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'

FFA elects officer team
at national convention .

Your ·Social Security
By ED PETERSON
Social Seeurlty
Manager in Athens
Recently, 1 read a book about a
family's life during th.~ "Gr~at
Depression." The book, 'Growmg
Up" by Russell Baker, describes
hard-luck stories and-events.most
people read in history books &lt;ir are
told by grandparents. Russell Baker
lived one of those stories.
BakJ:r'Ji book brings the depression era into focus for people
whose vision of history is blurred
by the good life. For me, it also
illustrates one of the reasons why
we have a Social Security system
in this country.
Many young people question the
need for Sociill Security and often
assume that they will be able to
take care of their own financial
needs wilhout any help from the
government. As one ypung man
recently told me, "If people could
make it on their own before we had
Soeial Security, they ought to be
able to malce it on theii' own now
without the. govelnment's help . "
Baker's book shows that many
people weren't "malcing it" before
Social Security. '
Following liis father's death,
Balcer's mother, left with three
small children-including an 18
month-old baby girl-had many
tough decisions to make. Among
the toughest was deciding to give
up the little baby, Audrey .
Baker writes: "The giving up of
AUdrey was done in a time of
shock and depression for my moth· '
er. After my father's funeral, when
the undertaker was paid, my moth·
er was left with a few dollars of
. insurance l)IOney, a worthless

· Monday, .November 16, 1992

Poinaroy Middleport, Ohio

P11g1 10-The Dally S.ntlnel

model T, several chails. a table 10
eat from, a couple of mail-order
beds, a crib, three small children,
no way to earn a Jiving, and no
prospects for the future. " A few
days later, Baker's aunt arrived to
pick up his little sister. "My mOiher
helped them carry out the crib and
boxes packed with .baby clothes.
When the car was loaded, my
mother bundled Audrey into blankets carried her outside, handed
her in Aunt Goldie, and lcissed her
good-bye."
,
That' scene struck a nerve w1th
me because every week, recently·
widowed young to middle-ag~d
men and women. with small chll·
dren in tow visil the :ehillicothe
Social Security office to rile for
survivors benefits. Each one, of
course, is grieving because of ~e
loss of a loved one, but each one IS
also very grateful for the Soci.al
Security benefits he or she will
receive. Unlike Balcer's family,
they have bright prospects·for the
future because Social Security is
there for them.
Survivors benefits are paid to
widows and widowers at any age if
they're caring for children under
the age of 16. Children can continue to receive benefits until 115, or
up to age 19 if they're Still in hi~h
school. Widows and widowers wnh
no young children can receive ben·
efits at60, or as early as 50 if they
have a disability.
When young people criticize the
value of Social Security; they often
fail to take these benefits into
account. Soc'ial Security survivors
benefits help ensure that stones
like Baker's and that of his little
sister Audrey remain the stuff of
history . .

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) dent is John Kleiboeker, io, of.
National FFA delegates have elect· Suius City, Mo. Kleiboektt' raised .
ed the six·DICIIIber ream of officers purebred illd commercial beef cat·:
th.at will lead the organizatio.n tie for his supervised program.
•
through 1993. One of rbe officen IS
Todd Hingson, 19, of live Oat,
from Ohio.
Fla .. is the southern region vice
Travis Park, 20, of Franklin, president. Soybeans, watennelon .
Ind., was elected ~ident Satur- and tobacco comprised Hingson's :
day. Park's supervised ~ultural s0pervised program •. . I .
.
experM:nce program was m diversiThe western regton 1cc ~~­
fled crop and livestock operation dent is Dennis Degner, 19, of Mal·
and hay and straw baling. He is a ·one, Texas. Degner's supervise!lsophomore at Purdue University program was a purebred Anj~us ;
majoring in agriculiural education, beef cattle operation. He also
and will take a year's leave. of miut:et steers. ·
.
al5sence from his studies to serve
· During their year of SCIVicc, the •
his term as presidenL ·
national officers will each travel
Kevin White, 20, of Redding, more than 200,000 miles for
Calif., was named secretary. appearances on behalf of the FFA.
White's supervised program was in The national officers rei?Tesent:
marketing and-breeding swine, members to officials in &amp;()Vern· :
agricultural sales and SCIVicc land· ment, business, education .til agri•':·
scape deve~t
.
culture.
•
Rick Perlcins, 19, of Bloomville,
The National FFA has 401,574 •
Ohio is the eastern region vice members in 7,4561ocal chaplen in_
p(Csidcnt. Perlcins raises registered the United States, Puerto Rico,
Hampshire sheep an~ crops, .and Guam and the V~ Islands. FFA ;
works on a farm for his supervised members are prepanng for careen··
program.
in the science, busineSs and teCh·'
The central ~egion vice presi· ' nology of agriculture.
,
.~

DENTAL C.ARE DISCUSSED· Dr. Craig Mathews, D.D.S.,
recently visited Salisbury Elementary, He Showed a film on tbe
proper process to complete to noss and brusb your Ieeth. He used
as bis model, Horace tbe Horse, and bad a student, Justin Starrett,
demonstrate. Dr•.Mathews also discussed the educ~lion wbicb is
·necessary to become a dentist as .p art of the ongoing career educa·
lion program at Salisbury.
·

.

Potato potpourri
IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (AP) Americans consume about 80
pounds of potatoes annually and
one-third come from Idaho, more
than from any other state. Here are
. some "tater tips" from the Idaho
Potilto Commission:
- What should I look for in
choosing russet potatoes? A rounded or elongated shape, with few
eyes, a net-textured skin and a deep
russet brown coiOI'.
- Should I wash potatoes
before storing th!lm? No. Damp·
ness can cause decay.
~ Where should I store them?
In a cool, dark well-ventilated
place. They'll· keep for several
w~ at45 to .50 degrees Fahren·
heiL Never refrigerale SPuds.
- Should I bake Idaho potatoes
in aluminum foil? No. That holds
in the moisture and steams them,
giving a ·~boiled" taste and tell·

STAMP COLLECTING DISCUSSED • Mar·
garet Edwards, Rutland Postmaster, recently
visited Salisbury Elementary to talk to students
about October being National Stamp Collecting
Mouth. Students were given information on bow

~,

.

'

•
•

·

C-4 t PlooHI Col« Film

MOTRINif1
' CAPlETS
TABLETS OR
2' '~

239

him and bls passenger, Curtis Jones, age and address unreported,
inside. Ford was pronounced dead at the scene and Jones was listed In fair condition at Cabeii·Hunlington Hospital, Huntington,
W.Va. Workers used tbe crane shown above to assist in removing
the two men from the wreckage. (OVP photo by Kris Cochran)

r.&amp;ETS&lt;O'S

219

SUDAFED
SEVERE COI..D
FORMULA
TABLETS OR
CAPlETS JD'S

•
.ROBITUSSIN

W.XIWUII STRENGTH

~~"ccxo299

.fOZ.

s5&amp;~~.s~~;:n~o~-:sf~re:a~~ ~o~~~~:_cehisOctoberarrest

EFFERDENT
OEHTVFfE CLEANSEif

Sato Price
less Afail

SUAVE

In R8batfl

ANTI-I'E.ItSPIIfANT &amp;

f:x~Joz.
OZ.

SOLID

1.1~

f19

OR SUPER STICK
Z.50Z.

Yoor,Cost
Allor
Rebate

239
-2.39

FREE
. '

V.Jiur•s t •ve ry day at H1te 1\ui

N'ICE THROAT
LOZENGES

ASSORTED

149

FLAVORS

1J6'S

V05SHAMPOO

\':&amp;"''"9gc

B · h · announce d

9'1

CORRECTOL

329

TASI.ETS
:&gt;J'S

. HERR'S
CHEESE CURLS
1.75 oz. Bon• a.g

. COKE
12 Pltcll, 12 oz.
Cans

STAYFREE
MAXI PADS

011249

Zf'
~ lCING
ULTIU
PUIS
20'S OR lA. TRA

THERAC.M
•
ORrHfRAO~~
I -~
1.10'5

.

Pt. US NlrE 11'$

C1lAFI' BAZAAR PLANNED • Beta Sigma
Phi Sororltlel Ill Melp County will present a
craft bazaar oa Nov. 21 aad 29 In tbe ornce

PRICES QHWEEI&lt;LY SfiECIALS EFFECTIVE NOVI!...d::" 18 THROUGH NOVEMBER 22. 1812 • SOME !TE.US WAY NOT BEAVMAIL~INAU. IT()f1£&amp;

·

apace of KeaDy Uti (tormerly Main Street
Plaa). The •auar Ia llelna or1anlzed by tbe
Pftuptor Beta' Beta Ctlapter whb partlcipatJon
planned from the other sorority chapters of

300 E. Mala • Pomeroy, Ohio •992·2586
•

'.

·One man was lcilled and another Equipment Sales to lift the truck,
injured in a tractor-trailer accident freeing the occupants.
on U.S. 35 near the Silver Memori·
Jones was transported by
al Bridge in Gallipolis Township HealthNet emergency helicopter
Tuesday ·around 6:45a.m .
transport to Cabeii-Huntington
Dead is Leroy H. Ford, 51, of HoSPital. A hospital spokeswoman
2016 E. 93rd St., Chicago.
said he was listed in fair condition.
Ford was eastbound.on U.S. 35
Ford was pronounced dead at
traveling at a high rate of speed the scene and transported to the
when he lost control of his Ford Waugh- Halley· Wood Funeral
9000 in ~ right curve, reported Lt. Home in Gallipolis.
Robert J, Woodford, commander of
The Gallipolis, Rio Grande and
t'he Gallia-Meigs Po~t of the State Point Pleasant, W. Va., fire departHighway Patrol.
ments, and the Gallia County and
The truck went off the left side Point Pleasant emergency medical
of the road and overturned onto its services were on the scene.
side, trapping Ford and his passenAccording to Woodford, Ford
ger, Curtis Jones, age and address was the owner/operator of the
unreported, inside.
truck. The trailer. owned by PST,
It took almost three hours for contained a load of popcorn.
rescue workers to extract the two
The accident was Gallia Counmen from the wreckage. Workers ty's fifth highway fatality of the
used a crane from Southeastern year.

TRANSPORTING VICTIM - Arter being was later listed in fair condition by a Cabell·
trapped
in an overturned tractor-trailer for Huntington Hospital spokeswoman. The driver
ley.
LeMaster was arrested by agents
almost three hours. Curtis Jones, age and or the truck Leroy H. Ford Jr., 51, or Chicago,
from the FBI and Ohio Bureau of
address unreported, is rushed lo a waiting was not so lucky. He was pronounced dead at
Criminal Investigation in Lakeland,
HealtbNet helicopter by rescue workets. Jones the scene. (OVP photo by Kris Cochran)
Aa. last week after he indicated
,1""'ln-o...,rd_er_to_se-:-p-that '11e wanted to surrender to Ohio _co..::u::.:nts==of::.;k.:.:idn_a_;_p_pi.:.:na_an_d:.a-co-u-nt_A...,tli,-en_s_C_oun_t_y_J81...,
of aggravated robbery. His trial is aratc him from Drennan, who has
autltodties.
been incarcerated in the Meigs
Arrested in mid-October was set for January 4.
Fred Drerman, 30, of Ravenswood,
W.Va., who was charged with four
t
counts of aggravated murder, two ua1y 12. He is being housed in the
A major environmental seule·
ment that closes the book on a
seven year battle over the Cozan
Landfill, located near Coolville in
Athens County, has been negotiat·
ed by At10rney General Lee Fisher.
Under the settlement, the
' .
Manville Corpomtion has agreed to
, '
\
establish a $3.9 million trust fund
to clean up the landfill,
The landfiU was designed to be
a solid waste landfill but was shut
down in 1985 by the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency for vio·
lations of state solid waste laws:
Fisher said that the negotiated
settlement creating the $2.9 million
fund was approved by the U. S.
Bankruptcy COurt for the Southern
. DistrictofNewYorkonOct. 30.

3"0f&lt;II"~PMM

'

One man killed,
another injured
in truck wreck

The second defen.dant in tl\e
Halley murder·case was artaigned
on Monday ~fore Meigs County
Common Pleas Court Judge Fred
W.Crowm.
William LeMaster II, 26, of
Racine, was indicted on Friday and
entered a plea of not guilty yesterday mornmg. He is charged with
four counts of aggravated murder
with death penalty specifications in
the murders of Jeffrey L. Halley,
36, and his 12 year-old son, Jeffrey
S. Halley, both of Gallipolis.
The H'alleys' bodies were found
in two separate locations in Meigs
County. Jeffrey L. Halley's
remains were located near P9rtland
in September, 1991, and Jeffrey S. ·
Halley's in April on Seller's Ridge.
Last month, Prosecuting Attorney
Steven L. Story ·said that he
believed the deaths followed a&lt;drug
transaeli&lt;in involving the elder Hal·

represented devil worship.
Stan Rosenfield, DeVito's Los
Angeles-based publicist, said Sa.t·
urday the actor read about Bate·
man's dilemma and has sent Penguin IIICIChandise 10 the teen-ager.
''Danny was very upset to know
that his character was being con·
nected to devil worship," Rosen·
field said.
·
Colorado City is an isolated
town of about 2,400 people on the

(

Low tonight around 40.

Wednesday, parUy cloudy. High
In SO$.

'

•

1 Section,.10 Pagea 25 canto
A Multimedia Inc. Newapoper '

.. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 17, 1992

LeMaster
arraigned;
trial-slated
January 12

-Names in the news-

CHICAGO (AP) - Actor Don
Ameche, dise jockey Casey Kasem .
and co~ntry music's Grand Old
Opry have joined broadcasting's
. finest in the Radio Hall of Fame.
They were among the five
,inductees Sunday. The others were
ABC radio pioneer Leonard Gold·
enson and Detroit morning radio ·
personality J.P. McCarthy.
Ameche, star of movies includ·
ing "Cocoon," co-starred J.ears
ago in the radio program ·'The
Bickersons."
.i(asem hosts "Casey's Top 40"
and "Casey's Countdown," two
syndicated popular music ·shows.
ABO Radio's Paul Harvey was ·
host of the ceremony Sunday at the
Museum of Broadcast Colhmunications.
NEW ORLEANS (AP)- Blues
CHELSI RITCHIE
singer Doctor John, famed banjo
player Danny Barker and several
Irt IS
more of the city's biggest musical
Charles A. and Lori-D. Ritchie, sws had them dancing in the aisles
Racine, announce the birth of a Saturday at a school fair.
·
The second annual "Gospel and
S
daughter, Chelsi Diane, on ept. 5 Jazz Festival" was held to raise
at SL Joseph's Hospital in Parkers- money for the music program at the
burg, W.Va.
'
Lafayeue Elementary School.
She weighed seven pounds and
"Support that good music,"
10 ounces and was 20 and one-half Doctor John told·listeners.
.
inches long:
Allen. Toussaint, ~omposer of
Maternal grandparents are Mr. hundreds of hits like "Southern
and Mrs. Larry Dugan, Pomeroy • Nights," sat in on piano for some
and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Faulk, blues with Willie Tee, another of
Urbans.
. the city's headline keyboard artists.
Paternal grandmother is Mrs.
Willie Humphry, 92 rear-old
Violet Ritchie, Middleport
clarinetist from PreservatiOn Hall,
Other chi~dren are Larry J. performed with Brian O'Connell
Ritchie and Chuck Ritchie Jr., both from their traditional ja,zz album,
of Racine, and Carry Ritchie, "Two Clarinets on the Front
Lehigh Acres, Fla.
Porch."

VoL 43, No.145
Copyrlghr.d 1992

FATAL WRECK- A Cblcago man w~s killed and his passen•
.:er injured in Ibis tractor-trailer wreck on U.S. 35 near tbe Silver
Memorial Bridge Tuesday morning. Leniy H. Ford, 51, or 2016 E.
93rd St.:; Chicago, W. eastbound on U.S. 35 wben his .truck went
off tbe left side ol t•e road and overturned onto its side, trapping

TO PERFORM · ·The Kevin Spencer Family or Shelby, a new
southern country gospel group that organized In June 11192, will
perform at the Rutland Freewill Baptist Cburcb ou Nov. 22 at 2
p.m. Tbe group consists of Kevin Spencer, bis wife; Tammy, and
ber brother, Michael Hunter. Spencer wrote tbe 11191 bit, "Let's
Meet By tbe River." The group will perform along wltb Reflections
Trio. Rev. Paui·Taylor invites tbe public.
_

I

1615

•

to start their stamp collection. Mrs. DorOtbJ •
Chaney, rd'tb grade teacher, helps tbe students •
at Salisbury witb their interest in stamp coiled·
ing.
·
•

Check your list and save at RiteAid

.

Page4

Pick 3:
634
Pick 4:

.

Holiday Savings

Arizona-Utah border.

Buffalo
defeats
Miami

lli1Se8:

lute.

COLORADO CITY, Ariz. (AP)
- A teen-ager sent home from
school for wearing a Penguin Tshirt from this summer's "Batman
Returns" movie got some support
from the web·footed villain himself, in the person of Danny DeVito. .
James Ba1eman, 14, was told to
go home and change on Nov. 4 by
Colorado City School District Principal Lawrence Steed. _
Bateman's mother, Trudie, said
Sreed deemed the 'f.-shin inappro·
priate for school and claimed it also

Ohio Lottery

!;

Oh.io Eta Pbl; XI Gamma Epsilon and XI
Gamma Mu. A variety ol hndmade craft Items ·
will be available during tbe bazaar. Plctlll'ed are
Ann Rupe, Norma Custer and Charlotte Elber·
reid members ortbe Precepter Beta Beta Cbap·
ter.'as they work on several of the items ror the·
baz~r.

Pomeroy Village Council
discusses cooperative
revitalization narrative
By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff
_Will coopemtion between Middlepon and Pomeroy assist the two
villages in obtaining revitalization
monies?
That question was discussed
when Pomeroy Village Council
met in regular session Monday
night. Jean Trussell, who is coOrdi·
nating a revitalization project for
Middlepon, arid John Musser, president of the Pomeroy Downtown
Revitalization Committee. dis·
cussed a cooperative venture
between the two villages, and how
it could improve both communities' chances of bein~ funded.
Each village is eligible for up to
$400,000 in matching grant monies
for downtown revitalization
through the Ohio Department of
Development, and Mike Stroth of
SBA Consultants of Jackson. is
working with both villages (in different capacities) in the application
procedure. It was Stroth, Trussell
said, who first recommended that
the villages present a unified narra·
tive with separate grant applica·
lions.
Trussell explained th~ Middle·
pon and Pomeroy could be the first
communities which neighbor one
another to file applications using a
joint narrative such as that pro-

posed by Suoth.
"We have .a unique situation
which -I:OIIld make a differeooe in
the outcome of our funding,"
Trussell said. "We wouldn't be
combining Our applications, but we
would be using an application narrative which intertwines the two
villageS. This might include maps,
photographs, drawings, or other
items which outline the historic
relationship between Pomeroy and
Middlepon."
Memtx;rs of council were receptive 10 the proposal because it provides an oppOrtunity for Middlepan and Pomeroy to work together.
Councilman John Blaettnar
called it an "excellent idea", but
council agreed that their final
approval would depend on the
reaction from the merchants in
Pomeroy who have pledged to participale. Although opposition is not
expected. Musser agreed to check
with those involved and report
back to council.
Council voted to give Christmas
bonuses to all village employees.
$200 will be given to full-time
employees, and $150 to part-time
Continued on 3

S.ettlement ends 7
year land~'illfiighl
'J

The fund will also be used for
any maintenance required at the
landfill during the 30 year period of
restoration. If there are any funds
remaining, they wiD be transferred
to the Ohio Environmental E4uca·
lion and Charitable Trust.

Levy recount set Nov. 24

The ·agreement comes almost a
year after Fisher settled a criminal
action against Manville for illegally
dumping hazardous waste in the
solid waste landfill. Fisher had
charged Manville with illegally
sbipping untested hazardous waste
from its Vienna, W. Va. plant to
the Cozart Landfill. Last Decem·
bcr, Manville pled guilty and
agreed to the establishment of a $1
million trust fund, the largest cor·
pomle criminal environmental settlement in Ohio Histtwy.

An official recount has been set
for November '2 4 to confirm the
results of the official count of bal·
lots cast on Election Day, due.t~
the close results of the Meigs
Board of Mental Retai'dation and
Developmental Disabilities levy . .
Following the official count on
Saturday, the MRJDD levy came
out seven votes ahead, and state
law requires a recount when the
margin is less than one half of one
percent. The flllai vote count on the
levy was 4,989 against to 4,996.
The recount will begin at 3 p.m.

Fisher noted that tWo trust funds
with two different purposes have
been established as a result of liti·
gation against Manville. The $3.9
million trust fund settles the civil
suit and will be used to clean up rbe
landfill. The $1 million trust fund,
established as the Ohio Environ·
mental Education and Charitable
Trust, settled the criminal suit and
is used for environmental education
and the' investigation, enforcement
and prosecution of environmental
cases.

li

SALLY WATSON

Continue search
for missing teen
A search for a Pomeroy teenager
missing for over a week is under·
way.
Pomeroy Chief of Police Gerald
Rought reponed Monday that Sally
Ann Watson, IS, of 202 1/2 Spring
Ave. II¥ not been seen since Nov• .
I 0. She has short blond hair and
blue eyes, is five. foot eight inches ·
· in height and weighs approximately , )
140pounds.
When she disappearecf she was
wearing a light blue windbreaker
· and blue jeans decomted with red
roses according 10 her father, Marl·
on WalSOn.
Anyone with information abou!
the teenager is asked to contact the
: Pomeroy Police Department, 992·
6411.
.

�Tueaclay, November .17, 1992

Commentary

Page 2-The Dally sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
TUesday, November 17, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

i!

OHiO WcJtlwr

Mild day forecast for Ohio .Wednesday

Wednesday, Nov. 18
Accu-Wealher• forecast for

.·

The Daily Sentinel

It's not just the economy, stupid

111 Coart llbeet

The bjtzzing is aD abOut Presi·
dent-elect Clinlon's priorities. It is
said !hat "!he economy" will be
· 'DJ:VOTZD TO THE ll'riDaT8 01' THE IBIQ&amp;.IL\IJON ARBA
highest because we are in "an economic criSis." and because Clinron
ran on "change" and "to grow the
•.
economy," all of which yields a
"mandate" to - ·what else?change the economy. Surely, and
ROBEKI' L WINGE'JT
properly, Clillton will quickly try 10
.._blll!ler
spur economic growlh. But I will
guess
!his: H he mates his mark it
PAT WIDTEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
will
not
be on economics, but on
Assistant Pvbllsller/ControUer
General Manager . social policy.
There is a reason for this. and
LETIERS OP OPINION are welcome. They obould be le11 than 300
new proof. The Ametican ecOnomy
· words. All leueu. are oubject to editins llld must be sigoed with name,
grows, and falters, and !hen grows
lddrel• and ralepbotle number. No unsiped leaen will be poblisbed. Leaen
some more. This yields a jagJed
sbould be ill &amp;ood tule, od&lt;he,.iD&amp; iuuco, not pononalitieo.
but ascenilant national trend line;
regardless of who is pruidenL This
is made apparent in ~ new edition
of America's best book "The Sratistical Abstract of the United
Srates." Clinron should read it as
By WALTER R. MEARS
he rakes invenrory of his siruation.
AP Special Correspondent
Consider the glum year of 1991.
WASHINGTON - Come January and a Democratic preside~ I, !he
special pmsecuror law Republicans blocked in angry defense of lhetr own It was a year of-a recession, a big
deficit, corporare layoffs, and a
adminislration may srart lootin!~ beuer 10 !hem.
It usuallr does from !he outs1de. .
..
.
.
But !he mdejlendent counsel law ts expmng next month, and B1ll Clmron's administration will be in charge long before there could be any
renewal.
Right now, Republicans are angry at the way !he sysrem worked
against President Bush, handing Clinron a bonus issue just before he won
!he Nov. 3 election.
That happened when !he independent counsel - !he euphemism for
prosecuror - in !he long·ruMing Iran-Contra case released a 1986 memo
th4t seemed 10 contradict Bush's insistence he had been out of !he loop
and unaware of !he arms-for-hosrages dealings.
,:It was part of a new indictment against former Defense Secretary CasPat Weinberger, announced by Iran-Contta prosecuror Lawrence Walsh
Oi:L 30, !he Friday before !he presidential election. Walsh said that was 10
- coinply with a court-set filing deadline.
·
·The revised indictment and !he memo lhar wenr wilh ir put Bush on !he
dclcnsive when he seemed 10 be narrowing the gap in his stru~e 10 overwe Clinron. "That's the straw !hat broke !he camel's back,' Sen. Bob
Dole ol Kansas. !he Republican leader, said after the election.
:Dole said !he office of Walsh, a Republican, had become a hotbed of
activist Democratic lawyers. He said !he Justice Department ought 10
appoint a special prosecu10r 10 look inro !he Walsh operation.
Dole has suggested !hat the whole Walsh operation be effectively
squelched wilh presidential PIII"Cions - for Weinberger, who is 10 go on
trial .a January on charges of lying to Congress and !he independent counsel, and for olhers caughr up in the Iran-Contra case.
. Sen. Orrin Harch of Ulah, who is 1iecoming !he top Republican on !he
Juiliciary Committee, said he thinks they should be pardoned, 100.
But !he Wjlite House said Bush is nor considering pardons. Press secre/ary Marlin Fitzwater said such speculation was Just street lalk and !here
hal,! been no meetings or discussions wilh the president on the topic.
: Even the lalk makes the point that irks !he Republicans - !he Walsh
ajlcration has been going on for six years, with a bud~et of about $32 million, the longest and cosdiest conducted under !he mdependent counsel
law that e~pires Dec. 15. While rhe law is lapsing, rhat affects !he
appointment of new prosecutors, not Walsh's offtee, which was operating
before Ronald Reagan left the White House.
.
·; And there was gossip about possible Iran-Contra pardons in !he final
· da)'S of Reagan's presidency, four years ago. There were none.
..Republicans were bitter about Walsh and !he Weinberger indictment
LITlt.E ROCK, Arlc. (NEA) long before the current con1r0versy about his re-indictrnent at !he end of
Perhaps the best kept secret inside
the campajgn.
·
In lhreatening 10 filibuster to block an extension of !he independent the Clinron campaign was that it
counsel law, 28 Republican senarors signed a letter calling !he original had a spy either inside !he Bush·
Quayle campaign ot irs advertising
Weinberger indic\fllcnl dis$raceful and the law itself pernicious.
Walsh had said at th:lt umc he was wrapping up his investigations, !he team - !he Clinron people won't
II conducted under the inds:pendcnt counsel law, which was enac!ed in say which, or even !bat such a mole
existed. But several sources in' !he
1978 and has been renewed twice.
All but two have involved Republicans. The independent counsel sys· Cliilron camp admit !bat !hey usutern was set up 10 keep warch on !he executive branch, and Republicans ally had advanced copies of ads
that the Bush campaign was going
have controlled it since 1981.
The premise is that there's a built-in conflict of interest when an alle- to run, and were !hereby able to
have compleled counler-ads ready
g~tion of wrongdoing is leveled against an administration official and !he
Ju.stice Department· in !hat !he same administration is in charge of the 10 go as soon as the Bush ads .Siart·
ed 10 appear.
investigation.
·
The 5ources said that on a num' The lapsing law provides for court·appoinled special prosecu!Ors, independent of !he administration. Republican opponents have complained ber of occasions the yet-to-bereleased Bush ads were shown by
lh~ while executive branch invesugations are aD but guaranteed, !here's
no requirement for independent prosecu10rs when members of Congress !he Clinron ad team 10 focus groups.
to gauge !heir reactions- positive,
are accused of wrongdoing.
·
And when a biiiiO extend !he law came up in the Senare in !he closing ne~tive or otherwise. Anncd wilh
driys of the congressional session, the GOP prevenled passage simply by th1s information·, tbe Clinton ad
team was able to devise·responses
threatening ro rallc as long as iriOOk.
"We will be back nexr year," said Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., the spon- that played up the negatives and
diluled !he positives of !he Bush
sor, when the bill was blocked.
. And a Republican advocate of the measure, Sen. William Cohen of ads.
Almost as important, the. ClinMaine, added !hat with a Democrat in rhe Whire House, GOP opponents
ton ad team lmew where !he Bush
· ~mighr rue the day they presided over the final rires of !his legislation."
ads were going 10 run, so !hat they
;. EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R, Mean, vice president and colum- could spot buy time for the
nist for The Associated .Press, has reported on Washington and counter-ads in !he same relevision
markets.
national politics for more than 30 years.
As never before, public opinion
polls dominated !he fmal weeks of
this campaign. In !he end most of
!he pollsters were \&gt;indicated. Most
of the major polls agreed !hat Clinton would wm wilh 6 percent 10 8
percent over Bush. The acrua1 final

.._...,,olalo

Where's the prosecutor?

Ben Wattenberg
.
wrenching global economic trans·
formation.
Still, !he Gross Domestic Prod·
net in 1991 only fell by an after.
inflation 0. 7 percent, after eight
years or solid srowth. (The 1992
figure wiU be positive aga!n, poblh
bly around .2.2 pen:ent) The number of jobs fell by a million in 1991
after growing by 10 million since
1985. There are still 20 million
manufacturing jobs, about what
there wm in !he mid-'80s, but during that time professional and managerial jobs grew by more !han 7
million.
It would be nice to report !hat
our social situation also keeps get·
ting better, wilh only temporary
recessions. Alas, !hat is not where
the Abstract's numbers lake us.
In a more prosperous society
fewer people should· be dependent
on welfare. But the nwaber of Aid

to Families with Dqlendent Chil·
dren recipients went up by 8 per·
cent from 1980 10 1990, 10 12 million. The JJumber of Food Stamp
recipients has been hovering at
about 20 million.
It is ' no wonder. The rate of
di\IOfted persons bas climbed Ill an
aD-time hiaJL The number of children living without bolh parents
trended 15-23-28 pscent in 1970'8(). '91. The proportion of babies
born out-of-wedfock has climbed
11· 18·27 percent in 1970-'80-'89,
wilh !he fasrest groWib rare among
whileS.
·.
The violent crime situation is
&lt;lmrionuing. The rare is at an alltime high, up 31 percent from 1985
to 1990, and up 10 percent from
1989.to 1990, as measured by the
FBI's "crimes known to the
police."
· We have 'much to be proud of in
our education system, but student
achievement, measured by die SAT
and olher rests, shows liule upward
movemenL

In short It's not just !he econo- .
my; sblpid. ,
Does Bill Clinron have a solo·
tion for our social ailments? The
eleclim issue of Newsweek ("How
He Won") reminds us lhat Clin10n
had something important.IO say. He
expressed his public philosdphy,
again and agam, in tllese words:
"No More Somelhing For Noth·
ing." That, 100, is his mandate.
It is a worthy goal for an Ameri·
can president, particularly a Democratic president, particularly Clin·
1011. His welfare plan-- "a helping
hand not a way ollife" -is keyed
direcdy to "No More Something
Fm Nothing. •• So are his education
ideas, linked 10 testing, and earned
college acholarships.
Crime is tougher, but CliliiOn's
idea of usiu military bases as
"boot campsr. for teen-age hoods
makes·sense. He may have 10 loot
seriously at the idea of using furlher military assets. Until punishment catches up 10 crime, lhere is a
somelhing-for-nothing quality to
criminality, and it won't get better. •
Going to a somelhing-for-something government standard means
changing the culture. Ullimately it
bumps into America's most threat·
ening issue, proportionaUsm, a
loaded multi-cultural pistol, which
yields our most ttme polltica. The
Abstract sets !he paramerers: The
number of Asian-Americans
climbed by 108 percent from 198090, Hispanics S3 pen:enL There are
an estimated 6 million Muslims.
Immigration from former Iron Currain COIDltries is up.
We can no longer offer demographic; distribution of goodies for
race, or ethnicity, or gendtt; that is
somelhing for nothing. We eilher
bolster !he merit slaiMWd, or we're
in for trouble.
A Republican president saying,
"No More Something For Noth·
ing" would be reviled. A Democrat, like Clinton, governing as
"The Merit President... could fulfill his mandate, and offer America
serious change.

Ben W•ttenberg, a aeolor fellow at tbe Ameriean Enterprise
Institute, Is author of "The First
Universal N8tloa," published by
The Free Press, and a syndicated
Miter for NEA..

. PHANTOMS

Berry's.World

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I'VE GOT
CARPAL

tUNNEL

SYNDRoME

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$2.
Most of America knows how
many votes Clinton, Bush and
Perot receivild. But how about !he
"other" candidates who were offl.
cially on stare ballots, like the libertarian Pan)" s Andrew Marron,
.!he New Alliance Pany's Lenora
Fulani, !he Populist Pany's James
--oo., Gritz or "None of These"
- an offteial ballot category in two ,
srares. So in an effort 10 be complete, here are the vote 1otals for ,
!he "other" candidares:
Andrew Manon- 281,805; Bo
Grirz - 97,721; Lenora Fulani - ,
8D,411; John Hagelin - 42,494;
Howard Phillips - 39,840; Lyndon LaRouche - 25,959; Ron ,
Daniels -. 25,833; James .
MacWarren - ' S,046; Drew Brad· .
ford- 4,605; Jack Herer- 3,539; ·
Helen Halyard - 3,067; J. Quinn
Brisben - 2, 789; None of These
- 2,525; John Yiamouyiannis - ,
2,3i6; Honest Jim Boren - 980; ·
Earl Dodge - 9S3; Delben Ehlers .
- 876; Eugene Hem - 395; .
Isabell Masters - 395; Robert ·
Smith - 290; Gloria La Riva - :
178.
And finally, in the 271h precinct ·
of Chicago's 45th ward, receiving
one vote was William "Da :
Fridge.. Perry.
Robert Wagman is a syndicated writer for Newspaper Enter- ·
prise Association.
'

The asinine continue .to spew . forth

'II.Pi

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margin was 6 pen:enL
'
But one polling organization
emerged from !he fray wilh a badly
d11maged reputation, especially
within !he polling communitY. The
Gallup organization did national
polling for several major media
oudets including CNN. On !he Fri·
day before Election Day, it released
a new poll showing !he contest
dead even (which contradicled !he
internal polls of bolh !he GOP and
the Democrats).
Without announcement Gallup .
changed its polling methods on
lhese final ·surveys. Based on ques· ·
tions it asked respondents, GaDup
tried 10 judge who would actually
go 10 !he polls. It !hen discarded the
vores of those it figured would not
go to the polls .. Most polling
experts say this made the pofl
invalid for comparison wilh previous polls or olhers done wuhout
rrying 10 qualify !he respondents.
Gallup defends its action and
calls the poll valid. If you are to
believe the Gallup explanation,
!here was a tremendous surge for
!he president in the last week of !he
campaign, which !hen receded just
as sharply in the final 48 hours
before Election Day. The only
problem is !hat Ibis showed up in
no other organization •s polling.
Even the GOP's polls showed !he

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Tile. besr thin$ about po~itical
campa1gns, I sa1d to myself on
Nov. 4, is that it feels so good
when they stop. Blissful months
ahead of no politicians shoveling
sludge. No more empty promises,
no more slashing characler.attacks,
no more pundits pontificating about
pols and polls.
Ah, downtime.
Then I saw a Baltimore Sun arti·
clc dated Nov. 7 and headlined
"Never 100 soon 10 speculale about
GOP nominee in '96,'·' by political
columnists Jack Germond and Jules
Wircover, and I got positively irate
at Ibis tarbarous trespass upon our
senses.
And !hat made me think of !he
Curmudge-0-Meter.
· .
Distracled by !he political season, I hadn't checked !he machine
in· ages. Indeed, most of the
delightful people wbo regularly
read these words bave ~robably
for,oucn about this h1gh-tech .
dev1ce developed by ~ Labs (a
division of !he SJU! Foundation, a
small but spintcd think tank),
which mCUU~e~ !he Outrage Level
of asinine and obnoxious lhings.
Some of the events that have

Joseph Spear
triggered high Outrage Level Measurements, or OLMs, in ·recent
months include the Houslon Chronicle report !hal !he taxpayers paid
for acuba lessons for Vice Presi·
denr Dan Quayle and family; and
Bell Arlantic's admissionfession
!hat it routinely turns phone records
over to government investigators
and delays telling customers.
And !he Riclunond, Texas, mortuary !hat dumped a man's body on
his son's doorstep when !he son
could not come up with enough
funds 10 118Y the full price for a cremation; ud !he executive fm the
American Intemational Group
insurance comp111y wbo advised
his aubordinateJ that Hurricane
Andrew - "Ill ~ity "'get
price incnluell now. '
And these pArticularly outrageous incidents:
· The declaration last June by
Kuwaiti government official and
fat cat businessman Abdui-Aziz
Masaecd that the United States
played a minimal role in chasing

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the Iraqis out of his "country. want to cover Operation Soulhem :
"America did not bring us back 10 Warch,lhe U.S. Air Force effort to •
our country," he said. "If it enforce a "no-fly" zon~ south-&lt;
weren't for the wisdom of our gov- ern Iraq. Many of the flights take :
emment and the help of Saudi Ara- off from Saudi Arabia, but Western ·
bia, !he Gulf Cooperation Council, reporters are kept ouL Nice, isn't ,
Egypt and Syria, we wouldn't have ,it? The American people deft!nded
been liberated. America came !he Saudis 'from Iraq. We are probeca'use of its interests." Son of vidin~t the bodies and the bucks to
makes you wish you could give !he keep the shackles on Saddari! Husgrateful sheik a nice, !Cnder bear sein. But we are not allowed to .
hug, doesn't it?
know anything about it. This is .
Professional basketball star George Bush's greatest triumph?
Charles Barkley •s assertion that he
The Rev. Pat Robertson's odi· .
doesn't vote "because our political . ous ~ement of !he "feminist
. system doesn't wort." He contin- . agenda ' as a "socialist, anti-famiued:. "I think it's a shame when we ly politicill ,movement that encowl
biVe to vote for the person we ages women 10 leave their huslhink will do !he least amount of ~. kill their chilchn, practice
harm 10 everybody.·~ I like Charles wirchcraft. .
capitallam and
Barkley. He has said some Iruly become lesbians.' And wbUe I am
outlandislllhings Uuou&amp;h !he ye~n, on the subject, Jet me 111y 10 all ol
and l have applauded lilmost every the Robertson ~ijlles who have
remark because I believe him 10 be been ~vingJRC pier bec;*•w of my
a proud man with a decent heart. negau ve remarkl about their
But when he tells the millions df favorite preacher that, conln!rY to
young ~e who idolize him that your asaenioni,l1m a believer.
he does .not vote, he is going 100
ln God. Not in tbe intolerant
far·. This time, Sir Charles, you charlatan Pat Robertson.
truly made an ass of yourself.
.
Joseph Spear II • 17J1dluted
Saudi Arabia's refusal to grant . writer fm:_ Newtpape~ EnteriJrjle
visas to American reporters who . Allodatkia.
.

tlestror

IMansfield 146• I• .l
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W. VA.

Coast and soulhern Texas.
· "I
Temperatures · today were j
expeeled to reach the 20s in ncrtlf·1
ern Minnesota; 30s in norlhern l
New England, upstale New York, I
Michigan and the northeln Plains; :
40s in the northern Rockies and j
central Plain~; 50s in the Midwest. l
!he soulhern Rockies and the Plcif· 1
ic Norlhwest; 60s in most of the l
Southeast, !he southern Plains and j
California; 70s in Florida, Texas 1
and soulhern California; and 80s in •
southwest Arizona.
i
The high for the nation Monday l
was 85 de~ at Gila Bend, Ariz., 1
and Yuma, Ariz.
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authorizes
blockade

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UNITED NATIONS (AP)Ahhough !he Securiry Council has
voted to tighten economic santions
on Yugoslavia with a naval bloekC11K12Ac:cu-w..lhet.lnc. ade, it is not clear to what extent
governments are willing to ger
in enforcement
- - - - - - W e a t h e r - - - - - involved
The council voted for a naval
South-Ceatral Obio
the 30s. Highs in the 40s, except blockade on !he Danube River and
Tonight, cloudy. Low around low SOs far soulh. Friday, a chance !he Adriatic Sea as a way of step40. Chance of rain 20 percent. of rain. Lows in mid-30s to low ping up pressure on Yugoslavia 10
Wednesday, partly sunny. High in 40s. Highs in mid-40s 10 upper SOs. end the fighting in Bosnia-Herze!he low 50s.
·
Saturday, fair. Lows in mid-30s 10 govina.
Extended forecast:
low 40s. Higlls in !he 50s and low
The world community widely
considers Serb-led Yugoslavia as
Th~sday tbrougb Saturday:
60s.
Thursday, rain likely. Lows· in
. .' '
the prime aggressor in the 8.
monlh-cld war. Serbian forces have
seized about 70 percent of Bosnia.
'Most of the rest is held by Croat
militias, wilh only Sarajevo and a
few other towns still held by the
Muslim-led government.
The U.N. imposed economic
sanctions on Yugoslavia on May
LITILE ROCK, Ark. (AP) Built in 1927, the h()!,el has host· 30 but provided only a weak
President-elect Clinron is forgoing ed Presidenrs Caner and Ford since enforcement mechanism.
some of !he trappings of office as they've left office, along wilh a
Violations have been frequent;
he prepares for his first trip to long list of other dignitaries. Its the shelves of stores in the
Washington since !he election. But rooms start at $195 a night for a Yugoslav capital, Belgrade, are
artillery fire around the Bosnian capital ·,
SANDBAGS • A Fr*h member of the Unit·
to the people who want 'P see him, single, but the hotel would not filled with importee! goods this
ed
Nations
peacekeeping
force
in
Bosnia
helps
knocked out electricity and water in much olthe . .
he's got all !he trappings be needs.
reveal what it would charge Clin. week.
his
comrade
carry
sandbap
to
fortify
the
U.N.
city,
U.N. officials said Tuesday, but they . ,
President Bush offered Clinton a ron for his suite.
In !he new measure, !he Security
headquarters
in
Sarajevo
Tuesday.
tnten5ined
remained
optimistic about a 6-day-old ceaserU"e. ·.
milirary jet for his travels and lhe
Wilh just a single night in th~ Council ciled Chap~Cr 7 of the U.
use of rhe official visitors' man· capital Wednesday, Ciinton's N. Charter, which it has usee! to no significant control over the
Serbia and Montenegro are the Macedonia withdrew from the fedsion, Blair House, for his sray. It .schedule was packed - including enforce embargoes and bans on Bosnian Serbs.
remaining
republics ofYugoslaviJI. eration over the past two years. ,·' '
was a nice gesllire, but "We said, visits to the White House during international weapons trade with
Yugoslav Foreign Minister llija
A new report in Privredni PreBosnia, Croatia, Slovenia and
'Thanks, but no !hanks, nor this the day and to the Capitol on Iraq and libya.
Djukic asserted that the war in
gled,
a Belgrade business weeldt~:
trip,'" Dee Dee Myers, Clinton's Thursday.
The resolution. prods Bulgaria Bosnia is a civil and ethnic war
claim.s !hat up 10 20;000 lOlls of ml·
press secrerary, said Monday. .
and Romania to palrOI !he Danube, fought by patamilirary groups not
and gasoline have been imported
"One, it's expensive to cover
Continued from A-1
Cljnton has opened a transition which flows along !heir border to conrrolled by Belgrade, and by
into Yugoslavia on certain days
· !he coSt of sraying at Blair House offtce in Washmgtoo 'to, among !he Black Sea after passing through mercenaries from Islamic nations.
worlcers. For !he tirst time, council violation of the embargo.
',..
and, two, slllff couldn't stay !here,'' olhcr things, begin reviewing !he Yugoslavia. But there was no
agreed ro give $300 bonuses to
To discourage smugglers, the:
she said. "It was a gracious invita- thousands of reswnes from ~le immediate word from the conn·
The resoluiion 's main thrust is department heads upon !he recom- resolution bars trans-shipment'
tion, but we d~ided to stay wilh ~ngjobs in ihe new admmistra· tri~s. which arc strug~ling with to close off loopholes in the eco- mendation of Pomeroy Mayor through Yugoslavia of gasoline,•
our original plll!l," .. , •
_ uon. ·
•
"
"'·, lhw own post-€ommuntsniomes- nomic embargo on Serbia and Bruce Reed.
coal, iron, steel, rubber, chemicals
As for !he lllililary jet, !hat .100
A resolution was passed in sup- tires, airctaft, and any type of'
Ciinton said Monday be was • tic problems, on whether they Montenegro adopted on May 30,
would cost more than !he charter, working on the list of people he would rake action.
and the ban on arms supplies to all port of extended area telephone motor. to keep strategic material
she said, and with a transition bud- might ask 10 join his cabinel but
The resolution also authorizes !he former Yugoslav republics, in service between !he 992 exchange from reaching Serbian forces.
·· :
get of $3.5 million it was not worlh had nothing )'CliO.reveal:
.
.
inspections of ships in the Adriatic force for more than a year.
and the exchanges in Mason, New
!he expElnse.
Until now, ships moving up !he Haven and Hartford, W.Va. Also Police probe accident ·
that are !leaded for Yugoslavia. '
Instead of Blair House, !he Clin"I have spent hotlrs Of! it. l have
NATO and the Western Euro- Danube have not been boarded and passed was a resolution authorizing
A minor accident occurred or{
ton enrourage has booked into !he . interviewed no one, on P,urpose. pean Union have five frigales each searched. Port authorities merely a $40,000 transfer of funds from
rhe Dairy Valley parking lor at
next closest place, !he Hay-Adams I'm not n:8dy for !bat yet, ' he Sjid m rhe Adriatic, but tliey have not radio the caplain to ask what is in the general fund to !he street fund.
noon Monday.
Hotel, just across Lafayette Park at a news COnference 'WIIh Demo- been aulhorlzed to Inspect vessels. the cargo and where it is bound.
Mayor Reed announced that a
Pomeroy pol ice reponed that
from the executive mansion.
crlltic congressional leaders who
The vote on the resolution was Afler tha~ on the ship goes, often Christmas tree for village hall had . Bernice Carpenter, 74, Mulberry ·
met with him in advance of his 13-0, with China and Zimbabwe all the way 10 Belgrade.
been donated by Bill and Cathy Awe., Pomeroy, backed her 1991
Washington
trip.
absraining
because
they
believe
!he
Forty qualify for
Other ships unload at Montehe- Davis, but that no tree would be Dodge into rhe rear of a parke(!: :
Some job candidates ·probably Serb-led Yugoslav government has grin ports on lhe Adriatic.
placed in the parking lot. However; truck owned by Joe Harry Smith, ' .
don't need to be interviewed.
council discussed the possibility of Jr., 19, ofLeran, W. Va. There was.,
Among.lhem, .former Soulh Caroli·
decorating !he new srage pavilion moderate damage 10 !he rear quar'·,
More than 40 Meigs Countians rta Gov; Richard Riley, an old
for Christmas. No action was tcr panel of lhe~ssenger side ot·
have qualified for rental· assisrance friend of Clinton's who visiied
raken.
rhe Smilh truck
Carpentc,r car ·
through the Housing and Urban with the president-elect at the
Reed also reported that cable was nor damaged.
Legion to meet
ment officials, and heads of various
..
Development program, according Arkansas governor's mansion on
Racine American Legion Post agencies, as well as !he general relevision service should be in
Monday nighL
to Jean Trussell, director. ·
'•
602 will meet Thursday at 7:30 public, are invited 10 anend. There place on Pleasant Ridge within 30
days after being requested by a resSome of !hose people are activep.m.
will be a speaker.
Riley has been '111mored to be
ident there.
ly looking for property to rent,
Banquet Wednesday
Veterans Memorial
Clinton's
choice for secretary of
Councilman Scott Dillon noted
Trussell said, and she is compiling
Thanksgiving dinner
•
The
Meigs
Athlelic
Boosters
fall
Admitted:
Kaaron Pickens.
•
a list of available rro~rties to be education.
Failh Full Gospel Church will sports banquet will be held !hat campaign signs were still up in Racine;
Also in advance of his Washing- have a Thanksgiving dimer Friday Wednesday, Nov. 18, in the Meigs Pomeroy from !he rea;nt election,
distribuled. Trussel SBid !hat negoDischarged: Cora Wolfe.
ton
vi~it, Clinton was meeting
tiations for rent of a house is done
at 6 p.m. There will be a preaching High School cafeteria, 6:30 p.m, It and council discussed the ordi·
by the owner and the person want· IOday wilh !he heads of his transi· and singing at 7 p.m. w11h David will be apotluck dinner with every- nance regulating !hose signs. Can- HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER'.
ing 10 rent. Once !hat phase is com- lion team, Vernon 'Jordan and War- Dailey and the Dailey Family. Pas- thing to be furnished except didates who have not removed
Nov. 16 discharges- Alicia
pleted, !hen Trussell inspe\!ts the ren Christopher.
tor Steve Reed invites !he public.
desserts and vegetables . Those them by 10 days after !he elec.tion Nichols, Joshua Perlcins, Elizabeth :
propeny tb be sure it meers HUD
attending are asked to take two forfeit their deposit and can be Sheers, Britrani Commons, Darrell
cited to courL
srandards.
Trustees to meet
covered dishes.
Council met in executive ses- Galloway, Nancy Casto, Mrs. Mark
All rentals arc on a lease basis
The Chester Township Trusrees
Plan auction
Jenkins and son, Brittany Brown,.
with owners being required to
will hold a specilll meting ThursT-he Southern Junior High sion to discuss personnel in light of Rhoda Grimm, Betty Gibeaut,
mainrain !he property, !he check foe Ewing T. Boles
day .at 7:30p.m. at the townhaD.
boosters will sponsor a Christmas !he failure of a levy renewal, but no George Malone, John Bartels',
!he HUD portion of !he rent goes
auction at !he Senior Cilizens Cen- action was laken.
Ewing T. Boles, 97, Columbus,
direcdy to the owner imd !here is
Council also appointed Blaet- Luther Bowles and linda Canter.
Dance planned ·
ter, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy,'
also a dama~e and vacancy a principal owner and former chairThere will be a round and Saturday at 7 p.m. Dan Smilh will rnar and Councilman Th·omas
allowance. Additional information man of !he Ohio Valley Publishing squ~ ~ce Saturday from 8 p.m. ' be the auctioneer. Toys, rools, ,pic- Werry 10 the Firemen's Dependenis available from Trussell, 992- Co. from the early 1950s until to m1dn1ght at !he Rudand Amen- • lures and clocks are included in the cy Board and voted against renew1977, when !he company was pur. can Legion Hall. Music will 'be by variery of items to be sold.
ing a $754 service agreement with
2733.
cha~ed by Multimedia Inc., died
NCR for lhe village c~:&gt;mpurer sysC.J. and the Country Gentlemen.
·
•
.
Monday, Nov.J6, 1992.
·
Public inviled.
Squads answer stx calls rem .
The Dally Seolioel
Boles spent 36 years in !he secuPresenl, in addition 10 R.eed,
Six calls were answered by units
(UBP8 111-1111)
rities business wilh The Ohio ComBlaeunar,
Dillon and Werry, were
Club 10 meet
.
f h M . C t E
Publi1bed every atwnooa, Moatlay
pany. He joined the former Bane·
Council
President
Larry Wehrung,
Riverview Garden Club wilt ~e~i~al se~~ce ~~r?'day~~g~~
Ohio
lhroaih
Friday, Ill Colin 81:1. ~-·
Securities
Co.
in
1929
as
Council
members
Deny Baroniclc
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at !he Tuesday morning ..
Ohio by lbe Ohio Valley t'UDiiohlnr
t' o( • , I ,
sales
manager.
He
later
became
and
Bill
Young,
Village
Adminis:
Compoay/Mu!Umedia .lacs.,~"''·
Reedsville
Church
of
Christ.
A
At
11:21
a.m.
!he
Syracuse
unit
Ohio 45788, I'll. llla-21118,
era. president and lleld the post through Christmas workshop will be held went to Main Street in Tuppers trator John Anderson, and Clerk
pootop polclol """'"""·Ohio.
the cbmpany 's name change to The directed by Betty Boggs. Members Plains for Marvin Walker who was Kathy Hysell.
Slate Auto's already
Ohio
Company, and he continued bring finger food and a gift for a transported to St. Joseph Hospital
Member: The Aooollalld - · ond the
low premiums can be
Ohio !'lewtpo.Jft Aooollallola, NatiODOI
in the job lhrough 1963.
.
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilira- in Parkersburg,W. Va. The Racine
Advortlobll ~-alaliva, Brllllbam
reduced even more by
He was named chairman of !he · tion Center resident.
New~paper Salu, 733 Tldnl Av••·
squad went to the Third St., Racine
insuring both your c~
NowYodt, Nowlbkl0017.
'
C!)mpany's board of directors in
residence for Emma Lyons~ 11:40
WITH
A
CHOICE!
·and
home with lhe Slate
1964, retiring on Dec. 31, 1965. ,
FOBTMASTER: Bond-. • . . _ to
Dance planned
a.m. and took her to Veterans
AutoCompanies.
'
Boles was also president of !he
The Daily S.nttnel, 111 Court St.,
Gallia-Twirlers Wesrem Square Memorial Hospital.
OHio 46788.
Investment Bailkers AsscX:ialion of Dance Club will hold a dance S~tAt 2:27 p.m. Pomeroy went to
IUIIICII.IP110N RATU
America ·lind a member .of the urday from 8-11 p,m. at !he Hen· Nye Avenue and transported Lore!·
Lei us tell you just
BTCaorlor ... -a-te
National
Association
of
Securities
how much your savings
One WeoiE; .......................................... It.60
derson (ommunity Center in Hen· ra Reitrnire 10 the ·Holzer Medical
Dealers.
.
One Mlllllh ....... ,.,............................. ,.ll8,1111
can
be.
derson,W.Va.
Jolm
Waugh
will
be
Cenrcr,
and
at
8:07p.m.
!he
Mid·
One Year., .................................- ...183.:10
In
World
War
I.
Boles
was
an
!he
caller.
dleport
unit
was
called
to
Beech
81NGLII COPY
ensign in the Navy.
. PR.ICB
Street for John Frair, treated but
Dally................ .......... ............... ~•.• 25 Cent.
He was il graduate of Centre
War Cry •vailable
not r:ransported. At 9:54 p.m the
. College of Kentucky, in Danville,
The Christmas Issue of "The Racine unit transported Ilene
Suboalben
pay liN coni·
and once wu chairman of lniSiees, War Cry" is now being dislributed Congo from her home on
or moy nadl Ia ad••co • - to The
Daily S..tinel Oil a three, ais. or 12
He also attended !he University of , in Middleport. The issue will be Stiversville Road to Veterans
IIIODih booio. Cndll will bo pven wrior
Illinois and the University of Ken- distribuled in Pomeroy next w.eek. Memorial Hospital .
~bWMt.
.
tucky Law College.
Anyone who is· missed during dis·
Tuesday morning at 2:57 a.m.
No oaboarlpllono by nuoll pomdllld In
Survivors include a son, Dr. E. tribution but would like a copy the Racine squad was called to
anu wMre hCRJM arrl1r 11rrice it
214 EAST MAIN
Thomas Boles Jr. of.Upper.Arling- should caD 992-5472 or 992-{;917. Rowe Road for Doma Russell who
,..
POMEROY
ron, and (our pdchildren.
.
lbllh-.t......
'.
was dead on arrival.
llotp eo..~
Services will be held 11 a.m. in
992·6687
MADD
kickoff
Monday at 1:29 p.m. !he Salem .
13 Woob.., ............ ..........................
SL Marltls Epiacopal Church, 21S1
118Woob.....&lt;.. .................................. .18
The
red
ribbon
campaian
of
!he
Township
Fire
Department
went
to
&amp;2Woob .......................................... .78
Dorset Rd., Upper Arlingron.
Mothers Against Drunk Driving Price Strong Road near Wilkesville
O.t.ldollolp llotlal;)o
· Calling hours are 2 to 4 p.m. will take place on Saturday, Nov. for a structure fire. The frame
II Woob .......................... .... :........... IU.40
and 7 to 9 p.m. Tllursday in the 28, at 11 a.m. at the srage area on house owned by Jeff Burcher was
118-Ttoob........................... .................IO
State Auto .
a=~ we~~r~~ ..........................
40
Schoedinger Funef&amp;) Home. 1,740 the Pomeroy parking lot. Mayors, completely destroyed in !he ftte. It
Insurance Companies
ZOllinger Rd.
.
'
all EMS personnel, law enforce- . was unoccupied.
~

Clinton turns down
jet-offer by Bush

m:

Clinton campaign.g.o t Bush ads early
Robert J, Wagman

PA.

By Tbe Alllocia~ Press
The. record-high temperature for tains. Rain mixed with snow was
A panly sunny and mild day is !his dare at !he Columbus wealher forecast for !he New England coast
predicled for Ohio on Wednesday station was 76 degrees in 1958 and !he northern MidwesL
before !he rain returns. Tempera- while the record low was 13 in ·
Rain was expecled 10 continue
tures will climb into the 50s in 1959. Sunset tonight wil! be at 5:14 IOday in western Washington slate
many areas.
p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at andOregon.
.
.That will follow a chilly night 7:21a.m.
Early
today,
snow
feD
in
upstate
wilh lows in !he 30s as !he result of
Around tbe nation
New Yoric as far west as Albany, in
cool Canadian air being drawn inro
A jet stream disturbance moving northeast Ohio and in western
!he region by a low pressure sys. east over !he Great Lakes dumped Pennsylvania.
tern.
snow in parts of Ohio, New York
fell Monday evening over
The National Wt~alher· Service a~ PeMsylvaniil early today while theSnow
Great
lakes region, from Min·
said !he next chance for rain will ram dampened the Pacific Northnesota
lhrough
norlhern Michigan
occur on Thursday as a srorm sys- west.
to
western
New
York state and
tem develops to the southwest.
The disturbance was expecled to western Pennsylvania.
T~mperatures will begin a slow leave light snow today in !he New
Scattered rain dampened norlh·
clu11b to ,more normal readings England interior, II!OStly in the Verem
California, the northern Pacifi.c
toward !he end of !he week.
mont and New Hampshire moun-

:=·

Pomeroy..

I

, president a steady 5 percent 10 8
percent down !he final two weeks
of !he conrest.
· Ro.ss Perot ended up with
19,258,910 voles. To achieve Ibis
he spent about $3.25 per vote, cer·
tainly a record amount - per vole
- in a presidential conrest Perot's
spending, probably in excess of
$70 million, is likely to result in.
some changes in federal election
law.
Because they received public
fun(!s, !he Bush lind Clinton campaigns were limited to spending
about SS5 millioo each. They were
outspent overall by Pemc, and vast·
ly ot~tspent in buying television
ume, which is where most of
Perot's nioney went
The courts have said dlat it is an
individual's Fust Amendment right
to spen4 as much personal money
as .desired on his or her own. election campaign. While !here are not
100 many individuals wbo can dig
a$ deep as Perot. the fact !here are
any may lead to a change in !he
rules.
.
One suggestion is !hat if an indi·
vidual spends more !han the federal
muimum, additional federal
money will be given 10 the candi·
dates receiving fed.eral funding.
That would even pot !he brakes on
an individual lilce Perot, because it
would mean !hat for every dollar he
spent, it would cost !he lallpayers

The Dally Senllnel

.

HUD assistance ,

--Meigs announcements-·-

Hospital news

Area death

AUTO

H ME

A THEATER

Pan-.

not-....

.......·. -d·

m..

j .......... . . . . . . . .

.I!J

�'

.

Tuesday, November 17,1992

The Daily.J.~.~!

i;.Sports

Re.d~en ·edge

p

Starting its new season off
promisingly, the University of Rio
Grand.e men •s basketball team
knocked down two opponents that
ranked among the top 10 in the
NAIA preseason poll to· win the
championship of the Georgetown
(Xy.) Classic this weekend.
Coach John Lawhorn, entering
his 13th season 81 Rio Grande, saw
· the Redinen post a 92·85 victory
over seventh-tanked St. Mary's
(Texas), Friday and advance to the
, title bout Saturday, emerging with
. a 80.78 win over Georgetown,
which was second in lhe poll ..
For Jeff Brown, the (j-S senior
forward from Newark who has
started every season for the Redmen, the tournament will go down
as a milestone in his career. Brown
scored 44 points over bolh games,
3() of them in the Georgetown tilt
· for a caieer high. BroWn hit 14 of
2S attempts from the floor, including five of eight tries 81 the threepoint, and was three of four from
the foul line against the Tigers,
who had handed Rio Grande a 106-

'

_Buffalo defeats Miami 26-20 in critical AFC East contest
-

~ ~

•••
,•
By STEVEN WINE .
·· • MIAMI (AP) - _Bruce Smith
· kept closing in on Dan Marino, Jim
Kelly stayed away fro.m Louis
Oliver, and the Buffal!&gt; Bills pulled
ahead of the Miami Dolphins in the
AFCEaSt
.
. Smith led a relendess pass rush
. 'that sacked Marino four times in
• Buffalo's 26-20 victory MOnday
: night. Kelly directed an error-free
: attack that contrasted with a 37-10
loss to Miami last month, when he
had three passes picked off by

Oliver.
The Bills (8-2) gained three"'
games on Miami (7-3) by winning
their last four games. Because of
the NFL's tiebreaker system 10 settle playoff slots, Buffalo in effect
,has a two-game lead because it has
two fewer losses than the-Dolphins
within lhe division.
"We're thrilled with the victory,
but we know we've got a lot of season left," coach Marv Levy said,
" We know we can only be thrilled ·
for a short time."

"We could be in a lot better
"He had to move around all the Buffalo convened both mistakes leaping five-yard run on third and
shape," Marino said, "but we're · time," Miami men10r Don Shula with. Steve.Cliristie's short field four, and the Bills ran out the
clock.
still not out of it ...
goals for a 26-17 lead.
agreed.
"I've never had a bigger run ..:.
Christie also kicked two field
The Bills had Marino on his
Kelly, meanwhile, directed scorheels - or his back - much of ing drives on six of seven posses- goals in. the flfSt half, including &amp;, not in junior high, high school, eol·
lege or the pros," Thomas said.
time after Miami took a 14-3 lead sions midway through the game. team-record 54-yarder.
Marino completed his •ftr$1 II
Jones' interception was his sevon its fll'Sl two possessions. Smith, The only failure came on a blocked
passes, including touchdown
Darryl Talley, Marvcus Patton and 53-yard field gpal attempt at the enth of the year, most in the NFL.
''To beat Buffalo,Jou have 10 throws to cap Miami's first two
Jeff Wright sacked Marino for l.oss· end of the fli'St hilf.
"We di!ln't tum the ball over take the ball away an not give it possessions. The scoring plays coves totaling 35 yards.
"We knew we wouldn't get a any," Kelly l!aiilo "That's why we up," Shula said. "In this game we ered one yard to Greg Baty and 19
yards to Mark Clayton.
gave it up and didn't take away."
great deal of sacks on him," Smith won.''
Miami's only score of the sec"We slart out like a house afii'C.
Levy received a game ball folsaid. "But we got a lot of pressure
'ond half came on Pete Stoy- Then we just slOpped scoring,"
lowing his I OOih NFL victory.
on him, and that was importanL"
"It's a great feeling," he said. anovich's SO-yard field goal with Shula said. "We started 10 shoot
ourselves in the foot." .
"It puts me about 220 behind 4:041eft.
Defensive penalties against the
Marino completed 22 of 33
· Shula. I know he's looking over his
Dolphins helped set up two Buffalo passes for 321 y&amp;rds. Kelly hit 19
shoulder."
, Buffalo took advantage of two scores, and a pass interference C!lll of 32for 212.
"Any time you face a guy like
Miami turnovers in the third peri· against rookie· Troy Vincent ~1th
od. Comelius Bennett recovered a three minutes left negated a th1rd· Marino, you just hope for the
fumble by Mark Higgs, Henry down incompletion at the. Buffalo best," Kelly said. "But after he
.
.
g~ts to do hJS iblng, I go right out
Jones picked off a pass that slipped 18.
Thurman Thomas then made a and do mine."
through Keith Jackson'shands and

OVER THE TOP - Burralo fullback Carwell Gardner (35) goes over the top or the Miami .
Dolphins' defense during the fourth quarter of

Indianapolis 31-34 in overtime and
eliminating the possibility of the
ftrSt 0-16 finish in league hiStOry.
· But the 49ers-Saints game best
demonstrated a point .- why San
Ffll!lcisco has dominaled their division for so mwiy ye;trS and why the
Sai~ts have become so frustrated
chas1ng them.
"We're just as good as they are
but we can't seem 10 bealthem,"
lamented New .Orleans' Rickey
Jackson, who had two sacks,
knocl\ed down two passes and
forced a fumble."
"We've got 10 put'up·or shut
up.''
Why the SainLS can't "put up"
has 10 do with lhe quarterback posi·tion, even though Bobby Hebert
passed for 301 yards on Sunday.
The win was the eighth for the
49ers il;r the last 10 meetings with
the Saints, mo~t often by scores

v......,...6.t.ooAnad• 3
Tonight's a:,ames

In the NFL ...
'

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Tcwonto va. Q.acbcc at Hamihon, Ont,
7:40 pJII.
Buffalo at Pinsbwgh,7:40 p.m.
Montreal at Ottawa, 7:40p.m.
OUcaao at Daroit. 7:40p.m.
Winnipeg at Tampa Bay, 7:40p.m.
to. Anad.a. at SanJa~e, 10:40 jl-ITL

Eultrn Dlvlllon
Tum
W L T PeL PFPA
Buffolo.............. &amp; 1 0 .ROO 260169

'

MlmU ................ 7 3 0 .700 :150177
fndiiiiiOpolis ....... 4 6 0 .400 133223

N.Y. leu ........... 3
New En&amp;iond .....

7

163202
138257

0 .300

I 9 0 .100

Wednesday's games

Central Dlvldon
Pitl&amp;bu:Jh .......... 1 3 0 .700 196139

Buffalo va. Nr:w Jeuey at H1milton,

Ho"'"" .............

0nL, 7:40p.m.
I
SL, l..ouilat lhnf~,1:40 p.m.
Minncwtaat Wuhingt.on, 7:40p.m.
V~n«~~~va at ~dmonton, 9:40p.m.

6 4 0 .600 230178
Cle..w\d........... S S 0 .SOO 1541S9
Cincinntti.......... 4 6 0 .400 114229
Wl!ller• Dlvillon
Omvor ............... 7 3 0
17S U3
KansasOty ....... 6- 4 0 .IJIW 2041 SI
S1111 Dic~o ......... S 5 0 .500 158165
L A. RaidOB ...... 4 6 0 .400 152111
S~ttle ................ I 9 0 .100 5919411

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eu&amp;em Dl'illon
Team
W L T PeL PFPA
Dollu................. &amp; 1 0 .800 247 JSZ
Philoolelp,io .. ..... 6 4 0 .600 201134
Washington........

Western Dlwlllon
SanFrancUco .... S 2 0 .800
New Od.CINI...... 7 3 0 .700
,.~ ..~ ............... 4 6 0 .400
~.A. Romo.. ...... 4 6 0 .400

292172
191138
1162o!l
190206

224:144

Next week's games

N.Y. JtllatNew EnJ1and,4 p.m.
Ddla• at PhoenU, 4 p.m.
Dern-er II. L.A. Ra.idm, 4 p.m.
Sll1 Franei.sco at L.A. Rams, 4 p.m.

McmdaJ, Nov. l3

In the NHL. ..
WALES CONFERENCE

.

GFCA

V[uJtin&amp;too........ 7 10 I

87 61}
60 60 ·
67 65
7S 7S
63 66
IS 5&amp; 60

Ad•rna Dh·lll011
Mon.W ............ 13 4 2
Quc9c&lt;............. 9 s 4
9 l 2
Buft•lo.............. I 7 2
H...rord ............. 3 13 I
()u.aWI ............... 1 IIi 1

21 8&amp; 61
22 "' 69
20 70 ll
18 91 69
1 42 75
3 38 96

&amp;.....................

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Norrll J)twlalon .

'

Team

W L T PI&amp;.
9 7 3 21
TOIOIIIO .....:....... . 953 21
J)ouoit. ............... 10 8 0 .ZI
T""'fl'
9 9 . 2 :Ill
&amp; I 2 II
SL Low. ............ 6 10 3 ll

Chicoao..............

Boy ........
Minn...............

s..,..,.DI..,Jon

s

t.ooAn1eJoo ....... 12
2
C....ry .............. 12 ~ 2
v.................. 10 6 2

Edmontan .......... 6 9 ,3
Winnlpoa........... l 12 I

GFGA
64 l7
3641

72 61
72 64

Sl

60
63 71

26 92 70
26 86 61
2:! 71 51

56

72

s.. J.......,........ 314 1 7 so
MondaJ's scores ,

93

MontJUI 6, u..... 3
SL Loull 2. ToraniO 2. tio

IS
II

.667
.600
.500
.400

.400

.333

1
U
2
2.S
l.l

3

Midwest DtvlUon:

W L

Utoh ........................3
Houi\OI'l .................. .2
MinnCI(Ila ................l
Dtllaa ....................... l

2
l
3
l
Denver ..................... } 4
San Anl.OI'Iio ............. l 4

PeL
.600
.SOO
...00
.250
.200
.200

CD

.S
1
1.5
2
l

I

.IIIlO

I
2
3
4
4

.800
1
.M7
U
.SOO . 1S
.333
3.S ~
.333
3.5

I

Tonl2bt's aames

Wuhinpat Ne.'ft Odcan1, 9 p.m.

60

76

Others rttelvlltf: ¥DIM: T... u 171,
New Mexico SUile 15&amp;, IUinoiJ 127, N.C.
Chulotte 91, California 91, Bri&amp;htm
YOWIJ 84, Ohio Slllt 14, Aubura 10,
Utah 62, Wake Foreu 61, Florida 60,
Adtlru.u SS, Purdue 4S, Oootllo 44, AI·
obonwo 43, llcoton Coilop 43,l!VUIIVW.

'Transactions
B-baU

'
N-JIAaauo.
CIIICAOO CUBS- N.....S Ed F...t
&amp;eoutift&amp;tuparvilor for New York, New
Enallnd, New JUICy and Ctnada, and
Pral~ DouaJu IOOUt
Northern Flori·
dl ~rul Soudlem Oeoqia.

DOUBLES PARTICIPANTS - ~ompetlng In the 35 and ov~r
doubles dlvlsloa or th~ tournament sponsored by the University or
Rio Grande Teanis Club were, from leh, John Bentley, Frank
Porter,Tom Hopklas and Pat Lynch.·

r.

Monday's scores

Kanau City at Scaule, I p.m.

Palrkk Dlwlllon
W L T Pta.
Pittabw)h .......... 12 " 3 '1J
New Jersey ........ 10 1 0 20
N.Y. R•n~ao ..... 9 7 2 :a!
Plill•dclphi• ....... 7 &amp; 3 17
N.Y. Idondcn .... 7 9 I IS

3

Phocnil 117. ScaUlo lOS
Polllond 109,New YCII: M

r.,.po B•y lts.. Dicao,4 p.m.

Tea~n

.167

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Team

lAS
:142

7

174

CINCINNATI REilS - Named Tom
Nieto mtnaacr. Maet Jcakinl ~\chill&amp;
coach &amp;n4 Tom lveraoa tr11ner 'Of
0sut.e11aft. W.Va.. r:l \he. South Ad.tnlic
Mark B=~ maaeaor, DuM
, DiJdiAa
11111
""-' rl WiftliOn..Salern ollhl CUoliM
Leoaue. St...... Jell Kunkol ond Jwti"'
NUld £rio Yeldinl- Steve
Cai\Ct', K.oi&amp;h HvJh•. Tncy Jon• and ...
Otoa Tubbo, autl'ocldea, 1 0 - with
lndianapoljl ol the American Atlociation.
CO(ORADO ROCKIES - Siped
A.nd..- OalamJ&amp;o fiat huemlft, \0 . . . . .

=;

r... s -

inf........_

Phoeni.&lt; .................. .. 4
Scattlc .................... .. 4
Sacnmeato ..............4
LA. t..kcn .............. 3
Golden Staltl ... 1........ 2
LA. Cllppcn ........... 2

Pbiladclphiltt N.Y. Oilnt., 1 p.m.

.

S

4

Ponlond ................... s 0 1.000

r.m.

'

.l
1
:l
2

Paelfk Dhillon

SundaJ, No,, 21
Allantaat Buffalo, I p.m.
Cleveland at Minne&amp;OU, I p.m.
Oeutiit•t Cincinnati, I
0rccn B1y It 0Uca&amp;o. p.m.
HoultOrl at Mi~. 1 p.m.
·lmJimopolio •t PirubwJh, I p.m.

,.

3

.600
.SOO
.333
.250

3

'

·~

Buffalo 26, Miami 20

.5

Milwalli.cc ...............4 2
Jndiana .. ...................3 2
Cl~ond... ..............3 3
AllanL1 .. ...................2 3
lletroit.....................l 3
Charlooe ................. .2 4

2S9161

Monday's score

.600

Chit.ao......... ...........l 1 ·.m

N.Y. Qianw........ S l 0 .500 214202
PhomU .............. 3 1 0 .300 174225

ll12 ll
1842Z7 .
1TI216

GB

Cenlnl Dlwlllon

6 4 0 .600 t7.S 167

C11ntral D4wlalon
Min...... ......... 7 3 0 .700
Chi&lt;OJO.............. 4 6 0 .400
On&gt;cn81y ..... ..... 4 6 0 .400
TampiB•y ........ 4 6 0 .400
DetroiL............... 2 I 0 .200

2
2

27S
260

14
12

I, Will Virllolal.

All•nlk DIYWoa

Miami ....... -............. 3
Orlondo .................... 3
' New Jeney .............. 3
Bc:.tm .............. ........ l
· Philadclphia ............ .l
WllhinJlOn ...... ........l

320

aippi Stato I, Minnuou 7, Oklabom•
Sloto 4, V - 4, Rioo 3, Vupla 3,
Tcmplo l. Xa.ter, Ohio :1, Muquetto I,
Ml1111l. Ohio 1, Pappcrdinc I, PrinCCIUIIl.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Ttam
W L PeL
New YcD .............. .A 2 · .667

2S. - · ..............19-10

'J'/4
3U

36, ON&amp;on Swo 26, T - U" Mil·
toUri If, Clelqe Wuhin&amp;lon 16, &gt;outh·
em 1llinoil 1~ ArizaDa Siate 10, Miuia·

In theNBA ...

·1!!2

19. IOwa SL ................21·13
:a!. MidliJan SL .......... .22-I
21. Cincimad ........... ,...29·S
22. tJNLV ....................26-2
23. - - ....... .JG.S
:M.1JCUI ................... .21-S

Uu.h at New T~y, f:Xl p.m.
80110n at Waah.inp:ln:, 7:10p.m.
Ooidal Stile at Milmi, 7:30p.m.
DalluatOiadoue,7:JOp.m.
Dmvcr II Indiana, 7t30 p.m.
. Milwaukee at Atlanta, l p:m.
Oliclao at MinnOIOII, I p.m.
Sacnmenw at Uouaton, 1:30 p.m.
Oevchnd at Sua Anloni.o. 1:30 p.m.
New York at Soaale, 10 p.m.
Ddnlitot ~.A . Clippon. 10:30 p.m.

--

, Basketball

Nollonal llukttball.u-ltollon

MIAMI HEAT- ACtiv•tcd Grant
• Lon,, forward, from tho injured litt.
P!aoed Swwo Smilh, pul, ., W. injuftld
li&gt;t. '

SACRAMENTO KINOS - Eatauled
t h e - - of Mitch Ri&lt;bmaod, ......

FootbaU
Nallonal Foolballl.oaa"'
DREEN BAY PACKERS ~Waived
Kitrick -Taylor, wide receiver. Claimed
Ronald IAwil, wide RC~ivor, off waivcn
from the Son l'1ancilca 49on.
. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS - Ploced
John H~o~~~tet, pard, on UljUNd ronrvo.
C.imed Kid&lt; Scntr...t, alfcniw tockle,
em waivca r!Qfll the Ci.nc:inaali hpla.

'

Hockey

Nallooal HackeJ !Aaa"'
NIU. - s...,...w O.vo -yellult,
forwud, cl &amp;ho Bulfal.o Sabrw twa da)'l
withollt pay IDd fmed him $500. Tho
NIU.Iinld the Bulrolo S•""" $3,930.
LOS ANOEIJ!S EINOS - A11iped
Robel Lon&amp;. ......,, 10 Pboooix of tholn·
tano&amp;ianol llocby lap.
MONTRI!At CANADIEN$ ~ At·
lianed Seu·Hill, defcmteman, Olea
PfiUO'I uut Patrie KJcl.ltiera. farwUdl, lO

Wednesday'aeames

Utah •~ Bc.Ulll, 7:10p.m.
Orllllldo ot Pltiltodclphio, 7:30p.m.
to uPhoenix, 9:3\)P-"1-

Prcdoric&amp;on oflbc American Hockey
.........

s........
AP preseason college

Area netters compete in open
tournament at Rio .Grande ·
.In intermediate singles, Faron
• The newly-established tennis
Sanders
defeated Jeff Snyder 6-2,
club at the University of Rio
6-0.
Intermediate
doubles action
Grande and Rio Grande Communi·
saw
Krishna
Kool
and
Bill McDonty College recently hosted an open
ald
over
Chuck
Brradbury
and Jim
tournament althe courts on Stanley
Hoffman,
7-6,
6-4.
L. Evans Field
Jim Osborne bested M.C. Shah
Tournament results saw Brent
·6-0,
6-0 in the 3S and over singles
Johnson over Steve Baird, 6-0, 6-3
in open sui~~and Brent Johnson category. Winners of the 35 and
and Jim Os
over.Brant Pauley over doubles category were John
and Sean Gibbs, 6-4, 6-1 in open Bentley and Frank Porter over Tom
Hopkins and Pat Lynch, 6-4, 6-3.
doubles.
.A 10ta1 of 38 players from Ohio,
--Sports briefs:-- West Virginia and lllinois participated in the 10urnamenL The tennis
club
is expected to play itS final
Hncke;r
mau:h
agamst Shawnee State Uni·
TORONTO (AP) - Phi'ladelphia right wing Mark Recchi, who versity later in the fall .
had ' three goals and nine assists in
three games last week, was named
NHL player of the week. He tied a
team record with six Points in an 85 victory over the New Ybrk
Islanders on Thursday night
Hnckey
NEW .YORK (AP)- .Dave
Andreychuk of Buffalo was sus·
pended for two days without .pay
by NHL president Gil Stein for .
cross-cheCking Jeff Beukeboom of
the New ·York Rangers in the jaw
Nov. 2.

basketball poll
The Top Twauy Fivo tc1mt ia lhe Atloc:iated Prell' presason coUqc balkct·
oball poll, with f1nt"'Place Yotel in patan·
lhctCI, 1991-92 record, toW poin\1 biNd
on lS poin\lfot a till~ place yote throu&amp;h
one point tor 1 lSth place vote •nd Ju1
acuon'• final rankins:
LUI
Team
Aecord Pta. Y..1. MX:hipn (23)......... .ZS.9 1,536 IS •
2. Konw (19) .............27·5 1,513
2
3. Dulto (15) ............... 34-2 1.!104
1
4. lndlllll• (6) ...............27-7 1,419
s. Ka.tUclty ........ .........29·7 1,341 6
6. s-IWI (2) ..........23-9 1,300 19
7. Nonh~ot&lt;&gt;liol ......23·10 1,171
II
8. Mcmlitio Ill. ......... .23-11 l,ll&amp;
9. Flori.lo SL ..............ll-10 l,D19 20
IO. Arizono ..................:IA-7 1.0S3 10
I I. lowo.................... .J9-ll 731
12. o.o.ptown ..........ll-10 631 2:!
13.LouiMJio ............. l9-ll 611
14.Oootp Toclt ........2H2 S73
Jl. Okloh.... ...............21-9 Soil 23
16.CcrtAeclicut ..........7Jl.IO 470
17. T..... ........ ...........22-9 469

CALL
TODAY
•
992·2124

s

11.s,..ouoe ..............22-1~

~~

21

With llteml

59•.99

By RUSTY ~LLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Ohio State coach John Cooper
knows a thing or two about coaches
who get-booed
The most recent example when Michigan coach Gary
Moeller was booed at the end of his
team's 22-22 tie with illinois Saturday - made Cooper as angry as
• the times he has been on the receivinJ end of boos from Ohio State's
fmthful.
·
"I heard there were boos,"
Cooper Sll,id Monday. "You know
what tha£ tells me? That's how
stupid, how ridiculous some fars

are.''

There were boos in the air after
Moeller disdained a fDurlh-and- 15
try at the Illinois 22, instead eiecting 10 send Peter Elezovic 10 kick a
39-yard field goal with 16 seconds
left.
- .
Elezov ic' s kick allowed the

NFC Least .
A week ago, thC NFC East went
5-0 llj!ainst outside opposition, running 11S record forlhe season to 176.
'·
Well, parity found it on Sunday,
when lhe diviSion went ... 0-S, lhe
ftrSt time that's ever happened.
Before Sunday, Dallas, Washington and Philadelphia were 12·1
against OuLSiders. Now, they're 12·
' 4.
The biggest shocker was Dallas' ·
2 7-23 loss to the Los Angeles
Rams - at home. The Cowboys
had come in 8-1, the Rams 3-6,
another indication of the "on any
given day" theory.
Why?
Probably because the Cowboys
were due for a letdown after beat·
ing Philadelphia two weeks ago,
then thrashing Derroit in ~nge
·for two beatings last year. ' We
caught them at the right time," said
Jack Faulkner, the _Ramf Fhief
scout, who predicted before the
game that his guys had a good shot.

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Bobby
Ayala and Freddie Benavides were
going ,to spend the afternoon
· watching television and guessing.
Chris Hammo!ld? He wa~ off
somewhere hunnng.
Cincinnati Reds players left
unprotected for IOday s expansion
draft were eager for answers to the
big question: who will they play for
next year? They've spent weeks
reading sports publications, specu. lating with friends and trying to
guess along ~ith general managers.
All that was left was to sit and
wait, or go somewhere and try not
to think about it. Players had differ·
. ent ways to handle a big day in
their careers.
. "It's a bi~ deal," said Ayala, a
pitcher who s not on the 15-inan

With Brown hiding consislently
and center Troy Donaldson snatch·
ing 12 of Rio Grande's 38
rebounds 10 conrrol the floor, the
Redmen were in charge alllhe way
against Georgetown, relinquishing
the lead only briefly 10 the hosLS.
The Redmen posted a six-point
advantsge 81 the half illld kept lhe
Tigers at bay for the rest of the
COIIICSL

George10Wii 's RUssell c::hadwell
nearly matched Brown's output
with 35 points, but the boards made
the difference a! Rio Grande came
one short of.the Tigers' 39, with
Paul Newton cau:hing seven, while
Mark Tandy and Mike Stacey were
responsible tor six each.
Both teams were even on shoot·
ing at 42 percent (28-66, 11·20 for
SS percent from the three for Rio
Grande; 32-76, 6-9 for 67 percent
on trifectas for the hosts}, but the
'Redmen netted an advantage at the
foul line by hitting 13 . of 22
attempts for 59. percent. GeQrge·

town ·was 89 percent on eight of Henderson was high man in that
nine tries, all of them by Chadwell. category with 10. Andre Cotton
In opening action Friday against had eight assists.
·
St. Mary's - the team that
Rio Grande was 49 percent from
knocked the Redmen out -of the the field (28-57, 13·27 from the
1987 national tournament - two three for 48 percent) and hit 23 of
of Lawbom's younger players got 34 attempts from the line for 68
the opportunity for some quality percent The Rattlers were SI perminutes and made the most of it, as cent on shooting (27-S2, 7-15 from
Breu Coreno, 6-S sophomore for· the three for 48 percent), in addiward from North Olmsted, had 23 tion to sinking 12 of its 13 foul shot
markers to ls ad all scorers and attempts for 92 percenL
Walter Stephens, the· 6-4 sophoThe Redmen return to action
more. forward from Akron, fol- Friday at 9 p.m. in Lyne Center
lowed up with 15: Matt Powell, 6-4 against McMaster Universi-ty,
sophomore guard from Barnesville, Hamilton, Ontario, in the second
turned in 22 points 10 aid the Red- -men's game of the Bevo Francis
. men cause, while Donaldson netted Classic.
eight of the team's 25 boards.
Box scores:
A tight game developed with the
GEORGETOWN (78) Rattlers, leaving Rio Grande ahead Mark Tandy, 7.{)..14; Paul Newton,
by four at the half, but a concerted 1.{)..2; Russell Chadwell, 6-5-8-35;
effort by the team provided the Lloyd Collins, 3-0-6; Jason
scoring cushion necessary for the Woodard, 5-0-10 ; Johnny Ray
win.
Williams, 1-0-2; Lamont Duckett,
St. Mary's Chris LeGrand 2-0-4; Cannon Simpson, 1·1·0-5.
pumped in 21 points and had eight TOTALS 26-fi-8·78.
of its 41 rebounds, although Elliot
RIO GRANDE (80) -Jack

sixth-ranked Wolverines 10 escape
with a tie - and locked up the Big
Ten Conference title .illld a irip to
the Rose Bowl.
"All you do is kick a field goal
10 .put you in the Rose Bowl? Why
wouldn't you kick .a field goal?"
Cooper asked in defense of
Moeller. "Let's say they go for it
and doil't make it. I've said this
before, those people· want 10 gamble but ther like to gamble with
your chips.' ·
Cooper added, "Probably 98
percent of the fans up there knew
he did the right thing. The other
people ... bi$ deal." · ·
As for h1mself, the Ohio State
coach said he realizes 'that if his
team upsets Michifll_l (8-0.2) Sat·
urday, he still won t win any popu·
laritr, contests in Columbus.
• I think there's some people in
this IOwn that ain't going to like me
if we win 'em all," Cooper said.

Cooper's BQCkeyes.(8-2) are on
a five-game winning streak and
stand 17th in the nation heading
into their annual schedule-ending
showdown with Michigan.
The Buckeyes accepted a bid 10
the Florida Citrus Bowl Monday.
They will meet a representative .
from the Southeastern Conference
- either No. ·2 Alabama, No. 9
Florida or No. 10 Georgia - on
New Year's Day in Orlando. .
Ohio S,tate has bounced hack
from· a two-game losing skid to
start the Big Ten season and can
lock up at least a share of ~ond
place with a victory over the
Wolverines. That would leave the
Buckeyes at 9-2, their best record
in Cooper's five years. ·
But Cooper said he knows that
even thai wouldn't make him popular with fans that have called for
his heoo throughout his tenure.

prote$:ted list. "I've just been sit·
ting around and waiting to see
what's going 10 happen."
"I really like the town (of
Cincinnati) and the team,'' said
Benavides, a middle infielder also
unproteCted. "It's a team capable
of going all the way. It would he
pretty lOugh if I have 10 leave."
The Reds player with the best
chance of leaving is Hammond, a
young left-bander with a small
salary and two years of majorleague experience. That's lhe type
of player the Denver Rockies and
Aorida Marlins are looking for.
Hammond, 26, made just
$140,000 last season, when his
inconsistency prompted the Reds to
drop him from the starting rotation
and eventually leave him off their
IS-man protected lisL

"I hope I'm never a hero, let's
put it that way," he said. "I'm not
in the game to be a hero. Thai
never enters my mind."
When critics cite Cooper's failures despite a 35-20-2 record, near
the top is an 0-4 record against
Michigan and an 0-4 mark m bowl
games.
He said he isn't consumed with
how a loss might affect his furure
with the Buckeyes. He is in the ftrSt
year of a four-year conbliCt signed
m July.
"I've said all seasqn long I'm
not worryin~ about that,'_' he said.
"I'm worrymg about trymg to get
our football team prepared the best
way we possibly can. Period."
Cooper said he comes into Saturday's game feeling his team has
its best chance to win since he's
been at Ohio State.
''I think this is the ·best team

Morgan, 0-1-3-6; Walter Stephens,
1-1-0-S; Matt Powell, 3·3·2·17;
Jeff Brown, 9·5;3·36; Troy Don·
aldson, 2:2-6; Brett Coreno, 1.{)..2;
Kyle Schroer, 0.1·2-S; Tim Christian, 1-1-3. TOT-'LS 17·11·13·80.
Halftime score: Rio Grande
40, GeorcetOWD 34.
ST. MARY'S (85) - Andre
Cotton, 1-2-0-8; Jerry SOlO, 1-0-2;
Chris LeGrand, 8-1-2-21; Elliot
Henderson, 7-1-1-1·8; Reggie
Cobb, 6.{)..12; Darian Tusie, 0-1.{)..
3; Domasque Moore, 2-2· 0-10;
DarylDouthard, 1:5.7; Henry Yza·
guirre, 1-4-6. TOTALS 10·7·11·
85.
RIO GRANDE (92) - Brett
Coreno, 3-4-5-23; Kyle Schroer, 32-8; Jack Morgan, 0-2-4-10; Walter
Stephens, 0-4-3-15; Matt Powell,
4-3-5-22; Jeff Brown, 4-0-8; Tim
Christian, 1-0-2; Troy Donaldson,
2-4-8. TOTALS 15·13·23·92.
Halftim~ score: Rio Grande
42, St. Mary's 38

JEFF BROWN

OSU's Roberts
looking to lead
by example

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Averrill Roberts already is leading
by example.
The senior guard has been at the
forefront of the Ohio State
we haven ' t scored a basket or women's basketball team workouts
stopped one yet and those are the at SL John Arena.
"I want to lead this team the
things we have 10 do consistently
way 1 can," Roberts said .
best
and very well JO be as good a team
·'That·
means giving them the right
as I'd like us llYbe."
direction
on and off the coun.
At No. 8, Memphis State is the
"I
honestly
feel this team is
highest ranked of die eight teams in
very
capable
of
challenging
for the
the preseason poll who weren '.t in
Big
Ten
title.
As
far
as
posLSeason,
the last regular.-season poll. Tlle
Tigers, who lost to Cincinnati in I feel we can go as far as our hearts
the regional finals, have superb will take us. But it's going 10 take a
swingman Anfernee Hardaway lot of heart, dedication and commitment to what we're doing," she
back among fotir starters. '"
said.
·
The other conferences with four
teams in the rankings are: the Big
"It starts right here in this gym,
Eight (Kansas, Oklahoma, Iowa
State and Nebraska); the Atlantic and we have to work at it every
Coast Conference (Duke, North day. That'll determine how far
Carolina, Florida State and Georgia we'll go. I just want everyone to
Tech, the first three all in the Top understand thai every hard day we
Ten); and the Big East (Seton Hall, put in here puts us a step closer 10
Georgetown, Connecticut an.d the Big Ten championship."
Roberts said it helps, particularSyracuse).
ly with younger players, for every. one to be in lOp condition at the
outset (&gt;f organized workouts.
''It's very important to be in
shape on the first day of practice,"
I've had since I've coached here," Roberts sald. "Especially on_a
he said. "But this is the best Michi· mental level, because you get a Jot
gan team we've faced too."
more BCCDmiJiished and it puts yOU
Cooper, who has !Jeen _a colle~e in better spints.
:
coach since 1962, S81d Mich1gan 1s
"When evetyone is in' shape and
the second-best team he has ever you can see it, that's inspiration in
encountered. He .gave an edge to uself."
the 1966 Michigan State team
Making their Ohio State debut
which featured Bubba Smith, Clint are freshmen Katie Smith, AdrjJones and Gene Washington.
o!nne Johnson, Lisa Negri, Kel!y
Michi$an has yet 10 beat a team Fergus and Gigi Jackson. Smhh
with a wmning record and has not was Ohio's Ms. Basketball last seawon against a rank~d op!l&lt;?ne~t. son at Logan High School.
Ohio State's five vlCUms dunng 1ts
"Everyone on the team, from
winning stteak have a combined the coachin' staff to the players,
record of 18-33. The Buckeyes did (is) excited,' Roberts said. "We're
beat a ranked team when they just very e~ited about what we Cljn
upended heavily favored Syracuse, do this season and were ready !O
then ranked No. 8, 35-12 on Sept. go.
19.
"We all worked hard, and we
The Wolverines have won six of worked hard because we wanted 10.
the last seven meetings and hold a We have something to prove this
50-33-5 in the all-time series.
season."
ABC. will televise the game,
Talent and experience will he :a
which kicks off at 12:10 p.m. EST. plus for lhe Buckeyes. They ret!$
four starters - Roberts, Nikki
Keyton, Audrey Bucey and Erin

•
th
.
t
•
f
t
WI
uncer a1n u ores

· Hammond wasn't sining around
and waiting for the draft. His roommate said he's gone hunting for the
next few days and won't be available for co111ment.
Ayala planned to go to a
friend's house, watth the draft on
television and see whal.his future
holds.
"I'm trying not 10 think about
it," he said, in a telephone interview Monday from tiis home in
Oxnard, Calif. "I'm just wondering
what's goin$ to go on, whether
they tak~ an ~~fielder or a pi_u:her.
I'm anXIous to see what's gomg to
happen."
.
National League teams will be
allowed to protect an additional
three players after the ftrSt and second rounds. Ayala, 23, probably
would be one of the first players

-

By RONALD BLUM
ftrSt to switch teams.
trades set to announce after the clubs add another four.
"The one thing you can't con"Galarraga is a veteran," Rock- draft, and that he wa,s continuing
NEW YORK (AP) - Toronto
·and Atlanta. the best teams in base· ies manager Don Baylor said. "serious trade talks" with 17 rrol is the situation,'' Dombrowski.
ball, figure 10 be the first to lose "He's been around the National te~ms. Rockies general manager said. "Colorado may draft the
League for il coople of years.'' '
Bob Gebhard said he hoped 10 have player before us, or the player
players in today's expansion draft.
EaCh team will draft 3() players, eight;io 10 trades in plaCe before might be pulled back from the proBraves pitcher David Nied was
teCted lisL"
expected to he taken by the Col- and plenty of big names are avail· ·the diaft begins.
Nied 24 next month, was 3-0
There
will
be
five
minutes
able.
Lee
Smith
and
Shawon
Dun·
orado Rockies as the flfSt pick. and ;
Toronto outfield prospect Nigel ston- and Jose Lind may be drafted between picks in the ftrst round, with a i .17 ERA for Atlanta this
Wilson was expected 10 go 10 the and dealt just after the picking ends and then a half-hpur break while sesson, and was 14-9 with a 2.84
at 9 p.m. EST. Lind is widely National Lea'ue teams add three ERA for Class AAA Richmond.
Marlins on the second pick.
"From what I ~. Nied rumored 10 be heading to the Los · players 10 their ~ted lists and Galarraga, 31, is more welltcnown.
American League clubs add four. He batted .243 with 10 home runs
already ha~ taken a flight out to Angeles Dodgers.
Danny
Tartabull,
Jack
Morris
NL teams will add three more olav· and 39 RBis in 95 games for St.
Denver," ••d Casey Close, who
and
catchers
Mite
LaValliere,
Don
represents Braves teammate Kent
ers after the second round and AL Louis.
· Mercker. "That's whal Kent found Slaught, Greg Olson and Damon
Berryhill were among the others
ou~ That's whal he IOid me.''
Nied's aaent. Steve Pierce, said · left off lS·man protected lists .
Each existing team can lose just
he wasn't sure.
"I've heard so much specula- one player per round, and· can pro·
Plstols------$44~95
' lion,'' Pierce said. "I think there's 'teet additional players after each
going 10 be the biggest masa move- round ends. ·
"\\;'e'rc not naive going into
ment in the hiltory oftialleball .."
, Colorado started baseball's big this,," Marlini general manager
BUY- at.t.- TRADE
week Monday by signln&amp; free Dave Dombrowski said. "We
agent flr51 bucman Andres Galar· know thai a team might talk 10 ua
raga 10 a $500,000, one-year deal about drafting a player and then
with the oh&amp;nce to earn another trtding him, and then call the
UCIIII
Ul .lHIID AYI.
$600,000 in performance bonUJCS. R~es and see about the trade for
Oatarraga became only the IICalnd the same·player."
949·2161
· Dombrowski said he had two
of I 53 Tree agents 10 ·~ and the

Remington &amp;Winchester Deer Slugs .... $2.2511ox
Raven·p.. 25 ACP
22 Cal. CCI LOng Rifle SWis ........... $1 0.9511rkk

'

UCINE GUN SHOP

FOR FURTHER DETAILS CALL JOOAY ,,
•

II

'

''

1~~~~130~~~uaa':9$a~r.~~

added 10 the protected list if Ham· ond baseman Bill Doran and piu:h· place) in the Big Ten. Other retUCIJ·
er Tom Browning. Neither is con- mg letter-winners are Alysiah
mond is drafted in Round One.
· Ayala won two games and made sidcred attractive to an expansion Bond, Lisa Sebastian, Lavona
a good impression after his call-up team because of tbeir age and · Turner and Stacie Howard.
from Class AA in September. The salary.
As a left-handed startin,g piu:her,
right-hander probably will start
Browning
might have gotten con· Meigs girls basketball
next year at Class AAA if he sticks
sidcration-from
Denver or Flonda.
wilh Cincinnati.
But
he's
coming
off reconstructive preview Saturday
.
Benavides, 2,6, started 44 games
knee
surgery
that
clouds his future.
at second base and shortstop last
The first Meigs Marauder girl~ •
32,
also has a size- basketball preview will be played
Browning,
season. His primary value to the
Reds was as a backup 10 shortstop able contract. He's entering t~e Saturday at Meigs High School '.s
Barry Larkin. The Reds might opt third year of a four-year, $11_.9 mil- Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
to protect a young pitcher instead lion conrract that has an opuon for
The evening's ftrSt contest will
a fifth year at $3.5 .milli~n.
. , pit Warren Local against Eastern at
of Benavides in the later rounds.
His wife, Debb1e, smd he d1dn t 6 p.m. At 7 p.m., Southern will
·Benavides wants .to stay with
seem concerned about his chances meet the Meigs junior varsity team,
the Reds, bui is philosophical.
"Whatever happens, I have no of being chosen as he headed for and the host Marauders will play
control over it,'' he said Monday, Aorida over the weekend.
River Valley at 8 p.m.
·
'·He must not be too worried in an interview from his home in
Admission price is $2.00 for
he went golfmg," she said.
Laredo, Texas.
adulLS and $1.00 for stndents.
The Reds left several veteran
players unprotected, including sec·

Toronto, Atlanta stand to be first to lose players

WINTER?
CONSIDER

1·614-992-7022

'

In basebaU's expansion draft,

Wll..L YOUR
UTILITIES
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OSU's five-game .win streak on line in bout with Michigan

THE MAPLES

2 MEDIUM PAN PIZZAS

94 defeat at Lyne Center cmly last

By JIM O'CONNELL
gan," said Fisher, an ~sistant at ranked No. 1 in the 1977 fmal reg- Louisville, Georgia Tech, Okla• AP Basketball Writer
Michigan since 1981. "Without ular-season poll, received 23 of the homa, C90riecticut, Tulane, SyraSteve Fisher holds back when question we are the No. 1 league in 65 first-place votes and 1,536 cuse, Iowa State and Michigan
talking about his top-ranked Michi- America. You can make a case for points from the nationwide panel of State.
gan Wolverines. He has no qualms even putting another team in the sportswriters and broadcasters.
Cincinnati, lhe other member of
about telling the world about his Top 25.It's a great league."
Kansas, second in the final regular- last season's Final Four, was 21st,
Michigan lost to Duke in the season poll last year, had 19 flfSt· followed by UNLV, MasconferenCe. .
The Big Ten has four teams in NCAA title game last season and . place votes and 1.513 points to take sachusetts, UCLA and Nebraska.
the preseason college basketball · Indiana fell to the Blue DeVils in the same spot eight months later.
Two-time defending champion
poll, and Fisher's band of SOIJhO- the semifinals. Nine of those Big
The top four teams will have a
mores was on top, with Ind1ana Ten Final Four starters are back, Duke, which lost player of the year tournament of their own on Dec. 5
fourth, Iowa J lth and Michigan including Michigan's Fab Five Christian Laettner ·to graduation, when Michigan is at Duke and
was named ftrSt on lS ballots and Kansas is at Indiana.
State 20th. Three other leagues -'- freshman class.
"I think it says a lot of people had l,S04 points, IS more than
Big Eight,. Atlantic Coast ConferMichigan, led by Chris Webber
ence andJ!ig' East - have four recognize the quality of our players Indiana, which was No. 1 on six an~ Jalen Rose, was never higher
than No. lllasi season and entered
teams each, ~ut Fisher wasn'i bit- illld program and the sttcngths are ballots.
perceived 10 be that good," Fisher
Kentucky was fifth, followed by · the NCAA tournament ranked
ing.
•
"I think the conference will be said Monday. "But tliere are 10 or Seton Hall, with two, lhe only other 15th.
"We go(hot, white hoi, at the
much better than it has been in a 12 teams good enough 10 be con- team 10 get flfSt-place votes. Then
number of years. We had two sidered the No. 1 team. I think we comes Nonh Carolina, Memphis right time last year and still only
fl!lished tied for third in our conferteams in the Final Four last year are. one of those teams, but how State, Florida State and Arizona.
Iowa led the Second .Ten and ence," Fisher said. " 'I think our
and this is the srrongest the league good? I don'tknow."
Michigan. which was last was followed by Georgetown, players are sman ·enough 10 realize
has been since ! came to Michi-

like Sunday's- 13·12, 34·33, 24·
20, 24-22 .and 16·10. Most are
decided, as was Sunday's, by a late
drive engineered by Joe Montana
or Steve Young - or by a late
New Orleans drive that fails.
This year's games are the perfect example.
In the fll'Sl, the 49ers' 16-10 win
in New Orleans, the Saints h.ad a
shot at winning on their last possession. They drove to the San Francisco three, got set hack by a holding call and then Hebert threw an
interception in the end zone.
On Sunday, the 49ers trailed 207 with 11 minutes left
Then Young directed a 65-yard
drive capped by a 14-yard TO pass
to Brent Jones. They got the ball
back with four minutes left and
took it all the way, with Young
throwing eight yards 10 Sones with
46 seconds feftiO make it 21·20.
Then the difference. With
Morten Andersen as the kicker and
all three time outs left, the Saints
·had a reasona~le shot
Fred MacAfee returned the
kickoff 10 the 31 and then -Heben
hit Dalton Hilliard for 8 yards in
bounds. While the Saints rried 10
line up, 20 seconds ticked off the
clock and there were about 19 seconds left when New Orleans' next
play came.
But no time out. Why not?
Coach Jim Mora said he had
cirdered two plays run before a time
out and offensive coordinator Carl
Smith said "I'll talce the blame."
"I can't control that," Hebert
said "I just do what I'm IOld."
Would Steve Young, Joe Montana or John Elway say that?
Doubtful.

Scorclloar()

preseason picks to win .cagefest title

Four conferences dominating AP preseason cage poll

Niners, Broncos show final drives
can sometimes make the difference
By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Football Writer
It's not rrue thai the last possession decides most NFL games.
Only if you're San Francisco or
·Denver. · .
While the Broncos didn't need
John Elway's heroics on Sunday
(Or Elway, who missed the second
half of Denver's 27-13 win over
the GianLS with a bruised shoulder),
the 49ers made their point - liter·
ally. By beating the· New Orleans
Saints 21·20 on a 74-yard drive in
the last four minutes, they demonsrrated why they almost always win
those tight NFC West showdowns.
In most,places, Sunday was one
of those "any given days;" one on
which the weak can rise up 10 smite
the srrong. The NFC East, considered the NFL's srrongest division,
went 0.5 agaipst outside opposition
for the first time in history and
. even New England won, beating

The Deily Sentinel Page 5

.Po~y-Middleport, Ohio

PRICES so LOW

NEW 14170 3 BEDROOM
29
ONLY
MO.

$13 9

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NEW 14' WIDE 2 BEDROOM
39
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110.
1ft-,,.-..,.__

OILY

liT.

PRIVAn LOI SPACES AVAIWLI
OPEN
Mon•.frL 1:30-1
Sllll:30-t:OO

CLOSED SUNDAY
lne.rwnaton
St. RliM • 31, Login, Oh.

385-2434
;

�.'

-

.

By T.he Bend

Th~

.

'

~

.

~~.Todd

Grace to take part .
!?in history contest Dec. 3
vcrsity's 46th Annual American
Hillllry Conr.est schedu ed for Dec.
3 on the Athens campus.
.
Grace, son of the Rev. and Mrs.
Roger GfiiCC, Racine, was one of
; 18,000 sllldents in 440 Ohio high
' schools who took the preliminary
·: multiple choice examination at
·:. their lOcal schools in Ociobcr. He
; JC(Il'ed.highcr than.any other M~igs
r Counuan 10 qualify for the ftnal
:. round's three-question CSSIIY exam~
.
·• inalion.
The first place winner ·will
:: receive a four-year full tuition Ohio
-; University scholarship and $100.
;. The second phlce ~inner will
:: receive a one-year Ohio University
: scholaJsltip an(! $75, while the third

Prizes will be given through 10
place.
The contest is sponsored by
Ohio University's College of Arts
and Sciences, the Pcpartmem of
History, &amp;1\d the Admissions
· Office.
Grace alsg participated in the
Ohio University Chemistry Contest
held in October. Hew~ one of 53
students from 37 Oh1o h1gh schools .
to take the one-hour examjnation
designed to lest the achievement in
chemistry of Ohio high school
seniors and to encourage the study
of science.
All contestants were awarded
chemistr¥ books. Chemical eq~ip­

•

·.

.

Page-6
\

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./

aware ot·it and becauSe there are
more tests to be used to find the
cause of the dementia, instead of
giving it a ·generalized term. The
elderly population is also increasing everyday.
Two~ thirds of. Alzheimer viclitns are cared for by family membeAI • generally the 51JOUse.
-.

Alzheimer's Disease is the lead·
ing cause of dementia. or replacing
organic brain syndrome, which
describes generalized loss of mental ability."'lbis'loss of mental ability incl,udes the process of thinking,
reasoning, memi&gt;ry and learning.
Dementia 1s· not a disease, it is a
sy~drome or group o~ sympto~s .
wh1ch have an underlymg cause m
common. The disease is a chronic,
progressive; degenerative demen·
tia.
.

Uni~

1

.

TUesday, November 17,1992

November is Alzheimer's awareness month ·

Todd Grace, a student at South- through .seventh place winners will
l•I •em
High Scbool will be panicipat- received $1,000 Ohio University
in&amp; in the
in Ohio
. sc holarships with $50 in cash.
final~rtlljll(!

Daily Sentinel

. "This relieve's soci~ty of a
tremendous burden," Leifheit said.
"This job requires '36 )lours' of
care, not just 24 hours a day. These
caregivers need help and relief. We
at Meigs County Council on Aging
have in-home help and a suppon
group."
Some of the goals or ideas .tl)at
are discussed at the support meet·
ings or could be used as advice to
those individuals !lying 10 cane for
an elderly loved one: follow:
• Develop realistic goals, Recog'

Dementia is not to be confused
with senility, according to Lenora
Leifheit, R.N., coordinator of the
Alzheimer/Related Diseases SupTODD GRACE
pon Group at the Meigs County
ment was distributed to the high Council on Aging. Senility is the
school chemistry teachers who · condition of being old or the probrought their students to the con- cess of aging.
Alzheimet's Dise.ase is on the
test.
rise because doctors are more

nize and accept youi limitations.
Don't try to work miracles. ·'
• Set asi~ time for yourself.
· Plan to take a break from
· ing responsibilities daily or ,
y.
Do not feel guilty aboutlllkin~time
for yourSelf. You must Ulk:e c4re of
yourself so you can continue to
cane for your loved &lt;inc, . ·.•c.
• Get acquainted with and attend
meetings of a local canegivcrs sup- ·
port group.
. u
• Contact your area .office on
aging for resources that mee&amp; the
· needs of the elderly.
· . ;l
- Learn about personality and
behavioral changes that are caused
by lbe aging process, djS(IIses and
medications.
·
.
• Keep client independent as
long as possible. Look: at wliat•.they
· can do, not what they caalt ·do.
Stress the posi!)ves and Cherish·the
good moments.
I1 ~,

'!:ft

!'-

~.

. November 16, 1992
The Meigs County Board of Health, Staff of the Meigs County Health
Department, and Meigs County Health Department Levy Committee
·would like to take this ~pportunlty to thank all those people who ·
voted for, and supported the Meigs County Health Department
·fleplacement 1.:-evy. The staff of the HeaHh Department shall continue
to provide, and will expand upon the quality services you have btHJn
accustomed to receiving In past years. .
·
.
·
·:
For those people who did not vote for-the Health Department Levy,
.we shall try to Increase our effortl to eam your support, ·and vote In
the future. We realize that each Individual does not directly benefit
from the Health Departmen.t services; but Indirectly, all Meigs
County Citizens benefit from the servlcn provided by the Hea19'
Department.
· .• ~ •

4~~y~/~s .

•' •

17,1992

~· New

universal Catechism
· addresses 21st century
PARIS (AP)- The Roman cia! contraception and divorce.
C&amp;lbolic Churtb's new c:atechisin · Although the catechism contih· finds new implicalions in the Ten ues to condemn homosexual acts, it
Commandments, ranting as sins urges Calbolics to show "respect,
such phenomena as white-collar compassion and delicacy" toward
crime, rnistlabnent of the environ- homosexuals.
mall ..t seuetic: engineering.
k condemns
• engineering
· French clerJymen introduced that is used to
a baby's
the new Cltocb•m of lbc Catholic seJI 01' olbcr ~~~ of it "unique
Cbllldl for the wadd'J 900 million identity and human dignity" and
· belie~ l'donday. The 676-page says that producing human
document addresses some issues embryos for biological ma1erial is
that didn't exist .426 years ago immoral.
And tbird-party procreation . when the last full revision was
such IS. sperm donors 01' surrogate
' issued
I·
Jean Honore, bishop of Tours mothen ~ il inherently dishonest
: and the c•tddsm's Freocb editor, because it breaks the lint between
· said ihe catechism contains no the sexual act and procreation, the
• "new sins -· We have simply tried catfChWD says.
The six-year project spurred
to take up the commandments
intense debate among the world's
r again on how a Ouistian can con3,000 bisbops, who submitled some
' duct his Ji(e today."
The text will IICCVC IS I univer- 24.000 amendmcnll, Honore said.
Prohibitions against non-marital
sal guideline for church teachers
and theologians, who may put sex, masturbation, pornography,
IOgletber local ~isms based on ,adultery, polygamy and free sexual
it.
.
union remain in force. Chastity is
•~ The catechism retains many of ·demanded of the non-married.
But strictures on the Sevenih
• the old positions that bave betome
increasingly controversial, includ- Commandment - Thou Shalt Not
ing prohibitions cif abortion, artifi. Steal- bave been updated to rant

Cine

I&lt;,

/ J , • t.&gt;.,O•

.,,

I

1~-. , ~ ~

j

and scissors.

• e......

MIDDLEPORT · Jim Oliphant
will conduct a bible study' class
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the First
Baptist Church in Middlepon.

·:Community Calendar itenis
.j )ppear two days before an event
~ .iDd tile day or that event. Items
'. must be nc:eived weD in advance
...- to_...assure
__ publication in the cal.

.

•

••

TUESDAY
GALLIPOLIS • Lafayette
; Shrine ·No. 44, White Shrine of
• Jerusalem, Gallipolis, supreme
! inipection, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
!_ ~dinner at 6 p.m.
. It...

J

i';. POMEROY • Regular meetin~.
1•;:. Drew Webslllr Post No. 39, Amen. :':' can Legion, Tuesday. Thanksgiv-

1'· ing dinncr·at 7 p.m. and meeting at

,:, 11 p.m . All members urged lo
'· auend.
POMEROY • Ladies Auxiliary,
: 'veterans Memorial Hospilal, will
• meet on Tuetsday at I :30 p.m.
1
Plans wiD be made for the Christ~
~ mas Jl8I'IY on December 11.

'

POMEROY • Alzlleimers Suppon Group, W~y. 1·3 p,m.,
Meigs County Senior Citizens Cenlllr.

RACINE · The Southern Athletic Boosters will meet Wednesday
at 7 p.m. at the high school.
THURSDAY
.
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
group of M will meet Thursday at
7 p.m. at the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church in Pomeroy. Call 992-5763
for infonnation.
POMEROY
• The Rock
Springs Better Health Club will
meet Thursday at 1 p.m. at the
home of Frances Goeglein.

:
COOLVILLE· Revival at Wes·: lcy-Allesbeny Church in Coolville
: will be Tuesday lhrough Sunday at
" :7:30 p.m. mghtly :with Rev.
'. WiUiam Cope of Salem. Glen East·
erllng. pastor, ipvites the public.

ROCK SPRINGS • The Middleport Child Conservation League
will host a "Hobo" party Thursday
at 6:30 p.m. at the Rock Springs
United Methodist Church. Mem bers of the South Cenlral District of
Ohio
Child Conservation League
:
VVEDNESDAY
will
be
the guests.
·
• • POMEROY · Pomeroy Mer, chants Association·, Wednesday,
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun·
8:30 a.m., Bank One conference ty Public
Libnlry Board of Trustees
rlioiJI. All members attend.
will meet Thursday· at 1 p.m. at the
library in Pomeroy.
~"· POMEROY • Wildwood Gar,..._.. Club wil meet Wednesday at 1
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun·
.11.1t the home or Pauline Eynon, ly Democratic
Executive Commit-·
tee will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
· i :. POMEROY • The Middleport at the Carpenters Hall. •
.• ~~ tfi«a'y,Club Will ~I Wednesday
~"-l-~11,m. at lbe Me~gs County Pub(JALLIA-MEIGS • Township
:Jlc Llbnlry in Pomeroy with Mrs. Trustees
Gallia and Meigs
, D1nJe1 Tliomal. hostess. Mrs. Roy Counties,from
Community Housing
.1Holter will review "A Thousand Improvement Stralegy Meeting on
:1Mrot• Jane Smiley. Roll ca!l Thursday
at 9 a.m. at the Gallia
will be a penon aI farm expen· County Commissioners' Office,
~-R
and at 1:30 p.m. in the Meigs
County Common Pleas courtroom.

·l

'?l

TUPpa_RS PLAINS • VFW Post
No. 90S3 will meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at the post. Members
urged to auend.

•

Tueoday Paper
Wednesday Paper

Thlll'!day Paper
FndayPaper
Sunday Paper

CLOSED SUNDAY

,POLIClES
• Ada 0111oide the co..ty ,....,. ad,... a..t he pn,.ud
• Rocei,.dioco..tfor .... poidioJad.,._
• Fr. Ada: Ci-waJ oad F.....d ado ...lor IS ......1. orillhe
... Jcla,.~ ..........
• Prico ol ad lor al capilalleuon io clo...le prioe olod - •
• 1 poia&lt;liao .,,. ..Jy • s.....a i1 eot ••1 iHe for enon diet r....t d.y (eheek
for emtn ftrolday od """' iD paper). Call betore 2:00 p.m .

G.Wa Counly

p

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t••

· lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
.and Seeding.
Shrub 1nd Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal
Rnldontlll • c:ommorclll
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PomerOy

388-ViaiOa

985-Cb.ter
843-Pordond
247-Lelorl F.Uo
949-R•cine
742-Radond
667-Cool.ille

245-RioCnado
2~6-G.,. •• Dlot.
643-Ar.Wo Diot.

· 379-Wolmat

675-Pl. Plea.. nl
458-Leon
57(&gt;-Apple Cro•e
773-Muon
882-New Uawen

· 895-Leiorl
937- BoJrolo

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54- MUe, Merehandilc
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of,.,..._

NOl1CI! 10 IIIOEiil
1lle IMnl
of
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rHoiYo llldo lor lito ·
Mill=• of • 1MI alnglo
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1991 CIIVIOLn CAVALIER

2DL

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Air cond., 5 1p11d, A~M caQette, sporty,
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'

Students honored
Pomeroy Elementary recently
held ill awards assembly Cor per·
feet allelldancc llld bonor roll 1111·
dentl for the nine weeks. I..&lt;K:al
buaineasel donadn1 COUJIOIII and
certlrlcatea were McDonald'a,
VlUIban'1 c.rdinal, McClure' 1,
DC:~ Valley, Subway, Video
~
llld M!ddlqiM Book*ft.

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~Aatior- .

General Haulins

__
Till----·--_. ...,_,... _____
--······
. --·=-. z.:.:·===
.................
...

.

1991 "S10'' V6, air .....•.•....~ .........................................
SALE $7995
'

tp ulltalllaM of truok,

,_..,.

1990 MERCURY
TOPAZ Well equlpped
.. ~ ................ SALE $5895
.
I
1988 OLDS DELTA 88 4 DR. A great buy ................. ~ALE $5995
1915 CHEVY CAMARO Z28.......................................0NLY $3496
1987 FORD ESCORT 2 DR. Qaa aaver......................SALE $2396
1984 BUICK CENTURY 4 DR .......,............................ SALE $179&amp;
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INo Sunday Calls)

iiHiF.""

ISA
·WANT AD

Olllo 41710.

.., • t - Clio¥.

Du••

DELIVERY SERVICE
.S111all Dozer Work
$25.00 ,., ...,

lnveatmont, be your
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992·7553

when you don't.

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9-12 end 6-10 pm

Deer Heads....................*1 nniiO
rke·ys ...••.....•.......•....••..'1
Fish ...•..............•...•..5400 per 1
Call (304) 895-3386.·
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Been wailing foro good reoson to oorchose oceHii11 {ilone?
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liMITED
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local aorvlco
TIME ONLY 2
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DAVIDSON'S
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CHRISTMAS '
TREES
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OPEN ~7
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742·3051
SR 124
Ready Nov. 26
11·17-12·1 mo pd.

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Ape,....ntlor Reot
Auto Por,. &amp; Acceooori ..l
4$- F•niohod Roonu
Auto Repair
46-~ Spooee·IO. Rent

j

Vouchers

Factory 12
Gauge Choke

18 yre •nd up. Earn u
much •• you w1nt, lull
or Pllrl time from your

LiYMiock
Hoy &amp; Crain
Seed &amp; Fertili1er

34- s,.;_. Buildiap

Jones loses rounde-

'

We

1:00 P.M.

Do you nMd 111art

arwa qu p
Wanted to Buy

I'

1·800·598·5654
or 614·446·1157

SUNDAYS

CHARLIE'S

I \i;\1 "l 1'1'111"
S I I \ I " I I II 1,

.•

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

SHOOTS

PH. 614·992·5591

Frui,. &amp; V..,toLieo
For Sale or Trade

$.60

41- Ho .... for Belli

GUN

14-742.;2138 .

11- Autoo for Sole

1919 lUlCK leSAIRE
4 Dl.

BP OIL CO.

J

HOME HEAliNG OILS
DIESEL FUELS • GASOLINE$

MU1ical lrut.rwnentl

Opport. y
zz-111_,- to Lo.n
zs_. Profouloaol s...ie..

$.05/day

RACINE GUN
CLUB

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
. HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt; Gravel and Coal

11-13·'92-1 mo.

.

$.20
'$ .30
$ .42

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

I 992 BUICK CENTURY CUSIO. 4 DR.
crulae, electric reclining Hit backs.

.

6637

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAl
Reasonable rates
JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

and LIMEnONE

I I\ \\I I \I

c;:------1

VENTURA, Calif. (AP) ·-·
Singer Rickie Lee Jones lost a
round in her divorce baiUe when a
judge ruled she and Pas.cal Nabet
were together as husband and wife
15 months longer than sbe thought.
The ruling Friday by Superior
Coun Judge William Peck means
Nabet is entitled to a greater portion of their commul)ity property,
includinF, royalties from the
singer's : Flying Cowboys" album
and tour m 1990.
The amount of money involv!l(l
wasn't disclosed.
The judge fixed the date of separation at the end of September
1991, instead of May 1990, the
date insisted on by Miss Jones.
···u isn't so much when you
think the marriage is over" but the
date when that decision is COfli!IIU·
r\icatcd.to the other person in no
uncertain ~am~, Peclt aaid.

. , ....

Call614·992~

R&amp;C EICIYATING

POMIIOY, OH.

•••

. --

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

HAULING

SIIILL DOIER
, WORK.

...••
....,.

985·4473

~JAYMAR
Qualit_y
Stone Co.

•The. Area's Number 1
Marketplace

'"..
•

992-2269

MICROWAVE
·aad VCR REPlll

Meiga Counly MilliOn Co., WV

446-GolllpoUo

Door Plus Ope!ler

Wit• Purcllase of

. CONSTRUCTION

667-6179

Cltu11i/Wd pages cover the
foUuwing telephone e:¥change1 ...

...., .,... pelolicuioooto ..... - l i o a
• Ad. .....-. be paid ia .d...... an:
.
Can! ol Tlooab
BappJ Ado
'--' Ia M-rioa
Yanl Soleo
• A ciUoillod od-tploeod Ill the Collipolio DaiJr
TrU.... (aeopl Cluoil'ood Ilioplay, B••iaeu Can! or Lepl .
Nollooo) willaloo "I'P""' ia the Poiat Plouoatllqpoter oad
die Deily S..linel, ....w.,. .... 18,000 ..._

'

Mr. and Mrs . Brent Arnold,
Hemlock Grove, announce the
birth of their daughter, Alaine
Meredith, on Oct. 14.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold have
another child, Grant, age six.
Maiemal grandparents are Nan
White, Memphis, Tenn. and Mar·
vin White, Athens. Great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Harley Han·
ing, Pomeroy.
·
Pateml!l grandparents arc Stacie
and Marcia Arnold, Racine. Greatgrandmothers are Carrie Grueser,
Racine, and Effie Black, Pomeroy.

With 2 Triln11111tte,.

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

USID RAILRO'AD TIES

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. TueSday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. ThUJS&lt;Iay
1:00 p.m. Friday

Monday Paper

Call992-2156

•"

Announce birth
of daughter

IISJALLED PIICIS
::
9:17-$275.00 l6ll7-S45D.!JO
OPEIERS IIRILLED-Yt HP...$200.00 r

•llewHo•s
eGara•••
•UGHT HAUUNG . •Complete
Remod•ling
•FIREWOOD
Stop
&amp; Compare
BILL SLACK
FREE ES11MA'rES

ALLIIAIII

COPY DEADLINE

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.8-12 .

CoiMIIUM, J
J.,.. W....... Chlilrperaon, Mulbony-••tLMrJ
Helghlll, Pon..,oW, OH.

~ Plid for lor llelp Co. twth 0..,

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

949-2391 or.
1-100·137·1460

'&gt;

•''11!1

TRY OUR IIEW
STEEL INSULATED
. RAISED PAIIEL GAUGE DOOR .,

~~FREE

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

''

. fll •[.

992-6215

· PCIIIIII'oy, Oltlo

Euy Work from .
homl. No Cah IUrt
up. Swt 11-lnd
you'll naver hive to
Worrylbout
Clvlltmu monay
.lnllncoml tllll
u.p. going when
you Clll't.
(&amp;14) 37N153
tam-12pmlnd
&amp;pm·10pm

c•eshire, OH.

~

"

(.

MOTHERS AT HOME
Chi'lnt-lneomel

St. Rt. 7

I~

Dr. Margie S. Lawson, D.D.S.
HeaHh Commissioner

Under the Fifth Commandment
-Thou Shalt Not Kill - the tale·
chism does not rule out a state's
right to impose the death·penalty.
A few paragraphs later, regarding
abortion, it says "human life must
be proleetcd in an absolute manner
. from the moment of conception.··

CAIPENnl SERVICE

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE .
992·5335 or
915·3561

!,

.

bad checks, price-gouging, fiscal
misdeeds, paying low wages or
performing low-quality wort as
sinful.
The document also demands
that ,Jch nations accept immigrants
from poorer ones and help economic development, noting that the
mass of lbe world's poor are Third
:World pensants.
It says the handicapped bave a
right to wort and that goin$ on
non-violent strike is a moral nghL
The church's once-sacrosanct view
toward private propeny has been
modified to Slate that the Earth is
the heritage of all mankind. Damaging the environment is thus a sin.
Terrorism, hosllige-taldng, and
force(! ampulation and sterilization
are condemned.

Plck!!-

j•·

Jon D. Jacobs, R.S.
Deputy Health Commissioner

YOUNG'S

lrl.. It I• Or We

~

J'

The Dally Sentinel Ptge 7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Qnllly HI Efllclettcy
Air ea.lllolers, Heat

P....,Ftnacts&amp;

New Water Htattrs.
Bennetts Mobile Home ~tfl1111
Utls.fforUcllael...

8

8 .....,_
."(llf61~)446-9416 •1400-172·5967
·'

�Pag• a

The oa11y Sentinel

Pomeroy·

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

3

51

42 Mobile Homes

Houalhold
Goads

for Rent
Announcements ·.

2 llodlum · Slzo II ole !logo. 814-

2 malo ohOft holrod Clll. 7 I I

304~7'5-

3 Y11r Old . Dog, Nlct Pet,

Fumlohocl, 2 or llodnn., lor -

Uko ~ $

No~h

Golllo School Aroo, 3 Bod·
rooms, Ston, Rtfrlgerator,
Water, Trath Paid, · $250
RtflflnCH, Dlpalt, 814·388·

. Moving Can't Keep. Call 114·

4Q-48SO.

GE

.

5 puppln all ftmalt, e wkl old,
304-47~1~.

IINO.

Large maple tree to giWea;::z

44

tor wood. Mutt cut down.

.

Apartment

112-2708.

for Rent

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

11

----=-------

1 malt, 2 femtl.es. 7

- 0 old; 114·112·:1608.

6

Lost

&amp;

31

Help Wanted

Tho Molgo County Boord ol

Mtnttl
Attarda·
tloi'V'O.valopmtntal Dlsabllltlu
ICI~oton School) II liking IP. pllcatlons for I hi following posJ.
lion:
Early
lnlerventlon
Speclatltt: must have or bt
eligible for Ohio Department of
MRI1lD Early lnierventlon Ce_rw
tlllcate, valid Ohio Department
of Education Teaching Cartlfl·
caltj salary, commensurat~ with
qual•flcatlons; benelits, medl·
oat, dental, Pert, tick leave,
personal daya,1nd Uta ln-sunu1Ct. AppUe~tlon dladllnt,
noon, Frldty, November 20,
1992. Send rttume to: Malgt
County Board of MRJDO, P.O.
Box 307, Syracuse, Ohio 45779.

Found ·

Found: Yellow Tom Kitttnl Cornor Second Avtnuo, Gall polls.
Coli To Claim: 614-446.0842.

:
=

Horu Misting on Stat• Route
2 I. Raccoon Creek Area. 614·
. 4 ..!427, 814-446-8V84.

tiOO Rowardl Malo
rfon Huoky, Riod &amp; Whllo.
A Wlt"' To Lokey. Red COllar,
Have BHn Seen Wnt Columbia
,.,.,_ 814-4411-71:16, Ploa11l

S

Yard Sale

1568 Sq. ft ., .18 aero lol 2..
walls, 2 complete baths, dining
room, living room, 3bdrm., watk:ln CIOMII, lully Clrptttd, 2 por·

&amp;
_
A;L Yard Salet Must 9 1
A vance. DEADLINE : -c. 00 p.m.
·til; day bolorolho od lolo run.

Sunday od«lon - 2,00 p.m.
Frida$. Monday odlllon . 2:00
P·t· olurdoy.
,
P lo Solo: 18th, 19th. Crofts,
M c. Oddo And Ends, 322
S uct SU'MI Ertenllon, Gal·

11 111 Ohlq.
_J_:.;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ I

24x40 log home, 2 yrs. old, 4
acres. ! mi. from Holzer,
$31,000. 614-446·8373 or 304·
67'5-3331.

2 Or 3 Bedroom · Ap1rtment,

~

Bad·

rooma In Ewlngton With AJC
Largo Lot $9,600. 614·388-8710.
Or 614·6911-7192.
.
HouH with lar9e lot, needs
·rtpalr, Gallipolis Ferry ar11,
$19,900. 304~75·1384 or 6758853.
Two story, garagi, one a~r•,

located in Mala• County, low

hv.ntl11; 614-MI-2358 ev•nlnga

andwMktnds.

Troo topping &amp; t~mmlng ••·
p.rlence, frM Htlmat•, 304815-3411.

I
aucUonHr,
boodtd tltln ot
Wtsi VIrginia, 304·937·

a

22ll or 137-21211.

9 .,

Wll co10 lor lldT. In my homo,
lnnlld bod polonl p!Oitrl'ld,
rw80Riblt, good c1re, 814·849-

2278.

Wanted to Buy

Now 0. Almoot Now Woodburner·lnllrl Prlttr Buck. 614-446·
1142.
uooci lloblio - · · Coli 114·
441'0175.

Will Do Babyolnlng My Homo.
Dlyo, Evonlngo, Wookondo,
Gl'lln School Olotrlct Or Local
Aroo, 814-448-1855.

WUI

do

babr,etttlngj

II·

peritnced, Clrtllld diy Cll'l
provider, call anytime 814·992·

2181.

Will do houst ciNnlng, ax·

Plrltncld, 304-875-7185.
Will do . . .kly hoUHCI18nlng 1
nporlencod, 614-112-7555.

Will talca cart of alderly_during
wHkdayt, elq)lrllnc.cl and
dopondoblo; 814-949-2181.

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

1 Bedroom, Convtnlant To Hoi·
zer Hospital, Economical, Gas
Hill, $245/mo. Plus Utlllllo~ &amp;
Dopoolt, 814-4411-295Z

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

por monlh , Including 6
months fr•a lot rent! Naw 14ll70,
delivered &amp; Hl up, skirting,

$171

otopo, only $700 down, 1-80 •
837·61i25.

$350/Mo. Plus Deposit. Trailer
Lot for

Locattd

Ron~

At:

$90/Mo.

Hannan

BOih
Trace

School Ololrk:l.l14-258~823.

2bdrm. apt•., total electric, .ap-

plloncto lumlohod, loundoy
room lacllltln clo11 to school
In town. Appllcollono ~vllloblo
at: Villaga Gr11n Apts. 149 or
Clll614·g92·3711. EOH.
Avollablo Aftor Doc. 151 111.2: 1
Bedroom Unfurnlthla Apart·
menl. Range, Refrigerator, Dis·
po111, Glr1g1~ Wotor, s-gol
O.lbogt
l'lld,
Dopoth,
Raterencuil 131 Firat Avenue,
Gaillpollo, Hr.l14-445-211t
BEAUTIFUL APARTiriENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
~STATE~L._531 Jockoon Plko
!rom 11.-.umo. Walk to ohop 1
movln. CIIIIM-441-2588. EOH.
B-h Slreol Mlddl~ Oh.lo,
.,.... '
lumlohod 1 room
utllllln
lncludod, dop &amp; '" roqull'ld,
304..!82·2581,
Fumlohod Apt. 507 Socond
Avonuo, Gallipollo, 1235/Mo.

•r'·

7Utllilloo
P.M. Pold, 114-441-4418 AHor

Fuml•had, 3 Aoomt &amp; ~ath,
Clean, · No Pll11 Reference A
Dopooll Roqul10a. 614-446·1519.
Gr11clouo living, 1 end 2 bodroom lptrtmonto II Village
Manor
ond
Alverolao
~·~manto In Middleport. From
•• 96. CoN 614-112·7787. EOH.
Now Hovon, 1 DR lumlohod
lptrtmont. DtpooH 1 IOIOnnct.
304~82·-·
Camplolty Fumlohod Smoll
Houll, $300/mo. • Utlllll11. NO
Poll. Coli Boloro 7 P.M. 614-446·
0338.

1985 mobile. home 14x70, ov•r Complolly
1 miltFumlohod
below .town,mobil•
ovtr·
half acre lot compl•tely tur- 'home,
looking
rfvor
•
.
NO
Poll,
CA.
614·
nlohod InclUdes satellite dish, 446.0338.
30.4~75·2722.
1986 14x70 Potriol lrallor. 2 BR 1
fUll
balh,
comblneo
kltch1n/dlnlng
arta,
Untur·
nlshtd. Good condition. 304·
895·3683.

One
boclroom· oportmonll,
$225/mo. lncludn utllllln, $100
oocurlly dopooft, no polo; 814·
112-2211.
.

One bedroom rumlohod $200.
3bdrm.,
65x12,
furnished, ·plut ·~ Bordman Furniture,
central 'alr, aklrting, wlllllnanct, 304~7'5-2406.
$800 down, $1361 mon., 61~·092- One bodroom fumlehod aport·
2167, 614.:185-11227.
ment, re•r~ncee and_ ctepoaH,
Looking For A Dtol? Consider A no poll; 114-HZ-2937.
Pro-Ownod llobllo Homo, urgo
S.laction, Low Money Down,
Fl'll SII· Up And Dtllvory. 1·800.
589·5110.
Rodwood Double Wide, 3 Bod·
rooms And 2 Baths, Cathedral
Ceiling, 24x54, 2 .Porches, 614·
446-11427, 614·446-11964. '

33

45

Farms for Sale

68 acrt country eatatt with
pond. VInton. Colonial farm
house newly rtmodtled. 2 larga
barna, summer hou11 garage,
otudlo, hunllng co bin. By owntl.
Aa•nts welcome. Reduced! Dan
Brack, 614·388-8210.
Business

Room• for rant, welk or monlh.
Siortlng 11 $120/mo. Golill Hotot.
114-441-1880.
SlooPlng .--no whh oooklng.
Alto ll'llilr OptCI. All hook-upo.
Coil oftor 2:00 p.m., 304·77.11151, Maoon WV.
Space

tor Rent

STEEL BUILDINGS. Yoar·End
Cloaeouta. Save Thou11ndsS
1,200 Sq. Fl. To 10,000 Sq. Ft.
Bob 614-446.0771. Ends 11·27

Trailer Lot, With Bam Pond,
Hannan Trace District: N5oe, In
Country. Hook.Up. 114-25H94Z

35 . Lots &amp; Acreage

~lny,

SEVERAL 7· ACRE, PARCELS:
Molgt Counly, Solom Twp.,
18501 acre. Rtmott1 beautiful
land; woodt, pasture and hills,
Coil lor good mop. 1·614-593·
8545, Athtno.

47

Trailer apacH tor renl Gallipolis

wv. 304~7'5-8335.

.

Wanted to Rent

Born 0. Building For Storogo,
Y1ar Around, 814·256-1238. .
Wonlod To Aont: IIOior Homo
For Waokond Trlp To South
Bond, IN Nov 13-15. CoD Pot 114441~701.

Rentals

Mcrchundise
41 Houses tor Rent.
2 Bodroomo Locotod 13 While
Avenue, Galllpollt. WUh Stove,
Rol~gorotor,
$185/Mo. $100
Dlpollt. 61it-4411-387U.
3 bodroorn homo, NO~h 62 at
Potter Crnk Ad, 304·675·5418.

·
31

Real Eslate
Homes for Sale

3 Bedroom Hou.., Gallipolis,
Applloncoo Included Nowly
Aodocotlltd. WID Hook·Up,
$325/Mo. Dopooll I Roloronco,
114-441-2308, 614-223·71112.
4 . Bedroom .HouM, References,
Dopoolt, Rtqulrod. 114-4414621.

Nlct hou11 for rent, Pomeroy. 2
or 3 bedrooms, close to school
ond llol'lo, hal wllor hoot; 114·
1112-51511.
Small four room houH Camp
Conley, $150. par month, 304·
178-3812.

THOSE U.S

-INII.ARS

TO WJII POCKO

WDHA

ClASSfiDAD
'

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

11

/.. f

Nowllltod
Houllllold rumleltlng. 112 mi.
Jorrlcho Ad. PL· Pt-nl,
coli 304-117!1·1480·
SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 12
Olivo St, Ollilpolo. Now ' Ulld
tumHwe, blat. ., w..tem a

,,_,1 .

+.::========:;:===:=====:..J =~or

W.,ho10 I Dryo10 1100 6 Up. All
SOld WNh W.r10nt{ ~I Waohor
I Dryor Shoppe 11
5-21144.

52

Sporting Goods
For Salo or Trodo, Rug11 Supor
Rod Hawk 44 llitgnum polloi.
otolnltlo 8112" BBL. llountod
Taoco Stolniooo 3x22 ocopo,
1850. wHh corrfng · cap
114-441-111171 ,,.nlngo 304.f82·
2400.
~ng

For A Chrlotmu
Pr...,l? High Ci- And High
Qual«y IIIII Plltoio.t. 310 Pllloll, 22 Rlllll, SICS .,.lilt, AKS
RIIIoo I A Cauple Of Sholguno
And Ammo. Moet N...- Some
Uttd But AI Now. Lay AWIIyo
Avllllbltl 10 A.ll. Til 10 P.ll. 7
Dlyo A WHII. Hock, 2310
Exotom, 614-446-tiU o. (114441-im Lorllll Only).

53

Antiques
:-:--~;::_;::=,:.:..,..,,___
1124
Buy or
E. lloln.
0111. Rl..rn.
SIIMl, onAntlquoo,
At. 124
Pomoroy. Houra: II.T.W. 10:00
a.m. lo 1:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00
to 8:00 p.m. 814-812-2521.
Furt~Hurt
l'lllnlohlng
ond
l'lptll'l, aloo will buy; coil 614112-7441.

Miscellaneous

61

fann Equipment

Merc~ndlae

Sla Hlodbolrd Wllh 2020 JD Dlooll Troetor, Crum
PuH ll,~i 135 MF Dloool
llatcltlng O..O..r • I DmNr Sllarpl
$4,-. 114-2-22.
~. 114-388-ltllll.
Ford 10 R. Pun Bohlnd Disc,
lbcollont Condltlonl $700, 114·
2!U071.

!'~~~~~~~~:.=.:=
I~

Slp~n C o - with cony
cooo, $525, con 114.fi2-I0115 ·~
tor lpm.

=
;r:iar

lnlemaUoru~l

410 Dllati TrKtor,
bll!!,_ Alko, I!Owlng llochlnt,
$3,1100. T020 Fl&lt;!luoon Troc:tor

81,115. 114-~522.

Sip: Largo porllblo lghlod
-1111'1 reg. $31111, triiOIII

cr:,

bo'."'~'fM:./!':!
Nov. 30. AM Siano

3453 ·~rJimt.

=

1'19-dol:!::

N~l~....

1-.13).

63
,1

Livestock
Jorooy

lui,

1

Horolord

Hololrtln CrOlL 114-241-1557.

r

'

~

OF TI-l~ 6ARA6E!

TI-IAT'5 fi.IE WAY!

Th-'•

Sip: ' Po~able lighted llgn

,S21t.

W1111toro. Fl'll doll:
Ptolllc lotloro $41.50 bQx, 1

533.;J453.

Sidor A_, ExorciH Mocltlno

For Solo. 114-441~551.
Solid ook ~~ wllo-.
now m1tt,... I holllng llomont, llllch:J. 2 drowtr IOIId
304-11"-•883
01k ighl 11
n
•
~ .
Surpluo Army Doolan -"Y
T-rk, ~- C.llllllup
-hlng, Woodllnd Clolltlna,
A c - Sam Somorvlilo'o
bolkla Sondyvllt Pool OHico,
Exit ~7T Rovittnood. Only Frl,
Sl~ Sun ~:OOPM, othor
55

~~ ~do~yo[hou~ro~304~273-~~~~~
Vinyl
~·t~
mont

Coltll

Ho~lng:

Anvllmo,

"''.,,... CIRick William•,
:
Crook Trilcklng, 614-241Trotnina Wlnlor s.-111

-

NO lrondl "Wright, 614-3118MII.

Alalot-lyroldTWIIlkw Mare, well broke,
w/JaiiOiw. call olllr 1:00 Pll,
30Wl'8400t.
'
Hay
•~ Gralnc
64
-__,.;.;;;;:...;,.;;_;;;:.::;;;_ _

i

74

'

, . . Hondo

I'!210~~~~~~~~~~

I

FOf/ A wi'QL.E, ANl&gt;
YOU I,IIOULf&gt;N'T
,~,.~eve

THE A8SENTefiSM/

1111 Hondt Pilot, 400cc, · wattr •
cooled, . forward,
rtvarie, ''·
bouahl now In tilt. $2200. 814- ·~

•

&amp;

'

,"

Accessories

llltypoo, Martina • Ill: .&lt;

-22113, _...,.,
114-24Han
lM-m- -':
114.ft2-li00.
.;.
lllw

11n1ta, - t o n truck

racla..._ floor mats,
R A"'!'._llfptoy, WV, 304· 1
372-31133 or t-m;l32t.

Boll $221
8038.

IIJ Murder, Shew- Q

Q!l Crook and Chllu

EEKANDMEEK

. ''

$2,200 Alto

VI'RA FURNITURE AND AP·
PUANCES
114-446-4421 OR 114-441-3158
Entorlolnmonl Ctntot'o S14t Of
SU2 WMic; - . , . sto~­
i!'t 121.91; Roollnoro t121L!o"
Arid Chltl'l 1291 Of 11V.n
W10k; ColiN And End Wilh
Dooro 1111 Sot· a· Tobit With •
Chelro IAII Woodl; w~.
DIYII'I, R111111, llor.taorator 1
12U·iiiHouro: llondoy - lllurdly
H;
low Blivor lrldgo Piau
Of 4 1111• OU 141 On Unooln
Plko,

QtPrimeNewor:;l

liD Young Rldlr8 Hickok
delends a town; Lou
considers married lila.
Stereo. r:;1
'
8:05 (I) MOVIE: illaad-'IR)
(2:00) Stereo.
8:30 (1).8 Hangln' With Mr.
Coopar Mark gets· the
chance to try out lor an NBA
team. (PI 2 or 2) Stereo. r:;1
t:OO (J) G 0 Ruoonable
Doubll Maggie finds solace
in Dicky"s arms alter her
client is murdered. Stereo.

''

40Ft. Log Trol!~. 12,800 Aloo
15" Ptalnor · 1,....: . 10" S..10
Aodlll Ann Sow $250. 114-4418038.
55 gel. oquorium. 114-441-9364.
Vtntod Goo Htll'!t. 15,000 BTU,
2 y..,. Old, $78 uBO· Elto1tlc
H11tor 10,000 ITU lt5: Otcl
Dlolc, Chair, 120, ~5.
Chrtatmaa TNe, t~ ,,.. now,
cui $18. dug $30, Thornlo Tr10
Farm, R1. 2 North, I mlln out
ocr- !rom Good Shephord
Church, 3CJ4.175.4041.

•

g

ID Fronutna ti
lila Roaeanne ~ burglar

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

.·. IN

TEU:V1510N ..•

F'eReCNNet...

/

1500. 304-77.1-8814.
Flro Wood For Solo, Ill
Hardwood. 114 448 4105 114-

trias to break into the Lunch
Bo• while Roseanne works
late. Stereo. C
till 0 112llll r.IOVIE:
'Overkill: The Aileen
Wuomoe Story' C8S
Tuesday Motile (2:00)
11J Tueadey Nlghll Flghtl
Junior Walterwaight bout:
Aockin Rodney Moore vs.
Louis Lomelli, 10 rounds,
from Philadelphia (L)
12!1 N. .twllle Now
Bell of Sunday
Conv-llonl (L)
LMry King Live! C
e.:llher Dowling Myoterlee

WE HAVE ees~
FORCEO !0 MAtc:E
IDIQI5TIC REroCTJC»e .

A5A RESUL.TO:
FLINDfN!i CUte
R:lR E:DLJO\Tia-IAL.

Explorer computer, 1811 • pat., prln1er, color monHor,
mouu and computer cabinet.

J

441-9527.

=

Flrowood lor 111o, S3l t . on lood; 814-112-28110.

a

Firewood For Belo, AU Oak, lnlonnlllon: 114-367-71111.
F - For Solo: BIG Loado,
$4a Dollvel'ld 7 Stocl&lt;od. 114-

BARNEY

441-1132t.
Fhwood.........,.d Hardwood,
iA¥11, ltookld, Pick-Up Load,

MY SISTER
ZONIE MAE

Dlllv- Wllhln R-on, $40.
114-245-11033.

IS COMIN' FER

..,

.

A VISIT

FII'IWood: All Hlrdwoodo SpiN
Dill- $31 Plck·Up Load,
114-211-1311.

AN' I'M GOIN 1 OFF.,
FLOAT FISHIN' FER

A D~UBLE WHAMMY I!

TWO SOLID
WEEKS H /;?,.........,

And ·
Contiel:
Quy
- P-o
At: 614-4412716.

9:30 lll8 Coach Luthe!
complicates Christina·s plans
for a per1ect wedding.
Stereo. r:;1
, 10:00(J)G 0 DateUne NBC
J
Pornography In the "90s may
'
be exposing too much to
·
children. Stereo.
(J)N-aC .
&lt;ll a Cll• Qalng to
E - o Dr. Croll's ego
takes a M when he's
l!!jl&amp;hlned in a video. Stereo.

tAH2

+a 7 2

SOUTH
+A 52

Thinking
in straight lines

.K75
tKQJB

+KU

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

By PbUllp Alder
One new book, • All

Cards"

~2

+AJU

($10 .9~, C&amp;T Bridge Supplies, 800-525-

Soootll

I NT

Wesl Nor lit
Pass z+
Pass . 2NT
Pass Pass

"·
";

zt
4718), isn't so new. The author, Mar- 3 NT
shall Miles, .has revised the 1963 edi·
lion by adding more examples and
Opening lead: • K
updating the content.
·
The text explains declarer-play and L - - - - . , . - - - - - - - - - - 1 '
defense with deals that are of about
'
' .l
the same difficulty as those used in
..
'• .
this column. The reader is set a prob~ '
lem and asked to IVork out the solu·
tion. The explanations are well-writ·
. ..
and lucid, the deals excellent. My
.. "
main complaint is about the lack of a
,
··· ··
full diagram alter an answer. Almost contract. You_ must assume East ~ .::_
always you are given only the key op- both mtnor-~utt aces. So, after wi1tn1JJi •1
ponent's hand. I think that printing all trick two wtth the spade a~. you lead
of the full diagrams, despite·adding to the dtamond king. Eas~ WtDS and rethe cost, would have produced a better turns a diamond. Wtn m the dummy.-:-.
· book.
. and play a club to your king, wltlcb· . ,
Today's deal gives you a good idea East must duck. Now cash the ella- : .
of what to expect. Being shown only moods, throwtng spades from IIMf.,
the North-South ~ cards, . you are in dummy. Finally, try to run the hearts. :
three no-trump. West leads the spade H they are 3-3, you have niDe trlcta: .:
king, which you duck, and continue! But when EasUurns up with four, j~ :~
with the spade qu~n. East discarding endpiay him wtth th~ fourth heart. He ,.,
a low diamond. How do you proceed? must concede your runth trick to dum' ~
Overbidding bas put you into a had my's club queen.
·•

.

ACROSS

clor'a origin

40 Smarr b..a

1 Joint
6 WWIIevent
10 Smell hole
12 New
14 DeNver
15 Fllhlng gear
18 br(comb.
form)
17 Colorado
lndr.tn
. , , Snlkll
20 Endleea
23 EIIJpl'o • sedat
28 lallevorlnan ·

42 AclnoaoDllany
45 Look at
46 Chemical
aulllx
49 Exltnded
parloda
51 Legal
54 Smlll
carvlngo
55 Sllelo
56 Exp•lment
57 Bulinlla·

worn•n-

Lauder

""'

27 tn tha put

DOWN

30 Sudden
. alllek
32 Preued
34 Pllonograph
lnYintor
351nclnod
31 Soak IIIII)
37 DettUet'•

1 Of llrcralt
2 Ruoolan nto

terlal (abbr.)
70fe
nobleman

word

3 RtiiUYa of

bingo

8 Ouelllonl

4 College dag.
5 Wltlllhoe
llle
6 Genetic m•

de0·

3S Facing gl•

II Utter a lhrtll

11 ::.1

12 Tool

rn

(f) New EuropHna
Stereo. t;J
I!J).HUftlll~
•

Ron'o TV Sorvlco, tpoclollzlng
In lM&gt;Nh oloo ..,.lclna moot
otMr brandt. ttouu calla, 11so
"""' aPIIllonco riPaltL WV
304~714311 Ohio 814-441-2454.

Slpllc Tonk Pumping $110~O.lllo ;
Co. RON EVANS EN1ERPRI8ES,
Jocklon, OH 1-.t37.f521.

Full Size Man- And 8o1
=~~Good Candltlon. 114·

'

Plumbing &amp;

a - l l Nutrllon Producll
lelturlng Amlnti Acid Body
and Ill
lulldlncl. wtlahl "forrnuf11. Avollablo ••·
c:luoiii'I!Y II - Aid Pharmacy.
ThiHII-1011111.

Heating

a~w-··~

Nationals lrom Orlando, Fla.

(T)

day girt: · S!llld loi" Scorploia Aatro· intoirett.
Graph predictions tor the year ahead by TAURUI (April 20-MoiJ · 20) Don't
maMing $1 .25 plus a long, sell-ad· . dOdge making adllflc~lt decision today,
drened, stamped !lllveiope to Aatro- especially one that requires courage.
Graplt, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box You have wltat It takes to do what'e
BERNICE
. 9t428, Clevel!llld, OH 44101-3428. Be right.
.
BEDEOSOL sure to stile your zodiac: elgn.
QIMINI (Mer 21-.1- 20) Don't depart
· BAGITTAIIIUI (llotr. D Dec. 21) You from your ....,llal routine today, but
could be quite lortunole today In alilu- , keep an eye peeled lor a way to Improve
atlon wltere you have 1 cttanca to take i your llnanc:lal position. Something out
something thai another hal Initiated : of the ordinary may pop up.and anhanpe It wllh your per1101181 ' CANCIII l.lune 21-.IUIJ 22) People In
.
.
touclt.
' general wtH find you magnetic and at·
CAPRICOIIN (Dec. 22-.lan. 11) Your Uractlve today. H_.,, your penonalUHI today Ia your unique tallnt lf'lty could be moet appealing to members
lor pulling deelatogether _ . . . , peo- ' or the oppallte gender.
pie wlto don't quite know how to bind · LEO (oiiJiy 11-A... 22) Thla can be a
looee threads togethor.
.-y prQdtictlve day lor you - H
AOUAIIIUI (....._»FelL 11) Try to be · give priority to lamHy mattero
flexible today where your objeetl-.,. ln~ll with outlldara. What you
llotr.11,111112
conc:erited; your brlglnal p i - may be . do nOw oould have long·IU11ng - raEnterprl- · you'll be Involved· In that ~ lm;toved upon by b(lght• 111.,.11_ _..,.. el*te.
..-, th~•~"
promote progriMalve procedurea or • you may later conceive.
VIIIGO (Aug. 11-lepl. D) E
products should work out quite well lor "SC:I!S (felL 20-" oH 20) Not only you'no likely to be vert Imaginative
you In Jhe year ahead. This could be II- . are your 1 - rllher lngeniOUitoday, . day, your lllltldea could come from
peclalty true wtth aomethlng you conbut you should be Mile to ftguno out
friend ragardlng aomethlng In which
calve yoursell.
waya to make them produ.rnutu.l ad· : your Plfllolpallon Is ~aalnod
icOIII'IO (Oc\. M-llotr. 22) SUCCIIN II ! vMtagea lor yourself and othero. • f ~ (lepl. a.o.t D) Your financial
Ukely today provided you have the
(Mirclt 21-Apr1111) Latw In the . 81Pac1110o11 vert encoureglng 101 both
courage of Your conllletlona.. ll you · ~ day, you might be abltito fUnction mora (· today and torr.ouow. If there Is tarntltUrted where you should 1111 bold, •• Independently. !=artier, though, It could · thing you leal could be meaningful lo
thlt could be juat be another ordinary prove to be mora to your advantage to • · you rnoneywl~. work on II. .
·day. karpio, tr~t yourself to a birth· Involve yourserr with ot~ lor m~!ual ~ •

~'Your

Ukl , _ 1111 -pttoblo comYOAmonlor·
lwd
.....
_.
, _40111
_

W'Birthday

inaludld; rtiMIN7U.

IM~

• J .IO 6Z

r::;J

For Bell To lhl Hl(jhtll Blddor:
1 Sllarp Bllm Com Wllh Cooo

NloeJlvlna -

e

Ful Houn Jessa and
Joey direct a school play;
Danny walches the twins.. , ,
Stereo. C
tllliD IIJ""e Reacue: 111 A ._
911 operator monijors an
intruder; a Sister aids her
sibing. Stereo. C
I!J). MOVIE: AiMrican
Ninja 2: The CootfoOttl&amp;lkM
{R) (2:00)

"'lu""'d'""~-=T.....---,-..,....,-~.:,Uitd.,..
~ -~ ~·
....

QtCroelflrl
7:35 (I) Sanford l San
I:GO(J)
0 au.- LHp
Som leaps Into the life or a

~a

,&lt;,
1

Auto Parts

Expanalon Draft (L)

m

~ 1'

441.{)311.

76

IIJe Family Feud
tD Malor Laague laleball

Falce .

ALLEYOOP

EAST
+10

WEST

+KQHB
.83
• 763

backwoods sherlll. (PI 1 of 3)
Stereo. C
·
(J) MOVi!: The Defllt
IR) (2:00)
(1) D Collego Bell&lt;etbltN
Ohio Stale at Lalayette (L)
.(f) Nova The deep-sea
drama or IWe among the
dolphins Is e•plored. Stereo.

-~~~.. ~111.

1111 Suzuki ATV 250, 4 WD, 150 •
lllta, Excollont Co.ndllonl
$3,400. '*:mu331.

114-44W2111.

goss

--

- cond,
•on •$5110
-......
. 8ood
...
- io'""'·
....

u ... y
bll 12 1 12.110
~ ' _,..
"
·
·
Round blltl $20. NOh. S.turdey pick up only. ~1160.
lllxod ho~~-.50. Dolo I -~
-·
·~

~~-1.
=~. 2 , llllwood, WV

MY OwN

,
•

;:_ . , •

-~-At.
I*: -·~ Elovllor

·~-::..: I. TFI~l&gt; lf'ING

~

11• XR 100 IIOiorcyeio. 11,000.
114 44tii2H attar 5:~ p.m.

PHILLIP
ALDER

7:05 (I) Beve~ Hlllbllllel

7:30 (J) D 0 Jeopardyu;J
(J) The JeiiiiiDIIS ~:;~_:
(I) D El!!!rlllnment Tonight
Stereo. Q ·
.
(I) e You Bet Your Ufe
tllliD Whul of Fortune Q

U·I'J.ft

tl09
+Q 106

12t Moneyllno
«D LJfe Goel On Stereo. Q

:

125-·-·

NORTH

·~ ·

.AQ91

tD SporbCenm

•

., '

+7843

Enlertl'rnment Tonight
Stereo . C
I[) QueriiUm Lup Stereo. Q

~

Motorcycles

BRIDGE

Star Treli: ffie Nex1

11J e

'

.,
&gt;

Oenerellon []

1

'

. '

the

:;r-.:£rdJr
C
e

1143 Ford Bronco. auto., PS, ~~~
PB, ,... u,..., new muffler, ...
73,000 loW mlln, $3300 OBO, ~

..

and save to buy a house, fix it up and decorate "· then
we ao. to
country and sleep on the ·G~OUNQ!."__ . _

NewaHourQ
llle Marrlell ... With

''•

Til~ CnoiH Allof'll Steroo. Boo
Llnor'nrSiiding Rur Window,
Now H, Sllll ,Undtr Witrronty.
21,000 lliloo, Roll In Color, Coot:
$18,900 Now -WII Sill For
812,1100. WUI toko Cot Or Truck
Ao Tl'ldlln. Cllll11 4111 0840.

Q

Ina . Edlllon
(l) (f) Mei!Naii/LIIIrer

I!J)

Com plete tho chuckle quorod
by fdling m the miu•ng words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Codger - Gully - Wager - Wooden - GROUND
"It's ironic isn't 1t?" my husband mumbled. "We work

®
Oasl!tng Wom1111
Stereo.

:.;:;::.::,.:.:.:~::.:=-----1182 Dodge Voyogor Extllldod '
Van, Extra aNn, Will Equfp.. 1'
pod, Excotlonl CandNion, Wllh •'
Extr101 PM~: $4,200. eM-3117- ·~
0447 0. 614.;JI7-G465.
•

Ford F-150 '4x4 Auto, Alr1

.

8:35 (I) Andy Grttfllll
7:00 lij D 0 WltHI of FMune

1111 Chevy ........ 4wd 12.50- ;,:
33 111'11, d~v.. porloct, b.ii loft '
le Nlly. HoVI now ponoto. '
11,000. 114-446-03111. .
''

e

and sleep on the

'

I' I' I* I. I' r I
6 u~~~~~N~~~e tmm I I I I I I I

RoaeanM Stereo. r:;J

e

16

..

PR~~~s~u~~~~slETTERS IN '

•

ie oe cn Newe D.

:

114-1112·7733

I 1I I

lift'- Sllndlega? Stereo.

(I)

;

5
1.-l..-.L.-.l.-.1.-.J.L-.J

&lt;llO CllOAICNeweQ
mIN'- In the World lo

I!J) •

·we

--.,.0-W-N-E-0--=-.~~~-~-~untry
0

StarCh

«D 111w Zorro Q

"It's ironic isn't it?" my husband mumbled.
work and
save to buy a house. fix it up
and decorate it, then we go to

I '"

r,-

Q

(J) Ed McMelton'l SW

•

$3,~. 1'14-441-t053. .

.

Rln Tin Tin, K· t Cop
8:05 (I)
Company

..

G WE A R

oc•-r::;J

gw_r;:.9
0

-,

.'

..
I ·I r I

8:30C2lG 0 NBC lllwe C

· MINt, $200;

,..........

Allll•

Coi:!

,

.
'I

,,

,I
I '

. .. . ...

I-IA~DER!

1950 Chovrolot Sllvorodo, V.a, ,•
Aut_oJ_ E•collont
Condition, :

19M

Worm Morning G01 Slovo,
40,000 BTU Ulid 1 YHr, $275.
Soddloo, Brldltl And Blinkolo,
614-311-8412.
54 Miscellaneous
~for·=:·::;
. Wlnchlotor 130o Rllll lSI~ Bor· ·1pm.
Merchandise
• rol Wltlto ToU $325; 110 Co Hop10 opood bicYcle 125. Outtn kino lluzzlo Loldlr 1225. 114TransportatiOn
olzo w1111 bod wlmlrrowod - 3 .
.,_ohotl hoodbolrd $1110. 304Building
8&amp;2.:17!6 .
71 Autos for Sale
2 Rolrlgorotoro: Worlt Good,
Supplies

CAAFTa
:mt .... R-. 14\ GolliJic!!leJ GUIM lla bod with ltox
S1101Mo, RIIINitol I
1-1422. w. lur Anti ... ...... lllld ......... 1171:
~lrwd. f14 141 11:11 A or 5 CJoool Uttd l'umll-. Mondor liMir
oar Mil, IIO; drwMr,
Thru lo-y. U P.ll.
N;-4QI,

, ) ltdroom Tra._ In

MOM!

GOOD! WE'RE OVT

----..:..----.1:
73
&amp;4

P I - Corttpoot Dloo Plapr,
RCantrol,
Random
. . _ , , . _ Condltlonl Coil
Co
.
.rpot h12 ~ VlnrJ ht2 .... Anytime, 114-44Mlll1.
lo On All c,rpot In ltoolt
uniumllllld ~,..~
2 lA trollor
PIIOIIc Antllrlodll Cur..rt linch
drlvo. iii. 11. . , .
Thru 10 Inch In 8toclo. Ron
- : - 1100 ~- "304- COUNTRY . I'U~NITUIII AND ~LJocklon, Ohio. 1 -

r.ue

PEDAL 14ARD,

Household

lloclroorn T10llor, 114-446-:MQI,

:1:.!

50 14ERE I AM ON TI-lE
E!i\CK. OF ~M'S EIIC'fCLE
· ON T.14 E' WAY TO TI-lE
GROCER'( SiORE ..

I

WD's

LUG Y l

~ Ma1h Laamlng Hour

long: NO Nit. :·1

814·2M-11350.

till•

llle

\tllqua"'

314 Ton R!'lr End All For 1350.-.

Vans

..

'

low to form fau r simple words.

(J) Saved by the llell
Ono TV Stereo.

Wlh ~ 8- T-itllon 1 ;,

54

Ill •

aJe ONew•

Chtnolot, Fotd, Dodge- pickup :.

2 bodroom - • • homo In
Aoclno 11'11, 114-112·8818.
2 bedroimo $2SO. per monlh
11110. -urlty dlpoon, trooh
pold, ~pp~~oo~ron. token, no
poll, 31J4478.1000 Uti 5:00 Pll.

1:00 C2l •

Fonl Truck Enalno 351 llodlllod ,

wv. OuMn

Wolle l&gt;oolo. 1 - 5 1 .
Uood
FumN,..,
fiwzll,
Rtllrlgtrtlor, Wuhor, Drtoo:
Dtop Wotw Pump. 114-24~85
Aftor 4 P.ll.

•

614-441-ont. ·
'·
It Ford, 1cy1 auto, ucol- ;.
condalon,11100; 114 ...,...,._ •:

~rtl~
., IN&gt;., .... " '·

·.

0 IQur
JtearrOn;e ·letters of
tCromb)od words

EVENING

1

6411, 11•5pm:
'
11117 Ford F-150 Aoldng: $4,200. :

For sor. 8lzt modlum llcloo
wlnllr - · donlm wl loolhlr
-lrlm, lllnnor lining, Ukl •
king liDO, pold 1150: otoo miN.
Goods
lldlet -lng· otU 114-9112·
41" Round Dok Toblo With 2 2155, Npm or .14-141-2204 1~
Laovoo And 4 AITOWblck Cholro t•6pm.
1780, Curved Glloo Chino
Coblnott, Sto~lng AI: $175, For Soil: Uko Now stondonl
River Valley Oak F"umltur•, 114• Slu Storm Door, $110. 8eo At
2110 So. Fou~h An., lllddl..,a.
446-4318.
•

51

I

PUULII

. :

Eloct~ Range lloalc Chol,
Good Candftlon, Will Bel,
Ao11onoblo. 114-441-2217.

Furnished
Rooms

46

Buildings

\ \

--

IIIII IAI.Y

~~

TUE., NOV. 17

';:':.J contl.,
duty Food ~
814-

!

,

PICKENS FURNITURE

2 bedroom ·Town Hou11 aptt,
nttr school•, ttores, New
Hovan• $210. to $278. 304-882·
3718 .. ~. o : H.

Home Or lnvutment

NOTICE
We tkln, cut &amp;wrap ••r. $30. &amp;
$35. Crawtordt Grocery, Htnw
doroon, WV 304~7'5-5404.

Fl'lt Dollvery.

chn, •tectrlc hliat, AC atove,
,.frlgerator, st~reo-wtred, Homa
Nal'fBanlc, Roclno, OH. &amp;14·9482210.

3 B.drooms, Modern .House,
Garage, AC, Security Alarm.
2108 N. Main, Pl. Pleasant, For
Solo By Ownor. 614-446·6152.
15
Schools &amp;
·- .
BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
Instruction
Historical Area Corner Lot - 818
Holly'o Dolly'o Modollng Studio Main St. Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.
will begin winter clasall Compl1taly Ae11ovated: 2 fLIII
November 21. Call now to regia- Baths, 3 Large. Bedrooms, New
tor,
614-992,2834. _ _ __
HVAC, Now CltpOl. Avolloblo
;.;;:..;;.;.;.;.;;;:;;;.;.;_
lmmodlally. 614-446·2205.
,
.;1.;;,8_W;.;.:;a.:.;n.:.;ted;.:_t;.:o_.D:.o.:..._
GOVERNMENT HOMES Fram $1
Ailorallono: Sowing &amp; Mending, (U Repair). O.linquanl TalC
814-446·4934.
Property. Atpos11111ons. Your
~:.....c:.....c:.:..c_ _ _ _ __
Aru (1) 805-962~000 Ext. GH·
Do you need your house 4562 For Curranl Repo List.
c111n~ for the holidays? It's
111m work. 614-367-7633 or 367· Homo For Solo In Chtohlrt VII·
0415.
.
lago, I Roomo, • both, Lg. Flat
l:o1 By OWner, 8·3:30 P.M.
Phono: 114-44HB78 After 3:30
P.ll. 814-4414125.

Gallipolis

e
rum~~~~0322, s mll01 out lulaylllo Ad.

Hours:
CompltloYon-Sat,
homo N.

Homes for Sale

1 Bedroom Unfinished Bao•
mont 1 Carport, 64 Mill Crook,
Gooa Rental Property, As Is:
110,000. 614-445-JilSt

.

.

W

1111 Ford~. 114-'Jit24133.
· Fotd Ton f.311i Wlh 12 R. !'
1111
ltd
' 114-367-7102.
:·
11117 Chewy !114 ton jilck- 305..,
111, 41p., PS, PI, 131,GOOIII., '·
lolr, ~no - - · :•
:::cL , . . 314 ton P!ck· '
~p, .., onglno, o~o., PS, PB, ~
12t,~J,..bodv lolr, ·onglnl ~
good, - : 1t78 .Ford f150 i·
ilclt-up, 311 tnalno, auto., PS, ,
PI, 111.ooc.o., -.uoG; 114·012· ·.•

··

S.mi-W...._ ......... 1200.

ThrH bMutlllll ml•od brood

'1'12·2947.

Gold Rango I Aolrlgonrlor.
Pr-n~ :;s.n Ulod. 122S
~
TOI.I

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2210.
11112 !114 ton
lllciHip tn101t,

Cut To $115; BE•

114-441-2S24.

puppies,

Englni:

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GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wuhoro" dryoro, rolrlgorll~
rang11. r~kloaa Al*lllnca, 1D
Vine Sl-1 pi111 814-441-7318, 1·
800-411-:Mn.
King SID Wotorbod Wllh Dor11
Pint Flnllh And Plddod Alit.,

.

.
Cummln11~
....... 42ft~ ,

AiUmlnum
Tralll&lt; Nat'l•
11on11, Atclno, Ot.ki: 114-Mf.i

Kin~

195:

-hlr

1m Chovr. 1 ~ 112 Ton Truck, t2
Ft, Clrllft - . ~ iltiMII, E.-.
..., COndllon,IM-2414:14.
:

1171 GI!IC, C.l:t Ovw.

In Counloy llobllo PIIIIL -horf DIY• Uloo New 1 Yur Wlrrlnly
dryor, olr.J:nll rnon., 114-tt2- $150: r ErtctM Ringo ns:
Fr!eld.olrt Allrigorolor, Frwi
2117. eu~s.an
FIM, SIS; Rolrlgolllor Sldo ly
homo lor rtnl or Hll on Sldo Horvool OGid 11~5; SmoU
contract: 2 BR, an eltctric. ::rtmont Sla Aomgorator
Located: Johnaon't Mobile
Homo Plrlo.l14-440·140t or ~41- VI:; si:".:P.g:,tJ:.':,';''6r ~
800-411-3411.
2003.

4~8.;J7SI .

I whlto.

For or 141114, 2 bod- . .....,._, IIC up, unclor
~~~Mid. ..... •1114 . a-1100.

Giveaway

Bloc~

p

1
3 lodroorn Trollor, IJath 1112, a
lllnutta Fr- HOIHI Holpltll. Gao All!lll $110, 114-241-1131 A~~
114-441-7TSO.
tor 5 P.ll.
,

Notice ne~ t~mtma or triiJ'IU
lng on •
l.owl"o FIJ1I!, 011llpOIIo ...... wv. Provlouo mltlll'll v.ld.

.Television
Viewing

72 Tl'UCkl tor Sale

=71-2722:.::.:;:=·:...,:-!"",.,.,..==::-=

1i

montho.
6286.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrf&amp;llt

Floor -color TV $180. 304-·

Ouyal U.. Olrt. ~vt;~o'J,
Toll To Youll 1
En 1141~ 13.11 Por .. n. Be 11 V... Unlolor Ca. (to2)131•
0111.

4

•

Tuetlday, November 17, 1e82 ·'

Middleport, Ohio

.

a Waner Newo

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With Pat

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "ij'o true tome wl- Improve with age. but 0111)
H the grapee - . good In the ftrll .,.__.. - Oear Abby.

•'

.

�•
Page 1D-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy •ddleport,.Ohlo

;

TUtlday, November 17, 1992

Reds trade

Mother has crush on. daughter's boyfriend

o.- Aaahaden: 'lbere.ino ·
ooe olio I can talk to _ . tily
A
JX?biem. so )'011 !lie iL Plcue doli't
nn

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich

'

thmk: I· am crazy. I need your

-

boyfriend. 1 jut
40, llld "Brie" is 18. He docln't
have the · lli&amp;hte~t idta lhlt 1 £eel

ANN 1ANDDS
"lff2, Loo~

"'t'::t
rm in love witb my
Landers
daupll!r's
b1r11ec1

-

how to deal with them.
I kept wishing my ftiend -'d
.
· --• .
the. ·s-~.a.
I::isw::

Ohio Lottery

~ did ~

, 10 ~ me. Maybe 1. 1111 CMdy

Isn't it great to live in Meigs ously injured and since that time
IICIIIIliVe, but I WIS lembly WICOIII·
County where you may be down has been with family in the Column.. s,. 't s, _.
forllble lllld resen_tful. What m
·but you 'rc never out-of friends bus area. Loretta has now returned
this
way,
and
of
fd
never
c-..
S)llll
'r"
yow tbouPII on dais? - FEELING
and support, that is.
home and although on a cane was
tdl him,. I have wild fantasiclabout
VIOLATED IN NJ.
Vaughan's Cardinal in Middle- able to again visit the Meigs Counthis
young
boy,
and
I
gea
a
lhriU
in
lhefllllily.
Good
luck:.
DEAR FEELING VIO~TED:
port- the idea of owner$, Diclr:: and ty Senior Citizens Center-a spot
when I hear his voice onlhe ..........
When you arc asked ~ons ~
Ruby Vaughan-has announced she really lilces-yesterday. Good
When he gives mea friendly'b;-g,I
De.- .U.I.a. .n: I am miffed
feel are too~,dontbe afraid
that it will be staging free public to have you back: home in
melt.
.
·
about IOIIIelhiDB and need to know lO say, "Why m the world would
Thanksgiving dinner on Nov. 26 Pomeroy, Loretta.
'
with the cooperation of lhe lvfi&lt;!dleI
I still love my husband, but . ~~~;:e or if I have a Y~ ~g~ in tlllll'!
_ • • ti
the
port Church of'Christ.
. .
Frien~s are planning a ca'rd
our lovemaking has become boring
I
···
· 1~ · d •
·~
you !JI1IC ~
and tireaome, I get •h-.:d. it by
was VISiting a gtr .nen ,or an of ilhiftitlg _the con~on so .
The food-turkey and the..trim- · shower for Florence Barrett. Cards
mings-will be prepared by will reach her at the SICU, Ohio
substilutingBric-m.;;;iiY,'Ihltis. the weekend, and .we spent about tliat)OIIIIRiuk:ingthequestlOIISIIId
Vaughans and employees will help State University Hospital, Fourth
I'm SJn you know what I mean. four boon Slilurday swimn$1 in ~ else m~ do the answerserve the dinner at the fellowship Floor, Columbus, Ohio.
As if this isn't bad enough, I'm .
~.:~":~ tng. For ex_ample. ~ei_I me about
hall of the Middleport Church of
.
envious
of
my
daughter.
I'm
hoping
'
.......
n nie queslions that I considyolll'? early life. Where _did_yoll grow
Christ. It will seat about 180 peOThe Women's Auxiliary of Vetand praying that she marries Eric ~..
~P ~~the maJOf influeaces
ple. Members of the Middleport erans Memorial. Hospital will be
becm1oc
it
would
break
my
bean
if
I
~fairi~J!
~Jl!~
tn
Y!"" life? When you get people
church will also help with the serv- staging a jewelry sale, open to the
couldn't oce him an)'IIIOie
your mother a ~eer wODJan?" ~g about themselves, they wiU
ing and will be providing trans- public, from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fri·
Do I have I serious Pobtem or "Where does your brother live?"
ea;,.:o alone.
·
portation for anyone who would day. The sale wiD be in the conferlike to attend the free dinner but are ence room and auxiliary members
do oth: wo~en go. through ~ "Did you travel much when you who has c!,;'h:n!~~!.he
without a way to $et to the church. !ill aSsist you in finding the locaWINNER • Jennifer
same. mg With thetr dau~ters wm powing up?"
'
booklet, "Gems," is ideal jo-r"a
If you need any mformation call non from the hospital lobby.
, Mankin was the Pomeroy Eleboyfriends?, P~easc answer _'!I the
During a brief n!prieve, I leaned_ nighlstand or toffee table· "Gems" .
mentary winner for the poster
the store, 992-3471. Serving will
paper. I cant risk a letter commg 10 over 10 my ftiend and whispeled, is a collection cf Ann l..tuide •
contest
held in conjunction
stan at II a.m. and continue ·1mti14
the house. '"-_-'-- "'or ·your· help, "All these
--~
rsS most
In Middleport, the Peoples Bank
.,,.....,.
.
·personal quesll'ons ·are reqlll!st ·..-~
"""'
nd
p.m . and if you are "al.one" or has announced that it will serve as with the permaneot Improve·
Am\. ·- FEELING LIKE 16 IN making me uncomfortab_Ie." She .
e poems
essays.
e
COLUMBUS
self-addrtsstd, long, business-Sizea
"without" you ane cordially invited a dropoff point if you would like to ment levy. She Is a sixth grad·
DEAR FEELING UKE . r
seemed annoyed and replied, envelope and a check or .money
to attend.
contribute food items for the under- er in Mrs. Debbie Lowery's
16
sure
many
mothers
whose
&amp;Uf!.~
"Lighten up, for heaven's sake. order for $4.85 (this includes
class.
The same rings true for a privileged of Meigs County for the
ters
start
to
date
auractive
young
They're
just trying to make postage and handlmg) to: Gems,
Thanksgiving dinner to be served Christmas holiday season. You can
at the ftre station in Syracuse with . leave your contributions there durmen have momentary flashes of conversation. They don't want you c/o _Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562,
the Syracuse Fire Department and ing banking hours. ·The final day,
wishing they were 16again, but my to :~~~~:.t coniider such ghiCago, Ill. 60611-0562 . (In
its Auxiliary stagin·g that event however, will be Dec. 11.
.Wanda Imboden. Syracuse, is a dear, you have goneovCiboald.'
IUIDda, send$5.87.)
·
questions from people I have just ·
with the Racine American Legion
Contributions left at the bank patient at Charleslon Area Medical
I urge you to get some counsel- met and will probably never see
Post providing assistance. Serving . will be turned over to tbe Meigs Cent« in Charleston, W.Va. in the
ing.
You need to start thinking again "making conversation." I am
will stan at noon and will continue Methodist &lt;:;ooperative Parish S.C.I.C.U.
throughout the afternoon.
which will sort the items and put
Tom Ferguson was either the Pro
Cards may be sent to her at ralionally about this young ·lilan - a very private person and ha,ve
Money and food have been together well-balanced food bas- Charleston Area Medical Center, and soon. If your daughter picks · had a complicated and difficult Rodeo Cowboy All-Around champion
donated by businesses and individ-- kets for the needy.
Memorial Division, SCICU Room up on your erotic feelings fcir ller background. lntrusi ve questions or co-champion every year from 1974
uals for the Syracuse Thanks$!ving · In Pomeroy, the lobby of Veter- No. 3, Charleston, W.va.
. boyfriend, it cOuld cause prQblems offend me, and I'm at a loss as to through 1979.
dinner. Home delivery will be .ans Memorial Hospital is a spot
available for shut-ins and if you wherefooditemsfurtheunderpriv· r-------------------------------------------------------~-----------------------------------need delivery or have any ques- ileged also may be_left. Employees
tions caD Mary Pickens, 992-7181 of the howitai are conducting their
or Edna Hunnell at 949-2338.
annual food drive there and have
So there's no reason for you to invited the public to join them in
spend Thanksgiving alone and the drive. These items, too, will he
there's no reason not to enjoy a turned over to the cooperative for
good dinner. · Both the Syracuse distribution. This is the fourth year
and the Middleport .dinners are for hospital employees to hold the
open to any Meigs Countian. food drive during the holiday seaThose staging the events just don't son and is the ftrst time that it has
want anyone going without a good invited the public to join the effon.
dinner on that day especially.
Would you know what I mean if
You may remember active I say the big daily objective for
Loretta Beegle who fell five some of us these days 1s to spend
months ago while taking in Amen- more time perpendicular than horiflora in Columbus. She was seri- zontal? Do

Pick 3:
737
Pick 4:
9902
Buckeye 5:
8-11-17-31-·33

.Cbarlton for

Mitchell
Page4.

Low tonight Ia mld-40s.
Tbursdoy, cloudy. High In 50s,

coune,

!:.

=·

vol. 43, Na. 1441
Copyrighted 1tt2

II

Supt. Sheppard resigns
Mason County position

=:.

By Michele Carter
OVPstalf

Hospitalized

. EMPLOYEE OF MONTH - JeiT Haning, ao employee at the
Senior Citizens Center since 1981, has been named the October
employee or the mon.th by tbe Meigs County Council on Aging. His '
nam~ wi~ !Je added to the plaque which hangs in the activity room.
Hanmg IS m. ~barge or the .maintenance and home repair program
For senior Clltzens. He was selected on the basis or his initiative
reliability, concern ror senior citizens, courtesy and consideration. '

SEVERAL ·UNDER ROOF· Five of the
el&amp;ht bo- to be~ In the Betiy R1111
HoaaiDc Subdivision Ia Middleport are uader
roof aod the first ODe Is.apeclcd to be ~:~~mplet-

Five homes in new Middleport
subdivision are now under roof
Five of the eight two and three
bedroom houses being constructed
in tbe Betsy Ross Subdivision,
Fifth and Williams SL, Middleport,
by Valley Lumber and Supply are
now UDder roof.
Jean Trusse\1. Middleport's
housiil&amp; spec~ advUcs that one--of the houses w11l be completed
within the next three weeks and an
open house is being planned for
early December.
.
The homes will be sold to low
income families who qualify for a
. Farmers Home Administration

rural housing loan. F&lt;u applirants
have already received FmHA
approval for loans aod several
other app1icalioos 1R UDder &lt;:OOSideralion.
·
However, Trussell said that
more applications will be tateu
Jince it tS anticipated' thlllewril ~
the current applicantS' may not be
approved for loans.
The criteria require~ lhlllp(llicants have a dqJeDdlblc on-gomg
income to mate IDOIIIhly paymeots
on the houses which nmae in price
·

'

from $42,000 to sss;ooo. The
ioterest oo the loao is reduced
~a:f~ the_ FmHA prol!ram
;
. to illcome. The village
has ptOVided • no alit the Iocs 011
wllic:ll the houses are being conMlidbll
·
Dowo payment assistance can
abo be provided if needed, according 10 Tl• 11 en
To sec:tne additiODal informatiOD 011 tile bo01sing, 1csn 1•1 may
con(Wet TP• 'I • M"uJdlepYt Viilago Hall, 237 Rxe SL, Middle-

Following a 4S-minute executive
session of the Mason County Board
of Education Tljesday evenmg, Superinrenclent Grant Sheppard resig·
ned his position effective January
4, 1993. The boanl _members voted
unanimously to approve the resignation.
.
Sheppard announced he had accepted a position in the Coshocton
County Ohio School DistricL He
said he. had previously served in
Coshocton County for 1s years. Qis
oldest son and grandchildren are in
the area.
'"Ibis (tile IIISignation) has noth"'1 to do with the situation which
eXuts," SlqlJ*d said, referring 10
the OlstOD "Nick:" Wright situation.
As in the previous two board
sessions, Wright lltended lhe meet·
· ing and sat in his former position
beside other board members. Board
presideD! Harry Siden asked SheppMd to le-mld the letter from the
SIBle [lepartment of Education,
removing \Vri~L
·The letter, signed by Carolyn Arrington, a dCsignec of State Super-

port, 992.(1182.

Columbus board
turns down plan

•

Banks loan money to the people

they know. That may be presidents,,princes,
a sheik or two People with grand

I

j

'

'
''

'

'

projects in faraway places. Or if its Bank One,
it can stay a little closer to home. And ·
be ready when a house in the neighborhood
becomeS one room too small.At

to~ :=t-which was inaoduced

in Seplember, wouJd·have changed
the way SIJJden!s wm: assigned to
schools. allowing Sllldents 10 attend
schools near where they live and
reducing the number of students
bused 10 achiew racial bttlw:c.
It also would have removed
some allaDalive school progran15
from some schools and placed
them in others. students • risk of
~~ also would have~ more
heavily concentrated , m some
schools.Tile JMoposal met intatse opposition during six aDIIIunity meetings aod during regular board

. 11'~-

IDterim Superintendent Larry

to do "Whatev~r it takes" to help you
SIGNS OF CHRISTMAS - .The large lighted wreaths wlaicli
traditionally line North Secood and Mill Streets iD Middleport
were huog OD the street light poles Tuesday u the vWa., p,..a
ror the Cbrlstmu sbopplq IJaiOD, Again this year parklD&amp; -ten
' wiD ~ "freed" Jle&amp;bmlnl the day after Tballkl&amp;iviD&amp; ud cond...
Inc tbrouah New Year't Day. An open house will be held by Middleport merchants on l!lov. l9, and the annual &lt;;:hristmu pande
will take pll!Ce on Dec. 3.

.

Mixon had urged rejection of the
plan.. He said it would divert atlmltion from ec'JCB!ion IIIII would disIUJil tile lives of allnot 4S,OOO of the
district's 64,000 Sllldents. He also
said he - worried allnot "the fiscal~·· of tile plan.

Building modifications would
have cosa about SS.S million, and
anochcr $1 million WOII1d he needed to reopea four elementary
schools, he said.

intendent Dr. Hank: Marockie,
stated Wright was no longer in
Rood standin$ and was removed
lrom his position. This was a result
of Wright failing to complere seven
hours of training which is required
by law.
Previously, the board members
voled to uphold the decision of the
State Department of Education until action is made.
·
Siders asked Wright to vaciue his
chair with . the board members.
Wright responded he would not
.leave until there is a court order.
Wright auempled to vote in board
action, but his votes were ignored.
Under
delegations,
Danny
Dewhurst, president of the Mason
County Teacher's Association
(MCfA), was on hand to remind
board members there ane positive
things going on in the school system.
Dewhurst asked for an explanation of the board member removal
process and what is being done td
find a replacement for Wright. He
offered the board assistance from
the MCTA, Profession81 Council,
and Service Personnel for seeking a

replacemenl
Dewhurst said there is a disruption in the school system and
teachers are having problems concentrating on the teaching due to
the disruption. He stated when a
student is disrupting a class, they
are removed.
The MCfA president asked the
board to move swiftly in this matter.
Siders told Dewhurst the board
nCC\15 to get together to figure out
what district they can choose a
replacement from. He said the
board hoped to name a replacement
at the Dec. I meeting.
The state gave the board members 4S calendar days to replace
Wright. He was removed from
Office October 23 and a board
replacement is due, by Monday,
Dec. 7.
County resident Harry VanMeter
· ask:cd the board members what the
black: and whire procedures are for
the impeachment of an elected offi'
cia!. He wanted to know how a
"hired hand" (Marockie) could
remove Wright.
Continued on page 3

Landmark trial pits lung cancer
v~ctim against tobacco gian(
Cf\RBONDALE, m. (AP) --In
the ftrst trial since the Supreme
Court cleared the way for such lawsuits, a man dying of lung cancer
claims a cigarette maker pemtaded
him to-ignore evidence that smqJ.ing is dangerous.
Opening arguments were scheduled for today in.Charles Kueper' s
lawsuit against R.J. Reynolds
Tobacco Co., the nation's second
largest tobacco company, and two
other defendants.
Jury selection was completed
Tuesday in SL Clair Co1J111Y Circuit
Coun.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled

m June that warning labels on

tobacco ll!llducts don't shield companies that make them from lawsuits based on state' personal injury
laws.
Kueper, 51, claims he got lung
cancer from smoking. 1 1/2 packs
of cigarettes a day for nearly 30
YCSf!l·
.
His attorney, Bruce Cook, said
Reynolds ll)ld the Tobacco Institute, a Washington-based trade
association, tried to persuade people to ignore health warnings.
Kueper, a retired Army master
sergeant, is suing for compensatory
damages of $3 million and unspeci-

fied punitive damages.
Reynolds spokesman David
Fishel said Tuesday the Supreme
Court's ruling pre-empted lawsuits
such as Kueper's because it found
no proof tobacco companies tried
to undermine health warnings
against smoking.
•'Personal responsibility is at
the heart of this issue,'' Fishel said.
If the lawsuit against the Winston-Salem, N.C.-b.ased company is
successful, it could boost dozens of
other cigarette liability lawsuits
pending against tobacco companies, anti-smoking advocates said.

Clinton goes to Washington
to meet with President Bush
LITTLE ROCK, Ark:. (AP) -Mr. Clinton was going to Washington, and his. first appointment was
witli President Bush to get a "candid assessment" about world issues
the president-elect will face.
Clinton did not reveal precisely
what he had in mind for his White
House meeting with the man whose
eviction ,he arranged. But he said
Tuesday. he was "pleased that he
invited me up and I' II be pretty
much as. his disposal. ... There are
one or two things I want to raise."
Meanwhile, the Arkansas governor was focusing his attention on
putting together a new government
with a distinctly different tone than
his Jn(lecessor's.

Clinton on Tuesday appointed
former South Carolina Gov. Dick
Riley, a Washington outsider, to
oversee the hiring of the upperlevel bureaucrats -- the insiders -for the new administration.

Aft« meeting with Bush, Clinton was going to a black: business
district fcir a walk: through the
neighborhood. And in the evening,
he was scheduled to attend a reception for the Children's Defense
Fund, the advocacy group that his
wife, Hillary, once chaired.
Since the election, Clinton and
Bush have tallced by telephone and
communicated ·through emissaries,
but today' s meeting was their firSt
face -to-face encounter. Foreign
policy was on ihe agenda.
••I want to get his candid assessment about some world issues,
some problems I'll be facing at the
beginning of my tenn ," Clinton
said Tuesday.
Aft« a picrure-taking session in
the Rose Garden, their private conversation was set for the Oval
Offtce, the symbolic center of presidential power.

Neither Clinton nor Bush has
since election night any
public animosity about the rouJ!Itand-tumble campaign, dunng
which the president referred to
Clinton and running mate AI Gore
as "Bozos" and Clinton called
Bush a man Without principles. ,
In fact, Bush has _promised ihe
full coopemtion of hiS administration for the transilion, and Clinton
has praised the president's helpfulness.
However, there seemed to be
some lingering bad feelings among
their deputies.
White House spokesman Marlin
Fitzwater accused the Clinton camp
of trying to score political points by
tum1ng «!own the president's offer
of a military jet and the use of Blair
House, the 11overnment guest quarters for v1siting VIPs, for the
Washington trip.
e~pressed

---Local briefs----- Public highway meeting set Nov. 30 at Marietta

-:-···'

· Theft, break-in reported

50% off
closing costs

Ron Carman of Columbus reported to the Meigs County Sherifrs Department on Saturday that a tree stand had been talcea from a:
wooded area on the I van Carman Farm.
Charles Stewart, Middleport, reported that he had discovered lhll
the house he owns at Pity Me 1l8d been entered. He had to vacate
the house following the rock:slide there.
Stewart adviseS that he thinks someone has been staying in the
house.

1-800-6!77-4994

B4NKEONE

Trash mystery solved

~it takes.

•
•

'

. Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported Wednesday
that the depabnent learned that the litter piled afong Rowe Road ia
Letart Township last week had been placed there by Meigs Caunty
Litt« ConbOl workers so that it could be hauled w the 1andf1D.
Soulsby expressed his appreciatioQ to the party who called in lhe
complainL

'

~ () 1992 BANC ONE COR_PORATJ ON SubjcCI w mdil appro&gt;al. The APR on a_vq,riablc·ralc credit /inc of !20.000 as nf Au~"'' I, 1992 wa&lt; 8.00% APR. The APR may''""""
~ drLrc:asr, not to cXt:t'td 25% rn Oh10. Thl' ann~~~ .frc Is !50. Closrng co~t5 arc approxtmalc/y $300. If your lrnc I~ dt~onrmu~d tn less rhan onc yc:ar. S 125 rn clilsr n~ cvsb wr/1 Ht: ch(&lt;[~ed. No1
!Ia valid wllh 0ny other off« Olfrr ~pplirs 10 appilcalions n:c~ ivcd 1hrough Novem ber .10, J 992. . ·
·
•

01

, I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The Columbus Ba.d of Education
rejected a holly debated student
reassignmeot pi.m opponents had
said woold re-segregate city
schools.
The bolri 011 Tuesday voted S-2

-

Bank One,we always want to be in a position

out the day you need us. Like today maybe.

2 Sectlono,14 Pogeo 25 cento
A Multimedia Inc. Newopeper _

Pomeroy-..ddleport, Ohio; Wednesday, November 18,1992

'

Continued on page 3

i

=vale

approximately five years, while
long-term plans will take Ohio to
the yea{ 2020. Acc~ss Ohio will
u••Jiics oom- address
all types (or modes) of
= g Disuict 10 of the Ohio u.uportalion.
mcluding rail, water
lildll of TraDsporllliOD will
and
air,
not
jus&amp;
highways.
have a chMM:e to review ud di&amp;"Access
Ohio
is ai action docucuss • a pablic me tiltg, the ibfU ment, one that establishes
clear priof the action plaD for the state's
orities
and
aeateS measurable steps
future trusportatioo needs ••
· toward meeting those priorities,"
At:t:aa Ohio.
The ptblic mwurc will be held says Jolm Platt. ooors Assistant
November 30. 1:30 10 3:30 p.m., at Directt for Transportation Modes.
the Holiday Inn jnst off 1-77 in "Ohio is the fii'SI state in the nation
to develop 1 truly multi-modal
Maricaa.
tnmspor1lbOII
plan, as mlllllated by
Whell completed, the Accesi
the
Rcendy
enacted
federal InterOhio doc-twill be ODOT's
modal
Surface
~n
EffistmleJic plaD for meeliDI both
ciency
Act
(ISTEA),
Platt
said.
sbort-ICIDI ud long-term !riDS·
According to Platt, the draft
portllioD needs in die 1111e. Shortplan
that will be unveiled at the
will focal 011 blllllpl*lltiOD tmpiOVCJIICIW' 10 be made in November 30 meeting will reOect

Public officials
zens in Mllip IIIII
and the other seveo

laiD,...

citiCoUIJiies

many of the recommendalions that
were voiced during 60 public meet·
ings held throughout the state earli·
er this year, including ooe in Marietta-in Aptil. "Since this action
plan wiD affect how Ohioans travel
and move goods far into the 21st
century, we have worked hard to
give the customers of Ohio's transportation system opportunities to
voice their needs arid concerns • to
provide a direction for Access
Ohio," Platt said.
AlthOugh Access Ohio will designate possible high.,..ay and rail
corridors, as well as identify potentia1 airjlort 8lld water pon locations,
it will not present a list of specific
projects to be undertaken by
OOOT.
.
John Dowler, de!Juty director of
District 10, says the action plan

that wiii be presented at the
November 30 meeting will serve
s.everal purposes, including: "to
preserve and manage Ohio's existmg transportation systems and
resources more effe1:tively; to
improve the safety of the state's
transportation systems; ati4-tOensure that revenue from all levels
of government and the private sector is sufficient, flexible and stable
to meet Ohio's future transportstion needs."
The meeting to be held in Marietta is one of 19 being held
throughout the state. There will be
opponurtity for questions and discussion regarding the plan draft.
Once public comments on the
draft have been. received, a ftnal
plan wiU be prepared and presented
to Governor George V. Voinovich.

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