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Dl Sunday 11m11 S1ntlnel

•

•

wv

Ott Point

7s..c»-IOIJJO
'lOJD.ICBJIO

,.,..,..,

.....

300-under
300-.500
m-700
100-owrr
STOCK BUU.S:
300-lllllk
300-SOO
S00-700

a,.-,

weekly--

••:r

7'11'99Jit

'

utl\iy

Joins sales st8tT

- GAl.UPOLis . RIIIICll w~·
l»•te /OWiM, CENnJRY 21 Dll
. . . Jtcalay, IDe:. IIIDWIICCCl llll wccl Sflayl Wu:n baa ....._.
llis.... ....
JU"""!
. Sbe bas beea actively worlcing ·
ID ral . . . lllcs fa( lhe past year
SCitilij; Melp County. Wbore she
--~agent in 1991 for
Duaie
Realty. Sbe canpleled CGIBIU iii real estate finance
_. ~aisal at Son* tan Bllliaess olleiC and completed her"
~ed
at lhe University
orltiD Gw* • real CSiate prlnci- ,
plls .a prac:licel, IIIII real estate
law. Sllle al10 auended Hondros

~SIJIO

. .

1600ASJIO
:l&amp;f»-31.110

VEAL:

~

71..00-85.00
8l.OD-71.00

Good
LAMBS:
Ewes

21JID-77.00
21JID-3S.OO
49JJD.,g.oo

· Bucks , '

Fcedas
police and olher legal entities, a its agents, ~IUffers in premiBaby Calves BH
paaem of fraud was discovered in um notices · from lhe compaHORSEScwt
the policyholder's history. This ny and postage meter 118Dlps show·
PooieaB.H.
resulted 1n claim denial and lhe ing lhe 1011-free number.
HOGS:
claimant's disappearance. ,
"We want 10 olllist lhe general
"This is a dramatic example," public in Ibis program ·because it . ~2SO
300-SOO
marlteling IRI CSD IIOW report SUI• Wisenlan continued, "but lhere are can lessen lhe Impact of fraud on
Male
Hop
peeled insurance fraud by calling lilerally lhN111nds of Olbcr insur- their -premium costa," Wiseman
tbe 800 number and providing ance fraud lll&amp;empts' annually. Con- continued. "Wo encourage people
infqrmalion wilhoul identifying tinual inVCSiipljon and pmsecutioil 10 calll-800-TIP-OFF2 (1-800847lhcmselves.
are necessary 10 thwart attempts 6332) if lhey have any suspicion
Local Grange independent agent and avoid lhe1r bnpact on pn:mium fraud is contemplated or bas.been
.
Tom Wiseman of fie Wiseman . ~IS. "
.
commilled. We will WOik wilh lhe
Agency said insurance fraud now
Grange is publicizing lhc new proJX2' authorities 10 invesligllc lhe
'cons lhe American public $17 bil. number by providing information tip no matlet which insuranc:e Com·
lion annually, wbicb ll'IIIISiates ·10 10
pany may bo lhe inlellded Yiclim." an avcmge of $56 m0111 per year on
:an individual's au10 premium.
"Ten percent of lhe premiums
·paid each year for au10, home and
penonalC::Uq!City goes 10 coverlhe
COSI of
dwenl ·Claims," Wise·
man said. "In one recent f&lt;iur-ycar
.period, fraudulent claims inceased
a llllal of $4 billion dQllars."
: Mr. Wiseman reported insur- ·
ji!ICC fraud is comrnilled by a broad
nnge of people from white-collar
professionals whose elaborate
1ebemes, have stolen millions of
iloUan, 10 lhe average citizen who
·inflates an insurance claim 10 00\U
lhe deductible.
"'We DenVer and Spread Umedoae"
Grange bas been a leader in lhe
fJgbl against fraud, having estab•Mason Sand
•Top Soli
lisbed its own Spcciallnvesliptive
Unit in the 1980s. In addttion,
•Concrete Sand
•Fill Dlrt
Granae supports a variety of indUstry orpnizalions, police and olher
•Pit Run
•Shredded
legal entities in lhe fight against
•Drainage Gravel
TopSoil
fraud. One of lhese groups,is lhe
Nllionallnlunnce Crime BIRIII,
.Pea -Gravel
•Straw
Whose sole purpose is 10 develop
and coordinate a national campaign .
•Drainage Tile
of Information and action against
insuranc:e fraud.
.Culvert Tile (all sizes up to 5")
As an CXM~plc· of bow fraud can
bo detected, Grange recently dealt .
•Block and Mortar Mix
with a claim alleging lhc lheft of
$200,000 li!Prlh of oriental rugs.
SIIIPicion about lhe circmnstances
surrounding lhe claim caused lhe
~vestigative unit to delve furlhei
iniO lhe case. In cooperation wilh
. GALLIPOLIS • 1-800-TIP·
OFF2 is !he lalest move by Glqe
IIISUiliiiCC Companies 10 help Slelll
the tide of increasing Insurance
fraud.
Anyone in the Granae fivwta~e

3S..IJD.mm
21.110-6S.SO

VoLa, No. 1a
CapJ1111ghiM1H2

Jack Fruth hailed on firm's 40th anniversary

coursc:s

J5011L?CIUII

Caecr...._~

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0

~ ID

Col'UIDuu..
..__

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·.!

By KEVIN KELL'V'
Special to
The Dally Seetlnel
November 1952. Durl11g tile first
weel: of tu 1110111/t, Gt11. Dwlg/11 D.
Eisenhower became presitklll-elect
of tile U.S. Construction colllinutd
on the Kyger Creek power pla/11.
And a new enterprise opened Its
.doors in dowliiOW11 Pollil PlelWJ/Il.
An advtrtisemelll i11 tu /ocallltWs·
paper said it all: "Frwh's Phanna- .
cy. Free Delivery. Dial 87," Tile
first day's take ill tu cash register
was $37. Forty years aitd more
than a dozen storts later, Jacl: E.
Fr11.1h has .bi/.Jit tile bii.Siness into
OM of the biggest success stories 111
tile retail dr11.g chainlndii.Stry.

•

Slle laides wilh her husband •
. . . . . . c:bildlal, Jamie, Joey and .
~ iD CbalriR.

CUTTING THE CAKE T" Jack Fruth aud
his wile, FraDCes ''Babs'' Rhodes Fruth, are seen
with the ftrst piece they .sliced trom the c:ake

5

10,900

0

A Racine

0

19921UICI aNTURY:

5

11 900 '

0

Loans for

1992 PONTIAC GRAND

9.2%APR'

5
;::::...., 998'8-

· Thru 1992

AIIFII

·

.

.

0

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•'

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19921UNSPORT VAN

Don't let time
slip away! This
great loan rate will
,; be available only through
_ 1992. Ideal for ...Bill consol·
· ---.--- idation • Pay off credit card debt
· _ • Holiday shopping and more!

'

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provided for the 40tll unlversary celebration or
the toundlat ot Frutll's Pharmacy. Tbe eelebra'tioa was held at the Holiday lan Saturday.

LeMaster returns to Ohio
to face murder charges

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--.

1 Section, 10 p~ 25 """"'
A Multlm.... InC. W.W.peper

'

_Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 9, 1992

'You're a great guy'

1992 BUICK SmAll

ALL SIZES LIMESTONE
PLUS RIP RAP

•

31Q!UOM

Choice
Medium

'

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340m-'105.00

~&amp;Culler

Insurance.firm opens fraud hotline-

8l.OD-79.00
SlUD-72..00

LoW tonight In mid 40s.
Tuesday, cloudy. Hlgb In mld605.

lfiiAD.9JIUIO

Slaugbter Cows:
Hi"" Dreaing

.e-

PageS

4!DI»&amp;SID
czm-S4JJO

Cows .t CIMis BH
Bred Cows By t
BredCowsBH

•-ber

949

Pick 4:
1216 .
SuPf.r LOtto:
2·12-13-22-24-30
Kicker: 323415

'lOJD.IOSJIO
6Z..00-9000

Slaughter BuDs

45631, aad JOII
will a $5 priM troa tae
Oblo Valley Pujl..ldal Co. IAI!in JOIII' uae,
lllldreu ud telepMae
will you CU'CI
or letter. Note= Cllll willie KCeJtecL All
CGDitlt entrlel
be tw aed Ia to lie
~ paper ollkt by 4 P-!11· t8dl Wedan1'Q'. II ca.
ot a tie, tile wiuer will be ellelta llj klltery.
Next week, 1 Gallla CoaatJ tua will be teatared by tbe Gallla Soli ud Water c - ¥aCicJ!a
- Diltrld.

Pick 3:

SlUD-"J9Jit

S10CiC HEIFERS:

MYSTERY PARM- 'BII weell'l
farm, featured by tile Mel11 Soil aad Water
Coaservatloll Dlllrkt, II located -•wlllere Ia
Melas Couty. Illdlvlduja wiUlaa .to partid·
pate Ia tbe
IIIJ do 10 bJ p1 IDI
tbe ·tarm•s 01111er. Jut 18111, or drop orr JOIII'
1ueu to tbe Dalll_ Seatlul, Ill Co.,t St.,
Pomeroy, Olllo, of$7,!1, or ~e GaUipolla DaUy
Trlbuae, 825 Tlllrd An., _Gallipolis, · ob,~o,

Bengals
post win

...

STOCKS IEiiRS:
300-under
300-.500 .
m-700
100-ouw
.

Ohio Lottery

man, arrested' in
Florida on'lbunday for his role in
tbe mur4er of two Gallia Countians, hu been returned 10 Obio
and will bo arraigned sometime on
MOndaY.
- · ' - -~
. . William D. Lemaster, 26, of
Tanner's Run Road, was arrested
by agcDIS from the Federal Bureau
of Criminal Investigation and lhe
Lakeland, Fla., SWAT team on
Thurs&lt;lay evening for his alleged
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role in the deaths of Jeffrey L. Halley, 36, and his SOD, Je~ S. HaJ.
ley, 12, both of Gallipolis. Tbe
elder Halley's remains were fOWid
ncar Pordand in SepiCmber, 1991.
- The.boy's bOdy was foun·d last
April off Sellen Ridge Road near
Raeine.
Fred Drennen, 30, of
Ravenswood, was arrested last
month and charged witb four
counts of aggravated murder, two

counts of lddnapping and a count
of aggravated robbery in connection wilh the incidei!L He remains
in lhe Meigs County Jail.
Meigs-COUDiy Sheriff James -M.
Soulsby said oa Saturday dla't
Lemaster would. bo ciWged wilh
two counts of aggravated munler
and olher related charges upon his
relllrn. Lemaster bas been incan:eraled in lhe Gallia County Jail.
.

.Supreme Court refuses
to re-eriter
utility
dispute
'
WASHINGTON (AP) - Tbe
Supreme Colirt today refused toreenter a dispute over how lhe govemment regulates electric rates
charged. by utilities lhat buy fuel
from !heir own subsidiaries;
.
Tbo coun, over one dissenting

vote, left intact a lower coun ruling
15 Obio mlllliciJlllities s,ay encourages price gougmg.
Only Justice Harry A. Blact- -.
mun VOied to bear argulneniS in the
case. Four voles are needed lo
grant such nsvicw.

...-----Local briefs-EMS units answer six calls
Six weekend calls WQe answered .by uniiS of Meigs Emergency
Services.
.
•
On Saturday at 12:06 p.m., Rutland squad lOOk Evelyn Riffe
· ' from Main Street to Veleralls Memorial Hospital.
At 2:20a.m. on .Sunday, Wanda Imboden was taten to
CbarlesiOn Area Medical Center by Heallh Net. At 6:05 a.m.,
POmeroy unit was sent t6 Second Slleel James MarCum was taken
10 Veleralls. AI 10:20 a.m., Racine squad went 10 State Route 124.
Helen Williams was transported 10 Pleasant Valley Hospital. At
3:45 p.m., Racine squad went 10 Rowe Road and lOOk Bill Morris 10
Velerans. At 7:57 p.m., Middleport unit went 10 Riverside ApanmeniS for Lai Roush. She was laken to Pleasant Valley.

.

The IS villagil! and cities buy
eleclricity from Obio Power Co. 10
seU 10 their residents.
Ohio Power buys coal for senor·
ating electricity from a subsidiary,
Soulhem Ohio Coal Co., wbicb it
financed wilh approval from tbe
federal Securities and Exchange
Commission.
, . The Federal Energy Regula~~!&gt;'
Commission, which regulates utility rates, determined in 1982 that
Ohio Power was paying·more than
lhe going rate for coal it bought
from Soulhem Oblb.
The FERC barred Ohio Power
from charging llllepaym for those
excess costs, and ordered lhe utility
to refund about $10 million in
overcharges.

And according 10 lhe man who
was honored by more than 100
company employees, local and
state officials, and guests Satilrday
. at lhe Holiday Im, none of it could
have been ~ble wilhoutlhe support and aid of his parents, family,
friends and workers.
"Tbis is truly a magnificent
evening, the greatest nifht of my
life," Jack Frulh said. " 'm proud
of SQ many lhings and so many
le."
.
~be occasion was the 40th
anniversary celebration of tbe
founding of Fruth •s Pharmacy,
which has grown from one store 10
a chain of 1~. including nine retail
outlets in West Virginia and six in
Obio, in addition to a warehouse
and distribution center. 'Fhc evenl
capped off 1 week of activities $111'·
rounding the business and the man
wbo Slai1ed it all' one year after his
graduation from the Ohio State
University School of l'harmacy.
Frulh, 64, wa8 not only honored
for his buSiness success but for his
-coolribulions to the area, where he
has been active in all phases of
economic development and in
improving lhe lives of lhe people
livmg lhcre.
·
TO highlight this aspect of
Frulh's career, a scbolarslup in his
name has been established at the
University of Rio Grande to assist
area students in obtaining a c:oUege
education;
· "This guy appeals to everybody," commented U.S. Rep. Bob
Wise, D-W.Va., echoing lhe sentimcnls of numerous speakers who
came to praise and in some cases,
rib Frulh.
"As I have had lhe privilege of

~

'A MAGNIPICENT EVENING'- Jack Frwtll offered 1111
thauks 10 compuy employees, officials and pests 011 the 40th
' alllli'l'ersary ot tbe loulldlng or Pruth's Pharmacy. "l'hls Is • truly
maplflcent e'l'tllinlo tbe IP'Cilellt llighl or my life," he said.
.
..
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knowing Jack and his wife Dabs,
I've found that he works with a
wide range of us in an unassuming
mann or, and be wants to bring
good to tbe community," Wise
added. .
"The -record is not subject to
debate, but a matter of his10ry ,"
said Frank Lee, executive director
of the Mason County Office of
· Economic Development and master
of ceremonies (or the evening.
''Tonight, we lie not honoring lhe
business, l&gt;ut to honor tho man
behind lhe -business." ·
A bost af llonors
Tho celebration opened with a
ioasl of Fruth by Jim Lewis, former
president of Peoples Bank; John
Wiseman, who develops s10re locatioosforFrulh's;notedPointPleasant businessman Vitus Hartley; R.
David Yost of Alco Heallh Services Corp.; and Dave Kriegel of
Cardinal Heallh Marketing Group.

~

The jesting spirit continued
lhrough the nisht. but was cllllplemenled wilh a number of honors
individually presented 10 Frulh.
One of lhe most important was an
announcement by Lee on behalf of
stale senators Osbei Craigo and
Robert Dillmar thai when lhe Legislature reconvenes e'ariy next year,
.Frulh will bo designated lhe nextDistiguisbed West Virginian, an
honor placing him in lhe same category wilh Olympic athlete Mary
Lou Retton and other noted Moun·,
tain State residents who have significant contributions 10 lhe state
and lhe nation.
Hdnors we{C also presented to·
Fruth from West Virginia Gov.:
Gaston CaperiOn. U.S. Sen. Robert'
C. Byrd, Ohio Gov. George
Voinovich and both-houses of lhe
General Assembly. In addition,
Wise said renwts detailing Prulh' s
· Co11tinued on page 3

Ohio Power appealed lhc deci·
sion, and tbe_U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals for the District of .
Columbia ruled · in its favor.
Because the subsiliiary arrange·
ment was approved by lhe SEC, lhe
appeals
court sai!f, the Pedetal
Light damage resulted from a two-vehicle accident on the .
Act
bars lhe FERC ftom
Power
·· .
Farmer's Bank -parking lot Friday about 5 p.m.
regulating
the
coal charge's. .
Pomeroy poliu reilorted lhat Debbie Homfeck, 20, Peach Fork .
Tho Supreme Court reversed
Roed, Pomcri&gt;y, while backing from a parking place hit lhe left ·
lhal
ruling in 1990, ruling lhallhe
front of a )llllkcd car oWned by Vicky Peckham, R{lcinc. Damage f
law
only stripped the FERC of
·was 10 lhe front risbt beadligbt area of lhe Peckham car, and 10 the
jurisdiction
in some instances. The
left side front qua11er panel of lhe Hornfeck vehicle. There were no
high
coun
sent
lhe case bact 10 lhe
ciwions.
appeals coun for a loot at other
questions. ·
•·
The appeals court again ruled in
Ohio Power's favor. saying anolher
The Meigs County Democratic Party wiU bold a potluck victory
federal law barred lhc FERC from
dinner oo Friday at 6:30 p.m. atlbc Meigs·COWity Senior Citizens
· disallowing cOils aulhorized by lhe
Hollday-IDL Tbe I'OIIten were, from left, Jim
· Center. Consressman-elect Ted Stticldand and other Democratic
ROAS'I'EilS AND ROASTD -Jack Prutb,
SEC. In addition, it said PERC' s
candidaiCs wiU bo honored. The public is invited 10 bring a covered
Lewis,
Dave Krlqel, DaYe Yost, Vitus Jfartley
ce•ttr, wu routed lly trlends and aMOCiattl
own
rules
required
it
10
defer
10
lhe
and
Jolin
Wisema11.
-diJh and aaend. The Democratic Party will provide I1IC8I and boverdur~fa~' 40th aalllversary ccltbntloll or lht
SEC.
toun
or J1ruth's l'llarmiiCJ Saturday •t •
• · Admilion is free.
· In !heir appeal, lhe Ohio munici·
palities said-the _lower court's deci·
sion "will permit - indeed
Put Couneilon Club of Chester Council No. 323, Dauabttn of
encourage - electric utilities 10
America, will meet on Wednesday evening II 7 p.m., II !hebane of
gouge lheir cUSIOmen by manipuFor tho third consecutive year Association Stale Marching Finals :This was lhe most successful sea·
Bither Smith. The co-bostcsa is Ella Osborne.
,
l•ting lhc prices utilities pay for the &amp;stem Man:bing Band was are held annually at Cooper Stadi· son ever for the 26-member band.
goods and services provided by rated "suoerklr" lithe SI8IC march- urn in Columbus. Over 120 bands whose llllal includes five flfll place
finishes, Best Music at A... ens,
lheir afliliales... .
ing finafs. Tbi1 biabcst possible competed for stale honors.
Orand Champton at
Runner-up
The
SEC
lact$
the
power
to
lXO"
In
addition
10
Eastern's
overall
No injuries were 1eportcd foUowing a deer-car ac:cidcnt on Leadaward is compiled from lhe indiAthens
and
·Onnd Champion at
teet
ratepayers
from
such
gougmg,
superior
raling,
its
pcn:ussion
secing -Creek Road In Rutland Township sbonly lftor midnight Monvidual *Corel Of liX judges WhO
Tri-Valley,
' ·lhe
appeal
said.
The
IPIJOI)s
court
tion
was
also
awarded
a
superior
evaiUIIC lho banda in lhe areas of
day..
.
Final
performances
for
ruling
will
affect
up
10
SO
million
the
while
Dawn
Foley,
field
rating
Accordlna to a report from lhe Gillia·Meiaa POll of lhe S1110
.music, man:hlna IIIII acncnl effec~
lhc
marcbina
band
will
be
11:30
Lm.
utility
customers
nationwide,
received
an
excellent
commander,
lfl&amp;bway Patrol, Robert W. Richmond, 21, 3i940 Happy Hollow
Eallem recef¥ed a'T' or supen·
·
Saturday a1 lhe band's annualaru
·Ohio !llunicipalilies said.
or rating from eiiCh ollhe jud&amp;es. rating.
ltd:, Mlddlepon. wa IIOfl)lbouJid w~ be sauc:t and ~. a dect
a
separate
appeal,
FERC
and crafts show held in lhe gymna- - ·In
With
lhe
performance
at
Stale,
This is tho first lime in EastcrD 'a
lhlt wa aaanlllinl to c:rosslhe roadI· ·
· ·
.
Ia~
said
the
commissioo's
rule
bisiOry for lhe marching band to lhe Baatem Marching Bllld's com- sium ·at lhe high tcbool froni 9 Lm. •
. D1mqc 10 lU:funond's ear, a 1981 Metcury Zqlhyr, IV8S liSied
was not inlendcd 10 give away lhe receive "straight l's" at stale.
petition season drew to a close. 10 4 p.m. as weD as local Cbrislmai
UJi&amp;hL
parades.
.
.
authority 10 rcgu1alc rates.
The Ohio Music Educaliol!

Police probe two-car accident

5

13 900

·Democrats to hold dinner

Stop by or call any of our Star Bank locations today. If you can't IT)ake il during our
regular hours, call 1-800-274-4111 Monday through TliuiSday from 5 unlil8 p.m.

•

D of A paeeting set

..,

STARBAN_K
STAR BANK. N.A .. TRI-STATE

On The SFct Financing:

~

T1 (](I •- · In·; VIc Icom c!

Deer-car accident reported

MEMBER FDIC

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• All liMN arc suhf«'l to crc.odn appov11l. '35.00 p~icl (JMnt:t: charsc will iJnpwt AI'R. For ~--m~. on ai(Mn ror '10,000 ror36
months. the p!'ynwnts woukt ~ '320.04, t~ ftMinCIWJf.' '1..52 1.44, IOtotl raymrrus o( "11 _521.U tllld t!lfLoaiYC ArR of9..U~.

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• Cttrt.lin r~lricl iOn.. apply.

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1900EISDII

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Ill IIPOUS, OHIO

,...

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Eastern band rated 'Superior'

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�lllondly, November 9, 1112

Commentary

Pegl 2 The Deily sentinel
Pomeloy •dcll•po.~ OhiO
Monday, Novemblrl,1112

OHIO Weather

.

Tuesday, Nov. tO

Medicare horrors don't seem tQ stop
WASHINGTON - Camilla
BoarqiiCI lamed r.nt-halld bow
III8CIIn die IIIOdlodll of M=dicllte
can be.
Boliacp:"s ' - husband, Philip,
had·always been able to function
inde&amp;l nleally despilc die llllputalion of boCb his Jccs. But a 00. of
~~=eative heart failure and
, _ lllldc it. imposlible for
him aimplv to lift himself from a
chair llld lmo IU prostbelic lc •
His doctors iugaested a sea~t
chair.
.
• Hia Medicare iDsurance carriel'
ovarulcciiU pbysiclans ~for rea- .
lOllS thll rliJe
about bow
ratu.l die
Medicare
care is for the nauoa's elderly.
Med. off'ICials ay they furnish
sucb-ICI!Iift ciWiin, but Only if die
Palieut sull'en froln 1 rti
eof die
lega. As a double amputee, Philip
Bourque, 7S, was oot of luck.
Gile Swiech is a 42-year-old
sufferer of spina bifida, a sr:nal
defect requiring lnrenslve ate
care rrom her 72-year-old falher.
Her Mediare cmiei- refused to JBY
for the $400-per-month dressing
for an infectious wound on
Swiech 'a hip that doctors say is
chronic and .-Is to be •cdleSsed

111 Coart 8tnet
Polllel'OJ', Ob1o

DEVOTED TO 11Dt JinZitDTS or ... IQ!IC'HLIIA80Jf ARU.

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
PubUsber .
PAT WWTEHEAD
Assistant Publlsber/ControUer

· CHARLENE HOEFLICH
GeneralMan.pr

a::-icJf

~s OF OPINION are wek:ome. 'l'bey 1bould .be 1.._ tban 300 ·
words. All leuen are subjec:t to editinc md JDUJl be sisned with . _
eddless IOd telepboae number. No uosisned letters will be published. uaen
sbould be in good wre, addressing issues, not personalities.

Glenn wins, but DeWine
scores some gains, too
By JOilN CHALFANT
'
A9!!!Cia4ed...._Wrlter
COLUMBUS - Democrat Jolm Glenn may not be lbe only winner
from die election dill gave IUm an w..ecede.lled founb consecutive 1en11
in lbc u.s. Senate.
..
Mike DeW'me and negative cam.-ign tactics seemed 10 IIXJI'O pomiS,
GJenn llllll8ged to c~t himself free from !he JJO!itiCII anchor of 18.
years in office that weighed down ocher candidates m a IC8SOII of vott:r
desire for change.
.
.
·· .
The tluee-tenn senator won 51 percent -of lbc vOle to defeat DeWme,
lbc Republican SI8IC lieutenant governor, who had 42 pen;enl. Socialist
Martha Grevau, who n11 as an independent, picketl up 7 ~nL
·
Glenn .blunted arsumenll! ~st his re-election lhal wae based on
tenure. DeWine is a CIII'CCI' politician, althoup his IJerVice was spJe8d
across locll, slate and fedeml oftices,llllher dal one elective job.
DeWine failed to acora an upset against Glean, but be lllldc pins dl8l
could belp if he dDt:idelto run apin in 1994 after die anlicipeled miremen! of U.S. Sen. Howlrd Metllenbewn, also a DemoaaL
DeWine came from 35 points behind at the start to almost topple
_Glenn in what was die toughest and most COIIlly race of Glenn's career. In
die process, DeWine increased his name recognition from less than 50
pm:ent to 95 percenl.
~·He·~ a m~ ~ cl!l!didate today than be was a year ago," said
Curt s-.,JU camp~~gn 1118118&amp;e1'· .
•
".This adqe, which has rally bl;cotne more lban thai in Ohio ... that
one IIIUSl run once and lole befole one IIIIlS and wins bas proven to be
corJeCt once qain," Steiner said.
That's whit hlppened 10 Republican George Voinovich, who lost a bid
for die U.S. Senile. then was ek:cted governor two years lalcr. ·
DeWine capitalized on his two best issues: Glenn's lint to jailed sav•
ins• and loan owner Charles Keating and lhe $3 million debt from
Glenn'l J1f01Mienlial bid in l!IIW.
DeWmc moved up in die polls as his commerdals hMimaed away at
Glenn on boduopic:s.
·
.
·
·
But die style or die Ills may have gone too f.-, giving Glenn .. openin&amp; to counreraaaclc widl charges of negative campaigning. Ediulrial writen came down on Glenn's side, condemning DeWine for nmchlinpg.
Dale But!and, a longlime aide Glenn cmliled for die SllaiCIY that led
to yictory, rejects~ suggestion that negative campliping ~
Bulland said'DeWine spem more money than any of Glenn's previous
oppociCDts, had the machinery of SI8IC govmunent behind him, end was a
bcttcr-known candidate dian those lbc Dc:r!locrat pieViously faced.
"I think in die end VOICrS really did reject negative campaigning. But I
lton'tlhinlt thai's the sole explanalion for Senator Glenn's win. VOICrS in
die end loolted at the issues. They concluded lhat John Glenn was going
to stand up for lbem," Budand S81d.
100

YYou !&lt;NoW tfoW I

a,.,p saco~

aNP STeaK 3HP

Qteese? Wet,L--

Ha,Ha, THiS fS

FutmY--1VRNS

ouT cffoLesreJ?oL

iSN'T 83D aFT~R

aLl~~

By Jack Anderson . ~
and
Michael Binstein

0

HaP 'tau cur ouT

eGGS

woman wu dia._-cl with Cardio-Pulmonary Obstmetive Disease, her pbyliflan pescrlbed an
electric machine thai distributes
medication throush a breathing
device, which retails for a mere
$119. The Medicare carrier, however, would not JBY for die purchase of the machine. liutead it
twice daily. Her case is under
told lbc polientto ~e~~tdle IIIIIChine
appeal by a local Medi~ advocafor
$43.86 a monlh. Given that this
cyiiiDilft.
.
patient
has had the · breathing
"'It'S lite seniors are being put
device
for
37 months, Metlr.l"lhla
through bureaucratic water torPHe
doled
out
more than $1,215.82
just to secure their rights under
instead
of
lbc
$119.
.
Medicare," Rep. Ron Wyden, D"Thousands of our clients call
In
ocher
words,
Medicare
could
Ote., told our associale Jan MoDer. Medicare and get no r.esponse," ,
havej)llld
for
10
machinea.
."It's pretty clear thae are enor- says Diane Arch« of die Medicare
Many of the cases colleciCd by
moos holes in the federal govern- Beneficiaries Defense Fund: "The
die
committee mWIIve around the
ment's oversight" into private program is a never-ending nightreimbunemellt
for power-QDCnled
insurance companies that handle mare for beneficiaries and heallhvehicles.
iuch
as electric
Medicare claimS.
·
· care providers. The simplest probwhcelchain
IIIII
IIRe-wheelacootAlso under fire is the Heallh . lem can lake a pllienfs lifetime ID
Care Financing Administration ccincx:t. As a result, marly publerns en that allow otherwise bedriilden
polients to enjoy the ICIDblance cia
the agency that pays die bills for never get mlOived."
.
Medicare. As a keystone of PresiExamples of needy elderly let- normallife.
·
Typical
is
the
case
of an 84dent-elect Bill Clinton's domestic ting the runaround are at near ePiyear-old
sufferer
of
scoliosis;
agenda. lbc $117 billion Medicare demic levels, according to Mediprogram, serving the nation's 35 care activists, and are far from die arthritis, a belltt condiliOII and who
million elderly and disabled, is exception. Some Oilier cases du&amp; up had Only one lrtn. These couditions
expected to Rceive renewed scruti- during lbc AginJ Commiuee lli'Obc cJe.ly limited his mobility,11111 his
ny. The House Select Co"'niittee . also show how mindle'ss lbe Medi- doctor prescri)led an elecuic
wheelchair. The man's daughter
on Aging plans hearin,&amp;s when care maze can be.
Congress reconvenes ill January, ·
When a 66-year-old California went to buy a wheelchair but stoi'{Jed by .the Medicare carrier, ·
wh1ch said it would only reimburse ·
for the rental, not pwchalc, of such .
items.
.
'
The.catch, however, -lhat die
daughter couldn't fmc! a sinale supdill would lellllllber irian sell
use, lhe was informed, insur- ance carrien don't cover die hij!b
maintenance costs associaled w1th
rentals.
In short, there were no
wheelchairs to rent, and die only
option was for die man to enter a
nursing home.
Reimbursements ftr ambulance
services are also routinely challenged or· denied by carriers who
are accused of misinterpreting
Medicare criteria. A 70-year-old
Medicare beneficiary from
Louisiana was ta1ccn tlllbc hospital
by ambulance after suffering a
11evere heart attack. His doctor
wrote the canier explaining the
seemingly comnion sense necessity
·'
of ambulance transponation. But
lhe carrier denied paymenl on the
grounds that the man could have
gotten .to the hospiial by other ·
and has been uneanhing a 110ve of
IIOrica.
.
of die bearings will focus
on whether the HCFA has been
laglrd in policing insuance calriers, causing a rash of underpayments and wrongful denials. By
failing to punish carriers who
wrongfully deny or underpay
claims; some believe lhe indifference has been lhe way the Bush
admlnistnition has foond •'a back
door" way to cut .Medicare. .

WH08!

WafcH THaT
6l.COD PRaSSuRe!

C:

Today in history .

b

Ben Watten erg
hard as die chairman of die mainstream Democratic Leadership
CounciL
. And now, how will Clinton goyem? As a liberal? As.a moderate?
As a sy:nlhesizer, which could risk
Bush-style split vision? Is there
another way? The stru~le for the
mind of lbc president will go on for
four years, but it is never more
intense, nor more important, than
in the early weeks following a
party-changmg dcclion.
I doubt that Clinton himself yet
· knows all the answen to the direetional questions. Many Clinton
people seek synthesis, not only
from lbc wings of the Democratic
Party, but from die broader counby
as well. It if hard to fault an initial
search for the best ideas from
ev~where. But sooner or later a
guiding ~ is chosen. ·Sooner is
likelier than later, beC:ause the
Washington truism lhat personnel
yields policy is true. The
aPJl(lintees lay out tbe path.
The liberals have an opening
advantage in lhe personnei selee-

Berry•s World
51~~'

•

IS 1\-\E~£
AN'(Tt·h~
WftO~G-?

'

1

-----Area
deaths---.

married

.

lion process. Th11re.is a broad armr. speeches. They fmn die '-is of a
of activist libeml baualions - civil DLC book now being prepared to
rights, civil liberties, environment, suggest policies for lbc new adminconswner, feminist, gay, union to istration. The essence of lhe pro- ·
name a few - waiting to get their ~ram is to non-bureaucratic~~
troOpS on die Clinton JByroll.
're-invent government," to
But the liberals are weak . ·"a third way" that rejects big gov- ·
because, with a few exceptions, emment, to foster "comm~" ·
Clinton did not run on lbcir agenda. "opportunity" and, ~ost n
y, •
The defining event of lhe Clinton "responsibilitr," a word not ·
campaiJ!n came at the New York recently
calhmon
among ·
convention when be was certified Democrats.
.
President-elect Clinton's first
as a moderate. Moreover there is
the Juiunling his\Of)' of Carttr, end- big decision concans .how to pick
ing up perceived as a moderate people. He can 110 Wllh lhe flow '
rolled by librnls, a mushy, In-box and choose people to fill siOIS. Or
GS-100 president, lacking a vision. he can hang tough, try to re-edu- '
The moderates are fewer in cate his pany, ani! pick people to
number,less credentialed, less · fulfill ideas.
.
.·
wired-in and less well-known.
If be swts h1s govananee as a ·
There is no anny, and "moderate ~-filler, he will, given lbc ~t
activist" is almost an oxymoron. hberal nature of the Democratic
What they have going for them is a. ~ ••run a risk of ~ush-like Carset of powerful Ideas. Those ideas ter17.ation. If be begins work as an
were formed in part by Gov. Clin- idea-promoter, he can govern the
ton. They were pushed by candi- WB'/ he won, as a different Demodate Clinton. They won· for Presi- ClliL
dent-elect Clinton.
~· Wattea!Mra, a IWor fel·
The ideas are found In die publi- low at tile A•rlca• Katerprile
. cations of die DLC and in Ointon' s IDIIItate, II ntllor oi"TIIe Finl
announcement speech, platform, Ualvenal Nation," publlllled t.y
acceptance speech and campaign · ~ Free l'nll nd a IJIIdlcattd
·
wrder for NEA..
•·

I tAl5Sr
M.AJ&lt;ltl&amp;
PROMISeS. ·

I

:morning

t

r--.

:·

emor df New Jersey, was Southernborn as weU. Both, however, were
national figures wben dley ran for
credited as weU. 1'he day of polili- president. Though Johnson was
Clllocblcp is over ill fact and the- acutely seositivc to real and pcrory.
ceived slights from lhe Eastern
Look at it from tbe perspective establilbment becau~ of his oriof Electoral College math alone. gins and education, his dettactors
President~lect Clinton, Arkansan, tended to strea his penoliallllher
was elected primarily because New than his regional defects. Wilson,
York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Dlinois who never forgot hia Southern
· and California went for him deci- roots, was beaer known to die votsively. Clinton and .Gore. were en as i college professcrwho had ·
elected not because of the Soulh; onee IUD "rinceton University, also
but·almost despite it. But lhoup in New Jersey. Only Jimmy Carter
the South pve an Electoral Col- was .elected as a man whose public
lege majonty to George Bush, lbc pe1sona was inescapohly Southern.
popular vote outcome was just
Clinton and Gore are not bf a
about a draw from Virginia to piece with Carter, Johnson or WiiTexas.
.
son. Proudly Soulhcm end~
Compo~ lhal to Jimmy Ciltcr's on the fllSt aU-Southern Ucket in
triumph iD 1976. His c:lole mqin national JllllY history, they neilhcr
of victory depended heavily on stress nor run from their roots.
Soutbem VOIIII. Tbe Georpn was They wear their Southemess as
a "Southern" candidate. His tri- comfortably as an old pair of jeans.
umph - 11 a "Southern" · Indefinable as Southerners of
triumph, a breakthrousb that familiar stereotype, they are not
.red limed a region ll!ut IJ!II of lbc Bubba, not Sen. Cleghorn, not
White HoUIII l'or 111111t of the II 0' Faulknerian and not mdnedt raciaL
yean since die Civil W•.
Nor are dley yuppies, 1 tenn that
Al:tllally• ..._ bad been olhen ahould be nidiecf from die national
before Carter. Lyadon Johnson diaJolue.
from Toul, one of the 11 1tate11 C'l
What lhcy are is among die best
the Old Confederacy, and of lhelr New Soodl gc:nc:ration 11111
Woodrow WJIJon,dle fmncr gov- repreacntatlve ci .it, which In 1992
'

·Hodding Carter Ill

Court news

means 1qa rn1alive of lbc bell of
their contem,POraries across the
nation. Theu cohort of white
Soulhcm politicians .moied toward
the end of die civil righta revolu·
lion, benefited from it and belpcd
to consolidaite its plnJ, but were
not defined by It, eidlet In 1111JP01t
or opposition. Progreuivel in 1
msion trying to lind Ita bearinp
after one ci die most far-readlina
social revoiWOIII In Amalcan JD.
IAlry, they n nevenbeleD 1101 liberats of lhe old school. Equally
clearly, lbcy am not OOIIICI'YIIives
of whale- variety. Freed from lhe
embrace of a once rigid hiltory,
they and dleir qton hive mwriben
lbc future as aomedtina 1111n thaa a
saaJaht-line exteallon of Ita Jlllll

Hospital news

I

:

•

I

1
1

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1

I1

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1

I·

I

Hoddilll Carter m, far•er . :
Stat:!egart•e•t·
spokea•a• :I
d

: .... ,.;;.:,,;;-~~ 0!
•

w · ~at• .o.·c. . . '
paiiJ .. . ~ •t..fc:O:c~
ea:; .i

MaiiStreet,
•
IJaldteleqjaioa

=~paper DterpriH

UTILITIES
PUT
IN
THE
HOUSE TIUS

..--.. ·'

Which is what AI Gore llicl in 1
few simple, direct words in the
•I
Demow•' hour of trilllllpb_

I

s

---Announcements---

.It's time for last goodbye to .old Dixie
'the presidential election of
Nov. 3 Wf1 "lbc nigbt they put old
Dixie doWn." That ma lound like
nonsense, given the ?act that the
winning ticket of Bill CIIIIIOII of
Arkansas aad AI Gore of Tenneuee 111'81 SoiOrm born and bml.
It probably sounds even sillier
when put up against the flct that
Ross Perot Is a Southerner and
Gecqc BUill IOIIICtina pn:tc:nded
to be one.
But It isn'L Place of origin 111'81
all but Irrelevant to lhe way the
voten viewed die candldetes or the
way the cendidl"
'peel. As
AI Gore put ll esrly
of Nov. 4, IIIC!ionali1111 was buried
lll'idldle Demo ..... victory. What
he ml&amp;ht •ve lidded was dl8l the
Old South al reality and caricature
... . _ 011 ill last legs for almost
lwodec ...
Viewed only in the terms
defiued .., . . . . . pn:aidalt-elel:t,
die day II CMr wbea ...-.can
or wOI be raised on resional
gnJIIIIIII aiOIIe about the fllnell or
colectability of a white Soolbcmer
lar P'........ 1be lmplida
veto, Bned 111'1111 Jiluly Caner's
electloa, baa been lbltlerecl lll'ilh
..... OliO. Almolt tiQIIIily impG....
lhelll)'lh aldie IOild Sciuth, Danamile or JPepeeNirm, ._ been dll-

Fruth...

Weather--------

Will Clinton govern as t,e ran? ·

. As we move quicklY. to Part
- • 111c bailie
for die mind of lbe president-elect"
contesaed on a playing field wh&amp;e
. "policy is pe1-l" -lhc:re is a
lesson that Bill Clinton can learn
from Gecqc Bulb.
.
By The Assoc:lattd l'nll
Bush is die p'Oduct of twD politToday is Monday, Nov. 9, the 314111 day of 1992. '!\ere are 52 days ical traditions. By birtb be was of
lefl in die year.
.
the moderate-Eastern-eslablish· Toda · 's Highlight in Histav:
ment-Rejlublican .e~rsuaaion,
On l!fov. 9, 1938, bands of Nazis began I08Diing die sacets of Ger- Thomas Dewey JRiidina. But he
many and Austria, lootin(l and burning s'ynqogues as well as Jewish- rose to prominence through the
owned IIOre8 and . _ _ In' a pogrom thai became known as "Kristall- rawhide-Western-conservative
IIICht" ("CrySial Nipt").
.
wing of die GOP, Barry Goldwater
On ibis date: .
resident saint. It is saJd that Bush
'In 1872, fire deslroyed nearly a thousand bulldings in Boston.
- a smart and decent mail In 1918, Germany's Kaiser Wilhelm ll announced be would abdicate. lacked vilion. But his fmal problem
He then fled to die Neth«&lt;ands.
'
was thai he had two visions, in conIn 1935, United Mine Wortm president John L. Lewis lmd other labor Oic:L He was painted mushy, call it
leaden formed die Commiuee for lndiiS1rial Organization as part of the Gewey.
American Federation of Labor.
Clinton, like Bush, is also of
In 1953, die U.S. Supreme Court upheld a 1922 ruling that major- 'two lildltioris. 'l'hen: is die anli-league beiCilllll did DOt come within die scope ci fccbal•tiii'IISt Jaws.
Clinton, networked with the elite
In 1953,aulhor-poetDylan Thomas died in New Yorkaaage 39.
liberal Rhodes Scholars, the very
, In 1963, twin disaatm struck Japan as some 450 miners wae killed In .you_ng liberal governor, growing
a coal-dust expllllion, and 160 people died in a train crash. ,
his contacts with the best and
In 1965, the great Northeast blactout 'occurred as several states and briptest liberals. And dlele is the
parts of Canada were hit by a series of power failures lasting up to 13 1n. Clinton who worked tirelessly with
hours.
,•
moderate Democrats, mostly
In 1967, 25 ycail ago, a Saturn V rocket carrying an UIIIIIIIQilCII ApoUo Sootherners, 10. J)Ulllbc party back
spacecraft biiSICd off from Cape Kennedy on a successful leSt flighL
from far-out liberalism, working
In 1970, former French President Chlrles de Gaulle died al age 79.
In 1989, in lbc 11101t vilible sign thaldle Iron Curtain w.s collapsing,
communist East Germany threw open its borden, allowing citizens to
U'llvel freely to die West.

ton, Oregon and Idaho. The CasTemperatures were foreclst in in much o( the Southeast and the
B1 Tbe ~lated Prell
cade MoUntains of Washington go( the 30s in RC?Jthem New England Midwest; the 70s in die Southwest
yo-yo
weather
pattern
Ohio's
MICH.
and die nortliem Plaiils and Rock- and Southern California; and the
continues lhil week with 1 Willi!· at least 8 inches.
Burlinston, VL,Iached only 30 ies; the 40s in lhe mid-Atlantic 80s in southern Texas and Soulh
ing llald followed by colder temdegrees on Sunday, a reconl for lbc states, Great Lakes region and the Florida.
peraiiRS, fomcullen said.
'
A shift to southerly w1nds date. Tile previous record of 31 Great Basin; lhe SOa in the Ohio
The high for the nation Sunday
River Valley and Carolinas; the 60s was 85 degrees at Tavernier, Fla.
· tonight and a cloud buildup will wis set in 1927.
keep die mercury in die 40s tonight
'and then send ~ into die 60s
Continued from PIIKe 1
!Mansfield ls1•
on T_uesdar, the National Weather
Service Sllld. There also will be a life and accomplishmentS wiU be
read into the · Co"gressional
slight chance of showen.
Record.
But a cold front on Wednesday
The pesentations were made by
will send temperatures plunging
Wise; Fruth's executives Don
and could tum die !lin into snow.
The·record-high tempc:rslll(C for Pullin, Paul Sllinner and Geary ·
•lco1umbusls1•
this date It lbc Columbus weather . Spencer; Jim Devine. president
l
station was 76 degrees In 1975 Chain Drug Marketing Associates,
while the record low was 18 In of which Fruth served as chairman
1991. Sunset tonight will be at 5:20 of the board and is currently a
. , ...
p.m. ana sunrise Tuesday at 7:11 director; and Kriegel on behalf of
the vendorn.
a.m.
A Iastln1 testament
Around Ohio
W.VA.
The Northeast awoke this mornThe creation of lhe scholarShip
ing to lhe coldest weather of lhe in Fruth's name by lbc sponsors of
season, with readings in the 20s the celebration came about when
and30s.
.
Tamara Theiss, a pharmacy student
Rain feU in parts of tbe nation's at Ohio State, wrote a letter detailmid-section and the Pacific North- ing how Froth took an inierest in
west.
.
her goals and offered her a scholarRain was also forecast over lhe ship to continue wilh her studies to
·'western Gulf Coast states and lhe become a pharmacist. The letter
Associatfld PrfiSs GrapticsNet
middle and lower Mississippi Val- was written on behalf of all of die
ley. Snow was forecast from nonh- students Froth has helped OVCI' die
..;.o_ _ _ _ _ _ _
eastern Nevada to the northern years, Theiss said.
· Rockies, with up to 6 inches
"Wherever my phannacy career
Wednesday tbroiagb Friday:
expected over higher terrain.
lakes me, I will never forget who
South-Central Ohio
Wednesday, showers likely wilh
Fair slcies wae forecast across gave me a start in life," Theiss
· Tonight, decreuing clouds with
lows
in the 40s and highs S5-6S. much of lhe rest of the nalion, with wrote.
SCHOLARSHIP ESI'ABLISHIID- Dr. Barry M, Doraey,left,
a low 40-45. Tuesday, variable
Dr. Barry M. Dolsey, president
preslclent of lbe University of Rio Graade and Rio Grande Comcloudiness. A slight chance of Thursday, chance of showers, unusually chilly weather in the
of the University of Rio Grande mualty College, conllratulated Jack Fruth durlngtbe 40th ..
afternoon showers. High 6:5-70. ~ws in the 30s and highs 45-5~. NortheasL
Fnday, a chance of snow. Lows 25;
Snow fell Sunday over some of where Fruth has been a member of
Chaqce of rain is 30 percenL
anniversary celebration of the rounding or Fruth's Pllarmacy. A
35. Highs 35-40.
lhe higher elevations of Washing- the Board of Trustees since I!J86
scholarship In Frulb 's honor has been established al Rio Grande.
- said he was "pleased and bon- ·
oled" to accept die scholarship. ·
approximately $27 million a year i!S president inl982-83; vice presi"When I came here 14 months spent in merchandise pwchasing.
.dent of the Mason County Develago, 1 immediately liked him," Dr.
Among his proCessional activi- opment Aulhority, director of the
Dorsey said of Froth. "Among the lies, Froth is a member of lhe West Point Pleasant-Mason County
Johnie Hagans
F1orence L: Howell
Stanley Roush
things I've seen about Jack in the Virginia Pharmacists Association,
of Commerce and its
Johnie .Hagans, 83, Gallipolis,
Florence L. Howell, 90, of
Stanley A.. "Jimmy" Roush, 89, last year, Jack is objective, analyti- . of which he served as president in Chamber
in 1968, the Board of
president
died S~nday, Nov. 8, 1992, at Upper SandUiky, a .Conner Meigs of Albany, OH., died Sunday at tbe cal, supportive of me, and impor- 1973 and received the Bowl of
Directors
of
the Green Acres Cenijolzer Medical Center.
County reSident, died Saturday, Overbrook Center in Middlepon,
tantlr.
he
can
cut
through
die
disHygeia
Award
for
Community
Serter for the Mentally Retarded in
· He was born Feb. 2, 1909 in Nov. 7, 1992, at the Fairhaven 'OH.
cussiOn and gel to the poinL We vice in 1975; the Ohio State Pilar- 1960-67 and its chainnan in 1962,
Langley, Ky., son of the late Phillip Heallh Care Community, Upper
He was born in the Gmllam Dis- will use lhe scholarship appropri: maceutical Association; the Trinity United Melhodist Church,
and Betty Ratliff Hagans.
Sandusky. ·
trict of West Virginia, a son of the ately."
National Association of Retail director of Peoples Bank since
· He was a retWd coal miner and
Born on Feb. 22, 1902 at Jon- late Reuben and Minerva Roush.
From
that
poilit
on,
Lee
added,
Pharmacists;
and as the pharmacy 1964, serving as chairman of the
filrmer: He was a Kentucky estown, Pa., she w.as the daughter
He was a farmer.
the
scholarship
will
serve
as
a
tesrepreseritalive
to the Medical AdVIcommittee from 1965
Colonel, and a member of Fellow- of lhe late Benjamin Book Wenger
In addition.to his parents he was tament to Fruth's dedication to sory Board of the West Virginia executive
unlil
1988
and
elected chairman of
ship Baptist CliiD'Ch, Gallipolis, and and Lavinia Ulrich.
preceded in death by two brothers,
the United Mine Worker! of AmerShe graduated from the Office Dorsey and Adrian Roush; and two helping students realize their Department of Human Services, the bourd in 1988, and director of
serving as its chairman in 1979-83. lhe City Holding Company since
ica.
Traininl! Teacher CoUege, Colwn· sisters, Lovina Rickard and Ethel dreams.
"You're
a
great
guy,"
Lee
conHe is a member of lhe Kappa Psi 1,986.
Survivors include his wife, bus, wtth a bachelor of commer- Grimm.
.
.
eluded.
phannaceutical
fraternity and the Pi
Annabel Daniel Hagans, who he cial science and taught six,years at
He is survivpl by several nieces
The
beginnings
Kappa
Alpha
social
fraternity.
OcL 21 1972 in Waverly· Middleport High School. She was a and nephews.
Members of lhe commiuee that
Born
in
Mason
on
June
3,
1928,
His
civic
and
social
activities
one daughter ~. Virgil (Barbara) member of die John Stewart United
planned the celebration were Jim
Gmveside services will be conMoore of Waverly; two stepsons, MethD&lt;!ist Church and the Failh ducted Wednesday; 11:30 a.m., at the son of Henl)' E. and Marjorie include being the founder and fust Stiffler, Jim Fisher, Don Pullin,
M.
Rothgeb
Fruth,
Fruth
attended
president
of
Hidden
Valley
CoonBilly Paniels of Point Pleasant, .00 · Hope ~le. .
Paul Skinner, Bob Messick and
tbe Broad Run Cemetel)' in Letart,
She IS s~1ved by a '!&amp;ugh~r, W.Va., with Willard Love officiat- Mason Elementary School and uy Club; member of the Point JoanFruth.
Bobby Daniels of Orville; two
·
Bufralo Junior High before gradu- Pleasant Rotary Club in 1953-65,
stepdaughters, Mrs. Gene (Janet Mrs. Fredenck (Naomi). Retd, ing.
ating in 1946 from Greenbrier Mil- in which he wss rresident in 1962;·
Daniel) Johnson of Gallipolis and Harpster; three grandchildren, .
There are no calling hours.
itary School. He attended Duke and a member o the l:oyal Order
A number of vendors sponsored
Mrs. Larry (Linda Dl!niel) LaDe of Damel F. Reid, Upper S~dusky,
Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home in University in 1946-48 and received of lhe Moose.
tbe
celebration honoring Fruth,
Point Pleasanti two granddaugh- Mrs. James (Barbara) Ellis, Fla- Albany is in charge of arran- his bachelor of science degree in
Frutll".
s
other
memberships
including
Alco Health Services
ten· and foill'grtat~ii'aildchildren· · trock, and Mrs. Harold (Carolyn) gernen!S.
pharmacy
in
1951.
include
Minturn
Lotlge
No.
19,
Corp.,
Goldsrilit-Biack
Inc., Cardiseven step-grandclilldren; four Bernd, .Lafayette, La., and s!x
He
has
been married to tbe for- A.F. &amp; A.M., the Pat Wilson .nal Heallh Marketing Group, Peostep-great-grandchildren; one grandchiJdleiL She was pmc:eded m William Swartz
mer Frances "Babs" Rhodes of Shrine Club, Bcni Kedem Temple,
Bank, Chain Drug Marketing
brother, Bill Hagans of Manin, death by her husband, Ralph M.
William Hobert Swartz, 91, of South Charleston, Ohio, whom he the Pleasant Valley Hospital Board ples
Associates,
Ohio Valley Bank,
Ky.; and two sisters, Sadie Haynes Howell on June ~4. 1977, and Williamstown, W.Va., formerly of met in college, since December of Trostees since 1958, serving as
D.M.
Merchandising
Inc., Mason
and Jewel Hagans of Martin, Ky.
seven brothers ~d smc.:sAlfred in Meigs County, died Mon- 19 50 and lhey. are lhe parents of
County
Instii'8IICO,
Pleasant
Valley
He .was preceded in death by
Funeral serVIces will be ~eld day, Nov. 9, 1992, !II tbe Marietta rive children - Michael Fruth,
Hospital,
Rollins,
Cleavenger
&amp;:
one son, .Reginold Hagans; two Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. at die Bnng- Convalescent Center in Marietta.
Plan
holiday
program
Joan
Fruth,
Carol
Fruth
RoU1ns,
Fuji
Trucolor,
Allied
Sales
brothcrs·llld one: sister.
man and Co. Funeral Home. The
He was born Feb. 10, 1901 in McCormiclc, Lynne Frolh Trovato
Co., Ohio Valley Publishing Co.,
Services will be bCid 10 a.m Rev. Gail Sims and the Rev. James Alfred, son of the late Abraham and
John
Fruth.
In
addition,
they
Are
you
looking
for
new
recipes
Artnuut Inc., American Greetings,
Wednesday at M~·Moore Ellis will officiate and burial will and MariUa Carr Swartz. He spent have five grandchildren. Joan Froth
and
ideas
to
share
with
family
and
Bloomer
Candy Co., National MarFWlCI'al Home, Weth
Chapel, be in the ~ld Mission, Upper San- most of his life on his fann near was also responsible for lhe decofriends
this
holiday
season?
Do
you
ketsliare
Group,
Leriotis Associates
Gallipolis, with the Rev. Joseph dusky. Fnends 111ay ~all at the Alfred moving to Williamstown in rations at the celebraticn.
need
a
creative.project
for
a
holiInc.,
E.T,
Associates
and Synercom
Godwin officiating. Burial will be funeral home ~y. 3 to 5 and 7 to his later years.
While serving as assistant man- day bazaar or gift exChanf.e? If SO, Systems.
·
in Evergreen Cemc:tel)', Waverly. · 9 p.m. Memorials lll!IY be made .to
He was a carpenter and Carmer,
of the Gallaher Drug Store in plan to attend the 1992 'Holiday
Friends may call at the funeml lhe John Stewan Vruted Methodist a member of the Alfred Methodist ager
Xenia following his graduation Happening" sponsored by the
home on Tuesday· from 2-4 p.m. Chwch, Upper SanduskY.
Chwch and die Modem Woodmen from Ohio State, Froth .conceived Me1gs County Extension Office on
and 6-8 p.m.
of America.
tbe idea of opening a pharmacy in Nov. 16 from 10 a.m. to noon at
A
Rev. W. C. Ratlford
He is survive4 by his wife of 62 Point Pleasant Within four years of lhe Meigs County Scni~r Citizens
WITH A CHaCE!
· c df
f years, Alma Koehler Swanz, two the opening of the first store, the
Rev. Wud . . Ra ord, 97, o · sons and daughters-in-law Gerald business was eaining in excess of Center.
The propam will be presented
Church Street m Beaver, formerly
'f
Marriage llceases •aec~
$100,000,
and.
from
the
1970s
of
Rock
Springa,
died
on
Sunday
an4
Norma
Jean
.
wartz,
o
Reno,
by
ExtensiOn Home Economists
Milrriase licenses have been
onward
pharmacies
bearinJ
the
morning,
November.B,
1992
at
OhiO,,~
Harold
8nd
Neva
Sw~
Cindy
Oliveri, Meigs County;
i~sued in Meigs C9unty Probate
Fruth
name
have
been
established
Pleasant
Hill
Manor
in
Piketon.
of
Williamstown;
seven.
grandchilBecky
Culbertson,
Gallia County;
Court to Franklin William
dren,
II
great-grandchildren,
and
throughout
the
region,
from
Lana
Hardy,
Lawrence
County;
. Spradling, Jr., 30, and Elizabeth .
several
nieces
and
nephews.
Athens,
Ohio,
to
Huntington,
Janet
Hollingsworth,
Athens
CounAnn Reynolds, 32, both of
He was born on ·August 21,
Besides
his
parents,
he
was
preW.Va.
ty;
and
Program
Assistants
Jeanette
Ravenswood, W.Va.; and to Mark 1895 in Rock Springs, son of lhe ceded in dealh by two brothers,
"I'm very proud of the long-last- Ray, Alhens/Vinton Counties and
Wesley Grossnickle,, 33, and Dar- late John Emmet and Flora Schaf- Vere and Waid Swartz, one sister,
ing
we have built wilh Jackie Graham, Gallia County.
lene Kay Barton, 28, both of fer Radford. He had served with Gladys Swanz. Funeral services our partnerships
suppliers,"
Fruth remarked.
Participants will receive a proReedsville.
lhe Weat Ohio Confaence, United will be held Wednesdar at 2 p.m. "All have been great friends and gram full of materials and rectpes,
Methodist Church for 66 years, in at the White Funera Home in great contributors to our success."
create two projects to take home
the Eureka circuit and Central Coolville. The Rev. Sharon HausToday,
Fruth's
accounts
for
a
$5
and sample five snack recipes. Cost
VtteraDS Memorial Hoapltal
Avenue United Methodist Church man will officiate and burial will million payroll to lhe finn's 320 of this annual event is $'1, which
SA1URDAY ADMISSIONS - in Athens, Lincoln Avenue United be in the Bentz Cemetery at Alfred.
employees (including 40 pharma- includes all materials, Those planGeorge Cundiff, Syracuse.
Metbodist Chwch in Pleasantville, Friends !IIBY call at tht: funeral cists), an estimated $500,000 in ning to attend must preregister by
SA1URDAY DISCHARGES - Piketon United Methodist Church, home Tuesday from S to 8 p.m.
annual local advertising, and Friday. To regi$ter for lhe class,
Ross Shuler.
and Emmanuel United Melhodist
contact lhe Meigs County ExtenSUNDAY ADMISSIONS
Chwch ln Beaver. He was a memsion Office at 992-6696 between
None.
ber of Eureka Masonic Lodge of
8:30a.m. and 4:30p.m.
SUNI&gt;A Y DISCHARGES
Gallia C~ and charter member
Nov.
21,
10-11:30
a.m.,
ages
three
Clellan Siders.
PMA meetlna postponed
of Beaver L10ns Club. He was a
The
Pomeroy Merchants Asso- to eighL Cost is $4. Shirin Nuuud;
member of lbc board of Pike ComWIIJ. YOUR
. The Daily Senliud
munity Hospital. He attended Ohio ciation will net meet Wednesday as instruciDr. Call 992-2675 or'"9927733
to
register.
regularly
scheduled
due
to
the
VetUniversity and Ohio Wesleyan
.(UBP811,_)
Teddy bear class, Nov. 19 and
erans Day holiday. The ~eeting
"
Uni~tv' · .
Publiokod ••lll'l' aftom-. }'••dar
23,
.6:30 p.m. Cost is $25 and
Sumvmg are four sons: Thomas will be held Nov. 18 at 8:30a.m. in
lbraasll Pri~. lD c-t 11&lt;..1. ~.
includes
aU supplies. Susan Baker,
Ohio by lbe Ohio Vallq ...........,,.
E. Radford, Clrroll, Charles the conference room of Bank One.
YOU
instructor.
Call 992-7733 or 992c-paarlllolll-• •••·· _,.,.
Dance planned
"Dick" Radford, Piketon, Paul E.
Oblo 46~1 Pb. IIIIJI.UIII. lloooDd c._
2675
to
register.
The Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Radford, Knoxville, Teml'., James
J*U. ..-.a Pwwau;, Ollio.
Teddy bear class for kids, Dec.
POOR
I
Dance
Club will hold a dance Sat. W. Radford, Sarasota, Fla.; a broth·
Membr. TboAIIolialod-..... lbo
5,
1
p.m.,
ages
6-12.
Cost
is
$10
er, Emmet Wyatt Radford, urday from 8-11 p.m. With music and includes all supplies. Call 992Ohio N _ , _ - - Nalloaal
Altrorllllof .._toll••· •........,
Pomeroy; a sister, Helen Rich of by the Smokey Mounlain Drillers. 2675 or 992-n33 10 register. Class
Now- Sal,!", TSS Thlrcl Anaao,
CaldweU; seven Jf811dcbildren lind Arthur Connant is die caller. Those size is limited.
NowTiot, Now_,. to017.
attending brinJ snacks f9r the
WINTER?
seven P.t-Cfllldchil~.
Open bouse pluaed
POII'I'MABI'IIR:--. _ ..
snack table. PubliC invited. ·
Besides
his
perents,
he
was
preTho DollY lloa&amp;iaol, Ill c..r&amp; II&amp;.,
The Middleport Ans Council
Grange to meet
ceded In death by his first wife,
·CONSIDER.
-..,,OHio 46'1111.
will
hold an open house and counThe
Rock
SprinJS
Grange
will
Naomi
Donaldson
Radford,
on
lllliiCIUP'nON lATa
·
November 9, 1974; his second hold and ~n meeting Thwsday at try gift shop No'::.29.
.,.c-~or
Oao Weot. ........................................ a1.60
wife, FI•ICCI Pitton Root Radford, the hall. Rev. William MidOao MCIIIII•·•····"""'''""""'""'"' '"'"""'IIIl
on February 6, 1982; a · sister, dleswarth will show slides of
o.
v..r............................... _ ..asuo
IINOL&amp;COPf
=hlaci:l' and a brother, chwches in Meigs County, Public
Rents are computed accordlnsr
PalCii
invited : Refreshments will be
CLEVELAND (AP) - Tbe
to
your
Income.
Lovely
DeiiJ........" '" '·""""""""""'""'-.211 C..to
served.
Super Lotto jackDot will flOW to
apanmenta featuring wall to wall
Classes announced
$20 million for W'eclneslhy niabt's
w-t-o - -.... )1111bo -.!• IMl nral&amp; Ill . . _ to Tbo
carpeting,
all appliances.
The Middleport Ans Council · drawing, after no one came up with
Funeral services will be on
DoiiJ lloallaol ., a Ill- Jda or 12
Tuesday II 2 p.m. at Rock Spri118S wiD offer the foUowing c:._:
all six num"!:,B:.ked Saturday
-~~~-. CndM w111 • sma can~or
Slate painting, SII1Urday, nocn to night with $16 · · at IUliie.
United Methodist Church, where
STAY WARM lhls Winter!
Hae n Saturday night's Ohio
the body will lie In Illite an hour 2 p.m. Cost is $15 lmd includel all
No ..........11,- ponollllld Ia
.,... wloon ·cantor.oomoo Ia
prior to the 10rvlce, Rev. Keith supplies. Kathryn Meadows, Lcttery selccllon•:
All PRIMARY UnUTIES PAID
..ailaiiiO.
Super Lotto
Rader
will alllclate. Burial will be instructor. Call 992-2242 or 992JWihllu.tfdoM
n33to register.
2•12·13-22-24-30
In Roct SJI'inal Cemdllry.
· Must be 62 yMra of.age or handleapped
lrrilclo ..... Oou9
u· Woob. ......................................t:l.IW.
. Friends may call at the Cox
Ceramic tree top ansel, Friday
(two, twelve, diirfeen; twenty• w-........................................ .1e
Funeral Home, 101 Main Street in and Nov. 20, 6:30p.m. Coat is $12 two, twenty-four, thirty) · ·
u w-...................................... .'18
FOR FURTHER DOAILS Wl TODAY
Equal Housing
Klckas'
lkaver on Wednelday from 4 10 9 and includes all supplies. Judy
11
~AO
0 I " · - - c...liJo
3-2-3+1-5
.
p.m. In lieu of Dowen, memorial Dixon, ins11UClor. Call992-6564 &lt;r
Opportunity
...........................................
.10
.
·
(three, two, three, four, one, .
contributions may be made to Rock 992-7733 to regiJter.
ssw............................................. .40
Thanlisgivlng craft for kids, ·.fi~)
·
Springs United Methodist Church. ·

I

Jack Aadenon and Micllael
Binsteln are .writers for United
Feature Syadlc:ate, Inc.

Two cidle ciection

Warm-cold pattern continues around Ohio

I•

•

means.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

conditions and high

forecas~ for

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

1

Auocla•r: :
J

--·

w..-..................,_,,_. ,. ._......

THE MAPLES

Lottery results

.e

1·6T4·992·7022

�Monday, November 9, 1992

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
·

Monday, Nowmber I, 1112

Miami regains
top spot in AP p~l~
.\aNa

By RICK w
. AP Football Writer
Miami is baclt where it started
top of The Aaode!C!d Prea
- on ~ (o
·

CQIThclegcHOotbalurn·~. 'poU~hOwcnNo.1

OVERTIME VICTORY • Claclnuti BeDzals' Lee JohllsoD,
left, gives teammate Jim Breech (3) a bear bug after Breech's 36yard game-wiDDID&amp;IIeld pi In overtime Sunday at CbiC!IIo's ~I­
dler Field. !be Be~~aall came rn. a two-touchdowo cler.c•t. beatillg
tbe Bears 31·28. (AP)

GOT YOO • H••tuJ Ollen' quarterbadl WarreD Moon (1) 15
sacked by ClevelnDcl. Browna' Rob BIU'IIett (90) durin&amp; the !bird
quarter II Suday'a pme In HoustoD. The BrowDS weDt OD to win
24-14(AP)
'

-

.

Giants win, lose a·Taylor for rest of season
.

· . ·
By Tbe Associated Press
Lawrence :raylor was all set to
leave after thisrcadyear and~s team·
mates were
Y to see
go.
No one, tho~gh, exP_CCtcd t!Jat
one of the NFL s most llftpresslve

h h
till th
ts' 1 dw at, e was s
e aan .. ea ·
er.
·
.
bl T:~~ohpasad~i:.e tJ!a~t ~?

oc

·

·

H~ was hun with 1.:44 _left in the
thud quaner when he JUmped to
~~~d~:',~~usly ~~:OGi~~- forced five
~·he would retire after the turnovers, including Reyna Thompseason.~~ doW!! S~y with a son·~ first NFL interception, "!h~~
~ right _AchiDes tendon, an ~e returned~ Y~ f~ the c~
mJury that w1ll need about four mg touchdown wath 3.38 rem8lnths to heal
ing. That offset Green Bay's edge
m'¥aylor's tcinunates on the New in flfSt downs (21-9), yardage (363y k G'ants and players on the 177) and time ·o f possession
Gor 8' Packers surrounded the (36·08-23'52)
A~o aflnebacker after he was
Rodney lflimpton had two shon
hun late in. the third ~uarter Taylor touchdown runs and Matt Bahr
·
was carted oflthe fae ,left' the sta· k1cked
two f'ae!d goa1s for New
dium in a cast before the Giants' York (54). Ghreen Bay (3b-6) ~ot a
27-7 vic!Oiy was complete and was 3-yard touc down run Y Vince
hedulcd to undergo surgery early Workman while Sterling Sharpe
~is wce1c
·
had 11 rec~ for·160 yards.
•'I'm ;addened that Lawrence
In other games, it was Buffalo
has to end his career on a golf can 28, Pittsburgh 20; Dallas 37,
going out of Oiants Stadium," said Delroi! 3; Cle.veland 24, HoustoD
bi1 former coach Bill Parcells 14· Philadclphia 31, the Los Angc'f' NBC "I' le~ Raiders 10· MiaRii 28 Indi:C~
~ players~ anapolis 0; Mi~nesota 35, Tampa
have coached, 1 would have to say Bay 7; New Orleans 31, New Eng0
that Lawrence T!!!~L~ .'!'C great- }:Sd ~;= ~~·::: ~wk ~
est player I ever ...-......
•
• .
•gc
Taylor 33 was an All·Pro for les Rams 14; Kansas CI!Y I6, San
fi 10 '
f his careet and Diego 14; WashingtOn 16, Seattle
the lfSt, years o ks leadc H 3· andCincinnati3I,Chicago28in
t'!C NFL s careerAIIsac:Pro teamr.laseI o~ertime·
did not make lhe season for the first time, but though
On Monday night, San Francish" k'lls
had
diminished
someco
is at Atlanta.
1
as s ·
Bengals 31, Bears 28

an:'a'lJOC:

1

P("f

fi fi

INGLEWOOD, Caljf. (AP) Wa)'IIWl Tisdale was ecslatic with
joy. Walt Williams wondered what
1111 the lilss was abouL
Tilllale, the senior member of
the Sacramento Kings, and
Williams, playing i~ his sec~nd
NBA game, were maJOr conlllbu·
torS Sunday night as the Kings beat.
the Los Angeles Lakcrs 124-114

for their nrst victory _at the Forum
in more than 18 years.
"It's just the ultimate," said
Tisdale, who had 25 points and 10
rebounds. "I'm just elated. If it
wasn't a big deal to anybody else,
it sure was to me. We can wave the
towel tonight. I know how many
times I've been humiliated in this
. bu ilding. ..

:Piniella to manage
Seattle in 1993
SEA1TLE (AP) - Lou Piniel- Woody WOodward, and a group of
la 11ho managed Cincinnati to a local owners who are committed to
w~rl'd champiooship two yean ago, winning,'' he said.
Woodward has said'that hirin a
could fmd himself starting ncar the
bottOm of the baseball heap with veteran manager such as Pinie~la
the Seanle Mariners nCJtt season.
would show the Mariners' new
PinieUa. 49, has signed a three· owners are committed to winning.
"Lou's a winner," Woodward
ycllr deal with the Mariners worth a
10181 of $2.5 million, with an optim · said. "We need a winner, someone
for a founh year, according to a who can teach our players what it
report published today in the Seat- takes to win." ·
Piniella and Woodward worked
tle Post- Intelligcncer.
In addition, former Reds star together with the New York YanKen Griffey, whose son Ken Jr. kees in 1986·1987, when Piniella
plays center field and anchors the was manager and Woodward ran
·
SeauJe' lincup, will be named bat· the front office.
ling coach,the paper rqxxted.
The Mariners have had only one
Piniella and Mariners general winning season in their 16-year
manager Woody Woodward history. Manager Bill Plummer and
arrived from Florida Sunday after· the entire coaching staff were fued
noon and met wilh other club offi- in mid-October after the learn went
cials to finalize the contract, the 64-981his year, fmishing last in the
. American League.
·
newspsper said.
Team officials have not conPiniella managed Cincinnati to
firmed reports of· Piniella's the World Series title in 1990, a
appolnancnt, and Piniella·could not fifth-place Natienal. League West
be reached for comment Sunday at finish in 1991 and ·a second-placo
his Allendale, NJ .• home. A news finish behind Atlanta this season.
conference was to be scheduled for Piniella also managed the Now
today to announce the deal, the York Yankees from 1986-88 lead·
ing the team to records of 00-72,
newspsper said.
Piniella spent two days in Seat- 89-73 and 4!148, respectively.
He left the Reds last month after
tle last week discus.sing the
Mariners' top coaching job with failing to reach agreement with
team C)lecutives. He made no secret owner Marge Schou on a new conof his intercsL
1 tract. Piniella made between
"They've got a good organiza· $6SO,OOO and $716.000 in the fmal
pan of his three-year contract with
tion led by a good
.. baseball man, Cincinilati.

Eaf::

I

'

*'·

FlcJ..

Blackhawks top Penguins 7-2

f:s

,k

How Top 25 fared •.•

tou~=r:a;~r~~e:o~~~

J:j!,

THANK YOU

TQ EVERYONE WHO
.SUPPORTED ME ON NOV. 3
PAUL GEURD

~p:~:::kw:!hr:!C:.n;1::d•:•:·

-~

(,)

a::.

· Jim Breech's 36-yard field goal its eighth straight hom~ game. The
g 112 minutes into oveltime capped Broncos (6·3) overcame four
Cincinnati's comeback froiD a two- turnovers to win, helped when
touchdown deficit at Soldier Field.
Wymon .Henderson returned an
The Bengals (4 5) had tied the interc:epuon 46 yards for a touchame with S9 ~ left in rcgu- down. The Jets (2-7) trailed 20-16
ration on Boomer Esiason's third . in the fourth quarter' and had the
touch~own pass, a 23-yarder to ball~~ midfield, but Freeman
Carl Pickens.
McNeallosta !'UJDble.
in ~er::sJt~::S~-':!~J
~:00~!~bing for one
before Chrili Gardocki 'punted to game for benched Randall Cunthe C'nc'nnau· 17 Harold Green
ningham directed a conservative
• •
. •
•
•
.
h"
By JOHN KREISER .
Chicaio Sllldium siDcc a 6-S victo;
who rushed 2j IID!CS for 117 yards, offe~Jl!C. t!'&amp;t led _Phllade1p Ia rcst
AP Sports Writer
ry last June I gave tbcm their sechandled the rushmg and Jisiason the VISiting Ra1ders. McMa on
Though
it
came
about
five
ond
straight Stanley Cup.
comJIIetcd an 18-yard pass to Rod- completed 1·2 of 24 passes for IS7 months too late, the Chicago
"It was good 10 have the feeling
n~y ~ol~an I'! set up Breech: s yard~ and on~ touchdown, and Blacthawks weren't about to com- that we outworked them," uid
wmnmg kick w1th 8:39 elapsed tn Cunnmghani will ~.~~xt ~ p181n about the timing of a victory Goulet, who hadn't scored since
OT
The Eagles
Raiders
B"Us 28 S eele 20
(54)
starter (6-3)
Todd .,..."""'
Marinovich
who over the Piusburgh PmgWns.
Oct. 10. Ooulet. moved in!O l~th
1
Pittsburgh swept the Black- place on the 1111-!DJJC NHL list With
Th.;m!.. Th~mas ran for 155 was pulled in ihe second q~artcr
.
.
afte he
lctcd ;.,.. three of 10 hawks last spring m the Stanley 5~4 goals, pamng HaD of Farner
yards on a career-h1gh 37 carnes
r ~~ ards"~
.
Cup finals. The Blackhawb fared · Gil PertcauiL
.
and Jim Kelly threw three touch- passes or . Y
was mter• I!Cttcr
in their first meeting of tbe
The .loss waa the second 1n as
down passes _as Buffalo won at =~'~!'bam
new· season as Michel Goulet many mghla for tbe PensuinJ, whO
3
iKI!De. Kelly, hit JJI!IICS Lofton for a
Mark R •. tblll m
. endtd
a four-we« slump by scor- feU to .11·3-~ The ~lackhawks ere .
pau ~f sco;nng Slrikes and hoo~ the fourth qY::'rz forwW~~~ ing three times in a 7-2 vx:tory. .
5·1·211'! thelf liSt eight pmcs and ·
up With Mitch Frcroue for the sec
.
. .
d
. S
"We
wanted
to
gain
some
Into lint place In the Norris
ond time Ibis season on a tackle· farst offensJve_touch ~wn •.n. 1 revenge, but we also knew we had mov~
Diva~lon, one point . abead of
eligible play. The Bills'f·2) h~ld =cl~;:sp ~~ to get to the puck fiT!it and not just DetroaLl
. .
Barry Foster, the AFC s .lead1:;l
)
h gS tile (!· ) to . . th sit back," defcnseman CJuis Che·
In otner NHL lltllon, at was Los
3
8 115
Angeles 11, San Jose 4; Calgary S,
~·ti~~=~orU:
sU:~t
:d the worst SU:in lios said. .
"We knew where Mario quebec S, and Vancouver 6, WinEas lead. d. th
·
Ia
h franchise history
I
an e .teams P .Y cac
C..........._ 37 Ll. l .
Lcmieux
was all night. We know mpeg 1.
·
other next week; Pittsburgh JS 6-3.
vw-3~ • ~DS
·.
he's
going
·
t
o
get his chances. But
The
Blackhawk!
broke I! 2-2
Broncos27,Jelsl6
Emm•tt Sm•th scored three he can't it alone." ·
second-period
deadlock
when
00
John Elway completed the touchdowns and Dallas dealt
Lemieux had a goal and an Stephane ~attcau •. cutdng across
·
· ·
h
de~ · 28
longest regular-season pass of h!5 Dettollats wofS~: orne ~cat m
assist, both in lhe lint period. But the crease, beat Pittsburgh goalcareer, an 80-yard TD to rook•e years. The last _tune the L1~ (2-7) the Penguins got nothing over the tender Tom Barrasso at 8:10.
Anhur Marshall, and Denver won lost ;w badly )II home was m_1964
a1 T1ger Stadium to the Baltunore last 40 minutes of t!leir fust visit to
Colts. The Cowboys (8-1) avenged
a pair of losses last season to
.
,
Detroit, including one in the play·
offs.
VlkiDp 35, Buccaneers 7
By Tbe Auocilted Press
How the.top 2S teams in the Associated Press' college football
poU fared this week: .
week as Carlos Jenkins returned a
I. Was.hlngton (8-1-0) lost to No. 12 Atizona 16-3. Next vs.
The· win was the first for the fumble 22 yards for a touchdown
Oregon
State.
··
Kin8ll at the Forum since .theY beat and Chris Do Ieman returned an
2.
Miami
(8-0-0)
was
idle. Next: vs. Temple.
the Lakers IOS-95 on Oct. 20, interception 27 yards. Roger Craig
3.
Alabama
(9-0-0)
beat
Louisiana State 31-11. Ne.xt at No. 19
1974, when they were known as ran for two more TDs as the visit·
Mississi
.
State.
·
the Kansas City-Omaha Kings.
ing Vikings (7-2) won for the sixth
4.
Mic~gan
(8-0-1)
beat
Northwestern
40-7.
Next
vs.
Dlinois.
l;he Kings had lost 43 straight time in seven games. Tampa Bay
S.
TCllas
A&amp;.M
(9-0-0)
beat
Louisville
40-18.
NCllt:
at
Houston,
regular-season games and two (3-6) has lost six in a row.
Nov.12.
playoff games at the Forum since Dolpblas 28, Colis 0
6. Florida State (8-1-0) beat Maryland 69-21. Next vs. Tulane.
that game.
Miami, which lost at home to
7. Nebraska (7-1-0) beat No. 13 Kansas 49-7. Next: at Iowa
Williams, a first-round draft lndiana~lis two weeks ago, got
State.
choice from Maryland who only even w•th a rout at the Hoosier
8. Notre Dame (7-1-1) beat No.9 Bos10n College 54-7. Ne.xt vs.
recently ended his lengthy holdout, Dome. Dan Marino passed for a .
No.
23 Penn State.
said he didn't know aboUt lhe los- pairof touchdowns as the Dolphins
Boston College (7·1-1) lost 10 No.8 Notre Dame 54-7. Next:
·9.
ing strcalc ~I after the pmc.
(7-2) stopped their two-game ·slide.
vs.
No.
10 Syracuse.
·
·
"I'm very happy we won, but Steve Emanan, the AFC's defen10.
S)'f!ICuse
(8·1·0)
beat
Virginia
Teclt
28-9.
Next
at
No.
9
we've got 80 more games to go," sive player of the week after a big
Boston
College.
said Williams, who scored 17 game last month at Miami, left in
11. Southern Cal (S-2-1) lost to No. 21 Stanford 23-9. Next vs.
points, including five straight late lhe first quaner with a sprained left
No.
12 Arizona.
in the game to Clltcnd a seven-point knee for the Colts (4,5).
12.
Arizona (6-2·1) beat No. 1 Washington 16-3. Ne.xt: at No. 11
Sacramento I~ to 12.
Salnls 31, Patriots 14
Southern
Cal.
Tisdale has been with the Kings
New Orleans held New England
13.
Kansas
(7-2-0) lost to No.7 Nebraska 49-7. Next: vs. No. 16
since being traded to Sacramento (0-9) to 122 yards and six first
Colorado.
by Indiana on Feb. 20, 1989.
downs, and maybe ended quarter14. Florida (6-2-0) beat Southern Mississippi 24-20. NCllt vs.
In other NBA games, it was back Tommy Hodson's season with
South
Carolina.
·
Portland 123; Denver 104, and a broken finger: The Saints (7-2)
IS. Geoigia (7--2-0) was idle. Next: at Auburn.
Cleveland 127, Charlotte 107.
have pven up fewer than 200 yards
16. ColoradO (7-1·1) beat Oklahoma State 28-0. Ne.xt at No. 13
The game was the Lakc:rs • home four tunes during lheir current fiveKansas.
opener and the rust at the Forum game winning stteak.
17. North Carolina State (7·2·1) beat Vifainia 31-7. Next vs •.
sance Magic Johnson announced BrowDS 24, OUen 14
Duke.
'
his retirement last Monday. JohnStcvon Moen returned a fumble
18,
North Carolina (7-3-0) lost to C1cnuon 40-7. Ne.xt: at Duke,
SOD watched the game from a front73 yards for a touchdown and Mike
Nov. 21.
·
.
row seal in the Slands.
Tomczak threw tw.o m passea as
19. Millliasippi State (7-2-0) beat Arkansas 10-3. Next: vs. No.3
The Lakers have lost their last Cleveland won at Houston, leaving
Alabama.
three home openers.
both teams at S4. Oilers quarter20. TCliBS (S-3-0) l.ost to Texas Christian 23-14. NCllt: vs. Soulh·
The Kings, under new coach bsclc W-arren Moon, who sustained
ern
Methodist.
. Garry S1. Jean, have started a sea- · a concussion last weelc against
21.
Stanford (7-3-0) beat No. 11 Southern Cal 23-9. Ne.xt: vs
SOD with two wins for ihe fii'Sl time
Pittsburgh, completed only 12 of
No. 2!1 Washington Slate.
'
in 10 years.
2S passes for 69 yards, his lowest
22. Ohio State g-2-0~ beat Minnesota 17-0. Ne.xt at lndlana.
Mitch Richmond led the Kings total since 1989.
23. Pam State 6-3-0 was idle. Next: at No. 10 Notrc Dame. ·
• with 29 points and eight a•sims
Cardinals 20, RUIS 14
24: Teimcssce S.3-0 was idle. Ne.xt: at Memphis Slate.
.
James Worthy led the I.aken (1·
Johnny Johnson scored his sec.
25.
Wasbingtoo
State
(7·2-0)
beat
Arizona
State
20-18.
Next:
at
t) with 30 points and Byron Scott ond touchdown of the game on a
No. 21 Stanford.
.
•
added 15.
10-yard run with 2:04 remainin_g •
and Phoenix sent the Rams to their
Trail Blazen 123, Nuaea IN
At Portland, Ciyife Drexler rant home loss this ICIISOII. Clevescored 29
16 In the third land Gary fumbled twice for the
.quarter, as
opened Its sea· Rams (3-6), and .the Cardinals (3-6)
'
son with a victory over Denver.
converted both turnovers into
Drexler showed no Ill effects touchdowns.
from arthroscopic surgery on bia Cbiefa1,, Cbarpn 14
riRht knee six wceb ago, making 9
Nick Lowery kicked a 36-yanl
of 12 field goals, most of them field goal with S4 seconds remainfrom long range.
ing and Kansas City (54) won at
He waa S for S from the field home. Lowery's third field goal of
and scored 16 points in the third the game waa tlio 300th of bia
quarter, when lhe delendln• Welt- career and was onouah to stop a
em Conference champions ~ by four-pmc winnina streak by San
as many as 28 points.
• ~go (4-5).
·
.... ... ........... ...... •...ll c

•
h
ose
to
zngs
at
ome
K
Lak e l
•
•
18
or zrst ti m
_ e zn years
' iJ

-·-.
· ·
in tbe preseason, roaamcd first
pi~ S1111day follo,v~ Wasb;lng:
ton s 16.J loss to Arizona. Miami
had the weekend cif
"lfeel pretty go(,d, but the sea. •
. ..
.
~n t o~~ ~~· . reCCJver
The~1 ninking has been a
lost-and-fcx'mc! item for Miami Ibis
season The Hurricanes had it, lost
•
•...h ....._
inod · lost 1·1
lltoW~-.....·•1'!181
U.
!0 W~ agam, and IIOTo' have
u for a third lime.
The ~y olher:ream~ to be No.
1 three different nmcs m a season
were Notre Dame (1947), Tenncssee (1951? and Alabama (1~2).
The Hurncanes (8-0) receiVed
61_ first-place v~tes. and 1,549
po!fliS from a natiOR~i!lc panel of
wntcrs and brOadcasta's. The olher
ftrat-plac~ vote went to Alabama
(9-0), which rose one IPOC to No.2
after beating LSU 31 11
If Miami aDd A~bbna remain
undcfCatcd and 1-2 in the rankings
the will meet in the Sugar Bowi
' ythe u· na1 u·tle
.
.or nao
"If the season "ended tOday, we
would have ... a dream matchup,"
Sugar Bowl executive Troy Mathieu said.
·
Miami lost its No. 1 ranking for .
the first time after struggling to
beat Arizona 8-7 in late September.
But Arizona helped the Hurricanes

on ~aturday by' en~ Washina·
ton s 22-prnc wlnnin&amp; ~
· "It ~ our one-poilll YiCI07,
over Anzona look real aood.
Miami dd'onsive tacldo Milk Cacsar s~ill. "There should be no
doubt whO's No 1 "
Micb'
(8:.0:1) climbed one
"'~· to
after beat!Dc North·
...-.. .,. 7 3and ..._ A&amp;M~ ·
weiiCnl ...,.. •
,,
0) mowd. up a 11011:h to~: 4 lh
a 40-18 VX:IIIr)' OYtl' Louiavillc.
. Florida State (~-1) lOse one spoc
to No. S after ~g Maryland 69·
21, and WuhingtOn (8-1) fe~ to
No. 6. Nebraska (7-1~ remmned
No '1 after overpowcnna Kansas
49:7 and Notre Dame (7·1·1)
sta .ed No. 8 after !aiding Boston
Cor,eo e illl fiTitloss,
. '~zona (6-2-1) jumped three
io No 9 the Wildcats' high~:mranking ~~
1983 and Syra·
(8•1) remained No. 10 after
cu:w. v· · · Tech 28·9 ·
do
~lth, follo~ed by
Georgia, ColoradD, North Ca10JiDa
State, Stanford, Mississippi Slate,
Boston College, Soutliom Cal,
Oh' State Kansas WashingtOn
1o
•
. •
State!. Penn State, TcDnessee,
Hawau and North Carolina.
Hawaii (7· I), which defeated
Colorado State 24-13, was last
.
hcn"t
1-dat
ranked m 1989, w
• peat
No. 23. ·
• BOSton CoOegc,-(7-1-1) plunged
eaght notches. while Southern Cal
(5·2·1), Kansas (7·2) and North
Carolina (7-3) each fell seven
spots. Southern Cal lost ~3-9 to
Stanford and North Carolma was
beaten 40-7 by ClemSOD.

~

~

~

The Deily sentinel hge 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Newark Catholic-advances to playoffs after 62-6 victory
BY SCO'ITWOLJIR
• . Eastern c:lclcs the IQIOIIIl l·9,
Selatbael Cm1~t Cmishing a schedule thai was rated
Tbo Newark Ca ollc Green one 'of die five IOdgilea ill the State
Wave kept their undefeated grid of Ohio c!uring Ibis foo«bb!IIQIOII.
mark in place by defeatin&amp;the
Cat,holic: wasted liUic dme in
~ l!qles 62:(; at While F'JCld consuming huge ponlona of the
in Newark Saturday evening.
facld, sparking a series of posn1
Newark Catholic, 10-0, sions that netted them 449 total
advances to the Division V, play· . yns. F.as!erttwas limited 10 150.
offs at Moun~ Vernon thi~ Friday . New.t ~ lirst.on the openwhere they will face l&gt;ariville, 9-3 mg pci1SCS81on, ramblinl 63 yards
· al7:30 p.m. .
·
on eight playL C~ f:!uharty's
13-yard run tapped the drive at the
8:41· mart, whlfe Rob Jones JKided
the PAT kict to open the scoring at
,
7-0, Newark.
.
Eastern's .rust possession was
bahed at the 2!1 yard line after three
plays.
·
Paul Randles returned the Eastern punt to the tliirty-two yard line,
then five plays later he rambled
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) into the endzone on a three-yard
Here are !be regional semifinal run at the .7:01 mark. The Jones
pairings for the 21st annual Oliio kict was good the score 14-0.
High Sclioo! Atbledc Association
Eastern tocik the kick-off on a
state fotJtbal~·· bescd Qll the fair catch at the. 31 yard line, then
top four fini
in each region of two plays later hit the endzone
the computer raliJigs: ·
itself on a 73-yard pass play from
DIVISION I
Chad Savoy to Pat Newland. NewAll Gamea Saturday
land caught the Savoy screen pass,
At Berea GeorJe FIDDle Stadlu• got some .key blocks; and turned
Cleve. St. Ignatius ( 10-0) vs. the reception into a footrace
Euclid (9-1), 7 p.m.
At Lakewood Stadium
Berea (9-1) vs. Mentor (9-1), 7
p.m.
At Uma Stadium
Piqua (8-2) vs. Toledo SL Fran·
cis (8·2), 7 p.m.
· At Daytun Welcome Stadium
· Troy (9-1) vs. Springfacld North
(8-2), 8 p.m.
At MBIIilloD Paul BI'OWII Ticer
Stadium
Massillon Perry (10"0) vs.
YOllllgstown' Austintown Fitch (8·
2), 7 p.m.
At Dublin
Pickerington (10-0) vs. Mansfield Madison (10-0), 7 p.m.
At CeDtenlle
Cincinnati SL Xavier (10-0) VS.
Clayton Northmont (9·1 ), 7 p.m.
At Middleton BIJ'IIia Stadlam
Cincinnati Anderson (10-0) vs.
Cincinnati.Princeton (9-1), 7 p.m.
Reglo•al PIDala Saturday, Nov.

. State
.I. grid
,

pairings are
announced·

the endzone, ending a ~!-yard
drive on another Tim Fleming 16yard run Ill the 7:04 mark of the
plcte, the score now lU.
. secolld ·quarter. The Jones kick
· Newark then ICcnd 1111 ita next · was pd. the score 28-6.
pos"'$sion, dominating the line of
At the S:58 mark, the JiHS
scrimmage, and the ground game. defense converged on the Green
The Green Wave ate up huge Wave quarterback Klockner, hit~ of nn on *!' pos"'$sion, linl him for the loss and knocking
desp1te some hard h11S and good tlle ball 1~ for a fumbl~. The
effOJt by t!'cEI&amp;Ies·
. Eagle comtng out of ~ile was
Catholic toot 2:0? to score !IS not_ identified, but !he
es ~ade
next touchdown, a nme-yard Tam a bi~.~~and
possessiOn.
Fleming_ run at the 4:22 mark. The
's offense staned to click
Jon.es kick was good and NC led . again, gaining a first down, and
21-6.
,
showing signs of competing with
Eastern put together a seven- the state's best: An interception,
play drive ~hind freshmJI!I quar- howerver, ended the drive and NC
terbact .Bnan Bowe~ dunng the took over.
last senes of the f1rst quarter.
At the :14 mark Klockner hit
Bowen comp~etcd; one fmt down David Gravely on a 14-yard pass
pass to Charlie B1ssell before the .play to push the score to 34-6 at the
Eagles were forced to JlUDL
,
half,fofiowing lhe Jones kick.
_After three plays, New~rk s
After two fruitless possessions
Bnan Klockner had a pass packed by both clubs to start the second
ciff by Ea5!em's Wes Arbau~~:h as half, Eastern's Roben Reed had a
the fiTit penod closed at ~~ -6. .
pass intctc:cpted by John Kempf at
Easte.rn then stab•hzed Its the 36-yard line. Kempf returned
offense and ran off, seven more the baU to the two and Klockner hit
plays before Bowen s handoff to Keary McCanhy on a two-yard
Arb11u~h was · fumbled and play for a 41 ·6 score at the 9:32
Newadi: •.Adam Bl!lesrecovercd. .
mark.
Catholic toot eaght plays to hll
.held NC to just seven
'

towards thecnilzone. Newland won
the race at the 5:31 mark. The
PAT J1118S to Newland was incom-

r
. e g a i n e d

points in t!le third quaitcr ~ N~ . over the 1,000-yard passinj maat
began to substitute more freely, but with a 3-7 passing night liiCI 86still had many of it main oogs in yards.
the line-up. .
Overall. Jiaslem puliDJ of
Tony Devito ended a 55-yard Savoy Boweb, IDd Reed IICUCd
drive with a three yard
run 120 ~on 10 of 30 ci*I.,..Cioel
at the 11:57 mark of the inal
In lhe rushing dqwllllllllll a.· frame. Mike Musselman's kick lie Francis netted tweDty yank 011
was no good, the !IICOie now 47-6.
five carries, while I'll NcwW llld
Shawn Purcel~ recovered an 3 CIIIChes for 93 Ylris in the lir.
Eastern fumble at m less tban two
Jeremy Buckley and Wes
miJ!utes NC found the endz~ne Arbaugh each had 12 tac~les,
apm on a one-yard run by Devato. Shane JAmes ten, Savoy e1abt,
Chris Greene added a PAT pass to Francisseven,udBowen five.
BJ Varner for a ~S-6 ac;nre.
The Eastern fall spoita '-IIMJt
. Tom KcUy p1c~Cd o!f Bowen's will be~bcr 19M 6:30p.m.
next pass . and 10 mne plays,
Following arc the game ltalisNewark found the endzone ~at tics.
the 5:08 mark '!!'hen Wcs WineEastern will host an Alumni
gardner ambled .m from four yards foolball game with Soutben and
ouL Kelly's kick was good, the both teams a,e in need of plaJasto
score now 62-6.
.
participate in the game, whic:h will
Jason Sheets took the kick-:&lt;&gt;ff be played Novembel- 21. For fur.
return 16-ym;tb to the~ yard line. ther information please contact
but Eastern .s next dnve stalled. Dave Barr at Jias1em Hip Scbocll
JiHS had another chance late in the 985-3329. Dave Gaul at 98s-394S.
game when Shane James recovered or John Sheets. SQulhern
a fumble Ill~ EHS. 28. .
should contac:t Gaul and.
Eas~Qm. llled ~last tune to get players, either Barr or Sheets.
_ __ _
~ score,"ending the game on Score by quarten ·-- - . a l:laal ~ pass by Reed that Newark--....... _ ..2113 7 21-62
fell 1ncom_pletc.
.
Eastern ..- ................6 o o 0 • 6
The WID gave NC us 8th AP.
regular season State Poll Champi- Stat.istics
onship, and third in the last five
yean. The Green Wave is 126-15
N
E
in the last ten seasons, winning 7 of Departmmt
Yll'Sl clowns.............. " .. ....25
S
10 state titles in the same period.
rushing ...- ....54-213 19-30
Aeming had 16 rushes for 157 Yards
120
yards while Klockner had 10-13 Yards passing __..._.__ ,166
passe$ and one interception for 132 Total Yards (rush·pass).499 150
...........-.14-18 ·10-304
yards. Overall, NC passed 14-18 Pass/tomlaU
Intcrceptlons ..... ___,, ___ 1
times and netted 166 yards.
Fluhany ·had 13 rushes for 109 Penalties --·..·--·--....7-'JO 9-55
Pllrlts .........- ............ 1-39:.0 7-23.9
yards.
. ·
UnofficiallY •. Chad Savoy went Timeofpom11ion 21:19 20:41

scorinf

0::

n

DMSIONU
. AU Ga•es Friday
At Canloa Faweett Stadium .
Louisville (10-0) vs. Richfield
FLEMMING ROUNDS CORNER· Newark
Revere (8·2), 7:30p.m.
Eaales. Newark won 62-6. Closing In on left Is
At WarreD Mollelikopf Stadium
Catholic's Tim Plemmlna (44) I'OIInds tlie comer
EasterD's Chad Savoy (12).
·
ID Saturday Di&amp;ht's aame aaaiDst EasterD's
Akron Buchtel (8·2) vs.
Youngstown Chaney (9·1), 7:30
p.m.
At Fremont Harmon Stadium
Fostoria (10-0) vs. Vermilion
The Bears (4-5), who led 21-7 at
(8-2), 7:30p.m.
·CHICAGO (AP)- Quarter- was his ninth straight in ovenimes.
At Lara!D Daalel Stadium
back Boomer Bsiason aDd wide · "They asked me where I wanted the half; may have taken themAmhcnt Steele (8·2) vs. Elyria receiver Carl Pickens had practic:ed the ball and I told lhem a liUie to selves out of the .playoff picture
West (10-0), 7:30 p.m.
the play all season. an alley-oop the left," Breech said. "I was com- wilh the loss.
"I don'tlaiow. It's a long seaAt Upper ArliD&amp;ton Memorial lOSs into .the end zone where the fortable and I hit it real good."
son,
but it's going to make it awfulStadl... .
receiver hopes to out-jump the
It was the second overtime vicly
tough,"
Chicago's·Neal AnderColumbus Brocildlaven (9-1) vs. defender.
tory provided by Breech's foot .this
son
said
of
his team's postseason
Worthington Kilbourne (7-3), 7:30 . They gQt a cluuEc to usc it Sun· lear. He kicked a field goal on
p.m.
day night and it worlted. Pickens ScpL 13 as Cilicinnati beat the Los chances.
•
At Gabanu LIDCOID Field
caught a 4lh·and-22 pass with S4 Angeles Raiders 24-21.
·
Columbus Walnut Ridge (9·1) seconds left in regulation as the
vs. Columbus Watterson (8-2), Cincinnati Bengals carne from two
7:30p.m.
touchdowns back to edge the
At Dayton We~ Stadium
Chicago Bears .31-28 in overtime
• Dayton Chaminade-Julicnne (9- on a lim Breech's 36-yard field
~ I) vs. Hillsboro (10-0), 7:30p.m.
goal.
. .
h
n.oooo. ao, s,;..,..ai .5000. 10, ou
' At Troy Memorial Stadium
"We've been pracucmg t at
n..IC I .....u...
!Wborll.SOOO.
COLUMBUS, Olllo (AP)- Tho·!!·
~
St. MatY.s Memorial (9-1) vs. play for nine or 10 weeks and we
R.,.U.. 11- I, bon""' 213.7222. :Z.
JUJ ...t11 rOOIWl CIOIIIput.r tatinp ••
·. Greenville (7-3), 7:30p.m.
never got the opportunity to t1uow
Thornville Sheridan 144.0000. 3, Nclnolouo4 bylho Ohio 11iF Sdaool Alhlodo
Ar=•Hrt · by dmliali IDd.Jelian. wid!
001\Yill•Y.a 136.!000. 4, IJbriduville
· RegiOJial Flu~ Friday, Nov. 20
that," Esiason said of the 23-yard
Ill-loYd poilu (IAlp four....,. io oado..,.
c:u,.,
... 131.9444.5, Bcllalno 120.5000.
; DIVISION m
touchdown pass that tied the score
• odvoaoo 10 ........ ....,;n,m):
6,.Wavodj 115.5SS5. 7, Nowadl Liciina
V.Uoy 109.11000, I, Now Caoc&lt;ml loltn
fi."VJSJOI'j I
• AU Gamea Friday
at 28-all.
·
·
0111111
105.00009, w-~ w...r.u
~;goa 1-J,.Cleve. St. Ianuius
· At Austlutown FakoD Stadium
· Pickens explained that the play
237.
2, s... 201.0000. 3, Montor
101.5000. 10, Mulino Ft:ny f010000.
119,0000. 4, l!udld 179.5555. 5, ........
Youngstown Ursuline (9-1) vs. was design¢ for the right side o(
Rosian I~ I, Monow Linlo foiWni
wood 162.0000. 6, 2111 Ceve. Shaw
157.5000. 2. Gc.nnanto'lm Valley View
Twinsburg Chamberlin (9-1), 7:30 the end zone, but coach !&gt;ave Shula
149.0000. 7, s.......,w. 123.5000• ••
1'5.50110. 3, ~Allor llOJ5S4. 4,
Mnfield 110.5000. 9. Womon HmJia&amp;
p.m. ·
.,_told the receiver to go left if he was
b
i.ondon121.0000. !,
C1r 127.5000.
101.0000.
10.
P•in
..
ville
RJvenide
At Niles Bo ReiD Memorial Sta- ueing covered one-on-one y
6, Haolkaa Baofin II . Ill. 7, U-a
106.0000.
102.1333 .•• IW&gt;ulolllla ltinpl01.5000.
dlum
· Chicago's Lern Stinson.
RcaiOa 2-1, Piqua 113.0000. l.
9,111uaa 96.0000.IO,I!aloe 10.11000.
Troy 1&amp;6.0000. 3, S;rtaafiold Nonh
Youngstown Mooney (8-2) vs..
"I want to make the big plays.
DIVISION IV
163.11000. 4, T.W. So. Frooidol61.1333.
0-0) 1 30 Finally, 1 had a chance to make a
~~ton 13- 1, Wall"Cn Kennedy
Calho
'·- .,1501..Q 7,153.50110.
6. w.....w.
162. . . 2, suoouboro 1:14.5000. 3,
lie (1
, :
bi$ play and 1 didn't ma1re it," said
. Mentor Lalcc
a.- Cll7 1"'.0000.
Allnnl - - 121.0000. 4, Nonh
I, Oroodo O.yl31.7777. 9, Suoduolly
Limo Soutll R..,p 113.4566. S, Clove.
. ~:OMansfleld ArUn Field
Sunson, who at 5-foot-9 was at a
125.0400. 10, Tb-1 WO!IhiDIIOD
CcaL Cadi. 101.0000. 6, Gate&amp; Mills
Lima Bath (8-2) vs. Orrville (6- disadvantage blocking the 6-2
117.5000.
llawk111 I 0'2.3331 7, Onrdll &lt;lnnd ValPickens.
'
~·· 3-1, M..owoa Pony
loy 111.0000. I, Allnn 95.0000 9, Roo~·
4), 7:30p.m.
Shula called it "the sweetest a
..... 94.5000. 10. o... MUll OilmD&lt;II .
219.
2, - - 213.5000. '·
Monofiold w.&amp;.. 211'7.6666. 4, A..UO·
At Manalle1d Ram Field
P3.1333.
town
Filch
206.9444.
S,
L1ncaucr
· Delaware Olentangy (8-2) vs. victory I've ever been around • .
R.csia! 14--I,Eiflia Clll\.131.2777.
:zoo.oooo.
6, .u- Ellt&amp; 191.5000. 7,
:z. Apple~ w.,.oo~o~. 110.1111. 3,
Millersburg West Holmes (7-3), ·
don't come any better than

Bengals rally to edge Bears 31-28

SC()reboard

~:0..!:mouth SJ18rtaD Stadium

Ironton (10-0) vs. Nelsonville·
Yorlt (10-0)•7:30 p.m.
At Newark Wblte Field . ,
Thornville Sheridan (9-1) vs.
. Uhrichville Claymont (8-2), 7:30
p.m.
At Xaala C. Field
Morrow LiuJc Miami (10-0) vs.
London (8-2), 7:30p.m.
At Trotwood Bob Driver Stadium
Germantown Valley View (100) vs. Kettering Alter (7·3), 7:30

!:'fi.¥.

But losing quarterback Jim Har·
baugh, who had two interceptions
that set up Cincinnati toUChdowns,
said: ' 'ThiSIS
· the worst feeling I've
everhadaftcrapli!C."
Breech's wmning kick, with
6:21 remaining in the Clltra period,

Cincinnati Academy of Physical
Education (8·1) vs. Cincinnati
Wyoming (9-1), 7 p.m.
Realonal FIDals Saturday, Nov.
21
DIVISIONV
Finals Friday, Nov. 20
All Games Friday
DIVISION IV
•
At Adlland Commlllllty Stadium
All Games Saturday
Dalton (9-1) vs. Monroeville (9AJ Boardniaa Spartan Stadium
1).
7:30p.m.
' Warrat Kennedy (9-1) vs. North
AI
Berea
Finnie Stadium
Lima Soulh Ranac (9-0), 7 p.m.
Independence
(9-1) vs. SailAt Stow H11b Scbool Stadlam
dusky
SL
Marys
(7-3),
7:30p.m.
Streetsboro (9-1) va. Akron
At
Findlay
Douaell
Stadium
Manchester (I 0-0), 7 p.m
Libeny ~nter (9-1) vs~ ColuAt Port Clinton True ~y Stadl·
mubs
Grove (9·1), 7:30p.m.
um
At
Belle\'lle
Atlde11e Field
Elyria Catholic (8·2) vs. Mont·
AUic:a
Seneca
East (9-1) vs. Fre·
pelier (8-2), 7 p.m.
mont
SL1oseph
(9-1
), 7:30 p.m.
At Medina Ken Dukes Sta41um
At
Mouat
v..._
Yellow Jadu!t
Apple Creek Wayncdale (8-2)
Stadia
vs. HUIOII (64), 7 p.m.
Newark Catholic (10-0) vs.
At Gro¥.,ort·M..It4la Stadium
Daavillc
(9-1), 7:30p.m.
Wheelersburg (9·1) vs. BarAt.MarioD
Hanllnl Sladhnn .
nesville (10-0), ?2.m.
Marion
Pleasant (10-0) vs.
At Wa'ftl'l:r Rallll&amp;tl' Field
Howard
East
Knox (9-1), 7:30p.m.
Coal Grove DawiQII-Bryant (81) vs. Columbus Academy (8·1), 7 At Falrftekl Hllh Sdlool
Lockland (10-0) vs. Cedarville
p.m.
.
.
(10-0),
7:30p.m.
At Huber Hel1ht1 Heldllamp ·
At CeUiia Stadium
Plelll
SL Henry (10-0) vs. Minster (9SJJringf"JCid Northeastern (10-0)
1),
7:30p.m.
vs. Ilrookville (9-1), 7 p.m.
•
Reaio-al
Finals Friday, Nov. 20 ·
At lorJrla•d Memorial Stadium

. &amp;:.O...i

•1

C1nton McKinley 196.5000. I, Stow
Walah Jcaah 141.6214. 9o Alliance

131.9444. --129.5000.
~on 4-1, Cia. St. Xavier
251.
2, Cin. ~ 195.1665. 3,
Cin. Princeton 195.1665. 4. CI&amp;JlOil
Nordlmont 116.0000. 5. Cia, w..~am
llills 151.5000. 6, 150.4444. 7,
Cia. Mo.ll• 147.SOOO. I, Middletowa
1-16.3111. 9, lfinri I 1144.5000. 10,

cto.
l!ldor ·~
DIYISIOND

5-l,l.aainiiiD 176.5000. :z.
Joclul 1116.01100. 3, y _ . . .
Cboaer 162.5000. 4, Rlobllcld a......

-

-

147.sooo (mol&lt;• Jllo&gt;aiF• booed .. lllinl·
lovU poiaU). 4, Btloil Wut Branch
147.sooo. 6, ltoJIMd Budl.,. 147.0000.

7, S....._.W. 146.0000. I, A...~abul•
115.50110.9, c--•&amp;11~50110. 10, CoafioW 101.50110. 1 0 . - 101.50110.
•
..... 6 - 1 , - 174.0000. 2,
.... 16!JIOOO. !, myr~o w..
. 164.50110. 4,
150.666l '· Dell·
141.50110. 6, 1-ll.SOOO. '·
Lodi a-..r 1'3.!1- ......m ..
129.5000. 9, Sylvoalo loulllvtow
123.50110.10, A-Ubl21.5000.
~on '7-1. Cot.. Broeth..ea
170.
• Colo.
2. Colt.
w.....
161.0000. 3,
W-140.5000.
4,

v-

·i···

rm 134.5000. 5 Jodt.
-_a:M.Gt
6. ,_
• 1111:smG: 7,
, 1010000 .. QaoJrriiJo 1110.0000.

Ww II

'· -·Y-tum.
.....,c.a
o.,....

10. w...,.

-"J'i.o!l&amp;.7m.

a.,.;.. &amp;-1,

Clt•io..t•

JulelaDtl6t.3112.2.St.MamJI

add

167.5000. 3, Hlllokro 1~5.5000. 4,
0..-Yillo 13S.50CIO. 5, Cia. Wiatoe
wooa 133.1:150. 6, Lowoi•••·Horol
1:14.D33. 7 , - 114.GOqO. I, Nor·
...,. 113.50110. ' · - Ooib w• - 91.0000. 10,- 91.5000.

..-m
. ....... 9-1.

y i U..IIM
20ot.lfi:J. 2, Yoaa&amp;II&amp;Owa Mooaa1
us. 7:121. l, Moo10r L.oko Colbollt
177.1333. 4, Twlaokr:a Cb•llorlln

""'"" 105.0000. 4, MoaiPOiia 10oi.2'ITI.
5, Sollinn BlodliUvot 104.0000. ~Ton·
.....y oo..,. 103.5000. 7, Wollin&amp;IOO
.95'.5000. I, DotlloOo Tlllon 91.1666. 91
Lonia

Clearview

IS.OOOO.

10,

LoudmriDo UIIA.
Rcaioa U-1, Wboelenbura
m.31n. :z. Cool an- o........sryon•

146.1949. 3, Bam•villo 145.5000., 4,
Cob. Acad...y 121.6269. !, LooamDe
V1Ucy L16.!5000. 6, Crooklville
111.5000. 7, SteubeaviU11 C11h. Cent.
104.5000. I, Bolono I 02.0000. 9, .......
da ·CinrCJ'ook 9).2717. 10. BalUmore
Libcrly Union 96.!000.
Reaioa 16-1, Sprinafiold Narth·
,...,. 133.3333. 2. Cin. A01d. of Phya.
Ed. 129.1666. 3, Ctn. WJomlos
125.0000. 4, Brookville liS.SOOO. S,
Wci.t JctfonM 101.5000. 6. Cudina&amp;on·
Lincoln 96.0000. 7, Cony9!.5000. I,
North Robinson Colonel Cr~wford
94.5000. 9, Plain City Jlmldlan Alder
91 .5000..10,S;.lnoy!.ohmon 91.11000.
MVISIONV
R.ion 17-1, Dob.., 132.11000. 2,
Jndq&gt;aidmco 117.0000. 3. s.. dolky St.
M1 ry'• 115.5000. 4, Matuoevillo
1110.0000 (mUa o~o,.,rr.- 11\hd.
1evt1 poinu). 4, Moa..t... 100.11000. 6,
l.ooiOai.a 99.2221. 1, Norw•lll Sc Pllul
92.5000. I, McDonold 13.7653. 9,
Coluaabilna Cnatview 66.2717. 10,
M1lvau 61.5000.
11-1, LibeftJ Cerner
134.
• :Z,Aalco -l!oa 126.0000.
3 PretDoal Sl. Ja.ep~ _~ :Z3.SOOO. 4,
0.... 1015000. 5, o.n.Ayonvlllo 16.2222. 6, Rawooa COOJ·
lla- 50.110110.7, 'h
tillo79.5000.
1 McCcnb 16.01110. .,, Utu Cool. Colli. ·
6i-.ao,llioltlvillo61.7m
.
~TrJoa· tt- t, N•••rt

...

::tioo

-..t27.5000.

...... t... Liou- 141AOOCI. 3,
Dlau"w pl......,_l...._.

-.w• .-al..-.ol,a...m.
92.f&amp;&amp;l. ,_ - - 90.0000.6.Pool
9'nP
JJ.IDIIO. 7 w-11.5000.1.
Uppio s..- , .ia.oooo. I, Jtoooro..l

Announces
The Association Of

DR. DAVID MATUSIEWICZ
And

Southern Eye Care Associates
OPIOW:IRL PHYSIOANS

./ Eye Disord~ and Diseases
./ Family Vision Care
./ Fashion Eyewear
./ Contact Lens :Packages

NEW PATIENTS
NOW BEING ACCEPI'ED

~·

'·-c...

62.50110.

....... 20-1, ........ 1~1.11000. 2,
SL Hoary 126.5000. 3, Coduvlllo
111.0000. 4 , - 113.0000. s. w;.a.
1'-wiok 101.50CIO. 6, "-io '
1116.0000. 7, cto. c-.., DoyiiiO.OOOO.

Cit=•

DR. G. D. NIBERT, JR.

Cual Wia._w 99.0000. 1, luaan
ikodal Ucllbtl .... 90.0000.
. • • .,......

15:1.7145. 7,
150.50110. I, Boy
9, C... c.ool

lid•
Polllltoaaoa
lor 1:1100110.
· 131.MM. 10,

NEW YORK (AP) - Three
players filed for free agency SUIIday. the last day to me, bringing
the total to a record I53.
Filing were Mil~ee Ol!tfield·
er Robin Yount, Pluladelplua outfielder Dale Murphy and New
York Yankees reliever Steve
Howe. Howe is currently suspended because of drug violations. ·
The only players eligible who
did not file were Carlton Fisk and
Bo Jackson of the Chicago White
Sox.

·
C••"·
/:,w,.
S:.
't:'t=.ar,a:o-~
1OUII&amp;. 5, I01Uovlllo 102.5000

fiol4 19.5(1110.

ISI.D». I, Cion. I

-Sports briefs-

c:..........

t61.sooo. s, ~ v...., Unl-"y

llclti&gt;ol,

GREENE HAULS DOWN PASS • Newark's Claril Greeae
catches a pliS! In Saturday JJialit's pme aaallllt 1!a1tei •· Cllad
Savoy (12) tries to bat It down. Newark- 62-6.

IO

z.-,~~to'

w61.SGOO,

1 Noo11t ......... Tdo• M:OOOO. 9, I .

ci..dM1001 Soolhal- 1!.!3!3. 10,
Dololladia~69.0000.

Phone 675-4580
626 Main Street, Point Pleasant

•

�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
•

...

Monday, November I, 1912

I

·page &amp;

...a

···c m -

•lEI", ... ller

Ann

mind liB Ileal lA&gt; •' Fur a w11i1e,
four of ber dlilclla, incJIIdiJI&amp; _p;..IPU\.
me,lld:c:m:~lla'ODilllealliDI&amp;

daJs_ Wbcll - aJIIId DO •q;
.,.._,_._.., . . lama
• bomc.
l!lli1IDI
.
kis head»: 'ili&amp;IO-IIowdlis
woncbful- is DOW liviD&amp;- Site
·i s,..,..,.- in a dllir wllcano ODC
in the family em bB _., lla'. 'l'be
home sapcnilor ays. "Sony. doo't have C1J001b suff 1o have
SOIJil:iQnC widl J'ID' ......... 110111111
theclock." .
Sbe dimin*' in ber elolbing
brr•nc DO ODC is ~ 10 lab: her
. to the~ Site is leA- wrj
until ,. ...,•• in die r.nily am:s
IOd•tFIIa'.O.:C,w 1 pMiml,
mcrual1y ••• I I, Jli*c:d UMIF
juiocaB
- -.ul
- I arivcd
-ldt
in
lba1 (11plj1M•
aod

*

CANDID.\TFS ·Pictured are king and queen
candidates for the 1991 faD carnlv~ at Salem
Center Elementary. Pictured are Jenny Priddy,
Kendra Cleland, Hope Nease, Krlsty Puckett,

~Pumpkins fly
.
: MILTON, Del. (AP) -· The
:skies over a Delaware cornfield
·were full of flying squash as 10
:teams competed in the seventh
:annual World Championship
·Punkin' Chunkin' cornpelltion.
: The De-Terminator team set a
·new record Saturday !&gt;y hurling a
:pumpkin 852 feet. Never mind that
:11 veered off course and splattered
·in the crowd It broke the record of
'776 feet set .in 199!).
The ream used centrifugal force
;pro.vided ~y a 1970 Chevrolet
•engme to will.

•

~.Meigs
•

Aubrle Kopec:, Tawney Jona, Jeremiah Smltb,
Zach Kisner, Joshu• Napper, Dould Blltneu
and Adam Tillis.

as teams compete for record
Other homemade contraptions

included Flipper, based on a crossbow design, and a crude catapulL

"These aren't factory-made
machines," said John EUsworth,
one of the originators of the evenL
"They can fall apart, fly apan,
throw in the wrong direction or just
generally misbehave."
The event, which began as a
way to get rid of leftover Hal·
loween pumpkins, drew a crowd of
several thousand spectators.
No explosives are allowed, The .
pumpkins must weigh !!ctween 8

and 10 pounds. Each team gets
three throws.
The winning team used 10 get
only a year's bragging rights as
World Champion Punkin' Oltmket.
This year they took home $250 and
a trophy.
De-Terminator beat Ultimate
Warrior, last year's champs and the
former record-holder. ·
•
"We were beat by a superior
machine," said Ultimate Warrior
designer Bill Thompson. "Next
year we 'II be back bigger and lake
it back."

clelncd her' up..
Mother wean clcamres. Her
Jw•a.n c~eo~uae•rvaed. a1
no ODC an liDd iL TWice slle bas
waildcml Olll~ die bome IDd becD
fuuod laa _.iDa field. This bas
hiMJ'C'K!d ., adler 1 c•• ••s. yet no
one liB Ileal p hl the .._10
1*6¥ il!RD ou:uuiug 8pin.
'l'be rood is -illle. .,. they ldl
OS it is .._• • • " No ODC blows
wbc:da or . . slle 1:111 lllllr:ss a
r.aily "'CCDDI«s ~ 10 reed her.
Sbe
lie I 1 J dlily,
but wc doiiJt dill Ibis is~ We

is
is.......,..,

&amp;We her a bath whenever we cOme
10 visit and suspect it is all the

""'rina: she geu. Her hair is snarled .·
and matiCd and gets brushed only
when ooe of us comes to sec her.
Ann, our society honom the dead,
bas humane shelters for llllinials and
funds the arts, yet very litlle is done
for the elderly who made America
wbal it is today. When TV showed
tbe larible condition of children in
Jtornania, many Americans rushed
to adopt them. We send aid all over
tbe MDI to help victims of war,
famine and oppression. Hurricane
vic1ims get help from federal social
service agencies as well as state
'&amp;&amp;eneics. Immigrants come here
daily and receive help. Why don't
ow own elderly gel equal trestment?
H the DIO!ICY our government pa)'s
oui 10 nursing homes was given
iee 1 aJ to the families so they could
11ft same help, it would cost less
and the old folks would be able to
1M in clan, loving homes and get
the care they deserve: This could
also cn:aiC jobs for caretakers.
Wake up, America. We are
suwosed ID be the most advanced

TROM BUILDERS
·

nation in the world. All of us
. will be old one of these days and we
just might end up being tresiCd like
my mother. -- HER LOVING
D,t..UGIITER IN TENNESSEE
DEAR DAlJGHI'ER: Thank yau ·
for a leuer that is bound to shake.up
a good IIIBIIY people in the nursing
care induslry.
.
In all fairness, I must ICil you that
I have visited 10111e nursing homes
and found them well staffed with
caring auendants, the housekeeping
was superb and the guests were
treated besutifully.
.
Thank yoo for giving me permission to senil your letter,. along
with your name and address, 10 the
edit« of the Memphis Commercial
Appeal, who will, rm sure, look into
the appalling situation you have
described.
For those who are concerned ·
about relatives in nursing homes,
help is available by writing: National
Eldcrcare Institute on Elder Abuse
and State Long-Term Care Oinbuds·
man Services, 2033 I( SL, N.W.,
Suite 304; Washington, D.C. 20006.

Is life ~ng you by? Wa111 .to
improve yow .social slcil/s? Wrilefor
Ann I.Andtrs' new bookltt, "How to
Make Friends and Stop Being .
Lonely." Send a self-addresstd,long,
busiMss-size envelope and a clttclc
or mor~ey order for $4.J.S (this
inclllllts postage and hllndling) to:
Friends, c/o AM I.Andtrs, P.O. Box
11562, Clricago,lll. 6061 UJ.S62. (In
Canada, send $5.0.5.)

•j

COPY DIIADLINE
Monday Popor
T.-.y Poper

tlir. FRI. 8A.H.-5P.H.- SAT;B-12

POUCIES

• Ado ....w. ... _.,,.... ad . . . . . . . . . tpokl
............., ...... pokl ...... _.

m_,_.,.,.. .-.
... u.,..,.........
p~~o~-.

• Prioo o1 ad
0

.or.oo1...., .

uo~orts...,..

.....
.7,... ...rtype..Jr
...

C.ll AI, 614-742·2321

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

S..&amp;IMI lw loot . ., o iLl. tor ....," allor lint dar (•.,_.

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CONr

BILl SlACK

G.Wa Cooanay Melp Cotmay M - Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area~ S04

992·2269

446-GIII.....

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.,......,r
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.....__
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&amp; Cool!rtg
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c.....r • .

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I
Public Notice

I~D
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4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUILICAnOI

Bl'l. LFTI'\ BO \

•

County land transfers post~d
.

Compiled bl'

Emmocene Holste..;' Congo ·

,_e"

A--»-.

IMTAllON 10 Ill ON

.............
w.-..
••
... ..,..
·tiSIUICE

-COim·
1161

wilwun

JOHN WIDE,

IIIC.

&amp;

...._T

NORMAN II.
HYSELL (Dibln)
Who went to be wltll
the Lord, 3 yeln
ago, Nov•••
~ hla bllthday
Nov.17111

1-.

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

llwon Flro O.t. lit (304)
1111444.
llkiiMWI be r1111rod by

FOR SALE:
19761NTERNATIONAL BUS

11:00 P.ll; Nov_._ 11,

35 pauenger, PIS, PIB, auto.

1...

l

-

Thooo lnlorHIH

Phone 304-875-19115

ATTN.:

All~·VIntlge&amp;

Colact1ltle
Sit Dleplly At..
QUAUTY PRitT SHOP
2&amp;&amp; Mlllatr.M
. lll,..1part, Ohio
·Alii For Dalal
EVIIII!tfl
114-7424CI20

•'

a.- Boy.,_.

.

Flro Deportment Inc.
...., _ lho rlghl to rejlllll
IMvar Ill Ill&amp;
Jell An1nl, Storolllry
Flro

to leaw ue, bUt you
did not go lllone, for

ltf1111l10, , , , . .

~oruaw..twllh

...., .._.Vol.
Dopt Inc.

.

t=--;._:_~...:...;..:~---11

WANT ADS lET

I ' I •

'

RESULTS
LIKE

Qod lcnowa you hid

'you.
D11p.'y mlaed Ed
lowcl by Wife ~j
O.UC.hter, Ntilcy;

......

lion, NclnnM;

gnndchlldNn Ed

~liNDA'S

Plllnl&amp;

YOUNG'S

CARPEtmR SERVKE
Rca•' 7'Ia•

Alit!. . Wo!l!
~I .lwl ..............
AI ••
... IIWior ' Edlrlor

MOTHERS AT
Chrlatmaa Inc CIMI
Eaay -"from
home. No OMI'IIIart

up.Swtal-you'H ,.._haW to

mNnll righll wifl property. $24,SOO

NEW Ul'lltO- Lollonon Twp. Bald Knob-S11wnvile
Ad. 211+ or vacont!Md. Good hunllng, building or
IIICII* hcmullll $8,750 ·

110111
IANNII I

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

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

UNUMITED TAII.IIG

co.

....,............
. Fill ISniiAIES
IIAVI ~UEIOKIS

IA.I2i O.IWIII- MINI FARM· 2-3 ac:rea wllh 1 1121111rr .
homo, 2 bldlooma. pond, born. !llll8ae. lhed; oeiW,
chlc:Mnhoull, cHIIdwoA,IIncllng. Goodpovedld. $22,500

FORIVIR

'Tile rN M o.t 01 , . ,
- Lll UrD. It Itt 'frf'

&amp;

NEW IJS11NO • Ooklllldp Rd.· 54.25+ acrea fncludH
oldlr 30 x. 30 houM, moally limber. electric .wiloble,

Alltr' .... 614-915-4110
.

NOv. 4, 6:30: "Dried
Mnlrlal&amp;w.a" .
Call the Trolley Sl8tlon
for DION Info.
1D'a'ltl1 mo.

ION

. KEVIl'S UWI
IUIIIIIIICE

CAJIPENTER. 10+- 110111\ 10 X 86 mol&gt;llt homo, dug
Ml,llpllc tonk, ....... gm~ge, glideR . . .. $23,1500 .

Mt•Dtlor

loiONI7·1460

POIIIROY• t 112 IIDIJ' homo will 3 boc*ooma, newly
1•1 aJ I J; IIIII I l:lnj;, porah, lui buemlnl. $32,500

..... -:'.:Jilng,

Fertilizin~

...... THE NUIIIER 10 CAU. FOR THE lilT
VALUit AROUNDI C' • 'lfi&amp;.RI!ALTYI THI NAill
10 KNOW FOil ALL OF Y
HOUIING NEI!..l

· lllld ulng.
· lhrublllldTrw

~~::2'
ICRemovll
auulll

,_,.1

r
fiREWOOD FOR IALE

z

I,

1·800·598·5654
or 614·446·1157
We

o............l

S!5"
949·2126

Vouchera

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Wfndows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-949·2101 • 949·2160
or 915·3139

wonyellout
Ch.'11l1111•--r
lljllnllnoamelhltt
Meplgolngwr.n
you-'1.
(614) 37M113
11111·12 lim and
6
·10

GUN SHOOT
RACINE FIRE
DEPT.
EVERY
SATURDAY

IIYIDSON'S
PLUMIIIG

Flctory ChoU
12Gwge8hol
Strictly Enforced
10.1:1s'll

2112192/tfn

£1tJl.f't9

CELLULAR

;jlt

k•••

31904~

c.... o•1o
..hhl..,.rt,
614-992·7144
10/1/92

- .... AQenl

TOTALLY AUTOMOTIVE PERFORMANCE
t

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t

t

t

t

t

I

I

t t

t

t

t

I

t

t

t

t

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t

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•FREE INSTALLATION• With any phone purc~e
.
thro~:gh October 31
Servlco rmea from $111.95 per month.
lnclucl. 180 mlnutea of off-peak air lime.
L-Ing IIVallllblelrom $15.00 per month.
FOR MORE INFORMATION
CALL KEN RIGGS AT.

YOUNG PEOPLE

Do you IIMCI a ltal1.
In life?

11 YNIII!d up. Earn M
much • you want, lui
or part tlina flom vour
llome.No-h
Inn bnMt, be yOur

lrMplgolngwhen you don't.
(114) 371-1153
ll-121nd 11-10 m

Stone Co.

Ann ouncerne nt s

SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call614·992~

6637

St. Rt. 7
CHs.ire, OH.

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

UH•rtlwl.,

(614) H2·5449

3 Announcements

·

Ouyel U.. Olole Ano Wohln\T
Talk To Youii-IOQ.211-3m 11~
ma,~a "- llln. lluet a. ui
Trw. .,....., Co. (102) 131,Ge15. .

The Phoria Sex Ade E.om The
Tribune $1.10 !Day. II You Oblect
Coli The TriiKooe: 114-446-~2
T~IAll Your FrlondoToCall. · . .

1

4

Giveaway

. RACINE MOWER
CaN 114 441 4114.
I .._h Hall IIMale Bluo
, CLINIC
Hell"!..:.Sloo4o Ani1 s1111y111.
leii94-w.lkw Ally
4 Kll-

ll&lt;I~OIIO
(f....t,
~ ... .

F.IREWOOD
FOR SALE

Vacation Money

· Quality

f&amp;AJUI_.

-••me•
'-:3;'£7:;
-..w-:
............

WANT ADS bring

· ~JAYMAR :

awnboM,-11
vou·,. milia mudant.
ThlllllliCO!Mihat

6:30P.M.

POIIIIIOY· Wllghlll- UniQue A-frame homo wllh 10
-~..L~~~:·72IIIICI81, electric I -'CI
t.l,
•2 IIIII' ~
outbuilding.
...CXIO
111111' ·
111111idlr,...,...
o-.

We Deliver In•••
Gallia, Meigs, Mason and
Surrounding Counties

(No Salllllay Callsl

114.QI

STARTS

y

.

992·3838

Pmny,OIIIa

Factory choke 12
gauge only

POMEROY, OHIO

61'4-1192-2541

mEE ES11MATES

Y. C. YOUNG II
m-6215

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SUNDAYS
12:00 Noon

992-2259

HOME HEATING OILS
DIESEL FUELS • GASOLINE$

CRAFT CLASSES
Oct. 21, 8:30 pm:
"Lunch llukllt" S14.00
Nov. t, 8:30pm: "Pie
Baollllt" $16.00
SWAGS by Connie:

~E=ED
UMESTONE-TAUCIONG

~lE~l

Real Est81e General

cuns

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

SEPTIC IYITE. .,
HOlE lllEI Mel

.... Hoven, wv. 211215
·n. Nw H - Volunliler

HEART TO HEART' MEETING
THURS., NOV. 12 • 7 p.m.
Speaker: Steve Burris
Topic: Experien~ of a Heart
Traneplaflt Recipient
675-4340,Elrt.405

....

EXCAVAnNG
BUIIJ!'?!!! 1~CKHOE
end ''"'''NIUI:
AVAILMLRWORK
•

P. 0. BoiiiDI

j

TROLLEY STATION

In

Nw Hoven \loL Flro
Dept. Inc.

•

608 EAST MAIN

TOYS

10111112

............ ~eond

!
l

.

D.lt's

1. . . . . . . . be__. ..
7:00 p.m. Novomller 11,

lrana., _318 Cil. in. engiiw,
good condition. .

•

who have any

BP OIL CO.

In Memory

In Loving llamory

AIWJE IIAY DOORS
Tile .... " - VDiun...
Flro D~ent Inc. wiH
n 11ln i..tecl bide lor four
(4) uoed t2x12 oluanu•
111r• lillY doora with
opener MOtors .nd 1r11111t.
Tile doora . . be oold. to.
0

Writing duo

._..CIILIS

2

;• I

-·

Glallty HI Effidelcy
Air Co.tltloters, Heat
P1111p1, f11'1111Ces &amp;
Naw Water Heaters.

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

StOll

IA'JERTIIIIM.

~-_;1 ~~·~ .

BISSELL &amp; BURKI

OASSU'IIi:IIS
.G ET QES1J:LTS • PAST!

.,.,,~

LICENSED and ,BONDED

f •lllew Ho••

15
15
15
15

Door ,.,. OpeHr

R&amp;C EICAJATIHG
. IU~~NG .

:00 P.M.

RATES
Over 15 Words

....

Wit• Pwrc••.. of

..

. COISTIUCTION

Rate

With 2 Transmitters

458 ,.,.•

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace
Words

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
TRY OUR lEW
STEEL INSULATED
RAISED
PANEL GAUGE DOOR
,,

oUMESTONE

. •FIREWOOD

the

f~llowfn6 teleplaou esc/uuage1...

• ""'""'' · -.. poklla - . -...,
3118-'Yieloe
Cat.lcl........
llaPPJAdw
24'-Bio c..843-P.tdud
Ia Mm r1a1i1
Yud Sol.
256-G_,
••
Dlot.
247-Lotott
, ..
• A :Ja 'Pod .... . ,
tploood Ia ""'Callpo. Do1Jr
·
64S-.boldo
Dlot.
·
949-Ro
.....
T..,_ (-r&amp; Clw lfed Dioplof,- CaN or Upl ,
379-W.._t
742-Ltloed
Notloto) wUioloo opPobd P •e• Ropo• aecl
667-Coolwllle
""'Dolly S..tieol, ........_18,ot0 .._

Days

after 5 p.m.

111711fn

To place an ad
MoN.

F.IS h·············~~~·········· '400 per Inch

ONfltr AB•NI e..,_,.,.

20 Yr.l1:p.

6

Jerry Cecil Ward, Elaina Ward. ert, Rutland
James W. Bland, Virginia W.
Lot 416, to Judith L. Thivener,
: Recorder, Melp County, Ohio
Pom Viii.
• Bland, Tracts· to, Dale L. Davis,
Raymond L. DeWitt, Parcel to. Karyn,D. Davis, Sutton.
: Helen Throckmorton, !IIJ'CCis, to
:Marrianna WhitlQCk and Joan Cecil D. Frye, Rutland.
·
Allah A. Lambert • Lot 7 to,
~ t't re, Bedford.
Orval L. Wiles, Bell)' J. Wiles, Victor Counts, Virginia K. Counts,
: Stephen P. Marcinko, Tamela s: Parcels to , Patrick Hill, ~ancy Syracuse. .
Max G. Grueser, Barbara
,MarcI'nk0, 5•OOOA , Joseph EdWard Hill, Pom Viii.
:Sowers, MarySowen, Orange.
Cl.ifford Beegle, Mattie Beegle, Grueser, R/W, to, Buckeye Rural
• Elizabeth A. Rossiter, parcels, Parcels to, Ronald G. Beegle, Eleettic Coop. Inc., Bedford..
:Michael T. Rossiter, Olive
Leanna S. Beegle, Suuon.
Ronald L. Saunders, Audrey I.
' Maxine Griffith, Charles GrifJeffrey Hubbard, Julie A. Hub- Saunders, R/W, to Buckeye Rural ·
fith, parcels, Maxine Griffith, bard, PL Lots 53 and 54, to Carol Eleettic Coop. Inc., Columbia.
:Karen Griffith, Salem
L. Theiss, Syracuse .
Doyle E. Meliclc, R/W, to,
: Ralph J. Harden, N. Jean Qeek,
Morris E. Teaford, Mattie Buckeye Rural Electric Coop. Inc••
R/W 10 Tuppers Plains- Chester . Teaford, Parcels 10 , Richard Lee Salem.
:Water Dcstrict. Sutton.
Teaford, Kevin Dwayne Teaford,
David M. Brickles, Edith A.
• Billy T. Dailey, Carole Dailey, Lebanon
Bricldcs, R/W, to, Buckeye Rural
:R/W to Tunpers Plains- Chester
James R. Priddy, Sr., R11th A. Electric Coop. Inc. Bedfonl.
:Water District. Olive
Priddy. 2A.Fl. T-6,R-14,to Charles
Anthony Corsi, Helen I. Corsi,
• Edward E. Adams, Tammy R. Calhoun, Rutland
R{W, to, Buckeye Rural Electric
STARS Oil I'AME •l'ldwal~n "Sian or
Ellsworth J. Holden; Ann F. Coop Inc.. Bedford.
:Adams, R/W to Tuppers Plainsd
, . . . at 'd
Cater Ele-t&amp;rJ.
;Chester Water District, Olive
Holden, Parcels Sec. 12T,Rl5, to
John Yost, Jqnc Yost, R/W,IO.
n.e,
1ft .W.. ....... R:hrt
"-ny
, Tim B. Wolf·, Donna M. Wolf, Stephen R. Rife, Rhonda J. Rife, Buckeye Rural Electric Coop. Inc..
Dalliell,
J
n
1 M,
er-,
Crlsty
R/W 10 Tuppers Plains-Chester Salem.
Rutland.
.
and Misty hcbll. O.ald ._krl, DoDJid
'Water District. Olive.
Tammy A. Hoffman, Tammy A.
Robert L. Mash, Tamera L.
: Ida w. Cowdery, 17.496A. to Crider, James H. Crider, Parcels Mash, Parcels, to, Scott L. Walton
)ames C . . Eddy ; Cheryl L. Sec.36,to Bill E. Buchanan, Bever- Geri Walton, Pomeroy Village.
'Edd~,01iYe
ly Buchanan.
Homer Mills, Goldie Mills,
Otis S. M c Clintock, dec'd, 0.838A., to, Brian C. Ric thhard,
•' . J'f'
1 .ordE• Young , Sr ., dec'd •
·affid, to Clifford E. Young. Jr. , affid., to Emma Jane McClintock, Sut10n.
..
·Porn Viii.
Sutton.
Kennith E. Newland, Howard
Hartly, Hartley &amp; Hartley, Inc.. ' W. Newland. Parcels to, Glen R.
: Susan E. Pigott. Tracts to Virgil
;A. Miller and Sherry A. Parcels to Fred Beaver, Porn Viii.
·Bissell, Chester.
·Miller,Oiive.
Gerald R. Thompson, Alice
C8fol F. Pierce, Bonnie Gene
: George H. Buchanan and Vera Thompson, 0.066A., to, Thomas G. Pien:c, Parcels to, Carol F. Pierce,
·M. Buchanan, 0.39A to James W. McClung, Madeline McClung, Salem.
•
:Barter and Margie M. Barter, Pom Viii.
.
FrankM. Gugatcdec'd, CerL to,
'01'
Gary R. Canterbury, Doris L. EvaMaeStoeeper,Pom Viii.
•• IVC.
Betty Martin and Herman Mar- Canterbury. Parcels to , Southern
Frank M. Fugate, CerL to, Eva
:Un, Lot 53 to William A. Young, Ohio Coal Co.• Salem.
Mac Stoeper, Pom Viii.
:Porn Viii.
Teresa S. Canterbury, Pattels to
•
• Mary E. Thompson, Parcels to • Southern Ohio COli! Co. , Salem.
l'hillip A. Thompson, Salem.
Fred w. Crow,m, Cathy Crow.
• Carol W. Cline, lO.OOA to Ease.,toStateofOhio,LetarL
'Charles B. Holsinger, Olive;
Roy F. VanMeter, Bonnie F.
Guy H. Shuler, dec'd, affid, to VanMeter fpa Lawrence, Parcel to
NEW YORK (AP) - Charles
Mary Shuler, LetarL
, Roy F. VanMeter, Bonnie F. VanB. Nordhoff and James N. Hall
John C. Young, Parcel to, Meier, Sut10n.
were a team of novelists who co.
RichardR. Young, Sutton.
.
George W. Miller, Jr. by authored aueh books as "Mutiny
• Vernon Bartels, Judge Entry, P.O.A., Marilyn Jean Miller, Lot on the Bounty," "Men Againsc the
:VS. VillageofSyracuse,Syracuse. #327, to, Marilyn Jean Miller, Sea," "Pitcairn's Island," and
••The Hurricane.,,
Dorothy Emmons, E. David Midd.V.
Colwell; Jolene Molitores, Rex E.
Evelyn Elliou, Parcels to,
Nordhoff, born in London of
Shenefield, Catherine Shenefield, Roben ·G. Graham, Keith Allen, American parents, becune a piiOl
Catherine Colwell, Frank Colwell, Chester.
in World War I. It was while flyina
;Pamela Colwell, Ann Forbes, Paul
Robert G. Graham, Ruth A. with the French Air Rlrcc !bat be
.Forbes. Mary C. Johnson, Robin L. Graham, Parcels to, Keith Allen, met the Iowa-bllm Hall.
?ohnson, Dean Colwell, Lana Col- Chesler.
·
After the war, the p.u first l:olwell, lA, t.o Southern Ohio Coal
Jeffrey 0. Peckham, Vichy K. laborated on a book about the
Co., Salem.
Peckham, UJOOA.,to, Gary Harper, . Lafayette Flying Corps, in which
111 5•~••• St., P1any
Ronald L. Hensley, et al, Lori L Charlotte Harver. Rutland.
both served. Later, the two men
Hensley, et al, James Nutter, et al,
James E. Diddle, Linda C, Did- lived and worked in Tahiti.
Sheriffs deed 0.97A , to Michael die, l.OOOA., 10 Jimmy C. Cald• · Two of their boots- "Mutiny
~oe Hawk, Chester.
well, Sally Caldwell, Sutton.
on the Bounty," and "Tile Hurri·
Nancy D: Hoback. Tracts to ,
Alpha Ramey, 1/4 inL 103 3/4 cane," - were made into movies.
John Bill Hoback, Aaron S. A., to, David Ramey, Kenny Nordhoff died in 1947 and HaD in
1951.
.
Hoback, Troy David Hoback, Ramey, Craii!J· Ram~.
.
• ...__.
Virgil L. ill, dec d, affid, to,
Kracklimberger, dec'd, Kathryn Hill Letart.
Carl Hencirlcu, dec'd, alf'ld, 10 ,
CerL Of Trans. to, Golda KrackDorothy Hendricb.. Porn VUL
Onlberger. Chesler. : .
· Charles Bush, Alice Marie
Doroth~, Parcels to,
Bush, Parcels 10 , Arron L. Sayre, Harley E.
. , Porn VIII.
•EO, lOSE IHIOIJeMIEIIY
,_,_
S
S'fr:
Suuon
Virgil
E
.
Price
1.16A. to,
Cl IH ld ~ hid chlclr8n;
Shu ...y •
•
•
Bo)lbie rankam, 1/2 A· to, Pauline IaBonie, Chesler.
hMt,
te naadln
•HEARIIG AIDS • HEAD &amp; IECI_.IY
Richard A. Kipel, Scipio.
Hazell. Congo, Charles Congo,
l*w.,.IIMIII4:80P.M.
"
. Lin~1 W. Shaver, Robert E. Ruby Congo, Eileen Pollc, Rose
;,;;;,;..:~
Cut
Ftr
Yttr
G 1 I J, crlfte, llell pond,
StJ, , S. I , T -6, R-14 to, Ross Harris, Alvin R. Harris, Anna L.
111gia• erllcln a bead
Junior Stewan. Gertrude W. Stew- Oatley, Janet Jeffers, Evcreu JefFDdl
an,ltutland. .
fers, Lot 58 to, Odessa Proffitt.
C IJ out.-, anl1lt1l.
.
&amp;UMWAAf4
Ilea....
Kean P. Jalowy, Marie D. Leblnon.
nn 1 n~anry%
J.WWy, Palccl 10 llmclst E. Harris,
Robert Romines, Joyce
..... I' !Jill ... P.M.
SUITE 112 VALLEY DRIVE, PT. PLEASANT
RounD Hanil, Lcblnon. ·
Romines, Parcels to, Bobbi Kuehn·

:

Deer lieads .................•..*19000
'Kt!YlS.......,••••••••• ·····~······ *1

IID·mm11• UIIIIIUII
fAillES • IDDinOIS • SIDIII .

Daughter says very little is done
for the elderly; wants more help
Dar 0 . I ( L .....-, is
77 years old. Sllc snffers from

GRAY'S TAXIDERMY

PARTS

SERVICE

•wers
•
. • Wttdeaters

Gail5awL'l

...614·949·2104
. . ..

.
.ar'-":-i-'"~"~""!!.!'~~...,;!!. ·
•
·I'
T7'"

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•

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.

:

~·

-·

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' ~,. IL-----~~~

&lt;load

·-~.

ll"!,_- a1oort holr, t1 mMtli
old ....... 114-1'12-2114.

~
. . . . . cat &amp; 2 kntono, 304:
One male 1nd one •m•l• kitten
304..7U21S.
:
One male Poodla 3-4 yMro old·
lomale ChliNahue/ShHtu:

114--41.

'

-r.o lowldll.... 114-tt:l-eeee,
6

Loat &amp; Found

l.olt: lid ......... 1yr. Old, w
C:O., 112 CMw blond-n,
rod ooller, mlghii.O Injured 1141112-71111.
'

L.aet: Poi'Mt••lan pup, black
and mlxad, Co Rd 11·
114-1112-'lor.l.
•
. '

.

�\

:rite o.Jiy ~lnel
7

Ohio

SN.UU.bJ . . . . .

Ylfd Salt

1182

Pomeroy Mldclltport.

Uh

Television
Viewing

MI!Wift
~N.J.

Gallipolis
• VlclnHy
ALL Yll'll -

-

_......,.

Ww.EHD l

lo Pilei In

-· DEAIIUNE: 2:00 p.m.
... .., ........ "" .. to run.
~
Frtdoo.~

....... 2:00p.m.

a••• ;ann••,...
"••.,... ~-nr na•

lllondol odlllon • 2:00

(I).

IN,a.lo I Wool Vlrglhlo, 304TIW7II.

PSALM 121 : VERSE 6 ~
''TME SUN 51-iALL NOT
.SMITE Tl-lEE ~'( DAY, NOR
TI-lE MOON 9'1' NIGI-Ii ''

LM-

SOMEI-lOW. 1l...JE NEYER
WORRIED MIJCI-I A60UT
TI-lE MOON
..
'
'

3

•r.....,;N,;_;,
.O...;J...,..I_Tr-11
I~ 1
SCE0 0 J

I

1--1,.;;.5~~;,.6=-,1.:...;.1..:...,.1--t

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

I· I I I

1581 Sq. Fl., .11 otro tot, 2111
z _,.... tolho, dining
room, Uvlna - . Slldrm., ....
In
luU, caopoted, 2 por·
- . -.Jchool, fil!,ot....

7:00~e GJ)~ofF,_

Wlllo,

::n::::·~~1=:

Ani..._

llnir Etc. To 8i
Avollobll For 2 Or 1 DoYI EMil
WNt. A_......., I Moura
Por
!lay. ·HouriJ
PoJ
N-lonoblo, ldool Pori·Time
Jo6 For A Rlllrod P - . Wrtlo
WMh Hltllory, lo&lt;tar-td, Or
ROIIIM To: CU llilr 246, 0/0
GaPioollo Dally Tribune, 121
Third A•onuo, Goltlpollo, 011
4IMI:II. ,
EARN

BIG

BUCKS

FOR

CH"ISTIWI
s.u Avon. 61t 4tl 1311
EARN MONEY Aolld.....:.::::r
$30.~..

lncomo

Dololltl. (1) 10~
101111.
Eoay Worlil Eaoolllril

...
Ext. Y·

IIIII IIIII~ Or AI

=~~·d
Uoonoo,
v.... ·~=
Drivlnt
Ea........., Good Driv!ni

I

:ro
=.=to,.._
Op::.
Emfolol•·

..._,_
.
_1/llo
..._,a

&amp;t~;

COcllll

......,.., 11112112. Equol
lunlly

Buslnaas
Training

patohor IRocl!lllonlol, loluot
Ho" . Good Tolophono Slolllo,
And Work Woll Wllh Pullllc.
loluol Ho•o Good~ 18 · Wanted to Do
Skllltl1 Somo
_
Typlncf And Flllna
Roquonocl. -llooiHM To: Cl..l All••lloo•: ....... ' llondlng,
247, &lt;lo Golllpollo
Trttu~, 114-441-4t14.
125 Third A - .
polio,.,
latplnlna In llr Homo: Cly
4IMI:II.

their views on The Oprah

(I) . . . .,.

Ill. (I). Fll: Thf Untold
8loiiH (Seaaon Preinlera)
An OICeped murderer stsys
one ate11 ahead of the FBI;
stereo.·c
~ (!) s,lace Age Stereo.

....,.1111.

IHarlan
• ae
Evenln&amp; Sheds
Ilea to Rlc:h6rd

.._ 1
to111, 14 Flol
Ltil ,~ 1J ~ M:10 .. P.ll.
PhOne: ...... 1171 After 1:10
P.ll. 111 ,., tal

Simmons about how much
!!!lght he hu lOot. Stsreo.

~

ieMOVIE:Farrle

So-

Dlolllc:l.

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

Anl....... l1t ttl 1114.

44

.,

• Croolc and Cline
Ill NFL Monday Night
M81011-Up

!1ia;;a.~...
;;;;;;
..;:Fuliiiai......
~10iiilollftutlliftUi;;

TWo """"' -

Ea~ l'cir lloctrtc. t22tllolo.
~ .1 Rala•w.. lloqulled.
814-44&amp;11MO.

-

...... bounl ".!:;

.Jn...
,

IWNiilr.I'IW4J.all

IIIII• I11111L

32 Mobile Homes
· lor Sale

b d OOIA

.

_.,_arat
n1oo Illig_.. ·, rat a .P

........,....,..,_,

=-·

Tr• lopping

a

4M, lrio ........... -

Will Hbr oft In my homo lolon·

dly thru Frldey, have ,,,...,...

ftl-

. . . !1114-e?S-eaoe oak tor Dobtlo.·
'

__
- lllllnl-----

.WIU Coro FOr Elclorly In lly

Ohlo.41711.

'

O.T.R.
good

·clrhrn -Ill.

PIIJ, home •nkandll,

..........

~3048112117.

rwt'UI

~.

....

Ina' d

..... opportUiillloo, ... -

IIIIOt,...,._ ..... _
lo: 'P.O. Box

~ 721C,

..

,.,._.,,

Homo.l14-211-11111t, 114-25&amp;-171l

Will

do

tatvol111ng; a•·
porioncod, &lt;lrlltlod diy ....
pro•ldor, coli anyllmo 814·882·

2811.

WIA do -loaning, oall

4CiJOSS

BARNEY

1 !!oxen Ill.)

.;::bled

Datacttva (Saaaon Premiere)
An Intricate drug bust Is
planned. Stereo. C
.
a • ae ~~aarra Atlrs
The menot Sen. Smithers' •
staff dreao up •• woman tor

12Taka-view
13 Dlltrlct
14 Old card

MAW'S OFF VISITIN'
HER SISTER AN' I'M
STARTIN' TO FIX
SUPPER

waterfall

44 Fllhlng poiSI
46
of

!7!1

17 Tw".:Ctr-lhr•
50 Blsablller

HodgH
51 An..poH.

·xr•
57 Wriggly IIIII

Mineo
18 Commit

52 valanc,.

,.=.~ ·

58 -

pronoun
21 TIURII
24 Beaver ltln
25 Ortaktptc

27

Anlwer to Pnvlouo Puula ·

c::•

recorder

511 Tsnnll

-Nil
80 lloblrt E.~ 81 llachlnt gun
12 AuthorWleHI

~ldtlte-

lloll dtvlce
311111Wsat
role
32 Scrllftl
34 lllound

3 llualc:llln'a
. job (II.)
4 Grlna
5 Top of the

1 Comrade
2 Saled herb

. 7 - B. Dtlllllt
8 llsllglout

a•

Buslnasa
Opponunhy

10 Daallnlllon
11 - Clllb
18 Actr-Spacali

6 Paychlc:Giller

Parlormllnceto
The fortunes of a group ot
Cambridge undergraduates
are tollowed. Stereo. C
1111•
Mulphy ~n~wn
Murphy lei- Eldin with the
baby whllo on en a!lllgnment
1o Paris. Stereo. C
0 WWf' Pllms liiis
W!WIIIIjjWWF
Champlonohlp Tl1la Ma1Ch:
Brei (Hitmen) Hart vs.
Berzarker.

Fma nc1al

holiday
I OtharWIH

htad

DOWN

1D C!l

blfoN ...... 114-112-71illl.

Pau

(2 well.)

ltery ICienCI
17 Actor-

Night FOOiball San Francisco
· 49era aj[tlanta Faleona (L)
Stereo.

I'LL BE GLAD
TO FIX SUPPER
FER YOU
FELLERS

Eut

2t
3+
Pass

42 Famoua

15Chofml~

e ABC IIDnclay

Ill.

North

Pass
Pus
Pus

35--IHY
37 Wander
39 Front
40 In conftlct

5 Brownllll-

NIA lketball Indiana
Paoars 11 Chicago Bulls (4

llnebacl&lt;er Tommy
Nobla, San Franc:IKO 48ere
tight end Brent Jones and
40era former llnebecker oa ••
Wilcox; 1991 Hal Mary
Game.
I:OO())e ' GJ) MOVIE: 'F•l
Memories' NIC Monday
Night a~ lllovta. (2:00)
Stereo..

tnmmlnt ••·

W..t

2+
2•
6+

Tbe World Almanac .. Crossword Puzzle

former

.

So•th

I

a talent show. Stereo. r;l
Ill NFL MondaJ Night
Magazine Allllnta Flloons ·

eor-m For Your Chlld'o
C1n. Call Uo For A VIol. Infant
/T-rw 114 .4411227. P chaallra ISchool At- 114-441-

Dealer: South

1-----------....J

Ill. (I)·~

~

+AQ
Vulnerable: Both

\Vhen you are playing a bridge hand,
Pau
lt is pleuing to force an opponent to
Pass
a trick you cannot get ~y
l~•unrelf. This, of course, is the essence
Opening lead: t Q
an endplay.
Take today's deal, for example. You ·
1arnve in six spades. West leads the di1an1011~ q11een. Y011 win with the ace
.
.
down the spade ace, East dis· dummy on the third round of spades,
I ~~::t.~a ~1:o;w . diamond. How should 1 overtaking your three with dummy's
1
I you
five. However, as you see in the.dia-.
South opened with a strong, artifi- i gram, the club finesse loaes: one down.
cia! and forcing two clubs. North's two
Yet the contract is _guaranteed. Bediamonds wu a "waiting" response, ' fore you give West the lead with the
which is made with either a really bad spade king, you must eos11re that be
hand or one with some ~ cards but bas no safe exit. At trick three, cisb
no good suit to bid. Three clubs was the heart ace. Then, take your remainso-called double negative, denying lng top diamond. Finally, play a hlglt
any worthwhile values. At this point, spade to West's kin1.
South, who wu afew dollars dOwn, cleWhat can West lead -~ lt. beart
cided to-'try to end the evening on a sets up a winner in tbe dummy. A diewinning note: He took a sbot at six mond Cflllcedes a ruff·and-dilcard.
spades.
And a club is into your A-Q teuce.
Once the spade king fails to drop, it Wbicbever he chooses, you l011e no cltlb
looks u thouch you need to find East trick and close out the rubber with a
with the club king. You can get into vulnerable slam.

Stereo.

-Will OIHMC On Joolilon
Plto ...... I A.ll. -1:30 P.M. H
OuoiiiJ And bporionce lo Tho

1224.

.AK

By Pbilllp Alder

(I)

Serv1ces

.

.KlOtH
• •9 5 43 z
.J 106

...

1:30 C2l e IDIIIIolaom Blossom
tskes on 1118 InCumbent and
hlta the ~mpalgn trail.

In my homo,

..... Pellll'l Dav Cora Cone• 1

• QJ 10 8

SOUTH
.AQJI0876S

(1:40)

.......,..,_.

EAST

+K9 5

Stereo. I;J
1:05 CIJ MOVIE: Tal In lha 8eddle

Lllllr to - ....
"""
...- ...................
Zlll.

~

10 Young
The Kid
geta Involved In a plot 1o flnd
a 1111 of liQkl shipments.

~~
. ...--,.

l'nlm Goi!IPal... AI Ul.... l'llcl

1

......

'(®TAIL)',, .

Apanmant
tor Rent

c.. "" .!:.7:"w..""AP~
-

-.--.na.

. .,~?!rsB
-&amp;
·- ' Wroi.Q
,SOME. GIN tl.JAIJI'5
lO SELl. HIS

, _ 131 ltiO Alk For: lollto
-

1n 11omo -lnt c.ro. Ea·
porlonoad. llllw•a• AvoiJ.

lullll'l Illy Off (PGI3)

Or,._.,.. .

....... . . . . . . . . . . . 1710

0n

of

Wln"2 Show. Stereo. r;l

' - "'lovto In"
ato - . J tad- . 1 ...., llllllolly tlnlohod

R...-. 011: 4 ....,_,., 2
r::a..,.....,....
z - . 1.11.

'"""Prince
tamlly expresses

.Bel-Air The

-.d.

a

You let Yow uta
W'-1 of Fortune r;1

....

WEST

.K9
• 87 32

u "-""'..P

1:00(2). GJl

Good -

•u 11:a•

PHILLIP
ALDER

r;l

IZIICtowiiN
7:31 ()) len- ' Son

.

..._ Or

e

a•

_11\ .... nWIIIIA/C

a.

1111 Ula 0.. On Stereo.
7:05 ()) lavarly llllblllaa

112 e Family Feud
lllllchaap Talk

nolghborhood,
114 111:1 :IIIII, --3113, 814-

....

....

~~~~
1Z11 Monayllna

(JJ

..... lol,

t

•a

U·t-H

+B743Z

our friend
~
~=:m-,onlght the enemy
Stereo. I;J _

,..,o

lla·?Jft

g

7:30 (2).

B~olo - · 7 - . 2 Hlha,
10 ocroo, ~Ls . mll11 lrom
town, IM,Ibo. ao.471-1210.

lrvoclnr 91., Mldd_.,
olory, I "';':':'~ tolh, gao ·hoal,

NORTH
+54 2
.QJ4

BRIDGE

n:~~
~ e ~nmant Tonl(lllt
:~£mLMpQ

1

lmmodlally.l~205.

_ . . , Good eoo.-nlcodoii
. Drgrntlllon
Sldllo,
And Allie To Wort AI
Poll Of A Tllnt ~; Ea·
porleiooo Wooldna Wllh ,.,_.
Wlh llillnloUon And
O...alapmerHI
DlubiiiUN
Pt . . . . tlololy: $1.00 lltr, To

Pooducl8
AI - · Call
Toll
FrM,
1.-oo.417......
Eat.

8"l

'

WANTED: Poii·Timo PooPiona
Avollltlo AI A c-munHy
G=llomo For Poi'IOIIS WHh lololn 81. Pl. Pla~m1 w. Va.
0\.
10nhl Dlootllhloo In c-p1o1ory -.o~~a: 2 Full
GoH
. Houro: 2:30 -e:30
htho, sNow~
largoCorool
- -A•ollabll
·~ .f'~; 2 .P.M., Ill; 2-Hour HVAC,

P!IYI , . 14

:113.
for ..,.,._ Oltc&amp;(ICIYf

•
!
•

.

~-~ -----·
Martls"cl -· Willi
Chlldrsn Stereo.

(JJ

j

o.-.

,3M.

:a.::·~~~~

....e

·~

4 b•droom. fully lneu18t_!d~_new
wiring, paint, ~10o'Zl:IO.
BIEAUTFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
Hlolorloll Arlo Comor Lot ·til

r.quli'edj .......

-.

IDCil~

2210.
2 bedroom. loW twenty'a, no
-roclo, fM.II!I-3511.
2W Kollor Dr., Golllpoll!, atlo
4111131, TafiPhono: I14-440-338S,
Prtee: $12,000.00. Uvlng Room,
a llldiOOftiO, FomDy Room~ I
And 112 Bathraomo 1 car
0•-· lri&lt;k Front Whh. C.dar
Siding.
3 Beclrooma. Modem Houla,
- · AC, &amp;ocurlly Alomo.
2101 'N. lololn, Pt. Pltlooom. FJW
Solo .,
114-448-8152.

for •• month old, llondorFridar. non·• ~It!!,_ ,.,...K~e

Rllhd And
-Driver
For Occoolonol iEn'lndo, .......
- · TripoTo·Tlii_Porlr, ~

Number • Whirl - Build - Anyhow - DRYER
"The l_aundromat is a great place to meet men," one
cutie said. "Yea," sighed the second cutle, "but who
wants a guy that can't afford a DRYER?"-

~.;,r~::Q

•-o,

DRIVER /UGHT OliO .lOIS

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

e-zorror;J
1:31 ()) Andy Orlltllh

chuckle quotod

by filling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

I

•

" ' - ' - Stereo. Q
Ill Up Clola

31 Homes for Sale

Compl~le . rho

PRINT NUMBERED LEITERS IN
THESE SQUARES •

ae CIS NaWI Q

Employment Setv1ces

I'll be.there in a -··-.·

. .....I.L..J.-.L.-....J.
1.-l.:._L

lqcM=:::::.·

Rea l Estate

IG

.--------.--=~ "The games atmostovar, dear,

.....
!f!1:!-: :Cw'::.P

21

During any sports seaaon

.-:. .the
bi!xlest and moat lraquent
I I
...._,__,__,__L.......J.
white lie IOid by husband's is,

1:30 ()) • . u N8C .... c
(J) lei MCMahon'a 8tiT

about et our clesa reunions!' ·
11

. I I 1I .

llllllln Tin Tin, IC·I Cop r;J
1:01()) Thraa'a CompanJ

"I went e job I'H be eble to breg

Help wanted

·. r_,..S_Ur-M-...O_Er-11

I=,.~
iii!';

•

-Qolllpllle.
1131'11oo
.....
leoultJy lllloooll.
A f wnn. Cllll T.. -AI T..--a
51
Pumlww_11t 411 0111

·NMce.
- • · oomploto
UoonHd

••

(I) . . . . by Ills llall

tt,

Rlcll PM.- Allc:llon Company,

I I . I I 12

1:00 ()).
(J).
llle UNowa .

..... ..,............
J . . . . . . . Will Clrpalt.

•

EVENII!IO

1 tt*m '-,::.~II
...... Cnot ....
1lo-.,1Ful-.lfol..,
IIIII.
Quill C!MIIIY
hiU...
1!1Po11! - I

Public Sale
•AuctiOn

hiM
oilcllon

MON.. NOV. 8

~ ~

tALE 417 Kathy Sl.
P I - Yolloy Eat. (bohlne
Sloto Polloi omc.) Thur. -Fri.
Don1 ..............

8

•

41 Houn for Rent

••••
lA II

.....,_,,....~

(allbr.)

21 WlniOI'thl-thlllp11141Mid
30 Of kldntro
33 .........

38

41 PwchH
43 lcotllall

::'l

48 l.atl joint
48 E-llcl '-

a==lhslr
~

..
'

.

I

.,.

41

47 CloH falcon

110Dancer 1
Vardon

53 UncloH

let.)

54
55 502, llomen
Wiele 111oa

se
.

~~

.

*•

- ·· __..,_ ,,_..

CI!LI!IRITY CIPHER

-CtpOor'"'""'JPltoorgnw,;;;;w . . ..-clffomCII I I ab,flmoulpeopii,PIItlftCIPfellnt,
_ _ ln_
l h l - - l a r -. Tlldoy'o_A_C.

IC:~.;~

.

x:~= Robart

a

I

=

~:..'"a.rad

atone

38 Tllnrth

HaweU (T)

.,.,..ope

Iowen

2t Eternally

21 Furniture
Item

ill Naahvlls Ill Wlnclaurflna Diamond
Head Wahine CluaJc trom
whlc:h ligna are rom.ntlcally pertec;t tor pie you're ln•olved wltlltoday disagree
1Z11 ~.any King Uval •
you. Mall S2 plus a long, 1181f-ad- wlltl your way ot doing things, IC's time
Father Dowling Mvllerles
Stareo. Q
'
d...aed, at11111ped
to Match- - to review your Rtocedurn. You might
maker, c/o thla ~. P.O. eox be atttlcled with a cue ot unproductive
e:ao41e ce a.- a w.
BERNICE
91428, c......nct, OH 44101-3428.
tunnll vlllon.
end Jack apend the
BEDEOSOL SACIITTARIUI (Nov.~. 21) U11 Q!. . . (...,21...-.211)Thlt1Soneot
end apart and try 1o
your common ......, today regarding thole days when otllero mlghl try to
p!fv• they had tun. Stereo.
hNith ~I ... If theN II aomethlng you palm their raponllibllltln ott on you. Be
PITA llllll'lla Tour
know you ahoul\ln't be •tlng, drinking · cooperative and d!&gt; your part, but don't
Chomplonohlp,
r~W~'s
or~· .... aell-dlac:!PIIne to aYOid 11.
be a doormat.
.
oernlllnal trom Memphis,
C ~Ill CO.. 2Nen. 11) Be very CANCI!II (..._ 21-.IUIJ 22) It you get
Tenn. (T)
cwetut today that you're no1 ceughtln Involved In e competitive sport or ectlvllhe middle ofalltuatlon-. elrlend . ty today, you might b8temptld to try 10
1:41(1) MOVIE: Fort ApiC..
11 ulling you u a pawn In polltlcel : mike ~ more elCCitlng by betting on the
(2:45)
.,
...........,.,
: • outcome, This . could be en unwiM
10:0041e
ae
......
m ·
· AQUAM.II (olen. . . . . . 11) Be on I ' IIIO't8·
IMP al i f t Marilyn' a bNu, a
guard wllara I'OUf' Ia _,_ned 1 ...., (.luiJ D-AIIg. 22) lnat811d ol !eking
cln:w parfarmer' . . , . to
t~. 1"*- II a P&lt;!lllblll1y a crafty ... · the Hne of leu! ,.....,_ today, you
Nov. 10,1carry ~~ OOUftllllp.
' eoclets might try to tlka creel~ lor • ' mlgllt be Inclined to do thlngl the '*d
StereoiW:t.r
111rJW ·10 be biller equipped In your · aornalhlng you I'IOIIft!ly -ptllllld. ·, way. Lh Ia tough enough without adda - 11a1c1 of endeavor then tr- ' PliCA ~ • 15 114111211) You might : Jng aell-lmpolld penalllel.
you'l 118 COf1ll*lnll ,with 1n the ~ . _,.-today whO~ to ' ¥1180 (~II lapL 22) In .,.,lmpor·
llall'a(1:00)
.WOIIIINan
.,_,Y-kartoa.cemwlllll8pred- "l play on&amp;'upmlnllllp gamsa. Dont lai r tent -1118 ot lnformatlolt today,
ICatld
preperatJon end piMnlng. llllllndMclual cmOII you In the web, 11a- : • both you end the party you're tllklng to
0 7110 Club Willi ....
fla•araun
·1
ICOR. (Oot. M lin. Ill Tills ml(lllt ~lyou(~comeoutMC0016-belt. : e~lhao lnt-~ .~
not 118 a gciod Clay tar you llld your 1 21·A,rll 11) Menage , t
at you won t -••• to one
10:30ID C!JMalga Md Wlliar ;
IMietomatkujolntdlel~nNglrdlng • y o u r - with sxt- owe to- : 'another.
Allar a oouple hu 1P1n1 hllf
1n 1mpart1n1 . . . . n..•a a ~ • • 411!*1aU, II _,_,. .,_ Ia IlllaM (llpl. II-Oat. D) It _,_,.
relation
na1t11ar 01 you will axerc11e the bell pol- volved In UIIUIIIIOIIIhet, by,,_, doing 1 ollwa you a ....,_ proplllal today,
1111111 Judglfll'tt. Knowwllara to 1oo1c lor 10fY181hlng.whfch might bltckflre, could : don't act on RJmpulalvely, ~ot
tampered
lllCI you'H t1nc1 n. Tile .u.ro:. '· coet you paraona~1y.
.
. how good h IOUIICia. Thla dell COIIkl&lt;bl .
yen and the naellty Ql dilly
Grap11 Matchmaker Instantly riVIIII ' TAUIIUI(a,rti»MMtr:lll)llrnoat .~ . ,~ertartheotharguythanRIIIC:!.~·
SKitln:a. (0:30)

20 Exc~~Mts

21 - lllelr
22 FOOIIaii23Reell!IUon
. 24 lupp orting·

. 'YTU. MI

D SL

XDIDAI'CGLI;
K C U ' A Q TV U

WT H L
Q F LI

' FLU

V ,U WI

V XL U • '

WVIM
I'

~

.

•• •

.

.

.• •

•

'

l PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " My agenda Ia to mike people hlj)py. It's a
1 aplri!UII law the\ good prevails ovet evil." - Eddie Murphy.

I'

�\
Plfl

10--The Deily SenUnel

Ohio searches for new welfare director
ly JOHN CHALFANT
A• cit'"'...._ Writer
COLUMBUS - For die ICCClllll
lime in IWO yean, a nlllionfl seirch
is under way for a new Slale weifan: directOr. Acting qency chief
James. Conrad believes the scan:h
will be better the second time
around.
Conrad was api!Ointcd by Gov.
George Voinovtch last week as
interim director of the Ohio
Department of Human Services. ·
COIIrad will lad 1hc $7 billiOiia-yc* agency until a cqmmitiCC
recommends a successor for former
Dircclll' Tary Wallace. .
Wallace, who resigned under
criticism for hirinJ favoritism,
salaries of adminutrators and
employ« early miremcnt bu)'OUIS,
was himself the product of a
nationll search.
''
Comd, administrator of the
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services who is on loan to 1hc welfare

deparllllent, prcdlctod the

~h

c:ommlace WllUld bi~~e more lnfor-

mation II its di"P""l
" I don ' t know ODHS. I do
know ODES. And I must teD you
now. tlllt iiiCall:h group is aoing to
know a heck of a lot more about
how it opetllll8 and what the key
questions are goinJ. to be as they
search," Conrail said. ·
"To me that's the big' difference. Iesteec! of looting af gcneral'ities,lhey're going to knoW exactly
what type of pcr1011 is needed there
and are going to search for that
type ofpersoll," he said in an interview.
·
·
Jacqueline Romer-"-·"". executive assistant to v~';v'ich for
health alld human services, will
coordinate lhe sean:h for Wallacc's
successor. Voinovich said constituency and advocacy groups will .
be COII8Ulted.
·
Voinovich said in appointing
Conrad last week .there would be

no I'Uib to Jllllre a nl e:tion.
"I dlint IbM we're aoillJ 10 like
OlD' lime, identify key people tbal
sho\Jld be 011 thll screening (:Ommiaeeto Jlllb sure tbll We exh•nst
au of our Jemedies, llld not be satisfiod Ulllil we find that ~ lhat
we aU ~ can get the job done,"
Voinov1~ aaid, at a news conferlast wcet.
e~ said he is aiswning his
temporarr job with no preconceived IIOli01IS, and would not hcsi·
tate to recommend a management
oYIII'haul. ,
"We're going to talk to the peapie, talk to the poups. see how it's
OfJI81IIml, see bow we improve the
org&amp;llization,'' he said.
' ~if it needs to be broken up, ·
needs to be reorpJizcd, we're 8Iso
not going to sit oa our hands,
because as the governor said, it
may like months, and months. We
csaida
.n'. t afford to sit by," Conrad

Co•maalty Caleildlr Items
appear two daJII bdore • event .
.ad lbe day Ill tll!lt eveat. Item
anllllle received weD Ia IIIIVP«
to assure pubUcatlop Ia the cal·
mdar.
MONDAY
POMEROY • First Southern
Baptist Church, revival, through
Friday with Charles Altirnore and
Henry Roe. Lamar O'Bryant, pas·
101', invites the public.
.
MIDDLEPORT - Xi Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, will meet Mouda atlhe
home of Phyllis Hackett, ~ddle­
port. Preferential tea at 6:30p.m.
RACINE - Racine Board of
Public Affairs will meet at Star
Milll'lKlc Monday.at 10 a.m.

,I
I

Avenue,'Pomeroy.
CHESTER - Chester Elementary PTO will meet Monday at 7
p.m. in the 'school cafeteria. All
parents and teachers welcome.

DARWIN - The Bedford Township Trustees will meet Monday at
7 p.m. at lhe town haD.

RACINE • Racine Elementary
PTO will meet Monday at 7 p.m.
.
.
. CHESHIRE - Women Alive
will meet Monday, 7 p.m. ~y~~er
C_reck Clubhouse. Thanksga_vmg
~- Dar~ Jodon, devouooal
It • • •Cbristmaa all\ demo.

RACINE • American Red Croas
Bloodmobile will be at Southern
High School Tuesday from 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m. Public invited.
POMEROY • Ohio Eta Phi
· Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
will nieet Tuesday at the Senior
Citizens Center in Pomeroy. Dr.
Nick RoblaDI will diiCUSI "Drs.
With a Heart."

POMEROY - DAV &amp;,lid Ladies
Auxiliary will meet Monday at 7.
p.m. at the hall, 124 Butternut

'

'

WEDNESDAy
COOLVILLE • Hunter's safety

MaJIIclpal A~ Ia Sknveport, La., Staa·
day, Mb II J11a7bi1 t1te part Ill Elfll Ia a cable
televlllaa doea-Jitary abottt 1111 Dre 195+55. ~
(AP plloto)
••

Mendel said in an intot-l
By JO~ CHALFANT .
how tlilngs
out," said Dr. vices,''
•
•f:i
Alsol:lated Press Writer
Lawrence Mendel, the deparllllent VICW.
.
.
Correctional MCdical Srslel!lr
COLUMBUS - The state is medical director.
turning to private busineSs to pro-. · Tllcre are clinics at aU 22 of lhe .wiD cover costs 9f patients m loc4
vide niedical cue for hundreds of department' a·other initit~ttions. hospitals, up to $10,000 per inmate;:
prisoners at the TrumbuD Come· Surgery and long-term care are The 11a1e pays for cos11 over thai:!
. amount. .
tiona! Institution, scheduled to provided in central Ohio.
"We're anticipating a fair n~UJ~, ·.
• opcn Tuesday.
·
.,
Correctional Medical Systems
ber
of hospitallzetlou tbal wou14l
Correctional Medical Systems will hire all medical personnel to
run
over that," Mendel said. He:
of SL Louis will provide complete provide 24-hour physician, nursing,
said
several cues i year exceed t!W
mcdical serviceS for inmates under dental,' -qy, and EKG services at
$10,000
level.
.;;
a $928,645 contract through June the prisQn near Warren in northeast
The
state
will
have
to
pay
fc»;
30, 1993.
Ohio. ,
"
The Ohio Department of RebaThe ·collpany also will provide prisoners hospitalized in ColuiiJ:;:
biliiation and Correction said it psychiatric care that otherwise bus, and for all costs associateD
may save $102,000 as a result of would not be available at Tn.mbull with tra1men1 of AIDS or the HIV'
. that causes•sease.
the d'
•'
,..
the arran11ement, primlrily because because of cutbacks in the Ohio vtrUS
Sharron
Kor'negay,
spoteswom~
fewer pnsoners will have to be · De~t of Mental Health.
taken to medical centers in Colurn'We tum over lhe keys to the an for the department, said the~
buS for treatment
medical area and write them a $47.2 million Trumbull Correction..
"It's a pilot project. We want to c~ and say you provide the ICI'- al Institution will' open ·TuesdaY,

i:•

MIDDLEPORT • Jim Oliphant
will conduet a bible study course
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the First
Baptist Church in Middleport.
Everyone welcome.

William LeMaster of Racine
was arraigned by Meigs County
&lt;;ourt Judge Patrick H. O' Brien
!-fonday looming for his aUeged
mvolvement in lhe death of a Galli!! County man and his son in
1991.
.
.
LeMastert 26, was arrested·on
Tbursday evening by authorities in
Lakeland, Fla., and ntumed to
Ohio over the weekend. Auotber
defendant in the case, Fred Dren- .
~en, is awaiting trial and is incarcerated in the Meigs County Jail.
Jobn Perry, an a~ent for the

..

MIDDLEPORT • Middleport
Amateur Garden Club will meet
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the home
of JCIIII Moore. Charles Blakeslee
wiD show slides of past shows by
the club and Middleport Garden
Club.

OhioBureauofCrimmallden~­

cation and Investigation said on
Monday that the two arc being
bouaed in sepuate facilities for
ICCUrity ne8IOII8.
. Bolli p accused of the murders
. C!f~~eme:f L. Halley. 31i. al1d his
~ ~y S.llalley, 12, in 1991.
The· Halleys' bodies were later
foUnd 'in rural Meigs County, and
~ has ~n speculation tha! a
dlvg lnlllacllon was in progress at
the tiJne of their deaths.
LeMaster is charged with two
counts of ~vated murder, and
II yesterday.s hearing, O'Brien set
LeMastcr'i bond at $SOO,OOO cash
!l" each ftrst de~ felony count,
m acconlance With the recommendalion made by Assistant Prosecut·
ing Attorney Unda Warner.
Gallipolis Attorney William

RUTLAND- Leading Creek
Conservancy District offices will
be closed Wednesday in observance ofVercrans Day.

replace Leno with youag-aitdience else," he said. "!love to create
magnet David Letterman, whose characters around me. I don't know
"Late Night" show follows why. Maybe it means that I ought
Lena's. ..
to go to a psycboloaisL ••
NBC conflfll\ed Leno's version, , Hopkins portrays the vampire
calling the New Yorker report slayer Van Hclsing in. the soon-to"ilonsense.'' 1V Guide reported. . be-released honor film "Bram
Leno said his ratings among the Stoker's Dracula.·. ~
18-to-30 age group were up about
m a 11111anen1.
10 r,:rcent.
·
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Billy
Mitchell and Murphy arc
'As for David Letterman Ray Cyrus told concen-goers he
expected to wed in March. The breathing down my bac"k, well, would visit a 4-year-old transplant
baby, their second, was named David is the best," he said. "We patient. but fatiaue. bad weather
after jazZ lrumpela' Miles Davis.
were friends going into the rinf• · and ovencas obligations prevented
~ir daughter, Bria, is 3 years
and we'll be friends going ouL t him from ~aldng the trip, Cyrus'
old. ·
David ever did take over the show, manager Slid
I'd wait a month, call, and. say,
Cyrus on Thursday invited the
RADNOR, Pa. (AP) 'Hey, can I be a ..........
~~..., '"
crowd in South D-A
· ·
......... Ind., to JOm
"Tonight Show" host1ay Leno
him in visiting Charlie Fourstar
has denied rumon that NBC has
LOS ANGELES (AP) threaJA:ned to ftne him if the show Anthony Hopkins, winner of an
does POOrly in the ratinj!S sweeps.
Academy Award for his ~yal
"Word of honor, its not true,'; of a cannibalistic killer in 'Silence
Plans for the Rutland Elemen- · ·
Leno said in an interview published of the Lambs," has a kiw-tcy defitary
faD carnival were discussed at
in the Nov. 14 issue of 1V Guide. nition or his craft.
,
"Yes, I feel like I have a sword
"It's weird, it's simple and it's a lhe recent PTO mcctina. The carni·
hangina over my head, but I'm the job,",he said in an interview to air val will be Nov. 14 from !1·8 p.m.
OI)C who's gone to NBC to say I'd
Tuesday on the syndicated TV with ~ al1d prizes.
quit if I began to do poorly, not the show, "A Current Affair.'.'
K1m Willford presided at the
other wa II'OIIIId."
While downplaying the art of meeting durina which ofticers
The l:iew Yorker magazine actinJ!. Hopkin I\, stressed tllat he reports were given. ·
reported last week that if ratings loves IL
It was 8IIIIOUIICed that orders for
don't improve, !he ncrwork plans to
"I can always be somebody jackets and t·shins an: to be turned

ENGLEWOOD, NJ. (AP)Eddie Murphy and fl&amp;ncce Nicole
Mirchell are the new parents of a 7•
pound. 7-ounce baby boy.
.
Mitchell gave birth Saturday
morning to Miles Mi\CheD Murphy
at Enalewood Hospital, said the
. act«'s publicist, Terrie Williams.
. "Love~• aU righl," M!lfPhy said

I.

'

Economic .Development Office to which operates the 992 exchange
The. Betsy Ross housing project
secaire the toO-tree service between ·also controls the' 773 exchange and was discussed and progress on
Meigs County and the 773 is expected to approve the request building the eight houses on tne
exchange in Mason.
block noted. Council granted a 20
on behalf of C&amp;P.
It was earlier reported by
It is anticipatetlthat hearings foot easement.to C~Iuf.llbl!s SouthNichols that the C&amp;P Telephone before the Public Utilities Commis- em Power whach will be mstaUing
Co. which provides service to the sion of Ohio wiD begin before t1ui underground electrical wires.
773 exchange in Mason has already end of the r,ear, Hoffnum said.
Council members Judy Crooks
approved the toll-free service to the
Counctl extended a vote of and Dewey Honon were appointed
992 exchange which serves thanks to residents for support of to the Ftremen's Dependency
Pomeroy and Middleport. GTE the fare levy in the Nov. 3 election. Board. The second re@ding was

LeMaster's bond set at $1 million
on two coun.ts.of aggravated murder

---People in the news---

!

-·

County maD aad his aoa. Boad was set at
LEMASTER RETURNED • Accused mur·
$5001000 on each or two counts. Pictured wltll
derer WIUiam "BWJ'' LeMaster D, 26, In white
LiMaster as be Is take• to -Is arralgameat
sblrt and dark pa1ts, was returued to Oblo over
the weekend and arralaned Monday before · bearln1 lll'e Sberirr James M. Soulllby, left, aad .
Deputy Ralph 1'ru8seD aad Jabn Perry, ID qent
Melp County Court Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
with the Ohio BCI. (Sentinel PboCo br Brian J.
He was arrested Ia Laikelaad, Fla., for his
alleged Involvement In the murders or a Gallla . Reed)
Eachus was appointed to represent
LeMaster on behalf of the public
defender's office due to a conflict
on the part of Public Defender
Charles H. ~ij!hL Knig~t and .!Jis
' '

assistant, Christopher Tenoglia,
represented a potential witness in
Drennen's case, MichcDe Drennen, .
in obtaining an im'munity grant in
exchange for testimony, creating a
·.

Clinton's new Democratic
party reaching out to business
LIITLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) President-elect Clinton's caD to big
business for help on an economic
sttate'y is designed to show his
commabnent to crossing Partr lines
and ·offering a different kmd or
government, aides say.
. A planned economic summit,
which will feature economists,
labor representatives and academics, also is aimed at rallying
the American public behind whateVer economic: plan Clinton comes
up with before he takes it to
Congress, a senior aide said Mon.dsy.
'
'

Rutland PTO makes
plans for carnival

'

Clinton ran his campaign as a
"new kind of Democrat" and
pledged to cross patty lines to
solici( advice for solving America's
problems. Clinton 's outreach to
business leaders is part or that
effon, aides said. •
"I think Clinton is demonstrut•
ing that he wants to be in tune with
the business community," said
Sandra
Shaber, an economist at the
Thanksgivin~.
WEFA"Group,
a Philadelphia fore·
"Wfiat he s trying to do is show
casting
farm.
"This
summit doesn't
he's in touch and he wants to get a
sound
like
some
Democratic
brllin
sense of the scope of the problem,••
communications director George trust, some inner circle of technocrats. This is reaching out to the
Stcphanopoulos said.
country."

"He's buyin' into the country
before he buys mto Congress. He
wants to get the people behind
him," said the aide, wbo spoke
only on condition of anonymity.
. Clinton has not made any spepfic pl!IDS to meet with congressional leadets. On Monday his
aides said he would hold an economic summit sometime after

m soon.

Portraill will be sold Dec. 3, ~
al1d 5 as a fundraiser for the PTO.
Times will be 6-10 p.m. on Dec. 3
who is accused of robbin&amp; the 1omb and 4 llld aU day Dec. S. Pictures
of Jesus of Nazareth, 11ea11ng the will be liken 11 the fire bouae.
body, and, in conspiracy wlt!t
The tbhd
presented a
Joseph of Arilllllhea, Mary Mag- program
Day and
'dalen, and other, perpetuatin&amp; the won the room count
memberstory-of the resurrection. '!'bough- ship drivo.-The claas
the events and characters under refrellunents.
.
. consideration ·are ancient, the scene
New ofticen are ICim WiUford,
is set in a modem American court- prcs_ident; T~my Searlea, vlce· room.
preaident; Katie Oilmoro,IIOCretary:
David Keller, asiOCiate prole.- Vlcb Perrell, treasuftl'.
sor of communications and ,directol'
Members were urged to collect
of lhestre activities, is directi1111he "McBucks" from MCDonald's in
play.
Pomeroy.

•

White to portray 'Pilate'
Robin White, son of Robert and
Dove White, Coolville, is a mem. ber of the cast in "The Vigil,"
which wiD be staged at Ohib ValIcy CoUege Nov. 13 and 14.
·
White . will portray the role of
Pilate in lhe play.
A junior music major, White
plaai&amp; to gnlduatc in 1993. While at
OVC, he has been a member of the
Kappa Social Club and the

Cborale. ·

The Vigil, a courtroom drama
by I Mislu Fodor; enacts the. trial

or the gardener of Gethsemane;

'

Alfred. UMC hosts party

'

I

The Alfred United Methodist
Rev. Shwon Hauiman spoke of
Church recently hosted a Hal- God's loving care, 1111na pumpkins
Ioween party with SO people in as an illuatration. Sharon Boyles
detldance.
.
JUC.SSCI.d 1hc amount of candy com
Pri1.ca were IJYCII 10 thole 1· 10: m the jar.
.
preulclt, 1easlca Boylca; ugliest, ' Everyone enjoyed refrealmients
Tiffany SJICnce~; most orlginf!I, of hot dogs, donuta, cate, cookies,
Tylel Bid; IIJIIIIie8t. Megan AVIS. · cider llld other aoft drinks.
In the 11 -100: prettiest, Doris
Wcetend gue111 of Marilyn and
I&gt;111inF: nglita, Micbael O'Niil; Wilbur Roblnton ~ Leann Fick,
moat orlfinal, ~baron lfausm~; Columbus; and Larry Ritchie,
10d fuMiell. Kirt,Spencer. Nellie CaldweD.
l'llkcr Willi Shakespeare wircll.

'

'

Treatment
plants subject
to hearing
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) The Ohio Supreme Court ruled
today that public hearings must be
held on permit applications for two
treatment plants that would discharge waste into Blacldick Creek
in Franklin County.
The unanimous decision
involved wastewater treatment
operations of Lionmark Development Partners and the Jefferson
Water and Sewer D'istrict that
would serve 890 househOlds in Jefferson Township. ·
Justice A. William Sweeney
wrote the court decision.
It also said the director of the
Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency also must cOjiSider altema·
tives, including a connection 10 the
Columbus wastewater tteatinent
system .

Meigs Cou;:r Common Pleas
Court JudgeR
W. Crow ill has
announced that his office, as weD
us all o1hcr courthouse offiCeS, will
be closed Wodnesday, Nov. II, in
observance of the Veterans Day
holiday. Judge Crow asked that all
of Meigs Countl join in a proper
remembrance o the sacrifices or
those fellow citizens who ierled in
the various branches of the U. S.
militarY·
.
·
The Common Pleas Court, as
weD as au other courtboule offices.
will be opcn for business during
normal hours on Thursday.

.

Jennifer Sheets spOke on The
Livina Will at whea the Meigs
County Women'• Fellow¥Jp mot
recendy with 2!1 mem~ present
at the Dexler Church of €~~riaL
Devotlonl by Janice Petty
and Xadlta Stump
solo.
Katlartn lohnaon plellded It the

_,a

meeiint-

conflict in the LeMaster case.
The case will now go before tile
Meigs County Grand Jury, as
statute prohibits LeMaster from
entering a plea in O'Brien's court.

Courthouse to close

· Sheets addresses
fellowship members ·

1 Secllan, 10 , . . 25 011111
A liluhlm .... Inc. tic uu PII*

.Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio,· Tuesday, November 1o, 1992

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Seatilld New~ Stair
A reaototion of support for tollfree telephone service between
Mela• 111d Mason Counties was
paUed by Middlepo~ Village
~il ar Monday naght's meeting
at VIllage haD.
I
Mayor Fred Hoffman noted the
efforts of Mason Maror George
Nichols ~nd the Mctgs County

New prison tests private medical carej.
..
see
work

MIDDLEPORT · Royal Ambasssdor Recognition night, Wednes·
dar, 7 p.m., Hope Baptist Church,
Middleport.

Low tonight In high 40s.
Wednesday, rain. High In mid·
60s.

Middleport Council supports toll-free service proposal
FILMING ELVIS DOCUMENTARY · 'liN,
played by actor Kevbt MUll, walla past • pwp
or IICI'eamina lit~ u be IOH ap lite 1teJi!1 or the

RACINE - Racine American
Legion Post 602 will ha~~e a cornbread and bean soup dinner
PORTLAND • Portland Ele- Wednesday from IIOCIIIO .4:30p.m.
mentary PTO will nicet Tuesday, 7 Public invited. The post wiD visit
p.m., at the school. Everyone Wei· . Portland Elementary at 10:30 a.m.
come.
and Letart Elementary at I p.m.

TUPPERS PLAINS • Olive
Oranac Mem~ VFW POst No.
90S3 and Auxiliary will sponsor
lhe fourth annual Voice of DemocI'I!CY eontcst Monday at 7:30 p.m.
Public invited.

Vot.a, No.140
CGJI¥rlght.ot 11182

course, Wednesday, Friday, Nov.
18 and 20,6:30-9:30 p.m. and Nov.
21 and 22 from '10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at
lhe CoolvUle Uons Oub. To register, IX for further information, caD
Bob Pullins, 667-3831, .Ed Rood,
667-6348 or Ed Wigal. 667-6657.

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT ~ Women's
POMEROY- Veterans Day proMiss~· Union will meet Tues- gram, Meigs County Courthouse,
d ay,· 6: 3 p.m., Hope Bap t'IS 1 Wednesday. All veterans and the
Church, Middleport.
public invited. ·
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Senior Citizens, blood
pressure clinic, Tuesday, 10 a.m. to
noon. Meeting will follow and officcrs wiD be electioh. Thanksgiving
potluck will be held also, AU memben urged to attend.

PageS

•

Community calendar

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
727
Pick 4:
6697

49ers
topple ·
Falcons-

Tltese.

alld a queen, •~a&amp;, prlaee and prlneea will be
crowned. laterested nnclldatellft asked to COD·
tact tbt T.I. advisor at their schools· before
Wedaaday. Pictured are, 1-r, Jason Hudloa,
Mary Staltll, Brld1et Powell, Stepunle Sarre,
Becky Moore, altd Sherrie Stover.

Soatllern
DANCE COMMITTEE •
Hlllt Sc:llool lbldntll In
Ill the Teeti
IUeltull D•ct O...tiee. T•e aaaaal daace
wiD be uW Prtday
to 11 p,ta. T J. 111
dl'lll·he CII'IIDiUIIIoa wllklt promotes pCIIIItlve
lll'eltlle ellokel. A.ll tltree Ill tbe couaty'a bllh
~ebooll are lnlted Jo partklpate ~· tbe claace,

•••ben

.

ne De:~~ter Chutc:h of Christ
celelnled ita bomecotniaJ Sunday.
· The IICllt me 11m, will 'be Dec. 3
at Hemlock Grove.
Refreshmentlwere served.

rn. e

'

Jl

I

Oftlclhl count set.
The Meigs Countr Board of
Elections will hold us official
count of ballots cast durin1 tbe
General EloctioR on Saturdatkat U
a.m. at the·board offtee on hariic Street.

given to an ordinance declaring as
excess property al1d authcrizing for
sale a small section of Hartinger
subdivision adjacent to Lot 12
owned by Reuben Collins.
Duriag the meeting it was voted
to fare parking meters beginning
the dsy after Thanksgiving through
the end of the 1992.
The mayor·s ·report showed
receipts of$2,691.49.
.
According to the police·report

there were 66 arreSIS made during
the month of October, and three
accidents investigated. Merchant
police coDections was $96, padting
meter collections, $S92, and parking tickets wrilll'p, 370.
The October
report showed
that Middleport responded to a
total of 80 calls during 1hc month.
That figure included 12 fire and
rescue calls.

rue

Natural gas costs
rising for winter
COLUMBUS (AP) - Residen-_
tia1 customers of most natural ps
:ompanies"in the state are facmg
higher monthly bills as the winter
heating season begins, Ohio Consumers' Counsel WiUiam Spratley
said today.
"Ohio's average residential
household monthly gas biDs, which
have hovered near record lows for
the past five years, have 11one up
$9, or almost 10 percent, Stnce last
November,'~ Spradey said.
A surve:r- of the state's eight
llqcst utilibes showed the average
household, using 20.000 cubic feet
of natural gas per month, paid
$110.72 monthly as of Nov. 7.
. An ay~ge bill as of Nov. 7,
1991, was$101.05.
·
Although average monthly bills
rose 9.6 percent from last year,
Spratley said customers of some
individual companies saw more
dtamatic boosts.
Da)'IOII Power &amp;t Light gas bills .
an: 28.S pcm:nt higher than a year
ago, while Cincinnati Gas &amp;t Electric went up , 17.5 percent. Bills
from Columbia Gas of Ohio were
up 14.1 per:enL
"What brings these averages
down in p1rticular is East Ohio
Gas, which is one or our largest gas
companies, serving Clevelarid,
Akron, Canton, Youngstown, and
their rates basically stayed flat,
down almost 1 percent," Spratley
said at a news conference.
· Much of the increase was ttaced
10 higher prices that local disttibu·
lion companies pay suppliers for
natural gas. Those costs are passed

directly through to consumers with·
· out having to apply to the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio.
Prices increased because of supply and demand, mole use of gas .
for generating elcctricity, inters tare
pipeline rate increases, and an
expecteil colder winter than in
recent years.
Spratley said bills also went up
because of increases in base rates
approved by the PUCO for some
companies, including Cincinnati
Gas &amp; Electric and Dayton Power
&amp;Light
Since January 1991, CG&amp;E was
j!:ranted a $39 million base rate
mcrease, and DP&amp;L a boost of
SIP million. CG&amp;E now is ~­
ing an additional $36.1 million rate
· increase for gas euslllmcrs.
The highest monthly bill of
$134.96 was listed for National
Gas &amp;t Oil, a company that operates
in east-central, and southeastern
Ohio. The total was-18.6 percent
higher than Ias't year.
Other companies, current
monthly average, and the percent·
age increase:
· -River Gas, $117.90, down 1.6
percent
-Columbia Gas of Oklo,
$117.62, up 14.1 perc:eat.
-Ohio Gas-Defiance, $112.16,
up 2.7 percent.
-Dayton . Power &amp; Light,
$106.49, up 28.5 pen:enL
-Cincinnati .Gas &amp; Electric ;
$105.48, up 17.5 percent
-West Ohio Gas, $98.20, up
2.3 percent. .
- East Ohio Gas, $92.94, down
0.8 percent.

Board OKs $2.1
billion for schools
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The sllte Conttollina Board has
authorized the release of $2.1 billion for Ohio's public schools.
The money represents the state's
share of school operating coSts for
the fiscal year ending 1une 30, and
is not an increase - just a lump
sum pa)!l!ent to cut Mil tape, offi·
cials Sllld Monday.
For years ; the Department of
Education has been required to get
the board's approval of monthly,
subsidies, and more recendy, twice
a month. ·
Stratford Sbields, board presi·
dent, said that under the new system, deparunent offacials wiD Collie
back in January and June for any
adjustments needed to keep the
total in line with legislative appropriations.
•
Rep. Robert Netzley, R-Laura,
asked if the lump sum could lead to
schools bonowing against next
month's subsidy to deal with cash
now problems. He was assured by
depiartment officials that it would
noL
.
Shields said the change had
nothing to do with the state's fmanclal problems IX tile possibility that
education could be hit if spending
cuts an: needed to eliminale a projected $300.miUion budget defaciL
At an otherwise routine meetIng, the board approved a department request for $1.1 million in
loans from the Vocational School
Building Assistance Fund for projects in Greene .and Wa~e coun.
ties.

The board authorized the
Department of Alcohol and Drug
Addictio~ Services to award
$674,939 1n grants for drug outreach services in Cleveland and
Dayton. The programs an: designed
to reach intravenous users and
mothers who can get on-site child
care when they recei~~e treanncnt.
1n other' action, the board:
- QK'd a $3!5 ,000 contract
between lhe Departmen! of Administrative Services and the Sierra
Environmental Group, Blacklick
Ohio, for asbestos removal fro~
the Statehouse llll part of a rcstorationprojccL
- Released $400,000 from a
Department of Development
account for highway impro~~ements
in Archbold and in German Township, as a result of an expansion of
the furniture maker Sauder Wood- .
woatingCo.
- Released $500,000 for the:
Ohio Steel Futures Program for ,lhe:
Department of Development to·
fund 19 steel-related training pro.'
grams, and $100,000 from the "
Business Development Account to :
assist the Glidden Co., Huron in :
the construction of an on-;ite ·
sewage treatment plant
-Permitted the Department of
Human Service• to enter into a
$139,836 COIIIIICt with the NatiOII·
al Assault Preveation Center
Columbus, to train teachers of
courses that alen deaf and other
special-~ students about sexual
and olher typeS of abuse, and how
toreponiL

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