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•
Page 14 • The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, November 15, 19~5
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 16, 1995
State's pay raise bill put on hold
(
Turkey ••••••••••••••••••••• 69(
LB.
ByPAULSOUHRADA
· Assodaled Press Writer
COLUMBUS - County prosecutors, sheriffs,
, judges and other elected officials likely won'tlrnow
until next year whether they will be getting raise s
after a bid to add legislators to the mix killed the
issue in the Ohio House.
The House, on a 56-38 vote, rejected Senate
amendments to the pay raise bill, sen(ling it to a joint
conference committee where lawmakers almost certainly will eliminate the provision granting raises to
members of the Legislature.
·
. Those negotiations probably won't start until after
the Legislature reconvenes in January, since neither
. Senate President Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, nor
House Speaker Jo Ann Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg,
seemed inclined to call their members back before
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year's end.
"It 'isn't necessary because. with the exception of
judges, the raises would not lake effect until after the
November election,'' Aronoff said.
The judges were due to receive their raises immediately. The state constitution prohibits other elected
officials from receiving pay increases until after their
next elections.
The Senate added the leRislative raises to the bill
on Tuesday before passing it 25-7. The House passed
a version that did not include lawmakers in June .
The bill would have granted raises of 3 percent a
year to elected officials, ranging from the governor to
township trustees. Legislators elected in 1996 would
have received their pay increase s in 1997 through
2000.
Other officials would receive raises over two to
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1
THE HAGUE, Netherland•
(AP) - An international uibunal
today indicted the Bosnian Serbs'
top two political and military leaders for more war crimes, charging
them with genocide in the Muslim
enclave of Srebrenica.
• Bosnian Serb leader Radovan
Karadzic and army commander
Gen. Ratko Mladic have already
been charged with war crimes
against Bosnia's Muslim and Croat
populations. including attacks on
the capital Sarajevo.
The new indicanents come just
days after Mladic and Karadzic
agreed to relinquish power once a
U.S.-sponsorcd peace deal is
signed, in exchange for not being
handed over to the war crimes tribunal.
The tribunal said today's indictment related to "one of the bloodiest acts of the war in the former
Yugoslavia ... involving crimes of
an unprecedented cruelty against
the Bosnian Muslim population."
· Karadzic and Mladic are
accused of being "directly responsible for the auocities commined in
July 1995 against the Bosnian
Muslim population of the U.N :de~!gnated safe area of Srebrem~a. tnbunal d~uments srud. _
· The latest md1ctments agamst
the two appeared certain to further
1solate the Bosman Serb leadership
at a time where the leaders of Serbia, Bosnia and Croatia are trying
to hammer out a U.S.- brokered
peace accord.
_ _
The Unued States has sa1d 1t
would not send troops to monitor a
peace agreement as long as the two
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ease of E. coli bas been reported lo
Columbus city officials, who still
don't k)low what caused the oul-
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s
_ remained in power.
After the fall of Srebrenica to
Bosnian Serb forces, an estimated
25,000 Muslim refugees fled to the
nearby town of Potocari, headquarters of Dutch peacekeepers.
The Serbs deported thousands of
Muslims to Bosnian government
lines after reportedly separating out
men and boys.
About 8,000 refugees have been
missing ever since, and Western
governments have said evidence,
including satellite photos of alleged
mass graves, suggests mass executions.
"After Srebrenica fell ... a truly
terrible massacre of the Muslim
population appears to have taken
place, '' tribunal documents said.
"The evidence describes scenes
of unimaginable savagery: thousands of men executed and buried
in mass graves, hundreds of men
buried alive, men and women mutiJated and slaughtered, children
killed before their mothers' eyes, a '
grandfather forced to eat the liver
of his own grandson.
"These are truly scenes from
hell. written on thedarkestpagesof
human history," according to a
summary of the indicanent.
.
The indicanent depicts Karadz1c
and Mladic as the architects of
what is perbaps the worst massacre
in Europe since World War II.
U.S. spy photos have indicated
mass graves around Nova Kasaba,
west of Srebrenica. Madeleine
Albright, U.S . ambassador to the
United Nations has told the security council as m'any as 2, 700 people
might he buried there.
C9lumbus r.e ports
another case of E. coli
260Z.
'
PRESIDENT CLINTON
·Top two Bosnian Serbs'
leaders are indicted for
additional war crimes
$399
$ 59
five years .
Legislators now make $42.427 a year, with extra
pay going to those in leaders hip positions. Their lasl
raise was in 1992.
In the House, neither Republicans nor Democrats
were willing to provide the decisive margin to ensure
the bill's passage. In the end. 22 Republicans and 16
Democrats voted in favor.
"The votes that I had indicated were there, were
there," said House Speaker JoAnn Davidson, RReynoldsburg. "It was the votcs from the mi'noritv
party that weren't there."
·
Minority Leader Patrick Sweeney. D-Cicvcland,
had a different recollection of his conversations with
Republican leaders .
"We had indication s that they had more votes
than they produced today, " Sweeney said .
"There was no way we were goin g to be the
majority on this," he said.
Swee ney predicted the legislative raises would
come out when the bill goes to conference committee.
"That issue has bumed iL>clf out. I suspect," he
said.
Supporters of the bill argued that the dispute ove r
the legislat tve rai ses was unfairly holding up pay
increases for county sheriffs. township uustees and
other local officials.
But oppo nent s said other officials will sti ll get
llleir raises alter the conference committee takes legislators out of the bill.
Rep. Mike Fox. R-llamilion, said the Legislature
has left too much unfinished work to consider granting themse lves a pay raise.
''The public has been sending a message that they
are nut happy with our job pcrfonnance," Fox said .
Clinton says he will veto latest GOP proposal
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· A 45-year-old woman was conOrmed ill with the bacteria Tuesday, said Ted Strouth, team leader
fQT the food ,Protection program of
the Columbus Health Department.
: She became sick on Oct. 27,
-.llbich is within a week of the other
cases, he said. She did not need to
hospitalized.
• Jbe woman saw a doctor after
calling the health department's botlib~, Tests confirmed her suspiclons.
. The hotJine has received almost
4SO calls sioce the outbreak in late
October, Strouth said. Recently,
ti!OOgh, calls have dropped off.
10 LB.
!if
90
,,
t.
'
'
Tbe bacteria can cause bloody
diarrhea and occasionally kidney
failure, though Ohio's experience
has not been as serious a< one in
1993 in the Pacific Northwest. In
that case, four children died and
600 others became sick from tbe
'bacteria, which was traced to contaminated and undercooked hamburgers served by the fast-food
chain Jack in the Box.
The only thread connecting the
Columbus-area victims Is some
experience in northwest Columbus,
Strouth said. Beyond that, no links
and have been found.
Strouth said officials are inlerviewing the victims. In addition,
two neighbors and two dining companions of each victim are being
mterviewed.
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
defiant President Clinton says he
will veto the latest Republican
attempt to end the three-day-old
federal shutdtlwn because it would
comer him into accepting "highly
objectionable" spending cuts.
The Senate headed for final con- ·
gressional approval today of a bill
Jetting shuttered agencies call
employees back to work. Leon
Panetta, the, White House chief of
staff, said that stopgap measure is
still unacceptable because it would
commit the president to a deep cuts
in Medicare to reach a balanced
budget.
"The president has basically
said we have an approacb to balancing the budget in 10 years and
Congress has an approach to bal -
ancing the budget in seven years,"
Panetta told reporters. "Let's sit
down and negotiate and try to
arrive at a common base here for
balancing the budget.'·
The House approved the stopgap measure early today 277-151
- not far from the 289 votes that
would be needed 10 override a veto.
Forty-eight Democrats voted yes. "
while only three Republicans were
opposed.
The legis lation would keep the
government operating through Dec.
5 while lawmakers and Clinton
continue their struggle over GOP
plans to balance th e budget by
2002. In exchange, it would commit the president to balancing the
budget in seven years - a deadline
to which the adminisualion objects,
but which Republicans feel high- which I lind hi ghly objectionable."
lights the difference between themlie added: ''I'm not going to do
sc'vcs and the While House.
it, even if it's 90 days, 120 days or
"For the purpose of getting the 180 days. If we take it right into the
federal gover nment up to full next election, let the American peospeed, we are prepared to focu s on ple decide. ''
the ccniral question: Will lllc presiThat wasn't a convincing argudent sign a hal:mced budget agree- ment to the 48 Democrats who
ment of seven years," House voted for the temporary spending
Speaker Newt Gingrich . R-Ga .. measure , including conservatives
told reporters . "That's the central and lawmakers representing many
issue, after all . Everything else is civil servants. To avoid the embarsecondary.''
rassmcm of seeing the measure
Clinton said on CBS News on pass with enough suength to overWednesday that he would veto the . tum a Clinton veto, Vice President
measure because the GOP demand AI Gore and other administration
for eliminating deficits in seven officials telephoned wavering
years "re,g uires a level of cu ts in Democrats to keep t.bem Joyal, said
Medicare and Medicaid. in educa- one Democratic lawmaker who
tion. in the environment and a tax spoke on condition of anonymity.
increase on working people, all of
Continued on page 3
Police compare notes on alleged serial killer
RICHMOND, Ky. (AP) Law-enforcement officials from six
states met in Kentucky to compare
notes on a drifter suspected of
killing four women in t.be past two
months.
Authorities on Wednesday dis-
cussed Glen Rogers, a suspect in
the strangling or stabbing deaths of
women in California, Louisiana,
Mississippi and Florida. Investigators from Ohio and Kentucky also
were present.
"I think there was an obligation
Jobs Bi/111/item clears
first legislative hurdle
The Rural Industrial Park Loan
Bill, Ohio House Bill 440, was
passed by members of the Ohio
House of Representatives 93-1 in a
vote earlier this week in Columbus.
Tbe bill, which is just a part of
the Jobs Bill III proposal, would
establish a revolving loan program
for rural economically disuessed
counties that lack infrastructure and
a substantial iDdustrial base.
The bill, sponsored by state representative John Carey (R- Wellston), would create the Rural
Industrial Park Loan program for
the purpose of assisting eligible
applicants in financing ~evelop
ment of and improvements to
industrial park sites.
The assistance would be provided in the form of loans and loan
guarantees for land acquisition,
construction of industrial park
buildings, and infrastructure
improvements.
"While Ohio in general is pros·
pering, there are some areas in the
state th•t have not recei'ved fully
the benelits of our state's good fortune," Carey stated in a release
Wednesday.
Jobs Bill Ill is an economic
stimulus package containing five
separate proposals. The package
would benefit businesses and communities tluoughout Ohio. Together, House Bill 440 and Jobs Bill
Three could encourage investment,
supporr Ohio's urban core, and
expand Ohio's rural economics.
according to Carey.
"I encourage my colleagues to
help those communities that are
already willing to help themselves.
The public-private partnerships
created by tl1is bill woul~ work to
market and develop industrial sites
for distressed areas of the state,"
Carey added .
House Bill 440 will now move
on to the Ohio Senate for debate
and furthcr consideration.
Reno has Parkinson's disease
WASHINGTON (AP) - Attorney General Janet Reno disclosed
today that she has Parkinso_n' s disease. She said it is not adversely
affecting her work and that she will
remaiJI on the job.
"I'm taking my medicine. I feel
fine now, " the 57-year-old attorney general told her weekly news ,
conference. Her only· symptom so
far bas been trembling in her left
hand, which she first noticed this
summer.
She said she advised the White
House after the diagnosis was
made three weeks ago and chief of
staff Leon Panetta "was very supportive."
Reno· made clear she bad no
intention of resigning and said if
President Clinton wins a second
term and "if be wanted me baek,
this would be no reiiSori not to do
it"
Displaying a steady left band for
reporters, Reno said her symptoms
are now under control as a result of
taking three .Jablets of sinenet a day
before each meal.
Her doctor, Jonathan Pincus.
chairman of the deparunent of neurology at Georgetown University
Medical Center, has told her there
is no reason she cannot continue in
her job, Reno said.
"I first noticed my hand shaking over the summer and I thought
it would go away," Reno said.
"When it didn't I went to see the
doctor.''
An estimated 500,000 to I million Americans have Parkinson's
disease, which robs people of control over their movements. It causes
tremors, shuffling gain and muscular rigidity, and can eventually
incapacitate people who have it.
The disease results from the
death of brain cells that produce a
substance called dopamine and use
it to communicate.
Reno told reporters the disease
itself has no relation to job strain
but that she bad been advised that
stress can exacerbate the symptoms . She added, "During lhe
Waco heruings; I didn · t see il shake
at ali."
of all jurisdictions to coordinate
and see what we have , " Mike
Coblentz, an investigator with the
Los Angeles Police Department,
said at a news conference.
The investigators met for about
five hours at Eastern Kentucky
University.
Rogers, . 33, a native of Hamilton, Ohio, also is, a suspect in other
slayings, including one in Kentucky. He was arrested Monday in
rural eastern Kentucky , where he
has relatives, and is being held
without bond at the Madison County Detention Center.
"My goal is to sit down and see
if there's any co mmon link we
don't know about," said Detective
Chuck Lee of Jackson, Miss.
"Maybe by all the agencies being
here, maybe there is a common link
we haven' 1 discovered yet.
"I wou.ld love to have Glen
Rogers first but if another agency
gets him fmt, we'll wait our tum."
The detectives declined to reveal
details of their conversations.
" The most important thin g is
ge tting the cooperation of everybody involved to determine who
has the strongest case so we can get
the suongest conviction on him."
said Detective Julie Massucci, of
the Tampa Fla., police department.
Madison County Commonwealth's Attorney Tom Smith said
a decision will be made by Monday·
on whether to pursue two counts of
wanton endangerment and receiving stolen property against Rogers,
who led authorities on a I S-mile
chase before his capture.
'!be Kentucky charges could be
dropped or deferred to speed up
Rogers' exttadition to a state where
he faces a more ser~o u s charge,
Smith said.
Smith said a decision would be
made in about 60 days on where to
ex tradite Rogers first. The final
decision rests with the governor's
office .
Madison Disuict Judge William
G. Clouse set preliminary and
extradition hearings for Nov. 21.
Kentucky authorities want to
talk to Rogers about the death of a
73-year-old Ohio man , Mark
Peters, whose body was found last
year in a cabin that Rogers' family
owns ncar· Bcanyville.
Peters' son, Paul, told The Kentucky Post on Wednesday that he
douhts Rogers will confess to his
father's slaying.
Spencer announces
county commission bid
Ernest "Ike" Spencer, Racine,
officially announced Wednesday
his intention to seek the Republican
Party nomination to run for the scat
on the Meigs County Board of
Commissioners commencing Jan.
4. 1997.
Spencer is a Navy veteran of the
Vietnam War, past commander of
the Racine American Legion Post
602, past master of the Shade River
Lodge 453. Ches ter. and has been
active in Meigs County sports for
the last IS years . umpiring baseball
and soflhall and refereeing ba<ketball.
This year he was an assistant
coach for the Southern High
School football team and has
coa<;hed various football teams during the la<l 15 years.
He is employed as a bus driver
for the Southem Local School District.
"I haven't been satislicd by the
work ol the current commission "
Spencer said. ''I'm running to heip
the people of all over Meigs County, not just a certain III'C3."
"I want to help the people in the
county and help with bringing jobs
in the county," he added.
ERNEST 'IKE' SPENCER
He is married to Judy Thornton
Spencer and they have two chi!. dreu, Lisa of Nelsonville and John
'
of the home.
�,,
Commentary
·The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
Page2 ·
Thursday, November 16, 1995
O.fficials urged to preserve local business
Dear Editor,
I would like 10 thank Middleport
May<r Dewey Horton and Middleport Council members for sending
more jobs out of the village, not to
mention out of the county. The
terenl contract on residential trash
ttmoval in !be village was talcen
ftom Manley's Trash Service.
I have worked along side my
fa!ber for lbirteen years building
ellis company lhl\l my grandfather,
Lawrence 'Dobie' Manley, staned
10 many years ago. My grandfather
~erved failbfully bis customers and
lbe village of Middleport not only
~ !beir local trash collector, but
llso as street commissioner.
I tbink it is a sbame tbat tbe
Mayor and council feel tbal wbat
little money saved by acrepting an
out of !Own company's bid will
make up for !be jobs lost in our
town and !be quality of servire !bat
we have provided for years. As of
January , 1996. !he money genernted from lbese jobs will be going to
Cincinnati or Wellston.
1bis is in no way keeping business locaL Wilb !be fi ne service
we've provided, lbese jobs should
have never been taken out of our
community.
Roger Manley, Jr.
Middleport
What they are saying in
other Ohio newspapers
By Th• Associated Press
·. Excapts of Ohio editorials of national and statewide interest
1M (CI•nland) Plain Dealer, Nov. 7
~
· So now it's official. The Browns are leaving. After nearly five decades
Ill Cleveland. one of football's greatest franchises is moving to Baltimore.
What is particularly galling about The Move is that it came in a memorable year when Cleveland seemed to have overcome, finally, its status as
the cbeapesl joke in a cheap comedian· s routine.
An Modell, !be Browns· majority owner, would have us believe that
k was unable to compete financially with other reams in !be league.
. -Don't you believe it.
·
::: Anyone wbo regularly fills more !ban 60,000 seats, and often upwards
• )If 70,000. ought to be able to make a decem profit.
: ·: No, if Modell were the smart businessman and !be smart football man
•lfe thinks be is, !be Browns would be bolb a money maker and a con: )ender. But because be couldn't make tbe Browns a financial winner, be
: ~nl searching for.a Baltimore bailout tbat rewards even his D)ismanage: :.enr with windfall profits.
OHIO Weather
MICH.
Adjustable or inexorable?_ _ _---:-_
With Colin Powell out of !be
race, wi!b President Clinton beat·
ing potential Republican opponents
in bead-to-bead surveys, with
Democrats· doing bel!er tbao
expected in !be Nov. 7 elections,
with surveys showing voters
believe !be GOP budget proposals
go " too far" - it is now being
said !be Democrats are on the way
MARGARET LEHEW
Controlll'r
Letter to the editor
The polls mean almost nothing
now . When lbere is a Republican
nominee, we will likely see instant
hagiography. The public will learn
that !be nominee-to-be. whoever be
is , was born in a log cabin.
chopped down a cherry tree but
told his father about it, sJilit r.Uls,
was a war hero, was a peanut
fanner, has a wonderful family,
stood up for his mom against an
Ben Wattenberg
alcoholic father and bas always
responded heroically in moments
of crisis. How will such a candidate
do in a match-up· against Clinton?
No one 11nows, but Powell, who
had been pre-canonized, was beating biro by 10 points.
Moreover. Clinton bas not yet
been bit with an organized poUtical
auack campaign. which will surely
come. By the same token. the
Democratic co unterattack of !be
anointed Republican bas not yet
come, and that too will be tough .
(He told his falber !be neighbor kid
axed !be tree ; be took bimbos to !be
cabin.) Forget the hcljd-to-head
polls for a while. ·
The 1995 elections were scattered and almost impossible to
interpret. Thus, the Republican s
were unsuccessful in capturing !be
· Virginia Senate. but they did pick
up several seats to gain a 20-20 ue.
It's bard to call !bat a loss. even
though the GOP bad hoped 10 gain
control.
More interesting are the surveys
about policy . A recent USA
Today/CNN/Gallup poll reported
!bat by 57 percent-36 percent voters think !be GOP b'udget proposals
go "too far." But !be same poll
showed !bat 82 percent want a balanced budget and 67 percent favor
a tax cut - Republican staples.
So we shall see . Surely . th~
Republican s in recent weeks have
not done a good job se lling thw
budget They have been allacked
by Democrats for savaging grandmas, grandpas. welfare morns and
poor children.
I have a problem with tlle ratchet attack. Liberals believe socia l
welfare spending can go up , and
up, and up , taking vigorous
1
I
~ ~: 1lle SOP. IJJ6 ~eta' ~A t11Ab.%T CUT
~T S4~lP ~Ali Ia.! t.rmf ~~~~~ 1l4f &'AD~~~
IT~ CUt~~ . AUl'l'T~!
----------------------~------ ------------------~
•
IMansfield 135' I•
Ice
Sunny Pt. Cloudy
Cloudy
~ 1995 Accu Weather, Inc
• Via AssociarBd Pre ss GmphicsNsr
Today's weather forecast
Southeastern Oblo
Today ... Mostly cloudy with
scattered flurries. Higb near 40. ·
West wind 5 to 15 mph.
Tonigbt .. Partly cloudy. Low in
!be mid 20s. Light winds.
Friday ... Parlly sunny in the
morning. Increasing cloudiness in
!be afternoon. High in !be lower
40s.
Extended forecast
Saturday .. .Snow likely north
and rain or snow likely south.
Lows in the upper 20s to the mid
30s. Highs in the upper 30s north 10
!be mid 40s soulb.
·
Sunday ... A chance of snow
northeast...Otherwise partly cloudy.
Lows 25 to 30. Highs in the upper
30s north and in tbe lower 40s
south.
Monday ... A chance of rain
norlbwest ... O!berwise increasing
clouds. Lows 30 to 35. Highs 45 to
50.
Snow flurries will end today
Small-cap funds require patience
..
::.ua.on
~
Country needs a 'grown-up' leader
!oday in history
'
•
Elizabeth T. Frisch
Clinton says he will...
W VA
By The Associated Press
Flurries will end today throughout Ohio and skies will become
partly cloudy from west to east
As bigb pressure moves from
Oklahoma into the Tennessee Valley on Friday, !be threat of precipi·
tation will return to western Obio
as a combination of rain and snow.
Tonight will be partly cloudy
west with a cbanre of snow early in
!be east and snow showers likely
northeast. Lows will be in !be 20s.
It will be mostly cloudy west
and north on Friday, wilb partly
cloudy skies southeast. There will
be a chance of rain southwest and a
cbance of snow north in the afternoon. Highs will. be in the middle
30s to around 40.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus wea!ber
station was 72, set in 1953. The
record low of 12 was set in 1883.
Sunset today will be at 5:15
p.m. Sunrise on Friday will be at
7:16a.m.
Across the nation
Snow showers lingered this
morning over the northern
Appalachians, while tbe Great
Lakes region braced for up to 3
inches more from a powerful wintry storm !bat belted parts of !be
Northeast
Lake-effect snow showers and
mountain snow sbowen; were dust·
ing parts of West Virginia and Virginia before daybreak, extending to
the eastern shores of Lake Ontario
and Lake Erie.
Mostly light snow accumulations were expected.
Purchase of SheJI division
has no impact on area plant
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. An agreement announced between
Union Carbide Corp. and Shell Oil
Co., a subsidiary of the Royal
Dutcb/Shell Group of Companies,
will not affect the Shell Chemical
plant in Mason County, according
to a plant official.
Under the agreement, Union
Carbide will acquire Sbell' s
polypropylene technology and
manufacturing facilities, as well as
polypropylene assets .previously
held jointly by Union and Shell
Oil.
Dale Wunder, manager of indusbial relations at !be Shell plant in
Apple Grove, said today lhat !be
transaction will not affect the
Mason County plant. He added !be
acquisition is only a subsidiary of
Shell and is not Shell Chemical.
Completion of !be transaction is
expected by year's end, pending
appro~a! by the Federal Trade
Commtssmn.
.
Polypropylene is one of the
world's largest volume, fastest·
growing plastics. End-use applications include carpeting and upholstery, apparel, packaging films,
food containers, housewares and
appliances, and automobile interior
trim and panels.
Couples issued licenses
Tbe following couples were
issued marriage lioenses rerently in
the Meigs County Probate Court of
Judge Robert Buck:
Harlan Craig Webrung, 54,
Cbarleston, W.Va., and Texanna
Jane Well. 51. Pomeroy; Bryan Jay
Justis, 19, Racine, and Taunda Lei
VanMeter, 20, Oifton, W.Va.;
Robert Joseph Calaway, 20, and
Stephanie Lee Hoffman, 19, both
The Daily Sentinel
(USPS Zl3-960)
Published every nfttmoon, Monday through 1
Fridny. Ill Ccun St .. Pomeroy, Ohio, by
I~
Ohio Valley Publishing Company/Muhimedia
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 43769, Ph . 992·2156.
Second clau postage paid nt Pomeroy, Ohio.
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Newspaper Association.
POSTMASTER: Send address correction.4 10
The Daily Sentinel. Ill Courl Sl. , Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
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One Week....
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The Dally Sentinel • Page ~
--Area Death-- ,.---....:..-Local· brief----.
Elizabeth Titus Friscb, 84, of Fort Wayne, Ind., and formerly of
Pomeroy, died Wednesday, Nov. 15, 1995.
. Born Oct. 19, 1911, she was the daughter of the late Judge Earl R.
Tttus and Mary Giles Titus.
.Survivin~ is a son, John Titus; a brolber, James Titus of Syracuse, and
a SISter, Claire Butler of Roanoke Va.
She was preceded in death by ber husband, !be Rev. Paul Frisch, and
by a brolber Paula Anderson.
Services will be held Saturday, 10 a.m. at !be Hire Funeral Home in
Keudallville, Ind. Burial will be Saturday morning from !be Immanuel
Lulberan Church in Avilla, Ind.
Friends<Diay caU Friday, 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
IToledo 136' I
umbrage at any cut, eilber absolutely or even as a~ !n lbe rate
of increase. If any dimirusbment is
proposed. for wbalever reason, liberals attack !be dirniniM!ers as primal feral brutes. They will fmance
liberal, Democratic pbone banks
telling elderly voters that Republicans will take away !beir Social
Security and Medicare to leave
recipients at dealh's door, starving
and bankrupt. They will say that
such policies push millions of poor
kids into poverty.
Now, it can surely be argued
!bat the Republican plans for Medicare or welfare are too stark, just as
it can be argued !bat !bey are just
about right, or even insufficient.
But there is a danger in the idea
tllat any cut. anywhere, any time. is
brutish behavior. If sucb an attack
works, it means !bat voters never
can turn !be big ship of government
Joward another course.
The true welfare argument is nm
about whether a million children
will be pushed into poverty, but
about whether the welfare trap ,
which leads to out-of-wedlock birlb
and child poverty, can be disarmed.
The true argument about Medicare
is not abbut whether the rate of
growth df Medicare should be
curbed. but by bow mucb. The current rate of growlb is ma!bemalically unsustain~ble .
Whelber tbe Republicans can
handle the simplistic liberal
rheloric of tears and travail is of
great importance. If !bey cannot.
!.hen we will return to the mindset
of yesteryear wben the growlb of
tlle social welfare stale was seen to
be "inexorable." Tbat is not a
word that is compatible wi!b the.
idea of political democracy, where
voters should be able to shape their
own destiny.
Ben Wattenberg, 11 senior fellow at the American Ent•rprise
Institute, is the aut.or of 11 new
book, "Values Matt•r Most." ·
(For information on how to
communicate el~ctronlcally witb
this columnist and others, contact AIDI'rica Online by calUng I·
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
Small-company grow!b fuuds West Palm Beach. Fla-based bro- shares of his fund, or others like it, and consumer companies (13.2 perhave !be potential to offer investors ker/dealer.
need to know that they are buying a cent).
big rewards. But as !be pros see it,
Abram said that people don't fund !bat invests in companies !hat
But even if a fund is well-manthese funds can be very volatile.
always understand !be risks they have a high degree of risk assOciat- aged and well-diversified. big
Over !be past five years smalled wilb !hem. One of the rea sons sw ings in !be market sector where
company growth funds have made
for that risk is because !be compa- it is invested, or changes in !be
some attractive moves upward:
Dian
Vuiovich
nies are small and growing and not economy. will affect its perfor·
Between Dec. 31, 1989, and Dec.
mance.
well-established blue-chip rmns.
: ~Galion Inquirer, Nov. 6
31. 1994, !be average small-wmpa- are taking in small-cap funds.
In Ibis year's soaring stock marThe
Berger
Small
Company
• :- If you're a longtime Browns fan, yoo mu st have felt !be sting of being
ny growlb fund had a cumulative "People are chasing equity perfor- Grow!b Fund. while only 2 years ket. Abram said investors need to
: jappCd in tbe fare Ibis weekend. The blow came from an ugly monster total return of 78.56 percent, !be
mance Ibis year like !bey chased old, bas had its share of price be concerned about martet swings
: (~~!led Greed.
fourth-best showing among funds, yield," she said. "Right into tbe movements: II ended 1994 wilb a and ought (0 be creating a p<rtfolio
• :- As tempting as it is to say, however. Greed's face is not An !'.fodell's. according to Lipper Analytical Serwrong end of tbe market and total return of minus 3 percent. of funds that includes things like
: ~ Cleveland Browns OW1ler may have been at !be root of !be football
vices. But !bat's !be big picture. A unaware of the risks.' '
!ben in January 1995 it was down blue-chip and income-producing
: ~·s failure to win a Super Bowl during his tenure. but he didn't create closer look shows ups and downs.
William
Keilbler,
president
and
about 5 perrent Bur as of Nov. 2. funds along wilb small-cap funds .
·lireed. He simply couldn't outrun tbe monster's reach as it consumes
For instanre, if you look at this portfolio manager of the Berger its year-to-date total return had . Keilbler' s advice is more specif: jverytbiog that bas endeared America to professional sports.
category's performance for !be 12
ic : ''The advice I give to my
:-: Greed was prese nt this afternoon in Baltimore. where that city monlbs of 1994 alone, you'll see Small Company Growlb Fund, is soared up nearly 27.5 percent
disclosing
the
quite
candid
about
friends
is, don't put any more in
"I
got
off
to
a
slow
start
and
-:.OOOUnced a deal with Modell to move his storied franchise th~re from · that small-cap funds ended !be year
risks
associated
wilb
small-wmpamy
fund
than you're comfortable
have
kind
of
been
playing
carcb-up
:oeveland.
wilb !Otal returns down nearly I ny stock investing.
losing
half
of, because you have
ball
most
of
!be
year."
Keilblcr
·: • The monster is ruining what used to make professional sports fun to percent. Look at tbe grouping as a
"
ll'
s
very
easy
(0 get enthusiassaid.
swings
when
this sector of the mar: lWatch, talk about and get caught up in. Greed has convinced owners of whole thi s year and the story
tic
and
excited
about
stocks
that
are
Keithler
runs
bis
fund
from
the
ket
can
be
down
50 percent within
:professional teams !bat cities like Cleveland and fans like those of !be changes once again: Through June,
appreciating 20, 30, 40 percent or bottom up, selecting stocks that are six or seven mon!bs. So the volatil: ;~Jrown s don't really maner.
small-company grow!b funds bad a more a. year. That's typical of growth oriented. are in growing ity can be enormous."
!Otal return of more !ban 15 per- human nature or any kind of invest- markets, have strong management
Dian Vujovich is the author of
Beacon Journa~ Nov. 10
cent, and by Nov . 2, !be average ing," says Keithler. "and it's easy teams and are niche products that "Straight Talk About Mutual
-:.- Those wbo bad hoped Colin Powell would enter the presidential rare
small-company growth fund had to see !be upside, particularly wben have !be potential to be market Funds" and "Straight Talk
:)Were disappointed this week . On Wednesday. tbe retired general moved ahead 27.4 percent
you've been in a market that's been leaders. Wilb 126 different stocks About Investing for Your Retire: timounced !bat he would not seek the presidency in 1996. He did so wilb
" These kinds of funds are very strong. But !be downside can in its portfolio, be says !be fund is
ment," both or which ar• pub·
;pe and aulbenticity. His performance und~ored why many wanted unpredictably volatile and heavily
be
prelly
unpleasant,
and.
!bat's
well-diversified,
wilb
its
heaviest
lished
by McGraw Hill. Send
•J1im to join !be fray.
oversold in this market, " says important for investors to under- weightings currently in computerquestions
to her in car• or this
: •: Powell explained that, try as he did to st e the flames, be simply
Pany l Abram, senior vice presirelated tech stocks (22.4 percent), newspaper_
· 6tidn' r have the "fire" to run for !be White H se next year. Fair enough. · dent of Mutual Service Corv. a stand."
·He also said investors wbo buy health care issue s (21.3 percent)
A Powell candidacy would have made·1'fesident Clinton's re-election
. , aU -tbe more difficult Sen. Bob Dole. the leading Republican presi4eotial contender. surely feels relieved.
:-: Both Clinton and Dole should take a look at !be Powell news oonfer-i:Dce. They'll catch a glimpse of !be steadiness and deplb that intrigued
many Americans about !be potential Powell presidency.
Leadership" It requires more !ban a fire in the bell y.
The recent election results and omy.
to congressional. leaders anhc on Tuesday, Nov. 14 :ind possibly
now !be possible .shutdown of the
Instead of negotiating !heir dif- . White House on Nov. 2: Namely, default on its debt service pay Springfield N•ws·Sun, Nov. 8
federal government make it all the ferenoes on the federal budget like that be wouldn't negotiate until ments later in the week.
What Ross Perot aims to do Ibis year and next- get a political party
more regrettable that Colin Powell adults . both side s are playing · Congress had finish ed passing its
Clin10n probably will benefit
: off !be ground and qualify for the 1996 elections in as many states as posdecided not to run for president,
budget and appropriations bills and politically if !be Republicans are
. Jlible - will be a daunting (and no doubt expen>ive) undertaking for !be depriving the country of a moderMorton Kondracke he'd cast his vetoes.
seen as zealots more determined 10.
: money's-no-object Texas magnate.
ate, a leader- and a grown-up.
Surely, a grown-up president close
!be Commerre Depart·:
. 'The frnt rung on· his ladder appears within grasp with the announceThe election results and every "chicken" like irresponsible teen- say, Colin Powell or Harry Truman ment down
and
bar
lobbying by federal ,
. .en! last week that his volunteen bad secured more !ban 90,000 signaavailable poll indicate !bat tbe agers. Each gang !bought it could - would have used his time with
grant
recipients
!ban to enable !be:
: tures on petitions 10 put his new Reform Party on California's November country desperately wants centrtst cause !be o!ber to swerve, and now
opposition
leaders
at
least
to
try
to
government
to
pay
its bills.
· 1996 ballot. Petition drives in Ohio and Maine also must reach !heir goals
policy, not !be right-wing radical- it appears !here will be a crash.
inspire
!bern
to
act
in
!be
nationa!
This
fits
nicely
with the :
: before year's end.
'
The White House refuses to
ism of congressional Republicans
. 1bis will be no easy sell. Unlike Perot's personal quest for !be presi- or the reactionary liberalism of negotiate Jrow because it wants the interest on so grave a matter as !be Democrats· strategy of exposing:
country's financial health. He
. clmcy in 1992. !be Reform Party does not yet have a recognizable stan- congressional Democrats.
pubUc to see Republicans as inept, might have failed , but ~e could tlle Republicans as ideological radicals. Polls and !be recent elc:Gtion :
: dlrd-bearer 10 fl.re up !be troops and capture !be public's imagination.
Even though President Clinton divided . and extreme. Indeed.
. To make matters murkier. !be party's agenda is nearly a~ bani to detecl is currently reprising bis 1992 elec- Republicans have been unable to have tried.
results indicate that the public is :
Once back in Washington , mchned to Ibis view. The ·.
· • an incOming F-117 steallb fighter-bomber.
tion role as a centrist "new Demo- pass appropriations bills or budget
· Perot and bis followers don't have much to offer except a vague unease crat" --:-speaking recently, in fact. reconciliation on time - partly !bough, it's the Republicans who NBC/Wall Street Journal poll !
: llbout the bigness of institutions. foreign entanglements (including trade to the Democratic Leadership because tbe Republican Senate have been behaving like spoiled showed !bat by 64 percent to 26 :
children, with Gingrich complain. qreements). growlb policies. the scope of regulation, etc.
Council be formerly beaded - the won't buy the radical agenda ing !bat he'd been "snubbed" by perrent, voters are more concerned ·
that the GOP will go too far in ;
NBC/Wall Street Journal poll last passed by the Republican House.
Clinton aboanl !be plane and made
monlb showed !bat only 28 percent
Oo the other band, Clinton is so to depart by a rear exit at Andrews changmg !be country !ban that they •
;
of Americans think be bas tbe interested in seeing the Republi- Air Force Base instead of the front. won't change it en~gb.
In
Kentucky,
Virginia
and
elsei
"right set of personal characteris- cans fail !bat be refused even· to
Most recently, Gingrich
tics" 10 be president
talk about !be budget (or much of whipped bis minions into an anti- where, Democrat.~ slowed the rusb •
Even DLC president AI From anything else) to House Speaker Clinton lather and eocouraged !hem toward Republican realignment by-;
disparages Clinton's 1996 election Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., and Seuate to pressure Clinton· into negotia- campa~gnmg against Gingrich. Oo :
ly Tile Associated Press '
strategy of " lriangulalion," assert· Majority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan .. tims by loading up a stopgap con- th ~ olfter band, there was no ~
Today in History
Today is Tbtnlay. Nov. 16, !be 320tb day of 1995. There are 45 days ing it constitutes "passive" posi- during the 20-odd hours they were tinuin~ ~ulio~ and a temporary embrace of old-style liberal j
tioning between !be Republicans aboard Air Force One togelber on debt liruit extensiOn with provoca- Democrats. In Kentucky, for l
left in tbe year.
Today 's Highlight in Hist<ry:
· and the Demoaats, not active lead· the way to and from the funeral of tive items from !be GOP's ideolog- mstance, Democratic Gov ,-elect l
Paul Patton campaigned against l
On Nov. Hi, 1933, !be United StaleS and the Soviet Union established ershl)l in fwding a " third way" to Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak ical tit bag.
GOP
Medicare cuts but called bim· 1
Rabin .
.6Jjomalic relations. President Roosevelt sent a telegram 10 Soviet leader govern the country.
The Senate bas stripped out selfa "conservative."
:
abxim Litvioov in which be expressed hope that U.S.-Soviet relations
White House aides claim And now, !banks 10 stubbornsome of !bose items and tempered
It's
more
evidence
that
the
iiwuuld ''forever remain normal and friendly.''
ness on !be part of bolb Clinton and implausibly - tbat it was "inapothers, but it remains to be seen country wants moderate leadership. :: ·
. . On Ibis dale:
congressional Republicans, tbe propriate" for Clinton to talk bud- whether !be House will accede. At
: . 1D In6. British troops caplllrCd Fat Washington during the American country is on the verge of a go~ get policy on a funeral mission,
the rate things ~ going, Clinton
(Morton Kondracke Is execu• '1
ment ·shutdown and a default on although !bey also claim that be will veto !be CR and the debt oeillevolution.
live
editor or Roll c.n, the news•, 1D 1864. Union Gen. William T. Sherman and his troops began their U.S. deb! payments that may raise simply bad nothing more to say on
ing Congress sends biro. The. gov- l paper of Capitol HID_)
:
interest rates and damage the ccon· the subject than be' d already said
!.'Mlwdl to the Sea'' durin~ the Civil War.
ernment was expectfd to shut down
. I
:<
Pomeroy • Middleporr, ·ohio
Friday, Nov_ 17
AccuWc"thcr• forccaSI for <iaytimc condi tions and high tcmpcr"tures
back.
Don· 1 count on it. We sbaU see.
'There are many acts yet to come in
the drama of the 1996 election
year. Some involve the inexorable
LI:JlERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All lenm are subject to editing and must be SJgned with name.
logic of a campaign . One episode
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
still to come will determine
should be in good taste, addressing issues. not personalities .
whelber a free society can ever deal
...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___.. with
bility.!be ratchet rhetoric of inexora-
CHARLEJiiE HOEFLICH
General Managl'r
Thursday, November 16, 1995
Continued from page 1
The veto was ready even though
Republicans deleted a provision
that would bave boosted premiums
Medicare recipients pay for doctors' care beginning in January,
language that Clinton bad vehemently opposed last weekend. The
president's auacks had forced
Republicans onto the defensive,
and only Wednesday did they
return to the offensive with !beir
seven-year balanced-budget language.
To box Clinton in tighter, !be
GOP provision would require the
president to agree 10 use Congressional Budget Office calculations
to determine whether !be budget is
balanced. The president has insisted on using estimates by !be White
House Office of Management and
Budget, whose more optimistic
economic forecasts make !be job of
balancing the budget easier by
more !ban $100 billion.
As !be fight escalated, Clinton
canceled his plans to fly to Japan
this weekend for an economic summit of Asian nalions. Republican
leaders, too, wondered whether
Congress would take the weekend
off at a lime when approximately
800,000 federal workers have been
furloughed since Tuesday.
Treasury Secretary Robert
Rubin maneuvered federal books to
keep !be government from sliding
into its fJrst-ever defaull. Witb the
government's borrowing aulbority
expired as a result of the duel
between Clinton and Republicans,
he plucked $61 billion from a pair
of trust funds so !be government
could pay its bills. Rubin said it
was unpalatable, bui "using this
authority is immeasurably preferable to default."
That spectacle left many members of the public disgusted wilb
politicians' performances.
Juror jailed for being
35 minutes late
be bad trouble making bus connections.
The judge said that was no
excuse.
K.inneary, a federal judge for 29
years, said be bad never before
ordered a juror jailed.
"It's time he (Hutson) learned
who runs the show here," Kinneary said.
The attorneys for both sides
agreed to accept a verdict from !be
11 remaining jurors in the civil
trial.
Hutson was annoyed.
"I showed up to do my duty as
an American, and I wind up in
jail," he said.
COLUMBUS (AP) - When
U.S. Distrtct Court Judge Joseph P.
Kinneary says 9 a.m., be means 9
a.m. A juror who failed lo heed that
instruction spent a day ili jail.
When juror Bryan Hutson
showed up 35 minutes late for
court on Tuesday, Kinneary cited
bim wi!b contempt of court The
judge ordered Hutson taken to the
Franldin County jail.
The juror was released on
Wednesday.
Hutson, 23, of suburban Worlbington, said be was late because
Correction
..
In Wednesday's story about
Rudand Village Council, the comment by Councilwoman Gladys
Barker !bat the state would repair
problems left over by a paving project referred only to Mulberry
Streel
The Daily Sentinel apologizes
for !be error.
Meigs announcement
Dance to be beld
A round and square dance will
be beld at the old Middleport
Legion hall Friday from 8 to II
p.m. There is no admission charge.
Meigs EMS logs 9 calls
POMEROY
4: 11 p.m., state Route 33, Byron
Watson, Holzer Medical Center.
RUTLAND.
7:58 a.m., state Route 124, Margaret Bishop, VMH;
II :49 a.m., Leading Creek
Road, Maude Spurlock, treated at
!be scene;
5:44 p.m., Long Street, Owen
Wiseman, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
9:03 p.m., Beech Grove Road,
Andrew R. Phalen, HMC.
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
recorded nine calls for assistanre
Wednesday including one transfer
call. Units responding included:
OLIVE TOWNSIUP
4:51 p.m., Coolville Road,
Bessie Brawley, O'Bleness Memorial Hospital;
6:25 p.m., Eden Ridge Road,
Wilma Golden, St. Joseph's Hospital.
MIDDLEPORT
11:23 a.m.; Soulb Third Street,
Lee Fitcbpatrtck, Veterans Memorial Hospital .
Hospital news
..........,.
of Reedsville; Robert Wayne Sis-· ..,.............S~t""o""c"""!!kF"s
son Jr., 27, and Laura Forbes, 33,
both of Rutland; Jarrod Lyn
Folmer, 18, and Michelle Dawn
Am Ele Power ........................37 1/8
Alao ..............................,...............S6
Johnson, 17, both of Pomeroy.
Allblaod OU ............................JZl/8
AT&T ..................................... 64 3/4
Bridge inspection
Bul< One ................................J6 1/4
might conclude today
Bob Evans ..................................... l8
Borg-Waraer..........................Jl liZ
Champion Ind........................lll/4
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va. Charming Sbop ........................z 718
Inspection of !be Shadle Bridge by
City Holdtng ...........................l3 114
!be W.Va. Division of Highways
Federal Mogul ........................ til 3/4
might conclude as early as tbis
Gannett ...................................51 1/4
afte~noon, according to Sieve
Goodyear T& R ...................... 40 3/8
Campbell of Division I Bridge
K·mart ....................................,.7 liZ
Lands End .............................. 14 3/4
Department, Charleston.
Limited Inc............................. 17 5/8
Campbell said the inspection
Multimedia Inc ......................44 liZ
will conclude today unless weather
People's ..................................ZZS/8
conditions slow !be process. He
Ohio
VaUey .Bank .........................J6
stated the inspeclion team bas
One Valley ............................. .31 718
advised bim of no new problems
RockweU .............................. ..47 liZ
found during the inspection,
Robbins & Myers .................. .33 1/4
allhougb tbe DOH is aware of
Royal Dutcb/Sbell ................ ll6 3/8
some existing problems.
Sboney's lnc ........................... ll 5/8
Sl8r Bank ...............................56 718
No work: is being done on !bose
Wendy lnt'l ........................... .20 114
existing problems Ibis week,
Worthington lnd .................... J6 3/4
Campbell said, due· to this being
purely an inspection. He added a
Stock reports are the I 0:30 a.m.
full, written report will be filed
quotes
pro•lded by Advest o
with his department following the
Gallipolis.
inspection.
-·-·-
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admissions
None.
Wednesday discharges
Elladene Watson, Pomeroy.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Nov. 15 releases· Jimmie Jenkins, Dallon Riebel, Mrs. Joseph
Duncan and son, Nellie Jones, Darlene Moodispaugh, Mary Gillilan,
Andrew Lambert and Robert Stewart.
Nov. IS births - Mr. and Mrs .
Joseph Smilb, a daughter, Middle.port.
Printed with permission•
Deer/car accidents reported
No injuries were reported in four deer/vehicle accidents investigated recently by !be Meigs County Sheriffs DepartmenL
. A 1994 Buick driven by Clyde R. Fisher, 66, Middleport, sustam~ m?<~erate damage after striking a deer Tuesday evening near
theJuncuon of state routes 338 and 124.
Wednesday afternoon, Brenda S. Roush, 42, Pomeroy, was
sou~bound on U.S. 33 in Salisbury Township when a deer struck
!be s1de the 1996 Buick rent·a-car she was driving, causing moderate damage.
Also Wednesday afternoon, Rayan E. Young, 17, Pomeroy, was
on state Route 124 when a buck deer jumped in front of the 1986
Buick she was driving, causing moderate damage.
Thursday morning, Charles Brewer Jr ., 20, Pomeroy, was on
state Route. 7 when he drove into a ditch while avoiding a deer on
!be road.lhs 1995 Chevrolet S-10 sustained light damage.
i
Guards did not aid escape
COLUMBUS, (AP) - Guards
at the Lebanon Correctional Institution were negligent but did not
intentionally aid in the escape of
two inmates, a State Highway
Patrol investigation found.
The patrol determined that no
criminal violations were committed, according to a report released
Wednesday. The report did no I
mention any LCJ employees by
name.
Tbe report closes the criminal
investigation of !be June 2 escape
;j
••
of Rex Elam, 22, of Cincinnati, and;
Robert Michael, 21, of East Liver•
pool. patrol spokesman Sgt. JobO:
Born said.
\
Eleven LCI employees alread~·
have been disciplined in !be case,
and olbers are under internal investigation. said Joe Andrews,
spokesman for !be Department of
Rehabilitation and Correction.
•
The 3 I -page report offers ful'lber details on !be escape and !be
inmates' one week of freedom.
:
••
Reform party has enough
signatures to get on Ohio ballot ::
By The Associatl'd Press
· problem wilb some of !be sign~'
The Ross Perot-backed Refonn lures and !be sort of thing you go'
Party bas enough petition signa- lbrough at !be last minute."
.·,
tures to qualify for the Ohio ballot,
The pany already ha.~ qualified
!be Texas billionaire told a network for !be I 996 presidential ballot in:
television show today.
California. Supporters in Ohio bave.
"I just got word last night we until Monday to collect the sigtta, ·
bave crossed the line in Ohio," lures of 33,463 registered voters. .;
Perot said on CBS' "This MornSo far, volunteers have collected
ing.''
nearly 36,000 signatures, said'
"Ohio is done. We turn in the Richard Taylor, Ohio coordinato, ·
petitions next Monday. We'll have for Citizens to Establish a Refo1111
a big weekend, continue to get a Party.
good pad in case !bey find some
•
•
Today's livestock report ,
COLuMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Thursday by !be U.S.
Department of Agriculture Market
News:
Barrows and gilts: 50 cents to
1.00 lower; demand moderate to
light.
U.S. 1-3, 230 -260 lbs., country
points 37.50-39.00, a few 37 .00
and 39 .25- 39 .50 early; plants
38.50-40.25.
U.S. 2-3. 230-260 lbs., country
points 33.00-37.50.
Sows: 1.00 to 2.50 lower.
U.S . 1-3, 300-450 lbs. 27.0029.00; 450-500 lbs. 29.00-32.50;
500-600 lbs. 31.00-34.00.
Boars: 25.00-28.00.
Receipts: 40,000
Prices from The Producers
Livestock Association:
Cattle: 1.00 higher.
Slaughter steers: choice 61.0069.75; select 56.00-61.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 60.0068.50; select55.00-60.00.
Cows: steady; all cows 32.50
and down.
Bulls: steady; all bulls 39.25 and
down.
Veal calves. steady; choice
90.00 and down.
Sheep and lambs: 1.00 to J.stl
lower; choice wools 72.00-76.00;
choice clips 74.00-78.50; feedor
lambs 80.00 and down; aged sbeep
32.00 and down.
.
Feeder callle: 2.00 to 3.0r>
lower.
Calves: steers 60.00 and down}
heifers 55.00 and down
PATRICK SWAVZ.E IN
THREE WISHES PG
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
BRADPITI,
MORGA~ FREEMAN IN
SEVEN.
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
..
FILM DEVELOPING
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thank me lor it.•• :·
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01!1< tiOOCI on 1 111 of ltlndotdlizo 3' .
printl.-lrom your :l5mm
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SPE~L\L*
O!'PR
•
�t
Thursday, November 16, 1995
The Daily. Sentiriel
Sports
After 7112-month layoff,
' PaR84
,
By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - Baseball
negotiations resumed after a 7 1/2mooth layoff, and players and owners weren't sniping at each other.
Owners on Wednesday' made
their first bargaining proposal to
t~layers since the end of the strike.
While the union didn't perceive it
as a breakthrough, it wasn't met
with hostility.
"We'll look at it, study it and
make a report to our players," said
Eugene Orza, the union's No. 2
official.
Randy Levine, the owners' new
negotiator, presented the plan in a
thick binder during a 1 112-bour
Rookies take charge; Nuggets win in triple OT while Cavs lose
By The Associated Press
A few rookies showed big-name
veterans Shawn Kemp, Karl Malone and Charles Barkley just bow
good they're eventually going to
be.
In Detroi~ Pistons roolde Theo
Ratliff bad 21 points and 15 to Boston.
In Phoenix, Denver's Antonio
rebounds in a 94-87 victory over
McDyess
bad a big game against
Kemp and the Seattle SuperSonics.
In Boston, Eric Williams scored 13 Phoenix's Charles Barkley, getting
straight points for the Celtics in a 17 points, 16 rebounds .and three
fourtb-quarter duel with Malone, . blocked shots. Suns roblde Michael
finishing with 17 in a 102-90 loss Finley did even better, scoring 27
as Phoenix heat the Nuggets 137127 in triple overtime.
''Playing against guys like
Shawn Kemp and Detlef Scbrempf
is what! have been dreaming about
since I started playing basketball,"
Ratliff said . "I could tell they
thought they were just going to ldll
me, but they had to go out there
and play, just like I did."
Other rookies made their mark
Wednesday night, too. Minnesota's
19-year-old Kevin Garnett had the
best game in his young pro career,
~oring 19 against the San Antonio
Spurs, and Toronto's Damon
Stoudamire had another strong
night with 20 points in a 96-93 loss
to Houston.
In other games, New Jersey 90,
Charlotte 79 ; Washington 127,
Philadelphia 95; Indiana 103 ,
Miami 97; San Antonio 105, Minnesota 96; Chicago 113, Cleveland
94; and the Los Angeles Lakers
114, Dallas 97. ·
Pistons 94, SuperSonics 87
Ratliff, who hadn't had more
than eight points or eight rebound~
in Detroit's previous five games,
came off lite bench to help the Pistons to their third straight win
despite ju st four points from Joe
Durnars.
Otis Thorpe had 27 points and
12 rebounds, while Lindsey Huntet
scored 19 points. Kemp had 23
points and 21 rebounds for Seattle,
and Schrempf had 19, 16 in the
first half.
The Pistons trailed 49-43 at the
half but charged into the lead with
a rally late in the third quarter.
Jazz 102, Celtics 90
Malone 'cored 34 points,
including II in a row for the Jazz
POST-COLLISION PASSThat's what Cleveland guard
John Crotty (left) finds himself
doing after running Into Chicago
frontman Toni Kukoc in lbe
third quarter of Wednesday
nigbl's Central Division game In
Chicago, where tbe Cavaliers lost
113-94 to remain the NBA 's only
winless club. (AP)
Scoreboard
Frldar's .
second-round games
Basketball
Alla~~lk
Ium
:d:Lbi.Ja
Orlando... . ....... .. 6
New York .. ............. 5
Miami .... ... ..
... 3
New Jcney .. ........... 3
Walhlngron ......... 3
~!adelphia ... . . ..... 2
Bolton ................... !
1
2
2
3
3
4
4
.857
.714
.600
1
2
.500
.500
.333
2.5
2.5
3.5
.200
4
Sem!Onals-at New York
Wednucby, No\', lZ
6and II p.m.
Finals-at New Ybrk
Transactions
friday, Nov. 24
7 p.m.-th ird place
9:30 p.m. "' hampio':Uhip game
Baseball
Majm- League Ruehall
Centnl Dl•iRon
. ..........6
Olicago .
1
.857
2 .714
.667
.500
5 375
Milwaukee
4
.1)3
1.5
2.5
3.5
3.5
CLEVEt-\ND . ...... 0
7 .125
7 000
S.S
6
.. ..2
Toronto .. ,.. .............!
2
J
ARIZONA
Hockey
t
AUanl.a ..... "
..... l
lndiaoa ......... ....... 4
Detroit ... . ........ J
... 3
Charlotte
Amulc:.n Ln.pr
CLEVELAND INDIANS: Exercised
th~ir 1996 op tiu01 on Orel Hershiser ,
pitcher, al!d Albert Belle, ot.ufi t lder, and
their 1r:y;J7 option on lose Mesa, pitcher.
Named Jack Mull manager of Kinston of
the Caro lina League.
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Dlvbion
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldwell Oivi•lon
»:
...... ..S
L Ed.
Ulab .... "... ". ".... 6
Da.lllli
... ...... .5
San AntoDio .. .. ........ 5
Vanoouvrr ............. 2
2 .7l0
2 .714
Iuoa
Hm.11ton ...
MilllleiOia ............ .~ . !
Dcn.-er ... .. ........... 1
I
2
~
.833
.5
.S
3.5
.71 4
.S .286
5 . 167
6 .143
4
l
4
4
4
5
.5
j7J
.500
.429
"429
.286
I
1.5
2
2
3
21
19
12
8
48
48
49
43
3 21 78
0 20 ll
I ll 37
I l.S Sl
0 12 -46
2
12
54
Friday's games
7 ~0
National Leaaue
CINCINNATI REDS : Named Phil
Wellman !TUl nage r of Winston-Salem of
the Carolina League
NEW YORK METS: Named Bobby
Valentine manager of Norfo lk of lht In·
ternalional League .
SAN DIEGO PADRES' Named Jerry
Royster manager and Galen Cisco pitch·
ing coach of Las Vegas or the Pacific
Coast League: Ed Romero rnanaRtt and
Dave Smith pitching coach of Memphis
c f the Southern League : Mike BIWO man ·
ager and Saul Soltero pitching coac ti of
Rancho Cuca monga of the California
League; Mike Ramsey manaaer aDd Scipio Spinb pitchinB coach of Clinton of
U1e Midwe~tl...cague> Don Werner maD.IIg·
er of Idaho Fall!i of the Pioneer league;
Larry See manager and Jackson Todd
pitching coach Cor Peoria of the A-rizona
League; Russ Ni:ton coordiutor of the
roving minor-league instructor&; Jon Mat·
lac( roving minor- league pitching instructor: Tony Frankl in roving minor-lea£ue
infield instructor; and Tye Waller roving
outfield-baserunning coach.
43
47
lO
SJ
5?
61
:d:LI&la'GA
s
6
7
7
8
7
2
3
3
2
2
5
22
19
19
18
16
IS
66
59
65
65
41
48
43
53
57
65
48
53
Padllr Ohislon
Col01ado ... " ""·"· t I 4 2 24 67
4!
Los ADaele~ ... .. -- ~
21 64
59
18 66
60
Anahdm ...
Indiana at Orlando, 7:30p.m.
Houston at Milwaukee, 8:30 p.m.
Sacramtnto at Portland, 10 p.m
Vaocouvu n L.A. Ciippen at Anaheim, CalK., 10:30 p.m.
New York. at Gulden State, 10:30 p.m.
NEW YORK YANKEES Named
Charles Estrada roving pitching coach;
Mike Kelleher rovinll infield instructor;
and Gary Ruck roving catchi ng i~tructor .
45
39
46
67
67
Central Dl'fbion
...... 9
5
~
tO 0
Vancouver ..........5 7 S 1S 64
Tonight's games
43
51
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Detroit .............. 10
Toronto ............... i
Ctucaso ............ .11
Winnipeg .. ... ....... 8
St. Louia ........... ?
Dalla& ............... S
Houston 96, Toronto 93
Ulah 102. Bo·ston 90
New lMsey 90, Charlotte 7'1)
Washington 12?, Phi ladelphia 95
Detroil 94, Seaule 87
'
Indiana 103, Miami 97
San ADtonio !OS , Minnesota 96
Oucago Ill . CLEVELAND 94
Denver 137, Phoenil 127 (3 01)
L.A. Lakm 114, OaJJu97
Minnesota at Toronto. 7 p.m.
Wa!hing1on at Boston, 7:30 (l.m.
CLEVElAND at Philadelphia.
p.m.
Seattle at Ola~ l one , 7:30p.m
Miami at AUanlll, 7:30 p. m
Utah at Detroit, 8 p.m.
New Jersey at Olicaso. 8:30p.m.
Pittsburgh ...."......9 J
Montreal
...... tO 7
tlartf01d .......... ".. "1 8
Buffalo ............... 7 9
Olt.awa ........... 6 10
Boston ........ ........ 5 9
I<-.
Wednesday's score~
28 67
24 65
22 65
Norlhust Dl"l•lnn
4.5
Paclf'i( Di.-a.on
Sacnmeoto ............ .5 2 .714
SeattJe... . . ........ .5 3 .625
I.. A. Clippen. .. .. 4
L.A. Latm ..............4
Phoenix......... .... .. .3
IU\]anL...
. .3
Golden Slate .. .. .. ...... 2
.ll:LI&JiE!iA
Florid<J
... 14 4 0
N.Y. Rangt.'ni .. II 5 2
PhiladelJllia .....9 6 4
New Jersey .. 10 6 I
Washington .. ..... 9 7 I
Tampa Bay ..... 4 9 4
N.Y. Islanders .... 3 II 2
DIAMONDBACKS '
Named Buck Showalter manager, and
signed him to a seven-year contract.
NHL standings
fum
72
Edroonton .......... .S 9 4
Calpry ....... ".... 1 It 4
14 45
67
10 38
64
SanJo&e .......... 1 12 4
6 52
&6
Basketball
N•llon.J Bukttball AIH(iatJon
HOUSTON ROCKETS ' Activat ed
Mark Bryant, forward , from the injured
list.
MIAMI HEAT: Activated LeRon Elli~ . forward -center, from the injured Hat.
Placed su.cey King. rorward·center' O D
U1e injured list.
Wednesday's scores
Hartford 3, OUawa 2
Buffalo 2, Dallu I
Mootreal 4, Edm:mton I
Anlileim 7, Colorado 3
Tonlgbt's games
New Jcney at BoJtoo, 7:30p.m.
Ottawa at Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.
Toronto at Tampa Bay, 7:30p.m.
VanCQuvu at Florida, 7:30p.m.
N.Y. Rangers I;' Chicago, 8:30p.m.
FootbaU
..
Nallonal Football Lt•ue
CAROUNA PANfHERS : C laimed
Jamal follntaine, defenlive end , off
WlllVCrs from lhe San Francisco 49ers .
Waived Damon Pieri. safety.
New York at Oenl'er, 9 p.m
L.A. Laten at Vancounr, 10 p.m.
1ltollas ati..A" Chppen, lfr30 p.m"
Phoenix• Sacramento, IO:JO p.m.
Pre-season NIT
Wednesday'•
flnt·round scores
Oeorlia Tedl87, Manhattan 67
OtJ.ahoma 99, Jacklon St. 68
Atbnsal7~ . NE Louisiana 67
Arizona 91 . Long Beach State S7
MichipJ173, DcPau.16.S
Weber St.oU 102. Fretoo Slate 86
Tonight's
frlt·round games
Rldor at Temple. 7 p.nt
ColpU a1 Cleo<ld<>WD. 7J0 p.nt
.
LARKIN HONORED - The Cincinnati Reds' Barry Larkin,
shown In action during the National League playoffs against the L.A.
Dodgers, was named the senior circuit's best player Wednesday. His
hitting and second straight Gold Glove season helped the Reds win
the Central Division title and advance to the league championship
series. (AP)
:Larkin receives
:NL MVP honors
By BEN WALKER
: NEW YORK (AP) - The Cincinnati Reds knew bow much Barry
._,arkin meant to their team, on and off the field. They just weren't sure
whether other people noticed.
: In a surprising yet shrewd choice, Larldn won the NL MVP award
Wednesday, finishing ahead of Dante Bicbette and Greg Maddux as voters looked beyond big numbers to defme what is meant by "most valuable."
. Larkin bad impressive statistics, sure. He bit .319 with 15 borne runs
and 66 RBis; stole 51 bases and scored 98 runs. He also played well
enough to win his second straight Gold Glove at shortstop in leading the
Reds to the NL Central title.
Bichette, however, almost won the Triple Crown. The Colorado outfielder led the league with 40 home runs and 128 RB!s and was third in
batting at .340 in helping the third· year Rockies win the wild-card spot,
Maddux, meanwhile, went 19·2 witha 1.63 ERA and won his fourth
Slraigbt Cy Young for the World Series champion Atlanta Braves.
". "If you look at sheer numbers, there arc guys who have more homers
and RB!s," Reds second baseman Bret Boone said. "But it's nice to see
people look at 'most valuable.' He was really great on our team. He was
Our leader.,,.
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Still, the leadership qualities that made Larldn the Reds' team leader
clearly made him the convincing cooire and left Bichelte as the runner-up
;md Maddux third.
"I thought the MVP would go to a guy like Dante Bichelte ·because of
the home runs !Uid all that kind of stuff," Larkin told The Cincinnati
1\nquirer from Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, where be's on a cruise. "But I
was wrong."
Larkin, the ftrst shortstop to win the NL MVP since Maury Wills in
1962, received 11 first-place votes and finished with 281 points. Bicbeue
got six first-place votes and had 251 points and Maddux got seven firstplace votes and 249 points.
Dodgers catcher Mike Piazza, who bit .346 with 32 homers and 93
RBis despite being injured, was fourth with three first-place votes and
214 points. The top four fmishers were named on every ballot by members of the Baseball Writers Association of America. Ron GanL Larkin's
teammate, received the only other first-place vote and was 11 lb.
"There were a lot of candidates with a lot better stats. I'm glad the NL
voters were able to notice the intangibles that Barry brings to the game,"
Reds general manager Jim Bowden said.
•
This marked the ftrst time since the current voting procedure went into
effect in 1938 that four NL players got more than 200 points. The 67point differential between the top four was the slimmest in the NL since
1972, when 66 points separated winner Johnny Bench, Billy Williams,
Willie Stargell and Joe Morgan.
"I played my game this year," Larldn -said. "This year it was critiqued, and people appreciated it for what it was. Because we were able to
win, they spoke about it more often.''
Larkin's selection is sure to spark further debate about what constitutes
the MVP. While Larldn did not have the best numbers, his all-around contribution made him the winner, the way Kirk Gibson won the award in
1988 for Los Angeles.
N.Y . Rangers at Winnipeg, 7:30p.m. Pittsburgh at Washington. 8 p.rn
San Jose at Dallwo, 8:30p.m.
Colorado at Calgary, 8:30p.m.
Detroit at Edroonton. 8:30p.m.
N.Y. lslandersat Anah~im, 10: JO p.m.
Weber State at Michigan, 7:30 p.m.
Thanks to the voters of
Chester
Township
.for
supporting me for clerk.
Janet R. Life
·
meeting at the union's office. It
was the ftrsVormal bargaining ses·
sion since 'March 30, the night
before a federal judge issued an
injunction that led players to end
their strilce after 232 days. And it
was tbe owners' first proposal
sinq! March 27 .
"It was a very professional,
very cordial meeting," Levine said.
Neither side would elaborate on
the plan, but a person familiar with
the proposal confirmed it was a
taxation J)lan, a format on which
the sides traded offers in February
and March.
The union regarded the plan as a
small step forward, one source
said. After owners provide a computer disk detailing how the plan
would work, the sides will schedule
a technical meeting sometime next
week. The wtion's executive board
meets in Florida the week of Nov.
29 and probably will respond to
owners the following week.
"It's very good that the process
bas resumed," Levine said.
A source familiar with the owners' tbinking, but with no knowledge of the exact proposal said the
teams were. considering having the
taX levels nse or fall depending on
revenue, a suggestion the union ha'
made. In addition, owners talked
about making changes in salary
arbitration and to the limitations on
maximum salary cuts.
Unlike last year, when talks
took place following the cancellation of the World Series, bargaining this fall is much more low-key.
Talks last year were conducted
with the owners repeatedly threatening to implemem a salary cap.
Because of the injunction, own:
ers can't attempt to impose new
work rules unless tbey have the
pennission of U.S . District Judge
Soma Sotomayor, which isn't like:
ly to occur before Dec. 20, the la~t
date to offer 1996 contracts.
:
Union head Donald Fehr couhl
not be reached for comment. After
attending the meeting , he left fpi
San Juan, Puerto Rico.
:
Showalter signs on with Diamondbacks ~
Friday's games
Co lgate-Georgetown winner ..,. _Rider-
()lyltJon
Juwan Howard scored 21 points
for tbe Bullets, who didn't trail
after the opening two minutes. It
was Washington's largest victory
margin since a 42-point win over
Boston in April 1994.
Pack was 9 -for-17 from the field
and made all six of
b his
ledfJ;CC
th tbrows.
··
Sharone Wrig t
e Vtstting
76ers with aMcareer-high
11 bad 30
15 points,
and Vernon
axwe
p
103 H t 97 .
acers
• ea
Indiana only had eight players,
· M'II
but one of them was Reggte
1 er,
th dif'
andM·11
that made ed 10.erence. ·
1 er score
consecutive
Indiana points in tbe final 6:10.
The Pacers were without injured
center Rik Smits, forward Derrick
Ia
McKey and four P yers suspended
following a bench-clearing fight
with Sacramento last Friday Dale Davis, Adrian
d T · Caldwell,
B
Duane Ferren an raVts est.
Miller scored 13 of his 24 points
in the fourth quarter against the
NBA's top-ranked defense.
Miami's Alonzo Mourning had
21 points and 12 rebounds. Rookie
(See NBA on Page 5)
p.m.
T~ mple
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Zan Tabak had· 20 poims for
Toronto at SkyDome, where regu·
lar referees worked for the first
time this season. Houston's
Kenny Smitb scored 16 of his 22
· · th fi half
pomts m e trSt
·
Nets 90, Hornets 79
Kevm· Edwards scored 14 of his
21 points in the third quarter to
help New Jersey overcome a 14pot'nt defict·t and de'eat
•• Charlotte.
The Nets held the Hornets to
·niS, 27 in the
01·ne tht'rd-quarter po1
Second half. Charlotte has lost all
five road contests.
Armon Gilliam added 16 poims
for New Jersey, and Jayson
Williams bad 10 points and 14
rebounds.
Glen Rice, Kendall Gill and
Dell Curry each had 15 to lead the
Hornets. Robert Parish started at
center 'or
•· Charlotte ··n bt·s J,500th
NBA game.
Bullets 127, 76ers 95
Washington cruised to its most
lopsided victory in two seasons,
getting 26 points and 10 assists
from Robert Pack in a rout of
Philadelphia.
San Jose at St. Uluis. K:30 p.m.
N.Y. Isl anders at Los Ang~Jes, 10:30
OKlahoma at Georgia Tech, 7:30p.m
Ariwna at Arkansas. 9:30p.m.
NBA standings
in the fourth quarte;.
He came away impressed by
Williams, whose own scoring
streak cut the Cehics' seven·point
deficit to 81-78 with 7:47 to play
until Malone re-entered tbe game
and extended the Jazz lead.
· b," Mal "He did a very good JO
one said. "He played a really good
• tbem. I think tf
· he stays
game .or
•
healthy, be 11 be a good player. "
Jeff Hornacek scored 17 for the
·
Jazz. Eri c Montross bad 14 pomts
and 14 rebounds and Dino Radja
·
13 pomts
an d I 0 re boun d s for
Boston.
Nuggets 137, Suns 127 (3 OT)
· fi
f th
De over won tiS
trSt game o e
season after six losses, but needed
three overtimes to do it.
Dale Ellis, Don MacLean and
Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf made tbree·
·m tbe fitrst 2:42 of th e third
pomters
·
overtone.
Abdui-Rauf had 30 points and
20 assists as the Nuggets snapped a
14-game losing streak in Phoenix,
where they last won on April II,
1988.
MacLean added 22 points, and
Ellis and Bryant Stith had 21 each.
Barkley led the Suns with 29
points, and Elliot Perry and A.C.
Green had 18 each.
Spurs 105, Tlmberwolves 96
Vinny Del Negro scored 10
points in San Antonio's decisive
16-4 burst to start the second half.
David Robinson scored 30
points in just 29 minutes and Avery
Johnson had 13 assists for the
Spurs, who improved their overall
record against Minnesota to 28-3.
Tom Gugliotta led the Wolves
with 20 points.
Del Negro, who finished with
16 points, started the second half
with a three-pointer to give the visiting Spurs a 60-59 lead. He hit
another tbree-pointer in the run that
saw the Spurs pull ahead 73-63.
Rockets 96, Raptor< 93
Robert Horry' s buzzer-beating
three-pointer sent Toronto to its
seventh straight defeat.
Trailing 53-42 at the half, the
Raptors slowly chipped away at
Houston's lead, going up 93-92 on
Tracy Murray's two free throws
with 53 seconds left.
Hakeem Olajuwon, who had 17
points and U rebounds for the
Rockets, hit one of two foul shots
to make it 93-93 with just under 40
seconds remaining . A Raptors
turnover gave the Rockets posessian with 19.9 seconds to play, and
Clyde Drexler set up Horry's winning basket.
The Daily Sentinel • Page 5
Baseball talks resume without hostility
Thursday, November 16, 1995
In the NBA,
Pomeroy • Middleport; Ohio
Your Business Listed
In The Sentinel's
Holiday Gift Guide
Wednesday, Nov. 22nd
Bichette's candidacy likely was bun by some who believed he was
helped too much by hitter-friendly Coors Field, He hit 31 of his 40 home
runs at home and batted .377 in the Denver ballpark. Also, he is not nearly
the defensive player that Larkin is.
Maddux, a fellow Gold Glover, unanimously won tbe Cy Youn-g
Award. His winning percentage was the best in baseball history for a
starter with at least 20 decisions.
But there 'lfC some who contend a pitcher should not win the MVP,
saying it should go to an everyday player.
In fact, no pitcher had finished as high as third in the NL MV P voti~g
since Los Angeles reliever Mike Marshall in 1974; the last pitcher to wm
the honor was Bob Gibson in 1968, when he had a 1.12 ERA.
Larkin, 31, was the Reds' best player in the post-season, batting .387
with five steals, although MVP ballots are returned before the playoffs
begin.
.
. . .
?
He is the sixth shortstop to wm the NL MVP, JOtmng Ernte Banks
(1958-59), Dick Groat (1960), Marty Marion (1944) and Wills, who stole
.1 then-record 102 bases in 1962.
Larldn is the fust Reds player to be named MVP since George Foster
in 1977 and lith overall. Morgan. Bench and Pete Rose also won in the
1970s. The St. Louis Cardinals have the most with 14.
The AL MVP was to be announced today at 6 p.m. EST, with Albert
Belle of Cleveland and Mo Vaughn of Boston considered the top two contenders.
"\..
neaeA o~ 6,, ooo
9.n
Advertising Deadline:
Monday, Nov. 20th
5 p.m.
'
By MEL REISNER
PHOENIX (AP) - More tban
two years before he wiU don their
uniform for their ftrst game, Buck
Showalter has agreed to be the
manager of the Arizona Diamol)dbacks.
Showalter, 39, who spent nearly
half his life in the New York Yankees organization, signed a $7 million, seven-year contract Wednesday with the 1998 expansion team.
At a news conference, he turned
aside a question about whether the
Diamondbacks can reach the playoffs three years after expansion, as
the Colorado Rockies did this season.
"We're not going to get into
quotas," said Showalter, who this
At 992-2155
Rd. for by Candidate 47095 Eagle Ridge Rd. Racine, Oh 45771
I~
Sasba Danilovic scored a seasonhigh 21 for the Heal. who lost for
t~e first time in four games at
home.
Bulls 113, Cavaliers 94
, Scottie Pip~n scored 27 ~ints
and Michael Jordan 20 as Cbteago
k~pl Cleveland tbe league's only
winless team.
Terrell Brand on scored 22
points for the visiting Cavaliers,
who lied a club record witb eigbl
three-pointers in a half. Cleve·
..
'
Iand' s I 0 threes in the game tied
the most ever against the Bulls,
who were 8-for-12 from three-point
rnnge.
Cleveland's o. 7 start is the
club's worst since 1984-85, when
the Cavaliers lost tbeir fust nine. ·
Lakers 114, Mavericks 97
. Cedric Ceballos ,bad 31 points
and 13 rebounds to belp Los Angeles remain undefealed at home.
The Lakers, who played five of
Down.
"A lot bas been said regarding
the reason why we decided to close
early in terms of naming our manager," said Jerry Colangelo, the
Diamondbacks' managing general
partner. "Simply put, when the
best manager in baseball is available, you go for it regardless of
what timetable you have."
Diamondbacks general manager
Joe Garagiola Jr. said Showalter
and the team were a perfect fit and
listed the qualities he was seeking:
"Someone who has significant
experience as a player or manager,
a good teacher, good morivator,
patient, someone who buys into our
philosophy, someone who can pick
Coronary disease kills Horvath at 74
By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)Les Horvath, a multipurpose back
at Ohio State who won the Reisman Trophy in 1944, died of heart
failure at his home in Glendale,
Calif. He was 74.
Horvath was pronounced dead
at 9:10 p.m. PST Tuesday, Detective Will Currie of the Glendale
Police Department said Wednes·
day. Currie said Horvath appeared
to have died of coronary disease.
Horvath had lunch with a friend
Monday and missed , a dinner
appointment Tuesday, Currie said.
Police found his body after being
alerted by his dinner companion, be
said:
Funeral arrangements were
incomplete Wednesday.
Horvath returned to Ohio Stadium last year to be honored on the
5f.}th anniversary of his Reisman
award. But be did not make the trip
back this year, when the i942
national championship team reunit-
ed the weekend of Ohio State's
game against Notre Dame.
Nicknamed '' the Playing
Coach" for his versatility on the
field, Horvath graduated from Ohio
State in 1945 with a degree in dentistry.
He was the first of four Ohio
State players to win the Heisman,
leading the Buclceyes to a 9-0
record and a No. 2 ranking in the
final AP poll in 1944.
Horvath played quarterback,
halfback and defensive back as a
senior, accounting for I,248 yards
in total offense. He led the Big Ten
Conference in rushing (a thenrecord 924 yards) and total offense
in his final year and was selected as
most valuable player in the conference.
Six of his 14 pass completions
as a senior went for touchdowns.
He totaled 412 points in the balloting for tile 1944 Heisman, edging the Army inside-outside duo of
Glenn Davis and Doc Blanchard.
The native of Parma, Ohio, also
was a starter on Ohio State's 1942
national championship tcrun.
For his career, he had 290 rushing .attempts for 1,546 yards (an
average of 5.3 yard' per carry) and
12 touchdowns. He also completed
25 of his 50 pass attempts for 509
yards.
He entered the Navy in June
1945, serving as a dental officer in
the morning and as assistant football coach to Paul Brown in the
afternoon at the Great Lakes train- ·
ing station in Chicago He continued coaching when he was transferred to Hawaii and his team won
the service championship.
He played three years of pro
football with the Los Angeles
Rams and the Cleveland Browns
before starting his own dentistry
practice in Los angeles.
He was selected to the National
Football Hall of Fame in 1969 and
to the Ohio State Sports Hall of
Fame in 1977.
Jurors in King insurance fraud trial rehear
Maffia's c.laims about ex-boss's instructions
By LARRY NEUMEISTER
NEW YORK (AP)- Jurors
considering whether promoter Don.
King cheated Lloyd's of London
out of $350,000 reheard testimony
from a former employee who said
King asked his staff to lie about an
insurance claim.
Excerpts of testimony from
accountant Joseph Maffta and other
witnesses kept the jury busy most
of Wednesday , its third day of
deliberations.
Jurors are weighing nine counts
of wire fraud against King, who
promotes some of the biggest stars
in boxing, including Mike Tyson.
Maffia's testimony seemed to
bolster a prosc;,cution argument that
King instructed his staff to tell
Lloyd's of London he ·paid
$350,000 in training expenses to "'
Julio Cesar Chavez for a canceled
1991 bout with Harold Brazier.
Prosecutors allege King faked
the contract to make it appear he
gave Chavez the money for the
training expenses.
In fact, Chavez testified he was
never paid $350,000 for expenses
and was not told that King got the
money from Lloyd's of London.
Chavez's testimony also was read
back to the jury Wednesday.
So far, jurors have not asked for
a reading of any of King's testimony.
During three days on the wit-
---- Sports briefsNEW YORK (AP) - Bobby
Valentine is back in American
baseball, agreeing to a two -year
deal with tbe Norfolk Tides, the
New Yori\.Mets' top farm team.
Valentine, who managed Norfolk in 1994, was fired by Lotte
Miuines or Japan's Pacific League
after the first season of a two-year
contract.
/V£JJ4gannes •• ~~·~<~Co~nu~·n~ued~fr~om~P5~e~4~>..................................................-
Call
Dave or Bob
year took the Yankees to the postseason for the ftrst time since 1981.
"Sometimes you set limitations on
yourself when you do."
Showalter rejected George
Steinbrenner's $1.05 million, two,
year offer to stay with the Yankees
because the owner wanted partial
control of the coaching staff.
Showalter said some of his old staff
would join him in Phoenix.
"We'll say something shortly,
but at this point I don't think it's
fair to those people because some
of them may be working for other
organiza~ons at this point,"
Showalter said about the names.
His parting with Steinbrenner
was due to the owner's insistence
that be fire batting coach Rick
their llrst seven games on the road
and lost their ftrSl four, controlled
the game from the opening period.
Jamal Mashburn led the Mavericks with 32 points and nearly ·
brought them all the way bock from
a 20-poinl halftime deficit with 15
points in a five-minute span of the
third period.
.
Anthony Peeler added 25 points,
and Elden CampbeU bad 22 for the
Lakers.
ness stand, the promoter said be
knew nothing about the $350,000
claim and bad not discussed it in
depth with his accountant
Maffia was described by the
defense as a disgruntled exemployee who believed be was
fired by King in September 1991.
King's version was that Maffia left
on his own.
The promoter also accused Maffia of stealing from King's company before the Chavez-Brazier bout
was canceled.
During the six-week trial in
Manhattan federal court, King's
lawyer, Peter Aeming Jr., played a
tape for the jury in which Maffia is
heard cursing at King and vowing
to hun him.
If convicted, King could face up
to five years in ., prison and
$250,000 in fines lor each count.
The jury began deliberations
Moqday and met Wednesday for
about six hours . They were to
resume deliberations today at 9:30
a.m.
.
'
'
up a ~~ayeh spiriL' when they'~
down.
Showalter, initially interested iit
vacancies at Detroit and Oaklanlt
said he was swayed by the comrni~
ment shown when Colangelo calle4
him at 12:02 a.m. on Nov . I, two
minutes after his Yankees contracit
expired.
,
He said he hadn't yet decided
how much he would work with the
Diamondbacks· two rookie team~
which begin play in Phoenix and
Lethbridge, Alberta, after the June
1996 amateur draft.
Rather than stay on the fiel~
with either short-season ciull,
Showalter may shuttle between th~
two, giving help and advice to th~
managers, Dtamondbacks president
Rich Dozer said.
:
"I would imagine that there's a
very good chance he'll turn up in
Lethbridge at least once next
year," said Dozer, 38. "He might
stay five days or a week, or bo
might go back twice, but he's prob;
ably not going to stay the season.'' ·
Dozer said Showalter will havci
every chance to build on his reputa:
tion as a worlcaholic.
.
"His duties haven't been delin;
cated, but there is a whole host of
six, seven, eight, nine items that we
think be' II be involved in," Dozer
said. "From helping us prepare for
the expansion draft as far 8 > oWUting players and helping us set it up,
to helping write the player development manual.
"He's also going to be involved
in the community, charity things
and speaking appearances. We' II
probably have him help some in
marketing."
Dozer said Showalter also will
have to familiarize himself with .
NL personnel, both for the Novem ~ ·
ber 1987 expansion draft an([ :
because Colangelo is lobbying: :
other owners to have the Diamond· ·
backs a%igned to the NL West.
·
Showalter was an outfielder-first :
baseman for seven seasons in the ·
Yankees organization, then had a :
360-207 record in five seasons in :
the minors before Steinbrenner·
made him manager of New York :
before the 1992 season.
:
He lyd the Yank~~es to a 312-269:
record in fou~ seasons, winning the .
1994 AL Manager of the Year :
award.
I would like to thank the
voters of Racine Village for
re-~lecting
me for town
council. .
Julian Scott Hill
Pd for by candidate Main Street. Racine. Oh 4577t
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�•
Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, November 16, 1995
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
}hursday, November 16, 1995
Pomeroy ; Middleport, Ohio
The Daily Sentinel • Page 7
•
: In the NHL,
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Sat., Nov. 18- Major
·Arkansas Slate
42
• Army
50
·Auburn
27
• Baylor
33
· Brigham Young
30
Cincinnati
28
• Easl Carolina
25
Eastern Michigan
30
• Florida
54
• Florida Stale
56
• IllinOIS
28
Kansas
23
• ·Kan sas State
21
' L.S.U.
24
• Louisiana Tech
22
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34
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31
·Miami (Ohio)
46
• Missouri
22
· Navy
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35
New Mexico
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31
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29
North Carolina Stale 20
Northwestern
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Notre Dame
26
·Ohio Stale
44
• Oregon
35
·Penn Stale
27
Rutgers
21
San Diego Stale
32
• South Carolina
19
• Southern California
24
Southern Mississippi 21
'Slanlord
31
• Syracuse
29
Tennessee
37
40
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• Virginia
22
' Washington
24
20
23
27
• Western Michigan
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32
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Div. 1·AA
• Alabama-Birmingham 29 Miles
Appalachian State
27 ·Citadel
Boston U.
20 'Buffalo U.
• Brown
22 Columbia
Cal Stale Sacramento 24 ' Cat State Northridge
• Central Florida
34
Maine
·Connecticut
25 Massachusens
Dayton
33 • 'Wo'iford
Dalaware
25 • Rhode Island
• Delaware Stale
19 Howard
• East Tennessee State 17
Western Carolina
'Eastern Kentucky
55 Morehead State
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26 'Cal Poly S.L.O.
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Virginia Military
35
• Hampton
38
Morgan Stale
• Holy Cross
24 Colgate
' Idaho
25 Boise State
'Idaho State
23 Weber State
'Indiana State
27 Eastem Illinois
·Jackson State
32
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• Lehigh
28 Lafayette
·Liberty
26
Western Kentucky
'Marshall ·
21
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49 · Nicholls Stale
Montana
30 • Montana State
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29
Western Illinois
• Now Hampshire
20 Northeastern
• Northam Iowa
50 Winona Stale
• Pennsylvania
24 Cornell
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21 'Dartmouth
·South Carolina State 27 North Carolina A& T
• Southeast Missouri
25 Tennessee State
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28 Jacksonville Stale
•Southwest Texas Stale 22 Sam Houston Stale
Stephen F Austin
23 • NW Louisiana
• Tenn.·Chaltanooga
t7 Furman
• Tennessee-Martin
. 21
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(Thurs.) 27 • Samford
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22 Richmond
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20 Harvard
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27 Illinois Stale
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Kucera scored his frrst goal of the season with 1:06
remaining to lead the Whalers over Ottawa.
Kucera took a cross-ice pass from Geoff Sanderson and lifted the puck past goaltender Don Beaupre
for the Whalers' third victory in 12 games.
Andrew Cassels and Nelson Emerson each had a
goal and an assist for the Whalers. Rookie Daniel
Alfredsson and Anui Tonnanen scored for the Senators.
' 'I'm not going tf1 say this is a turning point,"
said Whalers coach Paul Maurice, 2-2 since laking
over for tired Paul Holmgren. "This is one step. We
came back. ll's a game that can give us confidence."
Sabres 2, Stars I - In Buffalo, Dominik Hasek
had 29 saves and Randy Burridge and Pat LaFontaine
each scored a goal lo lead the Sabres past Dallas.
Neither team found an offensive rhythm through·
out the game, with the Stars generating 30 sbots com·
pared to the Sabres' 19.
Andy Moog had 17 saves for the Stars. winless in
their last seven games (0-4-3). Todd Harvey's goal
2:20 into the first period opened s~oring for the Stars.
"We are going to go through a lot of those close
games with this hocke y club," Sabres coach Ted
Nolan said . "You have to have confidence in in your
learn."
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'·
·
Canadien.• 4, Oilers I - Olcg JTetrov had a goal
and an assist in the fmal period as Montreal won its
third straight road game ..
Edmonton goaltender Bill Ranford robbed Petrov
once, but couldn't do it twice as the Canadiens' right
wing scored the go-ahead goal at 6:00 of the third.
Petrov also added an assist on the Canadiens'
third goal, at 11:44 by Vincent Damphoussc. Damp·
housse added an empty-net goal at 19: 33 of the final
period.
The Canadicns are 10-2 since their 0·5 start and
are just one point behind ftrst-placc Pittsburgh in the
l
HEAD OVER HEELS - Dallas center Cuy
Carbonneau (right) upends Buffalo left wingMatthew Barnaby during the first period of
Northeast Division.
"The Oilers bad some prell y good chances in the
second period,'' Montreal coach Mario Tremblay
Wednesday night's NHL game in Buffalo,
the host Sabres won 2·1. (AI')
whcro~
mines The Associated Press Top
25, while coaches vote for the
CNN-USA Today Top 25.
Debate over the rankings has
been raging since last year, wben
Penn State finished No. 2 behind
national champion Nebraska even
though both were undefeated.
College football officials
tl)ougbt they'd solved the problem
: does.
this year by creating a bowl
~
"I don't think coaches are quali· alliance that will almost always pit
:; tied to vote," he said Tuesday. "I the top·ranked team against the No.
: ·think I've watched as much college 2 team . The only exception is if
• football as anybody, but most one of the teams belongs to either
: coaches don't see many teams play . the Pac-t 0 or the Big Ten, as Penn
"I think it ought to be done by a State and Ohio State, No . 2 this
,
· computer, I've always fell that," week, do.
:· he added.
The winners of the Pac- I 0 and
• A panel of sports writers deter- Big Ten play in the Rose Bowl and
•
:
:
:
•
:
•
:
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) Notre Dame coach Lou Holtz
doesn't have a problem admitting
that a computer can do a better job
than be can.
When it comes to ranking the
nation's top teams, coaches have
no business putting in their twocents worth. Holtz said. No one
are not part of the alliance.
Despite the new alliance. a rank.
ings controversy is brewing again
this year. No. I Nebraska is undefeated, as are No. 2 Ohio State and
No. 3 Aorida, but there' s no way
the Cornhuskers and Buckeyes can
play each other.·
If Ohio State wins the Big Ten.
it's committed to the Rose Bowl.
That means if Nebraska wins its
remaining game against Oklahoma,
and Florida slays behind Ohio
State, the Fiesta Bowl would
match, at best; the No. I and No. 3
teams on Jan. 2.
So who's No. I if both Nebras·
lea and Ohio State finish undefeated
and win their bowl games?
"!'m not qualified to say is
Nebraska, Ohio State or Florida
No. J?" Holtz said. "I can't and
don't think anybody else can. It
should be dctennined on the field.''
The lack of a clear No. 1 isn't
the only reason Holtz doesn't like
the ranking systems. With people
voting, there's always !be possibili·
ty someone will vote based on their
like or dislike of a coach or his
.
said . "Ranford was outstanding in the fir st and"
Patrick wa~ outstanding in the second. 'lllat 's why it:
was 1 - l,andthc~amc could' vc gonc ci tlJe r wav . " :
~· Holtz says college coaches aren't qualified to vote on ·w ho's No. 1
~ By NANCY ARMOUR
HEATING AND COOLING
Div. ll
21 ·American International 10
HIGHLIGHTS
On ils undefeated cruise lo !he Rose Bowl last year, Penn State reached No . 1 in !he polls -temporarily, illUmed outwith ils 31·24 win over Michigan. This year !he Ninany Lions and Wolverines will be fighting for a tess lofty bowl bid - most
likely the Outback Bowl - bullhal won'! make the confrontation in Stale College, Pa .. any tess dramatic . Last year in Ann
Arbor, Mich., Kerry Collins' 16-yard TO pass lo Bobby Engram gave Penn State the lead wilh 2:53 left in the game. Michigan
mounted a final drive. but QB Todd Collins was intercepted on fourth down with 1:26 to go. As far as our computer is concerned, !he only difference between the two teams this Saturday will be the Lions' home field.
There's no bigger sporting event in Alabama than the Alabama-Auburn matchup, !hough il, too, isn't as huge as las! year,
when fourth-ranked Alabama dealt sixth-ranked Auburn its only loss, 21-14, and ended the Tigers' 21-game unbeaten streak.
This season !he Arkansas Razorbacks spoiled both the Crimson Tide's and Tigers' plans to decide the Southeastern
Conference West Iiiia in Auburn this week. The Tigers won't end their probation with !he bowl appearance they hoped lor!he Fiesta - bul senior tailback Stephen Davis and the awesome Auburn offense look 10 points bener than Alabama.
With !he Colton and Holiday bowls a! stake (lor !he Big Eight's second· and third-place finishers), Colorado visits Kansas
Stale. Las! year in Boulder, the Buffaloes beat the Wildcats 35-21 as Rashaan Salaam ran lor 202 yards and two Tr's, and
QB Kordell Stewart scored three TD's ol his own, including a 60-yard quarterback keeper. This time K·State seems the tog·
ical favorite , having beaten Kansas, which beat Colorado, but we're following that lOgic reluctantly, picking the Wildcats by
: By KEN RAPPOPORT
: AP Hockey Writer
:
The wrong team got buried by an 'avalanche.
:
Reversing a recent trend, the Mighty Ducks of
~ Anaheim stopped ~e Colorado Avalanche's tO-game
unbeaten streak wtth a 7-3 rout Wednesday night.
"'
"We didn't come out in the flfSt period like we
• usually do, and they got a couple of quick goals "
• Colorado scoring leader Peter Forsberg said. "We
: had our chances to tie the game in the second period,
; but the breakaway that made it 5-3 was the key."
The M1ghty Ducks were clinging to a 4-3 lead late
.. in !be second period when Todd Krygier split two
•· Colorado defenseman at the blue line and scored with
~ 3:25 left off a lea4 pass from Peter Douris.
Leading the Mighty Ducks was Alex Hicks, who
bad two go~ and an assist in his flfSt NHL game.
"It was JUSt a matter of fin<ling the right opportunio/ for him, ~d boy, it, worked great," coach Ron
Wtlson srud. Now . he s got to do it every night
though." .
'
.
Tbe Ducks raced to a 3·0 lead on their ftrst seven
: shots against Colorado backup goalie Jocelyn
. Tbtbault, two of them by Paul Kariya. Thibault
: allowed one goal in each of his previous three starl\
•
· stopping 66 of 69 shots during that span.
Kariya's goals e~tended his point-scoring streak .
·
. to nine games, tying the club record set by Anatoli
. · Semenov in November 1993. Bob Corkum and Steve
•: Rucchin also scored to help the the Ducks win for the
·: seventh time in nine games. Scan Young scored
:- twice for the visiting Avalanche, who were 9-0-1
: before Wednesday night.
The Avalanche remain atop the Pacific Division
with an II -4-2 record . The third-place Ducks
: improved to 9-10.0, si~ points behind the Avalanche.
Elsewhere in the NHL, it was Hartford 3, Ottawa
~· 2; Buffalo 2, Dallas I; and Montreal4, Edmonton I.
Whalers 3, Senators 2 - In Hartford, Franlisek
•
3
BANK
•• , UJ~ ,,
.
team.
Take Florida coach Steve
Spurrier. for e~ample . Holtz said
Spurrier may rub some people lhc
wrong way, but that' s no reason to
penalize his team, Holtz said.
"His personality is a little dif·
ferent ... but he's as honest as the
day is long and he' s a heck of a
competitor," Holtz said. "And you
•
say, ' Well. I ' m go in g to vo~C
against (Florida) becau se I don't
like him ,' is lot:lll y unfair to tlk:
athletes invol vcd
:
" Anybody votes down Floridjt
because of their di slike for Stcv€
Spurrier, I think they ought to b~
out of the game of foo tball.' · ht
sai d. "Tha t' s asinine and ridic~
lous."
Smith leads OSU women to 85-50 victory over Pitt
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Katie Smith with 26 points led
Ohio State to an 85-SO victory
Wednesday over Pittsburgh in a
flfSt round Women's National Invi·
tation Tournament game that
opened the season for both teams.
Marrita Porter added 12 points
in her first collegiate game, and
GiGi Jackson scored lO for the
Buckeyes, who were 32-for-63
from the field for 50.8 percent.
Stephanie Pctho, lhe runner-up
to Smilb for Ohio Ms. Dasketball
honors when both were high school
se niors in 1~rn scored 15 poin!s
and wa~ the onl y playe r in double
figures ror the !'anthers. wlw wcic
19-for- 50 for 3R perrcnl .
:
Ohio Stale will p!;,y Maine 011
Friday al St. John Are na in ttic
tournament' s second round.
•
RAWUNGHOATS
Fisher Funeral Home
Bruce Fisher · Director
MIDDLEPORT
James R Acree Jr. Director
992-5141
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Allhe Los Angeles Coliseum. UCLA and Southam Cal meet lor the 651h time. The Bruins have bowl hopes of !heir own,
but they'd much rather trade places wilh !he Trojans and play lor some roses. In '94 UCLA won Its fourth straight game
against USC, 31 ·19, outscoring !he Trojans 28·7 in the second hall, sacking USC OB Rob Johnson six times and etiminat·
ing Southern Cal lrom !he Rose Bowl race. You think USC wants this one?
Finally, Lehigh hosts Lafayette in !he 131 st game ollhe mosl·o"en-ptayed rivalry in college football. Last year the Lafayene
Leopards pounded !he Engineers 54-20, but this year il's Leh1gh's turn to win their biggest 'game - and the championship
of the Patriot League.
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"Texas A&M
Texas Tech
·Toledo
·Utah Slate
Colleges- Div. 1-A
Mississippi Valley
9
Bucknell
7
Alabama
17
Rice
15
Utah
24
• Tulsa
19
MemphiS
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• Kent
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Vanderbilt
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Maryland
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Minnesota
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Colorado
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Arkansas
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Northern Illinois
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West Virginia
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Tulane
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Chester, Ohio
THE HARMON NFL FORECAST
Monday~ Nov. 19-20
(Sunday)
ARIZONA ................. I9
**CAROLINA ...... I7
Who ever would ' ve thought an expansion team would have a bener overall defense than the Cardinals? This
year, though. most of the NFL can make that claim. But Arizona will lind a way to win .
**ATLANTA ............. 27
ST. LOUIS ............. 24
Led by wide receiver Isaac Bruse's 10 catches for 191 yards and two TD's, Lh<; Rams outlasted the Falcons five
weeks ago in Si. Louis, 21 -19. They look lobe just as closely matched this time.
BUFFAL0 ................. 29
**N.Y. JETS .......... IS
In Week Six, the Bills forced four Jet turnovers and Bruce Smith knocked Boomer Esiason oul cold as Buffalo
heal N.Y. 29- 10. The Jets ' pass defense is sparkling. hullhe Bills aren'tlhrowing.
DETROIT ............. 23
**CHICAG0 ............ 28
Believe il or not, the Bears and Lions will banlc with two of the NFC's most productive offenses. For !he past
.
six seasons they 've split their lwo:gamc series; they'll meet again in two weeks.
SAN DIEG0.......... 22
**DENVER...............26
The Chargers held the Broncos without a TD for the firs! time since November '92 during a 17-6 win in
September. Den ve r's passing game is sharper, but S.D.'s secondary will keep this one close.
GREEN BAY ............ zs
••cLEVELAND ... 27
Involved in tight races in their respective Central divisions and led by two hot young QB 's, Brett Favre and Eric
Zcier, the Packers and Browns should have quite a light. They last mel in '92.
·
INDIANAPOLIS ...... 24
**NEW ENGLAND 17
Last year th e pl ayoff-hound Patriots beat the Coils 12- 10 in Indy and 28· 13 at home. This year N.E. can
t manage two good games in a row, and it ', ' 1c Coils who should play in the postseason.
**KANSAS CITY .... 33
HOUSTON ............ 23
The Chiefs held the Oilers to 223 tolal yards and forced five turnovers in a 31 -9 win in '94. Houston has enough
defense lo slay within reach. but it's weakest against the run, K.C.'s forte .
**MINNESOTA ....... 21
NEW ORLEANS .. 18
Warren Moon 's 11 -yard TD pass to Qadry Ismail with five seconds leflled the Vikings past the Saints last year,
21-20. Minnesol~ needs lo corral Jim Everell-lo·Quinn Early to avoid an upset.
**OAKLAND ........... 32
DALLAS................ 28
Will anyone he able to hear himself think on the floor of the Oakland-Aiemeda County Coliseum? Are there any
more intimidating otle nses in the NFL? Will they meet again in Arizona in January?
nPHILADELPHIA.23
N. Y. GIANTS ....... 13
In a mistake- plagued .game five weeks ago, the Eagles and Ginats combined for eight turnovers and Philly won
ugly. 17- 14. The Eagles have more defense than offense, but the Giants have neither.
PITTSBURGH ......... 20
*°CINCINNATI .... I4
Bengal QB Jeff Blake took the Steeler secondary apart in Week Eight. throwing three TD passes as Cincy
spanked Pinsburgh 27-9. But the Bengals have n' t beaten the Steelers twice in five years.
**TAMPA BAY ......... 17
JACKSONVILLE 13
Thi s is Florida's only intrastate matchup this year, between teams that are scoring points only occasionally. It's
also the Buccaneers'lasl easy game before live weeks of divisional showdown s.
** WASHINGTON ... 25
SEATILE.............. 20
When the Redskins and Seahawks m~t in '94, Seallle churned up 350 offensive yards and won 28-7. This year
these two ground-oriented attacks· and their porous defenses · are more evenly matched.
SAN FRANCISC0.. 27
•• MIAMI ............ 26
(Monday)
The 49ers and Dolphins have mel twice since S.F. 's win over Miami in Super Bowl XIX 11 years ago, and the
49e'l!. won both games. They, too, could meet again in Tempe, but it's a real long shot.
Sunday and
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�Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, November 16, 1995
According to Maryland legislators, .
Thursday, November 16, 1995
.
Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine
Lottery funds insufficient for Browns' new stadium
By TODD SPANGLER
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) - Maryland finally succeeded in its bid to bring a NFL team back to Baltimore. But now some la-ers are complaining. th~t
lhe state bas promised too much and the money tsn 1
there to fund a new stadium.
As the deal bringing the Cleveland Browns to Baltimore was approved by the stale Board of Public
Works on Wednesday, critics charged lottery revenues currently paying for state services will have to
be raided to help fund construction of a $200 million,
70.000-scat stadium .
" 'lbere is no more money from the lottery." said
Delegate Robert Flanagan, R-Howard, who sits on
the House Appropriations Committee . "We have
peaked out on the lottery.''
Special inslant lottery games are still helping to
pay off bonds to build Camden Yards, which openad
in 1992. Those games bring in about $20 million a
year- a far cry from the $35 milli'on needed to pay
for bonds on both the baseball stadium and a new
football stadium, Hanagan said.
Be predicted that more special lottery games
would drain money from existing games. Those revenues go in to the state 's general fund.
But Gov. Parris Glendening and Maryland Stadium Authority director Bruce Hoffman disagreed,
5aying not only will the team be a boon worth $123
million a year to Maryland, including $17 million in
tax revenues, but no taxpayer dollars will be lost.
"Don't buy a lollcry ticket . you don't pay for thi>
stadium." Glendcnin~ 'ai d.
On the Division I college cage scene,
"lbe fact is that every dollar that comes out of
'the budget to pay for a football stadium is a dollar
less out of the budget," said Sen. Chris Van Hollen,
D-Montgomery, who opposes the stadium. "All of
the money comes out of the same pot at the end."
The criticism, however, did not stop the threemember Board of Public Works, which includes
Glendening, Comptroller Louis Goldstein and Treasurer Lucille Maurer, from unanimously approving
the deal Wednesday.
Now a decision by NFL owners in January is all
that remai ns to make the move final. And even if
they tried to block Browns owner Art Modell from
moving. legal precedent remains on his side.
Glendening said he expected to be chastised for
the deal from some quarters, but he and other board
members believe the team and the stadium are best
for Maryland's economic future .
Van Hollen also complained that Maryland \"as
offering too much to the team.
"The whole thing is a sweetheart deal," be said.
"This is a bad deal for the Maryland taxpayers. We
got caught in a bidding war for an NFL team,''
Tbe deal offered Modell and signed Oct. 27, gives
him 30 years rent free at the new stadium.
It also promises the owner all of the proceeds
from parking and concessions at the s,_.dium, as well
as $75 million from the sale of permanent seat licenses, though the Browns will have to reimburse the
state for the cost of maintaining and operatin~ the
stadium.
.
UCLA expected to have Kansas, UK & Villanova close behind
By HOWARD SINER
NEW YORK (NEA) - Defending champion UCLA might repeat
as the No. I team in college baskethall in 19%. But it won't be easy.
The Bruins expect stiff competition , particularly from Kansas.
Kentucky and Villanova.
Going into the season. these are
some of the leading candidates to
make it to the Final Four of the
NCAA basketball tournament:
CONNECTIClH: The Big East
- thanks to UConn. Georgetown
and Villanova - looks like America's best conference. Last season,
Connecticut went n-5 for coach
Jim Cal houn. UCL A beat the
Huskies in the NCAA West final.
Now a junior. swingman Ray
Allen (21.1 points per game in
1994-95) is UConn's top' star. He'll
get backcourt help from senior
Doran Sheffer (5.5 assists per
g'11ne). Senior Travis Knight (8 .2
r~ bounds per game) is the center.
GEORGETOWN: Coach John
Thompson claims tbe Hoyas are
back. They were just 21-10 last
season; but llley made llle Sweet
16. Thompson vows this deep team
will play harder for 40 minutes a
game - the old-fashioned G-Town
way .
Sophomore guard Allen Iverson
(20.4 ppg). the Big East's 1995
rookie of the year, runs the fast
break . The frontcourt - led by
seniors Othella Harrington and
Jerome Williams (10 rpg)- can
Winston Cup final standings posted
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (i\P)
~ 1995 NASCAR Winston Cup
stock car racing results, with winners of previous events in parentheses and final driver point slandings
(x-non-points race):
I. Jeff Gordon, 4,614.
2. Dale Earnbard~ 4,580.
3. Sterling Marlin, 4.36 I.
4. Mark Martin, 4,320.
'5. Rusty Wallace. 4.240.
6. Terry Labome, 4,146.
7. Ted Musgrave, 3,949.
8. Bill Ellioll, 3,746.
9. Ricky Rudd. 3,734.
10. Bobby Labonte, 3,718.
II. Morgan Shepherd, 3,618.
·12. Michael Waltrip, 3,601.
13. Dale Jarrett, 3,584.
. 14. Bobby Hamilton. 3.576.
15 . Derrike Cope, 3,384.
16. Geoff Bodine. 3,357.
17 . Ken Schrader. 3,221.
18. John Andrcui, 3,140.
19. Darrell Waltrip, 3,078.
20. Breu Bodine, 2,988.
21. Rick Mast, 2,984.
22. Ward Bunon,_2,926.
23. Lake Speed, 2.921.
24. Ricky Craven. 2.883.
25. Dick Trickle, 2,875.
26. Jimmy Spencer. 2.809.
27. Steve Grissom, 2, 757.
28. Joe Nemcchek, 2, 742.
29. Roben Pressley, 2,663.
30. Kyle Peuy, 2,638 .
31. Jeremy Mayfield, 2,637.
32. Jeff Burton, 2,556.
33. Todd Bodine, 2,372.
34. Mike Wallace, 2,178.
35. Dave Marcis, 2,126.
36. Hut Stricklin, 2,082.
37. Bobby Hillin Jr., I ,686.
38. Elton Sawyer, 1,499.
39. Greg Sacks, 1,349.
40. Randy LaJoie. 1.133.
41. Loy Allen, 890.
42. Kenny Wallace. 878.
43. Chuck Bown, 618.
44. Jimmy Bensley , 558.
45 . Rich Bickle, 538.
46. Davy Jones, 520.
47. Jeff Purvis, 391.
48. Ernie lrvan, 354.
49. Steve Kinser, 287.
50. Wally Dallenbach Jr., 221.
51. Billy Standridge, 209.
52. Gary Bradberry, 208.
53. Chad Little. 146.
54. Butch Leitzinger, 127.
55. Doug George, Ito.
56. Joe Ruttrnan, 106.
57 . Ed Berrier, 103 .
58. Ron Bomaday Jr. , 82.
59. Ben Hess. 79.
60. Phil Parsons, 77.
61. Jimmy Horton, 61.
(tie). Michael Ritch, 61.
63. Pancho Carter. 58.
(tie). Ron Fellows, 58.
65 . Andy Hillenburg, 55.
(tic). Shane Hall, 55 .
67. Terry Fisber, 49.
68. Ken Pederson, 40.
69. Butch Gilliland. 37.
70. Dan Obrist. 34.
71. Emie Cope, 31.
and must produce.
_
KANSAS: What 's so hot about
Kansas? The Jayhawks have four
starters (II players in all) back
from an NCAA Sweet 16 team, the
third >Straight under coach Roy
Williams. They went 25-6. Now
the Big Eight squad is hungrier.
Sopbomore forward Raef
LaFrentz (I 1.4 ppg, 7.5 rpg) has
Danny Manning-like ability. Senior
forward Sean Pearson is also a
returning starter. So are junior
guards Jacque Vaughn (7.7 apg)
and Jerod Haase (15 ppg).
KENTUCKY: These Wildcats
could be coach Rick Pili no· s best
ever. Talent. Experience. Depth.
Kentucky's certainly got it. The
team is coming off a 28-5 mark, il~
37th SEC title ami a finish in the
NCAA's Elite Eight.
Senior guard Tony Dclk (16.7
ppg, 53 steals) is Kentucky's best
shooter. But the Cats want inside
scorin~. too. Senior lorward Walter
McCarty fits the bill. lie's flam boyant. Senior center Mark Pope
helps out.
LOUISVILLE: Led by veteran
coach Denny Crum, Louisville
hopes to fly high in Conference
USA during its debut season. The
young Cardinals, ousted by Memphis in the NCAA Midwest first
round, went only 19-141ast season.
But all five starters return.
Heading the list are junior guard
DeJuan Wheat (16.5 ppg) and
sophomore center Samaki Walker
(13.7 ppg, 7.2 rpg). The top new'
comer, sophomore forward Alex
Sanders, ought to make a big difference.
MASSACHUSETTS: Like
UCLA, Kentucky and Nonh Carolina, UMass spent all of last season in the AP Top 10. The Minutemen (29-5) made an untimely
departure in the NCAA East final.
Can they bounce back? Yes, says
coach John Calipari.
:S ampras' latest success puts him
closer to top ranking at year's end
By NESHA STARCEVIC
tent last year. This year has been a White Group, in which Ferreira
FRANKFURT. Germany (AP)
little bit up and down. But I have beat Yevgeny Kafelnikov 3-6, 7-6,
- Pete Sampras is one victory
been pretty consistent for the past 6-1. Ferreira is 1-1 and Kafelnikov
away from securing the No. I rankfour months since Wimbledon and 0-2.
ing at the end of the year. The way
Thomas Enqvist upset Jim
I always measure myself on major
he is playing, there is little doubt
titles. I won two this year," Sam- Courier 6-3, 6-2 to go 1-0 in the
that be will do it
_ pras said.
Red Group. Courier is 0"I.
A victory over Wayne Ferreira
Becker dropped to I-I in the
today would give Sampras enough
points to end the-season as No. I
for the third consecutive year.
Ivan Lend! was the last player to
finish three consecutive years as
No. I, from 1985-87.
Going into today's round at the By HARRY ATKINS
Fisher said. "I heard them
ATP Championships, Thomas
ANN ARBOR, Mich . (AP) announce that at the end of the
Muster of Austria held a mathemat- In the first half, Robert Traylor game, and didn't believe it."
ical chance of claiming the No. I looked like exactly like the rookie
Jermaine Watts scored 30 points
spot under ATP' s complicated 1 be is. A big rookie, to be sure. But - including five three-pointers - ·
computer rankings . Muster is cur- a rookie all the same.
forth _· Blue Demons, a 17-1I team
rently No. 3, behind Andre Agassi,
But with the game on the line, last season wiUl a ftrst-round loss
who is not here because of injury.
!he 300-pound freshman showed to Iowa in the post-season NIT.
But at ihe end of the day, Sam- why Michigan coach Steve Fisber
" Our guys made a good effort."
pras held his destiny in his own worked so hard to recruit him.
DePaul coach Joey Meyer said.
bands.
Ma·urice Taylor scored 16 "But we made some dumb mis So far. everything has gone points, but it was Traylor hitting takes. This was a great opportunity
Sampras' way at !he championship five of his eight points down the for DePaul to upset Michigan. and
that involve the top eight players in stretch Wednesday night that we didn't do it."
the world.
sealed a 73-65 victory for the No.
A three-pointer by Dugan Fife
Sampras is 2-0 after a victory 17 Wolverines over DePaul in the broke a 57-57 tic with 6:34 remainover Boris Becker on Wednesday.
first round of the Preseason NIT.
ing, and the Wolverines led the rest
The eight players are split into
"I thought Traylor played well of the way as Traylor hit a free
two groups in a round-robin for- down the stretch." Fisher said. · throw, a dunk and a show-stopping
mat, with the !Op two from each "He hung in there and was not layup willl amazing hang time for
pool advancing to the semifinals.
afraid to make a piay.' '
someone so rotund:
Even if Sampras loses in the
The Wolverines, who shot 46%
" You can' t win lllem all if you
semifinals. he will end Ule year as while holding DePaul to 33%, will don't win the first," Fisher said.
No. I.
play host to Weber State on Friday " We' re going to come back. and I
Right now, Sarnpras feels invin- night at Crisler Arena. Weber State promis... you we'll be a better team
cible, and hi s fallen opponents defeated Fresno State 102-86 on Friday."
aren't arguing.
Wednesday night.
It was the first time the two
Sampras dismantled Becker 6-2,
It was Fisher's 200th game as schools had ever met in basketball.
7-6 with an awesome display of coach of the Wolverines. As fate
It was painfully evident in the
tennis that left Becker hurting .
would have it, Fisher's first game early going that this was the first
"I really couldn't play any bet- as coach also was a tournament game for both teams. The Blue
ter. Tbe way I'm playing now, I'm game . He guided the team to Demons went 6:02 before making
going to be preny tough to beat," through the 1989 NCAA tourna- lllcir first basket, while the Wolversaid Sarnpras, the Wimbledon and ment as the Wolverines claimed the ines missed their first eight free
U.S. Open champion. "Everything national championship.
throws.
was great. I was returning well.
"It sure doesn't feel like 200,"
Making him play . I was serv ing
pretty big."
Becker wa~ full of superlatives
for Sampra~ · game.
· "When he plays average, he is
good. When he plays good, be is
the top," Becker said.
"I I eel like a freight train hit
me. The first 25 minutes were the
best anyone has ever played against
me in this hall ," sai d Becker, a
three -time Wimbledon champion.
Health Care information talk show
"I carne out feeling good, but he
fti!to:ri!lg Holzer Clinic physiciii11S.
was on fire . He plays similar to my
game, except be does everything a
little better. On a good day, he is
almost impossible to beat."
SUNDAY MORNINGS AT 9:00AM
Sampras and Becker split their
previous four matches here, and
ON ~GG- MAGIC 101.5 FM
although SamprM went in holding
a 8-5 career edge. Becker was
ahead 5-3 indoors. Sampras won 1,
the Paris Open 10 day s ago by ,
beating Becker in three straight
HOLZER CLINIC
FOCUS ON HEALTH
setS.
Sarnpras, who has five titles this
year, regained the No. I spot from
Agassi on Nov. 6.
"I was a little bit more consis-
HOLZER CLINIC
Here For Your Realth, Here For Your Lifetime.
•
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associ31e Professor
of Family Medicine
Question: My daughter has had
a platelet count of 83,000 for the
last two months. I undersland that
this is low. She has been taking
treatment for this. Could you
explain in layman's terms just what
platelets are and what they do?
Answer: Human blood contains
many important things, including
glucose, hormones, red blood cells,
white blood cells and platelets.
Each of these components performs
an "essential for life" job. Glucose
provides each cell with necessary
nutrition , hormone s regulate
metabolism, red blood cells carry
oxygen to each cell, white blood
cells fight infection, and platelets
are an important link in our defense
against bleeding. You may think
that this isn't very important
because you haven' t cut yourself in
years- but it is.
· Each of us bleeds every day.
Minute damage occurs to small
blood vessels from very minor
trauma such as pulling on a drawer
handle. ftrmly grasping a steering
wheel or brushing our teeth. This
allows the blood to escape from the
- blood vessels into the neighboring
tissue . A simple brui se re sults
when this occurs in a vessel that is
close to the skin surface. Yes ,
bruises are nothing more elaborate
than bleeding under llle skin.
Platelets stick to the surface of
an injured blood vessel and start a
cascade of physical and biochemical events that ultimately stop the
bleeding. Individuals with a low
countQ usually considered below
150,000 platelets per cubic millimeter (a tiny cube, 1/25 inch on
each side) - often have easy bruising, nosebleeds. bleeding from
minor gum injury such as from
brushing teeth, blood in llle urine.
and if female, heavy menstrual
periods. Occasionally, though, individuals can have low platelet
counts without any symptoms.
There are several problems that
can cause a person to have a low
platelet count. Occasionally thi s
occurs as pan of an inherited disor• der such as Bernard Soulier syndrome or Glanzmann 's thrombasthenia. but more commonly it
results from complications of
chronic kidney failure . coronary
artery bypass surgery or medications.
The best trcatrnem for the condition depends upon the platelet
count level and th e underlying
cause. Very low platelet counts
increase the risk of serious bleeding, and therefore, require more
aggressive treatment. Moderately
low counts, such as your
daughter's, are usually best treated
by being careful to avoid injury
that would cause bleeding while
identifying and treating the under!ying condltion.
Low platelet counts occur most
often because of taking medicaffons. Antibiotics, particularly sulfa
and penicillin, seizure medication,
some bean medicines. and arthritis
drugs are the most common offenders. In addition. aspirin and olller
non-steroidal anti -inflammatory
drugs interfere with the proper
functioning of platelets even
though !bey don' t actually decrease
the number of them . (This is how
aspirin reduces tbe risk of a second
heart attack in someone who has
already had one.)
So, platelets are physically a
very small component of blood, but
. they play a very large role in keeping each of us from bleeding to
death !rom the minor bangs and
bruises of daily living.
''Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O-,
Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine, Gronenor Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701.
Beat of the Bend ... /
by f'ob Hoeflich
Michigan beats DePaul
73-65 in Preseason NIT
Your Best Prevention Is Knowledge.
Family
Medicine.
CliQI~TMA~ GREETING EDITION
Thursday, December 22nd
With wreaths of holly and mistletoe, stockings hung by
the fire and scenes blanketed with snow, Christmas
encompasses warmth and good cheer as we cherish the
blessings we've shared this past year. For us It m~ans
saying "thanks" to you, our many friends, old and
new, whose kind support we'll always treasure. Doing
business with you is our greatest pleasure%
Wish all your customers and
friends a very Merry Christmas
in our Christmas Greetings Edition
on December 22nd
ADVERTISING
ASKFORDAVE orBOB
992-2156
THE DAILY SENTINE
Far be it from me to complain- tal the other day by a Meigs Emerhowever, I will.
gency Service Unit for treatment of
It's with interest that I noted that- - a le,g problem. She's having much
Middlepon Village Council Moo- difficulty walking. After treatment
day evening entered into a contract there was no transportation home
with a Wellston trash collection so the Pomeroy Police Department
f11111 to serve residents of Middle- was nmified. Very shortly, Officers
pon.
Joe Kirby and David Reese showed
According to what I'm told, the up, took Annie and her husband,
fmn which will begin service about Chet, who accompanied her on the
the first of the year, will pick up run, home and even tucked Annie
the trash at homes for $7 a month back into bed. She really appreciatand $6 a month for senior citizens. ed the helping Jt;utd, feUas :
A household is also allowed to set
out one large item each week in
I thought you would want to
addition to the regular trash.
know that Cleveland will be celeThe bottom line here is how brating its bicentennial next year.
come in nearby Pomeroy I am pay- As I understand it helping to proping $11 a month ,'presumably the erly observe the anniversary will be
senior citiz~ ns rate. As near as I one million of your Ohio tax dolcan tell village officials are doing lars. Isn ' t that great? Makes you
absolutely nothing to make my fee feel good inside to pay taxes
more compatible with that being doesn't it'! That certainly ought to
charged in Middleport. Is my trash provide one helluva birthday cake.
dirtier? Do I pay more beca.use of
,,
the hills in Pomeroy? Am I more
A Meigs County youth, James
affluent than Middlepon residents? Conley, did learn that sometimes
Whatever the answer, I'd love to there are rewards for honesty .
know why my fee is $5 more per
James found a billfold at the
month than that bein·g collected in Spring Valley Cinema and turned it
Middlepon.
into the employees of the business.
As you know I feel the same The employees rewarded him willl
way about gasoline.
three passes to the movies-<me for
himself and one for each of two
Big congratulations to Mr. and friends who were with him that
Mrs. Bob Harden of Syracuse. day.
•
They observed their 54th wedding
anniversary yesterday, Nov . 15 .
You'll be marking Thanksgivthe Hardens' have Jived in the ing Day in one week. Then comes
same resid~nce since 1946. They that big Christmas rush- the buyadmit the long residency has really ing, the wrapping, the cleaning. the
given them an opportunity to col- decorating, the Christmas cards.
lect a bunch of "good stuff."
and best of all of the parties, unless
you're the hosl and hostess. HowPomeroy's Annie Knight was ever, I know in spite of all the pres:
laken to Veterans Memorial Hospi- sures you're gonna keep smiling.
Researchers say heart
bypass advances could
shorten stay, reduce costs
By PAUL RAEBURN
~p Science Editor
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) - New
and gentler bypass surgery in
whiCh doctors make a small incisfon in the chest and stitch blood
-.:~sels on the surface of a beating
heart could cut costs in half and
sllorten hospital stays.
. One of the developers, Dr. Valav&nur Subramanian of Lenox Hill
Hospital in New York, reported
that he and colleagues in Italy and
Argentina have done 188 of the
operations, with a 94 percent succ.~ss rate in keeping the I)Cwly
a~ arteries open. That is compprable to conventional bypass
surgery.
Two deaths have been recorded
so far, he said.
"We are still .in the embryonic
stage" of the new techniques. Subramanian said Wednesday at the
annual meeting of the American
Heart Association.
In the surgery, a 3-inch incision
is made in the lower chest, avoiding the more traumatic conventional technique of breaking the breast
bone and making a large incision in
!he middle of the chest
In conventional bypass surgery,
the heart-is stopped and blood is
circulated by an external pump.
That has complications, including
the possibility ofproducing blood
clots that can cause strokes. .
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
The Daily Sentinel • Page 9
Mu.nicipal leaders get training in· comedy
By JOHN CURRAN
Associated Press Writer
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)
- Did you hear the one about the
Ben & Jerry's executive who wore
pink tights and a tutu for a week
after losing a bet?
Or about the guy who parked
illega'lly in New York and left a
note reading "Back in 15 minutes"
on his windshield? He came back
to a ticket and a note from the cop:
" Take your time."
How about the one about 80
elected oflicials from New Jersey
crowding into a stuffy meeting
room for a sem inar on comedy?
Now THAT's funny.
Garden club
highlights
convention
Highlights of the Ohio Association of Garden Clubs convention
held recently in Toledo were given
by Suzy Carpenter when the Meigs
County Garden Clubs Association
met recenlly at the home of Alice
Thompson.
She noted that as focus workshop will be held on Fell. 19 at the
Rolling Hills Baptist Chur ch in
Athens with Belly Dean as the
demonstrator. The 1996 convention
will be held in Columbus. July 16IS.
Attending were members of representatives of the Middleport
Amateur Gardeners, Chester Garden Club. Friends and Flowers of
Rutland, Rutland Friendly Gardeners. Shade Valley Wildwood and
Winding Trail Garden Club.
The Christmas fl ower show to
be held on the weekend after
Thanksgiving at Carleton School
was planned.
Mrs . Pauline Atkins in stalled
the new officers as follow s. Suzy
Carpenter, contact chairman; Margaret Edwards, treasurer: Gladys
Cumings, secretary.
The next regional meeting will
be held at Rio Grande College.
I•OS'I'AJ,
'
NO'l'ES
•
Plans for the annual Christmas
dinner were made at the recent
meeting of the Rock Springs United Methodist Women at the church.
The dinner will be held Dec. 12.
and requests wiU be made for nonperishable food donations to be
brought to the meeting to help
sponsor a needy family for Christmas. Discussion also occurred on a
trim-a-tree projeci for the church
basemen! to add to the season's
festivities.
The business meeting was
opened with prayer and scripture
reading. The group read "The Purpose" in unison . Office reports
were given and approved. A report
on the "World thank you offering"
was given by Hazel Ball.
Prayer for the sick was given by
Rita Radford and the cards sent
report was given by Pandora
Collins. Rita Radford read an article from prayer calender.
Devotions consisted of reading
scripture on Thanksgiving from
Leviticus 7:11-13, I Timothy 4:3-4, .
and Psalms 50:14-15 .
The program title was "Pray
always and do not lose hearL" It
was presented by members Hazel
Ball, Dorothy Jeffers, Pandora
Collins, Mll()' Showalter, and Francis Gocglein.
Mary Showalter had the closing
prayer and refreshments served by
the hostesses.
lEE
Einstein to Jerry Seinfeld, he said
the nation 's most successful leaders
- including former Presidents
Reagan and Kennedy - won popularity by poking fun at themselves.
Example: The Ben & Jerry's
executive who agreed to wear a
ballerina oulllt after betting workers that they couldn't set records
for productivity and allendancc
over six months.
Lesson: Silliness can motivate;
officials and constit uenLs.
First class postage 32¢ mules, boats and bush pilots
included free.
The 32¢ first class stamp you stick on an
envelope imposes an obligation on the US
Postal Service to get your letter from wherever you are to wherever it's going, whatever it takes_ To fulfill thi s mission "to
provide uniform service throughout the nation," occasionally it takes quite a lot
Mules carry mail to the bottom of the Grand
Canyon_ Bush pilots deliver mail above the Arctic Circle
and in the Alaskan wilderness. We use mailboats to
deliver to ships on America's rivers, and along the bayous of Louisiana. And we do it six days a week, 580
million pieces of mail a day_
But, you say, if the USPS could do all that for 29¢
last year, why is it 32¢ this year? Because, unlike many
other government services, the USPS is a self-supporting business, not funded by tax dollars. So when the
price of gasoline goes up a penny a gallon, for instance,
it costs us more than $1 million extra in operating costs.
We don't have exact figures on mule food, but that
probably costs more too_
On the other hand, through high-tech equipment
and automation, the USPS continues to have one of the
lowest-cost rates for first-class mail of any industrialized
nation in the world.
Anq with the USPS you can count on getting
the same service everywhere, from our biggest office
(the one in Manhattan) to our smallest, the 61 square
foot office at Ochopee, Florida.
UNITEDSTIJTES
Rock Springs
UMW plans
holiday dinner
'
It's no joke: Members auending
the State League of Municipalities·
annual conference took a break
Wednesday from seminars on taxes
and wastewater for an hour-long
session on the ''dollars and cents of
humor in municipal government. "
Stand-up comic Joey Novick ,
elected to the town council in
Flemington last year, a~sured them
Ulat bumor can improve communicatiou. help solve prohlems and
relieve stress.
Quoting everyone from Albert
•?J
,,
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'
Q
CO.
�. Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, November 16, 1995
Reader wonders just .what it is her husband does in Masons
Ann
Landers
"1995, l oe Aogelel
nmrs SyndiCate and
Creators Syndicate•
Dear Ann LanderS: My husband
· and I attended a funeral for the
~ mother or male friend of his. This
friend is married and has several
· children. Both my husband and his
friend arc in their late 40s.
· In an emotional momem, the man
whose molher had died embraced my
· husband and kissed him on the lips. I
. was shocked and offended by this
: and just stood there embarrassed,
.wondering who had seen it and what
a
•Community
calendar
The Community Calendar Is
." published as a free service to
. non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
·events . The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.
.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Ewings Chapter,
Sons or the American Revolution.
Thursday, Meigs County Museum
ln Pomeroy. Dinner by reservation
111 6:30: meeting at 7:30 p.m. Ray
Swick, curator of Dlennerbasseu
Mansion will speak. Reservations
to be made at Museum through
Wednesday. Open to public. Fur_tber information, call Keith Ashley.
992-7878.
RACINE - Southern FHA
·chapter to host district meeting at
Southern High School Thursday,
6: 15 to 9 p.m.
they thoughL
I later asked my husband about it,
and he said it was a Mason lhing.
Both me·n are members or the
Masonic Order. At the time, I
accepted lhis explanation, but I am
still confused and doubtful.
I have shared some emotional
experiences with women friends over
the years but have never kissed them
on the lips.
Will you please-comment? Is this
a Masonic thing, or was he trying
to put one over on me? •• STILL
WONDERING IN ST. LOUIS
DEAR ST. LOUIS : I checked wilh
the Masons, the Elks, lhe Kiwanis
and the Rotarians. None of lhem kiss
each other on the lips. It may be a
local custom, but it is definitely not
national.
I would not make any blanket
assumptions based on that one
occurrence, but you might be alento
other signs of "Masonic brotherhood"
your husjland exhibits in the future.
Dear Ann Landers: It has been
said that youth is wasted on the
young, and in many cases, I'm sure
this is true. I am glad the wisdom of
an older co-worker woke me up. If I
can do the same for some of your
readers, it will be a gift they can use
today and every day, tilllhe days are
no more.
I was young (age 25) and just
married. On my way to lunch, I was
rambling on to a friend about how
annoyed I was by my dad's toofrequent phone calls, especially when
he rau!ed on about trivia and things I
had no interest in.
·There was silence in the ear as my
friend slowed down. I could see him
fighting back tears as he delivered a
heanfelt message chat I have never
forgotten. My friend asked me how
it would feel if the phone didn't ring
anymore. He told me how my heart
would hun and how chat pain would
be one of lhe hardest to put to resL
I grew up that moment and
understood wha! he meant.llhought
about that message every day until
my dad passed away. To this day, I
thank my friend for the gift or that
Pooler, Brandi Reeves, president Rebecca
Evans. Row two left: secretary Heather Well,
treasurer Jessica Karr, Jennifer Mora, and
Melissa Dempsey. Back left: Robbie Murphy,
and Brian Bowen. Absent was NUS member
Lauren Young.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Public Library Board of Trustees,
regular meeting, I p.m. Thursday at
the library.
POMEROY - Middleport
Child Conservation League, 7 p.m.
Thursday at the Rock Springs United Methodist Church. Mony Wood
of DARE will speak.
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday
at the Reedsville Church of Christ
for Christmas workshop. Members
to take finger foods for meeting
and gifts for Pomeroy Nursing
Center.
., .
FRIDAY
.
LONG BOTIOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church, Long Bottom.
Guest speaker, Keith Roshon, 7
p.m Friday. Anniversary dinner at
5:30p.m.
I
,
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star, annual installation,
·Friday, 7:30p.m at Masonic Lodge
•ball. AU chapter invited to attend.
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER - Star
'Grange 778, annual Thanksgiving
supper, Saturday, 6:30 p.m. .at hall.
-Grange to provide the wrkey, those
·attending to take covered dish.
LONG BOTTOM - Special
·service, Mt. Olive Community
·Church. William Villers, evangelist
for the 7 p.m. services Saturday
and Sunday.
SUNDAY
DANVILLE - Weekend services at the Danville Church of
Christ will be held Saturday 7 p.m.:
and Sunday, 10:30 am. and 6 p.m.
Denver Hill, Foster, W. Va will be
the speaker.
MIDDLEPORT - Thanksgiv.lng community servi~. rust Bap: list Church Sunday, 7 p.m. Those
attending asked to take canned
•rood.
MONDAY
. POMEROY - The Disabled
American Veterans, special meetIng, Grange hal-l on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds for the purpose of buying a meeting hall, 7
p.m. Monday.
'
.
: LETART- Letart ToWnship
Trustees, 6 p.m. Monday at the
!Jitice building.
TUESDAY
. POMEROY - Meigs Ministerial Association Thanksgiving serYi~. 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Trinity
Congregaliooal Church. Rev. Brian
lfarlaless, pastor of Racine United
Methodist Church, to preach. PubIc invited.
•
How we/1-infortMd are you? Write
for Ann Landm' booklet "Sa and 1M
Teen-ager. • Send a self~ssed,
long, business-size envt:lope and a
checkornwneyorrltrfor$3.75 (this
includes postage and handling) to:
Teens, do Ann Landers, P.O. Bo](
IJS62, Chicago,/11.606JUJ562 . (In
Canada, send $4.55.)
By ED WHITE
Associated Press Writer
COLDWATER, Mich. (AP)When the sheriffs department suspected that a health spa was octually a brothel. the No. 2 man stepped
forward for the undercover assignment.
Tben he went again. And again.
And again.
Now the spa's future is in question, and folks in this small town
are chuckling about the details in
the explicit court affidavit or
Branch County Undersheriff Gary
Abbott, which was reported in the
local newspaper.
"Some people in the community will get some laughs out or it.
sure," Sheriff Ted Gordon said.
"But a bouse of prostitution in
Branch County is not something
people accept here."
A sign on an interstate near this
south-central Michigan town of
9,600 invites weary travelers to
stop at the 24-hour Coldwater
Health Spa, where a one-hour massage costs $60.
Suspicious that customers were
getting more for their money, the
sheriff sent in Abbott, who took
along a tape recorder.
According to Abbott's affidavit,
be was massaged for 10 to 15 minutes before the attendant offered to
masturbate him, which be accepted.
He returned four more times for the
X-rated massage.
Gordon explained that the
repeated trips were necessary
because the department has old
recording equipment. "You
couldn' l hear lhe women make the
proposition," lhe sheriff said.
Gordon insisted that Abbott also
had to agree to some sex acts if the
department wanted to put the spa
out of business.
A former deputy director of the
Michigan State Police said
Abbott's participation "has a funny
ring."
"Once engaged in the transaction- sex for money - you don't
go in and consummate the act,"
said Dennis Payne, now a criminal
justice professor at Michigan State
University. "But !here are 83 counties in Michigan and 83 philosophies about law enforcement."
In one of several letters sent to
the local newspaper. The Daily
Reporter. Dallas Seiler wrote:
"Medals are given for being brave,
wounded, etc. Does this officer get
four stars?"
Abbott declined to comment.
During an Oct 6 raid, deputies
confiscated stacks of credit-card
receipts that Gordon claims are a
paper trail of 4.000 sex acts, some
involving teen-agers.
=I
rr------------------~--~
~
RACINE - Alpha Epsilon
Chapter of Alpha Delta Kappa will
meet Th·ursday at the Racine Unil' ed Methodist Church at 7:30 p.m.
Members are to take a toy for
EASTERN NUS 1NDUCTEES - These East·
donation to area children. Program
ern High School students were Inducted Into the
will be a make-it, take-it Christmas
Eastern chapter of the National Honor Society
at ceremonies held Thursday at the school. The
craft.
new Inductees are: Front left, Christie GrossRACINE - Racine Post 602,
nickle, Tracy Heines, Anna Wolf. Row two left:
American Legion. 6:30p.m. meetTracy White, Lisa Stethem, Maria Frecker,
'
ing Thursday. Dinner to follow.
POMEROY - AA at Sacred
Hean Church. 7 p.m. Thursday.
lilllcbitbrighterlw:anseyoutookthe
time and trouble to write.
Gem of the Day: People who stand
in front of the refrigerator and don't
know what they want aren't really
hungry. They just want something
thattastesgood.(ThisGemistheresuit of home research.)
Feeling pressured to haw: sex?
Investigation of
suspected brothel draws
chuckles in small town
Eastern National Honor Society
EASTERN NHS MEMBERS • Eleven new
inductees into the Eastern chapter of the National Honor Society were welcomed by Eastern
NHS advisor Mrs. Sheryl Roush and these NUS
members at ceremonies Thursday. The NUS
members are: Front left, vice-president Connie
lesson. That night and every night
after, I shared a phone call wilh my
dad -- sometimes brief, sometimes
long, but he heard my voice, and chat
is what mattered. It's been nine
months since Dad passed away, and
believe me, Ann, I would give
anything U chat phone would ring so
lcouldtalktohimjustoncm!X"Ctime.
-PETER IN PLAINVIEw, N.Y.
DEAR PE1ER: You have wrilterl
a letter chat is sure IQ send millions
of sons and daughters suaight to the •
telephone at some time during the
ne~t 12 hours. AT&T should love
you.
Thank youonbehalfofall the dads
whose lives you have made just a
J
Martie Holter. Back left: Ginger Nutter, Nicole
Nelson, Noelle Pickens, and Meredith Crow.
Guest speaker at the Induction ceremonies was
Professor Roger Watson from Ohio University.
The Eastern High School concert band also performed during the festivities.
American Legion Auxiliary to
honor longtime member
A gift will be presented to the
First Baptist Church in memory of
longtime member, Lillian Pierce,
by the Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion.
Meeting recently at lhe hall, the
group discussed ways or working
together with the legion post for the
benefit of veterans of Meigs County and those in the hospitals. Plans
were discussed for going to Chilli-·
cothe Veterans Hospital for the
Christmas party on Dec. 21.
ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
'rOO CAN7 ESCN'f Tl-£ GREAT
I!UYS N Tl-£ CLASSFEDS.
WEARING APPAREL!
•Sweaters
•Slacks
•Dresses
•Skirts
•Suits
•Blouses
•Night Gowns
•P.J.'s
Tim Week:. Special:
~
~
~ ~~
~!
. r'f'rl''r'l''r~~}
----------~
rGumby stretching
~- imaginations - again
•. . By MICHELLE LOCKE
: Associated Press Writer
, SAN RAFAEL, Calif. (AP)· He's loyal, brave and always ready
· to extend himself to help a friend.
And be's really, really ~n .
Now, Gumby is trying to make
· his biggest career stretch ever. A
technique called stop-motion, in
which figures are tilmc:d, moved
slightly and filmed again, a
paii!Staking, but according to
Clokey, uniquely S!ltisfying, pro-
cess.
Clokey's big break came via his
paying job at Harvard Military
' COOiebaclc.
.
Academy (now Harvard School) in
He's back on TV, this time on Studio City near Los Angeles .
' Nickelodeon, which is interspers- There, he tutored the son of Sam
. ing new episodes with reruns of the Enge~ then-president of the Motion
old series tbat started in 1956. Pictures Producers Association.
Invited over one night to look at
. There are Gumby pizza parlors in
. college towns, capitalizing on a previews, Clokey mentioned he'd
new student following. There's made a film of his own and was
even a motion picture, •'G~mby told "bring it over."
1."
.
What followed next was every
Don't look for Gumby to start young film student's dream. Engel
trashing hotel rooms anytime soi>n. didn't just like . "Gumbasia," he
He isn'tletting renewed success go loved it.
~ to his bumpy little bead.
For a moment, Clokey envi·- "There's none of this wise- sioned himself a Hollywood player.
cracking and cynicism that you see
"I could just see myself being
in ... some of the other cartoons," his assistant and mingling with the
says creator Art Clokey. ' .'He ~ s stars," he recalls. Engel's next sensupposed to be a role model for tence shattered his silver scree~;~
kids. He cares about other people. fantasy . What he wanted, it tumed
He will be loyal to bis friends and out, was better children's televi·
• respects his parents."
sion: Could Clokey develop some
, In many ways Clokey bas clay figures.to create a TV show?
. proven as resilient as his creation,
The result" was Qumby, his little
. keeping his balance through for- pony Pokey and a host of other
tune and fiasco.
clay mates.
His film career began in the
From the beginning, Ciokey,
. early 1950.s when he was a gradu- who once studied to be an Episcoate student at the University of pal minister, had a clear vision of
.Southern California. Working in a Gumby. He would be a hero, but
garage, he made a four -minute ftlm not obnoxiously so.
.
..called "Gumbasia," chat showed
"He bas some characteristics of
. absttact clay forms moving to jazz a superman. ... He also bas characmusic.
teristics of a buman being. He's not
The name was a childhood superpowerful; be will need the
memory of visiting his grandfa- help of his friends.''
. !her's farm and remembering his
Clokey's father, Arthur Farringfather coming into the bouse and ton, lent more than the inspiration
. saying he'd "got stuck in the for the character's name. His amazgumbo," local coinage for the ing cowlick - captured in a sepia
. region's sticky, clay soil.
photograph that hangs on the wall
"Gumb;lsia" was made using a_ ()f Clokey's San Rafael office-
·Study says SIDS deaths
:preceded by breathing
irregularities
,By JANE E. ALLEN
AP Science Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
differences in breathing rates of
:healthy babies and those who even, tually died or Sudden Infant Death
:Syndrome are so subtle they can
~easily go undetected, researchers
~ said
v :mal
; Some
SIDS babies show abnerbreathing patterns in their first
•few days or months, said the
.authors of a study presented
.Wednesday at the Society for Neu·roscience meeting in San Diego.
: The finding might one day be
:used to develop screening tests chat
·would identify infants in danger of
"SIDS. the researchers said. In the
·meantime, it's led at least one
researcher toward closer study of
the part of the brain tbat controls
breathing.
While sleeping, healthy infants
usually compensate fo r_;~-' long
breath with either a longer or sboner subsequent breath.
Close monitoring of babies'
every breath revealed that some
who succumbed to SIDS didn't
vary their breathing as much as
other infants did, said Ronald
_ Harper, an anatomy professor at the
University of California at Los
Angeles and a member of the
UCLA Brain Research Institute.
SIDS, defined as the sudden,
unexplained death of an infant,
kills 5,000 American babies eacb
year.
The Daily Sentinel • Page 11
Yellowstone is a
geologically diverse .
area, Rotarians lear~
...
Yellowstone National Park is
the "mother" of all national parks
in the United States , according to
Bill Wise or Reedsville who spoke
to the Middlepon-Pomeroy Rotary
Club at its Monday night meeting
at the Heath ·United Methodist
Church
Mr. Wise was introduced by
Bob Beegle, Syracuse Elementary
School principal, who bad him
speak to the elementary students on
Monday.
Mr. Wise bas spent 17 years
GUMBY COMEBACK • Cartoonist Art Clokey demonstrates
with the National Park system,and
tbe flexibility of Gumby, his happy-go-lucky creation at his office
spends the off-season at Reedsville.
In San Rafael, Calif. The Gumby character Is making a comeback
The Yellowstone Area encomon the cable TV channel Nickelodeon, which Is showing new
passes the geological history or the
episodes of Gumby lntenpersed wltb reruns on tbe old series that
western United States. Much of the
started In 195(;. (AP Photo)
area was formed when a huge volcanic explosion, 5 to 7,000 times
was the model for Gumby's &Sym- and "after that lhings started hap. greater than the Mount St. Helens
pening, .. she said.
metrical head.
Back in California, Clokey was explosion, occurred thousands of
As a clay boy, Gumby could
years ago, be said. The crater-like
assume any shape, squashing flat as asked to give a Gumby show and basin formed from that huge exploa paint slick or splillinl! into a lecture at lhe Beverly Hills Library. sion measures roughly 35 by 45
It was standing roorn only.
handfu I of gum balls to escape a
Next came a tour of movie the- miles across and encompasses over
gumball machine.
1.2 minion acres.
Children were enthralled as he aters and bookings on the lecture
This area wilh its over I 0,000
and his friends embarked on fantas- circuit.
hot
springs, geysers and thermal
In the early 1980s, the Clokeys
tic adventures, leaping through
pools
has 80 percent of the world's
time and space to book up with fic- got a boost from an unexpected . features of these geological phesource when comedian Eddie Murtional and historical characters.
nomenon. Underneath the entire
By the late 1970s, Gumby was phy brought Gumby to TV's "Sat- Rocky Mountain region are the
yesterday's star and Clokey was urday Night Live." Murphy would Pacific plate moving west to east
facing foreclosure on his bouse. A swagger around, bullying his and the North American plate of
second toy he designed bad failed cohorts and declaiming, "I'm the earth's crust moving northeast
spectacularly afier something went Gumby, dammit."
That wasn't euctly in line with to southwest over each other. This
wrong in the manufacturing proClokey' s vision. After all, he _took continued movement generates hot
cess.
spots which come to the surface in
His wife and business partner, legal action to stop the manufacture Yellowstone more than any other
Gloria, traces the resurgence of of "Scumby" T-sbirts chat showed place in the world, he explained.
their fortunes to a visit to spiritual Gumby as a beer-bellied reprobate.
Weather at Yellowstone varies
leader Sri Salhya Sai Baba in India Murphy's Gumby had the saving greatly but snow can be expected
about 15 years ago. lbey gave him grace of being funny. It also came any day during the year. The snowGumby to bless with sacred ash on way past the bedtimes of
Gumby's more innocent fans.
Diagnostic
_Services
That Make You
The Picture
Of Health.
Understanding the nature of a
problem is often the key to solving
it. That's why at O' Bieness
Memorial Hospital . we continually
invest in state-of-the-art diagnostic
imaging technologies.
The latest in Magnetic
Resonance Imaging technology,
advanced CT scan equipment-even
high resolution ultrasound and
x-ray equipment all keep
O' Bieness on t~e leading edge.
fall anntJally exceeds 20 feeL
Tiiis
a problem for the wild aniI. creates
mals which are left to provide their
. own food during the winter. Winter
starvation causes more death loss
·than any other single factor. During
the summer months there may be
as many as 36,000 elk in the park
but during the winter it may get
down to 10,000.
:
Because of danger to human
life, tourists are forbidden to feed
the wild animals. Because of dan·
ger to tourists they are now kept at
a respectable distance from the bot
springs and geysers. In regard to
forest fires. Mr. Wise said these are
necessary part of the chain or life
in the park. Some of the pine cones
require a temperature of over 140
degrees just to open the cones arid
permit the seeds to spread and getminate. Wildlife bas doubled in the
park since the big forest fires Of
1988 which permitted new planfs
to germinate and grow.
·
The legacy of the park system is
that we preserve the beauty df
nature and our heritage so that'
future generations may see nature
in all its glory according to Mr.
Wise. He said that 66 percent of his
work is for future generations and
only 33 percent for the present. .
Lloyd Blackwood, president,
thanked Mr. Wise for his presentation and pictures. It was announc<d
that next Monday will be the annual Thanksgiving dinner with spouses and friends invited. Next we4<
will also be lhe "Ugly Tie" contest.
Guests for the evening included
Jake Goebel of the Gallipolis Club
and Ben Slawter. Ladies of tlie
church served the meal.
Our mammography service has
been accredited by the American
College of Radiology and the
F.D.A. It meets their stringent standards for equipment and so do our
people who provide accurate interpretation of the data generated by
this life-saving technology.
The way we figure it, when it's
your health on the line, nothing but
the best wi 11 do.
Open.House Nov. 17 & 18
Country Naturals
Gifts & Accessories
992-4015
Mon-Sat9-5; Evenings Mon., Thurs. Fri. til8:00 p.m.
Refreshments - Door Prizes
Come in and see what we have for Christmas.
Get Your Message Across
"NO WAX" VINYL
FLOOR COVERING
With ADally Sentinel
BULLETIN BOARD
'7" column inch weekdays
•tDO column Inch Sunday
R,g. 5 1395 Sq. Yd. To
53995 Sq. Yd
!
I
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155
..
'
12' Wide One Week Only
1 95
7 Sq. Yd. to s1696 Sq. Yd.
Econo Vinyl Closeout Reg. 1895 Sq. Yd.
F~MOUS ·BRAND
GRAPHIC
COMMERCIAL
CARPET
·NAME
CARPETS
I
•Jackets
•Coats
•Levi's
Bendover Slacks
.
'
,
.
-·
;: "
:jl;-:J1;1
Reg. sg95 Sq. Yd.
$
Htw Kortt of California
For Fall & Winter
12'Wide
BAHR CLOTHIERS
'
I
COURT STREET
GRILL
FRIDAY NIGHT
CHARLIE LILLY & THE
POOR SIDE BAND
9 P.M.-1 A.M. ·
SATURDAY NIGHT
~ALL STYLES· ALL cOLORS
...
12'WIDE
~- ' .
•Robes
145 N. 2ND
jl
SUN -SAT. 10'00 AM - 10'00 PM • 992·2556
~---------
9!
~I
FISHTAIL
$179
'
f .1
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
317 N. 2nd Ave, Middleport, OH 45760
Joan Vaughan, presiden~ asked
about getting the piano at the post
home tuned. Mrs. Jane Snouffer
gave a report on the party held at
lhe Athens Hospital for the veterans there.
Attending besides those named
were Loretta Tiemeyer, Mary Martin, Kathryn Welch, Gladys Cumings, and guests, Garrett and Brennen Haptonstall. Mrs. Tiemeyer
served refreshments.
SEE BAHR CLOTHIERS
FOR THE FINEST IN LADIES'
t
~~
..:Thursday, November 16, 1995
NOW
'
'
•
KARAOKE WITH THE
RIVER RATS
9PM-1 AM
O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital
THE DRAFT HOUSE
TONITE
55 Hospital Drive. Athens, OH 45701
614-593-5551
MEN'S POOL
A hospital we can all
be proud of.
TOURNAMENT
MIDDLEPORT
992·2351
'
•I
.'
'·'
�.
·Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, November 16; 1995
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
·
•
• -
r
· The Dally Sentinel • Page
t
13
•
.
~ -···~
K.&w.
ou e ouons
er
a
TOTAL (USTOMER SATISfACTION - THAT'S ABIG BEAR HUG!
HAULING
(Speclllze In driveway
spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dir1
992·2549
614-992-3470
mo.
11N1
.
• Room Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical & Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior & Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
Shady Brook
res
I
Nov.17 & 18
Country Naturals
Gifts & Accessories
317 N. 2nd Ave,
Middleport, OH 45760
992-4015
Mon-Sat 9-5; Evenings
Mon, Thurs. Fri. til 8:00p.m.
.Refreshments - Door Prizes
Come in and see what we
have lor Christmas.
.
.
YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
Prices.Effective November ·16 • 17 • 18
-
WICKS
GLASS
&WINDOW
REPANE
We Redeem Federal Food Stomps
..
·-· · · ~ ·
(Lima Stonalo• R1t11)
Local (rafters
American Made
992·2549
11N1
1/2/lln
"I HAD NO IDEA IT
WAS THIS MUCH
FUN"
Meet new people the
tun way today.
Call 1-900-255-5454.
ext. 6694 I
$2.99 per min.
Must be 1B yne.,
Touch-Tone phone
requlned.
Serv-U (619) 64~~
1-900-255-5454
Grade_A ~ 11 lbs. and Up • All Natural
Ext8417
be 18 yrs
$2.99 per min
Touch Tone
Phone Required
Serv -U (619)
645-8434
Must
Limit 1 with Additional Food Purchase
of $1 0 Excluding Cost of Turkey
Are you looking for
love?
Longterm
~ relationship?
1-900-255-1515
Ext. 1064
$2.99/Min.
Must be 18 Yrs.
Touchtone Phone
Required Ser-U
(619) 645-8434
lb.
H&H
SAWMILL
. Top Frost
Young Turke s
Portable
Bandsaw Mill
32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny & Peggy Brickles
614-742·2193
11113195 mo.
Grade A Frozen· 181bs. and U'p • 5e f Basting
Limit 1 with Additional Food Purchase of $1 0 Excluding Cost of Turkey
lb. '
NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE
House Repair 6
Remodeling
Kitchen 6 Bath
Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reasonable
tnsurere- Experienced
Call Wayne Neff 992-
BUY OHI 37 oz. • Mountain Top BUY OHI
Pumpkin
I - · P1e
Gil ONI
5 lb. Bag • u.s. N~. I
Potatoes
4405
For Free Eatlmatas
mo.
Round
Bales of
Hay for
Sale.
Call
'614-949-2512
Will PHOTOGiiiAPH
ANY SPECIAL
OCCASION
Including weddings,
receptions.
anniversaries,
reunions. Special rates
tor Individuals,
couples, family groups
in the privacy of your
own home.
Reasonable rates.
Call992-7747.
992-9923
10%
Discount w/Ad
Call your date now
1-900-255- 1515
1·Free
Limit
16 oz. Bag • To~ Frost
Vegetables
•
I
................
Is your summer tan fading?
New beds with dual face tanners
Also new High Turbo Bed in mid December.
992-5756
;:::===:==:=====:::!
1111411 mo.
- ·
HAULING &
EXCAVATION
Umestone & Gravel,
Septic Systems,
Trailer & House Sites.
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre
SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742-2138
~
l •
..
..
..... ·--- -·- · - ·
KP's CLEANING
Will Clean Small
Shops or Offices
and Homes.
Have 4years
experience. Call
for estimate Karen :
at 614-843-5327
or 614-949-2632
after 10-10-95
..f
": .
Kraft Miracle
American
Ltgloli Far111
Bailey Run Rd.
.,
1 P.M.•?
SUNDAY,
NOV. 19
.
•
.,
2 mo. pd .
J
i,l.. .
LOOKING
FOR LOVE?
,.~.,
' -
.....:...;.:.....
_:...:~
r
...;..
J.D. Drilling Company
P.O. Box 587
Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call
949-2512
REASONABI.i BAriS
bPENING NOVEMBER
813/lfn
25t~
102 E. Main
Pomeroy, OH 45769
614-992-7696
Holiday Hours: M-S 9:30 - 4:30 p.m.
Sun. 12:00 - 5:00 p.m.
~
~ -.·.... SbaronLo.uk.s .. (614. )9~
.. 11·.4 · . ·.~
- .· · ·
~u~~~~~~B
tWae. &: ~-fJi.u c.m.tJ~m
'P... 0.. t3.o.4 443
nutlan.d, Oirlo. 4577 5
(614) 742-2630
Bill Slack
992·2269
ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop & Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
gas-4473
7122194
J.E. DIDDLE OWNER
949:2512
RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
& MACHINE SHOP, INC.
Cheaoer Rates
WELDING & FABRICATION
$20.00/HR
HYDUULIC REPAIR
$32 00/HR
· __
L__;!:::;·~::::..
I
ALL YOUR BOW
HUNTING NEEDS.
•Bows •Arrows
•Deer scents ,
•Deer calls
<Clothing and much more
JOE'S .
28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45nt
SPORTING GOODS
(6t4) 94&-30t3 Phone
WOLFtE'S POOL HALL
(6t4) 949-20t8 FAX
·1
Antiquity, Oh.
__j(~61~4)~594-~2008~N~IG~H~Tj L.--6-14-_94_9--2906.....,:~~
101511 mo
,; -
FOR SALE
Cut & split
Firewood
All Hardwood
Pick-up or Delivery
Available.
Ball Logging &
Sawmill
DAllY
HOROSCOPE
Up-To-Date
Soap Results
CALL NOWlfl
•1-900-178-1800
Ext. GHS
. 992-6142
..,j
lftErrriON
BOW BUNTERS
$ 2.99
• • r min. Nlulf be18
vrs. Touch-fane phone Nq.
Call Evenings """ ~
Sorv·U (619)
64S ·84J~
DOZER
DUMP TRUCK
BACKHOE
SERVICE
•Licensed
•Bonded
•Insured
Jim Hawthorne
985-4386 111:111mG.
POMEROY, OHIO
Trash removal - Commercial or residential.
Septic tanks cleaned & portable toilets rented .
Daily, weekly & monthly rental rates.
Licensed
Free Estimates
Stump grinding
Gallipolis, OH
Limestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal 6 Water
WE HAVE A-t TOP SOIL FOR SALE
614-441 -1191
992-3954 or 985-3418
Beautiful Girls
Exciting!!!
Passionate!!!
Talk To 'em Live
1-900-526;2500
Ext. 6113
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-Tone Phone
Required Serv-U
(619) 645-8434
&
Insured
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
9.127195 tin :
S.ro-U (619) 645-8434
Ch'llstmM CJi6ts .{j
MODERN SANITATION
Factory Choke Only
Bashan Building ,
y.... Touch· tone phone Nfl·
.· ~
,-
HARTWELL HOIJSE
· Companionship
1-900-2SS-1S1S
• Elrt. 8S83
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.
~e'l.6ect
10121/M/'tln
Ext. 9106
ROMANCE
~
95 Varieties
Call or write for a
free price guide.
Antiques - Gifts - Folk Art
$2.99 per min.
Must Be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone phone
required.
Serve-U
(619) 645-8434
t0/26195
Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
.I
State At. 33
Darwin, Ohio .
1-900-255-4242
DATES
·
TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAl
.·tJ
Shop Early For Best
Selection Of Patterns,
Sizes & Country Colors
'
BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New At King Hardware
<lhe ~'U~»1e
Co~ne~
Pic1Ure Frame, Mats
& Framing Accessories.
405 North Second Ave .. Middleport 992·5020
HOCKINGPORT
MOBILE
HOME PARK
Mobile home
sites for rent
U .t9 per rwin. Moat be 18
32 oz. Jar • Limit 1 Jar
·
~-
••••••
30 Announcements
:.
.~-
PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
,:_.-~
12 Guilla•
Must be 18 years.
Touch-tone phone
required.
SERV-IJ (619) 645-8434
Q' 1 ~
One·Step Complete Auto Body Repair
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone
phone required
Serv-U
(619) 645 -8434
a
· ti·
Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome
$2.99 per min.
·Home or
Trailer
SHOOTING
MATCH
Whi
--
Your Choice of Corn, Peas, Mixed
or Green Beans
Co. Rd. 20 North of Meigs Fairgrounds first
drive past horse barns
1471
2.99/min.
1900·484·2600
Ext. 6927
<i13/ill1
1 Free
34480 A Rocksprings Rd.
Ext.
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
GUN SHOOTS
SAT., 6:30 P.M.
CALL YOUR ·
DATE NOW!!!
DougCrites
614/667-6825
J;r.,.~~~!!t=~"~
t
A~fjhans to'l Sale J
COUNTRY TANN
11/1411 mo.
On Site Dry Cleaning
Now Available
Premier Cleaners
anrl Coin Laundry
397 West Main St.,
Pomeroy
Under new management
New equipment
. .
SPORTS
POINT
SPREAbS
AND MORElli
1-900-884-g204
Ext, 2912 ,
'
$2.99 per min.
Must be 1B yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serv-U (619) 645-8434
Commercial and Residential
Driveways, Patios, Slabs. Parking lots, Curbs& Gutters
Sidewalks, Porches, Tear-out and Replacement
41 960 Kaylor Road
Reedsville, OH 45772
-
.
.
Repairs/Additions
Craig 614-367-0567
Limit
i
Cuatom Building & Remodeling
• New Homes
•Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992-5535
ie14i 992-2753
..
For Love And
Affection Dial
Abiding Concrete Construction
'
SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
TROLLY
STATION
HANDMADE
CRAFTS
'
.
.
I
614-667-3630
10111!95 1mo. rvt
Let A Psychic
Answer Your
Questions
1-90D-255-0200
Ext. 6993
$3.99 per min.
Muat be 18 yra.
Touch-Tone Phone
Required
Serv-U (619) 645 8434
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
614-992-7643
( No Sun~ay Calls)
6;
~
Water
~ ~Treatment
Equipment
Du1nbu1ed by
TRI·STATE WATER-SYSTEMS, INC.
The water treatment company cordially invites you to
participate In a free. no obligation. comprehensive water
analysis. WE WILL TEST FOR THE FOLLOWING:
TDS, Mineral Hardneu. Iron, PH.
Ple88e call RainSoft et 992-4472 or 1-800-606-3313
to set up your tree water analysis. tll/5/lfn
1-800
650-1234
110\\ \1111
E\C:\\ \TI\1,
Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems & Driveways. .
Trucking- Limestone,
Top Soil, FUI Dirt
()()•) ' ) U ' ) U
--,)(),)O
'·'·
Remembering ·
Linda Lou Stewart
on .her Birthday
Nov. 16
As long as hearts
remember, As long as
hearts still care, We
never part with those
we love ~ They're with
us everywhere.
So may your
precious memories
Of the one you held
so dear,
Bring peace and
comfort to you now
And keep your
loved one near.
Always Loved By
Friends and Family
QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
Solid Vinyl
Replacement
Windf WS
I
We have the
best Window
and the best
price
BIB ROOnNG and
CONStRUCtiON
ANNOUNCEMENTS
(614) 992-5041
40
Giveaway
Residential • Commercial • Industrial
2 Femalt~ Pul)pies. g Weeks Ol d
To Good llo:TI&, 61 4-446-o132.
'
ONE CAU. .DOU IT AU.
•Pressure
•Plumbing
•Tile
Beauti ful friendly y~ II OW lab mile
large, one yea r 01d male, shots:
Cleaning
oCarpentry
oCarpet
wormed , neu tered , call 61 4· 99l •Roofing
•Painting
-Drywall
3919.
-Gutters
oCablneta
oMasonry
•Electrical
•Siding
oOecks
;CoCker Spaniel-Border Collie mox
We Have Em-.ncy Servlcn
,small male pu ppy, 1 112 Y" old.
.....""
. ca ll SU-99 2-5408 lea ve me s:
. 7 Daye A Week, 24 Houre A Day.
sage,
35 Yea..·experience, all WOrk gua..nteed.
Hospital bed, needs work. 30<··
"fall Speelala" Leaves cleaned up and hauled
&75-5150.
away. Moat yards $49.00
Male 2 tl2yr old black Lab &
Gutte,. cleaned and acreened,
Shepherd mi• . 1o good home 30<moat 1 story homes, $49.00.
' 895-3685.
·
. L--..;;:OH:.::,IO::,.-.,:W~E::,ST;..V;.::IR.:;:GI::.:;N:::;tA:..;-;,.;;K::,ENTU:.:.:.::;C::,:KY:,:_1IINI
......mo.~ Piano.304-B95-347t.
I·
•
~
'
�Thursday, November 16, 1995
Page 14 • The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
~
ALLEYOOP
The Dally Sentmel • Page 15
BRIDGE
NEA Crossword Puzzle
~ote
ACROSS
PHILLIP
ALDER
P eway F rep lace Fo r MoD le
Home Table & 2 Chars 61-4 2S6
6459
Ea n S 1000s w eekly s ufl ng en
ve lopc., a he n ~ Be yo u bo s s
Sta r ow No exp I oe supp es
nlo no ob ga or Send SASE
60
0
p ~s 9~
9:>b09
32 9
u
W n
ll'l
p0
So n g s
so~
F
General M a ntenance Pamt1ng
Yard Work W ndows Was hed
Gutters Cleaned l1ght Hauhng
Comme11ca l Res dent at Steve
614 446 886t
Rub & Scrub Cleamn g Se rv ce
dust ng mopp ng w ndows and
mo e Complele seflJ ce or touch
ups Rete ences on request ca l
Terry at 61 A 992 423 2 or 6t4
992 445t
Sun Vall e y Nursery Scho o l
Ch ldcar e t.4 F 6am S 30pm Ages
2 K You ng Scl"lO o l Ag e Durmg
Summer 3 Days per Week M n1
mum 614 446 3557
Tamm y s D ayca re hours Mon
da y throlJgh Fr day 6 30a m
6 OOpm l ois o lea n ng and TLC
614 992 5388
envelopes at home Sta 1 now no
expe ence I ee supples nfor
mat on no obi gat on Send self
add essed sta ped enve ope to
Pa k TX 786 3
very clean
304 675-130>
N ce two beCiro om apanment n
Pomeroy 614 gg2 5858
3BR Home lor Rent Spruce St
$350 00 mon Call 61 .4 446 21 S8
Stonewood Apart ments now ac
ce p1 ng appl ca t ons tor apart
ments all elec t c lor elder!~ and
d sab I ty FMHA subs d zed ba
s c ent $260 per month EOH
614 992 3055
40acres .. at elec tr c 2 story
house 3bedrooms wood burner
Homestead Real tv Boker 30.4
G75 5540
Duplex 3t>edrooms oat h up
star s I v ng roo m d n ng oom
iu chen lrrst floor tu ll basemen t
lurnace heat Depos1t & relerenc
OS $3001mo 304 675-1180
rw
n AYes Towe now accept ng
applcarons lor tb HUD subsd
zed apr for e derly and han d
capped EOH 304-675-6679
450
New Roomy 2 Bedrooms 1 Bath
Apartmenls Alt Elec t c Near
Porter $3251Mo Oepo s t Refer
ences 614 24 55114
69B 7244
FINANCIAL
Business
Opportunity
210
NOTICE
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
eco mmends tha you do bus
ness w th people you know and
NOT to send money through the
ma I unt you have nves t gated
the oler ng
Seven com house hree be d
ooms upsta s w h bath l ull
t>asemen1 $250 ma pus utI r es
$20 0 depos t Fo nlo mat on call
Pomeroy Fooa ShOp 614 992
5552 9a m 3pm ask lor Frances
Show n by appo ntment on y
MERCHANDISE
510
son Jo hnson R dge area reward
614 949 2544
Unlurn shed two bedroom house
n ce and clean depo s t requ red
no ns1de pets 61.4 992 3090
Yard Sale
Wa shers dryers re1 r ger ator s
ranges Skag gs Appl a nces 76
V neS t ee t Ca ll 614 446 739 8
All Ya d Sa es Mu st Be Pad In
Adva nce DEADLIN E 2 00 p m
tne day before the ad s to un
Sunday edt on 2 00 p m Fr day
Mo nday edt on
0 00 am Sat
urday
th s newspaper s subject to
the Federal FaJr Housing Act
ol1969 whicl'l makes It Illegal
to advert1se any preference
I mltatlon or d scrim1nat1on
based on race color reiiQIOn
sex fam1l1al sta tus or nat1onal
origin or any Intention to
make any such preference
ltmttation or d scnm1nat10n "
A I Vard Sales M ust Be Pad In
Advance Oea dl ne 1 OOpm the
day Defore tn e ad s ro run Sun
day ed ron 1 OOpm Fr day Man
aay ed ron 10 ooa m Saturday
PubliC Sale
and Auction
Auct ons every Fr day SaturdCly
7pm Mt AI o Au ct on Rt 2 33
Crossroad s New merchand .. e
grocer es a o1s moe Eo Frazer
930
Ch r stmas Sales sta 1 ng 11 16
95 at Hartle d Commun ty Bu 10
ng Come and do you Ch stmas
5tlopp n9 Au c onee Ho'lfa o
Beasley 1470
Mature respon s tlle adut to ca re
lor sen or ctt ze n n hrs home
Room tJoard and sala r y For
moe no mat on ca ll61 4 367
7727
Th1s newspaper Will not
knowhngly accept
advertisements lor real estate
which IS 1n v Cllai!On olthe law
Our readers are hereby
mlormoct thai all dwellings
advertised mthts newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity baSIS
REAL ESTATE
R ck Pear son Au ct on Company
full 1 me auctioneer co n pl ete
auct on
serv ce
L c ens ed
t9B1 3 Bedooms Eectrc Fu r
na ce Atso Equ pped For Wood
t>ur ner $4 900 6 4 379 9447
6 14 379 2435
1166 Oho & West V gna 304
773 57850r 304 773 544 7
Wanted to Buy
90
, 800 499 3499
GOODWILL STORE
DONATION CENTER
Ba gen s Brand Names
l ow Pr ces Pont Pleasant Foe
dland Plaza Open Da y 304 675
4460
Atl real estate advertising In
Pomeroy
Middleport
& VICinity
80
Mobile Homes
for Rent
3 bed oom turn shed good clean
cond ton porch yar d sem pr
vare lot above New Haven Rt33
$2fi0 mo 304 862 2466 anyume
LAYNE S FURNITURE
Compere home furn i Sh ng s
Hou rs Man Sat 9 5 6t4 .446
0322 3 m les out B ulav rl e P ke
Free Oelrvery
2be droo m mob le 110me Broad
Run Rd near New ti aven $2401
mo plusdeposH 304 77'3 SBBI
Mollohan Carpets At 7 N 614
446 7444 For Ca pet & V nyl
:----'----_:_:..:___ I Needs
2bedr o om $ 275 mo Ga l l po l s
Fe ry 304 6 75 7552
-----:-:-----SWAIN
AUCTION & FURNI TURE 62
01 ve St Gall pols New & Used
turn l ure hea ters Wes e n &
Workboot s 6144463t59
Glenwood tOm n lrom At 2 1990
3 bed oom 2 bath mob le hom e
ace and ctywmer $350plus
deocs 1 304 562 5840
Small 2bedroom M ddleport OH
References & socu ty depos 1 re
QU red 304 662 3267
Waterbed super smg e acces
sodcs rnc uded $150 304 456
1775
Tw'o and thr ee tledroom mob le
homes start ng a t $240 $300
sewer water ana tra sh ncluded
614 949 2167
440
WhHipoo l Washe r $150 Cut To
$95 3 To Choo se From Wh rl
pool Dryer Was $95 Cut $75 3 To
Choos9 From Kenmore Electnc
Range Was $125 Cut To $95 90
Day Wa rra n!y Freezer Upnght
$150 Freezer Chest Type $150
Skaggs Appl ances 25 Years In
Bus ne ss Serv ng You t 76 V ne
Street, Gall pohs 614 446 7398
Apartments
lor Rent
3 B<>droo m Br ck In Gall pols
laundry J=loom Fu I Basement
Carpo n Storage Room Sunse t
Or ve lmm ed ate Pos sess on
6 14 446 9523 614 446 1443
Ant ques co llectable s es ares
Av e ne Ant ques Russ Moo e
owner 614 992 2526
C lean la le Model Cars Or
Trucks 1987 Mode ls 0 Newe
Sm th Buck Ponl ac 1900 East
ern AYenue Gal po s
520
3be dr com house 5ac, es land
c rt y water new sep t c
Model 70 W nchester BDM With
A 4 ~12 Srmmons Scope $525
304 675 77B5
614 379 2677
30 06 Ruger 77 n
7mm rr<19 304 882 2457
Rem ngton 760
J & D s Auto Pan s Buy ng sa l
vage veh c es Sel ng pa 1s 304
773 5033
3bedrcom on e ba lh house w
2 t4acres 25m les our Sand hi ll
Rd 304-675 5171
Three bedroom ho me rn country
Whites H II Act Rutland one balh
n ground pool 614 992 506 7
Wanted To Buy Junk AulD s W n
Or W thout M01crs Call larry
LIVely 614 38B 9303
Wanted To Buy l tile T kes To~s
61.4 245-588 7
Three Bedroom 1 Bath Home On
Ftve Acres In Nonhup Severa l
Ou 1bu ld ngs Garden Spot 6t4
446 7812 6t4 .446 6833 A sk ng
$45 000
no o le s Wa n1ed
M n mu n 5
Years E•l'e ence In Aesrdent al
ReRoof ng Requ ed Relerences
A t.1 us1 Call fi\4 446 4514 Men
Fr tlA M fo::~ PM
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110
$200 $900 weeki y Yea au nd
posrlrons H 1 ng men wom e n
Fee room boa d W U tra n Ca ll
24hrs
40 7 S75 2022
eA t
0505C 43
AN Cl n ca l Superv sor M n
n um 2 Years Ho me Heath Ex
per ence Manageme nt & Cr t cal
Ca e Exper ence A Pus FT Po
stan
StaU! Tes ted N urs e s A des
Pe sonal Car e & Sr att ng Pa s
1ons
Occ upat onat Therap s1 Con
r acte<l Se IVCe Fo Home V s ts
Ame Ca e Hone Ca e Is A Ful
Se v ce
JCAHO Ace eO ted
Agency Serv ng Jackson P ke
Sc 010 Lawrence Gall a & V nton
Co um e~ Pre m un Sala y B. Full
Bene! I Package To PT & FT Em
piO)Iees Apply At 73 East Ma n
Streat Jac kson Oh1 0 In The
Evans Cente 8 4 M F
AVON CHRISTMASSALE S
Earn SB S15 Hr A1 Work Home
D1scounts1 No 1n11en ory Or Door
Door tnd !Rep 1 BOO 742 .4 738
Tne Ga I a County Farm Serv ce
Agency Is Acce ptr ng Appll ca
1 ons For A Tempora r r l nte r m1 t
em Prog am Ass srant Mus t Be
Able To Perlorm Cler ca t And
Compu te Act v t es Te m Back
g ound Helpful Grade 01 Th s Po
s ton lA Be Determ ned B~ Ex
pe r ence 0 1 App can App ca
en s Are B e ng Accepted
Th ou9h December 1 1995 At
Tt e FSA 011 ce In The C H Me
Kenz e Agr cutural Ce nter t1 1
Jackson P ke Rm 1572 Gall po
I s Oh10 Phone 614 446 8686
Applt can s W I Be Cons dered
W thou 1 D scr m nat on Because
Of Race Color Rei g on National
Or g n Sex Age Poll cal All ha
lion Physrcal Or Montal D1sab lty
Mar tal Sta tus Or Other Nonmer t
Fac ors FSA I s An Equ al Em
ptoyment Opporlun ty Employer
Wanted Ro ck And Rol Bass
Playe r Ve y Versa ! le Sero us In
qu res Only 614 367 0613 614
446 6160
180
Wanted To Do
24 Hour Care For Elderly O r
Hand capped Per son In Pr vate
State l censed Home 6 14 44 1
0000
B&by s 11 ng
In
Mr Hom e
Chesh re Area 6t4 367 7849
Do you need HELP decoral ng &
clean ng for th e hoi days? Ca ll
614 992 2335
Georges Portable Sawmrll don t
tlaul your og s 10 the m1ll JUSt call
304 675 1957
MagiC Years Daycare Preschool
M F 7 30 5 30 State lrcens&d
reasonable rates nclu d ng L.nk
qualty care dependable car ng
staff Le t your cl"lld expenence a
fantast c daycare w th tender lev
nQ care 1•yr exper~~nce 30<4
675 5847
work All areas 304 682 264 5 1
Profess onal Tree Serv ce Com
ptete Tree Care Bucket Truck
Se v ce 50 F t Reacl'l Stump Re
moval
Free Esttmatesl In
s~rance 24 Hr Emergency Serv
•ce Call And Savel No Tree Too
B 9 Or Too Small! B dwell Ohto
800 992 6356 INDIREP
614 JaB 9643 614 367 701 0
AVON Chrstmas $8 St5 1Hr
Door To Door No M n mum
t 800 927 <~640
der 18 Vrs
IsiS /rep
AVON EARN US al horne·il1l
Sporting
Goods
320
Mobile Homes
for Sale
t9 B6 Danv lie Mob le Home
1.4•70 2 Bed oom s 2 Bath s C e
Alter 4 00 PM 614 446 3956
530
1t24 E Man Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to 6 00 pm Sunday 100 to
600 pm 61.4 992 2526
35 WEST
540
Buv or sell Rtvenn e Anuques
2 BR URICK TOWN
Miscellaneous
Merchandise
19 Pan as on•c TV almost new
1978 Monte Carlo 1986 Kawa
sak t85 -4 wheeler utI ty type
One pew new Car hart cove alts
304 458 1541 alter 6pm
Amana S de By S de RelnQerator
tAa ytag Wa she r D r yer Pau 22
Cu Ft "'hest Freezer Sanyo M•
c owave Dryer Calor TV 8 14
256 123B
755 5885
Country S de Apartment l arge t
Bedroom $325/Mo Depos 1 513
ssu m Trot Road W th
R eady To Move On No
Contracls $18 000 6 14 388
8918
35acres woods pasturf'S county
water 114m te of! At 2 12m tram
Pt P leasan t $25 000 304 882
3775
Wah l To Purchas e Older Home
Or Bur d ng lor In 0 Near Gall
potr s 304 273 2940 30.4 273
0136 Airel'S
Frve acres
aerator
nea r
Rae ne1 16 000 can f nance with
hall down 614 9.40 2025
Scen 1c Valley Apple Grove
beauttlul 2ac lot s public water
Cl~
Bowen J• 304 576 2336
RENTALS
Ex raN ce 2 BR AU Etec Furn
K 1 Close To Spr ng Valley A ea
No Pe s $355/Mo + 0 D
Re f
614 448-6 15 7 AI e 5 PM
Rem1nQ1on B70 W1ngma ster 12
gauge $259 Re m ngton B 70
W ngmaster 16 gauge $249
Remtngton 870 Express 20
gauge $225 Steven s 30 30
$129 Remtngton 742 Woodmas
ter 243 automattc S359 New Ha
ven 12 gauge pump slug barrel
$t.tl9 Mossberg 12 gauge pump
slug barrel $169 RuQer GP100
sta nless 6 barrel 357 Magnum
$339 Auger Secur ty S • 6 barrel
357 MaQnum S210 TaurUs 6
barrel 357 Magnum
S t89
DaYe s Swap Shop 8129 SA 7
Sam Somervrlle s regular Army
camouflage by Sandyv11te Post
Olftce noon 6pm Fr Sun 304
273 5655 Jun o r s zes Free De
hwry Pt Pleasam
Sears natural gas vented heater
K ng wood/coal heater wlblower
Rem 700BDl 7mm mag uf e
Cha 1n saw Gas snow bow e r
Upr ght a r compressor 6hp 60gal
tan k Plast iC 4 Sgat ke rose ne
c ans Metal S5gal kerosene
drum Savage pump 30 30 deer
nile Savage bolt 30 06 w1scope
SKS nile wired starr sc op e &
mount 304-6 75-7163
SorghlJm mol a sses
quarts 304-675-587 1
P nt s
&
STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Upr ght Ron Evans Enterpr ses
Jackson Oh o I 600 537 952B
Square bales $ \ $2 Round ba ll'S
$15ea 304 675 3960
Straw 304 675 SOB6
TRANSPORTATION
710
Autos lor Sale
89 Thunae1b rd SC IWO door 3 B
hire V 6 el le model tur bo PS
PB AC 5 speed powe1 sea s
and leeks $ 7300 neg 6 4 992
7478 or6 14 9.49 2B79
1972 Mo nre C 1 o
355 P S pb au!O new t es &
brakes e~c cond $:1 500 304
576 2797
197B Chevy Vega srat on wagon
shar p bla ck new whee s 350
s ma ll block $3 650 304 675
2457
Meta l Roof ng & Sang Geo TeK
tie Fabr c Fo r Or veways & E1c
Typar For House Cove 0 Tem
porary Storage C o11 e
All ze
FarmSuppl~ 614 245-5193
560
Pets for Sale
Groom Sho p P9t Groom ng Fea
tur ng Hydro Bath Ju te Webb
Call614 446 0231
7mos old Rottwe1ter female had
shots 1100 304 675 6046
OBO 304 675 8B70
1984 Butck Regal V 6 R uns
Good $650 1986 Aud 4 Cy l nder
S 200 1985 Saab 4 Cyl nde r
$ 000 614 388 8970
S ze $2 500 DBO Nice 1980
5320
19 85 Olds Toronado $ 1 500 Ne
got able Oa k Blu e Good Car
6t 4 446 8605
19B6 Came o low t.A leage T
Top s Automat c Excellen t Cond
t on 614 446-4053
1986 Volkswagen Jena ps pb
ac 4doo 1800 080 304 895
3557
19B7 Camara w ne colo T 1ops
bla ck louvers on back w ndow
$2 000 304 773 6176
B g beaut lui AKC Chow PlJPP es
only one blue and on e black fe
male left $200 614 992 757.4
eo
Cr~evy
Cava e 5 Spd Tnt
W ndow s Alum nu m R ms
$3 400 OBO 614 388 B57S
2003
t991 Rocke t Chass s 1ace car all
new n 91 W lwood bes t of eve
ry1t1 ng weld lhree wheets ures
Neat pedals fuel cell on board
Ire sys em rot ng chass s ~5800
neg C all Sea l! Wolle 6 4 949
2879 6 14 9.119 20 .45 or 614 992
6 193
M1mature Prnchers 2fe males
8wks old choc tan AKC Reg
has shots & wormed
Ia Is
1991 Town Ca Black W lh Grey
Inter o W l h Conve 1t able To p
Immaculate 49 5K M tes $15 750
6 14 446 .4880
Chustmas lay a way Spec 1a11
55ga tank & hood sg9 F s h
Tank & Pe t Shop 24 13 Jack son
Ave Pont Pleasant 304 675
bobll<!d $250 304 675 7826
H Elfec ency l P: Or Natural Gas
92% Furnaces 100.,000 BTU 1
BOO 287 6308
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Aepalfed New & Aebu1U In Stock
Ca I Ron Evans 1 EWJO 537 9528
KILL RATS AND MICE I
ENFORCER® ra1 and mouse ktll
ers are GUARANTEED! Ava 1
able a1
CENTRAL SUPPLY
0 DELL TRUE VALUE LUMBER
N ce cle a n ground flo or 2bed
room WJO hookup Oepos1t Rei
New Woodburn ng S tove Cast
Iron Brr ck l1ned Sold By Sears
New In S tore $450 Puce 1275
e<ences No pets 304 675-5182
614 448 3664 Ahe< 5 P.t.l
N ce one bedroom apanment lor
rent n Pt Pleasant 614 992
Old sword & case ma(je by Petti
bone Co 1n Cnc.nnau Oho fan
_5B_se
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __, cy en1J8Ved A 1 614 992 2563
OBO 614 379 2726
1992 Dodge Shadow 4 Door
Rat Temer puppes lull blooded
Au1o AJC 39 000 M les $4 500
OB0614 379 2726
no paper~ ISO 304 B82 3340
Regtstered We1maraner pupptes
304 675 7740
Musical
Instruments
2883
1992 Dodge Stmaow ES 2 Door 5
Speed AIC V 6 sg 000 M les
$5 800 OBO 614 742 2792
1993 Couga )( R 7 Loaaeo One
Owner l kl? New Cond ton
39 000 Easy M e::; $11 900 6\4
4.46 8026 Or 304 675 53.49
1993 Pymouth Sundance 4 Doo r
Auto AIC 32 000 M les $4 900
OB0614 379 2726
1994 Chevy Z 71
34 OOOm
loaded $17500 304 675- 7362
'
610 Farm Equipment
Ag ee AIrs
tractor s wl wortd
famous atr coo ted d eset eng nas
4yr dt~v e tra n warran y Eumple
4660 4WD 52hp fully loaded w16 g
I nan c ng d scount to r cash
$20 SOD 00 Keefer Servrce Cen
ter St Rt 87 leon WV 30• B95
3874
1994 Ford Mu stang GT loaded
low M les E~~:cellent Cond ton
Call Be!W99n The Hours Of 6 00
900 S14 441 1879
1995 Toyota Camr1 Le a r auto
c ruse am lm casselte pw pi
gold trtm 13 DOOm must sell
304 675 6047
Auto Loans Dealer wIt arrangl? 1
nanc ng eYen ! you havP b ee n
turn ed down else where Upton
Eq u pment Used Cars 304 458
1069
Buy Two For One Pr ce 1983
Po nt 6000 1985 Pon1 6000 614
Vans
& 4-WDs
1979 Bro nco 4K4 35 t automate
runs goo d good t res StBOO
tlto< 992 3016
BARNEY
1982 lull s ze Bronco 4x4 30 ~
au tomat c 1uns good $2200 614
1984 Ford Bronco 4x4 New Molqr
Many New Parts 6t4 4.46 .4217
POLE BUILDING SPECIAL
30 X40 X9 Pam ted Steel S des
Ga~aluiT'A S.,.l Roof 15 x8' S1eel
1979 Bronco $t000 lrr m need s
back glass m1nor body work 304
8953038
800 352 1045
1984 Ford F 250 v 8 au1omat1c
shd.ng back w ndow runntng
boards bedra Is looks and runs
Livestock
2 Ouatter Horse Mares 2 Walk
ers61<4 4<46-4110
Club calves lor aate four way
cro11brtd L mol Angu s Chat
Stmm Make elu; ellen 1 <4 H FFA
pro,ecls (reasonably priced)
304 372 5Qg7
real good $1995 614 247 4292
1965 Ford Escort Runs Good
1988 Bronco XlT 4l4 All Power
61.4 44 6 831 3
1988 Ford F t 50 4K4 EnendQII
Cab Al l Opt ens 106 000 M l es
Excel lent Sha pe $8 SOO 614
OUR TEACHER WANT5 ME TO
TAKE YOU TO THE PRINCIPAL
446 0213
1989 GI.IC 4x4 AC PS Bl ack
304 675 2679
I NOTICED S~E ~AD
DI~~ICULW PRONOUNCIN6
'L~610N ~TRAN6~~.E''
PROBA6LY KNOWS VER'f
t990 Dodge Ram Van B 250
LITTLE FI{ENCH
Seen At Ga ll pol s Da ly Tr bune
82 5 Th rd Avenue Galhpohs
ono
1992 Fa d F tSO custom 4x4 V6
au o 71 OOOm
e~~:c
cond
94 Fo d Aorostar XLT van 7
pass extended tuny loaded twO
tone pant alum num whee l s.
14 000 m11es $16 99S 614 992
2405 senous cans on y
740
Motorcycles
~
{fD
~
Tttt,t viAS A YOuNG POET I'IAMfl> tiEINZ
Wt'fOSt POEMS t-fAI> ONLY TvJO Lll'ltS.
1985 Honda Big Red Shalt DriVen.
Rev e se l ke New Mu s t Seel
$11506t43670239
1995 Waiver ne 350 $4 000 61 4
256 12B8
tt
Ffm ,
750 Boats & Motors
for Sale
1993 20 1 Pro XL 20 Stru lOS
tJa ss boat 200 XPHP 6t4 66 7
73.47o 6149492879 ,
Auto Parts &
Accessories
Budge t TransmiSSIOns Used &
Rebu II All Types Access1ble To
Over 10 000 Tran smiSS IOn Also
Parts Clutches & Pr ess ure
Plates 6 1.tl 379 2935
mark
36
37
39
41
Modern lebtlc
Liberty
Actor Peter Guido a high
t Fumblers cry
2 Slight quarrel
3 Weary
4 -Vegaa
5 WWIIarea
6 Melt down (let)
7 Tea type
8 Mra , In Madrtd
9 Small rug
10 Of hearing
organa
11 Taboo Item
19 D•ssentrng
vote
12 Type of race
21 Play
segments
22 Snuggle
23 Sprtng
holiday
24 Responsl
bllilles
25 Shark
26 Ratse
27 Scandinavian
god
29 Narraled
30 Church
~
Pass
Pass
Pass
1 ""
2•
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
calendar
Learn about
Australia
31 Appear
37 Orlando s st
38 Do a
cobbler s 10ll
40 Tttled ones
41 Long times
42 Mortgage
43 Wings
45 Btrd
By Phtlhp Alder
46 And
47 Lemony
Q
BORN LOSER
""A..ND TO!'-IK,ffi5 W£/\11-\61- FOR£ "" 1'1-\1005 IN THE: &l5 LOW~ IN -,
ffi£ TE£1'\~ 1-J ITfl. Clfn- 5KJ(~
J6T FOR~ VIC-WI!'(, NZ£A
N>ID A. 100 'lo CI·INKE: OF
~F~
~
I'
lOC~L F~~T5 OONI /M~
MlJ(J1 ~
STh.T ION!:>
w em.£ ~12.
All lhe maJor mdustrtallzed - and
many umndustna ltzed - countnes
have mternattonal bndge teams But
when you factor m the population of the
country few have been as successful as
Au stralia Its teams have won several
Far East Champtonshtps and have nev
er been a pushover m World
Champtonshtps
If you would ltke t o l ea rn about
brtdge m Oz from 1930 to !990 buy
Cathy Chua s mter estmg book The
Htstory of Australian Brtdge 1$22 95
postpatd 800-525 47181
Chua has r epresented Australia at
bndge and chess She found th e
key defenstve play tn today s deal
Agatnst four spades Wesl led the dt
amend queen After wmnmg w1th th e
ace how dt d Chua contmue the de
fense•
At another tabl e South was Ttm
Seres Australia s best ever player
There th e defend er st ttmg East
swttched to the heart two Seres played
lo" from hand and couldn t be defeat
ed Aller drawmg trumps and unblock
mg the club king Seres ruffed hts dta
mond 10 to get tnto the dummy and
dtscarded hts second low heart on dum
my s club ace Seres had only three
losers two hearts and one diamond
Chua swttched to the heart]OCk Now
dec larer couldn t avotd losmg three
heart tncks and wa s one down before
he had started
Walch for the ftrst hand htgh lead
when you have no chance to play the
sutt through th e declarer lor dummy! a
second t1me
Phl!lli~
Alders book Get Smarter
' IS available auto
l!11raphed upon request for $14 95
I
~PITA.TII_:Ct-~~:-.J.:::V:iii.
P 0 Box 169 Roslyn Hts NY
77 0169
New gas tanks one ton t uc k
wheels rad ators lloor mats etc
D & R Auto R pley WV 304 372
3933 0
,
790
Campers &
Motor Homes
contraction
52 Gender
53 Female
soldter (abbr
by Luis Campos
CeletJricy C~~~tograms 818 CIO&ted from QUO!atoos Oy lamous p pia p;~ s <l r'l rJ p 0 ~ 0
ner n the crptle stands !o allOihe Tooa)l s c p K equ 1 ~ H
BMM
0
2KFBBDB
FCXNPG
I t1EAN C.OtJ5ti>ER.IN(:,
HOW B"UTAL IT WAS,
r DEFINITE.L'(
C.OULDN T HAVE
DONE AN'( BElTER
A LOT OF
Home
Improvements
KID~
, I REALLY
DID THE BEST
I COULl)
I 11 PROUD
OF MY
EFfORT
.SAID
THEY
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
0
IX
FB
Z F C C H
0 p
F
ZEFBBH
H X N C
0 D P G
BHERMBIM C
BIFEEXPM
PREVIOUS SOLUT ION
Shakespeare
Netth er a borrower no a tend o• be
Lack of money ts the root of all ev1l " -
George Bernard S haw
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As a you th I found tt dtfftc ull
to dectde on a caree r A col
lege counse lor told me ttt at tl
wa s best nollo do what you ltke
you
the
chu ck le qu oted
(614) 446 0670 0• (614 ) 237
0488 Rogers Wa e pool ng Es
tab! shed 1975
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
0
THOUGHT
IT ~A".:> Tf-IE
TOUGHEST
TE.ST OF
THE "tEAR'
Uncond Ilona I lie me guarant ee
local references !urn shed Ca 1
Effect Rusty Image Unpack PUT I T
STRIKE ABLOWN Tl-£ \WI ON
I know for sure that I cant have everythtng In th e t1rst
place I have no where to PUT IT'
HIGH PRICES SHOP TI-E. CLASSffDS_
Appl ance Parts And Serv ce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years EK
per renee A I Work Guarantee~
French C tr May 1ag 6t4 446t
7795
:
Btl Orr ck s Home lmpro\lement s.
add 1101 s remodel ng oo lmg'
Sldrng plumbrng etc lnSlJred ca(l
Bill Orrck 61 4 992 5183
C &C General Home Man
tenence Pamt ng v n~t srdmg
ca1pentry doors w ndows bath s
mob le home repa r and more For
lree es ttmate call Chet 614 992--
6323
DRYWALL
Hang I rnh repa r
Ce1t ngs te~~:tured plasJer repal(.
Call Tom 304 675 4166 20 yea r&
expenence
ASTRO·ORAPH
vtnyl
nterr
roonf
614
lNG 614 992 5041
"
&
Heating
I ;F<.r:::e:erna;::n;:::-~-::H:-:o:-al~tn~g·A~nd:.,.C"o•o•lt•n-g
ln stalla tron Ar.d Sc r~ 1 ce E PA
CeriiNed Residem nt Commerc al
1
614 256 1611
Frtday Nov 17 1995
t
E lectrlcal and
Refrigeration
RSES CERTIFIE~ DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps A Condition ng If
Vou Don I Call Us We Both loser
Free Est mates 1 800 287 6308
1ga5 Ford F 150 1r2 Ton 302 En
Restdent1at or commer<: al w rtng ~"
new oor\llce or repatrs Master lt
censed elec1r1cran Rldtnou ~
Elec1rtcal WV000306 304 675
1786
I
TAURUS (April 2G--May 20) When shop
ptng
lor spectal merchandtse loday don 1
you Mad $2 75 to Malchmaker c/o lhts
tmpulstvely
buy the ltrsl thtng 1hal calches
newspaper P 0 Box 1758 Murray Htll
your eye Try to bargatn tl posSible
Stallon New York NY 10156
SAGrrTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec 21) In an GEMINI (May 21 June 201 Convtnctng
arrangement that requeres a collecttve olhers of the menls of your cause today
effort Ieday make sure your tdeas are m w1ll take sohd presentatton Make sure to
harmony wrth the other person tnvolved do the requtred homework
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You mtght
Untty wtll be essenltal
CAPRICORN (Dec 22--Jan 19) Matnlatn have 10 deal with a person today whom
a sensible schedule regardmg lhe tasks you ve no1 yel forgtven regardtng a pasl
you hope lo accomplish Ieday Do not transgresston Old grudges could sltfle
your collecltve endeavor
beg1n a new chore until an old one has
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Extravaganl
been sallsfactonly completed
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19) The grass spendtng today could wreak havoc on
on lhe olher sode of lhe fence mtghl look your budgel Don 1 waste funds spectlt
greener 10 you loday If you stray from cally earmarl<ed for somelhtng tmportanl
your back yard you may find that thtngs VIRGO (Aug 23--Sept 22) If you pursue
your obJecttves tn a dtsorganlled manner
are lhe same everywhere
PISCES (Feb 20--March 20) Make every you mtghl nol realize your lull potenttal
eflorl loday 10 lollow through on lhe To g1ve yoursen a ftghltng chance plan
prormses you made lo your male If you every move
LIBRA (Sept 23-<let 23) If you re undu
renege you may have dtffteulty eradteal
ly susplctous regardtng lhe mottves of
tng lhe til wtll you have creatO!I
ARIES (March 21 April 19) Today you olhers Ieday you mtghl ftnd somelhlng
mtghl lhtnk you II have adequate lnne for that would dtslress you even ff your eval
work and play but the clock may prove uattons are erroneous
you wrong
wh1ch srgns are romanttcally p e rfect lor
Ron s TV Se r"1' 1ce spec1at zmg n
Zen lh atso se rv 1cmg most other
brands House calls 1 BOO 797
840
Y X G H
PRINT NUMBERED LETTE RS IN
THESE SQUARES
SERVICES
Plumbing
F
.
.
.
.
•
•
by f IJ r g n lhe m ss g wo ds
L-...JI---l--'--.L-- L-.J you develop f o m step f-l o J belo w
614 992 3016
Earls Home Mamtenance
s1dmg roo! ng ex1enor and
or pa ntmg power washmg
add tons Free Est 1mates
992 4451
I
CELEBRITY CIPHER
I
10
shde rn ca mpe r n1cely
equ pped good cond ton $650
810
49 Rage
so Poellc
y ET0AS
but to ltke
~-..,,~..::,.,_:..,:,5_:..:,,6....::.-.-,---1 G) Comp e 1c
800 273 9329
614 446-6308 W'/ 0029 45
256-6314
35 Pronunciation
DOWN
drtnks
Red & Wh 10 9BK GC $7 BOO
$600 6, 4-448 6958
gme Auto Overdrtva PS & PB
Good Tires Run s Great ! 61_.
., 0 9 5
Opemng l ead •
$3 500 61< 446 9278
S1950 614 247 4292
Sl der 3 Man Door $8 444'
ERECTED Iron Horse Budders 1
630
MAW If .BACK TH' OL'
CONVEitTIBLE dUT OF
TH' BARN AN' LET'S
HEAD FER TOWN
1987 Che vy A stra Van Great
Ccn d hon loaded Towtng PKb
Roo! ng and gutter s commerc 1al
and res den rat m nor repa rs 35
yea rs eKpe ence B&B ROOF ,.
19 78 Che.y 4WD p ""P good
tA76 43
51 LH Harvey 54 Approached
55 Confederation
56 Shows acorn
57 Surplus
e nclosure
720 Trucks for Sale
h res and dr ve t ne runs 9 rea t
rwo new fenders $1550 neg 614
992 7478 0161-4 9.4 ..J 2879
QJ 8 '
Q B 74 2
1•
4•
19B5 s 10 Btazet Great Shape
$2 000 614 367 7902
Equtpmen1 304 675 7421 or 1
800 277 3917
• J 4 2
48 Grnlier
$4 eoo 6 1.4 256 930 E.verangs.
0015 wv 304 576 2398
HusQvarna ch atn saws now on
sate thru November S1 der s
AJ i
A Q tO
8110
45 Numbera pro
Vulnerable East Wesl
Dealer Wes l
South
West North East
1977 Ford 4 WD Ne eds Work
$1800 OB06t4 446 74t1
367 7440
t957 Ford V 6 au toma t c tour
door dua l exhau st blue and
wh !e looks an d run s real good
83
E:X~I2C15£
t K I0
loK
All s Chambers C Tractor Plow
Cu l trva tor Mow.ng Ma ch1 ne
Combme Pul Typ e Pr rce d For
614 44B 630B
Duct Systems And A r Cond taon
ers Free Estunates.
t992 Dodge Shadow 2 Door
Auto AIC 49 000 M les $4 60 0
pers & podtgree 614 867 3404
FARM SUPPLIES
& LIVESTOCK
Mode n 2 Bedroom Apartmem
Cen ral Heat & A r 2 Blocks F10m
Downtown $295/ Mo + Oepos 1
614 446 2300
730
760
1991
&TTEI2.
EAST
11-\P.t.J JCIDII0G
72 000 M tes $6 000 Can Be
AKC German Shepherd pupp es
hrs1 shots & wo med 3 femal es
304 675 6639
AKC Male Beagle 18 Months Old
A so Fema le Beagl e E xce 11e nr
Rabbit Dogs 614 388-84.4 7
P.,
Red lntenor New Tues $6 200
1983 Bu tck Skylark 2 Door On
ven Daly Runs Good $425
F~T RUJIJIU3 IS
lHAT
j
SOUTH
aKI08 5 4 2
•K 8 6
992 3016
Runs Good If Interested Call B
AM
1 PM A sk For Donald
614 386-8560
Electr c ~ange Unused Stationary
l ke Ot her Ite m s All In Good
Condton 614 256 6493 Between
1 4 P:M
Fuel 0 I Tanks 250 & 300 Gallon
Capacty 61.4 256 1291
l
Large round bales at hay excel
entconot on $20Dale 614 742
3089 or 6 4 742 3064
19B5 Dodge Omn $BOO OBO
Bundy Suaphone Excellent Con
dton CaiiAI!er 4 PM 614379 -
245 5887
New Roomy 2 Bed rooms 1 Bath
Apartments All Electnc N ea r
Porter S3251Mo Oepos t Reier
ences 61.4 245 5 114
Hay & Grain
640
IT WI LL~~~~
IIJ Rl.ITIC.S
1994 Chevy S lverado lulls ze
sn o rl bed VB au to low m1les
b gh teal metal\ c t nted wmdows
a r am fm casse tte axe cond
must see to apprec1ats 614 446
67S31eave message ~ not home
550
Concrete & Plasuc Sepu c Tanks
300 Thru 2 ODD Gal lons Ron
Ev ans Enterpr ses Jackson OH
Fodder Shocks $2 Each And In
dan Co rn F ve Fo r $1 00 614
N 3rd Ave M ddlepott 1bed
room lur nrshed Oepos 1 & refer
ences :J>4 882 2566
Pant Mae Pony Saddle Brok e
61 4 446 8981
7 5 3
• 9
lo A J 6
t993 Ford Ra nger XLT ere
cond $7 600 304 773 S909 or
304 .458 1771 alter 5 30pm
1993 Jeep Gra nd Cherokee Lar
edo all opt•ons V8 $22 000 304
675 4297 alter 6pm
570
G ac ous I " ng 1 and 2 t>edrOO.(fl
apartments a1 llage Manor ar1d
Rwers de Apartments 1n M ddte
pan From $232 $355 Ca ll 6t4
992 5064 EQual Hous ng Oppor
tun tres
v
Hawks Ho1se St oe n9 And
Blacksm th ng Cert t ed Ma ster
Ferrer Hoi 8 Cold Therap eu l c
614 2.45-5796
A Q 9 6
• tl
l ke New 198 8 VW Fo x AIC
71 ooo M es 1988 Cutlass Su
p erne S l FW O Cook M otors
6 14 4.46 0103
Ford Van $800 080
Two
Cheapo s Uno er $300 6 4 24 5
Building
Supplies
I I 16 95
a
1991 S 10 Taho V6 Pck Up
Wa m Morntng Wood Stove For
Sale 614 245 5090
BOO 935 9999 ext 65B9 Mon Sa1
F u n she d 2 Rooms & Bath
Downsta s Utlt e s Fu n shed
Clean No Pet s Re tere nce De
postReQured 61 4.4.461 5 19
s5000 304 675 61>38
$, 0 500 304 B95 3685
Trio Of Jnd1a Blue Pea Fow 3
Yea r Old Uale 2 Two Year Old
Females $tOO 614 388 8879
Electr c Wheetcha~rs /S cooters
New Used Scooter ! Wheelchair
l h s Sla rway Elevators l•ft
Cha r s Bowman s Homecare
614 446 7283
Fun shed 2 Bedroom Apartment
Ac oss From Park AC No Pet s
Rete ences Depo s t $3501Mo
614 .446 B235 61.4 .tl46 0577
1989 4 WD Ford New Jasper En
g ne S II Under Warra nty 814
.446 41 10
t966 Chevy S1verado <4K4 short
1965 Chev Celebr ty Clean N ce
$975 1984 Fo1d Sta nco 4K4 Full
1 BOO 53 7 9528
410 Houses lor Rent
2bedroom at 1 77 N Pa rk Dr
$3251mo References depos1t no
pets 304 675 2749
E-=.:::::::.::..:..::::.:.:::..::___
9am tOpm
922 0294
For Sale Or l e<~se 5 000 Sq Ft
Commerc al Bu ld ng On State Ao
ute 93 In Oak H 11 Forme ty
Know n As H 9hway Res aura nt
Large Cu stomer Parkmg lot Call
.4 682 3199 Alter 6 PM
Relr gerators Stoves Washer s
And Dryers All Recondmon ed
And Gauranteedt S100 And Up
W11t Delver 614 669 644 1
BAHAMA CRUISE' 5 dayS/4
n ghts Underbco~ed Must Sell I
$279 couple l m1ted t ckets 1
Bustness and
Buildings
304 675-3087(Sand<a)
Poodles toys a l so m nature
Schnauzers
AKC champion
blood I nes shots & wormed pa
Pr ce Bus i er* New t4 x70 2 or
3br Ony $995 down $t95Jmon h
Free delrve 1y & setu p Only at
Oakwood Homes N tro WV 304
340
$55 Full s ze Futon bed w black
mattres s (converts from so la to
bed) $150 6x9 bathroom carpet
never used spruce green $60
$95 304 895 3554
Fu n shed Apartment 1 Bedroom
$275/Mo U It es Pad 607 Sec
ond AYe nue Call po s 614 446
44 6Aiter7PM
Fa t hogs and baby p gs tor sa le
614 949-290B Of 614 949 2017
Antiques
2t:>Orm apts tot al e ectr c ap
pi ances !urn shed laund ry oom
lac J t es close to ~choo
own
Appl cat on s a>Ja Iable a vII age
GreenAps lf49o ca l6 14992
37 t l EOH
H OUSES
t261 Jac kson P ke
Ac ass From C nen a $295 Mo
Oep Fo1 A en a Appl ca t ons Cal l
6t 4 446 0957 6 4 44 6 0006
6t4 4.41 1616 Or Wrte PO Box
99.4 Galhpol s OH 4563 1
bed
Papa san char w cush on &. frame
VI RA FURNITURE
614 44() 315B
Qual ty Household Furn ture And
Appl ances Great Dea ls On
Cash And Carry RENT 2 OWN
And l ayaway Al so Ava laDle
Free De very W th n 25 M tes
3 Bred Ewes Due To Lamb F rst
Of Ma rch 2 Purebred Sullo k
Rams 614 4.46 6566
304675 4084
GOOD USE D APPLIANCES S450 304 675 151l8
t 4x70 2 Bedroom s 2 Baths Wa
ter Sewer & Ga ba9e Fu n sned
Oepos R eQu red Reference
614 446 2381 614 446-0268
GallipOliS
& Vicinity
Now m stock chocolate candy
walers & molds Fait Harvest Sale
now n progr ess ce 1 ng pant
$t 0 991gallon Other sav ngs
through out !he store Pant Plus
New locauon 511 Burd e ne St
9 ato rs 90 Day Cua an tee • ~~C:--he:--s~h-tre=-:-:-------
Fr e nch C rv May rag 6l4 446
7795
Rockford losgate punch 00 am
pllrer and kicker SS12 speakers
era tor $325/Month Depos u Ret
erences No Pets 614 4.46 4926
420
Household
Goods
Appl anc es
Aecond uone d
Wa she s Dryers Ranges Refr
Small 2 Bed oom Rear 236 F rst
AYe K tche n w th Stove Re !n9
Lost two female Beagl es Add1
70
Furnished
Rooms
Roans to rent week or mon!h
S!art ng at St201mo Gall a Hotel
614 4<~6 gsao
N1ce clean two bedroom house m
Pomeroy S3501mo plus depos 1
wuh opt on to buy no pets 614
Ea n up to $1 000 week.ty stu !I ng
E:.lo ess Dept 36 tOO E Wh te
stone B '.' C Su to 148 345 Cedar
3bedroom hou se
1 Groom
, 7 Donny and
Marie' 13 Sedative
14 Speaker
t 5 Clergyman
16 Green ruat
17 5aull - Merle
18 Genetic
material (abbr )
20 Gear tooth
21 Acled furtively
25 Supermarkel
28 Care
32 Yellow fever
mosquito
33 Mall unit
34 Pollute
Answer to Prevlou a Puzzle
44 W hemisphere
In lhe year ahead you wtll enlertatn loHt
er amMtons than you have enlertatned tn
lhe past You can accomplish your goals
tf you don 1 attempt loo many thtngs
stmu«aneously
SCORPIO(~ 24--Nov 22) Try to avotd
mantpulaltve acqualnlances Ieday You
mtghl overreact Hthey rub you lhe wrong
way Know where 10 look for romance
and you II hnd your lrue love The Aslro
Graph Matchmaker tnstantly reveals
J
\
•
•
•
•
�Pllge 16 • The Dally Sentinel .
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Simpson lawsuit testimony won't be kept secret
. SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP)
..c.. The public may get to bear OJ.
Simpson tell his side of the story
sooner than he wanted.
· A judge on Wednesday refused
a request by Simpson's lawyer.; to
seal written transcripts of his
upcoming deposition in a wrongful
d<ath lawsuit filed by the families
Of Nicole Brown Simpson and
Ronald Goldman.
Superior Court Judge Allan B.
Haber also said he would allow the
deposition to be videotaped if a
mediator supervises the testimony
tO keep attorneys from becoming
abusive. The mediator would then
take charge of the videotape.
"If there ever was a case that
called for a discovery referee. this
is i~" Haber said.
In his request to seal tlle transcripts, Simpson lawyer Robert C.
Baker argued that releasing them
might taint the case, and that a
videotape could he leaked and
"will be the lead story on the 6
p:m; news."
"We will get a jury pool that
bas made 11p its mind to a degree,"
be said.
Haber replied that he would be
surprised "if there were a great
number left in the county of Los
Angeles who have not formed an
opinion as to the culpability of Mr.
Simpson."
While Simpson has given some
interviews - to The New York
Times and The Associated Press be bas refused to discuss details of
the case. He never testified at his
yearlong trial thai ended Oct. 3 in
his acquittal in the knife slayings of
his ex-wife and Goldman.
He has said !hal he would like to
talk publicly about the case in
detail one day, but not while litiga-
lion is pending.
Simpson bad agreed to a payper-view TV appearance, but that
idea fell flat when cable companies
rebuffed the idea. He then backed
out of a no-holds-barred NBC-TV
interview.
His deposition in the lawsuit
bad been tentatively scheduled for
Dec. 4-6. On Wednesday, Haber
set a firm dale but ordered it kept
secret.
Haber set trial for April 2. A status hearing before another judge
was set for Jan. 18, at which time a
trial judge will be named.
It was unclear when and in what
manner the transcripts would be
made public, including whether
they will be released in complete
form or quoted in sections in court
papers.
"It does not mean we will
release the transcripl," said Daniel
M. Petrocelli, a Goldman family
attorney.
The judge also consolidated
lawsuits against Simpson filed by
Goldman's father and sister, a separate suitl1led by Goldman's mother and a third suit by me estate of
Nicole Brown Simpson.
"If I were not to consolidate the
cases, there is the possibility of
inconsistent verdicts,'' Haber
explained.
The hearing was attended by
Goldman's father and stepmother,
Fred and Patti Goldman, and sister
Kim Goldman. Simpson did not
attend.
"This lawsuit, as I've said
before, is the only opportunity left
for our family to get justice." Fred
Goldman said outside court. He
previously bad said the suit is
designed to strip Simpson of his
wealth and that Goldman would
reject any seUJement offer.
Ram
Pick 4:
5-7-8-8
Buckeye 5:
6-12-34-35-36
Vol. 46, NO. 143
Copyright 1995
"2" 95
LESABRE'S
$1,500 REBATE
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - From alcohol addiction to taXation, Ohio relies on
federal money to help pay for an array of programs. It would not take long
for Washington budget gridlock to crimp the state's bud gel.
State Budget Director R. Gregory Browning said there have been no
problems so far as a result of the stalemate between Congress and President Clinton that bas led to a partial shutdown of the federal government.
''My sense is. if Ibis is resolved this week or next. we should be able lo
manage our way through il without any serious problems," Browning
said in an interview.
Ohio depends on the federal budget for one-fourth of all the money it
spends each year on welfare, education and other programs.
The single-largest arnoun~ $5.5 billion, goes to the Ohio Department
of Human Services. The smallest amount listed in an agency summary of
federal special revenue: $39,862 to the Veterans' Children's Home.
Browning said the federal shutdown might require the state to take
money out of one account instead of another to get through the period, but
the procedure was manageable.
A longer stalemate posed a biggeljlfoblem.
ROADMASTERS
$1 ,500 REBATE
1995 BUICK
LESABRE
Power seat, power
windows, aluminum
wheels, cassette, tilt,
cruise, rear defogger,
balance of 36/36 warranty
$15,995
the fust Meigs countian to serve on
Gerald E. Rought, chief of the ·
the board. The board's objectives
Pomeroy Police Department, bas
are
to enhance efforts in determinfiled his petition to seck the Repubing the direction to be ~ble to offer
lican nomination for Meigs County
viable training programs. He also
sheriff.
serves on the Meigs County Cancer
Rought has been with the
Board.
Pomeroy department since 1983 · ·
A 20-year U.S. Air Force veterand was appointed chief in 1985.
an who served in Vietnam. Rought
He received his. training in Montis a life-time member of the
gomery and Gallia counties.
Pomeroy Drew Webster Post 39 of
He recently attended a 16-hour
the American Legion, the Tuppers
class sponsored by the Ohio Peace
·
Plains
Veterans of Foreign Wars,
Training Council on domestic viothe AMVETS. Sergeant Associat---~in Columbus, setting procetion, Chief of Police Association,
dures for the department, and trainliaison for the Boy Scout Troop
ing the officers in U1e new protocol.
249 and the victims' advocate for
He also attended a two-day seminar
Mothers Against Drunk Driving.
in Dayton on leadership and man:
He resides in Pomeroy with his
agement.
wife,
Ellen Nesselroad Rought.
He initiated the COPS FAST
They
have
three daughters, Gerri
program for the village and was
Miller, Stephannie Mintz and Kelawarded one full-time officer under
lie Snider of North Carolina. and
the grant, bringing his staff to six
GERALD E. ROUGHT
II grandchildren.
full-time and three part-time offiRought said he is seeking the
cers. along with his dispatching officers to school in Columbus, and
two officers attended driving- nomination because he feels he has
staff.
He also initdted the mercbaniS' . under-the-influence classes in Gal- the best experience and qualification for the position of sheriff and
business checks witllin the village, lipolis to better detect DUis.
Rought serves on the Buckeye would like to put that experience to
done at random by officers on each
shift. He initiated the department's Hills Career Peace Officers Advi- work for Meigs County.
training on sex crimes, sending two sory Board in Rio Grande, being
95
CENTURY'S
V-6, overdrive trans, power
windows, tilt, .cruise,
cassette, bal of 36.36
warranty
$12,488
19·92 PARK AVENUE
climate control, leather trim
·1·.. 9·9o.
$
Wanted: Cadet firefighter5 to
serve on volunteer fire depanmenr.
Must be willing to work odd hour5
in all conditions. Serious inquirie5
only.
After a hiatus of several years,
the Pomeroy Volunreer Fire
Department Junior Firefighter Pro-
1'993 f·ORD F150 XLT
~----------------------~
How federal funding is
spent in Buckeye State:
By The Associated l'ress
An estimated $8.5 billion of Ohio's $34.9 billion in toutl income
sources for the currcn1 fiscal year will come from the fe dera l government. Some examples of where the money goes:
• HUMAN SERVICES: $5.4 billion.
• EDUCATION: $S52,million.
• MENTAL RETARDATION: $292 million.
• HEALTH: $270 million.
• EMPLOYMENT SERVICES: $244 million.
• DEVELOPMENTr $228 million.
• MENTAL HEALTH: $197 million.
• REHABILITATION SERVICES: $187 million.
• AGING: $131 million.
of the Year__,
, Meigs County businessman Roscoe MiUs was honored as the
1995 Meigs County Person of the Year at Thursday's Southeastern Ohio Regional Council annual dinner in Athens. Mills,
owner/operator of McDonald's Restaurant of Pomeroy, was
commended by Meigs Chamber of Commerce President Horace
Karr for his active role with area business development, schools
and charities. Mills, left, is seen receiving his award from
SEORC President Bernard Fultz.
gram bas received new life.
Now known as the Cadet Firefighter Program, the program is
designed for young people between
the ages of 16 and 18 who are
interested in serving the community as ftrefighters.
Pomeroy Mayor John W. Blaetmar, himself a fuefigbter, is one of ·
the program's major proponents.
The program was initially started 17 years ago, said Blaettnar.
"It has been a great success in
the community , .. from several
points of view," he explained. "It
was a good recruiting tool for the
tlepartment."
"First, concerning the fire
department, one-third of the present membership in the department
started as junior firefighters," he
pointed out.
"Second, it has permitted the
department to have a positive influence on those young people in the
community who are going through
the program," Blaettner added.
Firefighter Bracy Korn also
strongly endorses the program.
Korn became a junior firefighter
.
II
8 Passenger, auto, AC, tit, aul$e;
power windows, 29,000 IQw mdes
MERCURY
!991 CAPRI CONVERTIBLE
O!lfy 35,000 low lilies, A(, S spHd. IIIHHI, local-.
SUJIII clean, lady .Un WAS 9.900
$7,9
I
•
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
"$2,000 dollar.; a week .. : Mailing postcards from home."
These words listed at the top of
a mailing from a Jackson, Miss.,
company appear almost 100 good to
be blle.
If one reads on in literature from
the company, it states "this program is a powerful money-maker."
Unfortunately, according to the
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney's office, the program appears
to be only a moneymaker for the
company, and a money-loser for
those who fall into its trap.
· The prosecutor's office is investigating an alleged pyramid scam
involving Information Research
Center of Jackson that has already
cost one Meigs resident money that
they may not see again. ,
"We contaCted the Better Business Bureau in Mississippi and
they have no record of a company
·by that name . We. b~ve b~en in
contact with the MISSISSIPPI State
Attorney General's on the matter
and we are both currently cooperating on an investigation," said Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes.
Accordinlll to documents from
the Mississippi company, con-
somers are convinced to become
their own boss by becoming a mail
order entrepreneur.
The company offers wholesale
prices on a collection of books,
manuals, programs, systems,
course, directories and reports on
new business development and
financial matters.
Consumers, after paying a $125
fee to become a "director" in the
company, are !hen asked to help
expand the company's dealership
and book savings network by paying a $29.95 subscription fee per
month with the option of sponsoring other people for the network.
Commissions are tllen paid for
new members sponsored on the
sale of the company's services.
"We attempted to contact the
company by telephone and the
numbers are not in service. This
appears to be a pyramid scam,
which is illegal in the stale of Ohio,
and we are investigating it as that.
We caution residents of the county
that receive information by mail
similar to this to disregard it,
because it probably is not what it
appears to be," added Lentes.
Tbe investigation into the matter
is continuing, Lentes said.
•.
three days after his 16th birtllday .
Now, at 23, he is a second lieutenant in the department.
"I feel it got me more prepared
to be a firefighter," Korn said. "I
knew a lot by the time I became a
regular firefighter."
"It was a major asset to the
department," Korn commented. "If
(Continued on Page 3)
GOP's plan
faces certain
Clinton veto
WASHINGTON (AP) - With
broad sections of the government
closed for a fourth day, Congress is
beginni·ng final debate on the
sweeping Republican plan for balancing the budget and culling
taxes.
In the face of certain veto by
President Clinton. the House
· planned lo approve lhe package
today, with the Senate likely to follow by Saturday morning. The bill,
the cornerstone of GOP efforts to
shrink govcrnmem. wouJu ·reduce
taxes by $245 billion over seven
years for famili es and companies
while promising a balanced budget
by 2002.
.
It would also overhaul Medicare, welfare, Medicaid, and payments to farmers while slicing hundreds of other programs.
Clinton ordered thousands of
furloughed workers to return to
their jobs lo process benefit applicatiom Spokesman Mike McCurry
said today that "we will very
quickly ac1 to adjust lhc size of the
work force" if day -Io-day evaluations indicate any llJrcal 10 public
htalth and safely.
Allhough lh e budget-balancing
measure is U1e highest-profile hill
in Congress this year, il is overshadowed by the biller budget duel
between Clinton and congressional
Republicans that has seen the
forced idling of 40 percent of the
federal civilian work force of about
2 million. The two sides have
refused to budge in lhat standoff,
realizing il is a prelude 10 likely .
bargainin g later thi s year on the
balanced-budge! package.
Perot party backers
make last Ohio push
Alleged 'pyramid'
scheme investigated
by Meigs prosecutor
V-8 engine, A/C, po~er'~do~s, tdt, .~ise, 29,000 low miles
EDUCED TO
~Man
for now
Pomeroy reinstates cadet program in firefighting
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
.
"If it went on for weeks, of course, you start running into questions
about how you pay people. But we are looking at the various issues, we're
trying to understand what the impact would be without either over or
under reacting," Browning said.
About 40,000 furloughed federal employees statewide were expected
to apply for unemployment benefits.
The claims will go through the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services
which relics mainly on federal money to cover administrative costs.
David Garick, agency spokesman, said Thursday Ul31 the state budget
that took effect July I included $10 million in stale money.
"With those state dollars in the bank we are in good shape to continue
operating," Garick said. "We're not in any immediate danger. " ·
Unemployment insurance benefits arc funded through assessments U.at
employers pay.
"We've set up special centers where we have the largest concentrations of federal employees like Columbus. Cleveland, Dayton and Cincinnati," Garick said.
Although federal worker.; may apply when they receive their furlough
notices, they do not become eligible for benefiiS until they have been out
of work for one week.
Pomeroy's police.chief tosses
hat into ring for sheriff's race
''4" 9S GRAND AMS
1 '9S BONNEVILLE
1 '9S BONNEVILLE SSE
REMEMBER
NOVEMBER is Senior.
Citizens Appreciation
Month at Smith's. Ask
about our 10% Service
Discount
Wash and Trip
.Inspections! Phone
Larry Casto at 446-2332
likely tonight, lows In
2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, November 17, 1995
Budget crisis impact minimal
"1" 95 PARK
AVENUE
$2,000 REBATE
Rain
the 30s. Saturday, rain. High
near 40.
ent1ne
space a
success
"I think that is really an excellent instrument to have on board,"
said German cosmonaut Thomas
Reiter, an accomplished guitar
player.
Tbe collapsible guitar, designed·
by a man in Eugene, Ore .. as a
travel guitar, is an improvement.
over the old, beat -up acoustic
instrument that's been banging
around Mit for years.
" We'll be looking forward soon
to a concert," Cameron said. "The
languages that we all·speak coming
from different countries can some,
times be a problem .... We feel that
one international language is the
language of music.'·
Astronaut Jerry Ross offered
Mir commander Yuri Gidzenko a
cassette tape of country music from
Texas.
: ''Not everyone on tl1c space sta(ion or space shuttle is musically
talented." he joked.
. The Mir crew presented each
astronaut will! a packet of mementos, including missi.on emblems
and commemorative photographs
"so they would remind you of our
jointfligb~'' Gidzenko said.
The space travelers later played
the old and new guitars for Russian
Prime Minister Viktor Cbernomyrdin, who was sending up his
greetings, but the communications
.link made it difficult for those on
th" ground to bear the music.
· A full day of work was scheduled aboard the.,tandem ships today
as they hurtled around Earth
together.
·· Much of today's activity
revolved around the transfer of
food, water, science experiments
and otller supplies from Atlantis
and Mir. The shuUJe will have left
1,000 pounds of equipment behind
by the time it undocks on Saturday.
That doesn't include about 900
pounds, or about 100 gallons, of
water the three Mir cosmonauiS are
taking from the shuttle's abundant
supply to drink and to use for
experiments. The shuttle creates
water as a byproduct of iiS electrical system. The surplus is nonnally
dwnped overboard.
Some 800 pounds of equipmen~
including experiment samples, is
being .transferred from Mir to the
shuttle for return to Earth early
next week.
8-7-7
..J~
~~-,~·
•
linkup in
fiebruary.
Pick 3:
Sports,Page5
Second
SPACE CENTER, Houston
(AP) - Shuttle astronauts gave
their hosts sportsbirts, a new
"astro-guitar" and a steak dinner
today to commemorate the second
linlrul' of Atlantis and the Russian
space station Mir.
The five-man Atlantis crew
treated the cosmonauiS' taste buds
to a real space rarity - a fullcourse meal complete with soup,
steak, vegetables, shrimp cocktail,
ice cream and cherry cobbler. The
steak was reheated but the ice
cream was just like you'd get it out
of the freezer at home.
Tbe two spacecraft linked up
early Wednesday and will be flying
together through Saturday. Five
more shuule-Mir dockings are
planned as the two nations gear up
to build an international space station.
. "Part of building and working
together is building friendships,"
shuttle commander Kenneth .
Cameron said after the eight gathered aboard Atlantis. "We want to
build an international space station
in the future. and we start by building friendships between people.''
The Mit ·crew members - two
Russians and a German - were
each given blue sponshirts emblazoned with the shuttle emblem.
Then they received a plaque and a
··•oclamation marking the occasion.
Next carne the grand finale: a
:lassical guitar with a battery-operated headphone amplifier and
speakers to help the cosmonauts
· wlle away their spare time aboard
Mir. The Mir crewmen have have
been in space since early Septem·oor and won't return to Earth until
Ohio Lottery
MoVaughn
nets league's
MVPaward
ALILEC:ED FRAUD INVESTIGATED -Meigs County Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Chris Tenoglla, seated, Is pictured look·
11111 over documents from a Mississippi company alleged to be run·
niDI! a pyramid sebeme In Melp County. Looking over the documents with Tenoglla Is Investigator Jelf MiUer~
,
COLUMBUS (AP) - Supponers of the Ross Perot-ba ckcd
Reform Party say they've got
enough petition signatures to quali fy for a spot on the Ohio ballot. but
they are preparing for one last push
this weekend - just in case.
"We've got the minimum,"
said Richard Taylor, Ohio coordinator for Citizens to Establish a
Reform Party.
The party has qualified for thr
1996 presidential ballot in CalifOJ
nia and next will collect signatures
in Maine. Supporters in Ohio have
until Monday 10 collect the signatures of 33,463 registered voters.
Taylor said nearly 36,000 signatures had been collected and predicted, "we're on line for 47,000."
He -said volunteers will conduct
a bit-and-run strategy right up to
the filing deadline, targeting bowling alleys , flea markets, the Bengals-Steclers game in Cim;innati
and other gathering places.
Perot, the Texas billionaire and
1992 independent presidential candidate, told a national television
audience on Thursday that be wanted a cushion of signatures in case
some are tossed out by the secretary of state's office.
"We' II have a big weekend,
continue to get a good pad in case
they fmd some problem with some
of the signatures and the sort of
thing you go through at the last
minulc," he said on CBS' "This
Morning. "
Maureen Brown. spokeswoman
for Sccrclmy of Sta le Bob Taft
said no pelilions hall hccn submit:
ted so far.
Taylor said about 100 organiled
volunteers hav e been co llect ing
sJgnalurcs lor two weeks.
Bono, Cremeans
cancel area stop
Today's sc hedu le d political
fund-r aisi ng lour th rou gh the
region by U.S. Reps. Sonny Bono,
R-Cal1f., and rrank Cremeans RObio, bas been suspended.
'
The congressional duo had
planned to appear at the Ariel Theatre in Gallipolis at 5 p.m., followmg appearances earlier in the day
at Charleston aud Poim Pleasan~
W.Va.
In a statement issued Thur.;day ·
afternoon, Cremeans cited the current federal budget impasse as the
reason for the suspension.
"I apologize to those who have
worked so bard on these events "
the Gallipolis Republican said.
"The events will be rescheduled
when a budget co mpromise is
reached in Washington.
"Until then, I feel obligated to
suspend political activities and con- ··
centrale on the task at hand," Cre- :
Imeans said.
·
�
Dublin Core
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Title
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11. November
Text
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Newspaper
Dublin Core
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November 16, 1995
frisch
titus