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                  <text>Sentinel

Remembering the
day Kennedy was
shot • Page 81

Annual college football rivalries, C1

HI SOl

Disaster-training in Meigs, A4

"". 1'11011

•Air Co nditioni ng
•Power Mirrors • Ove rdrive
• Ciearcoat Paint
•AMIFM Stereo

•
•Dri ver Si de Air Bag
•M cPherson
Suspension
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•H alogen Head lamps
•Reclining Front Seat s

A Mull1rned1alnc .. Newspaper

Middleport-Pomeroy Gall ipOlis-Pt. Pleasant- Nov emb er 2 1, 1993

Tim••Sentlnel Stall
GALLIPOUS- Onany given nigh~ two Gallia County
sherifrs deputies bear lhe awesome responsibility of
protecting more than '\45 square miles of territory and
patroning almost 1,000 miles of roads.
Allliough the sheriff's departtnent has enough cruisers
and equipment to adequately patrol the county, budget
limitations prevent Sheriff James D. Taylor from paying
more than two officers per shift.
"M&lt;nlly, I feel there should be one deputy (on pauol)
for every two townships," Taylor said "Being more
realistic, I'd like to see five every evening and drop it back
to folD' at night when everyone goes to sleep."
Having a small force on patrol creates many dangers,
Taylor said - not only for the deputies but also for the
citizens they are trying to protect.
Depending on where the deputies are in lhe county
when an emergency call comes in, responding can take
anywhere from two to 20 minutes.
''That's a terribly long time to wait," Taylor said.
To overcome the problem, Taylor, Chief Deputy Den-

94 TOfi

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94 0/ds c
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ocks

DISPATCHER ON DUTY

or tbe Gallla County Sheriff's

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patrolling olf'JCers Friday rrom the
·In the basement of the GaD Ia
·Only two deputies patrol the county
.Sber!lf Jamri D. Taylor said.

Courthouse.
each shift,

nis Salisbury and off·
isalsokeepinghiseyeon
duty deputies are preDerv&gt;ndlngon wherethedenutJessreln
thefederallinti-crimebin
pared to provide emer,.,.
as a potential revenue
gency assistance if
thecountywhensnemergencycallcomes
source.
needed.
In, respon dlng can ts..,.e anywhere from
According to Klnn
"The staff is scattered
Sprague, administralive
throughout the county
two to 20 minutes.
assistant for the Gallia
and they stand ready to
County Board of Comrespond," Taylor said.
"That's s terribly long time to walt. "
missioners, the lherifrs
"Wewillcontinuetoroll
deparUnent receives 16
out the personnel, wherGallla Sheriff James D. Taylor
percent of County Genever they are, until we
era! funds and is one of
get enough there to handle the siruation."
the heaviest-funded deparunents in the county - second
Cooperation between the sherifr s deparunent and the only to the commission itself, whichis fmancially responGallipolis and Rio Grande police deparunents also helps sible for running lhe courlh~MJSe,
alleviate crisis siruations, Taylor added.
Taylor said the slate average is 30 percent of the county
''The problem isn' t as bad in the major situations be- budge~butdidnotblamethe commissionforunderfunding
cause we can call in olher personnel," Taylor said. ''The . his department.
problem is we're not gening to do lhe road paual we need
''They're giving us what they can," he said.
to be doing."
Some feel differendy, however.
Taylor said lhe answer may be in obtaining state and
Deputy Mike Martin said he feels some other county
federal grants to fund putting exua officers on the road. He
Continued on page A2

·Reclamation .project
:completion delayed·,
. ov~r expected budget

G~vin

' By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
·Tlme•Sintlnel Stall
: MIDDLEPORT -Reclamation work in tJie area along Route 7 below
Hobsqn where a rock slide occlD'red in the spring of 1991 is expected to be
.~
completed by the end of
the year.
Gary Casper of the
U.S. Office of Surface
Mining, ~tarnation ·and
Enf~t!l, in ~

~~J~~;~ ·

project
on schedule,
within budget
...
"

uledforcompletionill~ly

Octobtl, additionai'Y!IniI&amp;C of rock and dirt iq be

You Can Lease h For Only

$249-NO*.:.=~~~

94 Toyota 4x2 Pickup

94 Toyota T-100 ~ickup

•Air Conditioning •Cloth Seat
•Full Carpet •Chrome Package
•Rear Step Bumper

•Automatic •Air Conditioning ·

removed and wet weather
contributed to the delj!y in
cornplcling the job. · ~
He said that it a1so increased the COSL
.
Originally it was
thought that shearing off
.the cliff and removing the
hugerocksandpilesofdirt ·
along the 1800 foot slide
in the area known as Pity
Me would be completed in
less than a year and cost
Reclarnetlon work near
about $1.3 million.
on Stile Route 7
The cost is now expected to be closer to $1.5 million, Casper said, and the work to take several
rnonths longer than anticipated.
on
'· The reclamation job is being paid for by fees from the mining industry,
according' to Casper.
Electlcal Generating Plant in Cheshire Is ahead of schedule and within
Gary Ruble of Lewisville is conuactor on lhe project which got underway
budget
to tbe latest progress report rrom American Electric
Power. Tbe
45.4 percent complete.
. Continued on paga A2

•AM /FM Cassette

R~ep,ubli-can

•Bed liner

sure. .

. .

.

,

' 'I think the Brady b1U IS dead for this year, Senate
~ty Leader George Mitchcn, D-Maine, said befOR
the Senate, rushing toward adjournment, began al. uri·
IJI!I81 session ~aturday.."Republ~· have successfuny
filibustered the Brady bi!IIO death.

91 PONnAC 6000. LE ·
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AM I FM cassene.
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93 FORD TAURUS Gl ·

Leather. alloy wheels .
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6 cylinder overdnve.
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one owrler

92 OLDS 88

84 CHEVY 4x2 PICKUP

6 cylinder. automatic. ai r.
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One owner .
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88 DODG~ CARAVAN
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B8 MERCURY· GRAND MARQUIS

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But Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole,R-Kan., insisted
that a version of lhe bill could still be approved before
Congress leaves town.
''We're prepared to sit down now and talk about it,'' he
said.
Atnmed to public disquiet over violent crime, lhe Senate qverwhelmingly approved a $22.3 billion anti.crime
package Friday that bans assault-style fll'eBI1lls and aulhorius 100,000 new police.
But ihe Brady bin, which gun-conual advocates have
been trying to get enac:tect since lhe mid-1980s, was
thrown in!Q limbo after supporterS twice feU three votes

"

\~ '

short of the 60 needed to choke off a GOP-led filibuster.
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Joseph Biden,
D-Dcl., said lhere was "liUle more than a fading hope"
that the Brady bill would pass this year.
The bill, which would require a five-day waiting period
and a background check on would·be handgun buyers,
takes its name from fanner White House press secre~
James Brady, who was wounded mthe 1981assassmauon
attempt on President Reagan.
SupPorters said they would rerum next year and try
again.
. .
Just the day before, they had expressed opumtsm that

Wit·ness critic·izes Ohio's News capsules
!;C_
hool .funding forml.lla Strategic planners r---..,...---,
,NEW LEXINGTON, Ohio (AP) - ebililren in p6orer areas are deprived of

~educatioilalopporrunities under the state's public schools funding system,

a witilesltcstifled~
·
·
. Kcm Alexander, 1 professor at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and Univcnity,

·testifiOCI Friday in Perry County Col:nmon Pleas Coun in the case of five school
m.tricu lltlekiDg a court order thai wouldOYenpin lhestate' ssystem offlllanCinB
•schools.
·
.
,
· "OiiiblillflCofthe most PWify eqt•iized SlaiDSin the United Sia~ It's one
'of the 1ta1e1 with the greatest dispantie~,'' Alexandeuaid. ' ·
·
·· ·A c:oalitioa.iif ~t Ohio School dillril:ts hired Al~r in 199p q, •
,analyze thO llllli's syilem of pli!ilii: ~ flnlnci!IS. Aloiander said he did a
:IIIIIR detailed IIUII~ for .the . triiJ arid ca,me to the I!IIIIC conclusion aboua
:dilpatitia in tbil distribution of liiO!IGY· . .
·
·
ForOliii!IPle, In tho i990;9i, the lllp20pen:eatoflhericliesl school districts
recdv«&lt;»47lnlli!QQ mOR in SWD-.xflocal f\tn!lins ll!ln'the ~20perc:em
of scbbol dlsiriCts.
··
·
'
Much the disparity in how Ohio finances public schools stems from the
p~operi:y !IX system, Alexander said. Thele is little dil'f~ ~rich and ·
pail' iliirit8 when it comC$ 10 localpopMy ~effort. lie said.
·
'The Ita~ avezlgc 'for rich scbools is 29.6 mills, compared with 26.8 mills for '
poor dlatricis. But whal a mill of property l8lL generates in those disu.icts differs
wldl!ly.
.
•
.
.
UuchooldisiriCI is propeny-poor,the yield received "may be so smalllbert
is 110 ~live to levy a tu," be said.
' 01'-llndlnga Aleunder noted: .
.
.
- Teachets from the riChest .IO )X!lCCIIt of~ school districts rec;eive ...
·
· . '
-Contlnutlf On page A2

or

lj'

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'~4'

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~

By JIM FREEMAN
Tlme•Sentlnel Stall
CHESHIRE-TheGenera!James
M. Gavin Plant flue gas desulfurization project is ahl!ad of schedule and
within budgetacca-ding to a progress
repon recendy issued by American
Elecaic Power.
AEP decided to install the flue gas
desulfwizalion system- scrubbers .
as part of its plan to comply wilh the
1990 Clean Air Act Amendment.
The progress repon, which covers
a three-month period ending Sept.
30, states that site consuuction activities are on schedule.
The flue gas scrubbers are expected
to be completed March and June,
1995, for units one and two, respectively.
The original in-service dates for
the units were September and November, 1995.
The project is 45.5 percent complete venus a projected43.5 pen:ent.
In addition, project expenditures
to date total $278,575,000 versus a
budget to dale of $330,285,000, the
company reponed.
The total project budget is $815

million of which approximately
$512 rniUion has been committed.
The following construction activities were compleled during the
report period in addition to lime
preparation buildings and tanJcs and
lime silo floors: unit one and two fly
ash transfer activities, unit two pri.
mary dewatering fotmdations, unit
two absorber area switchgear building, unit two Slack shell, primary
dewalering buildings and unit one
absorber modules.
The Gavin plant consists of
I ,300 MW coal-fired units which
entered service in 1974 and 1975 .
Between 1985 and 1981, the units
emitted 388,100 tons of sulfur dioxide each year.
The 1990 aean Air Act Amendments set emissions for the two units
at 174,000 tons of sulfur dioxide
each year beginning Jan. 1, 1995,
and 68,700 tons a year beginning
Jan. I , 2000.
The decision to install scrubbeq
at the Gavin plant sparked protesa
by environmental poops who favored the use of low-sulfur coa1 to
decrease sulfur emissions.

stall kills Brady bill; Senate passes anti-crime bill

.By CAROLYN SKORNEQK
Aiiaoc..t.d Prill Wrlt1r
WASHINGTON (AP) - Supponers of legislation
impOsing alive-day wait for handgun purchases declared
today that passage of the so-called Brady bill would have
to wait until next year after Republicans stalled lhe mea-

$12,999

No 3,

Vol 2B

~~i .ht~. patrol: two deputies cover 1,000 mile-s of roads:
By KEVIN PINSON

94 Ford f·150 4x2

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94 FORD

TEMPO

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.

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seek public Input

the bill would be on President Clinton's desk by Thantsgiving.
The House had already passed a nearly identical veesian, complete wilh a National Rifle Association-J:w:ked
provision that would end lhe waiting period after five
years, whether or not a required computerized, insclnt
c~ system was operational.
Clinton had tned to move the Senate version dect.ing
at a news couference from a D'8de meeting in
"I'm
disllessed at the Senate."
For some senators, voting for gun control is poliliciiUy
Continued on paga A2

Prosecutor to seek indictments
in Lucasville prison riot deaths

LUCASVlll.E, Ohio (AP) - A special prosecutor
appointed to handle charges from a prison riot said be
win seek indicunents in the deaths of nine inmates and
one guard.
Mark Piepmeier also said he will ask for indicunents
on felonious assault and kidnapping charges in connection with the uprising at the maximum-security Southern
plan.
Ohio
Comctional Facility. Inmates rioted April I I and
l!fembersoflheGalliaCounty
held 409 prisoners in a cellblock until they surrendered
Cluillberot'Commen:ellld !be ....... .... ..... ... . ...
April21.
.Community lmpl'ovementCor·
pooi!bt -,viii al8o p.ticipete in the program, begin- Evidence could be presented to a grand jury Ibis year,
' lllnla7 p.m., iti lbe a•odimmn oC Wood Hall on the Piepmeia said Friday.
He said authorities do not know how many people
CIIIIJIU$ of the UriiveisitY of Rio Grande.
Tho formal ~!Ilion will include a description of migllt be indicted. Investigators were 8111lyzing evithe strategic pllnnlna puc ea and hOw it will lie denCe and doing follow-ups on the more than 1,000
applied to the fum~ Glllia Comty. StrategiQ is$u_es, interviews conducted and 1.200 bags or evidence colIICiiJie!l by the plannen as "111!11 of CODCefiiiQ Gallia lected ~ the pest seven months.
Countians.6 win be addresaed; md, JliOI)OIS4Id courses · Piepmeier, an assistant Hainilton County prosecutor,
said authorities would not prosecute e very crime Corn·
of action presenllld.
,
.
"CiliZcn iJumstandinvobementin the futoreol' our milled ~luring the standoff.
"Otherwise, we'd be at ittherestofour lives,:•he saki.
CO!IIIty's quality oflife and economic wen·beina make
He Sl!id inmates who only committed vandalism 1!1(1
it inl~tto lllend and ~pate in'this ~nta•
·lion, a Je1e!lae issued Frillay by the planning commit- simpie assault and who were involved in the rioting
probably would not be charged
tee lilies. '
'GALLIPOLIS - The formal
presentation of the Gallia
County Suategic plan - set for
unveiling on ~day, Nov. 23
• will i1Jvolve many of the citi•
zeqa that helped rorm~~~ate the

hale:

Today's Times.SentiMl
18 Sections · 160 P1g05

Business
Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituaries
Along tbe Rivtr
Sports

Dl
B5&amp;6
D2-7
Insert
A6
A4
AS
Bl
Cl-11
AS

Column~

nm Freeman
Apnledm

c. .

U

JCcyliftiWP

u

JhpSrpM
CI!Kh 5'?"'

.U

Jli,

CIIOI,- ............. 0..

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Page-~-sunday

November 21,1993

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH,....Polnt Pleesant, WV

Times Sentinel

.
'

State reviews process for selecting construction man·agers
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -The
aa.cney general's oflice will teview
the state's process of seeking con·
suuction managers for state-funded
projects. The Columbus Dispatch re·
• ported Saturday.
• The newspaper said !he Depan·
ment of Administrative Services' di·
vision of public wotksapparently violated notification laws for some
projects. including the new building
fortheCenterofScienceand Industry

in Columbus.
"We intend to have a discussion
with the client on some of 1hese is·
sues. •• said Dan Malkoa, an assistant
aiiOmcy genenl in the business and
go'ICmtllent regulations section.
Ohio law says the state must advertise in a newspaper its intent to em·
ploy construction managers, and the
ad must be published at least 30 days
before the date proposals are to be

accepted.
The newspaper said an ad for a $67
million building for !he College of
Business at Ohio State University had
a deadline of 16 days. A revised ad
had a deadline of 29 days.
In other cases, including the COS!
project, there were no newspaper ads.
The Genenl Assembly had appropriated$18 million to belp COS! relocate to a new building estimated at
$110 million. COS! officials hoped to

receive $50 million from the state.
Architectsandengineerswerei\Sked
to n:c:ommead coD$1111Ction managers for other projects, inclildlng !he
$7.8 million renovation and restoration of the Southern Theatre and the
$26 million renovation and restoration of a state office building.
The department said in a statement
released Friday that it had "not done
anything inappropriate on the contracts where we have employed con-

Republican stall kills Brady bill___;____ _
Continued from~ A1
difficull, Ointon said.· 'but clearly it
iJ lhe right!hing to do...
The measure's chief Senate sponsor, Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, DOhio, said the Republicans •'now fmd
lhemselves in the position of having
killed the Brady bill.''
"I !hinlt !here is some discomfon
on their pari," be said, speculating
• that they are "not sure it's a great
·. victory to have under their belt.''

bill could come up for a vote. But each
time, they came up with only 57 votes.
All sides said they were willing to
ers found anathema - to make the
five-day waiting period preempt more listen to options, but Metzenbaum
stringent rules imposed by some state said, "There's just nothing much to
and local governments-even though talk about"
Earlier in the day, it wa8 a united.
the Senate specifically rejected !hat
bipartisan
Senate that voted 954 for
earlier in the day by a 5445 vote.
Supporters had two chances, eight the crime package that calls for more
hours apan, to muster the necessary than IOO,OOOnewpoliceon city streets
60 votes to cut off debate so !hat !he and more prison cells and would ban
the sale of combat-style fuearms.
Opponents insisted that the mea-

sure include a ptovision that suppon-

Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said,
•'There's so many good proviJions in
here that it'shardnotto be euphoric at
this particular point
"The most euphoric !hing about it
is we've had a tremendous vote out
there showing !hat !here's an awful
lot ofbipanisan solidarity behind this
bill even though I suspect every per·
son on the Ooor disagrees with one or
more provisions," he said.

struction managers as subconsultants
to the architectural and engineering

rums.''

StepS already had been taken to
ensme that staffers adhere to the requirements, the sta~ent said
Fred Forbes, deputy director of the
division, said earlier this month that
since architects and not the state were
considered the construction managers' employers, the Stalll did not have
to advertise.
Forbes, who joined the depanment
in 1991, said the attorney general's
offiCe had looked at the issue, specifically contracts with "associate
architect's agreements" for four
prison projects from late 1992.
But Malkoff said the selection pro-

cess for the managen was not an issue
when reviewing !hose conllliCis. ·
The Columbus Dispatch said it
found none of the four prison project
agreements cited by Forbes details
the construction manager selection

process.
State Sen. Chatles F. Hom, RKettering, has questioned whether it
was a violation to haveatchitectsrecommcndconstruclionmanagers.Han
sponsored the Senate bill detailing
how public agencies should hire construction managers.
••As I understand the law, the objective is to get the construction managers responsive to the needs of !he
state, not the architecl." Horn said,
promising to look into the matter.

,
•·,

.
:

•
:
~

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byists - hel.,ed lead -to House pas·
sage of the bill that now divides the
Senate.
Republicans said the proposal goes
too far; Democrats contend there
might be ways to make it even tougher.
So why not just make legislators
subject to !he Ohio Ethics Commission?
Senate Ethics Chairman Richard
Finan, R-Cincinnati, cites the constitutional separation of powem among
the legislative, executive and judicial
branches of government.
·'Ifyou put everybody into the same
pot you run a tremendous risk, in my
opinion, of merging those people together or allowing one body to have a
dampening effect on the other body,"
Finan said.
Senate Minority Leader Raben
Boggs, D-Jefferson, offem a similar
response, pointing out that the execu·
live branch now appoints the com·

mission.
"Separation of powers is basically
the argument there," Boggs said.
"We're willing to retltink !hat if anybody wants to. •
Giving up power to police themselves may not be palatable to legislators, but nei!her does it appear to be
unconstitutional.
Kevin O'Neill. legal director for
the American Civil Liberties Union
of Ohio, said !he separation doctrine
was designed to avoid concentrating
too much power in any one branch.
O'Neill, asked about the matter in
an interview, said independent policing or legislative ethics would not
contradict separation.
"If !hey had someone else do it,
someone truly independent, that
would be more consistent with the
doctrine of separation of powem,"
O'Neill said.

'

Senatetriesto wrap up NAFTAquickly
WASHINGTON (AP)- The Senate is pushing to approve the Nonh
Anterican Free Trade Agreement by
week's end, minus !he fanfare and
clamor that marked the House's cru·
cial vote of approval.
In a nearly empty chamber, sena·
torS delivered monologues about the
trade pact Thursday in a debate that
even opponents conceded would end
with fmal congressional passage of
the continental trade pact
An Associated Press survey showed
atleast·53 senatorS were likely to vote
for the ~ment Only 12 were un·
decided, with the remaining 351ikely
to vote against it.

"They say the jury is rigged over
here," adminedonecritic,Sen. Ernest
Hollings, D-S.C.
Three thousand miles away, President Clinton alighted in a buoyant
mood at an economic conference with
Asian and Pacific leaders in Seanle.
Onhisway,hesaidNAFfA'serasure
of tariffs among the United States,
Mexico and Canada would smooth
the way for an even bigger prize: the
dropping of worldwide trade barriers.
Riding !he momentum from the
House's unexpectedly decisive 234200approvalofNAFfAiateWcdnesday, Ointon said Vice President AI
Gore will visit Mexico shortly to dis-

,Committee ends probe of Hatch
. WASHINGTON (AP) - An eth- of available evidence that there is no
. ics investigation concluded Saturday crcdibleevidencewhichprovidesreathere was "no credible evidence" son to believe" that Hatch violated
· that Sen. Orrin Hatch violated Senate Senate rules or federal Jaw, the state' rules or fedenl law in contacts be· ment said.
; tween hill office and representatives · · Hatch strongly defended BCC!in a
· of the Bank of Credit and Commerce speech on the Senate Ooor in 1990
and has said he once asked the bank
' International.
The was no "reason to believe that for a loan to a friend.
thc·senaror engaged in any improper
conducl, •'!he Senate Ethics Commit·
111e said In a one-page statement
Haith, R·Utah, had requested in
writina Aug. 12 that the committee
investipte his offiCe's contact with
representatives of BCCI -the bank
that was closed down after accusaContinued from page A1
tions of money laundering, racketeer- average of $35,846 annually, com·
ing 8nd other ~rim ina! activities.
pared wi!h $27,521 yearly from the
The committee; which deliberated 1Qpereent at the bottom, according to
Friday. said it had subpoenaed and 1990-91 statistics. Alexander said
reviewed documents of eight indi- poorer districts are at a disadvantage
viduals and entities. and conducted in at!IliCting .talent
·
10 depositions ;.... including !hat of
-A comparative study of curricuHaiCb;
.
.
lums of 55 rich dislricts compared
"The committee ftnds on the basis

cuss "how best to launch this great
new era inNonh American relations.''
Gore, accompanied by White House
Chief of Staff Mack McUity, was to
meet with Mexican President Carlos
Salinas de Gortari.
Little !hat was happening in the
Senate seemed likely to slow !hat
momentum.
The Senate's NAFI'A debate was
consi&lt;Jered so routine !hat senators
turned to it because they needed something to do during a lull in consideration of !he crime bill. Just a handful
of people watched the NAFI'A debate, in contrast with Wednesday,
when the Capitol was overOowing
with reponem and lobbyists monitoring the House showdown.
As it did in !he House, NAFTA's
strange politics was turning some
Democrats against their own president and pulling many Republicans
toward him. But leaders of both parties said passage was certain, and all
!hat was left was for senators to talk
their way through the 20 hours of
debate the rules allowed.

Reclamation

Continued from page A1
in early October, 1992.
Casper said that most of !he rock
being removed from !he site is going
into reclaiming an old abandoned mine
about a mile in back of !he area along
Route 7 where !he slide occurred on
Continued from p~ge A1
May 3,1991.
departments get too much money Pan of !he rocJc and soil removed money whicb could be funnelled to
from the slide site has also been used the s~riff's depar~nent to get more
to build a road around and behind the manpower on !he mid.!.
·
hill to where ·!he old strip mine is
"I think !hey (the commissioners)
located
need to re-evaii,UII.O their priorities in
"It's like killing two bitds with one the county." Martin said.
stone" said Casper in describing the
Deputy Joy Elliot agreed. "The
project. "We're reclaiming !he land commissioners need to COtll\l dOWII .
where the slid!~ octwred, and we're hCtc and see the real world inSiead of
takinJ cate d !he old mine problem." sillin&amp;'op there in lheit ivory towers."
When die job is completed there
Martin and Deputy Carta Hampton
w!ll be a gentle slope from the cliff 10 · said the deputiea'li~ are in danger
the highwa)'. The dur bas been because lhey often en1er poteadally
si.-ed beck so !hat is now sevmt deadly situations on lheitown- with
the kilowledge that backup may not
hundred fe6t.floril the roed.
The acl :qe iltvol~ and the five arrive for 30 minutes. .
realdCntl.I pupei1iea damaged when ' · "It's kind of hair-!lising bec"tse
lhetlide occ:uned ~~by youiletoutoflhccarlllddon't~
Jhe Oblo Depalliiiiill d Ttili&amp;)4w what's goinstohappen."Mirtln Said. ,
doll. The II1IIICQIIeS ~ demoilJbCd I HampiOII added, "They could be I
killcd,lholllld buried befme sonicone ~ts !here.• ;
.

;

.

'

11 a.m.-2:30p.m.
-Honey Baked Ham
w/Ralaln Sauce
•Roaot Turkey
w/Oreaalng end all the
Trlmmingol
•Roast Sirloin of Beef
' •Cod Almondlna

•Whipped Potatoee &amp; ,
Gravy
•Sweet Potatoaa
oCom O'brien
o!luttered Baby Carrot•
•Seuoned Graen Bun•
•Salad Bar and Aeaorled
Deaeeno

$995
ALL THIS FOR

agreements to impori Japanese- and joint ve-nture between' a Japanese ota dealerships in Japan, as
Korean-built cars for sale under and a U.S. automaker. NUMMI, opposed to the myriad inspections
Big Three nameplates.
located in Fremont, Calif., recently that other U.S. vehicles exported to
The deal, ftrst rumored last year, . received government approval to Japan endure. All design and safety
resulted from GM-Toyota coopera- continue operation indefinitely !.)JCCifications for the Japanese mar.
lion in joint ventures. in California beyond its scheduled 1996 expira- ket will be done in the U.S. P.lant.
and Australia, GM Chief Executive lion.
"I believe this project w11l bring
Offi~r Jack S!JU!h said at the signThe cars for expon to Japan will about many $ood effects as a new
mg ceremony m San Francisco.
be built in Lords town, Ohio, or exemplar of mdustriat cooperation
"Personally, Mr. (Tatsuro) Toy- Lansing, Mich. A site decision is between Japan and the U.S .. " Toyoda and I have worked toge!her on expected by !he end of the year, ada said.
these projects, which has given us a srud Tom Davis, general manager
The right-hand drive prnduction
respect for each other and our orga- of GM's Lansing Automotive Divi- will be the ftrSt ror a GM plant in
sion, which builds the Cavalier the United States.
nizations," Smith said.
In the early 1980s, Smi!h over- sedans and th'e Pontiac Sunbird
"This obviously opens some
saw GM's effort with Toyota to coupes.
other opportunities," Davis said,
launch New United Motor Manu·
Davis said the exponed cars will referring to right-hand-drive
facturing Inc., !he firSt automotive go directly from the factory to Toy- expons to England and Australia.

Wheat

•~'

GALUPOUS, OH.

446.0090

614-742-2233

Oats

3.25

2.53

1.27

6.48

NWOhio

3.37

2.67

. 1.57

6.72

3.18

"'2.66

1.36

6.62

' Central

•
•

W Central

3.30

2.73

1.60

6.72

•
•
•

SWOhio

3.24

2.71

NA

6.68

Trends

H

u

u

•
•

~~

••••

TRENDS: SL-Sharply Lower; L-Lower; U-Unchanged; H-Higher; SH-Sharply Higher.

~~ Proctor &amp; Gamble buys

HOLZER
HEALTH
BOTUNE

iiinto Russian plant
; CINCINNATI (AP) - The
:rrocrer &amp; Gamble Co. has agreed
=•o invest $50 million in a Russian
: :lletergent company in exchange for
Can initial 14 percent interest that
s-Will become a majority stake in
:Jive years.
No purchase price was given for
•lbe 14 percent inte(llst in PO Novo:JIIoskovskbytkhim, which has a
:.,Jant abo~t 130 miles south of
;:~oscow. The size of Cincinnati'n&gt;ased P&amp;G's ultimate stake in the
[ompany
r.
was not disclosed.
•
A minority share in the compaa: y is reserved for ownership by !he
·"COmpany's employees, !he public
~!he Ruasian government
::· P&amp;G's bid was approved Thurs~ilay by Rus$ian authorities. P&amp;G
,.
wokesman Terry Loftus said Fri' day.
~: The PO Novomoskovskbytkhim
:&amp;Plant in Novomoskovsk has been
eJ&gt;roducing deterge.nts for P&amp;G
jflince December )992 under a man-

t

As a part of your Health
Team,
'.
our goal is to provide you with
The answers you need ...
as close as your phone!

·1·800·462•5255
.or
·
inj~ry

uracturing agreement
P&amp;G said the plant will concentrate on laundry and cleaning products; but ultimately will produce
other consumer goods.
Procter and Gamble began operating in !he former Soviet Union in
August 1991 and has been expanding. P&amp;G produces Ariel and Tix
laundry detergents in Russia.

BUY BY THE CASE SAVE!
/
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Attends
OIIPUAilll~lll

•Small

•Medium

J+,
I"/

BOWMAN'S
uoMEcARE MEDicAL suPPLY

1/ .446-7283

Toll Froo

2116-7484

Gallipoll• 1..JC»-458-1144 J•ckaon

YOU ARE WHAT YOU THINK•••

Arts &amp; Entertainment
CNN
CNBC
Discovery Channel
ESPN
Family Channel
Scio-Fi Channel

'.

•Physician .Referral
•Health Care Events
•Support Groups

...,.,,,...nl

' ThrH dUiinCI
rintf• pLoiA Pf!llolwod,jlal l"'lu.Uod,

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER .
•

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}

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V

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~-

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, 6rlfhl Mclr.J,..N&lt;h 01lf CI"OIII...J
.,;1}, D 6iiUionllllamoowJ Uo D
.z.,d.r .U. pronf ........... Eiotlanl,
ESf'"''i,..· A....U..blo iA 14K y.UO..
· or tUiaiu pld. Compa..-. our
·Di&lt;anooold Pnc•• .m,...~.o... r

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Tawney Jewelers

,.,

"Partners in change, as we continue the Holzer Tradition" ·
'

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422 Second Ave. '
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IT

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""" ~Otis year'.'

sion stations, five AM stations and
II FM stations, including KSEGFM in Sacramento.
The Federal Communications
Commission must approve the
KRXQ purchase. But Great American said it expected to begin operating the station under an interim
marketing arrangement

Adult Briefs

f---------1'

c;,rfAI' eJ

correc:

UAttends.

/

/

NEW YORK (AP) - No':" that The number of stocks rUing iJ1 ~
the economy seems headed m the was about even with thole fa11inC 011
rightdirection,investorsmightthinlt the New York Stock ExchanJC. Du
Wall Street should celebrate by advance-decline ratio is one of che
bidding up stock prices in anticipa- indicators closely monitored by ·- - .
lion of the ~te profit _gains ket technicians.
!hat growth promtses.
. Rickyllarrington,scniorvic:eplailnstead, the stock market appears dent and technicalanalystatlntcnllleto be taking a detour from its pro- Johnson Lane in Charlotte,N.C.,IIid
longed advance.
the stock selling that developed
~e arrows directing stocks are Wednasday and peisisicd duougb b
com•ng from the bo~ ~arket where week came as investors redirected their
mterest rates are pomung up. Afler auention away from fundamental fac..
descendm~ to dep!hs not seen for tors that had motiva!M buym.
decades, )'lelds on Tn;asury notes
Tuesday'srally,whichwasfocuscd
and bonds are rebounding. The 30~ on big name companies reflected
year Treasury bond's yield eaded euphoria)XI:CedingthcappWvalofthc
Fri~y at 6.33 percent; in late sum· Nonh American Free Trade Agn:e·
merothoveredaround5.?5 percent mentby !he House of Representatives '
R1smg rates are rattlmg mvest· Wednesday night. The market's
ment strategists because they know memory is notoriously shon so
!hat low rates have been a powerf~l NAFTA's presumed benefits for the
magnet pullmg money mto eqm- U.S. economy were all but forgotten
ties: Poor returns on inter~t·bear· by Friday.
mgmvesunents,suchasceruficates
According to Nie of Kemper, the
or deposit, have .sent mvestors marketwilltakealengthybreakbefore
searchmg for relauvely better re- beingcorporateeamings-drivcnrather
wards from stocks.
than interestrate-drivenasithasbeen
One heavy drag .on stocks is the He predicted: "This pullbacl:,
quesbon of what will happen to the lion whatever you want to call it will
market with thecbbofthis high tide be behind us by the spring."
'
of funds that has helped the Dow
The Dow ended Friday up 8.67 at
Jones mdustnal average and other 3.694.01. It rose 9.50 in !he week.
popular indica~m crest at a sucres·
The Nasdaq composite index slid
SIO~ of new heights.
.. 2.78 to 751.56 on Friday, producing a
. Uncenamty breeds weakness, Jossior the week of 27.76 points.
saldGregNie,atechmcalanalystat
The NYSE composite index fell
Ke~per Securities Group Inc. in 0.67 to 255.53 and ended the week
Ch1cago.
down 2.04.
He and other Wall Street watchThe Wilshire Associates Equity
e~ who speciali~ in tracl&lt;ing tech- Index, the market value or NYSE,
meal trends, believe the market has AR14'rWan and OTC issues ended the
bee~ ripe for a pullback for quite weekat$4,,587,654billion,off$59.932
awhile.
billion from last week.
Sev~ral telltale signs were evi ·
The American Stock Exchange's
dent th1s past week. On Tuesday. market value index skidded 1.56 to
when the Dow mdustnals closed 467.98andfinisbed 11.62pointslower
above 3,700 for the ftrst trme, the than a week earlier.
broader market behaved onlv so-so.

Great American to buy
California FM station

Beans

NEOhio

I

'

UPPER RIVER RD.

Corn

Stocks sticking to
course set by 6onds

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- A coal leasing company filed
for bankruptcy protection after it
was required to pay an annual multimillion-dollar assessment to provide health care for·retired miners.
The Mountain Laurel Resources
Co. filed for protection from its
creditors under Chapter II or the
federal bankruptcy code Friday in a
U.S. Bankruptcy Court in
Charleston.
,
The company cites a new federal Jaw enacted last year to bail out
two United Mine Workers trust
funds that provide heal!h care for
retirees and their dependents.
Alan Law, president or the
Mount Hope-based company, said
the company is required to pay
$5.2 million into the combined
UMW funds, even though its yearly revenue amounts to $1.2 million.
Company liabilities reached $40
million earlier this month when
Mountain Laurel received a
$435,000 bill from the federal government, Law said. By oomparison,
the company has $2 million in
assets. be said.
"So it's pretty simple ma!h," he
CINCINNATI (AP)- Great
said. ·'There is going to be a lot American Television and Radio
more filing (for bankruptcies). Co. said it has agreed to buy
KRXQ-FM in RqseviUe-Sacramen·
We're not going to be the last'
Under Chapter II, companies to, Calif., from Fuller-Jeffrey
may continue 10 operate while reor- Broadcasting Companies Inc. for
about $16 million.
ganizing its debts.
Cincinnati-based Great AmeriMountain Laurel owns about
100 million tons of coal reserves can owns and operates six televi:
that it leases to coal operators in
Fayette and Raleigh counties.
Although it has not mined coal
since 1986, it did pay into the
UMW funds while it was in the
mining business before quitting the
program, Law said

Ohio cash grain prices for Friday

•

•lllne~s

Coal co.
files for
protection

"

Children 10 and under Only $5.95
Under 3 Eat Freel
·

Rutland EMS
will have a
Christmas Bazaar,
Dec. 4th
at the Rutland Civic
Cen~r. from 9-5 p.m. For
information concerning
table rentals, Contact
Marcia Elliott.

Night Patrol

=~~~~===!e~
v

. DETROIT (AP) - General
•·Motors Corp. and Toyota Motor
,, Corp. signed an unprecedented deal
·.Friday !hat will send GM-built cars
to Japan, where they will be sold as
Toyotas.
. The agreement calls for GM to
. build and sell 20,000 right-hand·
: drive versions ef its new generation
· Chevrolet Cavalier to Toyota each
year beginning in 1996.
It is !he firSt time an American
_carmaker has sold cars to an Asian
automaker for sale under the
: buyer's name. GM, Ford Motor Co.
: and Chrysler Corp. each have

FOR RESERVATIONS CALL 446-0090

Witness criticizes Ohio's
school funding formula
with 59 poor districts shows that students in richer dislricts can choose
from more coilrses. Alexander said
students from ric her districts also have
more opponunities for advanced- ·
placement courses.
- Poorer school districts have a
higher incidence of handicapped students than rich districts. A study of
1992 statistics shows tlult rich dis·
lricts have a IO.o? percent incidence
of students with special needs, compared with a 12.16 percent incidence
at poor school districts.

. By ALAN L. ADLER
' · AP Auto Writer

: NEW YORK (AP) - Heavy bond's yield was arouiid 5.75 per· over Japaii's economy. s·hares also
:buying of blue chip companies cent.
retreated by varying degrees in
;hotsted the Dow Jones industrial
A new government report that Frankfun. London and Paris. ·
-average out of a hole late today but •the U.S. merchandise trade deficit
According to preliminary calcu:the broader market finished lower widened 8.3 percent in September lations, the Dow Jones industrial
:amid worries about rising interest to $10.9 billion from $10.05 billion average rose 8.67to 3,694.01.
-rates.
in August also was perceived nega·
Declining issues outnumbered
. Virtually all market indicators lively by bond tradem.
advances by about 5 to 3 on the
·spent most of the session in the
They focused on the fact !hat the New York Stock Exchange, with
:minus column. The blue chips recovering U.S. economy drew 792 up, 1,329 down and 577
:m!lllaged to recover in !he closing record impons of $49.8 billion in unchanged.
:mmutes as numerous buy orders September, up 3.4 percent from a
Big Board volume totaled
.tied to the monthly expiration of month earlier.
300.89 million shares as of 4 p.m.,
;options hit the market.
The most active stock on the against 310.41 million in the previ' Trading was unusually volatile Big Board was new issue Talbots. ous session.
:with stock indicators swinging The women's apparel retailer
The NYSE's composite index
closed at 22 5/8, up from its debut fell 0.67 to 255.53.
:back and fonh.
• Selling in the horid market set price of 19 l/2.
The Nasdaq index dropped 3.26
:the course for stocks. The closely
The Tokyo Stock Exchange's to 751.08.
'Watched 30-year Treasury bond best-known index finished below
At the American Stock
~ost more !han I 1/4 points, pusb- the 18,000-point mark for the firSt Exchange, the market value index
:ing up its· yield to 6.34 percent A time in eight months on pessimism lost 1.56 to 467.98.
'1Tlonth and a half ago tbe key

Thursday, Nov. 25

Sunday Times-Sentinel/A3

.General Motors, Toyota sign
~.: deal for GM ~xports to Japan

~ Wall Street closing results

Legislators want to police own ethical con.flicts
the House and Senate.
By JOHN CHALFANT
Currently. all officials, including
Aeaoclated
Writer
COLUMBUS,Ohio(AP)-There legislators, must disclose sources of
is at least one point on which Repub- income in excess of $500 but not
1icans and Demoaats agree in a Sen- specific amounts.
Pending in the Senate is a compreate debate over a tough new ethics
hensive
ethics reform proposal, part
bill: legislators ought to continue po·
of which would require public offitieing !heir own conflicts.
Such self-regulation is a benefit cials and employees who now must
!hat at least 8,000 local elected ofli- file disclosme statements to list the
source and amount of all.income.
cials do not enjoy.
Questions raised about ethical conElected state, county, and city offi- ,
Oicts
involving most elected officials
cials,andcandidatesfor the posts, are
are
investigated
and resolved by the
imong the officials who now must
commission.
ftle annual fmancial disclosure stateBut in the case of the General Asments with !he Ohio Ethics Commissembly,
the 132 legislators tum to
sion.
their
colleagues
to handle such matThe panel is made up of 1hree Reters
through
House
and Senate e!hics
publicans and 1hree Democrats, all
committees.
gubernatorial appointees subject to
Problems with the current legislaSenate confmnation.
Members of the General Assembly tive mechanism - solicitation and
file· their disclosure statements with acceptance of hoi'Kllllria. free trips to
football bowl games, gifts from lob-

Financial

November 21 , 1993

'

SUCCESS
So.utheastern Business College
AT

"Member accrediting

CouncQfor

SPRING VALLEY PLAZA • GALLIPOLIS

, 446• 43'67 . .

lndiJ!tlndent Collegee

and Schools'

.

•

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W~er
Begtn8 Quarter
January 3
Reg. *90.05-12748

Headline News
TNN
TBS
USA Network
WGN
Trinity Broadcasting
Mor Music

�~. Local

November 21, 1993

- - - - - - A r e a &lt;Jeaths-------

Sunday Tirnes-Sentinel/A4

.---:------ Tri-county b
Police probe reported rape
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis police are still investigating a
Crown City woman's repm !hat she was abducted and raped Thursday nighL
.
The woman !Old police that She was walking from her workplace
to a friend's house on Third Avenue around 10 p.m. when four
males drove up beside her in a red vehicle. ·
.
The victim reportedly refused 'when one man asked her 10 get in
the car, but was !hen forced inro the vehicle. The men then drove to •
an old road and raped her, she rold police.

Two a"estedfor DUI
GALLIPOLIS - Local authorities arrested two men Friday
night for driving under the influence.
Jailed were Asbury W. Chenoweth, 64, 1090 Highland Dr., St
Albans, W. Va., by the Gallia-Meigs Post of !he State Highway
Pauol for DUI, failure to conuol and not wearing a seat belt, and
Darryl L. Walters, 30, 301 Hastings Road, Sciotoville, by Gallia
County sheriff's deputies for DUI, speeding, and possession of marijuana.
Chenoweth was later released by the coun and Walters was later
released on his own recognizance.

CITIZENSHONORED-DickAderto,left,presldentortheOhlo
County Superintendents Assocation, presents Bob Evans and Ron
Toler with a-rds ror their service to local schools. Also pictured Is
Gallla County Local School Superintendent Robert Lannina.

I

Toler, Evans honored
for service to schools
' ''

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'

COLUMBUS - Two Gallia
Countians were recenlly honored
by the Ohio Cobnty Superimendent's Association (OCSA) with
awards for outstanding leadernhip
and community service.
Bob Evans and Ron Toler were
recogniZed 81 a recent Ohio School
Board's Association Capitol Conference in Columbus.
~
Roben Lannin,g, superimendent of the Gallia County Local
School School Districtalsoattended
the coilference.
. Evanswashonoredforhiswork
with and cornnbutions ro the 4-H
programs, local Christian youth activities and service to the University of Rio Grande where many of
Gallia Cqunty's high school srudents ancnd classes in the Summer
Scholar's program.
Evans also served for 13 years
on,the Ohio Board of Regents and
his role in developing new and impro'led facilities on the URG campus.
Toler started !he Ohio Valley

~~

Items stolen from vehicles
GALLIPOLIS- Two vehicles were robbed Friday, according to
reports in the IJallia County Sheriffs Office.
Edward E. Crawford, Rout I, Leon, W. Va., rold deputies !hat
someone rook a radio and a radar detector - valued at $489 total
- from his van while it was pad&lt;ed at the EconoLodge, 260 Jackson Pike. The sub~t reportedly gained entrance to !he vehicle by
prying open a vent on the driver s side.
In another incident, MillOn M. Houdashell, 281 Lamett Drive,
Gallipolis, rold deputies a CB radio was stolen from his truck while

ganization for children in T-Ball
through Pony league. He has also
served as a volunteer coach for the
River Valley High School baseball
team.

During .!he fall of 1991, Toler
accepted an appoinunemro the Gallia
County Local Schools Advisory
Committee and served as chair for !hat
committee.
"He successfully steered the
committee through difficult times as
they considered and ultimately reached
consensus favoring high school consolidation in the local school &lt;listric~"
a press release from Lanning said." As
aresul~ theGallia County Local School
District has beglUI the RfOVery, both
financially and programmatically,
from what might have otherwise been
a devastating siruation."
Lanning complimented the
achievements of both men.
"In order for !he school district to
continue 10 make progress that will
yield positive change for students, we
must have !he active involvement of
our school community," he said.

man
charged in holdups
ASHLAND, Ky. (AP)- The
FBI bas filed charges against an
Ohio man who was chased and
shotbypoliceWednesdayShortly
after two banks were robbed.
Robert R. Gorby remained
under pard Friday at Klag's
Daughters' Medical Center In
Ashland, where be Is recovering
from a buUet wound be suft'ered
to the upper back during his
I c:~~t;:::.· The 39-year-old Proc·
It
Ohio, man was in fair
Jcol~d!till.n. A spokeswoman for
U.S. attorney's ofrJCe In
Lexinaton said Gorby Is in state
custody.
Gorby is accused or robbing
two Ashland area banks of more
than $30,000.

Hospital news

:
:

Four serve commitments

•

' GALLIPOLIS - Four people were jailed in Gallia County Friday on commitments for previous charges of driving under the
mfluence.
In~led were Connie S. Frazier, 34, 52 Wesrw.ood 01\Ve,
Gallipolis, on a Gallipoli$ Municipal Co!lrt ordered sentence of 10
days; Robin J. Daniels, 36, 1253 Nebo Road, Palriot, on a Gallipolis
Municipal Coun ordtled sentence of 10 days: Damn W. Yeauger,
19, State Route 7, Cheshire, on a Gallipolis Municipal Court
ordered sentence of !hree days, and Susie N. Abbott, 33, 1~ Country
Lane, Shade, on a Meigs County Municipal Coun ordered sen!Mce
of 10 days;
.
Also jailed was Eaa N. Kelly, 27, Barbenton, by Meigs County
sheriff's deputies rc. a probation violation.
·

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diC4f SatuJday, Nov. 20, 1993 In Holut Medical ~ter. Vineyard was

. GALLIPOUS -. Tbebna P. Vineyard, 83, Route I, Langsville,

a member of the Danville Holiness Church.
She wu born Aug. 8, 1910 in Elk View, W.Va.
Survivoq include threedaughtcn, Lois (Bill) Blmd eX. Tavmes, Aa,
Jo (Charles) Smithem of Langsville and Judy (Fred) Davis or
Langsville; eight grandchildren and five ~-ICIIIllcbildren.
She wa5 preceded in death by her hus6and, William C. Vineyard.
Services will be 2 p.m. Tuesday 81 the Danville Holiness Church
with the Rev. Rick Maloyed officiating. Bwial will be in the Danville
Cemetery.
.
Friends may call Moriday from 2 to 4 p.m. and 6 to 8 p.m. 31 the
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home in Vinron.

BJl~~~ =~the"":.:C~f:;r~~~il and Artie

.Survivors include. two sons Billy of Navam, Ohio and Jimmy of
Su1tlend, My; one daughter Jewell Francis Henderson of MmphySboro
Tenn; ~5 grandchildren and several great grapdchildren and great grtai
grandchildren.

·

She was preceded in death by her parents; husband Harald F. carter
Aug. 25, I 9'83; one son; !hree daughters; three brothers and four sisters.

Friends may call2 to 4 p.m. and 7 10 8:30p.m. Monday at AllmonDugger Flllltlal Home in Carrollron. Services will 'be 8:30p.m. Monday at the fun~ral home with Rev. Marion Sanderfur officiating.
Graveside services will be 2 p.m, Tuesday it Miller Memcrial Gardens
in Miller.

MU's faculty senate
OK'd sex assault policy

, Marvin Ours
'

GALLIPOLIS- Marvin"ijiggen"OursSr.,64,ofEunbCoaununity
; inGalliaCounty,diedFriday, Nov.19,1993 atCabeli-Hunlington Ho$pital in HlUitinaton. W.Va. He was
a self-employed truck: driver for
, Mountain State Enterprise.
•
Ours was a member of Gallia
: Masonic Lodge 469 of Eureka,
the International Brotherhood of
TeamsterS Union. He was a for.
'' mer Clay Township T~
Born May 1. 1929, in Gallia
County, he was the son of the late
Will and Goldie Johnson Ours.
Survivors include his wife,
Mary Jo Williams Ours; a son,
Marvin E. Jr. (Jeanne) Ours of
Gallipolis; a daughter, Jennifer
'- (Jim)OsbomeofGallipolis; three
brothers, Herman Ours of Crown
, City,Kl:ll!ICihOursofCrownCity,
Melvin "Tince" Ours (his rwin
· brother) of Crown City; one sister, Gladys Layne of Crown City
.andfourgrandchildren,BrillnOun
of Gallipolis, Michael Ours of
Gallipolis, Tige Osborne of An·
napolis, Md., and T11 Osborne of Gallipolis.
He was preceded in death by rwo brotherS, Donald and Lawrence Ows.
Serviceswillbe2p.m.MondayattheWillisFuneralHomewiththeRev.
Billy Payne offiCiating. Burial will be in Providence Cemetery.
Friends may call today from 610 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
There will be a Masonic Service at8:30 p.m. today 81the funeral home
by Gallia Lodge 469.
Pallbearers will be Brian and Michael Ours, Doooie Oun, Paul Dean
: Porter, Norman Mitchell and Tony OUrs.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) - A proposed Marshall University
policy to allow campus police 10 keep lllpe victim's names secret violates the state open·records law, a campus journalism group said.
The Marshall Faculty SCnate on Thursday endorsed the policy.
"The people, in delegatil)g authority, do not give !heir public servants the rightro decide what is good for the people to know and what
is not good for them 10 know," said Maureen Johnson, vice president
of Marshall's chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists.
"The people insist on remaining informed, so !hat they may retain
conuol over the instruments of government they have aeated," she
said.
Marshall President J. Wade Gilley must still approve !he resolution
before it becomes policy. Gilley said he was unfamiliar with the
delails.
The resolution came in the wake of a decision by Marshall's student
newspaper, The Parthenon, ro identify a Huntingron woman who was
sexually assaulted. The newspapec has changed its policy and now
does not print the names of victims.
Marshall's pepartment of Public Safery does not release the names
of any crime victuns 10 the media.

!

The 1994 Communi!).' Services Block Gr:ant application, rre·
pared by the Gallia-Meigs Co1J1munity Action Agency, wit be
available for review starting Nov. 22 and ending Dec. 3.
A copy of !he completed application ~ll be available for public
revie~ 81 the CAA ofl1ce in Cheshire. Any comments or recommendations on the application Should be received by the CAA no
later than Dec. 3. All comments .will be forwarded to the Ohio
· Department of Development, Office of communi!}' services.
The CAA administers the block J!1311l for Gallia and Meigs counties, and the J!1311t provides funding for a number of services to lowincome residenrs.
'

Editor's note: Names, aces and addresses are printed as they
appear on olrlclal reports.

LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS

. WOOD

.culiio

cABINR

1

All things com·e to those who wait

GALLIPOUS - Cuba Dean Carter, 95, formerly of Gallipolis died
ThUISday, Nov. 18, 1993 in Carrollton Health Care Center CarrolltQD.
Ohi9. Sbe ~ a member of the United Methodist Cbun:h,
Ohio.

\

Grant application review set · .

Veterans Memorial
Friday admissions: Beatrice
Williamson, Pomeroy; Milford
Bowens, Portland and Doris
Goodrich, Long BotiOIII.
Friday discharges: Earl Glass,
Middleport and Helen Jeffers,
Syracuse.

Thelma Vineyard
Miller

it was parked at lils residence. According to !he report, !he radio is
valued at $75.

'

Cuba Carter

-with the exception of buses, elevators and lottery jackpots.

BOWMAN'S

.

color
the S

• Anpirllloly Thor111iot• On Stoff
• 24 Hr. Elnwfl"'ey Strvict
• Dlroolllllng: Modlcar~dictld
1114AIInlw-

I

Tall FIH Dbll-100-458-6344
70PINEST. GAlliPOLIS

JHE GRAND~ JJE~PENING .
il '

~.

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We have completely redecorated our building Inside a.-ad out and we
a~ anxious for you to see our "New Look''. We have restocked and .
are loaded with new fall merchandlie now at special prices during
this Grand Re-Opening Event.

~

Scott Lacas, lert, Admialstrator or Veterans
~
Hospital ill Polneroy, Is plctared with two afternoon
$ speaken reatared at the IUllllll!i bolpital board or trustees retreat
• held at tbe HoUday Ina, Gallla Coail~y. The speakers were
?, Charles Stearas, ceater, and Jim Wheatoa, both of the U. S.
§ Health Corp., ColuabDJ. They addresaed bealtbc:are reform as
,. weD as aspecls or tbe HOIJ)Ital AIUIUIC!e or Oblo or wbkb Veterans
, ' Memorial is a member. The llollpllal'a board or trustees a&lt;~ well as
~ the hOIJ)ital's medical staff held basiness sessioiiS during the after·
'I
aooa session or tbe retreat.

Emergen~y

Managemeat Agency, Renee
Young, Southeast Ohio field coordinator ror
Ohio Emergency Managemeat Agency, Bud
Marshall, the exercise training office or Ohio
· Emergeacy Management Ageacy, lllld Dan Winningham, the field coordinator ror Northeast
Ohio were the instructors. Abeve are several or
the participants as they took part in an emereency exercise. (Pboto by Dave Hartis)

EOC COURSE- A one-day course deslped
to aequalat local el!lf'1eDcy ~ ptr!Ciallel
aad elected ol'llc:lall WJth the role o( an Emer·
aacy Operations Center dur1D1 dllllllten aad
emerJenclea wu beld Thursday at die Meigs
Coaaty Emefleaey Servlcu ~ beadquarters. ApproXImately 30 EMS iid county omdall from ·Melp, GaDia aad IJodrliiJ Couaties
atteacled the tralnlna RUIOD, eoilllacted by the

lUll'S

DOCKER SUCKS

$28"'

Valutsto
$37.50 ' .

.I

Meigs EMS
responds
seven calls

to

.

2 PA11 155

WARNING
MO HUNTING·NO TRESPASSING

Units of the Meigs County
Emcraency Medical Servic~s
~ 10 seven calls for asSIStance Friday ind early Sallltday.
Unill responding w= 8:34 a.m.
Pliinl to Swe Route 124
~ling Reed who was treated
at the scene; 9:19 a.m. Rutland to
White •s Hill R!lad for Michael
Gomez who was ueated at the
.cene: 2:47 p.rii. Middlepcirt 10 Mill
Sitcet Cor IacCJ,IJe.linc Mays ~ho
.... ~ 10 Holza' Medical
~· 7:11p.m. Sf11Cuse 10 Collei&amp; Road for Michael Jlubbard
'w6o . - tae8ldd at the scene: 7:12
,111.'RII:ille 10· Stile Route 124 for
Reynolds who w~ tr~s-

=

10 VetaUJ Memorial Hos-

i*ll: P:~ pJII. s~ ro FoUrth
' !laeeil ~ Elneat Trip~ who was

~ to VMH: 12:34 a.m. ·
M
S ::,ase to Sellen Ridge for

Sellen whO was lralljported

10 YJ,JII-!1

eorrectlon

This notice is a warning to ·any and ·
all perso~s t_hat no hun'ting or
trespassing will be allowed on the
lands of ·Cr~wn City Mining, Inc.,
located in Gcillia and Lawrence
Counties.
·Anyone found hunting
trespassfng on these lands will
prosecut,ct to ,the fullest extent of
the law, in accordance )Yith Section
2911.21 of the Ohio Revised Code.
~rown City.Mining, Inc.
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: • POMEROY - The follpwing domeStic violence. $100 plus costS,
: cases were resolved Wednesday in 30 days jail suspended to time
• the Meigs County Coun of Judge serve~.. one ye.~ probation,
~ Plttrick H. O'Brien.
restrammg order ISsued; Rhonda
~
Fined were: Clarence W. Vale, Long Bottom, seat bel~ $25
• Mitchell, Gallipolis, speed, $30 plus costs; Charles E. Jones, Rus~ plus costs; Terry L. Hlad, Cam- sellvill~, Ky., speed, $30 plus
: · bridge, speed, $30 plus costs; Deb- costs; V1c10r R. Counts, Syracuse,
o, orah A. Dunlap, South Charlesron, seat bel~ $25 plus costs; Gale L.
: W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs: Dal- Berry, Dw)bar, W.Va., speed, $30
, ~ las E. Gardner, Luckey; speed. $30 plus costs; Vinda J. Biggs,
, plus costs; Philip A. Wolfe, Pomeroy, speed,'$30 1&gt;lus costs;
; Reedsville, seat belt, $25 plus Darrell T. Young, Racme, speed,
• costs; John H. Manley, Pomeroy, $30plus costs;
: speed, $30 plus cosis: Dewayne E.
Steven B. Cherry, Dublin
: Good, Racine, speed, $30 plus speed. $30 plus costs; Oren Ellis'
• costs; Sharon C. Wtny, Pomeroy, Middlepon, improper handling of
: seat belt, $25 plus costs;
firearm in a motor vehicle, $100
:
Denise M. Scott, Athens, seat plus costs, silt months probation
• belt, $15 plus costs; Steve E. fine suspended; spotlighting, $130
g McCauley, Athens, seat belt, $25 plus costs, forfeiture of spotlight·
~ plus costs; Harley Edward Duke, Thomas King, Middleport, seai
• Allen Park, Mich.. speed, $30 plus belt, $25 plus costs; Dale Riffie,
" 'costs; John Wayne Shelton II, Pomeroy, seat belt, $15 plus costs;
• ,Kingspon, Tenn., speed, $30 plus Ricluird L. Coleman, Pomeroy, seat
~ costs: Linda S. Jones, Middlepon, belt, $25 plus costs; Robert M:.
o1 ·seat belt, $25 plus costs; Robert Johnson, Racine, no OL, $100 plus
~ Avis, C~lville, speed, $30 plus cosrs, five days jail, $SO of fine and
S "costs; Chrisropher Qersbach, Syra- jail ~nded if valid OL jreSCDt·
~ ,cuse, speed, $30 plus costs; Timo- ed wi!hin 60 days;
~ thyA. Graham, Pomeroy, seat belt,
I~s P'riddy, Middlepon, pos~ $25 plus costs;
session of marijuana, $50 plus
• : Mabel Sheets, Pomeroy, speed, costs; Steven _Swann, Pomeroy,
, ~ :S30 plus costs; Francis Dickens, improper handling of a.firearm in a
. r.j'omeroy, seat belt, $15 plus COilS; motorvCbicle, $100 plus costs, $50
~ Eric Ray Johnson, Pomeroy. driv· of fine suspended; Dennis Boyd
~ ing under the infl~. $500 plus Wilkesville, assault, $100 plu~
i. cost$, 10 days jail suspended to costs, five days jail suspended, one
~ olhree days, 180-day pperator's year Jlf011ati9n: lfCrbenNoel, Mid~ liCense S!JSpeiiSion, one year proba- dleport, misuse of a credit car·d,
~ lion, $250 of fme and j8it suspend·
00
•f ed upo
· n completion of residential $1 plus costs, 10 days jail suspended and 40 houn of community
~ "treatment pJOIIlllD: stop sip, $20 service with litter CO!III'OI, restitu·
= Plus coslll; -belt, $25 plus costs; tion: Earl Wines Jr.. Cheshire,
to )on Frmnan. P~&gt;:· DUl, $500 DUI, $500 plus .c osts, OL su.spen~ plus COlli, 10 days jaiiOS!JspeL
. nded sion, I 0 days jail suspemled to
~ ~ days, 180-da&gt;:
suspen- three days, $250 of fme and jail
s1on, one. l!ear probation, $250 of suspended upon completion of resi~ ~~ jail ~~tial upon com- , dential mtment program; failure
~ t - - ' 'alta~..... trcaiJDCDI pro- to COIIIIO~ $30 plus costs;
= ~; liiCp sigrl! $20 plus COiiU;
Sheryl H. Holdren, UUle Hock.._~ Raymond Utchfield, Pomeroy, ing, speed, $30 plus ~: Michael

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' WRAPPING '

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Sands' in the past.

Pinson's off the wall.
Freeman's out in the woods.

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Times-Sentinel

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Moslly clear ronightl.ow in
themid-20s.Lightsou!hwinds.Sunday,mostlysuooyandwarmer. High
in the lower 50s.
Extended forecast
. FairMonday. l.ows in the 30s.
Highs m !he upper 40s 10 m•d·SOs.
FairTuesday.Lowsinthe30s.Highs
in the lower and mid-50s. Wednesday ,chance of showers. lows in !he
upper 30s and lower 40s. Highs
upper 40s 10 mid-50s.
Around the nation
Clouds and.rain covered parts
oftheNortheastandNorthwestearly
today, while the coldest air of the

inservices and some special educational instructional materials and
other administrative services.
Bids on a 1964 van and a bus
body were openecUTbe high bids
of $101 .50 on the van from Jack
Kerwood and $136 from Wendell
Ervin ror the bus body were accept·

team .

ed.

The board approved contracts
with Site Scan, Inc. for asbestos
management services for this
school year at a cost of $2,100.
Also approved was a contract
between Southern Local School
District and SEOSERC, an agency
which provides special education

B. McCon. Logan, speed, $30 plus
costs ; David L. Douglas,
Reedsville, left or center, $20 plus
costs; Glenn A. Ferguson, New
Haven, W.Va., disobeyed traffic
sign. $20 plus costs; Nicole G. Jennings, Athens, speed, $30 plus
costs; Ryan S. Douglas, Massillon,
se8l bel~ $25 plus costs; Karen S.
Toothman, Bidwell, speed, $30
plus costs; Cynthia L. Jones,
Pomeroy, speed , $30 plus costs;
Christopher Cole, Coolville, tint

The board gave approval to
Syracuse Youth League and the
Syracuse YfO to purchase an ice
machine.

Attending were Susy Grueser,
Joseph Thoren, Tom Roseberry,
and Denny Evans, boanl members,
and Dennie Hil~ treasurer.

Girl dragged to death by bus
as horrified father watches
MARKESAN, Wis. (AP) _ A
man waiting for· his 9-year-old
daughter 's return from school
watched in horror as !he little girl
was d ragge d to her deat h by a
school bus.
Renee Belongia's clothing
apparently was caught in the closing bus door as the third-grader
wasdroppedoffathomeThursday,
sheriff's deputies said. Her father

was waiting for her In their front
yar~.
.
. . .
! was In the house lhinlting 11
was JUS! about time for Renee 10 be
home," her mother. Paty Belongia,
h d
.d F .da "S dd
sa1 ~· Y. . u en 1Y 1 ear
screammg. Chris,!M after !he bus
and got It to SIO!!·
The bus dnver, Anthony R.
Sche~. 67, had 31 J:cast 10 y~
expenence, accor~mg to Ch1ef

seasonhitAiasband!hreatened todescend soulhwanl.
Showers fell in Albany, N.Y., and
Portla..t, Ore., and 1emperaruresacross
parts of the Alaska interior plunged to
near SO degrees below zero. Early
morning temperatures in Anchomge
hovered around zero.
The rest of the nation was mostly
clear and seuonably cool.
The coldest air of the season was
expected to sweep down from Canada
and Alaska inlo the Northwest and
PlainsearlySundayandkeeptemperawres well below freezing for several
days.

Is there

a difference
in auto claim

handling?
Allstate has today's most
advanced claim handling.
Coast to coast. Fast. Convenient. A lot of times we
can settle it right over the
phone. Wben you compare,
we think you '11 find
/ - -- - ..
a difference
/ ~ ·
at Allstate.

. i~~

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The McGinness.Sianley Agent
417 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis, Oh.
446-176 1

Allslale~

~~\1.::.!~"'"' .....,

violation, $100 plus cos~. given
one week 10 remove tint, fine suspended upon proof.of tint removal;
Forfeiting bonds w.ere: John R.
Vandsteghen, Barboursville,
W.Va., speed, S70; Scott Keesey,
Tiffin, improper turn, $70;
Clarence Mitchell, Gallipolis. seat
belt, $45; Anhur McCloud, Huntington, W.Va., speed, $70; Charles
Boothe, Chesapeake, speed, $62:
David Alston, Athens, speed, $90.

Remember the good times
· with ArtCcirved:
Ohio
11 Ohio River Plaza
between Hills &amp; Big Bear
Gallipolis,

446-SAMS

Houn: Mon.-Fri. 9-8, S.t. &amp;-6, Sun. 12-5
NO APPOINTIIEHT-JUST DROP 14 AT YOUR CONVEHENCE

r------------------PERM PLUS SPECIAL 1

HIGHSCHOOL

tl.ASSRINGS

PLUS AlEE CUSTOM

. FEA11HS-

'75 off 18K,

ATOTAL VALUE OF

'50 off 14K,

l.PTO'US.

'25 off 10K
Designer
Series Styles.

I
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--.---

$2495

•Shompoo ·

P ; ' ' ;OA

-ccu:ol a .,.. ,.,.,..

Of1tf b)&gt;iresllot. 5. 1993.
•

SotM•-idioi• ""'-,.
... ...., ,., lllllilll.

SPIRAL PERM

sg9s

i

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By The Associated Press

which bus the camera is in and the
purpose is 10 curb some discipline
problems on the bus.
Linda Harman was hired as a
substirute aide ror the Ponland Elementary School. Also approved
was payment to Jennifer Roush,
coach for the reserve volleyball

j;Meigs County Court fines 47

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Hoeflich's 'round the bend.

RACINE - Operating funds for
the Southern Local School District
for fiscal year 1994, including
$3,693,677 to the general fund,
were approved in a permanent
app•op•lltions resOlution passed by
the Board of Education Thwsday
nighL
The delay in passing the appropriations resolution was attributed
to loan program approval delay.
The district now has allilpization
from the state andiJor to bOrrow up
· to $179,000 during this fiscal year
which ends June 30, 1994.
. The lOial of the all funds appropriated is $5,089,531. In addition to
the $3,693,677 in !he general fund,
other amounts appropriated were
- $40,425 to the special revenue
funds; $65,146. ro the debt service
funds; $15,900 to the capital projects funds; $288,572 to the enterprise funds; and $85,809 to !he
fiduciary funds.
The board approved the purchase of camera equipment for the
buses totaling $2,029. That will
include one camera and 11 boxes
and decals for the buses. A box will
be on each bus and the camera will
be moved from one bus 10 another.
Students will not be able to tell

OXYGEN &amp; RESPIRATORY
EQUIPMENT &amp;SUPPLIES

NEW .HASKINS·TANNER CO.

------------------,
Crow's on top of things.

Cool weather to give way
to.warm and sunny skies

Southern board OKs operating funds ·

SPECIAUSTS IN:

.. - Ar,TJD: ·'

.

l . or ~ tl

NOIECARE MmiC.U SUPPLY INC~

,,44G•7J83

Weather

$4195

MEN'S STYLE CUT

ssss : .:
4Qol ~ (TUl

IW!"

O.loll.f'OLIS ['IIQ 4-.R::U
t,W"t.nrr lUI ~ t i£M !rll:t "

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�Commentary
Sunday Times-Sentinel/A6
Panetta set to play the bad guy

November 21, 1993

A DfvlaloD ol

Ill Court St., Pomeny, Obio

('I4) 99l-ll56
ROBERT L. WJNGE1T

Publlobtr
HOBART WILSON JR.
ExO&lt;utln Editor

MARGARET LEHEW

Controller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, and the American
Newspaper Publishers Association.
c

LETTERS OF OPINION an welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letters ore subject to editing and must be signed with

name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be
published. Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not

pcrsona1ities.

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Candidates want support
at polls, not their opponent's
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASH!NGlON - To be politically correct, candidates traditionally
urge every citizen 10 register and vote. To be politically successful,
they're more selective.
They want their supporters at the polls, not their opponent's. Let them
stay home.
That latter aim, holding down the opposition turnout, usually went
without saying. But they were tallting about it in New Jersex even before
Republican Ed Rollins told, then retracted, his story of a $500,000 effon
to hold down the black, likely Democratic vottl for governor.
He was one of three aides to Gov .-elect Christie Todd Whitman who
spoke of suppressing the opposition vote, although one of them caught
himself after a syllable and softt~ned his language.
Tryin$ to figure out who ~oltls in any elec'tion is as much a pan of the
competilloo ~ trying to convmce people how to vote.
The new federal law to simplify voter registtation, aimed at enrolling
millions of prospective voters.who hadn't signed up, was debated off and
on for five years before it fmaUy was enacred'.
It had been blocl&lt;ed by Republican veto before the Democmts won and
PreSident Clinton sijned it into law.
The law, effective for the 1996 elections, requires states to let people
register to-vote by mail or at state and local government offices, including
those that issue driver's licenses. and at welfare and social service agencies. It aiiD forbids purging the voting lists of non-vottlrs.
Republican OllJ!ODCnts called it an invitation to fraud. It would have
been unpolitic 10 aay so, but they worried that the new rules might tend to
boost Deil)ocratic registtation oC lower income and minority votm.
Elfons to regi$cr and then to tum out voters on election day are pan of
any campaign. But they are carefully targeted. And actively trying to hold
down the ether side, persuading people to stay away, let alone paying for
the pUI'JlOIC, is IIIOiher matter.
Rollins said that was ~ in the Whibnan campaign, which he managed for trix MCb. Then be tried to back off, saying he had exaggeratt~d.
TQO late; his story of S!reet money payments and contributions to black
churches to dampen the Demoaatic vote prompted two investigations, a
challenge to the DillOW Republican victory, and controversy that hasn't
eased.
• In the Nov. 9 remadts be recanted. Rollins said "I think to a cenain
extent.. we suJ)JX'eSSed their vote."
That wcxd-hatliUiliCd up in earlier comments by Whitman campaigners At a blne1 at Princeton IWO days after the election, Webster B. Todd
Jr.: Mrs. Whitman's ~· who managed the campaign before RoUins,
talked aboui I;UnlOUt taclics.
" .. :fiiilt is where a lot of our elTon went and a lot of our planning -·getting out the vote on one side and voter sup ... " be said, stopping to
re~ "and keeping the vote light in other areas.''
Carl' Golden, spokesman for the governor-elect, was quoted by the
Asbur)' .Park Press as saying that "voter suppression" sometimes is as
important as getting votes. pointing to reduced Democratic margins in two
urbiln counties.
After the Rollins episode, Mrs. Whitman said she didn't campaign that
way, "I urge ~le to vote, I don't suppress voltls."
More candidly, but carefully, she said later:
•'You make your effort to get your vote·out where you know you are
stiOng and you just hope that the vote isn't as strong in the areas where
you are baiting ... "
Acblally, winning campaigns seldom leave it to just hope. Then: are
ways to bold down the opposition vote, or tty, perhaps unauractive, but
accepted.
. . IS
. ooe, ...............
·---··-· n~ the .~""
-···· canelidate, espeNe$8tive camp81gnmg
clally m opposition. territory. When that Sliceeeds, 11 can tum down enthu. . . and turnout.
S18S~etimes •. ~t sttate~ lea a .plll'IY !0 avoid ftelding a.candidate
in a locallir distnct race, wnlinJ off an, unwim)able challenge m opptlSItion· tenirory to avoid stirring intereatllld .tumaut that could affect a state
I
contaL ·
• Jt works both ways. Republicans might pass ,up a contest in a Democnitic cily, while the Democmts skill one in an affluent suburb with GOP
babits.
cimpaign mailings tiRI used .the Slll'le !'ay, '!UB~rcd, so that the mes. 881e lroes only to areu wbere ihe. tand•date 1s likely to benefit, and
d'oesliTt motivate people who probably Would v.ote the other. way.
It's standard ~edure amoog campaign~·
Talldnti'about II iS noL
EDITOR'S NOTE..;_ Walter R. Mgn, Yke president and columDiit -for
Aaaoclated ~reu, bas reported oD WashiDRton ud
nado~ull polltla ror 1110re t1au 30 :rears. ·

·ne

s·erry·~
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e1tNI!rNU, IIw:.

•t know it's fashionable to wear j61Jris that are
tom lit 'the knees, but, dem il, MY KNEES
. GET COLD!' . I
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WASH!NGlON -It was Pogo
who said: "I have seen the enemy
and it is us." But perhaps nobody
in public life sympathizes with the
sentiment like the director of the
Office of Management and Budget,
Leon Panella.
Even by his own outspoken
standards, Panetta was remarkably
blunt and barbed during a recent
intt~rview. He discussed the palace
politics that help perpetuate the
deficit, the hopelessly bankrupt
budget process-and a boreaucracy
that knows how to break the spirit
of reformers.
Approaching his rust anniversary as budget chief after a 16-year
career in Congress, Panetta was
asked what he has learned.
"WeD, I ~ss the most important lesson I ve learned is that the
problems are more immense and
intractable inside," he said, bursting into laughter. "You are almost
trying to confront a state of mind
that's been in place for a ion$ time.
It's almost the attitude (10 the
bureaucracy) that administrations
come and go ... (but) the system
wiU survive.''

Some of Panetta's Cabinet colleagues have already become too
much a pan Qf that sySieln. Panetta
is piqued at adminisbation officials

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
who are seeking end runs around
the new budget realities.
"Right now, just to give you an
example, most of the agencies and
depanments have come back with a
wish list that's anywhere from $15
billion to $20 billion above the
(budget) cap. You've got to then
force some very important decisions," Panella said. He pointed to
the new discretionary spending
freeze that will force painful cuts in
the next budget.
Panetta currently finds himself
pinned between two extremes:
There's Reps. Timothy Penny, D·
Minn., and John Kasich, R-Ohio,
who are pushing for a $103 billion
package of cuts, and those

Demociats who are seeking more
government "investment" to spur
the economy.
The savmgs from reinventing
government are proving to be exaggerated, and what's left is quickly
evaporating into requests for new
spending,,as opposed to deficit
reduction.
One of Washington's oldest
story lines is unfolding. Everyone
is for a balanced budget - as long
as their ox isn't being gored.
Everyone is for perSonnel cuts as long as they aren't in their back
yard- or agency. The issue is
greed, not gridlock. •• Agencies and
del!artments that now say we need
to be exempted from that or we
need more personnel for Ibis... they
need to make very tough decisions," Panetta says.
Ultimately, it's Panetta's Jot to
play · ~ the bad guy" and impose
cuts Cabinet secn:taries can't sromach to make Jhc:mselves.
"It shouldn't be done here within OMB," said Panetta. "It should
be done .within the agencies and
those that'know the program. The
unfortunate thing was for a tong

(i)t!!lfOltf 'l'jiJSI\S~·'I'Ii~

f+Uc.it\e

",

'tJ ~
'IJ 1J y

time the name of the game was
throw the ball here to OMB. To
some exttlnt it's what I've seen on
Capitol Hill because sometimes
departments develop their own
constituencies, and they want to
show their constituencies they're
for them. Therefore, they build up
the {budget) numbers.''
There is a way to make a beller
budgetary mousetrap, and Panetta
has been pushing il since his freshman term in the House: Switch
from an annual to a biennw budget. Passing a bud11et every two
years, Panetta believes, would
afford more time for long-range
planning, reduce some of the posturing, and pave the way for better
oversight of current programs.
It might belp with deadlines as
well as decision-making. The 1995
budget will be the first that was
actually prepared in a " bQtlomup" fashion, Panetta says. The last
one was shaped by the White
House after the election. Some
agencies are late in 'delivering them
10 OMB. As an ironic illustration,
Panetta took a phone call from
Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen,
who was gently asked to ''have
your people send over your budget
ASAP." It was due OcL I.
"The year-to-year process basically forces you to kind of get by,"
he explained. ''Rather than n\aldng
some hold decisions about areas
that ought to either be totally wiped
out or areas that don't work and
building a case for that, you find
yourself in a position where... the
temptation is let's just put enough
money in or let's just cut enough to
get by."
. Panetta has another priority on
his agenda, though Ibis is rn'ore attitudinal. He expressed it when we
invited him to draft the most
sweeping executive order he'could
imagme that might -sluike up business as usual in Washington. After
a long pause, he answered: •'l think
you probably need an executive
order that says, "Cut otlt the b.s.
Get to the heart of die issue a lot
faster and try to see if there's a
more direct way to solve a prob- ·
tern.'''
Until then, Panetta, like Pogo,
knows where to find the enemy.
Jack ADdersoD aDd Michael
Bluteln are writers for UDited
Featare Syndicate, Inc.
·•

'
Clinton's 2nll political lynching
Clarence Thomas may have
coined the phrase "high-tech
lynching,'.' but i!'s ~i~t 9inton who •s putting thts tdea mto
practice. In less than six months,
two distinguished blact Americans
- Lani Guinier and Dr. Clifton R.
Whanon - have been t1!e victims
of a presidentiaii¥JII:hing.
Last wedt:, Clinton scapegoated
Deputy Sec~ of.State ~n,
the departments h1ghest-ranlcing
black, for the near total failure of
Clinton's foreign pdlicy.
But back-to-back headlines
explained the ~ ~sons .for the
bankruptcy of Clinton s policy. On
the clay Wharton's resignation was
a~cepted, a front-page New York
Tunes story, 3 PLAYERS SEEK A
DIRECTOR FOR A F~REIGN
POLICY STORY, descnbed the
ineptitudes ~f Secretary of State
Warren ChriStoph.er, Secrela!Y of
Defense Les Aspm and National
Security Advi~ Anthony Lake.
~. fo~owmg '!!'Y· when '!Yharron s resignation. was ~shed,
a front-~e Washinaton
story
was headlined HOW THE WHITE
HOUSE RUNS AND S.TUM·
BLES. .
.
,
.
.
President Bubba s fore•gn !Xlh·
cy ~ def!CC! common sense Since
h1s maugurall~n. But what happens
when somethmg gets broke? Most

people try to fix' il Ointonchose to
scapegoat the black guy, and Clift
Wharton was conveniently available.

Chuck Stone
As secretaries of state go,
Christopher will never achieve the
historic grandeur of his seven
greatest predecessors - Monroe,
Hay, Root, Hull, ~hall, Acheson and Dulles - or the second
team of Jefferson, Madison.
Sew)lld, Kellogg, Rusk, Kissinger
and Vance.
If Christopher had a shred of
decency in him, he would have
resignedinsteadofWhanon.
Clinton's political hero, John F.
Kennedy - who had something
Clinton will never have: class never humiliated his black
appointees. Yet, in the space of six
months, Clinton has already
debased ' two high-level black
appointees. What is 'especially
galling is that both are members of
two of America's most distinguished blackfamilies.
Lani Guinier's father. Ewart,
was a prominent blact scholar who
headed the African-American studies department at Harvard. Clift

WhanOn's father beclame the flfst
black
'career ambassador serving
1
with distinction in two ma}or posts.
Both families are members of
1
W.E.B. DuBois' "talented tenth"
But what does Buliba Cli~ton
do? Savage their reputations and
sidetrack their careers. Guinier's
legal career has already been wellpublicized. Less welt.known is
Wharton's distinguished career.
This is where the media.' s
intractable racism has been a tacitpartner in justifying adminisbalive
racism.
· Stories about his resignation
alluded only to him as a former
president of Michigan State Uni·
versity and •'a fanner pension fund
executive." The latter is like callingPicassoapainter.
Whanon haS been the CEO for
TIAA-CREF, the country's largest
private pension fund, as weD as the
president of the State University of
New York system and a former
clu!irman of the board of the Rockefeller Foundation. He is a man•"erial genius, it distinction for whlch
no official at the: State Department
is known.
But the plantation masters at
State (an independent fiefdom)
barred Whanon from White House
meetings. State Depanment widers and influential columnists

I ,

Evans and Novalc were distressed
· that Thomas Pickering, currently
the ambassador ro· Russia, did not
get the No. 2 job, as had ·been
expec~
·
Inspired by loyalty to Christopher, his staff members. leaked
mformation predicting Wharton· s
depart!lre to ' Ne!"swe4?k and
"Washington Week 10 Re'VIew." A
printed version'of "WWR" reveals
an interesting subliminal slip: One
of the panelists referred to Wharton
as "Clinton Honon."
We all look alike, don't we,
Wiltie?
In Wharton's gracious two-page
letter of resignation to Clinton,
whom he warmly pnlised, he con:
eluded, ''One cannot shrug off
such pernicious attacks and COJ)tinue to be effective in the ABSENCE
OF SUPPORTNE REfUTATION
OF THE L~" {my emph8sis).
Wharton's resignation will not
go down as one of the nobler
moments of~ Clinton presidc;ncy.
But then agam, when the odds. that
Clinton will only be a one-thm
president are formidable, both
Guinier and Wharton may have
made the right decisions.
.
Chuck StoDe Is a syndicated
wrller.for Newspaper ED(erprlse
Association.

Enough with the Bobbitt case
How do you tell when something is geaing old?
Well, with shirts, the collars get
fmyed. With cheese, the: blue niold
is a dead giveaway. If it's banalities and buzz words, the primal
screams in the middle of the night
are a good indication that somethins is getting jlast its prime.
Oh, and the nausea. If you are
constantly suppressing the gag
ren~. you can be fairly cenain you
are regularly encountering something that's gotten old and gone
bad.
That's where I am right now
with radical feminist dogma. It's
jtctling old and I am getting sick of
11. When the fanatics want to
decapitate Sen. Ro!Jert PaCkwood;
R.()re., for~ relatively innocuous
sin of pi101ry, I shake my bead in
wonderment When the fundamentalista fang up on an honorable
judicia nominee like Clarence
Thomas. I get severely out d llort&amp;
When the monomllliacl yelp With
glee at the news thit a wife baa cut
off her husNnd'1 penis, I want to
throw up.
Yes, God forgive me, I am
going to wril.e about John Bobbitt's
1e vered member. I prom Ised
myadr I would not, but I have been
orqvoked. For the uninformed, this
J

is the gist of it:
On June 23, 26-year-old exMari~e cum nightclub host Johp
BobblU of Manassas, Va., came in

Joseph Spear

hothead wbo gOt carried away and nine women and thrie men cieclded
concocted the mpe story to cover there were too ntany boles in Loreher cruel act? Sbouldn't she have na's story and ablolvedJohn.
let a jury decide? Isn't this what we
That seems to have satisfied
used to call vigilante justice? Nooo, fair-minded people, includin,g most
they said. Spousal abuse is abom- of the women I know who rushed
inable; John Bobbitt got what he to judgment in the immediate wake
deserved.
of the event. ~ Jhc:y let the1r
When I expressed my senti- eiiKllim)s get the beat of them, they
ments .to ,Of!C of my classes at The now seem to be saying. Perhaps
American University, the women John Bobbitt and his manhood
studentB sat in stunned siJena,, star- should not have been trepii'IIU!d.
OK, I thQUght. now we can we
ing at me as if I bad just uttered the
m._. asinine thing they had· ever let this patlletic pair recede into t1te
anonymity from whence; the·y
~ Finllly, one spob up. "Certainly a woman knows wllen. she ambushed our sensibilities? No,
fias bcenaped, .Prof. Spear," she said the zealou, we ~anaOt.. Kiln ·
Said.
•
Gandy, executive vice JJrelident of
' In that innocent utterance is the the National Organfzatio'n for
lamentable Slimmation of what we Women, said it "discourages
have come to in the era of radical women and gives men a free ride l'n
feminism: Any male accused of marital rape caaea." Pur another
trespass againit a woman is ipso way, Bobbitt's limOcence js lrrelefacto guilty. 'Iho mere ICCUIIItion Is van~ hia infaaiioUI OIJIIIII!ould'be
~- . We don't need tJ¥s. We SIPri&amp;ed far tbe Jdod of tbe Cllll6.
'(pur schti¢k ia jetting old,
don't need hearili1s. Just snip off
..
•
their jlenlses and toss·thCm out the Kim.
wlnc!Ow.
· JDHph Sp1r Ia a •pdlc1ted
AI it happened; theie was a triii WfJttl' for ~per ED•-rlle
· ""'"
in the Bobliitt else, and a jury of · Aaodatloti.

after a night of boozing, rolled
upon his wife Lorena and auempted conjugation. He later testified lie
couldn't remember the finale. The
24-year-old Lorena later told the
cops sl\e was mad because be was
. insensitive to her needs. So she
Jlll~ a filleting knife, "pulled
ll&amp;Ck the sheets and ... did it.'
She ian to the car and drove off
with penis in hand. When she reaJ.
i~ what ahe ·waa clutching; she
floog it out the window. It was later
found and reattached to husband
John. Sbe told the cops she cut ber
SJlC!UIC becese he had mped her.'
This is where things reaD)' 111rt
10 get revolting. In the da)'ll' UDDIII•
diately thereafter, almost eve.,Y
woman I ran into drycleaner to
degreed academic, would say
somethinJ like, "Did you hear
about
the
Bobbi~ta?
YESSSSSSSSI'' •
'!'h()ught for Today: "We are ..way~ dplng, says he, something for
Well, walt a minute I would say, posterity, but I would fain see· poilerity do Something for Us." -1bseph
.
'
isn't there a chance that Lorena is • Addisclil, English easayiJtand poet (1672·171?).
•

•

.

•

-

~N~o~v~em~bw~~~~~1ft~3~==~====~~======~====~P~ome~r~oy~;M:Id~d~l~~~rt~-G~~~l~lpo~lla~,~O~H~P~o~ln~t~P~.Ie~a~u~n~t~,w~v==============·~S~ugnd~a~y~n~m~ea;;S,~n~fl~n:et~P~~~D':·~A?

-Three men tell Dayton newspap;er
:.:'.th.at priest a.cte.d -inap. propriately
"
DAY'I'ON, Ohio (AP) - Three ahle.
' men said a priest also named in a
"He's already JCl'IC to bed, and
1 . sex abuse lawsuit against Roman I don't want to wake him," Kramer
.. , Catholic Can1inai Joseph Bemardin said.
.
, · licted lewdly with them and other
Steven J. Cook, 34, of~.· high school students during ~he phia, filed a $10 million lawsuit
:' early 1970s, the Dayton Daily last week alleging thai Bernardin,
"; News reported today.
· then archbishop m Cincinnati, .00
_, Two of the .men said the Rev. Harsham sexually abused him
,;, EJ!i4 ~ show~ them ~ when he was a preseminll')' hlgll
" graphic mOVIes, while oae claimed school tltlldent in Cincinmti in the
·: the priest once grabbtd the .ntan's . mid-1970s. Both Bernardin, who
• ·crotch. The newspaper dtd not , Jives in Chicago and Harsham
•: id~ntify the. three former Carroll have denied the all~ns.
,· High SchD':&gt;I students who requestShortly after his ordinati~n in
- ed anonym~ty.
May 1968, Harsham was assigned
_ Harsham, 52, could not be as associate pastor of St. ~len
.. reached for commenL
Catholic Church in Mad R:iver
' The Rev. William Kramer, who Township and to teach biolo~ and
.••· answered the telephone shonly retigion at Carroll. He remained in
· before midnight at SL Luke's recto- those posts through June 20, 1973.
· ry in Beavercreek, where Harsham
He was an instructor at St. Gie' ' lives, said Harsham was unavail- gory Seminary in Cincinnati in lhe

1910s, aad now heads a campus
miniall')' Pfl1&amp;ram ~ WriJht State
Univenlty.
·
"He'd tell you a diny joice in
the conf"aional," laid one man,
·identified by the Daily News u a
1975 CanoJl gndDete Now 36, be
it a criminal justiu administrator
livirigln IWestenl~~~~e,
The' liewspaper ·said the man
alleged that IIIIIUII hiJ tophomore
year at Carroll, Hanham showed
him and some friends sexually
. explicit movies ill the basement of
t¥ SL Helen's rectory tllld IIUide a
sexual advance 'toward him at
I!Chool.
.
The Daily News laid the man
.offaed to ~ with any official investigation of the priest. The
111an laid hC1ricd to tdl his parents
abouti:Urshllll)'s behavior, "but
they just dido 't want to hear il .

..----Ohio briefs- ----.
State denies giving false information

~Ei~=:FJ:S~~

They didn't want to talk about iL"
He said be Stopped associating
with the~ and put the wisodes
out of his mind until Jlarsham' s
name surfaced in the news.
The Daily News quoted a second former student as saying he
arrived at a mtionale for Harsham's
behavior.
"He didn't do anything- he
didn't touch any of us, so I didn't
think it was that weird," the former
student said. "I just thought it was
a thin' priests did because they
couldn 1have women."
But the third Carroll graduate
said Harsham often fondled students, the newspaper reported.
"The only thing he did was grab
me in the crotch," the man said.
"He did it to a lot of guys. That
was his liule attention-geuer."

; Team's use of Redskin nickname de~ated
of the Eagle Clan Band . of
· , By SONJA BARISIC
•. ASsociated Press Writer
Shawnee, said Redskin is an examOXFORD, Ohio (AP) - Stu- ple of the racial intolerance thin
.. , dents, faculty and alumni argued Indians have endured for hundreds
• Friday about whether the Redskin of years.
"Choose a .new symbol that
, :nickname for Miami University's
,.c spons teams is a racist throwback truly represents Native Americans
,. · or a grand tradition.
as they are,'' Ms. Brewer, of West
.. , Paul Risser, president of the A1exarldria. said. "It is time to stop
• , state school in southwestern Ohio, the cycle."
· said he Would use input from the
Dolph Green~. a professor of
: •three-hour·public forum to decide anthropology at Miami and a grad, : whether to recommend the nick- uate ot the school, said use of the
- name be dumped or retained.
Redskin nickname cannot be J!!sti·
,,, The university's trustees could fied with assurances that it will be
:decide the issue as early as next treated with respecL
,, month. Their next meeting is Dec.
Student Tyree Ayers said Miami
, , 10-11.
should not affiliate itself with a
· • Miami, named for an Indian name connected to "a history of
. tribe that once lived in Ohio and brutalizing people."
,·: now is in Oklahoma, has used the
"As an African•American
•Redskin nickname since 1928.
woman, I do not want to be
, . Brad Beckett, president of referred to as a Redskin, a nigger, a
. · Miami's College Rejmblieans, said bitch or any of these derogatory
: .at the forum that Redskin conjures lemltl, .. she said.
, an image o~ a great warrior.
.... "Do not be the president who
Nancy Tepfer, the parent of a
holds the red carpet out for the Miami student, said the ilickname
_.. politically correct croy.od,'' Beckett should be changed even if the
told Risser.
.
.
Miami Tribe has supported it in the
!.., . 1ay ~nneu, a Miami alumnus pasL
• who tives in Oxford. said ·Redskin
"It doesn't matter if you use the
.. is derogatory only if taken Out of term Redskin with pride, even·with
contexL
affection. if any Indian from any
AI Miami. be said. "the term is tribe feels offended, •' said Ms.
!)'nonymoul with' courage, sacri- Tepfer, ofBea.vaaeck: ,.
,
(ice hard work•. perseverance aDd " ·: A:bo'lit 1~ ·people 'POke·· to a
excellence.'.
. crowd of abOut 300. Pilrticipants .
Another Mianii alumpl(s, Vin- · e8ch had,thmi minuta\
~· cent Tirola of Westport, Conn.,
. None of the spealcers belOnged
~ said the debate was frivolous.
to ,lhe Miami Tribe of Oklahoma,
1••
"The children of Woodstock which in 1972 passed a resolution
ll now control this university,'' he . stating, ; 'it.is pro~d to h.ave t!Je
said. "They're playing the same name Miami R~ carried '4?th
' games they did 30 years ago.''
honor by the athletic representation
i . But Sunshine Brewer, a member of Miami University."
'

:boards. .

: · · The outcome of the lawsuit will
' determine where the mentally ill
. receive medical care: .in state hos.'pitals or in community programs.
~,:rhe boards are fighting the state
Department of Mental Health for
•·'conuol over state money.
·' The department distributed
· 'about $240 million to 53 county
''boards this year. But it required
$150 million of that money to go to
' 'sratt~ hospitals, said James Wasser··man, executive director of the Clermont County board.
Wasserman also is chairman of
the Coalition for Fair Mental
Health FUJiding, which initiated the
lawsuit.

r-

EA$T UVERPOOL, Ohio (AP)

the way for a ~dons. waste incinerator to continue limit- ·
, ed operations until it obtains final ·
, commercial use permits.
•
· The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of
.,Appeals in Cincinnati on Friday
; reversed a ruling by a lower coon
:that fC9uUcd Waste TeChnologies
)ndusin" to shut down after a trial
~-bum last spring at the $160 million
. pihnt.
' The appeals coon said u.s. Dis: trictludge Ann Aldrich in Cleve;Jand did not have jurisdiction to

Coal company announces layoffs

PROTESTS NICKNAME- Suasbln~ Brewer, a Cherokee
Jru!Jaa from :West A1aaadrla, speaks to several hundr'd people at
Miami' UDivenlty'a Millet HaD durlag a forum oa (hanging tbe
Miami Redsld111 Dickname Friday afternoon in Oxford. Brewer, a
. former atudent at Miami, aDd oue of 72 scheduled speakers, is
ojlposed to tile tldlool'•l!l!l ol tbe name. (AP)
'

Indian mascot to complement the
Redskin nickname since the 1950s.
The current mascot, Chief
Miami, daltls to 1972. Students in
the role wear Indian gam provided
by the Miami Tribe and perform
traditional Indian dances.

Miatni Chief Aoyd Leonard has
"said be would not comment publicly about the Redskin debBUI. The
tn"be issued a statement earlier this
y~,supponing the calls for discusSIOn.
•
Miami has had some type of

A 1988 law gave county boards
control over 80 percent of the
money they received in 1993. But
the boards actually were left with
conuol over about 40 percent of
this year's money. This IS the main
issue in the lawsuit, flied JIUI. 4 in
Clermont County.
Testimony concluded Monday
and a decisiOn was expected in
February.
Krista Magaw, chief of the
office of community treatment for
the Franklin County Alcohol, Drug
Addiction and Mental Health Services Board, said the funding
restrictions could have devastating
effects on the mentally ill.
Sam Hibbs, spokesman for the
mental health depanment. said he
could not comment on the suit
because it is pending. But he did
say that mentally ill people do better if they are treated in the community.

By JOHN CHALFANT
prohibit display of the holiday
Associated Press Writer
symbols in an auempt 10 avoid the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A kind of problems that have
state agency's decision to ban a occurred in downtown Cincinnati
holiday tree and menorah from the over the Ku Klux Klan's display of
Statehouse turned out to be about a cross.
as popular as Scrooge. So the panel
Word of the board's ban lit up
will reconsider the idea.
telephone swiiCh boards in governThe Capitol .Square Review and ment offices.
Advisory Board scheduled a meet"We have received hundreds of
ing for Tuesday after a written calls. I don't think we've received
nudge from Gov. George one thaCs in favor of this deci Voinovich and legislative leaders.
sion," said Dan Shellenbarger,
"While we recognize the spokesman for the review board.
board's concerns, we strongly
believe the tree and menorah
should be displayed as they have
been in the pas~" the leaders said
Frida •
''~e request that the board mee1
at its earliest possible opportunity
to reconsider tile decision on the
permit 10 d~lay the holiday uee
and menorah, ' Ihc:ir letter said.
Voinovich signed the letter,
along with House Speaker Vern
Riffe, D-Wheelersburg; House
MinOrity I eader JoAnn Davidson,
R-Reynoldsburll; Senate ~ident
Stanley Armotf, R-Cincinnati; and
Sen~te Minority Leader Robert
Boggs, D-Jeffcrson.
The board voted_Thursday to ·

meet, would pose an immediate
danger to publiC health.

2j:leared

~~Ms. Aldrich's March 5,ruling

-.only allowed wn to ccnduct a.trial
"bum 10 procluee data for the U.S.
iEnvironmental Protection Agency
' ai it considere(t whether to issue ·a
1nal opqating permiL
~ · MI. Aldrich was acdng on aJan .
13 suit filed by Greenpeac~ •Inc.
and 12 East L1verpool re11dents
.
two days before WTI planned to
',start the trial burn. The suit laid
opetation of the incineratol, built
on the Ohio River where Ohio,
Pennsylyania and Weilt'Vi~ginia

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A man who held police at bay for
1wo hours until a sharpshooter shot the gun from his hand was
placed on probation for two years.
Franklin County Municipal Coun I udge Janet Jackson on Thurs·day suspended a 180-day jail sentt~nce and ordered Douglas Conley,
37,10 continue counseling.
He also must undergo screenings for possible aicohol or drug
abuse, perform an unspecified amount of community service and
pay a $150 fine.
Conley, apparently upset after breaking up wilh his girlfriend, sat
down at a city intersection on Aug. 16 and waved a pistol at passing
cars and police. .
Officer Michael Plumb, acting on orders, shot the pistol from
Conley's hand 60 yards away.

.

,.Appeals ruling favors
~:waste incinerator
.r - A 'federal appeals court has

Man .fights police, gets probation

MARION, Ohio (AP) - Authorities have confirmed that a
bomb caused an explosion that injured a man and demolished a car
last' weekend.
Federal agents and Marion police finished examining evidence
Thursday and will send it to a lab for testing, said spokesman
Patrick Berarducci of the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms.
Investigators will not reveal specifics about the bomb that
exploded while Raymond Keeton was driving his wife's Dodge
Daytona in downtown Marion Sunday afternoon. Friends at a bar he
had just left puUed him from the car moments before it exploded a
second time.
Keeton, 42, was in serious condition Friday at Ohio State University Hospitals in Columbus with burns on his back and legs.
Marion is about 50 miles nonb of Columbus.

:;Suit decision to affect Board will consider
;.state's mentally ill
ban on holiday tree
By SUZANNE BOWLING
Associated Press Writer
:, COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ''The future ·treatment of Ohio's
; ~ mentally ill is at stake in a.Iawsuit
• filed by county mental health

Niki Schwartz, a Cleveland lawyer repruentin~ inmates. rot~ the
Lucasville Media Task Farce oo Thursday that JX1S011Cn who rioted
thought officials released in:accurate information to make them looJc
bad.
•'At no time did we tell rcponcrs information that we did not
believe to be true," Sharron Kornegay, a spokeswoman for the
depanment, said Friday.
Alan Tolen, special agent in charge of the FBI's Cincinnati
offiCe, said officials should have denied reports about mass murders
at the prison that were not true.
Tolen said prisOn spokesmen had to go through too many levels
of command before they could release information.
Gov. George Voinovich asked the task force to dett~rmine how
the state can bettt.r work with the news media during disasters.
Nine inmBUis and one guard died during the 11-day riot at the
Southern Ohio Correctional Facility.

Authorities: bomb caused explosion

,.

CUMBERLAND, Ohio {AP) - Central Ohio Coal Co.
announced it would lay off 133 employees from its mine in Beverly,
effective today.
The company, a subsidiary of Ohio Power Co.. supplies coal to
Ohio Power's Muskingum River generating station at Beverly, 83
miles southeast of Columbus.
The Cumberland-based company's layoffs are a result of a plan
to meet the federalOean Air AcL The layoffs will help the company reduce the high-sulfur coal inventory at the plant and the mine,
Gary Dimmerling, the general manager of Cenual Ohio Coal, said
Friday.
~
The COIDJl!lllY and the United Mine '!"orkers of !-merica .union
will help lwd-off employees get retrauung money mcluded m the
act.
Another 360 jobs at the plant will be unaffecltld.
Cumberland tS 74 miles east of Columbus.

State offers money to researchers
C&lt;:OLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The U.S . De{&gt;anment of Energy
wiD offer $15 rnlllion for small, technology-onented companies to
do research, Gov. George Voinovich announced Friday.
About 200 research grants of up to $75,000 each wiD be awarded. Companies with successful research will then be able to compete for other awards of up to $500,000 for two-year prototype
development.
Some of the 45 topics include enhanced oil recovery, robots for
nuclear environments, chemical sciences research and study of
waste treatmenL
lntt~rested f11111s must apply to the U.S. Depanment of Energy by
Feb. 15, 1994.

Robber stopped out offear
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - A convenience store owner said Friday
that he stopped a man from robbing his store at gunpoint because he
feared for his life.
Three inner-city convenience store owners have been killed in
scparattl robberies since May.
"It was a spur of the moment thing," said Sami Abou-Dahech
who owns Eden's Carryout on the city's north side. " People had
been giving these robbers money from the cash register and they
were still getting shoL I said, ' I am not going to be shot. I better do

something.'' '

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AS SUnday Times-Sentinel

Novem~r 21,1~

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH....Polnt Pleasant, WV

Passengers
say
airline
• •
giving them ·runaround
•

:'Along the River

•

November21,1m

. .
u: ~- outlook In November '63 was bright, then...

•

By SUSAN HIGHTOWER
AP Business Writer
As the Thanksgiving trave l
surge began, thousands of frustrated passengers J?leaded with &amp;Dikecrippled Amencan Airlines to let
them know who was flying where
- i f at all.
" What bothers me is being lied
to by American Airlines. They told
me this flight would be departing,"
said Mark Walters, whose flight
from Indianapolis to Dallas was
canceled Friday. ''Don't tell us that
s0 we can come out here and sit out
here for three hours just to hear it's
been canceled."
American chairman Robert
Crandall said the walkout over pay
and other issues by the 21,000member Association of Professional Flight Attendants was having "a
profound effect'' on his airline.
The strike, timed to coincide
with the Thanksgiving holidays,
began Thursday.
Many passengers complained to
the Department of Transportation
that lhey were getting "insufficient
and often erroneous infonnation"
about flights and their options, the
department said.
Transportation Secretary Federi-

co Pena ·told Crandall in a letter to
''take the necessary steps'' to make
sure travelers knew what flights
were canceled so they could make
other plans.
Thousands of passengers were
forced to compete for the dwin dling number of seats on rival airlines, which were accepting American tickets . .
Mike Fontain, a businessman
hoping to find a flight from Chicago back home to St. Louis, was
waiting in a line with a few hundred other people, hoping to trade
in his ticket for one on anolher airline.
"It's a farce, because the planes
are taking off with cargo, and
lhey're telling passengers lhey will
be taking off, and you get to the
last minute and you blow your
options . Now we know these
planes aren't taking off wilh passengers.''
The airline was still mum on
how many flights carried passengers, were canceled or earned just
freighr., American usually carries
around 200,000 passengers daily.
Rich LaVoy, president of the
pilots • union at American, said less
than a third of the airline's flights

Shots fired in.Dallas

carried passengers Friday morning.
Other estimates put the number at
half or less.
While the airline said flight
attendants were crossing picket
lines in increasing numbers, the
flight attendants ' union claimed at
least 95 percent of its members
were on strike.
The uniol) began the walkout the biggest to hit a U.S. airline
since 1989 -after failing to reach
a new contract with American.
Talks broke down over differences
in pay, health benefits, staffin g and
scheduling.
On Nov. I. American imposed a
new contract with an average 7.8
percent raise. or 35 percent over
four years. The union had demanded a 16.9 raise by July 1995, saying
workers needed to make up for previous concessions.
American was training other
employees in shortened 10-day
courses to fill in for the strikers,
hoping to get more planes flying in
the coming days and lessen the
impact of the walkout.
The airline also said more than
2,000 people so far have applied to
replace striking flight attendants.

,,

\\ ( I{\ .L~ I'\ '[
\ !1\ l lh .( Hl \ l

IH' Ill 't '.

I
Friday morning. The airline flight attendant
strike bas caused delays and cancellations or :
American Airlines flights around the country. ·
(AP)
:

WAITING -Janice Annah,let't, of Chicago,
waits as American Airlines ticket agent Jale
Mahaffey tries to arrange a trip back home for
Armah from Kansas City International airport

ily MARK FRITZ
to criticize the government, noting
"We nOte with deep sOITOw, the
Associated Press Writer
a rash of disruptions in the tele- damage that successive military
LAGOS, Nigeria (AP)- Elect- phone service since Abacha took administrations have inflicted on
ed senators dismissed by Nigeria's power.
aU facets of our national life," the
military leader vowed today to
In a sign of splits within the mil- senators said.
remain m office and llfliCd Nigeri- itary, state-run Radio Nigeria
Tbeir statement was issued after
ans to join them in opposing the reported an imminent military they were ejected from their govcountry's new dicllltorship.
shakeup to bolster the power of emment-paid hotel rooms in Ahuja,
A statement signed by all 67 Abacha, whose rule follows the administrative capital.
senators did not say how they months of unrest following the
Abacha, a U.S.-trained soldier
planned to organize resistance to annulment of presidential elections who helped lead coups in 1983 and
Gen. Sani Abacha, who announced in June.
1985, served as defense minister in
Thursday thatobe was dissolving all
In his first speech after assum- Shonekan's government and was
democratic institutions in Africa's ing power, Abacha announced that the only holdover from the previmost populous country.
he was dissolving 30 state govern- ous regime of Gen. Ibrahim
Abacha ousted the civilian gov- ments, the federal legislature and Babangida.
emment of Ernest Shonekan a day all local councils, as well as banBabangida resigned under presearlier.
ning all political activity.
sure in August amid widespread
"The military must know that
He also declared that he would protests that followed his annulthey are not armed to treat Nigeri- run the country as head of a mili- menl of presidential elections in
ans and Nigeria like a conquered tary council and organize a consti- June.
people and an occupied territory," tuti?nal conference in _the future to
The annulment also divided the
the senators said.
devise a new democrauc system.
army and apparently allowed
But elsewhere in the country, &lt;" Nigerians shocked by the mag- Abacha to engineer Babangida's
elected governors in the. CO!llltry's nitud~ of his !"oves were skeptical resignation.
30..states have been turning their of his promues o~ ~emocracy ..... . . . . , . . - - - - - - - - - .
offices over to military comman- They Sll_laclced pf Similar. pledges
ders without resistance.
by a stnng of other generals who
Union officials, m~I!IIW)lile, have run t!'e Cll_Untry foc 23 of the
have gone into hiding, ·S'cveral 33_ y~ smce Independence from
prominent activists were reluctant Bntam.

..

NOTICE TO OHIO INnASIATE
BUSINESS CUSTOMEU

!'1any influential Nigerians
believe Abacha acted to pre-empt a
possible coup against him and Ami' COMMUNICATIONS OF OHIO. INC. hereby gives notice that it has
under increasing pressure from filed changes with the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio. which restrucopposing forces in the military who tures several inbound services for calls within Ohio.
want the !'lilitary to recogriize the· ~ 800 READYLINE"Service will be restructured lo have separate Day.
June election.
Evening and Night/Weekend rates. Ami' Cust9mNet"' Inward Calling
T~e apparent winner of that
Option will have the additional period reduced from six seconds to one.
election was MoshQod K.O. Abio- ~ 800 GOLD'" Service-Switched and iU8rr 800 READYUNE Day rates
Ia, a Yoruba tribesman from the are being increased.
southwest. _ He was strongly
overall effect of the CustomNel restructure will result in a decrease for
opposed by northerners who tradi- The
most customers using these services. However. some customers. depending
tionally dominate politics and the on their individual calling pattern. may receive a slight increase on some
military.
caUs. iUBil' 800 GOlD and iUBil' 800 READYLINE Day rates are being
. The Campaign for Democracy, a increased approximately 5%.
coalition of human rights, trade
unions and soci!'l groups. called These changes will become effective on December 1. 1993.
Fnday for tough mtemauonal sane"
lions.
L - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - _ j

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.lCamelot still touches the nation

8,898

: Py LISA PETERSON
: rime..Sentinel Start
: ' The uncanny ability for people to remember a specific
•lime on Nov. 22thiny years ago lies not only in the death
! (lf the nations executive chief but in the magic that he
: ~med topossessandfeelingofprogressassociated with
: his administration.
! : ThetennCame!otwasnotlighdyplaced.'j'henationfelt
•ltOpe extending from his policies and youthfulness.
L(.-Three shots fired from. a · 6.5 mm. rille in a book
~ depository in Dallas not'Ol)ly toOk away America's leader
• but its sense idealistic optimism.
• ~ ; It has been three decades since.that cataclysmic event
lOOk place but it is vividly remembered by those alive at
·•
the time.
Estovan Matthews was teaching elementary school !lithe time.
· "I remember just as clear as if it
happened yesterday it had such an
impac~" she said.
''When they announced the president had been shot one little fella,
Roger Taylor, started tp cry and said,
'I'm ~_.-And he kind ofspoke
,•
for all of us.•
~,
"You
were
left
wondering
what was going to happen
1
tiextl will never forget i~. she said.
1: i -B~ Scot~ a courthouse employee, was 32-years~Qid m 1963.
.
·
She echoes Matthews feeling of fear but also.one of

A freshman that year, Roderick remembers how the younger generation
identified more strongly with Kennedy
lhan with any prior president.
"Hewaslikeoneofthek.ids,"hesaid.
"We saw him as an equal. it was Ukeyou
lost somebody you knew. This great
•
white knight was
gone."
·
The sense ofloss
has not diminished
·in thirty years.
"ldon'tthinkthere
wiD be anything like JFK," he said.
"He was a hope." .
JFK was a source of hope for the
nation ·but also a source of pride for
Rlcbanl Rodfrlck theCBthoUcsegment.TbeflfStCalholie president was a living icon of the faith in politics.
"'The Catholic people were very proud oftheirpresident,"
said Msgr. William R. Myers of St Louis Clturch. "He
seemedtoepitomizcthebalanceofchurchandstate.Itwas
a real period of Camelot for the church."
A philosophy soident at St John Vianney Seminary
Bloomingdale, Father Myers recalls hearing the news.
"Iwasmoppingtloorswithothetstudentsinthekitchen."
he said. "The boy that told us was a practical joker so we
didn't pay any attention."
Afterahalfanhourtheylearnedlhe
news was real and joined the rest of
' sorrow.
the student body in watching televi·
: "Everyone was grief stricken," she said. "For once he sion and feeling the sorrow .
:_gave us hope." ,
'
''There was genuine grief that such
: Upon hearing lhe news Scott ina beloved man was Instantaneously
: formed the school~ and requested that
taken from us," he said. "It was a
·:flags be nawP. at ~alf mast
momentofveryrealuagedyandgrief
:- It was as tf the nation halted for
for the Calholic community."
MJcr. Mycn
::threedays,absorbingthetumofevents
Mourning that deep was more lhan just for a head of
;:from the shooting to the capture and
state. K~nedy embodied more lhan a presidency for that
•ldlling of Lee Harvey Oswald 10 the
genenwon,
1
!jtuneral procession down Pennsylva"It was a very ideiliistic time," said Father Myers. "The
~Avenue and Hghting of the eternal
.
ftnt~ilywiiS}'oung, c;alholicandit wasalhrilling time.
;~e.
He bridged a l!&gt;t l1f gaps."
·
'~"Wherever you weritthat was all that was talked about,"
While Father M'yenrealizcsKennedy'simage has been
' ailed attorney Richard Roderick:, a law school student somewhat tarnished, he sees lhe dominant quality as
' the University of Tennessee.
prosperity.
·
~: "Some peaple actually cried and they were still crying
"History wiD judge JFK as a brilliant man accomplish~ · Saturday and Sunday."
ing a Jot of good.~ he Sai_~ -

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CLINTON ADDRESSES APEC -President CUnton addiUIH.
tbe .uian·PIIlille Economic cooperation Friday In Seattle'• four·
Se_. Hotel. CUnton urged Alllericllls not to turD their baekl on
economic cbanae sweepln&amp; tbe world and set his own conne on
reveniD&amp; abra~lve r~ with China, (AP)
·
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··- -··-·· ······ -· ---··....,..·-···....._ . . . . . - · '-~··----···

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_. -·-

-----~--

President John F. Kennedy, above, is
slumped down in tire backseat of this
car after being shot. Jacqueline leans
over the president as an unidentified
Secret Service agent clings to the rear
of the car. A Hanard student buries
his face in his hands, right, as he sits
on the steps of Memorial Church in
Harvard Yard in Cambridge, Mass.
Lyndon B. Johnson is sworn in as
president of the United States, below,
in the cabin of the presidential plane
as Jacqueline Kennedy stands at his
side on Nov. 22, 1963. (AP/Photo).
JF K photo below -is courtesy of Life.

Meigs Countians recall 11/22/63

'

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POrtable heaters were ftred up
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the flland eight miles from down·

The dl!fY Kenn~dy was shot...

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aU college-age Americans were enrolled on campuses.
By late morning, on Nov. 22, Bill Bradley
NEW YORK (NEA) - It was Friday, Nov.
22,1963.
'
was deep inside lhe Princeton library, researchina a
history paper. He was a
The United States,
j1111ior.
living high on the New
Frontier, was thriving.
Pop lingo:
"lOugh toenails, • '~IP
America was in the 33rd
codes," and "Valium.•
month of one of its longest
The British rock
economic booms since
World War II. ·
invasiOfl had begun. The
Beades led in 1963 with
.
So far, the biggest
U.S. s10ries of the year
"I Want To Hold Your
Hand" and "She Loves
included civil rights ("I
You." But the rising Allhave a dream," Martin
, America sound carne
Luther King Jr. had told
from the Beach Boys
200,000 marchers in
("Surfin' USA," "Litde
Washington); the nuclear
Deuce Coupe." etc.).
test ban treaty with the
Soviet Union, and the
All the mge was
folk music. "Blowing in
Supreme Court's decision
the Wind," by Peter, Paul
to ban prayer in public
schools.
and Mary (written by
Bob Dylan), and "If I
For the momen~ ·
Had A Hammer," by
during a Cold War thaw,
Trini
Lopez, were current
the only real hot spot was
hits.
"Hootenanny"
on
South Vietnam, where there
ABC- TV was a popular
wen: some U.S. military
show.
"advisers." Recently,
Folk stars also
Washington had sanctioned
turned
up
on
TV
prograins
hosted
by
Ed Sullivan,
the overthrow of the Diem government by Saigon
Johnny Carson, Andy Williams and Judy Garland.
generals who vowed 10 destroy the communist
Still a favorite perfonner: Elvis Presley ("Devil in
guerrillas.
Disguise").
·
The U.S. outloolc, just before Thanksgiving
So 100 Jimmy Durante ("September Song").
·
1963. was bright.
Most of the 190 million Americans ---despite who was on the bill in Lake Tahoe with Peter
.
U.S. racial woes. poverty in Appalachia and organized Lawford on Friday, Nov. 22.
Other records being played by U.S. mdio
crime- had felt some effects of prosperity.
In those days, nearly 75 percent of American~ believed siations that day included "Dominique," by lhe
Singing Nun, and "Louie, Louie," by the Kingsmen.
that the U.S. government would do the right thing
Plus:
"My Boyfriend's Bpck," "Sugar Shack," "Be
most of the time or always.
My
Baby"
and "Blue Velvet"
Early on Nov. 22, Richard Nixon, then a 50The Looks of '63 were fur-trimmed
year-old New York attorney flew out of Dallas. The
sophistication or casual layers. Ladiu of the jet set
weather was clear and seasonably mild. He had been
wore short hair: Skirts halted just below the knee.
attending a bottler's meeting on behalf of Pepsi Cola.
Astronauts were as famous as movie stars.
The Dow Jones industrials opened the day on
Recently,
Project Mercury had ended. At mid-day on
Wall Street at732.65.
Nov. 22, John Glenn and Scott Carpenter were eating
For a week's work,~ average U.S. faciOry
lunch at NASA's new headquarters site in Houston.
employee now earned just over $100, a record. About
"O~patra," the biggest movie of the year,
40 percent of the families in America made more than
lingered
in
theaters. Its stars, Elizabeth Taylor and
$7,000 a year. The niinimum wage: $1.25 per hour.
Richard
Burton,
remained a hot item. Along with
Led by autos and steel,the economic upswing·
Cary Gran~ she was Hollywood's highest-paid star
of 1963 was broadly based. The U.S. gross national
in 1963.
product hit an annual record of $588.5 billion in the
The top-rated fall TV programs were ''The
thiJ-,d; 'JU~.
years, prices had ~n steady.
.
Beverly
Hillbillies•
(CBS) and "Bonanza" (NBC).
· '·: dJ~c:rthan 3 percentofmarnedmenwere
"l!l.et H~· put you-in the driver's seat,~ sang a
unemp byed. • ·
·
·;
televisiOI\ commercial. Lately, the evening news on
" " ( !:fbil$ing starts were up. A typical home
mdngage at that time was about $15,000; with a down TV had expanded to 30 minutes.
Perhaps the most talked about book of the
payment of $1,000 and closing costs of$300 .
year
was
''The American Way of Death," by Jessica
The hot automobiles out of Detroit for 1964
Milford.
Just
out: ''The ~inine Mystique," by
had "fastbacks," including the racy Corvette Sting
Betty
Friedan.
Miss America? Donna Auxum of
Ray. New cars were lower and longer. Sales were
Arkansas.
brisk.
·
Jim Brown of the Cleveland Browns
Discount stores. kept popping up. As a bonus,
became
the
NFL career rushing leader. In baseball,
food markets and retail outlets issued S&amp;H Green
pitcher
Sandy
Koufax was the star of the world
stamps and Plaid stamps by the millions. ,
champion
Los
Angeles Dodgers. Sonny Liston
The median age of the U.S. popu.Iation was
owned the world heavyweight boxing title.
less than 30 years old.
X;
The Rev. Billy Graham went to the golf
Still a fact of life in 1963 was the baby boom.
course
on
Friday, Nov. 22. Atl:34 p.m.
On Nov. 22, Jamie Lee Curtis celebrated her
EST,
United Press International broke the
5th birthday.
news that shots had been
America's toy industry was booming that year: Early
ftred at the presidential motorcade in downtown
Christmas shoppers were buying up military gear for
Dallas.
boys; and dolls (especially "Barbie") for girls.
Sixty-one minutes later, UPI sentlhis flash:
More than 50 million Americans-from
k.indergarten through college- were students. Half of PRESIDENT KENNEDY DEAD.

Nov. 22. 1963

'.

By HOWARD SINER

Nigerian senators oppose dictatorship -

SEATTLE (AP) - President
Clln::Jiayed host today to an
unJll"
nted island gathering of
Pacific Rim leaders, assembling
them for an informal session to
pRKh his free-trade gospel.
u.s. omciaiJ said the 17-member Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum would issue a "joint
visioii statement" espousing freer
trade and more glob8.1 economic
growdl.
'
Oinlon was up at da'!iJI to greet
the leaders as they arrived at the
s . waterfront for the ferry ride
to 'woodsy Blake Island in Puget ·

Section B·

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By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Starr
POMEROY - Where were you when
.F.K. was assassinated?
Ask anyone what they were doing last
month - or even last week - and most
likely you will get a blank stare in response, but ask a person old enough to
remember what they were doing when
President John F. Kennedy was shot and
you will get an instan~ J:lay-by-play recall.
On occasion, an
ordinary day is called upon to play
an important role in history, burned
forever into a nation's collective
memory. Nov. 22, 1963, was such
a day; people going about their
everyday routines until they were .
shocked by the death of a popular,
young leader.
Meigs . County Recorder ;;;jj.;;H,;;;;i~
Emmogene Hamilton, then a full- E
time mother and homemaker, was
with her husband and children at Holzer Hospital in
Gallipolis when a pediatric nurse gave her the news.
"We were shocked beyond belief," she said. "I remember thinking "This isn' t possible that our president has
been shot•."
"It seemed like the beginning of a series of tragic
events," she said. "It was like losing a member of the
family."
"We listened to the radio over and over again and stayed
glued to the television," Hamilton commented. "We were
still warching when Lee Harvey Oswald got shot."
Pat McKnight of Pomeroy recalled going to pick up her
daughter at Pomeroy Elementary School when sbe heard
the news on her car fl\dio.
"I about flipped," she said. "We didn't know he was
dead at ftrst."
"Later we sat in front of the television and cried," she
added. "For several days everyone walked around in a

Meigs County Prosecutor John R. Lentes was attending
second grade at a Catholic school in Detroit when news
arrivedofKennedy'sassassination.
" It was a real big deal at the
school," LenteS said. Since Kennedy
was a Catholic, there were pictures
of him in aU of the classrooms.
"School was canceled, but before
they sent us home we went into the
church and prayed.''
It wasn't untillater,after his fam•
ily moved 10 Massachusetts, that
Lentes began to appreciate the sig- John Lentes
niftcanceofthe assassination. Starting in junior high scbool, Lentes began working in thereelection campaigns of Senator Ted Kennedy, John F.
Kennedy's younger brother.
"John F. Kennedy was a hero in the fa mily. Everyone
though Ted could follow in his footsteps," he said. "John
F. Kennedy was always in the background as a role model
during the campaigns."
Lentes said he got into politics because of his efforts in
the Ted Kennedy campaigns.
The Kennedys had a sense of noblesse oblige, he commented. Tbey felt that people in powerful positions were
obligated to help others.
That sense of duty was perhaps best illustrated in what
may have been President John F. Kennedy's most famous
saying: "Ask not what your country can do for you, but
what you can do for your country."

daze."
Her husband, Leon, said he was working on a portion of
the Blue Grass Parkway in Kentucky when he heard the
news.
JACQUEUNEKENNEDY,berfacevelled,lsilallllecl
Everyone stayed home until they buried him, he com- the AIDerican nag which covered the casket lit Iter
busbaild.
mented.

,.

�llmes-Sentlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

November

N:o;ve:m~be~r~21~,~1ft=:3. .~~~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~::~~:::=::;;=:=:~0~H;:P:ol~n~tP:I:u:ll:n~t~,wv~. . . . . . . . . . . .~s:u::n~~==~~=:~~~~

1993

Middleton-recognized for
disabilities rights advv'"''L'"'
IRONTON - James Middleton
of Ironton, Ohio Was recently presented with a Lifetime Achievement Award for his dedication to
people with disabilities. This award .
was presented to Middleton by the
Ohio Private Residential Association 81 an conference held in Cleveland.
He was nominated b~ Nancy
Burgey, Director of Middleton
Estates, an ICF/MR facility located
Middleton worked for the pasin Gallipolis, and managed by the sage of both Senate Bill 648 and
VOCA Corporation of Dublin, House BiD 169, establishing county
Ohio.
boards of mental heaith and retarMiddleton has spent his adult dation. He has served as a member
life dedicated to the needs of indi- of both those boards. He helped
viduals with disabilities. He was establish the Open Door School in
inspired by his own daughter, who Lawrence County and is an officer
is develoJ.lmentallf disabled, to in lhe Parent ·Voluntecr Association
make life m instimuons a thing of at the Gallipolis Developmental
the past.
Center (GDC).
He lobbied for and won respect
. In his honor, homes developed
in the field of advocacy for rights in 1982 for residents of GDC who
of people with disabilities to have a relocated were named "Middleton
vo1ce in making decisions about Estates." He continues to serve on
their lives. He fought for deinstitu- numerous advisory boards and
tionalization at a time when· it was advocacy groups as he works for
only a thought in the minds of most lhe needs of Ohio's citizens with
parents and legislators.
disabilities.

iii

jf·.l .

MELISSA FOSTER AND KEITH STOUT

Foster-Stout

MONICA BASS AND WU.LIAM O'NEO..

Bass-O'Neil
GALLIPOLIS -Mr. and Mrs.
Monte Bass of Gallipolis, together
with Mr. and Mrs. AI Alderfer of
Point Pleasant, announce the
engage111ent and forthcoming mar·
riage of their daughter, Monica
Leigh, to William Joseph O'Neil.
The bride-elect is a 1989 gradu·
ate of POint Pleasant High
School and is employed by Fruth

Phann.~a~cj~Y~·:Ja~dc,~kson
Pike, CommuGallipo·
lis.
Carteret
Morehead City ,

N.C., and Rio Grande University.
· The groom-elect is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. William O'Neil of
Point Pleasant. He is a 1985 graduate of Point Pleasant High School
and is employed by the Boilermakers, Loca1667, Winfield, W.Va.
The custom of an open church
ceremony will be observed at 2:30
p.m. Dec. 4 at the First Presbyterian Church, Gallipolis with a reeep·
lion following at the Elks Club in
GaUipolis.

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Bobby Foster , Sr. of Pomeroy
announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Melissa to Keith Stout.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Stout of
Long Bottom .
The bride-elect is a 1987 gradu:
ate of Meigs High School and is
employed with Chester Skate-A·
Way.
Keith is a 1985 graduate of

R( &lt;!OLA
PRODUOS

Eastern High 'School and a 1988
graduate of Hocking CoUege. He is
employed with T.S. Trim Industries
of Athens.
The open church wedding will
be held on Dec. 4 at the Rock
Springs United Methodist Church.
Music will begin at 2 p.m. A reception will be held in the church
basement.
The couple will reside in Long
Bottom.

Let us copy your old
family photos_ Special 25x7's for $14.96. Reg.
$19.96. SAVE $6.00. We

also do panport photos,
Identification photos and
photo tlnlahlng.

TAWNEY STUDIO

-

STORE HOURS

24 PACIC 12 OL CANS

Monday thru Sulllay
8AM·10PM
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD NOV. 21.THRU NOV. 27, 1993

PEPSI COLA
PRODUOS
20 PK., 12 OZ. CANS

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

••

OF

••~

Confidential Family Planning Services for females &amp; males
• Medical exams
• Pap tests
~Pregnancy tests &amp; counseling
• Thsts &amp; treatments for sexually transmitted diseases
• Anonymous IDV tests &amp; counseling
• Methods and supplies for birth control and safer sex
Norplant-lmplant

DepoProvera-ln.Jeetlon
Birth contr'!ll pill
Condom/Spennldde

I

FISCHER BRAND

Gallipolis

GALUPOUS

446-0166

!109 S. Third Street
Middle part
992-!1912

'.'

US?A CH~ICE BONELESS BEEF

•.

LB.

R1beye Steak•••••••••••••

..
•

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Ru~p

'. .....
..

.•••:
'..,
r:

LB.

Roast ....~•••••••••

SMITH~.IELD BONELESS

.

LB.

TAVERN HAMS ••••••••••

$ 49

1
$ 49
Smoked Sausage ••••~. 1

Bol
,i

424 SECOND AVE.

FARM FRESH

APPLE OR
·CHERRY PIE
FILLING
21 oz.

Chicken Leg Quarters.49c

Sliding Fee scale
We accept Medicaid and private Insurance

414 Second Street

FLAVORITE

$169
Chuck Roast •••••••••~~•••

-

SOUTIIEAST OHIO

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

•••••••••••••••!'...

HILSHIRE FARMS

$499

Sm 1i'e \\IJ11lth of dTistmas with !l-ese
cdlectible ·~ of VIctcria Cirde''
•001.100115. TI-e ftrqke li!tis up nJ is
dated "911" Adfferent cmanent
is avalable ~ 1\t'l'k fcr ;.st

RACINE - Dale and Roberta · Southern High School, is a slUdent
Maidens of Racine announce the at Hocking College.
engagement of their daughter,
Petie, a 1990 graduate of SoulhGhristi Dayle, to Franklin (Petie) em ~h School, is associated with
Hendrix, Jr., son of Franklin (Pete) Hendrix and Sons trucking.
and Phyllis Hendrix of Syracuse.
A summer wedding is being
· Christi, a 1993 graduate of planned.

QUAKER
OATS

LONG BOTTOM - Tara,
Amanda and Steve Soulsby and
Travi$ fhillil's announce the up·
coming .mamage of thetr parents
Carla Soulsby and Gary PhiUips on
Saturday, Nov. 27 at lhe Faith Full

..
t

Campbells Cream

'

.

of Mushrooms

Gospel ChurCh in Long Bottom by
Rev. Steve Reed.
A reception will foUow the dou·
ble-ring ceremony in the social
room of the church.
All family and friends are invit·
ed to attend.

Soup 10.7 oz.

...~ Of CITistmas'' cmunent

Celery•••••••••••••••• 2
BROUGHTON
20l10 M.lk·
I •••••••••••••••••••

This first lt'Cll'dable cmanent fran Hallm.J'k m.l&lt;es tt pa;sible to
capture m:e 11 alifetime l1'lef1'il'l&gt;s .n:l replay them fer )Q'S to cane.
l1'f cmrnent ab.vs yw IS secm:l; of recmi 1g liii-f, preserves }W
~ tcr )US .n:l M1 ~ ba1teries.. al tcr PB $35

This is the only fund raiser of the
year held by the parents and students.
Tickets can he purchased for $2
at the door the day of tJie event or
from any students parents. Refreshments will be served 'and Santa's
elves wiU be on hand.

0
$1
$ 189

°

GAL

KRAFT PARKAY

~Oii.JOl

-••
-••

A Clristmas Tm

Of Olocdates

.

Ths festive Hamrk

...••

mik .n:l d.:rk ctnnates.

-•

$4.95

•
•
•

Ntl wt. 7.15 OL

(fonMr School of Nur•ing)
· Fir•t A.ve. - GaU.ipolil
Between Courthowe and Riverby

Saturday, December 4, 1993
9:00 a.m. - 4:00p.m.
Sunday, December 5, 1993
'
'
12:00 noon-4:00p.m.

'

.

(

TOILET TISSUE

I
I
I

••
•

.•
'.•
•

·:
I
I

12

PK.

$269

~ Only AI Powell'a Super V.lu

I

•o

Ulillt4ParCu-r

:ol1

FLOUR

I :
I I

:::1 ::1:SIIAG
I 1
:I I :

6'9(

11

11

--------------------·

'• .
·'..

GOLD MEDAL

:1 : :

1
'1

Good Only At -,_.I 'a Super Vllu

DRESSING

I I
I I

1:

I
I I

OllerGoociNov. 211hru Nov. 27, 111t3 1 1 I
Umlt1,_C-...; . .
' I
I

· aoz.
•••••••••••••••••
-----1I I ---------------------1
COOPMN
:1

STOVE TOP

1 :

601

89&lt;

Good Only At PoMII'ISuper Ylllu
Ollwr~~~ g:u.=,z?, 1113
P17-11~1AK3
---------------

I

I

1 1

KRAn

,1

: 1

MIRACLE WHIP

::

:l 99'
I I
I I

I I
I

Good Only AI POWIII'a S - Ylllu
Ollwr ~ NOV. 211hru Nov. 27, lllt3

I

·

BuyS get
6th free ·
P-1 7-11-100 #IBCFM3

Coupon Expires 11/27/93
Umit I Free Per Customer

POST SUGAR
GOLDEN CRISP
18 oz.

$299

89(
.... -............. .

·

Cool

:I

2 $100

Ice Cream••••••••• !~·-~:....

I . '

· OifwGOod Nov.2tlhru floll. 27, 111t3 ol I

•••

Cl1993 Hallmar1&lt; Carda, Inc.
•v

CHARMIN

:

••

I

99(

1

I

~

•

BIRD.SEYE

.

1

•
••
••

Gallipolis .
Full Hous~ of Cards
Ohio River Plaza
446-7330

ZESTA

0

~~'! .!".'! .!l.'!couP'o'N!I.'! .!".'! -':',1 ~~'! !'.'! !'.'!couro'N!'.II!. !1.11!. !II~~'! .•.'! ,!l_'!couPo'N

.•

Spon.ored by HMC
·Employee Activity Auociation

KEMPS

Crackers••••••••••••••••~••••

•..
•

Margarine ••••••••••

9
9
(
.
Cocoa Mix •••••••••••••~ .~~.

CARNATION

••

Crown~ linT~
lin fealllres 14 pieces ci ~icb.i!;

4th ANNUAL
HOUDAY CRAFT SHOW
DAVIS HALL BUIWING

.'

99C

Wiih roch SS lfal/mQir purcmst.
SQIItrits not im:Juded.
Firtp/a&lt;t bost sold stl"ralrly.

.Donuts to be served with Santa
GALLIPOI:.IS - Children will
have the opportunity to give their
Christmas list to Santa at "Donuts
with Santa."
The annual fund raising event
wiU be held Dec. 4 from 9 am. to
12 p.m. at !he Presbyterian Church,
State Street, Gallipolis to benefit
the Community Nursery School.

18 oz.

P·17-11 -160-IC3AAG
Coupon Explreal1/27/93
UmH 1 Per Customer

$4.95

Soulsby-Phillips

LB. BOX

$ 179

Special ~ cmunent Offer

Maidens-Hendrix

MACARONI OR
SPAGHEnl

00

12 OZ. CAN

CHIRJS'n MAIDENS AND FRANKLIN HENDRIX

MULLERS ELBOW

$ 189

s
••••••••••

L.

(

Umltt,_C.._
Pl7·11·1-1il0110331

!:

,I
'I
•

,I
'I

----------- ----------

p.
BCFM3
Coupon Expires 11/27193
lim~

t

Per Customer

POST FRUITY or
COCOA PEBBLES
13 •.

$229
P-17·11-100-NIBCGM3
Coupon Expires 11/27/93
Umn I Per Customer ·

I
I
I

I

I·

�•

'
Page B4 Sunday nmea Sentinel

.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Novamber.21,199S

November 21, 1893
•

Christmas newsletters
·offer some correspondence

•

~

every reception hall in lite arci :
willlout sua:eu lllayed up all niahl;:
worried aick, imagining all sons of :
tmiblc ihinp.
·• ·
Claire finally arrived 815 a.m. Shi :
said she wu so01' to be 10 '-te, but :
plelae 1i1ten ID my side of the IIOry
she had to dri.e ICvcral ~ hoJne :
and reD me if you are stlll opposed
from tho Rteption at the bride'• :
to them?
.
request. I was so upset, 1told her 1·
I don\ know about you, but I feel
would ~v.er baby-sit for her AABin-'1 ·
roally lot ~own when I ICC an So pleuo don't UIC me as the norm.
A few holD later, Olinl ~ envelope with the name of IIOIIICOtiC
It y011 took a poll, rm sure the . to lpOlogize, but I was ~~1 baven\ heard from in qcs, IUid I majority would vote, •yes - send aad ltill furious. I -.ld. .'I'm !00,
open it up and find 1 printed them. • So when in doubt, go ahead. upset to talk.' aad bung up.
' ;,:
message with a signature, 'Love, Those whoaren\inlerestedcan IOU
Now thatf.e~leddown,~t~Jinlt
Helen.• And that's iL
'em.
maybe 1 shouldn\ bave aa 115' o(f:
I would just love to receive a
Gem of a Chris~mu gift: like !hat, but I was n:ally ~ dial·
mimeographed letter with some 'HCiblock: A Canoonist's Ufe' is a she showed 110 lillie .CICIIISidenllio:
1
news in iL Even If there was some fabulous, runnr,, fact·611ed book 011 for me.
.
·bragging, I wouldn't mind.
the political life of America - 1
Should I apoiop, or llbould lbe? :
Evc;ry
year,
I
send
about
ISO
·
~~W-fue
hiL
Price:
$24;
in
Canada:
Irs
been fourmonlba. -ELPA$0 ~
with money generated from the Kiwanis gift cer·
TURNING IN FUNDS • Foxy Grant of the
newslettentdlinJfamilyandfriends
S29.95.Publisher:
Macmillan.
DEAR
EL PASo:· .You we~
tificate contest.
Kiwanis presents Chairperson Henry Thrapp
what.l.ha.e been doing all year. Any
Dear Aun Landers: Several generous ID baby-tit fcx:·Clalre,J!ut:
rec~t who doesn't zespbad with
monthS ago, "Claire' asked me to shecertainlyiOOkldvinlil&amp;eofJOI!I'·
.some comment is dropped from my baby-sit her young son while she friendship by 11ayiq out witil S Lm.
list the next ')'Car. Invariably, I hear attellded an aflcmoon wedding. She
~ ~ called .to apologiu,
from those Wllo have been dropped, broug,ht the child to my house, gave you llbould not have ba,ng up 011 ber,
GALLIPOLIS ·"A Children's best theme and a special merchants contest for a $500 gift certific'iue asking, 'How come 1 didn't get your me a phone number whelc 1 could 110 now the ball is in JOI!I' court. : , ·.
Christmas" will be lhe theme for award. Trophies will be given to with the winner to be announced newsletter !his year?"
reach her in case'of an emergency,
You'd better call IUid J&amp;y, 'Tm
· lhe annual Christmas parade spon- entrants with the be st decorated after the parade. Tickets area availSo, dear Ann, whal's a person to IUid said she would be back late in sorry 1 hung up Oli You,tiut I WB$10
sored by the Rerail Merchants and bike and the best walking display.
able form lhe Kiwanis or any retail do?- G.B., CINCINNATI
the afternoon.
.
angry I couldn't speak. Let's bury
Kiwanis Club.
The cash prizes will be $100 for merchant member.
DEAR CIN: It was not engtaved
!expected her at S p.m. or 6 p.m., the hatchet."
:
The parade to be held Dec. 4. first place, $50 for second place
Deadline for parade entrants is on the Rosetta Stone, 'Thou shalt but she didn't show up. At 1 p.m., I
Nov. 29. For more information call not send Christmas newsletters." A became concerned. By 9 p.m., I was
will include cash prizes for the and $25 for third place.
most original floats, !hose with the
The Kiwanis are sponsorin£ a 446-0596.
great many people love to get them. a nervous wleclc. Several times, I
Pelhaps the fact that I receive phoned the number she had given
about 2,000 pieces of mail a day has me 'in case or emergency,• but it
something to do with my aversion. was a wrong oumiJer. _I then tried

Dear An Landen: Y011 bave
printed Ill many negative cobunna
abom ~ Cbrislmas newsleaen
that I !Cel II if I 1m j:OIIImilting
~ lmible sin if l impose them
on my family IUid friends. Will you

OH.....f'olnt Pleasant, WV

Ann

LEDA HAMMOND AND TRENT HARRISON

Christmas parade entrants sought

Hammond-Harrison
MR. AND MRS. JOEL FEUER

DeBord-Feuer
POMEROY • Tammie Lynn
DeBord and Joel Evan Feuer were
united in marriage on Oct. 31 at
MR. AND MRS. LAWRENCE WORKMAN
Temple El Emeth in Youngstown.
Rabbi David Sleinhardt officiated and a reception followed at the
temple. The couple plans a delayed
honeymoon
in lhe Grand Cayman
: THURMAN •· Ruby Pratt and grandson Chaz Stapleton of GalIslands.
; Lawrence Workman were uniled in lipolis. The ring bearer was the
The bride is a daughter of Mr.
· marriage Oct 16 at Calvary Baptist bride's grandson Cory Mason of
and
Mrs. Dallas DeBord of
Gallipolis.
1Chwt:h in Rio Grande.
The groom is the son of
Pomeroy.
A reception followed at the
; Rev. Earl Dale ~rformed the
Dr.
and
Mrs.
Seymour Feuer of
·ceremony. The bnde was given church with a fountain cake made
Youngstown.
iaway by her brother-in-law Andy by Jackie Hall and. flowers
The bride wore a champagne
!Lambert of Poca, Vf.Va. and her arranged by Pat Miller.
color
Victorian lace and satin gown
· The couple took a honeymoon
:two daughlers Missy and Karen.
embellished
beaded apPliques.
; The maid of honor was Karen crpise on the West Virginia Bell as The skirt fellwith
to
a
chapel
tram.
'Pratt lhe bride's daughler of Mari- a gift from the the brides two
Vicky
Abdella,
sister
of the
daughters, Karen and Missy
;eu.a.
bride,
was
honor
aaendant.
BridesThe beSt man was .the groc1m's Masop.

INDEPENDENCE

Pratt-Workman

Doctors, prices evolve over time
by Jim Sands
Special Correspondent

The fust strike that we know of in
Gallipolis history
came in 1854
when doctors
organized and
wentonstrilcefor
higher prices. In
their ·stalement ·
to the Gallipolis
Journal, the doc·
torS claimed that
Gallipolis doctorS
were paid much less than doctors in
other communities- in spile of the
fact prices for everything else in the
Old french City·had kept pace with
prices in newby towns.
The action~taken by the doctors
involved the fixing of priees.
All doctors·in town agreed to the
followings~: single day visit, $1;
two visits the same day. $1.50; each
: succeeding visit, 50 cents; medicines
: given in the office, $1; accouchment
· (also known as parturition, or delivering a baby), $8; depletion and exuactim of teeth, SO cents; night vis: its', $1.50; consultation, $5, and de. tenlion, 50 cents per hour.
· Ratesfortravelingoutside of town
:·had an added surcharge on every: lhing of Sl per mile.
. A doctors strike in 1854 was not
: nearly so serious as one mightlhink,
: for doctors had competition from a
· number of other professionals who
: also "dabbled" in the medical arts.
For instance, in that same year
two men opened a 'barber shop on
· Cowt Slreel with lhe advertisement
that they_also did "cupping, leeching, bleeding, and teeth-pulling."
It was a common theory m the
1850s that a person needed to have
!he body cleaned out periodically By
draining out "bad blood" and purging both the s10mach and intestines
on a regular basis.
'Jbebody was compared to a boiler
that needed to be flushed out. Irani·
cally, bleeding was last practiced in
the Uniled States in Gallipolis at the
Ohio Hospital for Epileptics. It was
held by some that mental iUness was
the result of 100 much blood, thus
causing pressure on the brain.
• 111e last year (or bleeding in Gallipolis was about 1909.
Doctorsalsohadcompetitionfrom
herbalists. In the 1830s a Mr. Thompson had begun the profession _of
rtatural medicine whereby the dis·

News policy
In an effon to provide our read·
ership with cunenl news, the Gal·
'liJ?!?IiS Daily Tribune and Sentinel
.will not accept weddings afler ' 60
days from the date or the event
All Club meetings and other
news articles in the society section
must be submitted within 30 days
of oa:un'ente. All birthdays must
be submitted within 42 days of the
oa:uience.
All malerial submitted for publiCiilioll is 51!bject to editting.

'f! ,

VILLAGE FLORIST

LIFT CHAIR/POWER
RECLINER

Saturday, November 27th
·10 A.M. til 4 P.M.

For That Added
Feeling of Self·

BUlLT ABOUT 1840 • This State Street bome near
I.:ouis
Catholic Church dates to about 1840, and was home for a doctor
for at least its rust couple of decades. In 1854, tbe doctors of Gal·
lipolis went on strike.
ease was trealed with herbs and
vegetables.
Included with the purchase of
Thompson's book (which cost $20)
was a license to practice medicine
within one's own family. Of course
some families were quile large, particularly if one counled fourth and
fifth cousins.
Still other people practiced medi·
cine on themselves using not herbs
but chemical compounds that they
could purchase in most any store in
town. Even hardware stores in that
era sold medicine.
Even then most medicine had a
cherry flavor. A sampling of lhe
"cure-ails" available in town were:
Mrs. Kidder's Cholelll, Dysentery,
and Diarrhea Cordial; Balsamoflndia
Squaw Root; Hoofland's Gennan
Bitters, and Houghton's Pepsin,
which cured debility, emaciation,
nervous decline and dyspeptic consumption. This last named product
was the ancestor of Pepsi-Cola.
Another competitor to the resident doctors of Gallipolis were the
traveling doctors, most of whom
would be regarded as "quacks."
Many of these doctors would
board at lhe Our House tavern for a
few weeks. A hole! room served as a
doctor's office: Most of these itiner·

ant doctors had a gimmick. They had
brought the medical secrets of the
Far Fast or of Germany, Sweden,
France or of the American Indian.
The picture with today's article is
of a house on Stale Slreel that was
used as a doctor's residence and of.
fice. It was probably built sometime
around 1840 by either A.O. Shepherd or Dr. Naret.
In 1854, Dr. R.H. Lee lived here.
Acco~ing ~ his ad, Lee had long
cxpenence m the Reform Practice:
"Dr. Lee keeps constandy on hand
a good assorunentofBotanic Family
Medicines of his own manufacture
which he will .sell or administer o~
reasonable 1erms.
"Among which may be found the
following : Atit]rBilious, Anti·
Dyspeptia, Rheumatia Fever and
Ague Pills; cough ppwder and drops;
Neutralizing Cordial or Physia. This
is one of the most valuable remedies
known for Cholera Morbus, Cholera
lnfantum, or summer complaints of
cllildren; it has never been known to
fail when given in time.
"Special at'tention given 10 discases of women and children."
James Sands is a special correspon·
dent of the Sunday Times-Sentinel.
His address is: 65 Willow Dfive,
Springboro OH 45066 .

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POMEROY - Area creative
writers may hone their fictional
skills at a workshop from 9:30·
H :30 a.m . Nov. 27 at Meigs Coun·
ty Library.
Ohio University Professor June
Langford Berkley will discuss topics including: developing characters, dialogues and plots; revising
for publication; and using practical
tips to improve writing.
Wordsmiths Q from beginner to
more experienced Q wiU also learn
how to use journals and writing
experiments to create published
pieces. To register for this free session, call the library by Nov. 26.
Berll:ley has taught creative writ·
ing for 10 years at Ohio University
and has had her work published in
newspapers, magazines and acad~m ic journals.
.
She draws on her Appalachian
upbringing and ancestry for her
prose.
·
Describing her background,
Berkley wrote, "In that 56th county
of (her) imagination, which hangs

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: GALLIPOLIS · Catherine Marie
·tlark daughter of Mary E. Clark
'ftlld the !ale-Joseph W. Clark was
'married to Paul H. Eich sm of Paul
·'lind the laiC Kathleen Safford Eich
'Of Pomeroy.
: The ceremony was performed
by Senior Minister Joel S. Baer
Oct. 9 at Maple Grove United
Methodist Church, Columbus. The
bride was escorted by her twin
brother, Charles David.
i Bridal attendants were
~lephanie Kathleen Eich, &lt;!aughter
of the groom; Amanda Marie Clark
and Le Ann Buescher, nieces of the
bride; Eve M. Lapolla; Gretchen
pummel; Betsy Hamrick Dawson,
·cousih of lhe bride; Jennifer Lohse
~beets; and Barbara Clark sisler in
r w of the bride.
Gro_qmsmen were William A.
:t-ic.h; brother of the the groom;
: ~1ephen C. Safford, cousin of the
.groom; and M. Andrew Burnett.
1Jsh~rs were Ross E. Hamrick,

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GALLIPOLIS- MIDDLEPORT

JUNE BERKLEY
on golden threads above the hcan
of West Virginia ... where the sky
opens straightaway to heaven and
all the rivers now down toward
Mississippi and the sea."

Burkett Barber Shop. Social hour
and trading session preceed meeting. Refreshments will be served .
New members are welcome.
RACINE - Racine United
Methodist Women will meet at
7:30 p.m. at the church. The program will be World Thank Offering Service.
TUESDAY
RACINE · Racine Area Com munity Organization will meet at
6:30 p.m. at Star Mill Park. New
members are welcome.
POMEROY · The Meigs Ministerial Association presents its annual Thanksgiving Service at 7:30
p.m . at St. Paul Lutheran Church .
The theme for this year is, "From
Whom All Bless ing s Flow ."
Preacher will be Rev . Kenneth
Moller, pastor of Racine Wesleyan
and East Letart Uniled Melhodist
Churches. The community is invited to anend. For more information
.call Rev. Dawn Spalding at 992·
2010.

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the daily paper as space allows.
Photographs of either the bride
or the bride and groom may be
published with wedding stories is
desired Photognlphs may be either
black and white or good quality
color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
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Th e Sunday Times -Sentinel
regards weddings of Gallia, Meigs
and Mason Counties as news and is
happy to publish wedding stories
and photographs without charge.
However, wedding news must
meet general standards of timeliness. The newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the event.
To be published in the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prior to
the publication. and may be up to
600 words in length. Malerial for
Along the River must be received
by the editorial department by
Thursday. 4 p.m. prior to the dale
of publication .
Those not making the 60 day
deadline will be published during

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SUNDAY
POMEROY • Hillside Baptist
Church will have a hymn sing at 6
cousin of the bride and Joseph W. p.m. with singing by The Children
Clark II, brother of the bride . of God, The Redeemed Quartet and
Greeters were Christiil Amber, more. Pastor James R. Acree, Sr.
cousin of the bride; Karen Hall invileS lhe public.
Gcizer; Jill Elizabeth Dawson,
CHESTER ·The l1.aak Walton
cousin of the bride; and Stephen
Charles Clark, nephew of lhe bride. League will continue their deer
Guest book allendant was James R. slug shoots at I p.m. Prizes will be
turkey, bacon and cash. Tbe shoots
Sheets.
are
held at the Izaak Wal10n Farm,
The,bride wore an ivory satin
three
miles south of Chester on
gown accented with sequined lace
Boy
Scout
Camp Road.
and a chapel-length llain. She car·
ried ivory roses. orchids and
MIDDLEPORT · Thanksgiving
stephanotis.
Community
Service wiU be held at
Tbe·bride and bridegroom gradMiddleport
Church
of Christ at 1
uated from Gallia Academy lligh
School. She received degrees from p.m.
the Ohio State Universit:y and is
MONDAY
employed by the .uni verslly. The
GALLIPOLIS
• The November
bridegroom graduated from John
of
the
oania-Jacksonmeeting
Fisher College and. is employed by .
Texas Instruments m Dallas, Texas. Meigs Board of Alcohol, Drug
Tbe couple took a wedding trip Addiction anct Mental Heallh Ser·
to Sante Fe, New Mexico, Duran· vices will be held at 6 p.m. at the
Holiday Inn.
go, Co. and Grand Canyon, Ariz.
•
MIDDLEPORT • The OH KAN
Coin Club will meet at ,1 p.m. at

Wedding policy

.9Lcquisitions

Meigs community calendar

MRS. PAUL EICH

•

At Bank
Athens, We can't
when our interest rates })ave been so bv. &amp;k
your dealer fur the affordable,
competitive auto
loan interest rates
from Bank One,

maids were Debbe Mayo and Betsy
Feuer, sister of the groom. Elizabeth Abdella, niece of the bride,
was flower girl.
The best man was Brian Feuer,
brother of the groom. Groomsmen
were Randy Feuer, brother of the
groom and Ron Cuculic.
Tammie is a graduate of Hocking College and is currently
employed as a HomeCare Resource
Planner for Dacas Nursing Suppon
Syslems in Youngstown.
Joel has a bachelor's degree
from Ohio University, a master' s
degree from Youngstown State
University and a doctorate in dental
sUrgery from Ohio Stale University. He is currently in private practice in Youngstown.

GALLIPOLIS · Leda D. Ham- ter's Degree in Classroom Teachmond and Trent D. Harrison, both ing of Read\ng. She is currently
of Gallipolis, announce their employed w1th Huntington Ross
'
engagement and approaching mar- Local Schools.
Harrison
is
a
graduale
of Gallia
riage.
Academy
High
School
and
TriHammond is the daughter of
Welding
School
of
Nel
County
Cassandra Byer and the late
sonville.
He
is
employed
as
a
con·
Franklin D. Hammond of Patriot.
She is lhe stepdaughler of Robert struction foreman with Ahearn and
Associates of South Charleston,
W. Byer.
Harrison is the son of Katie W.Va.
The open chwt:h ceremony will
Mullins and Bob Harrison, both of
.take
place at 6:30 p.m. Dec. 4 at
Gallipolis and the slepson of Eddie
the
Chapel
Hill Church of Christ on
Mullins,
Bulaville
Pike
in Gallipolis with
Hammond is a graduale of the
prelude
music
beginning
p.m.
University Rio Grande with a The reception will follow atthe6 cereBachelor of Science in Comprehen·
sive Communications and a Mas- mony at the DAV building off Burnett Road and State Route 35.

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�-November 21,1993

Times

November 21 1993

OH-Polnt

Chester Daughters of
.f\rnerica hold meethig
CHESTER ·- Chester Council
323 Daughier$ of America met on
Nov. 16 at the hall with Councilor
Betty Young.
·
Pledges to the Christian and
American Flags were said in unison and lhc first stanza of the Star
· Spangled Banner was sung.
Matthew 22 verses I -6 were read,
lhe Lord's Prayer was said, roll call
was taken and minutes were read
and approved.
The death of Leta Kraeuter and
Betty Roush were reported, Goldie
Krakenberger was reported as in
lhe hospitaL Octa Ward is out of
the hospital and Alta Ballard is
recovering.
Cards were read from the
Kraeuter and Roush families. Mary
B~inger thanked everyone for
!hell' ~elp during the siclcness and
death ofhermolher.
A card was read from lhe Historical Society Com . Mar~aret
Parker. ·
Past Councilors Club will meet
on Oct. 8 at lhe Trinity Church in

recognition

Pomeroy with a $3 gift exchange.
Charter will be draped for Leta
Kraeuter and Betty Roush at the
next meeting. Members should
wear white.
The District Deputies and past
Councilors meeting will he at the
Quality Inn on Dec. 4 at noon with
at $3 gin exchange.
Erma Cleland read, "You Get
What You Give" and Betty Young
read ''Friendship."
The meeting closed in regular
form. Refreshments were served.
Door prizes were won by Elizabeth
Hayes, Lora Damewood arid Mary
Holter.
.
Attending were Goldie Fredrick,
Doris Grcuser, Thelma White,
JoAnn Baum, Laura Nice, Mary
Barringer, Katheryn Baum, Erma
Cleland, Heleri Wolf, Esther Smith,
Elizabeth Ha.yes, Betty Young,
Ethel Orr, Charlotte Grant, Sandy
White, Opal Hollon, Lora Damewood, Mae McPeek, Ada Bissell,
Pauline Ridenour, Marcia Keller
and Mary Holter.

BUSINESSES AWARDED- Vicki DeVault oF Kroger (left)
and Cookie Krautter or Foodland display tbelr Gold Star Certificates of Achievement for tbeir dedication to quality service for persons with disabilities as former HMC rehabilitation unit patient
'l'bomas Scott looks on. Scott was part of a committee that chose
the businesses for the awards.

.

'

Rockspring UMW readies
50th anniversary to be observed Gauls to observe anniversary for Christmas charities
MR. AND MRS. J.M. GAUL

MR. AND MRS. FRANK SNEDAKER

PIKETON · Frank L. and Mar. jorie R. Snedaker celebrated their
50111 wedding anniversary Nov. 20.
·' They were married in the
Methodist Church in Piketon Nov.
20, 1943.
They are the parents of Steve of

Gahana, Ohio and Jeff of Gallipolis. They have four grandchildren
Stephanie, Sam, Ryan and Tim.
Frank and Marge live in Port St.
Lucie, Fla. Cards may be sent to
Frank and Marjorie Snedaker, 3387
Ironwood Ave .. Port St Lucie, Fla.
34952-3381'.

•••

•'
••'
•..

GALLIPOLIS - American
Legion Post 27 to hold Thanlcsgiving dinner for memhel's and immediate families, 2 p.m. Members to
bring non-perishable items for
Christmas baslcets for disabled veterans.

...
"••
••

•••

t·

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{-,

MILLER - Rev. Ralph Workman to spealc at 7 p.m. service at
Federal Creek Church.

~. '..

...••

Lane for the summers.
The observance is being hosted
by theit children, Victor E. and
Darlene Gaul. of Newark, Larry
and Patricia Gaul Clay of Alpharetta, Ga., and Viclci Gaul of Centreville, Va.
Their grandchildren are Victor
E. Gaul, Jr. of Newark, Lisa
Sanderson of Washington C.H. ,
and Steven and Patrick Clay of
Alpharetta, Ga. and great-grandchildren, Justin J. Gaul and Bryant
Gaul of Newark, and Erin Sanderson, Washington C.H.
The couple requests that guests
not bring gifts.

Luminaries to light park

Several prayer requests were
made and the prayer was given by
Fern Morris.
Sharon Folmer and Missy Fosler
presented the program titled.
"Wholeness is God's Will." Mary
Showalter opened the program by
reading scripture from Matthew 4:
23-25.
Other readings were given on
"Thankfulness for Thanksgiving"
by Missy Foster, Tracy Beaver,
Dorothy Jeffers, Pandora Collins
and Fern Morris.
The next meeting will be on
Dec. 14 at noon with a Christmas
potluck dinner in the church fellowship room.

ROCK ·sPRINGS - Rocksprings
United Methodist Women enjoyed
a Thanks~ving dinner atlheir regular meeting on Nov. 16. The meeting was conducted by Norma
Balcer, vice president
The minutes and treasurer's
reports were given and app(llved.
The group voted to sponsor a
family for Christmas wilh a food
basket and toys. Several contributions were made to organizations in
the community.
A food drive is also being held
for the cooperative parish for
Christmas baslcets. The group will
be raising their annual pledge to !he
district UMW this year.

GALLIPOLIS - GFWC/ Community League of Gallia County's
Annual Memorial Luminaries will
be held Dec. 6_. along with the
~ommumty Chnstmas Tree lightmg.
. For any donated amount, contnbut~~ may have a luminary for
an mdiv1dual or family they wish to
honor. As before, the memorial
luminaries will be located around
'!le bandstand on the evening of the
hghbng of the Community Christmas Tree. Names of donors and
those honored will be displayed on
the bandstand.

The lighting event will be held
5:30 p.m. with special music and
programs at 6 p.m. Lighting of the
Community Christmas Tree will be
at 7 p.m. Followed by the arrival of
Santa.
All businesses in the Gallipolis
shopping area will be open until 8
p.m.
For more infonnation on Memorial Luminaries call the Chamber of
Commerce offtce at 446-0596,
Beverly Dunkle at 446-1405
Empire Furniture, or Jan Brown at
446-2502 Carl's Shoe Store- coordinalors of the ~emorial Luminar-

ies. Checks for donations should be
made out to GFWC/Cornmunity of
Gallia Co.
Donations can he given at the
Chamber office or to Bev or Jan.
Donations need to be made by Dec.
I.
All proceeds will be donated by
the Community League to the Parle
Beautification Community.
In case of rain on the evening of
Dec. 6, the ev.ent will be moved to
Dec. 9. Any group thai would lilce
to he part of lhe special music or
program please contact Kim Canaday at446-7538

Gallia community calendar Thanksgiving dinner set
Sunday, Nov. 21
CROWN CITY- Ralph Work-

•"
"

...

POMEROY - The 50th wedding
anniversary of Mildred and J. M.
Gaul will be observed wilh an open
reception at the Pomeroy Gun Club
on Pomeroy Pike Saturday, Nov.
27, from 2 to 4 p.m,
Mr. and Mrs. Gaul were married
on Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 25,
1943, at Proc\arville. The officiating minister was the Rev. Bert
O'Connor. She is the daughter of
the late Bud and Edna Morgan and
he is the son of the late Delbert and
Linnie Gaul.
Lifelong residents of Meigs
County. the couple since 1983 have
spent lhe winters in Florida returning to !heir home here on Lovers'

GALLIPOUS - The Commanity Reintegration Comminee at
Holzer Medical center's rehabilitation unit recently awarded Gold
Star Certificates of-Achievement to
three Gallipolis area businesses for
the!r dedication 10 quality service
for
s with disabilities.
~ed were Kroger, Foodland and Kmart. Although the latter
could not send a representative 10
the awards luncheon Tuesday,
Vicki DeVault of Kroger and
Coolcie Krauner of Foodland were
on hand to receive certificates.
The awarding ,committee con. sists of rehabilitation team members and former patient Thomas
Scott. The rehabilitation unit works
. wilh patients after they have recovered from their illness of injury to
bel p them learn to take care of
themselves - patients relearn how
to do '"ything from cooking meals
to just getting around.
Although. former patients with
disabilities can become quite independent, hospital employees said,
they rely on !be communi'¥ to help
them malce their way. For mstance,
people in wheelchairs can often

'

•••

POINT PLEASANT • Narcotics
Anonymous Tri County Group will
meet at611 Viand St. at 7:30p.m.

~

1. ,

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.. 55th anniversary celebrated
"'
••
~

MR. AND MRS. ROBERT EAGLE

~
~

~ j.

t- -. .Eagle
VINTON - Mr. and Mrs. Raben
of Vinton celebrated their

SSth anniversary Nov. 19.
They were married Nov. 19,
. ·1938 in Catlettsburg. Ky. and are
: the pare.nts of daughter Janice

Zarbaugh of Groveport and son
Larry Eagle of BeUaire.
They both were employed with
the Gallia County schools for 30
years before their retirement in
1981.

; Holter awarded golden sheaf
' ROCK -SPRINGS -Pat Holter
was presented with the Golden
Sheaf Certificate and a 50 year pin
at the regular meeting of Rock
Springs Grange, All members and
officers of the grange participated
in the ceremony.
· Barbara Fry repooed on the past
· Pomona meeting. Roy Grueser
placed fifth in the state woodworkmg pro.JCCIMeigs County granges will pre-

Woman's appeal
to use maiden
name rejected
TOKYO (AP) - In a deciSIOn
reflecting Japan's male-orie!lted
society, a Tokyo court Fr~day ·
turned down an appeal by a uruversity proresaor that she be allowed
to use her maiden name in her
work.
. S6
. .lo
· ReikO Selciguchi, , a SOCIO •
p(Ofes&amp;OI', sued her university in
saying WOIJ!en s~ould have
the right 10 use their maiden names
in profe•sional actiYities and in
dailJ life.
, . /elciguchi changed her officially
regiS!=&lt;~ name to thai of her husband when she married in 1966.
But she continued to use Selriguchi,

Rss.

ber~nname.

In denying the ease, tbe threejudge panel in Tokyo District Coon
,refirred 10 a Civil Code provisiOn
'Which sa}'S couples must ch&lt;?D~
.one of' their ~ and regtster
their marrlaae undet one family
naine In 97 percent of·the cases,
~give up their IWllel.
The Univcnity of Library and
)nformalion Science in Tsukuba
h8d requate!lchai Seldguc;hi sign
documents with her reg1stered
name. On several occasions, it
.rofued 10 piy te~Weh expens~
ailcllrl~ lllowances when .she
inllste!l c111 slpina her maiden

sent stuffed toys to Veteran ' s
Memorial Hospital on Oec. I. The
county officers conference will be
on Dec. 5 at 2 p.m. at the Rock
Springs Hall.
Sympathy was extended to
Charles Aldridge and the group
gave a get well wish to Lucille
Potratz.
A potluck dinner will be held on
Dec. 9. Members are aslced to bring
non-perishable items for a Christmas project. There will also he a
white elephant gift exchange.
A programs of writings about
World War I was given by Pat
Holler.
Refreshments were served by
Sarah Caldwell and Janice Weber.

•••

GALLIPOLIS -Tom Vogelsong
to preach at Failh Valley Church, 7
p.m.

man will be the guest spealcer at
Good Hope Baptist Church at II
a.m.

•••
•••

Monday, Nov. 22
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
Chapter #283 Order of Eastern Star
Annual Installati()ll of Officers at
Masonic Temple at 7:30 p.m.
Members bring dessert.

•••
•••

Tuesday, Nov. 23

•••

GALLIPOLIS - The Open Gate
Garden Club will hold a meeting at
Ann Day's home at 7:30 p.m. The
program will be "Bring in the Birdhouse." Bring gifts for GDC.
.

CROWN CITY - Rev. Keith
Eblin will present the sermon at
Liheny Chapel church 7 p.m.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Paul Chapman
will present the sermon at the
White Road Church of God at 7
p.m. wilh special singing.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Historical Society will have a regular meeting at I p.m. at the His torical Office. Following the meeting
Dr. Danny Fulks will speak on
"Evolution of a River VillageCrown City."

•••

BIDWELL - New Hope Baptist
Church will celebrate its 129th
anniversary at 2:30 p.m. with pastor Robert Jackson of Union Baptist Church.
·

•••

MASON - That Youth Thing
presents a service wilh Mark Reed
at Faith Baptist Church from 10 to
11:30a.m.

....

For Christmas

'

Choice of lANE Cedar Chests

•
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.,

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t
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•
•

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I

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II!'

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Endearment Reg. 1825
Sill

Colonial Star Reg. $525

$499

SALE

Cherry wllh at.ncl daalgn.

•••

0* with quilled pod lop

PRICES START AT

Revivals
MERCERVILLE - Missionary
Baptist Church will hold a revival
beginning Nov. 15 with Evangelist
Curtis Sheets and special singing
nightly at 7:30p.m.

$424

$299

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•.:

'·•.

VETERAN JOINS ASSOCIATION- Bob
J.1oster, sixth from left, signs a Gallla County
Vietnam Veterans Association membership
form for his father, Narvei H. "Shug" Foster
(center). The .senior Foster was wounded twice
while serving in tbe E Troop 2nd SQuadron 11th
Armored Cavalry Regiment in Vietnam and
now resides at Pinecrest Care Center. The

TOPE'S CHRIStMAS GIFT SHOPPE
WTGIRIIYIII

.

oGolllpolla Blond Blind nvoRool C..cha
oCryoW lo ar-e
•CiuloiRI• OrMm.nla
•S.IIo
•Pine Cone Potpounl
oOaaka
'

(Community Calendar Items
appear two dJJys before an event
and the day of that event. They
must be rrcelved by the GaUipolls
Dally ·Tribune by 9:30a.m. for
they dJJys publication.) ·

Model Home Located at
Intersection of Rts. 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, OH · 614-992-2478

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Tawney Studio
424 Second Ave.
Oh•

HUNTINGTON. W.Va. (AP.)
- A Zamhoni can do more than
just smooth the ice at slcating rinks.
It's also a vehicle of love.
Just ask Christy Stubblefield.
whose boyfriend staged a free
Zamboni ride for her Thursday and
proposed on the ice during a break

Cherry, .triple chime, cable

driven.

luzlvaal'laaan
willlwaj·m.._.

1420
. ,. ...-. --............
n ·.
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'

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'!:lit
..
'

tift
, .

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\

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.FIIE-'OIFT
._,~··~A_.PP...;III~~...I ~
Second It G111pe
lri GaHipolla
.4410332

'

Of Our Homes Standard Features

At).dlersc:n Wmdows
• Geoigia Pacific Doors
• 2x6 Exterior Walls, 16 ln. On Center
• Annstrong Solarian Aoor Tile
• Kitchen Compact Cabinets
• 8 Foot Ceiling
• 2,x l0 Floor Joist, 16 ln. On Center
jll~
• 52 Gallon WaJer Heater
~
~ Carriage Carpets
•
• Mastic ;r-Jock Vinyl Siding With Lifetime Warranty
• 25 Year,Warranty Asphalt Shingles.
• 10 Ye-ar Structural Warranty On The Home

Our Prices Are The Lowest In The Area.
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November 27th
10:00-5:00

Oak, triple chime, cab~
driven.

• .

in a minor league hockey game.
" Is this the last place you
expected this to happen?" Alan
Gianettino, 25, aslced before dropping to one lcnee. ''Will you marry
me, Christy?"
The answer was yes.

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The old adage about marriage has
been updated. It now goes, "Marry in
haste and repea~-·~Ieisure ."

FAMILY HOMES INC.

"SOMETHIIIO FOR EVIRYOIII 011 YOUR lilT"

•••

2nd Set

GCVV A IS a service organization formed in July
to raise community awareness of Vietnam veterans. Watching the signing are Foster's children
and members of the association. From left are
Larry Marr, president; Howard Foster, Joe Foster and Amee Foster; Henry L. Myers, treasurer; Bob Foster; Roger L. Fetterly, vice president, and Bill Stansbury, secretary. (Tribune
photo by Kevin Pinson)

14 DIFFERENT
STYLES ·

.,,'

POMEROY - Ed Bartels was er in his building and attended
recently selected as the outstanding Ohio University three summers
math teacher for the Southeast trhough a National Science FounOhio District by the Ohio Council dation grant. He brought this inforof Teachers in Mathematics.
mation back to his buildin~ to share
Bartels has been actively with fellow teachers as well as in
involved in the Effective Schools the district through a number of ingrant at Salisbury Elementary for service meetings.
lhree years. Through this grant he
He was also involved in an Ohio
has worked with parent volunteers Board of Regents granr , th e K-6
in Salisbury to train them on differ- Mathematics Teacher Training
cot concepts of the Ohio Math grant He also served on the South·
model to present to the Salisbury east OMEM team which provided
students.
in-service workshops throu ghout
He was selected as a lead teach- lhe state.

-•'

Model Home Viewing H011rs l:Ojl-5:00 p.m.
Tue-Sat. lir II:Y appointment
Call614-99l·M78
,, '
.

~~aid lhe will appeal.
~·

Bartels named as
outstanding teacher

l~!~~~!;:;::;.;."'!::.!'~~!.l

..••.

-•

POINT PLEASANT - Narcotics
Anonymous Clean and Free Group
will meet at the Episcopal Church
at 8:30p.m.

Call ·1

ics.

·-

••
•

GALLIPOLIS
American
Legion Post 161 will hold a regular
meeting at 7:30p.m.

.

Soutlleast District of the Ohio Counca of Teachers of Mathemat-

·

••

•••

•.

CHELMSFORD, Mass. (AP) Two young men stole $400 from
lhe gas station where they worked,
then shot each other in the shoulder
to malce it look as if IIIey were victims of a holdup, ,P&lt;?lice say.
Michael Wngbt and Steven
Bean "are lucky they didn't kill
each other," Lt. Francis Roark
said.
Roark said the two 18-year-olds
confessed while being questioned
in the hospital, where they were in
fair condition Thursday. They were
charged with larceny.
·
Sgt. Ron Gamache said lhe two
men stashed the receipts behind a
stone wall outside the gas station.
shot themselves with a .22-caliber
weapon and then ran inside
Wednesday, yelling that they had
been shot by a robber.
They gave police a detailed
account, claiming a robber in a
black parlca sbotthem at pointblank
range. Police began an intensive
search for the gunman.

BEST TEACHER - Pictured are Ed Bartels and Bonnie Beach,

•
•

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Auto or Health Emergencies-.Seniors &amp;.Spouses Traveling AloneStudents... makes an Ideal Christmas Glfth
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Two thiefs
fake a holdup

•

LOGAN - Narcotics Anonymous Courage to Change will meet
at First Church of Christ at 6:30
p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - Alcoholics
Anonymous will meet at Woodland
Center multiporpose room at8 p.m.

446-1651 or 446-3056.
On Thanksgiving Day, iridividu- .
als may Cl\ll 446-0954 for assistance.
Members wish to thanlc all individuals who have helped the project in any way.

propel themselves, but cannot get
tluough doors unless they are held
open by another person or, "'ey·
open automatically.
Scott advised the committee on
businesses in the cornmunil)l that
provide quality service to penons
wilh disabilities. He commented to
lhe committee specifically on coovenien( aa:ess and friendly service.
The committee plans to increase
community awareness of the needs
of disabled persons through education, service and exposure. They
also intend to educate patients and
families on accessibiliiy and attitudinal barriers within the community.
During National Rehabilitation
Week, the rehabilitation unity
invited Dave Cameron of the Rehabilitation Service Commission to
S)?eak about the Americans with
disabiUties act to hospital administration, the Retail MM:hants Association, the Gallia County Chamber
of Commerce and the Community
Improvement Board.
The committee emphasized the
Americans with disabilities act in
its awards to the three businesses.

Tawney's Photo Center

•••

•••
CENTENARY

- Centenary
United Christian at 7 p.m. with the
Rollins Family Singers and Rev.
Junior Preston.

GALLIPOLIS - The laymen of
Paint Creek Baptist Church will ·
stage their .12th annual free
Thallksgiving dinner this year.
Individuals wishing to have
their dinner delivered to them
should. call !be following numbers:

I

'·'

.~ .

FREE
'

Cider-Coffee-Cookies
Poinsettias, Christmas Trees, Bulk
• Candy, Crafts, Amish JeUy, Candy
&amp; Jelly Gifts. Handmade Baskets
10 Door Prizes.

Karens Greenhouse
"'3-01/2 miles past Southam High School*

St. Rt. 124 R'clne, Oh
614·949·2612
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-------Gallipolis Ferry • 675-3857
NQ1111lity Remains Long

After Price Is Forgotten"

.'

I

�•

.
'

..

Entertainment

November 21,1993

PEOPLE IN THE NEWS
Suit claims Cyrus Is no Mozart

Sunday Times: sentinel /B8

CBS -movie filmed in exotic location

Elizabeth Taylor says Jackson is in Europe

:pickens to be performed at OU

Historical
hbuse for sale

Am~~

now

'Great American Chokeout' held
364 days a year for non-smokers

Ohio Valley
Symphony

"lbe'l

C!IUY{J -

7

~e-

·Wood{ancC Centers, Inc.

a.-Sw1mming
.
Concerts
KATJIY MATTEA '
Kathy Mattea '1· Cbrl$tm,as
Homecoming '93 with special
Clly Wllkrt will be jlrelellt·
Dei:. llll the O.leston

5:i'
JUDit

Audlrorlum. Tlckeil are

It die Civic Cenler Box .
Oftice iDd all TicbtMasler outlets

- .orl1Jphcaut(304)342-575'7.
'

.,

1r:im~s- ~entinel Sectioh

'C»&gt;is
lAYAWAY NOW &amp;
P.

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~

Tho199A

JACK.SON
200 MAIN ST• .

C

November 21,1993

wading inro 1,500 swooning females at a suburban
mall. ''They won' t go to see a picture that has lnlns
being blowri all over a sidewalk."
The 32-year-old Milanese hunk, who shot ro fame
when ~ beefy, bald chest began appearing on the
covers of romance novels, appeared at two malls in a
lxity promotional tour for Mediterraneum, his new
men's fragrance.
Fabio said his aversion to violence limits his
recurring role in the syndicated TV series "Acapulco
H.E.A.T."

ByLYNNELBER
When one of the group's three
Loggia's career seems to have
planes crashes en route, team mem- gone smoothly since he landed ~
AP Televilloa Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Robert bers are thrust into a life-and-death first acting job he tried for, a role in
"She's Not Crying Anymme"
a 1953 TV play starring Hume
Loggia recendy has been dashing medical nightmare.
the way he said he did, a lawsuit
from one film locatioa to the next
Lindsay Wagner, playinl! a Cronyn. C'ronyn, Loggia recalls,
·ClaimS.
in Australia, Mexico and Texas, recenlly divorced woman searching suggested he develop his talent
and sometimes running into some for a new life, co-stars in the fact- with famed acting coach Stella
Danny Mote, an insurance
based movie, along with David Adler.
pretty scary stuff.
salesman, filed a copyright
Clennon.
"She rook a shine to me," Lqg·
But
even
a
warninjt·
from
Sean
infringement lawsuit against
Loggia
heeded
Connerts
Connery
didn't
deter
hun
as
Loggia
gia
recalls.
Cyrus, claiming the song was
He
went on to appear in plays,
advice
not
to
take
along
his
w1fe,
prepared
to
head
to
Catemaco,
in
derived from one he wrote in
Audrey,
to
Mexico
last
July,
and
he
including
such classics as "T~e
the
Mexican
rain
forest,
to
film
the
1973. He said he sent unsolicpaid
foriL
CBS
movie
"Nurses
on
the
Line:
Three
Sisters"
in London, in fdlllS
Athlete refuses to apologize
ited copies ro Cyrus' label,
and
on
television.
After his TV
The
Crash
ofFlighl
7/
'
·
.
"
I'm
taking
a
lot
of
flak,"
he
Mercury.
PHOENIX (AP)- Charles Barkley offered an
"Before I started the film I was says, laughing. "There's a bevy of series "T.H.E. Cat" ended in
At a pretrial hearing
extreme alternative to apologizing to a fan over a cut _ irr Monte Carlo -for a tennis and beautiful nurses in ·the 'film, and I 1967, Loggia says he "kind of
Thursday, a judge listened to a
lip.
· golf tournament, and Connery was ' came home with all these pictures went on hiatus.''
short rape recording of what sounds like Cyrus
"I'd rather go to a Klan
A 1973 appearance in a New
tllere and I mentioned Catemaco. of us, arms around each other,
composing tile song.
meeting with a Malcolm X hat
Slowly. he turned,. with this fear- • embracing ... It looks like Club York stage produc\ion of "In the
"Irving Berlin, being the genius he was; Amadeus
on than apologize, ".the Phoenix
Med."
·
Boom Boom· Room" helped get
some face, and said, 'Catemaco?'
Mozart, being the genius he was; and certainly no
Suns'.Jorward said Friday nighL
"He shot 'Medicine Man' down
Audrey, his wife of more than him back on track, bul he found
songwriter in Nashville, can lay that song down,
"I'm not apologizing."
there. He said, 'For openers, don't 20 years, did accompany him to himself paying his acting dues
verbatim, _in three minutes," said Mote's lawyer,
your wife.'"
bring
Brisbane, Australia, where he again in LOs Angeles with a series
Edward Durham, 36, said
Grant Sm1tll.
There
were,
in
fact,
spiders,
filmed
an NBC movie last spring of TV guest roles.
"'Barkley punched him in a bar
and
'•a
strange
sort
of
"I played every episodic heavy
lizards
that also is fact-based &amp;lid with an
But Cyrus' lawyers say tile singer repeatedly
early Thursday after Danley
kamikaze beelike kind of thing," aviation .angle: "Mercy Mission: you could imagine ... I was overexpaused while writing the song, which they say was
argued with a woman. Durham
Loggia
said.
The Flight of 771."
.
. posed and underpaid," Loggia
composed during a two-hour period.
said he rold Barkley, "You don' t
There
also
was
an
armed
guard
Loggia plays a commercial air- says.
. Cyrus said he fii'St recorded the song while driving
talk ro ladies like that" and "I
posted
outside
his
bungalow
each
Then came the film '•An Officer
line captain who diverts his plane
m August 1990. On the tape, Cyrus sings the entire
used ro have a lot of respect for
night,
presumably
because
of
the
and
a Gentleman" in 1980 "and I
to search for the pilot of a smaU
song, accompanied only by traffic noise.
you.''
threat of crime, he says.
aircraft (S~ou BaklJI&amp;) lost near crossed the line into being a char·
Barkley, at 6-f001-6 and 252 pounds, denied
Despite that, Loggia says, "it Pago Pago m American Samoa at acter acror," he says.
pwtehing Durham.
. Singer, ex-wife settle divorce
was a wonderful experience, Christmastime. The movie's
The 1980s blmed out 10 be "an
Police
are
investigating
the
complaint
against
the
because very oflen these r.unishing December airdate has not been · incredible decade," Loggia says,
SAN ANTONIO, Fla. (AP)- David Bell311)y and
NBA's current MVP, who has been reportedly
locations make you grow. •
capped by his Oscar nomination 1!5
anmnounced.
.
his _ex-wife settled a dispute over their 1991 divorce,
involved
in
two
other
barroom
scuffles
since
1992.
Besides, he adds, smiling:
Most recently, Loggia took a best supporting actor for the 1985
wh1ch means he pays her as much as $250,000 for
"When you're from the Lower detour to Del Rio, Texas, to play film "Jagged Edge."
legal fees.
East
Side of New York, you know the role of an "old codger bandit"
"That kicked the income way
Juliet actress may be victim
That was the only part of the new setdement
how
to
side
slep
trouble.''
up,
and it just put me on a roU," he
in
a
Western
movie,
''Bad
Girls,''
revealed Thursday. The country singer and his wife
LOS ANG!;:LES (AP) -Olivia Hussey is among
In
"Nurses
on
the
Line,"
airing
says.
starring
Madeline
Stowe,
Andie
asked that their divorce file be resealed.
the victims of a financial manager charged with
at 9 p.m. EST Tuesday on CBS, a McDowell and Mary Stuart MasHe feels secure enough to
Janet Bellamy challenged the divorce this year,
stealing from clients, prosecutors said.
white-bearded Loggia - "I look terson.
believe he's past the rough spots in
charging she had been obliged to stay on the family's
Jay Lawrence Levy, 51, was jailed Friday in lieu of
like Schweitzer JUmself' - plays
His next project, the movie "I his acting career.
rural propeny fQI' years after her marriage when she
$445,000 bail on forgery and theft charges for work
a veteran physician who heads a Love Trouble' with Nick Nolte
" I've been at this now for over
was 17.
at his financial management business from 1985 to
medical outreach effort in a jungle and Julia Roberts, will allow him 40 years, and somebody has to play
1991.
She also claimed she was asked to sign Jlipers in
village.
.
, some at home time in Los Angeles. grandpa."
1990 that she was told would create a trust fund for
Levy forged Hussey's name on a trust deed for her
their five sons, but she unknowingly signed papers
home 10 pay off interest on a $348,000 loan, prosecufor the divorce.
tors said. Hussey also accused Levy of stealing as
much as $1 million from her savings and pension
fund.
Violence is out for Fabio
Hussey. 42,.is best known for her role as a teen-age
ATI..ANTA (AP) - ·Violent roles are out for
Europe, Taylor said Friday in her view last week after canceling his
By CASSANDRA BURRELL
Juliet
in
Franco
Zeffirelli's
1968
film
version
of
first public comments about the worldwide "Dangerous" concert
Fabio, who doesn't want to alienale his biggest fans.
Associated Press Writer
"Romeo
and
J
ulieL"
tour and revealing his addiction 10
"I want women 10 be comfortable seeing whalever
WASHINGTON (AP) - Eliza- singer since he went into hiding. prescription drugs.
Levy
faces
more
than
10
lawsuits
by
former
&lt;!
I do," the longhaired model declared Thursday before
beth Taylor says her former addic- She wouldn't give his exact locaclients.
Meanwhile, Jackson's family
tion.
tion to prescription drugs was use"I have suffered and dealt with postponed the raping of'il NBC
ful in getting pop star Michael
telev1sion special next month; sayJackson into the best treatment for the same kind of medical problems ing they wanted to give Jackson
now afflicting my friend Michael
his problem.
Jackson,"
the actress said during a time to complete treatment for a
Jackson is recovering froin
dedication ceremony for a 'new drug addiction. Jackson's brother,
It's beginning to look a lot like Dickens' classic tale -is written by set and special effects were addiction to painkillers in a treat- AIDS clinic. "Because of that and Jermaine, said the family decided
tbe Holiday Season in Athens, as Charles Jones, artistic direcror of qesigned w1th meticulous derail to ment program somewhere in because of our friendship, when to reschedule the "Jackson Family
Charles Dickens' "A Christmas the Omaha Community Playhouse recreate the world of Dickens'
Michael's doctor called to ask if I Honors" TV special so that the
Carol" comes alive on stage at in Omaha, Nebraska.
England of the 1800's.
would help, I was glad 10 inter· entire family could be together for
Ohio University.
A Christmas Carol features twoTickets for A Christmas Carol
lheevenL
.
·
vene.''
,
A new stage musicaladaption of hundred costumes and an ensemble are $10 for adults and $8 for
"Because of 1'1\Y own experithe Dickens classic win be present. of 36 actors, singers, musicians and children (12 and under) and can be
ence with addictioll to prescription
ed at Templeron-Blackburn Alumni technicians presenting a full array purchased at the audirorium 's box
medicines, I was able to .make a
PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) offiCe weekdays between Noon and
Memorial Auditorium on Dec. 3 at of traditional Holiday carols.
number of calls in search of the
The Kennedy estate, famed as
The show features set designs 4p.m.
8p.m.
best and most appropriate treatment
Performed by the Nebraska The- and special stage effects created by
For more information, call the JFK's winter White House and
for Michael, and he is
underatre Can1van, this adaption of
noted designer James Othuse. The, box office at (614) 593-1780.
darkened by the William Kennedy
going such treatmenl in Europe."
Smith sex scandal, went on the
Jackson vanished from public
market Friday for $7 million.
'
"The Kennedy family has
always enjoyed going to Palm
'
COLONY THEATRE
Beach," said Bryan R. Dunn, a
Holiday Corwert
FRI. THRUlUI!I.
Kennedy family spokesman in New
CUNT EAITWOOO IN
Sat., Dec. 4, 8:00p.m.
York City.
IN THE LINE OF FIRE PG
Thursday was theGrcatAmerihave a rich and long tra·
Caii448-ARTS to get your
ONE EVENING IHOW 7::10
dition o going down there. But it
can Smokeoutand theze weze a lot of
reoerved ticket.
ADIIISIION t2.00
makes sense to sell the property
moody people out there who thought
4410121
llorrla and Dorothy Hooklno
now," Dunn said. ·
STARTING WEDNESDAY, NOV. 24
il was mighty annoying the way w.e
Arlo! 'Thealre '
The Mediterranean•style, seaoxygen breathers walked around
...._ _
JURASSIC PARK .
426 2nd Ave., Galllpallo, Oh.
side mansion was built in 1923 and
sampling unpolluted air like it was
purchased 'lO years later by Joseph
free champagne.
r
~
P. Kennedy. It has six .bedrooms
Not ro stereotype all cigareue
and 8,500 square feet.
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
~ as inconsiderate smoke.
President Kennedy used the
446-4524
stacks, but every day should be a
two-acre estate as a wmter resorL
Smolteout as far as us non-addicts .
More recently, Patricia Bowman
are concerned.
alleged that Smith, the nephew of
I have absolutely no problem
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, sexually
with those who wish IOconductslow
assaulted her theze in March 1991.
suicide in their own homes, but I'm long, passionate affairs with Camels else I had some really irritable travel
Smith was acquitted.
The sale is "wholly unrelated"
a fum supporter in federal regula- and the Marlboro Man.
companions.
to
the allegations and the trial of
tions which would require nicotine
· At least one of my gang, Andy
I consider it good trai11ing Smith,
Dunn said.
slaves to wear a ftsh bowl or diving "Live Fast, Die Young of Lung Dis- someday I may have to deal with
helmet when smoking in public.
ease" Powell, was in such a hurry to taking the kids on long car trips and
Either that or a mandate excus- dieheoftensmokedtwocigarettesat slOpPing for multiple potty breaks.
ing all murders conducted 'along once.
The only diff~nce is, I won't punch
resJaurants' smoking/non-smoking
The boy never had any money to my kids in the face when they get too
leave the house, but he never seemed &amp;Moying.
PIIQJ Oii'CAPIIY .
border.
,I_c;lonl)Vant to deny sm.okers to have any li'Qllble supporting a $50To my friends, the term "smoke• SS.nlor ,Portrait SpfclaBsts
theit rights 10 irritate the hell out of dollar-a-week cigareue habit.
out" held an entirely different delini(Iff} 44H1UD .
us who have to sample their habit
According to my. other addict lion. The·objectwasnottoquitsmokwithout the belicfit of a filter, but at friends,Andyneverboughtapackof ing, but to attempl to ·make non1_9151 ban such pollution in places cigarettes- he just bummed off of smokers addicted through second
"where I am now forced to cat smoke them.
hand smoke.
along with my Bi8 Mac.
What Andy docsn'tknow is that
lean recall eye- and throat-~
There's nothing more irritating they have been keeping a running ing ima~es of slUing in a closed off
• than biting into a hamb..ger, pizza tab, and to date he owes each of them room w1th eight or 10 smoking budor steak that suddenly takes on the nine cartons of cigarettes.
dies, trying 10 watch the glowing
flavor of a well-used ashlnly.
If there is any one thing I can television through a London-fog
Keep your eyes on this paper. blame my anti-smoking attitude on, quality cloud.
ONE OF THE '-I:JST COMPAEHENSIVE &amp;PROFESSIONAL MENTAL HEALTH AGENCIES IN SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
· Someday there will be a piclure .of it's my friends.
I can understand the appeal of
Woodlond Conl. . lo Jurdod In port by lho GIIIINaclloon-llolgo Board of
'
twOcops.JeadingmefromtheGolden
Everything we did had to be smoking. It's so glamorous. Who
•
AlcOhOl, Drug Addlellpn oncl MonltiHNih ~
Arches afttt I force some inconsid- planned around nicotine fits.
wouldn'tbetemptedtowakeupevery
enite smOker 10 eat the conlentS of
I had astrict no-smoking policy morning to a 1S-minutecoughing fit,
in my car (mainly because I doubled spittil)g up liUle black chunks of
his ashlnly.
And lick il clean.
•.
anyofmy friendsownedananicleof something that w,s bnce probably
· RESIDENT
PRiVATE '
• P~TII;NT
I hope I don't come ott: sound· clothing without 8 cigareue bUm in part of 8 vital organ?
CONFIDENTIALITY
PSYCHIATRISTS
INSURANCE
ing like 8 smoltet hater. That's not it), which made long trips ueal chal·
Taste' the adventure.
the cue. I hate the habit, not the lenge.
Kevin Pluoills a part-time toPSYCHOLOGISTS It
PROTECTED
PLANS PROCESSED
Any
drive
more
than
half
an
bacco
r.rmer
and
Iliff
writer
for
pealOll.
SOCIAL WORKERS
As a matter of fact, most of my ho..-long required several SlOpS 110 Oblo Valley Publlshln1.
friends from high school have had they could step out and get a fix, or
NASHVILLE, Thnn. (AP)- BiUy Ray Cyrus is. no
Mozart. nor Irving Berlin and couldn't have written

Sports

Michi.gan blanks Ohio
State 28-0 in finale
•

By HARRY ATKINS
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) - Fans on both sides

FINGERTIP CATCH - Michigan wide
reteiver Mercury Hayes (right) makes a fingertip
grab or a pass for the touchdown In front ol Ohio
State defensive back W!!lter Taylor in the first

wondered why Michigan was favored over Ohio
State. Now they know.
Tyrone Wheatley ran for 105 yards, Ty Law led
an inspired defense with two of the Wolverines' four
inlerceptiOIIS, and Michigan defeated Ohio State 28-0
Saturday, marring the Buckeyes' Rose Bowl dream.
. The fifth-ranked Buckeyes (9-1-1 overall, 6-1-1
B1g Ten) needed either a win or a lie against Michig!ID (7-4, 5-3) ro clinch their fii'St triP. to Pasadena
smce the 1984 season. Ohio State wtll play in the
Rose Bowl anyway if Wisconsin loses either of its
final two games.
Ohio State, which hadn't been shut out since
1982, was unbeaten in 16 regular-season games, yet
the Wolverines we!lt into the game as I 3/4 point
favontes . They qu1ckly showed the genius of the
line makers.
Todd Comns, who completed 14 of 20 passes for
140 yards with one interception, tossed a 25-yard
touchdown pass 10 Mercury Hayes and had a threeyard touchdown toss to Che Foster. Jon Ritchie
scored on a one-yard run and Ed Davis Jiad a fiveyard touchdown run.
. On the secon&lt;! snap of Michigan'~ second possesSion, Wheatley ripped off a 43-yard run to the Ohio
State 30. Three plays later, Hayes made a twisting,
diving catch of Collins' wind-blown pass ii1 the end
zone and the Wolverines were ahead 7-0.
The record crowd of 106,867 in Michigan Stadium erupted, and the Buckeyes never recovered.
Ohio State's defense, ranked No. 6 against the
run, had allowed an average of just 99.4 yards per
game. Wheatley, completing his second 1,000-yard
season, had surpassed that before leaving with a
shoulder injury with 5:00 remaining in the second
quarter.

quarter of Saturday's pme In AJin Arbor, Mich.
which the bost Wolvennes won 28-0 to knock the
Buckeyes out of the unbeaten raaks. (AP)

·Field goal helps Boston
· College upset N_otre Dame
SOUTH BEND, Ind . (AP) Just when it looked like Notre
'Dame had found one more miracle,
luck ran out on the Irish.
Boston College upset No. 1
Notre Dame and the New Year's
·Day bowl picture, stunning the
Irish 41-39 Saturday on David Gordon's 41-yard field goal as time
expired.
· Gordon's kick stopped the
·longest winning streak in the nation
at 17 games and spoiled a Shot by
Notre Dame - which had rallied
from a 21-point deficit in the fourth
quarter - for only its third perfect
regular' season since 1949.-'Ifle loss
clouded Notre Dame's chances for
a ninth national championship.
The Irish (11-1), finally showing some of the emotion that carried them past tllen-No. 1 Florida
Stale on the same field last week,
rallied from a 38-17 deficit in the
final 11 1/2 minutes. Kevin
McDougal's four-yard rouchdown
pass on fourth down to Lake Dawson with 1:09 left put the Irish
ahead 39-38.
But Glenn Foley, who threw
four touchdown passes. drove the

Eagles (8-2) 57 yiu-dS in 'eight plays
to set up the winning field goal.
Gordon had missed from 40 yards
inro the wind earlier in the game.
Gordon's kick came at the same
end of the field wheze Notre Dame
cornerback Shawn Wooden baued
down Charlie Ward's pass at tile
goal line on the final play last
week, preserving Notre Dame's
win and setting off a wild celebration.
This time, Boston College's
fans swarmed the field while Notre
Dame's players slowly walked into
the tunn¢1 !~ding to tile locker
. room.
No. 8 Florida 52
Vanderbilt 0
At Gainesville, Fla., Florida
extended the nation's secondlongest home winning streak 10 23
games and earned a berth in the
Southeastern Conference championship with a 52-0 rout of Vanderbilt on Saturday.
The eighth-ranked Gators, who
win face Alabama in the SEC title
game on Dec. 4, amassed 454 yards
and forced eight Vanderbih
turnovers in the final tuneup for

Chuck Win1ers and Alfie Burch also had interceptions for Michigan. The Wolverines, finally playing
the way they had been expected to all season, also
came up with four saclal on Obio State quartetbacks
Bobby Hoying and Bret Powers.
Before this game, the Bl~Ckeya had thrown only
I 0 interceptions all se~!'ee by Powers, who
gave up three of the four
Michigan.
The sacks and interceptions went a long way
10ward taking Ohio Slate split end Joey Galloway out
of the game. Galloway, who already tied a school
record with II touchdown receptions, caughl three
passes for47 yards againsl the Wolverines.
Law's first inlerception, on a Powers pass for Galloway in the second quarter, gave Michigan the ball
at its five. But the Wolverines, with Collins and
Alexander hooking up for a 50-yard completion to
the Ohio Stale one, needed just five plays to cover
the 95 yards. Ritchie punched it in for a 14-0 lead
with 5:30 left in lhe ftrSI half.
Moments later, Winters slepped in front of Galloway for another interception and returned it 19
yards to the Ohio State 31. A 10-yard pass ro Alexander and a 12-yard run by Ed Davis keyed that six·
play drive, which led ro Foster's touchdown and a
21-0 halftime lead.
The Buckeyes were forced to punt on their fust
possession of the third quarter. But punter Tim
Williams let his knee touch the ground while fielding
the snap, giving Michigan the ball at the Ohio State
32.
Alexander gained 21 yards on a reverse 10 key a
four-play drive which ended with Davis outrunning
two defenders to the left comer for a 28-0 lead.
It was Michigan's ftrSI shutout of Ohio State since
a 22-0 vicrory in 1976. The Buckeyes had gone 136
games since a 6-0 shu lOut by Wisconsin in 1982.

Marshall beats Western Carolina 20-16

next week's regular-season finale
against No.2 Florida Stale.
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)- Todd Donnan threw for 276 yards, one touchdown and a possible
Terry Dean threw touchdown
playoff berth as Marshall beat Western Carolina 20-16 Saturday.
Marshall (8-3 overall, 6-2 in the conference) and Western Carolina(6-4, 5-3) both needed victories 10
passes of 18 and four yards to
Aubrey Hill and scored on a wide
keep their playoff hopes alive. Marshall is the defending NCAA Division 1-AA champions.
Georgia Southern won its game 31-24 againSI East Tennessee State S8Uirday. for the conference tide and
receiver pass from Chris Doering
before be1ng benched in the second
an automatic playoff berth.
quarter
with Florida leading 24 •0
Marshall will have 10 wait until the NCAA announces Division 1-AA playoff .,.;rings
Sunday 10 learn
but sputtering.
,......
No. 10 Texas A&amp;M 59
whether it receives a berth. The loss put Western Carolina out of the playoff picture.
Texas Christian 3
Donnan was 17 of 34 passing, including a 35-yard touchdown pass 10 Casey HiU that put ManhaU ahead
At Fon Worth, Texas, Greg Hill
17-13. Donnan threw one inlerception.
ran 94 yards for one of his two
The pass 10 Hill with 9:59 remaining in the third quarter capped a five-play, 91-yard drive.
The touchdown gave MarshaU its first lead. Western Carolina led 13-10 at halftime.
touchdowns and Corey Pullig
passed for two scores Saturday as
The Catamounts' scores came on a 99-yard pass interception return by Julius Grant in the second
lOth-~, Texas A&amp;M ea~JII ~ 1-qt*W,,...,.•- one-~nliltby:Hatold:m-itllllefillt~- .;;..;.,
• · ~ .~ ,.
.., '
...,.
least a lie for the Southwesl Con·
terence tide with a 59-3 viclory
over Texas Ouistian.
The Aggies (9-1, 6-0 SWC) won rushed for a career-high 173 yards 132 yards. It was his fourth 100- possible bowl bid for the Hoosiers
their 2181 consecutive SWC game, and two touchdowns and Kerry yard game this season, tying a Penn (8-3, 5-3 Big Ten) and gave Purdue
tying the record of the 1968-71 Collins passed for 278 yards Satur· State record set by O.J. McDuffie (1-10, 0-8) its worst finish in 86
years.
Texas teams of coach Darrell day, leading 14th-ranked Penn last year.
No.
21
Indiana
24,
Purdue
17
Thomas, who had carried only
State
to
a43-21
vicrory
over
NorthRoyal.
At
Bloomington,
Ind.,
Shane
12
times for 13 yards this season,
western.
TCU (4-7, 2-6), which lost for
Thomas.
a
redshirt
freshman,
had
12 rushes for S4 yards against
•
Archie,
fillinl!
for
injured
Kithe 21st consecutive time to Texas
rushed
for
1wo
rouchdowns
Saturthe
Boilennakers,
including seven
Jana
Carter,
earned
27
times
and
A&amp;M, last beat the Aggies 13-10
day,
including
a
10-yard
run
in
the
straight
carries
for
his first touchscored
on
runs
of
five
and
23
yard~
in 1972 at College Station.
fourth quarter that lifted No. 21 down. a three-yard run early in the
and
Collins
was
19-of-30,
includNo. 14-Penn State 43
third quarter.
ing a 15,yard touchdown to Bobby Indiana over Purdue 2A-17.
Northwestern 21
The 1· 10 record was Purdue •s
The victory in the ft~!nual Old
At Evansron, III., Mike Archie Engram.
Engram caught eight passes for Oaken Bucket game kept alive a worst since an 0-5 mark in 1907.

Browns to face hard-to-beat Oilers in divisional contest
By M.R. KROPKO

CLEVELAND (AP) - If a
home-field advantage exists roday
when Houston tangles with the
Cleve~qrid Browns at Cleveland
Stadium, it may favor the visiting
Oilers.
Both teams bring 5-4 records
into the AFC Central contest and
trail the Pittsburgh SteeleJ.s by one
game.
Visiting teams usually lutve reason battle not only the Browns but
also the boisterous, fiercely loyal

home crowd in huge Cleveland
Stadium. Few NFI- stadiums offer
anything as intimidating as the
' 'Dawg Pound," the raucous fans
in the bleachers.
But the Browns will play at
home for the fii'St time since Nov.
8, when owner Art Modell and
coach BiD Belichick released popular Bernie Kosar, the team's starting quarterback since 1985.
Since then, fans have been venting their anger daily on radio talks
shows.

Ratings in the Cleveland television market showed about as many
viewers watched Kosar help lead
his new team, the Dallas Cowboys,
to a 20-15 win over Phoenix last
Sunday as watched Seattle smash
the Kosarless Browns 22-5.
A Cleveland department store
placed a large ad in a daily newspaper's sports sec lion this week to
announce that Dallas Cowboy jerseys with Kosar's name and No. 18
are on sale for only $35 "while
supplies last.''

Bengals' jetsam -may hurt
them in today's bout vs. Jets
By BARRY WILNER
HEMPSTEAD, N.Y . (AP) Both starting cornerbacks could
have been Bengals. So, of course,
could the quarterllack have been in
Cincinnati.
·
No wonder James Hasty, Eric
Thomas and, especially. Boomer
Esiason are smiling.
Hasty, a transition player,
signed a free-agent contract with
the Bengals earlier this year that
the Jets matched. Thomas left
Cincinnati as a free agent to join
the Jets. Esiason carne back to New
Yorlt in a lmde:
They are three key reasons the
Jets m 5-4 and riding a three-game
winning streak1into today' s game
with the NFI..'s oruy winless team,
the Bengals.
"I thought abOut that the other
day." Hasty said. "I couldn't see
!letnl 0-9. It's real scary ro think I
could've been there.
"I thought maybe tlley would
be a little more aggressive in the
free agency market. that my contract would be the beginning. But I
was wrong.'' .
Thoaiu also feels he made the
right deCision·, that it clearly was
time to chlnac addresses, even if
he went from a 5-11 iearn to a 4-12
club.
'· "l had an oppoatunity to come
here or sq~y there," he said, "and I
mllde the ~oice ·o f corning here for

'11:1

the chance to be with a winner.
Cornerback Mike Brim, a Jet for
Based on nothing else but records, two seasons before joining the
I think I made the right move.''
Bengals this year, understands why
Esiason, the leading passer in
such backbiting can occur.
the AFC, knows the Jets made the
"A lot of lllnes, frustration sets
right move in acquirin~ him for in wh~n things are not going well,··
draft picks. He "was rotllllg on the he SBid. "It's tough to be up each
bench" at the end of the 1992 sea- week. A lot of people are trying to
son with the Bengals and was anx- make that inro a bi8 lhing.
"It was between coach Shula
ious ro leave.
"I was busting at the seams and and Harold and now it •s a team
I had to get out of there," he said. thing.! don't think it affected us."
Not having Esiason certainly
"I tried to tell them when they
drafted David Klingler, but tlley has affected the Bengals, whQ will
resisted. One of the reasons they have second-yea'r qUIU'Ielback Klindrafted Klingler was because I was jller back to start for the fust time
demanding a trade when Sam m a month . He was out with a
bruised back.
(Wr.;he) was fired.
With and without Klingler, ·
'But I had 10 fight through a
Cincinnati
ranks last in the conferwhole year after I thought it was
ence
in
offense.
The lets are first in
time for me to go."
theAFC.
·
While the Jets, helped greatly by
Center Bruce Kozerski, one of
addina Eaiason and Thomas and
keepln• Hasty, Ire in ~ playoff the few reniai11ing Benaala who
picture, the Benpls quickly have played under Jets coach Bruce
faded from view. At 0-9, they CosleJ when he was Cini:illnatl's
alreldy are the wmt team in fran- offensive coonlinalor, mlsiCI Esiachise history, as COidl David Shula son - on and off the field:
"The. things you min ue the
acknowledged last weetend .. ln
response, running back Harold cam~derie that made it special
Green - benched afle.\' · : m and is the part of athletics you
·~l)er for the rest ci yo..- life.' •
audible against Houston
day ;_ questioned Shula's coach· he laid. ·~I ~ he'll be fired up.
, It'll be areat'lfto( ~e end of the
·
.
ing.ability. '
"I thmk that's something .we game to go out and sliake his hand.
discussed individually and in meet· Betwoin the s11rt of'the clocks and
injlt and it's by us now," Shula th,o end of lhe clocb, be Ia on -the

Belichick, who has been taking
the brunt of the fan reaction after
sar.in~ Kosar had "diminishi'ng
skiUs, ' added to the fan wrath this
week when he praised tile performance of the new starting quarterback, Todd Philcox.
Philcox completed jusl nine of
his 20 passes for 85 yards, no
rouchdowns and two interceptions
against the Seahawks. On his r~rst
play, Philcox fumbled, and Seattle's Robert Blackmon turned it
into a touchdown.
The Browns coach said the team
can win its fans back with a good
showing against Houston.
"If we're jllaying well, I imagine lhe fans will be behind us. They
usually are," he said.
Running back Eric Metcalf, who
lit up the horne crowd OcL 24 with
two long punt returns for touchdowns against Pittsburgh, admits to
concern about how the Bernie-

AP Top 25 scores

rn:rlun-

said.

others~"

backers will react
entrenched as the starting quaiter.
"I thought about that. In some back. Against Cincinnati, Moon
cases lhere will be fans who are completed 23 of 31 passes for four
against us," Meu:alf said. "At the touchdowns and no interceptions.
same time, that 's something we
Moon said the run-and-shoot
can't worry about right now. We offense is reaping the benefit of an
need 10 take care of our business offensive line that is finally perand do the thin~s we need 1o do to forming up 10 expectations.
try 1o get a win. •
"The only thing that's really
The Browns are 2-4 afler a 3-0 changed is we're getting betlcr pass
start, and Belichick need only look protection," Moon said. "Our line
across the field to Oilers coach ts a litde bit more secure now witll
Jack Pardee for a role model on Mike "!unchak back in the lineup,
how to turn a team around. Hous· and we ve g01 Brad Hopkins playton has recovered from a 1-4 start mg left tackle now . We've got a
with four straight wins, the last a solid front, and those guys are
38-3 thrashing of winless Cincin- playmg well together. When you
ge t good pass protection, that' s
nati.
Pardee said there's no mystery what you need 10 be successful.· •
to Houston's resurgence.
If Moon wants 10 quickly win
"The harder you work, the luck- over the dislnlught Cleveland fans,
ier you geL We weren't very good, he might go to his big weapon
but we just kept working on the wide receiver WebsiCr Slaughter'
things it takes to win in this who was formerly Kosar's favoriu;
Browns rargeL SlaughiCr leads all
league." he said.
Warren Moon is again AFC receivers with 58 catches.

,....

How the rap 25 teams in The Associated Press' college football poll fared this week:
l. Notre Dame (10-0) lost 10 No. 17 Bosron College41-39. Next TBD.
2. Florida Stale (9-1) vs. North Carolina Stale. Next at No. 8 Florida.
3. Nebraska (10-0) did not play. Next: vs. No. IS Oklahoma, Friday.
4. Miami (8-1) lost to No. 9 West Virginia 17-14. Next: vs. Memphis State, Saturday.
5. Ohio SJate (9-1-1) lost ro Michigan 28-0. Next TBD.
6. Auburn (10-0) defeated No. 11 Alabama 22-14. Next ~over.
7.-Tennessee (7· 1·1) defeated Kentucky 48-0. Next vs. Vanderbilt, Sarurday.
8. Florida (9-1) defeated Vanderbilt 52-0. Next: vs. No.2 Florida State, Saturday.
9. West Virginia (9-0) defeated No.4 Miami 17-14. Next: at No. 17 Boston College, Saturday.
10. Texas A&amp;M (8-1) defeated Texas Ouistian 59-3. Next: vs. Texas, Thursday.
11. Alabama (8-1· 1) lost ro No. 6 Auburn 22-14. Next: SEC Championship, Dec. 4.
12. Wisconsin (7-1·1) defeated Illinois 35-lO.Nexc vs. Michigan State at Tokyo, Dec. 4.
13. Nonh Carolina (9-2) did not play. Next: vs. Duke, Friday.
14. Penn Siare (7-2) defeated Northwestern 43-21. Next at Michigan State, Salllrday.
iS. Oklahoma (11-2) did not play. Next: vs. No. 3 Nebraska. Friday.
16. UCLA(7-3)def'elledNo. 22 Southern Cal 27-2l.Next: Rose Bowl, Jan. 1.
17. Boston CoU~ge (7·2) defeated No. 1 Notre Dame41-39. Next: vs. No. 9 West Virginia.
18. Colorado (6,3-1) defeated Iowa State 21· 16. Next TBD.
19. Arizona (8·2) did not play. Next: at Arizona State, Friday.
20. Kansas State (7-2-1) defeated Otlaholna State 21-17. Next: TBD.
21.Indiana (8-3) defeated Purdue 24-17. Next: TBD.
22~ Southern Cal (7-4) lostroNo. 16 UCLA 27-21 . Next: TBD.
23. Virginia (7-4) lost to No. 25 Virginia Tech 20-17. Next: TBD.
24. Clemso~ (8-3) defeated South Carolina 16-13. Next: TBD.
25. Virginia Tech (8-3) defeated No. 23 Virginia 20-17. tojc:J:t: Independence Bowl, Dec. 31.

--~--------;----------=~----...1

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-

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

~-~

~ In

Big second half gives Redmen 103-89 victory in tournament
RIO GRANDE- The University of Rio Grande men's basketball team shrugged orr an early
lead .bY visiting Daemen (N.Y.) 10
domtnate the floor throughout the
second half and post a 103-89 vicIOry in first round action Friday in
theBevoFrancisClassic.
The Redmen faced Milligan
(Tenn.) in the championship game
~aturday night at L~ Center. Milltgan bested Montclair State (NJ.)
earlier Friday 10 get its shot at the
title. A victory for the Redmen
would give them another IOumament crown and Coach John
Lawhorn bis 600th career win.
In a game in which Lawhorn
utilized his bench 10 the fulles~ the
Rcdrnen concentrated on control of
the rebounding and were successful
in shutting down Warriors center
Mario ·Torres to break away for
their second win of the new season.
" lt was a good team effon in
which we played hard and our
bench made some real contributions ," Lawhorn said . "We
rebou~de~ well and did a great
defenstve JOb on Torres. We know
we have 10 get better, but as young
as we are, we will get bettet every
week."
Don Silveri's club, with a loss
in its season opener behind them,
came in 10 make up for it through
aggressive play that won it the lead
(17-15) at 12:12 in the· first half.
The Rcdrnen, worlting from a 19point performance from Mau Powell for the half, gained back a slim
lead only to lose it again as Daemen's Adonis Smith, with 15

markers

~or the period, led a bal-

anced anai:k..
The margut seesaWed as the half

wo.und down, but individua!lhlcepotnters from Shawn Snyder at
1:58 and J~ff Hoeppner with 38
seconds left helped give Rio
Grande a 41-38 advantage. Larry
Caudill's successful buzzer sbot
increased that lead 10 five.
In .spite of what was a punishing
20 mtnutes, the Redmen continued
10 show it was a team of runs when
it star~ed the second half by
ou~g Daemen 14-4 within the
opentng five minutes. While that
"!ostly decided the game, the Warnors proved they still had a few
energy bursts left by cutting Rio
Grande's lead 10 under 10 on several occasions.
Powell ended the game with 27
points, backed by 20 from Caudill,
16 by Hoeppner and 14 from rising
post player Eric Burris 10 help stem
the visitors' attack. Smith would
end with 23 points while ·Travis
Carrow neued 15 and 14 apiece
cam~ from Torres and Tim Foley.
· Rto Grande outboarded Daemen
30-25 qs Caudill's five led balanced contributions from his teammates, and held its turnovers 10 10
while the Warriors suffered 14.
Torres was 10p rebounder for Daemen with 11. Walter Stephens netted nine assists and Brett Coreno
five 10 boost Rio Grande's defense.
The Redmen maintained an
advanrage on shooting with a 48.7
percent showing on field goals (3878, eight of eight from the threepoint range) to Daemen's 46.1 (35-

76, six ol nine on treys for 66.7).
Daemen did better on free throws
10 hit on 13 of 15 attempts (86.7)
although the Redmen shot mor~
often - 19 of24 fCl' 79.2.
Daemen was pitted against
Montclair State in the consolation
roimdSaturdayaftemoon.
1n another case where the effort
was in evidence, Montclair's Red
Hawks fell .10()-88 to Milligan's
Buffaloes which entered the tournament with three early season victories under its belt. Trey Wilburn
exploded for 29 points and eight
rebounds to lead Milligan to the
win, while Keith Hines notched 25
points and 13 boards for the Red
Hawks, which opened their season
with the game.
Box scores:
RIO GRANDE (103) - Jeff
Hoeppner, 5-2-0-16; Walter
Stephens, 1-1-0-5; Brett Coreno, 11-2-7; Man Powell, 6-3-6-27;
Lance Ream, 0-2-2; Benjie Lewis,
0-2-2 ; Larry Caudill, 7-6-20;
Tobey Schreck, 0-1-1 ; Shawn Snyder, 3-1-0-9; Eric Burris, 7-0-14.
TOTALS 30-8-19-103.
DAEMEN (89) - Carlton
Holder, 3-0-6; Travis Carrow, 5-515; Mario Torres, 7-0-14; Adonis
Smith, 6-2-5-23; Rob Lange, 1-0-2;
Dennis Schimpf, 2-1-5; Tim Foley,
1-4-0-14; Darrick Castronova, 3-06; Chris Sprigg, 1·0-2; Mike Skolnick, 0-2-2. TOTALS 2?-6-13-89.
Hatrtlme score: Rto Grande
43, Daemen 38.
- MILLIGAN (100) - Jeff
Lyons, 5-2-12; Tret Wilburn, 11-2-

t:29; Jason Pinser, 3-3-2-17; Eric 100.
Richanlson, 1•1-3-8; Kevin Smith,
MO~CL~ STATE (88) -:3-3-9; Ned Smith, 0-2-2· Jason Dean Spmogatll, 5-1-0-13; Cbris
Otter, 0-1-1; Chessie
2-0-4; Jacks~. 2-0-4; Keith Hines, 10-SGilbert Charles, 6-2- 14; Matt 25; Ketth Roberts,,l-1+9; Greg
Young, 2-0-4. TOTALS 33-6-16- Fowler, 9..().18; Chris Smtth, 2-3-0·

Py.U:

RIO GRANDE - When Lori
she was a member of Jhe Missouri
Western team that won the
women's division dtle in ~he Bevo
Francis Classic in 1986.
Her return to Lyne Center Fri-

day as coach of the West Virginia
Wesleyan women ' s team was
somewhat more disappointing, as a
93-78 loss 10 the Uruversity of Rio
Grande would indicate. But for Flaherty's club, the loss couldn't be
blamed on a lack of trying, for the

Lady Bobcats provided the Redwomen with one of the more physical encounters they've seen this far
iniO the season.
·
The victory in the first round of
women's acdon in the Bevo Fran-

see what happens next during Friday night's Bevo
Francis Classic tournament game at Lyne Center,
wbere tbe Rechvomen woa 93-78.

ATTEMPTS STRIP- Rio Grande's Ginger
Smith (40) moves In to strip the ball away rrom a
West Vlrgblla Wesleyan eager while teammates
Stacy Riley (25) and Michelle Crouse (14) wait to

1~; S~ve ~c:?.f~ ~~~~

Ptperctc, !..,.. • .
•
2. TOTALS 31·5-9-88-M t 1 1
Halftime score: on c a r
State Sl, MilliJan 46.

By Tbe Associated Press
., · Dennis Rodmari was prepared
for his ftrSt game against Detroit.
• · No one else was prepared for what
followed.
' 'I wanted to get ejected, to
make it exciting for the Piston
fans," Rodman said after a dislllfb.ing Friday night in which the Pistons beat the San Antonio Spurs
95-86. "The fans in Detroit are all
· hypocrites and two-faced. I brought
them a lot of excitement over the
years, and now they treat me like I
have a disease I wish I never had
10 COme .....
,......,~."
The emotional Rodman, who
spent the ftrsl seven years of his
· NBA career with Detroit before
: being Jraded to San AniOnio, was
: ejected after getting into two scuffles and being called for two tech-

nicals.
Alonzo Mourning scored 26
overcoming a 41 -point perforSan Antonio's David Robinson, mance by Shaquille O'Neal.
points, and Charlotte tied a franwho finisbcd with 27 points and 17
Gamble, who finished with 18 chise record with its fifth consecurebounds, dominated inside in Jhe points, got the fmt four baslrets of tive win in beating visiting Washthird quarter. But two three-point- a 10-0 run and the last three of a ingiOn.
ers from rookie guard Lindsey 14-5 spurt in the third period .
Clinging to a one-point lead
Hunter and another from fellow Boston hit 18 of 23 shots as it early in the third quarter, the Horrookie Allan Houston enabled the outscored Orlando 36-21 in the nets went on a 13-2 run to pull
Pistons 10 stay even at 65 with 12 quarter after ttailing 58-57 at half- ahead 84-72. Five different players
minutes left.
lime.
scored during the spurt. Tile Bul· Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
76en U4, Jazz 115
lets, who missed 18 of 24 shots in
BasiOn 115, Orlando 106; Philadel- With Orlalido Woolridjle scor- the third period, got no closer than
phia 124, Utah 115; Atlanta 95, ing 25 .J!Oints in only his third game nine in the ftnall2 minutes.
Miami 92; Charlotte 127, Washing- for Phtladelphia, the 76ers scored
Timberwolves 113, Kinp 108
ton 111; Minnesota 113, Sacrarnen- JOO points for the f'trst time this
Christian Lacaner had 1.7 points
10 108 ; Phoenix 118, Portland 109; season.
and 13 rebounds, winning his rust
Seattle 116, Dallas 87; and Chicago
The 76ers, shooting at a 42 F.C· pro matchup against former Duke
88, the Los Angeles Lakers 86.
cent clip through the first etght teammate Bobby Hurley and leadCeltits 115, Mlll!lc 106
games, shot 60.5 against the Jazz, ing Minnesota over Sacnunen10.
At 'Boston, Kevin Gamble malcing 46 of 76 shots at 'the SpecMicheal Williams added a seascored 14 points in the third quarter b'WD.
son-high 2S points and nine assists
when the Celtics pulled away,
Karl Malone with 32 points for the Timberwolves, who have
topped the Jazz, who had won their rmttwo-game winning streak
------Sports briefs------ seven straight over Philadelphia.
since last March.
Hawks 95, Heat 91
Laeuner, who led Duke 10 four
College
nesota quarterfmal.
Dominique Wilkins scored 21 consecutive Final Four appearances
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) College
points, including a running hook in
: Richard Scou scored 19 points and
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) • Steve Woodberry added 14 as No. Top-ranked North Carolina used a the lane that give Atlanta the lead
•9 Kansas beat N'o. 6 California 73- 12-0 run at the end of the f'ml half for good with 2:10 left at Miami.
The basket gave Wilkins his
· 56 in the second round of the Pre- to break open a close game and
· season NIT.
went on 10 beat No. 19 Cincinnati only points in the fourth quarter,
, Kansas, which ousted Cal from 90-63 in the second round of the but it was enough to help the
· last year's NCAA tollfllament en Preseason NIT.
Hawks win their third straight
By STEVEN ZAUSNER
:route 10 a Final Four appearance,
The Tar Heels. (2-0) advance 10 game. Kevin Willis led Atlanta
BUFFALO,
N.Y. (AP) -In the
:outscored the Bears 23-5 over the the tournament semiftnals Wcdnes- with 23 points, while Rony Seikaly
midst
of
an
ugly,
brawl-ftllcd mess,
last nine minutes of the rust half.
day at Madison Square Garden had 19 points and 15 rebounds for
a
much-needed
pretty
performance
TheJayhawks will play the win- against the winner of Saturday's the Heat.
by
Alexander
Mogilny
jumped out.
ner of Saturday's Georgia-Min- Massachusetts-Towson State game.
Hornets 127, Bullets 111
With superstar center Pat
LaFontaine announcing he would
probably be out for the season with
a knee injury, the Buffalo Sabres
wanted something extta from their
newly appointed captain. Mogilny
man , outfielden, 1nd Joe Randa 1nd
Pr--NIT
delivered.
Shane Halter, infieldl!n, from Mcm.W. of
the Suu.tbcm League, and Chad SLrick·
The 24-year-old Russian scored
N. Cuolina 90. Cincinnati 63
land, caiCher, Gary Carab•llo, infielder,
Roc-Tipalr
three
goals and added an assist in
and Darren Bu.non, outfielder, from
Ftratround
leading
the Sabres to a 6-0 win
WilminllDft rL the Camlina Lea~~:~~e.
Kcnyoo 13, Ftecknia St. 68
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Ttmn n...,c...Jc
over
the
Winnipeg Jets on Friday
Allandc IMW~en
NEW YORK YANKEES: Purchu ed
Pint round
TIWft
WLPcLGB
night. It was the Sabres' first win in
the oon.tncu cl Tau~ SeWied, fillt ba1e·
Caldwdl64, Lake Supelior St. 46
Now Yadr. ..... ....... 7
1 .875
man; Kevln )onlan, 1eeond bueman ;
lndiana· Eut 101. Fwhawe, Canada
eight home games.
Boe1m......................6 l .7SO
1
Andy Poi, third ba1eman, and Iuon
91
"It was obviously important to
Orlanclo,,.,,"'"""" " "...
4 ..500
3
Robauon,
Billy
Mwe
and
JaW
Leach,
wuhln... "1M Ttporr
MWni ......................3 3 .soo
3
us,
both emotionally and from a
flnl
round
outfieldet'l,
from
Columbw
or
the
lnla·
W•Wnct«m ............ .3 4 .429
3.5
John CaaoU 92, Wuhina:ton &amp; Lee :5 2
national Leuue..
very
real standpoint that he step
New JGDey ..............3 S .31S
4
WlllmiiWter Touraament
Pbibdclpilil .............3 6 .333
4.5
up," Sabres coach John Muckier
SEA'Ji'l:E MARINERS: Purcbaae-d
Flnl round
the contnctl of Cra.!J Oa)ton, pitcller.
Malone 19, St. Thomu Aquinaa 19
said of Mogilny. "He took comCenlnl DIYIIion

,

Did.

Wingfield followed .Wednesday's JQ-point, 12-rebowid perfor" I!IIIICC with S·f«· l7 shooti!lg and
four rebounds in 22 minutes
qainst the Tar ~eels. Part of his
)inie wu 1011 on the bench with
fouliiOUble - the othef part was
Qt when RupliJIIII biro down.
· ."1 ~ on tbe floor
are
p 't0 y,'' Huaint Said. "We
dol~ eo~ ~mates out of

m.t

•,

games. We don 'I stop playing . ...
One thing we are going 10 stand for
is we are going 10 compete. If we
don't compete we are not going 10
get on the floor."
.
The Tar Heels advance to the
toumarnent semiftnals Wednesday
at Madison Square Garden against
the winner of Saturday's Massachusetts-Towson State game.
Meanwhile, the 6-10 Wallace
recorded North Carolina's first
double-&lt;louble by a freshman since
Pete Chilcutt in 1987. He was 6for-6 from the fteld and several of
his blocks in the second half led 10
easy baskets for the Tar Heels, who
were led by Donald Williams' 21
points.
"He has got very long arms and
very good juml'ing ability which
gives him a diStinct advantage over
a lot of players," said teammate
Eric Montross, who added 16
points.
"A lOt of balls were coming off
in his direction, but 90111e of them
weren't and he went after them and
got them. I thOught that was awful
good timing for him 10 be able 10

YOUR

get the rebounds and get it
ingrained in his head that that's
what he is going 10 have 10 do. I
think he is going 10 surprise a lot of
opponents because they haven't
seen him yet."
It was the second good game by
a North Carolina freshman. Forward Jerry Stackhouse had 15
points in his debut against Western
Kentucky on Wednesday.
"Everybody has. their night and
today was my .day," Wallace said.
"Who knows whose game it will
be next. Really, you don't go out
there and set ~oats like, 'I am going
10 get 2S IODJght.' You just go out
there and play."
It was the second sttaight game
North Carolina has dominated on
the boards, outrebounding Cincinnati 45-29.
''There is no question their size
is an obstacle you have to overcome, but we are kind of used to
that," Huggins said. "Everybody
has always been bigger than us.''
In other action, Kansas beat California 73-56.

IN ONE DAY

Custom Fitted Denturee lh One Day At Our Thaya Valley Office
·By Our Profeaslonala And Trained Stair.
Made In Our Dental Laboratory By Qualtlled Techntctane.

CALL TOLL FREE' 1-800-926-0025
For Ali. .Appo._tmeot or lllfonaatlon.

Emlfnll Appointments At.dlable

COME BACK HERE! - With Daemen College's Carlton Holder (31) beblnd blm In the
paint, Rio Grande's Walter Stephens (center)

attempts to corral a runaway ball during Friday
night's Bevo Francis Classic tournament contest
at Lyne Center, wbere the Redmen won 103-89.

cis Classic propelled the Redwomen into the championship round
Saturday night against Tu8culum
(Tenn.), which defeated West Virginia Tech earlier Friday.
"Our philosophy this season is
40 minutes of defense, forcing our
opponents into an uncontrolled
position," Rio Grande Coach David
Smalley remarked as his team posted its third straight win of the new
season.
·:1 was pleased with our offense
because it made good decisions
with the fast break, which I think
was evidenced in the 14 turnovers
we had," he added. "We improved
defensively, as our goal was 10
work on the defensive transition to
get the press."
The Redwomen matched the
Lady Bobcats to maintain a slim
lead most of the way through ·the
half, breaking loose with four minutes left in the period 10 post its
biggest lead at 14 (40-26).
Wesleyan, led by big ftrst half
scoring from Cathy Koenig and
Beth Kelly, threatened co~tinually
and came back 10 within two (4644) with 1:18 on a pair of Kelly's
free throws. But after worldng the
ball around, Lori Hamilton compiled the last of ber 12 points for
the half with a buzzer shot 10 give
Rio Grande another small lead
entering the second half.
Within the first four minutes the
Redwomen neutralized the visitors'
scoring 10-2 while HamiliOn, who
finished the pme with 24 points,
and Stacy Riley (with 20) led an
offensive effon that put the game
comfortably back into their pocket

Not that it was all that easy: Flaherty got big games out of Koenig
(31 points) and Kelly (23), plus
athleticism from her bench 10 keep
the RCdwomen on their IOCS. At the
same time, the Lad)' Bobcats were
successful in hmiting their
turnovers 10 nine, as well as outshooting their hosts with a total of
45.7 percent (32-70, four of nine
from the three for 44.4 percent) 10
Rio Grande's 43.8 (35-80, eight of
23 on treys).
"Wesleyan is a good team they really gave us some problems
in the paint," Smalley noted. "Our
lcids did a tremendous job of reading and reacting against their
defense. I sense we're starting 10
play the game more fluidly, not
mechanically."
The Redwomen controlled the
rebounding 47-28 as Tricia Collins
recorded 14 and Hamil10n an even
dozen 10 keep the game under control. Koenig was Wesleyan's top
person on the boards with nine,
while Rio Grande's Stacey Ritter
and Wesleyan's Kelly matched
each other as assists leaders with
four each.
Additionally, the Red women
held the advantage on free throw
shooting, sinking 15 of 21 attempts
for 71.4 percent 10 Wesleyan's 66.7
(10-15)..
"We had good, balanced scoring, everyone Saw playing time and
got to produce in some fashion,"
Smalley said. "Riley had a great
game, Michelle Crouse came in to
have a great floor game, and Ritter
contributed in every phase.•
Wesleyan faced off against

West Virginia Tech in Jhe IOUmameru's consolation round Saturday
afternoon.
·
Tech fell 93-77 10 Tusculum on
the strength of 20-plus-points performances by Eva Bright, Amy
Bible and Susan Starnes. ·Sharon
Saunders was Tech's top scorer
with 21.
Box scores:
RIO GRANDE (93) - Tricia
Collins, 5-3-13; Lori HamiliOn, 88-24; Gena Norris, 1-2-4; Stacey
Ritter, 8-0-16; Kim Sow~. 0-1-03; Michelle Crouse, 1-3-0-11;
Megan Winters, 1-0-2; Stacy Riley,
3-4-2-20. TOTALS 27-8-15·93.,
WEST VIRGINIA WESLEYAN (78) - Terri Blasius, 3-06; Cathy Koenig, 14-3-31; Betlt
Kelly, 3-4-5-23; Tanya Wh~~.
1-0-2; Jody Bosley, 3-0-6; Lis)l
Roberts, 1-0-3; Jennifer Skinner, 31-7. TOTALS 28-4-10-78.
:
Halftime score: Rio Grand"
48, West VIrginia Wesleyan 44. :

DENTURE8 START,AT •143 PER ;DENTURE!
· SMAILADOmoNAL
CHARGE
FOR SAME DAY SERVICE
.
.

West

YJralnla '
Will•• v......, D.D.S., Jlio.
3011.

AD.

.

tOI!t

No. !I Kansas 73
No. 6 .California 56
At Lawrence, Kan., Richard
Scott scored 19 points and Steve
Woodberry added 14 as No . 9
Kansas withSIOod a valiant secondhalf cllarge and beat No. 6 California 73-56 Friday night in the second round of the Preseason NIT.
The Golden Bears weni the last .
seven minutes of the fust half without a field goal, but then Jason
Kidd and Lamond MIDTBy became
a !WO-man team and sparked a 19-5
run that sliced Kansas' 19-point
halftime lead 10 five.
The sellout crowd, which spent
much of the first half chanting,
"over-rated," at the Bears, fell
quiet and looked on in disbelief as
the expected rout turned tight
Mu.:;a~·s tip-in of a miss by
Kidd
it 46-41 with 13:30 10
go. Then the Jayhawks, who
missed 11 of their rust 13 shots in
th_~ ~ood half, got a steal and two

free throws from Calvin Rayford
and went on I 6-6 spree.
Murray had 24 points and Kidd
22 and, except for one two-point
basket by Michael Stewart beginning the second half, nobody else
scored a field goal for the Bears in

,

2

.7SO

Atlanu ........ .............4

4

.SOO

~...... . .... ...... .. ...

o.ruu. .....................4

CLI!\'IIUND ......... 3

lncliana ..................... l

Milwaukee ............... ]

4
4

'
6
7

Eo&lt;lllbllloM

2

..soo

500
.375
.143
.12.5

2
2

MWni, Obio 98 • ....,~ 82
Zrinjevac:: Clu.b, Croaua 92, Bowling
(h-.

it

3
4.5
S

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Tum

MWw•t IM'flllon
W L PtL

HCOICOn ................... B

0 1.000

Utah .........................6
San Antonio .............4
Deawr ... .................. 3
_ . . , ................2

3 .667
5 M4
4 .4~
' .2&amp;6
7 .12:5

o.u........................ .l

PKlnc Dhillon
Seaale .... .......... ........7
0 1.000
Jltll:tlllllia ................... ..5
2 .714
LA. Clii'J"D ...........4 3 .S71
Pordmd ...................4 4 ..500

NIIL

w-.....-....

2.5

Flodda .............. 7 10 3

17 56 62

N.Y. lalctdcn ... 612 1
Tampt.llly ....... 4 14 2

13 65 68
10 45 64

4.5
4.5
' ·'
7

1
3
3.5

GoldllnSU.UI ............ 3

4

.429

4

Sac:nnuna ..............3
LA. Lobn .............3

5

.375
.333

4.5

6

Atl•ndc OPWon
Team
W L T PU. GFGA
N.Y. Ranacn .... l4 S l
30 18 SS
New J_,- ....... 14 4 0 28 70 44
Philadelphia ...... 13 8 0

Frld1y's scores

They played Saturday

OdCldO II"'New Je:raey, 7:30p.m.
Miami VI . Wnhinatoo at Baltimore.,
7'30pm.
O!arloae at Atlanla, 7:30 p.m.
BOitonat lndiaDI,7:30pm.
Da1va 11 Minneaau, I p.m.
Utah 11 NewYmk, B:30 p.m.
LA. Clippcn llHouAon,l:30p.m.
San Amonio at Milwaube, 9 p.m.
CI..EVEL\ND It Pboeni:J:, 9 p.m.
Suttle at Ooldca S&amp;at.o, I 0:30pm.

TonJ&amp;hl's pmes

L.A. Lako:rl at New Jcncy, 7 p.m.
~at Dewit, 7 p.m.
CU.C.JO at Saaamao. 9 p.m.
D&amp;1lal at Po!Wad, 10:30 p.m.

Preseason NIT
Quarterllttats
Nonll Cuollno 90, Clo""""o 63

Kanlu 73, Califomla 56

,.,.,..,... s........,
Semlftnats

801u.t .............. 10 4
Moahci.J. .... - ..... 10 7
Qu-.............. 7 II
Buffalo.............. 6 II
OttAwa .............. 5 11
Hu\ford ............ 4 13

Nonh Carolina VI. Ma111chu•ettl·
To'A"'GG St. winner, 9 p.m.

ChamJttllhlp

Al M•dllon ure Garden
,.. J .

Scmiftnal winnln, 9 p.m.
Thlrdpb,ee
s.nif'ma.lllllon, 7 p.m.

I _,......
Ohio men's
college scores

Friday'• scores

Alhland 14, Orand Valley St. 71

Shlwu. St. 110, Appllach.ian Bible
36

tmnlnJ u

a nan·ftllta' playa-.

Notloootl.oa.,..
COLORADO ROCKIES: AJrMd to
lenni with Howard Johnlun. dlird buoman, on a ono-y~~~~r ccmtnct.

• LOS ANOBLBS DODGERS : Ac·
uired Delino Dclmdda. Heald bu.nm,

?""'
... Mao~noot ~ r.. -..~o~o&lt;­
tine%. piu:ha'. Pwd1ued lhe con1rlli.ltl cl
" -"Bt.noo, lhW """"'"'- ... Neloon

2

10 52 79

cunaact~

GFGA

2

Edmonton ......... 3 IS J

Cuuo, pitchl:r, from San Antonio of the
Tex• LAp Deliptted Jon1than H.u.n1
and Mike Milchin , pitchorl:, for autp·
"""l

NEW YORK Mm'S: .Purchue-d lhe

uCTcm W~, ~er, from
Norfolk ullhe lnternati.onal leaJUe; Pete
Walker and JaiCXI Jacoma, pi\dlen, and
Q.tilria Varullld Alan Zintcc, idelderl,
ln&gt;m BintLJ!m""' of lbo l!m&lt;m Lague,
... R....ty CWda. ouoliold«, 6om SL Lu·
c:ie or the Florida State Lea...

12 SS

Baskelball

60 S!i

65 ss
22 12 61
11 68 18
IS 69 65

Nadc.•l Bukelball Alloclatlon
DENVER. NUGGETS: Traded M•rlc
Macon, JUird, md Man:~.~~ Uberty, f01:•
ward, to tho Detroit Pilton• for Alvin
Robe!Uon, guard, 1 1995 ICCOnd•rou.nd

81
66
75
48
12 55
9 57

dt&amp;ft dloice and fut.~R oonJiden.tiDnl.

Oallaa................ 9 8 4
Winnipq .......... 8 II 2
Delroit. ............. 7 9 I
P•dnc Division
Ctlguy ............. 14 4 J
31
Vancouver ........ 12 1 0 24
t.o. Angelet ...... 9 8 2 20
San Joce ... ......... 6 12 4
16

s 13

u • noa•roltet player. AJreed to term&amp;
with Butch Davil, oudiddllr, an 1 minor·
l~r.c conb'lct and inYiud him 10 1prin1

25 63 46
22 ~ 47
IS 69 60
13 66 70
12 61 81

CntraiDIYialon
W L T Pt4
Ton:m~ ............. 14 3 4
32
SLl.ouil ....... :... 11 4 3
2S
Chicaao ............ 10 7 2 22

Anaheim ...........

McDowell. oudidckr:t, to • millor-leap
ccntnct and iDrited him to JPM&amp; trairun&amp;

5
2
I
I
2

Team

64
57
73
66
14
8J

Frlday's scores
BWialo6, WinnipcJ 0
N.Y. Ranaera S, Tamp~ Bay 3
Anaheim 6, Vancouver 3

MILWAUKEE BUCKS' S... od G!&lt;g
Q~e-yca.r contract.

FOIU:r, cen.Uir, to •

Foolball
National Foo«balll..aJUG
CLEVELAND BROWNS : Plu :ed
,LawyeJ" Tillman, wide rcc:civer, on the in. ...tful
J.j HOUSTON OILERS : Sianed Ray
Childrcu, ddenlive uckle, to 1 four·year
conuact.

They played Saturday
Detroit at New Jem::y, l :35 p.m.

Hockey

Philadelphia at Bolton, 5:05p.m
Winnipq" Queboo, 7,35 pm .
Chlel~o at Tampa Bay, 7:JS p.m.
Wuhingtm at Flodda, 7:35p.m.
San J010 at Hanford, 7:35p.m.
PiUiburah at Mmuul, 8:05p.m.
CaiPQ' at Dallal, 8:0:5 p.m.
Tormao ~~ Edmmton, 8:0:5 p.m.
l..ol Anpl111 at St. Louie, 8:35 p.m.

Nation.. Hockey Leque
NHL: Suapended Brian Dennin&amp;.
Florida Panthers defen~eman, for four
ame~; Mike Folipo. Florida Panthen
right wina, !tw lhniD sana; Oooft Cowt·
nlll , Vancouver Canuc.U left wins. for
two aama; and Oary Robem, Calaa"
flamel ~~~ ~~~ for 0110 Jlme for

Today'sgames

my Sjodin. ddulleman, ~ Kalamuoo of

N.Y. l1landen u Philadelphia, 2:05
p.m.

San JOlt at Buffalo, 1:05 p.m.

n.o.;. 01S L LouiJ, 7,os p.m.

l.ol Anae.lel•t Dallu, 1:05 p.m.
Anaheim at Edmmton, 8:0:5 p.m.

Foot hall

WtdAeodat.

••
"•

2:5 76 76

WESTERN CONFEREI\'CE

Kanau VI. Minnelota·OeorJ.ia winner,
7p.m.

:

S4 6L

Northeul Dl•"loD

AI M1dllcln Squan Garden

'

26 90 86

o ta

l'iaobur&amp;J&gt; ......... II 7 3

Frld.oy~...,...

Cl

910

S

Towaon St. at Ml•achulew, 1 p.m.
Occqit at Minnelou, 9 p.m.

Effective December
1993 the.Gallia CountY,
Landfill Will Be Open the ,
First Saturday Only ,
of Every Month.
,7 A.M.
til
12
.
·
n
oon
only
.
.

TEXAS lUNGERS: Sianed Oddibe

GB

&amp;o.ton 115, Oriando 106
~dttlpbia 124, UW. 115
Adama 95, Miami 92
O.adone 127, Wuhinston 111
Detroit~. Sm Antonio B6
Minneact~l13,Sacrameato lOB
"-WW Ill, Pontond tcl!l
Sootllo 116, D!llu 87
au..., 88. LA. I..olten S6

the second half. Together, Mu~y
and Kidd scored all but 10 of California's points. For the secolld
straij!ht game the Bears were misiing tnjured Starters Alfred Grigsl!Y
and KJ. Roberts.

GAL'LIA COUNTY LANDFILL

•

EASTERN CONFERENCE

TUSCULUM (93) - Tamara
Carver, 2-0-4; Angie Austin, 2-1-5;
Eva Bright, 11-4-26; Tamara Rettner, 1-0-2; Amy Bible, 8-1-5-24;
Susan Starnes, 10-3-23; Marcey
Davis, 4-1-9. TOTALS 38-1·1~93.
WEST VIRGINIA TECH (77,)
- Keemia Harris, 3-2-8; Sharon
Saunders, 10-1-21; Nikki Newell,
6-3-15; Cynthia Hedrick, 1-0-2;
Becky Oda, 3-1 -0-9; Marybeth
Brumfield, 3-0-6; Christaine
DeSaine, 7-2-16. TOTALS 33-~8-77.
Halftime score: Tusculum 48,
West Virginia T('(:h 38.

CHANGE OF SATURDAYS HOURS .;

'l.

from c.tauy of lbei'Ocffi&lt; Cout Lugue.
and Anthony Minihan and Ruben Santana, infielden, from' Jacbonville of the
Soulhem Lea.ue.

paullia
· ;, •-::,p,ma.
DALLAS STARS: R waned Tom·

lhe Inwr:mational Hockey IMp. a.nd Jtl.
fre7 Stolp, r-)under, to Binninaham of
lbel!ul CoUt Hoctoy ~.f.!':
HARTFORD WllAt.4-.S: R~• ll cd

Om Kcczrner, defenaernan, from Sprins·
field of the American Hockey lel&amp;uc.
Tnded Kcczmw LO the Calgary F1tmc.
for Jr4f R111111e.aoakondeJ", and future. eon·
1identi0111,

__

LOS ANGELES KINOS : AUIJned

Robb S&amp;auba, aDiltendeJ", to Phoenu of
the International Hockey leap.

College scores

PIIIUIDEIJ'IIIA FLYERS' A,_. 10

,,...,.with Yva RxiDc. dc!CNtman, on
ltmlll

Midwest

Toledo 14, E. Miclliaan 0

Ohio H.S. playoffs

SAN JDSB SHARKS : Auianed
Michal Sykora, delenn:man, to Kanu1
City tllhe Int.n1tionaJ Hockey Leap

COWMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Here are
Friday'• ~ fmll aeote~ fur the 22M
annual Ohio l-liJh School Athletic Auociaticn 1tate rootballtounurnent:

Dlvlslon n

Chardon 21 , Otoenlbu.fJ Ora:n 12
Piqua 3S, Franklin l..
St. Marya Memorill 35, Col um bu.a
Eu1m0011
Unil:mtown l..akcll, Bellmae 0

Dlvlslon IV

Cnxbvil1e 11, Amanda·Ccarmlck 12

(~~~~

MUll Hawken 19 , Warren
Kaonody6
Huron 13, Mrm~a- 6
Vanaillm 15, Cin. CAPE 8

41P"d.•r.c:a~~. radlo

'19F•diMDStw
Ya1IL ..--·----·- ..-·
'19POIIt. Granda-.111

'""'· s.-u.--•

e.-1

·-·'*·-

'19 Plr.Accl•i•. . ..'99"-

'91aercurr s.w._1144·4 door, 8 cyl., u , AIM'U. Very Clooni

'91 Chevyi-10P.U~ 1 138"s opood. AIM'M, PB. Low Milot I

'II •rcurr
Cot~~•lS.......... .... .5139"2 door. 8 cyl. Loodocll Very Cloonl

u ••

Ch.uloue .................. 6

from Dallas 16 times en rou1e 10 its
seventh straight victory.
The Mavericks ( 1-7) got 24
poinu from rookie Jamal Mashbum. They committed a seasonhigh 27 turnovers and gave up their
highelt point total ot the lealal.
Bulll88, Laken 86
Hence Grant tipped in a missed
shot as time exptred, hil 23rd
rebound of the pme, Jiving visiting Chicago a victory over Los
Angeles.
After BJ. Armstrong's 17-footer tied the game 86-86 with four
seconds remain in~. the Lakers
blew a chance 10 wm when Vlade
Divac threw a pass intended for
Doug Cbristie out-of-bounds.

'II ferd festlwa L.!62"-

Ducks as their record improved 10
5-13-2. Geoff Courtnall, Cliff Ronning and Trevor 'Linden scored for
Vancouver. The Canucks outshot
Anaheim 47-24.

-·..-

'

'

Our Regular Sei'VIL'e ls A~nUahle At All Ojpl:es.
SAllE DAY SERVICES ON ltELJNEi AND RBP.AJRSI

and two straight NCAA ti tles
before the Timberwolves drafted
him in 1992, scored five points on
2-for-8 shooting in the first half
before going 8-fCl'-8 and scoring 22
points in the second half. Hurley,
the point guard on the Blue Devils'
1991 and 1992 championship
teams, had 11 points, 11 assists and
six turnovers.
Suns 118, Trail Blaun 109
A.C. Green scored 31/oints.
two off his career high, an Kevin
Johnson had 27 points and 16
assists, helping Phoenix weather
another bout of poor foul shooting.
The Trail Blazers were behind
just 93-90 after Mark Bryant's basket with 7:56 left, but Johnson's
ballhandling and the reboundinll of
Charles Barkley and Oliver Miller
helped Phoenix pull away despite
15-for-27 free-throw shooting.
SuperSonics 116, Mavericks 87
Shawn Kemp scored 24 points
and unbeaten Seattle siOie the ball

Sabres, Ducks, Rangers
record NHL triumphs

North Carolina, Kansas notch victories in NIT's second round
CHAPEL HIL,L. N.&lt;;. (AP) -It
was the tale of two talented freshmen inNortb Carolina's 90-63 viclOry over Cincinnati in the second
round of the Preseason NIT.
Rasheed Wallace of the topranked Tar Heels was relaxing on a
couch in the locker room Friday
ni~t, taking questions after his 12pomt, 13-reboi.tnd, five-block game
~t the 19th-ranked Bearcats.
Meanwhile, Doatonio Wingfield
had a scowl on his face and refused
to be interviewed after being
benched at Jhe start of the second
half by Cincinriati coach Bob Huggins·bec•'se of his temper.
After playing the Tar Heels on
even terms despite starting three
freshmen, Cincinnati was forced 10
play the final 8:43 of the opening
half without Wingfield. He went 10
the bench with three fouls after
being'called for a charge and.then a
technic!ll when he threw the ball
about20 feet in Jhe air.
From that PQint, the Bearcats'
offense seemed out of sync and the
veteran Tar Heels went for the ldll,
going on a 12-0 run ro take command.
.
It was a shock bllck 10 reality for
Jhe 6-foot-8, 256-pound Wingfield
after the best debut in Bearcats hislOry against Butler on Wednesday
·night
. " ... 'IJlings came easy 10 Dootonio in high School and now rou are
at a level wbere everyone tS relatively • good as you are ind you
~ bave 10 get tJttou8ll that," Huggins

.

Pistons top Spurs in Rodman's first trip to Detroit since trade

Redwomenfend off Wesleyan in Bevo Francis Classic opener
Flaherty last eame 10 Rio Grande,

the NBA,

Monlhly Payments
Based Upon

Down
Or Equal Value In
Trade-In
11,000.00

mand."

Despite Moligny' s performance
and Balance Financed
and 22 saves by Sabres goalie
Some homes try to separate
Grant Fuhr, tbe game was almost
Thru Lending Institutions.
you from the environment
stolen by the antics of the two
Our homes make you a
Taxes &amp; Fees Not Included
teams' strongmen: Tie Domi and
Rob Ray.
part of it
Taking advantage of the
Call today for more lnformallon
replacement officials, one of whom
just officiated his first game the
'
night before, Domi and Ray .
Jtppalachial'
engaged in several fights, the first
~tructures.
Inc.
at 4:27 of the second period.
..Jhc diiHL bas bun sing -If/ore cliolcttur~~~u~i'M!..-lr,.,,,£•-£1•
replacement officials since Monday, when its regular officials went
P.O. BOX 614
on strike.
RIPLEY, WV. 25271
Domi and Ray weren't the only
1-800-458-9990
combatants. The Sabres and Jets '----,;,;,,;,;,;,;,,;,;,;,;,____,
notched six fighting majors and
four game misconducts. In total,
135 penalty minttes were assessed
in a game that lOOk three hours and
10 minutes 10 play.
In other NHL games, the New
York Rangers beat Tampa Bay 5-3
and Anaheim defeated Vancouver
6-3.
8848Y CARBON EXTREME XLR ILL CAMO
Rangers 5, Lightning 3
Fo r "93. you can have tasr · you can have accurate . you
New York extended its unbeaten
can ha11e great shoohng - and you can ha11e an aesl hetr·
streak 10 12 games as Esa Tikkanen
ca tty pleasrng bow tn the recurve tr adifron Tht s bow SJXH1S
and Adam Graves scored twice.
the e• lr eme c m ma tched wit h the mrcrotune yoke s-,.s.
The Rangers, 10-0-2 in their last
tem. •ewrve II bs wilh an Ideal mi .. of c~ess 100
12, extended their road winning
molded hbergta s and cartl'ln and a power balanced dre·
cast magnesrum
et Handle and limb color· Jennrngs
streak 10 five, third best in club hisrnus10n
camo
Lei
·
t 65%. m ass werght 4 9 lbs
tory . The loss was Tampa Bay ' s
lOth in its last 12.
Tikkanen scored the game-winner at 4:20 of the third on a slap
shot from just inside the blue line
that beat screened Lightning goaltender Daren Puppa to his glove
65/80 LB. RH
side . Rob Zamuner and Marc
Bureau each scored their first goals
of the season for the Lightning.
Mighty Ducks 6, Canucks 3
AnaiOii Semenov, claimed from
IN BOX SET UP '20.00 EXTRA
Vancouver in the expansion draft,
had a goal and two assists as Anaheim defeated Vancouver.
The Ducks had lost three conPRECISION
secutive one-goal decisions, includSHOOTING
ing 3-2 in Vancouver on Sunday
EQUIPMENT®
after leading until the last four minutes. This time they got reliable
0315SV INFINITY SR·,OOO TREBARK II
goaltending from Ron Tugnuu ,
The lnlimly bow rs ma tched to hmb s. wheels and harness
who made 44 saves.
con hguratrons to b est sur ! the rndrvrdua l demano ot each
Semenov now has 21 poinls in
t&gt;owtlunter and com petr tor II features the Svnergy 11 1
20 games for the Mighty Ducks.
eccenrr~ cs . a prec•sron machrned atumrnum rrse r 1M
Todd Ewen, Randy Ladouceur,
exchJStlle HT E bracket s harness torque eQuatrzers wh•ch
v1r1ually el lm t nt~le r.-r: cenlnc lean at lull dra w. magnaglasst
Peter Do uris, Garry Valk and Joe
g•aph•le sl• &lt;ught hrnbs and the S R· 1000 dlsfmgu•s hes
Sacco ~so scored for the visiting

JENNINGS

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•I sell by •IS •nl•n•ty 'M I · overdraw Handle and limb color
gray rh•no handle w1th treba rk II hmbs Let-oH 65 '"'~ ma ss
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IN BOX SET UP '20.00 EXTRA

Dlvlslon V

Libaly CtJuer 42, CnotiUoe l9
Newldr: Cath. B, Wooddield 3
Sldftoyl.ehman 21, SL"- 14
St•ubtnville Cath. 21. l o u in

~w14

·

·I'ra 11 ~a l'1 ions

If the first Saturday is a
Holidaf. t,hen the Landfill will
~~~ .op•n . t~e ,Second .SaJurday
of'that month. Don

...

TO ACCOMMODATE TiiOSE WORKING PEOPLE,

WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 9 P.M. ON TUESDAYS

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

Phone (304) 175-21118
New S.X. Houri: Mol.-,-fridly, 8:30 MHI pm
S.lulday, 9:30 om-6 pm; Sunday, 11 MHI pm

25TII &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE

POINT PLEASANT
(304) 675-1675

,,'

BY MASON COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS,

POINT PlEASANT

..

I'

�Is, OH-Polnt

nmes-Sentlnel

wv

£November 21 '1993

Blue Angels to enter 1993-94
season with similar chemistry
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Tlmes-SentiDel Starr
GALLIPOLIS - It's basically
the same old team, just one year
older and hopefully, one year
wiser.
Gallia Academy's Blue Angels,
who lost a grand tolal of one player
to graduation (forward Amy
Hemby) in the 1992-93 season.
enjoyed plenty of success in that
season, winning twice as many
gam~ as they losL
But head coach Renee Barnes
and assistant coaches Todd Miller
and Kim Adlcins - the two assistants, responsible for the varsity
and reserve teams, respectively,
came from the GAHS boys' and
the Meigs girls' programs, respectively- won't let them be content
with last year's 14-7 finish. That
performance is merely the keel
'from which a new battleship,
namely one that can beat defending
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
champion Logan and runner-up
Athens, can be builL
Logan and Athens, the only two
teams to lieat the Angels on the
road (GAHS went 7-2 on the road
in the regular season), were responsible for half of the GAHS losses at

home (the Angels were 6-4 at
home).
"Beating Logan would top the
season, and we can do it," said
Barnes, but warned of the foil y of
talcing the rest of her ~·s foes
lig~tly . ~'Anything can h~~en.
We re gomg to have to play
, .or
we won't win. We don 't have the
excuse of being young anymore."
The Academy has the guns to
get things done. Mindy Pope, a 5·
foot-11 sophomore forward/center
whose freshman season was the
stage from which she averaged 22
points per outing, made herself Ms.
Inside and Ms. Outside (her 45.9%
shooting from the field included
her club-high 24 three-pointers) by
never scoring fewer than the II she
had in her varsity debut. She was
the deadliest Angel at the line
(74.2%) as well as on the boards
(she led in rebounds and blocked
shots). She and fellow sophomore
Whitney Hastwell were the only
players to play in each of the
Academy's games.
Should opposing defenses concentrate too heavily on Pope. 5·
foot-9 junior forward Meghan Kolcun can make opponents pay, usu·
ally from the baseline. She aver·
aged 11.8 points per contest and

only missed seven foul shots in 43
tries in her ftrst full varsity season.
With only four seniors - Kari
Brown, Amy Manis, Kim Tackeu
and Gennie Tucceri - on hand and
three ,other players - Hastwell,
Misty Coleman and former Jackson
eager Brandi Muon - with at least
100 points last year not due to
graduate until at least 1995, the
future is bright enough that the
Angels may need Ray-Bans to get
through the season.
Munn, a junior, was a point
guard for Chuck Dorsey's Ironladies last year. She showed a soft
shooting touch to follow her hard
drives to the baselines, and is lilcely
to be rewarded for her two seasons
of varsity backcourt experience
with the coun general's baton. But
that merely means that the backcoon won't be huning should any
of the four- Muon, Morris, Hastwell and sophomore Sara Wallcer
- most likely to see extensive
playing time get in foul uouble or
suffer injury.
In spite of all this, there is plen·
ty of work to do. The Angels will
have a three-game home stand
starting on Saturday, Nov. 27 in
which to roll up their sleeves and
get started.

Date
Opponent
Nov. 27 ................ Minford-6:30PM
Dec. 2 ........................Warren Local
Dec. 4 ................Rock Hill-6:30PM
Dec. 6.............................at Marlena
Dec. 9 ................................. Jaclcson
Dec. 13 ................ ,................ Athens
Dec. 16 ....................atRiver Valley
Dec. 18 ................... Belpre-6:30PM
Dec. 20 ..................................Logan

Dec. 23 ............at South Point·6PM
Jan. 5 ....................... Vinton County
Jan. I 0 ................... at Warren Local
Jan. 13 ....... .. ....................... Mariena
Jan. 17 .................at Meigs-5:55PM
Jan. 20 .. .................... .... ...at Jackson
Jan. 27 .............................. at Athens
Feb. 3 ............ ............. .River Valley
Feb. 5 ..................at Rock Hill-IPM

.
'

••

---..
,,..

-~_

.••••.

....
·~

~

~

••
••

·-.·-.-.·---•••

&lt;*

~

••
.

~

~·

~

·-

Feb. 7 .. ........ ....... ... .............at Logan
Feb. 10 .. .......... ............... at Fairland
Head coach -Renee Dames
(All dates are reserve-varsity
dou blebeaders that start with re·
serve games at 5:30 p.m. unless
otherwise noted.)

Alicia Ward and Erica Mollohan. Standing are
bead coach David Moore, Erin Conley, Racbael
Polcyn, Cindy Armstead, Stephanie Cash, Heidi
Hash and assistant coach Tom Weaver. (Times·
Sentinel photo)

On the South's college basketball scene,

Vandy has top veterans to greet
new coach; 'Hogs get young stars
summer, likes Vanderbilt's role as
an underdog.
"Pressure is what you make of
it," he said. "We have the potential to be a very good team. The
SEC is very talented, and even
though we haven't been ranked real
high in the polls, we're not going to
be able to sneak up on anyone."
Competition will be lOugh with
Kentucky looking to avenge last
season's loss of its No. I ranking in
a loss at Vanderbjlt: Rick Pitino
has to replace Jamal MaShbuni but
he has the league's best three-point
shooter back in Travis Ford.
Pitino needs sophomme Walter
McCarty to step up after sitting out
his first season. Forwards, Rodrick
Rhodes and Jared Prickett must
mature after impressive freshmen
seasons.
Georgia coach Hugh Durhatri is
under the gun to produce. School
officials decided against automati·
catly rolling .over his contract even
though Cleveland Jackson and 7-0
Charles Claxton are back.
Arkansas should dominate the
Western Division thanks to another
lalented freshman class signed by.
Nolan Richardson. He added Darnell Robinson and Lee Wilson,
both 6-11, to go wilh top scorers
Corliss Williamson and Scotty
Thurman~

North Carolina may . be the
favorite to repeat as national champion~. but tlie Tar Heels have to
slinive the Allantic Coast Conference fusL
Dean Smith is mounting his
repeat effort behind center Eric
Montross and 6-4 point guard Der·
rick Phelps. He also signed three of
the country's best freshmen.
bulce counters with swingman
Grant Hill and center Cherokee
Parks, and Mike Krzyzewski may
stat1two freshmen.

,,

TOGETHER AGAIN - At
a blg·time wrestling match in
Circleville on Nov. 13, Kay
Powers or Gallipolis finally got
to meet her ravorite competitor
- David Simmons, a.k.a. Gigolo Jimmy Delray. She hadn't
seen her nephew ror 17 years,
time that be spent collecting
many championship belts
throughout the United States
and abroad. Delray, an inde·
pendent wrestler who grew up
in Grove City, Pa. and now
lives in Florida, is expected to
~ompete in Circleville sometime
in mid-February.

Kolcun. Standing are
;;
Karl Brown, Mindy
-.:
Baroes,.Misty Coleman,
Tackett and ll$!liS· ..,
'tant coach Kim Adkins. (Times-Sentinel pboto)
:::

...
·'

Bobby Cremins remains at
Georgia Tech, after briefly leaving
for South Caro.lina, but he can't
afford any injuries since he has no
bench behind four reruming starters
led by guard Travis Best.
Denny Crum appears to have
quited critics and adjusted to the
three-pointer at Louisville where
his Cardina~ hit a school record
188 treys last year.
LouisviUe may be primed for its
first visit to the NCAA tourna·
menl' s round of 16 since winning
the title in 1986. Clifford Rozier,
Dwayne Morton and Greg Minor,
all· Metro Conference performers
last year. are back, joined by freshman Jason Osborne, a 6-8 forward.

...

River Valley to begin season
as Chesapeake's guest team
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Times-Sentinel Starr
CHESHIRE- Defense and rebounding.
Those are the two areas River Valley girls' bas·
ketball head coach David Moore and
assistant/reserve coach Tom Weaver will stress to
their charges in a season due to start with a pair of
road games.
Moore, who confessed to regularly having his
teams being outskied in the paint in his coaching
career, has a treat waiting for him in junior Cindy
Armstead, his forst six-footer and true center. She is
one o"f five girls - seniors Erica Mollohan and
Darna Twyman, junior Heidi Hash and sophomore
Amber Staton were the others - who auended summer camps to polish their skills.
"Her height is going to be a big advantage for us,
and her strength will help us in our rebounding, espe- cially offensive rebounding," said Moore of Arm·
stead. He added that his Raiders averaged one to two
shots after every missed shot, a problem he ~xpects
to be cured with Armstead's presence. But Armstead,
with all her talent. can't and 1sn 't expected to be the
club's savior.
"Our seniors (Mollohan, Twyman and Alicia
Ward) are focused on what needs to be done," Moore
said. "I try to impt;eSS upon them not to look ahead,
because I got in trouble doing that· my fust year of
coaching," he added.
Certainly as that trio begins its farewell season,
their focus can't be questioned. Neither can tha~of
Staton, who as a point guard raclced up a team-high
ll.8 points-per-contest average that made her the
club's leading scorer ls:!J:" and one of three players-junior Niclcie M
(7.4 pts./game) and 1993
graduate Shelly Metzger (6.8 pts./game) were the

_

By TERESA M. WALKER.
AP Sports Writer
Eddie Fogler has left for South
Carolina, so Vanderbilt must
depend on BiUy McCaffrey, play·
ing for his third coach in five years,
to prove last season's success
wasn't a fluke.
"There's no question that people are gunning for us because of
the success the team had," new
coach Jan van Breda Kolff said.
"We also have Kentucky and
Arkansas in the league ... and they
say LSU is going to be very good."
The Commodores stand no better than third behind Kentucky and
Georgia in predictions for the
SEC's Eastern Division thanks in
part to Vandy's offseason changes.
Vanderbilt hired van Breda
Kolff from Cornell to replace
Fogler, the national coach of the
year who led the Commodores to
their best season ever at 28 · 6.
Along the way was the school's
flflll ~egular-season conference title
since 1965 and a spot in the NCAA
tournament's round of 16.
• But van Breda Kolff inherits
McCaffrey, fellow returning
starten Chris Lawson and Ronnie
McMahan and an experienced
benCh.
the formec Vandemilt star who
went on to a loos NBA career has
been rework.ing Fosler's patient
motion-offense with the new 35second shot" clock in mind and to
p~ more of the offensive load on
McCaffrey.
.
The 6-foot-4, 184-pounder, who
lefl :Duke after the Blue Devils'
1991 nalional"litle, will have to go
110111e job to top last,year,
He led Vlndy with 20.6 ~iniS a
pii)C. hailded out •. tam·htgh 124
assiats 111d hit S1.2 percent from
1Jtiec.point range. Mccatrrey, who
play~d fo,r Team USA over the

Matt Wiseman. Standing teammates are
Boster, Joey Chapman, Andrew Woodyard,
Anthony Dey, Shannon Shipley, Clarke Saunders,
Cliff Wheeler, Leslie Sickels and Brandon Sommer. Behind them are coaches Tom Wheeler,
Doug Shipley and Brent A. Saunders.

·~

:__

BLACK MONDAY'S COMING- With a
winning season marked into the history books,
River VaHey's Lady Raiders will wear these uni·
rorms in their season commencement on Monday,
Nov. 29 at Chesapeake. In tbe rront row are (L·R)
Amber Staton, Nickie Meade, Dama Twyman,

shutting out
the 1993 season, the Bulls
Mcintyre Plll'k. District's Divi·
with an 8..0 record. Kneeling
Anthony Thorn pson,
Ross Batlst~, Jason Noorth, Zachery Schoonover,
Burnett, ADx Boster, Roy Adam Sayre anti

~-~

On November's final Monday,

Gallia Academy's 1993-94 girls' basketball slate

f~'

- ~'~·

'tP" ~

others - to pass the century mark in poiniS. Staton ·
had 248 points for the season.
•
Meade, and fellow juniors Rachael Polcyn and •
Heidi Hash are the most likely candidates at the for- ~
ward positions, with Polcyn gelling the"nod at center ",
should Armstead get in f9Ul uouble. Ward's experi- •
ence - she played point guard on the -!list Kyger
Creek team in the 1991-92 season- in running the ,;
floor should be helpful to Staton as weD as being a
safety valve should Staton get in foul trouble.
Consistency desired- One can't say whether a ·
lack of height, namely Armstead's on .a consistent
basis (she got in!O 17 varsity games, but she split hei •
time between the reserve and varsity clubs en ·route
to tying Twyman for fourth place on the team in tolal ,,
points with 71), or looking ahead caused the Raiders'
failure to win consistently last year.
.
Last year's 11-10 showing included a three-game
winning streak in mid-December that was never •
duplicated. But to their credit. the Raiders never lost •
more than two in a row, an attribute directly .related ..
to having sub-.500 teams such as Ch~e, .East, ·,
ern, Southern and Warren Local - the Warriors "
were one of fl~e Southeastern Ohio Athletic "r..q~guq "
teams the Raoders faced last year - scattered •
throughout the schedule. By the way, eight of the :
Raiders' wins came against those aforementioned •
teams.
1 ..
'
Now that River Valley is a full-fledged S£0AL ~
member, the Raiders will have 12 guaranteed game~ :
while retaiping Chesaoeake, Soulhem and Fairland. :
Fairland and River Valley. who played once last
year, agreed to a home-and-away package for this ~
year, as did the Meigs Marauders, the Raiders'. ~
newestopponenL
•

__:....__;:........:.._:_~------------ ,.

River Valley's 1993-94 girls' basketball slate
Date
Opponent
Nov. 29 ........... :......... at Chesapeake
Dec. 2..............................atJackson
Dec. 6 .... ...............................Athens
Dec. 13 ..............................at Logan
Dec. 16 ..................Gallia Academy
Dec. I 8 ............·..................at Meigs
Jan. 6 ..............................at Marietta
Jan. lO .................... ............ Jaclcson
Jan. 13 ..............................at Athens

Jan. 15 ............ :.................. Southem
Jan. 19 ..........................Chesa~e
Jan. 22 ................................Frurland
Jan. 24 ................... at Warren Local
Jan. 27 ...................................Logan
Jan. 29 ...........................at Southern
Feb. 3.. ...............at Gallia Academy
Feb. ? .........................Warren Local
Feb. I0 ...............................Mariena

Feb. 14 ...........................at Fairland ·•
Feb. 17 ................................... Meigs . ;
Head coach- David Moore

••

(All dates are reserve-varsity ,,
doubleheaders that start with re·
serve games at 5:30 p.m. unless •
otherwise noted.)

..

Indiana expects tough times in coming
season with loss of Cheaney, Graham
By HANK.LOWENKRON
JNDIANAPOUS (AP) - Indiana basketball fans ·can expect
some struggles as the 12th-ranked
Hoosiers adjust to the absence of
forst-round NBA draft picks Calbert
Cheaney and Greg Graham, coach
Bob Knight said Friday.
"I want that Ibis basketball sea·
son will be an enjoyable one,""
Knight told a group of about 2,000
fans and alumni at the annual
Tipoff Luncheon sponsored by the
Indianapolis chapter of Indiana
Universi~ Alumni.
"You re going to have to kind
of sit there and cross your legs, and

.Financial
Following
The
Institutions will be closed
Thursday November 24, 1993

..••
•
•

' "
cross your fingers, and do some
"I've enjoyed what I saw," h~ :
things. We're going to stntggle a told WISH- TV in an interview •
little bit. I think you're going to before the luncheon. "!liked the :
kind of enjoy it."
·
way we played, the way we went ;
Knight said he likes what he's about playing and what tran-. :
seen of the team in its practice, spired."
•
intersquad scrimmage and first
Knight said he would know a lot ~
exhibiuon. The Hoosiers. b'ounced more about the team after it corn·, ::
a Croatian National team 99-56 plete~s a December schedule lhaL, :
Thursday.
(SeeKNIGHTonC·S)
.~·

''Confused about
life insuranee?
.
Rely on me to help y9u
·make the right
choices.''
.

SNOWDEN
S42s..IA...

,.......

THANKSGIVING DAY
• Bank-One
•Ohio Valley Bank
• Star Bc;mk
•U~ity Savings ·Bank

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., .

I

·'

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Like a good neighbor, State· Farni is there.

I

.

By ED SCHUYLER JR.
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)
-At the fonal beD, Jesse Ferguson
said to Ray Mercer: "Nice fight,
Ray.'' Mercer said nothing.
This time, Mercer let his fiSts do
the talking as he won a 10-round
split decision in his heavyweight
rematch with Ferguson Friday
night in a ballroom at the Conven·
lion cdntet.
. . .
.
· The next time the two men will
see one imother will be in New
York State SUJ'PC!lle Court in Manhattan, where Mercer will go on
trial Dec. 6 on a charge of attempting to bribe Fergl!son to lose their
rtrst ftght. Ferguson will be a pros·
ecution wimess.
Mercer, a flabbr 238 pounds
when he lost a unarumous decision
to Fecguson on Feb. 6, came in at a
.trim 223 Friday night ·and his COD·
ditioning paid off in the late
rounds.
Judge Debra Barnes scored it for
the 36-year-old Ferguson 95-94.
Judges Vincent Rainone and
Joseph Pasquale each favored Mer·
cer%-93.
· The AP scored it96-93 for Mer-

-

Hockey
BUFFALO. N.Y. (AP)- Buf·
falo Sabres center Pat LaFontaine.
last year's runnerup in NlR. scar·
ing, will undergo reconstructive
knee surgery that will sideline him
for the rest of the season.

544 RICHLAND AVENUE, 593-8697

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On Luxury Cars, Sports Cars and Trucks

*All Our Prices Have Been Slashed!!
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cer.
The 32-year-old Mercer
appeared in conuol in the ftrst four
rounds but then Ferguson came on
in the next three with several good
head and body punches. Mercer
also was penalized a point in the
sixth round for hitting low and Ferguson was given 30 seconds to
recuperate by referee Tony Orlando.
Then in the eighth and ninth
rounds· Mercer jabbed and moved
and took the momentum away from
Ferguson, 232 1/4.
After the seventh round, the two
men punched after the bell and
when Mercer turned 1o go back to
his comer, Ferguson hit him. In the
lOth round, Ferguson hit the referee wilh a light left hook to the forehead. No damage was done.
While bOth men landed some
hard shots, neithec was in danger of
going down, but Ferguson was cut
over the left eye and .it was
swollen.
A computer analysis of the fight
showed Mercer landing 244 of 679
punches, 107 of them jabs, while
Ferguson connected on 199 of 44 7.

. But, Knight said lhat Henderson
:is having a problem trying to make
•up for the loss of Cheaney, who
:averaged 22.4 points last season
;and was selected college basketball
1plarer of the year.
: 'He confuses himself with
:Cheaney. I think he believes at this
poinl he's inherited Cbeaney's shot
selectlm, that he can take the same
kind of shots/' Knight said. "You
will Jllldually fmd that that is not
true." ·
·
. As for ot~ers on the team.
Ktiighl' said ·sophomore · Brian
Evans; who scored 2S points
'Fhuriday night, has the potential to
be·a &amp;iCIII play~. Alao: be believ~
tetn1 this·~ wQuld !lave been
~~er bad' Pat Graham not
·
mOSt of the past tw~ years
due to foot injuries.
1'
I I.

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1987 UNCOLN TOWN CAR

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Dark brown, factory carriage lop, like new

1985 UNCOLN TOWN CAR

New Shipment!
Just Arrived!

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Locally owned, well maintained, ...... ..

1889 DODGE DYNASTY
Affordable.luxury,s harpI ............. ...., .. .

. .......'6,395

1988 BUICK PARK AVENUE
All the options .. .... ..... ... .... ............ .

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1989 BUICK PARK AVENUE
Blue with white carriage top , clean! .

... ..........'9,995

1989 BMW 3251

1
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Coupe. 5 speed. 6 cylinder. red, loaded! ..... ... ...... .

1986 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE

Pewter. all power. affordable luxury .. ... .. ................ ..... .... ........ 14,968

1990 MERCURY COUGAR XR-7

h~h performance ... .... .... .. .... 1 11 ,440

Super charged . ha•d to find,

1991 FORD THUNDERBIRD

'9,995
Local trade. automatic ,air, teather interior ............. . .. .......... '5,828
1990 CHEVY CAMARO RX
Bright red , aulomaoic,air,only 24K miles . ... ........... . ...... ... '9,41 0
1990 FORD PROBE GL
Automalic,air, cruise, AMIFM cassene ... ....... ....... ............. '7 ,855
Automatic, air, power windows,doors , seats &amp; locks , red . .......

1987 VOLVO 740 GLE

Air Jardan ~

THE SHOE CAFE
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•

1988 HONDA ACCORD LX
Locally owned vehicle. all power ... .... ..... .... .. .. ..... ............. '6,565

1890 CHEVY CAVAUER

Knight on Indiana...
(Continued from C-4)
includes second-ranked Kentucky
and No. 9 Kansas.
"I think that you want to find
out (in December) \Vh&amp;t they can
do against teams that they're going
to have to beat somewhere along
the way' if you're ~oing to be any
good," Knight Sllld. "I've never
been able to see ... us play against
teams just to give us a chance to
win games. That's never been our
intention. ••
.
In remarks to the fans, Knight
said he was happy with the play of
Alan Henderson, who injured ·his
right knee in practice February and
played only six seconds in the final
, six games of lhe regular season. He
; was used sparingly as the Hoosiers
: won the Big Ten championship and
•reached the regional final of the
: NCAA tournament.
.
, Henderson had surgery in May
•to repair ligament damage.
, "Henderson has done really
:weD with his injury," said Knight
• The 6-foot-9 junior is the lead:ing reruming scorer and rebounder
:from last season's team, which ftn•ished No . I in The Associated
:Press poll and compiled a 31·4

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1989 HONDA CIVIC LX
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ow.
They're rounding the firSt tum and beading into the back stretch.••
· -the leaders In the Peoples Bank Discount Brokerage Stoc:k Picking Contest are:

Delbett
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~

................... 55,978

Long bed Pickup..... ...... ..... .

1984 NISSAN SENTRA COUPE
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1989 NISSAN SENTRA
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Sport coupe , black , automatic,air ..

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•

4 doOr sedan, auiOmattc, air ..... .... .. .... ..

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1989 NISSAN SENTRA
2 door, black. automatlc.air ... .... . ... ... .. ... ..
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2 Door, like new concfftlon , air .......... .

~

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1988 SUZUKI SAMURAI4X4

Winter's coming! ... ......... ......................... ..... ............ .... ...... ...... 15,288

+27.13%

1989 GMC SAFARI CONVERSION VAN
Dual atr, VB . locally owned vehicle!. ..... ....... ..... ........... .... .. ...... '9,495
1991 PONTIAC GRAND AM LE

4 Door, automatic. family car! ... ............ .. .... .... ............ .......... 1 8, 178

1989 PONTIAC SUNBIRD SE
Coupe, automatic , red , sporty .... .............

30%

20%

1()%

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.. '6,298

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As ofNol'l!mber 12, these were the lOp Sperforming portfolios out olthe hundreds In our contest. Overall, 179 portfotios
are up 10% or more! Each conlestant chose SpubUcly traded siOCks from a tist of 100 selected companies. Performance
Js based upon change In portloUo value from the close of business Friday, OciOber 8, 1993 through Friday, NoVI!mber 12.
111e percentage galniloss of all entries will be tracked through 1993. Peoples Bank will awud SSOO to the 10p perfonner,
S2SO for second place and SHIO for third place.

W

)

AMONG
SECTIONAL
WINNERS -Mathew Bnsb or
Gallipolis is one of three local
sectional winners or th e
Gatorade Punt, Pass &amp; Kick
competiJlon held recently In
Athens. He wBI joiD Joey Dambrougb and Ryan Perdue in the
state team championship competition at halftime of the L.A.
Raiders-Cincinnati Bengals
game at Ciucinnati's River front Stadium on Sunday, Nov.
28.

Sports brief:

Mercer defeats Ferguson
in heavyweight rematch

!

INIUIANCI

David Finney ot Gallipolis (nineyear-old group), T.R. Rodgm (12year-old group) of Gallipolis, Guy
Guinther of Gallipolis (13-year-old
group) and Tony Perroud from
Gallipolis (14-year-old group).
Finishing third were Cliff
Wheeler of Gallipolis (eight-yearold ifroup) and Dusty Cox of Gallipolis (11-year-old group). Those
finishing in the top three on the sectionals received medals for their
accomplishments.
Other participating in the sec ·
tiona! competition after winning
the local Gallipolis contest were
Tim Hunt Gallipolis (nine-year-old
group). Jeremy Payton of Gallipolis (ll·year-old group) and Cody
Lane of Gallipolis (12-year-old
group).
The NFL Punt, Pass, and Kick
contest is sponsored by Gatorade,
Sears &amp; Skybox Trading Cards.
with local sponsors the Gallipolis
Parks &amp; Recreation ·Department
and the 0.0. Mcintyre Park DistricL

* 6 Month/6,000 Mile Limited Warranty On Most Units

l

tlAfl f_A.IM

.

c'1

ATHENS - Tbree area Gallipolis youths won fiSl place in the
sectional NFI..IGatorade Punt. Pass
&amp; Kick competition recently held
in Athens.
.Mathew Bush, Joey Darnbrough
and Ryan Perdue were each win·
ners in their respective age groups
and will compete in the stale team
championship competition Sunday.
Nov. 2&amp; at the halftime of the Los
A~geles Raiders/Cincinnati Bengals game at Riverfront Stadium.
Bush, 10, son of Marlowe &amp;
Cheryl Bush of Gallipolis, passed
for 81 feet, punted for 44 feet 6
inches, and kicked 61 feet for a
tolal of 186 fett6 inches to win his
age group.
Dambrough, 13, son of Wil~e &amp;
Sandy Darnbrough of Gallipolis
passed for 132 feet, punted 96 feet,
and kicked for 93 feet 5 inches for
a tolal of 321 feet 5 inches to capture forst place in his age bracket
Perdue, 14, son of Rick Perdue
of Gallipolis and Linda Perdue of
Athens, passed for 88 feet l/2 inch,
punted for 91 feet 1/2 inch and
kicked for 82 feet 3 inches for a
total of 262 feet 3 inches to win the
14-year-old division.
Finishing second in their a$e
groups were: Bobby Jones of Rio
Grande (eight-year-old...J!roup),

REAL PRICES! REAL DEALS!

:record.

WDU

Sunday

Three Gallians headed
for state team PP&amp;K
competition in Cincy

••

••
. •

SIX DAYS remain before Gallia Academy's
Blue Angels open their season and a three-game
home stand against Mlnrord. Seated in front are
(L-R) Amy Morris and Brandi Munn. Kneeling
are Sara Walker, Whitney Hastwell and Meghan

wv

OH-Polnt

•

�Peqe C6

SUnday nmes Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

November 21,1993

Sports Probe

'
'•

--

Nebraska's schedule causing 'Huskers to get little ·respect
By HOWARD SINER .
Nebraska, under head coach
Today's questions in the world Tom Osborne, has one more game
of sports:
during the regular season. It will
• Does Nelnslta's football ream finish at home in Uncoln on Fri·
deserve more respect?
day, Nov. 26, a~nst Oldahoma.
or course, Entering Saturday· s After defeaung Iowa State 49·
play.with a 10.0 record, Nebraska 17 on Nov. 13, the unbeaten Cornhas 10 hand its third straight Big huskers were still treated like out·
Eight liUe and its third straight siders. At 10.0, they were ranked
Orange Bowl berth. Yet the Com- third - behind No. I Notte Dame
huskers haven't shared in the glory (10.0) and No.2 Florida Swe (9·1)
heaped on Notre Dame and Florida - in both the Associated Press poll
State.
and the bowl coalition standings.
For one thing, !he doubters criti·
The Fighting Irish had just
cize Nebraska's 1993 schedule.
edged Florida swe 31-24.
But the Huskers will have
So the hot topic certainly wasn't
{&gt;Jared four games vs. top 2S teams Nebraska's unmalehed reign of 202
(Al&gt; or CNN-USA Today) by the consecutive weeks in the AP Top
end of the season. That's the same 20. It was the possibility of N.D.
number as Notre Dame, Miami and and FSU meeting again, in the
Ohio State. And just one less than post-season, 10 decide the national
Florida State.

title.
Lost in the commotion was the
fact that Nebraska's 25th consecu·
tive bowl berth ties Alabama's
NCAA record (1959-83) . The
Huskers also have an NCAA
record of 25 seasons in a row with
at least nine wins. In fact, this is the
32nd straight winning season for
Nebraska, another NCAA record.
In the face of that, skeptics
remain. They complain that the
Comhuskers haven't won decisively enough this season. But Nebras·
ka's three one-point wins (vs.
UCLA, Oklahoma State and
Kansas) each came on the road.
Linebacker Trev Alberts, a sack
specialist, and running back Calvin
Jones, a scoring ace, are AII-Amer·
ica types. But !hose two Huskers

don't get that much ink. And
sophomore quarterback Tommie
Frazier of Nebraska is just a Big
Bight star.
. Some experts have even dis·
missed the conference this year as opposed 10 the quality of play
found in, say, the Big Ten or the
SEC.
Actually, the real knock against
Nebraska has been its failure in
bowl contests. Especially in recent
years. The Comhuskers have lost
their last six post-season games in a
row.
In fact, during the Osborne era,
they have won just eight of 20
bowl games.
·
No wonder he has yet to take
the ream 10 !he national title.
But don't overlOC!I: Nebraska.

The Cornhuskers always in the run·
Ding.

• Who's keeping an eye on offi·
ciating in the NBA?
Darell Garretson, that's who .
He might not be a household
name - like Shaq, or Patrick or
Hakeem.
But G~tson, who has begun
his 27th and fmal year as an NBA
ref, has a lot to do with how the
game is played.
For the past 12 seasons, Garret·
son has worked as both an active
official and the league's chief of
officiating staff.
So he's earned a promotion.
Next year, Garretson will
become .the NBA 's director of offi.
ciating, a new fuU-time job. His
responsibilities will be expanded 10

November .21, 1993

include the development -of young
referees for the league.
"Withoui question, Daren has
been one of the outstanding offi.
cials in our history," notes Rod
Thcwn, who is the NBA vice presi·
dent for operations.
.
An NBA ref since 1967·68,
Garretson has worked in over 2,000
games. He is one of the few offi.
cials 10 have been assigned to more ·
than 25 NBA Finals games. Also,
he has officiated in five All-Star
games.
Obviously, Garretson believes
that NBA refs ought to 1!e hlu'dy.
Ooin' into this season: he
hadn't m1ssed a game due 10 iUness
orft)7993
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

On the NFL scene,

Defections, long injury list all but wrecked Eagles' dreams
By DICK BRINSTER
AP Sports Writer

Now that a massive player
defection and a long list of mjuries
has all but wrecked a once-promis·
ing seaspn for the Philadel~~
Eagles, there is little left for
coach Rich Kotite 10 do but laugh.
That's exactly what he did when
aslced about IOday's game against
the New York Giants.
"What's your injury situation,
Coach?" he wu asked.
Kotire laughed hard for several
seconds.
.. Are you lddding?" he asked.
In view of a lengthy injury to
quarterback Randall Cunmngham
: and a season-ending one to wide
; receiver Fred Barnell, a sl,Fw of

breaks and aches dUll have stopped
or slowed many startersand the
eventual effect of free agent defec·
tions by Reggie White and some
other key operatives, the season has
become a disaster.
It didn't start that way. Despite
the loss of White, running back
Keith Byars, Iackie Ron Heller and
eight others unhappy with management, the Eagles stunned every·
body by opening 4-0.
Then Cunningham and Bameu
went down on the same afternoon.
The Eagles, who weathered the
defections, eventually began losing
backups, and haven't won since.
They now start Ken O'Brien at
quarterback because backup Bobby

· Sanchez Vicario edges
N ovotna to gain spot
~ in Virginia Slims semis
•

•
:
:
•
•
•
:
•
•
:
•
•
:

:
:
•
:

By BOB GREENE
NEW YORK (AP) - Arantxa
Sanchez Vicario, nearly on the
verge of elimination, rallied Friday
night to defeat Jana Novotna and
grab a spot in the semifinals of the
Virginia Slims Championships.
GeUing suonger and more deter·
mined the longer they played, the
second-seeded Spaniard toppled
Novollla 6-'1 (2-T), 7-6 (7·2), 64 in
a match that took 2 hours, 57 min·
utes at Madison Square Garden.
Sanchez Vicario will play Mary
Pierce in Saturday's second semifl·
nals. The unseeded Pien:e reached
the semifinals in her first trip to
this season-ending tournament by
upseUing four-time winner Martina
Navratilova on Thursday nighL

The fllSt semifmal has top-seed·
: eel Steffi Graf against No. 8 Anke
Huber. In Friday's first match,
: Huber made it an all-German semi: final by defeating fourth-seeded
: Conchila Martinez 6-3, 6-3.
It was a rare victcry over Novot·
: na for Sanchez Vicario, who has
• lost eight of 12 career meetings.
: But this one was sweeter, consider·
• ing from how far back she had to
come.
; . Although Novotna, one of the
: !)est all-court players on the
• women's tour, and Sanchez Vicario
: battled evenly through the fust two
: sets, thai parity was only on the
: scoreboard. Novotna appeared to
• be in control while Sanchez
: Vicario Sb'Uggled.
•
Appearances were deceiving.
:
Tliere were four service breaks
; in the flfSt set and two m&lt;re in the
• second. Bach time one brotc serve,
• the other broke right back.
;
Novotna conlrolled the fmt-set
: tiebreak, but it was Sanchez
; Vicario who was starting to conuol
• lhemaleh.
: Novotna had to fight through
: five de1Jces to hold serve in the
; fifth game of the middle seL She
• was taken 10 deuce again in her
: next service game, but still man: aged to hold.
,

:

I

..
•

: Akers steps down
:• as Urbana head cotich

The first four points in the sec·
ond-set liebrealc went against serve.
That was when the Spanish right·
hanoor took conuot.
She won the next five points 10
capture !he tiebreak, then took the
lead in the third set for good by
breaking Novotna in the seventh
game, the final point a forehand
cross-&lt;:OUrt ~g shot that ticked
off Novotna s racket.
·
Huber and Martinez engaged in
long baseline engagements, send·
ing powerful groundstrokes to the
outer edges of the court. If the
points were long, the games were
longer as the two evenly matched
competitors kept battling 10 deuce.
Martinez had the bigger serve, a
stroke that would have worked per·
fectly to set up a serve-and-volley
game. Instead, the Spaniard retreat·
ed to her regular spot behind the
baseline and worked her way into
the poinL Huber retaliated by slam·
ming her grunt-assisted strokes
deep into the corners, keeping
Huber on the run.
The match was halted briefly in
the second set when Martinez
asked for and received medical
attention when her back muscles
tightened up. After a brief massage,
the match resumed.
The loss ended the best year for
Martinez, who had victories over
Gabriela Sabatini, Navratilova,
Mary Joe Fernandez and Graf, the
latter Sunday in the final of the
Virginia Slims of Philadelphia
"I have a lot of confidence
when I play against her," said
Huber, who has never lost to Mar·
tinez in four meetings. "It makes it
a lot easier."
FoJ Huber, malting her first
appearance in Madison Square
Garden, it is the best she has done
in a major tournament since m~eh·
ing the semifinals of the French
Open in May where she won only
two games in losing 10 Graf.
"In the beginning I was too ner·
vous," Huber said. "I was doing
everything 10o fasL My serve was
not good. After that, I just tried 10
play my game."
Sunday's winner of this $3.5
million tournament will receive
$250,000, with $120,000 going 10
the runner·IIJl. .

Brisler is hurt.
No one could blame the Eagles
(4-5) for mailing in the rest of the
season. It's over.
Elsewhere in the NFL today, it
will be Houston at Cleveland,
Chicago at Kansas City, Cincinnati
at the New Yorl:: Jets, Dallas at
Adanta, Delroit vs. Green Bay at
Milwaukee, Indianapolis at Buffalo, New England at Miami, the Los
Angeles Raiders at San Diego,
Pittsburgh at Denver, Washington
at the Los Angeles Rams and Min·
nesota at Tampa Bay.
New Orleans will visit San
Francisco Monday night
Phoenix and Seattle are idle.
With the Eagles quickly fading
from playoff contention in the NFC
East, the Giants (6·3) are moving
toward erasing effects of two years
of chaos· under former coach Ray
Handley. Dan Reeves, who carne
over from Denver, has righted a
badly listed ship.
But the Giants, despite unex·
peered success built on the strength
of the league's stingiest defense,
have problems of their own. They
began when wide receiver Mike

In a key-game in the AFC Cen- Green Bay, coupled with a loss by
Sherrard went down with a season·
tral, Cleveland coach Bill Belichick Minnesota at Tampa Bay, would
ending brotcn hip.
Phil Simms had nine touchdown should hear plenty of boos for cut· give the Lions a three-game lead
passes as lhe Giants moved 10 5-1. ting Bernie Kosar, the most popular with six remaining. ·
Kansas City (7·2) again plans to
But they are 1·2 siilCe the ShClill!'d Brown since Jimmy. II will be
Cleveland's
fust
home
game
since
rest
Joe Montana, hoping his )lUlled
injury, and Simms has passed for
thecuL
hamstring
will be sufficiently
nary a score.
The
Kosar
conuoversy,
plus
the
healed
to
start
against AFC East
But Reeves won't blame the
terrible
performance
of
replaceco-leader
Buffalo
next week. By
Sherrard injury for the decline in
ment
quarterback
Todd
Philcox
in
beating
Chicago,
the
Chiefs would
the passing game.
thC
Browns'
27·5
loss
last
Sunday
hold
a
three-game
lead
in the AFC
"I don't think it's because Mike
at
Seaute,
has
Oeveland
fans
in
an
West
should
Denver
lose
10 Pittsisn't in there as much as we
uproar.
burgh
and
the
Raiders
lose
to San
haven't executed !he way you have
The
Browns
(5·4)
meet
the
Diego.
·
to in the passing game," Reeves
The Broncos have won 20 of the
said. "A breakdown here, a break· . resurgent Houston Oilers (5·4),
who
have
won
four
straight.
last
23 at Mile High Stadium, but
down there, whether it be the
Detroit
(7-2)
is
on
a
four-game
two
of the losses were in the past
receiving, the route running, the
four
weeks.
,
winning
streak.
and
a
victory
over
line protecting, the quarlerback
reading, the play calling. All these
thinj!S contribute."
SIRlmS agreed.
"Generally the play has been
there, but it's always something
that stops it,'~ he said. "Sometimes
it's penalties. Sometimes it's not
picldnl! ilp the blitz the J.li'Oper way.
LnliT FAW,OHIO
Then ll's me not lookmg for the
right guy . And sometimes it's
'NOW OFFERING THE FOLLOWING:
being unlucky in picking the wrong
guy ·instead of the guy who is
open.''
1974 CORYEnE .........................................................:'5,495.00

MAX

ATLANTA (AP)- Luxury
ticket holders at the Georgia Dome
are finding out half a suite may not
be beuer than none.
That's because the NFL is
claiming 65 of the dome's suites
for the 1994 Super Bowl Jan. 30 meaning 87 suite-holders will have
to double up.
"The premise is if we didn't
give up lhe 65 suites 10 the NFL,
we wouldn't have a Super Bowl,''
said Khalil Johnson,'the dome's
general manager.
,
"There was a misunderstanding
from the beginning. I assumed we
got lhe suite for everything," said
David Oyler, president of lnmark
Inc., who will bave to share a 24·
seat suite with two other companies. "You pay your fee and you
should be in iL"
Suite-holders ·are paying as
much as $120,000 a year for their
suites.
"Our suite is $50,000 a year,
and that's a lot of money,'' said Gil
Hodge, owner of Marietta-Dodge
Inc., who also will have to share a
24-seat suite. "They did whatever
it took to get the Super Bowl and
didn't care about anybody else."
Some su.ite-holders who would
have to share won't even get 10 go
because of the change.
"In fact the current thinking
among me and my coUeagues is 10
give the tickets to .our best customers and let them go," said Tom
Watson Brown, an Atlanta lawyer.
"Without question, you don't feel
as comfortable in another box with
a bunch of strangers as you do in
your own box, when you can conuol what's going on."
During the sales pitch 10 get ten·
ants 10 sign a lease for a 16-or 24seat suite, dome officials made it
clear they would have flfSt priority
to such major events as the Super
Bowl, the Olympics and the Final
Four.
Many did not realize that the
contract specified seating arrange-

'S

CODiftY CORVE'HES

(2) 1984 CORVMES.................................................15,900.00.
1915 GMC CUSTOM YAH LOIDED ............................ 15,995.00
1910 DODGE MOTOR HOME...................................'5,495.00
1916 DODGE RAM (HARGER ..................... lStUNG 16,996.00
1914 CADILLAC fLEETWOOD LOIDED..................... 13,995.00
1917 CADILLAC ALLAm IWO IOPS......................'11,900.00
1916 CHEVY, CAVALIER avro."'"'"-·-·············.......'1 ,495.00

Georgia Dome suiteholders
unhappy with having to share
ments could be changed for major
events. It did exclude the first 98
suite-holders who signed leases
before Dec. 31, 1989.
The NFL will use its 65 suites
for media, charities, corporate
sponsors and athletes. There are
203 suites in the Dome, with 186
leased and the rest held back for
promotional purposes or event-by·
event leases.

---------------------------------------------------------------Outdoors

PAlliAL USTING FOR fURTNEI INFOIUIATION
PHONE: 614·247...161 or 1·100.279·3147

Sunday Times-Sentinel /C7

•

.
'

· Senators go for 'quick fix'
on criminal control issue
Watching the current rash of
· anti-gun mania sweeping the
nation's capital, it seems we really
do live in a nation of cowards.
Basically, the problem is every·
one is loolting for a quick fix and
unable 10 make tough &lt;lecisions, On
the other side of the coin, nobody
wants IQ assume responsibility for
. their own actions - its always
. ·somebody elae's fauiL
Senators John Glenn and
Howard Metzenbaum apparently
decided for the quick fix, unfortu·
nately lheir quick fa is no solution
. at all, merely a placebo which
· dodges the real issue: crime.
· · Recently the two se!UIIOIJ voted
. 10 include an amendment 10 the so· called "crime bill" banning certain
· automatic rifles (they call them
. "assault ri.fles").
lncred~bly, Glenn and .Metzen·
, baum dec•ded to vote agamst mea·
. sores which would help control
criminals.
They voted against amendments
10 the crime bill which would have
youths age 13 and up tried as adults
on four categories of violent
crimes. They voted against making
numerous gun-relared crimes feder·
al offenses and allowing a federal
death penalty even in states that
ban capital punlshmenL They voted
against mal:ing carjacldng a federal
capital crime whenever someone
dies as a result and, this is unbe·
lievable, voted against an amend·
' meniiO classify as federal offenses
~· a h~,t of illegal gang activities
!: ranging from conspiring 10 join a
C criminal street gang to commiuing
murder for that gang.
~
Fortunately, cooler heads pre·
.~ vailed and the amendments were
.., passed.

•' Not all of our representatives
.(4 have caved in to the. anti-gunners.
t: In palticular, it is refreshing to see
that our representative 10 Con~,
Ted Strickland, kept his prom!SC 10
vote IJP.i!lst gun conuollegislati.on.
StriCkland (D·Lucisvi!le) voted
against passage of the Bfl!dr ·bill
which would impose a naflonal

five-day waiting period for the pur·
chase of handguns. Ukewise, Con·
· gressman Bob Wise, who repre·
sents our neighbors in Mason
County, W.Va., also voted against
the Brady bilL
Tbe Brady bill; which calls for a
five-day waiting period for bandgun pnrchases will accomplish
nothing. Partly because Congreas
also passed an amendment 10 the
bill which will end the waiting
period requirement after five years,
regaidless of whether a compurerized beckgrouiwl check system is in
place or IIOL
Tbe primary result of the ~rady
bill will likely be increased cost
and lessened efficiency in law
' enforcement as already overworked
officerS are taken off the street to
conduct worthless "background
checks" of already law-abiding citi·
zens.
·
How many convicted felons will
attempt to purcbase a firearm
through channels which involve a
background check7 Probably the
same amount as currently purchase
fli'CIU1llS through legitimate fll'C8!11l
dealers: none. .
"It is not an answer 10 the prob!em of crime and violence in this
country," said Strickland who
described the bill as a symbolic
issue, a meaningless effon.
"I met in Athens with members
of the Athens Pqlice Department
who wanied 10 express their opposition to !he Brady Bill," he said.
"They want effective action, not
cosmetic action. •
Many police deparunents across
the country won't or can't conduct
the background' checks called for in
the bill, lie concluded.
Perhaps Strickland and Wise
remembered something that Glenn
an4 Metzenbau:ll! apparently for·
got: the responsibility of each and
every law abiding citizen 10 snuff
out crime and the duty of our elect·
ed representatives to make-laws
that punish criminals and not law
abiding citizens.

~·

best resuits. due to t1!C clrynes• .of
veniso; Follow t_h~ direcUO!II ~,!!!
"&lt;: tasty but nutritious as well.
~
. For ad!liUonal flavor, ...
!'• According to Cind~ Oliveri of two three stnps of bacon on the
~: the Meigs Cotmty Oh1o Coopera· roast
:; tive 'Extension Agency, beef, top
The oven should be_ set at 32S·
• loin broiled, has 9.6 grams of fat, 350 degrees Fahrenhet~ allow 25
• ~ 76 milligrams of cholesterol !IDd minutes per pound: If USing a meat
t: 209 calories per 3.5 ounce ~rving. thermometer, cook 10 170 d~grees
;,. In comparison, roasted vemson has F !IDd allow to stand 10 mmutes
;~ only 3.2 grams of fat per serving, before slicing. To microwave, set
; · 112 milligrams of cholesterol and time for 12 minutes per pound on
•:· t58 calories.
high or tOO percent power. Cut
: : · Light meat chicken with the roast in half and finish for two to
:.• sldn removed and roasted has 4.5 four minutes.
Venison has a dark surface
•.: grams of fat, 85 milligrams of
;.. cholesterol and 173 calOries. Roast·
(See VENISON oa C·S)
;; ed squirrel has 3.6 grams of fat, 95
•; milligrams of cholesterol and 136.
1• Domesticated rabbit has 6.3 .
} grams of fat, 64 milligrams of
• ~ cholesterol and I 54 calories as
::;. compared to 3.5 grams of fat, 123
j milh~s of cholesterol and 170
r calones for a wild rabbiL
Venison can be successfully
~ substituted in recipes calling for
:;: red meat. ·use 1/4 less suj;ar in
-:- sauce recipes for beef as veruson is
•·; a sweet meaL
:' Venison is apt to be dry, so
:( moist cooking methods are best for
1" all exce.P' the very tender cuts (ten·
t:, derloin, steak, clq)s). Po not over·
~ cook, but serve medium to well
..: done. Because of its shan fibers,
:· venison need not. be . pounded
~ before cooldng and 11 will toughen
:• if overcooked at .a temperature
;; g~ter than 375 degrees FahrenVenison, or deer meat, offers a
-~: meat alternative that isn't only

rs:

-c _ o .ste,Brin,g &amp; brakes, driver'a air bag.

Many hunters think the kill 'pieces which can cause nasty
marks the conclusion of a suc- mjuries.
"
cessful deer hunL
Many hunters also carry a
Better think IJBin. One of the whetstone, a small axe or ~w, a
most critical pans of any success- lillht cloth game bag and a length
ful htmts cornea after the deer is or rope or cord.
down 8lld ragged: field dressing. ' . Onceitwasreconunendedthat
Just how taSty your deer will hunters ."bl~" the deer, usuai!Y
be depends on prompt and proper by cutung Its throat or caroud
field care. Preventing din, beat artery, but no more. Prompt field
and moisture from coittarninating dressing involves culling all the
the meat will help prevent major blood vessels permiuing a
spoilage.
free now of blood.
Field dressing can be define
Care should be taken not to
simptr. as removing an animals touch the scent glands located on
entra1ls while It ia still irl tho the insides of the rear legs. The
field, allowing gaine oCTICOrs 10 scent may taint the meat. Some
identify the anim~ . Field ~ hunters prefer to remove the
ing, while nor i very pleasant glands and wash their hands and
· task, is not as difficult as many knife before proceeding with lhe
people believe. However, it is actual field dressing.
almost without exception a
Field dressing
messy, bloody job so don't be
Hang the ~irnal up or posi~on
squeamish - roll up your it on a slope w1th •ts head uphill.
sleeves, grit your teeth' and go 10
Tbe fmtcut is made by slowly
iL
and carefully sliuing the akin and
For most hunters, die only tool . belly muscle tissue beginning at
needed for field dressing is a the breastbone and cutting to the
good, sharp knife. A sharp knife
pelvis laldng care 10 avoid punc·
helps ensure a fast, neat job, but turing the intestine.
be careful - any people have
Cut deeply around the anus 10
been seriously cut by their own free the intestines from the pelvic
knives while dressing deer.
cavity: Tie the intestines in a knot
Also, be on the lookout for or tie them off with a piece of
jagged bones and broadhead cord to keep droppings from con-

By Jim Freeman
Times-Sentinel Staff

:; Venison: nutritious·, tasty
~: holiday alternative to beef·

SUNDANCE

Proper field dressing vital for good-tasting ventson

·,In the Open

Fish Ohio
awards program
participants ,to .
•
•
recezve
pzns
soon
By JOHN WISSE

Divlsioa ol WlldUie

COLUMBU~,

Ohio (AP) -

The I'm Fish Ohio pins ~ting

a largemouth bass are finally on
their way to participants in the F"tsh
Ohio anglers awards program, the
Division of Wildlife said.
Bach year, more than 20,000
· anglers receive certificates of merit
in recognition of their outstanding
catches. FISh Ohio award recipients
receive: a lapel pin (or their frrst
qualifymg ~tch ~y ,'but conumie
10 be awazded certificates for sue·
cessive qualifying catc)les.
Anglers who catch at least four
different qualifying species during
the year additionally receive Mas·
ter Angler certificates and pins in
late winter. About 240 Fish Ohio
participant's receive the Master
Angler awards each year.
Otily carches made during 1993
are eligibt.e for recognition, exclud·
ing fisli caught in pay lakes. Partie·
ipants have until Jan. 31 to submit
their applications.
.
Following the decision tMr win·
ter 10 reinstate the Fish Ohio pins,
the Division of Wildlife had 10 pre·
pare, advertise and let bids, then
await the manufacture and delivery
of the Fish Ohio pins. This created
some delay, but the wildlife agency
said its program will be back on
scbcduJe shortly since the ~ are
being mailed 10 eligible rec1pients.
Th~· program remains poJ&gt;ular
with anglers, especially those who
cau:h Lake Erie walleyes. About
half of all Fish Ohio certificates of
merit are given in recognition of
walleyes taken by Lake Brie
anglers.
Fish Ohio pins also are viewed
as collector 11ems. The division
began issuing the pins in 1980 and
created its Master Angler award in
19R2.

BUY.A

After

f.

1994 NISSAN ALTIMA

71

Crossword Puzzle on Page D-2

•. bell.
~·

1994 NISSAN MAXIMA

1994 NISSAN PATHFINDER

.

\

t.

i

'237

~

i

I

.

Because fat absorb~ off-odors,
" trim fat from game. Venison fat
t. solidifies quickly; for that reason,
,. the meat is best when served piping
..: hoL Fat rrom bacon or suet can be
:: .used to. .replace
. venison fat and
•• 1mpari JUICIDCSS.
w: Frozen meat can be cooked
"' directly from the frozen slate. If
.~ thawed, do so in the refrigerator.
MarlnadDI
If your deer is a mature animal,
or if you fmd the flavor.stronger
than you like (even .~ith the.f~t
removed), you may WISh ·to mannate i1. Cover meat wi.th French
dressing or other mannade and
place in retrigerator for at least-24
! bOWS before cooldng.
BrolllDI
"
FO, oven broiling, choose oneinch cl)ops or steaks. Begin to
bi'Qwn, then brush ~th mel~ butter and, sprinkle wtth Jarhc salt•
..,; Tum aftca' oighl to 10 minutes and
•~ repeat on the other $ide. Most pea;: pte prefer medi\IDIIO well done.
:•
RoutiDI
plastic
cooking
bags give the
,,

j

;

.
A

tMW

[a IF .

m\

PA.YTO

ooo&lt;R
""'

--

&lt;f__.jL } ' 1~.. ~

Of

I

"':::

..- .... -··· ··
The:e'a only one thin&amp; lhal CID &amp;ive you a cozier feeling IbiD a durable,
blab-elfici•I!FY· ....,.y..,.,uervill&amp; 1hDe ~~ea pump: • TnM liNt pump .
with a cub nobata. ADd,nmtmbef, a boat plllllp,coob u ....tl u k boall. So
talk to your p1111icipllll!c'l'rllle ~ and
, get a nice, wum foeHn&amp;. In more ways tblll ODI.
It~ Htll'd To StopA lhul.t."'

.'

WARNER
HEATING aD . COOLIIIG
.
.,CXlWORJ
CHEBfER1....,7~-4223

POINT PLEASANT f75.72154

'

-

.

-

-

5!1
'

..

·,

taminating ·the meat. The pelvic
.bone should be split to allow
removal of the anus and sex
organs.
Next remove the heart and
lungs by cutting the diaphragm
close to the ribs or cutting
throu~h the breastbone. Severe
the w•ndpipe and esophagus as

far up in tli neck as possible. .
Roll the carcass onto its side
to remove the entrails. Most will
pull away with difficulty with
minimal cuuinJ.. Take care not 10
puncture or spill the paunch COil·
tentsorurineontothemeet
Trim darna#.ed and bloody tis(See DRESSING OD C-8)

PUBUC HUNTING LAND is available ID Gallia, MilSOn
and Meigs County. Shown is a portion or Shade River State
Forest In Meigs County.

�Page C8 Sunday Tlnies Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

November 21,1893

For the rest of the NFL scene,

49ers favored by eight points in rematch with archrival Saints

By DAVE GOLDBUG
AP Football Writer
It only seems like the Saints and
49ers play each otber four times a
season with an NFC West title at
stake.
That's pretty mucb what' s on
the line Monday night when the
Saints go to Candlestick for their
second - yes, second - meeting
of the year.
San Francisco is favored by
e~t points, which is ridiculous for
thts series, which usually comes
down to a Morten Andersen field
goal or late game-winning drive by
the Nincrs. It was Andersen in the

rust meeting, a 16-13 victory by
the Saints.
1llat was the fourth win on the
way to a S-0 start. Since No. 5,
New Orleans is 1-3, including a 191? loss at home last week to Green
Bay.
That brought the Niners, who
once uailed by two games, back
into a tie - they beat TamP.B Bay
45 -21 and finally looked like the
team we've come to expect -on
offense- as Steve Young and
Jerry Rice combined on four touchdown passes.
Defense is anotheJ" matter.
"It was like looking at two dif-

ferent teams on Iilm , • • coach
George S«:ifert said after reviewing
the offenstve and defensive tapes.
The Niners will probably win they've NEVER been Swept by the
Saints when Jim Mora was coaching New Orleans and are II-4
against them since New Orleans
became good. But the margin is
usually narrow.
49ERS, 21 -16
Detroit (plus 3)
at Green Bay (Milwaukee)
The Lions are coming off a bye
week, which isn't necessarily good.
The Saints were coming off a bye
last week when the Pack beat them

and bye teams are 7-14 against
non-bye teams this year. Green Bay
is banged up but the incentive is
there - a loss and the Pack is three
behind the Lions and fighting for a
wild card.
PACKERS, 20-15
DaUas (no line) at Atlanta
This game is off because the
odds guys don't know Troy Aikman's status. As long as Bernie
Kosar's there, why risk him?
COWBOYS, 31-14
Pittsborgb
(plus 2 V2) at Deaver
Mile High is not a good place to
go after an emotional win. Particu-

larly when the Broncos have blown
a 20-3 lead at home to a team they
should have beaten.
But Pittsburgh may be the second-best ream in the NFL right
now.
STEELERS, 20-16
Ciociooali (plus 13)
at New York Jets
The Bengals arc so bad they're
laughing at themselves.
JETS,34-10 .
Chicago (no line)
at Kansas City
The Chiefs are taken off the
board every week because Ma~rtv
Schottenhcimer never says

Lyne Center slate

(Continued from C-7)
when roasted and may appear done
before it ac018Uy is.
Following are some recipes provided by the Ohio State University
Cooperative Extension Agency.
For you own copy, consull the
OCES and ask for Bulletin 724:
Venison, From Field to Table. The
publication cosiS $1.
RtciJifS courtesy OC8S

Fitness Center
Today - .1-3 and 6-11 p.m.
Monday -8 a.m.-11 p.m.
Tuesday-S a.m.-11 p.m.
Wednesday- 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
Racquetball courts
Today- 8 a.ni.-11 p.m.
Monday- 8 a.m.-11 p.m.
Tuesday- 8 a.m.-11 p.m.
Wednesday- 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

WASHINGTON (AP) - New the future is very uncertain.
private farms stiU account for only
-The current state farm and
10 percent of the arable land in collective livestock operations do
major agricultural re~ons of Rus- not lend themselves easily to livesis, the Foreign -:\gncultural Ser- stock privatization. "It is difficult
vice says.
to break the Soviet system's huge
In a recent report on the world grain farms' land and machinery
livestock situation, the Agriculture into smaller parcels," the report
Department agency said agricultur- · said.
Russia, Ukraine and B~larus are
al change in the former Soviet
republics is occurring "with great graduaHy lifting food price controls
and eliminating substdies on prodifficulty and resistance.''
It is "by no means certain that ditction and consumption, &lt;the
market-driven livestock sectors in report said.
·•
these countries will eventually
Enumerating other ingraiiied
resemble livestock industries found problems in moving the livesiOOk
in the United States and other sectpr toward a market economy,
developed market economies, .. the the report said resistance is strong
report said.
among ministry bureaucrats and
It said the change process is farm managers who would lose
more one of reinventing the old . from change and that resistan~ is
large suuctures of state farms and definitely slowing reforms.
· ··
collecti'fe S than the growth of
In addition, Russia, Ulcraine and
smaller individual operations.
Belarus lack expertise on business
However, the report added, "if practices needed in a market econthey can overcome the gross ineffi· omy, with many state farm manciencies of the Soviet era, their ager&amp;,,~cleat · on what' ~Y ilt.ould
potential for livest.ock·J)!Oduction is do 10 s.ucceed in new clj'tumvast, perhaps even changing the stances.
region from a net importer to a net
•'The concept of resuucturing
their resources to improve profexporter of livestock products."
New private livestock opera- itability seemed foreign to most,"
lions independent of old sbltctures the report said. •'Instead, they
have been slow to develop even seemed most concerned with mainthough individuals have long held taining production levels regardless
one or two animals privately, it ofthecost."
said.
.
The report also pointed out that
It gave three reasons for the obligations to workers are proving
delay:
difficult to abandon. For instance,
- Although state farms and col- managers cannot lay off workers
lectives are privatizing by changing and can fire workers only with
their legal suucture, creation of great difficulty.
new smaller farms typical of West"Nonetheless," the report said,
em-style farms has proceeded very ''no one seriously speaks or returnslowly.
ing to the Soviet system, and most
-Those farmers who break realize that dramatic change will
with the state farms to set up their have to occur if these countries are
own operations are reluctant to take to garner the benefits they now
up livestock production. Startup realize exist in Western market
costs with livestock are heavy. and economies."

Notes: All Lyne Center facilities will be closed on Wednesday
from 5 p.m. until Sunday, !'~v. 28
in observance of Thanbgmng. A
new schedule will be available on
Monday, Nov, 29 when classes
resume.
A Lyne Center membership is
required to usc the facilities. Faculty sraff, students and administra- .
to~s are admitted with their ID
cards.
Racquetball court resecyations
can now be made one day in
advance by calling Rich Fabri at ·
245-7495 locally .or toll-free at l800-282c720l,
,
.extension 7495.

·PBL results

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2 Or. SpQrt Coupe1 P/8, 5 Sp. Manual Transmission.
Custom Clotll Bua&lt;et Seats, Steel Belted Tires.

--Business briefs

Sports deadlines

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) The nation's economy will limp
along at least through mid-1995,
University of Michigan economists
predicted.
At the annual Conference on the
Economic Outlook on Thursday,
the economists predicted growth in
. the gross domestic product at an
annual rate of about 2.75 percent
through the cot! of the year and a
drop to just under 2.5 percent for
the first hal(of 1994.

.

Auto, Air, PIS, P/B, Rear·Window Defrost~. AMIFM Cassette, ..
Tilt. Cruise, P/Winoows, P/Door Lock$, P/Oriver Seat
Aluminum Wheels, Presllge Option Pa~; ~Oidedl ,

1
• .- 1_
1

..........
-···
:r:!1 ·

Driver Side Nr ~. Rear ~ Spp~~ AnU·Jock
brake$. Steel Bellld Rldlll Tires, ,.,..M StellO,
Door Loc~. w.~

Nollo:r...- ·

--

COLUMBUS - To ensure that
all injured workers receive workers' compensation benefit checks
before Thanksgiving and Christmas the second biweekly mailing
of ~nefit payments in November
and December will take place earlicr than usual.
. ''The,Phio Bureal! ~f Workers'
Compensation wants tnjured workers to receive their paym~nts in
time for the holidays," satd Wes
Trimble CEO/Administrator of the
Ohio B~u of Workers' Compen-

Loaded, With Leather

1

.

wOods, it altould be hung bead
dowri and lltODDed open to allow
.coolin~&gt;· Skinning the hide will
aid it) coollilg.

'

(

I

By ·coNNIE WlllTE

..

rnt IJii•• #lllrJ. •~ hill•, 11111; "' 111

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IIIRY 1:111 1:1
• Ti!X8$, Tags. Tnle Fees eldra. Roo.e inCIOO!ld in sale price ot new
listed where awtica&gt;Je 'on approved credit'. Nol responsible tor Iypogr3flhlcal arrllr$.
~ide

.•

- -·- - ----·- ----------- - --

By LISA COLLINS,
Gallia ASCS,
County Executive Director
GALLIPOLIS - The slates of
nominees for the upcoming ASC
Committee election has been developed. The candidates for each ASC
community holding elections in
Gallia County for 1993 are as follows:
·
Harrison Township: Ronald
Slone, Kathryn Massie, Margaret
Adkins, Kim Deckard, and Dale
Larilphier.
Guyan Township: Cody Boothe,
Scott Bailey, Ross C. Fulks, Garret
E. Campbell, and Deborah S.
Belville.
Ohio Township: Everett Lee
Johnson, David A. Mills, Brenda
K. Saqder~R~obert C,P!ldee a~d
ThOmas B. Jolles. ·~ -~
•·
Greenfield-Walnut: Paul G.
Pope, Lois Cade, Richard Innis,
Paul C. Goddard, and Nolan
Thornton.
The candidates were nominated
by farmers and the local ASC
county committee.
The ASC commiriee election
will be conducted by mail from
November 26 until December 6.
Voters may .also get ballots at the
county ASCS office.
Eligible ASC voters will receive a
ballot in the mail with insuuctions
on how to vote for candidates of
their choice and return the ballot to
the county ASCS office.
Participation in ASC elections is
open to all farmers regardless of
race. religion, sex, color, age, handicap, or national ori$in.
For additional mformation on
the upcoming elections contact the
GaHia County ASCS Office at 4468686.

NEW YORK (AP) -The New
York Times Co. and phone company Nynex Corp. said they will test
a service next spring that would Greenlee attends session
GALLIPOLIS - Phil Greenlee
enable subscribers to get infonnaor
River City Farm Supply, Inc.,
tion via fax machine on demand.
GaUipolis,
recently attended a feedIt is the· first such alliance for
ing
and
management
school at the
the owner of The New York Times,
headquarters
of
Kent
Feeds,
Inc., in
and Thursday's announcement puts
Muscatine,
Iowa.
it in the company of a number of
The school was for employees
other newspaper owners who are
of
businesses that sell Kent feeds
exploring ways of distributing
and
Animal Care products and was
infonnation electronically.
designefl..!_o help them better serve
their livestock producer customers.
Nearly 200 people attended sessions, taught by members of the
Kent nutrition, training, advertis·
ing, marketing, animal care, and
sation (BWC).
production
•
Benefit checks are norma II y deparunents.
issued biweekly on Thursdays. To
ensure that injured workers receive
their benefit checks before the holidays, Thanksgiving-week checks
will be ma1led Tuesday, Nov. 23
By EDWARD VOLLBORN
instead of Thursday, Nov. 25.
GALLIPOLIS - The U.S.D.A.
. Christmas-week checks will be November crop report estimate the
tssued Tuesday, Dec. 21 mstead of average corn yield at only 103.1
Thursday •.Dec. 2~.
.
.. ·
bushels per acre, which is 28.3
A Similar change m ma1ltng bushels below last year's record
dates takes place each year to yield The unusual lower yields are
accommOdate the holidays.
being blamed on the lack of sufficient nitrogen, poor root developJ .,1
ment and insufficient growing
~U
degree days and sunshine to develop the com plant. The result was
small ears that were not fiUed and
light test weigh!.
Ending stock$ (what's left over
This planninl! session assists the just heforel the 1994 harvest) are
district in putting together their expected to be the tightest supply
aruma! work plan and review of the situation experienced since 1975.
long range plan to see if goals are
Any problems with the 1994
being met.
.
production would result in sharply
We would like to . invite h'gh · ·
er pnces..
landowners agricultural organiza- . 1 The
1993 national average soytion representatives, township bean yield is estimated at 32.7
uustees, village, city and ,county bushels per acre. This level of proofficials, and anyone interestecl in duction would put the stocks-to-use
conservation in GaUia County.
ration under 9 percent, the lowest
If you_ plan to at~nd or if _you . level since September 1977.
would ltke more tnformauon. .
AceordinJ! to Dr. J. William
please c.ontact the Oallia SWCD Uhrig, Extenston Economist. Puroffice at,446·8687
due University; wi_thout l'lllli~ pro-

Farm Flashes

GaUiaSWCD
GALLIPOLIS - On Thursday,
December 16, at 8 a m., the Galba
Soil and Water Conservation District will hold its annual planning
meeting at the C.H. McKenzie
Agricultural Center.
The session will' _begin with a
light breakfast . Pur:pose or the
event is to discuss priorities of the
disuict and review suggestions
from the public as to natural
resources concerns that need ~tren­
tion.
'

········· --

"'

-~~-

.... .. .

-'

'

~~

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
land that produces much of America's traditional holiday food is in
danger of being gobbled up,
accml.ing to a private group devoted to preserving farmland
" At this time of year, we should
all consicler the threat facing the
farmland that produces the bounty
for our Thanksgiving dinner
tables," said Ralph E. Grossi, president of the American Farmland
TrusL
"All too often, our best and
most productive farmland, much of
it on the urban edge, is being lost to
sprawl that is wasteful, expensive
and unnecessary," he said in a
news release this week.
Of the 27 top producing counties of such Thanksgiving staples
as turkeys, cranberries, sweet potatoes, squash, green peas and carrots, snap beans, pecans and pumpkins, 20 lie in urban-edge counties
under pressure from rapid population growth and urban sprawl,
Grossi said.
"This Thanksgiving, let' s be
grateful for the most abundant food
supply history has ever known,'' he
sa1d. "But let's also resolve to protect the farmland that makes it possible so future generations can be
just as blessed as we are today.''
American Farmland Trust is a

private membership organization
working to stop the loss of productive·farmland and to promote farm.
ing practices that will lead to a
healthy enviro!uneot.
·
The organization named the following Thanksgiving staples and
the top three counties producing
each:
:-Turkeys: DupHn, N.C.;
Umon, N.C.; and RockinRham, Va.
..,..sweet potatoes: Johnston ,
N.C.; Nash, N.C.; and Merced,
Calif.
-Squash: Dade, Fla: Lee, Aa;
and Gloucester, NJ.
-Carrots: Imperial, Calif.:
Kern, Calif.; and Orange, Fla
-Cranberries: Plymouth,
Mass.; Burlington, NJ.; and Wood,
Wis.
--fireen peas: Umatilla, Ore.;
Skagn, Wash.; and Fond Du Lac,
Wis.
-Snap_ beans: ~ade, Fla.;
Portage, WJS.; and Marion, Ore.
-Pecans: Dona Ana, N.M.;
Dougherty, Ga.; and MitcheU, Ga
-Pumpkins: TazeweU,IU.; Sutter, Calif.; and San Joaquin, Calif.
All the counties were said to be
high in development vulnerability
except for Duplin, N.C.; Wood,
Wis.; Umatilla. Ore.: Fond Du Lac,
Wis.; Dougherty, Ga .; Mitchell,
Ga.; and Tazewell, Ill.

Leglslalioa ltttroduced
WASHINGTON (AP) -Legislation to amend wetlands provisions of the aean Water Act was
inlroduced recently by Rep. Oerry
Studds, D-M•u., chairman of the
House Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee.
The bill incorporates a number
of provisions from the Clinton
administration's wedands proposal
released in August, said Washington Gouncilor, publis.h ed by the
National Council of Farmer Cooperatives.
Provisions of agricultural interest include:
-The required use of the 1987
· Army Corps of Engineers wetlands
delineation manual, pending completion of a sbtdy by the National
Academy of Sciences.
-The Soil Conservation Service's authority to decide on agricultural land$.
-A $10 miUion fund 10 assist
small landowners who cannot
afford development plans to mitigate wetland$ losses.
-An appeals process for penal·
ties, delineations and permits.
-Exemption from regulation of
former wetlands that were converted to agricultural uses before passage of the 1985 farm bill, unless
abandoned.

China becoming bigger corn exporter
WASIDNGTON (AP) - China
is expected to expon an estimated
12 million metric tons of com for
1993-94, accounting for about 22
percent of world com exports, the
Foreign Agricultural Service says.
The 12 million meuic tons
would be 2 million more than the
previous forecast and would be the
fourth marketing year in a row that
China has set a new record for com
exports, the Agriculture Department agency said in a report this
month on the world grain Situation.
"In total, corn exports by the
United States, China and ...
Argentina, Thailand and Soulh
Africa h,ave been _;c;lati)!e}y_flat
over' rliC past deCade, .. the tepofl
said.
Exportable supplies from
Argentina, Thailand and South
Africa have fallen due to increasing
domestic consumption, switching
of land to other crops and weatherrelated crop problems, it said
"China has taken advantage of
this decrease and has been the
world's second-largest corn
exporter," it said. "In addition,
transportation advantages have

a

helped China to capture growing
Chiriese com probably will conportion of the Pacific Rim's com tinue to be comP.etitive in Asian
market, previously met by the Unit- feed markets until Chinese dlllnesed States."
·
tic feed grain de111and outpaces
Throughout the 1970s, China production, as has occurred recentwas a net importer or corn, the ly in Thailan~. the report said.
..
- report said. This changed in 198485, when exports jumped from 0.3 Expect bumper crops
million metric tons in 1983-84 to
WASHINGTON (AP) 5. 7 miUion metric tons.
Bumper crops are expected in
"Expansion in production has 1993-94 for pecans, hazelnuts and
outpaced domestic use, allowing walnuts, the Agriculture Departfor this exportable surplus," the ment says, but almond production
report said. "With the current is expected to be Smallel'.
export estimate of 12.0 million
"Good quality and smaller sapmerric tons for ... 1993-94, China ply for almonds is expected to
wiD account for about 22 percent of result in higher grower prices,"
world com exports and achieve a said a report in this JDODth's issue
fourth consecutive record export of AgriCUltural Outloot, publlslicd
program."
by USDA's Economic Research
The United States has lost com Service.
export markets in the Pacific Rim
However, abundant walnut supto the Chinese expansion, the plies and larger pecan crop
report noted.
prospects are likely to keep down
"Currently, four Asian import grower prices for those nuts, it said.
markets (Japan, Taiwan, South
"Most nut trees tend to bear
Korea and Malaysia) account for large and. small crops in 'alternate
over 50 percent of estimated world years, and part or the production
corn imports," it said. " Until changes in 1993-94 reflect this
recently, the United States met a cycle," the repon said.
majority of this demand."

••

MYSTERY FARM- This week's mystery
rarm reatured by the Meigs Soil and Water
Coos~rvatioo District, is located somewhere in
Meigs County. Individuals wishing to part!cipate in the weekly contest may do so by guessmg
the farm's owner. Just mail, or drop orr your
guess to the J)aily Sentinel, 111 _Co~rt S_t.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Galhpohs Dally
Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may win a $5 prize from the

Ohio Valley.Publisbiog Co. Leave your name
address and telephone number with your cani
or letter. No telephone calls will be accepted. AU
coolest entries should be turned in to the newspaper ofTICe by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case
or a tie, the winoe_r will .be chosen by lottery.
Next week, a Galha County farm will be featured by the Gallia Soil and Water Conservation
District.

Corn yield 28.3 bushels below last year's mark

· a a.llt'a·· s&amp;' UTCD
to ho
ff
Plannl'ng sesst'on Dec·. 16

(Continued from C·7)
sue from atound blillet :wUnds.
Place the belrt llld liver in a ptas. ticbqfor~
'
.After field drasJDg,
I. tite carCUI must be coo~ If It ean 't
, removod from the woocia illlmodlalely,·it mUll be cooled there by
DI'OIIIIin1 the belly open with a
itlck" aNI p!aciog it In a shaded

.

Committee
announced

Workers' compensation checks
are mailed early for holidays

Field dressing ... .

OncC the animal is out of the

award to be used for employee incentive pro·
grams, and for the September win a trip for six
in February to the Caribbean. Don Vaughan,
store manager, fourth from left, accepts a
plaque from Dave Sherer, retail counselor for
Cardinal Foods. Others pictured are Michl
King, _assistant manager:, Beth Schneider delibakery manager, (Sherer and Vaughan) Dave
Steebler, store engineering manager, and John
Hoffman, assistant manager,

Privatization offormer
Nominees
Soviet farms going slowly for ASCS

~ '.

D

Urban sprawl threatenin-g
farms' holiday bounty

Venison

CARDINAL CIRCUS OF V1\LUE WINNER -· Vaughan's Cardinal of Middleport was a
winner in the Circus or Values contest spon·
sored annually by Cardinal Foods. The Middleport store took second place in the August program and first place in the Western Beet
Roundup· ia · September. Criteria tor judging
was on.lbe basis of presentation,. decor, sales,
and· community and employee involvement. For
the August win, the store received a monetary

(Results.'Ill or Nov. AO) ..
• League - Early Wednesday
Mixed
·. ·
·
· Team stimdings ~~ points,
season polttts) - Hackett s Roofing (54-42, 21321), No. 6 (54-42,
20494), F.O.E. 2171 (53-43,
20250), No. 2 (43-53, 20321),
Tony's Carryout (42-54, 20844) ..
and Pinsplitters (42-54, 20551).
Team high series - No. 2
(1925)
Team high game - No . 2
(673)
Women
Individual high series
Shirley Simmons (485) and Drema
Ussery (469)
Individual high game Ussery (188) and Simmons (187)
Men
Individual high series - Bub
Stivers (543) and Scott McKinney
(502)
Individual high game Stivers (201) and McKinney (187)

Section

November 21,1913

Pool
Today- 1-3 and 6-9 p.m.
Monday- closed
Tuesday- 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday -closed

area.

1tim.es - ~entinel

that Joe Montana won'tplay.
He probably won't, but so what?
The Bears can't score.
CHIEFS, 16-3

RIO GRANDE - Here is the
schedule for the resr of the week of
Nov. 21-28 at the University of Rio
Grande's Lyne Center.
Gymnasium
Today- 1·3andt;.11 p.m.
Monday- 8 a.m.-6 p.m.
Toe"'ay- 8 a.m.-11 p.m.
Wednesday- 8 am.-5 p.m.

The Gallipolis Da)ly Tribune.
The Daily Sentlnel, the Point
Pleasant Regl~ter, and .the Sut!fiay
Tlmts-Sent~l yillue the contnbutions their, readers make to the
seetions of these ptpm, and
will continue 10 be published.
c&gt;Wever, ~deadlines for
!imluions will be observed.
fll'be deadline for photos and
reiated articles for football and
piher fall sports is the Saturday .
before,the SUJjer Bowl.
·The deadline for photos and
related articles for basketball (summer basketball and related camps
· faU under the s_pring and summer
sports deadline) and other winter
sports is the last day of the NBA
finals. The deadline for submissions of local baseball- and sof~­
ball-related photos and related llrtlcles from T-ball to the maj0111, as
weti as other spring and summer
sports, is tlte day of the last game
of the World Senes.
These deadlines are in place to
allow contributors the time they
need to get their.photos back from
the photography studio/developer
of choice and to give the stalfJ the
chance to publish these items in the
appropriate season for .those sportS.

~ Farm/Business

\

duction problems tot the 1'1'14 soy- ume just a little higher than last
bean crop, the best prices are year.
expected to occur by March. Dr.
The season average price was
Uhrig has also takes a very aggres- $167.62 per hundred, down $2.49
sive position by saying that com from last year. Some 37.3 percent
and soybean prices during the next of net sales went to the Aue.Cured
couple of months are expected to. Stabilization Corporation (Pool).
present the best opportunity to The Eastern North Carolina, Type
price current crops and future pro- 12, Flue Cured market ended
duction untillhe next major crop November 10 with volume just
probleni. He believes that now is under last year. Gross sales averthe time to plan on how to market aged $170.37 per hundred, down
threC year's crops, last year's, this $2 .96 from 1992. The pool
year's and next years. That is good received 15 percent of net sales.
news for the cash crop producer but The Old and Middle Belts, Type
will drive costs higher for the live- II, Flue Cured Markets .are ending
stock farmer needing to purchase this week. The season to date averfeed.
age price was $169.20 per hundred
The 1993-94 Burley Tobacco or about $6.50 under lasr year.
marketin~ season wiU begin this
To date some 21 .I percent of
week. It JS still ·a guess on price for that crop has aone to the Stabitiza· Corporauon
" (PooI) compared
this season, but high quaii ty Burle y t1on
tobacco is expected to be strong to only 6.8last year. A reminder of
with the pool getting I! lot o~ crop. the programs available through the
One of the "gauges" for pnce tn local ASCS office as a result of last
what has happened in !he "Flue- summers drou-ght. If you had to
cured" markets. The South Caroli- haul livestock water or move cattle
na - Border North Carolina, Type~ause of depleted water supply
13, Flue Cured tobacco markets last summer, it is a good chance
closed last week with a season vol
you might qualify for the 64 per1'.1

cent cost share to improve a water
source. Farm ers in areas where
crop for live stock feed were
severely reduced last summer could
also qualify for emergency feed
assistance . Sign up time is very
hm•ted, so call the ASCS office
immediately if you are interested.
A reminder of the presentation
of the Gallia County Strategic
Plan on November 23, 7 p.m. at the
Wood Hall Auditorium on the campus of the University of Rio
Grande. Your involvement in this
program is important. To confrrm
attendance, please call Jerry Gust,
University of Rio Grande, 245-

.
.
.

5353.

.

:
:
·

A special welcome to several ·
families from the Kidron area of
:
Wayne County, Ohio who are moving to the Patriot/Gage area in Gal- ·
lia County. When traveling on
State Route 141, 775, or 325 or
county roads in that area, please be
extra alert for the slower moving
horse drawn bunics and NBgons.
Edward VoTlboro is Gallla
County's extension acent, agriculture.
ly

�.,

P11ge 02-sunday limes-sentinel

21 1993
p
-Middl~e~~~rt~~~~~~~~··~H~P~o~ln~t~P~I•~u~n;t,:wv~~~~~~~~s~~~n~~~ll~m=•:;~~=n~U~~=~P:•~D•~
-Galli
0
~~
.. November
~~==~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~o~m~~~~~Y~~·
. ~D~3

November 21; 19&amp;3

. Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

California prisons
turn on the electricity

RECEIVES TREATMENT- Pike Fary (lefl),
2, sits in an interview with parents Danny and
Sarah Fary at the Ho6day Inn In Pittsburgh, Pa.,
Thursday. Pike recently received a leukemia

treatment which utilizes the ceUs from tbe umbilical cord or bis brother Tyler (seated with Sarah
Fary). (AP)

'Fighting words' may
be key to legal challenge
CINCINNATI (AP) - A legal:
argument known as "fighting
words" may be the key to whether
a Ku Klux Klan group is allowed to
erect a I 0-foot wooden cross on a
downtown plaza this Christmas
season.
Legal experts said the city faces
an uphill court battle if it tries to
ban the Klan cross by using an
ordinance thai would prohibit displays with symbols perceived as
"fighting words."
"It's awfully hard to argue that
a cross constitutes fighting words,
even if it's the Klan," said Burt
Neuborne, a First Amendment
scholar at New York University
law school.
"It sounds to me like this is a
friendly, disguised effort to say,
'Because the Klan is so offensive,
we don't want the Klan on our
square.'''

Martin Redish, professor of con- similar Klan cross for which sponstitutional law at Northwestern sors had obtained a pennit. Council
University law school in Chicago, members spent months considering
said he did not believe the argu- ways to avoid a repeat of that conment wollld help the city.
frontation.
The new ordinance allows city
· 'To say it includes views or
officials
to deny a permit for any
symbols would defeat the purpose
display
on
the downtown Fountain
of the whole First Amendment,"
Square
that
would communicate
he said.
any
obscenity,
defamation or
A City Council member whose
committee drafted the ordinance "fightin~ words." The ordinance
enacted last month said Friday he states thiS includes any symbol,
thought it could be used to prevent object, graffiti or oral statement
that injures a P.erson or group of
a Klan display on public property.
"I think you can get legal people, or is hkely to cause vioexperts who will render opinions lence by a listener or observer.
The American Civil Libenies
one way or the other on an issue."
Union has said it would sue the city
Councilman Todd Ponune said.
A Hamilton-based group, the if officials try to block display of
Knight Riders, has applied for a the Klan's cross. The ordinance
10-day permit to display the cross may violate the First Amendment,
ACLU lawyer Scott Greenwood
beginning Dec. 19.
Last December, vandals repeat- said.
edly damaged or knocked over a

Rain forest helps ·Cleveland Zoo
top 1.5 million in attendance
CLEVELAND (AP) - Cleveland Metroparks Zoo had a special
reason to celebrate the one-year
anniversary of its rain forest more than 1.5 million people have
visited the zoo since the exhibit
opened.
That's the highest auendance
ever recorded at the zoo, according
to director Steve Taylor.
"It's really been 8.henomenal.
We had only abut 93 ,000 visitors
in 1992, and we still have a month
to go in this year."
Taylor said there was no question the rain forest contributed to
the increase.
"Although we sell tickets to the
zoo only, tlie combination tickets
foqhe zoo and the rain forest make
up a1least 80 percent of our total
ticket sales," he said.
Tl)e zoo opened The RainForest
exhibit on November 19, 1992, and
has been constantly adding to the
attraCtion. The exhibit is now horne
to more than 600 animals of 118
species and to more than 10,000
plants of 360 varieties. •

Bornean orangutans, small- received more publicity in recent
clawed otters, ocelots, scarlet years and that has increased intermacaws and Madagascar hissing est in the zoo's exhibit,
Taylor said more zoos realize
cockroaches are among the
denizens of the forest which is they have an opportunity and a
housed in an 87 ,000-square-foot responsibility to provide information on environmental issues. He
building on about two acres.
Visitors to The RainForest are said other rain forests can be found
greeted upon entry with a 25-foot in zoos in Omaha, Neb.; Seaule,
curtain of water and then treated to Wash.; New York !l"d Washington,
·
a rainstorm with thunder and light- D.C.
TIK; benefits to tourism from the
ning effects, a 30-fOOI butterfly tree
with a spiral sraircase inside and a rain forest in Clev.eland and the
"jungle lab" classroom for stu- state are also significant, Taylor
said.
dents.
"Before The RainForest
''The RainForest is constantly
eva! ving, and next year we hope to opened, less than 5 percent of the
add more educational displays to visitors were frOm other states, but
make it an even better atuacuon," this year more than 15 percent of
Taylor said.
our visitors have been from states
School groups are in constant other than Ohio,'' he said.
attendance at the exhibi~ which is
Taylor said 'the zoo is also drawdedicated to presenting the animal ing more visitors from outside the
and plant life of the tropical rain seven-county area of northeast
forests, and to interpreting all Ohio.
aspects of the rapidly disappearing
"People seem hungry to find
ecosystems, he said.
out more about rain forests and the
Environmentalists' concerns environment,'' be said.
over the future of rain forests have

The $1.S million fence stands 13
BySALLYSTREFFBUZBEE
feet
high, erected in a no-man ' s
Associated Press Writer
land
between two 12-foot fences
CALIPATRIA, Calif. (AP)topped
with razor wire so nobody
The signs show a man hit by a holt
touches
it accidenlally.
of electricity, falling backward.
A
special
wire at the bottom
"Danger. Peligro," they warn .
prevents
rats
and
other small ani"High Voltage, Keep Out. Alto
mals
from
climbing
up and dying.
Voltaje, No Entre."
The
ring
or
fences
is separated
A new electrified fence at Califrom
the
low,
tan
prison
buildings
patria State Prison means instant
·
and
~,900
inmates
by
a wide,
death for any Inmate trying to
empty
strip
of
dirt.
·
escape.
ft4 many as 20 other California
A prisoner advocate said she
maximumand medium-security
was honified by what amounts to
prisons
will
get
electrified fences in
an automatic death sentence. State
the
next
few
years
as the state
officials contend it's no different
from the old shoot-to-stop policy S!fDggl~ to build more prisons on a
bghtbuilgeL
for tower guards.
Massachussetts, Indiana and
";Ibe renee doesn't gel distracted, tl doesn't look away for a Tennessee have used less sophistimoment and it doesn't get tired,'' cated electrified fences for years.
Walpole State Prison in Massaid Warden K.W. Prunty.
" We already had a lethal sachusetts installed one at the top
perimeter," he said. "This is sim- of its outer wall in the 1950s. ·
In the early 1960s, a Walpole
ply a way to keep that same level
inmate was killed when be touched
of security while savin8· money.''
· Calipatria, a maximum-security it during an escape attempt A felprison, opened nearly two years low inmate managed to jump over
ago. It's set in the desert scrub near the electric wire, said Tom Rapone,
the Salton Sea, 35 miles north of Massachusetts Secretary of Public
the Mexican border. The Chocolate Safety.
A prisoner hasn't been shot to
Mountains looin over prison
death during an escape attempt in
grounds.
Guards threw the switch on the California since 1981. Most
fence Nov. 8. It carries 4,000 volts escapes are walkaways from miniand 650 milliamperes. About 70 mum-security prison camps, something that has happened 48 times
milliamperes is enough to ldll.

,r

removal of more than half of the
accumulated waste by Sunday
night.
•
"For the first time since the
coup, all sectors of the community,
in spite of their cleavages, are
working together for the common
good,'' said Reginald Boulos,
director of the U.S. AID-funded
Center for Development and Health
and coordinator of the cleanup
effort.
.
More than 1 million people live
in Port-au-Prince, which has no
sewage system . They generate
between I ,200 and 1,500 tons of
garbage a day.
The cleanup effort involves the
government, which is supplying

~-

'

'

this 'year. Only nve inmates have
escaped from higher-~urity prisons this year.
The California Department of
Corrections estimates electrified
fences could eventually save the
state $34 million a year by reducing the number of tower guards .
The legislature approved the fences
in 1992.
·
After a 30-day test of the fence,
CaUpatria will stop using 10 of its
12 guard towers and reassign 48
other guards for a savings of $2
million a year. No layoffs will
result because there is already a
guard shortage.
The guards' union warned that
no system is foolproof and is pushing for roving patrols to make sure
no one gets to the fence to disable
it.
"Yes, a guard can get sleepy .
But an electrical systeni can fail
too," said Jeff Thompson, chief
lobbyist for the California Correctional Peace Officers Association.
Tbe Prison Law Center, which
has sued the state over alleged brutality at Pelican Bay State Prison,
says it is investigating whether the
fence can be challenged as cruel
and unusual punishment
"It's really a horrifying thing,"
said staff attorney Alison Hardy.
"It's like the Dark Ages or something."

:¢'

*

'

ambiguous iest results and shi~
more than 100 lots or potenually
contaminated blood 10 hospitals.
The report gave no indication
an}'OnCC-__llad been infected, but ·
faulted the Red Cross for.allowiDg
the blood to remain in circulation
after ~ intemal report on the sloppytesnng.
The Red Cm.ss is one of many

"

•
1 Filling
7 Doclrlne
10 Crafty
13 Part of PTA
19 Raloe
20 The uon
21 Pedal digit
22Newapapw
executlvee
24 Protuberances
25 Paid notice
27Near
28 Rl- In Siberia
29 AbcluttD
30 PI- In position
31 PrOducer Tors
32 Mental Image
34 Cooking maas.
38 Dlx or Ord
38 Flm
39 Army off.
40- gorda
41 Incorrect
44 Sun gOd
460147 Rooney tO
48 Emmet
49 -lntheaky
50 Metric measure
51 Wine cup
53 Danson 10
54 Equally
55 Stalk
57 Pigeon pea
59"- Freedom"
80 Large birds

81 Stallone tO
82 Steeples
84 Takao a vote
86 Falla Into disuse
86 Type of croas
70L-s
72 Airline Info
73 Musical
Instrument
74 Also
77 Overhead ralta
78 Regards highly
60 Wire nails
82 Knock
83 Plunges
85 Ankle bone
86 Small horses
87 Severa
88 Moray
90 Permit
91 a - -: abbr.
92 Fabulous bird

L-

DOWN

1 Shore blrcfl
2 Ptrt ol
lortlftc8tlon

3Stovepert
4 Dlnetltep
5 Latin conjunction
6 Peruee
7 ~live prellx
80cMn

104Unua~al

105 Enemy
107 Rocky hill
108C"109 Short oteep
110 Rubber tree
111 Sorrow
112 Civil Injury
114 Famed
118 Temporary .
ahelter
117 Knock
118 Fumll
120 Mud
122 Nolae
123 GOd of love
124 H-lelter
125 Roman gOda
127 K-N linkup
129 Blrda' homea
131 DrMa protector
133 River In ttlly
134 Altalre tO
138 Runnlna '·
137 Daniel - -Lewll
139 'Chl- ~odtl
t40 R'- leland
141 Fondle
142 Spanlllllrllele
143 Act....a Carrere
145 Crlmeon
147 No good
151 Ordlllanl*
152 Meanllml: abbr.
153 The -'lOP
155 Scottlah cap
157 Narrow openings
158 Cut
159 Detergent niiM

9 Slogan

10 Mine excavauon
11 Tennla atroke
12 Old pronoun
13 Bote: or anjou
14 Paid notice
1516 Kind 01 COllar
17 SmeiHng organs
18 Tll..-legged
llandl

19 l'lll:M
23 Spirited hors.
28 Profound
29
32 eono.n
33Dry
35 Tin aymbol
38 "Alii 01 -"
37 Walko on
40 All
42 H.,._t
43 Plddlea
45 Entertains
48VIper
52 Peer Gynt'a

"ttltude

mothlf

58 Per181nlng to
the mind
58 Clayey earth
50Embr80 Plltladelphla 62HunglooM
13 CubiC meters
85 Army off.
88 Wolllah
87 Building
88 TV'I Koppel
18 Former boxer
71 Lutllxllna
Olaeonnet
73 Expel
75 Grain
78 H.,._, goddaos
79 Greek letter
81 AaflrU
54 - a PI Kederlt
87 Temporary bed
89 Rail8

180-, H. -,J, K

181 Helium aymbol
113 Divided Allan
country
185 Helped
167 AllernaUve word
188 Teutonic dilly
169 Artllt'llland
171 Grown pereon
172 Loop
173 Aah trapa
175 Clayey earth
178 Pee Wee or Della
177 Indian currency
178 N.J. cagert

By GEORGE ESPER
By AP Special Correspondent
HANOI, Viemam (AP) - M)lfl
Allinder never prayed to God to
save his life nor to·kill the enemy
when he was flying missions over
Vietnam more than 20 years ago.
''I was praying for peace,'' he said.
Jill Hubbs was only 10 when her
father was shot down over North
Vietnam more than 25 years ago.
"I'm here because my dad is still
missing from the Vietnam War,''
she said .
Allinder and Hubbs journeyed
half way around the world to Vietnam with The Friendship Force,
seeking to mend the wounds of
war.
They are among 14 Florida and
Geor~ia residents who arrived in
HanOI Saturday. The Atlanta-based
Friendship Force promotes friendship among nations through
exchanges of citizens.
This is its first delegation to
Vietnam. During their week long
stay, the Americans will tour Hanoi
and the countryside and sponsor a
Thanksgiving Day celebration
Thursday for their Vietnamese
hosts. The Friendship Force said a
similar Vietnamese delegation will

"

"

"

..•

Senlgal

'

148 Gledden
148 Roman 51
150 Babylonian hero

151 Mine w1n1
152 Roman two
154 HomeOI N.Y.
Meta

11511 Fuhlon
11511 Tllbleland
159 WOody pllnt
182 Shede trM
184 Regret
188 Manlngly or

•.

--M

l)ryldlle

..

187P-·
170 ,__..
174 "Tag" player

""

'

'

garbage trucks, and the army,
which is providing security and
controlling traffic. The ftre depanment will spray disinfectant in the
market zones.
. Private construction companies
are providing trucks and drivers. A
private foundation and businesses
have contributed $25,000. Hundreds of volunteer workers have
joined in the effort.
Residents recall the last time
their city was clean - during the
weeks surrounding Aristide' s Feb.
7, 1991, inauguration, when hundreds of volunteers swept,
scrubbed and painted the capital to
welcome their elected leader.

''

..
,,

...
..

""-

·n

"~

,.
•\ .

'
''"
·H

blood suppUers in Germany, wbere
donations and preparation of blood
products frequentfy are handled by
private rmns.
Hepatitis B antibodies in blood
are .a potential signpost of HIV
infection because the two viruses
frequently have affected the same
popu1ation groups - homosexuals,
dnig Users alld hemophiliacs.

_, .
'
••

•',
'"

..1~

...
I'

J

.

~

visit the United States next year.
"I examined my bean every day
in flying," recalled Allinder, who
served two ltlurs in Vietnam as a
Marine Corps pilot during the
1960s. "I prayed for my wingman.
I prayed for North Vietnam every
day that I was here."
Allinder, 58, lives in Clearwater, Fla.
During the week the group is
here, Allinder is hoping 10 visit his
old bases in Da Nang and Chu Lai
in cenual Vietnam.
"I'd just like to see if there's
any remnants or anything left," he
said.
Allinder helped rescue 300
Montagnard orphans ranging in age
from 2 to 16 from the mountains
near the Laotian border in 1969.
Their parents had been killed in the
war. But he doesn't really expect to
find any of them.
He also helped build an orphanage and a school in Tam Ky in the
same region.
"I don't have some or the real
grievous wounds that many of our
veterans do,'' he said. "I'm really
coming to serve. I admire the Vietnamese spirit: And I'd like to do
something to help the children.''
Jill Hubbs, 36, is an elementary

school teacher in JacksonviUe, Fla.
She has a daughter, Sarah, who is
10, the same age sbe was when her
father, Navy Cm4f. Donald Hubbs,
was shot down over North Vietnam
on March 17, 1968.
"I'm here to see if I can find out
anything, any shred of truth," she
said.
She is planning to meet with
both American and Vietnamhe
specialists on those missing in
action. By pure luck, on the Air
Vietnam flight from Bangkok, she
met Lt. Col. John C. Cray, the officer in charge of the U.S. MIA
office in Hanoi.
"I just feel it's important that
people of the two different countries have some kind of reconciliation, not only for the veterans but
also for the Vietnamese people,"
she said. " When you come and do
things in the name of friendship, I
feel like I might be able to get
some answers.
"The war's over," she said. "I
understand there's so many people
that have bitterness and there's so
much pain . There's so many feelings that were tom apart because of
the war, Vietnamese and American
families. I feel we need to get past
that and get on with everything."

•'

mainland China.
Six years ago, the Nationalists
began transforming a virtual dictatorship into what Lee proudly calls
the world's first all -Chinese
democracy.
In local elections in 1989, the
Nationalists got just 53 percent of
the vote , and the then-fledgling
Democratic Progressive Party 38
percent.
This time !he DPP is hoping for
50 percent and looking ahead to
1995 legislative elections.
"The Kuomintang can't afford
to lose,'' said Kao Lang, political
science professor at National Taiwan University. "If they lose, people with local influence will change
sides to support the opposition, and
the Kuomintang will have great
difficulties recovering.''
After a sweeping, high-profile
effort to eradicate the cOrruJ?tlon
that bedevils Taiwanese pohtics,
the 'elections are expected to be the
fairest the island has experienced.
They have attracted a ~cord 76
candidates for the 23 county and
mayoral posts.
The Democratic Progressive
Party has capitalized on its antiestablishment, anti-corruption
image, styling itself on reform
movements in Japan and South
Korea.
The NationaHsts take credit for
turning an impoverished island into
a wealthy industrial powerhouse.
They present themselves as a born-

·.

Book Your Party Now!
Mary Kay Consultant
Kim Christopher
Inventory in Stock!
Great ideas for Christmas

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November Special
Perms/plus '2500
New Tanning Bulbs 446-9496
Joanne .Sheets/Connie Parsons

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Storewide safe ·Nov. 221hru 2710%
off every purchase
2 1/2 mi. from Gallipolis on Mill Creek Road

614-446-1407 (closed Thanksgiving)

lAYNE FURNITURE
LARGE SELECTION OF
LIVING ROOM SUITES
SOFA&amp;CHAIR
PRICED FROM
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MON. THRU SAT. 9-5 PH. 446-0322
3 MILES OUT BULAVILLE PIKE
Unique Expressions
652 Jackson Pike
446-4848
Thanksgiving Aoral Arrangemenls
'8" and up
Hand Blown Pedistal Fru~ Bowl
arranged with Fruit and Nuls
Special - Monday. Tuesday. and
Wednesday '39"
Master Charge and Visa
accepled Closed ThursdayHappy Thanksgiving
Mobile Home lor Sale
14&lt;70, 2 BR. Garden tub. separale

again force that has democratized
its pany machinery and swept the
last of the mainland refugee generation from its leadership. Lee, who
took power in 1988, is Taiwan 's
fust native-horn president.

shower, large kitchen, all
appliances, air conditioner,
underpinning , excellent condition

$10,000

614-992-2335

All Mens Nike• &amp; Reebo~
Basketball Shoes
$1 0-$60 off!
The Shoe Cafe
Lafayette Mall• Gallipolis

Country Roads
A GREAT GIFT IDEA!!
Audio Driving Tour of Gallia
County Available at Ohio
Valley Visnors Center, Bob
Evans Restaurants, Chamber,
and Historical Society.
$15 plus tax

Christmas Trees
Are Here!
$12-$20 &amp; $22

None Higher
Rayburns Mkt.
Kan?luga, Oh
Brunicardi Music Inc.
Greatest Sale in 27 years.
Sale begins
Friday Nov. 26th. 1993
CHRISTMAS SALE
Guitars, Gibson,
Ephiphone , Aluarez,
Fender &amp; more
Kimball organs, &amp;
Grand Piano
Grave Blankets
are in at

Mary Kay
CAN HELP WITH GIFT IDEAS..
Professional Beau!'{ Consultants
Carolyn McCoy 992-5062
Sandy Henderson 992-3647
Beverly Adkins 742-3200
• In ~tnrol

Spain, France
call for U.S.
action on GATT
MADRID, Spaill (AP) - The
leaders of Spain and France urged
President Clinton on Saturday to
make a gesture that wolllqpave the
way for agreement on the GATT
world trade talks.
Speaking to reporters at the
close of a two-day summit, Spanish
Prime Minister Felipe Gonzalez
and French President Francois Mitterrand said the onus was on the
United States to take the initiative
in the GATT talks.
Mitterrand reiterated that France
would oppose ~rnent on GATT
unless the Umted States took a
more flexible stance.
France and other European
countries have sought exemptions
for their farm and culture sectors in
the GATT talks.
Officials have set Dec. 15 as a
deadline for agreement on GATT
- the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade - which is aimed at
reducing barriers and boosting
world trade.

Slug Shool
Gattia County Gun Club
Buckridge Road
Sunday, November 21, 1993
10:00 a.m. til?
Bring Shotgun and Slugs

Fabric &amp; Craft Outlet

Beleaguered ruling party in
Taiwan fights a key election
By ANNIE HUANG
Associated Press Writer
TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) - Taiwan's President Lee Teng-hui is at
his folksiest these days, and for
good reason.
Taiwan's young democracy
reaches a watershed next weekend
with county and mayoral elections.
The outcome could determine the
future of Lee's increasingly beleaguered Nationalist ~ .
If the Nov. 27 elecbon bears out
the Nationalists' poor showing in
opinion polls, it could reinforce
public perceptions th~t after 44
years of unshakeable rule, the party
is finally on its way out
"Most voters no longer believe
that the Nationalist Party is identical with the country," the prestigious Journalist weekly commented recendy.
Thus the president is campaigning vigorously for his party's 23
candidates. Voters are looking for
the common touch, and the 70year-old Lee has it in abundance.
'• A man has to follow his wife's
orders, and I'm no exception," the
Cornell University-educated president told an audience of women
voters.
"So please go home and tell
your husband to vote for the
Nationalist candidate.''
The Nationalists, or Kuomintang, have ruled Taiwan since
1949, when they fled Mao Tsetung ~ s communist takeover of

Empire• LP Gas Ventless
Heater on Sale!
Comfortable heat at an
affordable rrice.
Burlile Oi Co.
446-4119

Community Rumage
&amp; Craft Sale
November 22, 23-8 lo 4 pm DAV
Bid. Kanauga. Ohio
Table reservation
$3-1 day $5-2 Day
Lunch sold by DAV Auxiliary For
reservations call
446-7910 or 446-4208

The Friendship Force:
Healing the wounds of war

wale

115 Agave plant
118 Jog
119 Ancient
121 Brother ol Jecob
123 Goddlll 01
dlacord
124¥125 EliCIIII'M
londri,u
126 Arlt
128 o.mage
130 Pelldent
orn811*1tl
132 Love
133 Church bsnc:ll
134 Automobile .,_
135 Changea
138 Stitt
141 Cat'11oot
144 Ekberg 1D
148 Capital 01

.

No~18,21,29,1983

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

temperature in the 'area fell to some i4 degrees
Fahrenheit Saturday. Relief agencies are worried that the bitter cold will claim many lives in
tbe embattled Bosnia. (AP)

KEEPING WATCH -A British U.N. soldier
keeps watcb from bis post at tbe Royal Engineer's base in Tomislavgrad, Bosnia-Herzegovina, some 90 miles northwest or Sara.ievo. The

lor one

100 Culhlon
101' Prohlblll
102 Guldo'a high note
103 Corded c:lolh
108 Emerllkllale
101 Ge IDLII ...l.-n1
113-lor

'.:1\l' :... &gt;·

""".

.

92 Tr8nlj)Oited
with CIIIIQIII
93S..
94 TOkyo'a Old 95 Weamg IIIIIChlne
97Vutege
98lJI'a- on
99 AtiMta'a Omnl,

' 'il. .J '

,~ ?ill,/'
"' . :1 .-

•

Red Cross took short cuts on blood tests
HAMBURG, Germany (AP) A Sf andal over tail)ted blood
spread Saturday wit)) report that
German Red Cross officials had
knoVIingly distributed blood suspect«! of being contaminated with
the \tirus ,~ - ,causes hepatitis.
The n..,ort in Det Spiegel mMazine'8aid employees of the Red
Crosll.' ' Mljnnheim blood donation
center in 1991 manipulated

~~:

.•

Croat m1titia also shelleilthe
Sero and Croat nationalists ~
Thursday in Geneva to end harass- cenual town of Gotnji Vtttur, bltment of relief operations.
tering a factory occupied by the
On Friday, U.N. orricials in Bosnian army, Aikman said. He
New YOrk announced that aid con- said the fire wu so intense that
voys in cenual Bosnia were resum- wounded Bosnian soldiers were
ing. The shiprnen18 were suspended evacuated from a clinic in the
Oct 26 when a Danish truck driver buildin-:::ll~-~~~--.-was killed by gunfire in a MuslimPubllc Notice
Croat combat zone.
Aikman said relief officials in
PUBLIC NOTICE
Bosnia had not yet received word
The Bprfngftetd Townehlp
10 stan convoys but were ready to
Tru•'"• will noc:elve -'-"
bide lor. • 1e75 Chevrolet
begin within 24 hours' notice.
plcllup truck whh club cob
Snow curtailed fighting in most
until I p .m. Dec. 1, 1ell3 11
areas but combat continued in the
which time they will be
divided southwestern city of
publicly openeclond r-.
Mostar, Aibnan said.
The To-ehtp reoervH
the right to eccept or refect
He said the generator providing
any or oil blcla.
power at the hospital in the
All btdo ahoutd ba
besieged Muslim sector of the city
submitted
In let*· form ond
had been wrecked by Croat
morked Truck Bid. ·
artillery fire. He also said a truck
Hennon Sprague, Clerk
used to bring water to the hospital
1474Ken Rd.
lacked fuel "? make enough trips.
Bidwell, Ohio 4511'-9255

BULLETIN BOARD

,.......,

~·4till

Crossword Puzzle Answers on Page C-6
93 Soup Ingredient
96
through
99 Church part
101 Bueb811 player

ByDAVIDCRARY
Associated Press Writer
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) - Heavy snow halted a
U.N. airlift into Sarajevo today,
while Bosnia's warring sides ~n­
tinued to block relief efforts on the
ground.
Lt. Col. Bill Aikman, a
spokesman for U.N. peacekeepers,
described the lack of supplies as
" very serious." In Sarajevo, food
aid has been arriving only by airlift, which cannot supply all of the
city's needs.
Aikman said Seros continued to
block convoys from reaching the
surrounded Muslim enclaves of
Zepa and Gorazde in eastern
Bosnia. Croat militiamen were still
barring traffic except road crews
from two key supply routes in central Bosnia, he said.
Leaders of the Muslim-led
Bosnian government and Bosnian

,.

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS

'

•

\

Haitians pull together to clean up capital
By MICHAEL NORTON
Associated Press Writer
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP)
- It's a truce of sorts: Haitians
working together to clean up their
capital city.
Haitians have put aside their
poliiicru differences for four days
to pick up some of the estimated
22,000 tons of garbage that has
acculnulated since President JeanBerttand Aristide was ousted in a
Sep~mber \991 military coup..
It )las blocked cars from some
city 'streets and gathered in giant
heaps in front of schools and hospitals.
WOrkers hope the effort, which
began Thur$day, will mean the

Snow halts Sarajevo airlift;
land routes remain blocked

- ·*

Pomeroy Flower

'WE

Pomeroy Bowling
Monday Night Special
$1 .00 per game
Open at 6 p.m . Call992-3432
(Reservations available)

Call 446·2342
or 992•2156
FOR MORE INFORMATION

.
\

Shop

Lg. '32 50
Sm. '20 00
Place your order early

992-6454

�Pag&amp;-04-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolls1 OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

~No~v~e=-m~be~r§21~,~1~99~3~=:=:=::==:=:::;~=~~~~Po~meroy-Middleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

November -21, 1993

32

Mobile Hom11
for Sale'

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

45

Fumlshed ·
Rooms
Roomo
for
rent • week or month.
1192 Norrto 18x80 Trallor. Hugo Zbr. mobil homo, lully lumloltod,
Jt201mo.
0.1111 Holol.
Spoclouo Roome With Cothoil- HC. cond., IYIIIablt Die. 1. :1()4..; e
tsao.
rol. ColUnga Throughout. Throo 175-4284.
Bedroom, Two Bath. Hugo ao~
Slooplng roomo wHh -'&lt;Jng.
don Tub In Moot., Blllfi. Ovor 3 ledrcaom1, 0.. Melt, In Oa... Alao troll., ..,.c.. All hooll·upo.
1200 Sq. Ft. Lata Of Slor~o.
eft• 2:00 p.m., 304-m..
114-448-2003, · - · Clll
Hu All 1M Ertru. Uvld In
5811, ...... .,..,.
Lin Thon 0.. Yoor. Excellent Z bedroom traU..., ,., • dep, At.
CondHion, lluot Soo To Apo &amp;2 N. Locu• Ad on right, no 46 Space for Rent
-loto. Col! 814-247·2032 Pill. 304-875-107!1.
l.Nvt .._age If No An.wer.
Spocoo lor· ront MOlting Ill

BEATTIE BLVD.'" by Bruce Beattie

Olbaon u cubic - . , ,
304 ..75-1531.

='·· .

Llova

-oaoo.

814.-.&amp;224.

11M Rtdllll!ln 1CX70, 3bdrm., ln-

44

cludoo aklltlngr olopo, blocka,

&amp;yr. warrant~, nomeowntfl lnIUI'IInct, and 1 yNr of fr• lol
rani, all for only $t77fmo., CIII1-

800..37..S238, aM for Mlkl.

11
A.nllqutt and UHd furniture, no
Item too large or too IMIII, will

buy ont plec• or complete

household, 1110 ward..:!· old

Lite and HNH.h lnauranc•
Saln- Do you haw cantrol of

i92·744t

Pra,-rty &amp; CatUI~ lntunnce

blcyciH, can Osb~ Mertlrl. 1514-

momllters, aid clocks, lntlqut
Rlv1rlne

Antlqutt.

Au11 Moort, owner. 814·9922526. Wt buy tstattt.

Novembtir

your own lifo? Expending
AgoncJ lo tooklng lor full&amp; polt

Freeu,., VCfl'a, Mlcrowuee.
Air Condltion•rs, Wuhere.
Dryers, Copy Machin•, Etc.

814·215&amp;-1238.

304-773-5343.
Wont To Buy: Needed: Dog

Mall

ap-

pllclllons or com1 In PII"'In to
FNth Pharmecy, Mlddlaport,

meuaa• on machine.

B1n11h1. M1.111t bii I Mil lt.rt....
Experience · prwf1rrwd.
Sind
rt1ume to: Agent, 114 Court

TOR(S) rwMied to tuc:h communHy and personal •klllt to
aduHa with IMming limitation•

In

training. ERA Town 1: Country
R••l Esta~ Broker, Beckie

Melg•

porlonco, good dltvtng roCord,
and
adaqlllte
1utomoblle

no txperlence
neceeury, will tl'llln, amlng
fuiUpiirt·t me,

covorogo roqulrod. R lnt.,...od,
r.urne to Cecil" S.ket.
P.O. loa 104, J1cklon, Oh

pctontlol 12·15/lw. pluo now tupperware. 304-f75.6415.

o1 t 9118 which mokiM Nllogal
to adwtrlllt •any pref...-.ce,
lmllltlon or &lt;JICIII• ..natlon
baaed on rae.. cobr, relglon,
stx lamllllllllilul or national
~n. or"'' lrtentlon to
make lll'f suc:f1 preference,
lmitatlon ordlsaYnNUon.•

Business
OpponunHy
!NOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
Ncommend• that you do bullnoel with people you know end
NOT to aond ,_,,, through Jho
moll until JOU hove lnvolllfgoled

nlgh(a - · H i g h - - .
aroo. VOIId drlvor'a - .
fh- ,...., llconood d~vlng ex·

Stein, 304-t7ll-5548.

11111 no-IIIUI&gt;jld to

lfwF-IFIIr-.gArl.

21

Counly. H'OURS;
w..kdoy ond wookond ,_.

Rtal E1t1tt ca ....r. Pro... llonal

All ...., eslllle .,..efttailg h

Fmanc1al

WANT~D: EMERGENCY RELIEF
COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUC.

Str.t, Pomeroy, Ohio 45788.

·

Thlo IIOWI!p- wll no4

lhl o!ferlng.

..nd

kno\Oingt,l ocoopt
alt.lertlsern&amp;11s for real estala
whk:t! ~ In V101otlon ol thl
law. Our readars are henlby
lnlonnod Jhll oil dWellngl

Earn Money 81 Home wtth a

45840-0804 no Iaior then Computer. No ExpOrtonco
Roq'd. P r - .Hoonh Jn.
Houu, Fret Or To Sell Cheap, Surface mln•ra ·nHded lor out- 11123/V3. EOE.
or-state work. Optraton nHded
aun~nct Clalme. bc•ll•nt Inc.u 614-4414615.
WILDUFE
/CONSERVATION
for and loader, lhovtl, dragllne,
coma Pottntlal ~ny trainJOBS
Wanted to buy, Karouna drille~ doz.,, CtrtlfiH welder,
Ing. F""" $34K Flnc'g Avoll. 1·
Gam.
Wardene,
S.Curtty,
Heat ar. 614·256-15'13 after &amp;:oop and a1 .... m.chlnfc. TranaporJJOI).ef7..11511 old. 842 (24 hrol
MalntlfliOCI
Etc.
No
Exp.
Pm
tatlon, room, bolrd provided,
National Clalme Slrvlce, Inc.
pay $1,112.00 wookfr. t-100-826- Nocnury, il- Hiring. For Info
Wanted To Buy: Junk Care &amp; 9817.
Coli 2111-794-0010 Eld. mo, a &amp;m Money At Home Wflh A
A.M. To I P.M. 7 Dlyo.
Truekt At Top Prlet &amp; Rt•
Computer. No Exp Roq'd
tOf'llbla Cars, 114-388-1554.
WANTED
Procna
Hlanh lneurii'ICtl
Clolmil.
Exc
Income Potontlol,
Wanted
to
Do
Wanttd To Buy: Junk Autoa
Com,Piny Trol~lng. From $3,4115,
With Or Without Motora. Call

are avaMIIM on an tqUII

Wanted To Buy : Standing TJmIMr &amp; Pine, Good Prlcu, 614·

Top Prlc11 Paid: All Old U.S.
Calna, Gold Ring!~ Sllv.r Coins,
Gold Coins. M.T.::J. Coin Shop,
151 Second Avenue, Galllpoll•.

Real Estate

hom.•. 114-446-0175

31 Homes for Sale

WANTED: angina tor 1i88 Ford
3 Announcements
Fntlva, 4sp.1 1.3 lllar, nMded
L.ott:
t.m111
Germtn
short
Chrlllllon htlred polnler wnh pup, llorn- ASAP, call61q· IJ92-2155, 8:30t.m"HIIplng Cllrl• c:ent
or 614-H2-2428 attar
cofllr, Palnler Ridge aru, 5:00pm.
5:00pm.
fiN;~ Chrlttl•n rtWird, St4-'M2-31n
1-IOO-i30-7599.

2 Bedroom With a...
mont Off 511, All Cltr Utllltloo,
$31,500 Firm. Flnonco, CoH
Larry, 114-441-1157.

:a

Employment Services

Bedroom-. New Heal Pump,

Storogo Building, :114 Aero Lind,

MercerviUe Aru, Stall Route

R...ord Up To $300 For Woot
VIrginia
Porcelain
Llc1nH
Ploloo, Chuck Wnlphll, 2411

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

E..t aroedway, Port Jtffllraon,

AVON I All Arooo I
s-"'· 304.e75-14:HJ.

y,,,. Proc111

eo. (6021954-11120.

Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

card of Thanks
Wodomoy.,'l AuctiCXI Sorvlco,
Rio Oron«M, Ohio.814-245-5152.

-·-Or
9

Wanted to Buy

totool Any

Eaoy Wo~ll Excollont P_,l A.
aomblo Producto At Homo. Coli
Toll Froo, 1-800-487-e!IM, Eld.
313.

~po

01 Fumlturo,
Eo- Exp. Chllroldo Dontll Aaa1.
A.ppllrn c r . Antlque'a. Etc. Alto nooded
JIIOWing, quallll'"
:rsr.lool Avolloblo I 1!4-24&amp;- conacloiiOk&gt;rdonlat
proctlcO. Sorid

raeume: 2824 Jackaon Ave, PI:.
PluNnt, WV 25550, AHn; B•

2

In Memory

cky.

,.

'•

REALTOR .... 245-8070
WIWAIISON, REALTOR .... Z~ 1070
NIEHM, REALTOR ..........!... -1117
SCITES, REALTOR ........ Ul UDI

til ~~
•

UND111t

FRALEY, REALTOR .............. 448 1101
~~~~:~~MILLER, REALTOR .......... 44111111
aD.... OI4

ROSS, REALTOR ............. 245-111711

$2800,

41 Houses. for Rent

514-992-

2483.
f889 Mobile Ho'!'!1 Quell Croak
Lot 3, 12xl0 S1,ew, C.ll Dl~
Ot' Collect.~, 614-444-1'91\ Sarlouo
lnqulrtn unly.

2 Bedroom

Hou.., $300/Mo,

,$300 Dtposh, Atftranct R•
quiNd, Call 114-441-3823 O.t

P.M.

2 a.droam Ranch, 29 Evant

tbdrm. apartment In Mlddi'Port,

til utllttlte turnfl;,.d, $250/mo.

2br. all tltctrtc, appllancn furnished, on tltt managemtnt.
Lautrltnd Apt1., Ntw Haven,
WY. EOH 304-882-3718

1181 Plrw R&amp;dge, 3 bedroomt, 2
bath, utltHy .room, $13,000, 614-

1911 Man•lon Special Edhlon,

3 Bedroom Houtt In Galllpallt
AlftranCH 8t Deposit Required,

1171 Titan, 2br., remodeled, tur-

nlahod, $4i50. 30H7So3073.
992-304i or 814·912-1441.
14180, 3br., 2 bath,

304-882·3234.

.

•••urn• loan.

·814 448 8002.

3 Btdroom Houst, $400/Mo.

1114-245-9258.

2505 Mt Vernon

Ave., $425/rno. w/dtposft. 304-

Help Wanted

675-21119.

a-h St..,lll, Mldd-rt, Ohio.
Ono bedroom lumfohed opl,
utDHIIol pold, depoaH 6
rtfwtnc... 304-882-2511.

FirM
HDillf . Apartm•ntt,
S.cond Avtnue, Otllfpollt. 614441·1800 Stnlor, Dltabled, &amp;
HtndicsppH, 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom
Unlt1. Attnts B•std On Adluated

• 'Nice, cltan 2 or 3 bedroom Income. FMHA Subeldlzod, HUD
• houtlt In Pomeroy tor rtnt on

• eontl'lct whh option to buy, no
: pel:t_J3751mo. with dtpotlt, 6,..

C.nltlcalat Accepted,

614-441~

1800I Equol Houolng Oppor•

JOSHUA R. FARMER
Dec. 8, 1977·
Nov. 21, 1989

locallon ol lhls beaulllul cape Cod home.

1878. HAVE ABEAUTIFUL COUNTRY EBTATl! - Bulkl

your dream home overlooking a large lake. 73 acres m11
of rolling land, ctaan and mowed, with a bit of woodland. 8
ac. o11akes mJI, This property has many opportunities. Ita
presen1 use 11 a paid fishing lake. Oreat for a church
camp, camping grounds or subdiiJide. Long Road

Third AvenLII, Galllpolll, 0H

1833. PRICE REDUCED, $70,000.00. 3 bedooom whh

45831.
MATHEMATICIAN n;oucATOR
For Projoc1 Dlacovory SOUih
Region. Content Spoclollal In
Molh. .l11co Noodod For llothomotlc:a /Sclonco EducoUon
Rolonn Llldorohlp Toom, Ph.D.

You forgot me But
I remembered you.
Happy 50th
Love Deb

acres overlooking Ohio River. Home features 4 ·
bedrooms, 2 full baths, IMng room wtttl fireplace. 1922
sq. n. living space. 36x48 metal bulkllng and 141124 frame
building. El. trt. JlUmp and cent. air. can for price and

~

15, t913. Add- lnqulrloo And
RoqUOIII AllPIIcotlono Poc:UI
From: Dovld Tocft, ~lonal
Coordinator, Pn&gt;Joct Dlacovory,
ShownM Stlto UnlvwoJtx.
Pon.mou;~, OH 458e2-4311.1
(814) 385-;u-J&amp;.
CMotmoo Mono,? Coli
Shor~o. 814-338-8027, Call UO
P.M. To 8:30P.M.
3

Announcements

room, kitChen, bath. Attached garage and comer lot. Walk
to school and lhcpplng.

formal dining room, IMng room, kitchen, dtnlng area with
1M~ng doors to pool area, 1'f, baths, full balement wfth
family room with fireplace, 2 car attached garage. Close

10 town - city schools. AMUST TO SEE.

PoloJ.!I•foroncn. $300/Mo.
• Pl.. .... Oopoall, 814-446-

: &amp;

1111 REDUCED - t48,000 - Owner II anxious to sell
th~

3 bedrm. ranch. Very nice homo and location. Large

LR w/dlnlng area. Full basement, an extra large garage.
::!:lots, clty water &amp; sewer &amp; schools.

1811. OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS ONCE - 6 bednn., 2
Story homa. w/enclosed porch, fenced lot, 3 C8t'J)Oftl, 2
building•. omce or aales building, blackiOp &amp; cement
driveways. Best garden spot In VInton. $47,700.

•· ~=~2·~-------------­
: 42 Mobile Homes
Apartment• In Middleport. From
$202.
Coli 814-992·5859. EOH.
for Rent
; '2

bedroom

mobil•

hom1,

• Mlntrtlllllt tf'll, ,.ftrancn •
, ;ctepo11t required, &amp;14o992-e777
• tfttr Spm.

4411-43110.

New Haven. 2br. efficiency apt,

•

dtDOSit &amp; ret.rencH. 304-882-

: Bedroom $200/Mo. Atftrti'ICII
, ·a ~·"· 614-25&amp;.e9Jl!!. .

1225/mo. lncludoo utllllloo, JtOO
MClN'fty dtpoeft, no petl; 614912-2218.

251;5.

• '!-or;•
3 · Bedroom
With
... Fftplace, 2 Ba1ht, $250/Mo.; 1 One
• 2 B.c:lroome,

Furnished, On

bedroom

•partmantt,

, Cor1 Mill Road 4 MIIH From Rlpl1y ar.., rww 1br. ept.
• Rlo Grandt, No Pets, Clll w/complltl khChen, Including
• Evenings, 814-245-5622.
wash•rl*ytr. 304-372:·5480.

'

11921 1113 -RIS IIOBLE HOllE on rontol tot. 3
- . . . 2 b l l l h , - - - ol-.14' X 10'.
OMlor wit -•o o "'~Mod party.
1811. WHITE OAK AD. location, 30 acre1 m{l vacant
land with timber. mineral rights, good road frontage .
Some cleared land. $26,000.

LANO CONTIIACT - Comer lot In City. 1931

Chestnut St. Comtortable 3 bedrm., 2 baths w!full
basement. Lot ~so·xuso·, D.R., hyge lR w!flrep1ace, new
lnautaled wlndowa, cenllal air, kit. w/dl, hwaahlt, trash
compoctor and colllng lana. Dan or otllce rm., fruit 1-.

,,.wt&gt;erry piiCh. _ . , galllen opot4 blskolbOI ccun

1904. DEUGHTFUL LITTLE HOllE - Pool, 18'x32'

lovefr home. Call qulclrl

IM1.1 8USINE88 AT HOME - 3 bedroom, 2'/. baths,
whhe brick home wfth 4.13 acres. Also Includes a 4000

sq. ft. commtrrt:lal building. call Joday 11 245-9070.

Harrisonville
PTO
wlahea to thank the
Melga, Gallla &amp; Maaon
Merchants for lhe fall
festival donations.

bednns., 3 bllhl. comrortable ltvtng rro,. wjwoodbumlng

11replace, dining nn., equipped k11., all large rooms,
covered back &amp; front porch, 2 car aHached garage,
bulking a 1 ac. m/1. Green 4 City schools. DONT BUY

1923. LOVELY RANCH, NICE LOT. 3 bedroom with new
ORTUN~Y
heat pumP, new hDt water tank . Brk:k and vln)'l. 8lC1 0 1148 EXCELLENT BUSINESS OPP
12

AT

h

bedrms., 2 baths, nice entry, LA &amp; tamlly rm ., 3 car
garage. Located on SR 160. This can be a QOOCS place to

==In

lho lcltcllon. 2 cor-- 1 oc. 111&gt;1.

sell cars &amp; work at home. 21ots.

•

ot

tho

ranch,

and outtlde

doors . .,.ke this yours now.

1872. STATl! ROUTE teo - 3 ac. lol

m~.

t-.-.. . .-.. .

HU LAND CONTRACT, grut Jn.town loc:otlon, 3
bedroom
'1111! 2 Oidro n1oo lola, plo~Wf oJ 1ru1
-70
$15,000.00. . -NICE LOT CLOSE JN;·Wih an old -In nood o1

Charolals Hllll. Make an ofl'er.

2-.-

IOPii', Cllf 245-11070.

PRIME DEVELOPMENT LAND - Land tlyo wan. -JUST R£C~Y REIIOLOED, 4 bodn&gt;olm 2 otoi)'
Older 2 story home with 4 bedrooms ant1 bulldlnr;~s . homolnthoC!hllf*"
, -,ptloodto ..., 24_5-iOTo.
Home In naad10ropalr. 117 ac. m/1. Call lor-.
J1i01 CL~E TC{UNVERBITv OF, RJO ORAND£, 4
11100. BUNGALOW with 2 bedoooma. LR .. kK., din. am, bodroomO with 2 ..,.., o.W, 3 rooro old. owner WlntO
n73.

Sweet
16

Angie I

uJIHJy rm. ~lng the lleMIIful Ohio Rlvo&lt;. $29,900.

aclrl, .... 246-G070.

.

...7. SPACE FOR REAL LIVING - lmmaculolo 4 IIIIa GREAT STARTER HOME, 3 bedroom ronch with
bad&lt;Oom hOmo, new caiJ)OI, point, new knchon with oak t&gt;ltck-lnd vtnyl, moJntononr:a INo, on 0 n1co 101, 100X180.
cablnett. dilhwuher, range and ref., attached garage, Now hlol pump, CJA, hoi wolar tonk, lb&lt;10 o-ltdlng.
OUibulldlng. Beautiful landacape. Raady to move ln. Z45-11070
$65,000.
182&amp; CLOSE IN 5 oc:roa 111&gt;1 lolling land.

I

1111141 THIRO AVE.· Llvlln one ond Ollllthl Olhoror
· uoo .bolh u rorlol propooty. Two otory )ramo wtth 3 BRa, 2
bothl,guhlol,roi,; -I!JI,DR,Idtchon.UII.rm.Aioo
mobile homo on roor ollol. Chodl thJa out u a lt10My
lnlker.CoHE.....,.Niohm44&amp;-18o7 ·
'
1823 CLOIE II. Oloon 3 BR homo .... 5 ,...,. mil LR
oal·ln kitchen, 1 both, very lg. FR. 1 cor lJII'9 , 'TNi
homo lo full right lor I roung)amlly o r o - CO&lt;iplo.
Makoon"!'PP. to-, CaiJEunoo Nlohm"''&amp;-11117

1100 BUNGALOW .... 2 BRa, LR, Kll., tin, 0100 uiN. rm.
NEW LISTING, t0X70 pori.wood hOmo 2 OvorloOklng the BooudUI Ohio River. COl....., 1129 600
'· .
btctOOm 2 bath, comet COft'llllely fumllhld, we• buy .. Eu- Nlolwo 44~18117 ·
13,500.00 COI245-11070
''

a

"Lawn Tractors &amp; Mowers·
Craftman G .T. 6000 '10 HP Kohler engine 6
speed and 44" deck, Sears Suburban 12 H.P.
garden tractor, 19" and 21" Lawn Boys.
''Tools &amp; Ect."
11 HP B &amp; S Chicago ~leclric generalor,
Lincoln ACIDC welder, "craltman 3 H.P. air
compresser, 6" bench grinder, log chains,
Craflman Lawn sweeper and dump trailer,
wheelbarrow, one lot of lumber cherry and pins,
fertilizer spreader tor lawn , saw horses, plywood,
drums, alum. step &amp; extension ladders, cement
block, plat ice pipe , canning jars, misc. tools, 7
. bags 12· 12· 12 fertlizer, pipe stand, 5 gal roof
coating, wood preservative, acetylene oulf~ and
· lots morel 22 aut. J .C . Higgins rifle. sweeper,
·, lamps, chair, quitting frames , and ect.
Owner • Vernon Lockhart

!
~

;

!'

Dan Smith - auctioneer
5i68·1344 Ohio 515 WVa
Rhett Milhoan apprentice

i Cash
!
:

54 Miscellaneous

Oonlon Arch Woy'a $1211.00

tl Tool Box For Ford Aln,or,

Excellent Condition, 1150, 14-

446-8857.
Bedding ·Twln.MIII Sot $89, Full Danlty, Mk ~. blue upNr~~
$91 SOt Ouoon $149 Sot; 4 rtng, eiZI 8, o,...t Chrlltma•
Drawtr CtaMtl44.11i Car led'•, Pr-1304-Tn-58311 .
Bunk •ed'o, Bodo. Full
Line ot Southweatet:n Vaen Buck Wooclbumer Stove Whh
Sto~ln,t AI $20.00; lnrllon• Mlny Supply Of Wood, Full Size Pool
Shape 1 I Sl1n !ltarting At Toblo WHh EGulpmonl Tobie
$5.00. 2 l.ocollontl ·Bnldo 7.ulo Tannlt, G14-441-o4)531.
Auction Or 4 Mlln Out 141.
Open 9 A.M. To 5 p,M. MCXI-Sot. CONCRETE SPETIC TANKS,
11!JOO Oollon, $325; Now ~ET Bot
NIW Flblrala11 Showers, 1100 {No Sond Filler Roqulrodl
Etch New "'FlblrgiiQ Shower &amp; $1,495; Ron Evarw £nttrprtH ..
Tub tr50 Each, 814-245-5152 Alo J1cUon, Ohio 1-800-537.Q28.
tere P.M.

Con1011 Humldllltr WODdgraln

USED

APPLIANCES U0 New 91111 For $120, Great
l'lf.rigtrator•, For Woodburnlng Ho-, 814-

W11herw1.. dryara,

nngn. :sll:-ap Appllancae Ta 448-3118.

Positive

10

#5926

Refreshments

Annoltncements by auctioneer take
precidence over printed matters.
"Not. res nslble for accident or loss of ro rt

55

Building
SUpplies

8Jock. brick. win- · JlniOio, .... Cloildo Wlntoro, Rio Oroncfe, OH Coli 114-

24H121.

c

Glau
tlblt
&amp;
chalra
w/cuahlone, S50i coHH &amp; 1nd
tebll, $20; Story I Clark piano,

Storm door 32' 1n. One antlqu•
Hopef fiddle. German made. 614-

$200; 814-69&amp;-1228.

High chair, play pen, walker,

875-4548.

Zenith Con10l1 Colar T.V. 25
Inch NNd1 Minor Work, f100,
C11t 81C-2C5-5818.

AKC Regletered Anwrlc•n Partl
-Coior.d Coclttr Spanl•' P~.~p­
piee Talt Dock4MI, Dew Claon,
~ernovtd, Born: 10111'13 Now
Toklng Oopoolto, Roodr In Tlmo

55

BUilding

XXXL. Competive prices . FrlSuppll
Sot-Sun, noon 1111 6:00pm, _ __;:.;:::.::.;;.:e;.:s_;___

3()4..

othtra days &amp; houra. 304·27:J.

5655.

Mlcklnloeh kelly green · co•t

slu 12, 314-ltnth. woren twice.

STEEL

Machlna , 814-388-1261.

Meet '"Citflah, Man of the
Woodt: In the 90 minute video
In which h1 explains hit
remediH tor evtrythlng from
obalt"y 1nd Impotency fo cancer and AIDS. To order "Catflth,
Healing S.crlt• of lhe Mountain
a..a.nd" und $29.85 + $4.00
P&amp;lt to Tapeworlui, OHtr 1·8,

B~ILOJNGS.

For Chrlitmall Stud Strvtet~
Alto Avalltbll. 614-371-2721.

AKC Rogllllored Booton Terrier,
Foctory z 112 Mentha, 614-t82-1830.

Speciale. San. 24132, 36~0.
eG1100, 10x120. We Deliver. Bob

Tappan Microwave &amp; Antwertng

61-215&amp;-80:HJ

AKC Golden A..rtlwrs Born
Oct 10, 1913, $150 Elch, ~·
S50 WUI Hold For Chrttlmas !
&amp;14-388-9243 B.tween 10.10.
AKC Aeg. Otrrnan Shaph.,d
pupp&amp;.s, v.1 chtcktd, 11m
thole ltarted, 114-"'2-2518.

Sam Somerville'• army turplua
tinct 1V64 by Sandyville Pott
Oftlc::e hu full line 81zta cam·
tlaugt, Junior kids 4 to e 1nlor

245-5822.

Tr..., cUI your own or

1hot1 and wormtd, mother/
father on prernl..., 814-742·
2948.
c

WI cut, t-Ift . .cotch or whitt
pine, $'12, available 11126, 27, 28,
1213, 4, 5 only, 614oo992·5885. '

446-165t2

Hay For Stl1, Squa,. Bal•, Ear
Coin, Ducko $2 A Ploco, 814blby bed, ttrolltr, car Hit.

X~M••

AKC Clonnan Slflphord pupploo, orccopllonollr ioOVO boned ,

&amp;14-446-0721.

AKC

Regitt•red

German

Shephard Puppy, 814-4411-7.!114.

SCC\\.4}~-~f.~S

ANSWERS TO
SCRAM-LETS
WARMTH

The young couple thought they
had a legitimate case against a big

PICKAX

corporation. While meeting with an up
and coming lawyer they became disillusioned when he sighed, "It's a

~~~~~

CJ~~L~Urf

shame this didn't happen last year

~

CHANGED the LAW before they CHANGED the LAW."

Alntprator, Almo!l~ Ukt Ntw,
1 Year warranty; .-n~Sj Sbaa•

Mollohan

Real Estate General

C.rpet,

Furniture

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

WE HAVE LOTS OF PROSPECTIVE BUYERS, WE NEED NEW LISTINGS!!!
CALL TODAY
446-7101 OR 1·800-585-7101

15.50 Yd I VInyl $4.4D, 814-44611144.
PICKENS FURNrrURE
NewAJ1ed

HouMtlold fumlthlng. 112 mi.
Jerrlcho Rd. Pt. PINNnt, WV,

iii'

coii»H75·1480.

SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 82

Olive St., Galllpollt. New &amp; UMCI
tumlture, heattl'l, Western &amp;

.

R•frlgtrttor,

Oryw,

T.Y.

FrHltr, Stove,
Mlcrowtve, 6,...25&amp;-1238.

located at 51013 Rainbow Ridge Rd.,
Longbottom, Ohio. Watch for audion signs on
St. Rt. 7 at Meigs Memory Garden or on St. Rt.
124 at Bashan Rd.1 Radne; Sold farm and
movea to Belpre.

ANYTHING UNTIL YOU SEE THIS. VIrginia 388-8828.

HOllE, wlllo boautNul white brlclc 3 bedroom, 2 bot
1111. $25,to0 will buy this lovely home. 3 bedrm., LA,
·
ronch al on 4.13 oc:raa. HIH 4000 oq. ft. commordal
kit , 1•J, baths. corner lot &amp; garage. VIrginia L Smith 3881127 A FINE COUNTRY H&lt;iiiE· En)OJ thl comiOit ol o bUilding with Jlvoo phoN-· CoH W... ot245-ll070
6ll26.
op- 31&gt;odn&gt;om ronch homo. 1112 bah one wtth o
·
1121 . NEW LISTING - Very clean home offering 3 i1CUZ1Jo 3- x 32gntal room ond o -.rN1g ftropleco.

w/office

Inwving

1111.1MPIIE81ME IRICK RANCH olauparb quality. 4

Fan Back Rocking Chair SSii

Waahtr,

Public Auction
Sat., Nov. 27, 1993
10:00 a.m.

Un the yard. Owner anxious to 1811.

Wrought Iron T1b .. W/4 Chalrw;

GOOO

875-3828.

Coron• EI1Ciric ly~rtter, 2
Black Full Face Motareyc..
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Helme'~ Llkt New, Apartmtnt New Commercial, Home Units,
Sind t.lectric Orytr, 014-367· From $191.00. Lampo• LI&gt;Ciona,
Accaaorl... Monthly "'ayments
~·
Aa $11.00, Coli Todar FREE
Signa: Portlble changeabM let - Low
NEW Color Catllog. 1-800-462ter -'gn Sm. FrM IMtera and 9197.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandlsa
Merchandise
Buutlful Oultn Ann Occa• Croa Country Sklng And
•lonll
Chair.
Newty Rowing E:urict Machine $50, dellllery, Plastic l.ttara U5. box
~pholltarod, Llko Now, $200
614-258-i364,
{HC:ond box frH) . 1-8---533Firm, S.rtou. Call Only; HamF\JANISHINGS: mond
:1453.
Organ. Bench, $.200j Mtt·

OUTSIDE

Color

'Licensed and bonded in Ohio and W. Va. Ill 030
tenns: Cash or approved check.
Not responsible for acc1dents or lost items.
Attention: Tuesday, Nov. 23, 1993, 7 p.m.
special auction due to surplus Items that
must go to make room for our Christmas sale
Items. Tools, linens, glassware, furniture end
numeroua other Items.

and aae Kyou don't aorea.

oulbulldlng. 245·9070.

~;;:,;;,~~·;:,~·.' Oll·ln
lite Ia kh.,
cr

memoryofa
special boy
whose Ught still
shines in the
I he,arts of all who
loved him.

remartamte ..-cloUI home wtth Wlw of the county. Italian
Jllo ' - • cathedral coiHng with balcany, 3 BR, 2'1• bltlro,
living room with woodbumlng fireplace, equip. kiJchon,
breakf1at room haa • lg. window, stereo speakers
throughout, brass light flxtures and much more. ·:i! car
attached garage, attic storage, 2 m~. This house ~
maintenance fiee of -quality. Make your appointment

Household
G09&lt;1s
VI'RA .FURNITURE
814-4411-3158 Or 814-448-1428
"iO OAY SAME AS CASH
OR RENT-2-0WN (NO DEPOSIT)

Sharp Wlz1rd Oraaninr SmHh-

"I liked Big Ben better the other way, . ."

51

Wortc boola. 814-441-3159.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

P•o11: (614) 311·9370 or 1110

1141 - II!DUC!D SUIURIAH I!AUTY - The

lnground. Great llocatlon, Green Twp. 3 b,edri'hs., 1'1•
baths, cozy LR, equipped kltch, new range &amp; ref.,
dishwasher, furnace &amp; hot water tank. Brick exterior, :i! car
fl8'800 , bldg .. &amp; dog run. Much work has gone 111!0 this

Merchandise

Appltl.-, 814-441-7398, 1~
411-3491, 7!1 VIne St-. Go~
II pella.

o:J'r"
o 4..

l•ctioaeer: Fiais •Ike• Isaac

1183.

or 3 bldrocm
houu, ln -n ofld good cond~
tlon, pre'- private ••Ulna, 114112-2421, If· no anewer pill"
ilavt me~·· on machine.
Wanting to rtnl• 2

New 2 Bedroom Apartment, 614-

Fumlthtd c Aooma And Bath,
: Pomeroy- 2bdrm., large kitchen, Ground Floor, Water Paid, Q1
, or.pllanctl, butmtnt, gar1g1, Cedar, Gllllpoll•, $3251Mo. 114• n ct neighborhood, 6"14·992- 388-eOOO.
• 2152
dayo,
614-742·2972 Fumlahtd Apartrnenl: 3 Room1,
: IYIOIRQI &amp; Wtllkandt.
B.t:h, Utllltl• Paid, No Pitt,
&amp; Roloronco, 814-441• Remodelld 2 Bedroom Home,

This sale is being held on Thanksgiving
weekand. Bril')g your visilors, hunlers welcome.
Coma and enjoy the evening! Gilts galore for alii
Door Prizel
The following is a partial listing: Curio hulch
with curved glass, k1tchen table and 4 chairs,
reclloer, swivel rocker, pillows, lamps, pictures,
: clocks·, ceramics, dish sets, cookware sets, plant
· stands, tools, socket sets, hammers , screwdriver
sets, pocket watches, men's gloves and socks,
. Q!Jns and racks, Mr. and ·Mrs. Santa Claus sets,
fndi,nds, rsligious items, .Christmas paper,
jewelry, American plastic and matal loys, dolls,
tricyct,s, bicycllis, collectible dolls.

~~23 LOCUST
ST. ~~J/ak,
446-6806

47 Wante&lt;! to Rent

Gracloua living. 1 and 2 bedroom aJ)Irtmenta at Vlllage
Manor
and
Aiveralde

n.

CHRISTMAS AUOION
ISAAC'S AUOION HOUSE
JACKSON ST,. VINTON, OHIO
SAT,. NOV. 27, 7 P.M.

Q/md(

horn• ror rant, 114-lt24111.

Vlno St-, Coli 814...8·73H, 1·
Dollhou ..., Miniatures, Etc_
800-41111-3491.
Memory Land Mlnlaturn, 3261,
P.O. Box 233, Pt. Pltlllnt, WY
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
At. 80 E. Huntington, WV, 1-aoo- 25550.
Complllt home fumi~~J:· 400-4414.
Houre: Morf.Sat, ..5. e
Never Uled Wolfe Suntegra tan·
0322, 3 rniiH out Bulavlllt Rd. Flrowood lor Olio, 81W92-e814. nlng bod , 14 bulb. $14qo, 814Frw~lvery.
For Sell Or Tract.: 1182 FOrd F- 912.e843.
Mlytog AutomoUc WaahO&lt; Uko 150, 4 Spoed, Stick Shift Olk Curved OIIH China
Nowh1 Vur WuronJy, 1205; G.E. Chrome WhHit; Banqutt Tablt Cablntlle Oak lablft, &amp; Chllrt,
Wa1 er Uke New 1 Year War- And Sl• Cholroj Mole Auotroltln Etc. River Valley Oak Fumlturt,
,.,.., $205; Hc!Cpolnt o,or, Uko Shephtrd, Rea Merte, Phont: 3813 O.Orpa CrHk Road, GIIN~_1_!ur Worronty, $205; O.E . 814-4411-15111.
Jipcllo, OH, 614-4411-4316.

tunft

• &amp;H· r..::44.

Real Estate General

'&lt;?!.

t85tmo, aleo 2 b1dtoom mobile

pluo $200 d.,..lt, 814-HII-2217.

Holghto, $300/Mo. $300 Dopoolt, BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
'614-446-0187.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
2br. houat, New Haven, -wv. ESTAT~~&lt; 5311 Jackoon PI••
ITom SiMI/mo. Wllk to 6
304-882·3752.
movln. Call 81~2588. EOH .

l=l~

- · OUI FASHION CHARM - In lown location lo!' 'Mr.
Fix Jr. Large 2 &amp;1ooy home. 3 bedrooms, LR, formal dining

plication DudiiiNI • O.C.mbilr

and Grandchildren

BAOKEA .............. 311 '128

frontaoe.

In Mathema1lc1 PrtflrrN.

Marlene, Wilbur and
Marilyn, Greg, &amp; Paige

woodbumar,

approvea

B

Real Estate General

Fulttlme Babysftt• In My Home
For 13 MoMh Old, CPA A•
qulr..t.~ VIr{ In OllilA,... MnG Alil~nle: C~ 217

clo Oolllpcllo DollY T~buno, 125

PIIUI 8. Seuncl«&lt;

bless you all.

horne

1103. CAPE COD - Br~ Cape Cod situated on 2·,

prey«&lt;.

The family of Glen
(Bill) Robinson greaUy
appreciates and thanks
all those wbo helped at
our time of Joss; the
Thppers Plains EMS
Unit, Dr. Witherell, Dr.
Patterson, the nurses
and staff at Veternns
Memorial Hospital,
Scotty Lucas for always
bcign there for us,
Ewing Funeral Home,
Rev. Sharon Hausman
for her presence and
comforting words. Rev.
Peter Trembly, and all
who came to help, sent
food and flowers, called
or sent cards. Special
thanks to Sherman and
Roberta Henderson and
Peggy Robinson and all
the neighbors, friends
and relatives who knew
Bill. Our loss was so
sudden, buy with sucb a
caring community, we
are comforted and
forever grateful. God

mobllli

Rentals

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DlfFEREN((

Robln10n, 814-902-24153.

1-

Thllnk you to the
doctors of Holz«
Hoepllel and the
Nur... of 2nd floor
Wnt, their kind, lllld
·efficient ..vice was
certainly .ppreclated.
To ell my frlend8
thanka for ell your
eel.. , Cll'da end
eepec..lly for your

General

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
12x70 with 8x10 oxpondo1

money « want a CII'Mr, llllhtr

tho d•r bolon tho od 1o to .. n.
S..ndly edltiCXI • 2:00 p.m. AVON HOLIDAY • Chooao Your
Fridoy. Jlondoy edHion • 2:00 OWn Hou..,, lncom~, And
p.m. S1tw-dl.y. .
Aeward8. Av.rage :ta· 114
· Giveaway
Hou~y Sojllng ot Wort&lt; Or
4
Homo. No DOOR /DOOR.
Public
Sale
2 Month Old Block. Lib To 8
1112-4738.
Giveaway, Female, lf4..441..0367,
&amp; Auction
304.e7JI.3132.

1

Real

AYONI All arAa. NHd 11tr1

..NY'-'-'11:.:.
m:.:.·c..__ _ _ _ _ _ 2 Fombr Moving Sale: 28Jh, w•r-e•ll Marilyn. 304-882-2845
1 27th, 1811 Hilde Drive, GoJJlpollo, or 1.e00-912-e358.
SPORTS
FAN?
Anutta, Fairview Sub, N.
Spraada, Trtvla And Marwlt-~
Any goopll groupo Int.-ed In
884-1203, Ell. 1338, $2.91 Per ALL YiiidSoloa Muot a. Pokl In boDklniJI call Rev. Margaret
Min. Mull Be 18

7VO, $25,000. 114-258.e215.
S Bed100111 H-. .IOiforoon
A-uo, Point PINN'!.'z. WV
FHA Approved, 30~5-1~r5.
For Sale: 2 Stor)l, 4 Bodroomo, s 111!\0.~: B•-•nt, InGround Pool, ""h Mlny Extroo,
ul1 Sool Ml•• Ollot, 814-25118580.

Shl~.,

abova 'f on Rt. 2, w/burn~~d out
houte, $10,000. 304-458·1m 2bdrm. apte., total llectrlc, ep_tvtnlngt.
pllancet · fumlahed, laundry
room faellhiH close to echool
Jn town. App_l{catlont available
at: Vlllagt G,...n A11t1. 141 or
coli 814-1192-3711. EOH.

choke onrt hutch, ..-

SenUnei--Piae-05

modo! color TV eondMion, 814-lltZ·7501.
noodo ropolred; 114-MJI.:zHg Vltomaalor OQICJH biU, $75. Stool Blclgo. Olgontlc S-lo.
Hugo lovlnp On 175 Sq. Fl.
dora.
like now, 304-f7H'I88.
Throuah 1,1100 Sq. Ft. Wo Are
Aaall•llc car lterto pow~a~, W•rm Momlna Woodbur,... No! Allrokor. Wootcmon Conltr.
ao watte, Nke new, tAs, 8
• Sa rnt All New, Very AeHOnlb+l 114--20.
2:114.
e~2111 Call Att•r 4:30 P.M.
RomlngtCXI
11~ ::'" ~b. WATER LINE SPECIAL: 314 Inch 56
PetS fOr Sale
llu now, $350.
75-7H2.
200 PSI $11.15; 1 Inch 200 PSI -:-----:-~__:.:;;:...._
Aotory Ptow, • Cultivator For 132.50; Ron E•ono EntlrorfHI, ij,_ ond Supply Shoo-Pot
ar-Jng. All bioOrlo, o!vln.
Ora«~ ]ractot, Baeebtlt Carda, Jockoon, Ohio, 1-eo0-537·0521.
814
MI.
WATER STORAGE TANKS Julio WoliO. COli 114-448-0231.
Sam Sornervl...., Army Suntl'ua Abovo And Below Oround FDA AKC All Whho Pok- Milo
For Pc!Coblo Wlllor. I Monlho Old, Vet Cfioc:kod Ali
olnco 11114 bv SandY&lt;IIIo JloM Appnwod
Evant; EnttrpriNaa.l Jack· Shots; Shlh-Uu 2 Ftmal•, 3
Otftce ha tuff line camoflauae, Aon
~. on1o, 1-..ur-ts...
Mlloo, Vet Chocked. Shoto, 1
aiZM Junior kklt 4 to unlcW
XXXL. Compotnlvo ~ - Fri- WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS WMka OW, Pure Bltodllne,
Sat.-Sun. noon-epm, other dap Aon Allleon
1210 Second Floodr 1ti2CW3 8M-446-1000,
lnd houra. (Flight r.v.,.Jb .. to A....,., GoJJ{pouo, Ohio, 814- Lllv•--·
orongo jackola.f304-273-5855.
448-4338.
AKC Female DalmaHon 6116/a:l
s..ra Prima Fit Ski« Machlnl, Wolff Syltem, 24 bulb tanning llr1hdata, 114-251-8301 Lllw
$375 Llko Now. 814-246-eG43
t.d, buck booat11, axtra KryiiC ltlellage .
I bulbs, c ...nttt, $2200. 3Q4.

r311
:::.,'~'7:..:8::80::·_ _ _ _ _ __

$421ill00, ooll $37,000. 304-815300 .

Exciting opponunky available lor an lnr1ovath•d
individual to direcl all aspects of the
Accounting Depanment from the registration prc10e:sd
through the final collection.
We are seeking a goal oriented individual.
lsiJCc,essfu candidate will poesess the leadership
lv;•inn to supervise employees and will be reSI)On:slbhi:l
policy, planning, directing,
controlling the patient accounts area--to include
accounts receivable, outpatient and
registration , ~llllng, cred~ and collection.
Qualifications include 3· 5 years experionce as Ji
Director of Patient Accounting in a healthcare
a working knowledge of a computerize
billing/information system; proven in-depth
knowledge of healthcare reimbursement and
regulatory issues. An undergraduate degree i
required. Anraclive salary and bene!~ package.
An equal opportunity employer.
Send resume to: Box 729·V. The Daily Sentinel,
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769.

Bu-. 1144411-85211,

Want.t lo buy: uud mobile

2 Urge Bedroom•, 2 Floora,

DIREOOR OF PAnENT ACCOUNTING

Tanning Baauty $alon Equip.
mint For Sale, Everything
NMdH To S.art Your Own

388-9g()6,

Small, 3br. houH wfahachect
garage, con11enlent to
Pt.

Lind For·Salo, 5 Ac:roo, 614-388- CAt 1 112 Bath, 2 Paols, Patio,
,8083.
$320/Mo. No Pit'!! Llloo Plua
•Lot 241'x85'x235'x91', 112ml. Socurl1y Dopoall Hoqulrod, 814-

3br. homt,

11

.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

oppoftunlty bula.

Fine g Av1ll. 80016W-1561 Ext.
642, (24 Hrsl National Cl11m1
S.rvlct,lnc.

Larry Llvaly. 614-388-9303 .

Announcements

a&lt;t;ortlood In 1NI n t - r

114-441·2320.

31 Homes for Sale
PINNnt, tyrs. old, 1ppraiMd

112-2312. If no arwwr, , IMvt

Ohio.

Saln rer,r...ntatlv.. ~

J &amp; D'a Auto Parts and Salvame,
atao buying junk cars &amp; trucks.

24th.

Wanted to Do

Trl SUite Tr• blrv~ tODDing,
trimming, trM rwmoval, · idump
removal. Free lltlmltM.· 114-

pharmacy lecMlclan, through

Don, Junk ttl Sal! Us Your Non-

Working Major Appll1nc81,
Color
TV'1._ RetrlgeraiOtl,

18

Now taking oppllcotlono for

Oec:orattd stoneware, wall ttl• time agent Eam while you
phonn, old lamps old ther· INm.
Training
provlcMd.
tumHurt.

Help Wanted

1 Bedroom Efficiency Wat1r

Paid, Oulet Setting, 10 Mlnut•
From
Ge1Upoll1,
$175/Mo,
O.postl &amp; Reterenc.. AequiNd

Mlecetlaneout
Merchancll•

$100. Uood
lurnlturocouchoo,
recllr-., ct.irs, dining table,

n-

OUUor

Mcbllo Lato For Rent. 814992·1837 Dr 814 441 111110.

Apanment
for Rent

54

54 Miscellaneous
MBrchandlsa

'::1':1"'

bedroom
$22illmo.,
1113 22 Hundred 8Gu1r~ FHt Two
Amlah Bull, Coli d P.M. Or Pomeroy 11'11, 114·H2·2312.

Sunctay TlmM

BLACK ·BEAR Compound Bow,

814-387-7566.

Fo1 Fir~ Craa Bow, Scope &amp; 10
Arroww, 1100; N-446-6688.
Looking For OUIIhy CutiOm

Aaoombled Oolf CiullO? 814-2~5-

5811 Rtatonabl. Prices.

on

At 124,

Pom1roy. Houra: U.T.W. 10:00

a.m. to 8:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00
to 6:00 p.m. 814·H2·2!528.
Will Buy Otw h1m Or ES1at11.
Dova'1 HeM Antlqun, 336
Stcortd Avenut, Gallipolis, 114F~d•r

Mon -Sal.,

e::J0-8.

i :30-5,

tamily rvom. living room, eat-in kitchan , balh,
ba..manl Newer electric heal I!&lt;Jmp, satelito

NEW LISTING! BE THE FIRST TO LIVE
HERE! Brand now home. 2 baths, living room ,
eat-i n kitchen, 3 bedroom s, 2 car garage
attached. Brick exterior. Elactric haat pump.
Hill

,_

NEW USTINGt GREAT HUNTING LANDI110
ACRES mil vacant land. Approx. 36 tillablo
remaining eereago pasture and woodland.
1993 'robaooo allolmont t ,000 lbs. Appro•.
41610

care!
Three bedroom ranch with full basement 50%
fi nishe s. Det ached 24'x24 ' garage and

NEW USTINGl FARM! LOTS OF PASTURE l
TILLABLE ACREAGE and woodland. 3

basement garage also . A must see\ Asking

bedroom home liVing room kitchen, bath ,

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
14' Trampoltnt $150, 114-38881103.

enclosed back porch. Additional 3 room
dwelling bam 2 com cribs shed and mo1o.
Apporox: 102 acres moAI or loss. Farm located
I
H11

Wagon,

4WD,

$1100.

Oay1 14

Bahlma Crul•, I daya/4 nlghte.

Undorbookodl

t27'81couplt.
40~717-1100

Mulll

ooill

Umlttd tlcktla.
ext. 1111. Mon·Sal,

8:00AM ·10:00PM.

811 with titooll; antiQUI baby
cndl1; •..o; 1'14-tt2-.,504.

RANCH 6 A UTTLE BIT OF LANDI Homo
conslots ol 3 bedroomo, living room , 1 t/2
baths, basement, front porch, """perth. 2.494
aero lot Won't believe this pnco $36,900 1594
EXTREIELY NICE HOME THAT HAS LOT$
OF CAREl 3 bedrooms, 2 112 baths, tam1ly
room, livi119 room, kilchon, cllnl119 room '· 2
firapl-•, 2 car attached Q8J1IIIII and amemU.s
galoAI. call today!
1587
OWNERS RELOCATED! REDUCED PRICE Ill
WAHTS SOLD IMIIEDIATELY111 kiNIIoclltion.
Roomy 3 bedroom ranch styt. homo. Large
lamily room, dining aroo, ki...,_n, bath, laundry.
Nice lized t.vtl lawn. Wtlhin MCOnds ot New
~

t4x70 MOBILE HOME AND LOTI· Priced in
lower $20'a. CaU for rna,.. delailal Won'tlaat
Cannelburq, Inc. 45719
Specializmg in Pole
· Buildings.
Dnigned to mae! your
needs . Any size.
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON
Posl Buildings and
Package Deals. Save
Hundrads , even Thousands
ol Oolla1s.
Local Sales Reprasentalive
DONNA CRISENBERY
11366 S. St. AI. 7
Gallipolis, OH.
PH. 6t4·256·1633

lumance, real nice family room with modem

fireplace. 2 or 3. bedrooms, ltitchen and dining
Uka new

above ground swi1nming
Mus1... to
~•.oc)l)

home 4 large bedrooms. den , dm lng room. ~~v.
.
2 baths laundry and more! Beautiful
mg mom .
·
.
1 • -r
throughout! N1ce v1ew o r ....... ·
oak woodwork
.
1562
1
Stocked pond . Must see lt.

M~~

D. C. •111 Sllu1 lac.

WON'T LAST LONGI
Ono story. 1.704 Aero lot. Basemen~ luol oil

'
A HOME OF THE PAST! Beautiful older 2 story

1327, lf~· 445 8435.

CruiM 5

1572

CITY UVINGI On a low iraffic stroot. Very nice
kitchen C0f11P1ol8 with apphancea, hv1ng room,
family mom 3 bedroomo, 2 baths, laundry
'*troom apartment included. 1557

floWer Arrangement• Acron
FI'Ofl'l
Aaytiuma
M1rkll,
Kan1Ugli1 W..Und.. IM-251-

Undort.oobrl, Muot Soli.
~ Por Couple. UmHed Tick·
••· 407-717.-.oo Eld. tn8, liond., ThiV Slllunlar, I A.M. To 10
P.ll.

.

mom combmat1on, 2 car

4 F901 x8 Fool Br 1115 Inch
Ptootlc Shlota, For Solo $5.00
Each, 814-3117'71113.
Apple n aS Computer 5 1/4 • 3
112 Drive. lmagewrfter II Prinltr,
Jt,OOO, 114-448-el37.
Allontlon: Soiling Chrllllmoo

Baharftl

blr~lt·1 n

story home . Oversized 2 car garage . E~ra
mobile home hookup_Owner wants an off:~

ctudTng Speaktrll And Record

Nla~lo,

balh , family room , dimng room w11h

hutch, kitchen, living room . newer heat

home situated at Eagle Ridge. Extra mce 1 ll

2 Eklht lr1ck AMIFM Aadlot In·

&amp;14-843.

brick/vinyl sided hom.e With 4 b:Bdroa:m ~.

'
REDUCED
I NOW S57 ,500.00 - 4 Bed roo~

never bMn uHd, $150. 304-e75-

e~rdt,

Nice front and side porch. 1 car detached
garage. Low $30's
1586

$65.000.00
1579
REDUCED! IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!
49630 Eagle Ridga Road- 1 112 s1ory

'

6902.

· 35,000 beub.all
5360.

Living room, kitchen, dining and living room.

acre lawn additional mobile home hook-up .

Karottnt hNttr, 23,000 BTU,

Ptoyor, $25 Eoch, 814-448-2380. ·
300 Flro Brlcko, 121&lt;12,
Alum. Dog Lot, Like Now, 614258-t058.

t016 SECOND AVENUEII GREAT
INVESTMENT PROPERTYI3 bedroom 2 story.

pjump. Building with fruit cellar. Approx . 2

1980 Codlloc Sovlllo, $1500. 1983
Eagle

LOOKING FOR A LOT7 Ov01 1 aero , road
frontaga along SR 160. County wator and
aloclric available.
1596

Meigs County

NEW USTINGI OWNERS WANT A QUICK
SALE! N..t &amp; clean 3 bodmom ranch home,

$29,900.00

Buy or 1111. Alvarlnt Anllq~.~tt,

446-8771,

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
510 SECOND AVENUE, GALUPOLIS. OH. 45631 _ _ _ _ _!1111111_ _ _ _ __

system, nice laval double lot. Front proch.

Antiques

1124 E. Main Strttt,

n

.-

52 Sporting Goods

53

Russall D. Wood, Broker•• 446 4618
Tammie Dewltt.............441·1514 Martha Smllh •••••••••••• 379-2651
Judy Dawltt..................441.Q262 Cathy Wray•.••••••••••.•.•446-4255
Phyjlls ~lll!lr............,... .256-1136 Cindy Drongowskl••••245-11697
J. Merrill Carte~.............379-2184 Cheryl Lenilay...........742·3171

longt

e s just waiti ng tor you. Lot s at wooded &amp; pasture land. Septic &amp; well on property.
11581

BACK ON THE MARKEll Now is your chance
to own this newer brick hom~ .. Nic. river ~~w.

Large gnoal mom including liVIng room, d1n1ng

room &amp; ltitchon. Fam ily room, 2 baths. Hogh
eflicioncy oloctric hoat pump &amp; more. 8 ysars
loh on tax abatemen t. CaLl today lor an
appcinlmonl
1593
IDEAL FOR THE FIRST HOME BUYER lis 1his
well decorated 3 bedrooms ranch style home .
Living room, kitchen. bath , full basem ent
Newer electric heat pump . Attached one
carport . Must see to appreciate! Just minutes

1803

from town !

-

IMIEDtATE POSSESSION! 40'x40' 3 car
detochod molal garage Wllh concrote noomg.
One story 3 bedroom homo with w85Mrldl)'llr.

TWO HUMORED SIXTEEN ACRES MIL.
Vacant land. Mobile homo pod on property.
Spring. Several wooded acres, crop and
posture land. Owner willing to soli on land
contract!
1577
NEW USTINQI FARMI Approx. 52 Acres and a
3 bedroom home. Uvlng room, kitchen, bath,
laundry &amp; more . Nice locatiOn I

ATTENTION! DEER HUNTERS! Over t19 acr·

some fumiture, apphancea mcluded . Tracklr
with blade, plow, b\Jsh hog included. Call=

WHAT A LOCATION! 154 DEBBIE DRIVE.

1108

Quality brick ranch. Large rooms consisting ol 3

bedrooms, 2 baths, dining area, living room. full
basement. 2 Car garage with electric door

-

opener.

a pprox .

THIS MAN MEANS BUSINESS! LOWERED
PRICE TO $24,100.00. Whala great deall Just
parfoct homo lor starting out or wa~ting
something smaller. 2·3 bedrooms, largo lot,
living room, kitchen, bath , pallial basomont.
Storage building! Homa in good raparil
MAKE HIM Nl OFFER!
1584
LOOKING FOR SOliE INVESTMENT
PROPERTY? UKE SOME EXll'IA INCOIE?
Homo with 4 bedroomo, living room, family
room, kitchen, bath and mo111. Plus, 2 garage
apartments! Located al 142 Portsmouth Road.
call lor moro details!
t602
COMFORTAfiLE HOMEI Green Township.
One slory home clean and 1n good condition. 3
bedrooms, living room , familv room , dining
room , bath. Nice fireplace . 24 ';~~; 24' two car

garage. Priced righl in ttle $30's. 1605
COMMERCIAL BUILDING l OVER II
ACRES. Lola ol g,... polentiall p,....,tly uood
as an auction business. Metal building ia
oppiOX. 7(/'1225' totaing approx. 15,750 sq. It

For '"""' ~~ cal an agent Ieday!

CHEAP! CHEAP! CHEAPI $15,0001 2
Bodroom home, nlca laval lot. Kitr:hon , living
room, back &amp; lronl porch!
1581

Immediate Possession! Level lot

100'

'

15 0 '.

$70·s

' Discover The Power Of Nuniber lenc
UOIOI'fQ•.a:N.ICIPmJ"O...MOOIN.MIO. , ... ..,_.

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

c-...r.,..,•-~

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54 Ml~eellaneoua

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br CLAY R. rOUAN

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Qormon
Fomolo 7 llantho,

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58

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~~;~ERASED

INVESTMENT PROPERTY • Possible
Commercial IIIB· Curren~y has Excellent
Rental Potential: 2 Homes, 4-5 Mobile
Home hook-ups, AH Utilities aw~able, Nice
size lot. Located. in Middeport Villaga.
ASKING! $112,000 MAKE AN OFFER
NICE HOME IN THE SMALL COMMUNITY
OF RUTlAND, ON A QUIET STREET!
Located on Depot $,1. t Floor Frame Home
with newer vinyl siclng and And n~wer
oepain throughout. DoywaiVcarpet ontenor, 2
Boclrooma. Bath utility, New handmade
poplar kitchen cabinets, attached blodl
Woiflahop Block garage with storage area
clverhe~ 1WO story, cable hool&lt;·up LCD
Wiler EKtra tO x 50 mobile home hooked
·up, reictv to rent. ASKING! $35,000.
TR 240

Bedfotd Township. 115+ a&lt;:res

, _ , ground with 3-4 oil &amp; gas wells , All
rn1n1ra1 rtghtl are AIMrw.&lt;f. There are no
biiNclngl

tnd no mirittral rights with this

propony. ASKING I $29,900.

'

•

building lot. Green
School District.

850 BUHL MORTON RD.

More or leaa. Wooded
building lot surveyed.
City schools, Buhi
Morton Road.

More or less.
BeautHui wooded

5.66ACRES

,~· ~ . ),;~it - ·

Canaday
Realty

75 Boats &amp; Motors

446•3636

=. .

198S PIIUbuoy Pontoon boot1
tift., 40hp Yomoho Oldbaora
motor, Eaey4.old triller, ltlachebJe prlv1cy curtain
uoed 4 llm11.
5

ro:t

P,

IWCt

Alii

0

19117 Ford Eocort 4 Dr., tii,OC¥1
12,000 080, &amp;14-388-1041.
Harv1rd UIH'klhl gl'lnd plano,
good

conditiOn ollkln• ~so

Make otf.r, 304-IM-5243~ ••

Aeglltored Stondordbrod moro,

experienced riMr only. S04~75-

'

7106 or 614-1414708.

NEW FREE
ALL LOCAL
AVAILABLE.
FREE COPY.

18117 Hondo CAX-111, ,..,.
root, lop., bloclc, ntro nlco,
82,000 mllel. $4400, 1'14-8D2·
2514 afterlp.m.

1i77 Cldlllac, 2 door, Good
motor ond tronomloolon, •ood
Urn, $400,114-843-&amp;381. •

Real e.tate

SHOWING NEARLY
IN COLOR, IS NOW
OFFICE FOR YOUR

Real Estate General ·

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

PRICE REDUCEO. Collt!go
groat .location In Rio Grondo.
Evano Farms &amp; Rio Granda
lnvoabnent opportunity or ~rfact tor rotinod
poraona not oatiofied with doing nothing. 12
unite plua raaldonco. Largo lot with ooml
parking. Good income. Call Dave for mora
information.
1218

UP SCALE RANCH· Very otately home In
Charolalo Hilla Lake Eotateo oftero a
comfortable way of Hie. Largo apaclouo rooma
Include 3 bedrooms. deluxe eat-In kitchen,
family room with vaulted ceiling and brick
flraplaca, and largo living room. Loads of
windows take lull advantage of tho oleo ft. of
lake frontage. HUGE lull walk out baoor!&gt;ant
double• living lp8C8 if noodod. 2 car garage
pluo garage door entrance to basement
wortclhop. Melntonance froa exterior allowo
you lelatra timo to -ch tho goooo gracefully
glldt in and out of the lako or go attar that
Junker ban In tho lake. 52 toot traaled dock
with atrulm doon ott maotor euilo, •• wet ao
family room, alia enhancos tho groat lllko front
location. $143,000 S.riouo buyers only! HOt

UVABLE • RECENTLY
lECORATE:D
FAMILY LIVING AREA HAS CENTERBAR STYLE KITCHEN ADJOINING LARGE FAMILY ROOM,.
DINING AREA AND DEN, FORMAL LIVING ROOM HAS COZ:V
FIREPLACE. THREE BEDROOMS TWO BATHS. TWO CAR
GARAGE WITH WORK AREA. 40' X 72' BARN IS PERFECT
FOR HORSES OR OTHER LIVESTOCK. APPROX. 30 ACRES
WITH PICTURE PERFECT VIEW OF THE OHIO RIVER. JUST
A FEW MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS. FIRST
TIME OFFERED!

'"CJM'"

Qlva uo a can, Thlo could be tho place you atweyo
droamed of.
WE NEED BUYERS AND SELLERS!
can today
BRUCE TEAFORD
Broker

11 4-1112-35112

Jill HILl
lolooAgonl

SHII!RY RIFfl..E

811-M.HoiO

8.twt2-332S

YOU WILL LOVE THE SETIING • LOTS OF TREES.
THIS RANCH HOME HAS LARGE COVERED DECK ..
FAMILY KITCHEN WITH AMPLE CABINET SPACE ON
MAIN LEVEL PLUS A FULL KITCHEN ON LOWER
LEVEL. FAMILY ROOM WITH WOOD BURNING
FOURTY EIGHT ACRES. MIL RIO GRANDE AREA.. MOSTLY STOVE .. VERY COMFORTABLE
AND
VERY
WOOOED HILL SIDE.. CALL FOR MORE DETAILS!
AFFORDABLE FOR $52,000.

lolooAgont
(~)

205 Norlh Second Ave.
Middleport, OH
.
RACINE· Elm Street· ~ In the 2 story aecllon at this hoine
rent the one·story rear tiiCiion and live tree. Front has 5 ·
rooms, 3 bedrooms, and bath. The rear has 4 rooms, 2
bedrooms and bath. Larie nlce.lot.
$20,000

i

,

Real Estate General

ln caDinets and knick·knack shelves beside of fireplace.

aUPPLEIIENT A PENSION·Two mobile
homoi haie, ono to live In, one lo_colloct rant
troml Could rant both lor mor. lnc:orM, II
preforted, as praoontiy baing dono. One hao 2
bodroomo with woodbumar, rango and
rotrigerator and one hao 3 ~room• with
woodbumor. Each mobile home hao Ita own
ooptic, water tap onct oloctric. EaiiY care lot on
blacktop road. Pricoct at $25.400.
ttoo

IMMEDIATE
.
REDUCTION - New repairs lncludong
Kitchen, And Bathl THIS IS WH)\T YOU
WANT?! WELL COME SEEI Located in
Middleport 2 Sto&lt;y Frame Home with 3
bedrooms New Electric Heat Pump/CA
Allie Space. Full Basement. Fireplace,
Approl&lt;imately. Acre, NOW ASKING!
$45,900.

Happily Ever After Ia how you'll
llva In thlo 3 bedroom, t t/2 bath ranch with
!amity room and largo oat-ln kitchen. For help
with utllty COlli and oaoo of malntananca thlo
home IMtureo raplacemont windowo. wail! to
liva out, yet clooo to town. Call today tor an
appointment
1502

FIFTIES' BUYER, BSAT THISI Crisp, clean 2·
3 bedroom home on large comer lot in
Middleport. Everything you could wanl at a
price you can atloid. $55,000
1507

bodmomo, 3 lui baths, largo ~ving room, oat-ln
kitchen with cherry cabinols, largo family room
with anractive brick fireplace. Located only
minutoa from town in city schools. 2 car
garage. 2 acres plus. St25,000 Call Davo tor
mora into.
1224
· 31 AcNil, mon or teu. E1Mu11ful rollng illld
o" Rt teo. Porlact for buildjng one houN qr a
whole oubdlvlelon. Must to appraciate.
$45,000
1211
RIO CENTER ESTATES- Build your ~nie
among the lroea on one of ·theoo ooml·
.-cludod lolo. 1 mile well of Rio G1111tdt Lola
ran~ In olzo from 2.&amp; acrao to 6 aoraa.
R~atncllve covenants for your protection
:f~~to from 56,500 tor 2.5 acra lize.tr:i
'
r Mlect5 acra parco~, County wator
available. Call ua formoralntonnation. 1237
GREAT STARTER HOllE OR REnRINQ TO
THE COUNTRY! Locat.d on 3.8 btltutitul
~~Crai, m/1, thl1 property olfen 2 bedroomo, 1
bath, living room, dnlng toam, laolle kitchen, 1
car ga~~ge, plus lltlcioncy dwifling. Efllclency
olera living room, t bedroom with range,
ralrigerUir, link. catl today! At thla prlolt, you
can1 atloid not to. Only $3t,900
1101

TR 240 Bedford Township . tt 5+ acres
vacant ground wilh ~ oil &amp; gas wells, All
mineral rights are reserved. There are no
buildings and no mineral rights with this
property. ASKING I $29,900.

Evooythlng You Could Wttn~ AI a Price You
Can Afforcl.•• 3 bodroomo, t bath vinyl oklod
ranch on 1i largo lot. Otten lalgelivlng room &amp;
kltchon. FuH unfinlohed baoomont with a 2nd
bath that you can linioh to eult ycitlr nHdo.
Freohly painted on tho inoldt. Jull llatod at
$49,000, don't mlu outl Cal Carolyn.
NOS

NEW LISTING- Located in Middleport. A
MUST SEE HOMEI Has lots ot potential:
THEY DON'T BUILD THEM LIKE THIS
ANYMORE I!! 2 Story Brick with large front
porch,4 Bedrooms,t · Baths, Cellar &amp; Attic
space, 3 Fireplaces, Ceiling Fans, Blinds,
Herb llarden in back, Older Frame Garage,
Nice River Viaw from back yard . Unique
Older Home. Nice Large Rooms . ASKINGI
$49,500.

.

ATTENTION INVESTORSII Ho,.•o an
· opportunity in town you ohouldn't ~·· up .
Located on First AND second Avenue 3
buildings. 4 rental units in good conditiOn.
Good rental income. Call for mora information.
$94,900
12t2

Ciin:w;:;' iiiiiTiY -;;;:;;::;:;;:;;;:; on a dtad..r&gt;d
streot
a year
of lha river makoa -

this contemporary ranch a "rnu1t oot'. The
remodeled kitchen loaturao cherry cablnoto,
cantor island with JtnnAir range and oeoving
counlar, highly organized storage areas and
that aforamenlioned "Viow". The .grand piano·
alzod living room/dining room co.mbinatlon
oilers a wooclbuming fireplace ond 'that view".
The cozy.den and maslar bedroom lhara • tho
view" as wall, You will appreciate the 2 lull
baths and 2 car carport of thia vory special
home. Banor call today. Tho prico·jull $89,000.

SOMETHING VENTURED, SOIIEHTHINQ
GAINEDI Own your own body lhop onct towing
bulinon pluo fomily rantal unill. ·Body lhop
ollara 26x34 bay, t 8X34 bay and t 2x28
ottlcallobby with bath, pluo 8 car carport.
Owner
AM
conlracl will go with
tho property, t4x60 ta.mlly ranlal unho include
1886 Rodinan offering 2 bedroomo, t 112
batho, nice kitchen and' living room. Anolhor
14x70 1885 Rodman oftoring 2 bedtoOml, 2
bath (master ball hao wh._,..,llub), large fully
equipped kitchen wltb llland, double oveno,
dshwalhtr, range, central air. 47 wooded
acreo overtoolclng tho river Ju•t 2 mioe eoulh ot
tho dam. The ponlbiNtlea lor thlo property .,.
llmltieu. Priced at 574,800. Call Carolyn tor
additlonallntormatlon.
MOO

••Ia•

HOO

SL RL 1114, Bldwott lhrae bodroorn, two IIDry
with living room, ltunlly room, dining room, onct
2 car detached garage, all Mtting on a .754
acra, m~. lot Owners raacty to ooK at $25,500,
May ooll on land contract. Call tor mora
lnfo~mation.

t3CII

WE ·NEED LISTINGS!!!
.,

loretta McDade•
446·77.29
. .
Patrick Cochran• 446•8655

•
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I

f.~~~~~:~~hiPIKE· Near Salltlbury Elemenlaly School· A nice
I'
a 2 bedroom , one story home. Haa dining room,
and rear porch , part basement, and storage building.
REDUCED to $18,000
lltDDUiPO·RT· Level laying lot on Broadway Ave. Lot t 5
opprox. 50xt25 priced to sell at
112,000

OFI~CES. OFFICES, OFFICES... Tttah
ft. building ottera. Located
noar Holzer. Ideal for many
mo,. Information.

[ :CHILDREN 'S HOllE ROAD· At the edge of Pomeroy a 5.6
wooded lol, with utilities available. Great buDding site.
. $t5,000

.

.

'

I

'

-.

I

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Catolyn Wasch•441·1 007
SO•nJ GarHs-446·2707

DOTnE TURNER,IIrokar .......- -....................... tt2-8112

IRENDA JIFfiRS ....................................._ ,......• II2-3011

BANDY lllilrcHER ............................................. :...~t
JERRY BPRADLIHG .................................... (304) ~
OP'FICE ~..............................................~ ...................II2-a.

.

,~

:.····.
1.75 ACRES, m.1, near new 4 lane, 4 BRs,
2 baths, LR, DR, cent air, 2 car anached
garage.

PoiiiEI~O't· Union ~.·A one 11oiy home with 2 bedrooms,

IMng room, kitchen, and new be\11 on the ftnt
a large ftnlahed room In the basement. Has 2
l.O.mct-. C8lp&lt;lrl, and a large new deck. ·
azs;ooo

ey

o/r~,w~-

IIIDDU:PO•RT· Hobart Street- 2 bedroom, 1' bath, t story
wMnyt siding.
S1 0,100

e DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER • 446-9555

WE HAVE EM FINE HOMES· PILGRAM
NO TEE· PEE'S OR WIGWAMS JUaT
FINE HOMES SUTABLE FOR SETILERS
OR THOSE INDIAN TRIBES, LET U8
ClltTHER TOGETHER TO FIND YOU A
NEW HOMEI HAPPY THAfiKSGivtNOIII

3 BRo, LR, FR. DR, 2 112 bello, full
buomen~ cent air, 2 firapf ceo, 3 garogoa
wlolo ctrfc opanen, gerdln opot by river.

Cd lor tppointmenL

1"-ACINE· Pine Grove Road- A 2-3 bedroom home sitting on
2 t/2 acres·. Has a storage building with llblehed
a 20x30 workshop, hog pen, and a chicken
$44,900

446-3644·

IIEAUTIRJL HOlE WITH 8PLENDID
VIEW OF THE OHIO RIVER.. Home ohn

NEED A NEW OFFICE + a rontal
apartment? 250 S.c. Ava., Nico otflce
downllein and aparnent and storage up.
Convenient to banks and lhopping.

towln"

r----.WISEMAN REAL ESTATE,

NICE RENTAL INVESTMENT- LoCated In
Middleport, 2 Bedrooms Home. Nice Interior
with Carpet/drywall, Front sitting pcirch, 2
Lois . Owner ASKING! $16,000 WILL
ACCEPT A REASONABLE OFFER II

DANVILLE· State Route 325· Approx 92 acres of ground
with a huge beautiful yard and approx. 20 acres tillable or
pasture land. Lots or woods and a mobile home wHh several
addHions. Over 2,000 square feet wittl 8 rooms. 3 bedrooms,
and 1 t/2 baths.
M4,900

Thlo noat as
please. Ownora
to 1-• lhio 3 bedroom
homo but hod to.
include fotmallivlng
room, family room, large covered dock &amp;
fenced yard. 2 car garage, hoat pump onct
mota. located In a quiet family orfontod
noighboillood only minutes from town, $611,800
1201
REDUCED! REDUCEDI REDUCEDI Out ot
the area owner lo Mriouo, wants hlo property
SOLDI 2U72 woodod acrao, mil, hal a 32X3!2
bam with loft, oloctrio and water tap. PriviiC)' 11
yours whon you build your home omong tho
- ·- $24,000
H/17

c~·~~~:~la~:~~ry~:ouinoidt
won't havo to do • thing
to.
and out featuroo 3

COUNTRY
LIVING!
HAYMAN
RD.
LONGBOTIOM - Just minutes trom
Racine: Very Nice 'like New" 1988
Fleetwood 14 x 76 mobile home. Features 3
Bedrooms, 2 Full Baths, A Master Bath in
Bedroom, Has Garden Tub, &amp; Shower stall.
Walk in closet Also Features utility room,
Newer Electric Heat Pump/C.A.. Gas
Fumance. Built in Hutch, Built in Stereo,
Ceiling Fan, t2 x 35 covered Patio, tO x 15
Storage Building, 3+ Fenced acres. Good
well water, ASKING! $27,000.

Newer carpal and paint, hardwood floors, all on approx . 3
acre lot.
·
$38,000

Uncoln ·Heights- A three bedroom frame home
siding, dining room, family room, chain link
ln,ground pOol, oft street parl&lt;ing and WOOden
'· ,
.
JUST 5a.900

a very

A + Location just off SR.124, Just minute's
From SR.7, 98.99 acres with 2 Okler
Homes, Sheds, Brick Buildings, 2 Septics,
L.aadong Creek Water, Free Gas, Producing
Wells, With Royalties , ASKING! $t05.000.

J

OFFICE 992-2886

POIIEROY· Anne Street- A t t 12 story home with 3
bedrooms, 2 t/2 baths, large living room. dining room,
kttchen, full basement. Down stairs has archway doors, buln-

LOOK! NG FOR A VACANT LOTI Here's
one located on Condor St. Utilities should
be available. ASKING! $5,000.

WANT SOME ·SPACE, YET CLOSE TO
TOWN I checl&lt; this outl Located in Pomeroy,
On Union Terraco- 1 Floor Frame Home
with 3 Bedrooms, t bath, FA Electric Heat.
Central Air. t .86+ acres, part basement
Large
Front
porch.
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION I ASKING! $29,500.

Home

for Sale .

1.24 ac:res Locatsd out of town, y.et close
enough to be oonvenient Includes nico 26 1
51 Modular, that features large utility room,
2 beths,Garden tub, 3 bedrooms,
F.A.Eiectric heat, Decking, ll'C watur,
ASKING - $46,500. MAY CONSIDER

ACREAGE NEAR RACINE- Bashan Rd. 8·
ecres with t 978 t 2 x 65 mobile home and
Older house, 2 septic systems, TPC Water.
F.'A.N.G. and Electric B.B. Heat. May have
gas available to the house. ASKING!
$23,000.

*

81

62Acres
Wooded
$15,000

Real Eltate General

Transportation

HENRY E. (LELAND...... 992-6191
TRACY BRINAGER ........949-2439
SHERR I HART ............. .742·2357
HENRY E. CLELAND 111 .. 992-6191
CLELAND ..........992-6191
OFFICE.........................992·2259

REDUCED - A NICE HOME AT A NICE
PRICE! Located In Longbottom,On Oewins
Run Rd. t acre with One ltoor Frame
Home, ~ Bedrooms,1 Bath, Newer bone!
Gas Fumance, Drilled Well, Shed &amp; Wood
Shecl. MAKE AN OFFER! ASKING
$23,000.

73 Vana &amp; 4 WD'a

US11NGS NEEDEDIIi
Many qualified home
and land buyers. New
marketing techniques
and products.
BUYER BROKER
Represents the buyer
only In a home pur·
chase. So If you have
questions about Buyer Broker please call

2.33ACRES

Plflo COVM, deckl,
roomo, put up vlnvt
troller oldrtlng. t1ol-

Avenue, Galllpol(e Ohio. large

Real Estate

•· HOME • SAY'S
'WELCOME', ~Ot;Biod. 1!1 Middleport t floor
Frame Home, 3 bod!ooma, 1·bath, canar
space, CIA, Decf&lt;lng, Patio, Nico level
Fenced yaod, Nice lntlllrior, Lots of closet
space, ASKING I $45,000. .

Will

Supplr Of Roto, Mlc~ 1 • Blnfo,
Floh &amp; Pot Supplloo. wo Now
Hav. Our Chrlltmu Toy1 For
Your P"•' Monday Ttwu Frld1y
10 A.M. To I P.M. Sundar 12 A.M.
To 6 P.M. &amp;14-446-227!1.

etten

Real Estate General

304-I'IWSN Ohio •"'-24M.

llpolle. NQW open. 814-M1-D404.

I' I' 1 1 r I' I' 1· I' ,. 1
·~~mblt I I I I I I I lrH~ I I I
•

4

Home

Improvement•

446-4206

Cbom p 1ete .the, chuckle quotedd
y 1111 rng on t~e missing wor s
you develop from ~tep No. 3 below.

3

81

Serv1ces

MW211.

i IG

LI.l/\RO
19-....1_ 11.....,0...,1-.---1

C&amp;mpera&amp;
MotorHomea

Tho Aril ,._. Shoo, 7!18 9ocond

-rl

1
:
-_

~ ,

304.f75-lllin ot 1-80tJ.D7·:m7.

Plloco Pot Shop•
l.oi:oted In O.C. Murphy Co. ao~

Puppp

....- - - - - - - - - .
The young couple thought
K I X CAP
they had a legitimate case
I----.1-.,..,16,.........1.-.,.17=--T"I--1 against a big corporation.Wlile
L.--1.-..a..._.__--L.-.L..--1. meeting with an up and coming lawyer they became disilUN CC0 R
llusioned when he sighed, "It's
1-""'l---.l~a --r-1---.l~ a shame this didn't happen
1
L-.....1'--..L-L.--L-.L.
. ......~ last year before they - - - - - - the---."

79

7!'.000 mlloa, 1
m.
11tt 11-10 Tohoo For loio Or
Tredo, 114-446.111114.
.

1172 Chewy 4 witMI drive, hll'll'
holt,
enlngo, 4 lpMil
.1011.
lnnMnllllon, kiokl l rune
'1 1tt Pant. CloAm PISJ PI, AI~ ..-. tt,2GO. nrm. :J04.tl'll-2704.
·Auto, 4 Door, lt,fio, Attor 1
1m a...,. llozw, 1400, ,,._
P.ll. 114-st7-0221.

r

tiEROEL

s.o,

•
ounroot,

. 1HO Ponttoc TrlnSport For
..11all. CIMn With N.,.. , .....
1irw. Owner A Non &amp;mal•.
;AIIdnv 112,000. Coli 114446-

Floh Tlnlc, 2413 Joekeon Avo.
Point Pl....nl, 3CJr4.1"7S.ZOI1
10gol. tonk ..,..,,., $11.11.
Yount
Po,.klllo,
$14.111.
J rm Suppi!CS
Homotoro, 12.111 • 14.11.
Ev.,.day low prlcu.
&amp; Livestock
Hampete,.., P1r1bl't•, Cock·
at1111, Mice &amp; Baby Atle, 61._.
446..C283 or 4117 Konougo, a.~ 61 Fann Equipment
II polio.
Ono yr old Red lllnloturo 2 Ford Trlct'!"'t. I H And
Plrwcher, m111, SIOO. 3()4.675.. J~blloo, 2 Buoh I!Ogo, t 'IWo
Bottom P1ow, 814-~ After
31103.
IP.II.
Puppl..
AKC
O.rmon
ShOj&gt;htrd, flrwt thotl, vot tlydraullc oll,50 gol$125. Sldoro
chocked, ot4.fl7-3m.
EqulpmontJ. Hoildonon, WV.

2

=·-

.fNOO.t--s.

oouth ot C.rpontor. fled ond
Ooldon Do.llcilouo lppiH. Open
8oturdoro only.

Ahlr7:00 p.m.

-bod

_....
c-a;
1111-77ttor-

cj\:rsvr ~

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

• . , .•.. . • . , " ' ........ .. . ................. ..... . .. ....... .. r-••·····.,

,... Pt,math ..... 1111 Chi.,.
* · Auto,
.$11!11, 40 IIPO. 1117' Dodao 4"
uti KM 1S11t Ttno Aid With m1 Prowtor 21" loll Col!Nt-.IU,IO, $1300, 3111PO. :JCA. lleck Int. M.OOO, 114 Ill 1101
tolnod, Air 1 Awnlnv 114-446. Ron'• TV lorvtco, -'"!blna
f'/1.3440.
nM.
In Zonlllt oloo - n g IIIOio1
1111 Cllow - - 112 tan
tHO Clwyolor Ll loron,
Cillo, ~k-up, :101 ~~ box..,
,.1!1~~.PS, Pl, 'llr, 1uto, cruiH.
-othor brando.
lppl...otro. wv

•.ooo

IT,IM"N Wi-!y

~

SUnday
72 Trucka for Sale

304.fl'U101.

.

. •November 21, 1993

AutOI for Sale

App!Mo 11111 ott At. 143, one milo

S11mne Ktttena. 81t-.t41-3844

T R A H H ~1

71

1112
- · C.rto, """ • good, ~"'"· 12000 080.

C.olo !Coybaord SIUIIn Box
Loaded, 1200; 080, Moat Sell!
8t4 441 tml.

Cocutlolo Hond Fed
I
FonciH, s.e P.M. Onlr, 114-446.
7ttt. .
OroOOflWYI!d C.Hory: CFA

simple words. Print letters of
each in Its line of squares.

November 21, 1993

KIT 'N' CA RLYLE® by Larry Wrlllht

Myslcal
Instrument•

12 otnno gultlr. 304-tl'll:llShftor 7:3trprn. .

Block c...,. And Sllvlt, Shoto,
WOI'Oied Largo l....t, N il..r Sool l300, 814-446.
428S.

O words
Rearrange the 6 scrambled
below to make 6

1

st

Merchandlll

That lntrig'uing Wore/ Game with a Chuckle
-------Edited

wv

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, OH-Polnt

Page 06-Sunday Times-Sentinel

~

70 ACRES mil. S.C. 12, Madlaon Twp.· i
Approx. ·20 - • tillable, 50 woocto, old
hOld houoo on property has 3 BAs, LR,
kitehon. Caler houu and sheds aloo on
property.

ACRES m, near
Raccoon Twp and approx. tOA. in
Huntington Twp. Home on property·ott.ra 5
BRs, bath, L.R , kitchen, now tumaoo, wood
bumlng stow, oiding, oome now carpet
Bam on property. CALL FOR DETAILS.
OLD CIEVY.OLDS IIUILDING· 420' front
on Second Aw. and 82' lront.go on Grape.

117 ACRES, 11/L, FARII IN GUVAN
lWP., older home on property w/3 BAs, JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD - ADDISON
LR. kitchen , bath , DR , Farm builcings are TWP. - 386 acre term, 3 ponds, tobacco
bam, •ilo, aibs .
base, 44xt00 bam with conaete ft00111 . May
consider split. (578) .
BUILDING FOR IALE· Approx. 8,800 oq.
ft. looalod on Uncoln Pilla It Ctnllnary.

Callordtlda.

OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS· Fiesta
Grande on St. Rt. 35. Well established.
laUndromat also goes with business.

TO 562,50011
' I
tho river, homo ott.rs 3 BAS,
,
k~chon, bath, in gmund pool, large 2 c.r
unattached garaga could be a shop. Call
todayl
viow

IS SECWSION WHAT YOU WANT? Don't
miss this one , 4 BAs. 2 baths, city sel1ools
2 a. mA, asking $52,000.
'
INVE811ENT PROPERTY· Mil Croak Rd.,
3 BRa, LR, kitchtn, bath, unanached
ga~~ge, $22,000

••
•

•I
I

••
••
I

I
'•

�Page

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

DB-Sunday Tlmes Sentinel

wv

November 21,1993,
s

Po.lnt Pleasant, WV

World soybean production expected to fall by 5 percent
WASHINGTON (AP) - World
soybean production for the 1993-94
crop year is f~ at 111.1 metric tons, S percellt below the 199293 estimate, the Agriculture
De~ent says.
'A further decline in the U.S.
soybean production forecast in
November was compensated in part
by an increase in Brazil's soybean
production, where forecast production was increased 250,000 tons to

Horticulture
as therapy
flourishing
NEW YORK (AP) - People
who haven't spoken a word in
months or even years look at a
plant and suddenly perle up and
say, "We used to grow those back
in the '20s.''
Stories lilce that. attesting to the
stimulative mystique of plants,
have become fairly common in
psychiatric settings, says Joel Flagler, coordinator of honicultural
therapy programs at the New Yorlc
Botamcal Garden.
Courses in horticultural therapy,
which combines gardening skills
with a mission to heal or comfon
ailing bodies and minds, are thriving at universities, botanical gardens and arboretums around the
country.
"It's an ex)!loding program,"
Flagler said. 'We've seen more
interest and more job opponunities
in the last three to four years than
in 15."
More than 700 individuals, service groups and commercial concerns ~ipate as members of the
Amencan Horticultural Therapy
Association, AHTA, headquartered
in Gaithersburg, Md.
Some 300 hospi!als use plants
as a therapy for emotional and
physical disabilities. The therapists
also work in prisons, rehabilitation
centers, old-age homes, centers for
the blind and visually impaired and
schools for the learning disabled.
Just misting a plant with an
atomizcr helps strengthen muscle
tone of stroke victims and people
with spine or head injuries. Plants
and flowers help patients regain
their sense of touch, color .and
smell.
"I think the fact that plants are
alive makes them a uniQue 111¢1!ium
to work with," flagler said in a
phone interView. "Plants are everchanging, they're dynamic. If you
plant a thing on Tuesday, the following Tuesday it's going to look ~
differen!, change in shape, size.
"Plants reward· us with new
leaves and new fruits and new·
· flowers all !hi time.Whal's unique
is that plants are oot discriminatin~.
they don't care if somebody ts
blind mentally retarded or 1n a
wheelcluur - the plant is going to
respond. And that nondiscriminating and nonjudgmen!al c~aracter
makes plants an ideal medium for
therapy."
,
in general. the therapists let the
patients decide "what plants to
grow and how they will be
~v.own:· flagler said. "That way,

:~:~~~~!f~~~ts~~~~~

because "seeds are
hard to see and
hard to han dl e, " PI ag Ier sa1'd ·
·
1an seed
,"Also, when Y.ou p td h ' some
will not germmate an t en you
have to deal with failure."
·
Matthew FrazeI, who supervtses
the horliculturalthera~ program at
the Chicago Botanic arden, says
· •IS good .or
• the e!der1y.
gardemng
"It may revive some interest that
they had earlier in their lives. It
sparlcs a lot of memories."
Aside from therapy, gardening
skills learned in jails
help pris0~ evdentua!~togusesetjoor :: fan~enes an gree·~·
·
scapeTh workheal~dg lurfpotemnanatialgocmfpelnant.15
10
c known
has been
for centuries, but
the teehnique gained impetus in
1 after World War 11
Am •
c:nca on Y
·
8 profession in
It
has
flourished
as
the past 10
Now more than
yleearsges' and 00
' 1·verst' ti'es
COi
d
8
ozen
offer courses and programs. Kansas
State University offen both bachelor's and master's degrees.
More thhan 800 personhs hNave
taken sue courses at t e cw
Yorlt Botanical Garden in the last
five years, Flagler said. To complete the requirements for certification as a horticultural therapist
tatcs lbout 18 months.
. Flagler got such a certificate
bimself. Before that, be earned a
degree in horticulture and forestry
at RlllgCrS and a master's degree in
f~RSUY at Yale. A member of the
boanl of the AHl'A, he now teach·
es at Rutgen and is also the agricultural agent for Bergen County,
NJ.

mabs

Smith honored
. GALLIPOLIS • Manha Smith
of CentU1Y 21· Big Be"d Realty,
.Inc. was rtcently recogniz'ed by
~gw 1. Sirlnabln, Ceittuiy 21
Lakta, Inc. Divisional Presidcn~ Cor being 111110111 the top prodllclng saklaaoc• in the Centuzy 21 Atbeni/Marieua Brokers
Council durina tlie month of

23 million tons," said a report on
the world oilseed situation by
USDA's Foreign Agriculture Service.
The forecast for. 1993 U.S. soybean production was reduced 3 J?!lr·
cent this month to 49 .9 mtllion
tons, 16 percent below the 1992
crop estimates. Lower yields in
such major producing states as
Iowa, Indiana and·Ohio account for
most of the large drop.
The forecast for world oilseed
production excluding soybeans was
increased 120,000 tons in November for the 1993-94 crop, reaching
112.4 million metric tons.
This is 2. I percent ahead of last

i.ion, especially favorable weather
during the current growing season
in Shandong province boosted
yields above normal "levels, adding
to the 21 percent increase in producti9n over last year.
•
World coUonseed production is
forecast to reach 31.5 million tons
in 1993-94, which is 276,000 tons
below the October forecast
"Reduced production forecasts
for Pakistan and the United States,
down 392,000 and 261,000 tons,
respectively, exceeded increases in
forecasts for China and Greece, up
225,000 and 148,000 tons, respectively.

Fannie Mae lowers equity
required for refinancing
WASHINGTON (AP)- The
nation's largest investor in home
mongages has lowered the amount
of equity that many homeowners
must have to refinance their residential loans.
The Federal National Mortgage
Association said Friday it will permit refinancing on homes in which
owners have as little as 5 percent
equity: Previously, refinancing
required at least 10 percent equity.
"We are extending the benefits
of refinancing to a greater number
of people," said James A. Johnson,
chairman of the association also
known as Fannie Mae. "We
believe this will be an enormous
benefit to consumers, especially
those living in areas where home

prices have-declined.' '
Millions of homeowners have
refinanced their mortgages in
recent years as mortgage rates fell
from double-digit figures. Rates
had dropped to a 25-year low of
6.74 percent in October, although
they averaged 7.08 percent this
week.

Refinancing at a lower rate permits homeowners to reduce their
monthiy payments. For instance,
homeowners who took out a 30year mongage on a $100,000 home
when rates were 9 .5 percent four
years ago now pay $840 a month in
principal and interest. By refmancing at a 7 per:cent rate, their monthly payments would drop to $665.

Johnson said Fannie Mae refinanced more than $143 billion in
mortgages for about 1.5 million
households so far in 1993. Association economists estimate $10 bil·
lion of savings will be pumped into ·
the economy through mortgage
refinancing and the downward
adjustment of adjustable rate mangages this year.
But many owners are unable to
refinance because the value of their
homes has fallen.
These usually are people who
bought homes in the mid- to latet980s, when propeny values were
reaching all-time highs. Then came
the recession, overbuilding and
,tighter credit, which sent prices
tumbling in many areas.

World oilseed expons, exclud·
ing soybeans, are forecast to
decrease 52,000 tons 10 8.3 million
tons. An 80.000-ton in=ase in the
peanut export forecasi, due entirely
to the increase in peanut production
in China, does not offset a 102,000ton decline in sunflower seed
expons.
World oilseed im(lons, excluding soybeans, are forecast to
increase 115,000 tons to 8.9 million tons.
·
'.'An increase in impons by the
Untted States in response to the
recent start-up of a crushing facility
near the Canadian border is e~pect­
ed to account for a 100,000-ton
increase in imports to 250,000
tons," the l'etlOrt said."

KIEV, Ukraine (AP) - Less
than two years after the euphoria of
independence, Ukraine has a hangover of crisis proportions.
Back when Ulcraine was called
the breadba$ket of the Soviet
Unio.n, many Ukrainians imagined
they would thrive if given independence. Soviet leaders worried that
Ukraine was the one republic too
valuable to let go.
But hyperinflation, severe fuel
shortages, political paralysis and a
dangerous nuclear legacy are
Cf!!Shi!'g the former Soviet republic

has given a hostiie reception to
investment frtlm overseas.
Instead, tJtc:raine has asked the
West for aid to dismantle its nuclear arsenal- weapons it has been
reluctant to give up as called for in
international agreements.
"Ulcraine is on the verge of eco-.
nomic collapse," warned former
Deputy Prime Minister Viktor
Pynzenyk, who quit earlier this
year in protest of Kravchuk's policies.
So far, Ukrainians have reacted
with stoicism to the crisis.
thiS.';!'IRlef: ,, . , "''- . . .
Ukraine's transitional currency,
Econom1sts see hllle hope of the karbovanets, beuer tn&lt;rwn as
improvement in the country's econ- the ucoupon," is so. weak Ukrainiom~;
. . .
.
ans are eager to trade it for dollars,
Ukraine ISm a ptt- a deeper other foreign currencies and even
hole doesn't exist. People here Russian rubles, which Ulcraine outmake less than $2 a month,'' said lawed last year.
lawmaker Serhiy Holovaty, an
Few people can afford the Westopposition leader. "There is no em goods stoclced in kioslcs around
worse place to live in the world."
the city. State stores have empty
President Leonid Kravchuk, a shelves. When a · shipment of
former Communist leader, has sausages arrives, long lines form .
shoveled out subsidies to ailing Bread and milk must be bought
stare industries, causing the budget early, before they run out
deficit to _soar, and printed m_oney
Good cms of beer cost about
with nothing to back 11 up. PrivatJ· 18,000 coupons a pound. The mini·
zat1on has barely_begun, and cor- mum monthly wage in Ulcraine is
ruption i_s widespr~.
.
40,000 coupons. ·
Warned that h1s opponents ~ill
Ukrainians are already shivering
accuse the government of selling this fall, the coldest in the last 10
the country to foreigners, Kravchuk
,

years, and the fuel shortage has
curtailed most public transporta- '
lion.
Most bus routes to rural areas
have been cut. Public transportation in Kiev, the capital, has been
cut in half. To conserve energy,
electricity is cut off for an hour a
day everywhere except large cities.
. Many cars have been put away
for the winter because of soaring
gas prices.
About 90 percent of Ukraine's
gas and oil supplies comes from
Russia. but is no longer highly subsidized as it was in Soviet times.
Cliirig fuel Shortages, Ukraine
has decided to increase its use of
nuclear energy, despite international concern that its plants are unsafe.
The country relies on nuclear
power for 40 percent of its energy
in winter.
This fall,lawmalcers decided not
to phase out the reactors at the
Chernobyl nuclear power plant,
where the world's worst nuclear
disaster occurred in 1986.
"The situation at our nuclear
plants is catastrophic ... . Our
experts are not qualified, our nuclear stations perhaps the most dangetous in the world, " said
Volodymyr Usatenlco, chairman of
a parliamentary committee on use
of atomic energy.

Wool prices continue decline
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
fthe
td' sh
11 k ·
nature o
wor s eep oc IS
changing, with more animals
devoted to meat and less to wool,
the A · u1
Depanmen•
says
gnc wre
~
In a recent report on the world
livestock situation, the depart· Agncu
· Itural Se rment•s Fore•gn

vice said world wool prices dipped
sharply in early 1993 as a weak
world economy held down
demand.
''The nature of the world sheep
· d fi · 1 han ·
11ock IS
... e mne Y c
tgmg, with
ad higher
percentage of animals
ed .
rod .
evot to meat tl ucuon, pal11'c-

Livestock report
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Direct livestock prices and receipts
at selected buying points Friday by
the Ohio Department of Agriculture:
Barrows an d g1'I ts: most Iy 50
cents higher; demand moderate.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 39.00-40.00; plants 39.7541 .00 • a 1CW
' 41 •50•
Soned U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs..
country points 40.00-41.00.
Rece1pts Thursday 9,700. Estimated receipts Friday 9;500.
Prices from The Producers Livestock Assoct'au'on·.

ularly 1·n China ·and Austral-ia, as
well as the United States, where
rece!ll reforms will eventually
lower wool suppon payments," it
'd
sat ·
Meanwhile, world meat prices,
especially for lamb, have climbed
this year, it said, partly because of
a late 1992 snowstorm that scored a
big hit on New Zealand sheep
inventories.
"An expected improvement in
the world economy over the next
couple of years should eventually ·
help wool demand, but with Sldcks
at current levels, a rebound in wool
flocks is not expectM anytime•
soon,"the report

Cattle: 1.00 higher.
Slaughter steers: choice 66.00·
72.50; select 60.00-67.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 65.0071.00; select60.00-66.00.
Cows: stead y; a! 1 cows 52.50
and down.
Evans joins law firm
Bulls: steady; all bulls 67.00and
down.
HUNTINGTON • Marfaret
Vea 1 CaI ves: h'1g her; c hotce
·
Evans, a former resident o R1'o
110.00 and down.
Grande and a 1993 graduate: of the
Sheep and Iambs: steady to 2.00 University or Kentucky College. or
lower; choice wools 60.00-66.50; law, has joined the law firm of
choice clips 62.0Q· 70.00; feeder Huddleston, Bolen, Beauy, Porter
lambs 72.00 and down; aged sheep l!lld Copen as an associate in the
Huntington, w. va., office.
29 ·00 an d down. .

HOLIDAY LOAN SPECIAL
N0
v'

•52%
A. R. _.

FEBRUARY

EX wagon, power moon roof,air,
power windows &amp; loc:t&lt;s, loadedl

· UIIJOCUredlolnofrymf7,4\0C)IIIS5,DOOror-pmoro4&amp;"oathswllllcrodkapprovll•
(Elcomplt: A"'"nt fin anted $.!,001) o18.$llli A.P.R•• 48 miNIIhtr pi111•1e of$125.05)

' Lou role oYilloble ll/11931hnll213119:J. Flnl , . , _ , dueli1/H.

Equ~Op~w·~~~

..

0 hio Valley Bank

~~

You're Invited to Our

~(\~ekt~ 0~ ~~

NOT LIKE THE MALL JEWELER, IF YOU HAVE
'
A PROBLEM THE CLARKS WILL PERSONALLY
TAKE CARE OF YOU!!

$5495

$13,995

90 HONDA CIVIC DX
Red, black leather Interior, stereo,
automalic, extra sharp1
·

Bronze, 5 Sjlee(l, stereo, oi&gt;&lt;lra
nice.

$17,995

. $5995

91 TOYOTA CAMRY
4 door, automatic, air condHioning.

$10,995

LXI, 2 dool, 'whna, automatic,
stereo, power windows &amp; locks.

--4949$ .

92 HONDA ACCORD
White, automatic. air, stereo.

EX 4 dr., power, moon roof, CD

player, power win. &amp; locks, ctuise,
loaded.
$14,995,

$4495

TO BETIER SERVE OUR CUSTOMERS. THIS SALE
HAS BEEN EXPANDED FOR TWO BIG DAYS.
Saturday, November 27th and Sunday, N9vember 28th .
"~atnrda~rg:30' A.M: To ?:o·crP.'M. · ·sunday r1 :bo ro ·a:oo P:M.

OVER $1 ,000,000.00 IN GOLD &amp; DIAMONDS
MANUFACTURER'S COMPLETE LINE

COMPLETE

14K GOLD CHAIN

DIAMOND LINE
ONE
OFF
DAY

90 HONDA CIVIC
Wagon, 4 door, gray, automatic.

$6,995

Red, AMJFM. 5 speed, great gas
mileage. . , .

$88.16 per mo.

. 91, BUICK CENTURY

90 HONDA ACCORD

AutomatiC transmlssion,air. V6 en·
glne. stereo.

EX, loadedl CD player.sunroof,
automatic.

$198.28 per mo.

$259.51 por mo.

Chains, Charms, Bracelets
Earrings and More!

1DO's of Clusters, Fancy Rings
Earrings, Necklaces, Bracelets and More!

tVl••~••; V'.• 131C:(sA~E ~ot.'~!~,~~ard abo~. our".9ol~.1!a•~; ~..Ieaman ·and Dlam~~d Rep!_..Ptltlve~'1:111 :'

· be'ln Qur store for TWO DAYS .wt'ti their comRietl -~ of over.$1,()00,000.,00 ln ~l-\!&lt;~ ~oUI and ~lne: ·
,. DI~IJ'PJJ!~ 'til"'ot~% ~{fd ~. o~~ g9m1e el,rJY .alid:fila~~eu.r;chrl•triiat ,Seleetton ·and ~~~· Uke ·~~v,r ··
efdfe. (:;bme 'early and•enjoy ttie oobr 'prfzea.an~ Fo!).

iill...,ili'
RS, sliver, automatic tranamlasion,
4 cytlnderl

"0

'&lt;

!

.,

.

....

-

' ·
.t

•

·

·

' -

·,.1

Blue. automatic transmlsslon,air,

$180.64 per mo.

$198.28 per mo.

Automatlc&gt;•tranamlsslon,alr condl·
tlonlng, stereo

5 speed ·transmission, air condl·

89VWG.OLF
per 'mo.

I

AM/FM.

Uonlng, stereo.

STOP IN AND REGISTER FOR OUR FREE GIVE
AWAVS. DRAWINGS WILL BE HELD EVERY
HOUR DURING THE BIG 2 DAY EXTRAVAGANZA!

$159~37 per mo.

LAYAWAYS
90 CHRYSLER 5th AVENUE

STOP BY AND SAY

';+tefU!

Landau roof, burgundy, air, loaded!

Joe and Susan Clark

· $241.•51 per 11'0·
91 (7.98 APR), 90 !8.5 .APR),;IIi

"ATHENS
"THE HAPPY
HONDA
'
.
.
810 J:. State St. • Athena, Ohio
~

Member FDIC

113 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 • 992-2054

Bronze,alr, 6 cylinder, 4x4.

1994

You'll save ple,~ty with tbis loan spedil compared to
credit card rates and other revolving lines of credit.
But hurry, this special rate on holiday loans expires
December 31, 1993. .
,

Your Professional Full Service Jewelers

HOMETOWN SERVICE IS WHAT
WE STRIVE FOR.

$166.71

PAyMEN T TiL

Expansion encourag'ed
WASHINGTON (AP)
Favorable net relllms are c~­
ing expansion or broile, production, die Agriculture Depanme 0t
says.
" Strong .retail and food-service
demand and record exports are
keeping prices above a year earlier,
despite seasonal-declines," said a
report in this month's issue of
Agricultural Outlook magazine.
While feed prices have been
inching up, it said; they have not
risen enough to affect production
costs appreciably.
Broiler production in 1993 is
expected to increase S percent from
last year. /1. similar increase is
expected in 1994.

Not Only Do You Get the Finest
Jewelry at the Best Prices, You Get It
from Your Local Jeweler.

Two years after independence,
Ukraine faces economic crisis

a.

Scplemb«.

year and reflei:ts a 4 percent to 6
percent increase in sunflower seed,
rapeseed, copra and palm kernel
production, the repon said.
"Only couonseed production,
up 0.1 percent from a year ago, l!lld
peanut production, down 1.4 percent from last year, deviate from
the pattern," it s!lld
"Forecast peanut production in
China, up 900,000 tons, represents
the largest single commodity
adjustment for November," it Said
Favorable peanut prices in 1992
led to an increase in plantings in
Shandong, Hebei and Henan
provinces, the repon said. In addi·

UHCI

COURT ST•
POMEROY
992-2054

�_)

•

Page E2-8unday Times Sentinel

'

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Novem,ber 21, 1993

.
.
Pomeroy-Middleport 'i"IIJpolla, OH-Polnt Pl•aat;~t. WV

Novembtr21,1993

Sunday lime• S1nt11181 Pig• E3 .

-

Older
activists play lawmaker for real results
.

Railroad enthusiasts ·determined to revive rail line
By USA CORNWELL
A.aoelated Press Writer
WELLINGTON, Ohio- The
sight of a maroon-and-gold loco·
molive chugging alont"a rail line in
Lorain County this summer was a
dream come true for a dedicated
group of railroad enthusiasls.
But the 200-member Lake Shore
Railway Association Inc. has even
bigger plans: a railroad renewal
that could be a fmancial bonanza
for a once-thriving Lake Erie pon
that has fallen on hard times since
the decline of the American steel
indusary.
But the Ohio Turnpike Commis·
sion could scunle plans for the rail
line, which crosses the highway
near the site of a proposed inter·
change.
" We're not going to give up
now, after we've come this far,"

said Richard Lamont, president of
the Elyria-based assix:uuion. " We
want to make this into a railroad
that will attract people from all
over the countty - not just Ohio
- and show people that railroads
hold the answer to our transpOna·
lion needs.''
Lake Shore, a non-profit corpo·
ration formed to promote the his·
torical and educational aspects of
railroading, has struggled since
1979 to establish an operational
railroad and museum in Lorain
County.
It took the group 12 years to
raise enough money to purchase a
portion of the abandoned Lorain &amp;
West Virginia Railway - 7.8
miles of uack along the Lake Erie
coastline from Wellington to Ober·
lin - and another two years to set
up an operational train on two

miles of ihat line.
connect to commuter uain service
Members used chainsaws to in neighboring Cleveland and
clear brush, straightened the track, Cuyahoga County. said Lorain
replaced old ties and lugged more C?unty Economic Development
than 300 tons of stone for ballast Drrector Lurry Coyne.
"'!here a ponion of roadbed had
"I really believe there is great
washed out.
potential for this line," said Coyne.
By summmer, Lake Shore was The touris~ freight and commuter
offering train rides during the service could mean millions of dol·
Lorain County Fair. The group Iars in revenue, he said.
leased an engine, two cars and a
But the Obio Turnpike plans an
caboose from the Midwest Rail tnterchange with Ohio 58 that
Historical Foundation. Some 6,300 would run across the track's in
passengers rode the uain on week· · Amherst Township.
ends from August to October.
Lamont's group was unable to
"Just imagine if we could offer strike a deal with the tompike com·
a uain ride all the way to the lake mission for an interchange that
in Lorain and back," Lamont said. would be compatible with the rail·
" It would not only achieve our road.
.
goal of keeping railroading alive,
"The association offered to put
but it would be a 1errific boost for up $200,000 and make some
the area's economy."
unspecified annual payments for
The railroad also could provide leasing turnpike propeny, but we
freight and commuter sel'VIce and

Radio news industry
isn't dead, it's not like it
used to be, insiders say
ing needs of both the heavy news in a-cost-cu~g move. And WlUJ,
By ELlNOR MILLS
users ... and stations that have a a heavy news and talk operation,
Associated Press Writer
Radio newscasts may be going lighter news appetite," Staehle laid off several reporters.
Nick Mills, a Boston University
the way of crystal sets and vacuum says.
News-talk is one of the fastest· journalism professor and a morning
tubes as shrinking news staffs
scramble to compete with cable growing formats, according to anchor at WCLB in Boston, says
David Bartlett, president of the news departments are expensive to
television and satellite networks.
"Radio news has raken a horri· Radio· Television News Directors run and the first to get cut when
ble hit, almost like we've had a Association in Washington, D.C. profits slip.
FM stations, which have a clear·
cancer." says Brian Whittemore, Over the past decade, the number
news director at WBZ radio in of stations programming either all er sound and less static, largely
news or news-talk has increased dominate the !liaJs these days. And
Boston.
FM, in most markets, means music.
In 1982, there were about 6,300 more than 80 percent.
"Poor AM radio is looking for a
There are 28 all-news radio sta·
radio news operations with about
home,"
Mills says. "Its role has
tions
around
the
country
and
an
.
19,500 employees, according to
evolved
in
the history of radio quite
Vernon Stone, professor emeritus additional 157 stations that pro·
of journalism at the University of gram a mix of news and talk , a bit and it's ttying to hang on by
Missouri. Those numbers had Bartlett said in the 1993 summer its teeth."
Bill Polish, news director at
dropped to about 5,700 news edition of Media Studies Journal.
Seattle's
KIRO, says small news
departments employing about
A May 1992 Federal Communi·
stations
have
"dried up."
15,700 people last year.
cations Commission rule review
In
Philadelphia,
Paul Perrella,
Television and all-news net· found that nearly 300 radio stations
news
director
at
WWDB-FM.
says
works have contributed to the "are currently silent; more than
Pennsylvania's
largest
cit~
was
decline in radio news operations, half of them have ceased broad·
once
a
''news-hound
heaven.
'
Stone says, along with deregulation casting in the last 12 months.
"Everybody aspired to work
in 1981 and the elimination of min·
"The outlook for small radio
here,"
he says. "But I have just
imum news requirements for radio stations, which comprise the bulk
seen
the
marketplace dry up.''
of the industry, is particularly
stations.
Mills,
Stone and others say that
While Stone's numbers paint a bleak," the commission said.
to
survive,
radio news stations must
In Providence, R.I., with a
gloomy picture for radio news
overall, stations are reporting metropolitan population of be committed to local coverage,
growth in programming targeted to 160,000, radio news took a hit last news that networks and satellites
a specifiC age group or interest.
spring when three stations radically can't afford to provide.
"What justifies a radio news
"It's not dead," Stone sap . changed their operations with an
operation is local coverage," Stone
"It's just not what it used to be.'
eye towanl cutting losses.
·
The Associated Press, the
WPRO and WWRX-AM, the says.
Hall says WSB has a huge news
nation's largest radio news network state's only all-news station, were
with about 1,000 members, has sold and a dozen broadcasters were department by radio standards:
changed its ~rvice to reflec~ the unemployed within days of the eight full-time and six part-time
workers. in a computerized news
industry, says IMyl Staehle, direc· sale.
tor of sales and marketing for the
The experiment at WWRX-AM, room.
"Ten years ago everybody
AP's broadcast services.
named news station of 1992 by the
The AP split its radio news Rhode Island Associated Press would have been full time," he
report into two networks in 1988. Broadcaster's Association, lasted says. "I guess we're putting money
One features longer, more com- only 15 months. Countty music has into technology and less of it into
plete stories and another with since replaced CNN headlines on people."
Hall says it's uncommon, even
shorter versions of the same i~ems. the station.
Both include live coverage.
"You've got a lot of talent out in major markets, to find more than
Today, the wire. service also there that is unemployed," says two or three radio stations with
offers more entertamment news, Glenn Laxton. a former WWRX rcponers on the Slreet.
WOR in New York City has
reports aimed at a specifiC format, reponer who now directs news for
tried to compensate for staff reduca morning-only semce and a head· Inland Cable in Attleboro, Mass.
lines wire.
Elsewhere in the Providence tions by becoming more efficient,
. "We've repackaged and reap· market, nearly 40 of 55 employees says Joe Bartlett, the station's news
Continued on E-3
J!lied resources to reflect the chanJt· re•imed or were laid off at WPRO

deterniined that tliey would need to offered ·$250,000 toward the proput up at least $2 million," said ject.
commission Executive Director
John Platt, assistant director of
Allan·Johnson.
modes for the state transportation
The turnpike plans to begin con· depanment, said he thinks a com·
struction of the mterchange by the · promise can be worked out. Piau's
middle of next year.
division oversees non-bighway
"We would have liked to work transportation modes, including
water, air, rail and public transsomethin~ out with the railway, but
we think 1t's inappropriate to spend · portation.
millions of dollars to accommodate
•'This rail line's accessiblil)' to a
a project that has little chance of major water port makes it consis·
tent with our statewide plan for rail
success," he said.
Lake Shore has not given up uansponation," he said. "Ohio haS
lost more than 3,000 miles of the.
hope.
"We have been tallcing with the 9.200 miles of rail it had in 1971l.
county chamber of commerce, · and we want to preserve our exist·
business leaders, and state and fed· ing rail corridors."
Lamont said his group will do
eral officials to get their support
and hopefully come up with what it must to make the line work:
"We've put our hearts and souls
grants," said Mark Chappo, execu·
into
this, and will make ·it .the rest
tive vice president.
Chappo said the county has of the way," said Lamont

by director Alan Parker.
"Wellville" skewers obsessive
health-consciousness as (lllrsonified
by Dr. Kellogg. Well-heeled
patients went to the doctor's sani·
tarium in Battle Creek, Mich., in
the early 1900s to be cured of
"autointoxication," which covered
a variety of ailments that Kellogg
would attribute to eating meat.
'If you came in with brain can·
cer, he'd put you on a strict vege.·

laaeJ.

.

And, for those who are mterest·

ed the Millers offer all-night
ay~huasca sessions. These cere·
monies are conducted br .chanting
native shamans. or mcdicme men,
who concoet potions that produce
inte!IIC peycbedelic visions.
"For several ye~rs now, we've
bei:n llkina small groups of people
into the Peruvian Amazon each
winter," says Miller, a lean, mi~­
d!Wpl man wlio sports a ponytail
and wears a monkey-tooth necklace
that he says was a gift from a tribal

leader.

"For some of the people who
Come llonl," he adds, "the trips
are 10rt ·o( vision quests. Others
jllll Wlil1 10 aperience the jungle,
and look fpr muahrooms and

mcdiCinll pllnllo ••

1111 accomplilhed mycologist -:mullaoaruxpen- Miller also IS
a illenfcd lrtilt llld a gourmet chef.
~11 featulel .mushrooms
in bil c~ns, whether on the

ue

~

canvas or in the lcitchen.
"I grew up in East Haddam, but
left after high school," he said
recently. "I later lived in New
Mexico and on the West Coast,
among other places, and got an
advanced art degree from the University of California at Berkeley.''
"I was at Belkeley in the '60s,"
he adds, telling his story while for·
aging for mushrooms on a mossy
bank beside a hidden brook near
East Haddam. "It was back then
that I first got interested in the
Amazon.
"About 25 years ago, I went
down to Peru to tty to get to know
some of the lndi.:ins in these remote
tribes. I'd read about them, how
they were fierce headhunters, but I
found them to be very gentle and
friendly people. I've gone back
every year since then."
Miller says his maternal grandmother was a Peruvian Indian, a
member of the Shwa tribe.
"I initially went down to the
Amazon to see where my grandmother came from," he says. "I
started spending time with a lot of
different shamans in the jungle,
learning abol!t medicinal plants and
mushrQoms.
"The stwnans would feed me
these unUJual·IOOking muhrooms
and we'd uavel on the astral plane
and meet spi~itual figures• who
would give us knowledge. I didn't
realize jt at first, but what I was
doing was studying to become a
shaman myself;'
Miller, who claims 10 speak several Indian diale&lt;:ts, says The Wild
Mushroom Traveling Road Show
was born 14 or iS years ago, ini·
tially to a&amp;:ommodate friends who
wan!M to visit the jungle.
"I'd begun spenaing several
months ill Peru each year," he

says. "When I'd come back to
Connecticut and tell everyone
about all the wonderful birds and
butterOies and exotic plants, and
how great the natives were, my
friends would sar they'd like to
come along next time I went down
there. Now, people from all over
the countty come with us on our
tours. We advertise by word-of·
mouth and in several New Age
magazines.' •
Phyllis Carlson, a medical tnln·
scriptionist from Levittown, Pa.,
and wrirer Tom King, of East Had·
dam, were among the I 0 people in
last winter's tour.
"It was marvelous," says Carl·
son. 60, who met the Millers when
they did a presentation at a meeting
of the New Jersey Mycology Asso·
ciation. "I've been to China, Egypt
and Greece, but this trip was like
none I'd ever been on before."
Carlson. and King, a former television scriptwriter-turned playwrigh~ sars they were among those
who participated in the all-night
ayahuasca (aye-yuh·wahska) cere·
monies.
"We drink a potion made from
the ayahuasca plant, a psrchoactive vine that produces vistons,"
says Miller, who estimates he has
participated in hundreds of
ayahuasca ceremonies over the
years. "At fust yo.u throw up a lo~
but then the visions swt coming.
"One doCtor wbo was with us a
couple of years ago said be saw a
formal garden, in wbich every heal·
ing p,lant in the jungle was l~yed
out tn perfect order. It was all he
tallced about for days."
Carlson and .King recall experiencing a wide army of visions.
"At one lime I saw tile' nervous
systems of loti' of different ani · ·
mals," Carlson says.

tarian diet There was also a regi·
men of five enemas a day, mini·
mally, just to be healthy," say.s
Boyle.
Boyle has painted Kellogg as a
Darth Vader type who sought to
control other people's lives. Boyle
has made some enemies in Battle
Creek. They don't appreciare Boyle
making their city look like the
binhplace of today 's food fads.

.

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m

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)scene looks real enough: Gray·
ing lawmakers &amp;~ered in the
chamben of the
· ornia Capitol
to delibenlle the issues of the day.
~results, however, reveal an
alternate pOlitical reality. Bills are
passed to leplize SotDe medicinal
use of marijuana, establish univer·
sal health care, lower prescription
drug prices and control mobile
home park nmts.
The California Senior Legisla·
ture is back in session, representing
the interests of oldet vo1ers. And
although the bills have no immediale impact, they could in the future.
After meeting for four days lare
last mohth, the Senior Legislature
~

selec!M 13 Slale proposals and lour
federal measures that it will span·
sor as reallepslalion in 1994.
On state 1ssues, the Senior Leg·
islature boasts a 70 percent to 80
percent sucoess rate in ultimately
getting its measures adopted into
law.
"Many memben of the regular
Legislature· stand in line for our
bills," said Laing Sibbet, a relired
minister and the Senior Ugisla·
ture's newly elecled chairman. .
''Some of them are afraid of us
because we have become more and
more powerful over the yean. but
the power is not in money," Sibbet
said . "One staff member said,
' You 're the only lobbyists that

Join the
Peoples Bank
Cfiristmas
Club!

By MARK J, PORUBCANSKY ered to itself the golld and ill of a
City under siege, the suJfering, the
Associated Press Writer
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Henegov· bad nerves, the will to survive.
Since the end of July, the shells
ina - Doctors gather for morning
coffee, and giggles blossom into that shred flesh and shatter bone
guffaws as gossip probes the char· have fallen only rarely, permitting
actcr of absent colleagues. Nearby, an exhausted, jitlery calm. But doc·
kids howl at the prospect of a peni· tors hesitate to believe that the days
of meatball surgery by candlelight
cillin sbot.
Judging from such sounds one and weeks without running water
day a few weeks back, Kosevo really are over. Even if they are,
Hospital could have beell almost t4e battle to hcallives - including
anywhere, reducing - as hospitals their own - that form a broken
do - tlie daily dramas of human body politic is only beginning.
The wounds of this· war in
life to matters of rouiinc.
But listen again, to sounds that Bosnia are psychic as weD as phys·
reveal just how extraordinary this ical. Take 6-,ear-old Gorana, even
· bit of normalcy is: the unsettling in the best o circumstances one of
crack of a rifle or thump of a shell, the least of Bosnian society.
. little Gorana asking for the old lady
Abandoned as an infant, sl\e is
who promised to take her to Italy not even secure in her name. Those
where there's peace, doctors quiet· who found her gave her a name
ly fretting over what will be left derived from the word for a fort.it,
when the killing stops.
where sbe was found. Her reactions
For more than a year and a half, are slow, as if arresled by a lack of
Sarajevo's main hospital has gath- attention in the institutions where

By MARY.CAMPBELL
set the course of the future.
In 1974, the piano teacher of
AP Newsfeatures Writer
"Life is about choices and how one of her three children asked if
In Norfolk, Va., wh.ich isn't we allocate funds and time. You've he could oring some people to her
· thought of as one of the world's j!Ot to provide some balance and house.
. culture centers, the city's new mspimtion . If you don't, people
''They wanted me to organiZe
. ·opera house bears the name of a will have nothing to do ·but sit
what
they had named the Virginia
• '. real estale agent who 20 years ago home cleaning their guns."
Opera," she says. Her response
·.insisted he didn't like opera and
The Path to the Harrison Opera · was , "It would have to be the
·.had never at1ended a performance. · House, however, was not simple.
finest company, the most profes·
. .' StanlH Harrison changed his
Acwally, it's a renovation of the sional
and the highest qual1ty that
mind after his wife, Edythe, got old Center Theater. Now gutled, is obtainable.
Opera is so difficult
- involved in starting 'the Virginia expanded and redone inside, i.t was to pmduce that
would require a
·_Opem 19 years ago. He atlended built by the government in 1943 for lot of financial it
backing. For that.
·'.cveryrrformancc until .his d!;.~JI!.. U,~Q~sJ:lo-.ys. Adjoini!IS) t wasJhc · you have" to have-value reeeivedY
'
· Arena. '"'the· two back-.to-back
.·. in 199 .
· The $10 million Edythe C. and stages were divided by a brick
The committee ,bad already
·Stanley L. Harrison Opera House. wall, not totally soundproofed. On . planned a performance of "The
· ·which enjoyed its inau&amp;ural gala on the same night; the Boston Sym· Elixir of Love" which Harrison
• ·Nov. 5, stands as li monument to phony might be on one side and says was unintentionally hilarious.
• this couple.
boxing, wrestling or basketball on She got tough. Anybody who want·
· "I wanted to prove that some· the other.
ed civic opera instead of first-rata
thing like this could happen in a
Ever since the Detroit-born Mrs. opeta could get off the board.
: place like Norfolk," says Edythe Harrison had married a Southerner
·:Harrison, the first president of the and moved to Norfolk, she'd been
She hired an impresario who
opera's board.
a community organizer.
immediately started spending
"This country is made up of
"I'm the George Plimpton of money, orderin~ $800 worth of sta·
Norfolks. It's not made up of New the volunte.er world," she says. tionery with h•s name on it. She
Yorks. The boondocks are going to "Name it, I've done it."
canceled lhe order.

director.
Bartlett says five news-writing
positions at the station have been
eliminated in as many years. The
station also makes more use of
independent reponers not on the
regular payroll and anchors report
and write t!leir scripts instead of
just reading them, he says.
"In the old days, we used to
have a writer, producer and engi·
neer work for a month on a docu·
mentary," Bartlett says. "We don't
do that anymore. We still do (!ocu·
mentaries. We just don't have a
: whole staff to do it"
· Whittemore blames the shrink·
ing field on "rampant" broadcast
capitalism in the 1980s when sta·
lions were bought and quick1y sold
at inflated prices af1er ownen max·
imized profits by shaving news
departments.

Whittemore predicts that in
most markets one AM station will
become dominant.
·
"That station will be the station
that wins the news reputation," he
says . "And the stauons that let
news go will have to pay the piper.
I think there's a lot of evid~nce that
that dynamic is happening now.' '
Stations like CBS owned-and·
operated KMOX in St. Louis, also
known as "The Voice of Middle
America," lire an elUIIIlple.
Tom Langmyer, KMOX pro·
gram director, says the station's
50,()()().watt signal _covers most of
the Midwest during the day and
reaches about 48 states at night
when the sun's q~ys•()on't interfere
with the signal's ·&lt;tran~mission
through the i0n6sph¢te. :· ,
Langmyer says I&lt;MOX serves
about 800,000 listeners weekly. He

Lowell

37J.31SS

593·7761

423-7516

Middleport

896-2369

Nelsonville

992-6661

753-1955

The Plains ··
797-4547

•

''

-

~~~~~~~· ·FDIC

.
•

'Open l:ao-:1:00 ...~21oqec. t

.

j:

r

I

'

'

••
f.
"'

·'

no war thete.''

,

"Is the old lady who's going to
take me to Italy here?" Gorana
asks. "She said she's going to take
me to Italy.''
The plight of another girl about
Gorana's age, 5-year-old Irma
Hadzimuratovic, awakened West·
emers this summer to the needs of
Sarajevans whose wounds were too
severe to be treated by local doe·
tors.
With the girl near death, doctors
got the international media inlereSt·
ed in her case. Irma was evacualed
to London. Scores followed ber.
But Dr. Sanja Besarovic says
Gorana has a lot going against her.
•'Everbody who comes here likes
her because she's so
"

AIII1IIL
While California tar'*'" &amp;d
paid - $52,500 a year, pfua
expenses, for the rant llld file -

senior legislators ~ vo1UDteers.
Their expenses 1re !Mid wben they
meet in Slcnmento.
WOQ!Iell make up nearly half lhe
ranks of the Senior LeJi"•tnre 37 in the Assembly alid 18 in lhe
Senate; thai's double the number or
women in lhe real Lqillature.
Uni¥alll health care bill been a
top pr_iorily of the California Senior
l..egislaiiR since 1985.
"We're quite s ure there
wouldn't be tbe .J.!ressure for
national health care if it wasn't for
the California Senior Legislature,"
Sibbet said.

Besarovic says. Then they find out
about all her problems.
Gorana, and her problem s,
remain in a land least able to help
her. Gorana is just one among mil·
lions of needy.
Here, sporadic electricity is
something to be grateful for; the
racket of water pushing back up
enipty pipes is a blessing.
For Besarovic and her colleague
in the emergency room , Fari s
Gavran Kapetanovic, the quiet
offers a chance to appreciate the
achievement of the near-impossible. It also allows time to ponder
the future .
Most of the 14 lcids in the chil·
dren's ward now suffer from stan·
dard childhood injuries, not war
wounds . But just a day earlier,
Besarovic lost a patient - a 10·

year-old boy wbose stomach and
spine were pierced by shrapnel
In conditions so bad doctors
operated without gloves. running
water or electricity, be wa Only the
second patimt she lost Once they
decided to 11ay in Sarajevo rather
than nee. doeton became heroes
because they had no other choice.
A few weeks earlier,
KapetanOvic says, a badly injured
young man was brought in late at
night.
"We had a solar battery - it
can wort two-three hours - until
midnight, then we had 10 operate
on this boy by candlelight," he
says. The surgery saved his life, but
left him 1 panplegic still banlin a
severe chest wound.
g

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Hours:
llonday Fttdly, 1:30- pon;
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Sundor. 12-5 pol

'

BAOM lUMB'ER
'

as she speaks. "I want to go to
Italy. There's no shooting, there's

Mercurr

·Sat., Nov. 27, 7:30 a.m.-8 p_.m.
Sunday, Nov. 28, 1-6 p.m.
. .

1

•

Chris Berry. director of news
and programming at another CBS
operation, WBBM in Chicago, says
his station has taken a different
route.
"The days of full-service,
everything to everybody radio,
those are the days that are gone,"
Berry says. "More and more. spc·
cialized audiences are targeted.''
Despite the doomsday talk,
Berry says radio news will not be
replaced entirely.
"When we've got severe weather coming through tile area, we're
the only medium that can deliver
that news to the people as it's hap·
pening," he says. "We are really
th.e only portable medium you can
rake with you anywhere."

"

5PBCIAL JIVNrJNG BOVRS
Open Fri. Nov. 26, 7:30 a.m.~ p.m.

'l·\

'l'

stale income tax reiWDI.
Marion FIIIIIIIIJfl, a senior IICillltor and the outcoing chairwoman,
laid the power of the California
Senior Legislature lies in its con·
atituency. Five mUlion Californians
are over age 62, she said. ••And
they vote."
Like real lawmakers, senior leg·
islators wrile legislation, hold com·
mittee hearings and lobby each
other intensely.
There are, however, some clear
differences.
"We're all very polite to each
other," said Faustman.
The Senior Legislarure is also
quicker. It meets once a year for
four days. The real Legislature is in
session from January through

tion."

•Hunting Clothing
•Shotguns and Barrels
•Slug• by Remington~ F8deral,
Winchester and Benneke .
•Hunting License
•Lur•
•All Accessorlet ,

·Join the Christmas Club now! Get a free gift and earn interest on the daily balance
in yollr account. Come in today-it's never too early to save for Christmas!

omce.

characterized the station as a "big,
full-service news and talk radio sta·

.

Open a Christmas Club now and receive a FREE Glass Candy Dish. The Christmas
Club is so convenient! Your Christmas check arrives when you want it most-j11st
in time for Christmas shopping. Christmas Club is so easy to join-and so easy to
keep up because you choose the amount of your regular deposits.

Belpre

she's spent her young life.
Now she is in the children's
ward of Kosevo Hospital, a dim ,
cool room of pink, yellow and blue
cubicles.
Her dark hair, shaved bec•nse of
lice, nevertheless frames an
almond-shaped face of exceptionally pale, fine skin and big, dark
eyes. A tendon problem in her legs
makes it difficult for her to walk
without support from adult hands.
A little stuffed bear in an Oak.
land As baseball uniform and a
cheap plastic doll in a green knit
dress share Gorana's crib.
Nearby, S-year-old Eldar Kumro
complains about the impending
penicillin shot. "I don't want even
a linle bit," he hollcrs, then starts
calling for his mother.
Gorana was thinking about the
lady, and Italy.
"It's better in Italy," she says,
her hand outstretched and fingers
wagging slowly and unconsciously

WE ..HAVE
EVERYTHING FOR.
THE SERIOUS HUNTER

Get your free gift for Christmas '93
and extra cash for Christmas '94.

Assembly membell and 40 senators. To run for
however, a
candidale must be at least 60 years
old.
Ele:c:lions take place overy two
yean .and are ~dueled by local
agenclCS on agmg, usually 8l local
senior centers or retirement hous·
ing. Only registered California vot·
ers over S9 are eligible to cast bal·
lots.
Twenty·IWO other states have
senior legi.tlatures, according to
Lois WelliDgton, a senior senator.
The first one started in Missouri in
1973.
California's is unusual in the
size of its budge~ up to $350,000 a
year from contributions made
through voluntary checkoffs on

Civilian health care in strife-torn Bosnia described

•

Athens

01

Radio news... _co_n_tinu_ed_~_ro_m_E_-2_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __

Smart Santa's Joined Last Year!

Marietta

knoek on our doors without money
in your ~kets. "'
State Sen . Henry Mello, who
authored the bill that crealed the
Senior Legislature 13 y
~to,
said he knows of no other
· or·
nia lobby that has been as success·
ful
Mello said he believes that's
because senior legislators are elect·
ed by their pea-s and because they
deliberate in public.
"I love you all," Mello told
them during their opening session.
"You've done a tremendous job
and have helped all Californians,
especially seniors.''
Like the real California Legisla·
ture, the Senior Legislature has 80

$10 million Opera House immortalizes couple's
effort to bring culture and class to Norfolk, Va.

Poulan PRO

• Extra chflin
•2. 5r. i.I40N' or 2.8r .i.J,,6N·

Flora, fauna and psychedelic potions
highlight Amazon tour package
BySTRATDOUfHAT
Aaoeiated Press Writer
EAST HADDAM, Conn. Geny Miller runs a different sort of
travel agency, one that specializes
in ~ys to the Amazon, to get
hiJII in an esoteric way.
"Take the shamanic voyage of
discovery up the Peruvian Amazon, •• urges one of hi.s broch~.
Miller and h1s w1fe, Chnst1an,
operate an antique-curio shop in
East Haddam during the summer
months. But in January they close
up shoP and turn their attention to
"The Wild Mushroom Traveling
Road Shaw."
1be "show" actually is a tour,
one that fealllreS two weeks of tnlv·
el up and down the Amazon exploring the flo!B. and fauna of ~e
jwlale - piUS VISits to rcrDOie VII·

'

Wild man of American letters talks
offood and the 'Tortilla Curtain'
By TERRENCE PETTY .
Associated Press Writer
BONN, Germany- T. Coraghessan Boyle is about to do
something that would earn him a
lecture from Dr. John Harvey Kel·
logg and a day's worth of systemcleansing enemas at the doctor's
Battle Creek sanitarium. ,
The American novelist is going
to have a beer. He will further pol·
lute his body by consuming meat
Both were proscribed by Kel·
logg: the turn-of-the~entury inven·
tor of the com flake and vegetarian
bad guy in Boyle's latest novel,
''The Road to Wellville.''
"I don't drink coffee. That's the
only sin I don't have," Boyle says
proudly, sitting down ui a Koelsch
beer, a mayonnaise-drenched
turkey salad and fat-soaked fried
potak)Cs at a wine bar'in Bonn.
Boyle was on a Euro~ tour to
publicize "Wellville. ' London,
Paris, Vienna, Frankfun, Munich
and Bonn were among his stops.
With hair like a wad of rusting
steel wool, a matching beard and
multiple earrings, Boyle looks
more like a grunge band guitarist
than a writer.
The wine bar is a strait-laced
place. It has heavy oak tables and
nicely dressed customers sipping
glasses of Riesling. Heads turned .
as this wild man of American let·
ters loped in with a gang of
acquaintances.
Dining with Boyle is a weird
experience. He can talk about a ·
foreboding matrer and crack·up his
listeners by using a satirical oh·
what-the-hell tone. He's like a
doomsayer who delivers the bad
news with a punch line.
Boyle also talks about food, a
lot It's an obsession.
"I may not look it," says the
pencil-thin Boyle, "but I have not
yet met a food I don't like.
Boyle turns to "Wellville,"
which is being made into a movie

'

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�/

November21

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Browns,
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lose again

..,.

Pick 3:
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Super Lotto:
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Kicker:
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a1
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TEMPO

•Driver Side Air Bag
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•Powe r Mi rrors •Overd rive
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•AM/FM Stereo

Rapist
receives

--Remembering JFK__.;...-

10 to 25
TERCEL

&lt;

-

strike.

Those hopes have run high ever
since Thursday night, when a
spokeswoman for Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., said the UMW
, was finalizing contract language
with the Bituminous Coal Operators Association.
" We're 1f¥ing to teD people not
to get to excned about it, because
anything can happen," John
Spinks, chairman of the mine committee at the Hobet No. 21 mine
near Danville in Boone County,
IBid Sunday.
The quiet surrounding the talks
has left many striking miners ·lorn
between hope and caution.
·
"I think it's like the night
before Christmas for a lot of people," said striking miner John
Lucas of Danville.
Such tensions require delicate
handling, Spinks said
"I've gone down 1o the picket
lines ever since Rockefeller
announced. and everybody's being
pretty good," he said SWlday.
Nothing but silence has emerged
from the talks since Friday, when
special mcdialor Bill Usery said an
annoWlCCiliCilt of a tentative agreement was irnminenL
"It could be several days"
- · .before both sides.are .usfled.with
the written versions of what they
have already agreed 1o verbally, a
source close 1o the talks told The
Associated Pless on Satwday.
The two sides are taking their
time drsfting the agreement, said
the soun:e, who agreed to speak
only if he would not be identified.
"They don't want any misunderstandinss." said the source ..
"They are going over everything
very, very carefull y. ..
·
Legal disputes arising from the

served.
Milia- was found guilty on Oct.
22 on ihree cotmts of rape which
occurred between June 1 and Aug.
31, 1988.
Judge Dan W. Favreau,
McConellsville, hearing the case
by assignment from Morgan Count'/, ordered Miller io pay prosecuuon costs but did not levy a fmc. In
addition, Favreau released a
$25,000 bond, less costs.
Present at the hearing were Special Proseculor Mark Sheets, Gallipolis, and Millez's atlomCy, Harry
Reinhart, Columbus.
A notice of appeal will be filed
in the case, accoiding to court documents. Attorneys representing
Miller have already flied a motion
seeking a new trial for. their cUent
aU~g that jurors were prejudiced
agamst Millet.
Miller remains in the Meigs
County Jail pending transport

?"· ·· -,~-

-

----UL__

..,Wi.tness ..,..

•

ii '

•.

CritiCIZeS

funding
formula
NEW LEXINGTON, Ohio (AP)

J I

94 Ford F-150 4x2
You Can Lease h For Only

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3 to choose trom

Automatic. air. AMIFM
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93 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

93 FORO MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE

AM /FM casselle
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AM I FM cassette .
au tomatic. air

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Leather. alloy wheels.
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6 cylinder . automatic. air .
trlt crUise. loaded

tAu tomatic •Air Conditioning

l S model. all power
optrons . ~w mrleage

Republicans
.target major
gains in '94

•Bed Liner

Air. V6 .
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AMIFM cassene . air

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84 CHEVY 4x2 PICKUP

88 DODGE CARAVAN

One owner.

Automatic . low

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0\(ER: ~4i
USED VEHICLES

IN SfOCKf
•Units subject to prior sale and
cr!cfit apProval. All . rebates &amp;
incentives are retletfed in pric·.
lng or vehicles.

tery Monday. Kennedy was assassinated 30
yean ago 1n· Dallal.. Cemetery Superintendent
Jack Metzlar Blanda at lett (AP)

Attendants' strike enters fifth
day; airline takes large losses
FORT WORlH, Texas (AP) A flight auendants' strike has cost
American Airlines at least $50 million so far and up 1o two-thirds of
its flights will not carry passengers
during the boliday week, the airUne
said.
The walkout by the Association
of Professiol)al Flight Attendants
0

entered its fifth day today, frusllating thousands of travelers trying 1o
get home or elsewhere for ThankSgiving.
"I think it's a pretty selfish
thing to do at this time of year,''
said.Eiizabeth Moser, 23, whose
flight from Los An~eles 1o a honeymoon in Hawait was delayed

• Presidenl Ointon.
,._ •.•, •• . 24 tool11hs Rea Carpet Lea.se MSF!d on MSRP of $12..866. Option to purchJst at tease """"·"'· fOt.1t ~Olei:IS $599. 76. Fi rS! payment 11Ce115e. Iitie. dOCUAI!!I'II·Iees iiS wall as securllv
le~ Signing. I!j 000 lliles ~~ yiw .
r

.

'

EVELYN LINCOLN, Fonner secretary to
the late PresldenfJohn F. Kennedy, stands
bef11re his grave In Arlington National. Ceme·

PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - With
their two 1993 winntls on hand to
offrz advice, Republican governors
are plotting 1994 campaign strategy and predicting voters will tom
on Democrats·and give the GOP a
statehouse majoity next year.
"While we celebrate our Victories, we will' not lest on our laurels
because the job is not done," Ohio
Gov. George Voinovich said Sunday in opening a Republican Governors Association meeting•
With a heavy emphasis on cutting spending and fighting crime,
the GOP governors are spending
today and Tuesday in Phoenix
sharing ideas for next year's campaign. which features 36 gubemalorial electioris.
RepubliCan National Chainnan
Haley Bll;bour also iiJ on hand, aild
wasted little lime liking a poke at

one owner

92 OLOS 88

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...
' '
•comll,1 leol!e - 313 rnonm lease through TMCC . bo:ts&amp;d on MSRP of$)!) 863 01'!ion !o purcllilse
at ~a~ end S8294 13 Total ot payrnrents 57884 1 tax, licenSe, SIC\irttY
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I

- Schoolchildren in more affluent
areas receive more opportunities
than ~oor students, under the
state's system of financing schools,
a scholar said.
Kern Alexander, a professor at
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and
University, testified Friday in the
case of five schobl districts trying
to ovettum the system.
A coalition of southeast Ohio
school districts hired Alexandtz in
1990 to analyze public school
financing. Alexander said he did a
more detailed study for the trial imd
·
Continued on Page 3

;

.

CELLULAR.PHdNE .

• ·. ·Free·· Use Of .

Celular.PJJone'

•• lonD as yt~ fP iiletr
nrvlce. Phone i'im.allls
property of Cellular ~"''

Silence surrounding.
strike talks keeps
miners in suspense
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
-United Mine Workers officials
say they are urging members 1o
contain their hopes of an imminent
settlement of the six-month coal

· A Middleport man found J(Uilty
last month of three counts of~
was sentenced Friday in the Mei8S
County. Court of Common Pleas.
George William Miller Jr., 52,
Will! senienced to 10-to-25 years on
each count. The sentences are 1o be
served concurrently and Miller
must KZVt 10 years of aclllal incarceration, with credit for time

94 TOYi

1, llon,10 . . . . . . _ . .
Allulln uln Ina. Na111ap J

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 22, 1993

, He said tbe GOP governors
have "proven records of being
honest and not renegina on their
pledges 10 cut speniling and cut
taxeS" in contrail to "an administiatlon ~~ government

Sunday.
American Chairman Roben L.
Crandall said travelers who can't
be rescheduled at an acceptable
time will get a $100 credit on top
of refunds, even on non-refundable
tickets.
"Our losses are very large.
They are certainly more than $10
million a day ," Crandall said.
"They may be substantially more
than lbat."
The union, meanwhile, hqlcd 1o
get a decision sometime IDday on a
request for a special presidential
parielto help referee the dispute. If
one were created, strikrzs would
retnm 1o work immediately.
At a news conference at American headquarters in Fort Wonh,
Crandall said 4,(XX) fight attendants
would not have jobs after the
strike, scheduled to end next Monday. Sut the union says American
would have 1o offer workers other
options, such as part-time jobs.
An undetermined number of
other American employees also
would be laid off because the strike
has damaged the public's confi·
dence in the carrier and cost it busi·
ness, C!anda1l said.
•'No inalla' what we do, no mat·
ter how agressively we advenise,
some ~sen are gone," Cran·
da11 said.
The 21,000-member union
walked out Thllflday in a conuact
dispute over pay, medical benefits,
staffmg and wut rules. The strike.
the first by flight attendants at
American. Ia the bigest against a
airline since 1989.
Many of American's flights
have flown without passengers
since the strike ~...,they
have not had the
mandai·
ed minimum number of flight

u.s.

:C~ I!O,,;'~tdjust17

by
of
the SO tqJ swehou.ee ,iol1s. but the
number Will pow to 19 in January

When Oe&lt;xllt Allen of Vqinia lnd
'Christie Whitman of New Jersey
take office. Both are 6n bind for
the meetlna and wore sharlna
advice from their campaigns 1ft a
ICssioniDday.

attendants.
011

The airline plans Ill COIICiillllllf,
flights at its main hubs at Dill·

However, the companies have
contended that the language in
1988 contract extends only 1o those
companies that actually siped the
agreemenL They point Ill Janpage .
in the coverage clause that outlines
who is oblipted by the agreement
The umon claims that ,s ome
operators set up nonunion subsidiaries as an intentional pWI 1o
cin:umvent the contract !an~.
In the absence of bani infomac
lion, rumors circulated through the
coalfields throughout the wecbad
as to what might have been lgRed
lo during the talks in Washingtm.
''And rumors tend 11101e towaad
the neplive," said Danny Meaer
of Danville, another striking coal
mmer.
"I'm in no hurry to settle for
anything less than our demands."
he said.
The suspense is palpable on
both sides of the picket line.
"It's bothering people a lot,"
said Frank
Johnson
of
Moundsville, who has been working as a security guard at a strikebound mine since August

me

U.S. EPA testing
Ironton landfill site
IRON'ION, Oliio (AP) -Federal environmental regulators are
collecting air and Willet samples at
the site of a landfill fire that has
been burning about two mooths.
The officials will help the testing that began Saturday wiD determine whether the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will help
put out the fii'C at G&amp;B Auto Pans
and Landfill, near this city 100
miles south of Columbus.
Local and state agencies have
been trying since September to find

money to fight the ·fire. Residents
have complained of headache&amp; IDd
respiratory problems they blamed
on smoke from the fire.
"We're trying to evaluate lite
conditions, get a feeling for the history and get a good handle of what
air impacts could be from the site, ••
said Ralph Dollhopf, coordinator
for the U.S. EPA's Eastern
Response Unit in Detroit.
"We've brought contractors to
get a feel for what it will take to get
this nrc out"

Local briefs-Alani~uredin

wreck

A Racine man MS listed in serious condition at Grant Medical
Centel'.lhis I1ICll'lliq following an apparent one-vehicle wreck near
the junction of Mcming Star and Pine Grove roads in Sutton Township late Sunday afvauoon or early evening.
James H. AndencD, 20, of31320 Roy Jones Road was lranSpnrted via Lif~t be1icoptu to Grant Medical Center where, according to a hasp1tal spokeswoman, he was admitted for treaunent of
multiple injuries llld head trauma.
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department arc investigating but have yetlo determine the time or cause of the accident.
Damage 1o Anderson's Ford F-150 pickup truck was listed as
heavy.

Girl hit by car returns to school
A Middlepln girl run over by her families' car nearly two weeks
ago while delivering newspapers retnmed to school last Monday,
officials said IDday•
Jessica Barnhart. 360 S. Fourth St. fell out of the front passenger
seat at3:1S p.m. Nov. 10 at the intersection of Asb and Page Slleels
while helping her mother, Patricia, said Middleport Police Chief
Sidney Little.
.
"The story's been going around thal she was riding on the hood,
but we checked itoutlfld that wun't true." Little said
The car was moving about 4 miles per hour as the back lire rode
over the 7-year-old, Liule added.
The girl suffered facial almlsions and chest injuries and was
treated and released from Children's Hospiral in Columbus.

Man cited for DUI
A Midd1cport ~ wu cited early Sunday mcming for his \ICC·
ond charge 11 dri~ 1mder the influence, the Gallia-Meigs Post of
the Statellighway Pail\lh!'I'OI*L
.• •
• ~

. COIItbiued liD Pace 3

Contlued on Paae 3

I~

1988 agreement have not yet been
fully resolved, even though thil
conlraet expired in Febrwuy.
·
One point has been a partieu18r
sore spot and led 1o UMW Prelident Richard Trumka's demand
that union members receive 100
percent of all new jobs ctealed by
companies signing the agreemeol,
as well those aearcd at their relaled
subsidiaries and liister operatiolls. ·
Union officials say they believe
the expired 1988 agreement enti;
tied them to 60 pen:ent of newly
created jobs at minea operated bY
members of the coal operators
association and their subsidilnes.
The agreement included a sec.
tion headlined "non-siCt=
OperaiOrs" that the WJion
'
.
covered those opera10n that didn't
actually sign the contract.

.

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32924">
              <text>November 21, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
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  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3225">
      <name>burd</name>
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    <tag tagId="236">
      <name>carter</name>
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    <tag tagId="1369">
      <name>ours</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1220">
      <name>vineyard</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
