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11m11

1182

Ohio Lottery

Farm prices ._nchanged in October .
eauto,
ers aw no Oftllll._
decrm" com.
rtw
•

WASHINOTON (AP)- P11111Ill pri;os
from Sip'
10 Oclliller u pay11111111 . . up far ...........
fruit, orangea and wheat but
declinid for corn, apple,l, leuuee

and tomon•

Pick 3:

wtns contest

Pick 4:

•

lettuce aad
would have been up I percentage for 10matoel,
wheat,
more
tban
otrsettlna
point in OciObcr compared with a ·
fer
co"OD,
lemool
year ago.
llid
IO)'belns.
the
reportllid,
Prices were highc::r over the year

716
7788
Super Lotto:
8-14.19-35-38-44

at Portland
PageS

Kicker:

\

17S,414 ' - ' of Ciale C()IIIIJimliO
166 7f8 held recorded in t99I.
.

The American Angus Allociation, headquartered in SL Josepll,
Mislouri
wu founded in 1883. It
.
is the 11raest beef~ UIOCII·
. tion in the warld in terms of both
annual reilstrations and active

.

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·e···

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mcmllenVoLa, No, 1M

l

Wants .To Be our
Choice For .
Common Pleas Judge
'

'

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By CINDY BENEDICTO
Associated Press Writer
President B'ush, BiU Clin1011 and
their running mates targeted the
batlleground state of Ohio today in
a flurry of campaign stops to give
one last pitch to voters.
Both Clinton and Vice President
Dan Quayle used the theme of
courage in urging voters to cast
ballOis f~ theil- tickets.
· The campaign for Ohio's 21
electoral votes tightened as polls
. release.d today and during the
weekend showed Clinton with a
slight lead or indiCI!Ied the I1ICC was
a dead heaL
In Cleveland this morning, Cliocon spoke to about 2,000 people at

.

I

.
'

Trained ,
tlogto

Monday and
Tuesday

'

.

9:30 u. to 1:00 p.m.

A specially-trained german
shepherd will assist the Mei$S
County Sheriff's Dj:panment m
several areas of law enrorcemeru
once its training is completed,

'

.

The pup has spent considerable
time wilh Deputy Mart Boyd, who
wiD serve as his "partner" and handler once the dog's training is complete. Boyd said that the dog's
trllining, under the direction of Bill
· Price of Carroll, Ohio, should be
finished by year's end.

.'

.

PROPOSED CHARTER AMENDMENT
GALLIPOLIS CITY
A Majority Aflirmaiiv6 Vote Is Necessary For Passa~:e.

PROPOSED CHARTER AMENDMENT
.
GALLIPOLIS CITY
A Majority Arrirmative Vote Is Necessary For Passage.

Chanaea re1idencr

~equire•ents

0
chanae• the ,word " e l ec.tor

It

to

~tty ~alton

for
~eg 1

II..

stere d _voter " • .

Section 9

'

• City C:O,.i ssion shall 11eet "regularlJ" ; requiru 24 hours
vritten notice for special .eetings .•

Secti~n 10 - eo..i saion seat aar be vacated after •lss i ng 5 consecutive
~etinas.
•
Sect~

14- Requires publis~in&amp; · a brief ••rnopf i$ of ordinanCes instead
of the ,entire text .
, ~
·
.

.

200201-

FOR THE.ORDINANCE

be approved by the Gity Manager.

AGAINSTTHEORD1NANCE

deleted .

Section 60 - Declarations of C.ndidacy (for eo.ntssion) .shall be filed 75
days priqr to the pri.ary election.

Sections
. ,
.
64,66 &amp; 67 - . Oaanaes the word "voters" and ''elec tors" •to " ~eailtered •otera".
read the Ci t)' SOliCitor .shall ~pprove ordin•ncet a a to for•.

FORTKEORDINANCE
AGAINSTTHE ORDINANCE

194-+
195

'-+

\
Shall the proposed Ordinance No . 92-42 amending Section 20 of the
• Charter be approved? \ A· van: FOR lllE ORDlHANCE:
.

-

•

"'

...

'

· ...4

•

••
~

·'

~y

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r

i,

.,,

Here', Trainer Bill Price of Workin&amp; Dop of Ohio demonstrates
the training procedure uslnl oae ol his german shepherds. (Sentinel Photo by Brlaa J, Reed)
lies womng dogs, ~ which commissions dogs as police officers.
200 of those &lt;logs are crosstrained on working with explosive
delection. The dogs are abo ttaincd
to conduct building searches,
search and res~ue operations
involving missing persons, drug'
deleetion, riot and crowd control,
and apprehension of persons bran-

Two vehicleS were damaged in an accidc!lt oo West Main Street
Sunday at 5:29 p.m.
.
Pomeroy Pnlice reponed thal a truck driven by Elmer Pinons,
Jr 311. Apple Grove Road, Racine, struck the rc1r of a ea- driven by
Edwina Bell 49 Lincoln Street. Middleport. There was moder8te
damage 10 tiic trOnt of the Pinons truck. and licavy damage to the
rc1r o1 the Bell ,ehicle. There were no injuries in.the accident
P1nonJ wu cited for failure to maintlili IIS8UI'Cd clea' distance. .'

.

...,

SPECIALLY TRAINED -Jumping on command is' oae or tbe
skills learned by workln&amp; dop used by law euforcemeiit ageucles. ·

Vehicles damaged in wreck

FOR TKE ORDINANCE

•

~

'•

•

Chana.. re1ldent requirements for the Soli,itor fro. a reaident of the City
to a re1ident of t~e County that h~s an e1tabli1hed la~ office in the City .
{Dr at lean two years prior to the appOintllent.

224AGAINSTTHEORDINANCE '225-

•

A Pnmcroy woman was cited after a two-vehlcle wreck on Ohio
1
143 in Scipio Township around 10:50 a.m. Sunday.
According 10 a rcpon from the GaUia-Mcigs Post of the State ·
Highway Patrol, Brenda K. Cotterill, 32, 33993 CPiterill Road.
backed from a private drive and struck the side of a southbound
pickup truck driven Daniel D. Jeffers. 46, Woodland Drive, West
Columbia. W.VL
.
No injuries were reponed.
·
Damage to Cotterill's 1983 Ford LID was listed as moderale.
Damage 10 Jeffers' 1991 Nissan 4X4 was lisled as light. ·
·.
Coueri1l wiS cited for im~ backing.

217218-

By JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Staff
Law enforcement officials in
several counties throughout Ohio
and several states arc continuing an
investigation in10 a riding lawnmower theft ring cracked in Gallia
County last week.
According to Gallia County
Sheriff Dennis R. Salisbury, 19 of
the brand-new John Deere riding
mowers have been recovered since
Fn.da~ ·
Salisbury said the investigation
started last week and that the
department is lookinll at several
susoects and questiorung "ownerous'l. WilJICSSCS. He said the investigation may be time consuming
because several departments in
other counties and states are work-

'

Woman cited in two-vehicle wreck

I

Section 61- Change• the for•• o! Declaration and· Certification to conform
with those uaed state wide.
·
· ...

a rally on the tarmac of Burke
Lakefront Airport overlooking
wind-swept Lake Erie.
HQ~rse from allergies and
overuse of his voice, he spoke for
about 11 minutes, stepping aside
briefly to introduce his wife,
Hillary, Democratic National
Chairman Ron Brown, and Martin
Luther King III, son of the civil
rights leader.
" This election is a race between
hope and fear, between division
and community. between responsibility and blame, between whether
we have the courage 10 change ...
or whether we start With the canfort of the status quo," Clinton
said.

"Tomorrow, we will drown out
the negative voices that have held
us bact too long," he Slid.
Bush was schcdulcd 10 altend a
rally this aftemootl at Akron-Can~
lOR AirpOrt.
Quayle, al a rally 81 Polt Columbus International Airport. emphasized the importance of Ohio as a
swing stiJic.

"As Ohio 'g oes. so goes the
nation," Quayle told a about 500
people'in a IS-minute speech.
"My friends,IOIIIOilOW have the
courage to do what is right for
America. Have die courage to \'Ole
for George Bush," he said.
AI Gore W1S IICbeduled to speak
at Port Columbus lata' in the day.

proportion of young people voting
this time than in recent elections
because of Clincon's stand on abortion.' '
In recent years, people 18 10 24
have repiaced blacks as. the single
biggest block of unregislercd voters. Only 17 percent of that age
group voted in the last presidential
election, compared with a 50 percent turnout among all age groups.
"There is a risk that the polls
arc missing something important
with younger vOters," Garm said.
"Pnlls of likely v01ers lend to be
based on past voting participa-

· tion."

CliniOII packed an appennce at

a get-out-the vote rally at tho

Meadowlands sporu complex in10

a crowded schedule in New Jersey

on Sunday. Pat RobertSOI)'S Chris·
tian coalition .said it distributed 811
estimaled 30 million pamphlets in
chlD'Ches over the weekend UIJing
peo~&gt;Ie to vOle. Although Robertson
•s a Republican, spokesman Ralph
Reed said the effort was non-panisan.
• Most 'of the experts agreed that
ovcrall turnout would be up from
1988 .

Probe continues in mower theft ring

- --Local briefs... -:-.- ....,

PROPOSED CHARTER AMENDMENT
GALLIPOLIS CITY
A Majority Affirmative Vote Is Necessary For Passage.'

Section 33 - City C..i ss ion shall fix salaries/cnpensation for all. offi ~ers and eeployees enti t led to compensation .

to

Approximately 330 working
dogs are used by law enforcement
units in the state. Ohio is one of the
few staleS in the nation which certi·

PROPOSED CHARTER AMENDMENT
GA-LLIPOLIS CITY
A Majority Aflirmative Vote Is Necessary For Passage . .

Section 29 ~ Refers t o Tru ; t ees of the Si nking Fund - Sect i on 29 to be

Sectiori 69 .:.

God,"

Co.penaatioR for ~•berS of the City eo..iaaion at the r1te of $3.600 ·per
yur c.-ncins with those elected r-opr•t•h.;.•"'199-4•t•er••-·--~-----

, Section '22 - Olanse• "City Auditor" to "Auditor/perkiTre ..auret"; warrants ·
for payaents to be signed by the 'Auditor/Clerk/Tre••urer and
the Cit)' Kana.ger ; deletes "2 year "co.paretive- atetetDent" tn
.unthly financial s tatement .
pey~nts ~hall

,

Shall the proposed Ordinance No. 92-41 amending Section 7 of the Char,. terbe approved?
A VOTE f2! 111£ ORDIHAIIC£ PROVIDES :

"'.

Section 25 - Claias for

.

ACAINSTTHEORDINANCE

•
... Deletes the "Sinking Fund"'; pr-oYi des for the "Commis
sion
A.ppoint-ent Coadttee" .

·,

candidate• to three years:

FORTHE'ORD.INANCE

It should be noted that Sections 6, 9,10,1,,22,25,29,33,60 , 61,64,66 67 end 69
appear toaethe~ on the ballot as the changes in these sections are' considered
to be non-controversi al technic:~l chanses.

Price is ihe owner of Worlting
Dogs of Ohio, which operales ken.
nels and training programs in
Japan, Hawaii and ~ashington,
D.C., as wen ISm Ohio. The ken·
net has won several worldwide
grand champion hon&lt;xs for its germ~n shepherds, and is the only
American firm to train working
dogs for the German police. Pri~e
cites his faith as a reason for hts
success, giving "all credit due to

I

Shall the proposed Ordinan~e No. 92-40 amending Section 4 of the Charter be apptoved?
A VOTE~ lllE ottDINAHCE:

Shall the proposed Ordinance No. 92-39 amending Sections 6, 9, 10, 14,
22, 25, 29, 33, 60, 61, 64, 66, 67,
..
an.d 69 oftl)e Charter of the City of ,
A.vcm; !2! THE ORDINANCE
Gallipolis, Ohio, be approved?
INVOLVES lllE FOLLoWING:

Charles BuiiQck. a specialist in
Southem politics 81 tile University
.of .Georgll, predicled "a highe_r

By BRIAN J, RE,ED
Seatlael News SCali'

Opea

OFFICIAL QUESTIONS AND ISSUES BALLOT
GENERAL ELECTION- NOVEMBER 3, 1992
GALLI A COUNTY
.

Clinton.&amp; lot,..

assist
sheriff

No Refunds • .No Sp~clal Orders
Layaways Accepted Wlfh %Down

GALLIPOLIS CITY CHARTER
AMENDMENTS · · .·
.
'
·a COMPLift IIPLIIAt•N OF 1111 OIDIMIM- WBDIIIIDVUIA ILY LIF7 OFF HI
.
" . U•.LO'I'. PL'AII fiD fill Wail YOU ftl VI II.
.
.

Section 6

WASHINGTON (AP) Young vo1ers who have shunned
poUing places in recent years could
hold the key in a tight election
· between President Bush and Bill
CliniOII, political experts say.
&lt;'"t woold guess that there will
be an increase in voting amon~
people under the age of 30, '
Democratic pollster Geoff Garin
said in a lelephonc inlerview Sunday. "I think it's going to help

helps tr~ il dot to be ll5ed by the Meigs County
SberiiT's Departmeut. Peputy Dana AldrlcJ&amp;e is
wearin&amp; a specially-desi&amp;ned iacket for protectloa. (Sentinel Photo by Brian J, Reed)

ATTACK TRAINING· Although they are
not utunllJ violent, .specially traiDed german
sbepbeJ'dl are rapable olattacklng violent crimi • il the need arises. Here, Pepub. Mar" Boyd

STOUWIDE STOCK (b:cept Handbags)

.

~·~·

Young voters could make difference
in tight race Tuesday, pollsters say

I o
-

A llulllmedta InC.lie

Candidates stump in
Ohio on election eve

Monday &amp; Tu,sday.
November 2. &amp; 3
9:30 a.m. 'til 8:00
.

2 Sect~-. 14 . . . .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohi.QL Monday, November 2, 1992

ca,.JWtlecl1112

2

·RON CILHOUN
..

60 pen :nt. Hlall Dear 60.

•

Ghrist Mills on Raccoon Creek
- Their parts ~nd functions _
GALLIPOLIS • When I was a 'wheel: The 111iller would get so intended job.and that a discharge .
young lad I was I~ enough to be tense he would Slop talking 10 me ram had not pushed a ponion of
laken 10 the old ghrist millS when and start making proper adjust- milled flour into the flour bin and
my fathet or grandflilher was l8k- ments because at that moment the lar~Je wheel in front of us was
ing a load of grain 10 mills either some ·tind of noise in the large the ghrist wheel and this wheel was
on Raccoon Creek 'or Symmes . revolving wheel in front Of us was the ~ ghrist wheel and its pur·
Creek at Cadmus.
making a different noise, he had pose was to make the flour and
It was ever so exciting when the !mmediately pulled a_ lever that com me81 that the farmers brought
miller W0Uid left 81\d set me beaide mStantly s!OJ!Pe:d the_ OO!'f· ~ then to his mill.
him as the mill ground the ghrisl er renewed hu desc~tpuon .of that . Submitted by Wendell Tope,
grain that we had brought to -his large wheel, _he satd the balan.ce Earth Tea• volunteer.
,
mill. I only wish' I could name and ry~d had failed to perform tis
. .
·
·
describe the functions of each part
of the mill but, as I remember, I
wiU make a feeble effort as I write.
The miller would start at the
bottom of the mill and move
upward. The first was the base
stone. it was a large stone eight or
ten foot long; perhaps half that
wide, and twelve 10 eighteen inches
w. '
· thick. It was placed in a weD made
base. The stone was leveled 10 precision in order to make it easy for
the mill 10 move the grain through
the mill during the milling-process.
As I sat beside this man while
. he was moving levers, pulling on
ropes, and performing his regular
. and very cssenliaJ mo':es I was lislening to sounds commg from all
: parts of the mill. There were
sqqeaks, raules, grunts, and .moans.
If he heard a moan or groan he
know whether it was a good or bad
sound, if bad. he would make the
'proper adjUSIDlent tO case the 11011. ble. That knowledge is whal made
him die IPCC~ palllll that be waa.
. J4W __ _. ~ ... cmuble,
good or bad, 'hi woUld IIIID to me
and again make his description of
another mill part for instance the
bed sconc 'was next il) order. This
wheel WIS a small grinding wheel
used IIIOIIly fer grinding cern inco
fine com meil or feed fer farm ani- . ·
mals, and help regulate the balancing of the mill. SliDe mills did not
use the bed wheel because they did
not have the water 10 f~~mish the
energy for grinding, only for bal·
ancing the.mill.
.
Next in order was the ghrist·
wheel used to 11rind all tinds of
grain. It was the largest of the three
. Pd. for by Candidate,_444 Second Ave., G!JIIIpolla, OH.
wheels and consumed most of the
energy produced by the water

I.e. aatpl la .........
Tuesdlly, clOUdy. Qgce ol raJa

603981

Champion Farms ranked second
nation·.; 1992 reaiJICI'Cd a total ci

The A,rieulture Department
said Fric!aY that farm prices were
GALLIPOLIS • Champion
dowD 2.8 peltCIIt in OCIDber cornFarins
of Gallipolis ranked IS secpared with
110·
ond
laraeat
in registering the most
"The ,_.to-year index decline
Angus
Tlccf
cattfe in Ofiio having
continuea 10 be driven primarily by
recorded
113
head of Angus with
tbe .ex~eme change in orange
the
American
Aosus Alsociation
prices .from record high levels ln
Oblo Valle:r PubllshiDI Co. U.n JOar aame, . W91," the USDA.report said.
during fiscal year 1992 which
addreu and telephone aumber wltb your card.
A, flcezc in 1ale 1990 dcvUIBted · ended Septembcr 30; according 10
or' letter. No teleptloae ails wll H a«epted. AD
Richard L ~ Spader, Association
crops llld ilrovc up prices.
coatest entrlea aliould be tnrDed iD to the news· citrus
Without the orange price executive vice prcsideQL
paper oflke by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case decline, USDA said, farm prices ·
Angtu breedqs acr.oss the
or a tie, the winner wUJ be ch01en by lottery.
Next week, a Melas Couaty far• will be fea·
tured by tbe Melp SoU and Water Conservatioll
District.

a,_

MYSTERY· FARM- Tbll week's mystery
farm, featured by the Galll11 Soil and Water
CoDHrvatlon .District, II located ~ewllere in
Gallia County. Individuals wlshln11 to parllclpate In the weekly coatest may do so by peuin11
the farm's owner. Just mall, or drop oiT your
1uess to the Dall1 Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Dally
Tribune, 1125 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
45631, .nd you may win a $5 prize from tbe

Sixth grader

'4

dishing deadly weapons in a threat·
ening manner, among other functions,
. According to Boyd, a study ~on­
dueled by the University-of Lansing, Mich., revealed that a trained
do~ can conduct a search of a
butlding seven times faster than
three police offiCCJ'S. Additionally •
the dog's rate of effectiveness is
estimated 10 be 89 percent. compared to 4 7 percan on the part of
theoffi~.

German shepherds have the
learning ability of a seven-year old
child, B~d said, and the average
worlcing life of a dog is eight to ten
years.
Use of a trained dog br law
enforcement is considered ' minimal force", less forceful or violent
than the use of a baiOII er flashlight
against a perpetra!«• but the ~n­
tial of these doss JS not 10 be ~r­
estimated, as a demonstrauon of
the dog's training makes clear.
Although they are not inordinately violent, the dogs have a
..sixth sense", Price said, and can
sense from their handler when the
need for qgression is present in a
situation. Therefore, the bonding
between the dog and his handler is
or uunost importance 10 the success
of a canine program.
According .10 Sheriff James M.
Soulsby, the department has not
purchased the dol yet, and a price
has not be ncl(lliated. Funds for the
purchase wilf come from the Law
Enforcement Trust Fund. a dcposicory for forfeitures ordered by the
county's coun system.
I

·)

ing on similar investigations.
. Salisbury advised those who
have the stolen mowers that they
need to cooperale with the investi~ation 10 avoid charges of receivmg stolen propeny.
"Anyone who purchased a John
Deere riding mower within the-last
six months needs to contact the
sheriff's department." Salisbury
said

Salisbury said the mower$ may
have been purchased through flea
markets or under the guise ofdeal •
ership bankruptcy sceliario.
.
"I do' not feel people wh~ have
received t~ese mowers wtll ~e
· prosecuted if they cooperate With
the investigation," Salisbury said.
"This is your opportunity to voluntarily come forward," Salisbury

said. ''If we find out through our
investigation or interrogations that
you possess these siOlen items, or
have tried to dis,pose of them, you
may be charged.
"I feel there's more of them
(riding mowers) out there in Gallia
County and surrounding counties,~
Salisbury added
Salisbury said tJie investigation
is not limited to the John Deere riding mowers .
"We're looking for stOlen tools,
. tool boxes, chainsaws, weed eaters,
pressure washers and other items."
Salisbury said.
·
·
Anyone possessing these items
· needs to mate contact with the
sheriff's department at 446-1221 ,
Salisbury concluded.

Athens police·arrest 101 on minor
charges during Halloween party
ATHENS, Ohio (AP)- The
annual Halloween street party in
this southeast Ohio college town
attracted a record 24,000 people
and resulted in 101 arrests, police
said.
l..aw enforcement officers from
the city. Athens County and the
state arrested 101 revelers Saturday, mostly for disorderly conduct,
underage consumption of alcohol
and possession of a controlled substance, said a repo·rt by Police
Chief Richard Mayer.
AnothCr 31 people receive tick-

ets for underage drinking. There
were no arrests for assault, vandalism or sexual offenses, the repon
said.
In 1991, there were 90 arrests
and numerous tickets for underage
drinlcing violations.
.
Mayer wants to make the party
leu attraCtive 10 outsiders.
"Why should we, the residents
of Athens, be locked iniO playing
host to a wave of out-of-town, latenight partyers that increase city
expenses, vandalism and disoolcrliness?" Mayer asked Sunday.

The crowd was paclced so tightly into the three-block area of
Court Street blocked off for the
party that police officer&amp; could
barely get through 10 answer caDs.
Officer Dave Williams said.
"The crowd seemed more
behaved than past years, although it
was definitely larger, " said
Williams, who has worked the
street pany eight years.
·
The pany was from 6 p.m. Saturday to 3 a.m. Sunday. Athe!,ls.
about 75 miles southeast of Coll!d'lbus, is home to Ohio University.·

B'l' PAuL

FLU SHOI'S • A toCa1 ~ 1,145 ftu . . . were pvea to senior·
cltlRDJ and 11-ebou•d realdeull Friday by the Mel~~:s County
Healtla Deparblnt. Here Undl Vaa Inwagea, R. N. &amp;fvea Charles
w. Boyles of Middleport hla ftu shot.
.
·

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C o ~mA o

0 ,, OylOI -.ngaau hmt$ .SI"\\ICIIIO

DIS fAIBUTED 8'1'

NEWSPAPER FEA-TURES COU NCIL

·'

�Monday, November 2, 111Z

:~ommentary

I

Page 2-Tht Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, November 2, 1992

I,

...

The Daily Sentinel

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,.

111 Coart Street
Pomeror. Oldo

.

:·DIWO'BD TO THE IN'I'ZilB8TII or 'I'D IBIO&amp;-IIMOI'I A1UCA

....
...
...
.·
'
'

ROBERT L WINGE1T
PubHsber

:·~ :

PATWIDTEIIEAD
: · Assistant Publlsber/ControDer

.··

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Genenl Manager

=· . LETI'ERS OF OPINION are wel&lt;Ome. They lbould be leu 11w1 300
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed With 011110
address an~ telepbone number. No unsigned !etten will be published. Le~
. sbould be 1n good taste, addressing issues, DOt Jlel'ODilitios.

_An indiyidual's right
~~o vote: Democracy's
determining (actor
:&gt;' Turn on any neWICISl, B;JptckJoeupM.anyRcidg~

ne~.

and you will quickly
~- lhe buzzwords of the eutrellt cam)llllgn season, as politicians from
~oast to coast try to ~JI on lhe election-year bandwagon of "change"
'til1d "reform." 1be specifics may differ, but lhe themes are constant-tax
~form! w~U:are reform, rcinvealed governmenL
·
• • While tt IS true .there arc many problems to be solved and changes to
be made, lhe most fundamental change we must make is iri lhe area of
voter tumO!il All talk ?f change and reform, whether it's on the local,
state or nauonal level, ts rendered useless if the volers continue to stay
a~ from lhe poHs oo ~ection Day.
.
· ...;For decades, ~ United States and its ideals have been lhe '-:on of
lldpe for people ln1pped benealh lhe oppressive, totalitarian governments
~the ,.,orld. And oow, as ,country after country steps from the dark·
- or communism into lhe light of freedom and democracy it is terribly
iJoonlc lhll ~ ~ in. our country continues its oownwint spiral. In
die 1960 presidential elecnon, 63 percent of all eligible voters cast a balloL By 19_88, barely SO perctlll tumcll out on Election Day. Should Ibis
tr_l!r!d oonunue, less thai\ half of all eligible vtJ1a5 will villi: in Novanber
giVIng 1992 the lowesl vocertumout in America since 1924.
'
you:r ~Y cuts across lines of ideology, political affiliation, race and
SOCIOCCOIIOIIIIC status. Wilen asked, Americans give many different rea·
tOnS why lhey don :t voce. They r:'C?ver learned how or w~ to register to
Yllll:. Tl)eY had'!" UllereSl in pollbCs .when growing up and never·got into
die ~tt of voung. They have moved and not learned lheir new state's
reqwrcments. TheY lra\'el and don't know how to vOle~ absentee balloL
~Y ~:t lhink politics affects their lives or tbat polibcians care about
~ ~; Some use bed weatber as an excUJe. Olbers claim there lie
lllldue reatrt~ 0!1 voter regislration and lhat the process prohibits citi·
%ellS from J*t1C1p8tlllg.
,. 11,te ·u.s. Constilutiol! pu,anrees lhe right to vote. The only lhing
"~and~ from paruclplting !' !Mnselves. II) the end, 8J1111hy, lazi.
QC,U
C)'IIICISIII are the ttue restncbve fon:es 10 blame
· It should ttouble us all greatly that while we waich brave people
around the world risk their lives to gain lhe freedom to vote half the people in wr owu counlry ~ Ibis freedom for pled and Jet minor obsta'les ~ lhem from ~g. The fact that representative democracy began
ii! America only ~ lhiJ point more ttoubling.
". Young people, in particular, feel dlsconnecitd from our poHtical system becanie tftey are not ~ugbt by parc._us or schools why their i"volvemenl matlen. Democracy IS not somelhing you establish once and w(illc
a~y from. II·needs nurturing aDd &lt;;onstant care, yet our society is not
dpmg enough to teach younger generations how to keep democracy
Slrong.

. ·The ~Ole ~erica Foundllion is • non-profit, non-partisan organiza'!"R helpmg high schools, col!eges and businesses organize voter registrabon
ab~!CC ballot awareness p10grams. Vote America is one or
_:any orp1UZ811ons formed in recent years to reverse the disturbing trend
;'f" 'VOII:f ~L While all of these groups arc to be commended for their
·~ il tS unf~ Am«icans need others to convince lhem to exer;jt,e ~bill'Y s most fundamental right and fulfill their most buic civic
o(clponSI
ty.
;; ;-We must edUC81C young Americans about what it means to vote and
~ them to voce respot~~~bly. We should once again expect our educa~ ~ to produce _adults who C.. read the newllpBpel', Ulldcntlmd
;@11 rellti\'e oonlell.t of an _ISSUC·preaented on lhe evenina news and recount
~Oio ~tn~Qiel ot lhose who ltave fough~ and died for lhe right to vote
:aiound the -:orJd. Moreover, lhe M11catl011 ollll American voters must
;~tude one IIDportanllesson: ~ocracy requires preventative mainte-

ana

•l)anee.

;• _1o1m D_. ~ellcr once ex~ lhe belief thal"every right implies

;J JIIIPO!II.1~ty; every OPJlO!IUruty ~ obligation." Indeed, lhe inherent
~~bility

Is it a federal agenCy or ·a limO service?
WASHINGTON- Wbea form« ·Rql. Guy ~·1, R-N.Y.,
maried in July 1988,
one poliucally JII'OIIIinent couple
made I meaiiOnlble tllllrlnee.
The Molinari _.,i~ was held
at Fort W1d1wortb, tn Staten
Island, New York, a property
owned by tho NaMj;_!~ong the
V1Ps Seaate . . Leider
B&lt;!b Dole, R;Kan., and ~is wife
~hrabcth. After a bD1icopret
mg, three lllllllllted cars from lhe
Federal Protective Service deliv. ered. the Doles from a helicopter
landmg area to a Fort wadsworth
chapel-amc:R 1~ yards.
Wilh Sllidiecl ~~~a~tion to detail
~S ''ml!ntained radio contact
~tlh lhe pilot" 1!0 lhlllhey could
. ~ for their arrival by tummg ~Ill COf!ditioaer on in ... (lhe)
car• accotdtng to an unreleased
report recently completed by the
General Servic&amp; Administration's

dqhra: ,.

land:

~tor Oeneral.

.

'The problem is not with Sen
Dole. It's '!'ilh GSA and lhe peq&gt;l~
~ho, provtded tbe services and
didn t leD Dole Ibis was an offtcial
v~hicle," Dole spokesman wall
~r !'Jld our anociate Jan MoDer.
Don t forget, Ibis is lhe same senator w~o refused Secret Service
protectiOn during his entire presi.

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

~

the fact ~ Sununu received and
placed several telephone calls
while 11 the Gi•ts game, including
at least one he received from the
White House.
After the game, Sununu avoided
the headache of heavy traffjc
thanks to the usc of emergency
Hghts and sirens by two FPS. cars.
One witness .told the IG lhll after
being whisked away from the stadi·
um amid sirens and flashing Hghts,
Sununu was ~urported to have
commented, • That's the way to
travel." Sununu refused to commenL
Though the report c0nf11111s lhll
most trips by Cabinet members
were for offiCial functions, the line
between business and pleasure at
times became blurred. In iuldition,
FPS only has authority to protect
government property and lhe people using iL A GSA official here
says thallhe FPS broke oolaws !i)'
transporting administration offt·
cials, but added that the report is
being reviewed to determine if
lbere were any ethical violations.
Meantime, new GSA rules allow
federal agencies access to fleet
cars, but drivers are not included.
·One FPS insider - looking
back on the decade-long practice
- believes that whlluanspired in
the New York region was simply
an efficient way for GSA's ~ to
mix wilh administration celebrities.
"They were just mimicldng lhe
Secret Service," acconling to Ibis
source. He recalled a time an· FPS
officer and a GSA official drove
Commerce's Mosbacher to a black·
tie affair bedecked in tuxedos with
guns tucked into their cummerbunds.

·The FPS work did not go unap·
predated, which is attested to by a
. raft of thank-you notes sent by
' administration officials. James
Rosebush, deputy assistant to President Reagan, was so impressed
after one trip he wrore FP.S:
"You were a great help. The
sound and light show were fun
too.

..

.

Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are syodicated writers
for Unite'd Feature Syodlcate,
Inc.

Clinton: the accide.ntal president? ~
The con~entiooal wisdom has it
that the Democrats arc aShoo-in on
Eiection Day, and~_ for a
change - the convenuonal wisdom will prove right. But there
haven't been many, if any eleclions in my memory (which goes
back to the early days of FOR)
when the presumptively victorious
party had so lillie going for it
In the ftrst place it won't be
. because of any gre&amp;! upswelling of
• pubHc sentiment against lhe GOP.
Not only is c:onsCrvatism 1101 alar·
get in this cam~gn (od the contrary, "liberal ' is stit1 the word
that every politician, Gov. Clinton
included, would rather die than get
tagg~ with). But hardly anybody
really hates George Bush. He
hasn't been qualified for the dis·
missive contempt with which, in
1980, most voters regarded Jimmy

1.1J:'ll".
rr l

: ·R
· · h
A

zam ,

US

er

casualty war against Iraq. But now
there's a shallow but persistent
worldwide reeession for which the
president inevitably receives some
of lhe blame. He can insist lhat he
has lhe best plan for ending it, but
tha_l invites the nuestion why he
WBited so long tobnplemenl it. He
can respond, correctly • !hat
c gre fused
b

· h~~ ~the t!riceicrs:,:On::~
nity to make his campaign a crusade against Congress. .
So the De.moc~ (forget Ross
Perot- he's just a colorful irrele) ha

:S~ res~~~~J~7~e

.

:•

World

Sullivan and HHS official Gail
Wilensky (24): Labor Secretaries
Eli.,.belh Dole (IS) and Lynn Mar•
tin (11); and Housing and Urban
Development Secrc~ary Jack Kemp

dential campaign (1988)/'
(11).
·
Dole's ofl"tce was not informed
· Bven White House chief
until last July iha! IIOIIlCihing might economist Michael Boskin request·
have been amiss with the trans- ed FPS lleCUrily during a 1990 visit
.
-~"-"
....... lllhe ....-.o.o:..
........g. to New York. There was also one
by the internal probe, request from the Small Business
Dole was billed last July approxi- Administtation, 19 from the offJCC
mllely $496.
of fmt lady and eight from lhe vice
It also turns out lhe Doles were ~nL
not singled out for special treat·
"A review of records further
meaL In the New Yort region, lhe disclosed that YIPs, or their staffs.
FPS, which falls under GSA's requested a wide range of services
i!'riiJ!ijction, Jut;! long_ been. moon- ... (including) protection, transhJhlDlg as a pnvale Jlmousme ser- portation and armed poteclion in a
vtce· while its official task is to high crime ares: escon: unmarked
guard government buildings. None car with sirens and Hghls; commuof lhe othC:r eight GSA regions had nication: security coordination;
a similar poHcy for VIP transporta• chauffeuring and VIP' physical pr&lt;?·
lion.
tection to press conference ... ,''
The several hundred page IG according to lhe IG report.
report details every request by it
GSA launched its investigation
Bush administration official for followin~ repcxts last year that for·
FPS Hmo services to the New Yort mer Whue House Chief of Staff
region (of FPS). It reads like a John Sununu had used FPS personwho's who~ the Bush Cabinet
nelto shuttle him on two occasions
Amoog lhe most frequent ridm to New York Giants football
who reQuested FPS shuuie service games, and on another occasion to
~~n-~~~~~

lhll!ICC?"'parues lhe nght to elect our leaders is to cast a
voters'· vague discontent with
)ldnSiltaltly well~idercd vote.
George Bush. Gov. Clinton, if he
wins, wiD richly deserve the nick·! .Government. will ~ seem accessible and politicians will not seem c.ter.
!CCOUDtlble ~ American 110tm make them so. If our nation is serious . Instead, the public's attitude name, "The Accidental Presiab!&gt;ut change m 1992 and beyond, improving voter turnout is lhe best toward Mr. Bush seems pretty well dent."
l)lace to ltiiL
. summed up in the old expression . It's amusing to reflect lhll, just
. ; ~ Joe M. Rodgers Is chairmaa oltbe Wasbinllon, D.C.-based Vote "What has he done for us lately?': a year ago,lhe DemocraiS' entire A
Foundation.
J\ffiericans generally approved of team·of possible presidential candi..-merk:a
.
hts leadership of the brisk • low- dates - Gov. Cuomo, Sens.
•

~erryls

were: CommerCe Secrecary Robert a stamp auction at Christie's in
Mosbacher (IS); Health and Manhattan.
Amoll the tidbits IDIWthed is
Human Services Secretary Louis

Bra dl ey, ·':Ju~n
· and Rockefeller,
House MaJonty Leader Gephar~t.
~ven Sen. Gore - were all elect~mg to~ ~a race for the prest·
dency 10 19 2• on lhe theory that
George Busl! w~ unbeatable. Tiu!t
left lhe nom1118110n, fo~ wha1ever II
was ~orth, to the B team:. Sen.
Harkin, ~en. Kerrey of Nebraska,
Gov. Chnton and former Sen .
Tsongas .. As Ia~ as. early s~nng,
G?v. Chnton _dtdn t look ltke a
wmner even m th~t t.~ague •. so
e!lmes~~d ~as he m erup~mg
btm~ and tortuous explananons
. of hts .draftrecord. . . '
But o~e by one hts nvals llllll_lag.ed to tmpress the Democrattc
pnmary vote~ ev~n less than he
did. Today Btll Clinton. stands on
the lhreshold of_the ~tte Ho~se.
not becau.se he IS ~tdely admtred
for anythmg, but St!"ply because
~J;oters arc ralher tired of George
.u · .
.
~~gcJew ::;.en. approacht~
ce, ve ever se:em
to stan~ for less than Mr. C::hnton.
Frankhn
Roosevelt
hadhts
~tsGreat
New
Deal, LyndQn
Johnson

· · Ronald Reagan his CruSoctety,
sade for America. Like these slo·
g!l"s or not, .lhey all stood for poH-·
ctes ~!tat had a memorable impact
on thiS counlry. But Gov. Clinton,
after a mercifully brief flirtation
with "The New Covenant" (which
didn't survive his acceptance
speech), has concentrated on
promising to spend more and pay
for it by IBlr.ing "the rich:" Haven't
we heard that somewhere before?
o:'t the fundamental level of
social, economic and political theory. moreover, the initiative is still
almost totally with the conservative
movement. Intellectually • liberal·
ism hasn't enough breath left in it
to fog a mirror. That's why a voce
for George 8ush, wilh all his flaws
and his · e'\ually undeniable
strengths, is stilllhe rational choice
next Tuesday. The impulse·to vOle
Democratic in this election isn't
much more sensible than the
ancient impulse to get drunk on
Saturday nighl
WIUiam Rusher is a syndlcat·
ed
writer
for Newspaper Enter•
prise
ASIOCiation.

Round two! Creation vs. evolution
(

•
I

During lhe McCarthy era and
t!JrouahoUt lhe Cold War, schools
and colleges in this country were
often cr!licized for "teachin!f •
commurusm to our youth, by which
was meant indocuinating them
wilh its principles.
. But most of the people who
·railed lhe cry WI:R not opposed to
the schools "telling" children
about communism. Aflel' all, stu-·
. dents could have no grasp ol what
wsa · co~n&amp; on in the World if lhey
were not told of communism and
what its'phllosop5ty was.
Isuch a distinction
between ••telchinJ• • and •'lelling,.

rnaldn'

ists don't accept the Genesis
They therefore find nothing to
account of creation as merely an contradict lhe Bible reckoning that
"artist_'s conception." They are the Earth is only about 10.000
derermmed
to prove that the ere- years old.
"Any good teacher knows one
alienist
view
is every bit as scienScientific creationists also cbilin
of the ~est ways to get a lesson
tilic
as
!.he
evolutionist
view.
to
find
suppon in the fossil record
across ts to tell a good story. In
That
is
why
today's
breed
of
for.~ir
anti-e~lutionist position..
fact; teUing a slory may weD be one
creationists
is
being
called
•
'scien·
.
If
progrcsstve
evolution w·- a
of lhe oldest leaehiilg techniques.''
tific
creationists.'·
fact,"
says
a
university
zoot.;;ilst, ·
~abbi SchamberJ -says: "We
.
Some
Of
them
hold
to
a
belief
in
''the.
fossil
record
should
reveal' a
should get the pubhc schools to
"flood
d~logy."
Olher
scientists
conunuoos
gradation
from
simple
teach !he creation story, but 1
have
I
.
Ill
the
Earth's
geologic
to
complex.
On
the
basis
ol
what
is
would mclude it wilh lhe creation
column
and
concluded
that
the.
.
actually
found
in
the
Earth
the
.
myths from many cultures.
me,ny
thousands
of
feet
of
rock
sudden
creative
act
fits
the
besL"
"I see oo suggCstion in Mr. PlaI lhought I could end an argogenz' s column that the public strata Wc:R deposited ov« millions
of
years.
But
"flood
geologists"
!'lent.
I seem to have added fuel to :
schools ~n lhe story of Vishnu and
take
the
P.JSition
lhat
in
a
great
catu.
·
Rudra (India), Pangu (China),
aclys_
m
(like
a
Dood)
these
strata
George
Plaaen1 Is 1 l)'lldkat· ;
Olorun, Olokun and Obatala
~ould
have
~
C!CJ~osited
rapidly
ed
miter
for
Ne'll'l))lper Enler· :
(Yoruba of Africa), no iuggestion
a
short
penod
of
nme.
prile
~latlon.
·
m
of CfC!~Iion stories from the Hopi,
NavaJo. Hoopa or other Native

THREE AMIGOS • Me.;bers or tbe Meigs
Band dressed in Halloween costumes during
half-time entertainment of the Meigs-AielWider

Today in history .

:cr.

O:J!,. :

. ,n

.,..,.._tloe team member, Jim

5 ' ., left,. a medtllllk: for ODOT Diatrld
11, ~ .JMk Wells, rlpt, a mechanic ror the
tGWI) s pw~ check out tbe truck.

D

--.lite
1J.,. c.aa-.u..

_.......____.Area deaths-----Florence E. Baer, 95, Yost
Road, Minersville, died Sunday,
Nov. I, 1992 at the Overbrook
Center, Middleport.
Born on March 31, Ul97 at
Pomeroy, she was lhe .t!a•.pw ~
the late Joseph Epple and 'Dcaa
Wolf Epple. She was a bousewife
and a member of the Forest Ru
Melhodist Church.
She is survived.by a soil and
d~ughte~·in-law, Guy .and Freda
Bmg, Mtddle!,JOrt; a daugblel'-in·
law, Bertha Bmg,
a lister-in-law, Leah Nease, acioe,
and a son-in· l!lw. Edwin Aslt,
Pomeroy; 12 grandchildren, 19
great-grandchildren, and three
great-great.grandcbildren.
Besides ber parents, she was
~ in dealb by lw tint bus.band, Mount Bing, 1w _ . 1 busband, Albert Bacr. and three :110115,
Vernon, Milford, and Oliver Bin&amp;
and a ditughter, Martha Ash.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 1 p.m . at Oje Ewin&amp;
Funeral Home. The Rev. Dam:n
Newman wiD ·officiate and burial
will be in Gilmore CemeteryJ
Friends may call at the funeAI
home Monday (today) from 7 10 9
p.m.

Pomet1i

Dwc McCoy. 15. of Torch.
dial• s
.., ,. -.. Otlilv
11. 5992atSt.._.. Howz;;. • •
Pa"»'w.. W ..Va.
Slac was lion oa Juury 5.
!!~7 at~.Kr~&lt;'
oflbe
,_ midi ..a Mi-. S~a~:y Hat·
fidd. Slie - a • "''I of TMIJ
Bap!icl a.n:~a. _. 1 n:sidmt or
AdaeB 0
1 fur 38 ,an. She
~a ~cd
I 'nJW of Obio
...-WJ :AJad Suwil::es..
.s.m~- dnc -..ters:
7 . !e,t 'h1)lor ofT_. . t Brenda ........ K'a6y'Daey. both of

v

5

= ::e•

''!'

;four
•ca:a--=r.~·

... ....-..-._

Hatfield, Lciiap., Kr.: and a
Ia• 1 • ~ IJM!ieM, IWdy, Ky.
Bc=Hr' • pm:ats. slac was

prti nhl il dada bJ lati I lwwl,

....

Rabat M:Cuy, dnc sislas _. a

F
" 1t11 tica wit be ladd 4lll&lt;
WI
2p.&amp;atTOida!Japlilt C dt willa Dnid Ken J11sti
aa11 Gaa Ellatia&amp; officilliDg,.
e.- wil illi:Jw ii"Ubrdl Qme...
ICIJ.
.
Ft"
alllir:r 1 p.m. on'
......, ..alii da,rT.alay alhe
Wllilc-Bno.a- Fuaa! Home in
CooiYillc. 'l1tc ...., wiD n:cem
I

.., •

.

is_,

rr·

t

rn. 1 ., 9 ,.._ u.....r

... 210 4 •11110 9 .... 011 rue.
day.
.
...--

Charles Boggess
Charles A. Boggess, Sr., 64, ~
State Route 124, Racine, died Sit·
urday, OcL 31, 1992, II 'lhe Pulley
Nursing Horne. Soulh Point..
·
Born on June 26, 1928 in West
Virginia. he was lhe son or the r.e
Charles Boggess and 0sa ArodaBoggcss. He was a truck driver and ·
farmer.
He is survived by a daughter
Cindy Park of Pomeroy; .five
daughters and sons-in-law. Au
an~ Lowell Miller of Prescott,
Ariz.; Esther and James Wamsley
of Leon, W. Va.; Evelyn Louise
and Junior Mattox of Leon, W.
Va.: Karen and David Jone.s of
Pomeroy. and Tinni and Ron ca.
of Nobe. W. Va.: a son. Clwlcs
Andrew Boggess, PrescoU, Ariz. a
sisre~. Mrs. Junior (Marie) Sp11111.
Racme, and a brother, R.aul
Boggess: 17 grandchildren, and
eight great-ltl'llndchildren.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in dealh by his wife, Evelyn
Boggess: three brothers, Glenverl
Denzel and Benny Boggess, two
gmndsons, and one great-granddaughter.
Funeral services will be beld
Wednesday at 11 a.m. at lhe Ewing
Funeral Home. The Rev.• Ernest
Bush will officille •d burial wiD
be in the Letart FaUs Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Monday from 7 to9 p.m. and
Tuesday from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9
p.m.

The Daily Seldinel
l'llblllhed • ....,.,

C. E. Schartiger

DisieMcCoJ

Florence Baer

George R. Plagenz

• when I wrote a recent column
about evolution vs. aeationism.
In the column, I said that we
could reach a solution to lhe con- ·
· ttoveny in the public schools by Ammcans.... • ·
''I have 1 nightmare of my child
· "tellinj" our children aboufbolh
1
sitting in a public achool clalsaoom
evoludonilm and creadonism.
.
. By Tbe ASIOCiated Pretll
;
Nlnv. from a very diJtinguithed forced to endure only the fondacorner, comes a stem ~butlal of . mentalist telling of the Bible atory . · ~oday is Monday, Nov. 2, lhe 307th day of 1992. There are S9 days ·: .
left mlhe year.
,
•
.of creation.''
.
~hal I had to say:
Today's HighHght in Hi.sux'y: .
.
I should have known I couldn't
"Mr. Plqenz wants the blic
Seventy-five years ago, on Nov. 2, ,!917, British Foreign Secretary :
school• to 'tell - not
the ~~ everybody 'Nith my sngges·
Bible uory of cre.tion," says
Arthw; B'!'four .expressecl support for a national home'' for lhe Je or ·
That
includes
the
American
~
m a statement lhll came to be koown as "The Balfour
Rflbbt Lester 0. ScbarnberR, wlio is
onlhe l1l1illon flculty ollfiimboldt Civil Liberties Union, on the one
On Ibis date:
.
.
State Unfvenity in California hand, and the fuitdamentalilts on
•
In 1783, ~n. Georae Washington issued his farewell addresa 10 lhe :
"His Q)II!IDCDLI notwiibatlndin j lheolher.
.
·
•
IDJPitlhere il very little diff~t­
The ACLU WIDIS religion out of Army near Princeton, NJ.
ence between ' 'teaching' and lhe schools, particularly out of sciIn,t79S,Ihe lllh presi~t~lhe Uniled States, James Knox Polk
:
born Mecklenburg County, N.C..
·
·
•was
'tellina:
ence classes. But the fundamental·
.

wiiiiW.Incl.•

iNFrSidPECTION HELD • I 1 uti
wa-e
held
ayattheMelpC ';~Illite
Ohio Deplll'tmnt oil\
; II
district's annual ·ilrJ·rwL
risouville, a biJhway w01Ler, Is plicbaal 5teft

.n.m..... .w......,

tluoath Frida7. lU Coart Sl, P
0,,
Ohio by 1M Ohio 'ft!l1eJ' Pon ' lac

Company1MaU.ime4lia Inc., ~OJ, '
Ohio 46'1f9, Ph. 11112-1156. - · -

pa1tqe paid at PonwaUJ, aDo.

'lftl RileJ

'Jic&lt;l'lcc (Tal) RilcJ, Sr.• 88,
of ............ dials Ia). No¥.
t, 1992. i1 dte E• hi ~Unit
• v:
, •ill ........ fol. . . . . . e.

wr

.

llonJ aa Ol:t.. 11. 191M ill Wesl
0 7 b's, W. Va, lie- dte of lite la!e Pabid: _. Ea VIlli
Min Rik:y. He ....... 32 ,an

fordteNar Yadto.nr W
... 15 )I!IISW~M'i .. Plat
bdiln:Mil....
He is a
'u of die Middll&gt;
pata.dto(OritL
He is Mritcd bJ !tis wife. M'il·

dred. a - ..a -----ill-law,
Ted. Jr. _. a.. RilcJ. Middle·

pod; two d , . . IS . . . . -.in.·
taw. Slaidcy Dd WillWD Lee or
Saralmille. ~
Pa11J Lou

...a

llld VCIBOI! ..... ofM• •a. W.
VL: a su:p!IOil, Wesler Sisson,
New Bwl!iwec:;, Pa.; m bnlllas,
RaPpPt Rik:y of l'bitll M
• W.
Va.; P.ntl: RiiBJ, Ma 5 ° Riley
-J-RiiBJ•• ofJI [il, w.
VL; two s' I s, PllsJ Miller or
West 0 5 74, -s Ucy Clips of
Pomeroy; 12 pudclaiJdrCII,.21
p:at-pUtdc:~,darcc

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p • • 'ildrr:a. _. sr:wual Dicces:
I

...

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hewaspreciCdcd iii deaPa lit !tis first wife,
MiPdn:d. • - . . d , . • and a

,...... Joe.ticJ.

-

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FIUICI'II scniea will he beld
W• • I ; at 1 p.a. a 61: Fbller
n .. Uto.c ita u; '"¥•'- witb

AI DaliLa ,.n;- -. . . &amp;.ill will
he ill Ga
Jo FricDds
. . , ciiiBt 61: r
Ml t..c 'Jbesdayi2104Ml7109p.a.,
I

c

Clayton E. Schartiger, 87,
Grantsville, W.Va., died Saturday,
Oct. 31, 1992, at Roane General
Hospital in Spencer, W.Va. follow·
ing a long illness.
Born in Calhoun County,
W.Va., he was a son of the late
George E. Schartiger and Sally M.
Lowers Schartiger. He was a
relired coal miner and a dairy
farmer. He attended lhe Rush Run
Baptist C)turch.

Mr. Schartiger is survived bf his
wife, Mrs. Edna Elliott Schartiger;
one daughter, Mrs. Barbara Ellen
Mace, Spencer, W.Va.; one sister,
Mrs. Ruby G. Cardlebaugh, Kingwood, W.Va.; six grandchildren,
Stanley Mace, Spencer, W.Va.,
Steven Mace, New Hjlven, W.Va.,
Cheryl Riggs, Martinsburg, W.Va.,
Gregory and Dehorah Boatright,
both of Chestu, and Nathan Boa·
tright, Nicaragua.
Besides his parents he was preceded in dealh by his first wife,
Mn. Cora Burge Schartiger, and
one daughter, Mrs. Helen Marie
Boatright
.
Servi~ will be Wednesday at
10:30 a.llf. Ill Stump Funeral Home
in. Arnoldsburg. W.Va. with Rev.
Lewis Villers and Rev. Glendon
McKee offteiating. Burial will be
in qaesrer Cemettry wilh graveside
!I:IVICell at 1:30 p.m.
Friends~ call at the funeral
horne on T
y from 6-9 p.m.

V:'dm-IMIIIII•WW
SAlURDAY
ADMISSIONS •
Mvorli;iq Re..-olati.,., &amp;....Mdria v• .,.., 1'\
0). and
No•npaper Saloo, 733 Third - .
No" Yort, N.,. York 10017.
RmsS.P
·
SAlURDAY &amp;sliWtGES •
POSTMAIITII!~ l1oad _ . . . . _ ..
Hubert Wa!ka. DBYid Naace,
Tho Daily llealiool, Ill Co.n :Ill.,

I·' ...... .

-----Meigs ann-ouncements---Turke7-bam dinner
There wiD be a lllrkey-ham dinner at Southern High School on
Sunday beginning at 11 a.m. Cost
is $4.75 for adults and $3 for children. Mashed potatoes, homemade
noodles, green. beans, slaw,
desserts, tea and coffee will be
available.

on Wednesday and TJiunday from
9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Sorority to meet
The Preceptor Beta Beta Cha~
ter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, wtll
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Ann Rope. Mrs. Rope will
present lhe program. Refreshments
will be' served by the hostess and
Clarice Krautter. ·
·

Slate painting class offered
A slate paintin' class will be
offered by the Mtddleport Arts
Council on Saturday and Nov. 14
from noon to 2 p.m. with Kathryn
Meadows the instructor. Seasonal
designs may be used. The cost is
$15 and all supplies are included.
Cal) 992-2242 or 992-2675 for
information.

Rummage sale
There will be a rummage sale at
the Pomeroy FtrSt Baptist Church

Dance planned
The Gallia Twirlers Western
Square Dance Club will hold a
dance Saturday from 8-11 p.m. at
the Henderson Community Center.
Roger Steele will be lhe caller.

Pomona Granae to meet

Turkey supper
.
,
The annual Rutland FR [)eplit:
ment Turi:ey Supper will be Nov.
19 at Rutl~ Elemerhary. Ticket$
are available from the Rutlaqll .
Department Store, Buttons and
Bows and Gallary Hair Arts ill
Pomeroy, and Classic Cuts in MicJ..
dleport, as well
from the rote
department and auxiliary manhml
Serving wiD begin at S p.m.
,. :

.

'

Services pianned
.• ,
Kerry Drennan, Elizabeth
W.Va ., will speak at the
Stivenville Word. of Failh Churcll
on Wednesday and Thursday at
7:30 p.m. Pastor David Dailey
invites the public.
Truatea to meet

Salisbury Trustees to meet · ·
The Salisbury Township·
Trustees will meet Thursday at 7
p.m. at the township garage.

ACC_EPTS PROCLAMATION • Steve Beba, left, was in
Columbus Tueaday to atcept a proclamatioo from Gov. George V.
Voinovida. T• occasion marked the 25th anniversary or legisla·
tioa establishing community based services ror persons with devel·
opmental dilablUties.

Gov. Voinovich presents
MRIDD board proclamation

Sreve Bella, executive director
of Carleton Schools/Meigs Industries, was in Columbus Tuesday for
the ninth annual convention of lhe
Ohio Association of County Boards
of Menral Retardation and Devel·
opmental Disabilities.
Gov. George V. Voioovich was
· the banquet Slle&amp;ker and presented
South-Central Olalo
each county board wilh a procla·
Tonight, showers and thunder· mat ion recognizing the 25th ·
stor, · likely early, then cloudy.
Low the mid-40s. Chance of ram
60 p~ocent. Tuesday, variable
cloudiness. Hillh near 60.
EXtended I'Grecast:
Wedaelday througla Frida7:
Wednesday, a chance of rain.
Lows in upper 30s to low 40s.
Higlls in lhe SOs. Thursday and Fri·
day, fair. Lows in the 30s. Highs in
lhe mid-40s to low SOs.

anniversary of the legislation which
established the local county boanls
of mental retardation and developmental disabilities. Bella accepled
the award for Meigs County.
In his address, Gov. Voinovich
said lhat it is only through community -based MR/DD boards that
individuals with mental retardation
can become "active, inlegrated, and
contributing members of lheir community.".
''

Meigs Local Schools

James Anderson and Emma Lyons.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
Lester Casto, Chester.
,SUNDAY DlSCllARGES
Melvjn 1bomton.

a

To 011r Kids!
Vote'YF:S
lor z,SIZ Excellent

Por....,, OHio 46'1f8.

onNov.~rd.

IUBBCIIIPTION IIATIIII ·

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or may.m..o di...t
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Tha •40 Dllp of Pla;er" campaign
end
Tuaa 1at~ Nov.wrll;ar 3. There will be a short
&amp;aw ofiN&amp;JW at DOe 0U. Park that day
from 12:15-12:30 Md ewryone Is Invited to ·
join • in lii&amp;IIQ up our ..UOn and election.

FOIIII TO YOIEI
mI ' i nd m In' 1711 AIIDCII!don

.•.

. The Olive Township Trustee~
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. it
the Shade River State Forestry
Building.

Perle Shreve, 81, of Guysville,

Weather

Star granaes tci ate~
Star Grange and Star Junior
Grange wiD meet Satunlay at 7:30
p.m. at lhe grange hall on County
Road 1 near Salem Center. A
potluck supper will follow. All
members urged to attend Officeq
and committee chairmen are io
meet at 6:30 p.m.

Trustees to meet
,
The Rutland Township TrusteCa
will meet Thunday at6:30 p.m. at
the Rutland Fire Station. PubUe
invited.
·
'

died on Saturday, October 31, 1992
at. :Hickory Creek Nursing Home.
She was hom on October 4, 1911
in Meigs County, daughter of the
l:ale Charles and Eva Meek StooL
Sbe was a member of lhe United
Methodist Church and Lottridge
COIIIIDuniiy Church.
She is survived by her husband,
Henry A. Shreve: a son, Carl
Shreve, Cincinnati; a daughter,
Kathleen England, Guysville; six
grandchildren; five great·grandchil·
dlren; a sisler,.Lola Belle Dugan,
DeLeon Spring, Fla.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in dealh by four brothers
and three sisters.
Funeral Services wiH be held on
Wednesday at II a.m. at White·
Blower Funeral Home in CoolviDe
with Rev. Helen Kline officiating.
Burial will follow in Vanderhoof
Cemetery.
Friends may call at lhe funeral
home after 7 p.m. on Tuesdav.

The Meigs County PomoQa
Grange will meet Friday at 7:30
p.m. at the Rock Springs Grange
Hall. Racine Orang~; will be holt. .

as

Pete Shreve

Hospital news

Manbor&lt;'nle Aotodaled Proa, ..,. 'lloe
Ohio Ne1hJNlJIOf Anodad..,, Na"-1

game i!' Albany on Friday'evening. Pictured, J.r, :
are Mtke Hall, Shane Hatfield and Midaelle :
Young as they perform a trumpet trio during •
"Taboo." (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris.)

�The Daily Sentinel

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Ohio college
football scores

--

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Ohio high school
football scores

You might 1110 ast the Houston off m lbe NFL's final b,e week of
Oilen, the Indianapolis Colu, the 1be ICIIOII.
Miami Dolphins or any of the other
· Cowboyl20, Ee..... 10 . ·
seemingly endless list of NFL
Smith becae the-first Dallas
teams that allowed big chunks of runner with 100 yards against
yardage on the~Sunday.
Philadelphia since current Eagles
The larFSt p!OCCS, thou&amp;b. came back Herschel Walker did it in
from Emmitt Smith, Dallu' sw 1986.
·
runner who pined 163 yards In the
Tbc Cowboys (7 -1) have the
Cowboys' f0-10 victory over the NFL's best JllCOid and a~
Eagles.
·
lead in lbe NR: East over ·
•
Entering 1bc pntO. Philadelpbia phil (S-3) and Washington.
hadn't allowed a UXI·Yifd rusbet in
Smith's S1·yard nm ~up a go54 games. and Smith hadn't como ahead 48-yard field goal by Lin
close to that IIIBIIY in five previous Elliott. Smith liad five carriea for
games against tho fierce.llaglcs' 4S yards In a drive that ended with
defense.
,
Troy Aikman's 1+yanJ 'I'D pass 10
What would possibly make dtc Daryl1obnslon in 1be fourth quarCowhoys think this tinle IIIey could let to seal dtc ~tory.
··
run on Philadelphia?
C1rdlnala 24, 49en 14
''Because we got Emmitt
l'hoeall knows how to win big,
Smith," Dallas coach 1immy 1o1m- even it doclll't win a lot.
"d
1o1m10n's fust start of dtc seasonThe
sat .
Phoenix Cardinals migbt be son revilllizcd lbe Can1ina1B (2-6) •
thinking the same thing about who pos!cd only lbeir ICCOIId vieto1ohnny 1ohnson, their top _rusher ry of lbe season-· the other comthe last two seasons who h8d only itig against the Super Bowl cham·
five canies in 1992.
· '
pion Washington Redskins.
He got back justin time, though,
Jobnson ~the le8lll's fust
to gain 102 yards agains' ~an Fran- 1()0-yard rusher m 29 games SIIICC
. cisco in Phoenix's surpnsmg 24-14 · Nov. 25, 1990.
victory.
·
Barry Fosler has been around. all .· -"'!'
season for Pittsburgh, prod~mg
rushing numbers not seen SJ(I'CC
Franco Harris was leading the
Steelers to all those Super Bowls in
the '70s. Foster's 118 yards on lbc
ground helped Pittsburgh 10 a 2120 victory over Houston and first
place in the AFC Centtal.
It was the same almost everywhere: gain 100 yards and gain a
viciCI)I.
·
Marion Butts had 120 yards
riiShing as San Diego got its first
shutout in six years, 26-0 against
Indianapolis; Brad·Baxter picked
up 103 yards ~or lbe New Y~ 1e~
in ·a 26· 14 viCtory over M1am1;
Green.Bay.' s Vince Wortman got
101 yaids rushing as the l)ckcrs
topped Deaoit 27-13; and Rodney
Hampton gained 138 yards in the
New York Giants' 24-7 ~in at

. Olio SL 31,1aiwa 15

Mld-Am.-lcut Coafenace
Sl, 0... Mldd&amp;"' ll
Boll SL :lA, ttio U. 21
Bowlia&amp; 0...44, Miami, Ohio 24
T.W.l2,X.17

The Cardinali also belpcd
when Ssevc YOODJ, the NFL'a toprated quarrcrbaclr:, left the game
with die nu in lbc ICCOIId qu1111er.
Slim Bono "'lllaCed him, but cauld
no&amp; rally Sill ~ilco (6-2).
Chris Chandler threw touehdown JIUICS of 4 and 23 yards to
Randal Hill and 22 yardaiD Ricky
ProcbL
Steelera :U, Oilers 2.0
POllet pined over 100 yards fcxthe sixth straight game and Neil
O' Donnell connected on fourth·
quaner touchdown puses with
Aclriln Cooper and Eric Green as
Pitllburgb (6-2) got off to Its best
S1llt since 1983.
With a 100-yard rushing game
next week It Buffalo, Foster. will
break the team record he shares
withHmis. .
Houston (S-3) took a 20-7 lead
. on an Jl·yard touchdown pass
from Cody Carlson to Webster
Sla!!.fbtet - lbe tint 'I'D given up
by PiUSburJb in 11 quarters - and
the rust fumble recovery TD by
defcusive end Ray Olildresa.
Cllalfts26,Cola0
San Diego (4-4) put together a
four-game winning streak for the
rust time since lbe sttike replacement pmes in 1987, and Butts had
his fust 100-yard game since
(See NFL II!' Pqe 5)

""*i

Callqel
a..-40.w._21
--21,0ollmcol0

MEIGS COUNTY
CLERK OF COURTS

.

N•-c:oalerell(e

JloyiOII ~. s..-illo J5

Jlindlq 47, Ulboiuo12
J.oooiri;lJo 27. Cincinaaii 17
...._ SL Jollpb ll, Oliva Nuanne

NFL contests ..._&lt;:._Co_nti_nu._....Cd......:fro.....:.in:.:Pag:::.:. e4.::.. .).:....·' --~--:--___;_December 1990.
The Chargers got to IndianapoliS quarterback 1eff George for six
sacks and limited lbe ColiS (4-4) to
99 total yards and eight first
downs.
After leading S-0 at the half,
Stan Humphries finally got San
Diego moving, hooking up with
Nate Lewis on TD plays of 17 and
9 yards. BullS also ran in a 3-)'ard
score.
Jets 26, Dolpblus 14
·
Baxtei and Ken O'Brien took on
expanded roles as New York won
for just the second time this season.
Playing for the injured Blair
Thomas, Baxter's yarda~e helped
the Jets to double Miami s possession time (40:26 to 19:34).
O'Brien, subbing for the injured
Browning Nagle, threw touehdown
passes · of 36 yards to 1ohnny
Mitchell, 4 yards to AI Toon and ·
20 yards to Rob Moore as the Jets
led 23-0 in the ftrSt half.
·
' After Miami got two TDs in a
span of 69 seconds in the second
half at the Meadowlands til cut the
lead to nine points, New York went
on a 13-play drive that ate up eight
minutes of the founh quarter. It
.,ended with Cary Blanehard's 47·)'ard field goal.
: · Toon, who ended with five
·:receptions. has a catch in 100
• ~ght games.
·: ·
Packen 27, Lions 13
· : At Pontiac, Mich., Workman
:looked a lot like Barry Sanders,
-:while Sanders didn't look: like any- .
,thing again&amp;t Green Bay (3-S). The
.Lions' stat was held to 38 yards
·and Detroit could only gain 190

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Thla CIIF Ia equipped With AC, power lteerlng,
AMIFM/SteNO, p. windows, p. lacks •nd much - ·

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.....,....... 26,Km,.. 21

W
Y

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._brt;.,DT z «..•

.

,1'1.49,T"IIb0

a -SL21,!!--19

I will work full time lor the bettenne~t
'
of Meigs
County.
Your Vote &amp; Support Appreciated.

S6395

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
500 E. MAIN

POMEROY, OH.
992·2174

VOTE FOR

DR. G. D. NIBERT, JR.

WILLIAM "Bill"
SNOUFFER·

Announces ·
The Association Of

For Meigs Co. Commissioner

DR. DAVID MATUSIEWICZ
And

:·total yards.

, · Bren Farve led a Packers attack
·lhat rolled up 347 ;ranis. He com''pleced 22 of 37 for 212 yards and
,touchdown passes of 14 yards to

Pd. lor by Candidate, 121 Welle TeiTICe, Pomeroy,

...•

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~ ,

,r

ID II rDI DPDIDCI,
IBILift, BIIDft - I

......,_,., na •"'· ar 1111a cauwr

Southern Eye Care Associates

.
.
·~ports deadlines posted
.' ' .'fhe Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
'

&lt;JfiCI IRIC PHYSICANS

.

~

Eye Disorders and Diseases
~ Family Vision Care·
~ Fashion Eyewear
~ Contact Lens Packages

~The

Daily Slllline/, tbc Po.lnt
·'P.IetJSIIIII Register and the Sunday':!itmes·Sentinel value the conttibuions their readers make t0 the
:.pons sections of these papers, and·
; these conttibutions wiD continue to
:be published.
·
~ However, certain 4eadlincs for
~ubmissions will be observed. The
-deadline for submissions of local
lascball- and softball-related pho!lt)s and related articles, from T-ba!l
:to !he majors, as well as ~ther
I nng and summer sports, IS the
y of the I!JSt game of the World
, ~ries. Likewise, the deadline for
J)!lotos and relalcd articles for foot~
)lill and odler fall sports is the Sat·
~Y before the Super Bowl. The
~dline for photos and related ani·
q,fcs for basketball and other wintet
is .the last.day of the NBA

NEW PATIENTS
NOW BEING ACCEPI'ED

~

C.

•

S111E 112 VALLEY

Phone615-4580
626 Main Street, Point Pleasant
IJ

lOSUifltlelk.
.
" like the attack offense as
much u anr,bocly," eoach Dave
Shula said. ' But our dieme has got
to.bo, lo execute. When we do
thiDJi.riJbt,-wo can go back to
doina J11C!11 of lltat (~liuddlo). ·~
The Browns didn't do 'many
lhi!IP rial* u they icJit,to lbe Ben·
gall for-the aixtl time in seven
pnes. 1'blly llli1ed to lllllP Esi"'M,
they &amp;iled 1D pt my poinlll!ftt:r a
fint-and-JOI)lrom the 4-ymd line
laic in dtc first half, and lbcy JICt up
two second-half field goals with

(below and behmd Tomczak) in tbe ~ - half
of Sunday' a "Battle of Qhlo" in Cincinnati,
wblcb the Bengala wou 30·10; Tbe Bencals
recovered the ball on this play. (AP)

FUMBLE! - Cleveland quarterback Mike
T0111czak (18) fumbles the football after bein&amp;
sacked by Cincinnati defeasive lineman Daniel
Stubbs (lel't)"and ll•ebacker Altred Williams

HONEST

OWES NO
POLITICAL FAVORS

yard game since Sept.' 20, when

!her loll to Green Bay to swt the

LARRY E.
SPENCER

Only Cleveland Gary, w!lo
. rushed for 144 yards, didn't COD·
vert as hit Lol Angeles Rami "loat
to Atlanlll 30-28.
Elsewhere, it was Buffalo 16,
New England 7; New Orleans 23,

A.tloc. oi'Mid·Eut

tioll.
The Benpls got lbeir lint 300-

RE·ELECT

Washington.

•DEPENDABLE

,.

73 and 82 yard1 - a major
improveme!lt over d1eerntic per·
fllftll8IICel o f - t weeki. Esia1011
COIIIplelllcl 13 of 24 for a -.onhip 192 ylnls widlout m in!Crcep-

fumbles bY q~k Mike Tom- e thought he'd scored.
czak.
·
•
'·'I thought the brll wu over dtc
. "The~: playe4 beUer dian us goal line," he said.
-allll better dian us," linebacker
It was marked a foot shy. The
Clay "Mallbews said. . .
Browns deeided to go for !t, and
Esiuon duew touchdow" pass- ·came away empty when 1hrec Benes of 1 yard to Craig Thompson gals stopped Mack befcx-c he could
and four yards 10 Rodney Holman reach dtc line of scrimmage.
- dtc 6nt touchdown catches by
"It was bard for the offense to .
Bengali tight ends this season- get down there and nol score,"
for a 14-3 first-half lead.
Vardell said.
The Browns had a chance to
The gi&gt;aHine stand gave tbe
tighten it just before the half, when down-on-dtcir·luck Bengals a lot of
they drove to the Bcngals' four. confidence.
But Kevin Mack mana~ed just · "T.hey have those 240-plusthree yards on two carncs, and pound running backs and we're
Tommy Vardell was stopped just near the bottom of the statistics
short of the goal line on third defensively,'' linebacker Alfred
down.
Williams said. "I guess their
Rct:r,s indicated Vardell 's coaches fiF,ured they could j ust
lower
y landed outside the end pound it iii. '
zone before his momennun wried
The Bengals figured Cleveland
dtc ball in. Vardell wasn't sure, but would try to dominate on a cool,
·

wet day by •si•l Mac:t ~ .
Vardell. 10 dteJ-* • paiallf
stop • na Clei!hd ; \
jua 61 yllds CJII 'l7 ...._y8l1la acmy.
:
"We w • t T•• 4 ID ...,_.
tho ball," llfcty Darid Fllkltet'

i

said.
Tomczat ~pieCed 16 o121

for2S2yadsl8da• h' •a.llllll
was sacked (0111" a-, fi ' l~d :
twice ..tlldt
- .... llill.
afJcr ;tL he lbe bilL He alllt ...:
involved in ooe ~tile p80'a;
IIIJIIICIOUI

fi&amp;llls, ~ llftll' .-.,.

Bamey B!l$1e)' follow . .
iinollml
''They ph~ ll8nl,"

"'*

*' P

.
•

T•• • •

said. "Give lbca a lot f1l aedil.:
We bad a •
f1l OJIIIGl • .' ,.
but we fdl sllart Oil dJae, fMIICII-:
ladyODibepi-ID:~'
'

The first-place votes were split cats on the rmd, they will
ev.enly, with Miami and Washing- increase dtcir
over Miuu •.
AP Football Writer
whicb is idle Dell wcct..
Second-strinJiers may be the ton geuinJ 30 apiece. ·
Washmgton has a chance to
reason Miami is 111 second place in
The AriDiu 0"11Misa is rilaJ :
The Associated Press college foot- move farther abc8d next Saturday bec•l"" tbc W"ddc:als - - 08ly ;
when it visits No. 12 Arizona (S-2- team that plays WaUillpw .S •
ball poll.
The Hurricanes led W,est Vir- 1), which lost by a point ID Miami Miami ct..iq dlcn:pbr ~~
:
ginia 35-3 Saturday before giving earlier this season at the Orange . Alaiw!NJ
. .didn't play S..dat.
/
up three late touchdowns - two Bowl. If the Huskies beat the Wild·
(See POU.• . . 6)
.
against Miami's reserves - and
winning 35-23.
.
The misleading final score
didn't look very impressive com·
pared to Washington' 41-7 win
over Stanford, so the Huskies
replaced the Hurricanes as the No.
I team in this week's media poll. .
Washington, which trailed
Miami by one point last week,
moved six poiniS ahead. of lbc Hurricanes after beating then-No. 15
Stanford. Washington topped
Miami 33 112-27 1(2 in rtrSt-place
votes and 1,520 1(2- l,S 14 1/2 in
points.
Both teams are 8-0.
"I don't sec how we can't be
No. I if we keep winning every
game ," Washington tailback
Napoleon Kaufman said.
Miami coach Dennis Erickson
was upset at his subs, who played
poorly for the secopd straight
4 Dr., air cond., tilt lteertng, 'p our loclra, pa u·., wlntlo!n,
week. A week ago, V~nia Tech
,...r defog-.
A
v.y cleMa .c:er. $·
scored two touchdowns m the fmal
.
......
.
six minutes of a 43-23 loss to the
Hurricanes.
"I teamed a lesson from this," · 1--------..;;.;;;;;;;;,,;.,;;;;;.;;;;;;;......;;;;..;;;;..;;;;,o;;,l;
Eriekson said. "Maybe I'm taking
out dtc No. 1's too soon. Maybe I
should leave them in until tM,re are
about 30 seconds let\."
Despite the late letdown agaill$t
West Virginia, Miami retained its
No. 1 ranking in the USA TodayCNN coaehes' poll by one point.

1990 MERCURY TOPAZ

w-~I.Eadbom21

-Wollooo39,11oidolbeq 20
COpuJ 21, ttioN.abem 9
JohoCmoll42, ....... 6
-U.U...54,011abcinl3
6 44, Hinat 22 .

'

By JOE'KAY

By RICK WARNER

Ohio W.to,.n23,Cue R.avo 7 .

OWo Coaltnace

5

Second-stringers blamed for Miami's
drop in AP poll after win over WVU
p......,
ad

Midwest IDltn:ollealate

Norlll Coast.Conferell(e

i

of lbe year. 1nlteld of frlntK:ally
CINCINNATI (AP} 7 No more Jin!nl up hil am fcx- a q~ IIIIP•
~-huddlec
· .:._~mu'!.'!.~n1 atrcat.ha Eawon becamh
. e acal.mma in.Dud·
~ "" mch..,.. - - • ml)'
vc once on. 11 youna 11nemen an
somechinJ here.
recelvas In 1ho buddle.
The team that developed a
"TIIere was no ~huddle," Esiquick-strike. offense under ·sam ason said. "Wo - . mKinJ sure
Wyche has eli~ 1be llrlllqy fcx- th~t everybody knew :what was
a more convendonal."l''"'.'*'h. The gomg on. We would JCl m lhc budBenAk 'ldJ•1ly t.""""d and took die and say. 'Loot, if they lbow
th~ir time Suncla~, fashioning a blitz, this IS wbat we're going 10
le1surcly 30-10 VICtory over the do.' Everybody Ulldcntood those
Cleveland Browu.
things. Guys wore comfortable
.It .waa .~o ~oincidencc t~at with they bow what 'tbey lmd 10
C1nc1nnau s f1ve-game losmg do."
streak went the way of.lbe attack
Unlike lbe Jut eigbt years of nooffeiiiC. For the first umo in six huddle hurry, the Browns (4·4)
~ecta. the Bengals (3-S) looked 'didn't haVe to worry about hustling
b~e they knew what they were to change defenses. A defense that
domg.
.
had allowed just eight touchdowns
Boomer Esl&amp;son, the NFL' s· - the lc8pc low - could line up
low~-nmked p8111Cr, duew a sea- ataloisurolypece.
SIJ!I·bigh throe toucl)down passes in
It just bcc:amc slow tortw"c. Tho
the Bcnpls' best offensive JIIIIIC Benpls put together drives of 77,

Boolowl&lt;l, Albluod 21

AJJoabmy S2. Domilall3

.,.

·:

1988 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88 ROYALE

It Na'ltl...-.n
meaalioS111e

. .....

,,

Far Welt

An-. 30, New Muioo SL 0
~Y..... :IO, PanoSI. I7
Cdii'OIIIia .... UCLA. 12
1!. W.......... 37,1dtboSL 3
-SI.42,W,......31
Jcllho53,N.ADIDI&amp;I4
Maot-SL 17, 8oiloSL 13

AmoyS7,1!.-..nl7

Big Ten standings

!i

I

I

standings

Ta.. Bay 21; IIIII Cincinnati 30,
C1cvelllld 10.
·

1U::&amp;~
:"~~~ no!'!:7:T.~!~~
or san Francisco 49ers.
~eles Raiden and Seaule were

25
IS

~c

m

.,

Alloclated Prea Writer

)4

~---re-a
Tepi&lt;IIAbm
Youa.prown SL II Ohio

1FY'Z' n
p= ETC
.. J

By PETE IACOBELU

21
D

101 19

BOSU....- ..6 0 0 1.000
W. Midl. ....5 2 0 .714

11'1. 'J ........
- · 71 n o .m 111122
. .7
s ~ Cl1 AZI tD Ft
m ;··
s l a; .61Z5 1.01:111
174165
- -- -· 1'. ~ 0 .Z11113'119t

:.

477
3U
324
301
221
211
114

I, MIIIIOIUI SIIIO 6. Bowlin&amp; OJoori 4,
Calilomla 4, Wake Fann 4, Wilt Vif..
pnu 4,SODihom ~ 3, o..p I.

~ c:DNI'DENCE

~

11. -~--7·2-0

If

a..-,. -

-

596

.....•lo1-: Hawllll6,
Vualoio 76. Oooqja T... 74,
lW
16,"Ia Diop- 1&lt;1, JdP- Y -·

"

T &amp;. -

., •

-

~-=3J o. .625121154
-kT" - - - •
.t •
.t 00 .51111153121
.51111•1:101J6
J •
] &gt; 5) Q 375 J%1J31
m 1&gt; 0 .1~ 53UI

-

-------H-0

'I

Running game helps-Cards,
Cowboys -beat Niriers, Eagles

767 17
764 II
754 20
7J9 7

1 2 . - - - --...5-2-1
13.
14. - -----·-·J-2-0
15. a..po -----1·2-0
16. CoioiMD ------'"1·1
. 17. N. c.llol SL -··-'"2-1

The o.lly Sentl.nel ....

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

.Cincinnati beats Cleveland 30-10 to snuff losing streak

. Monday, November 2, 1882
Page 4 .

,.,

c ·. rmz

Monday, November 2, 1912

'

•

: These deadlines have been institllled to give readers plenty of time
to get their photos beet lrom lbe
pllc)Jograpby 1tudio of &lt;:hoicc and
tb live lbe l!affa dtc opponunity to
"p:li61ish•tllese spons photos and
articles during the apptqaiiiiC seaBOn for thai sport.

Iackie Harris 30 yards to Sterling
Sharpe, the NFC's leading receiver.
Detroit (2-6), last year's NFC
Central champions, are last in the
division.
GiauJs l4, Re4fklns 7
At RFK Stadiut;, Hampton's
yardaF came against the vaunted
Washington defense, which continued to struggle to find the fprm
which took the ·Redskins to the
Super Bowl last~.
· Things looked normal as Washington (5-3) went ahead 7-0 on an
84-yard punt return TD by Brian
Mitchell. But the Giants (4-4) did
not reliquish possession very often
- controlling the ball for more
dian 20 minures in lbc rtrSt half and got an 8-yard touchdown run
from 1enod Buneh and a 17-yard
scoring catch by Ed McCaffrey.
Mark Rypien was also troubled.
constanUy hounded by the Giants
defense and completing only 3 of

12 passes for 49 yards in tlie ftrst
half.
Falcons 30, Rams 28
It loote4 like Gary's ~wcr run·
ning and Jim Everetl"S passing
would~ L.A. its ftnt road victory
in 12 games. However, repla&lt;:e·
ment Billy Joe Tolliver, subbing
for injured Chris Miller, finished
off a 7S-yard scoring drive with a
13-yard pass to Michael Haynes for
Adanta in the fourth quartec.
Everett threw for 253 yards and
four touchdown passes, two to
Gary, after Atlanta led 17-0.
BIDs 1,, Patriots 7
Buffalo (6-2) overcame a sluggish nerfonnancc by lim Kelly and
an injury to Thurman Thomas to
defeat New England (0·8), the
NFL' s only winless team.
With the "Patriots ahead 7-0, the
Bills got i 3-yard TD pass from
Kelly to Pete Metzclaars, a safety
by Ollis Hale and a 13-yard scarin catch lames Lofton.

iH*
. . RE 4 1. SiORY!
AS
PROSECUTING
ARORNEY

STEVE STORY
·HAS:
1. A 131 per cent Increase In felony
prosecutions!
2. A 72 per cent Increase In drunk driving
prosecutions! ·
.
3. Pr'*'cuted more drug cases than at any time
In the history of Meigs County!
4. In 1991 alone, collected more than $570.000
In delinquent land taxes.
5. In 1992 collected the largest delinquent tax
foreclosure judg~nt In Meigs County
history for our school systems!
.
&amp;. Obtained the first two death penalty
Indictments In more than 50 years In Meigs
County!

Steve Story Is a llfe:long reslde1t of ~s County
and a 1972 gra.ate of Meigs Hlgll Sdloil. He •as
pracHced law slice 1979 n~ served the people of
Meigs Cou1ty as.. Prosemtl~g Attaney since
J•ary 1989.

RE·ELECT

STEVE STORY
PROSECUTING AnORNIY, NOV. 3
Pd. rar.., 111e Clnll' • • 111nn L IIDrYt
2H W. lea ancllhlt, p..._.,, Oh. 4571"•
II

SMITH NELSON
500 E. MAIN

PO.IOY, 01.

992·2174

....
,.BEY Cll ftiDft
.,..!1

WOIIIIG Mil

II

ID

·MARK

ftl PIGB,. PDR

f

THEY KNOW HE'S BEEN FIGHTING II COLU-US FOI liE
FUTURE OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO. THEY -IIOW IE'S FotiiR
TO RETAIN AND EXPAND NEARLY 7,000 lOIS liD PIOIKT .
·
OUR COIL ECONOMY.
:
In tlis upcoming election, you'll be able to keep movi~g farw.-4
vote to bep a strong voice for Southeastem Olio In COI.bn. O.li
,
November 3rd, send a message to Columbus, iust as these foisltave '-••·
Tell them that we want a proven fighter. We want Mark
lleusese
he's on our sidel :

W:J; '

•••e,

THESE FOLKS KNOW MARK MALONE WILL FIGHT fOR OUR INTERESTS, :
THAT'S WHY THEY ENDORSE AND SUPPORT HIM. PLEASE JOIN THEJI IN
.
SUPPORTING MARK MALONE:
•Advocates for Effective Public Administration
·
•American Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employees
•National Rifle Association
•United Union of Roofers &amp; Waterproofers &amp; Allied Workers
•Fraternal Order of Police
•AFUCJO
•United Steel Workers .
.Ohio Civil Servant Employees Association
.Ohio Building Construction &amp; Trade
•United Auto Workers
.Ohio Nurses Association
•United Food Commercial Workers
•Executive Council of t~e Ohio Federation of TeacherS
.Ohio Education Association
•United Mine Workers of America
.Ohio Valley Council of Sheet Metal Workers
•Farm Bureau .
•Farmers Unloh
•Committee for·Agrlculture/A.E.!l.E.
· •CHizens Against Crime.

.MARK

STATE REPRESENTATIVE
Trust Bftn To ftlht For Us!

LONE

•
••

••
•

•••

.
•

•

.

.•
••
•

•.

•••

.

•
•
••

Paid tor by 1M CommlttM to EJ.ct llllrk Milone; K. Mlllone, T-urer; At. 1, Boa: II; ..C&amp;'*»&amp;i,. OIL. 45IW

'

•

• j

�.~Y. November 2, 1992

Pomerot llddllport, OhiO

Dally Sentinel

Commentary

.S.S-yarcliOUCbdown .-a to Jemmc• run wilb 9:00 left in die lbird hme
Betl, who troaed into die endzone IDd tile ICCIIe 56-6.
with 10:38 loft in 111e fillt q1111111r.
JOPlin lddecllllltlllt replay to
Goff llll in the cxtru, for 1n 8-0 opea tho finll round on a fivo-yil'd
!ICOI'e.
run. Tile conwnioa 1'111 fllilcd, but
]crane Bell lhen bid I 2S-yard Mllewan loll 62-6 with H:.SO ltill
run wilh 6:07 ~ in the ru. uwnaidaa in lhe fourth quart«.
quarter. Rodney Joplin added the
Finllly, s.ep.eo Bliliey added a
PAT run foc a 16-0 ICC!Ie.
three-yard ru to end lhe acorin&amp;• After u~uuccessful Eastern A Kennedy to Bailey pus c:omerdraves, Jophn added a one yard- sioll wnp'ct 1~ lhe ICOring 111 70-6
run, followed by a Joplin ·conver- · with 8:4S left.
sion run with 4:00 SliiJ left in the
Easfcm bid lliOiher chance. but
first quarter, the score 24-0. The fumbled the ball away, while .
ftnt of aeverll Eastern fumbles aet Coach Yop lcinder•s Tigers opced
up that i!ICOI'C, while two intercep- to run out die clock.
rl?ns played a big !01!1 in two other
A touch of class by boduqlllds
T1ger acaes.
wu shown after the game, when
Joplin ad~ed a fo'!r-yard run after -Coach ~vid B~'s ~
and a CODVelSlOII run wath :O.S aec- shoot hinds with the WlilDCrS,
onds left in the initial round, the clubs kne}t on the field for a Jll'lya'.
ICOI'C now 3U, Matewan.
Matewan had 436 total yards,
Eatly in the game, Matewan Including 297 oo the ground IIIII
played power ball in utilizing its 139 in lhe air.
huiJe line, but also worked the
Easlem bid 118 yards in the iur,
opoon to perfection. Initially, trap- but minus13 on the ground.
pmg and pulling guards on the line
Pat Newland had I53 kick-off
~the Eagles, but 1a1t:r EHS return/.ards, including one of 65
adjusted and made several hard hits yards. ..,.. Sheets had one foc 25.
on the Tiger bsclcfield .
·
Charlie Bissell of Eastern
A Jeff Simpkins to Benji Starr ca_ught three passes for 21 yards,
41-yard touchdown reception was while Newland ~d three for 91
next for the vlsldng Tigers. Joplin yards.
.
added the run for a 40-0 acore in
Eastern plays at DiviSion V's,
the aecond quarter with 10:58 left.. number one-ranked Newark
Just before halftime, Matt Catholic next Saturday night.
O'Brien pounded in for a score on Newuk Catholic hu won aeven of
a one-yard run. The O'Brien con- ten slale champiooships in its last
version run was good with 3:29 10 tries, including last year.
remaining in the second quarter,
SCORE BY QUARTERS:
the ICCIIe now 48-0. ·
EASTERN 0 6 0 ~
Eastemsavedfacewhenquar- MATEWAN32 16 8 14-'10
ICrback Robert Reed hurled a pass
to Pat New land, which was good STATISTICS
for a 7Q-yard 1D tally. The PAT
run was stopped short with 2:34
EHS;
showing on !he second quarter DEPARTMENT
MHS
clock, the i!IC01'C 48-6.
First~3;19
· As reported by the Matewan Pla,....%5;
41 .
radio stallOII, that was only the sec- Yards Rlllldna--8-(-13);
30-197
ond time Matewan had been sconx1
Yards
Pusln&amp;-118;
13!1
on all aea1011 long. The other time TOTAL Net Yarda-105;
was in a 12-6 win over Peterstown
a
last week.
Palllel(complltt.)-8·17; 6-11
The i!IC01'C -stood 48-6 at lhe half. Had Intereepted-l; 0
Joplin's two-yard TD run
U
opened the scoring in the second Fumbte.ilost~-3;
Penahl-3-15;
5-l!
half. The nine-~lay 65-yanl drive
· ended on an 0 Brien conversion Pua~3-lO.l;" 0

,

. L

. a Iuxury on
• R1'ght now, ·--"
...,..... IS
• a Canadian Football League team
: that can't justify his huge salary.
:The Los ~eles Raiders; who
• relain RockCt's NFL
~hts,, can,
: and IIIey desperately
him.
; Bestdes, letting Ismail go
; wouldn't be nearly as 11aum81ic as
, losing native soa Wayne Gretzky
; to L.A., or even rocker Neil Young.
• Much of Canada doesn't know
: Rocket is there and wouldn't miss
- him if he weren't. Ismail doesn't
: play hockey and he can't smg. For
I pnn

1

Coshocton wore himself out by
ctrrying a North Coast Conf~
lnd school record 49 times for 202
yards, scoring three times in
·WOOIIa''s 28-21 victory oYCr Earlhim.
• ''He likes the ides of carrying
the ball a lot," said Wooster coach
Bob Tucker in the understatement

ror 228 yards and a touchdown
when Robinaon ~'tcanyina die
ball.
.
In other NCAC gamea, Ohio
Wesleyan atayed ~rfect through
eight games and an a de for the
conference lead with a 23-7 victory
over Cue Reserve; AU-American
tailblck Stanley Drayion went out
early with a bruised ~r muscle,
but backup Chuck Bremer scored

11ot enough carries and he said, ·
Y:eah,coach, .iha(wa8greaL"'
'Robinson, a 5-foot-11, 200"'JJUDd transfer from Ohio UniversiJY, acored on runs of four, two and
·two yards as Wooster imDroved to
'2,5-1 on the year and closed out
theNCACseasonat2-4-l.
For good measure, he caught
$WO passes for 30 yards.

a IIC8f'City of healthy bodies.
In die Ohio Conference, Chris
Ocha threw for two touchdowns as
Capital defeated Ohio N011hern 219; lim Ballard ~J~rew fOI' fiYC ftrsthalf touChdowns as Mount l!nioil
remained unbeaten with a 54-13
triumph over Otterbein; Chuck
Geiss scored his 23rd career rushing touchdown, a school record,

LeRoy Smith's three touchdown
runs and Erik White's three touchdown passes to a 44-24 victory
over Miami of Ohio; Kevin Meger
passed foc a touchdown and Rusty
Hanna kicked three field goals as
Toledo beat Kent 32-17 and Daron
Alcorn's21-yanl field goal with29
seconds led AkrQn to a 31-28 victory over Central Michigan.

We;~ going to come in during lhe prod~tive ::Jr~: with the Bud.-

~ea.
.
~ &gt;lilrlier Salurday;thejunioc frtlm

.
:College poll...
•

'

.

(Conlinued from Page S)
:but the Crimson Tide (8-0) still
'JIIIIIIIICd10 get one first-place vote
:and move past Michig.-. to No. 3
:1n the AP poll. Michigan (7-0-1)
•dlopped to No. 4 after struggling to
itnniWd Pwdue 24-17~
: Texa AAM (8-0) remained No.
•S after bellin~ Southern Methodist
!4I.7, and Fl«ida State (7-1) stayed
:No. 6iflerdowning Virginia 13-3.
• Nebllslra (6-1) rose one DOlCh to
' No. 7 after clobbering Colorado
:52-7. Notre Dame (6-1-1) moved
-up two spots to No. 8 following a
•
: 38-7 victory over Navy, Boston
·Colleae (7-0-1) climbed two pllces
' to No. 9 after defeatin~ Temple 45' 6, and Syracuse (7-1 went from
-,No. 12 to No. 10 a ter beating
PittSburgh 41-10.
Bo!lton College is in the Top I0
for the fust time since finishing
; fifth in 1984.
: Southern Cal is 11th, followed
•by Arizona. K.-.sas, Florida, Geor:gia, Colorado, North Carolina ,
:stale, North Carolina, Mississippi
•state, Texas, Stanford, Ohio State,
Peml Slate, Tennessee and Wash1ington State. ·
• Arizona's 30-0 victory over
:New Melico Stale lifted the Wild:Cats five spots to No. 12, their
•hi~ ranking since fmlshing 11 ih
:in 1986.
Kansas (7-1) jumpe4 from No.
18 to No. 13 ifaer besting Okla:homa State 26-18. The Jayhawks
~ven't been this high in the AP
,an Iince riling to No. 8 in 1976.
. GeorJia (7·2) and Colorado (6'1·1) clnijJpecl eight spots after los:mg on s.tunlay. Georgia was beatea by Florida 26-24.
·
, Ohio Stale, ranked earlier this
ie.-. moved beck into the Top
:z.s after belting Iowa 38-l.S. Vir·
pua. No. 23 last week, feU out of
ihe rankings foUowing its loss to

:beat

I
l

l

..

STICKS GOALIE - CblCIIO's Mlebel
Goulet (16) pats 1111 stkk Into Saa J01e 101lle
Brian Hayward, Wllo llel on tbe Ice In rr.t ol
bis pal, wblle renow Sllarb Rob Zettler (IKOIIII

rr.- left) alld Tom ~ (rl&amp;llt) try to keep

Blackhawk Steve Lan~~er away !'rom tbe 1oal,
d!lrlnl SUDday's NHL game In Cbleaao, wlllc:b
l'$1lted In a 4-4 tie. (AP)
'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -:-A
university committee says more
women should by hired by Ohio
State's athletic departmenL
The Athletic Salary Equity
Committee was appointed in
February 1991 10 review coaching
and administrative staff salaries. at
the institution.
·
The group, which consisted of
four faculty members, two staff
members, a graduate student and a
-female coaclt, said women in the
department are t~aid leu and have
fewer opportumties for advanc.ement than men do.
The committee said that
although the university compares
favorably with other schools in
equity and ~ty for women
and blacks, • it is clear that we still
have much to do if we are to
achieve true equity." ·
The department was encouraged
to recruit and hire women for all
positions, including ihose in revenue-producing
SJll:h asand
football and men's ~
basketball,
to
provide llJIPOI'llU!ilies roc womt:n .to
advance m coaching and admmutratlon.
·
"I think the chief thing in tha{
recommendation is the providing of
the opportunity to advance in
coaching and administratioo," said
David Frantz. associate dean of lhe
College of Humaniti.es and chair-

Pittsburgh hands Tampa Bay 5-4 loss;
Chicago, San Jose skate to 4-4 ·deadlock
entering the final period to lake the
lead on Jeremy Roenick1s shorthanded ~ and a power-play goal
by Fllllttaek Kucera.

,

~State.

IISIUICE

,............,
....,•."

111 Sam•• St., P....y
&amp;IIIII SEmi&amp;
IIICI1161

L TOIII 01 CIUIU All IIIII

l. llore than doubled felony proMCutloM
lnthJMyears. ·
B. 11ore drug c:.... pra110uted In lhrs~
y..,. than In thellltlrs hlltory of the
county.
C. 72% Inc,.... In dru'* driving

IlL 11111 niWTY
A. •1•m For It!"

.

=::

.......

.

A11x gene;atlo., Melga Countlln

"'"

JUI'I'I..IDWIID
Cl .......

No

prsvloua hlatory a• proMCutor

A1m grsdlllle of lltlgl HIGh School

,

''

•'.
''

.:•,:

....'
'

PI'ICIIclng law In Meigs Gountv IInce 117t
Your PraHCutlng Attorney elnce 1188

PROSECUTING AnORNEY
Paid for br tile -IIdill, Ill W.luond IL. Pomanlro Oh. 417111

•As your Commlulon,r I will keep in touc:h with the
people of Melga County 111d their problems.
I will work to bring in ECONOMIC development. For
that we spec:lfleally Need • better "Road Syltem."
I will work hard with our Chamber of Commerce
and our Director to maka these gc11ila possible.
1 will keep in touch with our Federal, State and
Local Offlc:lala to make sure we know of ALL
monies available for new projects to help improve
ourcounty.
•
I will work to keep different groups and organiza.
- tiona informed of the many grants and Federll
• monies available to them; ma~ing sure lhey apply
: so the deadllnea are not milled. WE mult m•t
.. gyr deldllnesl
I have new id8as and will work with the people to
: incorporate their Ideas
as well.
.
'
:We mu.t work together as a team ·for our betterment!
:Toaeth!r we can make Melga County a better place to
~live for ua now and our children later.

••
•',.

..

...
.•.
..

ENDOIISED
THE DAYTON DAILY NEWS SAID...
Experience makes the difference in this race, giving
the edge to Francis Sweeney. The fact that Sweeney
has served well at higher levels is to his advantage.

67YEARS
COMBINED
JUDICIAL
EXPERIENCE!

:*

ENDORSED
THE COLUMlJUS DISPATCH SAID...
The most impressive thing about Judge John T. Patton may
be his capticity for hard work and his .dead-on dedication
to interpreting the low without favor.

:*

.
•

•Our county haa

10

much to oHer. With proper

'management It will grow and prosper!
;

.

u.,

Plldtorl!rlheqandl' ... ,_LI...Inl,
Ohle 417•

17110, ..... AIM* ta, Pint

a•

•

I objecfto any form of negative campaigning. I re(ect
any untruths concerning any candidate. We're all sick to
death of
For the post 10 months, I hove talked to you about
the issues that concern us all. I hove conducted opositive
campaign to tell you what kind of Sheriff I'll be - fl}lly .
qualified with 13 years of full-time low enforcement •
experience.
,
I know the low; Iknow how to make good cases and I
will be oSheriff for all of Meigs County.

THE AKRON BEACON JOURNAL SAID...
We believe Judge Robert Gorman can help restore the calm
deliberation that is badly needed at Ohio's highest court... .
lje has consistently received the highest ratings from his
Weal bar association.

11182.

*
·*

rsprsatntlng murdlrlra In neighboring

.

TO THE PEOPLE OF MEIGS
COUNTY:
Let's Setlhe Record Straight

ENDORSED

Employed with krOtlw'• el._

*

111. OPPO.II1'1 ..,IOih
A:Polltlon unknOWn Ill thla time
B. Made tena of thouunda of clolllra by

RE·ELECT STEVE STORY

•

'

.

eyes. Senior co-&lt;;aptains Alex :
Davis (6-l) and Tom Br~ndewie •
(6-9) juniors Jamie SkeliDll (6-2) :
Md Jimm Railiff (6-9) and aop11o- •
mores Rilkey Dudley (6-7), 0oua •
Etzler (6-0) and Antonio Watson .:
·

:, '

1874 High Schoolgradu.tL
I
pare Accounting and
BuaiMII~ 10y..,.
plu.
lfttall
111111111Dameftt
..,.rlenc:L
.

IL OPPOIII1'1 POSftiOIII
A. No plan to cltc:h or proucute drug

COU . . . . al aup.Jtn eXptnll.

SIEVE STORY:

~mgs and walk throul!h some
thmgs for a half-!JouJ: at a lime, get
some free thro~s 10 and try to
make up for lost IJJJ!C•" says Ayers.
The lone returrung starter 1s 6foot-9 Lawrence Funderburke,

h' · ·

FOR CHIEF JUSTICE • ROBERT H.

IT'S TIME FOR A CHANGE

OPPONEIII:

back •

PAUL GERARD

Oct 12,1182.

A. "Crtmlnlla -, need not go to prlaon. •
•THAT DOES NOT SOLVE ANYTHING."
(Dally Senllnel DeCillion W, Oc:tober 23,
1882, p.g. 8, Column 4-5.

:
•
:
:
·
•

know where you would do duu_..
ter are in their fiist year of eligibiliOhio Stale wome'\'s ,basketball ty. The two-time defending Bl·g
coach Nancy ~h tsn ,t 00110sed Ten Conference champions, who
it.
to w~rpen ~bing me~ ~ bask~- · finished 26-6 a year ago, are look~·. but~ m not sure IllS reabs- ing for replacements for Jackson,
be, she satd.
Brown Jent, Baker Bill Robinson
"I.think you can gain sufficient and sreve Hall. Se~enty-five perexpenence as ~ coach of ~ non- cent of the scoring from last year's
revenue sport 1f you are ~nght, a team was lost to graduation.
g~od teacher and good coach. I
"We've got ;~lot of new faces,"
thmk there are many ex~ples of says Ayers, who is 70-22 through
th~t around the country, Darsch his first thr~ years. "But we're
Slid.
.
. .
·excited about working with this
The co~tttee ~ classifi~ group. We've told them that if they
10 pe6ple m the Oh~o. State athletiC can stay together, they've got a
depanment as admmtstrators. The chance of having an impact on this
only woman among the 10 is Asso- program."
I ASK FOR YOUR VOTE AND
elate Athletic Director Phyllis J.
A new NCAA rule has cut the
YOUR SUPPORT •••THANKS!
Bailey.
·
.
preseason by two weeks. In the
The study showed a dlsc~y past, teams could begin organized
in pay among men and Y"omen m workouts Oct. 15. This year, the
th~ deP8f!t"enL Coaches m football startin~- date is Nov. 1. The new
· a~4 men s basketball were at ihe regulation couldo't have come at a
Experience • AbUity • Honesty
Jngh end or the pay scale. Th_e worse lime for Ayers.
Paid for by Canclklata
median salary for fe~e coaches IS
• 'That's the reasi:m why we're
$31,92q. The medaan for .male going to go twice on Sunday .
coaches IS $4ll,020. r'- . . . ; . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

TanMr A8y, 1M a.werrlval, bom

OPPONEIIT
L son 01 CIIJII

THE CHOICE IS CLEAR

lira. Zlrchar'• Clau

'

.

•

on~~~r~s.limeinyears,you
~~~~~J:~i:~~withouta
Six of the 13 players on lhe ros-

36 v- old, matlled tD Ray
Taclwtt, 2 .on•; Kevin Barry &amp;

1

A. Set up flret 'mufll.county antklrug teak
force. (42 .defendant• In first aw11p
lionel)
.

·

By RUsTY Mii:LER
. COLUM~US, Oh10 (AP) Jun Jackson_u K!JIIC- So are Jamaal
BroW~!, Chris Jent and Mark ~cr.
In.theu place are baby-faced kids
wu~ . names that sound vaguely
fam11iar. .
.
As Ohio State opened pracbce
Sunday at St. John Arena, coach
Randy Ayers said he would spend
as much time in getting to know
everyone ashe would in working

Candidate for County
Commiuloner

D. t=:O"';&gt;c~eath penally lndlc:tmen~

.

1

•
:

Ayers excited about new OS.U cagers
·~
season af•••

Janet L." Howard

'

I.ITOPPIII IIH IWIII

Nll!lld by "h Gnda,

.
(Continued from Page 6)

Why Re·Eiect Steve Story?

In fifty years.

CALL JEAN TRUSSELL
VILLAGE HALL
882-6782

.

STEVE
STORY 'RO$EC.TING ATTORNEY
.

. SRYI STORY·

"If you loot 111 patterns, one of
the traditional paths to move into
adminlsll'ative positions in athletic
departments is coachinj! - in particular, football coachin1. If football is closed to women, then IIIey
don't have that path to go to the
administration."
·
Women in the athletic department's administration often aren't
given authority ovet revenue-producing spGrts and are "shut off to
one of thC main [lO!Ials of entry to
hu·ons,igh-,\eFranvel !_dsaicL~tnistralive posi...
Athletic director Jim Jones
r~jected t!'e premise that athletic
directonlups must be passed on to
. successful football and men's basketball coaches.
"I would_~ave to say that. h~
been the case m the past, but IllS
not likely to be in the fut_ure," said
Jones, w!X&gt; started at ~o State as
an alhleuc counselor wilh the footbaJ!.team. .
. .
Today,
athleucordirectors
coming
fromI see
~ nlll'!'ber
place~.
A_t In~ Uruversaty, die athlebc
director IS a lawyer. . · ·
"The bottom line is, yes, there
should be ·m.ore women," Jones
said. "The question is, where do
y~ go find t¥ female _who has_~
kind of coaching expenence to JOIR
pur football coaching staft'l I don't

.

.

19;' Tiffm lost to unbeaten Westminster (Pa.) 49-0; J.amie Beetz
~ foc two touchdowns in leadIn- Mount St. Josepb to a 21-19
WID over Olivet Nazarene; undofeated Dayton beat Evansville &lt;10I.S as Pat Hofacre r-IIIDred up three
touchdowns; Kenyon came up
.short to Waynesburg (Pa.) 26-21
aild F'tndlay moved to 6-1 as quarterback DeMya Wimberly rushed
for 101 yards and Balewa Walker
scored twi~ on one-yard ptunses
as the Oilers beat
. Urbsna41-12.

rather quickly, so I guess the two ' to WiMipeg, are. 6-11 and out of
years !hal remain probably will do the playoffs with one game remaining. Attendance at SkyDome,
the same."
which was close to 40,000 last
·That might be a bit optimistic.
Last aeason, like his salad days year, is closer to 30,000 this year.
at Notre Dame, Iamail tore through And Ismail's numbers are lower
tl!e CFL. He scored 13 touchdowns almost across the board as wen.
So what happens next? That
in lhe regular season and capped it
apparently
depends on Rocket.
off with an 87-yard TD return in
AI
LoCasile,
executive assistant
the Grey Cup game that won the
to
Raiders
boss
AI
Davis; said FriArgos the championship and him
day
that
just
talking
about ISJ!Iail
MVPhonors.
could
be
construed
as
111'\lpenng.
This season, though, a knee
"He's
the
pmperty
of
another
club.
injury sidelined Rocket for three
He's
got
a
conttacl
That's
alii
can
games and the Argos, stung by the
say
right
now."
loss of quarterback Matt Dunigan

DOWIIII CIIUS ·
MLUIMUSSEI

Herd has three SC opponents
chasing them to start Week 9

I

•

(Smail. . .

Pace

Nestable/stackable
bins
provided for
collection!
Curbside pickup of recyclablesl
You can make a diHerence by lolnlng
your neighbors and recycle In tile
Village of Middleport!

y:::·

•
h
•
fi
•t
Osu
' . commzttee pus zng or equz y
fior wo_men working·- in athletics
.

.

SIGN UP TO
RECYCLE
IN MIDDLEPORT

Conference

te~~·;:;~:e::~~
=~~!!/l&gt;e~~~~·h~~~
~=~=~~~!:::~i!~~~~
Jy. I asked hun 8ftcr the game if he forfeited 10 WitlenberJ because of second, straight MAC ti~ by riding

Ismail turned up tiliefty Sunday
on "NFL Today" on CBS and he
was lfsted,whelher he felt a similar
need to proYC himaelf.
"I don't feel .that " Rocket
replied, "but I'm sure it would ·
probably mab life a lot easier if I
at least played there a year .•. so
'people wouldn't keep questioning
mo about whether I bid the ability
to play in lhe NFL." .
"Much of die rest of lhe aegment,
filmed in Toronto, centered .on
Ismail's four-year, $18.5 miUioo
contract and whether he would take
advalltage of an eocape clause in it
to join the Raiders. .
"I definitely intend to fulfiU the
rest of my contract lhere," he said.
"The two _}'Cars have gone by
(Set ISMML on
7)

CULLOWHEE, N.C. (AP) _ · which 'one gets the conference's
Marshall, which has had its eye on automatic playoff bid. If three
the Division I:AA ratings all sea- teams tie, the Division I-AA aelecson, now must worry more about tion committee determines who
the Southern Conference standinll'._ gets the berth.
The Thundering Herd trampled
Western Carolina has lost to
all but one of its opponents en The Citadellljld ~~ Fwman this .
route to a 6-1 start and the No. 2 weekend. The C1
I flllishes the
spot in I-AA.
regular season at Furman.
But Saturday's 38-30 upset Joss
"We're in a good situation in
at Western Carolina left Marshall that we've beaten Furman and
(6-2, 4-1) and coach Jim Donnan Citadel and those two play each
"lllOOng back at t1uee tealns.
other. It's going to be hard to win it
The Citadel is 4-1 in the confer- outright," Donnan said.
ence and Western Carolina and
On Saturday, Michael Payton
Furman are each 3-1.
was 36 of 67 passing foc 429 yards
"We'll have to fight our butts and four touchdowns for Marshall.
off just to make the playoffs," But the Herd gaYC up 469 yards to
Donnan said.
the Catamounts as Lonnie GalIf two teams tie for the tide, loway threw for 266 yards and four
head-to-head competition decides touchdowns.

anil John Koz paned for 205 yards

40-21 viaorr over Wtlmington and
in the Assocmtion of Mid-East Colleges championship sbowdown,
Thomas MOI'C held off previously ·
unbeaten Defiance 21-IO.
In nonleague games, Marlon
Pearce had I 0 catches for. 186
yards, but CinCinnati lost its fourth
m row in falling to Louisville 2717; Nick Cochran ran foc the goahead touchdown in the third quarter and threw two scoring pmcs to
Herb Williams as Youngstown
Swe defeated Eastern lllinois 28-

Quartmbll:k John Ramlier, who
hal filled lhe air with fontbllla foc
111011 of the aeasonJor die Plgl!dng
~ bit on 16 of 27 pass aaempts

.Ismail should be returned to U.S.
all his athletic prowess, even the
Blue Jays can't use him; Rocket
dbesn't play baseball, eilhet. ·
·
What the former Notre Darner
does do is play fOOiball like almost
no one elae on lhe planeL And riptt
now he is doing it in relauve
'obscurity for the Toronto Argonauts of the relatively obscure
CR..
.
Call it chauvinistic, but Rocket
doing the work of three playa's 111
once - returning kicks and punts,
catching passes and making,the
occasional run from acrimmage is like Cecil F'111lder hittin all those
home runs in Japan a ~w years
back. It was a tidy little accomplishment there, but it didn't mean
much - even to Cecil - until he
did it here.

P-si' 7 :

Robert Smith ran for 129 yards
and two touchdowns as Bildwin- and two touchdowns oo 18 carries
Wallace beat Heidelberg 39-20; and Ohio State stuffed Iowa's
Willie Beers became tbe leading offense and punting game for a 38rusher in Ohio Coll&amp;:rence hiltory, 15 Big Ten
victory.
breaking the record with a 17-yard
Ashland scored 21 str.ight
touchdown run that opened the points against Buder to g0 Bhead
ICOI'ing as John Carroll beat Mari- 21-17, ·but lost 24-21 as the Bulletta 42-6 and Jody Stoldt llll for dogs' Kevin Kimble scored on a
223 yards, includiq ihree first-half one-yard run wiih 4:18 left in a
touchdowns, as M~n1um best · Midwest Intercollegillte ConferHiram 44-22.
ence
Bluffton broke a 12A Jut-minute lhnlat died on an game · g streak as Gary Smiddy
incomplete pass 111 OhiO University gained ~ yards ~}3 caries in a
lost to Ball Stale 24-21 in the Mid-

:• By RUSTY MILLER
• ••
AP Spo&amp;11 Writer
. ; It's doubtful Eric Robinson
~yed out late at IDY Halloween

•

By JIM LITKE
AP Sports Writer
• Canadians are more polite than
• AmeriCIIIS, but it has been a week
: now since the Wocld Series trophy
: was shipped north of the border
' and no llli'J up ti!R Ills yet aeen fit
, tom:~
f
. '.
In ihe Interest o ma1ntainmg
neighborly relations, we offer this
suggeation: Return the Rocket.
; Slap a postage stamp on Rocket
• Ismail's forehead, mark it care of
: lhe Nalional Football League, and
: let the lawyen work out the fine

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-llddl81)4?rt, Ohio

9U transfer helps Wooster beat Earlham in weekend encounter

Matewan bombs Eastern 70-6
BY SCO'M' WOLFE
S.*'-1 C• mp WI t
The Maaewan ~p,::• left no
doubt in IDYOIIC's
Saturday
night as to why they are the top
ranted, undefedd Class u A• tc:ll1l
in West VirJinia. The defending
state champion Tigen clawed their
way to a 48-6 halftime adVIIIrage,
then canlelqd·onto a 70-6 aiwnph
over lhe Eatern Eagles.,
.
'rbe Tigers, who completed lheir
regular sesson schedule, are now
10-0 going into state play-off competition next week, while Eastern
drops to 1-8..
ws~z
television
"3"
sporucaster Kenny Bass was on
hand to shoot highlights of the
game foc lhe studio's "Spons Sunday Live" program.
All-State candidate Rodney
Joplin scored 38 points on five
touchdowns and four conversion
runs, while compiling ISO yards on
21 carries. Jerome Bell added a 647 night on the ground, ~ad two
catches for 75 yards, and two
touchdowns.
MaU O'Brien ~ onc touchdown and two conversiolls, while
gaining 39 yards on lhe ground.
Eas~tm's OJad Savoy came into
the game just 112 yards short of a
I 000-yanl pusing year. Savoy feU
stiortoflhernonumental nwt with
a 7-14 mark for 48 yards. This
gives the senior signal caller 936
yards on the year. · .
Junior Robert Reed and frosh
Brian Bowen took a few snaps for
theEWes. Reedwascredlledwith
the ?i)..yanl toss to Pat Newland,
who made several nifty moves en
route to a se&lt;:Ond quarter score.
· Malewan's size was an intimi•
dating factor in the opening
moments of the game. The line
averaged over 200 pounds and
included 6'5", 23{;-pound Phillip
McCoy and 6'6", 222-pound
Robyn Justice. Q~er~k Jeff
Simpkins huddled m belund the
line at 6' S", 236, giving him· the
vision it takes to be a suc:cessful,
multi-purpose signal-calle!:.
,
On just the second play from
acrirnmage, Michael Goff took ·the
pitch from Simpkins, and hurled a

.

RESTORE DIGNITY AND FAIRNESS
TO OHIO•s SUPREME COURT
•

Paid tor by

The O!Jio Democratic Party, 37 w. Broad St., Columbus, Oh.. Eugene Branstoot, Chm .

�....

By The Bend

MOnday, November 2, 1992 .

•

Page o

•

_....;.;.......,. . . Names in the news ... - - -··
NEW YORK (AP) - She
raised Hollywood hackleS by droppins out of thisl::r's Emmy
aWIIda lbow Ill die
minute, but
Shannen Doberty of "Beverly Hills
90210" says she's 110 prima donna.
· "I'm not saying I don't have my

•
moments ... because eveoobodY bas
them," the 21-re--old acaess said
in Nov. 9 issue of PeOple. "Bill it's
never for 110 reuon.''
She Slid the flap arose when
tickets wm denied to ~ mem·

&lt;·h

bers of the "90210" cast, not
because of ~enis over her
-·- - ....
presenter•I ,,_
u"' prod uc:er.s,....
and her IIUIIIBier's venion- or
because she had bronchitis - her
·publicist's excuse.

·WHY .VOTE ,FOR

JOH

LE TES

.NEXT, COUNTY PROSECUTOR?
HONEST
WINNl:R - Lacey Banks, a llb:tll vader at
Salisbury Elementary Scboolln Pomeroy, won
· the Southeastern Ohio Ben Franklin Stamp
Cluli Wildlife colorlnl contest. 'Her entry beat
out approximately 500 entries from various

a

Lacey Banks, sixth grader at
Salisbury Elementary School in
Pomeroy, won the Southeastern
Ohio Ben Franklin Stamp Club
Wildlife coloring contest. Her entry
beat out approximate!~ SOO entties
from various schools m Southeastem Ohio.
Her entry was neatly colored

and detailed, all questions about . ~dy home ~ five ~ndapgered
en!langered species were answered spectes; the As·~~ wtld horse,
correctly and her handwriting and homed onyx, Cuvetb gazell, North
spelling was tenned excellent.
Ameri~ red wolf and, ~ann
She won a 1991 commemora- mountaJn ~bra.
.
live mint set, a Wilds t-shirt and a
Her winning enll'}', and all Slll;istour of the Wilds, a 9,000 acre b~ry Elcme.ntary ·Sch'!ol entrtes
nature preserve located in south- wtll be. available to. vtew at the
eastern Muskingum county. It is Pomeroy Post Office through
Thursday.
I

I

Community calendar
Commuuity Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received weD iD advance
to assure publication iD the cal·
endar.

sandwiches, pie, cake .an~-~ver· ' .
ages. Bring.containers .or ,_e-out
LETART FALLS - Letart orders.
Township Trustees :will meet Mon· ,
•
.
day at 7 p.m. at the office 1&gt;uilding.
RO~K SPRINGS: Elect.JOn
Day dmner, Rock Spnngs Urutcd
TUPPERS PLAINS • Orange Methodist Church, !uesd&amp;Y~ at 11
Township Trustees will meet Mon- a.m . Soup, sandwtches, pte and
day at the home of the clett, ~ beverases are planned.
q.I&amp;way, at 7:30p.m.
. '
RUTLAND ~ Rolland EMS.
hall.

MONDAY
POMEROY - Revival at Mt.
}lennon Unillld Brethn:n in Christ
Church , off Texas Road near
Pomeroy, through Sunday, 7:30 '
RACINE - Racine Village
p.m. nightly. Rev. Robert Markley Council will m~ct Monday: at 7
will be the evangelist. Public invit. p.m. at Star Mill Parle.
ed.
.
TUESDAY
· · POMEROY- Grace Episcopal
RACINE - Reorganized Church .
Church Wonien, rummage sale, of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
Monday and Tuesday .9 a.m. to 4 will serve food Election Day. Pubp.m. with luncheon Tuesday for lic invited.
election day.
POMEROY - American Legion
SYRACUSE - Suuoo Township Drew Webster Post No. 39 will
TrusleCS will meet Monday at 7:30 meet Tuesday for the annual oylla'
p.m. at the Syracuse Municipal supper at 7 p.m. Meeting at8 p.m.
Building.
FOREST RUN - Forest Run
. PAGEVILLE • Scipio Town- United Methodist Church, Election
Ship Trustees will meet Monday at Day dinner, Tuesday 11 a.m. IQ 6
~: 30 p.m: at the Pageville Town·
p.m. Vel!et!lble and beaQ soup,

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

_..._

..

.....

-1

in the riews. ...
-·:Names
-· OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) lury Oan:ia isn't dead, and fans
are grateful.
• fhe Grateful Dead suitari1t
returned to the ltiJC for a Hal·
lowcen conc:ert afUr serionl illneas
took him off the road in August
and gave rise to rumon dlat be was
dying.
A slimmed-down Glrcia played
on Saturday with his other group,
The Jerry Garcia Band, in a soldout show at the Oakland Coliseum.
The liSJJIIlly portly, S0-1ear-old
rock star had been adhenns to a
strict diet and exercise progam
since his bout with exhauStion and
other problems. He lias a history of
health trouble, including diabelcs
lind drug abuse.
: ',' He's a lean, mean guitarJ!ickin' machine," said Grier
McCurdy, 27.
,
; The often-deadpan Garcia
smiled frequently durmg the show.
~t one pomt, he ubd the crowd,
1
Hcy, how y'all doin'?"
~ The audience roared back with
wild chcen.
·
·-;; "He never talks!" said one
young man.

She said Dylan told her afterward "that llliould ~on~
what I'm doinJ. But It 1 no '
sayinJ dlat to
Why dooiD t he
say it to them?"
. · Dylan aaent Joan Hyler In l.ol
Angdes did not mum a call lOCkins comment Sunday. A call to
Columbia Recordl. Dylan'1 label,
went unanswaed.

me:

RADNOR, Pa. (AP)- Vio·
lcnce may be a WI}' of life for
boxer Evllllller Holyfield, but that
doean't mean he .WIDIS his children
seeing it on TV.
"My kids are 2. 4, 6 and 8; so I
usually rent vld~os for them
bee••"' 10 llllllly ~ on mgular
TV are too violent,' the heavy.
weilht said in the Nov. HssiiC of
TVOuide.
·
'"Their favorite is 'Sons or the
South.' 'That's the one with the guy
sinainl! 'zio-a-dce-doo-dah, zip..adec-day.' We sing along &amp;r\d then
they ask me, 'How do you know
that song?' They always forget that
I was youns once, too.''

BREANA HEMSLEY

Observes first
birthday recently
. Breana Danae Hemsley, daughter of Rollie and Kay Hemsley,
Pomeroy, recently celebrated her
f1111t birthday at her home.
A "Twcctie Bird" theme was
carried out in die decorations and
· refreshments of cake, ice cream
· and drinks.
Attending and sending gifts
were grandparents, George and
June Wyant, gnndparents Harry
and Eileen Clark, Dave and Barbara Vujaldija, Jimmy Joe Hemsley, Vicki and Mandl Carpenter,
Donna Davis, Emily Dillard, Mau·
rice Smith and Paulette Harrison.

Fall carnival
l
d
p anne

Syracuse Elementary will hold
its fall carnival Saturday. A soup
. dinner wlll begin at S p.m. with
games from 6-8 p.m. There also
will be elllertainmcnL

ELECT ,JOHN LENTES
.

.

A Competent and Dependable Attorney

FOR A BtTTER
MEIGS• COUNTY
'*
hid tor by the ClltcH"e, 211 E. 2nd, Pomeroy, Otl. 41111

1
.

• -

--

e

P8Q1

People who work in finishing labs
are not always totally trustworthy ·

Help Collect These Funds For Our
· Schools•.••
-

...

The Dally Senunel

Continued on page 9
...----..:.,._ _ _ __:__ _:__ _.:_:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _--:".....;._

,oar·Alia LaDders: I am writinl
aboul die lcaer fJOm the IUder whO'
bid WlliUd in • photo poc:euin&amp;
' lab. He bid run aaoss dozens of
oliaceae pictures and said even
though illlch photos are supposed to
be dellroyed, many are not.
N a penon who owned his own
Dhoto lab and has seen more than a
. few X-lllcd photos, I want ~ say .
your advice to use ~ camera that
develops the film in your own home
isthewaytoso.Onccfilmisoutof
your baqdS, you have no idea where
it will erld up.
People who work iD rmishing labs
are oot always totally trustworthy.
Blaclanail is an ugly won!, but every
person who reads your column
sh~ be ~~ that he or ';he is a
potential vJCbm of blackmail from
the min~te a roll of X-~tcd film
leaves his or her hands. Stgn me ••
CONFIDENTIALLY YOURS IN
PHILADELPHIA
D~ PHB..ADELPHIA: Thanks
for the mput. And now -- ano~
testimonial from Houston:
Dear Ana Landers: !' pox on
all people who get a kick out of
posins for nude and kinky pictures.
My fiance received in the mail,
anonymously, of course, some
.pornographic pictures that almost
broke up our relationship. There
were several photos of a couple
engaging in some pretty weird swff
.. bondage, whips, chains, etc. -- and
the woman looked so much like me
it was frightening.
I don't know bow many mpies of
those pictures are floadng around,

Ann

rag dolls and such, but oothiDS
compared to what is sho•aal oo
. her by the other griiMipii'CIIII.

Landers
ANNLANDDS
"1HZ, La A pi•

n..s,.,t' ,

CnMons,.ac•e" ,

L--...-----..;...;.-.1,
but tlic possibilities are scary
bec111se I am totally defenseless. WHEN A DOUBLE COULD
MEAN TROUBLE
Dear Aua Landers: Once you
wrote "Children can't be bought."
Not

ne. · '.

This is what is breakinl my hca!C
Whenever the family is tosether. my
Rl'llllddauRhtcr will hsve .nochiD« to
do with me. She Wllltl Olliy to be
with ber other grandparents. She
ignorea me to the point thlll I feel
cmbanasacd. She won't even sit with
me, let alone give me a ·kill or a
hug.
Maybe I am too emotionally
involved with my family and
should distance myself a bit. If
you don't love pcoplc, they Clll't bun
you so much. Is that the IIIISWel"' SAD, NOT WISE, GRANDMA IN
BOSTON
DEAR SAD GRANDMA: Young
children don't know or care about
social position or bow expensive a
toy is. Perhaps your grandchild
senses that you arc extremely
competitive with the other grandparents and there is some son of
"contest" going on . .Try tumins
down the voltage and don't be 10
&amp;ggrefSive in seeking her approval.
In other words, c:Ool it, Gran1. I'll
bet you11 get results.
. .
Drugs are everywhere. They're

Five years ago, my only daughier
married into a wealthy family. They
paid for and controlled the entire
wedding, an elegant affair that was
beyond my means. I didn't mind,
because it was the wedding of my
&lt;baughter's dreams.
I now have a 3-year-old granddaughter whom I love dearly. Since
her birth, 1 have been the one who
cares for her whenever her parents
need a baby sitter. This is not an
imposition Ann. I love being with
the child. 1' read to her, and we bake
cookies and play games. She's very
bright and fun to be with.
easy to get, eaiy to use anJ even
Her other grandparents are never easier to get hooked 011, !Jyou lttl~~e
asked to care for her, because their questions abolll dnlgs, yoa Mtd AM
lifestyle does not include baby- · Londtrs' booklet, "The LowdOwn on
sitting. They made that perfectly Dope.• Send a self-addressed, long,
clear from the stan. They do, business-size envelope anJ a ched:
however, lavish her with expensive or money order for $3.65 {this
gifts. She loves these things, and I iiiCiudts postage an4 luuulling) to:
can understand iL Of C()ursc, I love Lowdnwn, clo A1111 Landers, P.O.
to buy her things, too •• books, Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611·
0562. {In Canada, send $4.45:)

Annual Christmas show slated Nov. 21~ 22
The annual Christmas Show of
the Meigs County Garden Clubs
will be presented Nov. 21 and 22 at
Carleton School in Syracuse. This
year's theme is "Christmas Cards"
and this year's general show chairman is Janet Bolin. The show will
be open to the public for viewing
froin 14 p.m. on Nov. 21 and 14
p.m. on Nov. 22. ·
. Thirty-three clsss ate offered to
exhibiton ill five divisions: artistic,
horticulture,' com~titive · educational, non-competitive educational
and·invitational commercial.
Special awards to be presenllld
include Best of ShOw, Reserve Best
of Show, and Creativity. The Cte·
ativity Award doa DOl ner•wUy
have to be a blue ribbon winner.
One blue, one red, one yellciw and
one white ribbon will be placed in
each class, except in junior classes

whm the judge may place as many ·
honorable mention ribbons as
• desired. Junior awards will be Be,s,t
of Show, Reserve Best of Sbow m
Anistic and Honiculturc Sweepstakes.

The Problem

The So!utjoo

C4tsses

In the artistic division, 10 classes are offered for county garden
club members only: "How Lovely
Arc the Sentiments Contained in
Christmas Cards," including a
thlistmas Madonna; "As Well As
De'ar Heartwarming Scenes of
Snowy Trees and Yanls," a design
featuring white; "They Never
Change So Very Much But Who
Would Want It So?," a creative
mass design, special elass; "For
Christmas Seems to Always
Belong to Cedar Trees and Snow,"
including evergreens and snow;
Continued on page 10

-·

NAIL FUNGUS

PUNGI NAIL®
TrJ.hil safe, simple, ciTccliw remedy for
L1C sympcoms or cmbanuslna nail fun- .
l"f· '""" NaPriJ(IIa thick,aptil, dilcGI· ·
o!Cd nails. 'TwDpawa"6IIIJIIi.fllllp(aJCIU
· ns~~t infoclion on locnaila IIIII l'iilauuill
and -rk .., climiriiiA Jbo actual funps.
Euy to apply u nail polish. No p.-riplion nee "'7·
.
Do You Use Artif1cleJ Nlils7
,.... uao Fual N.ae to poco• Jbo Mil
foaapa ..-iiJcd dllll\lllclil nails.

K_,...,,,.,_,

AriiiUM •r ~ /IIIMmHYw.v..
rJNm _,ocr

17711 8. W. I SL. Mhml, FL. 33174

.

A MESSAGE FROM S·ENATOR
JAN LONG &amp; FORMER REP.
JOLYNN BOSTER (BUTLER)

.

WHAT A CROWD· Sneral•uadred people turned out for the •auuted trail at Sleepy
Hollow iu Mlddlepo\ot on Thursday evenlua.
Those atteadluJ wen trested to hotdOJS 1 doouts
and elder, uot to mention a trip on the bauuted

Continued from page 8
Election Day dinner, Tuesday at
a.m.

Octo~.l992

.

Dear Friends:

"t.

In a few days, you must choose the person who will represent you in the State

....'

House in Cbiumbus. One candidate has fought hard in Columbus for the past
decade to help uie people of Southeast Ohio. l'Mt candid:!te is Mark Malone.

"

'

FACTS:
1. The single greatest source of
income to the Meigs County budget
is provided by the Ohio Department
of Human Services.
2. One out of four Meigs Countians
receives some form of public
assistance.
3. Meigs County has the 4th highest
unemployment rate in the state of
Ohio.
4. 25% of the population in Meigs
County fall below the "Poverty
Level" as . defined by federal
government guidelines.
In view . of these (sad but true)
statistics it is ·important that · your
county's money be managed with
prudence and caution.

~-

Matt Marone has fought to rebuild the economy of Southeast Ohjo. He took on
the Washington bureaucrats for passing a Clean Air Act which put an unfair
burden on Ohio, and threatened the jobs of Ohio coal miners. Mark took action
.to keep Ohio cool burning in the state, by fighting for Ohio's Clean Coallegislmion
which protected mining jobs all over Southeast Ohio.

JAN LONG
State Senator

...

' .

..

~

,.

Matt Malone has fought for state dollars for area highways and bridges, and has
woited to bring .money to the~ for job training programs.

Those big city politicians in Columbus sometimes forget about the needs of the people
of Southeastern Ohio. Mark Malone will 6ght to make sure that we get our fair
share.

'

On November 3rd, choose a candidate who will fight for the needs ofSoutheast Ohio.
On November 3rd, vote for Mark Malone. ·
Sincerely,

~

.

&amp;-itz/).;'

4LYNN
BOSTER(BUTLER)
Former S131C Representative

ELECT
'

MAUREEN HENNESSY
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURE·R
I.

JOLYNN BOSTER {BUlLER)
Former State Representative

.'
..

·. ,;Those politicians in Columbus sometimes
·forg~t about t~e needs of the people of South.eastern Ohio .. Mark Malone will fight to make
sure that we get O'Ur fair share." .

'

. '"
· :,:Matone=::.·~C.::::Ih::;•rin:::;•:.:M:::al::::ooe::,.;:T,..:::::•"'":.::'::..:•R:;::out:;.:e~l,:.:,:lron.:::;;;:ton;;:,•O:;:H.;.;4:;:S63:;:8.. _~-----'
L....:---~Pald=~!::ar~...t~lllllloti»d=~::Z,:the~C;:'"":"'::'illee::!ID!,!I!Iea=MIIIc=
t

I

I

'
by
trail by hiJWJIIOL The eveat was spoosored
·the Amerll:u Leglou Fenuey Bennett Post No.
U8 aad Ladies Auxiliary aud the Village or
·
Middleport.

00 George Bush and Dan Quayle
PrllldHt

VIce PNSideot

.

IXJ Michael DeWine
U. 5. S.ltlllor

Community ...

B
ESSY FOR
,.R.EASURER

lou-: 1....... Co. Auditor; :a. ...... Co. Dlpt. .. - ..,. .;a. Ohio Bun 11al ~liS.•'-; 4. Ohio .....
IEldMJelon . . ,. . (DIMd Cralllud). .
. Paid tor br cancllcWe, 12 FlalwiWat, Pa--r.

.'

THE STORY - "Prosecutor has collected •soo,ooo .In delinquent
land taxes."
THE FACTS - Any delinquent taxes collected has been almost
exclusively the result of voluntary payments and . the
treasurer.
. .
.
.
THE FACTS - The Prosecutor has been unable and unwilling to
successfully collect $600,000 for our schools through the
.
courts.
THE FACTS - The Court has had to dismiss more than 40 cases
.tiled bY the Prosecutor at a cost to the County of thousands
of dollars.

Sixth grader wins coloring contest

_.

· NEW YORK (AP) - Jay
Le11o's ousted "Tonight Show"
NEW YORK (AP) - Sinead producer was the victim of a good
O'Connor sQys the crowd that cop-bad cop relationship that
l:!OOed her of£ the stage at a Bob · served her and the comedian well
Dylan ttibute learned nothing from until he reached the top, The New
the anti-establishment songs that Yorter says.
IJiade Dylan famous in the 1960s
In a "Letter ifor!l Burbank: Jay
-andheapparentlydidn'teither.
Leno's Hard Bargain," the maga·
· O'Connor stirred controvcny zinc reports on the ouster of Helen
last month when she tore up a pic- Gonnan Kushnick in September,
ture of the ~pc on "Saturday four months after Leno became
Night Live.' Days later, she was h05t of the NBC show. The story
jeered at the concert.
appeat11 in the Nov. 9 issue.
"What occuncd to me in those
Ku~hnick - who had come
seconds was that if this audience under fJre for her abrasiveness and
felt like this, then they hadn't actu· her hardball tacti~s in booking
ally listened to what Bob Dylan guests - ·was Leno s ~~r f~r
said, they didn't actually get it," nearly twO decades, S~ng 10 hiS
she said iii the Nov. 9 issue of ' days as a s~-.up comtc when he
Time.
had to sleep UJ his car.
' .
• "And this is proved by the fact · She satd sh~ once told h•~·
that himself, their fisurehefd ... · "I've been semng you steak ~n·
went onstagc after that had hap- ners for the last 18 &gt;:e&amp;l1. I JUSt
~ed .to another artist.''
sho~g you !)ow

. Won't Give Voters Misleadinl
lnfor11aation

schools In SontheMtel'll Ohio. She Is pictured
hen wltll, 1-r, ~ Edwards, ~utland Postmuter; Ed Barteli, 11llth vade teacher; aud
Dorothy Chuey, stamp eutlluslut.

·-

Monday, November 2, 1992

The Daily Sentinel
· ·

..

~

00 Thomas J. Moyer

'ro My Fellow Melgs'Countlans:

With the general election just hour&amp; away, I will
not have the opportunity to contact m•ny of you
perao~lly. How.Yer, I would like to reiterate my
CHESTER - The Chester United
Methodist Church will be serving
commitment made to you four years ago. At that
lunches Election Day (Tuesday)
time I vowed honest, Impartial enforcement of
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Plate lunch,
the law regardless of aoclal standing, personal
sandwiches, soup, pie, cake and
beverages.
friendship or political affiliation. Despite the rhetoric of some,l have fulfilled that commitment
RACINE - Southern Junior
High Bbosrers will meet Tuesday
and can substantiate that claim to anyone.
at 7:30 p.m. at the junior high
There are Insinuations regarding honesty and
school.
experience. 11 a~y person can come forth and
RACINE • Election Day dinner,
prove any dlshontsty on my part, either In the ·
Racine Unillld Methodist Women
performance of my duties as sheriff ·or In my
at the church, II a.m . to 7 p.m.
Soup, sandwiches, dessert and
private life, 1 would welcome the opportunity to
drinks.
discuss the Issue. M for experience, mine dates
SYRACUSE • Election Day
back to. the early 1960s In all pha888 of "hands
soup dinner by Syracuse Fire
on" law enforcement. We have not solved all the
Dcparttnent Auxiliary. Dine-in or
carry-out, 11 a.m. Vegetable, chili,
problems that face the citizen~ of Meigs County
beans, com\lreld and desscn availbut 1 can say, without reservation, that we have
able.
made a concerted effort to address thoH proSHADE - Modem Woodmen of
blems and 'will continue those efforts In the
Ainerica, Camp 4798, will ~101'
future. Look at the record and determine for
a matching fund benefit for
Alexander Junior High at Shade on
· yourHif whether we have progressed In the
tuesday from S- 7:30 p.m. Soupfield of law enforcement•
beans, cornbread, coleslaw, applesauce, pudding, icc tea and coffee
I' will not engage In a negative, mud-slinging
will be available for $3.50 There
campaign to retain this office. It did not happen
will alSO be a bake sale. All proceeds will go to the school.
four y8ars ago and will not happen now. I solicit
your support on November 3rd and thank you for
MIDDLEPORT - An Election
Day dift\ICr will he held Tuesday at ; the truat you Placed In me four years ago. I have
Heath Uni!ed Methodist Church.
not betraytd that trust•
Serving will be from 11 a.m to 7,

Hi

~p.m.

Food may be taken out or
eaten in the church dining room. ,.

POMEROY • Grace Episcopal
Church Women, Elecdon Day luncheon and rummage sale, Tuesday
9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT • The Middleport Literary Club will meet
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at the
home d Mrs. Richard Owen.

Sincerely,

.

~I«V'~
James M. Soulsby
Sheriff ·

.

O.lef J11tb of tile

·

IXl Mark P. Painter
Jostkt of tile
Olllo Sepre• Coert

Oltlo Sepretllll Collt

IX] Paul E. Pfeifer
.llstke of IN
o•lo S.prlllll Coll'l

IX1 Meigs County
Paul Gerard,
••,.• • O.aimtatt

Ohio Congressional Candidate · C.unty Sheriff
IX] Pnl Gerard
. OO ... McEwtl
... District

County Recorder
Ohio House Candidate
IX] Frilk c. en••,
941. District

County Treasurer

County Commissioner
IX] ....... Hartttlladl

00 Howard E. Fra1k

County Engineer

00 Rldlard E. Jooes

00 Rollert H. 'Easo•

County Prosecuting Attorney

County Coroner

00 D0111las H11ter

IX] Stn• L Story

County Clerk of C~urts
IX] ~.my l Speacu I·

00 Em•ogene Hamdtan

.

Judge of the Court o~ lpPeils
(X) Earll SttpiJHIOI!
4.. District

Paid lor by Melg•Co. Republcan Elte9utlve Commlttle;
Box 231, Pomeroy, OHAS711, E~~~~~~~~pne Hamlllon, ,.,._....,

'.,,
•·

�•

•
P~ge

1G-The Dally'Sentlnel

.

Pomiiov lldclleport, Ohio

AnnuaL. __condrlued
__
trom_J~~ae_9_ _ _-..,..._

Portland
students
honored-

.

...

Mondly, November 2, 1 •·
___, _ _ _ _ __

1'11111- Blllll be fwniibed by

lbo ablbilar llld wrilllll oa ...,. .
1111 . . ..bolll lbo bg«pplcll llld
c0111mon name wllere po11lble.

lEVIN'S UWN
MAINTENANCE

Swew'Meewtll •n•ded 10 lbe
exhibitor ICCllllllllaliq tho molt'
. poinll. Tllja awan1 wiD be fipred'
by the judaos c:ommiaec. '
· . ArdadC .-rangemenu m1111 be
the wort of lbo exhibitor wi!ll no
artificial plant material except
claucl 9 llld 31. hinted. dyed ar
~ matcrill may be used in .U
claucl hoWever. In no caae shauld
fresh plant material be. painted, '
dyed ar artificially Colored in any
way. An exceplion is IIJDY snow ur
.Jliltel' 10 be ' - ' in good taste and '
with moderation. Only one entry i
per person is permitted in each ;

STARTS

To place an ad

be listed on the cird provided by· :
.

MQN. thru FRI. BA.M.-5P.M •• SAT.8-12

I

·

....!

'

CLOSED SUNDAY

POU~IES
.
·.• .Ado ....loio lloo ~-ty JOUr ............... pnpold .
• Roo.!.. dioeo•t for .... pold t. ..t.._.
• r- A.ko Ci..__, ud F....,. ..I. ...w 15.-n~o wllll&gt;e
....~ . , . at ""' ......

.

.

.

"

.

•

• 7 ..... .._ typeoaiJ uod

.
.
,
. • S.."eoolo- ,._..,.. for . . .n aflor flrol day (cMck ·
fororron-ftntdoy od ..... _bo paper). CoD WoN2:4» p.ill.
day..- puhllcotioa lo ...... • A.k lloot- ... pold Ia ..~..... - ·

446-Golllpollo

36?-G He .

uam .w.

Cord "',.,..

. la.,__a
YordSoloo
' • A cluoillod od--'-t ploood Ia lloo Callipollo Doily

T.U.... ( - , . Ct...IRod Dliplay, Bu'- Cud or Lopl
Netiooo) will o1oo.,... 1a .... Pobot "'-'-"•
lloo Doily S...tlael, ....
18,000 ..._

a.,...,...

w,.. ·-

.

.

245-lllo Cnade

985 ° ,..
1143-Pol'lloa4 '

256-C.,. •• Blot.

247-Lota~F.U.

643-.bot.lo Blot.
· 579-ll'olaut

949-Rodae
742-Ldood
667-CoohiDe

"388-VIatoo

.

615-PL. 1'1...0111
458 .._.
57()-A,pple Cron
773-M882-Naw Bnoa
895-Lotart
937-Balfalo

. r......, .

We Deliver ln. ••
Gallia, Meigs, Mason and
Surrounding Counties

or 614•446·1157

ALLIIAIES
...... hl80rWe
.· Jilek !l-

We

IEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 ~r
985·3561
lcre11 frHt Pest Office
217L ...... St.
NMilOY,OIIO

.

'

HOME HEATING OILS .
DIESEl FUELS • GASOLIRES

aad VCR.REPllr

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace
'

BP OIL CO.

1•800~598·5654

'

'

111711111

Euy WQI'k froni
home. No C.lll atilt
. up. start at Once llld
you'll ...,., hllvelo
wwryllbout
Clvlatni• money
. egalril Income !hit
kMpe going when
YOU cart'l.
(114) 378-6153
llllll • 12 pnund
lpm • 10pm

.

992-lll....portl

. ....'12-tfn

· Chrl8lntM 1ncom.r ·

Galllo Co11nty M... Cotmty Muon Co., WV
Area ~e 614 Area _Code 614 Area (:ode 304

BUILDERS

•A Ou•lity bturefl Co•'""",.
20 Yl'. bp.
Call AI, 614-742·2328

R......ili. Commetc1a1
F-EIIJ-

MOTHERS A.T HOME

. Clauified P~se• ctner the
folllnmn.s tekpllqne e~c#wnse• ... ·

• Prioo olod for aD eapkollouon 1o douldo prioo of od e.-t

~TROMM

Shrub ll1ld Tree

Trimming" Removal
.

PAY BEPORE PUBLICATION
!~p.m. SotulW.y
l:OOp.m. Mondoy
1:00 po~~~. Tueeday ·
1:00 p.m. Wednelclay
100 p.m. Thunday
1:00 p.m.l'rklly

p..,..

· Lawn Mowing,
Fe11JIIzlng, Weeding,
and Seeding.

AREWOOO FOR BAl-E

.

COPY DEADLINE
Mcoiday Paper
Tueocloy'Paper .

.Call 992-2156

ll'listic class. Plant materials 111ust •
the committee.

949·2391o.1·100.131·1460

.SUNDAYS
12:00 Noon
Factory chokil 12
gauge only

WI DO.
AND mitYtNING UNDERNIAIN
IIUGES • ADDinONS e SIDIII

"

PubliC Notice
·

BlLLI&lt;TI\ B&lt;&gt;.\RD

.r
...

~

...

,•·'

DEMOCUT SAMPLE .BAL

.Jiii -SOULSBY ·
For
Sheriff

11

•
'

REAL ESTATE CLASSES
WEEKENDS
•P&amp;P ot.aw •Appraisal •Finance

:~

oConlinuing EducatiOn
Call 446-4367 for more infq.

..

:r

who passed
away
. Nov. 2, 1963
Sadly missed

~

by
Laura Circle

'

.

oo ~iltiuu~~~Ma

•SAND oGRAVEL •DIRT

lvlTenn Com-Ing 11t3113
~JANEl HOWARD

•

•

•
l'

PROSECUnNG An'ORNEY

~JOHN I. LENIES . · . ·

l

'

;o~.

•'

·

.•
•

!1

(

.....,....._:..-.~~-

--- -

"
..
•

'. •.

'

.

.'

:

.

-.aoo

..

CONIII'S HEllS

__

"" :.

.ATTN: LooaiCraftlhopa
and .C I.:lwt
Elmln.alllhe llllcldle m111
.- buywflohnlelrom
Connie.

TANNING··

Clio S.ntlay Calls)

LICENSED anct BONDED

PH. 614·992-5591

12·5-tln

~

.·

-

CEllULAR

.......
..... ............................
.
any
toTALLY AUlOMOTM! I'EAFOIIIIN«:E

D.K.'s

~

·. FARMTOYS

•FREE INSTALLATION• With
phone purchMe
·.
·.
through October 31 ·
' .
. '. . .
Service ratea from 1111.95 per month.
lncludaa 180 minutes Qf Qll-peak air lime.

All Scales • VIII. &amp;

.

Collectable

Set Display At.. .

L-Ing available from •15.00 per monlh.

OUAUTY PRIIT SHOP

.

'

.

•

"

. 255 Mill Street
llclclaport, Ohio
Aak For DaJJ•

Eyenlnga '
814-742'3020

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE

10113/V:i

GUN SHOOT
RACINE FIRE
DEPT.
EVERY
SATURDAY
6:31) P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gaug., Shot
'Strictly _
Enforced
10.12-'12 tfn

'

Anno uncPmrn t s

.,..,.1
UNUMITED TANNING

SIZED.liMESTONE
FOR SALE .
.Call 614·992~
6637

Cheshire, .
FU1111_.

PLUMBING .

. nv~

52500 .

·. _;a! .

949·2826
10.2-'112

'"'···!II

:

· 31904
CI'Mill...
••t~•r.,....;o••

614·992·7144

'-:.t:r.:: •..,..~

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC
lix 894-W•• Ahr
IAONE, OliiO ·
(f-.ty ~ lllolp w
. hjllal

....... ....

~~~~~.;:.

Frta Erlltllt...-742•2160

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

PARTS &amp; SERVICE
MoWers • Ooltt Sow,

· •W~ters ·.

614·949·2804 .
All Hartlwood,
Seasoutl,. · •
'= ,.,.. ....., "'. ,.
$40.00 aloatl
. f • . :. J;::J
••llveretl.
. ~ • N•.;·I-......,.;,....,(· .
I . ,
.
(614) 992·5449 .
•

'f

' "

~

...

Nov. 4, 8:30: ·orled
Mllltrlal Sweg"
C.H the Trolley St.tlon ·
fQrniONiftfo.

........,..~:~

·,·

1crt12111

·'

.

'

.

Q•llty
Stone Co.

RIIIW •niCE

•'

'
~------ ·
3 A.nnouncements

St. Rt. 7

...........ac~••
o.....,

1ctr.llltJI1 mo•

.·

614-949·2101 • 949·2.60
or 915~ JI39

985·4473
667·6179

·

,,

. . COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
. FREE ESTIMATES

fREE ESTIMATES .

SWAGS bv Connie:

.

. PONDS
. SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
· BASEMENTS &amp;
HOMESITES .
HAULING: LllllQBIQne,
Dirt, Gravel end Coal

•New Homes ····
· •Garages
•Co•plete ·
•••d•li•t
Stop &amp; Co•pare

..... 111.00 .

. ·~ ...

.
New Garages • Replacement WTndows
·
Room Additions • Roofing

BISSELL &amp;: BUR.KE
· CONSTRUCTION

FOREVER
BRONZE

814-8824548

New Homes • VInyl Siding

I.------.....,

IWidcillfted IWIIgl,
_
......... polplurrl

CRAFT .CLASSES
• Ocl. 21, 8:30 1!111: .
"Lunch BMkat" 114.00
Nov. I, 8:30 prn: "Pie. ·

......TIIJiiELL..-.- ...................-".~-....... .

___,..

o•••

. llcl•,
He ... Sloop Otlea (or Fl'll

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

H1NRV I.
CULAII)--··-······"··
.. -·....- -..
TRACY
BFINAGEA...-.....
__ ...._. ____
.....
.111
..

"'""'"'"

USED RAILROAD

S2100I.LUI

TROlLEf RATIOI
CUFTS

fti,IIIO.

~----'!-'-.~------

BILL SLACK
992·2269

&amp; EYEilASTIIGS

1011

IHOP CLELAND AI!ALTY FIRST FOR ALL OF
YOUR HOU...G NEEDII
'

u. Dt ''"' r..•

FlEE·
. HAVI
...... , ... I.Nw........
Ah• 6,.&amp; 614-915.4110

and

.'

.

INnRIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

POIEAbY - 8prlng /we. - 1 floor ,,.,.,. homs will 2
bechoma, NG .FA heat, lull baHmanl; utility
. , . . , 1\Pplillal, CIIU hook up, good looallon. .

..

. -Itt

'*"'-'"

. JUBnCE OF THE OHIO SUPREME COURT
~Full Tenn Commencing 1/2193

.

'7 IOOma, 4 bedrooma,
addad lnllillllon, large Iron!
J11,00Q.

lA 124-1117 Forl&amp;l Park Molllle Hollie.on 1..10 8CN
lncludea 3
ball, llrga 11v1na liM, plua 17X62
U&amp;l1llll and two 15!152 carpo!tl. Qoocf loolllon. Home I"
GREAT llllpel
.
.
S21,0DO.

..'•

'

garden .,..,

.

.

~JO ..N I. PAnON

TREE

TRIM and
REMOVAL

.
aupplleL
HOURI: 10 -.a pm
Wed.-tlctt. 1Mi2

"Tale IN l'rJi O.t Of l'rJillrrt

IIDOLEPOI'IT • Brownell St. - 1 loOr , _ home with
.a beclrooma, bath, lull baHmenl, one car garage; ·
~. FA NG h10~ lillie apec:e, addad lnaulabl.

.
'.

·rxt
~ FUNCIS E. SWEENEY ·.
.

Milar end

.'

.'

&amp; co.

DEXTER- tis I!Qry hQme wilh

I

JUBnCE OF THE OHIO SUPREME COURT
Full Tel'ri'l Comme'nclng1/1/83

-

1

t9~::~;~G

m

I

Jv1 Full Tenn Comrnenclng1/1/83 .
- ~ lOBEII 'H. GORMAN

JOHN LENTES .
For

:(11)2; 1TC

101

a.

''

CHIEF JUSnCE OF THE SUPREME COURT

.:

· SHRUB

'(.14) 992·3470

RIDUCEDI 1"' atorr, log home. 11!1 lolomlng
Road,
Rail. ,. bedrooma, canllli lir, 5+ 8CNI, large flont .
peW!, lull .....,_,1, 2 ':*' garage, only 4
old.
COME _seE. .~-~·-. .
110 171,100

•'

lvl COUNTY TREASURER .
· ~MAUREEN HENNESSY

Treasurer .·

992·3838.

.BISSELL ·BUILDERS, INC. .

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING ·

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN
SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
·
·

EXCAVATING

. we Alao HMtJ eoiol,
·UiM, Com, Grain
ancj Wood

REDUCED! Film localecl c:1o1e 10 Chelllr. 711.33 acrea ·
With 1112 . IIOIY home, bam, ponda, ailo, linclng,
oulbuldnga. lrull INII, canlnlf lir. Thia II'- mull be
- 1 0 INir be~
Now AKing •.ooo

l

f"V1 COUNTY SHERIFF ·
'
L.I.UJAMES MORRIS SOULSIY

~ Har,

. 992·2259
.08 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OH~O

992-62IS

1:00 P.M.

WICK'S
IIAUUNG SERVICE ·

,_.,. ..,.

::.= ·.

· 1~91Sciflcd Sclloal.d. ·
Galil,.ls, 11Wt
."(aU (614)446-9416 O!I-100-172-S967

P01111roy, Ohio
IL---~~W-1~
V~~~· · L-----~~~

MALONE
36970WI•I
....
.

Bennetts Mobile Home ~~n1g

949·2168

•FIREWOOD

'l-IMESTONE ·

For

FREE ESnMATES

. •LIGHT HAULING :

COUNTY COMMISSIONER

MAUREEN
HENNESSY

$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

.__~_

COUNTY COMMISSIONER

lvl COUNTY

Gutter Cle$ning
· Painting

27 In ardor to provide lntno•
a1a1•, tong dlatance ,....
phone _,._ In Adame,
F c1
12
Aahllnd,llalmoill, Crawford,
a . Ory
Hot mea, Marton, Mal go,
Gauge Choke
Monroe, Richland, ind
0/2QI'a
1
211
Wayne ooundea, Ohio. Any 1.-~----...1.
In-teo~ peraon,n.... corporallon, -or enllly who can .----::::-:
lhow good cauH whr thla
appllcetlon ahould not be
g,.nle!l ahoulcl file with the
Coml!lluton 1 written alit•
ment deiiiUng the reaaona BUllDOZE!! 1_~CKHOE
llri or .before November 5,
Mid TRACIU'tUI; WORK
. AVAILABLE. ·
1882.UnleulheCommlulon
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
r-lvea 1 wrltla!l alltement
HOME liTES alld
to tllat elfeGl and u accomTRAILER II~!!,
panying reqileit lor an oral
. LANDCLEAAims
hearing In ·thla matter, the
DRIVEWAYSINBTAilED
ca.. will be decided on the
baala -of the Information · UI,!ESlONE.TRUCKING.
FREE ESTIMATES
conlalneclln the appiJcatlon
.ancllhe alflclavlla aut&gt;mltted
br the applicant. Further Information may 1M obtained
llr oonlliodng .._Public uuulleaCommlulonoiOhlo,180
, J:aal BroadStreet, Columbua,
' Ohio 432H-0673.

................. '

Real Estate General

REPRESENTAnVE

~URI

CIRCLE

.~

lvl.REPRESENTAllVE TO CONGRESS
~ .lED SIRICIUND
lvl STATE

·

In Memory
WESLEY

.,

.

In Memory

. .. -- ·-

··'"'
·..'
•'

$ .20
$.30

Public NOtice

• lEGAL NOTICE .
NottcetegtwnthatAmerlllne Communlcallona, Inc.,
lka Long Dle~ca Ohio, Inc.
h~~allled 1n apptlcallon with
thto Publlo UliU..._ Colnmloalon of Ohio IC.ee No. 81•
1751-TP-AAC).
AIHI'Ittn• Com,.unlca·
llone,lnc. lkal.onQ Dlalance
Ohio, lno. JNOPOI.. to am•d
lla Certlllw.. of Publlo Conv•llftoe and "-*'lly No.
.
.

2

.\

STATES SENATOR

· ~JOIN . GLENN

BULUIIN'IOARD DEADLINE
8
P.
M
D
11'it BEFORE
.' 4•30
•
•
•
A'fiON
'-- ·
.
'
PUBLIC
~---...;...;~;;;;.;;,;.;;,;.;;..;,;;;;__ _ _-1

"

rvJ PRESIDENT I VICE PRESIDENT
~ BILL CLINTON I AL GORE
rvl UNITED

t

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

Gutters
DownspOuts

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

OF STUFF·

.J

JANET HOWARD
For
CoBIIIissioner

1
. 15
3
15
6
15
10
15
Monthly 15

THANA
GARAGE·FUL •

....

NEW-REPAIR

RATES
Days · Words Rate Over.15 Words

.A HANDFUL
OF CASH
BETTER

and "ThC Minsti:el Boy·" by Leroy
Community Band will present its Andmon. . •
.
premiere conccri at Meigs lunior ·
Communhy band members
High School on Nov. 8 at 3 p.m. come from all walks of life includThe SO-piece .bend has been prac. ing JX9fessionals, teachers an'd coltieing weekly at Meigs -High lege and high school students; Bill
Scl'toOl since Sept._14 in anticipa" HaD, band director, said, "We have
lion of Ibis evenL
' • been amazed at the turn-out for
Featuml music 011 the~ rehearsals. There is so much enthuwill be Jobn Philip Sousa s march siasm shown by the players; you
"The Fairest of tbe Fair.~ and can tell Jhat they are happy 10 be
IICioc&amp;i0111 from Rod&amp;a:'s and Ham· playing apin." The musical.quality
lllllleill'l' mullic:al "The Sow\d or or the band exceeded all expccla'Muelc." Other pieces 10 be· per~·· HaD repOrted, as wen as the .
'formed arc "Credo" by Robert stze
and balance of instrumenl8·
·. Smith, "Overture for Winds" bt tion. "I have played in community
· Charlca Carter, '"''he Bucannecr, · · bands that have sttugglcd for ye$1
"Noble Men~ by Henry Fillmore, to schieve what we hive done in a

'

Qwality HI Effideacy
Air Condilioaers, Heal
Pumps, Furnaces &amp;
Now Water Heaters.

ROOFING ·

CLASSD'IF.IIS
GET BE8l11..TS • J'An't

The recently formed Big Bend

·Howard L Wrltesel

·-

........

�Plhilllll..
l-12-lbe Deily Sentinel

Ohio

Yll'd ....

7

42 "*II Hamil

II

torRinl

Ol'lpaUe
I VIcinity

.......

Pomwoy ..ddleport,

HeM llhlld
Go alii

Television
Viewing
.•

I

MON.. NOV. 2 •
C1tlili 1V Lilliftl • • h weiiit. n-.
EVENING

1:00 (2).

(1).

13'

FRUWEC

,

(I). • •

o• o ......

Pomeroy,
MiddlepOrt
&amp; VIcinity

(J) . . , . "' lila ...
~ ..._. One TV Stert9 .

•

..,.

0 Chlc:keNCI

.I ._

(lJ-InlheWorldta
cam-~anc~~ego?

77W715.

n --r·. .'!"'..:.e=·
dupl~tl?llro.,...,bod-

' 1181 mobile home 141:70, ov1r
hiH ocro lot comiOIOioly fur·
nlohod lnctiidn ootolllto dloh,
304.a7W722.

.

Wanted to Buy

*~'

CllD ~11!'*'....,51

~-~;;-Q'-::~·:-

2bclnn. ................... .,.
p i - - - . loundty

- '"""='' . -

!Il. ManleCI -

lntaom.

... _ _
ol: -~
• Alii. .....
Gilt I1UICI m1. 101t

.-For··;:L-..
..,..

100 To 1,100

l.acltll!lg For A OUt? Conoldor A
~~..ownod llobUo Homo, urgo
IIIII Poulo'o O.y·Coro Contor 1 -tl!'l 1on, ~ llcnoy Down,
-Wool 01 HMC On Jockton Froo Sot.Up And O.llvory. 1-800.

Employment Serv1ces

Piu 11-F I A.ll. -5:30 P.M. H
OUIIHY And Exportonoo lo Tho
11 COncom For YoiW Chlid'o
Clro. COli 1/1 For A VloH. lnlont
/Todcllero en 441 1227. p ·--Agol14-4411224.

Help wanted

·=
=""';.,.:;,.,,.,;;;..;,;.;;-·AVOII' ALL AREA81 ..... your
,ODifti*IJ. tao •

114'

·. - Pd. fod,

Ford

Sz~~oo

11-, rww murtler,

, . .Good
. ChoroUo,
Drlw.
Concltlonl4 -Excot- ·
..,.. ·lloch. Condl u ,ooo 114-

P~~·~£-~CTION
POLITICAL

..... ioodod,~.

CllovY Aol"' Tlora Mini
V... Mint bondMion,_ PI, PW,
ae. Air t.OOnGIUonlna.
Air
Condlliono&lt;
T.V.:, VCR. _ , Sto:IOh.Color
,,...
111 , . . Aft• I P.ll.

-ood
ll:f-2111.

Doubto Wldo, 3 BodAnd 2 Boiho, Colhodroi

~24d4,

a

- - - ~ l&gt;ON'T !'NOw t'I0\.4"
~·M GOING TO

PHILLIP
ALDER

Tonight

MAte~
w~Ttl

TONI6t4T

~~oo..,,~

..

S"tereo.
(I).Youa.tY-W.

1311.

ae-on..

7:35 w Sanford a 1on
1:00 (2). 11J MOYIE: 'Problem
Child 2' NIIC llotldeJ Night
at the Movlet (PG13) (1 :30)
(J) MOVIE: Pate'a IINgoft {G)
(2:00)

.. .

Bulldlnli

,a PooltJono A.- F a t -·
..... ~- 111111 Bo
•AIIIo To Warll E~ a Ovor·

Supplies

ALLEYOOP

'lllghl Shllta lncludlnj Holldop
a Wookondo. lluot Bo Aoliobto

CllD !ll •

Poroon Able To Work u . Minlmum Suporvtolon. Pleooo
"-'&lt;! To: P.O. Box 414, OoJ.
lpotlo, OH 411831.

YMN~t~lndlanlo

.lc!nft Chranlelel Indy learns
lessons in passion and
deception from Mall Harl,

Stereo. C

11 Aulollor Sllle

=-=~:-

~~.;::.:~::.

..

(PG13)

:.-~::ro.·~
.......
_,..__

...... ...

:::. ''.i:rli.¥ =..·~

Mai!*Up
PllmcNawa

8

EEKANDMEEK

78 . Auto Parts &amp;

1:01 (J) MOVIE: The Cowtoya
(PG) (2:30) ·

~1+\E.~

oMag111no
NFL~' Night
Chicago 'Beant

C'JJE.R...

Celnpar8&amp;

Motor Homes

•-wv.

composer. Stereo.

i'. c. Mu!phy . _

46' Spaee for Rent

Darlington, S.C. (T)
Gil Larry King Uvel
Fa- DoNIIng IIM&lt;hnylllltetlri'ieMI

8

il .

. . _ ..... .,._TINDII

Wul•ndl._

Ell·

Ohio
Woo11f1111on
lo Clloo t Clooo I W I lo • c:.l

~ II,

Counly. .....

ooukl

-·-&amp;--114'
-

Or .... P

••• -

-TI

.'

'

. I

r
0

0

Wal&lt;tr'a ca,

a.-•

aWOfldNeft
10 700 CluL Willi Pat

~~- ·

10:300 GNII AmMcan 1 ! -

10:36 ()) MOVIE: lhe w.. I

--

Yetlow AlLton (2:00)

11:aoC2l• ClJ • •

o•' o

liaqteroo.
.CiuL

e··=·•

...... Tonight

~

.

and Mn. King

X I

ZNSK81!

I T M N E' Y

K X I

li5. 'lwutlng lluhla'

IIIVMNRI

..

ITU811

ZITII .

c

NVMNRI

N

'

•, 'o'

IGAIUVXJNC

I T C ,

11:31 (J). 11J Tonight 111ft With
Jey lMO St8ro6.

'I

. • k.

R•

:;:~::Pot Ito~
.....,~~~e
•

--·. ----·,_.._A_... .

CIPHER
--wo:"':..,,.w.iiiCELEBRITY
.. ......,,_ • ·, • ,.,._.--. _.._.,.,_..,

Q

11130(!)=£.
'
(lJ
olouniel
AIMnlo Hall Stereo.

or-

....

:......... ""'"" a-. ONe,
;

o

:Do-

WliMod Wltor Operator In .¥111110 .Gf
-

=·~·w·

w.

itiit•liiii••illll•ill•

:1l.~ ....

, . . . Olloo ... -

11J To lila Announced

.
aoaaono of My
Conway
Twitty, Randy 'travis, Tanya
Tucker and olhefs join
Loretta Lrnn aa she
remlniaces and travols to hor
hOm8IOWn ol Butcher Holler,
Ky. (1 :00)

ligna are rbmantlcally perll!ll lor you. than a bummer. Don't worry about
Mall $2 plua a '""~~· 1811-addrasaed thlngllhat will never happen.
atamped envelope to Matchmaker, c/o TAUIIUI(Aprti»MQ 20) Don't 1'81181
thta newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Clove- change today, even WIt'~ lmpoaecl upon
BERNICE .
land, OH 44101·3428.
you by outlkl4i !Orc:oo. A ahiH that ap·
BEDEOSOL SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 21-Dec. 21) You pure lntlmtdatlng at flntt Ia being engl·
.,.. now In a brief cycle whore your newed by Lady Luck.
hope8 .and expeclatlona have be11er W Ill (..., 21-.lune 20) Wyou treat
ch.,_ 01 being roa11zec1 than ueual. lt'OM you do buolnell with more like
Take poolllve ,.......res to 1um11 your ffleildt than commorclal colloaguel to·
d~, benellla cen be dertwd. Your por.
uplratlona.
• CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.lan. 11) Your eonal touch Ia ~1.
greateet UMI today II your ability to CANCU(..... I1......., Zl) 80 alert lor
take the Ideal ol others and expand opportune dewlopmeuta today whore.
upon them In wap that could prove your - I • concerned. Tha big brook
bene11c1a1 to -..yono conc:ernecl. Put . yOu've .been hoping lor might IMI uoh·
your giH to uee.
erect In through a fortunate chain ol
AQUARIUS (.1811. ·»-Feb.· 11) Attitude . ctrcumllencea.
Now. 3,1W2
II . ext~ lmportont today, 11 you LIO (.Nir
Zl) People you k119W
Your lnatlnCil portalntng to wayt to think and btihave like a wtnner poaltlve aoclally c:ould be a big help lo you today
generally Improve your lot In llle will be rOOUito are lklly. Don't let ..il-doubta · In an unrelelod - · Traat any IIPI or
heightened In the , _ lhead. · Thla ·. y0u to believe otherwloo
ad¥lce they mar otr.r you Mrtouily.
COitld be a banrW cycle lor rou - II you · PIICII(M. IHiarah 20) ~y Luck VIIIGO (AIII-II I.,C. Zl) Thlala a procapHaiiH on all your opportunltlea.
mlghtllngte you out today and help you · pltiOul day lOr lmportent ancleavtn,
ICOIWIO (oat M , .. :.11) In ordtr to raecll your financial or - - objec- · PI cMclad you'ro proparod to lottow
II'!IPfOV8 your nnanclal aiiUitiOn, It mighl t ' ' -· She;ll char1the path ar,c~ open the thlnp tltrougllto concluiiOn. Oellrabte
be nee mary to tae a calCulated rlalq d--. The root, o1 coune, will be up lo rwu111 are Indicated.
toer. If your r n --t . _ that you.
·
a..~&lt; flepl. 11o0ot. 111 An kteo
the-odde aroln your llvOr, mike your • - • c . - 11·Aprll11) You
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111M. Know where to loOk lOr rornanc:. · be In lOr 1 ........,IIUrprlae today when
potential thin you may raallza.
. IIIII you'H llild II. The. _AIIJo,Graph ' WOU Cl""onLthiL a...lltuallon you've Have It evlluatld today by • -eel
Mafchrn-'&lt;er ln!"antly . - I I , wlllch been '""Ung about 11 a boom rather lrtliiil wllcrw-m~~t-.llt·IIIJIIIod than you

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former runnjng back Waner
Payton, Boars defensive
tackle Steve McMichael and
Minnesota Vikings fanner
rumlng beck Chuck
Foreman.

3S Lots &amp; Acreage

Wesl
Nor Ill Eoot
Wben you are defending, it is a rea· Sottq
Pass
Pus
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Pass
3NT
All pooo
throw lOiters. But what do you do if I NT
.' .
both your choices are winners? Then
Opening
lead:
+
2
you must be careful to abandon Ute ·
right one.
Today's deal, which arose during '------:---'-----......1
the NEC World Team Olympiad, re·
suited in at least one red face because
of an Ill-advised discard.
. cashed his two remaining bell t t · ks
When West led a low spade, South ' ending in the dummy ·and eJtedn~tb
called for the queen because be want- : the spade nine. The defenden caabed
eel to get into the d.m~my. Now came a their spade tricks, ending 1n Eut'i.
low club to. the k1ng, East cleverly . band. He switched to the diamooiohev&lt;
playing the nine. Back to dvmmy with ' en, but declal'l!r guesse.t coroecti
a heart, decla'fer led another club; . playin&amp; low from band
y,
East dropped the two. Refusing to be
At another table ~ wilel k t
deflected, South went up with the club all four hearts. ~wing be ~t
queen; then he exited with a club, West \ afford a diamond discard, East tbl'ew'
dilcardtng a low,heart. East returned ; bls remaining low spade. Now when
a spade to South s ace.
declarer cubed the bearts before exit
.Wbelt declarer cubed hls Jut club J ing with the spade nioe, East - with
tnck, West threw a diamond, but wbat the spade jack and cas11ec1 a beari
~ould East release? One East dis· trjclt:. The defenders had five wtnnen·
carded an appal'l!ntly useless low . two spades one heart oue d.lamooKi
~art. Yet this was fatal. Declarer and one club.
'

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Sage advice from granny: "Be bold and courageous.
When.you look back on your life you'll regret the things
you d.idn't
than
the ONES you DID."
.. . . do more
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SCU.M-I.ETS ANSWERS

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ",In potila, II 'you want anything Mid, Ilk 1 man; : •
II you wont My~htng · Ilk 1 woman." ~ Margoret-TIIatcher. -

�By JORGE AMADO
A-..elated Prtu Writer
LUANDA, Angola - Spondic
IUIIfU'C ~ In the capital IOday
6oun after a U.N.-brobnd fire
e&amp;ct, but witnesles Slid
the fightiDa was less intense than
the W«tead clasbcs thlt threatmed
to renew civil ww.
Some civilians were reponed
looting bulldina• that had been
used by UNIT A rebels. Police
vehicles with loudspeakers eruiscd
the lliCCts appealing roc an end 10
the
A machme-gun battle filled for
about an hour after a police
armored car shelled UNITA positions in Luanda's diplomatic quar- ·

""*

shootin,.

.

~o:e:;:; ~o:;o.:::!

of the capital, but witnesses said

~=::d::::::::
died

Vikings
pound
Bears ,

:l:;iiiiWia

doctors, nothing, just bodies and
ill WubiiJiton, aid !he
an "Ill-out offensive
wounded lying 011 the floor...
The situation ouuide Lunda by ?be aoflllllllell? .. The aovern·
was unclear today. A resident of ment blimed UNITA.
The e•u•lties included three
the port city of Beai'Mia ?Old '!1Porta
...... th'!' dead Sunday ~y
Auocietec! Prell of heavy ~Mg
mil·
thele, 1M ?be auce III'P* to be IO"UIF • palic)e, They taJren
for
UNIT
A
members
trying
'-okling in otber c:itiea.
Durina Sundly's fish~ . 10 flee, u. rcpor1Cd.
U.N. offteials in Luan.~ ssid
Luanda, prvenunent forte~
•
by armored personnel carrters they ~ not confirm ICJ!"*ts that
pounded UNITA positions with two U.N.~ WIR kiled..
mortar and machin~-gun fire. ,
The c:iVII - . whicb brotc out
Armed civilians, including teen· shortly befcn indCpendence tiom
agers, fousht alongside police Portugl1l in 197S, $UI1Ied into one of
the Cold Wit'S fiercest proxy batagains? the rebels.
.
Jardo Muekalia, a UNIT A da
·

.

armed civilians moved out agala1t UNIT A
strongboldl In Luanda Suaday, poud:::l the
rormer rebels with mortar llllells and a
..e.
gna fire. A UN-sponsored ea.ftre lOok llold In
the southwest AFrican nation Sunday. (AP
Photo)

Fighting reported near Sarajevo
By TERRY LEONARD
Associated Press Writer
SARAJEVO, Bosnill-Herzegovina - Heavy fighting was .reported
today between Serb and Bosnian
government forces in a broad arc of
territory nonh of Sarajevo, where
the government is steadily losing
ground.
Sarajevo radio reported intense
clashes around Olovo, Srebrenica,
Gradacac, Tuzla and Brck:o, IOwns
all located north and east of
Bosnia's besieged capital.
. It also reported heavy shelling
of S10lac, in SOI)thwestern BomiaHerzegovina near the CroatiaJI border. S10lac was attacked after more
than a month or relative peace, it
said.
Bosnia's Muslim"led government on ·Sunday rej.~:ct~!J Serbmade clothing brought by UNICEF
for needy Sarajevo children, an 1

indicatiori af the ·depth of animosity
felt for the Serbs, who have
besieged the city for severi months.
· "What could be more cynical
than to give this aid to a ldd whose
father was k:illed two days ago by
the same source?" · said Deputy
Premier Zlatko ~dzija.
Manuel Fontame, a UNICEF
representative in Sarajevo, said
other clothing would be SCllt quick:·
ly 10 replace the soclts. shoes and
winter clothing~ which arrived on
Sunday with UNICEF's executive
director, James P. GranL
GI'8Jil poclaimed the be~nning
of a "week: of tranquility ' -. a
time to provide supplies for chil·
dren before winter sets in. But
week:end fighting was intense.
Bosnian officials said nine people
were ldlled and 111 wounded in
fighting on Saturday, the heaviest
in weeks.

State of emerge-ncy :
·declared by Yeltsin
MOSCOW (AP) - President
Boris Yeltsin today declared a state
of emergency in two regions of
southern Russia to try to stop the .
latest explosion of ethruc warfare
in the Caucasus. ·
The declaration comes after
fighting brok:e out Friday between
lngush and Ossetian forces in
North Osselia. lngush mililaniS are
demanding conttol of part of Nonh
. Ossttia.
Following 'II Kremlin meeting
with his security council, Yeltsin
· · imposed the f110nth-long state of
emergency in North Ossetia and
lngushetia, a neighboring region
thai is predominandy ln~sh.
Yeltsin appointed VICe Premier
Georgy. Khizha 10 govern the conflict :zone temporarily. The decree
bans the activity of political

groups; allows roc searches of vehicles and people, increases secmity
at k:ey facilities such as power
plants and talces control of broad·
castin~ facilities, newspapers and
magazmes.
Seven people have been ldlled
and scores of Russian servicemen
talcen hostage since the violence
began. Russian paratroopers and
Interior Ministry llOOpS were called
in Sunday to help separate the
lngush and Ossellan fighters in
Prigorodny, near the capital of
Vladitavkaz, the ITAR-TBS$ news
agency said
Clashes ncar Vladikavlcaz were
reported today, despite a cease-rue
agreed to both sides that included
using the Russian llOOpS as a buffer
force, IT AR·Tass said. At least two
people were killed and nine
wounded, it said .

.

There was only lporadic fighting in Sarajevo overnight, and
occasional infanll')' fighting continued on a hill south of the Bosnian
presidency building.
On Sunday, a cameraman for
the British Broadcut Corp. was
killed when his vehicle was hit by
mortar rue near the northeastern
town of Travnit. Tihomir
Tunutovic, a Croatian, was at least
the 29th joumalislldlled covering
Bosnia's war.
Presidents Alija lzetbe~ovic of
Bosnia and Franjo TudJman of
Croatia met Sunday in Zagreb,
Croatia, in an apparent efforno
defuse tensions between the once
nominal allies.
A joint statement said the two
leaders agreed to punish those
r~spol)siblt~ for recent Muslim·
Croat clashes and 10 fonn a joint
military command to prevent fublre
conflicts.
Bosrtian officials have accused
the Croats of secretly conspiring
with Serb nalionalisls to the divide
up moat of Boani1 Only 1 101111
portion of the JqJUblic is still held
by the government's outgunned
supporters, who have recendy suffered a steady string of defeats in
northern towns.
The UNICEF aid was to be distributed among all ethnic groups.
F.ive truck:S carrying the relief supplies arrived in the capital on Sunday and five remained in Pale, the
Serb lieadquancrs outside Sarajevo.

RUNNING FOR COVER - Realduts of
Sar*vo prepare tu 1'1111 acn8 a street Ia dowa·
IOWII Sarajevo, ductlna anti-aircraft maclalae
pa fire wllld1 ilblal•a tbe r - military llolpltat (out or pboto • ri&amp;ht) Monday. Hetvy

Liberian rebel
blamed ih killing
MONROVIA, Liberia (AP) - .
Monrovia's Roman Catholic arch·
bishop today bllmed rebel leader
Chlrfes Taylor for the slaying of
five American nuns and prayed that
the guerrillas would end their siege
' oftbecapl!ll.
~

fiahtlal WM reported Monda;, hetweea Serb
ud ...... acmruant fon:a Ill • brold are
or territor;, aort11 or SuaJml, w11ere 111e ao•eo •·
meat illtadlly loollaalfOIIDd. (AP l'llolo)
·

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von FOI

Robert C. (lola) Hartenbach
for •••• Co. Co••lsslo••r

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. .----------~~~~~~~~~~-.---,

WHY. VOTE FOR

Vol. 4S, No. 1SI
Copyr!ghted 1182

JOHN LENTES 'I

By BRIAN J. REED
• Sentinel News Stair
Pomeroy Village Administrator
John Andelson updaled the village
council on several pending
improvement projects when coun·
cjJ met in regular lleSSion Q11 Monday evening.
The village'$ new sewer treatment pla!tt, which will aiiJIIICDI the
existmg facility behtnd Bob
Roberts Field, is ahead of schedule,
and nesrly 95 percent complete,
Replacement of water line in the
area of West Ma.in Street to the
Middleport corporation line is

expected ·to go to·bid by the end of Historical ~o.ciety has requested
November, Anderson said. The clarification of portions of the jlroengineering work on .that projeCt is ~sal, and a timetable for such clarnow underway and will be hand Ification is not k:nown. The comdelivered to the Ohio Environmen- missioners are administering the
tal Protection Agency in Logan grant, which was· awarded through
discretionary funds of the Ohio
once it is completed.
A project to extend sewerage Department of DevelopmenL
The sewerage system and the
service 10 the new Riverside Food
Mart on West Main S~met is in the water line project are also funded
environmental assessment stage, through governmental grants.
i
with the ad~ertising process now
Anderson also said that tlie
underway.
engineering firm of Burgess &amp;
Mary Hobstetter, clerk: for the Niple of Park:ersbQrg, W.Va. is
Meigs County Commissioners, gathering da?a as it relates to a joint
reported on Tuesday that the Ohio water system between Middleport
'

VOTE JOHN
LE
.

MIL TON, Mass. (AP) George Bush was born in this town
a couple miles south of BOSton 68
years ago, but he's no favorite son
among some voters.
· "I am a Perotist," proclaimed
Stanley Manin, a jeweler. "I'm

tired of politics as usual. Give a
man lik:e Bush four years and if he
hasn't proved himself, why give
him four more just because he was
born locally? He's not a hometown
guy. He hasn't lived here...
For Manin, owner of Grono &amp;

s

FOR A BETTER MEIGS COUNTY
. ,.

QUESDON:
WHY SHOULD RICH JONES BE RE-ELECTED
'f.O THE OFFICE OF COUNTY
COMMISSIONER?
EXERCISING THEIR RJGHT • Joyce Ana MeCarthf, left,
and Jllll O'Brlea, were out early Ibis Electlou Day dolnllbeir dvk:
duty by exeo dlla=drlpt to vote. They're pldured as ~ey vote
at the third~
at ~Pomeroy Fire Departmeut. . ,

BECAUSE HE HAS PRODUCED
FOR THE
&lt;
PEOPLE OF MEIGS COUNTY DURING HIS
TIME IN OFFICE.

LETS LOOK
AT THE FACTS••••

•'

FACT-Rich Jones has always supported Village governments by distributing '
Block Grant monies to assist them witlf their needs.
.
FACT-Rich Jones led the way in establishing our current E,M.S. system and is
a strong supporter of that agency. The construction of a Heliport has
saved many lives.
FACT-Rich Jones has stood up to Sta$e and F9deral agencies and fought for , 1
Meigs County's fair share.
FACT-Rich Jones has supported Township governments with Block Grant
monies.
•
FACT-Rich Jones assisted in bringing Nursing Homes to Meigs County with
"no-risk" Industrial Revenue Bond sales.
·FACT-Rich Jones has assisted Fire peoenmaots with Block Grant monies.
FACT-Rich Jones was a leader lr\ establlshlilg the Meigs County Development
·
Office by assisting with financing. .
FACT-Rich Jones worked to keep the Meigs Mines open and retain coal miners
jobs. He testified before the PUCO in both Athens and Canton.
•.
FACT-Rich Jones has dempnstrated financial management ability by maintain·
ing a balanced County Budget.
FACT-Rich Jones ~s held the line on Ill increases.

RICH ]ONES il a prtmen letuler•••
working full-tims for the people of Meig• County . ··

Clinton is no exception,
althouch there was a time she
wasn't happy with him because he
tried to wriggle out of questions
about his character and his draft
status.

Bush, she said, ran an undignified campjlign. "I didn't think they
could get any dirtjer than they did
in '88, but they did," she said
.
John Minjlolelli, · a Boston
banker whose inWstry was hard hit
by the recessi.on and who lost
money himself in invesunent propas he .tried to flag down the vehicle erty, was drawn to the Clinton tid·
for assistance.
et because of running mate AI
Bates and his ~nger, Regina Gore's envirorimental stance.
F. Cook, 28, Gallipolis, were tranS"I don't know if I'm crazy
ported by the Gallia County Emer- about any candidate," Mingolelli
gency Medical Service to Holzer said. "Everything was rehashed
Med1cal Center where they were over and over again. They don't
admit?ed for trea?ment.
really getiO the poinL They just tell
Winbigler was uninjured.
you what you want 10 hear.'
Batea was listed in guarded conIn the Milton home wbere Bush
dition and Coot was listed in IIIJ1ble lived for only six months after his
condition Tuesday morning, a hos- birth, the current occupant, Nina
pital spotreswoman said.
couldn't be counted on 10
Batea' 1982 Chevrolet Ciprice Graves,
vote for him,llthough her husband,
and Evans' 1980 Oldsmobile Cut· Dean. is a staunch Bush supporter.
~ere both destroyed in the
"I was definitely for Bush
the debates," she said. "I
before
The accident is Gallia County's was pretty
impressed with Mr.
fifth fatal wreck of the. year.
~ I guess I really don't k:now."

Man k·illed in wreck,
two others injured

,.

Councilman Bill Young again
brought 10 council's attention needed repairs .on Willis Hill. According 10 Young, emergency vehicles
recently had difficulty responding
to a call in the area, and he
expressed concern for the safety of
residents in the area in those circumstances. The road is damaged
due to a slip, and estimates .
obtained by council earlier, involving piling installation and road ·
repair, placed repair costs at
approximately $10,000.
Courtcil also: . ·
• Presented a plaque· to the Big

Christie Inc. Jewelers in this town
of more than 2S,OOO, ,business has
· been off during the weak economy
under Bush. He wants a return 10
the past of textile, shoe and wa?ch
. manufll!:turing in the United States
instead of abroad.
"I'd tile~ to· sec government.sponsored industries which \Yould ,
put people to work: and generate ·
taxes," Manin said.
Like Manin, other voters across
the country are disenchanted with
the dirty campaigns run by Uush
and Bill Clinton and .are skeptical
about the future.
· ~ Some were leaning toward ROss
Perot, waiting to hear what he had
10 say in an e~on eve TV m~­
sage Monday mght before dec1d·
ing.
COMMITTEE RECOGNIZED • Pomeroy .
Voters backejl· their candidlte
VIllage Coun~il present,.. a plaque to the Big
for a variety of reasons: Party loyBend Sterawheel Association last ni&amp;bl, in
alty and tradition, the economy, the
recogni?IDa or the sacceSI or last moatb's Big
envirorunenL
Janice Gilbert, a Boston legal
secre7ary, said she always votes for
the ()emocraL

ANSWEB;

FACT-Rich Jones is continually working to improve Meigs County highways.
Over 150 miles have been blaCktopped.
FACT-Rich Jones is leading the effort to obtain STATE highway improvements
to bring about Ecor!omic [)eyeloomeot.
FACT-Rich Jones has strongly supported the Senior Citizens Center and

and Pomeroy, a project which both
village councils and mayocs have
been considering for several
months.
Mayor Bruce Reed distributed
petitions 11nd em;ouraged council
members to circulate them in support of extended area telephone
service between Pomeroy/Middleport and Mason and New Haven,
W.Va. The project is being spearheaded by the Meigs County Economic Development Office and
MasOn Mayot George Nichols. The
petitions are restricted to one name
per household or telephQne.

Bend Sternwheel Association,
through John Thomas, in appreciation of the success of the recent
Third Annual Big Bend Stemwheel
FeStival;
- Accepted the mayor's report of
fines collected, totaling $8,041, for
the month of October;
- Set leaf pick:up in the village
for the week:ofNovember9.
Present, in addition 10 Anderson, Reed, and Young, were Cooncit members Betty Baronick, John
Blaettnar; Scott Dillon, Larry
Wehrung and Thomas Werry; and
Clerk:.Kathy Hysell.

Voters tired ofpolitics·as
usual as campaign ends

u,s.

-

1 Sec:t!on,10 , . . 25 Ollila
A llult?med?l lni:. Nflw prper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohi9.L TUesday, November 3, 1992

Pomeroy council receives update on village projects

NED OUNn PROSECUTOR

Senior proarams.

•

586

•

pte
in the wedl:end fighting,
the worst outburst since tenSions
c·
began escalating after national
elec?ions in 1a&amp;e Sep?ember.
UNITA leader Jonas Savimbi
contends the elections were rigged,
although the U_nited Nations says
the balloting' was geaerally free .and
Don't be misled by the Incumbent's STORIES
fair.
about his accompllshmlntl.
UNITA. the National Union for
1Don't be .misled by his STORIES about John
the Total Independence of Angola,
ran second to the ruling Popular
Lentu' positions~
Movement for the Liberation of
Angola in voting for the national
THE STORY: "Lentn Ia soft on crime.'
legislature and Savimbi trailc:d
THE TRUTH: Criminals who deeerv8 prison WIU
incumbent Eduardo dos San10s m
the presidential race, although dos
GET PRISON
Santos did not get the SO percent
Criminals who DESERVE a chance will get
needed foc a rust-round viciOI')'.
one.
The elections were held under a
1991 peace accord th•t ended the
THE STORY: "Lentes has no experience aa
16-yellr war between UNITA and
prosecutor.' ·
·
the MPLA, in which some 3SO,OOO
THE TRUTH: Appointed by Steve Story as
people died.
·
·
Unconfirmed reports on Porspecial prosecutor In Meigs County
tuguese radio IOday said a number
Appolnttd as Special Prosecutor In Gallla
of leading UNITA officials in
Co~ to fight government corruption.
Luanda had been ldlled, wounded .
oc captured over the weekend One
Chief Prosecutor In two large Cuyahoga
said Abel Chivuk:uvukli, UNIT A's
County cities.
,
foreign affairs spotesman was seriTHE STORY: 'LentH .repreHnts murderers In
ously wounded and being trea?ed at
a military hospi?al.
· other COUJ1tl88...
Savimbi left the capital three
THE TRUTH: Specially certified by the Ohio
weeks ago and was last reported in
. Supreme Cow1 as one of five attorney&amp; In SE
the central hiPJand city of Huam·
Ohio C!lpable to handle death cases.
bo.
.
The speed with which tbe ceaseStory, for 10 years, represented the worst
rue was worlted out Sqndly with
murclfrars, drug deal~rs.- rapists and child
.U.N.;
and Porlugllese media:
abtlaersln Meigs County. ·
tion - suggested that both sides
wan?ed to s?qJ back from the brink:
of another freab nationwide con·
flil:i. But Edmund de Jamette. head
of tbe U.S. mission, described the
situa?ion as ''still confused.''
A Competent and Dependable Attorney
The weekend fighting left the
capi?ll in chaos.
.
A nurse at Luanda's Prenda
Hospital lOki Usbon's TSF radio
Plld lor br ... c.nJ~ 11;211 E.lllcl, Pa••rov. 011.41711
todly: "There's no medicine, no

Northwest of Sarajevo, refugees
from Jajce continued to stream
southward. The city's fall to Serb
forces on Thursday was a severe
blow to the Muslim-led government.
About 25,000 refugees had
anived in Travnik, south of J ajcc,
and thousands more were expected,
Pecer Kessler, a spokesnwl foc the
U.N. High Commissioner for ·
Refugees, said in Zagreb.

Page4

Pick 3:

'

INTEGRITY

CEAS!J:-F1RE VIOLATED- This Is a photo
taken f'rom Portuguese television showing what
was said to be a polic:eman armed with rockets
and a rocket launeher u he moved out Into the
streets or Lullda, Sunday. Government rorces
backed by armored personnel carriers and

Ohio Lottery

A 79-year-Oid Vinton man, John
W. Evans, was tailed and two other
people injured in a two--car wreck:
at the intersection of U.S. 35 and
Vinton Street ncar Centerville
Monday around 7:SO p.m.
According 10 a report from the
Gallia-Meigs Post ofthe State
Highway Plt?rol, Evans was northbound on Vin10n Road and pulled
out on10 U.S. 3S in front of an eastbound car driven by Robert L.
Bates, 30, Gallipolis.
Batea' car ltnJC1c the left side of
Evans' car, the pabOI said.
According 10 the pabOI, Bates
was then struck: by an eastbound
?raetor and semi-trailer, driven by
Richard D. Winbigler, Sl, Newark:,

Creator of 'Our Gang,'
Hal Roach, 100, dies

Stuart pleads guilty

.
.
BOS.TON (AP) - Matthew
Laurel cr&gt;:ing or scratc~mg ~Is Stuart is goin" to jail for ·helping
head, or Oliver Hardy playmg ~th hide the
JJs brother
nd
his tie. They were adults plalmg used to~his pcgnant~ BJc
children, The reverse was the Our
utors sa he wasn't alone in
Gang' series with children playing C:..g his t!tt.er·s secreL
grown-ups."
. "There were 12 to 20 eo le
George McFarland, who plsyed privy to some version of w~at
pudFY.• lieanic-wearing Splllk:y in occurred that nighr."-prosecutor
the Our Gang" Belies, said Mon- Thorn Mundy 'd'
day: "I didn't know the man when·
Ma~thew St:'ri. 26, pleaded
1 was a child. ... He - the head of ..,,;Jty Monday 10 tsldng part in an
the studio and I wa an ICior, a kid f~ fraud scheme ?hat led 10
actor, at lhai."
the ala · and drew ~ to five
"But he was llways ~ 10 us C8l'll in~son But he declared "I
at Christmas and on bilthdlya,"' Y
.._,:' or' brothrr'1 tm
McFarland said. He said he and ~ wilem,r
P to
R011th lOOk IOIIIC lllllllhota togeltb- m Suffollt SuPerlor Court Judge
er recen~y, and
hadth~ wrO?e Robert BUlks said Matthew Stu·
on one, 'If 1
...,... you were art's c:onduet- •'lne:xc:usable and
JIQing 10 UDD out so good. I would Oll!l'qCIOUI.'\
liave lrttJl 'f.N 011 the contract • lit·
Carol Stuart, 30, wu shot and
tie longer. '
·
killed in 1989 ais sbe ll1d her h...
Bom in Elmira. N.Y., in 1892, bind left a childbirdl class. 01ar1ea
Roach ~j ~~.!~~In Stuart, 29, who was wounded,
Jold UJU , uou-.. m...., ....,,.
called for help 011 hil car phone in 1
thinl• a child foc
Alaska
and
driving
a
truCk
in'S.·
dnmatic
Clll tblt w.. broadcast on
doel.' • he oaoe llid. "But il ?abl , tie.
·
na71ona1
television.
a great ll?ill10 do it - lUte Stan

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Hal
Roach, who teamed Stan Laurel
with OliVer Hardy 011 celluloid, discovered Harold Lloyd and created
the beloved "Our Glllll" comedies
tblt endure on TV ?oday as "The
Little Rascal•," has died at 100.
· The ftlmmaker died Monday at
UCLA Medical Center after conaacting pneumonia.
Stai1ing in films as a cowboy
e1.tra at S.5 a day, Roach rose to
command a comedy factory that
produced hundreds of shorts,
begiJIDIIIIID the lilent.era.
"Out GaDa" and die teamin&amp; of
Lllnl and Hardy DIOVod hil great·
· est nceesses, wlnnlnl him two
Olean for short 1~11: Laurel
end Hardy'• '"Tho
Bo1." in
1932 and Our Oana'• "Bored of
· EdlcMk".. ln 1936.
He believed 1he formula fbr•

~ ';!:~

.J:

. Bend Stenwlleel FelllvaL Preseatlna tbe plaqae
to aieoclatiou member Job Tboaw, rlaht, were
Council President-Larry Wehrung, left, and
councilman ThCIDias Werry.

EasteFn board commends band honorees
Two students in ihe Eastern
Local School District will be
attending prestigious music programs, and Superintendent Richard
Smith reponed on those events
when the Eastern Local School
Board met in regular session on
Thursday.
Andrew Wolf and .Dawn Foley
will attend the Annual Ohio Music
Edudl?ion AssociatiOn Professional
Conference in Cincinnati in January. Wolf will he in the 1993 Ohio
All State OrcheStra and Foley in .
the 1993 Ohio All State Band.
''It is quite an honor to have two
students £rom Eastern pirticipate in
this program, because bundreds of
students tiom across the state have
applied," Smith said, ...and only the
most talented were selected."
The Eastern Band will participate in State Marching Finals on
Sarurday.
·
The following were employed
as substitute teachers for the
remainder of the year, to be used
on an as-needed basis: Debonth K.
Davis, Michelle Frazier, Sabra
Ash; Lisa Miller and Virgil
Phillips. Charlotte Smith was hired
as a substitute cook 10 be used on

an as-needed basis. Charlotte
Smith, Leonard Dailey and Helen
Dailey were employed as subs?i?utc
custodia!ls for !he remainder of the
year.
The board employed John Per·
in~&lt; as a home tutor for Michelle
0 'Nail effective September IS and
as long as needed for the school
year.
Joe Bailey and Roger Bissell
were approved as volunteer assistant jumor hi~h bask:etball coach
and volunteer Junior varsity basket·
ball coach, respectively.
Board Member Mik:e Martin
submitted a donation from .Kibble
J,.ogging to purchase Ohio State
bask:etball tick:ets for varsity bask:etball players.
·
Smith updated the board on leV)'
activities and reported that total
enrollment for the school year is
893. He also announced that founh,
fifth and sixth graders from Tuppers Plains Elementary will go to
the Center of Science and Industry
in Columbus on November 13.
It was reported that the board
had received approval concerning a
Community Education Grant in

collabonllion with the University of
Rio Grande.
The board also:
- Met in executive session to
discuss personnel;
• Approved adver1ising for fleet
insurance forcalen&amp;w year 1993;
- Approv~ 1!11 amended temporary appropnauons retroactive to
September 22, a spending plan for
FY93 and permanent appropriations for FY93 to several accounts;
• Set graduation f~ May 30;
- Approved a list of parent volunteers for the school year at Tuppers Plains Elementary;
- Accepted Scott Golden, Ellen
Watson and Jaclde Hall as tuition
srudents for the school year;
- Approved payment of membership and dues 10 the Ohio Coalition for Equity and Adequacy in
School Funding;
- Set the next meeting on
November 23 111 6:30 p.m., to be
held at Chester Elementary School:
Present, in addition to Martin
and Smith, were Ray Karr, president: Jim Smith, vice president;
and members Ron Eastman and
Bill Hannum.

Voter turnout in Ohio heavy
Bystalr ... dWireR~ts
. Votet: t~t. was excepll~ly
h1_gh tht~ mo~mg, accordrng. to
Rita Smtth, dii'CCtor of ~;he Me1gs
-County Board of Elecuo~s. a~d
pollwork:ers at vanous precmcts m
the county.
.
Lin~s. '?f voters hll~ fo=
those vtSIUng many~ . !·p
. in the co~nty to wall m_ .me, an
unusual ctrcums!IDCc wh1ch has
created some probS~:;:s f~ voters
and pollworken. nu 111 . •
Ruth Powe~s, the p~estd!ng
jud~e of . Mtddleport ~ ftrst
precmct, sard thlt tbe pectiiCI had
received.78 Vll7lrl by 11 a.m .. three .
times that experienced in .most
~idential electionl., ~g
to
1
SthhirhirtcRacy~ne
iurgeeaprecld
,.:~6~
e
•
•
people~ w?ed there by ~1 a.m.,
1!'C1 has?ial
aboUt. twtce
the P'presidenct
expcnenced 1n recent
election yean.
P 11 ~
Ohio city
0 W01o.ers lD 0
pleade!f foc_more voting boo?hs as
long lmes formed at polling sites

!"'W

0:

around the s?ate this morning.
· Secretary of State Bob Taft predicted that 4.7 milliQII, or 72 per- ·•
cent, of Ohio's 6.S million registered voters wDuld vote today.
Ohio has about 8 million residents
of voting age.
' ·
Workers at polling· places
around Hamilton County in southwestern Ohio, which includes
Cincinnati, asked the county board
of elections .for more booths to
accommodate heavy blmOUL Each
polling place in the county was
assi~ five boo?hs.
' The problem is ... we don't
have any more," said Pamela
Swafford, elections board deputy
director. " .They just have to be
patient
Ken Fisher, a member of the
Cuylho11a County Board or Elections, sard that by 8 Lm., about 8
percent of the county's registered
voters had
to the polls. At the
same time m the last presldentill
election in 1988, aj)out S percent
had VOied.
"We 'rc running well above
1988," he said. "Our prediction

before today was thlt 70 percent of
the registered voters in the county
would participate and we are stick:ing with ?ha? prediCtiOJ!."

G~ T IN

11-\ERE.

r&gt;.NO ~jjg

/

cc-.

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'.

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