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                  <text>Page 08 Sunday llmel Sentinel

Pomeroy--Middleport-GeiHpolle, OH Point Plelunt, WV

October 18, 1992

NEW YORK (AP) ..:.... Along a would come or could come," said
busy passageway on the New York Donald B. Marron, chairman of the
Stock Exchange floor, brokers race PaineWebber Inc. brokerage. "We
to lr8ding booths and messengers now know what happened. There
deliver sandwiches~ They seldom was an adjustment, but things
·llQiice the telephCJIIC on the wall in moved on. It lut!led out very constructively in the ellif,"
' the box with the lock.
The crash ended a five-year
On it, two dozen numbers are
programmed for ~-dialing. Just surse that had tarried the Dow
touch a key to dial "Jim B." or Jones av~e of 30 big stoclcs to
"Rich B." - James A. Baker ill, an ·all-time high of 2,722 in August
,. the president' S· right-hand man, and 1987. S\)Curities fU11ls ~fattened
· Richard Breeden, chairman of the staffs to meet seemingly 'insatiable '
S.ccurities and Exchange Commis- investor demand. Hostile takeovers
sion.
were 'the fl.l(e.
Next to the phone is the "Hoot
'n ' Holler" line connecting the
: floors of the New York exchanges
and .Chicago futures pits. Over. head, 25 multicolored computer
screens monitor every inch of flcxr
WASHINGTON (AP) : operations, like a nuclear power DOzens of lawmakers have written
p'Iant control ro6m.
the Bush administration to warn
Big Board officials are proud of that the North American Free
"The Ramp," as the area is ·Trade Agreement could ruin or
lcnown. The VIP hot lines and high seriously damage the domestic
technology reflect a commitment to sugar industry.
· crisis management and computeri·
. Unless th.e sugar provisions are
• zation. But their mere existence rewritten, lawmakers saY. Mexico
. reflects something else: Black would have virtually unlimited
Mon&lt;!ay.
access to the U.S. market by 2000,
Five years ago, on Monday, Oct. displacing sugar grown by U.S.
19, 1987, the stock market crashed. farmers or supplied by 39 other
The Dow Jones industrial average nations, some with frllgile
• fell more than anyone imagined economies.
. possible: 508 points in one panic"If passed in its present form,
· driven day lhat brought the nation's the NAFTA would cause the ruin
financial system to the brink of ool- or the U.S. sugar industry. It is,
·lapse.
. .
therefore, vital that modifications
The unprecedented 22.(i percent be made in the provisions on
• drop replaced a raging bull market sugar," according to a letter to ·
with a securities industry recession, U.S. Trade Represenlative Carla
. frightening away hordes of individ- HiUs signed by 85 Republican and
ual investors. The 600 million Democralic·members of the.House.
. shares traded that day stretched
In a sepanuc letter 10 Hills and
market capacity. like an overinflat- Agric,lture Secretary .Edward
.. ed balloon. Sophisticated strategies Madigan, 30 senators issued a simi. thou,\lht to be safe only worsened Jar warning.
·the dive.
The agr,e.ement, the senators
At the time, Black Monday was said, could cause "serious damage
· :Compared to the Crash of 1929 to the U.S. sugllf industry.... Fail·:before the Great Depression, but it ore to make these changes 10 the
:ilas proved far less apocalyptic. To sugar section of the igreement
·be sure, thousands of people lost could jeopardize Senate approval
:Jots of money - the value of the of NAFTA."
:·-nation's stocks decreased. by Sl
Unde!' the law, Bush cannot sign
·:aillioo over four days- but there the agreement until Dec. 17.
'nave been few lasting negative Congress is not expected to vote on
:~ffects and many positive reforms the pact until nexiSummer.
1hat have helped make Wall Street .
During, the fii'St six years after
-somewhat saler today.
ratification, Mexico's duty-free
: "For the industry and the coun- access to the U.S. sugar market
try, here was a test everybody said would increase from the current
quota of 7,258 metric IOns annually
.
·
10zs.oootons.
·
.
• • • Continued frOm D· 1

L.awmakers
question issue

-IBM

.. .

low-fare carriers and the recession;
TICKER:
· General Motors Corp. is trying The U.S. trade deficit worsened
io work out a deal with the United drarnaaically in August as exports
i'\uto. Workers to prompt employ- suffered their biggoSl setback in
ees to leave without resorting to five yea,~: Brltllb Cu.l lt8id It wiU
, more layoffs. Meanwhile, OM close 60 perceil! of its mines and
Cbairman Robert Stempel was·hos- lay off 30,000 miners; Philip Mor·
pitalized several days after suffer- ris said smokers are shifting to
lllg an attack blamed on high blood cheaper brands, causins its thirdpressure. His illness ~ame as quarter profit to rise . less than
reports indicated he is under expected and sending its stock
increasing pressure from GM' s pnce sliding; Apple Computer
provided the one bright spot among
board Ui turn the company around;
American Airlines 8ai4 it will lay technolDgy earnings reports, saying
off up to I ,000 employees to cut its quarterly profit climbed 20 percosts as it contends with upstart cent.
PARKERSBURG LIVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
Mineral Wells, WV
October 10,1992
STOCK STEERS:
300-under
55.00-110.00
300-500
S7.50-92.00
S00-700 .
53.50-79.50
ll()(),over
49.50-76.50
STOCK HEIFERS:
300-under
51.00.86.00
300-500
. 53.50-85.00
S00-700
51.25-82.00
800-over
36.50-62.50
STOCK BULLS:
300-under
48.50-96.00
300-500
53.7S·91.50
500-700
51.00.85.50
Slaughter Bulls
50.00-60.00
Cows &amp; Calves BH
390.00-952.00
Bred Cows By#
31.00.70.00
BredCowsBH
290.00-717.00
Slaughter Cows:
High Dressing
42.0045.75'
Utility
36.0042.00
Canner &amp; Cutter
20.00-36.00

After the emil, mergers dried
up. Wa)l StnletiOA money in 1990
rot the fii'Sl time in 17 ycm. Two
big rums ~history- Thorn·
son McKinnon Inc. went out of
business and B.F. Hutton &amp;. Co.
was boughi by Shearson Lehm_an
Bros. Scores of smaller outfits
closed.
But the crash did not induce a
market melldown or an economic
depression. in IS months, the Dow
average exceeded its pre-crash
level of 2,2A6. This June 1, It hit a
record 3,413 - nearly double the
post-crash low. Firms eliminated
more than 50,000 jobs, CUI expenses and refocused business lines.
Wall Street posted record profits ,

liSt year.
Individual investors appear
more cautlo111, u retlccted by an
explosio!l in mutllll funds, which
Spreld risk by inveaina iJ1. groupc
of stocks. Reaulators have tight~
ened overs~~ying increased
attentioniO
capital levels.
But the most substantive
changes have been regulatory and
operational ones, designed to pre.. ·
vent another market ealamity and
10 coordilllle official response dur·
ing a crisis. The NYSE:s high-tech .
monitors and hot lines, for
instance, were installed in 1988.
The proliferation of powerful,
high-speed computers means
exchanges ~process more orders

than before.. TJie Securities Indus-

Southern
defeats
Eastern

executive John McQuade . said .
"We said, 'Let's get on 10 the next
Javel, pron10. " '
Delays in processing trlldes on
the exchange floor created backJogs during the crash. Specialists
- the intermediaries who monitor
trading flow, buying and sel~ng to
correct imbalances - were overwhelmed and undercapitalized.

try Automation Corp., which handlos nearly all the nation 's .stock

and bond trading or setdement. has
i~ ·on~cr processing capacity
about 7~ percent.
Big Board computers have been
tested 10 handle 1.06 billion shares
in dally trading, nearly double the
crash level. Be{ore then, offiCials
thought the system's limit was
about 450 million shares. ·
.The crash led SIAC, owned by
the NYSE and American Stock
Exchange, to hasten capacity
expansion, which has tripled .in the
last 10 years.
"The reality of October 1987 is
we accelerated thin~," SIAC chief

.

MEIGS COUNTY REPUBUCAN

EXECVTIVE COMMITTEE
FAU CAMPAIGN DINNER

Wednescta,-, October az, Z99a
l!'.utenl Bllh l±ool, R 7

lool•1 Boar 6cJO to 7 PM
Dbuler WI ted . . . . .~ at 7 PM
An Evening of Good Food and
Good Republican Fellowahlp
See and hear your cancldatta. ·
TlcUts available from Republican County otrlceholclerw,
canclldatea, or at the Republican Headq•rters
P•d by llelgo Co. Rop,.llcln Exoouln Cononlll , ,_. a..n1,
. CIWnuil, 111 L TIIInl, lid II •• 1, OH. 417111

I

. 758
Pick 4:
'0948
Super Lotto:

JJt·"'
.; ' .~;;·. ~~
. ' ·'':"'...
-~.·-~
·"·

I ' • ...... .
I

~ ::

•

.

.

•: • .' . "r

." .
'

•,• i

• !

7-8-26-36-42-46

Kicker:
645861

Low toaltlbtln 301. Tunday,
cloudy. HIJib In upper SO..

Today: nearly all NYSE orders
are registered on e)ei:tronic ''order
books" that have eliminated much
of the paperwork on the floor. The
system enables spec~ 10 calculate quickly an equilibrium price
for a stock, a cntical function
before the opening beU.

. -,

1 Section, 12
A Muldmedla

October 19, 1992

Probe reveals waste
by feder-al government
,.• .IIIPBIIS YIUI

•

0

1992 PONnAC
GRAND PRIX SEDANS

1991 PONnAC

P. wind., cassettea, loaded,
4to chooae from.

4 To ChQOBI From.
GM Progtam C.rs.

Fro~ 121900'

•a·99o
. I

'61788

19921UICI.
CENTURY SEDAN

1991 FORD RANGER
XLT SUPER CAl

1917 IUICI
PIII .AR. ·

Air, CISIIttt, 11111g whHis,
5 apeed, burgundy.

$1- 1900~":
I

. Marlin blue with contraatll)g vinyl top, loldld.
Sharp I

'81990

•51990

1·9.92 NllftAC
IONIIEVILLE

1991 CUVROLET
510 PICKUP

19111UICI
. CENTURY

13,000 miiH, cassette, 5
speed, local owner.

48,000 mllee, CISSib,
local banbr's tracla.

$151990

$61990

•51495

1991 OLDS
cunus SUPREME

19921UICK
SJ(YLARI

1919 POinAC
GUNDPRIX

Tudor, 17,000 miles, red.
Load9d.

P. wlnciOWI, V6 engine,
burgundy.

While, loecled, WI aold It
neW. Shlrp.

$101900

'11;900

•6,995

GUN~IMS

P. wlndowa, 6 cyl., stereo.
5 to chooae from.
•

'

local
White,
lmmacullde.

0

White, 11 ,000 mllaa.
Ortg. $21 ,128 .
SALE PRICE

1

lti.I IIICI
USAIRE
owner,

APPRECIATION DINNER • "We had a
super fair, and the credit goes to you", said Dan
Smith, president of the Meigs County Fair
Board, at Friday night's appreciation dinner
held at Sebastian's In Parkersburg, W. Va.

1990 GEO
PIliM

White, air, ituto., cute 1m1e
car, lady owned.

Air, 35,000 mllea. Expect
the best.
·

$71990

'6,990

. $5,490

1992 BUICK
RIVIEU

1919 POiftAC
FOIMUU

PICI UP YOUR GM
CUDnCAID
APPUCinON Hill. '·

White, 1,000 mllaa, factory
official car.

42,0QO miles, loaded, lady
driven.
'

$191990
.

•a,990

sold

'

.

-

1992 PONftAC!
GUND AM SEDANS

1916 CHEVROLET
CAPRICE

Air, tilt, CNIH, ate,.,.
5to chooH from.

52,000 mll11, local owner,
worth checking Into.

•6,490

$111900
0

SUIDAY SHOPPIIS
WILCOMI,
Ill

c•

··110-.
IUY IIOIDAY
.WIIILL .

•110 WOUY cw•
IIUIICI OF FICIOIY
WIIUIITY PLUI
GOIUIITID n lSI

'

.900 EASHRI AVENUE
·GALLIPOLIS, 01.10

.•

.

CIIDIT

.

"38 Yea? Sel'11ing the Mid-Ohio Valley"

C46·2212

,.
•

Seat belt law penalty will
be enforced after Nov. IS

-19161UiCI
LESIIU

110 MOllET DOWII
WITH APPIOYID

EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) failed while trying to rnise the com- very winnable."
Still, aides promised Bush
President Bush, Bill Clinton and fort level of those who reluctantly
would be more aggressive than in
Ross Perot close their debate triple- are backing his candidacy.
header tonight with the pressure · "I'd just like the American peo· the fii'St two debates, but they consquarely on Bush 10 chop Clinton's pie to know that I care very deeply ceded that the president needed to
lead. But the president faces an · 'about these things that I've been walk a fine line between drawing
accompanying risk that any strident tallcing about for a year and that I . contrasts with Clin10n and appear·
auaclcs could backf'lre.
believe they can make a differ- ing too eager 10 attack.
"It.can look desperate," said an_
The three candidates meet for 90 ence,!' the Arkansas governor said
minutes tonight at Michi~an State in Ypsilanti, where he spent the administration official who spoke
on condition of anonymity. This
University, their presidential debate weekend preparing for the debate.
The slakes- .were far higher for offJCial ,said Bush would argue ihat
. fin!'lc arid the tpn~-setter for the
two-week dash 10 Election Day.
Bush ·as ht iried ·to extend the a Clinton presidency and a Demo"I'm just going 10 answer the Republican grip ·on the. White cratic·Congress would send taxes
questions ," · a confident Clinton House to 16 years. Trailing Clinton and spending out of control "as
said Sunday ~fore staging mock in national polls and in most of the well as the need for strong characdebates with advisers. "I believe if big electoral battlegrounds, the ter in the Oval Off'lce.... He has to
we make the changes that I'm president needs 10 mount a historic hit tliose themes very strongly, but
advocating, it will really build this comeback· if he is to win a second no1 in a shrill or desperate way.
He's got to get people to stDp
country enormously." ·
term.
As the front-runner, Clinton's
"I don'tthink it is going to take before they close the deal with
goal was little changed from the a bombshell," Bush campaign Clinton."
Perot entered the final debate
. first two debates: press his case that manager Fred Malek said Sunday.
Bush's economic appm&amp;ch has "We think this election is very, running a distant third in national
polls, conducting his independent
campaign through the debates and
a series of network television ad
buys in~tead of traditional personal
appearances.
·
''I think the American. people
need 10 be looking for change. Anu
Beginning Nov. 12 it will be that in the couns, the fine will be there's only one method of J~ettinl(
change and that's to take both of
more expensive to ride unbuckled, mandatory.
Figures show that since 1986 these parties out of circulation for
according to Charles D. Shipley,
when Ohio's safety belt law was the time being and let's get someOhio's Highway Safety Director. .
body who will address problems,"
"Make This an Automatic Habit passed, niore than 540,000 people
...Or It's an Automatic Fine" is the have waived the fine by VIewmg Perot coordinator Orson Swindle
said on CNN's "Newsmaker Suncampaign slo~an to announce the the film.
new changes m Ohio's safety bell
"Educational programs, such as day." ...
Bush, who was flying to Michithe safety belt film, have helped
law.
"Drivers who ·choose 10 ignore Ohio reach the current 53 percent gan today, sraged mock debates in
the law, and the slatistics on the belt use rate, but to reach a higher Washington on Sunday as his camlife-saving value of safety belt use rate of compliance we must com· paign tried to shake the air of ·
and still do not buckle up will after bine increased law enforcement inevitability settling over a race
Nov·. 15 have to pay $25, while efforts with public awareness activ· Clinton has led since July.
But even as they insisted there
other front seat passengers will ities," said Shipley.
was time to tum the race around,
have to pay $15 along with the .
The increased funds \viii enable
many Bush advisers conceded pricourt costs," according to Shipley.
the Department of Highway Safety
vately the Ddds were long, a sentiThe last date for seeing the safe- to increase its public awareness and
ment voiced repeatedly by aca&lt;Y belt film in lieu of paying the law enforcement activities to help
fine will be Nov. 14 in Meigs Ohio reach the goal of 70 percent demics and analysts from both parCounty. All film sites, includi.ng safety belt compliance, which in
ties.
.
"By the middle of October,
the one at Pomeroy Village Hall tum will help save more li ves on
most people have made up their
operated by Eric Chambers, will be our fOa\(ways.
minds," said Benjamin Page, a
eliminated in Ohio which means
Norlhwestem University professor
who studies pubtlc opinion.
~

I

1991 GEO
CONVERTIBLE

62,000 mJIM, loCal, It new. Nlcel .

Attending were members of the fair board, their
guests, and others whq contributed signi6cantly
to the success or the six·day event. The 1992 fair
had a record attendance.

Final presidential debate sla!ed tonight

• . J..

13 killed on Ohio roads

Everson, 21, of Alliance, in a two· Sy The Associated Press
car
collision on U.S. 62 in MahonTraffic accidents in Ohio over
ing
County.
.
the week.end claimed 13 lives,
CANTON
-John
C.
O'Conincluding those of ~wo high school
nell,
88,
hometown
not
available,
teens whose car slammed into a
in an accident on U.S. 62.
tree after they left a homecoming
RAVENNA Terri T.
dance, the State Highway Patrol
said.
.
Kudravy, 17 , and Carolyn S.
The patrol counted traffic fatali- Greene, 15, both of Garrettsville,
ties from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight when their car ran off a Portage
Sunday.
County road.
FAYETI'EVILLE - Eugene S.
The dead:
SUNDAY
Keith, 53, of Milford, in a oneELYRlA- Audrey A. Olmslelld, vehicle accident on U.S. SO.
MARION - Mathew Rogers,
64, of Elyria, when her car was
struck by a train at a railroad cross- 11' or Marion, passenger in a car in
a two-vehicle crash on a Marion
ing in Elyria. .
. CLEVELAND - Marc M. County road.
Franz, 35, of Cleveland;n a motor· . LARUE - Shawna D. Harris,
IS, of Galion, passenger in a one·
'~ycle accident.
' FEUCITY- Mary J. King,31, car crash on Ohio 37 in Marion
of Felicity, in a one-vehicle acci- County.
CLEVELAND - Anna M.
dent on Ohio 756 in Clermont
Zielinski, 84. No other d~tails
County.
FINDLAY- Jeffrey A. Alge, available.
33, of Mount Blanchard, passenger FRIJ)AY NlGHT
ST. CLAIRSVILLE - Stephen
in a truck that crashed on a Han.
·L. Bowman, 30, of Bridgeport, in a
cotk County ~d
crash on U.S. 40 in Belmont CounSATURDAY
YOUNGSTOWN - Clay 1. ty.
'

'

P!ck 3: ·

Page7

VEAL:

Choice
81.00-86.00
Medium
76.00:81.50
Good
67.00.76.00
LAMBS :
Ewes
15.00-23.00
Feeders
44.00.54.SO
Baby Calves BH
25.00-150.00
HORSEScwt
21.0045.00
Ponies
168.00
HOGS:
200-250
32.00.34.50
' ':..,.
300-500
20.00.32.50
Male Hogs
24.50
Pigs
5.00-17.00
Goats
28.00.59.00
Harvest Moo11'C w Classic Sale - Frida OcL 16 7:30 .m. .

· Ohio Lottery

.

Five years later: Post-crash· reforms change financial markets

•

'

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - A program that compensates injured fed-.
era! employees is loaded with
waste and fraud, but Congress has
shown little inclination to change
it, according 10 a newspaper report.
The Dayton Daily News report.ed in a copyright story today that
up to one-third of the S1.24 billion
that will go to former injured federal workers this year may be wasted.
The newspaper's estimate was
based on an examination of federal
audit reports and interviews with
federal auditors and investigators.
"If the public only lcnew about
some of this stuff, they'd gD nuts,"
said R. Michael Smyth, an investigator for ihe U.S. Postal Service in
.Cincinnati. "Sometimes you wonder why you bother."
The Federal Employees' Compensation Act pays workers' medi·
cal bills and up to 75 percent of
their former salaries tax·rfee when

they're injured . The newspaper
cited cases of former federal
employees receivil)g lucrative
injury compensation even though
they were in jail or able to play
golf.
Government watehdogs repeat·
edly have tried 10 get Congress to
cut off funds to convicted former
employees, but couldn't find anyone who wDuld sponsor such a bill.
Congress finally will consider the
matter next yeat.
·
"This is not a spicy issue for a
congressman because what they
would be doing is laking money
away from their constituents," said
Norman Zigrossi, former inspeciOr
general for the Tennessee Valley
Authority. "Why would they want
to back lhat?"
Larry Rogers, who oversees the
workers' compensation fund for the
Departme-nt of Labor, ·believes
there is little fraud in the fund. He

pointed out that the program's benefits to emplDyees are intended 10
discourage costly lawsuits.
.
The program's regulations pro'hibit government investigato~s
from testifying at hearings unless
employees request it. As a result,
evidence that a worker should be
denied benefits might not be
allowed.
~.
Also, the law allows employees
to choose the doctor that will sutistantiate their injury claims. ·
:
" Ail it lakes is ·an employee
saying they're injured and fmdinglt
dociOr who will support that," .said
George T. Prosser, a TVA investigator.
: ·
"It's written in such a way t1uQ;
it's very easily laken advanlage
of," Smyth said. "Employeei
don't tell the truth about their
injury or the extent of their injury.
And a physician, in many casci,
will take the employee's word." :.

Meigs Mines are among
Strickland's industrial visits
As part of a tour of Southeastern
Qhio industries, Democratic Congressional Candidate Ted Strickland toured the Southern Ohio Coal
Company' s Meigs Division last
week.
During his tour of Meigs Mine
2, Strickland discussed miners'
concerns about their jobs and told
them of his agenda 10 create jobs.
According to Strickland, one
miner expressed great cynicism
about the way things get ~one in
Washington and asked why the
striker replacement bill hadn't been
passed yet.
"I've never been in Congress
before," Strickland said, "but you
can bet once I get there, I'll never
vote to take away your right to
strike. " Another asked about gun
control, and Strickland said he
reassured the miner that .he would
never vote in favor of it.

.•
•

"I wanted. to experience a little aruilogy to his own upbringing in a
of what it feels like to work deep in steel mill family where "a strong
the mines every day," Strickland work,ethic was always evident."
said. "I was struck by the openness
"What they want is a cpngressof the miners and the concerns they man who will work hard' to help
had about holding their jobs and them keep their jobs," he said.
supporting their families. They also
The VISit is one of a number of
seemed-orelieved that I support 1 visits which Strickland is ma)dng
national health care system that is to manufacturing and mining cenmore lhan a tax break for big busi- ters throughout the Sixth Congrcs. sional District. Last week, he also
nesses."
"Miners know more than any- visited the workers at the Koppenbody that the dangers in their work heimer .trousers factory, and the
requires them to have adequate EIICem Metals plant
health care covera~e for themselves • "In every plant I visited, I found
and their families,' Strickland said. hatd-working people concerned
Strickland also commented that about jobs and about health care,"
many of the miners have worked Strickland said. "Our government
down in the mines for decades and is failing them. The greateSt pledge
represent "the very best of the . that I can make to Ohio's working
families during my flfst two years
American worker."
"Miners have a strong commit· in Congress is to create jobs and to
ment to work:
'Jy and commu- help pass a national health care
nitv." Strickland 'd, making the package."

3,500 left homeless after earthquake
BOGOTA, Colombia {AP)Buming rock and scalding muil
rained on a village where people
were bathing in hot springs when
an earthquake struck. The mayor
said today that two people died and
four were missing.
The sheriff.of another town lhat
was cut off by Sunday's quake
reported today that 90 ~rcent of
the dwellings in his village had
been destroyed, forcing 3,500 people to shelter in .tents.
The quake was the second to
strike Colombia in two days. Two
people were reported \lead in other
villages and a total of about 75
were injured.
Alt!l&lt;&gt;ugh the temblor was measured at 7.2 on the Richter scale by
the U.S. Geological Survey- a
potentially devasrating magnitude
- th~re were no reports of
widesp~ dam{lge or casualties.
A quake registering 6.6 on Sat-

urday leveled much of the town of
Murindo, 90 miles northwest of
Bogota, but no deaths were reported.

About 70 miles south, in the
town of Vajira, nearly all the
dwellings were destroyed or damaged by the earthQuake but no one
was ltilled, Sheriff Alberto Zulaga
told RCN radio
He said all
•mt SOD of the town s 4,00Q..residents were living in tents artd shelters improvised from plastic and
other materials.
.

State Gov . Juan Gomez said
today that nearly all of Murindo's
adobe, tin-roofed shacks ·that survived Saturday's quake collapsed
Sunday. He said the town's 5,000
residents were being helped to
move to other toWns.
Zulaga said boiling mud was
During Sunday's quake, molton
rock, steam and scalding mud seeping from cracks in the earth
spewed from Cacaqual Mountain caused by the quake.
· Many of the victims at San
onto San Pedro de Uraba. a town of
2,500 people about 125 miles Pedro de Uraba were bathing in
thermal pools at the base of
northwest or Bogota.
.
Mayor Alcides Caballero told Cacaqual Mountain.
Although local people refer to
the Caracol radio network tDday
that two people were confirmed the 1,SOO-foot mounlam as a voldead, including one wDman cano, a scientist at the Cali Seismoeqgulfed by a 9-foot-deep fiDw of logical Institute, Hans Meyer, said
scalding mud: He said fQur people today that the mud flow wiiS caused
were missing and 37 injured, most by the liquification of sandy soil by
with second-degree burns.
superbot, undergrownd water. .

todar.

•

. QUEEN CROWNED - Stephanie Otto was crowned Easterli
High School's 1991 Homecoming Queen. on Saturday night. Pic·
tured is the Homecoming Court, front 1-r, Chelsea Young, Rower
girl; KenneJb Amsbary, crown bea~er; Chad Grlmtb, senior
escort; Tracy Murphy, quee11 candidate; Queen Stephanie Otto
anll escort Chris Carleton; qljeen candidate Heather Farley and
escort Davi!l Woolard; flower girl J~ica Kehl and crown !learer
Tyler Winebrenner; and 1991 Homecoming Queen Lisa Golden.
~,

'

\

.

' Back row, l:rlriKeill BaileY and Bnndon Buckley, ·...,ventb ·
·grade; Susan Brewer aad VIc Vau Meter, sopllomores; Amber '
Well and PhUip Mardnko, juniors; Jeanlfer Mora and Eric Hoi·
Jon, freshmen; Patsy Aelker and ~at Aelker, eighth grade; and
PhUip Woodl, escort for 1991 queen Lisa Golden. Pictured croWD·
lng Stephanie Is Eastern's ftrst llomecomlng queen, Janice Weber,
and her hu&amp;baad/~ort, Steve We~er. Both are teadlen at East·
em Hiah School.
"'
·

�•

Monday, October 19,1992

r

-:Comm.entary
The Daily Sentinel

Monda~October19,1992

•

Tuesday, Oct.lO

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein .

~

conditions and high

forecast for

DEA needs to keep a tidier shop
~e yarns go,

Warmer temperatures forecast later in week

OHIO Weather

MICH.

WASHINGTON -:- As espi. employees used obvious passwmls , agents to monitor suspected drug
the SIOry unfolding
like "DEA," or shared passwords, traffiCker's telephone calls. It was
ins1de the Drug Enforcement
or even worse, left passwords taped located in a room with a broken
Adminisuation borrows more
lock on the door. The password to
ti&gt; computer terminals.
heavily from the slap-stick llfltics
DEA's assislant administrator of the system and instructions on how
of the Pink Panther' s Insj)cctor
the Intelligence Division, David to retrieve information had been
.. : ....,..:.. .;..,,
...... •~
.......
Clouseau than an Ian Fleming
Westrate, defends his agency's 'e"• !.•.u- .t'_,"'-""
._..,.
..._.. "'
,.. •,...'"•"'
.,. c""-·
v•••
novel.
J~ecurity systems. "DEA is not puter. The name and phone number
, Congressional investigl\tors li!'C tive criminal investigative data leaking infonn~ltion," be recently of a diug suspect was actually
ROBERT L. WINGETT
fmding that some or DEA's most from the DEA's own da~base, told a congressional panel. "Our taped to the computer screen.
sensitive i:omputer secrets could-be Narcotics and Dangerous Drug investigations have not been comPublisher
"No agency should
the risk
at.risk - not from higMech hack· . Information System, or NAD[)IS, promised, nor is there any evidence of having an agent or informant
ers or black-bag jobs, but just sim· and admitted to unlawfuUy disclos- to show that lives have been endan- killed as a rC811lt of slojlpy com~­
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEHEAD
pte sloppiness. .
ing the inforniation to a drug traf: gered as a result of computer infor- er security practices," Wise !Old
General Manager
Assistant Publisher/Controller
In one case, a sensitive docu- ficker under investigation by 'the mation leaks."
.
.
our rqJOrter Paul Zimmerman. .
ment was found lying unattended agency. DEA was told that the sus·
QUAYLE WATCH- Vice
Rep.
RobertWise
Jr.,
D-W.Va.,
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less thon 300 .
in a.FAX lDliChinc tray in a regionPresideni
Dan Quayle, who has
chairman
of
the
House
subCommitwolds. All letters 110 subject to editing . and must be Signed with name,
al DEA office. It had been trans- pected drug trafficker bad paid the tee on government information, been brandinjl Sen. AI Gore, Daddress and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
mitted. from a foreign country, and cornmunicatioas ~uipmcnt operaexple&amp;sed his growing concern in a Tenn., an cnvuonmental e~tref!!ist
tor for the informliiiOn.
81
1
· ·•:·...;•;:bo:;:•;::ld:.;be::.,:in:.,:good:::;;,;w;;;;;;te;.
, ad;;;;;;dre;.;,ss;;,;;.in,:.g,;,iss.•.es.;.,."".perso:....-"
ollisclosed the name and Socipl
- A foreign service national leiter to Auomcy General William for his position on global warrnmg,
· "!
"Security number of an undercover working in a DEA foreign office Barr earlier this year:
sounded the alarm on the earth's
ozone layer years before his rival's
"lam
troubled
by
DEA
's
careDEA
working
overseas,
as was granted unauthorized icc:ess to
well asagent
details
of an ongoing
DEA
controversilil
book, "Earth in the
lessness
in
handling
the
security
of
the NADDIS system and obtained
•. ·
operation.
classified
information
.
...
In
fact,
it
Balance."
sensitive criminal information over
This and other examples rurned a two- to line-year perio1 in viola· reflects a level of casualness which
In .a letter we obtained, thenjs
not
acceptable
for
a
profession.!!~
Sen.
Qllliyle wrote the Environ·
lion of DEA policy.
· .
federal
agency,
and
particularly
·
mental
Protection Agency on June
- A conuactor data analyst
:::
By MARC RICE
gressionaltnvestigators, revealing accessed scnsitive NADDIS invcs· one which is involved in the dan- 10, 1987, to e~press his concern
;.;
AP BusineSs Writer
sometimes gaping holes in· the tigalive information outside of her gerous business of fighting the · that a toxic dry-cleaning chemical
was about to be shiftecUrom a
:; ATI.ANTA _Developing a battery good enough II? ~alee electri~- security systems of the front-line official duties. Specifically, the nation's war on drugs."
In
one
of
the
most
egre,ious
"possible carcinogen" to a "prob: j;,owered cars a commercial reality has become one utihty company s agency in the war on drugs. Other analyst obtained sensitive infonna·
security
lapses,
congresuonal
able
carcinogen."
·
tion on a pending investigation or
•ilriving ambition.
.
.
. .
.
examples include:
investigators
fouml
a
computer
sysQuayle
wrote:
"
...
the
only
:~: "The remaining barrier to widespread cons.~me~ use of electric ve~t- A DEA communications an individual she was dating.
tem
that
contained
data
used
by
other
v1abie
solvents
available
to
- In some instances, DEA
:Cjcs is improving lhe technology of the battery, s~d Gale IQappa, seruor equipment operator obtained sensidry
cleaners
are
chlorofluorocar' Joice president for mad::eung at Atlanta-based Geo~m Power.Co. .
.
bons, which have been implicated
~-: "We're on the verge of a whole new chapter m, automollve _his!ory m
in the depletion of the Earih's
; ihis country, and I think befor,e l998 yo~ re gmng to see stgmficant
ozone
layer," During this cam, )dvanccs in battery technology. Klappa S81d. .
.
. .
paign,
however, Quayle has
••· Nearly every major automobile manufacturer IS working on des1grung
.
tidiculed
Gore's warnings about
:i(,me form of battery-powered car, an effort spurred partly by tougher
global
warming,
.predicting that
: )chicle emi$siol\s laws.
.
. h
Gore's
solutions
will wipe out
••. But the batteries for such cars remain big and unw1eldy,,talcing ours ·
American jobs.
:.!i, recharge. Georgia Power is considered one of the leaders m research
Last sprin~. Quayle QPPOSed the
:Jiin!ed at building a better battery.
·
global
warrnmg treaty that was set
•• • For electric utilities, much is at stake.
· · .:
. :
•
to
be
signed,
by saying: " ... we
::: "When you look at _our markets, th.e only m~ket electnc1ty doesn t
simply
cannot
abdicate our
;fiave a major presence m IS transportauon. So 1t s a natural growth area
soverei,gnty and our decisions to
· tor us, " Klappa said.
.
..
some tnternational body that
:-; The compa.ny is counung on electnclly sal~ re!~':ed to battery-powdoesn't like the fact that the United
;~ cars .to "be a major contributor to our earmngs m 20 years, Klappa
States is a prosperous and wealthy
•said.
. Power m
. the long ron and'11 shows .ores1g
r
' h"
country."
:-:
"This will help Georgia
t;
Although Quayle cited concern
•i~Ud Gary F. Hovis, a utilities industry analyst for Argus Research Corp.
for small dry-cleaning businesses
: Jn New York. "I'd say they're out in front. Not all, not even a ma]Onty, of
in the 198 7 letter, some of the
' ll!e electric utilities are into it."
.
.
biggest contributors to Quayle's
:;. But, Hovis said, "It isn't going to happen tomorrow."
state and national campaigns have
: •: Georgia Power believes about 150,000 electnc-powered cars could be
been chemical interests that pro·
•1$1 the.road in Georgia alone by the year 2010.
.
.
duce the dry-cleaning substance,
• "When you think of the ... charging requirements of hundreds of thouknown as.perchloroethylene. ·
sands of vehicles, you can get some ~nse 11 wou_ld malce a significant dif.
Jack Anderson and Michael
ference in termS of ow: sales growth, Klappa 881~. .
' '
Blostein are syndicated writers
·Georgia Power created a separate segment w1thm the company over.
ror United Feature Syndicate,
the summer to focus on electric cars and has si~ an a~ment .to OJ)en
Inc.
one of live research centers in October 1993 bemg established nauon~1~e
by a consortium of carmakers, the federal government and the electnc1ty
industry.
·
._
. . .
Georgia Power also is investing more than $1 million to buy two new
electric shuttle buses and 10 Chrysler battery-powered minivans, Klappa
' the eIec-.
,.said.While competition is fierce among the autom akers des':gnmg
Recently, in Eugene, Ore., I was criminate against homosexuals, Springfield, I heard chilling stories Clinton kept mum' on his support
.tric cars, Klappa said those developing battery_ tech!'olog1es arc gen~rnl\Y talking to a gatl)~ring of book- Oregon may banish them from of physical attacks on gays and les- for gay rights.
cooperative. The Electric Power Rr.search Insutute m Palo ,Alto, Calif., 1s
"If the .Arkansas governor
from all over the Northwest. society and, for tllat m11tter, from bians there in celebration of the
· coordinating the U.S. research and is part of a consortium that has com· sellers
wanted
to talk about his sland on
Most of them were wearing but- the slllte itself.
passing of the municipal act malc, mitted $260 miUion over the next four years to the effort.
homosexual
issues - he supports
As Timothy Egan pointed out in mg them less than thinl-dass citiNo.9.
:, But the quest for the nght battery has frustrated some. Japanese car- . tons:
ending
the
military's
ban on homoBallot Measure 9, which will be The New York Times: "Some
maker Mazda said earlier this year the slow progress m battery develop- on the Oregon ballot Nov. 3, is a legal scholars in the state say the zens.
sexuals
and
would
like
some form
I told the jli'OUP of booksellers
. ment had steered the comparty toward experimenting with a clean-fuel car drastic proposal that would strip measure could be used to remove that I thought Measure 9 would Qf civil rights legislation for homothat runs on hydrogen.
.
gays and lesbians of a large catalog homosexuals from teaching-posi- ev~ntually be declared unconstitu· sexuals - the stop in Oregon's
·:.. Other clean-fuel technologies, notably natural gas, are staking a cl31m of
basic rights. They would be offi- tions and state jobs - and as a tiona!. It violates the Oregon state largest city would have been a
• 'IS the car fuel of the future..
.
. .
.
cial pariahs. And many non-homo- basis to take books from libraries constitution's ri~ht of freedom of prime place to condemn .Measure
'"' "Natural gas is already m commercial use m some pans of the -:vorld. sexuals could be pupished under · and deny parade permits and liquor expression and 1s also overbroad 9,n
It apparently worlcs pretty well," said Maryann N. Keller, an auto mdus· Measure 9 for "encouraging" licenses."
But Clinton said nothing about
and vague in its language.
_try analyst with Furman Selz Inc. in Ne.w York.
.
In Springfield, Ore. - near
·
But these court battles could RO it in his speech despite all those
• Being an electric company, Gccrgta Power naturally thmks battery· homosexuality.
This is part of the actual lan- Eugene - the same group pushmg on for a long time and meanwhile placards in the audience urging him
powered cars will win the race.
. .
.
. .
the statewide Measure 9 and - .as has already happened in to. Later, off staBe, out of earshot.
of Measure 9:
"(Company president Bill) Dahlberg IS probably the mo,st enthuswuc guage
"State, regional and local gov- financed largely by Christian fun· ~~?,~J~~li="~Jood many lives of the crowd, Cbnton answered a
·. supporter of electric vehicle technology I have ever run mtp," J51appa ernmen~ and their departments, damentalists has already succeeded , ____ _ ··· ·····" -'·· ·
reporter's question by saying he
said. "He's become convinced the timing is ~ght and the technology is. so
in
getting
similar
language
into
the
and other entities Indications are that the vote will was against Measure. 9 because
close that it was really appropriate for Georgi&amp; Power to be on the leadmg agencies
city
charter.
That
law
prevents
including specifically the .State
be 'close. So, .when Bill Clinton "it's a divisive measure." The
·edge."
·
Department of Higher Education Springfield from doing anything to came to Portland, Ore., last mbnth, more accurate word is "unconstituand the public schools - shall protect gays and lesbians 'from dis- the expectation was that the candi· tional."
Gccrge Bush \vould have been
assist in setting a standard for Ore· crimination, and it orders lhe town date - who ClaiiiJS to be a true
no better. Actually, he might well
gon's youth that recognizes homo· and all its agencies not to "pro- believer in universal equality sexuality, pedophilia, sadism ·and mote, encourage or faciiilllte ilomo- would say something about this have approved Measure 9. What's
masochism as abnormal, wrong, sexuality."
profoundly discriminatory propos- most tacking in this campaign 1$ a
candidate passionate about the Bill
That could mean, I told the al.
unnatural and perverse and that
.
booksellers
in
Eugene,
that
if
I
these behaviors are to be discour·
Yet, as reported by J. Jennings ofRights.
Nat
Hentoff
is
a
nationally
taught
in
a
high
school
or
a
public
Moss of the Washington Times,
· The Daily Sentinel welcomes letters regarding the ~v. 3 genernl.elec- aged and avoided."
Homosexuality, therefore, is college and recommended books "Bill Clinton didn't talce the cue. renowned authority on the First
: lion. However; in the interest of fairness, nc elecuon letters wtll be
bracketed with such criminal by Andre Gide or James Baldwin, I Even though mal\)' who cheered Amendment and the rest of the Bill
: ~epted after 12 noon on Wednesday, October 28. . . ·
behavior as pedophilia and sadism. could be fired for "promoting and him at a noontime rally yesterday of Rights.
. Individwds should address ISsues and not personalines.
Nat llentorr is a syndicated
With more and more cities and encouraging''homosexuallty.
lofted signs opposing a. strict antiLetters purely endorsing candidates will not be use&lt;~,
writer
for Newspaper Enterprise
From people living in and near homosexual slate referendum, Mr.
· Letters should be 300 words or less, preferably typed. All letters are smtes striking down laws that dis·
Association.
: .oject to editing and must be signed with name, address and relephone
: number. Telephone numbers wilf not be published. No Uf!Signed letters
: will be published. Letters should be in good taste.
.
111 Coart sueet
Po.._eroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO 11m JNTEREIITII OJ' 11m MEIGS-MASON AREA

'

· Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'' ' '
Ir--~-:T=:-1'
Mansfield !s2" I•

-. ~

,,,,,

• IColumbusls2• I

run

,,,,,

.'_u•_•._'!'""____,

lectri·c c·ar .battery
•:·
·h
t•
~researc .· con tnues

~E~~u~:~~~~~t;~o~~

Fear an~ l~athing in Oregon
.

.

NatHentoff

~

:. Deadline for publication
of election letters Oct. 28

Carter endorses Clinton

Berry's World

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•

Before you ~t to the end of this endorsed freedom of speech and
column, you will discover thar it is religion. They expected Americans
a presidential endorsement, so I'll to e~ercise what the Constitution
end the suspense before it builds. granted- vigorously, openly and
Bill Clinton is my choice. To often - because truth could
which there is a filling response: So emerge only in the marke1place of
what?
·
contending views.
But there is a larger issue underGiven the fact that he was often
foot than the state of my political out of step with majority opinion
mind, or yours. What is lhe point of where we lived, he did not expect
endorsements anyway? When your people to follow hill lead blindly. It
local·newspaper announces which was just as likely lll8l1}t would ta1ce
way it sees an election, what's their cue from his position in a nc~­
going on?
ative way. The "kiss of death ' .
About 20 years ago, one of the thccry held that his endorsement .
crustiest men I ever knew in the could be fatal to a candidate' s
ilews business issued a warning to chances.
all of his fellow journalists that
But that only mattered if you
went something like !!!!s: '"!'!&gt;!~!-: thought of your role as king-maker.
twice before you endorse anyone · If, instead, the endorsement was
for public office. If be wins, you'll meant to focus opinion and stimube held responsible for him ever late informed debate, to _Present
after, and you will deserve what arguments for a point of VIeW in a
you ·get." .
world in which no one had a rilortal
On the other side of the argu- lock on Uuth, .then you had no
ment, my newspaper editor father alternative. To fail to speak out was
thought it was as irresponsible to to fail the political process.
So much for general theory. As
hold your tongue as it was not to
vote. The men who wrote and rali· · to how you should decide between
fied the Bill of Rights didn't give candidates, !here were two other
the press virtually unchecked free- points central to Dad's thinking. 1
dom in the First Amendment First, no pany, faction or individual 1
because they JoYed or respected the should be allowed .to hold power
press of their time, he insisted. for very long. Second, politicians
They endorsed freedom of the should be held to account for what
press for the same reason they they had done or failed to do.

I

Hodding Carter Ill

That is why he endorsed both or President George Bush, the lion
Tom Dewey and Dwight D. Eisen· ·of Kuwait and World War n combower for president in 1948 and bat hero? It's the wrong question, 11
1952. The Democrats. in whose point made cleat i&amp;J his own inim·
number he counted himself, had itable fashion by Ross Perot in thCI
held the presidency long enough. ·first debate. No, he didn't have a
The republic's good health lot of experience in office , he
demanded change. It was time to admitted, particularly in .running up
a $4 triUion· debt. Besides, he
throw the rascals ouL
In 1992, that time has come added, what concerned him were
again. Twelve years is enough time not the decisions made by·a young
to take the measure of anyone or man in the formative early stages
any party, and 13 years is 100 many of his life, but those made by a
when the fmt 12 have been marked mature man in a position of author.
by economic rot and profound con- ity.
For
George
Bush,
that
is
the
tempt for the people.. Failure to
fatal
rub.
He
has
failed
to·
underchange leadership when that lead·
crshi{' has presided over the steady stand that the ecdnomy is in trouble
detcnoration of the nation's fiscal and that government should lead in
and moral health is not merely efforts to revitalize it As ·a result,
wrong, it is suicidal. NOt to change · be has done little or nothing while
in our current condition is 'to millions of Americans have lost
endorse diSiptegration.
their jobs, ann11al deficits have
When this was written, only two reached . record highs and the
of lhe debates had been staged. But national debt has soared into the
what was on view in both under- stratosphere~

~c;~~~-~.!:n?~~~
_i_?~~1~!'.'clo
0i~t;
... ""' ....... ...... ,.._ ..............
.............
~

w...~

.1.~

.L

lican ticket could offer nothing bet·
ter than smear, innuendo and the
pretense that they were not responsible for the past.
Who do you trust. the president
and his surrogates demand, "Slick
Willie': Clinton, lhe artful dodger,

Hoddlng Carter Ill, rormer
State Department spokesman
and aWIIrd·""'nlnl reporter, editor and publlaber, is president or .
!'. !:!::~trcct, a 'Yasblngton, D.C.·
based television proouctioa company and 1 syndicated writer ror
NEA.

iradually warming trend throughout the week. By the end of the
week high temperatures should
reach the upper 60s to the mid-70s.
· The mconl-high lmiperature for
th.is date at the Columbus weather
station was 85 degrees in 1953
while the record. tow was 25 in
1896. Sunset tonight will be at6:46
p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 7:48
a.m.
Around the nation
A chill gripped much of the East
today, while much of.the Sj&gt;utheast
and Southwest enjoyed sunny
skies.
Low pressure was expected to
draw the coldest air so far this season to the Northeast today. Snbw
showers were possible from the
West Virginia mouniains tp New
England.
On Sunday, showers associated
with an upper-level weather system
were scattered from Ohio and
lower Michigan to southern New
England and the middle Atlantic
coast. Showers along a cold front

also hit southern Florida. Widely
scattered showers developing
ahe8d of a cold front were over the
Pacific Northwest.
Skies were generally clear from
the central Gulf Coast states to
Indiana and Illinois and across the
southern Plains and the upper Mississippi Valley.
Highs today were forecast in the
30s in northern New England,
upstate New York, central Pennsyl·
vania and the apper Great Lakes;
40s in southern New England and

the rest of the Great Lake;&amp; regiOIJ;
sos in the middle ,.dantic 111~,
KentuCky. Tennessee. and the~­
em Plains; 60s from Oeorg11 10
Oklahoma and north through tl\e
Great Plains; 70s along the G ~ f
Coast and much of the West; 80s tn
the ·Southwest and so~th Florida;
and 90s in southern Arizona a~ d
California.
Fortuna, Calif., posted a .recotd
high Sunday of 84. The hig~ for t1!C
nation Sunday was 98 at G1la Bend
and Lake Havasu City, Ariz.
'

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
-

~1992 Accu·Weather, Inc.

Meigs County Court Judge suspended for one year' two years
Patrick H. O'Brien processed 41 probation.
Shawn Price, Long Bottom, seat
cases last week.
belt
violation, $25 and costs, posFined
were:
Kenda
Ann
Kloes,
Wednesday through Friday:
session
of marijuana, $75 and
Rutland,
failure
to
stop,
S
10
and
Wednesday, a chance of showcosts
,
speedinu
$20 and costs,
costs,
seat
belt
violation,
costs
ers. Lows in the upper 30s and low
driving under suspension, $100 and
only;
Andrew
L.
Simmons,
Colum·
40s. Highs in mid·50s to the low
30 days in jail, suspended to
60s. Thursday, fair. Lows in mid· bus, speed, $22 and costs; Sherry costs,
three
days, two years probauon;
E.
Miracy,
1
ackson,
seat
belt
viola30s to m1d-40s. Highs in the 60s.
Jerry Hayman, Syracuse. possestion,
$20
and
cosiS;
1ames
R.
CarFriday, fair. Lows in the 40s. Highs
penter, Pomeroy, seat belt viola- sion of marijuana, $75 and costs;
in the 70s.
tion, costs only ; Hubert A. Hat- Lori A. Brumfield, speed. Gallipofield, Culloden, W.Va .. ~ $21 lis, $25 and costs; .Chad C. Ward.
and costs; Eric F. Stringer, Jackson, failure to cover load, $15
Charleston, W.Va., speed, $20 and and costs; Donald E. Vaughan,
Erma Turnbul. '
costs, seat belt violation, $20 and · Pomeroy, speed, $22 and c~sts;
costs; Regan M. Sherreu. Bidwell, John Eikenberry, NelsonYJlle,
Erma L. Turnbull, 81, Mason; speed , $21 and costs; Ray L. speeding, $26 and costs; Earl
W.Va., died Sunday, Oct. 18, 1992 J b J c 1 b
peed $27 Goode, Middleport, no operator's
at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
aco s, ~·· o urn us, s
'
license, three days in jail, suspend·
.
.
H
f
d
and
costs,
Deborah
R.
Gray,
S. he was born 10 art or • . B tt m seat belt violation Long
costs ed, $75 and costs, failure to stop
W.Va., a daughter of the late Mar- ~y~ •
'
for sign, $20 and costs.
E David Averion Pomeroy
cellus and Lula Roush HowelL She
Clephus D. Ratliff, Ath.ens,
was a ho~e~alcer 3!'d a member of speed, $28 and costs; Shawn
speed, $20 and costs; Manella
the Chnsuan Sctence Church Waters, Pomeroy, speeding, $24 Godby, Logan, W.Va.. speed, $20
where she was a former Sunday and costs; Brian K. Well, Pomeroy, and costs; Larry L. Savag~, Nelschool teacher. She was a mef!lber . seat belt violation, costs only; sonville, speed, $20 and costs; ·
of th~ ~ason County Amencan James Hawley, Pomeroy, seat belt . Timothy Hazleton, Pomeroy,
Assoc1auon of Retired Persons, the violation, costs only;.Bnan J. Reed, firearm in a motor vehicle, $200
Southernwester'! Commumty Reedsville, speeding, $21 and and costs. 30 days in jail, suspend•
Action of Hunungton, Mason costs: Nathan E. Plants, Coolville, ed, two years probation, weapon
County Co.mmumty Acuon and the failure to control, $30 and costs; forfeited to the state; Joseph A.
West Vuguua Silver Hair Leg~sla· Gary Curtis, Pomeroy, DUI, $3'50 Riffle Middleport, no operator's
ture. .
.
.
and costs, 10 days in jail, suspend- license, five days in jail, suspended
She IS surv1ve~ by a n~ece, ed to three, one year probation, with valid operator's license in 60
Isabelle Powell, Middleport, two operator's license suspended for 90 days, $75 and costs.
nephews, Glenn Wallace, Cape days, upon enrollment and compleForfeiting bonds were William
Coral, Fla., and Jack Wallace, tion of RTP school, $150 of fine C. Hannon, Jackson, left rear tum
Maples, Fla.; a great-mece,_ Ruth and jail time will be suspended, signal not operable, $85, and out·
Ann Powell; and seve£a! coustns.
speeding, $21 and costs; Steven E. side trailer tread less than '1[32 inch
She was IJ.receded .1n death by Sizemore; Springfield, DUI, 30 with cord e~posed, $85; and Jerry
her husban3, Paul E. Turnbull, and days in jail, suspended to 10 days, Van Kirk, De~ter, seat belt violatwo s1s.ters, Ruth Wallace and $4SO and costs operator's license tion, $60.
ChloeF1ck.
•
Services will be Fridar, Oct. 23,
at Fisher Funeral Home m Middleport. Burial will be in Kirkland
Distharges. Saturdal., Oct. 17
Veterans Memorial
Memorial Garden.
Paul Clay, Mark Rtffle, Carl
SAnJRDAY ADMISSIONS Friends may call one hour prior
Stewart,
Mrs. Michael Grimm and
Sheila Jones, Langsville.
to the services on Friday.
son,
Mildr~d
Spencer, Delmar
SATURDAY DISCHARGES Todd
and
Mildred
Gaul.
Tracie Beegle, William Williams
Births,
Saturday,
Oct. 17 and Jeffrey Connolly.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bradley
Hale
of Oalc
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
Hill,
a
son;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
James
Alzheimers support group&lt;&amp; None.
meet
Martin
of
Wellston,
a
daughter.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
There will be an Alzheimers Michael Brown.
Discharges, Sunday, Oct. 18
suppon group meeting Wednesd3y
HOLZER
MEDICAL
CENTER
- Mrs. Marion Adkins and son,
at 1 p.m. at the multi-purpose
Discharges, Friday, Oct. 16- Mrs. Bobby Fisher and daughter,
building (Senior Citizens Center). Kathrine Stephens, Mrs. Kenneth Mrs. Tim Jeffers and ,son, Mrs.
Bill Bias will be the guest speaker.
McGhell and daughter, Mrs. Brent Bradley Hale and son, Ashely .
D ol A to meet
Arnold and daughter, Amy Moore, Manning, Stacie Krebs, Wanda
The Chester Council No. 323, Jamie Kerr, Mrs. Robert Jerlkins Gardner, Mrs. Rex McGuire and
Daughters of America, will meet and son, Lenore Bradley, April daughter, Mrs. Aaron Henson.
Tuesday at 7 p.m. fot lodge in5pec- Speakman, Jamie Cavins, Cheryl
Births, Suaday, Oct. 18 - Mr.
lion. Members are urged to attend Hunter, William Wise and Teresa and Mrs. William Farrar of Jack·
and wear white. Refreshments will Wood.
son, a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Max
be served by the kitchen commit·
Births, Friday, Oct. 16 - Mr. Grueser of Shade, a daughter; Mr.
tee.
and Mrs. Bobby Foster of Gallipo- and Mrs. Dale Lear of Gallipolis, a
Rummage sale plan~ed
lis, a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Aaron daughter; Mr. and Mrs. David
The Grace Episcopal Church Henson of Gallipolis, a daughter; McCormick of Gallipolis, a daughWomen will hold a rummage sale Mr. and Mrs. John Hunter of Bid· ter.
Nov. 2 ar.d 3 beginning at 9 a.m. at well, a daughter; Mr. ~U~d Mrs. Tim
the church. There also will be an Jeffers of Gallipolis, a son. ·
Election Day LilllCheon on Nov. 3.
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
Legion auxiliary to meet
were
no tickets sold naming all six
The Racine American Legion
numbers
selected in Saturday's
Au~iliary will meet Thursday at 7
.
Super
Lotto
drawing with $,6.mil·
p.m. at the post home.
·
Am
Ele
Power
.........
:
.........
.32
518
lion
at
stalce,
so Wednesday s Jack"Library Board to meet
Ashland
Oil
........................
27
1/4
pot
will
be
$20
million, the Ohio
The regular meeting of the
AT&amp;T
................
·
.................
42
1/4
Lottery
said.
Meigs County Public Library
Bank One................... ........44 7/8
Here are Saturday night's Ohio
Board will be Thursday at I p.m. at
Bob
Evans
........
:
................
18
118
Lottery
selections:
the libraiy in Pomeroy.
Charming Shop.:................36 318
Super Lotto
City Holding ..................... .18 318
7-8-26-36-42-46
Federal Mogul................... .l6 7/8
(seven, eight, twenty-six, thirty·
Goodyear T&amp;R ........ .......... 63 1(2
six, fony-two, forty-six)
Key Centurion ...................19 1(2
Kicker
Lands End..........................28 114
6-4-5-8-6-1
COLUMBUS, Ohio· (AP) Limited Inc. ...................... 23 1/8
(six, four, five, eight, six, one)
The Ohio Bureau of Workers'
Multimedia Inc .................. 25 114
Pick
3 Numbers
Compensation ·on Monday extendRax
RestauranL
..................
S/16
7.-5-8
ed the hours that injured workers
Reliance Electric ............... .l6
can call with questions about
Robbins&amp;Myers ................14
claims.
Shoney's Inc ...................... 18 1/8
They now can call Monday
Star Bank ................·........... 30 3/4
through Frid~y from 7:30 a.m. to
Wendy Int'l....................... .l2 7/8
6:30p.m. at 1-800-282-9536 or
Worthington Ind. .............. .19 3/4
(614) 466-1000. The lines previStOck
rtports are the 10:30
ously operated until4:45 p.m.
a.m.
quotes
provided by Blunt,
The bureau said it gets about
Ellis
and
Loewi
ol GaUipolls.
20,000 inquiries each month, a~d
callers had waited an average of Sl~
minutes on hold. before reaching
someone·. The bureau hopes the
extended hours will reduce the
wait.
The extended hours were made
possible through a work schedule
proposed by employees, the bureau
111 51•• St.,
y
said. The plan will be tested (or six
months.
"Not only docs the public benefit from this idea, but our employees interested in fl~~ible work
schedules are getting the opportuni·
ty to test it out," said Administrator Wes Trimble.

-------Weather----South-Central Obio
Tonight, increasing cloudiness.
Low in the low 30s. Chance of pre·
cipitation 20 percent. Tuesday,
cloudy with a slight chance of rairr.
High in the upper 50s. Chance of
rain 30 percent.
Extended forecast:

- -.Area deaths-Gladys Taylor
Gladys L. Taylor, 87, of Rock
Springs Road in Pomeroy, died on
Sunday, October 18, 1992, at Vet·
erims Memorial Hospital.
She was born on October 11,
1905 in Flora, dnughter of the late
William E. and Augusta Sinclair
Conant. She; was a homemaker and
housewife and attended Minersville
United Methodist Church. .
Surviving life a daughter, Mrs.
Floyd (Helen Jane) Brown, Mid·
dlepon; two sons, Gene (Peggy)
Houdashelt, Pomeroy, and Paul R.
"Bob... (Marcia) Houdashelt,
·Pomeroy; fou.r grandchildren ; a
great-grandson; two step-great·
. grandchildren; and several nieces
and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by her sister,
Pauline Wears.
Funeral services will be held on
Tuesday at I p.m. at Ewing Funernl
Home in Pomeroy, with Rev. Alan
Blackwood officiating. Burial will ,
be in Minersville Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home oli Monday from 2 to 4 p.m.
and 7 to 9 p.m.
·

c:

----Hospital news----:.-

--Meigs announcements-.
Smorgasbord planned
There will be a smorgasborg
dinner at the Long Bottom Community Center on Saturday beginning at 5 p.m. Cost is $5 for adults
and $2.50 for children and includes
desserts and drinks. Several meats,
homemade noodles, scal)oped oystets and dressing will be available.
A candidates night wilt be featw:ed.
Sorority to meet
The Preceptor Beta B~la Chap-.
ter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, will
travel to the Amish Counlly Thursday. Those going are to meet at the
home of Norma Custer at 8 a.m. '
Card shower planned
A card shower is being held for
Ada Morris, formerly of Chester,
who is celeb~ating h.er 99th birth·
day. She resides at the Pomeroy
Nursing and Rehabililation Center,
36759 Rock Springs Road,
r Jmeroy, Ohio 45769. Cards
would be appreciated.

The Daily Sentinel
(VIP8111-IIO)

'Piabliahed enry afternoon , Monday
th....b Friday, IU Courl St., Po...,.y,
Ohio by the Obio VaHey Publiahina
Company/Multimedia Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, Pb. 992·2t56. Second elua
poet.ap paid &amp;t ~. Ohio.

Membor: The Aaaoetated Proaa, and tho,
Ohio Ne,.apaper Aucda~ion, National
Advertiainr Rapreaentat1ve, Branham
NeWIJP&amp;JM! SalN, 733 Third Avenue,
New York. N.,. :York 10017.
•

POSTMASTER: Send addroa eha- k&gt;
The Daily Sentinel , 111 Court St.,
l'omorvy, OHio 457611.
8VII8CIUPI10N Jli,TII
.,.. eam... or Motor Rotlte
()ne Week.1................... ....................... l .60

One Monlh...... ............ ................... .... $6.1111
One Yoar.......................................... 883.20
liNGLE COPJ
PRICE
l)ei}y,,,,,,,,,,,,,,..,,,,, ,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,, . w.wo26 Centl

Sublcriben aot cleoiri"lllo

.-y

lhe coni·

er ma,y remit .ift advance direct l.o The
Daily, Sen\lnel on a t.hree, ats Or 12

month buia. Credit
each wf!ek_. ·

wm be liven cani.er

No •ubo&lt;:ripUon• by mail permllted In
area• where home canier ~ervice i1
••ailoble.

...

record on which to run, the Repub-

Ice

' By The Associated Press
Ohioans got an early taste of
winter this morning, when a cold
front brought subfreezing lmlpera·
tures and a few wet snowflakes.
Areas of extreme northeast Ohio
received one to three inches of
snow overnighL
Temperatures dropped to unseasonably cold lows in the upper 20s
and low ;lOs. The e~ceptions were
close to I.ake Erie, where tempeiatures hovered in the upper 30s. A
few record low temperatures were
recorded around the state.
Cloudiness will increase across
the state again tonight. It will be
· another cold nijlht with temperatures dropping mto the upper 20s
and low 30s again.
It will be cloudy on Tuesday .
There is a chance of rain across the
state. The precipitation may begin
as snow in the north. High temperatures will be in the upper 40s to"'
the lower 50s.
Though the work week started
Out on the cold side there wilt be n

.. Meigs County Court news

=
. ·E·

'

The Dally Sentlnei-Pe(!e 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

lolall-ortrlllaoldoM.IpCou\7

w-. .........................................
26 w-..........................................
18

nw..u..........................................

E..1sM
.

.76

o.-.W.Ip Coul]r
18 Weob............................,............ .~ .40
26 Weob.......................................... $411.60
n w..u..............................................40

''

Lottery numbers

Stocks

Hot Ihie hours
are extended

DOWNIII CIILIS
MULLIIM-11

INSUUICE·
r...

,...........,
•m
-COUIIY
IIICIII61

'

JUMPING FOR JOY -Jerry Berpn or Norrolk, Va,, leaps orr'
the New River Bridge.into the new River Goree Saturday in Fa yet- ·
tevllle, W. Va., during the day-long 12th annual Bridge Day tele·
bration. Base jumpiDI is a traditional event from the 87-root-hiah •
bridge, the longest steal arch span in North Amerita. (AP)

EMS units answer 7 calls

''

Seven calls for assistance were Center.
At 2:23 a.m. on Sunday, Syra-·
answered over the weekend by
units of Meigs Emergency Ser- case unit went to Bashan Road for
vices.
·
Betty Friencl, who was talcen to
On Saturday at 5:03 p.m., Mid- Veterans.
·
dlepon unit took Gail Stroul from
At 1:05 p.m., Middleport squad
Laurel Street to Veterans Memorial took Gladys Walburn from Third
HospitaL At 9:34 p.m., Bashan and Avenue to Veterans. At 1:51 p.m.,
Racme units went to a search and Middleport squad went to Overrescue. Jon Hoy and Ben Sharp brook Center. Joseph Leach was
were treated on the scene. At 10:32 talcen to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
p.m., Pomeroy squad was sent to At 8:42 p.m., P6rneroy squad todt
Mechanic Street for Homer Baxter, Golda Krackomberger from Scout
who was talcen to Holzer Medical Camp Road to St. Joseph Hospital.

WHAT WOULD YOU LIKE'FOR YOUR NEIGHBORS .
TO KNOW .ABOUT OUR GOSPEL MEETING?
This question was asked 'of the members of the Westside Church
ofChrist and the following is a compilation of their comments.
You will find them to be both revealing and thought provoking.
One sister asked that it be stressed to our neighbors that this is a
Bible believing and teaching congregation and that the gospel
meetingisnotasocialoragimmi.:ktolurenum~rs . Jesuspurpose

on earth was for mankind's salvation and that we also are to serve
this same purpose. Therefore when another member asks,
"Wouldn't you like to know about Jesus whose love was so great
thai He was willing to die that you might live. (Gal. 2:20)" the
question is quite valid . Another questioned, "Wouldn't you like to
learn more about your best friend who died for you?" The gospel
is for you, for all.
Another comment was, "Tell all, you are invited to Christ's
church to hear 'not what we believe', but what The Christ has
. communicated to everyone .through His word. Jesus not •only
spoke the thingsofGod (John 12:49-50), but also showed us --left
us an example to follow . "so then the query," Would you like to
learn more about Him and see if you are doing (treating Him) as
you should?" (1 Pet. 2:21) A roung girl simply said, "Come and
study the Bible".
•
If you are looking for something unchanging inJhis changing
world, look to, '1esusChrist who is the same yest~ rday, today, yes
and forever." (Heb. 13:8) While Jesus said "That we might have
life, and might have it abundantly (John 10:10) we are also reminded that the judgment is closer today than it was yesterday."
Remembering also that "all flesh is as grass, and all the glory of
man as the flower of grass, the grass withers and its flower falls
away."
Indifference on the part of families toward their children's
knowledge, neglect of the Scriptures even by churches, denominationalism which blunts desire to know right from
wrong. ball games, television and on and on keep people
away. Come and search the Bible - not some book or other
writing of men. Learn what the Scriptures teach, not what
someone says t!tey say. Yes, you need to tum from indifference, denominationalism, seeking worldly riches and etc. and
turn your thinking to Cod. Do you want more of the real life,
the peace and comfort of Jesus? Then take your place among ·
Cod's elect and enjoy, "every good thing and perfect gift."
. (James 1:17· 18)
. .
1
Parents and our nation ~re indifferent and so we neglect our
responsibility to the Creator. The educational system actively
undermines beliefin and respect for God on all levels. But with
· a soul (spirit) we are different from animal~.

As.a brother from Dixie Sllys. "You all come."
Each evening 111 7:30, October 19-23, in the Westside Church of Christ
on Children's Horne Rolul in Pomeroy, Ohio.

�:n. Deily sentinel

Page 4

-~he

Monday, October 18,1882

alonda~Octobe119,1192

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

1992 General Election is scheduled Thesd~~:y, Nov. 3
EXPLANATION AND ARGllMENT
AGAINST PllOI'OSED AMF.NDMEN1 3

I

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

3

1

or

A question proposed in Article 16, Section 3 of the Constitution of the
Slate of Ollio. to be submitted to the electors in the general election of Noo;emher
' 3. 1992.
.

;

.

Article 16, Section 3 or the Constilutlon or the State or Ohio, reads as follows:

"At the general eledion to he held in.the year one thousand nine hundred
and tlllirty-two and in e~~eh twentieth year thereafter, the.question: "Shall
theft he a. convention to mise, ·atter, or amend the oonstitution," shaJI
. bt submitted to the electors of the state; and in case a m*rlly of the electon, YOtlng fur IUid against the caUing of a oonvention, slulll decide In ftn'Or
or a convention, the general assembiy, at liS next session, shall provide;
by law, for the election of delegates, and the assembling of such convention, 85 Is provided in the preceding section; but no amendment of this
cOIIIItltutlon. agreed upon by any convention assembled In purs118nce of
tills article, shall take effect until the ~me shall have been submitted to
tile eledors or the state, and adOpled by a majority~ those voting thereon."

No person shill hold the olllce Stale Se1111tor for a period of longer tblln two tiUC·
cessive terms or four years. No per- shall bold the ofllce of State ReiN eeentative for a period longer than four SUttessive terms of two years. Terms shall
be considered successive unless Hptlnlted by a period of four or more years.
Oniy tenns beginning Oll or after January 1, .1993 shall be considered in deter·
mining an individual's ell&amp;ibility to hold office.
In determining the eligibility or an individual to hold an oftlce in accordance
with this article, (A) lime spent In an ofllce In fulfillment or a term to ·which
another petson was.first elect~ shall. not be co~idered provided thllt a period
of at least four years JIIIS!Ial .between the time, 1r any, in which the individual
prt'lliously held that ofllce, and the time the individual is elected or apPointed
to fulfill the unexpired term; and (B) a petson who is elected to an omce In a
regularly scheduled general election and res11ns prior to the completion or the
term for which he or she was elected, shall he considered to have se.ned the
full term in that olflce.

•

If a~opted .by a majorily of"eleclors.voting on this am.endment, each provision
of this amendment shall be deemed severable from the oth,ers, and finding that
a provision is invalid shall not 11ffecl the other provisions. ·
·

.

A majority yes vote is necessary for passage.

.

A majority yes vote is necessary for passage.
SHALL THERE BE A CONVENTION TO
REVISE, ALTER, OR AMEND THE
CONSTITUTION OF THE STATE OF "OHIO?

No

Yes

'

EXPLANATION OF QUESTION I
(AS PREPARE.D BY THE OIDO BALLOT BOARD)

.,.,

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

EXPLANAndN AND ARGUMENT
FOR .PROPOSED AMENDMENT 3

.

, Article 16. Section 3 of tbe Ohio Constitution requires that every twenty years the elec-.
•.tors or the State of Ohio be given the opponunity to decide if there should be a convention
Issue 3 will limit the terms of the Qhio
. to change the Constitution of the State of Ohio. If the.calling ofa convention is approved · Senate to two consecutive four-year lerms.
by a majority vote. then the next session of the General Assembly ~ust provide for the
Members of the Ohio House of Represenelection of delegates and the assembling oflhe convention. If the convention agrees to amend
tati.ves will he limited to four consecutive
'the Co~stitution. those amendments must be submitted to the electors and approved by
a majority vote be(ore taking effect .

2

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONA,L AMENDMENT ,

To aniend Anicle V of the Ohio Constitution by the addition of new sections
8 and 9 as follows:
Sedion 8: No person !ihall hold the off'tee of United States Senator from Ohio

for a period ~o~~&amp;er thlln two successive terms or six years. No person shall hold
the ~ or United States Representative from Ohio for a period longer thlln
r- successive ,terins two years. Terms shall be considered successive unless
. . .nted by a period or four or more years. Only terms beginning on or after
:January I, 1993 shall ·1Je considered In determining an indlvid11al's eligibility
to hold olfice.
'

or

Sedion 9: In determining the eligibility or an individual to hold an office in accordance with Ibis article. (A) time spenl in a11 office in fulfillment of a term
10 whkh another person was first elected shall not be considered provided that
• period of at least four years passed between the lime, if any, in which the in·
.dhrldtiiiiiJII'f"lously held that oflke. and the time the individual is elected or appoillted to fulfill the unexpired term; and (8) a person who is elected to an of·
flee ·In a regularly scheduled general election and resians prior to the completion of tbe term for which he or she was elected, shall be eonsidered to have
~~ the full term in lhat office.

If adopted by a majorily of eleclors voting on this amendment. each provision
of thiS amendment shall be deemed sevenble from the other$, and a finding
that a provision is invalid shall not affect" tbe olher provisions.

A

Yes

yes vote is

for

SH..,.LL THE PROPOSEO
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

No
EXPLANAnON AND ARGUMENT FOR
PROPOSED AMENDMENT 2
.'
,,
Issue ~ will Iimit the terms of member&gt;
nf the U.S. Congress from Ohio. Represen·.·
.~ lativ.:s· will be limited to four consecutive
,iwo-year terms. U.S. Senators will be limited
I&lt;Hwo consecutive si:-.-year terms. After ser,ving their limi1cd terms. members must sit
nut for at least lour years before re10rning
the same office.
Since 1951the Prcstdcnfs terms have been
limited. The terms of Ohio\ governor have
been limited since 1954 . These proposed
~ ll '· c:ongn::ssion:allimits arc dc,igned to work
· in much the same way.
'

cumbent has sat out of office for a four-year
·rest period ...
This amendmcni will not aflect Ohio's
"'clout" on Capitol Hill : Congressional clout
is defined as having members who chai r
powerful congressional committees. These
committee chairs arc granted based on
seniority. The way t~c current senioruy
sy,stem works. and given the Ohio delegations average seniority at I~ years per
member. the chances of gaining any significant committee chairs in the next ten years
is exrrell]ely remote.

Continued research shows that incumbent
members of Congress out&gt;pend challengers
in elections by significant margins. This
, Issue 2 does not immediately throw any making "voting incumbents out" of office
·current incumbents out of qffice . The terms· very difficult because elections are not comihat count toward limiiation will begin with petitive. By limiting terms of Congres; .
open-seat elections will •occur more often .
, !h.is election.
These elections will give more citizens the
.·
• This amendment does not prohibit •n in- chance to run for Congress without having
' cumbent member of Congress from running 10 challenge "well -financed inc~mbents .
fi&gt;r other offtces. It simply prohibits
,inc,;.,ber.; of Congress from making a career Committee F\lr the Amendment
nul of holding the same offtee for a lifetime.
John J. Jazwa
the voter.; choose to return an incumbent
Suwnne Robpin'
10 a position previously held for eight c'onKenneth M. Lann
yeans. they may do so a her the in·

\'

EXPLANAnON AND ARGmn:NT
AGAINST PROPOSED AMENDMENT 2
Term Limits
.,. will damage our representative
democracy.
- The people already control who stays
in office through' their right to vote.

.'

- Term Limits would force out qualified
legislators and deny choice to the
voters.
-Term Limits would decrease the power
of Congr&lt;ss. the most directly representative branch of federal
government.
- Term l-imits will deny citizens their
right and responsibility to make deci '
sions about a candidates values and
ideas. Democracy is based on citizen
participation .

• The goal of a citizen legislature com. prised of idealistic people interested in
/ public senice won't be achieved
through term limiis. The same sons of
people who are in !he legislature now
are most likely 10 run ·and \win.-those
who can afford to take a break from
their lives and · jobs· and who are
motivated enough to campaign. raise
money from friends and strangers. and
withstand inh!nse scrutiny of their personal lives.

two-year terms. Since 1951 the t~rms of the
President h.s been limited. Ohioans have
limited the Governor"s terms since 1954.
No curreot incumbents will be immediately thrown out of office as the result of this
amendment. The' terms that count IQward
limitation will begin with this election.

''•

I.

- Term Limits would raise the. constitutional question of whether a state has
the power 10 limit terms of a federal officeholder and involve Ohio in c6stly ·
lawsui1s.
Built-in "lame duck" problem
- Term Limits ~ill ensure more lame
duck legislators. Legislators·may not be
effective or responsive to the electorate
in their last allowable tenns.
- Re-elect ion pressure is a necessary component of our democratic system. Accountability is based on the fact that
legislators have to face the voters at
clec1ion time.
- Lame duck .legislators could ~ temp ­
ted with offers of future jobs or other
benefits.
·
Worsens exi sting probleiJls
· Term Limits will discourage competition . incumbents wi11 still have extraordinary advantages in elections like free
mailings, 'name recognition, and media
access. Why run against an incumbent
when you can wait and run for an open
seat?
·

citizens can'l be trusted 10 make

I

I

\

'

,

'

Prepared by Ohio League of Women '«Jters.
Marilyn Shearer. President

•

responsible ·choices and vote against the
politicians they are no longer satisfied
with, and we are giving up our power
to make politicians accountable.

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION

4

- Term Limits will guarantee that the
system i~ shaken up. not just now. but
constantly and permanently. With ,h.is
constanl turmoil. g~crnmenl will nol.
work any more cftcctively or efficiently. Complex issues like health care and
education finance reform take many
years to adequate!~ address .. Shon-tcrm
officeholders will tend. to adopt short·
term solutions to long-term problems.

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

To Amend Article Ill . Section 2 of the Ohio Constitution by the addition of
the following paragraphs:
No person shall hold any one of the offices or lieutenant governor, secretary of
state, treasurer of state, attorney general, or auditor or staie for a period 'onger
than two .successive terms or four years. Terms shall be considered successive
unless separated by a period of four or more .Yfars. Only terms beginning on
or after January I, 199S shall be considered in determining a~ Individual's
eligibility to hold the olf'tee of lieutenant governor, srcretary·of state, treasurer
of state, attort:K'Y general; or auditor or state.
In determining the eligibility or an individual to hold an. office in acctlrdanct
whh this article, (A) time spent in an office in furftllment of a term to which
another person was first eleded shall not be considered provided that a period
of at' least four years passed between the time, if any, in which tbe individual
prt'lliously held that omce, and the time the Individual is elected or appointed
to fulftll the unexpired term; and (B) a person who is elected to an office in a
regularly scheduled general eledion and resigns prior to the .completion of the
term for which he or she was elected, shall be considered to have serVed the
I
full term In that office.

If adopled by a majority of electors voting on this amendment, each provision

or this amendment shall be deemed sevenbl&lt; from the olbers, and a finding
that a provision Is itwalid shall not affect the oth.tr provisions.

Term Limits will force even more
reliance on un~lected staff and lobbyists, because new legislators have
limited knowledge of the complexities
of government finances, services, and
programs;

- Term Limits will not change the factors
that make for cumbersome. disjointed
public policy. because they don"!
change the fact that politicians do not
receive clear. unambiguous instruclions
from the public about what the public's
priorities are 'and what they are willing to pay to achieve these priorities.
- Term Limits will not lead to more informed and active citizen participation
in government. By adopting Term
Limits, we arc giving in to the idea that

John J. Jazwa
Suzanne Robbins
Kenneth M. Lahn

A majority yes vole is necessary for passaae.

•

Prepared by Ohio League of Women Voters.
Marilyn Shearer. President

FULL TEXT OF THE
PE I IliON PfiOP08INQ
ISSUO 2, 3 AND 4
Be i1 raolwod ..,

die

poopte "' die

'

No pe11011 lllall hold

u-

die ollioo ol

No '

Tennl oboll be CGillidel'ld ........ - ..,.period d...., ... -,..... Ollly- ........
_.. ......_.. _
'1 rid '
Uta on or aftlr JUIUII'Y 1, ·~., .... - "
m·
~ on iodividu1rs ot;pwry 111 hold .ollioo.
die

ObioC'"Iimtlm

~

............ Ill read:

. No po11011 lliiiU hold lho o11ioo o l - -

llr

•period ...... --.-... _d....,,.....
· No
lliiiU tiold tbt
d. - '"'"
'""
..... period....,-...,_...-"'
two
petiOli

'

Ullitld -

period ...... - . . . , -.. -"'-,.....

amondod by lho oddilion d. • -

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENOMENT BE ADOPTED?

I'!'

--Ohio rot • period ...... - two ....
ceui&gt;o tmn1 of lix yoan. No- oboll hold tbt olfiCO o1
-ll:opt
wiw - Ohio llr 1

2) Anicte n. Sootion 2 d.

Yes

s.. of Ollio:

I) Arti&lt;:le V of die 01lio COftllillllioo ~ -ndod
· die ldditioa ol a now Sootion I to read:

o11ioo

"'"" ia ..... ollioo.

•

5l U udopud by a mojority d........, ..... oa dria
1

tC, •eKh~flchil

I

5

1,-~t?e:

PROPOSING ISSUE 5
Seclion I. Thai Section 37'2 of the Rcviood COde be
enac!ed 10 rOad u follows :

.

(E) "Ex.pos.e" meuu to cause an eAposdR:.
(F) "Exposure" means to inFSt. inhale, contact via
body surfaces or otherwise come inlO roqlaCI with a

Issue 5. the chemical labeling law. would
guarantee consumers the right to know when
they are exposed ·to dangerous amounts of
chemicals that cause cancer or binh defects.
The label law. supponed by Ralph Nader.
is the best consumer protection because well informed consumers can choose to buy safer
products .
Here's an example of a warning label :
'"WARNING: Tili&amp; product contains one or
more toxic chemical substances known to
cause cancer. specifically benzene and formaldehyde ."'
In addition to the product labeling requirement. Issue 5 requires polluters thai expose
neighbors to dangerous chemicals to warn
them ,

lial human nutrient or an esseDtial medlcation or pro-

C&lt;durc prtscribed by • licenood pl!ylic:ian.
The de11101111n!ions roquired by this divilion lllall
be booed upon evidence and lllandordl of conrponblc
sciealif!C validity to the evidence and lllndardl whic~
fonn the sc::ien"tifK: basi&amp; for the Uscinc of any JUCb ,
,..bslance punuant ro division (8)(2) of SeClioo mz.ir
of the Revised Code. ln any aelion btoulhllo enforcie
Section 3752 .03 of the Reviood Code, - r !han one
broopl pu·rsuanr 10 So.."'ion 3752 .99 of lho Revised
COde , the burden of demonstralinJ that an e.11.posure
meet&amp; the crilelia of this division shall be on the

defeodanl.

,·

(D) An upos.ure t~ a tollic chemif:al subatance

c""-

tained in walcr or drink.ina water to the elltent that lhe
person respon&amp;ible can dernonau~~e lhal the 1oxk
chemical 'ubstanee wu contained in drinkint water

which wu received from :
(I) A public

.

water system, as defined in SecUon

6109.0t of the Revised Code;

·

'

(2) A commercial suppl~r of driflkinc wl\er; or

(l) A source of drinkin&amp; water in compliuce With

all applicable primary drinking wa1&lt;r lllndardl for lll
· lislcd toxic chemical substanca, and lbe toxic chemical '
substance in question is the rtSIJh of treurm:m ol the '

(0) "Health distri&lt;:l" means aciry or general distriel
,,..led by or under lhc authority of ChaP!&lt;' 3709 of
lhc Reviood Code .
(H) ''No signiftcanl risk'' means for asubsunce or

subs&amp;ance from the sources lilftd in subdivisions (I),

chemical subitante.

(2) ond (3).
(E) An uposu~

w a toxic chemical substance con-

tained in air to the extent that the penon re'&amp;ponsible
can demonstrate that the subsWJCe wu contained in air
which the pcr1011 ~ived from the ambient iir . ~~
Where lhc source of the toxlc chemical substancCI
is part from lbe ambient 1.\r aDd in put form Olher
sources, the exempcion 01'11)' appha to lhat p:lftion
the tollic chemical substance in lhal the periOD did noc
cause to be emitted imD the ambient air.
:

in

any legal entiry defined as a person under Section 1.59
of lhc Rcvi.J Code.

or

(F) An exposure lOa loxic themic;;al substance coir- '
tai.ned in food to the utent that the person mponsiblt
can demo:nslrate thai the subil&amp;nCe is naturally oocurJiinJ in the food. A toAic chemical substucc is natu~ .
ly occurrinJ only to lhe extent thai the 5Ubstancc d~

J) "Person in the course of doing business" does not
include ony pm;on employing fewer lhlll! ten employees
in the business, the Slate, any politicai5Ubdivision, interstate body created by com.,.:t. or any entity in iU
operation of a pubiK: wller system as defined in Scctioo 6109.01 of lhe Revised Olde .
(K) ' ' Reproduclive' toxicity ' ' means embryocoxici·
1y, fetotollicity, teratoacnidty, or adverse effects on
male or female reproduclive performance .

We all choose to take some risks- that's
pan of life -but no one should CxJ!9sc us
to risks without warning us.

DOl

result from any known human activity .

Sec.

.' •

3752.06 (A) Any ~individual who. 'esides or ~ '

Committee For the Law
Kathleen M. Fagan
Ed Hopkins
Cynthia M. Starr
James L. Sweeney
Noreen L. Warnock

known to cause cancer or reproductive toxiciry lhal is
listed in division (A) of Secaion 37S2 .21 of the Revised Code, or that may be listed in rules adopCed under
lha! section .

ARGUMENT AGAINST
THE PROPOSED LAW

business shall nx:klessly expose any individual to a toxic
chemical subsiance wilhoul firsl givins clear and
reasonable wamin1 lo such individual.
Sec. 37,2.o.(A) The warnings required 10 be aivcn

efq)loy.=d at a location thll is within a two mile radiUs •
of a premises thll may CIU5C an envirormclul
'
for which a wamingis required under Section,,• .~,, •·I
of the Revised Code. buc for which no wamina is
ing provided, may flle 1 complaint, in writin&amp;
verified by the arftdavit of the complainanc, his or ~
agent or anorney, with lhc director of en•·i"rOM&gt;eni~:l
protoclion, alle&amp;in&amp; thai such penon is causina an eavironmen&amp;al exposure ror whK:h a warllinc is recpairal.
The affidavil verif)'ing 1 complainl . .y be modlr: bc:fon:' I
any penon autllorired by law 10 odminiller oatha,
muS1 be signed by the pe11011 who malca it.
(8) Upon roceip1 of a con~plainl ..-ued by
SCCiion, the direc:tor shall iliuc • onk:r Ia acronlor,..,]

under SecliOII 3752.03 or the Reviled Code lhall be
displayod promincnlly with bold l&lt;llering, underlinina.

penon nomocl Ia lho complailll10 submi110 lho direo:-:·1

uift

(L) ""Tallie chcmicol.........,... n-uny...........,.,

Sec.

Issue 5 creates a new tax and government
program to estalitish and enforce new pro-·
duct labeling and chemical notification requirements. Based on extreme· criteria. it
identifies 458 chemicals and requires that all
products containing even trace amounts of
these chemicals be labeled with a "one-sizefits-all" ' warning. It al so requires many Ohio
businesses that use or store any of these
chem ic als to mail warnings to every
residence and businc:ss in a t\'tJo-n:!ile radiu s
of their premi ses semt -annually.

30 Million Californians have had a label
law for five years. While some companies
there have put warnings on dangerous pro'ducts. others have avoided warnings by
removing toxic chemicals from products.
Gllleitc removed trichloroethylene from Liquid Paper and Dow removed per- · As cx.perts.'flote. this costly proposal is :&lt;~ 0
none of its purponed
_chlorQCthylene from K2r Spot-lifiet , fo.r .cx- flawed it achieves
.
·
.
II provtdes regulatory overkill Wllh n&lt;
ample - without price incrc•ses. And Old goals
. :·
R " I •d
El Paso Foods stopped making food cans cnvuonmental or health benefits. ldd c
with lead solder.
with loopholes, it exempts local and slate
governmems from its extreme rcquiremems.
In Ohio, the chemical and pesticide in- It would put Ohio clearly out of step with
dustries have invented a group called more un ifonn existing federal laws on the
•10hioans for Responsible Health lnforma-· same issues. Issue 5 also ignores the many
tion'" and are spending a fonune to scare existing state and federal laws that already
voters with outrageous lies .:.that thousands protect Ohioans and supply ample consumer
of safe products would be labeled, prices and information.
taxes would skyrocket. and Ohio's economy
. Putting the same label on everything and
would collapse .
nooding Ohioans' mailboxes with " warn ings" are not real solutions for improving
in fact Ohioans' health and environment . So many
products would require these labels that any
• About 0.5 % of all chemicals used in
commerce cause cancer or binh defects.
"warning" would lose its impact.
and warnings would only go product'
Econom.ic analyses show that Issue ~ has
with dangerous amounts of these
real
potential - especially in this fragile
chemicals.
• h costs almost nothing to add words to
economy - to raise prices •nd threaten fur·
ther job loss. The new taxes in Issue 5 cover
a label: companies already change
only a fraction if its real costs. The remain labels all the time.
ing millions needed would come from
• Voters· won·t have to pay more taxes. A
penily-per,-pound fee on polluters c011ers · Ohioans' · pocketbooks. paychecks and
payrolls. Issue 5 also wotdd ·discourage new
the costs of enforcing the law.
• Most Ohio factories don't e~danger · businesses and jobs from coming into Ohio.

on

de11101111ratelhallft alternolive 11WJin of llfety. which
shall 1101 be less !han one hundred (lllOl timealhc tevc;t
iii quealion, witt prote&lt;;l die ellj)Oiod populolion; Ql"•
(3) Tha11hc ,._,. is 10 a . - t h a i i1111 _,.

cOmbinalioo of substances known to cause QDC:er. a
risk levd ~hich is calcullled 10 resuh in no more lhm
one ndss cue:: of can&lt;:er in an exposed population of
one million, based bn the most Conservative generally
IICCcp!ed risk wosstnont modtod, IIISUming lifetime exposure a1 the level in question .
(I) " Person·· meanS the state , any political subdivision, intel'$l&amp;te body created by compact, the Uniled
Stales and an~ aaency or instrumcnll.lity thereof, ud

neighbors. and wont have to warn
anyone.

me

level in question for subsrancel known eo cause
rcprod~live taxK:ily / or for whi!:h the penon cu

water in orcstr ·to ac:hieve compl~ wilh primary
drinking water standards.
Where rhe' source of the toxic chemical subslance is
in pan from the sources lilted in subdivisions (I) ,• (2)
and (3) and in part from oUter source&amp;, lhe exemption
only applie5 10 Lhe portion or lbe toxic chemtcal

to~;K:

No

ARGUMENT FOR
THE PROPOSED LAW

111Umin1 CllpoiUR at otle lhousand (I (XX}) timet

"Con~rumer

made substances.

SHALL THE PROPOSED
LAW BE ADOPTED?

.

(I) Thai the uposwo poses no •ignifrcanr risk for
individual; ond.
:
(2) Tha11ho nposurt will have no -"'able effe&lt;1

ony

''Environmental expoture' ' means an exposure
thai may foreseeably·cx:cur u a resull of c:on111ct with
an environmental medium, inchldiDJ but nollimited to
'"'bient air, indoor air, drinking w11er, surface wer,
aroundwaler, soil , vege1alion, or natural or human-

A majority yes vote is necessary for passage.

.. ,

can demonstrate lbe followina:

(0~

law would be effective on pecember 2, 1992.

rl-ioo 3752.21.ofthe Rcviood eooe:

on exposure thai OC&lt;UR leas !han twelve ..-hi arblc·
quenc to the effective dlle: of lhe rule.
..
(C) An e&gt;puourc for which lhc person rtspollli~

product expDIUre" mean&amp; any ell·
pa~~~n= d1al: resulll from an indiyidual'sqaisition, pur·
chue, storage, COiliUmption, or other foreseeable use
of a conlumer product or an exposure lhal fortro=+ty
raults from m:eivinaa scrvM:c .
(C)

aubsrancesliaood in divilion (A) of~«:

10 divilion (B)

life. or property.
(8) " Board ofhcllth" meanslho board of health of
1 city or general health district or the authority having
the dulies of a board of ~hh in aDy cily as authorized
by Section 3709.05 of the Reviled Code .

Provide for criminal penalties and civil fines for violations or the law.
Civil penalties or up to $2,500 a day per exposure. and crininal penalties
of 2-4 years in jail and up to a $25,1100 fine may be imposed. Attorneys
fees may be awarded. Persons subject to the law must conduct inventories or chemicals and detailed area assessments under specirted
. circumstances.

.

·(B)( I) For

lion 3752.21 of the Rcviood Code, oneltpol&lt;lrtlhal occurs le11 thin twelve mondUi dlseqnclll: &amp;o the effec~
live dale Of lhli section; _
~
(2) For wbslances liaood in Nlea llllop1&lt;ld punUan1

and Slate and fedenl oaencies hove not pnwided ad&lt;·
qua~e infonnoion about el.poiUJe 10 toxic chemical
subalanca. The pocple then:f01e declan: choir rilh1 10
kMw obool their •._,. 10 roxie chemical JUbs1ancol
krown IOcauoc:concer, binh defO&lt;IIorother rcproduc·
I ive hann.
Sec . 37,2.02 As uood in this chapter:
(A) ''Ambient iir' • means that portion of the almosphere outside of bui~lnp and Olher enclosures,
HICks, or ducts that sunounds human. plant or animal

Require businesses to provide labels and/or other warnings in conjunction with tbe use in consumer produciS or the environmental .release
or chemical substances determined on the basis of lesiS or other evidence
to increase the normal risk of cancer or reproductive defects in animals
or humans.

Yes

Sec. 3752.05. Section 3752.03 of the,Rcviood Code
oboll not apply 10 MY of lho followi.:
(A) An upooure for which fedenl low ..,..... war-

Sec. 3752.01 The pocple &lt;1 Ohio find (I) dw u posurt to 10,.jc chemicaloubalanca cndan..n public
health and safety by inc,...ina lho rill: of cancer,
generic RNiatioa, binh de leola and other dilcues, aod
improperly infrin,.s upon lho public's ri&amp;ht 10 a safe.
clein and healthy environmeM: and (2) thai businesses

To enact Sections 3752.01 through 3752 .99 of the Revised Code .

'u adopted, this

!IOC1ion.

nins in a manner lhil preempca 1ta1e 1111hodry;

FULL TEXT OF THE PETITION

-·ODd. fiodiac drol

Create a new tax on businesses that release or transfer toxic chemicals
or one cent per pound per year on their emissions to be paid into a special
fund. That tax and dvU fines would pay for implementation, administralion and enforcement or the law and would award graniS to groups
demonstrating a need to study environmental exposures to chemical
substances. State and local government oftkials administer the Pf011'8111·
State and local governmeniS and private businesses with nine or fewer
employees are exempt .from the law.

the wamina and tire locolioD ~ lho ·s
pmnioil (rom whiclllho tollicd"'niarl nl
•been rtleuod.
(C) Within one hundred eiaf!IY days after the cft"ec•
live dole of this -ioo. die di.-lhallodopl Nlea
to further adminisccr, impleineat and entorce thi1

John Hodges
Mary Schell
William Swank
Norma Vermeer

PROPOSED LAW

&lt;

.

ccaaidcrcd.,-

au

waminp lhallllao ideftli(y lho pe.- retj •niblc for

alvin&amp;

Committee Against the Law

PROPOSED STATUTE

'

'

. A diverse coalition of Ohioans - from
labor to agriculture to business - opposes
issue 5. So should you .

.......... iairMiidahrll . . . . . the .........-

(3)

- Term Limits will not guarantee more
cot;npetitive elections: elections will
become even less competitive.

•

ODd

- - -lho

(2l

The concept of Term Limits is not a good
tdea' II will not achieve more competitive
elections or better public policy.

.j

1101 be

-=

1NIIW'el' tl. -·..,.,..,.

(I)

Executive officeholders don't make law•.
They implement the laws made by the
Jegislarurc. Mandatory turnover every eight
.years will not guarantee more efficient or effective performance. In fact·. it will lessen
the effectiveness of the offices by having new
officeholders spend years mastering these
complex jobs. This is time that could he used to better serve Ohioans.

Committee For the Amendment

'

...........,.d.-.
..-....
.-ct-.

issue 5 invites scores of new lawsuits and
even .creales a fund of tax dollars to pay the
expenses of activist groups attacking
busines5!'s under thi ~ law.

The proposed law would:

EXPLANAnON AND ARGUMENT
AGAINST PROPOSED AMENDMENT 4

- Lame duck legislators could be tempted with offers of future jobs or other
benefits.

. W ud pouoidtoiii11U poriDd d. .• ' pooaod _
... - . If..,, Ia .......
lho iodivldualpmioualy bold dtolalloo,
the ...
lhoiodivaat~eledudor . . II 'lllfulllll!lroiiiiOl·
aod(l)a- wlrola-IDad.·
pind
floe ilia ...,.tarty • hrl ibd ........ aod lllipj
prior ., tbt cu1rpletioo d. die..., for wlridr be or abc
- eloctod, .uu be
aenodlhe run

-

=&lt;1.-•-

iodiva.'s dielbiliiY Ill trold lho ollioo d. r

-=

t••.

:::4~--rrpr

.

This amendment does not prohibit an incumbent state legislator from running for
other offices. It simply prohibits members
Power ofelections
of the Ohio House of Representatives and
Ohio Senate from making a career out of
- Re-election pressure is·a necessary comholding the same office for a lifetime. If the
ponent of our democratk system . Facvoters choose to return an incumbent to a
ing the voters at election iime fo'rces
position previously held for eight conaccountability.
secutive years. they may do so afler the incumbent has sat out of office for a four-year ·
- Term Limits will discourage competi"rest period."'
tion. Incumbents will still have extraordinary advantages in elections like free
This amendment : as well as Issues 2 and
mailings. name recognition, and media
4. are designed to promole rotation in office
access . Why run against an incumbent
and give more Ohioans an opportunity to
when you can wait and run for an open
serve in public office. By limiting terms.
seat?
open-scat elections will occur more · frequently. These eJections pr011ide tnore op- Prepared by Ohio ~ague of Women Vot~rs.
ponunities for riew people to run for office
Marilyn Shearer, President
without having to challenge well -financed
veteran legislators.
'
,---------------_,

Congressional Term Limits would hun Ohio
- Ohio's cloui in Washington would be
greatly reduced if Ohio adopts congressional Tenn Limits independently of
the other states or adopts limits that arc
more restrictive.

'1

Soctioll 9 tD

-d.·_.,_.....,......,._ftnt_

'bJaperiod
d.bor9f-)WI.Oilly-b &amp;f I a,.oroftei
J _ , I, 1!195 .W be o · • od Ia I
I I• on
lie

"' • -

~~lhe·~~"'·~---hold
ID d.lb ia •
l ·m lllidoa D, m, ..r V d.
litis C w!l'
(A) 1i1Do 111'1111 IIIII! d.lb ia ltdllll·

~·-:J::. ':,':,~-=

Committee For the Amendment
John I. Jazw•
Suwnne Robbins
Kenneth M. Lahn

- Term ·Limits will force dependency upon
staff. bureaucrats, and lobbyists who
will. in turn .. be the ones deciding
public policy rather than our elected
officials.
Legislators may riot be effective or
responsive to the electorate in their last
.allowable terms.

... -

holdOIIjl- d. !he ollloeo o f -

The above term limits issues have all been
forwarded by a citizen-based initiative
designed to bring elected offteeholdcrs closer
in touch with the electorate they serve. None
of these measures is designed to prohibit
voter choice, nor diminish the power of
regular elections. They are designed to create
more balanced elections which will enable
more Ohioans to sene in public office.

Pay-to-play politics

No

No--.....-.-,.&lt;1.-trn

After reaclling a limited term .• incumbents
holding these offices may run for any other
office. They may al so return to a previously
held limited office aher sitting out for a four
year "rest period." This pr011ision secures .
the .voters' right to choose to return a
previous incumbent. but prohibits an incumbent from making a career out of holding the
same political office perpetually.

p~oblems .

ollloo.

3l 1ut1r:1o m, 2 d. tiro 0111o c ...... a 11
. . . - l!r - - ~ lho fallo!r&lt;iol:

The offices to be include are: Lieutenant
Governor, Secretary of State. Treasurer. At·
torney General, and Auditor. None of the ·
current incumbents will be immediately
thrown out of office due to the passage of ·
this amendment. The terms to be limited
begin with this elec.tion.

- A short-term legislature will tend to
adopt shon-term solutions to long-term

IN -

• iodlit ... ......., .. -

ia

-Term Limits won't guarantee resp&lt;insi·
ble legi'slation. They only guarantee
that our legislature will have limited exP.,rience and a. limited memory of successful and failed policies of the past.

II od

1 Ad by apooio!lll...,ar--. o.ty1 11 le,.arollr-.yl.ll93 ....
11 J

Issue 4 will limit the balance of Ohio's ex·
ecutive branch to the same limits that are
placed upon the Governor. Since 1951 the
term of the President has been limited. Since
1954 Ohio's Governor has served under a
limit of two consecutive four-year terms.

Term Limits won't guarantee competitive elections; they simply
guarantee turnover. TulllO\'er, however,
is not the real problem, In that last 10
years, 70% of our stale Senators have
been replaced at least once, as have
68% of our state Representatives.

To amend Article II. Section 2 of the Ohio Constitution by the additi&lt;&gt;n of the
'
following paragraphs:
.

,...._ ,.._ ...U bo

EXPLANATION AND ARGUMENT
FOR PROPOSED AMENDMENT •

Myth of Citizen Legislator

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL
.
CONVENTION

.-

ElectiQn polls will open ·at 6:30a.m. on Nov·ember 3

'

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
.TO ·THE OHIO .CONSTITUTION

The Dally Sen ne~age 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

3752.03 No lJer&gt;on in

die

coune of doing

or other speCial presentatiollS of equal effectivcncu in
drawing attention to the presence of the warning and
s~l ·idenlify every toxic chemical subaancc:.

(B) The medlod e1r9loyed 10 rnnsmit die wornlna
shalt be desiped to ...., lhc warning ......., known
lO the individual prior IO Cllposure.

( 1) For con&amp;umer product ekJ)Oiures, ·the warning
shall, if feasible , appear on a label that is affix.cd lO
or accompanies a produa or its conl&amp;iner or wrapper.
If labelin&amp; is not feasible . warning&amp; shall be provided
throuah shelf labeling, sians . menus, or other communicalions al the retail oudct . If neither of the foregoina warning methods are feasible, warnings shall be
Ji\'en by a system of signs, public advertilinl, or dher
s~ thai provides dear and reasonable wamine. For
products or &amp;ervices that conrain mlic chemical
subsrances known m cause cancer, ~ _wamin~ stwl
include Lhe following languaae : ··wamm•· Ih11 pro. .
. ·- . .. bstana:
·. dua c::onyms one or more to51C C!.!:mJC_ w _ s
' known 10 cause cancer . .. fQr products or services

with Cbopler 3745 of lho Rcviaod Code roquirioa
tor within thirty days of lho issuance of the onla' a
containing the amouni of-" to&gt;&lt;ic dremical--.:e
. produ&lt;:ed, uood , proceued. ... handlod ;.,
pmniltl during die pr«ediq c:alendor year . .,_:...:•
rea:ip1 of the tis1, the dircc:ror lhalt ...id a copy of ;,.
10 the indi•idual wbo lllbmiaod lho c:oq&gt;laim.
•
Sec. 3752.07 (A) lf, upon the bu~ ollhc infonno.•

!hal contain •••ic cherrucll su~ known 10 cause
reproductive 1oxicity, the warnina shall indudc the
following longuagc: "Wamin•; Thja l!l!!duct conyjns
one or monaoajc cbqnjcalwbttincg tpown to tf'r
binh c!eliqs or a!hel'mmuli!jve harm," For producls
or ocrvicoa.lhll contain to&gt;&lt;iccbcmioal.,_ltnown
to cause cancer and reproductive toxicity. bolh wam·
ings lhall be given.
To the C.ll.tenl praccicable, reaulations implemenlinJ
lhis subdivi&amp;ion shall place lbe obliplion to provide
any wart:~ins tnMCrials, such u labels, on the producer

or packager !Blhcr !han onlhc iollil toller. ei&lt;cep&lt; whert
lhC mail ·seller is rapomible for introduc:inJ "I' toxic
chemicalsubatance into me· CCR~Umer product .
(2) For environmental exposures. wunina•lhall be
mailed or odacrwise delivered 10 t..ch reaidenn and
place of business loca.:d wilhin the; Aiel where lhe u pooure ocam, and shall be provided ICIIIi-annually for
so long u the exposure conriftuel,' For~ 10 101ic
chemical substances kilown lO cause c:ancer, the w1mw ...

iq lhall include lhc foll011'inl lon-:"Wamjns' '

su-

Tbj1 atg contaans ODe or III9I'S IPiic rttcmifel Ml'r
5t111C!f kpowp w cAUK Clf'tCe'·' · For e&amp;poiUre to to.ll.-

ic cbcmioal
larown10cauoe rq&gt;rOductlve .,,_
icily, the wam•111 shall include the lollowintl....,....,
••warn1n1 : . Thjs arn conttjns one or . more
!Olk Cl\emical subfwps known J0 crl'lt birth *fects
or other reprndtl£1jve bpm. ' • For expoiUre to toxic
known

lion contained in lho till pm&lt;ribed by ~=~~:5;~~:;1
of the Revised Code, or otherwise, the director
thai the 1oraJ amount of any ~lie chemical subAORCe

.I

thal is also an e~tlremely haw"dous subltance or
dous subsiance listed in rules odop1ed undO.. I)iviis~o.
(8)( I)(A), (C), or (C)(5) of Sec1ion m0.02 of

Rcviood Code, u IJIIIIl!Piialt, was prcaeni 011
prtmiscs durinl lho prccodiq Oalendor year in

an:
amoun1 arcater than len times the reponabk quantity .,.
applicable 10 die subslance under"- Nlea, lho dinx:-•

lor. in rw:cordancc with Chapter 3745 of the ·
shall issue 111 order direo:ljp&amp; lho penoo 10

'

Code,

mil an exposure auessmem to lhe'directOI' . An
issued undci lhil division shall require the exposure "'
assessment to be aubminc:d within one tl.lndrtd ei,hcy :
cloys after iJS!11nm of the onlcr. For JUDd co- .m..n., ~
·the director may cxlend the time for Albmiuion
elljiOSUre ...... menl by n&lt;M more !han one hun~J1j

eipl)' additional doys.
•
(BJ Within fifteen cloys of I&lt;ICOip1 ol the npuaure &gt;
wessmcnt, the dilictor shall mail a copy of it to the :
individual who filed lhe coq&gt;taine under

Sec::liOb:

3752.06 of rhe Rcviood Code ond 10 lho public llbnl)' ~

located nearesc 10 lhc pRnuK&amp;, and shall CIYIC uM:c ~
of lhc UseumenllO be publilhod in a newspaper
general circulllion in rhc county where ~ prc;miooo'j
arc loc1tcd .
(C) Tbe director or environmenll.l pi'OUICtion shall
not issue an~ order or &amp;Ike o&amp;her .ruo. apptoviq.,

di&amp;apprOVina or otherWise ~ns any~":==~
on lht adeqwlcy or oompl... ness of 111y
assessment
Sec. 37ll.08 No penon shall be required 100. 1
~n cxpo&amp;ane lllelllne~ for a toxic chemical Ml
durillJ the iwelve month&amp; imrnecliolely followiRJ lho
lilliq of such P!bl1ance punuanl 10 SeClioo 3752.:Z.l

==;

of the Rcviood Co&lt;lt.
Sec. 37,2.09 Eoch poncin requiftld co su.bmit an ••poaure

II

•••

UDder s.:tioa 37$2.1.11 ofbleviled

shall inelude lho followin&amp; II I mini.....,: .'
(A) Acharo&lt;terizatioo of lho pl!yslcal !IOIIi1lf of lho
· P"'mi~, includiq the looaliun, clinnte, .,.._.,,
Code

�P111• s The 0.11y sentinel

~ Polls

•

Monday, OCtober 11, 1~

for General Election will close at 7:30 p. m~ · Nov. 3

o l - - - - • ....,,
(B)A"'*I • . •ollllo......-lllll•ybe
...-f, i.:h .,.._ kmka ftllllhtem:d- ,.. . . ..
ICtiYil'y. ........... lhe IIIIUre and pi !I I FCf fl ten•
'ailive lib I 4 ...,._;
I (C)Aol.,
! 0 • " •oloodvk*
o .......
;,.
. . . . . . . . 1110)'- d i e - oiiOSit
jcel
... ollllo-illwhlchcbey

:

t

An-..

·.,. or 1110)' lie ......,.;
(D)
• t

'

111 -

"

at

kU

.....,aticlliof oldie.,..,

beilt&amp; releuod. 1be enviroann-

IIIIo which IIIey .., mo.ocl ..... lhe
UIICe1lainlitl illvolvod

•.qy. _..,.....
...
--..;

...........
,.,.~

_(E) All idenlifKMioo oldie expoou10 poohwoys, in-

.duolinldlo~ i l l - micdielniall••........

--II

t 'ftld lhr\*lh variout avinawlleDbJ media.
All~ oldie..._ by wl!idl individuols
waiald 00111e ialo 001111a with the toxic ct.ail;al

m "

e_.,

die ......... a n d for eocto .,..,
...,uicoloubol.,.. n'-1 • dJo pmaioel i.lhrouJh
inllllltioa............ dennll CGIII!:I, or adler means;
: (F) A cpiiMIIIcarion ollhe .....in"'e. li'eqilency IIIII
- o l e - " foreoctomicd!emiool ou1oollonc&lt;
llld expoour&lt; l'l'l!woy to _ , . , . die moximum
11 ., wbeGier dJo route of

expo~&amp;~re ;

(G) A cpMii"ICIOioa of die riot olconoeror ...,.....,.

ave tollicily ., die elpOIOCI - - eouted by lheir
e1p0111re 10 che &amp;oDe: chemical IUbalnce of combinl·

or .,.., chemical •d•l- rdeaood from lhe
premioeo; .
(H)AnQociftcorimo(lheUfiOelloirlliooand ..........
lions ill l1llkina l h e - ........., by dliloec·
lion, ... oldie - r in which ...h o f - unoer. . . . . . . . . . . . - Wll addi ..,; ud
(I) Sod adler illf_.., oolhe director moy, by
rule, ......... i o - or~ .
(J) Wilhirl - yeor after lhe eff..Uve dole of dus
oi.:tion, die diredor oholl adopt and may ommd IIIII
reocind IUiel., fUnher odminioler and implemetU !lois
lion

.........

- · - · onclenforoe dW dlapler.
: Sec. 3752. 11 ThediledorofenvironmeniAI proi&lt;ICdon 1110)' - . . lllllllify, or ........., onion in...,.,...,..
:widl Cbopler 3745 ollhe Reviled Code to enforce Ill)'
,ooolion of doil dlopler or a rule adoplod under it NOIw--.Secliollll9.06oflheRevilodCode,all
.Ofllerliolood woler d l i l - . or Ill)' ocber ...uon
of IIIia dlaplor, llllllbe iuued wi- holdia&amp;111 od~ ~ ia .,......ion wilh lhe order and
: ...f1111 aina a propDocd ..uon under Seolion
:?74'-07 of die llnio&lt;d Code.
, Sec. 3752.12 (A) No penon lhlll violale or fail to
perfonn "'1 &lt;Uy ...,_. b!- "'1 -or lhildllpler
of die Reviled Code or o rule odoplod or order iuued
under it
(8) No penm lholl knowinJ)y oubmi1 falae informllion ot ....,.. or fad Ill oubmil information or
reoon1s !'OC)IIiRd by dlilchllpler or lhe Reviled Code
or o rule odopled or order ~ uoder il.
(C) For violation&amp; of Sec:lion 3752.03 of die Revio·

tdCode,eooh----·....--·
(D) Forviolalionoofallolher -oflhil ........
of !be llnilod Code, or ruleo adoplcd ororden iuued
doereunder, ...h d a y o f v - - • - offerue.
·
·
·
• Seo. 3752.13 The -..ey aenenJ or !he..........,.
,.aomey of !he oounl)', oily diJa:tor or law of lhe city,
pw villqc oolioilor of !be vUiqe wbel&lt; 1 violllion hu
~oa:urrod or 11 ooc:arriD&amp; may, lftd upon the writtea re.....,. or die di....., ol envi11111111011111Ji-. ..-!be
.boons of hoallh of lhe hoallh diolrid lwvia&amp;lmitorial
;.riodidion. • ....,..&amp;,lhoJJ '. ..-10 .......,..
lion or briJII•ICiion for injunolion apioll Ill)' per.0. who hoi ~or ia viofolina lUll', ...uon of dlis
-dlapler, or a rule odoplod or order iuued uoxler it. The
.COUrt of Common PleaA in whW:h an Ktion for injuncilion io filed hu juriodiction to IIIII lholl 111111
tnJimi!W)' llld permanent in~ve r&lt;lief upon a
obowinl IIIII lhe penon apirlll whom !he ICiion is
,bnlujho hu ·~..-is viollllinllll)' section of !his
j:boplor, or a rule odoplod or order iuued uoxler it
Sec . 3752. 14 (A) Al'l'f penon who viollres any ooc&lt;ion of !his o:hapler or I rule odoplod or order iuued
under it !lhall poy 1 civ!l penalty of nc!l _ , dwl
,lwenl)'·five holldred dollln. The anorney ...,.... or
V"-".U"IIItome)' o( dJo &lt;011111)', city di,_ of law
of lhe city, or villqe oolic:itor of lhe villqe wher&lt; a
violation hu oocuried or is OCOJrring may, and Upon
111e ..-...,...or !he directorofenvironrnenlalpn&gt;.uon or !be board ofhoallh of !be heallhdiJirict hav·
in&amp; IMTIIC1rial junoc!ic:lion. u ..,.,..,.,.we, lhlll brinJ
an ICiion under lhio seo:1ion lpiRII any pOn.n who hu
violalod or il viololin1 any ...uon of doio dlaplcr or
' a rule odopled or order ioouod uoxler it. AJTy lOtion under
1
lllis seo:lion ia I c:iviJidion, .......... bj- die Ohio Rules
';,rciviiPro&lt;:edu~ andolher rulel of pract!CC and pn&gt;-

,cedure appluble to civil actions.
,
; , (8) Monies col~ u civil penalties under Divi~
lion (A) oflhio oeotioolhlll be cRdilod 10 die follow-

""""'"'""-..y

jina fUnds on die followin&amp; priority ·
(I) To roimbunc lhe -..cy senenJ.
' of lhe &lt;O!!IIIy, oily director of law, villop oolicilor,
,»rector of environmental protection, and board of
:heallh, u opprqlriare, for die ........,.. 00111 incur·~ in iawesdptins. preparina llld litiptins the cue;
(2) To !he Toxic: Chemical RoJIM&lt;o-Know Fund
in Seolion 3752. 17 of !he Reviled Code.
i Sec. 3752. 15(A) E..... u for provided in Diviaioo
of lhiii«UOP, any penon may commence 1 civil
~ion on hil or her own behalf:
r (I) Apinst any penon who io allepd to ... in violaof any oedion of lhio ohapler or 1 rule odoplod or

f":.'rdl
Ja&gt;

F.

--·nder~ ;

: (2) Apilllllhe dinotor of environmeral..........,
!bel&lt; ildepxl failu~ of lho director Ill perform
101 or Wly woter !hit cl!apler which io 1101 diocre• wilh dJo d;.....,.,
.
No IICtioncan be commenced undtrDivilion (A)
...,ion prior to oiXI)' dayalftcr lhe plai,.iff hu
~·en IIOiice of !he alleaed violndon 10 lhe·direotor of
!'nvoronrnenlllprooOotinn, lhe ~ ....... and !he
allepdvio!Mor.
No ldion can be OOUI!Id~ omder Diyioion (A)
...,ioft if !he 1110mey pnenl or !'"""""'inJ
of 1110 QJIII1Iy, oily of lhe c:ily. or vi1JoF
~ lhe ¥tolauon his occuned or il oa:urrina, tw

~=:=

IIIII io diliaeraJy JIRM'ol"&amp; I civil or
.......... oompl-wilh l h e dlil clllpler or !he rule or order in .,_.,., IIUI in
ooioch a&lt;ooo, uy penon moy "*'- • a,_,

riJhl.
(D) Jf lhe dirediW io not I )lillY in ll'l'f ICiion ....,.
~IOOIIuoxJer dlil...uon,

he 1110)' . . . •ene II I

!1101·

. . iJI riJbl.

~ (8) All ..uon .-;zed by Divioion (A) ofdoluec:1110)' be ......... orty in dJo Out~ Camnon Pleoo
dJo coulll)i in wlllch tile allepd viololion hu ....r.
or 1o ......,.;na. The ...,rt 1111111 .... juriodidion
eMJrt:e die pn&gt;Y- iJI IIIia dllplet ot I role

h

::::or~an 'order ialod it, IIIII to apply any
clvU plllolliel.
(P) Tllo - . ill . . . '1"' ftlol order ill any IC·

t

ofliril l•(iri""""•
II -.oyandupen
w~ feel) to a plaintiff wllo pren.ill or pat r'•

•i•'·

ly prevoiiJ ill dJo ·
.
(G) Nodoial in IIIia- llhlll .-ic:l IllY riJ)!t
wlllch""' penon (otdaolol-)- - -

.., .... or CGIMA law to teet crdol"
II of In)'
--..or dlil clllptcr or rule llloplod .,. order IIIUOd

.,.... il, or to oodt Ill)' adler relief.
Sec. 3752.16 NodliriJ in dlilc:hopoorllllllalrer or
dirainilb ..,. Jet~~ ..,.., r ., olhro • • _...sin....,.
IDOD Jawor b j - - or.....-. ... IIOihinJ ill IIIia
diaper obaiJ.- or enlorp Ill)' dora. ia 11ry acdon 10 onfonle - ..... &lt;All ;pion. p llioo .........
lions impolod under lhio chlpoer lhiiJ be in addition
10 any penal1iH or Nrll:lions Olhqwioe
by
law .
Sec 37$2.17 Theoo is heooby c..- ill lhe Tollic Chemieol RiJI!t-to-"- Fund. The
- ..... CXIIIIill ! h e - mdilodloilomder - tion,37$2.19 .... Divilioa (8) o f - 3752.14 of
lhe Reviled Code. T h e - of envin•_. prolection oholl ... --half of lhe moaieo CIOdiled to die
timd for die .......... of imple•!*'llin&amp;. ~.
and enforoiaa !his cl!apler and lhe ruloo adoplod oncl
orden iuued under it The diredor lholl - ihe remainder of !he moaieo cnodited to !he fuad to make
gruu under Secdon 37,2.18 iJI dJo llnlood Code.
Sec. 3752.18(A) The diroctor envi11111111011111 protoclionmay makearuu available Ill Ill)'....., of in·
dividullo w~~o.-.r
o .-mile radiuo of .,........ lhll .,. die !IUbjool of
an order iuued under Seolion 37,2.01 of lhe llnlood
Code. Gran! .-ieo )NO'Iidod ..tOr IIIia l!eCSion lhlll
be._, e'"'llllively to-., - i r a l w i - ..,....
dina lhe hlzlnls ., hurMn hoallh ..-1 by exposure
to toU:: chemicll ...... ~tlhllay be releued inlo
die eovironmeat from- IN&amp;Uilea. No ,.., Jrllll
lhiiJe.- $50,000: T h e - - - ooly,.... ropnlillg Ill)' !IU!:h premils unleoo he or olie finds
lhll renewal of • Bran! io neoeoury to achieve die )ilr·

,....ribod

- *

or

or

.........,.......,;. -

pooe~oflheooolion .

Sec . 3732.10Thedi.....,.ofenviromnenlal prole&lt;·
lion, i l l - wilh Chapler 119 of !be Revio&lt;d
Code, moy odopl, ommd IIIII 1&lt;10ioxl rulel lo imple-

~

• .....,....,_IOihil-. ---.

(8) Wilhin 0110 year after lhe eft'..Uve due of !his
......... lhe dilec:tor oholl adopt and
unoad onc1
1&lt;10ind rulel es~ablilhinJ proc:ec~~mo for orpplyina for
anna ., ... provided under IIIia - · crireria for
clelenninina diaibilily for- JfW*, and !IU!:h ocber
roquiJemenll u die di....,. ....;den neoeoury or appropriale for implemeoling and adminillerina !his

-r

...uon.

Sec. 3752. 19 (A) For !be Jii'P'*ofproviding tundine for lhe iaJ4*uwnarioo, aduiuilbidou and enfon:e.._1 of Chaplcr 3752 of dJo Reviled Code and fUn ·
dinl J!lllli under- 3752.11 o( lhe Reviled Code,
tad! owner or operuor of a facilil)' ...,Ured., file 0ae
or,... toxic chemiCal releuc formo mler Secdon
37SI.03oflhe Revio&lt;dCodelhallpoy 1 foeofonecenl
per pound oftollic dlernil:ak ohown oauy ouo:h form
Ill have boon relouccl or lrllll~ Ill an off-oilo looalion in d J o - year to wllidllhe form lflllliel. Each
......... ..,.._ lhlll mnillhellftOIUII of !he fee due
under lhil divioion ., l h e - of mvbwwal protection •ith the toxio chemicall'eleue f011D110 filed .
(8) If paymenl of I fee uoder div- (A) of lhilaec:tion is 1... die owner or operator 1111111 poy an addilionallen.pertenloflhe .,._,I of!be fee due for ... h
mondo - die poy.- io .....
(C) If dJo director cldenru-11111 die f... levied by
lhio ...uon w~loubslantially exoeod $3,000,000 anaually,he or she shall adopl and may ameoxl IIIII rescind ruleo Rduoina lhe 11110!1111 of die fee to be poid
under diyioion (A), oudllhlllhefeeslevied by doia !ieotion oholl _ . $3,000,000.
Sec. 3152'.10. If any provision oflhio cl!apler or lhe
applk:llion dler&lt;Of io held invalid, !hal invalidity shall
1101affeot olher provio10111 or •ppl..._ of lhe dlaplcr
whio:h ....... aiven widtoullhe invalid provision or orpplk:llion and lo !lois eoxllhe )NO'Iisiona of !hi&amp;
chaprermaeverable
Sec. 37,2.21. (A) BeJinrung on !he effective d.are
of tbi1 ICCtion, the initial hst of to~ic chemical
IUbllances known to cause Clneer or reproductive loxicity oholl inc:lude !he following:
WTOXIC CHEMICAL SUBSTAI'tCES KNOWN TO CAUSE
CANCER
SVIST.\NCES
CAS NUMBER
A-ALPHA&lt; (2-AMIN0-9H-PYRIDOI1 .l-BIINDOLEI
261461$
ACBTALIJEHYD£ .. . • . ..
.. ....... ,
. . . 75070
ACBTAWID£ . . . . .
• • • • CiOJSS
ACI!I'OCHU&gt;II
34256121
2·A.CE1YLAMINOFWORENE
&gt;196l
ACifLU()Rf£N . . . . . .
624"16599
AC1tYLAMIDE . • . . . . .
. 19061
ACI:YLONrftiL£ •
. . . 10"11)1
ACTJNOMYCIN D . . . .
50'160
ADII:IAMYCINCDOXOR\IBICJN
HYOlOCHLORIDB)
23214921
A.F·2 : fl-(2-FUI:Yl.).~S· Nn'R0-2-FURYLJA.CRYLAMIDE 36115J7
AFLATOXINS . . ..
ALACHLOR . . . . .. . . .. . .
, . . .
, lmu.o&amp;
.-.LCOHOUC II!VEilAOES,WHEN A-SSOCIATED WTTH
ALCOHOl ,ABUSE
ALDRIN . . . .. . . . . .
309002
ALLYL CHLOIUDE
. .. . .
. .. . • , .
. . I~ I
2·AMINOAH1'KRAQUIMONE .
. 117193
P·AMINOAZOBENZENE
.
60093
OltlltO-A.MINOAZOIOLUENE . . . . , . .
97563
.t-AMINOifPMBNYL(4-AMINODIPHENYL) . . .
, . . 92671
3-AMIN0-9-ETHYI..CAUAZOLE HYDROCHLORJDE 610f97J
I~ AMIN0-2 - MElltYl.A.NTHRAQUJNONE
81210

2 - AMII«H-(S· N~l- PURYLI· l , 3,4 -TlUADIAZOl.E

71261~

AMITROLE . . . .
. . • . .. . . . . .. , . . .
61825
1\NALOP.SIC MfXTtiii!S CONTA1NJNO PHENA-CETIN
ANIUNE
..
. . .
62~)3
OI:THO-ANISIDINE .. . ..
. • . .. . .
. . .90040
OI.THO-ANISIDINE HYDROCHLORIDE .
. 134m
A.NTJhtONY OXIDE (A.NTIMONY TRIOXIDE)
. , JJ0964.4
ARAMITE
140571
ARSENIC tiNOROANIC AltSENIC COMPOUNDS) . . . . . . •. . .
ASBESTOS • . .
• • .. ll32~14
AUIAIIIONI!
.. 491110l
AZASI!IINE , .
II .SOU
AZATHIOI'ftiN£ . ,
. , .. , . .
.446166
AZOIENZENE , . . . . .
.. ....
10l!33
II!N!(AlANT1fRACENE •
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BeNZENE
. . . .
. . .. . . .. . .
71432
IENlJDINE )AND ITS SALTS) . . .
.• . •
. . . . . .92175
IENZO(IJFLUOlANTHENE . . . . . .
JOJ9In
II!N!O(IIPLIJCiil.6ttmtENE
205123
llNZO(KIPLUORANTHI!NE . . •
.
. . 207019
ll!fi!ZOF\JitAN .. . . . . .. . , . . . . , . , ..... .', ... 2"1 1196
BeNZO(.-.)PYRENE • . . , . . . . .
. . .
. .50321
II!NZOTliCIILOit.IDE .
910'77
IENLYL CHI..ORIDE
1(1)447
8ENZYLVIOL81'4B . . . . .... .. .. .. .... . , . . 1694093
IEIYWUM A.ND IEAYLUUM COMPOUNDS
. . . , . , ..
III!TEL QUID wrrtl TOIACCO . • , . , . .. .. . . . . . . ..
811(2&lt;1tLOIOEilfYL)EI'III!a .
. 111.W.:.
N.N-115(2-CitC*)I!f'HYL}-2-NAPHTHYLAMINI!
(CHLOI:NAPAZINI) . . . . , .. . . . .. . . . • .. • . . . 494031
IISCIIl.OaOITHYL Nm.OSO\JRIA(ICNU) •
(CAIIMUmNB) .
..
,.
154931
IIS4CIILOIOMETHYLIBTHI!a ...
. . . . . . , "'2111
IITUWI!NI, EXTRACTS OF STEAM-kEFTNED
A.ND AIR lBPINED . .
. . . . . . . , . . .. , , , . , . ,
AACKIIN f'l!ltN . . • , . . . . . . .
lltOMCIUCHLOIOMBlltANB .• . . , . . . . • . . . . .

1,3-1\JTAIIIZN&amp; .... ,

. . .751'7_.

. . ................... .. ......

. 1.4-llri'ANIIDIDL IMMEI'IL\NESULPONATE (IU$ULPAN)5"'1
IUTYLATIID HYDIOXY.\NIIOLB ... . • • . . . . . 2JOI)165
IITA·IUTYftOI..ACTOHI. . • . . . . . . . • . . , . , . . .. lDIIIal
CADMIUM AND CA.DMIUM COWPOUPb
CAI'TAPOL • . •. ,, ,, , ,, , , ... . . ..• .. . . , . . 2A1VI61
CAI'TA.N .... . , ...... .. ..,: . '. .. ..
. . . . . lll062
CAUON T!TRACHLOAIDE . . . , . , , . , .. , . . .S623S
CAUON-a.ACK EXTUCTS .
.
•CEAAMIC PIIUJ (AIDOJINE PARTICLES OF
l!IPIRAal SIZE) . .. ... , . . . . .. . .. . . .. ... . , .. .. . .. ..
C'I!RTAIN C0M11N!D OEMOIH!ItA.I'Y fOR
L YM'"'*"' .. . . , , , . . , . .
CHLOlAI!IIOCIL • .. . .. .. ..

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... , . .

... • ..

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CHI IWa.:oNI Cl1lPONEl •. •• ' ' ' •. ' • . . • • ' . • . '. 14.J5GO

Clll.OIDIWIJIOI. ' .. .. ' ' .. . ...•..•. . ..... '.' .6161913
CH~ ACID ..... . . . . , . . . ..
. 115216
CIII.OIINATID PAIAPPINI (AVIIAADE CHAIN LENCJ111,

Cl2. ~tm.Y 1)1 C1II..C*INI!IY WIIOHI')*I71l6l
CII1 CW(I"_........-n1ANE . ,.. ..
. ... . .. . . , . 12+411
CHLOilOB'IliANE • • . • . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . .
.7!110]
1.(2-Cifi.OitOITKYL}-KYCI.OHBXYI.-1·
N~mNI!) ..... . .. . .. Jl01047&lt;t
1-42-CIIl.DilO!ftfYL)-}.(4-wmiYLCYCI.OHBXYL}-I ·NI'I'aOIIOURI!A(MBTHYL-CCNUI . . . •. 11!109096
Ctf"""""'"" .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. ..61t6)
OII..OIOIIE'ntYL METHYL mtl!l
fTECHNICA.L OIADII) . . . . . . • . . . . . . .
. . I01lD2
3-ctiLORO-HIE1'HY.....OPENE . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . , !6l47J
"&lt;fii..OaO.ORT"HH-PH!NYLIINBDIAMINE . . . . . . . . .9$130
P&lt;"Jt~Q.O.TOLIJJDIIE .
. .. . .
. 95692
·CHLORO'J'HALDHIL . . .
...
. . 11974.56
CHIIOMIUW IHEXAVALEHf COMJIOtJNDSJ .
CHRYSBNE . . . . .. . . . . . . ... . ... . . . . ... 211019
C t BASIC RED 9 NONOHYDI.OC'HLORIDE . . , . • .. 569619
CINNAMYL ANTHRANlLATE . . . . . . .
.
17296
CISPLAnN . . . . . . .. .
. . .. 1:5663271
CTTaUS RED NO l
... . 63SI5ll
CUKE OVEN EMISSIOI'G
CONJUCJAT£0 ESTROGENS
CRI!OSOTES . . . .
.. . . .... '.. . '
PARA-CRI!.SIDINE
. . . 120711
CUPFEUON • .
.
. . .. .
llJ206
cYCASIN . . .. . .
. .
. . . .
• . . . . 14901017
CYCLOPHOSPHAMIDE 4ANHYDR0USJ
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CYp.DPHOSPHAMIDE (HYDRATED) . . . .
. . 60!1iJI92

. ....
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DlC ORANGE NO I"I
DAC RED NO 8
D&amp;C RED NO. 9 . .
O.C RED NO ,

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. ..•. )468631
2092&gt;00
. Jltarll
. ... ' . . . 11119
. . . . 4341034

....

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DAMINOZIDE
DAUNOMYON . . .. .
. ' I .. ..
. . . . . 20830113
ODD (DICHLORODIPHENYLDICHLORO £THA.NE) . . nS41
ODE (DIOILOIOOIPHENVLDICHLOII:O.ETHYLENE)
7U59
DDT (DICHLORODIPtii:,NYLTRICHt.ato-ETHANEI .
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DOVPfDICHLOaVOSJ . . .. . . . . .. . • ... . . , , . . 62737
N,N '-DIACETYLBENZIDINE
. . .
61JJ54
2 4-DIA.MINOAN~ . . . .
615005
2.-t-DIAMINOANISOl.E SULFATE .. . . . .
... J9156417
-4,-4'DIAMINODIPHENYL ETHI!R(4 ,.. .QXYDIANJUNE) . 1011)1
l ,-4-DIA'WINOTOI..UENE .
. . . . . . 9'1»
DIA.MINOTOLUENE (MIXED)
DIBENZIA.HlACRIDINE .
. . , . . . 2l6J6B
DIBENl(AJ)ACRJDINE ...
. .
. .
. .. 2244ZO
DIBENZ(A ,H)ANTHRACENE •
. . . . 53703
7H·DIBI!NZO(C ,O,cA.UA.ZOLE
195-492
DIBENZO(A .EJI"YRENE • . . . . . . .
. . . • . 1926St
r.IBENZO(A,H.PYUNE . . . .
. . . II9MO
DIBElfWc:A.I)PVRBNE
. llt559
DlBENZ()(A.L)PYRENE .
191300
12-DIIlltOMO-J...CHL.DROPROPANE(DBCPJ . . . . . ... 96121
P-DIC'HLOROIBNZENE .
. , ... . . .
. . . . . 106467
3 3'-DICHLOROBENZJDfNE
91941
14'-DICHL.DR0-2-BllTENE
"164J'10
] 3'-DICHI..OR0-4 4'-DIAMINODIPHENYL ETHER . . .1:1434161
1.1-DICHL0aD£THANE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7~34]
DICHLOROMETHA.NE4METHYLENE CHLORIDE)
7~
I 2-DICHLOIDPI.OPANE .
'1117~
l.l-DICHLOROI'IOPENE .
. . . . .S42"1$6
DIELDRIN . . • • ....
. . . ... 60571
O!ENEST1101.
. 14173
DIEPOXYilTrANE
146453~
DIESEL ENOINE EXHA\lST
DI(2·£1'HYLHEXYL)PHTHALATE
.•. 117117
1.2·DIImfYLHYDitAZINE
161~101
DIETHYL SULFATE .
646"1~
DIETHYLSTIUEST1l~D£SJ
,
. . 56531
DIOLYCIDYL IU!SORCINOL ETHER (DOIEJ
... 101~
DIHYDROSAFIOLE
94~16
3.3 DIMETHOXYBENlJDINE(Of\lltO-DIANISIDINE) .. 119!1fM
3 3'-DIMETHOXYBENllDINE DIHVDROCHLORIDE
(0Rnf0 .
2032~
DIA.NJSIDINE DIHVDROCHLORIDE)
DIMETHYL SULFATE . . . .
. . .. . . . . . . . ,
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-4-DIMETHYLAMINOA.ZOIENZI!NE . . . . . . . .
6CI17
TRANS- 2 -{ DIMI!THYLAMIN01WE1'HYUMIN0)-~ · (2(5· NM'R0.2·

FURYLJVJNYL)·I.J-4-0XADIA.ZOLE . . . .
. 5~73M40
7.12 DIMETHYLBENZ(AJANTHRACI!NE
57976
3 3'-D1METHYLII!NZIDINE(OitTHO-TOLIDINEI .
119937
DIMETHYLCARBAWOYL C'HlOIIDe
'19647
1.1 -DIMETHYLHYDitAZINE ... . . . .
511"1
I 2-DIMETHYLHYDRAlJNE ... . , . . . . . . ... .,.;rna
DlhiETHYLVINYLCHLOIUDE . ... , ,
. . . ,1)]71
I 6-DINrrROPYRENE , ,
4239'764.1
1.1-DINITROI"YRENE . .
2.4-DINJnQTOL.UENE . .. . . . . . .. .. . . . 121142
1.-4-DIOXANE , . . . . .. . . . . . ,
. . . . . . 12!911
DIPHENYLHYDAHTOIN(PHENn'OIN)
. 57410
DIPHENYLHYDANTDJN(PHYENYTOIN) ,SODitJM SALT 6l0933
DIRECT BLACK 3lkTEOtNICAl. ORADEI . . . . :. , 19313n
DIRECT BLUE 6(TECH!«'Al. GkADEJ . . . . . . . 2602462
DIRECT BROv,'N 95(TE.CHNICA.L ORA.DEI
16011166
DISPERSE BLUE I
lot7,_SI
EPICHlOIODHYDRIN . . . .
. . 1061911
ERIONrr£ . ,
ll510421
f.STRA.DKlL 17BETA
, 50212
ESTRONE .. . . . .. . . . . . .
. . 53167
ETHINYLESTRADIOL .
.
. . . 57636
ETHYL ACRYLATE
IM:II85
EfHYL' METHANESUtroNATE
62500
ETHYL-4 .-4 '- DICHLOROBENlJLATE
... 5101$6
ETHYLENE DIBROMIDE .
. 1069)4
ETHYLENE OICHLORIDE(I.2·DICHLOROETHANE)
10'7062
ETHYLENE OXIDE
75211
ETHYLEN E THIOUREA
. .. . . . 964$7
ETHYLENEIMINE
.
. .... 151564
FOLPET
FOit:MALDEHYDElOASl ..
2-(2-FORMYl.HYDMlJN0)-4
C~ · NTTR0. 2 · FURYL)THIAZOLE

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FURAZOLIDONE
FURMECYCI.OX

• • . • . • .3510"15C
6"1..58
.. .

. .60$61050

GASOLINE ENOINE EXKAUn (CONDf!NSATESIEXTRACTSI
GLASSWOOL miERS (A.IRIORNE PARTICLES
OF RESPIRABLE SIZE) . . .. . . . .
GLU·P-1(2-AMIN0-6-METltYLDIPYRIDO
l1 .2-A 3'.2'·D)IMIDAZ0LE) . . . . . .
. , .6"17l011-4
GLU P 2C2·AMJNODIPYRIDO{I ,2·A.3' ,2 '·0)
IMIDAZOLE) . . .
. .
1.17730103
GLYCIDALDEHYD£
.
. . . , , .. 16S344
OLYCIOOL
. .556j25
GRISEOFULVIN .
OYROMITRIN(ACETALDEHYDE
METHVLFORMVLHYDRAZONE
16561021

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He BLI.J E I .. , ..

. . 218-t!Ml
HEPT.-.CHLOII: , . . . ..
. .. .. . .
. 76441
HEPTA.CHLOit EXPOXID£ ,.
. .
. . . . . , . 10'245"1)
HEXA.CHLOROBENZENE . .
111141
HEXACHlbROCYCWHEXANf..(TECHNICAL OAADE)
HEXACHLOIODIBEHZODIOXIN . . , . .
,,. -~
HEXACHLOROI!THA.NE
.. .. . ..
. . . .. .. 61121
HEXAMETHYU'H(l'iiPHORAMIDE .
. , 1.110]19
HYDRAZINE . . . .. . • .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Jal012
HYDRA.ZINE SULFA.tt . . , , . . .
. . . . . , 100)4932
HYDRAZOBENZEPE(I 2-DIPHENYLHYDIAZINE} . .. . 122667
INDENO{I ,2.3-CDJPYRENE .. . ,
IQ(2·AMIN0-3-METHYUWIDAZ0(-4,5·F)
QUINOUNE
IRON DEXTUN COMPLE)(
ISOSA~OLE

. , , , . ... 193395
610061]1
lllliM664
120$11

.,,..

• . n5016l4
l..t\CTOFEN • . . . ' .
l.ASfOCARPINE . ..
. . )]1042
LEAD ACETA-TE . .
LEAD PHOSPHATE
..
. .
. . . . . . . . . . 74462n
LEA.D SUBACETATE .. , . . , .
. . . . . . . lll5326
UNDANE AND OTHEJt HEXA.CHLOROCYQ..OHI!XANE
ISOMERS
WANCOZEB
. . . . . . .. , .". .
.. ..... . .... 1011011
MANEI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . 12-427312
ME·A·ALPHA.CI2-AMINO-l·METHYL·
tH-PYIID0(2.3·8)1NOOLIII .... .. . .
, . . . . . 6a6137
MBDIOXYPIOOIIITERONE .-.CeTA.TB ..• , •••.•... 115119
MIIUJitt.-.LAN • . , .. . . , ..... . ... . . . • . .... 1... 14U23
Ml!aPHALAN . . .. . . . . •
. . . .... .
531760
MI!ST'I.ANOL . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7.2333 ·
1-ME!THOXYPSORAU!N WITH ULTRAVIOLET
1\ THI!aAPY . , . , . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . 291117
.S.METHOXYPIORALEN WITH ULTRAVIOLiiT
A THERAPY .
. . . . . . . . • . . . , . .. '. . . . . . 414201
2-METHYLAZIRIDINE(PROPYLENBIMINEJ . , , , , • , , , , . "j51
METHYI.Az0XYMETHAN0L . • .. .. . . . .. • . . . . . !Q0965
WETHYLAZOXYW£TIIANOL ACETA.TE .
. J92621
l-METHYI..CHOLANTHIEfr11E r . . • • • • • .. • • • , •• , • . • · ' .511495
J.METHYLCHRYSVIE . . . . . .. .. . .. . .. . . ... , . . .. 3697243
4,4'-MBTHYLBNI .1(2.cHLOROA.NIUfffl) ,
. . . lOll ..

4,4'-MBIIIYLINI! III(N.N-DMI'IIIYL)
~NE • ••.•.... , . ..•.••.•••• . •• :.: .•• . 101611
4,4'-MI'11fYI..Ifflllla·WITIIYLANILINII •. , ......... . .
4,4'-WI'I'HYJ,.!NIDIAHLINE
• . .. . . . .
. · · · -1C!f l'19
4,4'·110mtYLINEDIAHIUNE DIHYDROCHLORIDE . l:wlMI
MIBTIIYL JODIDE ... , , , , ,,,, , , .• ,,, .. ,, •...•. . . , •. 7. .
WITIIYL MBTHANISUIJlOtiAil . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , 16m
2-WftHYL-1-fi11'10AN'fttRAQUINONE
(Of UNCI!J.TAIN PtJJJTY) .•... , .. , . . . .. .. . . , .. .. 1291S7
N·ME'niYL-N-NITJlO.N·NJTROICXlUANDINE ., . . . , •• .'JOU1
N-WITKYI..OLACII:YLAMmE . . . . . . ..
. nMU
M!TIIYLTHIOURACIL •
. . . .... 56041
ME11RAM .. ... .. .. .
.. ....
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M~ONJDAZOI.E , . . . . . . ... , , . • , . , . . . . • . .443411
MICHLER'S KETONE . . .
. . . . . 90MI
MrREX .
.
. . . . . . . .. ... l:JISI55
MITCMtYCIN C . •. .. . . .. .. , . . , . . , .......... 50071
MONOCII.OTALIHE . . .. . . . . . , . , , .. .. . . . . . .
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i . .......... .. .

S.CWORPHOUNOMETHYL }-3(~· NmO.FUIFUIYUDENEI

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M!.!nAlDOAS .. . . . . .. . . . . ... . . . . • . . .. .
JOWI2
NAF!!NOPIN
. . .. .. .
. . . . . . . . l nll95
1-NAPHTHYLAMIN! . .. .. .. . . . . .. , .. , . . . • . .. . .. 1]4ll7
. . . . . . •.
. . .91591
2-NAPHTHYLAMINE
NICKEL AND CERTAIN NICKEL COMPOUNDS , . , . . : , .
NICKEL CARBONYL . . • . . , . , . . . . . . . , . . .. 13463)93
NICKEL REFINEI. DUST FION 1112
PYIOMETALLURGICAL PROCESS ... . . . . . . .
NICKEL SUBSULFIDE . . . . . . . .. . .. . .
. ... 1201S12~
NIJUDAZOLE
. . 6U74
NrftiLOTIIACETlC ACID
I.J911!1
NrTI.ILOTIIACSTIC ACID. 11USODIUM SALT
·

MOHOIIYDitATE . . . . . .

. ...... . .. ,161lj]l

J.NiftOACENAPH'ftiENE
I
• • 601179
5-NrrRO-O-ANISIDINE . . .
.
. . . . . . 99592
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. . . , . . . . 92933
6-NrTaOCHRYSENE
. .7496021
NJTROfiENcnctiNICAL ORADE)
. IIJ6'1.S~
l ·NI'IKOFLtJORENE . . . . . . . . . . . . . .........607571
HJTII:OFUKAZONE . . . .. . .
. . . ..
. . , .M10
lo(5-NITROFURFURYLIDENE)·4MIN().
llMIDAZOLIDINONE . . . . . . .
555...0
N-IH5-NITR0-2·FURYLJ-2· THI.-.ZOL YU
ACETAMIDE
.' , . . . . .... ,
... p . Ji]ll21
Nn'IOOEN MUST AID
(MECHLORETHAMINE)
. .SI"I$2
NITROOEN MUSTAID HYDROCHLORIDE
IMBCHLORETHAMINE HYDMOCHLORJDE!J .
,86"1
NrrROOEN MU$TAID N~XIDI!
... 1261U
NITROOEN MUSTARD N.OX'IDI! HYDI:OOU•.OliDE
302'705
2·NI'nOPROPANE . .
.. . .. . .
71469
I·NITlOPYIENE . .. , . .. .
. . . . .... ~52~l0
4-NJTI.OP'VRENE ,
. . . . . . . . . S11Jm.4
N·NITROSODI ·N·BLITYLAMINE
92A 16]
' N-Nil'ROSOPIETHANOLAMINE . . . . . . .
I 116547
N-Nt'J'ROSODTI!'!'HYl.AMINE . . . ..
$51U
N·NITIOIOOTM£TIIYLAMINE .
. . . 62759
P-NITROIODIPMENYLAMINE
1-'6105
N·NrrJOSOOIPHENYLAMINE .
. . . . -.lo6
N-NmtOSODI-N·PIOPYLAMINE .. . . . • . . . . . . .621647
N·Nri'JIOSO.N-ETHYLlJREA
759739
l-IN-NrhOSOMETHYI.AMINO)..at'IONn1liLE
601.S:J493
4-(N·NITROSOMETHYLAMINOJ-1(l-PYR.IDYL)I ·IUTANONE .
. ... 6409191_.
N·NI'IliOSOMETHYLETHYLAWINE
. .
I~
N·Nino50-N ME111YLUREA . . . . . .
61M3$
N-Nfi'ROSO.N ·MBTHYLURETHANE . .
.615532
N·NITIO!IOMI!THYLVINYLAMINE .... &lt; • • • • 4549400
N·NJTROSOMORPHOUNE
. )1M2
N-NmtOSONOilNICOTINE . . .
. .
IM-'M~I
N-NrnosoHPSI.IDINE . . . . . . . . .
. .. 10075-t
N·Nn'IOSOPYUOUDJNE
. . . . . .. . .
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N·NrrROSOSARCOSINE
NORETHJSTERONE(NORETHINDilONE)

,,.,.

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OCHRATOXIN A .
OIL OltANCE SS , • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ORAL CONTRACEPTIVES, COMBINED.. . . . , . .
ORAL CONTRACEP11VES, SEQUENTIAL .
OXYMETHOLDNE
'
P.-.NFURAN S
PENTACHLOIWPHENOL
'PHENACBnN .
,
PHENAZOPVRIDINE
PHENAZOPYRIDINE HYDROCHLORIDE
PHENESTERIN . .
.
PH!NOIA.UITAL .
.
PHENOXYBENZANJNE
PHENOX.YIIENZAMJNE HYDRQGHLORIDE
PHENYL OLYCIDYL ETHER
O.PHENYLPHI!NATE , !ODIUM , .
POLYBIOMINATED BIPHENYLS
POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS .
POLYCHLORINATED MPHENYLS
ICONTAININO 60 OR MOitE P£RCEHT
CHI..OliNf! BY MOLEC'ULAR WEIGHT! .
POL YOEENAN ,
'
PONCEAU MX ....
PONC'EAU 3l
POTASSIUM BROMATE
ftOCAUAZINE . . .
PROCAIIAZINE HYDROCHLORIDE . .
PROOesTERONE .
1,3- PROPANIBUL10NE
. . . . • .. .
BETA-PROPIOL.ACTONE .•. , ...... , . . . . . . •
PtiiOPYLI!NE OXIDE . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . .
PltOPYLTHIOURACIL

"''"'

.,..,

.... 62442
. . 94710

........
.. ll6W
35461119

. .. . M61

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... 161,SU
. . 132114

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671169
. 366701
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RESIDUAL4HEAYY)FUI!L OILS

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SACCHARIN , .. . . .
. • , . , . . . .... lion
SACCHARIN, SODIUM . . . , . . . . . . . .• • . . . . . . 121449
SA FJtOLE .. . . .
.
9U97
SELENIUM SULFIIE .
. . . . . . . . . . . . ut6346
SHALE-OILS
. .. . . . .
. . . . .. . . .. . 61301349
SILICA , CRYSTAWNE(.IJRIORNE PA.R1'1Cl.ES OP lli!JPilAil.E
SIZEJ .. .
.. .. .. .
.,
SOOTS, TARS , AND CERTAIN MINERAL
OILS(MINERAL OO.S MAY VAIY IN
OOMPOSrTJON PARTICULARLY IN RELATJON
TO ntEIR CONTIINT OF CAII:CINOOENIC
POLYCYCLIC AROMA'nC HYDRACARBONS) ........ , .
STERIGMA.lOCYmN . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . , .. IOIHIIlZ
STREPTOZOI'OCIN . .
. .. .. • . .. ..
. lllll664
STYRENE OXIDE . .
91109]
SULFALUTE
.... ~7

T.-.LC CONTAINIHO ASIESTIPORM FIBERS ..
TESTOSTEIONI! AND rrs ESTERS . .
$1210
2,3 ,7.1,-TETIACHLOIOORENZO..
PARA·DK&gt;XIN(T'CDDJ ... , . . . , . .•. . . . . . . . 1"14eol6
l, l.l.2-TETL\CHL0a013THANE . . . • . • •... , ..... 19)U
TETitACHL.OROBTHYUNE(PERCHLOimTIIYLENE) .. 127184
P·ALPHA,A.LPHA,AI.IHA,TETI:ACHLOROTOLUENE . ,,1:16251
TETKANITROMETIIANE ..... ., .. , ... .' .. , . . . .. 509141
THIO.-.cET.-.MIDE .. . . . .. . . . , • . . . . . .. . . .W,
4,4'-THIODIANIUNE . . .
IJMjl
TlfKlUli!A
· · · · .. · · · · · W66
THOfUUM DIOXIDE .. .. .. .. . , . . . .. .. . . .. . ... IJI4l01
• TOBACCO , ORAL USE OF SMOKf!LESS PRODUCTS . . . .
TOBACCO SMOkE
TOLUENE DIISDCY ANA.TE
. . . . . . . . . • 26471625
OltTHO-TOLUJDINE ........ . . . . . .. .......... ~Ut
OI.THO-TOLUIDINE HYDROCHLORIDE . . . .. . . . . . .636215

ALL-RA .. III1'INIWC ACID .• . ... , .•.• •. •• , • , • , , , ,_ , .
.......... . . .. . .. . ........ . ...... .211t1m
AMaAC~N IULJIATI! .. ... . . . . . . . . . . .. ...
~...

••m

AWIIIOOLUm'IIIMIDI! . . . . . .·..................I AMINOPI1IIUN •.... , ... , , . , , , , ....... , . . . ' ........ 5463l
AIP'allt rN0'111: rt .ICIAU.Y JMPOITANT NOT fO
ua .wwN DUliNG TH1
11fliE MONTMI OF

a

i..An

PRKJNANCY , UNUIIIIP&amp;::IPICAU.Y DmiCIWD 10 DO
SO IY PIIYIICIAN IEAUII n MAY CAitss . . . . RMS IN
111l UNBORN CIILD OR C'OMPLI:AT10NS IXJUfO
DIIUVIIY) . . . . . . • . • , . . • . . .. . , . . . , , , . . . , .. . 5CJ712
MUfUHITAMINB HYDitOCIQ..DI.ID ..... . . .... . 5411223

IIJCHU)oomtYL "'""*'*'IEA!AUI
(CUWUSTfNI!)
. . . . • . .. . . . . . . • . . . , . . 1St931
IRDIIOXYNIL . . .
. . . .. .... .
• . . . . 161114S
1,4-ltrfANEDIOL DIMETHYUULI'Of'1IATE
(aUSULPAN) .. . •.. .".... ........... .. . . . . .... ,,SMI
CAitBON DISUU'IDE . . , . . . • . ..•. , . •• . . . .
. . 75"0
CAII.ION MONOXID£ . . . . , ~ . . . . . . . . . . • • •• , . . .a-.
CA.RIOPI.ATIN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ........... 1!75944
CHENODIOL , • . . . .. .. . . .. . .
. . . . 4'74
C'IILOaCYCUZINE HYDIOCHLORIDE ..• , .. . , , , . IDI'll

c:;HI..OIAMIUCIL .. , .. .. .. . , . , , ............... , :J0503J
~~ (ICBPONE) . . . . . •.
- . . . . I..
l -fl-CHL.OII:OI!THYL)-J..CYCLOHEXYL-1 ·Nfn.OIOUI:EA
(CCNli)(LOMUmiiE) .. • . . . . .. .. .. . . . . .. . , . llDIIM74
CI.OMIPHENE C'ITRATE
. . . . . . . . .... . . . ....... 50419
COCAINE . . . . . .
. , .. !OJQ

CONJUOAT1!D IISTROOINS .. , , , •• , , .
CYA.NAZJNI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . • .

. ...... ., 2172S46Z
. . • . . ..66119

CYCLOHBXIMIDE. . . . . . . • . . . .

CYCI.OPHOIPHAMIDE (ANIIYDIIOU!)
. ~1.,
CYCLOPHOSPHAMIDE OIYDitATEDJ ... . • . . . . . 61l'15192
CYHEXATIN
._ . . . .. .................... IJI21105
CYTARAIINE .
. .1 . . . . 141944
DANAZOL . . • . • . • . . . . . . . . . • . .. . , . . . . . . . . . . 172~
DAUNC»:UIICIN HYDIIOCHLORIDI! . • . . .. . .... 23S41D
DIETHYLS11LBI!S11tOL (DES) . . .
. . ..
. .S6531
DINOCAP 1.. • • .. • .. .. • .. • • • • • •
• ~3
DINOSBI .. .. . . . .. .. .. . . .. .. .. . . , . .
111$'1
DIPHENYLHYDANTOIN (PIIEHYTOINJ .... .... , .... 57410
DOXYCYCUNE . .
.
. .
. .
. . . . . . . 564~

HOOT AMINE TAilTJATB .. , ..... , ... ..... ,.,. . . . 179'J9l
E'MfVL ALCOHOL IN ALCOHOLIC IEVUAQES .. , . . . . , . ,

ETHYLENE CJLYCOL WONOETIIYL mt!R . .
ETHYLENE GLYCOL MONOMETHVL ImlER .
ETOPOSIDE • . . . • • . . . . . . . . • . . . • . . . • . .
ETRETINAT£
. . . . . .

. . . . llo.l!l
. . . 109164
• .... 314194210
. . . . SU~

fLUOROURACIL . . . . ... ,
Jl211
FLUOXYIIIBSTEIONE . . , . . . . . . . . . . . .. , . . . .. . , 764]7
Fl.trrAMIDI!
...... , 13JIII47
HALAZEPAM
HEXACHLOROBENZ£fr11E.... . , , .. .

2l092173
. .... , ... llll741

lffiSFAMIDE
IODINE-Ill ...

)7717)2

. . . ' . 24167569

JSOTRETINOIN

•

••

'

'

'

•

...~

... . ..

L

LEAD .
UTHIUM CARBONATE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... »4132
UTHIUM CITRATE . . . . . . , . . .
.. , . , . 919164
t.ORAZEPAM
146t91

MEDROXYPIOOBSTEaOHE ACETATE.. .. . . , : .. . 71519
M!Ol!STII:OL ACETA.TE . . . . .
,595)]$
MELPHALAN . .
. . . . . . .. 141123
MENOTROPINS . . . .
. . tooMKI
Ml!ltCAI'TOPUIUNE •.• , .
. . . . , 6112161
MERCURY AND MERCURY COMPOUNDS
. . . . •. .
ME111ACYCUNE HYDRDCHLOIJbE
)9619!9
MITHIMAWI.B . . .. . . .. . . . ..
. . . . .. . . . 60560
METHOTI.BXA.TI!
. . . . . . . , .. .!9052
ME11tOnEXATE SODI\JM . . .
.
. 15415566
METlfYL MI!RCUIY ... , , . . . . . . . . . , , . • ."
METHYLTBI'I'OSTIItONE . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . 51114
MIDAZOLAM HVDIOCHLORID£
. .
. 594679611
MISOPII:OS'IUL .
6201U91
Mn'ROXANTRONE HVDII:OCHI.ORIDE

. . . . . . , 704"16123

NI!PAREUN ACETA.TE .
116220410
NBnLMICIN SULFATE . . . . .
.
• • . SM91572
NICO'nNE ... . , ..•. .. . ...... , , . , . . . • . . . . . _,..I 15
Nn'RODEN WUSTAAD (MBCIILOIE'I'HAMINI!) .. , . 51752
NnaOOiN MUSTAJ.D HYDilOCHLOitlDE
(MICHLORITHAMINE HYDIICletJLOliDe) . . . . . . . . 5SI67
NOIETHIS'I"BBONE (NC)li!'THINEII.ONE) ...•. , . . , , , .61224
NOIUITHISTUONE (NORETHINDIONI!)
ETKINYL BITaADIOL . . . . .
.61224157636
NOU1'HJSTUONE CNOIBTHINDRONEl
MBITRANOL . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... . .61224172331
NOIKlESTREL
. . . . . . 65JJ002
OXYTI!TRACYCUNE
PARA.METIIA.DIONE
PBNJCIIJ.AMINE . . . . ' . . .
PEN't'OIA..,-AL SODIUM . . . .
PIIENA.CEWID£
PII'OAOWAN : .. . . .. . . .

• •

. •

... 11.5613

52675
~7)30

.. • . . . . . ' ISJ989
.54911

PIJCA.MYCIN , • . . . . . . . . . , , .
.
113'71191
P'OLYCHI.OlJNATBD .. PHENYLS . , . . . .
PIOCAIIAZINE HYDROCHLORIDE . , . . . . . . . , . . .l66101

PII.OPYLTHIOURACL . .

.

....... 5U2S

IJmNOUUTINYL BSTERS, WHBN IN DAILY IJOSAOES IN
~OF IO,l'IXI RJ'OR J.OOO UTINOI.IIQUIVALENTS.
o
(Hai'E: lllmNOLIRETINYL BSTBlS AU RBQUIRID AND
~L fOR NAIHJ'ENANCB DF NORMAL
RDIODUC'TIVB PUNCT10N THE l!D)MMENDED DAILY
LEVEL DUliNG ..EONANCY IS I,DIID JU)
RIBAVTIUN . . . .. .. . . . .
. . . .. J619104S
STI.f!FTOMYCIN SULFATE . . . ....

.. lll0140

TAMOXIPEN CITRATE
154965141
T!MAZUAirtt . . . . . . . . .
M6504
1'IISTOIT'!aONE ENAHI'HATE .. . .
]IS]17
TEIWAC\'CUNE HYDROCHLORIDE . . . , . , .... . , .64755
THALIDOMIDE . .. . . . . .
.
.
.. .SIIl51
THIOOUANINB . •• . . . , . . . . .. .. . . . . .
15442'1
TOBA.CCO SMOKE (PI:IMA.RY) . • .. .. ..... , .
TOIIRAMYtiN SUU:ATI!. .
,
•• , . , . . . . , 49142011
TOLU£.. · · · . · · . . . . . . . . . • • .
101113
THIA20LAM . • . . . . . . . . . . . . • . , • .
. .:21911015
THILOSTANE .
, . . . . , , , .... , 13647353
THIMEiliADIDNE
, , . . . .. .... ll74Mt
UIOPOUJTROPIJtr(.

. . . : . . .. • .. .. .. . . . .

VINaLAmNB SULF.-.TE . . . . .

2699S915

' ..• 99661
14)6'19

'·
.,

VINCRJmNE SULFATE ..

WARPAIIN .. .

...... " . . .. 11112

til FEMALE II:EPRODUCTIVE TOXICTI'Y
SUISTANCBS

CAS NUMBER

AMINOI'I1!iJN .
. . , , , 54626
ANAIOLIC JTUOIDS .. , . , , . . . . . . .. .
. .. . .. .
ASPIRIN (NOTE: n 15 EIPI!CIAUY IMPORTANT NOr TO
USI! ASPIRIN DURING THf! LAST THIEl MON1'H$ OF
PI.E!ONANCY , UNLW SPBCIFJCAU.Y DII8CT!D TO DO
10 IY A PHYSICIAN IIBCAUSI! IT MAY CAUSB PROII.EMS
IN THB UNIOlN CIILD Oil COMJIUCA'IIONS DURINO
DBLIVI!lY) . . .
. . • .. . ..... . ...• . , ... 50782

PAAA -TOLUJDINE . . . . .
10M90
TDXA.PIIENE(POLYCHLORINATIID CAMPHENESJ ... 1100135)
TlEOSULPAN ......•.... . . . '. I . ' •• ' • • • • • • 299752
2,4,6--TlJCHLOII:OIMENOL . . . . . . . .
.o62
. 7St50
TIICHU.OETHVU!N£
19016 • CAUON DIS'uLfU)E . ..... . . . .. . . . .
COCAINB , . . . . . . . . . . . , , . . . . . . . . . , . , . . . . . Ml62
TRIS(A.ZIIIDINYL)..PARA ·III!NZOQUINONE
,
CYCLOPHOSPHAMIDE {ANHYDROUS) . . ... , . . . MilO
ITIUAlJQUOHEI , . . . , ....... . ....... . ..... 617411
Tit IS( I·AZIIIDINYL)PIK)SPHINE 'SULFIDE
CY'C'LOPifOSPHAMI~ (HYDRATED)
.
. .... eo5SJ92
(THIOT'EPA) . .
'. ,. .
. .
. . . . . . . .. Jl244
!THYLENI! OXIDE , :
TRIIC1 ,3- DIBROMDPROPYL)I'HOSPHATE , .... . ...• llln7
. .... 7mt
TltP-P· ICTIYPJOPHAN·P· I) ....... , ... • • . · • .624J0060
LBAD . . . . . . . .
TltP-MO'JtVPTOPHAN-P-lJ . . . . . . . .
. . . . Q.UIXI71
TRYPAN BLUE (C()WMBitCIAL GRADE) . . . . . .•. '7U"II

.. .. ..

TOIACCO SMOKE CPitiMAIItYI ... , ..

'

UNLEADBD OASOUNE (WHOLLY VI\JIORIZED)
\lRACIL MUSfAlD . . . '
66751
URETHANE !ETHYL CAiliAMATEJ .. •...• , . •. ••. , 51796
VINYL BROMIDE ........ , . . . . . . . .. . .
.
VINYl. CHU.IDE . . . . .
. .. , .
4-VINYL-1-CYCLOHEXENE DIEPOXIDB IYINYL
CYCLOHBXBNE DIOXIDIJ. ....... . . . . .. , . . .
VINYL TUCHLORIDE
(1. 1.2·TIICHLOIWI!1'HA.NE) . . . . . • . . . " . . . . . .

- ~31!02

(C) MAI..E II!PIOOUC'tWE TOXICITY

IUIITANCESi_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _CAS NUMBER
ANAiotJc IT8IIOIDS ...... , , , , , ... , , . , .. , . , , . , . :., .... ,

: . 7501_.

CAUON DIIULFIDE .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,
. 10611

.. 1.51JO
CYCLOfltOIIIHAMIDB IAN.HrDII:OUS1 ••..•.•. .. .. 50111J
CYCI.OI'HOIPHAMID! (HYDlATBDJ , . , .. • . , .. , .Ci0s.SI9)

. .. "19111:5
1.2-DIIROMO-J...CHI..CaON.OPANE (DICP) . .
DINOSEI .. .

ZINEII • ,

' . . . . . .. .. .

. .MI21

DINITROII!NZBHE . . . . . . .. .. ••. , •. , . . . . . •. ... 151j4S45

U -XYUDB,NE . .. . . .. . . . . .

•.

, . . ....... ;' •• . .•.... IIIS7

. . . . . . • · · .• · , . 1212167"1

ETHYUNB OLYOOL '-IONOETHYL RTHEI , . . . . . 1101105
1~1

TOXIC CHIMICAL SUNTA.NC'I!S KNOWN
TO CAUSI! REPIODUCTIYE foXK'ITY
(AI D!VI!LOPMI!NTAL ~ICITY
SUISTANCII!
CAS

ETHYLENE•OLYCOL MONOMBTHYL E1'lll!ll . .... 1091M
LSAD . . . . . • ' ·
NUMBBit

TOIA.CCOSMCJKI(JIRIMARYJ .... , .•• , ,. .. 1 ••• , ,

. }:.

•

,

'

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
Mondly, OciDber 11, 1 -

?

Southern beats Eastern 44-29 at Eagles' homecoming_game.
BY SCOTr WOLFE
SenliDel ClllTilSpOIIdent
An offensive awakening thai
produced fuewoda in OciOber and
resulted ill 73 points on Jhe saxeboard allowed the Southtm Tornadoes to defeat the Eastern Eagles
44-29 Salurday night in the annual
cross&lt;01111ty grid contesl at Eastern
lfigh School. .
·
In winning the game, Southern
not only claimed county bragging
ri$hts, but also spoiled an otherwtse pedect Eastrm h&lt;imeooming.
Playing before a full house on a
very brisk October evening, Southem (4-3) amassed 460 tOial yards
offense. Eastern (0-7) 11llied 253
overall yards with 184 of that coming in the air.
Southern thoroughbred Russell Singleton pounded out 164 yards
on 25 carries, while Michael Evans
threw for 228 yards passing and
three Jouchdowns, biUtn$. ll of 24
pass attempts. Jeremy Dill grabbed
six catches for' 126 yards and two
1D's.
In the passing game, Eastern's
Chad Savoy was equally impres-·
sive. He compiled 184 yards passing, threw for two 10uchdowns and
·ran far another, while hitting 10-19
attempts.
'
Jeremy Buckley caught two
passes for 73 yards, while intercepting a Southern pass and running it 48 yards for ·a IOuchdown.
Pat Newland had three catches for
24 yards and had 106 tick-off return yards.
With the exception of the ISpoint spread at the conclusion, a
Hollywood scripl could not have
been wriJten with more suspense
than the unraveling of Saturday's
plot.
Southern grabbed the opening
tick, which Nick Adams graciously ~etumed for 32 yards 10 the East·
em 40-yard line. Four plays later,
· SHS quarterback Michael Evans
lofted a perfect 2'/-yard spiral to
Dill for the fii'St score of the game.
Unai Aldama-Eiorza booted the
PAT through 1he uprights and
Southern led 7.fJ at the 10:13 mark,
~Dring on its first possession.
Eas1ern came back ready to
play. The Eagles quickly marched
(or two rust downs and ran eight
plays before Dill brolce up an EHS

pass intended for Newlanil. Charlie ron propelled him toward Jhe end
Bissell delivered a 30-vanl punL ·
zone; where he wu up-ended at Jhe
goal
line and catapulted in for Jhe
A clip ended Southern's second
drive, while Glenn Young ham- score. Koeai2's ticlt sailed lhrouah
mered Wes ArllaiJih at the line of the uprights for a 10-7 score with
·
scrimmage·to halt Eastern's second 45 seconds left in the half.
Adams
hild
a
15-yard
Kick
rcpossession.
Each team endured lengthy IWII. Bissell ·broke up a deep pass
!lrlves of eight plays or more, but play 10 Dill. Evans faked 10 Dill on
did not store. Southern led 7.fJ af- the right side of the field, then fired
high and hard to the left, where
ter the first frame.
Trenton
Cleland ran under Jhe per·
At the 11:43 mark in the second
feet
arc
and completed a 65-yard
can10, a seven play drive ended
TP
play.
Evans hit Dill for the exwhen Southern's defense held Eastlias
and
SHS
led 18-7 with just :12
em at die 18, seuing the stage for a
seconds
left
in
the half.
30-yard field goal attempt by
Southern
had
on! y 40 yards
David Koenig. A mishandled snap
rushing
in
the
half,
bul 161 m the
forted a rushed tick and it hooked
air.
Eastern
had
46
ground yards
to therighL
and
was
3-9-and
66
yards
in the air
Southern's next. drive failed as
as
both
teams
played
ve'Y
well.
Eastcm JoOlt over on downs on the
During halfume ceremonies,
42-yn line. After Charlie Francis
ran for two yards, Nick Adams Eastern's class floats were dispiclced off a Savoy pass and gave played and previous homecoming•
SHS the chance it needed. An queens from the year 1-958 and up
Evans-10 Dill 46-yard pass Set up were recognized along with their
what llppeared would be a success- escorts. EHS senior Stephanie Otto,
ful 37-y.-d field goal by Aldama- daughJer of Ron and Joyce Hill of
Eiorza. The ball split the uprights, Pomeroy, was crowned homecomhowever, an EHS defender car- ing queen.
Throughout the flr.n half, both
omed into Aldama-Eiorza. The
roughing the ticker penalty was an teams were at their best; neither
automatic first down. SHS eleCted team willing 10 talce defeal as an
answer. The second half started just
to void the tick and keep the ball.
After one fii'St down, SHS was the same.
At the 8:58 marie in the lhird
stopped and o11ted to again kick
from 17 yards out. A bad snap quarter, Eastern capped an eight·
aborted the play and EHS took play, 51-yard drive set up by a 40yard Newland ret\11'11. Marching 10
over.
On the third play from scrim- the nine on first and goal, Eastern
mage, Francis JoOlt a hard hit and ran Arbaugh and Francis ·up lhe
fumbled into Jhe hands of South- middle for five·yards net. then got
em's Billy Jones on the EHS 17- another yard on an Arbaugh re:ception.
yard line.
'
Faced with fourth and three,
Eastern's defense again held,
bul Aldama-Eiorza calmly booted a Savoy faked into the line, then
35-yard field goal through the up- dropped back for a surprise play
rights for a IO.fJ SHS lead at the action pass to Robert Reed, who
2:0 I mark. The kick set another was uncovered in the end zone.
SHS school record for longest field SHS led by a slight 18-15 margin
after Francis executed the twogoal
.
. On the ensuing ticlc.off, New- point ccnversion on a sweep.
Adams coumered on the ensuing
land rambled downfield for 42
yatds, giving EHS excellent field Ieick with a 32-yard return, setting
position. On the second play from up a 49-yard TD run by Russell
scrimmage, Buelcley grabbed a 48- Singleton. The Aldama-Elorza Ieick
yard reception to the SHS nine, was good. The one-play drive
where Savoy turned what appeared turned a thee point game into a
to be a brolcen sweep play into a more comfortable 25-15 tally at the
8:33 mark in the third period.
scqre.
Southern's Sam Shain made a
Savoy appeared to be heading
oul of bounds, when his ·second ef- crunching stop on the tick.off, then
Jones grabbed a Savoy pass and re'
turned it32 yards for the score. An·
olher
Aldama-Eiorza Ieick was
(8)Wi1hin one year of die eflioclive dale ofdoil101:•
good
and
SHS led 32·1~ at the 8:10
lion, and 11 leasl once per year lheraftor, lhe diledor
mmlc. )Vitbin :48 seconds 22 points
of cmit0111.... RlcAI;(:jiob•l(\ WXOI\18119£' wilh Olw*r
had been scored.
119 of die Reviled Code. lhlll adopl and may ameoxl
The stallion North·
Evans ca~ved a nine play, 71IIIII ..,.ind rules idenlifyia&amp; or lilliac oolollic c:hernic:al
em Dancer, who died yard drive with a one-yard run, but
101bttanoes- oubttanoes doll.,. llmwn Ill cause
in 1990, sired 143
the PAT pass was incomplete and
......r or reprod1101ive IOllicity. A -.ce is known
stalces winners.
SHS led 38-15.at the 1:35 mark in
Ill...,.......,. or n:produaive IOllicily wilhin !he,_.
the third frame.
.
in&amp; of IIIia chapler of:
John Riggins of the
,
Moments
later
and
just
four
(l)lri dJo opinion of die director, i1hol boon ohown
Washington Redstins
plays
into
the
drive,
Wes
Arbaugh
lllrou&amp;h I!Ciaoili&lt;ally valid ...........dinl ..........y
set a record with 38
hauled in a Savoy ouJiet pass on
ooc:&lt;qJitd principles to cause or be 1 JII'Obll&gt;lc: CIUie of
rushing attempts in the
the
near sideline. Arbaugh averted
o:uoer or ...,..,....ave Mxicity ia...._.or_; ..
1983 Supez Bowl.
a
tackle
and short gainer, then
(2)11 hoi been fornudly idenlif_, 11 Cllllina or be·
opened
up
down field where a nifty
ina• problblc cau~e of cancer or reproductive tcWci·
In the 1987 Super
stutter step at the 18-yard line alty 'mhuiiWII or animals by die 1\Jr.f'q
Bowl quarterback Phil
lowed him to elude an SHS defendfor Reaeon:h on CIIICOr, lhe NmonoJ lllllilule forOI:Simms of the victori·
er. He wenl unscathed for the 58oupolional Safely and lleallh, !he Jllalioaal Toxia&gt;lo&amp;Y
ous New York Giants
yard reception run and put EHS
J&gt;roaram, die Unill!l Slates Envi......-.1 , . , _ •
completed 22 of 25
back in the game at38-21 with just
Aaenc:y , or me Uniud s- Food and DruJ Ad·
passes.
two
seconds lefl in the frame.
minbtrltion. unless the dn-ector ddenninet that the
.,--Early
the fourth frame, BuckidelilifiaDiol oliO)' . . - by """" ..,... is clearIn the first 26 Super ley gave inSHS
another scare when
ly erroneous.
Bowl games, no playhe
intercept,
e
d
a halfback pass by
(C)The ruleo adoplod under !his ...uonlhlllte! fordo
ers returned a punt for Single10n and rambled
48 yards to
for each IOXK: chemical subllanoe whtlher i1 is bowl!
a touchdDwn.
paydirt.
Savoy
hit
Newland
for lhe
10 cause cancer or reproductive toUc::ity. or bolh.
extras
and
the
score
stood
38-29.
Piltsburgh and Dal(D)!IOI ill&lt;r !han IWO yean after lhe effective dale
Southern finished off a 67-yard
las
set a S'uper Bowl
ofdoia- and. lcooi.......Uy ........... dJodinc:,
drive
at the 5:45 IIJllrk when senior
record with a combined
tor oholl publiah alii! of die · - a • · • doe lillie
Adams
rambled 31 yards to the end
total of 66 points in the
of Jilblicllion or die Iii!, .,. ""J'lifttd by federal Jaw
zone.
The
PAT pass was caught by
1979 Supez Bowl.
or lhe laws of dlil- Ill be for !heir pooelllill
Trenton Cleland, but was shon of
10 cause cancer or reproductive toxicity but N lhe
goal line.
Retired
jockey theLater.
diru:&lt;or fioxla have 1101 been wkq&lt;ouely ,...... io ao·
Cass Cleland grabbed an
Angel Cordero won ·six
tordancc wi~ the nxp.~iranna with thole laws.
interception
and SHS iniliated anTriple Crown races, other drive, with
three failed passes
three in the Kentucky
5e&lt; . 3752.99. Whoever rec:tleuly - I l l Y ,...
iniO the end zone late in the 11ame.
Derby, two in lhe
lion oflhilchapler or Ill)' rule ................. ~
Eastern battled ·to the flmsh, but
Preakness and one in succumbed to the big play by
under il i• pill)' of a felony and 1111111 be flllild 001 lea
the BelmOIIL
.oan $10,000 new _ . dwl $25,000 or ill4"- not
Southern, who had three mtercepless dwl2 or..,.. dwl4 yean, o r -· For violations and a fumble recovery that
Jockey
Angel led to three SHS scores.
tions of l!eCSion 3732.03 of !be Revlood Code, each ••·
Cordero was named to
Besides Singleton's 164-yard
JIOIU'" coutihllel • - - - for •• ,..iona or
five different sports perfonnance, Adams added an exall ocber section~ of IIIia chapll:r oldie Revlood Code,
Hall of Fames. .
or ruleo odoplod or orden iAued lhen:uodor, eocto day
cellent 13-69 night rushing and had
of violatton ill 1JeP111* offente.
79 kick off ret\11'11 yards and a pass
On Feb. 7, 1969, reception. Trenton Cleland caught
Diane Crump became three passes for 92 yards and a
the fust"woman to ride touchdown to complemenl Dill's
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
in a regular race at a 126-yard night
OF STATE OF STATE OF OHIO
major' American JraCk.
Only fine defensive plays by
Bissell, Newland and Buckley kept
I, Bob Taft, Seicretary of State, do hereby
Franlc Jackson won Southern's Evans from having an
certify that the forcgoina ue the required
the fU'Sl world champi- even more impressive night in the
onship horseshoe pitch· . air.
ballot language concernina the liiUldiJory
ing tournament in
Evans was 11-14 with 228
·submission of a constillltional cp'Cilion and
1909.
yards,
and in addition had at least
explanation thereof ldopted by Jhe Ohio
two balls merely dropped by
Ballot Boatd; the full text of oenain COIIIIiluThere are 10 players Southern receivers .
tional amendments and a certain 1111ute proon a side in a game of
Francis led EHS rushers with 13
lacrosse, including a carries for 29 yards, while Arllaugh
posed by initiative petitions filed in the of~ecper.
had 15 rushing yards and 62 receivfice of the SecretaJy of State JU"'IWWt to Aring
yards. Savoy had 19 yards
ticle 0, Seelions Ia and lb of the CoastituIn 1983, Fred Lynn rushing and lallied 184 in the air.
tion of the State of Ohio, together wid! Jbe
of the California
Micah Otto had a kickoff return
Angels hit lhe first 'of 15 yards.
ballot language certified to me by Jbe Ohio
grand slam in Jhe histoSouthern will hosl Symmes ValBallot Boatd and 11JU111t:1U IUbmiaed to me
ry of the All-Star ley Friday, while Eastern goes to
by Jhe piopoo~nta and opponenta of the
Game.
Ashton, W.Va. to play Hannan Friissues, u pracribed by law.
day.
Stan Musial of the Quarter totals
Cardinals hit a record Southern ...............7 11 20 6 - 44
IN TESTIMONY WHEREFORE, I have
six. home rnns in All· Eastern ·.................0 7 14 8 - 29
~rcumo subs&lt;:ribed my nune and affixed ·
Star compeJilion.
my official seal at Columbus, Ohio this 4th
day of September, 1992.
Tho tint oo-bitter in Statistics
the history of the Department
E
S
Nalional Lcaaue was Fint downs.................... l2
Bob 'l'aft
8
by
0.
Bradley
pitched
253
Total yards ................. .460
SECRETARY OF STATB
of SL Louis in 1876.
Rushing atL·yds .....44-232 25-69

Sports
shorts

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SURROUNDED - Easlern running back
Wes Arbaugh (32) rmcts himself surrounded by
Southern defenders, namely Jeremy DiU (12)

and Riusell Slngletoa (ceater), • Ellile Cllarlle
Bissell trails tbe play, darilla Sabmlay mpt'•
homecomiag &amp;ame at Eastera Hi&amp;ll Scllool, •
. w:bicb tbe Toma+w-... 44-19.

TURNING THE CORNER - Easlern quarlerback Chad Savoy Oeft) turns the corner past
Soulbern tackle Kyle Wickline (71), as Eastern
tackle Brian Long watches lbe play in the back-

ground, during Sat.rday aight;s INitde lit Eastem High School, whicll tbe Tornadoes -... 4429.

-.

Braves, Blue Jays deadlock World
Series
. in opening Atlanta contests ·
By HOW~D ULMAN
ATLANTA (AP)- Want to
win a World Series? Don't waste
your millions on big-name pitchers.
No-name catchers cost less and are
doing more.
Ed Sprague was nobody's
choice to be a hero. Neither was
Damon Berryhill. High-priced
hurlers Jeff Reardon, David Cone
and Jack Morri~~; were obtained this
year to bring their teams a title.
Bul in Sunday night's second
game, Sprague hit a shocking,
game-winning, pinch homer off
Reardon, baseball's career saves
leader. It gave Toronto a 5-4 win
and evened the Series with Allanta
atl-1.
One night earlier, Berryhill hit a
game-winning homer off Morris
that gave the Braves a 3-1 win over
the Blue Jays.
" Sometimes, lillie guys come
up big in this game," Toronto's
Robeno Alomar said.
· It all starled last Wednesday
night when anonymous Atlanla
backup catcher Francisco Cabrera's
two-run single in the bottom of the
ninlh senJ the Braves into the
Series with a seventh-game playoff
win over Pittsburgh;
In the opener, they faced Morris,
who Toronto acquired llefore this
season to help them get into - and
win - their ftrst World Series. But
he allowed three runs on Berryhill's sixth-inning homer and five
walks in six innings.
In Game 2, they faced Cone,
who was Jraded by the New York
Mets on Aug. 27 as Toronto ttied
to strenglhen an already strong
pif,Ching staff. Bul he allowed four
runs and five walks in 4 1/3
innings.
The bullpen kept Toronto in the
game, holding Atlanta hitless the
rest of the way and giving Sprague
a chance to slilaclc the ninth-inning,
two·run homer on Reardon's first
. pitch 10 him.
"They came through as advertised," Cone said of the relievers.
Sprague, called up from the
minors July 31, had just one homer
in 47 a1-bats this year and five in
207 at-bats in his big-league career.
Reardon, who had been inconsistent with Boston, was oblained on
Aug. 30 and was 3-0 with lhree
saves and a 1.15 earned run average for Atlanta after setting the
saves record on June IS.
He has 35~ saves, but missed a
big one Sunday nigbL
"The all-time save record
doesn't mean anything rig hi now.
I'm just trying to help lhis team
Passing yards ..............228
Comp.-atL ................ ll-24
Interceptions thrown ....... 1
Fumbles-lost ................0-2
. Pun is .......................... 2-32
Penalties..................... S-90

184
10-19
3
1-2
4-85
6-75

win a World Series," Reardon
said.
It toolc a while for Sprague, who
hit .234 this season, 10 appreciate
what he had accomplished with the
17th pinch homer in Series history.
"When I hit it, I didn't feel il. I
kind of lost if in. lhe lights, " he
said. "I don't thinlc it has set in yet,
but I know what it means - we're
tied going back to Toronto."
The first World Series game
ouJSide the United States will talre
place Tuesday night in SlcyDome.
Juan Guzman, who had two of
Toronto's four playoff wins, will
oppose Sieve Avery.
'"Perhaps," Toronto's Dave
Winfield said, "the momentum has
shifted in our favor."
It hadn't been Toronto's night
until Sprague's shoL
During the playing of the Cana-

dian national anthem, thai coun- ••
try's flag was held upside oown by :
the Color Guard. In the secoad •
inning, Mlnlel Lee's throw to thinl
baseman Kelly Gruber hit runner •
David Justice in the !Jack. and the ;
Braves scored Jhe game's fii'Sl run •
in the inning.
:
And in Jhe fourth. the Jays were •
deprived of a run wht'n Alomar was called oul at home by umpire
Mike Reilly when replays indicated
he clearly had goUen his hand on
the plate before pitcher John ·
Smoltz Jagged him. Alomar bnJke for home when Smoltz's pilch in ;
the dirt eluded Berrybili.
''That run could have been the
game,'· Alonw said.
It wasn't because of Sprague
and relievers David Wells, Todd
SJoUiemyre, Duane Ward lmd Tom
'(See SERIES 011 Pqe I) .

Tornado, Eagle linemen praised
By SCO'IT WOLFE
Sentiael Correspondent .
A lot of "guts .... very little
"glory." That is the ,layman's definition for an offensive lineman.
This season, Eastern and Southem have been in several big games
and have done quite well.
. Southern has won big games
and its offense has done well in the
others, excluding last week's
demise at Oa1c Hill. Southern head
coach David Gaul, a former lineman, knows
stereo" what
.. negative
.

type can be a tilled to a liaaDan
"If the backs gain yarda1e,
you've done your job, and if they
don't hit the hole or slip on die turf, .
the lineman ofteli get the blame." ;
But Gaul and EHS lad coach •
Dave Bur knoW beuer. Bocb aalit :
~ lines far pni4tC ling their ~- :
Jeibaclcs against the pas rush and
allowing their respective q-baclcs 10 open up the ]*Sing pnC.
Both also give credit for opeain1
the holes for the nmning bacts to :
(See LINEMEN a. i'llel)
'
•

AITENTION

Area High School Seniors
YES! We are still doing senior portraits as
we have for the past 17 years. Our "living
color" portraits are done in a top line finish
.'
and are guaranteed for life.
We show you between 10 and 12 previews
from which you make your final selection and
some of your portraits will be taken in outdoor
settings as long as weather permits. Our
prices are reasonable and t~re's no addition.al charge for clothing changes.
Call for your appo~ntment.

THE
PHOTO PLACE
109 HIGH STREET
POMEROY

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c,_,_ llw/lldt)
~--------------------~ (Bob 111111

�Page B The Dally Sentinel

Sunday's sc:ore

Toronto 5. A1lanu 4, Mli• ti.od 1-l

Futurepmes
T-f
Atlanta (Avery lJ-11) at Tororno
(\)w:mud6-5), 8•29 p.m. ,
W~ay

Atlanta at Toronto (Key 13-13), 11:2ti

Akron

Allanhlat Toronto. 8:26p.m.

Sunday, OcL. %5
Atkn"', 8:29p.m., if neca·

Toronto·~

Eutem Dlvblon
W L T PeL
6 0 01.000
Buffuo............... 4 2 0 .667
lndiltl&amp;poli! ....... 3 3 0 .$00
N.Y.Jeu ............ 1 S 0 .167
New England..... b 6 0 .000

166102

Central Dl•lslon
Houston............. 4 2 0 .6G!
Piwburgh .......... 3 2 0 .600
Cleveland........... 3 3 0 .sao
·Cincinnati .......... 2 3 0 .400

153110
91 74
88 84
99121

·ream

Miami ................

&lt;men 10, Toledo 9

This Saturday's games

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
PFPA
168 94
68 112
84123
631.57

W
Team
Michigan ..... .. 3
WuCMJin ...... 2
Jowa ............... 2
Michiga11 SL .. 2
Ohio St1te ...... l

Western DIYlalon

nunru ........... ! 2 .333

3 3 0 .lOO

Indima ........... l
I'Ur&lt;iuc ...... -.. .1
Minn........... !
Northwestem.l

3 3 0 ..500
2 ~ 0 .2l0

.571 lSO 101
.429 10911}}
.333 80115'
.143 43 t3S

~~

o.u..... _............

o .833 m

5 1

PhihdclpiUa.......
Wuhirlgton........
N.Y. Giants ........
Phoqili ..............

Wcstcra Division
SanFnnciseo .... 6 I 0 .857
New Oduns...... 5 2 0 .714
LA. Rams.... ..... 3 4 0 .429
Atlanta............... 2 .5 0 .286

.
160112
139!A5
129114
&amp;0121
109128
21612.5
117 82
121133
133179

- 3 1, Dcuoit 14

Sunday's "'ores

Clovehnd I 7, Gun B•y 6
Dallu: 17, JCansq: City JO •
Wultinaton 16, Pbilodclpltia 12
s.o Dies• l&lt;!.lndi..•polU 14
Otie~a,o 31. Tamp~ Bay 14
San Fnncisoo 56, All•nta 17

Miami 38, New England 17
Denver 'r1, H01.,1ston 21

LA. Raiden 19, S~ule 0

New Orle.ans 30, Phoenix 21
LA. R1m1l8, N.Y. Giants 17
OPEN DATE: Buffllo lJ1d N.Y. Jeu:

Tonight's game

Next week's games
Sunday, Oct. 25
Chicago 1t Gn:aa B1y, 1 p.m.
Cincinn•ti It Houston, I p.m.
DetroitatT~.I!~r~

1 p.m.

PbocnU at PhilldelpiW, I p.m.
Seattle at N.Y. Giuul, I p.m.
Wlllhingtm at Minnesota, I p.m.
Den'let at S1n Diego, 4 p.m.
Clevcl1nd 1t New Engla11d, 4 p.m.
Oallun L.A. Raidm , 4 p.m.
Indianapolis at Miami. 4 p.m.
PiruburRhatK1nsuCity, 7:30p.m.
OPEN .IlATE : Atl1nta, L.A. Ram1,
New Orleans, San Francisco.

Wuhin'gton........

3 3 0

6 23 22

N.Y. Islanders ....

2 3 1

5 23 25

Sm)'the

Los Angeles.......
Calgary..............
Vancouver.........

• Wlnnipcs...........
•

Edmoni.On ..........
SanJ01e.............

S
4
4
2
I
I

so

16

10
I
8
4

S I

4 0

28
24
25
24
3 20
2 l2

19
ll
12

33
34
2S

Saturday's scores

Detroit 4, Edm011ton 2
New Jmey 2, Philadelphia 0
Mootrul I, Minncsou I

TorontO 4, Chlclgo 3
Loll Angeles 8, Bo:ston 6
&gt;~ c,1 8 ary 6, Sm Jose 2

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Sunday's scores
Philadelphia S, Winnipeg 4
Minnaota S. TortttlO I
N.Y. Rangen 4, N.Y.lslandets 3
Oticago !, Vancouvu I

•
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Tonight's game
S~o.

Lwi. at MQfl.tn:al, 7 :3~ p.m.

Tuesday's games

OUawa vs. Toronto It H~milton, Ont.,
~ 7:35p.m.
Hartford at New Jersey, ?:35 p.m.
Phiildelphia 1t N.Y. blandm, 7:35
p.m.
.
Vancouver 11 PitubW"gh. 7:35p.m.
•
•
WiMipes It Detroit. 7:35p.m..
•

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25
21
17
15

Othen receh·lna: •ole~; North Carolina 86, Wen Virginil 76, Okl1hom1 73,
S1n Dieao S11te 63, Teus 3.5, WiJconrin
21, Htwa1i 7, Missilsippi S, Ohlo State 2
1/2, Ctlifmtia 2.

Edmonwn 11 T1mpa Bay, 7:35 p.m.
l.OI Angeles al Calgary, 9:35 p.m.

Days

Major college
football scores

Ak:on Ollfield 41, Akron Kerunore 14
Amanda.Clc:arau.k 14. Canal Winchatt&lt;7

Waydle 31, Harvard 29
Lehigh 31, Brown 24
Maine 21, Rhode Island 9

Muu.chuaeu.s 20. Coonccticut 1
Nanhcutem2B, Youngst9wn St 23
Penn 34, Columbia 21 ·
PittaburJh 'V, Temple 20
Richmond 37, Bornoo U. X1
Rutsrm 4S, Army 10
Syracuse 20, Wcsl VitJiniai 17
Alabama 17, Tcnne&amp;Sce 10
Appalachian St 27, VMl12
Clf St-Fullertoo. 14, SW Louiliant 10
CenL Flaricl1 42, NichoUs St. 18
Cent. St., Ohio 51, Morgan St29
OernJOn 21, Duke 6
Dolaw110 St. 22, Ao;rida A.t.M 20
Eut Carolim 42. Cincinnati 21
Florida 24, AuWm 9 ,
Florida St. 29, Gcargil Tech 24
Goo.gi• 30, VOlldori&gt;ilt 20
Georgi! Southern 24, Jamea Madison
17
JacUm SL 25, Southern U. 24
Kentucky 27, LSU 2S
Liberty 9, Troy St..,
Louisiana Tech 65, E. Tatncuec St. 7
Louirville 32. Tulu 27
M•nhall34, Cil.ldd 13
McNt....e SL 29, NW Louiliana 0
Memphis St. 37, Arhnus St. 7
Miami.&lt;Ci, TeusChristian 10
Middle Tenn. 38, E. Kentucky 7
Morehead St. 31, Mumy St. 7
,
. N. Carolina St. 13, Virginia Tech 13,
38, Sam HoUlton St. 10
"' NENorthl...o.llaiana
Cuolinal7, VUginia 7

'

Midwest
Akron 22, Ball SL 14

BowlinaGreen 10, Toledo 9
Cent. Michig&amp;n 3S, Kent 0
Indiana St. 63, Glenville St. 49
Iowa 2A. Dllnoil 14
K1nus 50, Iow1 St 47
Miami. Ohio 23, Ohio U. 2.1
Michigan 31,lndian• 3
Michigan St. 20, Minnesua 1.5
N. Jowa 30, S. lllinoil 2S
Ohio St. 31. NoMWCI\cm 7
.
SW Miuow:i St. 24, lllin oit Sl. 21 , •

Southwest
. Alcorn SL 63, Prairie View 0

Bloom-Carroll 13, Fairfield Unio116
Canton Cath. 21, Musillon Jacl:ron 14
Canton McKinley 42. Zanesville; 0
Cin. PurceU-Mari1n 14, Cin. McNi·
cholas 7

Covington l:Z. Twin Valley S.l •
Day. Chaminadc-Julimne 21. Hamil-

wn Bactln 14
' ·
Dclphollcffcraon 27, Cridenvillc PercyO
E. Cleveland Shaw 16, CleVeland Hts.

Hawkein 42, Hudsoo W. Re~Cl'VC 12
.Huntinston. (W.Va.) Vinsori 20,1ronlon St. Joseph 8
Ledgemont 21, Newbury 0
Lima Ca\h. 20, Plulding 19
Lorain Sr. 7. Lonin Southview 0
Lucasville Valley 20, Porumoulh
Notz:e Dame 1
Marion C.th. 43, Southington 0
Manillon 38, Blooming ton (Ind.)

Sou\hO
·-Mingo I :Z. Edioon N. 6
'
Newuk Cath. 26, Col Ready 0
Pant'lll Holy N1mc 28, Cle. Catholic 14
Piqua JS, W. C.nollton 6
RichmOOd Hts. 20, Lutheran W. 13
Sandusky St. Mary'• 24. Huron 21, OT
Sprlna. Nonhcanem 2.!, Kentm Ridge
0

Sylvanil Southview 27, Millbury Lake

TU1c1rawas Cath. 36, Jewctt-Sclo 7
Wamn Kennedy 14, Girard 0
Wu:rensville20, Parma 10
Young. Mooney 17, Akn;m St.V-St.M

·romeroy

588-Viatoa
245-llo GrtPIIIe
25(&gt;..(;.,•• Diet.

1143-Portleud

Diet.

'985 Or

247-l.etadFallo
949-Raclae
762-Redaad

KEVIN'S lAWN
MAINTENANCE

949·2391 or
1·100..137·1460

882-N.M- u....

).awn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Saacllng.
· Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

895-l..tad

RMkllntlll &amp; Commorclll

937-BolTalo

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

c.....

FOR
SALE
33acres,
Twp.
25acre&amp;,
Oli1111 Twp.
Timber on both
Rutland

~Ploof......

$ .60
$.05/day

Linemen~

..

Tyson _Rose, ·aDd ShaDe James. Back·Jere•l
Buckley, Jared Rlde11our, M11tt lo'll!'en, and
Robert Reed. ·

run through.
.
Gaul said. "Our line has allowed
us 10 have a two dimensional offensive. They've done an ~ excellent
job. Football is a team sport, and
the line is a key ingredient."
Barr agreed, "We've grown as a
team every week. We had a lot of
positions 10 fill from last year, and
our line has stepped up and has
done a good job. Because of the
line and the development of our
backs, we can throw or we can run
the bPJI successfully."
Southern's offensive line consists of Glenn Young, Kyle Wick·
line, Craig Knight, Sam Shain and
Jamey Smith.
The quintet regl!larly opens

s.m...

I 11:11-1 1'1'111'
,\I 1\ I ~'1111.1,

WILSON'S ARMY
SURPLUS

Ea.... Waa...t

41- Bo- for Real
42- Mobile no... for Rea~
0 - Fal'fiUI for Real
44- A....,....t for R.,t
45-- Fu...,iahed R......
~ Spaoe Cor R...t
47- Wantad to R-.1
48-- Eq.Up•eatlor Real

Public Notice

Paid lor by the Commltteelo Elect
Fr•nk A. Cramuno; Sleven B.
ChapiiWI, Treu. •

..-----.,
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JOHN WA-DE, M.D., INC.
•EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT •AlLERGY . .
•HEARING A~DS • HEAD &amp; NECK SURGERY
Cere For Your Fendlv

'

DR. DAVID MATUSIEWICZ
And
OPI'OMETIIIC PHYSKlANS

./ Eye Disorders and Diseases
./ Family Vision Care
./Fashion Eyew.:;ar
./ Contact Lens Packages

NEW PATIENTS
NOW BEING ACCEPTED

wee

_.
Phone 675-4580
626 Main Street, Point Pleasant

benent of Melge Coun!y
Health Deparlnl.,t for the
pu.rpo•• of Curren! Ex·

Medic1are &amp;
SUITE 112 VALLEY DRIVE, PT. PLEASANT

·r-·

of~: of lla

Board of
-•
Election• of Melgo County,
Ohio.

•I

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I I

Nestable/stackable
bins
Provided for Recycle
Mich...
collection!
Curbside pickup of recyclables!
You can make a difference by·iolning
your nei9hbors and recycle in the ·
Vllla1• of Middleport! · "

''

1

CALL JEAN TRUSSELL
VILLAGE HALL
.892-6782
.
Named by 4:11 Grade,
Mrs. Zun:hlr'1 Cla11

Middleport
Drawing by Chuck Mut'I'IY, 411t Grade,
.
Mlddltp011

•

992·2259
608 EASTMAIN

POME~OY,

OHIO

NEW liSTING- Mldcltepon- Beau111ul10 room home with
5 bedrooms, carpet lhrough~ 2 1/2 bat.o, ftraplace, woo~inllr, 1 car garage, alied, pallo wllh gril 6 lum~re.
spacicUsldiCheri and HYing mom. 3130 sq,ft. ofiOial fivtng
apapal $69,000

REDUC!'DI Nlohole Rd. Owners ralocating hlw raducacl
this wall built, moclam 6 -rgy elflcienl ranCh homel Good
,_.lor you who want 10 own a 3 be&lt;room1 2 balh home
with heat pump, decki1g and abowl grouna pool lor only
$42.000

:

j.
:

WRIGHT IT. POMEROY· V8f)' uriqueA-Irwne home with
tO roomo. 5 bedrooms, 2 balh.IUCked away insida 2.725
lla'81. Also lncludllt decklna. pello, flrplace, appllaricet, 2
car,garge and outbulking all in fle ~-hrna style. ASKING
$95;000

lllODLEPORT· Very= 2 tlorY homewilh 3 baclro«na,
ancloledoun·room,
lnsulallon, lalge da18chld 24 x
24 gar11(18 dose Ill altopplng but just out ot IDwn. $27,000

'

i

CHESTER· 1 floor frlnla home whh 2 bedrooms, endOHd
Nllr porch, thad, vinyl siding, nftnl gu hML ASKING
$20,000

.~

STOP IN TODAY... PICK OUT THAT DREAM HOllE OF
YOUR FUATUREI WE'LL DO ALL WE CAN TO HELP
YOUR DREAM COME TRUEI

I
:
•

l.....:::~....~:F:w:~:~~~~~~~-~~~~~u~~~~~:::J j:

HENRY E. CLELAND.....- ................ :........~........11112..111
TRACY eRIHAQER..." ................ ,_..,,................NI-aa&amp;
JEAN TAIISIELL ..............................................e..lllll

OFFICE.............................................................. -112-2211

KEN'S =lANCE
SERVICE .
992·5335 or
985·3561

31904LHtli•l
CI'Mklo•tl
MltltllefOrl, Olllo

WANT
All

WITH BARGAINS

day of November, 1•, lhe
qu•llon of lavylng a tax, In
axciaae of lla l8n mill Nmltallon, lor the b.,elll ·of
Pomeroy Village lor lh•
P Ubll ~ Not ICl
beneftl of Pom•or VIllage
lor lhe purpo•• o current. NOnCE OF ELECTION ON
T~ LEVY IN EXCESS OF
Bald IIIX being • • - " ' ntE TEN MILL UIITATION
of an axletlng tax of 1.11
NOTICE Ia h•aby glvMt
f
mille a1 a ralll not HOHdlng
In purauanoa o a
1.11 ..... for ...... Gill dol• thlll
of the Wlage
., of wtluallon, which -nla Aeeolutlon
of
lhe Vlltag• of
Counol
to nine_, canla ($0.11) tor
..., -hundred dollara of Syraouae, Syraouu, Ohio,
paaHCI on Ute 71h diJ of
v.tuatlon, for live~·
The Polio for . uld July, 1-, ..,.wllbe....,..
Elecllon wiR open at 8:30 mlttad to • Y~la of the JMO"
o'clock A.M. and remain pie ol aald eab liMa ion Ill a .
Elacllon Ia 1M held
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M. Gen«al
In lhe VlUaga of Byraouae,
olaaldday.
By order ollhe Boarcl of Ohio, al Ita regular plao•
voting lhareln, on lla 3rcl
Elacllone of Maig'o Cou~ty. of
day ol November, 11112. lh•
Ohio.
.
Heniy L Huntar, Chair..., qu•Uonfo.!.~":.:
o ... -·
.m
Alii! D. Smith, DireCtor exceea
llon, for the bene.l ll of
Dilled 8epl8ntber 4, I 1112
Syracuee VIllage lor the
(10) S, 12, Ill, 21, 41c

lrit!

11

Smith, Sr., who
passed away on
October 19, 1991

at the age of91.
We love and mias

you, ~ad, but our
memorlt!!l of you
will last forever.

Childre:Q
Jr., Rhoda, Dolly,
Pauline, Shirley,
Ra tu;Jd Besei

· •Room Addltlol1•

614·992·7144

R&amp;C EICAYAnH

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

BUllDOZING

Quality
Stone Co.

All Htrdwood, ·
St•IOitd,
$40.00 .....
dtllwtrtd.
(614) 992·5449

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: U!MIIone,
'Dirt, Gl'IIVel end CMI

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE .

Call

614·992~

6637

St. Rt. 7
Oelhire,

LICENSED and BONDED

PH. 614·992-5591

\2-5-tln

11W121112

Howard L Wtftesel

~FARM~~~:
255 Mill Street
Ml...llpott, Ohio
Aak For Dalhit
Eveninge
614-742-3020

lft7pd.

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR

purpooa . of

CLUB

Gutters

SUNDAYS

Downspouts
_Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES .

I

12:00 Noon
Factory choke12
gauge only

STARTS
·OCT. 18th

949·2168
WI 8/'11211fn:

~35 00
CAliFORNIA
TINS
949·2823

current

Upenl ...

Saki IIIX, being a renewal

of an ....ting IIIII of I miU•
at a rala not uo . . .ng I
mill lor NCit one dollw ol
valuation, wltlcll Mtounla to
cenla (S0.101 lor each
one hundred clollare of val·
uallon, tor lin,_,.,
The Polla for aald
Elacllon will open al &amp;:30
o'olook A.M. ·and ramal~
open unll 7:30 o'cloclc P.M.
of aald day. ·
By order ol the Bolrd of
Elecllona of Melga Countv,
Ohio.
Henry L Hunlar, ChalrinM
Rita D. Smtih, Director
Dalad September 4, 11182
(10)5, 12, ... 21, 4tc

~liNDA~$
~ PAINnNG

·YOUNG'S

.

n. Pall 0.1 01 ,.,.,.,
-111 u, Do '' F« r..•

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES .
HAVE REJIIENC£S

Iefort 6 p.a.loavt Mosllfl
Af1• 6p.a. 614-915-4110

POIIIIfOJ,: Ohio

11111

chlrlcl.
Said lax being a renewal
of an exloting tax of 5 milia
al a rate not exceeding 5
milia lor uch one dollar of
votuation, lllhich arnounla lo
Oily oenla (10.50) lor uch
on• hundrad dolla,. of v.,.
uation, for two (2) yu,.,
The Polio for uld
Elecllon .,m open at &amp;:30
o'clock A.M. and remain
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
oiNidday.
By order of the Board of
Election• of Meigo County,
Public Notice
Ohio.
Henry L Hunlar, CtlllirmM
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
Alta D. Smith, Director
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF Dilled Seplamb• 4, 11192
THE TEN MILL UMITATION (10) 12, 19, 21, 28, 41c
NOTICE It .._eby given
lhat In purauance of a 5
Happy Ads
Auolutlon of the Board of ,:___,;,::=~.:.:;.---­
EducaUon of the Eaetern
.Local School Dltlrlct,
Reedevlle, Ohio, _....on
11a 211111 day of July, 11112, •
there wll be eubrnltled to a
vola of Ute peopla of aatd
oubdlvlolon al a General
Election to 1M held In the
Eaotern Local Bo.bool
Dlelrlcl of Melge County,
Ohio a1 the regular p i of voitng therein, on lhe 3rd
dar of November, 11192;' the
qUHIIon of levying a tax, In
- - of the
mlU limlfa.
lion for the benefit of
Eaoiern Loc!ll · School
Dlalrlcl for th• purpo" of
providing lor the -gency
requlramenla of lhe ochool

GUll CLUI
•••••• lulldi11
EVERY SAT.6:30P.M.

Factory Choke
12 Gttuge Shot
Strictly Enforced
f()'/12/lfn

·

Wei whoever she is she
cartainly is in aDIUY.

m.

Because 1oday wenl
over the HIUY.
Oh, &lt;ome on now SILLY.

Everyone knows that's our
. JILLY.

Happy 40th Birthday!!!

36970WI•I...
P-lY. OW.

oSAND -GRAVEL •DIRT
oUMESTONE

•

We Alto Haul Coal, Hay,
u ...., Com, Qrllln
and Wood

(6141 H2-3470

FOREVER
BRONZE

TANNING

B•shtlll Rtl., ltld••

Oot••er ''"1•1

UNUMITED TANNING

s2soo

949·2826
10.2·'82

SHRUB
· TRIM and
REMOVAl
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992·2269

Help wanted

No, I remember iiot lhal's
• MIUY.
, Come on now! lhat's
WILLY. .
But lhen - maybe lhal's

WICK'S
HAULING SERVKE

GUN SHOOT
UCINE

'*'

· LILY.

. &amp; co.

'Tab

•C. YOUNG
992-6215

Public Notice

'*'

The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District Is now accepting applications and resumes for office person.nel. Requirements: All basic secreta·
rial skills; ability to meet/deal with
the publ!c; handling money; book·
keeping an~ ~omputer experience Is
a must with · all general ledger,
accounts · payable and payroll . all
computerized. Excellent working
conditions and benefits. Pay commensurate with experience. Please
send resumefappllcatlon to 39561
Bar 30 Road, Reedsville, Ohio 45772.

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN

111113/12

Public Notice

Public Notice

Henry L Hunlllr, Chatrman
Notice of Propaaed
Allll D. Smith, Dlractor
Adma!ICimenla
Da~ . . , _...... 111112
Soulhern Jr. High School
(1 0) 5, 12, 111, 21, 4la
Athlellc Booater Aaaoclatlon will ·vote on
amandmenla to by-In• at
Public Notice
the 7:30 p.m. November 3,
NOnCE OF ELECTION 'ilN 1982maaUng.
. (10)111, 20, 21, 31c
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF.
ntE TEN MILL LIMITATION
NOnCE 1a htoreby g~,;.,
th t I
I
. • ri purauanca o a
ReooluUon &lt;&gt;f lhe Village
Council of the Village of
"-oy, Pomeroy, Ohio,
puaad on lhe 3rd day of
Auguot, 11192, ~~~- will 1M
aubmlllacl to a vola of the
people of Nid aubdlvlalon
at a a-81 Election to 1M

In Loving
Memory of Our
Dad,WilHam Fred

eGuttera

UNLIMITED SESSIONS
Mon•s of Septetnber
and Octaber

.

In Memory

~flng4ldlng

10/1/92

·SH ue for your hunllng
and back to ochool
needa. Aru'e largeot
oelecollon of mllllary
aurpluo llamil

5$-An!lq.;4- Mlae. Mercluuutlto
55-- Buildi"« Supplle.

2

and REPAIR

. . ;ji1

lrl~lt.OrW•

County Rd. 111Peaehlorlc Rd.
!192-7093
Mon.·Sun. II .,.., pm

'

PORTLAND- Very private olclar I floor frame home wl1h
2.81 IICIIIs ~uo a •mall tliad. ASKING $7,1500

:
'

71&gt;- Aato Parta a Ace&lt;...tri•j
Auto Repair
C..plq Eqwp. .at

..........

' '

I:

74- Moton:yclea
75--lloata a Moton lor Sale

of vellng lhenln, on lha 3rd

l
••

112---'I'rudka (or Sale
73- va.a .. WD'•

----------~R~a-a~I~E~~-~-t-a~G~a-n_a_r-al~--------- ~~~~~~~.:~~0~~~

•••
•••

SIGN UP TO
RECYCLE
. IN MIDDLEPORT

&gt;-..,.u•oo for Salo

Public Notice

pen-.
'
Said tax being • r!lfllan
mentoftaxofl miU .tarala
not en...tlng 1 Mill lor
- h - clok of valuation,
which -oun.. to 1*1 oanla
($0.10) lor ..ch oria
hundred dollaro of vatu•
lion, tor live (5) y--.
·
The Poll•· for ..td
Election will - n at 1:30
o'clook A.M. and reMain
until 7:30 o'clock P.M.

___.,._____....._____....

._

Southem Eye Care Associates

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCEII OF
TIE TEH IBLL LMTATION
NOTICE Ia ......, given
that -In purauanotil .of a
R..orutlon of the ao.d of
ComMlulonaa of the
County ol Maiga, Pomeroy,
Ohio, paued on lhe .211h
d8y of July, 1112, .,_ wll
1M eubmllled Ia • vola of
the people of Mid aubcll¥1•k!n at 1 Gen... Elaotlon to
be held In lh• County of
Melgo, Ohio, al lha regul•
placee of voting lh&amp;n!ln, on
the 3rcl clay of Non~~~ber,
11192, the queetlon of lavy·
lng a tax, In • • - of the
len miU limitation, for the

~~ ·

IU.IIIIU

All Scalll· Vintage &amp;
Collecllblt
See Dliplay AL..
QUAUTY PRINT SHOP

52- SportJaS Cooaa

PubliC Notice

MAIIODWKE

·PlUMBING

SPE~IAL ,

17-.Mlto.ua-u
!8- 'IVaniOd To Do ,

Auclioa
II- 'IV... ...t to Buy

94th District
State Representative

or 614-667·3109

32- Mobile Homea fOr Sale
33- Far.. lor Sat.
34- 8 .,.;.... BuildiDI!'
35-- I..ota a,.._,.

1s.- Schoot. a ,...........
It&gt;- Radio, TV a CB Repair

Lootud FoWld

1- l'lol&gt;lle sato a

holes for Southern ace running
backs Russell Singleton, Nick
Adams, while offering protection
10 top passer Mike Evans and targets leifmy Dill and Trenton Cle·
land.
At Eastern, the line consists of
Tyson Rose, Shane James, Brian
Long, ~tt Bowen and Jared Rjde·
nour:
This group anchors the offense
and spreads the defense apart for
Charles Francis, Chad Savoy and
Wes Arbaugh. They also offer
good pass rush protection for Chad
Savoy; who has connected regular·
ly with his receivers, Pat Newland,
Jeremy Buckley., Charlie Bissell
and Roben Reed.

Announces
The Association Of

.-

5-Bapp,Ada

(ContinuedfromPage7)

Call 614-667-3484

Fru;u· a v.,.tat.loa
For Sale or Trade

12- Situ.tio• Wanted
13- I.,uraaee
•
14- B•illllia TraiDi~t~ " r

1&gt;-"l»et aac1 FoWla
7~

tracts.

M.. tc.IIDitrumerill

21- Buam- Opportualty
22- MoDay to Lou

MICIOWAVI OVEN
.••tl YCI REPliR

TOP TO BOTTOM

6-26- '12-lfn

PetaforSala

11\\\1111

11-Belp'IVIlllad

EASTERN LINEMEN·Tbe Eastern Eagles
have shown improvement tai:Ja and IVti'J pme,
· mainly because or the development or these
young men. Pictured are front, Brla11 Lon1,

DIYIDSOI'S

Free~Jm.t•

667-CooMUe

GET RESUI..TS • IASTf

4---CiMt.wa.y

&amp;.- ~tlmn, Heat
Door Plul Opeur Pillllpl, flfiCICel &amp; .
Now Water Heaten.
...I triM
II Benn.etts.Mobile H~!!!!,·~
Uti S.Hord Sdleollol.
."c.ll614) 44 .. 'Mlt

675-Pt. 1'1-lil
4$8-Leoil
76-Apple
773-M-•

s

Da-

J;(\1\1,

DR. G. D. NIBERT, JR. ·

·-

367...a....lolre

379-'IValnut

$.30
$ .42

$13.00
$1.30/day

Cle. Rhodes 19, Cle. Eut Tech 6
Cle, University 42. Pitu:burgh Shady
Side 7
·
CoL Watt.enon 14, Col llcSalca lO
Conouoo v.u. H, Wcinon (W.Va.)
M1donna 7

YoWtg. R1yen 2:0, Young. Swth 6

992-lllddleponl

643-AraLla

ae. Glenville 34, Cle. East 8
Cle. ll1y 18, Clc. Wc:3t Tech 14

0

440-G.WpoUa

-='---------j 36--- Ileal

World Series ... __;_&lt;c_on_ti_nu_ed_fr.:....om.:....P..::ag'-'-e.;.:.7l_ __
¥.coke. Wells worked 1 213 innings probably expected a little bener
after Cone struggled, and the other starting pitching."
each pitched one. Ward was
Atlanta scored in the second on
Qle winner and Henke got the save. a walk and s10Jen base by Justice.
• Henke put runners on ftrst and Lee's throwing error and Cone's
8econd in the ninth when he hit ·. wild pitch. Mark Lemke made it2·
tonnie Smith with a pitch and 0 in the fourth with a single after
W:t ked Deio n Sanders with two Sid Bream wallced and Jeff Blauser
rlt
he ended the game by singled.
·
!,'&lt;'UII•! 'I crry PcndleiOn to foul out
, Smoltz struck out five of Toron·
Ill third baseman Kelly Gruber.
to s ftrst stx batters, then gave up .
• "I wasn't worried a bit in the two tying runs in the fifth on a
ninth " Henke said. "I guess we walk to Pat Borders and consecuare a 'little bit fonunate. I think we tive singles by Lee, Cone and
·
Devon White.
·

Melp County M - Co., WV
Area Code .6 14 Area Code 614 Area Code 304.

charged for each day as separate ads. .

. W.lllinoil28, E.lllinoi124

W. Michig1n 20, E. Michigan 19
WiJ!cmsin 19, Purdue 16

G.Wa Coanly

s .20

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00

.

S. Caroliu St. 35, Bethune-Cookman

Sam!ord 45, SE Miuouri 14
South Carolina 21. Miui.u.lppi. SL 6
Tenneuec St. 23, Tcnn.·M1nin 15
T~Tech IO,AustinPuyO
Texu Soulhcm 30, Alabuna St.lt
W. Carolina 33, Tn.-OitLinoop 13
WU.eForat 30, Marylmd 23
William&amp;: Mary 43, ToWioo St. 15

followi1J6 eelephone e:cchoRBe•...

Over 15 Words

Benjamin ~san 26, W. liberty-Salem

0

South

Rate

a.ahty HI Efflcincy

CIDu4fied page• c011er the

Rates are for consecutive runs, brolcen up ~ays will be

Aurort 31, Columbil 0
Bellaire 21, Wheeling (N.V1.) Linsly
ll
.

Elyria Csth. S8,•0regon Saitch 0

East

Words
1
15
3
15
6
15
15
10
Monthly 15

0 hio high school
football scores

0

Wltll hrciHitH of
lectin Fill

RATES

12

7 26 II

Pitubwsh 7,llutlord 3
Washin,Awrl 6, Buff1lo 4
Sc Lou• 6;Queb« l
N.Y. bilnde.rs 6, N.Y. Rmgen 3

.•

22
9
18
8
13
19
23

6 31 2l
l 23 23
2 12 '11
2 14 '11

Dl~lalon

1 0
2 0
I 0

12
20
14

446

I 29 17

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Norris Division
Team
W L T PLI. GFGA
Minncsou .......... 4 3 0 8 2S 26
Detroit................ 3 2 0
6 18 16
Chicago.............. 2 3 I
5 19 20
Tampt B•y ........ 2 3 I
.5 21 2:0
T~ .......... ~.. 2 3 I
S 20 11
SLLoWa ............ 2 4 0
4 19 24

I

6
10
ll
7

20.Roridl ................... 3-2.() 330
21. Am.,. ................. 3-2-1 316
22. Kansa1 ................... S- I-O 269
23, N. Caro!inl SL ...... 5·2·1 136
24. V"sWo ................. l -2-0 125.5
25. Miuissippi St .......+2-0
92

Dlrlllon

Quebec...... ......... 4 1 0
801ton................ 3 1 1
Bulluo............... 3 3 0
MonUCI.l ............ 2 3 l
Otuwa· ...... -....... 1 4 0
Hutford ........ -... I 5 . 0

Non~onrerence

Central St. Sl, Margan St. 29
DaytCII. 38, Drake9
E. Camli.n1 42. Cincinnati 21
Northeutcrn 28, Youngstown St.l3
Urbana 20, Bluffton 14
W.l.ibcrty 23, Tiffin I 0
We~tminsler, P1 . 30, Findl..sy 17
Wit~ 20, Me:rcyhurst 20, tie

S

College 35, Penn St. 32
Comell2S,Colgue7
;'•
Dartmouth 39. YaleZ'f
Dcllwue21, Vi).lanova20
Holy Cms" 10, Princet.oo 1

8 2S UP
1 2S 26

Ada~J

2
I
3
4

B ~ton

N.Y. R~n~~..... 4 1 0
Philadelphia .~.... 3 3 l

.

Lui
Pta. Week

l,ll7
1.517
1,399
1,363
1,302
1.26l
1.109
1,030
1,018
10.NomDame......... ..,4-l-1 969
H . Bostm College ..... 5·0.1- 915
JZ. Syracusc ................ 5·L·O 881
13. Washington St....... 6-0·0 6~9
!4. Pr.nn SL .. :.............. 5·2·0 686
1S.SouthemCal ....... :.3-1· 1 642
16. Stanlmd ................ l-2-0 611
17. Tcnneuee .............. 5·2·0 S94
18 .Cic:maon ............. ;.. 4-2.0 SSI

Patrick Dlvllkm
Ttam
W L T Pts. GFGA.
_, Pituburgh .... .. 4 0 2 10 31 19
!•
New Jcney ....... 4 2 0
8 19 19

rf

Midwest Intercollegiate
Ashl111d 21, St. J ~h ,lnd. 7

in&amp; in last woek:'s poll:

WALES CONFERENCE

!

Dc1Wt&lt;o4l, WllmingtoO 7

on 2S ~til lor a first place vote throu&amp;h
one po~nt for a 2Sth place voce, and·ruik-

'
DAY BEFORE P!JBLICATION
I:OOpom. Saturday
· I :00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. T.-!ay
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday
lOOp.m. Th\U1day
I :00 p.m. Prlday

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuelday Paper
Wedneaday Paper
~\U1day Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

•The Area's Number 1
J)'larketplace.

Association ofMfd.East
Colleges

The Top Twenty Five~ in die .A•·
JOciated Press 1992 cOllege footbell poll:,
whh.fint-place votes i11 p•renthcse1,
:R:Cords throuah Ocl. 17, 10\:U polnu bued

In theNHL .. .

.Pictured are llnemeti, kneeling; 1-r, Glenn
Y OUIIJIIDd Kyle Wickline; Back·Crall Knight,
Sam Shain, Jamey Smith.
.

Ohio Northern 42, Hiram 3!
Otu:rbe:in 28, Mlriet111l6

AP college
football poll

Mond.y, Ocl.%6
Buffalo It N.Y. Jeu., 9 p.mv

tl

Mount Un.ioo 48, Hcidclberg 7

01\io S~oate at Michigan SLate
Pll.rd\le at Jow1
Wisconsin at Indianl

19. Geo1Ji1Tcch ........ 4-2c.Q

Cincinnati 1t Pilllburgh, 9 p.m.

men don't have a stat sbeetto proDOIIIICt their
importaQce, but have bee11 highly praised by tbe
Southern
backs and Cu.ch Dave GaliL

Baldwin· Wallace SO, Capital 0
John Curolll7, Muslrlngum 3

19, Purdue 16

Team
Record
I. Mi•mi (31) ............. 6-().()
lie. Woshington OO) ... 60.0
3. Michigan ................ 5-0-I
4. At.buno (I) ........... 7-().()
S. Texu A&amp;M ........... 6-0-0
6.florick .Sc .............. 6 1-0
7.GcolJ1' .................. 61-0
8. Nebruka .......... :.....4-l ~
9. Colorado .............. - 5·0-1

Thursday's sc:ore

SOUTHERN LINEMEN-These ftve young

. Ohio Conference

Nort.hwenem It Illinois

99

4 2 0 .667 136 74
4 2 0 .6G! 121 9Z
2 4 0 .333 127151
1 s 0 .167 110170

Central Dl~blon
MiM.. ou.......... l I 0 .833
Chicago.............. 3 3 0 .SOO
TamP' B•y ........ 3 3 0 .SOO
Grcerl Biy.......... 2 4 0 .333
Douoic............... I l 0 .167

Case Western 14, Oberlin 3
Ocnitoo 14, Woostq: 14, tie
Ohio WcslCyan 37, Earlham 8

Minnelota 11 Michigan

W L T PeL PFPA

r....

Alle3heny 41, ~Cilyon 14

This Sa lui-day's games

Eutern Di•IJion

Team

• Ad. OUIIW. tJ. OOUDlJ )'OVI' ad 1'11111 • • l . . pnpaicl
• Reo.i.... dilcouatfor ..U paid i • adnaee.
• Fno Ado: GI--J ...t F.....t ada u..!er 15 -n1a will H
.... sdaJOat ......... .
• Prioo &lt;tf ad for a1 capllallott.on ildoulo priee of ad -•
• 7 polalliooe type oaly uad
• S...tlael it ................. (or .....,. Jtor
dar (ebock
for orronlint day ad nuula paper~ Calloefo" 2:00 p.a.
. day after pubUcatioB .&amp;o JUke eorNctioa
• Ado that •ad H palclla ad•-" an:
Card of 'l'loaalla
Happy Ada
·Iu M-on..
Yard Saloa
• A clu.oillod ad•-••• plocad Ia doe Galllpolit Dailr
Trihuae (.....,t Clualllad Dieplay, Blllill- Card or Lopl
Noticto) willaloo appear Ia IH Poioat Pleuut Roptor md
... Doily S...tla"', reaehlec o..., 18,000 hom•

North Coast Conferenee

I S 0 .167

an ad

CLosED SuNDAY

Akron 22,Bill SL 14
Bowling ORen 10, toledo 9
Cern. Michigan 35, Kent 0
Miami, Ohio 23, Ohio 21

IIAIWD PIIGS

·OP::lii~~~:'w~~i~CI.oo
With 2 l'rlnamlllil...
•

POLICIES

Mid·American Conference

· Iowa 24,1llinoil 14
Michig1n 31, IndiaN 3
Michigan Sute 20, MiMesoLI 1S
Ohio St.ate 31, NoMWcnem 7

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

MoN. thru F1u. 8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.B-12

Ohio St 31, Northwcstem 7

Saturday's scores

WiKon~in

. Exhibition

Big Ten

I l 0 .i67

2 .333

Call992-2156

To place

Ohio college
football scores

Coor.
Overall
L Pc:L W L T Pet.
· 0 1.000 .5 0 I 1.000
1 .667 4 2 0 .750
1 .667 3 4 0 .429
1 .f:LJ7 2 4 0 .333
2 :333 4 2 0 .667

2 .333
2 .333
2 .333

..._

ILw.U47"'FRinoSt. 4.5
ldobo 38, e. Wuhington 21
Mm""" 28, N. Ariuoa Tl
Mm""" Sc. 14. ldobo SL 7
Nevada14, UNLV 10
New Muioo 24, Ucah 7
Oklahoma24, Calondo 24,lie
Ptclfic: u~ 49, New Meaico SL 17
SmDieao St. 49,·T cxu·El.Puorf
Soulhan Cal rT, Cal.ifomia 1A
Utah St. 21, Kannl SL 16 .
Wuhington 24, Oioaon 3
Wuhinpn SL 30, UCLA I 7

W. Kentu,cky 4S, Russia 14

Big Ten standings

Denver ............... S 2 0 .714 100130

Kan1as Cily ....... 4 3 0
l.;.A. Raiden: ...... 3 4 ()
San Diego.......... 2 4 0
Se~We. .... ........... 1 6 0

-Youna31 , Wyominal.l
ColOndo St. 32, Air FM:o 2J

Bowling Green at Akron
Cent Michigan at B•ll SL
Ohio at E. Michigan
Toledo at Miami, OJUo
W, Michigan at Kent

In the NFL ...

m OUR lEW
STEEl IISULITED
RAISED PUR lAIIlE DOOR

Far West·
.Atizorta 21, Scanlcud 6
Arita\a St. 40, ONJaon St. 13
Boioo SL 24, Weber SL 21

Ccnl. Michi.Ran 35, Kent 0
Miami, Ohio 23, Ohio 21 ·
w. Michiaan 20. E. Michigan t!il

Toronto at Atlanta, 8:26 p.m., L! nece&amp;-

...,.

Oklahoma Sc. 21 Mluoo.ri 26
Tuu AA!o( 35, PJ; 9

22. Ball St 14

Bow~a

Saturday

'"Y

M.iablippi. 17, Albnau 3

Saturday's scores

Thu-r ·

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

N&lt;Ztb Tox.u 21, Slephl:w\ P-AUllin 11

Conr.
Overall
Tum
WLTPc:LWLT
BGSU ..... ,...4 0 0 1.000 5 2 0
Mitmi ......... J I 0 .750 4 2 I
Aiml .........4 2 0 ,667 4 2 0
W. Midl ..... 4 2 0 .667 4 2 I
C. MicL ... J 2 0 .600 4 3 0
Ball St... ~... 3 2 0 .600 3 4 0
Kent ..•........ 2 3 0 .400 2 s 0
Toledo ....... .! 3 0 .250 3 3 0
Ohlo ........... l 5 0 ·-. l61 I 6 0
E. Mich. .....0 s 0 .000 0 7 0

Saturday's score
· Allanu 3, T""""" I

Monday, October 19,1992

Bayb 29, HC~URa~13

MAC standings

World Series

p.m.

Monday; October 19,1~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

USED RAILROAD

BISSELL. BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages• Replacement wrndowa
·
Room Additions • Rooting
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL '
FREE ESTIMATES

614-949·2101· 949·2160
· or·915·3139
(Ito

s.-, Cal1l

'

((C\ABSIPIID liS apra ta gat raai~) :.
•

f
.

"'

�•

P-a• 1o-Thi'Delly Sentinel

Pomeroy

SNAnJ® by Bruce llemtlt

11

Mlddf.,ort, Ohio

.......... d

Monday, October 19, 1

32 Mobile Hom I I
tor Sale

---..-·.....
Autos for Sill

KIT 'N' CARLVLE® by Larry Wrilbt

a n...

411. N;. Allto mo· 1HI
Ptym. i!oi ~~ ~6, AC,

lllnd ti,IOO. 114

,

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- -llo -.-.
boiiY
good, ...~ l)ood ..........

01\•wlt

4

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attw1bt1. MOO, 114!112-2W. •

l,_ .............
.......
,,
1-lo--.AI
----1171.
aCogo,

EVENING
6:oo

·•

6

Loii.FOUnd

IF THE TREES ARE BARE ..
IF THE SKIES ARE 6RAV ..

LoM: ......-. .. Glnllln
~ni/LIII.,- - . -

-King.·--

IMirY
tagl,

CllD

tmJe

@ Scholaatlc Tporta
·Americ.l C
World Today
.
ID Rln Tin Trn, K·9 Cop
&amp;:o5·m Th-'o Company
6:30 (2) D illl NBC Nawa C
(!] Ed McMihon'o StaT
Search
(I) Cl Cllll ABC Newt I;J
(!) Where in the World to
~rmen Sandlago? Stereo.

\18

YaniSate

L I QU T

..,
.

llll• Full Houui;J
QJ MocQyver C

IF THE ZAMBONI IS
RUNNING, CAN WINTER
BE FAR. BEHIND?

---·-

7

rn a oo o

(!2).. (!2) N&lt;IWI
(!] Soved by the Sell
(!) Square One TV 1;1
(!) Raa:ilng Rainbow 1;1

I .I I Is
·

·

I. ~

·

Son to mom: "This new dishwasher is payment for the
years you spent taking care of
me." Mom to son: "In that case
t_h_e, dishwasher doesn't . . ...

~

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.--...---..---=-.
·.. 'IA6 LI /PIR 01. p·l·,·'
1
1

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Complete the Chuc kle .quoted
by fillin g in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

'

--

(jj Square One TV 1;1

tmlll!l 11}) 411 CBS Newt c_
lllliD Roleanne Stereo. Q

@Up Close
QJJ Pre-Debate jpaclat
Q]) New Zorro L,l
6:35 CD Andy G~fflth
7:00
(I)
Cllll
Q2l Ql illl QJJ Presldentlel
Debate Live·coverage of the
debate lrom East Lansing ,
Mich. (1:30)
t
C!J Detiuwna Women
Slareo. _1,1
(!) MacNelt~ehrer
News Hour
(!) MacNeil/ ehrer.
Presidential Candidate
Debate Live coverage of the
debate lrom East Lansing,
~ich _ (1 :30)
I!] ID ~tar Trek: The Next
Generation C
I!J Quantum leap 1;1
@ SportsCenter
ID Life Goes On 1;1
7:051J) Beverly Hillbillies
7:30 ® The Jelfersona 1;1
@ World Series Special
7:351J) Sanford I Son
8:00 ® MOVIE: Wizards o1 the
Lost Kingdom (PG)·(2:0CJL
CD Space Age Slereo. Q
lllliD MOVIE: Blind Date
(PGt 3) (2:00)
QJ Murder, She Wrote 1;1
® Crook .and Chase
@ NFL Monday Night
Match-Up
ID Young Riders The Riders

· WIU. HE. DO THATf

rn a

vii'IY IS IT THAT SOME/IM~S'
COPIE~ MAC.I'IINfS ~tnODUC..r
AND . 50MfiiM~S
iHfY wO/'I'TJ
MAYg~

THE'(''f
nO· CI'IOIC~. .

you want it ...
you ·ve got it ...

a

am o

help defend a-mission from a

......

WHm'BIIETAL IIETECTOAI

.,

-

A11ilo!:L12'o -ond

. _ 0 1 - Ohio,

GUN SHOOT
UCINE
GUN CLUB
. SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

WlooROOniG
.

BUILDERS

W16/lfn

Call AI, 614-742·2321..
1117/lln

CELLULAR

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

-Aglnl

TOTALLY AUTOIIOTIVE PERFORMANCE
I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

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INSTALLATION• With any phone purcheae
through October 31
SIIVIce ,._from •10.95 per month.
lncludee 180 mlnut.. of ofloope~~k 1ir time.
. ,__lng av-'lllble from •15.00 per month.

I

.CONSTRUCTION
•NewHOIMI
•Garates ·
•Complete

-

a..vy

.

late to class initiates some

s-10J.4 cYtl-••

unlruths. (A) Stereo. 1;1
l!l MacNeil/Lehrer:
Presidential Debate Analysis

1HO l'onl AI- lUI Undor·
Foctooy
w..._
5StM1.
W.O.onlri.., lxoollonl GU
M .I - Will ~ Cor Or
Truo~
Ao ti,IIOO. ·~
4410140.

~

11!1 11}) 411 Evening Shad,;
Will wants to skip a
lather·s~camping trip .
Slereo.
iD NFL onday Night

75' BoatUo Mototil ·
for Sale

Opponunny ·

-TEAS

......... ,....""..
:u..:=o.

, ... ottwlng.

-

,

I

Auto Pans&amp;
Acceuorles

Coli 1-.Jif-

Stop &amp; Compare

~.r.

"'

FIIEE ISfiMirES

lie. D

-.--

.....

Real Estate

79

'

tonka, ton truoll
AAuto, AI-. WV.

3'J2.31S301'1~

W::

I &lt;.JUeT

I

c:oN'r

KNOW WHAT
ITW,I¥5.

campe,.&amp;
MotorHomn

31 ttomn for Sale,-

HOUSE FOR SALE
BY OWNER
12 Year old ranch type house. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, 1'lz car garage
and breezeway, central air and heat
pump, many extras.
On :2 acres of land.
Eastern School District.
Blacktop roads Co. Rd. 28 and 32.
949-2801 or 985-3839

EXCAVATING

FREE UnMA:rES

992·3838

RUTLAND
MINE .SUPPLY

r.o...~ 194-w.lktr AI"
" . UOII,OHIO
(hl..t,::=:,Wpw .
PARTS &amp; SERVKE
Mawen • Cllail Saws.
•Wee.inte;s ·

614·949·2804
•

•

•.· L....!T~&gt;"':::_j_!!:!!!!~!L
11111r
w..II••A•

I •
~

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• N. -,1-...:..-...,...:.;
....
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Weci.-IIIL

tMI2

"

RACINE MOWER
. CLINIC

~ .

......,i ,

$-14-92-tlw

""•" Sui••••••"·

· "Any Size Avelllble"

Ajfld1:0)il PRECISION PbST FRAME
BUILDERS

. !-!]

·

3 ledrOorM, Modem WouN,

Go-. II:., _ , Alarm.
2t01lt ll!oln, Pl.

·

9 Year•
Experience

104 Beech StNet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

"C./I U• for All Your Building NHd•"

COMMERCIAL, • RESIDENTIAL
AGRICI,JLTURAL ·
Llveltock Buildings • Machine Sheds • Hay
Bam• • Carport•
Garage• • Sto,.ge Building• • Roofing •
Wlndow1 - Siding
WV Uc. IWY GIZG:IG
FREE ES11AIAl'ES
ROBERT BORING
JEFF STAATS
. (114) 112-3541

(304) 773-1341

1Wo .,.,. B"-111!"1 running,
old; $TieL; 014..82·1823,

Plluont. For

· , -.•~-w.
Ann om.. Qolllpollo, 3 , ....
~.

~aat1

Home
Improvements

Musical

1 112 lOth, Cltr
. .,IOD.I14 441 tiM.

DREAM ON,
ELVINEY!!

Instruments

IIIAUTifUL HDUSI FoR SALE

Anlla,. UDrfaht Pllno

Hl•alteal ArM Comer Lat • Ill

.·h -

~o.

Con Ill loin It 50 Olive Slrlll,
Os'Mpalln

lllln 81. Pt. ~' w. v..
Qompllltefy Aenowrwa: 2 Ful
llltw, I iMVI! I .J uonw, HVN:., ¢111111. A... l,ooblo
lawr 1 'I ltJ. fit UWIOII

Farm Supp lies
&amp; Livest ock

A---.-_

fumlohod _ . . , 7

61 Fann Equipment

112 Noll

Ullllll• ...... liM4I ttll Afllr

7P.M.

Fumlohod,I~·­
No llete.: Ill I MIOI I

ASTRO-GRAPH

CIMn.

Dopoolt Requlni4.·1M 4411111.
Apoot-. .. _ And

-a

=
ca-

- -lllh
On '1"-r•
1111 LololnI

OetUp :In, 111 1.. 1101. 114-371ZliiO.

Rs•¥;illorllumWw4 I' ¥c.
l'lrlt ~
ts, 11t 00
111 34~1.

BERNiCE
BEDE OSOL

.,.n.,.... •Rh....a.

O-lvlng.1ondl--

1Wo I J o4tn Home For Ss..:
In Doublo Lol. 0.~
11po11a. 0111111 m • z

32 Mobile Homet1 ·
for Sail

rooM

Minor ·

vt....

end ·
Apool- In tllddt#1.IIM. Cd - - m t IDil

Con
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ttouee

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Trans port at1011

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.BARNEY

~.:, •
-"
·- Clrly
Hoot
- z Ylnyt
. Cor

oncl Crlfleno
Ellmlnlle the middle me
Hlndcrll'led IWigl,
w..thellld potpourri
euppl11.
HOURS: 10 1111-l pill

Services

• Ooll Hll Ohio. '

ATTN: loco~~ Croll8hope

Connie. • .

•

:zp, Coiltoct: I.Nia

Herb Sloop ()pea for Foil

-buy whalnllelrom

i

, Oiolt HtH LJown And

521011.LQI ·
llllclle,OIIIe

.

.

i11d~_ 2 latlw, . I 112

CONNIE'S lEOS
&amp; EYEILimiGS

Pipe for Water, Sewage
. and Gas
..
.
Rutland, OH.
742·2656

---------..:...'"11 .

=
'

Oct.

71 Auto1 for Sile

:io,

'112

There Ia likely to be a line ot demarcatlon betwMn your social friends and ,

1DI Culau Otdl, runa good,
$aii;-7-GII13.

yourbualnesalrlendo ,lntheytt~rahead. ·

This should tum out lobe a good policy!
and give you the best ot two wo~da. 1
LIBRA (llepl. 23-0ct. 23) Don't be ·
stingy with trlends tOday, but, by thai
..,. token , be careful about lending:
monay to a pel who hu yet to repay a '
previous debt. You 'll !eel foolish II hlsto-.
ry rapeatalttelf. Know where !O look tor
romance and you'll lind lt. The Astro,
·Graph Matchmaker Instantly reveals

ld .... Up.

"

Stealers wide receiver Louis
Lipps; t 981 AFC
Championship game .
Poat Debate Special I;J
9:00rnD trlJ·MOVIE: 'Jonathan:
The Boy Nobody Wanted'
NBC Monday ~- htatthe
Movies (2 :00)
·
(I) D (I) fl A C Monday
Night Football Cincinnali
Bengals at Pitlsburgh
Stealers (L) Stereo. 1;1
(!) Amorican Playhouu A
. story is told about a gro~p ot
gifted Gerrroan writers in
Hollywood. Stereo. I;J
l!l Space Age Stereo. 1;1
tmlll!l 11}) 411 Murphy Brown
Miles almosl has a heart
anack when Murphy throws
him a party . (A) Stereo . 1;1
(!J WWF Prime Time
Wrestling Macho Man Randy
Savage vs. Papa Shango.
12!1 Nashville Now
@ Gulnness Records Wo~d
ot Sports
QJJ Larry King Livel
Q) Father Dowling Mysteries
Slereo. 1;1
9:30am 11!1 (!2)411 Love I War
Jack tells Wally that if she 'll
wear a sexy dress. he'll wear
a suit. Stereo . 1;1
10:00 ® Newt 1;1
1!J American Playhouse A
story is told about a group of

a

J.S. MARINE SERVICE
81WIIM110.

NEW DEALt
Don1 Cd You Wont To
llllolo SERIOUS IIOHEY lolna

H-92-tlw ·

Mcl nally, former Pittsburgh
Steelars coach Chuck Noll,

,...Oil."""'-·-

t!OOO A Wolll POie,.lll Locol
Roooto Muot Soli 1·

915·4473
667·6179

Magazine Cinc1nnati Bengals
former wide receiver Pat

--rlzlllll
263 cy. outboon111121
.... cyl. outboenll $35
I() &amp; "2
" -1
fiiO
--11

trtemc:£1
OHIO VALLEY PIIIUSHINQ CO.
RtDnnmendl thll W0U do buaJ..
-111111 fiiOIIIerou~l.ionc1
NOfto--t
tho

Your Qwn 7BCI7.

Re1110deliag

tbwo,IM-HZ.utl.

Bullrleu

21

•j Quality .Auured Co•fratfor"'

20 Yr. Exp.

Bulkllng
Supplies

ton, Mlo - . OH Col 11424HIZ'L

F 111 illlCI&lt;1 1

1117 Fonl plclt-up tiucll, AC, PI,

outo., WI tool bo- I cyt., , _
~ Mllng: ...aoo, ~-

. - . ~~r~c~&lt;, ' - ..._ ......
-._llnloll, Cloude Win-

AND·mRnHING UNDERNEATH
GAUGES • ADDITIONS • SIDING.

. Factory Clloke 12
Gaige Oily
Starts Sept. 27

'*

bandit allack. (A) Stereo. 1;1
8:051J) MOVIE: Snowbeast (2 :00)
8:30 crJ I) illl Blossom
Blossom's excuse for being .

which signs are romantically perlecl for
you. Mall $2 plus a long, sail-addressad , stamped envelope to Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box
91428, Cleveland. OH 44101-3428.
SCORPIO (Oc1. 24-Nov. 22) You might
not accomplish ·your oblec11- tOday, :,
owing to an Inability lo judge the ·
strengih Of your opposition or obsta-.
ctes. Don 't go In kidding yourHif.
.
8AOinARIU8 (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) You ..

.....

ARIES (Miorch 21-Aprlt 1•) If your expectatlons are nolloundod upon roallstic !actors, disappointments could occur today_Putting In a little and hoping
to get back a lot is a formula, tor shattered dreams.
.
TAURUS (April 20-Miy 20) You and
your mate might reach an lmpassa today on an Issue you both !eel iS sjgnlflcaot, Confrontation can be avoided If you let It rest lor a few days.

·-.. . .. ,_

,...,~,~~··- ·1.

-~·-

.~

over your logic and Intellect today, rath- Jlng down the suggestions of others toer than the other way 'around . This may day, be certain you . know what you're
not work out too well.
I lalklng about. Your thoughts might apCAPIIICOIIN (Dec. 22-Jan. 11) A aitua- '• peor equlllly ulmpractlcal to them .
tlon you're pr""""tly Involved In might .f CANCER (June 21.JuiJ 22) Strive to be
undergo eorne unexpected changes to· 1: prudent In the management of your rediy. Instead ot bucking the tide, try to , sources today. this Ia not a propitious
. now with e~enta. It will make the transl· 11,.,. tor extravagant shoppllljl or reck·
tlon easier.
. las nnancllllln-tlng.
· · ,
AQUAIIIUI (Jill. 211-Feb. 11) Usually,. ·LIO .(JutrD-Aug. 221 Upon occaalon.
·you're pretty good at dealing 'with lndl- ~ you can juggle MYeral projec:tsolmultavlduala on a one-to-one buls, but this,· neoualy and do a reasonably good job.·
could be your short suit today. Don't , · However, It's beet you stick to one thing .
rock the boat In your rela~lonshlpa.
. today and dedicate yourMif to doing 1
PIICI!I (Feb. ~h 21) Work that well.
j
could be doubly difficult tor you today, . VIIIQO (AMI· 23-lepl. 22) II you plrtlcl- 1
owing to a negatlveattltuda or Improper ,. potaln gosalp today, don't be ourprtMd ,
planning. Think positively, and draw up latar to learn you have been 111lked
a sat ot blueprints before attempting : ·atiout._by others ~· well. Wh~t goes
talks.
1. eroi.orill"l:omu around.

SeRAM-LUS AN$"t:o

- Outrun. Icing - Elder - Knotty - DOCTOR
Before we were married I wished my husband had
a nice voice so ·he could sing me to sleep. Now, after
fifteen years, I wish he was a DOCTOR!
.
NORTH

BRIDGE

Newa

m tmlllil
·

t!2l411

11·11·11

,.

, AKZ
IK!094

+so

I'HILLIP
ALDER

EAST

WEST

+Jlo u

+KB 2

+6
' +J 9 6 s

•

SOUTH
+AQ

Worry about
your own tricks

.Q$4

tQ8H2
+AK2

.,.,

By Phillip Alder
Saltust lived in the years just ·before
the calendar went from RC. to A.D. (I
wonder how they numbered the years
in B.C., not knowing that A.D. was on
its way.) He pointed out that a person
can be ' greedy for the property of others, extravagant with his own.' That
sums up the declarer of today's deal
rather welt.
West opened the attack with the
heart jack. Declarer won the first
trick in the dummy, played a diamond
to his queen and led a second diamond.
West's discard was irritating. East
won this trick and switched to the
spade jack. South had to finesse , but
when his queen lost and West returned
a spade. South could do no l;&gt;etter than
win seven tricks.
South said: "The textbooks are
right. Once I knew West was .long in
hearts, I should have played lor East
. to be long in diamonds. I would ·have
made an overtrick.,.
'
It is true that this is often a reliable
huid·eliroe, but here South had over-

Sood~

West
Pass

I NT

Nor~

~

Eu1
All pill

3 NT

Opening lead: • J

looked the danger o.f a spade switch
from East. With six top tricks In tte
other suits, declarer needed only~
tricks from diamonds. South C!OIIld Ifford to concede two diamond tricks
long as he didn't lose control of another suit while establishing the dia-

.a

monds.

:

~

The guaranteed play is to lin-

through East for the diamond jack •
trick two. Even if West can win Wlll!l
the ·jack, he caimot hurt South with"
spade switch. Whatever happens, d4clarer must end up with at leut ~
tricks.
· ,
South had greedily hoped to lOijje ,
only one diamond trick, but had ~
too extravagant with bis own resources in the suit.
:
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VoL a, No. 125
Copyrighted 1882

OUTSTANDING STUDENTS • These stu·
dents at Tuppers 'PlaiDS Eleinentary School were
bouored at a recent asseinby as students of the
month. Perfect attendance were also presented.
Tber are, front 1-r, Le Ann Marcinko, second

· grade; Bailee Cline, nrst grade; Jamie
kindergarten; Jeunller Hayman, kindergarten.
. Back row 1-r, Jessica Brannon, sixth grade;
Matthew Boyles, fifth grade; Joshua Kehl, •··
fourth arade; and Kimberly Marcinko; third
·grade.

Volunteer workshop held recently
THE CIRCUS IS COMING • "Circus Futasy'' is comilig to Meip High Sebool ill ro..eroy
oa Od. 22 at 7 p.m; far oae show. The sbow is
sponsored by Amerk:an's Missing Children, a

natiollwide non-proftt orpnizatlon dedicated to
loc:atiaf missing cbildreD. Pictured is Jobaaila
Zer!1ill .on the slagle trapeze, as sbe performs
ber IJ'III)efuland dan~ ad.

A volunteer in-service training
workshop was recently held at
Tuppers Plains Elementary School.
The program developed as a part
of the RU1111 Demonstration Grant,
encouarged parents to become
involved wi!h !heir child's educa-

Your Social Security
By ED Pt:I'ERSON
Social Seauity
Manager ill AtbeDS
Many people know tbat wives
and widows can get Social Security
benefits when their husbands retire,
beCOme disabled, or die. And men
have these same benefit rights on
their spouse's Social Security earnings. What may. be less well
known, however, is what happens
if the marriage ends-what rights
do divorced spouses have to Social
Security benefits on their exspouse's Social Security earnings?
A divorced spouse can get benefits on a fonner husband's or wife's
Social Security record if the marriage )as led at leaSt I 0 years. ,The
divorced spouse must be 62 or
older and unmarried. The worker
aJ,so must be at least 62. If they
have been divorced 2 years or

more, he or she can get benefits as a legal spouse. Previously, these
even if the worker is not retired.
women and men were considered
People often aslc if the amount. wives and husbands for !he purpose ·
of benefits paid to their ex-spouse of gelling Social Security benefits
will reduce !he amount of benefits · only if no legal spouse received
paid to their current wife or hus- benefiis.
band. The answer is "no." Social .
A P-erson C!lnnot receive
Security figures benefits for an ex- spouse s benefit if he or she quali. spouse without regard to the fies for a higher benefit on his or
her own work under Social Securiamount paid to a cune.ll spouse.
ty,
nor can he or she receive bolh
A change in !he Social Security
benefits.
He or she will get the
law !hat went into effect in January
higher
of
the
two. This is one of the
1991 eliminaled the 2-year wait for
reasons
why
men,
With their generpeople who were already 'etling
ally
higher
earnings
and thus highspouse's benefits at the ume of
er
benefits,
arc
less
likely than
their divorce.
women
to
receive
spouse's
beneAnother new provision of the
fits.
.
Social Security law affeets women
The full amount of the Social
and men who married in good faith
and later found out !hat !heir mar- Security benefit for a spouse is 50
riage was invalid. As of I an. I, percent of !he worker's benefit. If a
1991, !hese people can qualify for spouse's benefit is takeo before age
benefits on the worker's ·social 65, !he benefit amount is reduced
Security record on !he Slll!le basis for each month before age 65 benefits-to a low of 37.5 percent of the
worker's benefit at age 62.
For more infonnation, call the
Social Security toll free number (1·
800-l172-1213). The Chillicothe
phone number is 774-5500.
POMEROY· MADD will meet
The September meeting of the
Tuesday at Health Recovery Ser- Natures Garden Club of he Galvices, 119 Butternut Avenue in lipolis Developmental Center was
Pomeroy at 6 .,.m. Everyone wel- opened by 14 members repeating
come. Further mfonnation may be the pledge.
Roll call was called by Mary
obtained by calling 992-5277 or
Kirkwood. Virginia Garnes was a
742-2933.
visitor. Minutes of !he last meeting
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle- were~ by Charlotte Young. For ·
were . the poems "A
port Literary Club will meet devotions
Reassuring Smile and "A Touch of
Wednesday at 1:30p.m. at the Love" were read by.Lucy Earwood
home of Mrs. Wilson Carpenter.
Mrs. Wendell Hoover will review of the Gallipolis Garde11 Club.
The program of the day was
the book "Dear and Glorious
given
by the French City Garden
Physician" by Taylor Caldwell.
Club
of
which Mrs. Elaine .George
Roll call will be "share a verse
is
president.
Members assisting
from the Gospel of Luke."
were Bertina Smeltzer, Juanita
SYRACUSE • The Syracuse Spurloclc, and Willa Saunders,who
Homemakers Third Wednesday gave readings of, "Friends Are
group will meet Wednesday at 10 Like Flowers", "My Neighbor",
a.m. at the municipal building. "When You Wish U~ A Leaf",
B~ng wallpaper or colored paper, "Front Porch Rocker , "In An Old
SCissors and glue to make shopping Garden" and "A Garden".
The members of Natures Garden
bags.
Club then participated in a plant
CHESHIRE - The Galiia-Meij!S identification of geranium, fern,
Community Action Agency w11l dusty miller, sweet pea, begonia,
hold a (ree clothing day Wednes- . marigold, clover, dahlia, petunia,
day from 9 a.m. to noon at the old passion fl~wer, spider plant, pansy.
coleus, airplane plant, asparagus
high school building in Cheshire.
~ern! mum, sedum, holly, wanderREEDSVILLE - The Meigs mg JeW, camphor plant, vinca vine,
County Republican Executive dandelion, lobelia and pyraeantha.
Comm1ttee, fall campaign dinner, Each member made an arrangeWednesday, Eastern High School. ment in a small bottle consisting of
Social hour, 6:30-7 p.m., followed dusty miller, white and purple
by dinner served by Eastern Band globeamratha, straw flowers and a
Boosters. Tickets are available for small bow. Refreshments were
$5 from any officeholder, candi- served. The meeting closed with
date or at the Republican Party the benediction "God Bless You
.
Headquarters, Main Street, and Keep You in His care•.
The
next
meeting
will
be
Oct.
Pomeroy.
22.
.

lion.
Dr. Donald Shue, principal, welcomed ·the group to the meeting,
and John Costanzo, Meigs County
Elementary Supervisor, provid~d
an overview of the program.
Joann Calaway and Leslie Kid-

der, volunteer coordinators, spok'e
of the satisfaction invQlved wi!h
being parent volunteers.
Instructional stations were located in !he gymnasium where teachers demonsttaled the types of activities in wh'ich par~nts could
become actively involved.

RVRRY IN
SALE · ENDS SATURDAY:

permits

JlothFor

*399

Community calendar A
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.
MONDAY
ENTERPRISE - Enterprise
Uniled Me!hodist Church will hold
a series of meetings through Tuesday at 7 p.m. nightly. Rev. Kenny
Baker will speak Sunday. Bruce
Stone will perform Monday and
Tuesday. Public invited.
RACINE - Racine Village
Council will meet in recessed session Monday at 7 p.m. at Star Mill

Part.
SALEM CENTER - Revival at
Salem Center United Methodist
Church will be !vJonday through
Friday at 7 p.m. nightly. Special
singing night! y. Rev. Chester Lemley, Ed Mingus, Roger Kennedy
and Dennis Faught will be the
speakers. Public invited.
lffiEDSVILLE - A meeting for
...1 Easlem High School seniors and
their parents, especially those interesled in going on the class trip, will
be held Monday at 7:30p.m. in the
cafeteria at the high school.
RACINE - Big Bend Antique
Tractor Club meeting , Monday,
7:30p.m. at Southern High School.
TUESDAY
PORTI.AND - There will be a
special meeting at Portland Ele·
m·entary on Tuesday at 7 p.m.
Superintendent of schools, Robert
Ord, will speak on the school levy
and the teachers will discuss the
effective school 1\!Bnt Open house
for the school w1il be held at 6:45
p.m.
POMEROY 'Women's Auxil·
iary of Veterans Memorial Hospital
will meet Tuesday at 1:30 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT • The annual
Meigs County Sconish Rite dinner
will be held Tuesday, at 6:30 p.m.
at !he Middleport Masonic Temple.
POMEROY - American Legion
prew Webster Post No. 39 will
meet Tuesday at Pomeroy. Dinner
at 7 p.m. Meeting at 8 p.m. All
urged to attend.
·· pOMEROY • FOE 2171 Ladies
Auxiliary will meet Tuesday at
'7:30 p.m. Members bring a bag of
Halloween candy.
·

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News of our servicymen
SAN ANTONIO, Texas - Air·
man Shawn C. Marcinko has P,d·
ualed from Air Force basic tnuning
at Lackland Air Force Base, San
Antonio, Texas.
During the six weeks of training
the airmail studied Air Force mission, organization and customS and
received special training in human
relations.
In addition, ainnen who complete basic training earn credits
toward an associate degree through .
the Community CoUege of the Air
Force.
Marcinko is the son of Charmaine R. and Bill R. Thoma of
Racine.

rank and reported for duty wi!h 3rd
Battalion, 8!h Marines, 2rid Marine
Division, Camp Lejeune, N.C.
The 1991 graduate of Southern
High School, joined the Marine
Corps in February '1992.

FOR
THOSE PRECIOUS
MOMENTS of relaxing comfort in
any position. (sitting or fully
lleiined), lhia conlempollry beauty
has been qUality constructed to.give.
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COLUMBIA,' S.C. - Army
National Guard Pvt. Kevin L .
Grady had compleled basic training
8l Fort JKkson
During the training, students
received instruction in drill and
cen:moniea, weapclDS, map reading,
tactics, military counesy, military
justice, fust aid, and Anny histoty
and traditions.
Grady is !he son of Paul L. and
Marine .Pfc. Aaron H. Knopp, Cathy L. Grady of 48360 Bowmans
son of Max L. Knopp of 28305 .. Run Roed, Racine.
Tanners Run Road, Ra~ine, 'fas · The private is .a 1992 graduate
recently promoled to h1s present of Southern High School.
.
&lt;

ByBRIANJ.REED
Sentinel News Staff
.
Pomeroy Attorney Patrick H.
O'Brien, legal counsel for !he Vil·
lage of Pomeroy, discussed a proposed contract between the village
an4 SBA Consultants of Jackson
when Pomeroy Village Council
met in regular session on Monday
evening.
' The contract outlines the tenns
of tlie Pomeroy Downtown Revital·
ization Plan, to be developed by the
consulting firm and submitted to
!he Ohio Department of Development in February with a ~~:vitaliza­
tion grant request. O'Brien

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Council, O'Brien discuss revitalization contract terms

Lawsuit says
landfills lack

BUY ONE, GET ONE

1 Section, 10 P-a•• 25 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, October 20, 1992

reviewed the contract by section,
and expressed a concern about a
clause in which the firm retains
ownership of the plan once it is
compleled.
In the event that the plan is
complele\1 and the grant application
is in tum denied, business owners
who have expressed an interest in
renovating !heir buildings would
not be able to carry out the work on
their own. without !he involvement
of the consulting firm, which
resC?rves. the right to perform all
engmeenng wort.
The plan, which will act as a
"blueprint" for the revitalization

pro~,

will cosl !he village and extend the Ohio Department of
busmoss donorS $10,000, and sev- T~ansportation' s pavmg of Main
eral council members feel that !he Street to the bridge on to !he Mid·
village should.own lhe pian once it dleport corporation line. The loan
is completed.
is through Bank One. A!hens, N.A.,
O'Brien, Mayor Bruce Reed and at a rate of .75 point below the
Revitalization Committee Chair- prime lending rate.
Fire Chief Danny Zirkle was
man John Musser, who was also
given
permission to seek specificapresent, will contact lhe consulting
tions
for
the
of a new ftre
ftnn this week to discuss changing
·trUCk.
Council
and
Zirkle
also disthat condition of the contract
cussed
the
sale
of
two
fire
trucks
before the village agrees to enter
not being used by the department.
into the a~menL
.·
Counc1l approved a resolution to No action was taken.
Reed announced !hat boundary
borrow $41,000 to eay for recent
questions
surrounding the .village's
paving work in !he v1llage. The village voted earlier this year to

eurchase

The free two-hour, on-Street rarking will begin on November 2 and
continue !hrough New Year's Day.
Council President Larry
Wehrung reported !hat a complaint
had been received about barking
dogs on Wehe Terrace, and Councilman Thomas Werry stated that
road grading was needed on Willis
Hill.
No action was taken on a $791
request for winter police unifonns.
Present, in addition to those
named, were council members
Betty Baronick and John Blaettnar,
and Clerk Kathy Hysell.

Many government owned buildings
exempt from American· Disabilities Act
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
While private businesses are
required to make their establishments handicapped accessible in
compliance with the Americans
with Disabilities· Act, many govemment owned buildings, inciuding the U. S. Postal Service, are
exempt.
Gary McCann, facility engineer
wilh the U. S. Postal Service, said
Monday that the "Postal service
doesn't have to comply with the
ADA-•
· His response Was in reply to a
question relating to what was talcing place in the way of construction
at th1f Pilin"eroy Post Office after
local postal employees Said it was
not a mmp to make the building
more accessible to the handicapped.
The exterior entrance improvements, McCann said; are not being
made to alter the building, but just
to repair and maintain what is
already there - 14 steps to the
front door.
..

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Two landfills that are part of a
court challenge against the state· s
new garbage law are operating illegally, a consumer group alleged.
West Virginia-Ciuzen Action
Group filed a lawsuit Monday in
Kanawl!a County Circuit Court
alleging landfills in Parkersburg
and Clarksburg should be' shut
down or forced to show they have
apPIOval from state regulators.
A hearint~ is set for Monday.
Namlld 1!1 the 'lawsuil are the
, landf'ills~ operator, Mid-American
Waste Systems Inc. of Canal
Winchester, Ohio, and two pf its
subsidiaries, Northweslem Disposal Co. and Mid-American Waste
Systems of Harrison Inc. The state
Division of Natural Resources arid
Public Service Commission also
were named in lhe suiL
There was no answer early
today at the offices for the state
aJ!encies: A call to Mid-American's
offices also went unanswered.
"There are pretly significant
.legal questions about whether these
various entities are properly permitted to operate these dumps,"
said Tom Rodd, one of three attorneys who filed the lawsuiL
"It points to the existence of an
elaborate shell game of corporations which are not in compliaoee
wilh West Virginia law," he said.
The company is part of a law&amp;uit
to abolish West Virginia's law limiting landfill size and chargirig new
- fees for garbage dumping.

Asked about adding a ramp
McCann said that is not feasible
because of "site constraint and
ienglh of run and area size it would
take to construct a ramp." ·
He emphasized that post offices
are not subject 10 the ADA legislalion "if the building in which the
operation .is taking place is owned
by the U.S. Postal ServicJl."
However, he explained, if the
building in which the postal service
is being opemled is leased, !hen !he
owner may be forced to comply
with the ADA.
.
As to how handicapped persons
arc to receive service at either the
Pomeroy or MiddleP.ort Post
Offices, since boJh bwldings are
owrttid by .the U. s. Postal Service
and neither are handicapped accessible, McCann said that if the postmaster is contacted, "accommodalions can be made at the curb."
He also said that there is a
"stamps by mail" service with
delivery by rural carriers.
He indicated that there are "no
plans" to make eilher the Pomeroy
or Middleport post offices more

accessible to handicapped individuals.
The Americans with Disabilities
Act went into effect in January.
It is aimed at breaking down
barriers for the handicapped and
disabled, many of them senior citi-·
zens, by giving them access to new
opportunities in all areas of their
lives.
. The law prohibits discrimination
against disabled individuals in private, state and local government
employmenl. That can be accom plished by constructing new facilities or· by reinov ing barriers in
existing buildings.
It also prohibits discrimination
in public accommodations, public
transportation,. government services
and telecommunications.
It requires ali public and private
facilities (restaurants, hotels, theaters, stores and offices) to be completely accessible to aU disabled
oersons.
- But, according to McCann , it
excludes the U. S. Postal Service
from compliance.

Bush shines in final debate; needs
historic .turnaround for victory ·

By JOHN KING
AP Political Writer
EAST LANSING, Mich. President Bush and Bill Clinton
today opened a two-week dash to
Election Day fresh from a stonny
debate marked by clashes over truS\
and taxes ,and Ross Perot's frequent, pointed attacks on Bush's
foreign policy.
NOT A RAMP • Construction at the Pomeroy Post Office led
Bush's last debate performance '
to speculation that perhaps a ramp to make the buDding handiwas his best, repeatedly criticizing
capped accessible was being installed. Not so. Just replacement or
Clinton for a "dangerous" pattern
OEA endorses Malone
the 14 steps which lead to the front entrance of the building.
of waffling on issues ranging from .
trade with Mexico to war with Iraq.
The HoUse Dislrici 94 Screening
Bush wa's more focused and
aggressive
than in the first two
. Committee of the Ohio Education
Association/Educators Political
encounters, yet instant polls
Action Committee has endorsed
showed voters viewed Clinton a
Rep. Mark Malone for election to
· narrow winner, suggesting Bu.sh'
!he Ohio House of Representatives.
had not done much to loosen Clinton's tenacious grip on a doubleRep. Malone is a 10 year member of the Ohio House of RepresenDAYTON, Ohio (AP) _ The
'"I have federal and state land," digitl.ead.
.
tatives. A fund raiser and meet the federal government is losing said rancher Mike Corn, of
W1th the election two weeks
candidate night was held recendy money on grazing land it owns in Roswell, N,M_ "'You see. any dif- away, Bush needs a hasty and hisat Mogio's American Cafe in Gal- the western Uniled States because ference? There's noL"
toric turnaround if he is to win a
lipolis. Jane McCarley, chairperson it charges ranchers half as niuch as
New Mexico charges ·corn second term.
of the HD 94 Screening Commit· states charge to graze similar land · $3.46 a month to feed one of his
Their debate series over, Clinton
tee, presented Rep. MaiOQe with a newspaper reported today.
' l"egistered H:reford bulls . Th.e and Bush 'today begin what promis!he check from !he OEA-EPAC at
The Dayton Daily News pub- ~s on. the hill across the road 1s es to be a heated and hecuc cam·
that time. The Ohio Education lished the repon as part of a series JUSt as high, just as thick and just as paign finish. For all the post-debate
Association represents 109,000 on goyemment waste, based on an healthy, but that hill is owned.by bragging of the campaigns, the
school employees as members in eight-month examination of federal the federal government. wh1ch schedules·best illusttaled the state
600 school districts aciQSS the state. ~udit reports and interviews with . charges Cor.n $1 .92 month~ the ofthemce.
federal auditors and investigators
newspaper wd.
Bush headed South, for a train
· · · New Mexico mised its land-use tour of Georgia and South Caroli, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , fees, and it makes $6 million a year na, trying to rebuild a crumbling
from its grazing land. The federal R~ublican base. Clinton looked to
government refuses to raise its fees sohdify leads in Illinois and Wisand it loses $52 million a year, the consin before a swing through
Daily News reported
W-estern states that were once
Since the 1970s, government thought solid Republican.
auditors have .toid Congress the
Clinton provoked few fi~hts
federal grazing program is losing during the third debate in etght
money. A 1986 congressional days, but he returned Bush's volThe American Red Cross Bloodmobile will visit the Meigs
report concluded that because of leys, mocking Bush's trust arguCounty Senior CitiaDS Center In Pomeroy on Wednesday from
the country's "burgeoning ment with a recitation of the presi1 to 5:30 ,p.m.
•
.
deficits," !he· federal .government's · dent's "read my lips" tax promise,
"Pamlly ¥1catlona and summer activities are now over for
grazing program "cannot be justi- his pledge to create 30 million jobs
a~r yur," Bloodmobile Chairman Brian Reed said; "Now
fied." the Daily News said.
·
and his s : ' t of what he once
that famiUes are baek Ia lbelr routines; Meigs County folks
economics."
A proposal to18ise grazing fees called "v
should IIIIo lhlDk about lnc:ludlnil replar blbocl donatious into
about 33 percent by 1~95 passed
To Bush's charge that Clinton
tboae roatlnea. Tbe need for blood is aever-endln£1 and·has no
the House but died in the Senate was a failed governor, Clinton
respect for our bill)' llthedales."
last year. Ali but one Western sena- countered that Arkansas was head"We uever bow wben a family member or loved one will
tor voted to kill the proposed ing in !he right direction under his
need blood,' aad local h011pitals depend on volunieer blood
increase.
.
leadership while the country OoundOIIon to pi'O\IIde our area blood supply. Please show your coa"1 don't think the present sys- 'dered under Busb.
eena lor the commnnlty by tU1n1 a moment from ;rour day and
tern is fair to the taxpayer," said
For his part, Perot said neither
clonallq blood."
.
.
.
Rep. Ralph, Regula, R-Ohio, the of 1:\is opponents' economic plans
Thole frolllaaes 17 to 70, who weigh at least 110 poua!IJ may
ranking' Republican on a House added up and !hit he would, spend
donate blood at this time.
subcommit~ that handles grazing
more than $60 million of his own
legislatioti
•
money 'on his campaign . Perot

Government losing
Ijtoney on grazing land

Bloodmobile to visit ,
Meigs Wednesday

'

purchase of the old junior h-igh
propeny on East Main Street had
been resolved, and a deed is forthcoming this week. Council also
agreed to purchase a lot at the corner of Spring Avenue and Condor
Street from Bob Thompson at a
cost of $3,000 in order tci construct
a road to the new property. That
amount is the appraised property
value, at which Thompson agreed
to sell the land.
At the request of Councilman
Scott Dillon, council agreed to provide free parking for lhe Christmas
season in the downtown district.

~

•

again left the specifics to his TV
ads, turning in another colorful
debateperfonnance.
"We'D be down in the trenches
under. !he hood working on fixing
lhe old car to get it back on the
road," he said. Perot said votm
worried about jobs.should suppon
a businessman who has created
thousands - and ignore "these
folks in the press Jelling you you're
throwing your vote away."
Perot's sharpest volleys were
aimed squarely at Bush, whom
Perot said needed wars to remove
Saddam Hussein and Manuel Noriega from power only because he
had tiuilt up their regimes . And
Perot's mere presence complicated
Bush's attempts to land a lcnock:out
punch on Clinton.
The fights Monday night were
on familiar issues, but s11iced .at
times with the tens1on and mtens1ty

befitting a fmal clash.
Some highlights:
- TAXES. Bu·sh argued that
Clinton couldn't be trusted to keep
his pledge to raise taxes only on lhe
rich. :'Mr. and Mrs. America ...
watch your wallet because his figures don't a&lt;ld up and he's going to
sock it riglit-to the middle-class
taxpayer." Clinton said Bush had
zero credibility on the tax issue and
said Bush was wrong to promise
never to raise taxes. But in impiementing his campaign promises,
Clmton vowed: "If lhe money does
not come in to pay for these programs we wm cut other government spendtng or we will slow
down the phase in of the programs,
I am not going to raise taxes on the
m1ddle class to pay for these programs." Pe~ot said gene.rally that
~.e would ratse taxes, asking ~oters
to take fau, shared sacrifice. '

-----Local briefs--Youth cited in car-bus accident
A Pomeroy youth was ciled following a car-bus accident at the
intersection of Pomeroy Pike and Flatwoods Road in Chester Township Monday around 3:20p.m.
Todd A. Perty, 16, 36485 Lakewood Road., was eastbound on
Flatwoods Road and pulled .oul onto Pomeroy Pike into' the path of
a southbound school bus driven by Patricia S. Pape, 50, 30485
Bashan Rd., Racine, according to a repon from the Gailia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Perty reportedly sustained minor injuries and was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service.
Pape and her 13 passengers were uninjured according to the
report.
Damage to Perry's 1990 Honda Civic and the 1988 International
bus belonging !he Meij!S County Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilitr. was listed as lighL
Perty was cited for failure to yield from a stop sign.

Woman cited in wreck
A Middleport woman escaped injury aftir a one-car wreck on
U.S. 33 in Bedford TownShip Monday around 9:25 a.m.
Accordina to a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of !he State
Highway Patrol, Ly1tn E. Shuler, 45, 245 N. Fifth Avenue, was
nor!hbound when ber car dropped off the right side of tile roadway
in a curve: The car !hen went off !he left side of the road and struck
ag~nge.

Damage to Shuler's 1989 Ford Tempo was listed as heavy and
disabling. .
Shuler was ciled by the patrol for failure to control.

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