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                  <text>Pega

12-lhe Daily Sentinel

Robinson birth
.

Mr. and Mrs, lirad (Serena)
Robinson, Long Bottom, are an·
IIOUIICing the birth of their first
child, a ·son, Bradley Jordan, on
July 31 at St. Joseph's Hospital,
Paikersbwg, W.ViC
. ' ..
The infant weighed eight pounds
14 ounces and was 20 inches I011g.
Maternal
grandparents
are
Grover and Elsie White, Long BotUllll. Maternal great ~dparents
are Woodrow and Virginia Fof111ey,
Long Bottom.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Elmer Still, ·Middleport, and Lou Robinson,
Columbus.

BRADLEY J . ROBINSON

auctioneer.
Mrs. Pat Holter presenled the
program using weathered or
treasured wood in arrangements.
She showed an unusual piece of
weathered wood that looked like a
ghost She suggests spraying wood
with Gesso before spraying color
on it
She made an arrangement using
a block of wood painled black, golf
club protectors painled black, a
burnt piece of wood, alium and
leaves painled black, She also made
an arrangement using driftwood,
peach roses and croton. She
showed a piece of sycamore and
made an arrangement using a piece
of wood inside a container and button mums.
Refreshments were served by the
hostess.

Chester UMW meets
"Freely You Received, Freely
Give" was the title of the program
presen~ed by Mrs. Betty Dean and
Mrs. Bonnie Landers at the
November meeting of the Chester
United Methodist Women.
The purpose of the meeting was
to explore ways to share and give
time, talent and money in fulfillment of the purpose of the United
Methodist Women. and tr:l provide
an opportunity for
United
Methodist Women to present their
gifts for the World Thankoffering.
The scripture read was Matthew
10:8. The group sang the hymn,
'"Thank You, Jesus" with Mrs.
Kalhryn Baum pianist.
Three women told stories about
· being a UMW and what pleasure
they received from that.
The group sang the hymn "Take
My Life and Let It Be" as the closing hymn.
Rev. Sharon Hausman closed
with·prayer.
Mrs. Mae Young presided at the
· business meeting with nine mbmers
present and 17 sick and shut in

8&amp;40 Salon
meeting held
Reports by dClegates attending
· Departmental La Marche in
Mansfield was given at the recent
meeting of Meigs County Salon
710 Eight and· Fony held at the
home of Marjory Fetty. Attending
the La Marche were I ulia Hysell,
Pearl Knapp and Mary Martin.
Awards won by the Salon included a certificate of merit for the
pubiicity scrapbook by Lula
Hampton; the annual report
. prepared by Mary Martin; certificate and cash award for second
place in rituals and emblems; and
second place for children and youth
programs with Julia Hysell as
chairman. The group also won the
Grace Garrison trophy for Best
Memorial Service.
It was noled that the Salon has
reached its membership goal for
1991.
Tickets were purchased for raising money for a bed for a child.
Prizes given in this fundraiser include a while afghan, a multipurpose radio and a picnic basket. It
was also noted that the group will
sell pecans again as a fundraiser.
The Christmas party was planned
and the place will be announced
lall!r. Homecoming will be held at
the Roadway Inn in Mansfield for
Deparunental Chapeau· Delores
Kilgore. Dinner will be a 7 p.m.
and tickets ate $16. Deadline for
reservations is Saturday. Mrs. Kilgore selected "Good Health for All
Children
with
Dollars
for
Research" as her theme.
The group voted to support a
cash donation to the tuberculosis
office in Meigs County. The money
will be used to aid a Cystic Fibrosis .
child in the eounty.
The next meeting will be held at
the home of Iva Powell on Nov. 12.

Alfred area

Helping Hands Circle meets

Floral arts meeting
held recendy by group
The Shade Valley Council of
Floral Arts met at the home of Mrs.
Denise Mora for its recent meeting. ·
Devotions were read by Mrs. Mora.
Roll call was to make or decorate
and wear a hat representing the
mem.bers. Attending were eight
members and two guests, Mrs .
Kalhryn Mora and Mrs. Judy
Eichinger.
Mrs. Beny Pean presided at the
meeting in which members paid
dues and new program boolcs were
distributed and discussed.
· The group received · Christmas
flower show schedules for the show
to be held Nov. 17 and 18 at Royal
Oak Resort. JoAnn Francis will
check on getting new specimen
vases for the flower show.
.
A brown bag auction was held
with Mrs. Melanie S~ethem as

. Monday, November 5. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Calls reported.
A workday was set for Thursday
to work on lap robes again.
The group will hold an election
day dinner and bazaar on Tuesday.
'

Officers were elected at the
recent meeting of the Circle of
Helping Hands held at the home of
Kathryn Johnson.
.'
•
Officers elected are Lucille AIlen, president; Suzanne Warner,
vice president; Marjorie Purtell,
secretary; and Kathryn Johnson,
treasurer.
Lucille Allen presided at the
meeting and all responded to roll
call with a bible verse using a form
of the word "!hanks." Mrs. Allen
had devotions using I Corinthians
13.
Plans were made to prepare fruit
Uilys for the Thanksgiving season.
These will be prepared Nov. 20 at
10 a.m. Also, a box of items will be
prepared and sent to Brad Zink,
who is stationed on the .U.S.S.
.

Kennedy.
The Christmas church di•ner
will be Dec. 7 at 6:30 p.m. at 'the
Zion Church of Christ Meat and
drinks will be furnished and others
will bring covered dishes. .
The Thanksgiving eve prograrri
will be Nov. 21 a1 7 p.rn. at the
church and the Christmas program
will be Dec. 24 at 6 p.m.
:Hazel Stanley presented the
program. Each relaled their favorite
" Autumn Activity" and Mrs. Stan.
ley read a poem "My Thanksgiving
Memories" and Mrs. Purtell had a
poem, "In Love Again." The
program closed with a game on ,
embellishing of words.
· Mrs. Johnson served refreshments.
The next meeting will be Jan. 3
at the home ofMarjorie Purtell.

Literary Club meets ·
Mrs. James Diehl reviewed- the
book "Fairy T~es of the Orient" by
Pearl S. Buck at the recent meeting
of the Middleport Literary Club
held at the home of Mrs. Wendell
Hoover.
Mrs. Diehl state that the book is
a labor of love by Pearl Buck who
has by her life and work, built a
bridge of understanding betweep
East and West She has gathered a
treasure of faily tales and folk tales.
her own favontes from the Oriental
world she knows well. She opens
new realms· of enchanunent for

Western civilization. Mrs. Buck
says in fairy tales, evil is worsled
and good triumphs, princes and
princesses live happily ever after.
The 90th birthday of Mrs. Nan
Moore ·was observed.
Mrs: Forest Bachtel gave a brief
insight of her life. This is done so
members learn about each one's
life.
Roll call was answered with
members giving a favorite fairy
tale.
The hos~ess served refreshments.

Southern jr. high honor roll
The honor roll for the first six- · son, Nick Smith, Rayan Young,
weeks at Southern I unior High Sarina Winner, Kim Smith, Joan
'Hait and Angel Day.
.
.
School has been announced.
Receiving all ft&gt;s in the eighth
Receiving all A's in the seventh
grade are Rochelle Jenkins and grade are Brian Anderson, Grant
Jennifer Lawrence. Other seventh Circle, Man Morrow, Kendra Norgraders named to the honor roll are ris, David Pickens and Courtney
Amanda Mills, Jason Barnett, John Roush. Other eighth ,graders named
Card, Robby Crow, Robin · Gil- to the honor roll are Randy Bing,
lespie, CJ. Harris, Paul !hie, Craig Mason Fisher, Kevin !hie, Andrea
Knight, Jay McKelvey, Denise Moore, Tracy Pickett, Jeni Stewart,
Roush, Jason Shuler, Sarnmi Sis- Amy Weaver and Ryan Williams.

RYAN TERZOPPLOUS

Celebrates sixth
POMEROY - Ryan Terzopplous,
Middlepon, recently celebrated his
sixth birthday with a party at McDonald's in Pomeroy.
Attending were his mother,
Narsa Terzopplous, sisters, Marlene
and Darlene Moodispaugh, Brenda
and Ricky Ha\Vley, Christopher
Guinlher, Darla Hawley, Gregory,
Ma1gie and Jimmie Yeauger.

Giants
•
remam
unbeaten

Alfred United Methodist Church
sponsored a Halloween party a1 the
church on Oct. 28. Rev. Sharon
Hausman explained the real meaning of Halloween.
- Prizes were awarded to Aaron
Yost, most original costume;
Mic.helle O'Nail and Tiffany Spen·
cer, prettiest; Stai::ie Watson,. funniest; Mike and Jeremy Robmson
and Derik: Winebrenner, ugliest.
Clarence Warner and Michelle
Donovan won jara ~f candy com in
the guessing contest.
Refreshments
of
coolcies,
candies, popcorn balls, cereal m.ix
and soft drinks were served to 55
people. ·
Nellie Parker spent a weekend
with Thelma and Edwin Boenicher
at Smithfield. Other visitors in their
home were their daughter, Joan of
New Concord, foster daughter and .
·children, Gladys Carpenter, Danny,
Justin and Crystal.
Harriet Sialder, Parkerburg,
W.Va. and Pauline Cox, ' New Jersey, visiled their cousin, Nina
Robinson and Clara Follrod.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Poole and Will
and Nellie Parker altended a
birthday party for Robert· Parker,
Marietta, on Oct27.
·

Community news
Pages 5·6

Page ·4

Page 6

Vot .41. No.139
Copyr;ghted 1990

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News StaiT
Three ordinances were given
final readings and were approved at
Monday night's regular meeting of
Pomeroy Village Council.
The first ordinan~e· that was approved last night ·Will grant
Christmas bonuses to village
employees.
Effective November 19, the ordinance will grant bonuses of $125
to fuU·time village employees and
$50 for part-time workers.
'
A second ordinance that was approved last night raises the sl\lary
of the village clerk from $10;000 to

.

$15,000 per year. Mter December
31, 1991, the salary will revert back
to $10,000, as it was prior 10 the
new orcjinance.
'The reason for the increase in
salary, according to the ordinance,
is "to attract and retain a qualified
and competent individual" for the
clerk position.
.
The third ordinance provides for
the abandonment of Steep Street, a
short street in the Monkey Run

area.

Discussiol)s on the abandonment
·of the street jJegan in early summer.
That abandonment has been approved by, and will be paid by;

residents with property on the for the Pomeroy Police Department
street
in the amount of $552.83:
Discussions were held last night
Preliminary discussions were
with Pomeroy · Police Chief Jerry held last night between council
Rought regarding purctuise of new members and Rought concerning
parldng meters and winler police the purchase next year of a new
uniforms, both of which the village Pomeroy Police Cruiser.
approved purchase last night.
That _purchase is expected to be
Rought reports that vandalism of .written mto the 1991 budget
the meter$ has taken its toll on the
In other action, the village made
village treasury. In order to replace a three-year committment · to
all meters now missing, Rought provide $1,500 to $2,000 toward
reponed, 22 new meters will need the salary of the new Executive
to be replaced, and that will cost Director/Development Ditector for
the village a total of $4,284.04.
the ·. Meigs County Chamber of
Council 8Iso moved to purchase C&lt;immerce. That new position is
new unifonns for the winter season expecled to be filled by year's end.

VICTORIOUS BAND • These squad leaders
are a pari or Eastern High School's whining
marching band. Pictured with lbeir state rompetition plaque are. front row l·r, Lorre Os·

borne, Susie Kimes, ·s berri Wol~ and Aaron Wilson. Second row 1-r, are Andrew Woll, Letitia
Holsinger, Bobbie White, Vicki Warner and
Dawn Foley.

Chilly weather greets Ohio voters
By United Press International
Chilly temperatures and gen-.
erally dry . weather con!litlons
greeted Ohioans today as they
went to the polls to vote in the
general election.
Early Tuesday , temperatures
across the state ranged from the
mid 30s in the northern part of the
state to !he lower 40s in southern
Ohio. Skies were cloudy In all but
the northwestern section of the
state, where clear skies
prevailed .

Harrisonville news .
Dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Doug Bishop on Sunday were Mrs.
Golda Han, McArthur; Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Cartwright, Zanesville;
Mr, and Mrs. Gleim Kennedy and
children, Mr. and .Mrs. Kenny
David and son, Lan~ville; and Mr.
and Mrs. Tim Bishop.
Mrs. Pauline Atkins, Mrs. Stella
Atkins, Mrs. Avanelle George, Mrs.
Betty Bishop, Mrs. Gmcie Wilson,
Harrisonville Chapter, attended the
Grand Chapter in Columbus last
week.
Mr.. and Mrs. Doug Bishop atleniled a square dance festival
recently at A!,Wood Lake Reilort.

.
Temperatures Tuesday were
expected to climb only into the
40s across most of the state with
some readings in the low 50s
possible In the southern part of
the state.
Mostly cloudy conditions were
forecast for the most of the state
Tuesday. With some drlzzle.possible In the northeast. , In the
southwest the cloud cover should
break by Tuesday afternoon.
The cooler trend will continue
Tuesday night and Wednesday.
Lows Tuesday night will drop to

Hutton found guilty;
sentenced to prison
morning.
. The jury deliberated 40 minu1es
before returning irs guilty verdict
Hutton was one of 13 individuals
The final defendant in a sbing of
alleged drug offenders was found indicled this summer on cocaine
guilly in a jury trial on Monday in and marijuana charges. Since then,
Meigs County Common . Pleas · four have been found guilty of a1
least one count each, and eight
Coon.
others
have entered guilty plea~
Tony Hutton of Rutland was
wilh9ut
going to trial.
found guilty yesterday on a single
A
final
defendant, whose name
count of trafficking m cocaine, a
cannot
be
released, is believed to
third degree felony.
have
tied
·
the-· jurisdiction of the
According to Meigs· Counly
·
cotirt
and
has
not been served with
Prosecuting Attorney Steven L.
his
indictment
Story, H.ut1011 sold a half ounce of
"Hutton's conviction gives us a
cocaine to an undercover agent of
clean
sweep after more than a year
the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Invesof
investigation,"
Story said.
tigation and Identification in lune.
.
"This
just
proves
that Meigs
Hutton, who wi!S represented in
County
and
the
jtJC!icial
system will
the trial by Pomeroy Attorney
not
tolerate
cocaine
trafficking,"
Charles H. Knight, was sentenced
by Common Pleas Judge Fred W. Story said. "This entire unden:over
Crow m following the return of the operation has helped rid us of ail
undeserved repuwion."
verdict.
"Meigs Counly," Story commenHuttoQ was sentenced to the led, "is a bad place to do.business if
. ·, maximum allowed by law in accor- you are into narcotic trafficlliilg."
dance with Story's recommendaKnight was unavailable for
. lion, lhat of 5-15 years in prison comment Tuesday morning, but
.and a $7 ,SOO fine.
Story indicated that an appeal bond
· "!' m pleased wilh the results of was set by Crow and that he
the trial and lhe quickness of the believes .Hutton intends to appeal
jury's verdict," Story 'said .Tuesday his conviction.
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News StaiT

Best decorators

Full rich flavor, not full price.
Available In ICings 8c ltlngs Uphts.

Harrisonville news

.. -'

Mayor Richard Seyler also in- Disc~ ssed repair or replacedicated that the v.illage Would be · ment of the village's salt-cinder
willing to provide any office space sprea~
that was needed for the new direc- Commenled on good behavior
tor, in addition to the salary provi- of village residents and visitors
sion approved last night
durin!:! the annual "Irick or treat"
In other action, council:
festivities;
- Approved Mayor's ltepon for
- Discussed possibility of but
October in the amount of $4,354 tabled action on purchase of a
generator "for the Pomeroy Police
for fines collected;
• Commended the Village of Department and a replacement
Middleport for the success of its copier for village hall.
Present at the meeting were
"Haunted Hayride" held last week;
· - Thanked Pomeroy village Mayor Seyler; Council members
workers .for ,tbeir assistance during Brian Shank, Bruce Rwl, Thomas
setup and cleanup at the recent Big Werry, and Bill Young; and Clerk
Brenda Morris.
Bend .Stemwheelers Festival;

Record number of voters are
expected to cast ballots today

ACTRESS AUDREY HEP·
BURN IN ASIA - Actress
Audrey Hepburn, in a recent trip
to Vietnam as goodwill ambassador for the United Nations'
Chlldren's Fund, said she hoped
UNICEF would increase its
assistance to VIetnam. The offl·
cia! VIetnam News Agency said
the actress felt her visit In·
creased her understanding of
Vietnamese children's living
conditions, especially their rearing and growth. Sl:le was sche·
duled to spend several days in
VIetnam, where malnutrition
affects more than half of the
children and schools are threatened by the resignations of
thousands of underpaid teachers .
SUGAR RAY AND WIFE KISS
AND· SPLIT UP - Champion
boxer Sugar Ray Leonard and his
estranged wife, Juanita, reached
an amicable divorce settlement
jus.t before they were to duke It
out l.n court. Neither party would
divulge the terms of the settle·
ment. "This has not been a happy
time for either of US," Leonard
said. "It's been painful and
agonizing. I still love her and she
loves me (but) !think it's time we
went our, separate ways," said
the five-time boXIng champion.
"We will always be together
because we have two lovely kids
but life goes on." They kissed on
the courthouse steps and went
their separate ways.

,,'

25 Cent•

A Multimedia Inc . "New11Japer

Pomeroy Coimcll .approves three ordinances

A party at the Athens Mental
Health Center was discussed. It will
be held the second Tuesday of the
mooth and will be a birthday dinner
for one of the women. Games will
be played and prizes awarded.
It was noled thai the group will
adopt a conage at the Sailors and
Soldiers . Home of .Children in
Xenia. The group will remember
the · children's birthdays and
Christmas.
A flower fund was collected and
navel prize awarded.
Jennifer Taylor, Buckeye Girl's
Stale delegate will speak at the next
meeting.
·
A social, hour followed the business meeting.

. Mfr's. suggaslad retail price.
Kings lights: 11 mg "'tar:' 0.7 mg nicotine-'.Kings: 14 mg
''tar; · 1.0 mg nicotine av. per cigarane by FTC method .

1 Section. 10Pag8s

Pomeroy.:...Middleport. Ohio. Tuesday, November, 6, 1990

'

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Smoking
By Pregnant Women ~ May Result in Fetal
1njury, Premature Birth, And Low Birth Weight.

Low tonight near 35. Wednesday, hi&amp;h In low 50s.
Chance ol rain SO percent.

•

•

People in
the news

Pumpkins were decomled during
.the fellowship hour when the
Hearthstone Sunday School Class
of the First Baptist Church of Middleport met recently at the church.
Best decomtors were Clara Bell
Riley and Ouida Chase.
Ted Riley, I r.. presided at the
meeting and Edna Wilson opened
A wedding reception was held with prayer. Devotions were given
Friday.at the home of Mr. and Mrs. by Flora Marie Gibson entitled .
Raben Mahr for their grandson, "Locked Out" by Elaine CunninBill Foley and Becky South. Those gham.
· auending were Kit and Crystal
Refreshments of pumpkin pie ·
South, Gatha Alvarado, Pomeroy; and coffee were served by Flora
Barbara Bill, Michigan; Bud Mul- Marie Gibson, Maxine Tucker and
lens, V(est Virginia; and Mr. and· Kathryn Metzger.
Mrs. Gary Foley, Syracuse,
. .· Attending were Fried and Milton
Mr. and Mrs. John · Gibson, ·. Hood, Kathryn and John Metzger,
Athens, visiled Sunday evening Clara Bell andl'ed Riley Jr., Ouida
wilh Vuginia Gibson.
.
and Harold Chase, Edna and Dom
Mr. and Mrs . Babe Whal~' Wilson, Katie Anthony, Lillie HubPlorida, were dinner guests ·of . bard, Faye W~lace. Flora Marie
and Mrs. Bob Alkire on Wednesday Gibson, Sarah Fowler, Kate Wilson
evening.
and Rev.James Seddon.

Pick-3: 709
Pick-4: 3878
~s: 2-H; 8-C;
2-D;S..S

Beat of the Bend

Drew Webster Auxiliary meets
Offices were appointed at the
recent meeting of the American
Legion Drew Webster Post 39
Auxiliary.
Offices appointed were ve1erans
and rehabilitation, Veda Davis;
second vice president in charge of
poppies, Iva Powell; first vice
president in charge of membership,
Katherine Welsh; community service chairman, Mildred Hudson.
Loretta Ticmyer presided at the
meeting in which Mary Martin
gave the secretary and treasurer
reports. It was noted that a budget
is to be made and a commitlee will
meet. Mrs. Welsh announced thai
dues for 100 members have been
paid.
t

Ohio Lottery

0 Plllllp MorriiiMC. 1900

.I

'

.

the lower 30s with highs Wednes·
day topping out In the 40s for the
most part. There will be a chance
lor precipitation again Wednes·
day as another cold front moves
ac,ross the state.
Windy conditions continued
along the Lake Erie shoreline
early Tuesday. Northwesterly
winds in the 35 to 45 mile an hour
range continued along the Lake
Erie shoreline. However, elsewhere in the state winds were not
as strong. In the north ~peeds in
the 15 to 25 mile an hour range
were·common while 10 to 15 mile
an hour winds were the rule In the
south.
·On the early morning weather
chart, a cold front extended from
an intense low pressure system
In Ontario through New York

Cincinnati. But Celebrezze, the'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Voter discontent with politicians, two-term state attorney general,
a hot casino gambling issue and said he does not believe in polls,
other ·factors may bring Ohioans and predicted he would pull a
to the polls In record !\umbers for Truman-like upset.
Also on the ballot are'contests
Tuesd~y's general election.
That is the feeling of Secretary for attorney general, auditor,
of Stat~ Sherrod Brown, who secretary of state, treasurer, two
forecast a record turnout of 3.55 seats on the Ohio Supreme Court,
mllllon - 60 percent of those 21 House seats, 17 state Senate
registered- to vote for governor seats and al199 Ohio House seats ..
Local vote~s will decide on 261
and other lesser offfces.
· Ohio's 13,625 precincts will school money Issues -more than
open for . voting at 6:30 a.m. in any general election in 13
Tuesday, and will remain open years- as well as countless local
offices, levies and bond Issues.
untU 7: 30 p.m.
The contests for governor,
The governor's contest pits two
•-veteran ·offiCeholders - .:J;lemo. · ~~cretaryof'state and auditor are
crat Anthony Celebrezze and especially Important because
they will tip the political balance ·
Republican George Volnovlch of
the Apportionment Board,
against each other In a battle to
which
will redraw state legislasucceed the eight-year Demotive
districts
next year.
cratic adminlstratjon of Gov.
Volnovlch
has
campaigned on
Richard Celeste.
Volnovlch, the 10-year former the idea that Ohloa~s are tired of
mayor of Cleveland, had the lead the "corruption, mismanageIn polls taken by newspapers In ment and waste" of the Celeste
Columbus: Clevelimd, Akron and administration and that Cele-

· brezze was "part and parcel" of
it by declining to Investigate.
Celebrezze said he wants to
build on the Celeste successes
and eliminate any ethical tapses.
He said he represents '"the
working people and the forgotten
people or Ohio" while Voinovlch .
catered to wealthy developers
and neglected the neighborhoods
during his time as.mayor.
Ce:Iebrezze, 49, is a fonner
state senator who served one
term as secretary of state. His
running mate for lieutenant
governor is state Sen. Eugene
Branstool, a 53-rear old Licking
County grain farmer who wrote
the state's cqllective bargaining
law for public employees,
Volnovich, 54, is a former state
representati ve, Cuyahoga
County auditor and commissioner and lieutenant governo,r
who is credited with resculn.
Cleveland from bankruptcy in
the early 1980s.

•
•
ratmg
EHS band receives supenor
The Eastern High School Marching Band for the first time in history received a superior rating in
the Ohio Music Education Association's ·stale competition.
The stale finals were held at
Cooper ·Stadium in Columbus
Saturday with 125 bands in four
classes competing against what Bill
Hall, EaS!em band director, referred
to as the "mythical standard of perfection."
Performing before hundreds of
spectators, the Eastern Band gave
!be performance of the year and
captured the coveled award - a superior ratin~, the highest possible in

· OMEA compelili'lns.
the marching judge state&lt;~ "1/lis is a
In addition to the over-all rating, most difficult marching program,
Eastern's percussion received a su- executed to near perfection."
perior rating, and its field commanThe band will now tum its attender, Sherri Wolfe, an excellent tion to concert season and will next
rating.
perform on Saturday at its annual
Hall described Cooper Stadium Arts and Crafts Show. Over 40 loas an ideal sill! for the contest be- cal exhibitors will be displaying in
cause of the asb"Oturf and the high the gymnasium at Eastern High
seating. He said that this is the first School in the Arts and Crafts Show
time in many years the band has which is sponsored by the Band ·
marched on asb"Ottuf.
Boos~ers.
On the way to its overall superior
Proceeds will be used to buy
rating, Eastern received superior music and to help pay off . the
ratings from the marching execu- balance due on the new uniforms.
tion and both general effect judges. "fhe band will be performing at
In a commentary on performance, noon, Hall said.
·

Middleport receives
$40,500 gral11
A $40,500 Ohio Port Assistance
Grant has been awarded. to the
Village ol Middleport by the Ohio
Deparlrnent of Transportation
(ODOT) .
The grant will be used for a
study to determine the feasibility
of il port In the Hobson area of
!')flddleport to serve the VIllage of
Middleport and surrounding
communities.
•
The feasibility stully will develop estimated costs for the
pi'Qject, Including the port facUlty, road access to the port, water
and sewer services, site development and lighting. The study will
also explore the opportunities lor
local businesses to expand by
using the port.
ODOT's grant represents a 90
percent share of the study cost
and Is funded through the Ohio
Port Assistance Program . The
VIllage of Middleport will contribute . an additional $4,500 toward the project's total rost of
$40,500.

ARTS AND CRAFI'S · ·Tile third annual Arts
and Crans Fair or Eastern Hlgll' School win be
held Saturday from, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Eastern
· Higb School. About_40 enflsmea from Meigs,
GaJUa, and Athens Counlies, Ohio, aad Woocl
County;W. Va. wiD be dlspllylag and seiHng a

wide variety or .items including ceramics,
wooclworldaa, baskeiS, rup, wreaths, mop dolls,
painted IIWeallblrll, jewelry, and lora! arrangeme.nts. Tbe event Is lltaged by the Eastern Hl&amp;b
School Band Boosters represented here by LOa
Vaa Meter, left, and Piltty Pickens•

-

�.-

•
I"UilltlfUy-ovuuuoqNR, UrtiU

COmmentary
'

'

The Daily Sentinel

Page-'-2~The Daily Sentinel

-raiser~

___,........._Ja__,.ck_A_nd_e_rw_n_

..

. The Daily Sentinei- Page...:..a

Modell .boots Carson, ·names
Shofner·new head ·coach

Pomeroy-Middliport. Ohio
Tuesday. Navember. 6. 1990

Senators at fund

'

.

·,..
...
....'•-J

.

.

·,

By -BOB KEIM
.team to a 4-4 record before being MreQ after the season and reUPI Sports Writer
named as the bead coach.
placed by Shofner. a 27-yea r
Ill Court Street
'BEREA, Ohio (UPI) --CleveCarson, hired as the seventh coaching veteran and forrpe~ _
Pomeroy, Ohio
land Browns owner Art Modell,
coach of the ' Browns In 1989 to Brown who was the quarterback
WASHINGTON -- Two South- patgn Committee was held at.the stonal , affection comes- as Con- . man In Washington, Scott Runkle , told us he was unaware of
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
saying he was trying to ''stop the replac;e Schottenhelmer, was coach during the days · of the
ern Democratic senators flew · Dorado Beach Hotel outside of gress Is drafting ballot questiOI!S
any lack of cooperation with the
- hemorrhaging" of a season filled flr!'ll with an 11-13-1 record that "Kardiac Kids" and Brian-Slpe
down to a beach hotel In Puerto San Juan; Sens. John Breaux, for Puerto Ricans - to . choose
Alb
GAO Investigation. He Is quick to
D-La.,
and
Robert
Graham,
among
In
a
1991
plebiscite.
Their
with embarrassing defeats, !Ired Included a 9-6-1 mark last ·ye;~r from 1978-80,
Rico last inonth· and came _back
~m~ .-.-,__..,__
--.-, ....-= c::l•=
put In a plug for letting Puerto
0- Fla., were the guests from
choices
will
be
for
Independence,
head CO~!-Ch Bud Carson_Monday when they won their fourth AFC
The offense has not done much
about
$75,000
for
the
Demowith
~v
-- ,
and replaced hliri on an Interim Central title In five years and · better this year_under Sho(ner's
cratic PartY.
. , across the water. 'P uerto Rican statehood or a continued com- 'Rico remain a commonwealth,
noting that the area lias thrived
basts with offensive coordinator advanced to the AFC Champion- controUed passing pbUosophy
Why would a poor common- business owners and other locals monwealth relationship with the
ROBERT L. WINGETT
CHARLENE HOEF)..ICH
under
that
arrangement.
paid
$500
each
to
s.
c
hmooze
wtth
United
States.
'
wealth
with
less
than
half
the
per
lim Shofiler.
_.
ship game.
. and Carson's desire for a run- .
Publisher
'
General Manager
While the commonwealth adThe commonwealth movement
. Carsol!'s firing com.e s wl!h thfl .
Willie the _defense carried the · oriented, big back offense. .
.
capita Income 6f Mississippi · them at cocktails and $2,000 to
vocates throw their money
eat with them. '
is throwing money at some ofthe
Browns In last place In the AFC club at the start of -the .1989 ·
Shofner said Bernie Kosar ,
donate
that
kind
of
money
when
, PAT WHITEHEAD
· Miguel Lausell, the national ·. most skilled lobbyists In Wa- aro!lnd, the,statehood supporten
Central'wllha2-7record _andone · · season, this year It -has surren- replaced by Mike PageHor the
-Its peopli! don't even' have a
Aosllllant Publloher/ Coutroller
carry out their campaign on the
day after a 42-0 loSs to Buffalo' In dered the second-most points In Buffalo game, would be the
voting representative In Con- coinmltteeman for the Puerto - shlngto!l as the House and &amp;lnate
'1
cheap. Benny F. Cerezo, the
Rican Dell'\ocratlc Party who consl~r wbeather to authorize
Cleveland
Stadium,
the
Browns
the
NFL,
and
an
offense
with
a
starting
.
quarterback.
Shof~ter
gress?
Because-If
Puerto
Ricans
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
'
can't . Influence Congress with organized the festivities , said the . the , pl!'blsctte. Sources on the , presidential · delegate for the ·
. worst home loss ever and the
shoddy line has been unable to said he mtght make some minor,
Association and th~ American Newspaper Publls hers Assilctatlon,
.
statehood
party,
runs
on
convicfund-raiser
had
nothing
to
do
House
,-Insular
and
International
votes, they can stUI win friends
thtrd;worst defeat In franchise
put together the ball control type . adjustments on offense and In .the
'
tion Instead of money, "We hat e
and Influence people on Capitol with the statehood -issue. now Alfalr~bcommtttee, which
history.
6f attack Carson desired.
teani:S . practice schedule, bilt
LETTERS OF,OPINION are welcome, They should be less than 300
paid - our share In blood In
pending before "Congress. Lau- drafted the. ground rules tot the
words tong. All letters are subject 'to editing and must be signed with
"I've been In lt30 years," salt!
There were 20 new faces on the - would pretty much con.tlnue wltl)
Hill 'with money.
battlefields,
but we cannot even
sell
Is
a
close
friend
and
former
plebiscite,
repor.t
being
badgered
name~ address and telephone numl}fr. No unsigned l~tters wUI be pUbModell; a · former advertising
roster this season, -and while the the same scheme the team has
The Caribbean commonwealth
I'
vote In presidential elections,-"
lished. Letters should be In good taste. addressing Issues. not personaliexecutive who b9ught the
Browns have some -established · had all year,
Is teeming with political party ca blnet member of Pt.~erto Rican by a_t least 35 lobbyists.·
. 4
Cerezo told - us. "We want to
ties.
The a~tnual celebration of
·Browns ' In 1961. "I don't own -... ·.. veteranssuchasClayMatthews. - "I'm very disappointed that
animals who know how to wine Gov , Rafael }lernandez Cqlon participate. We want to share
an
outspoken
opponent
of
Puerto
Rico's
Commonwealth
· shopping malls. I don'( own oil
Flank Minnifield and Raymond .Bud and I didn't get this done,"
and dine washington when there
,•
some of the same powers. We are
Day on July 25In Wash!Jigton was
companies. I'm not In the .auto- Clayborn, the majority of the . Shofner said. "I feel obligated to ; ..:
Is something they want. And the statehood.
,
.
loyal citizens."
. -Sources In the statehood move- billed as a non-political 'event.
mobile business .. Football has
team Is comprised of younger do the job the rest, o.! the year.
Influential politicos who hosted
Cerezo's
p11rty
may
have
a
been my sport, my love, my
players.
Obviously, . you start thinking
the Democratic tund-ratser want ment · told us that they also But the featured entertainer,
small war chest, but It has one
passion lor 30 years.
"I dread!!!~. as nightmarish as abQutl! and y,ougetexcttedabout
to deraU the -popular Puerto offered to hqst the fund-raiser for singer Jose Feliciano, made a
big backer -- President Bush,
"Evenlhoughicannotcoach,l ltmlghtsound,tobe2-14or3-13or lt."
•. -• .,
Rican movement toward the Democrats, liut -could not point of scolding statehood sup,,
who
plugged
statehood
tri
his
guarantee
as
big
a
take
as
those
porters
for
their
lack
of
patriotlsaw,
even
4-12
and
leaving
thatfeellng
There
have
been
reports'
the
·
have
some
Instincts.
What
statehoOd.
Inaugural speech.
Ism.
for whatever l'!'asOII, I saw a
In the off season," Modell said. front office has been dictating
The quickie fund-raiser tor the who oppose statehood.
'rhe
tug-of-war
to
w11t
congresThe
commonwealth's
-spokes''There's no sense of optimism personnel declsic;ms to Carson, a
deterioration
taking
place.
We
SHOFNER TO HEAD BROWNS- Jim Shofner · conference Monday following the firing of Bud
Democratic Senatorial CamBy AR"'OLD SAWISLAK
)lad
to
stop
the
hemorrhaging.
andconftdencewhlchllhlr\klsso charge Modell vehemently
(left), offensive coordinator- for the Cleveland · _ Carson. Looking on Is Browns owner Art Modell.
UPI Senior Editor
Hopefully;
this
man
and
a
new
needed, partlcluarly In the young · dented:
- Browns, was named, head • coach at a news
(~PI)
,
wASHINGTON -- Back when he was the hOst of the "Tonight"
approach might stop the
players. .
A1ter a season-opentng13.3'wln
show .Jack Paar- said he knew an elderly lady In Maine who, when
' "I wish I knew (what hap. ove.r a Ptitsburgh team that did
hemorrhaging."
,
' t' l
asked who she voted for In an election, replied, "Oh, I never vote. It
_Shofner will coach the. team for . pened). I can't answer that. I do not score an offensive touchdown
jusHncourages them, you know. "
.
, ·
the rest of the year, and Modell know that there's been a deterlo- _ until the fifth week of the season,.
. . . '
'
That -expression of distaste for poUtlclans Is funny because it Js
said a ' permanent successor ration going,on and on. People In the Browns have .lost seven of
"I like Bud,:' Perry said. "I J977 and Sam Rutigliano In 1984.
Byi$0BKEIM
ridiculous, just as Is -the _current talk about voting_ against all
_
the media have accused me of etght, Including •tour ·straight.
.
UPJ·Sporta Writer .
think Bud Is a heck of a coach, Offensive coordinator - Jim ,would be named then.
incumbents t.n the elections Tueday.
It
Is
the
third
time
Modell
bas
t'wlstlng Bud Carson In the wind, The only 'win In that stretch was a
BEREA, 'clhlo (UPI) -- Delen- . especlaily a · greaf defensive Shofner will take over lor the rest
'.! r
The opinion polls do show ~ measu~a b)e 'Increase In public anger at
relieved
a_ coach during the year.
I was hoping and praying that he come-from-behind 30-29 'win at
coach. Yeah, It's sad to see.'' - ..of the year. slve tackle Mlchl!el Dean Perry
their elected representatives and some 'of us In the media, seizing on
'with Forrest Gregg !Ired with would make IL He was In the Denver;
spoke for his teammates on
Also saddened by the firing
-"A lot of guys liked Bud, but one game left In 1971 season al!d league 17 years and no -other
&gt;"
the survey results and the anti-Incumbent activities of a few people
Included in that string Is a 34-0 .
was- executive vice president that's not a decision that's In our
defense Monday when he said
looking for their Andy Warhol15 minute~ of fame, have been fanning
Sam
Rutigliano
!Ired
midway
owner
ever
offered
him
a
head
Joss
at Kan's as City to Schotten&gt;' •
Ernie Accorst, who was a Carson hands;' ' Pagel said. "We have to
fired head coach Bud C~rson was
the Idea of a blgtlme voter revolt.
through
t)le
1984
campaign.
·
coaching
opportunity
bilt
me.
helmer's
Chiefs and a · 34-13
fan arid convinced the Browns . go out and play. That's the nature
given a raw deal by the team's
. ,;;.
In fact, tl)ere have been huge congressional washouts In the not too
Marty
Schottenhetmer
replaced
"To
suggest
that
I
wanted
to
Monday
ntght
home Joss to
' ,•,
that
Carson
was
thecoachtotake
front
office.
of.the
business.
You
regroup,
you
dlstantpast, with as many as 90of the435 House seats and a dozen or
Rutigliano In 1984 and led the see him !allis ludicrous. It would Cincinnati that dropped Carson's
them where they had never gone go on. They're notgotngtocancel
'-'1 think so," Perry said when
mo~ of the 100 Senate seats c_
hangtng hands In some elections before
have been to our credit, and io record against the Paul Brown- '{.,
asked II Carsol! got a raw deal.
before -- the Super Bowl. Carson the rest of the season because we
World War II. ,
.
our
utter joy, to S.e him succeed run _Bengals to 0-3. The Browns
,• I
Was hired in January 1989.
"This could have been solved In
changed coaches."
But most of those electoral eruptions accompanied or loUowed .
and succeed In a big way."
. also have been heavily penaliZed,
. the off season. I stand behind Bud
'
"I just feel ·- Its a personal
,_,•
Perry questioned whether the
major economic dl:;asters and It may be !hal the flattening of the
for
and were penalized 13 times for
Carson
was
not
available
110
percent.''·
-,
move
"
w.as
warranted.
He
cited
me
beC!lUse
disappointment
for
business cycle in recent decades has been reflected In a similar
comment.
87 yards Sunday,
Carson
was
fired
Monday
with
year
(five
'
the
holdouts
this
he (Modell) has to stand up here
- stabllity_ln politics.
·
;,
·
Shofner will continue on as · ·. "Not only did we just. not
the
Browns
in
the
basement
9f
and
answer ail the questions but starters missed- all ·of training
In any case, the turnover of congressional seats in recent times has
"'
offensive
coordinator, and Jim maintain a 'level that would-even
' •'
the AFC Central.wlth a 2-'1 record
I'm the one-who recruited him,'' camp), and the acrimony left
.'
been extremely small - 2 percent or 3 percent In many recent
Vechla.
r
ella
will
lake
over
from
be
competitive
with
the
other
and _four straight losses; includover from that experience. The
Aecorsl said. "I was S141'e he was
·'•'
elections .,... and the conventional wisdom has been that this
Carson as defensive coordinator. teams and their 5-4 records, but ing
a
42-0
defeat
to
Buffalo
-going
to
be·
a
success.
I
h;~ve
a
.
Browns also have failed to take
stagnancy' has not helped the cause of good government.
,
ANN ARBOR, Ml.ch. '(UPI) Shofner said he planned to retain we're down In last place;'' Modell
Sunday. ·One · player anonymsteps to Improve their' offensive Michigan Coach Gary Moeller Is
tendency to blame myself first,
In addition, polls that revealed low public esteep1 for public
' '
all of Carson's assistants.
said. "It's not over yet. I couldn't
,,
ously told the Akron Beaconline,
so I take responsibility for tt.
orrtctals in ,general or Congress In particular also have shown that
more c&lt;incerned with 'winning his
this
morning
If
we
help
but
think
Journal that the front office '!Vas
A-t least one other player has last three games -than any bowl
"He didn't fall alone. We all
·Carson was hired Jan. 27. 1989, ·had gotten by the Jets or San
'
-voters usually make an exception for their own elected representtve~;
'
dictating
personnel
dectsfQns
to
''
~omplalned
that
the
hard
line
share
the
-responsibility."
.
ending
a
33-year
trek
through
the
Thus, even people who have embraced the "throw the_bums out
bids that mtght CO!lle the WolveDiego,, or puUed .a couple out of
. ,... ·,,
Carson, a charge dented by
taken by management in the - rln'e s' way.
Carson's last stand as a coach
coaching profession spent trying
,
battle cry paradoXIcally .4raw the line at the bums they should know
the hat, we'd be right up there
'"1 ••
owner Art Modell.
negotiations has left the. players
was benching Bernie Kosar and
"We haven't even talked about to realize his dream of becoming
best, the ones they have elected.
With
the other teams I~ our
Several other defensive play- · starting Mike Pagel at quar.ter-, bitter- Perry's contract is up bowl games With the team," an NFL head coach. He replaced
The sum of all this Is that most of the experts pooh-pooh the Idea that
division,"
'
ers, Including safety Felix
after this season. ·
back aga)nst the Bills. The result
·-- ..•
there will be a major uprising' against publiC officials seeking reMoeller said at his Monday press . Schottenhetmer. who had four
Carson tried to spark the
'
Wright
and
cornerba~k
RaJ!·
,
. "II It (the change) doesn't conference. "And l don't vw;ant straight playo_ft appeariln~es .b~t
was the third-worst defeat In the
election. But In fact the odds on such'an occurence probably are no
-.
offense ' Sunday -againSt Buftalo
· mond Clayborn, agreed with "' hlstpry of the team and the third
work, tlie'n wha'Fs the next
worse than they were on a World series sweep by the Cincinnati Reds.
them thinking about that. We just would not give lnto-ml!nagement . by starting -backup Mike :"agel, ·
Perry's assessment. Carson wa~
mid-season firing of a coach in solution?" Perry asked. ···Hope- want to have a good year and we demands tha,t he -hire an offenTherefore, someone ougllt to examine whether there Is any merit In
who had led the 'Club to two · •· I '
'
a
defensive
specialist
and
welltully It can alleviate some of the - can do that by playing tough sive coordinator after the 1988
team history.
the Idea · of voting against all Incumbents. The- answer Is, almost
fourt)l-quai-ter touchdowns in a
•,
,
problems so we can _get on with football the last three games.
The other two-coaches fired In
liked by most of the players •.
season.
surely not. To suggest that the willy-nllly dismissal of everybody
20-1'( loss to San Francll;co a
it.
..
es
peclally
the
defenders
"
_Lo_ng
the
season
were
Forrest
Gre~
in
59,
had
built
reputaCarson,
. ' \~
. holding publiC office will somehow Improve the quality of
. "If we do that we'lt put
week ep;rUer;_at quarterback. He
as
a
defensive
genius
as
a
·
ijon
government Is akin to the belief that firing a sl)otgun Into a television
ourselves tti a position to go to a
chose Pagel over Modell fa vorite
;
coordinator for five NFL teams,
_ ,
·
good
bowl,"
he
said.
screen will Improve the quality of TV.
s
on Ko:;ar,
-- Fourth, more must be done
A new report Is out on the state of- which most of us are aware.
ures provided bytheOhloBureau
Steeler
Including
the
Pittsburgh
The key here Is l!lformed voting. We are constantly told that It our
Mlchtgan,
which
bas
won
Its
to promote the region's tourist
of the portion of Ohio known as · Per capita Income is 26 percent
of Employment Services, the
duty as cltliens to vote, but seldom Is that Injunction expanded to
last two Big Ten contests to .teams that won Super Bowls IX .•
attractions, and to encourage
jobless rate dropped tit all eight
Appalachia, and It contains some lower In our part of the state !hap
' ''l
Include the necessity to pay attention to the Issues and to the position good Information.
Improve Its overall record to 5-3, and X, and owner Arl Modell said
people from other parts of the
In the state as a whole, average
counties In the district between
SPRING
VAlLEY
CINEMA
man
that
would
Carson
was
the
clOses
out
the
season
agillns
t
of the candidates on them.
state to visit southern Ohio.
As a state senator representing per pupil spending Is 13 percent
1985 and 1989.
446 4524
~I" ~/.'
Just opposing tax Increases Is 'not enough. Unless ,they have truly
' three teams that still have title lead the Browns to their first
. -- Fifth, current efforts to
an eight-county region, niost of below the state average, there Is
In some cases, there was more
Super Bowl berth.
- studied the records of everyone on the ballot before they go Into the
aspirations.
upgrade the area's housing must
which Is In the heart -of Appala- a shortage of doctors in many
than a 50 percent drop In the
"Bud Carson ' Is a qualified
booth, anyone who goes to the polls Tuesday and votes against all
The Wolverines hosf nttnots
be Intensified.
chla, 1 have a first-hand under- areas and the coal mining
unemployment rate ,dUring the
football
man," M:odell S(lld. "I
tncumlli!nts Is engaging In the ultimate citizen cop-out. ,
·
(4-lin the Big Ten, 6-2 overall) on
A lot of useful work has been
standing otthe problems facing Industry continues to decline.
last half of the 1980s.
think
he
may have been the best
Saturday, face Minnesota (4-1,
... '..li
PfflSBURGH . (UPI) -- The Ship 'seasons of the 1970s. "I don't
92- 10, but they rebounded to
our region. The report, released
This Is why, as a state senator,
To help our part of the state done by the Governor's Office of
defensive
coordinator this league
5-3) at home the following week
Appalachia and . the Develop- ,
qualUy·for the AFC playoffs.
last month at a press conference I have worked hard to get more
achieve even more economic
Pittsburgh Steelers have taken a :· think you evaluate a team In the
'
and close out the regular season has ever known."
D.\1 1r1i - n1r1m1
ment Department In preparing
In 1990,-there was the 1-3 start
turn for the--b etter.
middle of a season. We stlll.have .
In Columbus· that I allended,
highway money, mark' capital
progress, however, more needs
Even before he was hired, ,
at
Ohio
State
(3-1-1,
5-2-1).
the report. Now', It's up to us as
They began the 1990 season by a long way to go ... '
and the offensive slump, but Noll
paints a realistic picture of both construction money and more · to be done. The report outlines
however, there were signs Car- ,
Mlchtgan'·s IItle hopes all but son would not be In complete
-The Steelers still hav!' four
legislators and It's up to the new
has the Steelers back on track
losing three of their first -four
the problems and opportunities
jobs · for the district. As .the
several of these.
~
• 1- .__
aqintnlstratlon to work toward
died three weeks ago when the control of his team, beginning
games and going W\thout an gaines against division fOes
once again.
confronting our part of the state.
ranking member on the Senate
-- First, better ways must be
sure that the residents would
Dear Editor:
Implementing the recoinmenda"I always thought we had the Wolverines lost to Iowa ~ which Is 'with Modell's decision to prooffensive touchdown duttng that remaining, Including a homeThe 40-page rep&lt;irt Is the Education - Committee, I have · developed to funnel state loans
" ·"
This past Saturday, (Oct. 27) I then come pouring out of the hUls
' '•
tlbns
so
that
QUr
,
rei!on
gets
a
paten
tlal to be a good football
and-home
series
'with
the
Benthe only team that remains mote Marc Trestman to offenspan. Since then. the Steelers are
been working as well to make
and grants Into the r~glon.
product of seven months of
' ·~ '
made the trip from South of and hollows. ,
share
of
the
state's
wealth.
fairer
unbeaten In the Big Ten.
. sive coordinator before hiring
research Into the problems of the funding formulas fairer, and I've
- Second, programs for re4-1 and have climbed Into a tie gals, and one of the things Noll
~earn, and I ~tlllth.lnk that, but we
Heartiest Congratulations to
Dayton, OH., to Pomeroy to
·-'
If you have any questions about · ~. ' q
"Winning those three games Is Carson.
haven't -reached our potential
28 -Ohio couptles classified as
been serving on a special com- training the work force and
with the Cincinnati Bengals for believes will' help see his team
attend the Sternwheeler ,Festi- Mary }&gt;owell,, Donna and Jim
this,
or
any
other
state
Issue,
yet," said Noll, who Is two our real motivation," Moeller
Appalachia. Among the 28 counmlttee that Is exploring ways to
Improving the school systems
first place In the AFC Central through thai schedule is imThe offense struggled for much
val. I must say that I ~m very Davis, Bruce Reed, the Chamber
please contact me , State Senator
Dl vision.
.
·'
, . proved-depth .
victories shy of 200 In his career. continued. ''If we do that we'll lei of the year and , Trestman was
ties are seven -Athens, Gallia,
reform the education financing
must be upgraded.
of Commerce, the Sesquicentenglad that I made the trip.
Jan Michael Long, at the State"We did a lot of things In this things fall where they may and
system,
· -Third, more must be done to
But despite the turnaround ,
Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, Ross
' 'Right now, we have more
'
WOW! What a sight to see the nial Committee, and the many
house, Columbus, Ohio, 43215, or
particular game on hustle, and reflect on It later. We started a
and VInton -- In my district.
Coach Chuck Noll refused to depth
Progress Is being made on
attract new industry for the area.
than
we've
had
In
a
long
many stern wheelers_gathered at other persons who worked to put _
call me at (614) 466-8156. _
second season after the Iowa
that's -what it takes."
The report reviews many facts
unemployment According to fig!llllke any proclamations of
time," said Noll. " When you
the levee. I feel this Is something the Festival together. I would
game
and decided to just concenMany
believe
Noll's
ability
to
greatne~s'
during
.
his
weekly
•
'
have a Keith Willis go down and a. stay the course when things get
that the vUlage of Pomeroy has only hope and suggest that they
trate on Michigan and not worry
news conference Monday at - guy
. ' "i
like
Craig
Veasey
come
In
needed for a long time. With the begin planning for another Sternrough Is what calms his players about the outside world."
Three Rivers Stadium. :
'
'
(at defensive end) and play well,
rich tradition and history that wheeler Festival sometime durMoeller made It clear that he
and keeps their minds on.thetask
"That's still up to be proven," that speaks well for your dep!h.
'Pomeroy has a river town, I'm Ing the Summer, II possible. And,
at
hand.
,
wasn't
looking at Saturday's
said Noll when asked If this team
Early
in
the
season.
we
had
sure that many found the sight of If only the ,Delta or Mississippi
game
with
the llllni as a grudge
"You like to be able to keep an
advertising.
was his. best.since the .champion: Injuries In the secondary. Larry
SAN LEANDRO, Calli. (NEA) voters In every election year.
all of those boats tnsptrJng Queen C!Juld ~ sche&lt;fuled td stop;
eyen keel, because the highs and match. Moeller got his . first
Bu.t the advertisement deftly
Ballot Initiatives and refer..!. "Vote yes on no," says the
, Griffin came ,Jn for Thomas
Indeed. I know that my Father, even for an hour. What treat that
' '
lows are what kill you," said college head coaching expeuses
humor
to
make
a
serious
enda
are
hardly
unique
to
Cali,,
satirical radio commercial for
.,
Everett
.
and
played
well
(at
Pat Lochary, would have been would be.
'
off
these
measures.
"
rience with Illinois from 1977 to
Noll.
political statement "Say no' to · fornia . Plebiscites on Issues are
•
Proposition
Zero,
a
rtctlttous
The
Daily
Sentinel
safety). That shows the depth-we
pleased as punch. Now, If onlySincerely,
There 'are other problems. As
And while Noll wouldn'tllst his 1979. He was !Ired after posting a
lawful In approximately halt of
Initiative on California's No- the tactics of distortion, lies,
have."
someone could arrange to have a
James H. ~hary
the
Issues
become
.
!DOre.
comteam
among the NFL's elite, he 6-24-3 record, but many felt he
Innuendo
and
personal
attack;''
50
states.
the
(U8P81fHttl
vember ballot. "Say no to-agitOne of the qualities NoU has
calliope present and playing. I'm
,
plex,
so
do
the
ballot
propositions
A
Dlvlllon
of
Multimedia,
Inc.
;tlso
wouldio'
t admIt to being wasn't given enough time to
In
recent
years.
voters
it
proclaims.
"Protect
your
confro!ll
prop !rom big oU, big business
shown throughout his 21-plus
•
'butfew,lf
any,
voters
have
the
overmatched
by .any , possible Implement his programs In
stitutional
right
to
have
no
Florida
to
Arizona
and
Maine
to
and big-mouth political
Publ1shed 'even- afternoon, Monday
seasons as an NFL -coach Is his
time
to
read
th!'m,
much
less
the·
.
Champaign.
have
been'
f
aced
with
.
Washington
opponent.
opinion and keep It to yourself."
through Friday, 111 COurt $t., Po·
consultants."
ability to avoldJoslng the confimero)',
Otllo,
'by
the
Ohio
Valley
Pubspecialized
knowledge
required
-~
"I don't even want to talk about
"If
we
play
the
kind
of
football
The message Is Clear: Some decisions at the polls on AIDS,
Conjured ' up by 'a radio talk
.
'
.
Go To The University Of Rio Gran!ie This Winter,
dence of lils players, even In the · we're capable of playll!g, and It," Moeller S&amp;ld, referring to his
Itshlrl.g CoJNJ&amp;ny/Multlmedia. Inc..
·
to
analyze
and
understand
them.
Dear Editor:
as pornography. Once I was
Pomeroy, Ohio 4~769. Ph, 992-21!16. Se·
show host; the Proposition Zero Californians are overwhelmed abortion, auto seat belts, catfish
event'of a poor start.
!t
Arid You'll Go Plact~s All Year Long.
;~;?.
:For example, the semithat's a big If, we can stand up years at Illinois. "All I'm concond class poatage paid at Pomeroy, 1
I am writing wtth reference to visiting In one of our hospitals
promotion, -state lotteries, strip
spoof Is a parody of the wildly by - If not disenchanted with In
1989,
the
Steelers
lost
their
n •
Ohio,
·
technical
text
of
just
one
of
the
·
•'
with
anybody
In
the
league,"
said
cerned
about
Is
Saturday's
game
the Issue concerning when. a patient who shared the
.
We Have Hundreds Of Courses That Can Help
contllctlng claims for and the proliferation of complicated mining, judtcal procedures,
_!Irs\ two g~j-mes by a combine~.
' '
pornography.
Initiatives on next month's ballot
and getting Michigan Into. the
NoD.
room with the Individual I had , ag1,1tnst the . dozens - of ballot ballot measures that _are pro-, handgun. sales; hog farm owner..
Member: Unlled Press Interpatlonal,
You Furth_
er Your Career. Or, Investigate A
- the "Big Green"- omnibus ·
right frame of mind to play
Inland Dally prHs Alloclltlon and tlk&gt;
I feel human , sexuality Is a called on was desirous to talk
Initiatives that face 'the s.tate's moted or denigrated through , ship, historic / landmarks arid
Ohio
NewtpaPf'i'
Association.
Natlonal,
environmental protection meaIllinois."
precious gift from God our with me. This lady was very
simplistic slogans and deceptive scores of other Issues.
, Subject That's Always Fascinated You.
Adv@rtlllng RepreseQtallve, Branham
' ,,
sure -- IS almost 16,000 words ., ,,•
,Last week Illinois suffered a .
Creator. This endowment was · eniollonally upset. She told me
Nowhere, however, Is the proNew.aper Saleo. 733 Third Ayenue,
•Come
To
Rio
Grande
This
Wl.nter:
.
O
f
All
The
.
New York, Now .York 10017,
'
devastating 54-281oss to Iowa Ina
long and lUis more than 38 · ·- "
given to mankind not only to ho,v.&lt;.her husband read pornogracess more routinely relied upon
. •• I
slngh!-spaced typewritten pages.
game .that was billed as a Rose
assure the propagation of the pblc material; then expected her
_; or more widely publicized
Winter Trips You've Ever Taken, This One Could
}
POSTMASTEII: Send addrela chanaes
'.:.~
These difficulties suggest that
Bowl showdown.
_
race, but In order that one man to put It Into practice. This
to The Dally Senllilel. m.coun St,
outside the state -- than In
•••
,,
Take
You
The
Farthest.
'
'
Pomeroy, OhiO 45769,
By United Pressbiternallonal ·
,
the process needs some fine
and one woman, united II\ mar- precious woman was suffering '
.''lo,wa just got roUing and as Is
California, where It was Initially
• • · ,1.1.
Today Is Tuesday, Nov. 6, the 310th day of 1990 with 55 to follow.
tunfng,
But
abandoning
It
alto;
riage, may -have fellowship, love, mental anguish.
PHILADELPHIA
(UPI)
case In a high-scoring game,
the
touchdowns,
the
offense
speaks
promoted early In this century by 8UII8CIIJPTION RATES
. ~ .,
·~
This Is election day.
gether, as some have proposed,
IJ Carrier or Motor Rollte
The Phtladelphta Eagles' of- for Itself," Coach Buddy Ryan the tackling wasn't very good,"
and be belpful to each other until
I teei a· person's freedom stops
Gov. Hiram _Johnson, a populist
.One Week .. .... :•.. ·...... .. ..... .'........ Sl ..O
The rrioon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
d'it~oy
a
process
wbose
fense,
which
struggled
In
the
would
death dlsolves the union. Within when It brings suflertng to other
Moeller
said.
'
Republlcan.''
· - '·
said.
One Month --- ---------- -------- -- ·---------$6:10
. '
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter-.
·::;
fundamental value Is best lllus_the (ramework or marriage sex people. Am I to stand by and do
early weeks of the season, hit Its
"We're looking for a tough
"The system seems to have
A1ter the game, Ryan :&gt;aid you
One Year .... 1.. .... ... .. . .... : ... .. .. .. .. $72.80
The evening stars are Mercury and Venus.
trated by two measures on pext
become• a blessing, but when nothing when I see such sufferstride at the midway point.
slipped away from the citiZens It
had to take the caliber of the game because (the DUnoiS
.. 'SINGLE 'coPY
', PRICB .
Those born on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They Include · was Intended to serve Into the_ month's ballot that would limit
perverted lt. becomes a curse. Ing? AbSolutely no! I realize-the
Now the team can only hope It opposition Into ac~unt but Mon- 'coaches) are going to get (the
Dally
..
........
.....
.~ ....•........·...... 25 Cents
., ;.
~
Belgian lnstritment-maker Adolphe Sax, Inventor of the saxophone.
the number of terms members of · , ··' Tlle same fire that warms our real problem tuues from the
se_ts a tone for tlie rest ofthe year. day, he said ' th~ Eagles have players') attention," Moeller
hands of the very kind of special
"
Subscrlbf.ra
nOt
deslrtng
to
pay
the
cu
.
In 1814; band -leader and composer John PhWp Sousa In 1854; Charles
homes Ia capable of taking our heart1 for Christ says, "For out of
•t:':'
The Eagles, who evened their enough offensive weapons to continued. ' 'They're going to be
Interests It was meant to contain. .the state legislature could serve.'
'rter
may
remit
In
advanre
direct
to
Henry Dow, co-founder of Dow Jones and Co. and first editor of The
Tbe wisdom of those proposals
lives when burning out of con- the heart proceed evil thoughts.
record' at 4-4, amassed 514 yards scare any defense.
In more of a physical frame of
Merely qualifying a measure for
The Dally Sentblel 011 a~. 6or 12 month .
Wall Street Jouma~. In 1851; James Naismith, the Inventor of the
- trol; the water that quenches our murden, ad_u ltertes-, fornlca· ' matter of legitimate debate,
QuBI'terback Randall Cun- mind tha11 they would have been
of tolal offense In Sunday's 48-20
the ballot can cost as much as
· basts, Credit will be ctven wrlor Mch
week:
' drubbing of the hapless New ningham, wide receivers Fred If they'd' won."
A beyond question Is the . ' --'
thirst can become the means of tlona, thefts, false Witness, bias- · game of basketball, In 1861; !Urn director Mike-Nichols In 1931 (age
'
•
$700,000 and consume more time
· Call The OIIIW Of AdmiSSiOns
59) and actress Sally Field In ~946 (age'44.)
our drowning.
-ertalnty that professional law- -, •·'
No oubocrtpttono by mall perml!ted tn
phemlea. These are the things
England Patriots, their best Barnett and C&amp;lvln WIU!ams,
Moeller said backup free
than most citizen groups can
areas
where
hrme
carrier
~ervtce II
makers
would
never
eveD
con·
•
tight
end
Keith
Jackson
and
PoFDOIJI'aphy Ia addictive the which dettle a man:" (Matthewperformance
since
1981.
safety
Ertc
Bus"
would
miSs
the
_At (614) 246~3153, Or
muster.
Of
.
'•·. ~"'
avallable.
,_
On this date In history:
Byars
pose
running
back
Keith
same as gambling, alcohol, and 15: 19-20&amp;)
slder
limiting
their
own
tenure.
·
-:··
"
The
48
points
were
also
the
rest
of
the
.
s
eason
'will!
a
dislo"Taking their place Is a whole
TOll l'rw At 1-800-282-7201
' '
In 1860, Abraham Lincoln was elected 16th president of the United
Molllablerlpllou
'
drup are · habit forming. In
Therein lies the ultimate justtLet us pray for revival, but In
'm ost the team has scored since It man)( problems, Ryan said .
cated shoulder he suffered In
new Industry of consultants,
For
Funher
lnfOrmaUon
Rio
Grande
' 1111111• llelp CotuiiJ'
States.
·
.
.
"We have tremendous talent _Saturday's 38-13 victory over
the meanwhile let us as store
rtcatton of c!tlzen-cratted. ballot
• .
managed 52 against the St. Louts
(~erbl 5:22 NIV) we read, professional petition circulators,
13 Weelll .... -- .... ·--·--· --------·· ---- -- $19.24
' ,_
In
1869,
In
the
lfl'st
formal
Intercollegiate
football
game,
Rutgers
·
OWrien
and
,
citizens
band
toand
If you're the opposldg deCardinals In 1981. Phlladelpbla's
" the cordi of his sin bold him
measures: They seek to bring :~ ~&gt;
Purdue, but he hoped defensive
pollsters and media gurus who
26 W------ --·•--------------------....-.S37.98
112 Weelll ... __ .. , __ ............. --------- •f1UI Wherever You're Going, ·..
fast." We wbo are cl01e lXI the gethar and do something about - beat Princeton, 6-4.
30i yards rushing was the most fense, we bave to sca111 the hell tackle . Chris Hutchinson (back
about what legislators, too often · '' . ,
have been lured away from
Oulolde Metp co.,.tr
In 1917, the Bolshevik revolution began In Russia.
prnblell'll of mankind, perhapa thllisslle of pornography.
since the team had 307 against outof you becauae YO!I don't have spasms) and center Steve Eve-.
traditional campaigns by special . unresponsive to their constttu- __ .,,·
, 13 Weelll .. -- :•.__ .. ...... ,.. ,............ ,$21).80
You Can Get.There From Here.
•••
enough people - to double we- rltt (broken foot) might be able to
In 1952, the United States ejlploded the world's first hydrogen bomb
are more acutely aware of the
· Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr.
26 Weelll ........... .... ---- -·---- -- ------- 11tl.30
Washington on Dec. 2, 1951.
ents',concern3, cannot or will not -• ...;
Interests willing to spend wha112
S?uo
at Enlwetok Atolrtn the South Pacific. ·
·
. ·
ryone,"
he
said.
devl.ttattng effects of such thlngi
do
on
their
own.
•
"Middleport, Ohio
"With
tlie
yardage
and
~I
th'e
practice
this
week.
tever It iakes to promote or fend

•'

.

'

'Off with their heads'.·
·a dumb way.to vote
I

•

'

'

•

.

BrotVns:angered by Carson firing

'

..

'

'

...

..

1°11'{,

"

·.

Michigan
still eyes
major bowl.

&gt;11

~~

.

.

A growth plan for our.region __s_en._Ja.,.--n

•

.

..

.,,.

....

.

'

I

''

a

Pittsburgh's Noll refuses to
say Steelers have arrived

WL.U.I! (,11rrt

.

Letters to the editor

•

'!

~

..

111,1!~"' WIDo~l

l)jii'JII

-

he made the trip

Glad

_,\ I I

Power

and puzzles

This Winter,
. Go·
SomeRiace
That Will Help You
Go Places.

to the people

'

Robert Walters

'

The issue of-pornography

••1

..
.,.

•· • I

I

~.~.

, I •

.

'

'/ ·

•..

Today in history.

.

-

.

E_agles are feeling
good about offense

)

1..

-

Winter Quarter Registration:
· Monday, Nov. 12
· 3 p.m. 7 p.m.
Davis Career Center

1

:;;t

'

..
·'

University

...

~

...

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

'

~

-·- .,. ---· . - ,···--·...

I'

'

);-

�•

Pege

4~inel

Tuesday, November. 6. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. OhiO

Giants hand ·Colts 24-7loss
to push season mark to 8-0
N. Y~ off to best
start in its history

ANDERSON PACE'S GIANTS- mdlanapolls
Coils outside linebacker Chip Banks gets a grip on
the faee maak of the New York Giants' OtUs
Anderson on the first play of the second quarter of

Mon4ay night's game under the Hoosier Dome.
Anderson led all rushers with 55 yards on 14
carries and scored two touchdowu to help push
the Giants to a 24-7 victory. (UPi)

Forgetting abaut the Northwestern game,

Ohio State now fooused on Iowa
By GENE CADDF8
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP1)
Ohio State head coach John
• Cooper quickly put Saturday's
48-7 win over Northwestern to
, rest and announced Monday that
' Buckeye practices wlll be closed
• for the remainder of the season.
: "We .did not show the Northw·
' estern films to the team yester: day (Sunday) after'n oon ,"
: Cooper told his weekly press
luncheon. "We started on Iowa."
• The victory over Northwestern
was the third In a row for Ohio
State. now 5·2·1 overall and 3-1-1
• In the Big Ten and the auckeyes
' needawlnSaturdayatNo.5 1owa
: (7-1 and 5-0) to keep allve any
• chance for a BlgTen IItle and trip
to the Rose Bowl. .
• "Last Saturday, Iowa com·
: pletely demoralized what I
: thought was a great D Unols
• football team, 54-28;" said
• Cooper. "I would think right now
• Iowa and Washington are the two
ho.ttest teams In college football.
: Both of them are playing great
football at this pofut.
"The difference between this
' Iowa team and the team we
' played (and beat 28-0) a year
, ago, In my opinion, Is this year.
Iowa Is lining up and running the
football. Nick Bell and Tony
, Stewart have about1,400yards."
Cooper said his decision to

Nn.. results

close practices , the final three
games was to "focus our attention" on Iowa, Wisconsin and
Michigan.
"It's just to set th~ last three
games apart," he said. "Just to
try and let our team and fans
know, 'Hey, these are big ball

games."'
The Buckeyes must win their
tlnal ·three games and hope they
get some help for them to get to
the Rose Bowl.
"I still think we've got a shot at
It, although Iowa Is going to be
very tough for anybody to knock
off," said Cooper. "We've got win
out and, of course, Minnesota's
got to beat Iowa :" '
Cooper, however , feels his
team, which has ourscored Its
last three opponents (Purdue,
Minnesota and Northwestern)
142·32, has a shot at the
Haw keyes.
"I would think both teams will
be sky high," said Cooper. "I
think It will be a dogfight. If we
play as well as we 're capable of
playing, we've got a chance to
wln the game. We've got to move
the. ball and score pofuts and
we've got to play great defense. "
From a conflilence standpoint,
CooiJ!!r said It will be important
for Ohio State to get an early lead
against the Hawkeyes .
Cooper said he spent some time
the past summer with Iowa head

MoDday, Nov. tt
Washingtm at PhUadelphia, 9
p.m.

By Uailed Prnelnternatlonal
NA110N.U. FOOTII.U.L LEAGUE

AmeriC!Ail C.Dierenee
EMI
Twn
WLTPei.PFPA
Bul!alo .......... .... .. 7 10 .875 229136
Mlaml ............. ... "7 I 0.875175 93
NY J•ts ...............4 50.444175199
Indlanapdls .........2 6 0 .250 112 186
Now England .......I 7 0 .125 120 244
•
Cenloal
ClnciMBtl ............5 4 o.556 212 225
Plltlllulllh ....... .... 5 4 0 .556 171147
Houllloo .... ...........4 50 .444194 169
CIE'III!Iand .... ........2 7 0 .222 128 235

w...

' LA Raiders ..........6 2 0 .750 154 106
Kansas City .........5 3 0 .625 i76 121
San Diego ............4 5 0 .444 195 156
Denver .. ............. .3 50 .375 190 205
Seettt• ............. ...3 50 .375158 166
Natlaaal Confertnct

.
Eut
TMIII
WLTP&lt;I. PlrPA
NY Giants ......... 8 0 0 1.0110 195103 '
Waablngton ........ 5 3 0 .625185141
Philadelphia .. .... 4 4 o .500 199172
Dal!u .......... ,..... 3 6 o .333119180
Ph.,.nlx ...... .. ..... 2 6 0 .250103195
Cenloal
Cblc:ago .. ........... 7 1 0 .875 199102
Tampa Bay ........ 4 5 0 .444 163 208
Detroit.. ............ . 3 50 .375 206 220
Green Bay ......... 3 5o .375147180
Minnesota .......... 2 6 o .250 177181

w..t

San Frandsco .... 8 0 01.0110 198138'
AUanta .. .... .... .... 3 5o .375 206J21
LA Rams ........... 3 5 0 ·.375 191 227
New Orleans ...... 3 50 .375136157
S.May Raul•

Philadelphia 411. New England 20
Mtamt 23, Pb""nlx 3. ·
Kansas City 9, LA Raiders 7
Nt'W Orieans21, Ctnctnnall7
Plttlllul)lh 21, Atlanta 9
Wuhlnatlll 41, O.tnit 38, OT
Sin Franclaco 24, Greea Bay 20
NY Jeta.24, Dallas 9
Bullalo n, CJ...,tand o
5aa Dlco 31, Seettte 14
CblcaJO 26. Tampa Bay 6
LA Ramal?, Houston 13
MIIIJiei&lt;U 27. De"""r 22

.....,.a...,.

NY Gtanta 24, Indianapolis 7
......,, NeY.ll
Atlanta at Cbtcaro. 1 p.m.
IJidlanapdit at New England, 1
p.m.
Mlamt at NY Jet a, 1 p.m.
MIOIIOIOIA at Detroit, I p.m.
Pb ..ntx at Bullalo, I p.m.
S.tUeat Klonau Clly, I p.m.
Tampa Bay at New Orleans, 1

p.m.

NY Giants at LA Kama, 4 p.n\.
Den.W!r at San Dhp, 4 p.m .•
Groen Bayat LA Ral~a, 4 p,m . ..
San Fra..,laco at Dalila, 8 p.m.

N..UA rat~
NAIA Dt.talonl Foolllall Rallllp
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -The
tqJ 20 ~ams In the 1900 NAJA
Dtvlslon I coDege foQlball poll, wUh
first-place votes an!;l reconl In
parenthe!les, total poln1S and last
week's ranking.
Team
Points
1. Carsm.-Newman (13) {9-01 .2791

2. Central St. (Ohlo) (lli6·1) ..265 2
3. Western New Mexico (7-1) .247 3
4. M•sa State 16-2) ................ 229 6
5. Central Arkansas (7-3) ,_,..223 5
6. Southwest Minnesota (7-21 .205 8

7. NE Oklahoma !6-2-11 ....... 19211
8. (tiel S. Arkansas (7-2-11 .... 1774
8. ( 1ie) Fort Hays S1. (7-3) ... 11710

10. Co1100rd (6-31 ................... 147 7
11. NW Oklahoma (6-31 ....... 14112
12. L•nolr·Rhyne tH l ......... 12713
13. Northern S!. (S.D.) 17·31 12115
14. Shepherd 16-3·11 ............... 107 9
15. !tiel Mocrheod St. ir.-:11 ... 7114
15. (tiel Emporia Stat• tH1 .7117
17. Falnnmt Statei5-3·1) ...... 57 18
18. Arltanoas-Monticollo (5-41 4319
19. Harding (5-41 ................... 3716
20. Ouachita Baptist 1Hl ... ,!) NR
Nil - aat raaked
..

coach Hayden Fry and listened to
his good friend " poor mouth'' his
team.
" I'm mad at Hayden because
of that," said Cooper. 'tHe acted
like he didn't know what he was
going to do, how many games he
was going to wln and that kind of
stuff. He was laying low, The old
fox was laying low." ·
Cooper admitted both hls offense and defense were ImprovIng, but tempered that by noting
the last three games were not
against highly-rated opponenrs.
"Certainly we're getting bet·
ter," said Cooper, "but we
haven't played a team as good
defensively as Illinois the last
three weeks or a team that's as
good as Iowa will be."
Cooper said the Buckeyes
carpe through the Northwestern
game without any major · InjurIes. Quarterback Greg Frey
suffered bruised ribs against the
Wildcats but Is expected to be .
ready for the Hawkeyes :
'

By JIM SLATER
UPI Sports Writer
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI)
Safety Dave Duerson scored hls
first touchdown In eight · NFL
seasons and .the league's top pass
defense produced the points that
subdued stubborn Indlanapo!Jl!.
Duerson, a na.tlve of nearby
Muncie, returned a fumble 31
yards for a touchdown In the
fourth quarter Monday night,
llttlng the undefeated New York
Giants past Indiana polls 24·7 .
Linebacker Pepper Johnson
ran through a blOCk by Kevin Call
and smashed Colts quarterback
Jeff George to the turf, forcing
the fumble DUerson ran Into the
end zone for the final points with
. 13:23 to play.
''All I bad to do was pick up the
ball after Pepper did most of the
work," Duerson said. "In the
back of your mind, you're wondering when you're going to get
one. Tonight was the night."
The triumph made the Giants
and two.tlrne defending super
Bowl champion San Francisco
the first pair of NFL teams with
8·0 . starts since Chicago and
Detroit In 1934. The Giants, off to
the best start In their 66- year
history, matched a 62-year-old
team record of 11 straight
regular season victories.
Duerson sealed the Colts' !ate
after they had struggled to
remain In the ga'm e following a
woeful first half.
"We felt we were In the ball
game until the big turnover."
Colts head coach Ron Meyer
said. ''We felt we had a chance to

get something going until that."
Johnson · scuffled with Call at
halftime, but beat him when It
mattered most to slam George to
·
the turf.
''He rolled left and alii needed
to do Is slow hlfn down for a
· second and It worked," Johnson
said. "When Isaw Duerson scoop
it up and .head for the end zone, It
felt good.' '
George, the No. 1 piCk In this
year's NFL draft, made hls first.
start In five weeks after being
sidelined by an abdominal strain.
He replaced Jack Trudeau, lost
for the season with tom knee
ligaments last week. George
completed 23 of 37 for 160 yards
but lost the key furnble.
"lhad Idea he was coming,"
George .said of Johnson. "I was
getting ready to throw and he got
me. It was a good defensive
play.. "
With VIce Preslden t ·Dan
Quayle watching from a luxury
suite, Ottls Anderson rushed for
55 yards on 14 carries and scored
on &amp;econd-quarter runs of two
and three yards. The 12-year
.veteran moved Into a tie tor
eighth on the all·tlme rushing
. touchdown list with 76.
Phil Slinms, the NFL's toprated passer completed 7 of 8 !or
100 yards In' the first quarter and
New York scored the first three
times It had the football.
"We played a real good first
half," New York head coach Bill
Parcells said. "I can't say too
much tor the second half. I'm just
happy to getoutof the flrsthalfof
the season."
Simms, who turned 35 Satur·
day, threw for 172 yards on the
night, completing 17 of 21 passes.
Slfnms suffered hls first Inter-

no

screwy: Four · of the top five
teams In the country lost,
To get to a New Year's Day
bowl, however, theCavalters, 7-1

MAC .recognizes
Meger, Clement,
Beegle for top play

TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) - Quar.
terbacks Kevin Meger of Toledo
Saturday was particularly and Jlm Clement of Mlaml and
defensive end Toby Beegle of
Ball State Monday were selected
the Mid-American Conference
players of the week.
Meger, a sophomore from
first eight of the year In Madison Glenford , Ohio, accounted for 290
yards In total offense and four
Square Garden.
Trailing 2·1, the Bruins pulled touchdowns In Toledo's 37-9 win
Moog In the final mtn~te of over Western Michigan. He com·
pleted 15 of 23 passes for 254
regulatiOn for a sixth skater. The
.
yards
and three TDs and rushed
Bruins quickly controlled the
eight Urnes for 36 yards and
puck and Neely, parked hi .front
another score.
knocked In a Craig Janney pass
Sharing offensive honors was
for his eighth goal of the year at
Clement, a redshlrt · freshman
19:36 . .
from Marshall, Mich. He ac·
The Rangers led 2-0 after the
first period on goals by John counted for 317 yards In total
· offense and four touchdowns In
Ogrodnlck and Mike Gariner.
Miami's 34-14 victory over EastLeetch grabbed a loose puck at
the point and sent a perfect ern Michigan. He completed 12 of
17 passes !or 248 yards and three
centering pass to Ogrodnlck, who
touchdowns and ran 13 times for
wrlsted In his nfuth goal of the
69
yards and a fourth TO .
season at 5: 18. It was Ogrod·
Beegle, a senior from Wornick's fifth goal In hls last four
thington, Qhlo, made 10 tackles,
games.
Including seven for losses total Aggressive forechecklng by
Darren Turcotte and Jan Erlxon· Ing 45 yards , and caused a fumble
as Ball State beat C~ntral Michl·
set up Gartner's ninth of the year
gan 13-il. Beegle sacked Central
less than two minutes later.
quarterback Jeff Bender five
Turcotte picked up the puck
times.
behind the Boston net, skated In
front and backhanded a shot that
was gloved by Moog. As Moog
attempted to smother the .puck
!or a whistle, Gartner poked
ltfree and Into the net at 7:08.
Bob Carpenter trimmed New
York's lead to 2·1 at 14:22 of the
second period on a feed from
John Carter. Carter, carrying
the puck Into the Rangers' zone,
faked a slapshot before passing
to a cutting Carpenter, who beat
Vanblesbrouck for his fourth
goal of the season.
~. .;

year."

·

Boston tops N.Y. Rangers 3-2
By TOM WITHERS
UPJ Sports 'Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - Bob
Sweeney scored his second goal
of the season at 3: 30 of overtime
Monday night to give the Boston
Bruins a 3·2 victory over the New
York Ritngers In the NHL's only
scheduled game.
The Bruins trailed 2-1 late In
the third period before Cam
Neely tied the score with 24
seconds remaining to force the
flve-mlnute overtime.
With the Bruins !lttacklng l.ri
the extra session, Sweeney took
the puck behind the NewYorknet
and left It for Neely. Sweeney
received a return pass from
Neely to the right side of New
York goalle John Vanblesbrouck
imd his 15-foot shot found the net.
Boston 11oa11e Andy Moog, who
limited the Rangers to two
tlrst-perlod goals, was brilliant
In overtime and a bit lucky. He
repelled hard shots by Ray
Sheppard and Brian Leetch and
got a break when Bernie Nl·
cholls' blast hit the post and
caromed out.
He kept the Bruins close with
several outstanding saves In ·the
second and third periods as well.
Vanblesbrouck was equally
outStanding !or the Rangers,
making 29 saves. New York has
lost three straight and two In a
row at home after winnlpg their

By The Bend
'

ceptlon In 150 passes since
opening day when Mike Prior
caught a deflected toss In the
second quarter.
"We dld some good things and
seemed to be -ln control," Simms.
said. "When we have a chance to
put a team away, though, we
don't. We seem to do this e11ch
week. One of these times. we're ·
not going to be able to do It and
It's going to hurt us."
Indianapolis (2-6) managed
only 45 yards total offense In the
first half, galnlng only one first
down and advancing no farther
upfleld than Its own 39. The Colts
rank last in NFL rushing yards,
possession time and first downs.
"We had a tough time getting
our offense.in gear," Meyer said.
"This Is an 011ward and upward
.building process for Jeff and our
entire offensive unit. No question
we have to do better. It was a
tough night for our team."

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the dily of that event. Items
must be received in advance to
insure publication in. the calen.
dar•
TUESDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - Election day
dinner at Rock Springs Church
beginning at 10 a.m. Vegetable and
bean soup, sandwiches, pie and
cake. Bring containers for carry-out
orders. Place orders by calling 9923356 or 992-5869.
PORTLAND - The Ponland ·
PTO ·will have an election day
· money maker on Tuesday beginning at 9:30 a.m. at the school.
Serving bean soup, cornbread,
vegetable soup, hot dogs, pies,
calceS, brownies, cookies and cupcalces.

The Colts drove 80 yards
following the second-half kickoff,
scoring on Albert Bentley's oneyard dive 7: 18 Into the third
quarter. George threw a 17-yard
pass to Blll Brooks on fourth·
down and seven to give the Colts
a first-down at the New York
20-yard line. 'fhree plays later,
Lawrence Taylor was whistled
for a personal foul after slapping
George's helmet, glvlng the Colts
a !lrst doWn at the Giants six.
Anderson's two-yard run 3:26
before halftime gave the Giants
and 17-0 lead at the break. His
two-yard touchdown run came
two plays Into the second quar·
ter. New York moved 74 yards In
12 plays on the opening drive,
scoring on Matt Bahr's 23-yard
field goal.

vegetable soup, chili, bean soup,
sandwiches. pie and cake. Take-out
orders available. ·
POMEROY - Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Scrority
wiD meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. a1
the home of A.R. Knight in
Pomeroy.
POMEROY - The Drew Webster
Post American Legion wiD have irs
annual oyster supper on Tuesday a1
7 p.m. All members· are urged 10 attend. Bring a prospective member,
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Masonic Lodge No. 363 F
&amp; AM will meet Tuesday a1 7:30
p.m. Officers will be elected. All
members urged to altend.
POMEROY - The River Valley

Herbalists will hold its annual bar·

RUTLAND - The Rutland EMS
will be serving the election day
dinner on Tuesday at the EMS sta·
lion in Rutland.
· POMEROY - The FOE Auxiliary
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. A potluck (!inner will be served. Note the
new time . .
FOREST RUN • The Forest Run
Methodist Church will have an
election day dinner on Tuesday
from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Serving

overall and 4-1 In the ACC, will
have to shut the Georgia Tech
defeat out of their minds and
dweil on their ACC game Satur·
day at North Carolina.
Reporters did not ask U.Va.
Coach George Welsh one · question about the Tar Heels, 5·3·1
overaU and 2-2-1, at his weekly
news coriference here Monday .
The news media focused on the
Georgia Tech game.

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BRrri'ANY BLACK

vest dinner on Tuesday at 6:30p.m.
at Royal Oak Resort.
WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND - Leading Creek
Co!lliervancy District has changed
its regular meeting date from Wed·
nesday, November 7 at 9 a.m., to
Wednesday, November 7 at 9 a.m.
· POMEROY - Hearing clinic
from lO·a.m. until 2 p.m. at Meigs
Senior Citizens Center. Graduate
students from Ohio University
Speech and Hearin~ Qinic wiD
conduct testing. Baste hearing test
and counseling for further testing
or how to deal with hearing loss.
Gall the Center at 992-2161 to
make appointment.

-" Cheryl and Danny Black are an.notmcing the birth of their second
child, Brittany Michelle on Oct. 25.
w The infant weighed six pounds
thirteen ounces and was 19 inChes
long.
The couple also has another
daughter, Stacy Marie, age three.
GI8Ddparents are Agnes and
Larry Sellers, Ponland; · Mr. and
Mrs. George Black, Portland. Great
grnildparents are Ruth and Harold
Sellers, Ponland, and Margaret'
White, Pomeroy.

The Meigs Soil and Wl!ter Conservation Disaict Annual Meeting
and Banquet will be held Nov. 13 a1
7:15p.m. a1 Meigs High School. .
Tickers for the meeting are $6
· each and the meal consisrs of
chicken leg quarters, baked
potatoes, cole slaw, baked beans,
roD, ice cream, ice tea and coffee
prepared by the Meigs Fu1ure Farmers of America.
The speaker for the evening wiD
be Dave Schiltz, service forestry
with the Ohio Departmen1 of

I.

Randall F. Hawkins, M.· D.

Denzil Huffman and Lulu Huf·
fman, lot 15, to Joan Pyles, Olive.
Steve Allen Burton and Connie
Faye Burton, parcel, to DeQnls
R. Howell and Norma J . Howell,
Janice Carol Trueblood,
tracts, to Richard Fetty and · Middleport Vlllage.
Matthew J. Phllllps and Terri
Glenna Fetty, Rutland.
L.
Elkins, lot 60, to Home
Columbus and Southern Power
National
Bank, Racine Vlllage.
Co., Right of way.
VIrgil E. Westfall and L. Fay
Gertrude Van Cooney, dec'd,
Bftld. to Charles Van Cooney, Westfall, 15A., to Lewis C02art
Middleport Vlllage.
CompUed by:
Emmogeae Holstein Con1o
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio

To get the Cavs thinking more
about North Carolina and less
a bout Q&gt;orgla Tech, Welsh asked
reporters to conduct all thelc.
player Interviews Monday. Normally, he allows player Interviews until Wednesday.
"I'm concerned that they'll be
talking about this game through
Wednesday," Welsh said.

not good."

Cleveland- Fired coach Bud
prCI'Iloted offensive
CO&lt;I'dlnator Jim Shdnef to hmd
coach .
New En1land :.... Ret ....d ful.
!back Robert PerJYIIlan.
Car~a~ ;

.... 07

Cbtcago - Recalled 1cottender
Oomlnlk Hasak frcrn Indianapolis
~ the lnlernatloRIJ
Hockey
League.
Hartford- Reatlled center Mike
Tomlak lrcrn Sprlntlfleld or lbo
Aml!l"lcan Hockey l,eague. ·
Philadelphia - Reallled eoal·

tender BruceHotrorttrcm Hershey
or the American Hockey League.

Vancouver - Recalled left wing ·
Gary Valk rr11n Milwaukee at th•

lniernattonal Hockey ~~lflle.

MIDDl.EPORT • The Heath
United Methodist Church will have
a rummage sale on Thursday from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and Friday from 9
a.m. to noon a1 the church base·
menL
POMEROY - The Sacred Heart
Catholic Church will have irs Ill·
nual bazaar and dinner Oli Thursday
from 5,7 p.m. There wiD. be crafts .
and games for . everyone. Door
prizes awarded every half-hoUr
from 6:30-8:30 p.m.
POMEROY • There wiD be a
FaD Open House at Meigs High
School on Thursday from 5-9 p.ni.
The public is invited to attend. An
open keUle ham and bean soup
supper will be held sponsored by
the band boosters. Cost is $2.50 for
adulrs !!Dd $2 for children.
MIDDLEPORT - There will be a
hookfair at the Meigs Junior High
School Thursda).' through Tuesday.
All' studenrs wall be permitted to
purchase
books,
. posters,
bookmarks, etc.

I'IEW ROBE'S • Wearin&amp; their oew blue and
white Serenata robes, members or tbe Pomeroy
United Methodist Cb'urch Cbllir . are, left to
right, front, Acolyte Wester Thoene, Dorothy
Downie, Janet Meadows, Lmda Warner, Dean
Barnitz, Acolyte Ashley Hannahs; ~ond row,
Mazie' Hannahs, Acc:ompaoist Paula Welker, •
Martha ·Hoover, AUce Wamsley, Eleanor
Leonard, and back row, Dale Thoene, Sharron

Perry, Director Jeannie Werry and John Werry.
Several members were absent wben the plctnre
was token. The robes were purchased from
funds beqaested to the chun:h by the late Evelyn
Lucke, Syracuse, who died in May 1989. Sbe bad
been a member or the church since the 1950s.
Matching acolyte robes were given by Jane Walton; in memory of Kermit Walton, who also was
a member of the church. He died in 1988.
·

Internal Medicine

...

CHESTER - The Shade River
Lodge No. 453 will meet Thursday
at 7:30 p.m. a1 the lodge hall.
Refreshments will be served and all
members urged to altend.

Cancer screening clinic
planned by health dept.

TERRENCE SMrrH

SAR speaker ·
is announced
Ewings Chapter of the Sons of
the American Revolution will hold ,
i!S banq)let celebrating its 54th an- ,
niversary on Saturday at the Mag- ,. ,
gie Davis Room of Baker Center a1 · .
Ohio University.
·
The speaker for the-banquet will _:
be Major Terrence J. Smith, .assis- .
tant professor of military science in .
the Army ROTC department of
Ohio University. Major Smith bails ,
from Chicago, IU. and was com- ., .
missioned on May 20, 1973 in. :
ROTC. He has served twice in ·,·
Korea since 1976 and has received :
numerous · commendations. He.,:.
.
holds a BA in English from St.
. Norbert College in Depere, Wise.,
and a MA degree in human
resource
development
from -;
Webster University in St. Louis.
His topiC for the evening will concel)l the do~izing of the U.S.
military due 10 the reduction of ,
federal funding.
~
Reservations for the banquet cost •
$12 per adult with guests welcome.
,
For reservations, call992-7874.

Natural . Resources 'Division of
Forestry.
Awards to be presented during
the evening include Goodyear Farmer, Outstanding Fanner, Soil
A canca: scm:ning clinic will be is the second cause of death in
Judging ·Individual and Team
Awards, Hay · Show Winners, held at the Meigs Coanty Health Meigs Cqunty. Cancer is on the rise
Afliliate Membership Certificates, Department on Nov. 14, Nonna nationwide, she said, but is poe of
Forestry Award and Litter Control Torres, nursing director of the the most curable of all major disAward.
. Meigs County Health Deplaitment eases if it is diagnosed in time.
Early detection of cancer is one of
Election of two supervisors will amounced today. ·
the
aims
of
the
Healtll
The
clinic
is
limited
to
12
be held. Candidates are Ron
Department's
Cancer
Screening
patients
and
the
examinations
are
Eastman. Gary Michael, Thomas
offered free of charge. c;:ounty Clinic. She repeated · the se.~en
TheisS and Chuck Yost
residenrs who are interested in warning signals of cancer - a
making an appointment should Call change in bowel or bladder habirs,
the Health Department at 992-6626 a sore that does not heal, unusual
to make an appointment. Ap- bleeding or discharge, thickening or
pointments are made on a first call, lump in breast or elsewhere, inand Sharon COzart, Lebanon.
first serve basis, Mrs. Thrrcs said. digestion, or difficulty in swallowCarol L. Latta and Thomas J. ' · The examinations wiD include a ing, obvious change In wart or
Latta, parcels, to Arthur D.
pap smear, hemoccult, urinalysis, mole and nagging cough or hoarse·
Fulks and Lesa M. Fulks,
height-weight check, blood pres- ness.
Chester.
sure and a generalized health exRuth Kathleen M. Patterson
amination.
and John D. Patterson, parcel, to
Dr. Mark BroWI'! wiU be donating
· John D. Patterson, Chester.
his services a1 the November clinic.
John Garen aka (Jack) Morrl·
Mrs. Phyllis Bearbs, Women's
son, parcel, to John D. Patterson,
Health Care Technician, will be
Chester.
coordinating services at the clinic.
Edward Reinhard and Helen
According to Mrs. Torres, cancer
IH/f/ht\'I/IAM'!Nili:'II!)\)WI)M\111 '.'lil,.ll\ll"llllfiiiiii/HIIHHHHHIIIIIIHIIIIII!fiii/IIIIIIHIIIIIIIIJ
Reinhard, *A., to Southern Ohio
Coal Co., Salem.
Southern Ohio Coal Co., 1.56A.,
to Edward Refubard and Helen
Reinhard, Salem.
Leo S. Curtis, dec'd, affld. to
Albert L. Curtis and Jessie A.
Curtis, Bedford.
Shelly White, lot 33, to Charles
-you quellfy. I , .....Ill
. C. Wright, Middleport VIllage.
rilll for 1 - AIIIO ConipMiel'
opeolll 1:111111111 AUIO l'ollcy, your
Jonathan Tillis and Wilma M.
Fitch, nka Wilma M. Tillis, lA.,
- · · ... up wttll , _ flrat
to Albert Lawson RJ1d Susan
annoWlce the opening of their
11m. . pa~~a~. - requiN
. Lawson, Lebanon.
- vew•
of pcolloy _ _ ....,,
· practice in
Debra A. Fitch, nka Debra A.
.... MHI!IItt llllowl ..........
Mlrgon, John Mlrgon, .a nd
61nil idiLUIW .
Tammy E. Fitch, right of way, to
'llle l11delilt ilDLgnilM U. ol ,
Albert Lawson and Susan LawNf• ............. ron.
Son, Lebanon.
..d reductlonl- IIi I W - ·
.... 111111 doctlalll=•.-lr
John L. · Werner and Aan .
and
• ... Zl •d .,.leolr It·
Werner, lot 3, to Jack W. Carsey,
tnct... for the 41 to 14 y.- old.
Middleport.
_;.
"
,.. h - ..... doMilg - .
E!lward E. Stiles and Eloise F.
en•paolliumunbtwllhttle ....
Stiles; part lot, to Ryan Scott
at
cllllotAuto........, tram ..... Auto
Jeffers. Middleport VIllage.
2907 Ja~ksonAvenue
Eula B. Hensler, 8.15 A, to
Cell ua eloout thltl . . tneuoaWllllam A. Hepsler, Trustee,
Point Pleasant, West Virginia
llorellttlliOutlh for ·- d........ .
Sutton.
,
'William A. Hensler; Trustee,
Seeing patients
8.15A., to Steven D. Bradbury
and Ann J. Bradbury, Sutton.
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday
Larry V. DWon nand Tammy
L. Dillon, parcelll, to tarry. V.
Dillon and Allee Dillon, Olive.
For appointments call
Rllbt of way, Tuppers Plalna,
214 EAST MAIN
Che11ter Water Dllt.
(304) 675-4107
POMEROY
Cindy L. Hql)l, aka Cindy L.
882·1187
Hollinger, parcels, to Ropr A.
Holsinger, Olive.
John We11ley . ArbaUIIh, dec'd,
affld., to Ethel M. Arbaugh,
. . . . .,. bnl/y ol proleatonaiJ .
Orange.
Macle r.f.. Prtddy by P .O.A.,
,· &amp;A, to Stanley E. Starcher and
Doria Starcher, Rutland.

ItS Allin 1!Je WAKIA0J

.......
u..-..

E. Neal Orteza, M.D.
&amp;

Emy . Olivare~·Orteza, M.D.

:?.

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The 7-Day-Premium CD
is anor~;r example of our
Commitment To Customers.

Office Hours
Monday through Friday

9 a.m. - 5 p.m.

Call or visit your nearesr
Central Trusr office-for details roday.

Suite 13,
PVH Medical Office Bulfdlng

(304) 675-7700

'

JI.I PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
R
Vl .""
famll, ol p!OitllloltaiJ

Valley Drive, ~I Pleosont, W.

.-

s10,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT

Va. 25550

Maximum d~posi1 599.999.99. Subu:mtial pen;;alry fo~ rarly withdrawai
\.
Int....,t pold tc&gt;Prtndpal ~4 compoonded wfel&lt;ly. Rates ellecttw Sept.
1990
:Jfld subJ«t ro chanAe wtthuur nntK·e. Y~d usumts rhnr srart-d rart rem:ains
uJnsranr for t1 full year .'N'ith no wirhdrawnlt of inreresc or prindpal.

2i

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY
Tlu! Bank That .Wake• Thinga H~ppen.
441-0802
.

992-8881
Middleport

Glllllpo!ll

.

'

t\!•mbirr FDIC ·

.r

,.
..

· CELEBRATION EMCEE'S • Ju IUid Kathy GGspel Slnaen will
be llllllel'l of ceremcndel for tbe Gabriel Quartet's 15tlt annlverIII'Y 11q to be laeld s.tarday at 7:30 p.m at tile Ualted Pllltb
Cbarcb,Pomeny, Route 7 by..,_; Al0111 with tbe Gabriels other
~tared poiiJII will be True Geipelliaa1lcll and Charity. The
palldt Is lavlted.

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..••
,
I

•

•

•

'•'
'•

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••

•

Adolescent Medicine

,.......,.. c.mr •·

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Teaford birthday

WE'LL
OVERLOOK
YOUR FIRST
ACCIDENT

Enjoy rhe flexibilily and liquidity of a CD
which is auromatically renewable and redeemable
ar each 7 day anniversary

operauona and named Larry Mon·

Foolbal1

and Paul Parish Hall, Wellston.

General Pediatrics

Transactions

Shatter director of scout1f]g.

Ohilloc Society .wiD present a
baseball card show on Thursday
from 4-9:30 p.m. at the SL P~

Meigs G:&gt;unty .property transfers

State, Colorado Mines. Elm. Hendersm. Southwestrrn Oklahcma,
Wingate.

roe minor league- dlrectCI"; named
Steve Noworyta director ot mlllor
learue operations and Duane

Paga 6

A birthday party was held
recently in observance of the
second birthday of Darin Thaford,
son of Dale and Linda Thaford,
Racine.
A ·teddy bear theme was carried
POMEROY - The Preceptor Beta out with cake other refreshments
Beta ChaP.!Cr, Beta Sigma Phi being served.
PAGEVll:.LE • Scipio Township Sorority WID meet Thursday at 7:30
Auending the party were his
Trustees meet Wednesday 6 p.m. p.m. at · .the . Grace Episcopal !Win brothers. ·Dale and4l Derek
Township Building.
Church. Hostesses will be Jane Teaford, grandparents, Larry and
· RUTLAND. The Village of Rut· . Walton and Reva Vaughn.
Phyllis O'Brien and Dale and
Wanda
Teaford, great grandparents,
land wiD have an easement meeting
ROCK SPRINGS • The Rock
Florence Adams.
Bob
and
on Wednesday a1 11 a.m. and 7-10
Thursda
Y · Others attending were ·Jim
p.m. at the cavic center to discuss · Springs GI8Dge will meet
at 8 p.m. Patty Dyer, delegate to O'Brien, Raymond Adams, Carla,
the village sewage system.
Ohio Siate GI8Dge will give a
Terry lee and Merissa BeD, Joshua
_Pape, Tricia Wolfe, Lori, Dustin /
1UPPERS PLAINS - The Voice reprot.
.·
and Cameron Brinager, Staey WarDARIN TEAFORD
of Democraey Contest wiD be· held
POINT
PLEASANT
den, Diane ~d Kyle Wol~e. Wen_dy ADen and Chelsea Pape, Dennie
Wednesday a1 the Tuppers Plains
VFW Post 9053. The public is in· WVARNG Point Pleasant Family Gabeaut,_ Shirley, Stephame, Jessica and EUie Teaford, Hazel Congo,
vited.
Sup6port30 Group Wit·theumAnnoeet
ThursdaDay . and Lori Sayre, Kenda and Kelly Pearl · Adams Doris Adams and
THURSDAY
at :
p.m. a
ry
Y Rizer, Jamie and Brittany Morarity. great gr.andpaWars Rex and Mary
WELI:.STON - The Wellston . · Room. ·
Others sending gifts were Carol, o •Brien.
'

Others receiving votes; Adams

Moadar Sport• Tru~acUoa
-ball
Cbtcago IAL) - Placed Ron
Schuele!' In charaeotmajor leaeue

'

.

Meigs SWCD banquet scheduled

·Black birth

Welsh was asked whether
VIrginia's multiple formations
and multiple substitutions 'con·
trlbuted to the confusion that led
to two lliegal- procedure penal·
ties after the Cavs, tralilng 38-35,
had made It to first and goal at
Georgia Tech's 1llne with !ewer
than tour minutes left.
The second penalty nullified a
Shawn Moore-to-Aaron Mundy
touchdoWn pass, and Vlrglnla
settled for a f~ld goal that tied
the score at 38· 38.
"You may screw up (with the
multiple formations), but w~·ve
done It all year," Welsh said. "To
me, It's worth lt. That's why
we're averaging 540 yards a
game on offense."

~~That's

Tuesday, November, 6, 1990

Community calendar

Virginia Cavs dream of· bowl date
CHARLOTTESViLLE, Va .
(0PI) - VIrginia's 9th-ranked
Cavaliers will play In a New
Year's Day bowl despite their
41-38 · Atlantic Coast Conference
loss l!J. No. 7 Georgia Tech, U. Va.
Athletic Director Jim Copeland
predicts.
"I think we have a real good
chance of going to a New Year's
Day bowl," 'Copeland said Man·
day. "So much Is up In the alr
right now: It's been a screwy

The Daily Sentinel

Dd PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPrrAL .

•••
I

,••

�-~

&lt;

Page

6-The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Women's A~iliary at
Velt:r8IIS
Memorial
Hospital
Jeeently lOOk on a major project that of providing a 46-incb rclevision for residents of the hospital's
Sltillcd Nursing Facility.
The rclevision has been inSialled
and IllS enhanctd TV viewing for
residents ·who actuaDy mate their
horne in the facility. Cost of lhe big
screen TV. amounrcd to about
$1,750. Tho Auxiliary had .$500
provided by member, Edna Triplett,
and spectally earmarked fQr tho
purchase. The balance due,
however, is sizeable and lhe
Auxiliary, which serves the hospital
patients, employees and visitm so
weD Js hoping for some helping
hand9 out there on the projecL
1
No:contribution is too smaU - the
Awtillary would just appreciarc
. some help. Those wishing to help
are asked 10 send their donations to
Tile Women's Auxiliary, Veterans.
Memo Hospital, 115 East
Memorial Drive;, Pomeroy.

l

And spealcing of women, the
Indies of Sacred Heart amrch will
stage their annual dinner - and they
stack 'em in for lhe event - this
Thursday evening with serving to
start at 5 p.m. The anooal bazaar
wiD be held in conjunction with the
dinner and the usual crafts and
games wiD also be featUred during
lhe evening. The churoh basement,
of course. is the location . .
And if cooking is getting to you,
you can avoid your .kitchen again
on Saturday evening when Veterans
of Foreign Wars Post 9053 wiU
hold !heir annual turkey dinner at
the post home in Tuppers Plains.
Serving · turkey and the wolks ·
wiU begin at 4 p.m. Co5t is $4.50
for adults and $2.50 for children
under 12.
In a few days, Edna Pickens wiD
be observing her 90th birthday.
Friends are planning a card shower.
The address is 522 Palmer SL,
Middleport The apniversary date is
Nov. 13. .
.
.

Dr. Zinnia Dayo will be closing
her Middleport office as or Nov. 30.
Patients can pick up their records at
the office by closinJI dale. Dr. Dayo

~

... By Bob Ho6jlich

will be dOing ~-time emc1J811CY
room and nur5111g home duly • she
gives up. part of her dli1y piM for
health reasons.

-Roger L. Wdliams, MWJepnrt

Recreaiion Director, is -.... liD
come up with some actiaa fiir dille
Six through 12 year old ,.autllllliJ~·
who lilt kind of in •
.-e
since . . high and senior hiih
years =de more activities for
their age groups. .
The departtnent UIICil'r lop's
supervision is offering a ywlh
howling league which will beliD on
Saturday, Nov. 17 and continue
through, March 30. Play will like
place at the Po~roy Bowling
Lanes and is open to all area vouth
in the designated age group. Cost
will be $3 for three games an4 shoe
rental will be free.
.
Registration-"to participate will
talce place this Saturday from J0 ·
a.m. to 11:30 a.J11. at the department office located in Middlepon
Village Hall. There will be a $5
registration free which will be used
to help offset the cost of a llWOII
ending recognition and awll'ds
banquet.
Oh, and adult volun~ee~~ will
also be needed as coaches,
scorekeepers and statisticians if the
league is to fty. If you're willing to
add you expertise, do let Roger
know.

ne&amp;l-

The family of Esther Wright will
be staging a surprise birthday party
for Esther from 2 to 4 p.m, SUnday
in the social room or die Ullited
Methodist Church in Chester.
Esther used to live oa ltiiUie 7
near Chester. She WOJked • Qow's
Steak House for a period and diM
81 Ohio University retiring fnllll
there some years ago. The r.nily
invites you to join in the celebration and also requests that you omit
gifts.
How did they manage 10 do all
of their prediction polls on who
would win in the election without
ast9ng me and thee? Now, does that
make up lonely lillie pctuniil ia 111
onion pllch, er what? Do ~eep
smiling. ·

Court lets stand case to
bar press from juvenile
courtroom proceedings
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Supreme Court Monday let stand
a decision that the constitutional
right of public and media aCCf!SS
to court proceedlllgs does not
extend to Juvenile court cases
where publicity could harm an
lnnocent child.
·
The court refuSed to review ·a
ruling by the Ohio Supreme Court
that there exists "no qualified
right of publtc .access to juvenile
court proceedings to determine If
a child Is abused, neglected or
dependent, ,or to deiermtne cus·
tody of a minor child."
The court's refusal to hear the
case sets no precedent, meaning
It could take up the Issue at
another time If It causes prob·
terns In the lower courts.
The case In· question stems
fromablzarreOhlochlldcusiOdy ·
battle involving a surrogate
mother and a divorcing husband
and wife who paid $10,000 for the
surrogacy contract.
The case eventually ended with .
the husband getting custody and
his ex-wife shooting ))lm to death,
but only-after the Ohio courts had
barred the media from proceed1ngs out of fear the spotlight whiCh had led to publiCity rangtng from a story In The New York
Times to a segment on the
television program "A Current
Affair"- would cause emotional
damage to the young girl at the
center of the controversy.
Owners of The Columbus Dispatch newspaper asked the high
court to review the decision oft be
Ohio· Supreme Court allowing
Juvenile · court , In Franklin
County, Ohio, -to bar the medii!
and the public from the child
custody hearings and Impose a
gag rule on parties Involved to
keep th~m from speaking out
publicly about the case.
M
•
The case began 1n ° ay 1987•
when Richard and Beverly
Reams flied separate divorce
petltlona, both seeking to retain
cuatodY of Tessa, born In 1985 to
Nonn a Lee Stotskl, who at the
ttme was working lor a "surroeate mother service."
The Reamses had never tot·
sa _ who was
many a do Pted Tes

•

I:;

education, . ~· ; 3
weekly wCigh-lRS, tel_ - niques, recipes, diet nail .....,
exercise techlliquea _. t1111r
phases or wei~·control.
aass size IS limbed _. wll •
held in Jhe conren:nce .... al ...
multi-pmpoae building Jn P
1).
To ngisltr, call ._ ...._
County Health Depjlblrll ill 1ft.
6626 111d indicarc a Ji I 1 r• II
TuesclaY or Wednesday • 'I • I

By United Press International
BERNSTEIN ON ARTISTRY: Composer Leonard Bernstein,
"who died last month of lung ailments, said In his last major
Interview that It takes a lot of lime to creale a work of art.
During his lengthy career. Bernstein conducted orchestras and
wrote nlll)lerous works, Including the score for the Academy
Award-winning musical, "West Side Story." In his last major
Interview, Bernstein told RoUing Stone magazine that
"anything of a serious nature Isn't Instant- you can't do the
Sistine Chapel In on~ hour ....
COSTNU· OtrrSIDE THE "STAR" LIGHT: Actor Kevin
C.slller tells Rolling Stone there Is more to life than star status.
"I don't think fame Is a cultural achievement," says the star of
"Field of Dreams." "I mean, acting has a place, but celebrity
as an achievement? I've had my share - more exposure than
anybody has a right to have. Enough at this polntfor the rest of
my life."
NO NIGHT "SOAPS" FOR LUCCI: Despite several

successful forays .Into the world of prime-time televisiOn.
daytime soap queel) Susan Lucci says she 's not Interested In a
nighttime series- at least not yet. Lucci tells TV Guide that If
she were working on a nighttime show, she would never see her
children. Uza Victoria, 15, and Andreas Martin, 10. Lucci, who
has played Erica Kane on ABC's "All My Children' •for the last
20 years, commutes dally from her Long Island home to
Manhattan for the show's filming and has a contra·ct clause that
gives her time off for the first day of school and school
vacations. "I've found It Impossible to walk away from Erica,"
said Lucci, who earns a reported $1.3 mllllon a year.

--- ·

AUCTION OF' TRUMP CONDOS IN FLORIDA: Lenders are
·forcing Donald Trump to auction ~ more than 100 unsold
condominium units at the Trump Plaza of the Palm Beaches In
Florida to pay on !its debt. The Miami Herald repoFts that 45
condos ranging In price from $229,200 to $1.8 milllOJ\ wlll be sold
at discount prices Dec. 16. The auctions are expected to net
about $15 million - still more than $10 million short of what
Trump owes on them.

"'
.~
...3......

~

••

'

3

~~~::M:eig~o~.

Q:allia or M11on counues mu st

m••
•Ads thlt must be paid in advance are
-

"'

~.,

G1Uia.Countv

MtiiiJI Coun1y

Aru Code614

Area Code 614

~_,

446-0ellipolis

992 - ~iddliport

Montanez perJOnal

COUPON

t75 -1111

FREE ELECTRONIC HEARING TESTS
will bt gi¥111 in MEIGS COUNTY by

BELlONE HEAliNG AID CENTER

Til TESTS WIU IE GIVEI BY ALICENSED IIEAIIIIQ AID SPECIALIST
·~who,_ tNUllle a..tna or undll,lllldlng oon-lon lolnvlled
10 .... 1 1'1111 hMIIng -to -lfthll prolllem un be htlpedllllng thlo
-••• wllh ""' lor filii! HIAIIING TI!IT of 171 Vllluo. Adulla

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

UMWA • UAW • OTHER INIURANCE PROVti)ER
...... nm.
·
1
1111011 m1111

3?9-Walnut

•• f
It

'

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"''

Who's Who lists
local young man

Daniel Kennedy, son of Carl and
Jean Kennedy, Rutland, has been
accepted into Who's Who Among
American High School Students.
Kennedy is a 1990 ~duate of
Meigs High School and IS attending
Ohio University.
Only five percent of all students
from America's 22,000 high
schools are honored in the Who's
Who book each year.

Rancbnade QoUday Treasure~ VI
· Craft Show •nd Sale

I
I
Saturdar, November 10, 1990

·1,

· I
I
·
SmM'ay, Nov. .ber 11, 1990 I
lp.m.•Sp.m.

Pollnt Pl..Lat Junior

.J...

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...
...
'
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,

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•

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•

&amp;

Situation Wlftted
lnturlnce
Busineu Tt~inir'lg
SchOolt &amp; lnttructian
Redia , TV &amp; CB Rtpeir
Misctlllneous
W•nted To Do

. .'

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!I

•
•''

...

•••I•

II

33 - Fsrms far Sale

81 - · Home Improvement•

48 - Equipment tor Rent

j

5

86-MobileHom'e Aepair

IJashan lulltllng

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Cliob
12 Gaugo Shal1101s Only
Strictly Enforatl
Factory

STEWART'S

Lordy, Lordy,
Look
401

GUNS &amp;
SUPPLIES
Set

For Your
Sporting Needs
Buy, Sell or Trade
Guns
OPEN MON.-SAT. 10-5
ut

36496 s.t1l lUll ID.
IUTli. .,OIIO

8

'

·DI\f'K
rM\1

Happy Ads

~=======:::;
HAPPY 46th
· BIRTHDAY!

-

H e's full of Love;

He's full of Grace;
He'll bring a smile
Upon your face.
He'• a father, e
husband,
A grandpa. • friend.
Our love for him
Will never end.
WE LOVE YOUI
HAPPY
BIRTHDAY I
Wife.
7

HappyAdl

FREE ESTIMATES
Take tht pain out of
pain~ng. Let me do
1t for JGII·
Very Rtoson•le ·.

. hawt

614-915·4110

IOoi0-'!10-1 mo.

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

CEDAR
CONSTIIOION
992-6648 or
698-6864

10-12·'10-1 mo.

ClEAN UP WITH
Cl.SSIJI(D ADS I

90DAY WA... Im
WASHER$-$100 up
DRTER$-$69 up
;
lEFRIGERATotl$-$100 up '

RAIIGIS-Gos·Eioc.-$125 up

FIEEZEI$-$125 IP

Public Sate
&amp;Auction

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
The following described item will be of·
farad for public sale to the highest biddar on the 27th day of November,
1990, at ten o'clock a.m.
1979 AMC 2 DR. S CONCORD
Sar. #A9A087C267620
Sale of the security listed above will ba
held on the premises of City Loan Financial Services. Inc .• 238 East Main
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 46789.
Terms of Sale: Cash
Sellar resat~~as the right to bid and the
right to reject any and all bids. Prior to
the data of sale, arrangements may be
made tp inspect this merchandise by
calling 992·2171 between the hours of
9:00 a.m. and 6:00 .m.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
The following described item will be offered for public sale to the highest bid- ~
•der on the 27th day of November,
1990, at tan o'clock a.m ..
1982 PONTIAC. 2 dr. model J2000
Sar. #1G2AC27G4C7678412
Sale of the 1ecurity listed above will be
held on the premises of City Loan Financial Services, Inc., 238 East Main
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 46769.
· Term1 of Sale: Cash
Sellar resar\lea tha right to bid and the
right to reject any and all bida. Prior to
lhe data of sale, arrangements may be
made to il)spect this merchandise by
calling 992-2171 between tha hours of
9:00a.m. and 6:00 .m.

liN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 art15-3561 ·
Across ,,_Post Office
.POMEIOY (01110 .
· ·

PROPERTY FOR SALE
100 ACIES WITH
APPROXIMATELY 2 ACRE

Renting Spaces 6x6
For 1 6.00

POND, GAS WELL AND .

TO RESERVE YOUR SPACE
CALL SHERRJE DAVIS
AT 992-3466 .
Now is the time to get rid of all

FIEI' GAS.
LOCATED IN SmON TOWNSHIP
OFF DORCAS ROAD.

your cluuer.

LOOK
WHO'S 301
PAM
POWERS

REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE FOR SALE

w•Ez At Po~~~~roy TNII Dance
luldln• "'llle Loco•tlen",
M1dlailc St., Po•erey (oltl
llllerfeld Wonhouse).

/

UNLIMITED
4.TON MIN. UMIT

$50.00,... ...
Lump or Stoker
286-2689
10·24 I MO.

..

'

PH. 949·2101
or Res. 949·2160

.

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" ".
!()

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; •. .l'J'(

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·.:r.&lt;.~

110 SUNOll CAllS

H6-86-tln .... \. ~~;"J
.............-...,..;;;.:.;;~::::--

CALL

FAIMEIS IANI
992-2136

'. :~~~
SER~ICE

..
SHRUB &amp; TREE

TRIM and
REMOVAL

Wt can repair and re.

radiators and .
heater cores. Wt con
~'
also acid boil and rod '·-.=-.·, ~r

!:111'1

~.u

out radiators. We also
repair Gcil Tanks.

:: ... J h~

PAT' HILL FORD

... ·.
' ''':!

992-2196
Middleport; 011io

. ..

' .,:..:,:....,
1-13-lfc ··&gt; ''-"'''
....
L._ _ _
,

COMPLETE
ELECTRICAL SERVICE
Reoidantial and
Commercial

IEWIIING ANO
TROUII.E SHOOnNG
C1rtified ElectrldaM
.Frta Etimates

.

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION

•,

., '

992-5009

'I :::1 1

10.1 I 010.

'

~'

....•..."'

BUI~DERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGU

*FIREWOOD

-' '· • .

' ... -2"'1

...' '

• ' '·,, t•l

''At Roasonabl1 Prices"

PH. 949-2801

. '

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS
· {~-

A
PLUMBING &amp; IIAnNG

tin

11ssru &amp; ana
CONSTIUCTION

..... "-•s

BGara181
•Complete
R.•madaling
Stop &amp; C0111part
fr• Est.l matn

985-4473 :
667-6179-

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' ·

. &lt;: :.1.
•:.· .'.':'l

Mithlloport, Ohio 45760

.r,·

SALES &amp; SERVICE

•· ' ·~ 1!

c.,y Flahinv Suppli•

. . Pay Your Phooe
end Cable Bills Here

USED RAILROAD T1ES

.

..., .

or ReL 949·2860

We

BILL SLACK
992-2269

. • • IUSINES5 PHONE
16141 992-6550
iaESIDINQ PHONE
·. 16141 992-7754

•

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,...._______ .... :. ,j
~.....1-L:.-__,~11!!;281:1!lm!J_ , • ..,: . l

Banks
Construc:tion

..... t ; · ~

992-6009

&amp;~!Gutter
~H!Jlmel "

NEVER CLEAN YOUR ·
GUTTERS AGAIN
GUARANTEED!
FREE ESTIMATES

: , ; .•J.
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Tti'ii"N £: il Jl C ,. l T Y

11011111.

Want Ada
They:Jlt'111111

NewrW.s• Z11

......

,, •..., ..·'1

·~

205 N. Second Str"l
IIIIDDlEI'ORT, 01110 4571101
Offke 614-992·2116
...... 614·992-5691

;

\:.

Now location:
I 61 North Second

*LIGHT HAULING

8-12~90

. -H.n
-""

. ,

4·16-86-tfn

Gt:t UtJILI1 H1::;dlLI fll11u: A s:1 Pt:r !lily Bllllcltll 8odlli Allvf:rtlst:lrH:nt In 1111: D.Jrly St:rlliiWI Ci.Jssrlit:ll S!:clltlll.
.

~·H-slt!llt

·-Free Estimates••

.,

.

· BISSELL"

5·31.'!10 tin

NOV, 15 &amp; 16 - THURS. &amp; FRI.
9:00 A.M. 'DL 5:00 P.M•

BAZAAR. &amp; DINNER

"

•· .;.l :_,.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

I0/30/'891fn

COAL

YardSata

FLEA MAllET - YARD SALE

3 Announcements

&lt;( ..

•VINYL SIDING
• . '• ........ f
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
.\ : .v
INSULATION
....., ...

USED APPUANCES

Real Estate General

Misaed by wife,
Elizabeth, and
chlldran

Reftrtn~

IIICRO.OYEN$-$79 up .

CALL 614·992·7104 FOR APPT.

ISA
.WANT AD

..

........
_ ,.

PAINTING

10·01-'I0-1 ·mo.

HAPPY
Bl
DAYI

home. A real bargain at $89,990. $84.900.

---------i-----------1

-.,~;
.·. :.:.
...., :
'.

.

locatltl o~· Safford School I d. off It. 1•1
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· :..·'.;.;'.;;2:..-s;..•_6_,_ __,- "; ~:

9-2 -'99·1fR

prox. 4,800 sq. It farm bldg. and mobile

5

....

,..,,_

,,

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HappyAdl

Carolyn Jeffers!

VERY NICE LARGE f«lME ON APPROX. 311
ACRES - 4BR, 3baths, 2garages. rented I
·BR apartment Property indud,. pood, ap·

ABIG PUllf'
Ht
11ll •

:j-- ;•

HEAnNG &amp; COOLING

INTUIOII - Em-.ot

''

FOR SALE IN RACINE

I

· ~)~

~--~----~------~
BENifmiS MOBILE HOME

UCINE
FIRE DEPT.

HOUSE OVERROWINC?

SMAll
WnNT ADS

HOME FIIINACES - HEAT PUMPS
ALL FURNA(E PARTS

GROOM.
ROOM

742-1421

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

THIS 1"x 1"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
AT $5.00 PER DAY

MOilLE

LINDA'S'"'

BULLETIN BOARD

prOVklll tiiNi IIFVicl with

Mowln
Stoekl!

GU,. SHOOT

10·&amp; 1 mo.

82-Piumbing • He•ing
8-3 -Excweting
84- Eiecuical &amp; Aefrioeration
85-Gener•' Hauling

48 - Space for Aen 1

,..~-------..!.--~-----.,·. v . \~&lt;~~·
~

The

Pomeroy, Ohio

Serv;ces

43 - Farms for Rent

47-Wsnted to Rent

Soc.,..,_,,,

• POMIIOY,

mo.

614-992-6820

44 - APtrtment for Rent

breast •.

The Sacred Htert
Church, Pomeroy,
will hold ita annual
bazaar and dinner
Nov. 8. Dinner
HIVed li-7 pm.
Crafta and gemn
for everyone.
Come One, Come AU!
Door Prize• avery
. Y.a hour
8:30·8:30 .m.

217 L

ENILEE MER IN AR
Owner &amp; Operator

79-Ctmpers 6 Motor Homn ·

41 -Houses ror Rent
42-Mobile Homes for Rent

••liltllnce provided under
Section 1 8 of tho Urban
Male Traneportatlon Act of

5

992-5335 or91S;3561
Acrau frOm P~ Offlco

Complete Grooming
for AJI,Brttcls

may· be ob-

In Memory Of
CONRAD
OHLINGER
Who Want To Be
· With The Lord On
Nov. 8, 1989
Safe in the arms of
Jesus;
Stifa on HI• loving

.·.

'

....,...:_~

75-Boalt &amp; MatOtt for S1le
76-Auto Parts &amp; AcC•sori•
77--Auto Rep1ir
78 - Cempirlg Equipment .

I;I§Uilll

lnMamory

'·-•'

11-6-90-1

74-Motorcvcl•

34-Business Buildings
35 - ,l oh &amp; Acruge .
36- Aul Ettau Wanted

lEN'S ·APPUANCE
SEIVICE

949-2206

61 - Farm Equfpment

62 - Wanted to Bu~•
83 - Livestock
64-H•y &amp; ~rain
65 - Saed &amp; Fanil i:.~:er

72-Truck• to, Sale
73 - Vans &amp; 4 '-"D ' s

31-Homn for S.le
32- Mobile Homes for Sale

Richard E. Jonoo
Commissioner
(10123. 30: !1116. 13, 4tc

•

L iVC SIUGk

71 - Autol for S .. e

Re31 Eslale

PUBLIC HEARING
NOTICE
·Tho VIlle go of Mlddlopon

hllned . ot the office of
Burgou &amp; Niple, Umhed,
lo..ted at 4424 Emoroon
Avenu•. ·1Jark8raburg, West
Virginia 21104 upon paymont of Fifty · Dolloro
(UO.OOI. NONE OF WHICH
WILL BE REFUNDED .
By ardor of tho Meigs

2

StiiHIIies

Transporl ali on

21-Butintlli Opportun ity
22 -Mon..- to LOan
23-Prof•Ponal Servicn

AU MAlES
Bring It In Or Wi
Pick Up.

CUTTING,
SKINNING,
WRAPPING
BASHEN RD.,
RACINE

'

·

.,

oPiinl Plilulll ,.,.... Otpa: ..,••

895-letart
937 - Buffalo

1213 1415 16 1718 -

County Commitsionerl.

.~

'.•'

c.at•AIII~

ond Archltocto Estlmote for:
1. Gonerol. .... f811.8&amp;2.00
2. Electrlo:ol. .. .'. 12e.912.00
3. HVAC ......... 142,778.00
4. Plumbing ...... 39,880.00

Documents

.,.
'

Sehool

Fmn

.·

OVEN IEPAut

cuniNG

~ 11111Ioy1111• nl
Serv1ces

MICIO~VE

HILL'S DEER

51 - Hou..nold Good•
52-Sporting Oaadl
53-AmiQues
54-Mite. Merchll"'dite
56-Building Suppli•
56-Ptts for S1le
57-Mullie-' lnttrumlll'ltl
58-Fruits &amp; \ltg~•t»•
59-For Stle or Tr1de

Pomeroy, Ohio 415789
or
Burgou &amp; Nlple. Limhod
4424 Emenon Avenue
Por1&lt;oroburg, Wut Vlfglnlo
21104
Copies of the Contract

;;·!

•Hooo CUI · -CMIY Yo-Tldl Com&lt;

6 - lott and Found
7 - Vard S•le(plid in advan ce)
8-Public S1le &amp; Auction
9 - W•ntecl to Buy

Public NOtice

AOVERTiSEMENT
FOR BIDS
Mllig1 County Departrt~ent
of Human Service•
175 Race Stroot
Middleport. Ohio 4&amp;780

County Comml11ionera
Melg1 County CourthouN

•

-Ccurly--

S- Heppy Ads

Tha Contnct
Documents
m11y be
examined
at: Molgo
· II"
The
Offici
of the

.,

Mer c handise

~IIIIIIIIIIII._4,9~-=Fo:•:L•:M:•::::~~==!8~7~-!U~ph~o~l01~"='::::::::~

lng building togothor with
the neceaury appertllinlng

r

Rt. N North, Polat Pl..-~t

S,.~~a~ld8y:

882-New . He~en

fl"f
~ ~

won:.
,
Soparate Contracts
for

0

10 a.m. • • p.m.

Ann nun cc 111 en! s
1 .... C.rd of Thanks
2 - ln Memory
3-Annoucements
4 - Givuway

•&amp;-Furnished Rooms

rior renovation• to thlexlat·

·-· ·~

Black birthday

•

Ratune
1.1

87&amp; - Pt . Plenant
458-Lean
576 - Appla Grove
773 .,-MaiiOn

10-1·1 ....

oO

1984, os emended ond unthe co•.-tructlon of an llddi- der the Ohio Public Trontlon to and the renov1tion of apartatlon Prog,.m,
1ho Meigs County DeportDue to lncreallld coats of
mont of Humon Sorvicoo will operating the Hrvlce, the
be r.:::eived at the office of village wllllncnon the purtho Moolgo County Commlo· chiH price of tho bluo E &amp; H
liollll'o, Mtlgo
County token to eo cent• end the
Courthou•. Pomeroy, Ohio red Oene,.l Pullllc tokiln to
4&amp;7e9 untll2:00 p.m. (locel 11 .20 offlctlveJonuory 11,
tlmel on the 20th of Novom· 1991 ,
ber, 1990 ond then ot uld . The vllleoo lnvhos comolflce publlcty opon0d end ments from the public on tho
read aloud.
propoud chongH In the
WORK covered by
program.
·
Contract Documenta In·
A public hearing will bo
dude the following homo for hold on Docombor 10, 1990
which bldo will be occoptod: 11 7:30 p.m. ·In tho Council
Addition to and Renovation
Chombero 1t Middleport Vllof tho -Melgl County
lllge Hall for public com~ ·
Dep1rtment of Human
ment.
Service a
Fred Hoffmon, Moyor
A new building addition to
Vlllogo of Mlddlepon
t~l exlalng Department of
11118.13.2tc
'
Hum·an Service• with Inte-

'

DANIEL KENNEDY

742 - Aulland
667 - Coolvil le

Separ•t• •••led blda for

."
.....,

· Stacy Marie Black celebraled her
third birth.day recently at the home
of her grandparents, Agnes and
Larry SeUers.
Attending were Ruth ·and Harold
SeUcrs, Noami, Gary, Josh,
Stephanie Black, Mandy, Cody,
Carol Lang, Rick Sellers, Margaret,
Kenny, Debbie White, Floyd McCieUan, Rhonda, Michael DePue,
Charlie, Janie, Patty, Peggy,
Tootsie, Boomer Lawrence, Ruth
Ann, Kasi Sellers, Sharon, Steven
Smith, Clarinda, Tommy, Jessica
Theiss, Tris Ann, Billie Jo and
Aaron Sellers, Fr~ 'Engle, Ann
Sellers, Catina Wolfe, Larry Sellers
Jr., and her parents, Cheryl and
Danny Black.
. Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
George Black and Kathy, Larry,
Linda Black and kids, Judy ·Sellers.

985 - Chelte'

.P ublic Notice

-·
"'...
•"

STACY M. BLACK

Pomerov

/

...,

CENTEI

Cll , . fill NM1..r 1·100·6J4·5:t6S hr lau1• It appailllmlllt.

~~

949 - Racint

••
,.,.

-----------AID

1312 EASTEIN AVENUE, CIT. 71, GAWPOLIS
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMUI 7
9:00 A.M. TO 4100 P.M.
CAU. 614·446-1744 or 1.100-634-5265

643-A.r lbi• Oist

''11

...

MIDDLEPORT FAMILY PRAcnCE CENTER
Z. I. DAYO, M.D.
306 SECOND AYE~ MIDDLEPORT
TH~SDAY, NOVEMIEI I
9:00 A.M. TO 12:00 NOON

IlLlO. . .AIIIIG

247.,.-Letan Feus·

:1

1·

t7S -1111

9

843- Portllnd

266-Gu'ten Oist.

••

McCartney said, and "It was
very clear that ·It belonged to
perhaps an Individual _rather
than some ... big operation. I
think when we get down tO' It,
what we'll find Is that unfortunately, some Individual has a
habit."
,.
&lt;'·' ·

Mason Co .. WV
Aree Code 304

367-Cheehire
388-Vinton
24&amp;-Aio Grande

0

It was "a very small amount,"

2 :G0 P .M . TUESDAY

- 2:00P .M . WEDNESDAY
- 2 :00P .M . THURSDAY
- 2 :00P .M . FRIDAY

foUt:&gt;tl.'ing telephone exchanges ...

~

CAPE CANAVERAL.- Fla. for takeoff Friday . night, but
(UPI) - NASA managers are problems with the ship's secret
considering the possibility of spy satellite payload forced Air
launching the shuttle Columbia Force missiOn managers to order
at the end of the month, just two a delay. While McCartney would
weeks or so after Atlantis's not discuss the ·progress of work
planned launch around Nov. ~6 on to repair the payload, he said the
a secret military mission.
spaceplane should be ready for
An Internal space agency tule launch next week.
'
requires three weeks 'between
''The 16th, give or take a day or
shuttle fi!ghts to make sure data so, is the best guess now. That's a
from one mission can be studied reasonable planning time," he
before launching the next. But said, "I'm not speaking for the
Forrest McCartney, director of Department of Defense. But If
_the Kennedy Space Center, said you were to ask me what's a good
Monday that agency managers planning date now ... , !think the
were studying ways to reduce the middle of the month Is reasonarequirement.
ble to assume."
"We'd like very much to fly
Assuming Atlantis blasts off
(Columbia), get ltdownandgetlt around Nov. 16, Columbia should
· home before Christmas," he be ready for flight by the entl of
said. "But we're not going to the month If NASA mapagers
waive any of the looking, what we agree to waive the three-week
look at'' between missions.
· rule.
.
On another front, McCartney
As for drug use at the space
said the discovery of about 1 center, a small packet of cocaine
gram of· cocaine In a shuttle containing about 1 gram of the
processing hangar Friday dld not drug - about 0.04 ounces- was
Indicate that there was a prob- discovered Friday morning In
lem with widespread drug use at Orbiter Processing Faclllty No. 1
the sprawling shuttleport.
where the space shuttle DiscovHe also said there there Is no ery Is being serviced after a
evlden~e drugs were Involved In
mission last month.
any of a number of embarrassing
McCartney sa!d an alert Indimishaps and accidents at the vidual spotted the drug under a
spaceport earner this year.
desk In the OPF and called
"It's been suggested perhaps security personnel.
that could have been Involved In
I
some of the Incidents we've
had," McCartney said. "We have
not fourld that and In analyzing
First Lt. Agustin Montanez Jr.,
each one of those Instances, we
son
of Mr. and Mrs. Agustin Monhave not found a common thread
tanez,
Arecibo, Puerto Rico, and
that would cause you to think
that.
grandson of Mr. and Mrs. ~o~
Ables, Pomeroy, is now servmg m
"I don't see any evidence Operation Desen Shield in ~audi
whatsoever that links drugs to Arabia.
the Incidents or accidents that
Lt. Montanez is a 1986 graduate
we've had," McCartney sald.
of Ohio University. He was a senior
In the meantime, engineers at Jaw student at Americana College
launch pads 39A and 39B are of Law in Puerto Rico.
pressing on with plans to launch
Lt. Montanez is in command of a
the shuttle Atlantis around Nov. suppon unit 'from a medical group.
16 and Its slstershlp, Columbia, This is the ~ond time he has been
just two weeks later around Nov. called to active duty.
30.
.
Mrs. Montanez is the former
Atlantis had been scheduled Carolyn Allman, Pomeroy.

-

Classified pa[(es .corer the

••

Atlantis, ·Columbia ready for.launch

- 11 :00 A .M . '$ ATURQAV

- 2,00 P.M . MONDAY

992-6009

fnr e1r.h ti!N u uparale ad •

.

DAV BEFORE PUBLICATION

SHOOTS SUIT
SEPT 1 . 1990

l ' J ~·,
I'OMIIIOY. OHIO: Rt. 7. S.R . 143
·"h-1.
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt. 150. S.R. 143
.
: ~::
NEW MOURI:
,.
POMEROY : 8 o.m.-7 p.m. 7 Days
ALBANY: 10 1.m.-ll p,m, II D1yo, Clooed Sundly . ' i~J&lt;.
PAYING AS OF TODAY, SEPT. 11, 1990 ·~·· ~ '1'.
-,{ .r:
111 Celli* •.1 par lb.;
C..en Dry Alvmln~~m Cano, 46C per lb. ,
Clean Auto Rediatcn440 II.; Batterie1*1 .26•.
Yellow Braq 40c ib.; Alum. Sheats 40C lb.
.
614 992- 114
•., ,•.••
L.--.......1~~~~.;:,_--=;;....t . " ,, ,
~·

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION

.Choke only .

.. ,.

,.

OFniS I LICA11011S tO SIIVI YOU'"'

lon'l • Worth Doing Jli9!1

12 GaUJI Factery

R8tM are for c onte'c utilte i'Urtl, broktn updfllfSwill be ChiiiO~

pre·

H1ppy Adl
Ylrd Sales

. MONDAY PAPER
TUESOAY PAP,ER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSOAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

•

' I' / \

Rate
Over 16 Wordt
$4.00
.
.20
$6.00
.30
S9.00
.4:L.
813.00
.10
Si.30/ doy
.0&amp; / doy

11 - Help W•nted
COPY DEADLINE -

e
...••

SOCIETY
to Glory". Diles Is pictured with, back row 1-r,
BENEFITS - The Meigs County Chapter of the
customers Ca~by Thcker and Doris Curry,
American Cancer SoCiety received five percent or
American Cancer SQ!:iety Chapter 'Director Lil·
the sales of Dave Diles' new book at MDI Street · lian Moore, Store Qwner Ruth Darst, and cusBooks in Middleport CHi Saturday. Diles was on
tomer Larry Roush.
'
'
band at tbe store to sign copies·or ''From Ashes

10
Monthly

•A el•••ified 1dller1 iHment pl1ced ·in The Daily Sentinel I ell ·
cept ~ cl•tiried (:lispl.,.., 8utillMI C•rd tnd legal notices)
will •lso appur in lhll Pt. Ple••nt Aegi ... r end the G•ll •·
polis Oeuv Tribune. ruching over 11.000 home~

~

CANCER

C1rd of Thtnkl
I" Memoriam

Words
15
15
15
15
15

6

ads - Givuway and Found ads under 15 words will be
run 3 d~s at no chwglfl.
"Price ol H for aU capka l l•nen Is double ~r i ce or ad cost .
"7 point line type only used .
•sentinel is not rnponsmte for errors after first dfV . (Cheek
for errou fi,.l d8';' ad runs in paper) . Call before 2 :00 p,m
d.v •har public• ion to
correction

......

AMERICAN

Days
1
3

:~~''""'~ 1 .50 ditcoum for ~a. paid in advance.

F:

Myca Ann Michael celebrated
her third birthday recently with a
party at McDonald's in Pomeroy
given by her parents, Raymond and
Debi Michael.
Attending ·were her brother, Jeff
Michael, her sister, Tara Michael,
Sabrina Smith, Marc Smith, Ann
Alley, Jessica Alley, Becky Alley,
Matt Salser, Mikie Salser, and
James Alley.
Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
Raben (Lucille) Lawson, and Maxine Michael.

t~e

1:00 , ...
SUNDAYS

•~•

I'

Til-COUNTY IICYCLING

Commercial •
Relidentiel
•Roofing
. •Siding
•Windows ,

GUN SHOOTS

RATES

TO PLACf AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

BUILDING &amp;
REMODELING

RACINE
GUN CLUB

• The Area's Number 1 .Marketplace

•

Michael birthday

not a blood relative- and Stotskl
joined the three-way custody
battle.
·
In December 1988, after the
couple's divorce had been flaal!zed, a Franklin County Probate
Court judge consldertnc ~ep~r­
ate adoption petitlona oi'Vred
Richard Reams ·and Beverly
Reams - then known as lleverly
Seymour- each to post a $3,000
bond. The judge also encouraged
Richard Reams to give up his
efforts to obtain .the child so she
could be 1\dopted by a wealthy
East Coast couple,
Seymour, clalmfug sll~ could
not afford the $3,000 bond, ftlll
public Ina two-page news release
dlstrlbuled to news ageucles.
The story was picked up
nationwide,
A court-appointed prdlan
then asked for a gag order on the
parties Involved. To that point
the proceedings had been open to
the public and media.
Franklin County Judge Ronald
So love held a hearing and levied
a gag order, wrltlngthat "sillo!!i
as there is a scintilla of po~slbll­
ltyof hann to the child, this court
will restrict the rights of adults
Involved."
So love then closed the jlldlclal
proceedings to the public and tile
media,
.
The Dispatch sued, arguln1~e
gag and closure rules violated
the First Amendment.
The Ohio Court of Appeals
agreed, barring enforcement of
the gag rule or court cloeure
orders, and holding there 11 . a
presumption ·of openness for
juvenile courts as well as adult
courts.
The Olilo Supreme Court tiMin
reversed.
The custody heariJIII conUnued behind closed doorw oa
Aug. 14, 1990, when Rlcllard
Reams was granted custody of
Tessa.
However, when he went to
Seymour's home to take the
d Sey
ho
chll • mour s thtm to death.
She reportedly told the county
sheriff ,she shot Reama In ~rt
because she "felt llhe had not , ·
been g1vell a fa 1r opportunity by
the courts."

Weight control classes planned
•

A Slirim of silt-week clalies for
t~~elsht CXIliiiOI will be oft'eted by .
the ~ Cowtty Health DeparttDeDt 011Nov 13111d 14 816 p.m.
1'heN will. be a choice of nights
for the clwer of either Tuesday or
WedPIC adly and Classes are me to
Meip County relidenll.·
l!llch cJau eill be of two hours .
dtaMiotl. Atlelldance is reqaited at
CJBIJ one two 1tour • iol weddy.
~, 1 will include -. -.;tion

Tuesday. November. 6, 1990

..--People in the ·news-------.;......__:.---,
.
.

Beat of the bend...

Classifie

Pomeroy-Midd,-leport.:....;,;.;;';_Oh:..;,:;io.:.__"_....,_ _ _ _ _ ___,~----The--D..,illy~Sent--in-II
_ _Pa4_~;;..a_7

TuesdaY, November, 6. 1990

&gt;

'•' I :'"J \~

'

Announcements

.

" " '
· :·\,.~\

'~'"
-·3--------·'
· •'
Announcementa
•

�~'U:""f= a

·~
~

1~.

I

e:oorn• l1l Cll• IDl a •

.

O,_wa
(JJ Chill. . Ill ~
·
Q
Cll3-2-1 Contlet .
Ill aqun One
Q
IIDIDALF · ·
.I I! Clrtoon bjnae
IDNBAToday . .
· 18 World Todly
~ Blbnan Stereo. Q
6:05 [lJ Beverly Hlllbllllel.

Pu-: I wkt old, Bolh •••"'
rogllltrod
Golden
ROirlo""!!.!no lo good homo.

..........

&amp;1+31111-J·•··
'
Refrigerator &amp;.washlrwg mac:ihln.
lo Qlv-iy. 814-446-3897.

8:30 ~G. 0 NBC Nightly " - •

IIi Abb9tt and CoaMIIO
(I)

CllO ABC N- Q

II
II I I I
LlGFN

3

!
!

K A L

N Y ..

Overheard outside a · diet
clinic: "The toughest part ofa
L-..1-....L-L--L--' ~ • diet isn't watching what you
..-----..,.-..,----, eat, it's watching what your
RI 8 L ED
------ eats."

Cll Wild Alnericll Q
.
Ill 3-2·1 Contact Q
IDl !ED ID CBS Newa Q
liD.• Andy Orifllth
Sportal.ook
·
~ Bin Brother Jake Stereo.

a

PRINT

. ·.

•

NUMIIU~D

lETTERS IN

THESE SQUARES .

Q •

UNSCRAMBLE ABOYE lETTERS

6:35 [lJ Andy Grtllltll
7:00 C2l G IDl 0 Wheal ol
FortuneQ
.
.
(JJ I Drum of Jaannl1
(I) ·CilO lnllkle Edition
Cll Ill MacNel Letner
NewaHour
·
llll18 Nlghl Coun Q
tED • Current Affelf
i1J MacGyver Q
tED Spo...Center
aMoneyllne
~ Scllrecrow and Mra. King

TO GET ANSWfR
•'

SCIIAM-UTS ANSWIIIS
••· s
Whaler- Young- Annoy- Humane- YOUFf OWN
You could almost be called a saint it you can listen to
someone's tale of woe and not respond with a
description of YOUR OWN ..--~---------. "·
.,

BRIDGE

NORTH
U-5-!!11
tK 74 3
'IAQJ0·54

Q
7:05 (]) HIPPY Daya

tJ5
+As

7:30 (2) •

IDl 0 Jeopardy! Q
(JJ Night Court Q
(I) 112) ID Entert81nment
Tonight Stereo.
CllO M•ma'e Family
lllll8 Threa'a Company
SuperBoute Hagler's
Knockouts: '85, Ha~ler vs.
Hearns: '84, Hagle....
Hamsho II
.
a Crot~allra
7:35 [lJ The Jefferaona

JAMES

tA9

a

i

8:00 C2l • o Mallock While
defending a gambler,
Matiock uncovers an
unsolVed art tllelt. Stereo. Q
(JJ MOVIE: The Po-ker
(2:00)

1-

-(1)

Tony's having difficulty
aceepllng Samanlha's need
lor lndapenden(:e. Stereo. Q
Cll Ill Nova Geologists hope
to diville the clues ihat
priiCOda eartllqual&lt;ls. I;!
IDl ll2l ID Reacue: 911 A
teen clings to a loose rock
2,400 feet above tlte ground.
Stereo. D
lllliD MOVIE: BilOxi Bluea
(PG13) (2:00)
II! Murder, Slle Wrote D
12!1 Sonoa of tile 1110 Vaftey
G&amp;Orge StroH; k.d. lang,
Highway 101 and the
Bellamy Brothers .are among
the artists performing al an
!)pen-air fesuv~ in Canada.
a Prirneilawa
~ MOVIE: My FavOrtttt Spy
. (2:00)
8:05 (]) MOVIE:'Cold Sauy TrM
(2:00) .
8:30 (I) Cll CJ Head ol the Claaa ·
The class learns whal
freedom ol protectiOn really
means. Stereo. Q
tED USHRA Mud and Moniter
TNCk Racing
.

4pm.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

Rick Polloon Aucllon Company
noW booklno auctklne, ex~

.,.n.nce

I

the dtt.,.nc,,
LlconMd Olllo, Ktntucky, Wll1
Vlrglnll, 304-TIU785.

9

Cllll WIIO'I the Boat?

make~

Wanted to Buy

.Hoi'MI &amp; poNaj 814-446-2107,
814-318-8&amp;04.

Help Wanted

.

-

~.~o.

•11H., o..rant•
,..r pollnlltl o.vor $401(.

Minimum

Er!:

leH 11ocoun1
dlola.- al
nl, MCI, or
~ ..... . 1ccoun11 Mr•
1llcad &amp; biUod by AT&amp;T. Cqrronl
A T &amp; T - - okay. Lllollmo
- 1 1. -kly poy.
CALL SUN·WED.
1114-1117

,.:0"'3#:;., '

18

Wanted to Do

,_;.·....,,..........._

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

Btoutltv ~r •• • proraet n
!rom wfnlor NM &amp; grtmo. Export·
auto ciMnina IIWkle I ,out,
RIV41rolde Aufo Dolllllng . . 81+
448-81110.
·
Int..., 1 Exlarlor Paint, 10
}'NIW .ptl'lencll. .FrM Eallm8t• AIIO do IMf raldng.

ONE

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Mr. Steve P01111.-..

vias down one.
Tlie right play is not so easy to see.
the point where declarer played the
of spades. he should lead low iri·

M111 Pauta'a Dar Caire Center.
a~, ahl ...,., M-F
I i.m. • 5:30 p.m. Alii• 2-10.
Before, all• ac:hoal. Orop.ln1
....................224.

MAW II I JEST

Will do boby tilling In my homo
Will Colombia orao, 304·773-

OREMPT.
I WAS EATIN'

115'1'1.
Would likt 10 do bobyolltlng In
my home. All ahltte, all apt,
have .,.ftl .. aa. ca11 114-3888515 (K no an-, coM 114-387-

IUTTfllMILIC
PANCAICIS

(T)
10:00C2JG .ODacielon '90
(JJ Nawa
(I) Cllll ABC Election
Coverage Stereo. Q .
Cll Ill Power In tile PacifiC
An economic comparison is
offered between tho United
Stales and Japan. Stereo. Q

DRIPPIN' WITH
FRESH-CHURNED

IUTTIR AN'
. CANI SYRUP If

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IDl 11211D CI!S Electlan

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Robertaon
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10:05 [lJ MOVIE: The Dallmaker
(3:00)
10:3012!1 Crook and ChaM
tED NASCAR RIICing .From
Phoenix (T)

Financtal
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Rl.'ntals

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TAURUS (AprH 20-Mey 20) Make every
-----------~ Graph predictions for the year am.;ad by effort to Subdue your impulsive lnclina ...
mailing $1,25 IO Astro-Graph, c/o Ihis lions today. !le sure your mind is In gear
newspaper, P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland, before your moulh star1s talking and
OH 44101-3428. Be sure to state your wa1ch 0u.t when you get behind the
zodiac sign.
wheel and go .buzzin9 around town .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) 1his GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Today will
is not an especially . good d'ay tb go not be devoid ol financial opportunities,
shopping for expeh~ive merchandise. although they are @oPt to be rather eluBERNICE
.Your desires for instant gratification siva. If you hope to capitalize on adv~n­
BEDE OSOL could distort your value judgment . ·
tageous developments. don't blinK your
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Olsen- eyes.
.
gage yourself from ideas or plans today CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your possiabout which. you do not feel ·cer1ain. ·. bllities for succeeding in a commercial
Don't complicate your Jile by speeding endeavor are somewhat limlled today.
d.dwn a road that is probably a dead- This Is because you might .deliberately
end street.
· '
Involve yOUrself with people who can't
· AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) In order make effective contributions.
to expedite produciion loday you might LEO ·(Ju(J 23-Aug. 22) ln _spite 'of. your
experiment with some untested meth- better judgment. there Is a chance. toods or procedures. Toying with the un- day you may do something that does
Nav. 7, 1890
known could create problems lor you , not serve your best inle~s where your
Instead of resolving them.
career Is. concerned. Watch your step.
You mlghl be luckier than usual in lhe PISCES (F..,. 20-March 20) When ca- VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Your friends
year ahe&amp;q. In ventures or endeavors vorting wllh friends tOdl\1 ybu ,m ightfeel might lind you a trifle difficult to deal '
lh~t require prOmotion and salesman- so9ially obligated to foot lhe bill instead . wl,th today, because· you may. say on'
Ship. Your ability tq successfully market of splitting lhe qosts equally. Don'l be thing and do another.lnstead of having
Y~ur wares could be rather remarkable • stingy,, but, on the olher hand, be them wonder what you'll do next, stick
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24·Nov. 22). You'll realistic.
·to your word.
grasp ttle 8S8811ce of ideas today, bul ARIES (March 21-Aprf' 11) There is a . UBRA (Sept. 23o0cl.23) In order to luinot necessarily their entirety. This is be- possibility you may be subjected to 1111 meaningful objectives today, ·conticause your focus is likely to be· on· your .more domestic tensions than UB\J&amp;I tq- nulty of purpoaa is 8888ntlal. If xou. ato~n conpi!Pt instead of on what you~re . day. If you I real evenls emotionally, in- tempt to do lhlngs In llts. and starts,
l&gt;iung told. Scorpio. !real yourself to a stead of logically, it'll contribUte to ev- you 'll merely have a lot of beginnings
birthday girt. Se~d for your Astro- · ervone's discomfort.
with no endings. ·
·

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l1l Clle IDl tDe

ONIWI
(JJ Night Cauri.Q
(lJ NIWIWatch
11])18 Arsenio 111111
1!J Miami VIce
·
1211 Songa ol the Big Vellly
Geor:ge Strail, k.d. t0ng; ·
Highway 101 and the
Bellamy Brothera ara among
the artists performing at an
open-air reativli in Canada.
18MOMJflne
Brother Jake Slareo.

Pllllg

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(JJ Welldna Tall
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My Talk 8h!IW

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Norlb

East

t •

Dbl.

Pass

Pass. 3 •
All pass

Pass

Opening l ead:. t K

stead. Now . it-·wili "iioi help West to ..
take the ace of spades immediately .·:,
(The Q-J wilt be winners . and fina tk .
the king.) Should West due~ the sp•de . :
declarer takes the king in dummy and ··
returns a spade to the jack a!lll ace . .
Now what• A diamond will provide a .
sluff and a ruff, and a club will be ,
away irom the king and around lo declarer's queen.
Why should declarer assume lhat
West holds the club king' If West did
not, he would surely·have led a club at
the third trick alter winning the first
two diamond tricks.

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH

... .

ACRoss·

.

snacks
1 Second- • 47 Hinder
brighlesl
DOWN
stars
1 - au
&amp;Saw
rhum
socially
2 Peron and
11 Use
·Braun
12 Century
;I Tete-aplant
tete
13 Eleclion
4 Feel
day needs
poorly
15 In vile
5 Calch16 Luger,
phrase
e.g.
6 Actor
17 Ballpoint
Coleman
lill
7 Pasr
18 Jazz
8 Prepare
insfrufcir rakeoff
menls
9 Flal
20 Mountain 10 Editor's
home
·
base
23 Streisand 14 Groom's
film
wear
27 Sign of
18 Head
lhe·future
cavity
28 Nelher19 Car lype
lands
20 Man in
sighl
29 Cheese-

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35 Extinct
blue
21 Francois's
bird
friend
36 Commo22 "Willard"
tion
sequel
38 Secre24 Velo
tarial
25 Boxing
group
win
39 Noted
26 Actor
volcano
Cariou
40 Part of ·
30 Emulares
Miss
Mondrian
Muller's
meal
31 Fabled
sailor
42Beliel
33Marsh
43Grand34Swear
Opry

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cake

posler
31 Anglo's
counlerpart
32 Noted

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developer
34 TV spols
37 'Charged'
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38 Sunday
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41 Election
day need
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one
45 Wilhout
help
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DAILY CRVP'I'OQUOTES- Here's how to won it:

1116

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Is LONGFELLOW

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(2:00)

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Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

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Declarer played well in four heart~ .
West led K-Q of diamonds and then
switched to a trump. Declarer won in
his hand. ruffed his last diamond with
t~ ace of hearts , and played a second
trump to his hand. He then led the jack
of spades. Perhaps West could be cajoled into thinking that declarer was
missing the spade queen. Not this
time. West grabbed the spade a~e and
returned a spade. Declarer won in his
hand, played to dummy's club ace. and
ran all of the remaining trumps,
· discarding the last club from dummy
at the finish. If · the spades dtvided
equally or if the defender who held
long spades also held the kmg of clubs.
the contract would succeed. Unfortunately East had nothing to protect ex·
cept his 10-8 ol spades. and West held
tight to his king of clubs. so declarer

CW4d·

11

, 83

A near
miss

9:00 (2) G 0 In the Hut of the
Night A retarded•girl Is tile
suspected mother of a
infant. Stereo. Q
, .
(I) ClliiJ ReiHnne··
Roseanne plans a big
bir1hday bash lor Dan down
at the loQge. Slareo. Q
Cll Ill Frontline Q
IDl 11211D CBS Cornec!Y
Bloopero II Bloopers frOm
lhe networic's priinatime
series aro spollightecl. Clips
include Candice Bergan,
Sandy Duncan, Matt Frewer
and Whoopi Goklberg.
Stereo.Q
1!J Bu-oer Pree111ta:
Tulldly Night i'lghta .
12!1 Nall)vflle Now
~.~~,., Kltlg Uvel
9:30 (I) Cllll coach Haydlrl
cancels his plans so he can
meet a new 111111&lt;1 Of
Christine's. Stereo. D
iD NHRA Racing ChTal Ayto
Parts Nationals from Dallas

Employmenl Serv1ces

EAST
+10 8 6 2

WEST

JACOBY

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Y-..U,'a Cot....- • TALK TO A MAN
ABOUT HIMSELF AND HE WILL LISTEN FOR
HOURS. - BENJAMIN DISRAELI

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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

10-The Daily Sentinel

Paga

---Area deaths-- Quickel
Margaret Spent'.et'
,
addresses
Margaret A. Spencer, 71, ·Of
Route 3 in Pomeroy, died on Sunday.
A housewife, she was born on
January 12, 1919 in New Lexington, the daughw of the late Fred
and Ruth Young Harper. She was a
member of the St Paul United
Methodist Church in Tuppers
Plains.
.
She is survived by four
daughters, Sarah Josephine Showe,
Toledo, Connie Ballard, Chester·
ville Brenda
Weber and Loreua
.
Brown, both of Pomeroy; an aunt,
Edith Harper, Pomeroy; several
nieces
and
nephews;
10
granchildren and four great
grandchildren.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by her husband,
Anhur L. Spencer (in March,
1990), a daughter, Audrey Jean.
Spencer, and a sister, Audrey
Powell.
.
Funeral services will be held on
Thursday at 1 p.m. a,l Ewing
Funeral Home, w1th Rev:' Sharon
Hausman officiating,
Burial will be in Keebaugh
Cemetery.
·
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
on Wednesday.

.

.

Rhoda Worthington
Mrs. Rhoda A. Wonhington, 90,
of Ravenswood, W. Va., died Sunday at the Village Health Center at
Ravenswood after a brief illness.
Born in Gallia County, she was
the daughter of the late Thomas and
Lena Nibert She ,.as a housewife
and · member of the First United
Methodist Church at Ravenswood.
She is survived by four ·
daughters, Beryl Rowley of
Ravenswood, W. Va., Mrs. Faye
Elder of Minerva, Mrs. Mabel
Frazier of Columbus, and Mrs.
Gloria Wagner of Racine, 12
grandchildren,
22
great·
grandchildren, and four great-greatgrandchildren.
·
She was preceded in death by her
husband, Francis Worthington, in
1963, and one daughter, Jean Cecil,
in. 1973.
Services will be held Wednesday
at 11 a.m. at the Straight-Tucker
Funeral Home at Ravenswood.
Rev. Van Hogan. Burial will be in
the Ravenswood Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeraf home from 6
to 9 p.m Tuesday. In lieu of
· flowers, memorial contributions
may be made to the American Cancer Society.Hannan obit

Richard Fortney
Richard R. Fortney, 85, South
Canaan Road, .Guysville, died
Monday evening at his residence
after an extended illness.
Born in Harrison COunty, W. Va.,
he was the son of Harter Fortney
and Evah Robey Fortney, He was a
retired construCtion worker with
Brewer Construction in Lancaster,
and a member of the South Cannan
Baptist Church.
He is survived by his wife,
Catherine Homer Fortney, one sister, Gladys Fuller, The Plains. a sister-in-law, Beuy Fortney of
Guysville, several nieces and
nephews.
Besides his parents he was
preceded in death by an infant
brother, Donald, and a brother, H.
Paul Fortney, two sisters, Pearl
Croy and Virginia Hesson.

Funeral services ·will be held at
11 a.m. Thursday at the White
Funeral Home with the Rev. David
Couto officiating. Burial will be in
the Bean Cernewy in Guysville.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Tuesday 7 to 9 p.m. and
Wednesday 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

•
team IS
announced

students

Pick-3: 616
Pick-4: 8670
Cards: 9-H; 5-C;
2-D; A-S

Page4

Lenville Hannan
LenviUe R. Harman. 68, Slate
Route 124; Rutland, died Sunday at
Camden Clark Memorial Hospital ,
Parkersburg, W. Va. · ·
.
, Born on May 4, 1922 at MeCodde, w. Va., he waS ·the son of
William Clarence Harman and
Thelma Mitchell Harman Ashworth. He was a farmer and former
superintendent for BabCock and
Wilcox Construction Co. He was a
member of the Boilermakers Lodge
667• W.mfi etd • w· Via., the Mlt.
Moriah Masonic Lodge 037' F. and
A. M., Beverly, and .a vetei:an of
World War U.
.
He is survived by two sons and
· Ia G
d B
daug hters-mw, ene an
arbara Harman, Vienna, W. Va.;
Michael Dean and Linda Harman,
Grayson, Ky.; and a son, Larry R·
Harman, Rutland; a daughter and
son-in-law, Sheila and Timothy
McDaniel, Rutland; a brother and
sister-in-law, William J. and Diane
Harman, Sunberry, and a sister and
brother-in-law, Saralyn and Don
Drenner, Pipersville, Pa., seven
grandchildren,
two
step.ldre
d
grandch 1 n, an two greatgrandchildren, along with several
nieces and nephews.
.
'
Besides his parents he was
preceded in death by his wife,
Mabel Julia Williams Harman in
May, 1990, a sister, Martha Lewis,
and 'a brother, Boyce Gene Harman.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at I p.m. at the Ewing
Funeral Home. The Rev. Laura
ShrefOer will officiate and burial
will be in Riverview Cemetery.
Frien(ls may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday.

· A citizenship assembly was held
Monday at Pomeroy Elemenwy.
Guest speaker for the assembly wa5
Bill Quickel, member of the Meigs
County Board of Education
owner of Davis-Quickel Insurance
Company in Pomeroy.

•

..

·

During the assembly a student
from each class was chosen by the
teacher for his or her outstanding
display of good citizenship. Receiving certificates in ·Mrs. . Mary
Carolyn Wiley kindergarten classes
were Kayle Davis, a.m., and Corey
"'--•
I grad. 1 6 the
nuuus, p.m. n
es •
recipients were, from Mrs. Jamie
Blaettnar, Danny BuffingtOn; .Mrs.
Carol Ohlinger, Crystal Lemley;
· Ashl .....~
Mrs. Becky Trent,
ey ...vmas;
Mrs. Suzy Carpenter, Emily Stiver;
Miss Kathy Haley, Melissa Davis;
Mrs. Linda Zamoch, Whitney
Thomas; Mrs. Judy Carter, Jenny
Clark; Miss Carol Smith, Amanda
Buckley; Cliff Kennedy, Jason
Boggess; Mrs. Julia Vaughan,
Rachell Davidson; Mrs. Marjorie
Gibbs, Kasey Williams; Mrs. Linda
Stanley, · Danielle Grueser; :Mrs.
Debbie Sebert, Jerica Clark; Mrs.
Julie Hubbard. Shawn .fife; Miss
Becky Tripleu, Tara Grueser; Mrs.
Joni Jeffers, Reatha Bush; Mrs.
Janet Ho.an, Jessica Roush.

GOOD CITIZENSHIP WINNERS • Receiving
certificates ror good citizenship at Pomeroy
Elementary on Monday are, 1-r, front, Kayte
Davis, Danny Buf'6tlgton, Crystal Lemley, Jes,.
sica .Roush, Jenny Clark, Corey Woods, Reatha .
Bush, Ashley ThOmas and Amanda Buckley.

.Weather
Soulll Central Ohio

•

Most Meigs incumbents post wins

Back, Bill Quickel, guest speaker, Kasey Williams, Tara Grueser, Jodie Sisson, Danielle
Grueser, Jerica Clarll;, Jason Bogg~s, Shawn
Fife, Melissa Davi$ and RacheD Dav1dson. Absent for the photo were Emily S!i~ers and Whitney Thomas.

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr

his bid for reelection as Ohio's
AuditOr: His Rep.ublican opposition, James M. Petro received 3,319
Meigs County voters pulled few votes.
SecretarY. of State Sherrod
punches in Tuesday's general election, endorsing a Republican Brown, a Democrat, was defeated
Gubernatorial ticket and voting to in Meigs County. Brown received
retain nearly all of the incumbent 3 060 votes to his Republican chall~ger Robert Taft's 4;593 votes.
office holders on their balloL
· Democrat Mary Ellen Withrow,
Republican Gubernatorial candidate George Voinovich and his Ohio's incumbent State Treasurer,
running mate, Michael DeWine;· won in Meigs County over her
were the victors in Meigs COunty, challen~er, Judith Y. Brachman; a
capntring an unoflicial4,333 votes. RepubliCll!l, 3,920 to 3,444 votes.
Their Democratic opposition; AnClarence Miller, a Republican,
thony Celebrezze and Eugene received '5,205 Meigs County votes
Branstool. received 3,372 votes.
over Democrat John Buchanan's
In the race for O~io Attorney 2,605 votes in the race for U.S.
General, Paul E. PCeifer, a Representative in the lOth District
Republican, won over Democrat
In the race for State SenatOr for
Lee Fisher by a wide margin, 4,657 the 17th District, Incumbent
votes to 2,744.
Democrat Jan Michael Long was
Incumbent Democrat Thomas E. the victor in Meigs County, receivFerguson received 4,189 votes in ing 4,742 votes over Republican

·Soapbox derby meeting slated Thursday
• •

Mostly clear Tuesday night,
with a low near 35. Becoming
partly cloudy Wednesday , with a
chance of afternoon rain; and
highs In the low 50s. Chance of
rain Is 30 percent.
Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
A chance of snow flurries In the
northeastern part of the s ta'te and
fair weather elsewhere Thurs·
day.

A meeting for all persons interes·
ted in bringing an area · soapbox
derby 10 the Meigs County area has
beenscheduledforThursdaynjght
at 7 p.m. at Middleport Village
Hall. Roger D. Williams, recreation
director for Middleport, encourages
auendance at the meeting· where
questions will be answered ·and
plans. developed Anyone · with
questions should contact ,the Mid-

Raymond Sterling Roush, 70,
New Haven, died Monday, Nov. 5,
1990, in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born July 20, 1920, in the Broad
Run Community, he was a son of
the late. Okey W. and Alma M.
(Pickens) Roush.
A coal miner, Roush attended the
Broad Run United Methodist
Church.
~
Survivors include hiS wife,
Evelyn 0 . Roush; son and
daughter-in-law, Jerry R. and
Tammy Roush, New Haven; two
daughters and sons-in-law, Joyce
M. and Steve Gillispie, Gallipolis, ,
Janie A. and Danny Gillispie, New
Haven; five sisters, Elsie A. Lieving, Estyl L. Clark, both of New
Haven, Fannie L. Clark, Louise K.
Gibbs, both of Letart, Irene L. Jus·
tis, Mason; mother-in-law, Eunice
E. Martin, New Haven; six
grandchildren and several nieces
and nephews.
He was preceded in death by
three sisters, Estella llene Roush,
Eunice M. Hart, Freda D. Henry,
and a brother, Hazen H. Roush.
The funenll wiD be Thursday,
1':30 p.m., at the Foglesong Funeral
Home with Rev. Merlin Teeks and
Rev. Clyde FerreD officiating.
Burial wiD be in the Graham'
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Wednesday, 2 to 4 and 7
to9p.m .

is coming to our area'

dleport Recreation Department at .
992-6782.
;
•
/
&gt;

Hospzta news ···Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted:
Flossie
Stanley,
Shade.
Discharged: Laura Arnold;
Mildred Blankenship, and Laura
Scott.
·

"RockTober" 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!

ROBERT BUCK

(County Commissioner)

challenger Daniel R. Hiercinimus, in her rae¢ for the lOth district of
whO toOk 2,061 votes. Independent the State Board of Education. She
candidate Ron Eastman received ' received 4,437 Meigs County
1,194 votes in his home county in votes.
·
his bid for State Senator.
In Meigs County, ·incumbent
State Representative Mary Abel, Andrew Douglas received 3,913
a Democrat, lost here to the . votes in his race against Stuart .J.
county's native Ric bard E. Jones by Banks for a seat on the Ohio
754 votes, Republican Jones receiv- Supreme Coun, for that term coming 4,368 votes to Abel's 3,614.
mencing January I, 1991. Banks
In a close race for a seat on the received 1,535 votes, In the second
Meigs COunty Board of Comm!s- Supreme Coon race, for the term
sioners, Janet L: Howard, · a commencing January 2, 1991,
Democrat .in her first bid for a Stephanie Tubbs Jones was the
political office, was ~efeated by ~ winner in Meigs County, defeating
1ncumbent, Republican Mannmg the incumbent Craig Wright and
Roush .. ,Rous~ took 4,069 votes and ~ challenger J. Ross Haffey. Jones
Howard rece1ved 3,859 votes ..· .
took in 2,687 votes while Wright
Me1gs County Auditor William received 2,393 votes. 610 votes
R. Wickline and Coron~ Douglas were cast for Haffey.•
D. H'!'lter, both Repu~hcans and
Peter B. Abele won Meigs
both mcumbents, rece1ved . 5,877 County voters' endorsement for his
'VOtesand6,109.votesrespecllvely.
retiring father's seat on the Fourth
Mary Goodrich was unopposed District Coon of Appeals, winning

Despite sometimes furious ef.
forts by their opponents to unseat
them, Meigs County's two rejlre·
sentatlves In the legislature were
chosen to return to Columbus In
Tuesday•s· voting.
Sen. Jan Michael Long, D·
Clrclevllle, defeated Republican
· challenger Daniel R. Hleronlmus
and Independent candidate Ron
Eastman ~or a second term
representing the 11th Senate
District, which Includes Gallla,
Meigs, Athens, Jackson, Law·
renee, VInton, Ross and Plcka·
way counties.
Mary Abel, D·Athens, appointed Jn Aprtl 1989 to fill the
unexplrffi term of Rep. Jolynn
Butler In the 94th House District
of Gallla, · Meigs and Athens
counties, turned .back the chat·
lenge from Meigs County Com·
missioner Richard E. Jones, a
.
Republican.
''I think this has been a vote of

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) ' Riding the crest of a ' 'throw the
rascals out" wave, former Cleve·
land Mayor George Voinovich
trounce&lt;! Attorney General An·.
thony Celebrezze · Tuesday to
become Ohio's first Republican
governor In eight years.
Volnovlch, who was credited
with rescuing Cleveland from
bankruptcy during his 10 years
as mayor from 1979 to 1989,

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1991 CHRISTMAS CLUBS
BEGIN
OCTOBER 22ND.!

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confidence, a strong one, and I
was very happy with the turnout
for my campaign In Meigs
County," Long told The Dally
Sentinel late. Tuesday from a
victory celebration In Chill!·
co the. "My plan Is to continue the
formula for communities In my
district, to continue working on
legislative Issues that will benefit
the district."
Because of computer break·
down In Athens County, results of
the race were not complete until
Wednesday, but late Tuesday
Long had won an unofflclal total
44,497 votes In the other seven :
counties, Hleronlmus had netted
33,321 and Eastman had 4,331.
From those results, Long's
largest lead was In Ross County,
where he polled. 11,171 votes.
Hleronlinus defeated Long only
In Lawrence County, receiving
9,724 ballots to Long's 8,575.
Eastman's best showing was In

a

Meigs County, ivhere he won
1,194 votes.
Considered one of the hottest
Senate races In· the state, the
campaign was highlighted by
Hleronlmus' accusations that
Long lied to the voters In 1986
about the legal status of Sen.
Oakley C. CoUins' holding down
positions as a legislator and
·school superintendent at ·,t he
same time.
Hleronlmus, serving his third
term as Lawrence County sheriff. conceded the· election to
Long around 10 p.m. Tuesday
from his Ironton headquarters.
He told a Huntington, W.Va.,
television station that he didn't
think the controversy surround·
lng his attacks on Long contributed to hiS defeat:
"I don't think so," Hll!rnonl·
.mus said. "The campaign was
too aggressive and I apologize for
that, but I thought · It was a

matched his performance in the
pre-election polls, defeating
Celebrezze by 12 percehtage
points. He will SUfCeed two-term
Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste In January.
The final unofficial results
showed Volnovlch with 1,917,161
votes to Celebrezze' s 1,523,098.
Volnovlch rebounded In .convincing style !rom a humiliating
defeat In 1988 at the hands of Sen.

Howard Metzenbaum, D·Ohlo,
who tried to help Celebrezze In
the latter stages of the campaign.
Votnovlch captured ~11 but the
most Democratic areas of the
state in carrying 56 perceniof the
popular vote against ·Cele·
brezze' s 44 percent. Celebrezze
could win only a dozen counties,
many of them In the eastern coal
region and In southern Ohio._

Meigs County .Fair extended ·to six days
;

An EQual OpporMllty Employer

JAN LONG
·(State Senator)

.Voinovich rolls to victory

Choose from a

(QUANTITIES~ LIMITED, SO DONT DELAY!)

The L•t•yeltll Hotel
101 fltllllt Bt.
Mll'lflttl

(Probate .Judge) ·

j

•
'

•

The 1991 Meigs COunty Fair
will be a six day evenL
The Meigs County Agricultural
Society meeting Monday night in
the secretary's office o.n the' Rock
"' Springs Fairgrounds voted to extend the fair by one day. It has tentatively been scheduled for Aug.
12-17. .
Plans call fer the Meigs County
Minilterial Association to hold
religious services on Sunday evening to open the fair. Camival rides
on the midway will begin at I p.m.
on Monday and there will be an attraction that ,evening at the

~

grandstand.
.
.
In other action the 11oard ~ot.ed to
ban out-of-county youth from participating in the Meigs County
Junior Fair. While It was not a
~polar decision, according to
Mary Gilmore, secretary, the board
decided that only Meigs COunty
youth can belong to a Meigs
County 4-H Club. Several in the
large crowd attending the meeting
proteSted the ban. A board member
explained that this is an action
being taken by fair boaids across
the _.tate~ It was pointed out that the

limitC4 bam . space at the
fairgrounds, as well as livestock
sale dollars, were facrors considered in the dec.ision.
Adopted by the board was a constitptional amendment in whicb it is
stated that if a person behaves in a
manner which the Fair Board
de~:ms impropef while at the fair,
the board has the right to discipline
and possibly even ban them from
participating at the fair fer a period
of three years.
The Ohio Fair Manqers Convention to be held in ColljlllbUS was

4;189 votes to William K. Shaw,
Jr:'s 2,068 votes.
Incumbent Probate and Juvenile
Judge Roben E. Buck was retained
despite opposition from Pomeroy
Auomey D. Michael Mullen. Buck

received 4,971 votes to Mullen's
2,739. .
.
All vote counts are unofficial.
The official count by the Mei~s
County Board of Elections w1D
take place on Nov. 1'7. ·

Eastern school levy
approved; others
rejecte~ ·Tuesday
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr

A five mill emergency tax levy
billed as the last chance to save the
financially troubled Eastern Local
School District was the only sehool
levy in the county to pass in
Tuesday's · general
election .
M~anwhile, Meigs County voters
rejecte9 a.county'wide levy for the
Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation and Developmental
Disabilities ruul school levies in the
county's other two districts.
The levy in the Eastern Local
District, a two year emergency levy
of five mills, was approved by a
vote of 1,009 votes to 860 votes
against the levy.
The Meigs MRDD 1.5 mill continuing levy, the only county-wide
taX issue to be decided in yester'
day's general-,· • election, •. was
defeated 4;095'10 3,768 votes.
In the Southern Local School
. District, voters defeated their 4.0
mill, three year levy 810 voies ·for
the levy to 947 votes againsL
MARY ABEL
Meigs Local School District
(Slate Representative)
voters defeated two proposed taX
levies. The first levy, a four mill,
three year levy for pennanent im·
provements, was defeated 2,381 to
1,446.
A second levy, a continuing levy
legitimate Issue," Hleronlmus.
for
operating expenses in the
said.
amount
of one mill, was defeated
Lortg and Hleronlmus dis·
by
a
vote
of 1,290 for the levy to
cussed several major Issues In
2.493 votes against.
. the campaign, Including educa·
In Rutland Village, a Police
lion and highways, In forums
Protection levy in the amount of
throughout the campaign. East·
1.5 mill for fiVe years was defeated,
man, a Meigs County farmer,
81
votes for the levy to lll votes
stumped on a platform of reduc·
against.
A second levy, a 1.5 mill,
Ing taxes and Increasing local
five
year
current expense levy, was
control of government.
defeated
119
to 79.
Abel won her own term In the
Voters
in
Syracuse Village apHouse outright when she talUed
proved
a
current
expenses levy of
an unofficial dis trlct ·wide total of
1.8
mills
for
five
years.
The vote on
21,331 votes to Jones' 13,188.
that
levy
was
224
votes
for the levy
County-by-county, Abel defeated
and 115 votes againsL Syracuse
Jones In GaiUa, 6,553-4,378 and In
voters also approved a levy for fire
Athens,l1,164·4,442. Jones won In
protection in the amount of I mill.
Meigs County, 4,368-3,614.
for five years. 214 votes were cast
''I'm very pleased with the
in favor of the levy, while 124
results, I appreciate the vote in
votes
were cast against it..
Meigs County and the confidence
.
the voters there have shown In
me, " Abel told The Dally Sen·
tinel from Athens County Democratic Headquarters late Tuesday. " I will continue to work hard
for the district and continue with
the plaUorm I have put forth for
By Charlene Hoe8lcb
the residents of the district."
. Sentinel News Starr
Somewhat quieter than the
The ballots cast by voters at the
Long- Hie~onlmus-Eas tma n
Board of Elections Tuesday in
race, the Abel-Jones competition
compliance with House Bill 237
saw the candidates mostly In
were not counted last night and
agreement on major Issues,
could,
in some cases, actually
dlffertng only In approach . Abel
change
the
result of a close race.
ran on her 19.-month record In the
According
to Jane Frymyer,
House, while Jones attacked the
direc.tor of the Mei~s Board, a total
Celeste administration in Columof 59 Meigs Counuans voted at the.
bus for corruption and told voters
Board of Elections office Tuesday.
he would work with George
These people were registered
Volnovich should Volnovich win
voters who bad moved before Oct.
the governorship.
9 but had not reported their change
of address to the Board prior to the
deadline for making that change.
The new bill, implemented this
year, was passed by the Ohio Legislature this past summer, so this
announced for Jan. 2-5 with C. W. year's general election marks the
Henderson to serve as delegate and · first time the new law has been m
Laurie Reed as alternate Several effecL
other board members will be atThe purpose of H. B. 237 is to astending the meeting. EntertainmetU sure every registered voter the right
for the 1991 fair is cun'ently being
booked, Mrs. Gilmore reported.
The election of board members
was held at the meeting with 107
voting for the candidates. Re-elecMiddleport police are con_tinuing
ted for three yeai terms were Vugil an investigation into a breaking and
Windon, C. W. Hendeoon, and entering which occurred at. .the
Laurie Reed. The new members Sears Store in Middleport ovenught
elected to the bolrd were Jim Monda~
.
AccOrding to Police Otief Sad
Sheets and Charles Shain.
'
Little; entrirn:e was made, through

Long, Al?el retain legislative seats

OPEN YOUR
1991 CHRISTMAS CLUB
NOW AND RECEIVE'
.A FREE GIFT!

ERY.

2 Sections. 14 Pages 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy~Middleport, Ohio, ·wednesday, November 7, 1990

Vot.41. No.140
Copyrlghtec! 1990

Low tonight In mid 20s.
Thursday, high near 511.

•

at

and

Raymond Roush

The Ohio Lottery

i'

Ohio Lottery

·All TVC

A 3 mill, five year current expenses levy in Racine Village was approved by voters there yesterday,
with 239 votes being cast in favor
and I00 votes cast againsL
Middleport Village voters approved a 1 mill, five year current
expense levy, with 439 votes being
cast in favor of the levy and 390
~ing cast against
In Salem Township, a half mill,
five year levy for cemetery
maintenance was approved by a
narrow margin. 136 vQled in favor,
while 122 voted against the
measure.
Suuon Township voters also approved a half mill, five year
cemetery levy. 669 votes were cast
in favor and 585 againct.
In Olive Township, a 1.5 mill,
five year fire protection levy was
approved. 332 voted in favor and
253 voted against.
.
Voters in Columbia Township
cast 198 votes in favor of a .fire
protection levy for I mill and five
yerits. That levy received 84 against
its passage.
In Chester Township, a I mill,
five year levy for cemetery
maintenance , was approved by a
vote of 519to 389,
Two of three proposed constitu·
\ional amendments were rejected in
Meigs County.
The first, concerning governmental provision of housing and housing assistance, was rejected in ·
Meigs County. That vote wa13,234
for the proposed amendment and
3,726 against.
A second proposed amendment,
which would allow the spouses of
homestead exemption recipients to
receive the exemption after their
spouse dies, but who would not
otherwise ·qualify for the exemption, was approved by a large margin. 6,224 voted in favor, and 1,254
voted agaipst the amendment
Thinlly, an amendment which
would allow casino gambling in •
Lornin as a pilot project was rejected by vote of 5.477 against and
1,877 for.

59 Meigs voters cast
ballots at courthouse
to vote even though the voter failed
to report the address change 10 the
Board of Elections.
However, those ballots were not
counted in the results Tuesday
night. They will be counted during
!he official count next week and
then only after if it, has been.
verified that each voter.did not vote
at his previous polling location.
Also the local Board expects to
receive more absentee ballots from
military personnel stationed overseas. Those voters had until yester'
day to exercise their voting right
absentee. The ballots must be
received no later than Nov. 17.
With the large number of servicemen now stationed in the Middle East, this 100 could affect the
final outcome of close races, Board
of Election officials report.
The official count, as set by State
Law, must take place between Nov.
17-22.

Middleport police probe B &amp; E
the back wall of the building where ·
a hole had been cuL Five Camcorders and two VCRs, valued 11
$5,800 had been taken from the
store owned . by Bill HaptoriStall. ·
The QCI has been called in to ISSist
in the investigati011, police te(IOr\•

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