. On the
yopng daughters, Mabel proved pen11aded Lopez to abandon his set nobody spoke ~o me. They litresourceful, if on the wrong side slow-tempo · dance music and erally turned. the1r ~acks, They
or'the law.
adopt the p~rful· rhythms of also put me m a dressmg 109m
"My mother ran: a 'blind pig' swing, which fit the Hutton style. nght aboVe Judy. And Ilov~d her.
·10 La ·
Michigan" Hutton Audiences at•Billy Rose's Casa Later when we talked m Las
ns10g,
•
y,
h
'd 'B
I
said using the Prohibition-era Manana nightclub were astoundegas, s e saJ • etty, . never
rer'~ for a place that sold booze. ed by her unlimited energy and could .h.~~ done that p1cture, I
"Most of the customers were raucous comedy. After a year, she hated 11.
men. It scared me so when the left the band and became a sin~e
Hutton returned ~o Paramen woUld go on the make for act.
mount and made one p1cture she
1
Hutton
scored
another
hit
on
loved:
"The Greatest
.gh
d
her. Ireally got ft1 rene . _sang
Ea h" Sh
d d Show
c
il on
B
·
· ds If h
d Broadway in "1\vo for the Show;•
rt .
e astoun e
ec
·
h
k
ro ta e t e1r nun
er, an
D Mill b learnin all of the
.e
e Y
g.
they'd throw money on the 8oor and the Hollywood offers began.
•
'd
·
k
·t
Th
h
w
I
She
decided
to
stay
in
New
York
trapeze
.
work
for
her
role as the
1
d
I
;~,n
piC 1 up.
a s o
'ali
k
h
fi
I
I did
for a supporting role to Ethel aen st"
•
e~~F~~~e ~r:::f 3 u~tili Merman in "Panama Hattie." On
Buddy DeSylva had suffered a
was 7, we had a house where .she opening night, she says, Merman stroke, an~ Hutton lost the
made her own beer and bathtub decreed that Betty's big number beloved ~ude to .her ca~er. T~e
gin and sold it. She had two men would be dropped from the show. new studio baSICs gave er su working for her, and the police
Hutton protested to the pro- standard scnpts, and she patd to
caine and arrested them. My ducer, songwriter Buddy DeSyl- have her contract canceled. By
mother grabbed me and my sister va, who replied: "Betty, I'D tell 1952, her film career ~ over
and we went out the back door you something n\)body knows. (she mad~, one more~ Spnng
and into the snow.... 'She hid out I'm becoming head of Para- Reumon, a soaper With Dana
because the authoriiies were mount srudio.I will bring you to Andrews in 1957).

indicate th e middle to final stages of
alcoholism. For information about alcoholism, contact the National Council
on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence,
12 West 21st St.. New York, N.Y. 10010
(www.ncadd.org), or call 1-800-NCACALL (1 - 800-622-2255) .
P.S.: To those readers who wonder if
l am talking spe~ifically to YOU, yes, I
am . Get 111bving.
Ann Landers' booklet, "Nuggets and
Doozies," has everything from the outrageously funny to the poignantly
insightful. Send a self-addressed, long,
business-size envelope and a check or
money order for $5.25 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Nuggets, c/ o.
Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
Ill. 60611-0562. (In Canada, send
$6.25.) To fi nd out more about Ann
Landers and read her past columns, visit
the Creators Syndicate web page at
www.creators.com.

The Daily Sentinel Baby Edition is
a Special Edition filled with
photogra~hs of local kids • a_ges
newborn to four Y,ears old. The
BABY EDITION will appear in the
July 7th issue. Be sure your child,
grandchild or relative is Included.
Complete the form below and
enclose a snaf:shot or wallet sized
picture plus a 6.00 charge for each
photograph. I more than one child
Is in the picture, enclose an
additional $2.00 per child. (ENCLOSE
PAYMENT WITH PICTURE)

PICTURES MUST IE Ill IY
MONDAY JUliE t6, 2000. PICTURES
CAll IE PICKEl UP linER JULY 10TH,

... ·----..

Send to:

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

------------------~-------------------,

Child's Name(s) &amp;Age(s) :

I

1 Parent's Name:----,..------ - - - - - -- - - - - - 1 City &amp; State: ______.=-:-:-=-=-:-:-::::-=-:-:-:-:::-:-=-:-:::=--::-:-::::-:-::::-:-::-:-:-:--:--1
****THE ABOVE INFORMATION WILL BE USED IN THE AD****
I
I
I
I
I PHONE No.: - - - - - - - SUBMITIED B Y : - - - - - - - -

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HURRYI PICTURE DEADLINE 18
MONDAYJUNE28,20001

I

'

�Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Money for networking

•
•
~

amilp
edicine

Poems were ~d including "Flag Day" , "I Am Your Rag" and "Old
Glory" by Goldie mderick and Esther Smith. Opal Holl&lt;in and Thelma
White won door prizes. Opal Eichinger and ·I..awa Mae Nice served
retnWnents, and Opal HoDon and lnzy Newell conducted games.
Others attending were Erma Qeland, Elizabeth Hayes, and Ella
, Osborne. Shayne Davis, Sandy White and Richard White were guests.

.• .

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

MIDDLEPORT- Piano and voice students of Sharon Hawley presented their spring recital recently at the Middleport First Baptist Church.
Children performing piano solos were Jamie Bailey, Hannah Foreman,
Crockett Crow, Nicki Smith, Sarah Hubbard, Scott Kennedy, Jordan
Smith, Kasey Vanmeter, Adam Ingels, Jaden Honaker, Brittany Dingey,
Nathan Jeffers, Jordan Shank, David Poole, Katie Russell, Ashlee Hill,
Kaylee Kennedy, Lyndsey Roush,Veronica Ohlinger, Amy Barr, Lindley
Smith, Whitney Thoene, Kaley Ferguson, Leslie Kitchen, Erica Poole,
Adam Shank, and Darrin,Jackson.
Presenting a vocal solo was Katie Reed.

Tammy Queen and Patty Pickens. center, of the Meigs County Council on Aging, Inc. accepted a check from Charlene Hemphill, left, a.
r~:~presentative from the General James M. Gavin Plant in Cheshire,
an affiliate of American Electric Power. The donation will be used for
the computer network at the Center.

GEMS receives grant
RIO GRANDE -The University of Rio Grande "Girls Emerging in Mathematics and Science" program, now in its fourth summer,
has received a gtant for $9,650 from the Martha Holden Jennings
foundation .
GEMS provides math and science enrichment classes for adolescent girls residing in Gallia, Jackson, Meigs and Vinton Counties .
. The first two-week session for ninth grad~ girls has been held this
month. GEMS II will be heldJuly 10-19 for girls who started in the
summer of 1999, and GEMS III, will continue the math and science
enrichment classes for the beginning class at a more advanced level
(rom July 17-21.
: Drs. Barbara Hatfield and Pushpia Agashe started the GEMS program in the summer of 1997 to encourage young females at the high
school level to continue their interest in mathematics and science.
More information about the program may be obtained by calling Dr.
Agashe, 1-800-282-7201 , Ext. 7 483.

.Club names new officers

Scarbel'r)'

Maynard

.POMEROY -Three Mei~ County students have been presented
Atwood Awards for ExceDence by the University of Rio Grande.
The awards are tuition-free scholarships given to the stud~nlli for academic exceUence. Receiving the awards were Roberta J. Scarberry of
Racine, daughter of Anne E. Scarberry and the !,ate Lawrence Scarlletry;
Atnber Dawn Maynard of RAcine. daughter of Cecil and Deborah Maynaro; and Rebekah Smith of Langsville, daughter of John and Linda
Smith.
·
·
Scarberry plans to major in education, Maynard in journalism, and•
Smith in nursing.
The Atwood Award for ExceUence is presented to students in honor
of the university's founders, Nehemiah and Permelia Atwood. Eligibility
for the award is based on scholastic achievement, aptitude test scores and
leadership in extracurricular activities .

UMWmeets

Question: I was running my weed etally only come in contact with the
eater and apparendy got_into poison .exposed areas of the skin.This may be
ivy, although I don't i-emeJ;nber cut- how you·got the spots on your face. .
ting any.The next day my leg. were
Areas with the greatest exposure to
corered with blisters and I had a few . the urushiol will usually break ou~
on my face. Is there anything I can do firsr. Areas that have thick skin or less
to prevent getting poison ivy again?
urushiol on them will then break out
Answer: Poison ivy and its close a day or two later, giving the impresrelatives, poison oak and poison sion that the poison ivy was spread
sumac, cause itchy blisters in about 85 fiom the first group of blisters.
,
percent of those who are exposed to
It is too late to prevent this episode
them.This rash is known medically as ofpoison ivy, but here are some tips tn'
allergic contact dermatitis or thus reduce )QUf chances of subsequent .
dermatitis, but l)lost people simply outbreaks. If you suspect. that you
call the condition "poison ivy." .
have been in contact with poison ivY
• The bodys reaction to the chemi- or one of its cousins, the firsr thing to
cal urushiol - a sticky sap found do is to thoroughly .wash with soap
within poison ivy's leaves, stems and and water. If more than 20 minutes
roots- is what actually produces the have elapsed since the exposure,
rash. In order for this sap to get on washing' may not prevent the initial .
)Qur skin and produce a rash, the poi- rash. but it can prevent you ~
son ivy plant must be broken. This is spreadiqg it further.
;!
the reason that an allergic person can
. Any clothing that has come
sometimes brush up against a healthy contact with the sticky sap should also,
poison ivy plant and not break out be washed prompdy. too. Handle !hi: ·
Running the weed eater, however, clothes carefuDy. preferably witli
slueds the poison ivy plant and releas- gloves, to prevent ~y more skin con-.
es urushiol.,
.
tact with the sap.
:•
It. is a safe guess that )QU weren't
Any other object that may ~
wearing trousers made from heavy urushiol on it should be washed, ~
fabric when you were trimming )QUT This can include the fur of pet ani.:
yard since )\Ju have blisters on )QUr rnals, garden tools, golf balls, or any,legs. Your string trimmer could easily thing else that may have come in~
sling the sticky urushiol directly on contact with a broken plant. But, weaf
)QUf l~ Oops- big mistake!
gloves when you du it; otherwise,
Once the chemical comes in con- touching these contaminated obj~
tact with the skin, it begins to pene- can transfer the offending chemical tQ .
trate within minutes, but it takes fiom your skin and, thereby. give you"
I 2 hours to several days for the "poi- another case of poison ivy.
son ivy" to appear. First there is itchIf you're unsure of the appeaf.Uice.
ing. redness and swelling, followed by of poison ivy, oak and sumac in its:
blisters.
various growing conditions, . )'Oil'
Contrary to myth, poison ivy can't should point your web browser tQ:;
be spread by touching the 001ll!g liq- · http://res.aar.calbrd!poisivy/title.ht .
uid in lhe blisters! This liquid is not mi. This is an excellent site prepared
urushiol, but your body's own fluid by the Agriculture and Agri-f&lt;xxl
produced as part of its reaction to Canada research branch. :
urushiol But as you know, poison ivy
can be spread If the vi¢m gets
"Family Medicine" is a wookJy col- ·
urushiol on his or her hands, touching
wnn.1b tubmit queodont, wr1.. "'
another part of the body - or anothJolm C.~. 00., Ohio Uni&gt;wtity •
.er person's body - can transfer the
CoDep of~c Moclldne,
chemical to that area.That~ the reason
Groovonor Hall, Alhont, Ohio 45701. ,
poison ivy tends to turn up all over
Past columnt .,. ovailoblo onlbw at
the body. even though t!le plants genWW\dndio.org/lin.

m

Smith

CHESTER - New officers were named at the recent meeting of the
Past Councilors Club of Chester Council 323, Daughters of America,
POMEROY -Plans for making beginner sewing killi oo be sent to South
held at the hall.
Africa were made when the United Methodi.'t Women of the Rock Sptin~
: Elected to serve for the next six months were Esther Smith, president; Church met recendy.
.
(;)pal Hollon, vice president; T helma White, secretary; Charlotte Grant,
Rita Radford. president, opened the meeting with scripture from Ephesian&lt;
~asurer; Goldie Freqerick, flower committee; lnzy Newell, sentinel; and
2
and prayer. The purpose was given in unison and the group sang "Blessed
¥ ary K. Holter, news reporter.
Assuranoe" and "Standing on the Promises:'
· Jean Welsh opened the meeting with the !17th Psalm and the story of
Pandora Collins and Leah Ord gave ollicerss reports, and Hazel Ball was
the flag. The Lord's Prayer and the pledge to the fl~g were given, and
named to take Clller the cam report Prayer for the sick and shutins was given
members responded to roll call by commenting on plans for their sumby
Oxd. Theme of the program was on love, that of God, your neighil9rs and
mer vacations.
)Q#/•rticles were read on the history ofthe.flag.The annual picnic will be
,: Mary Jo Barringer, secretary. and Laura Mae Nice, treasurer, gave their held onjuly 11 at the home of Frances Goeglein. Dorothy Jeffers closed the
.:)!ports.
·
meeting with prayer,and refreshments were served by Pandora and Iris Collins.

s ·ociETY BRIEFS
Alfred UMW meets
:' POMEROY - A report on African children becoming soldiers was given byThehna Henderson when the the
A!fu:d United Methodist. Women met for its monthly
meeting at the church recendy.
: She noted that the children are drafted inro the army as
~as six ro 12 years old are requUai to do tasks as&lt;ocial:t:d with much o!det soldiers.They join these armies for
J1l'I!1Y reasons, it was noted, but mostly to obtrun food to eat
: After their study on the plight of the children, the group
chcse items to purchase for sewing kits which will be sent

tO Africa.

·: Sarah Caldwell gave the opening prayer and secretary

Jt1artha Poole read her repott which was approved,Thitty-

t.WO friendship calls were repotted and the reading program

and Mjsgon Today reports were discu.;ed,

·: Nina Robinson had the prayer calender and selected
&lt;;:qene R. White who is in Mexico doing ~on educatjon ..mtk. The society signed an birthday catd fur her. ·
:· .Charlotte Van Meter led the program. "The Bible and
PlFtion: Guide My Feet:'Mary Jo Barringer read scriptim:. The 'Mltship center featured maps.lxlxEs and shoes.
: AD of the members took part in readin~ and a ~
sjon about seeking justice for all, especially 'Mlmen and
Qllldren.
· Nellie Patter served ice cream, strawberries, bugles an&lt;l
SOi?kies during the group~ social hou~ Aorence Ann
Spencer gave the grace.
, , The next meeting will take plaoe on July 11 with Osie
~ FoDrod as program leader and Robinson as hostess.

Sonshine Cirde meets
'. DORCAS -A repott on the cookbook being pregared by the Sonshine Circle of the Dot= United
Methodist Church was given at a recent meeting held at

the church.
Lois Sterrett, president, conducted the meeting with
Ann Boso repott on the cookbook. She noted that once
recipes are submi~ to the COJnPallYo the books will be
shipped within nine weeks.
Reports were given by Kathryn Hart, secretary. and
Melissa Smith,·treasurer, and in the absence of Mary Oeek.
corresponding secretary. Hart reported that sympathy c:udo!
were mailed to Mr. and Mrs. Craig Harrison and thejeff
Dilcher family.
Cards of encouragement were signed for Anna Lee
Tucker, Martha Studer, Mary Oeek,Edna Knopp. Gordon
West, Pauline Wolfe, Nettie Ctm!, Douglas Cixcle, Edison
Braoe, Dolley Beegle. David Grindstaff, Mildred llile, Ellen
Amott, Ethel Orr andVicki Boso.
As for fund raising projects. it'was noted that the group
held a yard sale on ]ilne 16 and 17, and mted to serve
ren..hments at auction on June 22. It was also decided
to purchase a stave for the parsonage and Letha Proffitt and
Jo Lee mlunteered to check on one for the group.
The group will also serve refreshments at an auction on
July 8.
Sterrett w:ls in charge of the prostam and read from a ·
book by Barbara Johnson.The article was tided, "Leaking
Lafes Between Pampers and Depends." The other article
was "Three Most Pcr.verful Wonk - Act as if..:'
She read scriptUre from Colossians 3 which teDs us that
we rrrust clothe ourselves with compassion, kindness,
humility. meekness, gendeness, patienoe and 1"""- .
R~ents were served by Ud1a Proffitt, Melissa
Smith and Jo Lee to those named and Mabel Braoe, Mildred Hart, Edna Knopp. Ruth Simpson, Blondena Rainer,
Sheila':I'heils. Hazel McKelvey,ThelmaWiilton,JanetThei.'ls,
and two guests,Violet Fisher and Gladys Sterrett.
The next meeting will be held on July 13 at the Marvin McKelvey campsite at Portland. with Hazel McKelvey
~ of the program. The meal will be poduck.

an

What's so great about ready-made curtains?
FOR N' SPECIAL FEATURES

: Ready-made curtains can
p:Covide your home with a
tailored look that doesn't
b:elie their convenience .
Widely available through
c} talogs and store s, they
cpme in a variety of glowing
~es and organi c patterns . In
~e July issue , C ountry Livil!g m agazine n.otes that
(~ady - mad e c urtains are
being used to re defin e space
iaside and o ut. R easo nabl y
pr iced and easy to ca re fo r.'
tl\ey diffu se li g ht w i th o ~t

blocking it.
Country living says readymade curtains can go a lot
farther than the sill and add
sheer co lor and texture
where you wouldn't expec t
it. Suggestions include :
-Use them outside : Curtains add shape and definition to outdoor pore hes.
- Renew older furniture :
Hang c urtains over open
shelving in an armoire or
shelving unit .
- H a ng them 10 th e
threshold : C over doorways

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 1

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Weclneeday, June 21, 2000

-

.

SOCIETY NEWS

•

/

Wednesday, June 21, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

with sheers to let in air and
diffused light.
-Give your favorite fab ·rics a new life: Easily tran·s form old linens with tab ties.
. - Go to any length : Pool
fabric on the Ooor· below the·
curtain or le.t it hang above
the gro und .
-Remember, there are
many choices: Choose from
rich textures and colors
ranging from the traditional
to the opaque for the look
that is righi for your home.

..

Limited run ends July 9th.
Talk about a box office smash: call rt,ht now and ''t si11 months

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1·800·900·0400. But don't waiL Uke 1 p t film, this of~ ends soon.
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0400

case of m_Jssing hard·drives gets murkier at Los Alamos lab
WASHINGTON (AP) -They may
have contained highly classified nuclear
secrets, but two computer drives causing
all the ruckus at the Los Alamos nuclear
weapons laboratory left virtually no
_papet trail while they were missing.
After interviewing dozens of people
and conducting a string of polygraph
te'sts, investigators are stymied in trying
to determine - even in general terms
- when the two hard drives vanished
£tom a highly secured vault at the federal laboratory in New Mexico. lt may
li'ave been as long as six months ago,
gi&gt;vernment officials fe iu.
·. "The last actual inventory that gives
a degree of certainty took place as
part of the Y2K inventory;' Rep. Porter
Goss, R-Fia., chairman of the House
l,Q,telligence Committee, said in an interview Tuesday. That was a few days after
!)lew Year's.
" "That screams at me and says we've
gpt a procedure problem," added Goss, a
former CIA officer who has kept in

us

close touch with the FBI and Energy
Department investigation into the disappearance - and then reappearance - of
the two hard drives, which contain
information about how to dismantle
nuclear warheads.
Energy .s'ec.,;etary BiD Richardson was
to make his first appearance on Capitol
Hill Wednesday on the Los Alamos case
as he testifies before the Senate Armed
Services Committee.
The failure of the laboratory to
require basic logout and login proce.
dures for the devices is expected to be
among the issues troubling committee
members. Energy Department and lab
officials have said no such tracking was
required -under a relaxed policy instituted in the early 1990s for material classified as "secret" - as opposed to "top
secret."

The FBI~~ still electronically examining the two drives, which . suddenly '
reappeared )lehinq, a copying machine
last Friday not far from the vault where

they were supposed to be kept.The area,
where access was limited to people with
high security clearances, had been
searched several times, raising the possibility someone might have misplaced
and then returned .them.
But when were they last taken from
the vault and by whom?
Initially, Air force Gen . Eugene
Habiger, the Energy Department's new
top security officer, and Los Alamos Lab
Director John Browne said in congressional testimony that a scientist had
reported seeing the two devices in the
vault on April 7, a montl\ before they
were found missing and seven weeks
before senior lab officials were notified.
Sources familiar with the investigation said Tuesday that this account,
although not entirely dismissed, has
come under suspicion because of" conflicting statements" made during interviews and polygraph tests. Another individual has told investigators he went into
the vault on April 27 and would have

'

"
"

EASTMAN's •••.CLOSE

Law1nakers:
F,TC issuing
sub~nas

noticed if they had been missing 'then,
but does not recall actually seeing them.
What's clear, said Goss, is that there
was inadequate tracking on paper of the
use ofthe two drives, which belonged to
an emergency nuclear response teom.
Members of the teal)l, known as NEST,
have been the focus of the FBI criminal
investigation. The team is trained to be
ready to find ·and disarm a nuclear
device on sh(!rt notice.The disks, or drives, are designed for use in a laptop
computer and are part of an emergency
response "kit" available to team members.
All 26 individuals who had unescorted access to the vault have been given
polygraph tests, according to Richardson.
,
,
Browne, the lab's director, has testified
that security rules for the tracking of
items classified as secret were eased government-wide in I 992 to reduce the
cost of handling the large amount of
documents carrying this designation. ln

On the Net: For general information
lal;:
about
the
Los
Alamos
http:/ /www.lanl.gov/worldview/
.,·

t

·Buy One, Get One

To HOME

into tilgh
.
•
gas pnces·
•

,.,

·v•

&amp;. C~hl/Jl'ttltit/1 J,ti~tded

.,

·wASHINGTON (AP) - · A
pieliminary ~deral Trade Commission inquiry found nothing to
explain why drivers in Chicago and
Mil~ui&gt;ee are paying as much as
6§ cents more for a gallon of gas
than other parts of the country,
prompting the agency to open a
formal investigation that will
involve subpoenaing oil con~pa~:lies.
'. FTC Chairman Robert
sky told some members of the
nois congressional delegation Thesday that the sudden price spikts are
"sufficiendy questionable" to warrant formal inveStigation into possible price gouging and coUusion.
The ;'agmcy will being iSSuing
subpoenas by the end of the week,
according to the lawmakers who
attended the ·meeting.
An interim report is expected
within 30-45 days, said Sen. Dick
Durbin, D-m.
Meanwhile, ministen from the
Organization of the Petroleum
Exporting Nations were ~ting
Wednesday in Vienna, Austria, and
it was widely believed that some
increases in crude oil produCtion
would be approved The Clinton
administration has been quietly trying to m&lt;M! OPEC in that direction.
· But analysts were anticipating
only ,modest increases that likely
would do little to drive down Sasoline prices that have (eached as high
as $2.33 a gallon for regular grade
in Chicago.
The Energy Department's
weekly survey showed the cost of
gasoline nationally increased 5
cents a gallon from last week to
$1.68, a record high for a fourth
week in a row.
"There is gouging on the part of
the large oil companies:• insisted
Senate Democratic lead;t2r
om ·
Daschle of South Dakota. He
Rep. Dick Gephardt of ·
n,
the top Democrat in th House,
met with President Clinton bst
week to emphasize "the seriousness
of the matter;' Daschle said.
The two leading Democrats
reportedly raised concerns that if
gasoline prices are not reined in, it
could mean trouble for the presidential bid of Vice President AI
Gore and for Democratic efforts to
regain conttol of the House in ·
November.
Republicans have lost no time
in trying to tat the adininistration,
the Environmental Protection
Agencys cleaner gasoline rules and
Energy Secretary Bill Richardson
- already under attack because of
security problems at the Los Alamos nuclear weapons lab in New
Mexico - for the gasoline price
surge.
1
"This is the kind of thing people
get mad about, and they want
action:· said Senate Majority
'
Leader Trent Lott, .R -Miss.
At the request of the Clinton
administration and members of
Congress. the FTC has for the past
week been conduct4tg an informal
inquiry into the steep gasoline
prices. Until now the agepcy's
actions amounted to fact-finding,
with no threat of subpoenas.

early I 993 it was extended by then-Pre!ident Bush to government contracto{i
such as the University of California;
which runs the Los Alamos lab.The pol~
icy was continued by the Clint~
administration.
•
The President's foreign lntelligen~
Advisol)' Bo~rd a year ago cited inade;.
quate tracking of secret nuclear mater:i~
als in .a stinging rebuke of secutiry at tl\&lt;
Energy Department and its weapo~
labs.
·:
While the current Los Alamos securi•
ty break likely did not involve espionagCj
"in some ways it's worse," former Sen;
Warren Rudman, chairman of the advi•
sory board, said in an interview. "Espionage is very hard to guard against. Yoli
win some and lose some. Here you
got a situation where there just slopgy
accountability and record keeping:' -~

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amilp
edicine

Poems were ~d including "Flag Day" , "I Am Your Rag" and "Old
Glory" by Goldie mderick and Esther Smith. Opal Holl&lt;in and Thelma
White won door prizes. Opal Eichinger and ·I..awa Mae Nice served
retnWnents, and Opal HoDon and lnzy Newell conducted games.
Others attending were Erma Qeland, Elizabeth Hayes, and Ella
, Osborne. Shayne Davis, Sandy White and Richard White were guests.

.• .

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

MIDDLEPORT- Piano and voice students of Sharon Hawley presented their spring recital recently at the Middleport First Baptist Church.
Children performing piano solos were Jamie Bailey, Hannah Foreman,
Crockett Crow, Nicki Smith, Sarah Hubbard, Scott Kennedy, Jordan
Smith, Kasey Vanmeter, Adam Ingels, Jaden Honaker, Brittany Dingey,
Nathan Jeffers, Jordan Shank, David Poole, Katie Russell, Ashlee Hill,
Kaylee Kennedy, Lyndsey Roush,Veronica Ohlinger, Amy Barr, Lindley
Smith, Whitney Thoene, Kaley Ferguson, Leslie Kitchen, Erica Poole,
Adam Shank, and Darrin,Jackson.
Presenting a vocal solo was Katie Reed.

Tammy Queen and Patty Pickens. center, of the Meigs County Council on Aging, Inc. accepted a check from Charlene Hemphill, left, a.
r~:~presentative from the General James M. Gavin Plant in Cheshire,
an affiliate of American Electric Power. The donation will be used for
the computer network at the Center.

GEMS receives grant
RIO GRANDE -The University of Rio Grande "Girls Emerging in Mathematics and Science" program, now in its fourth summer,
has received a gtant for $9,650 from the Martha Holden Jennings
foundation .
GEMS provides math and science enrichment classes for adolescent girls residing in Gallia, Jackson, Meigs and Vinton Counties .
. The first two-week session for ninth grad~ girls has been held this
month. GEMS II will be heldJuly 10-19 for girls who started in the
summer of 1999, and GEMS III, will continue the math and science
enrichment classes for the beginning class at a more advanced level
(rom July 17-21.
: Drs. Barbara Hatfield and Pushpia Agashe started the GEMS program in the summer of 1997 to encourage young females at the high
school level to continue their interest in mathematics and science.
More information about the program may be obtained by calling Dr.
Agashe, 1-800-282-7201 , Ext. 7 483.

.Club names new officers

Scarbel'r)'

Maynard

.POMEROY -Three Mei~ County students have been presented
Atwood Awards for ExceDence by the University of Rio Grande.
The awards are tuition-free scholarships given to the stud~nlli for academic exceUence. Receiving the awards were Roberta J. Scarberry of
Racine, daughter of Anne E. Scarberry and the !,ate Lawrence Scarlletry;
Atnber Dawn Maynard of RAcine. daughter of Cecil and Deborah Maynaro; and Rebekah Smith of Langsville, daughter of John and Linda
Smith.
·
·
Scarberry plans to major in education, Maynard in journalism, and•
Smith in nursing.
The Atwood Award for ExceUence is presented to students in honor
of the university's founders, Nehemiah and Permelia Atwood. Eligibility
for the award is based on scholastic achievement, aptitude test scores and
leadership in extracurricular activities .

UMWmeets

Question: I was running my weed etally only come in contact with the
eater and apparendy got_into poison .exposed areas of the skin.This may be
ivy, although I don't i-emeJ;nber cut- how you·got the spots on your face. .
ting any.The next day my leg. were
Areas with the greatest exposure to
corered with blisters and I had a few . the urushiol will usually break ou~
on my face. Is there anything I can do firsr. Areas that have thick skin or less
to prevent getting poison ivy again?
urushiol on them will then break out
Answer: Poison ivy and its close a day or two later, giving the impresrelatives, poison oak and poison sion that the poison ivy was spread
sumac, cause itchy blisters in about 85 fiom the first group of blisters.
,
percent of those who are exposed to
It is too late to prevent this episode
them.This rash is known medically as ofpoison ivy, but here are some tips tn'
allergic contact dermatitis or thus reduce )QUf chances of subsequent .
dermatitis, but l)lost people simply outbreaks. If you suspect. that you
call the condition "poison ivy." .
have been in contact with poison ivY
• The bodys reaction to the chemi- or one of its cousins, the firsr thing to
cal urushiol - a sticky sap found do is to thoroughly .wash with soap
within poison ivy's leaves, stems and and water. If more than 20 minutes
roots- is what actually produces the have elapsed since the exposure,
rash. In order for this sap to get on washing' may not prevent the initial .
)Qur skin and produce a rash, the poi- rash. but it can prevent you ~
son ivy plant must be broken. This is spreadiqg it further.
;!
the reason that an allergic person can
. Any clothing that has come
sometimes brush up against a healthy contact with the sticky sap should also,
poison ivy plant and not break out be washed prompdy. too. Handle !hi: ·
Running the weed eater, however, clothes carefuDy. preferably witli
slueds the poison ivy plant and releas- gloves, to prevent ~y more skin con-.
es urushiol.,
.
tact with the sap.
:•
It. is a safe guess that )QU weren't
Any other object that may ~
wearing trousers made from heavy urushiol on it should be washed, ~
fabric when you were trimming )QUT This can include the fur of pet ani.:
yard since )\Ju have blisters on )QUr rnals, garden tools, golf balls, or any,legs. Your string trimmer could easily thing else that may have come in~
sling the sticky urushiol directly on contact with a broken plant. But, weaf
)QUf l~ Oops- big mistake!
gloves when you du it; otherwise,
Once the chemical comes in con- touching these contaminated obj~
tact with the skin, it begins to pene- can transfer the offending chemical tQ .
trate within minutes, but it takes fiom your skin and, thereby. give you"
I 2 hours to several days for the "poi- another case of poison ivy.
son ivy" to appear. First there is itchIf you're unsure of the appeaf.Uice.
ing. redness and swelling, followed by of poison ivy, oak and sumac in its:
blisters.
various growing conditions, . )'Oil'
Contrary to myth, poison ivy can't should point your web browser tQ:;
be spread by touching the 001ll!g liq- · http://res.aar.calbrd!poisivy/title.ht .
uid in lhe blisters! This liquid is not mi. This is an excellent site prepared
urushiol, but your body's own fluid by the Agriculture and Agri-f&lt;xxl
produced as part of its reaction to Canada research branch. :
urushiol But as you know, poison ivy
can be spread If the vi¢m gets
"Family Medicine" is a wookJy col- ·
urushiol on his or her hands, touching
wnn.1b tubmit queodont, wr1.. "'
another part of the body - or anothJolm C.~. 00., Ohio Uni&gt;wtity •
.er person's body - can transfer the
CoDep of~c Moclldne,
chemical to that area.That~ the reason
Groovonor Hall, Alhont, Ohio 45701. ,
poison ivy tends to turn up all over
Past columnt .,. ovailoblo onlbw at
the body. even though t!le plants genWW\dndio.org/lin.

m

Smith

CHESTER - New officers were named at the recent meeting of the
Past Councilors Club of Chester Council 323, Daughters of America,
POMEROY -Plans for making beginner sewing killi oo be sent to South
held at the hall.
Africa were made when the United Methodi.'t Women of the Rock Sptin~
: Elected to serve for the next six months were Esther Smith, president; Church met recendy.
.
(;)pal Hollon, vice president; T helma White, secretary; Charlotte Grant,
Rita Radford. president, opened the meeting with scripture from Ephesian&lt;
~asurer; Goldie Freqerick, flower committee; lnzy Newell, sentinel; and
2
and prayer. The purpose was given in unison and the group sang "Blessed
¥ ary K. Holter, news reporter.
Assuranoe" and "Standing on the Promises:'
· Jean Welsh opened the meeting with the !17th Psalm and the story of
Pandora Collins and Leah Ord gave ollicerss reports, and Hazel Ball was
the flag. The Lord's Prayer and the pledge to the fl~g were given, and
named to take Clller the cam report Prayer for the sick and shutins was given
members responded to roll call by commenting on plans for their sumby
Oxd. Theme of the program was on love, that of God, your neighil9rs and
mer vacations.
)Q#/•rticles were read on the history ofthe.flag.The annual picnic will be
,: Mary Jo Barringer, secretary. and Laura Mae Nice, treasurer, gave their held onjuly 11 at the home of Frances Goeglein. Dorothy Jeffers closed the
.:)!ports.
·
meeting with prayer,and refreshments were served by Pandora and Iris Collins.

s ·ociETY BRIEFS
Alfred UMW meets
:' POMEROY - A report on African children becoming soldiers was given byThehna Henderson when the the
A!fu:d United Methodist. Women met for its monthly
meeting at the church recendy.
: She noted that the children are drafted inro the army as
~as six ro 12 years old are requUai to do tasks as&lt;ocial:t:d with much o!det soldiers.They join these armies for
J1l'I!1Y reasons, it was noted, but mostly to obtrun food to eat
: After their study on the plight of the children, the group
chcse items to purchase for sewing kits which will be sent

tO Africa.

·: Sarah Caldwell gave the opening prayer and secretary

Jt1artha Poole read her repott which was approved,Thitty-

t.WO friendship calls were repotted and the reading program

and Mjsgon Today reports were discu.;ed,

·: Nina Robinson had the prayer calender and selected
&lt;;:qene R. White who is in Mexico doing ~on educatjon ..mtk. The society signed an birthday catd fur her. ·
:· .Charlotte Van Meter led the program. "The Bible and
PlFtion: Guide My Feet:'Mary Jo Barringer read scriptim:. The 'Mltship center featured maps.lxlxEs and shoes.
: AD of the members took part in readin~ and a ~
sjon about seeking justice for all, especially 'Mlmen and
Qllldren.
· Nellie Patter served ice cream, strawberries, bugles an&lt;l
SOi?kies during the group~ social hou~ Aorence Ann
Spencer gave the grace.
, , The next meeting will take plaoe on July 11 with Osie
~ FoDrod as program leader and Robinson as hostess.

Sonshine Cirde meets
'. DORCAS -A repott on the cookbook being pregared by the Sonshine Circle of the Dot= United
Methodist Church was given at a recent meeting held at

the church.
Lois Sterrett, president, conducted the meeting with
Ann Boso repott on the cookbook. She noted that once
recipes are submi~ to the COJnPallYo the books will be
shipped within nine weeks.
Reports were given by Kathryn Hart, secretary. and
Melissa Smith,·treasurer, and in the absence of Mary Oeek.
corresponding secretary. Hart reported that sympathy c:udo!
were mailed to Mr. and Mrs. Craig Harrison and thejeff
Dilcher family.
Cards of encouragement were signed for Anna Lee
Tucker, Martha Studer, Mary Oeek,Edna Knopp. Gordon
West, Pauline Wolfe, Nettie Ctm!, Douglas Cixcle, Edison
Braoe, Dolley Beegle. David Grindstaff, Mildred llile, Ellen
Amott, Ethel Orr andVicki Boso.
As for fund raising projects. it'was noted that the group
held a yard sale on ]ilne 16 and 17, and mted to serve
ren..hments at auction on June 22. It was also decided
to purchase a stave for the parsonage and Letha Proffitt and
Jo Lee mlunteered to check on one for the group.
The group will also serve refreshments at an auction on
July 8.
Sterrett w:ls in charge of the prostam and read from a ·
book by Barbara Johnson.The article was tided, "Leaking
Lafes Between Pampers and Depends." The other article
was "Three Most Pcr.verful Wonk - Act as if..:'
She read scriptUre from Colossians 3 which teDs us that
we rrrust clothe ourselves with compassion, kindness,
humility. meekness, gendeness, patienoe and 1"""- .
R~ents were served by Ud1a Proffitt, Melissa
Smith and Jo Lee to those named and Mabel Braoe, Mildred Hart, Edna Knopp. Ruth Simpson, Blondena Rainer,
Sheila':I'heils. Hazel McKelvey,ThelmaWiilton,JanetThei.'ls,
and two guests,Violet Fisher and Gladys Sterrett.
The next meeting will be held on July 13 at the Marvin McKelvey campsite at Portland. with Hazel McKelvey
~ of the program. The meal will be poduck.

an

What's so great about ready-made curtains?
FOR N' SPECIAL FEATURES

: Ready-made curtains can
p:Covide your home with a
tailored look that doesn't
b:elie their convenience .
Widely available through
c} talogs and store s, they
cpme in a variety of glowing
~es and organi c patterns . In
~e July issue , C ountry Livil!g m agazine n.otes that
(~ady - mad e c urtains are
being used to re defin e space
iaside and o ut. R easo nabl y
pr iced and easy to ca re fo r.'
tl\ey diffu se li g ht w i th o ~t

blocking it.
Country living says readymade curtains can go a lot
farther than the sill and add
sheer co lor and texture
where you wouldn't expec t
it. Suggestions include :
-Use them outside : Curtains add shape and definition to outdoor pore hes.
- Renew older furniture :
Hang c urtains over open
shelving in an armoire or
shelving unit .
- H a ng them 10 th e
threshold : C over doorways

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 1

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Weclneeday, June 21, 2000

-

.

SOCIETY NEWS

•

/

Wednesday, June 21, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

with sheers to let in air and
diffused light.
-Give your favorite fab ·rics a new life: Easily tran·s form old linens with tab ties.
. - Go to any length : Pool
fabric on the Ooor· below the·
curtain or le.t it hang above
the gro und .
-Remember, there are
many choices: Choose from
rich textures and colors
ranging from the traditional
to the opaque for the look
that is righi for your home.

..

Limited run ends July 9th.
Talk about a box office smash: call rt,ht now and ''t si11 months

FREE when you sl'n up for a year of Internet service. Just call

1·800·900·0400. But don't waiL Uke 1 p t film, this of~ ends soon.
· ~v1l11blt

your hometown Internet

lo ntw customen onlv. R~ulr•• •nnual contr1ct. Offar oplru 7/9/00.

www.zoomnet.net

1 · 800 · 900

0400

case of m_Jssing hard·drives gets murkier at Los Alamos lab
WASHINGTON (AP) -They may
have contained highly classified nuclear
secrets, but two computer drives causing
all the ruckus at the Los Alamos nuclear
weapons laboratory left virtually no
_papet trail while they were missing.
After interviewing dozens of people
and conducting a string of polygraph
te'sts, investigators are stymied in trying
to determine - even in general terms
- when the two hard drives vanished
£tom a highly secured vault at the federal laboratory in New Mexico. lt may
li'ave been as long as six months ago,
gi&gt;vernment officials fe iu.
·. "The last actual inventory that gives
a degree of certainty took place as
part of the Y2K inventory;' Rep. Porter
Goss, R-Fia., chairman of the House
l,Q,telligence Committee, said in an interview Tuesday. That was a few days after
!)lew Year's.
" "That screams at me and says we've
gpt a procedure problem," added Goss, a
former CIA officer who has kept in

us

close touch with the FBI and Energy
Department investigation into the disappearance - and then reappearance - of
the two hard drives, which contain
information about how to dismantle
nuclear warheads.
Energy .s'ec.,;etary BiD Richardson was
to make his first appearance on Capitol
Hill Wednesday on the Los Alamos case
as he testifies before the Senate Armed
Services Committee.
The failure of the laboratory to
require basic logout and login proce.
dures for the devices is expected to be
among the issues troubling committee
members. Energy Department and lab
officials have said no such tracking was
required -under a relaxed policy instituted in the early 1990s for material classified as "secret" - as opposed to "top
secret."

The FBI~~ still electronically examining the two drives, which . suddenly '
reappeared )lehinq, a copying machine
last Friday not far from the vault where

they were supposed to be kept.The area,
where access was limited to people with
high security clearances, had been
searched several times, raising the possibility someone might have misplaced
and then returned .them.
But when were they last taken from
the vault and by whom?
Initially, Air force Gen . Eugene
Habiger, the Energy Department's new
top security officer, and Los Alamos Lab
Director John Browne said in congressional testimony that a scientist had
reported seeing the two devices in the
vault on April 7, a montl\ before they
were found missing and seven weeks
before senior lab officials were notified.
Sources familiar with the investigation said Tuesday that this account,
although not entirely dismissed, has
come under suspicion because of" conflicting statements" made during interviews and polygraph tests. Another individual has told investigators he went into
the vault on April 27 and would have

'

"
"

EASTMAN's •••.CLOSE

Law1nakers:
F,TC issuing
sub~nas

noticed if they had been missing 'then,
but does not recall actually seeing them.
What's clear, said Goss, is that there
was inadequate tracking on paper of the
use ofthe two drives, which belonged to
an emergency nuclear response teom.
Members of the teal)l, known as NEST,
have been the focus of the FBI criminal
investigation. The team is trained to be
ready to find ·and disarm a nuclear
device on sh(!rt notice.The disks, or drives, are designed for use in a laptop
computer and are part of an emergency
response "kit" available to team members.
All 26 individuals who had unescorted access to the vault have been given
polygraph tests, according to Richardson.
,
,
Browne, the lab's director, has testified
that security rules for the tracking of
items classified as secret were eased government-wide in I 992 to reduce the
cost of handling the large amount of
documents carrying this designation. ln

On the Net: For general information
lal;:
about
the
Los
Alamos
http:/ /www.lanl.gov/worldview/
.,·

t

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into tilgh
.
•
gas pnces·
•

,.,

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&amp;. C~hl/Jl'ttltit/1 J,ti~tded

.,

·wASHINGTON (AP) - · A
pieliminary ~deral Trade Commission inquiry found nothing to
explain why drivers in Chicago and
Mil~ui&gt;ee are paying as much as
6§ cents more for a gallon of gas
than other parts of the country,
prompting the agency to open a
formal investigation that will
involve subpoenaing oil con~pa~:lies.
'. FTC Chairman Robert
sky told some members of the
nois congressional delegation Thesday that the sudden price spikts are
"sufficiendy questionable" to warrant formal inveStigation into possible price gouging and coUusion.
The ;'agmcy will being iSSuing
subpoenas by the end of the week,
according to the lawmakers who
attended the ·meeting.
An interim report is expected
within 30-45 days, said Sen. Dick
Durbin, D-m.
Meanwhile, ministen from the
Organization of the Petroleum
Exporting Nations were ~ting
Wednesday in Vienna, Austria, and
it was widely believed that some
increases in crude oil produCtion
would be approved The Clinton
administration has been quietly trying to m&lt;M! OPEC in that direction.
· But analysts were anticipating
only ,modest increases that likely
would do little to drive down Sasoline prices that have (eached as high
as $2.33 a gallon for regular grade
in Chicago.
The Energy Department's
weekly survey showed the cost of
gasoline nationally increased 5
cents a gallon from last week to
$1.68, a record high for a fourth
week in a row.
"There is gouging on the part of
the large oil companies:• insisted
Senate Democratic lead;t2r
om ·
Daschle of South Dakota. He
Rep. Dick Gephardt of ·
n,
the top Democrat in th House,
met with President Clinton bst
week to emphasize "the seriousness
of the matter;' Daschle said.
The two leading Democrats
reportedly raised concerns that if
gasoline prices are not reined in, it
could mean trouble for the presidential bid of Vice President AI
Gore and for Democratic efforts to
regain conttol of the House in ·
November.
Republicans have lost no time
in trying to tat the adininistration,
the Environmental Protection
Agencys cleaner gasoline rules and
Energy Secretary Bill Richardson
- already under attack because of
security problems at the Los Alamos nuclear weapons lab in New
Mexico - for the gasoline price
surge.
1
"This is the kind of thing people
get mad about, and they want
action:· said Senate Majority
'
Leader Trent Lott, .R -Miss.
At the request of the Clinton
administration and members of
Congress. the FTC has for the past
week been conduct4tg an informal
inquiry into the steep gasoline
prices. Until now the agepcy's
actions amounted to fact-finding,
with no threat of subpoenas.

early I 993 it was extended by then-Pre!ident Bush to government contracto{i
such as the University of California;
which runs the Los Alamos lab.The pol~
icy was continued by the Clint~
administration.
•
The President's foreign lntelligen~
Advisol)' Bo~rd a year ago cited inade;.
quate tracking of secret nuclear mater:i~
als in .a stinging rebuke of secutiry at tl\&lt;
Energy Department and its weapo~
labs.
·:
While the current Los Alamos securi•
ty break likely did not involve espionagCj
"in some ways it's worse," former Sen;
Warren Rudman, chairman of the advi•
sory board, said in an interview. "Espionage is very hard to guard against. Yoli
win some and lose some. Here you
got a situation where there just slopgy
accountability and record keeping:' -~

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Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

'
Wednesday, June 21, 2000 •'
''

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'

Inside:

•

NL: Cards humble Giants, Page B2
AL: Pettitte outguns Pedro, Page B2
lVho can tame Tiger?, Page B3
Crooksville grid boss suspended, Page B8

&amp;;ngress struggles over prescription dnag insurance.j
. WASHINGTON (AP) Partisan
,maneuvering is ascendant in Congres.&lt;'
ltruggle over prescription drug insurance
for Medicare rectptents, clouding
proopects for a compromise that could
reach President Clinton's desk in the current campaign seasdn.
"It is imperative that Republicans
hang together on this issue and pas.&lt; a
bill;~ pollster Glen Bolger recently
advised the House GOP rank and file. "It
is helpful if we can be bipartisan in our
approach;' according to his script, a copy
of which has circulated widely in the
Capitol.

By Bolger's accounting, the issue is a
Passage in the narrowly divided House
critical one for swing groups in the fall remains a challenge, and the GOP leaderelections, including rural residents and ship's timetable for a vote on the House
several categories of women voters.
floor in 10 days is ambitious.There's scat" Message: I care, (but say it better than tered grumbling about the $40 billion
that)" Bolger instructed Republicans last price tag and also about a p[()vision that
week. "It is more important to communi- makes the government the insurer 9flast
cate that you have a plan as it is to com- resort in a plan that otherwise relies on
municate what is in the plan."
private insurance companies to offer
As if on cue, Republicans are follow- insurance to Medicare recipients.
Even if the GOP leadership can round
ing the script. They've drafted legislation,
up
the votes for the House bill, progress
enlisted two conservative Democrats to
join them, and declared the result to be a in the Senate is · unclear. But House
"House Bipartisan Prescription Drug Republican officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, say they will have
Plan."

accomplished a primary political goal:
pushing a bill through the House, and
thus permitting the rank and file to tell
the voters they did what they could.
Not if House Democrats can help it.
Eager to regain control of the House
for the first time since they lost it in 1994,
they are matching the Repqblicans move
for move. For them, it's a matter of holding onto their historic partisan advantage
on Medicare - an edge in the range of
20 percentage points in recent polling.
QWe can understand the Republican
proposal if we remember their attitude
towards Medicare;• House Democratic

•

Leader Dick Gephardt said in a statement :
,
last week. "They hate it.
"They fought its creation and have ~
been trying to do away with it ever;
since;• the Missouri Democrat added, :
previewing rhetoric likely to reemerge·
when the bill comes up for debate.

When Republicans sought bipartis~n;;
support for their bill, Gephardt sought to:
discourage it, in keeping with his strategic;·
plan of denying the GOP legislative&gt;
accomplishments wherever possible.

..

•.

PEPSI &amp;
MT. DEW
PRODUCTS

P 0 WEL L 'S

Hate-crimes bill
in legislative
limbo, despite
Senate boost

STORE HOURS

••daythru
Sunday
IAM-10PM
'291 SECOND ST.

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
White House-backed measure to
. expand the federal law on hate
crimes could fall victim to election-year politics, despite a victory in the Republican-led Senate.
Its future was extremely clouded after Tuesday's. high-profile
vote that brought Vice Presi~nt
AI Gore in from the presidential
campaign trail in case his tiebreaking vote was needed.
It wasn't.
But shordy after the Senate's
57-42 vote to add the hate-crimes
measure to a ·sprawling defense
bill, Senate Majority Leader Trent
Lott, R-Miss., had the Senate put
aside the underlying defense bill.
Instead, it turned to a foreign
aid measure that it will continue
to debate on Wednesday - with
no set time for when the Senate
might get back to debating the
defense bill.
That leaves the hate-crime
measure in limbo, e!len though
Democrats vowed to try to keep it
a)ive.
; ~ The House has never passed
such a measure, nor is support for
it seen as strong there.
Even so, Gore and Senate
Democrats were able to claim an
important, but possibly largely
symbolic, victory after 13 Republicans crossed party lines to vote
with them on Tuesday.
Although his vore wasn't needed, Gore was on ·hand for the vote
the Senate. At" a news conference afterward, he credited families of victims of hate crimes for
pushing the issue.
"This vote is a sign of hope for
all of America;• Gore said. The
vice president had been campaigning in Kentucky when Senate Democratic · leader Tom
Daschle ofSouth Dakota told him
his presence might be needed.
Republicans suggested Gore's
trip to the Capitol was political
grandstanding - and that the
vote was never in serious doubt.
The Senate had passed an identical bill the year before by voice
vote, but it died in the House.
Gore disputed that his return
to the Senate was politically motivating, saying, "It's my job."
The vote further bogged down
the defense bill, which has now
become a catchall for many pet
pieces of legislation, mostly
pushed by Democrats.
' Earlier, a campaign-finance
proposal pushed by Sen. John
McCain, R-Ariz., was added to
the bill.
Lott suggested that, unless
some way Was devised to separate
the unrelated amendments, the
¢ntire defense bill might have to
be indefinitely put aside.
Lott has insis\ed his top priority is getting needed spending bills
through Congress - even if it
means that other major pieces of
legislation must fall by the wayside.
In anothe~ vote on the defense
bill on Tuesday, the Senate rejected 59 to 41 a ptoposal to·set up a
commission tci explore closer ties
with the government of Cuba.

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Page 81
w.ctnesd.,. June 20, 2000

WEDNESDAY's

·ohio Stadium to have
5~

more seats

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
The renovated Ohio Stadium is
projected to h~ve 95,346 seats this
fall, 5,505 seats more than a year
ago, the university said Tuesday.
The final number equid vary
because not all · of the benches
have been installed, athletics
department spokesman Steve
Snapp said.
The 78-year-old stadium,
known as "The Horseshoe"
because of its shape, is in the second year of a $187 million, threeyear renovation that is adding
seats and )uxury suites, a new
scoreboard, wider aisles and more
restrooms:
Snapp said much of this year's
work is ahead of schedule..
The Buckeyes open the season
Sept. 2 with Fresno State .

Ohio Sbde tackle
headed to Marshall
' HUNTINGTON, WVa. (AP)
- Ohio State offensive tackle
Matt Zahn says he plans to transfer to Marshall.
' Under NCAA rules, Zahn,
who is 6-foot-8, 380 pounds and
was redshirted last year by the
Buckeyes, will sit out one season
with the Thundering Herd. He
will have three years eligibility.
Zahn was a highly recruited
player out of Ohio small-school
power St. Henry, which featured a
pass-oriented offense. He passed
over offers from Michigan, Penn
State,.lndiana and Purdue to play
.....
.
·' &gt;to ~
'
•
A fut!'the auckeyeS,
&lt;
Zahn is regarded as a strong
pass blocker.
. "He's a big kid with a lot of tal. ent," Ohio State coach John
Cooper said.
Z:ihn said he knows that he has
to use more than his size to be a
dominant lineman at the college
leveL
" My coaches always told me
that technique is important and I
can'tjust rely on my size:· he said.
At Ohio. State, Zahn battled
weight problems ·and had a torn
shoulder ligament that required
surgery and cost him his freshman
seas9n. It also limited his workouts.
At one point, Zahn grew to
407 pounds. He said he has lost a
considerable amount of that
weight.
He chose Marshall because of
its potent offense, powerful passing game, proximity to home and
growing national reputation.

Penninpon signs first
endorsement deal
HUNTINGTON, WVa. (AP)
- . Former Marshall University
quarterback Chad Pennington
has signed the first endorsement
deal of his professional career.
·Pennington agreed Monday to
be the spokesman for Genesis
Hospital System, a partnership of
St. Maty's Hospital and Cabell
Huntington Hospital in Huntington and Pleasant Valley Hospitll in Point Pleasant.
"They have been strong supporters of Marshall athletics over
the years, and I'm proud to be
helping them further solidifY this
commitment," Pennington said in
a statement released through
International Marketing Group,
which represents him.
Financial terms of the two-year
deal have not been·disclosed.
· Bill Henkel, Pennington's agent
at
International
Marketing
Group, said that if the first-round
draft pick does well with the
New York Jets, he probably will
get other endorsemem col).tracts.

•••••
. Send Meigs County sports
news to the Sentinel by fax at
992-2157, or email at galtribune@eurekanet.com.
. Contact sports editor Andrew
Carter at 446-2342, ext. 21.

WNBA

s sna

HIGHLIGHfS

\
••

The Daily Sentinel

•

Phoenix
topples
Minnesota

CiNCINNATI (AP) - As
they wasted chance after
· chance, the Cincinnati Reds
gor the sinking feelif\g that
another Joss was in the makmg.
Ken Griffey Jr.'s sensational
catch and Dmitri Young's firstpitch homer left them celebrating instead of commiseratmg.
Griffey's diving catch resulted in a double play that
snuffed out Colorado's rally in
the top of the eighth, and
Young homered Off' the first
pitch in the bottom of the
inning for a slump-b. sting 3-2
victory Tuesday over the
•
Rockies.
"We hadn't been: out there
shaking hands for ,) • while,"
manager Jack McKeon said.
They'd gone eight days
without a win, losiljg six i1;1 a
row as part of a Julft free fall. ·
They've gone ·.~-11 since
June .9, leaving the consens11s
pick to win the NL Central
with a 33-35 recQ.rd, a lot of
ground to make uf and a lot
of explaining to do..
· Things had got):en so desperate that the players held a
brief meeting before Tuesday's
game and McKebn gave one
of his rare pep talks.
" It was just a matter of saying, 'Let's go. We've got to
keep playing hard,"' team captain Barry Larkin ·said. "When
the ·players talked amongst
ourselves, we got some things

Please see Reels, Pap 81

MINNEAPOLIS (AP)
Bridget Pettis' scored ·a seasonhigh 22 points and the Phoenix
Mercury pulled away in the second half to beat the Minnesota
Lynx 74-55 Tuesday night.
It was the second straight loss
for the Lynx following a franchise-record five-game winning
streak.
Minneso.ta shot just 38.(\ percent from the field while being
held to its season-low point total.
Tonya Edwards finished with
16 points, while Pettis, who went
8-for-13 from the field overall,
scored 13 points in the first half
for the Mercury (6-3).
Betty Lennox led the Lynx (64) with 14 points.
Starzz 66, Storm 63
SALT LP.KE CITY (AP)
Adrienne Goodson scored 23
points to lead the Starzz to a franchise-best fourth win in a row.
Their 7-5 record is their best for
the first 12 games of a season.
Seattle (2-8) has lost three
straight.
Margo Dydek scored 17 points
and pulled down eight rebounds
for the Starzz. Edna Campbell led
the Storm with 17 points, includ~
ing 11 in the second half.
Sting 87, Fire 85, OT
GOOD JOB - Reds third base coach Ron Oester congratulates Dimitri Young following his eight·innirig
home run last night against Colorado . The Reds won, 3-2. (AP)

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) Andrea · Stinson scored 25 points
and Shalonda Enis added 20,
including the clinching free
throws in overtime for Charlotte.
Sophia Witherspoon scored 23
and Vanessa Nygaard 18 f9r the
Fire.

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Former
'Spielman has expressed interest in one day
linebacker Chris Spielman and former run- coaching the Buckeyes' football team.
ning back Keith Byars are among 15 people . "If you're asking me today would I like to
selected for this year's ~lass of the Ohio State be considered for the job, I'd say yes," SpielUniversity Spoqs Hall of Fame; the school man said Tuesday, adding that others he did
announced Tuesday.
not name also would be deserving. "But just
Spielman lettere.d four times and became IJecause somebody deserves something
one of college football's best mid!fie line- doesn't mean you ever stop trying to
backers while p4ying for the Buckeyes achieve the goals in your life," Spielman
between 1984 andt1 987.
said.
He was also a tw} -time.All-American and
Byars, who played for the Buckeyes from
won the Lombardi'':!ward in his final year at 1982 to 1985, was also a four-time varsity
Ohio State.
''
letterman. In 1986, he was a first-round
He retired from the Cleveland Browns last draft pick of the Philadelphia Eagles.
year after a neck injury. He spent most ofhis
He still ranks fourth among the pagles' in
professional caree~. with _the Detroit Lions career receptions with 371. He retired from
and also playe..l for the Buffalo Bills.
the NFL in May. He also played for Miami
"It's humbling aQll. it's something you can Dolphins, New England Patriots and New
look back at it sitrce I'm not playing any .York Jets.
more and say 'Yeah, that's pretty cool,"
Other hall of fame selections announced
Spielman said of his ~election to OSU's hall. Tuesday, their sports and the years they
I

played at Ohio State are:
Ollie Cline, football (1944"to 1947); Dave
Sorenson, basketball (1968 .to 1970); Kent
Vosler, diving (1974 to 1978); Paul Hartman, lacrosse (1955 to 1957);William Hunt,
fencing (1942) ; Chris Smith, golf (1988 to
1991); Laura Davis Johnson, volleyball (1991
to 1994); Carrie Irish Finneran, diving
(1975 to 1980): Nikita Lowry, basketball
(1986 to, 1989); June Brewer Daugherty;
basketball (197 4 to 1978); Gail Armstrong,
swimming (1985 to 1988); DeAnn Dobesh
Clark, fencing (1986 to. 1989) and Krinon
Clark Moccia, softball (1991 to !994).
· After being named to the hall, Sorenson
credited retired OSU basketball coach Fred
Taylor.
· "If it wasn't for him pushing the fundamentals of the game and teaching .that to us, ·
I'm sure I wo.uldn't be here," Sorenson said.
Inductions are planned for Sept. 15-16.

.

~

li

Mason .co.
Legion ".
squad falls

Pluu -

BY ANDREW CARTER

'
.Lqlon, '-P 88
li

a

Mwadi Mabika added 21 points
(or Los Angeles, while Ukari
Figgs had 12 points and a careerhigh eight assists.
Houston's Sheryl Swoopes led
all scorers with 27 points, and
Cynthia Cooper had 24.

'I, too

38 baketball referees attended a camp
held at Rio Grande last week

PoLcYN
OVP SPORTS STAFF

~

The victory put second-place
Los Angeles (7 -2) one game
behind the Comets (9-2) in the
WNBA's Western Division. Leslie
scored 11 of her points during
four-minute stand late in the second hal£

Officials hit the s.ummer camp

Bv DAN

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
-The Mason County Post 23
team dropped both ends of its
twinbill with the Putnam Panthers at Harmon Park Tuesday,
losing 12-6 and 16-1.
In the opener, Mason starter
pitche~ six ·
Joe
.
. Marcum
. .
.
mrungs, gtvmg up JUSt two
earned runs and six hits while
striking out seven to stake his ·
club to a 5-4 lead aft~r six
innings.
Then the rains came.
The top of the seventh was
played
through
varying
degrees of rain, all of whi~h
resulted in relievers Bra~on
Moore and Andrew Kruk issuing four walks and plunking
two batters, allowing Putnam
to score eight times in tne
frame and take~ 12-Slead int,o
the bottom of the seventh . ~
· The rain stopped by the enH
of the Panther eruption, but J::!Y
the time the rain stopped arid
Tim Greene took the mou~
in relief of Kruk, the damage

Sparks 90, Comets 84
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) -·
Lisa Leslie tied a season-high with
21 points and grabbed a careerhigh 14 rebounds as the Sparks
snapped Houston's six-game winning streak·.

OVP SPORTS EDITOR

work both college and high
school circuits took time out of
their lives, and money out of
their pockets, to help better
themselves tnd become more
proficient at their craft.
Joe DeRosa, a veteran NBA
referee and supervisor of officials for the American Mideast
Conference (AMC), conducted
the clinic along with several
other veteran refS.
·
DeRosa h:~~ been an official
since 1977. He attended his first
officiating camp, similar to the
one held last week at Riq
Grande, in 1985. He reached the
NCAA Division I ranks rwo
years later and was hired by the
NBA in 1989.
The Youngstown area native
has been director of the AMC
officials for two full seasons,
DeRosa has been able tq
expand the stable of officials fo~
the league and takes pride in
training quality referees.
"We have a·pretty good group
· of veteran, experienced referees
that mosdy work Division I bas-,

RIO GRANDE Even
when they're right, they're
wrong.
Fans love to hate them. Players
enjoy, or don't enjoy, that sallie
love-hate relationship with
them.
By and large, they're probably
the most hated people in sports.
No, not sportswriters.
·
Officials. The dreaded men
and women in the striped shirts.
But what the average sports
fan doesn'i know is that Mr. or
Ms. Referee's sole purpose for
existing is not to ruin their kid's
chance for glory.
.
Officials help maintain some
· saJlity and order in a less than
sane and orderly world we call
athletics.
And they work hard to keep
the peace, especially in the offseasqn.
Witness a basketball officials
clinic held in ~onjunction with
the youth basketball camps
sponsored by the University . of
Rio Grande last week.
TOP REF ..,.. NBA official Joe DeRosa talks with a fellow referee dur·
Thirty~eight referees. that · PIIIH ing last week's camp at Rio Grande. (Andrew Carter photo)
I

Hey Rtf...... Ia

'•

•

•

�•

•

•

~

Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

'
Wednesday, June 21, 2000 •'
''

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'

Inside:

•

NL: Cards humble Giants, Page B2
AL: Pettitte outguns Pedro, Page B2
lVho can tame Tiger?, Page B3
Crooksville grid boss suspended, Page B8

&amp;;ngress struggles over prescription dnag insurance.j
. WASHINGTON (AP) Partisan
,maneuvering is ascendant in Congres.&lt;'
ltruggle over prescription drug insurance
for Medicare rectptents, clouding
proopects for a compromise that could
reach President Clinton's desk in the current campaign seasdn.
"It is imperative that Republicans
hang together on this issue and pas.&lt; a
bill;~ pollster Glen Bolger recently
advised the House GOP rank and file. "It
is helpful if we can be bipartisan in our
approach;' according to his script, a copy
of which has circulated widely in the
Capitol.

By Bolger's accounting, the issue is a
Passage in the narrowly divided House
critical one for swing groups in the fall remains a challenge, and the GOP leaderelections, including rural residents and ship's timetable for a vote on the House
several categories of women voters.
floor in 10 days is ambitious.There's scat" Message: I care, (but say it better than tered grumbling about the $40 billion
that)" Bolger instructed Republicans last price tag and also about a p[()vision that
week. "It is more important to communi- makes the government the insurer 9flast
cate that you have a plan as it is to com- resort in a plan that otherwise relies on
municate what is in the plan."
private insurance companies to offer
As if on cue, Republicans are follow- insurance to Medicare recipients.
Even if the GOP leadership can round
ing the script. They've drafted legislation,
up
the votes for the House bill, progress
enlisted two conservative Democrats to
join them, and declared the result to be a in the Senate is · unclear. But House
"House Bipartisan Prescription Drug Republican officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, say they will have
Plan."

accomplished a primary political goal:
pushing a bill through the House, and
thus permitting the rank and file to tell
the voters they did what they could.
Not if House Democrats can help it.
Eager to regain control of the House
for the first time since they lost it in 1994,
they are matching the Repqblicans move
for move. For them, it's a matter of holding onto their historic partisan advantage
on Medicare - an edge in the range of
20 percentage points in recent polling.
QWe can understand the Republican
proposal if we remember their attitude
towards Medicare;• House Democratic

•

Leader Dick Gephardt said in a statement :
,
last week. "They hate it.
"They fought its creation and have ~
been trying to do away with it ever;
since;• the Missouri Democrat added, :
previewing rhetoric likely to reemerge·
when the bill comes up for debate.

When Republicans sought bipartis~n;;
support for their bill, Gephardt sought to:
discourage it, in keeping with his strategic;·
plan of denying the GOP legislative&gt;
accomplishments wherever possible.

..

•.

PEPSI &amp;
MT. DEW
PRODUCTS

P 0 WEL L 'S

Hate-crimes bill
in legislative
limbo, despite
Senate boost

STORE HOURS

••daythru
Sunday
IAM-10PM
'291 SECOND ST.

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
White House-backed measure to
. expand the federal law on hate
crimes could fall victim to election-year politics, despite a victory in the Republican-led Senate.
Its future was extremely clouded after Tuesday's. high-profile
vote that brought Vice Presi~nt
AI Gore in from the presidential
campaign trail in case his tiebreaking vote was needed.
It wasn't.
But shordy after the Senate's
57-42 vote to add the hate-crimes
measure to a ·sprawling defense
bill, Senate Majority Leader Trent
Lott, R-Miss., had the Senate put
aside the underlying defense bill.
Instead, it turned to a foreign
aid measure that it will continue
to debate on Wednesday - with
no set time for when the Senate
might get back to debating the
defense bill.
That leaves the hate-crime
measure in limbo, e!len though
Democrats vowed to try to keep it
a)ive.
; ~ The House has never passed
such a measure, nor is support for
it seen as strong there.
Even so, Gore and Senate
Democrats were able to claim an
important, but possibly largely
symbolic, victory after 13 Republicans crossed party lines to vote
with them on Tuesday.
Although his vore wasn't needed, Gore was on ·hand for the vote
the Senate. At" a news conference afterward, he credited families of victims of hate crimes for
pushing the issue.
"This vote is a sign of hope for
all of America;• Gore said. The
vice president had been campaigning in Kentucky when Senate Democratic · leader Tom
Daschle ofSouth Dakota told him
his presence might be needed.
Republicans suggested Gore's
trip to the Capitol was political
grandstanding - and that the
vote was never in serious doubt.
The Senate had passed an identical bill the year before by voice
vote, but it died in the House.
Gore disputed that his return
to the Senate was politically motivating, saying, "It's my job."
The vote further bogged down
the defense bill, which has now
become a catchall for many pet
pieces of legislation, mostly
pushed by Democrats.
' Earlier, a campaign-finance
proposal pushed by Sen. John
McCain, R-Ariz., was added to
the bill.
Lott suggested that, unless
some way Was devised to separate
the unrelated amendments, the
¢ntire defense bill might have to
be indefinitely put aside.
Lott has insis\ed his top priority is getting needed spending bills
through Congress - even if it
means that other major pieces of
legislation must fall by the wayside.
In anothe~ vote on the defense
bill on Tuesday, the Senate rejected 59 to 41 a ptoposal to·set up a
commission tci explore closer ties
with the government of Cuba.

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Page 81
w.ctnesd.,. June 20, 2000

WEDNESDAY's

·ohio Stadium to have
5~

more seats

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
The renovated Ohio Stadium is
projected to h~ve 95,346 seats this
fall, 5,505 seats more than a year
ago, the university said Tuesday.
The final number equid vary
because not all · of the benches
have been installed, athletics
department spokesman Steve
Snapp said.
The 78-year-old stadium,
known as "The Horseshoe"
because of its shape, is in the second year of a $187 million, threeyear renovation that is adding
seats and )uxury suites, a new
scoreboard, wider aisles and more
restrooms:
Snapp said much of this year's
work is ahead of schedule..
The Buckeyes open the season
Sept. 2 with Fresno State .

Ohio Sbde tackle
headed to Marshall
' HUNTINGTON, WVa. (AP)
- Ohio State offensive tackle
Matt Zahn says he plans to transfer to Marshall.
' Under NCAA rules, Zahn,
who is 6-foot-8, 380 pounds and
was redshirted last year by the
Buckeyes, will sit out one season
with the Thundering Herd. He
will have three years eligibility.
Zahn was a highly recruited
player out of Ohio small-school
power St. Henry, which featured a
pass-oriented offense. He passed
over offers from Michigan, Penn
State,.lndiana and Purdue to play
.....
.
·' &gt;to ~
'
•
A fut!'the auckeyeS,
&lt;
Zahn is regarded as a strong
pass blocker.
. "He's a big kid with a lot of tal. ent," Ohio State coach John
Cooper said.
Z:ihn said he knows that he has
to use more than his size to be a
dominant lineman at the college
leveL
" My coaches always told me
that technique is important and I
can'tjust rely on my size:· he said.
At Ohio. State, Zahn battled
weight problems ·and had a torn
shoulder ligament that required
surgery and cost him his freshman
seas9n. It also limited his workouts.
At one point, Zahn grew to
407 pounds. He said he has lost a
considerable amount of that
weight.
He chose Marshall because of
its potent offense, powerful passing game, proximity to home and
growing national reputation.

Penninpon signs first
endorsement deal
HUNTINGTON, WVa. (AP)
- . Former Marshall University
quarterback Chad Pennington
has signed the first endorsement
deal of his professional career.
·Pennington agreed Monday to
be the spokesman for Genesis
Hospital System, a partnership of
St. Maty's Hospital and Cabell
Huntington Hospital in Huntington and Pleasant Valley Hospitll in Point Pleasant.
"They have been strong supporters of Marshall athletics over
the years, and I'm proud to be
helping them further solidifY this
commitment," Pennington said in
a statement released through
International Marketing Group,
which represents him.
Financial terms of the two-year
deal have not been·disclosed.
· Bill Henkel, Pennington's agent
at
International
Marketing
Group, said that if the first-round
draft pick does well with the
New York Jets, he probably will
get other endorsemem col).tracts.

•••••
. Send Meigs County sports
news to the Sentinel by fax at
992-2157, or email at galtribune@eurekanet.com.
. Contact sports editor Andrew
Carter at 446-2342, ext. 21.

WNBA

s sna

HIGHLIGHfS

\
••

The Daily Sentinel

•

Phoenix
topples
Minnesota

CiNCINNATI (AP) - As
they wasted chance after
· chance, the Cincinnati Reds
gor the sinking feelif\g that
another Joss was in the makmg.
Ken Griffey Jr.'s sensational
catch and Dmitri Young's firstpitch homer left them celebrating instead of commiseratmg.
Griffey's diving catch resulted in a double play that
snuffed out Colorado's rally in
the top of the eighth, and
Young homered Off' the first
pitch in the bottom of the
inning for a slump-b. sting 3-2
victory Tuesday over the
•
Rockies.
"We hadn't been: out there
shaking hands for ,) • while,"
manager Jack McKeon said.
They'd gone eight days
without a win, losiljg six i1;1 a
row as part of a Julft free fall. ·
They've gone ·.~-11 since
June .9, leaving the consens11s
pick to win the NL Central
with a 33-35 recQ.rd, a lot of
ground to make uf and a lot
of explaining to do..
· Things had got):en so desperate that the players held a
brief meeting before Tuesday's
game and McKebn gave one
of his rare pep talks.
" It was just a matter of saying, 'Let's go. We've got to
keep playing hard,"' team captain Barry Larkin ·said. "When
the ·players talked amongst
ourselves, we got some things

Please see Reels, Pap 81

MINNEAPOLIS (AP)
Bridget Pettis' scored ·a seasonhigh 22 points and the Phoenix
Mercury pulled away in the second half to beat the Minnesota
Lynx 74-55 Tuesday night.
It was the second straight loss
for the Lynx following a franchise-record five-game winning
streak.
Minneso.ta shot just 38.(\ percent from the field while being
held to its season-low point total.
Tonya Edwards finished with
16 points, while Pettis, who went
8-for-13 from the field overall,
scored 13 points in the first half
for the Mercury (6-3).
Betty Lennox led the Lynx (64) with 14 points.
Starzz 66, Storm 63
SALT LP.KE CITY (AP)
Adrienne Goodson scored 23
points to lead the Starzz to a franchise-best fourth win in a row.
Their 7-5 record is their best for
the first 12 games of a season.
Seattle (2-8) has lost three
straight.
Margo Dydek scored 17 points
and pulled down eight rebounds
for the Starzz. Edna Campbell led
the Storm with 17 points, includ~
ing 11 in the second half.
Sting 87, Fire 85, OT
GOOD JOB - Reds third base coach Ron Oester congratulates Dimitri Young following his eight·innirig
home run last night against Colorado . The Reds won, 3-2. (AP)

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) Andrea · Stinson scored 25 points
and Shalonda Enis added 20,
including the clinching free
throws in overtime for Charlotte.
Sophia Witherspoon scored 23
and Vanessa Nygaard 18 f9r the
Fire.

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Former
'Spielman has expressed interest in one day
linebacker Chris Spielman and former run- coaching the Buckeyes' football team.
ning back Keith Byars are among 15 people . "If you're asking me today would I like to
selected for this year's ~lass of the Ohio State be considered for the job, I'd say yes," SpielUniversity Spoqs Hall of Fame; the school man said Tuesday, adding that others he did
announced Tuesday.
not name also would be deserving. "But just
Spielman lettere.d four times and became IJecause somebody deserves something
one of college football's best mid!fie line- doesn't mean you ever stop trying to
backers while p4ying for the Buckeyes achieve the goals in your life," Spielman
between 1984 andt1 987.
said.
He was also a tw} -time.All-American and
Byars, who played for the Buckeyes from
won the Lombardi'':!ward in his final year at 1982 to 1985, was also a four-time varsity
Ohio State.
''
letterman. In 1986, he was a first-round
He retired from the Cleveland Browns last draft pick of the Philadelphia Eagles.
year after a neck injury. He spent most ofhis
He still ranks fourth among the pagles' in
professional caree~. with _the Detroit Lions career receptions with 371. He retired from
and also playe..l for the Buffalo Bills.
the NFL in May. He also played for Miami
"It's humbling aQll. it's something you can Dolphins, New England Patriots and New
look back at it sitrce I'm not playing any .York Jets.
more and say 'Yeah, that's pretty cool,"
Other hall of fame selections announced
Spielman said of his ~election to OSU's hall. Tuesday, their sports and the years they
I

played at Ohio State are:
Ollie Cline, football (1944"to 1947); Dave
Sorenson, basketball (1968 .to 1970); Kent
Vosler, diving (1974 to 1978); Paul Hartman, lacrosse (1955 to 1957);William Hunt,
fencing (1942) ; Chris Smith, golf (1988 to
1991); Laura Davis Johnson, volleyball (1991
to 1994); Carrie Irish Finneran, diving
(1975 to 1980): Nikita Lowry, basketball
(1986 to, 1989); June Brewer Daugherty;
basketball (197 4 to 1978); Gail Armstrong,
swimming (1985 to 1988); DeAnn Dobesh
Clark, fencing (1986 to. 1989) and Krinon
Clark Moccia, softball (1991 to !994).
· After being named to the hall, Sorenson
credited retired OSU basketball coach Fred
Taylor.
· "If it wasn't for him pushing the fundamentals of the game and teaching .that to us, ·
I'm sure I wo.uldn't be here," Sorenson said.
Inductions are planned for Sept. 15-16.

.

~

li

Mason .co.
Legion ".
squad falls

Pluu -

BY ANDREW CARTER

'
.Lqlon, '-P 88
li

a

Mwadi Mabika added 21 points
(or Los Angeles, while Ukari
Figgs had 12 points and a careerhigh eight assists.
Houston's Sheryl Swoopes led
all scorers with 27 points, and
Cynthia Cooper had 24.

'I, too

38 baketball referees attended a camp
held at Rio Grande last week

PoLcYN
OVP SPORTS STAFF

~

The victory put second-place
Los Angeles (7 -2) one game
behind the Comets (9-2) in the
WNBA's Western Division. Leslie
scored 11 of her points during
four-minute stand late in the second hal£

Officials hit the s.ummer camp

Bv DAN

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
-The Mason County Post 23
team dropped both ends of its
twinbill with the Putnam Panthers at Harmon Park Tuesday,
losing 12-6 and 16-1.
In the opener, Mason starter
pitche~ six ·
Joe
.
. Marcum
. .
.
mrungs, gtvmg up JUSt two
earned runs and six hits while
striking out seven to stake his ·
club to a 5-4 lead aft~r six
innings.
Then the rains came.
The top of the seventh was
played
through
varying
degrees of rain, all of whi~h
resulted in relievers Bra~on
Moore and Andrew Kruk issuing four walks and plunking
two batters, allowing Putnam
to score eight times in tne
frame and take~ 12-Slead int,o
the bottom of the seventh . ~
· The rain stopped by the enH
of the Panther eruption, but J::!Y
the time the rain stopped arid
Tim Greene took the mou~
in relief of Kruk, the damage

Sparks 90, Comets 84
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) -·
Lisa Leslie tied a season-high with
21 points and grabbed a careerhigh 14 rebounds as the Sparks
snapped Houston's six-game winning streak·.

OVP SPORTS EDITOR

work both college and high
school circuits took time out of
their lives, and money out of
their pockets, to help better
themselves tnd become more
proficient at their craft.
Joe DeRosa, a veteran NBA
referee and supervisor of officials for the American Mideast
Conference (AMC), conducted
the clinic along with several
other veteran refS.
·
DeRosa h:~~ been an official
since 1977. He attended his first
officiating camp, similar to the
one held last week at Riq
Grande, in 1985. He reached the
NCAA Division I ranks rwo
years later and was hired by the
NBA in 1989.
The Youngstown area native
has been director of the AMC
officials for two full seasons,
DeRosa has been able tq
expand the stable of officials fo~
the league and takes pride in
training quality referees.
"We have a·pretty good group
· of veteran, experienced referees
that mosdy work Division I bas-,

RIO GRANDE Even
when they're right, they're
wrong.
Fans love to hate them. Players
enjoy, or don't enjoy, that sallie
love-hate relationship with
them.
By and large, they're probably
the most hated people in sports.
No, not sportswriters.
·
Officials. The dreaded men
and women in the striped shirts.
But what the average sports
fan doesn'i know is that Mr. or
Ms. Referee's sole purpose for
existing is not to ruin their kid's
chance for glory.
.
Officials help maintain some
· saJlity and order in a less than
sane and orderly world we call
athletics.
And they work hard to keep
the peace, especially in the offseasqn.
Witness a basketball officials
clinic held in ~onjunction with
the youth basketball camps
sponsored by the University . of
Rio Grande last week.
TOP REF ..,.. NBA official Joe DeRosa talks with a fellow referee dur·
Thirty~eight referees. that · PIIIH ing last week's camp at Rio Grande. (Andrew Carter photo)
I

Hey Rtf...... Ia

'•

•

•

�.
...:

..

Wednesday, June 21, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport~ Ohio

Pllge B 2 • The O.lly Sentinel

Wednelehly, June 21, 2000

NATIONAL L-E AGUE
'

RUNfl--M......,, ~ldo.

Star break will be on the road.
Bei)SOn (6-5) allowed Jose Vidro's game- tying
Jim J;.dmonds. JUt Iris 21st homer in the third · homer in the fourth to snap his scoreles's-innings
: With just 13 starts in the majon, 20-year-old
inning,
put the Cardinals ahead to stay with an 'RBI streak at 16. He allowed six 'hits in 7 1-3 innings as
Rick Ankiel feels right at home.
Ankiel dominated at Busch Stadium again with single in a four-run fifth and robbed Burks of a sec- his ERA fell to 2.83.
Mike Williams pitched the ninth for his lOth save
six strong innings, and Craig Paquette hit a three- ond homer when he scaled the center-field wall.
Marlins 8, Brewer, 2
in 11 opportunities.
run homer. as the St. Louis Cardinals beat the San
Florida's
Ryan
Dempster
allowed
three
hits
in
Braves 11, Cuba 4
Francisco Giants 7-2 in a rain-shortened game
At Atlanta, Chipper Jones hit a pair of two-run
seven innings at home, and Alex Gonzalez had his
Tuesday night.
hom en, and Kevin Millwood won for the fint time
Ankiel (6-3) worked on nine days' rest so he lint career multihomer game.
~ould pitch at home, where he's 5-0 with a 2.52
Dempster (8-4), who struck out three and walked since May 17.
six, gave up one run - GeoffJenkins' 12th homer
Quilvio Veras went 4-for-5, scored three runs and
ERA; he's 1-3 with a 5.83 ERA on the road.
k.nocked in three, Andruw Jones had a pair of hits
"I don't think there's any significant reason why . in the sixth inning. .
Cliff Aoyd hit a three-run home.r off Milwau- - including his 19th homer -..11cored three times
I'm not good on the road," Ankiel said. "I feel comfortable here. You've been out here so many times, kee's Steve Woodard (1-6) in the fint. Luis Castillo and drove in three runs, and Brian Jordan went 3·you start getting used to everything."
was 3-for-5 with two runs scored and his 30th for-4 with an RBI in Atlanta's 14-hit attack.
', Ellis Burks" two-run homer in the second was the stolen base.
· \ _,_Millwood (5-6) gave up fou.r hits and str.uck out
pnly damage against Ankiel, who allowed three hits,
Pirates 2, Expo• 1
~in six innings.
·
·
K.ris
Benson
pitched
his
way
out
of
a
basesKevin
Tapani
(4-7)
lasted
only
two
innings,
givwalked three and struck out eight.
·
., "Everything I've heard· about him is true:' Giants loaded jam with none out in the seventh as Pit~- ing up seven hits and six runs.
.
Phillie• 3, Meta 2
manager Dusty Baker said."You don't see many 20- burgh stopped a four-game losing streak with a
road victory.
Mike Lieberthal"s two-out single in the t,Oth off
year-olds like him.''
.
Jason Kendall homered off Mike Johnson (2-2) in Armando Benitez gave Philadelphia its fourth win
The game was called in the top of the ninth after
the fint, and Warren Morris hit an RBI single in in five games against the NL East's top two teams.
a rain delay of 1 hour, 29 minutes.
Benitez (1-3), who had not allowed a run in 17
None of the rest of Ankiel's starts before the All- the fifth.

innings since May 6, also yielded a game-tying solo
homer to Pat Burrell in the ninth, his third blown ·
save in 19 chances.
.
.
;:~
Mike Piazza gave New York a 2-0 lead m the fi,sl
with his 19th homer.
~;
Dodgers 9,Astro• 6
: ·;
Gary' Sheffield capped Los Angeles' four- run 1&lt;n~
with a three-run homer off Joe Slusarski (1-4). ..
Jose Vizcaino, traded to the Yankees for Jipl
Leyritz after the game, singled in the go-ahead run~
Jeff Shaw blew his sixth save in 18 opportunities,
giving up Jeff Bagwell's 17th homer leading off the
ninth.
. Padres 3, Diamondbacks 1
Brian Tollberg allowed one hit in seven innings in
his major league debut, and Ryan Klesko homered
twice as San Diego won for the fint time in five
games at Bank One Ballpark this season.
·'.
Trevor Hoffman got his 18th save in 19 oppor!U'~
ruties.
.
~'
Todd Stottlemyre ·(8-5) has lost three straighJ
starts.
..
.

' ··
' '

...

AMERICAN LEAGUE

~
,_,

three starts, gave up six hits and two walks, striking
AJ impressive as scoring 22 runs in one game is, out four before leaving with two outs in the eighth.
getting three against Pedro Martinez might be even Mariano Rivera got four outs .for his 16th save.
"It says a lot about our pitching stall', because we
better.
haven't
scored a lot of runs off him:• said Jeter,
One night after the New York Yankees scored
their most runs in 47 yean, Andy Pettitte out- whose Yankees beat the Red Sox 2·1 last Wednespitched Martinez in a 3-0 victory over Boston on day in Martinez's last start. "The way that Andy was
Thesday night. Solo homers by Derek Jeter, Bernie pitching, we thought that a couple of runs would
Williams and Paul O'Neill accounted for the Yan- be enough."
.
The closest ;Boston came to scoring was in the
kees' runs.
All three shots came otf Cy Young winne'P Mar- third when Nomar Gil.rciaparra singled with Jose
tinez (9-3), who allowed only three previous Offerman on second. Shane Spencer threw a OQehomers all season and no more than one in a game bopper from shallow left field, and catcher Jorge
Posada held onto the ball when Offerman tried to
since Sept. 24, 1998.
The Yankees, who won the opener at Fenway bowl him over. · .
Athletics 8, Orioles S
Park 22-1, moved 1 I /2 games ahead of Boston in
Ramon Hernandez's three-run homer, Oakland's
the AL East.
"To win a game like we did last night, and then fourth of the game, capped a four-run eighth as the
beat Pedro tonight:• manager Joe Torre said, "if that Athletics rallied at home to win their seventh
•,
,,
.
doesn't d.? something for our "onfidence, I don't straight· game.
After Matt Stain' solo shot witWtwo outs in the
know what will.''
MaJ"tinez allowed just five hits and struck out eighth tied the game "at 5. Sidney Ponson (4-4)
nine in eight innings, but Pettitte (7-3) came a'way walked 'Miguel Tejada and Eric Chavez. Calvin
Maduro relieved Ponson and allowed Hernandez's
with the win.
Pettine, who allowed t 6 runs in his previous homer.

The Orioles hit three homen offTim Hudson
(8· 2), who bas won his last seven decisiom.'Jason
lsringhausen got his 17th save.
Tlpra 18, Blue Jay• 6
Tony Clark hit two ofDetroit's club-record eight
home runs,leading Detroit at 1bronto.
Juan Gonzalez, juan Encarnacion, Bobby Higginson, Robert Pick, Rich Becker and Deivi Cruz also
homered for the Tigers, whose previous best was
seven homers on May 28, 1995, against the White

sox:

.

Chris Carpenter (6-6) gave up a career-high nine
runs and seven hits in two-plus innings.
Indian• 4, White Sox 1
Travis Fryman hit a two-run double off Mike
Sirotka (6-6) as visiting Cleveland snapped Chicago's eight-game winning streak.
The victory pulled the Indians within 7 112
games of the White Sox in the AL Central and was
Cleveland's second win in nine games.
.•.
Jim Brower (2-1), who lasted just 11-3 innings
against the White Sox in his last start June 14, gave
up one run and six hits in 7 1-3 innings.
Rangers 5, '1\vins 2
Kenny Rogers allowed just five hits in eight- plus

innings as Texas returned home from its worst road
trip in 14 yean with a win.
Rogers (6-5), who had two no-decisions in
games the Rangers lost during their 1-8 trip, set t~
'1\vins down in order in five of the six innings atJ:t\'t
Minnesota got its first run in the second inning:::'
Mariners 4, Devll Ray• 3
Paul Abbott (4-2) pitched seven strong innit)gs
and Rickey Hendenon had a two-run single for
host Seattle.
·The Marinen scored three runs in the secoJcl
inning to beat Steve Trachsel (5-7) for the third
time this season.
Royals 8, Angell 6
' &gt;J
Mike Sweeney had four hits, including a game~
tying RBI single in the iunth offTroy Percival {44), and Joe Randa followed with his second R,Bj
single as Kansas City rallied from three runs down
to win.
.,
Randa, Carlos 8eltran and Jeff .Rebou,let ,e.a~£.
had three hirs in a 17-hit attack' by the ItoyaTs'. wW.~
snapped a three-game losing streak.
.
' ~.
Jose Santiago (6-2)
pitched two innings for th~
.
. .
win.
·· ' ~
r ~

.,' 1 ~

Rocker says he won't hide from New Yorkers Harnisch almost re~dy to ma~e comeback
NEW YORK (AP) - John
Rocker doesn't plan to hide from
the New Yorken he insulted last ·
year. He's going to commute with
them.
"The first day 1 get to New
York, I'm getting on the (No.) 7
train;• the Atlanta Braves reliever
told USA Today Baseball Weekly,
which hit the newsstands
Wednesday. "I'm taking it to Shea
Stadium. I won't be in a cab. I
won't be on the bus. I'll be on
that train.
"And .I'm looking forward to
it.''
Rocker said he won't initiate
any conversations with people on
the train, "but if sOmeone wants
to talk to me, that's tine."
·
It was that same subway line
that Rocker i~tsulted in an intervieW with Sports Illustrated last
December.
"Imagine having to talte the 7
train looking like you're (in)
Beirut next to some kid with
purple hair, next to some queer

Reds
ltom ....

ll

out there. We said we can do
one of two things: We can ~ut it
down or keep going at it."
Larkin doubled off Pedro Astacio (6-4) to start a two-run tint
inning that seemed to get them
going. But the Reds fell right
back into their recent habit of tiz..
z:ling after a good stan - they
otrllnded at least one runner. in
each iiming.
The Rockies' defense had a lot
to do with it. Center fielder Tom
Goodwin timed hit leap and
stretched above the wall to take a
hOmer away from Larkin in the
second, and the ilttield made one
sensational play after another.
When Todd Helton hit the sec~
ond of hit two solo homers off
Osvaldo Fernandez in the aeventh. it was lied at 2 and the Reds
were getting that bad feeling
back.

•

with AIDS, right next to some
dude who got out of jail for the
fourth ' time, right next to· some
20-year-old mom with four kids.
It's depressing.
"The biggest thing I don"t like
about •New York are the foreigneri," Rocker said in the Sports
lllustrllted interview. "You can
walk an entire block in Times
Square and not hear anybody
speaking English. Asians and
Koreans and Vietnamese and
Indians and Russians and Spanish
people and everything up there.
How the hell did they get in this
country?"
In the Baseball Weekly article,
Rocker said those slurs were
"meant' as a joke."
After the story came out, ·
Rocker was suspended for a
month and fined $20,000 by
commissioner Bud Selig. The
playen association appealed, and
an arbitrator reduced the penalty
to a two-week suspension and
$500 fine.

The Braves also fined Rocker
$5,000 last month for threatening
the Sports Illustrated reporter
who wrote the .story revealing
Rocker's offensive comments
about gays, minorities and for~
eignen.
Rocker was sent down to the
minon the following day. but was
recalled last week when Rudy
Seanez tore a ligament in his right
arm.
New Yorkers are poised for
Rocker's return to the city June
29 for a four-game series w,ith the
Mets. Rocker is also looking for- ·
ward to it.
"I'm not scared, I'm not intimidated in the )east," he said.
·~come on, what are they going.
to do to me but boo ·me? I hope
they do.
"The wont thing they could
do to me there is have no reaction. No reaction at all .... I'd hate
that. I want to get booed. That
fires me up."

"You're sitting down there on
the edge of your seat saying,
'Here we go again;" McKeon
.said. "But when it turm, that's
what happens. You get jus\
enough.''
Griffey and Young gave them
just enough.
.
Mike Lansing doubled off
Osvaldo Fernandez and Larry .
Walker drew a one-out walk in
the eighth from Dennys Reyes,
bringing closer D~nny Graves (91) into the game.
Graves was hoping to get a
double-play gn&gt;under to end the"
threat, but Jeff Cirillo hit a soft fly
to center that seemed dettined to
fall for a pme-turning sinjlle.
lnttead, the tO- time Gold
Glow center fielder · made a
game-turning catch. Sprinting
the whole way, Gritfey d10ve and
caught the ball, then popped up
and euily doubled up Lansiqg at
second to end the Inning with
Helton on deck.
"AJ a baJerunner, I don"t know
what you can do," Rockies man-

ager Buddy Bell said. "That's
what great plays do for you they get you out of big innings.
I've seen him to that many

'

times."
Lansing momentarily held near
second, then took off for home
when he thought the ball was
going to fall in. He wasn't alone
in his misjudgment - Cirillo and
Graves thought it was a hit, too.
"I was going to back up home
plate, but then I stopped;' Graves
said. "1 can't tell you what I said
when he caught it.''
Griffey has made several highlight-caliber plays for the Reds,
but none was 10 important.
"Hup," Larkin said. "Uke I've
said befOR, he'a not getting a lot
of atteniion f()f the things he's
doing.(defensively).''
..
The crowd of 24.060 was still
buzzing when Young led oft" the
bottom of the inning and hit the
first pitch for his eighth homer. At
that moment, it seemed like old
times again.

•

CINCINNATI (AP) - Pete
Harnisch bounced his changeups.
He took a one-hop grounder off
the back of his right leg. He
talked to himself after one particularly frustrating pitch.
Even so, he might be back in
the rotation next week - a sign
of the Cincinnati Reds' desperation.
Harnisch, on the disabled list
since May 6 with a weak pitching
shoulder, threw 80 pitches in batting practice Tuesday before a
game against the Colot~do
Rockies.
His shoulder seems fine but his
control is still way otf.
,
"Three weeks without throwing a ball in the middle of the season is a hard thing," Harnisch
said. "It's a touoh-and-feel thing."
Harnisch hasn't regained his
touch, but he may have regained
his spot in the Reds' pitching
plans for their 10-game homesrand. Manager Jack McKeon said
Hai:nisch will throw one more
batting practice session, then
could pitch the final game of the
homestand against St. Louis next

Thursday.
Instead of' a minor league rehabilitation stint, Harnisch is going
right back into the rotation.
"It's not ' etched in stone;·
McKeon said. "The biggest thing
is you doh 't want to rush him.
You want him to be right. You
always have to face that temptation.n
··
There's an · overwhelming
temptation to rush him back.
Heading into Thesday's game, the
Reds had lost sill: in a row and 11
of 12, falling 6 112 games behind
St. Louis in the NL Central.
The starting pitching has been
the biggest problem, going 0-10
with a 7.34 ERA in the last 13
games. Steve Parris and Rob lJell
have been hit hard lately, but are
staying in the rotation because
there's no one to replace them.
"We talked about it today and
decided we don't have much
choice;• McKeon said. .
HarniSch, who led the staff in
wins each of the last two seasons,
was hit hard in April and the fint
week of May, going 0-4 with a
9.95 ERA. Tests found weakness

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
115 Memorial Drive Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
992-2104
RURAL HEALTH CUNIC
Dr, Kashyap MD. lnlemal
Medicine
·
Pat Smith RNC FNP
Acute ai)d Chronic Healtbc.are
Appointments Preferr~d,'
but Walk-iris are welcome
Monday tbru Frldayli

OUTPATIENT
ANCILLARY SERVICE
•Laboratory
"Radiology (General X·Rays,
EKG's IJitruounds)..
•Physical Therapy """'"'-..r s
(Eveninf Appointments AvaUable)
Massage, Speech,
Oj:cupational Therapy

8:30 !lm 1111 5:30 pm '
.

-~
W L

Pot.

Clll

.114
- - .........................37 :10 .582 4 1/2

IAonlreol ..........................38 32 .522 8 1/2
FlOrida ........... .............. .. :14 :17 .479 8 1/2

=. . ·-. .-.. .

Pblladeiphta .................. ::28 40 .412

14

Cenl... DMIIon

Sl. i.Dulo ...........................40 28 .1580

'

_,,aa

311 8 1/2
rgh ..................... ..30 38 .435
10
Ctolc.gci ..........................28 40 .420
11
Mlhlwoiol&lt;oo .......................28 41 .41• " 112
Houo1on ..........................25 ... .382
15
.
W&amp;OIOMok&gt;n
...........................40 30 .!71
Colorodo ........ .................37 28 .569 1/2
Lao Angtloo ............... ...... 37 31 .544
2
Ban Franclaoo.................. 33 33 .500
5
Ban Ologo ........................ 31 38 .449 8 f/2
~·.a.
Ptilbwah 2, Mornroal 1
.Florldo I, M-..eo 2
Philadolphla 3, N.Y. MN 2, 10 lnningo
Clnclnnol 3, Coiorodo 2
Altanla 11, Chlcogo Cubo 4
Los Anaelos 8, Houolon 8, 10 lnnlngo
• 51. i..r&gt;Jla 7, San Fronclloo 2, 8 innings, rain
Son otego 3, Mzona 1
Todoy'o&lt;lomM
• ' P!11ol&gt;urgh (CorQo'ltl 4-!) Bl Momrtlll IJ'ImU
2-4), 7:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Wood 2·4) al A1fan11
(~ ?-3). 7:05p.m.
Mllwsukoo (Haynes 7-5) 01 Florida (COr·
nelluo 2·1), 7:015 p.m.
(Amllo W) 11 Clnclnnlll (NMo

.

ca

- - .......... ...............311 28 .554 •
............. ........ ....... 36 31 .!130 1 1/2

Alloroto ..............................:! 27

"

W L Pel.

....

.·c-

gle W), 7:011 p.m.

Pnlladelphla (Schl~ng 2-4) al N.Y. MOll
(Liller 8-1), 7:10p.m. ·
Los Angelo (Poroz 4-3) 01 Hous1on (COlli
1-4), 8:05 p.m.
Son Frandsco (RuOior 4-4) '" St I.Diis
(Siopltonlon 11-2), 6:10p.m.
San otego (Meadows 5-5) a11\rizona (Oaal
2·7), 10:05 p.m.

TOIOOIO ................ ........... .37 34 .521
2
- · .. ...................... 30 38 .441 7 1/2
T.,.,. Boy ........... ............ 28 41 .408
10

c.ntroiDI-

g',':Y:.cf:::::~:~:::::::::::J: ~~

.1143
.1:17 7 1/2

- C i t y ......... ....... ..... 34 34 ,500 I 10
... ............... ." .. 30 41 .423 151/2
Ootrol1 ............................. 27 38 .415 15 1/2
W&amp;OIDIVIolon
Oakland ..........................41 28 .!588
.. .......................... 38 30 .589 ·
2
Anaheim ..... .................... 36 34 .&amp;!7 5 1/2
Toxaa .............................. 32 38 .471
8
'111~10.111011

Monday lhru Friday

1:00 am 1111 4:38 pm

24 .HOUR SERVICES

SKILLED NURSING FACILITY

HOME HEALTH

•Quallfle4 Skilled Nuning Care *Hotpice Care •Personal Care Aid
"Physical, Speech and Occupational Therapy •Nutritional Consultation
· *Restoratlv~ Program
"INNER REFLECfiONS" BEHAVIORAL HEALTH UN1T
. "Services Older Adult Population *Nutritional Counseling *Free
Confidential Assessments *Psychiatric/Medical Evaluation Within 24
Hours *Program F&lt;icuses on Stressful issues Associated With Aging
*Trained.Mental Health Staff

in his shoulder, and he went 011
the disabled list and a strengthe.Q,
ing program to ·fix the probleni.'
Asked if his arm has gotte~
stronger, Harnisch said, 'Tm, s~
it has, but I don't feel stronger::,":
The problem now is with Q{s
control. After bouncing yel
another changeup Tuesday, 1).~
yelled to no one in particular,
"I'm so close but I don't know
.:
what I'm doing (wrong);'
Harnisch was encourage;t
because his control was · better
Tuesday than the last time he
threw batting practice. McKeoa
also liked what he saw overall. &gt;:!
"He had a hard slider," McKi•
eon said. "The biggest thing ·. ~
this stage is his control, gettiilg
the ' ball over the plate. He wu
pretty close, but you know Pete:
He's never satisfied. It's kind ·u"f .
nice to see a guy who takes a lot
of pride in what he does. He
wants to get it right."
. 1,

ICI

8 COOLERS

Chicago Cubt OIA11on1a, 1:10 p.m.
P1111burgh at Mon1roal, 7:05 p.m,
Mllwoui&lt;H II Fiofldo, 7:05 p.m.
Ph=::J:Ia al N.Y. Moll. 7:10p.m.
. .C
II C1nclnnot1, 7:311 p.m.
• ' I.Ds """IIias a1 Houa1on, 8:05 p.m.
· '. San F11111Ctsco a1 St. I.Dule, 8:10p.m.

Oolro~ 18, Ta&lt;orno e
N.Y. Vlnk- 3, Botlon o
~ 4,
Whlto Sox 1
Toxaa !, Mlnneoola 2
5oo11lo 4, Tampa Bay 3
Kanaas City 8, Anohtlm e
Todoy'oOomM
Oolro~ ~ 4-3) 01 Toronto (I;Joobor ! ·
8) , 7:05p.m.
N.V. Yankeoo (Cone 1-6) 111 Boaton
(Schourok 2-e), 7:05 p.m.
CJiulbo 7-2) 11 Chic-eo Wlllto
(lloldwln 10.1), 1:05 p.m.
Mlnn1101o (Rodko 4-11) II T"""s (Loaiza 35), 8:35 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Van 4·4) o1 5ootllo (Sale 7-3),
· 10:05 p.m.
Bal11moro (Muaolna 5·6) a1 Oakland (PriMo
0.0) , 10:05 p.m.
.
Kansas Cl1y (Suzuk13.0) al Anaheim (Washbum 2·t), 10:65 p.m.

c...._

c-

Thu.-y·o-

Oolro~ 01 Tororrto, 7:05 p.m. ·

N.Y. Yankeaa at Bolton, 7:0S p.m.
C-ond 11 Ch.._ WIIHo Sox, 8:05

p.in.
Minnesota 01 Taxas, 8:35p.m.

Nlllonol Looguo S1111oUcol L.oodoro
BATT1NG-Htllon, Colorado, .396; Guor·
~real,

.384;

P - . Now York, .364: Cllii1IIO, Florida, .352;
San Fran·
Shotllold; I.Da Angelos, .352;

l&lt;fnl,

cllco, .345.

RBI-Mir1inoz, SeoHio, 73; S w -.
KllniU City, 70; Glomb!, Ool!lord , 70:
ROdrlgutt, 5oo111o, 54; Delgado, Toronto, 114;
Evlfllt, Boo1on, 83; Wllllomo, New York, 83.
HITs-Erotod, Anohelm, 108; Aoc1riguoz,
Toxao, IM; S-..y, Klln181 City, 87; Delgado.

Tororwo, sn ; Lawton, Minnesota, aa: Rodriguez,
5-lo.
Vaughn, Anaheim, 83; Martinez,

ee;

S-lt, e3.
DOUBL£8-0ierud, seomo. 24; Law10n,

VIod,S2; HoHon, ~o . 81; Joneo, AU.mo.
88; '!boog, Chicago, 89; Kant, San Francllco,
87; Owtnt, San Diego, BB.
DOUBLEs-Young, Chicago, 25; Vldro,
Mornrea1, 24; Groan, 1.o1 Angeles, ·24; CI&lt;IIO,
Colorado, 23: Whno. l.lon1rool. 22: Alfonzo,

Minneaota, 23; Glaus, Anaheim, 21 ; Oye,

NS't¥ Yor1c, 21 ; Kent , San Francisco, 21 ; Gonza.
1oz, Arizona, 21 ; Zollt, Now York, 21 .

Hunter, Minnesota, 4; Nixon, Boston , 4;

Kansas City, 2t ; Sweeney, Kansas CKy, 21 ;

R®riguez, Texas, 2t ; DeShields, Baltimore,
21 .

TRIPL.Es--Guzman,

~

Mlnna~ota,

11 :

Durham, Chicago, 8; Singltlon, Chk:ego, 4;
Damon, Kall!!8S Cl1y, 4; 1/alerrtln, Chicago, 4;

TRIPLES-Goodwlri, Colorado, 7; Guernwo,
Mornrool, 6; Peret, Colorado, 8; WomaCk, Ari·

Martinez, New YorM;, 4; AJ;cg, Texas, -4.
HOME ~UNS-Delgado , Toronto, 24;
Ev&amp;l'ett, Boston, 22; RodriQ~ez, TeK&amp;s, 22;

4.

Glaus, Anaheim , 20; Glombi, . Oekland, 20;
Rodriguez, Seattle, 20; vaughn, Anaheim, 20;

HOME RUNB-Bonds, San Froncioco, 26;
l.oolo, 26; Hel1oo, Colorado. 21 ;
Edmonclt, 5t L.oolt, 2t; Shelliold , LosMga&lt;...
21 ; 6
wllh 20.
STOLEN BASES-Cas1111o, Florida, 30;
Goodwin, COlorado, 30; Young, Chicago, 2&lt;0;

McGwlre, Sl.

••lied

Varaa, Attanta, 19; Reese, Cincinnati, 18;
Cedeno, Houston, 17; Owena, S8n Diego, H .
PITCHING (9 Declolono)-Johnson, An·
zona, H -1, .liU7, 1.47; Graves, Cincilnati, SM,

.900, t .e:J; Maddux, Atlanta, 9·1, .900, 2.98;
l.eller, Ntw York, 8·1, .BBD. 3.00; Stephenson,
St. Louis, 9-2, .818, 3.90; Pavano, Montreal, 83, .727, 3.07; Kilo, S1. Louis, 10-4, .7t4, 4.67.
STRIKEOUTs--Johnson, Arizona, 158;
As1ack&gt;, CorOfadO, 911; MaddUX, Al1an1a, 97;
Dempster, Fioflda, 93; ~le . Sl. Loulo, 92; Por·
son, Philadelphia, 110; Benson, Plllsbta"gh, 89;

Brown, LOs Angeles, 89.
SAVEs-Atfunseca, Aorlda, 20; Hottman,
5an Diego, 18; Benitez, Naw York, 16; Aguilera,

28

Casey Ber ry, OF Layne• Nix and
LHP Ch ri a Aun .

12
15

TORONTO BLUE JAYS - 5 1gnod
2B Dom i n i c Fi l ch , OF Rich Thomp ·

Cdorado .. ·-···········)"•7 8 1 - 22 22 34

t on and 38 Aaron Silk . Transferred

19 22
W-Oivlolon
l&lt;anMSCIIy ............... tD 2 3 33 28
L.oo~ .......... ......7 3
21 22

e

San.Jooe ....... ..............4 7 • 18 20 25
Weclnnd•'J"• Gil.,..
Miami at Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m
DC Untied at New York-New Jersey, 7:30
p.m.
Donas 01 Kansas C11y, 8:30p.m.
New Engtand at san JoM, 10 p.m.
Chicago ol Los Angeltt , 10:30 p.m.
s.turuy'o&lt;lomM
New York-New Jersey at COloradO 3:30 p.m.
Dallas 01 OC Un~ed . 4:30p.m.
Tampa Boy a1 Miami. 7:30 p.m.
Now Entland II COiumbuo, 7:30 p.m.
Loa Angeles at Kansas City, 8:30 p.m.
Chicago 01 San Jose, 1o p.m.

PITCHING (9 Decillons)-Saldwln, Chico·

go, 10·1 ,.909, 3.11; Wells, Toronto, 11·2 , .846,
3.71; Hudoon, Oakland, 8-2, .800, 4.2&lt;0; Eldred,
Chicago, 8-2, .800, 4.28; PlllqUO, Chicago, 7-2,
4.1e; Burba, a .....nd, 1-2• .ne. 5.13;

.na,

Martinez, Botton, a-.3, .750, 1.18.

·

STRIKEOUTS-Martinez, Boston, 130; An·

ley, C1eveland, 98; Noma, Detroit, 87; Hudson,
Oakland, 84; Wells , Toron1o, 82; Burba, Clove·
land, 81 ; Clemens, New Yorlc, 81 . .
SAVEs-Jonol. Otlroil, 19; laringhauson.

Oaldand, 17; Perclvat, Anahalm, 17; Wetteland,
Texas, 17; Foulke, Chicago, 18; Lowe, Boston,
18; Rivera, Now York, 16.

Ang-.

BASEBALL

Ameri can Leagu•
BALTIMORE ORI OLES - Acllvatod
RHP Calv i n Madura trom the di s-

abled list. Optioned RHP Gabe
Molina 10 Rochester o1 the lnterna 1lonal League .
BOSTON

RED

EIMetn ·DMIIon

Pto
25
21
19
12

SOX - Recalled

LHP Tim Young from Pawtucket o r
the International League .
CHICAGO

WHITE

SOX - Agr eed

to terms wHh SS Tim Humme l and
28 Tommy Nicholson .
CLEVELAND

INDI AN S- Agreed

to terms with OF Kenneth Folsom,
LHP
Adam
Cox ,
OF
Aashad
Eldridge and LHP VIctor Kleine .
Signed OF Robert Womack and C
Mik e Er nst t o minor leag ue eontracts .
DETROIT

Toom
W L T
Now Er&gt;;~land ....... ........7 5 4
NV·NJ ..... ...... ....... .......7 7 0
·Miami ..... ...................5 7 4
o:c.............................3 10 3
,
Ctnt,.. Olvlolon
Chicago ......................9 7 1
Tampa Boy .... ... ...... .....8 7 o
Oall.. ..................... ....&amp; 8 2

ClF CIA
27 22
23 23
18 23
24 34

26 39
24 31
20 28

33
22
32

Natlonel Leagu•

•

HOUS T ON ASTROS - P1ocod LHP

Billy Wagner on the 15 - day dia ab l ed nat .
MILoYAUKEE

BREWEAS - Agrtod

to terms wit h AHP Heath McMurray.
NEW

YORK

METS - Signed

SS

Christopher Baaak and C John Wilson .
ST. LOUIS CAAOINALS - ·P iaced
28 Fernando Vine on the 1 5-day
di sab l ed list. Activated RHP Mike
James from 11a diaaoted list .
terms with RHP Jonathan Huber,
RHP Micahel Earay, OF oav l d Giorgia, 28 Kevin Nulton, 38 Joel Klatt ,
J:tHP Josapn Cassel , AHP Jonn
Herbert and RHP Jane Bustard . •

TIGERS - Purchased

t he contract of AHP Steve Sparks
from Toledo of the Interna t ional
League . Designated LHP Allen
Mc D il l for assignment.

Mojor L.ooguo s -

OF DoWoyne Wloo 1rom 1hl 15· 1p

the eo - day diaablad Hal .

SAN DIEGO PADRES-Agreed 10

STOLEN BASES-Damon, Kansas Cl1y, 20;

Mondesl, Toronto, 20; Oe5hiekls, Baltimore,
20; Alomar, Cleveland, 17; Lawton. Mimesota,
15; Cairo, Tampa Bay, 14; Jeter, New York, 14;
Mclemore, 5ea111e, 14.

Chicago, 15; Veres, St. Louis, 13; Shaw, Los
12; Jimenez, Col0&lt;11do, 11 ; Rocker,
""tlanta, 11.

BATTING-Manlnoz,
Soatllo,
.376;
ROdriguez, Toxas, .373; Eratad, Aneholm, .364;
Sweaney, Kansas Cily, .359; Oelgedo, Toronto,
.355; ROdriguez, Seatlle, .346; Lawton, Min·
nesota, .340..
RUNS-Rodriguez. Saotllo, 71; Delgado,
Toronto, 59; Mondesi , TorontG, 58; Giambi,
Oakland, 55; Damon, Kansas Clly, 54; Glaus,
Anaholm, 53: Durham, Chicago, 53.

Columbul ............. ...... 5 7 •

Martinez, Seattle, 20.

Amorloon L.ooguo 'BiaUIIIcol L.oodoro

Bal11more 01 Saat11o, 10:os p.m:
Kansas Ci1y o1 Anaheim, 10:05 p.m.

rero, Montreal, .389; Vldl'o,

!19; ~.St.

I.Dulo, 88; · Son Fnrlc:looo, 81 ; Bllgwiil,
~. 511; Grudtielonll&lt;, Los Ang-. 55;
AJcnM, Allonta, 54; Aifoozo, New Vo!l&lt;, 54;
Kent, Son Francioco, 110.
RBI-Ktnl, San Froncloco, 88; Hollon. Cot·
&lt;&gt;&lt;ado, 54; Soaa, CIOcago, 63; GIIOI, Pitts·
burgh, 62; Shol!lold, lol Ang-. 61 ; Guer·
roro, l.lontroal, 110: Karrot, Los Angeleo , 58.
H1TS-Guerrero, l.lontroal, 114; Vldro, Mon-

zona. 5; Shumpert, Colorado, 5; 7 art lied wi1h

Oakland 8 , Baltimcn 5

Thu.-y'a Clomoa

·Pettitte outduels Martinez as Yankees bla·nk Red Sox, 3-0
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS

-OMolon

T-

,fV' /.

BY 'IKE ASSOCIATED PRESS

'T ODAY'S SCOREBOARD

.,
••'•

Ankiel's arm, Paquette's bomb lead Cards past Giants .~

The Dally Sentinel ; Page B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

MINNESOTA

TWINS - Wa i v ed

RHP Sean Bergman . Recalled RHP
Jaso n Ryan and C Chad Moe ller
fr o m S alt lake City of lh e PCL.
NEW VORK YANKEES-Agreed to

term s with C David Parrish. Trad ed
OH Jimmy Leyritz Jo t he Los An9e les Dodgers tor INF Jose VIzcaino
and cash .
TEXAS

RANGERS -S i gned

RHP

BASKETBALL

National 8aaketball Alaocla~
tlon
,
CHICAGO BULLS- Rel8ased C
Will Perdue .
•
GOLDEN

STATE

WARRIORS .,-

Named Brien Wlnlers, Phil Hubturd, Mark Osowski and Clifford
Ray assistant coaches , Kevin Tarry
executive director of tickets sates
and services and Vic to r Pelt dlrec"1or of co rp orate sales .
NEW JERSEY NETS-Announced

the resignation
trainer.

of Ted Ar;zonlco,

FOOTBALL

Natlonel F.o otball

L••au•

NFL- Suspended Te nnessee DL
Josh Evans for the 2000 seas on
following a third violation of tha
league's s ub sta nce-abuse poli cy .
BUFFALO BILLS - Signed DT Loll

Larsen .
C LEV ELAND

BROWNS - A11reod

to terms with DB Anthony Mal bro ugh a nd DB lamar Chapman on
fo ur -yea·r co ntra cts .
GREEN

BAY PACKERS-Signed

L8 Na 'll Diggs to a multiyear con tr act.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS -Sig ned

FB Ke.vin Ho use r to a three -yea r
co ntra ct.

ON THE FRINGE

Who can tame Tiger?
- PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP)
•
....:.. No one ever made such a
mockery of par in the U.S. Open.
.'
.. Tiger Woods is that good.
He also became the first player
to win a major championship by
1§ strokes.
: let's hope everyone else is not
that bad.
Woods' awesome performance
at Pebble Beach
raised
.
. a question
~r has been naggJPg at the game
ever since he started an incredible
r11n of 14 victories in his last 25
tournaments, two of those major
championships .
Is Tiger good for the game?
l'hat depends on what his margi!J of victoty in ihe U.S. Open
represents.
If he was 15 strokes better than
everyone else on talent alone, golf
will blossom the way it did when
Arnold Palmer hitched his pants
and took the game to new levels
Of popularity. Woods is exciting to
watch, and the fact he still is 10
years troni his prime makes it tan.
talizing to speculate whether he
indeed will become the best ever.
. -The fear is that what separates
Woods from the rest has more to
4o ·with desire.
·"That hunger for winning a
major championship ... it's there
every week:' Ernie Els said. "To
be honest with you, I don't feel
like that every week when I'm
playing. He's just different.
Whether it's a regular tournament or a major, he's going to be
110 percent to win and beat the
field. And I'm not sure if there's a
lot of playen like that out there."
- ·Els and Miguel Angel Jimenez
tied for second at Pebble Beach. A
year ago at Pinehurst, 15 strokes
~hind the champion would have
eatned
them a tie for 30th.
...
"I'm kind of embarrassed, finishing 15 shots behind:' Els said.
He should be.
So should Phil Mickelson and
David Duval, who couldn't even
break par over four rounds on a
course where Woods did it three
times. So should Hal Sutton, who
picked the wrong occasion to
shoot his wont score ever in a
U.S. Open, 83 in the third round.
So should Davis Love Ill and Jesper Parnevik, who didn't even
make it to the third round.
•If this U.S. Open was a waterslied for Woods, it should serve as
a ·'Wake-up call for everyone else.
::j!very sport needs a dominant
R4yer. To have someone like
Woods, a worldwide celebrity
al'~ng the lines of Muhammad Ali
and Michael Jordan, is a bonus.
What golf needs to sustain its
risjng interest is for someone aoyone - to challenge him.
:woods has gone through so-

..

.

'

called rivals as often as Vijay Singh
changes putters - · Mickelson,
Els, Duval, Sergio Garcia, back to
Els and Mickelson, even Sutton~
Woods has always downplayed
talk of a rivalry, claiming there
were too many goo~! ,players.
Perhaps he was merely being
polite.
Tom Kite compared the drama
ofWoods destroying the field to
when the Texas Longhorns used
to dominate the Southwest Conference. ·
"You knew who was going to
win before the game," he said.
"It's certainly fun when you're
pulling for Texas, but it's not real
exciting for everybody else."
Jimmy Connors {~dn't make
tennis fun to watch until John
McEnroe showed up. Larry
Holmes was the domipant heavyweight during some of boxing's
dullest years becaus~ his stiffest
eompetition came fljOm Gerry
Cooney.
Golf has so much ptnential, and
is getting so litde response.
"Right now, when he's on his
game, I don't see anyone really
challenging him, depending on
the golf course:• Nick :Price said.
"There are a lot of grtiat players
'o ut there who aren't ~tting any
credit because Tiger ii"taking it

.all."
There's a reason Wooiis is taking all the hardware, aria it's not
just because of his length, shotmaking, short game and· putting,
all of which are superb. ',
After he won the Mast~n by 12
strokes, Woods scrapped his swing
and buil.t one that would allow
him to contend every week. After
winning the U.S. Open by 15
strokes, he talked about his desire
to get better.
Woods is not only good. He"s
hungry.
1\vo days before the U.S. Open,
Jack Nicklaus was asked whether
it was more difficult today to win,
as he did, 18 majors - the one
record that drives Woods.
"It depends a lot on your competition," Nicklaus said.
Ni cklaus lost more tha9 he
won - a record 19 runner-ups in
the majon - thanks to players
like Palmer, Gary Player, Lee
Trevino and Tom Watson.
"They knew how to win
majors, which made it harder to
win;• Nicklaus said. "Right now,
we don't have many guys that
have won many majon."
Then; h e wondered aloud
whether more players should lie
at the top of their game to chal~
lenge Woods.
"Either that," Nicklaus said, "oihe's so far above them that hel
making everybody else not look
very good."

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�.
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..

Wednesday, June 21, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport~ Ohio

Pllge B 2 • The O.lly Sentinel

Wednelehly, June 21, 2000

NATIONAL L-E AGUE
'

RUNfl--M......,, ~ldo.

Star break will be on the road.
Bei)SOn (6-5) allowed Jose Vidro's game- tying
Jim J;.dmonds. JUt Iris 21st homer in the third · homer in the fourth to snap his scoreles's-innings
: With just 13 starts in the majon, 20-year-old
inning,
put the Cardinals ahead to stay with an 'RBI streak at 16. He allowed six 'hits in 7 1-3 innings as
Rick Ankiel feels right at home.
Ankiel dominated at Busch Stadium again with single in a four-run fifth and robbed Burks of a sec- his ERA fell to 2.83.
Mike Williams pitched the ninth for his lOth save
six strong innings, and Craig Paquette hit a three- ond homer when he scaled the center-field wall.
Marlins 8, Brewer, 2
in 11 opportunities.
run homer. as the St. Louis Cardinals beat the San
Florida's
Ryan
Dempster
allowed
three
hits
in
Braves 11, Cuba 4
Francisco Giants 7-2 in a rain-shortened game
At Atlanta, Chipper Jones hit a pair of two-run
seven innings at home, and Alex Gonzalez had his
Tuesday night.
hom en, and Kevin Millwood won for the fint time
Ankiel (6-3) worked on nine days' rest so he lint career multihomer game.
~ould pitch at home, where he's 5-0 with a 2.52
Dempster (8-4), who struck out three and walked since May 17.
six, gave up one run - GeoffJenkins' 12th homer
Quilvio Veras went 4-for-5, scored three runs and
ERA; he's 1-3 with a 5.83 ERA on the road.
k.nocked in three, Andruw Jones had a pair of hits
"I don't think there's any significant reason why . in the sixth inning. .
Cliff Aoyd hit a three-run home.r off Milwau- - including his 19th homer -..11cored three times
I'm not good on the road," Ankiel said. "I feel comfortable here. You've been out here so many times, kee's Steve Woodard (1-6) in the fint. Luis Castillo and drove in three runs, and Brian Jordan went 3·you start getting used to everything."
was 3-for-5 with two runs scored and his 30th for-4 with an RBI in Atlanta's 14-hit attack.
', Ellis Burks" two-run homer in the second was the stolen base.
· \ _,_Millwood (5-6) gave up fou.r hits and str.uck out
pnly damage against Ankiel, who allowed three hits,
Pirates 2, Expo• 1
~in six innings.
·
·
K.ris
Benson
pitched
his
way
out
of
a
basesKevin
Tapani
(4-7)
lasted
only
two
innings,
givwalked three and struck out eight.
·
., "Everything I've heard· about him is true:' Giants loaded jam with none out in the seventh as Pit~- ing up seven hits and six runs.
.
Phillie• 3, Meta 2
manager Dusty Baker said."You don't see many 20- burgh stopped a four-game losing streak with a
road victory.
Mike Lieberthal"s two-out single in the t,Oth off
year-olds like him.''
.
Jason Kendall homered off Mike Johnson (2-2) in Armando Benitez gave Philadelphia its fourth win
The game was called in the top of the ninth after
the fint, and Warren Morris hit an RBI single in in five games against the NL East's top two teams.
a rain delay of 1 hour, 29 minutes.
Benitez (1-3), who had not allowed a run in 17
None of the rest of Ankiel's starts before the All- the fifth.

innings since May 6, also yielded a game-tying solo
homer to Pat Burrell in the ninth, his third blown ·
save in 19 chances.
.
.
;:~
Mike Piazza gave New York a 2-0 lead m the fi,sl
with his 19th homer.
~;
Dodgers 9,Astro• 6
: ·;
Gary' Sheffield capped Los Angeles' four- run 1&lt;n~
with a three-run homer off Joe Slusarski (1-4). ..
Jose Vizcaino, traded to the Yankees for Jipl
Leyritz after the game, singled in the go-ahead run~
Jeff Shaw blew his sixth save in 18 opportunities,
giving up Jeff Bagwell's 17th homer leading off the
ninth.
. Padres 3, Diamondbacks 1
Brian Tollberg allowed one hit in seven innings in
his major league debut, and Ryan Klesko homered
twice as San Diego won for the fint time in five
games at Bank One Ballpark this season.
·'.
Trevor Hoffman got his 18th save in 19 oppor!U'~
ruties.
.
~'
Todd Stottlemyre ·(8-5) has lost three straighJ
starts.
..
.

' ··
' '

...

AMERICAN LEAGUE

~
,_,

three starts, gave up six hits and two walks, striking
AJ impressive as scoring 22 runs in one game is, out four before leaving with two outs in the eighth.
getting three against Pedro Martinez might be even Mariano Rivera got four outs .for his 16th save.
"It says a lot about our pitching stall', because we
better.
haven't
scored a lot of runs off him:• said Jeter,
One night after the New York Yankees scored
their most runs in 47 yean, Andy Pettitte out- whose Yankees beat the Red Sox 2·1 last Wednespitched Martinez in a 3-0 victory over Boston on day in Martinez's last start. "The way that Andy was
Thesday night. Solo homers by Derek Jeter, Bernie pitching, we thought that a couple of runs would
Williams and Paul O'Neill accounted for the Yan- be enough."
.
The closest ;Boston came to scoring was in the
kees' runs.
All three shots came otf Cy Young winne'P Mar- third when Nomar Gil.rciaparra singled with Jose
tinez (9-3), who allowed only three previous Offerman on second. Shane Spencer threw a OQehomers all season and no more than one in a game bopper from shallow left field, and catcher Jorge
Posada held onto the ball when Offerman tried to
since Sept. 24, 1998.
The Yankees, who won the opener at Fenway bowl him over. · .
Athletics 8, Orioles S
Park 22-1, moved 1 I /2 games ahead of Boston in
Ramon Hernandez's three-run homer, Oakland's
the AL East.
"To win a game like we did last night, and then fourth of the game, capped a four-run eighth as the
beat Pedro tonight:• manager Joe Torre said, "if that Athletics rallied at home to win their seventh
•,
,,
.
doesn't d.? something for our "onfidence, I don't straight· game.
After Matt Stain' solo shot witWtwo outs in the
know what will.''
MaJ"tinez allowed just five hits and struck out eighth tied the game "at 5. Sidney Ponson (4-4)
nine in eight innings, but Pettitte (7-3) came a'way walked 'Miguel Tejada and Eric Chavez. Calvin
Maduro relieved Ponson and allowed Hernandez's
with the win.
Pettine, who allowed t 6 runs in his previous homer.

The Orioles hit three homen offTim Hudson
(8· 2), who bas won his last seven decisiom.'Jason
lsringhausen got his 17th save.
Tlpra 18, Blue Jay• 6
Tony Clark hit two ofDetroit's club-record eight
home runs,leading Detroit at 1bronto.
Juan Gonzalez, juan Encarnacion, Bobby Higginson, Robert Pick, Rich Becker and Deivi Cruz also
homered for the Tigers, whose previous best was
seven homers on May 28, 1995, against the White

sox:

.

Chris Carpenter (6-6) gave up a career-high nine
runs and seven hits in two-plus innings.
Indian• 4, White Sox 1
Travis Fryman hit a two-run double off Mike
Sirotka (6-6) as visiting Cleveland snapped Chicago's eight-game winning streak.
The victory pulled the Indians within 7 112
games of the White Sox in the AL Central and was
Cleveland's second win in nine games.
.•.
Jim Brower (2-1), who lasted just 11-3 innings
against the White Sox in his last start June 14, gave
up one run and six hits in 7 1-3 innings.
Rangers 5, '1\vins 2
Kenny Rogers allowed just five hits in eight- plus

innings as Texas returned home from its worst road
trip in 14 yean with a win.
Rogers (6-5), who had two no-decisions in
games the Rangers lost during their 1-8 trip, set t~
'1\vins down in order in five of the six innings atJ:t\'t
Minnesota got its first run in the second inning:::'
Mariners 4, Devll Ray• 3
Paul Abbott (4-2) pitched seven strong innit)gs
and Rickey Hendenon had a two-run single for
host Seattle.
·The Marinen scored three runs in the secoJcl
inning to beat Steve Trachsel (5-7) for the third
time this season.
Royals 8, Angell 6
' &gt;J
Mike Sweeney had four hits, including a game~
tying RBI single in the iunth offTroy Percival {44), and Joe Randa followed with his second R,Bj
single as Kansas City rallied from three runs down
to win.
.,
Randa, Carlos 8eltran and Jeff .Rebou,let ,e.a~£.
had three hirs in a 17-hit attack' by the ItoyaTs'. wW.~
snapped a three-game losing streak.
.
' ~.
Jose Santiago (6-2)
pitched two innings for th~
.
. .
win.
·· ' ~
r ~

.,' 1 ~

Rocker says he won't hide from New Yorkers Harnisch almost re~dy to ma~e comeback
NEW YORK (AP) - John
Rocker doesn't plan to hide from
the New Yorken he insulted last ·
year. He's going to commute with
them.
"The first day 1 get to New
York, I'm getting on the (No.) 7
train;• the Atlanta Braves reliever
told USA Today Baseball Weekly,
which hit the newsstands
Wednesday. "I'm taking it to Shea
Stadium. I won't be in a cab. I
won't be on the bus. I'll be on
that train.
"And .I'm looking forward to
it.''
Rocker said he won't initiate
any conversations with people on
the train, "but if sOmeone wants
to talk to me, that's tine."
·
It was that same subway line
that Rocker i~tsulted in an intervieW with Sports Illustrated last
December.
"Imagine having to talte the 7
train looking like you're (in)
Beirut next to some kid with
purple hair, next to some queer

Reds
ltom ....

ll

out there. We said we can do
one of two things: We can ~ut it
down or keep going at it."
Larkin doubled off Pedro Astacio (6-4) to start a two-run tint
inning that seemed to get them
going. But the Reds fell right
back into their recent habit of tiz..
z:ling after a good stan - they
otrllnded at least one runner. in
each iiming.
The Rockies' defense had a lot
to do with it. Center fielder Tom
Goodwin timed hit leap and
stretched above the wall to take a
hOmer away from Larkin in the
second, and the ilttield made one
sensational play after another.
When Todd Helton hit the sec~
ond of hit two solo homers off
Osvaldo Fernandez in the aeventh. it was lied at 2 and the Reds
were getting that bad feeling
back.

•

with AIDS, right next to some
dude who got out of jail for the
fourth ' time, right next to· some
20-year-old mom with four kids.
It's depressing.
"The biggest thing I don"t like
about •New York are the foreigneri," Rocker said in the Sports
lllustrllted interview. "You can
walk an entire block in Times
Square and not hear anybody
speaking English. Asians and
Koreans and Vietnamese and
Indians and Russians and Spanish
people and everything up there.
How the hell did they get in this
country?"
In the Baseball Weekly article,
Rocker said those slurs were
"meant' as a joke."
After the story came out, ·
Rocker was suspended for a
month and fined $20,000 by
commissioner Bud Selig. The
playen association appealed, and
an arbitrator reduced the penalty
to a two-week suspension and
$500 fine.

The Braves also fined Rocker
$5,000 last month for threatening
the Sports Illustrated reporter
who wrote the .story revealing
Rocker's offensive comments
about gays, minorities and for~
eignen.
Rocker was sent down to the
minon the following day. but was
recalled last week when Rudy
Seanez tore a ligament in his right
arm.
New Yorkers are poised for
Rocker's return to the city June
29 for a four-game series w,ith the
Mets. Rocker is also looking for- ·
ward to it.
"I'm not scared, I'm not intimidated in the )east," he said.
·~come on, what are they going.
to do to me but boo ·me? I hope
they do.
"The wont thing they could
do to me there is have no reaction. No reaction at all .... I'd hate
that. I want to get booed. That
fires me up."

"You're sitting down there on
the edge of your seat saying,
'Here we go again;" McKeon
.said. "But when it turm, that's
what happens. You get jus\
enough.''
Griffey and Young gave them
just enough.
.
Mike Lansing doubled off
Osvaldo Fernandez and Larry .
Walker drew a one-out walk in
the eighth from Dennys Reyes,
bringing closer D~nny Graves (91) into the game.
Graves was hoping to get a
double-play gn&gt;under to end the"
threat, but Jeff Cirillo hit a soft fly
to center that seemed dettined to
fall for a pme-turning sinjlle.
lnttead, the tO- time Gold
Glow center fielder · made a
game-turning catch. Sprinting
the whole way, Gritfey d10ve and
caught the ball, then popped up
and euily doubled up Lansiqg at
second to end the Inning with
Helton on deck.
"AJ a baJerunner, I don"t know
what you can do," Rockies man-

ager Buddy Bell said. "That's
what great plays do for you they get you out of big innings.
I've seen him to that many

'

times."
Lansing momentarily held near
second, then took off for home
when he thought the ball was
going to fall in. He wasn't alone
in his misjudgment - Cirillo and
Graves thought it was a hit, too.
"I was going to back up home
plate, but then I stopped;' Graves
said. "1 can't tell you what I said
when he caught it.''
Griffey has made several highlight-caliber plays for the Reds,
but none was 10 important.
"Hup," Larkin said. "Uke I've
said befOR, he'a not getting a lot
of atteniion f()f the things he's
doing.(defensively).''
..
The crowd of 24.060 was still
buzzing when Young led oft" the
bottom of the inning and hit the
first pitch for his eighth homer. At
that moment, it seemed like old
times again.

•

CINCINNATI (AP) - Pete
Harnisch bounced his changeups.
He took a one-hop grounder off
the back of his right leg. He
talked to himself after one particularly frustrating pitch.
Even so, he might be back in
the rotation next week - a sign
of the Cincinnati Reds' desperation.
Harnisch, on the disabled list
since May 6 with a weak pitching
shoulder, threw 80 pitches in batting practice Tuesday before a
game against the Colot~do
Rockies.
His shoulder seems fine but his
control is still way otf.
,
"Three weeks without throwing a ball in the middle of the season is a hard thing," Harnisch
said. "It's a touoh-and-feel thing."
Harnisch hasn't regained his
touch, but he may have regained
his spot in the Reds' pitching
plans for their 10-game homesrand. Manager Jack McKeon said
Hai:nisch will throw one more
batting practice session, then
could pitch the final game of the
homestand against St. Louis next

Thursday.
Instead of' a minor league rehabilitation stint, Harnisch is going
right back into the rotation.
"It's not ' etched in stone;·
McKeon said. "The biggest thing
is you doh 't want to rush him.
You want him to be right. You
always have to face that temptation.n
··
There's an · overwhelming
temptation to rush him back.
Heading into Thesday's game, the
Reds had lost sill: in a row and 11
of 12, falling 6 112 games behind
St. Louis in the NL Central.
The starting pitching has been
the biggest problem, going 0-10
with a 7.34 ERA in the last 13
games. Steve Parris and Rob lJell
have been hit hard lately, but are
staying in the rotation because
there's no one to replace them.
"We talked about it today and
decided we don't have much
choice;• McKeon said. .
HarniSch, who led the staff in
wins each of the last two seasons,
was hit hard in April and the fint
week of May, going 0-4 with a
9.95 ERA. Tests found weakness

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
115 Memorial Drive Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
992-2104
RURAL HEALTH CUNIC
Dr, Kashyap MD. lnlemal
Medicine
·
Pat Smith RNC FNP
Acute ai)d Chronic Healtbc.are
Appointments Preferr~d,'
but Walk-iris are welcome
Monday tbru Frldayli

OUTPATIENT
ANCILLARY SERVICE
•Laboratory
"Radiology (General X·Rays,
EKG's IJitruounds)..
•Physical Therapy """'"'-..r s
(Eveninf Appointments AvaUable)
Massage, Speech,
Oj:cupational Therapy

8:30 !lm 1111 5:30 pm '
.

-~
W L

Pot.

Clll

.114
- - .........................37 :10 .582 4 1/2

IAonlreol ..........................38 32 .522 8 1/2
FlOrida ........... .............. .. :14 :17 .479 8 1/2

=. . ·-. .-.. .

Pblladeiphta .................. ::28 40 .412

14

Cenl... DMIIon

Sl. i.Dulo ...........................40 28 .1580

'

_,,aa

311 8 1/2
rgh ..................... ..30 38 .435
10
Ctolc.gci ..........................28 40 .420
11
Mlhlwoiol&lt;oo .......................28 41 .41• " 112
Houo1on ..........................25 ... .382
15
.
W&amp;OIOMok&gt;n
...........................40 30 .!71
Colorodo ........ .................37 28 .569 1/2
Lao Angtloo ............... ...... 37 31 .544
2
Ban Franclaoo.................. 33 33 .500
5
Ban Ologo ........................ 31 38 .449 8 f/2
~·.a.
Ptilbwah 2, Mornroal 1
.Florldo I, M-..eo 2
Philadolphla 3, N.Y. MN 2, 10 lnningo
Clnclnnol 3, Coiorodo 2
Altanla 11, Chlcogo Cubo 4
Los Anaelos 8, Houolon 8, 10 lnnlngo
• 51. i..r&gt;Jla 7, San Fronclloo 2, 8 innings, rain
Son otego 3, Mzona 1
Todoy'o&lt;lomM
• ' P!11ol&gt;urgh (CorQo'ltl 4-!) Bl Momrtlll IJ'ImU
2-4), 7:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Wood 2·4) al A1fan11
(~ ?-3). 7:05p.m.
Mllwsukoo (Haynes 7-5) 01 Florida (COr·
nelluo 2·1), 7:015 p.m.
(Amllo W) 11 Clnclnnlll (NMo

.

ca

- - .......... ...............311 28 .554 •
............. ........ ....... 36 31 .!130 1 1/2

Alloroto ..............................:! 27

"

W L Pel.

....

.·c-

gle W), 7:011 p.m.

Pnlladelphla (Schl~ng 2-4) al N.Y. MOll
(Liller 8-1), 7:10p.m. ·
Los Angelo (Poroz 4-3) 01 Hous1on (COlli
1-4), 8:05 p.m.
Son Frandsco (RuOior 4-4) '" St I.Diis
(Siopltonlon 11-2), 6:10p.m.
San otego (Meadows 5-5) a11\rizona (Oaal
2·7), 10:05 p.m.

TOIOOIO ................ ........... .37 34 .521
2
- · .. ...................... 30 38 .441 7 1/2
T.,.,. Boy ........... ............ 28 41 .408
10

c.ntroiDI-

g',':Y:.cf:::::~:~:::::::::::J: ~~

.1143
.1:17 7 1/2

- C i t y ......... ....... ..... 34 34 ,500 I 10
... ............... ." .. 30 41 .423 151/2
Ootrol1 ............................. 27 38 .415 15 1/2
W&amp;OIDIVIolon
Oakland ..........................41 28 .!588
.. .......................... 38 30 .589 ·
2
Anaheim ..... .................... 36 34 .&amp;!7 5 1/2
Toxaa .............................. 32 38 .471
8
'111~10.111011

Monday lhru Friday

1:00 am 1111 4:38 pm

24 .HOUR SERVICES

SKILLED NURSING FACILITY

HOME HEALTH

•Quallfle4 Skilled Nuning Care *Hotpice Care •Personal Care Aid
"Physical, Speech and Occupational Therapy •Nutritional Consultation
· *Restoratlv~ Program
"INNER REFLECfiONS" BEHAVIORAL HEALTH UN1T
. "Services Older Adult Population *Nutritional Counseling *Free
Confidential Assessments *Psychiatric/Medical Evaluation Within 24
Hours *Program F&lt;icuses on Stressful issues Associated With Aging
*Trained.Mental Health Staff

in his shoulder, and he went 011
the disabled list and a strengthe.Q,
ing program to ·fix the probleni.'
Asked if his arm has gotte~
stronger, Harnisch said, 'Tm, s~
it has, but I don't feel stronger::,":
The problem now is with Q{s
control. After bouncing yel
another changeup Tuesday, 1).~
yelled to no one in particular,
"I'm so close but I don't know
.:
what I'm doing (wrong);'
Harnisch was encourage;t
because his control was · better
Tuesday than the last time he
threw batting practice. McKeoa
also liked what he saw overall. &gt;:!
"He had a hard slider," McKi•
eon said. "The biggest thing ·. ~
this stage is his control, gettiilg
the ' ball over the plate. He wu
pretty close, but you know Pete:
He's never satisfied. It's kind ·u"f .
nice to see a guy who takes a lot
of pride in what he does. He
wants to get it right."
. 1,

ICI

8 COOLERS

Chicago Cubt OIA11on1a, 1:10 p.m.
P1111burgh at Mon1roal, 7:05 p.m,
Mllwoui&lt;H II Fiofldo, 7:05 p.m.
Ph=::J:Ia al N.Y. Moll. 7:10p.m.
. .C
II C1nclnnot1, 7:311 p.m.
• ' I.Ds """IIias a1 Houa1on, 8:05 p.m.
· '. San F11111Ctsco a1 St. I.Dule, 8:10p.m.

Oolro~ 18, Ta&lt;orno e
N.Y. Vlnk- 3, Botlon o
~ 4,
Whlto Sox 1
Toxaa !, Mlnneoola 2
5oo11lo 4, Tampa Bay 3
Kanaas City 8, Anohtlm e
Todoy'oOomM
Oolro~ ~ 4-3) 01 Toronto (I;Joobor ! ·
8) , 7:05p.m.
N.V. Yankeoo (Cone 1-6) 111 Boaton
(Schourok 2-e), 7:05 p.m.
CJiulbo 7-2) 11 Chic-eo Wlllto
(lloldwln 10.1), 1:05 p.m.
Mlnn1101o (Rodko 4-11) II T"""s (Loaiza 35), 8:35 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Van 4·4) o1 5ootllo (Sale 7-3),
· 10:05 p.m.
Bal11moro (Muaolna 5·6) a1 Oakland (PriMo
0.0) , 10:05 p.m.
.
Kansas Cl1y (Suzuk13.0) al Anaheim (Washbum 2·t), 10:65 p.m.

c...._

c-

Thu.-y·o-

Oolro~ 01 Tororrto, 7:05 p.m. ·

N.Y. Yankeaa at Bolton, 7:0S p.m.
C-ond 11 Ch.._ WIIHo Sox, 8:05

p.in.
Minnesota 01 Taxas, 8:35p.m.

Nlllonol Looguo S1111oUcol L.oodoro
BATT1NG-Htllon, Colorado, .396; Guor·
~real,

.384;

P - . Now York, .364: Cllii1IIO, Florida, .352;
San Fran·
Shotllold; I.Da Angelos, .352;

l&lt;fnl,

cllco, .345.

RBI-Mir1inoz, SeoHio, 73; S w -.
KllniU City, 70; Glomb!, Ool!lord , 70:
ROdrlgutt, 5oo111o, 54; Delgado, Toronto, 114;
Evlfllt, Boo1on, 83; Wllllomo, New York, 83.
HITs-Erotod, Anohelm, 108; Aoc1riguoz,
Toxao, IM; S-..y, Klln181 City, 87; Delgado.

Tororwo, sn ; Lawton, Minnesota, aa: Rodriguez,
5-lo.
Vaughn, Anaheim, 83; Martinez,

ee;

S-lt, e3.
DOUBL£8-0ierud, seomo. 24; Law10n,

VIod,S2; HoHon, ~o . 81; Joneo, AU.mo.
88; '!boog, Chicago, 89; Kant, San Francllco,
87; Owtnt, San Diego, BB.
DOUBLEs-Young, Chicago, 25; Vldro,
Mornrea1, 24; Groan, 1.o1 Angeles, ·24; CI&lt;IIO,
Colorado, 23: Whno. l.lon1rool. 22: Alfonzo,

Minneaota, 23; Glaus, Anaheim, 21 ; Oye,

NS't¥ Yor1c, 21 ; Kent , San Francisco, 21 ; Gonza.
1oz, Arizona, 21 ; Zollt, Now York, 21 .

Hunter, Minnesota, 4; Nixon, Boston , 4;

Kansas City, 2t ; Sweeney, Kansas CKy, 21 ;

R®riguez, Texas, 2t ; DeShields, Baltimore,
21 .

TRIPL.Es--Guzman,

~

Mlnna~ota,

11 :

Durham, Chicago, 8; Singltlon, Chk:ego, 4;
Damon, Kall!!8S Cl1y, 4; 1/alerrtln, Chicago, 4;

TRIPLES-Goodwlri, Colorado, 7; Guernwo,
Mornrool, 6; Peret, Colorado, 8; WomaCk, Ari·

Martinez, New YorM;, 4; AJ;cg, Texas, -4.
HOME ~UNS-Delgado , Toronto, 24;
Ev&amp;l'ett, Boston, 22; RodriQ~ez, TeK&amp;s, 22;

4.

Glaus, Anaheim , 20; Glombi, . Oekland, 20;
Rodriguez, Seattle, 20; vaughn, Anaheim, 20;

HOME RUNB-Bonds, San Froncioco, 26;
l.oolo, 26; Hel1oo, Colorado. 21 ;
Edmonclt, 5t L.oolt, 2t; Shelliold , LosMga&lt;...
21 ; 6
wllh 20.
STOLEN BASES-Cas1111o, Florida, 30;
Goodwin, COlorado, 30; Young, Chicago, 2&lt;0;

McGwlre, Sl.

••lied

Varaa, Attanta, 19; Reese, Cincinnati, 18;
Cedeno, Houston, 17; Owena, S8n Diego, H .
PITCHING (9 Declolono)-Johnson, An·
zona, H -1, .liU7, 1.47; Graves, Cincilnati, SM,

.900, t .e:J; Maddux, Atlanta, 9·1, .900, 2.98;
l.eller, Ntw York, 8·1, .BBD. 3.00; Stephenson,
St. Louis, 9-2, .818, 3.90; Pavano, Montreal, 83, .727, 3.07; Kilo, S1. Louis, 10-4, .7t4, 4.67.
STRIKEOUTs--Johnson, Arizona, 158;
As1ack&gt;, CorOfadO, 911; MaddUX, Al1an1a, 97;
Dempster, Fioflda, 93; ~le . Sl. Loulo, 92; Por·
son, Philadelphia, 110; Benson, Plllsbta"gh, 89;

Brown, LOs Angeles, 89.
SAVEs-Atfunseca, Aorlda, 20; Hottman,
5an Diego, 18; Benitez, Naw York, 16; Aguilera,

28

Casey Ber ry, OF Layne• Nix and
LHP Ch ri a Aun .

12
15

TORONTO BLUE JAYS - 5 1gnod
2B Dom i n i c Fi l ch , OF Rich Thomp ·

Cdorado .. ·-···········)"•7 8 1 - 22 22 34

t on and 38 Aaron Silk . Transferred

19 22
W-Oivlolon
l&lt;anMSCIIy ............... tD 2 3 33 28
L.oo~ .......... ......7 3
21 22

e

San.Jooe ....... ..............4 7 • 18 20 25
Weclnnd•'J"• Gil.,..
Miami at Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m
DC Untied at New York-New Jersey, 7:30
p.m.
Donas 01 Kansas C11y, 8:30p.m.
New Engtand at san JoM, 10 p.m.
Chicago ol Los Angeltt , 10:30 p.m.
s.turuy'o&lt;lomM
New York-New Jersey at COloradO 3:30 p.m.
Dallas 01 OC Un~ed . 4:30p.m.
Tampa Boy a1 Miami. 7:30 p.m.
Now Entland II COiumbuo, 7:30 p.m.
Loa Angeles at Kansas City, 8:30 p.m.
Chicago 01 San Jose, 1o p.m.

PITCHING (9 Decillons)-Saldwln, Chico·

go, 10·1 ,.909, 3.11; Wells, Toronto, 11·2 , .846,
3.71; Hudoon, Oakland, 8-2, .800, 4.2&lt;0; Eldred,
Chicago, 8-2, .800, 4.28; PlllqUO, Chicago, 7-2,
4.1e; Burba, a .....nd, 1-2• .ne. 5.13;

.na,

Martinez, Botton, a-.3, .750, 1.18.

·

STRIKEOUTS-Martinez, Boston, 130; An·

ley, C1eveland, 98; Noma, Detroit, 87; Hudson,
Oakland, 84; Wells , Toron1o, 82; Burba, Clove·
land, 81 ; Clemens, New Yorlc, 81 . .
SAVEs-Jonol. Otlroil, 19; laringhauson.

Oaldand, 17; Perclvat, Anahalm, 17; Wetteland,
Texas, 17; Foulke, Chicago, 18; Lowe, Boston,
18; Rivera, Now York, 16.

Ang-.

BASEBALL

Ameri can Leagu•
BALTIMORE ORI OLES - Acllvatod
RHP Calv i n Madura trom the di s-

abled list. Optioned RHP Gabe
Molina 10 Rochester o1 the lnterna 1lonal League .
BOSTON

RED

EIMetn ·DMIIon

Pto
25
21
19
12

SOX - Recalled

LHP Tim Young from Pawtucket o r
the International League .
CHICAGO

WHITE

SOX - Agr eed

to terms wHh SS Tim Humme l and
28 Tommy Nicholson .
CLEVELAND

INDI AN S- Agreed

to terms with OF Kenneth Folsom,
LHP
Adam
Cox ,
OF
Aashad
Eldridge and LHP VIctor Kleine .
Signed OF Robert Womack and C
Mik e Er nst t o minor leag ue eontracts .
DETROIT

Toom
W L T
Now Er&gt;;~land ....... ........7 5 4
NV·NJ ..... ...... ....... .......7 7 0
·Miami ..... ...................5 7 4
o:c.............................3 10 3
,
Ctnt,.. Olvlolon
Chicago ......................9 7 1
Tampa Boy .... ... ...... .....8 7 o
Oall.. ..................... ....&amp; 8 2

ClF CIA
27 22
23 23
18 23
24 34

26 39
24 31
20 28

33
22
32

Natlonel Leagu•

•

HOUS T ON ASTROS - P1ocod LHP

Billy Wagner on the 15 - day dia ab l ed nat .
MILoYAUKEE

BREWEAS - Agrtod

to terms wit h AHP Heath McMurray.
NEW

YORK

METS - Signed

SS

Christopher Baaak and C John Wilson .
ST. LOUIS CAAOINALS - ·P iaced
28 Fernando Vine on the 1 5-day
di sab l ed list. Activated RHP Mike
James from 11a diaaoted list .
terms with RHP Jonathan Huber,
RHP Micahel Earay, OF oav l d Giorgia, 28 Kevin Nulton, 38 Joel Klatt ,
J:tHP Josapn Cassel , AHP Jonn
Herbert and RHP Jane Bustard . •

TIGERS - Purchased

t he contract of AHP Steve Sparks
from Toledo of the Interna t ional
League . Designated LHP Allen
Mc D il l for assignment.

Mojor L.ooguo s -

OF DoWoyne Wloo 1rom 1hl 15· 1p

the eo - day diaablad Hal .

SAN DIEGO PADRES-Agreed 10

STOLEN BASES-Damon, Kansas Cl1y, 20;

Mondesl, Toronto, 20; Oe5hiekls, Baltimore,
20; Alomar, Cleveland, 17; Lawton. Mimesota,
15; Cairo, Tampa Bay, 14; Jeter, New York, 14;
Mclemore, 5ea111e, 14.

Chicago, 15; Veres, St. Louis, 13; Shaw, Los
12; Jimenez, Col0&lt;11do, 11 ; Rocker,
""tlanta, 11.

BATTING-Manlnoz,
Soatllo,
.376;
ROdriguez, Toxas, .373; Eratad, Aneholm, .364;
Sweaney, Kansas Cily, .359; Oelgedo, Toronto,
.355; ROdriguez, Seatlle, .346; Lawton, Min·
nesota, .340..
RUNS-Rodriguez. Saotllo, 71; Delgado,
Toronto, 59; Mondesi , TorontG, 58; Giambi,
Oakland, 55; Damon, Kansas Clly, 54; Glaus,
Anaholm, 53: Durham, Chicago, 53.

Columbul ............. ...... 5 7 •

Martinez, Seattle, 20.

Amorloon L.ooguo 'BiaUIIIcol L.oodoro

Bal11more 01 Saat11o, 10:os p.m:
Kansas Ci1y o1 Anaheim, 10:05 p.m.

rero, Montreal, .389; Vldl'o,

!19; ~.St.

I.Dulo, 88; · Son Fnrlc:looo, 81 ; Bllgwiil,
~. 511; Grudtielonll&lt;, Los Ang-. 55;
AJcnM, Allonta, 54; Aifoozo, New Vo!l&lt;, 54;
Kent, Son Francioco, 110.
RBI-Ktnl, San Froncloco, 88; Hollon. Cot·
&lt;&gt;&lt;ado, 54; Soaa, CIOcago, 63; GIIOI, Pitts·
burgh, 62; Shol!lold, lol Ang-. 61 ; Guer·
roro, l.lontroal, 110: Karrot, Los Angeleo , 58.
H1TS-Guerrero, l.lontroal, 114; Vldro, Mon-

zona. 5; Shumpert, Colorado, 5; 7 art lied wi1h

Oakland 8 , Baltimcn 5

Thu.-y'a Clomoa

·Pettitte outduels Martinez as Yankees bla·nk Red Sox, 3-0
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS

-OMolon

T-

,fV' /.

BY 'IKE ASSOCIATED PRESS

'T ODAY'S SCOREBOARD

.,
••'•

Ankiel's arm, Paquette's bomb lead Cards past Giants .~

The Dally Sentinel ; Page B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

MINNESOTA

TWINS - Wa i v ed

RHP Sean Bergman . Recalled RHP
Jaso n Ryan and C Chad Moe ller
fr o m S alt lake City of lh e PCL.
NEW VORK YANKEES-Agreed to

term s with C David Parrish. Trad ed
OH Jimmy Leyritz Jo t he Los An9e les Dodgers tor INF Jose VIzcaino
and cash .
TEXAS

RANGERS -S i gned

RHP

BASKETBALL

National 8aaketball Alaocla~
tlon
,
CHICAGO BULLS- Rel8ased C
Will Perdue .
•
GOLDEN

STATE

WARRIORS .,-

Named Brien Wlnlers, Phil Hubturd, Mark Osowski and Clifford
Ray assistant coaches , Kevin Tarry
executive director of tickets sates
and services and Vic to r Pelt dlrec"1or of co rp orate sales .
NEW JERSEY NETS-Announced

the resignation
trainer.

of Ted Ar;zonlco,

FOOTBALL

Natlonel F.o otball

L••au•

NFL- Suspended Te nnessee DL
Josh Evans for the 2000 seas on
following a third violation of tha
league's s ub sta nce-abuse poli cy .
BUFFALO BILLS - Signed DT Loll

Larsen .
C LEV ELAND

BROWNS - A11reod

to terms with DB Anthony Mal bro ugh a nd DB lamar Chapman on
fo ur -yea·r co ntra cts .
GREEN

BAY PACKERS-Signed

L8 Na 'll Diggs to a multiyear con tr act.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS -Sig ned

FB Ke.vin Ho use r to a three -yea r
co ntra ct.

ON THE FRINGE

Who can tame Tiger?
- PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP)
•
....:.. No one ever made such a
mockery of par in the U.S. Open.
.'
.. Tiger Woods is that good.
He also became the first player
to win a major championship by
1§ strokes.
: let's hope everyone else is not
that bad.
Woods' awesome performance
at Pebble Beach
raised
.
. a question
~r has been naggJPg at the game
ever since he started an incredible
r11n of 14 victories in his last 25
tournaments, two of those major
championships .
Is Tiger good for the game?
l'hat depends on what his margi!J of victoty in ihe U.S. Open
represents.
If he was 15 strokes better than
everyone else on talent alone, golf
will blossom the way it did when
Arnold Palmer hitched his pants
and took the game to new levels
Of popularity. Woods is exciting to
watch, and the fact he still is 10
years troni his prime makes it tan.
talizing to speculate whether he
indeed will become the best ever.
. -The fear is that what separates
Woods from the rest has more to
4o ·with desire.
·"That hunger for winning a
major championship ... it's there
every week:' Ernie Els said. "To
be honest with you, I don't feel
like that every week when I'm
playing. He's just different.
Whether it's a regular tournament or a major, he's going to be
110 percent to win and beat the
field. And I'm not sure if there's a
lot of playen like that out there."
- ·Els and Miguel Angel Jimenez
tied for second at Pebble Beach. A
year ago at Pinehurst, 15 strokes
~hind the champion would have
eatned
them a tie for 30th.
...
"I'm kind of embarrassed, finishing 15 shots behind:' Els said.
He should be.
So should Phil Mickelson and
David Duval, who couldn't even
break par over four rounds on a
course where Woods did it three
times. So should Hal Sutton, who
picked the wrong occasion to
shoot his wont score ever in a
U.S. Open, 83 in the third round.
So should Davis Love Ill and Jesper Parnevik, who didn't even
make it to the third round.
•If this U.S. Open was a waterslied for Woods, it should serve as
a ·'Wake-up call for everyone else.
::j!very sport needs a dominant
R4yer. To have someone like
Woods, a worldwide celebrity
al'~ng the lines of Muhammad Ali
and Michael Jordan, is a bonus.
What golf needs to sustain its
risjng interest is for someone aoyone - to challenge him.
:woods has gone through so-

..

.

'

called rivals as often as Vijay Singh
changes putters - · Mickelson,
Els, Duval, Sergio Garcia, back to
Els and Mickelson, even Sutton~
Woods has always downplayed
talk of a rivalry, claiming there
were too many goo~! ,players.
Perhaps he was merely being
polite.
Tom Kite compared the drama
ofWoods destroying the field to
when the Texas Longhorns used
to dominate the Southwest Conference. ·
"You knew who was going to
win before the game," he said.
"It's certainly fun when you're
pulling for Texas, but it's not real
exciting for everybody else."
Jimmy Connors {~dn't make
tennis fun to watch until John
McEnroe showed up. Larry
Holmes was the domipant heavyweight during some of boxing's
dullest years becaus~ his stiffest
eompetition came fljOm Gerry
Cooney.
Golf has so much ptnential, and
is getting so litde response.
"Right now, when he's on his
game, I don't see anyone really
challenging him, depending on
the golf course:• Nick :Price said.
"There are a lot of grtiat players
'o ut there who aren't ~tting any
credit because Tiger ii"taking it

.all."
There's a reason Wooiis is taking all the hardware, aria it's not
just because of his length, shotmaking, short game and· putting,
all of which are superb. ',
After he won the Mast~n by 12
strokes, Woods scrapped his swing
and buil.t one that would allow
him to contend every week. After
winning the U.S. Open by 15
strokes, he talked about his desire
to get better.
Woods is not only good. He"s
hungry.
1\vo days before the U.S. Open,
Jack Nicklaus was asked whether
it was more difficult today to win,
as he did, 18 majors - the one
record that drives Woods.
"It depends a lot on your competition," Nicklaus said.
Ni cklaus lost more tha9 he
won - a record 19 runner-ups in
the majon - thanks to players
like Palmer, Gary Player, Lee
Trevino and Tom Watson.
"They knew how to win
majors, which made it harder to
win;• Nicklaus said. "Right now,
we don't have many guys that
have won many majon."
Then; h e wondered aloud
whether more players should lie
at the top of their game to chal~
lenge Woods.
"Either that," Nicklaus said, "oihe's so far above them that hel
making everybody else not look
very good."

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�.
Wednesday June 21, 2000

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

W"neaday, June 21 , 2000
540 MIICellllneou.
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71 o Auto&amp; for Saill
IBn Oklo Ragoney Good cond
lion no uol A fiOWt AC Does
no wo k (30•)662 201 g 882
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Tappan H E e encv 90% Qaa
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wara laouad by tha Ohio
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Agency (OEPAI lalt weak
Actlont
Include 1111
tdoptlon modification or
repeal of ordtrt (othtr than
tmtrgtncy ardara) tho
leauenct
dtnlal
modification or revocation
ill llctnott permllt ltaltt
varlancaa or cerllflcatel
and lht approval or
dltapproval of plant and
aptclflcattonl
Drall
Action•
art wrltltn
etattmtnll of lht Olractor
of
Environmental
Prottcllona (Director •I
Intent with reaptcl to lht
lttuanca dtnltl ale of 1
parmi! llctnta order tic
lnlerttttd ptrtont may
submit wrllltn commtnta or
raquetl a public mtttlng
regarding draft actlona
Commtnll or public
mttllng raqutlle mull ba
eubmllle within 30 daya ill
notice of the draft action

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AMDATHLON &amp; PENT UM
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COMPUTER BROKERS NC
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UR GENTLY NEE DE D p asma
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I-=============================::::::;;:;;:=======:...

wrllltn
Propo"d
attltmtnla
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tha ..
dlrtetor 1 Intent with
retptct to tha l.. uance
denial
modification
revocation or renewal of 1
permit llcentt or variance
Written commtnll and
raquaala for a publ c
meeting regarding a
propoaed action may bt
aubmllltd within 30 dayt of
notice of lht propotad
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.~

Tha Budget of Ltbtnon
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appointment only Junt 21
thru Junt 30 2000 at lht
homa of townthlp Clerk
oorothy Rottbtrry Public
hearing on lht Budget will
ba held Juna 30 2000 prior
to the regular maallng
which will bt htld at 4 pm at
thtlownlhlp building
Dorothy A Roatbtrry
Cltrk
(8) 21 1to

Jenson Base ube $ 25 740 367

32x 80
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RESOR T SALES NTEANATI ON
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40

(3) Ansloe Bu dingo
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30&gt;..:! Was $ 0 080 SO $4 675
53x OWaa$26500
Se I 3200
1100-392 78 7

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TAKE T Ame cas Mos Sue
ess Campg ound And T me
sha e Aesa e C ea nghouse Ca

800

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74().592 642
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540 Miscellaneous
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31 ALL STEEL BU LDINGS
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30••2 Was S o060 Sa $487 5
53x1 o Wa s $2 8 500 Se
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·0·

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997 b ack Chevy S 0 Sleps de

Ex ended Cab 3 doo oaded
25 000 m es e y sha p u a
ngs $
00 740 949 2045 o

JANITAO~

HEATING AND
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1990 Fou w nds Boa1 20 Open
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Budge

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n S ock
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A mos Eve yone Ap
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p oved W h $0 Down

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800 287 0576 Rog
ars Walt proo ng

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ed EanUpToS32000 a Y
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AM To~ PM PAM Tanspo
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ed Pho og a

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WATERPROOF NO

347B E• 330

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Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

hearing may bt hald on 1
propoltd action Ita hterlna
r1qu111 or objection It
rectlvtd by lht OEPA within
30 daya of ltauanca ollha
propolld action Wrlllan
commtnla raquaett for
public matting• and
adjudication htarlng
raqualta mual ba atnt to
Heulng Cltrk
Ohio
l!nvlronmtntt Protection
Agency, P 0 Box 1049
Columbue Ohio 43218 1041
(Teltphont 814 1144 21211)
Final Actlone art aallona
of lht director which aro
tlftctlve upon lttuanco or 1
alated alftcllvt dtlt
Purouanl to Ohio Rtvlltd
Code Section 3745 04 1
final action may bt
appultd
to
tht
Environmental Review
Appttll Commlulon
(ERACI (Formerly Known
AI Tht Environmental
Board 01 Ravltw) by a
pel'8on who waa a perty to 1
prooaedlng belora lht
director by filing tn eppttl
within 30 daye of notlct of
lht final action Pureuant to
Ohio Rtvlatd Code Stctlon
3745 07 a lint I action
luulng
dtnylng
modifying revoking or
renewing a permit llotnta
or variance which 11 not

preceded by a propottd
action may bt appealed to
tht ERAC by tiling In
appeal within 30 day1 of
laauanca ill lht final action
ERAC apptall muat bt tile
with Environmental Ravltw
Appoale Commlae on 238
Ettt Town Straat Room
300 Calumbua Ohio 43215
A copy of the oppeal mutt
be aervod on the Director
within 3 dtye antr Ill ng lht
appeal with tht ERAC
Final lttuanct of NPDES
Ptrmt
Aahltnd Brtncltd Mtrkotlng
ABMI Facility No 490
Routtl124
Mlnarevllla OH
ltaut Data 07/01/2000
Receiving Wattra
Unl To Ohio Rlvtr
FacUlty Dttcrlptlon
Bulk Plant
Permit No 1N00194'AD
Thle llnll action not
prtctdtd by propoatd
acUon and 11 appealable to
ERAC
County Mtlgt
FlntllttUinCt Of rtntWII of
NPDES Ptrmll
Middleport Stp
1 milt South and East of
Stole Route 7
Middleport OH
111111 Dttt 07/0t/2000
Rtctlvlng Walert

Oh o River
Facility Dncrlpl on
Munlc pallty
Ptrmll NO OPB00025"DD
Thla final action not
prtcedtd by propottd
acl on and 11 appttlablt to
ERAC
Final laluanct of Ptrm 1 to
lnattll
Melga County Trenaltr

Station
34878 Rock Spr ngt Road
Pomeroy OH
laaua Datt 08 14/2000
Foclllly Daacrlptlon Air
Application No oe..oetee
luuanct of Dlr-.:1 l'lnal
StattOnly PTI
Material handling at eolld
Watte Trantltr Station and
Roadwaye and perking

.,..

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�.
Wednesday June 21, 2000

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

W"neaday, June 21 , 2000
540 MIICellllneou.
Merchandlee

71 o Auto&amp; for Saill
IBn Oklo Ragoney Good cond
lion no uol A fiOWt AC Does
no wo k (30•)662 201 g 882
2•7111(304)n3-9130

Tappan H E e encv 90% Qaa
Fu naces 0 Fu nacea 2 See
Hea Pump &amp; ~ Cond on ng
Sys ems Fee 8 Yea Wa any
Benne s Heat ng &amp; poo ng
80Q-872 5967 www orvb com/hen
nett

AN NOUNCEMENTS

005

Personals
440

Apartments
for Rent

AI eal es ate advert 1 ng n

h a newapape t1 sub ect o
he Fede a Fa Hous ng Act
o 968 which makes It ega

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

Seek nQ Ma age Fo
ewe y
S o e App can Should Be A Mo
a ed Peop e 0 en 8d Pe son
Cand da e Mus Be 0 gan zed
Abe o Manage 0 he s And
Have Sa es Ab y Some Com
p e Sk sReq &amp;d SaayAnd
Bonus 'P us Bene Pa kage

EMPL OYMENT
SERVICES

o advert se any p efe ence
mila lon o d scrlrrnna on
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Tht
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applicatiOn• and/or vtrtfle
compltlnlt wtrt rtcalved
and tha following draft
propoatd or ftnal acllona
wara laouad by tha Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency (OEPAI lalt weak
Actlont
Include 1111
tdoptlon modification or
repeal of ordtrt (othtr than
tmtrgtncy ardara) tho
leauenct
dtnlal
modification or revocation
ill llctnott permllt ltaltt
varlancaa or cerllflcatel
and lht approval or
dltapproval of plant and
aptclflcattonl
Drall
Action•
art wrltltn
etattmtnll of lht Olractor
of
Environmental
Prottcllona (Director •I
Intent with reaptcl to lht
lttuanca dtnltl ale of 1
parmi! llctnta order tic
lnlerttttd ptrtont may
submit wrllltn commtnta or
raquetl a public mtttlng
regarding draft actlona
Commtnll or public
mttllng raqutlle mull ba
eubmllle within 30 daya ill
notice of the draft action

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New 6&gt; B0 3BA 2BA $266 pe
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AMDATHLON &amp; PENT UM
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UR GENTLY NEE DE D p asma
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592 665

Fu n shed E c ency Apa mel\l
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wrllltn
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tha ..
dlrtetor 1 Intent with
retptct to tha l.. uance
denial
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revocation or renewal of 1
permit llcentt or variance
Written commtnll and
raquaala for a publ c
meeting regarding a
propoaed action may bt
aubmllltd within 30 dayt of
notice of lht propotad
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oorothy Rottbtrry Public
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(3) Ansloe Bu dingo
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997 b ack Chevy S 0 Sleps de

Ex ended Cab 3 doo oaded
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ngs $
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JANITAO~

HEATING AND
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367.0 52

Needed 740-446-7267

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Budge

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o es n o Cash A sc
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ars Walt proo ng

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ed EanUpToS32000 a Y
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Mddepo OH45 60
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u

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1

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347B E• 330

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Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

hearing may bt hald on 1
propoltd action Ita hterlna
r1qu111 or objection It
rectlvtd by lht OEPA within
30 daya of ltauanca ollha
propolld action Wrlllan
commtnla raquaett for
public matting• and
adjudication htarlng
raqualta mual ba atnt to
Heulng Cltrk
Ohio
l!nvlronmtntt Protection
Agency, P 0 Box 1049
Columbue Ohio 43218 1041
(Teltphont 814 1144 21211)
Final Actlone art aallona
of lht director which aro
tlftctlve upon lttuanco or 1
alated alftcllvt dtlt
Purouanl to Ohio Rtvlltd
Code Section 3745 04 1
final action may bt
appultd
to
tht
Environmental Review
Appttll Commlulon
(ERACI (Formerly Known
AI Tht Environmental
Board 01 Ravltw) by a
pel'8on who waa a perty to 1
prooaedlng belora lht
director by filing tn eppttl
within 30 daye of notlct of
lht final action Pureuant to
Ohio Rtvlatd Code Stctlon
3745 07 a lint I action
luulng
dtnylng
modifying revoking or
renewing a permit llotnta
or variance which 11 not

preceded by a propottd
action may bt appealed to
tht ERAC by tiling In
appeal within 30 day1 of
laauanca ill lht final action
ERAC apptall muat bt tile
with Environmental Ravltw
Appoale Commlae on 238
Ettt Town Straat Room
300 Calumbua Ohio 43215
A copy of the oppeal mutt
be aervod on the Director
within 3 dtye antr Ill ng lht
appeal with tht ERAC
Final lttuanct of NPDES
Ptrmt
Aahltnd Brtncltd Mtrkotlng
ABMI Facility No 490
Routtl124
Mlnarevllla OH
ltaut Data 07/01/2000
Receiving Wattra
Unl To Ohio Rlvtr
FacUlty Dttcrlptlon
Bulk Plant
Permit No 1N00194'AD
Thle llnll action not
prtctdtd by propoatd
acUon and 11 appealable to
ERAC
County Mtlgt
FlntllttUinCt Of rtntWII of
NPDES Ptrmll
Middleport Stp
1 milt South and East of
Stole Route 7
Middleport OH
111111 Dttt 07/0t/2000
Rtctlvlng Walert

Oh o River
Facility Dncrlpl on
Munlc pallty
Ptrmll NO OPB00025"DD
Thla final action not
prtcedtd by propottd
acl on and 11 appttlablt to
ERAC
Final laluanct of Ptrm 1 to
lnattll
Melga County Trenaltr

Station
34878 Rock Spr ngt Road
Pomeroy OH
laaua Datt 08 14/2000
Foclllly Daacrlptlon Air
Application No oe..oetee
luuanct of Dlr-.:1 l'lnal
StattOnly PTI
Material handling at eolld
Watte Trantltr Station and
Roadwaye and perking

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