<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9363" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/9363?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-26T12:09:06+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19795">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/5fd9036b67c342e79b8cbee2212ffbdc.pdf</src>
      <authentication>b75fd1c4374f4e387b72f3f48dea7734</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="30059">
                  <text>!,

'*taDI~·:~::·:·~~::::~::~~~:--::::::::::=~~P~o;me~ro~y~·~M;~;:~:pon:::·:G:al~ll~po~I~~,O~H~•Pioil~~p~--~u~n~~~WV~H)j~~~~~~~~~S=u:n~::~·Od:::~:::1~3,~1~10e•
:

Investment wewpoint

International markets

~~~ ...

1111''

AEP DONAnON- American Electric Power
recently dailvered a $5,000 donation to Shar·
·lng The Harveat, a ·capital fund-raising campelgn for the Southeaatarn Ohio Regional Food
Center, In Logan, Qhlo. Preaantlng the·check
Ia Greg Pauley (second from right), AEP
Athena Dlatrk:t mtlnager,.and Jl!" Tompkins (far

right), former vlca.preildent and ·general man- .
ager of Southern Ohio Coal Co. Accepting the
d!)natlon Ia Trl-County Community Action
Age.ncy's Dick Stevena (lett), food bank coordinator, and Pam H\)dson, food and nutrition
director.

AEP .donates
$5,000
tq 'Sharing
the Harvest'
.
.
.

.

.

.

Foodbank and a 5.000-square-fool
commercial · food preparation center
for Tri-County Community Action's
Central Kitchen.
"AEP is pleased to make this
commitment to thf Southeastern
Ohio Regional Food Center," said
Greg Pauley, AEP Athens District
manager. "This organization helps to
meet critical needs of people in a
large section of Ohio. We're thankful
that we can help in this way."
In addition to Pauley, employees
representing AEP at the presentation
were Pamela Watkins, Lancaster District manager, and Jim Tompkins, former vice president and general manager of Southern Ohio Coal Company.
.. .
'

LANCASTER - American ,Electric Power (AEP) recently donated ..
$5,000 to "Sharing The Harvest," a
capital fut\d-raising campaign fo'r
the Southeastern Ohio Regional FoOd
Center, The donation is tbe forst
installment of a $25,000 commit'
ment, payable over five years, that
AEP made to the organization.
In addition, during !995 AEP
companies Southern Ohio Coal. Ohio
Power and Columbus Southern Power delivered a combined $5,000 donation to the campaign.
·Tri-County Community Action
operates the center, which opened
m:ently in Logan, Ohio. The cenre.r
comprises a 14,000-sqtiare-foot warehouse for the Southeastern Qhio

-

~

Bishop
named consultant
.
'

GALLIPOUS • Melissa Bishop,
Wellstort, has been promoted to
. medical records
consultant
to
according
Norm Cutright,
administrator of
the Holzei Senior
Care Center, Gal· ·
lipolis.
Besides her
Gallipolis duties,
Bisbop has been
~~!'Signed to also
~erve at Four Winds Care Center,
Jackson, as well as the Extended
Care , Unit of Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

The kitchen formerly produced
I ,200 meals per day' for clients in
Athens, Hocking and Perry counties.
In the new facility, the kitchen can
produce up to 5,000 meals per day for
children m Head Start facilities,
elderly persons at dining centers and
.Meals-On-Wheels recipients who are
home bound.
The Southeastern Ohio Foodbank
helps feed more than 125,000 people
and distributes 2 million pounds of
food each year through a network of
food pantries, meal sites and food
kitchens.
The foodbank's ·nine-county service area of southeastern Ohio
includes Athens, Gallia, Hocking,
Jackson, Meigs, Morgan, Perry, Yin. ron ahd Washington counties.

Peppers .•.

She is a graduate of wellston
Contin-;;ed from D-1
.High School. She receiveq her assoers
to
contact
him either at home, or
ciate degree degree in health man·at
the
pepper
station
(446-1020). The
.agement infonnation from Hocking
collecting
station
.will
remain open
College in June, 1995.
. She and her son, Alex, 4; reside three days a week to receive the pep·
per crop Until approximately Oct. 20
in Wellston.

I

e• "Jii!'W

:Producers ...
f

Contiilued from D-1
at 4467ooi ·
Agnews
Field Crop Producers and any oth- '
j:r interested parties, you are invited
to attend an educational me.eting fea-'
turing Dr. Pat Lipps, Extension Field
.Crop Disease Spiciest. Tie will
address . disease identification and
control including'gray leaf spot, stalk
rots and bead scab. The session is in
conjunction with the Jackson Coun.1)1 Fanner's Club meeting on October
21, at 7 p.m. at Lewis Family Restaurant at SR 32. and 93 in Jackson. They
will begin with a dutch '1eal treat ar\d the program will follow. To make
your reservations, please call the
OSU Extension·office at 446-7007
Unwanted pesticides may ·be disposed of confidentially and free of
charge. For more information on
how to take advantage of this opportunity, please call the Extension
office and request a pesticide disposal
registration form. Time is running
out, registration forms must be in by
October 25, 1996.
Jennifer L. Byrnes is Gallia
County's ,extension agent, agrlcul·

AWARD • Sales manager John Borman presents a 30-year service award to Larry Drummond, an agent at
American General Life Insurance Office, Gallipolis, during a
recent ceremony In the Gallipolis office.

By JAY CALDWELL
.
GALLIPOLIS . In today's financial environment, an investor who
ignores the global investment aren~
is like a mathematician who ignores
all the fractions--sooner or later, it
be•cornes clear that
numbers just
' add up.
This is especially
today, now
the changing
~~:~~;:~cs of world
..
has made
investing a
' more attractive--and somewhat less
threarenm,g--alternative · for the
individual investor.
Consider the fact that the majority of the w.orld's stock and bond
transactions have moved beyond
our borders. In other words, there
are now more investment opponuniries overseas than there are in the
United States. And these investffients are worth more than ever
before. For example,' the total capi·
talization ofthe U. S. stock market-the value of all the shares of all 'the
companies listed on an exchange-was approximately two-thirds of
the world's total in 1970; by the end
of 1994, the U.S. portion made ·'P
less than one-third.
Much of this shi·ft can be
explained by the sweeping political
transformation that has occqrred
·around the globe, creating a fertile
environment for business development and a surge in consumer
demand:
All over the world. paiticularly
in the "errierging" countries in Asia,
. South America, and Eastern
Europe, foreign economics have
been growing faster than the U. S.
economy. Even established foreign
economies have benefited from
broad political, social, and economic change in recent years. Western
Europe, for instance, has been moving toward a more integrated financial alignment, i~volving freer
trade, reduced tariffs, and privatization of state -owned industries.
lAs a result, the potential for
favorable investment opportunity
outside the United ' States has·
become increasingly, apparent A
closer look at the performance of
worldwide equity.markets shows us
that, over the past I 0 years, the U.
S. stock market has ranked among
the top five markets only one time,
and not once has it been the world's
best performing market. .on the
· other hand, no single stock market
as dominated over time. Clellfly,
global· di.versification is a logical
alternative for investors who seek
opportunities for increased. return.
Why are so many investors
reluctant to embrace global investing? Naturally, .in'vesting in foreign
markets involves its own unique set ·
of risks, such as currency fluctuation; smaller, less liquid markets;
less stringent accounting standards;.
less oversight of securiti~s markets;
.and the possibility of political insta. bility. But what many investo~ fail'
to take into account is the leveling
, effect.of diversification. · ·
'
Studies have sho¥in that a welldiversified portfolio consisting of
both U. S! and non-U. S. stocks
max actually provide ~ lower overall level of risk ari&lt;j a higher return
than a portfolio consisting solely of
U. S Stocks. A mix of 70 percent U.
S. stocks and 30 percent non-U. S.
stocks eenerated a rel:•liv·elv
·.return with ·the lowest

volatility. In short, investors who
dedicate even a portion of theor ,.investment portflllio to oversc:as
investments .could tap the potential.
for higher onvestment returns, as
well as achieve a !':realer degree of
dovemficatton, wh1ch should .serve
to reduce overall mvestmcn~ nsk..
Of course, global mvesung s~ll
requires close attenu·on to the poltt·
ocal, social, and economoc climate
around the world. Your mvestrn~nt .
professoonal has access to the mdepth research and mformed analysis that prudent deci sions require.
All told, global investing should be
considered as a viable strategy for •
virtually any investor. The potential
rewards just can't be ignted
(Jay C!lldwell is an I vestment .
Broker with The Ohio ompany '
in its·Gallipolis office.)
'

- -WASHINGTON . Under 8 final
rule amending the tobacco progr8111
ulations tobacco producers whose
:~acco is found to have been :·nest·
ed" at the time 6{ delivery for a price
support loan advance will forfeit the
advance, whether the producer knew
it was nestsd or not, ~rding !6.
Grant Buntrock, execuuve vice pres-'
identofthe u.s.DepartrnentofAgriculture's Commodity Credit Corporation.
•
Program regulations already p~
elude producers from price sup~
eligibility for the enU.re crop yeanf
the local Farm Service Agency com~
mittee derermines ,that their tobaccp
was kn.ow.ingly nested.

Dr. Black,· named
·to state task force
GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Daniel R. cems regarding the Ohio Bureau 9f
Jr., Holzer physician, was Workers Compensation's proposed.
recently app•oint•ed to the Ohio State policies and rules, and make recomWorkers Comp mendations to the bureau. In addj.Task for~ .for the tion, the task force· will provid~
1996-97 calendar OSMA membership with inforrna:
rion on policy issues.
year.
Dr. Black sees this appointment
Accor(jing to
the OSMA, this as both ~ privile~e ~rul challen~e.
task . force was , "Ohio Stare Workers Compensqtoqn
established
to is a leader in· workers comp legisla: ·
monitor the effec- lion with the implementation of. ll
tiveness
of health 'provider p~nel ," · said Dr.
Ohio's Industrial Black. HPP is a managed care pro4·
Commissio~
in ucl for worker 's compensation.
administration of Workers Compen- According to Dr: Black, this.
sation benefits and rehabilitation approach to worker 's comp is pioprograms, and report to the OSMA neering.
.
Dr. Black has been a member of
Council.
During 1996-97, the task force the Holzer Medical Center medical
will also
member con- ·Staff since 1989.
·

Focus on your
fin•nc'i al fut'-re •••
Why get State Fann Life Insurance.
when you're
.

I ltliUh ' _ 'roo ~Jfl lOt' II.;
1 SUit..'

hun Lite
11\11\llib&lt;lr
I ilt.

•

smail grain has been known ro
emerge through the soil under a
blanket of snow.
Cover crops should be seeded as
soon as possible after summer crop
harvest this year. The above mentioned benefits tar out weigh any late:ness in getting the cover crop SOV&lt;n.
'A no-till seeding can save rime that
'would be spent in preparing the soil
·conventio~ally. Your Gallia SWCD
:bas no till drills .for lease. For any
·questions on fall cover crops or the
no-till drills please call us at 4468687 . .
Buz MUis is district tec:bnidan
for the Gallia SoU IUid Water Con·
~ertatlon District.

1996 FIOntlae
'Grand Prix
C::Oupe

1996 Regal
Custom.Sedan
and Gran Sport

19H Skylark

1996 P-.rk

Sedans

Avenues

Sedans

Only "1" Left!

Only "1 " Left!

Only "3" Left!

See Do_n Carter, Bob Cook, or Bre.tt Epling at .•• ·

Business .briefs
WASHINGTON (AP) - Whole·
sale inflation pressures eased in September while retail sales rebounded
from a summer slump, spurring
hopes that the all-important Christ·
mas sales season could tum out' bet" ter than expected.

'

Yankees cop.,

Pick 3:
015
Pick 4:
7202
Super Lotto:
5·9-15-17·21-38
Kicker:

34th pennant
with 6-4 ·win
Sports

on Page 4

1996 century
Special

•

•
..

•VoL 47, NO. 114 .
. Copyylght 111118

•

Pomeroy-Middleport,
. Ohio, Monday, October 14, 1996

1 Section, 10 PegH 35 canta
A Gan~tt Co. N....,paper

·:D.ole plans to .be more aggressive in final debate
.

'

HAMILTON, N.J. (AP)- As he
: prepares for his final ·debate with
: President Clinton, · Bob Dole is
. promising to be more aggressive in
· questioning the incumbent about broken promises and ethical lapses. As
: long as his supporters don't object,
~ anyway.

:. "Should I get tougher ori Clin:. ton?" Dole asked to applause Sunday
; as he campaigned · in New Jersey.
! "You won't get mad at me if I get a
; little tougher?"
·
•;
Dole was flying to · California
: today ro prepare for Wednesday's
: prime-time debate in San Diego,

!

with a Kansas City stop tocou~ vob
ers in bellwether Missouri.
'f.l!e D~ampaign has indicated
a new--Push for votes in California
where internal polling shows Clioton's lead shrinking to 10 points. The
revised strategy, putting new empha·
sis on California, was discussed
extensively by Dole and campaign
strategists at a meeting Saturday.
At the meeting, a majority of the
aides advocated a full-bore campaign . for C!"ifornia's 54 ele~to~al
, votes, espec1ally ~oven that Chnt_on
' appears. to be holdmg to double-dogIt leads on the M1dwest baUlegrounds.

Such a shift would cost several million dollars and force at least two oth. er states off the target list. .
· The Republitan nominee" heads
into the debate !railing Clinton
nationally and in most of the big battleground states - California, New
Jersey and Missouri among them.
With just three weeks to Election
Day, some Republicans privately
suggest the prel\)dential race is all but
over, and are urging Dole to campaign iri a way that helps the GOP
defend its congressional majorities.
Dole promised Sunday . to prove
the skepti&lt;:S wrong. "We're used to

.
fighting back," he said before marching in a Columbus Day parade in
Newark. If there is to be a Dole
comeback, the debate is a critical
moment, and Dole has faced consid,
erable pressure to attack Clinton.
"We' re thinking about it," was his
answer when asked if he ·would be
tougher, and he was clearly testing
lines of auack as he spoke at two sub·
urban rallies after marching in
Newark.
·.
· . In Hamilton, Dole promised to
press .Clinton on why he raised taxes
afier promising to cut them and why
he campaigned on a pledge to balance

.
the budget bur then twice vetoed
GOP balanced-budget plans.
•
. "I want to demonstrate he doesn 't
keep his word - he doesn 't keep his
word," Dole said. "He promises you
one thing to get elected and then does
something 180 degrees different."
Dole called Clinton rbe "great
exaggerator," raising the president's
oft-repeated claim of putting 100,000
new )5o lice officers on the street.
' "You won't live long enough to
sec 100,000,'' Dole said. ."It ain't
going to happen."
Elole said the number of officers
deployed was closer to 12,000 bur

that Clinton "looks you in the eyes
and tells you he's got 100.000." Dole
also said credit for declining crime
rates should go to mayors and police
chiefs.
And he said Clinton was running
a campaign of fear by trying to scare
the elderly, veterans and others into
believing Republicans would cut
their benefits . "For Bill Clinton,
every day is Halloween," Dole said.
Over the weekend Dole's runnlngmate, Jack Kemp, stepped up the
attack on Clinton. accusin~ the r,residenr of an "arrogance of power 'arid
Continued on pa2e 3

'

I

I

.,

School
uniforms are
topic
of debate

~ Nation's
~· criticize

small farmers
government's new
:·manure pollution program
WASHINGTON .(AP) - The
::.,government soon will be doling out
•: federal dollars ro farmers and ranch·; ers !o help fight pollution from
manure and other sources. Even
~ .before it starts, the program is under
..attack as a potential cash cow for cor: PO"!le farms.
'
Several lawmakers, including
"senate Democratic leader Tom
. 'oaschle, are joining advocates for
: small farmers in criticizing rules
:' proposed Friday by the Agriculture
· . !&gt;epartrnent for distributing the $200
Jllillion newly available each year.
. :: I!Y failing to set cletlf limits On
who can collect, the critlei''Contend; .~e rules leave the way ~n for tax·
.payer doll~s to help corporate farms
budd pollubon controls that the Clean
Water Act already obliges them to ·onstall.
. The depanment denies the allega. lion. The rules fill led to spell out who
should q~alify, Agriculture Secretary
Dan Ghckman admitted, .but he
·P.':Omosed that wealthy operations
,woll get nothong.

"I have no intention of awarding
large-scale operation$ any of this
assist~nce. Period,': he said in an
interview.
The voluntary Environmental
Quality Incentives Program, created
by the 1996 farm bill, pays up·to 100
percent of the cost of building
manure containment lagoons or to
switch to farming practices thatlower pesticide use . .
Payments are limited to $10,000
per persori per year, with a cap of
$50,000.
During debate on the farm bill, the
Senate wanted , 10 set siu limiis to
coincide with'''th0se ·or the ·Clean
Water Act. It dropped precise language after Glickman pledged to
come up with limit definitions.
· Instead, Friday's proposals left it ·
to state conservationists to decide.
The Agriculture Department
scbeduled a nationwide round of
public hearings starting next week. It
will use the information to come up
with guidance to the states on the pro- .
gram's administration.

AKRON (.;.P) - Student uniforms in public .schools around the
state are becoming more popular
although. the impact ,is hard to measure.
"! don 't know if they (students)
behave better, but they sure look like
they bohave better," said Findley elementary school Principal Dave Butz,
whose school is in the Akron district.
The Ohio Legislature addressed.
'the issue this past summer by enact·
ing legislation confirming the right of
school hoards to lequire unifrrms as
.long as they solicit cqmmcnr from the
.community.

TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER - N- sonar
technology developed for anglers Is being put
to use by local authorities -rchlng for Jay
Holsinger, 24, of ·Pomeroy, who disappeared
Aug. 24. The Malga County Sheriff's Department has purchased a new Lowrt1nce sonar
system, which ahows the bottom .of the river
in a three dlm~alonal display and also accu-

f '·
.~~--~------------------~

Nation's soci~l well-being
,. at lowest point in ·25 years

, ,
NEW YORK (AP) - The country's social well·beinl has
; . reached its lowest point In almost 25 years, with children and
: , yo11111 people suft'erinc most, The New York Tomes reported today.
•~
The Index de,veloped by Fordham Univenlly ·resean:bers sioid'
cbUd ab!IS"; teen-age 1ulclde, drug abuse and, the blalh·school
; •· dropout rate had worsened In 1!194, the most recent year covered.
Pover1y remained at ltto fifth-worst level since 1971, the report
; '
: ' laid.
, ,
Man: I. Mlrln1o«, director of tbe Institute for lnno1111tloa IUid.
, • Social Polley at the Fordham Grtd\Uite Center, cited widapread
• , pesalmllm timon&amp; youth, lrlolatioa and less • - of conamunlty for
.• tbe dec:llne. .
"It'• a warnln&amp; sip'.' 01 tbe fllture, be said.
•·
Tbe report, "The 1996 Index of Social Heali!J," studla fedQ"alaoverameat Ita~ 01116 •rent IIOCial p......._, IUid then
comparei each un~ .......-. wltb tbe year at wbkh It - at
1tto 11at lnel. The Index It - r e d on a ICIIe of 0 to 101.
. • The Index- ftnt pnlduced In 1!185, wltb llallltb clet!.. back
. to 19'70. The ~eore for 1 , . - 37.5; tbe next-lowwl- 38.1 in
1· 1991. The nation'• 11at year-· 19'73, wblcb IICond '71.5 on tbe

... '

By TOM HUNTER

"

.,

. Chevctte in whifh Jay Allen
Holsinger, 22, was last seen the
morning of August 24.
Thus (ar, local authorities have
come up empty handed in their
search for clues surrounding
Holsingcr's disappearance. He was
reported missing by family members
after he fail Ill! to arrive for his morn-

according to Meigs County Sheriff
James M. Sou!Sby.
No contact has been made with
Holsinger and no sighrings of the
Pomeroy man have reponed since his
family reported him missing, according to Soulsby.
Officials with the Sheriffs Departmcnr, Meigs County Underwater

shift of wo~rlk;as*a~~~~;~~R:e:.sc:u~e~Tcam, Ohio Department of
111linec at 84 ~
Continued on
3

'"TJLI"It BEING
·A contnlct work·
er aaws through the original concrete stack at
Gavin Plant. The alack, built In the mid·1970s,

·

· Among sludcnts, teachers, parcnls
and administrators, the range ofopin- ·
·ion is wide.
Noroh Canton Superintendent
Thomas · Shoup considers student ·
unifonns window dresSing.

"I don't feel that if a·school has
severe problems with discipline that
dressing all the children identically
will make those problems go away,"
Shoup said.
The Akron ~ch\)ol district h~s not ·
tried to measure the ~ffccr uniforms
·have had at the five schools that have
made uniforms mandatory.
Four public schools in Akron and
one each in Barberton, Canton and
Norton now require uniforms and at
:least two more arc conSidering them
for ncx.t year.
In Cincinnati, where 21 of the 79
. schools require uniforms, school officials surveyed parents about the top·
ic,. They found that 78 percent
favored uniforms for kindergarten
through eighth grade, the newspaper
said.
Teachers also liked the idea, with
7J' percent of the Cincinnati Federation ofTeachcrs members favoring a
district-wide uniform policy.
Sixty-four percent of the teachers
said they believe uniforms improve
student attitudes.
As for cost, the issue cuts both
ways. Opponents say poor parents
cannot always afford the cost of uniforms, especially shoes .
, But uniforms appeared to be
'cheaper. ·

· Meigs Board OKs
personnel matters
Several personnel matters wcte
handled ·when the Meigs County
Educational Service Center governing board ll)Cl Thursday night.
Tammy Reed was 'employed as a
outer concrete shell has literally severe behavioral handicapped
climbed down the stack since in teacher's aide (or the current school
began in July 1995. There arc eight year. Nathan Robinette was hired as
load-bonring points on the dciOlck's a substitute reacher for the year, and
suppoFiing girders. At\cr removal of Rufus Browqing and Jerry Holley
.the stack pieces that do not support were approved for bus driver certifi·
the derri ck, the interior girders arc cates and Patrick David Williams was
•lowered down hydraulically. The ·approved pending receipt of addiupper frame is then raised four inch- tional material.
es to allow the last four piers to be
The board approved modification
removed. The entire assembly moves · to the early childhood budget,
down I0 feet at a time .. the height ,approved stale basic education carof the pieces cur.
ryover budget. ·
Th~ workers, employed by conA copier maintenance agrccrnciH
tractor Pullman Power Products of was approved with CWS of ParkersPittsburgh, remove about 32 pieces . burg, W Va. Next meeting was set for
pf stack per week, tutting a complete ;Nov. 14 at 7 p.m. at the office of the
.ring section from the stack twice board. Attending were Ro'bert Barton,
,each week. Each 12·112 inch-thick .Howard Caldwell, I. 0. McCoy and
piece of stack weighs just over 10 'Jeanette Thomas, members, and Car·
ole Gilkey, treasurer.
. Continued on page ;3

Gavin Plant stack cut down to size
The process of cutting a 1,100- ing around the plant's original stack
foor stack down to size at American could cause the new stack to sway
Electric Power's Gavin Plant is beyond design limits, said Dave
expected to be completed this month. Carr, construction coordinator. For
"This is the first project of its kind this reason, it was decided to remove
•• the first time we're aware of the · ~alf of the plant's Ofiginal stack .to
demolition of an I, I00-foot stack in . remove the cause of the potential
a controlled manner, instead of the movement.
Carr, who teams with Ray Kemp
convectional approach of jackhamas
the
project's construction coordimers and chisels," said Ned Jayjack,
labor contracting manager for AEP. nator, said a 16-ton-capacity
The procedure of demolishing the" liydrauliCderi-ii:k with an electric
original stack with a reinforced con- hoist was mounted on steel girders
crete shell and a steel liner from atop the stack. A helicopter lifted the
1,100 feel down to 550 feet started equipment to the top.
Using 36-inch-diameter diamondin March 199.5, nor long after the
construction of two 830-foot stacks 'tipped steel ~wblades for vertical
equipped with flue gas desulfuriza- cuis and a dill1lond-tipped wire saw
tion equipiJ)ent. Ttoe steel lining was for horizontal cuts, the stack has
been sliced apart piece by piece.
removed first. ·
The prOCI!ss of cutting down the
. • In ccnain
conditions,
wind
eddy,

.

~

rataly dlsplaya the location of the boat with a
Global Satal.llte Poaitlonlng Syetam. Here,
Meiga County Game Protector Keith Wood
(right) and Scott WaHoo, a member of the Meigs
County Underwater Rescue TeaR), examine the
new ayatam at the Pomeroy Levee Saturday
afternoon.

New technology aids search ·for area man

Sentinel News Staff
Local law enforcement officials
CINCINNATI (AP)- Fifty-two Dole's proposed 15 percent cur in have turned to the latest sonar tech·
,percent ofthe Ohioans who respond- . federal income tax rates, a 50 percent nology in their efforts to find a
ed to a new poll said Bob Dole's plan cur in capital gains taxes and a $500 Pomeroy man missing since late
tb cut taxes would make no differ- per child tax credit would make August.
ence in their vote for president.,
them more likely or less likely to vote · The Meigs County Sheriffs
About 33 percent q~estioned in for Dole. or if it would it make nQ dif· Department is using a new Lowrance
.the Ohio Poll said they would be ference .
in its search of the Ohio ·
sonai
; more likely to vote for the RepubliThe responses were not signifi~
' can candidate on Nov. 5 because of cantly changed from those in an Ohio
jhe tax plan and 12 percent said they Poll conducted in September: That
• would be less likely. The remaining poll found 29 percent of respondents
.3 percent said they did not know whai were more likely to support Dole
::Crfecr the plan would have on their bocausc of the tax plan, while it made
: vote.
no difference to 49 pcrce~~ thos.e
: · The poll , released Sunday, was surveyed. Sixteen percent said it
.: conducted by the University of would make them less likely to sup: Cincinnati;s Institute for Poliq port Dole, with 6percent saying they
· Research. Pollsters interviewed 679 didn 't know what it would do.
; l!kely voters by telephone from Se~..--· Voters also were asked to pick
! l6 through Ocr. 3.
three issues out of 14 that will have
: : The pQII is sponsored by The . the greatest influence on their vote.
• ~incinnati Enquirer, WLWT-TV in The top choices \\'Cre the federal
; t;incinnati · and the university. The . deficit (32 percent), crime (30 per; margin· of err?r is plue or minus 4 cent), middle~ and working-cl,ass
·
incomes (29 perceht).
percentage pmntsc
Those ~urveyed were asked if ·

,.
•

Clear tonight. Low In
401. Tueaday, tunny, .hlgh
In 708.

403999

' lale.

~

I '

Ohio Lottery

·oole's tax plan doesn't
,~way most
Ohioans
.

'96 BUICKS AND .PONTIACS -PRICED TO GO!!

19$6 Ponti~Je
nreblrd '

•

USDA revises
tobacco 'nesting'·
prOViSiOn

ture.

Cover
...
·Continued from D·i

•

~

I

...

' '

�•
'
'

'

Commentary

.

•

, ... 2

i

~.OCtober

...

OHIO Wci11hcr
1\aelday, Od. 15'

14,11H

AdwUIJier8 fGiecaot for

Agency he.ad travels the globe·
By JICk Anderaon .
II'ICI Jen Moller

was trimmed, forcing lhe layoff of 54
employees from a headquarters stair
W¥HINGTON ··A little-known of91.
111 Cowt lt., P~, Ohio
officiBI
in the Commerce Department
Though most of her trips were to
814-892-21~. Fax: 9112·21$7
r
is racking up some big frequent-flier
miles at the taxpayers' expense.
Joan. Parrott-Fonseca, who heads
~,
the Minority Business Development
Agency, has been on the road 212
A Gannett
New8P.per
days over an 18-month span beginning in 1995.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Some disgruntled staffers at the , major American cities like Atlanta,
I
agency, which recently laid off more Los Angeles and New York, they also
than hair its headquaners' s1aff, have include two visits each to South
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MAIIGAR£T LEHEW
laken
to calling their boss "t(azel Africa; Puerto Rico; and Kingston,
General Managar Controller
. Jr.,:• in reference to embattled Ener- Jamaica; plus visits to CJ:Una and
gy Secretary Hazel 0' Leary, whose Mexico City. Other destinations
: frequent and expensive overseas 'trips include Santo Domingo in the
~~.-n..,...,,.,_
': have sparked calls"for ber resignation. Dominican Republic; Orlando, Fla.;
-*.ltcftD==IIIUit•~n_,.,. 't;w:Mflf '5 'a111n"""'
,
. A Commerce Department spokes- West Palm Beach, Fla.; and Port-auI 'N&gt;c£, Uftlnr ,_,rl» lrt pd ...,.,
...:. woman says.Parrott-Fonseca's travels Prince, Haiti.
•
are pan of a "massive reorienlation'"
Anne Luzzallo of the Commerce
•· of the agency. But others can see no Department argues that because onejustification for spending more than fourth of Parro!I-Fonseca's travels
$100,000 on the care and feeding of 1took place on Y;eekends,.she !s actuParrott-Fonseca and two aides at a Iaiiy dotng the taxpayers a favor. "We
time when her agency's budget is arc expected, as government employunder assault by the Republican-coh- ees, to put mat least a40-hour work·
troHed Congress.
week,'" Luzzatto said. "If we work on
By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL
Lasty.ear, the agency's budget was weekends, we are not being reimAleocllltecl P.-..e Wrillr
chopped from $44 million to $32 mil- burseil for our .time. If Joan'~ travel
WASHINGlON- Bill and Bob did it, and Jack and AI. But all across
lion.
another S4 million lakes
on weekends,' that's over
this great land, ·as issues scream to be aired, all manner of candidates for
high office are ducking, stonewalllna. just plain refusing_to debate their oppo-

. 1£\ .'·
.......

By Jack Anderson

and
Jan Moller

cO.

.........

...... ---•.
..
,_ ":',;=:.:.,.,,..,.-::.;

.
__ _..A/1_

Cand
---~-:d-ucking
debates across U.S.
nents.

,

,

·

Usually, a commanding leild his.something to do with it.
''J.C, Watts is afraid to face liis i)wn electorate,'" cties state Rep. Ed Crock·
er, who's itching. to lake away Watts' congressional seat fn Oklahoma.
"It's a fear that his lack ofdebadii'g skills will come out.'' reasons chlj)lenger Giovanni Cicipne in Rhode llland, trying to entice Rep. Patrick
Kennedy into debate.
•
In Pennsylvania, Rep. Joseph Mcpllde had this putdown for his Democratic challenger's proposal to d ~~~~ i1t each of lhe dimct's nine counties:
"How about life hold 18 d~? I'll double the ante. I'd like to hold a cou.pie in W~ngton, too.'"
•
· -- ..
Debates are a time-honored way of letting it all hang out. In 330 B.C.
· the Greek orators Aeschines and Demosthenes contested whether Demos·thenes should be honored with a gold crown for his service to Athens. Har-'
vard's Spy Club held debates in 1719. The John Kennedy-Richard Nixon
debates of 1961&gt; set the tone and established the precedent for modern presidential debates.
_
But nothing in the rules says tliere has to be a debate.
Debates arc "sun: as hell better than the 30-seconcf. . . said former Colorado Gov. Richard Lamm, who knows what it is to be Shut out. Ross Perot did it to him when both sought ihe Reform Party's nomination for president.
When he was in office, Lamm said, he always debated his opponents.
"It's an important jlart of democracy;" he said. "The public ought to demand
a debate."
·
Tell that to Strom Thurmond, the 93-year-old South Carolina 5enator, who
wondered oui loud why he should give Elliott Close free publicity. Or to
Sen. Jesse Helms: He.says North Carolina voters know where he stands without a debate. Or to House Speak~ Newt Gingrich, who finally agreed to go
one round with Michael Coles in their Georgia distrjct.
Another politician of the old school, Bob Michel, said that even with his
seniority and position as House Republican leader, he agreed to debate his
opponent iri his last campaign. "l thought it was an obligation and responsibility. You knew you were giving free publicity,'" he said.
Jim Maloney, talcing on Republican-Rep, Gary Franks in Connecticut,
asked for a debate a week in September and October. "He does not reply to
us," Maloney said. Franks finally ~ to a ~ingle match-up, oil Oct. 29,
a week before the election.
•. :
Maloney asserts that Frankl ..,t!\lide·a-~r callous political calculation
in which he acknowledged that the JesJ he confronts me, the less name recognition he gives to the race - _anCI me:" ·
·
.
Oklahoma's Crocker is bitter lbout Warts, one oftwo black Republican :
congressmen and a former qualtertiiic:k who. played C~nadian football after
leading the Oklahoma Sooners to two Orange Bowl victories.
"He is more interested in being a celebrity in the Republican national
party," Crocker said. "He believes he is in such good shape that he doesn't
have to debate.'"
But wait. Watts' communications director, Rick Buchanan, said the two
candidates share the platform at IS forums. albeit no'l debates. "We said,
'Why would we want to do a 16th?"'
,
And Patrick Kennedy's reluctance to debate Cicione one-ori-one also has
another side. "We F n01 refusing to debate," said Kennedy spokesman Lar·
ry Berman. "Our position is we will debate him any pl~e. any time, as long
as the other three opponents an! also in~ite9." ·
.
· Besides. Berman mused, "We are saying, 'Why should this unknown
Republican get into lone-on-one clelme with us?"'
'The same thought probably wu ••pressed in ~ountless strategy sessions
across the country by candidates with ~Iter wll numbers than opponents.

Today in_.history
By The Aleoclated PrToday is Monday, Oct. 14, the 288th day of 1996. There are 78 days'left
in the year. This is the Columbus Day holiday, as well as Thanksgiving Day
in Canada.
Today's Highlight in History:•
.
On Oct. 14, 1947, ·U.S. Alr'Farcc Capt. Charles B.- ','Qiuck'" Yeager
became the first person to fly flltlr than the speed of sound.
•

~·~=-d~~~ansunderWllliamtheConqu~ordef..kdibeEnglishO!

born in Denison, Texas.
.
In 1912, 'Theodore Rooaevelt, ciiDpaigning for the presidency, was shot
in the chest in Milwaukee. Despite the wound, he went ahead with a schcduled speech.
In 1933, Nazi Germany announced it was withdrawing from the I,eague
of Nations.
·
In 1944, German Field Manhal &amp;win Rommel committed suicide rather
than face execution for allegedly conspiring against Adolf Hitler.
In 1960, the idea of a Peace Corps was first suggested by Democratic
presidential candidate John F. Kennedy to.an IUdience of students at the .Uni·
versity of Michigan.
,
In 1964. civil rights leader Millin Lulher King Jr. Wlll·llallle!l winlll!r of
the Nobel Peace Prize. _ ' · .,. - ,... • . •
.,
In 1977, singer BinJ.&lt;;rosby dliid liliiiJde Mlldl;id;3plln, a1 age 73.
In 1990, cOnlposer-condutlor 1.&amp; •4 8cmltein clitd itLI!few York at age
72.
.
·. • '
nn yean ago: Holocaust surviYOI' and human riJbts lid~ Blie W'~esel
was lliJiled winner of the Nobel Peac. Prize. Followina the !IC8Iemate • the
Reykjavik summit, Soviet leada' Mildtlil S. Gorblcbev cbalpd that lhe United States wanted to "bleed the Soviet Union white economically'" with an
elpeMive arms nee in space. · . .
.
•
Five ycanaao: Burmese opposlllcln Ieider Aung San Suu Ky1 was named
winner of the Nobel ~ Priie for her strusgle to achieve democi'IICy in
her homeland.
.
1
One y- aao: An II1IIOd J .,.. ~ abl!s.~i!.ll~ -~
~~~~~in MOICOw'aRtdSq-Jw•• ~~ca..-lbit
llllt~e~J4ay,
killinatheguamanaadi'IMiq ...~~l't:tp).'I'IIIAdull

...

t

!"r:=::,: ~'f~~~:t.~y ~ng

,.

Thomas J. Gorman

and above. She's giving lh4t (her itself as the "Caribbean's most com· ·
plete resort," Parrott-Fonseca found ·
time) to the taxpayer."
Parrou-Fonseca maintains that her the lime to order a massase ~ though
travels involve more gruel than glam- the government did not pick up the
our. "I don't want to travel (this tab for that one.
Though some of Parrou-Fonseca's
moth),'" she told us, noting that
· inany of her trips involve 18-hour ,travel claims have been disallowed
work days. Parrott-Fonseca and her , for exceeding go.emmeht per-diem
lieutenants claim they often gel ill allowances, there is no evidence that
from overpacking their schedules.
she has broken any rules or regulaDocuments obtained by our tions. A ~enior Comnterce Departreporter Kathryn Wallace, howev~r. ' men! official told us that all travel by
detail a. travel schedule that ·often senior managers mu~t now be
finds Parrou-Fonseca in luxury loca· approved by Cominerce Secre!afY
tions. On one 1995 visit to Puerto Mickey Kantor. During the period
Ric,o, for example, Parrott-Fonseca when most of Parrott-Fonseca's trips
stayed at the El San Juan Hotel and ,took place, she required no permisCasino. a 390-room beach-front sion from higher-ups.
resofl that boasts two swimming , '"Kantor has made clear to the
pools, a healt!l club, and four restau- :entire agency that at a time of bud•rants.
,
get constraints, travel should be conFonseca's hotekharges for that strained to necessary trips," a senior
. visit include a $29.25 tab from the agency official said. "I will tell you
"wine &amp; cheese" bar and $20 at the that in the five-and-a-half months
"Ia veranda" pool bar.
(since Kantor took over), her travel
On an October 1995 trade mission has been reduced significantly."
to South Africa, for which the plane
Ello Muller, the acting deputy
ticket alone was nearly $7,000, Par- director of, the Minority Busine$s
roll-Fonseca billed the government Development Agency, has also spent
$241 for a driver to get her around. considerable time on the road. Muller
While staying at the Casa de Campo left his family in Aorida to lake the
hotel in Santo Domin·go, which bills MBDA post. According to dQi:Uments~ hjs travels have cost more than
$30,000 since 1995, including visiis
to Ecuador and Chile. Of 135 tr.avel
days. however, 73 were spent i.n
._
Florida.
Commerce Depanment officials
.explain that the increase in travel is
no apcident. The MBDA was originally founded in an effort to help
small minority-run companies get off
the ground. But the late dommer¢e
Secretary Ron Brown th6ug~l the
agency should also be u'ed to help
•mid-size firms look for eiport oppoq
!unities-· even though a host of oth•er governll)ent agencies~ like the
International Trade Adininistratioho
,already do virtually the saiJie thing:,
"When MBDJI: was begun ... the
.minority community in this countl')'
:had.far different needs (than today), u
:Luzzatto explains. "Now it is ready
ito join the rest of small- and mediumisized businesse~ in this country and
'begin to pump up exports."
,,
Jack Anderson and Jan MoDer
are writers for United Featuri!
Syndicate, Inc.
,

I

W. VA.

•

••at Hentoff

u"'

i

, testers outside were members of ij
' Berkeley-based group, BAMN, who
are dedicated to opposing Propositioi1
209 "By Any Means Necessary." AI
Northridge to disrupt the dcbat(f,
they failed, and few Northridge stli''
dents joined them.
~
Also on 'hand, as reported b~
Sarah Luhman of the San Jose Mer-.
·cury News, was Susan Scheer, "one
of 15 self-proclaimed communists."
She shouted "No free speech fo~
racists'"-- and (ell good.
i
Ward .Connerly, exercising his
own free speech.• held a counter ral'
ly nearby.
·
During the melee in front of the
Student Union 'while the debate wa~
going on, an aging member of the,
Jewish Defense League was drcsse~
in Klan-like .white robes to ex pres;
his acute distaste of David Duke. I~
had not occurred to him t~at other.;;
who shared his view would not rcc•
ognizc his disguise. As he was being ,
attacked by haters of the former, .
Grand Wizard, the Jewi~h proteste{,
was rescued by members of the
Nation of lslain, who had come tt;~'
observe the goings-on .
.'.
That was a true multicultural,
teaching moment.
,
Nat Hentoff is a nationally .
renowned authority on the First•
;Amendment and the rest of the BUI '1
lor Ripts.
-

!

·

,;

Player's spit triggers national -rag
By Joeeph Spear
It ·was the glob seen round the
world.
In the heat of a pennant race and
, in a moment of great pjiSJion, a base,ball pl~er let fly an eighth of a tea'spoon or spiule that caught an umpire
I flush on the cheek, 'and it immediately became a metaphor for the
;downfall of the republic. Over and
.over again, the wizards of television
. news replayed the event, as if it were
·an assassination or a hostage situation.
Roberto Alomar,the player, com·
. pounded his mislake by uttering an
· intemperate ~el!llrk about the umpire
. being otr·his game since his youn.J
son died of a ran: disease. The Amer·
· ican !,ague affixed Alomar with
horns and pitchfork when it slapped
' him with a modest, five-game sus: pension, to be served nut year.
He was thua commuted into a ·
, Nlllonal Villain. · ln .Cleveland and:

· Alomat without mercy. filled their
lungs with the noxious gases that pass
·as air in these places and screamed
vi!e things at him. ·

Joseph Spear
John Hirschbeck, the umpire upoo
whose countenance Aloinar expecto·rated, was instantaneously canbnized.
Hirschbeck's peers gathered around
·him, said ~is by damn was the but
:straw. They would take no more
jabuse from &lt;&gt;verpaid. impudent,
!e
,puedffed-up .Pklaydue~, andthe they tl)rcat· n 10 stn e nng post-season
:aames unless that wretch, that worm
;AJomar was crucified and his corpus
cut into quarters and displayed in a
:public forum.
.
The network news waded tn:. and
rrom Brokaw IMIIITifully asked: Are
e • natto~ w1!hout manners?" J~ek
Kemp pu11n hi~ pe~y·a wonb: '·'Th'
abuse In off'a:ial 11 monlly URK-

- ~:York,~Aiom~~-the ~~i~

fr' c~..:~v:-

.!

,
intended to deliver 'in person. Bul
Hirshbcck; having been informed of'
Alomar's remarks about his son;
stormed into the looker room threat,cning to "kill'" Alomar. After that
frenzied scene subsided, Alomar 1
·repeatedly
expressed
regret; •
Hirschheck acc~pted the apology.
1So why can't we? We pardon thievC!I
land ax murderers these days. Why
not Roberto Alomar?
·
·
He is, by most reports,' a decent
young man, raised 10 respect God aJMt
1
,family. He is quie~ dedicated and tal~
en ted, and may even eild up in the
'Hall of Fame someday, assuming !hi~
incident doesn't permanendy pollute
the mindi of lhe perfect, flawless, :
irreproachable sports writers who
bestow this ltonor.
In Cleveland, they lpfllaud the
lantics of Albert Belle who throwllbiii'Mu, at fanJ and~:
, Roberto Alom1r does not ._.

cannot stand against this."
·I hear these things and I myself
feel the urge to spit.
Why do so few of us take the time
to learn the basic facts before we
make such hanhjudgmcnts?Why arc
we so willing to jump on band wagons like this? Why are we so eagcrto
bully? ·
·
· Roberto Alomar made a terrible
mista~e. That is all it was-- an offen1sive actthat fell considerably short of
murder and mayheln. The circum'stai!CCs do not excuse, but they do
mitigate:
It was the first inning of a mustwin game in Toronto, and Alomar
•was called out on a pitch that was by
common agreement a foot off the
pl_ate.
Alotnar
complained;
. Hinchbec~ ~w him out; Alomar ,
exploded; H1rschbeck called him a
·couple of _diny_ names; Alomar
·l•nchcd his truujle. Then, still
IIIJI'Y, he made the dumb comment
me. We 11:11'1 me

I

abo~l.!b:'ire'al~offocus,llld

Cinci~ Reels~,. pos~:O ~~: :v~fansre~:~~.,~~ ··;: ~noc=:~:~ytbin, ~~ - ·~to~~~~or:_ he

1

.1

I ,...,.s,.V ... ., ~. ~tel.;

z:..;~·•t;

....

~~~~..;-

·.Today's weather forecast
:By The Associated P"ll

ers north. Fair south. Lows 45 to 55.
,Sootheastern Ohio
Wednesda)Ot.. Fair. Highs in the
.. Today... Partly cloudy. High in tbe · 60s.
lower 70s. West wind S to 10 mph.
Thursday... Fair. Lows in the 40s
, Tonight...Mostly clear. Low in with highs in the 60s except around
. the mid 40s. Light and variable wind. 70 south.
Tuesday...Mostly sunny. High in
Friday... A chance of showers.
.•the mid 7oS.
Lows in the 40s northe~t and 50 to
Extended forecast
55 elsewhere. Highs in the mid 60s
Thesday night...A chance of show- to lower 70s.

.

Natural Resources~ U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers, and the ·Syracuse and
Pomeroy Fire Departments began
conducting routine sonar checks of
the river. late last week, looking for
any possible sign of' the missing
Holsinger vehicle.
The new Lowrance sonar technology, developed for anglers, was
purchased in cooperation with the
Meigs County Sheriffs Depanment
and shows the bottom surface of the
river in a three dimensional display.
The system also accurately displays
the location of the boat with a special
Gl.obal Satellite Positioning System
~at utilizes the latest satellite mappmg technology, according to Keith

~Fair weather forecast Gavin Plant•..
.~hrough .Thursday

·A free speech war in California·.·.
students will learn a lot about free
speech."
California Gov. · Pete Wilson
emphatically disagreed. He insisted- 8$ did Ward Connerly --that bringing Duke was a setup to discredit
Proposition 209. !"feanwh!le, opponents of 209 were JUS! as furious, pre·
dieting Duke would arouse the· kinds
of racial prejudices that might mili'tate against Proposition 209.
Dr. Wilson remained cal and
firm. "You ~now," she to!• me ."there is a 22-year-old black 'student
who says he wants Duke to come
because 'I've never hcari a white
racist out loud.",'.
.
Also wanting to heat and challenge Duke were leader$ of some of
the minority groups qn campus,
incl~ding the Black Stu~ent Union
and the Amencan Indian Student
Association .
.
· At lost, on Sept. 25 the ~te took
,place despite. eflbrts of Proposition
209 officials to get a court to stop the
dread arrival of E&gt;avid Duke. Opposing Duke in the debate was Joe
Hicks, director of the. Los Angeles
Multicultural Collaborative. Some
800diversc spectators peacefully lis·
tened to, and some participated in, the
exchange of views. Outside, howev.er, there were confrontations-' some
briefly violent but controlled by the
police.
Pr ·
h 2•0
ommcnt among t e J pro-

Ohio records 13 deaths on
highways over weekend
By The Aaaoclatld Prell
Thirteen people died in traffic
accidents on Ohio roads over the
weekend, the State Highway Patrol
said today.
.
·Four people were killed in one
accident.
The patrol counted fatalities from
6 p.m. Friday through Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
LANCASTER
Derrick · R.
Cole, 21, of Lancaster, in a two-car
accident on a Fairfield County road.
GEORGETOWN
Jason
Hamilton, 16, of Ripley, in a onevehicle accident on \J .S. 62 in Brown
County.
CHARDON -John Bodnovich,
60, hometown not available, and
Mary Bodn~vich, 49. of Lyndhurst. a
passenger, in a two-vehicle accident
on Ohio 306 in Geauga County.
CINCINNATI - Mark Grant,

AleW. ·Cootlnued from page 1
IWI
••• ,

'·

By Nit Henton
,
would.prevent California from grant·
The faculty of California State ing "preferential treatment as to any
University at Northridge was recent- individual or group on · the basis of
ly divided as to whether former Ku race, sex, color, ethnicity or national
Klu&lt; Klan Grand Wizard David
Duke should come,to the campus for
a debate on affirmative action. Jour1111
nalism professor Cynthia Rawitch, a
member of the faculty S(''nate, point- ongtn in the .operation of public
ed out during debate there, "We'd employment, . public education or
look foolish i~\"• were ihe only part public contracting.•'"
of the university that failed to support
Ward Connerly, chairman of the
free speech since the students and the Proposition 209 campaign and a
university president have already member of the state's Board of
supported Duke's coming."
Regents, wrote Dr. Blenda Wilson,
When she sat down, a young pro- president of Northridge, saying he
fessor leaned forward and instructed .would accept a previous invitation to
her, "There is such a thing as too participate in the debate provided'slte
much free speech. you know."
would instruct' Duke not to come,
"As a matter of fact," Rawitch ''unless, it is your choice to dishontold him, '"there isn't. That's the or your university':"
~
Dr. Wilson, former chancellor of
point."
Rawitch;s J&gt;?in~ was largely lost · the University of Michigan, Dearborn
dunng preparat1ons for the debate. A anc1 Northridge's firSt black president,
good many newspapers and col urn- • has made it clear she finds Duke's
n_ists deplored the universi~(s deci- views repellent. She told 'CQnnerly
ston to have Duke co".'~· ( Duke: ~s that it was up to the students who
beyond the pale of leg111mate pohll- invited Duke not her 'to rescind the
cal di.scussion,'" said the San Fran- invitation. B~t she e,;.phasized that
Cisco Exammer.) However, the Los since Northridge is "a public, taxAngeles Times, 10 an ed1tonal, not- · payer-supported institution it must
ed that "free speech is not the exclu- always be an open plliCe ..;,here all
s1ve.provmce of excellent messengers ideas are explored. If only one view
or even dec!nt ones."
is heard; there,is no learning."
'The subject of the debate was
Later Dr. Wilson said to me
Proposition 209 ., :Which will be on "This ~bate about the debate is wbal
the state's ballot tn November. It · 1call •a teaehing moment.' I,thirik ....

Thomas J. Gorman, 57, of Columbus, owner of Dcsiga Delivery and formerly employed by Thomas W. Ruff Co. for 30 yean, died Sunday, Oct. 13,
1996, at hi&amp; home.
He was a member of the Olkhurst C~try Club, St. Mary Magdalene
Parish and K of C. Council 2898, and was a veteran of the U. S. Navy.
" He is survived by his wife, Racl)el; children, Thomas Gorrqan and Angela
Gorman Bahen; five grandchildren; a brother, Jack Gorman, his mother-inlaw, M'lll)' K. Roush of Pomeroy, and brot)lers-in-law and sisters-in-law,
George and Nancy Simeon; Yvonne and Hiram Richardson, Columbus, and
Manning and Ramona Roush of Pomeroy.
He was preceded in death by his parents, Edward Gorman llld Emily Gorman Simeon, 8nd a sister, Mary Lou Simeon.
·
Friends may call at the John Quint and Sons Funeral Home. ll77 W. Filih
Ave., Columbus, Tuesday, 2 to 4 and 7 to.9 p.m. A prayer service will he
held at 7:30 p.m, with the funeral mass at 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Mary
Magdalene Catholic Church, 473 South Roys Avenue, Columbus. Burial will
be at St. Joseph Cemetery.
'

•tjjn:cl

Post of the Ohio State Highway
.
Therill
was
transported by Med'
'cle accident at an Olive Township
Flight
to
Grant
Medical Center,
,
construction site is improving,
Columbus,
where
he
was initially list·
accOrding to a Columbus area hospi·
ed in critical condition in the intental spoke!!lllan.
Randolph Theriii,Jr., 39, sustained sive care unit. His condition was
serious injuries when he drove upgraded from critical to serious this
through a barrel barricade and a con- morning, according to a hospital
struction barricade, striking a large spokesma~ .
Therill remains ,in the hospital's
front loader at a construc.tion_,ne
along State Route 124 at 4: 15 a.m. intens,ve care unit.
..,
.Fridaf• according to the Gallia-Meigs
The condition of a Reedsville

man seriously injured in a one vehi- 1Patrol.

'•

Wood, Meigs County Game Protec·
tor.
Soulshy stated that the river search
is being conducted as the next routine
step in the investigation. "We have
exercised all of our other leads in this
· case. This river·search for the vehicle is just our next step in the invesligation. Hopefully, the seitrch will
yield some new information in the
case," Soulsby said.
Holsinger is 5-foot, It-inches tall,
weighs 175 pou~ds. and has brown ,
hair. If you have any information on
Holsinger, contact the Pomeroy
Police De~ent at 992-6411 or the
Meigs County ·Sheriffs Department
at 992-3371.

31, of Cincinnati, when hi s motorcycle crashe~ on a city street.
SATURDAY
WAPAKONETA Ken M.
Esmonde Sr., 56, and passengers
Chloe A. Esmonde, 55, and Ken M.
Esmonde Jr., 34, all of Celina, and
Elizabeth Homan, 59, of Coldwater,
in a two-vehicle accident on Ohio
274 in Aughiize County.
WAPAKONETA - Kevin R.
Korte, 21, of New Bremen, when his
truck crashed on an Auglaizc County road.
FRIDAY NIGHT
COLUMBUS- Sandra Combs,
26, of Columbus, a pedestrian struck
by a car on a city street.
WARREN - Stephen Wiley, 21 ,
of West Chester, Pa., and another person whose identity was wilhheld, in
a three-vehicle accident on the Ohio
Thrnpike in Trumbull County.

Grain processor to plead
guilty on price-fixing charge

continued rrom page 1

tons on average, and measures I0 fee
high by 13 feet wide, Carr said.
One challenge that had to be
By The Aaaocletld Pre11
Dakolas to Texas were expected to be overcome early on in the project had
' · An · approaching high pressure mostly sunny.
system ·will bring fair weather to
An upper level trough could bring· to do with the plulfle fro'!' the shortCi&gt;hio at least through Thursday, the snow showers to the mountains of the er stacks.
"At times you could hardly s~e.
National Weather Service said.
Pacific Northwest.
·and
yo~ couldn't hear through the
-. Daytime temperatures will generIn the East, a low pressure system plume
-- it was that dense up there,"
ally be in the 60s and overnight lows, and cold front were expected to Carr said. Workers wore respirators,
45-55. But tonight, reading in north- · move through northern New England and sometimes work simply stopped
east Ohio could dip into the 30s and today, bringing scattered showers
until more favorable wind conditions
some frost is possible.
and a few thundershowers.
allowed it to resume . Work has
• The record-high tempera~ for
Most of the eastern third of the since progressed so that the plume is
this date at the Columbus weather country should remain dry, but there no longer a factor.
siation was 86 degrees in 1897 while was a slight chance of showe!S -over .
The concrete work will be comthe record low was 28 in 1988. Sun- northern sections of Illinois, Indiana,
pleted soon, Carr said, and then
set tonight will he at 6:53 p.m. and and Ohio.
sunrise Tuesday at 7:42a.m.
Showers and thunderstorms could equipment will he removed from the
·Across the nation ·
also dampen southern Florida. Some · top of the stack. It will lake 20 lifts
by a helicopter to remove all the .
Scatter&amp;! showers were dumping o( the ~l'lrms ~ay produce he~vy rail\ equipment; he ' said. 'Barrfng •
rain over the Northwesi 'and central and some gusty winds, but severe
inclement weather, the process will
Arizona at daybreak. Skies were weatber is not expected.
be
completed by mid-November.
misty in the Southwest and clear in
High temperatures today could
"We
want to stress the teamwork
the Midwest.
- ieach-the 90s in thj: desert Southwest,
on
this
entire project •• everyone
; A cold front pushing across the the 80s in the South and m)lch of Calinvolved
has done outstanding work,
northern and central Rockies today ifornia, the 70s in parts of the Mid·
including
engineering, construction, ·
could scatter showers and thunder- west and the Plains. and the 60s in
outage workers and contractors,"
storms from southern Montana to New England and the Northwest.
Jayjack
said. "This was a real joint
northern Arizona. Someofthestorms
The nation's highest temperature effort from
everyone. n '
mightbringwindgustsofmon:than Sunday was 104 degrees at Palm
Safety
has
been at tloe forefront
45 mph.
Springs, Calif. The lowest reading
throughoui
the
high-altitude project.
' The Southwest and southern Cal- was 25 at the Colorado communities
"We're
pr?ud
of our safety
ifornia were expected to have fair of Alamosa and Leadville, and the
'•kie~ and slightly cooler temperatures Wyoming com,munities of Jackson
today, and the Plains ·states from the and Big Piney.

record, and having had the least
amount of impact possible OJ! the
'
operation of Gavin Plant," Jayjack
NEW YORK (AP) - Archer face criminal indictments in the
added. "We have had only one lost- Daniels Midland, the target of a four- lysine case. Those officials are ADM
time accident on the job in more than year federal price-fixing probe, has vice president Michael Andreas ,' son
a year."
decided to plead guilty to two crim- of ADM Chairman Dwayne Andreas,
Duane Phlegar, (lavin Plant man- inal charges and pay $100 million in ~nd Terrence Wilson, head , of the :
ager, said that there has been virtu- penalties, The Wall Street Journal company's grain milling division.
ally no impact on the plant operation reported today. ,
The Journal said today that the status
during the demolition . .
The giant Decatur, 111.-based grain of those two cases couldn't be deter"We have had to take some safe- processor was expected to reach a mined, but a corporate guilty plea
ty precautions to make sure no one formal agreement on the plea as ear- could indirectly affect any cases
was .hit. by debris falling from the ly as today, the Journal said.
against individuals.
stack," Phlegar said. 'This wos espeThe newspaper quoted sources os
The company has already procially true when work occurred on saying the ·company tentatively had posed civil coun settlements totaling ,
the precipitator roof decks. With . agreed to pleas regarding the sale of more than $90 milhon in various lawgood coordination and communica- two corn-derived products: lysine, a ' S!Jits, including one alleging lysine
tion the work WllS SUCcessfully COm·
feed supplement, for livestock, and price-fixing and another alleging citpleted without mishap."
citric acid, used in soft drinks and ric acid price fixing.
· . The project is a model for recy- detergents.
The reported move in ihe criminal
cling' as well. The nearly 1,000
The proposed qeal with federal case comes days before ADM's annupieces cut from the stack will have prosecutors .calls for ADM to pay a al meeting Thursday in Decatur. Two ·
various uses, including riprap along $70 million penalty in the lysine case, big shareholders, pension fund s in
the Ohio River and side hill stabi· and an additional $30 million in the Florida and California, arc sponsorlizers·in the plant's landfill .
citric acid inquiry.
ing a proposal to make ADM d~rec­
AEP's Gen. · James M. Gavin
The fines would be the largest tors more independent of company
Plant, located along the Ohio River ever in a criminal antitrust case, the management.
at Cheshire, is the largest electricity Journal reported.
News of the probe first broke in
generating station in Ohio. The plant
In exchange for the plea, ADM .June 1995. when FBI agents raided
has a generating capacity of 2.6 mil- would gain immunity against charges · ADM's headquarters. Company offilion kilowaus. produced from two of price-fixing in connection with an cials and the public soon learned that ·
1.3 million kw coal-fired units.
antitrust inquiry' into alleged collu- Mark Whuacrc, then head of ADM's
sion in the sale of another P..oducl, B10Products division .- had secretly
high-fructose com syrup.
taped his fellow executives for more ·
. The Journal also quoted sources as than 1wo years.
,
saying that ADM would gain immu·ADM fired Whitacre weeks later,
nity in another inquiry. A Springfield. accusing him of -stealing millions
Ill., grand jury has been looking into from the company in a complicated
Units of the Meigs County Emer- ans Memorial Hospital;
the possible lheft of technology and invoicing scheme. Whitacre says the
gency Medical Service recorded 14
10:57 p.m. Sunday, Overbrook
trade secrets by ADM from other money was part of an uff, the-books
· COLUMBUS (AP) - Insurance could collect through &lt;'underinsured calls for assistance Saturday and Center, Edward Sable, Pleosanl Val- companies.
· bonus plan for many top ADM execSunday, including five transfer calls. ley Hospital.
lobbyists are among th~ state's major motorist" coverage.
ADM has denied any impropriety utives.
In the 1980s, companies selling Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
political players, and insurance-rei at·
in the trade-secret case or in the
ADM is suing Whitacre for more
12:34 a.m .. Sunday, North Second antitrust inquiries. Company and fed· than $30 million in a Decatur court,
Cd political action committees annu- life irtsu\o(nce policies in Ohio won a POMEROY
' 8:43 p.m., Saturday, Mulberry Avenue, Sheila Bing, Veterans cral authorities did, not respond to and Whitacre fired back earlier this ·
Jilly contribute thousands of dollars to special tax break. When and if a life
insurance
company
goes
bankrupt,
Heights,
Betty Bronick, Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Statehouse campaigns, The (Clevequestions on the proposed deal, the month by releasing an aflidavtt
other life insurance companies are Memorial Hospital;
II :28 p.m., Sunday, North Third Journal «:ported.
land) Plain Dealer·reported today.
'•
.accusing ADM of knowingly,selling
9:56 p.m., Saturday, Mulberry Avenue, Eric Roush. transfered to
. No matter what the issue of the assessed to pay off the defunct comOver the summer, published !tainted cattle feed and other corporate
day, insurers exert their power con- pany's claims, then get a dollar-for- Av~nue, GeneVieve Demoskey, Vet· Grant Medical Center via MedAight. jej)O'ls said prosecutors had told two wrongdoing.
.
TUPPERS PLAINS
sistently in the General Assefllbly, the dollar tax credit to offset the assess- erans Memorial Hospital;
~op ADM executives they would
ments.
10:29 p.m.; Saturday. Overbrook
4:50p.m., Saturday, fire depart·
· • newspaper said .
·,
The result is that Ohio taxpayers Cepter, James Spencer, Holzer Med- ment and squad, State Route 681 .
· In 1994, insurers 'g01 the Ohio
continued rrom page 1
auto accident, no injuries;
General Assembly to essentially can- end up paying the claims of bankrupt ical Center;
II :36 a.m .. Sunday, fire depart4:45 p.m., Sunday, State Route 7,
cel the potential effect of an Ohio life insurers.
come-from-behind campaign.
In
the
early
1990s,
Rep.
Robert
F.
men!
and
squad,
Highland
Road,
Aaron
Brown, Camden Clark Memo- ethical misconduct.
Supreme Court ruling which had·
In
response
to
Clinton's
weekly.
"Like Governor Whit man in
increased the amount policyholders Hagan. 0- Youngstown. repeatedly structure fire, Gary Black residence, rial Hospital :
Saturday
radio
address,
Kemp
said
1993,
we arc coming from behind to
tried to get House committee hear- no injuries. Assisted by Middleport RACINE
Clinton
had
pledged
to
hold
his
win,"
Dole told a rally outside the
8:50p.m., Sunday, Richard Road,
ings on bills he s~nsored to enact a Fire D;partment;
administration
to
the
highest
ethical
Somerset
Courthouse in the
:The Qaily Sentinel universal health-care plan in Ohio. 4:47 p.m., Sunday, Liberty Lane, Jordan Richard, treated at the scene: standards b,ut he declared: "Four RepublicanCounty
stronghold
of Somctvillc.
He got one hearing.
Avanelle Bass, Veterans Memorial RUTLAND
(l)SPS lt:J-910)
years
later,
the
words
that
seem
to
"You deserve your money more
"I didn't get any more hearings,'" Hospital;
7:04 p.m., Sunday, Main Street,
Publidted evay oftc:rwoon. Monday lhrouah
Hap;an said.
-..., 4:56p.m.. Sunday, Metgs County • James Snodgrass, Holzer Medical ' characterize the ethnics of this admin- than the government," Whitman said
Friday, Ill Court St .. Pomeroy. Ohio, by the
istration are words like Travclgate, in introducing Dole. "You need a tax
Fairgrounds, Paul McDaniel. Vetcr- / Center.
- ·~- ;...
Ohio Volley Publilhi• CompanyiOannetl Co.•
Filcgate,
independent counsels and cut."
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769. Ph. 992·2156. SCcond
possible presidential pardons. :·
clau JIM-UIF paid tu: POIN!roy. otio.
At every· stop, Dole acknowlMembtr: The Auoeialed Preu. and IIW: Ohla
edged
he was the ca111paign underAm Ele Power .........................41
New~paptr Auoclation.
,,
dog.
He
said his promise to cut tax:
Akzo ooo .. oouoooOUoooooooouooooooooooooo61\
' Send ~IUR corrediont 10
'POSTMASTIR:
Fall carnival
Riverview Fall Carnival .
Ashland 011 ...........................42\
es 15 percent across the board would
lbe Daily Senlinel. Ill ~rt St .. Pomeroy.
ATIT .....................................38\
_ The Meigs lndustrie~_ Third Annu- ·" Rive_rview.Elementary School in ultimately bring him victory, just as ..
(lhlo ·~169.
'
Blink OM ..............................42\ . al Fall Festival will he held Friday, 6- Reedsville WJII have !IS annual fall
a big tax-cut p.ledge did for New Jer8Ull8CRIP'l10N RATES
Bob Evana ................:........... 12'4
9
.p.m.
at
Meigs
Industries
in
Syra·
carn!val
Saturday
with
a
baked
steak
sey
Gov. Christie Whitman in her
·
I)' Carritr or Moler llelltt
Borg-Warner .................... ..,...••34\
with
hayride,
band
and
wtener
·or
fned
ch1cke~
dmner
from
5-7
P·'!'·
cuse
Chlmplon .............................19~
roast. Family and friends invited. :Cost $5for adults and $2.50 for chiiGuaranteed Safety &amp;
Charming 8hop1 .,.................
City Hofclng;OooooooHooooooooooooooooo24~
Bring covered dish or dessert and . dren. Outdoor games a~ from 5:30High InterestYields
SINGLII COPY P8tCI
Federal ~ .......... :............23~
chips.
6:30p.m. followed by 1ndoor games
Daily .............:0""' ............................... 3, Cenl:•
Gannett ................." ................70
from 6:30-8:30 p.m. and an auctton
AvaHable
Gooc:lye~r ............................- ...45'f..
Su~bm nat dellrina c.o P'IY lhe carrier tna)'
at
8:30
p.m.
Bingo
and
a
country
• No Loads or Fees
K-mart ...................................10~ . MRJDD meetlnc set
remit in od... anec 4ireci10 The Daily Sentinel
Sfore
will
be
featured.
The
Meigs
County
Board
ofMep,
Landa End ........................'•••••22'
• Accumulate or Mo~thly
on 1 thfte, &amp;11. or 12 month bGAi1. Credit will be
a!Yentatiereoch~
Umled ........... ~ ......................18f.
tal Retardation/Developmental DisIncome
·Ohio Y1ltey Blnk...., .............au
Meedaaset
,
abilities
will
meeting
Thursday,
7:30
•
High Safety!
No
sublerlpdon
by _
•llllil lt
pmnhted
_
__
....llble.in are.
Orll Valley .............................31\
Meigs County Right to Life ,will
p.m.
• Wide Choice of Annuities of
Prwn Flnl ...............·................ 12~
meet tonight (Monday), 7:30p.m. at
All Kinds
Rockwll ...............................as\
the Meigs Library. Pometoy.
-oubocrip!lon
- - ""ri
..........
- .....
Pomeroy Filii Festival
Ito&amp; ...
period.
S.bocripdon
..,.
ADIIMII ..............................114~
Call for Information:
..,_.nay Ia 1. .by c~~q;,. die
The annual Pomeroy Elementary
ShoMre
................................
.a~
cllndoll rA lhe •ublcrtpdon.
SCO'IT INSURANCE
Star ll8nll ................................~
Fall Festival will be lield Nov. 2 start- Bedford Township Tnuteel
Wendv'a
..............................
...22\
ing
at
10
a.m.
at
the
elementary
Bedford
Township
TrUstees
will
MAIL SUIICihf I 1014
614-698-4011 (mllect)
·!..... MtlpC..,.
Wc:Mthlnglon ........................
school. This year the PTO will add an meet Monday, 7 p.m. at the Bedford
3222 ~wart Rd.
t3 \l!leU ...............................................m .»l
ii!I-................................................ U3.U,
ltoclt
reporte
.,.
the 10:30 arts and crafts show to the schedule Town Hall in Darwin.
Albaity,
Ohio 45710
$ 2 - ...........,..................... ,.......... $105.!6
e.m. q~~C~~H provided bJ Aclftlt of e,veniS. Inte~~ted artisans and ·Club to meet ·
• Annuities are issue.. Insurance
cnifters should contact Gina Pines at . 1 The Rock Springs Better Health
of Ollllpolll. '
13 ............................................. .. $19.23
and have
992-3834.
·
.Club will meet at the Rock Springs
Sj6.61
1t ~=l::':!cfor early
withdrawals. ·
SIOII.1l
;Chufl:h Thursday, I p.m.

Meigs EMS logs 19 calls

Insurance lobbyists are among
'
t
•
l"t' I 1
s t at e s mos maJOr po I ICa p ayers

1

tJole ·plans•••

Stocks

E~ : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :~:::~i;!::~

___ ,....c-,

n-.lii-.. . . . . ,. . . .,. . .

Meigs·announcements

:S'-

-•-·-

.20'-

--

'

.

-

�'

.

•

J

hoe 4 • The o.lly ~enUnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

In NFL action,

Yankees defeat Orioles.6~4
-to w~n . America)n League title
By RONALD BLUM

Steelers beat Bengals 20-10
while_Bucs upset Vikings·

urday night against St. Louis or 'Don't get excited,' " Torre
BALTIMORE (AP) - For so Atlanta in what for many
explained. "Now I understand when
long, the New York Yankees were seemed to be its permanent home: all the participants used to say it's
the aymbol of exceDcncc. Ruth and Yankee Stadium.
fun to play in ·the World Series
~~.DiMaggio and Manlle, Rea·
"They played better than we did because of all the work it takes getgie and Thurman and Billy.
and they deserve to be American ling there."
But for 14long seasons, the Yan- League champions," Orioles inanFielder, who broke lhe game
k- had been on the outside, watch- ager Davey Johnson said. "I hope open with a three-run homer off
ing a procession of other teanis play· the Braves get there and they whip Scott Erickson in a six-run thild, will
for baseball's biggest trophy.
their bulls."
be going to the Series for the first
No more. The drought is over.
After dominating the Orioles dur· lime. On July 31, he was stuck with
Finally, the World Series will be ing the SCB.SQn, going 10-3, the Yan- Detroit, which went on to lose 109
back in The Bronx.
kees defeated the most-prolific ~- games.
. With more home runs from Cecil er team the ll)ajors has ever seen......_ Ju}t 2 In month! later, he was
Ftelder and Darryl Strawberry, the Baltimore hit a record 257 homers sipping champagne.
•
Yankees finished off the Baltimore .,.., during the season, but the Yankees·
"This is awesome,"lie said. "In
Orioles with a ~4 victory Sunday to out-homered the Orioles 10-9 in the my wildest dreams I didn'tthink I'd
advance to the World Series for the five-game series.
be pan of this."
first time since 1981.
"I think we_had more talent than
Strawberry,too, is living a dream.
"I never believed I'd be in this they did," said Reggie Jackson, pan He spent the early pan of the season
position,''said Strawberry, whose of the team that won .the Yankees' ~ith St. Paul of the Noo'them League,
rise, fall and rebound in some ways previous pennant. "One difference I unwanted by any major league team.
mirrors . the fonunes of baseball's •·really think is-that the leader of this 1 In Game 4 against the Orioles, he
most-storied franchise.
ballclub is 'the guy in the dugout."
homered twice. And in Game S, he
New York Won the AL champiJoe Torre, a consensus choice as · followedFielder'shomerwithasolo
onship series 4-1 with a three-game one of baseball's good guys, is fi~al- shot that made the lead 6~.
sweep at Camden )[ards, increasing ly going to the World Series after 32 '
"I never thought I'd he in a situits record at Baltimore this year to 9- seasons as a player and manager.
11tion like this again," said Strsw0. The World Series will open Sat"You' ve got to tell yourself, berry, who won a World Seo;ies ring
(See ALCS on Paae :.J

yean

~liD cltl d Pi IT
The Pittsbu!Jh Steelen are looking like !he te1m that won four Super
Bowls in lhe 1970s.
The Washington Redskins are
playing the same mistake· free, ballcontrol game they did when they
won three Super Bowls between
1983 and 1992.
B'oth teal)'is, after losing their
openers, have won five slraight to
lead their divisions with S-1 records.
The Steelen put on a defensive
show reminiscent of the Steel Curtain of Mean Joe Greene and Jack
Lamhen, sacking Cincinnati's Jeff
Blake I 0 times and scoring on Rod
Woodson's fumble return in a 20-10
victory over the Bengals on Sunday.
The' Redskins, who have· committed only four· turnovers in six
games, had none Sunday in a 27-22
victory at New England. They tlidn't get their usual production from
running back Terry Allen, but Henry Ellard took up the slack with eight
catches for I52 yards and a touchdown . •
"He's the fuel to their fire," Patriots cornerback 'I)' Law said of Allen.
"Normally, if you stop him you're
stopping their strength, but today
they were able to hit on both cylin-

By The

/

I

/

,,

•..
,.

·-

CELEBRATION nME comee for the New York
Yarlkeu, - • of whom celebnlta thttlr 6-4

~

,,

.

'

•

•

•

pennant-clinching vlclofy owr the S.ltimOt'e Orloln In Camden Yarde Sundlly night. (AP)

Cardinals hand Braves 4-3 loss to take 3-1 lead in NLCS
•
By BEN WALKER
moved within one win of the World
Fo~ the defending World Series
ST. LOUIS (AP) - All those Series by ·beating' lhe Braves 4-3 champion Braves, their third conyears, the Atlanta Braves drove :&gt;unday night for a 3-1 lead in the NL secutive loss was one of their most
~s crazy in !he National League
chainpionship series.
bitter defeats in a while.
playoffs.
,
Pinch-hitter Dmitri Young Denny Neagle, acquired from
They would get a key hit from Dmitri who?.- lined a triple and Pittsburgh in late August to win big
someone no one had heard of, a guy Royce Clayton chopped a single for games, shut out the Cardinals on one
like Francisco Cabrera Or a slar like three runs in the seventh inning to tie paltry single through six innings. In
David Justice would step up and hit it, and Brian Jordan homered in the his first career postseason start, he
a big home run. Maybe a lucky eighth.
set down St. Louis on only seven
bounce would go !heir way, Qr per"We're not done yet," winning pitches in the sixth, and retired the
haps !hey might draw a well-timed pitcher Dennis Eckersley said. ''I'm first two batters in the seventh.
walk,
just trying to key down and go gel it
Then, it all fell apan for Atlanta.
Whatever, it was always just tomorrow. We haven't won anything
"It's not deflating. It's frustratenough to win, just enough to leave yet." ,
ing," Braves manager Bobby Cox
!heir opponents muttering.
The Cardinals can wrap. it up said. "We gave them the damn ballKind of how the St. Louis Cardi' tonight at Busch Stadium, where game."
.
, nals are making. the Braves look and ' lhey've won nine straight postseason , "But with Smaltz, (Greg) Mad-·
sound these days.
· games. Todd Stottlemyre, the winner dux and (Tom) Glavine, we're still in
These Cardinals, underrated by ·in Game 2, stans for St. Louis · a good position," he said.
most everyone except themselves, against Game I winner John Smaltz.
Maybe, maybe not.

..

. Of the 47 teams that have taken family rool)l beneath the stands,
3; I leads, in baseball postseaSon , . where it got so wild th~t Jordan's 2series, 40 have gone on to win. Only yellr'old, son, Bryson, was overone team ever has blown 3-1 leads Icome by the excitement and briefly
twice - the Cardinals, in the 1968 passed o~t.
and 1985 World Series.
The little boy was conscious
"You never expect to lose. You when he was taken to a hospital as a
never expect to be down 3-1," said precaution, and was expected to be
Greg McMichael,. who gave up the fine.
clutch hits to Young and Jordan. "If
"I was so excited, so pumped
you want three guys to pitch in the , up," Jordan said right after the
next three games, I'd want these game, before he learned about .his
three."
son's fainting spell. "This is a game
McMichael gave Jordan the pitch that belonged to the young kids."
he wanted with one out in the eighth,
Young, specifically.
and the former Atlanta Falcons
The founh pick overall in the
defensive back hit it into the Cardi- 1991 draft, Young won the American
nals' bullpen in left field.
Association balling title with a .333
The home ·run sent the cr9wd of ,average this season. He was pro- .
56,764 into a frenzy. It also caused mated io the majors forthe frrsttime
a big celebration in the Cardinals' on Aug. 28 - .coincidentally, the

'

&lt;jllme date the Braves traded for Nca- ;
gle- and hit seven singles in 29 at··:
bats for St. Louis.
·
' '
He'd batted just once in this •
postseason when, after Neagle was·'
relieved by McMichael, Cardinals
manager Tony La Russa picked the ,
rookie to hit for Mike Gallego with ·.
runners on first and second and 1wo
outs.
La Russa could have used Ray
Lankford, who was on the bench
with a sote arm . and 1 an 0-for-11
slump, or Ozzie Smith,, but instead ;
stuck with Young.
"I just thought that w.S the best
match up," La Russa said. "With two ·
outs we needed an extra-base hit and '
I just felt Dmitri could get it for us."
Young responded with his first ·
· (See NLCS on Page 5)

In sacks. four solo tackles, seven
Allen rushed 26 timea for a sea- assists, one forced fumble, two pus
son-low 71 yards and fliled to run defenses and an in=~
CoWioyw 17,
3
for a touchdown for the first time in
II games. But Gus Frerotte.finished
Michael Irvin made a ho-hum ·
18-for-33 for 280 yards, iacluding return- five receptions for Sl yards
touchdown passes on Washington's - but he .provided Emmitt Smith
first two possessions of the second and the rest of the Dallas offense
half to erase a I~ I0 !Selicit.
with a lift.
,
Cunis Manin rushed for 164
With Irvin attracting the attention
yards and two touchdowns for the of the Arizona defense at Texas StaPatriots (3-3), including a two-yard dium, Smith ran for a season-high
run that cut New England's deficit to 112 yards on 21 carries and scored
24-22 with S:33left in the game. But twice -~OOth and IOlst rushof his career. Tony
he was stopped on the 2-point con- i·ng touc o
Tolben ..ctdedit o sacks to lead the
version allc:mpt.
"We had to make the defensive defense, which almost recorded its
stop after we seored." Patriots coach second sh.utout of the season.
Irvin WBs SUSJll'ndetl for the first
Bill Parcells said. "'We didn't make
five games after pleading no contest
it, and that's the .same." •
After Manin scored, Frerotte and to cocaine possession, and Dallas
Ellard hooked up for a 40-yard gain lost three of those games. Arizona
on third-and-nine. Then Ellard fell to 2-4 with the loss.
lllaeeaneen %4, Vlklnp 13
caught a I0-yarder on second-and-19
Tony Dungy, in his sixth try,
and a.t5-yarder to the New Eogland
five on which he barely dragged his finally got his lint win as Tampa
feet inbounds. The plays set up a 24- Bay's coach, leaving the NFL with
yard field goal by Scott BIanton with two winless teams: J\tlanta and the
Jets.
56 seconds left.
Trent Dilfer, who had just one
Chad Brown, who moved to outside linebacker after Greg Lloyd tore touchdown pass this season, hit
up a knee in the Steelers' opener, led Robb Thomas for two scores and
Pittsburgh's defensive charge with 4 Mike Alstoll for another.

ders."

RECOVERS FUMBLE - Saconda after Pltteburgh defenelve llnMIIIn Levon Kirkland (far
right) knocad the football looM from Cincinnati
quarterback Jeff, Blake (1), cornerback Ron
Woocl1011
down to pick up the looltt blllln

a-

The loss at Tampa was the second
in three games for visiting Minnesota
{5-2), which got a 26,yard touchdown run·by Raben Smith.
Dolpblno 21, BIIIJ 7
Jim Kelly was sacked seven times
and threw three interceptions, one of
which was returned 91 yards by Terrell Buckley for a clinching touc~­
down at Buffalo .
Karim Abdul-Jabbar and Irvin

LEXING'ION, Va. (AP)- Mar~hall launched a blitzkrieg against
VMI in the lint half of their South·
ern Conference game. Much to
coach Bob Pruett's chagrin, the Herd ·
sellled into a war of the trenches
against the military academy in 'the
second hal f.
After leading 35-7 at the break,
Marshall was outscored't3-10 in the

'

ALplayoffs
Baldnlore ••· New York
'

' ........, •• ICOI'e

s....., .• ..,...,

Nolwenftrtnce action
Wyoming 42,
MIChlpll l8

w

This week's slate
S.lunloy-MAC

6, 8allimoR: 4; New Yod:

NLplayoffs

Tonight's pme ·

Set. . .J 1IICOI't

Sa Fraac•soo ot Green 811y, 9 p m

s..a.,·.IEOft

AP Top 25 college poll
Hel't-..e thr: Top 2S team~ ia the Anocuued P~ll collcac football poll, with
fifll·placc votes in parenth.:sts, cunerit
rC\:onis as of lui St~~urday, total po1nt~
bnJtd on 2S prnnll for# fitll piDCC! IIOtC!
thrnu&amp;h one point for a Hth pi!M:e vote.
and hm week 1 finml ranting:

T..... l

Athmta (Smaltz 24-8) at St Lou11
(Sionlemyrt 14-11), 7'&lt;19 p m
Wedneld1y
Sl Louis at Allan,a, 8: II p.m.. if nee·
"""Y

...........
,
Atlanta. 8: II p m., if nec-

e....y

World Series slate
'saturday
NLchampion II New 'Vori, &amp;:01 p.m.

Suadoy, O&lt;L 28
NL 11 New York, 7JO p.m.

Tuelldlly, Oct. 22
,New York 11 NL. 8:IS p.m

Wedneaday, Ocl Z3

New York .:11 NL. 8:18p.m.

· Thunday,Oct. 24

'

""&gt;:
Saturday, O&lt;L U
NL a1 New

""'

von. 8:01 r .m.. •f ~·-

Suaday, O&lt;L 27
NL al New York. 7:35 p,m EST. if

"'''''""'

Footbal l

Jt.tHw Dhlllon • '

fill. U fA

lndiiUiapltlil ......... !l I 0 .833 II~ 87
8uffalo ................. 4 2 0 .667 19 95
Miami ............ .. 4 2 0 .fJ/J1 1..0 ' 86

- Enalond .. .. .1 l o.soo 147 -1.11
N.Y. leu ........... 0 ~ 0 .1100 92 187

C..OroiDI..........,. ............ 5 I 0 ,8))
HwMon .............• 2 o .667
J•kiORviUe ......... l 4 0 .429
..... ,.... 2 4 o .m
CINCI"""'n ...... l 5 0 .167

Ill

110

1!11 no
137 136
12.' 156

1177 Ill

w....n.otrW.

9~

I 0 .I'J.l 144
K..atCily ......... 4 2 0 .661 117

_..._

92

Sao DI&lt;IO ............ 4 2 0 .667 14l 1&lt;14
()ollond ............. 3 4 0 .429 I~ I:W
...... ................. l • o.m vl 153

.

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

i':.,...
. . . .J ~ ~ .~ I~
Phlladrlpllia ...... ,.. 4 l 0 .667 12.1

';t

Ill

llllllal .................. 3 ] 0 .!011 10' 79
AriiA&gt;ftl ................ l 4 o .m H 141
N.Y. QiOIMo .......... l 4 0 .m 61 116

c-.1111.0....
.......... l I 0 ,tlloJ 204 7l
MJuauca ............-' 2 0 .71t 127 116

3 o .m 162 124
l 0 .236 10' Ill
T-Bay .......... 1 l 0 .167 69 139
w.... oo.Donvk .................. 4
~................ 2

s.o frMcl100 ......4 I
Cltollot ..............4 2
Hew Ollooao ......, 2' '
Sc . ..... ............... l
.v..................... 6

0 .1011 Ill

62

0 .~7 14l ..
0 .• 114 161
0 .167 .. 171

o o.1100

1.472

I
2
3
4

1.406

~

l ,li'Q

1
8

1.m

I .~7:'i

1,146
1.126
1.1 IM
1.09J
1.0111
927
K9'!1
19R
1.\1

II
9
10
13
6
14
l!i
17
IK
12
19
21
20
22
23
24

~911

,

~14

4117
4'\1
400
:479
317
264
Ill
HW

c..t.

16

9l

m

Owroll

»: L I lit. »: L I

Nonhwesccm ..-:! 0
Ohio St ........... 2 0
Iowa ................ 2 0
Pen111 St .., .... ., .... 2 I
Mic:h1pn Sl .... 2 I
MlchiJ:i'IO . .. .. I J
llliMis......... l ·. 2

0
0.
0
0

1.00
I·.QO
1,00

,661
0 667
0 .500
0 .1:\J

'""""'.............. 1 l o
Minne~~ ........ 0 2 0

~

I
~ 0
4 I
b I.
:\ ~
4 I
2 4

.m 2
em . .l

WII',.'UQ•in ........ 0 2 0 em

o.nr .~ ......:........,

f

1,659

Olhtrs rrcclvln1 Y•ln: Southern
M1u 93, V•rtillla T«h 70, SyrocuiiC 2.1,
WiJCOOSin 21. Iowa II!. Soudwm Cal 17,
Army 13. Washi•atoe St. 9. Kon ... 7.
Tc•u T('Ch 7, Navy 3, San Oiep St ..l

lam

AMERICAN CONFERENCE ·

oW J. I

I.Aorida(54) ........ 6-0
2. OHIO ST (7) ........ ~.()
J AoridaSt (~) ............. :'i-0
4 AnwnuSt. (I) ........... 6-0
5. Nebra~ka ................ 4-1
6. Tennes~ . . .... 4-1
7 Al:'!bama .......... 6-0
8 N01n: Dam!= ........... 4-1
9. Colorndo ................. 4-1
10. hnnSt ......... ., ......... 6-1
II. North Carolina ........ :'i·l
12 MI~DU . ..... .. .. 4-1
l l MIChiJM ......... 4-1
14 Nonhwcslcrll ..... ~ - 1
I~ WEST VIROINIA .. 6-0
16. Auburn ................. ~·1
11. ~u .................+1
Ill lJtl(!hiUI~ YO\Ing . ,. 6-1
19. c.•l!fOOlm ....... ~ -o
20 ,VIfl,llftiU .. .. . .. 4-1
21 , KunsasS1 .... ............. ~·1
22. GellfFiaTtch ....... ..4·1
23 Wyomin, ............... 7.0
24 Utnh . ............ 5·1
2" WMhing!Oft ........... J-2

Big Ten standings

NFL standings
:t..

liU:I fill. »:a&amp;

Iull

•

New York at NL. U~ J1 m , If ~'Cl•

.....

.

0
0
0
0
0
()
0

4 o
2 0

3 2 o

IDIIJaaa.... .. ...0 .l 0 000 2 4 0

S8tUrd8y'IICOret
Iowa ~l.lndiuu 10
Mt~hipn St . ..l. Jllinoi1 14
Nonhwc•tcrn 26. Ni....:totA24
Ohio St. 17, Wtlt.'&lt;Win 1.4
Ptnn Sc. ~I . ,..,_ 1.4

This_.•• olatt

IM••-·... T•

lndi-111 MkhiJM
lowutPcMSt

Mi&lt;hipn Sc. •

loll-•
Nmhwctlem 111 Will.'On-'•
ObioSI. al,..,.._

second half. Marshall (6-0, 2-0
Southern) was penalized IOtimes for
93 yards, fumbled the ball away once
and was intercepted on another possession in the 45-20 win Saturday.
"I thought we didn't play with a
lot of enthusiasm," Pruett said. "I
think it's pretty evident we didn't
play our best football today. We just
kept hOlding or jumping offsides and

lri fhe NHL,

kept pulling ourselves in a hole. could have been more fired up in the ·
When we jumped out ahead, we just second half. A lot of the plays we had
, on were good, we just didn't execute
quit"
Eric Kresser keyed Marshall's them"
M~rshall running back ' Doug
offense, throwing for 265 yards and
three scores. But he completed just Chapman, who rushed for 66 yards
in splitting time with Erik Thomas, ,
45 percent of his passes.
"There will be a lot of things we said top-ranked Manshall sometimes
need to correct," Kresser said. "We plays down to iis opponents.
"At times we have to up our
should have scored more points. We
'

•

Stars beat Blackhawks; Flames blank Flyers
~

The Stars have been solid enough
Flames 1, Flyen 0 .
CHICAGO (AP) - The Dallas .
So far, so good The Stars extendIn P.hiladelphia, Trevor Kidd
Stars are taking a basic approach to ed their franchise-best stan to five to win despite skating without one of
their early-season success.
victories with a S-3 decision over the their top _players - injured center stopped 'P shots, several of them
"We're not thinking about win- · Chicago Blackhawks Qll Sunday Joe Nieuwendyk - in four of their point-blank blasts, to lead the Flames
first five games. "That's a pretty ·over the Flyers.
ning each hockey game as much as night. .
.
.
; we are about getting our jobs done,"
"We're very happy with our good sign," Hitchcock said.
'!lie game's only goal came ftom
!goaltender Andy Moog said. "You stan," coach Ken Hitchcock said. , But more impressive to the sec:can put too much pressure on trying "We're surprised, but not overly sur- ond-year Dallas coach is his team'·s Calgary's German Titov, who scored
•to win. It's (an easier) burden when prised. The good thing is our players intensity. He said the Sws' current on a power play in the second peri·
.
:you just try to do your job every aren't looking at it as 5-0, but one roll actually began in the pre-season. od.
!night."
'
·
game at a time."

Eut

AlbriJht n Kinas. Pa 0
Allfcd J4, Thlr:l 11
Alle~IJ6, C... We...., 12
Amherst . , Colby 0
Anny42.Ru~mU
·
81oomsburJ 4. Mansfield 13
Bndar:wntl!r,Mass. ;10, Frammahnm
S1 6
Brown 27. Princeton 2.~
C.W. Pust27, Co11TofN.J 21
Canis1u1 2.4i. Simm
Clanon 59, S~.f':nsbu~ 20
Coost Guard ~- , Westfi d Sl. 6
CoiJI*tt 3!i, Towson St. 10
Columbia20. Pr:na 19, OT
c~1120. Hanant 13
COI11and St 38. St. l.aWRnce 10
Dllrtmouth 3:'i, Holf:5rv11 7
Dcla'!are Val. 27. ll·Mad110111 24
Duque1ne: 52. St. Frnnas, Po. 1•
East StroocbburJ 40, West Cheater J]
Fairmont St. 67. W VirJinia Tcdt 0
Fr,..klm &amp; Mmhall 14, Dil;kin~Dn 12
~lown , DC. :!0, 1oM 0
Glenvil~ St. 42. W Va. Weslyn )~
Hamilton 25, Bowdoin I~
Hobor1 ;\~.ll(l(hcJtcr U
Indiana, Pa 32, Shpp::ry R~k 21
1th:&amp;ca :16. arockrn st :l
Jeney City S1. 2.. S1. John Fisher I~
Kmp Point 19, Plymuuth St . .~
Ku1z1own 41, Cheyney 1
Lo(;l,yeue at Fordhnm.
~comi?,41.Hnnwle 14
mhx I . ConncctlcUI 16
Mllli11 34. F.airflcld )
MaJN~:IIulelts 4~. Bottun Unir. 12
Mm.yhunt J4, GiMOn 14
Menimack 17. MIT 7
. Milknvillt: .W.I..ocl He vet~ 12
MDfllnOtllh, NJ 2.1. W?ner 10
Montclair St. 27, Keu
Ml.lhiCnbcrj ..0, Swanhmoru 27
New Hampshi~ 42. Lctuth 27 .
New Hil~ 66. VuJiftlll nlun 0
Nidmls41, Cuny 24
Norwich 2K, Won'CSiet Tn:h 24
S Cunner.1icut ~4. Ruwan 6
SOM:n.•tHicilrt 16. A11umption I~
Sulilb\II'J Sl. 2), Chowan 0
~Jw
17, Man .•Lowell J.e
Sh!..'f'h,'f 4~. C0r11.:ord 20
·
Ntnnehill.e~. W Nt.-w Enaland 7
S1ony BrtX1k .\ l ..Cem. ConM.:tlcut
St. 7
SulK(UI..'hMna .l$, J.cbctnon Val. 7
N)'flkUM.' ~S. PilllburJh 7
Tnnity, CoM. 34. Tufi1l0
Union. N.Y. l.,, A~ H.'V 6
Ununu• 2tt Johnl H
ni'O
Villunuva 42. Nonllculera Jl
W Vl~nia St. :1~. Wctt Ubm-l12
W"" It Jell 49,11eohony,W, a. 24
W~!llrniMttr, Pa.l8. Walsh 14
Widenr:t 4ft, Moravian 21
Wilka lH, Ju.i11a 27
.Willilllll 16. Middlebury 0
WOR:eller Sc. 66. Fildtbui'J St 24
Yakll.l, 8u.:tnell21
Y\&gt;Un11town St. 17, Burtalo 6

I
1110
1 o .750
I 0 .667
I 0 .667
2 0 .!011
Kont .................l 2 o .m
1!. Mi&lt;itlpn ..... l 3 0 .2!10
Alno ............... l 4· 0 .200
w.Mldtl,. ....o 4 .o .ooo

~

.

Altuon 69. Kalnmazoo 14
AumrDl4, Bencdu.1ii'IL:,III 7
Bilker~. William Jew~ll 27
Baldwin-Wall&lt;K:e 61. C:1J1ilall J
Be~t~.'llu.:tin.:,Kan . 49. Li'*nwuud ~
Bclb:l, Minn 28, Ma:ukAicr 14
Bl~tek Hills St. ~2. Columdo Cui. 46
Bl:ackburn 3 I, Princ~mO
Bosmn Colkge 24, in.:lnft:llll 17
Bu.mn Vista 47, Dubuque 40
Carleloo 4l Aus~i~ ~6
Coarrull, Wi1. rT. Bclo t6
Cattbuae 2R, Auauatana.lll 12
Cent. Iowa J4. Loru )I
C('nt. Sl., Oh1u 12, Knon1lk 0
C~ 7tt., Illinois C&amp; 11
Cornell, Iowa 20, Monmouth, Ill. I 4
Culver·Stol:l.ton 42, Miuouri Vnl. 14
Dayton 31, Robtn Mom• 11
IA!fianct 20, Mount St Ju11tft 19
Do~ 51, Cuncordia, N.:b 6
Oruke ~s. EvMsvlllc 14
Emporia St. Sl. Miuouri-Rulla 20
Eureka JM, CufM.'Of\lil4. 111. 0
Evanael 22. Mid-Am N~.: 21
F~1 S1. 40, Nonhwd , M1ch 24
Flndluy :4~ •.01ivct Hlll.at~.!De I J
Friend• ~J. McPhmon 6
Geneva 48, Ult:lena 0
Orauland 34, CeDI. Me1hoc.li•t 20
Orand Villley St ~. Michlau T~e~o'b 7
Hamllne 24, Sr. CMaf22
Hillldlle 24. N. MichiallDI4
Hope J8, Adrian 6
H•rvn t2Y.Oakotu Tech 14
llllnoiJ We.lyn 34, Millikin 6
Indiana St. 24, S. llllnoi1 11
Iowa ~n 40, ntnn 36
John
I 34, Mu1ldnfum 0
St. :15, hliuouri 0
Kan111 Wat 2.1, Slerli•J 11
Kenyon lS. niton J4
Kno• 3!1, Grinnell 24
MIC Mumy 42, OntC~~vine 6
Malone ~9. Tri·St1WI4
Mlriatt1 ~ Otterbein 0
M~Kendfee 27. Watm.intter, Mo 14

Kant•

Mldlttnd LAUitenolO, llotltt 19
Mi•·Dulutt1.19, MOOI'IIad St. 22
MIMI Sl. 40, J..-own l

Mo. Soulhcm 45, SW BopiiM 7
Mo. w.... :~~.PIIIIboraSo. ll

South
Alabama 14, N..Carollno St 19
Alob""' Sc.ll. Cliri. Adunts 21

4
4
3
)
3
2
I
I

o

l
2
)
3
4
4
6
6
1

=-

Albony. 0&amp; 14. Alabomo AIM 7

Auburn oW, Mlallli~ Sl. 1.5
ClnOfto,..,_ITiall ;\4,
IJ

C... Fiori&lt;ioli,Somfi 6
cte-ll, DuU6
C - . Teon. 7, U - Ky. )

0
o
0
0
0

o.

o

lleblrdoy'•-MAC

..,,

~ .. Honry

l3

1111 St JO. 01110 21. or

14

N - St..S.D. 4l, MIM.•Morrit 7
Northw .. llrD, IOWI 35, Nebr11k1

WlllrJ:.!I

Domeloi.W......onlD
Oltlo- 21, Ht .... Col, 7

w...,.

Dlllo
34, Oblrllo 13
Dll,. 26. Almlll
... 11.16.-oaiiO
!UI'oo31 ................
l-H-34, A - 20

:w. ~·-lrd·

Florido56.LSUI1
Floritla .AAM 24. N. Cwollu

-U-Oiolha 16.- Dlllotl 7

Nanlt Coolnl43, Norl1t Porit 6

--2J.WMhi-I&lt;Loe12
Odaw•l4, R~7
Della5c.24.H 1 -so.o
1!. T,._ SO. 41, CkodellO
~Cloy St. ll.llowleSt. 7
EJon J!...... Hllll

0
0

- · Uniaa :19,llelde"*l 7
N. Iowa 47. 1111noit Sl. 10
NW Ml- Si. 52, 'l'nomlft Sc. l2
49,1111)'1or 0
Nemska-K- 4l, Fon Hoyt 51.

AAT
1

I . Dlkoia St. 21, ~ DoltCMI 17

•

~

I
I

Dn)'ton ;\I , Rubef1 Moni~ ll
Dellanut 20. Mn\IRI St Jnlqlh I\I
Sl. Jos~rh's, Ind. 63, W•lmingtun 1 '
Thcmas More 24, BluH1m1 16 J
Wittenberg 60, Mruyvdtc, Tenn. 1
Yuung.~1own St. 17, Duffnlu 11

U5111V Al.lul o~

Ohio H.S. scores
Saturday's action

Arkitn~5 3K, loo•11ana Tcd1 21
AtkaM;n Tt.'l:h 2K, S 1\rkaru~t~~ 26
Ccn1 Oldahnmu 24, Abilene Chris.
•
tiun6
HurJmp. J:'i. SW Oklahum~ 23
Houshm
Memrflu 20
NF. Oklahumn :\~ . Pnnhalllllc Sl 14
Oklahomn :W. TekaJ 21, OT
Oua~:hita liJ. SE Oklnhdrrw 16, OT
Sam. Hnu~ltln St . 14. Stephen
f'.Aulltlll 10
Tallctun Sl. 27, W. T~•us A&amp;.M 17
T~•a s A&amp;M · Kina~v•ll~ .\5, T~xu~
· A&amp;M Cnmmen:c 2M
Tcx.u5l11rhtlun IK, 1'c!UIM·EI P!L'II! ()
Tnni1y. Te• . D. Wushinf1on. Mn 12
Tul5alO.l'nkKildu St. I
Valtlust;1St. :'il, Ark.·Muntk:ello 24
Valltlcrbiltl9.NorthTcMull 1 .
w. New Mox•co ~. Mulr•~em St ..
TelM 22
We111 Georpi11 30, Cent Arlcnnw 7

n

•

Delphos Jefferson 21. Cnd~rMvilh;
0
.
Fusturia St Wend!lin 26. M1•1awk 6
GihTMlUr 40, Cuy;llmt:a Ht~ 20
kwdt-Sdu 14, Tu.'ICar;aw,L~ Cadi 0 ·
keucrmg /\Iter 2H, H.umltnn Badin

P\.'IT)'

21

U.'\JJ,cmontlJ. Southi~mn 12
Lm\a C.1th. ~7 . PauldmJI 0
Mu.••illnn Wuhin,~tMI 21 . N:~pcrvillc
Hll.) C1:'ntn1l 13
Mi:~mbburJ :W, Middk.•ttlwn F~.:nwick

· .OtberObio
college scores

By KELLEY SHANNON
SAN ANTONIO (AP) - David
bgrin exuded confidence ~ll week~nd, even with Tiger Woods lurking
just behind him.
,, And after winning the Texas
open, Ogrin said' he'd known for
days that the tournament would be
his.
"I tried not to get all giddy ana
goofy about it, but we knew we were
going to win." said Ogrin, whose
wife and four children helped him
celebrate his first PGA Tour victory
Sunday.
A roaring hometown crowd at La
Cantera Golf Club cheered the 38year-old Ogrin, who edged Jay Haas
by one stroke and a charging Woods
by two.
Opin had an inkling he would
win as early as Friday when he used
two birdie streaks to grab the lead.
He never relinquished it - even
after a potentially disastrous triple
bogey in .Sunday's final round.
"God wanted it to lie exciting for
me," Ogrin said.
He shot an even-par 72 Sunday
~

•

Padua 24. tbW'OOn NO.CI. 14
Perry 27. Haw~n 6 ·
Purlllmuuth NUin: Dan.: :46, Frunklin
Furnucc Orccn 6 ·
Shtket' H1s 34. GarfieiJ Ht~ . 7 ,
Steubenville Cuth. :n, Vuu. ~~~16
T11l. Stntt 14, Tul Lihhcy 0
;.wurrcn Kcnned~ 41), luui~vi lie
A'{UIDllll26
Wancn"v•lle 26, Vullcy Jlnrf.C 17
Ynu MLM.I~)' 3, etc. Ucnc!oiM;tmcO

.

Hockey
NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERF.NCF.
Alltntlt l&gt;iw-hlen '

X.,0 ,

»: LIt II

Fk1ruJn ... ...
1
Tu!flpa D.!•y ..... . 2
Phthicklplua ........ 2
N.Y. blanden ... , I
NewJ~rlicy ........ . l
Wmttln-tun......'.... I
N.Y Run~D .. 0

lll. lit: 1iA
7
4
4
4
2
2
2

I
:\
I
2
:\

0
0
2
0
0
~ 2

IS
D

4

1 .~

14
7
· fl
K
14 , I fl
10 17
lfl

I!)

Nm-.hc.IIIDfr~

Mnntn:ul ......... 2
Htonfoni ............... 2
()tcawa ............... I
Bolton ............... 1
Buffblo .............. 1
PiusburJh ............ 1

0
I
I
I
3
;\

2 · 1\ 20
0
4 K
2
4 II ·
I
' II
0
i t1
0
2 11

14
9
II
12 "
14
lfl

•...

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Cenanl DlrWon

liMI

»: L I

l&gt;ullta~~ ........ ... ..... ~ 0 0

Phocnl• ............... :'! I
2
Ch1e11f.0 .... ,..... ,.. 2 )
llctn11 ........ ,, ... 2 :Z
. Tomnm ............ I 2

s...LouiN .............. 3

0
0
0
0
0

fill. 1ll! 1iA
10
6
6
4
4
2

10

n

14
12
10
10

Roberto Alomar's glove .at second
for a run-scoring error.
"That ball kind of tricked me,"
said Alomar, a six-time Gold Glove
award winner. "I thought it was
going to hop up, and it just stayed
down. Hey, I'm a human being. I'm
not going to catch every ball. I wish
I could."
Helder's homer made it 5-0 and
Strawberry connected, too - the
third three-homer inni~ fot the
Yankees this year.

"This ballclub had to use all the
ingredients, a11d that's what glued us
together,'' Torre said, "knowing that
for the machjne to work it had to
have all the lillie parts working for
it ..
Andy Penitte, ':"hose 21-8 record
led the )"ankees mto the playoffs,
allowed just three hits in eight
innmgs. He allowed solo homers to
Todd Zcile in the sixth and Eddie
Murray in the eighth, and John Wet·
teland gave up a two-run homer to

intensity," he said. ,
Thomas rushed for 164 yards,
outdueling VMI's all-time leading
rusher, Thomas Haskins (73 yards on
21 carries). But Haskins also threw
a 35-yard touchdown pass to Ed
Pearson.
Randy Moss, who nursed a deep

thigh bruise last week, had four
catches for 135 yards for Marshall.
Fellow wideout Tim Manin had
four receptions for 72 yards and
returned a punt67 yards for a score.
VMI coach Bill Stewan, a Fairmont State graduate, didn't sound
too disappointed.

·NLCS••. (Continuedfrom'Page4)
extra:base hit in the majors, slicing
~triple to the wall in left-center. As
McMichael warmed up, · Ron Gant
talked to Young about the side-arming.reliever.
"He was trying to give me a
scouting report, 'but it was tough to
digest it all right before I ;.vas going
to hit," Young said.
After a walk, Clayton hit a tapper
to the left side of the plate.
McMichael made a snap throw, but
Clayton beat it for the tying single.
"If he doesn't give up a chop hit
' to Clayton, we win the .ballgame,''

Cox said.
,The Braves, who built a 3-0 lead
helped by homers from Ryan Klesko
and Mark Lemke olf Andy Benes,
~d their chances against Eckersley
in the ninth. Jermaine Dye led o
with a double for his third hit, but!
Atlanta could not advance him any (
farther.
, .
1
"We're not dumb,'' Eckersley
said. "The team came together over
the last half of the season. So if
you're going to talk about our team
right now, you can say a bunch of
great things.'.'

Southern second defeat

!'
•'

Bobby Bonilla in the ninth - his
first hit in 20 at-bats during the
For only the second time this sea- struggled. Alexander took a 7-41ead 1
series.
son, the Southern varsity volleyball and never looked back en mute to the '
Baltimore went S-for-31 with
·
1
team fell to defeat, this time at the 15-9 tr.iumpli.
runners in scoring position.
Soulhcrn scorers were led hy I
hands
of
Ale•ander.
·
"I think they just played better
Alexander won an exciting Open' 1 Keri Caldwell's seven service points ~
baseball," s9id Alomar, at the center ing round game 16-14, then came ,and five each from Renee Turley. 1
of contrOversy since he spit on
hack to post a 15-9 win over the sev- ·Cynthia &lt;;aid well, Brianne ProfliU :
umpire John Hirschbeck during the enth-ranked Tornadoes.
:and one from Kim Sayre. Meghan f
final weekend of the regular season.
L'Heureu• gave Alexander u 9-8 IMcCabe. had nine for the winners, r
The Yankees have live days to · lead in the first game after Southern's Iwhile teammate Melanic Krumm f
rest before opening up the Series at Cynthia Cald'l'ell had scored four ·had si•. Fellow Spanans Sara Clark. I
home.
straight lor the Tornadoes. From that Joy King. Joni Grubb and Lynn f
point on, the game went nip-and- L'Heureux had four each.
~
.tuck, with neither team scoring more
Southern won the reserve game r
than two points in succession. 16-14 and 15-12 led hy Kara King l
Alexander finally onched its way to . with nine points, Stucy Lyons si!l, ~
Kim Ihie seven, Amber Maynard si• r
for a four-round toial of 13-under
Haas had birdied the previous
Haas closed with a 70 to finish a the 16-14 win.
In the second game, Southern and Ashli Davis six.
275.
hole and made par on No. 6to tie for
stroke back, and Woods wa.&lt; anothThe victory, worth $216,000 from the lead. But Ogrin fought back and er shot bchiad after a final-round 67.
a purse of $1.2 million. left Ogrin birdied'the next four holes before he
Greg Kraft (65) ended up a shot
with $533,457 in earnings this year. bogeyed two in a row.
behind Woods at 278, as ' did Len
He stands 32nd on the money list,
Woods, 20, playing in just his Mauiace (691.
r
and if he moves up two spots after siKth tournament since turning pro,
Tim Herron ·(68), John Huston
~
next weekend's Wah Disney World again was impressive.
·
(68) and Keith Fergus (70) were at
'
Classic at Lake Buena Vista, Fla., he
Lurking just behind the leaders all 279.
Defending stute champion Iron- land (377 ),
Meigs
missed
qualilying
by"
live
r
will qualify for the $3 million Tour 'week, he started the final round at~.
· Ogrin led .Haas by two strokes ton and GalliaAcademy advanced to
shol&lt;.
Mick
Barr,
who
ll)issed
by
two
;
Championship Oct. 24-27 at Tulsa, ·under. He hit his ball into a bush on approaching the 18th. The bogey the state golf championships by takstrokes in advancing to the stale, fin- ~
• ,
·
d h'IS 1cad to one, but 11
· was ingd'thetr'topt twoIfspots
in the
Division
Okla.
the fi1rst ho1e and made par. He 1nmme
h
.
h'
11 os ·~ go c ampoons ops a1· • ished Inth in the 54-player field with '
Woods, who turned pro in August birdied the fifth and eighth. then good enoogh for victory.
afterwimiing an unprecedented third' auacked after the turn 'with an eagle
"Took my bogey, took my victo- Valley View Golf Course in Litn- rin 80. Dave Anderson, who finished :
with a 82, was followed by Clay ;
'- IOth to move to 10- ry, took my trophy and took all the ca.~tcr.
straight U.S. Amateur title, moved on the par-S
83, Steve McCuliQugh's 84 ;
Craw's
from 40th to 34th ,on the money list. under.
'
applause. It was great," Ogrin said.
Ironton won with a 307. Gallia
•·
Hehaseamingsof$518,794.
· Woods birdied Nos. 14 and 15,
"Haas, a two-time winner of the Academy finished in second with a 'and Joe Hill's 90.
Meigs
11nishcd
the
1996
sca.&lt;on
(
.Lee Janzen_ 30th on the list ~t and_ unbeknownst to Ognn at the Texas Open and playing in Ogrip's,. 324. Circleville, which linished in
by
nailing
down
il&lt;
sevenlh
straight
;
$540,916- tied for ninth Sunday. , ' time- made_a run at the·lea~.
., ... tlm:esomc Sunday. said he was ..,...,. third place with~ 32'7. followed by_,
TVC
championship
and
fibislied
the'
""w' '·'
· Ogn'n nearly blew thetoumament "··· • ·~1 had no. idea wbat the k1d ~as. py to see Ogrin win at home..
·.Meigs (:J2'1or. U'nioto (H'7"): Wash"·
•
·
· "0 · 'd "So 1had 1dca
ington Court House (342), West year with a 125-45 record.
at the par-36th hole. His tee shot hit domg, gnn sal ·
no
, Union (355), Belpre (365) and Fair"He's noating," Haas said. '
·a·can
path and
rolled
into strokes
a creek. to
It that
he Woods
was makin~
.ru~. "·agam. and Rtdge
. Ogrin
in nearby
Garden , ·-------~~~~~~--------------.i"laoa•
took Ogrin
three
more'
. But
d1dn Iab1rtl1e
and lives
is a regular
at La Cantera.
reach the green, \hen he two-putted. bogeyed·the _17th. . • .
· All week he joked about having to
'
"My most interesting hole of the
Woods saod he dtdn I hot the ball rush home after his golf rounds to
year," Ogrin said. "Lost my three- well or pull well.
.
te!'d to 'domestic chores. But sleepshot lead in one fell swoop."
_ . "It's nice. that you can sull be ing in his own bed was an advantage,
His fiasco wos Haas' OpPOnunity. around and In the hunt ,:"hen rou Ogrin said.
don't have your.A-game. he sa1d.

•

I~

.
• 8y AICHAAD

12
6
12

AOSI!NBLATT

Alhland 24, Wayne, Mleh 7

North Coast Athledc Conr.
Alk.....{, ~.C.. w...... ll

'..

'

Oblo Athletic Conference
llldwin·Wtllacc61 , CapiJall~
Juba Cmoll34, Mnkinpm 0

.

MlriCUI 36, ou.t.i• 0
Mo.nt Urio • .!t, tw, • 1 7
Ohio N...... ll. HI,.. 7

Mlcl-lltallf "--lilan
Aocllly 35, Dtl¥01 N . - 13

•

I

Meigs golfers end season
in .D-11 district tournament .

ll

' Florida regained a firm grip on
the No. I rankins. and Florida State
n,early reclaimed the No. 2 spot from
Ohio State in The Associated Press'
Top 25 collese football poll .
Tho Oaton (~). with a 5~ 13
rout or LSU, received 54 fmt-place
votes and 1,6$9 points Sunday from
the 67 apons writcn and broadcast·
en who'vOle in the AP poll. Juat last
week, Florida bad 38 fint·place
vCitel to Ohio State'll4. ' .
But the No. 2 Buckeyes (5·0),
who neelled a founh-quarter touc~

down .,_ from .Joe Omnalne· tci

••

!'
'
'

DOMINO'S

MADNESS SAI.I

OSU barely holds onto
N.o.
2
position
in
AP
poll
'

I

10 •
6

'Midwest Intercoll011lite

Kenyon . 5, Ocni1011l4
Ottlo Wesleyan )4, Oberlin I~
Wooster ~2. Earlham 27

Colts 26, Ravens 21
A 68-yard interception return by
Jeff Herrod gave Indmnapolis a 12point lead, and the Colts held on at
home to beat Baltimore.
It was the first game bet ween the
two teams - past and present representing Baltimore, and the first
matching Ravens coach Ted Marchi- ,
broda against Lindy Infante, his former offensive coordinator with the ·
'
·colts.

Ogrin wins Texas Open;·- Woods ·t akes third

U1nen."L'f 64 Arthur VoaJen. On11•m
6

For West

Anzona Sc. 42. UCLA ;\4
Bnghnm Youn~ 6), UNLV 2H
CS Northfl~ 35, Weber S1 lK
Cal Poly-S ~4. St MillY 's. Cal. 33
t"ttAdmn St. J2, N Mea. Highlands 21
Olaprnnn 49, Call.&amp;ithenln 1
Colunadu 3~. Oklahurra;~ S1. 13
E. Washinatoa ~I. S~ramcnto Sl. :W.
Fre1114.1 St 211, San Jose St Ht
laV!!fDI! )K, Whi!IICr 22
Mc~a, Colo. ~fl. Colorado Mines (I
MomW\114), IUMI1 St. 19
''
Montana Tec:llll. Carroll, MOnt. I~
N. ArizUftll-49, Muntann St. IM
N Cnktmdo )R, N. 011kotn St. )6
Navy 20,-Air Force 11
Ncv00a66,Jtoise St. 2M
Pw; , Luthemn49. W. Oreaon ~0
Purtlllnd St. )1 UC Dnvi1 27
Rt)l;ky Mountain~. W. Mmatunu 41
S. ~on 24, Lewi1 &amp;. Clark 17
S. Ut •1, SW Teaas St 27
5onnmu St. 24. Hurnboklt St. 10
Snt,!lb..'fn Cui I 4, Arizona 7
.SnanfonJ 21. On:JUft 24, OT
Uhlh St. ~3. New Mc,dcoSt. 21
W. Wuhint~tun J2, WnfH:Id 14
WuhinJII.III St ~· On:J'111 St. :t
Wc~ectn SI,C!liU. 41 , ALlam~ Sl. 2:4
Wlllamcue 2~ . E. ()n:~un 21 ,
• Wyoming 42, W Mk i¥1111 2M

sCore.

touehd-n

ends .•• &lt;_c..,&lt;&gt;n-ti_nu_ed.,..r_ro_m_P_ag_e_4&gt;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,__ _---_ _ _ __ Alexander spikers hand

:With the Mets in 1986 bu.t then saw
:JJis career disintegrate during bouts
:Of alcohol and drug use.
• While New York won its record
(14th AL pennant, Baltimore was
hoping for its first since 1983. The
~rioles, who won the AL wild card
'tmd then knocked off defending
cl)ampion Cleveland, crumbled in
~he third.
} Fi~st. Jim Leyritz hit a solo
jlomer. Then, series MVP Bernie
iWilliams hit a grounder under

''

Akron Buchtc11fl. Akrun Goitlicll.l ;\
Akmn Ellet 49, Aknm Kenmure 6
Redrortl. Mich . 20, Sylllnnin
NOf'th\ltew 6
· Bclflre 47, Wellston J4
Brooklyn 4~. Luthcr.tn W, 6
Cle l?.au Tech 20, Clc Manhull 12
Cle. Hcipt~ 2l E. Clcvt.'lantl Sb:1w b
Cle. Snuth JO, &lt;.1e: RhuJe~ 0
Clc. St. lr.rwtiu~ 47, Omton McKin·
lc)' 19
C~tli~~. Oregon StntchO
Q.1y Pnllerson 3b, llay. Mci!dowdale

10

t

~ALCS

2H

Sooth west
Alcorn St 24, Prnlrit! View 0
An~do St. JK. E New Mu.iL'O 2K
Ark.·Pinl! Bluff 11 . TcllilN Southl:'rn

Midwest

.I

Non ..conrerence adion

phus 16
St . Joseph ' I, lnd 6J, Wilmington,
Ohm7
·
,
St Nl'lf~n 24, l.awR.'tM-1: 20
St. Thunwu, Minn. 42, Com:on.hu,
Moor 24
Ttlll!l A&amp;M 24, lnwn Sl 21
TelUlS Tech JO, Kansas 17
u~... luwa 61 . William Penn 6
Vt1 ley CitY St. 21. Dickinson .St. 1
Valparaiso :'iO, Bulkr 29
W Illinois J 0, E lllino•s7
Wabash 34, M1ull.:he~1crO
Washburn 2l Ct.'Dt Miuouri 7
Westmur 3~. Oakcxa We.dyn 14
Whcalon, Ill. 43. Elmhunt 0
Wmuna S1 3~. lkmi\lji St. 2tl
Wi5.· l:nCrm~42, WiJ.·Rh. Falls ~I
Wu;.•Stevens Pt. 52, W11.-0$hkosh 7
Woo~t~r !i2, Earlham 27

PresbytetiM 19, Catawb11IS
SW LouiSiima 42, Arkuns~ St ..~I
Sllvunrinh St. 10. Morris Brown J
South Carohna 2S, Ke-ntucky 14
Tennts~ 29. Geof,tdo 17
Tenneist.&gt;e T~h 30. SE Miuouri 20
lltumas Mocc 24, Blufllon 16
Troy St. 16, Md''-'1!5(! St. 12
Tu!ke'L~ 14. MOO!hou~ 0
Yitg1n111 St 10. Put;•uevllle St 7
V1r~:i niu Tes.:h :4H. em~lc 0
Wtuenberg 60. M..-yvl lc. Tenn. 7
WoiTorl.l4l, M~ St. 14

R':t""

m
. . . . . . lJ t ~0 fll -'! ~ .~
Mlw .............
4
lowllnaGnooft)
8111 Sc .............. l
01110 .............. 2
C. M~hipn ..... l

6

r.!·

c..t. o....u

~1. John's, M•nn. 41(

f

Gcneva4&amp;, Urtlana 0
• Iowa. Weskyllll40, T1rfin J6
t.;ialooe 59, Tri-STnte 14
Wcllmm&amp;tCT. Pi1. 2K. Walsh 14

St Ambrost 45, Taylor 13
St. Ooud S1 48. Mankato S1 42
Sa frulll;is, Ill 41, Qui~ 0 '

Ky. Wes~an40, Sue Bennett II
ntucky St. 19
Uv1nptone 21, lohnwn C. Smith 7
lc)tusvillt 23, Tulane 20
MARSHAU. 4~ . VMI20
Methodist 1~ . BridJt!W:Uet,Vo. 14
Middle Tenn. SO. AustiR Pcay 14
M•ll~ 3$. C~tre 30
M1ss. alit~ Sl. 19, Grumbllfttl, St. 10
Murray St 8, Tcnn ·Martin 14
Ne:w~ 1S. Ol•leston Southtm 6
Nid10li~S1 . 19, NW Lrnilsiluul7
Nonh Carolina 38, M~land 7
North Oreenville 27. t~mpbellsville

Toloedo Ill Louis1asaa Te.:h

MAC standings

7

l..o&amp;ne 23.

OtherJNCAA
Division I scores

St Loui1 ) , All.,.• 2

St. Louis 4, Atlanta l ~ Sc. Loui1 leudl
smc. 3·1

21

Funnanl ,~lachianSt. 14
Gardller·W 28. Lenoir-Rh.f,IIC 2.~
Oeorptown, Ky. 43, Bethel, 10nn. 9
OcorJia Southern 38, W Cw'olina 2H
Guilford 21,hmlm 14
J Hampton U. 17, ~lnwatt St 7
Hof11111 29, Libcny 20
·
Howard61, 8cthunc·C~m:m21
Jacksormlloe Sl 34, W Kentu~· ky 20
James MOOison 26, William &amp;. Mary

Non-conltttnee pme.

•

SL Louia vL Atlnta

·SI. Lou11 a1

Ball Sc. w Bowlina Green
E. Michigan at Ctnt. Mk'hlpt
Miami at Akron
OHIO Ill Kent

WuhinJion 27. New Enpnd l2
Oakland 37, Detroit 21
Philadelphia 19, New York Cihlllh 10
lnd:lanapolit 26, Baltimore 21
_Open """' o.n.... Kantu c;;oy, s..
DieJO. Seattle

wins tenet4-l

Aoridn Sc. 34, Miami 16
Fon Valled: Sr 40, Milt:t 29

Miami 3~. E.•Michipn 2!1

Cmolina 45, St. l..oui&amp; l:l

New York 8, BaJtirncJI'C 4
~York

Bowlihfi Green ~I. Kcm 24
Cent K:hiaan 42, Akron 0

Sunday'ucores

Dallas 17, Arizona 3
New Oo1oano 27, Cbicogol4
Piltsbvrah 20, CINCINNATIIO
Houston 21, Atlanta I~
Miami 21, Buffalo 7
Tampa ·Biy 24, MinnesotA I3
JackJonvllle 2l, New York Jert 17

Spike.-each. rnn for a touchdown f~r
the Dolphins (4-2), who led just 147 when a 49-yard pass from Kelly to
Andre Reed put the ball on the Miami two at the two-minute warning
for Jluffalo (4-2). ·
But Kelly was called for grounding on first down and his fourth·
down pass was picked off by Buckley and returned fo' the clinching

1

•

Scoreboard
Baseba ll

In part blcauH Woodaon ecored
on thle plly aeeondl later. (AP)

After fast start, Marshall holds on to notch 45-20 ·victory over VMI · ·

•

S111inaw Val. St. 20, lnd1ru~apolil 14
Simpson, lowo 40. W_,burg 27
Sioux Falls j4, Dakota Sl. 7
Southwestern, Kan . 29, Ollawa, Kurt.

the fourth quarter of Sunday'• AFC Cantntl bit·
tie In Plttlburgh, where the Stlllerl won 20-10

\

Dimitrious Stanley to beat Wisconsin 17-14, had only seven first-place
votes and 1,578 points this ~¥eek.
The third-ranked Seminoles beat
Miami 34-16 and received five firstplace votel and l,S75 points.
Last week, Ohio State moved into
No.2 with a 52-point lead over Florida State, which had been IICCOnd the
two previous -kl.
Tho Hurricane• (4-1 ), who had an
11-aamc winnina•lrllk brobn, fell
from No. 8toNo.l2. whlleLSU (41) dlopped five 1p011 to No. 17.
Arizona Sua (~) rallied from a
28-7 defic;il to beat UCLA42-34 and
remained
. at No. 4 with one first·

.

t•

·plai:e vote and 1,472 points. Nebras- Young, &lt;;alifornia and Virginia.
Kansas State. a 35-10 winner over
ka, a 49-0 winner over Baylor, was
No. S with 1,406 points as the top' Missouri, was 21st, · followed by
Georgia Tech, Wyomina. Utah and
five went unchanged.
Tennessee (4-1), a 29-17 winner Washington.
Utah (4·1), which did not play
over Ge01Jia, moved up to No. 6,
followed by Alabama, Notre Dame, Saturday, moved back into the Top
Colorado and ·Penn State. Notre 2S after a week's absence. Texas,
Dame (4-1) beat Washin11on 54-20 ran~ed 25th last week, dropped out
and moved up three spots from No. . after a 30-27 ovenime loss to previ·
II. The Huskies (3·2) fell nine ously winless Oklahoma.
With the losses by Miami and
places to No. 2S.
LSU,
eiahl unbeaten teams remain in
· Nonh Carolina (5-1), which beat
Maryland 38-7, moved up two places the Top 2S - Florida, Ohio State,
to No. II, followed by Miami, Florida State, Arizona State, AllbaMichlsan. Northwoslem, WOSI Vir· ma. West VirJlnia, smif0111ia and
ainia, Auburn, LS!J, Brigham Wyoming.

SIJNDAY·TIHJBSDAY
9 P.M. lJNfU.. CWSING

LARGE PEPPERONI.

$6''

.j
1

I

J

l

PLUS TAX

•

Offer Good At Pomeroy Location Only

DOMINO'S
111 WEST MAll

1'

l

l
J1

POMEROY

992·2124

1•
l

••
\

,.

�•

hue IS • The~ Sentinel

•

'

'

~y, OCtober 14, 1118

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Mlddltport, Ohio

Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Safety rules on meeting ·a man through the lriternet
Ann
Landers

By ANN LANDERS
~Ann Landen: I'm responding to the woman who said she was
raped and nearly sllangled by a man
she met on the Internet. I'm a 39year-old single woman who has
made many friends through the
Internet and personal ads, and I feel
qualified to address the question of
safety. I'd like to share my rules:
I. Always get both the work and
home phone _numbers of any man

I
I

you arc goins to meet. Do not agree
to see lflY man who will not give
you both. If you feel uneasy, call his
place of employment and verify that
he works there. Use extreme caution
meeting any man who says he works
for himself out of his home. It's
impossible to verify that what he is
telling you is true. Better safe than
sorry.
2. Meet in a busy public place,
and take your own·car. Do not go to
his home or invite him to yours until
you've had at least three dates and
you feel comfortable.
3. Don't meet any man who uses
even subtle sexual language over the
Internet or in a personal ad. (For
example, he might say he is "look·
ing for a sensual woman who is

comfortable wi!h her ~ody.")
Althouah he may not be danaerous,
he ai.JJiost certainly is a jerk looking
for something more than a caring,
respectable relationahip. Trust me, I
know what I'm talkina about. -Boston
Dear Boston: You have written a
lttlef that could be extremely valuable to women who arc desperate for
male _company. Thank You on be~f"f
of all of them.
Dear Ann landers: I'm nota doctor trying to drum up business. I
have nothing to gain from writing
this letter except lo ·share iny very
positive experience and encourage
other men to get with the program.
I used to have an impotency
problem and finally decided to see a

urologist. lt •took' me a long time
before I was willing to try injections,
but thank the good Lord, I did. The
thought of plunging a needle into
myself was scary, but the results are
so satisfying, I now look forward to
it with no fear or apprehension. That
one jab guarantees that I .will per·
form well sexually and there is no
awkwardness whatsoever because
. my_ wife i~ understanding and
pat1ent.
· ..
The doctor informed me of all the
potential dangers of injecting myself
in such a sensitive area, so there
· were no surprises. The occasional
bruising does not bother me at all. I
realize that not all me.n would want
to use this method and, of course,
there are other alternatives that

A'dd.some spice to your life
with the heat of Indian cuisine
By BARBARA ttOOVER
into India's famed curry·' dishes
The Dlttrolt Newe
(which, by the way, make up only
In India, the heat can be stagger- the tiniest segment of this vast cui·
ing, often matched by equally stag- sine).
gering hotl;l air-conditioning. It's
The term "curry,'" however, is
li~ being beamed Star Trek-style misunderstood, she says. Although
from a furnace into a deep-freeze.
you can buy ·:curry powder" at any'
On a visit there long ago, I was supermarket, curry is not a single
awaiting lunch in a hotel dining spice but the whole array just menroom, shivering inside my thin · tiohed. The mixture flavors the
cardigan. when a British tourist at · · sauce for meat or vegetables, she
the next table said, "Don't•worry, explains, and the resulting stewlike
as soon as they bring the curry, dish might also be called a curry. To
you'll be fine."
-add to the confusion, there is a
And I was. A few bites into the curry plant, whose leaves are used
mouth-.searing spicy stuff . and in some dishes of south India, but
sweat was rolling down my tern· not in.most curry combinations.
pies.
Incidentally, Indian cooks might
Which makes me wonder, buy ready-made garam mlsala,
recalling it, does that very same available at Indian and Middle
effect - iriggering the body's nat· Eastern groceries, but they would
ural cooling system~ help cool off never buy curry powder, preferring
t~ large numbers of Indians who
to mix their own more intense, cuslive without air-conditioning? . ' tom-blended spices, Ahluwalia
, , Maybe, says Ajinder Ahluwalia adds.
1 (pronounced ah-JIHN-der ah-looIf your food is too ·spicy,
WAH-Iee-ah), a IJit doubtfully.·But Ahluwalia recommends keeping
that's not why Indians are so fond some .hread at hand to munch on
of spices, says Ahluwalia, a.Dear· between forkfuls. It absorbs the
born, Mich., resident who learned pepper on your tongue - unlike a
to love them- and cook with thein drink of cold water, wl)ich, she
-as a child growing up in the Pun· says, "rolls right over it."
jab region of north India.
Indian spices do more than just
"It's the taste," says Ahluwalia, wake up your mouth, however; ·
who immigrated with her husband Ahluwalia says. They're 'consid·
nrath (pronounced TIH-rath), fust ered to have medicinal effects, par·
to Uganda, wbere his family was . ticularly as digestive aids (although
part of its sizable lndi"" communi- people who have tolichy stomachs
ty. and then to metio Detroit 28 may Scoff).
years ago.
Still, says Ahluwalia, if you
Indeed, Indian cuisine may well increase spices in your food ·gradube the most flavorful on Earth. In a . ally, you'll improve your general
land where spices have been major- 'health: "You will get less sick and
crops for centuries. the simplest make your stomach stro~ger."
dish is likely to be infused with five
Her interest in cooking flagged
or six of them. They're usually a as a teen-ager, but resurfaced when
basic mix called "garam masala," she married nrath and they moved
including, depending on the cook's l&lt;i Uganda.
preference, . cinnamon, cloves,
"Fields of mustard greens grow
black pepper, cumin, coriander, all over the Punjab, and my mothercardamom and nutmeg. They're in-law had brought seeds of musroasted in a frying pan, then ground tard greens with · her," says
together in varying proponions, Ahluwalia. "Things grow like
and added by the spoonful to most ciazy in Africa, and these did, too.
any dish, along with high-flavor When my. husband saw them, he
vegetables such as onions, garlic wantCII me to cook saag (a Punjabi
and tomatoes.
·
dish of mustard greens and cornThe mark of a skilled Indian bread). It takes talent - you have
cook is his or her ability to mix to cut the greens in strands and peel
those spices and flavors so that no them back a little bit, then chop
one of them overpowers another, them and saute them. Then you add
says Ahluwalia. All those ingredi· cornbread and mix it with a masher
ents a~d a few others - ginger, and add onion, ginger slices, garlic,
turmeric, hOt chili peppers - go turmeric, salt and a lot of butter. In

cians regardina the disposition or
dental gold in the deceased? It
-ms to me that gold is worth some
money.
I have often wondeted about this
and didn't have the nerve to.ask any- .
body. Please clear this up for me. ·Curious in Mississippi
Dear Mississippi: According to
the Funeral and Memorial Societies
of America, dental gold has very little commercial value. It would be
most unusual for a monician to
remove the gold from the mouth of
the deceased.
Send questions to Aan Landen,
Creators Syndicate, 5717 W. Cen. •
tury Blvd., Suit~ 700, I:.os Angel~,
Calif. !10045
•

SPICY SPICES. AJI'1der Ahluwalia a Dearborn, Mich., resident
learned to love the hotsplcea of Indian food- and cook with them
- as a child growing up In the Punjab region of north !fldia.
the back of my mind I remembered
how to do it.
"My husband raved about it,
and this got my interest back into
cookins.."
.
When they moved to metro
Detroit (Ajinder Ahluwalia had a
brother here) just ahead · of Idi
Amin's expulsion of Indians from
Uganda, she kept on cooking often revising U.S. dishes she had
at the homes of new· friends by

I ounce ginger root, minced
By BARBARA HOOVER
5 to 6 cloves of garlic, minced
The Detroit Newe
Recipes from India:
.
2 medium tomatoes, sliced
CHICKEN CURRY
I cup frozen peas .
. 3 pounds boneless chicken thighs, cubed
one-half cup cilantro, chopped
· 2 large onions, diced
one-founh cup vegetable oil ·
1 ounce fresh ginger toot, minced
OJIC·hai f teaspoon turmeric
6 to 8 cloves of garlic, minced
·one-half teaspoon paprika
2 medium tomatoes, chopped
I teaspoon salt
.
I tablespoon tomato paste
one-h'!lf teaspoon cayenne pepper (optional)
1 cup yogurt or sour cream
I teaspoon g~ram masala ·(availab,!. ar Indian
one-fourth cup vegetable oil
and Middle Eastem.stores) .
· ,
one-half cup cilantro. chopped
, . In a large saucepan, heat oil and sa11te onions
until light brown. Add 'ginger and garlic and cook 2
1 teaspoon salt
one-half teaspoon cayenne pepper (optional)
to 3 minutes.
· one-half teaspoon each turmeric and paprika
Reduce fire to low; add salt, spices and tomatoes
1 heaping teaspoon garam rnasala (See note)
and then cauliOower and potatoes. Mix thoroughly
In a la'rge saucepan,. heat oil and saute onions and cover.
untillight·brown. Add ginger and garlic and cook
Cook 15-20 minutes. stirring periodically, until
potatoes
are done. Add peas, stir, and cover for
for 2 to 3 minutes.
Add tomatoes, salt and all the spices and reduce another 4to 5 minllles: Add cilantro, stir1ll!d serve.
fire to medium high. Cook 2 'to 3 minutes.
·
Makes 6 servings.
Add chiclc.en and cook for IS minutes, stirring Nutritional analysis per serving: 245 calories; 9.6
grams fat (0.8 grams saturated fat; 3S percent calo·
·
periodically.
Add tomato paste and yogun Ql' sour cream, stir· ries frQm fat); 0 mg chl&gt;lesterol; 424 mg sodium;
36.3 g carbohydrates.
ring until thoroughly mixed.
.
BHINDI MASALA (Sauteed Okra)
Simmer about S minutes. Add cilantro, stir once
2 pounds okra, washed and completely dried, ends
and serve. Makes 6 servings.
•
··
Note: Garam masala is a mixture of cumin, corian- discarded, each piece cut in half
2 large onions, sliced
der. cinnamon and cloves, and is available at Indi2 large tomatoes, sliced
an and Middle Eastern stores.
one-half cup vegetable oil
Nutritional analysis per serving: S84 calories; '27
one-half cup cilantro
arams fat (87 grams saturated fat; S7 percent caloI teaspoon salt
ries froni fat); 16.1 mg cholesterol; S73 mg sodium;
I
teaspoon garam masala ·(available at Indian
15.0 J£amS carbohydrates.
,,
and
Middle
Eastern stores
ALU GOBI (CauQIIower llld PotaiDes)
one-fourth teaspoon turmeric
2 pounds fresh cauliflower, cut up.
one-half teaspoon cayenne pepper
2 .lqe potatoes, cur into I and one-half-inch
·2 tablespoons lemon juice
cubes
.
2 lqe onions, sliced

adding Indian flavors.
"I seldom had to ask for a
recipe; I could just tell what was in
there by tasting it," says Ahluwalia.
Meanwhile, her husband fin·
ished his degree in mechanical
engineering at Lawrence Tech, then
found an engineering job at Gener·
al Motors. She gave · binh to a
daughter, Rita, and later took a job
as a OM test driver.
But her husband had other ambi·
tions for her.
"We ate out a lot, and he kept
saying, 'Your food is better ' than
this ·- you should open a rcstau·
rant."'
And so she did. In 1982, in an
'unpretentious storefront a few
blocks behind Dearborn's City
Hall, she launched the Peacock
Tandoori· Restaurant, fitted with an
authentic tandoor - the supcrhot
Punjabi oven that turns out seared
and smoky m~ats and breads.

All Yard Salel MUll 8e Pllld In
Ad\l'an~e. Deadline: 1:oopm the
day before N ad ~ 10 run. ' un·

day &amp; Monday ac:lluon- 1:O(Ipm

FrldOy.

tft;,U !faalr

By ED PETERSON
Social Security manager,
Athens
The Personal Respon.sibility and
Work Opportunity Reconciliation
Act of 1996 w~s signed by the President on August 22, 1996. It changes
the Supplemental Security Income
(SSI) rules for children', noncitizens,
and others. A summary of the major
provisions follows.
SSI FOR CHILDREN
A ·new definition of disability
requires that, to qualify, children
must have mpre serious physical and
mental limitations than before.
Because of these changes, some
children may no longer be considered disabled. The law requires us to
review the cases of certain children
who are now eligible for SSI to see
if they are disabled under the new
definitioq.
Continuing disability reviews
will be conducted every three years
for children under age 18. These
revi~ws must also .be done no later
than 12 months after birth fc:ir i'nfants
"'hose eligibility was based on low
binh weight. When reCipients attain
age 18, Social Security will redeter·
mine .their eligibility usin~ the rules
for adults filing new claims.
.
In addition to the new definition
of disability, the reforms affect children who Jive in cenain institutions
where private health insurliJICC pays
for their care. The monthly 'payment
for these children will be reduced to
$30. Before, the $30 SSI payment
applied only to children in institu·
tions where Medicaid pays more

than half the cost of theit care.
·The new law requires that Social
Security notify all -people affected
by these changes. ·over 300,oop
notices to the representative payees
of disabled children will be mailed
in November and December.
SSI FOit NONCITIZENS
. The n.ew law changes the way we
pay SSI to noncitizens. Only those·
people in the -following categories
may receive SSI:
"·Refugees, people granted· asy- .
lum and· aliens whose deportation
has been withheld. Eligibility for
these nonCitizens is limited to five
years.
.
-Certain active duty military personnel and honorably disch·arged
veterans of the U.S. Armed Forces..
Sp&lt;iuses and unmarried dependent
children of military personnel or ·
veterans may also qualify.
- Noncitizens who have been
lawfully admitted for permanent residence and have a total of 40 Social ·
Security work credits. ·
During February and .March
1997, mailings of over 1.000.000
notices will be sent to recipients
affected by these changes.
OTHER CHANGES
The new law ·provides for, payments of up to $400 to some correctional institutions that give information leading to timely suspension Of
SS! payments. It also denies eligibility for people who arc fleeing prosecution, fugitive felons •. and those
violating a condition of probation or
parole.

Hannah Elizabeth Foreman celebr.. ' ' her fifth birthday on Saturday,
A. 31, with an outdoor party at her
home. The theme was "Cinderella."
Helping her celebrate were her
parents, David and Beth Foreman;
brother Benjamin; grandparents,
Dean and Ramona Knight, Joe and
Evelyn Iforeman.
Others attending were Jim, Pam,
Amanda and Erin Foreman, Joyce,
Todd, and Morgan Groves, Kim,
Danny, Danyal and Caleb Litchfield,
Mike Neal, Kevin, Joni, Whitney and
Caitlyn Knight, Richard, Anna and
Desiree Sines, Mary, Leslie, and
Tyler Kitchen, Ruth Ann and Lauren
Porter, Rex, Venis and Lyndsey
Roush, Brad, ·cynthia, Jordan and
. Olivia Smith, Tara Thotnpson, Jim,
Shirley and Carrie Lockhart.
were her oreJal-~unL

AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies •lnduslflal a- • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; FabricatiOn • Repatr Welding
• Alumlnum!Stainlees • Tool nr.stng • Ornamental
Stepe • Stairs, Railings, Paflo FumHure, Fireplace
Items, Planter Hangeis, Trellises &amp; lots of other stullll
'l

iii

~

"No Job Too

urge or Too Sm11/l"

We will work within your budget.
Ph. 773-9173
FAX mt-5881
101
S1raot
wv

I

1

111
IIIIPUCI.IT WIIDOW
liCHIOLotY
"HEAT MIRROR• pate.tlllsystllll.

8t. Rt. 7

1\lppera Pllllne, Ohio 45783
614-985 3813 or 814-667-6484
Plaetic Culven • Dual wan and Regular If' lhru 38"
4' S&amp;O ·pelf. • solid pipe
4' &amp; 6' Flex pipe
4• &amp; 6' Sch 35 ~
'II &amp; 'f,'C.RV.C. pipe
1'1.' thru 4" Sch 40 pipe •
W &amp; 1' 200 p.o.l. water pipe (100' rolls thru 1,000' rolls}
'1." U.L approved Condun
Er Graveless Leach pipe .
Gas pipe t• lhru 2' ·fittings· Regulators· Rls•ls
Full uaonment of P.V.C. &amp; Aax fillings &amp; Water llttlngo
Full Hne of Cistern, Septic &amp; water storage tanks

Highest "R Value"
... ,.. _ f'atlng Blocks 99.5%
of UV Rays
Offered Exluslvely
by

QUALITY
WINDOW

'

JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE .
992·7119

.FALL CLL\N·VP
Aeration lepalr or leplace•enl ·

· 10% Dlscn•t for Sept~ &amp; Oct.
EwMI.. and WHkt•d NO X•Ch.a rtt
1114/2-.
' .
·-- . --- ..

H&amp;H

,.,,
....
........w

SAWMILL

1
~

111111

32124 Happy.Hollow Rd.
Mlddtepott, Ohio 4ti780

Dlnnr 6 Paggr Brlc:ldoa
614-742·21f3
1111~1

mo.

liNDA'S
PAINTING
4!
r

lmiiOI·ImRIOI

,.1, ..,
.... ,...
VIIY IIASONAILI ·

FREU!STIMATES
leke ..a
of
. . . .tl... l.tllltlolt

Nlft IIFIIINCIS
114-91HIIO

4131/1 mo. pd.

BING'S
AUTO
REPAIR

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE
•Hardy Mums
•Fall Pansys
•Fancy' Qourds
•Dwa~ &amp; Large
Pumpkins
•Winter Squash
· •Hanging Baskets
· Opan llondar-s.turday
· H; Cloaad Sunday
9/1:!/1 ""·

GRAND OPENING
HIDDEN
TREASURES
749 S. Third Ave.,
MiddlepOrt
Coramlca, Woodc:nrfla,
Homomade Dolt• &amp;

!laelcela.

Aleo Chlldran'l\
. · ·Playroom
Monday 1oaliM! pm
Tuoa.·Thur. 2 pm·7 pm
Frt.day 2 pm-41 pm

J&amp;LSIDING &amp;
INSULATION
537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT

31801 Amberger Rd.
011 Forest Run

949·2057

MIKE BING
Enlllt I WI Lnrf .....
mo. pd..

8112-2772
1:00 o.m.-3:30 p.m.

=tWIRtlows
' Gcnps
eStnhors&amp;

ww.ws

'
eR... AMtlolls

REPLACEMENT

IVYDALE COUNTRY CUFTS &amp; GIFTS
614-446-4530

Call ~ Oemonetratlon er Free Estimate
814-992-4119
1·81J0.291-5800
110 Court ~t
Pomeroy, Ohio

LOCAL CRAFTERS feaiUrlng can, saw, slate
paintings, oak shelves; quill racks;
goose outfits; fall decorations.
WATKINS PRODUCTS featuring grapa seed oil
(lower In saturated fat than olive oU)
TUPPERWARE - Some cash and carry.
Placa orders/book parties/gilts/fund raisers
Mon. thru Sat. 10.6, Sunday 1-5
2 miles North Sliver Bridge on SA 7

THE INTERNET.

• Public Notice

Notice of Elactlon on Till
Levy
In Exceaa of the Ton
1

HANNAH FOREMAN

NOncE OF SALE
Br virtue of an Order of
1
MIM Llmltdon
laeuad out ol !he
' . RIYIMd Code, -ona. Sola
Probate
Court of lie ga
r3501.11(0), 57015.19, S1oe.2s Coun!J, Ohio,
In the ceea Of
' NOTICE ·Ia hereby given Connie Barthelm11,
~ thll In purauence of 1 Plllnllff, va. Richard I!YNII,
• Ruolutlon of the Board of 11 11., Oelendanta, upon a
' Townahlp Truateoe of the Judgment lharln rendarad,
Townehlp of Salem, Salem being Ceaa No. 2923&amp; ·tn
Center, Ohio, pee- on the aold Coun, I will offar lor
28th day of Moly, 1-. lhan
at the front of the
,will ba oubmlltld to 1 vota 111e
Courthouae In Pomeroy,
of lhe peoplo of aald Melgo Countr, Ohio, on the
eubdlvlalon 11 a
tat day of November, 19116,
Elocdon to be held In the al tO:OO a.m., the loll-Ing
·T -nahlp of,SOlem, Ohio, at Iandi and tenemente,
;the rwguter-1&gt;1•- of voting located at 32758 Hippy
•lfiaraln, on tha 5th daY of Hollow Ro•d, Middleport,
118&amp; the Ohio. A compl•te legol
quMtlon of levying 1 tor, In daacrlptlon of the raal
axcaaa of the ten mill -leaelollowa:
' lim~, for tha baneftl of
Situated In . Rutlond
Sillem Townahlp lor tho Townahlp, Mllga Countr,
purpoea of flra protection. Ohio: Being In Section No.
Solcl1u baing In lddlllonll il, Town Nci. 8, and Ronge
tlx of 1 mill 11 • r111 not ·No. 14 of the Ohio .
ax-Ing 1.0 mllto for uch Compt~ny'e Purchaee, and
ono 'dOIIIr of VIIUitlpn, In the northaul qu1ner of
whleh IIIIOUntltO ten centl &amp;action 8; Baglnnlng 11 •
(10.10) for eoch . one pin In the Hoppy Hollow
hundred dollota . of Rood at tha northeaet
valuation, lOt live (5) yeara. comer
Haler'•
Thl ·Polla for laid llv.... reoflot;Worley
thence
Election will open at 8:30 12-112 dag. eaot 152.5aoulh
feat
o'clock o.m. and remain olong -lhe canter, ol road;
opan until 7:30 o'clock p.m.
thlnCI lOUth 75 deg. WHI
ofaaldday;
84.5
feet; thanco north 87·
.ar-otlh!l-ot 314 cltig.
Will 114.5 fHI;
• Eiactllone, of MeliiO COUnty, thane• north
deg.
Ohio. _, 185 feat to 82·112
the
ptoce
or
Hlllr, L. Hunter, Chelrman, baglnnlr\g, oontllnlng 0.15
Rl1a 0. Smltlt,DI- aci'll.
DIIted
11,1988

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE
Industrial • Automotive
New Radiators • Re·Cores
AJC Condensers/Hose Assembly&amp;

•Room Addltlono
•Now Garollft
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Rooftng
•Interior &amp; ExtartOr ..
Pltlndng
• . AIIO Concreto Work
(FREE ESTIMATES) .
V.C. YOUNG Ill
eH-41215
Pome~oy, Ohio

,,...,

LUCKY J. TOWING
&amp;GAUGE

.:Nov...-,

~
--

- THING

FOR YOU
• TO .
JuGGLE
You've got a lot on your mind. You're building
your world and your ins&lt;Jrance. needs are
ritt)l. But you don't need to add this worry
to your list ....

;.;;;:;.;;;;.;;;.;;.:;;;;,.;...______....11

Talk to your independent agent. Insist on long·
term axparience, community presence, and
someone' who is with you both befora and
after things happen . Juat do this one t111ng.- .
~ l•ava tlte juggling Kt to us.

r,

thtm.

Dow

y.,.,. ,,.,.,..,., .4pnU
Melfi C....., Sine. JB68
11 a'fs ••,.......111111et

MlllleH.,atf.-ntKes,
Air ClntlitiNers and
Adl 01 Httt P11111ps.

Pick up dlacarded
IPPllancot, botlarltt,
manymolltlo&amp;
motor blockl.
614-9112-4025 8 am-11

lEAl PUMPs ·

CONSTRUCTION

lnltlllod with loW

oftealdanUal Remodeling
•Ackllllona
•New Conatructlon

u11,_,..2perate~

OVM' and acrou the abov•

praatndy empllcad.
Rafo111nca Deed: Volume
3011, Page 63, Molga County
Daact Reeorda.
..
Audltor'a Parcel No.: t1·

00998.000.

Public Notice

Public Notice
.•

1111111

·tfrt Tr;'C::i:,tuua1~ Group
wuCone Ja

WHERE &amp;XTIIA EF .FORT IS OUR POLICY
'

-

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PEA DAY.

Pe&gt;inl Pleasant, WV. Auelion every Mondar ~ghl. e:oo P.M. New &amp;
Usad Mdse. Consignments Wol -

come. Auclloneeu : Col. John
MCCOIII,jm· 11185t &amp; Cot. Jclrl
Barnette #1008. Frea Marke t sec ·
ond week-end of evary momh. Ra·
served Spacos must be paid onn
week tn Advance. 304· 458· 1675
or 304-675-'5287,

Ri ck Pearson Auct1on Com
lull time auct roneer. camp
auction
serv1&lt;:t .
Ucen
"66,0hio &amp; West Vlrgi ma.
773·5185 Or 304· n3·5447.

Public Notice

and/or verified complelnte
were received and the Agency, P.O. 80 1'

valuallon, which 1mounW to

twonty centa ($0.20) for
uch one hundred dollara of
votuallon, lor five (5) reoro.
Tha Polio lor ..ld
Election will open at 8:30

following draft, propoaad,
or flnollellona- laaued,
by the Ohio Envlronmenlll
Protection Agency (OEPA)

laet

o'clock 1.m. and · remain

week.

1049 '

Columbua, Ohio 43216-t049
(Telephone: 614-644-2129).
"Final Actlono" ore actions
of the Director which ore

\ Absolute Top Oollar:,,'lll U.S. Sr!·
ve-r And Gold Coina, Prooh'f ts ,
Diamonds, Anllque .1eWolry, Guld
Rings , Pre -1930 U.S. Cumu\cy,
Srerting, Etc. Acqu isltJons Jertl•r
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec nd
Avenue. Ganifl:Otil, 614-446-284 .

Clean la!e Model Cars lOr
Trucks 1990 Models Or N eWer.
Smith Sulek Pontiao, 1900 E1 st·
ern Avenue. Gallipolis.
~

J &amp; D's Auto Parts . Buying al·
vage vehicles. Selling pans.
773-5033.

for t911&amp;. ,
Rlta'D. Smith, 01Raal Eatata end Moblla
Dotad Sept. 18,1896
Home Appralaed At: (10) 7,14, 2t, 21 4TC
$2,500.00. The real aoteta
Public Notlconnot IMI the·ro..ar;'";;~",j,""'~';~n~~-:-:======-==two·thlnt.
volua.
NO'nCE TO T/I.XI'A'fERS
Torma of aole: Caah on Rellranco: 5715.17 ohio
delivery o f -·
Rev- Code
connie lllrthetmea, Thalrlelga County Boo;d
Admlnletntrlx of 1fi!t Ea- of Aevlaton hoa compl- ·
of Ida Smadlay Ita work of equollzatlon. '·
The llx 111turna lor te• year
(10) 7 14, 21 3tc
'
'
1896 h.,. -111\'laad and :
I the valuallona oomptelad
Public NotiCL· . , · ond ore opa_n_Jor public
lnapectlon In the olfloo of
the Malge County Auditor,
Notice of Election on Till
Second Floor, Courthouaa,
L.avy ln.Ex- of .the T1n
Socond Str11t, Pomeror.
Mill Llmltltlon
Ohlo45m.
Ravllld Code, Sactlona
Complolnta ogolnet lha
3101.11(0), 5705.19, ' .705.25
valuotlona, 11 •lllbtlehad
NOTICE Ia hareby
1896, muet ba
' In
wlui i
of
Ohio

111uance,
denial,
modification or ravocatiOf' ,Environmental Board oA
~ ._
Aewlew (EBR) by a par10,.
of IIcen..., perm.a.,
..., h
IO I
V.rl.nc••• Dr C.rtlflc.l.. •, W 0 Wll I bparty
he
and , the opproval · or procee dl ng ef ore t

dlaapprovol of plana and
"Draft
.p.clrlc•tlona ·
•ct•-·a"
era wrllt•n
"" _,
·
·
atetemanlat. of- th8' dlrlotof
of
Envlronmenlll

aolcl

-----.....o'---·

~_.,

,

(OI

Junk Cars &amp; Truck' Various
nning Vehicles &amp; Car Parts, 6 4·

446-4539.

coins, watches, .estates, old &amp;I ne
jars, old blue &amp; white dishes, .old
wood boxes, mrlk bottles, Md! gs
Count~ Advert isement, 0 by
"Martin, 614·992· 7441

WMted To Buy Used Mo rle'
Homes. Call : 614·446 ·017 SoiOr
304 ·875·5965.
•
'
Wanted To Buy : Junk Auto a
Or Without M6tor s. Call l
livety.-614·388-9303.

I

1

•

•

••

To

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
'

110

Help Want~d.

'ATTN : Point Pleasant' Po tal
Positions. Permanent full time for
clerktsorters . Full Benefils . or
&amp;Kam, application and salary · to
call : (708)906 · 2350E~t.36 o .
Bam-Bpm . .

.AVON:

I All Areas I Shir ey
Spears, 304·675·1429.

Able Avon Aepri;-sentalr as
needed. Earn .mone'y lor Chr SI mas bills at Mmelat work.' ! · O·
992 ·6356 or 304· 882· 2645, I d.

Rep.

I

Accepling ' Applications throJgh
Oct tSih lor regrstered lpng ttirm
care nursing ass is tant training
class . J.tarjorio Elliott, AN,
inwuctor. Point Pleasant Nur ng
&amp; Rehabilitation Cen!er, Stale o·
utlj! 62, Route 1, Bolt 326, P iru
Pleasant, WV 25550 . "
mark· Mu lticare Company. E E.
30.11 ·675-:nlS.

Clss

G1n.

Alaska Jobs l Earn .\;JQ lfo
$30,000 In Thiee MonthS Fis~~•g
Salmon. Construclion , Canner s,
Ott Fields, Moret 7 Days. 407·8 5·

2022 E~t 0526A42.

1

AVON Chrrstmas · S~' · $15 tt-tr.

No Door To Door, No Min. Orqer, "
1·800·827-4640 lndlsltlrep.
l
Band Seelcing Bass Player Only
Serious Inquire. 614-367·78tl0 1

614·4116 ·2659.

.

Bookkeeper

.

2 Year 0~ Female Airedele,.61&lt;·
388-0.029.
2. 75 Gallon Fuel bii Tank. 614·

3· MonU1 old black lab, good with
children, to
4650.

good home. 304-675·

Fre8 Fifewood, ,You t;u1 , Easy
Access, All Kindsi6U-446.g346
Pr8 '70 VW BeeUe set ol seats :
misc . inuuior Dody parts, 6'14·

Age~t Ou1sr~e· Jtt •·

C. ommissron
son Grow1ng Prrnter Heilllh. Se ellis French C 11y Press 423 S c·
end Aven ue, Gallipoh, , OH

•5631 .

~

c

,

omputer User? Needed1 Wtrk
own hours. $20k to $50klyr H~IO·
348·7186 "508.
.
.

I

Drivers ~
Northwest Ohio

Based Truc~ l

i

ad

Carrjer look ing For E-per 1&amp;n 8d
1
Professionals. We Provide:
_/
·Starling Pay 28 . 5~ 1Mile. :so1o

l

992·2958.
.31&lt; /Mile T,.m
'
Director by filing an appeal
• Annual R~se• ..
within 30.;.dlya of n6Uce of
Pretty. Cal~ ca,, smo.s. old, 1e• Paid Vacation
.
~- llnellellon. Purouant to· mala. ~ wlehfldiiHI.
,..,..,
.,.........
• 401 (KJ Wirh Emp~a- Maret\ ... 1 '" -·
/'hi.Cl Re,vlaed Code seotion 2 Yellow ca1s. amos. old, 1 mate, t
• 2500 .-XKIO Miles p;; W&amp;ek
1
}•~
1cr ....niPI:t-' honiif:: 30~6&gt;f.S:r
374&amp;.07, a final . action tlfmtl•;
•·
·
s:chetftlfOdHome·
n
,..,.
,
.
4650
·Regional Posi1ions li'Y'ou Lf ve

lniNearOhio ,

,

'

,COL-A With Halmat And 1 Ytar

EkperlenceR&amp;q~.~lred.

Chllltn"
••'
Opon 7 Days.
E

1

•

J

aoo · 777•O!llt5
T

octlon, mli• ba lp-•led 10 9432 .
·. ~
rth. EBR by' filing ·an
appell FOUND: neer ~.ombleson-A un on
arn $1 ,ooo Weeki~ StuHing n·
llhln 30 o~-a of laauanco A12, INMI~m size ~ad&lt; ~ . 304· Evelopes1 AI Home. s larl
w
· Now. ~~o
of h fl ,..,
1
11
EBR 895 39 00
.... . . ,
11per ence. Free . upplies, •In o
I e no •c on.
·:_-----.,.- 1 No Obi'1ganon.
· Sen d LSASE 0 :
ittl' ==·::.::=
lppMII muet be flied w '1 Lost: Blacli.Leamer wallet At Rio ACE, Dept 1351 , Box 5137, Ola·
Environmental Boord 0 . Grande M-Oonaldo Rewa rd If .fr&lt;)nd Bar, CA 91765.
Review,

236

Eat

Town

..

·

notloe of the dreft action. Street,
Room
300, Retumed, 614·446 -1849.
"Propoaed Actlona" 1 ' 1 Columbua, O.blo 43215. A ' Loat: Eyeglasseg, Vl'cinity: GaUls
written ltltementa of thl . copy of the·{ppeal muat be Academy, Fourlh Avenue, Small

-Earn 1000's weekly

Director'•

supplies Info, no Obliga110r1. s d

Intent

with

ltrved on the Director . Aewardlt!i14-386-8U4.

stutring l at home. Be your bo s.
Start now. No e.~perience. Fr e
velopes

raopect to th• leauonce, within 3 !lor• - r tiling 11,. .
S.A.S.E. 1o Nuggeo Unio364 •
·_ denlll,
modification, a-t with tha EBR.
Lost Medium Red Dog Chow Uix, · 10 · 51'Universily Blvd . Orlan o
0C11tfon
,_..,., of 1 ""~"'Black Spoued Tongue, Very
Fl. 32817
.
rev
• or
Receipt Of Raglotronlon Frlendlr. Cheshire. Area, Jessie
. parmlttlt,nl-.oomm"'en-'"talnoend" . Appllc.tlon For Scrap Tire . Creek Road , Reward I 614- 387· Easy Work ! Excellen~ Pay I ' .
Wrltte
.•
Cllll 11 Aecowary FICHity
7069.
semble Products at Horn•, C 11
roqueota for a public Nollonel Tlra Reeycllnn
Toll Free 1· 800 ·4ti7-5566 E .

notloe of the propooed
. oollon. An od)udiOitlon
hearing IIIIJ ba !leld on 1
....
* lllf aII d IOIIon •• '-'111
requoot or olt)eotlon le
.'raoolved br 1he OIPA
wltllln ao ... ol - of tho propooed ootlotl.
'WIll
m 111,
i f t OOIIINi
I qu
•for pullllo ........... and
lleor1n9.
13, 14, tl, :ecljudlutlon
1ra qunla 1111111 IMI .W ID
~

ith
ry

Wanted
Buy : L1tde Tykes
t·
door Pl8y House, 614·245·5887.

good home. 30-4-675-1509,

denying, · : ::;:::;_
· ------1 . , ) leauing·, .
modifying, revoking, or 60 Lost and Found
renewing 1 permit, IICenae,
I
hi h I
I Found: K•"s. Vi&lt;.init&gt;~ : Second
or
var an~• w 0 1 no
"'
'
preceded _by. a proposed Avenue, Call To ldenlily 614·448·

Pro.... uona
rae or •
Intent wlthdarea pe ~to t he
1 1 wd:. 0 1 •
-lnuanr:e, n.
..Ormtt,
llcenae,,
order, etc.
r"'
.tntereotld poraona may
•aubmlt wrta.n commentl or
-tlnn•
r.qu••t I PubliC ,_
draft
actlona.
r. "lrdlng
•
. Com manta or public
· meeting requwta muet be
.ubm- Within 30 da- of

4-

Nonproli1 Organ•zo!lon. Look. g
For Bookkeeper W1th Two YfJlrs
Act ua l b:penence. Wo rk 19
Knowledge Of AtH , AlP, Gen at
'Check Slation. CAAWEOAQ' S Hen.
· Ledger, Payroll, Ta~es, L6 [u~ ~2·
defson WI/. ·
3 And Wrndows . Sen d Resu e
By OCIQber. 23. 1996 .. To : I:AC S,
40
Glveawa~
1770 Jackson Prke, Brdwell, ~
2 Mini lop Rabbits, ~ack!Whhe. to 45614E0E _MtFt H.

''Actlona'' effective·upon leeuance or a ' 24 5-SS36.

effocttva. date.
lnc.lude the odoptlon, stated
Pu1'1uant to Ohio R.VIaad
modtflcatlon, or revoc. .on Code Section 3745,04, a
of ordan (otdherl thehn final action may be
emergency or era ; I a appealed· 10
th'i ·

Henry L Hunter, Chalrrn11n,

l

Wimted lo Buy

90

ny, 1
te
ed
4·

peroni, jerky, summer sausage .
Cooler kept, clean, s·anllar)'. HuntIn ~ supplies , license &amp; game

PUBLIC NOTICE
Hearing Clerk, Ohio
Tl1a fllllowlng appiiCIIIona Environmental Protection

Property Addreaa: 327&amp;9 open until 7:30 o'clock p.m.
HIPPJ Hollow· Road, ofaald daJ.
Middleport, OH 45760.
By ordar of the Board ol
Sold reo I eatoto and Elactlona, of Mllga Coun!J,
mobile homo are eubJec! to
· Ohio.

accrued reel eatate taxe1

. AUCTION HOUSE, Route 2
Northl Jericho Road fnter!leCttOn,

We process deer, make hickory
SrT)Oked hems, trail bologna , pep-

daacrlbld pram!•••· Bald ox~actlng 2 (two) milia lor
pip•· line to be located each one dollor of

ecrou the premlaH ae It Is

We can helpi.Piean Cill! Janna
&amp; Slav&amp;. 1-800-845-5715.

cle Dan.

,., .......

.

Loving, chlldiesS couple long to

adopl Infant lel)altConfiden!ial.

1:-45pm, WXIC . 660 . AM wilh
' Evangelist John Elswick and Un·

ROOF SPECIAL

,

Compnlfonll• Adoption

FM 93 .1 . Mondavs- 1:30pm ·

614-9112-19t0
"ASK ABOUT OUR

repair 1nd

Personals

Usten to -rne Gospel Broadcast·
Sundays- 8:30am-9:00am, WFY Z,

ofreaEotlmatea
•All Work Guoronteed

INIIntoln • pipe line for the
tranomlaalon of noturol gaa

WICKS
·HAULING

30 Announcements

-over 10 Yra. Experience

Former gr~nton reaarve
for thom.oelvea end thalr
end aaalgna lila right
1nd 111en\ent to lay, relay,

(Ume StoneLow Rates)

005

-Low Retee

Public Notice

111111 "mo. pd.

IIUYERII ·
'LARGE tNVI!NTOIIV FOA
IIIII~TE INSTALLATIONS.

COLLINS

'

ANNOUNCE MENTS

ov...bfolo QUALIFIED

on

18+ Serv·U
. (619)645-8434

~.99/Min.

614-992-3470

'ON THE SPOT FINANCINO

6'14-949-3117

1·900·656·5050
Ext. 3998

. Llmf1!stone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, FIJI Dirt

·meatl.ng . regarding a .
·
,•
·propoeed IOtfon may be Center, 38845 Pagewllle Rd,
. aubm~
~~ 30 ......
. of p - -.....,,. ott •
.
nwv WJUtltl
~J'•

,._o,

111111indlt.

\!;' f/1 .. t

TODAY

(No Sunday Calls) .

s-m.

MOUTHWATERING • Indian
culalnt may wall be the moet
flavorful on Earth. In e lttnd
·whtre eplcM hava bMn major
craps for centurlte, the elml. .t dlah Ia llk•ly to be
nfUHd with flva or elx of

742·3212

St. Rt 124,
R,clno, Ohio
Minor Repalre
24Hr.
Towklng/Rollback
Service
AAA &amp; All State
Motor Club

Public sate
and Auction

80

Top 'd.ollar· antiqueS. turni! r e,

Stick/MIG Alumln.urri Welding

614-992·7643 .

4 Famil~ Garage Sale, Tu (l:i·
Wed~ Thurs Oc to ber 15 - 1B : 7
1304 Meadowbrook Dr. 9-?
•

glass. chrna, clocks. gold,, sil e r.

MEET NEW
PEOPUTHE
FUN WAY

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
floom Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and .RESIDENTIAL
,.FREE ESTIMATES

&amp; VICinity

Painting
5/lll/lfn

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC •

Pt. Pltasant

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

YOUNG'S ·
CARPENTER SERVICE

...

•NawHomes
.•Garagas
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compar~
FREE
ESTIMATEES

Gutters
Downspouts
Guttar Cleaning

Unlimited Acceu- No Set·U Fte

OWner:
Ronnie Jo~rea.."'

UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT
PUBLIC WELCOME .

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

$19.95 /Month

Top, Trim,
Removal.&amp;
Stump Grinding ,

J=tacJne
American
Leglori Post 602
Doors Open
4:30p.m.
·Bingo 6:30
Every Sunday

Body work, car, truck
&amp; truck painting,
minor mechanical
repair.
Tune-up&amp;, 011 Change,
Wax, Buffing
Long St, Rutland, Oh.
742·2935, Aak for

Howard L. Wrlttael

New World Net -It's Waiting
1-888-goNWNET

JONES'
TREE
SERVICE
20 Yeara Esperience •

BINGO

GIUESEI'S
.GAUGE

985-4473

t/1111 mo.Od.

Public Notice ·.

~~4~
. -#·~~~\

ONE .
LESS

I&amp;W PUSTICS AND SUPPlY

Autho~zed

Welfare reform: New
law changes SSI rules

Fifth oi rthday
celebrated

Recipes from India

•

would be worth exploring.
For most men, admitting they
have a problem is the first step.
Being willing to talk with someone
knowledgeable can set us on a new
and wonderful path. I am 60 years
old and feel like 40. I am delighted
that I can be a satis{ying, lover and
grateful for all the help I've had in
keeping romance alive. •• Firmly
Convinced in Denver
. Dear Denver: Your upbeat letter
is sure to encourage other males
who have impotency problems to
get professional help. Thanks on
behalf of all the men you've made
happier .. and women, too.
. Dear. Ann Landers: Will you
please determine for your readers
the general policy used by moni-

~.

Mlcldleplll't
4VIclntty

....

Loat

reddish brown Chihuahua,
PomeroytMason briOge vicin ity,
an1we" 10 MCash·. 614 -9023898

_AppllcetlonNo(e)08 11113 R · ·
llcrap T1ra Cllull R-veoy 70 · .
Yard Sale
Foclllty
"-lpt or A=trlllon
GallipoliS
Appllolllon For
TIN
c..-. lltuoge FICIIIty
&amp; VIcinity
The Junlt T1ra Co., 41tl8
Hille lid, Po-.,. OH, All Yo!d Solos Uusr Be Paid In
a II .
No(
R Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
nJP
1 n
1)01 Ill 3
thlldly before the ad la to run.
·
C.... II ltoraga SUndly tdftiOri • 2:00 p.m. Friday.
·.
Monday tclillo.n . ro:oo a.m. Sol·
(10) 1
m_
urday.
.

e/Tira

12110.
, ·
Full Time Pus:itions Avaflabit

r
New Store Soon To Re-Open n

The Lo&lt;al Aroe. Call eut.eo .
0.060, Monctar Forlnlori\VII~rt

.Growing
&lt;ompany a&lt;tepUng • .
plicltions lor Data Entry Gent 1
Clericol. Good mental,and ,,. 1
tonttnllolion. Aocuracy, abll
10 .work fndopondonlly, and cltti
'" bo • toom ployor.
Mgoll\d bonofilt SoAd Retu
10 Box cw- 12 CIQ Point~1
R
n ..
an1~•; 5~~- Main St P1. f'lus·

c_,.,.

1.::::.:.:.:..::::::~----

'

•

�•.

\

..

•

..

~ Monc~ey; October 14,1998

.

.
OOP
. .

•
'

'

.

PoiMrOy • M~ Ohio

•

-·

A......_ :;.,-.........,. .•.
,. ·.«&lt;IIIi,.....,... ··
. =-· .,' .

PHILLIP

. ,.,_.-~

.=

. 1

··----"BL-40 ............
parlird 41 . ."'':' •
u:.,
. ..__
44 ....... ., ...

ALPER

12tl..

..
liHHI

· • KQ
•QJ06543

___.,_

-

Oullflt"tdlng opportunit)' ror a
highly motlvaled indi't11dual to
ttrvt h Alllttant Director of
~u,.lng. The quallritd candidate
Will joWl 1 pt&lt;&gt;g&lt;Hai'le health care
team prOvidinG services lr\ the
gerillric, hiSJh .cuity IMI and
ftabihtalion arti.a of hNith cara.
Two or mote years of nursing tM·

dllel''

aea-

necat~ary.

, Her'!d.,son
REGISTERED
tar lo-'-Home
10 houri of visits; ph•• ;,.elientj
on-call . Minimum
health e»tperience
havt current Ohio License, CPR,
TS. and phytic:al, vahd 0~ dri'tters hcenu. and proof of insurance. Background investiga·
lion requi(ed. May become full ·
lime In near future. Send reaume
and cover lenar to ~ind box The
Daily Sentinel, P.O. Box 729-33,
Po-. oh. •5769.

e A 10 5 S

• A K 7 2
• 54

• 9I

New UdO OniJ make 2 payments &amp; move-in, na paymen1 af·
l8r • yeatl, free HI•UP &amp; delivery.
300-755-5885.

eKIO. ~S

Our- arohofoby

~-lhal all dwoliklgl

N'EWI Bank Repo't, only 3 let;
a1ill under warrartly, free delivery
&amp; set-up. 304·755-7191.

-ln11111-r
.,. •vatlable on an equal '
_,.nry balll.

pied, 2 bedroom, e•cellent lor
young or retired couple, JM~ ited on

Welt Nortlr
Pass 1•
Pass 2•

I CAN HIAR
OL' BULLET

Pass

RIGHT NOW,
BEANIE!!

UnbeHevable, New 14X70, no
payments afltt 4 yeart, only
makeo 2 payments to mcwe in, frH
delivery &amp; set-up. 1-800-25t5010. I

1984 Buick Re'Q&amp;I •Runs Good,
11;500. 61•·•48-1859
.
t990Toyola EJCt&amp;nd~d Cab 4a4:
Cheven8, 57,000 Ullea, 814 ' 2M.·I3B5. '
'
••,
GoDd Condition, t1,495, t'992 Dodge Grand Catavan LE,
1988 Dodge. 800. 1750 E cttl
c d' · c 11 •t 7
Good Condition. 614·388· P.~.tl1~~~~:m:~"· , • .,r

330 Farms for Sale

!''

1

198&amp; Cullaas Supreme Sharp
89,000 Milos, $3.000. &amp;1•·378·

2820.

;IIQ2ii;
-580;;1;;.;;-L;;;;A;,;;;;:-Q.;;;;;;
Buildings
3 BeCoomt, living Room. Dining
Room. 2t.l Bo_,.,L Ftonl Pbt&lt;h, By Owner : Duple• Apartm&amp;nl
Central Air, 32.1 Ac:rH: 8 1,.·256· Building, Total Eletlric"'2 House
Trallefl On AdJacent Lol, Good
:lMI:.1~8::.·- - - - - - - - Income Property, 4 Rentals ToUII.
614·446·8155,

1988 Pontiac GrAnd Am SE, PS,
PB, wlnct:nn, lockt, air, lilt. amltm
alareo, ai'larp, S4200 ; 814-9926510.

Hl89 Mercur~ Topaz G$, 100K
m11es. aJC . amlfm casseue. rear
bumper damage, 1,000, 8' 4-

s

949·2311 dB)'&amp;, 814 ·949·2844
evenings.
1990 Doell!" poratlln Good Con·
ditiOn, V-6, High Milts, 41,400,
IJ1•·44G-ee38.

-PEANUTS

Yah~ma

nil 5 IS Ml( !!READ

SUPPOSED TO EAT
THE SAME TASLE
IAIITII A D06 7

WIIAT'SIIE

1885 Chovy S·10. 5apd, air, am·
fm ciuene. LS pack~~g~, call allor •:OOpm. 300-1175-1518.

DOIN.6 IN
HERE?

PLATE ..'(OIIIt BREAD
PLATE IS THE

OHE ON THE LEFT ..

•h4 4·.,eel drive, Big

Bear 350 electric sl8rt, reYerse,
new t~res, new rront &amp; beadngs.
eKC C:Oncl. S3,80Q. 304·895·387.4.

740

Motorcycles

1989 ~ondo CR 25. S1,6oo. 30• ·

882·3399.

1994 GR125 'Honda. e•c . conc::r.,
ntvtr faced. 12,300. 304-713-

5998.

'

lencter ~ Fairing damage, Hrsl

well equipped,
Boughl !arlit&lt;
boat,
8;1~4-;3~711-~298~~7·~~~~~~~ Eagle
tra11er, e•cenent
condit1on.
t950d, 814·592·2761.
'

760 Auto Parts &amp;

' ~cce.sso'rllls '

.
Registered mate Dalmallan, one
.and 112 years old, good W~t"!l k1d~
6U·7•2-14,10.
.Ron Weilet Puppies. Full Sloodtd.
t100 Piece. 2 Males. 1 Female.
814-388-9354.

570

We Buy Farms And Acreage, 20
Acres And Larger, No limit, 614-

Furnished
Rooms

450
RENTALS

•wn

7112.

FRONT

PROPERTY,

Wllll'tront honw- FkHkla

AIIICI·GiriQ81 &amp; OUtbuiiGings,
cleaning and ditpolal, lor inlormalion caJ-:104-a1S.303&amp;.

Georges Portable Sllwmll, don'l
haul your log a to the mil just call
30oi-67S.1957.

three btd.room, two bath, family
room, large livinG room, kitchen,
dining room, $99,900, 614 -992·

3801.

320 Mobile Homes

for Sale

2 Bedroom house tor rent, com·
plttely turnlshed, Park Drive area.
304·675·2 290, PIORIO call bel·

1 ween S:OO-G:OOpm.

2 Bedroom house lor rent. 304675-2535. •

Rooms lor rent • week or month.
.Siarbng 11 $120/ma. Gallia Hotel.
614-446-0580.
Slaapinq rooms with cooking.
Also 1ra1ler apace on river. All
hook-ups. Call after 2:00 p.m..
30C·773-5651. Mason WV.

2 Bedroom in city, references &amp; 20 Acres ol pulure W/1 111aU
deposit, no pets . 304·675-4558 .horae barn . New 1,500 squate
feet. 3 bedroom, SSOOtmo. on apafter 6:00pm. .
pru. 3 acres olland. 304,-75e·
.1331 .

·Home, orfice. or fall e... ning. Call
antrtme il no answer, IHve measail". 304-815-8328.

MERCHANDISE

51 o

I would like a house cleaning job
in New Haven, Conageville Dt' Evergreen Hill I area . Have"reler·
enc:es, &lt;1M :l0&lt;-1195-3996.
Prola55ional Tree Service. SlUmp
Removal, Free Eat•mateal ·In·
surance, Sidwell, Ohio. 814-388·
9648. 81.-381· 1010.

Sun Valley ·Nursery School.
Childcare M·f Gam-5:30pm Ages
2-K, Young School Age During
Summer. 3 Day a per WHk Mini·
m.tm &amp;t•.....S-3857.

•.,. .-

FINANCIAL

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PU~LISHING CO,
recommtnds that you do buaiMII

witn peopte vou 1y1ow, and

to

Firt\Wood .. :tl4-576·24SS.

Kimball console plano, good condition, $500 hrm, 61 ,_992·3138.

Franklin . Air Tigtn Cast Iron
Woodburner, S175, 614·388 ·
9645,

Uprighl ·Piano All The'Or~ginal
lvary~ Ancl Stnngs. Lowrey E'lectrtc
Otgan, $100 Each, 614-256-t367,
A~er S~M .

I 00 NL 'ffiE loUJ( CN

79 Chy. New Yorker t•oo.oo
I14-387-Q6t3or614--387·7011
86 CX:4 Cheyy ttlvet"ado, L'fed on
35' 1. atr, run1 graal, looks sharp,
614·4•11 · 1208
CARS
1oo 1Truck&amp;, boars,
4·'Whtelau, motor home•. lurni··
IUtt, eleCll'OniCI, compulert etc.
by FBI, IRS, OEA. AYailable rour
lrtl now. Call 1·800·513· •3•3
Ext. s-9388

s

11-V:: flEW §I"~WI&gt;PDL£

.a..cwUt\T:

Over tOO Lalt Model Low ~tle ­
age Motors Out Of Insurance
Satvaged Autos, Trucks. Foreign,
Oome11ic, New Windsh•etds, Ra·
dlltorl; AutO: Truck~~ Mtlll .
O't1er 500 Cars, Trucka For Parts.
, Fret OeHvtr)': MIJOr Parts To
Gallipolis, Point Pleuln1 Area.
Powerline Auto Systems, Kina
Hill, Ohio 1·800·•82·8280 U.S.
Ton Fret, 81•·532·0139.

790

- . C - 1 ·1100420·0353.

ilpm.

We PI, 12.00 lor IN81Y onvolope
)'Ou srun ai hOme. Send a ..U-«ddretHd stamped tnvtloPt 10
fl,w.J. Emerp&lt;i..... P.O. eo. «18,
Ttmplt Htlla, liD 201•8 (Pay·
~-...,., Fridoy~

,___...:: =~

or 1D BtG.

.7.

I MONDAY

1

-

,'

I

L

BERNICE ! Station, Naw Vorl&lt;, NY 10156.
way.
·
'
.L SCORPIO (Oct. Z4·Nov. 22) I~ lhis ··I TAURU$ (Aprl! 20·May 20) You must
BEDE OSOL j: cycle. your financial situation mlghl · vent your 'creative impulses tooay if ton· .

.•

lellu~W}d,

plasttr repair.
!104·&amp;75-0188, 20 yaara

Tanalm 5111110 WljlOII 3 8H10r
Roof Good Conditton 81&lt;~: 241-

Malchmak•r can help you unders1and I ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) You may no1
1Wh3IIO do 10 makeltte relalionship wor1&lt; .. : employ tradilional methods loday, but
Mail $2.75 to Matchmaker, c/o 1hi8 news· ,-your tactics will be effecti'l§. Even~ asso- ·
paper. P.O . Box 1758, Murray Hill elates think 1hey're peculiar, lry them any:

.
.

.

._,
. ·
•
'

improve . Luck might play a slgnifican1
role In f1111ping you to generate addition&amp;~
ean\tngs.
; .
,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0.C, '21) f&lt; pro)lc:t you 1hought had run out of steam ca~
. be rej\MII1aled In the flM' future. Make
an eflorllo coucer~rate on your
CAPIItCORN (Dao. 22..Jan. 11) Try to
think poaitive thoughll today. becauae
wi18VIIIllulllly corllofm to the WilY
you emllllon lham. Do no1 lei nagalfve

-.rs

You wilt have an OIJIID'IIInlty lo malta two
seta of trlendl In the ye~~r ahald.'
Each grOup will have 1 HP1111le locus.
This will be a good way to axpond your

new

AOHA Coli Pall,.'lO Wilt\ Whill
Mant And Tail And Star And
~81··~.

so..- -

WI

' 11124.

~ ~~~~~~----

.

I

'

••mz .

9"1' ·!130. :IO+ot71.'

Reg Polltd Htrolll;d Billll,

-Old, 304-812-2&lt;128.

.'

.r

#-

'

•

:

••

·~~.:~

1-·
~

j;.;;;;::;.;.;;.:;;;:;:,;;;;.:;:;:..;.;l:.!.:_....
I

yu'

~.
UIIIRA (latM· aa.oot. U) T~.
bfllt slaet f1111!11 ~ y = u r 16.
~ the
01
ott-. I will IIII!GIIh you Ill ,
Wllh

~CtiMt, AngUI COW WICI!Vt, ~

' Good

VHEUZDCC. T

PFDKDP)

LSYHC

HJI

HYL

EOFZDZSFE.'

NYSIIY

YS

CIYJ

. AOEDP

CTIK

.
'

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "My wile hu a whim of Iran." - ~ ·Harlofll.
"Marriage: 1he 1riumph of hope over experlenc8." .,- Samuel ~.

'::~:~~' &lt;0©\l.:illA-L&amp;~tfS"
Ulto4
CLAY I . '0UAN

-~--__;._.;.

' .
••

I R 0 I D I' ·,

UTYHUHY • .

WOlD
lAIII

~.

••
.•

,

0

Rearrang• letters of thi
four IC'rambled W9fdl beloW to form fovr lltnple wordi.

OBTMOT

I

'

.

''

'

,,
'.

•

...

•

...

OCTOBER14I

Sill Francisco 49ers

81 ...-1311 .

1

KS

R

••

WATiiR WELLI DRILI.ED

113 larltl DriM INtll To HMCl
Spilll-.1. I + Br'a l.orgt &amp;.-.
Sl1.oooer ..38Um.

MTYK

BBCN

,

NtW

Milo "YJIII1r
1716.

'FTHC

Grbfet · Limbo · Hotfy • Barren • BELONG to IT
No one complains about the younger generation except lhose who no longer BELONG to IT

FAST REAIONAIU! -ICE

Homes for Salt

r

t::=::::_____j

wo

~...,.304

•

51{Ef&gt;!&gt;.j.l(, i

m
.d •

20G

C'*loil Bul, 3

by Lula C.mpoa

CtlebllyCiptwOI.=Z•••nCI'MIIdtromq I •bftwnoulpeciplt,paMiflll,....,.
e.tl
In lit clilfWf _ . fof _.,.,, Toclly'tt:M: , ...... .,

SERVICES

..

WV-0213)8

CELEBRITY CIPHER

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

'

HEAL ESTATE

310

WE. Wf\OLE.

pie.

HARTS IIASONARY • Block.
bf'k:k I 110M work, 30 r-r1 tl·
per'iitnet. tHtonat!l• rale&amp;. 304 ·
8PS.3511 aner e~. no job ro

,•

-Go!•
.._

,...

230 · ProfHIIonal

Servlcn

53

Motor Homes

repair,

Stanley Bostit~h Na11 Gun with
melal caHylnQ cue. New, ntVar
been used, 814·992·4205 alter

,:,

-

521YJiaof

cami\Ars I

llRYWALl

¥ENOIHo: Great Buli,..ll. Uttlt

10 wet firound .
51=- ·

l'rot:O:.Tia-l,

....

•

••u•~manly- ~

21 Ft. Prowler Sell-Contained, E•·
Credtl Problema? E·~ Bank Fi- 1re1tem Hunters Camper Askang
nanclng. For U1td Vehicles No $1,00Q..614·U6·1743 Days. 614 ·
Turn Downs. Call Rulh 814,.•••·1 4•6·&amp;8!1 EWI'IIngs.

· Have You E¥er Sold Cookware,
looking For Managera In This
!lrta , Pan· Time CaU 30•· 875·

tmlll

t-Luplno

..

Hnd money U'lrouah me
mail u,.tll you have investfgaled
lhO ollori"D.

81i!1 .

:~ldng

::--::--=--:-:--:-:-:---1

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

1-tEMLOCK lor landsc41p•ng .
Balled &amp; burlapped, 3 112M to r .
Compact, ,lightly sheared. S30 and
up. Sanurs Forest. 304·675 · ~1 0 Farm Equipment
•136
•
2 ·4400 JD .Comines: WO., AC
IBM Computer Wllh Color Moni . 3 Point, P.S.~ 930 Case Wilt, Cab,
tor. Hard Drive, Also Two Color EnGine Overhauled, E»~ce:l1ent
Pfinters, 614·245-5463.
Condirion. Gravity Wagons; Other
Misc. Farm Equ ipment. 814·669·
JET
5101 Evtnlngs.
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock. 5 10 Lang Tractor Gooel Ttres.
Call Ron Evans, 1·800·537-952£1.
Wetllnt, PS, l 'OW Hours, GOOCI
Shape, 614·256·127•.
Kendall wood burn1ng sto\le, 8JCC: Hydraulic Hoses. Made :ro Ord&amp;r.
cond. $45fl.300-6&gt;5-2700.
Sider's Equtpmant Co. 304·875•
Onio Valley Gardens, 2, Lata 7.21.
S2 . 500, 3 v..r Old He•ler Cow, Lowett prkts on all wood cutter
Black Face Sheep, 61"" ·387· supplies. Ban &amp; chains, oil &amp;
' 7901 ,
'
fifes. Sidtf't Equipment Co. 304Pint. bathtub, lavatory wilh tlase 616·7•21.
and comn:aode. 614-992-2683.
MF2:J5 1175
o4000; White
Refrlv•ralor.-; Stove's, Wash""
And Dryers, All R•condition8d
And ,Gauranteedt. StOO And Up,
Wifl Otl~or.e1•-eev.a .. 1.
. .

Opportunity

NOT

Household
GoOds

Musical ,
Instruments

. ...

.

automat,
alerao cas- New GU tanks, 1 1on truck
telte,
,
mllea, nry good • wheel a &amp; r11chators. D &amp; R Aulo,
condition, $8700 080, e1.-.g92- R1plew. WV. 30•·372·3i33 or 1·
. ,.
:800..:..:·2:._13::.·;::93~29::.·_ _ _ _ __
1995 Ford Contour SE; tW2 New
Yotker Sedan, 814-3e7-7134.

Anuque upright ~uano &amp; bench,
S200, 300-8753383 afler 6pm. ,

Grubb's Piano- tuning &amp; repairs.
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
piano Or. 81•·446·4525

. 245-5677

THE BORN LOSER

•SHP

· Business

210

For Lease

490

F~rewoo&lt;l-spht I ditivared , lull
size load. 304-882·339~.

Budget Price Transmtnlons,
Ultd tRtbuilt, All Types, Over
10,000 Transmissions, Clutche9
Ft)'whtels, O'tterhual Kits, 6 t 4·

Pass

Youngsters always bid optimistical·
ly, hence South's leap to three no- ·
. trump In the expectation, rather than
hope, that his diamond suit would run.
West led the club three. After win·
. : ning with tlie jack, OyVind Saur played
:a spade to the queen and ace. Beck
1came a club to South's ace. The per&lt;centage play for six diamond tricks is
:to cash the top honors. But Saur
·crossed to dummy with a spade, called
. , for the diamond three and, when East
' played the two, finessed the 10. Why?
! Saur knew that East and West were
'using upside-down signAls. in which
:low-high shows an even number,
,rather than an odd number as it would
; in North America. Believing thai East ·
; · i had lwo or four diamonds, Saur insert' ed the 10-now the only logical play.
BUT ..lUST t£T
, AJ:!d when the diamond 10 held the
~~~1~00
trick; Saur had nine tricks: one spade,
W~ NoiD 'NflD
six diamonds and two clubs.
When I was young, I once played the
II 13''-' .J Tf\~ EIU.'Af-7
. seven in this sort of position !using
11-.t..'
normal signals) and that declarer believed me too. ,Never again!

199.5 Harley Ullra, 7,420 miles,

750 Boats &amp; Motors

WITH HOUSE, 727 FIRST AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, sse,soo,
:.81:;...~•::1:.8.:.71::1::2,:.__.:__ _ _

Momlon-

Eaal
Paso
Pass
Pa81

Last July, the European Junior (Wtder . ~51 and Schools &lt;under 20)
Championships took place in Cardiff,
· Wales. In the former event, Norway
finished first, ahead of Russia,
Denmark and 23 other countries .
· Those three nations will play in the
World Junior Championship next
, August in Hamilton, Ontario.
In the younger competition,
Germany won easily, beating Israel,
Great Britain and 11 other teams.
There were many excellent plays
during the I~ tournament. Here's
one featuring NorwaY'sJuniors, .even
though it brings back bad memories
· forme.

1993 Chovy Cavalier • Doort Air
for Sale
Automlic, Antilock Brakes, Rear
DefrOSitr, Ntw Banery. 83,000 1988 ea,a MForce 216M Cuddy Cl·
M~s. Excellert CondltlOn, 15.100, bin, ' 305 V-8. tow nours, Tandem

RIVER

2

·Poi~==JI
s, ....... lui

,;

Sp•ecf, ,2,995: 19,G1 Z2• AC, dayt,l14-8,00.26&lt;t•...n"D'·
Auto, $4,895; Trade-Ins Wel c·ome) Cook Motoro. B1•·••e· .l300 EX 4-Wheeter. $3.500.'304·
0103.
li75-0891 Aslt lor'Da'iid.

,I

An, odd jobs. painting, guners
cleaned, thrwb trimming, tlome
weatherization, leaves raked,
eomplele
care, eiC. 304-67~

"'*"-'
3411auna-

: By Phillip Alder

1992 C8\'.lier 2 Doors, AC, 5 $10,000 cash, eu-949-231,

410 Houses for Rent

DOWN

1 .._,

Young and younger
at the helm

Very good condition: 22,000
miles. $11,500 OBO. eu·•~e2394ahlt 111f11. '•

3 Beclraam houM hi lha
area, newly remodeled, has paal, -45 Acre farm off Bud Chattin Ad.
mellllo. aa~lno $59,900, mull 7.5 Acre tillablt ground, has
.... -5-3272.
1 ,OOOib tobacc:a batt, 2 am all
ponds, house has new roof &amp; vi- '
3 Bedroom Houle, New Haven, nyl siding .$85,000. Call 30H575-Electric Hut. Central .C'ir, Base- 2203 if oo answer leave message.
ment, City Water &amp; Sewage.
t4C,OOO 304·882-3772, Or 614· 340 Business and

180

33-··

32.eon-t Mila

· Opening lead: • 3

1990 GUC pickup, -ir4, loaded.

3 hdroom Home Oaubkt Garage Used trailef. 12X60 In good COO·
10 Acrn Of Lind Blacktop Rood, dllion, ilOo-895·3584.

115-~113 .

30 ..... . _ .

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer; South

:-:'~':":"---:--:::-:--1 Small Schullz ·Trailer, Wtth 2 Ad·
deC! Room, On 112 Acre, .Gara!l",
Uany Extrasi814·388-BS05.

'-'1.

con-

Ill operiIIICIIIIIIIid
lltllnlpo*nt
10 "'~ t.llar
-··

• A'K Q 10 9 8
eAJ

31 0 Homes for Sale

'

u..r ..,._.

=~=

9 B6 3

•J

insQtelion. 304~75-5394.

1&lt;15.000, !'1lone61·~·

B7 2

8ouUr

Otder Schultz hofne, owner occ;u-

~ - . , . , houoo, locallld 3 "'lei
out Crobc:rook Rd. Golllpoli&amp; lo..y.
New 'ttlnyl aiding, new roof,
screened In carport Call altlf
•:()Opn\ 301 182 391M.

• J 7 8 2

e

21

•27 .........

Eall

• J 7 4

New home1 tiRrtlng at $170 per
month with only $770 down. Call
Ru1111: 1-800-837-3238.

- f o r roo! Oolate
wticltllln- ollhe laW.

ss

e

15 lllap .....
131&amp;-1413) .
11 Hot moving
. 14 Call--- day '
around much Ill Fill 10 dD .
11 . . . _ . ,
Ill Plawla need;
.
57 8lllnlllt hlto
20 =(flax)
El23Ainae

Ne'ed· to ttll ynmediarali. Nice
1i85 two berh 1... JC70. CaM Milw at
81 ..385-9821.

not
-1111'1 ICCIP!

'ThiiMn•paper •

_,......:...:.;...:.:..-----t
during deer

............. religion.

make .ny IUCh pttfeiall6,
limitation or
•uon.•

peneooe, a ptOYen track reeotd in
geriatric nuralng admlnttlratlon
and a va~d W.va. nurting licenH
required. Knowtedgl, or state, fed·
era! regula1ionl and OBRA guidelines a must n .,oU have lhe gariatric backQround required br tt'111
challenging and rewarding posiUon. p i - conracr Poinl Pitas·
ani NurainQ and R.etlabilitation
Cent&amp;r, Slits Route 82, Route
801. 328, Pain~' Pleasant,
25550, a Glanmark-Mul!lcare
FaciHiy, EOE. 300-615-3005.
Overbrook Center, 333 Paa•
Street, M~port, hal part tlme
STN.t- poliltOrll a...oblo lor 3· 11
&amp; 1t ..7 thlhl. P*tse come In and
lin out an application if interested.
814-88?·6472..

• Q'

Weal

OfiQin. or any- ..

r•

1

is

13 !lot It\ Qarflold ... l'tollnaqUe
14 8elftclt
10 - EmpiN

'

1-.,
H.._

friiiO';Illl\la
Trying Ill i*d\141 1
, broken romanoa? The Aatro·CJraph

.

,,

t1r1n1tJng a1ow you down.

•

•en11ona1 methods don 't meel your
:·expetlalions. You can find a better way.
GEMINI !May Z1·Juna 20) You might
' · receive several unusual ben,e lils lhrOugh
a partnership arrangement with someone
1yau haven't worked with before. Try lo
! keep an open mind.
, CANCER (June 21-,Juty 22) An opportu.
nlty you've hOped for might suddenly pre1 sent lt8eff today. II will be ephemeral. so
1 act promptly. Your car- w!ll gel a boost
LEO (JIIIy 113-Aug. 22) Today, do 1hings
w1t1t palo who are u ldVen!Uroua aa you
,.,.. Spon111ne0U8 a&lt;rtlllilies wil be more

I

'
old 1·
friend 11 aoger to lnlroduca you to ...,..
one
today,
hll - · The . fun lllan tightly IICheduted activf11as.
~a who enter y+;~~~r life now could VIRGO (Aug. 23-lepl.· 22) An okl. rtll· .
IIQIIIMI trnpN,
.
, lillie Illy f11lllllt l*ve a ptaeaenl IU.fllllll
(M. " . .,... lOt let l/011( . In lor
luday. It may he. . lloth .
~ ~!~ghar todiJr, ~ In Nglnl , aoclal and material ovar1on11, with .
AQUARIJI(JIIII, ....,..,, 11) H eo

=•

new

""*'

n

you

to youtllnanclal ObjtctiYaa. You 'have
0f111011uni!IM 10 achieve~ fiDIII .
I'

~ unique bel,.:1taln eliCit.,...

•!

�•

••

P-oe 10 • The Dally SeuUnel

Monday, October 14,1981

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~"..:~~!.:ultu~~· ~~~:~~r=~~~ ~~ =~~: ~~~~~. .~~~~~ !?~:.~~~~" ~;'~~~ '

T1le Diboll rt.wa.

If you want to unc!e~d why
Robeno Alomar's sptltlng on an
ump•re ~such a hue and cry
- and why 11 hasn't budged from
the headlines -just consider proressor Martin Shennan's little experiment in his Loyola University psychology c_lass.
Shennan, who studies the psychology of disgust, ~ses out steril·
lted glasses to his students, asks
~m to collect some saliva in their
!'"ouths·and spit it into their glass.
Then he aslcs them to drink it.
· Nine out of 10 times, says Sherman, "They can't do it. They can
·swallow it when it's in their mouth,
but not once it's outside. It's as if,"
l)e su.,ests, "we have a vision of
ourselves as an envelope, and anythins outside that envelope is contaminaied."
If most of us are disgusted by
drinking our own saliva, how much
more loathsome to have to swallow
someone else's- or, in the cue of

Hirschbec~. to have to mop it off
one's facial landscape.
Unless you've been living in a
cave the past week or so, you've
probably heard that Alomar, a Balli·
more Orioles second baseman, spat
on Hirschbeclc during an argument
over a strike Hirschbeclc called. Alomar was suspended for five games,
but the punishment was waived till
next season so Jl,lomar could compete in the playoffs. Umpires threatened to strike, but were blocked by a
court injunction.
Some will argue that fear of contagion gives spit its oomph- particularly _)n the age of AIDS - but
most experts agree that spitting's
power far predates the dawn of medical understanding.
.
In any event, says infectious disease specialist Dr. Steven R.
' Mostow at Denver's Rose Medical
Center, unless Alomar himself were
deathly ill, noihing in his spit would
be likely to hurt the .umpire..
t&lt;or, ad~s Dr. Sarah George at the

AIDS program, has HN ever been/Jibe or assault."
'
It's all the more shockiiiJ, be
shown to be transmitted via sativa. •
• Burwhat particularly oulrlged says, because the rules for express. No, argues anthropologist David Americans, Murray thinks; was Alo- ing disap-eement with an umpireMurray at Washington's Statistical mar's cheek in spilling on an poking fingers, shouting, kicking
Research Service, getting spat upon umpire.
dirt on their shoes - arc wellis far more revolting than other posBy definition, he notes. the known and clearly defined. "It is,"
sibl~ alternatives ·....., lilce getting umpire is "supposed to · be invio- lie says, "a very c4fefully orcbesyour lights punched out -because late,", the very symbol of the rules· · u-ated dance."
of the power bodily fluids carry in that separate organized play like
In violating that convention, he
human culture to "defile and baseball from a stiffer sort of com· says. Alomw has broken more than ·
degrade."
petition that ends in open combat.
just a baseball rule, " he's·threatened
This revulsion at body products,
"The agony of competition and· the very fabric that allows the game
he notes. seems to be universal. He the passions that arouses are animal- to exist. And in this sense," he adds,
cites the story of the insult. New istic," he says, "and there must be "baseball is very much like civilizaYork-area Indians delivered in 1524 some line where you say, 'This must tion itself."
to the first European colonizer to not be crossed,' or the game falls
Of course, Murray, Lynn and
step on their soil. "They sent a little apart."
other baseball enthusiasu are the
boy in to pee on Verrazzano's leg," . In showing such" contempt, he first to concede there's a lot of
says Murray with a chuckle. "No says, Alomar as good as declared "expectorating" in the nonnal
mistaking the message there." ·.
that "civilized boundaries are no course of the national pastime, a
Indeed, he argues, social rules as longer inviolable, that all of soci- phenomenon connected mostly to
to what can pennissibly emerge · ety's rules are open to abuse.~'
the sport's mystifying affection for
from someone else's body and Jan~
Kef\)lon College's David Lynn, chewing tobaccO.
on yours are among humankind's. an English professor who "teaches a
And lest any other louts be con:
strictest and most narrowly defined. course titled "Baseball and /l.meri- sidering the same sort of behavior,
"When you ·violate that bound- . can Culture,'' agrees with Murray the Michigan · Stat~ Police confirm ·
ary," he says, "not to get too hyster- and calls Alomar's loss of control that spi~ting in some~ne's face. could

Where can you find ·
wooden coat,hangers?
. By ANNE B. ADAMS and
don't need this info now, you may
NANCY N~H-CUMMINGS
need it in the future, so PLEASE
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: save this column.
Maybe" you could help me. I would
REGALWARE, INC.: (Club Alulike to buy wooden coat ~nd dress minum, Presto, Thermo-Craft, La
hangers. I can't find them anywhere Machine, Salad Master. Seal-Q;
.in the stores. I've searched all over. Matic and Wonder Wear.). Write
All carry the wooden suit hangers them at' Customer Service, 1675-T
llut not the coat and dress ones. The Regal Dr., Kewaskum, WI 53040 ( !reason J want them is that I crochet 800-998-8809).
around them and use them for my
WEST BEND CORP: (lnkor,
sweater~. That way the sweaters
Kitchen Craft, Lifetime Stainless
don't get bumps on the shoulders. -- Steel, Luster Craft, Miracle Maid,
ANNA MALUSKY, Ashalsnd, Pa.
Royal Queen.) Write them at Cus; DEAR ANNA: Every kind of tomer Service Department, West
wooden hanger you've ever wanted Bend ·corp.. 400 West Washington
is available from a catalog called St., West Bend, WI 53095 (414-334"Hold Everything," Mail Order 2311 ; ask for Customer Service.)
Department P.O. Bqx 7807; San
MIRRO CORP: (Mirro, Wearev·francisco, CA 94120.7807 (1-800- er) Write to: Customer Service. 1512
' §21-2264, 24 hours day).
Washington St., Box 1330, ManiThe
"Hold
)3verything" towoc, WI 54221 (414-684-4421). , .
Swedish-made hangers are bowed.at
VITA-CRAFf:
(Vita-Craft,
·the ends to "preventthe problem of Renaware)Cust0merService,lllOO
"shoulder humps" -- no crocheting W. 58th St., Shawnee, KS 66203
·necessary!
.
. (913-631:6265).
THE STEVENSON. CO.: Pres.' CUP-IT: No doubt prompted by
·&lt;iur response to the reader asking. · sure cooker replacement parts for
where she could write for Farber- Presto: Mirro, Minute Maid,
ware cookware knob and handle Guardian, General Mills, Ali-Amer.ieplacements, we have received an , ican; replacement lids for Guardian
avalanche of mail asking where to Service Cookware. 212 Birch Tree
write for replacement parts for other Lane, Lewisburg, PA 17837 (no
bmnds of pots and pans and the like. phone orders).
We've decided to lump them all
OUT OF. BUSINESS: (no
togetl)er rather than try to respond
replacement
pans available ·-- at
separately to each one. Even if you

a

our~:::~~)

Enterprise, Osrow, Household Institute (Streamline), Permanent Stainless Steel Cookware, Life-line, Maid
of Honor, Cuisine Ware, Homemakers Guild and Youngswarc . .
STUMPED: Mrs. Gus Bernier of
Cudjoe Key, Flit, is looking for a
foam-rubber strip with a flat top that
is used to cover the gap between two
twin mattresses that have been
pushed together. We know just what
she means. We have seen this handy
item in the past. but not recently. Do
any of our readers know if is it still
avail.able? And if so, where?
Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
P.O. Bo~ 240, Hartland, VT 05048.
Questions .of general interest will
appe·ar in the column. Due to . the
volume of mail, personal replies
cannot be provided.

Braves staying
alive In search
·for NLCS title

Indeed, a staff attorney at Lambda Legal Defense's Midwestern
office notes that a cue is currently
before the Ohio Coun of Appeals
concernins a.man with HIV who spit
on officers. He's charge&lt;!. with felonious assault.
All of which may seem rather far
.afield from Roberto Alomar and his
difficulties with impulse control.
Murray. for one, doesn' t want to
be seen as crucifying the mail,
allhough,he compares the shock of
Alomar's gesture to that reg1stered
two weeks ago when the conVIcted
murderer of Polly Klaas accused her
own father of !f10lesting her. •

Anne~B . Adams and Nancy NashCummings are co-autl)ors of "Ask
Anne &amp; · Nan" (Whetstone) and
"Dear Anne and Nan: 1\vo Prize
Problem-Solvers Share Their
Secrets" (Bantam). To order; call l800-888-1220.

Copyriahtl996 NEWSPAPER
ENTJi;RPRISE ASSN.

I

Vol. 47, NO. 115
Copyright 11M

"Please understand, I'm not saying Mr. Alomar is an animal," Murray notes. "But this episode has
much that ltind of power. I think we
are aroused by Alomar because
much is at stake, though we're not
quite sure what. And to let it pass
'without. cQnsequences is somehow
very disturliing."

.
restraint .ch.ains on the ' tables and
By TOM HUNTER
throwing·them over the riverbank.
Sentinel News Staff .
.
Repeated vandalism _c&amp;ks and ·
Vandals have also wreaked havoc
maintenance issues at Middleport's at the restroom facilities at General
two public parks were discussed by Hartinger Park, causing extensive
Middlepon Village Council during its ·damage to sinks and toilets in the
facility.
regular meeting Monday.
"If we're going to continue spend·
Vandalism has ·.been steadily
increasing at General Hartinger Park ing money on repairs, I suggest that
and Dave · Diles Riverfront Park, we set portable toilets in the park and
including a recent arson attempt at the • close the restrooms to the public. It's
former Middleport train depot along a shame that we can't have nice facil ities without having to worry about
the downtown riverfront.
In recent weeks, vandals have someone tearing them up ," said
damaged several • picnic tables at · Amold.Johnson of the village RecreDave Diles Riverfront Parle. breaking ation Commissioq.

The group apologiud for any
inconvenience the error ·may have

caused.

---Community calendar--The Community Calendar is
publlsbed aa a free """ice to non·
profit aroups wishinl to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar Is not desiped to promote sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed as space,
permits ud cannot be guaranteed
\. .

1ndian

to run a specif'l&lt; number or ilays.

RACINE-- Racine Board of Public Affairs meeting Monday, 7:30
p.m. at the fire d~partment annex.

MONDAY
POMEROY -· Big Bend Farm
Antiques ·Club regular meeting
DARWIN -- Bedford Township ··
Monday, 7:30 p.m. in the Meigs · Tru~tecs will meet M.onday, 7 p.m. ·.
High School library.
at the Bedford Town Hall.

recipes.~..____ _ _ _ _ __

sodium; 23.1 grams carbohydrates.
Continued from page 6
In a large skillet, heat 'oil and BASMATI RICE WITH CUMIN
saute prepared olcra until light 2 cups white rice (Basmati if possi· brown. Reduce heat to low. Add ble)
onions and cook 5 to 6 minutes. Add
one-half cup vegetable oil
salt, all the spices •. lemon juice and
3 cups boil'i)'~ter
tpmatocs. Cover and simmer·5 mm-.
1 teaspoon cillnilkeed
ute~dd cilantro, stir and serve.. · I teaspoon salt
alee S
.
Heat oil in a saucepan and add
M . ~ servmgs._.
servin . 223 cumin seed to the hot oiL Saute ,
Nutnttonal.an alys•s peft (l g, a s "briefly until · cumin --seeds?· turn --I
caloncs; 1J. 2 grams •1 · ·.2 gr m c" b
·
saturated fat; 61 percent calories
ro':"n,
.
froni fat); 0 mg choleste.rol; 472 mg
Add dry "9.e and fry for about 5

·minutes, stirring constantly until the
rice grains tum white. Add boiling
water and salt.
Boil until most of the water has
evaporated. Reduce heat to Jaw and
simmer for 10 minutes with
·saucepan covered. · Makes 8 servings.
'
Nutritional a~alysis per serving: 288 ·
calories; 14.1 grams fat ( 1.2 grams
saturated faK 4'\ percent calories
·from.' fat);'O ,mJICbok&gt;tcroi;,2!U-.ng l
od" · 3·8 6.
boh d
s tum, . grams car y rates.

Owner of alleged ·
training site feels
militia leader Isn't
·a violent person

Opal Hollon, Everett Grant, Emla
Cleland, Goldie Fr~drick, Joann
Baum, Elizabeth Hayes, Mary
Holter, Ella Osborne, Kathcryn
Baum, Jcrui Welsh, Charlotte Grant,
Esther Smith. Thelma White, Eva ·
Robson, Marcia Keller, Ethel Orr,
Deloris Wolfe, Laura Nice and Opal
Eichinger.

By DAV.ID SHARP
Asaoclllted Preas WrHar
CHURCHVILLE, W.Va.
The owner of the 400-acre farm ·
where the West Virginia Mountaineer Militia conducted maneuvers described Commanding General floyd Looker as a · "super
patriot."
John Bob Woofter let members
train on his propeny after meeting
the militia commander now .
accused in a conspiracy to bomb
federal buildings.

Public Notice

N-Ot Etecllon on Tox

the purpo.. of
motntalnlng ond operltlng ·
eerneterlea. Sold Ill blltng • ,
renewal of an exlallng tax ol
1 milt
at o rote not
exceeding 1 (one) mill lor
eech ono dollor of
veluotlon, wlltch·-nta to
ton centa ($0.101 for ..oh
one hundred dollere of '
vohllllon, for flve (5) yMrL
The Polla lor oeld
EtiCIIon Will open II 1:30
0'9l00k a.m. and remain
open untM 7:30 o'otoek p.m.

In Ex.... of liM Ten
Mill Umlllllon
·
ReviMd Code, Seellona

3501.11(0), 5705.111, 5705.25
NOnCE Ia he111by given

thot In pureuance of a
Reaotutlon of the Boord of
Townahfp Truat~ea of the
Townahlp of IAtarl, Lelllrt,

liM~~ on tht 1at 11ay
Ill.,. will be
ot 1111

vote

of ..!dilly.
By order of the
Elecllona, of llelfll

'

I

\

•

ravorite ·Recipe
THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
wiU be publUhi.Rg
.
. a ·

tiOLID(jll ,·
. COO~BOOK

Brintf your recipe into our .olfic• or tend il lor

Public Notice
Levy

Send Us llo·ur

Included in the cookbook will be recipes from Mason,
Meigs &amp; Gallia County residentS, .at 110 charge.
The recipes will be categomed a. followa:
• Appeaiser.J!Jeverage• • Bread/CI:aiiu
• Coke.JPie• &amp; Cookies ~ Pork • Poultry
• Salads &amp; Vegetables ·
'·•S'oup~.- and.&gt;
StuulU1iche3'-' " ' -.~ ;~ ~Jt..,. ~·;.; ~&lt; '·" k·. N '
Hollday Coolt.boolc ··
·
c:/o The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Po""'roy,. Ola 45169 .

Pletue, include your. Mme Dnd .
phone # . t~~ith recipe.
Deadline for aU recipes
is October·31,.1996

35cenll

A Gannett Co. -•1111*

.

Mayor Dewey Horton said that Street side of General Hartinger Park,
enforcement will be stepped up in the with a ground cover.plant that won't
area during evening hours, and added be as hard to maintain.
that the current park closing time of
The reseeding project for the
II p.m. could be changed if vandal- 40,000-square-foot hillside area will
ism continues .at ihe parks.
·eliminate the need for constant main"We need help from the people in tenance by village employees during
stopping vandalism at the paries. If the summer months and eventually
village residents see anyone vandal- save the village · money due to the
izing the parks, they need tb call the elimination of cutting and low main·
police. The village spends a lot of tenance or the vegetation, according
money to keep up these parks," said to Horton.
Horton.
In other matters, council:
Council member,s gave full bless• approved payment of village
ing to a plan to reseed and landscape bills
• approved the Se~&gt;tember mayor's
. the ·hillside along the Broadway

'It's a strange contradiction here'

W.Va.
·
. the shotgun io the PTO; that is.incor: · ·
ian Hill ·donated the ham to the reel. The gun was purchased from
. Eber's by the PTO.
·
PTO.
The PTO is now holding ·a contest for a shotgun. It was written that
Eber's Citgo in Racine had donated

1Sectton,'to~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 15, 1996

Middleport park vandalism spu-rs village action

Letart Falls PTO holds. monthly meeting
The ~tart Falls Elementary Parent Teacher Organization announct;d
the winner of its ham contest which
.was held in September.
1be winner was announced at the
October PTO meeting. Winning was
Marty Rhodes of Point •Pleasant,

Buckeye 5:
3-6·16-34-36

•

Daughters of America to hold inspections
was out of the hospital and that Alta
Ballard is doing better. Cora and
Shirley Beegle had a car accident
with Cora spending time in the hospital.
Nathan Biggs had catheterization
and Mary Moore of Logan CounCil
spent several days . in the hospital.
Bette Wolfe of Logan Council is .
under a &lt;;loctor's care for a foot problem, it was reported.
'
· A card was read from Faye
Kirkhan and Lora Damewood.
JoAnn Baum reported on the
reception for the new state councilor
at Canton. Esther Smith reported on
the reception of Doris Williams at
Bethel. The meeting closed in regular fonn.
Present were: Mary Barringer,

1-3-9-7

c

The Meigs County Churches of ary, February and March , the Oct. 31 with speaker Lowell Mason.
The program was b'y Judy Well
Christ Women's · Fellowship met women's fellowship will meet wi.th
recently at the Hemlock Grove the men's fellowship with each hav- wiio spoke about dried flowers and
Church with the opening song "He ing separate business meetings but road side materials. She gave handIncluded Me" and opening prayer by common opening, devoti·ons and outs on flowers, their colors and
meanings, and made a victory
programs.
Patricia Arnold.
Cards were sent to Pat Thoma, wreath from different flowers and
Devotions were by Eileen Bower
of the Pomeroy Church with scrip- Ruth Underwood and Melanic told the fellowship the meaning of
ture froin Hebrews II: 1-l 0 and the · Daniels. The nominating committee each color used. Sara Culiums won
23rd Psalm on faith. The bu~iness selected Sabra Ash, Kathy· Erwin the ·wreath,
'
·meeting was conducted by President and Eileen Bowers. We will be supThe closing song was ~'When We
Patricia Arnold and reports were ·porting two girls, DePbie Alkire and
All Get to Heaven" with closing
read and approved.
. Joy O'Brien.
It was voted to change the time or
Upcoming church homecomings prayer by Charldine Alkire.. Refreshmeetings from 7:30p.m. to 7 p.m.
and revivals were announced includ- ments were served by the host
· ~so during the m~nths of Januing Pomeroy Churcli of Christ on church.

Chester Council 323 Daughters
of America met 7 p.m., Oct. I at the
hall with Councilor Goldie Fredrick.
. The pledg~ to the Christian Flag
was given and Psalms 117 was read.
The Lords Prayer was said in .unison. The Pledge to the American
Flag was given arid the first stanza
of the Star Spangled Banner was
sung by all.
It. was noted that inspections will
be held the next meeting and members were told to wear white. Practice was held for receiving national
and state officers.
The group practiced balloting. A
friendship meeting will be held Oct.
19 with a potluck at noon. The minutes were read and approved.·
.
It was reported that Jean FredriCk

Pick 3:
3-9-8
Pick 4:

Sports on Page 5

Women•s fellowship changes meeting time

ASK ANNE. NAN

Ohio Lottery

person.
a
person like that wanting to p8(ticipate in a scheme that would kill
innocent people. It's a strange con- - .
tradiction here," Woofter said.
Looker and six others with mili·
tia ties, including two Ohioans,
remained jailed awaiting hearings
AI,.LEGED TRAINING SITE- The FBI nld thl1 MCiudMI, 6110-acre farm In Churchville, W.Va.,
was the training site forth
untelneer Mllllla. FBI reports allege that militia members .pracon charges they conspired to blow
lie at the farm. SeVen mllltla members were arrested Friday
. tlcttd with an explosive vice
up three federal targets. An FBI
In
a
conlf)lf!ICY
to
blo
up
three
fedenll
buildings In Wnt V!rglnla. (AP)
complex near Clarksburg was the
only target identified.
he knew nothing about an exploJack Arland Phillips, 57, of FairRappelling, survival training,
rifle targets are mounted on a hillsion that was described in an FBI
mont. Moore and Phillips were
orienteering and target shooting . side.
affidavit.
identified as explosives experts.
. were practiced, Woofter.said. But
Militiamen held their maneu·carolyn Hoover, another neigh- .
Terrell P. Coon, 46, of Waynesthere also were discussions of con- . vers out of sigh!, behind a grove of
bor.
said
Woofter
knew
better
than
burg,
Pa.; James M. Johnson. 48, of
·
stitutional rights, executive orders
trees over the hill.
to allow bombs because the fann
Maple Heighu, Ohio; and Imam A.
and a return to common law.
Woofter said he does not know
rests over natural gas reserves, and
Lewis, 26, of Cleveland; were also
Some of the militia leaders'
how many militia members trained
a Consolidated Natural Gas Co.
arrested.
dres'sed in uniforms, while others
there, but court documents indicate
transmission
station
is
a
tenth
of
a
Charges include conspiracy to
26 leaders from West Virginia and
wore civilian clothes.
,
mile
away.
make
bombs, transporting explo- ·
Pennsylvania attended one meet"They were sort of like George
"Bob is no dummy. He's not
sivcs across state lines and conWashington's anny. They were
ing.
going to let people put explosives
spiracy to place explosives near the
· ' During that meeting, two
pretty rag-tag," he said Monday.
on
his
field,"
Hoover
said.
FBI center.
months
:
after
the
Oklahoma
City
Woqfter, who has not been
Woofter's closest neighbor, the
·
FBI
agents;
who
had
an
inforbombing, Looker discussed three
charsed, said he sympathited with
Rev,
Roger Brown, pastor of Grace
mant reporting on militia activities
targets. including the FBI's CrimLooker's concerns about the ConBaptist
Temple, said he heard gunfor 16 months, arrested Looker Fristitution being trampled and that he .. inal Justice lnfonnation Services
fire and saw vehicles on the oneday after he attempted to sell
Division complex ncar Clarksburg,
liked the militia's focus on educalane road to Woofter's property.
copies of FBI center blueprints for
tion, but. he was not a member.
authorities said.
.
''If they were .truly planning
· Woofter's property includes a
Woofter said .that during his ,
$50,000, authorities said.
·
what
they, say they were plahning,
Also arrested wer~ James R.
casual observations he never heard
two-story farmhouse painted bright
then
I
think we ought to be thanktalk or violence.
orange.
· Rogers of Jane Lew, a Clarksburg
ful
they
were caught," Brown said.
He said he warned militia memA wooden ~plank bridge leads to
lite lieutenant who authorities
") guess you never know your
bers against using or storing exploa field planted with blue spruce
allege photographed the blueprints;
neighbor."
sives on his property. And he said
seedlinss. Dozens of Woofter's
Fred Mo9re, 52, of Lavalette; and ·

Dole attac.ks escalate as second ·debate nears
,/

report in the amount of $4,606.70, ·
with $2,570 of that a111ount collected
in delinquent fines .
• learned from theRccreation
Commission's Johnson that Roscoe
and Sandeo Mills, owners/operators
of McDonald's of Pomeroy, have
donated additional playground equipment for General Hartinger Park.
Council expressed its appreciation
ani! thanks for the donation.
• approved a recommendation by
Horton to appoint Sandy Jannarclli to
fill the unc•pired council term of former council president Bob Gilmore.
which ends in 1997.1annarclli will be

sworn-in at the ne•t regular council
meeting.
,-di!;cusscd progress in grant applications and planning for sewer/water
improvements in the village, and ·
approved a resolution to enter a contractual agreement with FBA Environmental Inc. (formerly Floyd
Browne &amp; Associates) of Marion for
compilation of information necessary
for grant applications.
. • approved minutes of the Aug. 12,
Aug.
. 26,. Sept. 9; and Sept.
. 23 meetmgs.

.

• approved closing out the CHIP
(Contlnuttd on P111ge 3)

Iraqis rebuilt part .
of missile system
followi~g attacks
By SUSANNE M. .SCHAFER
The Washington Post said in today 's
AP Military Writer
·
editions, also quoting an unnamed
WASHINGTON - Iraq rebuilt official.
part of its surface-to-air missile netThe official quoied by the newswar~ in southern Iraq last month paper said it would take just "a flip
witlim two weeks of U.S. missile of the switch" for the Iraqis to tum
attacks on the system, a senior U.S. on targeting radar and create a milimilitary officer says.
tary threat to U.S. and allied aircraft.
"They've been able to rebuild
"If thcylurn the radar on to "radipans ofthe system," said the officer. ate, i.t poses a military threat,"· the
who was interviewed rectntly and official said.
·
who spoke on conditipn of anonymiThe newspaper report also quoted
ty. "They've been slapping things the official as saying "there is no
together but not threatening our air- indication" on Iraq's part "of an
craft."
. iotent to challenge" U.S. ·;p~d allied.
· '11ltr officer, who said the Unlr!!'d.. , aircraft pairolfh1g]hc no-fly zone in
States is closely monitoring the situ- southcrq Iraq. .
ation, told The Associated Pres.&lt; the
The Clinton administration has
,rebuilt wcap?n system .w~s patched been sensitive to Republican crititogether and IS less sophisticated. than cisms that the United States spent a
the network before the U.S. m•sslle lot of money on missile strikes that
attacks.
.
did only minimal damage in Iraq.
!he radars o~ the.systems can be
American warships and planes
swuche~ on to pmpomt al.hed a~rcraft launched 44 cruise missiles against
momtormg the no-fly zone m south- the Iraqi air defense system Sept. 2
ern Iraq, but that also m~kes . thcm . and 3 in retaliation for Iraqi leader
vulnerable to attacks by alhcd mrcmft Saddam Hussein's offensive into
Kurdish-hcld territory in northern
anned with radar-seeking missiles.
"It is the same basic (system) that Iraq.
was there the 30th of August 1996,
Cruise missiles cost roughly $1
million each.
·
M

Pomeroy merchants
select ·holiday the
·at 992-7296-is available to put w
By CHARLENE .HOEFLICH
lights on buildings and a.~sist
rSentinel News Steff
"A Victorian Christmas Along the chants with other decorations. BrenRiver" has been selected by the da Roush volunteered to contact art
Pomeroy Merchants Association as classes in the various area schools
the theme for the village's annual about doing Victorian paintings on
window~. particularly those of empob.servancc of the holiday.
ty
buildings.
.
· Meeting last week in the Peoples
Bank conference room, merchants
Nov. I has been set a.• the kickoff.
discussed ways io enhance the date for .decorating the village,
appearance of the village. The asso- according to Susan Clark, president.
ciation will ask merchants to decomte Clark also noted that Hank Cleland
their balconies with garlands and · said Super Sundry will stock quantibows. to outline their buildings in tics of white strings of ligh~&lt; for usc
· '
.
white lights, and to carry out a holi- in decorating.
day the.me in their business windows.
As in previous years, the 'parade
It was reported that Bill Aleshire
(Continued on Page 3)

By; TOM RAU~ &gt; . , ,..""&gt; ·!! · r..,. ''} pump4nio Cafifomiain th~fma .thr.-c ~rSDnall¥'rJiised;qucsliouMonJnyr: 'gcSitd1 it.wa~a smokc.acrccn1811d thW +·-~- "''
Associated Press Writer
weeks. of the campaign wpn 't be ab~uf co~tnbuttons from l~dones1an there was no tmmcdtate ev1dcn~c that
SAN DIEGO, Calif.- Bob Dole, made until after Wednesday's debate, · han king tnteresu to Chnt?n s re~lec- Dole was buymg mo,re ads m the
stepping up attacks on President aide~ added.
. non campa1~n, and Dole s campa1gn · stat~.
.
Clinton for ethical lapses as he pre:
· Meanwhile. Dole has .been csca- sent the prestdent questions about the
. The~ have to sr-:nd a ~eek m ,
pares for the final debate, is promis- lating his criticism of Clinton in transact1on.s.
, .
Cahfom1a and ar~ trrmg tQ JUSt get
ing a full-bore·battle for California's ad:.oance of the debate, signaling he
"We thmk the Amer~~an people out of there ahve, smd Wh1t~ House
S4 electornl votes.
~ill use a harder line of attack than 1!_re cnlltle~, to the fa~IS,. Dole told poht1cal dt~to~ Doug Sosmk . .
"It all started right here in San he did in the first presidential debate rc.porters. . No . more_ shppmg and
But Cahfom1a Gov. Pet~. W1lson
Diego. We're going to worlc and work on Oct. 6 in Hartford, Conn.
shdm~. M~; Pres•dent,Just answer the .told the waterf~ont rally, . ~e a.rc
and worlc .... When the bell rings in
Aftersoundingoutaudiencesovcr · questtons.
closmg the gap tn.Cahforma.
Some&gt;GOP leaders ha've suggest'
California, it's going to say Bob the past few days on wheth~r he
Dole, Bob Dole won," .Dole said as should he tougher on Clinton. Dole ed the admmtstrauon trade~ favors
bole aides were pleased with a
he onived for debate preparations and provided the answer himself.
for huge campa1gn contnbut!ons Field Califomil•pall last week that
, some California campaicning.
"He talks about an ethical admin- f~om the conglomerate and ~1d a showed Clinton's lead over Dole had
: But it was a rocky beBinning in the istration. He does not have an ethical spec~al c?unsel sh!luld be ap~mted , narrowed to 10 ppints - from 22
;city that was host to the 1996 Repub- administration. And we're going to to tnv.esugat~. .
.
.
poinu at Labor Day.
·llcan convention. Dole at f~r~t pro- ·ao after thi! ·in the debate on WednesChnton. '" New. Mex1co for h1s
, Even so, the same Field Poll also
:claimed be was "honored to be back day night," Dole told a Kansas City, own debate p_reparauon. s~~ged off said that 88 percent of the voters
11m in San Francisco" at a waterfront Mo. rally on Monday.
•
s.uch ,Rep~bhcan attac:ks- It • elec· picking Clinton ·and 86 percem of
Today, the Republican challen•er tton lime, Cltnton 511~.
Dole voters were "very certain" of
rally Manday evenina. After aroans
from the audience, Dole corrected ·was expected to launch his sharpest
Dole camprugn o~c•ab htve sug- their choice, an unusually higH num)limself. "Yeah, San Dieao. sure."
atta&lt;:k yet on ethical problems ip gested the GO~ ca~tdate IS hkely to . ber and an indication that it will be
Dole campaign officials, buoyed Clinton's administration d~rlng a em~ark ?n a htgh-nslc effon to wm very hard· for Dole to make further
bypollsshowinaOinton'sleaddown 'S)*:Ch to an elemon•cs tndustry Cahfb':"~·· even though final strate- gains.
to about 10 polnll hm, say they have organization. He Pllllned 10 caW.ogue gy dectstons have yet to he made. ln
"Clinton has been leading Dole
decided to pour oddilional resources . point by point what the Dole ~Imp fact, Dole plans a post-debate bus
DOLE ARRIVES- Republlcen presidantltll car.dlcltti'- Bob Dole
:into the state in a hiah·rislc strategy conaideri to be the liiOit 11r1ous tour of Orange County, a GOP 'nationally and in this state for a long,
showed off a Supar Bowl chllmplonahlp ring and an ""FL Hill of
· that could muh in leu being1pent olfcnsn. from Whi...,lllr to 'lftv- stronghold lOUth of Los Angeles, on long time. Clinton's continuing lead
Fama ring belonging to footbiiH great John Mackay as hearr'-1
sugesu.
that
he
will
EOntinue
to.
111 San D'-llo, C.IH., on Monday. Running ,_.. Jack Kemp Ia at
in otlilr battlepound stateS.
elpte to FBI filel! COIIIIo¥11'1ies.
Thunday.
right. (AP)
A fiul deciaion on bow much to . In a prelude, Dole for the lint time
Clinton . campaiJil officials SUf· lead." )1"11 rounder Mervin Field said.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="392">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9768">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="30061">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="30060">
              <text>October 14, 1996</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1615">
      <name>gorman</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
