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                  <text>· Poineroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, september 14, 1992

Names in Your Social Security
the news
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Comedian Soupy Sales is going
home for a slint as a morning disc
·
· the
where he
Jockey 10
town
grew
up.
Sales, 66, will do remote broadcasts this weelt from Marshall Uni·
d H 1
H' h
verslly an
unt nston tg
School and from a hot dog stand,
said Mike Killner, genenl nianager
of WRVC-FM.
Sales auended Huntington Hiih
and received his blchekl:'s degree '
in journalism from Marshall in
1949. His nickname is a play on his
given name, Milton Supman.
He became famous in the late
19SOs and early '60s for his pie-inthe-face television program "The
Sour,y Sales Show.'
• I have so many friends " he
said "If all my friends listen 'we'll
be No. 1 for the weelt.''
'

LAUGIUNG WITH THE HOST ·Miss Ohio,
Robin Meade, right, laughs at a quip made by
Miss America co-host Regis Philbin after a IUD·

NEW YORK (AP) - Garry
Shandling has ooe of TV's mosllalked-about talk shows - even
though it's not the real thing.
Shandling, 42, plays a talk show
host on the HBO sitcom, "The
Larry Sanders Show." As Larry,
Shandling teases talk out ci guests
such as Carol Burnett, Robin
Williams and Billy Crystal, all
playing themselves.
"There's no difference between
what goes on in 'Larry Sanders'
and what really hapl'm.' on a talk
show," Crystal said ut the Sept. 21
edition or People magazine .
"That's what makes it so greaL"
Shandling, a stand-up comic and
former substitute host for Johnny
Carson on "Tbe Tonight Show,"
told the magazine be fantasizes
about having a guest appearance by
Carson's successor, Jay Leno, or
Lena's rival, Arsenio Hall.
"I'd really love to get another
big host on the show and Start slugging it out in a fistfJBht,'' he joked.

cbeoa wltb tbe 50 contestants In Atlantic City,
Sunday. A new Miss America will be crowned
Saturday, Sept.l9. (AP photo)

For many children, Andrew is
a demon who could come back
By CHRISTOPHER SULLIVAN
Associated Press Writer
FLORIDA CITY, Fla.- It's
hard enough for their parents to
make sense of Hunicane Andrew's
destruction. But for many children
who lost homes, toys, everything
famitiar, the storm was a personal
enemy - and remains ooe.
In a tent city here, 6-year-old
Alvin Phillips drew a picture with a
red marker: A coiled line was the
hunicane, a rectangle with a ragged
edge his broken window, but what
about thai large smudge of red?
"That's blood," Alvin
explained. "Hurricane Andrew
lciUed the woman. And he's on the
way to till some more."
Child psychologists say time,
reassurance and a gradual return to
normal life will restore the emotional equilibrium of most of the
thousands of children who went
through the hurricane. Going back
to school - which starts Monday,
two weeks late - will help, they
say.
"You have to let them talk
about it," said Dr. Jose Vargas of
the Pediatric and Adolescent Center in Kendall, at the northern edge
of the woot damage. One in four of
his patients has lost his or her
house, said Vargas. He has treated
many cases of "night terrors," in

which the children are awakened
by sudden, extreme fears.
Parents may recognize their own
anxiety and depression, he said,
"but frequently they don't feel
their kids have the same type of
feelings. They do."
Though parents and counselors
note more crying, clinging and
aggressiveness - or sullenness in
adolescents - outward signs of
children's waries are subtle. Most
children Slill run, laugh, play,
sometimes making toys of the hurricane's wreckage.
At day care centerS set up in tent
cities here and in Homestead,
dozens of children last week played
Simon Says, clapped hands to
hap~y songs or challenged their
Marine guards to two-on-two l!as·
ketball.
One of the ballplayers was 7year-old Ariel Enricos, whose
smile dissolved as he told what
he'd been lhrough.
"The house was broken like
this," he said, pinching a bit of dirt
from the ground into dust on the
hot breeze. He remembered hugging and praying with family members in a bathroom as the roof tore
away. "I needed air," he said.
Now, his family occupies a few
cots in an olive-drab military tent
and his c'ollection of toys is

reduced to a pack of baseball cards.
"A lady gave them to me," Ariel
said.
.
I
He worried: "When I go to
school I can 't be in second grade
anymore ... 'cause they don't know
my name."
And there was another, deeper
fear he'd extrapolated from what
grownups had said. "Every month
a hurricane comes," he said ominouslr.. He would not be dissuaded.
Sull, a moment later he was
back playing ball.
"They change channels," said
Vargas, a former chief of pediaaics
at Miami Children's Hospital, who
said he expects most children to
recover fully - "unless they were
already emotionally damaged; it
wiD be harder for those.''
Psycholo~t John Freedy of the
Medical Umversity of South Carolina in Charleston, who treated
many children after Hurricane
Hugo, said research shows shanterm psychological recovery from
such a disaster takes three to six
months, and some effects can
linger for a year and a half.
Fewer than 10 percent of chi!·
dren will suffer long-term problems, he estimated, but given
Andrew's vast destruction "you're
talking about hundreds of children.''

NEW YORK (AP) - Bill
Cosby has bumped aside teeny-bop
stars New Kids on the Block to
reclaim the ~ he briefly lost as
the world's h1ghest-paid entertainer, a magazine reiJ(XUid.
Worth more than $300 million,
Cosby is expected to earn about
$98 million in 1991 and 1992 combined, Forbes magazine says in its
Sept. 28 issue.
Cosby, who collects a one-third
share of the syndication revenue
from "The Cosby Show," heads
the magazine's sixth aruiual list of
the top 40 entertainment moneymakers. He retired from the show
this year as TV's superstar dad.
Slipping to No. 4, New Kids on
the Block are expected to earn $8
million in 1992, com= with
$54 million a year ago,
said.
Last year, the PDJl group bumped
Cosby to No. 2 on the list
Oprah Winfrey, whose TV talk
show is broadcast in most U.S.
cities and 55 nations, is second
with earnings of about $88 million
in 1991 and 1992, the magazine
said
Kevin Cosater, director and lead
actor of "Dances with Wolves,"
jumps from sixth place to third,
with about $71 miUlOll in 1991 and
1992.
The magazine considers two
years' worth of income to smooth
out big earnings swings.

Maggots provide valuable clues
By ROGER MUNNS
Associated Press Writer
DES MOINES, Iowa - Most
people shudder at the image of a
maggot-infested body, but Ken
Holscher figures those bugs can
help solve a murder.
Holscher, an assistant professor
of entomology at Iowa Slate University in Ames, says insects can
tell a detective how long a body
has been dead and even, sometimes, where it carne from .
"To me, forensic entomology is
a valuable and useful science,"
said Holscher, who plans to lecture
on his findings Wednesday at the
third annual Insect Horror Film
Festival here. " There 's nothing
horrifying about it except the murder itself.' '
For years, forensic experts dismissed magg01s on a body as a disgusting nuisance. To change that
attitude, nine forensic emomologists published " Entomology and
Death," a field guide to camivo·
reus bu~s.
William C. Rodriguez, a foren sic expert at the Penlagon's Institute of Pathology, said insects are
useful because many indicators
experts use, such as tissue changes
and chemical tests, are only useful
during the farst 24 or 48 hours after
desth.
Holscher said that in the past
decade, scientists have found that
insect.s come to dead bodies in pre·
dictable s1ages. Thus, the presence
of a _certain insect helps to pinpoint

the time of death.
"First come the flies. They'll
find a body within one or two days,
sometimes within hours," he said.
"Then a few days later, probably
two to five days, you 'II still have
flies but there will also be certain
wasps and ants."
In five to 12 days the beetles
arrive, he said. In 12 to 16 days,
most of the fleshy parts have been
devoured and the flies depart.
Mites are the final creatures to
arrive.
Holscher said the technique
helped solve a double murder in
Louisi~na, in which a forensic
entomologist estimated the slaying
had occurred 60 hours before the
bodies were found. The information helped police direct their
investigation toward a man who
eventually confessed to the crime,
admitting he had done it 63 hours
before the bodies were found.

From clocks to stamps
CATSKILL, N.Y. (AP) James Bogardus (1808 -1874), a
prolific American inventor, started
as a wau:hmaker's aPJ¥entice.
Bogardus' inventions included
new clock mechanisms, a banlcnote
engraving machine and a dry gas
meter.
In 1839, he sold the British government his machine for engraving
postage stamps. He also invented a
pyrometer, a deep-sea sounding
machine and a dynamometer.

Holscher said he helped solve a
crime when he was studying with
another entomologist, Jerry Butler,
in Aorida 10 years ago.
"Investigators brought the maggots in and told us they had found
them on a body that had been disr.&gt;sed of," Holscher said. "Butler
tdenlified them but dido 't say anything and gave them to me. I tdentified them the same as he did.

Dog unit officers
need aifferent
kind of bravery

Workshop set
The University of Rio Grande
Through the Office of Continuing
Education is offering a two hour
workshop on being~ to sell.
This workshop ts scheduled to
be held on Thursday, Sept. 24,
from ~ -5 f..m. in Anniversary Hall,
room 20 . Cost for the course is
$10. Instructor for this workshop is
Jerry Gust, Director of the Loren
Berry Center, on the University
Campus.
This mini -seminar can aid people with the process of selling a
product, a proposal or an idea to an
mdi vidual or group. A video presentation produced by Toastmasters International and the Whanoo
School of Business will be used as
a centerpiece for this seminar.
For more information and registration contact the University of
Rio Grande, P.O. Box 878, Umversity of Rio Grande, Rio Grande,
45674 or call 614-245-5353 extension 325 or toll free in Ohio at I·
800-282-7201 .

COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Police officers applying for the
city's first or~antzed dog unit
found out that It takes a different
kind of bravery to do the job.
· Forty officers have applied for
the four-member team, which is
expected to be trained for patrol by
December.
"Tbe dog bite test is designed to
test their fear of the animals," said
SgL James Wagy, a supervisor for
the Columbus Police Department.
"Will they shy away from the
bite?"

During the test, officers first
were attacked by a muzzled dog.
Then they wore a protective arm
guard while being attacked by a
dog that wasn't muzzled. Finally,
ther. wore a full-length "bitt suit"
while being attacked from behind.
An ambulance crew stood by.
Instead or being shaken by last
week's test, the officers mostly
laughed as I 00-pound German
shepherds knocked over their colleagues.
Officers picked for the post
must agree to lceeD the dog at home
for a minim11111 ol' three yean. But
officers are urged to uy with the
team longer so they can bave tbe
most effective illljljliJil with the q .
Police dogs, some which COlt 11
much as $5,000, can only be
retrained once effectively to
I'CSflOitd to • different handler. Tbe
working lifo of a dog is about cipt
years.

Fall quarter registration begins at SBC
Registration is underway for the
Courses offered this quarter will
fall quarter at Southeastern Busi- be: Accounting I, Ill, Cost
ness College, which begins SepL Accounting, Payroll Accounting,
28, with both day and evening Intermediate Accounting, Math
classes offered.
100, I, II, C~municalions 100, I,
Two year associate degnee pro- Economics, Business Law, Busigrams, approved by the Obio State ness Psychology, Sociology, PolitiBoard of Proprietary Scbool Regis- cal Science, Personnel Managetration and accredited by the Career ment, .Professional Development,
College Association, are offered in Introduction to Business, Introducthe fields of Accounting, Business tion to ComputerS, Basic I, Cobol I,
Administration, Executive Secre- II, Spreadsheets, "C" Program tarial, and Microcomputer/Data ming, Data Base Desifn, Data
Processing.
Entry, Word ~ing , Typin~
Diploma programs are available 1, 11, ill, Shorthand I, IV, Secretariin Junior Accounting, Medical al 'Procedures, Medical Insurance
Office Secretary, Data Entry Spe- Coding, and Medical Terminology.
cialist, and Secretarial. ·
Faculty members include feff

I

(

Adkins, Millard Cassidy, Lenoir
Frick, Jaleh Hojat, Mary Lundell,
Ronnie Lynch, Brent Patterson,
Mike Putney, Cheryl Roush, Jeff
Steele, and Louella Stover.
Adminiatrative ataff members
are Robert Shirey, Walter Stowen,
Jeanette Shirey, Alice Parley, Din
MiDer, and Beth Clppelll. .
Financial assistance is available
for those SIUdeniS who qualify.
Admission appointmenu are
cwrendy being sehl!duled by phone
at 446-4367, or !If sl0ppin1 It the
college durina businel8 houri Mon·
day through Friday. In addition to
the ~usiness hours, appointmenll
may ~e scheduled for evening
.hours or Saturdays.

At least 33 U.S. police departmenu have canine units, police
said. Prailldin County deputiel fint
began using cklgs six ye~rs ·ago,
said S,L James PeiJOiky.

'

By ED PETERSON
Soclal Security
Manager In Atheas
The Social Security Administralion reports that some genealogical
researchers are worried about the
destruCtion of the original government forms that people completed
to request Social Security numbers.
"We can understand the concern
about the loss of information of
jl?Ssible historical value when the
Application for a Social Security
Number Card' is destroyed," said
Ed Peterson . "However, we .can
assure everyone that precaut10~s
have bee?. taken to make. certa~?
that no cnUcal inCOfi!!aUon ts. lost
Tbe Social Secunty Admmistralion, which is reqlli!'ed br law to
keep. records conf1denllal, can
release c~pi~s of Social Sec~rit_y
card apphclltlons for deceased mdividuals because the dead are
deemed to not have privacy rights.
Therefore, if a person has applied
for a Social Security card, SSA can
generally provide a copy of the
application that shows the pc:rson's
name, date and place of birth, and
parents' names that were given
when he or she applied for the
Social Security number.
Genealogists -often find this a
valuable starting point in their
research.
Peterson notes that while federal
agencies soch as SSA may select

records for destruction, the .records
may not be destroyed unless the
agencies have received written
approval from the Archivist of the
United States. This approval is
granted only after the records have
been appraised and it has been
determined that their historical
value does not warrant keeping
them~tly.

"S1nce the Social Security program began in 1935," Peterson
explained, "we have issued more
than 355 million Social Security
numbers, This is a huge volume of
paper, and we found it very difficult to maintain all of the original
paper documents."
In 1977, SSA obtained approval
from the U.S. Archivist to destroy
oriJinal Social Security card applicabon forms.
"But we entered the information
from all of the original application
forms into a computer data baseand filmed the 'face' of the form,"
Peterson said. He explained thai the
reverse side of the document is not
filmed because it contains only the
instructions for completing the
form.
Anyone interested in conducting
genealogical research through SSA
records should write the Office of
Public Inquiries, 6401 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, Md. 21235.
FC!ls are charged for' researching
agency records.

By SUSAN IDGHTOWER

Associated Press Writer
SPACE CENTER, Houston One of Endeavour's seven astra·
nauts squeezed eggs from frogs and
sopped them in sperm today as part
of research into how tadpoles
develop in space.
Mae Jemison fertilized eggs
from four female South African
clawed frogs ancl dunked them in
simulated pond water. Then, she
spun some of the eggs in a centrifuge to mimic Earth's gravitational pull.
The experiment, which began
late Sunday, is meant to compare
how frog eggs develop in wei~t­
lessness and on the ground SciClilists also want to watch the swimming of the tadpoles that they hope
will hau:h before the flight ends.
Jemison also continued biofeed·
back tests intended to help avoid
nausea and other motion sickness
symptoms.
Space agencies around the
world are anxious to learn more
about the motion sickness that
strikes most astronauts durin'- their
ftrst few days in orbit Tbe 1Dness

Top 10 country
singles named
The following are the best-selling country western singles of the
week, according to Cashbox magazine.
I. "Runnin' Behind," Tracy
Lawrence
2. "I Still Believe In You,"
Vince Gill
3. "I Wouldn't Have It Any
Other Way," Aaron Tippin
4. "Could've Been Me," Billy

Ra~~ove's Got A Hold On

You," Alan Jackson
6. "Warning Labels," Doug
Stone
7. "So Much Like My Dad,"
George Strait
8. "You And Forever And
Me," Utile Texas
· 9. "Yard -Sale," Sammy Kershaw
10. " What Kind Of Fool Dq
Yau Think I Am," Lee Roy Parnell

affects flight planning; critical
activities like spacewalks, for
example, are never scheduled early
in a mission.
Jemison, a physician and the
fmt black woman in space, is the
only member of Endeavour's crew
trained in biofeedback, a process
that involves using relaxauon and
mental exercises to control body
functions.
At the start or each 12-hour
Spacelab shift, she has forced herself to relax and mentally Died to
control her heart rate, sweating and
skin temperature.
As Jemison toiled in the lab, she
wore a tight, white shin with holes
for electrodes; a headband with an
instrument to measure head movement; a pinkie ring measuring
blood Dow and skin temperature; a
wristwatch with a display on which
she could keep track of her pulse,
sweating and skin temperature; and
a belt containing a data recorder
and batteries for the cquipmenL
Astronaut Jan Davts, the control
subject, wore similar gear as she,
too, worked in the lab, but the data
display on her watch was blanked
out. Davis and her husband, payload commander Mark Lee, are the
first married couple to go into
space together.
Earlier Sunda', Marnoru Mohri,
Japan's fm professional astronaut,
squinted at flashing lights while his
head wu wired with electrodes and
gripped in a vise for another investigation into space adaptation.
Mohri, a nuclear scientist, was
ptopped in a restraining chair rightside up, to the side and then upside
down as he kept his eyes ftxed on
lights attached to two perpendicular
bars.

DOWIIH CllliS
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SUITE 112 VALLEY DRIVE1 PT.

975

Page4

1105

Vol. 43, No.1 DO
Copyrlghled 1Q82

Low tonlgllt In mkl-'08.
Wednesday, partly cloudy. Hlgll
near 85.

1 s.ctlon, 10 PIQH 25 011111

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 15, 1992

Allulllmldll Inc. Newptoper

Work on Middleport housing
project to begin within 30 days
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentillel News Staff
Eight three-bedroom houses will
be built on the Betsy Ross lot on
Fifth Street, Middleport, by Valley
Lwnberand Supply, Middl~
Meeting Monday night, Middleport Village Council accepted the
proposal of Valley Lumber after
hearing Council president Dewey

Everybody to blame

Astronauts fertilize frog
eggs, study space sickness

Pick 3:
Pick 4:

Poet's corner
In the sliD darkness, a trap springs ment, so for them a little respect
For without their effort, no more
and caught
Some fur bearing animal, a mink, animals would be left
To stop them now, diseases and
skunk, or fox
A lar~e white tail deer, gracefully poison 11 would be
No more animals for your chilleaps m flight
dren's
children to see
As it tumbles to the ground, the
hunter had him in sight.
So why blame the hunter and the
Cruelty for management, that's the trapper for cruelty
way it's f!t to be
· While sitting at your oak dining
Some artimais have to die, so other table, as you driak your tea
Mr. and Mrs. Squirrel and family,
animals can eat
Your homes, factpries, and roads, died or starvation
They also dined at the same tree.
once grew grass so green
Animals use to eat there often, now
By Franlc Drehel
it's asphalt and concrete
37496 Leading Creek Rd.
The liapper and bunter is manage- Middlepon

Ohio Lottery

Dolphins
rally to edge
Browns 27-23

Horton's report on a meeting with
the three bidders earlier this month.
Horton recommended acceptance of Valley Lumber's bid on
the basis of housing style, better
arrangement on the lots, option
packages available, and agreement
.to construct all eight houses without a requirement that they be sold
in advance.

VOINOVICH MEETS DABS • Ohio Gov. George Volnovlcb,
right, calls on Malayslaa Deputy Prime Minister Gbafar Dabs at
his omce in Kuala f.umpur Tqesday. Voinovlch is there to lead
the first business trade mission fti Southeast Asia. (AP)

Construction, Jean Trussell,
housing specialist, reported will
begin within 30 days and be completed within 120 days.
Applications for the low income
housing are still being taken by
Trussell at Middleport Village
Hall. FHA funding is available to
purchasers. The lot.s are provided at
no cost by the village. There is also

Racine Fall
Festival will
begin Sept. 25

Ohio considering trade
office in Southeast Asia
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia
(AP)- Ohio is considering its ftrst
trade office in Southeast Asia, Ohio
Gov. George Voinovich said Tuesday.
Voinovich told reporters such a
trade office in one of the capitals of
the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations would not only help
increase trade and investments
between Ohio and the region, but
also between the United States and
the region.
Voinovich said the ASEAN
countries, including the Philippines, Thailand, Indonesia, Singapore, Brunei and Malaysia were
growing economically at a very
fast pace and would present vast
opportunities for American businessmen.
He said that if an office were too
expensive, it would share space
with an exisling Ohio company in
the region or worlc: through one of
the Ohio companies in the region.
Ohio companies already in the

region include Goodyear Tire and
Rubher Company, Reliance Electric, Dry-Air, Procter &amp; Gamble.
Voinovicll said Ohio exponed
$70 million worth of electronic
components, industrial and commercial machinery, chemical products and other goods in 1990 to
Malaysia.
He said that out of 172 trading
partners in 1992, Malaysia ranked
29th with Ohio.
Voinovich arrived here from
Singapore on Friday, with a trade
delegation representing 14 Ohio
companies mfood processing and
packaging, machinery, machine
tools and plastics production and
processing machinery.
Voinovich said it was estimated
that for each $1 billion exported
annually, 25,000 new jobs are created.
Voinovich said Columbus,
Ohio, has been selected by the
United Nations as the site for the
world's second Info Port.

Area leader says federal law
chips away at coal mining
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - The
Clean Air Act will continue to chip
away at coal mining in Ohio, an
industry leader said.
Coal production will balance out
at 20 million to 21 million tons
annually in the next few years, said
Neil Tostenson, president of the
Ohio Mining and Reclamation
Association. Current production is
29 ml'llion to 30 million • he said in
a speech at Hocking College on
Sunday.
However, chances are good that
mines in Southern Ohio Coal's
Meigs Division will stay open, he
said.
Tostenson said he expects
approval for a plan to install scrubbers at the Gavin power plant

rather than to swiu:h to low-sulfur
coal from other slates. Miners have
been worrying since 1.990 that
mines s_'}Pplying the plant would
close 1 scrubbers were not
mstalled.
However, th~ Cenu;aJ Ohio Coal
Co. m Zanesville w
. 111 not be
. so
! k T
d H
d th
uc y, OStenson SBl ·. e SBl e
company probably Will be out of
busmess by 2000 because the
M sk ·
Jan
u mgum power P t, which it
supplies, will change to low- sulfW"
coal.
.
,
The Clean Air Act of 1990 will
hit the coal industry hard between
199 5 and 2000 because a second
phase of regulations wi~l be even
more stnct, Tostenson SBld.

Barnhart released; Dudding
f:aces aggravated arson charge
Roger Barnhart, 14, who was
reported miss~ng last week, has
b~n released mto the custody ~L
h1s parents after he was found m
Athens County over the weelcend.
It was incorrectly reported in
Monday's Daily Sentinel thai Barnhart was charged in an auto theft
incident In New Marshfield. Meigs
County Sheriff James M. Soulsby
said Monday that Barnhart had not
been ch8rged and was expected to
be released from the juvenile dentention center in Zanesville sometiine yesterday.
Soulsby said an investigation
will continue into the theft of the
pickup truck recovered with Barnhart m New Marshfield Sunday,
along with the theft of another

truck driven by Randy Dudding of
Racine . Dudding was stopped
while driving the truck in Jackson
County, Ohio, early yesterday
morning. He is in the Pike County
jail, where he faces a charge of
grand theft auto.
In addition, a count of aggravat·
ed arson was filed in Meigs County
Court yesterdar against Dudding,
accusing him o burning his mobile
home on Pine Grove Road early
Saturday.
Barnhart's parents, Pete andBrenda Barnhart of Pomeroy,
reported him missing last week.
Soulsby was unwilling to say
whether he expected charges to be
filed against Barnhart in connection
.with the weekend's events

..---- Local- bri·ef
Postal exam scheduled

An examination for l'lll'ai mail carrier positions in Meigs County
is being plailned, and applications for the exam are now available.
Acconlins to Pomeroy Postmaster Tom Reuter, those applications are available at the following Meigs County post offiCes with
rural delivery routes: Langsville, Lens Bottom, Middleport,
Pomeroy, Ponland, Racine, Reedsville, and Rutland.
Reuter said that those applications must be turned in between
· September 21 and September 25. After all applications have been
received, notice of examination site and date wiU be mailed to all
applicants.

available ·down payinent assistance
TrusseD said.
'
Council voted to name the street
in the new subdivision, Covert
Lane, in honor of the family which
for many years operated a bakery
on the lot. The street will run from
Palmer to Williams.
The $22,402.50 bid of the
Continued on pa(lt! 3

LmRARY AUTOMAnON HERE· Norma
Hawthorne, seated, md Librarian Rutll Powers
begin some tataloefnl as tbe Meigs County Public Library moves toward automatloa. Eight

computers at the main
and two at the
Middleport building.will give
public access
to information on books available as well as provide technical search services on topics • .

Meigs Library automation underway
By CHARLENE H.OEFUCH
Sentlael News Staff
Automation of the Meigs Coonty Public Library is underway.
Th
h
h' · ed
roug a sop lSllcat compuler system the nearly 30,000
books available are bemg call1 d
da · be'
. ted
age • patron 18 IS mg 1IS •
and a data base link is being established between the library in
Pomeroy and the branch in Middlepan.
Ruth Powers, librarian, reports
that the computerized system, to be
·
completed in early 1993, will
::;,1~N~~ access computers at
Meigs County is the final link in

er terminals will be linked to a
printer.
Once the system linking the
Middleport and Pomeroy libraries
together is in operation, then the
next phase will be tying all II
libraries of OVAL together via
computer.
Stnce the Meigs County library
moved from the Carnegie Building

on Second Street, Pomeroy, into
the spacious new building on Main
Street, about 10,000 new books
have been added to the collection
and circulation has aipled. Currently figures show circulation of
between 8,000 and 9,000 a month.
The main library is now open 72
hours a week, including evening
and Saturday and Sunday hours.

Plans for Racine's' Annual Pall
Festival on Sept. 2S and 26 have
been announced.
The feslival will kick-off Friday
evening, Sept 25, in the town with
a variety of gospel entertainment
including The Hart Brothers,
Shammah, Russ and Southern Hills
Singers, King's Harmony Quartet.
Faith Harmony Quartet and the Joy
Singers.
On Saturday, Sept. 26,1here will
be a parade at 10 a.m., a pie eating
contest and a pumpkin growing
contest. Entenainment during the
day will include Howard and
Friends, Ivan Potter and Silver
Wings, Country Grass, Stoney
Creek, Middle Branch, Big AI and
Friends and the Midnight Cloggera.
Thost: participating in the pumpkin
growmg contest are requested to
bring their pumpkins to the lot
between Sonya's Country Kitchen
and the Gun Shop 011 the day of the
contest Those participating in the
pie eating contest should register at
the Racine DepariniCnt Store.
Craft spaces are available during
the festival with those arrangements under the direction of Bill
Nease at Home National Bank in
Racine, 949-2210.
The pumpkin growing contest
will prove to be quite interesting
this year with prizes to include a
large trophy that wiU be presented
to the elementary school which
raises the largest pumpkin; and a
trophy and $50 United States Savings Bond to be awarded to the
child in elementary school who
grows the largest pumpkin.
In addition there will be a Harvest Festival Queen crowned who
will reign over the weeltend's festivities.

~~~i~h~~~e~f~or;~s?vAL

According to Powers, getting
information on all of the available
books into the computer, and barcoding each boot for scanning purposes will mean that each one will
have to be removed from the shelf
and transported to the basement
where the server is located
Once all that information is in
the computer, then the work on
registering patrons wiD begin. New
informatioo will be taken on each
patron borrowing books even
though the patron holds a library
card.
For several months the card cat· alog will remain in place, but once
patrons become accustomed to
usins the public access computer
termmals the card system will be
discontinued.
At the main library, four P.ublic
access computerS will be avatlable,
one-of which will be in the chi!dren's section. and two will be
used at the circulation desk so that
employees can lllsist patrons.
. -At the Middi!',PDrl branch, there
will be one publtc access terminal
and one for use at the ·circulation
desk.
By entering a title, an aUthor, or
a subject, a patron will be able to
determine where the specific book
they 'fant is located and • which
library building, what books are
available from a specific author,
and what materials are there on a
specifiC subjecL All of the ~put-

tbe Captain's Houe Ia Middleport. Pktmtd, 1r, (boHOta to top) are e~lldldates: Julie IKk,
Nora Eastman, Amy Rouse, Aaale Searle.,
Linda Cupmm aDd MIDdy Harris. Ia adclldoa ·'
to a queeD, a lint I'UIIaer-ap Md I M.. C.....
nlaUty wiD alia be ~elected.
. ··

QUEEN CANDIDATES • Oae of these
q - coa~IIDts wll1 be CIViliied 199Z Middleport Fatlvll O.eea durlq ceremonies on Sat·
u:,:at 12:30' p.m. fro• tbe ftatbed atap on
N
SeCODd Avea.e durllll tbe Calfllh Festl·
val. Judafag took place lut nlabt (MOitday) 11

-4

{

�\
"·

TUesday, September 151 1992

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

OHIO Weather
Page 2-The Dally Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

Robert}. Wagman

-·lin&amp;
Letters to the editor

Leum

Response is overwhelming

Where is the fight?
Dear Editor.
I don't underslalld the headline
on the front page of the Sept. 9,
Sentinel, "Cremeans and Malone
spar over job legislation".
It seems to me Mr. Cremeans
would support the legislation Rep.
Malone had already supponed. So
where is the fight? If Cremeans
supports what Rep. Malone has
already done, what's the deal?
Mark Malone has already voted
for this bill. Now it is up to the
Senate to vote for it. I also see
where Mr. Cremeans is saying
Mark is on vacation in southern
Ohio. I've been with Mark and he
has been very busy in southern
Ohio talking to people about their
needs and problems. You can't stay
in Columbus and keep in .touch

Dear Editor.
On Friday, September 4, your
paper had the high school football
previews. I would like to know
why, of the three Meigs County
High Schools, only Meigs High
School had a write up complete
with a-lineup. Southern and Eastern
weren't even mentioned in the
paper. Then in Sunday's paper two
out-of-county schools were given a
much greater coverage than Southem or Eastern. I really don 'tlcnow
who is to blame for this but it
seems to me the paper should be

CLERK
c;~uFFLE PAPER AND RER?RT
TO ACRANKY BOARD oF DIREtT~

responsible for more even coverage. I feel the kids of Southern,
especially the seniors, are going to
need all the recognition they can
get since the SVAC broke up. This
paper should cover all three high
schools. The people of Southern
and Eastern like to read about their
schools and their kids as much as
the people of Meigs High School.
Thank You
William T. Kimes
P.O. Box 52
Racine, Ohio 45771

Nominations for the 1992 Outrageous Personage of the Year
Award are now being received, and
I have to tell you, the chore will, be
in the choosing.
The landscape in this political
year is strewn with teeming ponds
of wriggling hypocrites and charlatans. Dip your net and see what
manner of bouom-dweUing scavengers you can come up with and
send their names on to the Spear
Foundation, the tiny but tireless
think tank that sponsors the OP
contesl

We do not discriminate. We will
consider politicians, preachers, performen; and yes, even pressies. The
only rules: Foreign nationals, dead

-----Weather----South-Central Ohio
Tonight, mosdy clear. Low 606~. Wednesday, partly cloudy.
High around 85. Chance of rain 20
percent.
Extended forecast:
Thursday tbrougb Saturday:

IMSEBALL

$2,500 for·downpayment and closing costs to assist those families in
need. The DAP loan would act as a
nine-year second mortgage loan
and carries a 0% interest rate thus
avoiding any monthly payments.
The loan program has been
structured to make it as easy as
possible for you to buy your home.
Due to the absence of any monthly
payments the D_A? loan will not

Thanks for helping
Dear Editor:
We would like to thank all those
who supported the 1992 Street Festival in Rutland. 1ltanlcs to all those
who helped work, baked for the
bake sale, donated, or supported us
in any way.
Joan Stewart, President
Rutland Fire Department Auxiliary

Joseph Spear

•

OPs and groups are not eligible
(there are too many live, domestic,
individual rogues to consider).
No cash award goes with the
honor, but the winners will receive
Quaylies, small statueues of Vice

Today in history
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, Sept. IS, the 259th day of 1992. There are 107 days
left in die year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
On Se[l\. 13, 1917, Russia was proclaimed a republic by Alexander
Kerensky, the head of the provisional government that carne to po._,er fol·
lowing the abdicatioo of Czar Nicholas II.
On this date:
In 1776, British forces occupied New York City during the American
Revolution.
In 1789, the U.S. Department of Foreign Affairs was renamed the
Department of Stale.
In 1821, independence was proclaimed for Costa Rica, Guatemala,
Honduras, Nicaragua and El Salyador.
In 1857, William J{owllrd Taft, who served as president of the United
States as well as chief justice, was born in Cincinnati.
In 193S the NurembeiJ Laws deprived German Jews of their citizenship and m8de the swastika the official symbol of Nazi Germany.
In 1942, 50 years ago, in the PaCific during World War Two, the USS
Wl!SJl was torpedoed by a Japanese submarine; the U.S. Navy ended up
sinking the badly darnliged csricr. .
In 1949 "The'Lone Ranger" premiered on ABC television with Clayton Moore~ the masked hero and Jay Silverbecls as Tooto.
In 1950, d~ the Komln conflic~ United Nations forces landed at
Inchon in the
and bepll their drive toward SeouL
In 19.59, Soviet Pmnier N'tkita Kbtushchcv arrived in the United States
to begin a 13-day visit.
In 1963, four children wac killed when a bomb went off during Sunday services at a blaclt Baptilt chllltb in Birmingham, Ala.
I

'

President J. Danforth Quayle in the
act of demonstrating his inane grin •.
(Due to fiscal constraints, busts of
MAD magazine's Alfred E. Neuman are being used as substiwtes,
but no one has complained so far.)
Where in this fecund year does
one even start? With Ross Perot,
who led us on with talk of dealing
honesdy with the budget and then
chickened out? With the chicken
hawks in the Republican. Party -'
Newt Gingrich, Phil Gramm, Pat
Buchanan, Dick Cheney - who
never served in the military but are
not lite least bit shy about criticizing Bill Clinton for dodging the
draft? Or with Budget Chief Dick
Darman, who has personally
~ided over a $1 trillion increase
m the national debt but doesn't hesitate to trash Ointon's and Perot's
economic ideas as "phony"?
Or with J. Danforth Potatoe
Heade, who gets outspelled by 12year-olds; or with his press
spokesman, David Beckwith, who
refuses to talk to journalists who
report it? (Can a Quayle get a
Quaylie? We'll have to check the
rule boolc on that.) Or with George
Bush, who screeches about
Congress' pork baml spending one
week ·and uies to buy the election
with $33 llillion of federal largess
the next? Or with Country Club
George pretending to 1M! the rein·
carnation of Homegrown Harry?
How about if we begin the contest in Ibis year of big names I!Dd
ballyhoo with a few ielections
from OOwn in the ranks:
FBI Director William Sessions,
who has asked Congress to force
telephone companies 10 build systems that can be easily rapped and to pay for any new required
de&lt;igno by adding the costa 10 our
mOilhly bll1a.
Maurice GR&gt;CDberg, chief exec-

James Council
James C. Council, 67, of
Langsville, who died Sunday, Sept.
13, 1992 at the Holzer Medical
Center, is survived by two grand. sons, Jeremy D. Council and
Roben D. Council, II, and a granddaugher, Bridgett Council. The
names of the grandchildren were
incorrectly reported to The Daily
Sentinel by Ewing Funeral Home
who handled the services. Funeral
services for Mr. Council were held
at 10 a.m. today.

Gregory Satterfield
Gregory (Clint) Satterfield,
infant son of Gregory T. and Daisy
Haggy Satterfield, 300 Mulberry
Avenue in Pomeroy, died on Sunday, September 13, 1992 at
Women and Children's Hospital in
Charleston, W.Va. He was born on
August25, 1992 in Charleston.
Besides his parents; he is survived by his maternal grandparents,
Walter and Neltie Haggy of Rutland and his paternal grandfather,
Rev. James Satterfield of Racine;
and several aunts, uncles and
cousins.
He was preceded in death by his
grandmother, Yolan Satterfteld,
and his uncle, Joe Satterfield. His
family attends the Rudand Church
of God.
Funeral services wiU be held on
Wednesday at 10 a.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home in Pomeroy with
Rev. John COrcoran offictating.
Burial will follow in Bradford
Cemetery.
Friends may call on Wednesday
from 8:30 a.m. to the time of service.

Assistance Program it is necessary
to schedule an appoinonent with an
Ohio lender that is panicipating in
OHFA's low-interest first-time
homebuyer program.
With approximately 60% of
Ohioans livmg in owner occupied
housing the State of Ohio is looking forward to expanding this program so that additional families
will have the opponunity 10 fulfill
their dream of home ownership.
As always, please feel free to
call or write me, State Senator Jan
Michael Long, if you have any
questions or comments about these
or any other issues. My number is
(614) 4«HHl56, and my address is
the Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio,
43215.

.

l

utive of the American International
Group, a global insurance company, who infonned his subordinates
on the same day that Hurricane
Andrew slammed into Florida that
the storm presented "an opporwnity to get price increases now."
Rev, Pat Robertson, who disfG!·
aged the "feminist agenda' as
"not about equal rights for
women" but "about a socialist,
anti-family political movement that
encourages wome)l to ICO'Ve their
husbands, kiD their children, practice witchcraft, destroy capitalism
and become lesbians."
The minister of a Baptist chiD'Ch
in Houston who was ousted by his
congregation last month and took
the chwch organ, fans, curtains and
pulpit with him when be departed.
The meterpasou in Washington,
D.C., who watched IL'l a thief stole
a license plate from a car, then left
the vehicle's owner with a ticket
for a missing tag.
Keith D. Bjerke, administrator
of the Agricultural Stabilization
and Conservation Service, who
flew 900 employees 10 Washington
for an honorary gala and boarded
them at · the Capital Hilton.
Congress had informed him to cut
tile amount he spent last year for
the 11111ual event- $667,000- so
he carne in at $492,000. In an interview with a Washington Post
reporter; Bjerke said he had
trimmed his costs to "an absolute
minimum.'' He added: "People
don't min4 working long hours
without compensation, on weekends and holidays, if they are
praised."
So remember to thank a bureaucrat today. And submit his name
fortn OP awanl tanonow.
J~~~epll Spear Ia 1 l}'lldltated
writer tor New~p~per £nmprlle
AIIOdldoll.

,.I

Fair on Thursday. A chance of
showers and thunderstonns Friday
and Saturday. Highs in the 80s
Thursday and in the upper 70s and
low 80s Friday and Saturday. Lows
60-65 Thursday, in the upper 50s
and low 60s Fnday and 60-65 Saturday.

Hosoital news
Veterans Memorial
MONDAY ADMISSIONS ·
Ruth Bierhup, Langsville.
MONDAY DISCHARGES ·
Dom Wining.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Sept. 14- Jacob
Barnes, Mrs. Earl Current and son,
Mrs. Russell Deuney and daughter,
Mrs. Danny King and son, Faye
Murphy, Mrs. Robert Saunders and
daughter, Mrs. David Shotts and
daughter.
Births, Sept. 14 - Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Barker, a daughter, Northup.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard DeMoss, a
daughter, Racine. Mr. and Mrs.
Alben Dettwillcr, a son, Pomeroy.

The Daily Senlinel
Publi•lled

"'1'7

!lftunOGD,

Mcmday

th...... Friday, Ill CooriSt P ,..,,
Ohio br tho Ohio Valley NiHohlar
Company/Maltimad.ia lneS. ~meroy,
Ohio c.l769, Ph. 1192·21156.
d d111
poolop pold ol Pamoruy, Ohla.
Mombor. 'l1uo Aaoodolod ..,_, and lbo
Ohio New.paper Alaodatioa, National
Adnrttrin1 Rl~ataUYe,' Branham
Nowopoper Sol•, 733 Third
NowYort,N.,YootoUl017.
~

Ann..,

POSTIWI'I'ER: Bead odd!ou ........ lo •
The Dally Sen.&amp;tneJ, 111 Co'QI't St., '
PomOIV)I OHio c.l71t8.

8UB8CIIIPTION 11A'1'11

Bt Camerorllotor ...._

.
On• woek. .......................................lt.60
One Moath.............................:....... .. JII.115
One Yeor................ ..__...... ......,__ ,J811,20

IINGLICOPY
P&amp;l~

Dot\1&lt; ........................................-

1111 C...to

Bobocribon noldootril!l to J10Y lhl...,.._
er IDI)' remit In alh'Ane. dinu &amp;o Tbt
Daily But.in.el on a three, llx or 12
- l h ballo. Credit will bo
conter .
e~eh Week.
'
No 1ubtcrtptl:on1 by mail permUted Ia
anal wh•r. home eanier
it
••alllble.

P.••

--.--

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28 w..u. .............................,.........

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o.tlllclo ..... CoouoiJ,

.

II W..U..:....... ...............................
28W..U.........................................
MW..U..:........................,.... _,......

I

.)8 -

.76 ,

=fO
fO

VETERAN WAL~ERS -This team of
Heart Walkers, representing the Pomeroy omc:e
of Bank One, ooDected the most pledges last year
in the American Heart Association's American
H~art Walk. Along with Whaley's Auto Parts,
Bank One Is a sponsor of the local Heart Walk,

to be held on September 26. Pictured with 1 promotioaal banner for tbe eveat are, 1-r, 1992
chairman .Millie Midkiff, Des Jeffers, Mary In
Wllcox, Joan Wolfe, Dianna Lawsoa, Marilyn
Wolfe and MarilyD Robinson. (Sentinel Photo
by Brian J. Reed)

Reorganized Heart Walk taking shape for '92

captain; Southern Local Schools, cular and overal fitness. Walking
Jan Hill, captain; Meigs High can lOne muscles, increase stamina,
School, Dana Kessinger, captain; improve blood circulation and,
Eastern Local Schools, Doris Well, with a proper diet, can help cononl
captain; and Middleport Church of weight gain. The AHA recomChrist, Dreama Pickens, captain.
mends checking with your doctor
Anyone from these groups who before starting any exercise pro·
wish to join the team should con- gram and includes these tips for a
tact the listed captain. Any groups successful walking program:
who wish to form their own team
. Wear comfortable shoes suit·
are
to
contact
one
of
the
following
Fioyd Muncy
ty.
able for walking.
recruitment
leaders
for
the
neces· Find someplace safe to walk.
Floyd Clayton Muncy, 54, of
This year's event will take pl~~CC
sary
materials:
Millie
Midkiff,
992·
·
Wear appropriate clothes for
Gallipolis Ferry, died Monday, on Saturday, September 26 at the
2133;
Linda
Warner,
992-2477,
the
season
.
Sept. 14, 1992, in Pleasant Valley Meigs High School track. RegistraJane
Frymyer,
992-2697;
Debbie
·Walk
with a companion.
Hospital.
tion will begin at 10 a.m., with the
·Properly
warm up before walkwalk
taking
place
from
10
a.m.
to
I
Haptonstall, 992-2710; Donna
Born May 2I, 1938 , in Hatfield, p.m. The evt!nt is being sponsored Carr, 992-2153; and Denver and ing and cool down afterwards.
Ky., he was a son of Ruby Oney
.
• Drink plenty of water.
Burcheu of Rio Grande, Ohio, and ~ationally by Lederle Labomtones Nom Rice, 992-3759.
- Schedule a time 10 walk ana
the late Fred Muncy.
and locally by Bank One and WhaThe American Heart Associaley's Auto Parts.
tion encourages a regular exercise stick toil
He was also preceded in death by
''The change from Turkeywalk of moderate intensity perfonned 30
A free copy of the brochure,
a son, Clayton Allan Muncy, who to American Heart Walk really is to 60 minutes at least three to four "Walking for a Healthy Heart" is
died in 1973, and fosaer father, not much more than a change in times a week to improve cardiovas· available by contacting the AHA at
Mack Runion.
name and price structure," said the
1-800-282-0291.
A farmer, he was a 36-year local 1992 chairman, Millie Midmember of the West Virginia Na- kiff. "As always, we want people to
Continuedfroinpagel
tional Guard in the combined sup- Jearn the benefits of exercise, such
port maintenance shop, where he as walking, to the cardiovascular SheUy Co., Thornville, was accept· are to have services, there is no
served as maintenance supervisor. system. But this year instead of ed for the paving of Beech from choice but to raise the rates."
The last increase in rates was in
He was in Troop Command winning turkeys, they will win Parle: to Oliver, the block of Pearl in
1989.
Earlier the Board of Public
front
of
the
Middleport
Elementary
Detachment 2.
things like I!JKl" towels, televisions
Affairs
had asked for a 20 percent
School,
and
a
block
on
Hudson
Surviving, in addition to his and !-shirts.'
.
increase.
Streel
The
project
will
be
paid
for
mother, are his wife, Naomi (Phil"Most people think that cardio·
Gerard questioned whether
lip) Muncy; foster mother, Misie vascular diseases are something with Issue 2 (Ohio Department of
enough
cost-saving steps have been
Runion, Gallipglis Fetry; a you worry about when you're Development) funds and local
taken.
He
said that the IOta! cost of
dau~ter, Mrs. Joe · (Elizabeth) older, but cardiovascular diseases monies (10 percent of the project
salary
and
benefits for the employWhittington, Gallipolis Ferry; two and stroke to affect many Ameri- cost) of $2,240.
ees
of
the
water
and sewer departMayor Fred Hoffman said that
sons, S~Ol Lee Muncy and Floyd cans in their 30's, 40's and SO's Neil Muncy, both of Gallipolis Fer- often their most productive years," paving of North and South First ment is $180,000. Hoffman said
ry; eight sisters, Ruth Leftwich, Midkiff said. "And children aren't Avenue will take place next week. thai each department has 2 1/2
Pauline Dean, and Anna Lois Pope, excluded from cardiovascular dis- That project is being paid for with employees and one office person.
Horton said that the department
all of Edgewater, Fla, Helen Col- ease either. We need answers now money from the county's Commu·
has
cut back on personnel and
gin, Columbus, Lorie Bush of Sun- to continue saving lives right here nity Development Block Grant
hours
already and charged that the
belry, Ohio, Christine Jewell and in Meigs County where heart dis· (CDBG).
problem
is with mandates from the
Hoffman reported that the
Aileen Staten of Loving, Ky.; two ease accounts for 45 percent of all
half-sisaers, Connie (RWJion) Var- deaths, making it the number one downtown sidewalk improvement government for more testing and
project was not funded through the better water supplies. "There is
ney of Charl01te, N.C., Connie killer."
nothing the village can do to conCDBG.
(Burchett) Palmer of Cheshire,
Last year's walking event had
trol
th~ costs," Horton said.
Projects for the next round of
Ohio; seven brothers, Carl Muncy 32 participants in four teams raisGet\rd
acknowledged the govof Grove City, Ohio, Paul Muncy ing $3,000. In addition to individu- Issue 2 funding were discussed and
ernment
mandates,
but said that
of Pickerington, Ohio, Chester and al prizes, a traveling community it was voted to apply for $16,710
"according
10
figures
presented by
Gracen Muncy of Florida, Merle plaque is presented to the team for stonn sewer improvements on
the
board,
the
increases
are not in
Muncy of Loving, Ky., David with the highest total pledges. This Logan and Broadway, and for
Muncy ollnez, Ky., Eugene Muncy year, recruitment leaders are con- $70,184 for pavement and repaving the areas mandated by the state, but
of Columbus; and a grandson, tacting businesses and or$aniza- of North Second St., Mill Street in an increase in wages and beneJason Whittington.
tions to form teams for thts com- north to the corporation line. Both fits. He asked about a budget poliprojects would require 10 percent cy in view of the fiscal situation in
The funeral will be Wednesday, munity event.
1:30 p.m., at the Wilcoxen Funeral
Teams with representative cap- match from the village. A decision the villa~e.
The mcrease will generate a
Home with the Elder Chester tains who have committed to par- on the Issue 2 funding wiU he made
total
of about $36,000 a year, the
Cochran officiating. Burial will be ticipate so far are: Kroger, Carolyn in December, Hoffman reported.
mayor said. Ordinances require
in the Lewis Cemetery, Gallipolis Young, captain; Powell's Super
Water-sewer Increases
three
readings before being passed.
Ferry.
Valu, Jean Powell, captain; Bank
After a lengthy discussion ,
Other Business
Friends may call at the funeral One, Millie Midkiff, captain; Trini- Council passed first readings to
Council
voted to abolish the
home tonight (Tuesday), 7 to 9 p.m. ty Church , Debbie Haptonstall, two ordinances, one providing for a position of recreation
director as of
12 percent increase in water rates
Oblinger hospitalized
and the other providing for a 12 Sept. 30. Councilman James ClalBetty Ohlinger of Middleport is G. James Cancer Research Insti- percent increase in sewer rates. The worthy voted against the action.
Friday, Ocl 30, 6 to 7 p.m. was
hospitalized in Columbus. Cards tute, Ohio State University Hospi- combined increases on the miniset
for trick or treat nighl That will
may be sent to Room 956, Arthur tal, Columbus, Ohio 43210.
mum it the ordinances are passed
will be S1.55 a month, Hoffman be followed by the Halloween
reported. For senior citizens which party at the marina.
have a ·reduced rate, the combined
increase for minimum use will be
Council endorsed the Meigs
$1.40.
County Health Departtnent's one
A jury trial in the case of a Middlepon man charged with rape
Before Council voted on the miD replacement levy to be on the
got underway in Meigs County Common Pleas Court on Tuesday
ftrst reading which passed 4-1, with November ballot, commended the
morning before Judge Fred W. Crow Ill.
·
Councilman Paul Gerard voting Catfish Festival committee,
George W. Miller, Jr. was indicted in February on a charge of
"no", Horton reponed on a meeting announced the Gingerbread House
engaging in sexual contact with a male, under the age of 13. He is
with the Middleport Board of Pub- open house Thursday from 3 to 7
represented by Pomeroy auorneys Charles Knight and Christopber
lic Affairs. He said that ''the fund is p.m., and accepted the mayor's
Tenaglia. Special Prosecutor Mark Sheets of Gallipolis will try the
~oing broke, and that if the village
report showing receipts of
case on behalf of the state.
IS to have services, there is no
$2,868.&lt;Xi.
An ·indictment charging Miller with similar conduct with differ·
choice but 10 raise the rates."
ent children was filed this summer, and will be tried separately.
"Middlepon has the lowest rates
of anyone m the area and after the
Attending were Mayor Hoffraise, they'll still be the lowest," man , Clerk Terri Hockman, and
Horton said. He said that cost cut- Council members, Jack Sauerfield,
An inch of blaclctop wiU !le applied to West Main Street from the '
ting measures have already been Horton, Crooks , Clatworthy, and
Pomeroy/MaSOn Bridge to the Middleport corporation line, followput into effect and ''the fact is if we Gerard.
ing action taken at a special meeting of Pomeroy Village Council
last nighl
.
.
Although the bidding process has been completed, council earlier
discuased the possibility of poslpOning the work until after waaer
line replacement.had been completed. Council decided last night
that an incb will be applied immediately, with another inch planned
for next year after the water line has been replaced.
The work will begin today, and will be perfonned by Shelly
Company of Thornville. The project was planned to augment
· ~!,ye Avenue to the bridge by the Ohio Department of

--Area deaths--

A call for outrageous· personages

Berry's World

r

Sen.]an M. Long

probation and costs; Timothy
Willis, Syracuse, no motorcycle
endorsement, $75 and costs, three
days in jail, suspended with valid
endqrsement within 45 days;
Memfec Blevms, Pomeroy, failure
to appear on recognizance, six
months in jail, suspended to 30
days, fi.ve years probation, costs.
Monte Swindall, Shade, con-

•

UKE A

increase your debt and will not
interfere in your ability to receive
your ftrSt mortgage loan. A portioo
of the DAP loan is fof$iven each
year and the loan is cons1dered paid
off if you remain in your home for
nine years.
In order to q,ualify for the program your famtl)' must be below
the area median mcome, you must
be eligible for an Ohio Housing
Finance Agency low-interest ftrsttime homebuyer mon~age loan,
and you must be a first ume homeowner, or not have owned a home
within the last three years. In addition a family can qualify for the
DAP loan if the home is within the
target area which includes most of
Southeastern Ohio.
To apply for the Downpayment

only; April D. Cundiff, Middleport,
seat belt violation, costs only ;
Kevin Betzing, Pomeroy, speed,
$21 and costs; Robert Martin,
Mc~rthur, theft, $200. a~d. costs,
restJntUon, stx months m jail, sus- ·
. pended to eight days, five years
probation, Christine Ste~art, Middlepol'l. theft (2), six months in jail,
suspended, restitution, five years

suming alcohol under the age of •
21, $200 and costs, three days in
jail, suspended, three years ~- . ,
tion, seat belt violation, wtll see
film and pay costs; _Sharon !
McMullen, Albany, passmg bad .•
checks, $25 and costs, restiwtion; •
Mark Clark, Middlepon, driving ••
under suspension, $100 and costs,
30 days in jail suspended to three
days, one year probation; Marty
Hutton, Rutland, DUI, $350 and · ;
costs, 30 days in jail, suspended to '
three days, defendant given Residential Treaonent Program option . ,
and 90 days license suspension, •
failure to control, $20 and costs;
Angel Vance, Cheshire, passing •
bad checks, $25 and costs, restitu·
~

tion.

Home ownership · opportu.nities in Ohio
qualify for the program. The
Downpayment Assistance Program
administered by the Ohio Housing
Finance Agency can provide up to

Meigs County Court Judge
Patrick H. O'Brien processed 37
cases last week.
Fined were: William Hedrick,
Jr., Guysville, passing hac! ch~ks
(2), $25, costs and restttutton;
Christopher L. Adams, Reedsville,
failure to yield, $10 and COSts; Brad
L. Ebling, WintersviUe, stJCed, $20
and costs; Karen Workman,
Albany, seat belt violatipn, costs
·

• IColumbus!as· I

It is no accident that in the week
following the GC'P convention,
both candidates inade several
appearances in Illinois and then
fanned out across the re~ion. The
Bush camp hopes that 11 will be
helped by two popular GOP governors: Jim Edgar in Illinois and
George Voinovich in Ohio. But
they, in tum, are warnin$ that voters in their states are being turned
off.by the highly conservative tn·
tory that is coming on the heels of
the Houston convention. Both predict down-to-the-wire races in their
stales.
Robert Wapan is a syDdicated writer for Newspaper Enterprise As!ociation.

Why is nothing done?
Dear Editor:
Why is it that certain people can
kill' my puppies and nothing is
do.i~? I realize that would be a hard
lasl&lt;. But two nights ago, there
were two white males, what arr
they called? Peeping Perverts?
Well, who-ever they were took a
knife and slit every piece of my
clothing I had hanging on my
clqthes line. Why? I stay at my
fafm except to go to my Father
(Biicky) and Molhen home to take
C81l' of their dogs. J·would like to
know who and why some, two
meit, would make it so I'm afraid
to go outside after dark. And now I
have to lock all my doors andcwmdoltls after six years of living here.
The niaht my clothes were slit I
baa company who saw the men
looking in the window behind my

.
ber. If the California poUs stay as tial effon, look' at the polls, and
they are now. the Bush campaign then decide whether to continue to
will spend the time and money spend.
elsewhere.
IIJl for the rest of the South, both
On the Democratic side, the camps see it as up for grabs. The
Clinton camp concedes privately Democrats believe their candithat most of the Rocky Mountain dittes' home states - Arkansas and
West. down through the Southwest, Tennessee - are safe. They
and into the Plains states are likely believe they have a better than even
to be solid for the president. It will chance in Ult1isiana. The GOP sees
campaign in Montana and South Vir$iJti!1, South Carolina and MisDak01a, but the prize there in terms sissippi as safe. Both sides igree
of electoral votes is too small tP that with the Democrats having two
make much of an effol'l.
Southern candidates, they have a
One state in the region they will good chance elsewhere in the
contest is Colorado. It has been region.
safe ground for the GOP in the
However, both sides agree the
Sou$
will be a struggle, and most
Reagan-Bush era, but Clinton is
opetlltives
believe, in the end, Bush
cunendy leading in the polls. State
GOP oflicials admit that if the elec- and Clinton will probably come out
tion were held today, Clinton of the South with an almost even
would carry the state. Bill they are split.
Various other states, most
confident they can tum this around
by Election Day, and the Clinton believe, will tend to cancel one
camp is not all that sure they won 'L another out Indiana for Bush, MinClinton stnttegists view Florida nesota for Clinton, by way of
much the way the Bush camp sees example.
California - valuable enough to
Thus, as both camps now view
make an effort, but J)IOIJably lost- things. the campaign will be won
The Clinton camp will make an .ini- or lost in seven or so stales now
considered completely up for
grabs: Texas in the Southwest,
Pennsylvania in the East, border
states Missouri and Kentucky, and
~OUND£
the three keys in the industrial Midwest - Illinois, Michigan and
Ohio.
COMMISSIONE~S
Both sides agree, if either candi~ITION.
date can sweep Ulinois, Michigan
and Ohio, and split the rest. he will
almost surely capture the White

House.

In today's struggling economy it
is becomin$ more and more difli·
cult for m1ddle and low income
families to afford a home of their
own. With the rising cost of housing across the country and in Ohio
the American dream of home ownership can slowly tum into a nightmare. In an attempt to reduce the
barriers of home ownership the
Ohio Department of Development
recently announced a new home
ownership program entitled the
Downpayment Assistance Program
(DAP).
The program effective in August
of this year would allow the opporback. And no they (my company) tunitx fot low and middle income
didn't have a car. So whoever they fam1lies whose income is at or
were didn't see any vehicle. Do I below the area median income to
really have to shoot someone
before something is done? I live
alone and I do own a gun.
Thank You,
Melanie K. Walu:rs O'Neil
Middlepon, OH

conditions and high temperatures

MICH.

·

with your people in the district.
You must talk to the people in
southern Ohio. Many people can't
drive to Columbus so Mark makes
time to go to their homes to talk to
them on a one-w-ooe basis. I Icnow
this for a faet because I've been
with Mark.
Mr. Cremeans and Gov. George
Voinovich are very good friends.
He must be getting his advice from
him because we all know he stays
in Columbus. He's been asked to
come to Meigs County several
times. All he can do is send a representative! Mark Malone has been
in Meigs County more than 20
times in the last month.
Jeff Thornton
Racine, Ohio

Wants equal coverage

Accu-Weather" forecast for

Midwest is key to winning
White
House
.

CHICAGO {NEA) ...:.. Publicly, Washington state as well. But that
111 eout &amp;beet
top-level operatives in both the opinion is not universal.
PoaleiO)', Obio
Bush and Clinton campaigns tell
Some in the campaign DUOIID TO Tim DnUaTa or 11IB IBJQI .-.uoN AREA
you their candidales intend to con- including, reportedly, high-level
test this election in all SO states.
Ask them off the n:con1, however,
and you get very different though amazingly similar responses
from both sides. In realiROBERT L WJNGETJ'
ty, both Bush and Clinton camps adviser Charies BlaCk - ·believe
l'llbllaher
believe the 1992 presidential elec- California can still be turned
tion will be decided here in Ameri- around. During the GOP conven·
ca's heartland.
PATWWIEBEAD
tion, California Repoblicans made
CHARLENE HOEfLICH
·
The
Bush
campaign
has
written
·a
suong case to Bush campaign
AaiiWit l'llbiWier/Controller
GeneraJM.aacer
off much of the Northeast and Mid- operatives that unless the president
dle Atlantic regions with die excep- campaigns hard in their state, and
LBTJ'IlRS OF OPINION m welcome. They sboold be leu tllan 300
tion of Vennont and New Hamp- unless a major media campaign_ is
wordl. All !ellen m subject to edili.ng and must be 1i1aed witll name
shire,
which the GOP expects to mounted, chances are that the GOP
addnls and lelopbooo number. No lllllip&gt;ed lettm will be publilbed.
win, and New Jersey and Maine, will lose both Senate seats an,d a
oboold be ill £COd taste,
illlleo, 001 pmonolitia.
which both sides believe is up for number of winnable new House
grabs. Likewise, it has also writ- seats.
tendoff such traditional Democratic
It will cost the Bush campaign a
states as West Virginia and Min· great deal in time, money and enernesota.
gy to contest California. The
The big debate now raging with· emer~ing consensus is to make
in ·the Bush camp is how to view some mitial efforts and see how the
the West Coast. Most of the presi- polls respond. If, in the weeks after
Dear Editor:
the right words to express how dent's top strategists are ready to Labor Day, the president improves
Last week the Farmen; Bank of much someone's kindness is appre- consider California a lost cause, in the California numbers, then the
Pomeroy SJ?Onsored a relief drive ciated and this is one of th-ose and 10 all but concede Oregon and campaign will go all out in Octofor the v1ctims of Hurricane times. The effon made by so many
Andrew. The response 10 this drive people makes us proud to live and
was overwhelming to the extent work in an area filled with so many
that the Salvation Army had to caring people.
~!;RE's ONE ... WANT~DThe Employees of The Fanners
make an additional trip to Pomeroy
to collect the SUPIJlies.
Bank Pomeroy
CWibF EXEcUTIVE
TO
Sometimes 11 is difficult to find
Tuppers Plains

O'Brien processes 37 cases in Meigs County Court-%

Wednesday, Sept.l6

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
TUesday, September 15,1992

The Dally Sentlnei-Pase-3

There will be no more turkeys at
the American Heart Association's
annual wallcing event, the Turkeywalk. In fact, the Turkeywalk has
been changed to the American
Heart Walk. This name change represents the fact that this is now a
national event, taking place in over
700 communities across the country this fall, including Meigs Coun-

Work on...

Deborah Peckham, Middleport, 1
DUI, $350 and costs, 30 days in _ _
jail suspended to three days, defen- ,
dant give RTP option; Ruth Fran- !
cis, Pomeroy, passing bad checks,
$25 and costs, restitution; Larry
Block, Belpre, DUI, $350 and
costs, 30 days suspended to three
days in jail, 90 days license suspen- .:
sion, one year probation, defendant
given RTP option, left of center, "
$20 and costs; Roben Kennedy,
Rutland, DWI, S400 and costs, six
momhs in jail sus11ended to 45
days, and one year bcense suspension, two years probation; Max
Geary, Middleport, stop sign viola·
tion, $20 and costs.
Jarrell D. McCoy, Fremont, seat
belt violation, $10 and costs;
Harley Hendricks, Pomeroy, speed,
$23 and costs; Keith Scott, . "·
Pomeroy, DWI, $500 and costs, six · .. ·
months in jail, suspended to 30 ''
days, one year license suspension
and two years probation, driving
under suspension, $100 and costs,
six months in jail, suspended to 30
days, to be served concurrently ... 1
with DWI charge and one year pro' ·~ .. :
bation, failure to conuol, costs-:
only; Tina D. Schoonover, Rutland,'·:::~·
two seat belt violations, costs on:.:;~.::- ..·~ .
one charge, and $5 and costs on ' ''- ·· '·
second charge, speed, $23. and~ . :..:, __ . '
costs, passing. bad checks (2), $~5 : ::;::_
and costs, resnrunon on each; Ketth , .:·•Musser, Pomeroy, DWI, $350 and .,
costs, 30 days in jail, suspended to.· · : :~
three days, 90 days license suspen- ·; "
sion.
. ,
Robert Kuhn, Langsville, reck· :.' :;.
less operation, $100 and costs, sso· ~ .
fine suspended upon Jl!OOf•of valid ·•. ,
opemtor's license wtthin 90 days; '. :;:;
Jay Ridgway, New Haven, W.Va., ::,
speed, $23 and costs; Karen I:. ~~~
Lodwick, Pomeroy, speed, $20 and:_:_o:~
costs; Duane E. Boynton, Pomeroy;:- 0.,.:;- ••
seat belt violation, costs only; _ 0 '
Jerold B. Wheeler, West Columbia,
W.Va., seat belt violation, costs
only; Roland Poindexter, Columbus, speed, $22 and ocsts; Herbert
W. Johnson Ill, West Columbia ·. '
W.Va., speed, Patrick A. 'Lucas'
Huntington, W.Va., speed, $30 and
costs; James E. Sellers, Jr., Port· ·. · ~
land, seat belt violation, $20 and : •
costs; Franklin C. Lucas, Stewart,·- ··' .speed, $22 and costs; Jon D. Shar· · '
rett, Chillicothe, speed, $20 and ., ..,
costs; Robert L. Banks, Union- · ·•·
town, speed, $21 and COSts.
·•··
Forfeiting bond was J.K.···:":
Palmer, Athens, $65, speed.
· ..,_,

A THEATER
WITH A CHOICE!
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

. .

7

.

.' '

r--Local briefs. -__,
Miller trial begins

Paving project to be completed

EMS units answer four calls
Four calls for assistance were answered on Monday by units of
Meigs County Emergency Services.
·
On Monday at 11:-42 a.m., Rutland unit went to Me~s Mine 31.
Durwood _ffayea was ~n to ye~c,rans Mem&lt;Wial H~1tpi, At 1:12 ., .
p.m., Rac111e sqUid wen110 Sharon ~Old and toOt Cliilrles &lt;Heck to
Pleasant VaDcy Hospital. At 3:56p.m., Racine squad went to Yellowbush ROid for Dmnie Dye. He was taken to Veterans. At 10:02
p.m., Middleport squad was sent to the Middleport levee for Ouis
Rayburn, who was taken to Veterans.
· ·

1

The Board Member·s and Personnel
of Leading Creek Conservaney
District would like to Thank the
Customers and Landowners on
Beech Grove, Corn Hollow and ,
Whites Hill Rocids forthefr patience
and coOperation during the recent
line extensions.

:·

.---------__;,;,·*

...., t

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARliiENT OF INSURANCE
CERTIACATE OF COMPUANCE
Tho undorolgnod, SUPERINTENDENT OF INSURANCE OF THE
STATE OF OHIO, horoby corUfi""
lhot MUNICIPAL IIUT. INS. CO. OF
WEST VIRGINIA of WELLSBURG,
Stato ol WEST VIRGINIA hoo com·
plied with tho lowo of lhto State
oppllcoblo to II ond lo oulhorlzed
during the current Y•• to lranaact

In dllo ollto llo opproprlota bualn••• of lnaur•nce. · ON THE

MUTUAL PLAN.
. .
THIS CERTIRCATE MUST BE
PUBUSHED IN A NEWSPAPER OF
GENERAL CIRCULATION IN IEIGS
COUNTY.
Ito Rnonolol oondiUon Ia lhown
by Ita onnuof olotomont to hovo 11
followo on Docornlior 3t, 1H1:

1\:DIITIED

Assm ................. S11,317,24:s.oo
~IUTIES ............... $4,212,07t.OD

SURPW8 ..............:.... $7,105,1114.011
INCOME ...................... $7,171,240.00
EXPENDITUR~S ........ $7,22t,717.0D
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I
h....,to oubocribod my norno
cou11d my oool to bo offlxecl ot
Colounl11111, Ohio, thlo doy Mel dato.
HAROLD T. DURYEE
DI!ECTOR

......
.,

~

�Tuesday, September 15,1992

The Daily Sentinel

Twins' playoff hopes slip-slidin' away

posts 27-23 winyard over Cleveland

2 0 01.000 4S
2 0 01.000 l6
1 l 0 .SOO 44
0 2 0 .000 26

:II

l4
!9
41

w...... DIY.....,
2 0 01.000
2 o ouoo

Oat... ...............

a,,. . ...

31
30
LA. Raiders ...... 0 2 0 .000 l'
San Diqo .......... 0 2 0 .000 23
S..ulc.............. .. 0 2 0 .000 10

l6

n

41

11 ..ss

4
S
14.S
IS
16.S
11

Wt~t~nDI•W•

Ooilla4 ................. 17
Minn-.. ..............10
Oi.....................76

TNu ...................10
Colil..u. .............. 64
1t1n1u Ciiy ........... 63

s.........................l6

l7
64
67
76
79
!0
11

.604

.ll6

7

.Sll

.479

IO.S
II

.441
.319

23.S
31

.us ns

Moaday's scores
Oi&lt;qo I, New Yod! 6
Milwoubo6.-0
Ballimoro2, ltlnlu Cily I
c...EVElAND l, To~a~no 1
0Uiond3.~da2

45
47

Toni&amp;Jit's l&amp;mi!S

Chi.e~ao (Fcmlftdal'·9) ·~Now Yam
(Milil.cllo 3-2), 7:30 p.DL
Milwa\lkoc (BonN 1-9) at Botten (Vi·

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Tum •

EaotemDI.-

W L T PtL PFPA

Dallu................. 2 0 01.000 S7 31
2
I
0
0

Philo4clphio .......
WllhiJ&gt;&amp;1&lt;ln........
N.Y. Oionb ........
PhOIIIil ..............

0
I
2
2

01.000
0 .500
0 .000
0 .000

77
&lt;10
6.'1
S4

46
l4
42
21

Cntnl DtvWon
Tampa Bay ........ 2
Chi..,............... I
IA:troit. ............... I
Minnco&lt;u .... ..... 1

0 01.000 S4 10
I 0 .500 33 S2

l 0 .500 55 44
1 0 .SOD &lt;10 Sl
a.- Boy.......... 0 2 0 .000 23 S4
WtGernDivWoll

0 .500 11 41
0 ..500 21 &lt;10

Allao1a............... I 1
LA. R1m1 ......... I I
New Odcanl ...... 1 J
San franciJco .... 1 1

0 .500 41 2l

0 .!00 62 ...

Sunday's scori!S

r

Wuhin .... 1A, All.u!U 17
New Orl..,. :U, OU..ao 6
Dollu 34, Ncw Yod! Gilnu 21
T""PI Boy 31, O.....Bor 3
CI NCINNATI 24, L.A. Raiders2 1,
(IT

Oetroit31 , Minnaotl l 7
Kansas City 26, Scallle 7
Bl.lff'alo 34, San Fnncisoo ' I
Houlton 20, lndiana9fl0
L A. RIINI 14, New
d0
Pi111bw&amp;h Z1 , New Y JN 10
o...... }1, Son Oicao 13
Philldelphi• 11 , Phoenix 14

s.....,

·

San Fnneitco 11 New York Jell , 1
p.m.

Selulc II New £aaland.l p.m.
TampaBtyu~.l p.m.
a..EVELA.ND al LA. Jtaidcn, 4 p.m.
Deaoilat Wuhinp:m, 4 p.m.

L.A. Ram~ at Mini. 4 p.m.

PI.UibwJh 11 San Di.o, 4 p.m.

lnd.ianapolia ll autr.ro, I p.m.

New Yolk Oianu atOticato. 9 p.m.

In the majors ...
NATIONAL LEAGUE

~~. : :: ::: ~

SLLauil ................ 71
70
New Yod! ..............64
Philldclpllia .......... .!i9

au..,...................

I'd.

GB

.S04
72 .493
71 .4SI
12 .411

4
11
llS
IU
23

L

:m

:110

Wf.dtnll Di•Won
Alloml ...... ............ 87 ll .613
CINONNATI ........ 77 66 .m
Saa.Dicta .............. 76 67 .531

.................61 76 .472
Sift Franeilco ........ 64 10 .444
LooAnpb ...........SI 16 .«13

IO.l
11.5
20
2.4

30

Monday's scori!S
Alllldolphlo 6 , - 2
New Yod! IO, Chi&lt;IJ• I
S, S1. LaOiil 4,10iminp
HOUAtm5, Sin fruK:iKo 0
Lc. AnJC.lcs S, San Dicao 4, II in·

Pial....,

....

New YOlk (Oiblon 0· 1) at Chicaao
(II.W. S·l ), 2:ln p.m.
AllaoiA (A""7 10-9) 11 ONCINNATI

(8 ...... 11·14), 7,3Sp.m.
Montreal (Hill lf·l) at Pbilldelpttia

(Sdilllinlll-9), HS p.m.
Pi......,. (fomlin 13-1) II SL Louio
(CWk 3-9), l,o:l p.m.
Sin FnnNcG (Bw:ll:c:a. 12-9) at HOUJ.
""' (Bowao D-l),l,3lp.m.
- 1.01 ~n1el• (Hmhiler 9· 13) at San
DiqJo (lleohU.. 4-4), IO,o:! p.m.

•
•

,'.

Wednoday'a1ama

~ (Ri..,. 5'3) 01 \l"CIIO
~-·1·11~2::11Jp.m.

Aoiuto (P. lmilll 5, 9) ~ ~ll!l·
NA'Il (S-1 :1-6), 7:1S p.m, • •' ' •
(11-. 9·t0) al'laol •eli
(W.. ,., 7:3S......
'
SL ..... ~I-O)u-Yook

~2-0),;. &lt;&amp;:. •1•1) I I (Kylel-10).1,3S .......

.

IAIAqdei(~ l~t3)11

o;•• (lle.ll· l3).10,o:l p.m.

-Of-

S..

AMERICAN LEAGUE
T-

W &amp;. I'd.

t-10 .................... 61

.m

~(Smiley

'

14-8) II Ot.kland

(Will 9-13~ ! :IS

p.m.
Calllamio (Lu!piAIIII2-13) 11 S..ulc
(1..,_,11 · 1!~ 3:3S p.m.
__OUcaao (Hibbud 10.7) at New YM
(JiilcllcackO-O),HOp.m.
Milwl)lbo (W..... I:I-13) II BoliGn
(Gudinet .. IO), 7,35 p.m.
Konlll Cily (!Ioney 1-0) II lloliilnofo
(Mllllinlll·l), 7:3S p.m.
ClJlVEIANil ()'lqy 1._10) 11 Tlll'llll·
to (SlOUlanym 10..10),-7 :35 p.m.
T""' (1\o•W&lt; ._2) II Doaoil (l)ol&gt;on}
l-4~ 7:3l p.m.

Major league leaders

P.BI - Daultoo, Philadelphia, 100;
Shoffidd, San Dicto. 9S; Pa!.d.ICU~n, At·
lama, 9S; MtOritl', San Dirco. 93; Bonds,
Pii111Mih. 19: L. Wolk.,., Mon....t. 84 ;
Mum.y,~ew Yom, 82.
HITS - Pendlclon, Atlant a, 176;
V...Siylto,l'illoboqh. 176; Shd!icld, Son
Dieao, 169; Gwynn, San DicJO, 165;
Once., Chicaao, 163; Gri11om, MootraJ,
16~ Sondbal. Otioogo, IS9.
· DOUBW - VanSlyke. Pitubw-Jh,

Gl

CUM!IAND. 29; Tc-. DoW~ 29:

Door, Demit. 21.
STOUlN BASES - Lo&amp;n, CLEVE·
LAND, Sl: A n - Blldm.,.,ll ; U.·
lid!, Milwaubo, SO; ~'doni~, Colilomia,
49: R. H&lt;r~..._,, OUiand, 4S; Rlinca,
Oico... 43; R. Alanar, T...... 41.
PITCHING (17 dKiliea•)

T""

luau

cmm.,, T...,.., 1._3, .1:11, 2.4!; liCit
Moaio, T......,l9-5• .792,4.01; MuoQ.
na, Ba1!' qe, l.S·S, .'llO. 2.71; Mc:Dowoll. Cbioa... :10-7, .741, 3l11; Booio, Mil·
wallkoe, 14·~ • .737, 3.66; K. Brown,
T.... 19-9, .679, 3.77; Ckmeol. a-.
11-9..667, 2.31.
S'I'IUXEO\n'S - Clernau, Bottoa,
191; Peroz. New Yod!, 194; R. J.._,
S01ulo. Ill; MoDo...U. Oti01lo, IS6;
J010 Oumaan, T•u. ISS; JQIII. Outman.
TOftlll!o, IS2: K. a...... TCl-.lSI.
· S~VES "7" Eollonloy. OUiond, 46;
Aau.ilm, Minnaota, 37; Montaome.ry,
Kan11a City, 34; Olson, Baltimore, 33;
Ioff-R,...U. o.tlond, 29; llalio. T.....
to,ll; R.rdon,Bc.~. '1:1.

AP (()liege
football poll
The T~ Twenty Five teams in the AJ .

oocillod Pnol 1992 coll&lt;p foolboll poll,
with run-place votes in parentheses,
rKordltlucnlab Sept. U , toLil poinLI
buod an 2S poinll rw • Mt place vote
thnJuah OM point. for I 2$lh. {l'~ICO Vote,
and IMk:ins in lhe ~poll:
Lui
Tum
W-L.T
I. Mi1mi (47) .............1-!J.O
l Wullin ..... (ll) .... 240
3. Flolidl SL(2) .........2-0-0
4. Flodda .................. .I -D-0
l . Teuo A4M (I) .....l-0-0
6. Miobi&amp;m ...............D-0-1
7.
l-0-1
.2-0-0
9. Aiabomo(1) ...........240
to. Paul S1. .................2-o.o
II. Cobado ...............2-0-0
12Noblub ...............2-0-0
13. l'Mdshcr:w ............. .l40
14. T - ............. .2-0-0
IHK1A ...................1-0-0
16. N. C...W.. 51 . ......:1-M
17. Cauon ................ I·I-O
11. Slanford ............... .1·1-0
19. Oo!qia .................1·1-0

-n................

s.s,...,... ................

..

~:~=

· -· ~~

22. Oo!qia Ted! ........1·0-0
23. SonlliqoSL ........ I-0-1
24. MdoloOppi SL ...... .I -1-0
2S. Milliloippi ........... 240

Pll. Week

I~34
1~81

I ~I
I ,300
IllS
1.220
1,119
1,126
1,039

m

921
193
161
7fll
626

I
2
S
4
7
6
3
9
I

to

ll
II ·
13

20

16

l16

19

S2:!
42:1
391

IS
21
••

268
lZ7
79
74

24

m~
11

Othtrl rtctlwlel 'fOlt:t: Kanau 61,
B....., Coli... 63, Purokw: lO, LSU 39,
1llimU 36, Cllif..U. 32. Nol1h C...W..

21.1ndiana 16. Iowa lol, Wasb~naton
State 14, Southern Cal 12, Bnaham
Vounal, Tox• 7, Louiavill• -4, Ccall'al
Michipn :Z. Tulia 2, HaN I.

41; Duncan, Philadelphia, 3'7; Griuom,

Finley, Houlton, II ; VanSlyke, PitU •
bwJh. II ; Buuer. Loa AnF1CI, ll; AJ.
ieu, SL l..oWI, 10; Of!'cnnan, Lo. Anp:1", ! ; Sandbeia. Oicaso. 8.
HOME RUfJS - McGriff, San Dqo,
~; Sheffield, San D iea~. 31 ; B.nnda,
PinabwJh, 21; O.ullon, Philod...,..., 26;
Hollins, Phil!de!phia, 23; L. 'walter,
Mmtral, 22; Paldlculn. A.lllnta, 21.
STOLEN BASES - Griaaom, Montreal, 70, DeShields, Moru.ttll, 45; BuUcr,
1..o1 AnaeJ.s, 41 ; Lankford, Stl...ouis, 4(1;
Robcrla, CINCINNATI, 39; Nixon, Atlanta, 38; 0 . Smith, St. Louis, 31.
PITCJn:NG (1 7 dociliona) - Olivine,
Athnu, 20-6, .769; 2.81; Tewbbury, Sl.
Lo11i1, 16 -5, .762, 2.07; Swindell ,
CINONNATI,I l-6, .667, l.l 4; Mo11on ,
auc.10, 14-7, .61J7, 2.61; Lcibnnlh. At1~n~a,

12-&lt;;, .M7, l S4; K.

Transactions
BueboU
Na....IIIAaaua
NEW YORK METS - R"'llod Joe
Vitko, pilehcr, from Biilpam10n of !he
Euiomla... ~
SAN DIEOO PADRES - RccoUool
Ou.illolmo Voluquez. in&amp;elder, and TGm
Lamoltin. caldlor, 11om Lu
oflbc·
Plcilic Cout Laapo.

v...,

Buketball
NaU.U.IB•UIMII Allodallolt
NEW YORK KNICKS - Aoqui ....
Tony Canpboll. forwonl, """ lbc Minnotola Timbwwolvu for a ~ond:hianal
toeond-rouad dal\ choi(:e.

11i1J. Moo....t,

IS-I • .652,2.14; Cc.~e , New Yo«, 13-7,
6SO, 2.81.
STRI.K.EOliTS -Cone, New Yort,

214; Smol.1.1, Atlant1, 197; S. Fernandez,
New York, 173; G. Madd111, Chicafo .
172; Dn bek, Pittsburah, 157 ; RiJo ,
CINCINNATI, ll7; Groio, U. AnaeJ&lt;a,

FoolbaU
Na-1 Footballl.caa011
DALLAS COWBOYS - Waived
Danny Noaaan, d•tnli.volincrnan. AcU.·
•alod Madt Ste&amp;!IKIIki. Cldclr.

14l.
SA Vl!S - Loc Smilh, S1. Lauil, 31;
Mym, San Dicao. 34; Wcudlnd. Mon....,:13; D. l..,..,llouo1oo. 31 ; O.odtoo,
CtNCJNNATI ,-2S: MilCh Willlomo ,

-

19.

NEW ORLI!ANJ SAINTS - P1aood
FloJd 1\lm., widt ra:ciw:r; oa UU\nd

Philldolphio. 2S; Dibblo, CINCINNATI,

Today'i comi!S

,.

Wednesdlty's cameo

fRipLES - D. Sanden, Atlanta, 14;

MIM!dar

W

Call!omla (Fia.ley 4·12 ) at Scanle
(~'lamina ll·I), IO,JS pm.

Montreal, 36; W. Clad:, San Francisco,
36; Lankford, SL Lauil, 3l; J. Bell, Pilll·
bwl,h, 34; M~~rny, New Yeti, 33.

Phor:ni.lM DaU.u. 4 p.m.

EulcmDt•Woa

~ll-9), l«HHlp.m.

borL au..,~ 12.

ONONNATI 11 0..... Bay, I p.m.
Omver u Philadelphia. 1p.m.
K.anlu Cky It Houl!.an,l p.m.
New Orlean&amp; II All.ant.a. 1 p.m.

TUIII

a.EVELAND (F.mbnle ~) at Tmcn10 (IIIIo CNzmoa 14-3). 7,JS p.m.
Toau Q010 Owman l~ll) at Oc:uUt
(&lt;Niljrk- 14-10), 7:3S p.m.
(Mohama l-2) " Oailand

Notional Leaeue

Mooday's score

c-.

(llhodell-l~ 7:3S~.m,

BATTING - Sheffield, San Diego,
.333; VanSlyke, Pittsblqh, .331; Kru.k,
Philadolphia, .327; Gwynn, San ~
· o,
.319; L. "Waikcr, Montreal, .312;
". ,
.... An&amp;clel•.312; Once, Chi"'•· .
RUNS - ll&lt;xldo, Piou-, 96; em,.
...., Mon....t, 92: Hollino, l'bilodclphil,
90; Bigio. -...,,II; VonS1ylte. .Piluboqh, 81; -...., Atlon11, 17; Sond·

Miomi 77, CLEVF1AND23

Next week's gami!S

ala I 1-1 I), Blp.m.
Konw Cily ("""'"' :1-l) II 8~.......

HOME RUNS --:- luan Oonzalu,
T01•. eo; Mc&lt;lwho, Ooldood. 31:
Tomn10, 32: Pilldor, Dccroi.t, 31; BcDe.

OREEN BAY PACKBilS - Waived
Clullt w-.a. ...we reoclvor• • iftjurcd

MIAMI DOLPHINS - Acdva1ed
DIYid n.i-. U: 1~ k•. Waived J.oo..
aewtl~l' ' krr,

...-Ilia ..............

_,., Acdvltocl Cory Blucbanl. lDck·

American League
BAITlNO - E. Maninc::z, Seattle,
.3-t3; Putkcu, Minnao\1, .332; MaU:,
Minn010ll, .325; Oriff'ey, Seattle, .323;
Molitor, Milwaukee, .321 ; R. Alomar,
Toron.IO, .311; Thamu, Cbictao. .liS.
IUNS - Pbil~pt. Detroit, 102; E.
Mlninet, Seaale., 100;: R. Alom~r, TOI'OI'tto, 94; Knoblauch , Minnuau, 93;
1'h&lt;121u, Chica~ 93; Andcnon, Balli....._ 93; l'u&lt;bO. ~. 92.
RBI - Pilldor, Dewit, Ill; Cat=,
Torurto, 106; Pudr.e1t, Minneto~a. 100;
Thom11, Chiup, 99; JuiJI Oonzalo1,
Twa, 99; 0 . BclJ, Chitaao, 99; Dev·
~~·b'
,97.
. qm- ~ Miaaol~, II" E.
Meefn=, S.W.. 111; a.ap, a.BVJ!•

LAND, 175; W.ct. MialliiOta, 175;
· Mil~-·72;
""""'a"y,
Yod!,l66;
Devono1u. Bllilm..._
163.No..

DOUBW - B. Mln.lfta:, Seau1o,
oM, Orill"l. S.alo, YJ: MolliaaiJ, No" .
Yod!. :JloOi&lt;aao. 33;VC01Un,
Olieaac!:, 33; JeCteriet, JC'idau City, 33;
Io)IICI', JCan... Cily, 3!.
TJUPLES - O.vtn~v•, BalUmore,
II; I. I - . au..... II; And.....,,
B~l!m.... t Lofton, CLEVELAND. I;
I. Alamf.r, TCRII.IO, 7; Raincl, ChiCIJO.
7; h .. tl.hld! 6.

PHOENIX CARIIJNALS - Ploocd

r_.,..
.... • - -........-."' injulool
SAN D1E00 CHARGERS - Jll....t
Bioolodct ~. lld&lt;lo, "' illi"""'
_ Niko lfooaey, ........
-otf _
· Cloimod

,.,._Oilon.

I..._. I....._

SAN fRANCISCO 49ERS - Ro·
llpad
ulcj. w~....

ReaieMeK-N,H• tter.

1BA.1TLE SEAHAWKS - Waived

Tllm!okN&lt;ol.li;l•..._

By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Football Writer
So you think offense has
reblmed to th~ NFL?
Well, there WERE 63 touchdowns scored in Sunday's games.
But offensive as lhat may sound,
13 of those TDs were scored by
either the defense or special teams.
That included fumble returns for
touchdowns by more than 900
pounds of defensive linemen Philadelphia's Reggie White
against Phoenix; New Orleans'
Robert "Pig" Goff against Chicago; and Detroit's Jerry Ball against
Minnesota.
The most striking were the
back·to-back returns by two of the
NFL's most exciting players Washington's Desmond Howard
and Atlanta's Deion Sanders - in
the Redskins' 24-17 win over the
Falcons.
Howard took a lateral from
Brian Mitchell on a punt rerum and
ran 55 yards for his first pro score.
On the ensuing kickoff, Sanders,
who signed Friday and was on
leave from the Braves, went 99
yards for a TD.
"You look at Dei on and he's
the ideal out there," Howard said.
"He's just having fun, which is
what this game is all about"
The non-offensive TDs came in
almost every way possible - four
fumble returns; four interception
reblms; one blocked field goal; one
blocked pun~ two punt returns; and
a lcickoff return.
Detroit beat Minnesota 31-17,
despite just 169 yards of offense.
Twenty-four of the points came
from defense and special teams a 58-yard punt relllrll by Mel Gray;
a 56-yard return of a blocked field
goal by Melvin Jenkins; and a 21 ·
yard fumble return by 310-pound
nose taclde Jerry BaD.
Another three points were set up
by William White's interception.
"Any time you run for a !Ouch·
down on a return, it takes the
enthusiasm out of the other team,"
Gray said. "Special teams are
important If lhe defense is stalling
and the offense is stalling, the special teams unit has to try to give the
club a lift."
It also works the other way.
Cincinnati's 24-21 overtime win
over the Raiders was caused by
Dan Land's fumble on lhe ovenime
Idckoff - teammmate Sam Graddy
knocked the ball loose with his hel·
met That set up Jim Breech's 34yard field goal to win it for the
Bengals.
And."
- The 49ers rolled up 598 yards
of offense and lost 34-3lto Buffalo
in a game in which the two teams
combined for 1,086 yards.
-The New York Giants, down
34-0, rallied for 28 points and
almost beat .the Cowboys. The 28
points represented the most the
Giants have scored in the 18 games
Ray Handley has been the coach.
- There were 23 TDs of 30
yards or more Sunday, IS by offensive players, the rest by defenders
or special teams guys. The longest
on offense was an 89·yard pass
from Chris Miller to Michael
Haynes of Atlanta. New Orleans
scored on passes by Bobby Hebert
of 72 yards 10 Wesley Carroll and
52 yards to Eric Martin, as well as
a 71-yard interception return by
Reggie Jones.
.
.
. YoV!uy!
. Vinny Testavade completed 88
pcroent'of his passes Sunday; None
were 10 the other team.
·
Testaverde went 22 of 25 for
363 yards in Tampa's 31-3 win
over the Packcn Sunday despite
playing 'with the flu. The victory
puts the Buccaneers at 2-0 for the
ftrSt time since 1979, makes Testaverde the Biles',all-lbne pasSing
leader ~d should put him at or
ow' lbe rop of the NFL's quarterbact ratings.

By The Associated Press
If the Pinsburgh Pirates go on to

fielding error didn't help his atti·
tude.
win the NL East championship for
"I don't have anylhing to say,"
the lhird straight year, their mastery Smith said.
of the St. Louis Cardinals and relief
Cardinals manager Joe Torre
ace Lee Smith will be a major rea- wasn't about to blame his ace.
son.
"One little crack in our armor
The Pirates did it to Smith and - the error - was the differthe Cardinals again Monday night, ence," Torre said. "It's a shame."
as Cecil Espy's run-scoring single
The Pirates also own the Cardi·
in lite lOth inning - his first RBI nals, having beaten them 11
since July 10- beat Smith and the straight limes and 13 of IS this seaCardinals S-4.
son. Pirar.es manager Jim Leyland
The victory gave the visiting wasn't crowing about his domiPirates a four-game lead over sec- nance, though, pointing out that 10
ond-place Montreal, which lost 6-2 of lhe games have been settled by
in Philadelphia.
one or two runs.
Smith (3· 7) leads the league
Alex Cole reached on a ftelding
with 38 saves but is 0-3 wilh two error by second baseman Geronimo
blown saves in three tries against Pena with one out in the lOth and
Pittsburgh. That the winning run went to third on pinch-hitter Dave
this time was unearned due to a Clark's single. Espy followed with

RG harriers place first·
in meet at Wesleyan
In its first meet of the season
Saturday, the University of Rio
Grande cross country team came
out a winner by talcing first place in
men's and women's races at West
Virginia Wesleyan College.
The Redmen scored 30 points to
44 for Frostburg State {Md.), 59 for
Wheeling Jesuit, 91 for the host
school, 163for Fairmont State, 172
for West Virginia State and 176 for
Bluefield State. Also running but
not scoring were Glenville State
and West Liberty State.
The race marked the fll!lt time a
Rio Grande team had defeated a
com)Jetitive Frostburg squad, a
source of satisfaction to the team,
Coach Bob Willey and his assistants.
Finishing first in the race was
Rio Grande's Chad Benson at
30:06, with Chris Smith taking
fourth at 30:58. Hidemitsu Maeda

came in fifth at 30:58, followed by
Coody Richardson, sixth, 31 :31;
Mark Bennett. 14th, 32:22; Mark
McFann, 161h, 32:41; Jeff Roberts,
38th, 34:49; and Kuniamo Takayama, 5Ist, 36:41.
The Redwomen, led by senior
Renee Peck' s first-place lime of
19:59, scored 36 points to lead
Wheeling, which had 42, Wesleyan
with 49 and Fairmont's 97. Running but not scoring were
Glenville, Bluefield and Frostburg.
Bonnie Evans placed second
overall at 20:57, foUowed by Debbie Gray, lith, 23:06; Melissa
Story, ninth, 22:54; Jemifer Dyer,
J61h, 24:09; Crystal Patrick, 281h,
26:19; and Teresa Montgomery,
29th, 26:29.
The teams' next meet will be
Saturday , Sept. 19 in the Centre
College Invitational at Danville,
Ky.

'' '

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Racine Hydroelectric Project, located at river mile 237.5
on the Ohio River, is owned by
Ohio Power Company. This project is licensed as Project No.
2570 by Ihe Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission.
The Project is operated in close
coordination with the Corps of
Engineers as a run-of-river
hydroelectric facility .
Public recreational facilities at •
· this project consist ol an
, overlook area with parking
facilities, comfort station, picnic
area. and fishing pier. They
may be reached via State Route
.338 in Meigs County, Ohio. The
facilities are open to all
members ol the public at all
times without discrimination.
Additional information is
available from Ohio Power
Company's Pomeroy Olfice
located at 110 Mulberry
,Avenue; Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
telephone 614·992-2317.

'·•

By HOWARD SINER
Today' s questions in the world
of sports:
If Notre Dame can do it, why
can't many olhers?
Succeed both on and off the
field, that is. The Fighting Irish
seem to offer the best proof that
student-athletes can thrive in major
college sports.
"Certainly; the atmosphere at
litis university is academics first,
and everything else is secondary to
it," says athletic director Richard

Rosenihal of Notre Dame. That
might surprise a lot of fans,
because the Irish have the most storied winning tradition in lhe hisiOry
of college football.
·
Since the sports boom of the
1960s, major college athletics has
been increasingly tempted to pursue victory - the big prizes are
TV revenue and exposw-e- at lhe
expense of academics. Many
schools give in to temptation.
But the recent NCAA Graduation-Rates Report issued high

marks to Notre Dame. It found that
80 percent of scholarship athletes
who began as freshmen in South
Bend, Ind., in 1983 and 1984 graduated within six years.
The graduation average for such
athletes at the 297 schools that play
Division I basketball was 51 percent; the corresponding average for
all their students who received
bachelor's degrees was 52 percent.
The Ivy Lea$ue and the three
military academtes were excluded
from the NCAA report because

they don't give athletic scholar·
ships.
Pointing to other big-time sports
programs with high graduation
rates for athletes, Rosenthal says:
"We're cenainly not unique.'' He
cites Duke (92 percent), Boston
College {89 percent) and Stanford
(81 percent) as examples.
But there's no shortage or major
sports programs with much lower
athletic graduation rates. For
instance: Oklahoma {35 percent);

OSU needs pass in battle with Syracuse Saturday
By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - In
its ftrst two games, No. 8 Syracuse
has virtually conceded the pass .
The big question Saturday is, can
No. 21 Ohio State do anything
about it?
Hampered by injuries to quarterback Kirk Herbstreil and two other

mainstays on offense, Ohio State
head coach John Cooper said Monday the Buckeyes may be forced to
prove they can pass the ball when
lhey play at the Carrier Dome Saturday night
The game is a rematch of the
Hall of Fame Bowl on New Year's
Day. won by the Orangemen 24-

Eastern sextets notch wins
Don Jackson's Eastern volleyball team evened its record at 2-2
wilh a big come-from-behind three
set win over Federal Hocldng, 1315, 16-14 and 15-2.
Jackson said, "We haven't had a
gOOd first game all year. We start
out real slow, then tt seems when
we get behind we play 110 percent.
We have Ill start playmg with more
intensity in all of our games; start
10 fmish."
Sophomore Becky Driggs led
the way with 13 points{l3-15)
three aces and one kill. Senior
Stephanie Otto was 11-14.with
three aces, one kill and one block.
Junior Jaime Wilson had seven
points (9-11), one ace and 11
assists, and Carrie Morrissey four
points and o~ block. Pemy Aeiker
had four points, a lcill and block;
Jessica Karr an ace and four points;
Jessica Radford, two-for-two, one
ace and four assists; and Shelly
Hendricks a block.
Mary Grimm. led. FH with 16
points, Svea Mijlki(f had five,
Michelle Brukcr three, Cecilia
Spencer two, April Kidwell two,
Erin Snedden&gt; two and Amanda
Gaspers one.
Overall Eastern hit 9-16 spilcing
for 56 percent with lhree lcills; was
52-69 serving for 75 percent; had
nine aces and was led by Wilson's
12· 26 setting attempts. Radford
was4-12.
,
Eastern ,dropped behind 8-1 in
the fllllt game, then came back 10
. lA -13•,before Fed eta{ got gamcpoinL Eu&amp;em fell behind 6:() in •lbe
·Uconil match, ·then realized' that
they had better bounce back. Tied
at 14-14, Eastern won 16-14.
Becky Driggs and Stephanie Otto
paved the way to victory in the
finale; each havinJ. two aces.
Jackson said. We never missed
a serve in the last game. We played
like we are capable. We really have
been pla~ing well .except for on
pnic ~ Southern. We'll have
Ill get puin~ up h!Bh every game

•.

AUTO

H

5, San Francisco 0 and Los Angeles 5, San Diego 4 in II innings.
Phlllies 6, Elpos 2
Rookie Braulio Castillo's first
major league homer, a three-run
sho~ led the Phillies past lhe Expos
at Veterans Stadium.
Expos staner Brian Barnes (6-6)
had a perfect game and a 2-0 lead
until the fifth when Dave Hollins
opened with an infield single and
Darren Daulton walked. Castillo
lhen homered to left field.
Tommy Greene (3-1) allowed
two runs on seven hits in six
innings. Keith Shepherd worked
the last two innings for his first
major league save.
Astros 5, Giants 0
Willie Blair held San Francisco
to an infield single over six innings
to lead Houston over the Giants at
the Astrodome.

The Giants' only hit off Blair
{5·6) came when Darren Lewis
beat out a slow roller to lead off lhe
fourth. Blair struck out seven and
walked for his first win in five
starts this season. Xavier Hernandez allowed three hits over the last
three imings for his sevenlh save.
Houston took a 1-0 lead in the
fourth off Kevin Rogers {0-1) when
Jeff Bagwell hit his 141h homer.
Mets 10, Cubs 8
Charlie O'Brien's three-run
double with two outs in lhe top of
the ninth enabled visiting New
York to snap a six-game winning
strealc.

The Mets loaded the bases on
Chris Donnels' double, a walk to
Eddie Murray by Chuck McElroy
(4-7) and Kevin Bass' single. Jeff
Robinson replaced McElroy and

struck out Jeff Kent - but
O'Brien, a .194 hitter, ripped the
ftrst pitch up the gap to clear the
bases.
Jeff Innis {6-8), the Mcts' fourth
pitcher, got the win.
Dod'en 5, Padres 4
Mike Sctoscia, whose sevenlb·
inning homer was his first since
May 17, singled in Ute tie-breaking
run in the lllh iMing as Los Angeles won at San Diego.
Tom Goodwin drew a walk
from Jeremy Hernandez (1·2) to
open the 11th and moved to third
on a bloop single by pinch-hitter
Dave Anderson. One out layer,
Sciascia bounced a single up the
middle 10 score Goodwin.
Reliever Jim Gott {3-3) pilehed
two innings, striking out four, to
earn the victory.

'

me. The doctor I have now just
looks at me and shakes his head"
Matuszewski, 64, said he was
running down the street rccendy
when a man who looked to be
about the same age uttered a warning.
" He said, 'You shouldn't be
doing thaL You·re too old.' I said,
'I know i~ butllove it.' The older
you get, the mpre fun you have,''
Matuszewslci said.
For some runners, high mileage
isn't a necessity. Matuszewski,
who has seven children and 10
grandchildren, makes do on three
five-mile runs a week.
"That's all you need,' ' he said.
"Before I started running, I did sit·
ups to stay in shape. Now I do
bolh."
Other Toledo-area senior run·
ners include Henry Cummings,
who was 59 when he gave up his
job after 36 years as a railroad
switcher because of back problems.
"If I hadn't started runnin~, I'd
probably be in a wheelchair,' said
Cummings, 65 . "The last time I
went for a physical, the doctor told
me not to come back. He said I was
wasting my money."

. .

a single to right to give Doug
Drabek his third straight victory.
Drabek {13-10) worked nine
innipgs and gave up eight hits,
striking out five and walking one.
He's 3-1 against the Cardinals this
season and ha~ allowed eight
earned runs in his last seven starts
at Busch Stadium, covering 56
innings.
Pirates left ftelder Barry Bonds
dropped a fly ball near lhe wall by
Bernard Gilkey to start the Cardinals' lOth, allowing Gilkey to go to
second on a play that was ruled an
error and later changed to a hit.
Gilkey wen110 third on a wild pitch
with nobody out but Stan Belinda
retired Felix Jose on a line drive to
center for his 16th save.
Elsewhere in the NL. it was
New York 10, Chicago 8; Houston

Notre Dame's athletes have highest graduation rate of major universities

Toledo seniors like running
better than fishing, golfi'Jg
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - John
Wernert, Jose Reyes and Dick
Matuszewski say golf and fishing
are for old people. The three - all
over age 60 - would rather be
running.
The three are among a small but
dedicated group in the Toledo area
who regularly compete in 10.000meter races, .and all say they've
never felt better.
Wernert, 71, began running at
age 60. He used to swim wilh his
wife until the couple decided they
needed more exercise. When he
couldn't keep up with his wife's
fast-paced walking routine, even
while jogging, he began ruming.
"I don't play golf and I don't
fish." he said. "This is what I do
for relaxation."
Wernert finished in 49 minutes
51 seconds in a 10,000-meter run
last month. Reyes won in the 65-to69 age group with a time of 44:52.
"I feel like I'm 25 ," said
Reyes, who is 65 with five gnmdchildren.
Reyes, who is 5-foot-4, began
running 27 years ago because he
weighed 209 pounds. "I had high
blood pressure and looked like a
balloon," he said.
He now weighs 156 pounds. He
runs an average of eight miles a
day and logged 3,000 miles last
year.
"I've gone through three doctors," he said. "They all died on

TROTS HOME - Oakland's Harold Baines {rigbt) trots home
in front of Minnesota catcher Brian Harper after scoring oa a Terry
Steinbach d011ble in lbe second iDning or Moaday night's American
League game in Oaldand, which the Albletics WOD 3-1. (AP)

Pittsburgh defeats St. Louis 5-4 in 10 innings

YES! -Miami Dolphins quarterback Dan Marino celebrates his
25-yard touchdown pass to Mark Duper in lbe rii'St quarter or Monday night's AFC battle with lbe host Cleveland Browns, wbo lost
27-23. (AP)

E

•' ., ., I ,
Slate Auto's already
low premiums can be
reduced even more by
insuring both your car
' and home with the St1,1te
Auto Companies.
Let us !ell you jus!
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can be.

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POMEROY
992-6687

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lnaur•nce Conrp•nl••

:I .

if we are going to have a winning
record."
Eastern dropped lhe reserve tilt
IS-8, I 5-5 in two sets. Martcsa
Barnes and Alison Pierson led the
winners with nine each, while
Holly Rader added six, Kim Han
three, Angie Reed four and Aryn
Tholin one.
Brandi Reeves led Eastern wilh
six, Jessica Chevalier had three,
Rebecca Evans two, Nicole Nelson
one and Melissa Guess one.
Eastern· s junior high, playing a
different schedule because of the
"No-League" situation, .scored a
come-from-behind win over Oak
Hill after losing the opener IS-3.
· Eastern came roaring back the
second game- behind the serving of
Martie Holter, who had four points
and two aces, while Joanna Gumpf
had four points and Crystal
Holsinger four.
Two more Eastern girls, Traci
Heines. who led off the Rame wilh
five straight points and Amanda
Milhoan who had a very important
lhree. Holter added.five more.
· Coach Paul Brannon credited
Patsy Aeiker, Kim Mayle and
Michelle Caldwell with playing
excellent defense. Eastern 's sev •
enth grade scored a clean sweep
against Oak Hill's sevenlh grade.
Eastern moved to 4-1 as
Michelle Caldwell led them to a
big win over Alexander, 15-10 and
15-8. Heines had lhree, Gumpf two
and Mayle two. ·
The eighth , gra.~e only, team
claimed anolber.. win.as Holter tal·
lied six points' and two aces,
Holsinger had four, Patsy ·Aeiker
twelve poinu ind· good front line
defensive play to go along with
three straight aces.
'
Brannon s.ys, • The girls really
have been working hard as a team
and every pmc a new Lady Eagle
steps forwwd."
Eastern's varsity plays Southern
tqnighL
. .
.

17.
" Last year they played a pressure defense on passing situations," Cooper said Monday.
"They had an in-your-face type of
defense, crowded the line of scrimmage and played a lot of bumpand-run and man coverage. They
put a lot of pressure on your quar·
terback.
"But that is the base defense
they're playing lhis year. They're
doing that on first downs and
almost every down, not only in
passing situations."
Herbstreit, his mobility limited
by sprained anlde suffered in the
first quarter Saturday, was sacked
three times by Bowling Green in
No. 21 Ohio State's 17·6 victory.
Cooper said if Hcrbstreit, who
showed up at practice Monday on
crutches, doesn't regain his full
mobility by Saturday, lhc quarter·
back might end up with a lot more
than his ankle sprained.
"I'm sure those ~uys are up
there (at Syracuse) hcldng thetr
chops,'' Cooper said. " They're
thinking we can't protect (our quarterback) against Bowling Green,
that lhey're going to have a field
day. ..
Cooper said he expects the
Orangemcn to blitz a loL
"I think they'll test us early and

Youngblood, Dunn
MAC's-top players
TOLEDO, Ohio {AP) - Cen·
tral Michigan quarterback Joe
Youngblood and Akron linebacker
Phil Dunn were selected players of
the week in the Mid-American
Conference.
Youngblood, a 6-foot junior
from Utica, Mich., completed 17 of
22 passes for 163 yards and two
touchdowns with no interceptions
in the Chippewas' 24-20 victory at
Michigan State. He also caught a
pass for 29 yards tllllact up a'ICOI'C
and hit Bryan Tiee for a ·IS-yard
touchdown that put the. Chips
ahead tostay,14-7.
Dunn; 1 sophomore from Upper
· St. Clair, Pa., had six solos and 13
assisted tackles in Akron's 23-~0
victory over 'l:;oledo. Dunn was
fifth in the nation in tackles as a
freshman. J{e had one tackle for a
five-yard loss and also broke up a

pass.

...... w.-.. _..._...__
-~--~----------~\... - ..... ··------------ -~-.............

see how we handle it (the blitz).''
Cooper said. "If we don't handle
it, I lhink you 'II see a lot of it.''
Compounding the problems for
Cooper is that his top offensive
lineman, 6-foot-7, 290-pound tack·
le Alan Kline, will miss the game
at the Carrier Dome with yet anolh·
er sprained ankle.
Also, nanker Joey Galloway.
the team's No.I deep lhreat, is out
after injuring his knee against
Bowling Green. He will likely
undergo surgery later lhis week and
if so wiD miss the rest of lhe season.
Cooper said he expects Herb·
streitto be ready, but that Ohio
State ;ole;u would j!O with redshirt
freshman Bob Hoymg if Herbstreit
can't play.

Louisiana State (30 percent); San
Diego State (26 percent); and
Houston {16 percent).
To be eligible to play for Notre
Dame, athletes mwt maintain, from
semester to semester, at least the
minimum grade average needed to
graduate.
Which hasn't stopped lhe Fight·
ing Irish from competing success·
fuUy.
"I don't think !here's any conflict with winning," says Rosenlhal. "Duke University has won the
national basketball tide two years
in a row. Stanford wins more
NCAA championships than anybod y. ••
What's the bouom fine? Rosenthal insists: ''There is absolutely no
conflict between alhletics and academics."
Baseball's best sluggers
Who are the most powerful
sluggers in bascllaU this season?
You can probably guess two or
three of the top four. But lhe next
few weren't that widely known as
Sultans of Swat before 1992
The IBM Tale of the Tape program is measuring the approximate
distance of every major-league
home run this season, using an
unoffteial grid system.
Going iniO September, lhe HR
leaders in average distance were:
Frank Thomas, White Sox (405.1
feet); Fred McGriff, Padres {402.4
feet); Kent Hrbek, Twins {400.3
feet) and Cecil Fielder, Tigers

Clark, Jansen OAC's
players of the week

C.ONSTRUCTION WILL SOON
BEGIN AT "BETSY ROSS"!
8 HOMES TO BE AVAILABLE!
If you qualify for FmHA Rur11 Housing Loan, a lot gr1nt
and down payi!Nint grant aulatance .,. provided, as well
•• Interut credit on your horne loanl
The homes will be of suitable alze for your household
with 3 bedrooma, halt pump, furnished kitchen, and other
aiiNinltles. Three famlllea are already looking forward to
their new homeal
Your family may make application by calling Jean
TNIHII at 182-6782 Monday thru Friday between 9:00 A.M.
and 4:00 .P.M. Jean wiU 111111 you In IINiklng application and
explain the program.
.
The VIllage of Middleport, through the ODOD Spec:illt
Houllng Set·AIIda Program, offara your family the opportunity to own your own hoiiNI. The progr1m Ia dellgned to
offar thla opportunity to very lownow Income houaholda
who qualify for a FmHA Rural Home Loon and will gift ......
farance to alngle head of the hoUHhold with chldran,
The VIllage of Middleport will conduct this application.
procees In ~ecordance with the Equal Houllng OppoltUnlty
Act which provldea that no person lhall be dliCtimlnated
qalnat on the bula of IICO, color, niltlonal origin, 11111 ~
ltatua, HI, or handicap.
·

Vinton Raceway results
FollowinJ are winners of rilclng
action at Vmton Raceway Sunday
afternoon (listed fUSito third):
Four-cylinder class: Bob Bailey,
Reedsville; Don Lewis, Dyesville;
Bun Flora, Southskle, W.Va.
Eight-cylinder class: Delmos
Goff, Langsville; Rick Bishop,
Jackson; Greg Sheets, Pomeroy.
Powder puff class: Tina Cotter·
ill, Rutland; Peggy Yost, Rutland;
Debbie Schumacher, Dyesville.

,_ ·-· ...... ...
~

..

_. ·--.

(399.3 feet).
Next on the homer list came
four hitters who have emerged as
sluggers: Dean Palmer, Rangers
(398.8 feet); Alben Belle, Indians
(398.2 feet); Gary Sheffteld, Padres
{395.7); and Bobby Bonilla, Mets
(393.4 feet).
By the way, Mark McGwire of
the
A's was 13th at 392.1 feet; and
·
ex -teammate Jose Canseco, now
with the Rangers, was 23rd at
385.6 feet
How lou&amp;lll&amp; Cbave27
Is Julio Cesar Chavez lhe best
pound-for-pound fighter right now?
Don't answer too fast. Wait
until you get another look at Terry
Norris.
He's scheduled to defend his
WBC super welterweight title
against Simon Brown on Saturday,
Sept 26 (on HBO), at Caesars
Palace in Las Vegas.
Chavez. the legendary WBC
super lightweight champ, pushed
his record 10 82.() {70 KOs) with a
unanimous decision over Hector
"Macho"' Camacho on Sept. 12.
But Norris (32-3, 18 KOs) is
emerging as a stronger version of
today's best aii·II'OWid fighter. He
has retired John Mugabi , Sugar
Ray Leonard and Donald Curry.
And Norris also overwhelmed dangerous Meldrick Taylor.
No wonder "Terrible Terry ·'
craves some of Julio's glory.
(C)l992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

HAVE YOU CALLED TO
MAKE APPLICATION FOR
YOUR NEW HOME?

CLEVELAND {AP) -Quarterback Jason Clark of Ohio Northern
and outside linebacker Tim Jansen
of Baldwin-Wallace were selected
lhe players of lhe week in the Ohio
Conference.
Clark, a JUntor from
Reynoldsville, Pa., set an Ohio
Northern single-game passing
record with 292 yards in lhe Polar
Bears' 39-0 victory over Bluffton.
He completed -I 6 of 25 passes and
threw for three lllUchdowns wilh no
interceptions.
Jansen, a junior from Lakewood, had II total tackles includ·
ing nine solos in the Yellow Jack·
ets' 20-0 victory over Wittenberg.
He also had three sacks for 20
yards in losses and had another
taclde for a loas. B-W held Witten·
berg to 116 total yards on offense,
including 14 yards in the second
half.

~

c..~ratDt.­

.lS2
.SIS
.479
.476
17 .46S

=Darwin

·

EutemDI"II'W L T Pd. PFPA
Buffalo............... 2 0 01.000 1-4 31
Miami ············-·· 1 0 01.000 r7 11
lndilnopolil ....... I 1 0 .500 :14 23
New EniJond ..... 0 1 0 .000 0 14
N.Y. lou ............ 0 2 0 .000 77 47
Tum

64
6S
7l
7l

NFL defenses
score 63 TDs
this week

Park.
He struck out tbree, walked
D?ne, didn't give up an extra-base .
hll and didn't allow a runner past
ftrsL
Milwaukee took a 2-0 lead as its
first four batters all singled off
{8-8). Greg Vaughn
a sacrifiCe fly in the first and
a two-run horner in the sixth.
Wbite So18, Yllllkees 6
Lance Johnson tripled twice and
drove in two nms at Yankee Stadiurn. George Bell provoked benchclearing incident in the eighth
when thought Greg Cadaret was
throwing 81 him, taking a few steps
toward the mound. Order was
restored without trouble.
Bob Wickman (3-1), an emergency starter after Scott Sanderson
pulled a back muscle warming up,
failed to become the fUSI Yankees
pitcher to win his first four big
league decisions since Whitey Ford
in 1950.
Wilson Alvarez {5·3) gave up
five hits and four runs in six
innings. Roberto Hernandez got
four outs for his ninlh save.

~

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Milwautoo .............7S
New Yod! ..............f6
CLI!VEI.AND .......61
Douoil...................67
a......................... 6.'1

Humphrey for nine yards, then hit
consecutive passes to Fred Banks
covenng 22 and 18 yards. A roughing-the-passer penalty added 15
yards \0 Banks' fust caleb.
" Its fruslraung ~ e~
ing lhat we ~ou,l~ t stop them,
Matthews.S81d.. They !Dade. three
or four catcbes that you'd like to
deny i~ that situation. We j~st
wer~n t ab~e t_
o do w_hat .we ,ye
pracbced domg m that situation.
Higgs had no trouble _punchin_g
it over from lhe one, atonulj! for his
fum~le. He ran for 90 yards on 25
carnes.
•
"I wanted to redeem myself
some.whe.re," Higgs said. "~ was
thinking if we could .get a mmute,
Dan could go to work, and that's ·
when he's 81 his beSL"
Tommy Vardell, the Browns'
No. I draft pick, gained 84 yards
on 16 carries.
"I didn'! f~! like I!JY !~gs _were
very explostve, he satd. ~ Jll~
up m the second half. Looking at 11
from a team standpoint, I really
liked lhe way we pulled together at
the end."

Skydome.
Glenallen Hill homered for lhe
Indians, who beat David Cone {2·
2).
Mesa (7·10) struck out four and
walked one. Derek Lilliquist came
in following a single by John
Olerud, Candy Maldonado's RBI
single left runners on first and
third, and Steve Olin walked pinchhitter Roberto Alomar. Olin then
got pinch-hitter Rance Mullinib on
a groiDidout for his 26th save.
Orioles 2, Royals 1
Cal Ripken ended his 73-game
homerless streak, a span of 292 at·
bats since June 23, and Rick Sutcliffe (16-12) allowed two hits in 7
1-3 innings at Camden Yards.
Brady Anderson also homered
off Rick Reed (2·7).
Sutcliffe {16-12) retired his first
14 batters before Kevin Koslofsld's
sin$1e. Olson pitched the ninth
inmng of the four-hitter for his
33rd save.
Brewers 6, Red Sox 0
Chris llosio {14-S) lied a Brewers' record by winning his eighth
consecutive decision, pilehing fourhit ball for eight innings at Fenway

·

lllliimon ..............79

In the NFL...

Kan ...

to try to be prer,ared, but we
touchdown pass making it20couldn'tpull it off. ' . .,
10.
'
The pme began Miamt s seaTwo plays aflcr that, linebacker
son, their scheduled opener having Mike Johnson Sllipped Higgs of lhe
been posqx&gt;ned last. week to give ball, and David Brandon returned
south flor!da ~ bme to ~ver the fumble 32 yards for another
from H~cane ~w.
Cleveland IOuchdown.
. Marino, Jl!OVIRS the layoff was
"Defensively, we were talking
mconsequential, completed his fllllt about seeing if we could get a score
seve_n pilsses, includmg ~ 25-yard and chanfe the momentwn," Johnscormg pass to Made DuPer and a son said. 'That's what happened."
45-yard pass 10 Robert Clark that
Kosar kept it going on the
set up Higgs' ftrsttouc~down, a Browns' next possession, cornplet·
seven-yard blll$1 up the middle.
ing six sttaight passes including a
T~o field goals by Pete Stoy· three-yard touchdown to light end
anovtch extended the lead to 20-3 Mark Bavaro who flipped over a
early in the fourth quarter, and the taclder into~ end zone with 1:18
Browns- sl;ill smm:tmg from a 14- to play. But when Man Stover
3 loss at Indianapo)js last week miased the extra point, banging it
seemed headed for allother embar- off the left upright it meant the
rassment, this one on prime-time Dolphins could tie it with a field
television.
·
goal.
Bernie Kosar, however, limped
"It chaltged the whole outlook
onto the fteld on an ankle he had because if we had made it they'd
sprained in the fll!lt half and_com- have had to go for a touchdown,"
pleted a 60-yard_pa~s 10 Mich~el Browns safety Eric Turner said.
Jackson to the Miami 20, pumpmg "We could have played it differlife into an offense that. ha~n 't enUy."
scored a touchdown m tts fust
.They should have. Marino, who
seven quarters this season. Seven had only one timeout left, passed to
plays later, Jackson caught a six- Duper for 19 yards, to Bobby

wins lhe division, -that's fme. What
can we do?"
Especially when Steinbach ,
who'.s baffled lhe Twins all season,
continued his torrid hitting.
Steinbach, who grew up in Minnesota and fives there in the off.
season, is hitting .457 (16 for 35)
against the Twins.
Steinbach grounded a single up
the middle after Ruben Sierra led
off with a double and lhc Twins
made two pitching changes, fmally
set11ing on Tom Willis. Tom Edens
(5-3), who started the inning, took
the loss.
Jim Ccrsi {4-1) got the win and
Dennis Eckersley got the final
three outs - two on strikeouts for his 46th save.
Eisewhere in lhe AL, Cleveland
beat Toronto 2-1, Baltimore beat
Kansas City 2-1, Milwaukee beat
Boston 6-0 and Chicago beat New
York 8-6.
Indians 2, Blue Jays 1
ToroniO's AL East lead was cut
to four games over Baltimore and
five over Milwaukee as Cleveland's Jose Mesa {7-10) pitched
four-hit hall for 8 2-3 innings at

·

-~
By CHUCK MEL VJN
:
C.LEVELAND {AP)- Very
: • few quarterbacks can make you
• • nervous when they're three points
: · down, 84 yards away, with a
: . minute left in lhe game. Joe Mon• tana comes to mind. John Elway.
'· And of course, Dan Marino.
·
After the Miami Dolphins blew
a 20-3 fOjll'lh-quarter lead Monday
night, Marino hit four quick. passes
on an 84-yard, 68-second drive that
beat the Cleveland Browns 27-~.
, Mark Higgs finished it off by div·
:- ing over from one_~ard out wtth
.· seven seconds remammg.
::
It's the 19th time Marino has
:· brought the Dolphins back from a
.· fourth-quarter defictt. He went 25
: ·of 35 for 322 yards, leaving him
· ·eight completions away from sur·
: passing Johnny Unitas for fourth
• all-time.
"That's about as thrilling as you
can ma~e i~: " head coach Don
Shula S81d. It was vmtage Mart·
no."
" It's almost as if !heir offense is
beuer at that time than at other
times," Cleveland linebacker Clay
Matthews said. "We did our best

CINCINNA11....
Pittoboq)L,........
HOUilllll ........ ... ..
CLIM!LAND ...

By Tbe Associated Press
The Minnesota Twins arc getling closer to conceding that they
may not catch lhe Oaldand Athletics.
The Twins fell seven games
back of the first-place A's in the
AL West with on1y 18 games
remaining Monday night when
Terry Steinbach's RBI single in lhe
eighlh inning lifted Oakland to a 32 victory.
"We have our backs against the
wall," Minnesota maoager Tom
Kelly said. "We're seven games
behind and we have 18 to play.
Mathematically, we still have a
chance.
"Realistically, I don't know.''
It was a crucial game for the
Twins, who needed to sweep the
three-game series just to get to
three back. The best they can do
now is close make it to live games
with victories in the last two
games.
"We had our chances and just
didn't get it done," Minnesota's
Kirby Puckeu said. "We'll just
come back tomorrow. play hard
and see what happens. If Oaldand

-

:I

Ohio

With Athleticr' 3-2 victory,

Tuesday, September 15, 1992
Page--4-

~~ Miami

Pomeroy-Middleport,

..,.,_,

___ __________ _____
,......_

.,

'

�.

By
The
Bend
.

The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, September 15, 1992
Page-6

Community calendar
makers Club will meet Wednesday invited.
at the Syracuse Park at 10 a.m.
POMEROY . Meigs County
Potluck lunch. Bring ideas for projects. Books will be filled out at Young Democrats, regular meet·
ing, Thursday, 6:30 p.m., Carpenthis time.
ters Hall, Pomeroy.
REEDSVILLE • Revival and .
TUESDAY
homecoming at Joppa United
MIDDLEPORT · Catfish Festi·
POMEROY • Annual steak Methodist Church, Wednesday val Committee, meeting, Thursday,
meeting of the Pome.-oy American through Sunday. Carry-in dinner 7 p.m., Middleport Council Cham·
Legion Drew Webster Post 39, Sund11y, 12:30 p.m. Special singing bers.
Tuesday, dinner at 7 p.m., meeting nightly and Sunday afternoon .
at8 p.m. Membership drive under· Brerida Weber, guest speaker. PubROCK SPRINGS • Middleport
Child Conservation League, Thurs·
way.
lic invited.
day, 7 p.m., Rock Springs United
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
Methodist Church.
RACINE . Regular meeting,
RUTLAND • Rutland Fire
Department Ladies Awdliary meet American Legion Post 602, Racine,
Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. at the ftre Thursday. 7:30p.m.
station. All members urged to
POMEROY · AA mee tin~,
anend.
Thursday, Sacred Heart Catholic
BASHAN • Services, Red Brush Church, 7 p.m. Call 992-5763 for
Chun:h of Christ on Bashan Road, information.
FoOd was donated by members
Wednesday through Saturday, 7:30
of
Hope
Baptist Church which was
POMEROY · Meigs County
p.m. nightly, and Sunday 10 a.m.
and 6 p.m. Guy Mallory, Winter Democratic Executive Committee delivered to Columbus where the
Garden, Fla., will be the speaker. meets Thursday, 7:30p.m., Car- State Baptist Convention's Disaster
Relief Organization Dew the f~
penters Hall in Pomeroy.
Public invited.
into areas to help vicums of Hum·
cane
Andrew.
POMEROY
•
Grand
opening
of
POMEROY • Meigs Athletic
Other
churches in the Scioto
Boosters meet Wednesday, 7:30 Meigs County Democratic Party
p.m.. Meigs High School. Public Headquarters, 220 East Main Street Valley B~tist Association partici·
in Pomeroy at 7 p.m. Democrauc paled in thts ministry.
mvited.
Rev. David Bryan is pastor of
candidates will attend, and refreshHope
Baptist Church.
ments
will
be
served.
The
public
is
SYRACUSE • Syntcuse Home·

Community Calendar Items
appear two da,s before an.event
and the day of tbat event. Items
must bt received weD In advance
to assure publication iD tbe cal·
· endar.

HBC members
make donation

SCHOLARSHIP PRESENTED • Nichola
Pickens, center, has been presented a $200 scholarship from tbe Alpha Epsilon Chapter of Alpha
:Delta Kappa, au iaterutloul sorority honoring
:women educators. PresentiDa the scholarship to

Pickens is Karen Walker, right, president of the
local chapter. Also pictured is Mrs. Ray (Patty)
Pickens. Nichola is attending The Ohio State
University where she plans to major in journal·
ism.

STORE HOURS

Monday 'tmu Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

September 1 1992

Reader: Everyone needs an outlet
Dear Ann Landers: You recently
published a letw signed "Faithful
Reader in Hic:PviUe, VL" from a
man who was u(liiCt and felt belnlyed
because his wife shared their
conversations and disagreements
wid! her sisters and close friends.
While I can sec his point, I
empathized with his wife.
My husband refuses ~ tallc to me
about things I feel should be shared
between spouses. This ranges from
what is bothering him or me about
our work, to what may be bothering
one of us about our relaiionship.
I cannot share my feelings, fears,
anxieties or even my joya with this
man because be has no intcrest and
refuses to respond. There have been
times when he specifiCally told me
to talk to my friends because he
wasn\ very good at dealing with my
problems.
We all need an outlet, Ann,
someone to share our thoughts with.
How I wish that someone was my
husband, but he's made it clear he
can\ handle that kind or intimacy.
So when I need to release my
f!US011tions about anything, including him, I rely on my sister or my
friends. Sign me - SHUT Ol!f IN
OKLAHOMA CITY
DEAR SHl!f OUT: What do
you and your husband talk
about? The weather? Football?
Politics? It's a miracle that your
rnaniage has survived with so liule
nourishmenL
You are lucky to have the
emotional support of a sister and
friends. Since you didn'taslc for any
advice, I won't offer any, but if you
want a clue as to why your husband
is so uncommunicative, my hunch
is that he was frozen out by both
parents and has kept his own
feelings bottled up since early
childhood.
Dear Ann Landers: My
husband's parents haven't spoken
to me for almost a year because
they blame me for what they
consider a major breach of Cliqueue.
I say it was a simple oversight.
Here's whal happened:
When IU daughter was married,
I had no part in planning the
rehearsal dinner since that was the
responsibility of the groom's

guests and the minister lhould be

Ann

invited to the rehearsal dinner.
UJ bow If we lllllde a
mistake by JIDlinsjajng tbe pllldINCOME NOW!
psrents be includlld. - WAITING
ENVELOPE STUFRNG - $1100-$800 every week
FOR THE VERDict IN DUBLIN,
Free Detalle: SASE to
CALIF.
lntamatlonallnc.
DEAR DUBLIN: The ventict is:
1356 Coney ltllnd Ave,
Guilty on all counts.
Brooklyn, New York 11230
The grandpsrents, all of diem,
including your motllet, should bave
been invited to the Rh- sal
I r-=~-----..,.
If the groom's parents &lt;whoiCI
TREE
responsibility it was to Include
TRIM and
them) didn't have the pace to do so,
UNLIMITED SESSIONS
you should have iniCMned on their
REMOVAL
Mo1tlls of S.,ftllllaer

u-.

family. Three days before the
weddiJig. we received a phone call
from a relative informing us that
my blllband's parents were deeply
offended because they had not
been invited to the rehearsal
dinner. My husband and I were
sho&lt;:ked to hear this since we had
no idea who was invited and who

behalf.

There's a lot of fence mending to
be done and the sooner the better.
p,s. AU copies or your daughrer's
"wedding planner" should
into
the shredder bcftre it wrecks more
family relationships.
Whar's rhe rrurh about por.
coctdne, LSD, PCP, crcu:k, speed
and downers? "The L&lt;Jwdown
on Dope• htii up-to·tlre·miltwte
informtllitm on drugs. &amp;ltd 11 self·
addressed, lo11g, business-sire
enve/ofM and 11 clttc/c or lf1tiMY
order for $3.65 (rhis includes
postagt and hllndling) ID: Lowdown,
c/o Ann Londtrs. P.O. Box 11562,

ao

wasn't.
When my husband called to
smooth things over, my mother-inlaw blamed me for excluding them.
Ann, although I have not always
seen eye-to-eye with my in-laws, if
I had been doing the inviting, I
would never have excluded them
from such an important occasion. I
might add that my own mother was
not.invited, either.
My daughter's wedding planner
states in plain language that only
the bridal pany, their partners,
immediate family, out-of-town

Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562 . (In
COMda, selld $4.45.)

Till pnco nu- - • • $88,11otrona

BARN
45633 ST. RT. 124
RAONE

SHRUB &amp;

OPEN MON.-SAT.

SPEt:IAL

•UGHT nAlLIUI

allll October

$35

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992 "2269

USED RAILROAD

00

CALIFORNIA
TANS
949·2823

9·??

1117/Pd.

"Any Size Available•

' 'Poll auildln,s"

~
At!ilkl! ;J~\1'

PRECISION POST FRAME
BUILDERS

8 Yearo
104 Beech Street
Experience
Pomeroy, Ohio 45169
"c.JI Ue fDr Alf Your Building Need• •

COMMERCI4L • RESIDENTIAL
AGRICULTURAL

KMN'S lAWN
MAINTEIIANCE

Llveatock Building• • Machine Sheds· Hay
B11111 - Carports
Garages • Stor~ge Building• - Roofing -

949·2398or
1·800·837-1460

Windows- Skiing

Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.

WV Uc. tWV 020343

FREE ESTIMATliS
ROBERT BORING

JEFF STAATI

(304) m.s:MI

(&amp;t4) 112-3541

Rllldentitll I CGmn..rolll
FrMEitlnW:•
6-26-'12-tfn

. IUWDIIIOIRD DEIDUIE
4:30 P.IL DAY IEFORE
PUILICADON

PRICE REDUCED!

CURIO

..-------

ShrubandTTrlmmlng &amp; Removal

Bl'LLETI \ BO.\RI&gt;

tlnonci1g "' up .. - - bo

IIWIPII

~

Please let

ROOFING

WIDO
AND MRYTHING UNDERNUTH
GAUGES • ADDinONS • SIDING

MICROWAVE OVEN
••• VCR REPAIR
ALL MAliS
. lrl.. _It Ia Or We
Phk !!-

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
985·3561

-

al poon:NM

.,..-ror ~...,..In
oonlo '"" vert '*"' homo an 3% -

TROMM BUILDERS
•j O••lify Auurell C.atl'flfto,.

20 Yr. b,.

Acr- , . . Pwt Oftlco
217L.._.II,
HIIHY,OIIO

- .....· l'lopelly4 BR, 3 .,_, 2 rwtecll
8R
4,100·
~ft. linn

Coli AI, 614-742-2321
11111ttn

•

bldg. .

Cll614-11112-7104/or ~1.

BISSELL &amp; IURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•NewHo11101
eGoroges

•Complete

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
LIMIT QUANTITIES

•••••II••

H WARD

EXCAVATING

BU'I OOZF'I IACIOIOE
ond TRACiOio£ WORK
AYAILAILE.
8EP11C IYI1EIII,
HOllE IITEI and
TRAILER liTE~
LAII)CLEAR
DAIYEWAYIMt
D
UMESlONE-TRUCICING
FREE ESTIMATES

992·3131

HOUSE FOR SALE
BY OWNER
12 Year old ranch type house. 3
bedrooms, two baths, 1Y. car
garage and breezeway, central air·· •
and heat pump, many extras. On
acres of land.
Eastern School District. Blacktop
roads Co. Rd. 28 a"d 32

·---

RC COLA, DIET
RITE, SUNKIST
ORANGE,
A&amp;WROOT
BEER

FRESH WED

MR. BEE

POTATO
CHIPS

••

APPLE or
PUMPKIN
PIES

24-120Z.CANS

REG. $1.49
70Z.BAG

(IN OUR BAKERY)
240L

$399

69(

$199

UNDA'S
PAINDNG

3 LB.
BAG

&amp;

"*

"Taio lh
Ort 01 "**r
-1M U• Or It fit y.,•

APPLES

s1 o9

To place an ad

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
COPY DEADLINE

Call992-2156
MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. • SAT.S-12
CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES
• Ad• ouuide tbe coUDty your ad run• M\111 be prepUd
• Reeeil'e di.tcounl for ad. JHiid ia ad.-a.-:e.
• Free Ad.: GiYMway and Fouod &amp;eLi •Dder 15 worde will bo
run 3 day• at no charp.
• Price of ad for aU c.t.p~ letlen i• do..ble prtce of lid coeL
• 7 point liM type only ued
• Sentiaal il aol NlpGDiible for erron after ilrll day (cheek
for erron flrtt day ad rWM in p.per}. C.ll before 2:00 P·•·
day alter pu.,licatioa Lo lftake correction
• Ad. Lballl'l._l be pe.MI in ad.Y&amp;DCe are:

DEW

MORTON
FROZEN

CHICKEN OF
THE SEA

GOLDEN

Margarine

CHICKEN

TUNA

3 LB. TUB

MACARONI
&amp;CHEESE

240Z. BOX

6Y.oz.CAN

7.25 OZ. BOX

FRESH

89(

C.nl ol Tlwou
Hoppy Ado
I• MeMor..M
Yard Sal•
• A cluairoed oc~.,.-.,, ploced 1o tiN GoWpoU. Dolly

a......

TribuM (uc:epl Clauifted Dilplay,
Card or Lepl
NoLica) wUiallo appe.r in the Point Pleuut B.P.• aad

320L

Bonu

79(

Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
WedneodayPaper
Thunday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

I :OOp.m.Soturday

1:00 p.m. Monday
I :00 p.m. Tuesday
I :00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
!:OOp.m. Friday

Classified pages cfnler the
foUowing lelephone e:cchanges ...
GaWa County Melgo County Muon Co., \IVY
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
446-G.WpoUo
367-0o.lolre
388-Vmton
245-Rio Graacle

256-G.r•• DIM.
64S-Ar.Wo Dlot.
379-Wolnul

992-Mlddlopo.t/
Pomeroy

675-PI. 1'1-oont

985-Chooo..
843-Porllnd
247-Loloot Fo~
949-Racbte

571&gt;-Applo

742-Ru~oad

458-Won

c....

773-M..oa

882-New Ha•flll
895-Lelarl

.................
FRfl ESnMAns
HAVE REfiiiiKIS

Ahw 6,... 614-985-4110
1/21/H/1-

11011011
CONTUCTING
C.,.try Electric
" *Ins Replace•••
Roo!Dg
Wlldows

.,....

Free Esll 1Jes • low
· Rates fw Sellars
Ho.loHoas-1

WILSON'S ARMY
SURPlUS
· County Rd. 18I'Nchlork Rd.
1182-7093

.................. prn
... uo lor ,._. hunting
ond baok to ochaol

uloollon or rnll!blry

COUSIN WILLIE.
MICROWAVE

POPCORN
3.5 oz.

sl
4

ECKRICH

Bologna
1 LB. PA(JAGE

$119

SUPERIOR

HOT

Monthly

15
15
15
15
15

'""""" - · '

Over IS Words

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

Rates are lor consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged.lor each·day as separate ads.

=-=-- - --1

M~&amp;.~icallutnaMDtt

Fruilo A: V...,Uioo
For Sa&amp;. er TrW

I 11:\1 ,I 1'1'1 II'
,\ I II I ' I I )( I,
32- Mobile Ho•• for Sale

r.,., for Sale
34- IJuol_, Boildinp

~

35- Lo,. A:

Ae-.

-Reo! Eototo w••w

C[ll,...

Wuted to Buy
Li•e~tock

Hor a Gnbo
s..daFoniU...

BISSELL
New Homes • VInyl Sld1111
New Garages I Replacement ndo,w•·l
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-949-2801. 949·2160
or 985·3839
INo I11Hlay CaRsl

JIOIIIUY, OL
8· 11-'82·1 mo.

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULlDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER

UNES

BASEMENTS&amp;
HOMESITE&amp;

HAUUNG: Umettone,
Dirt, Grnel and Coal
LICENSEO IIIII BONDED

PH. 614·992-5591

..
..

RUTLAND
MINE SUPPLY

~JAYMAR

Quallt_y
Stone Co.

SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call614·992·
6637
St. II. 7

c••••ire, OH.

742·2656

IRY OUR NEW
STEEL INSULATED .
RAISED PANEL GAUGE DOOR :
IIITAWD PRIUS
ta7-$275.00 16z7-$450.00 .
OPIIEIS IIITAWD-Ya HP-$200.00
With 2 Tnt1t1mlttara

_

Door Pia Ope•ot
Sell

~

;a

38904 .....1••
Creek Rolli
•Wtlleport, o•1o

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

1/31/92 Ill

RAOflOIIO
!For-'•
~Stool

hxlt4-WthJhy

PAm

12 OZ. PACKAGE

.I
MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVIC E

Wit• hn..H of
ltceliMFIEI

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

•.

Pipe for Water, Sewage
and Gas
Rutland, OH.

1

1117 pd.

614-992·7144

1: I \ I l l '

DOGS

59(

992·7553

Sf&gt;- Peto fu Sole

$ .20
$.30
$ .42
$ .60

$.05/day

U5.00Pir._.

IWOIIIIU UIU

. . . 1 .........

nllda. - · · .......

Rate

:::.·:::::

667-Coot.llle

Marketpla~e
Words

SMALL DOZEI
WOIIL
DRIYEWIY WOII
. . LIMinOII

93'1-B.II'olo

•The Area's Number 1

1
3
6
10

KETCHUP

DAY BEFORE PUBLICAT!ON

the Daily Sentinel, re~chiDC onr 18,000 ho. .

Days

STOKELY

co.

CHARLIE'S

SERVICE

·Wifi·CW.~

2- lnlloooory

s- A.,aot~ac:et~MDII

11-Holp Wa....

4- Ch'Mway
5-Happr Ad•
6- Loot ond Found
1- Loot aad Fouad
8- PuWio Sole "'

1:1- Sit•- ..,,....
1:1-laoun...
t~ B•l- Tnilll"l

Attetioll
~WutodloBuy

·~

"' ·
t6- S.loooloo
lladlo, TV
A: CDRopoir
17-llllool!a-..
18-WooiOIIToDo

52--

s,......

·- ,..

Plu.blot!aH•IIq

Ceodo

53-AollotM- Mloo. Mono .......
55- Boildl"l 5upplloo

E,...,lbof

I!oelrilol a Rol&lt;\pndo~

c-n!Ho....
MoWle He• Bopoir
Upholo""Y

•W...eaters
614-949·2804
!• ,,,..

ChaiiJ HI Efflcltlcy
A.- c..•llaiiiS, Htat
P~~t~p~,fnact~&amp;
New Watw HHhrs.

s• .........

Bennetts Mobile Home

1Mis.thr4~U.

c.l (614144 ..MII•1.....72-5Mt

�Tuesday, September 15, 1992

Pomerov-4'1ddleport, Ohio

BORN LOSER

,.OUil ~'( ~ tlol A.~~
ll£&lt;~

r [~T TIIIMi(.['O ll£ ~ tO

5UM~ 5N,E5, .. fN.lUIII(.

cer...5f'l~

EHUU~ •••t~ 0Clio~AAJ611T

'

!

~y

'::!::' S@\\~lA-~t.tfs· ....
....

Television
Viewing

&lt;q

· ~IV£ IF If ~T RJR tt.Y

The Dall Sentinel-Page-&amp;

•

TUE .. SEPT.15

l~ltotl

0 four
Rearrange letttrt of
tcramblod words
low to form four

•

-

.

the

be-do.

.,._--rN.:...O:rrS::..,:rl. :;..U...:.D-r-1
1 2

EVENING

.

~mple

..

.

lty CLAY I. 'OUAN _;;__ _ __

: I 1 1 I I

1:00 (J). (I). (J). • •

IDe 11J Newt
(J) . .vecl

bJ lilt ....

CD 8qu.re Ont TV a_

Rutlalnii_!NI

ID
Q
Stereo. 1;1
IIJ !lac&lt;IYvtr .
ID RUMina a Racing
a world fot1ay
liD e FuH

M'f 6ROTHE!l. SAYS HE
DOESN'T THINK WE 60
TO HEAVEN IN A
60LDEN CHARIOT••

WHAT DOES
''HATH'' MEAN ?

. r.,.E.,.Y_TT'A_Rr---1

1
~-~~:~::l~l==~'~~!~ro
~:e~~uro~~~~
r
going on in our anvemment,"

D Rln nn nn, K-1 Cop 1;1
8:05 Cll Tllret'a Company
8:30 (J) e IIJ NBC Ntwal;l
(J) atar S..rdl

·

l

I CE T E D

CD Wild AIMitc:a Sl!r,IO. Q
ID Square Ont TV-~

~~ ::o~=:~r:m 1;1

I 1 I I' I

·8

ID Up Cloae

D Ntw Zorro 1;1

PRINT NUMBERED lEIT£RS IN ' I
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

1:35 (J) Andy Orlflltlt

7:00 \ij8 IIJI WliHI of Fortunt

.

(lj
The " ' " - • Q_
(I) a lnalcle Edition Q

l1l-l lllK YOU 00.'

everyone

Ch~

:ftl I St.r T::l~ R. Ntll
Stereo. 1;1

:g
a

rold

MonerJint

PHILLIP
ALDER

7:05 (J) Beverly Hlllbllllea
7:30 (J) e IIJ JeoptniYI C
(J) Major L.elgut lbNball
Chicago While Sox at New

·-·

IS A DOC.TOI" wiTH

•o"

MATERNITY

PO~SC.t-IE

•

PAYMEI'ITS

:

(I)

a Entnt.errltall~lnn•mtnt Tonight

!IIlii Wheel of Fortunt 1;1

112Je Famlty Ftud

ill Be 1 Star Stereo.

!

aeroutt..

8:00 (J) 8 IIJI 0uantum Laap
Sam leaps Into lht IHe of a
much younger AI. (R) Stereo.

Clmpenl
· · Moeor Homes

illlll 112le Aeacueol11

.,

.

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:

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poor houaeguest at the .
home. IR) Stereo .

snslow

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1111 ClldNnllt - ...._.. 27 ' ,.

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motorcycle shop ~

(Pt 1 oi 2) Sterto~C
CD (J) " - • Pot~~&amp;

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HICCI.IPe':l

ACRQSI
1 WaiUnft for

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•

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8 Prickly altrub
II Wltltnparw

8

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Exb- Cllerylls ahaken
by 1 tragedy; Or. Croft wants
to form a crtcket team.

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54 ....
Go away
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55 llngt polnb
56 Painting tlflt

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Verdon

2 Two worda of
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3 Goealp (al.)
4 YOko5 Rtlata1

8 Kllchan

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...

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8 Aulltor -

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34 Starting from

(I).(J).Oolngto

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17 Teg

Barrrmorn
te NtgaiiYI

bntl
31 Ban~ alter

medlcalttam goes airborne
to provide Immediate medical
attention. Sttreo. Q

UH·· ASK YORE
UNCLE SNUFFY--EI-UH•• I GOTTO
~._,..,
CHOP SOME
KINDLIN°

·

alltlcllon

Tenn. Stereo. !;I

AUNT LOWEEZ.Y-WHAT0S TWOTH,IRDS OF
ONE-HALF?
.
.

Eut
Paso
Paso

51 Cltocolalt 53 largt Ha
crtalurH

14 Sign up
· 15 OM of tha

30 Cornalla -

10:00 (J) e 11J Datellnt NBC A

BARNEY

North

...
. .
...

28 llklwiJ

1:30 (I) • (J). Dtlte (Preview)
A country-weatem singer
waits labial In Nashville,

'
'

West

39 Grlddtr'a
42 goat
Gtmtlll
artlclt
45 :;:lng
48 lnHCtlckle

13 PIMIII Oamtr

a

• 0

Sool)l

-·=-

under.

Cooper Yl. ROCky Pepell, 10
rounds; Heavyweight bout
Terry Davia va. Henry
Tillman. 12 rounda, from Fort
Llludeldale, Fla. (l)
ill Nalhvtle Now Stereo.
1.arrr 10ng 1.1ve1 .
Fathtr Oowllng MMt....
l rlllle,.a

'rOIJ KNO# AN'1"THI~
THATL.LQ PE'!l-e

'"

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

The World Almanac:®Croaaword Puzzle

~~£Figllll
HNVyWiight bout: Bert

MORTYMEEKLEAND~ROP

+A J76
.AQ
tAK987 5
+9

••

• • aeiiOVII: ·A~~get
8liWI' CIS T~ Movtt

w~~
OJ,
WINTHROP?

.10876 5
• Q6
+QJ 5 12

It is a reliable rule of thumb that if· I +
Pass I t
Pass 2 NT
you are in a 4-4 fit and faced with a 4-i 2 t
Pass
Pass
All pass
break, you do best not to try to draw 3 +
all the trumps, but instead to play pri·
.,
Opening lead: +6
marily on the side suits. Today's deal,
taken from the 1992 Pan American
Championsllips, is a good example of
Ibis.
Tbe deal was played during one
...
semifinal of tbe Open Teams. At the
first table, the declarer won the club Larry Cohen, on his way to the gold
lead with dummy's ace and played a medal, saw the danger. After a club
·"
spade to his jack. West won with the dwm;ny's ace, a spade to his jack and
queen. and led the club king forcing Wests queen, and the club king ruffed,
declarer to ruff. South caShed the Cohea played on diamonds immedlspade ace, East discarding a heart. ately. West ruffed tbe third round and
Now declarer turned to diamonds, but led anotber club, but Collen ruffed,
it was too late. West ruffed the third cashed the spade ace and tben went
round , drew South's last trump with ~ck to diamonds. When West ruffed
tbe spade king and led a club to his With blslast spade, be led a club, built
parlller:s jack: one down.
was ruffed in dummy. Declarer bad .,
In tbe given auction, one club was conceded three t~p tricks but bad
Precision: artificial and strong prom· won the other 10 tncks.
ising at leas116 points. North's 'one-di· . Al'!ays allow for a bad trump split,
amood response was artificial and if domg so doest1't endanger your
·weat, sltowing at most seven points. contract.
The rat of the auction ~as natural. ·
®--~

about ~true faalngs.
Stereo.
(I).
• RDIIIIIo,.
ISNton Prernlera) Oan'a

'·

CloM.--""'·

IIJ RHIC'Ibtl

Double Olcky W«t&lt;a • tough
stakeout; T- Is &amp;YIIIve

'·

Youi.Aa _ _: . . . _
• - . ._, llldro-_

tl4o411-

F01111dden lulljacta tR).Q.:OO)
IIJ .......0 8ht WIOta Q
ill Ctooll IIICI CltiH
aMnellewac_
D Ylllllltl Rldft Q
l:30
(J). ~...., Mllltarl

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.... . . . . , ...., ••.,.,
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Po_mlroyo
Middleport
lVIclnHy

(J) II Full HouH

(Saason Premiere) A man
alngle-handedly lilts a truck
to save ·a man. Stareo. Q
liD. MOYII: KJ1111e:

1tll ~ HT ..-1 . '

....

By Plillllp Alder

ID Major Leagut hHbaH
(L)

Jesse's big recording
contract hinges on his
danCing. (Pt 1) (R) Stereo. E;J
CD (J) ljova Scleiltists atuc!Y
hurrielnea walling to dellroy
many coaatal araaa. C
.

..•
- ..............

Keep the hand
under control

(J) e .You Bet Your Life

I

~.

...........,.
..........

••

.JI 2

SOUTH

~tereo. Q

1

•.

1·11-11

EAST

Cll Milar l.eagut BeHbelt
Manta Braves at Cincinnati
Reds (L)

TtiAT'S LIFE ...YOlJ C.OMe

. .."

WEST

+K Q9!

tJ 3
+K 876

York Yankeea(L)

YOlJ IC/'IOw IT, Tt-l~
fi,ST GlJY YOU M~T

NORTH
+t0152
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t!OU
+A 10 !

1;1

D Ule Oota On Stereo. 1;1

INTO Tt-l~ viO~Lf) wiTt!
NOTtfiNG A/'ll&gt;, yi0U£.l&gt;N'T

p

BRIDGE

Tonight

Stereo.

~ -·~

SCRAM-Lm ANSWERS

Wiring - Nomad • Known· Jestsr - WE ARE
The boy bragged about uis part in the class play and
how
was jealous ol him. His teacher
him
that n is batter to know how others value us than to
know how valuable WE ARE

CD (J) Mac!'!9il/l.alni
NewaHour Q
(J) 8 Mal'l'lljl •• Willi

=:=s==::P

I

one fellow said. "There's
5
plentyolgoodmen,"hisbuddy
"--'·-'-·_.__._
__.___.sighed, "I just wish they had
louder ......."

We (J) e AIC Newt Q.

a World

D 700 Club With Pat

,.

Rall1rllon
111'.30(11 Ntwa Q
(J) MOVIE: Gfll*ata (R)

'
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.... ,,

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(2:00)
i110nltage

~

ID Major Leagut lallblll
(L)

ASTRO.QRAPH

11:00 (J) e (I) e

•• a•
IIDIZ.,.

I

Pfedictlons for lhe year ahMd by mall$1.25 plus a tong, self·addressed,
to Astr&lt;H&gt;raph, clo
this ne\llpaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cteveland, OH 44101-3428. Be 1111n1 to state
ing

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

.......
. Electrtcal •
Rtlrlgtt'IIIOn

',,
'

stamped..,..._
your- ~

. ~ (..... D-Oct. 23) An Ineffective
....,.., COUld give you conluslng ft.
nanc:1a1 advice today, to don't loOk "to
•
lnciMduals who """" troublli belanclng
thelr- - . .
ICCSS 10 (Oct. M-New•.ZI) In order to
your ~ ....... ldaloce today, you
might unwllel) rejaCI the-' ol astoclat.- who an~~&lt; _, to be hlllpfllt.
Thia- be countlrproducthe.
IAGITT..... (tlloo, 23 Dec tl)lluel.-orflnanc:lal,. !obllyoumaketohpl. 11, 1tt2
. day could be CMrty lnfluanced by your
negative '*"'*'1... thul cauoing you
You could be ratller fortunate In the ! toftmltyour~ 'N'"w.
year, ahead In the way 01 buliMa fa- . c• NCOM (Dec........._ 11) ScMMvors that may be granted to you by · 01111 JOU'.. quite hloo• with " not
'lhoae you know tocidy. Keep on hi t looked upon aa'-ably 1oe1ay by anbest of terms with ~ In your ott. 01 your c:1o1e pall. Don't arr~nge
club, Cllurch or bOWling !Mgue.
•IJII•&lt;Oiodarlllalltorceooneuponlhe
YIRQO (Aug. 23 llpt 23) Try not to In- 1 other.
,
!roduco volatile- today Into- : ACII'MIUI (M .,..,11)11 you fall
con-.atlona with frllnda. A helted to tar an your Cllfdl on the table today,
debattcould •-" with v.y llltleprov- -•you'ft be~ ,.tth Ia ap1 to
ocatton. Virgo, treat yourMII to a birlll- httld beclc Cl1ttclllnformatliln from you.
day gilt. Send for Virgo's Allro-Graph_ FIICII(M.." cfo.,llyoudon'l

-'il•lill•••••

,,

CD (J) e

111 Ntwa
have something good to say about a
~Stereo. !;I
friend who Isn't prasant today, It's belt
not to say anything at all. Your comCtooll.;. ~
"'f''IS wilt be reportad In detail to this
1par1a Tanlghl
lniiiVIduat at a tater date.
0 lear- ltld MIL King
AlliES (Malcll 21·Aprll 11) Only noml!(ojllt ~
nat Achievements are likely today, yet 11:30(11
CD To lilt
Stereo .
lh'- WOI1 't be due to a lad&lt; of Initiative.
(1) . . . . . . . .
You'l have the ln&lt;luatrtoua lncllnatlono,
Stereo.
but your methods could be oetfKnlgM' Crime
-ling. .
To\UIIUI(Aprti:IHiaJ20)1fyou 'renot
Time Afllr Pllttte Tltnt
Stem. Q
c:arelui, poor judgment on behaK or
aomaone you're cloMiy aseoc:latld With
could C.. compllc:,ltlono for you to- 11:31 (J) e 0 TGIIIgllllllow With .
day. Kelp a tight reign on your atty.
MR I (llllr 21-.lutlt :10) II tomtone
.you k,_ CUUiiiy heapa unwarrantld
pr8iaa on y'ou today, be ....,. that this
IINKNZXAXDJ
tndi¥ldual may h... urtlrlor mot/Wa.
'HDUTXJV
XJ
12:00 (J). 1111111 Utnb •Ifill!
Don't.auccumbtoftattery.
IIJTitl..,...,
CAIICIII (oltlne 21-.lulr 23) 11 you're
SteNo.
XA
JXIIKNW
KXTN
INXJY
!lOPing to do -hlng ralhlr -Y
Nawallllll
wtlhout ollandlng lrllnda today, IIOc:lal"
0 ........ '"" Loll
liD
WVGTA . '
WNIIIP
IL
lpludu
mattn must be negotiated with lklll
1
1and uncllntlondlng.
• NUXG
ANZIUNXW .
UO (...., ....... 12) Two lmpollant ·
SinO. 1;1
PREVIOUS SOlUTION: "My ~~ eatlecl me a cream pull. Well, I
object!.- .., be IIChleved to1a:30 ltiOVII: Atrt Wlilllll
rutMd out lind got the bakn union to tlnd0f88 me." - Claiborne Pal.
day - If you hnlll them~­
You c.n (PO) 11:30)
Be carelul, " -· you don't 111 go or .
Cll MOVII: Till ~
you own.
, . . Lilli (II) 12:46)'

Ia

A•Minlo

ile .,_..,

...........

-LillO =-e·Q

u~

.-

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a

2:0IIIII'r'c':.S'
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(I) • . . . , . . . . . ,

:-:{o

war

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____________________._,_-_~__~__~_________________,5~_j
"

I

'
'
j

�Pag1 10-The

Sentinel

Twins celebrate first_birthdays
Megan Danielle Tripp and
Amber Nicole Tripp, daughters of
Rodney and SI8Cy Tripp, TupJXI!S
Plains, celebraled their first birth·
day recenlly.
· A hog roast was given in their
honor at Henderson's farm in
Airred and "101 Dalmations"
theme was carried ouL
Attending were malel1l8l grandparents, Mike and Becky Newell;
maternal great-grandparents, Del·
mar and Betty ~othgeb; paternal
grandparents, Alvin and Barbara
Tripp; paternal great-grandparents,
Fr~ Tripp and Fred and Bertha
smuh; Andrea. Hudson, Troy
Yankuns, Todd and Kelly Tripp
and Ryan:
Others anending were Jayne and
Dakota Collins, Rod, Susan and
Jason Pullins, Cricket Pullins,
Fritz, Phyllis, Christy and Jason

Rothgeb, Debbie, Adam and Abbie
Cbevalier, Larry; Janet and Ashley
Life, Sherman and Robena Henderson, Tom Morrisey, Jay Black·
wood, Donna and Jacob Roach,
Brian and LceAnn King, Bill, Jack·
ie, Mark and Nancy Gaddis and
Hazel Smith and Jack, Lisa and
Kenny Ritchie, Jeff and Sharon
Googley, Wilma and Bim Hcnder·
son, Robert Henderson, Rod, Debbie and Ryan Beegle, FracCll Imboden.
·
Sending gifts were Bob Moore
and Sharon Smith, Ronnie and
Lceann Beegle, Homer and Nancy
Cole, Ralph, Jenny and Jimmy
Parlcer, Tim Stone and Kelly, June
Hudson, Libby, Terry, Todd and
JoBeth Rothgeb, Mary Crossan,
Cheryl Crossan, Pauy Roush and
great-great-grandmother of Bosron,
Ma.

Twenty-two attend Past
Councilors Club meeting
BRANDI DILLON ud DAVID WELLS

Wells-Dillon
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wells, Long Tuppers Plains.
Bottom, announce the engagement
The wedding will be an event of
and approaching marriage of their Sunday at 1:30 p.m. at the Long
son, David Wells. to Brandi Dillon, Bottom Uniled Methodist Church.
daughter of Ginnie Dillon Himel!, A reception will follow.

Beat ofthe Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
Now isn't that special?
Vice President Dan Quayle has
been nailed to lhe cross for adding
that "e" to potato while visiting
with some students recenlly. His
error-let's face it-one which
many of us might make-even
made it to television's Wheel of
Fortune as one of the puzzles.
While I can't wax any enthusiasm over the fact that Quayle is
only a heartbeat away from being
President, I think be's been taken
pver too many coals for the cnor.
The incident has certainly been
blown out of proportion . Good
spelling doesn' t necessarily make a
good vice president-nor does it
make one healthy, wealthy or even
wise.
I'm told that a resident of the
Middleport area bit it lucky last
Tuesday by selecting the correct
five numbers in the Buckeye Eye
Five Ohio Lottery.
However, my grapevine hasn't
come forth with the name of the
resident who should be $100,000
richer at this point in time. The
ticket, I understand, was purchased
at the Hilltop, located on the
Porneroy-Rulland Road. ·
So let me extend my congratula·
lions to the winner- whoever you
are. Enjoy!
I don' t get as many letters as
Perry Como used to, but I get a few
as well as a smattering of phone
calls which help keep me up on
what's cookin '.
One reader phoned to express
concern about interest charges and
be bas an i~g points. Even
though the prime rate has been
reduced and reduced-that was
supposed to help the ailing economy-it hasn' t really done so and
that, the reader points out, is proba·
bly due to the fact that banks and
other lending institutions have not
reduced interest charges on loans
as drastically as they've reduced
the amount of interest paid on the
money you have on deposit. In
other words, there is too much
range between what you pays and
what you "gits".
Also the credit card interest
rates stay right up there in most
instances-whatever happened to
the action Congress mentioned tak·
ing to force the credit card interest
rates be reduced? Maybe lhe flood
of bad chec.ks got Congressional
members sidetracked. However,
all of those offenses, it turns out,
were not offenses and all is forgiven. Maybe they can get back on

membership fee.
The card features a GM rebate
which can be used towards the pur·
chase of a new General Motors
vehicle-a maximum rebate for
each year is $500. Now that's a
new aptllliiCb.
All of you are invited to an open
house being staged from 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Friday to marie the grand
opening of Continuity of Care
Medical Equipment in its new .
quarters. The fum which obvious·
Iy deals in medical equipment is
now located in one of the new
buildings at the foot of Hiland
'Road--dtis is lhe road that passes
Veterans Memorial Hospital and
the Meigs lnfumary and lakes you
to the Route 1 bypaas.
Personnel of the firm will be
serving refreshments and there will
be door prizes awarded during the
two hour period. And-you'll get
a chance to look over the outfit's
brand new quarters. The address is
33091 Hiland Road.
Can you believe that we're in
the middle of September already?
And isn't the weather terrific! Just
makes you want to keep smiling.

Harrisonville
community news

John and Ann Williams entertained her sister, niece and five
children from Allen Park. Mich .,
last week.
John and Ann Williams enter·
lained her brother and sister-in-law
from Columbus on Saturday.
Louise Eshelman entertained her
three sisters last Wednesday. They
are Virginia Casteel, Columbus;
Mildred Ray, S~ringfield; Doris
Vannatty, Springfield. This was the
first time all four sisters had been
together in 20 years.
Eugene and Ada Dilcher,
Albany, visited Ora Carsey on
Labor Day. Other visitors were
Jack and Laura Sayres, Vero
Beach, Fla. on Sunday afternoon
and her sons, Roger and Terry
Carsey and families over the weekend.
Faye Cotterill spent a month in
Dade City, Fla., caring for her
father, Noah Birchfield, who is in
poor health.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dill, Michigan, spent a week visiting her sister
and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Foley. "Kippy" South accomtnK:k.
panied them home where be spent
By the way, General Motors is three weeks.
now issuing a credit card which
Hazel Stanley entertained the
docs have a little lower interest Circle of Helping Hands of Zion
rate- 16.4- than some and no Church for their August meeting.

The following read poems: Barringer, lnzy Newell and a visi·
Goldie Frederick, "Happiness," tor, Sandra White. ,
from a get-well card that she bad
The Past Councilors Club of
received from Letha Wood, Cbesrer Council No. 323, Daugh·
deceased, years ago; "The Dirty ters of America, met recenlly at the
Open Bucket" by Ethel Orr. "The hall.
First Day of School" by Erma Cle·
lnzy Newell presided and read
land.
from the book of Genesis. The
Hostesses were Betty Roush, Lord's Prayer and Pledge of Aile·
lnzy Newell and Mary Jo Bar- giance to the American Flag were
ringer. They served refreslunents.
given in unison. Members
Games were conducted by Ada answered roll call by telling their
Bissell and Mae McPeek with favorite television program.
Enna Cleland assisting.
Mary Jo Barringer gave the secDoor prizes were won by Char· retary's report and Thelma White
lotte Grant and Sandra White.
gave the treaswer's reporL
Attending were Thelma White,
The October 14 meeting will
Elizabeth Hayes, Opal Hollon , begin at 1 p.m. This time will be
Marcia Keller, Enna Cleland, Mar· lhe new meeting time for lhe winter
garet Amberger, Ella Osborne, months.
Ethel Orr, Lora Damewood,
Mrs. Newell appointed Mary Jo
Pauline Ridenour, Charlotte Grant, Barringer and Jean Frederick to get
Faye Kirkhart, Laura Mae Nice, information from different restau·
Betty Roush, Goldie Frederick, rants for their Christmas supper on
Mary K. Holter, Ada Bissell, Mae Dec. 9.
McPeek, Jean Frederick, Mary Jo
Mary K. Holter spoke briefly
about attending Pribble Nell Wil·
son's funeral at Gallipolis recenlly.
She used to be a member of Gallia
Council No. 114 and was Associa·
lion State Council in 1948.
The Willing Worlcers of the SL
Paul Uniled Methodist Church of
Tuppers Plains met in the church
social room recently.
BOSTON (AP) - During an
The meeting opened with a average lifetime, a man will
scnpture on prophets by .Glenna remove about 27 1/2 feet of
Sanders, presiden~ and a prayer by whiskers from his face through
Evelyn Spencer.
shaving.
Reports were $iven by Mae
According to shaving industry
Vineyard and Patricta Hall.
researchers, it would take an estiThe group will begin quilting mated 3,350 hours to remove the
again and the y!i_ces for quilting for whiskers. And if the man never
1993 wiU be ~ for full sizes with shaved, lhe beard would be almost
$10 extra for each extra size.
30 feet long.
It was decided the group will
Shaving removes about 65 milassist in making puppets for the ligrams of whiskers daily, or about
upcoming puppet mmistry within a pound of hair every 16 years.
the church.
A birthday card was signed for
Edith Harper, the honorary member
of the group. Others celebrating
special days were Sharon Haus·
man, Glenna Sanders, Edna Har·
moo and Mary Jamison.
The group voled to have a bake
and craft sale Nov. 7.
The program participants were
Edna Harmon, God's Love; Doris
Koenig, Life's Problems; Mae
Vineyard, Diary of Unused Bible;
Glenna Sanders, Fall Promises;
Joanna Weaver, God Gives to Us.
Attending were Rev. Hausman,
Glenna Sanders, Patricia Hall, Beu·
lah Zumbach, Doris Koenig, Edna
Harmon, Mae Vineyard, Mary
Jamison, Evelyn Spencer, Mildred
Caldwell, Hazel Barnhill, Terry
Soulsby, Joanna Weaver and a former member and guest, Bulah
Maxey and Tyler Sanders.
The next meeting will be Oct.
13.
The meeting closed with the
regular circle prayer.

Willing Workers
to host bake sale

Close shaves

Contest

winners
were
IIIIIIOUIICed at lhe recent meeting of
Rock Springs Grange.
· Winners were judged at the
Pomona Gl'lllgc meeting and they
are: Elma Louks, first , afghan;
Kathryn Miller, fust, quilt, wall
hinging and decorated sweat shirL
Other winners were Louise Radfcnl, stuffed lOy; Bunny Kuhl, pil·
lowcascs; and William Radford,
wooden lOy.
lbc pgc endorsed the Ohio
~lion for reclamation of abendoncld mines.
Opal Orueser explaine_d the

Vol. 43, No. 101

Copyrighted 1m

'

POMEROY LODGE
164 F&amp;AM
18·HOLE GOLF
SCRAMBLE
SEPT. 19, 1992

.Ohio Enviropmental Protection
Agency (OEPA) Director Donald
R. Schregardus bas stopped the col·
lection of disttict fees by the six·
county solid waste disttict, accord·
ing to a release from Roben Berger
ofOEPA.
Berger told the Pomeroy Daily
Sentinel Tuesday, the order by
Scbregardus had been finalized and
mailed that afternoon by OEPA
officials and the Athens-GalliaHocking-Jackson-Meigs· Vinton
Solid Waste District office in Wellston had been notified.
When dumping waste in a landfiU, the hauler is charged the land-

TEE·OFF 9:00A.M.
BLIND DUWING SEPT. 18
s3500 Per person

fill fee, as well as the additional
cost of a tipping fee. The disttict
wiU no longer receive monies from
the tipping fees.
Since the AGHJMV district
failed to ratify its so~d waste management plan, OEPA will now
write the plan for the district ,
according to the release.
Ohio law requires a solid waste
plan for each disttictto guide waste
reduction efforts and long-term
management of waste. Under
House Bill 592, local officials must
ratify the plan prior to state
approval. If lhe plan is not ratified,
Ohio EPA must prepare the plan,

the release read. At that stage, the
local district loses the ability to collect fees on wastes disposed in
landftlls within the disttict.
It also loses the ability to adopt
rules governing restrictions-on out·
of-state waste, operation of solid
waste facilities, and inspection of
out-of-state wastes, according to
the release.
"The planning process in this
disttict has caused much conuover·
sy, which could not be resolved
locally," said Schregardus. "It is
important for this disttict to operate
under a comprehensive solid waste
management plan, so Ohio EPA

0
00
1st Prize 5200° 2nd Prize s100

Lunch/Awards Following Scramble
All Pro(eeds Go
Toward
Construdion of A
New Lodge
Building in
Pomeroy

lOIN US FOR OUR

..---Local briefs-----.

OPEN BOUSE
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18
2:30PM_TO 5:30

Theft, vandalism reported

•

PUBIJ:C IS INVITED
•DOOR PRIZES .•REFRESHMENTS
We wlllte raffline aH a Uh Chair, d•ted by
Cantinulty af Care, with • pro•ds going to area ·
Ost011y Group - drawitg DeCIIIIber 13th.

Rutland Couple
• $100 000

are

Accident investigated

~ARE

Miller trial underway

MEDICAL EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES
POMEROY

.

992·2310
,.

I

Dowler predicts Meigs section of
Capital Corridor will be done by '98

\

33091 HILAND RD.

ine the areas of drafting a plan,
making an assessment of the plan,
and seeing what additional information they will need from the dismet office, he added.
A local plan is ratified when.
legislative authorities representing
atleast60 percent of the district's .
population approve the plan. Also,
the release continued, the plan must
be approved by the boards of coun· .
ty commissioners and the legislauve authority of the largest municipality in a majority of counties:
within the distticL
Results revealed previously by:
Continued on page 3
:

,

Program presented

OF

"Even if we do not get to every
county, a copy of lhe the plan will
be put in a location where the public can read it and have some input
on the plan," said Berger.
According to Terri Belville of
the disttict office. as indicated to
her by OEP A official David White,
OEPA wiU hold a staff meeting to
detennine what additional information lhey will need from the district
office in order to go ahead with the
drafting of a plan.
"I will be the primary coordinator for the plan," White said Tuesday afternoon. OEPA officials wiU
ialce 2· 3 weeks to a month to exam·

Lentes said. "But a cooperative attempt to help the people in th81
By BRIAN J. REED
program between the LCCD board ares who are now without service."
Sentinel News Staff
Lentes said that the board is alsO
Efforts have begun between and the township trustees could
three local agencies and various qualify us for funds not now avail- pursuing a cooperative effort
between LCCD and Leax, Gallia
township trustees to improve water able."
"LCCD is real concerned about County Rural Water and Tuppers.
service m west:m Meigs County.
lobo R. Lentes, president of the making sure that past problems are Plains-Chester Water Distrtct to
urn~-?
Meigs County Regional Planning put benind us," Lentes said. "We provide a backup program in the
,: ·
&gt;.,
. .,.
Commission and legal counsel for are working for our existing cus- event of service interruptions.
Continued oa page 3
lli9Z
the Leading Creek Conservancy tomers and, now, are worlting in an
Disttict. reporled today that he and
Economic Development Director
Paula Thacker met on Tuesday
night with trustees and clerics from
Scipio, Salisbury, Salem and Rutland Townships. The purpose of
the meeting, acc~ng to Lentes, is
to set up a multi,wwnsbip commit·
tee, formed to explore funding
nros!raii11.1'1ie
MONEY DONATED TO BOOSTERS • Tbe
sources
for water line extension to
Home National Bank and
pu'r ·
Home National Baak, Racine, and Jay Hall, Jr.
customers
without water service.
chase of tbe 1,025 pound steer at $5 a pound.
donated $1,708.33 to eacb or tbe Meigs County
The
new
committee
will consist of
Here Tom Wolre, second rrom left, or Home
high schoolatbletic boosters associations TuesLentes
and
Thacker,
as well as a
National presents cbecks to Rick Edwards,
day. The money came !"rom the resale of a steer
representative from the county
Meigs Albletlc Director, Sandy Bowen, presi·
at the Meigs County Junior Fair Livestoc:k Sale,
commissioners'
offtee and one rep·
dent of the Eastern Athletic Boosters, and Virgil
owned by Jeremy Buckley. Frank Cremeans,
resentative
from
each township.
Dill, president oft~ Southern Athletic Boosters.
candidate for slate representative, purchased
Lentes
said
that Issue 2 and
the animal at the sale and then returned il for
Famers Home Administration
funds will be among the avenues
that the new committee will
.explore, in an attempt to provide
water service to customers who
have no rural water service, and in
many cases, no wells on their prop·
erty.
"Because of its prior (fmancial)
problems, Leading Creek Conser·
vancy District does not. have a
,,. . .
"This guy called me at 3 a.m.
By JEFF WILSON
Slreets have been cleared of bankroll to fund extensions,"
and said, 'I'm the ftrst one in line," power lines and poles, and there
Associaled Press Writer
LIHUE, Hawaii (AP) - Resi- said Civil Defense spokesman was heavy traffic congestion with
dents separated from family and Glenn Soma. "These guys have people trying to find water,
homes on hurricane-banered Kauai been waiting since Saturday to get propane gas and open markets.
began returning to the island Tucs· there so I don't think it's roo early
Electrical power was expecled
day for their ftrstlook at the devas· for them."'
to be restored in Lihue, Kauai's
Because Lihue Airport's control 'largest town, by Monday, although
tation.
Officials resumed some com- tower is damaged, only daylight officials said full restoration would
A prediction that the Meigs career in highway construction, the-present administration has
mercial flights to the island, where flights are allowed. General avia· take months.
County section of the Capital Cor- was introduced by his administra· shonened that to five to six years.
tion
craft
and
helicopters
are
still
He said that he came out of
limited phone service was restored
lniki struck Friday, flattening rido)" will have traffic moving over live assisumt, George Collins, for·
forbidden.
mer
Meigs
County
treaSurer.
John
retirement
to take his present posiMonday for some of the 52,000
sugar cane fields, battering the its entire length by 1998, was made
Before
the
flights
could
start
tion
in
Division
10 which has nine
residents, and portable generators
island's 70 resort hotels and seri· by John· Dowler, deputy director, Rice, pro$ram chairman, intro·
going
in,
more
than
2,000
stranded
counties with 1700 miles of highously damagi.o.g almost half of Division 10, Ohio Department of duced Collms.
were pumping running water to
tourists had to come out, said stale Kauai's 21,000 homes . Damage . Transportation, (ODOT) at MenThe deputy director, a 1957 ways, 1200 bridges, 15,000 culabout70 percent of it
Electricity remained out, and transportation spokeswoman Mari- has been estimated at $1 billion on
day night's meeting of the Middle- graduate of Ohio University ':"ho verts. and 442 employees.
immediately went to work on htghGene Riggs presided at the
.health officials warned people to lyn Kali.
Kauai alone.
pen-Pomeroy Rotary Club.
"We
would
hope
that
people
meeting.
ways,
said
that
it.uSed
to
be
eight
to
Women of the Heath
bury perishable food and issued
A National Guardsman died in
The Capital Corridor is a pro10
years
between
the
start
of
plan·
who
visit
the
island
have
a
real
United
Methodist
Church served a
instructions on how to build 1rench
an accident on the island late Mon· posed connecting road between
ning
to
construction.
He
said
that
dirmer.
good
reason
for
being
there,"
said
latrines.
day, said Army National Guard Columbus and Charleston, W. Va.
"It's just a Herculean task that Roy Price of the state's Civil Maj. Bud Bowles. It was unclear tf
Dowler said that Gov. George
we're doing," said Thomas Batey, Defense.
the death of Tech . Sgt. Dennis Voinovicb is committed to the phiHomeowners carted trash, tree Dalen, 46, of Honolulu was storm losophy that highway construction
assistant to Kauai Mayor JoAnn
Yukimura. "We've been kind of limbs, palm fronds, and aluminum relaled, authorities said.
can be a tool for industrial and ecoknocked down to our knees and siding to their curbs and slacked
Three people died during the nomic development and that is the
we're crawling up as fast as we rubble in neat piles 6 feet high. weekend, one on Oahu . Coast reason that Route 33-12A is so high
People lined up outside banks, Guard officials suspended the on the current agenda of construe·
can.''
Residents lined up before dawn which reopened Tuesday, and at search for two missing fishennen lion. ·
at Honolulu's airport for the first markets and drugstOreS, and neigh· Monday.
J{e said that ODOT bad given
bors exchanged Iniki stories.
him pennission to select a pan of
flights.
the "bridge connector" route with
the least environmenlal problems
for early construction. That is the
WIDS
'
reason, he said, he selected the
Rock Springs to Five Points secMeigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reporled today that on
A Rolland couple is going to be tion.
Saturday, Ann Cozart of Ponland reporled thai several buUet boles
The complete environmental
$100,000 richer as a result of
were found in her residence. She reporled that she heard shots being
impact
study for the entire route
selecting the right combination of
fued on Thursday night
will
be
compleled
sometime in the
five numbers in Ohio's Buckeye
John Marzoeehi of Carpenter Hill Road reported on Tuesday that
spring
of
1993,
Dowler
reponed,
Five lottery game last Tuesday.
within the last three days, a 1972 Dodge van was taken from his
but
he
said
that
work
will
proceed
Troy and Cathy Willis of the
~~.
on
the
first
section
before
that
New Luna Road
the winners of
impact
statement
is
completed.
the top money paid in the bi-week·
DOwler explained thai one of the
Iy game.
reasons for rebuilding the bridges
However,
the
old
adage
that
Cathy Clifford of Long Bottom n:porled to the Meigs County
"you can't win 'em all" rang uue on Route 33 north is that the old
Sheriff's Department that on Tuesday morning, she struck a deer
for Troy this week on Monday. He bridges could not stand the weight
that ran into the path of her vehicle. Light damage was reporled to
was enroute to his employm~nt in of materials to be brought in for the
the headlight and parlcing light. The deer ran from the scene of the
West Virginia when his vehicle "bri~e connector" construction.
accident, which took place on State Route 2A8.
was involved in a highway accident He satd that the normal life bf a
due to heavy fog. He was treated bridge is SO years but !hat the use
SPEAKER· John Dowler, Deputy Director, Dlvlsloa 10, Olio '
foe injuries 81 Pleasant Valley Hos· of salt in winter on highways bas
shortened the period. He also Department of Transportation, Jiaht, lalked alloat blpwlly wor~ •.
piial in Point Pleasant.
Testimony rrom both Defendant Bill Miller and an alleged rape
Meigs County at Monday •lgbt's meellll£ or t•e Middleport. '··
Mr. and Mrs. Willis are expect· blamed salt for the joint damage In
victim was beard when the fust day of'Miller' s jury trial got under·
Pomeroy
Rolary Club. He Is pictured here wltb bls admlnlstrallve •
ing to receive their prize money necessitating repairs on hig~way~.
Continued on paae 3
assislant,
George Collins, lel"t, and Gene Rigs, Rotary presldeat. ,'':;
Dowler who bas ~I 'Ius enure
within lhe next cOuple of weeks.
'

Kauai residents return
Home; tourists leave

~ONTINUITY

will now step in and draft a plan."
There is no time frame, however, on how long it will tak'e OEPA
to draft a plan, according to Berger.
"We (OEPA) will be using the
district's current plan to draft
another plan," said Berger.
Once OEPA drafts a plan, said
Berger, it will hold public comment
meetings and hearings, as weU as a
30 day period to allow citizens to
voice or write their opinions.
Whether or not OEPA will hold
hearings and public comment ses·
sions in every county of the solid
waste district, has not yet been
de1ennined.

Committee formed to
explore water extension

DOOR PRIZES:

Contad:
Meigs Co. Golf Oub
992-6312
or send $35.00 per
person
larry Th011as
33080 Badey Run Rd.
Pomeroy, 0~. 45769

2 Sectlona, 14 P1gea 25 cent•
A lluldmodlo Inc. Newape...,.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 16,1992

OEPA orders halt on district collection fees

AMBER and MEGAN TRIPP

33091 HILAND ROAD

chemical labeling issue which vot· Grani!C were made for ''Operation·
eQ will decide in November.
Baby whicb the nationaf ~ge
The £range COnJratulated the has endoncd for hurricane VICtims.
senior and junior fau boards for a
Pat Holter presented an article
good faii year.
for the ~liD on flrC tilts. Opal
Rock s~ placed second for Gruescr discuned ladder safety.
their exhibit at the fair and thanked Roy Holt« spoke on hand talking.
all who had auisled in the project.
Bunnb!;bl presented A Friend
Bunny ICuhl, newly elected lee· NC1t
and jokes were shared
turer, ootlincd some propams for · ~~ah Caldwell and Kathryn
the comin' pgc year. An open
meeting will be held Nov. 12 and
Cards have been at to Mr, and
slides of all churches in Meigs ~ Cblrle8 Aldridge, Ada Holter
County will be shown by Rev. and Kadlryn Miller
William Middleswarth.
Refreshments were served by .
Conttibutions to Florida Slate Janice Weber and Sarah Caldwell.

Low tonight In mid-60s.
Tbursday, sunny. High In mid·
80s.

•

AT OUR NEW LOCATION AT

Rock Springs Grange names winners

Pick 3:
732
Pick 4:
1441
Buckeye 5:
1-3-19-21-26

Page4

YOU'RE INVITED TO OUR

A candlelight program was pie.
sent by JoAnn Francis at the
September meeting of lhe SL Paul
United Methodist Women. The
theme was "Children with Aids."
Others panici~ating in the pro·
gram ·were Elue Culley, Rev .
Sharon Hausman, Connie Rankin,
Joanna Wcavcr and Betty Cheva·
lier. The group is streSsing Project
Children for the Season.
Betty Chevalier presided at the
meeting. The pledse and objectives
were read by the~·
.
A $50 donauon was made to
assist Hurricane Andrew victims in
Florida. Another donation was
made to Blankel Sunday.
The October meeting will be at
the church and lhe group will ceJe.
brale World Thank Yoo with Elaic
Culley leading. Connie Rankin and
Joanna Weaver will host the group.

Ohio Lottery

Reds keep
home jinx
·over Braves

'•

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