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ra.g.oa·· , -

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II

Pomeroy • Middleport • .Galllpolla, OH • Point Plea1ant, wv

ef

Catfish production record forecast ;
WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S.
calf-.sb prvd_uclion is expected to hit
a reconi 460 ntillion pounds this year
witb more arowth forecut through
1997 because of strong farm prices
and increasing acre13e.
. The Agriculture Department projects prices to fall a bit this year, to
an avef~~e 78 cents a pound. At the '
be,inning of July, srower inventories
of almost all size classes of catfish
· were higher than a year earlier.
Calfish growing is big business in
· Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama and
Arbnsas, with pond acreage totaling
162,100 acres. Mississippi alone
accounts for more than I 00,000

Faimope.
Opll inflicted heavy pecan dam·
age, palticularly in Covington County. Most of the pecan crop, howe•er,
was on 10,000 acres in Baldwin and
Mobile counties. Windblown trees
dropped a lot of pecans, which had to

a_nnual maatlng lind banquet at Melga High.
.School. The board cqnelata of, from left, John
Rica, Joa Bolin, Thllaa, Yoat 111d Marco Jefferw.

j.

MOBILE, Ala. (AP) -As Tropical Storm Josephine churned in the
Gulf of Mexico earlier this week,
pecan growers had scary memories of
last year's hurricanes that caused
more than $1 ntillion in crop damage
in coastal Alabama.
In 1995, Hurricane Erin lashed the
Alabama coast on Aug. 3, then Opal
struck Oct. 4, downing trees as it
. moved across the Florida Panhandle.
Pecan growers were poised for
recovery from disastrous crop years
in 1993 and 1994 - the lowest crop
production in 35 ·years - when the
:hurricanes struck, said Auburn Unil versil}' honiculturistMonte Nesbitt of

..

'J,

....

llama-,

LAND JUDGING CONTEST -

· 'T11m mamberl from the Southern FFA wera
. wlnnara In the dlatrlclland Judging contaat and
·-

Larry Wlllla, David RoLtlh,
standing, John Mataon, with Chlrlel
aupervlaor, pntllnllng 1 trophy to Jaaon
bart, and Jonathan Smith.
.

pr111ntld lrophlea at Tuesday's SWCD

.. ; banquet It Melga High School. On the winning .

;Jt
.. looks like banner
"-~year for walnuts
....
·· :ay HAL KNEEN

·

log home, now is the time~

..•••

Vol. 47, NO. 111
01111, Ohio Valt.y PubUihlng ~ny

owner, power seat, power lll!lndowa, caet
aluminum wheels, 24,000 mllea. Expect the belt.
Balance of new car warranty.

Homes show you just hl&gt;w,alfonlable 1 finely cralled

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aupenilion, or we will make amngement to build your home to any c1qrce of
COIIIPielion. An Alii home is a model of precision cmulllllllhip, ._ny
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, llllilbod with s..-bly plan«! white pine logs adding an air of sopblllicalion
to trlldltlonal country chorrn. It's sturdy, efficient. and pniCiically mal~

ere..

New Skylark trade, 10,000 mllea - not a misprint.
Nice car for nurse or teacher. Balance of new car
warranty.

'91 Buick
Regal
Limited

·sedan

P.O. Box 66, Chester, Ohio

(614) 985-3910
Open Tues., ThurS. &amp;: Sat. ·

IOa.m. to4p.m.

•

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~
~

1616 Ea.eem Ave.

r~:ctT -- Member•
Steel·
workara of
Local 51168, Ravenawood,
W.Va., were dlatrtbutlng materiel In Mlddlaport
Saturday protaallng agalnat the Brldg~t·
atone/Firaatone tlra company. Union manibera
88Y Brldgl1t0111 waa purchllllld by a Japan•••
com11111y that h11 rapleced Am~&amp;Fican workers
with foreign emplOy-, Ia making ·American

retiree trade.

I

'81 Buick
LeSabre
Limited

I

' By TOLt HUNTER
Sentinel Newa Staff .
.
Friday night's elation of a 21-20
come from behind Meigs victory over
Waverly quickly turned to feelings of
shock and sadness within the Meigs
Local SchooiHommunity following
Saturday's death of senior defensive
back Matt Ault at a Columbus area
hospital.
Ault, 17, Pomeroy, was pro·
nounced dead at 7:20p.m. Saturday
at The Ohio State University Hospi·
tals after suffering what has· tentatively been ruled a brain hemorrhage,
according to hospital .spokesman Bob
Fitzsimnlons.
Ault suddenly collapsed outside of
the Meigs locker room following Friday's emotional win at Waverly, suffering a "head bleed" or hemorrhage, of undetermined cause.
according to Ken Phillips of OSU

Chev•.

Cab

·Wheel Drive
•

miiM.

•

GallipoU.

(614) 446-3672

Ca.U ToU Free ·1-800-521-0084

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A.

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·tl
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Westerville, a Columbus suburb.
On' Sunday, Clinton was in New
Jersey and New York to boost
Democrats' chances of recapturing
Congress and to open a five-day trip
through industrial states and the
South .
Clinton is leading Dole in Ohio,
according ,to an Ohio Poll released
S~nday.

The telephone tracking poll was
taken between Thursday and Saturday. It found that49 perce,ni of those
who said they were likely to cast bal·
lots on Nov. 5 said they would vote
for Clinton, compared to 35'percent·
for Dole. ·
Of the rest, 8 percent said they
wquld vote for Refonn Party candidate Ross Perot. Eight percent said
they would vote for someone else or
didn't know.

The poll had a margin of error pf
plus or minus 4 percentage points.
:The . Cincinnati Enquirer, · WLWT·
1TV in Cincinnati and the.University
Iof Cincinnati sponsor the poll.

•

will stop in a~other. Columbus suburb, Westerville, on Thesday while
running mate Jack Kemp will likely
be · in the state later in the week,
Preisse said.
Mrs. Dole traveled to a dairy farm
south of Springfield, arriving ·on a
wagon pull~ by a tractor. She told
,supporters seated·on bales of hay that
.her husband's e~perielice on the agri.culture committee in Congress and
!Jiving in Russen, Kan .• make him
well qualified to s~e farmers.
' "Bob·Dole knows how hard dairy
farmers work," she said, adding that
Dole's father was a dairy farmer. '
Bllrl)' Young. a grandson of the
founder of Young's Jersey Dairy
P~n~~, where the rally was held, said
flrttlen s F e beca~ of his .
promise• to
au te the mdustry.

.

. .

celebration of fans and player followed, until Au II suddenly _collapsed
outside of the Meigs locker room .
Ault wa~ treated at the scene by
,the Pike County Emergency Medical
Services, and transported to a Waverly hospital where he was tran~ferred
by Med Aight helicopter to OSU.
"Matt was a great kid, very popuJar. When a tragedy like this happens,
it hurts everyone in the community
.very deeply," said Buckley.
Counselors and the high school's
crisis intervention team met with students as they arrived at Meigs High
School for this morning's classes,
3ccording 10 Buckley.
"Everything went well this morning. The counselors and crisis team
met initially with the football team,
cheerleaders, and coaches. The indicalion tliat we have is that the crisis
· (Continued on Page 3)

Meigs jobless rate falls

•

CINCINNATI (AP)- A trackClinton flew to Ohio for a campaign
ing poll taken late last week indiappearance at a suburban communicated that President Clinton may be
widening his lead over Republican· ty college and to attend a private
event at a downtown hotel:
challenger Bob Dole in Ohio.
Clinton arrived about 12:45 a.m.
The telephone poll, taken
today
at a private runway near Clevebetween Thursday and Saturday,
hind
Hopkins
International Airpon
· also found sustained·opposition to
• a proposal that would allow river- · and the' International Exposition Center. He made no public comment as
boat gambling in some counties.
he left in a motorcade for a downJn the presidential race, 49 per·
town
hotel.
cent of likely voters said they
.
He
was scheduled to speak late
would vote for Clinton, compared
this morning at the western campus .
with 35 percent fo( Dole. Eight
of
Cuyahoga Community College in
percent chose Reform Party candi·
Parma.
His private events set for eardate Ross Perot and the rest
ly
afternoon
are at the Omni Hotel .
favored someone else or were
has
now made seven visClinton.
undecided.
its to Ohio this year, most recently on
An Ohio Poll eonducied
Oct
I 0 ill Dayton. He also wi II cambetween Sept. 26 and Oct . .3
paign
in Michigan later in the day.
showed Clinton with 47 percent,
··
Repuplican
presidential candidate
Dole with 39 percent and· Perot
Bob
Dole
will speak at a campaign
with 4 percent
On the riverboat gam61ing
· issue. 53 percept of those questioned in the latest poll opposed the
. proposal and 42 percent were in
SPRINGAELD (AP)- Arriving
, 'favor. Another 5 percent didn't
the same day that a poll indicated her
know.
husband was losing ground in Ohio,
In the earlier poll, 49 percent
Elizabeth Dole. told supporters on
were oppqsed, 45 percent were in
Sunday that Bob Dole would look out
favoc lind 6 percent had no opinion.
for farmers.
,
·
The poll had a margin of error of
An Ohio Poll showed Dole lagged
4 percentage point~.
behind President Clinton by 14 perThe proposal would allow eig~
centage points. The same· poll con. permanently moored riverboat
ducted earlier this month showed
' casinos in Hamilton. Cuyahoga,
Clinton with an 8-point lead over
Lorain and Mahonina counti!S.
Dole.
• The Univmity of Cincinnati's
· Doug Preisse; head of Dole's
· lnstit'u~ for Policy lleMuch con·
Ohio. campaign staff, dismissed the
ducted the poll, lniorvlowin1 .,37
findinas and said the campaian will
)ilrdy~ .
.
.
Sllrt UMnJ ilew ads this week.
.
The Ohio Poll 11 concluetina a
. "lt'i not over here," Preiue said.
tnlekinl I'C!II of likely voten in
Sunday's rallies in Reynolclsblq
phio. E..:b day, I00 to 200 llbly and Sprinlfield ldcbd off wJuu will
voten will be interviewed.
.be a buly wee1t for the campaign. The
'
1Republican presidentilll- candidate

Hospitals.
An al\topsy is being conducted
today at the Franklin County coro·
ncr's office, and is expected to conelude whether Au It's death was the
result of an aneurism or a head injury.
"We.were told initially that it was
an aneurism, that it was not football·
related;then we were told that maybe
it was. Obviously, if he had an
aneurism, nothing preventative could
have been done and the coaches or
trainers would not have known about
it Everyone did everything they
could in this situation. It's tragi~; ·
said Meigs Local Superintendent Bil.l
Buckley.
Meigs senior quarterback Brad
Davenpon concluded Friday's game
with a snap and the taking of a knee
to run out the remaining :30, follow- .
ing a Matt Williams interception in
the Waverly' end zone. A p~st game

Unemployment up slightly In Ohio

Mrs. Dole mines_OhiQ for support

alum1num Wheell,

38,000

worker• work longer ehltle then their counlar·
parts In Japatn and have tried to take away
health benefits. Protaatora urged people not to
buy llraa medii by Brldgeatonelflreatone.
Shown era Woody Clll, Ed Barnett, Tarry Ball,
· Bernard Compton, Bill Wllllama, Kalth Kin~
and Jatt Peckham.
·

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OLDSMOBILE

stoner Janet Howard; Jatt Fowler,
Houae
of Representatives; Proaecutlng Attorney John
Lenteli; and commissioner candidate Jeff
Thornton •

reading from? Attacks and accusa- need to be sent a message come Elec- ·, Jeff Fowler spoke of a true committions like this ;~re not the Christian lion Day, and these folks can go crawl .ment to jobs, education, and high·
faith . Frank Cremeans says that this ·back under the rock from whence 1·ways as top goals if 'elected to sueis the way that politics and elections they came;: Strickland said. · · · ceed incumbent John Carey in
(Continued on Page 3)
are - negative. Groups such as ibis · Ohio 94th district hQUse candidate

Clinton lead Clinton makes return
IS grow1ng,
·v isit to Buckeye State
.
poll reports
CLEVELAND (AP)- President rally Tuesday at Otterbein College in

'

"--oluoll

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer

CAifmtDA'ifEs GATHER - Democratic can. dldatea attandlng Saturday'• Kennedy Day Dinner wera, from left, Sheriff J1n111 Souleby; Tid
Strickland, U.S. Congreaa; County Comml•·

97 LeSabre trade. Local Owner, low miles. Shows
a lot of T.LC.

entry,
•

Dream Catch• Loa Boaner

from paying millions of dolllii's in
fedend income taxes.
"If for no other reason than that,
you should vote against Frank Cremeans and send a message on Nov.
5. That particular vote pro~es beyond
a shadow of a doubt that Frank does
· not truly represent southeast Ohiqans
and the Sixth District," said Strick:
land
. '
,
Strickland spoke about literature
being circulated across the Sixth
District by the Coalition of Politically Active Christians, a political action
group fonned by a former congressman from Texas. Strickland read
accusations brought by the group
·against the Clinton admiQistration
and Democratic candidates, including
charges of bribery, murder, and drug
abuse.
, "This literature is absolutely
.repugnant. What bible are these folks

Meigs Local community copes
with death of football player.

•

• GEO •

Strickland attacked Cremeans'
push of the $500 child tax credit, saying Cremeans was misrepresenting
the tax cied.it for what it really is.
"The only way families can ben·
elit from the $500 child tax credit
plan is if they owefederal income tax
monies. During a recent visit to the
University of Rio Grande, a woman
with two children stood up and
explained ·that she was a student who
was trying to raise two children and
go to schooL Frank told her that she
would qualify for $1 ,000 in tax cred'
its automatically. That's wrong,"
Strickland said in remarks made to
over 130 people at Saturday's event.
Strickland attacked'Cremeans for
his vote of suppon, on four separate
occasions, for a House measure
renouncing U.S. citizenship of a
group of wealthy American businessmen to allo10 that group to keep

'94 ·Buick·
LeSabre
Sedan

AU1110RIZED DEALER FOR ALTA INDUSTRIES LTD

;

• By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newa Staff
Fermer Sixth District U.S. Rep.
. Ted Strickland cited Frank Cremeans'
voting record in Congress and his use
of political action groups in negative
camp~
· ning, In anacking the first
, term·
ublican congressman for
"failing truly represent the Sixth·
· . Ho~se District" during Saturday's
annual Mei~s County . Democratic
. Party Jefferson-Jackson Day' Dinner
in Pomeroy.
Strickland discussed Cremeans'
· House vote supponing a measure to
· raise taxes on working people who
make less than $28,000 a year, ":'t¥1e
, giving a $16,000 tax cut to lllj1lse
making over $100,000 a year, sa~mg
Cremeans "is either one of the most ·
deceitful people on earth or he i s the
one of the most uninformed in Congress." ·
'

'93
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1 Section, 10 1'811" 35
A O.nnett Co. Newo.,.w

Pomeroy-Middieport, Ohio, Monday, October 21, 1996

.Strickland ·rips opponent's
·record at .Democrat dinner

Buick

'

Alia Log Home can be. Take advanlllge of today'a low inlerefl ..-. For

Cloudy tonlaht, low.
soa. TUHaay cloudy
with acattared ahower1.
Hlgha In the 701.

1111

T·Bird

For a.great deal on
any one of these
cars see...

l.cj Draan Catcher Log

Kicker:

0-7-5-1-8-2
Pick 3:
8-1-9
Pick 4:
3-0-3-4

'94 Ford

;~

.

17·27·28-30-37-39

•

V6 engine, auto
trans, tilt, cruise,
pwr windows,
pwr lacks,
AM/FM cassette

Now is the time to consider
. POMEROY • Walnut trees seem relandscaping your yard with decid. ··to be loaded with nuts th_is year. Eat- uous (plants that lose their leaves
; ina grandma's walnUt cake and cook· . each fall) plant material. Fall pi anti- ·
~ ies fresh from the oven is a fond ng provides sufficient time for the
•; memory for many of us. It is work to tree or shrub to reestablish a root sys·.,prepare the nuls for·cooking, but well tem before the winter weather senles
worth it!
in. The plant will grow quite rapidly
1990 PON~C fiREBIRD
Nuts should be allowed to lully in the.Spring. Remember, Spring is
•
·mahire.on the tree and to fall natu- only 148 days away! Choose your
T·Tops, alum
rally (usua!ly after the first couple of plants with care. Most plants have
· wheels, auto
·!hlrd frosts). Gather as soon as pos· descriptions of how large they grow,
trans, tilt wheel,
liblo and husk promptly. This pre-- flower color, fruit size &amp; color, and
cruise control,
• vents both loss of color and flavor fall color.
low miles.
quality due to darkening and/or
Dig a hole twice as :.Vide as the
·· molding husks.
root ball or container. According to
. ;;. Hulling ~s. ti~ consuming. For research, over 80 of a plants nutrient
•·,·. small quu11111es, nuts can be placed ' collec'ting roots are located in the top
r:~_:._ : in a bucket wtth some clean gravel 8-10 inches of soil. Staking the trees ·
) ·. and water. Stir the mixture until the will assist in keeping the tree upright
·: hulls loosen and falloff. Many people even during a wind stonn.
This car is in
~ have driven.o•er hulled nuts wrapped .
Water in your new planting.
excellent
shELpe
: in burlap bags. This too, is time con- Watch out for Indian Summer week
with V6 auto,
- suming. Larger quantities can be when water ll)ay be necessary.
commercially husked.
... ~
·
tilt, cruise,
Wash the husked black walnuts in
Interested in improving your
pwr. windows,
· water as soon as they are hulled to horse's nutrition?· Join other horse
pwr locks,
produce more attractive nuts when owners by attending Equine Clinic on
keyless entry,
: they are dried. A curing period of sev- Tuesday, ·Oct 29, from 6:30-8:30
and more.
.- nat weeks in a dry room with ade- p.m. at the Meigs County Public
~ quate circulation is necessary. Spread Library, Pomeroy Branch.
:.out nuts away from direct sunlight for
Topics being covered by JoAnn ·
"2-3 days.
Pfeiffer, Purina Mills. Inc. district
The nuls should be easier to crack. manager, are "Basic Horse Nutrition"
.· Crack the nuts open and remove the and "Hay Quality". This event is
'- . nut meat. The nut should crack if they being sponsored by the Meigs Coun· I are ready.
ty 4-H Horse Committee. The event
The ideal storage conditions for is open 10 the public however, pre- walnuts include wire baskets or mesh· registnitioil is necessruj. Call the
_: bags t.o allow plenty of. air circulati~n, Meigs County llxtension Office at
. '60 degree temperatures and relative 992-6696 to register.
: humidity of70 or so. Excessive dryHarold H. Kneen Is lht Meip
:. ness may cause shells to crack and County Agricultural Agent, Ohio
State University Emnslon.
, .-:. . kernels will spoil.
V8 engine,
,8\paas. seating,
.•
pwr windows,
pwr locks, alum
wheels, excellent
If you have ever dreamed of owning a
condition

...

Super Lotto:

Sports on Page 4

Farmer reveniiCS ·from calfish are
forecast higher than lut year's record
$351 ntillion, bu~ profits are being
hurt by high grain prices.
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) - Color
Nebraska soybean growers happy.
The start of the harvest is bring ·
. prices in $7-a-bushel range and yields
are strong at40 to 60 b~shels an acre.
Bean quality is good.
·
"Farmers are very happy with the
yields," said Mary Hanke of the AGP
Grain Cooperative in Lincoln. "They
wish prices were higher, but they 're
still highenhan the tO-year average."

Braves swamp
Yankees 12·1
lrfopener

be quickly collected.
This was siiJIPOIOd to be an off.
year for pecans. but the tinting of laa
year's storms IICIIIIlly helped ~
a bumper crop now about ready for
harvest, Nesbitt said.

atres.

IIEIOS 8WCD SUPERVISORS- Tom Thel88
11\d Chartes Y~l wwe I'll elacllld to the Me9
SWCD Board of SupentiiOI'a Tueaday at the

Ohio Lottery

Young said many fami.lies are los-.
jing t~ir farms because they can't
:afford costly inheritance taxes.
"It's a shame to have a farm lost
because it can 'I· be passed· along to
'family members," "Young said.
·
Earlledflthe day, at Reynoldsburg
High School, Mrs .. Dole Walked
among the crowd S!lllted in chairs on
the gymnaslum floo~. talking at;out
DOle's commitment to famili~s ~nd
, children.
·, Her husband, she said, would be
tough on drugs and take on the enter·tainment industry.
"When you're president of the
·United States, you have to provide
moral leadership," Mrs. Dole said.
She used ll~year-old Counney
Thomas of Reynoldsburg to make.a
·ooint ftbouf, her •hushand's prOIJ(lsal

4

. The unemployment rate for Ohio in~reased slightly in September, the
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services ·said Friday. And, that trend wa5
reflected in much of southeastern Ohio.
·
In Meigs County, however the jobless rate fell by 0.2 percent- from 9
percent to 8.8 percent Gallia County's rate increased from 7.3 percent to 7.7
percent between August and Sepiember.
Other regional September jobless · rates
(August rates in paren- September jobless rate
thesis) were : Athens:
5.0 (4.9) percent; Jackson: 6.2 (6.5) percent;
Lawrence: 6.0 (6.1)
percent; Scioto: ~.8
(8.2) percent: and, Vinton: 8.3 (7 .7) percent.
Ohio's September . OH
rate was 4.8 percentup from 4.6 percent in
August. The national
· ~ate was 5.2 percent for
September, compared
.with ~5 . 1 percent the
' month before.
"The rise in the
unemployment rate for
Huntington .
September is generally
reflected across indus- '--------"----------1
tries, '' said Debra Bowland, administrator of the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services.
·
..
·
"September tends to be a volatile month for estimating employment due
to large movements in and out of the labor market as schools resume. Over·
all, the unemployment rate remains low and the job p1arket strong," she said.
Among the state·s 88 counties, Franklin bad the lowest jobless rate, at2.9
percent. Morgan County had the highest, atll.7 percent.
. Among cities with populations of more than 50,000, Youngstown had the
highest jobless rate, 10.1 percent, while Kettering had the lowe~t at2.t percent.
. ·
The county and city rates are unadjusted, meaning they do-not take into
account seasonal adjustments in employment.
·
Nine counties had rates at or below 3.4 percent, and nine had rates higher than 7.5 percent.
·
The state and national rates are seasonally adjusted, while the county
rates are not.
·
The number of Ohioans with 'jobs was 5.4 million in September, down
3,000 from August. The number of workers unemployed was 276,000, up
from 264,000.
·
Over the past year, the 11umber of Ohioans working has increased by
.126,000 from 5.3 million. The number unemployed has dropped by 1,000
from 277,000.

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Commentary

lloncllly, Octo-. 21, , .

..... 2·

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OHIO \V c•&lt;~lht~ r

Monday, OctOber 21, 1 -

•• •• •

Co.

Le~ers to the edi~or

More rain, clouds to spread
across state.on .Tuesday
By The At1oclated Preu
The National Weather Service
says there will be a break in the
· clouds and rain overnight as a low
' pressure system which had been
located over the East Coast mo~es
northeast Lows tonight will be in the
40s in northern and eastern Ohio and
the low to mid 50s in the western and
• southern parts of tlie state.
·
A slow moving storm system will
move out of the Plains states and
spread more rainfall and clouds
across Ohio on Thesday. Highs will
range from around 60 in the extreme ·
northeast to the low 70s in the far
southern ·regions-of the state. .
Clouds continued ·to cover the
stale overnight on the back side of a ·
low pressure system centeJed over

Opposed to gambling Issue

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Dear Cunnudgeon: I see ·where in Hope
rope off ~oober galleries in the cafe- , :
The Cut'mudgeon has finally fig- Rush Limba~gh's television show
Dear Bob: Many people seem to terias?
.
!
UJed out why he is 50 dam sour, and was tenninated. Has the Bloated ,have forgotten exactly what Gingrich
Dear Cunnudgeon; Is it my age • :
wouldn't you know it, iiiC answer has One's star finally imploded?-- Dou- •said in 1994. A "senior law-enforce- showing, or do I sense a new )Iouth
been right there in the stars for 4.5
ment official" had told him, Newt craze sweeping the nation?-- Janis in
billion years.
said, that perhaps ·"a quarter of the Joplin
·
This past June, a team of
White House staff, when they first
Dear Janis: I think your fad detec- •
astronomers from die University of
came in, had used drugs in the last · tor is working well. This summer, ' · .
lllinoi.s at Urbana-Champaign found glas in Fairbanks
four or five years."In astaff of 1,700, .then 14-year-old gymnast Dominique 1:
traces of acetic acid 2S,OOO light
Dear Douglas: Could be. One that would be 425 people. As it turned Moceanu pul;llished an autobiogl'lyears from Earth in a cloud of dust recovering dinohead of my acquain- out, exactly 21 staffers were subject· phy. Then 13-year•old country music •
and gas. ·Aceti~ acid is an organic lance says Rush m8de a fatal mistake ed to .drug tests for .prior use. In olh- singer LeAnn Rimes hit the chans • :
-compound known 10 he Oile of the · last winter when .he claimed Pat ·er WQrds, Newt exaggerated by a fac· 'with . a hurtin' tune called "Blue." •
building blocks of life.
· Buchanan had abandoned conser· torof20.Afairlytypicalperf'OrmllftCC · Dear· CurmudJeon: There are , 1•
Another narqe for it is vinegar.'
·vatism with his populiSI appeals. A for him, I would say.
crows in New Caledonia that 111e ; :
Don't you see? At one. time, we trendspotter I know says angry white i Dear Cunnudgeon: Have you 1twias al tools, and shrimp in Belire I
were all just molecules of vinepr in males are simply out this year. Sub- heard about the latest health hazard? •dlat socillire like ants and boea. It : j
. the dark vastness of space. Some JOI .urban women are in, and Soccer 't's peanuts. Some kids are atleraic to sort of• humbles a homo llllpiena: - : . ,
blended wid! molasses and beclllle Moms just don't give a hoot about !be peanuts, and die reaction can be fatal. Kirk in Doujlu
·~
your nonnalsweet-and-sour people. · Gas Man.
.
'Schools across America are cllllllor·
~ Kirk: Have you hNrd about
~
Some JOI COIIIIecled to a1oms of ,ray
Dear Cunnudgeon: I know the jnJIO declare themselves peanut-free ;the Brazilian slolhllhal hua uplide . . •
matter and became columnists. Some elite media don't like to 1ive any ·zones. •• Josh in Billinp
;down and liatea "10 'Ruah· 1'111111&amp;? : !'
teamed up with particlea of hot air credit to Newt Gingrich, but you have
Dear Josh: Sad, but true. And no I Arnuin1 animlls.
1
became talk-show bOlla.
to admit he was on r.get when he doubt nece~~~~~ry,llthouJh it -.us to ,
II a qed'· 't '
. Which brinp me 10 the lintques- ,. warned us about the drug, addicts in me that kids who munc/1 Reese's 1writer for Newspaper laterprllt ;
·
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lion of the day:
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Bill Clinbln White House. -- ll,ob Pieces have riJhts, too. What if we_ Ailoclatlaa.

' By Joaeph Spear

Joseph Spear

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Matthew Blair Ault, 17, Pomeroy, died Saturday, Oct. 19, 1996 at Ohio
State University Hospitals, Columbus. "
He was born Dec. 18, 1978 in Gallipolis, and was a senior at Meigs Local
High School, an athlete on the football and WJestling teams, a member of
the American Legion 1996 State Baseball team, an honorable mention in
WJestling, and a member of the VICA club, Boy Scouts of America and a
Boys State candidate.
·
·
·
He had been accepted at DeVry Institute. He was named most valuable
player and received the sportsmanship. award when he was active in little
league.
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. He is ~urvived by his mother and stepfather, Carol and Chris Shank, of
Pomeroy; father and Stepmother, Dennis and Charlotte Ault of Middleport;
a brother, TY Ault of Pomeroy'; grandparents, William Ault of Middleport,
and Ethel Shank of Pomeroy; and several aunts, uncles and cousins.
He was p~eeeded in death by grandmothers Lorena Ault and Mary Sheets.
Services will be 2:30 p.m. Thursday at Meigs Local High School in
Pomeroy, with burial following in Riverview Cemetery.
The family will be present at the Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport, from
2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday. Friends may call at the funeral home between
2 and9 p.m.
In lieu of tlowers,\lonations may be made to the Meigs Athletic Boosters Association., Meigs High School, 42091 Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy Ohio
45769.
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Nelle V. Childs Bahr
Nelle v. Childs Bahr, 73, Middleport, died Sunday, Oct. 20, 19% at her
Jesidence.
Born Sept. 29, 1923 in MiddleP,Ort, daughter of Martha Childs of Mid·
dleport and the late George W. Childs, she worked as a secretary and bookkeeper for many years, and assisted her husband in the family business, Bahr
Clothiers in Middleport. She was a member of the Middleport Church of
Christ.
She is survived by h~r husband of 49 years, Cash A. Bahr of Middleport;
two daughters and sons-in-law, Christine and Charles Williams of Gallipolis, and Candace and George Pope of Bidwell; six grandchildren; a brother
and sister-in-law, Bill and Joan Childs of Middleport; and two sisters and a
brother-in-law, Dorothy and Ralph Gibbs Jr. of New Haven, W.Va .. and Janis
Falkner of Binningham, Ala.
. Services will be II a.m. Wednesday in the Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport, with AI Hartson and Ann Forbes officiating. Burial will be in the
Riverview Cemetery, Middleport. Friends may call at the funeral from 7-9
p.m. Tuesday. ·
·
Memorial contributions may be made to the Holzer Hospice, Memorial .
Drive, Pomeroy Ohio 45769.
·

Vennont Martins, 86, formerly of Racine, died Monday, Oct. 21, 1996
in the Veterans Memorial Hospital Extended Care Facility.
Arrangements will be announced by the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

Margaret M. Thompson
•

Margaret M. Thompson, 91, Cuyahoga Falls, fonnerly of Pomeroy, died
Saturday, Oct 19, 1996 in the Summa Health System, Akron.
Bom March 25, {905 in Hartford, W.Va., daughter of the late Wilbur and
Eva Bass Moo~e, she attended the Cuyahoga Falls First Assembly of God.
She is survived by a son, William Thompson of Stow; nine grandchild~en;
17 great-~dchildJen and numerous great-gJeat-grandchildren; and two sisters, Betty Frank of Limaville, and Agnes Irvin·of Portsmouth.
.She was also p~eeeded in death by ber husband, Lewis W. Thompson. in
1983; and liy a son, Gene Thompson.
Services will be 2 p.m. TUesday in the Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport,
with burial following in the Beeeh Grove Cemetery, Pomeroy. Friends may
call one hour priorto service at the funeral home.

NeUe v. Childs Bahr
Nelle V. Childs Bahr, 73, Middleport, died Sunday, October 20, t9% at .
her residence, following an extended illness.
· I
Born September 29, 1923 in Middleport, the daughter of Martha Childs
of
and the late
W. Childs, she worked as a Secretary and
Bookkeeper for many years, and ·
assisted her husband in the family
business, Bahr Clothiers in Middleport. She was a member of the Middleport Church of Christ.
She is survived by her husband
of 49 years, Cash A. Bahr of Middleport; two daughters and sons-in· '
law, ·Christine and Charles Williams
of Gallipolis, and Candace and
George Pope of Bidwell; six grandchildren, Jason, Nicholas and AJ.
Williams, Kelly, Mindy and Ben
Pope; a ~rother and sister-in-law,
Bill and Joan Childs of Middleport;
and two sisters and a brother-in-law,
Dorothy and Ralph Gibbs Jr. of New
flaven, West .Virginia, and Janis
Falkner of Binningham, Alabama.
She was preceded in death by
her father.
·
Chlldt Bahr
Services will be II a.m.
Wednesday, October 23. i996 in the
Fisher Funeral Home in Middlepon, with AI Hartson and Ann Forbes officiating. Burial will follow in the Riverview Cemetery in Middleport. ·
Friends may call Tuesday, October 22, 1996 from 7-9 p.m. at the funeral
home.
Memorial contributions may be made to Holzer Hospice, Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy Ohio 45769.

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Strickland rips opponent's
'tunity, we hope · bring change to
southeast Ohio," said Fowler.
· Meigs County Commissi,oner ·
Janet. Howard, and commissioner
candidate Jef( Thornton briefly
assessed some of their·goals if elect- .
ed to the county office and thanked
those who supported them in the
March primary.
Also anending Saturday's dinner
were party chairman Sue Maison,
party officials from surrounding
counties throughout the area and
officials from various local labor

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(lnions.

a one-car accident Saturday on SR
124 in Rutland Township.
.Hood was westbound at II :30
p.m. when the car he drove failed to
qavigale a left curve, went off the
right side of the road, and struck a
limestone pile, according to the
~eport.

The car was moderately damaged,
troopers said.

ro.....,

·"Meigs Local

Ol!lo~1e9.

(Coiltlnued from P~g~1)

IIIJB8CRIPI'ION IIATIII

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teamwillbeattheschool.foraslong · Services weJe held at II a.m. today, Monday, Oct. 21, 1996 in St.
as we need them 10 be," said Buck-· Matthew's Catholic Church, Ravenswood, W.Va., for Clarence Albert Simley.
mons, 72, 703 Cyp~ess St., Ravenswood, who died Friday, Oct 18, 1996.
The high school aisis interyention~·
Monsignor Sylvester W. Staud officiated and burial was in the
team includes the Rev. AI Hartson o RavenswOOd Cemetery.
the, ~iddleport Church of Christ,
He was bom May 2S, 1924 in Huntington, W.Va., son the late Harold .
group of .psycholo1ista from1 and Lena Blankenship Simmons. He was a sheet 11\Ctal Journeyman and
ACCESS of Glllipolis, psychologist' welder at Kaiser Aluminum &amp;: Chemical Corp. . ·
.
Bob Hudek wilh the Moip County· · He was a member of the Knilhts of Columbus degree telllll, a !Little Leage
Educllional Servii:o Center, and the coach and umpiJe in Ravenswood &amp;lid Huntington, a member of Steelwork·
school1s l!lidaace counselors.
en Local 5668, a Cub Scout master for four years. IWD in HuntinJ(on and '
"ltaaiJ'OIIP of people thai you twoinRavenswood,amembetoflhePointPieasant(W.Va.)MooseLodp,
hope you never have 10 -.but it's. 111111 a member of St. Martbew's Chun:h and the church council. He was a
a poup thai you aood in the oveqt of U.S. Anay veteran of World War U.
·
a tragedy. We had a vecy quiet buildSurvivina are1his wife, Betty Stuik Simmona; four sons, Rick Simmons
ina this mornina. This is aometbi~l · ·of Port Myen, FIL, Albert Simmons of Alaball'll, Phil SirDIDOIII of
that we are aoin110 just have to gee Ravt~~~~wood, and Edward Simmons of Millwood, W.Va:! two dauJhtera,
lhrou1h. • Buckley Aid,
Cindy McComll of South Point, and Rita James of Fort Myen; J~iJht pant!·
FuneniiCIVices
for
Ault
have'tett-cbildlen,
tbne deplfllldcblldJea and two ltep-peat·lfllldchildren; a sillier,
1
.tativcly been sciJe!luled for Thunday .,Pal Schneider of Che 1 pe~ke; and a brother, Harry SimmonJ of Hundnp~~~.
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1afternoo.n at the hilh school's Lany ; Ho wu lbo prec:edod in death by two ~·
~ R. Momsqni)'DIIIUium.
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Amlil~nll were by the R~ ~ral Home,,Ravenawood.

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Clarence A. Simmons
of

Dolly .............................................. :... !l Oollls

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Wather Evans

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EMS un1ts answer 13 calls ·

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VinegarJ?Ius hot air· gasbag ·_

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:vermont Markins

Weekend accidents leave
·fo
residents injured

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Deborah Jean Bush

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(Continued from Page 1)
Columbus.
The ·Lelltl Township trustees will
"We see John Ca~ey's ads speak. met at 7 p.m.•toniglit at ihe hall. · Revival announced
ing of the commitment he has made
Revival services will beheld at the
in these three areas. Just look around:
Party planned
Faith Full Gospel Church, LongJ)ot·
Do we see any actual highway conThe Freedom Gospel Mission on tom, tonight through Friday, 7 p.m.
struction throughout the district. No.
County Road 31, Long Bottom, will- each evening with Evangelist Danny
Now is the time to stop our schools
have a Bible character tbemed party Patterso11 preaching.
from crumbling. Our kids deserve
on Sunday at 6 p.m. at the church.
bener in southeast Ohio," said
The public is invited to attend. Those Historical group
Fowler.
Chester-Shade Historical Associattending are asked to come cos"People ;Jike Ted Strickland and
tumed as a Bible character. A wiener ation will meet Thesday, 7 p.m. at the
myself know.what tbese important
Chester Fire Station. Development of
roast will follow.
issues are in southeast Ohio. We
the association will be completed.
stand for what is right and what good
~borahJean Bush, 43, Pomeroy, died Saturday, Oct. 19, 1996 at her res- ..in Jhis state. If you grant us the oppor·
Boosters to meet
Kate Corinan, visual llrtist of the
idence.
·
1be Meigs . Junior High School Ohio Arts Council will speak on CabBorn Dcc.t8, 1952 in Dayton, Ky., she was a member of the SacJed Heart
Boosters Club will meet tonight ric' collage depicting history ·of the
(Monday) in the school cafeteria area, the program which she is pre- Catholic Church in Pomeroy, a member of the Pomeroy Emergency Squad,
·
preceding the profi~iency test infor- · sentinJ1, in a workshop at Otester Ele- and worked with the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service.
She
is
survived
by·
her
husband.
PaulL.
Bush
II
of
Pomeroy;
four
daughrnational meeting.
. mentary School.
·
ters, Kellie Bush of Douglas, Ga;, and Kimberly, Reatha and Elizabeth Bush,
all ofthe home; a son, Jason Bush of.Mason, W.Va.; and five grandchildJen.
Four Pecple~1re
Mass of Christian Burial will be I0 a.m. Wednesday in the SacJed Heart in two separate m~~IS
Catholic Church, Pomeroy, with the Rev. Father Walter E. Heinz officiating. ed over the weekend
U11its of the .Meigs County Emer12:48 p.m. S~nday, Village Manor Burial will follow in Sacred Heart Cemetery in Pomeroy. ·
Meigs Post of the
The body will be ~eeeived 1\Jesday at6:30 p.m. at the church, with pub- Patrol.
gency Medical Service recorded. 13 Apartments, Patge Buckley, VMH; .
calls for assistance Saturday and
. 2:56 p.m. Sunday, Mulberry lie visitation'to follow at the church until 9 p.m. A vigil service will be held
None of the four'
peopleSunday. Units responding included: ivenue, Deshawna Sayre, Holzer .. ~.u 8:30p.m.
three of them in one accident- were
Medical Center;
·
,
MIDDLEPORT
treated at the scene, troopers said.
9:31 p.m. Sunday, Riverside
9:16 a.m. Saturday, Riverview
The three injuries arose from a
Apartments, Della ~illiron, treated at Apartments, Eric Bush, VMH . . '
one-vehicle crash on State Route 338.
POMEROY
~scene;
in . Lebanon Township Sunday,
I 0:0 I a.m. Saturday, Wetzgall
9:14 .a.m . . Sunday, Mulberry .
W
h E
82 42t•7 E
. R d p
d'ed S rd Oc . according to the patrol.
Avenue, Shirley Hannon, VMH;
at er vans, •
J
nterpnse oa • omeroy, I
atu ay, I,
Street, Albert Smith, Veterans MemoTroopers said Michael J. Hill II,
d
19,
1996
in
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.
0
1:3 p.m. Sun ay. , Nye Avenue,
rial Hospital;
·
Bom on Dec. 10, 1913 at Welch, W.Va., he was the son of the late Willie 23, 49968 SR 124, Racine, was
8:27 a.m. Sunday, Overbrook Barbara James, VMH.
and Amada Noe Evans.
northbound at 8:30 a.m. when his
RACINE
Nursing Center, Edna Foster, Pleaspickup
went off the right side of the
II :38 p.m. Saturday, Racine Fire
He retin:d in 1978 as a fork lift operator from Ford Tractor, Binningham,
ant Valley Hospital;
road,
went
over an embankment,
Mich. He was a veteran of World War II.
·
Station, Christine
Westfall,
VMH.
H
.
·
d
b
hi
.,
K
hry
E
d
d
h
·
t
struck
a
culvert
and tree, and then
e 1s surv1ve. y s w~ae, at n . vans; a son an .aug ter-m- aw,
RUTLAND
.
· 10:18 a.m. Saturday, Lower Route · D~v1d and Debbte Ev~ns of Bellv11le, M1ch.; two brothers-m-la~ and the1r overturned.
Hill told troopers his vehicle had
The Daily Sentinel 7, Helen Mulford, dead on arrival; · w1ves, Carl a.nd sw:a Dill of Pomeroy, and Willard and ~arbara Dtll o~Mans- struck
a deer, causing him to lose
8·51 p m Saturday Salem Street ·field; e1ght Slsters-m-law, Mary Starcher, Frances Carleton, Betty D11l, Bar(USPIII.213-9f0)
control
of the pickup, which was
Lilly Robin~on, HMC';
' bara Dill and Es~r Dill, all of Pomeroy: RettaArnett of Mansfield, WW! Faye
seve~ely
damaged.
Publlsbed every sllomoon, Monday _..,
·1:13 p.m. Sunday, Stale Route W~tson ?fR~svtlle; and diJee grandchildren, and diJee great-grandcMd~en..
Injured
were the driver and twc
Frldty, Ill Coort Sc, ' " - · Oldo, loy die
143 Lee Bini VMH
Serv1oes )NIII be I p.m. 'fuesday m the Ewmg Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
(l(llo Yolley Publllli .. Coorj&gt;ony~ Co..
''
SYRAcUSE
The Rev. Lamar O'Bryant will officiate and burial wiU be in . RQ~:k Springs passengers, Andrew C. Mahlman, 22,
Otclo457e9. Ph. 99-MI$6, Socood
51660 Bald Knob Road, Long Botdsss potllp ptld .. PonwoJ· Oldo.
S:59 p.m. · Saturday, Minersville , Cemeter,. Frie.nds may call at~ funeral home tonight from 6-9, and on Thes· tom, and Jamison S. Proffitt, 22,
Hill, Foster Yeauger, VMH.
·day unUithe ume of il\e serv1ces.
.
r 1 .,,.The Aucdllldl Praa. Ud thl Ohio
55956 SR 124, Portland. • I
,... pPC•r AuocllliOft.
Troopers said Steven R. HoOd, 33,
112 Vale St., Pomeroy, was injuJed in
POII11IIASTIIII s-t sddniO - - co
The Dolly Seodnol, Ill Coort St, ........,,

Trustees to meet

If only Bill ·Clinton were president

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Club·ptiuu social
_The Riverview Garden Club will
dine at Columbo's Restaurant, Parkersburg, W.Va., at 6:30 p.m. Thurslity. Members are to meet at the
Whitehead home in Reedsville at
5:30p.m.

Fall festival
The • Salem Center Elementary
School Fall Festival will be held Saturday, 5-9 p.m. featuring a haunted
house, auction, games and food.

.

Berry's World

eastern Pennsylvania. 'scaneJed rain
fell across northern Ohio, with lows
statewide from the low 40s to around
50.
The record high· temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was' 83 degrees in 1953. The
~eeord low was 17 deg~ees in 1952. ·
_Sunrise this morning was at 7:49
a.m. Sunset will be at 6:43 p.m. Sunrise Tuesday will be at 7:50a.m.
Weather forecast:
· Tonight... Mosdy cloudy. Lows in
die 40s north and east to the lower
and mid SOs west and south.
Thesday...Showers iikely southwest. Cloudy with mainly scattered
afternoon showers centrii,..Northwest and. southeast.

Meigs announcements

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Matthew Blair Ault

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COI)t·&amp;O"f'

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Born Dec. 26, 1917 in Jets ville, W.Va., son of Eva Coleman Anderson of
Summenville, W.Va., and the late Ercha Anderson, he was a mill helper-at
Kaiser Aluminum for 21 years.
He was a Wodd War II veteran of the U.S. Anny Air Corps, a member
of die,Second Baptist Church of Ravenswood, a mem!Jer of the Ravens~ood
Veterans of Fon:ign Wars and a former coal miner.
1 · He is survived by his wife, Florence McClung Anderson; two daughters,
!Linda Waybright ofFairplaip, W.Va., and Beverly McComas of Georgetown,
Ky.; three pndchildJen and two great-grandchildJen; a brother, Curtis Anderson of Ripley, W.Va.; and five sisters, Hilda White of Leivasy, W.Va., Ruby
Amick of Summersville, Elma Baber of Richwood, W.Va., Reva McCallister of Bridgeport, W.Va.. and Aleatha Howard of Pompton Plains, N.J.
S.crvices will be 10 a.m. 'fuesday in the Second Baptist Church, with the
Rev. Jack Gwinn officiating. Burial will follow at 2:30p.m. at Wallace Memorial Cemetery in Clintonville, W.Va., with the Rev. William F. Pittsenbarger officiating. Military graveside rites will be observed:
'
Friends may call from 6-9 tonight at die Roush Funeral Home,
Ravenswood.
.
In lieu of flowers. memorial donations may be made to !be Heritage Chris·
tian Academy Gy111 Fund in care of the Second Baptist Church, Ann and
Elwood s!Jeets, Ravenswood, W.Va. 26164.

IND.

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(Dc)p. COI)f'

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Leon En:baAndcnon, 78, Ravenswood, W.Va., died Friday. Oct. 19, 1996
in !be Ravenswood VIllage Heald! Center.

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Bsck to the cowboy days?

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Leon E. Anderson

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Today in history ·

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CIA thai spans diJee administrations, of a lack of equipmen~ especially the junk.
Md....,Mol....
Government audits estimated thll
our usociate George Clifford mhas air tanken that can muster such
WASHING10N- It was a made- learned.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
fon:e and power to light fires," Clin· 1taxpayers lost $66 million on !be
for-television
eomno;gn
moment:
&lt;
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' coldeal. But private estimates put the
UnansweJed, in the bill Clinton ton said at the signing ceJemony.
814-112·211M1 • Fax: 112·2157
orilil, chouographed and seemingly
1beJe is no doubt about the need number as high as $100 million.
nonconiroversial.
Then some of the planes the gov-·
for more planes. 1be number of airPJesidept Clinton, flanked by frretankers in' the hands of contractors ernment had handed over Slltled
fighters and fire trucks, stood atop a
who fight fires for the U.S. Forest turning up in international ho! spots
platform
outside an Albuquerque,
.A Gannett
Newspaper
.Service is falling, and within a cou- like Kuwait. far away from our
N.M .. hotel last week to announce he
ple years could be dangerously low. national forests.
had
signe4
a
bill
allowing
surplus
This caught the allention of a
But as administrative rules and
ROBERT L. WINGETT
military airplanes to be used in fight- signed are questions of whether die ·~egulations are drawn up to imple- House Agricultufe subcommittee
Publlther
ing wildfires.
fedqal government will comply with ment the law in the coming months, chaired at the time by Rep. Charlie.
Given
that
this
is
one
of
die
worst
·~era)
Services Administration the Forest Service would be wise to 'I Rose, D-N.C. Hearings were conCHARLENE HOEFLICH
'. MARGARET LEHEW
wildfrre
seasons
in
JeceDI
memory,
it
orders
to
take control of douns of look back at the bungling and boon- vened at which Rose ailed his suspiGtnet'M MIMget
Conlrol'was Iough not to support die presi- ·airtankers improperly given to con- doggles that plagued this program's cion that the Central Intelligence
. dent. For much of the local media . tractors under· a previous program. predecessor. ln the past, the Forest Agency had. pVI together the whole,
covering !be e~ent, fighting wildfires 'The planes may be worth as much as Service and its contractors have deal. Rose believes the CIA was
. was an issue close to the hearts of $100 million.
repeatedly managed to make a mess using the Fq~est Service as a cover to
their viewers, readers and listeners. · - Also yet to be determined is of well-intentioned plans.to put gov- free up planes for covert activity.
Much of the national.media noted whetper brokers and contractors ernment planes into the hands of the
The General Services Adminis11hat Clinton was making the most.of accused of ripping off the govern- firefighters who need them.
.tration, which acts as the governhis inclJmbency and his lead in the ment and taxpayers under die pre viBeginning iri 1987, Fo~est Ser~ice ment's landlord, has also gotten·into
polls with such "utterly uncontro- ous ' program would be allowed to contractors were' allowed to exchange the act. In September 1995, it orden:d
versial" events. "Clinton Relishes benefit from the new Wildfire Sup- · historic airoraft -- museum pieces -- the Forest Service to immediately
Signing Bills No One Could Possibly pression Aircraft Transfer Act of for surplus C- 130 and P-3 planes. The take control of the planes. But so far,
Hate," read one typical headline.
1996.
goyemment fulfilled its part of the the Forest Service has not complied, •
But beneath the preny picture is a
"We can' t tolerate a situation bargain. But instead of getting· his- ' saying the p,lanes were needed to •
legacy of fraud, theft, mismanage- ·where any firefighter is unable to pro- toric aircraft in exchange, it got fighi wildfires.
ne.r Editor,
get. Now I believe the target uSed to men! and alleged covert action by the tectthe public or .themselves because planes that amount to little more than
In June, a federal grand jury in ~
•
Are we soing back to the cowboy . be several rings and a bullseye in the
days when everyone wOJe a .45 gun? . middle. But they weJe using an out- 1 - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , Phoonix indicted Roy D. Reagan, the
:broker in many of the airplane swaps, ;
Tbetc are two states n- us who line of a person, which I PJesume
and Albano Fuchs, a former assistant
have laws permitting you to carry a taught the shooter where to hit a perdirector
of the Fore~t Service. Both :
I
concealed weapon.
.
·son 10 kill tbem.
face charges of conspiracy and theft ;
Now is this going 10 lead 10 a lot ·
We already ·have prisons full of
of government property' in conneetion .~
of killings. Now when you are jlllgfy · people who did lhC same things. ·
with the airplane ,exchanges.
· ,;
. youaresupposedto&lt;:ountiOIO.Now
Now is this target sending the
Also left unclear in the law that ;
with this law you will probably shoot wrong message?
Clinton signed is whether contractors ,
now and ask questions later.
Virail Walker
and brokers suspected of shady deal- ·
I was concerned when I saw on
Racine
ings in the previous program 'will "
1V teaching a person how 10 hit a tar·
once again be allowed to participate '
in the airplane swaps. Brian Burke, ,
'
deputy undersecretary for forestry, ·
told us his gut feeling was that ;.
known rogues would be excluded . .,
ne.r Editor,
nipped one of these follow-ups in the
Another Forest Service official said
I just want 10 Jemind Meigs Coun- bud, and you can do it again. Thank
the
key would be in the ~egulations ''
~ friends thai! if the door to gambling 'you for caring.
·
which are still to be drawn up.
•
ts opened, many other things that they
·
Pearl Scott
.. "
1be
new
law
does
include
safe.
. Middleport
do not·w~t will follow. A few years
guards to ensure the planes are used '
ago, canng community citizens
only .for fighting fires. The planes are '
. not allowed to leave the country :1
except to fight fires under interna- .~
tional agreements or with the wrillen .
;approval of the secretaries of agri- ,
By The Anoclatecl Press
1
:cultuJe and defense.
. Today is Sunday, Oct. 20, the 294th day of 1996. There are 72 days left
m the year.
. Perhaps most importantly, the ,
Today's Highlight in History:
planes are to be exchanged for fair
markel value, not junk,
',
On Oct 20, 1944, during World War II, Gen. Douglas MacArthur stepped
Jack Andersoa and Jan Moller "
ashore at.Leyte in !be Philippines, 2 112 years after he'd said, "I shall Jetum."
On this date:
are writen for Uaited Feature
Sy~dicate, Inc.
. In 1740, Maria 1be~esa became ruler of Austria, Hungary and Bohemia
,. "''
...
upon the death of her father, Holy Roman Emper!Jf Charles VI.
In 1803, the U.S. Senate ratified the Louisiana Purchase. . 1
"
'
. In 1892, the city of Chicago dedicated the World's Columbian Exposition.
.
·
.
Inl903, a joint commission ruled iR favor of the United States in a bound'
ary dispute between the District of Alaska wid Canada.
.
•
In 1944,the Yugoslav cities of Belgrade and Dubrovnik were liberated
..
during World War D.
Steinem answered herself with a noted, "On that theory, the bombing "The man is hollow."
In 1964, the 31st president of the United States, Herbert Hoover, died in By Nat Hentoff
In
czarist
Russia,
when
a
governslam dunk: "What happened was an· of Nagasaki was a great victory for
At that press confe~ence during
New York at age 90.
ment
decree
came
down
making
the
the
peace
movement."
t)lc
Democratic Convention, there ·,
outrageous
right-wing
Congress."
. ·!n 1967, seven men we~e convicted in Meridian, Miss., of violating the
lives
of
the
peasants
even
harder,
they
A
reporter
turned
to
the
fonnidawas
another defining moment. .,
Newt Gingrich pushed the_president.
ctvd nghts of three murdered civil rights workers.
ble Maxine Waters and asked why DoiOJes Huerta, long an associate of
In 1968, former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy m'arried Greek shipping would sigh and say, "If only the czar
knew."
The
czar,
however,
was
not
she
was not attacking Bill Clinton for Cesar Chavez -- who never had the. •
magnate Aristotle Onassis.
that
uninformed.
this
baleful welfare law.
benefit of Dick Morris' strategic
· In 19?3, in the "Satu~ay. Night Massacre," speCial Watergate prosecuj
A
variation
on
this
leap
of
conAg\ong
the
other
loyalists
at
the
Gently,
Waters
answered:
"Thank
~ounsel -- spoke: _
tor Archtbald Co~ was dtsmtSsed and Attorney General Elliot (... Richardsoling
faith
is
the
conviction
among
press
conference
were
renowned
.
you
for
reporting
that
I
am
not
angry.
1.
"We
were
in
shock
when
the
weison and Deputy Anomey General William B. Ruckelshaus resigned.
In 197~, more than 70 people died when the Norwegian tanker Frosta Clinton loyalists that if the true, the feminists Bella Abzug and Eleanor ·1bere was a lime when people would ~·are bill was signed. We're talking · ·,
collided wtth the ferryboat George Prince on the Mississippi River north of ·authentic, Bill Clinton is re-elected, Smeal. They too insisted that write a story about those angry fern- )!bOut the working poor," Huerta., t,
he will indeed be the president from although tl)e czar's signature was on inist women." But there was no rea- ~old the no-longer angry feminists.
New Orleans.
·.
·
. Te~ years ago: 1be government of Nicaragua formally charged captured Hope. No longer compelled to ·com- that cruel welfare law, he would, after son to be angry. 1be polls showed !"These fannworkers -- legal resi- :;:
promise, William Jefferson Clinton November, rescue the abandoned that the president would soon be ~ents -- have spent their entire lives ~
Amencan mercenary Eugene Hasenfus with several crimes, including ter·
will rise to the challenge of his mid- . children and their parents by crafting revalidated. The promised land was .pulling food on American families'
ron sm.
dle
name rather than pay silent trib- .humane changes that would be within reach.
.tables; and will not now be able to get
· Five years ago: Fire broke out in the hills above Oakland. Tile blaze killed
ute
to
Dick
Morris.
expected
of
the
poor
lad
with
a
sin"This
is
a
defining
moment
for
food stamps.
25 people and ~troyed more than 3,000 homes. The Minnesota 1\r;ins won
.
gle
The
leap
into
faith
that
we
shall
mother
in
Arkansas.
us,"
Rep.
Waters
went
on,
"not
to
be
"TheJe is no way to say that what · ~
game 2 of the World Series, beating the Atlanta Braves, 3-2.
yet
see
the
true
Clinton
was
taken,
for
An account of this tribute to the called angry feminists and to be here 'has happened is in any way positive. . ~
One year •.go: F~. the United States and Britain announced a treaty
·
example,
by
Gloria
Steinem
in
her
transcendent
president appeared in ,with all these cameras."
We must insist that it be changed. Or :
banmng atomiC blastS tn the South Pactlic- but only after France finished
answer
to
a
question·of
her
own
makthe.
October
Progressive.
The
report,
I
These
el)'linent
feminists
have
not
·we
must have second thoughts abOut .
testing there the follow!ng year. N~'TO Sec~tary General Willy Claes
ing
during
a
press
confe~ence at the "No More Angry Feminists," was by ,been alone in seeing beyond the pres- the Democratic Party.."
res1gned to face corrupnon charges m h1s nanve Belgium. Space shuttle.
Democratic Convention. It was orga- the magazine's managing editor, Ruth •ident's record to their vision of the
By the ye~ 2000,_a good many .:1
Co!umbta was launched on a Jesearch flight that had been delayed six times.
nized
by
the
usually
.
v
olcanic
conConniff,
who
could
hardly
believe
Jeffersonian
rebirth
that
is
to
come.
Americans
may have second
.Today's Birthdays: Radio-television personality Arlene Francis is 88.
gresswoman
,
M
a&lt;ine
Waters,
D-Calif.
' what she heard from these fonner tri- Mario Cuomo, in a strident speech at . .thoughts about both parties. But ·::
Country singer-niusiciail Grandpa Jones is 83. Columnist Art Buchwald is
• Steinem posed what seemed to be bunes of the downtrodden.
·the Democratic Convention, urged us where is the Norman lltomas to ere· .,.
71. Actor William ChristOpher is 64. Actor Jerry Orbach is 61. Country singer
a
difficult
challenge
to
a,presldent
Again,
there
W!IS
Gloria
Steinem:
.
all to save the Bill of Rights and the ate an educational new party? Not to
Jackson is 59. Actor Earl Hindman ("Home Improvement") is 54 ..
who had just signed the Republican "One good thing about this," she told · /Sup~eme ·Court by re-electing the win at first, but to begin to restore ·~
Smger Tom Petty IS 46. Actress Melanie Mayron is 44. Baseball All-Star
welfare bill that sent a million moJe the reporters, "is that it has gotten the ,president. Jesse J~kson preached to some credible hope that Clinton's re- •.,
Keith Hernandez is 43. Rock musician Jim Sonefeld ofHootie &amp; 1be Blow- childJen
ioto poverty: ''What hap- press to cover welfare. If we've the chpir at the convention by insist- . election does not necessarily mean
fish is 32. Rock musician David Ryan of The Lemonheads is 32. Rapper
. pened to this man who is the only done nothing but bring the spotlight ·ing they keep hope alive by voting for that this.is the president we deserve. 1
Snoop Doggy Dogg is 25. ·
president in history to know what it's to this issue ... it will mak,e an enor- Bill Clinton.
.
Nat HentoiJ is .a nationally · l
like to grow up poor with a single mous difference to this country."
.A couple of years ago, I asked renowned au~orlty on the First' ,
mother?"
Standing nexi to Rudl Conniff was . Rev. Jackson what be thought of the Amendment and the rest or the BW :
Without missing a 'beat, Glo~ia Marc C~oper of 1be Nation, who president . "Hollow," said Jackson. of Rights.
.:

.By Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller ·

t

.

The Daily Sentinel:' :Pian~-swap plan requires close oversight
iBv JIICII Andenoo

The Dally Sentinel • Pilge 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, OhiO

FHEE lf\SPEC'I'H)l\

JER REPAIR
CLI IC
,

FRUTH PHARMACY

f

�\

."

"

Sports

The Daily SentiDel
Plge4
Monday, October 21, 1tiMI

In the World Series opener,

•

•

'

•

• - llonday, October 21, 1998

.:·.

In Dlvlalon IV flf8t-round play, ·

.~·.

"The ball looks like the moon
right now," said Olipper Jones, who
made it4..() with a two-run single in
the third.
.
Following the ftrst raino111 of a
Series opener since 1979, the Braves
didn't have to worry about the field
conditions. Their big hits didn't
even land on the field.
Andruw Jones, a 19-year-old who
started the season in A-ball, hit a
twe&gt;-run homer in the second off
Andy Petlitte following Javy LOpez'
single. Atlanta finished off New
"We .were just ovt:rwhclmcd.'' York with a six-run, third, going on ·
Yankees manager Joe Torre said.
to send the Yankees to their worst
' Fred McGriff also homered for· loss in 34 World Series.
the Braves, who have outscored!
"It's beyond me what happened '
opponents 44-2. since falling .bOhind out there," said Pettine, whQ lasted,
St Louis 3-1 in the NL champi· ; just2 113 innings. "I had good stuff, .
onship series.
1 I had a good fir5t inning, I felt like I

. By SCOTT WOLFE

In the NfL,

.

was going to shut them down, and Braves manager Bobby Cox said. pitched i three-hitter against them in
then I blew it."
·
"The pitchers aren't exactly setting 1963.
Jeff BlaUser and Marquis Grissom him up, he's setting !hem up."
"We just ran into a buzz saw
singled leading off the third, Mark · And speaking of set up; the tonight," said Wade Boggs, who had
'Lemke bunted and Chipper Jones' Braves' pitching is in perfect order. half of New York's bitS.
single through the drawn-in infield ' Greg Maddux is to pitch tonight
John Smoltz was the buzz saw.
made it 4-0. McGriff singled, Lopez against Jimmy Key, and Tom He walked two batters each in the
.walked and Andruw Jones became Glavine follows Thesday night in first and second innings, but strandthe second player to homer in his Game 3 at Atlanta.
ed all four.
"Nobody can lay awake tonisht
lint two Series at-bats, matching !he
, Smoltz didn 'I illlow a hit until two
figuring. out how !hey could have outs in the fifth. when Boggs hit an
feat of Gene Tenace in I m.
"I think it's really something turned the tide," Torre said. ·;we're RBI double to.the center-field fence.
special for me," said Jones, who was here representinJ the American He allowed just two hits in six
.in the Instructional League at this League because we earned !he righf .innings, improving 10 4-0 in the postlime last year. "I think I never to be here. We're SljR not going to season this year and 9-1 overall.
roll over and die."
thought to get 8o far."
"This club has a lot of ptide,"
New York, which ·had never lost Smaltz said. ''The last week has
At 19 years, five months, Jones
became the yoQngest player to homer by more than eight runs in 186 pre- ' been something of fired-up bench,
in .a Series game, beating Mantle's vious Series games, managed just a fired-up team that knows we're·
four hits, the Yankees' fewest in a close to defending. We were almost
old mark by 18 months.
Series
game since Don Drysdale
"He learns things very qQickly,"

a

Iclose to bowing out."

·

I

.

By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Football Writer
When John Elway first saw the
Baltimore Ravens in their purple,
black and white, they looked like
strangers.
•
.
It didn't take him long to recognize that they remain the descendants
of the old Qeveland Browns, a team
Elway loved to tonnent.
Elway, who a decade ago beat the
Browns in two IJIC title games, did
it again Sunday to the Ravens, leading the Denv~:r Broncos to a 45-34
victory with two fourth-quarter
touchdowns, one his third touch-

.

.

down pass to Ed McCaffrey, the secSan Francisco's Steve Young
In other games Suriday, a 60-yard
ond a nine-yard run.
threw a 45-yard touchdown pass to pass from Troy Aikman to Kelvin
That came after Vinny 'Thstaverde tie CinciMati at 21 -all with 2:08left, Martin for Dallas beat winless
had throWn three touchdown passes ·then, despite his 'injured groin mus- 'Atlanta 32-28 at Texas Stadium, And
for the team that moved after last cle, bootlegged in from IS yards out Jimmy Johnson ·and Miami were
season from Cleveland to Balti- .for the winning score exactly a beaten 35-28 in Philadelphia as
more, turning a 28-13 halftime minute later. That gave the 49ers, · Jo!lnson rejeci lrvi~g . Fryar caught
deficit into a 34-31 lead.
down 21-0 in the first half, a 28-21 four touchdown passes for ·the
"It didn't feel like Baltimore," .victory over Cincinnati.
Eagles.
Blway said. "They didn'tlook like
And Jim Kelly drove Buffalo
The Broncos {6-1) had more
Baltimore. "I guess it felt more like down the field in the final I:43 to set trOuble with the Ravens (2-5) than
the B'rowns of old in different uni- up Steve Christie's 47-yarc! field recognizing the uniforms they wore
ronns."
goal, his sixth of !he game. That gave into Mile High Stadium.
Elway wasn't the only veteran Buffalo a 2S-22 win over the New
Baltimore came out in the second
.quarterback to showcase his come- Yodc Jets, who reached the midway half with a ne&gt;-huddle offense, and
back skills on Sunday.
mark at 0-8.
that seemed to energize them. Tes-

.

6. r ...........................+t

·World Series
Sunday's score

Allanta 12, New York I; Atlanta

14. YirJioia .................... 5-l

k!:adl ~~ 1..0

15. BriJham YOI.Jn&amp; ...... ,7· 1

16, Kansas s.. ................6-1
17. Penn St .....................l&gt;-2

TOIJI&amp;ht'apme

AI ..... ~ IS.II) or Now Yorlc
(Key 12-11), 7:15p.m.

•

.

New .Yort (Ro•n 12-8) at AlhMta

Thunday'apme

.

Arlanta, 8:15p.m., If

•

a.urnDivW.

I.a

lloolkko .................J
lodi_,tia........~
M;,m; ..................4
New Enalond .......4
N.Y.Jeu ..............O

2 0 .714 104 117

2 0 .714 124 114
J 0 ,571 161 121
J o .m 174 140
8 0 .000 114 212

Oolnl- .

H........ ............. s 1

o .714

to
Pi""""!Jo ,.......... ~ 2 0 .714 144 103
locbM..IIe .........l S 0 .37l Ill IS)
Balomore .............2 l o .286 159 201
CINCINNATI .... .1 6 0 .143 128 160
.
w........ Di......
Otn-..er .............. ,.. 6 I 0 . 8~7 189 127
KIRIDI City ......... S 2 0 .714 Ill lOS
174

2 o .667 14S 144
Ookl.... ... .....,...... l 4 0 .429 ll6 134
Scotl~ ...........,...... 2 s 0 .286 109 187

tolk:h;ptL ........ 2
l'eM St ...... ., .. .,,2
Illinois ..............!
i'IJrduc .............. l
MialleiOta ........o
· WiiCOdlin ........ 0

Ita

-....01....

l!! J. .I lll. f!· lA

.857 161 99
Philadclpllia ......... s 2 o .714 160 149
llollu...................4 3 0 .l71 136 107
Amooo ................l 4 0 :421 91 ll7
N.Y. Gi1011 .......... 2 S 0 .286. 8'? 147
W""'aJIOit ......... ~ I 0

c.oilnliMhlllaOUI ............ 5 2 0 .714 127
Dolroit """"""""'4 3 0 .571 162
Oll&lt;ap .....,.........2 l 0 .286 .104
T-Bay ......... i 6 0 .143 78
Gteen Bay............~ I 0 ,8, 227

WtMem DbWon

C..iina ...............l 2 0 .714 164 · 91 .
SanFnncii&lt;O ...... l 2 0 .714 181 106

~

0 ,250

.,

I

Suaday'a ac:orea

Philadelphia 35;Miami 28 '

Now Eaaload 27. ·~lio9

W""'DJI'"' 31. N.Y.01.., 21
o..... &lt;Ui • .hkintOfl' ]4
htrolo 23, H.Y,Iota 22
SM Ft ism U. CINCINNATI 21
11. I.Dttif 17,1-.lile 14
.-on23.[ 2 i t 3
AtWtol 13, T 9
Opeo diu: Clll&lt;tto,
'· Gteen
Boy,MI- .

AP Top 25 coUeae poll
Hn .. liiiTop2l-lo!MAMO.

,,..., ,.,_ eotlo,. ,_,, poll. wid!

"ow. i• ,......... QIITUI

rwconb • of ~Me Sllltdly, lOIII point•

-oa2lpoi•faror...... -p_
- . ,poiat
1 2ldl placo ooollool
flollfw
noidol:
.
IMI ·

~(57) ......_~

2. 01110 If, (4).... ,_,,,(&gt;.0

. . . ....,

3.- l l l.m ...........u 1.m

4._111..(1) ..........7.0 1,476

J. -

'·

·.

................,,,,_, i,:wJ '

Other Ohio

Colonwlo 2Q, Klftlll 7
Dayton 30, Butler 10

Clemson 28, Oeoraia T~h 25
E. KenNtky 20, Middle Tenn. 13
But Caroliaa31 . Miami 6
Florida51,A•bum 10
Florida A&amp;M 47, Delawn St 26
Furman 35. Ciladel 25

~

27, V~,..,Uoo

college scores

12

lndiaaa St. 2~. 11linol• St. 7
Murray Sl. 3.5, E.IDinoil 28
N. Iowa 38, SW Miuouri St. 31

PI-er Lea1111e

Dayton )1), Buller I0

· W. lllinoisl6, S.lllinoil19

Younsuown St. 38, !uhland 3

Orambliri&amp; St 32. Afk.-Pinc Bluff U
Howwd 40; Mcnhouae 0
.,. J.,na Madl1on 31, Richmond 27.
LSU 41. KeMicky 14
Uberty 23, W. Kentucky 14
Louiaiuoa Teclt 61. T - 20
Louisville Tl, N. Illinois l
MARSHALL 56. W. CnliMll
M.-yland 52, Wake Fon:tt 0
Metbodi•t42. Oa,idton 13
MiP. VaJiey St. 24, l..ane 22
N. Carolina A&amp;.T :1~ . MOfJan St. 1
NE Louili101 39. Cent. Florida 38
NW Loui1i11no 38, Sam Houlton St.

18

Wyomin&amp; 41, F~•no St. 21

Air fon&gt;c 2Q, N.,.. Dame 17 (01')
CiiK:innati 31, Houston 20

North.Coast Athletic Conf.
AUe&amp;flcny 13. Woosrer 3

Southweol

Dcnison ·53, Oberlin 21

Alabama St. 11 1 Pni~ View J.5
Artaaw Sr. :i&amp;. SE Mi~ri 9
Briaham Youna !5.5, Tul1o 30

WittenbciJ :15, Ohio Wesleynn 12

Nebraska 24, Teaas'Tec:h 10

Ohio Athletic Conference

Kenyo~ 14, Cue Re~er~e 12

KaMal $1. 21, Teua A&amp;r.M 20

Balawin-WIIllace 41. OtterbeinO

North Texu 13, New Melito S1. 0
Oklahoma 28, Boylor 24
Oklahoma St 28, Iowa St. 21
Rice 3t Southern Mcth. 17

HeidelbtrJ 41, Capitllll)
Mariena :ll, Hiram l
Mount Union 27, John Cwroll9 ·
Ohio Northern 28, Mustingum f1

(

Far West
On

S. CII'Oiina Sr. 20, Betbune-Cookmorl

Sunford27, JKklonvillrSt.17
S&lt;Nth C..Oiina2J. kbosu I7
Southern Miu. 16, Memphis 0
So.thcrn 27. Ja~:bon St. 16
Scqlhen F. Au11in 27, Nicholl1 St . II
Teaneuee St 37, Teftn.·Martin 14
TCIIntUee Tech 2.'\, AUIIin Peay 17
Teu. Southern 28. Alcorn St. 17

FindiDy 41, St. Ambroit 31
Malone 12. WAisb 2
Tiffin ~. UrtJana 27

!"l.SLO
45, S. \J11h 34
St.l6. s.., J.,. St. 13

Evw,ille 24, Sao Diego 23
Hawaii 38, UNL V 28

Idaho 24. Nevada

Non-conference action

IS

Montano )4, E. WuhiDitQn 30
Montana St. 24, CS Nonhridp 17
N. Arizona Sl . Sacramento St. 32
Orcaon St. 26, S1anford 12
,

EASTERN CONFERENCE .
Atlantic: Divlsian
~

lcam

2

1

4
J

J. I I'll. Gl G4.

Florida .................4 0 J
Tampa8af ..........4 I 0

Philadelph~ .. ., .....4 4 0
N . Y . Ran~n .......J 4 2
Ntw J~rsey ...........2 3 I

N.Y. bl1111tler:!i.,, .. l 3 2
Woshing1on ......... I S ' 0

II 21
8 22

8 19
8 27

9
IS

21

2H

5 D · IH
.4· I) 14
2 16 22

Northeast DPI!Cion
H1111ford ............. ..4 I 0 8
Monln:ul.. ............ ~ 2 2 K
Ba.ton .................. J 2 I 1
Onawa ................. 2 I ~
1

11
29
23
19

12
25
21
16

Buffalo ......... ;....... ] 4 0
Pinsburgh ............ 2 S 0

14
IS

20
29

6
4

Mid.-States Association

Ari10RD St. 48. Southern Cal lS (2

Col
Col

NHL standings

Grove City 21, Bluffion 13
l.oui1iana Tech 61 , Toledo 20
Mount St. Joseph 41. Sue Bennclf22
N.C. Oen11'11124. Cenrrul St. 6
'Thom111 M~ 2.1. Defiance 21

~

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Ialll

Central DMikln
}!'

Dullu .... ,..............7
Chieaao ................~
Sr. Louis ..............4
Phoenix ................ ;\
Detroit .................. :\
Toronto ................ !

J. I I'll. Gl G4.
I
l
4
l
4

0
0
0
I
0
S 0

14
10
8
1
6
2

26
19
23
18
16
12

17
1:-i
19
16
13
l.l .

I

s o

......e.

'

own

MAC standings
l!! J. I

Toleolo. ............. l 0 0

Cont.

ea.
1.00

O,fr~ll

lil: J. I

4 2 0

4 ~ 0

Boll St.. .... j ...... 3 I 0 .750
' OHIO ............... l I 0 .750
tolioni ........ :,..... 2 0 ,6/o7

4 l 0

. Bowlin&amp; Oreen 3 2 0 .1500

'

C. M~h ............J 2 0 .600

4 4 0

3 0

4 4 0

A...................2 4 0 .333 2 6 0
Kctu ................. l 3 0 .250 2 ' s 0
E. Mich...... .,.... I 4 0 .200 I 7 0
w. Mich .......... o 4 o .000 o 7 o

Saturday'• acorea
MAC

Bail St. 16, llowlina Orocti II

Cent Ni~!:h . 41 , E. Michiaan36
Akron 10, Mhni 7

St. Rtslstc.t Plio
COIIIJHII'O "'

120.00

u••..,c:.

Stylsh Ttxtwetl Pltsh
c_,_. "' 122.50

SJ4!:P.

$15!~,~

No EJd7a C/lltrJf ""~

No EJd7a a-tor~

a kiJtiMneloPJ

Nen cds1c:w:: action
LouiliiWI '(tell 61, Toledo 20

.

.

&amp; i'r«n*tbn

c_,_"' I:IB.oo

801-y-MAC

UIIPJIIU

Army•MlM!i
Akroa II N. lllil0i1

..,.,..

No EJdra C/lltrJIIOr
.

-.u

'

~

. . co..,...,. •' IIJ6,00
UIIJIIUca .

$22!:~
.h,

$23''... ,..

Eastern defeats So.uthern
· in champi~nship round

'

Southern beats Trimble

7

.

15~2,

15-7

TheCardBOI

nsmn , . , . '+

f

No EJd7a " - ""/MdtlltiQ
,.,

. .,

!

I

' EM!
8"""' 27, Fttnloom I4
B""'"'U 10, Pri- 6
Coolai• 21, Foitfltl4 0
Coipoo 31, C..ll 21
CD' '4• 3, Llll)'lhe 0
c
p'MI, ,.,..bludO

•'·

yr

l

.,._40.Y.6

11114

D 1
IJ,Owj&amp;aa,D.C.O
"""... 28, ...., a.. 2l
-21.-11. 20

' t.wp 21, -14

...... 34.How·"
Hr:20
- 2 1 , It Jollo'.:HY 20

••

ilotlhJo :10
_,.... 13,11.-. ... 6
IIi, NJ. 6'

:~on~~
It
• ..,.. ..... to mow on
; to by laalt Wolle)

W-41 , 11.,_.,,2

'

'

·r

I.

s

I· OUiand is at San DiCJO tonipl
.J.
Kanalll City beat Seaule 34-16
tone o~ !he belt.-ver ~hool ~~· ~ 'nipt.
.a Tri-Valley Hock1n1 Dtvlaton . i Cbicaao Detroit Green Bay and
Championahip and a final fifth-piiiCO · 1 ·
'
itll ' .
ranking in the alate pella.
Mtn.-ota w~ e.

ldaySoulhcm bowed out at20-3 with

=-·~~~=a

•• •

Tcmoa St. U, t h

'

DIVING ATTEMPT- AI Ea1tarn'1 Patey Aalker (lift) and Mindy
By SCOTT WOLFE
had three points, two blocks and four
After several long volleys that
sampaon (14) watch, tllmmate Jeellca Brannon dlwl for the Jailing
Sentinel Correappndent
kills; Amber Thomas had four points saw five serving changes, Cynthia
ball, but doeln't gat llltllflctlon during saturdtly'e .flrat-round match
Having dropped two close regu- and two aces; Kim Sayre had three Caldwell scored off a Profin kill to
wl1h Mllllr. The Eaglel won II'! two IJIIIIMII befora baiting Southern
.; 4 Jar season games to the Southern ·pOints, a kill and several big assists; tie at 2-2. A Sampson block conIn three ~ claim the HC!Ional crown. (Sintlnll photo by Scott Wolfe)
Y.! Tornadoes, the Eastern Eagles , and Emily Duhl had a kill. :Jayme trolled he serve for Eastern and
{ sought revenge.in a big way to upset Miller had a good floor game off the Michelle Caldwell notched four
'
• • the fifth ranked Southerners in the bench.
·
'
· straight points (6-2) to prompt a In D-IV splkefest's flrst~roun(l,
. .,
; Division . IV· sectional voll,eyball
Jackson felt his club may have Southern time out.
j , championship Saturday at South- had the advantage over Southern 'by
Southern coach Howie Caldwell
; eastern High School iri Richmond coming directly off its game with fired up his troops in an effon to stop
, Dale. ·
Miller, while Southern had to sit out the EHS momentum and they
said, "We hustled well, but we didSouthern scored !he last eight a match between its win over Trim- responded by folding up and closing . By SCOTT WOLFE
ranking.
.
points to claim the first game 15-8, ble and the championship game. shop. Caldwell scored four more
The fifth ranked Southern TornaLent drilled a spike into the SHS' n't play as well as we are capable.
but Eastern came back to take the Additionally, Eastern had nothing to points as Southern hit a couple balls
does advanced to tbe finals of the defense and the ball bounded The first game of any tournament in
next two games by 15-2 and 16-14 lose and all to gain, while Southern's into the net and appeared to lose
Division IV sectional tournament at towards Southern's right boundary. any sport is always the most nerve
racking and this was on our minds.
margins.
ranking and higher stakes were composure.
R~s-Soulhcastem High School Sat- · · An unidentified Tornado did a good
•
Eastern coach Don Jackson aid, · directly on the line.
The t;:agles sensed a breakdown , urday with a twq-game win over job gening to the ball, but deflected We must have done somethin~ riJ!ht
'Tm so happy 1 can hardly speak.
P-r-e-s-s,u-r-e was a big eight let- and despite losing one serve, took
Trimble, IS-2 and IS-7.
the ball funher into the SHS back- ·though by the looks of the scores.
"Right now, the second game is
; This was a greal win that took good ter word. Eastern took a 4-0 lead out · control off a Karr spike, then rallied
.Keri Caldwell had nine points for court, where Thomas raced to make
• team ' ball. Every girl stepped up of the gate on Caldwell serves and for five straight off Sampson serves
Southern and was 4-5 spiking with ,a blindsided, over the head bump the one thins we're looking forwa'id
when they had to. You have to give two Karr in-your-face ·blocks. The and a Karr kill to win it at I S-2.
two kills. Cynthia Caldwell had six over !he net for a Tornado point. The ·to. We'll .have to be "on" in that
Southern credit for coming back like once timid six-footer has become
Sensing victory, tile Eagles won · · points, Kim Sayre five points, nine save sparked a 5-l SHS rally to end ' game. It's the one we're looking for...
'!;he win advanced Southern to the
they did. We beat a very good ball increasingly more aggressive as the an initial long volley off a Holter l assists and 9-'10 sets; Brianne Prof- the game atiS-7.
.
sectional
finals against Eastern.
club."
- season wears on.
dink and Caldwell serve.to lead 1-0. i fill had four points, 4-4 spikes and
Southern coach Howle Caldwell
LOOking down through the stats
Southern countered with three Aeiker and Karr each had kills in a : two kills; Amber Thomas had three
and replays of the game, every girl 1\Jrley spikes for scores off Brianna string of four more Caldwell serves
poihts, I0 assists and 10-10 sets; and
did just that-her job. Michelle Cald- Proffitt serve~ for a 4-3 tally. Karr and a S-0 lead.
Jenny Friend had four points.
• well had a great serving night with and Cynthia Caldwell exchanged
Several long exchanges and excitRenee Turley had S-S spikes with
20 serving points and a fine floor serves resulting in a 6-6 tie, then ing volleys followed with neither
four kills. Maria Dolan had three for
game.
Brannon notched onefor Eastern and team scoring. Finally, 1\Jrley
Tr.imble, Misty Lent had three,
•
Mindy Sampson had numerous Em1ly Duhllaced a kill off a Thomas dropped dink for a Sayre score, Mandy Coffman had two and Joy
• saves off the floor with IOpoints, an serve for a 7-7 tie.
Southern's first of the game at S-1.
Pettit had one.
: ace and a block; Martie Holter had
. Two Aeiker kills gave EHS the Bolter canned two serves, including "
Southern started out like gangfive points, three aces, two crucial ball and a point. Next, Keri Caldwell one ace, then Cynthia Caldwell
busters, taking a 7-0 lead and defendblocks and a fine selling ganie; took control and•notched the next scored off a Turley kill for' a 7-alltaling many of Trimble's fine returns.
' while Valerie Karr dominated the eight points, including a momentum ly.
,
Amber Thomas laced up the first
After a Brannon save and a Branpoint, followed by two Keri Cald' • front line in a heads up battle with building ace. Eastern called time at
12 points, but4 Turley kill fueled the non kill that led to an 8-2 tally,
well markers. Trimble served into
; ~ Southern's Renee Turley.
:I Karr notched two points, had fire for a 15-8 Southern win.
Southern again called time. Southern
the net, then Turley put on a front
three blocks and spanked across
Eastern again took the upper regained control of the serve, but
row clinic to repel a Misty Lent spike
seven kills. Jessica Brannon notched hand in the second game; the mon- came up. empty handed in five
with a block, slamming a kill and
!l two points, a block and had two kills, ey game. of. the series. With the straight tries. Meanwhile, Eastern dropping a dink into the Tomcat
but her biggest contribution was her s~ng fimsh m !he first game, South: gained a point here and there with
front court allowing a string of four
great floor game and numerous sayes ern s momentum seemed msur- one from Caldwell, one from SampKim Sayre markers.
son and two from Holier, including
Following a Coffman tally, Cynthat kept Eastern volleys alive for mountable.
numerous cores.
However, Michelle Caldwell, a
nother ace and a 12-2 Eastern lead. thia Caldwell notched five points
.Patsy Aeiker ran the floor well, • c~usin to the Southern Caldwell
Eastern eased up and Southern
with great front row efforts from sister Keri Caldwell and Turley.
posting several big saves and three ~o, proved to be a Tornado ne:n.•r-""-+eturned to its championship form,
, kills, while Stephanie Evans had a s1s. Eastern went up 1-0, then of- · only too little too late. Keri Caldwell
Keri CaldWell notched !he next
1
•
good g~e off the bench.
· fitttook the serve with a goo ink. notched one and Kim Sayre three
two points for a 13-1 tally. After a
· For Southern, senior Keri Cald- Thomas placed a mce serv
points as Turley almost single handCoffman score for THS, Turley
edly brought the Tornadoes back into drilled a spike for a kill, returning the
, well had nine points with an ace and , scored off a Sayre kill to ti
:•· two kills; Cynthia Caldwell had five 1 Mindy Sampson scored off a o ter the game. In a short span, Turley
serye 10 Proffitt, who notched the
:: points,,Renee Turley five points, two block to give Eastern a 2-1 edge.
notched five kills.
final tally for the win. Southern came
·: blocks and 10 Jtills;,Brianne Proffitt'
Holter added two more serves and
out a bit lax in the second game as
:'
another ace for a 14-6 EHS lead and
Misty Lent served two strikes for a
game-point situation . Turley contin2-0 Tomcat tally.
::
ued her rront row dominance, aided
SHS look over the serve and
'
·:
by a Keri Caldwell kill and numer- · Thomas delivered a nice serve that
:;
ous saves from Proffitt and Sa)'re. saw Joy Pettit make a nice recovery,
;
1\J,rley also served up four points to only to have Proffitt slam a kill for
::
close the score to r4-12, prompting the point. Thomas gave SHS anoth::
an EHS time out. •
er point to tic the score at 2-2, then
577?287
· · ;•
Amber Thomas hit two straiaht Amber Thomas wodced the floor 10
::
. aces for Southern, rekindling the · . perfection .
:
Tornado fire and tying the game at
Thomas made a key set, then
14-14.
Karr
slammed
a
spike
into
the
dropPed
a dink in on tlie return vol- ·
I
Tlw C«t//lqK It nqwRipt/ng I Sllllng
Tornado defense to secure the EHS ley. Thomas then came up with a
·~~.Sampson delivered and Southgreat save out of bounds, selling up
'em hit the ball into tflenct out of a Proffitt kill. Thatpf!lmptedastring
brPIInW'M
·of four Keri Caldwell points and a 6·bounds io make the score IS-14.
r
Afwt,lrtm'$
Sampson got off another· great · 2 SHS lead.
.serve and Karr finished it off with a · Maria Dolan then served up three
llr':'m
kill to win the game for the Eagles. THS markers ,for a 6-.5 tally and
II1J1
Soothetn ended i great season with Proffitt aced a serve to spark a 10-S
lfi. . H
·some character by making a dra- SHS advantage. The play or the day
· 1Y1tfm RfnMII Wlllr2 &amp;mt fpr2D«n
·malic comeback bid.
came during the next series when
Jackson concluded, "Southern Southern exemplified the hustle and
•1/1 lfl,lf f psi"' ,.,, 11 f t f Day frJr
·came back to put the pressure on us. · greal thinking that ~ed it a state
U.Dtl «lllut .., - .
,,
•We played them close during !he seaAlll:!L
Cpmi
In '!"'Cft«kqut , . , .
•
son. It was a malter or us beina up 1
J
y
•ra:tlorl Qltlf(f( tlltl £7Nf[JJ
and them being down. Thdaywas the
. (Conli:~ from Paae 4)
••
i
••
best effort I've seen from this team." 1 New England beat Indianapolis 27·
• Tbe future: The Eagles (13-9) 9
Lou'11 bea11
•
TlwQgBQr
!willplayinthedistriclloumamentat
' l
acksonville 17-14,
•
•
HOUlton beat Pittsblqh 23-i 3 and
llw I' I U %'MticM
!South .Webster High School Satur- ·AriJona stopped Tampa Bay 13-9.
••

•

1omty !4, Tuiuo 10
Baoloa~l7. .
u

I

..

m.,s•r , . ,

c..,.,..."' 131.00
u••...a

Other NCAA
Division I score&amp;

_,,......

In Division IV S,ectlonal volleyball action, ·

..

lttt• Gilliy ••....,. · ~~oink· Ttxtwetl Su:oey Ma.nk Forlllll'lnll

Thla week'• Illite ·
Ball S1. 11 Cet11. Nlehipn
BowlinJ Chen • OHIO
KeM' II E. Nichi
W. MichiJAftll

·Save
20%
To
40%
On
........"
•11~~~ Over 1800 Styles &amp;Colors

Ttxfwtll Also Nylol
c..,.,... ., 125.(}0

IAIIJIIUU

OHIO 24, Keot IS

~2A. Na'

School. Eaetern (13-10) will play In the dletrli:t
tou"'-ment Sllturdey at South Webater . High

'

block, an ace and a 23-2S setlin1
.night; Valerie Karr had six points,
two blocks, two kills and an ace; Jessica Brannon had seven points and
six kills; Patsy Aeiker two kills,
Mindy Sampson three points and a
kill; Michelle Cal~well had eight
points, three aces and a kill and
.Stephanie Evans had fpur points. Juli
!Hayman and Meredith Crow had
good games coming off the bench. ·
Eastern coach Don Jackson said,
. "Both sides played very well. We
came out a linle flat. but played one
of our best passing games, Hining.wise we'll have to do bener. We reai1y played well together as a team."
1

:1

s.turd•y·BI&amp; Ttn

Illinois at Nonhwnrtm
Michi&amp;P at Minnesota
OHIO ST, 1t Iowa
Penn Sr. Dllndiana
WiiCOrllin II·Michipn St.

I.a

..

key points to tie at 14-14.
An Eastern miscommunication
allowed the ball to fall untouched'
between two indecisive Eaales and
looked to be costly at the time. However, a Brannon set and Caldwell kill
restored hope and restored !he serve
for the Eagles, now lfailing'atlS-14.
Brannon laid down two excellent
servesforaiCJ-ISEHSiead. AFalcon block prevented an EHS win and
set up Britani Merckle's two points,
Millerleading 17-16. Merclclehitthe
next serve out' deep, then Caldwell
served up three straight serves for a
19-17 EHS victOty.
Martie Holter had I0 points, one

•f
:1

This week'• a~eJM!a

.,

1,!74

0

Atabami37,Misliui ·o
Appalachian St. 35, ~ia Soulhem

Hockey

WcberSt35.PonlwtdSt. IO

BooroiiU. 16,Holooa~

Toallht'a..-

Ookl..., 01 ~ Diqo, 9 p.m.

nr~~-pa...

2

Ni.. eec.r.....-e .n6an

c..Haa 19. New arw-7

0
0
0
0

3 o
3 3 0

o .ooo

Saturday's

~

fo"ledo

Dallal 32, At..... 28

'

2

:\

3
I
2
4

Midwest

GeooJjall, Vandallik 2

21

Urilh Stl9. Boise St. 14
Washlnaton 41,lJCLA 21
Wuhhl&amp;ton St. 21 , California 18

ty voi'-Ybell teem Upeel the ftftiH1111Qd Southem Tomlldole Sllturdlly efltnttOCM In the Dlvlalon
IV~~ chemplonlhlp at SouthMmm High

'

Wilmington 24. Enrlham 0
You~p1ownSr . l8. Alhlandl

lo&lt;wa 21 , Penn Sr. 20
Mimipn 21.1Dd.iana 20
Micbipn St. n , MIIIMSOI:a9
Nonhwt:~~tml4, WIIOOMin 30
OHIO ST. 42, Purdue 14

StLau~ .............. 2 S 0 .286 IOl Ill

New Oricono ....... .2 .6 0 .250 121 IJO
AtiMtA .................o 1 o .ooo 121 201

4
5
6
2

3 o .ooo
3 0 .000

tadi ... .............o 4

92

116
124
IS2
ll2 .

28

10

5 I 0

I 0 .61o7
2 0 .~
2 0 .333

s.-Dteao ............ 4

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

Ala.·Birmlnaham 39, SW Looi1iann

29

23
8

6 I 0
6 0 0

YirJinia 62, N. Clrolioa St. 14 .
Woffotd48. Newberry 13 ·

Sooth

21

643
l70

lowa .................3 0 0 1.00
Miehipn St.....3 I 0 .UO

'

l!! I. I lll. l! lA

18

Nonhwa~cm ...4 0 0 1.00
OHIO ST......... ) 0 0 I .00

if IIICCIIIr)'

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

673

c..t. o......
l!! J. I fA. l!! J. I

Ita

- y. Od.l'IAt. . . II New Yort, 7:35p.M. EST,

NFL standings

71 I

IS
17
20

Big Ten standings

ir

Football

14

w.....,.,.:. ...........

(Nelcle 16-9), &amp;:18 p.m..

Atlanta at New York , 1 :01 p.m.,
necaury

II

ll

San Dicao St. 48, New Mexico 42

Urah 21 , Teaaa Oristinn 7

School. In front are (L..fl) Martie Holter, Jull Hay·
man end St.phanle Ev11111. In the beck row are
Angl Wolle, Valll'le Karr, Patey Aalker, Mindy
Sltmpaon, Michelle Caldwell, JHIIca Brannon
end Meradl1h Crow. Not plc:tured wei COich Don
Jackson.

SEC'TlONAL CHAMPIONS- Eallem'l Ylnl-

.

•

VMI 28, Tn.·Oniii~JK!U'P: 14

•.

....

taverde threw three touchdown pass- intercepted a Testaverde pass and'
es in the period, an 11-yarder to three plays later Elway went in for•
Floyd Turner and .25- and nine- the clinching score.
YIICders !O Michael Jackson . .
Terrell Davis ran for a team"The Ravens really had the record 194 yards for Denver.
momentum in the second half and
. But it was Elway who ,pulled off
kept us off-balance with the no-hud-' the magic.
·
·
die," Broncos coach Mike Shanahan
"You can't fault our team," said
said. "But I was pleased with the Baltimore coach Ted Marchibroda.
way we responded in the fourth quar- "They gave it everything they had.
ter."
John Elway is a great athlete. He can
The way they responded was win by himself."
'
with a 28-yard pass frqm Elway to
The Washington Redskins held on
Shannon Sharpe .that set up a six- to beat the New York Giants 31 -21.
yard touchdown pass from Elway to . Carolina beat New Orleans 19-7,'
McCaffrey. Then Tyrone Braxton
(See NFL on Page S)

Troy St. ZC, SW Texu St I3

William&amp;. Mary ~o . Vdlanov1121

9

408
300 . 24
2~ Aubutn .....................S·2
23' ' I~
23.
-1-2 224 25
24, Sourheri1Miss..........6-l
212 25. Mlomi ......................+2 i19 12
Othcn NalvJ•a .....: California
. 117, Vii'Jinia Tech 90, Eut c.oliaa 79,
Army 47, ·Wubin&amp;toa Sr. 42. Air Force
... )8, Geor&amp;iq Tec:h 26, Syracase 26, San
Diiao St. 8. Wisconaln 6, Navy .5, Texu
Tedt 4, Soulbem Cal :l.

Wednellday'a pme

Saturday'apme

Wei. Viraiiua :W, TemP.Ie 10

20.1owa .. ... ,................... S-I
21.Uioh ......................... 6-l

New Yort (Cone 7·2) 11 Atlanta
{Uiaviae 15-JO). 1:15 p.m.

&amp;I

6

7

18. WyomiDJ ......•..........&amp;-0 &lt;482
19. Nofre Dame .............4-2 · 444

. Tuelday'• pme

Hew Yort
.........,.

t.m

7. Aloboma..................... 7.0 1,252
8. Colondo .................... S-1 1,181
· 9. Nonbc...Jina ...........S·I 1,140
10. Mlcblpn ..................S-1 !198
II.Northwatcm ........... ~l
977
12. WESTVIRGINIA ...7.0 941
il. LSU ......................... S-1 759

''

I.

I

Scoreboard
Baseba ll

'!

.

.Broncos, 49ers and Oilers tally come-from-behind .wins

Eastern's volleyball i.eam over.came early deficits in bolh 1ames 10
' claim a big win in !he first round of .
I!he Division IV sectional Slllwday
· against Miller, beating !he Falcons
. 15-10 and 19-17.
Eastern fell behind 2-0 in the first
. game, but a Jess Brannon spike and
. four strategic serves by Martie
· Holter gave Eastern a S-2 advantage:
· Miller's Amy Hughes lied the score
ilt 5-S, but sophomore Valerie Karr
dtjlled a killiO regain the serve for
Eastern. Karr then served up an ace
. to give Eastern !he lead, but after
another exchange of volleys, Miller
lied the score again at7-7.
Eastern began to work like a welloiled achine as Patsy Aeiker, Bran. non and Valerie Karr illl posted kills
and Mindy Sampson dropped in a
.dink to give Eastern an 11-7 advantage.
Manic Holter again served well, ·
slamming another ace that gave
EHS a 14-9 lead and a game-poini
situation. Miller called time to
regroup. The Falcons took control of
!he serve and came back to 14-10
and gained some momentum. Brannon repelled a Corrie Cook spike
with a block, took control of the
serve and tallied the game point for
. a 1S-IO EHS win.
Miller went up 6-0 in the first
game, then dropped to )()-2'and 127. Eastern called time to regroup.
· Michelle Caldwell · had a kill to
regain the 'serve for Eastern,' allowing substitute server Stephanie Evans
to put two more points on the board.
Caldwell delivered her second ace of
he game, !hen came back with a third
ace and two more points as Eastern
tied the score at 12-12.
The quest for a win at this point
took a half hour longer than expected regulation as bolh teams fought to
claim the win. A Cluisty Halasz kill
gave Miller a 14-12 edge and game
point situation. Karr served up two
.

Now it's the Yankees who are
1under pressure. A loss tonisht would
.send !he Braves horne needing to win
just two of five.
•
"We wanted a split here, so we
feel like we' re in a good situation,"
Chipper Jones said. "We can come
'out and relax. (tonight). Even if w•
! lose, we've already achieved our
I goal. "
•
i If the Braves continue to plly lilcf,
Ithey have the last four games, 11\e
Yankees won 't stop them from
'1defending
their World Series title. •
"We're taking advantage,:• Cox
;said. "If we get a bloop hi~ we'll fol~'
low it with a line drive.
"Knock on wood, that it will ¢n-'
:tinue'For three more wins."
'

··

:Eastern beats Miller 15-10, 19-17

Andruw Jones' HRs help Br~ves pound Yankees 12-1
By RONALD BLUM
NEWYORK(AP)-InGame t i
of the World Series, the Atlanta i
Braves were !he Br01ix Bombcn.
By !he third inning, the game was,
for all practical purposes, over, the
crowd quiet, the mood somber. ·
Andruw Jones, just 4 years old
when !he last World Series game was
played at Yankee Stadium, homered
twice, drove in five runs and broke
one of Mickey Mantle's records in
leading the Braves over New Yodc
12-1 Sunday night

The o.lly Sentinel• Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, O"lo

••

"

,.

.·-

. r

•

llMQ Ulun
......., ... Dtlw

•

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WaiiSdto-..y

Horses and burros offered for adoption :

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich
It's Fainily History Week in Ohio reunions. · Both are gnds of that
aad the observance runs through , school.
0cL26.
Belated congratulations to a nice
The Meigs County Genealosical
Society is the local sponsor of the couple, Allegra and Nonnan Will,
observance and has on hand a procla- who reside in the Rutland area of
tnalion for the week signed by Gov. Meigs. They marked their 59th
George Voinovich. George Bain, wedding anniversary last week.
Ohio University, of the Society of They"ve been here for practically all
Ohio Archivists, is coordinating the of those married years and are cared
about by many of us.
week-Ions observance.
As a part of the week, Meigs res·
idents 8(e being asked to dig up all of
It was 1964 when Mrs. Lee Lee
the, imponant familY history papers was reheming students for the annuand documents they have in their al variety show at Racine High
homes. 'All those papers. which will School. ·
he of value to future generations.
A pony choJUS line featured in thai
. The Meigs Genealogical Society year's show was composed of Linda
It a little later time will have a work· .Carpenter, Terry McThrner, Pauline
·shop and program dealing with these· · Cummins, Beverlee Hunt, Beverly
family history matters and at that Price and Polly Decker. Any memtime you will he able to have those ories out there?
impol18nt papers encapsulated to
Spe8king of a pony chorus line,
preserve them for the future.
. one is being organized for the upcom.ing Thanksgiving musical of the Big
A lot of you will remember Ray· Bend Minstrel Associatil)n. The new
mood (Cub) Allenswonb, former group will perform two numbers·
during the show to he slllged at the
Middleport resident.
·
Cub is having health problems and Meigs Junior ,High School in Midhas been confined to the Grant Med· dlepon. Teens interested in hecom·
ical Center for the past month. He ing a pan of the dancing group should
has undergone surgery resulling from register right away by callins me at
diabetes and 'will remain confined to 992-5292. Rehearsal sessions will he
kept at a minimum and costuming
the center until things look better.
He undoubtedly would appreciate will he uncomplicated. No m01e !hart
hearing from Meigs County friends to 16 girls will be accepted for the line.·
help make those long days in the hos- Dates for the presenllltion·arc Friday
pital a little more pleasant. Cards and Saturday, Nov. 29 and 30, with
may he sent to him at the hospilal, the final rehearsal to be held on
Ill S; Grant Ave., Columbus, Ohio Wednesday, Nov. 27. Those interested in taking pan should make sure
43215.
Cub and his wife, the fonner Bet- they have those dates c1- before
·
·
ty )o Roush, also formerly of Mid· registering.
dleport. reside in G~veport in the
Columbus area. They have been so
Keep in mind that it won't be all
faithful in returning to Middleport that long until Nov. S and then all of
every spring to · attend Middleport election hoopla will be behind us. "lit
High School Alumni Association then, it11 probably get worse. Mean. time, do keep smiling.

On Nov. 23-24, 1996, approximately 125 horses and 60 burros, all
healthy, trainable ud recently round•
ed up from fragile w~tem range
lands, will be offered for adoption at
the 4 "T' Arena. in Bridgeport, W. VL
This adoption event is sponsored
by the Department oflnterior, Bureau
of Land Management. Since the
Adopt·A' Wild Horse Program began
in 1973, over 150,000 animals have
been adopted.
"The ·BLM has the legislative
responsibility for managing and preserving the, mustang and burro as a
'living symbol' of the Old West, " said
District Manager Jim Dryden. "We

~

~·

periodically gather excess wild horses and burros off the Western range
and offer them for adoption. The
Adopt·A·Horse or Burro Program is
·an excellent way'to maintain an ecological balance between wild horses
and burros, native wildlife and
domestic animals grazing on Western
public lands," said Dryden.
Before being transponed to sate!~
lite adoption centers in.the East and·
Midwest, all animals arc vaccinated,
blood tested and dewormed. Each
animal is'inspecled by a qualified veterinarian and given a clean bill of
health before being shipped.

·-···· .

To qualify to adopl up to four ani·
mals, applicants must have a sturdy
corral at least 6 feet high for horses
and S feet high for burros, shelter,
transponaqon, and the means of car·
ing for the animals. The adoption fcc
of$125 per borsc and$75 per burro
is payable in cash or money order at
the time of the adop«ion: The fee
helps defray the Federal Govern·
ment's cost of roundup, veterinary
care, transponation and administra·
tive expenses. After an animal has
been adopted, BLM personnel will
halter .and load the animal for the
adopter.
The horses &lt;will arrive on Friday,

:Nov. 22, with viewing hours from I '
'p.m.• S p.m. The burros wllt arrive •
Saturday afternoon. The scheduled •
hours for the horse adoption will be
from 7 a.m.· S p.m. on Saturday.
•
The burro event willlllke place on ;
Sunday from 7 a.m. until S p.m.
,
· For applications and more infor· !
,mation about this event, conlact
DiGrazia; Bureau of Land Manage· ;
ment, P.O. Box 631, Milwaukee, ;
Wise., 53201-0631, or call toll free 1- ·
800-293-1781, 414·2974443 or fax .
Applica\ions I
414-297-4442.
approved by Nov. 15, 1996, will he~
.given a priority in choosing.
'

.

.

An :

For all the an•-.
talk live to ont of
our rnetllphyalcal ·

FREE

Call1-1100 5'*-40110
Ext. 2301

t4t~57

rM.

LINDA'S
PAINTING
lm110ao~ma101

ROOFING
NEW· REPAIR

I'REE ESTIMA11:S

Guttera

flu ... ,.laMJOf

83.1tptr min.
Mulll»18yn.
3er¥-U- tit 141 1134

GRAND OPENING
HIDDEN

·

TREASURES
MiddlepOrt

Ceramlcl, WoodCI'IIfll,
Homemedl DoHa l
BMketll.
AJao Chlld,.,.'l
Playroom
Monday 10 •nHI pm
r-.-Thur. 2 pm-7 pm
Frkllry 2 pnHI pm

Public Notice __
; -....:...=::.:::::..:.::.:::;::..
Notice of Ellctlon an Tlx
Levy·In Ex- of the T111
Mill Llmltllllon
RlnrilldCode,.ICUona
3501.11(0), .57015.19, 6705.25
NOTICE II hereby given
that In pureuance of a
RIIOIU11on of lila Board of
Comml .. lonera of .the
· County of Melp, P-oy.
Ohio, plllld on the 20th
oily ol May, 11196, there will
I» aubmillad to 1 vola of
the people of 11ld
aubdlvlelon at a Qanar•l
Election to I» hlld In lila
County of Melge, Ohio, 11

814-992-8910
'llao1-.,&amp;

the r.guler , _ of voting

!heflin, on the lth dar of

Nonmblrw
1111
the
·11-'IDn of levying a tu, In

exc111 at the lin. mill
lmlilllon, lor thll l»nllllt of
Malga County for the
purpo11 of providing care,
malnt-.nanoe, treatment,

and hoepitallzatlon of
reeldanta of Mekla County
who are auflerlng from
tul»rculoala, at hoepltala
with
whlah
the
Commi11Ionara of Molge
County h•v• contracted,
and euppon of tuberculaele
oilnlca. Said tax baing a
renewal of an ulllllng tax of
112 mill mill at a rate' not
exCMdlng112 mHia for IICh

.

Pick up dlacardecl
•Pfiii.,Cit!, blltterfea,
many meiala &amp;
mOtor blockl. ·

(10) 7, 14, 21,28 4TC

t..
SentiHI Classifiltls
Filii ......I ..Jifl

SCO'IT INSURANCE
614-6118 40ll (de ct)

3222SnrtRd.
.u-,, Oblo oU'7lt
• A W• are illued 111

~ :'!ror~
·-;- '-'1'--

I.,.,,..,
S.,.. , . ,

C..,. Siract 11168

r

Dlw IJ O'•s lf6l l•a•IIZS£ mt

1111eaDtlda

... . . . .
® ..

1111111

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EXTRA . EFFORT IS OUR POLICY

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137 BRYAN PLACE

MIDDLEPORT
992·2772

e:oo a.m.-3:30 p.m.

eR•IIlilllf Wlatllws
tiii.IG.aps

...

1

WWo~·

FUN WAY
TODAY
Ext. 3991

2.1111/Mln. 18+ Slrv·U
(818) 645 8134
.

Racine
American
Legion Post 602
Doors Open
4:30p.m.
1 Blngo6:30
Every Sunday
UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT

ll/412mo.

•

PUBLIC WELCOME

FOOL
PROOF
LOVE!!!

,

tlltlrl ~ fO . . . .
IU wrlll willl

•
.

Willi .........

.

1-900-526-5050
Ext. 4500

.$3.18 Per min.
Multl»18yn.
S.rv.U. (618) 145 8431

7/I!Wn

~

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•

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.

, , , ,, ~ • • • -~- • ............ • • .o

-

lUCKY J. IOWIH
&amp;UIAIE

Authorized AQA Dillribulor

~ • . _ D . - ..d... L...

Racine, Ohio

Minor Repairs
24Hr.
Towlng/Rollblck
8arvlca
AAA &amp;All SUite
Motor Club ·

· "No Job .Too urge or Too Small"
•We will WOik Yllthln your budge!.

Ph. 773-8173

-

•

- Sf. At. 124,

• Welding Supplln •lnduatrial G - • Machine Shop
Services • Sleei Saln &amp; Fabricallon • Repair Welding
• Alumlnum!Sialnle88 • Tool D~lng • Ornltmental
Stape • Staks, R8ilnga, Pallo Furniture, A~ .
Hema, Plantar Hangara, Trelllles &amp; lola of Oilier tltuflll

..

~

Senoner. PO, Box 729·35, Pomotoy, OH 45769.
Computer Uttrs Needed . Work
own hours . $20k 10 $50kJyr 1.
800-348-1186X1508

7443.
F~ee Kittens, l•tter Trained ; 2
Mate Cocker Spaniels ; Papers,
To Good Homes, 614-446·8252.

Cn111e thip jobs I Earn $3001$QOO
WHkly. Year round posilions.. Hir·
ing both mentwemen. Frae room
and boa.rd. Will train. Call· 7 days
407-875-2022 8.111. 05i8C41

Free Puppies: In NHd Ot Good
Heme, Silt To Choose From 814256·6832 Anytime.

'

Diaco~ery Toys Nttd You. Earn
up 10 $30/hr, thawing parente the
e"ucatlonal ~atue or our toys,
boio.ks &amp;_computer aofrware. Call ·
now lor more details, 304·875 ·
5761 also, boo~ing parties.

German· Shephard, black masked
lace, 6 months ald. black/black,
lo good home only. 30-4-875·

•650.
Parr CMow Tan Good Natured
814-44$..0744.

Dfivers Regional Flatbed. Home ·
Weekend&amp; And Through The
Week. Family Medical /Dental ,
Homo Holld&lt;!ys, 401k. S34,000.
Annually. One Year OTR R•·
quire(j . Flalbed Experience Not
Required. Wabuh Valley 1-IQQ .
248-41305.

To Good Home: Female While

Long Hawed Cal, 814-387-7123.

60 Lost and Found •
Found : Italian Rim Glasaes. TriFocal Centenary Methodist
Church, Stare Route 141 , 614·
446·9707.

70

Earn 1000"a week~ tluUing en-

~eiopes at

FAX 773-5111

'

I
___ .._ ,._

Yard Sale ·

FL. 32817

Gallipolis
a. VIcinity

EASY WORKI Excoll""t Poyt As·
semble Products 11 Home. Call
Toll Free 1·800 · 487·5568 EXT.

12,170,

Estabtishad country bank sealls
Sunday edition - 2:00p.m. Fr1day. lead and bass player, vocals 8
Monday edition - 10:00 a.m. Sat- ptva, call 15U· 878·2534 or 814·
urday.
~9·2047.

, Pomeroy,
Middleport
a. V'lclnlty

Experienced pan-time cbhier
ntedtd. Larry's Locker, Lelart

wv.304-885-31103.;

Full. T!mt Position Available For
A. V1Ct1m Advocate To Work With
Women And Children Evenlnga
And Weekends. The Ideal Can.
didate Mus1 Bt Ablt To Work
With Minimal Super~ ision, Interact Poaitivtl't With Others And
Have Reliable Transport8tton
High School Diploma RequirBd.
And A . Background tn Soc:iai
Work Preferred. lnttrttttd Per·
aons May Apply To: Personnel, ·
P.O. Box &lt;454, Gelllpotis Ohio

2Q9 South Fourth , Middlepon,
uam-5pm. Beds. whe,t chairs, oil
healer, ITicrow&amp;Ye, ~ch mont•

All Yard Saltt Must Be Paid In
1:OOpm the
day before the ld is to run, Sunday .&amp; Monday tdition- 1:00pm

' Ad~ance. Deadline:

Friday.

80

. Public Sale
l!nd Auction

45e31 . .

Rltlc Ptarton

HOllE TYPIST, PC utttl need·
ed. $4S,ooo income PPttntlal.
call 1-800·513-4343 Extll-11388.
T1me Posulons With Local Employer. One Job Is For A Custa ·
dian fHousetteeper And the Other
It For A Caur11r. Equal Oppor luOlly Employef. Send Response
To : ClA 395, CJO Gallipolis Oa111
Tribune, 825 Third Avenue Galli·

773-57850&lt;

Wanted to Buy

I'Oii~ OH 45e31 .

Top Dollar · All U.S. Sil'tltr And Gold Coins, Pfoof&amp;ets,
Dlomondo, Anllqut JOWOity, Gbtd
Rlnuo. P•o·1 G30 U.S. CUttency
SlltiW.g, Etc. kqulohlons J-~r
· M.T.S. Cain Shop, 151 Socond
"-.Gtlllpoh,e••...,.~~o~:z.

linmedlale Optnlngs Availablt

For Ctrlifitd. Nurse Aldea, Comptlilive Wtgtl, Differanttal With
Experl,nce. Sign On Bonus
Ayailablt. Equal O~rlunlty. Employer. Cantact Pinecrest Cart
Ctnr.r, , 70 Pintcrllt Drive Gat·

Cltln Lale Model Cars Or
• Truckt, 1HO Models Or Newer

lipolil, 0No45e31, 81 ....... 7112.

e

Nted Tra~tOr Trailer Driver 21
Vrt. Old, Min 2 Y1ott E•porlet ICe,
Wllh
llollly l -

Smirh Qulc:k Pontiac, 1000 111:

otn Mow, Oal\tliDiil.

'

Good-.

Wotk. S.... - .. lit: P.O. 1u
4011. Clldpolo, OH - · ·

.

.

•

General offtce, light typing, mua1
be 55 or older and meet Income
guide lines. 30-4·875-0857 Conne~~
·

~mediate. Opening For Two F~o~ll·

Au~tion

lull !!me auctioneer,
auction
i
168,0hio &amp;

90

'

614-941-3117

· .u.on, WV

•• ........._._,A- M .~.&lt;""- ' ·-· ~

home. Be your boll.

Start now. No e•,.rlence. Free
suppUet info, ho obU111ion. Send
S.A.S.E. to Nugget lJnil 384·15
10151 Univeralty BIYd. OrlandO

Chnstmaa Aucllan -Sunday Oct
, 20th MI . Alto Auclion Rt2·33
"Cro11roada" . Major DeparuMrh
atore I catalo~ merchandise
·guartnteed, quality itema". Eleclronic:t, toys, dolls, eYtn CO
players, Sega &amp; Gtniuaea• .Ed
Frazier H30, Brenda Frazier fA·
105.

C1ll

.· tfte,U&amp;!It-tale

" " . , God &lt;IIIW,..

..

4 Year Old Female Cockapoo
Spayod, And Had Sho1s, Give To
Good Home, 814-379-11063.

A~oolult

,.,,.,.
BriJllll!t,. of
,

-

Clerk wanted lor retail 110re in ~­
meroy area. Knowledge ol cut\
regi&amp;ler and Jan~ oflice machines
helpful . Sunday and ovenlng '
houra, 33·40 hrSiweek . Send rt·
sume with pttviOLII worfl eJpltli·
ence and three references: Dally ..

Ajjvance. DE ADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
the day be~re the ad is to rurt

BINGO .

Body Work, e~~r, truck
• truck JMilntlng,
minor mechllniCIII
rtpltlr.
Tune-upa, 011 Ch"''lt,
wax, Butting
Long St., Rut11nd, Oh.
742-m&amp;; Alk tor Kip

1-900~656·5050

11 brou olll' lltltUtr to

•,

To GiYeaway, To Good
Home, Mother Cal, Also To GoOd

4 Kittens

All Yard Sales Muat Be Patd In

ei1011Addltioas

GRUESER'S
GARAGE

PEOPLE THE .

nrt.

......_

EOEIAA

-s... Doars&amp;

111.....,

·

MEEt NEW .

Ann, Chid WI I

.

Hunnngton, WV 25705

~75· 4506 .

'

ladlfm" •dil,wtr. ·

-

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
·INSULATION

Evening and WHklnd U XoCharge

108 Po111110 Street

.......- :

PO Box 11069 ,

10 Shephard-, lab &amp; Beagle
mixed, au colors, bOrn lil/21 . 30-4·

Doghouse to giveaway. 614-i92·

992-8215

·10%
. Discount for Sept. &amp; Oct..

Q. . . . . . . .

-

Human AesourCtll
Mason Count~ Cue MAnager

Giveaway

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

. A.lld wllil,eml. oo!'l' cur4

...

40

PRESTERA CENTER

• ·

304-675-3819.

•Ellctrlc•ll &amp; Plumbing
•Rooting
•Interior &amp; Extartor
Pilntlng
Alao Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill .

FAI.I. CLIAN·VP
Aeration Repair or Replace•ent

tlulllfhl bill,
Ht ctriltt an4 riDDd
. 6uldtyoll

Deadline: .
October 31, 1996

dertonWV.

Black · Walnutt 10 give away.

-•NIW Garages

992·7119

So, HI tiJd wMI Ht

. For

lng auppll... licente a game
check ttltlon. GB&amp;wmua Hen.

'

•Room Adcltlons

JACK'S SEPT~C SERVICE

. ,.,,

Flnallsll wllll;le chosen
and uked to make
. the reolpe. '

The Ohio CIIIUIIty Group.

(619) 645-8434.

Pomeroy, Ohio,,_

. . (No Sunday Calls)

God.IDW tlltllyou war

Submit Your Recipe(s)
. NowforThe
Dally Sentlnel1996
Holiday Cookbook.

Apt~~

IQitment services pttferr,ect Musl
posae&amp; .VaUd drivllft llcen•e and
reUable transporlation. Excellent
benefita. Send resume to :

smoked ham•, trail bologna, pep.
peronl, ;erky; summer sauslge.
Coolif kept, clean, unitary. Hunt·

Home, 814-446·0120.

$2.99/min, 18+
ServU

614-992,.7643

tloor,

'

Ext.1621B

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

.ma. ' .

Time Is Runnin,g Out!

1·900-526-5050

BISSELL B_UILDERS, INC.

I'd rl•t U, Yta, andnwn,'
1b hldr your POkt, to .,,
JOIII'
A.n4 gull you Ill rhr

Adults $5.50, Child $3.50
Entertainment, Door Prizes

Individual with BA in human
&amp;&amp;rvices field needed to provide
assessment, planning, linlung,
monitoring, advocacy, and ·crisis
assistance ser~ i cet to menially
ill populalion in Mason Councy.
Experience providing caH man-

Mix, 6 Wooks Old, 614·256·8829.

glu,

Talk to your independent ltgent. Insist on long·
term experience, community preaence, end
eomeone who le with you both before arid
after thlnge happen. Just do thll one thing,
and leftve the juggling tlct to us.

CASE MANAGER

Puppies: Australian Shepherd

CHAS. R. MASH, JR.
Who paatild IIWIIY
Oct. 21, 1882
If fluid till tht world to

or

Are You Sick And Tired
01 Being Single 7 Days
AWeek? Romance Is
Just AHeartbeat Awayl

742·3212

In Loving Memory of ·
My Huablnd,

=

DATE LINE

'

In Memory

Meigs County Fann
Bureau Annual Meeting
Tues., Oct. 22, 7:10PM
At Meigs Senior Citizen
Center, Mulbeny Heights

By Oc10btt 23, 1990, To: FACTS.
1770 Jackson Pike, Bidwell, OH
&lt;5614EOE. WfiH.

We proce11 deer, make hickory

Stick/MIG Alumin~:~m Weldh1g

In Memory of .
WILLIAM FRED .
SMITH SR.
who passeet
away
Oct.19, 1991.
Sadly missed by
wife, Ellen, and
son, Freel.

PUBLIC N&lt;mCI!

c:ouplt long to

w.va.25106.
30 Amouncements,

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

In Memory

Th•

chll~ltsa

Lad1e1 Are You Tired 01 Spend·
ing Holidays Alone? I Am A Single Chril!ian Male In Uy Mid
30's. Seeking A Single Chritlian
Female Age 25· .. 0 . If lnttrttled
Wrile: P.O. Box ·313, Henderaon.

Industrial • Automotive
New Radiators • Re-Cores
A/C CondenserS/Hose Assemblys

(10} 20, 21; 2TC

992·2156

Personals

adopt lnflnl. legal!Confl~ntial .
We can help! Pleue call Jonna
&amp; S.ve. 1-800-84~5715.

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

lloclc Grant.

To p'ace a1 ad, call

Nonprotit Organization Loolling
Fo'r ~okkeeper With T~o Vaara
Actual E!!Ptrience. Working
Knowl&amp;dge 01 AlA, AlP, General
ledger, Payroll, Taxes, ·Lorua 1·2·
3 And Windows. Send Resume

c•.,.,.-.., Adopltoa
loving,

Sl Rl 7
Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
· 614·985-3813 or 614-667-6484
Plastic Culvert· Dual wall and flegular 8" thru 36"
4" S&amp;D ·perf. • solid pipe
4" &amp;6" Flex pipe
4" &amp;6" Sch 35 pipe
'/," &amp; '/." C.P.V.C. pipe
t'/," thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
'i•" &amp; t" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (tOO' rolls thru 1,000' rolls)
'/•" U.L. approved Conduit
8" Graveless Leach pipe
Gas pipe 1" thru 2"- fillings- Regulatms · Risers
. Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp;Flex fittings &amp; Water fittings
Full line of Cistern, Septic &amp; Water storage tanks

PUaUCNOnCE
. The Melge County
Economic Oevelopment
Office will hold an optn
public h•rlng on Oct. 21 II
I :00 ·p.m. during I hi
regul1riy echlduled Melge
County · Commlealoner
Malting which maell In tho
Commiealoner'e Offlco,
third . floor, Counhou11,
Second Str101, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45718 to provldt ·
lnlormlllon · on ihe
Microenterprlea Buelneoo
Davelopme~t . Program
Fundi appttaatlan through
lhl OhiO Small CIIIIO
Community Oevelopment

LESS

following
opp~lcllllone 1ndlor ~flld
aomplalntl wert riOIIYICI
1nd the following 'drift,
propolld, or nn1l 1otlo01
...,. llluecl, by 1111 Ohio
Envlronmtntll Prottctlon
Agency (OEPA) ltllt - k .
•Jictlone" Include the
ldoptlon, moctlflOIIIIon, or .
revaallllcn of OfdiN
thin
or
);
the
dtnlll,

005

Public Notice

SAVE STEPS!
Shop the
\want Ads

Dllld Slpt. 18, 18tltl

SfiVIIU.w

.

Band Seeklnif Baas Ptayer Only
StrlOUI InQUire. 8 14 · 387· 7890,
614 .. &lt;6·2659.

FREE ESTIMATES

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

~,. :

2C22 Ext 0528M2.

ond Avenue, Gampolit

LOCAL CRAFTERS featuring can, saw, slate
paintings, oak shelves; quin racks;
goose outfHs; fall decorations.
WATKINS PRODUCTS featuring' grape seed oil
(lower In saturated fat than olive oil)
TUPPERWARE - Some cash and carry.
Place orders/book parties/gifts/fund raisers
Mon. thru Sat. 10-6, Sunday 1·5
2 miles North Silver Bridge on SR 7

"ASK ABOIIT OUR
ROO.P SPICIAL

REfiL nttl

Alaska Jobtl Earn Up To ·
S30,0QO In Three Months Flthlng
Salmon. Conttruction, CaMerles.
Oil fiildt, Motel 7 Doyo 407·87S.

Bartenders Full· Tin)t, Part· Tim4t,
Apply At Carl's Tavern, 858 Sec·

614-446-4530

•All Work Quaran-

'l..~,l

ROt&gt;.

Resld~ntlal and
Co~J~~Derdal

IVYDALE COUNTRY CUFTS &amp; GIFTS.

'

Ablt Avon Repreaentativaa
needed. Earn monty lOr Chrialm~s biHI at homtla1 WCirk, , -100·
992·6358 o&lt; 304·882·2045, lnd ,

ANNOU NCE MENTS

oLDWRNe
.of'r• EatllNIIII

Public Notice
· Notice of Elaetlon on Tax
Llvy 1., Ex-• of the Tan
Mill Limitation
Ravilld Code, Saetlona
3501.tl(Q), 5705.19, 5705.25
NOnCE II liereby given
that In purauance of a
Retalutlon of the Board of·
Tawnahlp Truat81a of the
Townehlp af Letart, 'Letart,
Ohla, petlld on the Ill day
·of July, 11196, there witt I»
eubm!Htd ta a vote of thl
people of aald eubdlvlelon
at a General Election to bl
held In tha Townehlp of.
Letart, Ohla, at lhl regular
pl.... of votlftg therein, on
the 5th day of Novoml»·r,
18tltlthe qunllon of levying
a tax, In ax~• of ihe ten
mill limitation, for the
btnoilt o~ Letan Townahlp
for ·the purpo18 of
melntelnlpg and operating
cemeteriee. S.Oid tali bllng 1
no-1 of en exiltlng tax of
1 mill at a- rate not
exceeding I (one) mitt for
IICh one dOI!Ir Of
valuation, which omounllto
ten cant• ($0.10} for each
one hundred dollare of
valultlon, for five (5} yeare.
The Palla for · said
Election witt open at 6:30
o'clock a.m. and remain
open until 7:30 o'clock p.m.
of •ld oily. .
By orcier of the Bo•d of
Electlona, of Meigs County,
Ohio.

Spear, 304-67S.142D.

Rooftq
~- RemodeUng

Owner:
Ronnie Jon....,.;

oR•Identlal Flemoclllllng
I•Adclltlont
oNIW Conatruotlon
oOver 10 Yra. EIIJMirience

614-992-3470

AVON I All Areas I Shirley

Interior and Esterlor
Palntlq
Palntlq Roofs
WaUpaper Hanging
Presoure Clcanlng

Top, Trim,
Removal &amp;
Stump Grinding .

COISTiumOI

. Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

e11am, application and salary Info
call : (108)g08·2350Exi.G870 .
aom.Bpm. .

Over 15Yean Exp.

COLLINS

· WICKS-HAULING

748 S. Third AVI.,

c:lerklaontn . Full Btntlllt. For

REMIRANDT PAINTING
· AND DECORAnNG

!II-

(UmeStoneLowRalel)

of-oily.
'" By order of lhl ao.d of
Ellctlone, of Melge County,

You've got a lot on your mind. You're building
your world and your iriiiiiJnJ:e needs ere
reel. But you don't need to add this worry
1
·
to your list
·

~

'ATIN : Point Pleasant• Poslal
Poaitiona. Permantnl lull time for

Call for Demonetratlon • Free Estimate
614-992-4119
1-8011-291-5800
110 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

949-2168

Help Wanted

110

SYSTEMS

FREE ES11MATES

whlcll amounta to live oenta
far each one
. hundred daliare of
1. valllllion, far live (5} v•ra.
Henry L. Hunter, Chalr1111n,
The Poll• for 11ld
Rita D. Smith, Olrtetor
Elaetlon will open at 8:30
Dated Sept. 18, 111116
o'clock a.m. ·and remain (10) 7, 14, 21,28 4TC
open until 7:30 o'clock p.m.

JUGGLE

SERVICES

QUALITY

pet ·

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

0111 mD. pd.

, -($0.05}

FOR YOU

F r,\Pl OYMI:.NT

by

Downepouta

ferJH • .
VI-" IIIIOIIIIU
liAR UfiUICII
114-tll-4110

' Cail1-900-478 8585
'
Ext. 3313

Ohio.
Hanly L Hu-, Chllrman,
Rita D. Smith, Director

J'INU'

low

Howard L WrlteMI

.....a........ It

one dollar of valuallon,

THING

LiYoly. 81 .. 318-g:JOO,

Offered Exlualvely

...... &amp;WI .. IIIIn

ONE

• No LDidl or Pees
• Accumulate or Monthly
Income
• HiJit Safety!
• Wide C'wice or AMuitici of
AIIKindl
Call for Information:

FUIIACU

Mill 1111

Mull I» 1~ JI'L
Slrv.U. (111) 141 8434

wanted To Buy: Junk Autos With
Or Without Motors. Celt Larty

oruv

Oft Forest Run

.I

Norlin, 8U·IIV2·7441 .

HlghHt "R Value"
Bloi:ka 99.5%
Rays

31801 Ambllrger Ad.

t~.ltpermln.

Unforgettable
Conversationell
Call thle excluelve
24 hr. hotllnell

'Sleepers' tops box.office

Guaranteed Safety &amp;
Hlgb Interest Yields
Avail8ble

TICHIIOI.otY
--aEAT MIRROR• patllltecl sys....

REPAIR

advl~lll

WOMEN TO TALK
WITH YOU LIVEIU ·

month could mean additional benefiiS file for benefits any time before Jan. .
1
for you and your famiiy. Because the · 31, 1997.
. ·
computation varies based on your : In 1996, beneficiaries under 65 ~
earnings for the year and the month :can earn up to $8,280 with no ~):due- · ,
in which you file. it's a good idea to ,tion in Social Security benefits; andJ
check with a Social Security rcpre- . 'beneficiaries aged 65-69, can earn up?
sentative before making your deci- to $12,500 with no reduction in I
sion.
. Social Security benefits.
~
Social Security· rules permit peoThe amount a person can earn and ~
pie to worlc and receive relirement still receive benefits increases each l
benefits at the same·tiine, so it could ;year with increases in average wages. 1
be to your advantage to have your I Of course, if you afll 70 or oldtr, ;
benefits begin in January even if you· Iyour benefits will not be reduced no "
don't plan to retire until later in the imatter how much' you earn.
~
year. This would allow you to.apply
"
earnings in excess of the annual lim· ·
For additional information or to •
it to those months and. still receive makeanappointmenttodiscussyour:
some payment for they-. Your ben· j retirement plans, call Social Securi- •
efitamount will be adjusted at age 65 !ty's toll-free number, 1-8()().772· ''
for months you did not receive a full j 1213, any business day between 7 ·:
.Payment. For your application to be .a.m. and 7 p.m..
•;
effective in January 1997, you should

LOS ANGELES (AP)- An all· Jackson action movie, mto founh
star cast helped "Sleepers" open at place~-~--iiliiiiiiiiiiiiliillliiiliiiiiiiiiliii_ _ _ _lll
the top of the box office in a week·
end crowjled with debuts.
nC film, slllrring Roben De Niro,
Dustin Hoffman, Brad Pitt and Kevin·
Bacoo about four men who .plot
revenge on their boyhood tormentors,
pulled in $12.6 million to heal out last,
week's top-grossing opener, "The
Ghost and the Darkness," indusuy
sowces said Sunday. ·
Final figures were to be released
. today.
.
The new competition pushed the
week-old "The Long Kiss Good·
· hi&amp;ht," the Geena Davis-Samuel
~ .TO .

1111 Lllln ·11 IIIUCIMIIII WIIIIOW

AUTO
'

furniture ,

...... dlinl, - · · [IOid, ·
colnl, - - aid .......
)art, old blue &amp; ""'- dl..,.t. old
wood bolltl, mUM bOtdM, MtiQt
Count, AdYtrtittrNrU, Osby

WINDOW

When is the .best time to retire?

The Community Calendar is pub- TUESDAY
liShed as a free service to non-profit
POMEROY -- Kid's craft pro·
sroups wishing to announce meeting • grtjlll, Meigs County Public Library,
and special events. The calendar is Tuesday, 6:30 p.m: Fall theme. Parfill( designed to promote sales or fund
ents to register their children.
raisers of any type. Items arc prin~
POMEROY •· Meigs County
as space permiiS and cannot be soar· Farm Bureau annual meeti~g Tuesanteed to run a specific number of- &lt;)ay, 7:10p.m. at .the Meigs Senior
days.
Citiuns Center. Entenainment and
MONDAY
door prizes.
MIDDLEPOIU •• Meigs Junior
POMEROY •• Annual meeting,
High, infonnational ni_ght, 7 to 8 Meigs County Council ~~~ Agin~,
p.m., Monday in cafetena for parents Inc., Thesdar. II a.m. Me1gs ~ulll·
and suanJians. Agenda to include purpose Semor Center. Pubhc mv•tproficiency test results, discussion ed. Tho~ with paid memberships
and qu~tion time.
_ may nommate and/or approve mcmMIDDLEPOKI'- Middleport Vii- hership to the Meigs County Coun·
tage annual fall leaf pickup Monday cil on Aging's Board of Trustees.
with village qews to sllln in the nOith
RACINE., RACO, The,sday, 6:30
end of town.
p.111, at Slllr Mill Park. New members
MIDQLEPOIU •• Middlepon Vii: welcome. .
1age Council, special session, 6 p.m. . WEDNESDAY
at village hall.
.
MIDDLEPOIU ,_ Middlepor1 LitLETART FAILS -· Letlln Town- crary Club, W~nesday, 2 p.m. at
ship Trustees, 6:30 p.m. Monday, home of Mrs: Wilson Carpenter.
Mrs. Dwight Wallace to' review "A
township hall.
Simple Path" b~ Mother Theresa.

•Garagea
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

IIIII'S

Horizon?

7/22/lfn

for the advanced stages of this disease, treatment is available that can
save women's Jives if the disease is
detected in its earliest slllgcs.
Mrs. Voinovich traveled to
·Youngstown, Athens, Hamilton and
Cleveland to 'raise awareness about
the imponance of early delecti 0 n.
Sponsors of Ohio Mammography
Day arc First Lady Janet Voinovich,
the American Cancer Society, the
American Assoc'iation of Retired Per· .
sons, theOhio Dcpartmen~&amp;'ofHealth. ·
and Aging, and the African American
Cancer Suppon Group.
Information regarding breast can·
cer awareness and the imponance of
CANCER MONTH COMMEMORATED ·When First Lady Janet
early delection is available to the pubVolnovtch was In Athens last week to talk on breast cancer, she
lic and can be obtained by calling lwas greeted by Athens Mayor Rick Able. The Mayor joined the
Firat Lady In commemorating Mammography Day, Oct. 17.
800-4CANCER.

-Community calendar-

Wllat's•Y•

ESTIMATEES
985 4473

.

Ohio First Lady Janet Voinovich
today reminded all Ohioans that
Governor George V. Voinovich has
declared October Breast Cancer
Awareness Month in Ohio. ·
"I encourage all women to ' perform a monthly breast self-exam; and
have a regular clinical ex11J11ination
by a physician. Those women over 40
should sch~ule a mammogram
every year or two ana each year after
age 50," said Mrs. Voinovich.
"There is no greater gift that a
woman can give to bcr'farnily and her
loved ones than the knowledge that
she is healthy. However, a woman
cannot know unless she chooses to
know."
In Ohio this year alone, over
2,000 women will die .from breast
cancer. While a cure is not yet found

10·11-ILL
COisftumol

•New HOlMe

:October declared Breast
ICancer Awareness Month
I

enttt~uet,

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October 21, 1118
A. .

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Outl•ncliftt OIJPOrlUnily lor I
hltlllf mo1hr110d Individual 10
ltt'Vtl •• Ataiatanl Director of
Nurtlng. The quaHfitd canclldaiO

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PHJIJ.JP
ALDER

...., detk. Send reaume to: 30e
ltd St. Pt. - - ~ 25550.
NM4 COl drivef with tanMr . ,.

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I TOLD HIM
I WAS SENDIN'
RENTA POOCHY
BACK HOME
II

REAL ESTATE

.WHAR IS
POOCHY
ENNYHOW?

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Opening lead: • 4

The bridge olympiad
is under way ·
By Phillip Alder

08VIOUSLV, WE
ARE ALL

GRATEFUL TO HI .... .. J

Yesterday saw the start of play in ,
the World Team Olympiad on the Is·
land of Rhodel. When aitlint out. the
CELEBRrrY CIPHER
AUOIO VISUAL.
playera can enjoy'the warm sunny
MA'AM ..
byLulaCI~
MediteiTIIIean weather.
Clllllrt\l Ciphwcwr:::t ................
-~--~........ ......
Tbe U.S. Open Team is Gerald
Carm!lli, Gary Cobler, Sieve Gamer,
J N H II H
IlK y
CI'J~
JeiT)' 'Goldfein, Jack Oesl and Larry
FMIHYIK
'I H J
RGbbins, wbo come from the Chicago
y
PM
IFVIITHC,
area. They were the surprise, but de·
YMLNRCHLC,
Yl
serving, winners of lhe trials. In the
semifinal, they beat N~ll, ~man.
NHYOHS.'
y
.N F I
IlK II I
III'VH
Hamman, Wolff, Meckstroth and
'RodwelL Jn 'ihe final, they downed
KHKKIIPIK QHMIID.'
BHFMiti
Deutsch, Zia, Rosenberg, Martel and
'
Stansby. Both matches were decided
by more than 70 IMPs.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION; "II you d!&gt;ir1 believe htll lrt~zea over, you ,_,.,.,
. In this deal from the final , bolh
been lo Nome." - L.uclly SeYellon.
.
.
teams reachec! six spades on almost
identical auctions. Here, South, in an·
swer to Roman Key Card Blackwood,
showed three aces, the trump queen
and the heart king. Both Wests led a
won
club to South's ace.
lAM I
Rosenberg played a heart to dum·
----...:...~ I~IIH ~y CLAy L my's ace and took the spade finesse .
Rearrange lottero ol tile
However, Robbins, West, won with the
lour ocromblod -do btking and returned a trump, killing the
•· low 10 form four ~mplo -ds.
contract as the cards lay. Declarer
won in hand, cas bed the c!iamond ace,
' GIVLNI
and ruffed his diamond loser in the
dummy. But when he tried to cash the
club king, Eat ruffed, leaving declar·
er with an unavoidable heart loser.
~
~
Gamer toot hia diamond rulf imme- 1
Iolii.'( 15 IT TR/&gt;..1 \ol~~ FU.ITI· . dlately and then tried lbe. spade fi.
TALSA

. . . . ----.--0-V

..

':~:~~, SC!:\\4\\lA-~~trs·

0

~'(t~;TIIE.)' ~60
~Yit-k':&gt;

I I

nease. Back came a diamond, but de- 1

c.t m5 ~Y,"tT&lt;:£f5 WiTflDJI'
IT'?'
0
0

ciarer ruffecl witb dummy"s spade
eight, pl8yi!d a heart to his ldng, drew
trumps, played a heart to dummy's
' ace, and discarded his last heart on ,
I lhe:club kini·

I
l'

I

1-....L.-1.-.L-...L...;.J ..

r-C_Hr-11.~:• ..,'

..,
...._r-O_Lr:-T

Children and politicians are
willing to take anything except
'-:::::::::=~~.:_, responsibility for their own

~

I 15 I I

~~tn.ch~~
I1-r-L.=I...~,. . !.~i .l. _~. . ..i~L. . . J·E1~. . ·~-;.;~::
~. ~or:
r
1
....· _

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you dovolop lrom

&amp;ETTER TO 1!E
PRI\/ATELY
CLUELE$5 THAN
PUI!I-ICLY
I(:,NOAANT.

•

PRINT NUMIU£0 LEITERS
IN lHESE SQYARES

•

UNSCRAMel! LEtTERS lO
GEl ANSWU

3 btlow.

110p

rrrtrl'l
I

1111111

SCRAM LITS ANSWIU

Justly • River • Bloom - Intone - MONEY
Imagination: you think you're having a great time when
you're only spending MONEY.

SERV ICE S

~~----~--------~
'!
810
Home
"•
· Improvements

I MONDAY

•

OCTOBER21I

12xe0" Vanda!e l Bidrooms, -'P·
pliai'C•t. Plul StJc kable Washer,
Dry•r. Fronl Porcl'l, $5,000, 6U·
448·0~63 , 01• ·U6 ·7371 Alter 5

PM

....

Hou•• Aftd I Room Uotel, On

AllllfOJI. 2 Acreo In MUlot Olt On
Rl 7, Atductd fRim tH,toO To

-.ooo
Ill -

reo··

Vary
-

Good- ....

BERNiCE

Repaif, . , . _

:

. BEDE OSOL

· Water Butlntll For
I
,
Ttuc:ks, Pump•. Ev•rr•hing Yo11
Hoed 1!1 Gel SllriOCI 114· 25e·
1177-IP.II.

'

Hllto Sunshine, 14170, . 2 bed·
untral air, l1rge

.,

hoult, llovt and

stor,aoe buildlno.

war

IIIII bellllllla could come yoll'
.-·~--OCAIIIDII-•

be an inre,.lllng &lt;111y tar you, becao~~t

~mag~ne11on 1o make eac11 a11y'"' ..,.,...
bOih your lucie llld your popularily could . elated. Your anentive,... will create a
be M a ~point
; 11rong bond.
BAGmARIUI (Nov. 2:1-Dac. 21) You · G111M1 (May 21-.luM 20) t - and
could be tonunale today In ·rnolvlng a lmaglnalion will be your billl 111e11
compllcalld lliluallon that looked like il IOCiay. Ulilla them 1o IIIII "*M lrl' d ol
··eould liave gone lllhtr way. H wll be fun your flnlncial_l..,lla, IWfllll IIIII ol
lo win.
' lhellllize.
.
CAPR1CORH (Deo. 2W8n. 11) Do nol 1CAMCIII (June 11-.luiJ' II) Today, II
heellall 10 comply II an old Irian~ )IOU. .._ 1o rnalle 111 ~ ~
.......... aiiMII' flam you loclay. WIIIIIM bd wl 6ot --~-·you,...., PIII•w11 do tor you In -.,could , . . yoll' per8011'1 1Miinga • - all lllhllr con·

_,._...._In
'.
OiAhfiWWUh.
dill 1\ In .0. IMIIIIIOnl. Jump II ... AQUARIUI (Jen. IO·Pell. 11) You
cl)encle 10 Join ,_ dUbl and 011J8111n· llhould 11y alway• lo lhlnll poeldveiJ.
...,.._
TCJdelr, Wyou blllev.ln )0111111, you a.-. (tepl. »CCeL II) lrNoh-lla ·• echltve eomelhlng lhal will 1u1priH
ln l,

ct..n, eu-DD2·

•

T....-,, Od. 22, 11111

S't!

no lnoldo pt11, 114·

·

ac-

.

.
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can help you und&lt;traland whello do to ; ARIES (...r:ch f1·Aprll 1t) Somelhing
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Pomeroy • Ml~dleport, Ohio

P8ge 10 • The Deily Sentinel

•

Ohio Lottery

Jackson receives rude welcome in Taiwan ~
Study: Painkillers
more effective before
r.
surgery than afte11Nlf1sd
By JANET McCONNAUGHEY

A8eaclal d Prw• Wrtlar

NEW O~S - Painldllen. usually given only after surgery,
may do lheir best work before the pain begins, a new study suuests.
The study,IO be ~nted today tp the American Society of Anes·
thesiologisas convention in New Orleans, looked at the theory that feel·
ina pain " winds up" nerves, making them more sensitive.
Doctors believe they may be able to minimize pain by stopping it
before ii.SWIS, noling that aggravated nerves can make the pain w~.
·"If you stub your IOC, portions of the foot might hurt for days
because the blow sensitizes that part of the nervous system," said Dr.
Allan Oottschalk of the University of Pennsylvania School of Medi·
cine. "The same thing happens when you have surgery."
To test wbether giving painkillers before an operation could pre·
vent pain afterwanis, Gottschalk studied 90 men, 'inost in their 50s, ·
whose prostate glands were being removed because of cancer.
They were divided into three groups: 1\vo experimental groups got
different painkillers both before and·aftcr surgery, while a control group
received the pain medicine only afterward. ·
·
•
· The 1!\en were asked to gauge their pain each day on a '100-miiJimeter slide rule with a ,miling· face at zero and a frowning face at
100. Those in the control group reported significantly mote pain than
those in the two experimental groups.
Different groups got different narcotics, although all were of .sim·
ilar strength ..They were injected into the spine-from a catheter.
"This is important," said Dr. Daniell. Sessler; an anesthesiologist .
at the University of California at San FI'Jillcisco.
The "windup" theory that pain activates nerves and spinal path·
ways that regulate pain, and thus make them more sensitive, is only
a few years old, he said.

TAIPEI. Taiwan (AP)-Michael
Jackson got a rude welcome from a
couple of city councilmen angry
over the pop star's alleged child
molestation.
Jackson .received a meritorious
achievement awani Saturday from
the mayor of Kaohsiung. Taiwan's
second-largest city. where Jackson
was to perform Sunday night.
As the meeting was concluding,
city councilors Huang Chao-hsing '
and Lin Ti-chuan burst into the room
and angrily demanded to know what
Jackson's qualifications were for
receiving the award.
Huang kicked over a tea table in
front of Jackson, prompting the sur·
prised pop star to ask, "Is that guy all
right?" the Kaohsiung-based Com-'
mons Daily newspaper rePorted.
The two men tried to prevent Jackson from leaving by the front door of
city hall, but were brushed aside by
the singer's bodyguards.
Told that the award to Jackson was ,
in} recognition of hi~ international
contribution, Lin replied: "His international contribution has been to
molest little boys."
During.his last appearance in Tai·
wan in 1994, Jackson was dogged by
accusations of child sexual abuse in
the United States. No charges were
ever filed after Jackson settled with
his accuser for a reported $15 million.

NEw' YORK (AP)- Just for the
reco!d, Madonna did end up giving
birth by Caesarean section.
It had been rumored ber plans for
a natural childbirth dido 't pan out,
and now the singer-actress has confirmed it in the Oct. 28 People mag·
1
azine.
• Madonna said she went into labor
at 3:30a.m. and reluctantly agreed to
a Caesarean section procedure 12
hours later when the birth had not
progressed sufficiently.
"Goodbye everyone," she said as
she was wheeled into the delivery
room at Good Samaritan Hospital in
Los Angeles where the baby, Lourdes, was born Oct. 14 at 4:01 p.m.
"I'm going to get my nose job now."

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Jose
Solano is on top of the world as the
new hunk on "Baywatch."
· No long ago, ' however, he was
mired in despair.
"I had a breakdown. The outgoing, persevering person that I am
wasn 'i there anymore. I became very
depressed," Solano told the S.)'ndi·
cated program "American Jou'ihal"
in an interview for broadcast Monday.
Those dark days grew out of the
death of his best friend in a helicopter
crash while they were serving in·the

Braves blank
Yankees 4-0,
take 2-o lead

Middle East. He was also emotionally sclll'I'Cd.from his job u a Navy
corpsman preparing bodies for shipment home during the Persian Gulf
War, he said.
When he returned to Sacramento,
he was hospitalized for three days ·
with,a mental breakdown. ·
The 25-year-old Solano told
"American Journal" he wanted to
talk about his past because he feared .
the·gossip tabloids would exploit the
story.
"I want people to know who I am,
my struggles. and my fight to come
out ahead in my life," Solano said.

Hatch ketps a keyhoartl in · hb
office in WashingtOII and is never
from a piano. He has sent songs out
to musicians, including Beach BoyS'
backup Billy Hinsche, who liked 'a
gospel song. but had other ideal
about it.
~
"He called me and said. 'Orrill.
l'm·going to make it a rap song.')
said, 'A rap song? You're going to get
111
me diselected.' "
Hinsche recorded the song an)/.·
way, which has an anti'&lt;lrug mes~
and Hatch liked it; although the reit
of his family was ICSl! enthusiastic. ,
"My son said, 'Dad, take thil
master tape and lock it in a safe IIJlll
SALT LAKE CITY 1(AP) don't let anyone ever hear it."'
~
Behind his tight-lipped, buttoned.
down facade; Orrin Hatch is a trouAUSTIN, Texas (AP)- Pulitzer
badour.
Prize winner James Michener and 1\i.s
The Republican senator has writ- late wife got a prize for giving their
ten more than 100 s.!'ngs during the money away.
.,
,
·past year. He writes gospel songs,
The couple, who has donateil
hymns and country tunes.
more than $100 million in gifts 10
He wrote.wife Elaine a love bal• . museums arqund the count!')',
lad called "All Because o(You,'' and received the Medal for Distinguished
recorded it for their 39th wedding Philanthropy by 1he American Assoanniversary. ·
ciation of Museums on Saturday.
"I oCcasionally write in the mid-.
The writer said both he and his
die of boring hearings. I write on air- , late wife came from deprived fami·
planes. Sometimes I write in church," . lies, so they learned to value the gifts
Hatch said. "It's a way of getting of sharing and education.
away from. it all. It's nice to have
Michener credited his wife, Man,
something that's not related to poli· · with being the force behind their phil·
tics."
. anthropic effons.

Plck3

709
Plck4
0~95

Buckeye 5:
12-17-33-26-27

Sports on Page 4 .

PUFFING CONTINUES IN HOI'-LYliVOCID
Edw•rd Buml, Clmet'on Diu 1nd Mike
MeG!- talk behind theiiC- In Burna' flim
titled, "IJIM!'a The One. H Billowing amoke len't

puH
. recent , films.
Delplte leglonil of Americana who've kicked
the heblt,'.amokl!19 on tlie sliver screen has not
dlmlnlehed Iince the surgeon generel first
HnRcl cigarette~ to c1ncer, '-rt dl-ee end
other elllllllllls men than three decedel 11go•

Bruce WHI!a, Whoopl Goldberg. en~ Sharon

(AP)

· -bOx-offiCe
ta HcillyWood'8
-~come­
• ·Such
...-rt~•Jolln
Trevoltll,

Fewer Ameri·cans· smoke, but
Hollywood can't kick the habit
By DAVID E; KALISH
Aaaoc:lllted Prell Writer
NEW YORK- The brash young
Wall Streeter flicks a flame to light
his wife's cigarette, then plucks one
from the pack for himself. He next
stretches across a table and gets his
father-in-law's cigar going.
The billowing smoke isn't confined to Hollywood's new romantic
comedy "She's the One." Such boxoffice stalwans as John Travolta,
Bruce Willis, and Whoopi Goldberg
all puff through their recent films.
Despite legions of Americans
who've kicked the habit, smoking on
the silver screen has not diminished
since the surgeon general first linked
cigarettes to cancer, heart disease and
other ailments 3 112 decades ago, two
studies show.
In a society that's banned smoking
from many public places, kicked the
Marlboro Man off roadside bill·
boards and determined secondhand
smoke is a health hazard, the celluloid behavior can seem strikingly out
of kilter.
Moviemakers insist the smokes
· are just props, a way to define tough
or rebellious characters, enhance
romantic scenes or evoke earlier,eras
when smoking was common.
But anti-smoking advocates fume
that Hollywood, willfully or not, is
glamorizing cigaJ'I'ttes. They note
that TV shows have largely given up
tobacco and suggest that more imag·
inative ways exist to summon nos·
talgia - tailfin Cadillacs and Nehi
grape soda, for two examples.
Moreover, the on-screen haze is
reviving concern! the tobacco indus·
try is paying for its products to appear
in movies. Such "hidden advenis·
ing" would violate the long-standing
federal requir~~~ that tobacco ads
include the surgeon general's warn·
in1 tbat smoking is . hazardous to
health.
"},.! the very least. (filmmakers)
1re bein1 1rossly irresponsible,"
uiCfted Dr. Stanton Glantz, a Univenity of California professor of
medicine who has chronicled Hollywood's·habit.
. ·
OIMIZ, in a random sampling of.
sunes front 62 top-,rossing films 1
~eleued front I 96() 10 1990, found
dill overall tobacco 1110 'in movies '

,,.

The worries about under-the-table
advenising hark back \O 1989, when
the issue· tla~ in Congre,ss. Memos
had surfac d · detailing product
placement d als, in which marketers
paid to have brand-name products
appear in films. The deals in question
lncluded / $350,000 paid by Philip
Morris \O feature Lark cigarettes in
"Licen\e to Kill," a James Bond
movie, 1and $42,500 to have Lois
Lane, pJayed by Margot Kidder,
smoke r.hrlboros in "Superman II."
The ne,ative news stories com·
\:&gt;elled the£ makers of ."License to
Kill," iQ. production that year, to
belatedly add the surgeon general's
warning to the creditS;
Today. film and tobacco compa·
nies vehemently deny they are mak'
ing placement deals, and the film
industry insists only creative consid·
erations now guide decisions to
include cigarettes. If no money, is
changing hands, moviemakers contend, they're not required to run the
'health warning.
"Our position and our under·
standing is that (paid placement)
hasn't been taking rtace for quite
some time," Larry Deutchman of the
Entenainment Industry Council said
in an interview. The nonprofit group
works on social issues with the entertainment industry.
"Our policy is vecy ·clear: We do
'!,01 engage in paid product placement," said Walker Merryman, a
spokesman for The Tobacco Institute,
Side."
a lobbying group.
- -x:ravolta, playing a Stealth · Others in Hollyw . ~urther
bo!llber pilot in "Broken Arrow," and suggest tobacco ·s not longer hip.
chain-smokes through a treacherous
"Smoking i rather passe now,"
nuclear extortion plot. He also said John Parkinso~. vice president of
SJ110kes in "Pulp Fiction" and "Get marketing for Danjaq Inc:, whose ,
Short)'."
·
subsidiary produced "Goldeneye,''
..,... Willis is s,hrouded in smoke at the la.test tale of Agent 007, last year.
a poker game in "Nobody's Fool"; a
"It was one of the updatings of
Marlboro box lies next 10 his cards. James Bond that we did. He still
Across the table, Paul Newman, drinks, i1C still "!Omanizcs, but he
playing the town b'Otlblemaker, sucks doesn't smoke anymore."
on a stylishly thin cisar.
In a telephone interview, Newman
voiced concerns tllat movie icons . .
might unwittingly be Juring people to .
smoke, particularly teen·ag~. If old
people "like me smoke, it doesn't
make a difference," Newman said. '
"If you get John Ti'IVolta smoking. II
that' a a different point." ·
remained level o~er three decades.
And even though · smoking by the
lead characters dropped somewhat, it
was still three times that of real Pc:o·
pie in similar demographic groups65 percent to 19 percent, by Glantz's
reckoning in 1994.
A more recent study, by the Amer·
ican Lung Association, looked at 133
films released in 1994 and 1995. It
found that I 02 of them, 77 percent,
featured characters either srqoking or
holding tobacco products. And com·
pared to TV. the lung association said,
feature films are five times more like·
ly to depict tobacco usc.
"If they simply showed tobacco
use realistically, that would be a
gigantic step forward from the· current situation," Glantz said.
Smoke abounds in an AP sampling of nearly a dozen recent films:
- In "The Bridges of Madison
County," Meryl Streep. as a lonely
farm wife, accepts a cigarelle from
Clint Eastwood, roaming magazine
photographer. in a smoldering prelude to their taboo passion. Film publicist Marco Darla says smoking was
faithful to the best-selling book and
additionally helped set the scene in
the 1960s.
- In "Corrina, Corrina," also set
in an earlier time, a cigarette dangles
from Whoopi Goldberg's lips the
moment she steps off the bus in her
rol~ as a sassy nanny. And she chain·
smokes her way . through an 'all·
female road trip in "Boys on the

a1

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Yol. 47, NO. 120
01116, Ohio V.llly Pub!WIIng eomp.ny

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; Tu;aday, October 22, 1996
•

I

I
'

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r
'·

DOLE GESTURES • Republican presidential candidate Bob
Dole gelturea while talking to supporters In Marshall, Michigan
Monday, (AP)

··:Taxes, trust Dole's
:theme· in Mich·igan·

.

The two projects are a part of the
plan to create an · l~90s flavor in the
downtoWn area in conjunction with a·
downtown revitalization grant for
businesses.
Half of the project is being fund·
ed by an as-yet-unnamed benefactor
with tbe other half from an ODNR
grani. The village will pick a small
percentage, ' approximately $5,000,
mostly in in-kind work .. including
electrical wiring.
·
· Plans call for the amphitheater to
be built on a pl~tform extending out
over the Ohio River and Musser said
the contractor is waiting for the steel
to arrive.
Meanwhile, some demolition
work or drilling may begin soon, he
added.
"Naturally were happy and thrilled
that it's finally going to get underway," Musser said, adding that work
on the stage area may be done by the
end of the year.

In addition. council revisited two
chronic complaints ·· downtown
•afterhour disturbances and drainage
in the Mulberry and Union avenue
area.
John Fisher, husband of downtown proprietor Sara Fis!ler, .a fre·
qucnt visitor to council meetings. sin·
gled out one drinking establishment
.. which he did not nam~ .. as the
~ource of mucp of the problem.
Drunken patrons of the bar congregate on the street after midnight
and damage merchants' efforts to
improve the area, he explained.
Fisher said he has monitored the
situation.
"I was really shocked with what!
saw going on," he said. "The situation
is dangerous ... it's not safe to walk up
and down the street."
Fisher said he has contacted tho '
state liquor commission which
advised him to address council.
He said patrons bring liquor out of

early NATO decision to a4d new
members in 1998, criticized tlinton ,
today for "foot-dragging" on
expanding NATO.
"He's been .talking about NATO
expansion since 1993. He's been
his feet
1993," Dole
Dole· said Clinton had undergone
an "election-year conversion" on
NATO expansion while Dole has
been consistently in favor of admitting Poland, Hungary and the C~ech
Republic as soon as possible. . •
Clinton did not plan to identify the
candidate countries, but it is widely
·
·
believed that those three would be the
first admitted. Some hold out the passibility that Slovenia also would be in
that group.
·
"The "resident wants to take the
" '" to specifically iden,tiopportunity
fy·the U.S. objectives" for an expect•
ed summit meeting next year of
NATO heads of government. White
House press secrelaTy Mike McCurContinued on page 3

CLINTOf'l ADDRESSES GROUP - President Bill Clinton joins
Detroit Mayor Dennis Archer (center) and U. S. Sen• .Carl Levin,
right, during a program Mondey In Romulus, Mich., 'l'here Clln·
ton addressed the United Michigan Clergy.
'
,.,..:'1v

tiOLID(jQ

· Charges are pending againsl a
Syracuse inan and a juvenile in connection with il weekend theft spree in
Syracuse.
Willie Kauff, 18, is being held in
, tl:te Meigs County Jail on two felony
· charges of theft and one count of
criminal damaging, according to
Meigs-County Prosecuting Attorney
John R. Lentes. ,
·
·
Charges are also pending against
· his juvenile brother, said Lentes.
On Saturda)l ,night; approximately 14 vehicles in the village were
entered and items stolen including
pocketbooks, credit cards, checkbooks, food stamps and change, prosecutor'~ investigator Jeff Miller said.
Many of these have been recov·
ered
'and will be returned
to their
"
.

(OO~l)OOK
litcluded i11 the cookbook will be recipes from Masora,
Meigs &amp; Gallia Cou11ty residerats, at fW charge.
The re~lpe· UJiU be categorised cu folloUJ•:
• Appetuen/Beverage• • BreadJCraitu
• Cak..JPie• &amp; Cookie• • Pork • Poultry
• Salad. &amp;: Vegetable•
· • Soup• and. SandUJichea
.
.

Brin6 yo,ur recipe into our olfice or Nnd it loJ
.

.'

owners, he added.
· The charge of criminal damaging
stems from where the two allegedly
busted out the window of a car
belonging to village Councilwoman
Kathryn Crow.
Miller urged anyone else whose
car had been broken into, and not
reported, to contact village Police
Chief Tim Gillilan at 992-6365 'or the
prosecutor's officer:
Apparently, many of the vehicles
entered were not locked, according to
reports.
Gillilan encouraged residents to
remove ·valuable items from their
vehicles and ,keep the doors locked.
More charges will be filed against
the two, Lent~s said.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa SteH
The. Meigs &lt;:;ounty Board of Commissioners Monday afternoon authorized county Economic , Development Director Julia Houdashelt to
pursue a grant designed to assist peo'ple wanting to begin small business·
. cs . .
Houdashelt applied for a $50,000
Micro-Enterprise/Small Business
Development grant through the Ohio
Depanmcnt of Development's office
of Housing and Community Partnerships. ·
The program is designed to assist
small businesses, frequently started
by people y;ith low-to-moderate'
incomes, she explained. The busi·

nesses typically employ the owner
and no more than five other employees .
The micro-enterprise ptogram is a
departure 'from most economic development programs .. which seck to
lure big businesses employing inany
people.
·
. Under the program. an applicant
·will go before a review boa!d before
taking a 16-week course which
includes the creation of a business
plan. Afterwards, a loao·review hoard
will consider the business plan be(ore
deciding to grant a loan, not to
exceed $10,000, from the grant fund·
mg.
· The ·review boani will be com_priscd of busines ~ owners and

.

I

bankers along )With other community members, Houdashclt said .
The program .will mesh well with
the day-to-day activities of the ceonomic development ofticc, Commission President Fred Hoffman pointed
out. ·,
Houdashch added that many 'of
the calls to her office are from peopic wanting to start small businesses.
She said the 16-week course
would hcip those applying for the
· grant even if the business plan or
business docs not work out.
"I can't see any way of losing," she
said .
The board also apprqved a
$194,078 appropriation to the coun-

ty highway department, at the request
of county Engineer Robert Eason.
The money is from the Federal
Emergency Management Agency in
response to nooding on May '4. Of
that amount, $188,063 is for road and
· culvcn repair and $6,015 for adm.in·
.istrati-.c e&gt;pcnscs.
' Commission Vice-president Janet
Howard said the whole amount
should have been appropriated
toward road· and culvert· repair.
Prior to adjourning, the hoard
paid weekly bills of $314,943 consisting of 317 entries.
Present were Hoffman. Howard,
' CommissionGr Robert Harten bach
;and Clerk Gloria Klocs.

.

. . ... -- Republican Headquarters·___, Columbus police ·c hief to·stay
..
home ·u ntil. probe is completed
...

.... ..

inelude your nalTU1 Gnd .

phone# with recipe.

Det;adline for aU recipes ·
il October·3l; 1996

Chelrrntn Cherlla Blrl'ltt, Party Sacralliry
BrWndli ROUih, Commllllon Clndldete Judy
Wlllleme, Auditor NMcy· Clmpbell, TrNIUIW
Ho~ ·Frink, 8t81a ~ve: John
C.r.y. Comntqn , . Court Juclgl Fncl
II holding eon,
P.ty "*''btt
Trlplalt
and
JllDI_.oy
)!lllyor Frink
•r
, ,

8...._.

w.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Three would appoint commumty members
community leaders have been to monitor the investigation being
appointed to oversee the mayoral conducted by Safety Director
investigation of Police Chief James .Thomas Rice, Assistant Safety Direc·
Jackson, who said he. intends to tor David Stunz and six members of
remain at home on vacation until the the Division of Police.
Brown. Craig and Dozier met
· probe is COJilpleted.
Monday
with Lashutka and Rice.
Jackson has been ordered to work
.
Brown
'said he agreed to partici·
from an office in the city fire depart·
me11t during the administrative · PI!• because "it's a.real important
review of how police handled inves- issue to the community. I felt I could
tigations into gambling operations spare the time. I see it as a contribu·
tion I can make."
and prostitution.
llerbert R. Brown, an Ohio . Dozier, a minister on the staff of
Supreme Coun justice from 1987 to Trinity Baptist Church. said he
1992; Bishop Judith Craig, head of agreed because he "wanted to be a
the Ohio West Area of t1pe United good citizen and I want to see a fair
Methodist Church, and the Rev. Wey· process." f
Craig was the first woman in Ohio
mon E. Dozier, president of the Baptist Ministerial Alliance, will serve as and the third nationwide to be electindependent observers, Mayor Greg ed ·bishop in the United Methodist
Church, a position she attained in
.Lashutka said.
The mayor ~d a week ago that he 1!184. Slic could not be reached for

'
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the bar and onto the street until
policemen arrive. "When the cop
leaves they come back out,'' he said.
One person assaulted an officer in
front of the bar, he said. ,
He asked: "Why does cgmlcil let
this ·situation exist? We're Jelling
riffraf( come in and control the town.
I don't understand 'how an establishment can come in and do this to the
town."
Mayor Frank Vaughan said co~ncil has little control over the bal , ince
it is licensed by the state.
Musser said he apprccia&lt;cs the ·
efforts the Fishers and others are
putting forth to clean up the town.
Following an' earlier meeting,
Mulberry Avenue resident Malinda
Strong presented a written request to
council and Vaughan asking they
flush out sewer drains in front of her
home.
'At' the last counc,il meeting,
Continuec! on page 3

Arrests are made in
Syracuse theft spree· Commissioners give nod to.small business grant

''

·

A Gannetl Co. Newopaper

Clinton asks NATO to take
in ex-Soviet block nations

11

THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
. UJill 6e publUh~ a

Plea~e,

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel New• Steff
Work on the Pomeroy Riverfront
Amphitheater came a lillie closer to
beginning Monday night after
Pomeroy Village Cou~cil approved a
contractor on the, project.
,.
Council President Jl!bn Musser
,advised council at its Monday night
·meeting that the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources has approved
revised plans for the amphitheater
project.
. Council then approved the
$177,900 bid submitted by Bank's
Construction of Pomeroy, for con·
struction of the facility.
The amphitheater, to be built at the
Pomeroy Levee adjacent the l~unch
ramp, will complement other
upgrades in the levee area ., most
·notably the , Grand ·Promenade, a
walkway alqng the inside of the parking loi wall which will feature bench·
es and IS90s-period lighting .

SAGINAW, Mich. (AP) - Bob Clinton administration ethical lapses
:Dole has found a certain campaign and questionable Democratic fund·rhythm, alternately drumming on the raising practices. :
By ROBERT BURNS
; issues of taxes and trust to persuade
Dole was then headed for a rally Alaoc:leted Pre•• Writer
:voters to choose him over President in Columbus, Ohio.
President Clinton was in Detroit
DETROIT- President Clinton is
;Clinton. "He has a way of walking
calling for America's NATQ partners
:right overthe facts," the Republican today to call for- America's NATO to add former ,Soviet bloc nations as
said of his rival.
partners to add former Soviet .bloc
Aftei: spending the day~~ his nations as members by the end Of · members by_the end o~ 1999. a tar·
·.-cut !!!~ M the iO..ic tor .a ..,k,.. -l~~"'~ ~~~ (lt i"!(j..
·that cotnctdes wtth the
economy, Dole returned to his a hCctJc day of campaigning and ""'
· party fund raiSing,
•.avonte
• attack on the prest'dent; "I Democra1JC
· · wm
· d• · nestern
Cl ' t
·
th
1 -•
could make this speech in. 30 ,sec- ing up tonight in Miami.
m on pan
....., to announce . e
onds.lt's spelled T-R·U·S-T. Who do _ . Vi~e ~~ident Gore, meanwhile, propNo!~~afy tm a speech ~ocusmhg
you .trust7" Dole asked a bOisterous was stopptng in Montana, South on n•v s u ure as ~· as .' ,•
crowd Monday niaht in Kalamazoo. Dakota and ·Minnesota as part of a sucky problem of managmg Russta s
"In two weeks, you're going 10 hectic week-long campaign swing.
su~plctons that an enlarged Western
decide. Which one of these men do 1 • Jack Kemp was courting Cali for- a~~~ce ~oubld dpose new secunty
. h
f th
d 1 · d
· ·he R bl'
tou .... ts at ns or ers.
trust. Wh1c one o ese men o
ma, cmonstratmg I
epu Jean
Cl' t filth N•.,.,.,
h·
want to be president1"
ticket's resolve to fight forthe state's
h. ~~ o~ ' ~ "' v speec mto
Dole planned bus stops· in three 54 electoral votes one-fifth of the , ~ ec Jc , a~ o cfamdpalg.n~ng an~
other Michigan 'towns today, ending 270 needed to win' the election The
emoc.raduc arty un h nustMng..!hat
h·
-d
ad
th · gh he
.
·
was wm mg up 1omg t m 1am1.
IS two ay ro
tour . rou t.
Dole-Kemp campaign and · the Advocating NATO membership for
state
,
· sOVICt
· bloc nauons
·
·
I' ·
I where
d adhe touted
. h1s~ econom1c Republican Party plan
. to s""nd
•• . at .ormcr
IS po Ill·
. pan,an m e passtng re erences to
Continued on page 3
cally pOpular with Midwestern VOt·
ers, ma~y of whom have family ties
to Eastern Europe.
· Bob Dole, the Republican presidential nominee who has called for an

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Bolidar Coolcb.oolc
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111 Cour• Slreet, Po-roy, Ola 45769

1 Section, 10 Pageo 35 cents

P-o meroy .Counc'i l approves
contractor for a·m phitheater

NEW YORK - Maybe it's the top 20 shows in the Nielsen ratings crowd, which had conjured up the
cozy slogan. After all, a catchphrase were displayed, CBS frequently had disconcerting look of a senior strug·
worked for "must-see" NBC.
as few as one.
gling into spandex.
CBS sopght to "welcome home"
In last week's Nielsens, however,
"They might have called last
television f iewers this fall to a place CI!S nabbed nine of the top 20 spots. year's (slogan), 'Go away,"' media
they had1avoided lately, promising The network has finished a solid sec- . analyst Betsy Frank said.
,lots of '!11:1 friends would stop by.,
ond behind ratings champ NBC'dur"Welcome Home" beseeches
Enough people have responded to ing the TV season's first month, .and those traditional view.ers to return,
'make CBS's comehack,together with its ratings are .up over a comparable and even the network's house ads,
the relatively desultory perfonnance period last year, while NBC, ABC' free of ~uick cutaways and jarring
of its rivals, the story of the. young · and Fox all are down. The declines graphics, are soothing. If young pcCJtelevision season.
'
are, most marked at ABC ·and Fox, pie want to tune in, too, so much the
"We're feeling that progress is where early signs Of panic arc evi· be.tter. .
.
being made," a cautious CBS Enter- dent.
·
"He's turned the sh1p around,''
tainment president, Leslie Moonves,
·cos banked on familiar faces like Bill Cr.oasdale, ptesidcnt of network
said last week. "But crowing7 No, Bill Cosby and Rhea Perlman to broadcasting at Western lntcrnation·
hardly. You won't hear that out of anchor new sitcoms this fall, and both al Media, said ofMoonves. "He's not
me."
are among the new season's top per· attracte\:1 the audience thatthe adver•
The memories of last season, formers _ and that 's before Ted tisers want to attract, but advenisers
.when CBS finished a third among the Danson's show "Ink" begins Mon- are taking a second look at CBS ."
b1g three netwo,rks w1th d1sastrous day night. Weekend shows like
Croasdale, who works with net.
' programmmg ch01ces hke the , "Walker, Te.as Ranger" and the new works to set rates for advertisers, not·
megahyped "Central Park West," are drama "Early Edition" also are hits. cd that CBS still needs one of its
too fresh m h1s mmd..
Th~ network. .traditionally a shows; like "Pearl" or "Everybody
Moonves, broughtm after the net· [avorite among older viewers, aban- . l?ves Raymond,". to become ~ hit '
work bottomed out, dreaded openmg doned last year's strategy of trying 10 . w1th the younger v1ewcrs advcrt1sers
h1s newspaper each week: When the copy Fox's success with the young • crave.

ravo.rite Recipe

,. •.

•

•

Tiffany net~ork heals its
cracks ·in new fall season

Cloudy tonight, Iowa In
the 50a. Wedn81dey,
cloudy with acettered
aho-rt. Hlgha In the 60a.

...

comment.
,
Rice said the trio will have access
to alithe documents that relate to the
investigation, which began in June.
."At thi s stage,' they have a lot of
reading to do," he said. "They will
review the process, review tran~
-scripts, rcviow documents and make
.recommendations."
' 'Rice said the apJ)ointment·of.communily members became necessary
when questions were raised about the
impartiality of those conducting the
•investigation,
· Jackson has. not yet reported to
work at the fite depanment Before
he started using vacation time, he
called in sick three days last week
with a hip injury. He has said public
safety would be endangered if he
tried to run the police department
from an office several miles from its
headq~rters .

•

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