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I

'
, . 8 6 •The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, October 11, 2000

Pometoy, Mlddl1port, Ohio

Details, A3

TODAY'S SC OR E BOARD
I PIOBHEI"' '
p

I

t

1

•

••GIJE CH•SPPIONSfoWI SERIES

-~
(NBC)
T-.0c1.10
s.tle 2. New VOfk 0. Seattle ...cs senn
1.0

Wed~ 14-9)
"''•·
Oct. VoR
11 (Heman,
Seante (l1alama
e11 New
oez 12-, 3), 4il'i p m
Friday, Oct. 1)
N.., YO&lt;t&lt; {Ponme 19·91 a1 Seonle (Sole 17·
10). 8:12p.m.
Sohlfdey, Oct. 14
N.., York [Oemens 13~) at Seattle (Abbott
8·1), 7:42p.m.

Sunday, Oct. 15
New York at Seattle, 4 09 p m .. If l"'eC~
~.Oct.17

Sellltht lit New Vonl, 8 12 p m., If rl80055ary

seam. •

w.........,., ca. ''

;

New YCif'X. a 12 P m..lf r.eceuary
Nationll L..Ngue

OMSIONrv

Peri&lt;ono (23)
7.0
2. ~ 11o1oy
(5)7.()
3 Co5hocX&gt;n (4)
7.0
• -l..dong \/alley (5) 7.0
5 aeve""SJ (1)
1.0
6 Coktwaw ......
6-1
7. Akron Mardlester (1}
6-1
8 YOUf"91 . Ursuline .
&amp;· 1
e . 1n&gt;nlon 111 ·--...................1-1

v-

sorf(4·3J 9 7141 ,0. WM.nouta Antnony
wayno (5·2) 8 5550

382
• 327
2&lt;!5
242

(bol.ll&gt;.Jis&gt;l~

Ae,gton 7- 1 C~s OeSIIH (S-1)
15 7934 2 . Sprtng South (fi· t ' 15 5214 . 3
Marysv1t1e ( 7~ 0) 14.3571. 4
Cols
Beechcroft {7-0) 13.7421
5
Cols
81~halfen (8-1) 12 1157. 8, Hew CarltJ~

226

'"
142
124

Tecumseh (4·3) 10 0571 . 7. Cola lndopen·
donee (6·1) 8.4102 . 8. Dovor (4·)) 1 .1500.
i Oubltn Sc1oto {4·3) 7.9285. 10. Cols. St.

•

.
6-1
""
Dmets reoeMng 12 or more potf'U 11

Wetltngton ~1) 47. 12 Chagrtn Fans 26 13

Charles {4·3) 7.4612.
Aeg1on 8-1 Piqul (6·1) 11 0985. 2 .
Cln McNichOlas {6-1) H5.9535 3. Vandalia
Sutler (6- 1) 15 7357. 4. Trenton EdgewOOd
(6 -1) f2 2785 5 . Cm Glen Este (4· 3)
11 857 1. 6 St. Bernard Roge.- Bacon (4· 3)
· 11 .USS. 7. Odord Talawanda (S-2 )
11 2&amp;42. 8 . Wapakoneta {5·2) 8.1421. 1 .
C1n . Turpin (4·3) 8 ...857. 10. Wilmington

Qn

Wyoming 22 1&lt;4. Blandlesler 20 15. UtiCil15
16 Cuyatoga VaM . Chnsttan 12.
DMSK&gt;NV
1 Amancla-Ciearcreek {18)
6-1
UJ
2. Ubeny.c...ter (10)
3 Cols. Ready ( 1)
15-ll
• . lllull1on (2) . . .. .
7-o
5.. MaSJA:)n TuUw {2)
7.0

326
317

274
226

7.0

170

7 Cols.

.,..,

126

Academy {1)

(5·2) 8 .2357.

203

8 -.ao A-ale (2)

DIVISION Ill
Reg1on 9-----1 Hubbard (5-1) 13 S883. 2
Akron Hoban (6·1) 13.5285 . 3 Medina
Htghland (8-1) 11 .8285. 4 . Mentor Lake

.. llomlootlllillor ....- ..........7.0
123
9 New M'1own Sp&lt;1ngfield (3) 7-o
107
10 St. Henry ....
.. .. 5-2
54
Dri"Mws reoeMng 12 or more pornts: 11,

Cath. (5·2) 11 .1882. 5 . Copley (5·2)
8 6857. 6 . Cortland Lakevtew (4-3) 7 .7652
7 Farrv1ew Park Fa1rv1ew (4· 3) 7.4142 . 8 .

Bodford Charlet 40 12, SarahSVIIe Shenandoah {1) 38, 13, Neowcomerstown 18 14, Gat85

(FOX)

W8dl

-Y

dey, Oct. 11

New "1'brii. (HamptOn 15- 10) at St. LOUIS (Kile

20-i). l :18 p.m.
l h - y . Oct. 12
New 'forti: {Leiter 1&amp;-8) at St. louiS (Ankiel
'1-1), 8:18p.m.
Salurday, Oct. 1t
St Louis (An.Benes 12-9) at New York
1 - 11-5). 4,18 p.m.
·
S•ndoy, Oct. 15
St. L.Du• (Kilo 20-9) at Now Vorl&lt; (B.J ...._.
11-8), B p.m.
Monclily, Oct. 1e
St. LDus at New Von:. 8 ; 18 p m . li neces""'Y
Wodnoodoy, Oct. 11
New Vc;ri; at St. Lou1s. 4.18 p.m.• rt neces""'Y
Tnureday. Oct. 18
New Yortc at St. Louis, 8 : 1B p.m ., If neces""'Y

PREP FOOl BALL
ONo Prep Footbell Polls

w-•

Ha~en 17. 15, Orwel.l Grand Vall. 16. 1&amp;.
Bolnbrklgo Poln1 \11111. 15.

Mlns

OIVISIONV1
1. Delphos St. John's(32) ..... 7-0
2. MarS Stem Manon Local(1) 1..0
3. Mogaoo&lt;e (2) .......
. .. 7.0

381
304

292

4 Norwalk St Paul (1) .......... 7-0

~

5. Portsmouth Notre D•me (2)7.0

211

6. Cuyahoga H1s. .... ......
1. Toronto (2) ...........

178 '

8. Covtngton ..............
9 Mc:Oonakf •

7-0
. 1..0
. .. 7..0
6· 1

145
138
77

.7·0

40

10. McComb .............

Othefs reoeMng t 2 or more po.nts: 11
Beali1'1111e 33. 12. Shadyside 22. 13. Cedarville

18 14. Garey 14. 15. E. Canton 12

OHSAA Football Computer R•tlng•
COLUMBUS, Oh10 (AP) - Here are lhe
fourth week ly football computer rat rngs
from the OhtO High SChOOl A1t11ettc ASSOCI ·
ation. Ratings are by d1v is1on and region
With record and average bi·level points per
game (lop eigt1t teams 1n each teglon
advance to regronal quarterfinals) :

DIVISION I

Regton 1-1. Solon (7·0) 22.9071. 2.
COlUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - How a S1ale
Cleve. St. Ignatius {7·0) 18.9385. 3. Shak·
panel of sports writers and broadcasters rates
or Hts. P·O) 17 45J35. 4 . Slrongsvllle (6·1}
Onio high scOOol footbaU teams in the fourth of
16 7251 . 5 . Painesville Arvers1de {6·1}
eighl weekly 2000 AsSOCiated Press polls, by
15 2151 6 Cleve_ Glenvtlle (6·1) 15.1428
OHSA.A dtvislons, wi1t'l won4ost record and
7 . Lakewood St. Edward (5·1) 14 1190. 8
tDtaJ points tfirst-place votes m par~) :
Middleburg Hts. Midpark (4-3) 12 3714 9
DMSIONI
lakewood (5·2) 11.06 18 . 10 E. C leve
I. Cleve. Sl.lgnatius (37) ........ 7.0
396
St1aw (4-3} 9.2071 .
2. Upper Mngton {1) ............... 7.0
310
Region 2-1. Mass. Perry .(7 ·0) 22.5214.
3 Pidl:eringtoo .......................... NJ
249
2. Mass. Washingtofl {5·2) 1't-0922. 3.
4. Shaker Hts .......................... .].(J
239
Cant. GlenOak (7-0) 16.4508. 4. Marion
5. Solon .. . ........... . ....... 7.0
229
Harding (6·11 t5 9642. 5 . Mass. Jackson
6. MassilkJn F'eny ............. 7.0
218
(6· 1) 14 5071. 6, Mansf1eld (6·1) 13.3928.
7. Canton Glen Oak ............... 7..Q
145
7 . Wadsworth (6- 1) 12 0357 . 8 . To!. Whtl ·
8. Cin. Colerain (1) ............ , ...... 7..0
90
mer {4-3) 11.8571. 9 . Fremont Ross (4-3)
9. Cin. lwtoeller ..........................G-1
86
11 . 1428. 10.- N. Can1on Hoover {5-2)
10. Cin. Elder (1) ........... .... ........ 5-1
83
10.8285.
Others recBtving 12 01 more po1n1s: 11.
Reg1on
3- 1.
Pickerington
(7· 0)
L.og•n 55. 12. Massillon Washington 36. 13.
18.6785 2 . Upper Arlmgton (7-0) 16 .9285·.
Marion Harding 14. 14. (tte) Lakewood St.
3. Weslerville South (5-2) 15.4357 . 4 .
Edward , Cle. Glenville 13.
Mtamisburg (5·2) 15.3571. 5. Gahanna UnDIVISION 11
coln (5·2) 14.6642 . 6 . Troy (6-1) 14 3785.
t.. Youngs Chaney (16)
.. 7.0
331
7. Log•n (7..0) 14.0714. 8 . Hilliard David·
2. Defiance (2) .
. 7.0
278
·SOn (5·2) 12.7928. 9 . Worthtngton Kil·
3. Niles McKinley (4) ..
.. ... 1.()
254
bo urne (5·2 ) 11 8142 10. Huber Hts.
4 . Avon Lake (5} ..................... 7..Q
240
Wayne (4-3) 10.5785.
5 MarysYille(2) ...........
.. .. 7.()
213
Regio n 4~1. Cin . Elder (5-I) 19.3436.
B. Cols. De Sales {2) ................ 6-1
168
2 . Ctn. Moeller (6 -1) 18.8261 . 3 . Cm ..
7 Akron Buchtel (3) ...
. .. 6·1
148
Anderson (6·1) 16 .1428 . 4 . Lebanon (7-0)
8. Olmsted FaJ~ (2) .......... ... .. 7.()
135
16.0071. 5 . Cin. Colerain {7-0) 16.0000 . 6.
9. Trenton Edgewood ............... B- 1
95
Ctn . Western Hills {6-1 ) 13.2615 . 7. Harri10. Piqua (1).... .. ................... 6·1
so
son {5·2) 12.5214. 8 . Xenra (4-3) 11.9002.
Othefs recerving 12 or more pornts : 11 .
9 . Gin. ti.t. Xav1er (4-3) tl .3065 . 10 Mrllord
Ccla. Beecherott {1) 52. 12. Tot Rogers (1) 50.
(4-3) ~~ . 0~71 .
13. Amherst 39, 14. Ttffin Columbian (1) 33. 15.
DIVISIO N 11
Cln. McNic:hola1 28. 18. Vandalia Butler 12.
Region 5-1 , Avon lake (7·0) 17.1857 ,
OIV1StON Ill
2 . Olmsted Falls {7·0) 15 .7357 . 3 . Niles
1. Portsmouth (28) .................7-o
3e7
McKinley (7-0} 15.1928. 4 . Young. Chane)'
2. Sunbury Big Walnut {2) ........ 7.Q
256
(7 -0) 14.5857. 5 Amherst Steele {7·0)
3. MeConnolavlllo Mofgan (2)7.0
252
14.4357. 6 . Garfield Heig hts (5 ·2) 13.1500.
4. Akron Hoban (Z) ................... G-1
248
7. Broadview Hts. BrecKsville (5-2)
5. Day Chaminad&amp;-Julienne·(t)6-1
196
1.2 .9500 . 8 . Berea {4-3) 10 8571 . 9 .
6. Canton Catt1 . (2) .......... ,..... 6-1
184
7. Usbon Beaver local (2) ....... 7-0
131
Chardon {4-3) 10.5092 . 10. Uniontown
lake {4-3) 10.0928.
8. Loutsvil1e ..............................6·1
116
9. Cl)ts. Wan8fSOn ....................5·2
59
Reg ion 6-1 . to\. Rogers (6·1) 17.2285.
10. r,tillersburg w.. Holmes .....6·1
50
2 . Bowling Green (6·1) 15.2000 . 3. Tittm
~ receiving 12 or mol'&amp; poims· 11 .
Columbian {7·0) 13.75o'O 4 Green (5 ·2 )
Bellevue 43 . 12. J•ckaon 37. 13. Orrville 33 .
13.6714 . 5. Def1ance (7-0) 13 5000 . 6 .
14. Betort w. Branch 29. 1!!5. Gltlllpolls 27. 16.
Akron Buchtel (6-t) 13.2401. 7. Tal.
New Aichmon&lt;l 23. 17. Meclina Htghlancl 18.
OeSales (5·2) 12.8642 . 8 . Sylvania
18. Stoubonvilla17. 19. Camon Soutt112.
Soutt1vtew (5·2) 12.7857. 9. Mans . Madi-

~

Mantua Crestwood (4·3) 7 .3928. 9 Chagfln
Falls Kens1on (3·4) 6.2071 . 1D. MOQaelore
Fteld (3·4) 5.8928.
Region 10~ 1 . Sunbury Biu WalnU1 (7-0)
15 1285. 2. Colt. Watterton (5 -2) 11.4740.
3 van Wert (5·2 ) 11.4428. .c. Fostoria (5·21
10 9500 . 5 . onawa-Glandorf (5·2) 9.8714.
6 Bryan (5·2) 9.2642. 7. St. Marys Memo·
rial (5-2) 8. 1428. 8 . Oak Harbor (5-2)
8 .1285. 9 . Bell evue (5· 1) 7 7142. 10.
Thornville Shendal'l (5·2) 7 .4000.
Regio-n 11-1. Louisville (6·1) 16.371&lt;4 .
2. Cant . Cent Cath. (6· 1) 16.2237. J .
McConnelavlll• llorg•n (7-G) 15.1114. 4.
Lisbon Seaver (7·0) 13.3857 . 5. Belott
West Branch (S-2) 12.9928. 6 . lexington
{5·2} n .8714 . 7 . Orrville (5-2) 113107. 8
New Concord John Glenn (5 ·2) 10.9428. 9.
Cant South {6-1) 10.8142 . 10. Struthers

(5·2) 10.82e1.

{5·2 ) 10.9142. 7 . tiam. Ross (4·3)

3

AJ.hland CfMtrin' (7-D) H .1857 4 .

NowCOfll8I'S1Qwn (8-1) 8.21128 5. hvorfr
FL FrytO c--11 IMI7. 8. llomn..;Ho (5·2)
7.3500. 7. Joltnalown NortMctgo (5·2)
7.1428 . I. Nol_,wllk-Vofll c--21 7.11121.
t . Smith'lille {8-t) l .eot5. 10. SeraMvdle
Shooondooh (7.01 8:60n . .
ROI)ion 20-1 . G-nna Coli. · 17·
0) 13.7828 . 2. Colt. Ready (1.0) 12.311111 .
3. Brookville (I -1J 10.5500. 4 . Reading (5·
2) 10. 5&lt;654. 5. Bainbridge Paint Valkty (5-1)
9.8285 . 8 AM:hmondale SE ~8 - 1J8 . 9714 . 7.
Sidney LAhman 1s-2) 1.2357. I . MiWord CIJ.
FairtJanks (1 -1 )

Region 1~1. Cleve . VA·St. Joseph (7·
0) 14 7765 . 2 . Young. Ursuline · (6·1)
13.0727 . 3 . Wickliffe (5-2) 12.0142. 4. Cha grm Falls (7 ·0) 10.7357. 5 Aleron Man.
chestet (6·1) 10.5095 . 6 . Aurora (5·2)
10.4714 . 7. Perry (5-2) 9 7857 B. Zoarville
Tusc Valley {4-3) 9.2714. 9. Louisville
Aquinas (6-1 ) 9.0204. 10. LeaviHsburg
LaBrae (5·2) 8.9487.
Region 14-1 . Wellington (7·0) 11.7928.
2. Sandusky Perkins (7·0) 11 .7000 . 3 .
Huron (5-~) 1 1 .6857. 4 . Ton1ogany Otsego
(6·1) 11 .0928. 5 . Kenton (4·3) 11 .0785 . 6 .
Coldwater (6-1) 10.7285. 7. Millbury Lake
(5·2) 10.1 285 . 8. Bellville Ctear Forie (4-3)
9.6500 ., 9 . Delta (4-3} 9 .1857. 10. Castalia
Margaretta (5-2) 8.2571 .
Region .15-1 . Newark Licking Valier (1·
0) 15. 1142. 2 . Coshoe1on (7·0) 14.6000. 3.
lronlon C6·1) 14.2438. 4 . Utica (6 · 1)
11 .3142 . 5 . Bellaire (5·2) 10.8428. 6
Loudonville (5 -1) 10.0050. 7 . Mattins Ferry
(5 -2) 9.7928. 8. Carroll Bloom -Carroll (5-2)
9 .5928 . e. Well•ton (4·3) 1.3411. 10.
Sowlh Point (5·2) 7.4718,
Regio n 16----1 . Germantown Valley View
(7 ·0} 13.3642 . 2. Cin . Wyom ing (6 · 1)
12.2071 . 3. Blanchester (7·0) 11 .6857. 4.
Minford (5·2) 11.1014. 5.1 Portsmouth
Weat (5·2) 9'.15782. 6. Cm. Indian Htll (5·2)
9.4142 . 7. Cin. Finneytown (5 -2) 8.8857. B.
Wheeleraburg (3·4) 8.2201 . 9 . Cin.
Madeira (5-2) 7.3011 . 10. Bethel-Tate (5-2)
6 .5714 .

DIVISION Y
Region 17-1. Mass. Tualaw {7·0)
14.7142 . 2. Bedford Chanel (6·1) 14.5591 .
3. New Middletown Springfield (7·0)
14.5344 . 4 . Independence (6 -1) 10.7928.
5. Gales Mills Hawken (6 -1) 8.707 1. 6.
Columbiana Crestview (5 ·2) 8.3384. 7.
Wtndham (6·1) 6.2765.
Orwell Grand
Valley (6-1) 7.7642. 9 . Columbiana (5·2)
7.1195. 10. Atwater Waterloo (5·2) 6 .7357.
Region 18-1 . Uberty Ctr. {7·0)
12.9428 . 2 . Morral Ridgeda le (7·0)
11. 1428. 3 . Crestline (6-1) 11.0357. 4. Mar.
ion Pleasant (6-1 ) 10.5642 . 5 . Bluffton (7·
0) 10.4642. 6, Sycamore Mohawk (6-1)
9 .5357 . 7. Aock1ord Parkway (5·2) 9.1428.
8 . Metamora Evergreen (5-2) 8.2071 , 9 .

e.

7.7214. I . Spencerville (8-1) 7 . ~2 . 10.
Or~~gon Stri1eh (4-3~ 8.86-12.
Region 2~1. Port• . Notret Dame (7.0)
13.4117. 2. Shadyside (8·1) 10.8882. 3 .
Bealllwille (6-1) 8.8542. 4, Toronto (7..0)

RNdo wlllo

Eaotom

(..1)

1.2224. 8 . Newark CathOlic (4-3} 1 .9940. 7 .
Leetonia (4·21 6 .3463. 8 . Wellsville (5·2)
5.7714. 9. S1rasburg.FrctnkJin CS-2) 5.5214.
10. Malvern (4--3) 5.2714.
Region 24-1. Maria Stein Marion Local

1998 DODGE RAM QUAD CAB 4X4

GOING ON One of the two

Auto, 360 V8, SLT packaqe IA05471

annual book
sates of the
Friends of the
Ubrary is going
on now at the
Pomeroy
Ubrary. It wi II
continue
through 4 p.m.
Friday. Reviewing I;K&gt;oks to go
into the sale
here are Marjorie Walburn,
secretary-treasurer, left; the
Rev. Father Walter Heinz. vice
president; and
Patty Pickens,
president.
(Charlene Hoeflich photo)

LOADED

BASEBI'LL

L••au•

American .
TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Fired Jim
Fregosi , manager. Signed Gord Aah,
president, baseball operations anct gen.
eral manager loa three-year contract.
N•tla n el L•agua
HOUSTON ASTROS-Promoted tpe·
cia\ assignment seoul Tom Wiedenbauer
to director of minor league inatruction
and baseball operations assistant D•vit:l
Gottfried to director of minor league
administration .

BASKETBALL

·t998 FORD EXPEDITION XI..T 4x4
Auto, V8, third seat, 1 80019 1

ONLY 22,000 MILES

N•tlonal B a•ketb•l l A ••ocl•tlo n
LOS ANGELES LAKERS- Aeleased F
Nate Johnson .

PITTSBURGH

Germantown Valley View in Divisio n IV, Liberty Center in Divisio n V and Maria Stein Marion
I ocal, whtch plays Delphos St.
John's on Friday, in Division VI.
Amada-Ciearcreek's
lead
dropped from 15 to nine pomts,
•while Portsmouth's 101 points
was the biggest gap between first
and second .
St Ignatius again had the most
points among any team m the
statewide poll of writers and
broadcasters, rece iving )7 firstplace votes, two for second place
and one for third place from the
40 voters, for 396 total points.
The only unranked team s moving into th e top I 0 were Elder in
D1v11ion I. Millersb urg West
H olmes in Division Ill and
M cCo mb in Division VI. All
three are in 1Oth place an d
reploce Massillon Was hington,
Orrville and Ca rey in their

WASHINGTON AEDSKINS-Signed K
Kns Heppner to a one-year contract.
HOCKEY
N•tlon•l Hoek•y
TAMPA
BAY
LIGHTNING-Rea&amp;·
signed G Evgeny Konstantinov to Detroit
o1 the IHL.
WASHINGTON
CAPITALS-Signed
George McPhee, general manager, and
Ron Wilto n, coach, to contract extan·
slons .
E•at c o . .t Hockey League
JOHNSTOWN CHIEFS-Signed F
Dorian Anneck, 0 Jeff Sul livan and 0
Mike Rod r igues. Tr aded 0 Brian Mcl&lt;ln·
noy to Jackson for future considerations.
PENSACOLA ICE P ILOTS- Signed
RW Leon Delorme for the 200 0-0 1 season .
COLLE GE
CAZENOVIA-Na med Rob
Kenna
men 's lacrosse coach and Shelly Kemp·
ton women ' s lacrosse coach.

Auto, Y8, XLT IA04212

~ LOADED

1997 FORD EXPLORER
SPORT
4X4
.
.
,
Power Equipment, Hi miles, 18001 11

...

$9995

Loyal, Dedicated
· H ours a Day, 7

d'

Appreciation
' Pastor
LesHayman
From the"
Congregation

I Pas1,or Les Hayman

P

+

~~~

~!I
ll

1994 FORD F-150 XL T 4X4
Cruise, tilt, AM/ FM cass #40640.

$10,995

. ALCS
from Page 81
lot of confidence," Garcia
remembered telling hiS manoger.
Piniella stuck with GarCia, who
struck out O'Neill and William s,
then retired David Justi ce on a
flyout Mike Cameron ca ught one
'step in front of th e ce nter- field
fence.
"He got three tough hitters
out," Pmiella said. " To haw a
young pitcher come into a playoff game for us like Garm did . he
should" be very proud of hi s
effort."
Sasakt, poSSibly the AL Rookie
of the Year, got hi s thtrd save of
the playoffs, but fill ed the mnth
inning with dra;na .

Rt·.1d .lt tht· !llt'l..'nng \\.1'

book

marker~.

The m oney rai sed by the Friends, a group
of M l'ib~ cuUJi tiau' who believe strongly in
th e Importance of libraries i~t the life of a
community, will be u"'ed to pay for a variety
of programs .
As explained by Marjorie Walburn, an offl'c.'r of the- volunteer group, then: are enrichment ac ti vi ties otferc·d at the library which
cann o t be paid fo r with tax dollar. .
Some of these includ e computer class
instruction , holiday partie s. and special art
and craft events for children. Money to buy
refreshments following activities usually
aren't included in what tax dollars can be
spent for and the Fri ends come through with
the mone y.
13ooks have been provided to various
health agenr ies for distribution to new
mothers to promote reading to chi ldren, as
well as to younb&gt;'iters enrolled in the &lt;lllnmer
reading program s at the county's four
libraries.
To stress the importance of libraries m a

kees' dc&lt;iipt:ratton

w.1~

when Y.lll-

kc c~ m.mager J oe Torre batt1.·d
Glenallen Hill in the e1~hth fi&gt;r
O'Nctll. JUSt 4- f&lt;&gt;r-22 in th e
pl.tyolf\. indudtng· three mtleld
htt~. W1th a runner on tlr&lt;~t .1nd
two n uts, H ill whdred.

community, Walburn cited statisti cs from th e
New York Public Library 2000 cale ndar of
facts: libraries in the U.S. issue more ca rds
than VISA, more c hildren are enrolled in
summer library program s th an little league;
·and have more visitors than all museums and

zoos combined.
Walburn used those statistics to srreo;;o; the
importance of supporting local libraries
through vo lunteer programs,likc the Friend, .
Organized in 1979, the currenl officers are
Patty Pickens, president; the Rev. Father Wal ter Heinz, vice president; and Wa1burn ; secn·tary-trcasu rer.
Mee tings are held the fir st M onday of eac h
month, 7 p.m ., and rotate among the four
librari es , Middleport, Pomeroy, Racin e and
Eastern.
·
Membership due s arc $3.60 a year for individual s and $6.30 for families. New mcmben
are needed to work in the program and the
appea l from the offi cers is " be a friend to
children , join the Friends of . the Meigs
County Library."

POMEROY - National Fire Prevention Week , whic h runs through Friday,
will be observed by area fire departments
as pr~parations to visit local elementary
schuoll, and tea ch students the importance of fire o;;afcty and preve ntion , get
under way.
Firefighters will focus on this yea r's
theme, "Fire Drills: The Great Esca pe ,"
emphasizing that every househ'old should
plan and pra ctice a Home Fire Escape

Drill .
. The drill is designed to help families
practic e their two cl10-;en eKape routes
out of th e h ou~c i f:~ fire should occur.
One escape route should identifY the
no rmal route through hal1ways and stairways , &lt;111d the alrernatc route should des-

ign-ate the li\L' nf w'in Jows or the roof
when th e nor mal route i.;, obstructed .
Acco rdin ~ to a n ew\ release by the
Ohio Dcp artnJcnt of Commerce, in
1999, Ohio saw I S,f,45 res id ential fires
th at kill ed 1J I people, injured 970 and

Eastern homecoming

caused more than $161 million in property damage.
"T he number of injuries and deaths
would be Si!(mfi cantly decreased if more
f.1milics had more working smoke detectors and a practiced home fire escape
pbn," sa id Gary C. Suhadolnik, director
of the Ohio D epartm ent of Commerce .
"The c~rly implementati o n of a fire
escape drill is crucial to one's survival."
addc·d Suhadolnik. "No matt er where
you are and a tire breaks out, it's too late
to start developing a plan ."

______

_._

- - .....4 - -

Frida)', October 13

140242

__ .._ ___ _

Ca!enl!ar
Classificds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
S11orts

$3995

W~athcr

1IYour
-----------------------------------Name: ________________
tAd dress: ____________________________
I Phone:,.....________________
I--

------------•• All Major Credit Cards Accepted

.H

the new

tdcm.lrkcting building on Mam
111
Pom eroy
WJ'i
Strt't.'t
.lmwunn·d t{,r todav. At that
tllllt', the nam~.: of tl'll' ten nant
S\ til h,· rc·s·eJie\l.
Th e successful Stcrnwhcel

let-

ter of n:I,Jgn.won from S.1r.1h
Fi\hlT .L~, downtm\ 11 b~.·amJtl r.t­
tiou coordm.HL}L A \'O[L' nf
appren:ltwn \\~1' L'Xt~ n~.lcd w
Mr\. h '\ her. a ion~'' nh her bu-.band, John, w ho h ,J\ ,tho bL'L'!l
,Knn· in thl' ,·,mou-.. dm' ntmn1
project-...
1r \\.".1" ,t!,o notnl 1h.n i\11\.

Ri\'l'fll· . . t \\'3\ Ji\ CWi~l'd \\'Jth
speoal rhanks g-oing to john
Mll'iSCr .tnd c;eorgc WrighLThe

Please see Sale; Page Al

Fire protedion not
issue in Olive Township
FROM STAFF REPORTS

REEDSV IL LI: -

ITlllOVl'd

R e11ckm;

t\H.T ll()tiCI..'.

in OlivcTown..;hip .1re not g()tng
with out firt· pnH l't tH 111. d~.· ~ pltt'
t~ t' 6ct tlut t\\'O of it' fir~· trllc~'
have bt·cn takt·IJ otl the rn.1d.

The townshqJs Jthtlr.lthY c.Hrier lu~ dn:med two ot. the
towmhip \ rh rLL' pumpn trucb
llll SJ.t~· . &lt;IIH..i

thO\t'

trLI L kS

!J;I\'L

bee n uken otT rh~.· ro.ltL ,JCt'tJrding to Ftre Chid' M.irk 'in lith
Sm~th .1 nd rill' Ul1vc rm, n-;hip
tfU &lt;;[Cl'~ lll.ldt• ;1 JOll lt '-! ,lll'liiL'Ill
on Wednl·,cl:ty, '·' Ylllg th.n· wink·
the

t \\'o · t nH: ~ ..,

h .J\'l'

fnHll "L'l'Vict! \Inti] fur-

the

CO nJI'Illlllities lJ1

St' rveJ by the
OJi,·c To\\'mhip VFD. 'till haw
tirl' protecttoJI.
In addition to the depa n Jllenr\ rcmainmg pumper truck,
"ludt Small ,,11d i&lt; "ftdly oper&lt;HIO nJI.'' dH· L'Oill lllllllity ha'\
tlllHU.l l ,11d com r&lt;ll't;;, with fire
dep,trtlll l'l ir~ i11 ()r;lllgc Tuwn, Jnp. Chc &lt;.,ter Tm\'mhip, 13.-tsltttn
.llld Coolville.
()]iw Tow n,hip

M eig..,

Pro~cnltor

Count)

Please see Olive, Page Al

lll'l'll

Pomeroy Fn-c Cl1icf ( ' hn " Sh.J11k \.11d
Wednesday rh .lt hl· L.llt llo t \ trL''"' ~.~ntlllgh
the import ,ltl CL' of :1 pre - pl.u111l'd lire
est'ape route &lt;111d ho w one '&gt;Pl'{ itlr Hll"l
dl'llt m ade hi111 rl'ali 7c the

c!ll·t -11\'L' lll'" '

of a tire esupc dri ll.
" I was o nce tl~.dtring .1 ti rl' .n11l \\.1'&gt;
1ntOnncd rlut .1 cbild wa' pu.,...1hly . . tdl
in"idc rhe burning ~rru ctu tT." ..,,tid SILnl k.
"After ,1 few ten"e lll ll lll cnt'i. the t·hlid
w as cvc ntu.tll y found O l lt....id~.· the httllll'"
"When ,t&lt;;kcd IHm he h .lll n1.1d1.· 11
our, rhe chdd rt·plil'd t!J .H lw n·rnL·tn

lwll'll lill· tire csr.tpe drill th.tt he luJ
pr.1cti~L·d

\\ nh l1i ' ~:1111il y;· ,,ddl.'d S!J ,mk
" If n ot .for th i.!· H0111 1.! hrl' bcJpl'
I )nil. tlw ,· lnld '"nild h.tw probably

l'l'll' l\\'t! L'll ht'l \l' l iom ifl_l tl fll''. lll' \\'OU Jd

IL1Y1.'

~ul·c umhl'd

... l h1. · tlr~..·

111 till' tirl'." .... lid Sh;mk.

L'~t·,lpl.'

dnll'

r~.·a lly

do

"'t,Jll' l·1n' l\ l .lr'ih&lt;~l R tlhL' lt

n't(llllllll'lld..,
hl\\"lllt,

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()]ll.lll'

pr~·~.,·,nltJon' to

R.

Rt eLtgc

uh· tht· fiJI -

l'll\lll'l'

th~..· 'Jtl-t y

Please see Drills, Page Al

AS
B2-4
B5
A4
AJ
Bl, 6
AJ

OHIO
These senior girls are candidates for homecoming queen at Eastern High
School: Amber Baker, daughter of Rod 6aker of Chester and Jan Baker of
Tuppers Plains; Jamie Hupp, daughter of Ed and Sharon H_upp of Long Bot·
tom; Cinda Clifford, daughter of Cathy Clifford of Chester and the late Pat
Clifford ; Shauna Elliott, daughter of Frank and Cathy Elliott of Pomeroy; and
Kristen Chevalier, daughter of Kirk Chevalier of Chester and Karla Fox of
Pomeroy. The queen will be crowned at halft ime during Friday night's foolball game between Eastern and Miller. (Bnan J. Reed photo)

Pick 3: 1-7-0; Pick 4: 4--9-X- l .,
Su~r Lotto: X-22-2S-31-32--4-I
Kicker: JJ-2-1 -_1-6-1

W.VA.
Daay 3: 7-7-f&gt; Daily 4: 4-9- 1-1&gt;

•

•

.

I

..

~.we

11\n ..

Lotteries

'

1Pastor's Name·-~-----------1Church:_·_____________________________
:Message:, ________________

.1

'&lt;. Uilll1ler.

A ribbon cutting

Andrea Krawsczyn was crowned
the 2000 Me 1gs H1gh School
hornecom1ng queen 111 pre-game
ceremon1es Fnday n1g~t at the
Me1gs Marauder and NelsonvilleYork Buckeyes game held on
Bob Roberts Fteld 1n Pomeroy.
Tl1e daugl1ter of Bette Hobstetter. Cella McCoy and John
Krawsctyn was escorted by Nick
Dettw1iler.

thf: Ash Street Church

1991 FORD EXPLORER 4X4

g rJm;;, then.· next

MHS homecoming queen

Today's
Sections - 11 Pages

From the Congregation of

Jl'i'ilda:r. October 20.

voted to take
the Pomeroy
Ulue.., and Jazz Society, which
'POll'iOrt•d -;ev~·ra l concert\ 'in
thL" ,mtphirheater Jnd i'i r~port­
,.,]h plannin~ add itional pro111

Fire Prevention Week stresses importance of fire drills

Sentinel
:z

With Picture

Thl· J&lt;;,o;on~mon

mcmbcr&lt;ihlp

n:fn:-.,h nt~IH'- .

WtthMuch

Onlf8,00

JOill

Mc:mhn.., d eu d ed it wnuld be
J t the Lfi\Cf(.'tlOII of ~-tl" h llli..TCh.m t J'i to '''lll·thcr dt~..·y ~~..-rvt·J

Appreciation
With th e crowd agam o n irs
feet. Williams singled leading o ff
as Sasaki repc.1tcdly stepped off.
Justice struck out, and Tino M artinez si ngled to bring up Jorge
Posada, w ho homered off Sasaki
tw ice in three at-bats in the reg~
ul ar season.
But Sa&gt;aki got Posada to fly
o ut , and L\us Soj o, after a long
foul down the righ t-lield ]me.
flied to c~ mcr for the fin al otlt.
Sa&lt;aki bowed to teammate Ja y
BLihner.
·
The btggest sign.•I of the Yan-

l'] ,m, m

The ";Jlc \\ill lll; lll'ld from ()
9 p.m.

OMEROY - Whe n Fn ends of
the Library stage book sales, like
the one going on today • and
tom o rrow at th e Pom eroy Library,
· they have a rwo-fold purpose to put books into the hands of c hildren and
their families and to raise mon ey for spe cial
library programing.
Hundreds of books , many donat ed. others
replaced or no longer being circulated at
local libraries, are sold for 10 cents each .
Patrons come with bags and boxes to " load
up " on books when the sales are held. Some
are reading-for- fun selections while others
are suitable for use as home schooling m aterials.
The sale today will continue until 6 p.m .
and the Friends will be back with more
books and magazines -something for every
age group - tomorrow from 9 a.m . to 4
p.m . They' ll also h~ve muffins for sale, along
with tote bags with the library insignia, and

B Y TONY M. L E4CH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Sho'w Y our Pa:stdlf.
Y ou A fJprji,C:id

n: spt.:ctive dtvi sions.

POM EROY -

M1ddlcporr in .1 monlllllf.dH
m adne~~ \all' on ( ) cr '' 1 we.' ft.'
m ade wht.•n rlw Pornl'ro\' Mercham&lt;. A~'iociarinn nll'r Wedlh'\day .It Peupk.., H,u Jl.. .

B Y CHARlENE H OEFUCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

L••aw•

f i,hn "til not be chai ring the
holtdav home tour. It was dcctd~d to Procr1..·J wah the toU r and
J
nl'\\
chairman wtll be
Jn nou lKL"d J.r rh ~.· nl:'xt meeting.

BY CHARlENE HOEFliCH
SENTINEL ~EWS STAFF

STEELERS-

Announced tho retirement of OL Chri1
Conrad .

ofthe
Ash Street
Church

Merchants set
moonlight
madness sale

Friends of the Library ready book sale

FOOTBAL L
Natlonel Football L eague
ATLANTA
FALCONS-Placed
T
Michael Thompson on mjured ·reserve .
Re-signed OT Evan Pilgrim .

AP releases new prep polls
COLUMBUS, Uhio (AP) For the third straight week , the
names are the same atop the
Ohio Associated Press high
school football poll.
All six division leaders Cleveland· St. Ignatius in Division
I. Youngstown Chaney in Division ll, Portsmouth in Division
Ill, Sandusky Perkins in Divi; ion
IV, Amanda-Clearcreek in Dtvision V and Delphos StJohn's in
Division VI - won last week to
stay on top.
Two of the three larger divisions have new second-pla ce
teams - . Upper Arlington in
Division I and Sunbury Big Walnut in Division Ill.
Upper Arlingt on
replaces
Cincinnati Moeller, wh1ch lost
21-7 against Cincinnati Elder and
fell to ninth . Big Walnut leaped
two spots past M cConnelsvi lle
Morgan· and Akron H oban by
defeating Mount Vernon 4 1-22.
Remaining in the No. 2 spot
were Defiance in Divt~ton II ,

so Cents

POMEROY

[ - ~~Ns :l

DIVISION IV

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51. Number 98

Cln. Country Day (3-4) 5.0000.

10.871 ... 8. Circleville Logan Elm (5·2)
10.4357 . 9. New Aichmond (7·0) 10.2571.
10. Ashville Teays Valley (5·2) 10.1285.

. Hometown Newspaper

1.11as. t . Chill. Huntington

(5·21 7.7000. 10. s~ No,....llom (4·3)
7.8214 .
DIVISION VI
Rogion 21-1 . Mogadore (7.0) 17.3785.
2 Mc0onak1 (5·1) 12.118&lt;11 . 3. a.... Cuya.
Hts . {7--0) 10.7137. 4. Nmrwatll St Paul (7·
0) 8.7428. 5 . Tiffin Calvert (5·2J 8 .5214. e.
Gibsonburg (1·1) 8.1285. 7. Eu1 Canton
(5·2) 1 .3571 . 8. Monr~lle (s-2) 5.11071 .
9. Gr-wicll S . cerrtrol (5·2) 5.4157. 10.
Lo•etlvilte {6·11 5 .4582.
Aegton 22-1 . Delphos St. Jonn' a .{7.0)
13.3725 . 2. Me Comb (7·0) 8 .8000" 3 .
Carey (1·1) 9. HS42 . 4 . Arlington (1·1)
8.5828 . 5. Oef. AyOJivillo (5·2) 8.4421. I.
Columbus Growe (8·1) 1 .2714. 7. Antwlq)
(8·1) 7 .1500. 8 . Pandora-Gilboa C5•2)

i .3382 . I.

Meip County's

5.7214. 9. New Bremen (3"") 5.0142. 10.

·

October 12, 2000

Bloomdok ElmWOOd (s-2) 7 ..011 . 10 .
Oolpllot Joflorooo (8·11 7.7'J57.
Aogoon 1..,_1 . ~ (8·11
131711 2. H1Miock --(7..o) 11.M.a7.

(7-0) 13.1071. 2 . Covington (7.0) 11 .5357.
3. Ansonia (G-1) 9.9142. 4 . Cedarwille (8·1)
1il .9071 . 5. Cin. Summit COuntry Day (8·1)
9.2547. 6. Anna (5·21 7.6500. 7. Tipp City
Selhel CS-2} e.2428. 8. Williamlburg (4·3)

Region 12-1. Portamoulh (7.0)
17.4111. 2. Day. Chaminade-Jullenne '(B·
1) 16 .3500. 3. J•ckson (7...0) 12..011 . "' ·
C1n. Purcell Marian (5-2) 11.8361 . 5.
Eaton (5·2) 11 .5214. S. Spring . Shawnee

thursday·

Meigs society news and notes, ·AS
Eastern,.Miller in TVC showdown, Bl

Ftf#WJ

Hl&amp;h: 70s: Low: 40il

_,

.. . . ..

'

-

�/

Thursday, October 12, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•: • Page A 2 • The O.lly S.ntlnel

-

Thursday, October 12,2000

Justice poses with toy

BEXLEY (AP) -A husband and wife were
found dead in their swimming pool Wednesday,leavmg behind twO brief notes asking rdatives to take care of their five childrep, police
said.
The children, ages 3 to 10, were asleep in
the fanuly's two-story house in this Columbus
suburb.
D etective Bob Cull said investigators suspect that Billy D. Matthews, 42, hit Kelly
Matthews, 41 , in the head, held her under
water and then drowned himself. He was
found in the deep end of the pool with cinder blocks taped to his feet and legs.
Cull said the preliminary . conclusions are

COLUMBUS (AP) Ohw Supreme Court employees
sneaked up to the third floor of the Rhodes Tower to get a peek
at Justice Alice Robie Resnick standing in her judicial robe brandishmg a Star Wars light saber.
Resnick was posing Wtth the roy on Tuesday for a photo crew
from George magazine, which she said is preparing a story on her
re-election bid for its December issue.
" I wouldn't do it if ll were conung out before the election," she
said.
Resmck, a Toledo Democrat. IS being c hallenged by Republican appellate Judge Terrence O'Donne ll of Cleveland."
Repubhcan state Chairman R obe rt Be nnett has launched what
he calls the DARTH campa~gn- for Defeat Alice Resni c k 's Tax
Hike. The slogan assumes that a 4-3 decision o n school fundmg
that R esnic k supported w1ll lead to a big tax increase.
R esnic k said an editorial cartoon m The (Cleveland) Plain
Dcaln depicting her as Star Wars ,·illam Darth Vade r prompted
George to suggest the photo shoot.
"l\·e never s~t·n the m ovtL'. so l didn't know who Danh Vader
was.'' she sa id.
Bur R esmck nov.:d she W:\S nor pns111g J.S Danh Vlder but .l s the
tilms' hero, L.:uke Skywal kn.
lntngue-d cmployt.·es ~~~ rhc: coun ·._ ofllccs gathered ro sec chc
performance.

Woman's trust and kindness
seen as factors in murder
AKRON (AP)
Family
members and friends believe a
woman's kind. tru sti~1g nature Jnd
,\ Ia( k of C:l ution may ha,·c contributed to her stabbing death .
Poli ce Capt. Elizabeth Daughert:y said Wednesday 'that investig.llors haven't determined what
ca used the attack early Saturday
on Rachdle Greenwood , 25.
The Akron Beaco n Journal
reported that Scott E. Henretty,
31, told mental health workers
that Greenwood was "too friendly" and that she had to " be eviL"
He is being held at the Summit
County jail on $1 million bond,
pending trial on a charge of
aggravated murder.

"There were pcoplc: bt.'Ing n~ry . :rc.aivc with rc.\sons to go
to thl' third floor:· ,.ud G11u K&lt;ll·hler. romn mll! C.HJDI'l"'
offic("r for th(' court.
upst~un

Demolition plan approved
AKRON (AP) Congre ss has approved Mayor Do n,a ld
Plusquelhc's S 1. 8 milho n plan to study the demolition of a threequa rter mil e sectio n of J highwa:wr here .
U.S. Rep. Tom Sawyer, D-Ohi o. said the transportati o n spending bill approved by Congress last ':eek should be signed by PresiJent Clinton shortly.
Plu sq udlic wants to np up the sccnon of the inne rbelt highway designated Ohm 59 and MJrtJn Luther King Jr. Free wJy.
Under the plan, the highway and its many overpasses would be
replaced with a slimmed-down boulevard while freeing up as
much as 27 acres of public land for development.
The highway is underused : It was designed to handle 110,000
, vehicles daily. but gets on)y about 22,000, mostly during rush
· .' ho ur.
It takes up neoded space, and the city must maintain and plow
t he highway, said Mark Williamso n, a spokesman for Plusquelhc.
So me of the older bndges along the route need to be replaced
~ a sigmfica nt cost for the state in th e next few years, Williamson
said. Th e innerbelt was bmlt between th e 1970s and 1987.
Plu squ ellic said the removal of a section of the 2-mile highway
·t.:on necting downtow n to Interstates 76 and 77 would eliminate
a barrier , between downtown and its west side neighborhoods .

Store clerk fatally shot
AKRON (AP) - A convenience store c;lerk was shot to death
during a robbery attempt Wednesday, police said. While making
his getaway. the gunman tried to shoot a woman but the pistol
misfired .
Police said they had no susrects 111 the kllling of Abdcl "Kenny"
Karim A(ta,
Atta . shot in the far&lt;, was prnnllunced dead ;tt
Akron Generol Me&lt;tleal Center.
After the •hooting in the store, the suspect pointed a gun ;tt a
wllman outside and demanded her car. She refmed and the man
pulled the mgger. bm th,• gun didn't fire. poJic,• said.
•
Tht: woman·~ .1. . yt&gt;.n-uld son and 3-ycar-old niece were in tht:
:-: back sea t .
:~ • Akron poli ce detecti ve S~t. Edward Moriarty said more than
one person may haY~ been involved in the robbt:ry, but no cle ar
: • ·. dt"scri ptions of the robbers hJd bt·en give-n to poll ee.
Th e Palestini,m i'i the city's se-co nd Arab- Ameri ca n store clerk

:13.

::!

killed 111 a robbery anl•mpt 111 th«.? last SIX months.
T.tleb Huse111. 49, d1ed .Ifter he was shot in the head April 17.
•
Michael R oper, 24, of Akron,. was charged with agg ra vate d
: . murder and aggrJ\·ated robbery fm the shooting. A ended w1th a
: . ' hung JU ry on FnJay.
'
Roper was ret urn ed t.n jail to await anoth e r trial.

based on the notes and on a mark thar was on
the side of Mrs. Matth~ws' head. She also had
a bruise on her shoulder.
Autopstes will be perfor~ted.
Billy Matthews had called hiS father-mlaw, Larry Metz, about 3 a.m. Wednesday to
ask that he come stay with the children while
Matthews took his wife to the hospital , Cull
said. He told Metz she was vomiting.
Cull said Matthews worked nights as
supervisor for the printing crew at The
Columbus Dispatch and had come home
early from work.
When Metz arrived, he found a note on
the kitchen floor.

Daugherty said she didn't
know ~1bout :my Suc h' co mm~nts
from Henretty. She said Hcnn-tty

has rt·fu sed ro comm&lt;::-nt co police.
Rob Coombs. one of Henrctry's two attorneys, t'ntered a plea
of innoce nt o n his bchalfTuesday
in MuniCipal Court. A telephone
message w» kft for Coombs on
Wednesday.
Police believe that Henretty, a
neighbor in Greenwodd's apartment building, knocked on her
door about 1 a.m. Saturday. She
apparently invited him in. Shortly
thereafter,
Creenwood
was
stabbed several times in the chest
with a kitch en knife.

Cull said the note read: "We, Bill and Kelly
Matthews, leave our possessmns and our children to Larry Metz. Please tdl the kids our
)ove is never ending." The note was signed,
"Bill Matthews."
A second note: Signed "KeUy and Bill,"
read: "We made too m;Jny mistak~s and don't
want to make any more. Pl ease take -:arc of

our children."
Metz identified the handwntmg on both
notes as Billy Matth ews'. CuU said he does not
think that Mrs. Matthews was involved in the
writing of the notes. "W hy would she do
something like that'" he asked .

Judge to n~le soon on Ralph
Nader's bid for party listing
COLUMBUS (AP) - A fed eral j udge promised to rule by
the end of the week on whether
presidenti al
hopeful
Ralph
Nader's n~me will appear on the
Nov. 7 Ohio ballot as the Green
Party cai1didatc.
Official&gt; in the secretary of
state 's ot!i~e had told U.S. District
Judge John Hol sc huh at a hearing TueS&lt;hy that it would be difficult to add the Green Party desigttation tp ballots after Friday.
Nader sued after Secretary of
State Kenneth Blackwell ordered
that .he and Green .Party running
mate Winona LaDuke be listed
on the ballot as independents,
with no party designation.

Nader and La I )uh· &gt;Upportcrs
submitted· on!~ · L' llo ug-h \ign.l tures- 8,950 - to qu.litt)" t!H.' Ill

as independent l",lllC.hd,H("S , ::..nJ
state As~ is ram ' AU&lt;lrJ ll'\' ( ;L'IlL'r.ll
Arthur J M.&gt;rmlc Jr
Far more ~ign:~tt m. ·~ ~ JJ,J-+2
or 1 percent of thL· nHl'' (.l~t 111
the 1998 guban.lHl ri.d ('\l'ttiDn
- were necessary ro h .l\'L' &lt;.:Jmhdates ' names ou rh ~ b.1llot with J
part)': affiliation , Marziak sai d.
Unlike th e Green Party, both
the Natural Law Porcy .md the
Libertari Jn Parry !lubm ittt.·d
enough signatu res lo h;l\'c lhc.:-ir
presidential candida tes ,l ppL'ar on
Ohio baUots with port)' aflili.ltions , Marz1ak S..1H.l

EMS runs
LOis Louise Hams
POMEROY - l o is Louise Harris, 78, P.omeroy, died Wednesday, O c t .
11, 2000 m Holzer Medi cal Center, after a short illness .
She was th e daughter of the late W.U..am R. Sr. and Eliza Marie Sayre
'
Hayman, and was a ho memaker.
She was a member of the Pom eroy Order of Eastern Star.
She is survived by her husband, George L H arris Sr.; two sons and
daughters-m- law, Georb'&lt; l. Jr., and C inda Harr is, and Thomas R. and
Sheila Harris, aU of Middleport; a brother and sister-in-law, William R'.
Jr., and L.U..an Hayman of Racine; two sisters and brothers-in-law, Mary
Ellen ,and W.U..am Lewis of Houston, Texa&lt;, and Janice and John Simpson
of Pasadena, Texas; and five g randchildren and four great-grandchildren.
Services will be 1 p.m . Sunday in Ewing Funeral Home in Pomerov.
Officiating
be R ev. Craig Crossma n. Burial will be in Letart Falls
Cemete ry. Fnends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Saturday.

apparel indu stry are made.
A report from the group
rdeased Tuesday showed that
pregnant women were discrimiIuted against in Mexi co and
Thailand factories; laborers were
forced to work an average of I 0 1
hours of overtime a month in
China; and employees worked
with hazardous chemicals without gloves or masks in El Salvador. Minor violations occurred
in U.S. factories, including missing tax forms .
The investigation was "an
attempt to understand what was

golng on. The report gives us a agreem ents in 1999.Tlw univcrsi much dearer context of what ty also plat1s to work with l eon
we_'re talking about and what Sullivan, an anri-apartll L'id .Ktivisl
issues we need to address," said ·
.
.
·
f M ' h.
and human- n ghts clumpam, on
Larry R oot, c hairman
o
1c 1.
. .
.
ga n's recently form ed Standing . the Jssue begmmn g Ill November
Committee on Labor Standards wh en he visits the sc hoDI. Co nlisk
and Human Rights.
said.
The universities plan to se nd
Notre Dam e's task ti:ncc on
the report to all companies th at swe atshops has spe nt ye.m
make collegiate apparel and solicit ideas on the best ways to create addressing oppressive workmg
a long-term plan to improve conditions, and school represenworking conditions.
tati~cs routi1H::-ly wur f.1 ctori cs.
Ohio State made about $3 oversees, sa id Dennis Moore,
million in royalties from licensing Notre Dame's spok,·snJan .

MIDDLEP ORT - Gen . Jam es V Harringcr of Colorado Springs.
Colo.. former commander- in-chit•f of rhc Norch Ameri can Aerospace
Defense Comma nd, died Mondav, O t t. 9, 20110.
Born in Middleport in 1925 , b~· w:1s thl' son of the b rc Lt\yrl'IKe :md
Violet Rickard H orti nger. He grc1duatcd from Middk port High Schon!
in 1943. and Jfter serving in the U.S. Army re ceived an appmntment to
West Pmnt, graduating from there in 1').J9.
Serving in World War II. the Korean W.1r anJVi~tnam , h~ acrru~d mon.·
than 5.000 flying hours and was tht.· recipient of numerous mihta ry
Jwards.
Gen. H artinger is survi,·ed by his wife, Mi ckey C hri stiJn Hartinger of
Colorado Springs: t\\·o sons. Jimmer Hortinger of Florida .md Mike
Hartinger of Colorado Springs; a dau ghte r. Kristin Kelsall of Colorado
Sprmgs, and seven grandchildren.
Also surviving are three sisters and brothers-in-law. Vi olet and Ralph
Jordan of Columbus , Betty and Garland Lani er of Rio Grande, and Mary
Lu and Lionel Boggs of Middl eport; o brother and SISter- in-law, David
and Jan Ha rtinger of Apple Valley, Minn .: and seve ralmeccs and nephews.
He was also preceded in death by a half-brother, Lawrence D.
Hartinger: a half-sister, Martha I. Searls; lm first wife, Susan Allensworth
Hartinger: a half-niece. and a nephew.
Services will be 2 p.m . Sunday in Midd(cport C hurch of Christ. with
AI Hartson toflic iating .. Burial will be in Riverview Cemetery Friends
may call at the Fisher Funeral Home from 6-8 p.m . Saturday.
Memorial contributions can be made to the Middleport Church of
Christ, 437 Main St., Middleport, Ohio 45760.

•

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992-2156

News Departments

from Page A1 ·
of their homes and f..1milie~ m
case of a fi re:
• In stall smoke detectors o n
every level of your h o m~.: and test
them c:very month for effective- 1

Police Chief Jeffrey Miller, left, and Lt. Mark Proffitt, right, examine the
damage that resulted from two large boulders fall ing behind the old
Shamrock Motel, across from the Pomeroy·Mason Bridge, on Wednes·
day morning. The boulders hit an electrical pole that temporarily
knocked out power to several stores and residences in the Middle·
port·Pomeroy area. AEP crews arrived moments after the rock slide to
repair fallen electric lines. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Second Bush-Gore·debate
largely a polite affair
WINSTON-SALEM,
N.C.
(AP) - AI Gore and George W
Bush took turns diswssing America's role abroad, mixing argument
and agreement on foreign policy.
in :1 campaign deb&lt;lte that turned
confrontational when they got to
issues of capability and credibility.
Their second debate Wednesday
night in rheir neck-;~ nd-nec~ campaign produced no clear breakthrou ghs for either nonllnc e, with
one more round coming in St.
Lon is next Tu esday, exac tly three
weeks before one is elected pre sident.
They met this time at Wake Forest U nivc:r~ity, where for an hou r of
the 90- minutc debate the tone was
as subdued as the setting. Then
they got personaL
Gore admitted making f.1Ctual
errors, a line of attac k that Bush
and his allies have used to challenge the Democrat's credibility
an d one the Republica n s.1id voters
should judge.
Gore said he couldn't promise to
never get another detail wrong,

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Subscnbers not desiring to pay.the carri er may retnlt in advance d1rectto The Daily
Sentinel . Credit will be given camer each
week . No subscnplion by mail perm1tted In
areas where home earner service is available

Th e C hristm as parade will be
held at 2 p.m. and Santa Claus
will distribute treats afterwards .
Again this year, Toney Dingess
will be the parade chairman .
docking of the Nina at the levee Entrie s are needed and Dingess or
was noted, as was continuing Annie Chapman can be contactefforts to get the keystone arch ed for additional information.
George Wright reported that a
moved from Condor Street into
lighted
sign for use in announcdowntown Pomeroy.
Musser reported that negotia- ing spena) events in town has
tions are continuing with Rite been lo cated. He will check into
Aid to secure the corner lot at the the price and report back to the
intersection
of Main
and group.'
Meeting with the merchants
Sycamore. for the arch and a wall
was Betsy Herald Nicodemus, '
of personalized bricks.
The kickoff for the holidays · Democratic candidate for clerk of
will be held on the Sunday after courts. She spoke briefly on plans
Thanksgiving, with businesses to for making that office more
observe open houses from noon- accessible to the public should she
be elected.
S p.m.

$27 30

$53 82
$105 56

52 Weeks
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

Serta Ortho Aid II

I look forward to working with you to use government for its proper
purpose, to assist and support the economic,development ofthe
\
. private sector.

Twin Ea. pc.

AEP- 37'~..
AKzo - 44 ~~ ..
AmTech/SBC - 49',
Ashland Inc. - 33011,.
AT&amp;T- 25'•

Bank One - 33',
Bob Evans- 17"•e
BorgWarner- 34',8

Champion - 2 ~.,
Charming Shops - SJ •

$29 25

City Holdi ng - 6 '~
Federal Mogul - 3'a
F1rstar - 16 "··~

$56 56
$109 12

S1J

BE.sr

Full Ea. pc. ·

MATfiiE89."'

•

$139.00

Full Ea. pc.
Queen Set

Lands End - 19'2
Ltd - 22'·1

John lentes, who met with Smith
and the tru&gt;tces Wednesday about
the issue, said the department's
vehides are bemg properly inspe cted 'nd mallltained, .and that the
insurance company's con cern is
with the safety of firefighters and
not 1oembers of the co mmunity.
"The trustees and the fire ·
department are working together
to solve the problem,'' Smith said.
"In the me a ntinl&lt;.~, residents of
loll! 1111n. t~t~ ~ lhl Fill Dly F•llil kiHil
Olive Township need not be co nDoors OpnAt ~PM MIHI. tbl'll Jlrl.
cerne d about a la ck of fire protec~ ,~
e.
tio n. They have never been witho ut fire prote cuo n.''
The trustees act as the fiscal
agent for th e dep artm ent , an d
administer levy funds used to
fin ance the department and equipment. Fire trucks and other equip-

**

ment, ··WOrkers'

OVB- 26~.e
BBT - 27 "\"
Peoples- 13"·•
Premier - S'a

Rockwell - 32",s

Full Ea. pc.
Queen Set

44~.00 .

•

RD Shell Sears-

63''•

an•

compensauon

SPRING VAL LEY CINEMA
L

44 g• 4524

OlOR(&gt;Ult

l~~~r•,f

7

1.'61 j(ICI('",r) N P!KI

FAI10/6/00 · THURS 10/12/00
BOX OFfiCI WIU OPEN AT
6:30 PM FOR £VINING SHOWS
2:30PM FOR JlNEIS

•

OD

7:00 SUN·THURS

NURSE BETTY (A)
7:00 SUN·THURS

MEET THE PARENTS (PG13)
7:15 SUN·THURS

NUTTV PROFESSOR 2:
THE KLUMPS (PG13)

Wai-Mart - 45~ ~
Wendy's - 20J ..
Worthington - a•.

7:10 SUN·THURS

REMEMBER THE TITANS (PG)

FREE
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Shoney's -\

Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m . closing quotes of
th e previous day's trans·
actions.
provided
by
Advest of Gall1polis

.. ,,.• * *

Belle Mldler (Bette) worked
ala pineapP.Ie processing plant
in her native Hawaii before be coming the Divine Miss M:

Rocky Boots - 5'r.

Oak Hill Financial - 14'·2

35

$209.00
5

Gannett -52
Gener81 Electric ..:.... 56 111111
Harley Davidson - 46'~
Kmar1 - 6
Kroger - 2 1 '1•

a Perfect
Sleeper St, Regis

Serta Angelique

WE MI\KI! THE

Wonw's

from PlpA1

LOCAL STOCKS

Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks

Olive

7:1

Mail subsaiption
26 Weeks

only that he would try Bu t he said
that as president he would "work
my he art out to get the big things
right."
Thurs&lt;by, he and wife Tipper
we1·e headed to a Milwaukee rally
before rctu~ning hom(' to Washinb'lon. Bush and his wife Laura
were sc heduled to campaign in
Philadelphia and be mterviewed
on a cable TV show a~med at
women before heading to Mi chigan.
In stant public opmion polls by
AB C News, CBS News, NBC
News and CNN-USA Today gave
Bush higher m arks in Wednesday
night's debate.
Snap polls after their first debate
in Boston on Oct. 3 jaid Gore did
best. But in the days that followed,
it 'was Bush who gained in the
na tional polls and narrowed Gore's
edge into an even race .
Bush and Gore basically agreed
on U.S. policy in the Middle East
crisis, both demanding that Yasser
Arafat act to halt Palestim an violence against Israel.

accounts and other financ~al matters fall under the trustees'jurisdiction.
"The trustees and the fire
dep anmenr are work~ng on a
short-term and a long-term solution for the problem," Smith said,
'' but in the meamimc, we \V.111t
peopk' to fed safe ."

SCARY MOVIE'(R)

Rates outside Meigs County

galtri bune@eurekanetcom

Local government must limit Its regulation and Increase Its
cooperation.

•

Drills

from every room in the house ;
• If a fin: breaks out in your
hom e, get out as quickly as possible. Do not try and fight the fire
yourself;
• Teach c hildr~n how to use the'
tdcphonL' to rcporr a fire ;
• If you are 111 a room filling
with smoke, stay ncar the fl oor,
where air quality is better:
7 Once outside, proceed to a
dc signarcd mcering space with
your family. Do no t go back inside
for any rc'.lson.

from PageAl

(USPS 213-960)
.
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published every allernoon . Monday
through Friday, 111 Cour1 St, Pomeroy,
Ohio Second·class postage pa1d at
Pomeroy
Member; The Associated Press and the
Ohio Newspaper Association
Poatmaater: Send addless corrections to
The Daily Sentinel , 111 Court. St .
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Correction Polley

Extended forecast:
Sarurday... M ostly clear. Highs in
the mid 70s.
Sunday... Partly cloudy. A chance
for a shower at night. Lows 42 to
48 and highs 75 to 80.
Monday .. Partly
cloudy.
A
chance for ~ showe r during the
day. Lows 45 to 50 and highs near
70.

Sale

I pledge to help you achieve your goals; not Impede your progress
·
with needless Interference.

"''"

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plains VFW Auxiliary
will have a bake sale in front of
the furnitur e store, Saturday
beginning at 8:30 a.m .

• Run practice fire drills to
familiarize your family with the
safest and quickest routes to escape

The Daily Sentinel
'

Friday... Mostly sunny. Highs in
the mid 70s.
Friday night...Mostly clear. Lows
ranging from the upper 30s in outlying areas to the mid 40s along the
maJOr nvers.

Bake sale

11J7SS;

COLUMBIA, S.C.- Julie Clark Kelle r, 37, of Columbia, South
Carolina, died on Monday. October 9, 2000, after an L'xtended illness.
She was a veterinarian, and a graduate of West Virgmia University
and the University of Georgia School ofVeterinary ML·dicine.
She was the daughter ofDorwin Clark and LiJtda Brinker Meadows.
'Surviving are her hu sba nd, W illard "Bud" Keller, and her son, Benjamin Keller, both ·o f Columbia; her stepmoth er, Gloria Clark of New
Haven, We st Virginia, and stepfather, lymucl Meadows of Letart, West
Virginia; two sisters and brothers-in-law, Joni and Kevin Knight of
N ew Haven , and Jenni fer and Stew Wamsley of Leonardstmvn , Mary"
land; a stepsister, Celia Wright of Charleston, West V•rgnua ; her grandmother, Alice Bnnker of Letart; a s p~ c ial uncle, Ardath Brinker o f
Letart; four nieces, Whitney Knight, Caidyn Knight, Ellen Wamsley
and 'Liza Wamsley; her mother-in-law. Audrey Keller, and her sister-inlaw, Susan Keller, both of N orth Carolina; and her ste p-gr;mdmother,
Georg1.1 Meadows of Shady Spring, West Virginia.
Th e re will be no visiution. A priva[C fa nuly g rave side service will
be conducted. Memorial contnbutions ma,y be made to th e Epilepsy
Foundation , 4351 Garden Ci ty D rive. Landover, Maryl and 107RS. or to
the lo cal animal shelter.
Arrangeme nts were handled by New Ha ven Funer~1l H o me.

This adage is even more applicable to a County Commissioner .

Thank you for your consideration and support.

major rivers .

Julie Keller

Our main concern in all stories is to
be accurate . If you know of an error in
a story. call the newsroom at (740)

I

POMEROY - Meigs County
Right of Life, Monday, 7:30 p.m .
at the Pomeroy Library.

Conditions unchanged.
That sums up the tri-county
area's weather for the next few days
except it will get a little
warmer, the National Weather Service said.
·
.
Skies will be su nny again on Fri·
day .with highs around 75 . Lows
tonight will be 40-45.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:56
and sunrise on Friday at 7:41 a.m .
Weather forecast:
Tonight. .. Ciear and calm. Lows
rangi ng from the mid 30s 111 outlying areas . to arou nd 40 along the

Fallen boulders

Obituaries

Reader Services

l't:loetherwe can reduce the burden of governmental regulation.
9:30- 5:00 Dally

Right to Life

TUPPERS PLAINS ~ Th e
I :\th Jnnual arts and crafts fair,

'

My brother, Ralph Knight, when learning of my desire to be a
lawyer told me some words of wisdom that I have always lived by:
"When people come to a lawyer, they wantto be told how to do
whatthey wantto do - not be told thatthey cannot do it."

This strong partnership of business and labor already existing in
Meigs County requires strong leadership in local county
government to succeed.

CHESTER - Chester Board
of Trustees, Saturday, 8 a.m.
Chester town hall.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LANGSVILLE - Daniel· Ray Lewis, Langs,iille, diCd Wednesday, O ct.
11, 2000 in Holzer Medical Center.
Friends may call at the Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport on Friday.
Times of service and visitation, and complete arrangements, will be
announced by th e Fisher Funeral Home.

':II"' lnij:! I:\1 fill! f$1:!!1 IJ f;! :Ill :I

I am well aware of federal and state regulations which Impede or
limit our local businesses. We do not need to add to these with
endless local meetings and ra.lles. I pledge to use my abilities and
efforts as your County Commissioner to aid our local businesses
and labor unions to achieve thelrjolnt goals by exercising a
leadership role and limiting state and federal Interference in local
·
progress.

Trustees to meet

Crafters needed

•

We are blessed In Meigs County with Intelligent and inventive
business men and women. We are equally blessed with o skilled
labor force. This Is best accomplished by using the position of
County Commissioner to help the existing and developing
businesses to expand and employ local labor with no government
·
Interference.

•

Area weather will stay mild

Daniel Ray Lewis

I Nil a,@ [a IJ i'l i(I]# Im

•

CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:45 a.m., Ohio 7, assisted by
Tuppers Plains, Elizabeth Lyons ,
St. Joseph's Memorial Hospital ;
4:02 p.m., County Road 3,
assisted by Middleport, . motor
vehicle acc ident, Terri Little,
Holzer Medi cal Center;
7: 18 p.m., Lincoln Heights,
Sam Williams , treated. ·
RUTLAND
9:09 a.m., Meigs Mine 31,
C harles Althouse, Grant Hospital;
10:54 a.m., Southern Ohio
Coa l Co., Francis Tillius, O'Blencss Memorial Hospital.

Cien. James V. Hartinger

.

sponsored by Eastern High
School Band Boosters, will be
Saturday. Crafters interested in
showing items at the fair should
contact Pam Crow at 985-4339
lor more information. Handmade
craft items only will be accepted,
and no flea market Items.

POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs
Emergency
Services
answered five calls for assistance
on Wednesday. Units responded as
follows:

,v;u

Colleges say they won't pull licensing contracts because of report
COLUMBUS (AP) Colleges that found poor working
conditions in factOries that make
their school clothing ~nd memorabilia have no plans to pull
licensing contracts that bring
them mill io ns in royalties each
year.
Instead, they plan to work with
companies to improve sweatshop
environments, while learning
about the issue that over the past
two years has 5parked student
protest marches, sit-1ns and
hunger strikes on campuses
nationwide.
"Canceling all om contracts
and walking away will not end
the bs than stellar records of
some of these companies regarding how they treat the workers,"
Elizabeth Conlisk, Ohio State's
spokeswoman, said Wednesday.
"We have found that we can be
more effective by working within
the system, then working ,outside
ofit."
·
Ohio State, Harvard University. the UniverSity of Notre Dame,
the University of California and
the University of Mi chig;m make
up the Indep.endent University
lnitiarive. [t commissio nc:d a ye:-~r­
long investigati o n in South
Am eri ca, Asia and the United
States facto ries where produ cts
for the S2.5 billion colleg ia te

VALLEY WEATHER

LOCAL BRIEFS

Bodies found in swimming pool in murder-suicide

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Of OLD BEDDING

7:00 SUN· Tl'IURS

ALMOST FAMOUS (R)
7:00 SUN·THURS

IIIMMBBI Til TITANS fiG1

7:15, 9:50

(llnma) !Mel Waslirqilll,lilllald f!ISOO, Kip Palll.&lt;
Showing Friday at 7:00 l 9:40

*II-'• -

"""0{ ?k ?&lt;W•

tiiBAN uas: Ani Cut

1•1

1:2o 9:45

f8

7:30,9:45

jSiJspensollorrot/Thriller) J~ndo MQ!lllOil, Loella I:Wne
Showing Frida! at 7:25 &amp;9:55

BRING IT ON

"'"'

(ComWj) Ki!101 Dill~. Jesse lila~ord, Gabne~ UnKll

Til WITCIIII

1•1

G

7:40,9:55

(Tivillel) Ja~ Spader, Mansa T001o, EmP. Hlld!on

Nw Shows Starling Fritllly

. ~I
6:50 9:45
(Or1n1) :Icon~. Chrislao Sialer,Je~ Bnrl;&lt;s.Gary~

Til CONIIMIII
111.

n TilwrMN

"

6:50 9:45

~

9:45

(ConJettr!IOIIIne!} Po:liard Got.Hele&lt;l Hlllt. Fanah ~Mitt
LOST
~~
7;30 9:55
(Thrill~) WiloNfiyQJ llei1 Clla;&gt;n..llhn Hun, EliJs k~eas

m

�/

Thursday, October 12, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•: • Page A 2 • The O.lly S.ntlnel

-

Thursday, October 12,2000

Justice poses with toy

BEXLEY (AP) -A husband and wife were
found dead in their swimming pool Wednesday,leavmg behind twO brief notes asking rdatives to take care of their five childrep, police
said.
The children, ages 3 to 10, were asleep in
the fanuly's two-story house in this Columbus
suburb.
D etective Bob Cull said investigators suspect that Billy D. Matthews, 42, hit Kelly
Matthews, 41 , in the head, held her under
water and then drowned himself. He was
found in the deep end of the pool with cinder blocks taped to his feet and legs.
Cull said the preliminary . conclusions are

COLUMBUS (AP) Ohw Supreme Court employees
sneaked up to the third floor of the Rhodes Tower to get a peek
at Justice Alice Robie Resnick standing in her judicial robe brandishmg a Star Wars light saber.
Resnick was posing Wtth the roy on Tuesday for a photo crew
from George magazine, which she said is preparing a story on her
re-election bid for its December issue.
" I wouldn't do it if ll were conung out before the election," she
said.
Resmck, a Toledo Democrat. IS being c hallenged by Republican appellate Judge Terrence O'Donne ll of Cleveland."
Repubhcan state Chairman R obe rt Be nnett has launched what
he calls the DARTH campa~gn- for Defeat Alice Resni c k 's Tax
Hike. The slogan assumes that a 4-3 decision o n school fundmg
that R esnic k supported w1ll lead to a big tax increase.
R esnic k said an editorial cartoon m The (Cleveland) Plain
Dcaln depicting her as Star Wars ,·illam Darth Vade r prompted
George to suggest the photo shoot.
"l\·e never s~t·n the m ovtL'. so l didn't know who Danh Vader
was.'' she sa id.
Bur R esmck nov.:d she W:\S nor pns111g J.S Danh Vlder but .l s the
tilms' hero, L.:uke Skywal kn.
lntngue-d cmployt.·es ~~~ rhc: coun ·._ ofllccs gathered ro sec chc
performance.

Woman's trust and kindness
seen as factors in murder
AKRON (AP)
Family
members and friends believe a
woman's kind. tru sti~1g nature Jnd
,\ Ia( k of C:l ution may ha,·c contributed to her stabbing death .
Poli ce Capt. Elizabeth Daughert:y said Wednesday 'that investig.llors haven't determined what
ca used the attack early Saturday
on Rachdle Greenwood , 25.
The Akron Beaco n Journal
reported that Scott E. Henretty,
31, told mental health workers
that Greenwood was "too friendly" and that she had to " be eviL"
He is being held at the Summit
County jail on $1 million bond,
pending trial on a charge of
aggravated murder.

"There were pcoplc: bt.'Ing n~ry . :rc.aivc with rc.\sons to go
to thl' third floor:· ,.ud G11u K&lt;ll·hler. romn mll! C.HJDI'l"'
offic("r for th(' court.
upst~un

Demolition plan approved
AKRON (AP) Congre ss has approved Mayor Do n,a ld
Plusquelhc's S 1. 8 milho n plan to study the demolition of a threequa rter mil e sectio n of J highwa:wr here .
U.S. Rep. Tom Sawyer, D-Ohi o. said the transportati o n spending bill approved by Congress last ':eek should be signed by PresiJent Clinton shortly.
Plu sq udlic wants to np up the sccnon of the inne rbelt highway designated Ohm 59 and MJrtJn Luther King Jr. Free wJy.
Under the plan, the highway and its many overpasses would be
replaced with a slimmed-down boulevard while freeing up as
much as 27 acres of public land for development.
The highway is underused : It was designed to handle 110,000
, vehicles daily. but gets on)y about 22,000, mostly during rush
· .' ho ur.
It takes up neoded space, and the city must maintain and plow
t he highway, said Mark Williamso n, a spokesman for Plusquelhc.
So me of the older bndges along the route need to be replaced
~ a sigmfica nt cost for the state in th e next few years, Williamson
said. Th e innerbelt was bmlt between th e 1970s and 1987.
Plu squ ellic said the removal of a section of the 2-mile highway
·t.:on necting downtow n to Interstates 76 and 77 would eliminate
a barrier , between downtown and its west side neighborhoods .

Store clerk fatally shot
AKRON (AP) - A convenience store c;lerk was shot to death
during a robbery attempt Wednesday, police said. While making
his getaway. the gunman tried to shoot a woman but the pistol
misfired .
Police said they had no susrects 111 the kllling of Abdcl "Kenny"
Karim A(ta,
Atta . shot in the far&lt;, was prnnllunced dead ;tt
Akron Generol Me&lt;tleal Center.
After the •hooting in the store, the suspect pointed a gun ;tt a
wllman outside and demanded her car. She refmed and the man
pulled the mgger. bm th,• gun didn't fire. poJic,• said.
•
Tht: woman·~ .1. . yt&gt;.n-uld son and 3-ycar-old niece were in tht:
:-: back sea t .
:~ • Akron poli ce detecti ve S~t. Edward Moriarty said more than
one person may haY~ been involved in the robbt:ry, but no cle ar
: • ·. dt"scri ptions of the robbers hJd bt·en give-n to poll ee.
Th e Palestini,m i'i the city's se-co nd Arab- Ameri ca n store clerk

:13.

::!

killed 111 a robbery anl•mpt 111 th«.? last SIX months.
T.tleb Huse111. 49, d1ed .Ifter he was shot in the head April 17.
•
Michael R oper, 24, of Akron,. was charged with agg ra vate d
: . murder and aggrJ\·ated robbery fm the shooting. A ended w1th a
: . ' hung JU ry on FnJay.
'
Roper was ret urn ed t.n jail to await anoth e r trial.

based on the notes and on a mark thar was on
the side of Mrs. Matth~ws' head. She also had
a bruise on her shoulder.
Autopstes will be perfor~ted.
Billy Matthews had called hiS father-mlaw, Larry Metz, about 3 a.m. Wednesday to
ask that he come stay with the children while
Matthews took his wife to the hospital , Cull
said. He told Metz she was vomiting.
Cull said Matthews worked nights as
supervisor for the printing crew at The
Columbus Dispatch and had come home
early from work.
When Metz arrived, he found a note on
the kitchen floor.

Daugherty said she didn't
know ~1bout :my Suc h' co mm~nts
from Henretty. She said Hcnn-tty

has rt·fu sed ro comm&lt;::-nt co police.
Rob Coombs. one of Henrctry's two attorneys, t'ntered a plea
of innoce nt o n his bchalfTuesday
in MuniCipal Court. A telephone
message w» kft for Coombs on
Wednesday.
Police believe that Henretty, a
neighbor in Greenwodd's apartment building, knocked on her
door about 1 a.m. Saturday. She
apparently invited him in. Shortly
thereafter,
Creenwood
was
stabbed several times in the chest
with a kitch en knife.

Cull said the note read: "We, Bill and Kelly
Matthews, leave our possessmns and our children to Larry Metz. Please tdl the kids our
)ove is never ending." The note was signed,
"Bill Matthews."
A second note: Signed "KeUy and Bill,"
read: "We made too m;Jny mistak~s and don't
want to make any more. Pl ease take -:arc of

our children."
Metz identified the handwntmg on both
notes as Billy Matth ews'. CuU said he does not
think that Mrs. Matthews was involved in the
writing of the notes. "W hy would she do
something like that'" he asked .

Judge to n~le soon on Ralph
Nader's bid for party listing
COLUMBUS (AP) - A fed eral j udge promised to rule by
the end of the week on whether
presidenti al
hopeful
Ralph
Nader's n~me will appear on the
Nov. 7 Ohio ballot as the Green
Party cai1didatc.
Official&gt; in the secretary of
state 's ot!i~e had told U.S. District
Judge John Hol sc huh at a hearing TueS&lt;hy that it would be difficult to add the Green Party desigttation tp ballots after Friday.
Nader sued after Secretary of
State Kenneth Blackwell ordered
that .he and Green .Party running
mate Winona LaDuke be listed
on the ballot as independents,
with no party designation.

Nader and La I )uh· &gt;Upportcrs
submitted· on!~ · L' llo ug-h \ign.l tures- 8,950 - to qu.litt)" t!H.' Ill

as independent l",lllC.hd,H("S , ::..nJ
state As~ is ram ' AU&lt;lrJ ll'\' ( ;L'IlL'r.ll
Arthur J M.&gt;rmlc Jr
Far more ~ign:~tt m. ·~ ~ JJ,J-+2
or 1 percent of thL· nHl'' (.l~t 111
the 1998 guban.lHl ri.d ('\l'ttiDn
- were necessary ro h .l\'L' &lt;.:Jmhdates ' names ou rh ~ b.1llot with J
part)': affiliation , Marziak sai d.
Unlike th e Green Party, both
the Natural Law Porcy .md the
Libertari Jn Parry !lubm ittt.·d
enough signatu res lo h;l\'c lhc.:-ir
presidential candida tes ,l ppL'ar on
Ohio baUots with port)' aflili.ltions , Marz1ak S..1H.l

EMS runs
LOis Louise Hams
POMEROY - l o is Louise Harris, 78, P.omeroy, died Wednesday, O c t .
11, 2000 m Holzer Medi cal Center, after a short illness .
She was th e daughter of the late W.U..am R. Sr. and Eliza Marie Sayre
'
Hayman, and was a ho memaker.
She was a member of the Pom eroy Order of Eastern Star.
She is survived by her husband, George L H arris Sr.; two sons and
daughters-m- law, Georb'&lt; l. Jr., and C inda Harr is, and Thomas R. and
Sheila Harris, aU of Middleport; a brother and sister-in-law, William R'.
Jr., and L.U..an Hayman of Racine; two sisters and brothers-in-law, Mary
Ellen ,and W.U..am Lewis of Houston, Texa&lt;, and Janice and John Simpson
of Pasadena, Texas; and five g randchildren and four great-grandchildren.
Services will be 1 p.m . Sunday in Ewing Funeral Home in Pomerov.
Officiating
be R ev. Craig Crossma n. Burial will be in Letart Falls
Cemete ry. Fnends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Saturday.

apparel indu stry are made.
A report from the group
rdeased Tuesday showed that
pregnant women were discrimiIuted against in Mexi co and
Thailand factories; laborers were
forced to work an average of I 0 1
hours of overtime a month in
China; and employees worked
with hazardous chemicals without gloves or masks in El Salvador. Minor violations occurred
in U.S. factories, including missing tax forms .
The investigation was "an
attempt to understand what was

golng on. The report gives us a agreem ents in 1999.Tlw univcrsi much dearer context of what ty also plat1s to work with l eon
we_'re talking about and what Sullivan, an anri-apartll L'id .Ktivisl
issues we need to address," said ·
.
.
·
f M ' h.
and human- n ghts clumpam, on
Larry R oot, c hairman
o
1c 1.
. .
.
ga n's recently form ed Standing . the Jssue begmmn g Ill November
Committee on Labor Standards wh en he visits the sc hoDI. Co nlisk
and Human Rights.
said.
The universities plan to se nd
Notre Dam e's task ti:ncc on
the report to all companies th at swe atshops has spe nt ye.m
make collegiate apparel and solicit ideas on the best ways to create addressing oppressive workmg
a long-term plan to improve conditions, and school represenworking conditions.
tati~cs routi1H::-ly wur f.1 ctori cs.
Ohio State made about $3 oversees, sa id Dennis Moore,
million in royalties from licensing Notre Dame's spok,·snJan .

MIDDLEP ORT - Gen . Jam es V Harringcr of Colorado Springs.
Colo.. former commander- in-chit•f of rhc Norch Ameri can Aerospace
Defense Comma nd, died Mondav, O t t. 9, 20110.
Born in Middleport in 1925 , b~· w:1s thl' son of the b rc Lt\yrl'IKe :md
Violet Rickard H orti nger. He grc1duatcd from Middk port High Schon!
in 1943. and Jfter serving in the U.S. Army re ceived an appmntment to
West Pmnt, graduating from there in 1').J9.
Serving in World War II. the Korean W.1r anJVi~tnam , h~ acrru~d mon.·
than 5.000 flying hours and was tht.· recipient of numerous mihta ry
Jwards.
Gen. H artinger is survi,·ed by his wife, Mi ckey C hri stiJn Hartinger of
Colorado Springs: t\\·o sons. Jimmer Hortinger of Florida .md Mike
Hartinger of Colorado Springs; a dau ghte r. Kristin Kelsall of Colorado
Sprmgs, and seven grandchildren.
Also surviving are three sisters and brothers-in-law. Vi olet and Ralph
Jordan of Columbus , Betty and Garland Lani er of Rio Grande, and Mary
Lu and Lionel Boggs of Middl eport; o brother and SISter- in-law, David
and Jan Ha rtinger of Apple Valley, Minn .: and seve ralmeccs and nephews.
He was also preceded in death by a half-brother, Lawrence D.
Hartinger: a half-sister, Martha I. Searls; lm first wife, Susan Allensworth
Hartinger: a half-niece. and a nephew.
Services will be 2 p.m . Sunday in Midd(cport C hurch of Christ. with
AI Hartson toflic iating .. Burial will be in Riverview Cemetery Friends
may call at the Fisher Funeral Home from 6-8 p.m . Saturday.
Memorial contributions can be made to the Middleport Church of
Christ, 437 Main St., Middleport, Ohio 45760.

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992-2156

News Departments

from Page A1 ·
of their homes and f..1milie~ m
case of a fi re:
• In stall smoke detectors o n
every level of your h o m~.: and test
them c:very month for effective- 1

Police Chief Jeffrey Miller, left, and Lt. Mark Proffitt, right, examine the
damage that resulted from two large boulders fall ing behind the old
Shamrock Motel, across from the Pomeroy·Mason Bridge, on Wednes·
day morning. The boulders hit an electrical pole that temporarily
knocked out power to several stores and residences in the Middle·
port·Pomeroy area. AEP crews arrived moments after the rock slide to
repair fallen electric lines. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Second Bush-Gore·debate
largely a polite affair
WINSTON-SALEM,
N.C.
(AP) - AI Gore and George W
Bush took turns diswssing America's role abroad, mixing argument
and agreement on foreign policy.
in :1 campaign deb&lt;lte that turned
confrontational when they got to
issues of capability and credibility.
Their second debate Wednesday
night in rheir neck-;~ nd-nec~ campaign produced no clear breakthrou ghs for either nonllnc e, with
one more round coming in St.
Lon is next Tu esday, exac tly three
weeks before one is elected pre sident.
They met this time at Wake Forest U nivc:r~ity, where for an hou r of
the 90- minutc debate the tone was
as subdued as the setting. Then
they got personaL
Gore admitted making f.1Ctual
errors, a line of attac k that Bush
and his allies have used to challenge the Democrat's credibility
an d one the Republica n s.1id voters
should judge.
Gore said he couldn't promise to
never get another detail wrong,

Subscription rates

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Subscnbers not desiring to pay.the carri er may retnlt in advance d1rectto The Daily
Sentinel . Credit will be given camer each
week . No subscnplion by mail perm1tted In
areas where home earner service is available

Th e C hristm as parade will be
held at 2 p.m. and Santa Claus
will distribute treats afterwards .
Again this year, Toney Dingess
will be the parade chairman .
docking of the Nina at the levee Entrie s are needed and Dingess or
was noted, as was continuing Annie Chapman can be contactefforts to get the keystone arch ed for additional information.
George Wright reported that a
moved from Condor Street into
lighted
sign for use in announcdowntown Pomeroy.
Musser reported that negotia- ing spena) events in town has
tions are continuing with Rite been lo cated. He will check into
Aid to secure the corner lot at the the price and report back to the
intersection
of Main
and group.'
Meeting with the merchants
Sycamore. for the arch and a wall
was Betsy Herald Nicodemus, '
of personalized bricks.
The kickoff for the holidays · Democratic candidate for clerk of
will be held on the Sunday after courts. She spoke briefly on plans
Thanksgiving, with businesses to for making that office more
observe open houses from noon- accessible to the public should she
be elected.
S p.m.

$27 30

$53 82
$105 56

52 Weeks
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

Serta Ortho Aid II

I look forward to working with you to use government for its proper
purpose, to assist and support the economic,development ofthe
\
. private sector.

Twin Ea. pc.

AEP- 37'~..
AKzo - 44 ~~ ..
AmTech/SBC - 49',
Ashland Inc. - 33011,.
AT&amp;T- 25'•

Bank One - 33',
Bob Evans- 17"•e
BorgWarner- 34',8

Champion - 2 ~.,
Charming Shops - SJ •

$29 25

City Holdi ng - 6 '~
Federal Mogul - 3'a
F1rstar - 16 "··~

$56 56
$109 12

S1J

BE.sr

Full Ea. pc. ·

MATfiiE89."'

•

$139.00

Full Ea. pc.
Queen Set

Lands End - 19'2
Ltd - 22'·1

John lentes, who met with Smith
and the tru&gt;tces Wednesday about
the issue, said the department's
vehides are bemg properly inspe cted 'nd mallltained, .and that the
insurance company's con cern is
with the safety of firefighters and
not 1oembers of the co mmunity.
"The trustees and the fire ·
department are working together
to solve the problem,'' Smith said.
"In the me a ntinl&lt;.~, residents of
loll! 1111n. t~t~ ~ lhl Fill Dly F•llil kiHil
Olive Township need not be co nDoors OpnAt ~PM MIHI. tbl'll Jlrl.
cerne d about a la ck of fire protec~ ,~
e.
tio n. They have never been witho ut fire prote cuo n.''
The trustees act as the fiscal
agent for th e dep artm ent , an d
administer levy funds used to
fin ance the department and equipment. Fire trucks and other equip-

**

ment, ··WOrkers'

OVB- 26~.e
BBT - 27 "\"
Peoples- 13"·•
Premier - S'a

Rockwell - 32",s

Full Ea. pc.
Queen Set

44~.00 .

•

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63''•

an•

compensauon

SPRING VAL LEY CINEMA
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44 g• 4524

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BOX OFfiCI WIU OPEN AT
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2:30PM FOR JlNEIS

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Shoney's -\

Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m . closing quotes of
th e previous day's trans·
actions.
provided
by
Advest of Gall1polis

.. ,,.• * *

Belle Mldler (Bette) worked
ala pineapP.Ie processing plant
in her native Hawaii before be coming the Divine Miss M:

Rocky Boots - 5'r.

Oak Hill Financial - 14'·2

35

$209.00
5

Gannett -52
Gener81 Electric ..:.... 56 111111
Harley Davidson - 46'~
Kmar1 - 6
Kroger - 2 1 '1•

a Perfect
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WE MI\KI! THE

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from PlpA1

LOCAL STOCKS

Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks

Olive

7:1

Mail subsaiption
26 Weeks

only that he would try Bu t he said
that as president he would "work
my he art out to get the big things
right."
Thurs&lt;by, he and wife Tipper
we1·e headed to a Milwaukee rally
before rctu~ning hom(' to Washinb'lon. Bush and his wife Laura
were sc heduled to campaign in
Philadelphia and be mterviewed
on a cable TV show a~med at
women before heading to Mi chigan.
In stant public opmion polls by
AB C News, CBS News, NBC
News and CNN-USA Today gave
Bush higher m arks in Wednesday
night's debate.
Snap polls after their first debate
in Boston on Oct. 3 jaid Gore did
best. But in the days that followed,
it 'was Bush who gained in the
na tional polls and narrowed Gore's
edge into an even race .
Bush and Gore basically agreed
on U.S. policy in the Middle East
crisis, both demanding that Yasser
Arafat act to halt Palestim an violence against Israel.

accounts and other financ~al matters fall under the trustees'jurisdiction.
"The trustees and the fire
dep anmenr are work~ng on a
short-term and a long-term solution for the problem," Smith said,
'' but in the meamimc, we \V.111t
peopk' to fed safe ."

SCARY MOVIE'(R)

Rates outside Meigs County

galtri bune@eurekanetcom

Local government must limit Its regulation and Increase Its
cooperation.

•

Drills

from every room in the house ;
• If a fin: breaks out in your
hom e, get out as quickly as possible. Do not try and fight the fire
yourself;
• Teach c hildr~n how to use the'
tdcphonL' to rcporr a fire ;
• If you are 111 a room filling
with smoke, stay ncar the fl oor,
where air quality is better:
7 Once outside, proceed to a
dc signarcd mcering space with
your family. Do no t go back inside
for any rc'.lson.

from PageAl

(USPS 213-960)
.
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published every allernoon . Monday
through Friday, 111 Cour1 St, Pomeroy,
Ohio Second·class postage pa1d at
Pomeroy
Member; The Associated Press and the
Ohio Newspaper Association
Poatmaater: Send addless corrections to
The Daily Sentinel , 111 Court. St .
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Correction Polley

Extended forecast:
Sarurday... M ostly clear. Highs in
the mid 70s.
Sunday... Partly cloudy. A chance
for a shower at night. Lows 42 to
48 and highs 75 to 80.
Monday .. Partly
cloudy.
A
chance for ~ showe r during the
day. Lows 45 to 50 and highs near
70.

Sale

I pledge to help you achieve your goals; not Impede your progress
·
with needless Interference.

"''"

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plains VFW Auxiliary
will have a bake sale in front of
the furnitur e store, Saturday
beginning at 8:30 a.m .

• Run practice fire drills to
familiarize your family with the
safest and quickest routes to escape

The Daily Sentinel
'

Friday... Mostly sunny. Highs in
the mid 70s.
Friday night...Mostly clear. Lows
ranging from the upper 30s in outlying areas to the mid 40s along the
maJOr nvers.

Bake sale

11J7SS;

COLUMBIA, S.C.- Julie Clark Kelle r, 37, of Columbia, South
Carolina, died on Monday. October 9, 2000, after an L'xtended illness.
She was a veterinarian, and a graduate of West Virgmia University
and the University of Georgia School ofVeterinary ML·dicine.
She was the daughter ofDorwin Clark and LiJtda Brinker Meadows.
'Surviving are her hu sba nd, W illard "Bud" Keller, and her son, Benjamin Keller, both ·o f Columbia; her stepmoth er, Gloria Clark of New
Haven, We st Virginia, and stepfather, lymucl Meadows of Letart, West
Virginia; two sisters and brothers-in-law, Joni and Kevin Knight of
N ew Haven , and Jenni fer and Stew Wamsley of Leonardstmvn , Mary"
land; a stepsister, Celia Wright of Charleston, West V•rgnua ; her grandmother, Alice Bnnker of Letart; a s p~ c ial uncle, Ardath Brinker o f
Letart; four nieces, Whitney Knight, Caidyn Knight, Ellen Wamsley
and 'Liza Wamsley; her mother-in-law. Audrey Keller, and her sister-inlaw, Susan Keller, both of N orth Carolina; and her ste p-gr;mdmother,
Georg1.1 Meadows of Shady Spring, West Virginia.
Th e re will be no visiution. A priva[C fa nuly g rave side service will
be conducted. Memorial contnbutions ma,y be made to th e Epilepsy
Foundation , 4351 Garden Ci ty D rive. Landover, Maryl and 107RS. or to
the lo cal animal shelter.
Arrangeme nts were handled by New Ha ven Funer~1l H o me.

This adage is even more applicable to a County Commissioner .

Thank you for your consideration and support.

major rivers .

Julie Keller

Our main concern in all stories is to
be accurate . If you know of an error in
a story. call the newsroom at (740)

I

POMEROY - Meigs County
Right of Life, Monday, 7:30 p.m .
at the Pomeroy Library.

Conditions unchanged.
That sums up the tri-county
area's weather for the next few days
except it will get a little
warmer, the National Weather Service said.
·
.
Skies will be su nny again on Fri·
day .with highs around 75 . Lows
tonight will be 40-45.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:56
and sunrise on Friday at 7:41 a.m .
Weather forecast:
Tonight. .. Ciear and calm. Lows
rangi ng from the mid 30s 111 outlying areas . to arou nd 40 along the

Fallen boulders

Obituaries

Reader Services

l't:loetherwe can reduce the burden of governmental regulation.
9:30- 5:00 Dally

Right to Life

TUPPERS PLAINS ~ Th e
I :\th Jnnual arts and crafts fair,

'

My brother, Ralph Knight, when learning of my desire to be a
lawyer told me some words of wisdom that I have always lived by:
"When people come to a lawyer, they wantto be told how to do
whatthey wantto do - not be told thatthey cannot do it."

This strong partnership of business and labor already existing in
Meigs County requires strong leadership in local county
government to succeed.

CHESTER - Chester Board
of Trustees, Saturday, 8 a.m.
Chester town hall.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LANGSVILLE - Daniel· Ray Lewis, Langs,iille, diCd Wednesday, O ct.
11, 2000 in Holzer Medical Center.
Friends may call at the Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport on Friday.
Times of service and visitation, and complete arrangements, will be
announced by th e Fisher Funeral Home.

':II"' lnij:! I:\1 fill! f$1:!!1 IJ f;! :Ill :I

I am well aware of federal and state regulations which Impede or
limit our local businesses. We do not need to add to these with
endless local meetings and ra.lles. I pledge to use my abilities and
efforts as your County Commissioner to aid our local businesses
and labor unions to achieve thelrjolnt goals by exercising a
leadership role and limiting state and federal Interference in local
·
progress.

Trustees to meet

Crafters needed

•

We are blessed In Meigs County with Intelligent and inventive
business men and women. We are equally blessed with o skilled
labor force. This Is best accomplished by using the position of
County Commissioner to help the existing and developing
businesses to expand and employ local labor with no government
·
Interference.

•

Area weather will stay mild

Daniel Ray Lewis

I Nil a,@ [a IJ i'l i(I]# Im

•

CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:45 a.m., Ohio 7, assisted by
Tuppers Plains, Elizabeth Lyons ,
St. Joseph's Memorial Hospital ;
4:02 p.m., County Road 3,
assisted by Middleport, . motor
vehicle acc ident, Terri Little,
Holzer Medi cal Center;
7: 18 p.m., Lincoln Heights,
Sam Williams , treated. ·
RUTLAND
9:09 a.m., Meigs Mine 31,
C harles Althouse, Grant Hospital;
10:54 a.m., Southern Ohio
Coa l Co., Francis Tillius, O'Blencss Memorial Hospital.

Cien. James V. Hartinger

.

sponsored by Eastern High
School Band Boosters, will be
Saturday. Crafters interested in
showing items at the fair should
contact Pam Crow at 985-4339
lor more information. Handmade
craft items only will be accepted,
and no flea market Items.

POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs
Emergency
Services
answered five calls for assistance
on Wednesday. Units responded as
follows:

,v;u

Colleges say they won't pull licensing contracts because of report
COLUMBUS (AP) Colleges that found poor working
conditions in factOries that make
their school clothing ~nd memorabilia have no plans to pull
licensing contracts that bring
them mill io ns in royalties each
year.
Instead, they plan to work with
companies to improve sweatshop
environments, while learning
about the issue that over the past
two years has 5parked student
protest marches, sit-1ns and
hunger strikes on campuses
nationwide.
"Canceling all om contracts
and walking away will not end
the bs than stellar records of
some of these companies regarding how they treat the workers,"
Elizabeth Conlisk, Ohio State's
spokeswoman, said Wednesday.
"We have found that we can be
more effective by working within
the system, then working ,outside
ofit."
·
Ohio State, Harvard University. the UniverSity of Notre Dame,
the University of California and
the University of Mi chig;m make
up the Indep.endent University
lnitiarive. [t commissio nc:d a ye:-~r­
long investigati o n in South
Am eri ca, Asia and the United
States facto ries where produ cts
for the S2.5 billion colleg ia te

VALLEY WEATHER

LOCAL BRIEFS

Bodies found in swimming pool in murder-suicide

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Of OLD BEDDING

7:00 SUN· Tl'IURS

ALMOST FAMOUS (R)
7:00 SUN·THURS

IIIMMBBI Til TITANS fiG1

7:15, 9:50

(llnma) !Mel Waslirqilll,lilllald f!ISOO, Kip Palll.&lt;
Showing Friday at 7:00 l 9:40

*II-'• -

"""0{ ?k ?&lt;W•

tiiBAN uas: Ani Cut

1•1

1:2o 9:45

f8

7:30,9:45

jSiJspensollorrot/Thriller) J~ndo MQ!lllOil, Loella I:Wne
Showing Frida! at 7:25 &amp;9:55

BRING IT ON

"'"'

(ComWj) Ki!101 Dill~. Jesse lila~ord, Gabne~ UnKll

Til WITCIIII

1•1

G

7:40,9:55

(Tivillel) Ja~ Spader, Mansa T001o, EmP. Hlld!on

Nw Shows Starling Fritllly

. ~I
6:50 9:45
(Or1n1) :Icon~. Chrislao Sialer,Je~ Bnrl;&lt;s.Gary~

Til CONIIMIII
111.

n TilwrMN

"

6:50 9:45

~

9:45

(ConJettr!IOIIIne!} Po:liard Got.Hele&lt;l Hlllt. Fanah ~Mitt
LOST
~~
7;30 9:55
(Thrill~) WiloNfiyQJ llei1 Clla;&gt;n..llhn Hun, EliJs k~eas

m

�ThundiiJ. October 12. 2000

Dear Ann Landers: Last year, I married
a wonderful man, and we combined our
two families. "Ralph" has a 14-year-old
daughter and a 16-year-old son from his
previous marriage. I have a 10-year-old
daughter.
We recently found out that Ralph's
16-year-old son has been touching my
daughter m an mappropriate manner. I
am so angry l cannot sec straight. Ralph
wants us to have family counseling to get
past thiS, but that's not enough. I want
the boy punished. I want him put in
prison for what he did ro 1hy litde girL
Thls is ruining my m a rriag~:. So far, I
have not reported the boy to the pqlice
for Ralph's sake. l know he 1S desperate
to keep his so n out of jail, bur l see no
o ther way to fix thi s. My health has
begun to fail, and I h.lVen't been able to
sle ep nights. I ct nnot cat, aud my hair is
SLlrtin g co fal l out. My daughtt'T seems to
be adjusting -- she sJys she is equally
guilty bt:C.lll~l' !! hl' p.lrtlciparcd willingly.
Thi!', m ,tkL'S lllL' e\'L'\1 .ltlgrier. What

'£stfl6llslid In uu
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.992·2156 ~ Fax: 992·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Lllrry Bpyer
Advertlalng Director

·r

October 12,2000

New integrated family is exp~riencing some problems

The Daily Sentinel

Charles W. Govey
Publlaher

Page AS

the Bend

The Uaily Sentinel

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

IAfl«rs 1o til• rdllw'- an wko,.,. TII«J sllm.Jd IH ku tluue 30tJ wonh. ..t.U llrl1n lilY s~!Jj.cl
Jirt~nlllltfl irteiiiM cttldtwst•M kkplttm« nM•IMr. No llrlrifrtul W.urs wiU
be ,.b/hh•d. Un.n sh011ld H in fOOd,._, twldnuillf i.mKI, 1tDl ,.rsoiMllrNs.
Tlu opiNions u,-.uH br tM roJM,.n INlow liN thfl ro11mtslll rJ/ du OltW Y.Jky fdlisltin1
Co.'s HiiMWd botm/, •m.&amp;tu oliN,...is, IIOlH.

w ftlilitlr uD •-.st N

OUR VIEW

Too hard?

Arm
Landers
ADVICE
should I do? -- Georgia Mom
Dear Mom: I am not sure exactly
what went on, but apparently there was
no sex involved, and the "inappropriate
touching" was slight. You are overreacting. I suggest you cool it before you traumatize your daughter, who seems to be
handling this much better than you. I
understand your anger, but your wish to
put the boy in prison is totally unrea~on­
able.
Fan1ity co unsel ing is :111 excellent ide:.,
and I rCcommend it. But beyond thJt.

you need to see a therapist about your an mversary has more meaning than any
failing health. Please ao so soon.
other. This . year, because it is his fifth
Dear Ann Landers: My husband and I anniversary, I want to have a s1nall gethave been married eight years, When I together with family and close friends
married him, I didn't realize he had such ' who know his history. Do you think this
a serious drug problem. He had been is appropriate?
Proud Wife 111
addicted to cocaine since he was a Downey, Calif. .
Dear Proud Wife: I know you are
teenager. We fell in love and married.
Two years later, l left him because of his thrilled with you r · husband's recovery
drug abuse, and he ended up living on and it is indeed a great victory, but ask
the streets. He then voluntarily entered a hill! if he wants a spotlight o n his recovrehabilitation program, and this month ery. The decision .should be his .
will mark his fifth year of being clean and
Dear Ann Landers: I am a 52-year-old
widow, and have recently started to date
sober.
l am extremely proud of my husband. a widower, age 56. Everyone says he
He has accomplished a great deal since bears a strong resemblance to my late
his rehab. He went back to sc hool and husband -- sanH~ hair color, samt' build,
le:1rned a trade . He hJS a good JOb now, simibr personality. My ·widower' fri~nd
and we were finally able to buy our first tells me I have many qualities in comhouse .We also have 1\VO beJUtiflil daugh - mon with his late wife, including physical appL'H;tnce.
ters.
Every yc;ar since my husband's sobriDo wt: like each othl'f because we arc
ety, I have bought a cake and candles, and remindl'd of our btl' spouses? We get
our little fonn ly has di sc reetly celebrated along wel l and enjoy each ocher's co manorher cleau yt'.Jr. In our family. rhis pany, but l don't want 1t to be for the

wrong reasons. Please reassure me. -Linda in California
Dear Linda: Don't overan.Jyze the
relationship, juSt enjoy it. Apparendy, you .
saw somethifig, in on~ another that was
appealing, and that is what made it click.
Leave it at that, and consider yourselves
blessed.
What can you give the person who
has everything' Ann Landers' booklet,
"Gems," is ideal for a niglnstand or Coffee table . "Gems" is a collection of Ann
Landers' most requested poems and
essays. Send a self-addressed, long, buSJ ~
nes~-si-Jc envelope and a chl'ck or mont:-y
order for S5 .25 (this includes postage and
handling) to: Gems, c/o Ann Landers.
PO Hox 11 S6~. Chicago. Ill. 601i 11 ~
0562. (ln Can4da. send $6 .25.) To lind
out more about Ann L:mdcrs and rea d
hl'.r past columm. \'i'llt the ( :r.:arors SynJtcart.:- ''"'-'b pJge ar W\\'W.crl'Jtor-..com .

"

Pnficiency testing needs repairs}
if not an overhaul
Dissatisfaction with Ohio's proficien cy testing is mounttng. A
forum featuring educators from several southern Ohio counties a
few weeks ago' voiced those sentiments.
Even Ohio's senior senator, Mike DeWine, said he has "mixed
feeling; " about proficien cy tests.
· So what can be done wahout giving th e appearance thr Buckeye
:St ate is "dumbing' down" the tests , and in effect, sending a message
J:h at they 're too difficult to pass' Or that students are ill~prepared to
.take them'
· Protests are being heard in Columb us, and earlier this year
p rompted several legislators, including State Sen. Mike Shoemaker,
:ro call for a moratonum on further testing until the bug; are worked
out.

· That didn't happen , and was probably too radical a step to take . It
"did, however, dramatize the frmt ration educators, .stUden ts and par.ents have with the cu rrent system.

· We are not educatoi-s or policymakers when it comes to how
3nstruction is given. However, the public has every right to questio n
what is in place and call for repairs, ~ven an overhaul, if needed.
: Speaking in Gallia County Monday, De Wine said he ·favors a
measuring system of school and student performance. He's right. If
-we are to measure up successfu lly against other states , a means uf
-gauging performance is needed.
: But when the current sys tem demands so much preparation and
:additional mstruction from stude nts and .teachers.. somerhing is
:wrong.
• The most commo n grievance heard is that getting ready for the
t&gt;roficiency .exams, which start on the fourth-grade level , takes so
)nuch time it detracts from everyday classroom learning.
That's wrong. Education is not abo ut gearing all efforts to pass
·tests every few year's . School is not supposed to be about building a
society of professional test-takers.
:rhe point is to provide our children with the knowledge to limericin in the world, as best as they can .
Schooling may have advanced beyond the three R s, but has not
b~en made so difficult that school districts struggling w ith limited
re1ources for a growing stu dent population can't cope with its
demands.
What is hard is that current proficiency testing has placed an addi ~
tiona! strain on our educators an'd students.
That's why it's time for the powers that be to re~examine the tes t~
mg.
Maintaining a standard for educational performance is vi tal, but
Ohio should heed calls for change. it 's poSSible that by not doing so,
th~re may be no performance left to measure.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thur&lt;day, Oct. 12,' the 286th day of 2000. There ar~ HO
days left in the year.
Today's Highlightin Hi story :
9n Oct. 12, 1492 (Old Style calendar; Oct. 2 1 New Style),
Christopher Columbus arrived with his expedition in the presentday Bahamas.
On this dare:
In 1870, Gen. Robert E. lee died in Lexington, Va., at age 63.
In 1915 , English nurse Edith Cavell was executed by the Germans
in occupied Belgium during World War I.
In .1933, bank robber John Dillinger escaped from a jail in Allen
County, Ohio, with the help of his gang. who killed the sheriff.
In 1942, during World War II, President Franklin Roosevelt deliver~d one of his so-called "fireside chats" in which he recommended
the drafting of 18~ and 19-year-old men.
In 1942, Attorney General Francis Biddle announced that Italian
nationals in the United States would no longer be considered 'e nemy
ahens.
In 1960, Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev disrupted a oU.N.
G~neral Asse.vbly session by pounding his desk with a shoe during
a dispute.
In 196{ the Soviet Union launched a Voskhod space capsu le with
.t three-man crew on the first manned mission involving mor~ than

one crew member.
ln 1968, the summer Games of the 19th Olympiad officially
opened in Mexico City.
In 1973, President Nixon nominated House minority leader Ger~
aid R. Ford . of Michigan to succeed Spiro T Agnew as vice president.
In 1997, singer John Denver was killed in the crash of his privately built aircraft in Monterey Bay, Cal! f.; he was 53.
Ten years ago: The U.N . Security Counci l voted unammously to
condemn israel's security forces for killing 17 Palestinian demonstrators on the Temple Mount. The Cincinnati Reds won the
National League pennant, defeating the Pittsburgh Pirates, 2-1.
Five years ago: After a 4R- hour delay, the U.S. ~ brokcred cease-fire
in llosm:-~-Hcrzegovtn.l wt'nt into etTe::ct.

011(' year ago: Paki~t.m\ rtnlirary uv~rthrcw th~· Jemncr.nit ,1 ll y
elected government of jlnme Minister Nawaz Sharif. Ahmed H
Zcwail of the California lnsmure of Technology won the Nobel
Prize for chemistry: Dutch 1cientisrs Gerard us 't · Hooft and M.Irnnm JG. Veltman won the Nobel Prize for physics.

c:

Syracuse Asbury UMW holds program

.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW
.

Debates leave lots of questions in the .wake
The two vice presidential candidates proved
in their debate that they' are qualified to be
president. That's good. But they fai led to do
what vtcc presidential candiJates are suppos~d
to do: skewer the oppoSition.
Texas Gov. Geo rge W l:lmh and his ai des
believe that V1 ce Presiden t Al Gore ca n't be
truste d to tell the truth . GOP vice presid en ~
tiaJ nominee Di ck C heney · h tlS s :~id as much
on the campaign trail, but he \Vt'llt '\ile-nt on
th e poin t in Thursday\ debate.
Similarly, the Gore campaign thinks that
under Bush the environment and public
health in Texas have dt·terior:Jtcd, but the

Democ ratic veep candiJ,1tt', Sl."'n. j Ot' Lieberman (C:on n.). didn't t6uch that issue'.
The two veep candidate.;; t"ist·ntiall;.· repeated the argumcnts and countcr:lrgumt•nts that

the presidemi~1l cam paigns have been making
on the issues over the past weeks, but they
utterly lacked the combative spirit that the
pn:sidcntial cand id ate~ s h ow~.:.·d in rh c1r face-

otT.
Citizens v1rwing the dr::batcs m ust have the
impression that all four candiJat es an: presidential, but my guess is that they ;Ire mightily
confused about who's right o n any number of
ISSUC5.

Now it 's up to PBS' Jim Lehrer in future
debates to get the candidates to clear up the
differences and also to get them to say what
they really think about each other.
In the first presidential debate, Lehrer did
ask Gore abo ut his statemt·nt th at Uush lacks
the experience to be pn:sident. Gore denied
he made ~uch a statement, bm sub~equent
fact-checking has establi shed that he did.
Le hrer should ask him ,\bou t that.
He also should ask Gore about his various
other misstatements- tall ied up by H.ichard
Berke in The New York Tun es on Friday rhat he VIS ited fire disaster sites in Texas in
19Y8, that schoolchildren lack desk s in Sara~
sota, Fla., and th at he "took a risk" by talking
ro Russian leaders about Kosuvo when the
talks were scheduled by others.
llesides his Texas record , Bush sho uld be
forceJ to defend his math. He m·aintains that
he'd devote just a quarter of anti cipated bud~

•lssert cd that the N;ltional A~sc"isnH:m of Edll c.Hion Prot;re\~ showed thJt U.S. rcadmg and
math \Cores h.KI unproved dunng the Cltnron

yc.tr-..

Yet tl!.lt is not what actii.II NAEI' numbers

Morton
Kondracke
NEA COLUMNIST

-.uggl'\t. ~~on.~ ur le\s, JS th l' lhl'~h l·~unp.ai gn
,h\lTt~. the \COI'l'\ hJ\'C b(..'l'll tl.lt Or h ,l\'l' f.1 lkn
-. li ~htly

ti.Jr thr.:.· p.l~t L'ighryc.u-,, ,\!hi U.S. -.cnrL'~
ITin.lin ,jg:nill c;mtlv lwlow rhn'c in 1 'tl'~T
indu..;tn.JIII'L'd COUIJtrles.
On ddi..·me pn:p.1n:dness. L'VL'l1 though it j,

not .1 rop C\.llh.'l'rn .of voter,, Cnrl· lll'l·d-. to lw
.l\h:d if 1t i~n ·r true .that 'PL'nding 1..kdined

during the L'&lt;lrly Clinton ye:~r' bd\xe H bq.!;.\11
gl't surplusr-: to t.1x cuts. but indc..:pl·mh:nt c.ll- nqng ag.lill 1111der pres"url' tl-Dnl rill' ltcpuh·
culations '&gt;how it\ morl' like one-thn·d. Tht·y ill'.\11 Cnng:n.:".
Bush needs to he asked .1hnut till' (;ore
.1lso demonstr,Jtc that his Social Security
reform s and spending programs would more .1 s~en ion s that the 'Democr.tt dlllH.:ip.ne-.'
~pen din g $1 (HI billion more on prq., ,trcdnl·~s
than me 'up the' mrplus.
Bush needs to be asked, particularly. about than hl' docs over the next lO year\, ~md th .lt
how hl''d m;lkc up the "tr:msition roo.;t" of hi11 Bmh i5 pl.1nn\ng to depri~re the \qVlCL'~ nfr'h e
Social ~ecunty plan - the $1 trdlinn the IJc:-. t round of prm Ul"l'lllt'nt upgr.tdL''·
Whether nr !Hll .1 ny \lll h qut•,tJnm wd l
guvernme11t would 11ot collect in LI.:"\L'" when
workers dre alluwnl to invt·~t thl'ir money i'll .1tll·ct the 1.ItT J' opt·n Lo 1kh.llL' I ,\,l \\el·k \.
tbe stock market.
poll~ p1m Jdl' .1 1 oJlt'u'&gt;ill~ ll .lriLTll I Ill' (:.diu~'
On ta.'&lt; c ut~. Core ha ~ been finced ro quit poll ..;hmvcd (;on· _iu111pmg to .111 ll - po111t
charging that Hll'.,h would hand !!lore m onl'y lt,•;lll. But c111 ABC New;,; poll ~hm\·t·d Bu'h
in tax cuts to thl' top I percent of taxp~lye r'&gt; ahead by 7 point~ .tt"rer tilt' week\ Li l' h tltl'~.
than he 'd ~pe nJ nn education and nrhn proThe R eutlT~ - NHC poll ~l lll\\l'd &lt;_;ore up hy
grams; but independent ana iY';;ts "elY th e very 5, \Yhik the Votl'r.cnlll Ba!tll'gmund ~uncy
h.1J Bush ,JilL'ad hy 2.
'
.
rich would get more than I (I tJillt'~ the tax
break tlut poor f(lmilie'l" would receive .
V.1rimt\ ell'nnr,J I vote cou!ll\ ;trl' ctho .tt
Gore, ml'a!ltim c, has been able to -.ucces~.­ o dd ~. dependin g on hem· r.tzor-clmc JVlich ifully declare that Bush is relying on a partisan gau ;111d Florida nre co ulltt.•t\.,
Senate l3uJget Comm itt ee staff analysis
What n:: m.tin s d ea r is tha t- .Jbout IO pncellt
demonstrating that he'd overspend th e antici - oftht' clector&lt;ltt' i~ undec idL· llTlll' ~rnup io.; (l:)
pated surplus.
pacem fcm.tll', 50. percent iiH..kp t' IHIL'Ill dlld
H owever, there are bther anaJy..,c::s th ;Jt . , how tends not to bl· col lege educated.
the s.a mc. Citizem Against Governn~ent Wa'ltt',
In fonl\ groupo.;, undl'cided" 'ay tlll'Y .ll'l'
a n o nparti s;~n though mod eratel y comerv&lt;l- wJitin~ for more di o;cm,.iuJt of dJL' 1smc'
tive group, calcul:~ tes Gore's spending at $2.2 before they ll1(lke up tln~ir lllindo.;. The
trillion over fi ve year' - $HOI I bi ll ion more deb,\tcr . . and their moderator ,!Jould g1vc rhi'
than the ant iCJpated surplus.
to them.
On education, an important issut&gt; to voters,
In the en d, "though. 111y gucs~ i~ tlut the
there is a real dit1crence of opinion between unde cideds ;1re \_\";liting for a defining m mnt'lH
the two campaigns over whether the past \ - .1 maj or rcvl'lation, a gaffe or&lt;~ triumph.
eight ye;us havt.· ber.:n a period of"re(ession''
or progress.
(Al1H'IIl11 Ka11drad~c · is cxt•wtil'c niiror n( Roll
In Thursday night's deb ate, Li eberman Call, tile tll'li'.'J!'lpcr o(. Capitlll Hill.)
·

SYRACUSE -A prog ram on prayer was given by Mary Lisle at
the rcc~nt meeting of the Syrac use Asbury United Methodist Women
at the church .
. She spoke on rbree different versions of the Lord's Prayer found in
Matthew and Luke and noted that prayer and worship go together as
found in Mark I, verse 36. Prayers from different pla ces were read and
merhber th en repeated the Lord 1s Prayer in unison .
Freda Wilson sang The Lord's Prayer, and Ruth Crouc h gave devonons usm,g scripture from Jo hn I.
A report was gtvcn on the rece nt meeting held at Grace Merhodist
Church by Hope Moore who noted that a five~star award and a silver
award had been presented to the local grou p. Others attending were
Mary lisle, Ruth Crouch, and M arie Houdashelt.
Hope M oore, pre,s ident, conducted the meeting opening it with a
reading. "Granny and the O ld Guys. " The purpose of the UMW was
given, along with a report by Jean Stou.t, secretary. T hirteen sick calls
were taken and a free will .offering was taken.
The birthday of Mrs. Lisle was observed with a cake made by Mrs.
Houclashelr being served. Others attend ing were Freda Wilson and
Elma Louks.

Stobart family holds reunion
RACINE -The fourth annual Stobart family reunion took place
recently at Star Mill Park in Racine with 40 fanuly members in attenda=
.
Descendants ofThomas and isabel (Weaver) Stobart from the local
area along w it h N ebraska, North Carolina, Missouri and Kentucky,
gathered at the park for th e reunion.
Following prayer by Joe Stobart, the group had a potluck dinner.
' They enjoyed family photos and stories that were on display and added
new information. Drawinb'S were held for prizos and mum arrangements swre giwn to John and Naomi Stobart and Ola Hysell as the
-eldest members nf the family 111 attendance. The fifth annual Stobart
t:11n ily reuni on will be held at the Star Mill Park tho fourth Satmday
1n Scptcmbo1·, 2001.
Attending were Christa Holtmekr. Plymo uth , Ncb.: Stacey Brandstetter, Chapel Hill, N.C; Susan arod, Kdli K~1hl. Shane Skaggs, Pierce
Citv. Mo. ; Fred, Kara and Kim Starr, Elkview,W.Va.:Joann and Ralph
5ta~r. C lu rleston, W Va.; Joe Kapraun, Windi Stein, Vienna, W.Va.;
Jolynn and Aaron Arch er. Lower Salem; Isabell e Couch, Jen nifer and
Joey Rou sh. Rawnswood,WVa.;James and Dorothy Cardwell, Fostoria; Ola Hysdl. Jani ce, Amanda an d David Fetty, Pomeroy; J oe Stobart,
Portland: James, C hanty, Kayla, Michael and Andrew Stoba,rt,
Cookillc. Shirley Roberts. Lexmgto n, Ky.; John and Naomi Stobart,
l:lewrly, J ody ,JIId Sheri C ummins, Margie Wolfe, Roberta Thaxton,
R;lcme; JV1ary GTace, La rry and Kim Cmvdcry, Long Bottom.

TREAT

'HARDBALL'

NEW YORK -Wa tching"WestWi ng" last
Wedn~sday night, it struck me what was
\Vrong \\lith the first l3u sh~Gbre debate of the
night before.
Watching the fictional TV ~ h ow, I was
struck with thf awe we ted for the office of
the presidency, this personal emblem of our
nationhood and the democratic v:~lue~ it
upholds.
Why did the first Core~ llu s h deb.rc fail lll
examine t:ach ca ndidate on how he views th is
~~lCred trust, how he \..'o tdd chome to honnr
it?

'

The questions Tuc,day night dealt with
issues of policy -:r pn:scription drug'l, t.lxt's,
education, Yugoslavia. Overlooked \\'.\\ the
11sue of the presidency itself.
Let me put a sharper point on thk Ncithl'r
the vice president nor the Tl'X.l ~ governor
were asked how they would guard thL· nation '-:
h1ghe&lt;t office, .md the White H&lt;&gt;u sc Itself.
from the scandalous ll11'Conduct of the sorecent past.
Before th1 s Clmp.ll!-fll 1' ovl'r. I would like [o
heJr th e two lll L' Il\ pre~cnptwn llll ri LH '-l'lhl OVl' 11\ ~H fL'I' of 1\Lltl'.
Bush\; fllllldlty l"i mmt JJ,turhnlg. A~ rhe
'
, ha!kijger. he 11 the c·.Imhd.Itc· best pmltioned ·

.

tn ron dc111n wh ;u'~ j!lllh' wrong ll'ltkr ( .l1n -

·ton, th e freest r.o promise refo rm.
ment, did he talk lik e a paid political h.Kk, sayGiven the chance, he did neither. Asked if ,ing the m ,m whmc misconduct crt'atcd thL·
there werL' '' i s~uc..:s of durJctcr" at stake m· this mess, dt.•st-rvt=d J~u.:C space on Moum R.ush electic.m , Covernor Uush said. that he was "dts- mon:?
appointed" 111 hmv President Clinton and Viet;
(;nrc '&gt;hou ld be furcl'd to c ho n-.l'~ Either
President Gore C(.lllducrcd their "fund-r:~ismg d~..·fl'n d thi-; de-.n:r.nwn of tlll.' \N'lliJL· J ](JlJ '&gt;L' or
affairs.''
vow to (.'lld lt.
h that all he has to say abom the worst
I would pre!Cr. personallY. rh.1t lw d1d the
pclliti cal o.;c;~nJah -.ince Watt'rgate?
J.nn:r.
To rdi·e'h memories, I am rl'fl'rring: to th e
Better yt't, he· .\lid Bmh both ,!Joll !d he
Cl intn'n - ( ;nrc o.;c ht:nl t' of 1lJV5 - tJ(l to e\·adt• ·'"ked ro f(H,WL\Ir the fOllowing:
the federal campaign - \pt'ndmg limi ts hy
• No "tin .lllCl'-relatcd event&lt;; .. at the Wlmc
exploiting the White Ho me to r:1i~c tem of HomL' on thl'ir \ov,nch.
millions of dollar\ in "~oft lllOTit')'." l'm talking
• Nn ;,;kL•pnwr~ 111 the Lin coln lkdroo111 tnr
,1bout the scorn of"cotfee~" (;ore 'hwtt ed pe1
&lt; lllllnhutclr~.
sonally in the White House Jnd the Old Exec ,
• No fund-raio.;Ing' c.11l ~ t!-om rill' \X.' hitl'
utive OfHcl' Buildin~, th t' night- aftcr- nigllt lloml' by lht• pre'l(knt. the \'1Cl' prl'~ l dl·nt lll
usc of the Lincoln llcdroo111 .1s a M1otel (J fnr a11yonc.
milli on,l irl'-. randy to pay (ash for the Lache( of
• No "c.;.;u.il L'xploirmion of 'W'Illt1..· I lome
5keping on the bl·d of the GreJt [m;mcip.ltoJ. 'lt,l tli.:l\.
I am rdl·rring to tht· vice prc~idcnt's (OllIf tlll'y both .Jgret.· Lo thl'\l' 1 uk . . . \\'L' Allll..'r Juct dunng tho".: seven nJOnth-. in 199H. , il.lll~ will h,tvl' rl'.J'i"ft"-rtl'd , otn rwo- n·muric~ ­
when tlh,' pl\'\ldL'llt lin! to the: co untry :.hout nld rl'\l'fl'IH e tm\ ,Jrd the prl'\llknt\ holl~L'. !I
his rel.niom with .1 voung Wh1te ll ou'c l'ithn nr holh n·!'u'&gt;t', \\'L' \\d l k11ow \\lin \\l'
nncrn. Why. dur111~ th.1t long n.ttion.tl pllrg.t - lrl' dl· ..l1ng \\ 1th
rury, d1d (;ore nn! &lt;:on t!·onr Cl!llt~&gt;n ? \V}l\_
n.'lnJ.O: \/,wlrcil'', 11111) of rlrr" . . . /11 ild/1,/'(tl
OIJ Ct' the truth ut"dll' thargc-. Wt'l(.' nudl· 111,111
' "xti lllillt'l :-- r I ;/1,/11/.~/(11/ Hun ·, /11' I' /;,,,[ ,,! "} I did
lfl'"i t by tlw [)1\JA 01 1. 1\lunH.".!\ dn.·o.;~ . ~hd ht·
/, ,,//" ''" CXI!C.tlld .1/S.\'/H ,· ,,,/o/, ,/t.tlllld•. '1'/w
drc11 ch C linton in l'VCII higher pr.ll-.l'?
I 99lJ rd1!it111 ~~/ ''I fllrrll!rdl" II'!/ I JIJI/lll .' fl('d /Jj•
'filtrr·fl,tn/1 (' n,1,L,, 1
\X;'l1 y. on tlll' d.1y of the prnidl·nt\ illljll\lch

Cigarettes

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Gospel
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Sunday 10:00 'a.m. lo 4:00p .m.

E Main
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RACINE - Sout hern Hig h
School Athletic Boosters, 7 p.m
Thursday at the high schooL

FRIDAY
Widows
MIDDLEPORT
Fellowship, Friday noon, Middleport · Ch urch of ·c hrist.
Potluck dinner.

CAR PENTER Home~
com ntg,
Carpenter
Baptist
C hurch, State Route 143. Pau l
Elswick G:irclevill e, preaching,
10:30 a.m . Carry-in dinner,
noon; afternoon servict:', 2 p.m.

vice to nOn-profit groups
wishing to announce meetings and special events. The
calendar is not designed to
promote sales or fund raisers of any type. Items are

printed only as space per-

mits and cannot be guaranteed to be printed a specific number of days.
.,·'
··~ '

w ith singers, Builders Quarte t
and Cross C reek of Buffalo.
PO MEROY -. There wi ll
be a free lun ch prepared at
Grace Chu rch, Pomeroy, Sunday
with serving from noon ro 2
p .m. Grace Church if located
between the muni cip al building
and the o ld Porlleroy Junior
High Sc h ooL Everyone is welcome .

• MONDAY

SATURDAY

LONG BOTTOM- H ymn
POMERO Y
County
·
meeting
of
M
eigs
County
Garsing, Sa tu rday, 7 p.m. at th e Fai th
Full Gospel Church, Long Bot- den Clubs, Monday, 7 p.m. at
tom. Delivered to be fea tured.
the Meigs County Muse um,
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
POMEROY - Burlingham
Camp, Modern Woodmen oi
LETART- Letart Township
America, potlu ck 6 p.m. Satur- Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m. at the
day. Refreshments of hotdogs, o ffice building.
pizza, cider and donuts will be
served. Door prize s. Everyone
The Community Calendar
is published as a free, serwelcome.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,

NIKE· REEBOK· ASICS
EASTLAND· DEXTER· KEDS
HUSH PUPPIES· DOCKERS

.'

~~;;;;;;i;;M;;jii;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

MIDDLE PORT - Return
Jonathan . Meigs
C hapte rs,
Daughters of tlie Am er ican
Revo lu tio11, 12:30 p.m. lun -cheon. Rcst'rvanons to be
made with Abby Stratto n, 'J&lt;J2
6 I OJ.The Southe.Istern Distr.ict
director will be the spe.1ker.

SUNDAY

............
.. ,._

RACINE - M orn ing Star
United M ethodist Church,
homecoming. Sunday; worsh1p
at 10; Sunday school. 11 a m.
dinner at 12:30 p.m. aftern oon
song servtce.

-~~~~~II I

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Charles Riffle, . Ph .
Mon . thru Fn. 8 a.ro . to 9 p.ril. Sat. 8:00am- 6 pm .

PRESCRIPTION

THURSDAY
POMEROY Preceptor
Beta Beta C hapter, Beta Sigma
Phi So~or i ty, hom e of .Joan
Corder, Thursday, 9· a.m. Luncheon at the C heesecake Factory with shdpping at Easton
Ce nter, Columbus.

I

$1 ~~ck $1~~~ck
TimeK
Watches

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

YOU!
Cold

HiUal

Issue No. 1 is protection of the White House
BY CHRIS MATTHEWS

•

J

SOCIETY NEWS

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October 17th

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·'

�ThundiiJ. October 12. 2000

Dear Ann Landers: Last year, I married
a wonderful man, and we combined our
two families. "Ralph" has a 14-year-old
daughter and a 16-year-old son from his
previous marriage. I have a 10-year-old
daughter.
We recently found out that Ralph's
16-year-old son has been touching my
daughter m an mappropriate manner. I
am so angry l cannot sec straight. Ralph
wants us to have family counseling to get
past thiS, but that's not enough. I want
the boy punished. I want him put in
prison for what he did ro 1hy litde girL
Thls is ruining my m a rriag~:. So far, I
have not reported the boy to the pqlice
for Ralph's sake. l know he 1S desperate
to keep his so n out of jail, bur l see no
o ther way to fix thi s. My health has
begun to fail, and I h.lVen't been able to
sle ep nights. I ct nnot cat, aud my hair is
SLlrtin g co fal l out. My daughtt'T seems to
be adjusting -- she sJys she is equally
guilty bt:C.lll~l' !! hl' p.lrtlciparcd willingly.
Thi!', m ,tkL'S lllL' e\'L'\1 .ltlgrier. What

'£stfl6llslid In uu
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.992·2156 ~ Fax: 992·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Lllrry Bpyer
Advertlalng Director

·r

October 12,2000

New integrated family is exp~riencing some problems

The Daily Sentinel

Charles W. Govey
Publlaher

Page AS

the Bend

The Uaily Sentinel

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

IAfl«rs 1o til• rdllw'- an wko,.,. TII«J sllm.Jd IH ku tluue 30tJ wonh. ..t.U llrl1n lilY s~!Jj.cl
Jirt~nlllltfl irteiiiM cttldtwst•M kkplttm« nM•IMr. No llrlrifrtul W.urs wiU
be ,.b/hh•d. Un.n sh011ld H in fOOd,._, twldnuillf i.mKI, 1tDl ,.rsoiMllrNs.
Tlu opiNions u,-.uH br tM roJM,.n INlow liN thfl ro11mtslll rJ/ du OltW Y.Jky fdlisltin1
Co.'s HiiMWd botm/, •m.&amp;tu oliN,...is, IIOlH.

w ftlilitlr uD •-.st N

OUR VIEW

Too hard?

Arm
Landers
ADVICE
should I do? -- Georgia Mom
Dear Mom: I am not sure exactly
what went on, but apparently there was
no sex involved, and the "inappropriate
touching" was slight. You are overreacting. I suggest you cool it before you traumatize your daughter, who seems to be
handling this much better than you. I
understand your anger, but your wish to
put the boy in prison is totally unrea~on­
able.
Fan1ity co unsel ing is :111 excellent ide:.,
and I rCcommend it. But beyond thJt.

you need to see a therapist about your an mversary has more meaning than any
failing health. Please ao so soon.
other. This . year, because it is his fifth
Dear Ann Landers: My husband and I anniversary, I want to have a s1nall gethave been married eight years, When I together with family and close friends
married him, I didn't realize he had such ' who know his history. Do you think this
a serious drug problem. He had been is appropriate?
Proud Wife 111
addicted to cocaine since he was a Downey, Calif. .
Dear Proud Wife: I know you are
teenager. We fell in love and married.
Two years later, l left him because of his thrilled with you r · husband's recovery
drug abuse, and he ended up living on and it is indeed a great victory, but ask
the streets. He then voluntarily entered a hill! if he wants a spotlight o n his recovrehabilitation program, and this month ery. The decision .should be his .
will mark his fifth year of being clean and
Dear Ann Landers: I am a 52-year-old
widow, and have recently started to date
sober.
l am extremely proud of my husband. a widower, age 56. Everyone says he
He has accomplished a great deal since bears a strong resemblance to my late
his rehab. He went back to sc hool and husband -- sanH~ hair color, samt' build,
le:1rned a trade . He hJS a good JOb now, simibr personality. My ·widower' fri~nd
and we were finally able to buy our first tells me I have many qualities in comhouse .We also have 1\VO beJUtiflil daugh - mon with his late wife, including physical appL'H;tnce.
ters.
Every yc;ar since my husband's sobriDo wt: like each othl'f because we arc
ety, I have bought a cake and candles, and remindl'd of our btl' spouses? We get
our little fonn ly has di sc reetly celebrated along wel l and enjoy each ocher's co manorher cleau yt'.Jr. In our family. rhis pany, but l don't want 1t to be for the

wrong reasons. Please reassure me. -Linda in California
Dear Linda: Don't overan.Jyze the
relationship, juSt enjoy it. Apparendy, you .
saw somethifig, in on~ another that was
appealing, and that is what made it click.
Leave it at that, and consider yourselves
blessed.
What can you give the person who
has everything' Ann Landers' booklet,
"Gems," is ideal for a niglnstand or Coffee table . "Gems" is a collection of Ann
Landers' most requested poems and
essays. Send a self-addressed, long, buSJ ~
nes~-si-Jc envelope and a chl'ck or mont:-y
order for S5 .25 (this includes postage and
handling) to: Gems, c/o Ann Landers.
PO Hox 11 S6~. Chicago. Ill. 601i 11 ~
0562. (ln Can4da. send $6 .25.) To lind
out more about Ann L:mdcrs and rea d
hl'.r past columm. \'i'llt the ( :r.:arors SynJtcart.:- ''"'-'b pJge ar W\\'W.crl'Jtor-..com .

"

Pnficiency testing needs repairs}
if not an overhaul
Dissatisfaction with Ohio's proficien cy testing is mounttng. A
forum featuring educators from several southern Ohio counties a
few weeks ago' voiced those sentiments.
Even Ohio's senior senator, Mike DeWine, said he has "mixed
feeling; " about proficien cy tests.
· So what can be done wahout giving th e appearance thr Buckeye
:St ate is "dumbing' down" the tests , and in effect, sending a message
J:h at they 're too difficult to pass' Or that students are ill~prepared to
.take them'
· Protests are being heard in Columb us, and earlier this year
p rompted several legislators, including State Sen. Mike Shoemaker,
:ro call for a moratonum on further testing until the bug; are worked
out.

· That didn't happen , and was probably too radical a step to take . It
"did, however, dramatize the frmt ration educators, .stUden ts and par.ents have with the cu rrent system.

· We are not educatoi-s or policymakers when it comes to how
3nstruction is given. However, the public has every right to questio n
what is in place and call for repairs, ~ven an overhaul, if needed.
: Speaking in Gallia County Monday, De Wine said he ·favors a
measuring system of school and student performance. He's right. If
-we are to measure up successfu lly against other states , a means uf
-gauging performance is needed.
: But when the current sys tem demands so much preparation and
:additional mstruction from stude nts and .teachers.. somerhing is
:wrong.
• The most commo n grievance heard is that getting ready for the
t&gt;roficiency .exams, which start on the fourth-grade level , takes so
)nuch time it detracts from everyday classroom learning.
That's wrong. Education is not abo ut gearing all efforts to pass
·tests every few year's . School is not supposed to be about building a
society of professional test-takers.
:rhe point is to provide our children with the knowledge to limericin in the world, as best as they can .
Schooling may have advanced beyond the three R s, but has not
b~en made so difficult that school districts struggling w ith limited
re1ources for a growing stu dent population can't cope with its
demands.
What is hard is that current proficiency testing has placed an addi ~
tiona! strain on our educators an'd students.
That's why it's time for the powers that be to re~examine the tes t~
mg.
Maintaining a standard for educational performance is vi tal, but
Ohio should heed calls for change. it 's poSSible that by not doing so,
th~re may be no performance left to measure.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thur&lt;day, Oct. 12,' the 286th day of 2000. There ar~ HO
days left in the year.
Today's Highlightin Hi story :
9n Oct. 12, 1492 (Old Style calendar; Oct. 2 1 New Style),
Christopher Columbus arrived with his expedition in the presentday Bahamas.
On this dare:
In 1870, Gen. Robert E. lee died in Lexington, Va., at age 63.
In 1915 , English nurse Edith Cavell was executed by the Germans
in occupied Belgium during World War I.
In .1933, bank robber John Dillinger escaped from a jail in Allen
County, Ohio, with the help of his gang. who killed the sheriff.
In 1942, during World War II, President Franklin Roosevelt deliver~d one of his so-called "fireside chats" in which he recommended
the drafting of 18~ and 19-year-old men.
In 1942, Attorney General Francis Biddle announced that Italian
nationals in the United States would no longer be considered 'e nemy
ahens.
In 1960, Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev disrupted a oU.N.
G~neral Asse.vbly session by pounding his desk with a shoe during
a dispute.
In 196{ the Soviet Union launched a Voskhod space capsu le with
.t three-man crew on the first manned mission involving mor~ than

one crew member.
ln 1968, the summer Games of the 19th Olympiad officially
opened in Mexico City.
In 1973, President Nixon nominated House minority leader Ger~
aid R. Ford . of Michigan to succeed Spiro T Agnew as vice president.
In 1997, singer John Denver was killed in the crash of his privately built aircraft in Monterey Bay, Cal! f.; he was 53.
Ten years ago: The U.N . Security Counci l voted unammously to
condemn israel's security forces for killing 17 Palestinian demonstrators on the Temple Mount. The Cincinnati Reds won the
National League pennant, defeating the Pittsburgh Pirates, 2-1.
Five years ago: After a 4R- hour delay, the U.S. ~ brokcred cease-fire
in llosm:-~-Hcrzegovtn.l wt'nt into etTe::ct.

011(' year ago: Paki~t.m\ rtnlirary uv~rthrcw th~· Jemncr.nit ,1 ll y
elected government of jlnme Minister Nawaz Sharif. Ahmed H
Zcwail of the California lnsmure of Technology won the Nobel
Prize for chemistry: Dutch 1cientisrs Gerard us 't · Hooft and M.Irnnm JG. Veltman won the Nobel Prize for physics.

c:

Syracuse Asbury UMW holds program

.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW
.

Debates leave lots of questions in the .wake
The two vice presidential candidates proved
in their debate that they' are qualified to be
president. That's good. But they fai led to do
what vtcc presidential candiJates are suppos~d
to do: skewer the oppoSition.
Texas Gov. Geo rge W l:lmh and his ai des
believe that V1 ce Presiden t Al Gore ca n't be
truste d to tell the truth . GOP vice presid en ~
tiaJ nominee Di ck C heney · h tlS s :~id as much
on the campaign trail, but he \Vt'llt '\ile-nt on
th e poin t in Thursday\ debate.
Similarly, the Gore campaign thinks that
under Bush the environment and public
health in Texas have dt·terior:Jtcd, but the

Democ ratic veep candiJ,1tt', Sl."'n. j Ot' Lieberman (C:on n.). didn't t6uch that issue'.
The two veep candidate.;; t"ist·ntiall;.· repeated the argumcnts and countcr:lrgumt•nts that

the presidemi~1l cam paigns have been making
on the issues over the past weeks, but they
utterly lacked the combative spirit that the
pn:sidcntial cand id ate~ s h ow~.:.·d in rh c1r face-

otT.
Citizens v1rwing the dr::batcs m ust have the
impression that all four candiJat es an: presidential, but my guess is that they ;Ire mightily
confused about who's right o n any number of
ISSUC5.

Now it 's up to PBS' Jim Lehrer in future
debates to get the candidates to clear up the
differences and also to get them to say what
they really think about each other.
In the first presidential debate, Lehrer did
ask Gore abo ut his statemt·nt th at Uush lacks
the experience to be pn:sident. Gore denied
he made ~uch a statement, bm sub~equent
fact-checking has establi shed that he did.
Le hrer should ask him ,\bou t that.
He also should ask Gore about his various
other misstatements- tall ied up by H.ichard
Berke in The New York Tun es on Friday rhat he VIS ited fire disaster sites in Texas in
19Y8, that schoolchildren lack desk s in Sara~
sota, Fla., and th at he "took a risk" by talking
ro Russian leaders about Kosuvo when the
talks were scheduled by others.
llesides his Texas record , Bush sho uld be
forceJ to defend his math. He m·aintains that
he'd devote just a quarter of anti cipated bud~

•lssert cd that the N;ltional A~sc"isnH:m of Edll c.Hion Prot;re\~ showed thJt U.S. rcadmg and
math \Cores h.KI unproved dunng the Cltnron

yc.tr-..

Yet tl!.lt is not what actii.II NAEI' numbers

Morton
Kondracke
NEA COLUMNIST

-.uggl'\t. ~~on.~ ur le\s, JS th l' lhl'~h l·~unp.ai gn
,h\lTt~. the \COI'l'\ hJ\'C b(..'l'll tl.lt Or h ,l\'l' f.1 lkn
-. li ~htly

ti.Jr thr.:.· p.l~t L'ighryc.u-,, ,\!hi U.S. -.cnrL'~
ITin.lin ,jg:nill c;mtlv lwlow rhn'c in 1 'tl'~T
indu..;tn.JIII'L'd COUIJtrles.
On ddi..·me pn:p.1n:dness. L'VL'l1 though it j,

not .1 rop C\.llh.'l'rn .of voter,, Cnrl· lll'l·d-. to lw
.l\h:d if 1t i~n ·r true .that 'PL'nding 1..kdined

during the L'&lt;lrly Clinton ye:~r' bd\xe H bq.!;.\11
gl't surplusr-: to t.1x cuts. but indc..:pl·mh:nt c.ll- nqng ag.lill 1111der pres"url' tl-Dnl rill' ltcpuh·
culations '&gt;how it\ morl' like one-thn·d. Tht·y ill'.\11 Cnng:n.:".
Bush needs to he asked .1hnut till' (;ore
.1lso demonstr,Jtc that his Social Security
reform s and spending programs would more .1 s~en ion s that the 'Democr.tt dlllH.:ip.ne-.'
~pen din g $1 (HI billion more on prq., ,trcdnl·~s
than me 'up the' mrplus.
Bush needs to be asked, particularly. about than hl' docs over the next lO year\, ~md th .lt
how hl''d m;lkc up the "tr:msition roo.;t" of hi11 Bmh i5 pl.1nn\ng to depri~re the \qVlCL'~ nfr'h e
Social ~ecunty plan - the $1 trdlinn the IJc:-. t round of prm Ul"l'lllt'nt upgr.tdL''·
Whether nr !Hll .1 ny \lll h qut•,tJnm wd l
guvernme11t would 11ot collect in LI.:"\L'" when
workers dre alluwnl to invt·~t thl'ir money i'll .1tll·ct the 1.ItT J' opt·n Lo 1kh.llL' I ,\,l \\el·k \.
tbe stock market.
poll~ p1m Jdl' .1 1 oJlt'u'&gt;ill~ ll .lriLTll I Ill' (:.diu~'
On ta.'&lt; c ut~. Core ha ~ been finced ro quit poll ..;hmvcd (;on· _iu111pmg to .111 ll - po111t
charging that Hll'.,h would hand !!lore m onl'y lt,•;lll. But c111 ABC New;,; poll ~hm\·t·d Bu'h
in tax cuts to thl' top I percent of taxp~lye r'&gt; ahead by 7 point~ .tt"rer tilt' week\ Li l' h tltl'~.
than he 'd ~pe nJ nn education and nrhn proThe R eutlT~ - NHC poll ~l lll\\l'd &lt;_;ore up hy
grams; but independent ana iY';;ts "elY th e very 5, \Yhik the Votl'r.cnlll Ba!tll'gmund ~uncy
h.1J Bush ,JilL'ad hy 2.
'
.
rich would get more than I (I tJillt'~ the tax
break tlut poor f(lmilie'l" would receive .
V.1rimt\ ell'nnr,J I vote cou!ll\ ;trl' ctho .tt
Gore, ml'a!ltim c, has been able to -.ucces~.­ o dd ~. dependin g on hem· r.tzor-clmc JVlich ifully declare that Bush is relying on a partisan gau ;111d Florida nre co ulltt.•t\.,
Senate l3uJget Comm itt ee staff analysis
What n:: m.tin s d ea r is tha t- .Jbout IO pncellt
demonstrating that he'd overspend th e antici - oftht' clector&lt;ltt' i~ undec idL· llTlll' ~rnup io.; (l:)
pated surplus.
pacem fcm.tll', 50. percent iiH..kp t' IHIL'Ill dlld
H owever, there are bther anaJy..,c::s th ;Jt . , how tends not to bl· col lege educated.
the s.a mc. Citizem Against Governn~ent Wa'ltt',
In fonl\ groupo.;, undl'cided" 'ay tlll'Y .ll'l'
a n o nparti s;~n though mod eratel y comerv&lt;l- wJitin~ for more di o;cm,.iuJt of dJL' 1smc'
tive group, calcul:~ tes Gore's spending at $2.2 before they ll1(lke up tln~ir lllindo.;. The
trillion over fi ve year' - $HOI I bi ll ion more deb,\tcr . . and their moderator ,!Jould g1vc rhi'
than the ant iCJpated surplus.
to them.
On education, an important issut&gt; to voters,
In the en d, "though. 111y gucs~ i~ tlut the
there is a real dit1crence of opinion between unde cideds ;1re \_\";liting for a defining m mnt'lH
the two campaigns over whether the past \ - .1 maj or rcvl'lation, a gaffe or&lt;~ triumph.
eight ye;us havt.· ber.:n a period of"re(ession''
or progress.
(Al1H'IIl11 Ka11drad~c · is cxt•wtil'c niiror n( Roll
In Thursday night's deb ate, Li eberman Call, tile tll'li'.'J!'lpcr o(. Capitlll Hill.)
·

SYRACUSE -A prog ram on prayer was given by Mary Lisle at
the rcc~nt meeting of the Syrac use Asbury United Methodist Women
at the church .
. She spoke on rbree different versions of the Lord's Prayer found in
Matthew and Luke and noted that prayer and worship go together as
found in Mark I, verse 36. Prayers from different pla ces were read and
merhber th en repeated the Lord 1s Prayer in unison .
Freda Wilson sang The Lord's Prayer, and Ruth Crouc h gave devonons usm,g scripture from Jo hn I.
A report was gtvcn on the rece nt meeting held at Grace Merhodist
Church by Hope Moore who noted that a five~star award and a silver
award had been presented to the local grou p. Others attending were
Mary lisle, Ruth Crouch, and M arie Houdashelt.
Hope M oore, pre,s ident, conducted the meeting opening it with a
reading. "Granny and the O ld Guys. " The purpose of the UMW was
given, along with a report by Jean Stou.t, secretary. T hirteen sick calls
were taken and a free will .offering was taken.
The birthday of Mrs. Lisle was observed with a cake made by Mrs.
Houclashelr being served. Others attend ing were Freda Wilson and
Elma Louks.

Stobart family holds reunion
RACINE -The fourth annual Stobart family reunion took place
recently at Star Mill Park in Racine with 40 fanuly members in attenda=
.
Descendants ofThomas and isabel (Weaver) Stobart from the local
area along w it h N ebraska, North Carolina, Missouri and Kentucky,
gathered at the park for th e reunion.
Following prayer by Joe Stobart, the group had a potluck dinner.
' They enjoyed family photos and stories that were on display and added
new information. Drawinb'S were held for prizos and mum arrangements swre giwn to John and Naomi Stobart and Ola Hysell as the
-eldest members nf the family 111 attendance. The fifth annual Stobart
t:11n ily reuni on will be held at the Star Mill Park tho fourth Satmday
1n Scptcmbo1·, 2001.
Attending were Christa Holtmekr. Plymo uth , Ncb.: Stacey Brandstetter, Chapel Hill, N.C; Susan arod, Kdli K~1hl. Shane Skaggs, Pierce
Citv. Mo. ; Fred, Kara and Kim Starr, Elkview,W.Va.:Joann and Ralph
5ta~r. C lu rleston, W Va.; Joe Kapraun, Windi Stein, Vienna, W.Va.;
Jolynn and Aaron Arch er. Lower Salem; Isabell e Couch, Jen nifer and
Joey Rou sh. Rawnswood,WVa.;James and Dorothy Cardwell, Fostoria; Ola Hysdl. Jani ce, Amanda an d David Fetty, Pomeroy; J oe Stobart,
Portland: James, C hanty, Kayla, Michael and Andrew Stoba,rt,
Cookillc. Shirley Roberts. Lexmgto n, Ky.; John and Naomi Stobart,
l:lewrly, J ody ,JIId Sheri C ummins, Margie Wolfe, Roberta Thaxton,
R;lcme; JV1ary GTace, La rry and Kim Cmvdcry, Long Bottom.

TREAT

'HARDBALL'

NEW YORK -Wa tching"WestWi ng" last
Wedn~sday night, it struck me what was
\Vrong \\lith the first l3u sh~Gbre debate of the
night before.
Watching the fictional TV ~ h ow, I was
struck with thf awe we ted for the office of
the presidency, this personal emblem of our
nationhood and the democratic v:~lue~ it
upholds.
Why did the first Core~ llu s h deb.rc fail lll
examine t:ach ca ndidate on how he views th is
~~lCred trust, how he \..'o tdd chome to honnr
it?

'

The questions Tuc,day night dealt with
issues of policy -:r pn:scription drug'l, t.lxt's,
education, Yugoslavia. Overlooked \\'.\\ the
11sue of the presidency itself.
Let me put a sharper point on thk Ncithl'r
the vice president nor the Tl'X.l ~ governor
were asked how they would guard thL· nation '-:
h1ghe&lt;t office, .md the White H&lt;&gt;u sc Itself.
from the scandalous ll11'Conduct of the sorecent past.
Before th1 s Clmp.ll!-fll 1' ovl'r. I would like [o
heJr th e two lll L' Il\ pre~cnptwn llll ri LH '-l'lhl OVl' 11\ ~H fL'I' of 1\Lltl'.
Bush\; fllllldlty l"i mmt JJ,turhnlg. A~ rhe
'
, ha!kijger. he 11 the c·.Imhd.Itc· best pmltioned ·

.

tn ron dc111n wh ;u'~ j!lllh' wrong ll'ltkr ( .l1n -

·ton, th e freest r.o promise refo rm.
ment, did he talk lik e a paid political h.Kk, sayGiven the chance, he did neither. Asked if ,ing the m ,m whmc misconduct crt'atcd thL·
there werL' '' i s~uc..:s of durJctcr" at stake m· this mess, dt.•st-rvt=d J~u.:C space on Moum R.ush electic.m , Covernor Uush said. that he was "dts- mon:?
appointed" 111 hmv President Clinton and Viet;
(;nrc '&gt;hou ld be furcl'd to c ho n-.l'~ Either
President Gore C(.lllducrcd their "fund-r:~ismg d~..·fl'n d thi-; de-.n:r.nwn of tlll.' \N'lliJL· J ](JlJ '&gt;L' or
affairs.''
vow to (.'lld lt.
h that all he has to say abom the worst
I would pre!Cr. personallY. rh.1t lw d1d the
pclliti cal o.;c;~nJah -.ince Watt'rgate?
J.nn:r.
To rdi·e'h memories, I am rl'fl'rring: to th e
Better yt't, he· .\lid Bmh both ,!Joll !d he
Cl intn'n - ( ;nrc o.;c ht:nl t' of 1lJV5 - tJ(l to e\·adt• ·'"ked ro f(H,WL\Ir the fOllowing:
the federal campaign - \pt'ndmg limi ts hy
• No "tin .lllCl'-relatcd event&lt;; .. at the Wlmc
exploiting the White Ho me to r:1i~c tem of HomL' on thl'ir \ov,nch.
millions of dollar\ in "~oft lllOTit')'." l'm talking
• Nn ;,;kL•pnwr~ 111 the Lin coln lkdroo111 tnr
,1bout the scorn of"cotfee~" (;ore 'hwtt ed pe1
&lt; lllllnhutclr~.
sonally in the White House Jnd the Old Exec ,
• No fund-raio.;Ing' c.11l ~ t!-om rill' \X.' hitl'
utive OfHcl' Buildin~, th t' night- aftcr- nigllt lloml' by lht• pre'l(knt. the \'1Cl' prl'~ l dl·nt lll
usc of the Lincoln llcdroo111 .1s a M1otel (J fnr a11yonc.
milli on,l irl'-. randy to pay (ash for the Lache( of
• No "c.;.;u.il L'xploirmion of 'W'Illt1..· I lome
5keping on the bl·d of the GreJt [m;mcip.ltoJ. 'lt,l tli.:l\.
I am rdl·rring to tht· vice prc~idcnt's (OllIf tlll'y both .Jgret.· Lo thl'\l' 1 uk . . . \\'L' Allll..'r Juct dunng tho".: seven nJOnth-. in 199H. , il.lll~ will h,tvl' rl'.J'i"ft"-rtl'd , otn rwo- n·muric~ ­
when tlh,' pl\'\ldL'llt lin! to the: co untry :.hout nld rl'\l'fl'IH e tm\ ,Jrd the prl'\llknt\ holl~L'. !I
his rel.niom with .1 voung Wh1te ll ou'c l'ithn nr holh n·!'u'&gt;t', \\'L' \\d l k11ow \\lin \\l'
nncrn. Why. dur111~ th.1t long n.ttion.tl pllrg.t - lrl' dl· ..l1ng \\ 1th
rury, d1d (;ore nn! &lt;:on t!·onr Cl!llt~&gt;n ? \V}l\_
n.'lnJ.O: \/,wlrcil'', 11111) of rlrr" . . . /11 ild/1,/'(tl
OIJ Ct' the truth ut"dll' thargc-. Wt'l(.' nudl· 111,111
' "xti lllillt'l :-- r I ;/1,/11/.~/(11/ Hun ·, /11' I' /;,,,[ ,,! "} I did
lfl'"i t by tlw [)1\JA 01 1. 1\lunH.".!\ dn.·o.;~ . ~hd ht·
/, ,,//" ''" CXI!C.tlld .1/S.\'/H ,· ,,,/o/, ,/t.tlllld•. '1'/w
drc11 ch C linton in l'VCII higher pr.ll-.l'?
I 99lJ rd1!it111 ~~/ ''I fllrrll!rdl" II'!/ I JIJI/lll .' fl('d /Jj•
'filtrr·fl,tn/1 (' n,1,L,, 1
\X;'l1 y. on tlll' d.1y of the prnidl·nt\ illljll\lch

Cigarettes

30% off

Gospel
Cassettes

:.~9

·S14.99

CO's

Sunday 10:00 'a.m. lo 4:00p .m.

E Main
·

RACINE - Sout hern Hig h
School Athletic Boosters, 7 p.m
Thursday at the high schooL

FRIDAY
Widows
MIDDLEPORT
Fellowship, Friday noon, Middleport · Ch urch of ·c hrist.
Potluck dinner.

CAR PENTER Home~
com ntg,
Carpenter
Baptist
C hurch, State Route 143. Pau l
Elswick G:irclevill e, preaching,
10:30 a.m . Carry-in dinner,
noon; afternoon servict:', 2 p.m.

vice to nOn-profit groups
wishing to announce meetings and special events. The
calendar is not designed to
promote sales or fund raisers of any type. Items are

printed only as space per-

mits and cannot be guaranteed to be printed a specific number of days.
.,·'
··~ '

w ith singers, Builders Quarte t
and Cross C reek of Buffalo.
PO MEROY -. There wi ll
be a free lun ch prepared at
Grace Chu rch, Pomeroy, Sunday
with serving from noon ro 2
p .m. Grace Church if located
between the muni cip al building
and the o ld Porlleroy Junior
High Sc h ooL Everyone is welcome .

• MONDAY

SATURDAY

LONG BOTTOM- H ymn
POMERO Y
County
·
meeting
of
M
eigs
County
Garsing, Sa tu rday, 7 p.m. at th e Fai th
Full Gospel Church, Long Bot- den Clubs, Monday, 7 p.m. at
tom. Delivered to be fea tured.
the Meigs County Muse um,
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
POMEROY - Burlingham
Camp, Modern Woodmen oi
LETART- Letart Township
America, potlu ck 6 p.m. Satur- Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m. at the
day. Refreshments of hotdogs, o ffice building.
pizza, cider and donuts will be
served. Door prize s. Everyone
The Community Calendar
is published as a free, serwelcome.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,

NIKE· REEBOK· ASICS
EASTLAND· DEXTER· KEDS
HUSH PUPPIES· DOCKERS

.'

~~;;;;;;i;;M;;jii;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

MIDDLE PORT - Return
Jonathan . Meigs
C hapte rs,
Daughters of tlie Am er ican
Revo lu tio11, 12:30 p.m. lun -cheon. Rcst'rvanons to be
made with Abby Stratto n, 'J&lt;J2
6 I OJ.The Southe.Istern Distr.ict
director will be the spe.1ker.

SUNDAY

............
.. ,._

RACINE - M orn ing Star
United M ethodist Church,
homecoming. Sunday; worsh1p
at 10; Sunday school. 11 a m.
dinner at 12:30 p.m. aftern oon
song servtce.

-~~~~~II I

BUY HlliNE®RECUIER AT
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Charles Riffle, . Ph .
Mon . thru Fn. 8 a.ro . to 9 p.ril. Sat. 8:00am- 6 pm .

PRESCRIPTION

THURSDAY
POMEROY Preceptor
Beta Beta C hapter, Beta Sigma
Phi So~or i ty, hom e of .Joan
Corder, Thursday, 9· a.m. Luncheon at the C heesecake Factory with shdpping at Easton
Ce nter, Columbus.

I

$1 ~~ck $1~~~ck
TimeK
Watches

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

YOU!
Cold

HiUal

Issue No. 1 is protection of the White House
BY CHRIS MATTHEWS

•

J

SOCIETY NEWS

&gt;

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October 17th

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..... lfiHI• .. M

·'

�Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, October.12, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:
ALCS: Yankees even series, Page 83
Regional prep previews, Page B6
Daily Scoreboard, Page B6

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

THURSDAY'S
'

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Sports

__
-L--.

• • ,....... . . . 11111111111

or •

at, Willa:

The OVP

NUUII
_...
..... 1Mo-

fl

On1V

·

All Timet Eptern
Craftsman Truck, O' Reilly 400
8 o.m. • Friday • ESPN
• Winston Cup, Winston 500
1 p.m. • Sunday • ESPN
• Busch Grand National, Sam's Club 200
2 p.m. • Oct. 21 • TNN

__ ...
•

- -

2000 POINTS STANDINGS

1. BoOby LilbOnl•, 4.405
2. Jeff &amp;Jrton, 4.153

.laOn twa., 3,794

Grc Bifflll, 3 .~1 3
Mb WIIIIIOI, 3,283

fOOd Bodine, 3,618

Kurt Busdl. 3.246

Jeff Green,

l . OM E•rlhaldt, 4,147
4. Dele Jattett. 4.017

4,320

KeYin pt.-vk*, 3,&amp;17

~

5. Tony 5\f!lwart, 3,911

Ron

I. Rlc*)o RUOd, 3.972
l'. M&lt;t~k Miii\Ml. 3,848
L Rusfw Wallace, 3.808

Elon~.3,322

Jack Spii\HI , 3.0&lt;19
JIM Al.4ttt'IWI, 2,D78

~m~wt-

3,otl0

9. Wcw() Bolton. 3.565
10. Jeff Goraon. 3.564

"'"'30. 1987

• Race record: Ernie lrvan.
Chevrolet, 176.309 mph. July

23. 1992

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL

• What: Sam's Club 200
• When: 2 p.m .. Oct. 21 ·
• Where: North Carohna
Speedway. Rockingham (1.017mil~ track I
•Format: 1971aps/200.349

miles
• oer.ncttnc ch1mplon: Mark
Martin
• QulllfyiiiJ record: David
Green, Chevrolet, 153.419
mph , Oct. 20. 1994
• Race tlcord: Mark Martin,
~~~ 124 . 397 mph , Oct. 19.

6

• Notable: Marlin has won
the fall race sl• times. all in the
last eight years .... The only
other winners in that span were
Todd Bodine in 1995 and Elliott
Sadler In 1998.

HII.IMa'l, 3.2U

3.

(3)

Jeff Burton

4.

{ 4)

5.

(5)

Dale Earnhardt
Dale Jarrett

Jeff Gordon
Rusty Wallace

~.

Mark Martin

(~)

·

Ia almoat over

More consistent tflla year
EIChth tltl• wiU han to watt
Craahed out of the race
Knoclclne; on vll;tory' 1 door
The bad luck 11 ba~k

Has allpped a bit
Haa won Talladee;a before
Just walt until next year

10. (10) Johnny Benaon

CONCORD, N.C.- Jeremy
Mayfi~ld might as well na11e
been leadmg Bobby Labonte on
a Halloween race through a
cemetery
£\lf!n at Lowe 's Motor Speedway, there was just no escaQing
Frankenstein, the 11keness pf
whOm Labonte had pasted on
the hood of his No. 14 Pontiac
Grand Pn~. lhe result was the
points leader and champion
apparent ·s fourth victory of the
season 10 the UAW·GM Quality
500.
·1 guess we scared a couole
of guys w1th the Frankenstein on
the hood,· Labonte said.
Labonte did not really need
the Hollywood histrionics.
howe11er. He had four fresh
t1res, and Mayfield had onl~ two.
Mayfield was fast all day. but
his dec1sion to &amp;o tor a quick
stop, at lao 308. and trac~
oosltion ultimately cost him the
race.
Second place was not e•actly
a pleasing prospect for
Mayfield, but his chamber of
horrors did not begin wltn
Labonte's oalnt scheme ..Gojng
Into Sunaay. Mayfield had
'
finished 35th or worse 1r1 six
consecuti11e races. As a

•

605 General
Hartinger Parkway
Middleport, Ohio
45670
740-992-4443
Fax: 740-992-4442
Ted Dexter
Home: 740-992-5260
Dwight Honaker
Ho111e: 740-985-3709

CD

'&lt;

r-

....

c

3

C"

.,CD

measure of compari son, duriMg
the same span, even Darrell
Waltrip naa a 27th, a 29th and
a 31st. Mayfield Is tne only
driller outside the top 20 in
pomts wno has won a race this
year. and he has won two .
Labonte led 12 different times
but for a total of only 37 laps,
the last seven being the ones
that mattered

---Clip-In.,...,._--.--...
"""ll'llrIIIII-- to-.. --Fox.... .. ..
JOIWI ~

BUSCH IRAND NAnONAL

7

t:

CONCORD. N.C.- Matt
Kenseth tooK the lead In the All
Pro 300 at Lowe's Motor Speedway. when Joe NemecheK's
Chevy ran out of fuel with on!~
two laps remain ing.
Ken seth has now won races
at LMS In both the Winston Cup
(Coca-Cola 600) and Busch
series .
lnltlall)', the enQ.Ine In ,
Ken seth's Chevrolet failed postrace Inspection . But It was
ImPOunded and retested on
Sunday morning, after which
NASCAR ofnclals ma de the
Yictory olflcial.

c

I

TtW.,...

...

276 t op-fl"Ve finishes , 390 top-10 finishes,
59 poles. almost $19.5 million ln earntnes
Flratt: Start (May 7,1972. at Talladeaa),
Without question, Darrell Waltrip Is one of
pole (J uly 18, 1974, at Nashville). victory
the finest drivers ever to strap on a helmet.
(May 10, 1975 . at Nashville)
He Is also a genuinely nice man w1th an
If you heel to wrtte 1 deacrlptlon Df
exceptional sense of humor.
yourseH and rour Clfl8r, whit would lt
For most or a dec&amp;Qe now, Waltrip has
sound like? "It wou ldn't be brief. It couldn't
been tom betwe&amp;n his de$1re to continue
· be brief. Gee, I don't know. Alii can tell )'ilU
racing end an Increasing Inability to regain
is , tram my perspective, It's been fun to be
the competltNe edf;e he once had.
In this soo rt; It's been fun to be a part of lt.
At long last, Waltrip nas declared thi s to be It's been good to ha\18 had an Impact on this
his final season. Next year he will mo11e 011er
sport .... 1guess. If I hBd to sum It up, I juat
to a broadcast booth , where most think he
marched to the beat of a different
will be an Instant hit prov iding commentary
drummer.•
for televised accounts or Winston Cup races.
Do people lpprecltta you more now t ...n
Momftown: Owensboro. Ky.• now li11es In
then? ·well, most or those guys aren't
Franklin, Tenn .
around anymore. They're all gone .... For
A&amp;e: 53
e~a mple, wh&amp;tever happened to (ex·technlcal
Cer: No. 66 Kmart Ford Taurus. owned by
director) am Gazaway? Whate11er happened
TrEJVIs Carter and carl Haas
to that guy who used to run the Busch
Wife: Stevie
Series? What happens to ani these people?
ChU!Wn: Jessica Leigh (13). Sarah Kaitfyn
Where did they go? What happens to you
18)
once you're not a part of NASCAR.anymore?
Crew chlet. Larry· Carter
You kind of f&amp;ll off tha face of the E8f'th, I
Carur atatlltlca: 804 starts. 84 wins ,
guess ... I don't know about appreciation. I

CRA"IMAN TRUCK
The Craftsman Truck Series
was off last week and will return
to action this week at TttlliaS
Motor Speedway.

F£UD OHHE WHK

Nadeau quaHfied third and led 32 eatly laps before cettlnc
caught up In a crash. Afterward, h8 put the blame on Busch ,
the 2001 rookie ofthit year candidate makln&amp; nls third
Winston Cup start.
"Then the 97 car (Busch), 1 don 't know what he was
thinking. He Just Ptle-&lt;lrived the 31 car (Mike SkiMer). I was
on the outside and didn't have anywhere to JO .... When I
was a rookie , I tried to ShOW a lot or respect out there. •
NASCAR This Week's Mont. Dutton llYN r.lt opinion:
"Busch Is obViously talented. or else Jack Roush wouldn 't be
bringing him alone: so rapidly. He has earned a reputation for
being Impetuous, hOwe~~er, In the Crartsman Tr uck S~HleS
before he e....en got to Winston Cup. He'll Jearn, but he is
mak1ng a lot of enemies right now. •

••••••••••••
Y.lho'aHot...

YJhdaNot

• HOT: Bobby Labonte could
lose 50 points a race and still
win his first Winston Cup title.
He's 252 ahead of second
place Jeff Burton.
• NOT: Bobby Hamilton's last
top 10 was 25 races ago. He's
way back at 31st In points.

1 . What was the original name of Talladega
Supers peedway?
•
2. When Bill E!llott drove the Coors-sponso red
Thunderbird in 1986, what was his n umber?
3. Restnctor plates are typically used at Talladega ancl
w~ich other Wmston Cup Serres race track?

·.&lt;eMpaads 1euoneuJBWI euot.Aea ' £ :6 ·z
:..:eMpaMs JOlOV&gt;l 1 eU011e u~alUI eweqe1\l' •t

SHiMSN'i

•••••••••••••
•
• In tNI a&amp;e, It It lnttf.
tttiRC to ,..ote thft
rnotOt'C)'Cie fiCin.l WQ
once con•lcterU en
excenem: Wlf fot ttock
car racers to belfn thek
careers.
Joe Weatherty, the
1H2-63 NASCAR Orand
Nltlonal (now Wln.a.on
Cup) champion, wa1 1
motorcyc;:le champion
before he blfln r.clnc

stock Clfl.
Weatherly, fTom HorIOik, VI,, lnd ftfCknlmld

•Uttte JOe,"' WM kiUed In •
a erath on the roiMI
course In Rlnrtldt,

COlli., In 1984.

AROUND THE GARAGE

Stewart waiting to win a 500-miler; tires scarce at LMS
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
Tony Stewarl has never won :1
500-rnile
which concerns the
29-year-oh.l driver oot i n the least,
Slewart, who Ms won more races
th:~rr nny other driver th is year (and
the past two in succession). figures.
like Brook Benton, that i!'s just a
ma~ter of ume.
In hi s second yenr. Stewart hru
won on 1-mile tmcks (Dover. Phoenix,
New Hampshire), I _"i-mile tmcb
(Homestead). 2-mile tmc:b (Michignnl. nnd shon track! (Ma.rtinsYille.
Richmond). About all he !oclo:s 1s a
victory oo one of the two ~strlctor­
pl:lte tracks (Talladega, Dayton.l) and
nne of the road courses (Sem1 Point.

Wat kins Glen). He hos nhendy
demonstrnted competence at rhn~t:
layoms·
"
·

mce.

TIRE SHORTAGE: Goooyem h:Kl
a li tt le sec~t when 11 brought il.'il l'iH:·
111g rrres to l.llwe's Molor Speed\\· ~)
for IMI ~eeke11d'~ r:lCeS Now c\'CIV·
one knows nbontu .
·
The tire gr:mt hoc! to discard hun~
dred.• Of I he tire~ t11e.1nt fOf 11~ A II
Pro 300 ~nd UAW:GM ~f,XJ , Tile
!l~s failed 11 quality -oontroltest nt ;111
Akron. Ohio. prodnct1a1 plnnf Goodyear ongmally lhoughl il ~o:otrld
prO\Iide enough t1n:s th;tl were not
tmnted. But Thursd.1y nrght. the c.:om
IX'Il~ reve&lt;~led to NASC'AR th;lltherc
might nOl be enou~h or rh~ ilrl•s

cu~tnm -dcs•g•ll!( l fnr n ~ all his Jr;l.·k

The rcslil\' 1 To cn~ u rc cnou~~ tires
fur Slrnd:1y s Win~tnu £'np tilCC ,
NA.'i('AR (l l fll'lals nmliH-;'I!cd all
the n!!I•H•dc Illes that h:1d carlrer
ho.:cn di~ln t'I•II L&gt;d to I he l:iu.Kh Gmnd
N~t •.,n.!l lc;un.&gt; I'm ~at unlny\ 200l:•ppcr llw~c tc;uns h.1U to m:• l.~,~ du
With 1HC) ldl U\CI ll\llll ;1 HII.:C in
l)mcr. l)d . \\!1 cr.1l "·cck~ a~o

X .
I.IKf JI:H·. LIKE JERRY: As difl'icull .1~ tlu~ m:t) he ltliiU:rgmc. Jeff'
Go;&gt;rJ\lll ~orys 1h;11 lc:nnnmlc Jerry
N:Klc.ru has l rcc.lltcntly hcl ped him
·-r m h:!Jli'Y to howe Jerry as 11n
:~ddil lt lll 10 Hendrick Mo1ms1mrts
bt..·colll~c he li nd l dd\'c ~i1111lar : \cry
ng~tl·~~~~ c." ( imdon ~:ud

Ob~lously, Gordon lm ~ won 52
mces and lhree champi on s hij ~. while
Nro&lt;.kau h&lt;'ls nc~er won so much ns a
pole. Nade.1u i5 o,:on~tdcred in some
IIIIMters to h.; e~ln:mely ralenicd, but
Gordon. 01 year younger rhnn Nadenu.
is Ihe pm~·e n commodity.
N:a.lc:~u's team. hov.·cvcr. gives
Hcr•d rick Mo1orspons n certain
rcsc;uch nnd-developmcru edge. ns
(iurdon explained:
" We're hnppy to hnve Tony (Fun,
Nmlcau's crew chief] O\ICt !here. too,
bl..'l.'llll~e Tony likes to throw some
Wtld stuff ill it. We' re kind of rnore
on tile more !r:'ldlllonal sluff th.1t h.-u
work«! fnr us rn rhe JXISI . It's nice lo
he able to blend those things logeth CI at those hrgh-speed plou,;es like
Atl~nla 1111d here ."

Place Your .
Business's Ad here
Call The Daily Sentinel
for details
.

461 South Third Middleport, Ohio

(740) 992-2196

1

1
2
3
4

5
6

9
10
B

Southern matched Mllkor toutlulmvn fi,r

touchdown m an exciting fif"ir h;1lf I )1\ I·
sion V Miller's playulf hopes mde on ·1 line
thread for the first 24 llllllU[l'\ , but Cn,
broke out of the gate, ;md Randy Nd . . on
fueled the fire with two key inttlll'ptHm\ in

the second half.
The Eastern power marhi11c put :)fll
yards on the board-; after cullt"ctin~ 4Hf, n n
the ground in Jefeatin~ Ft"der.l1 Hol kin~

63-8.
Quarterback Garrett Karr wa.\ 3-S p .h~­
ing for 38 yards. Brad Willford \\as H- 1.17
and RJ. Gibbs was 1 1· 136. K •rr ..lsu
rushed for 61 yards. Chris I ynm , llr;rd

ni ~hr.

ets take

39 (3)

37 (1)
31
27
25
20
13
13

1-o·tead

.9

Others receiving votes: Fort
Frye (1 ); Cheshire Naval
Academy (1)
To be eligible for The OVP 10, a
team must eHher: a.) be from
the Mason-Gallia-Melgs area;
b.) be a local conference mem·
ber; or c.) play at least one
game against local teams.

ST. LOUIS (AI')
M1h•
H.lmpton and the NL'\\' York
Mets kept M.1rk :\1cC\\"Ire .111d

C an. hn ,d-.; Jnanr~gr:r Tony La
R.u""a tried \\'Jthnut ~UCCt''\'1 to
gL·r McCwne an at- bat in &lt;l key

thl' St. L. ow~ C .m.lm,I].., nghr
whnc thl'\' w.mtcd thcm.
BJg M.1c lll'\\'r J:!Ot ntr the
bent'h ,md thl' C.m. hn.d" th'\'LT
got clo..,L' ro ~Loring until It \\· :t~
too btL' ,\\ tlh- t'vkh \\ ' Ull ( J- .?:
WL·dnt:sd.l\' nig.]lt
in (;,mlL\ I of
'

'-por.

tlw NL Champi&lt;lmhip Se-ries.
Hampton an~l MikL' l'i.\71.1
put their pbyotTpmbk111.., in th e
P""t :J\ tlw wild c,m1 Ml' t.., won
tht"ir ti.)urth in ,t rm\ 111 thi..,

ALL

po~t~c.·a~tlll.

.,

.

'

I

S/IHJ.:.
'"""'Jdbluu.com

See us for Your Stihl•
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

• The nre and times or Bill
Simpson, America 's roremost
motorsports safety pioneer and
a former race dri~~er. are
chronicled In "Racing Safely.
living Dangerously,· Simpson's
autobiography written with
noted motorsporter Bones
Bourcier.
Simpson raced on drag
strips, road courses and 011als,
but he is better known for his
safety innovations .
ThiS Is an entertaining book,
full of humor, as Simpson
describes eYerything from
midnight California street race s
to the scene on Grand Prix
weekend at the Monte Carlo
yacht harbor.
The book Is available for
$17.95 (plus $3.95 shipping
and handling) from Per formance Media, P. 0. Box 1 79 .•
Camden . ME 04843.
·

Ridenour.

Supply
St. Rt. 248
Chester 985·3308

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110 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone 992·1135

X CREW Of 111 WEEit

E·MaiiJmas@frognel ,net
www.performanceupgrades.com

Wahama
3·3
Hannan
1·6
South Gallia
1·6
,Friday's Games
South Gallia at Clarksburg Notre
Dame
Buffalo-Putnam at Wahama
Meadow Bridge at Hannan

Volleyball

• lt'a almost I t If Jimmy
Makar and Gle&amp;Zipadalll
alternate mentlona In
this apace. Thll week, It
was Makar's turn, 11 he
and hla Interstate
Batteries crew masterminded another vlctOfJ
tor the likely Winston
Cup) champion In the
UAW-GM 1500. Driver
Bobby Labonte made the
call to chan•• four tlraa,
even while a raw other
crewe were cr.t,..&amp;Jn&amp;

MARINE
Sales &amp;Service
121 Enterprise
Pomeroy, OH ".,.&lt;nl

two. Jeremy Mayfield had

a haalt.hy la1d, but
Labonte trackad him
down and palled the
Ford driver with seven
lapa to·

1· 740·992·130

co.

Today's Matches
Gall1a Academy at Athens. 5: 15
Logan at River Valley, 5:15
Rock Hill at South Gallia, 5:30
Southern at Easlern, 5:55
Alexander.at Meigs. 5:55
Ohio Valley Christian at Ironton
St. Joe, 6:00
Saturday's Match
Federal Hocking at South Gallia,
Noon

Boys Soccer
Saturday's Match
Sissonville at Point. pleasant, 2:00

(0
(0
1\)
I

1\)
Q)
1\)

U1

Today's match
Point Pleasant at Capital, 7:00
Saturday's Match
South Charleston at Point Pleasant. Noon

Cross Country

Saturday's Meets
River Valley at SEOAL Champi·
onships, TBA (at Marietta)
Gallia Academy at SEOAL Cham·
pionships, TBA (at Manetta)

•••••
C heck out the Sunday TimesSentinel for a full recap of Fmlay
night\ prep football action ti-om
around the Tn-County'

'
I

MEAliNG OF THE MINDS- Cardinal battery mates Carlos Hernandez (at lett) and Dar yl Kile discu ss
strategy in the filth inning of Wednesday's garne. (AP)

Tomadoes tangle
with Wildcats
Bv ScoTT WoLFE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - This week. the
3-4 Southern Torn,1doc-. try tn
t'Vl'n thL.·ir n:con.l with ,i long
road trip to

\):..';tt crfi.1nl

The

of-.1 I t(n 242 yards. Miller shut
do\'\' 11
thl' Southl..'rn passmg
ga111e in the '&gt;l'cond hal f. as
Evans completed just 4·ot: 12
pa"ilil'&lt;; ~)r K9 y.1rch.
For t!ll' '\cason,

Ev~n~

Jus

Wildcat&lt;, also l--1, h.m· pl.1yed
some grL.':tt b.d l LttL·ly, n;urnwly
be m g c..h:featnl hy ;~ patCct
rvtillcr tt::ml 20-27 ' rhcn bst
week up~etting Tri111ble 20- 14
in overtilllt: .

co mpleted 6 1-of- 133 passes tc&gt;r
&lt;l 45.H pl'l'ccnt throwing accuracy and HH7 y:trds. lhck-up
qua rterback and &gt;;taring linebarker Brandon Pierce has
cn111 plete·d .).ot:H passes for 13.1
At Racine Frid,1y, \Ulrt n g ~ i x. yard~ ,J\ Southern as a tr:am J u~
touchdmvw, .trl,d ~0111~ over gnill' OVLT one thousand yards
1.Silll y.ll'd~ for the lil' &lt;l~tlll, (111211) on the season. Evan&lt; has
Miller\ C liri nn Cox rmhl'll for thrown for o;~.:vcn touchdowns.
27R yards in leading the eighthSm1thtTil \uo; ,weragcd 145.7
ranked Miller hltol" (7 -11) to .1. y&lt;mh p.1~.;;1ng p~;.·r g,Hllt.'. while
5.1 -2 1 Tn - V.11lcv Cnntl·rcncc
win nvn Southern
,It !lngcr
Lee Adalll" ML'IIH&gt;rial field. Uv
Milln \Lt li ..,tin, IH· h,l\ 17Jtl
)'&lt;lrth 011 I'L'COrd tbl'i \L'.I'iOil ,
averJging 7 .H yard.., pt'r rarry
and rotalling 20 tm1rhdnwn-..
SouthL.'rn h;~t.! nn!y 25 y&lt;trd~
ru~hing .H tl1L' ktlf, but gained
rsJ yanh in till' .lir on &lt;1 1.1 -ot~

1t) pa"'mg; perfi.nm,HKL' from
qturrerb ,H.~ k Jnnath.tn E\.tll'i.
OvL·r.lil, E\'all\ complelL'd 17-

rmhing f(H' .m .\V&lt;:rage of 143.3
yards. \hL· ~wcragL' t~tal y&lt;ud.1gc

lies .1t

2H~.

Sourhnn\ ground gainns
ti·om Ja..,t \\' L'l'k wt·rc fvbtt Ash

H-1 '1. Joe Cornell 10-17,
and
Andrew Coffman ].7,
Jon.rth.lll Evans 5-7. The
rt'ccivcr.., were Justin Alil'n 2-25,
Brice II ill 4-'iH. M.1tt A&lt;h 4- 18.
Joe Conie·ll 2·-'H. Brandon -Hill

Please see Southern, Page B&amp;

Ed~Jrdo

locld Zelle ,,_nd Jay l'ayton
homncd in the mmh :md
Alfonzo scored a run
,md dnwe in ,ll\othl'r for Ne'\

Yorl- .
And 11 \\',\\ :1 ~nnd - hu· k \'irtorv fl:1 r dJL' iVl ct-.;- thl' Ll\t ~even

" I \\':HltL'd to bL· :l (OJHrtbutor
instc.:.td of :1 l1.1bliity." I Llltlptoll t~".llll\ to \\'Ill the NLCS opener
\H'Ilt on to re.ll'h the World
!~Jid. ''I ju..,t \\'.UH~·d t11 do my
part and hL·l}' thi' tcun \\'111. I · ~l"rJL'\,
··; liked dre w:"· \l"l' pLryed. I
didn 't Jo tlu1 111 thL· tir.., t '- L'I'I L'&lt;.; ."
1u~r
d1dn 'r llh· the tined \corl' ...
ll.unp ton earnt:d l11' lif,r
·1 .l H.tm.l ~.ud. ".H:1mpron ,md
playo~r \VIn ;1~ thL· ML·t~ c., knd
cd th~i.r pn't'&gt;L' .t~on \C (ll\' iL''' the Mer-. \\'L'I'L' .1 littk' bl'ttl'r."
(; ;11\11..' 2 will be rhur\d.!y
strc.lk to .1 t c.tnl - r L·l' nrd :!,( )
111ghr .1[ Bmch Stadiu111. w1th AI
inning~ hd()n.' .1llo\,.111).!. t\\' 0
unl'Jrlll'd rLIII" \\ 1th t\\o our.., 111 1 L:ttL'I' ~t.lrtlll~ for the i'v1ct..,
.h~.lllht rookiL' RtLk AnkH:l.
th e 11111th.
"/\cqlllrL·d tl·om Houston last
"Thnl' !J,Jd hi.:L' Jl \ l~lllL'
\\'intvr
w \\'111 .It crunch tlllll',
Uouhr.. ca . . r ll\'L'f MikL" hL'\'.llhL'
of ,1 \lll.dl ..,,1111pk ol- po\t..,L',l.,Oil · , l.tlllpton dcll\'L"rc.:d. Hc ourplay. .md I rhink h L· cr.N·d th u .. L pHLht:d former A\tro~ tL.".lllllllatL·
douht-.." ML'h 11 1.'\I J,\gLT lh•hb\ ]),1rryll&lt;1k, ~1k1King the -.;cllom
( 1\)\\ d t)f :=i:!.255.
Valentine ... 1id .
\l.llllptOil bq.!;;lll t'hL· L'\'Clllllg
H .1111p1on kL"pt th e· hi g ~U\
MtCwilL'. t.lw ( ..1rd1n.tl.., · )lli ll h . \ \11) 1 .t L'.11'L' I.'I' poq~~,.-,1..,011 l'CL' Ord
ll t- ( 1.. ~ .1nd .1 5.K7 ERA in ti.,ur
hittn dd11xv -+- 0 11 t h'L, hr 1h·h
;md lcti: \\ iil1 .1 .1- lt) l·.hl. !&lt;..din- •t.1rt \.
;\ l t'~ \L' I l.hf \' L'L'k Ill thL' OpL'Il L'l'\ jo hn I'·Lli H' O .l!ld -\ 1 l\l, JIId l.\
Lk1;lll'/ linl..,lrl'd up.
Please see N L~S. Page 86

ALL

Area non-league

who had zero ltBi s in
thL' np L·nmg round agam~t S,m
Fr;1nci'iCO. hit .111 RBI double in
,1 t\n&gt;- run fir.;;r inning. He also
...ingkd h1.., nL'Xt rime up.
··1 ~ wun~ thl' b,1t .1 lot b~·ner,
o nly h ~ c.tu..,~ of my teammates
~~..- tting on .1hcad of me, gJVin g
me the opportunity w drive 111
Pl ,I7Z.t ,

Hampton pitched hko an
OctohL'r an·. btmktn~ ri1L' C.wdinah 011 \ IX hrt' fnr \t:n''ll
llll1lll~T';,

Nelsonville· York 2·0 5-2
Wellston
2-0 4·3
Belpre
1- 1 3·4
Vinton Couqty 1-1 1·6
Me igs
0·2 3·4
Alexander
0·2 0-7
Hocking Olvlslon
Miller
2~0
7 ·0
Eastern
2·0 6-1
Southern
1,1 3·4
Waterford ·
1·1
3~4
Federal Hocking 0·2 1·6
Trimble
0·2 3·4
Friday's games
Meigs at Alexander
Southern at Waterford
Miller at Eastern
Wellston at Nelsonville~ York
Federal Hocking at Trimble
Belpre at Vinton County

l'\'CI' ::"&gt;
Hl'{ 1{ ::"&gt;
Hl)JJlU.''
t&gt;

tl~L' rum."' P1an:1 said.

{

~JJ

"He \\',1'- hot a couple of
t1111L''.'' L1 IJ...m,&lt;t 'did. ''Couldn't

"A ·good ..,t,1rt t'tH u.... \\'L' kiH)\\'
it\ far tium over.'' Pi,JZZ,\ . . aid.
"Gnt lu kLTP the pcd.1l Limvn."

~

TVC
TVC

•

•

Ohio Division

Fan Tips

M·F 8·6 Sat. 9·4
740·949·2804

I' 11ler, and C:acy F.IUik .llso had consider·
,1ble g&lt;lln\.
In ~i'eL L'I\IIl!::!, lkn Holtt"r \Vas 1-27, Jen:"" (mHrulh~ 1-'J. and Brent Buckley 1·\1.
KL'Y' to th~, '''l'rk \, game comc.oos down to
E.l\tl'r rl \ dl'fl~ n ..,L' \ 'L'f..,U\ Miller's offense:.
wh1rh 1\ mdinly compri,t:d of Cox and hi'i
speed. Fasrern will definitely put some
pu1nt.., on the bo.trd, and Eastern is rich in
tqJint)n ,JI..,o, t\\o LJUahtie' that may just
.rllms" 1he F .1~le; to pull off the big win.
R·n,titJL'"' ,n1d 'peciJl t.:.llll'l play may also
bl' .1 hugl' f.Ktor. ICmdy Nelson is just _as
qlll r k th Cox and ha' lit:veral punt return5
c1 11d kKkotfn: mn11i fi.)r touchdowns.
C .mH' t1mc j.., 7 :.1(1 .lt Elstern Friday

half and ended the [,'3nle with 27X ) .rl"ds nn
32 carries.

.2
2

SEO

•••••••••••••

2 Factory trained
Briggs &amp; Stratton
Mechanics

EAST MEIGS-This week's Ul1official
Tri·Valley Conference game of the week
will feature the Miller Falcons, ranked number two regionally, versus t\)e number fiveranked Eastern Eagles a~ the Eagles' East
Shade River Stadium. Miller is 7·0 overall
and Eastern is 6-1, while both are 2·0 in the
league.
Over the past f~w week's, Eastern has for·
gotten th e meaning of a close game, com·
pletely dominating the competition since
struggling early against non-league Parkersburg Catho~c in game three. Since dropping game two to a tough Fort Frye club,
Eastern has taken off since the second half

of the Ca~holic game, not storing less than
36 points. Two of those were over 50 points.
Miller, also ranked 8th in the state, took
off early but has taken a few scares against
Waterford (27·20). and Southern. The Falcons luckily defeated both after going up
27-0 against the Wildcats, then leading by
just one last week m Racine 14· 13 at the
hal[
•
Scoring six touchdowns and going over
1,500 yards for the season, Miller's Clifton
Cox rushed for 278 yards in leading the
cighth·ranked Miller Falcons (7-0) to a 53·
21 Tri·Valley Conference win over South·
ern Friday night at Roger Lee Adams
Memorial field.
.
Cox had 18 carries for 162 yards at the

Jackson
4·0 ' 7-0
Logan
4·0 7·0
Gallia Academy 4~0 6·1
Point Pleasant 2~2 5·2
Athens
1·3 2·5
Warren
1~3 2·5
Marietta
0·4 1 ~6
River Valley
0-4 0-7
Friday's Games
Logan at Galli a Academy
Athens at Point Pleasant
River Valley at Marietta
Warren at Jackson

The ~ew lele\·ision deal bet\littll
NA SC.oftR and Fo~. NHC and
WTB S is very controversiill, Atlhis
point, perhaps it is bu tlo gi~e il a
~hance and allow the new networks
10 show us wlult the y can do .

We service chainsaws,
snow blowers, generators
&amp; mowers

BY Scorr WOL.FE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

SEOAL

Janet Day
Rockwood. Mich

RACINE
MOWER CLINIC

Eastern and Miller meet in heavyweight bout

Prev. Votes

Ciirts Soccer

.

Dave Harris or Matt Haskins
992-2155

Team
1. Logan
2. Portsmouth
3. part&lt;ersburg
4. Jackson
5. Ironton
6. Gallipolis
7. (tie) Miller
Eastem
9. Point Pleasant
10. (tie) Ross SE
N'ville· Vorl&lt;

Thursday, October 12,2000

Football

Dear NASCAR This Week .
Wirh the new nel)"orks taking
over the tele~ising of the NASCAR
mces. it will be hard ro enjoy rhe
race~ in the future , due to :~II the
commercials an d them cutlrng
awny to sornelhing else befo1e the
inlerviews after 1he r:II.'C .
Al so, they seem to be more imeresred in baseb.11l and footb.'t llthn n
racing . I sure hope they impro11e in
!he fulure . I can no! afford to go to
all the ntCC! and don't ~all)' wa01
10 mis! !h em .

By r."onte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

top football teams, as voted
by Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
sports staffers. (First-place
votes in parentheses)

Page 81

•

.

Heather Ra\IIJi r:a
W1uhin xtorr, Pa.

Jerry Nadeau vs. Kurt BIIICh

'31/'eetdt &amp;
'Dea.tdt

-

FROM lAST WEEK
WINSTON CUP

Used Cars &amp; Trucks

~

Dear. NASCAR This Week .
Afrer reading the leller regarding
thce:um crocks NASCAR is add1ng
to !he schedule, I agree 1hn1 il
shot1 ld remove some in relnrn .
But the ro.1d tmcks?
Tho~e nre so fun and differenl
from any of the Olhers.
My opinion'?
I think they should consider cutting out the ob\IIOUS (Loudon,
N.H .) and possibly even Tc~as . I
love rnci11g, and I don't 1hin k any one can handle any more death"
like we h1111e hnd this year.

Didn't cool off much

Ricky Rudd

6. (8)
7. (6)
8. ( 7)

• Where: Texas Motor Speedway, Fort Worth (1.5-mlle track)
• Format: 167 laps /250.5
miles (400 kilometers)
• DefendlftC chlmplon: Jay
Sauter
• Q&amp;Ndtfylnc: record: Jay
Sauter. Chevt'olet, 179.718
mph. June 10, 1999
• RKe record: Jay Sauter.
Chevrolet, 132.430 mph,
'
Oct. 15, 1999

~atttnm.a..

• Weekly rankings by NA.SCAR This Week writer Monte Dutton.
Last week's rank1'ng is in parentheses .
The race

A weekly look at the region's

• What: O'Reilly 400
• When: 8 p.m .. Fr'iday

Your1Um

Darrell Waltrip

R..;y Talm1. 2,908
Brl*t ltlffntr, 2,8D

TOP TEN

1. ( 1) Bobby Labonte
2. (2) Tony Stewart

CRA"SMAN TRUCK

••••••••••••

$1M GriUOin, 2,92&amp;

KIYin Cirla&gt;, 2.808

•

• Whit: Winston SOQ
•When: 1 p.m ., Sunday
•Whlfe: Talladega (Ala.)
Supersl)eedway (2.66-mile track)
•Format: 1881aps/501.208
miles
• O.fendlna: chemplon: Dale
Earnhardt
• Qulllfyln&amp; record: Bill
Elliott. Ford. 212.809 mph,

• Notable: Eamhardt swept
the •aces at Talladega in 1999.
... NA.SCAR has changed
aerodynarn•c reQuuen'lents and
restrictor plate s1zes as a
means ot •mprovmg the quality
of competition for this. race.

o.nn+, sm ... 2.929

RW!Oy LaJoire, 3,181
D&amp;Yid Gtean, 2,944
Case, ,t,twood, 2.883

9 ,ft.C.21014

ON THE SCHEDULE

WINSTON CUP

•

•

Maraud·ers set to face
winless Spartans Friday
1') \c

h.l . ,

BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

th L· 1'\ J\ tlT. ,l!ld ) .~ U! th, 'l' IL.'
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pl.l \L'd \ \ L' ll .1! l]Ll ,lJ'{L'rb.lCk l( l lll

.ROCK SI'RINGS - The
Meigs Manwdl'r\ \Vill hL' trying
to t•nd a t\:VO gamL' losing, 'irrco~k,
while the Alexander Sp.lrt.lll\
will be trying tu \vin tlwir tlr~t
game of the \t':l~nn h ·id&lt;lY
L'VCillllg when the Mt~ril tllil'r"'

h.td gnm 111 g p.11 m. \nit thn .Ill'

pkr 11 1~

unpnl\'l llg \ ' 1th L' \ I.T \ ~-11111"

\.trd ,

travel tn A.lbany.
Me1gs (3 - 4, TVC 11 ~ 2) is &lt;"&lt;llll "
mg ott' a 35-7 loss to Nel sonvilk - York

L1'it

Frid,ry

,lt

home. Alexander (11-7. TVC 11 ~ 2 )
lmt ,1 27-20 ht·;Jrtbrc.ll..et to Vtn ton County b~l week.
The Sp.1rr.ms tlni . . hl'd l.1'it \ L\1-

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'

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h .1~ pbyl'd in rlll' " htg
~chuol" , Ohio 1/ivi..,ion .ltld tltL'V
arc .;;t illlookin ~ (or tht' lr tlr't Will

Alexandn

and they lmld a Il-l H in the· cnn fert·ncc.:: while being a nwmbcr nf
the Ohio Divi~1nn .
Alexamkr ha.:.; 2H p,l.ryn ... on

( ;r1:2;\h\
.

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.•

�Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, October.12, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:
ALCS: Yankees even series, Page 83
Regional prep previews, Page B6
Daily Scoreboard, Page B6

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

THURSDAY'S
'

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Sports

__
-L--.

• • ,....... . . . 11111111111

or •

at, Willa:

The OVP

NUUII
_...
..... 1Mo-

fl

On1V

·

All Timet Eptern
Craftsman Truck, O' Reilly 400
8 o.m. • Friday • ESPN
• Winston Cup, Winston 500
1 p.m. • Sunday • ESPN
• Busch Grand National, Sam's Club 200
2 p.m. • Oct. 21 • TNN

__ ...
•

- -

2000 POINTS STANDINGS

1. BoOby LilbOnl•, 4.405
2. Jeff &amp;Jrton, 4.153

.laOn twa., 3,794

Grc Bifflll, 3 .~1 3
Mb WIIIIIOI, 3,283

fOOd Bodine, 3,618

Kurt Busdl. 3.246

Jeff Green,

l . OM E•rlhaldt, 4,147
4. Dele Jattett. 4.017

4,320

KeYin pt.-vk*, 3,&amp;17

~

5. Tony 5\f!lwart, 3,911

Ron

I. Rlc*)o RUOd, 3.972
l'. M&lt;t~k Miii\Ml. 3,848
L Rusfw Wallace, 3.808

Elon~.3,322

Jack Spii\HI , 3.0&lt;19
JIM Al.4ttt'IWI, 2,D78

~m~wt-

3,otl0

9. Wcw() Bolton. 3.565
10. Jeff Goraon. 3.564

"'"'30. 1987

• Race record: Ernie lrvan.
Chevrolet, 176.309 mph. July

23. 1992

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL

• What: Sam's Club 200
• When: 2 p.m .. Oct. 21 ·
• Where: North Carohna
Speedway. Rockingham (1.017mil~ track I
•Format: 1971aps/200.349

miles
• oer.ncttnc ch1mplon: Mark
Martin
• QulllfyiiiJ record: David
Green, Chevrolet, 153.419
mph , Oct. 20. 1994
• Race tlcord: Mark Martin,
~~~ 124 . 397 mph , Oct. 19.

6

• Notable: Marlin has won
the fall race sl• times. all in the
last eight years .... The only
other winners in that span were
Todd Bodine in 1995 and Elliott
Sadler In 1998.

HII.IMa'l, 3.2U

3.

(3)

Jeff Burton

4.

{ 4)

5.

(5)

Dale Earnhardt
Dale Jarrett

Jeff Gordon
Rusty Wallace

~.

Mark Martin

(~)

·

Ia almoat over

More consistent tflla year
EIChth tltl• wiU han to watt
Craahed out of the race
Knoclclne; on vll;tory' 1 door
The bad luck 11 ba~k

Has allpped a bit
Haa won Talladee;a before
Just walt until next year

10. (10) Johnny Benaon

CONCORD, N.C.- Jeremy
Mayfi~ld might as well na11e
been leadmg Bobby Labonte on
a Halloween race through a
cemetery
£\lf!n at Lowe 's Motor Speedway, there was just no escaQing
Frankenstein, the 11keness pf
whOm Labonte had pasted on
the hood of his No. 14 Pontiac
Grand Pn~. lhe result was the
points leader and champion
apparent ·s fourth victory of the
season 10 the UAW·GM Quality
500.
·1 guess we scared a couole
of guys w1th the Frankenstein on
the hood,· Labonte said.
Labonte did not really need
the Hollywood histrionics.
howe11er. He had four fresh
t1res, and Mayfield had onl~ two.
Mayfield was fast all day. but
his dec1sion to &amp;o tor a quick
stop, at lao 308. and trac~
oosltion ultimately cost him the
race.
Second place was not e•actly
a pleasing prospect for
Mayfield, but his chamber of
horrors did not begin wltn
Labonte's oalnt scheme ..Gojng
Into Sunaay. Mayfield had
'
finished 35th or worse 1r1 six
consecuti11e races. As a

•

605 General
Hartinger Parkway
Middleport, Ohio
45670
740-992-4443
Fax: 740-992-4442
Ted Dexter
Home: 740-992-5260
Dwight Honaker
Ho111e: 740-985-3709

CD

'&lt;

r-

....

c

3

C"

.,CD

measure of compari son, duriMg
the same span, even Darrell
Waltrip naa a 27th, a 29th and
a 31st. Mayfield Is tne only
driller outside the top 20 in
pomts wno has won a race this
year. and he has won two .
Labonte led 12 different times
but for a total of only 37 laps,
the last seven being the ones
that mattered

---Clip-In.,...,._--.--...
"""ll'llrIIIII-- to-.. --Fox.... .. ..
JOIWI ~

BUSCH IRAND NAnONAL

7

t:

CONCORD. N.C.- Matt
Kenseth tooK the lead In the All
Pro 300 at Lowe's Motor Speedway. when Joe NemecheK's
Chevy ran out of fuel with on!~
two laps remain ing.
Ken seth has now won races
at LMS In both the Winston Cup
(Coca-Cola 600) and Busch
series .
lnltlall)', the enQ.Ine In ,
Ken seth's Chevrolet failed postrace Inspection . But It was
ImPOunded and retested on
Sunday morning, after which
NASCAR ofnclals ma de the
Yictory olflcial.

c

I

TtW.,...

...

276 t op-fl"Ve finishes , 390 top-10 finishes,
59 poles. almost $19.5 million ln earntnes
Flratt: Start (May 7,1972. at Talladeaa),
Without question, Darrell Waltrip Is one of
pole (J uly 18, 1974, at Nashville). victory
the finest drivers ever to strap on a helmet.
(May 10, 1975 . at Nashville)
He Is also a genuinely nice man w1th an
If you heel to wrtte 1 deacrlptlon Df
exceptional sense of humor.
yourseH and rour Clfl8r, whit would lt
For most or a dec&amp;Qe now, Waltrip has
sound like? "It wou ldn't be brief. It couldn't
been tom betwe&amp;n his de$1re to continue
· be brief. Gee, I don't know. Alii can tell )'ilU
racing end an Increasing Inability to regain
is , tram my perspective, It's been fun to be
the competltNe edf;e he once had.
In this soo rt; It's been fun to be a part of lt.
At long last, Waltrip nas declared thi s to be It's been good to ha\18 had an Impact on this
his final season. Next year he will mo11e 011er
sport .... 1guess. If I hBd to sum It up, I juat
to a broadcast booth , where most think he
marched to the beat of a different
will be an Instant hit prov iding commentary
drummer.•
for televised accounts or Winston Cup races.
Do people lpprecltta you more now t ...n
Momftown: Owensboro. Ky.• now li11es In
then? ·well, most or those guys aren't
Franklin, Tenn .
around anymore. They're all gone .... For
A&amp;e: 53
e~a mple, wh&amp;tever happened to (ex·technlcal
Cer: No. 66 Kmart Ford Taurus. owned by
director) am Gazaway? Whate11er happened
TrEJVIs Carter and carl Haas
to that guy who used to run the Busch
Wife: Stevie
Series? What happens to ani these people?
ChU!Wn: Jessica Leigh (13). Sarah Kaitfyn
Where did they go? What happens to you
18)
once you're not a part of NASCAR.anymore?
Crew chlet. Larry· Carter
You kind of f&amp;ll off tha face of the E8f'th, I
Carur atatlltlca: 804 starts. 84 wins ,
guess ... I don't know about appreciation. I

CRA"IMAN TRUCK
The Craftsman Truck Series
was off last week and will return
to action this week at TttlliaS
Motor Speedway.

F£UD OHHE WHK

Nadeau quaHfied third and led 32 eatly laps before cettlnc
caught up In a crash. Afterward, h8 put the blame on Busch ,
the 2001 rookie ofthit year candidate makln&amp; nls third
Winston Cup start.
"Then the 97 car (Busch), 1 don 't know what he was
thinking. He Just Ptle-&lt;lrived the 31 car (Mike SkiMer). I was
on the outside and didn't have anywhere to JO .... When I
was a rookie , I tried to ShOW a lot or respect out there. •
NASCAR This Week's Mont. Dutton llYN r.lt opinion:
"Busch Is obViously talented. or else Jack Roush wouldn 't be
bringing him alone: so rapidly. He has earned a reputation for
being Impetuous, hOwe~~er, In the Crartsman Tr uck S~HleS
before he e....en got to Winston Cup. He'll Jearn, but he is
mak1ng a lot of enemies right now. •

••••••••••••
Y.lho'aHot...

YJhdaNot

• HOT: Bobby Labonte could
lose 50 points a race and still
win his first Winston Cup title.
He's 252 ahead of second
place Jeff Burton.
• NOT: Bobby Hamilton's last
top 10 was 25 races ago. He's
way back at 31st In points.

1 . What was the original name of Talladega
Supers peedway?
•
2. When Bill E!llott drove the Coors-sponso red
Thunderbird in 1986, what was his n umber?
3. Restnctor plates are typically used at Talladega ancl
w~ich other Wmston Cup Serres race track?

·.&lt;eMpaads 1euoneuJBWI euot.Aea ' £ :6 ·z
:..:eMpaMs JOlOV&gt;l 1 eU011e u~alUI eweqe1\l' •t

SHiMSN'i

•••••••••••••
•
• In tNI a&amp;e, It It lnttf.
tttiRC to ,..ote thft
rnotOt'C)'Cie fiCin.l WQ
once con•lcterU en
excenem: Wlf fot ttock
car racers to belfn thek
careers.
Joe Weatherty, the
1H2-63 NASCAR Orand
Nltlonal (now Wln.a.on
Cup) champion, wa1 1
motorcyc;:le champion
before he blfln r.clnc

stock Clfl.
Weatherly, fTom HorIOik, VI,, lnd ftfCknlmld

•Uttte JOe,"' WM kiUed In •
a erath on the roiMI
course In Rlnrtldt,

COlli., In 1984.

AROUND THE GARAGE

Stewart waiting to win a 500-miler; tires scarce at LMS
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
Tony Stewarl has never won :1
500-rnile
which concerns the
29-year-oh.l driver oot i n the least,
Slewart, who Ms won more races
th:~rr nny other driver th is year (and
the past two in succession). figures.
like Brook Benton, that i!'s just a
ma~ter of ume.
In hi s second yenr. Stewart hru
won on 1-mile tmcks (Dover. Phoenix,
New Hampshire), I _"i-mile tmcb
(Homestead). 2-mile tmc:b (Michignnl. nnd shon track! (Ma.rtinsYille.
Richmond). About all he !oclo:s 1s a
victory oo one of the two ~strlctor­
pl:lte tracks (Talladega, Dayton.l) and
nne of the road courses (Sem1 Point.

Wat kins Glen). He hos nhendy
demonstrnted competence at rhn~t:
layoms·
"
·

mce.

TIRE SHORTAGE: Goooyem h:Kl
a li tt le sec~t when 11 brought il.'il l'iH:·
111g rrres to l.llwe's Molor Speed\\· ~)
for IMI ~eeke11d'~ r:lCeS Now c\'CIV·
one knows nbontu .
·
The tire gr:mt hoc! to discard hun~
dred.• Of I he tire~ t11e.1nt fOf 11~ A II
Pro 300 ~nd UAW:GM ~f,XJ , Tile
!l~s failed 11 quality -oontroltest nt ;111
Akron. Ohio. prodnct1a1 plnnf Goodyear ongmally lhoughl il ~o:otrld
prO\Iide enough t1n:s th;tl were not
tmnted. But Thursd.1y nrght. the c.:om
IX'Il~ reve&lt;~led to NASC'AR th;lltherc
might nOl be enou~h or rh~ ilrl•s

cu~tnm -dcs•g•ll!( l fnr n ~ all his Jr;l.·k

The rcslil\' 1 To cn~ u rc cnou~~ tires
fur Slrnd:1y s Win~tnu £'np tilCC ,
NA.'i('AR (l l fll'lals nmliH-;'I!cd all
the n!!I•H•dc Illes that h:1d carlrer
ho.:cn di~ln t'I•II L&gt;d to I he l:iu.Kh Gmnd
N~t •.,n.!l lc;un.&gt; I'm ~at unlny\ 200l:•ppcr llw~c tc;uns h.1U to m:• l.~,~ du
With 1HC) ldl U\CI ll\llll ;1 HII.:C in
l)mcr. l)d . \\!1 cr.1l "·cck~ a~o

X .
I.IKf JI:H·. LIKE JERRY: As difl'icull .1~ tlu~ m:t) he ltliiU:rgmc. Jeff'
Go;&gt;rJ\lll ~orys 1h;11 lc:nnnmlc Jerry
N:Klc.ru has l rcc.lltcntly hcl ped him
·-r m h:!Jli'Y to howe Jerry as 11n
:~ddil lt lll 10 Hendrick Mo1ms1mrts
bt..·colll~c he li nd l dd\'c ~i1111lar : \cry
ng~tl·~~~~ c." ( imdon ~:ud

Ob~lously, Gordon lm ~ won 52
mces and lhree champi on s hij ~. while
Nro&lt;.kau h&lt;'ls nc~er won so much ns a
pole. Nade.1u i5 o,:on~tdcred in some
IIIIMters to h.; e~ln:mely ralenicd, but
Gordon. 01 year younger rhnn Nadenu.
is Ihe pm~·e n commodity.
N:a.lc:~u's team. hov.·cvcr. gives
Hcr•d rick Mo1orspons n certain
rcsc;uch nnd-developmcru edge. ns
(iurdon explained:
" We're hnppy to hnve Tony (Fun,
Nmlcau's crew chief] O\ICt !here. too,
bl..'l.'llll~e Tony likes to throw some
Wtld stuff ill it. We' re kind of rnore
on tile more !r:'ldlllonal sluff th.1t h.-u
work«! fnr us rn rhe JXISI . It's nice lo
he able to blend those things logeth CI at those hrgh-speed plou,;es like
Atl~nla 1111d here ."

Place Your .
Business's Ad here
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for details
.

461 South Third Middleport, Ohio

(740) 992-2196

1

1
2
3
4

5
6

9
10
B

Southern matched Mllkor toutlulmvn fi,r

touchdown m an exciting fif"ir h;1lf I )1\ I·
sion V Miller's playulf hopes mde on ·1 line
thread for the first 24 llllllU[l'\ , but Cn,
broke out of the gate, ;md Randy Nd . . on
fueled the fire with two key inttlll'ptHm\ in

the second half.
The Eastern power marhi11c put :)fll
yards on the board-; after cullt"ctin~ 4Hf, n n
the ground in Jefeatin~ Ft"der.l1 Hol kin~

63-8.
Quarterback Garrett Karr wa.\ 3-S p .h~­
ing for 38 yards. Brad Willford \\as H- 1.17
and RJ. Gibbs was 1 1· 136. K •rr ..lsu
rushed for 61 yards. Chris I ynm , llr;rd

ni ~hr.

ets take

39 (3)

37 (1)
31
27
25
20
13
13

1-o·tead

.9

Others receiving votes: Fort
Frye (1 ); Cheshire Naval
Academy (1)
To be eligible for The OVP 10, a
team must eHher: a.) be from
the Mason-Gallia-Melgs area;
b.) be a local conference mem·
ber; or c.) play at least one
game against local teams.

ST. LOUIS (AI')
M1h•
H.lmpton and the NL'\\' York
Mets kept M.1rk :\1cC\\"Ire .111d

C an. hn ,d-.; Jnanr~gr:r Tony La
R.u""a tried \\'Jthnut ~UCCt''\'1 to
gL·r McCwne an at- bat in &lt;l key

thl' St. L. ow~ C .m.lm,I].., nghr
whnc thl'\' w.mtcd thcm.
BJg M.1c lll'\\'r J:!Ot ntr the
bent'h ,md thl' C.m. hn.d" th'\'LT
got clo..,L' ro ~Loring until It \\· :t~
too btL' ,\\ tlh- t'vkh \\ ' Ull ( J- .?:
WL·dnt:sd.l\' nig.]lt
in (;,mlL\ I of
'

'-por.

tlw NL Champi&lt;lmhip Se-ries.
Hampton an~l MikL' l'i.\71.1
put their pbyotTpmbk111.., in th e
P""t :J\ tlw wild c,m1 Ml' t.., won
tht"ir ti.)urth in ,t rm\ 111 thi..,

ALL

po~t~c.·a~tlll.

.,

.

'

I

S/IHJ.:.
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living Dangerously,· Simpson's
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safety innovations .
ThiS Is an entertaining book,
full of humor, as Simpson
describes eYerything from
midnight California street race s
to the scene on Grand Prix
weekend at the Monte Carlo
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The book Is available for
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Phone 992·1135

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www.performanceupgrades.com

Wahama
3·3
Hannan
1·6
South Gallia
1·6
,Friday's Games
South Gallia at Clarksburg Notre
Dame
Buffalo-Putnam at Wahama
Meadow Bridge at Hannan

Volleyball

• lt'a almost I t If Jimmy
Makar and Gle&amp;Zipadalll
alternate mentlona In
this apace. Thll week, It
was Makar's turn, 11 he
and hla Interstate
Batteries crew masterminded another vlctOfJ
tor the likely Winston
Cup) champion In the
UAW-GM 1500. Driver
Bobby Labonte made the
call to chan•• four tlraa,
even while a raw other
crewe were cr.t,..&amp;Jn&amp;

MARINE
Sales &amp;Service
121 Enterprise
Pomeroy, OH ".,.&lt;nl

two. Jeremy Mayfield had

a haalt.hy la1d, but
Labonte trackad him
down and palled the
Ford driver with seven
lapa to·

1· 740·992·130

co.

Today's Matches
Gall1a Academy at Athens. 5: 15
Logan at River Valley, 5:15
Rock Hill at South Gallia, 5:30
Southern at Easlern, 5:55
Alexander.at Meigs. 5:55
Ohio Valley Christian at Ironton
St. Joe, 6:00
Saturday's Match
Federal Hocking at South Gallia,
Noon

Boys Soccer
Saturday's Match
Sissonville at Point. pleasant, 2:00

(0
(0
1\)
I

1\)
Q)
1\)

U1

Today's match
Point Pleasant at Capital, 7:00
Saturday's Match
South Charleston at Point Pleasant. Noon

Cross Country

Saturday's Meets
River Valley at SEOAL Champi·
onships, TBA (at Marietta)
Gallia Academy at SEOAL Cham·
pionships, TBA (at Manetta)

•••••
C heck out the Sunday TimesSentinel for a full recap of Fmlay
night\ prep football action ti-om
around the Tn-County'

'
I

MEAliNG OF THE MINDS- Cardinal battery mates Carlos Hernandez (at lett) and Dar yl Kile discu ss
strategy in the filth inning of Wednesday's garne. (AP)

Tomadoes tangle
with Wildcats
Bv ScoTT WoLFE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - This week. the
3-4 Southern Torn,1doc-. try tn
t'Vl'n thL.·ir n:con.l with ,i long
road trip to

\):..';tt crfi.1nl

The

of-.1 I t(n 242 yards. Miller shut
do\'\' 11
thl' Southl..'rn passmg
ga111e in the '&gt;l'cond hal f. as
Evans completed just 4·ot: 12
pa"ilil'&lt;; ~)r K9 y.1rch.
For t!ll' '\cason,

Ev~n~

Jus

Wildcat&lt;, also l--1, h.m· pl.1yed
some grL.':tt b.d l LttL·ly, n;urnwly
be m g c..h:featnl hy ;~ patCct
rvtillcr tt::ml 20-27 ' rhcn bst
week up~etting Tri111ble 20- 14
in overtilllt: .

co mpleted 6 1-of- 133 passes tc&gt;r
&lt;l 45.H pl'l'ccnt throwing accuracy and HH7 y:trds. lhck-up
qua rterback and &gt;;taring linebarker Brandon Pierce has
cn111 plete·d .).ot:H passes for 13.1
At Racine Frid,1y, \Ulrt n g ~ i x. yard~ ,J\ Southern as a tr:am J u~
touchdmvw, .trl,d ~0111~ over gnill' OVLT one thousand yards
1.Silll y.ll'd~ for the lil' &lt;l~tlll, (111211) on the season. Evan&lt; has
Miller\ C liri nn Cox rmhl'll for thrown for o;~.:vcn touchdowns.
27R yards in leading the eighthSm1thtTil \uo; ,weragcd 145.7
ranked Miller hltol" (7 -11) to .1. y&lt;mh p.1~.;;1ng p~;.·r g,Hllt.'. while
5.1 -2 1 Tn - V.11lcv Cnntl·rcncc
win nvn Southern
,It !lngcr
Lee Adalll" ML'IIH&gt;rial field. Uv
Milln \Lt li ..,tin, IH· h,l\ 17Jtl
)'&lt;lrth 011 I'L'COrd tbl'i \L'.I'iOil ,
averJging 7 .H yard.., pt'r rarry
and rotalling 20 tm1rhdnwn-..
SouthL.'rn h;~t.! nn!y 25 y&lt;trd~
ru~hing .H tl1L' ktlf, but gained
rsJ yanh in till' .lir on &lt;1 1.1 -ot~

1t) pa"'mg; perfi.nm,HKL' from
qturrerb ,H.~ k Jnnath.tn E\.tll'i.
OvL·r.lil, E\'all\ complelL'd 17-

rmhing f(H' .m .\V&lt;:rage of 143.3
yards. \hL· ~wcragL' t~tal y&lt;ud.1gc

lies .1t

2H~.

Sourhnn\ ground gainns
ti·om Ja..,t \\' L'l'k wt·rc fvbtt Ash

H-1 '1. Joe Cornell 10-17,
and
Andrew Coffman ].7,
Jon.rth.lll Evans 5-7. The
rt'ccivcr.., were Justin Alil'n 2-25,
Brice II ill 4-'iH. M.1tt A&lt;h 4- 18.
Joe Conie·ll 2·-'H. Brandon -Hill

Please see Southern, Page B&amp;

Ed~Jrdo

locld Zelle ,,_nd Jay l'ayton
homncd in the mmh :md
Alfonzo scored a run
,md dnwe in ,ll\othl'r for Ne'\

Yorl- .
And 11 \\',\\ :1 ~nnd - hu· k \'irtorv fl:1 r dJL' iVl ct-.;- thl' Ll\t ~even

" I \\':HltL'd to bL· :l (OJHrtbutor
instc.:.td of :1 l1.1bliity." I Llltlptoll t~".llll\ to \\'Ill the NLCS opener
\H'Ilt on to re.ll'h the World
!~Jid. ''I ju..,t \\'.UH~·d t11 do my
part and hL·l}' thi' tcun \\'111. I · ~l"rJL'\,
··; liked dre w:"· \l"l' pLryed. I
didn 't Jo tlu1 111 thL· tir.., t '- L'I'I L'&lt;.; ."
1u~r
d1dn 'r llh· the tined \corl' ...
ll.unp ton earnt:d l11' lif,r
·1 .l H.tm.l ~.ud. ".H:1mpron ,md
playo~r \VIn ;1~ thL· ML·t~ c., knd
cd th~i.r pn't'&gt;L' .t~on \C (ll\' iL''' the Mer-. \\'L'I'L' .1 littk' bl'ttl'r."
(; ;11\11..' 2 will be rhur\d.!y
strc.lk to .1 t c.tnl - r L·l' nrd :!,( )
111ghr .1[ Bmch Stadiu111. w1th AI
inning~ hd()n.' .1llo\,.111).!. t\\' 0
unl'Jrlll'd rLIII" \\ 1th t\\o our.., 111 1 L:ttL'I' ~t.lrtlll~ for the i'v1ct..,
.h~.lllht rookiL' RtLk AnkH:l.
th e 11111th.
"/\cqlllrL·d tl·om Houston last
"Thnl' !J,Jd hi.:L' Jl \ l~lllL'
\\'intvr
w \\'111 .It crunch tlllll',
Uouhr.. ca . . r ll\'L'f MikL" hL'\'.llhL'
of ,1 \lll.dl ..,,1111pk ol- po\t..,L',l.,Oil · , l.tlllpton dcll\'L"rc.:d. Hc ourplay. .md I rhink h L· cr.N·d th u .. L pHLht:d former A\tro~ tL.".lllllllatL·
douht-.." ML'h 11 1.'\I J,\gLT lh•hb\ ]),1rryll&lt;1k, ~1k1King the -.;cllom
( 1\)\\ d t)f :=i:!.255.
Valentine ... 1id .
\l.llllptOil bq.!;;lll t'hL· L'\'Clllllg
H .1111p1on kL"pt th e· hi g ~U\
MtCwilL'. t.lw ( ..1rd1n.tl.., · )lli ll h . \ \11) 1 .t L'.11'L' I.'I' poq~~,.-,1..,011 l'CL' Ord
ll t- ( 1.. ~ .1nd .1 5.K7 ERA in ti.,ur
hittn dd11xv -+- 0 11 t h'L, hr 1h·h
;md lcti: \\ iil1 .1 .1- lt) l·.hl. !&lt;..din- •t.1rt \.
;\ l t'~ \L' I l.hf \' L'L'k Ill thL' OpL'Il L'l'\ jo hn I'·Lli H' O .l!ld -\ 1 l\l, JIId l.\
Lk1;lll'/ linl..,lrl'd up.
Please see N L~S. Page 86

ALL

Area non-league

who had zero ltBi s in
thL' np L·nmg round agam~t S,m
Fr;1nci'iCO. hit .111 RBI double in
,1 t\n&gt;- run fir.;;r inning. He also
...ingkd h1.., nL'Xt rime up.
··1 ~ wun~ thl' b,1t .1 lot b~·ner,
o nly h ~ c.tu..,~ of my teammates
~~..- tting on .1hcad of me, gJVin g
me the opportunity w drive 111
Pl ,I7Z.t ,

Hampton pitched hko an
OctohL'r an·. btmktn~ ri1L' C.wdinah 011 \ IX hrt' fnr \t:n''ll
llll1lll~T';,

Nelsonville· York 2·0 5-2
Wellston
2-0 4·3
Belpre
1- 1 3·4
Vinton Couqty 1-1 1·6
Me igs
0·2 3·4
Alexander
0·2 0-7
Hocking Olvlslon
Miller
2~0
7 ·0
Eastern
2·0 6-1
Southern
1,1 3·4
Waterford ·
1·1
3~4
Federal Hocking 0·2 1·6
Trimble
0·2 3·4
Friday's games
Meigs at Alexander
Southern at Waterford
Miller at Eastern
Wellston at Nelsonville~ York
Federal Hocking at Trimble
Belpre at Vinton County

l'\'CI' ::"&gt;
Hl'{ 1{ ::"&gt;
Hl)JJlU.''
t&gt;

tl~L' rum."' P1an:1 said.

{

~JJ

"He \\',1'- hot a couple of
t1111L''.'' L1 IJ...m,&lt;t 'did. ''Couldn't

"A ·good ..,t,1rt t'tH u.... \\'L' kiH)\\'
it\ far tium over.'' Pi,JZZ,\ . . aid.
"Gnt lu kLTP the pcd.1l Limvn."

~

TVC
TVC

•

•

Ohio Division

Fan Tips

M·F 8·6 Sat. 9·4
740·949·2804

I' 11ler, and C:acy F.IUik .llso had consider·
,1ble g&lt;lln\.
In ~i'eL L'I\IIl!::!, lkn Holtt"r \Vas 1-27, Jen:"" (mHrulh~ 1-'J. and Brent Buckley 1·\1.
KL'Y' to th~, '''l'rk \, game comc.oos down to
E.l\tl'r rl \ dl'fl~ n ..,L' \ 'L'f..,U\ Miller's offense:.
wh1rh 1\ mdinly compri,t:d of Cox and hi'i
speed. Fasrern will definitely put some
pu1nt.., on the bo.trd, and Eastern is rich in
tqJint)n ,JI..,o, t\\o LJUahtie' that may just
.rllms" 1he F .1~le; to pull off the big win.
R·n,titJL'"' ,n1d 'peciJl t.:.llll'l play may also
bl' .1 hugl' f.Ktor. ICmdy Nelson is just _as
qlll r k th Cox and ha' lit:veral punt return5
c1 11d kKkotfn: mn11i fi.)r touchdowns.
C .mH' t1mc j.., 7 :.1(1 .lt Elstern Friday

half and ended the [,'3nle with 27X ) .rl"ds nn
32 carries.

.2
2

SEO

•••••••••••••

2 Factory trained
Briggs &amp; Stratton
Mechanics

EAST MEIGS-This week's Ul1official
Tri·Valley Conference game of the week
will feature the Miller Falcons, ranked number two regionally, versus t\)e number fiveranked Eastern Eagles a~ the Eagles' East
Shade River Stadium. Miller is 7·0 overall
and Eastern is 6-1, while both are 2·0 in the
league.
Over the past f~w week's, Eastern has for·
gotten th e meaning of a close game, com·
pletely dominating the competition since
struggling early against non-league Parkersburg Catho~c in game three. Since dropping game two to a tough Fort Frye club,
Eastern has taken off since the second half

of the Ca~holic game, not storing less than
36 points. Two of those were over 50 points.
Miller, also ranked 8th in the state, took
off early but has taken a few scares against
Waterford (27·20). and Southern. The Falcons luckily defeated both after going up
27-0 against the Wildcats, then leading by
just one last week m Racine 14· 13 at the
hal[
•
Scoring six touchdowns and going over
1,500 yards for the season, Miller's Clifton
Cox rushed for 278 yards in leading the
cighth·ranked Miller Falcons (7-0) to a 53·
21 Tri·Valley Conference win over South·
ern Friday night at Roger Lee Adams
Memorial field.
.
Cox had 18 carries for 162 yards at the

Jackson
4·0 ' 7-0
Logan
4·0 7·0
Gallia Academy 4~0 6·1
Point Pleasant 2~2 5·2
Athens
1·3 2·5
Warren
1~3 2·5
Marietta
0·4 1 ~6
River Valley
0-4 0-7
Friday's Games
Logan at Galli a Academy
Athens at Point Pleasant
River Valley at Marietta
Warren at Jackson

The ~ew lele\·ision deal bet\littll
NA SC.oftR and Fo~. NHC and
WTB S is very controversiill, Atlhis
point, perhaps it is bu tlo gi~e il a
~hance and allow the new networks
10 show us wlult the y can do .

We service chainsaws,
snow blowers, generators
&amp; mowers

BY Scorr WOL.FE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

SEOAL

Janet Day
Rockwood. Mich

RACINE
MOWER CLINIC

Eastern and Miller meet in heavyweight bout

Prev. Votes

Ciirts Soccer

.

Dave Harris or Matt Haskins
992-2155

Team
1. Logan
2. Portsmouth
3. part&lt;ersburg
4. Jackson
5. Ironton
6. Gallipolis
7. (tie) Miller
Eastem
9. Point Pleasant
10. (tie) Ross SE
N'ville· Vorl&lt;

Thursday, October 12,2000

Football

Dear NASCAR This Week .
Wirh the new nel)"orks taking
over the tele~ising of the NASCAR
mces. it will be hard ro enjoy rhe
race~ in the future , due to :~II the
commercials an d them cutlrng
awny to sornelhing else befo1e the
inlerviews after 1he r:II.'C .
Al so, they seem to be more imeresred in baseb.11l and footb.'t llthn n
racing . I sure hope they impro11e in
!he fulure . I can no! afford to go to
all the ntCC! and don't ~all)' wa01
10 mis! !h em .

By r."onte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

top football teams, as voted
by Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
sports staffers. (First-place
votes in parentheses)

Page 81

•

.

Heather Ra\IIJi r:a
W1uhin xtorr, Pa.

Jerry Nadeau vs. Kurt BIIICh

'31/'eetdt &amp;
'Dea.tdt

-

FROM lAST WEEK
WINSTON CUP

Used Cars &amp; Trucks

~

Dear. NASCAR This Week .
Afrer reading the leller regarding
thce:um crocks NASCAR is add1ng
to !he schedule, I agree 1hn1 il
shot1 ld remove some in relnrn .
But the ro.1d tmcks?
Tho~e nre so fun and differenl
from any of the Olhers.
My opinion'?
I think they should consider cutting out the ob\IIOUS (Loudon,
N.H .) and possibly even Tc~as . I
love rnci11g, and I don't 1hin k any one can handle any more death"
like we h1111e hnd this year.

Didn't cool off much

Ricky Rudd

6. (8)
7. (6)
8. ( 7)

• Where: Texas Motor Speedway, Fort Worth (1.5-mlle track)
• Format: 167 laps /250.5
miles (400 kilometers)
• DefendlftC chlmplon: Jay
Sauter
• Q&amp;Ndtfylnc: record: Jay
Sauter. Chevt'olet, 179.718
mph. June 10, 1999
• RKe record: Jay Sauter.
Chevrolet, 132.430 mph,
'
Oct. 15, 1999

~atttnm.a..

• Weekly rankings by NA.SCAR This Week writer Monte Dutton.
Last week's rank1'ng is in parentheses .
The race

A weekly look at the region's

• What: O'Reilly 400
• When: 8 p.m .. Fr'iday

Your1Um

Darrell Waltrip

R..;y Talm1. 2,908
Brl*t ltlffntr, 2,8D

TOP TEN

1. ( 1) Bobby Labonte
2. (2) Tony Stewart

CRA"SMAN TRUCK

••••••••••••

$1M GriUOin, 2,92&amp;

KIYin Cirla&gt;, 2.808

•

• Whit: Winston SOQ
•When: 1 p.m ., Sunday
•Whlfe: Talladega (Ala.)
Supersl)eedway (2.66-mile track)
•Format: 1881aps/501.208
miles
• O.fendlna: chemplon: Dale
Earnhardt
• Qulllfyln&amp; record: Bill
Elliott. Ford. 212.809 mph,

• Notable: Eamhardt swept
the •aces at Talladega in 1999.
... NA.SCAR has changed
aerodynarn•c reQuuen'lents and
restrictor plate s1zes as a
means ot •mprovmg the quality
of competition for this. race.

o.nn+, sm ... 2.929

RW!Oy LaJoire, 3,181
D&amp;Yid Gtean, 2,944
Case, ,t,twood, 2.883

9 ,ft.C.21014

ON THE SCHEDULE

WINSTON CUP

•

•

Maraud·ers set to face
winless Spartans Friday
1') \c

h.l . ,

BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

th L· 1'\ J\ tlT. ,l!ld ) .~ U! th, 'l' IL.'
ti·nhlll l' ll. ~t ) til L ~p.11t.11b h,t\ ,·

pl.l \L'd \ \ L' ll .1! l]Ll ,lJ'{L'rb.lCk l( l lll

.ROCK SI'RINGS - The
Meigs Manwdl'r\ \Vill hL' trying
to t•nd a t\:VO gamL' losing, 'irrco~k,
while the Alexander Sp.lrt.lll\
will be trying tu \vin tlwir tlr~t
game of the \t':l~nn h ·id&lt;lY
L'VCillllg when the Mt~ril tllil'r"'

h.td gnm 111 g p.11 m. \nit thn .Ill'

pkr 11 1~

unpnl\'l llg \ ' 1th L' \ I.T \ ~-11111"

\.trd ,

travel tn A.lbany.
Me1gs (3 - 4, TVC 11 ~ 2) is &lt;"&lt;llll "
mg ott' a 35-7 loss to Nel sonvilk - York

L1'it

Frid,ry

,lt

home. Alexander (11-7. TVC 11 ~ 2 )
lmt ,1 27-20 ht·;Jrtbrc.ll..et to Vtn ton County b~l week.
The Sp.1rr.ms tlni . . hl'd l.1'it \ L\1-

Ou .1 rt n h.1l k
'

ll'.1d..,

h .1~ pbyl'd in rlll' " htg
~chuol" , Ohio 1/ivi..,ion .ltld tltL'V
arc .;;t illlookin ~ (or tht' lr tlr't Will

Alexandn

and they lmld a Il-l H in the· cnn fert·ncc.:: while being a nwmbcr nf
the Ohio Divi~1nn .
Alexamkr ha.:.; 2H p,l.ryn ... on

( ;r1:2;\h\
.

,lt th.L' rL·(~'I\~'1

l.l\

-t -t

H.lllll.lll

·t)f 1!10 p . l~~l''

1 1.111 11. 11 1 b l ()llllllg

h 1 ~h

fn r ~ 1.-t

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l)~

~ . ml~

utr . t l..lll'l' l
111 the 1( ~~~

p.t.. ~mg

1 .1"'~1

rn '-.. e],tlt l\· rll t·· York.
I L1n11.1n ·., L1w1r1t e t.tr~ct' .1rc

,lil t! H. . \,11,1 \ .1\\'\0il
Ar, t.11lhK~ tr11 :IlL' 1..\p.trt.IIJ\. 1,
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Hu1111H!;Wn .1nd ~Litt
Bulllll grnn lu~ 25
l'.lr dll'\ fu r 1X2 y. lrLI'&gt; . Sll'\\ ,llt h.1,

V:\11 C I il'll ( L'

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Schon .HJ L' I

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wugh ,.,\ rd ~ \\ 1h-n .lll',-,kd.

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Page 8 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, October 12, 2000

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

.,.Th:u~rscl~a~y~,Oct~~o~be~r=1:-2,:....2000r:==~;;;:;==============Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
-

Alwau.-...-nt.

Giwewll'

70

110

Yard Sale

LoM" ,._

Help Wanted

140

E•RN $25 000 10 $50 000 YR

Pomeroy
Mtddleport
&amp; Vlctnlty

YMI - . ..... w.ntod
To Do Ada

.........................
IpBI!tl M&amp;QUNE.
2 00 p m. the Wy ...,.,...

Med ca nsu ance B 11 ng Ass s
lance needed mmed a e ~~ use
you home compu e ge FREE

GoiMpolta c - College
Careers Close To Home

nternet FREE LONG DISTANCE
Webs te E Ma Ca Now
300-

800 2 4 0452
Reg 19(}-()5 2748

150

SEHJWft Df&amp;QUNE
1 00 p.m. the Wy betor.

210

Business
Opportuntty

AI eal ostato ng In
this 118n paper IS subject to

Schools
Instruction

of

E•RN YOUR COLLEGE DEGREE

QU CKLV bache G s Mas e s
Doc o a e by co espondence
based upon p o educ:a on and
sho s udy cou se Fo FREE n
o ma on book et phone CAM
BR OGE STATE UN VERS TV I
800 964 83 6

the ..s lata n.on
SUnclrt l lloncley edition
1 00 p.m Friday
BEQ§DB Df'P'!HE
2 olllp ........ the ed Ia
lo run D)' 4 3D p m.
-...-y
" llonclay
....,.,. 4:30 Thul'ldllr

tho F - F8Jf Housing IV:J.
t968 wl1ich - .. • illogll
to advertise any p4efelenca
limitation or 'diSCniTNnattOO
baSed on raoe color retiQion
S8ll fam lialltatus or national
ongtn 01 any intEif'D)n to

230

Proless•onal
Services

· anyorsuch
preftllllflCe
1mltattOn
d scriminanon

$$1

lhls newspaper will

no

·a a: -llflblect to

knowmgly accepl
advertisements for eal asta e

ANNOUNCEMENTS

which IS n violatiOn of the
law Out readers are hereby
nformed that an dwel W'IQS
advert sed n thiS newspapef
a e av&amp; able on an equa

~ ... Mlo holldayo

005

SFREE CASH NOW$ I om
wea hy a1111 lEIS unk&gt;ad ng m 10ns
o do as ohepmnmze he
axes W e mmedaey Wnd
a s 4542 EAST TROP CANA
AVE 11207 LAS VEGAS NE
VAOA 89 21

Personals

FREE OAT NG
www S N.GLES com
OS E 3 TO 5 LBS WEEKLY AS

SEEN ON TV FAT TRAPPER

9?

$2 500-&amp;50 ()()()
low Mon hly Pym s
1 day ServiCe
No fee us Good SVS

3

For Appointment

be o e

;am ly

o~

lor Sale
1977 Double W de 24x48 3 bed
oom 2 ba h unde p nn ng
bocks ct sconnec bocks $6000

Yankees even the series with big inning
NEW YORK (AP) - Pressure was building n
Yankee Stadmm In the home teams dugout ten
~10 1

mcreased wuh each zero put next to New
York on the scoreboard
There s nothmg vorse than struggling and
they re boomg you Paul 0 NetU md
Players smped at un ptres
Fans Jeered
Another shutout loss appeared to be m the offi• g
And then tt all ca ue pourmg out hke water
bursting through a broken dam
Seven runs etght h ts all m a half mnmg that took
41 nunutes And wtth a 7 I w 1 Wednesday over the
Manners the Yankees t cd the AL Champtonshtp
Ser es at one g.J 1 e ap1en
Dowt ? 0 go ng mo Seattle would ve been
devastatmg Cln ck K1 oblauch s,;ud And nght
10 '
ve re r d• 1g a h gh
Orlando Hen and z \as br lhant on hts bmhday

DECORATION ...
'

INSULATION ...

.J

~llenBal~

3 Sed oom House on

60 Nea

Nor h Ga a H S $400 mo $400
depoli

No Pe s Ca

Be o e

9a m Of arte 9p m anvt me wee
kends 74Q}446-8495
3 b hOuse no pes e &amp; dep
S400 00 a mon :)04 675-2749

540 Mlacellaneous

540

Merchandise

allowmg o 1e run a d x h ts n e1ght tnn nbrs a d
uuprovmg to 7 U th a I , ' ERA n postseas 1
pia\
B t for th first s
1 l
6" tl e Yank s sp t
t&lt; red 01 ce aga1 1 hk
h
I J SQ ofte-n n n.:c 1 t

Merchandise
STEEL BU lOINGS New Mus.
Se 30x40x 2 was S 9 200 now

$6 990 AOxGOx 2 was S 6 400
now $ 0 97
50x100x 6 was
$27 590 now $ 9 990 60x200x 6
was $58 760 now 539 990
aoo406 5 23 ex 1149

n Kanagua 2 Bed oom House

NEED CASH

PI Pleasant
&amp; VICinity

S8 95 METASOL TE 000 $9 95
BACKED BY THE NAT ONAl
0 ABETES RESEARCH COUN
800 804 0436 COO MC
C L
V SA www losewe gh nu

b,

OJ&gt;I&gt;Ortunllybasl

320 Mobile Homes

EDUCATION ...

ma~

wiSh to
all nurses and a ds the
Hosp1ct nurses and Dr
Mansf eld
at
Rockspnngs
Rehab I tauon Center
for CKcellent care All
who sa d prayers sent
food no ... ers and
helped n any way.,
Ew ng Funeral Home,
and Rev Charles
Wtllet dur ng the
Iillness and death of our
husband and father

Ca Today 74~6-&lt;367

29'\-4683 Dept 0109

ihe ..s lata Rill
Sunclrt l lland8V .clition
2 00 p.m. Friday

BuSiness
Tralmng

$375 A Mon h nc udes wa e 2
Bed oom T a e $325 A Mon h
Inc udes Wa e No Pe s Oepos
&amp;
Ae e enc:es
Req u ed
(740}44&amp;-4107

\~..:cks

GET PA 0 TO LOSE UP TO 30

LBS N 30 DAYS l m ed me
ncent ve p og am
866 278
BF T 2348 Sc en

&amp; dep no

740)256-&lt;;522

t-8n 748-11 LL (2455)

Auct1on
and Flea Market

30 Announcements
EXCLUS \IE FHA MH l oans
P eOua By Phone (740 446

Colltg&lt;Sphy by urry

3583
Fo C1 F 250 2000 2 WD Powe
S oke Loaded 6 speed 24 000
m es (740)379-2205

e hulo:. s eet
JET
AEAAT ON MOTORS
A epa ed New &amp; Rebu
n Sock
Ca Ron E ans
800 537 952B

Wapakonata OhiO 45895
4 9 738-2340
Wedd ng Showe A types o

nv a ons Ch s mas Cards

Would the lldy who found he
money c p 11 tl'le Polt Off ce on
Oct 6 and etu ned t ca 304
67§...6977

40

Addressed
Ca graphy L.euons Taught
CASH LOANS $2000 $5000
Conso da on o $200 000 Bad
ced noced OK Ced cads
mo gages e c G oba F nanc a
Se ICes To Feefo noma on
888 604 1444 x303

Giveaway

LOWER
F om Rent To Own Low Down
Payme
Low Mon h y Paymen

ca

MERCHANDISE

510

Need We And Sept c No Down

WORLD CUP SOCCER

Household
Goods

Paymen Requ ed La ge Se ec

1 60 0 948

5678

U.S Men facing -elimination from play
4 3

en
320

FINANCIAL

Lost and Found
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

210

Ne' York had 1 t sr r l 1 °1 t m ngs t tatch g
the franc hiSe postscaso r ord set t 1 th&lt; 1921 a d
?O World Sc rt&lt;S
The Yankees wore I for o tth r tnncrs n scor g
the senes The r
poSitiOn dropp t g to 0 for 13
team battt1g average had SU I k hke the Nasdaq
droppmg to 207 m tho ALCS (I? for &gt;8)
joh1 H alama born 1 Brookly
p tched s x
shu tot t mn ngs aga st the Bro x Bo ber a d Jo
Pam agua \\ent the se et th extend ng the scur l !l!lo
streak of Seattle s bullpen to b nnmgs m the pia)
offs
It seemed as 1fSta 1javters RBI smgle 1 the th rd
would be the d1fference
The• Davtd Ju sn e started the e ghth bv send 1 g
a pllch from Arthur Rhodes I gh off the fence
left center
Up came W1lhams \&gt;how th the bases loaded at d
no o uts
the first htt the ball 6 nches n front of
the plate w1tl catcl er Da1 W !son turn ng It tnto a
? 3 do 1ble play

TRANSPORTATION

Business
Opportumty

Help Wanted

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

Th e Costa Ricans pla)ed conservanvel} for n ost
COLU MBU S O hto (A P) - Th e US soccer
t
co Id n ISS the World Cup for the fmt tm e of tl ega 1 e content to play long balls fro n the back
to try to beat the A r cans offs de trap In the s c
su ce 1986 f tt doesn t wm ts final game of se n fi
o d half they packed defe ders around the r goal to
1 al qual fy ng 1 ext n onth
Tl e US team would have cl nched a spot n the pre~erve the u e
They clearly ca 1 e n trymg to get a po nt and
next round by beat ng Costa R ca on Wednesday
not
really ' n the game Saracha n sa1d l f)OU look
n ght but play d to a Scoreless t e No the A r
ca 1s nct:d t
1 at Barbados to be c na n of at th e nu b s th e) put beh 1 d the ball t as d1f
fi ult o get lo of lea cha es
dvann1g to the final rou nd of qual f) ng
The U e I S a
a
p d d 1 d
W. h k ere n gr 1t pas t 0 1
r lh do
I Ed I
h
II
s
Cl
do
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}
l D
S r llJI tl e actmg coach
l J ed
L IS ~ red
dfi IJ
I
v g th
g I
u p l SI
d Br a M cBn l
I
to go
t ll bados
co

All CASH CANDY ROUTE Do
and ca ay $9995
aoo 99a
VEND
FL A N2000 033
SC A!!'g664

EARLY PAY

P H 0 T O.G-A A P'"-"
Ma n S PM og aphy
5 ManS
Now open lo bus ness
Wedd ngs

A

M OOCk s Factory Ou 1e
o Homes
S4 EK 47 C oss Lanes
Save housa d A d spay
modes mus be sod

ManS ee Fun ue
304}675 422
5 5Ma

See Pon Peasan

866 88 885

$er)IQ 5

PSYCH CS TAROT READERS &amp;
ASTAO OGERS NEEDED FOR
MA OR TV PSYCH C L NE
WORK FROM YOUR HOME OR
OFF CE MAG KA
BOO 3 0
8645 E 45

I

~ood

"

!Cree 0036

Famly Po as
Ca o an appo
30 675-7279

S 00 $3 500 WEEKLY POT EN
T A GUARANTEED Wok om
nome
Se a se add essed
s amoel! enve ope T PRO NC
PO Bo 257365 Ch cage l
50625 7365

p

Auto Parts &amp;
Access ones

NSTANT
CASH
LOWEST
RATES CHECK OUT THE REST
Up o $500 INSTANTLY 1 877
you ea n $800 day 30 mach Ms

W U~anlS fouled off a j 1 pl!ch then fouled off
two 11ore JUSt hangmg on Fmall~ he slapped a sm
gle to center that drove m Justice
I was struggling through the whole game
Wtlltams satd This guy was throwmg 1t 94 95
mtles an hour There was no way I could be thmk
mg too much m that at bar
Tmo Martmez followed wuh a smlang !mer to
left that bounced off the glove of a divmg AJ Mar
u 1 for a " 1gle that allowed W !Iiams 10 rake second
Jorge Posada then hlt a smash that rolled off the
glow of a d v ng Mark Mclemore m the hole
betwee fi st J nd sec md bound ng mto left field as
Wdl ams scored It vas the first t e
I&gt; games
s 1 ce Sept ?1 at Detroit that four str:t ght Yankees
got h ts
I JUSt ~cnse e rei
d a I t of p e sur!! Yankees
manager Joe Torre sa d We Ul d ncand there s pres
sun: 1 olved As I SJ\ 'e 'ere eT) upng:ht
0 Ne lis sacr fice fl) 1 Jade tt 1 I and Jose Mesa
allO\ cd a s 1 gl to L1 ts SoJ an RBI double to Jose
V zcamo a r 1 s r ng st1gle to Ch ck Km blat ch
:1 1d a t '
r 11 ho 1 r to D r k Jt.: er JUSt the St"Cm d
h 1cr for th Ya 1k es 1 1 th r last Rl&gt; nnmgs
W d d t 11ak
I) good p!tc h s and th
&lt; \ u g the bats Man 1ers 1 a1 ger Lot P mdl
&gt;a1d W. ac 011pl sh d hit &lt; ant d h re
&lt;pht vtth them m Ne York and 10 v v go to our
h me ballpark Its a shJI 1 bcca IS&lt;
had seve
d n \he etghth the\
good m 1 gs of bas ball
nplodcd on us
Aftet so
y 1 s~ es the Ya kccs vent 8 for H /
1g ett t g a ALCS record for luts
ng
El D que vho says he t rned 31 bu 'hose bt th
c roficate sho s he s 3o nade t poss ble They.,
1
kees ar 9 0 \hen he pttches m th postseason
H e thrc v the best ga 11c I vcr aught toda) atd
I osada \\ ho also was beh nd the plate for Davtd
Wells perfect game t vo years ago
The ser es resumes Fr day at Safeco F eld :v th
And) Petr t e p tel g for Ne v York aga n t Aaron
Sele
If ve played the '"Y we play d yesterday a d
toda) Posada sa d we re gomg to be all r ght

800-948-5678

on 0 Homes Ca

60

ALCS

Card of Thanks

r.:.

AI,.....,..,

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8 3

men
R&amp;D s Used F n
e &amp; Ap
p ances An ques G ea See
on P eel To Se
Come And
B owse Co ne 0 Rou e &amp;
Add son P~A We Buy Fun u e
740 367 0280

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECUR TY ISS?
NoFeeu essWeWn
888 582 3345

520

REAL ESTATE

j

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I v s a httle d s ppotn ed o g t a
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format cc t th e Syd &lt;)
vc d d t g vc up 31} po

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th g

s I at

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at I tl c go e RJzo
t ckle
If
!
oR I d
d~ I

Peter Warrick full of frustration over bad start
SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

CINCIN NATI (AP) - F v ga 1 es to hJS rook
c season Pet"r War
s full of fr 1strat o
T l e play 11Jker
Fl d St t s
to a
cha p 01 sh p tea 1 has arn d nto a spect or o
th C n , at Be gals V11lcss tea 1 He has o I
16 cades a d o
touchdo v
fiv ga ~es f
bclo v h s xpect t ons
1g
Wnl tl c Bet gals ( 5) c 1 p JaS Zt1 g tl r u
g t 1e nder coach lJ ck L B a W rr k s b gg
contnbt tt ..; :tr co t g as
bl ck r for C o l

'e

'

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
ATTENT ON A L STUDENTS
We have o e
200 obsa a aile mmedaey
F andpa mea a abe
EARN up to S 51hou
p see abo ses
yo need wo k .gh away

Ca 1 8Q0-929-5753

Cal Oday tum omo ow

IJII

th field II ck 1g ~ r

Id

d)
DomnosNwH
go esFo
Po me o~ &amp; Ga po s oca ons

dllk

I
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bod} s do t
AI hough W: rr k \J
o
I plo
W. d e
day he d dn t b dg fro
s ss s e
I &gt;t tl e
Be gals need to get h 11 tl ba l
ore ofte
I JUSt van to feel mvo d he sa d I at t o
l c help g th s team Its not that I
lfisl
WI en the lle gals drafted ht
hey t lk d about
k gI
the cc t terp
f th of~
HIS firs
t
I do' n
pr&lt;s aso 1 ra
14 ard r ' rs
tl regula s aso1 I s g
tl ba I o
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I I d (
and ~a 1 ed II a is H
, 5 1 rl - b tl
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GNte Oeve opmen G o p
M enn m Te eserv ces

0

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1 14 I

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pad::.

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RENTALS

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Ta a ownhouse Apa me s
Ve y Spac ous 2 Bed ooms 2
F oo s CA
2 Sa h Fu 'I Ca
pe ed Ac!u Poo &amp; Sa by Poo
Pa o S a $365 Mo No Pe s
Lease Pus Se u 'I Deoos Ae
q eo Oars 740 446 348
E en riQ! 740 367 0502 740

446 0 0

Va

e

B

a F a

a

lab e
KeAesSe
eCe e
ST AT 8 PT P ea a

Ad

304 895 38 4

&amp; R p ey

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

CIJ.ASSDIFDIEIDSi

I

t

~I

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I I ~
' p

�•
•
Page 8 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, October 12, 2000

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

.,.Th:u~rscl~a~y~,Oct~~o~be~r=1:-2,:....2000r:==~;;;:;==============Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
-

Alwau.-...-nt.

Giwewll'

70

110

Yard Sale

LoM" ,._

Help Wanted

140

E•RN $25 000 10 $50 000 YR

Pomeroy
Mtddleport
&amp; Vlctnlty

YMI - . ..... w.ntod
To Do Ada

.........................
IpBI!tl M&amp;QUNE.
2 00 p m. the Wy ...,.,...

Med ca nsu ance B 11 ng Ass s
lance needed mmed a e ~~ use
you home compu e ge FREE

GoiMpolta c - College
Careers Close To Home

nternet FREE LONG DISTANCE
Webs te E Ma Ca Now
300-

800 2 4 0452
Reg 19(}-()5 2748

150

SEHJWft Df&amp;QUNE
1 00 p.m. the Wy betor.

210

Business
Opportuntty

AI eal ostato ng In
this 118n paper IS subject to

Schools
Instruction

of

E•RN YOUR COLLEGE DEGREE

QU CKLV bache G s Mas e s
Doc o a e by co espondence
based upon p o educ:a on and
sho s udy cou se Fo FREE n
o ma on book et phone CAM
BR OGE STATE UN VERS TV I
800 964 83 6

the ..s lata n.on
SUnclrt l lloncley edition
1 00 p.m Friday
BEQ§DB Df'P'!HE
2 olllp ........ the ed Ia
lo run D)' 4 3D p m.
-...-y
" llonclay
....,.,. 4:30 Thul'ldllr

tho F - F8Jf Housing IV:J.
t968 wl1ich - .. • illogll
to advertise any p4efelenca
limitation or 'diSCniTNnattOO
baSed on raoe color retiQion
S8ll fam lialltatus or national
ongtn 01 any intEif'D)n to

230

Proless•onal
Services

· anyorsuch
preftllllflCe
1mltattOn
d scriminanon

$$1

lhls newspaper will

no

·a a: -llflblect to

knowmgly accepl
advertisements for eal asta e

ANNOUNCEMENTS

which IS n violatiOn of the
law Out readers are hereby
nformed that an dwel W'IQS
advert sed n thiS newspapef
a e av&amp; able on an equa

~ ... Mlo holldayo

005

SFREE CASH NOW$ I om
wea hy a1111 lEIS unk&gt;ad ng m 10ns
o do as ohepmnmze he
axes W e mmedaey Wnd
a s 4542 EAST TROP CANA
AVE 11207 LAS VEGAS NE
VAOA 89 21

Personals

FREE OAT NG
www S N.GLES com
OS E 3 TO 5 LBS WEEKLY AS

SEEN ON TV FAT TRAPPER

9?

$2 500-&amp;50 ()()()
low Mon hly Pym s
1 day ServiCe
No fee us Good SVS

3

For Appointment

be o e

;am ly

o~

lor Sale
1977 Double W de 24x48 3 bed
oom 2 ba h unde p nn ng
bocks ct sconnec bocks $6000

Yankees even the series with big inning
NEW YORK (AP) - Pressure was building n
Yankee Stadmm In the home teams dugout ten
~10 1

mcreased wuh each zero put next to New
York on the scoreboard
There s nothmg vorse than struggling and
they re boomg you Paul 0 NetU md
Players smped at un ptres
Fans Jeered
Another shutout loss appeared to be m the offi• g
And then tt all ca ue pourmg out hke water
bursting through a broken dam
Seven runs etght h ts all m a half mnmg that took
41 nunutes And wtth a 7 I w 1 Wednesday over the
Manners the Yankees t cd the AL Champtonshtp
Ser es at one g.J 1 e ap1en
Dowt ? 0 go ng mo Seattle would ve been
devastatmg Cln ck K1 oblauch s,;ud And nght
10 '
ve re r d• 1g a h gh
Orlando Hen and z \as br lhant on hts bmhday

DECORATION ...
'

INSULATION ...

.J

~llenBal~

3 Sed oom House on

60 Nea

Nor h Ga a H S $400 mo $400
depoli

No Pe s Ca

Be o e

9a m Of arte 9p m anvt me wee
kends 74Q}446-8495
3 b hOuse no pes e &amp; dep
S400 00 a mon :)04 675-2749

540 Mlacellaneous

540

Merchandise

allowmg o 1e run a d x h ts n e1ght tnn nbrs a d
uuprovmg to 7 U th a I , ' ERA n postseas 1
pia\
B t for th first s
1 l
6" tl e Yank s sp t
t&lt; red 01 ce aga1 1 hk
h
I J SQ ofte-n n n.:c 1 t

Merchandise
STEEL BU lOINGS New Mus.
Se 30x40x 2 was S 9 200 now

$6 990 AOxGOx 2 was S 6 400
now $ 0 97
50x100x 6 was
$27 590 now $ 9 990 60x200x 6
was $58 760 now 539 990
aoo406 5 23 ex 1149

n Kanagua 2 Bed oom House

NEED CASH

PI Pleasant
&amp; VICinity

S8 95 METASOL TE 000 $9 95
BACKED BY THE NAT ONAl
0 ABETES RESEARCH COUN
800 804 0436 COO MC
C L
V SA www losewe gh nu

b,

OJ&gt;I&gt;Ortunllybasl

320 Mobile Homes

EDUCATION ...

ma~

wiSh to
all nurses and a ds the
Hosp1ct nurses and Dr
Mansf eld
at
Rockspnngs
Rehab I tauon Center
for CKcellent care All
who sa d prayers sent
food no ... ers and
helped n any way.,
Ew ng Funeral Home,
and Rev Charles
Wtllet dur ng the
Iillness and death of our
husband and father

Ca Today 74~6-&lt;367

29'\-4683 Dept 0109

ihe ..s lata Rill
Sunclrt l lland8V .clition
2 00 p.m. Friday

BuSiness
Tralmng

$375 A Mon h nc udes wa e 2
Bed oom T a e $325 A Mon h
Inc udes Wa e No Pe s Oepos
&amp;
Ae e enc:es
Req u ed
(740}44&amp;-4107

\~..:cks

GET PA 0 TO LOSE UP TO 30

LBS N 30 DAYS l m ed me
ncent ve p og am
866 278
BF T 2348 Sc en

&amp; dep no

740)256-&lt;;522

t-8n 748-11 LL (2455)

Auct1on
and Flea Market

30 Announcements
EXCLUS \IE FHA MH l oans
P eOua By Phone (740 446

Colltg&lt;Sphy by urry

3583
Fo C1 F 250 2000 2 WD Powe
S oke Loaded 6 speed 24 000
m es (740)379-2205

e hulo:. s eet
JET
AEAAT ON MOTORS
A epa ed New &amp; Rebu
n Sock
Ca Ron E ans
800 537 952B

Wapakonata OhiO 45895
4 9 738-2340
Wedd ng Showe A types o

nv a ons Ch s mas Cards

Would the lldy who found he
money c p 11 tl'le Polt Off ce on
Oct 6 and etu ned t ca 304
67§...6977

40

Addressed
Ca graphy L.euons Taught
CASH LOANS $2000 $5000
Conso da on o $200 000 Bad
ced noced OK Ced cads
mo gages e c G oba F nanc a
Se ICes To Feefo noma on
888 604 1444 x303

Giveaway

LOWER
F om Rent To Own Low Down
Payme
Low Mon h y Paymen

ca

MERCHANDISE

510

Need We And Sept c No Down

WORLD CUP SOCCER

Household
Goods

Paymen Requ ed La ge Se ec

1 60 0 948

5678

U.S Men facing -elimination from play
4 3

en
320

FINANCIAL

Lost and Found
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

210

Ne' York had 1 t sr r l 1 °1 t m ngs t tatch g
the franc hiSe postscaso r ord set t 1 th&lt; 1921 a d
?O World Sc rt&lt;S
The Yankees wore I for o tth r tnncrs n scor g
the senes The r
poSitiOn dropp t g to 0 for 13
team battt1g average had SU I k hke the Nasdaq
droppmg to 207 m tho ALCS (I? for &gt;8)
joh1 H alama born 1 Brookly
p tched s x
shu tot t mn ngs aga st the Bro x Bo ber a d Jo
Pam agua \\ent the se et th extend ng the scur l !l!lo
streak of Seattle s bullpen to b nnmgs m the pia)
offs
It seemed as 1fSta 1javters RBI smgle 1 the th rd
would be the d1fference
The• Davtd Ju sn e started the e ghth bv send 1 g
a pllch from Arthur Rhodes I gh off the fence
left center
Up came W1lhams \&gt;how th the bases loaded at d
no o uts
the first htt the ball 6 nches n front of
the plate w1tl catcl er Da1 W !son turn ng It tnto a
? 3 do 1ble play

TRANSPORTATION

Business
Opportumty

Help Wanted

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

Th e Costa Ricans pla)ed conservanvel} for n ost
COLU MBU S O hto (A P) - Th e US soccer
t
co Id n ISS the World Cup for the fmt tm e of tl ega 1 e content to play long balls fro n the back
to try to beat the A r cans offs de trap In the s c
su ce 1986 f tt doesn t wm ts final game of se n fi
o d half they packed defe ders around the r goal to
1 al qual fy ng 1 ext n onth
Tl e US team would have cl nched a spot n the pre~erve the u e
They clearly ca 1 e n trymg to get a po nt and
next round by beat ng Costa R ca on Wednesday
not
really ' n the game Saracha n sa1d l f)OU look
n ght but play d to a Scoreless t e No the A r
ca 1s nct:d t
1 at Barbados to be c na n of at th e nu b s th e) put beh 1 d the ball t as d1f
fi ult o get lo of lea cha es
dvann1g to the final rou nd of qual f) ng
The U e I S a
a
p d d 1 d
W. h k ere n gr 1t pas t 0 1
r lh do
I Ed I
h
II
s
Cl
do
R
}
l D
S r llJI tl e actmg coach
l J ed
L IS ~ red
dfi IJ
I
v g th
g I
u p l SI
d Br a M cBn l
I
to go
t ll bados
co

All CASH CANDY ROUTE Do
and ca ay $9995
aoo 99a
VEND
FL A N2000 033
SC A!!'g664

EARLY PAY

P H 0 T O.G-A A P'"-"
Ma n S PM og aphy
5 ManS
Now open lo bus ness
Wedd ngs

A

M OOCk s Factory Ou 1e
o Homes
S4 EK 47 C oss Lanes
Save housa d A d spay
modes mus be sod

ManS ee Fun ue
304}675 422
5 5Ma

See Pon Peasan

866 88 885

$er)IQ 5

PSYCH CS TAROT READERS &amp;
ASTAO OGERS NEEDED FOR
MA OR TV PSYCH C L NE
WORK FROM YOUR HOME OR
OFF CE MAG KA
BOO 3 0
8645 E 45

I

~ood

"

!Cree 0036

Famly Po as
Ca o an appo
30 675-7279

S 00 $3 500 WEEKLY POT EN
T A GUARANTEED Wok om
nome
Se a se add essed
s amoel! enve ope T PRO NC
PO Bo 257365 Ch cage l
50625 7365

p

Auto Parts &amp;
Access ones

NSTANT
CASH
LOWEST
RATES CHECK OUT THE REST
Up o $500 INSTANTLY 1 877
you ea n $800 day 30 mach Ms

W U~anlS fouled off a j 1 pl!ch then fouled off
two 11ore JUSt hangmg on Fmall~ he slapped a sm
gle to center that drove m Justice
I was struggling through the whole game
Wtlltams satd This guy was throwmg 1t 94 95
mtles an hour There was no way I could be thmk
mg too much m that at bar
Tmo Martmez followed wuh a smlang !mer to
left that bounced off the glove of a divmg AJ Mar
u 1 for a " 1gle that allowed W !Iiams 10 rake second
Jorge Posada then hlt a smash that rolled off the
glow of a d v ng Mark Mclemore m the hole
betwee fi st J nd sec md bound ng mto left field as
Wdl ams scored It vas the first t e
I&gt; games
s 1 ce Sept ?1 at Detroit that four str:t ght Yankees
got h ts
I JUSt ~cnse e rei
d a I t of p e sur!! Yankees
manager Joe Torre sa d We Ul d ncand there s pres
sun: 1 olved As I SJ\ 'e 'ere eT) upng:ht
0 Ne lis sacr fice fl) 1 Jade tt 1 I and Jose Mesa
allO\ cd a s 1 gl to L1 ts SoJ an RBI double to Jose
V zcamo a r 1 s r ng st1gle to Ch ck Km blat ch
:1 1d a t '
r 11 ho 1 r to D r k Jt.: er JUSt the St"Cm d
h 1cr for th Ya 1k es 1 1 th r last Rl&gt; nnmgs
W d d t 11ak
I) good p!tc h s and th
&lt; \ u g the bats Man 1ers 1 a1 ger Lot P mdl
&gt;a1d W. ac 011pl sh d hit &lt; ant d h re
&lt;pht vtth them m Ne York and 10 v v go to our
h me ballpark Its a shJI 1 bcca IS&lt;
had seve
d n \he etghth the\
good m 1 gs of bas ball
nplodcd on us
Aftet so
y 1 s~ es the Ya kccs vent 8 for H /
1g ett t g a ALCS record for luts
ng
El D que vho says he t rned 31 bu 'hose bt th
c roficate sho s he s 3o nade t poss ble They.,
1
kees ar 9 0 \hen he pttches m th postseason
H e thrc v the best ga 11c I vcr aught toda) atd
I osada \\ ho also was beh nd the plate for Davtd
Wells perfect game t vo years ago
The ser es resumes Fr day at Safeco F eld :v th
And) Petr t e p tel g for Ne v York aga n t Aaron
Sele
If ve played the '"Y we play d yesterday a d
toda) Posada sa d we re gomg to be all r ght

800-948-5678

on 0 Homes Ca

60

ALCS

Card of Thanks

r.:.

AI,.....,..,

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8 3

men
R&amp;D s Used F n
e &amp; Ap
p ances An ques G ea See
on P eel To Se
Come And
B owse Co ne 0 Rou e &amp;
Add son P~A We Buy Fun u e
740 367 0280

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECUR TY ISS?
NoFeeu essWeWn
888 582 3345

520

REAL ESTATE

j

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H
ag

1

t

K
o
l t t

t

1U k rk

II I o

Sport ng
Goods
"

uld

0

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C:o t
blo d I

1

A

agu
Rc

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lo hI
aa1pt
glt

e o I) f Co ta R ca ' ns
I v s a httle d s ppotn ed o g t a
Wolff ' ho JO ed th e nato al t an
format cc t th e Syd &lt;)
vc d d t g vc up 31} po

c

g

Ic
th g

s I at

c

at I tl c go e RJzo
t ckle
If
!
oR I d
d~ I

Peter Warrick full of frustration over bad start
SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

CINCIN NATI (AP) - F v ga 1 es to hJS rook
c season Pet"r War
s full of fr 1strat o
T l e play 11Jker
Fl d St t s
to a
cha p 01 sh p tea 1 has arn d nto a spect or o
th C n , at Be gals V11lcss tea 1 He has o I
16 cades a d o
touchdo v
fiv ga ~es f
bclo v h s xpect t ons
1g
Wnl tl c Bet gals ( 5) c 1 p JaS Zt1 g tl r u
g t 1e nder coach lJ ck L B a W rr k s b gg
contnbt tt ..; :tr co t g as
bl ck r for C o l

'e

'

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
ATTENT ON A L STUDENTS
We have o e
200 obsa a aile mmedaey
F andpa mea a abe
EARN up to S 51hou
p see abo ses
yo need wo k .gh away

Ca 1 8Q0-929-5753

Cal Oday tum omo ow

IJII

th field II ck 1g ~ r

Id

d)
DomnosNwH
go esFo
Po me o~ &amp; Ga po s oca ons

dllk

I
) "

t

r

bod} s do t
AI hough W: rr k \J
o
I plo
W. d e
day he d dn t b dg fro
s ss s e
I &gt;t tl e
Be gals need to get h 11 tl ba l
ore ofte
I JUSt van to feel mvo d he sa d I at t o
l c help g th s team Its not that I
lfisl
WI en the lle gals drafted ht
hey t lk d about
k gI
the cc t terp
f th of~
HIS firs
t
I do' n
pr&lt;s aso 1 ra
14 ard r ' rs
tl regula s aso1 I s g
tl ba I o
nl)
I I d (
and ~a 1 ed II a is H
, 5 1 rl - b tl
I ghs b I
k cxpc
Tl
g! r I

J

Ooty

tl

GNte Oeve opmen G o p
M enn m Te eserv ces

0

ir It fir
1 14 I

k h I
pad::.

ose

k

2

'

e s 304

RENTALS

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Ta a ownhouse Apa me s
Ve y Spac ous 2 Bed ooms 2
F oo s CA
2 Sa h Fu 'I Ca
pe ed Ac!u Poo &amp; Sa by Poo
Pa o S a $365 Mo No Pe s
Lease Pus Se u 'I Deoos Ae
q eo Oars 740 446 348
E en riQ! 740 367 0502 740

446 0 0

Va

e

B

a F a

a

lab e
KeAesSe
eCe e
ST AT 8 PT P ea a

Ad

304 895 38 4

&amp; R p ey

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

CIJ.ASSDIFDIEIDSi

I

t

~I

~

E

g

I I ~
' p

�/

•

. P•ge B 4 • The O.lly Sentinel

Thursday, OCtober 12, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

. Thursday, October 12, 2000
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Santlnel • Page B 5 _

ALLEYOOP
BRIDGE

VOUB

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local ~3-5264

MEIGS COUNTY FARM
BUREAU ANNUAL MEETING
Tues. Oct. 17, 7:10PM at
Meigs Senior Citizen Center,
Adults $5.50 Child $3.50
Entertainment·
Dwight Icenhower,
Door P rizes

IMiedicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
Final Expenses; College, Rerirement.IJj
lii&lt;me~rgcmy Funds; Mortgage;
1lfl.nmn'lli
Medical •
Home
•.el!!:!'""'-·

, CONCRETE
CONNECDON
Quality Driveways,
Patios, Sidewalks.
25 years experience
Free Eatlmates

~~~
High&amp; Dry

Self-Storage
I

33795 HilAnd Rd.

PHILLIP
ALDER
SECURITY

• NewHomas
·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
7 40.992·1671

Ctr1alntted,
Simington

Now accepting applications for
prep cooks, grill cooks.
waitresses &amp; dishwashers.
Send resumes or pick up
applications at
39239 Bradbury Rd .,
Middleport, OH 45760.
Apply in person.

lcc•llec:tiorls,, legal. papers, inveslmenr records. photo
albums, cameras. household
invenlory and
sentimenlal ilems will be safe.
For more information call

1'1'. R,.. 248

740-992~5232

DwD.p Tn&amp;clr; DeliYeJT
~~~and Gallia Cou.ollet
CiliA Le&amp;w Me~U~:e

OF

GALLIPOLIS

992·6142 or
Toll·Free 1·877-604-735

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

Ball Logging &amp;
Firewood

"W.elp"

Public; Notice

Public Notice

tht purpoet ot cloalng tht ·
A Yltwlng of McKtlvty remaining portion of tht

PUaUC NOTICE

S!Netln Lobanon Tow-lp
Wtll btl hold on October 16,
at 9:00 a.m. with tht htartng
to btl at 10:00 a.m. In tho

Commlaaloner'a offlct

atrttt. Anyone who Ia
lnttr..ted In tht elating of
thla atrHt Ia welcome to

attend.

{10) 5, 12, 2TC

1Uppers Plains

Certilied in Meigs,
Washin&amp;ton Counties.
Your Quality 24-Hour
Childcare Services

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

--

Couch and Johnson
looking for old rapport

I

him make plays for me like

h~

Rutland, Ohio
Mums. Indian
AP~•Ies.

APPle

Gift Items. Subs,
•a•ce.lce Cream.
:OioJ~na. Summer Sausaae, Beef Jerkv
.•

742-7405

~ ~ lt-F 10-7 Sat 10-6 Sun- Closed

-Anll Size Double Hum!·
l

~

• Free Installation
* Free in Home Estimates

!~
~ Call for Further Details
992-4119

tllt

Stop In And See

.1

that."

•
-;

Cardinals took away hlS ability to go deep.
"It's tough," Couch said. "You kind of get fru strated, but you have to take what they're giving
you . lt looks like you're j ust kmd of playtng 'Dink
and Dunk' a litde bit. But if it's all you've got, you
can't force the ball into coverage and surt throwing mrerceprions :ind get into that whole scene."

Forcing the ball is what got Couch into trouble
this ,summer. He played poorly du1ing the exhibition season, and was ripped m rhe media and by
some Browns fans who began to wonder if he was
their Ql3 of the futu re.
Couch isn 't to blame for the Browns'

three~

game losing streak. He has been limited by an
offensive sc heme that at tim es has. been too co nservative.
Cl~vebnd 's g:mH~ plan was co run the ball
:~gainst Ari zo na's JUth ranked rush1ng d efense, and
the Browns cram med 1t down the Cardin:ds'
throats early o n. JUmping w an early 14-0 lead,
Hm when An zo na. adj lJ5te d, the Bro\vm diJn't

change.
Clcvd,ll1d

Llll

tht: ball l..J. of 20 time-. on finr

down .

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

~ek·~..- oon .

"So n ll'tL!llL'~

\\ 'c.: Ill I 'I~

tlr ~ t

do\\ m by .1 ya rd hLTL'
.mJ tlh:n.:: ·· Couch ....ud "Or rtl 1111 ~., .1 thrn\\" Ot
we' ll drnp ,1 b,dl A lot nf lmlt' lht nb"· l.tck of l'Xc
t:U tlon Wh .l CL'\'L'r pl.1y they (,liL ,wd wh.H l'\-LT \W
J o, \\"l' _)lh( h,t\'L' hL· t() b~ ll101'L' L'f1iCI L'IH Il l nlll

l'Xt.'t'lttlnll
'' \V..._• Ill~! h.l\T to~L'f

nght ~ pot ~\\ Hh tht·
b.11J If tr·~ .1 p .t~~. I h.l\'L' tn gL't It to th L· n ght Wt\·
Th q··rL· gotng rn g t\'L' II \ ,1 d1.1n ce hl 'LILLL'L'd, \\L'
JUSt h,tn· tu go out .tnd dP tt."
l\ 1 rh L·

Phone (740) 593-6671

o~.lo

Truck seats. ::ar seats. headliners.
truck tarps, crmvert!ble &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler 3eats, motorcycle seats.,.
.
boat cove•·s, carpets. ~tc.
Mon - F';·i 8:30 • 5 :00
Over 40 yra experience

1••11
1-888-521-0916

Jiii!iitll •(740) 742-8888
~

OFFICE DPIIESS
"BUSINESS SERVICES
All Types of Business
Support Services

11401 661·3224
1-800-828·0212

VINYL REPLACEMENT

WINDOWS
·Any Size Double Hung·

$229.00*
• Free Installation
• Free In Hom.e Estimates

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC.

Call lor Further Details

CONCRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES

svsnms. me.

BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercial
Free Est Imates
Fully Insured

Brian Morri1on/Radne, Ohio

. Owner .Jim PickenS
Mechanic- Bill Jones
Parts Mar -Tamra Pickens

OUHUTV WinDOW
992-4119
1-800·291-5600
VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
ON STATE ROUTE 33 6
MILES NORTH OF
POMEROY, OHIO, AT
COUNTY ROAD 18
•No Dealers or Contraclors
Please W\/#023477

SELLERS CONSTRUCTION

• Custom Garages • Roofing
• Concrete Work • Decks
• Additions
740-696-1176
or 740~696-1233

SHE AN'
SNUFFY

HAD

A SPAT II

NO MA'AM-~ SHE WAS
SETIIN' UP ALL Nl&amp;HT
WITH OUR PORE
SICK MULE II

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M:
1\ioln St.,

HILL'S
SELF STORACE

Pomeroy, QJol

457('1
740-949-2217.

SHHDE RIUER HG SERUICE

"Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% Sweet Feed- '5.25/50 lbs.
• 12% Cattle Feed s6.75/100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog Food '6.75/50 lbs.
Pomero , Ohio 45769

SMITH'S COtiSTROCTIO"
'

• New Homes
• Garages
• Siding

• Remodeling
· • Decks
• Roofing

992·2753 "

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30''

7:00~~~s8 PM

THESE
N CASE YDU

r-....../"-....

trimming &amp; removal

Tues·Fri Ht-6
Sat. 10-4
• Candle making
supplies

Advertise in

for

WINTER
STORAGE
SPACE
AVAILABLE
Meigs County
Fairgrounds
Oct. t, 2000 -Apr. I, 2001
CALL FOR MORE
INFORMATION

949-2033

LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take the pain out
of paintingLf:!.t me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

Before 6p.m..
leove Message
After 6 pm- 740·985-4180

'

i

AND 1 SEE CONRAO 15

• Baskets

SENDING IN THE ..

740-992·4559

West
2•
Pass

North
Dbl.
4.,.

_j!~--~
.. WIENER FORK'

304·273·0036

74B-887-G383

~

A

~'Your

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

HlJ4 1·mo

WANTED

The CRAFTY,

Stan din g timb(•r large
or sma ll truck!'!. Top

BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)

prices paid a lsu.

All ver·ti1·ul hlind,

Dozer work.

lll'c

mude to ur·• l• ·r· ut otw
lu.•ntinn '

Free Estimates
Cdl T&amp; R Logging
aflcr 8:00 pm
740-992 ·5050
( Kanrty )

UP TO 70% OFF
• Vf"r·ti•·nl~; • Wood .
• Miui~ • Et('

·144 Third Ave. Gallipolis

446-4995
Tal Free ·888·745-884

Advert.ise · our business
on this page or one month for
as low as $25
'

Phone 992·2155

{abbr.)
21 Waltzing
25 Small

French

~:tf.'.':!••

28
32 Pertaining to

sheep
33 Drive back
34 Tropical rain
forest

35 Author Gore • 36 Stories
37 Unpleasant

sight

48 Correct
51 Exhaled
audibly
54 Tennis player
Andre55 Jerry's friend
56 Disavows
57 Type of sleeve

DOWN
1 Church

seats
2 - St. laurent

3 Nerve network , o:!L:.J.!.!l.~~
4 Savings-7 - ·lruHI
account Info
8 Exist
S Casual shirt
9 Youth org.
6 Like some
10 Gloss targets
knights

Friday, Oct. 13,2000
Al th ough you like parlners,
your progress in the yea r ahead
might be more rapid in what you
do alone. When it comes to
important aims, do what needs
doin g independem of others.
. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
Relationsh ips wilh ot hers could
be a bi l toucl1y today if you
become more"assertive rhan coop·
erative·with them. Go ahead and
be pushy for mutual benefits, bur
nol for selfi sh ones: Get a jump on
life by undersranding the innu·e nce s that ' ll govern you in the
year ahead. Send for your AslroGraph predictions by mailing $2
to Aslro -Graph, c/o this newspa per, P.O. Box ·1758. Murmy Hill
Station, New York. NY 10 156. Be
sure to stale your Zod iac sign .
SCORPIO . (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Should you fall behind today , it
wi ll be extremely difficu lt for you
to catch up later, so ir 's best to
keep pace with your duties and
assignments. Stay on schedule .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
21) Selecl social activities today
where you're comfortable with
the people, as well as the place .
Sho uld you have 10 deal wilh

someone you dis like. an unpleasant inci den t could occur.

CAPR ICORN (Dec. 22 -Jan.
19) When it comes lo yo ur caree r,
il mi ght be besl today to avoid
gett ing involved in a compelili ve
· situa ti o n where th e odds are
againsr you. If you lose. it could
hun you r reputat ion .
AQUAR IUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Unfo l1lm ately, you cou ld turn a
deaf ear to some ve ry sound
adv ice today, merely because you
don ' t like rhe person who is giving it. Your bias wi ll work against
you.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
You're not likely to be an even
match today against the entici ng
merchandise found in the stores.
It mi ght be smart Ieday not to go
shopping in rhe first place ·· even
window wishing.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Ignoring your mate's suggestions
today may be asking for trouble,
especially if events should prove
that what she o r he· had to say was
sound er wisdom than yours.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) It
could be your own fault if you end
up carrying more of the load at
work today than your cohons.

C ha nces a re ir'll be because you ·
didn 't trust their ability to do the
job.
GEMINI (May 2 1-Ju ne 20) If
. you don 'I interfere wilh the flow
of event s today , things will have
a way of working out 10 your ulti male bcncfil. But if you starr
chang in g thin gs. around , th e
results coul d be lousy.
CANCER (Jun e 2 1-July 22)
Be prepared lo pur fonh a second
or even third effo11 today , and a
difficull objecri ve can be
ach ieved. If you expect perfccli on
on lhe first try, you'll be sorel y
disappointed .
LEO (July 23 -Aug. 22) Your
bi ggesl problem loday· could be
your lack of pa11cnce for those
who can't or \von't immcdiatel i
go along with your way of thinking . The harder · you push . I he
more resistant they' ll be.
VIRGO. (A ug . 23-Sepl. 22)
It's wonderful to be a nice person
today, but , by the same token, it's
foolish to allow another to ace you
out of somet hin g to which you're
entitled in order to be the good
guy or gal.

11 Baseballer
Slaughter :
12
19
21
22

23
24
25
26

Paving stoneFrost
~
Colorado cltJ
Army order .J
(2 wds.)
Jltter·s
Kind of rock:
Muimum .
Part of the ..

·=

All pass

27 eye
Window part.
29 Hairstyle

30e-

31 " Vogue"

-

'·...

competitor ·..;

Man beats machine
BY PHILLIP ALDER
Regular readers will remember
that last year Zia Mahmood
played a tournament with and
against seven bridge computer
programs . In a close contest. Zia
finished ahead of a four-way tie
for second between Blue-Chip,
Oxford, Q·Pius and Saitek. If you
would like to read .all about the
contest, buy "Man vs. Machine"
by Mark Smith (Bridge Plus) .
Occasionally, the program s
produced excellent play, but some
of their mistakes would never
have been perpetrated by a human ·
--as in this deal.
North's double was negative,
promising length in both unbid
minor suits and enough count to
contest the bidding. South had a
promising hand . but his heart
king could be devalued . North
should have passed out South's
three-club rebid , because he had
a minimum double .
Zia (West) led the diamo nd
queen. Meadowlark won with
dummy's king and cashed the ace
to di scard hi s low heart . It drew
trumps. then ducked a spade. Zia
took hi s three major-s uit winners
10 hold .Meadowlark to its contract .
At the other table, Saitek was
in five clubs . Micro Bridge (West)
cashed its two top spades. Then .
a human wo uld have taken the
heart ace for one down . But
Mi cro s witched lo the diamond
queen. Sairek made no mislake .
After winning with dumm y's
king. declarer drew !rumps, threw
one of dummy's hearts on the
spade queen, ruffed a ~pade in the
dummy, trumped a diamond in
hand, and cashed the spade eight,
discarding dummy 's last heart.
The man won this time. but for
how much longer?
.
The book is approximately
$10.30
postpaid
from
www.bridge-plus.co.uk.

To get a current weather
report, check the

IRON CITY GYM
6 Month
Membership $100
plus tax
with this ad
Ravenswood, WV

18 River Island
20 Fast plane

1-S~,.!.,.J!~~

assn.

45 1974 kidnapping grp.

East
Pass

9,' 1/00 1 mo pd

Coo/viii•, OH 45723

dlmo•nu

c. o ~c.

_ L __

• Wooden crafts

$25 per

WHATIA YA 5/&gt;o.Y WE
BAG. THE RAH • ~AH
STUFF AND Goo
CHECK THEIR
' - - ~,..,.._ GATO~ADE
FOI'.
HUMAN
GROWTH
HOll.MONE 7

I'RE"I(S!

rf'liuiHr h"tu.,"

740-992-2269

DEPOYSAG
PAR,.S

ALL A
BUNCH OF
1'\USc.LE ·
I!.OUND

The CountrY
Candle ShoP

• Firewood • Light
hauling • Tree' &amp;hedge

Dealers. ·

131 mo d

HAVEN'T
NOTICED.

TH EY'RE

Bill Slack

1000 Sr. Rr. 7 Soulh

992·11 01

IT :.\1 D~ "00 C&gt;KJL.L:&gt; I'ZO!Jt RE.D,
t-\0 EXPOOE.t-\Ct: ~Cf.~R.Y I "

~

Road
Racine, Ohio

AH Makes Tractor
. .&amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts

Need it done, give us a call
FREE ESTIMATES
'
Great Priced on New Homes

~

29670 Bashan

this space

740-985-3.831

Hauling •limestone •
Gravel• Sond • Topsoil•
Fill Oirl• Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992-3470

740·99:2·7599
'

Paying $80.00
per ga'¥
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie. # oo-so """"'"

JlbWICK'SCIJ
tlfiOLir'IG and
EXCfiVfiTU'ICi

month •

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc
n :rtland ,

1-740-742•7243

• Roofing
COMMERCIAl and RESIDENTIAl
FREtt ESTIMATES

• No Dealers or Contracrors Please WV #0234 77

35537 St Rt 7 North

. "A Beller Wa , Eve

(7 40) 985-3948

Cou r h. \vho. co mpl .:tl'd l (• of 2~ p.l ~~~~ f(n .1
'iC.1Sot1-low 13H y.1 rds. n:fmnl to cntiqu1.• th~..· pl.1y

L.arry Sche y

OUT OF TH'
IN. HER
NIGHT·
&amp;OWN
AT SUNUP

I BET

wee9eaters, pick-up and .
delivery ava 1lable on
·

Sun. Closed
Phone 740·949·2804

holdor
t7 Opp. of NNW

~~g~nu r:~~~~~

•1 Taka to court
44 W. hemisphere

Opening lead: • Q

· generators, snowblowers ,
request. ·
Open Mon-Frl&amp;-6; Sat. 9-4

• Rep lacement Windows
• Room Additions

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

• Fall Fertilizers

After three games, Couch h'd the second- h1 ghest QB rating in the leagw: at 107.7. However. in
hH last three games - all losses - Couc h has
only one TO pa~s and five inrerceptions. His rat ~
ing has plummeted 25 points and he hasn't
thrown for a scor(' m 11 quarters.
Aga1nst 3 saggi ng Arizona defens e. whtch
·dropped as many as eight players into coverage,
Couch was forced to throw underneath as the

Steve Ri ffle

- Sale s R ep r esen t a tive

Couch's numbers are getting worse. tuu .

Stratton trained
mechanics

lo1 oled tn Rullund '&gt; Dcp1- Store
Ma:n Sl. Rl. 124 Open
Thur-Sat Noon-7 pm

New Homes • V:nyl
Siding • New Garages

1-800-291-5600

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

18 otch.cs.
h'-·'s not the go•ro n:ceh·l'r of
ye.u ago
·· I fl'L'I for ·hi Ill," Couch ~.t id. ·'We 'r~ rcJ!ly good
tfiends and we talk about 1.t. Bm I'm nut gomg to
go out thnL' .md fnrce the is~uc to get hllll the b.11\
if it's t.he wrong read . But wh&lt;:n Ill)' n:;tJ takes me
rhcre, \Vt' ju~t have to start getting on the sam'-'
page, and I can't be missing h im with throw~
when he 's open. I rake rhe blame for a littlt· of

We servit;:e mowers,
cha insaws, tillers,

BISSELL BUILD.ERS
INC.

'
i

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.

Last season, Couch and Johnson were the best
thing about the expansion _arowns. They h:1d
mstant ~hemistry as rookies , combining for dght
TD passes and giving C leveland a passing combo
for yeai"S tq com~:.' .
Thc'Y roumt'Ll together for roaJ ga m es, :md
seenungly did evl'rytlung in un1son.
It's beL'I1 a far difTaent story th1s season.
W1th GoL1c h spreading the b;tll aruu nd mun-,
Johnson hasn 'r L:wght .1 TD pass, ;md in the la sr
fiw galllL' S, his n:ccptions h.tvc dropped from 5 to ('l----'---'-...,....-----------,

4m3to?.tol . He \nedfo rtheteamk.ld\\'ltb

Creative Costumes

Featuring two Briggs &amp;

38

HARNEY
· JUG
I SAW
AUNT
EEZ.Y COMIN'

•

.AlltEL

Sunday.

Ragdol's
Costumes

theragdoi~Pilotma•l.com

~

did last year,"

Couch said of Jo hnson. who caught just one pass
for 4 yards in Cleveland's 29-21 lOss at Arizona oi1

Pomeroy, Ohio
.J 2 yr•. Locnl

RACINE MOWER CUNI(

I I~•I'P'-·r-.. • ( i:trl~~llT'
\\lid\\ l''[ "'""'l'li :-.\\ k'

South
Ia

Free Estimates

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

Nortb
10.12·00
• 7 6
• 8 5
t A K 52
aJ10972
East
• J 10 9 5
• J 6 32
to 7 1
7 3
• 9 8 6 4
• 8
South
aQB432
• K 9
• 10
aAKQ63

•
'

39 Make amends

Vulnerable: East-West·
Dealer: South

• Ratfil&lt;! &amp; Gulltr1
• VInyl Slolng &amp; Palotlng
• Patio &amp; Porch Dock•

\'iiH;I~l· ( 'IPiil lll te

740-667·6329

Kevin Johnson wide open again.
Pinned in front of his locker. by TV cameras and
reporters , Couch was too bmy tending otT questions about Cleveland's offensive problems to
. ·notice Johnson sneaking out of the Browns' locker room all alone Wednesday.
The t\vo have been m~ssing each other aU year.
"I've got to get rhe ball to him more and just let

•:.~::.•..,·~·

Athens and

BEREA. Ohio (AP) -Tim Couch couldn'nee

• R- atlolillon• &amp; Romodtltng
• Ntw Garal"
• lltctrtcal Pl...t.log

HEAP Vouctten accepted for
Melt• a. Glllli&amp; Comtiel

.

State Route 7,

• AQ
• Q J
• 5.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

35215 Ball Run Road

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

aAK

CHESTER

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

I ~,_.,....~

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

West

BAUMLUMBIR

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

7/22/TFN

PRODUCTS

I p,cole•ct your guns, fam ily heirlooms, coin and card

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

MILLIES
RESTAURANT

1

ACROSS
Fool'a gold

7 Articleo of
furniture
13 Smoolhor
14BNrtlka
15 Molitor
16 Etrl Grey

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

PomtrtiJ, Ohio

740-742-8015 or
1-877-353·7022

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Sentinel

ITHURSDAY

37 HI-story

.J.

chapter
38 Affirmed

-

~+--+--11--1--1 40 Actress Oay-

-+--l---11--t--1

41 WWI plane ')..

42 Persuade
43 Of the dawn
45 Wood Used to
lill gaps
46 Ms. Horne

47 Seaport In
Yemen

..

49 Greek letter
50 Compass ptt
52 Workers'
'"
assn.

53 Liquid mea$.

I

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created lrom quotations by famous people, past aM

present. Each lener 1n the cipher stands IOf another.

Today's clue : Z equals W

LPPA

El

'WSKSJFEGR

ZSELBG

J M G

E AS 0 I,

NEWN·IGOFGEXL
PDGSX

D P F

WSKSJFEGR

El

RPM F

OFPMXA

0

ASOA

XSWN . '

-

I G EX L
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Look ca refully before you leap. Experience is the
comb that life gives you after you've lost your hair.~- Dear Abby

WOlD
UMI

O four
Rearrange letters of
Krombled · words
~

the
be·
low to form fovr 1lmple word1 .

NOTENI

I II I I
I I I I" I
2

1

I

I

0 NF UT
!

e

PR INT NUMBFREO LHTERS IN
1HESE SQUARES

I

~ 'UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS 10
11;1 GEr ANSWER ·
.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
H~rbor- C/~ss- Quilt· Legacy- CLOTHES
"Women live longer than men ," my grandpa mused,
"beca use someone has to stay behind Ia pick up the
CLOTHES!"

OCTOBER 121 :

�/

•

. P•ge B 4 • The O.lly Sentinel

Thursday, OCtober 12, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

. Thursday, October 12, 2000
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Santlnel • Page B 5 _

ALLEYOOP
BRIDGE

VOUB

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local ~3-5264

MEIGS COUNTY FARM
BUREAU ANNUAL MEETING
Tues. Oct. 17, 7:10PM at
Meigs Senior Citizen Center,
Adults $5.50 Child $3.50
Entertainment·
Dwight Icenhower,
Door P rizes

IMiedicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
Final Expenses; College, Rerirement.IJj
lii&lt;me~rgcmy Funds; Mortgage;
1lfl.nmn'lli
Medical •
Home
•.el!!:!'""'-·

, CONCRETE
CONNECDON
Quality Driveways,
Patios, Sidewalks.
25 years experience
Free Eatlmates

~~~
High&amp; Dry

Self-Storage
I

33795 HilAnd Rd.

PHILLIP
ALDER
SECURITY

• NewHomas
·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
7 40.992·1671

Ctr1alntted,
Simington

Now accepting applications for
prep cooks, grill cooks.
waitresses &amp; dishwashers.
Send resumes or pick up
applications at
39239 Bradbury Rd .,
Middleport, OH 45760.
Apply in person.

lcc•llec:tiorls,, legal. papers, inveslmenr records. photo
albums, cameras. household
invenlory and
sentimenlal ilems will be safe.
For more information call

1'1'. R,.. 248

740-992~5232

DwD.p Tn&amp;clr; DeliYeJT
~~~and Gallia Cou.ollet
CiliA Le&amp;w Me~U~:e

OF

GALLIPOLIS

992·6142 or
Toll·Free 1·877-604-735

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

Ball Logging &amp;
Firewood

"W.elp"

Public; Notice

Public Notice

tht purpoet ot cloalng tht ·
A Yltwlng of McKtlvty remaining portion of tht

PUaUC NOTICE

S!Netln Lobanon Tow-lp
Wtll btl hold on October 16,
at 9:00 a.m. with tht htartng
to btl at 10:00 a.m. In tho

Commlaaloner'a offlct

atrttt. Anyone who Ia
lnttr..ted In tht elating of
thla atrHt Ia welcome to

attend.

{10) 5, 12, 2TC

1Uppers Plains

Certilied in Meigs,
Washin&amp;ton Counties.
Your Quality 24-Hour
Childcare Services

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

--

Couch and Johnson
looking for old rapport

I

him make plays for me like

h~

Rutland, Ohio
Mums. Indian
AP~•Ies.

APPle

Gift Items. Subs,
•a•ce.lce Cream.
:OioJ~na. Summer Sausaae, Beef Jerkv
.•

742-7405

~ ~ lt-F 10-7 Sat 10-6 Sun- Closed

-Anll Size Double Hum!·
l

~

• Free Installation
* Free in Home Estimates

!~
~ Call for Further Details
992-4119

tllt

Stop In And See

.1

that."

•
-;

Cardinals took away hlS ability to go deep.
"It's tough," Couch said. "You kind of get fru strated, but you have to take what they're giving
you . lt looks like you're j ust kmd of playtng 'Dink
and Dunk' a litde bit. But if it's all you've got, you
can't force the ball into coverage and surt throwing mrerceprions :ind get into that whole scene."

Forcing the ball is what got Couch into trouble
this ,summer. He played poorly du1ing the exhibition season, and was ripped m rhe media and by
some Browns fans who began to wonder if he was
their Ql3 of the futu re.
Couch isn 't to blame for the Browns'

three~

game losing streak. He has been limited by an
offensive sc heme that at tim es has. been too co nservative.
Cl~vebnd 's g:mH~ plan was co run the ball
:~gainst Ari zo na's JUth ranked rush1ng d efense, and
the Browns cram med 1t down the Cardin:ds'
throats early o n. JUmping w an early 14-0 lead,
Hm when An zo na. adj lJ5te d, the Bro\vm diJn't

change.
Clcvd,ll1d

Llll

tht: ball l..J. of 20 time-. on finr

down .

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

~ek·~..- oon .

"So n ll'tL!llL'~

\\ 'c.: Ill I 'I~

tlr ~ t

do\\ m by .1 ya rd hLTL'
.mJ tlh:n.:: ·· Couch ....ud "Or rtl 1111 ~., .1 thrn\\" Ot
we' ll drnp ,1 b,dl A lot nf lmlt' lht nb"· l.tck of l'Xc
t:U tlon Wh .l CL'\'L'r pl.1y they (,liL ,wd wh.H l'\-LT \W
J o, \\"l' _)lh( h,t\'L' hL· t() b~ ll101'L' L'f1iCI L'IH Il l nlll

l'Xt.'t'lttlnll
'' \V..._• Ill~! h.l\T to~L'f

nght ~ pot ~\\ Hh tht·
b.11J If tr·~ .1 p .t~~. I h.l\'L' tn gL't It to th L· n ght Wt\·
Th q··rL· gotng rn g t\'L' II \ ,1 d1.1n ce hl 'LILLL'L'd, \\L'
JUSt h,tn· tu go out .tnd dP tt."
l\ 1 rh L·

Phone (740) 593-6671

o~.lo

Truck seats. ::ar seats. headliners.
truck tarps, crmvert!ble &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler 3eats, motorcycle seats.,.
.
boat cove•·s, carpets. ~tc.
Mon - F';·i 8:30 • 5 :00
Over 40 yra experience

1••11
1-888-521-0916

Jiii!iitll •(740) 742-8888
~

OFFICE DPIIESS
"BUSINESS SERVICES
All Types of Business
Support Services

11401 661·3224
1-800-828·0212

VINYL REPLACEMENT

WINDOWS
·Any Size Double Hung·

$229.00*
• Free Installation
• Free In Hom.e Estimates

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC.

Call lor Further Details

CONCRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES

svsnms. me.

BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercial
Free Est Imates
Fully Insured

Brian Morri1on/Radne, Ohio

. Owner .Jim PickenS
Mechanic- Bill Jones
Parts Mar -Tamra Pickens

OUHUTV WinDOW
992-4119
1-800·291-5600
VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
ON STATE ROUTE 33 6
MILES NORTH OF
POMEROY, OHIO, AT
COUNTY ROAD 18
•No Dealers or Contraclors
Please W\/#023477

SELLERS CONSTRUCTION

• Custom Garages • Roofing
• Concrete Work • Decks
• Additions
740-696-1176
or 740~696-1233

SHE AN'
SNUFFY

HAD

A SPAT II

NO MA'AM-~ SHE WAS
SETIIN' UP ALL Nl&amp;HT
WITH OUR PORE
SICK MULE II

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M:
1\ioln St.,

HILL'S
SELF STORACE

Pomeroy, QJol

457('1
740-949-2217.

SHHDE RIUER HG SERUICE

"Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% Sweet Feed- '5.25/50 lbs.
• 12% Cattle Feed s6.75/100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog Food '6.75/50 lbs.
Pomero , Ohio 45769

SMITH'S COtiSTROCTIO"
'

• New Homes
• Garages
• Siding

• Remodeling
· • Decks
• Roofing

992·2753 "

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30''

7:00~~~s8 PM

THESE
N CASE YDU

r-....../"-....

trimming &amp; removal

Tues·Fri Ht-6
Sat. 10-4
• Candle making
supplies

Advertise in

for

WINTER
STORAGE
SPACE
AVAILABLE
Meigs County
Fairgrounds
Oct. t, 2000 -Apr. I, 2001
CALL FOR MORE
INFORMATION

949-2033

LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take the pain out
of paintingLf:!.t me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

Before 6p.m..
leove Message
After 6 pm- 740·985-4180

'

i

AND 1 SEE CONRAO 15

• Baskets

SENDING IN THE ..

740-992·4559

West
2•
Pass

North
Dbl.
4.,.

_j!~--~
.. WIENER FORK'

304·273·0036

74B-887-G383

~

A

~'Your

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

HlJ4 1·mo

WANTED

The CRAFTY,

Stan din g timb(•r large
or sma ll truck!'!. Top

BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)

prices paid a lsu.

All ver·ti1·ul hlind,

Dozer work.

lll'c

mude to ur·• l• ·r· ut otw
lu.•ntinn '

Free Estimates
Cdl T&amp; R Logging
aflcr 8:00 pm
740-992 ·5050
( Kanrty )

UP TO 70% OFF
• Vf"r·ti•·nl~; • Wood .
• Miui~ • Et('

·144 Third Ave. Gallipolis

446-4995
Tal Free ·888·745-884

Advert.ise · our business
on this page or one month for
as low as $25
'

Phone 992·2155

{abbr.)
21 Waltzing
25 Small

French

~:tf.'.':!••

28
32 Pertaining to

sheep
33 Drive back
34 Tropical rain
forest

35 Author Gore • 36 Stories
37 Unpleasant

sight

48 Correct
51 Exhaled
audibly
54 Tennis player
Andre55 Jerry's friend
56 Disavows
57 Type of sleeve

DOWN
1 Church

seats
2 - St. laurent

3 Nerve network , o:!L:.J.!.!l.~~
4 Savings-7 - ·lruHI
account Info
8 Exist
S Casual shirt
9 Youth org.
6 Like some
10 Gloss targets
knights

Friday, Oct. 13,2000
Al th ough you like parlners,
your progress in the yea r ahead
might be more rapid in what you
do alone. When it comes to
important aims, do what needs
doin g independem of others.
. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
Relationsh ips wilh ot hers could
be a bi l toucl1y today if you
become more"assertive rhan coop·
erative·with them. Go ahead and
be pushy for mutual benefits, bur
nol for selfi sh ones: Get a jump on
life by undersranding the innu·e nce s that ' ll govern you in the
year ahead. Send for your AslroGraph predictions by mailing $2
to Aslro -Graph, c/o this newspa per, P.O. Box ·1758. Murmy Hill
Station, New York. NY 10 156. Be
sure to stale your Zod iac sign .
SCORPIO . (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Should you fall behind today , it
wi ll be extremely difficu lt for you
to catch up later, so ir 's best to
keep pace with your duties and
assignments. Stay on schedule .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
21) Selecl social activities today
where you're comfortable with
the people, as well as the place .
Sho uld you have 10 deal wilh

someone you dis like. an unpleasant inci den t could occur.

CAPR ICORN (Dec. 22 -Jan.
19) When it comes lo yo ur caree r,
il mi ght be besl today to avoid
gett ing involved in a compelili ve
· situa ti o n where th e odds are
againsr you. If you lose. it could
hun you r reputat ion .
AQUAR IUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Unfo l1lm ately, you cou ld turn a
deaf ear to some ve ry sound
adv ice today, merely because you
don ' t like rhe person who is giving it. Your bias wi ll work against
you.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
You're not likely to be an even
match today against the entici ng
merchandise found in the stores.
It mi ght be smart Ieday not to go
shopping in rhe first place ·· even
window wishing.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Ignoring your mate's suggestions
today may be asking for trouble,
especially if events should prove
that what she o r he· had to say was
sound er wisdom than yours.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) It
could be your own fault if you end
up carrying more of the load at
work today than your cohons.

C ha nces a re ir'll be because you ·
didn 't trust their ability to do the
job.
GEMINI (May 2 1-Ju ne 20) If
. you don 'I interfere wilh the flow
of event s today , things will have
a way of working out 10 your ulti male bcncfil. But if you starr
chang in g thin gs. around , th e
results coul d be lousy.
CANCER (Jun e 2 1-July 22)
Be prepared lo pur fonh a second
or even third effo11 today , and a
difficull objecri ve can be
ach ieved. If you expect perfccli on
on lhe first try, you'll be sorel y
disappointed .
LEO (July 23 -Aug. 22) Your
bi ggesl problem loday· could be
your lack of pa11cnce for those
who can't or \von't immcdiatel i
go along with your way of thinking . The harder · you push . I he
more resistant they' ll be.
VIRGO. (A ug . 23-Sepl. 22)
It's wonderful to be a nice person
today, but , by the same token, it's
foolish to allow another to ace you
out of somet hin g to which you're
entitled in order to be the good
guy or gal.

11 Baseballer
Slaughter :
12
19
21
22

23
24
25
26

Paving stoneFrost
~
Colorado cltJ
Army order .J
(2 wds.)
Jltter·s
Kind of rock:
Muimum .
Part of the ..

·=

All pass

27 eye
Window part.
29 Hairstyle

30e-

31 " Vogue"

-

'·...

competitor ·..;

Man beats machine
BY PHILLIP ALDER
Regular readers will remember
that last year Zia Mahmood
played a tournament with and
against seven bridge computer
programs . In a close contest. Zia
finished ahead of a four-way tie
for second between Blue-Chip,
Oxford, Q·Pius and Saitek. If you
would like to read .all about the
contest, buy "Man vs. Machine"
by Mark Smith (Bridge Plus) .
Occasionally, the program s
produced excellent play, but some
of their mistakes would never
have been perpetrated by a human ·
--as in this deal.
North's double was negative,
promising length in both unbid
minor suits and enough count to
contest the bidding. South had a
promising hand . but his heart
king could be devalued . North
should have passed out South's
three-club rebid , because he had
a minimum double .
Zia (West) led the diamo nd
queen. Meadowlark won with
dummy's king and cashed the ace
to di scard hi s low heart . It drew
trumps. then ducked a spade. Zia
took hi s three major-s uit winners
10 hold .Meadowlark to its contract .
At the other table, Saitek was
in five clubs . Micro Bridge (West)
cashed its two top spades. Then .
a human wo uld have taken the
heart ace for one down . But
Mi cro s witched lo the diamond
queen. Sairek made no mislake .
After winning with dumm y's
king. declarer drew !rumps, threw
one of dummy's hearts on the
spade queen, ruffed a ~pade in the
dummy, trumped a diamond in
hand, and cashed the spade eight,
discarding dummy 's last heart.
The man won this time. but for
how much longer?
.
The book is approximately
$10.30
postpaid
from
www.bridge-plus.co.uk.

To get a current weather
report, check the

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L.arry Sche y

OUT OF TH'
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• Rep lacement Windows
• Room Additions

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

• Fall Fertilizers

After three games, Couch h'd the second- h1 ghest QB rating in the leagw: at 107.7. However. in
hH last three games - all losses - Couc h has
only one TO pa~s and five inrerceptions. His rat ~
ing has plummeted 25 points and he hasn't
thrown for a scor(' m 11 quarters.
Aga1nst 3 saggi ng Arizona defens e. whtch
·dropped as many as eight players into coverage,
Couch was forced to throw underneath as the

Steve Ri ffle

- Sale s R ep r esen t a tive

Couch's numbers are getting worse. tuu .

Stratton trained
mechanics

lo1 oled tn Rullund '&gt; Dcp1- Store
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New Homes • V:nyl
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992-5479

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h'-·'s not the go•ro n:ceh·l'r of
ye.u ago
·· I fl'L'I for ·hi Ill," Couch ~.t id. ·'We 'r~ rcJ!ly good
tfiends and we talk about 1.t. Bm I'm nut gomg to
go out thnL' .md fnrce the is~uc to get hllll the b.11\
if it's t.he wrong read . But wh&lt;:n Ill)' n:;tJ takes me
rhcre, \Vt' ju~t have to start getting on the sam'-'
page, and I can't be missing h im with throw~
when he 's open. I rake rhe blame for a littlt· of

We servit;:e mowers,
cha insaws, tillers,

BISSELL BUILD.ERS
INC.

'
i

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.

Last season, Couch and Johnson were the best
thing about the expansion _arowns. They h:1d
mstant ~hemistry as rookies , combining for dght
TD passes and giving C leveland a passing combo
for yeai"S tq com~:.' .
Thc'Y roumt'Ll together for roaJ ga m es, :md
seenungly did evl'rytlung in un1son.
It's beL'I1 a far difTaent story th1s season.
W1th GoL1c h spreading the b;tll aruu nd mun-,
Johnson hasn 'r L:wght .1 TD pass, ;md in the la sr
fiw galllL' S, his n:ccptions h.tvc dropped from 5 to ('l----'---'-...,....-----------,

4m3to?.tol . He \nedfo rtheteamk.ld\\'ltb

Creative Costumes

Featuring two Briggs &amp;

38

HARNEY
· JUG
I SAW
AUNT
EEZ.Y COMIN'

•

.AlltEL

Sunday.

Ragdol's
Costumes

theragdoi~Pilotma•l.com

~

did last year,"

Couch said of Jo hnson. who caught just one pass
for 4 yards in Cleveland's 29-21 lOss at Arizona oi1

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to 7 1
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South
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39 Make amends

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Kevin Johnson wide open again.
Pinned in front of his locker. by TV cameras and
reporters , Couch was too bmy tending otT questions about Cleveland's offensive problems to
. ·notice Johnson sneaking out of the Browns' locker room all alone Wednesday.
The t\vo have been m~ssing each other aU year.
"I've got to get rhe ball to him more and just let

•:.~::.•..,·~·

Athens and

BEREA. Ohio (AP) -Tim Couch couldn'nee

• R- atlolillon• &amp; Romodtltng
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NEA Crossword Puzzle

Sentinel

ITHURSDAY

37 HI-story

.J.

chapter
38 Affirmed

-

~+--+--11--1--1 40 Actress Oay-

-+--l---11--t--1

41 WWI plane ')..

42 Persuade
43 Of the dawn
45 Wood Used to
lill gaps
46 Ms. Horne

47 Seaport In
Yemen

..

49 Greek letter
50 Compass ptt
52 Workers'
'"
assn.

53 Liquid mea$.

I

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created lrom quotations by famous people, past aM

present. Each lener 1n the cipher stands IOf another.

Today's clue : Z equals W

LPPA

El

'WSKSJFEGR

ZSELBG

J M G

E AS 0 I,

NEWN·IGOFGEXL
PDGSX

D P F

WSKSJFEGR

El

RPM F

OFPMXA

0

ASOA

XSWN . '

-

I G EX L
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Look ca refully before you leap. Experience is the
comb that life gives you after you've lost your hair.~- Dear Abby

WOlD
UMI

O four
Rearrange letters of
Krombled · words
~

the
be·
low to form fovr 1lmple word1 .

NOTENI

I II I I
I I I I" I
2

1

I

I

0 NF UT
!

e

PR INT NUMBFREO LHTERS IN
1HESE SQUARES

I

~ 'UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS 10
11;1 GEr ANSWER ·
.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
H~rbor- C/~ss- Quilt· Legacy- CLOTHES
"Women live longer than men ," my grandpa mused,
"beca use someone has to stay behind Ia pick up the
CLOTHES!"

OCTOBER 121 :

�Page B 6 • The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

AREA PREP .GRID PREVIEWS

Thursday, October 12, 2000

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

Ciallia Academy, River Valley face SEGAL challenges I PfP.FGO•~·~L I
Saunders said hiS club wants to play some role the ball, Withrow has completed 20-of-51 for
410 yards and five touchdowns.
reversal With logan m this year's game.
Wahama \~ll answer their challenge With a
"Well, that's the side of the ball we hope to be
on," Saunders said. "We want to score when we running game which gene"\ted 486 yards last
should and play good defense.They did that real , week in a 60-13 drubbing of Gilmer County.
early against us last year. For the 6rst quarter and The balance in the Falcon attack has produced
a h.llf. we played them pretty even, but a lot of multiple HX)-yard gainers in the past two
rimes the ballgame's decided in the 6rst quarter, games. Eran Branch and Brandon Hankinson
hav~ both eclipsed the century mark in the last
quarter and a h.llf
t\vo· contests.
River Valley faces Tigers
CHESHIR.E -As Jared Taylor eases his way
Branch rushed for 113 against Gilmer last
to the l ,000 yard barrier, R.iverValley is seeking week and 153 against Southern. Hanltinson has
contributed 151 and 127 in the same rime
chat first dus1ve victory of tly season. ·
On Friruy, the Raiders meet a Marietta squad frame. Branch has scored three touchdowns in
that can be co nSidered ripe for the pickings.
each of the last two games.
ance. The Cluetbm~ .m: No. 7 111 this we~k's
Withrow will be answered by Wahama's
Kickoff for the game at Marietta is set for
Dtvision I, Regton 3 (Omputa r.nmgs .md Jrt' 7:30p. m .
Bradford Clark, who rushed for I 09 yards on
ranked No. II 111 tlus wel'k\ AI' poll.
. T.1ylm enters this weeks contest with 751 just five carries last week from his quarterback
· In smul.tr fJ~hton t\l bst yeJr's championship prds rushing on 153 carries.
spot.
run: Log;m Ius hulhed tht' oppo . . nion by :m
"It would be gre.lt for him to bret a thousand
Wahama's best answer for the Buff.1lo offense
JVt't'Jgc snJf('
3&lt;J~ 12 tht~ ~l'.l ~Dil. Luga tl ~~
v.uds.'' sa1d R.ivcr V:1lley .coach Larry Carter. will come from Branch, who has been his
JVL'ra~ing _"\9_) tot.tl y.trJ.s pc.'r g:tm~. while con··on the pace he's at, I think he will get it.
team 's defensive leader all season . Branch has
Ct&gt;ding Jll~t .179 yan-ls pt•r ouang.
"It couldn't l1.1ppen to a nicer kid or a kid t.lllied owr ten tackles in each of the Falcons' six
On~.? of rile bigg~.,·~t coni..·cn1s f(lr hL".td (O.Kh
\\'ho 's worked h.mler," Carter added. "He's been games this S('.tson.
DJ!t· Amy\ t:ll tL;.~ ,~g d1c o.;e.I~Dn w.1s rl'pLKIIlg·, our workhorse for thrc-c yr:ars now. He dt.~servl'~
Thl' Butitlo off~nse is also pront.' to fumblmg
out.SU!H.hllg :.c.·nior uilb.t . .:k W.tynl! B.ltl'tll.m. 1t. Other co.tCh,·s in the lea!,'tle talk about him due: to its prl·fcrencc for the option.The Bisons
who ruslH:d t~&gt;r 1.~17 \".lrd~ .md 19 muchdowns vay h1ghly .md havt.' ,1 lot of respect for him.''
h.t\'l' tl.nnbh:d . Q tl111L'S this se.tson (six pt&gt;r
last yc.u .md "··~&gt; n.un,·d :iEOAL MVI' .111d
Th,· senior haltb.1ck also hos a pair of touch- gaml') Jnd h.tvl' lost 27 of those miscues. ComSollthl•:~,o.;r I )1~[nLr otll.•mt,.L. MVP
downs . Ont: :~gainst Jackson last Wt'ek in tht' bined \\'lth Wahnl\v's t\vo mtLTcepnons, ButraJunll)r Dcn.·k H.mkn h;~s bL·L·n JUSt .1~ ~ulid J~ R..11ders 41-6 loss ond the other against Athens lo is J\'L' r.tging over four turnovas .1 g:un.:.
li.HL'lllan .ts (hl· Chc1ttaim' 1-b.h.-k. H.m.kn. \\'ho on St·pr. ~2 .
If rill' W&lt;~hJm:J. defense cJ n makl~ the 1110st of
JVt'raged bc.::ucr dun L'lght yuds p""l:r cury .1s
"I JUS! like to see for his personal career to get the opportunities that Buffalo will give them ,
B.lt,·mau's backup iu 199'). hJs rushed t(H I. I08 that thousmd yards and be the first person in ther~ might be an upset in the Bend Area air
yard~ JnJ .20 tm1 chdowm rh1~ YL'ar. Hts running
school history to get it," said Carter. "I think all Fmlay.
pJccs a rushin g att.Kk tlut JVL'r.lgl'S 266 yJrds the kids Jre that too. He a leader and the kids
South GaUia looks for .s econd win
per ganw.
arc going to do everything they can to push
MERCERVILLE - Conung off its first win
Co nrad is rhc lll.ll'StiU of the C hieftains' C.illl over that thousand yards."
1
of the season, South G.lllia will try to n1ake it
porcnt :tir att.1ck. which kicks in :ln .w.:ragl' of
The Tigers are 1-6 and remain winless in two straight on Friday.
·
117 ya rds per game tu thl' team total. The ul- SEOAL play.
After a 40-26 win over Gauley Bridge to
ented se nior !OJs mmpleted 6~-of-ll () passes
Marietta is coming off a disastrous 48-0 loss break an eight game losing streak on Saturday,
for 871 yards .md eight touchdowns with three to logan on Friday.
the R.ebels will make the long journey to
interception~
In f.lct, the Tigers opened their season with Clarksburg to meet Notre Dame.
His favontc t.1rget IS twin brother John Con- shutout losses to Morgan (31-0) and CamTo say R.ick C lary had a game of a lifetime on
rad, who has nud,· 18 receptio ns for 244 yards bridge (28-0) and have been blanked in their Saturday would be an understatement.
a11d three rouchJm\"llS. Senior flanker Travis last two games against Warren (34-0) and Logan
The South Gallia semor tailback rush ed the
Keirns hJs caught 1~ b.ills tor 229 yards and two (48-0).
ball 39 rimes for 334 yards and four touchscores, and semor tight end Jim Bennett has
Tony Huffman leads the Tigers scoring efforts downs.
caught 12 passes tor 147 yards and two scores.
tills season.
On the season, C lary ha.1 880 yards and six
Senior Ryan Wykle. who comes off the
The thing is, Huffinan, a junior inside line- touchdowns this season and 1,674 career yards.
bench tOr thl' Chief~. Ius nine catches for 150 backer, scored all three of his touchdowns on
Notre Dame enters this week's game with a
yards.
defeosive fumble recoveries.
3C4 record and a shot ;it the Class A playoff,
Galli a Academy counte rs Logan 's strong runThe Tigers have struggled on the ground.
with wins in its final three games.
ning attack \Vith J snl1d grou nd game of it'i
Kelly leads Marietta with 51 carries fa, 208
The Irish are conung off a heartbreaking 15own, led by senior fullback Ike Simmons. Sim- yards.
7 loss at Tygarts Valley &lt;;m Thursday. In that
mons has mshed for 726 vards and I I touchFullback Joey Moore has !55 yards on 46 car- game, neither team scored in the second half
downs. whue junior haltb.lCk Bobby Jones has ries and a touchdown for Marietta.
Senior Mark Calzonetti tied the game for
232 yards and five scores. Altogether. the Blue
Marietta blanked R.ivet Valley 24-0 m last Notre Dame in the second quarter at 7-all
Dev1ls have rolled up 1 ,327 rushmg yards and year's n1eeting.
before the Bulldogs regained the lead later in
18 touchdowns on the ground. _
Wahama takes on No. 9 Buffalo
the quarter for the decisive score.
Juruor quarterback . David Brodeur continues
MASON - ·When Buffalo-Putnam ma\,:es
Calzonetti (Sc10, 170) leads the Irish with
to improve He has completed 33-of-71 passes the trip to Mason to take on Wahama Friruy. 390 yJrds rushing on 6G attempts and four
for 7JO yards· and niMc to uc hJowns.
the f.1ns wtU be treated to one of the best touchdowns. He had 125 yards rushing on 16
In last year's game at Logan. the Chiefs scored ground game showings of the year.
·carries and a pair of touchdowns in Notre
early and ofi:en nn thl'H' w,1y to a ..}-X- 15 victoBufhlo (6- 1, ranked number nine in the Damt:'s sl'ason opening win over Hundred.
ry. logan Lllli,·d 21 poims in the tim quart~r SSAC computer pulls) will feature an option
Also for the Irish on the ground, Junior Mark
and ended the half mth ,1 3S-O lead, taking am ck w hich has generated . two 500-plm yard Jones (5-10. 155) has 65 carril'S for 284 yards
.1dvant.tgt' of a t\11"11l)\"l'r on tht: ga ml' 's fir~t play rmhl'f~ in Jeremy Howard and Ben Chapman. :md rhree TLJs. sophomore• Tim Swinger (5-9,
.:md Jtilllpmg out to .1 qui ck k.H.i with :1 short Howard. the tailback. has 523 on 72 carries. 1-15) · with ~(, carries fur 251 yards and one
to uchdown d n n·.
wh!le h1s runnmg ntlte Ch:1p111.1t1 h:1s 59 carri~s touchdown.
Lot,r:ln .tlso pur togL·thL·r .m X5-y.trd dn\·~:.· .md t(n· 5()7 yards from his fullback spot.
In thl' air, ~ophumorc C:ao.;ey ()'Brien (6-1,
a 97 -y.1rJ Jnn· 111 r!w tlr-.t h.1l f. both of whiCh
The tngger man for that attack, Justin With- 155) i, 18-for-53 f(&gt;r 17~ yards with fi\'l' interpron:d to bL· b.Kk -b rL'cl kcr~ ti.ll thl· Blll ~ Devil~. row. lu ~ c.1rricd 56 tim~' fm: 2~9 yan.:l~.y:~~sing ct:pnons :m d rwo touchdowns.

or

AFC
Eul
W L TPto. PF PA
Miami ..
N.'f Jels ...

1-napolls ... .

NLCS
from Page Bl
mg round at San Fran c isco,
prompt1ng so me to suggest Lt:itcr

shou ld stan the- opener, Hampton
tamed a Cardir1al ~ team tlut ave rJged c::tght rt.lllS :~ game' in 1ts fintround '&gt;Weep of the Bravt:\.
Not tlut St. Lmns d1dn 't h.1yc·
ItS ch.:ln Ct.' S. It we m O-fo r- 1J wHh
rti!Hll' n

111

~cormg

po~lti1H1.

m :mJu1g l I
The C:.trd1n.1l~ kll the b.1-.e-.
lo.1&lt;.kd ·1 11 thL' fir"t \\"hl'll C.1rlo~
Hnl Llmil'; ~mu J H.kdr(JUt.
St. l mm rhrl'.ltL'llL'd to til.: 1t

Ill

thl' \l'\.l'IHh Jr,niJ11g J-1) \\"Hh f\\"tl
on .111d Olll". out. Ldtt,1r 1-t.L'Ilti.Tl.l

~-~

tlv d1.1t ra!;IH IIL'kkr
Pnl'~ r:ul dm,;l 1111 thL'

r.,I KL' d .1 lonl!;
T ! lll o

\\".ll'lll11g fLh"k .
Ed1nonJ~

followed wnh .1
h1gh tly th .1t k tt tidikr lk111W
Agb.1\".llll L,lllghr Jll"t •horr 11t rhe
w.dL .11·1d Edn1ond-. g.n·e .rn ",l\\"shuLb" -.kip ,,., he rounded tir.~t
b ,l ,t'.
Jill!

'r.

4 1 0 .800 91

86

.. 3 2 0 600 135 100 ·

Cantr•l
BaltimO&lt;e ...................... 5 1
Tennessee .......
4 1
PiHsburgh ....... ... ....... 2 3
Cllvollnd .....................2 •
Jacl&lt;soo'lilll .......... ........ .2 4
ClnclnNitl .....................0 5

0 .833 125 65
0 .800
0 400
0 .333
o .333
V.ooo

104 78
84 78
85 131
t13 128
37 128

Wool
Oakland .................... 4 1 0 .800 141 108

Kansas C&gt;ty .........
Denver .. ....... • ..
Soa«le ................
S.n Otego .........

Antona

Daltfls .

~~:~ta······· ...

3 2 0 600 117 93
3 3 0 500 173 137
. 2 4 0 333 94 132
0 6 0 000 93 177

NFC
Eoot
.. 4
4
3
2
2

N.V. Giants
Washington
Ptiladelphia ....

2
2
3
3
3

Central

..

0
0
0
0
0

667
667
500
400
400

101 91
104 96
135 87
100 129
112 148

gg\,~~~~~ 1 ~

Tampa Bay .... .... .

.;
.3 3 0 500 150

Grellln Bay .......

2 4 o 333 111 111

Chicago ...

1 5 o 167 85 161

97

~

Weat
5 0 01 00021 7 145
2 3 0 400 104 76
.2 3 0 400 86 92
2 4 0 333 101 172
2 4 0 .333 170 193

St Louis .

Carolina
New Orleans ...
Atlanta

San Francisco

Sunday'a Gamea
Dallas at N.Y G1ants, 1 p.m.
Atlanta at St. Louts. 1 p.m
San Diego at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
Baltimore at Washington , 1 p m
Oakland at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
Carolina at New Orleans, 1 p.m

New York at Seattle. 4 09 p m
TUOiday, Oct. H

~FOX)

Wtdneaday, Oct. 11
Ntw Yorlc 6, St. Lou/a 2, N•w York lUlU
• . ,•• 1-D
Thurldly, Oct. 12
Ntw Yor* (L-'tll 16-1) er Sr. Loult (Anltlel
11·7), 1:11 p.m.
'SatUrdly, Oct. 14
St louis (An Benes 12-9) at New York

Meigs County's

{Reed 11-5), 4.18pm.
Sunday, OCt. 15
St Louis (Kile 20·9) at New York (8 J.Jones
11·6), 8 p.m

Gavin officials
outline plant
safety concerns

BASEBALL
American leagui
ANAHEIM ANGELS -C ia1med LHP Mark
Lu ka s•ew•cz oH waivers from the Toronto Blue
Jays
OAKLAND ATHLETICS - Sent AHP Jon RathH
aM AHP Scott Service outright to Sacramento
olthe PCL Announced OF Bo Por1er has been
c1a1med oil wa1vers by the Texas Rangers
TAMPA BAY DEVIL AAYS - Achvated LHP Wit·
son Alvarez . AHP Juan Guzman and AHP
Ryan Rupe from the 60-day drsabled Irs! Sent
LHP Trevor Enders, RHP Tony F1ore and AHP
Dave Eiland oulngh1 1o Durham of !he lnterna·
honalleague
TEXAS RANGERS-Sent LHP Corey Lee,
LHP Juan.Moreno and C B J Waszg1s out nghl
to Oklahoma ol the PCL

BY

Sunday, Oct. 22
Anzona at Dallas. 1 p.m.
Buffalo at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
Chicago at Philadelphia, 1 p.m.
Denver .t Clnclnn•tl, 1 p.m.
New England Jll Indianapolis, 1 p m.
New Orleans at Allanta. 1 p.m .•
St. LoUis at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
San Francisco at Carolina , 1 p.m.
Tennestee at Bammore, 1 p.m.

Cl•valand at Plttaburgh, •:OS p.m.
Seattle at Oakland, 4:05p.m.
Wastlington at Jacksonville, 4:15p.m.
Open: Green Bay, N. V. Giants, San Diego

RIBBON CUTTING- Elected officials, county leader:s and Millennium
Teleservices representatives cut the ribbon to the new building yes-

Millennium
Teleservices
to operate center
BY

Wednaaday, Oct. 11
New York 7, Seattle 1, serl111 tied 1-1
Friday, Oct 13
New York (Pflttitte 11·') at Seattle (Sele
17·10), 8:12p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 14
New York (Clemens 13·8) at Seattle (Abbott
g. 7). 7:42 p.m.
~

dill ·

1ng coach

friday's Special
Bar-B-Que Beef Sandwich
Small frY. Small Drink

onlv$29

FROM STAFF REPORTS

&amp;~7k~'lM-7~

¥

Stzeaa!4.

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992~3322
DIGITAL DYNAMITE

100•1. DIGITAL TV ENTERTAINMENT
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a... ..... Dic+ttiiDJ-It• P'-'--1kabl.l. ASk I'D" DrTAILS!
v.........;w -lilt ..... ,... . Ired.
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tiUy ·A · W·~·

'

I

POMEROY The Meigs
County Emergency Management
Agency has received a $25,000
state grant for emt:rgency preparedness planning.
The agency provid es disaste:
services for th e county.
The grant was funded under
Amended Substitute Senate 13ill
239, design ed to assist the , 25
counties with the lowest federal
adjusted gross in come, as determined by the Ohio Department
ofTaxation.

NEW BUSINESS - Walt Lapinsky, .president of call centers for Millennium Teleservices, addresses the crowd Thursday mor-ning during
ribbon-cutting ceremonies to welcome the new telecommunications
business to Meigs County. (Tony M. Leach photo)
workers, and operating 30 call
centers m 11 states.
The firm specializes in co nducting telemarketing campaigns,
inbound and outbound telesales,

and E-commercl' rclatl'd 'ierv icc"i
for Fortune 5110 companies and
non - profit organization~ .
The Pomerov si te is the fifth
Millennium· Td~scrviees ca ll ccn-

Meigs County placed fourth in
adjusted gross in com e.
Those initial 25 co unties were
required to meet criteria, includ ing compliance with requirc melm, including EMA direc tor

training, and

oth~.;:r

requirc:ments,

includin!S h aving a full-time
EMA staff memb er to h andk
planning and disaster services.
permission from the county commissioners and a Lurn:nt spending
plan, according to Robert E.
Byer, the county's disaster services
director.

Until the passaf!:e of Sl3 239.
county di"iJSter services werl'
f'unded by gm nts and loc.l l fumk
The gront \Viii fund the disaster
sl'rvicl''l opL'ration through 201)1,
and :-~ccorJing to the kgisl.ltion.
the ti.mding cannot replace :my
current local or federal funds
being mcd fOr di saster o;crviccs.
Funds w ill be med fi&gt;r th e
operation of .l Jisastt•r se rvices
office to be lorm·d in rlK· Mei6"
County Annex , ,u,d . to a~~i o.;t in

Please see EMA. Page Al

ter to be located within Ohio.
Others are in Warren. Canton,
Portsmouth and We llsto n.
The ce remony opened with
C IC Preside nt Paul Ree d welcoming those in attendance and
voic ing his a ppn~ci:~rion ·to the
community, wholit: t·fTo rts , h e
said. make it pt~sstble tOr new
businc!'es. like Millennium Tdescrviccs, t o locate to tbc area.
" In any connnunity, change is
\nevltab\e and progress is an
. " sa 1
.d I''-L'e d . ''I ' m Vt'ry
opnon,
proud anJ hqnorl'd to live in a
com muni ty where progress 1s
demi11ded ."
Following Reed's ~p ecc h, the
crowd wa&lt; imrodu ced 10 Walt
Lapinsky, pre,ident of ca ll renters
f~r Millennium Tc!t:services. Lapinsky greeted the crowd anJ indi cated the firm'&lt; happiness in
choosing Pomeroy J\ a call cl' nter
si te.
" It is a well known fan that
busincsse"i lm·at l' whL·fe they are

Please see Ribbon, Page Al

The plant
plans having
the tanks and
their contents,
used in the
reduction of
nitrogetr oxide

.

operation by
May 2001.

Investigators look for clues
in attack on the USS Cole
WASHINGTON (AI') - The crippled wo,.hip
USS Cole was l"rin~ but still atloot in a Ycmem port
~~" investigators tried to find who pl.mncd it~ &lt;lpparem bombing and the Navy broke the sad news to
bmilies of sa ilor' dead, mio,;sin g or injured.
" We will find out who is responsible and hold
them accoum~blc," Pn.•"iiJcnt Clinton dL·clarl'L.I.
Tht' tragedy \VJ~ all thl' mnrl' .shocking given that
US. force' in the Middle East have bl'en on a
hct~;hrened 'fate of alert in rece11t dayo; because of
spir:~lmg: i"iracli-Pa.l cstini:m turm oi l Jnd cou~idcrabk·
anti-Ameri ca n sc nttmcm in thl' rt'gion.

"If th ~ ir tntl'nrion was to deter us frum our nllssion of promoting peace and security in the Middle
East, they will tail, utterly.'' Clinton said in the R.ose
C:arden JUSt hours alter Thursday's explosion in the
port of Aden,Ycmen.
I )dense Secretary Wil)"m Cohen said he knew of
no other spec ific threats against American forces in
the region. but said he ordered an increased alert
level lt&gt;r all U.S. fi&gt;rce&lt; around the world, including
those· in the United States.

Please see Attack, Pllge AJ
'

Salary increases get .
Meigs board approval
FROM STAFF REPORTS

""'W•-...1 _._._..;..,.

:f"CrHII T•rl'lll

LEACH

County receives state EMA funds

Z'td &amp; 'R«-4 114"944" 11Wite
~0« 76 Sto{t- 1H ~
'l-z«14'f

M.

POMEROY - A large crowd
gathered outside a newly-c onstructed
telecomJnunications
office building in Pomeroy
Thursday mornin~ as the Meigs
County Community Improvement Corp. held a ribbon-cutting
ceremony to announce the identity of the area's newest employer.
R.epresent:nive'i nf Millennium
Teleservices , a leader io the evergrowmg
tdecommuni cations
industry, were present at the ceremony to discuss their operation
and to announce the specifics of
their hiring plans.
Mill ennium Teleservices calls
itself the fifth largest telecommunications company in the nation,
employing more than 7,000

COLLEGE
NE;,W HAMP SHIRE - Named Matt C1chella

TONY

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

SOCCER
SAN JOSE EARTHQUAKES- Announced the
retirement of 0 Ryan Tinsley
TAMPA. BAY MUT I NV ~ Na m ed Drew Cloud
director ol co rporate par1nersh1ps

Poei:Maaon Baaaball
At A Glance
LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
Amt~rlcan League
INBC)
Tueadlly, Oct. 10
Seattle 2, New York 0

terday during ceremonies held to announce Meigs County's newest
employer. (Tony M. leach photo)

CIC cuts ribbon on business

HOCKEY
PROVIDENCE BRUINS - Added LW Joe Hul·
b1g and G Kay Whitmore Sen t 0 Enc Van
Acker. 0 Den1s Timofee11 and D Vrat1Siav Cook
to Grean11ille of the ECHL
ROCHESTER AMERICANS - Added G Peter
Skudra and 0 Jason Holland Sent D David
Kudelka to long Beach of the WCHL

Monday, OCt. 23
M1ami at New York Jets. 9 p.m.

KEUY

plant and em ployees, and is
working with the counry's Local
GALLIPOLIS Preparing Emergency Planning Commitan t'me rgency res puno;e plan tee on a similar plan if ammonia
inside and out of the Gen.James escapes from the plant.
M. Gavi n Power Pl ant i'i a key
Ammoma will come to the
concern surro unding · installa- plant by rail, Phlegar explained,
tion of anhydrous ammonia and safeguards are being develtanks, Gavin ,officials told Gallia oped to ensure transfer of
Co unty comn1issioners.
ammonia from rail cars to the
Pb n1 Ma11ag;er Duane Phle- tanks will automatically stop in
gar, accompanied by staffers case of an accident.
DQII Andcnon . and Mark Vane
"This is on~ of those .things
Bremen. who are involved in that is imparbnt from the
the safery planning process, met employees' standpoint to protect
with co mmi ~s iontheir own health,"
ers Thumlay to
Phlcgar said. "If
ongumg
they make a ·misco nc erns
about
take, the impact is
the prcs t• nce of.
on them ."
more
than
Since August,
3UO,OIIIJ pounds
plant officials have
of amm 'o nia at
met with authoriGavin.
ties and the LEPC
They explained
on the county's
the need behind
response to an
usc of anhydrous
emergency.
ammo111a
and
"We have to
'
'
safeguards
th e
make
sure Gavin's
etnlSSIOriS, ln
planr is devdoping
and Gallia Counto prevt:nt leaks or
ty's plans all jive,
t•mergencies that
and when we get
may occur when
a call, see them
th e tankli an~ pUt
kick
m
and
on·line.
...
work;'VanBremen said.
The pJ.mt. pl.u" having the
Mike Null , direc tor of Gallia's
tankli ;~nd their contents, used m Emergency
Management
the reduction of ni trogen oxide · Agency and .LEPC coordinator,
emissions, in opcra tibn by May said the co nunittee has been
2001.
looking at contingencies.
The action
has spurred
At LEPC's last meeting, Midprnteo.;ts from nearby Cheshire dleport Volunteer Fire Chief
residents. who have cited 'afety David Hoffman attended and
concerm to citi2eno; and the was brought up to date on planthree .c hools ncar thl' plant.
ning, Null said.
Ci tizen s are also urgmg
Middleport VFD responds to
American Electric Power to use fires and
emergencies
m
an altanative pro cess.
-Cheshire Township.
Gavin ·has contr c~c t e d with
"We address'ed a lot of issuest
Unwin &amp; Associotes to develop
a respome plan to protect the
Please see Gavin, Pap Al
KEVIN

DVP NEWS EDITOR

FOOTBALL
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS-Released PK Pete
Stoyanov1ch. Signed PK Tod&lt;f Peterson to a
two·year contract
MIAMI DOLPHINS-Signed LB M1cMet Hamil·
ton Placed LB Scott Galyon on inJured res.erve.
'NEW ENGLAND, PATRIOTS-Signed SAndre
Dixon to the practice squad Released TE Ctlris
Fontenot.
PITTSBURGH STEELERS -·Reteased DL
Ernie Brown from the practrce squad. Signed
· Ol T.J. Washington to the practice squad .
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS-Signed TE Terrence McCaskey to l.he practice squad
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS -Cta1med DT Nate
Hobgood-Chtttick off waivers from St Lo uis

Thurt;dly, Oct. 19
Detroit at Tampa Bay, 8.20 p.m.

---·- -·--

50 Cents

L...TRAN
__S
_A_cn
_O
_N
_S__,j -

BASKETBALL
DETROIT PISTONS-Waived C Mall F1sh

,,

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51. Number 99

Monday, Oct. 16

Monday'• Game
Jacksonville at Tamassee. 9 p.m.

DISHNetworlt

Hometown Newspaper

St louis at New York , 8.18 p m., 11 necessary
Wednesday, Oet. 18
New Vortl: at Sl LOUIS , 4' 18 p m , if necessary
Thursday, Oel. 19
New York at $1 LOUIS, B 18 p m . II neces·
sary

Philadelphia at Arizona, 4:15p.m.
San francisco at Gr~n Bay, 4:15 ,p.m
Minnesota at Chrcago, 8:20p.m.
Open· Miami, Detroit, Tampa Bay

lndiJ:K!Bpolls at Saanle, 4:05p.m.•

October 13, 1000

Natlonalleagu.

National League

N. ~ts at New England, 4:05p.m.

.

Ctl

Friday

Society news and notes, Al
Local prep volleyball roundup, Jll

Seattle at New York. 8 12 p m , if necessAry
Wodnoodly, Oct II
Seattle at New York 8 12 p m , It necessary

FLORIDA MAR LINS-Announced C Sa ndy
Mart1nez has declined a11 outrigtll ass•gnme111
10 Calgary of ttle PCL and elected to become a
tree agent
LOS ANGELE S DODGERS - Named Maury
Wills organiZational base runn1ng and bunting
coordinator Ag1eed to terms with AHP Mike
Fe tters on a two·year contract
PITTSBURGH PIRATES - Released RHP Brad
Clontz Sent OF Adam Hyzde, AHP Matt
Skrmetta , AHP Brian Smith and INF Jotm
Wehner outright to Nashville or the PCL

Cincinnati at Plttaburgh, 1 p.m.
Cleve..nd et Denver, 4:05p.m.

an Andrew Cofl'mon kick tic•d th,• score Jt 7-7 at the~: 18 mark of the
'second quarter.
Southern hdd tough at the half 14-13, but Jll explosive seco nd half
from Page Bl
allowed Cox to run wild for four nHHl' scorl's.
·
~--+5. A.1 ron Ohh 11gL'I' 2-11, .tnd Brandon Pierce 1-7.
Wate~ford IS led by quarterb.lCk Mark Walll'r, a (J-5 senior, who is J
Thi ~ St'.holl. n.I\Iung fDr the.Torn ;u.iut's has been Jommned by Matt
four year starter for the Wildcats. In last week's win, Waller was 5-ofAsh With -1')0 v.mb (.1 'i .2 y.~rd average) and three to'uchdowns. Joe 14 passing for 6 7 yards. Waller is olso good on the option with great
Corncl11s \l'Cond \_\ nh .167 ya rds (5.3 average) and thre e rouchdowns. running abliiry. a strong ann. and a taU frame to pick apart tht opposAs J tl' .llll, Southern lu!l gamed l 003 yards on the ground ~ a rushing ing team\ defl'nse.
gamL" rh.H has -.how n ~o mc lll.'Cd for conce rn throughout the season.
Sophomore back Dan Doebrciner rushed for I00 yards on 22 carLeading Southern recLTvers have bee n BranJon Hill and Brice Hill ries with an additional 70 yards from Jesse Noland.
with 336 Jnd ~()(l y.trd ~ n.:spcctivdy.
The top rec~ivers for the team arc brothers Aafun and Alex Heiss.
Defenm·ely. M.m A&lt;h has Jed the WJY wah 104 ta ckles from the
last weekis touchdowns were all scored by Woller, who ran in a one
inside llnt'bJ ckn pusiuon . Stx of those tackles hd\'l' thrown opponents yard run to win the game in overtime. Additionally, h e scored two
for a loss Semor Tommy Roberts has 61 tackles. Brandon Pierce 52, others earlter in the game.
Tyler Lirtle -IK . and Joe Cornell and Brandon Hill ~2 eac h. Jonathan
Going into the game, it appears that both teams are very evenly
Evans leads the Jefen&gt;e with f1ve inte rceptions and Brand~n Hill has matched. Both have outstandi11g quarterback threats and talented
four .
backfields.
Southern matchr.:d Mdlcr touchdown for touchdown in an excitirig
Game time is 7:30 at Waterford.
first h:~lf. Southern counte red on the next possession after Miller's first

railing, Per~z got them off to a
fast start. Keeping up his role J!
late-season sparkplug, he kd off
the game with a double and took
third when K1le bounced a
curveball for a wild p1tch.
After Alfonzo walked, Piazza
grounded a double down the
third-base line. It was a good sign
for the Mets the All-Star
catcher began the night as a
carr:er .2 11 postseason hitccr.
Robin Veutclfa's sacrifice fly made
it 2-0.
Hampton be,tt otlt :111 1nftdd
single in the fifth and later 'corl'd
on Alfonzo's single.
Th...:- Mt·ts ta cked on thrt.•c run-.
111 tbl' ninth"ofT Mlh· j.11nn . Zcilc
kll otT \vith J home nm, A~b :tyan i
smglcd ,111J P.!Ytutl ho JJiercd oYer
the lcft-fidd \niL
Mike Burdick \\',lli t!p ne xt , ,\IH.I
James lnt hun With ,1 pltl h. Therl'
w.1s no troubk bL't\\'l'l'll thl'
ce:~ms, though., .mJ Bord1 ck Id-e
f'nr X- ray; on Ins nght tlnunb.
wh1ch wt:rc ncg:H J\~

St

B&lt;AfllO
2 3 0 400 86 911
New England ............... 2 4 0 333 103 101

score Js an Evans to Brandon Plt:rCL' pass of se,·en yards. followed by

·· 1 thought it had a chance of
g01ng out." Agbayani said. " The
ball kind of died down and tailed
IHc k ."
Hampton struck out four and
wa lked three. He also got the
benefit of .1 defense that paid
.
•·
extra anennon
to Jts posltwmog,
mJking subtle shifts that paid
major dividends.
Meanwhth:, not eve n the prese nce of .1 few St. Louis Rams .the !bJFL team scoring ·U points
per ;;a me helped boos t th o
( :.1 rdu1.1h hittl'r ~.
Sn·cr.Jl \&gt;f th_t:.' Met~ n.·ct:ntly
~.·xprl'~~c d rL'hL•f rh,It the1r No . 1 ,
!lClllL'~J-.. thL· Br.n·c~. \\'l' l'l' om. of
th\..· ·pi.Iy,)tr,. s~.'LTL'rly. m.1ybc thl·y
.d-.u kt.lL'\\ l"1ow wd l they m.ltchcd
up .1g.llll\t
~~- Lotm
,
I
J hL· r\k t ~ \\"l"IH (J-l ,lg:.llll'lt tbl'
( :c~rdtn.d . . thi~ \~.o',l \Oll, 111.11111y
bec.JU~l' New Yor k\ kft- h.mdL•d
pnL h L" I" untld o nce! out thl'
( :.1rdm.th. khy hmt.'l'\
l mu~
\\,I".Jmt 17 -2J ill g.l! J ll'~ ~t.ntc d bv
opp\hlng kft-h.1nJ.ers.
W1rh ill'.lrly every M e t\ pLl)'l'r
111 thL· Jtt~nul lc.lllll1g on tht' top

5 1 0 833 112

Details, A3

Sunday, Oct. IS

NalioNIIF-I..oliiUO

FROM STAFF REPORTS

GALLIPOLIS -The race for the SEOAl
ntle klcks imo h1gh gear Fnd1y when Logan
rolls into Memon.ll Field to face Gallia Academy.
The game IS especially important to Gallia
A cade~ny (6-l, SEOAL -1-0), which slipped to
No. II 111 the OIVI&lt;JOII Ill , R.egwn 12 computer ratings this weL·k desplte convmcmg wms
over R.iver V.llky and Athens. The Blue Devils
were 1Oth in bsr \\;cck 's ratin~.
The AP sportwriters \Uted Gallia Academy
No. 15 in thiS week·s state poll.
logan (7-0. SEOAL ~-0) 1s in ,uhd poSlnon
to n1akc a second (Onsccuttn: postSl'J~on appc.::r-

Southem

s.turd.y
Hlp: 70s: Low: 40S

POMER.OY- Salary increases for h ead teachers and part- time
.assistant high schoo l principals
were app roved and supplemental
contracts were awarded at Tuesday night's me eting of the M eiJSS
Local Board of Education.
The salary increase s in the
amount of 3.45 percent · were
made retroa ctive to the beginning
of the contran year.
In personnel matters. the resignations of Rusty 13ookm an as
boys assistant varsity basketball
coach, and Nancy M arlene Gibbs
as a substitute cmtodian and bus
driver were accepted.
Hired on supplem ental con-

tracts were Troy ilauer and M ark
Swan as co-coac h es for the Mcib"
High School varsity wre1tl ing
team; Becky Cotterill as nl'w, paper adv isor; and ]:mi ce Crog._gd a"i
n ation al honor '\Oc icty adviso r.
Oth er penonnl'l hired Wtre
substitute teach ers to ht: used o n
an as- needed basis were John Barcus. Theresa Coopt·r, Marg.nct
Demko, Liso ll onakl'r. D ale
Hoover, Bethany Justis. Christopher Kennedy, and 13ryan Swan;
and substitute cooks, 13everly
Allen, Diana 13owlcs, Kdly Lee
and G .1ylc Morris.
Tho board approved a payment

Please see Raises, Page A3

Book sale

·roday's

Sentinel
1 Sections- 11 Pages
Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

•

A2
B2-4
BS

AJ .
Bl, 6.
A3

Lotteries
OHIO
~
Pick J: 2-H-5; Pick 4: 0-2-!)-0
Buckeye 5:

.l-•&gt;·1~· 14

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Daily 3: 4-f&gt;-11 Daily 4:

1 - 1 -~-6

-~

Bo&lt;Mf lovers found tables filled
with biographies. westerns,
romance novels, discarded textbooks, children's books , magazines and other readable treasures al the Fnends of the
Meigs County Library's semiannual book sale on Thursday.
Books are priced at a dime a
piece, or a bagful for a dollar,
with proceeds benefitting the
Friends ' projects and the library
system's programs. The sale will
continue through 6 p.m. on Fri·
day. Homemade muffins are
also for sale at the event. which
is being held at the main library
in. Pomeroy. (Brian J. Reed
photo)

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