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1990
't
P~~g~a~1~0~Th.~!D~~!'t!S.~n~t~in~-~~~---;--~----~::::::::~;;·-;;;;;;::~~~~~--------~--:-~~--:----------------~-------t
· t"100 1"s the
key
Alfred community happenings-----~;
Educa
.
. Ann
Pastor ·sharon Hausman will and Greg Crum. Fairfield. High- SurrOunding coUnties. Russell Ar- :
M
. onday., Octo~ 22,

P-oy-Middlannrt. Ohio

to Unlockl.ng doors.

Dear Ana Lucien: The leucr
from the 32-year-dd woman who
became pn:£1WU 11 IS !Wiy hit
home. So did~ lllvice. She IllS a
job with no bonelits and no fut=
and she feels wonhless. You IOid
ha' to get a hiP achool diploma and
take night cJa : s 11 a community
college. Your lllvice was righton. l
know because r-ve been there.
I grew up in a sl~ and bad a
whir.e-aash bactground. l was sexually molested by a family member
when I was 4 ~ fmally found the
courage 10 make him Stop when l
was 12. That experience left me
emotionally scarred..
l eloped whert I was 15 and had a
baby. My husband was an alcoholic
and extremely abusive. His c.onst.ant
put-downs reinfilrrpd the feelings of
low self-esteem that kept me
bilpped. I believed l was too dumb
to do better. When he · sexually
molested a 12-year-dd neighbor girl.
I had him am:sted and lefL
At 19.l was an uneducated, single
mother. Earning opportunities were
scarce but somehow I managed to
scratch out an existence. Two years
later I took a hanlloolc at my future.
I had two chaices -- Slay stuck in
the mud f~nm or get an education
and makesom~ of my life.
I got 'my GED at night school. A
university counselor helped me
apply for a government grant for my
flfSt year of college and I earned
· scholarships for the years that
followed. l went to the university

during the day and wOfted as a
waitress in the e'Yellings.
Six yeais later I RSnatcd with a
degree in business lldminislration
and went on to beoome a certified
public ICCOUIIWIL Was I proud of
mysclf'1 You'd beUC"r believe it. I
now have the .elf-confidence that
comes with indc:peadcncc. I tOOw I
will never feel despc:rate again. The
education I so doggedly pursued has
given me tremendous frmJom and l
know thai the sky is the limit
I hepe my st1:11y will help that 32year-old woman and others like ha' .
to forgive themselves for making
foolish decisions when they were
young. Being born poor doesn't
mean you have to stay that way for
the rest of your life. - OPERATION
BOOTSTRAP IN CALIR)RNIA
DEAR BOOTSTRAP: What a
testimonial to courage and tenacity!
Your letter is proof that education is
the key that unlocks the door of
opportunity. Thanks for writing.
Dear Aaa Laaders: Most of the
time your advice shows a lot of
common sense but you missed the
mark when you applauded the man
who said, •sex without love is
lousy." As a youth of75. rm at lellst
as well-qualified to judge as the ·
yOWig pup who wrote.
The best sex I ever had was with
women with whom I had no emotional auachment It was siJnply lust
and physical ataaction. The worst .
sex I ever had was with my wife.

People in the news

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4 TO 7 PM
INCLUDES: CLEANING, OILING,
ADJUSTING, GREASING.

RAZORS IUY IE DIOPPID OFF IN ADVANCE

992·6491
786 North

Second
Middleport,
Ohio

area.

Clara Fo~ord visited her son, Mr.
and Mrs. B1ll Folllrod, Athens.
,APril . and Luther .. Neely{
Fa~rbom, were weekend VISitors o
her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Delbert
S1e8111S.
..
A group from the church VISited
the Amish country in Holmes and

cher and Lloyd DiUinger drove :
their vans. Passengers were Char: :
lotte Van Meter, Nina Rob!nson, }
Melvin Tracy, Gertrude Robmson, 1
Eloise Archer. Sharon ·and \
Frederick Hausman, Doris Dillin- '
ger; Thelma and Clarence Render" :
son, Will Po:;ie, Ruth Brooks, Sara ~
Caldwell and Nellie Parker.
:
•.
;

Piek.-3: 380
Pick-4: 7807
Cards: 2-H;
4-C;S-D;K-S
~

Page3

Vol.41 , No.120

Pomaroy-Middlap!)rt, Ohio, Tua$day, October 23,

Copyrlghtod 1990

429

12111UR
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',

By Charlene Hoeflich
Cab Co. with pilbilc uansit system with Co,11ncil to request a contribJ!.Appointment of Judy Crooks 10 funds was discussed and the mayor . tion toward the cost of paying a
fill the une~pired tenn of Bob Gil- reported ,approval of the elderly and full-time economic development
more on Middleport Village handicapped griult through the director. Eliason noted that the
Council and announcement of a ·Ohio Department of Transportation. Chamller will continue advertising
public tnmsit elderly and handicapHe noted that the village has ap- thetoberpos. ition through the end of Oc;
ped grant of $37,226 highlighted plied for $49,809 in federal funds
Monday night's Colllll;il meeting at and $64,569 in state funds for the
He said that he and the othei
village hall.
system. The local share of the members of the search commitlet;
Council on recommendation of operation .is $12.652. he noted. . Bruce Reed and Ron McDade, ha~
Mayor Fred Hoffman voted · un- Mayor Hoffman pointed out that numerous applications and are riow
animously in favor of Crooks' ap- the cab company is only paid on in the process of getting the funil:
pointment to Gilmore's term which the basis of actu81 rides.
ing in place. Eliason not.e_d that ~expires In 1992.
·
Lenny Eliason of the Meigs sides the salary, something under
The funding of the Blue Streak County Chamber of Commerce met
Continued on page 10

DR CAPI!TS-100'5

.RITE AID

1990
..

Crooks fills unexpired
ter1n of Gilmore on
Middleport Council

BAYER ASPIRIN
TABLETS

Literacy means that : a man Is
able to sign his name when he
gets his paycheck; a man and
woman waiting on a bus can read
the destination sign; a young
man can leave the area where he
lives to find work, because he can
read street signs and maps; a
mother and father can read a
story to their child, help with .
school lessons and demonstrJlte
the values of reading and writ·
lng; an adult can find a number
In a telephone book; open ·a bank
, account; read labels on grocery
products and add up their cost;
compute Income tax and Social
Security benefits; pass a driver's
test; flU out forms for Job
. application and Medicaid; learn
about legal rights; people can
learn to read the Bible, a
newspaper, a magazine or a
restaurant menu; read about .
one's own herltag~; a person
knows how to use the dictionary
and encyclopedias, find the way
around a·library. ·prepare for and
pass a high school or college level
examination, pursue self·
directed Independent .learning,
and help others to read and write.
Illiteracy Inhibits or prevents
the effective exercise of human
rights that are dependent on
literacy skills. Because of llllter·
acy men and women suffer
dlscrlmlilatlon; Ullteracy pre-.
vents choice of wor)c; prohibits
producuv·e lnc&lt;ime, makes ex·
plollatlon possible.
You can help make this difference In a person's life. Sign up for
the Volunteer Tutor Training
· workshops being held at the
Pomeroy Library on Oct. 22nd
and 23rd. Call your library for
more Information.
·

Low toalrht ·in mid 408.
Wednesday , cloudy. High
near 60.

•

And don't miss
.our great
weeldy specials! ...

Library
Lines:

c

•

KODAK
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GOLD FILM ·

200 A5A-TYPE 110
24 EXP.

MINGYAR SPEAKS TO PLANNING COMMJS.
SION- Dennis Mlngyar, the assistant director of
the Governor's Office of Appalachia, spoke to the .
l!l'lelgs Counly Regional Planning Commission, at
Its regular quarterly meeting at Fanners Bank
and Savings Company Monday afternoon. Mlng-

~

yar addressed development Ia his message to lbe
commission. Pictured from left are: Commiiiiiioo
Executive Director ·charles Blakeslee, Mlngyar,
and Meigs County Cornnilssloaer Richard E.
Jones.

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Don't Blame
Your Age For
Poor Hearing.
Chicago, IU.~A free offer of
special interest to those who
hear but do not understand
words has been announced by
Beltone. A non-operating
model of the smallest hearing
aid Beltone has ever developed
will be given absolutely free 10
anyone requesting it.
It's YO!JrS for the asking,
so send for it now. It is not a
real hearing aid, but it will
show you how tiny hearing
help can be. The actual aid
weighs less than an eighth of
an ounce, and it fits com- ·
pletely into the eaf canal.
These models are free, so
we suggest you write for yours
now. Again, there is no cost,
and certainly ·no ·obligation.
Although a hearing aid may
not help everY&lt;&gt;ne, more and
more people with hearing
losses are being helped. For
your free sample send your
name, address, and phone
nwnber today to: Department
98712. Beltone Electronics
Corporation, 4201 West Victoria Street, Chicago, Illinois

~-..

f

lights of the visit included a trip to
the Cincinnati Zoo and shops in the

RITE

· By Rulb Powers

By United Press lnternatlonal
SPOUSES WON'T BE CO·STARS: Actress Kirstie Alley says
she never wants to co-star with husband Parker Stevenson. ''We
got married to make love with each other,not to star with each
other," the "Cheers·•·star told the New York Dally·News. "l'll
work with Parker as producer to actor or as director to producer
but not as actor to actor. We work horribly together. We have no
respect fo~ each other. We direct each other., All the .
conslderatloris you'd give any other actor we don't give each
other. " Besides, Alley says If she and Stevenson made a movie
together. it would deprive them of the side benefit of getting to
kiss other people and stay within the bounds of marital fidelity.
"You can't be a secretary and smooch with the sales manager
that' comes to town," she said. "If you told your husband, he
probably wouldn 't !Ike it. When t·m smooching with someone In
a scene. It's allowed."
·
BROKAW WOULD LIKE TIME OFF: Tom Brokaw sounds
like he might like to drop his anchor duties. "What I'd like to do
Is always keep my hand In television but I would not llketo be on
every day," the.NBC newsman told People magazine. "II seems
to most people to be a very glamorous job and many days Ills.
(But) It's very hard to even think about taking a day off in the
course or a month because It's very competitive and the
expectations are so high for all three (CBS's Dan Rather and
ABC." s Peter Jennings and himself)." Brokaw says the pressure
ofthe job makes him feel like a g~rbll. "We're In a cage running
around and around," he says. ·'After a whlle. no matter how
much they pay you, you get to·thtnk you'd like a whole different
life."
LINE IS FOR BOOKS, NOT BORlS: Long lines of people
outside Boris Yeltsln's Moscow home set offfalse rumors about
the health of the Russian leader. The crowd had not come to
mourn Yeltsin but to buy the first Russian translation of Mario
Puzo's hovel "The Godfather" at a boOkstore In Yeltsln's
bulldlng. Yeltsin"s well-being has been a concern slilce a car
accident a month ago and there has been much speculation
abOut how seriously he was Injured. A Soviet newspaper said
Yeltsln had not deteriorated. "We know for certain from circles
close to the Russian president that his health Is In a good state."
one report said. "Doctors simply recommended that he rest for
a few more days."
GLIMPSES: Merv Griffin Is adding a Hollywood touch to his
Resorts casino In Atlantic City, N.J. He's bringing in special slot
machines 'that ·wtu feature scenes from famous movies Instead
of the standard spinning cherries and lemons ... Life behind
bars Isn't so bad for deposed Panamanian ruler Manuel
Noriega. While Noriega awaits trial on drug ·charges, he Is
staying In what has become known as the "dictator's suite" at
the Metropolitan Correctional Center In Miami. The cell has a
bedroom. a conference room and an office and Is fumlshed with
a color television, a computer. an exercise bike and a paper
shredder·. There also are two safes containing documents but
Noriega can't open them because he doesn't know the
combinations.

•

show slides of the assembly at ·
Kansas City when the Alfred
ANN LANDERS
United Methodist Women meet
"1989. t.o. An.,..H
Oct .23 at the chiD'Ch. The presentaT~::!:"(:,::.~~·
tion will begin at 8:30 p.m. The
public is invited to attend.
Church visitors were Debbie
We were married for many years
Eichhorn. Nelsonville; and John
and were madly in love.
Taylor, Torrence, Calif. . .
·That boy's problem was not lack
Nina Robinson VISited . her
of love but lack of experience. Did granddaughter and husband. Tammi
you enjoy dancing the first ti!ne you
tried it? How was the first meal you
rooked? Complete the. list. How
could two kida enjoy aex the fiJ'St
time when they had no idea what to
do or how to do it? fd like an
answer -- if you can think of one, 11iE VOlCE OF EXPERIENCE IN
SEATILE
DEAR VOlCE: A~g to your
theory. practice should make
perfect IT this is so, how come it
never got any better with your wife
with whom you were madly in love?
l'd like an answer- if you can think
of one.
An alcohol problem? How can )'OU
help )'Ourself or s~ne yow love?
"Alcoholism: HIYW to Recogniu It,
How to Deal With It, How to Conqwer It" will give )'OU the answers,
Send a self-addressed, long. business-size envelope and a check or.
money order for $3.65 (this inclutks
posklge and hondling) to: Alcohol.
·c/o Ann Landers. P.O. Box 11562.
CIUcago.I/1: 60611-0562. (In Canada. send $4.45.1,

Landers

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.·•

GEORGE VOINOVICH

Jones wues statement on
feasibility study of bridge

ANTHONY CELEBREZZE

•

Stemwheelers Festival plans
are complete for weekend

Richard E. Jones, candidate for tion) acting as a part of her camstate representative for the 94th paign. Over the recem weeks and
District (Athens, Gallia and Meigs) months, she has announced
today issued a statement on the numerous road projects but I am · A cloSe-up look at some of the
recent amouncement of . a not aware of any ·effort on her part Ohio River's stemwheelers,-lots of
feasibility study of replacing the that has added one inch of new 'food and popular live entertainment
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.
highway construction. Even she are on ·tap for Pomeroy as final
··The statement reads:
now admits, after me saying so for plans are completed for !~Je Big
· "l' m glad my opponent finally years, that we need a modem ' Bend Stemwheelers Fesuval on
considers us Important enough to at highway system if we are going to Saturday.
least warrant a study on something, have economic · development.
This year's festival, which is to
but l do qliestion the timing of the ODOT has been so blatantly politi- be co-sponsored by the Meigs
announcement less than three . c81 that l can't go any longer County Chamber of Commerce and
weeks before Election Day. My op- without saying something. My op- the Pomeroy Sesquicentennial
ponent makes the announcement ponent should have to run on her Committee, is the first of what is
for a study now-just a study, no record, and not have ODOT staging hoped will become an annual event.
actual consii'Uction-for a project events and announcements for her
The MeiJ!s High School March·
that is IS to 20 years down the road benefiL
ing Band wdl kick off the activityat least.
.
'1'eople are tired of this kind of filled day at 9:30 a.m.
"It is my opinion that Meigs ·politics. We get ignored except at
An estimated IS stemwheelers
County's interest could best be ser- election time and then 1111 of a sud- from across the area, with colorful
ved if we would build modem den we fet a litlle attention and lots names like the "U.S.S. Mudaock",
highways lo bridges we already of promtses. The citizens of Meigs, "The Gambler", "Laura J." and
have.
·
·
Gallia and Athens Counties are fed "Hobby m", will be docked at the
"I agree that ~ need such plans up with promises. They are tired of Pomeroy levee to be viewed by the
but I get a liule tired or ODOT having their intelligence insulted by public. The sta11wheelen will also
(Ohio Department of Tl'anspora- election-~ear rhetoric."
present an exhibition race at 4 p.m.

i\,

Additional entertainment will include area cloggers, the Meigs
County Choir perf11111ing at the
Trinity Church at 2 p.m.; and the
Crossover Bantt from 7 p.m. Wllil
IOp.m.
.
.
There will also be food available
the day, provided by area . f!re
departments and the Trimty
Church, as well as concessions
along the levee.
·
11ie Middlepon Arts Council
will have a display for the public
during the day, and the Pomeroy
Metchanll AsiOCialion will sponsor
their Annual Moonlight Madness
Sale from 7 p.m. untilll p.m.
That Slie will close the festival
evenll.
.
Those interested in displays for
the festival should contact the
Chamber of Commerce at 9925001.
l

THE STERNWHEELERS ARE COMING! - Stenwbeelen Uke the
U.S.S. Mudsock will be on hand at the Bit Belld Sternwbeelen Fe~­
tlvalln Pomeroy oa Saturdll)". Tile event Is CC!-IpiiiiiOftd by tile Melp
Couuty Chamber or Commerce aad tb,e Pomeroy Selqultentl!llllal
Committee ud olfen aetlvltles •·plenty for those Ia atteadlaee. ..· ...
~·

'

•

�The Daily

Ohio

Comment
.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Ceut 8&amp;ree&amp;

Pem..,,OIIIe

. . ·.,...=·-

DEVOftD 'l'O Tlll!i INTBBDTII OF Till: IIIEIG8-MASON ADA

e . ~~

CBA.iu.BNt£ BOBFLICil
Gee.-aJMaaqer

ROBttRT L WINGETT
Pabltsller .

PA.T WJII1'EilEAD
. A.Mll&amp;aal Pablllber/Coatrollet
A MEMBERof'l'lle United PraalnternatloDAI,Inland Dauy Preis
Aaoclatloll and the American Newspaper Publishers Auoelatlon.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. Tiley abould be leullwl300
words toq. AU tetlera are aubJect to edit Inland mull be alaned wltb
name, address and telephone nUJI!ber. No uaalaned letter• wUI bepUbllabed. LetterslbOUid be In aoocJ tute, addreulllalaalll!l, not p~uonal~
Ilea.

Letters to the editor
Voters urged to exercise their rights

Buying ti...n. le~
. . ______._.______F'i:..:re=d:.....:W..:....:.--=.c_row_
BJ Fred Crow
This past Monday, October 15,
I arrived at Grant Hoepltal In
Columbus, Oblo, for eye surgery
on my rlgltt eye. First I bad to be
processed tbrougb the reception
room for tltepurposeoffllll.ni out
forms. I gave my history, partie·
ularly all Information pertaining
to my lns~ance, etc. Th~ were
several forms In duplicate given
to me. One at wblcb I was to sign
and one of which my wife was to
slao. I proceeded to tell tbein I
waa a widower. Tbe receptioniSt
tben asked me whO were my next
of kiD. I confused her when I
stated that my aext of kin was
Bimbo, my dog. One set of forms
were not signed. The recepttonllt
lauabed and told me to sit down
and walt to see the Doctor.
A lady patient and her husband
ar.rlved In the.recepllon room af.
ter I did. Apparently sbe was lo
have laser surjery the same day.
She was dressed In a wblte jump
suit and appeared to be In ber
late 40's or early 50's. Her bus·
band was a large older man
wearing a h11ge black cowboy
'hat. My ftrst reaction was that he
was from Texas. He lajer stated
that he was from Tulsa, Okla·
homa and was a cow rancher. I
learned that this couple had Ira·
veled ali the way from Tulsa, Ok·
lahoma to obtain this new treat·
· 111ent for cancer.
Dr. K. Is a specialist In the use
of laser beam surgery on glaucoma patients. He stated that be·
cause I had Ibis same laser beam
surgery In 19\!4 be was only going
to do surgery on the right eye to
see the results before operating

Dear Editor:
When these selections do ap·
In spite of tbe slates o1
pe,a r on the ballot, they are often
cand,ldates offered tor our con·
elected by a minority of the
stderatlon, I encourage all ellgt·
electorate.
ble voters to exercise tbla fran·
A great plurality of voters are
cbtse on Tuesday, ~ovemller 6.
forced to make a declalqn of
Statistics bave sboWII that
voting tor what many vi&gt;ters
Jlllrtlclpailon In tbe electoral
consider to ·be the lesser of two
process bas steadily declined
evlll or not voting at all.
alilce the 1960's. (CNN- 2191i tor
Too often this great body of the
JS.:U year olds, 4191i tor 25-65 year electorate selects the option of
olds).
,.
not participating In a. process In
Since 1968, tbe number of . whlcb they choose not to support
voters who did not partiCipate In either candidate . .The result Is
presidential elections exceeded
tbelr voice aoes unheard.
tbe number wbo voted tor eltber
The solution to this particlpa·
of tbe two major political candl·
tory dUemma Ia very simple.
dates. This means that If tbose
The body politic must demand
who did not vote, had voted for a
an additional box be placed
third choice, that chOice would under each slate ilf candidates
bave won every presidential
for an elected office.
election.
This position would Indicate
WASHINGTON - America's
What Is tlte reason for this low that the selection of tbls box .
failure
to reduce Its dependence
level of participation?
states a preference for "none ot
East oil could help the
on
Middle
Are these voters merely apa·
the above".
Japanese
fllrtber
bury the U.S.
thetlc? Do they feel tbelr vote
This would offer an alternative
economy,
won't count? Are they dlasatls· to the "tweedle dee, tweedle
WhUe U.S.Jeaders ponder why
fted wtth the cbolces of electoral dum.,. ''busiDess as usual",
we
failed to heed warnings about
' candidates?
cbolces now available to tbe
another
gas crisis, some officials
As I survey the slates of electorate.
have
been
gathering evidence
candidates for conaresstonal,
If "noneof the above" won, the
that
the
Japanese
are .quietly
state, and local offices, I have political parties would 'be forced
preparing
to
mass
.produce
cars
come to believe the reason In the to re-evaluate the appeal, popu·
that
don't
need
gasoline.
latter.
• list viability, qualifications, and
Rep. Robert Wise, D-W.Va.,
It Is my . belief that tbe electoral responsiveness of their
recently
learned tbat Japan may
electorate does not deem these candidates.
be
on
tbe cu ttlilg edge of
candida tel to have been selected
Hopefully, future candidates
alternative
fllels. The Japanese
by tin! "people", but are products
wl1l reflect the public Interest
have
been
showing
great Interest
of· the patronage of central and wUI of the electorate rather
In
tbe
technology,
but
are being
committees, partllan political than a venial, partisan political
as
coy
as
always
about
what
they
machines, and a "dog and pony agenda.
plan
to
do
with
11.
sbow" orchestrated by special
Eric Chambers
"I've got a bad feeling you're
Interests c.ailed a primary.
Middleport, OH
going to see tbe Japanese on

and her hasband had to undergo
on my left eye. Shortly after the chemotherapy slni:e It caused
were' lley011nd description. Ear·
operation he alated tbal tbe pres· her bair to fall out and she dis·
ller I remarked to ber that I bad a
sure of the eye was greatly re- liked being bald.
cancer operation In 1975 and had
There was a particular risk In
. duced. I was next sent to the re·
recovered. I told her not to give
covery room. I waa lying on my 'bavlng this laser surgery per·
up hope. She stated that she was
back wltb an Ice pack on my right fonned. The lady patient was
told by her technician that abe 'full of hope. What courage this
eye.
lady had.
Shortly after I entered this could not go out of doors when
After thinking. about this mal·
room tbe same lady patient was there was daylight, because tbe
ter, I wondered what I would do
talklntrln a loud vo,l ce to a tecbnl· ultra violet rays In tbe daylight
under similar circumstances.
clan. The lady bad apparently would probably cause severe
Would I have had the deSire to
traumatic
results.
The
lady
was
hlld laser beam surgery about
live
as much as this lady had? I
told
by
her
doctor
tba.tshe
could
the same lime as I did. This surg·
guess
one wouldn 'I ever know the
not
venture
Jntothedayllghtfor
a
·
ery was described as having a
answer
until 1te Is placed In a
period
of
approximately
12
dye solution Inserted Into ber
similar situatiOn.
blood stream after whlcb laser weeks. She waa worried because
On Tuesday, October 16, I re·
beam surgery was performed. It was possible that she could not
turned to tbe doctor's office to be
This was described as having the attend the Nebraaka · OklahOma
told tbe results of my Juer beam
luer beam contact . tbe tumors football game. She also stated
surgery. I sat down In tbe recep·
wttb the dyesolutton. The beat of. that shews hopeful that sheeould
lion room. Next to me was a man
the laser bani would seal tbe can· recover to the extent that ·she
cer ln. the tumors and prevent It could take advantage of a trip to wbo waa very nenro~. I asked
him wbat bls problem was and he
from movlneto other paris of Iter Hawaii that she had won as· an
stated about a month ago be was
body. The patient was told that employee.
I was In the recovry room long- In anolhr eye doctor's office
this wu not a cure for lbe cancer
when a .man next to him dropped
but for a lime would stop the er than expected due to the fact
his eye on the fioor. 'nlla man
that
Doctor
K.
bad
an
emergency
spread of the disease. The lady
asked
him to reach down and
operation.
The
lady
patient
left
stated that she was aolng thla
pick
up
his eye. He reluctantly
prior
to
my
leaving.
"only to buy lime." Sbe did not
did
so.
Later,
a nurse had to wash
After
I
bad
left
the
recovery
.
expect a cure from tbla laser
and
was
proceeding
to
my
tbe
eye
In
dlllnfectant
and then
room
surgery. Another doctor con·
II.
This
man
then
Inserted
pollsb
hotel,
1
noticed
tbe
lady
and
her
firmed tbe plttent's statement of
buying time. In short this lady husband In tbe lobby. She was the eye back In his head. After alI
patient wanted desperately to wearing a ski mask over her this was done my nervous friend
face, and ber husband's ten gal· got sick to his stomach and failed
Jive.
,
'nlls laser beam surgery at the lon black hat. She was also wear· to keep his appointment with .t he
preSent time Is experimental and· lng a heavy overcoat. She was doctor; As he told the story he
the resulll sre speeulatlve. Tbe completely covered ·except for was becoming Increasingly nerlady patient related that abe had her eyes and was Indeed a person vOus. His story somewhat upset
me prior to my appointment with
to be pitied.
previous! bad a mastectomy,
Later', several thoughts OC· Dr. K.
and a complete bone marrow
Incidentally, the results of my
transplant. She has also had a curred to me. what courage, guts
IbiS
lady
must
bave.
operation
were good according
and
fight
series of chemotherapy treat·
Also
what
efforts
sbe
was
mak·
to
my
doctor.
ments an~ radiation ireatmenta.
Carry on,
She was adament lbat site would lng In order to continue Jiving.
The
stress
and
strain
that
she
Fred W.Crow
never take anolber treatment of

·U. S. needs alternative

feels this is one
·Dear Editor:
As we all know we have to pay
taxes every year. Some of
ur are on a fixed InCOme and It
ml.tea It very hard tor some of us
as' we bavea retarted son aolng to
tbe Carlton worlcshop.
We tblnk It Ia one tax that IS
needed. Our son gets enjoyment
out rJ. attendlngtheworksbop. He
makes his own spending money
,wbll:b he IS very proud or. I am
sure tbe parents or small child·
ren get a lot of help for them.

more

tax

we need

..

Residents lauded by McDonald's
Dear Readers:
This Ia an open letter to the
pepple of Pomeroy, Middleport
and lllrroundlng communities In
.Kelp and Muon Counties.
We put our heart and aoullnto a
dieam, whlcb all of you" helped
mike cometrue.. MeDonald'a On
Tile River, Pomeroy, Oblo. 'nle
. alte pve us so much to work
with, wltb tbe dePot and the
river. Most Importantly, bow·
e¥11",1tpveustheopportualtyto
n•eal'l!b the blatory of the area,
llld meet 10 many wonderful
peas*. You fed tbe exeltemeltt
we felt and 1ave us the atreqth
to punue our IdeM.
la days arew cloeer aad
la«£s . and • I'Verytblac atartec1
CIIIIIIDI tqetber, tbe reallzaUon
rJ.; wllat ali bad beell accompo
1IIJIId ...... eel the Jmaclna·
tiDL Tlllill we Mlted ounelvet,
''1tlll _
-..
-werally
appnela..
..,..
eajoyed Jlllltlllf ..
t1111 lllcDolleld'a IDI'ther for,,tbe
'

alternative car that runs on
alternative fllels."
.
Japan ISn't tbe only country to
forge abead with alternative
fuela development. Western Eu·
rilpe, for example, relies on coal
and nuclear power In spite of the
environmental hazards of both,
and uses natural gu for heating.
Thus, among lbe Industrialized
nations, the United States has the
most to lose If tbe Persian Gulf
and Its on falls Into the hands of
Iraq's.Saddam Hussein.
Why hasn't tbe lJnlted States
been as smart as Japan? One
reason Is AmeriCa's lnsatiabie
appetite for oil that cannot be
eliminated overnight. We are one
of tbe biggest petroleum consu·
mers on Earth. The cheap price

fue) _ _ _Ja_ck_A_nde_rs_on

of oil bas also been a factor. As
long as the commodity Ia cheap,
the American mentality Is to
assume It will always be cheap,
Jimmy Carter, who presided
over the oil crunch of tbe 1970s,
began Initiatives to develop new
fuels. But an oil glut came along
during the Reagan years. Prices
plummeted and Americans got
complacent. There was illlle
Incentive to conserve, much Jess
to look ahead for a lime when the
nation might need another
so11rce of energy, ··
.So the U.S. continued to shop
from OPEC, despite warnings
that aupplles COitld be cut off If a
crisis erupted In the Middle East.
Bush bas finally pledged to
seriously explore energy options,

Bengals rUDJnlng back
James Brooks (21) gels a
from teammate
lckey Woods, making hiS return lo the learn for
. tbe first time since early In
campaign,

bUilt remains to be seen whether
we have read his Ups correctly on
Ibis Issue.
Coal, which can now be burned
more cleanly thanks to pollution
control devices, Is being touted
as a predominant energy re·
source·. Nuclear power Is also
gaining more attention. And
natural gas and solar power can
still be used to meet many needs.
U.S. leaders, Including George
Bush, deserve some heat for
Ignoring the warnings of the past.
It's unfortunate that It ·took a
megalomaniac like Saddam Hus·
seln to get the ball rolling, and It
will be even more unfortunate If ·
American soldiers pay the ultl·
mate price for the miStakes of ·
their leaders.

would reduce the case for grow·
lng Inequality even more.
~oreover, as every student of
taxation knows, taxing tbe rich
doesn't do a great deal to reduce
tbe deficit. Big revenues In a
middle-class country (like Amer·
lea) can onty come from the
middle class. Sorry about that.
Do these· facts matter
politically?
Not necessarily. Only If Republicans can maketltemalng. So far
they have done a sorry job of II.
And not necessartly ~ause
the always potent Democratic
tbeme of mUd redistribution can
be valid even wben the American
economy II yielding across-theboard prosperity. There Is no
Iron law of captlallam that says
the top tax rate can't go any
bieber than 28 percent. ·
But there Is a danger for
Democrats. Phillips preaches
not only redistribution but
resentment.
Perhaps because he Is a
Republican, Pbllllps doesn't
quite understand the degree to
whlcb resentment has been a
polaonolll potion tor liberals and
Democrats In recent yean.
The "fairness lasue" Ia lnbcr·
ently 10und, but It has not worked
for Democrats. Walt!!!' Mcindale
round that out. Wby hasn't It
worked?
Ipvarlsbly, fairness baa turned
Into somethlitg else: tbe search

Ben Wattenberg

for vicious viJialns and vlrt11ous
victims. "Fairness" sbould not
be tbe same as the whine of a
of conspiracy and the drumbeat
5-year·old litamplng his foot and
of perceived Aqterlca-bashlng.
bleating, "It's not fair!"
That Is not popular politics. ·
Thus: ClvU rights was a fine,
Reagan kept wtnnlng elections ;
fair and powerful political cause
by saying America Is a great
when addressed to black oppor·
country.
tunlty; It was undermined when
Will the Democrats, now seek· .
It moved to preaching continuing
lng a handle on the anti·
white guilt even after reform was
Incumbency mood, also over·
legislated. Now Democrats are
play tbe solid Issue of economic
sadly locked Into the perception
fairness?
of favoring reverse dlacrlmlna·
If the past Is any guide, the
lion, and are pushed to unanlm·
danger Is there. Fairness won't
ous support ·of new legislation ·· work lilt 'Is seen as just another
that can yield quotas.
liberal trick to keep tbe special
Feminism, too, IS Inherently a
Interests \vell·funded. It won't
noble and potent movement
work If It II seen as vlllalnlzlng
toward fairness. But It becomes a
Sltccess. It won't work if It
political loser wlten · Its meg·
becomes a whine against
apbones sound anti-male and
America.
antl·tradltlonal values.
'nle complaint In · America
Real causes, pushed throUgh
today Is partly about who pays
the liberal, Democratic guUI·
bow much tax, but more potently
blender, soon come to be per·
about how taxes are being spent.
celved as pleas for special
Democrats are sltrewdly ad·
lnteresta.
dressing tbe first part. But the
The demand for fairness, In the
voters wbo are concerned about
recent Democratic tonality, has
the second part are also saying,
too often turned Into the screech .. It's not fair!"

Today in history

By BOB DIM
UPI Sporta Writer .
.
CLEVELAND (UPIJ -TheCinclnnatiBengals
unveiled a potent rushing attack Monday night
and ran the playoff hopes of the Cleveland Browns
Into the around.
.
The Bengals rushed 37 limes for 233 yards and
two touchdowns, Boomer Eslason threw two
touchdown passes, and Jim BreeciJ kicked a pair
of field goals to lead Cincinnati to a ;w;13 win over
Cleveland. The win gave the Bengals a 5·2 record
and dropped Cleveland Into last place In tbe AfC
Central with a 2-5 record that leaves them three
games behind Cincinnati and In danger or mllslng
the playoffs for tbe first dme In six years .
"We looked like a blg·tlme football team
tonight," said Cincinnati head coach Sam Wyche.
"We didn't think coming In we could iiirl'agalnst
the Browns tbe way we diet."
Eslason completed 7 of 17 passes for 85 yards
and was Intercepted once, and threw scoring
passes of 19 yards to ~ey Holman and two
yards to Mike Barber. James Brooks scored on a
28-yard run and Ickey Woods, making his 'first .
appearance since sutfel!lng a knee Injury since
last September, closed out the scoring with a
one-yard plunge wltb 2: 52 left. Woods carried five
times for ven yards.
B
kicked field goals of 20 and 21 yards as
Bengals raised tbelr record to 2·2 on tbelr
current stretch of five straight road games.
eveland Is 1·2 at home and plays Sunday at San
anclsco against the undefeated 49ers .
okle Harold Green gained 75 yards on nlrie
c rles, Craig Taylor gained 73 yards on 14
shes, and ;Brooks got63 yards on·slxcarrles for
the Bengals. Kevin Mack led Cleveland with 53
yardss on 12 attempts.
"The one thing we've been talking about In tbe ·
locker room Is that \\'1! felt like we didn't have the ·
running game together," Eslason said. "ltold our
offensive linemen at halftime that It was tbelr
game and when It Is tbelr game you can run tbe
ball effectively.
"It should prove that we're more than
one-dimensional, we don't rely on one player.
When everyone gets Involved and does tbelr job
we can win on tbe ground or In tbe air."
The Browns trailed 17·3 In the secopd quarter,
bu I scored 10 points In tbe flnall: 52 ofthe first half
to apparently grab the momentum when Leroy
Hoard bulled over from the 1 as dme expired:
· ''(thought at halftime we were In good shape,"
said Cleveland head coach Bud Carson. '·we got it

to 17-13, we had the crowd behind us, we were In
pretty good position to t'Ome back, and we go out
there and dldn 't do much."
.
But tbe Brown.s lost the momentum somewhere ·
between Hoard's touchdown and the start of the .
third quarter.
.
· "They appeared more motivated at the ·
beginning of the game," Wyche said ·of the :
Browns.
,
·
. On Cleveland's first possession after halftime~
Carl Zander picked off a Bernie Kosar pass and :
returned It to the Cleveland 38 to set up a 21-yard ·
Breech•field goal that put the Bengals ·up 20-13. :
Cleveland botched a field goal attempt wltlt 3:36 :
left In tbe third quarter when holder Mike Pagel ·
dropped the snap, an\:1 the Bengals ground game :
sprung Into high gear.
:
Keeping the ball on the ground, the Bengals ·
drove from tbelr 14 to tbe Cleveland 4, with Taylor ',
bt~sllng loose for a 24-yard run, Brooks' running :
twice for 34 yards, and Green ripping off a J.S.yard ·
gain on thlrd-and-10. Eslason then completed a :
i&gt;alr of passes, the second going to an open Sarber :
In the end zone for a 27-13 Bengal lead,
"I think we caught tberh at the right dme and
they did their stunts at the wrong time," Green:·
said, ''Our Inside game was strong with a lOt of out".
trap and counter' plays."
Kosar completed 17 of 33 passes for 190 yards
and was picked off twice and sacked four dmes.
"Tbe main thing tonight, not to take anything
away from ·them, but I don't think the Intensity,
was there ionlght as a football team," Kosar said.
There were several· long discussions among the
. referees, Including one that took approxlmatelll.:
10 minutes to figure out what down It was and :
another long huddle after an Eslason touchdo~·:
pass to Holman was nullified by an Illegal
formation penalty. That penalty was upheld. ·
But the Bengals, who must vie for attention with';
the W~rld Series champion Reds, say they·r~·
\rylng to emulate the success of their baseball· :
playing counterparts.
:
"l cait only compare It to tbe Reds winDing thi! '
World Series," Eslason said. "They kept talklne .
about team, team tel(lm, then winning the World
Series. Tonight was definitely a team win."
.
For the Browns It was ·a team loss, and for
Carson, who bas been rumored to have his job tn·.·
Jeopardy, It was an especially crushing defeat. ·
"The people In power, the people who run tbll:
city, want tilts football team to win and win now," :
Carson said.

Ch~pionship

picture clears

By JEFF.SHAIN
UPI Sporls Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - A
:weekend of elimination appears
to have restored some order to
the United Press International
college footb_;J ratings.
·
Gone are . the one-loss and
two-tie teams that helped thrQW
confusion Into the national cham·
plonshlp race after a month of
upsets and near-upsets. Instead,
the ratings show the IItle picture
focusing on four teams with the .
best shot at winding 11p No. 1 at
tbe end ol the season.
VIrginia remained In the top
spot and Increased Its lead over
No. 2 Nebraska In tbe latest
balloting by the UPI Board of
Coaches. No. 3 Auburn and No. 4
Notre Dame also received heavy
support before the point totals
dropped off sharply.
"I don't think you can say
trophy before a cheering Queen City crowd of
THIS ONE'S FOR YOU! - Reds owner and
anybody
has a shot at the
approximately 10,000 In downtown Cincinnati
president Marge Schott (left) and manar;er Lou
national championship yet," No·
Monday In the aftermath olthe Reds' sweep olthe
Plnlella ltolsl the World Series championship
tre Dame head coach Lou Hollz
Oakland A's. (UPI)
.
said. "But every week you can
add some names to the Jilt of
those who don't. It's like reading
_ the obituary column. You wake
up In the morning and If you don't
see
your name there, you feel
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Some the Oakland Athletics In four tearing his right kidney diving
pretty
good." ·
10,000 red-clad Cincinnatians,
games, bringing the city its first ·for a ball In lite first Inning of
Falling
out of.favor were such
undaunted by steady rain, turned title since the Big Jited Machine Saturday's clinching game.
teams
as
Florida State, Tennes·
• Reds reliever Rob Dibble, one
out In force Monday to hall their team In 1976.
see,
Miami,
Michigan and South·
World series champion Reds.
"We whopped 'em," said the Nasty Boys In the bullpen,
ern
Cal.
The umbrella-toting throng pitcher Danny Jackson, the first boomed Into the mike.
VIrginia received 39 of 56
''You guys are the greatest,"
jammed every corner of Foun·
player to address the crowd.
first-place
votes cast by .the
taln Square In downtown Clncln·
Two red motorized street· he ·told the crowd. "We're the
59-member
board and finished
nail to welcome a club that swept
sweepeFs led the parade, symbol· world champs, we 're the best."
with 814 of a possible 840 points,
Jose Rljo, the World Series
!zing the sweep that was ell·
lying the highest point total oftlte
Most
Valuable
Player,
won
two
maxed In Oakland Saturday ·
The Daily Sentinel
season.
Nebraska received 13
games
In
compUing
a
0.29
ERA
.
night with a come-from· behind
first-place
votes and 767 points;
"It's all over and we love you,"
( USI'S t4J.. . )
· 2·1 victory.
and
Auburn
was at the top of
.t Dlvtllon ol Mulllmedla, lae.
Car after car, most of them red he said.
three
ballots
and earned. 710
But the player everyone was
and many of them convertibleS,
l'loblllhed every afternoon. "!onday
points.
through Friday. 111 Court St. , Po·
carried the victorious Reds, their ·waiting for, third baseman ChriS
moroy, Ohio, by the Oblo Valley Put&gt;
VIrginia Is the fourth NQ. 1
families, along with manager Sabo, got the biggest ovation
Ushlng Comr.any/Multtmt'dla, Inc .•
team
this year. Preseason No. 1
wlten
he
announced:
"We're
No.
I.,ou Plnlella, his coaching staff
Pomeroy, Oh o 45769, Ph. 992·215li. Se·
1, we got the ring, we got Miami lost Its season opener to .
cond class ~taae paid at Pomeroy. 1 and other members of the Reds
. Ohio.
. ·
. famUy from Riverfront Stadium
everything.... I'm so proud of our Brigham Young, Notre Dame fell
team and so happy to to Stanford and Mlcblgan was
to Fountain Square.
Member: United Press International,
lriland Dally Pr(&gt;ll A•oclatlon and the
knocked off by Michigan Slate.
contribute."
Longtime radio broadcasters
O~o Newapaper Aaoclatlon. National
Besides
Davis,
pitcher
Jack
Illinois moved up four places to
Marty Brenna man and Joe Nux·
AdverllllDI Repreaentatlve, Branham
Armstrong
and
Infielder
Bill
fifth
on the heels of Its 15-13
Newspaptr Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
hall served as masters of cerem·
New York, New York 10017.
onles after Mayor Charles Luken Doran were unable to attend the victory over Michigan State. No.
Introduced Reds owner and pres· celebration. Armstrong has the 6 Washington also made a major
POSTMASI'ER: 5en&lt;l addreu ch..,..
to Tile Dally 5eotlnel. 111 Court St..
ldent Marge Schott and her flu and Doran underwent back gain, Improving six places after
Pl&gt;meroy. Ohio 4m!l.
surgery that kept him from Its 52-16 victory over Stanford.
famous St. Bernard, Schottzle.
No. 7 Brigham Young moved
postseason play . .
"It's
been
five
long
years,"
8IJJIICIIIPTION RATES
a,. Carrier or Motor Route
The
team
arrived
In
Cincinnati
up
three places after an Idle week
said Schott, alluding to a fifth·
One Week ................................... SUO
Oakland
late
Sunday
night
No. 8 Colorado jumped six
from
and
place finish In 1989 and four
One-Month ..... ....... ... ...............~ .. tG.lO
spots
after beating Kansas 41-10.
and
was
greeted
at
Greater
One Year ........................... .. :·;,.112.80
s tralght runner·up finishes In tbe
Mhunl
fell seven places to
Cincinnati
Airport
by
about
1,000
SINGLE COPY
National League West before last .
.
PRICE
ninth
and
No. 10 Tennessee
fans,
many
of
tltem
children
year.
Dolly .... :............................. . 25 Cents
wearing
Reds
championship
dropped
six
spota
after Its 9-6 loss
Tbe crowd roared as she
SublcrlbPra not dellrtne to pay thPcar·
to Alabama. Florida State wound
added, "We won this one for you shirts. •
rter may remit In .advan~ direct •tO
"ThiS team will go down as a up 11th, a three-position drop.
the fans and I want to thank you
The Dally Sentlnf'l on a 3, 6 or 12 month
No. 12 Georgia Tech slipped a
bUll. Credit will bP etven carrier each
all for hanging with us. We love special team," said Brennaman,
who completed his 17th season notch after lying North Carollns
--'~·
you."
No oubocrtptlona by mall permitted In
Plnlella, the first-year man· with' Nuxhall as the broadcast and No. 13 Iowa Improved six
areAl where horne carrier arrvlre Ia
ager
of the Reds, paid tribute to team. "The 1975 and '76 cham· places .on the heels of Ita 24·23
avaUable.
plonsltlp teams were the favor· victory over Michigan. No. 14
tbe endre Reds organization.
Mall Sllbocrlplleaa
ltes
to win, but the 1990 team Texas Inched ahead. one place.
"I'm proud of our team, proud
-oMelpCOUI)'
No. 15 Mississippi, off to Its
wasn't
picked by anybody to win
of our fans and proud of Clncln·
13 w..... ..................................m.:u
anything
and
It
won
tbe
Western
belt
start since 1970 at 6-1,
Ill WHiri ............. J.................... S37.96
natl," he said. "I tlpmyhat loour
52 WHirl .................................. fiU6
Improved
three. places. No. 17
Division,
the
National
Leaeue
players and I'm sorry Eric Davis
O.lllole Malp CooaoiJ
and
beat
the
team
that
was
.
Wyol'!llng,
8.0, moved up one
13 w..................... :....... ,......... ao.ao
lin' I here with us."
IIIW- .....................................30
place
and
Michigan
fell 10 spots
supposed to be the best In
Davis ·Is hospitalized In Oak·
52 w...................................... m.fO
baseball In tbe World Series."
to 181b.
land for five to seven days after

Red October comes to Cincinnati

..

By Unbed Press lnlertlllilonal
Today Is Tuesday, Oct. 23, the 296tb day of 1990 with 69to follow.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Ita first quarter.
The morning stars are Venus, Mars ~d Jupiter.
'nle evening atars are Mercury and ~:wrn.
Those born on tbls date are under tbe sip of Scorpio. They Include
French chef NichOlas Appert, Inventor of tbe canning process,. In
1752; Adlai E. Stevenson, vice president under Grover Ceve111nd
from 1893- 1897, In 1835: pioneering college football coach John
Reisman In 1869; William Coolidge, Inventor of the X-ray tube, In
pany, a concert was given by
artists Larry and Jo-ann Keenan ·1873; Gertrude Ederle, the first woman to swim the EngliSh Channel,
of Morebead, KY, This memora· · In 1906 (ase IN); talk ahowhoet Johnny Carson In 1925 (age 65); and •
Brazllla.n soccer player Pele In 1940 (aee 50).
'
ble event was OO.ted at the
Trinity Ch11rc1J on Sunday. Our
(,t
alncere tbankll to everyone who
On this date In history:
.
In 1707, the Brltllb Parliament met for the first time.
1.
was responsible for lis auccess.
In
1942,
the
British
8th
Army
launched
an
offensive
at
El
Alameln
In
,
Our gratitude Is expressed to
Egypt, a World War II battle that eventuallY swept tbe Gennans out . :
alllndlvlduala and orpnlzallona
wbo worked very bard to usure
of North Africa.
In 1945, Jackie Robinson, the first black baseball player hired by a
•
that tbe Ethnic Fell ran
major league team, waa signed by tbe Brooklyn Dodgers and sent to
smoothly.
Last, but certainly not least,
their Montreal farm team.
In 1972, earthquakes kWed more than 10,000 people In Nicaragua.
tltanb to all the cblldren and
In 19&amp;1, aulclde bomb attaclll on American and French
adulta who participated In the
actlv1tles, and the apectatora for , peace-keeping troope In Beirut killed ttl U.S. Marllles and 58 French
aoldlera. Tbe pro-Iranian terrorlsl group Islamic Jihad took
the)'' blip malre tbe eveAta
lUCCI ful. ·
res~W~.
.
In l988,1lUJW&amp;l'Y fonnally declared an eDd totO years llf.e ommunlat
P~meroy Seaqulcentennlal
Committee rule and proeJUmed ltlelf a republic, WdDIIbe atap tor ~ltlollllll
Mary Powell, CbaJrman
Wettllnl-ltyle democracy Ia tbe Eut Bloe 1111e.

Special recognition' for ·library

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as Virginia remains No. 1

Is 'fairness' ·.o ld whine in new bottle

'
'nle Democratic theme tor the
If you bave a handicapped
.
borne
stretch of · tbe election·
child vlalt tbe Carleton School. I
am sure tltey would be glad to /budget campaign now seems
talk to you. Vote for the levy, help clear. It 18, 'as the front page of
the handicapped to walk, talk the Wall Street Journal called It,
"The Kevin Phillips Scenario."
·and have a better life,
Questions arise: Is II the
Carlton has a program through
which many or tbe handicapped old·ttme religion - or heresy? Is
now working at jobs tbey bave It about redistribution or resent·
been trained tor In stores, res tau· ment? Is It true or false? Will It
rants, mowing and cleaning jobs help or burt Democrats?
Phillips' view, from his new
and taking care of public parks.
book
"The Politics or Rich and
Richard and Jessie Grueser
Rutland, OH 45775 Poor," and as now boned Into a
Democratic tbeme, ls.slmple: In
the 1980s, the greedy rich got
. richer whDe poor people and the
middle class made no progress.
It's not fair. Fix tbe deficit by
all tbe donations and work they taxing tbe rlcb~
But Census Income data,
did to make our Fall Carnival a
llsued
In late September, con·
succeas. .-·
firming
previous statistiCs re·
Hats off to you all,
veals
that
tbe facts behind tbe
Lee Codner, President
Phillips/Democratic
theme are a
Armlntha Norrll, VIce-President
way
from
accurate.
long
Mary Busb, Secretary
In the Reagan-Bush years
Brenda Johnson, Treaaurer
every
Income cohort got richer...,
Jan Hill, Financial Secretary
the
rlclt,
tbe middle class and the
Debbie Rizer, Newspaper
poor.
Reporter
Even tbe Idea that, while all
Portland PTO Officers
proapered, tbe rich prospered
much mote,la at least somewhat
dUuted In tlte Census report.
When taxes, non-cash health
benefits and non-cash govern·
ment programs are taken Into
account, Income Inequality Ia
community''? Your respo~ has much leu than assumed.
beeD everytblq tor wblch we ' Further statistical reflnemeitls.
could bave dreamed! We enjoy
dolq nice things for Dice people,
and you are lbe Greatest! You
bave shown us, that we really
couldn't bave done too much.
. Dear Editor:
Tbe ahowtng of your apprecla· · Special recognition to the
lion from best wishes to lack of
Meigs County Library for aaslat·
litter, reflects lbe character of Inti wtth Dr. Wilhelm's recent
·the area. We are very proud to be
presentatiOn, which was based
part of your community pride.
on the 1850 census. The natlonall·
You bave made QSC (Quality;
ties and the mtaratloli of the
Service aDd Qeanllness) more
settlers Into the area wu made
tban our reapo•lbUity, but an
opportwllty to lbare with titHe clear by the u.te of slides. Dr.
WUhelm'a technique used to
wilD appreciate aucb attribute.
tbe cultural Influence of
Tbanb to eaclt and every one explain
tbe architecture Ill Pomeroy and
of you. The · appreciation you
other ~u of Meigs County,
bave t1town ua can only be
certainly. made tor an excep.
mirrored, by lbe appreciation we
!tonal talk, and enjoyed by all of
bave tor you.
thole who attended. ·
Sincere Tbanb,
The Sacred Hearth Chul'llb and
Tile Staff and Family
lbe Grtce Eplalopal Cburcb bave
RolcoeMlllt
BarckbotfOrpna, wbll:bareatlll
... JolcDclilaJd'a ~( ~ In uae. In commemoration rJ. the
~ Cburcb Oraaa Com·

Appreciates donations
Dear Editor: ·
The Portland Elementary PTO
WQUkl like to thank aiL ·the·
businesses In Portland, Long
~ttom. Racine, SyraCIIIe, Chester, Pomeroy, and Middleport,
OhiO, and Ravensw6od, WV for
l~lr donations to help our Fall
Carnival to be a success.
We would also llketo tbank all
the parents, atudet!ts grandpar·
ents, step-parents, and the Por·
tland Elementary Employees for

Bengals welcome OOds'
retu111, beat Browns 34.-13

Paga · 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middiii!GI't, Ohio
Tuu lay, Octobel 23, 1990
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No. 19 Texas Christian was.
unchanged and No. 20 ·Southern
Cal fell seven spots after losing to
Arizona. The Wildcats rejoined
tbe ratings at No. .21 and fellow
Pac-10 member Oregon moved
up two places to 22nd.
No. 23 Louisville moved up two

places, No. 24 Penn State made .
Its lltst appearance since the_.,
first week of September and No,
25 Texas A&amp;M !ell four spots .,
after lying Baylor.
.•
Dropping outofthe ratings this· ; .
week were Indiana and Michigan . :
State.

Douglas' trainer gives
Holyfield fat ·chance
the start of training for Thursday
By .JEFF HASEN
nlght's defense against No. 1
UPI Sports Writer
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP()
(See DOUGLAS on Par;e 4~&lt;
Even when Buster Douglas was
gorging himself on seconds and ·
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
thirds, the brother of thee heavy446 4524
.
weight champion's mother res$2.75
WSAIIII
Mt\TIJII:£5
SATUIDAT
I SlolaY
'"'"
Is ted twls Ung the fighter's arm
SZ.75 IIARGAIN IUGKT TUUOAY .•
until he cried uncle.
·
OCI I D t i - U
"He worked for 5~ years,"
FRIDAY U.ru nutSDAI J
said J.D. McCauley, who has
7: 15 '9: 15
J • •• "li ,&lt;1' '"litt' 1./o
Mill
been Involved In Douglas' train·
t
Yr1 • Sill MTI.l$.
NliHT11vll;.JJ£AD
J:15
lng since the start of the boxer's
IIATIO li'$-Ul
career nine years ago. "Any·
•
thing he did after .the fight he
deserved."
That Includes the spoils - and
accompanying pastrys, pastas
and puddings - that accompany
the ho)dlng of tlte hea vywelght
championship.
"When the buzzer rang, he
answered It," McCauley said of
r

-~

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FREE
INSPECTION
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SHAVER REPAIR
CLINIC ·

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ALL BRANDS

$395
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OCT. 23
4 TO 1 PM

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INCLUDES: CLEANING. OILING,
ADJUSTING, GREASING.

IAIOIS MAY IE DIOP"D OFF IN ADVANCE
'

992-6491 .
786 North

s.cCNMI
Milklltport,
Ohio

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Tuesday, October 23. 1990

Pomeroy-Middlaport. Ohio

Commentary

By The Bend

I

Discarding football rivalries ~heats fans

PREPARING FOil DOUGlAS - Evuder Holyfield throws a
few Jw In preparation for Tbunday ntcht's heavywetchl IItle
opt wltll James (Buter) Douclal In Las VeJu. Holyfield Is the
tep-rulled coatender for tbe IItle. (VPI)

Douglas...

(Coilllnued from Page

3)

contender Evander . Holyfield. International Boxing Federation
·. ''We're going to buy him a donut title boutagalnst Tony Tucker In
1987 and his heart has been
' 's hop after this one."
- McCauley said h~ never suspect In other flgllts .
·. counted calories and never wor"Buster Is 30 percent better
· i1ed that Douglas could return to now. I know It," McCauley said.
&gt; fighting shape. The boxer, who "In all ways. He's more of a man
weiJhed 231 liz pounds when he now because he knows he belongs
beat . Mike Tyson In Tokyo In there. The ftgbt game Is 85
February, says he got up to about percent mental. Aher you get the
260 pounds while waiting tor the physical part, It's all mental.
You've got to believe In yourself.
bout's date to be set.
"Buster Is a thoroughbred,"
"We were entitled to one free
;- ·. McCauley said. "He's not just a fight . Who dld he ask for?
:run-of-the-mUIGeorgeForeman. Evander Holyflelli. He's not
/ ' When you've got something like afratdo!Holyfleld,notonelota. "
. • thll, you've got to fine-tune it.
McCauley ·said his fighter
:- He's a t,OO percent thoroughbred. shouldn't expect accolades be;. • "We don't care what he .cause they won't come after the
, weighs: Everybody Is blowing Holyfield fight.
·
''It's like we're going to shock
; : :this thing out of proportion. His
•· weight won't make any differ- the world again ," the trainer
:- ence. Buster Is going to plaster said. "We told him three years
: ·: 'this guy (Holyfield) because he's ago that we'd beat Mike Tyson.
·~ _ got'the goocllegs."
Everyone said It .would be
-;;: But what of the ample girth?
because of (Tyson's ex-wife)
Robin Givens. We knew It after
~ "When Tyson walks around one ro\lnd. We knew we'd beat hls
,;,between tights, he's 250 or 260, soc ks 0tt.
r· too," McCauley said. "Holyfield .
"But no matter what happens
~ ~ walks around 195 or 198, even 189 In this tight, we're going to be tn a
;~ ;; and then has to put on weight. no-win situation. When he gets
;-_;, Holyfield Is top heav;,o.
Holyfield, they'll say he beat a
·~-; "Four or five pounds Isn't blown-up tighter. When he gets
:·;:.:; going to make a difference. The Tyson again, they'll say Tyson
:- : ~ boneitlruthtswedon'tknowhow was shot. When he gets big
~~. muchhewelgbs. Wehaven'tput
George (Foreman), tl\ey 'll say
-,;&lt;Buster on a scale one time since he beat an old man.
· be. came Into camp. We don't
"Nobody believes that we
· ·' !!are."
sbould be here, that we were
:. Other than pounds, the biggest lucky. There's a crossroad of
. question around the champion's being lucky and good. No one
~&gt;::=~~o:=:~~~~~a~~ ~: : :;~.l~e Buster credit for

· ·&gt;

By JEFF SHAIN
VPI Sporll Writer
Egos and grudges are pushing out
tradition and fan Interest when It comes to
conege football schedules.
· Twice now In the last two weeks, we have
seen long-time opponents walk off the same
field for the final time, ending good rivalries
because of flimsy reasons that cheat the
fans;
·
Even the almighty dollar can't be blamed.
This time It 's ego, pure and simple.
Notre Dame and Miami have played each
other 19 of the past 20 seasons, with the
series gro\vlng Into the rivalry of the 1980s,
as the Hurricanes became a national
. championship contender and Notre Dame
returned to place among coUege football's
elite.
In each of the last three years, the winner
of the Miami-Notre Dame game has gone on
to finish No. 1 In the ratings, making that
game the key barometer to the national title
race. On Saturday·, tlie Fighting Irish
knocked Miami out of contention with a 29-20
victory.;
But there will be no more Mlaml·Notre
Dame games to capture the Imagination of
the country, no more renewals of the
good-against-evil rivalry that spawned the
"Catholics vs. Convicts" T-shlrts. Despite
repeated attempts by Miami officials to sign
a new scheduling agreement, Notre Dame
doesn' t want anything to do with the
Hurricanes.
"We would like to keep playing them,"
Miami head coach DenniS Erickson said.
"You've got two great programs Involved.
It's a shame It's over.''
·Notre Dame head coach Lou Holtz said the
decision to end the rivalry was made "long
before I got here."
"You look back and If we had dropped
Miami seven or eight years ago, when the
dElClslon was made, no one would haw

cared," he said. "But they have built that
program Into one of the best. This 1*!rles has
caught the fancy o( the country."
But apparently not the fancy of Notre
Dame hierarchy, which finds the rivalry too
heated and · the white hat-black hat .llliage
tiresome.
·
How far has Notre Dame been willing togo
to avoid the Hurricanes? When spots opened
up In .the Irish schedule for 1993 and 1994,
Miami was among the first to apply. Notre
Dame chose Instead to schedule · Florida
State.
·
The official line Is that Notre Dame wants
to spread Its schedule among all the teams
that want to play the Irish, keeping one
opponent from every area of the country.
Yet theschoolchooses to keep playing Navy
and Alr Force year after year.
The last time a Navy-Notre Dame football
game had any significance, Roger Staubach
and Paul Hornung were calling signals for
their teams. Today's players weren' t even
'born when. Staubach and Hornung were
playing college football.
And when was the last time Notre Dame's
game against Alr Force meant anythl)lg? ·
The Parseghlan Era? The Leahy Era? The
Rockne Era? The Hunchback Era?
. The next time Miami appears on Notre ·
Dame's schedule Is Sept. 6,199'1. Oops, that's
Miami of Ohio. Looks Uke the Hurricanes
will have to walt until at least 2016, unless
they meet In the postseason.
"I'm sure they Will be matched up In bowl
games down the road," Notre Dame
linebacker Mike Stonebreaker said.
''Maybe not every year, but I'm sure before
too long."
.
In fact, perhaps the surest way for a bowi
game to guarantee ratings In the 1990,
outside of a national title game, will be to
entice Notre Dame to face Miami.
Penn State also deserves a cur5e for
breaking relations with Syracuse. That

Tuesday, October 23, 1990
Page-6

series goes back 61! years, with the schools
playing each other every year but one since

Busy Bee Class has
dinnner meet ·recently

1922.
.
But that rivalry also Is finished, the victim
of bad feelings between the athletic
~ administrations of the two schools.
Penn State head coach Joe Paterno still
harbors a grudge against Syracuse for
joining the Big East Conference 10 years
. ago, leaving Penn State to latch on to the
Atlantic 10 In basketball before It joined the
BlgTen.
SO when Penn State's football schedule
needed to be cleared out to make room for
future Big Ten opponents, Syracuse was the
.
first to go.
" I have some regrets," Paterno said.
"Not about the series coming to an end, but
about not being llble to convince Syracuse,
Boston College and PittsbUrgh to get out of
the Big East and play In an all-sports
conference. It's not that we don't want to
play Syracuse. We wanted to play them In all
sports - wresting, basketball, everything.
"My problem Isn't with , the Syracuse
football team. My problem Is with Syracuse's athletic director (Jake Crouthal'!.lel) .
Ten years ago, he bad an option to go one
way and we wanted to go In another
direction. We couldn't reconcile our
differences."
Discussions over renewal of the football
series broke down last year when Paterno
demanded six home games over a 10-game
contract. Syracuse wanted a 5-5 spilt.
"I hate tt. I think It's awful that It's
ending," Syracuse head coach Dick MacPherson said. "I don't know why It's
happening and no one can give me a good

reason." .

slon, ' but says the fight Is not
worth the $34.95 price tag.
"I hate to see those other guys
bleed to get what I had," Tyson
said. "I never realized what I
had.
"When I won the title, I was a
boy . Now I'm a man. I have a
totally different outlook. I have
more respect for the title, what It

Cooper'S

stands for."
Tyson became the youngest
heavyweight champion at age 20
when he defeated Trevor Berblck
In 1986. At 24, he Is on the
comeback trail. In his only light
since his Feb. 10 loss to Douglas
In Tokyo, he knocked out his
amateur nemels Henry Tillman
In one round June 16.
Tyson held the title for nearly
four years and nine defenses.
Douglas registered one of the
.biggest upsets In sports history,

Scoreboard ...
NFL standings

WashJngt(JI at N.Y. Giants, 4
p.m,.
ClnrlnMU at Atlanta., 8 p.m .

Amerleu Cealfftaee

T-

l!;aot
WLTP&lt;I. PFPA

Mooday, O&lt;t. 19
L.A. Rams at

Mlaml.. ............. .5 I 0 .833 125 83

Pltt~urgh , ~p. m .

Bullalo ..... ,....... 5 I 0 .833 160 126
lachnapolls, ..... .2 4 0 .333 98 1~
N.Y. Jell .......... 2 50 .2~ 133 178
N.,. En1land .....1 5 0 .167 90 169

T1'808actions

Cealnl

Clnolnnau ..........5
Hou•oa ............ 4
Ptttlburtlh ........ 3
Cl..,.llnd ......... 2

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2

o.714 188 166

By tlaled Preaaln&amp;ernatlonal
Bueball
Baltimore- DeClined toexercl!l(&gt;
1991 op11on on contract of pitcher
Joe Price.
Seattle- Exlended thecontracts

3 0 .l71 169 135
4 0 .129 109 128
50 .286 Ill 173

Weot
L.A. Ralders ......6 I 0 .857 147 99
Kanou City ...... 4 3 o .571 167 114
Seottle .............. 3 4 0 .429 144 13S
Denvt'r ...... .... .. . 3 4 0 .129 168 t78

of coaches Gene Clines. Rusty
Kuntz, Mike Paul and Bill
Plummer for \he 1991 seasm.
BUke&amp;ball
Atlanta - Cui guards Steve
Bardo and Scott Haffner.
New Jersey - Waived forward

Sea Diego .... ..... 2 S 0 .286 123 132

NotlooaiCool......,r
BMI
Teom
WLT Pct.PF PA
N.Y. Giants ..... 6 o o 1.000 150 86

,..
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WUhlngtCOI .......4 2 0
Dalla1 ............... 3 4 0
Pbllaclolpltla .... 2 4 o
Pboentx ............ 2 I 0
Ceolnl

.667 134 82
.1 29 90 135
.333 130 132
.333 79 111

Tamp~ Bay ...... t
Detroit. .... .. ...... 2
Grren Bay ..... .. 2
Mlnttft ... ........ l

.S71147 141 •
.333 1i1169
.3331~3 146
.167 uo 135 .

Tom Domako.

, Orlando - Wiil.w d center Wal-.
'-ce Bryanr and guard/ forward
Mark Plan sky. ·

'Seattle - Released forward!!
Mike Gtcnl and Mike Htgglns.

·"'Wuhlngton- Released lorward
Ron Draper

Chlao«o .......... ,.~ I 0 .833 U2 . n

,-

30
40
t 0
50

....

Son Franttoco ..e o o 1.000 15f 101
L.A : Rama ....... 2 4 0 .333 1&amp;4 173

;

A!llnta , ....... ,... 2 f 0 .333 161 183
-Orlooll .... 2 f 0 .333105123

..,.nU)o'opmr
Mlamll7. New Enrtond 10

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l!toafQ'IIIottll
Don..,. 27, IJMII&amp;napcjlll7
WUitllfll• 13. Plllladelpbla 7
Dollll 17. Tampo Boy 13

Bullllo 30, N.Y. Jeta27

Houot• 23. New OrleonaiO

~ ~-

\

· ~aece
Coastal Car dina - Named Cart

· MCAiaose sports lntonnatlon
dlrect(X'.

Larry Baumann director of sports
lnfotmatlon.
Tenn~e - Reinstated defensive end Kasey Rodgers, line-

backer Dewayne Dotson and tallback Kellh Je,.r.
Foadllll
Chicago - Placed safety Maurice Dou1ll11 on Injured reserve.
Cleveland -

Aclivated auard

Dan Flke o!f the physiClllly unable
to perfonn Hat: placed guard Ben
Jeffersm on tnjuftd reserw.
Green Bay - Placed oaenslve
tackle ~ Ruetta:en on InJured

L.A . Ram1 u. Atlanta 2t
N.Y. Olanta 20, Pb01tttx 19

rt&gt;ttrw.
,
HoustM - Signed auar&lt;f Bruce
Matthews to a 4-year contl"lct

~A . ~~1U,Son~~9

Boeker

9eotUel9, Konou City 7

San Frudaco 27. Pllllllu!lh 7
....,.,. . . .It

Clndnnatl3f, CIMiand t3

.....,.tiel.

II

llt&amp;tlaloat New Enrtand, 1 p.m.
Detroit at New Orleans, 1 p.m .. .
Miami at Indianapolis, 1 p.m.
MlaDMcU YJ. Green Sily al

Mll'lillultA!e, 1 p.m.
N.Y. Jets at Hou!1111, 1 p.m.
Pbllldelpltla ot Dallu, I p.m.

Cl,evelancl •• S.n Frandsco, 4

p,m.
•
Chlcalo It Phoenlx, 4 p.m.
Tampa Boy at San Otego, 1 p .m .

&lt;

H

and guard Mike .

Morrison.

Nf"W York Unlwrstty- Named

-··-...-

,

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ex~nston .

Edm&lt;llt&lt;D - Traded center
Vlldlmlr lluzlcka to Boolcll lor
tuturt conaideratlons.
MlnDHota - Catlett up gO&amp;Itendtr Karl Takko fnm Kalama-

zoo

of the lnternaUonal Hockey
League; tent goaltender Jarmo

Myllys to Kalamazoo.
Ol,...ploo
U.S. Olympic Cnmmlll!e - .
Nimed Ron Fraser 1992 Olympic
baseball coach :
lloc ....
Milwaukee ()'IPSL) • -

Signed

mldlloldero Dean Kelly and Kel!l)
Fulk_,
·

II.U.

By GENE CADDES
UPI SpartA Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Ohio State head coach John
Cooper Monday missed the opportunity to talk about the first
Buckeye win In more than a
month.
Cooper underwent surgery
Sunday to repair a painful
ruptured disc In his back and was
replaced by assistant head coach
Jim Colletto at his weekly press
luncheon.
"I just spoke to Coach Cooper
about an hour ago and he's going
to be out of the hospital a lot
quicker than the doctors think,"
Collette said. "He's bouncing
around and he's already looked
at video tapes of the (Purdue)
game Saturday. I think he's
doing just fine."
But It was uncertain whether
Cooper wlll be able to resume
some sort of coaching duties for
this week's home game against
Minnesota.
Colletto, who also Is the Buckeyes' offensive coordinator, said
· Saturday's 42-2'wln over Purdue,
the first Buckeye victory since
Sept. 15, was a welcome one.
"It's good to play a game when
you can go out and beat a team
like you should," said CoUetto. "I
think the Purdue game got us on
the right track. When It was 7-2
and we weren't doing much, 1
was getting a little an lAy .
''The team played a lot better
as a collective unit Saturday,"
added Colletta. ''l'hat's something we've tJeen striving for. It
will be the same· thing this week
- talking to the players about
playing as hard as they can,
playing up to their level of ability
and not worrying so much about
who they're playing, but how
they perform as an Individual
and as a group."
·,
One of the Buckeyes' slx
touchdowns against Purdue
came on a GO-yard pass from
flanker Jeff Graham to quarter·
back Greg Frey, who, although
unchallenged, dove Into the end
zone from the score.
Colletta said the Graham to
Frey TD pass worked just as he
thought It would.
.
"We had seen other teams run
reverses on them, ·, said Colletta.

"When the reverse man (Graham) ran across the field, their
defensive back chased him,
"We thought, why not give It tb
Graham, an ex-quarterback, and
let him throw It back to Frey. It
worked exactly how we drew I!
up on the board. We told · Jeff
(Graham) oil Friday It's like
lhrowlng a 3-and-2 fastball with
the bases loaded. You only get
one chance.
"When trick plays work,"
added Collette, ''they're really a
lot of fun."
Frey and Graham were selecte.d the offensive players of the
game and fullback ScQ,ttle Graham was honored as the offensive "lineman'' of the game.

MEIGS MARAUDER ··BAND • qualified recently for the
Marching Contest. PiCtured, left to right, are band members
Clarke, Derrkk Miller, Mary Stein, April Hudson, Chris Hall, Kevin
Taylor, and Ryan Cowan.

Meigs High Marauder
band has superior rating
The Meigs Marauder Band
received a superior rating last week
at lhe Portsmoulh East Blue and
White Malching Contesl held at
Spartan Stadium in Portsmouth.
The band's score of 237 points and
live superior ratings and one excellent rating qualified the Marauder
Band for lhe State Malching Con·
test for the first time in several
years. In addition to the slate
qualificatiiJ!I. the Meigs. Band wone
. the foUowmg award tn Class B
competition; first place . band,
second place music, second place

.

but Tyson said he was lucky.
combined $32 milliOn, Including a
"He lucked out because I
record S24 mUIIon for the chamwasn't In the right frame o.f
piOn, Is because Mirage owner
· mind " Tyson said. "In the right
Steve Wynn "messed up" by
!ram~ or mind, I'd stop him. I
bidding so much.
knocked him down with one
"It I fought them It would be
punch. I'm not angry. There's · worth $50 mlllion or $60 million,"
nothing anybody can take away
Tyson said. "It the public defrom me. I'm still on top."
cided how much the (DouglasThat was·news to Douglas, who Holyfleld) fight was worth,
owns the title.
they'd have to fight In a little
"He still hasn't gotten over the square box In a comer of Central
.whipping he took In February, "
Park."
Douglas said.
Douglas and TYson have alTyson refused to pick a winner, ready agreed to a 1991 rematch If
but said he was leaning toward Douglas wins Thursday. Douglas
Douglas because of his size.
would be paid ~ million and
"I would Jove to see him Win," Tyson $16 million.
·
Tyson said. "Basically, he should
It Holyfield wins, he Intends to
go right after the guy. That's fight George Foremall. Tyson' s
what I would do, I would go right promoter, Don King, Is trying to
after the smaller guy."
have boxing's ruling organlza·
Tyson said the only reason tlons order Holyfield to fight
Douglas and Holyfield will earn a Ty5on next.
"Go for all the gusto,•• Tyson
said. "Fight me for big bucks. It
tbey're confident they can beat
me, then they can fight George."
Tyson said he would rather not
see any champtori stripped be- .
cause he believes 'there sbould be one heavyweight champ. But he
says It does not matter because
"Scottie Graham has blocked
",!!ventually I'll unify the title."
so well the last two games, we
Tyson will become the No. 1
had to find a way to give him
challenger after Thursday,
something," said Colletta.
prompting speculation he will
The Buckeyes also scored on
cancel
the Stewart bout rather
an option play, when fresllman
risk
losing.
The fight has been
Robert Smith took a pitch .from
pushed
back
once because of a
Frey and raced 69 yards lor Ohio
cut
Tyson
suffered
In trallitng. '
State's first TD.
said
he
Is loo~tng
But
Tyson
"We've practiced It (the opforward
to
fighting
Stewart.
tion) for tbree years now and
"I'm In great shape," he said.
figured It was about time to run
"Ready to fight ."
It," said Collet to.
Colletto said the Buckeyes
should go Into Saturday's Minne~tm tf e~..
sota game at near full s!fength.
l'Uin•uc tl Ju•run
Even tight end Jeff Ellis, who
missed the Purdue game with an
... ----·-·~-·-ankle Injury, Is expected back.

.....

-·.. _
. __ .. _
.. _____
--... ..... -_ .......
__.. _
~UIH

Hawks beat Celtics 127-122 WORCESTER, Mass. (UPI)Dominique Wilkins poured In a
game-high 34 points and Glenn
Rivers added 24, Including a
tie-breaking bucket with 30 se·
conds left, Monday to lift the
Atlanta Hawks to a 127-122
exhibition victory over the Boston Celtlcs at the Worcester
CenQ'Um.
The win raised lbe Hawks'
preseason record to 4-2 and was
Boston's first toss, !lropplng· the
Celttcs' mark to 3-1.
· With the score tied at 122-122,
Rivers cu !Inside for a back-door
layup, Pl!ltlng the Hawks ahead
to stay.
'
Larry Bird missed a short
Jumper with eight seconds left.
Wilkins hit one ·or two free
throws, making It 125-122.
Boston's Rente Lewis's threepointer with two seconds left was
long and Atlanta's Sidney Moncrief Jl'll bbed the rebound to seal
the Hawks • win.
•

Sports briefs
Marathon
Joan Benoit Samuelson, the
gold medalist In the first
women's Olympic marathon and
the second fastest, femal marathoner ever, has Joined the field
for the field torthe21stNewYork
1\farathon, She joins Grete Waltz,
Veronica Marot, Klm Jones,
Wanda Panfil and Katrtn Done:

v

~··

.

.

Kevin Wlllls scored 18 points
tor Atlanta and first-round
draft pick Rumeal Robinson
chipped In wltb 17.
Bird and first-round draft
choice Dee Brown, a 6-foot-1
guard from Jacksonville, paced
Boston with 19 potnll apiece.
Atlanta center Moses Malone
was not with the team, sidelined
with a leg Injury.

111 MUll

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_,_

bym~ sing
Dan Hayman and the Faith Trio
will be singing at the 10:30 a.m.
service at the Rutland . United
. Melhodist Churt:h Sunday. The
Rev. Arthur Crabln:e, pastor, invites the public.

.

bazaar
.
A holiday bazaar will be held _in
· the Asbury United Methodist
Church basement on Nov. 2 and 3
from 9 a.m. 10 5 Jl.m. There will be
crafts and baked goods for sale and
· soup and sandwiches will be ser· .
ved.
Meeting date changed
The monthly meeting . of the
Meigs County Litter Conttol Advisory Board has been rescheduled
for Oct. 30 at 7:30 p.m. All members are aslced 10 anend.
True Friends reuaion

The 16th annual reunion of the
Old Friends and True Friends was
held recendy at lbe .Star Mill Park
in Racine.
A covered dish dinner and even·

Community Calendar items ap•
pear two dsys before an event and

the day of that event Items must be
received in advance 10 insure publication in the calendar.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - The Ohio E!a Phi
Cllapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
will meet TUesday at 7 p.m. at the
Meigs County Poblic Library.
Bring canned goods for a needy
family.
HARRISONVILLE - The HarrisonviDe Senior Citizens meet
Tuesday 5:30 p.m. at !he IOwn
house. Snacks served. All members
urged 10 auend.
COOLVILLE - The Coolville
VFW Post 3478 will have games
beginning Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
Cooville Lions Club Building in
Coolville.
·
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY • Free Clothing Day
at Salvation Army from 10 a.m. until noon, Area residents in need of .
· clothing are welcome.
ORANGE TWP. • Orange
· Township Trustees meet in special
,session on Wednesday at 7 p.m .
The meeting will be held at tbe
home of Clerk Dorothy Calaway.
: MIDDLEPORT - Kay Cecil, lo·
cal antique dealec, will conduct a ·
'free antic:~ue and collectible identifi·
cation clinic on Wednesday at the
. Middleport Arts Council chambers
· 'a t 6:30 p.m. Those auending may .
:bring two items to be lllendfied as
to age, make or type.
. SYRACUSE • . The Symcuse
Nazarene Churt:h will show a .film
on "The Occult ia ROck Music" on
Wednesday at 7' p.m. The public is
Invited 10 aucncl.
·
• RtJTLAND • The Rolland
Friendly Gardeners wiD meet Wed·
jlelday It 7:30 p.m, at the honie of

Office Hours
Monday through Friday

9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Suite 13,
PVH Medical Office Building

(304) 675-7700

IJI.I PLEASANT VALLEY HOSrrfAL
...... "" family ol profeuionals

.

!ng meal was enjoyed by all followmg grace by Tom Bowen. . . .
The day was spent rem1mscmg
and _lhe exchange of pictures of
previOus years.
The binhdays of .Mary and Tom
Bowen were recogotzed.
The reunions are held annually
on the second Sunday of Oc10ber.
Attending were Mary and Tom
Bowen, Mary and Walter· Grueser,
Bill and Mary Russell, Eddie Sis·
son, Cecilia MilCh, Marge Reuter,
George Harris, all of Pomeroy;
June Sayre and Joan Mescher,
Syracuse; Jean and James Roush,
New Haven, W.Va.; Kathryn and
Allen Reeves, Cincinnati; Peck
Jones, · Minersville; John and
Blanche Grueser, Parkersburg,
W,Va.; Nora and Denver Rice,
Middlepon; Mary and Ed Farley,
Newport, Mich.; Phylis and Erme
Balcer, Racine.
Free clothing day
Free Clothing Day will be held at
the Salvation Army in Pomeroy on
Thursday from 10 a.m , until noon.
All area residents in need of cloih·
ing are welcome 10 come.

Community calendar

(~ ~·~~------===:.,__)

Internal Medicine

auxiliary, first place soloist ' honors
were awarded to Ryan Cowan and
Chris Hall, second runner up to
Grand Champion, ·and most · outstanding show design over-all.
The Marauder Band uaveled to
Portsmouth West and placed third
in Class B competition. The band
also qualified for Slate contest a
scone time at ihe west competition.
The Marauder Band is uder !he
direction of Mr. Toney Dingess, assisted by John Va~ Reeth, ~ag
Sponsor Kathy Price and F1eld
Commander Coach Susan Clark. "

Group of AA and Alanon will meet
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Sacred
Heart Catholic Church. For more
information calll-80()-333-5051.
MIDDLEPORT - The Women's
rcllowship of Meigs County Churches of thirst Will meet at tne
Middleport Church of Chris! on
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. A planning
session will be held for World
Community Day.
·
RACINE - The Racine A!llerican
Legion Auxiliary will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. a1 the post
home in Racine.

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

, POMEROY • The

f

A receprion was held recently in Darrell and Nonna Hawthorne.
Jim anc,J Alice (Ritchie) . She is a graduate of Eastern High
Hawthorne who were united in School and the University of Rio
marriage Qll Sept. I i n Virginia Grande. She is a licensed soc;ial
Beach, Va.
.
worker and is employed as a
The reception \VliS held in the Habilitation Specialist II wilb the
Masonic Hall in Chester.
Meigs County Board of MRIQD.
He is a graduate of Eastern Haw- She is the daughter of Roger and
thorne and is the owner of Haw- Carolyn Ri~ehie.
·
_
thorne Logging. H~- is the son of

honor .of

LEEANN WESTFALL

'

1\

. "Rocl&lt;fober" is almost over, but the beat• goes on!
Jazz up the holidays by opening your
1991 Christmas Club at Peoples Bank.
Simply make 49 weekly payments and we'll make the
final payment for you ... it's a great way to save!

·OPEN YOUR
1991 CHIUSTMAS CLUB

NOW AND -RECEIVE
A FREE GIFT!
'

$5, _$10, AND $20 CLUBS
Receive this lovely Victorian style
photo frame made of fme _silver plate .
An elegant way to frame your
favorite Christmas memory! ·

$1, $2, AND $3 CLUBS
Choose from a selectlqn of our
favorite gifts from years past:

There oltould be opeclol cw ln•n·
••u:e for more m1tureuter.-.v.a.

ANTIQUE FINISH SANTA ORNAMENf
BRASS CHAMBERSTICK .
BRASS AND GLASS HURRICANE LAMP

Nowtherelo:
lt'1 State Auto Companloe' Medii·
iot Auto policy.
II you han bad no ...,letlono orotfoult acaltlenll for tine_,. ,;, at lull 21 ,.,. old, you aauld
be quttllfled to become • Medellot
. policy holder, onjoylng.-alll, ,..
cluced. r1ta1.

And If you ••• mlclclle-lled tU141, you'll get the lli~~Mt rate
llrook of ell.

Med::r:"·

Wh•t'o more, 11 •
cyltolder you ••• not ch

for

, .... flrot .................. effwctlve
lntmedlltoly. too. Tit..., no tine
yMr waiting period to quollfy, on co
you e Medlllot policy.
.

·Coli uo obout tltlo cor l n -througlt fcir oafe drlv. ..

(QUANTITIES ARE,LIMITED, SO DON'T OELAY!)
•

1991 CHRISTMAS CLUBS
BEGIN
OCTOBER 22ND!
\

'

PEOPLES

We Make Beautiful Music Together/

THURSDAY

Valley Drive, Point.Pleasant, W, Va. 255SO
"

Reception held recent}y for Hawthornes

••••rv• treferr•• ret11

Curie Morris.

'.

STUDENT OF THE WEEK • Allea Ward bas been seleeted at stu·
dent of tbe week at Meigs Junior High School for math and spellldg.
He is pictured with teacher, Mrs. Vicki Hughes.

Heaven· LeeAnn
Westfall,
daughter of Roger and Sheila
Westfall, Reedsville, celebrated her
first binhday re&lt;;ently with a pany ·
at McDonald's in Vienna, W.Va.
Auending were hec mother, sisters, Tmcey, Michelle and Heather
Westfall, grandmother Faii'y Foster,
Vienna; Lisa Foster and Jessica;
Vienna. W.Va.; Doris Kin~ and
dreggie, Rachel and Bnuany,
Coolville;
Robert
Lawrence,
Reedsville;
Donanne
B.oyd,
Parlcerburg, W.Va.; Jamie and
Brandi Riebblet, Plrkerburg, W.Va.
Sending gifts were Teresa
Lawrence and Wayne Shamp.

·Meigs area announce:ments

i

Randall F. Hawkins, M.D.

Gwinnie White, Ruth Ebecsbach,
Elizabeth Slaven, Pooch Brewer
and guest Jim Brewer, Rosemary
Lyons, Belly Denny and ~tty
Gilkey.'
A shopping trip 10 the Hun·
tington Mall is planned for Nov. 8.

CelebrateS
birthday

It can be summed up In one word, coachegos. And It's not a good reason. In fact, It
stinks. Nobody really wins In these petty
conflicts. And, In the end, everybody loses.

,. our

trip and lunch at Bonanza in Jack·

son oli OcL 9. Members there were

..

k ee'llQ h. on• from
e
r!'"" .
· .
:~~------------...discussing Ohio ·state victory
8 .......01ery

The class enjoyed a shopping

The Busy Bee Class of the Middleport First Bapdst Church met
recently for lunch at Dale's in Gallipolis.
·
Attending were Dorothy Evans,
Betty Denny, Lillian Demosky,
Pooch Brewer, Ruth Ebersbach,
Beulah · White, Gwinnie White,
Nora Jordan, Betty Gilkey, and Jim
Brewer, a guest.

_Tyson vows to defeat Douglas-Holyfield winner
By DAVE RAFFO
UPI Sports Writer
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI)
Mike Tyson said Monday he
hopes Buster Douglas retains his
heavyweight title Thursday
night so he can win back hls
crown irom Douglas.
Tyson predicted he would
regain his title even If Douglas
falls to defe!lt Evander Holyfield
Thursday night.
· "Whoever fights me next, Is
gonna get ... kicked," Tyson said ·
In a telephone conference call
from ·Atlantic City, N.J ., where
he was farther than he has been
from a heavyweight title fight In
four years.
He Is training for a Dec. 8 bout
against Alex Stewart and said he
Is unlikely to attend Thursday
night's bout. Tyson probably will
watch on pay-per-view televl-

The Daily Sentinel

MASON

POINT PLEASANT

773-5514

675-1121

NEW HAVEN

882-2135
MEMIIEA F.D.I.C.

~lkloy

\)

••
•

•
_j'
I

�Mrs.

Fult~

!

ne ..... I'IJieCI tor 11 ,_, or

...,.11011 !*CO IIIII l"IIIJIIIity,
whil:ll made ha' 111e 11r11 . . in hisloly. She lte&lt;•lk'
1Upm11e ruler ill 1490 B.C.IIICI was
the ricbelt,- powaNJ lracb'
ha' lime. Her BOOd clccd8 and senSllional achicw:menu Lid beauty
are llil1 di.,lnec! in Egypt IDday.
Hlubeplat ruled brilliantly but 1Jcr
half-llotberoverttuewherandilis
believed she died by poison. l'l:ace
ended wilh her
·Roll c:all was 1118wcred with
JJICillbers and guests telling of a
sign of liiCicnt EnPt in llic 20th
century. The T!OStess served

Mn. Oaqc Jlllc.,clt lr.,
' pr '1,« • dil; me CWJI IJid weit como1 lhe - - . . and dlrcc
: a-, Mn. Hany Clmher, Mrs.
~ Lee
.-1 Mrs. Paul ·
' Smart, Sbo tbanbd die boAT for
' -llli'linl die club. . ·
r Mn,
Buck J1¥C I brief
iDIIIbt ber liCe up ID Ibis lime.
' Mn. 0:
BrWill ftlllirwed the
boci: ~by Evelyn Wells.
• T1iis ill
ola who
: was Queen
BIYPl lhe
· · 3,500 yell1 qo. Tile IUihor
OVC!I' 30,000 miles doing · refresluneniS.
' r n1 cUor tbe book.

McC-.
B&amp;ea
or

!

':''•vcled

:

·Jury assesses '$12 mllllon.

hosts Literary Oub

ne .......,., 11rt 1 n ., e1111
:::: Mill ill 11e •c rec II) at die
• ~~~-. or Mrs. aII'IIR PIW.

'

Tuudev. Oetolleo ~3. 1890

8 1he D It 81 1tfnll

, Psg

against white · supremacists

or

death:

• ·-

: Cultural programs presented

Business Services

PORTLAND, Ore. (UPJ) -A

·

DAVm IIV'ftON

Hutton in Who's Who

chloter had made.
1'hc

Jury Monday as-led $12.5 mU·
lloD ID damapa aplnlt two
Southern Callfomla wlllte aupremaclall, 1'111111&amp; that they' ·
Incited the murder of cif ao
Oreaon black man.
The jury foUDd that Tom
Metzger and hll son, Jolu).
Incited the 1988 beatlilg death of
an Ethiopian student outside his
Portland . apartment. Southern·
civil rights lawyer Morris Dees
badsuedtheMell&amp;'erslnhopesof

Portland apartment by lbree
racist aklnheadl.
The lawsuit, Which SOIIIIhl than
$10 mUllon In damage~, said

Met~,hlsson,John,andlhelr

organization, known by the acr~ .
nym WAR. seota YOIIIII CaiUorn1a skinhead to Portland to
recruit people to their caUJe. The
lawsuit says Dave Mazzella, the
Metzgers' one-time follower who
was the star witness for . the
plaintiffs, encouraged Pordand
skinheads to assault mlnorltl8,

~.':!7'..::~!::n~~P- the •e~~:~;U:h~a:!~~~~;a;-~

.

.

- ,.._ 1 _

and Maurilhl Nelson

-~IIU'II

::.o.

rep:;,

'Gifts from Bible' program
~_
at Friendly Circle meeting

1.ong guest
speater at

· ·Qub
R. Otary

.c

=

&gt;

or

the

o(

I

.

David Huuon, a 1990 graduate · The panel awarded $10 mUllon 'own lawyer. used a black lunch·
or
Alexander High School, has In punitive damages and more box during an hour·long closiJii
011
!.. r.:Ho!:
.. S•·"•• ·Yiour~•. •....t .the~eeded· comitem.ms ~aecorthere::: been listed in the.24th annual cdi· than $2 mnllon In other damages. argument to symbolize the case.
---- - · • llurlntm-.., u•
''
lion of "Who's Who Among
Themoneywillgotothefamlly Putting the box on a podium In
· ; at tbe receet meeting of the Xi jntheMiddlcEastBMIDbetumecl . AmerieanHighSchooiStuclents".
ofthemanbeatentodeatbwltba frontofthejury,Metzgersaldlt
~ 0... Mu Chillier, Bell Sigma in at the ilext meeting. Barbara
Now •"-''•• Hockin• nclmi· baseball bat by .t hree Oregon repreienled the case against
: 'P,hi Sonlrity bclcf at lhe home of Black infonnecl !he group lhat the cal Col;,ii:roo is ~ lOll of sklnheada.
·
him. As he argued against the
: ·A.Jt Kniglll
Prescription
Shop
had
donated
and Gl · H
f
AI
·
~
,..,., Altins _,ided atlhe meet· nUIIICiOUS useful items.
Everett
ana. utton o The jury received the case plaintiffs' case, he repeatedly
_,
.-Harris
the ·
f bany.
earlier In the day after Tom tapped the boX, sayiJii It was the
~ log in which I commiD!icalion from
was
wmner o
Only S penlClll of aU studeniS Metzger called the suit a ground- vessel Into which the other side
1 In~
the selling . !he
n Beat
from
•.......: •I 22•000 ' high 1ess vendetta ·and ,waved an had poured Its evidence.
~. of.......,books was
Winners in ·the Halloween cos"''""'ca
...,....
schools 11M honored in the bQolc empty black lunchbox to symbol·
Toward the end of his argo. A tbank·you 1101e read from llliiiC contest were Jackie Hoover,
h
.,_ .,_. R.N
· her --'est; u....; ""oods
.....
rae
year.
lze
the
evidence
against
him.
menl,
Metzger opened the box
1
,,.,nna, ... ,...,
.. cxpCSSing
~~ · ·--, "'
• ug_
EldenRosentbal,alawyerfor andwavedltatthejury,saylnglt
; &amp;PJIICCiation of the donation the MaiB'isha Nclaon, prettiest; and
the dead inan's family, angrily showed there was no meaningful
~
.Barbaia Welsh, funnicsl
charged In response that case against him.
Metzger exploits young people by
"It's just a lot of nothing put
persuading them to attack ml· Into this sinister black box," he
i
norltles. Rosenthal asked the said.
·
jury · to · "strangle'' Mell&amp;'er's
Me17&amp;'er said Seraw was
The Middlcpon Pomeroy Rotary efforts by hitting him with a large killed In a tragic bu 1
Club
. met recently • with ~ial . damages award.
"spontaneous" street fight, and
.' .
guest spealw. Senator Jm Michael . After the courtroom argo- he charged that Dees saw the
; , · Mary
F!izabrJh
~
Werner is again in the hospitll in Long
ments, the jury of 10 willies, a · event simply as a "tremendous
lloCd • jiiOgi8JII fmm "Gifts SL Louis. A c:anl was signed for
~ touched · 011 .CCOJIOIIIic Japanese- Amerlcao and a Ha· opportunity" to hinder Metger's
;.- ~ lhc Bible" by Ennen Reaves Elizabeth Fick who is willi Evelyn dcvclopmcnt for Aooalachia Ohio wallan retired to consider
activities.
• of
ir 1:Ja11 for lhc OcloiiCr meeung
Young in Sidney.
with onc key issue education. He case. The verdict required aereeDees's Southern !'overly Law
; Pricadly CiJde, Trinily Chm.
Plans for tile fall and the boliday explained that be was on the com- men! by nine Joron.
Center filed the suit on· behalf or
i She S)IOte or 111e Jift or t11e S!III)U weJe discussed. Basket Ol- mi!ICC 10 help Jeevaluare the way Metzger was accused In the Seraw's
relatives along with the
I gotl'll vine M rec:onled Dl lhe Book
den are being received. Staple schools are funded. The pescnt wron&amp;ful death suit of Inciting Anii·Detamatton League of the
· of Joaah. Jonah Wlllled it ID be a foods will be
B'nal B'·rlth. In a Similar case,
ID lhe chuJCh melhod has become ouldaled the 1988 beating · death of Mu·
: reminder of tile ~ he h L ned, in tile coming
for sllaring in making the qU' schools ctigililc lugeta Seraw, an Ethiopian stu· Dees won a $7 million Judgment
; lhal Ood's Jove is ..uv-1. Poems !he commiDiity. Unison . prayer for laiger funding monies. His goal dent who was kUied outside his against an Alabama Ku Klux
( and praycrcompleled tile prop11111. closed the IIICCting.
.·
·
to help come up wilh a plan to
' Gay Pelrin opened tile mcetiag · Peggy Harris and Norma I,oulse is
wilh • poan, MAle We W'umers?" Jewell served a dessert c:owse ID help aU schools as they truly ~
fiDiding. He also told of a study that
· Reports o111cen and lhirteen members. Jadc-o,lanlm was done by the Dqaaucnt or
; 1epoill of tile sick made. Micky deooraled the refreshment table.
Education that shoWed Ill alannins
operation of schools makes us II! tues, because four mUis are
B)' ....... Carpeaw
.
need for building repairs and
the bottom two percent of dis· ~Qing off the tu duplicate In
S.perlatelldell&amp;
repllccment in this section of Ohio.
tttcts as far as mUiage for December because the bonds tor
After a short descriptiOn of !he
We have recently received our operation In the slate Is construction of the high school '
four-step plan to aid the economic reaulta
wlll be paid off at that time.
from leltlnl which was concerned.
r
conditions or Appalachia Ohio, done last
Many of the Meigs High School
Our
stpdenl
attendance
rate
Is
year by the State
The 811111111 Elwood P. and Luella Judie and Darin YOIDig, wcsi ScnalOr Long 811swcred questions
92.17%,
which
places
us
In
the
senlon
were bom the year the
' Belle Lievilll reunion held at Coll!lllbia. W.Va.; Bei'Dard and Cor club members and ~ meeting Department of Education. Stu·
last
operl!tlng
levy for additional
b6ttom
5%
of
districts
across
the
denta In gradee 4, 6, and 8 all took .
• !he Lclart Community Center in Mary LiCViiiJ!, Harold and.Baitlara lllljoumed.
funds
was
passed,
and were
an ability test which meaaured slate.
: Leran, W.va. rccendy wilh S6 at- z;trklc, Gloria B. Roush, and Paul
entering
kindergarten
the last
We
are
three
students
short
of
the potential for learning. This
and Carolyn Hesson, ·New Haven,
; tending. A covered dish dimer result Is sometimes called the having exactly 10%. of our stu- time the voters passed a renewal
: served followed by an afternoon of ·W.Va.; Lawrence, Pauicia and
dents · In .a special education of a levy In 1977.
·
.
child's IQ.
• visiting and drawing for door Mary Gmy, Lecn, W.Va.; Eugene
Voters
have
approved
three
program.
The
national
average
same
period
of
time
During
the
: prizes.
and PattY Roush, l'alkelburg,
different
"Stay
at
Home"
levies
last
year
was
5%.
.
,
the
same
atudents
·
took
an
; Alleiiding wm Bill and W.Va.; Christy and Micbacl OhliliInspection was held wilh Esther
All of this Information Is given which did not lncreJse talies but
•) Madeline Roush• Wencli King. Ed· ger, MOIDII Alto, . W.Va.; Pllly, . Harclcn, Disirict 13 Deputy, when achievement test wblch mea• die Casto, Emillild Dorotha Gray, Missy, Jenny and BiUcy Rccvcs, the Chester Council 323 Daughters sured bow much and what the • to show that we are doing a ·did get back what was being
•~ Gray IIIII family, Lewis and Albany;
Tim
Mace, New of America met reoendy with student had learned or achieved. dece!lt Job In educating our overpaid to the state.
The Issue will appear as a new
When the ability of our stu'· students and to give you some
• David Lleving, Bobby and Pauline . Marshfield; John Burdette, Coolvil- Beulah Maxey presiding.
tu
Issue, butonceagaln I warit to
additional
Information
concerndents
was
compared
with
their
: Ueving, KD IIIII S~~~tey Hall, and le; and BiD, Belly, Chrissy and Joe
The J .P.C. read Psalm 23 and
emphasize
that passage of the
Ing
!be
dlsttlct.
Yes,
we
know
;Tom Brown, aU of Ldlwt, W.Va.; Weaver, Middlepon.
pledges to the Christian and achievement In reading, lanthat
we
can
make
·
ImproveIssue
wUI
not result In an
guage,
and
math,
a
larger
·
• Allert and Ada Oldalu:r and Alice
The 1991 reunion will be held at American Flags were given in
Increase
In
taxes.
Your support
: Licving, Mason, W.Va.; Jim, the same location on the last Sun- IDiison. There. were 23 members percentap of our students at ments, as some of the lnforina·
of
the
4
mnlwue
wUI
be greatly
each grade level did as well or lion Indicates, and we are mak·
; Rom. u11, Pam, t-roY and Amanda day of September.
and five visitors present.
appreciated.
lng efforts to Improve student
• Orea1is, Sandyville, W.Va.; Jack,
The death oC Brenda Cunnin- hlgber than expected than the
achievement.
state
average
and
,the
national
gham's mother, Marie Thomas, was
This Is where you as parents,
average or tholle who did a• well
reponed.
.
business
people and members of
or
higher
thali
expected.
Rcoeived officially were Esther
the
community
enter the picture.
We
were
also
given
some
other
&amp;r~tt t1 Aatt
Smith, state councilor; Dorothy
''
~fllflllllf r/IIIWI•r
It
Is
a
known
fact that educa·
lnl'ormatlon
about
our
dtstttclln
' · J - E. Allhop, PII.D. will be
Ritchie, past statc councilor; Eslher
tlon of our children Is the best
; the 1111 n= at lhe Thursday after.
Hanlen, Malgaret Cotterin, national comparison with other dlatrlcts
CUTI!'ICA1I OF. COIIPUAIICI
,
_....,__..
...,_,.
solution
for inany of the probIn
the
alate.
These
are
factors
: . - mwU. of the SIIJIJu.l group
representative md state credential
, ror wreh•s of vldiml oC
which make a conttlbutlon to lema In the world today. But
commiuec.
•' .\lzllllinler's di•se and .elliiCd
Friendship night will be Nov. I how our students do and achieve schOols cannot do the job of -..._ ...................
. ......
· •
·
educating cbUdren without fam· -uen.
at !he Belle Prarie Council, Belpre. In school.
...;.;;.o.;...;,;.;:;;;.;;..,;;;;.;..._,
---~-·
Ily and community support In
; Dr. Altbop will speak at 1:30
Melp Local hu almost one of
A potluck SUPper win begin 81 6:30
·~~t.:.;~.
p'
•
".~ ,.,..,.
.
. '
,,,.,,," ·~
: ~ lhe mcctins to be held at the
p.m. All district officers are wgcd every three students In the today's 10elety.
UUIUIIU ..
ll ; lll , u• . IU ~~
SchOols need your ongoing
•
Cilizms Center. SJu.on
dlltttctonADC, (AldforDepend·
to attend.
" 'j
support.
There
are
many
positive
; Wrigbl, L.P.N: is coordinalor Cor
ent
Children)
aod
this
percenEsther Harden gave the council a
••tt . nt ,tM ,,:
'""'"'·
..
.
the proJr1i11 which is IPOIIICRd by
good gntde on their woilt and Jo- tage of studenll pull ualn the top things In our schools, and these
··:
need to be recognized jus I as
. the Mcip Counl)' Council Oil
lit ...... . .
Ann Baum presented her with a two percent In the atate.
, ;
much as the negative things.
~••nu
The twenty mUla we have for
' Aainl.lllc.
gifL
We need your support on the
.
'
: for those.auelllcers who wiU be
,....,,..,,_",.· • - - - ....... 1
;:.-;:;:::;--_.............
four mUI permanent Improve• briDging lhcir afllicted famt,,
. ment Issue on the ballot In
: -'let or friend to. the center,
'
November. This wUI not Increase
.: Mrs. Wright asb she be advised by
. Welh:sday ar........ ao lhll apHonor rolls Cor the lint six Joncs, and Amanda Spun.
•lJIOPrille III8JIIellleiliS Clll be
Grade 4: V.... Blevins;
wccb' grading period for clemenA inlde for c:are during the meetin&amp;.
lli'y schools in the Southern Local Rebcccall Congo, Daniel Haonan.
l Regilll'llion will be1in at 1: IS
School District have been an- J1111cy HiD, Mike Jam-, Jennifer
~ p.m. and relrahmeius will be ser·
Morris, David ~ ,.. NorIIOdiCCII.
: ved lbllowing the Ill 'w.
JAMES E. ALTBOP
StudcniS of their 1~w illlll, Joc!Y Wolfe, Rebe1x:a WolCc.
• Dr. Altbop Is a psychologist in
Gmdo 5: Amber Allr:lns, Wesley
schcois making a grade of 'B" or
: priftll: priiCticc counseling adults,
above in aU their sobjccts to be liS.: Hall, Tntvis Ransom, Jennifer
• children, whlmmiS and couples. provides oulpfllicnt psychotherapy ted on the bonor rolls are 11 fol- Roush, HiJiay Turley, and Ranraa
: He • - IIIII clinical director or as wen as consulting to business lows:
Whrrt«.
.
: Aldiop . IJld .Msociates wbich and industrv.
Oracle 6: Eva ~ Tnldy
RACINE
Gnde 2: Mlchlel BaD, Macyn Justis, Jeremy Lyoas. Dee Jay
Ervin, Jonadlan EVIJII, Jaemy Richards, Adam Roush, Kimberly
. : Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Banoc IUld see .boUywood II Pigeon Foige, Hin, Shauna Manuel, Erin Roach, Roush, Jessica Sayre, Lora ~
Jamie Stemple, all Ks, Clay Vaacssa Shuler, and Michdlc
: filniJy, North Cirolina, tmelecl 1D Tenn. t:JII=Y alleiKk:d SC'Ieial Stqe and
Enalen,
Tony Hupp, and Courtney Snider.
~ord 10 -.ld llic r - 1 oC ha' . pi'ClWctions,
toured chwdlcs,
HiD.
SYRACUSE
:uncle. lflrold Oibbl. Mr. IJid Mn. museums and !he litdc ~ where
Grade
3;
Kyle
Nonil
and
BIBD·
Grade
2:
lolbua
Lanr.n, aU Ks;
1Luther BIIIOe 1mcled to Colum- Dolly Parton lived as a child.
don
Wolfe,
aU
Ka;
Jllllic
Biker,
J.
Sanlb
Ball;
'lUiccka
CooJDil, JLIDD
"blil 1D 11111111 1 _la)'CIIe sho..'CJ'.
Mn. Miry Andrew 80Jd her (urn
B.
Bolo,
Suah
BIIUer,
Stacey
ErCundiff,
JtiUily
Fisher,
IJid Math·
: Luther- IWJiiiled wilh a 7111 and has moved to Horhons
vin,
Kim
Amber
ewWaaa.
· ~ly
Aplnments 39.52-B Moundview
Mayurd, Chril
• 'IlllB
Grade 3: Joshlil o.vis. Steve
· · Enjoy the flexibility and liqr~idity of..a CD
;•
S~dlem, Mr: Lid Mn. Rolld, Hilliard. Ohio 43026.
Rose.
Dena
Sayre,
Scar·
Taclrett.
all
A'r.
Adam
CamJnas,
: ~ Olbomc IIIII o.y, Mr. 11111
Rev. IJid Mn.
Cline are
which is automatically renewable and redeemable
berry, Jaed Smith, and Lena 1lfl'any Hicbl, and Autumn
· · Mrs. Robert Laitina, Mr. IIIII Mn. !ivins in Miry's houe aad Rua- YOIIcham.
at each 7 day anniversary
Tbomas.
j 0one1 Llrtins. all of Long Bot- seD's lOll, Chiwlcs, ia COIIIII'Ucling a
Oracle 4: Jenny Cuteton, Josh
Oracle 4: Brldpt Croas, Ashll
I tom; Mn. Leota JobniOJI and new borne on ihe hill beside the Ervin,
J - Liulc, and Jcasica Davis, and Kim Sayre.
The 7-Day-Premium CD
; Sandy Folmer. Portllnd. all went 10 pond.
Theill, all Ka; SIOVUI Boso, DonGrade 5: Eva Struble, aU A's;
is another example of our
nie Carnahan, S-.ne Evaa. Jody Cyntllia Clldwell, Jennifer Friend. .
Commitment To Customers.
Hupp,Josie Jarell, Kn King, JesGrade 5: Briel Alllll, Amber
••
'lbomll, JIIIOII Lawreace. aU Ns;
D1ive SdWz, Servk:c Forella' ~~~~ am IIIII high scoring in· sica Smith,llld Josh Whldcy.
Call or visit your nearest
Grade S: 1Yton E-. RYJII Kevin Fields~Banis.
;!!!~' tbe Obio DeJ&amp;tu~e~ot oC Nalllial dividuab. the 1990 ouiSI8ilding
Cencral Trusr office for details roday.
;~ DIYiliaa Cf Pcnauy, r.m family, the 1989 Goodyear Ora, Nicole Hill, Danny ~.
Glide 2: Blllldl CodDey . arid
•will be dlo ~ • tbe - ' Pa ....., alllllale members, fom~Jy Dellt Slllitb, and hlphlnie
Stelllple.
Janice
Ridwd.
.
!m1 tlng _. A
of the Mei,P aWiid, litter cootrol award IIICI bay
Sl.O,OOO MINilUM DEPOSIT
Orido
6:
·
B
obby
Writelrl,
aU
A's;
.
Onde
3:
l!riD
IICJiiD,
Rebeh Coland Wiler ~ rr111ion Dis- ~ winnen.
Muimum dq•nsit i99.91J?.99. Sublnan~~alry fur c-.rly.withdra•AI.
linl, Anlla Holilir, Joay McKinney,
'triel.
.
.
1Wo ·~ will be ele!Ud AD&amp;ie Carleaoo. Krilten JJ!euler, and
y. Ratlllffootiw Sopt. 21. lHO
llllfl'lll
pold to pj'llldpalllld oompauDded
Jos!w PuUlna.
..
: 'l1lc chjc+tft dinJiet wiD be ser- to serve dlrcc year lmi1l. The Clll- DilnncJ-. J-~Amy
and SuDIM tu.chanpe wirhnut nor~. Yield UIUmtl lhlll' statfd rBr rtm~ins
Onde 4: ,.,. Lawlalc:e IIIII
en,. firM fur • full ~ar .*ith 1\4, wirhdnwals of inrft't'lf fM' principal
: ve~~ at 7:1.5 p.m. at Molp High didalel are Ron Eutman, Gay Jo Northup, JeDIIIc Scirlleuy, IIIII
Camilla
Yoaclllm.
J... Roulb.
' Moo! by lhe Mel.- Futtn F•- Michael, Thomas Theiss, and
Onde .5: Alhloy MI:KinDey.
.
;men of "--ea . Colt il S6 IJid Chuck YosL
Oracle
Holly
The Banlc Tlulc .Wab• Tlain1• Happen.
Onde
6:
Jolb
...........
aLI 11 be pildiMecl by Nov.
Ticket~ may be ~ fJOm
lfmlan,
Gaml
ICIIer,
·
Palloa
McKillloY,
aild
Zlcb
912·1111
448-GIIOZ
•.5~
Meigs SWCD supervisor~ l!lstman.
L D. Cilia: lm:a ....-,
Mlddlepan
Gelllpolle .
: ,llaiLdl to be pmertecl • the Alan Holtrr, ~ Chcvlliet, Roulb. Miahew Shain.
b. H. a., Dllhne 'Plowers
BlaWII
:a
• mllllJII' wiB be the 1011 'lbmThcila,andDa · Gloeckner. . Onde 3: J h
.
Hermal. Aullmn ijlll, Cia~~~ .... IIIII Lora w.d. •
~
r
;

~

MOBILE HOME FURNACES HEAT PUMPS
ALL FURNACE PARTS

Dees has said dama&amp;et from
the current cue would benefit
Seraw's famny, but be IW made
no secret ot the fact that be hopes
to put a financial dentin the white
supremacist movement. Dees
gave his closiJii argument
Friday.
Mell&amp;'er told the jurors he
never sent Mazzella to Pordand
and never told him to break the
law.
''The only thing you're here to
· decide Is, was there a meeting of
the mlnda betweenJohnandTom
Metzger and Dave Mazzella to
travel to Portland and speclft·
cally go out and find a black
person and kill him?" Me17&amp;'er
asked the jury. "If that didn't
happen, there' s no cue."
Rosenthal said Me17&amp;'er "spins
tales out of thin air," and called
the former KKK leader a "student of German history," an
obvious reference to the.Nazls.
Mell&amp;'er sent Mazzella to Portland to teach skinheads to attack
minorities, a sufficient connec·
lion to hold him responsible for
Seraw's death, Rosenthal said.
Rosenthal cited letters and phone
calls between Mazzella and the
Metzgers~ and to the testimony of
an Oregon neo-Nazl who said
attacks on minorities Increased
after Mazzella's arrlv~tl.
Rosenthal asked the jury 10
shut down Me~er's acltlvltles
by slapping him with a large
damages award. ''That's the way
we cao stop II, to strangle It
financially," he said.

16141 446-9416 .. 1·100-172-5967

--·-----....

h

;-,;.;:,. . .

;,

HUGE WHALE STRANDED ON BEACH Marine biologists tend to a Humpback whale t)tat

lias beaehed Itself In the San Frauclsco Bay area.
The whale Is estimated to weigh about 35 Ions.
(UPI)

·Huge whale .stranded on mud
flats in San ·Francisco ·Bay·
1
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Humphrey the wayward hump·
back whale, who enthralled the .
world live years ago when he
apparently got lost and wandered through northern California for three weeks, Is back and
In trouble again.
An endangered humpback was
sp6tted Monday, stranded or. the
mud flats In San Francisco Bay,
creating a massive traffic jam as
motorists slowed to catch a
glimpse of the beached creature,
who could easily be crushed to
death by his own weight 1.1 he Is
not returned to deep water.
Marine biologists familiar with
Humphrey's 25-day odyssey of
1985 positively identified him.late
· Monday from photographs of the
distinctive markings and shape
of the underside of his tall, said
Denise Springer of the Marine
Mammal Center.
"Right now It's mos.t critical
because he's fully exposed. He's
In· the mud. The problem Is he's
an animal that's usually In deep
, w.ater. ", .she .said.. "Right no~
he's on land and he could easily '
crush his organs. He's literally
·
lying on his lungs."

Springer said -a half·dozen
rescue workers are manipulatIng the whale to keep It con-

stanlly moving so It doesn't crush
any of his vital organs. They are
awaiting high tide to make their
job easier.
·
Scientists took blood samples
to determine If he Is sick, but said
he does not appear to be Ill or
Injured.
.
The whale was !lrst discovered
around dawn by Call1ornla High·
way Patrol officers Investigating
an . unusual early-morningbackup on Highway 101 near
Candlestick Park, just south of
the city.
Thousands of cu.rlous motorIsis slowed In the northbound
lanes and hundreds of people
stopped to watch the whale,.
causing what one dispatcher
called, "a major, majot mess."
Pelgln Barrett, a spokeswoman for the Marine Mammal
Center, said the whale apparently became beached when It
came too close to shore l.n a
shallow part of San FraJ!Clsco
Bay . "We were unable to determine If It was Ill or just became
lost," she said. ·
· Three people in a small boat
pulled in next to the whale and
spent the morning splashing
water on it to keep it from
bec6mlng dried out or burned by
the sun.
Barrett sa1d the splashing, and

~e presence qf humans, might

.

~ long

OHIO PALLET
COMPANY

MICROWAVE
OVEN IEPAUl

BISSELL
BUILDERS

ALL MAlES
Bring It In Or W11

Pick Up.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGE&amp;

KEN'S APPUANCE

"At leasonablt Prices"

SERYICE ·

PH. 949-2801
.·
Res. 949·2860

,r

992-5335 or 985-3561
Aaols frwn Post OHke
217 I. Soc. Po-•Y

, Day or Night
NO SUNDAY

1.::::!:=====:::

The

GROOM
ROOM

RACINE

GUN CLUB

GUN SHOOTS

PAT' HILL FORD

SHOOTS START

992-2196
Middleport; Ohio .
,

$EPT 16, 1990

Sept. 4.tfn

J.lJ.~c

54 Miscellaneous

.....

Merchandise

WANTED
TO BUY
STANDING
.
TIMBER

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

'

Calllon
Donaldson

843-5360 .

Middleport. Ohio 45780
Sep1r1t1 seeled bidl for

the conatruction of an addition to end the renovation of

tho Molga County Dopart·
rnent of Human Service• will

received at 1ho office of
tho Meigo County Commlo·
1ion.,,, Meigs County
tourthouilo, Pomeroy, Ohio
411789 until 2:00p.m.'{local
tinw)on the 20th of Novom·
bor, 1990 ond th., ot ooid
office publicly oponed ond
be

n111d .-roud.

WORK

covorod

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

10/ 30/'19 tfn

RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMAN CLUB

SHRUB .&amp; TREE'
TRIM and .'
REMOVAL ..
·uGHT HAULING
•fiREWOOD

GAME ROOM
NOW OPEN
Wed. thru Sat.

BILL SLACK:
992-2269 .

HAS.: Wed.- Thurs.-Fri.
5:00 p.m.- II :00 p.m.
Sat. 12 Noon-11 p.m.
·Between Wilkesville
ond.Snlem Center

-~

USm RAILROAD TIES
II- 12- sO

9 ·12·'90· 1 mo .

FIT and TRIM
OCTOBER
SPECIAL

$2 900

10 VISITS
OPEN BY

COMPLETE ~
ELECTRICAL SERVICE

Residential and
Commercial ,
REWIRING AND :;,
TROUBLE SHOOnNG •
Certified ElectrldaM
frH Etlmat01 •

APPOINTIJIENT
CALL

BANKS

992-3033
9127/'90/1 mo.
New

.

CONSTRUCTION
992-5009

"

10.1 I Mo.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMlNUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

location:

I 68 North Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We C'4"'y Fishing Suppli•

Your Pha11e
(;_ab•le Bills Here
IUSINESS PHONE
{6141 992-6SSO

I!ISIDINCI PHONE

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Now Notne1 l,.;lt ~
"Free Estimates" ·

PH. 949·2101 '.'
or les. 949-2160
NO SUNDAY CALLS ' :
4-16·16-tfn

{6141 ' ~92-7754

STEWART'S .:
GUNS &amp; ,
SUPPLIES

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing ·
•Siding
•Painting
NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

SN us for Your·;·

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION
992-6648 or
698-6864

Sporting Nllds :·:
Buy, Sell or Trade
Guns
•
OPEN MON.-SAT. 1D-5&lt;
742-2421
364.. SMITH n11 I D.
lunAND, GIRO ,;,

10-01 -'80-1 mo.

10·12· '90-1 mo .

R•. L• HOLLOII
IJ
TRUCKING ·

of the Meigs County

CHESIEI, OHIO· ,
•GRAVEL
.,,
•LIMESTONE ·
FILL 0
0
IRT.
·· .
aANYTHING : . ·.AT All
.,.

Department of Human
Services
A new building addition to
tho existing Department of
Human Servicea with interior renovations to !he exiat·
lng building together with
. the......nacesAry appertaining
WOn. .

Stptrltt Contr1cts

tin

for

985 4422

ond Archilecta Estimate for:
•
'','
1. Genoror. ....1668.652.00 I ~=:::;;:;:;1:;·;11;·;90:·;:!
2. Eloctrlcaf. .... 128.912.00 II
3. HVAC ......... 142. 776.00
4. Plumbing ...... 39.660.00
.

CA

The Contrect Documents

0/ "flid/IIUit#
,
rv

may be oxamlned at:
Tho Office of tho Meigs
County Commiuioners
Meigs County Courthou•
Pomeroy, Ohio 4&amp;769
or
Burgoul!r Nipfo, Limited
4424 Emereon Avenue
Parllortburg. West Virginia

Middleport "
. Hand Tufting . .'
~
Cultom Drapes 1

· Coplea of lho Contract

614-992~2321 :

28104

Document• may be ob~
t.inad at the office of
Burgo11 lfr Nlple, Umlled;

UPHOLSTERY '
213 No. Second

36 Y f"are Uperiena:

We

s ey What We Do .

Wt Do Who! We Soy,

locetod at 4424 Emer10n 1~====='0-:1:!1-:!:1~
11
VIrginia 26104 upon pay-

..

Av•ue. Parker1burg, Wast

ment of Fifty • Oolllra
. (1110.001, NONE OF WHICH

WILL BE REFUNDED.

FOR SALE IN RACINE

' By order of the Meigs
County Commissioners.
Richard E. Jonas

V£RY NICE LNIGE Ill ME ON AI'PROX. 3 ~
ACRES - 4 BR 3baths, 2 earages, rented I
8R apartment. Property includes pood, IP· ·
ilrox. 4;800 sq. ft. f•m bldg. and mobile
home. A real bareain at H9:989: $84.900.
CALL 614·992-7104 FOR APPT.

110)23,

..

Commi11ioner
3D:{1116.
13. 4tc

Public; Notice
ELECTION .
LEGAL NOTICE
The Ohio Soli and Wator

Conserv•tkln Commlaalon
will ceuae an e~ction of 1up~
arvlsora of the Meiga Soil
and Water ConHrvltlon

:Soil

.
..

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPAN'"Y

Dlllrlct to be held in eccord·
noce wllh Chapter 111111 of
tho Ohio Rovlaod Cado ot
M~ High School on · No..
r 13, 1110.
Nomt...a ,,. Ron Et11·
men. Qety Mlcheol. Thomu
·Tholu ond Chorl!to Voat.

THIS l"xl"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE .
'
'
AT ss.oo PER DAY ·

Nomlnatlont wMI bo IC·

cop1od from tho ~oor II !he
"""'of tlection. Two auporvllorl .,. to ofeclod. You
m1y vote It the · annu1l
meeting or on an eb.entlll

A SWEEPING SUCcDs - Tile' Clactuatt
Redl oelebl'JI&amp;Ioa ID dowatown «liDCllitDUI·MoildaJ
wu a "aweeplq _ _.. delpUe &amp;lie rain.

AlleJ:

------ ---------- - ·-- '- "

by tho

.

: Deadline for banquet tickets Nov..5

-·

.

BULLETIN BOARD

a-u

.....

5-31-'90 tfn

·

Addition to and Renovation

of Human Services
175 Reca Street

90 DIY WAIDANYY
WASHER5-$100 •P
DRYER5-$69 up
·, ,I
REFRIGERATOR5-$100 up •
RANGES-Gas-Eiec.-$125 up
FREEZER5-$125 up
MICRO OVEN5-$79 up ~

992-5335 or 185-35~1
Aaoss From Post Offjio
POMEROY, 111110 . '

985-4473
667-6179

cludithe following ilemsfor
which bid• wilt be accepted:

Meigs County Department

USED APPLIANCES

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE ·~

Contract · Documents in·

Public Notice
ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIOS

~

JIJic,,

a..

•Naw Homes
•Garugas
•Complete .
l .emodaling
Stop &amp; Co!llpara
Fr.ee Estimates

C'ONSJRUCnON

~ .-·I

6!:'.

BI.SSELL I, BURKE
CONSTRUCnON

1 / 27/'80/1 mo.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

Bottom personals

z';Bl:F~

POMEROY, OHIO: Rt. 7 &amp; S.R. 143
•
ALBANY. OHIO: Rt. 50 8o S.R . 143
. NEWHOURS:
POMEROY: 9 a.m.-7 p.m. 7 Days
ALBANY: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. 8 Daya, Clooed Sunday
PAVING AS QF TODAY, SEPT. 11, 199Q
#1 Copper '1 per lb.:
Clean Dry Aluminum Cans. 45¢ par lb.
Clean AutoRadiaton44¢ lb.: llllt181iea '1 .26••
Yellow Brass 40c lb.: Alum. Sheet• 40¢ lb;·
614 992-5114 •.,..oo.ot\l

· POMEIOY, OH• .

StrkHr Enforcod
!I-Z5-'t9·Hn

' ~ ... ~

tt.IU , I H ,_

Honor rolls released

DEUYEIED 10

have stimulated the whale to
POMEIOY,~t!?o/Hn
work 11$ way loose at high tide ·
..!:::::::-~
.a nd mo\oe &lt;~way from shore. ·
•
Escorted by tw.o Coast· Guard
boats, the whale began moving
toward the Golden Gate Bridge in
UllNCU R~:r.tTY
. a ztg.zag pattern.
But about 3 p.m . it ·started
Con~plite Grooming
moving In closer to shore and
205 li. Socond Strett
again hit the mud flats near the
MlllllEPOif, OliO 45760
for All ...ted s
HuJ!ters Point shipyard, 2 miles
Offkt 614·992-2816
EMILEE MERINAI
north of where it first became
HOME 614-992-5692
Owner
&amp; Operator
stranded.
DOniE S. TUINR, 1101£1
HOUSES•LOTSIIFARMS
Volunteers threw wet cloths
614-992·6120
COMMERCIAL
over. the whale to keep its body
Pomeroy, Ohio
We Need Llollnga!
temperature from rising. Shal10·&amp; 1 mo.
9-21-10- I mo.
low waters prevented boats from
getting close enough to pull the
BUILDING &amp;
animal Into deeper water.
Barrett said It Is highly unusREMODELING
ual for a humpback, an endanCommercial Bo
gered species, to lind Its way Into
Residential
INTtRIOR - EXTIRIOR
the shallow bay .
.
•Roofing
FREE ESTIMATES
'The 30-foot whale later named
•Siding
Take the pain out of
Humphrey gained lnterpatlonal
•Windows
painting. Let me do
fame In 1985 when he toured San
hn't • Worth Doing RiFt
it for you.
francisco Bay and even drifted
Very Reasonable
BANKS
Inland up the Sacramento River .
Into the Sacramento-San Joaquin
hove References
Delta. ·
614-915~4180
992-6009
Humphrey was eventually
10-10-'90-1 mo.
10-1-1 ~0 .
herded back out to sea and was
sighted as late as last year
"living a normal life near the
Farallon Islands," off San Fran·. SER~ICE
cisco, Barrett said.
We, con rl!f'tlir cincl rt· ·
~ore radiators. and· :
heater cores. We can .
1:00 P.M.
also cxid boil and rod
SUNDAYS
out radiators. We also
I
2
Gauge
Factory
npair Gas Tnnks.
Choke only

UI.IU , tU

hUMifUIJ

SlSO ,...:_...

f•..,r Cheb

f

lSpeaker' named for meeting
......._

lashan Building

SAW LOGS

. 12 Gauge Shotguns Only

Chester .Council has
recent inspection

______
_____ __

UCINE
FIRE DEPT.

LOW GlADE OAK

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 ....
.....

d.

WANTED

GUN SHOOT

.
i Lieving reunion held recently

..

-

lacahtl .., s.tf•d Schoel ld. oH itt. 1&amp;1 ~

Meigs school district ·notes...

amn

.-· . ~

BENNm'S MOBILE HOME
HEAnNG &amp; COOUNG

RECYCUNG

OFFEIS 2 LOCAftONS IO ·SEIYE YOU."' •

Stoekf!

Klan·group In 1981, shu !URi down
the or&amp;aniZitton. He waa oace
tarceted for asussiMtlon by a
Northwest white supremacy
~P·

TRI~COUNTY

Mow IJi

!

I

I

"

'

ballot which lillY be neurad
from tho fconaorv 0tlon dla·
trlcl offlco.
·
{1019. 23. 21c

Above, Bedl' pUcberaad Worldledu MVPJRijo offer• erowd a •IJII-aratlon or how co 11W8ep
upwiUJ&amp;'aleft. (UPJ)
\

'•

.'

Banks
Constructioil:
992-6009

:!!~!Gutter
~llelmet '
'

..

NEYER CLEAN YOUI:

GUnERS AGAIN ..,:
GUARANTEED! '
FREE ESTIMATES

10.1 I Mo.

RACCOON VALlE:Y:
SPORTSMAN CLUI:

SHOOTING ·~
MATCH :;
Every Sunday.,.
Starting nt 11 oOO A.M;
letwtln . · '~·

Wilkesville and ·..:·
Solem Center

,

. 9 · 12·'110-1 -

�October 23, 1990

-- ---·-- •

0-Allllr 23, 1110

Ohio

WJLUS? II

Television

11&amp;111&amp;1
..IIUI

Vie~ing

. . . . 101. .

T, ,

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

.."'

Prgr I

I

$

•

72 TrucU lOr 8111

'

-........
....
- -.....
., . . . ."=.=
=-=.~·---

,.,.

....

TUES., _OCT. 23

--::.::--- .o.w.. ,. ""to-•• •••

FMn Up To.._ Land Cion-

.. .

-

,

.......

....

·-......- .......... - -

=r.

a..·..

1211 ld. •
: lo Ullllo Land, for

Dlllilol• • . . _

~-·

.........

··-

............. 201ll_

NOGIDJ

I

O~l!lprMI

Ill Dellalllll'lllunnlng and

...,_

-bod,_
a-a•~fJ.itlol
.....

......._ -..
" -lor,.,.·-or.........
.,_,_Hoell. ·
-

I

I

M«&lt;a.

IJ)~c!..~
m
Mltll LMIMtg
oeALP

n . - II. iT . ..- - .. Palni

~·,1101.

-· .

lattws ol lha

low 10 farill four olmple

•

e:00me
Ill llle a ae
@Niwe

""""' ....

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

. :.~Today

tT' 5 '(OUR {'110M .. SHE

.WANTS TO KNOW WHEN
'{OU'RE COMING 1-lO"f.E...

011111....
11:08(1) lr•zotr 11111•11
1:30~e 0 NIC NlghtiJ 111W1

11~1180.

i

Abboll and Caao 'm

II)

e

aJ&amp;·~IIIWIQ
GIDeCIIIIIWIQ

Rentals

f9 PRINT
NUMBERED lETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

Andr Orlllllll

8===JUs

Steraci.

•

1:31 (J) Andy Qrltlllh
7:00 ~.:...~@Wiles$ of
(I) I DNMt 01 Jlamle
(I) (I). ln4lda l!dlllon
(!) (f) MacNeil Letnr
.. Newlllaur
II)
I'!WII Coult Q
IDle C. IIIII Allalr

UNSCRAMBlE LETTERS . TO
GET ANSWER

I

ICil-llM 1.111 ANSW11S
,•.u.
Defame - Silky- Knock- Mutual -AFLOAT
One old sailor to another: "I have often been adrift, but
1always manage to stay AFLOAT:
·

e

1=:=£
Ill

.,

MoMvfllta

Money (2:30)
7:01 (I) Happr Daya

S'

~p

41

TO Pou.sriJts.

!!ar
for . .~ ao- a n"""""·
RoUnd laloo In .,.. Fllld. 114-

···-

~Laagota

Transporta11on

OMI clao,81taW-1;1

• Cllulch . . . . lldoil

e ,,.,......

1:01 (I) MOYII!: Laat Tnlln FIOIII
Oun Hll (2:00)

e-

e::ao (I)

(I)
of .... ClaM
lilly lakn a hollr1 attaclc to
fight the buraaucrtg a1 hla
lnuance. Stereo, l:jl ·

QIOnltaga

--ml- -on

Emp loyment Serv1ces

all
... and - . lion. thiU

l'llda¥ I:G0-8:011. s.t. 1:00.12:00.

Thlnfand Vlond . - . 1311.

.

0 NAICAllllaclng AC
DelCO 2!10 from Rockingham,
N.C. (T)

IKJUR ftRSOIJN.S Arf&gt; ·flW

· SII\JGU:S PARrtts?

CROSSWORD

to the FBI. Starea. Q

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
. DOWN

(I)

tlleRosn-

Roseanne lnd Din prenura

1 Plod
5 Harbors
10 Donut's

Bed&lt;y·IO stop dating a boy

tttay c1et1st. s-. Q
(!) (f) Prcontllna Q

-

0 Bulhnt•• Prt unta:

..........
e

shape

TUaaday Night Flgltta

............ . _ . ..... Mel

:: \1..' :-·
.

-t=.::

-~,., ..

-for

__....

CICIVI!RNIII!HT HOlES from Ill

(U

1114-

o.u_... tax

repalf). ·

_,_

pnP«tJ.

~

- I I ) - - lilt. -

·-

snuatlon .

-.Chlo,._onl
aa.ooo.

Wanted

~

1D:OO me

IS" IG-NATIUS!

CALLS • L..J..lMPY DUMPY. II

WIIGW ldlr ....

Michael. ·Hope and their ·
lrlenda disco- grOWI,::.e
Ia hard to do. IR) S18ra0.

--on...
-

s-.

(!) (f)-lnlhl

Aller WWII, America alds
Japan's economic racavery.

Stereo. Q
® e llllir Tllk: The Mood
Oanaratlolo

71111.

0 NHRA llaclng Sunoco
Keystone Nallanala !rom
Reading. Pa. (T)
QIIE_,Ing_
1D 700 Club Willi Pal

~· ........ Homo ... UPII

--.
.,.........,...

:~·=-·=J.~

,.,loa
a. REIIODE •
INOI Alflrlf ITT EIMNII8.

11C -1111.

I PULL TH' REINS
AN' SHE STOPS If

I AIN'T QUITE GOT THAT
FIGGE REO OUT YET!!

HOW DO

YOU MAKE
HER 60?

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

Robzr11011

10:01 (I) MOVIE: Till Pa-l Qun
Alive (2:00)

....,llofdiiiii. .......... M-F

IIJ) ......
(I) Night Coult Q
(l) .......ICh

.

Wll .....,.
Aloobc I -

..-.

Wll • odd JNa. ... tina bNIIi •
luauc~
.,._, ...... OthDI. ..

au. .

to

'

111111
e- ........
ua•nabarn:lllomi
In~ IWtl1tiiiiiL. .
·

'

8

11:aome GTonlgllt . _ ·

Musial

ASTRO-GRAPH

lnltrumenla

FlflJilCiJI

BERNICE
BEDE·OSOL

to a birthday gill. Send tor your AstroGrapll predictions lor the year ahead by
mailing $1 .25 to Astro-Grapll. c/o lhla
newspaper. P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland.
OH 44101-3428. BP sure 10 state your
zodiac sign.

victorv within your reach.
TA~ (April• Mz; •) Today J(IU
rntgllt belherec~-bill Conllructlve
' ilan. ltcouklltl
-r neatly Into
~· .. M'oady
tormulll.cl.
. ,t\' "

might gain, however. could bi brOught peroon with whom ycMJ'rZ ·-friendabout through a strange ctilln of ly. II wiU be worthy ol l"rthtr
eventl. ·
investigation.
CAJIIIICOIIN (Dec. 22-.len. 11) Strive to CAIICIII (...... 11-- lll) Yo.. mighl
be an initiator ,today lnateld of 11111 1 have an opportunity 100ay to - r 1
peroon hanolnO back in lha r- rris. new lilly 10 • ~you've b-. encloriEven your .,_, will HIIH you belong JnO. lt'a an Individual • • ~ naa been ,..
at the held of the
li8fllnt·ll1oiZ Ill' . .
AOUAIIIUI (... • ""-• 1t) You 'LIO (...., D-lut. 22) Put an your
should be ablo to· ev-te olluatlonl :thlnlllllg c.p at _.. ~. ~1$1e1110Ua
quite ICCIIfatety today, blc8UM the ·ldzUyou«M, olap . . helpyouchalkup
luciQmenta you rMCh w;u be prlldlcNd pOinll With IUtllority llgutal. Two 1m·
The urge to Itani ond leqUire knowi· upon Y\1!1' Clld\ICIIvt -'"II I I pr1111ve COhCIIIIIIMI' -liZ·
......._
leo
~ ~ u your' intuitive perceplklno.
VIIIQO (Aug. lll IIPL. ~ 8oclll hap..,.,.. from pertOnal · - ICSII-- PISCII (Fell.. " ell.) You're ill a peolloiQI wlliCII .,..., llriitlcrMQeel 0t
a pronouncscf
ol your partOnaUty good cycTa lor
new paopljo, 10 100 ~ could be lilt 111a1
in the year Meld . " 11 ••trerMiy lll&lt;oly lntleld olvllillnO , _ llaunll. go to tum out to bi tile moa1 Tun -,.~~q
you'Hltnd lor aiCprftSing your ~ that ate dll*•tloday. A con- - a n d 1M- -111!1· .
=FlO(~ M lliu.IJ) Today you . IK1 could bi Ullbllhad.
,LiliA ce.t- • he. • ,., .t.,llkoly 10 be. r..... ,... tlllnk.-lnd ~s.-...
11) Don't give .
llfiOt " lnd . . . . . . lar ,aut
JCIU g~~n 111110 11z row '""an row~ too halllly loday. tllllily ..,..,, ...,., In • ._..
belt anei. Try to put ,our lhaug~ll 10 . E - eould'taka • MWprillng ~and 01 ~ lnwl!lnl 1ri111!11 Yllfl
proc:luotlvZ - · SC«PPI. t-1 j0urM11 alter a brlellult. you "'!!I"IIUdd••Y ltncl
I ZlljOy.
.
.

P•-·

•-t

614-992-2156

~304-675-1333
.

'

614-446-2342

1M-\!

.....una

.........

"*"

--they

~~'I

.

I ~ll!._llhco'I/Atllloolit,.,.BCII

La1e

43 Wilhin

os,::Z.V
=

••
.

"''

..

.

, form)

11:31 (I) CMIII Q

11:00tllelnlo Ita Night Stereo.
-~.1.
«De
T. . llllow
Ollie
Ill
Now

.

.

Llg$IIIU .... of lpDrla

(0:30)

.

0 Naallllght
12:011(1) IIIIOVII: Till Mig ~RCIIII
(I) ....t.... Q

.

• (COIIlb.

Mllnlr(2:30)

a.-(2:46)

_,

....

42Wear
down

Ql lpoula TonW!t
IJ) MOVIE: For Love 01

•

..

_,

40 Director,
Marvyn 41 Aches ·

Worlcl

(Nov.

..,

.....-

37Thomas
Harris
novel

Stzrzo.
(J) ToclaJ'I FBI

1D Adam lmllh'l Money

23-l)ac. 21) The, OEMIII (..., l1~.at1 ScloMihillll
possibHitieS olloc:lay being a protltable1 advontegeous in llle ·~Clll Mnse
one tor you 10011 encouragino. What you may ~ lor ~ · today thrOU!Ih a

SAGITTARIUS

,.

'•

PIUS~

Peak: Man VI. Mounlaln
Qlllla..,lnl
.
Big 11011• Jab Stereo.

ln . "" NO. por -11.

watch
parts
31 Japanese
code word
32 Begin-

35 Coilaclion
36 Coach

0 Miami Vlcl
Ill CIIUioh ....... l1atlan
0 SacNta of lpMd Plkll

DnotHno

cookie
28 Swiss

1 Valuable
fiddle,
for
short
2 Jerks
3 Actor
Jerry
4 Fellow
SThePiper
Yesterday's Answer
6 Switch
positions 19 Phi
Eddie
7 Africa·
Beta 29 Enler
Arabia
20 Pooch
compuler
separalor
pests
data
8 Charac24 Lam3D Maroon
terislics
poonad
33 Author~y
9 Fashions ' 25 Mare's
35 Tenier . ·
11 "Reminghpme
type
ton - ·
26 "Whether 38 Food llsh
14 Experl'lis- .. ." 39 Scors
ences
27 Jockey
denial
...-....-........-..-..~

34 CBS rival

®. AIMIIIo Hall

. ... ......, . P."" . . . 2 ·10.

,.....

nings

11:00m• &lt;ll .11le llll De

~
'
1M7 IND CMwrar-. IDIIIIId.

_ .. Dar c.r. cantor.

·

10:80QI Crook l ChaM

_ , . _ 1:1, ~
11 lmW 1111111111 ..,,...., Ulllll

- .&amp;114
- ••
.........
Ill
liM

18 Terminus
17 Part of
RSVP
18 Knocked
• down, as
a boxer
20 Gala partv
21 Thin rock
22 Colleen .
23 In hsell
25 Ginger

(l)(l)e~

land -

Big Dollola Fann - : Butn on
""'' 1o1. h!,ggs a up. 114-8111-

-

cuaJ.mbar

0 Law 81111 Oudtr

111'8111 to the halls ol the
criminal cour18. S18ra0. Q
(J)N-.

a taldng
-pafii&amp;ll,
Homo(1)01 auto
aa -123G.
J04w42t
...... R.
1111 loulh
-looglon, wv
lo!l on

15Cool-

JUitlee 8KIInc:IS ffOii1 the

NO... 1-:116 REAL. NAME

THERE:S A KID IN MY
CLA55 EVER."'(60DY

lnPon•CI'I· CIIIU 111..103

song

oz-

MORK

and hall 01 . . _ bohlnd
the Wtpow• on er.. Rolli

12 Sluggish
13 RoiUng
Stones

a L.aory King LMI
1:30(1) (I) Coach ·AI!It
ChrtsUne catc:hea the flu,
Hayden oilerS 10 care far
htr. Stereo. Q

Serv1ces

'four

-,.

Women's

GlnlhiHoatotlhl
light ~lllsple Ia Uke&lt;l 10

tum over a h~-anckun driver

.iii. IJINE.TIES ...

V.lamble: Neilller
Dealer: East

clia..,..

e:GOme

... "11-1&amp; ARE

· HAW~G" MH LlKK VJITI-\

+KJ

.

~'1,. ,MJ""*'*'

71 Autos for sale

"

.,
Knockout Team
.,
IIIII
Cllampionlbip liMis in Bolton last
July elided ia a dead lie. witlla subleqaeat 1%-delil playoff liekl in late P uo
Allhoun.
UIUIIIy a defender is delil)lted that
Openitlllelld: • 4
the oppo~tents are playi"'l in a 1111it
tcllltract wbeoi llhe holds live pieces ol ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,J
tnomp. Tills deal from the playoff lea·
turt~ Gail Greenberg IPYin&amp; and
makin&amp; • - spades apinll just sueba dubs. East ruffld ' ··d retlll'lled '
ba:,~•Nortb
. 5 lakeout double, East · trump. Declarer "·as ~ .iii able"' call
dummy's kina ol hearts, noll a club
~mpled in diamclllds. Greenber&amp; and get off lead with a dlalltlllld. Her
bad~ valaesiO bid lht'ft spades. and J·9 of spades wu- over East:• 1~
Nortll ~~loappy to raise to came. De- 7, 10 she made 11er contract.
1n the replay at the other Iaiiie o1
c18rer ....... the ace of diatllOIIds and
inunediately led a low heart W.O;: tbe matcll, East bid oae spade afler
woa tbe ace and played anotlMor di•· the inleu'W!Uiinllalte®t tloullle. ~
monel to force the dummy. Gri!Ca!A!r&amp;
b'A
IIII-I
(---·- .. •t
ruffed ~ diamond and cashed one now ouODe
rump _..., 10 111 &amp; '
for penal!~) and Nortb-SGulll plaJ'III
spade. Sbe played a cluh back to her line IICHrump. Willi Jl
leliil
kiag and a heart up ta tbe jark. Wben there was no play for 11111 ~tract 1,;
lite tried tAl cash d•mM y·s ace of ter bOth ~lad&lt; suits 111lit badly.
·_

The

........ 51

..

.1013
tAU

ByJ-J~y ·

socle&amp;delplt8
them.

ill D

••

SOllTII
.JIIU

Undaunted
bY bad split

Tony and Angell lace a
crucial dlclllon. Ster19. Q
(!) (f) Nova Cheunlcal
weapons paee a lhreatiO
aflor1S to ban

•

tQttU

•o 1sz

~
=(PO;=Ior
(I) (I). Wllo'l the lion?

A(ll AF/fAII&gt; TO i
Op6N THrift f)IO()/t i

•uz

tKJBU

7:31(1) The Ja"-1
1:00m• 0 M•ock Matlock
'
delands an undercollllr
narCOIIc officer accused al.

f'l/fCfNf' i

IWT
' . . . 7432

•AOtl

'aJ'i l!nllriUtmenl
e
e ""'"''

Ill c:oo..nr.

,~,.,,,

WEST

JACOBY

Tonlglot Stereo. .
IJ)
Mlltl'l Femlly
®
Ill 8uparlou$lConlp
I 987:nr
Leonard vs, Hagler

PllfCINT Cf' NEW
"{{(tf&amp;i~ lAY TtleY'P
/lATtl~ t.IVf

.AIIIIU

.....

•JAMES

7••[JlUc2,.~Q

IT IAYI THAT

-

.KJ7

1D MOVI!: For Love or

(JJ

,..u.• ..

NORTH

•AKO

"DAILY CR YPTqQli9,TES - Here '1 how 111 worlt II: 10/23
One letter stanca:ror another. Iri '\his sample A is used
for the three v,;• X1o,t the two O's, etc. Single lettel'!l,
apostrophes~ the 1englh and ron nation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different
,.
'
. CRYPTOQUOTE
'·

JMZD

N

Q NP

XRLMI • . Rl

R X

RX

.

12:10(1) . . . . . . . . . . . Willi '
Dtnlll
L n """•• (NIIj (2:00)
Ill
MOVII:•

!!!~=,

r.;;;;:; II:UCI.A (T)

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

1llll(l)llllllill ......

KHDL
HS

TZStiBZ

MZ

H PI

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Y..a• • .,.. Ctw•• ..olea SOME MEN ARE
ALIVE S.._Y BECAI,ISE rr .IS ~GAINST ntE LAW
TO IUU. lltEM. - ED HOWE
.

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�Paga 10-Tha Dlily Sentinal

Pom.-oy-Middleport, Ohio .

Bridge..

Voice of Democracy
contest set Nov. 7
•

The second annual Voice of winners receive an all-expense paid
Democracy Contest will be held trip to Washington, D.C. to comNov. 7 at 7 p.m. at the Tuppers pete in the National Finals· which
Plains VFW Post 9053.
are held in the spring national winAll Meigs County sophomores, DCJ'I' · wiD be awarded' more than
.
juniors and seniors are invited to $18,000 in scholarships.
take pan.
·
For information at Eastern High
A three to five minute speech School contact Joe Bailey or Arch
wiD be given on the theme Rose; at Soutllem High School con"Democracy-Van$uard
of tact Bob Ord; and a1 Meigs High
Fn:edom." The wmning speech
School contact Mike Wilfong..Furbe taped and forwarded to district ther information may be obtained
jud . .
by contacting · Merrilee BryS!It at
~150 savings bond will be 985-3376. The public is invited to
awanled on the local level. Stare artend.

will

Litter Control Program has
been successfiil in Meigs
Kenny Wiggins, Director of the
Meigs County Litter Control
Program, reports tllat since May,
the prognim has been successful in
recycling . over . 600
major
household appliances. This gives
Meigs County residents an oppo~­
tunity to properly dtspOse of thw
old WJused appliances.
Wiggins stares that only metal
appliances are acceptable and are to
be recyclable, not stripped. Items
"which
are
acceptable
are

refrigerators, ranges, washers and
dryers, dishwashers, hot water
tanks, heating stoves, and freezers.
Televisions, furniture and other
items are not acceptable, says Wiggins.
.
.
This is a convenient opporrunity
lQ recycle old hpusehold appliances
in an environmentally acceptable
manner. Wiggins added tllat those
who misuse this privilege and who
are apprehended will be treated as
all ocher illegal dumpers.

Tuesday. October 23, 1990

Vehicles damaged in wrecks ·

Continued from page 1

was "developed to recognize the in- Office," he continued.
terests of Southeastern· Ohio in
Meigs County Engineer Phil
state government."
Robens, who was present a1 the
Mingyar adressed development meeting, sail! tllat staff at the plat
of the county in his message to the map office had "done miracles with
planning commission, with special what they have to work with", and
auention being placed on develop- said that electronic equipment
ment of industrial sites.
necessary to ensure "closure" of
Mingyar also answered questions property descriptions presented to
from planning commission mem- the county auditor for transfer
ber$ regarding industrial park . could cost anywhere between an es·
development, and state funding timaled $200 and $800.
through his office for those
Meigs County Prosecuting Atprojects.
According to Mingyar, monies torney Steven L. Story told the
fro111 the state through his office commission tllat such a change in
might include funds for l!oth land protedure was. "long overdue," but
acquisition and building i:onslruc- tllat in order to succeed, the chantion, but would probably not aUow ges "must get acceptance from the
for the improvement or demolition Meigs County Bar Association."
of existing buildings.
-Executive Director Charles
The question of possible funding Blakeslee agreed to meet with
for the demolition of the former those involved in the process in
Pomeroy High School building or ·hopes of reaching a solution, while
the MOM site was brought up, but Roberts and Meigs County ComMin~yar was skeptical of funding
missioner Richard Jones agreed to
possobilities for that type of project. discuss the possibility of placing
A lengthy discussion was held by the tax map office under Robens'
the planning commission on pos- jurisdiction.
sible improvement of the current
In other · action, the Meigs
property-transfer procedure in
County Regional Planning Com·Meigs County.
The concern of ·me commission mission:
- appoited Jon Jacobs, Reed and
is that subdivision guidelines may
not be met by the current proce- Story on the nominating commit~;
.
dure.
- agreed to pay a bill to Leesa
"It probably can be safely said
tllat most of the surveying in con- Mwpbey and Associares for what is
. nection with property transfers has expected to be a final statement on
been made on the desk of auorneys the prepl!llltion of the commiSsion's
over the last fifty or more years," indusrnal site booklet;
- congrahllated 'Kim Shields on
Blakeslee said yeSterday.
obtaining
funding for the Rutland
"At no time in the transfer prosewer
project;
cedure is mention made of the
- set the next quarterly meeting
Board of Health, Subdivision
for
January 28, 1991.
regulations, or the Engineer's.

Crooks ...

1\vo accidents, both resulting in
moderate damage to the vehicles ,
were investigated Monday by
Pomeroy Police.
At I :30 p.m. a 1987 Plymouth
driven by Agnes Dixon, Pomeroy,
traveling north on Nye Ave. was
struck on the left side back door
and rear by a semi-lruclc owned by
Putman, Inc. According to the
repon, the truck driven by Franklin
Jackson, South Zanesville, slide on
the wet pavement into the car.
While there was moderate damage
to the car, there was no damage to
the truck. Neither driver. was . injured and no citation was issued.
· Police at 11:36 p.m. investigated

Police probe wreck
A minor accident involving a
school bus was investigated by
Middleport Police Monday.
According to the repon, a Meigs
Local Bus being driven by Shirley
Wilson, backe4 up in an attempt to
negotiate a turn from Nonh Front
St. onto Hudson and struck tile
parked car of William Van Meter,
Middleport. There was minor
damage to the car. No citation was
issued.

.
a one-car accident on West Main

St. near the entrance to Foodland. II
· was reported tllat Paula Horton of
Middleport traveling cast on West
Main swerved to miss an animal
and lost control of her vehicle. It
went into the wet grass and slid .
over the enbankment on the Ohio.
River side. Miss Horton was takeor
by private vehicle to a private~
physician for treatment or injuries.
There was heavy .damage to partS
underneath the car, wlice rellOrtOO.

A Middleport man was cited
for ·failure to control Monday
when he ran off U.S. 33 lh Meigs
County.
Paul J . Anspach, 17, was
northbound when he apparently
lost control and ran off the right
side of the road. striking a sign
and a tree, according to a report
from the Gallla·Melgs postotthe'
State Highway Patrol.
Anspach and his two passengers; Matthew S. Gatrell, 14,
of Middleport, and Matthew E.
Craddock, ·15, of Middleport,
were not Injured .

week.
· ·
·
malntalll peace.
Iraq also released 14 Amerl·
"The explicit and decisive
cans and said all French hos· stance declared by Saudi Arabia
tages, numbering about 350, towards the Iraqi criminal ag·
were free to leave the country.
gresslon against fraternal Ku·
· Some diplomats and ol!servers walt ts firm, Irrevocable, clear
said the move by Saddam to free and unambiguous," Fahd was
the French was an attempt to quoted as saying.
.divide the · Western alliance
Defense Minister Sultan Bin
formed against Iraq following Its Abdul Azlz hinted Monday that
Aug. 2 tnvasl1ln 'of KYW.aJJ ,, •. . _ Kuwait .. shOuld ..gi)l~ Iraq two
King Fahd of Saudi Arabia was 'strategic gulf islands In return .
quoted by the BBC Wednesday as for a withdrawal from the rest of
saying his country's stand In the the{:ountry. The following day he
gulf crtsls was unchanged, des· said his remarks had been
plte remarks over the weekend misinterpreted.
by the Saudi defense minister
Fahd said Saudi Arabia, which
that Indicated the kingdom would has alloweq hundreds ·of thou·
consider a partial wi!hdrawal of sands of foreign troops to be
Iraq from emirate m order to deployed on Its soil to counter,

e

CHAPMAN SHOES

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EXPERIEN'CE COUNTS
D
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WASHINGTON (UPI) -'Rep. office n~mb:e~, . . _. ...... :·· . -~- ·
Donald "Buz" Lukens convicted
· One unidentified source ··said
of having sex wiih a teenage girl, there may be a witness, a
reportedly has decided to resign passenger on the elevator.
rather !ban face new charges he
Another source told The Plain
fondled a Capitol elevator Dealer the woman became so
operator.
frightened of Lukens last Wed:
· Lukens, R-Ohlo, was ordered nesday that she asked her fiance
to appear Tuesday afternoon to act as her bodyguard on the
before the House Committee on elevator.
Standards of 'Official Conduct,
"She felt as If she were a
but obtained a 24-hour de.lay to . hostage In that elev;i'tor, " the
weigh his options.
source said. "She was humiliated
The Cleveland Plain Dealer and -afraid because,.afterall, this
reported Wednesday Lukens had was a member of Congress."
declded,to resign rather !ban risk
On Tuesday, House Republibelng forced out and stripped of can , Leader Robert Michel dehis pension and other benefits.
manded Lukens resign or face
The newspaper said a source loss of his pension.
close to the Investigation said
The ethics committee, which
Lukens patted the elevator oper· had conducted a preliminary
ator on her buttocks, rubbed her Investigation last year Into the
back and shoulders and gave her sex conviction against Lukens,
his business card,
his said In a stajement Monday !bat
home
number and
since that Inquiry "the commit·

tee has received additional evl' ·
· dence Indicating that Rep. Luk·
ens may have made unwan led
and unsolicited sexual advances
. to a congressional employee." ·
The 12-member committee
also stripped Lukens, 59, of some
of his defense rights under House
rules.

A 1!2 ·mill levy to raise additional funas for the care of 19
cemeteries in Salem Township will
be voted on by residents in the Nov.
6 election.
According to Bonnie Scoit, clerk
for the Salem Township trustees,
this is the .only township levy
which property owners will pay as

.••J

•

..
Pd. by JONES for R.P-ntatlve,
George Colllnl T....U... 11048 '
Rice Run R~ .. J:!Mdlvlle. OH. 41772

or

T\IESDAY ACClDENT • Racine fire and

eme11e.cy aquad itarr were' billy at tbe sceae or

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a Ollf-CIII' acddeat aear RldDe Tu~ay afternoon. Charlotte Klneald or McKenzie RldJ!e

Road was taken to GJ'llllt Medleal Ceater la
Columbus by Life FllahL She remallls Ia crltli:al
condltloa tliere. (SentlDel Photo by Brian J;
Reed)
·

WASHINGTON (UP!)
Orders for durable goods
plunged a surprising 1.7 percent ·
h;o September to $124.9 billion for
the second straight monthly
decline, the Commerce Department reported Wednesday.
Most private economists had
expected a smaller drop of 0.2
percent, with fewer orders for
cars, trucks and vans held up by
strong demand for commercial
airliners.
But analysts are not giving up
all hope.
.
"We are reading the manutac·
turing sector as hanging on for ·
dear life, .trying to resist going
Into recession," said Robert
Dlell, an economist at Northern
Trust fn Chicago. "They're hang- ·
lng In as best they can."
Not counting transportation,
orders were up 0.3 percent last
month, a government spokesman said.
·
September's 1.7 percent decline In orders lor durable goods
- expensive Items made to last
lbree or more years - follows a
revised decrease of 0.8 percent In
August and an Increase of 2. 7
tiercent In July.

2 Sectiops, 14 Pog&lt;os 26

Co~••

,A Multimedia Inc. New.,.per

''The numbers do not Indicate
that lbe manufacturing sector ~
sliding Into a downturn," said
Norman Robertson, chief economist at Mellon Bank In Pitts·
burgh. '"rhe figures show a
mixture of strength as well as
weakness.
"The economy Is still on a slow
but positive growth track," Robertson sa)d. "The,numbers are
weak but they do not suggest a
recession."

· The . weak demand for new
orders . for durable goods was
acros's the )loard In September,
with only non-electrical machln·
ery and non-defense capital
goods registering gains of 5.4
percent and ~.3 percent,
respectively.
.
Orders for primary metals
were off 0.8 percent In Sep- ·
tember, down 7.7 percent for
electrical machinery, off 6.8
percent for transportation equipment and down 9.6 percent for
defense capital goods.
·
Not counting defense hard·
ware, total orders for durable
goods were down 1.1 percentlast
lljOnlb, the Commerce Depart·
ment said.

Portland man arrested
. by deputies on charge

A Portland man has been aireS·
ted on a drug charge following execution of a search warrant by the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department.
According to a department news
Tokyo newspaper Wednesday release, 29 year old Terrence (Tertnd.lcated only 13 percent of ry) Clark was arrested early"
Japanese support the possible Tuesday morning and is charged
deployment of troops overseas. · · with trafficking in drugs.
In another development Wed·
He remains in the Meigs County
nesday, Egyptian President Jail.
Hosnl Mubarak headed to Qatar
According to the search warrant
and Oman on his surprise tour of
return, executed by the department
lbe gull, which took hlni to Saudi and agents of the Ohio Bureau of
Arabia Tuesday.
Criminal Investigation and Identification, cash and packaged
marijuana were found at the Clark
residence.
Deputies took an accident report
on Monday on County Road 35.
According_ to the report, Patrick
Clifford
Of Long Bottom was
a part of tlieir regular tax bill."
• She explained that a decrease 1n
income to the •general fund which
supports the volunteer fire department, cemetery ca,re, and ad,
ministration, and an increase in tile
number of cemeteries which the
An e~pee from the Mei$S
· lrustees must maintain, have caused County Jail has been recaptured on
financ.ial pressure on the township.
Soulh Carolina by the Federal
The trustees, she said, have at- Bureau of Investigation.
tempted 1.0 meet . the bud~et
Brian Bass, who escaped from
shortfaD with increased sale pnce the facility on August 20, was ap·
for cemetery lots, but the income is prehended without incident on a
still not adequate to maintain the charge of unlawful flight.
cemeteries.
·
According to · Meigs County
· Income from the proposed 1!2 Sheriff James M. . Soulsby. the
mill levy, Scott said, will go Athens office of the FBI, usong indirecUy into the cemetery fWJd and formation obtained by the .Sh~riff's
wiD he used only for cemetery office, filed the charge in Federal
costs such as mowing, upkeep and Court.
rebuilding of fences where needed.

a

traveling east in 1971 Mack lruck
owned by J &amp; F Contracting. When
he roWJded the curve, he saw a
stopped school bus. In his attempt
to stop the lruck, the vehicle slid on
the wet pavement andjackknifed.
Moderate 'damage was listed · to
the truck; no contact was made
with the bUS.
.
No injuries or citations are reported.
A deer accident was reported by
Paul E. Klien of Pomeroy, who was
operating a Blue Streak Cab in
Chester Township.
Light damage was listed to the
1982 vehicle.
No injuries are reported.
Linda Roberts of Union Avenue
reported Tuesday morning · that
sometime during the night someone
had damaged her mailbox.

Meigs escapee is captured
in South Carolina by FBI

Racine driver
·injured in
auto wreck

..,

ELECT

·
further Iraq! aggression, demanded a complete and total
~~~~~:wal of Iraqi troops from
,
·
.
'The stance os not subJ~! to
an~ change or negotiations, he
sa · •
In Tokyo, opposition parties
~di~ a o~-da[' bb~yco:t 0~1 ~
ar amen _Y e 8 e .0 8
iha~ w~ul~ all~w Japanese~~~~! .
fo steti ep
~e\~~ar II.
lr
me s nee or
.
t As debatteldcJntinuedi le~l sla
ors were 0 apanes so 1 ers
co~l~ supply ammunillonu ~0
~- · ledc forces t~nde~n\heToky~
h::c~ed 0.::f~~~o~n of d~llars to
the Pgulfg effort, b~t has been
under pressure to send troops 'to

Salem Twp. levy is sought
for care of 19 cemeteries

.

LET RICH JONES PUT THIS EXPERIENCE TO WORK FOR YOU

RICHARD
E.
JONES
STATE REPRESENTATIVE · 94th District

Representative of the 94th House District; Bill Wockline, for Meigs
County Auditor; Robert Buck, for Meig!O County Probate and
Juvenile Judge; rally speaker.Frank Cremeans, Gallia County Executive Committee .Chairman; and Manning Roush, for Meigs
County Commissioner.

.
will
Lu k ens reportedl. Y. ·.
resign . th~~~~r~~;~N·publlshedbya

Hospital news

WHO HAS BEEN A. COUNrv COMMISSIONER?
IPreaently Serving)

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 24, 1990

.Orders for
durable g
drop 1.7%

CAIRO, Egypt (UPI)- British ·
and U.S. hostages freed by Iraq
headed home Wednesday but the
International. community stood
firm against Baghdad, with
Saudi King Fahd demanding
complete withdrawal from Ku·
walt and Japan debating sending
troops to the Persian Gulf.
The British Broadcasting
Corp. said about 30 of 37 British
hostages who flew from Baghdad
to Amman, Jordan on Tuesday,
arrived In London Wednesday to
~n emotional homecoming. Ac·
companying them was former
Prime Minister Edward Heath,
who secured their release after
meeting with Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein earner In the

Refreshments Will Be

WHO HAS TWENTY YEARS EXPERIENCE IN
FINANCE?

Vol.41, No.121
Copyrighted 1990

More U. ·S. hostages are freed by Iraq

OFF

WHO HAS BEEN A SCHOOL BOARD CLERK?

•

REPUBLICAN RALLY -Jim Petro, left, candidate for Auditor of
State, was the guest speaker at Tuesday evening's Republican Rally
held at the American Legion Hall in Middleport. Other candidates
present at tbe rally were, 1-r, Ricb Jones, candidate for State
.

$1 ooo

Cloudy tontcht. Low In
upper ·30s. Thursday, hiJh In ·
. mid 40s. Chance of rain tt
percent.

•

TRUNK SHOW
WEDNESDAY
OCTOBER 24

$30,000, 'the person hired wiD have
the oppootunity to increase his
salary through the adminiStrative
fees on any economic grants which
he can bring into the county.
Asked about where the office
wiU be located, Eliason said that
another committee is working on
tllat aspect. He said that extensive
remodeling will have to be done if
the office remains in its present
location due to the lack of heat and
water, but that other locations are
under consideration by a Chamber
commirte.
It was pointed out by Council·
man Paul Gerard that as an entice·
ment to have the ·office lOcated in
Middlepon, the village will provide
space and some office personnel.
As for the contribuoon requested
by the Chamber representative, the
matter was tabled ·until the next
meeting. Eliason emphasized the
importance of three year funding to
allow time for a development director to do the job needed in the al'ea.
It was noted that whoever is hired
for the position will have to either
reside in Meigs County or relocate

WHO HAS BEEN A SCHOOLBOARD
MEMBER?

Page 4

You, Feel A,e In Cood
Nandi with D,. ComFo,f/

contlnu~ from page 1

WHO HAS BEEN A VILLAGE COUNCIL
MEMBER?

Pick-3: 053
Pick-4: 9740
Cards: 4-H; Q.C;
J-D; 8-S

Middleport man
cited by state patrol

The one mill levy for current ex·
· penses which is up for renewal was
discussed by Mayor Hoffman. He
noted that the levy generated about
11 A.M. TO 5 P.M.
$12,000 a year and most of the
money goes for street li~hts.
The mayor encouraged coWJcil
members to auepd lhe public meet;
ing on t!Je feasibility study of the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge next week.
he stressed the impor)ance of get· ·
CAROLYN KORN
HOMER SMffll
ting involved in the initial planning
for the proposed construction of a
CELEBRATING THE WIN - Meigs County Courthouse
new bridge.
employees celebrated ·the Cincinnati Reds' winning the World
The additional $25,000 from the
Series by wearing Red Monday. Among those jolnllig In .the
Department
of Natural Resources,
excitement of having the winning team were Homer Smith and
Division
of
Waterways,
was noted
Carolyn Korn, who wore their Cincinnati Reds shirts to work.
by Ma~or Hoffman who said that
the new money along with $25,000
from last year provides two-third of
the cost of planned improvements
Mary Little
Clyde Sanders
at the Middleport levee. The total
According to Information reClyde D. Sanders, 84, of
cost is $75,000 with the village to
celved by The Dally Sentinel Township Road 289, Reedsville,
provide $25,000 in local march.
from t)le Fisher Funeral Home In ·died early Monday morning at his
Hoffman said tllat he is hopeful that .
Middleport, It was listed that residence.
the project can get underway early
Frances Preston of Cheshire was
Born on June 28, 1906 in Meigs
next year.
Mary E. Little's step-sister In County, he was the son of the late
Looldng to the holidays, the
Mrs. Little's obituary that was · Clinton 811(1 Roena J. Kim Sl!llders.
mayor reminded council members
published Monday.
He was retired from the Operating
that trick and treat has been set for
Preston Is .Mrs. Little's half· · Engineers as a mechanic and oiler, · here.
Tuesday night from 6 to 7 p.m.
sister. The Incorrect Information a barber and a farmer.
It was decided tllat this year the
No action was taken by Council
was submitted to the Fisher
He was a member of the Success on a request of Lawson Hauling for parking meters will be "freed"
Funeral Home.
Church of Christ.
a permit to do some hauling in beginning Nov. 12, with'~ parkSurvivors
include
his
wife,
Middleport Village. Both Lawson .ing being restricted to two hours.
Kenndh H yseII
Helen Mae Chaney Sanders, two · and the current hauler in the vilCouncil gave the first reading to
Kenneth G. Hysell, 54, Rutland, daughters and sons-in-law, Rowena lage, Roger Manley, were present. an ordinance providing bonuses for
died early Tuesday morning a1 and Robert Walters, Blacklick, and Manley said he felt his company village employees who have been
ANY SOFT SPOT
VeteranS Memorial Hospital after Kathryn and Robert . Formey, was adequately handling the busi· on the job at least six months. Fullan extended illness.
Reedsville;
two
sons
and ness in town. He noted that he is time·employees will received $300,
OR NURSEMATE
He was born in Meigs County, daughters-in-law, Montie · and steadily upgrading his business, has while part-time employees will
PURCHASE OR SPECIAL
the son of Carl Hysell, Sr., and the Glenna Sanders, Reedsville, and purchased another packer truck, receive $150 on DeC. 15.
!ale Thelma Ebersbach Hysell.
Delbert and Nancy Sanders of AI- and had open lrucks for hauling
ORDER
Auending were Council memHe was a local disc jockey and bany; one sister, Nela F. Blake, junk appliances.
bers Dewey Horton, James C!atattended the Harrisonville Holiness Gahanpa, eight grandchildren, five
He also talked about his plans for wonhy, Paul Gerard, William WalChurch and the Rutland Church of great-grandchildren, two nephews expanding recycling _in the village ters and I ack Sauerfield, Mayor
the Nazarene.
and a niece.
noting tllat he has a new bailer Hoffman, and Clerk-Treasurer Jon
Besides his father, he is survived
Funeral services will be held at I coming next week. Further discus- ' Buck.
·~erved.
by his wife, Wilma Nelson Hysell, p.m. on Thursday at the Success · sian on the Lawson request is
Rutland; two stepsons, Evereu (Jo) Chun:h of Christ, with Mr. Joe needed before any action on a perRegister For FREE. Pair of Soft Spot Sandals
Gilmore, Rutland, and Gary (Don- Hoskins .and Mr. Ron Hennen mit is taken, it was decided by
na) Gilmore, Florida; two s~- officiating. Burial will be in the Council.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
daughlcrs, Mrs. Mark (Kay) G1l- Success Cemetery. Friends may
MONDAY ADMISSIONS
Gene Goodwin again met with
lilan, Tuppers Plains, and Mrs. Ron call a1 the White-Blower funeral CoWJcil to discuss Hudson Street Shawn Lambert, Rutland.
(Diana) · Starcher, Rutland; two home Tuesday after 7 p.m. and property lines and some dead trees
MONDAY DISCHARGES
POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE STORE
brothers, Carl Hysell, Jr. and Wednesday after 3 p.m. and after which are falling onto his property. Robert Imboden, Marvin Teaford.
Harold HyseD, both of Rutland; II a.m. at the church.
seven grandchildren; and several
aunts, uncles and cousins.
MORE THAN EVER
He was preceded in dealh by his .
mother.
,
Services will be on Thursday at I
p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in
Middlepon with Rev. Earl Fields
and Rev. Samuel Basye officiating.
RICH JONES
Burial will be in Miles Cemetery.
MARY ABEL
F*nds may call at the funeral
home on Wednesday from 2-4 p.m.
and 7-9p.m.
WHO HAS BEEN A TOWNSHIP CLERK?

--Area deaths--

Ohio Lottery

Douglas to
defend title
Thursday

A Racine woman was taken to a
Columbus hospital by Life Flight
after a one car accident on Portland
Road yesterday afternoon.
According to Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services,
Charlotte Kincaid was transported
to Grant Medical Center after the
Chevrolet Citation that she was
driving went off the ioadway and
overturned in a deep culvert.
Kincaid, who was trapped in her
car, remains in the Intensive Care
Unit at Grant Medical Center.
According to a Life Fliiht
spokesperson, she is being treated
for trauma and chest injuries. She is
in critical condition. .

Soulsby anticipates that Hass
will not be returned to Meigs
County
until
extradition
proceedings
are
completed.
Meanwhile, Bass remains iii the
Aiken County, S.C. jail.
Bass escaped by chipping
through the ceiling of the jail cell
block, crawling through the attic
and out a second floor window.
A second _escapee, Jonathan
Shawn Cline, was re-c~pwred in
September after giving himself up
tn officials in Lebanon Township.

DST ends on Sunday;
turn clocks back hour

. WASHINGTON (UPI)- Local time they turn their clocks back
fire departments want Amerl· an hour to end daylight'savlng
cans to use this weekend's time.
The change will come on Oct
biannual clock-changing ritual to
28,
the last Sunday of the month,
change the batteries In their
·and
clocks should be set back one
smoke detectors at ,the same
hour at 2 a.m. local time, ending
the· 7· month·long period of
brighter evenlligs and . giving
most people an extra hour of
sleep.
· Fire department representa•
r tlves across the country will be
knocking on doors on Oct. 27,
offering to change smoke detec- ·
lor batteries. and reminding•
Americans to "fall back" aild
change their clucks.
The International Assoctauon .
of fi'lre Chiefs, the American
Conllllued ol! page 7 ·

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