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                  <text>By.The Ben.d

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direction of Nancy Swartz. In the. ne1·fm·ml,n!!l
group wiD be !tfegan Johnson, Cayla Lee, Abby
Stewart, AlisOn Woods, EmUy B,abbltt, Nicole
Wrltesel, DIDleDe PblUips, Decca Haustlne, IDd
EmUyDavls.

TO PERFORM - These members or the
Daalla&amp; Doll tots clasS will perfom at the Big
Bead Stei'IIWIIeel Festival at 6~45 p.m on Satur·

daJ at the Pomeroy parklna lot levee. In the
pooilp are tbe four, ftve 1Dd six year old young·
sters who started lessons last year under the

Meigs Junior High, teacher rec~ives a.ward
.Ruaty Bookman, scienoe teacher
at Meigs Junior High Sc;hool, 1tas
been awarded a Krecker Science
Department Award by the Ohio
Acidemy of Scienoe.
·
This is the second lime in the
put four years that Bookman has
been aelccted for the award.
This y~ he was one Of 13 Ohio
teacbcn and school$ selected for
outsWiding achievements in malhematlcs anJJ science education. '
The awards - known as the
Jerry Acker Outstanding Teacher
Awards $nd the Frederick H.
Krecker Outstanding School
Awards - are designed to stimu-

late and recognize excellence in
science and mathematics education
in grades 5 through 12 in Ohio
Schools. .
The awards qualify each teacher
or school to submit a proposal to
the Academy to compete for a
$3,000 Battelle Award for Professional Development to fUrther their
education through partnerships
with community agencies, organizations, and COlJXIlltions.
The Krecker school award winners were selected on lhe basis of
educational level of ihe faculty,
nature and quality of malh and sci-

B1 £d Petenon,,

Partial benefits may be payable
when you 're employed and eligible
for retirement benefits (ihe earliest
Want to "keep on truckin'" and age is 62) or widow(ers) benefits
coUect Social Security benefits at (at age &amp;! or older). If you're under
the sime time? You may be able to age 70, you 'II be subject to an
do It! If you're over 62, it's-possi ~ · annual earnings limit. If your earnings exceed lhe limit, pan of your
ble lbat you could collect partial
Social Security retirement benefits benefits will be wilhheld.
In 1994, the earnings limit is
while continuing to wotk full-time.

Social Security Manager

'

Officers were elected and
instaUed when the Women's Auxil·
iary of Veterans Memorialllbloilll
met Tueroay afternoon in the l!ospilll conference fll!&gt;m.
lnstaqed by member, Mrs. Clara
Burris, were Mrs. ·Libby Fisher,
president; Mrs. Ab.bie Srratton, vice
president; Mrs. Betty Sayre,
recording secretary; Mrs. Carrie
Kennedy, cooesponding secretary,
and Mrs. Jessie White, treasurer:
Mrs. Louise Bearhs was named
schedule chairperson.
. _.
During the meeting presided
over by Mrs. Fisher, the a.Xiliary
made plans for a jewelry sale to bC
he~d at the hospital on Friday, Nov.
18, and for a craft and bake sale,
also ai the hospital, on Tuesday,
Nov. 22. Mrs. Stratton and Mrs.
Jeanette Lawrence were named to
head the annual Christmas door
decorating Contest at the hospital .
Refreshments were served at lhe
close of lhe meeting.

Lowery winner -

Community
calendar
.

The Community Calendar Is
JIM)Illahed as a free service to
--profit aroups wlsblna to
'antioanee meetblp and special
eveatl. T•e caleadar is. not
dealaned let promote sales or
luadrallera of aay type. Items_
are printed as space permits and
cannot be paranteed to run a
. spedlk n~ber or days.
MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs High
Band Boosters, Monday, 7 p.m. in
the band room.

Refreshmenls will be served.

. MIDDLEPORT - Regular
meeting Middleport Lodge 363
F&amp;AM Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at the
Masonic building.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Community Association meeting
Tuesday 5:15 p.m. at Peoples Bank
featoring Q&amp;A by county commission candidates.

Next year,' if you were still
working, you could be getting even
more money. The annual earnings
limit rises each. year. Therefore, a
smaller amount of your earnings
wo!!!!! be withheld if you exceed
the limit. And, because Social
Security refigures benefits each
year to consider additional earnings, you could get a h,igher bene- .
fit.
.If you're.at least 62 and want to
find out if you can worlc and coUect
Social Security benefits at the Satlle
time, c8II this toll-free number 1800-772-1213 (between 7 a.m. and
7 p.m.) to mlike an appoinunent to
talk with a Social Security representl'tive. You can call that number
at anytime to have a Request for
Personal Earnings and Benefit Estimate Statement form sent to you.
Y9u'll receive your statement
about four weeks after you complete the form and send it to the
Soc'ial Security address on the
back.

Vel. 41, NO. 107

I.

Pratt horse show set Saturday_
include log slcidding and an obStacit: course wiih a separate obstacle

Next Willis movie
due oot Oct 14

Johnson td speak
Ed Johnson, well-known television .and radio agricultund commentatc.", will speak at 7 p.m Tuesday at the Carmel United
Melhodist Church on Cannel Road,
Racine, at 7 p.m Tuesday. There
wiD be a carry-in dinner at 6 p.m.

JAFRA ~ANAGER •
Clara Day IIIII been appointed
as a manager for the BidweU
area with Jarra Cosmetics.
She bas been a resident or tbe
area .for 30 years and a bus
driver ror 20 years ror the
Gailia County Local Sdiool.

LETART- Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 7 p.m. at the
office building.
LONG BOTTOM
Fall
revival; MondaY through Saturday,
Faith Full Gospel Church, Long
Bottom. Rev. David Dailey, speaker, special Singing.

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POMEROY - United Fund
kickoff, S .p.m. Monday Pomeroy ·

atqe on paiting Jt)L

POMEROY :.... Salsbury To'Wftship Trustees, Monday, 7 p.m. at
. the Rock Springs haD.
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RACINE -

Racine Village

Counciil regular meeting Mond8y 7

p.m. at Star Mill Pin.

TUESDAY
- Syracuse PTO
m
Tuesday at the school Par·
ena · IIUdcnls involved in apms
or ~edi"' are to meet at6:40
p.ar. with npJar ineedn&amp; 7 p.m.
Ball Old Willlllk about ibe- upoom·
~'£USE

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- · Bd Johnson,

-~Ilion ll&amp;riculture com-

me • •,Ipat at7 p.m. Tuesday
af Carmel United Methodist
Cliliith, .Carmel Road, Racine.
Cirry-~ dinner 81. 6 p.m.

KICKOFF DONATION- American Electric Power made the
initial donation or $1,000 to the 1995 United Fund campaign at a
kickoff ceremony Monday afternoon in Pomeroy. Here, Chloris
Gaul, representing AEP, presents tbe check to campaign chairman
Paul Reed. Shown are, from left: Vicki Morrow, United Fund vicepresident; Gaul; Susan Oliver, United Fund president; John
Riebel, United Fund board inember;· Tom Dooley, United Fund
treasurer, and Reed.
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By JIM FREEMAN
work'iogelher for the goal of mak:
Sentlael News starr
ing lhe fund drive successful.
MeiJS. County residents were
"It all starts wilh the fust dol·cltl11er.iid;~ ,'·'~ll!ile - ~' tar," he c~l)lded.•~ • · •
&lt;tnel'&lt;• a kictoff ceremony tor 'the · Followmg Reed's address,
J99S ~eigs County United Fund . Chloris Gaul, secre~ of the Unitcampatgn held on· the Pomeroy . ed Fund Board of Directors and
Parking Lot Monday afternoon.
representing American Electric
Following a flag-raising cere-·- i'ower, donated that first dollar...
mony by Pomeroy Boy Scout and 999 additional dollars on
Troop 249 under ihe direction of behalf of AEP.
,
Scoutmaster Don Frymyer and perRev. Kennetli Baker, director of
formances by the Meigs High · the Meigs County Cooperative
School Bam! under direction of Parish, delivered the invocation
Tony Dingess. Susan Oliver, presi- and ben'ediction.
dent of lhe United Fund Board of
"United Fund for Meigs County
Directors and director of lhe Meigs was formed in 1993 to provide a
County Council on Aging, intro- local agency to solicit funds and
duced several guest speakers.
provide financial assistance to
Museum director Margaret county non-profit groups and agenParlcer commented on United Fund · cies," Oliver said.
benefits to the Meigs County His"Every doUar raised through our
torical Society which included the annual -fund raising campaign is
purchase of additional microfilm to awarded to Meigs County groups."
assist in genealogical research.
Board members serve on a volun·
:·we appreciate lhe support of fary basis and there"are no paid
Umted Fun~ to helJ? us better serve staff members of facility costs,"
our pan:ons •. ~ said.
.
she added.
. DaVId· MtUiken, adult sem~es
Last year, United Fund raised
director~general manager of Metgs $6,000 to assist several local orgaIndus!£1e~ Inc., ~omm~nded t~e nizations including Meigs Indusorgamz.atmn for .•ts ass•s.tance m tries, lhe Meigs County Cooperapurchasing a spec1al exercise cycle tive Parish the American Cancer
built for people w~o are unable to Society, th~ Meigs County Historiu~.a regular ex~tse cycle.
caT Society and Museum, Boy
. W~ like to lhtnk lhat we ha~e a Scout Troop 249, the Serenity.
~t . unpact on about),500.Jives House shelter for battered and
m Metgs County alone, he said.
homeless women, lhe Gallia/Meigs
He !~en challenged those pr~- Cpmmunity Action Agency, lhe
sent to Do all the good you can...
Meigs County Council on Aging
Next, Ohve~ mtroduced Farmo:s l!ld Big Brothers and Big Sisters.
Bank and S&amp;VIII8S Co!'lpany .prestThis year's goal is to raise
dent Paul Reed, who ~ servmg as $12,000, Oliver said. . ·
lhe 1995 campatgn chairman.
. Serving on the United .Fund
. ~eed set ~ ih~e for the .fund board are: president Susan Oliver,
ra1S!I!8 ~PII!8" as accentuare ~ vice-president Vicki Morrow, sec~stbve ; notmg IIW!)'. of the post- retary Chloris Gaul, ~urer Tom
!•ve f~atures of ~e1gs Cou~ty Dooley, Cathy Crow, Lesley R.
mcl.udmg a low ~nll!e rate, high · Gibbs, Debbie Haptonstall, Scott
fatntly. values~ ~ghbors help- Lucas, Cindy S. Oliveri, Emma
ing neighbors.
Paugh, John Riebel and Sieven L.
Reed then chali~!Jged ~thers to story.

A ~ immunizatiOn cOnic for

clliichii will be on Oct 10 from 3

· 10 6 p.m. at Reed's Coun1ry StllR
In Reedit~. The clinic II (II'OVid·
ed ·bJ lbe 'Obio UDivenity CoUego
of Otl~ic Medicine E:hild· .
bo04 Immunization Proaram's
COIIIIIIuni~llcaltb Unit and

t of HealtH in
I:Cii@ldon .widllbe Mcila·County

die·Obio

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IMIJdlc~:e,:unent.
Tlie clinic
from
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nUdlla lcllool. 1..., !!ltH!t!ing are

FLAG RAISING - Boy ·Scouts or Pomeroy Troop 249, under
tbe dlrectJoa or Seilutmaster Don Frymyer, raised thedU.S. flaJ at
· Moaday~ afteraoon's kk~ff or the 1~5 United Fun ampaagn.
The scouts raised die flag to tbe tUJie or "l'be Star·Spugled Ban·

110 t1to tJieir child'• previoils shot
·record1. For more information
· · · lbout llle JIIOPIIII, ~dents may
ciiU 1-aoo-;1144-654, or contact the ·
. ...... CountY Helltb De~tijltlll. .

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t Section, 10 P...-e "~*!Ia
A Mulllmeclalnc. ..-..,.._

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News St~~rr '· "
~ore than I 00 Meigs County
restdents vehemently complained
Monda)' night about 25 miles of
potential power lines to connei:t a
ReedsviUe hydroelectric plant to a
Ruiland suhllflition. ' . .
, The resklentS i. ·'lllong with
municipal powet .CAJiipjny officials, attended a pitbjjp:bWing to
. learn the environmental impacts of
1he project - which i~ 'set for operation by July 1997.
The Federal Environmental
Regulatory Council held lhe meeting to decide if the power COillpany's preferred route should be
allowed. This preferred route runs
norlh. of RCedsviUe through Fotked
Run State Park follows state Route
248, cuts across Chester near the
future state Route 7 bypass, norlh
of,the county fairgrounds until state
Route 143 at Ruiland
.
Citizens from Rutland· to
Reedsville voiced their disdain in
lhe Meigs High School gym for the
project lhat will h1101ess the Ohio
River to provide long-term, economical power to 42 Ohio communities - most located in Norlhwest
ohio.
•
' J&lt;!SCPh Loftis, who owns property along state Route 143, said
he's mad because surveyors walked
on his land without his permission. .
"I spent 10 ~F in lhe Navy t.O
protect your property. You're trymg to steal my 'land," Loftis said.
"EMF wiD hurt you. I've got a .couple piec(l! of property, but I've
worked hard for iL'
•
_Fl!Rc muat choose .one of five
lines as the best avenue be.tween
lhe hydroelectric plant and sizable
substation~. Three of the five routes

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are located in West Virginia.
Scott Williams, AMP-Ohio pro- ,
ject engineer, said the 12-mile-long
West Virginia lines were not
sought·because of the proximity to
higher-density populations and
environmental areas, such as fowl
nesting sites..
Earlier lhis year, lhe West Virginia governor vetoed a law passed
by lhe state house and senate that
would have taxed out-of-state
power companies. This legislation
could be proposed again.
"(The legislation) did have an
effect on our decision," American
Municipal Power-Ohio (AMPOhio}· President •Kenneth Hege·
mann said.
The olher Meigs County route is
longer - following an existing •
AEP line soulh toward Pomeroy but costs about the Satlle as lhe preferred fine, Hegemann said. But
lhis alternate Ohio route is not the
best since it comes close to higherdensity populations in the county,
he added.
Williallls said the preferred
route is not a suaight line, but
accounted for people and environmental concerns.
Chester resident Chuck Kni~ht
said he is concerned about the lme
since lhe county will get no benefits from it and it should really be ·
built in West Virginia.
. Many of the properties, particularly Knight's own, have arrowhellj!s and olher significant histori·
cal items, he added.
·
Knight questioned the county's
ability to grow and develop if it

POVVER LINE FUROR - Chester resident Chuck Knight
addresses the Federal Environ!IJ~!i,tal Rtlll!llllllry' Couacil at 1
meeting Monday night. More than 1!)0 residents from Rutland to
Reedsville angrily stated they opposed the power line because it
would reduce property value and taxed land, cause health bazards· •
.and endanger the envir"nment and historical sites, Knight said.
(Sentinel pboto by ,:;eorge Abate)
worked his entire life to acquire his want to buy a home or land wilh
propeny.
huge wires strung across it. Also,
· "They don't care about Meigs' many senior citizens are especially
County imd Meigs County citizens. sensitive to the electromagnetic
They're just interested in lhe dol- fields linked to these lines, he
lsr ," Barker said. "The citizen added.
.
.c:Gatlnues 10 be lllnlddled 'Willi lines doesn' t have' no n)!ll~110 more.ft-"
- ~ ,J&gt;ale''Kalift saiil lhe value of his
lhat benefit people in other parts of
Barker also questioned how the property would plumllfet. .
lhe state.
lines would affect property value
"I anticiJl3te ibis will be in use
Resident Herb Barker said he's ·a~d whether people would even
Continued on page 3 ..

Pomeroy council mulls rental housing quality
Mirroring Blae~tnar's com- !he Qld Liberty bar on Main Street.
1 p.m. to begin its ninih"annual toy
ments, stemwheel association pres- Councilman George Wright voted · run.
ident Jim J?avis said lhe association against a~proving .lhe transfer.
During open discussion, Wright
c!'at'ges ~tgher pnces for ~er to
. Council met w•lh Rought and at ·, brou~ht up lhe topic of rental hous·
discourage people ~m commg to his request voted to remstate Larry
ing mspections and·asked how
lhe fesbval JUSt to drink,
Hudson as a part-bme patrolman to
come rental units were not being
"WG,Jiave less problell!s in ihe be empayed on an_as-needed basis.
inspected.
parking lot dunng the,fesuv.allh~
In addttton, counctl appmved
. John Anderson, village adminis?n regular weekends, Davis S81~. spendin~ $1,000 on ne~ umforrntiator, said some units have been
'They can buy beer way cheaper m related Items for lhe police departinspected and two .houses have
4 bar."
ment and aP(Jroved lhe use of extra
been condemned. Part of the probBottles ~d cans are not ai.Iowed pohce secunty m the parkmg lot . lem is the number of rental houses
at lhe festtval and, accordmg to durmg Thursday, Fnday and Saturin lhe village - more lhan 400 he
PoliceChiefGeraldRought,people day's Big Bend Stemwheel Festiadded.
,
'
will be c.ite~ to mayor's court. if ' vaL
.
Anderson said he is developing
cau~ht drinkinR ·beer from contatnIt was noted lhat lhe Big Bend
a checklist village water departe.rs other lhan ihose sold at ihe fes- Ste~nwheel Assoctatton an.d lhe
ment employees can use to inspect
uval.
Meigs County Bikers Assocranon
houses when tesidents stop or
With one exceptj on, co unci I have made arran~ements ,to share
begin village water service.
.
approved ,the transfer of a liquor the Pomeroy parking lot Saturday.
"We need to put some teeih into
license from May Mayle to Diane The bikers assOCiation will meet in· . ibis thing," Wright said, referring
Lee Bachtel, bolh domg busmess as the lower parking lot from noon to
Continued on page 3

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News starr
Parking lot beer sales and the
quality of, renta~ housing were
among lhe ItemS discussed at Mon!lay's meeting of ·Pomeroy Village
Council.
.,
.~em~ers of t~e ~eigs. County
Mimstenal Assocl8llon, represented by association president Falher
Walter Heinz, approached council
conceming the sale of alcohol at
ihe Bi~ Bend Stemwheel Festival.
Votcing moderl!tion, Heinz
asked council members not to stop
sale of beer but to consider reslricting lhe area where drinking oci:urs.
Pomeroy Mayor John W. Blaettnar indicated·most of the problems
during the festival are not festivalrelated but come from people who
drink off site.

Meigs to observe homecoming Friday evening .
Homecoming will be observed
at the Meigs Marauder-Wellston
game Friday night at Bob Roberts.
Field.
Queen candidates are Tara
Erwin, Eddena Russell, Sarah
Anderson, ~lyn Swartz, and
· Amber Blackwell, The queen will
be crowned in pre-game festivities.
The traditional homecoming
parade will be held T!lursday wilh
units to move from the Rutland
Street,
. Bank ~e at 6 p.m. to Depot
.

and then go to Middleport where
they reassemble for a trip from
Family Dollar to~tern Auto.
The Pomeroy paride Will begi!J at
Farmers Bank wilh the group to
move to the footbaU field for a bon-

fue and pep raUy.
In observance of Spirit Week,
today has been designated as flannel and camo day, Wednesday as
cosntme day, Thursday at Western
day, friday as maroon and gold

day. Theme of the week is "Rope
lhe Rockettes".
· A·door decorating contest is aiso
underway at lhe high school wilh
lhe winners to receive free breakfasts one 'morning.

.

New Haven ,
man ·injured
1--H-.1 accident

Free immunizations

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Meigs United Funr;J
is drive underway~

HARRISONVILLE - HarrilcinvUle Elemenwy P'IO meeling
. TIIclday at 7 pm. at tl!e elemenlliiY
IC~. All parents urged to attend..

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lo'lt'er60s.

Meigs.residents in LJproar .

YOQTH STRINGS • Members or the Ohio VaHey Symphony
string quirtet, left, David and Kathy LIDgr, vioUn, David Messina,
bass, Andrea DlGr~rio, cello, Bernard DiGregio, viola and Ray
Fowler, music director perform for children.at Rutland Elementary School. Tile quintet viSited over 2,800 cbUdren In GaUia and .
Meigs County elementary Schools to promote the Ariel Theatre's
alterscbool youth string provam. ,..
·

course competition for women,
according to Brad Harter, coordinasonviUe.
tor.
. · '
The event will be held at I p.m.
Winners from first to eighth
at Robbins Crossing and will pllice in lhe log skidding and obstacle classes wiD shlll'!l a $350 purse
for each event. In the women's
event prizes range from $25 to $5
for frrst through sixih pllice.
. NEWYORK(AP)-qo·ahead,
Entry fee is $10 per ~lass in
treat Bruce WiUis like a piece of advance or $12 when registering at
meat
the .show. Additional information
That'~ lhe look Willis was going may be obtained by contact Deb
for as an over-ihe-hill boxer in Fraunfelter, 753-3591, extension
"Pulp Fiction."
. 21ol • .
"I wanted biJq to look like a big
piece "Of meat :wilh no fealhers on ,
him at all," Willis told The New
York Titnes in a story publis~ed
Sunday.
Willis pumped up arid had his .
head·shaved to play Butch, who
double-&lt;:rosses an underworld boss
and goes on the lam wilh a scatter·
braineil girlfriend. The ftlm, directed by Quentin Tarantino, is due out
Oct 14.
Willis waived his usual $10 mil·
lion action-movie take for a smaU
salary and a pcn:entage of lhe profits. the film cost $8.5 million to
make.

Low lonl&amp;hl bi 401, Clell' ud
COOL Wedaesday, suany. High Ia

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohlo,Tuesday, OCtober 4,1994

Copyrlgltt111M

A draft horse competition will
be held Saturd8y, Oct. 8, in con:
junction with the Paul Bunyan
Show at Hocking College, Nel-

Ohio Lottery.
Pick 3:
201
Pick 4:
7322
BuckeyeS:
15-16-2046-30

'def~at
• Page4

ence experiences in the school,
effortS to create interest in malh or
science including participation in
.Debbie ·Lowery was·recognized
the Academy's scten,ejl days and as lhe best loser and MicheUe Fracooperation wilh induslry, extent of zier as runner-up at the recent
. cooperation between faculty and . meeting of TOPS 1895 held at lhe
administration, laboratory facilities, Syracuse Church of lhe Naiarene.
and funds available for instruction.
Debbie Hill presided at lhe inet·
The Ohio Academy of Science ing with pledges being given by
is an umbrella organization uniting · Helen Hill and Daisy Patterson ..
all in Ohio who value science, Debbie Hill gave a program on the
en~jneering, tec~nolo&amp;f, and edu· , new nulritionallabeling and how to
, canon. The miSston of the Acade· read lhem. Meetings are held every
my is to empower curiosity; dis- Thursday at the church at 6 p.m.
covery, an innovation for lhe 21st Information may be obtained by
Century.
calling.Hill at 949-2763.·

$8,040 if you're under age 65,$1 is
withheld for every $2 you earn
over lhat amount If you're over 65
but not yet 70, $1 will bt wilhheld
for every $3 of earnings that
exceed $11,160. If you.'re 70 or
older, you can coUect full benefits
no matter how much you earn. ·
Here's an example of how ibis
could work for you. Let's say, you
are 63 and eligible to receive $800
a mpnlh in Social .Security benefits
-lhat's $9,600 a )'ear. You have a
job lhat pays you.$20,160, which is
$12,000 over the 1994 earnings
limit of $8,040. Because you earn
$12,000 over the eamings limit, we
would withhold $1 from your
Social Security benefit for every $2
you earn over the limit. In your
case, we would wit!Jhold $6,000 of
your benefits. However, you would
receive $3,600 from Social Security while earning $7(),040 on your
job. Your total income from wotk
and Socjal Security for the year
wpuld be $23,640.

Steelers

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Oilers

can work and 'collect benefits.at the sams time

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page 10

Auxiliary elects
new Officers

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Mondly; October 3, 1994

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~~r:,~;! :~M-olp""' """...,.

7

'"'_d_lrec
_·

A New Hayen, W.Va., man sustained minor injuries in a singlevehicle CJ8Sh Monday afternoon in
Salisbury Township, the·GalliaMeigs Post of the State Highway .
patrol reported.
Ralph T. Roush, 50, was trans- ·
ported br Meigs Co~ty Bmergen- cy Medtcal Service to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. He was treated
· for his injuries and released, a hos.pita! spokeswoman said lhis mom· ·
mg.
According to the accident
report, Roush was southbound on
State Route 7-when he drove off
ihe left side of the road and struck a
ditch. The patrol listed driver inat;
tention as die eause of the wreck.
the vehicle sustained mode,rate

. ·.
, ,
THE CANDIDATES - One or tbae Meip
HIP Sdlool students wUI be CI'OWIIed 'bolllfCom·

Meigs·Wellston 11me at Bob Roberts Field.
Tiley a'te front, I tor, 1'ara'Enrln, Eddena Rlll-

1 ~-e~-~!~!~_e:~d~-~~ ~~ed- fro~-th~-v~ l~n ~n-reatlvltles Friday nlg~t~~~-be -\--~~r;:t:~:~:~;~~~~~·~~a~t111

'

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Tuesday, Octo~r 4, 1994

Commentar
The ~'aily Sentine~

Comprehensive health reform
may be &lt;lead for this year, but
CongresS could still pass a modest
health pac;:kage - or at least extend
two eJUstinll programs· that will die
without legJS!ati~e action.
The last opportunity for a health
bill lies with Sen. Daniel Patrick
Moynihan's, D-N.Y., proposal to
pass insurance reforms, hike
cigarette taxes by 4S-cents per
pack, make health insurance premiums fully deductible fot the selfemployed and enlarge Medicaid for
pregnant women and children. If
that can't pass as Congress careens
toward • adjournment, then
Democrats at least ought to extend
existing 2S percent deductibility for
3 million self-employed tnpayers
and Medicare Select, an experimental progrBJD 11llowing 400,000
seniors to buy supplemental insurance through managed care programs.
Both programs will expire this .
year unless Congress afflllllatively
acts to extend them.' Republicans
favor the extensions, and
Democrats' failure to enact them
will further damage the party's
image with small business and
undermine Democrats' ability to
blame Republicans for tho failure

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Pufber
I

MARGARET LEHEW
. Controller

I..J!TI'ER.S OF OPINION are welcome. They lbould be less !ban 300
wordJ Ions. Allletttn are subject to editing and m~t be signed with name,
lddress ...t telephone number. No uoBisnod !etten will be publisbed. Letten
should be in sood ~a~~e: lddtessiog iuues, not penonalitios.
•

·Excerpts .from _other
Ohio .newspapers
By The Associated Press
··
Excerpts of Ohio edita,ials of statewide and national interest:
The Columbus Dispatch, Oct. 3
All things considered, it's probably all to the good that the Walt Disney Co. has decided not to spend millions of doUars on a theme parlc: in
Prince William County, Va., on what many consider hallowed Civil War
· ·
.
1battlegrounds.
A {Uition that does not revere its past shrinks both its present and its
future. A nation that does not honor its venerable places is surely diminished by oot havin~ asense of its own worth.
,
If these Virgima ·battlefields were paved over for BJnusement rides,
why not a discount store at Gettysburg or a fast-food outlet at the site of
Gel!. George A. Custer's last stand? ·
·
Being opposed tO this project does not mean that one is anti-developmenl It just means there is .some ground that should not be turned into a
carnival.
-

Tbe (Toledo) Blade, Sept. 28
Many Americans who voted in the 1980 election are undoubtedly still
convinced that Jimmy Carter was a presidential disaster who would have
been wen advised to vallish from the public scene immediately after his
defeat.
. .
.
.
,
: Mr. Carter, of course, has been no shrinking v1olet dunng_the years since be lost his re-election bid to Ronald Reagan.
. Now, tluinks to his key role in. the Haitian ll!lb· the rehabilitation of
his presidential reputation has rece1ved ~ e~en b1gger ~t. .
But what is notable about Mr. Carter:.&gt; htgh-profile, diplomatiC errands
for ibe Clinton White House is what it says about the president's faith, or
lack of it, in either Secretary of S,tate Warren Christopher or National
Security Adviser Anthony Lake. '
.
, ·

Letters to the editor
Distressed over B&amp;Es
Dear Editor, .
. safety belt violation or a speeding
I am writing this in regards to ticket or DU!s.
all the local breating and enterings
That's what I thought the State
in Meigs County.
Highway Palrol was for. ·
I am speatmg as a concerned
We should feel that our sheriffs
citizen. Why should all of us have office is there lP ptOtect us and find
to worry alioul making sure we these people that break and enter
have an alarm in our home or in and steal hard working peoples'
o~ car, people are a&amp;aid to be out belon~gs that the):, have worked
late or itay gone too long?
- .all their.fi};es for to geL And some
-The sheriff's office doesn't lowlifecatlcomeinourhomes'and
. seem to be looking very hard to " business and take it in minutes.
.
find these people. It seems they are
,,
·
Earl Caldwell
more interested in sitting along a
Po111eroy
highway and stopping people for a

d

'

Today _in history
By The Alsociated Press .
.·
.
. ·.
Today is Tuesday, Oct. 4, the 277th day of 1994. There are 88 days lef!

Morton Kondraclce
ate Finance Committee. "It met
with no opposition, just a lot of
exhaustion," one committee soun:e
said.
Democratic leaders and the
Clinton administration had agreed
to drop comprehensive health
refo1111 in order to allow for consideration of the GATT agreement
and to let membe(s get back home
as soon as possible to campaign.
. OATI, however, apparently has
been torpedoed by Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Ernest
Hollings, D-S.C. His action takes
the onus' off Republicans for ~us­
ing gridlock. Conceivably, though,
it makes ,tjme available for quick
action 0n·health care - if there is
any willingness any longer to fJght
that issue.
Passing Moynihan's bill may be
impossible since it would/certainly
attract conll'Oversial and lime-consuming amendments.
However, talcing action so as not
to clobber the self-employed and,

Medic1110 recipients ought to bedoable. E)ltenslon of deductibility
and Medicare SeJect were partS of
most health reform packages, but
health care's collapse means they
may die.
The Medicare Select extension
is being blocked -by Rep. Pete
Stark, D-Calif., who has told colleagues on his health subcommittee
of the House Ways and Means
Committee that he wants to let the
progrBJD expire in order to give l)im
leverage to federally regulate managed care plans that provide
"Medigap" policies covering prescription drugs and other semces
that Medicare doesn't. ·
Larger issues are involved, as
well. Advocates of Medicare Select
like Rep. Nancy Johnson, R.Conn.,
view it as a means of getting
se::liors pleasantly acquainted with
health maintenance organizations
and other managed care systems
_that represent free market devices
for hol!ling down health care costs.
Johnson says that Medicare
Select patients have saved betw~n
10 percent and 3S percent on their
premiums, but Stark and other
House liberals oppose managed
care and want to conlrol costs by
&lt;11-ect government price-setting, as

OHIO Weather

A~ent study by the benefits
consulting firm of Towers Perrin
· incidates that private insurance p-emiwns for individual workers this
year are going up by only 6 percent, compared to 14 percent in
1991. Medical inflation for the fli'Sl
half of this rear was 4.5 percent, its
lcwest leve in two decades.

W. VA.

..

The Clinton administration
claims that private insurance prerr.iums got less costly this year ·
because of a "Hillary effect" -:-a
conscious decision by insurance
companies to hold down increases
tr reduce the threat of Congress
• passing large-scale health reform.

Thursday...Fair. Lows upper 30s
South-ceoeni Oblo
, Tonighl .. Mostly clear.and cool. to mid 40s and highs in the 60s.· ·
Friday.. .Fair. Lows 4S to SO anti
Low in the mid 40s. Light northhighs in the middle 60s to lower
.west winds.
.
. Wednesday ... Partly sunny. High 70s,
Saturday
...
A
chance
of
showers.
m the lower 60s.
· Lows 50 to '55 and highs in the 70s.
Extended rorecast

.,..__...;.-Local briefs-Absentee voting begins Tuesday
Absentee voting for the Nov. 8 general election will begin Tuesday, Rita Smith,_director of the Meigs County Board of Elections
announced this morning.
.
People wishing to vote by absentee ballot must either be absent
from the county on the day of the election or be confined in a hospital, she said. Those 62 or older or physically disabled may also vote
by absentee ballot.
Nov. S is the last day to vote by abSC!I(RC ballot, she said.
Those who want to vote by absentee ballot should siOjYby the
board of elections office oo Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy. The office
is open 8:30-4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, except for Nov. 5
when the office will be open 9-noon. For more information, call
992-2697.

~

Tbe largest-ever study of so- •
cajled "capitated" health care syS- ~
tems, conducted by the Advisory :
BJant; a Washington consulting •
fitm, shows that' insurance costs ~
crtarged by the most a~gressive - ·
managed care progrBJDS m western :
states are actually falling this year :
b;; up to 15 percent, compared to a •
~~&amp;tional growth rate of 6 percenl
·

,,.

1!-epu!,lli~@DS may be primarily l
responsible (or the failure of health :
reform this year, but Democrats ~
will .get blamed, too, if they let :
quality existing reforms die,
'
(Morton Kondracke is execu- :
live editor or Roll Call, the news- :
. paper or Capitol Hill.)

.

Critics' cant obscures .... 'Forrest'

I recently ~e the last ceniIn this you-are-thm fashion, we
fied pundit in America to see the see Forrest practicing ping-pong
movie "Forrest Oump," and like diplomacy in China, meeting with
many, I found a message in the President Nillon, reporting a bur·
experience: The life of an ideologue must be hell.
·
Joseph Spear
I just re-read that sentence and I
perceive some convoluted'thought
there that might require clarifica- glary in the Watergate complex. He
lion. It is probably best to begin, had 'promised Bubba. a black
with a summary of the highlights:
buddy killed in Vietnam, that he'd
Forresi Gump, played by Tom · go into the shrimping business with
Hanks, is a slow-witted ~bamll him, so he buys a boat. With the
boy raised by a single mother of help of LL Dan, his legless and bitgumption and good.iense·:who fills ter former platoon leader whose
his head with aphorisms (Life is life Forrest had saved, and with the
like a box of chock-lits; You never help of Hurricane Camille, which
know what you're going to get) and spared Forrest but wiped out the
teaches him he is as worthy as the competition, he becomes the milnext persbn, despite his handicap.
lionaire owner of the Bubba Gwnp
On his first day of school, he shrimp company.
meets Jenny, the girl who will
Meanwhile, Jenn~takes up the
become his lifelong love. Because life of a dissolute ippie, gets
he can run, he goes on to become a hooked on drugs, eve tually coovacollege football hero. He is drafted, Iesces with Forrest in Alabama,
gets sent 10 Vietnam, saves the disappears, later reappears wi\~Jo
.·lives of several buddies, gets Forrest:s child, marries him, then
wounded in the rear end and earns dies of a mysterious virus, presumthe Medal of Honor. At the White ably AIDS,
House awards ceremony, we see
Despite the weepy ending,
Lyndon )ohnsoo asking him where "Oump" is a fun movie. It is fiC·
he was shot and Forrest dropping lion of an.absurd sort that requires
his drawers to display his butt- viewers ·to suspend their sense of
tocks.
disbelief. But it is worth the effort

because it's fun.
Except for the ideologues, burdened as they are with the compul. sion to fmd a political message in
everything. Fun is not enough.
"Forrest Gump" must say something. .
Right-wing politician/columnist/fanatic Pat Buchanan: "This
film ... ·is a morality play where
decency, honor and fidelity triumph over the values of Holly. wood. Though it carries a PG-13
rating, 'Forrest Oump' is, at its
core, a conservative film."
Gee, does tliis mean that Forrest
would worship at the feet of Phil
Gramm, Newt Gingrich, Jerty Falwell, Pat Robertson? Somehow, I
have trouble accepting that · ,
Left-wing tiu\aqc and editor of
Tikkun magazine Michael Lerner:
·"Gump's America has no class
divisions, no inti'aclable history of
racism, no genocide of Indians ....
Like Oump, rQally Americans have
·gpne through the experience of the
20th century without ever comprehending 1\ow theif good fortune
was connected to the oppression of
others."
In other words, the fllm did not ·
guilt-trip 'the 11udience and is therefore inferior. Gump got rich catc.h·

Pair of accidents reported_
MiddleP,Ort and Pomeroy Police Departments each reported an
over this weelrend, neither involving injuries, according' to
police repcrts.
At 1:25 a.m.;,$unday, Charles J. Thomas, 34, of Middleport,
smashed hiS car into a speed limit sign while driving west on Mill
Sueet ncar Fifth Avenue, Middleport reports Slated. Thomas later
was charged with leaving the scene or an accident, failure to drive
in the road and failure to mainlain conlrol, reconls show.
Thomas
drove U)l Mill 'Street to state Route 7 where Ohio
state troopers arrested him for driving under the influence after he
had raced to 70 miles per hour and swerved on the highway, reports
acc~dent

•

then

.

ing Shrimp, ror heaven's sake. Who I
the hell did he oppress? The ~
shrimp?
.
'~
A Baltimore Sun reviewer .
pointed out that "Gump" por- '•
trayed Vietnam as a battle of
napalm a!td horror a_n!l could be : .
seen as a liberal hit on war. I could ·
pc.int out that the goofy Foaest was :
shown becoming a millionaire ;
through sheer serendipity and the ·
film could thus be seen as a liberal :
slam on·the lucky rich.
.
l will not pursue that "logic" ·
because, thank God, I am not a :
monomaniac lugging around an •
ideological prism through which I :
feel co~lled to -view things. I :
enjoyed 'Oump" because it was •
flin and because Tom Hanks played ;
tl:e role masterfully.
:
As for the zealots, I would ,;
remind them of .what David Letter· ·
man said to Dan Quayle during the :
Murphy Brown Jtoo.ha.
It's fiction, fellas.
.
Joseph Spe11r Is a syndic11ted ·
writer ror Newspaper Eoterprlse r
Aosoclalioo.
·
(For lnform11tloa oo bow to
communicate eleclroolcally with :
tbls columolst aod others, eootllct America Oolioe by c.JUot-1- ;
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

&amp;aaect • ··

And if they'd wanted io black
-out the number Iater,'for national
security reasons, it would have
been simplicity itself. No messy
·

/an Shoales
sorting through pages of documents: just go over to the stack or
cocktail napkins in the FBI warehouse, flip througb ·quickly until
you get to S, whip out your Magic
Marker, and with one swift slroke
the job is done.
--Even if he was unlisted, they
could have asked around. I'll bet
somebody knew how to spell his

~~~fdor u nsrnee,·nste~gs~A~gabutlly,thehe
'"'·
m ,.,...,,
~·~:t:r=~~~lte~:es:n~

author Irving Stone, or filmmaker
Oliver S!one (who's probably
If I only had my own FBI file! If
going to make a movie aboul this, I'd only been on Nixon.'s enemies
b'-"". th
list! Where's the fun in paranoia if
uuio:'lg e name confusion on ·a nobody's really after you? Where's
sinist•r cabal of Cubans, mobsters the joy in tweaking the nose or the
anddisgruntledCJAagents). - '
Slilctirnonious if the sanctimOnious
At any rate, the FBI never did
.
don't even notice? Gosh, if only
get anrthing on Mr. llinklestein, ·then: were two men in neckties
which IS eithcr,heartening or infuri- wilo'd follow me around in a late·
ating, de~nding on rour political model black sedan. .Jf they'd _scribpomt of v1ew. ~ng as a self- . ble notes about the ]lie-dawn activstyled 88!1fly, I nd myself feelinl! ities of JIIRShultz, a- better! a linle resentful that the FBI found whisper cryptic observations about
him worthy or obserxation. _What Egon Shales' eccentric behavior
am I, chopped liver.?
into a palm-sized ....... rei:orderl
Certailify. as far as I know, my · It'll never. ha~, alaa. 'Jlut,a
own little vicious mosquito pricks . man ean dream, can't he?
1

·, l

•

0

I

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Sputnik, the fmt 1l1B11ll!ade site ,mto . It aro
.
The Great Cross-Dresserhimaelf, J.
', On th7is77date0:
Wasb
. ··~
· · ' • troops launch"" an as· sa It on. the E&lt;Jgar hoover, asked on Jlllv.29,
'ln.1 ; eorge
tn _ns
'
w
u
I941.,"Whathaveweonhi'm'g.,
Britilh at Gemlantown, Pa.
attack lost rtiOIIICIIIumi lll,ld the Amerid,
""' lain . .
'
.
· ·
an,
·s hiS
' somnameewr.: P .lively, "WI!al
Clllllliffered he8vy cai•Jties,
1
. 19th .......:.....:.t ..,~the United States Rutherford B Hayes
·
the
In 1822• Dela.....;,Obio-.·
'..:..•bomm'
"'
t•,
• .
• • •
If fimdin&amp; •out how to-n his
,_
.. -~
·
name ..was t6e true ~this
In 1887, the first issue of die lntemational Hc:rald Tribune was pub- 30.year observation, obvt'ously 1•1
Iishcdu tbe i&gt;aris'Herald Tribune.
·
was a total waste of tax~
- · In ~931, the comic strip "Dick Tracy," created by. Chester Gould, moitey. They could have just
.
made 1U debUt.
.1
.
. .
. . him up and lsbd him; Even llling
•
In 1940, ~If Hi:r ~· ~0:.10 M~tal~~ ~ B~_ ~ a pay pbope it would only have
1 8 e P m tg · g
in the Alps, w ere
8ZI
_e.1r soug
e c,,oat a dime'- mere pennies in
Britlll!.
· ..
. ..
B
..
.
·
CB
liOs doUars! l'l1e feds could lben
t. • In f9S7, the ICleVISton senes.
ve 1110 . Cl!ver pr~nuered on S. • have IICribbled Ills rilme 011 a sinlle
· ~ 1958; thc~fD.Il:IIIIS-Adanll!: ~~serviCe was begun by cocbail napkin, saving thousarids
with flights between London &amp;lid
not to
L
. ea

'

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=~~~
~
~011
'
c
.
"'
.

""

---~

~ges~-

--

I

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meptio(l!ilin~- -the~ ~i~C:~ru:l';!d:~
"

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.I

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~

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

would have given the feds the
information they ~. at no cost
tothetaxpayeratall.
On the other hand,.not to sound
paranoid, this could have been
._,ft,. f disinfillmlation cam.som.e.,..... o
p8Jgn. May;l!e they knew how ,to
speD S~ne s .nam.e all. along, but.
were miSSpelling 11 ~Iiberately m
an at~mptto make the JI!Dko s
· name hn to remember, (If that's
the case, however, I don't know
~by they waited so long to,declas.•
Slfy these documents. You d think
they'd lfanl to confuse fellow-cravelers right off the~) · .
, ·

- "' ~ -

·- • •

~

.. t - •. •

- -.- - . - - - - - - - - - - - - - . ; . ____..:....:,_ _
Today's Birthdai:~tic Brendan Gill is 80, Comedian Jan Murily is
77. Act« Olarlton
n is 71. Former Innisiana GovernOr Buddy Roemer is 51. Actor
Davis is 49. Ac:tess Susan Satandon is 48. Actor
Armllld Assante IS 4S.
Thought for Today: "We are Ill born mad. SQme of us remain ao.'-' _
Samuel ~.Irish novelist-playwright (1906- ~9)~
·
__
.
__ ______ ·t;- , - - - -

·M~igs announcements
BasketbaU meetlog
First meeting of the Chester
Basketball Association Thursday
7:30 p.m. at Chester Elementary
gymnasium. People interested in
coaching urged to auend.

-~---,-------

Mini Parle featuring wreaths, herbs,
swags, potpourri, folic-art angels,
garden lmgels, harvest ant~els, bundle of flowers, Ohio River Bear
Company,_bears, village seat chairs,
woodcrafts, T-shirts, flower bundles, Herbal Harvesters Society,
antiques by Rwls and Hope Moore
and fresh' apple cider by Southern ·
Cheerleaders.
·

J

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- - - - - ______ - - · - -· - - - - - -

Suit .against
Creineans.,.conerete
.
a,11 egeS breaC-h 0 f agreemen t

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01

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'JA 711
51511

AT&amp;T·Bank One
Bob E..u

15 511
53511
211 314
.20 til

CbarmiDa Sbop-

81114

Federal Moaul
Goodyear 'RIR

n 711

Cbamplon Ind.

1A

City Holding

K-mart__

LudsEnd-

•15

ltl711
-1731•

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Umlled lnc.---191/l
Multimedia IDe.
30 314
Point~
19
Re11811ce l!lectrlc
25 Ill
Robbbll &amp; Myen
19
SbQaey's ~··
14 311
Star Bank---.41114
Wendy lnt'L -------14114

Worthington lnd.------Zi 112

, Stock repor11 are tile 1&amp;.30 Lm.

quotes provided by Adveat o
GaWpolts.

.

The name or the soccer sreat,
Pele, translates 'to the "Black
Pearl."

...

Pomeroy Council...
coos1der passmg it as.an emergency
to )he rental property ordinance. "I • measure allowing construction to
begin before winter. TitUs plans to
haven't seen anything happen."
Blaettnar said the ordinance was develop the area for housing.
- Was notified the ne1" village
designed to bring "standards of
.
property to acceptable levels" and fue truck is IHJW in service,
- Met in executive session to
noted that pr!ibably more than 360
of the more thaD 400 rental houses discuss legal matters. The Oaily
in the village, or about 90 percent, Sentinel noted its objection to the
are in good shape.
, closed-door session which lasted
Anderson said he would present approximately on_e hour and 15
council members with a copy of the minutes. Attending the session
were Davis and attorney Patrick H.
proposed checldist.
O'Brien. .
.
In other business, council:
- Recessed its meeting until 7
- Accepted the minutes of the
Sept, 19 meeting, ·
. p_m. Wednesday in village OOUI!Ilil-Approved the mayer's report chambers in the Pomeroy Munici,
pal Building.
of$4,019.
·
Present were Blaettnar, Clerk
-Approved pa~ the bills.
- Approved spending $8,200 lUthy Hysell and councilmen Scott
on a new water tank for a village Dillon, Bill Haptonstall, John
fire truck. Council had earlier Musser, Larry Wehrung', George
agreed to spend $7,000 on the new Wright and William Young.
tank.
- Approved the fii'St reading of
mutual aid agreement between
Meigs County volunteer fire

Continued fron'l pago f

departments.

- Met with Pomeroy resident
Bob Titus concerning construction
of a road _aqoss an easement and
on his property connecting Union
Terrace and Hiland Road. Council
approved writing an ordinance
allowing the construction and may

Hospital news
.VETERANS MEMORIAL
Monday admissions - Elnora
C'OIIliiG 501:* I
a
: IIIIAIIOII ~'roM: ln '"ftl s..:-uw-ro
Ingles, Middleport
.
t· ltOBDT DOdiT Jl . • MaliA
Monday discharges - Don Cui- ·
in •C*Lt rov•
!urns. Pomeroy; Donald Van- ~­
cooney. Middlepcrt
IT~

~

OUT WITH THE OLD •..
IN WITH THE NEW!

12:39 p.m., Ash Street,
Stephanie Amott, HMC.
TUPPERS PLAINS
2:28 p.m., Tuppers Plains Volunteer Fire Department, state Route
7, brush fire.
.

.,

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one party against

A $38,000 lawsuil was filed Thursday against congressional candidate and .
Gallipolis businessman Fran~ A. Crem!;iins, allegmg breach of agreement w1th
.
a Pike County company,
·
The plainliff, D.G.M., Inc., an Ohio Corporation, claims he sglicitcd
Cremeans Concrete &amp; Sup•nly Co., Inc., for a price quotation for concrete and
"
•
D
r
used the quole in calculaling a bid submiued for an Ohio eparlment o
transportation proj4ct
.
D.G.M.. Inc., was awarded the ODOTcontract, but Cremeans refused to sell
the concrele for the agreed price, forcing I he company )o purchase concrete
from anolher ·supplier for a higher price, the suit alleges
The su11 claims Cremeans' actions --:ere "willfully ca lculated to hdrm
·(D.G.M.. Inc.) and followed a pallcrn of similar busines~ schemes carried out
by" Cremeans Concrete &amp; Supply Co.
_
The lalest filing brings lhe total of ~i~ il suits in which he or his company_has
been named as a defendanl since 1978 to 12.

,,.
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. ··'
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nett questioned -Frances Strickland's service as Congressman
Strickland's unpaid chief-of-staff..
"Congressman Strickland has
frequently cited her unpaid position
as evidence of his office's frugality," Bennett said. "In reality, paying his wife is not an 0ption since
Con~~· nepotism laws prohibit
him
using public funds to pay
a -relative."
"It would appear that once
Strickland reaii2ed he could not use
tnpayer doUars to pay his wife, he
looked for another way to reimburse her," Bennett said of the
$7,000 campaign payment.
''Frances has a Ph.D. in psychology." Strickland fired back.
"Before l decided to run for
congress in 1992, she was doing
extremely well • in' fact distinguishing herself on a national level - in
the field of educational psychology.
The fact that.she cares about helping people enough to give of herself in my campaigns and to the

E.MS logs 7 calls

~ --,-~···~:.·~ 1-___!__.~.:;~-=--::;-~--~:;-:::__:::~--------_:_~-- ----:-------::_ :__ --- ---- _____:_

I

In his Monday statement, Ben-

Continued from paget

H

Stocks

son."

, h
Area deat

Units of the Meigs Cou_nty
Emergency Medical Service
recorded seven calls for assistance
Monday. Units responding includ-

cong~:essionjl} office's effort is' a -;
lrUly unselfish decision.
'

''Tbe sman amount l!be WIJilllli!l for managing my ~gP doelll't .
even begin to compensate her for
heart they would have done some the sicrifice she's made," •Strict- _
checking before they questioned land added. "If she w8s livjqg life •
· the character of my wife and me,". for the pursuit of financial gain she would be bact in her profession
Stricldand
said Monday.
"~;=then
again,
desperate
people
n 't full-tilne."
always exeroise the good j
ent
that is expected of the crdinary per-

. wroo ~and Frank eremeans had the public's interest at

for 100 yetirs," Kautz said. "This is issues, PERC's Kevin Young said.
long term. Let's look at how it
"This is the very early stages.
affects the next generations."
· It's not a done deal," Young said.
Rebecca Martin, environmental ~'The preferred alternative is. the
test monitor of the FERC, encour· licensee's preferred route."
aged public input at the beginning
The power lines will need to be
of the meeting. The meeting's pur- built.and maintained, Williams
pose was to reacly an environmen- said. Currently, the company has
tal assessment - which is not a purchased 40 percent of the options
Tmal decision, she added. -for property right-of-ways, he
·A draft issue is due by Dec. IS, added. Surveys have already been
Martin said, adding a final decision completed, along with aerial phoshould be made by next April. tographs of the land
Written comments from the public
A state Ohio Power Siting
must be received by Nov. 4, she Board will hold a public hearing
added.
.
next March, Williams said . .The
The issues that will determine design of the line was set for bidw;tich route is chosen include geol- ding by November 1995, with conogy and soil erosion, fish and struction between February and
wildlife effects, visual resources, · December 1996. The line and the
reacation and land use and elecll'O- hydroplant would be operational by
inagnetic field and public safety July 1997, Williams added.
.
After the meeting, Hegemann
emphasized that any tax dollars lost
to the schools and county government would be returned 10 them .
. Oth ~r benefits of the project
include relinquishing people from
Helen Sams
paying taxes on the property and
Helen E. Sams, 85, formerly of added construction jobs needed to
Parkersburg, W.Va., died Monday~ build the lines and hydroelectric
Oct. 3, 1994, at Camden-Clark plant, Hegemann ~d. Recreation
Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, facilities will afso be built in
after an extended illness.
Reedsville.
Born in Parkersburg, daughter
The transmission towers can and
of the late Mose and Ruby Shepard will be moved to accommodate the
Deem. ~hewasachartermember
landowners wishes, he added.
of Landlilark Baptist Chunch.
, · "Are we discouraged at this
Surviving are one daughter. point? No,". Hegemann said. "lt
Beverly Connolly of Newark; a doesn't cause us to give up the
foster son, Bryan Deem of Vienna, route."
·
W.Va.; a foster daughter Becky
Later public mee• ings or indiCodner of Port Hueneme, 'Calif.; vidual discussions are possible if
six sisters,'Faye Davis of Washing- ' people do not just bash. the power
ton, Lois Yeater of Portland and company, he added.
Audra Lemon, Elma Lemly, Velma
AMP-Ohio's local attorney
Deem and Eleanor Roberts, all of Steve Story stated that residents
ParkersbU$81 10 grandchildren and have the right to be fully compenseveral nieces and nephews.
·
sated if their land is used for the
.She was preceded in death'by lines, Options on the property are
her husband, Delbert Sams; a being talcen to simplify the process
' granddaughter, Kay Ann Connolly; and the 40 percent of the property
six brothers, Walter, Delbert, who have already signed options
Albert. Carl,. William and one have made money from their
infanl
.
actions,_story added.
Service will be Wednesday, l
Owen Damewood said he also
p.m. at White Funeral Home, owns property that will be affected.
Coolville, with evangelists Jeff
"I retired from a power compaStevenson and Michael Lamb offi- ny. Don't believe a damn thing
ciating. Burial will follow in Sand they say," Damewood said. ''That's
Hill Cemetery, Lopg Bottom.
a health hazard. It's going within
Friends may call 3-S and 7-9 300 feet of my house and then up a
p.m. today at the funeral home.
Steep hill."
.

ed:
Gospel trio to perrorm
.
· MIDDLEPORT
Bill Ward and the GO'Spel Trio
2:S1 p.m., motor-vehicle acciwill sing Sunday at 7:30p.m. at the
dent on state Route 7, Ralph T.
Hobson Chun:h of Christ in Chris·•
Roush, Veterans Memorial Hospitian Union. Public welcome.
Dluner atoceled
.
This Thursday's spaghetti din- Ud;
6:30
p.m.,
Palmer
Street,
Herbrest slated
ner at Meigs High SchoQI has been
Dorothy Anthony, Pleasant Valley
A herbfest will be held Satur- cancelled
Hospital.
day, 9:30-3 p.m. in. the Pomeroy
RUTLAND
Auxiliary to meet
9:42
a.m.,
College Avenue, KeiTuppers Plains Vcterlns of For·
thel
Hatfield,
VMB;
The Daily Sentinel eign Wars Post90S3 Ladies Auxil10:29
a.m.,
College Avenue,
iary will meet' Thursday at 7:30
(USfS ao-Ht)
Dorothy
Lynn
Morgan,
VMB; .
p.m. at post home. Ali' members
2:19 p.m., state R~te 143, Stel·
Mtllboilo.., o11noo1. MolldaJ u.oup
urged to atrend.
·
la Adkins; Holzer Medical Center.
Fttclo)', 111 courtlt............,. Oblo. by lbo
SYRACUSE
~ :,::~C:,~f::"'"~~
__
-- - ;;&amp; · ._...... Prw.llllllbo!JIIo
Charaes 'oaUetn'otbUSinesS SchemeS

;

;
"

.

A 9-year-old Middleport girl who sustained head injuries in a
carlbic,-cle last week has been upgraded from poor to fair condition,
· acccrding to Otildren's Hospital officials.
Amanda R. Loushbaugh, 9. Second Avenue, had blond clots in
the head after ~e drove her bicycle ncrth on Sycamore Street amt
·failed to stop for a car that was driving east on Gen. Hartinger Parkway last Thursday, repcrts stated.
·
Alberta L. Hub~ 73, of Syracuse, was driving the 1991
' Chevrolet Betetta tliit t Loushbaugh. No citations were issued,
records show.

:
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:

C l i• f t o n .

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i

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Accident victim improves

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annoying llll ac.quaintllnces for Brell(b, _408 Broad St., Nevada• ~
years. Doesn t that caunt f9f lilY· City, CA 95959.) ·
·· 1
thinjl?-lhavebeencalledbotha ,. ,(ForiDformatloooobowto t
fasciSt (for advocating the burning
1
of Young Adult novefa) and liberal =CCIII!mlllilcate 1electroulcally '!'itb ',
(' dm' tl th 1 d'd • ha
II. aad otbers,., con- ;
.or • It ng at • n t te
Oallae by caW•al '
President Clinton as much as main"6~ ext; B3l'f:)
~ .;
slrellll Alllerica). ,
;

·

At 12:28 p.m. Saturday, Carl Sauvage, 25, of Pomeroy, backed
his car into another car in Jiiy's Elcr.on on Main Street, Pomeroy
repoi'\S stated.
Sauvage was charged with improper backing I!Dd his 1970
Chevrolet Nova was not damaged, records Sflll,ed.
. But, Charlene Lewis reported her 1986 Honda had moderate
damage to the front end, reports added.

The fi-le on Mr. Finklestein ______
According lo the Associated
Press, the late Iettie columnist I.F.
Stone ;was under FBI survoillaiK:e
for over 30 years. His file, released
recently und!ll' the Freedom of
Information Act, is I, 794 pages
I . 41 . h h' k
.h
ong,
mc es 1 1c , even Wit
many lines blacked out and 332
·pages withheld. Tluit's a 101 Of ink
10 waste on a writer.
Despite this heroic effort of
paper generation; the O-Men not
only couldn't figure out if SlOne
was a "Red" or not, they couldn't
this
" h

MeigS residents

_ ___..;.___ Weather-----

Once the heat is off, admin.istratioll officials coQlend, premiums
will surge again.
· ·
But other evidence suggests that ;
basic changes are under way in •
medical delivery that will continUe !
colltaining costs - provided the •
Jtovermnent allows them to contin- :

.

pJiona were satisfied," a staiCIIICIIl
released Monday by the Stricldand
cam · reads
·

then

·in~~~~~: =~e
bepn as thC( Soviet Uf!lmllaunc~ ~!:!f:!~:Ce~t~~~~~:': .;;~?n~°F~ =~n~~e ~~~se:fc~:~ 0~ ~:0: :e~=~ ~~i:O ~:fen:/~ Iaf;b~=~v~:,.~:~~:;:i! :.
llite . otb'
und the Eatth
,
Stone," and even "I.M. Stone... least c
'ng oot his .byline. That world-at-large. But I've been 800-9U·DUCKi or write Duck's , :

I
I·

Sixth District Congressman Ted paigrr-'debt in 1992 was not a simStrickland has labeled a complaint · ple oversight," Benneu said.
filed ~ainst him by the Ohio
Strickfand fired back Monday
Repubhca11 Monday as "outra- night by releasing a contract, dated
geous" and a "desperate altelllptto April 28, 1992, that specified, "If
save ·the struggling campaign" of tlwcandidale (Stricldand) wins the
his opponent Frank Cremeans, R• general election and if the funds are
GallipOlis.
available, Frances Strickland shall
The complaint, filed with the - be oaid the swn of"$7 ,000 fot ha
Federal Election Commission, services (as campaign manager)"
alleges ''distrepancies have been
The contract was signed by
uncovered between Strickland's Frances Strickland and Wanda
1992 federal campaign finance Kuhns, campaign treasurer.
reports and those he filed in 1993"
The incumbent labeled as untrue
involving a $7,000 payment to his ' Bennett's claim that the payment
wife, Frances, for services as was "an illegal conversion of camStrickland's campaign manager for paign funds for the private use of
the 1992 primary and general elec-- the Stricklands."
tion.
"This is not true because
"An
analysis
of his Frances served as campaign man- ·
(Strickland's) 1992 post-primary ager, fulfilling her contractual obliand post-general campaign reports gation," the Lucasville Democrat
showed no payments were made to said, "and was simply paid 'the
F~ for servipg as Stricldand's
money promised her under the
campBJgn manager nor were any te1111s of the contract."
outstanding debts to her listed."
"The Strickland for Congress
ORP CbainnaD Robert T. Bennett Committee retired the 1992 camcharged in a press release issued paign debt in early 1993, and
Monday.
.
simply paid Frances Strickland
"Ted Strickland's failure to according to the terms of the con-.
include his wife as an unpaid cam- tract • after all ~e:r c:m.npaign obli-

An abundance of new evidence
is em~ging that managed C'!fC significan(ly reduces costs, is nesponsil&gt;le for a levelling-off of increases
in national health costs - and is
P'JPU!ar with clients. Yet, only 9
p.rcent of Medicare clients use
HMOs or other managed care
plans, mainly because they are used
to traditional fee-for-service
medicine.

'
'

T11e Dally Sentinel Page 3

Strickland calls com)&gt;laio' 'outrageous'

Wednesday, Oct. 5
· Ac:cu:wealber" forecast fer

is currently done with Medicare,
which Stark oversees.

ue.

Akron Beac:on Joamal, Sept. 29. .
•·
" .. . .. _
The effort to ref01111 the country's inefftcient health-care system didn't
die easily.
In truth, Americans should be thankful at the tum•qf events. Of late,
the.,reform effort hl)d. become a fee~le and dubious·endeavor. Those still
looking. for a deal seemed only 10·agree on changes that threatened to
make matters worse.
Better to start again in January when a new Congress convenes.
.
As AmericaliS have learned over the last 12 months, the imperative for
reform doesn't readily translate into action.
·
.
The hope is that the country's leaders, in public and private life, liave .
learned some lessons. The opportunity .or health-care reform isn't dead.
. The need f(lr actioo'is no less certain.

.

of health reform.
Moynihan raised the possibility
of passing his last-ditch reform
plan at a recent meeting of his Sen-

AUTuMN!

The (Caotoo) Repository, Se{lt. 30
·
·
Crying pork is fast becommg every image-constious congressman· s
ticket to that coveted title ''fiscal conservative.''
The problem is that nearly everything Congress does costs money. S(/
almost every ;~Ction can be subjected to the dreaded "perk" designation.
So it was when U.S. Rep. Ralph Regula led an effort to create a fede{al
historic corrider along an 87-mile stretch of land from Cleveland to 'Zoar,
following ~ Ohio &amp; Erie Canal. The effort failed amid charges that the
proposal was·a waste of money.
_
.
·
The bill was small potatoes by congressional staildBJds: It would have
allocated $250,000 a year for 10 years for the northeast Ohio corridor and
as many as 40 others throughout the country, That money would be ,used,
along with local public and private matchinll funds, to plan and implement historic, ecooomic and recreational activities in the area. ·
It's not exactly the most pressing mBJter Congress has considered this
year. _But neither is the preservation of !!ll:Cn space something we'd con,
sider pork. No doubt there are members of Congress who would sell the
Orand Canyon to reduce the deficit.
·
.

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· Page '- 2-:-T11e Dally ~ntlnel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
TUesday, OCtober 4, 1994

Congress can pass modest .hea.lth package

111 Cout Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genenl Manager

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

• &lt;.:&gt;,

Stop In For A Test Drive .

214 EAST MAIN

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.

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·- ____
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�i

The Daily Sentin_el

Sports

I

"f'
·

Steelers defeat·OilerS' 30~ 1~ 4
!

By ALAN ROBINSON
PITTSBURGH (AP) - For
once, \he Pittsburgh Steelers didn't
need a comeback. Once again, the
HOU$ton Oilers do.
'
The Oilers did the impossible
last season, winning 11 in a row
and the AFC Central Division after
starting 1-4. Off their embarrassingly inept 30-14 loss Monday to
Pittsburgh, the Oilers can't even
dream of duplicating that
Even they say so.
..Our talent level is •down from
what it was last year. If we could
do what we did last year, it would
really be impressive," safety Marcos Robertson · said. "It's not
impossible, but it would take a miracle."
r. On a night when the defenseless
Oilers made the Steelers' oft-inconsislent.Neil O'Donnell resemble
Terry Bradshaw, Houston ' s Cody
Carlson 111ade no "one recall exOi~ Warren Milon- least of all,
the Steelers' sacking, attacking
defense.
Playing with a bad. shoulder, a
broken nose.and little protection,
Carlson wils 3-fq,r-7 for 1g yards
and a costly fumble before being
yanked after just 20 minutes. The
Steelers already led 20-0, so the
game was gone ,even before Carl, son was.
.
The Oilers were in minus
yardage almost until Carlson left,
prompting this new nickname suggeslion: Commander Cody and the
Lost Yardage Airmen.
.,.
"You can ' t even compare
(Moon and Carlson)," ~teelers cornerback Rod Woodson said. '"I
couldn't even think ofpuuing them
on the same field.'' ·
For at least this night, the Oilers
hardly belo~ged on ihe same field

with Pittsburgh. The Steelers (3-2)
were behind by at least 10 poiniS in
every game this season and ·ttaiJed
in 12 of their previous 14, only to
score on their first four possessions.
·
••Everybody knew we were
falling behind early," tackle John
Jackson said. 'There was a big
emphasis all week to start out
strong and not wait for somebody
to do the scoring! '
Gary Anderson kicked two field
goalS after a pair of big ~lay fmtdown completimfs by 0 Donnell,
Barry Foster had a one-yard TD
· run and O'Donnell threw a scoring
pass to Eric Green immediately following Carlson's fumble at his own
three.
"We were telling ourselves,
'Let's not mess around ·early like
we always do,"' wide receiver
Andre Hastings said. "It's too bad
we can't plaf every game on Mon·
day or we d go to the Super
Bowl."
In prime time; tlie difference in
the Steelers is like ... well, night
and day. They are 5-0 on Mondays
in three seasons under coach Bill
Cowher, but just 18-14 on Sundays.
"I just told our guys there' s ·
been a change in the schedule and
the rest of our .season will be
played at night," Cowher said.
So far, the Oilers haven't looked
good any day . They spent more
time fighting themselves than they
did the Steelers, with Robenson ·
angering some teammates by criticizing the ·defensive front's inability to stop the run.
That prompted an angry AI
Smith to yell across the locker
room, "Don't be pointing the finger at me.''

Qf course, there was plenty of •
blame to go around. Foster, the
AFC's rushing leader, had 115
yards before giving way early in
the third quarter to rookie Bam ..
Morris, who had 70 yards and a
touchdown.
·
.
"I ' m embarrassed for our
defen_se, our offense and the whole
organization," quanerback Buclcy
Richardson said.
·
Not with Foster on the field.
The running game's effectiveness
took the heat off O' Donnell, who
was 9-for-17 for 154 yards and a
touchdown only a week after
throwing a career-high four interceptions in a 30-13Ioss to Seattle.
The Oilers' defense didn't do
much, but the offense wasn't any
better.
•'It was probably a mistake
startin'- Cody," coach Jack Pardee
said. • Our protection wasn't good
early.•He was immobile and was
geaing hit way too many times.''
Richardson wasn't much better,
fumbling two of his first three
snaps before recovering to throw·
touchdown passes to Ernest Givins
and Haywood Jeffires in the final
9:11 aftcr..Pittsburghopened a 30-0..
lead.

,.

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~

oo!CIIor, AI Oouno, oitc:k-,

SAN FRAFiCISCO GIANTs: Purthe coatnct of Tom Umpkia,
...-. - "'-!&gt; olllll Pac:i6c t-i
Loo-. ~:l!dlt J....... WioJd.
cht~ed

cr. foi.fj

,

BllkelbiD

..,j

Nollcullublllel"-lllloo
BOSTON CEL11CS: Nomed loo Jcm.

CUVI!LAND CAVAUI!ItS: NomN
5WDCy Lowo uail&amp;an&amp; co.c:h.

-·-·

DBNYml NUOOETS: Waivod Alvin

HEADED FOR HISTORIC TRYOUT Heather Sue Mercer (right), shown practicing
field 110111 kicking durin&amp; a 1993 practice at Ycirk· ·
town High School in Yorktown, N.Y., bas been
granted a tryout next week as a placekicker oa the

Ric:Jwd MHnina,""'""·

VANCOUVER GRIZZLIES: Nomed
I...., ltiJey 4hocsar of

"""'"'1-

CINCINNATI BENOALS: SUipaldod
Mlkc Fri•, dcfcnJivo liDeman, without
poyfaroluoo....U.
DALLAS COWBOYS: Woivocl
Rd&gt;at
fullbodr..

Hockey

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'lldliiull.loolta!cler, to Shabroob of :he
Qoobeo Majow I..UO. Hockey Loa.,., mel
.u... Doodmanh. r........t, to - . t of

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l·l«dlm•W {II) 5-0 .........................331
:1-Dolplooo SL Jaba'o C5) :1-0 ..............319
:l-SI."'"" (4) 4-1 - ........................ .241 4-Cio. CloooiR7
5-0. .....................2!9

TORONTO MAP!£ LEAFS : Tndcd
Edo l..oaoix, lcll win&amp;, Chris Snoll, dof..anan,llld a 1996 founh-round draf'l
old&lt; to II!' ~ Anaoteo Kinao for Diooo
\Vud, ..,., ...... lluy Lovoquo. .......
and lbe ri&amp;btJ to Sbayao ToporowU.i
li&amp;b&lt; willa.~ Kclly Foin:bilcl. .....,. . •

o.,

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6-~ iiJI (4) S-0 ·--·--.............229
7-I'Qil'IMOUI'II BAST (2) S-O ..... 153
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THE CARD BOX

KAREN'S GRE.ENHOUSE·

RUTLAND MINING s·uPPLY CO.

Carter lumber

-----

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We carry a complete tine of
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CARDS•PACKS•SETS
Plus Star Trek and Star Trek Memorabilia,
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October 3rd thru 8th
7Ae I-St4p
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COLUMBUS, Ohla (AP) - .IIMr 1
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KAREN'S GREENHOUSE

w-..

·

' Southern recently defeated six P.OiDts, thn:ie aces and an assist; had six willts, 10 kills, six assiSts
Trimble 15-13, 6-15, 15-12 before Emily Dohl a point, Hillery Harris and three blocks in a great alldefecting Well~ton . in two games a point, an ace and one kill. B. around offensive-defensive game.
Monday night to lift its record back Brandau had three for Wellston, Jenny Cummin&lt; had five points,
above .500 in area high school vol- while K. Milliken, S. Sickles and five kills, six assiStS and two blocks
Ieyball circles.·
·
C. Leach each bad two.
in another great effort; Bea Lisle •
In the victory Over Wellston, 15S,outllern won th~ freshman had four points and one kill;
7 and 15-0, Jenny Cummins paced match 15-7 and 15~. Crystal Bar- Weaver had three points and two
the Tornadoes (8-7 overall and 6-S nett led with 15 points and four assists.
in -the Tri-Valley Conference) with aces, playing a super game with
Renee Turley liad three ldlls and
nine points, an ICC and two kills; several diving saves. Valetie CuiF one block, Brianne Proffitt had two
Amy Weaver bad seven points and cliff.had five points, two aces and a kills and Jonna MAnuel had one
an ace, Bea Lisle six points; Jess kill; Jenny Roush 1hree points, kill and two blocks.
Dusty Waldeck had 10 forTrin)Codner two points and a kill, Jenny Friend three points and three 1
Andrea Moore two points, two kills kills; Jayme Millee three points, ble, while Calie McCowan had
and two assists: Sammi Sisson two HillarY Turley 'one point and one nide and Shelly Hardy eight.
.
Southern won the reserve game
points, an ICC and three assists and · kiD.
Kendra Norris one point. Jenn
For Wellston;· M. Williams had · IS-8 and 15~.
Lawrence bad a point, a kill and six, A. Dickerson four, K. PlirsOns ·"" Amber Thomas agaipled the
two assisiS.
two and C. Baker one.
way with nine points and five aces
Wellston was led by Mandy
Against Trimble, Sammi Sisson and three assists. Duhl had eight •
Wittkamp's three, Andrea Wyatt's led Southern' s varsity with 11 points and three aces, C. CaldweD
two and Lorrie Johnson 's two.
points, three ldlls and 12 assists in seven pointS, five aces and one
Southern won the reserve game a super game. - ·
assist, Keri Caldwell four points,
15-4, 15-7. The reserves are now
Coach Jenni Roush said, ''I'm two aces and two kills; Proffitt one
12-3 and 9-2.
very proud of every one of these point and a super gtime at the net
. Keri~ Caldwell led the young kids. The played the best game I've with six ldJis and an 11-12 spiking
Whirlwinds with eight points, three seen them play all year. Everyone effort. Missy Smith had a point and
aces and a ldll; Brianne Proffitt had did their job and they played Hillery Harris a kill.
eith points, two aces and four kills; together re8lly well."
Southern will play at Eastern
Cynihia Caldwell six points, two
Jess Codner had seven points, tonighL
aces and two kiDs; Amber Thomas two kills and two assists; Moore

LOWEST

FootllaU

a... ........ 12 ....... pcolllll

Dl.tllctaVI

rootbaD teain at Duke Univenilty, where she Is a
freshman, She may be the first woman ever granted a chance to try out for an Atlantic ·coast Conference fl!l'tball team. (AP)
•
·

Na)lolul FOOIIIIII ~

-C...

~~.:;;:~wd:e~~~=

·southern beats Trimble lind Wellston
in latest varsity volleyball ac.t ion

Manacjer•s Special

MINNESOTA 1JMBBRWOLVES:
SipoclllovciiiMDGII, auud.
SI!AITLE SUPBRSONICS: Siaood
Som Clowforil ond c.rJ Thanu. plrda.
mel Nile IliJII.Jorwud.
liTAH JAXZ.: Sipocllomie w,,;.,
and Marque• Bn&amp;a, fotwarc1J , and

llokllooo Jelfmoo (3) 5-0 ................275
4-WolloviJJe (2) 5-0 ............................229
5--vlaC.oh. (I) 4-1 ................. 111
6-Cuoy (2) 5.0 . ................. ~ .--...... .110
7.t:obnbiiM c...viow (I) :1-0 ........ 1116
1-WOO&lt;Io&amp;eld
(3):1-0...1!2
9-LcnCily Buc:byo Tnll (I) S-0 :.... 119
IO.Sw ooJ: Oarowoy (I) S-0.-.......73

Hopefully,we'lldoOK.'~
Both Wallace and his counter.

'

THE CARD BOX

llinpcinlc:larolbultaWI~

DIVlalon V

meeting the defender from Division
II -North Alabama, the team with
the Iongest _winning streak in the
country.
.. It's like a mini-bowl in the
middle of the season," North
Alabama coach Bobby Wallace
said, .. It should be interesting.

I .

'By RUSTY MILLER
.
Catholic in Division V fell to bet:-veen t!te two divisions- the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- In crosstown rival Steubenville 14-0 · mam one_ts 1-AA schools get ~re
the 48 years that The Associated and No. 1 Iromon lost to Delaware scholar$hips - are not that noucePress has been ranking the top Olentangy 22-13 in Division III. abl~_amu:l the small ~hools.
teams in Ohio high school football , That turn of events resulted in
I.
we~ a b~ ~I.oser 'f.
there have been few .:..... if any Steubenville taking over as the 1-~ than 1-AA IS to Dm~on I,
weekends like it.
front-runner in Division III this . S81d Wall~. a. former ~~t II!
Upsets were everywhere as 16 week and defending state champion Auburn, Ilhnots and Mtsstsstppt
. to fiJrSt m
. D'1v1. State.
of the top 60 teams in the state fell, VerS81'IIes movmg
N th AI b
.
f.
turning the third weekly state poll sion V.
·
·
or
a am~, wmner o Us
into a patchwork quilt of teams on
The only holdovers aniong last fii'St _four games thts seaso~ and 18
the rise or falling m11idly. Very few week's top-ranked teams were stru~ht over~ll. feels 11 has a
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit in ehance to conun,ue the s~ even
kept the same spoiS m.the poll.
.
. First, consider what happened:
Division II and Wauseon in Divi- though Sa~y s game JS at S~- Four of the six teams tanked sion IV, the only .division in which baugh Stadtum • where the_Ohto By AARON J, LOPEZ
80-yar\1 drive in the last four min- penalties in die game. ·
.. Obviously one of the things
No. 1 in their divisions were belit- all of the top 10 teams_won during · school has lost only four of tiS last
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) ....:... Col- utes to set up a game-winning fteld
we have ro-improve on is that hold·
·
en. The losers included Clevel8iid tile weekend.
·
42 ~.o~gii!Des.
.
.. · omdo offensive coordinato1 ElliOt - goal against No. 15 Texas.
St. Ignatius, winner of five of the
The upseiS lefr Warren Harding
. Thts.ts real special f~r us,
Uzelac can't hold back his enthusi"I Icnow you guys are thinking ing stuff. That's really frustrating
last six poll titles, which bad won as No. I in Division I and MeDon- S81d !=~r G
_ ross, who ~ JUSt one asm for physical football, especial- I'm just saying this, but I knew we me," Uzelac said. "l' ye never
10
· were going to score with four min-. . been in a game where we've got
iiS last 38 games. Other top-ranked aid as top dog in Division VI.
!oss ~ stans ~ th~ Ltons. stan- Iy by his offensive line. .
"I like when our guys knock utes to go," Uzelac said. .. I lcnew · six holds - never. And I'm a pret·
Several other teams made dra- mg quarterback. We re I,ooking, to
teams to fall were Sl. Henry in
Division VI, StcubenviUe Catholic matic climbs in the poll, with go up ~ere and get a wm. Were 'em down and Icnoclc their helmets they weren't going to stop us. I ty old guy."
Head ~oach Bill McCIIItlley said
Central in Division V and Ironton Cincinnati SL Xavier, Youngstown, not loq!cing to go up_there f!Dd get off and bounce 'em around," knew it, and the kids knew iL I felt
he
plans to bring a referee to pracin Division Ill.
Boardman, Hilliard, Jackson, Avon someldnd of moral VIC~ry.
Uzelac said Monday. "We want to confident every time we called a
tice
this.week, something he's done
- Half of the top 10 teams in Lake, Nelsonville-York, HannjbaJ
North Alab11ma hnebacker play physical. We want to punch play.: ·
two differen ~ divisions lost. In River, SugQrcreek Gara&lt;A'ay and Ronald McKinnon, who leads a
em and lcnock 'em around. That's
That's 'been the way it has been in past penalty-plagued seasons.
.. We've got to draw attention to
.
going for the Buffaloes. Every play
addition to Sl. Ignatius iii Division Minster moving into their respec- defe~ ~ has three. shu~ts and our style."
I, No. 5 Austintown Fitch, No. 6 live top lOs for the fmt time this h!JSn t given up a pomt while the
That physical game plan has led - including the 64-yard despera- the fact that OlD' hands are careless.
. we're ...... _ . . . . . . _ . ...
-.
f!rst-team~rs have bee.IJ on the No. S (:olorado to a 4-0 alar&amp; lion pus lila&amp; heal Mk:"ips Dublin, No. 7 Cincinnati LaSalle season.
got IIi put a swp to it right now,"
despite
playing
nationally
ranked
seems
to
work.
Uzelac
attributes
and No. 8 Cincinnati Moeller all
St. Ignatius' 18-14 defeat ft~Id .- admuted he and his tea~McCanney said. " It's the fastest
.
both
against
Boardman
ended
what
is
mates
have
looked
ahead
to
thu
Wisconsin,
Michigan
and
Texas
in
that
to
the
system
being
in
place
for
were beaten. Th e Iast Ume
.
game for months
way to shut down this offense."
successive
weeks.
'Ehe
Buffs
rank
three
years
and
the
players'
ability
Moeller and SL Ignatius lost on the JM:Iie.ved ~~ . thOehifourthh
'ghlonhoogestl
"Ever since ~h Waiiace told
,That may be the only way.
sixth nationally in scoring offense to execute.
0 1 . sc w us about it over the summer, we've
sam~ nig~t might have been ~hour · wmrung su ..... m
With tailback Rashaan Salaam
"I think the real secret is we're
the ume 811' first was pwnped m the footbalL Moeller won 45,m a ro
been preparing
to play (41 points per game) end sixth in
total offense (528 yards per game) doing what we 've always done," leading the nation in' scoring a~er- ·
ball. . . .
.
fro~ 1978 to 198_lllnd Ug_per Youngstown, " McKinnon said.
age (15 points a game) , rushmg
In I?tvtSion VI, defending poll j.rhngton won 42 10 ~ row ~ .. You try to focus on one game at a going into their Big Eight opener at he said. '.' Jt's not a new offense . average (181.7) and all -purpose
~on Saturday.
.
We'do
what
we
always
do.
That's
champton St. Henry lost 'the same 1~7 to 1971. St..Ignauus had won time, but now it's showtime."
.
"We've worn down our oppo- out offense. We know how to yards (225), and quarterback
weeke~d that No . 3 Newark 39m a ro'Y from ~987 to 1990.
· While North Alabama, as the ncnts,"
Uzelac said. .. You look at throw the ball from it. We know Kordell Stewafl averaging 282
Catho_hc, No. 6 Dalton, No. 7
The Wtldca~ 38-game streak lower-division team, has little to our fourth-quaners, and we've' had · how to run the ball from it."
yards in total offense, the Col001do
Ansoma and No. 10 Heath all fell.
matched a Masstllon mark set from Jose playing Youngstown State, some· excellent slats. I think we'te
If the Buffaloes have a weak- stampede could be hard to swp.
- To~anked Steubenvtlle ~937 to 1941.
Tressel is trying to downplay the wearing down people because we ness on offense, it's penalt,ies. Col"Nobody can predict if you 're
play physical." ,
orado ~d a couple of first downs going to win them all or not,"
Colorado gained 231 yards in . and a touchdown called back Uzelac said, " but if somebody
the foiJrth quarter against No. 7 because of holding calls against beats us, they''re going to be really
Michigan and sustained a 13-play, Texas and finished with six holding good. Because we're good."
"We don t get too involved in
ByRONALDBLUM
· to discuss how they will proceed taking care of anyone's business
NEW YORK (AP) - On the next season.
but our own," he said. "I think if
"I'm not' sure we 'll meet, but if you stan worrying about things too.
day after the season was supposed
to end, the head of a congressional we do it'll be in that time range," globally, you'D be .in trouble."
·
committee said he would hold Selig said Monday.
OK, so this game doesn't have
The union expects owners to
renewed hearings on baseball if the
global importance. But for the
strike isn't settled wheA legislators impose a salary cap, management's small-college mnks, where media
right under labor law.
return in January.
"The probable result of that," covernge is usually limited to a few
Rep. Pat Williams, the Montana
paragrllphs ill the new§paper, this is
Democrat who chairs the House Williams said, "is that the impasse one of those rare opponunities to
Committee on Education and will continue and there wiU be no feel the glare of the national spot·
Herb will be on hand all week to give you the
LabOr, held a hearin~ last week on serious negotiations or break- light Spons Illustrated, ESPN and
his bill to impose binding arbitra- thoughs. That enhances the likeli· USA Today are planning stories on
P~ICES
hood the Congress will acL' '
tion on players and owners. _
the game, said Jeff Hodges.
" I think' it's likely the House
and when we say "lowest" prices we mean
: will likely pass either or both
: anti.trust le~is~on. or binding arbithey'll probably never be this low again. •
. tnruon Iegtslauon tf we have seen
: no action by January. ~ · Williams
J
· said in a telephone interview.
: The House Judiciary Committee
. : last week passed legislation that
1
1
1 10
1
110
1
· would have partially removed the
: owners • antitrust eumption, but
1SQueeu Play 1
1 · 9 pocket I
I Comjc
· the effon to pass a similar bill in
Cird Holders
eaqes
: the Senate ended Friday. Congress
1.wtth thla coupOf! 1
I with this coupon I
I with ihls coupon I
: is set to adjourn this Friday, but
· several legislators said both sides ·
L~--.1
&gt;should interpret the debate as a
·"wake-up call," and predicted
One Coupon Per Person • Per Visit
· some kind of action if the strike is
:still on when lawmalcers return Jan.
3
; . "I believe ihe House absolutely
will take action if nothing 's
. changed by the time it returns/'
:said Williams, who chaired last
"'
week' s bearing of the labor.management subcommittee . 'Tve
learned not to predict what the Senate will do.' '
: · No talks are scheduled to end
the strike, which goes through its
54th day today, when the expanded
playoffs were to begin. Owners "·
ne~otiator Richard Ravitch was
viSiting his son in lingland and acting commissioner Bud Selig said
~
~
I
he wasnt l sure if Ravitch will
-.
rellltn this week•
·
Union head D(lnald Fehr; who
last week completed a seven-city
tour to updale players, was back in
..
his New York oftkc Monday. Fclir
LOc:lted 3% mllu pest southern High School
,probably will visit Puato Rioo ani!
the Dominican Rqmblic next week
RACINE, OH.
on Rt. 124. ,
849-2882
1·
to give further UP,Ie~ to players.
-~ -·· ___ , Owncrl..lnl ~ted to meet in
.·
. Detroit during the "wedc of Oc"t 17 ·
•

Williams promis~s hearings
if baseball strike not settled.

cilio CCIIil Loo-.

DMIIGDIV

z.aa.- (4)S.(I _,_,...........m

Ohio media H.S. poll

1

ood Jorry B...U mel R. .io W'llliamo,
oodioWen, ,_AI~ ol d!o J&gt;o.

I'll.
I·VInlllloo (2)) S-0-- --------353

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oliiiiButmtl.oop. .
ollllls.udt Allude ......,.

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NolloooiiAcopo .
. HOUS'I'Otl ASTROS: Ann..a....t 1111
~lion ol Bcm HiDca, hittiPa 001.cb.
Nomod S!ovollooclonm biuino COidL
LOS ANOBU!S DODOI!lS: llooiaJim Oou llld Ropr
McDowoll, p:ldloa, oacl Cooy Snycler,
oulfiolder. Purch11od the contnell of

Od!on ........ 12 ....... pololll
11-DoloWuo 0 1 - (3) 71. 1:1-Col.
DoSoJoco (2) 72. 13-GAltlPOLIS (I) 41
14-lloiJoJooo 37. 15-Laocloa 22. 16-Mioco•• 21. 17· Now licbolcoacll5. II (lio)Bipio
Lob Cod!. 12.

r-

lo

aad Oa.oontt.of.&amp;bo New York·Pmn
l..olaue. Named Bill Even maaapr af
ColWilbu aad Jake Oitii:MI m111.a1er of
T -. ......... Scump MariiJ wi11Un
lhe....,Wiian.

------..lU
S-0 ......... ....... - ..221

HUJmNODON VAUJ!Y. Po. (All)

1

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,,,,

&amp;.MbaU

,..~~(/l-Je=j

:1-c:.o.. Cllb. (I) S-0

Olllon ncoiYio&amp; U or..-. polo~:
II ·OmiUo 51. JZ.WHEBLI!RSIIURO
(I) 41. 13-Col. lloocly4J. 14-llrookfiold
37. U ·Louinillo AquiJiu (I) 35. 16-'
llumo 32. '17.t'oohoaoa :!0. 11-Bellville
Clou Pool: (I) 19. 19-Noo.villo Huvoy
II. 20-Cloo. W,_u, 17. 21-Now J.m.
•ool6.
·

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'·

plaJer dewelopmont coauactl for two

1
· -(22) :I-0-·-···---..3l7
, _ _ (4) :l-0--·---..214

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A-IAiau•
NIIW YORIC YANitl!l!S: Reeowed

I'll.

99
110
.,
121

"11 - - -·

•

Dhthrum· ...... 11' ....

4-IIIIIIIDAN (I)

Foster in tbe rll'st half.of Monday night's AFC
Central battle in Pittsburgh, where the Steelers
won :J!I-14. (AP)

Transactions

Olllln . -. . . U ""men polnll:
II·Yc•IDI, Chmoy 31 • .12-Amllal 37.
13·PIIIIUio Wllkiu Memcxiol 36. 14Ma- 21. 15-&lt;la. Winlaa Wooclo 21.
16-~ Lob 20. 11·Dofiuoo 19.
11-llo,..Danhu 15. 19-Salom 11

I'll.
J.w,_ (II) :1-0............................3!6
l o
· .. VoJJoy v- (9) 5.o ..315
:~-w...... o mpi (3)5-4--.....- ..:151
4-AIMada.O. wwk (3) S·O•..•••.••..!222
6-Y-Ihoullao (1)4-1 ... ............. Ill
5-Y- """"'""(2)4-1 .................. 179
1·1tamo {I) 5.0 ....- ..........................154
1-D-.m. 5.0 __ .......- ................ 141
9-NEUONVIUJ!.YORK S-0 ........... .55
IO.IIIaalbol tuv. (3) S-O .................... .S4

M lm

Olloon .-o~oau or . . . ..,....,

4-0wdoo
5-Wul
01
t-5.0- ·---.214
&amp;.Col. w....... (3)5-0 :................. .192
7.Qn. And.....,, (2) 5-0 .................-.142
1-lloyllnciB....,.Locol (2) :1-0 ...... 131
9-Midiloa 4-1 .......- .................
.51
10-IACUO~ (1)5.0........~........ , ....4!1

C•lniDhloloo

Cotaao ·---· s

(3)

HEAD LOCKED - Because PittSburgh center
Dermonlttl Da'WllOn (63) was too la,te to stop him,
Houston defensive llnemaa Glen11 Montgomery
· (94) puts tlie lieadlotk o~ r iiiiiiiiig liaci Barty

detennine their No. 1 teams, they
can cross divisions to, in ,effect,
determine the best among all the
smaller schools.
For only the second time, the
defending champion in Division IAA - Youngstown State- is

. money going into a pool for teams feels j( the owners are taking.dris- least !hi$ (not slattin&amp;) is something
in small markets.
.
tic measures by locking us out: · which unifies us. ft's a stepping
Bettman said 't his. proposal then we ahouJd take two weeks-off . stone."
P
doesn' t recognize the league' s ceo- . as our drastic measure."
Canucks "captain Trevor Linden,
nomic ills.
• .
Added Rick Tocchet of the Los after cleaninll out his locker in
Players, meanwhllc, are prepar· Angeles Kings: " It is either going Vancouver, !18\d he has plans that
ing for a long dispute and are tend· to be the whole· union skating or don' t include hockey,
ing a message to owners.
nobody skating. If one guy skates
'' There's not a lot for mo to do
..I am not working out," Otica- ev~body skates.
' heie so I might as well go home,"
go B_Iack~a~~s .c~nter Jeremy
• I think Gary Dettman thinks . he said. "I might as well go help
~oemck S81d. Thu JS a tough~- · -we will crack, come cmwling back. - my father," who is a catlle farmer
smn, but the PA (players umon) . He thinks we won ' t stay out. At ·in Medicine Hat. AIIJena.

Offensive -lint1's physical play paying
Colorado
dividends for fifth-ranked
.

\,

ll'·LAHCASTI!R I&gt;ISHER C,lll'll. -19 .
IZ."'"""'"' (I) 41. 1:1-DuYillo 32. 14ca..,biuo (I) 311. 15-llocnll19. 16-Bol·
Wno SL Jalull3, 17·C1Jylhop Hll. (2)
:10. II·S - y Sl. Mlly'o 19. 19-Tipp
City BCIIIIel 17. :zo.N..., D:i:mcn 14. 21
(lio)·ArliJiatoo, Lowellville 13. 23 ·
.,. Spriqllold C.d!. 12.
'

from their Iockeis.
bring anything new to the bargainMonday was to be Day 3 o£ the ing table today, although both sides
1994-95 schedule. So far, 16 pmes say they have yet to tender final
have been postponed by the dispute offers.
between the NHL and the players
"I think there is enough time,"
association, and four more were NHLPA executive-director Bob
scheduled for tonighL
·
Goodenow said Monday.
Negotiations resum&amp;i at noon
"Lock the doors. Order the Chitoday at league headquaners here. nese food," suggested Brian
It's ~n almost a week sinee rep- Burke, the NHL 's vice-president
resentatives for owners and players and director of !Iockey operations.
tried to work·out an agreement
"Nobody lcav'es until a deal's
Last Friday, commissioner Gary done. I'd love to do thaL''
Dettman postponed the schedule
The NHL and NHLP A both
until at least Oct 13 to reach a col- agree that something must be done
lective agreement to replace the to help teams in small markets. The
one that expired Sept. 15, 1993.
league wants to tax a team's pay- .
There are huge philosophical roll to generate revenues. The playdifferences -to be bndged, leading ers say the tax will cause owners to
to speculation there may not be . cap salaries.
enough time to resolve the probThe NHLPA has proposed that
lems within the next two weeks.
the top 16 revenue-generating
Neither side was expected to teams be taxed 5 1/2 percent on
payrolls and gate receipiS, with the

Nearly o.ne-third of top 60
Ohio H.S. grid teams fa.ll

••

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NEW YORK (AP) - NHL
.~s 1!fC allowing players 10 plliCuce wtthout playing games. The
players are saying no thaitks.
They have vowed not to Jace up
their ,skates until the season be~s
and, if Monday was any indicauon
their blades are going to get rusty. '
. "No NHL player will go on the
. 1ce for two weeks, not even to skate
in their own baclr;yard," Pat Ver.
beck of the Hartford Whalers said
.. Put the gear in the basement and
leave it there.
.. We want to show owners how
serious we are about them locking
us out of the season. WhO' says
after two weeks there won ' t be
another postponement?"
Arenas were made available for
players if they wanted to work out
on their. ~- Players showed up in
some ctUes only to gather things

By PAUL NEWBERRY
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP)Tht; big schools haven't worked
out Ia system to determine the true
national football champion:
The lower' NCAA divisions,
however, not only use a playoff to

r.

IO.Minaer4-J ................... ................ .51

··

Youngstown State, North Alabama
to battre in small-college showdown

Tennis
ZURICH, Switzerland (AP) Fifth-seeded Magdalena Maleeva
struggled to defeat Pam Shriver 75, 7-(i (7-5) on the opening day of
the European Indoors women's tennis townament.
Helena Sukova ousted eighthseeded Aorencia Labat 6-5, 6-3 in
the only upset. Other winners
included sixth-seeded Lori McNeil,
and Americans Marianne Werdel
and Shaun Stafford.

DlvloloaD

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111e Dally Stntlnel

Players snub.tea_
ms'·lal.lowanee to practice . without games

•

ScoreiJoard
Football

On the NHL labor scene, . - ·

Page--4

(

--Sports--briefs-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

I

·. :ruesday, Octob~r 4, 1994

·

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Tuesday, October 4, 1994

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~The

Dally Sentinel

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TueSday; October 4, 1994

. .Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

"

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1\AeadaY, October 4, 1994

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Pomeroj-Middl..,rt. Ohio

Teenage shoplifters are. :plifltting smaff ·s.tore out of business
.
.
'

Ann
Landers
"1994.los~
TlmosS,_ond
ONtor• Syndicate"

De.- Au Lucien: I bope you

Wiii...Ont
m ....,_, 'lbc .....
r-~ y .,_.lie needs

to have its consciousgess raised on
the subject of ahoplifting. If it
continues • the praent rate, small
1110m that add ao much charm llld
flavor to small towns and suburbs
will no longer be able to stay in
business
"Not,;, daughrcr (or aon~
pareniS say. "They weren't · .
way. • Nobody wants to believe their

'·

kids steal. But the lrUth is, they do. many good kids that .it pains us to
Dear Ann Laadera: For me, wondcrfully free of inhibition, but I letter. He needs COUIIICilng - and
When my husband ancll opened our have to police diem, but the ones making love with my husband, was wrong. Pete iS slilllocked into loti oliL •
store in a small, L'llucnt IDwn in. who steal BR pulling many small
"Pete," takes precedence over his hang-ups. He aays there is a
For his sake, as wcll u yours, I
Connecticut, we made the decision stores out business.
everything short of a major nalional proper time and a proper place for hope your husband gets some
notiD exclude y0111g people. In fact,
I know you don't have an answer emergency. For Pete, making love 8Cl, IIIII it is not durin&amp; woildng ~de ~lp. He's missing out on .
we welcomed them. We cany many for this, Ann, but printinr mv letter to me ranks in importance houn. Daytime rex, ~ says, is something . that could add a
moderately priced items that · and calling auention 10 the problem somewhere aft« washing the car IIIII "inlpiJropriate," if not downright wonderful dimension to his life, .
tcen-agen can buy fa their mends' would be helpful. •• SMALL feeding the goldfiSh. It hlppcns only ~
W/iat's IM trulll abolll pot, CO·
birthdays or for them.selves. STORE IN CONN.
when IIJcn is absolutely nothing else
1 Wilh ibm werc IDIIIC way I cairre, LSD, PCP, crtiCk, speed and
Consequmtly, we BR mobbed after
DEAR CONN.: Here's your he could be doing.
could make Pelle 100 tbal be is dead dowMrs? 'The Lowdowli on Dope"
school lind during school vacations. IeGer. And now here'aa wt'f'd ID the . We never plan to have sex. WI'OIJIIbota lhil. Do you ~ any ..liDS up-to·IM·IfliluUt iltfomtatiolt on
I wonder .how pareniS can See the parents: Be aware ol your teen's new Acc:onling to Perc, 10 plan sex is sugcstiou 011 how I c:111 act him 10 drags. Send a self-oddreued, long, ·
new things lheir kids bring home acquisitions. Ask questions. If you Immoral. It has 10 be a spur-of-the- loosen up7 I really could use busirress-siu tnW!Iope lllld a clrecJ:
and not ask questions. We've done -don't get satisfactory answers, moment thing, or it's indeccnL Pete some help. - FADING IN THE or IIIOIItY ordo for $3.65 (/Iris Ill· :
everything the authorities .have explain in simple language that views actint sexy at any time RXYIHILLS
eludes postage fJIId llalrdling) to : ~
suggested c.tt&gt; protect our shoplifting is'ofrcn a dress .rehearsal before sundown as a threat to ' DEAR FADING: To straighten Lowdown. c/o Ann Landers.
merchandis£, but these kids · BR for more serious criminal beJiavipr. family values.
thisguyout,you'dhaveiOstartwith P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill.
amazingly lalented at shoplifting.
. Every major offender started
We arc retired, and the kids arc his grandmother. Pete needs a lot 60611-0562. (lr~ Canada, send
They slql in groups and btow how small. Kids who sleal are sending grown..I always envisioned sex in more help than I can give him in a ' $4.45.)
10 diSlJ'I!Ctthe owners. There BR so
up red flags. DOO't igJKxe them.
our · later years as crcati ve and

or

Sheets
birthday
:celebrated

Hartfo~d

By BRIGI17E GREENBERG
Associated Press Writer
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP). Desperate for a remedy for high
dropout rates, low test scores and
deteriorating buildin~s , Hartford
has ·become the nation s fli'St city 10
put a privarc comJ&gt;lllly in charge of
its .entire public school system.
After contentious debate, the
Board of Education voted 6-3
Monday 10 make Education Aolter·
natives Inc. responsible for the education of 25 ,000 children in 32
schools.
·,
''This marks a milestone in pursuit of academic excellence for our
children," said school board member Ted CarrolL " Change is never

Zachary Todd Sheets, son of
Todd and Tami Sheets, Pomeroy,
recently c~lebrated his fli'St birthday wi~'B party at the home of his
' 8'eat-grandmother. Martha ~off:"
.man.
A Sesame Stree~ theme was car·iied out. Guests were served hot
··dogs, a Sesame Street cake and ice

cream.

.

Attendinjl were his parents, his
sister, Jesstca, Jo Ann Bolinger,
Martha Hoffman, Mike, Beth,
Maggie and Mary Sheets, George
and Joan Hoffman, Bryan Hoff.
man, Layna Loy, Gail ShceiS, Stel·
Ia Lane, Marsha Barnhart and
Helen, Mary and Corri DarsL
.
Others presenting gifts were
Steven Hudson, Mary Sheets, June

v ZACHARY SHEETS

easy."

But there were many dissenters
VanMatre, Barbara VanMatre, Bud
among
the 120 yelling, stomping,
and Betsy Sim'pson, Betty, Curly,
,
screaming
and cheering parc;nts and
Anna and Palma Wiles and Lisa,
teachers
at
the board meeting.
Raymond, Aaron, Brian and Bradly
"What
we
'te going ID have left
Rider.
. is nothing for the chiJdren. You
'

'

treat them lilce so much livestock,"
parent Steven F!&gt;urnier hollered at
the board. "This is an invillltion to
corruption."
Education Alternatives,. which
manages nine public schools in
Baltimore imd one in Miami Beach,
Fla., has promised to raise Hart·
ford's test scores without spending
more money by using a system it
calls the Tesseract Way. The name
is from Madeleine L'En~le's chil·
dren 's book "A Wrinlde mTime,"
which describes a corridor for ttaveling ID new worlds.
The system relies on computers
and parent participation. Students
help set thell' own goals and. work
in groups at their own pace.
, Under the five-year contract,
Education Alrcmatives will essentially control the schools' $1-71.1
million budget, as well as $29 milli?n in state ~d fedei'al gr~ts. It
wtll pay all btlls,, buy ~upplies ll!'d
have a key role m umon negoua-

New Mason ·
Family Restaurant

The Co,111auaity Calendar is
published as a free •ervice to
non-profit groups wishing to
11naounce meetlnas aad special
events. The calendar Is not
ile~igiled to promote sales or
fundraisers of any type. Items
are printed u l)lllce pel'lllits and
tannot be 11uaranteed to run a
ipedftc number of daya.
.

RACINE - Ed Johnson,
radio/television agriculture commentata, speak at 7 p.m. Tuesday
at Carmel United Methodist
Church, Carmel Road, Racine.
Carry-in dinner at 6_p.ni.
HARRISONVILLE - . Harrisonville Elemelll.llry PTO mt;eting
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the elementary
school. All parents urged to auend.
Refreshments will be served.

TUESDAY
.
SYRACUSE- S)'JliCuse PTO
MIDDLEPORT - Regular
,meeting Tuesday 81 the school. Parmeeting
Middleport Lodge 363
eniS of students involved in sports
F&amp;AM
Tuesday,
7:30p.m. at the
or chcerlcadillll are 10 meet at 6:40
Masonic
building.
P..m. with regular meeting 7 p,m.
Bob Ord wiU talk about the upcomMIDDL~RT - Middleport
ing levy.
Community"WSsociation meeting

'

Tuesday 5:15p.m. at Peoples Bank
featuring Q&amp;A by county commis·
sion candidarcs.
POMEROY - Ribbon cutting
ceremonies for the opening of the
Meigs County Democratic headquarters, located in building formerly occupied by Larry's Woodworking, East Main St., Pomeroy,
7 p.m Tuesday.
RUTLAND - The Rutland
PTO will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in
the gymnasiu"!.
WEDNESDAY

RACINE - Red Brush Church
of Christ, revival, Wednesday
through Sunday; 7 .p.m. each

evening except Sunday, 10 a.m.
and6p.m.

.

RUTI.AND - Rutland Township TI'\ISteeS will meet in regular
session Thursday. 6:30 p.m. RutTHURSDAY
' land Fire Station. Bids will be
HARRISONVILLE - Free opened on the truck
clothing from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m
Thursday at HarrisonviUe Community Church, located nextiO Scipio
POMEROY· Pomeroy Group
Township Volunteer fire Depan- AA, Thursday, 7 p.m. Sacred Heart
Catholic ,Church.
menL

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Five years ago: Fawaz Younis, a Lebanese hijacker convicted of commandeeririjl a Jadanian jetliner with two Americans aboard in 1985, was
sentenced m Washington to 30 years in prison.
{)ne year ago: Dozens of cheering, dancing Somalis dragged the body
of an ·Americalr soldier through the streets of Mogadishu, while a video,
tape showed Michael Durant, an American soldier taken 'prisoner by
Somali militants. In Moscow, the occupation of the,.Russian parliament
building ended as tanks and paratroopers flushed oul'hard-)ine opponents
of Boris Yeltsin.

l

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De1t~ Kappa Gamma meets
Partilmentarian Sandra Nodruff
conducted initiation of new mem. bCrs when Alpha Omiclon Chapter,
Delta Kappa Gamma, met at St.
~ter and Paul, Wellstoli, 0!1 Sept.
26. Nodruff, assisled by chapter.
officers. initiated Robin Burke,
escorted bY Cindy Bale111811. Rox- ,
. anne Pyre escorted by Jean....,'Yard·
BeUy Jenkins escorted by Maria De.
aiSb'O, and Lisa QueC'II escorted by
Dian Partlow. Initiates received red
moses and the congl'atulations of the
chapta'.
. Ladies of the church served a
chicken dinner. Cindy.Bateman
gave the ·invocation. Tables were
decorated with red.rpses and red
candks. Favors were apples; ~n­
cili, no~ pads an~ peppermtnt

·slicb '
' '' •
· , ~Fern Grimm conduct·
Ccl the busineSS meeting. Secretary
Nellie Parker and trcasuref ~be­
raft Hammond gave reporiS. P8rker
read a 'thank-you. note from ·~e

e~e

j

I,

304-773-6786

I

a ear.
Come
see
•
us at •••

CLUB

IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.

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Galllpolle, Oh.
Or CaU Ue At 448-8971 and

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Pomeroy; 011. 45768
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Public Notice·
time.
In orde&lt; to Inspect any ol
the above named property·
prior
to · the · sale

arrangements mav be made
by calling 949-2210.

'
264,Upper River Rd.

446-9971 ·

~aUipolis,

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CONSTRUCTION

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. GaHJpolla

AnnounCements

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Roofing, VInyl
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lneuletlon, Storm
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Smoll Block l WhH1 Kmon, I
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women·~
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h I I II 1&lt; •

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Announce ments

qq:_&gt;./",' 17

J&amp;L INSULATION

Several members of the Meigs
At 'the 4-H fair show, Sara wrap up the fair activities, memCounty 4-H Pleasure Riders were Ctaig won. grand champion in the bers took part in a fun show where
701 Art Lewis St.
In Columbus over 'the wtekend to Junior Division and Jessica Wheel- they rode their liorses while playparticipate in state competitions ' er won .S~~nd champion in .t~e ing games. Several members won
Middleport, Ohio
after winning county awards.
novice divtston, and were the rectp- bags of feed donated by Chapman
. 45768
Qualifying for the state contesiS ie.liS of b'Ophie!l' donated by Herald feeds.
were county champions in the Oil &amp; Gas.
Five members went to the state
Phone: 992~6926
groom and clean contest Mathew
Outstanding Pleasure Rider for 4-H competitive trail .ride .at Bob
Peckham; Matthew Milhoan, ana f994 was Matthew Milhoan who . Evans in September with Matthew
David B8nlcs on the junior team, -- was ·awarded ·a horse bljmkel. The . Mil~oa~ rec_eiving fourth place m
ar.d Holly MilhOan, Linzie Notting- Optstanding Pleasure Riders with t~e JUntor dtvtston for best conchham and Sara Craig.on the senior horseless projeciS were Unzte Not- - uoned horse.
.
.
team. For winning in the county tingham and Mathew Peckham,
Others completmg the nd c
competition, they were presented and the extra effort memberS were received key chains. and they were
llyOik...
plaques donated by Herald Oil aild Holly Milhoan, Matthew Milhoan Holly .Mtlhoan, Dantel Yo~ng ,
£Hie
c-u
, .......,.,
G
and Daniel Young, all of whom Susan _and Sarah Grueser. Advtsors
~umerous members of the 4-H received plaques.
.
at~nding to help w~re panny and AI Natwll 446-3196
Pleasure Riden were award winDuringthefairmembersrcceiv- ·Ltnda Young, Pam Mtl_hoan and
ners with their horse projects.
.
ing clean stall awards doilated by Rachael Dow~ie: The Ohto Quarter
· sara Craig represented the club · the parents and advisors were Horse Assoc1auon has donated a
'
at the state fair in the barrel and Damel YQung, Jessica Wheeler, fiee pass tocthe All Amen.;b CfdS:·
Je b&amp;ldin(l classes. She received H.llly Milhoan. Lii)Zie Nottingham . rcr Horse . ongr~s ~ - ~ .e _ m
troph donated by Montgomery · and David Banks. This yCII' the • Octo be~ wtth the pass g01pg to
Trailer Sales and a tee shirt donated Ot:triders for the harness races were Holly Milh~.
.
.
.
from Valley Lumber. Susan . Sara Craig and Daniel ~oung.
Other members m the club thts
Qrueser WIS the horse ~ for Members dressed tn club tee year was Brandon Black, Tracey
·
f memb
. .
·
Shaffer · Ntck Bowles, Jenny •
the .fau, and ~evera mem ers , shirts for t,he JUIItor f~tr patad,e Bowles.
Ciaig was advisor.
recet~ed champton, rese~ ~hamwere second place wtnners. To
.
pion and honorable menuon m tho
·
.
~
.
. ·
·rr
· · th
livestock interViews.
.: ·
·
In 1965, ~pe Paul VI
e the fli'St retgmng ponll to vtstt e
. 12G.ge
the U.N. General Asse'!'bly.
Mathew Peckham Matthew · Western Henusphere and
'Milhoan qnd Holly Milhoan were ·
ln 1970, rock singer Janis Joplin, 27, was found dead m her Hollywood
Factory Cllott Oily
the ·top acllers of the road apple
horcl room.
.
, .
.
cit-ed fund raiser, and have been
IIi 1976, aari,cultwe,secretar)' Earl autz rcstgned 10 the. wake of a oon- . Basllall~
11121114
pesenttd savings bonds. · , .
1roversy .Q~ apke,he d inade ~t blacks.

•·

(No Sunday Calls)

R.tctlltJ St r ucture

TOP SOIL,

992·3838

(10) 4, 7, 9 , 10, 12 , 14 ; 6TC

Fae

.KENNY'S AUTO .CENTER

614·992·7643

Mc ig::; C-1. F ~1 i r g r o und s
Nr ·L' l.o1,·.1 Adrn. Pr1 rt &amp;

3 Fotn~~le 'WMe Ducko, 614-3111o
11311.

Lose

$AVE $AVE $AVE

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
. FREE ESTIMATES

Ho t L1 p~ &lt;J t 2 p .m
n .lcc:.; Jt J p .rn .

SAYRE TRUCKING

'

.

~

~.

GO-KART RACES

WttW2tfn

Meigs .cou'!tY 4-H membe~~ ·
pa(ticipate 1n st~~e comp~l1t1on
.

our linn1 \'c' r!)Li ry
12 ·HouR· MARATHON SALE
FRIDAY, ·OC~OBER 7

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Rooting

EVERY SUNDAY
AFTERNOON

Howard L. Writesel
.RQOANG
NEW~REPAIR

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter .Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMAiEs

949-2168

7131111 TFN

•

~

·

Specializing in Part-c:okn
for show and companion•.
Stud Mrvice l puppioa,
young a~lla lor 14le.
48750 Mile Hill Rd.

9

I

BISSElliUJlDERS, INC.

This ad good for 1

10 YOUR POCKEl
WITH A
CLASSIRED AD

Uc-..1 lllolldtd In Ohio, Kentucky I
Weal Vlrglnllt tel.

.J

12G.ge.O.Iy
llntltttb 740
Backhre, 680 Fro1t
81211114

·AW~

EXECUTOR: LARRYEBERSBACH
· Tenna: Clilh Or Check With LD.
Not rwpondlle for -ldenta or lou of property.

j
I

t

'

MASON, WV

AUCTIONEER, RICK PEARSON

I

.

family of Grace Warren. ,Fern
Grimm pre'sinled a plaque "God
llil
Bless this Teacher" to Nodruff,
retiring president.· Slie recognized
HOM~ DECOR
'Gay PeniJi and Becky Zurcher chosen by students as outstanding
STENCILS
teachers. FU'Sl vice-president Carol
NOW
IN STOCK IN A
Eberts reponed on the need for a
.WIDE VARIElY OF NEW
newsletter twice ayear. The.society
voted 10 pay $1 a year per member
PAITERNS TO ENHANCE
for newsletter costs.
THE DECOR OF ANt ROOM.
Scholarship chairwoman Ros alie Story reminded the society _of U----PLUS---·11
the silent auction, yearly fundrais·
er, to be held at the Nov. 14 m~t­ . ACRYUC PAINT&amp;: SUPPUES
ing. Martha Greenaway thanked
WJNSTOCK
the society (or cards sent to her.
W LPAPERAND
Present fro'm r.feigs co·unty
INDSHOP
were Fern Grimm, Rosalie Story,
IIIIIOIIIAL 11110,1 APfllll.lCH 011
Beclcy Zurcher; Gay Perrin, Martha
CWIFIILD AYl., PAIIIIIIiAUIIQ
· Gree0away and Nellie Parker.
.
The next meeting will be held
MON.-FRI. 9-8:30
Oci. 24 81 6:30 p.m. at the Racine
SAT. 9·5:30, SUN.12-5
United· Methodist Church with a
program by ihe research commit428~1065
tee.

LUNCH

Let us take
the worry
out of
renting

lUBTRACT" THOSE THINGS
GA11IERING DUSt

liCK PURSON AUCTION CO.

•
••

STrNciLta

I

r

will be chosen for publication and
will each receive a.$50 award. AU
entries must be postmarked by
October 21, 1994.
Promotion ;md publication of
the Appalachian Ohio Peace Prize
are coordinated by the Appalachian
•Peace and Justice Network. The
peace Prize is financed by subscription: $50 for organizations and
$1(} for indivi~uals. All money
raised for the Peace Prize goes to
cover iiS costs.
Entries are to be submitted to
The Appalachian Peace and Justice
Network, 18 N. College Street,
Athens.
,

949-2804 •
Complete Chain
Saw Service " Parts

AUCnoN CONDUCTED BY

I

'

beCause conflict seems ui be leading more and more often to violence. However, when conflict is
hal)dled through cooperation, negoOOion and other non-violent strate·
gies, it can lead to positive, necessary change. •
The Apfalachian Ohio Peace.
Prize wit publish the· ideas,
thoughts and experienc;es of young
people in SoutheastOhio about
coo(!Crating to resolv'i: conflict.
Entnes can focus on specific news
events Qr on finding ways for
young poo.ple, fainilies, schools or
communities to solve connicts
through cooperation. Ten entries

'

\

''Youth invited to participate in writing contest ·

~ Young people in grades 6
dlrough 12 arC'invircd to submit
entries of original poems, stories,
essays. drawings and m~c for tl_te
. 14th' Annual Appalachtan Ohto
Peace Prize.
.
The Appalachian Ohio Peace
· Prize is an annual anthology drawn
from work submitted y Southeast·
ern Ohio students. The Peace Pri1,c
is an opportunity for the commurulY 10 SUJIIm. and CIICOUJli8C young
people m the common struggle to
tmd genuine peace and justice for
all.
.
.
1bis year's themeo''Cooperallng
10 Solye Conflict," was chosen

'

992-4119 AI Tro• Owler I·JG0-291-56110

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES

Mower Clinic

Located on karr St. In Syracuse, Ohio. 3 . Echo Saw's in stock
mil• Eat of PoiMroy, Ohio. The eatata of. ·Christmas Layaway
Available On
Elizabeth Roberfa will be sold.
Weedeai81S
&amp;
FRIDAY, OCT. 7
chain saw. .
JEWELRY SELLS FIRST
Hundreda of pieces of good quality Jewelry, 1936
Pomeroy, Ohio class ring, aeverai10I(. 141&lt;. 18K &amp;
Starling rings, 17 jewel Waltham watch &amp; 10 more
watches, stick plna, old 4·H pine and mora.
·TREE TRIMMING
GLASSWARE
Helaey Master ada, butter dishes, Fanton coin dot,
AND REMOVAL
flow blue gravy boat • Grindley pattern, Fanton, pink
Ugt1t Hauling,
depression 6 gla...s, plates, cups &amp;saucers, cream
&amp; sugar, slag bowl, Smiley pig cookie jar, pink
Shrubs Shapped
Fenton, collection of satt &amp; pepper shakes, perfume·
boltlaa, Allamada Dairy bottle, blull a. wi'!He crock,
. and Removed
Iron Ilona pitcher.&amp;bowl, AP. Donahho jars.
Mls. Jobs.
SATURDAY, QCT. 8
FURNITURE
Bill Slack
Nice oak flat wan cullboard, handmade cupboard,
oak wesh stand, oak HI Boy, pran back rocker, set
992·2269
o1 4 walnut VIet. chalra; Vici. drop-lui table, oak
Morrie chair, 3 tier tabla, tNnka, 4 pc. maple twin
B.R. aulte, 3 pc, Glick maple B.R. auRa, Style Llna 2
Public Notice
pe. American L.R. eufte, maple table, chHcfa roll top
deak, cedar ch811, 2 pe. Hyda Bed L.R. ·aufte, gUde
PUBLIC~ NOTICE
rocker, lovaaeat, Magic Chef 36• alactrtc ranga,
Saturday, October 15 ,
Frigidaire wuher &amp;dryer &amp; mora.
1994, lit 10:00 ·a.m., ttie
.
HOUSEHOLD .
Homo National Bank, Third
7 Startlnv_ailvar' apoone, Gone with the Wind ~ ·Street,, .Recine, Ohio, will
(whla), Finger oil 1a1111. HVn · $i Clair IMlP8I' 'oHer lor aale at public
welghla, Lg. G11T11811 At\nlvaraary Clock, War euction, on the Bank
Mamorbilla, Eally prints, pill boxes, cild Ink pen • '&gt;llrklng lot the ' &gt;liowlng:
1987
GMC
SSL
P-"-. thimble collactlon • some stalling. handmade
Conversion
Van,
Serial
badaf&gt;readl, HVtral good· qld quilta, dolllaa; 11
Number
Vintage, dr_., lrona, cloth~ dryers. 2 lea cream. 1GKDII15Zohb514793
stools, old toya, rattlers, aava1J handrMda dolla, old
19M Plymouth VOF Van,
cameiaa. B&amp;O Railroad lantern. caat Iron door ltopa,, Serial
Nu111bor
Orlentlll buketa, beaded cape, Quality cookware, 3 2P4FH51G2ER222205
18tl flatware, Tupperware, Coming W.,., c:Opper &amp;
19.88 Oldsmobile Cullas
SN
«an tea. kattla, linens, ruga, hooked ruga, humliliJ. Clerra
er, dehumldWiar, WhRe sewing machine, material, 2G3AJ51R2J9362351
Terms of the sale are
craft rneterial, B.A. 1a11111. 200 akeina of yam, floor
·1a1111. card tabla, Books Rule Books Operation, etc., cash.
Tho 'tjomo National Bank
lana. awing; metal 36" door, 75 lheata of styrofoam reserves tho right to reject
2x8, Quality, Snap·on: Mack, Crilflarnen hand toola, any or all bids {)r to remove
IS snap-on socket 18t, alum. step ladder, cherry any unit from the sale at any
seeder, yard tools, SnoWfl~e 2 cyl. snow blower ~
more.

•viSIT OUR SHOWROOM•
110 Court SL POIM,or, Ohio
"Look for the Ked aDd White Awnl.-.1''

.

L.....----=:::1

RACINE

.
OCT. 7 &amp;8, 1994, 10:00 A.M..

------------ Co.mmuniJy calendar-~.. - - - - - ·

mllfellige.

FRI. &amp; SAT"!

~

j

Affar8 p.m.
81.4-885-4180- .

IDCIION

By JENNIFER DIXON
the congressional session ' s last age more interracial adoptions at a ago began CBII)paigning to end disThe group said only a black
She aaid the threat of lawsuits :
Aaaoc:lated Preas Writer
days, the ban on adoption discrimi- time when a record 460,000 Am~- crimination against white families family could give a black child the · and loss of federal aid would push ·
wASHINGTON · (AP)
nation is expected to win final can children are in fosrcr care. iNot lrying 10 adopt blaek children. His racialtdeiltity and suppon needed agencies to approve adoptions :
Congress awe-s close to approv· approval in the Senate as part of aU are candidarcs for adoption, but plan arouses mten~ feelings on all in a racist society. Today, the asso- "without consideration of cultural :
ing.legislauon which would bar the $11 .billion ·Elementary and tens of thousands, many of them - sides, from those who-believe-all. . - eiinion aays interracial adoptions . ties ... or the children-'s right to , ·
-discrimination against white fami- · Secondary Education Act.
black, are waiting for a permanent adoptions should be colorblind to should be allowed only after know their cult)lral heritage."
·
lies trying to adopt black children
In a recent interview, Metzen- - home.
others who say the proposal' would exhaustive efforiS to find a relative
•
who IIR in foster care.
baum said it is an ''abomination ID
Besides making .adoption dis- pressure- states to place a child in or a black family have failed.
Toni Oliver of the association :
.. . A bill prq10sed by Sen. Howard keep a child from bei~g adopted ~Y crimina!-lon .illegal, the. meas~r.e the first available home, without
Leora Neal, co-chairwoman of
'Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, would for- a family that can bnng that chtld urges child welfare agenctes to dilt· sufficient attention to cultural and the association's child- welfare said the bill would affect a handful ·
committee, said the bill does not of families while failing to address ;
bid child welfare agencies· from up, that wants to give that child .a gently recruit paren~ of all races · racial dynamics. .
discriminating against prospective home, an education, loving care. I and ethnic groups. But it provides
Interracial. adoptions fli'St took adt!J'ess one basic problem: most the reasons children·wind up in fos- :
parents solely on the·basis of race, see thousands more kids being ' ~o extra money .to help agencies place in significant numbers in the adoptive parents want healthy rcr care.
"I doubt more than SO cases :
color or national origin. Agencies ado~ted as a consequence of this · find the families who are needed tO 1960s, bul declined dramatically babtes and toddlers, while tnost
will
fall under this legislation," .
violating the law would risk being bill. '
take in abandon.ed, abused and followfng a 1972 statement of children available for adoption arc
·
Oliver
said. "It's a waste of money ·
sued and losing federal aid.
His bill, the Multiethnic Place- neglected children~
· opposition by the NatiQbai·Associ· school-age, members of sibling
ar.d time.'·
~:
~~ ,~lhoup....~!:bing .t~H~~-~t Ac~J!~.!\.uemHl!? ~~ur: -·" t.1e~~baum m~re than a year •. ation of Black Social Workers.
~s o(dismlll\l· .
.
"\. ,J •

Free £etlnwt..
Before 8 p.m. INva

lSIliE

Biil to ban adoption discrimination against white awaits _
Senate approva! ·

RACINE
GUN CLUB
.GUN SHOOTS
FRIDAY NIGHTS
6:30P.M.

you.v.ry---.

. &amp;Auction

.

446-7400
800-757-PELLET

Tiki the peln out of
ptlntlng. Let .. do It ...

-·----8
Public Sale

386 Stele At. 180
w/Natlonwlde lne.
Galllpolla, Oh.

12 Gauge
Factory Only

hiterfor &amp;
bterlor

•

' •loating, Inc.
Pellet Stoves

Gu1 s•oot
Evtry Su1d1y
1:00 P.M.

liNDA'S
PAINnNG &amp; CO.

cDpen Daily 7 am-8 pm
Sundays 7 am-5 pm
New Owners

lions and· hiring and firing school Teachers has recommended a
personnel in the city of 140,000.
moratoriU}ll on contracts with I;duThe publicly-held company can cation Alternatives.
·
·
earn profits after all expenditures
But teacher Jane Cam~II,"Wife of
are paid:
·
board niember Ted Carroli,Javored
Education Alternatives said it the~ move.
·
would invest $1.6 million in
· "(My) morale as a teacher will
schools and about $14 million in climb considerably when I have a
. teaching technology such as com- copy machine to .use, when I have
. puters and school operations. The · paper that I don't have to buy
company plans $20 million in capi- myself, when I have construc.tion
tal investments over the next 5 pPper, when my child.has a globe
years. .
..
1n her' geography cl,!ISS," she said.
The company wiU repon to the "I will feel a lot better."
·
superintendent. and the board can
Education Alternatives is using
cancel the contract with 90 days' the Tessersct sysrcm at the school
notice.
in Miami. Beach and in Baltimore,
A lawsuit by 'the Hartford Fcder- where it has operated eight elemenati9n of Teachers to block the con- tary schools and one middle school
tract was dismissed last month . for two years.
Local, state and federal teachers'
Instead of one teacher lecturing
unions have contended the compa- students, a master teacher and an
ny bas nd data to back up its associate are used. Together, they
promises and is more concerned determine how each child learns
with profits than students.
· .
best and individual learning plans ·
The American Federation of are made.
~

GU1 Cl•ll

Lie. No. 0182-27

Steaks, Sandwiches

• Cuatom lladt
• Solid vinyl
replacement
window I
.• Free Estimates
• $200 Installed
Call For Det.tlls

Sportlllltll

949-2038
949-2749

Home Cooked Meals
Daily Specials

priv~te . company

schools 'turned over to

Forbtllu•

Starting Sun. Oct.
11th Racine Legion .
Post H02 6:45 pm
Thlalld good for 1
F~EE CARD

'/

On
Collar,
- 114-446"'
Wrong,
PtCol~

-W.tch lor OfgM;
_.......,..m tpno.-

Bolloy Run/ Hyaell Run, Maurice

lotlt: 11-· whhellct Hlrolonl,

Oct"lhlao/GooHII lnl, ..... -

lotlt: llgor otllllld kltton tgray,
block, wt1h1), :!mo. old, lltowlt
tloo collor lith Sl I lloln,
Roword II 1ound olive. :IOW'IS-

Porch oolo, Vlnl 91, R.clno, 0ot
~3.c,:4~,1,~10::,=10;11.;..--....,.--,---,,­
s..... t family ylld • • t .

11647.

Johnoon,1114.012·ll188.

2398.

7

·
to'

untf ounnr cloy. ·

Clrc:ll, Ruetlc Hille, Sync-.
October
S..,
'IO&amp;ttt ..UR•
HeM
tleme, ldcra
lie.

olol-.

••hold

Yard s;tle

W'16104 TFN

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Howard
Excavating Co.
Ot d l{ h"~ZI I HJ

F. B.1ck hcc

S•'fVICf'

CnmiJidt"

H c u ~'&gt;f ~

Tr.lllc r ~I l l":.
Dr rvel'!, t V&lt;&gt;. S•'p l 1r
Sy~ k nr~ •. \'.'.1 1l"t S. St·\'.'t&gt; t
L1r.es . L md Cle.lt Hl CJ
Tlli CI.. HHJ

t lfll (".IOIW

[..

Fil l D11 t . Top Sod
Rr . 1 ~on.1b l t&gt; R.1ks
Estun.tks

992·3838

D. GURY'S

IUTOIODY
112-2096

550Pogoll,~lll part
FrwEollmMM
712111111

Yonl ullot - . . , Fhl ~
1111 CIIUidl, Oct. 4-5, _....,....

Pt. Pleasant

250 Pllr 01 New S,_ Lldiol. I
Kldl, Old
ChoiR. -hop.
tlonl IIIII Elll

Tlun, Fri.

Kidll , _ For
Too lluch To &amp; 1.- .._, 112
01, """"'· Wldo,

&amp;'VIcinity
._.,.. ·Void s . - . . r 4th l
Rolllno, New HI- Oct. 51h. Wlnlor ftemo

.;J..-

PubliC Sale
ALL Yold S.loolluot Be Pold In ' 8
Advo..,.. DEADLINE: 2:011 p.m.
&amp;Auction
tho day bo..,.lho eel· toto"'"·
Sundoy edhlon • 2:00 p.m. .....--Aucllon
Fllday. lllonday. eel-ion • 2:011 1uU limo ouct""-r, """'111111 '
p.m. Sllturdly.
auction MMce.
''c meecl'
Eltro Large I Fomilllo, 2 111111 77W785.
lllti,Ohlo • -•
'ilrglnle. Ou1 Ut1te· K~er Rood, Oct. 3rd

c.;;,..,.,,

l41h.

Four Fomlly: OctobOr 3rd, 4th,
1-l 7 lillie Fr&amp;n Poltor, I 1111..
From Ch.oohlro On 154. Homo
Interior, Lo•ge Womena Clothlng, Cnfla, Coleman Go HMIil)g Stovo, -·-~· llaDr
T.., lluch lllorel Rlln LJOIO Oct
7\h,lth.
Sole: 4 F1mlllle: Lot1 01
Mlaeetlaneoua INO MI._ South
On R1. 218, Wid I Th..., Oct
5th, lith, 10.?
'

Go-

a

Wanted to Buv

±,"~-;,;;:.~-:::-=~:;!'-=­

Qun late Yodel Care Or ,
TIUCko, 11187 llodola Or II
Sonllh Buldl ....
Eoot.... " -.... Oolllpolla.

..::a

O~and RMie: loll Thlo YMII
At. 7 At Acldloon, T-y Thru
Friday, t llU IS.

Coaaie's o•Jo

livtr Herbs •••
Ev41rl••li•t•
614-247-4035

Now.opan lor Fa~
Season
Wad. thN Sat. 9·5
SpeCializing:
Driecj Matertall
Pot pourri auppliaa

Olntde lite: Oct lnl, 111111 7111,
1.2 · - Out 211,
CIP11th, ..... At.

"'*
*·oi..._,

Rio And &amp; - . fumibft, , ....... Elo.

Helbal o,-atts

'

�:·

'

..

'

l

• ·t

" •. • .•.

1 • ,

.

.: .·:.

:-

.

..-...

. ,• ,

I ..... -

-

'

Tuisd~,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..

. ...

OCtober 4, 1994

OCtober 4, 1994

: Pomero~fddleport, 01110

The Dally

BRIPOI

NEA Crossword Puzzle
'. Clolhlna r.brtc

~39

ACROSS

PHILLIP
~DER'

BEATTIE BLVD.TM

by

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wri&amp;bt

Brute Beattie

"':... . :

=~

I

1N4 lloiM Corto AUio, "" IEIIalnl.
'"'"' tuOO.
' WliMit,
Canllllon,
104llooil New

=:."~

m.2siz.

. .
,11811 DodGe 1001 nc. • •. ,,..

hocllloUPL Col lllor 2:00 p.m.,
104-77WIII, ~~~- WY.

11

0111oo SUite With
Tollll In llodom Flro

PrlvoloTraUorl.oiForRent I
lllloo From Clalllpotll C!~r
Um~o. IW448-IISS2.
llobR Homo loto for ront, 3041711.f014.
~

e&lt;JT If I. EVER t:O
Sf-It fiAS A DRESS

1117 Ford IIUlllnt h,OOOr;JIIM

CI¥1111-PDO, 1144'JIIIIU.
1117 Plyonouth Hortlon 11111dlnl Clutch 1100, 114-

-1.

, 114-441·11M.

EAST
U7653~

•974
t964
•3

aK
•QJI0' 32
•A 3
•A K I 0 8 7

ConciHion, 114-241-tS4Z. ..

- O r Dou-.cto,~:'l,=IIO. 11M P"'-

2

SOUTH

1110 C:oufjor, Dnl OWnor, OOOd

Wanted to Rent ·

UIIIHioo, '

•s

WEST
18
•&amp;&amp;
•KQIOS
•QJ9642

oftor4pm.

W.nllll To Ronl: 3 8111,_.

42 Mobile Homes· ·
torRent

' '•.J 8 7

10111.
1110 C.mon&gt;, IUIO, V.f, 2.1 full
ln)octlll, good lim, T-topo, olr,
good condHion, ookiiiQ $3200
i\ogotllbto, 114-'JI2·3142.
11M C.valllr AD. 304.f711·78111

·-2ft!

Help wanted

•A' K 5 ·

EEK&amp;MEEK

robull 4cyl ongi111, 2·now tlroo,
_,. t u - 12100.. :IOW15o

Proof Blda. CoN llonlo Hlold111
Or 114o4441-U12.

Employment Serv1ces

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·lido/out, looo tnon IIOCXIIill on

46 Space tor Rent

aPrlvolo
-

NORTHIO+M

NOW

Merchandise

WHAT
' H~E YOU GOT
FER ME??

HIGH· TECH
GOSSIP

..

Anewlr.IID fiMvl~•llu&amp;lllf

40Amrmriw

.._ .

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41 Hommer pa1

1. Actor Oregary

s' WOOdin Plna

42 Purpoeelul

45 Rugln'a aon
41 A'llrlfll grade
411 Fllh 111111

II Be...,.llttat

12 Blbllclll king
13l.elveou1
14 Actor Bryn15- Piper
11ll~flrior In alze
17 Exodua hero
18 RR depot
19 Legal matter
20 Type

50 - ond ladder
52LeonlngTower
City

53 Grain
54 Let-' (Bealleo album)

22 Cow IOUndl
24 -Tin Tin
251nventor
Nlkola
27 Main movie
31 Muolcal
lnotrument
32 Actor Sean 33 COWboy
Rogero
·
34 Flahlng pole ;
35 Entreaty
36 Eye amorouoly
37 Aristotle -

55 Oopoallo
56 ExptOIIVI
(lbbr.)
57 f:emele otudenl· ~1-E+~
58 Two wordl of
under...ndlng

DOWN
6 l.ar$18 blrde
7 AlcOholic

1 Burotl

2 Throw off ·

-N..._
beVItlfle
11 Kiwi
8 Infernal
9 Actor-O'Nefol 21 Noun .......

3 Type of aolt
drink (2 wclo.)
4 Ycoung goat

10 Pollllcallllcler

5 Pontlfta

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West.
Souib
West Nonb Easl
Pass
I a
Pass
3•
4•
Pass
Pass 5 •
·Pass
Pass
7•
All pass
Opening lead: • K

30c...
32a.llel

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35Ubl
fortunetlller
31Belndelll
38C8puchln

39==.,...
41 Jeblled
12Jog
43 PerUinl"9 to
tile deMI

If you have read any of the recent
· M ....... ol
articles by tl).e Young Turks lfnost of
Lmt.
them older than I am!), you wfil be
15 Afler""'aware that they recommend bidding
as much as you can. Pre-empts rule; 1
47 Prlncoly
but there is a time for~ilence.
b-+--141 lo1olllly
Today's deal occurred during a ma51
(COI'IIb.
jor pair event several years ago. ~o
form)
declarers, Peter Weichsel from the
52Greekleltar
United States and Adrian Schwartz
from Israel, benefited from West's
verbosity.
·
In th~ given auction, six clubs was
by Luis Campos
the Grand Slam Force, asking North
• Celebrity C1pMt crvpk)Qrlrnl•rt crNtecl tom quo~~~tiona by t~ ~· JJUt
EICh \iMi WI tht c:::ipt.r standi !of anothef. T~·dw. J . . . . C
·:
to bid seven with two top heart hon·

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automatlo alothoo
-,_.!Ink hookup, good

Apartment
tor Rent

.........

PICKENS RIANITIJRE

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CELEBRITY CIPHER

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I'I.EAB? I!M'ORCIIICMRNITI
PLEA
wlthoul TRAP
"--ooddl,
. IIIIItiiM
...
OUARAHTEEDI Avllltlbll. II:

ors.
. . When West pa~ed throughout, the
declarers in six or seven hearts immeERNEST
diately
tried lop clubs or top spades,
FRANK &amp;
;:.::::::..:.=::.:.:=.::.....---------------------:-----.,;_-~ · with fatal consequences. But our two
heroes MTon the first trick with the dia·
mond ace, unblocked the spade king,
cashed the :heart queen and played a
second trump I'! dummy's king. Now
.........._~
came the spade ace, South discarding
~~.!.I his diamond loser . When' West
couldn't ruff, the rest was routine. The
WIT~
spade nine was covered and ruffed,
'
· ···
·r the club ace cashed and a low club
'
• "'"' ruffed in the dummy. South's 10·8 of
'. J&gt;
clubs disappeared on dummy's Q-10 of
• - ~ ~ spades. South ruffed the diamond sew-

YALUY WMBIR AND RIO
FEED.

Hot lll1okl fur.
. - A d . Pl.
ooi104-17J.-,

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o~AY, JUT YOU'rf

•!!}' /,.-·

NOT. FOOLif!IG ·

.ANYIOI&gt;Y IVT

Insurance
AMERICAN
NATIONAL IN·
· . 8UAANCE
VICKIE CASTO, AGENT
HOMEOWNERS a AUTO DIS-

1111 Tonlor ........... 7 W.b
Old, IIM44NII1. .·

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F.um Suppl1r.;

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tricks were four spades. five hearts,
one diamond, two clubs and a club ruff.
in the dummy.
·
Leopold Stokowski , t~e American
conductor of Polish origin born in
London, once reprimanded a talkative
audience: "A painter paints his pic- ·
lures on canvas. Bui musicians paint
their pictures on silence." More often
than they realize , bridge players
$ould act like musicians ..

SO, FI\/INtiS ...
/IRE '(()lJ

Nl'l RUN
FOR. ~E~ ·
I DENT'

----·

No Eopoot.oool SlOG To $tOO

I ' 1'1
GO -'HEI'I\) ~I) 00 IT
THINKING · AND t'l.l. RUN FOR ,
ABOUT
VICE PRES.I DENT I I'LL
IT.
. eE ~ tWNNING 11o'TE I

Home

ASTRO·GRAPH

!

BERNic!f"
BEDEOSOL

J

I
.

Wednesday, Oct. 5, t994
. I t I 10 commercial partMrships
Do no en eo nil" • ilh lndivid.uals who
1n the year a elu w

Rooms ,

, ac ·
. h good chances for success ·
only ones w~
consideral~
2
·UBAA (Sept. 3-0ct· Z3) , demandS ou
and realistic r~ar~:,.lheThey might ynol '
1
make upon
:., t
are doing and
•.
Jbra, lreat youi,....~
' 1ft Se d lor your Astro·
sell fo a bedlrthdaicl.Y g lor lh~ year ahead by
10ns
Graph pr

ee

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s~o:t::Sist ~ou.

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bor, 11 mo_,-, lnnd

new, ••ua, 114-IIIM1111.
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mailing $t .25 10 Astro-Graph, c/o 1his . mony today, I here's a poss 1 bi lil~ each
newspaper. P.O. Box 4465, New York. might do somelhipg _- krowingly or ·
N.Y. t0t63. Be sure to state your zodiac unknowingly - thai thwarts the other's
sign.
efforts.
SCORPIO
(Oct.
24·Nov.
22) TAURUS (April 20·May 20) Sho~ld
Complimenfs are elleclive tools..'oday. someone with Whom you're involved ask
However, insincerity will be read1ly d1s- for instri.Jctio.ns today, don't pretend to be
cerned by the recipients and is sure to knowledgeable it you aren't.
arouse their anger.
GEMINI (Moy 21.June 20) Be very cau·
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) Be lious regarding Investments today. Don't
hopeful and optimistic about your financial dive into something impulsively, based on
affairs today, but resist the lemplatoon to · unverified inlormalion~ You " need facts ,
lacts and more facts.
commit funds you have yel lo receive.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Little of CANCER (June 21·July 22) Guarcj
signilicane&amp; will be acllieved loday Wyour against inclinations loday lo go 10 I he
goals are improperly defined. II you hope wrong people for advice. An ineffective
to succeed, you '!l.Jlit be very exacting counselor c:Ould contribute confusion and
about what you anll~te.
complications thai prove impossible to
AQUARIUS (J•n. 20-Feb. 11) It's impera· unravel. ·
tlve you do not lake critical situations 4or LEO (July 23 : Aut. 22) Roll up your
ed od
11 0 do 't miglt lull you sleeves and go to wort&lt; II you nave a crili·
lhal could cal. assigflment to lake care of today If ,
collapse upon contact.
you're· counting on someone to come
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) Keep your along and ball you out. II'S jusl Wishful
guard up today ana search for ulterior · thinking.
motives il a business contact suddenly VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. ~) Usually, you
offers you a deal that gives you something manage your .resources In .a rather ·practifor nothing.
cal manner. Today, llOwever. you mighl
ARIES (M•rch 21·Aprll 18) II you and be impelled 10 lake gambles or chances
your mate's alms, aren'l in complele,.har· thai seem tolallv OI!J,ol character.
·
.
·
1

fan;o~ 00~:~e~:~:~~ ~;li~e:.;:,~c:r~ ~~~ ~~:~ fa\sea~~ns! ~1 s.lc~rlly

Fumllhlld

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PUULII

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low to form four words

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16 1 1 '

A famous motivational
speaker appeared at a local
s
symposium. We all laughed
. . . . . . when he smiled and said,
,..------·------, "If at first you don't succeed
T WE L L A
you're running about --·----!"

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by f.ll.ng in the miSSing words
you develop ''""' srop No. J below.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS

I

I I I I 'I I ) ·1

- SCUM-LETS ANSWERS
Voiced - Snuff- Dimly- Devout · YOU DO
"When t grow l!P no one .will tell me what to do!" the
teen yelled. "You've grown up, · the dad lectured, "when
you discover there are more things you don't know than
YOU DO .
·
•
-

-· -

-

.

-

5

•

OCTOBER 41

Improvements

.,

NCY

PREVIOUS SOLlrriON: "Alice COOI)er is the nicest QUY .in the wortd. He's 10
articulate and a geni"'\. really."- (Pilcher) Tom Candiotlo.
·
.

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'~!';;~' IN THESE SQUARES

floating on a cloud with
the buys you'll find in the
classifieds.

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drew East's last trump and
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claimed, his hand being high. The 13

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if.IROU6H PRACTICIN6

Ovor 10 Pottomo Kllollln Colll!ll
• In Stack. so Plllllme VinYl In
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By Phillip Alde.r

oond., -.104-4...- .
LAYNE'S RIRNnuRE
Complolo homo fllmllhlna&amp;
Noun: lllorHiat, t-1. I~
0322, a mllll out Butovllo Ad.
,_Dollvary.

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P-aa· 10-The Dally Sentinel

yomeroy-Middlepbrt, Ohio

Vitamins ·aldne do·
not fight depression

·oa.

GOTT

PETER.
GOTT,
M.D.
.
'

Reba McEntire answers question.: :
·"Is There Life Out/There?"

By SUE MANNING
Assotlated Press Writer
By PEI'ER H. GOTr, M.D.
sure to menlion the title.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - CounDEAR DR. GOTI: As a long-·
l&gt;EAR DR. GOTI: PleasC elabtry singer Reba McEntire, who usu- '
lime student of nutritional theraj!y, orate on what makes someone
afiy deals with lonely cowgirls and
I wish you would' address the value crave sweets. I'm in this situation
their cheatin' men, finds herself
of vitamin Bl2 tablets, together and can't seem to control my
reckoning with the likes of E\lrlpiwith folic acid, in lceeping depres- desire.
·
~hat about the genital _herpes des, Aeschylus 8nd Sophocles in an
sion'at bay, especially for pre-teens
DE,A.R READER: Athletic per· v1rus~ Can a moth~r pass thiS to her upcoming TV movie about a smalland teens.
·
....sOns, who often exercise strenuous·- baby m breast feeding as well7
, town waitress who returns to colDBAR READER: Vi~ B12 Iy, may crave sweets 10 replace the
DEAR READER: Because gen- lege.
'
,
and folic ~id, which are present in calories they have burned for ener- ital herpes is present on the geni· McEntire stars in the CBS Sun·
well-balanced diets. are necessary gy. Also. diabetics may feel a need tats, it is not transmitted by breast day movie "Is There Life Out
for body metabolism, including the to ingeSt large quantiues of sugar- feeding. However, pregnant There?" as wife aild mothe~ Lily
fonnation of blood cells and the products.- a practice that, obvi- women wilh active genital herpes Marshal!, who seeks I~ fulfdl_an
function of nerves. A doficiency of ously. they should avoid.
can pass the virus - often with acallem1c dream desp1te family
eilher substance may lead to aneIn addiiion, healthy people may disasttous results - to their babies obligations.
mia, malaise, numbness of the feet, simply like the taste 9f sweet edi· during delivery. The infants may
Lily's borne front includes a
and other symptoms. Such a defi· bles and develop a craving for · suffer a potentially fatal general- supportive husband (Ke1th Carrathem. This may lead to obesity and ized herpes infection.
ciency is diagnosed by blood tests.
dine), two children (Kyle Hudgens
Despite'•their importance for other health problems,-including
HIV is different because the and Blair Struble), a sister who
good heal!~~. B12 and folic acid 'are diabetes.
virus. which causes AIDS. is pre- needs special attelttion (Genia
not effective treatment for depres• Therefore, someone who is oth- sent in blood, tissues and body flu- Michaela) and a dependant father
sion, for which other therapy, such erwise fit and well who. craves ids - and, therefore, can be spread (Donald Moffat).
as Prozac and other drugs, is more sweets · can overcome such a by saliva, vomit, semen, blood,
While in school, she struggles
suitable. Therefore, I do not "sweet tooth" if he substitutes diet breast milk and other secretions with her own health; her father's
cndorse_your view. that v~tamins ~ products (such as those sweetened and excretions. In order to cause death and a tutor's advancea, all the
appropnate for Ibis medical condi- with artificial substances, including AIDS, the mv virus must enter the time grappling with.guilt.
lion.
NutraSweet). Tile switch-over victim's body through a ,break in . For much of th~ movie, she
To giye you more information, I should be gradual, because synthet- the skin or in the mucus membrane. tosses, out names hke Wbarton,
atn sending you a free copy of my ic sweeteners do· not taste exactly
Copyright 1994 NEWSPA· Frost, Gf!ther, Fitz~erald and C:'!"'·
Heallh Report "Fads 1: Vitamins like the "real thing" and the body PER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
mings;'and cons1ders queslloli'S
and Minerals." Other readers who must adjusL Aslc.your doctor about
(For inrormation on bow to like: "Why did Melville make the
would like .a copy should send $2 this.
communicate electronicaUy with whale white?''
plus a long, self-addressed,
DEAR DR. GOTI: I know that this columnist and others, cooThen comes those Greek guys.
Slamped envelope to P .0. Box breast feeding can pass the HIV tact America Online by ca16og 1~
"I didn't even know who
2433, New York, NY 10163. Be virus from mother to infant, but 800-827-6364, ext 8317.) .
Euripides and all that stuff was.

They schooled me for days. I
promise. ya, trying to say those
.words," McEntire said in a tele-.,
phone interview from her Nashville
home.
Altho11gh she once attended college in Oldahoma, MacEntire said
she "was kind of lost a lot of the .
time" while making the movie
because hei' literature classes
focused on ·' 'fairy tales," not
Greek tragedies.
"I lr.ind of nodded my head and
acted like I knew wbat everybody
was talldng about,'' she said of her
days on the set.
"Of course, I wasn't going to
say, 'Ya'll, I don't catch it, I don't
get iL Can •t we just talk about
something more common to the
everyday person?' ... It was over my
head drastically," she said
The 39-year-old entertainer
hopes that in spite of the movie's
academic script, her heartfelt message will get across - "Yes. there
is life out there."
·
The movie is a spinoff of McEntire's five-minute music video,
which stars rock singer Huey
Lewis as her husband.
The song "Is There Life Out
There?" is from McEntire's album
"For My Broken Heart." It was
recorded in May 1991, just two
months lifter eight members of her
band as well as two pilots were

killed in a plane crash in San
Diego; .
·.
McEntire said reaction to the
video was overw~elming - hundreds of people from all over called
or wrote to tell her they had decid'
ed ro rewm to school. Some
kids who hod dropped ouL Oth~
were women 45 arid 50 years old. ·

'

·

more likely 10 1m1tate therr mothers
than their fathers.
Confused, she resurveyed the
mothers and children, whose mean
age was 12 l(l.
Only 4 percent of girls whose
mothers didn't smoke while _pregnant had themselves smo~ed m the
last year, compared with 26 percent
of girls who were prenatally
exp~. she found. ,AD!onl! boys,
the difference wasn t s1gmficant:
14.8 peJ'C4lnt vs. 20 percent.
I
· Then Kandel turned to an ongoing national health survey of 796
IDQID.,9!'S !!!!!I !IJJli!' firs.J!!oo!, !!gain
With a mean age of 12 1/2. Five
percent of the non-exposed daugh-

·

percent·of the prenatally exposed
AJnong boys, the difference
aglllli was small: 3.2 percent vs. 7.7
percent.,
Combined, those surveys show
a fourfold risk for prenatally
exposed daughters, Kandel coneluded
That risk persisted when she
ccntrolled. for childhood exposure
10 a smolr.ing mother. In fact, pre~
natally expos~ daughters _whose
mothers had kicked the hahn were
l!lOre likely to smoke themselves,
than daughters of current, longterm ~mokers who temporarily
slOpped while plegnanL
·
"I don't know that I can prove
girl~.

. "I applaud these people, that
takes guts," McEntire said. And it
makes a difference to her. "Whel) .
you do a good }lroject, that's one
thing ~ut when you can help people'
in their lives, encourage. that's the
icing on the cake.'.'
·
"Is There Life Out There?" is
the movie's theme song. "The
Greatest Man I Never Knew,"
another McEntire hit, is used to
describe Lily.' s father in the film
and becomes her final oral exam in
English 208.
·
"In the movie, I don't want tO
be Reba McEntire the singer'
actress. I want to be Reba McEntire
the actress," she said.
This isn't her first TV movie.
Sbe's appeartld in "Tremors,"
"The Gambler Returns: The Luck
of the Draw"o;and "The Man from
Left Field." She made cameo
appearances in "North" and "The
Little Rascals."

next step IS further anunal studies
to pro~e how ni_cotine affects
developtng dopamtne· systems and
whether male hormones block the
changes.
But Pancth urged an immediate
look at other ~tabases that measure more precisely when mothers
kick the habit to ensure that Kandel
-despite 9uesti?ning mothers first
wh1le theu. ch,lld~en wer.e. very
youn~- d1dn t Sl~ply d1scover
that grrls are more likely than boys
. to imitate mother.
"I'm not dismissing this by any
means because it could be I! fasci.
nating ftnding," he said. "But this
database unfortunately wasn't so

clear."

Pesticides can increase breast cancer risk by affecting estrogen
NEW YORK (AP)- Pesticides
can increase a woman.&gt;s "bad
estrogen" and decrease her "good·
estrogen, 'l leading to a sliarp
in~ in tile risk of mast cancer, i:eaearthers say.

The researchers expose4 hlllll8ll parison, researchers said Mond!ly.
The study offers ways 10 reduce
breast cells in a test tube to DDT
and other chlorine-containing pesti- breast cancer risk, such as limiting
cides. The effect was three tO folD' exposure to such pesticides and to
times as great as that of a known fuels, plastics and natural sub·
human carcinogen used as a com- stances that have the same effects,

Retired teachers discuss health care

the researchers said.
''The lhing that's really exciting
here is we may be able to figure out ·
how to reduce the risk, even the
risk of recurrpncc in women
who've already had breast cancer,"
· said researcher ·Devra Lee Davis,
an epidemiologist with the U:S.
.Deparunent of Health and Human
Sei'vices.

The results surprised the direc·
tor of .the research, who had
expected to fmd that pesticides had
no effect on esttogen.
"I was wrol\g," said H. !,eon
Bradlow, a biochemist with the
Strang Cancer Prevention Center at
Cornell University Medical School.
The study showed that after exposure 10 pesticides, "your risk ratio

is greater than what it was before,"
Bradlow said. ·
The study builds·on Bradlow's
previous research showing that
there is a "good estrogen" that .
protects against mast cancer and a
"bad estrogen" that is associated.
with increased risk of the disease•

Health care coverage was dis- lege; talked about coverage and attended, she sai!L
The 20 members and two guests
cussed ill a recent meeting of the explained the new premium rates
were
served a baked chicken dinner
Meigs County Retired Teachers · recently adopted by the State
by
the
chulch women. All repeated
Teachers
Retirement
Board
A4ociation held at Trinity Church.
Newberry said she would like to the Pledge of Allegiance and
. June Newberry, district director
of lhe ~etired Teachers Associa- · have more retired teachers appoint· Rachel Downie repeated a Geman
tion, and Jack Frowine, of the ed to the retirement board for the . prayer.
Sonlheastem District of the Ohio benefit of such issuet as health
Retireti Teachers AssQciation and a insurance. A state meeting in
President Virginia Carson
teach« at the Shawnee State Col- Columbus on Friday should be well presided at the meeting with Maxine Whitehead introducil)g Newberry. who presented Frowine. of
The next meeting will be held at
•
Trinity Church on Oct. 15.

Quilt block contest to be .
held at Meigs Showcase

A new attraction at t"e 1994
SIIOwcaac, Meigs County, is a quilt
block contest
County residents are invited to
participate in an Ohio Star quilt
block oontest being coordinated by
Bunny Kuhl. Patterns will be
jndged on work!"8f!!hip, accuracy
and color co-ordination.
Thoae.interested in participating
in the eontest can pick up the white
fabric to be used for the backJ1101Ul(1. ~ and contest guidefines at the Meigs County Parks
District Office, 200 E. Second,
Pomeroy during business hours
Monday through Friday.
The rules are as follows:
. I) Must use ·the white fabric for
background supplied by the contest
ccmminee.
2) 100 cotton, a b~ue ca_lico
prini, must be use4. Plruds, ~s.
gingham or printed patternS (tn"ll
row) will not be acceptable.
· 3) All fabric should be washed
before piecing.
, ·
4) Finished block must meamre
9 1/2 inches square.
·
AI! entries must include a
Jabe with the natne, address, and

sl

phone number basted to one of the
white comers on the baBk side,
with name facing the wrong side of
the block.
6) All blocks become the property of Showcase, Meigs County.
7) First through third prizes .will .
• be a roll of quift batting ~&gt;fOvided
by the sponsor The Fabnc Shop,
Pomeroy.
8) Blocks must be returned by
Ocrobet 12. 1994 ro the Parks District Office.
9) There is no limit to the number of entries per person, but only
prize
person will be awllfdt

:e

r

-10/Aft participants must be reaidents of Meigs COIDity._
·
The blocks will be on display at
the Coonht6flters building during
the Showcase.
.
Additional details. are available
at the Park District Office. Quilt
blocks en~ in this year's contest
will be made Into a quilt to be Used
as a fund raiser wltb proceeds used
as money for expenses of a quilt
show in 1995. The I 995 Show will
have cash ~ and be judged by
a certified Judge. · .

UMW tell mission .stories

Mlrtha Poole teet the pledge
It was announced that reading
''Th T'thes that Bind" programs must-be completed and
~~United Methodist reported by Dec. 15 and that tile
W(IJDCI! met Sept_ 20 at tile cblirch. ABC 9\lilts ~~~ is con~nuing.
All
tOOk part in reading Undes~ gtVIDg ~ !fiscussed
aid dJacllBion ancl giving of the and contmued. In add1Uon, new
~': -,- .
. program books have been pur- ,.~ _ . from .Jerusalem, chased.
,
~ Nepal. Alabama and
Nominations co111mittee chair·
North ;CifOJi• ,recalled the wafs WOfJ!8D Florence Ann s~ prepcioplt
"bound" and influenced sen!M a slate of officers which was .
b' ·~andremiodecloftheneed . accepted by the society. Nellie ·
,
•eJ miasionlwy giving '
Parter had the prayer calendar and
for
Sbarotl Hausman ~ned c~os~ Ronald Whitla~h. ~a laity
lbe.blllineiS meeting with prayer. miSSIOnary ~n le~ve m D~nver,
Mdll-. reported 36 friendship Colo. The soc1ety Signed a birthday
-~"- ~s-·' dwell and Nellie N
c.ard
him..· Martha Elliott and
........,.
.,.,, eat
Hiefor
Parir.cr
_ .Par·k er reported on the recent
eN .
·. will be Oct 18 at
tMW ~t annual meeting durext mccung
. . :
·
1 wblch Alfred was recognized the church. Martha E~liou will!~
giving.
the program and Nellie Palter will
serve as hostess. '
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Buckeye 5:
S-10-16-26-30 ·

Page4

entine
;vot 45, NO. 101
:Copyright 111M

•

in.Meigs.

OJI&gt; ·
1 PIIIJ)

7~
By
Dave
Grate

of
Rutlttnd
Furniture

A Iuilidsome new siga now greets visitors to Harrisonville Elementary School. The sign was
baUt by Todd Jollnsoo, Harold Graham, Dave Jacks, Kevin Rousb aad J!ob Roush with materials
lloD8ted by HarrlsooviBe PTO, Scipio Alumni and Belpre Brick and Masonary Co. Here, showing
lhe new sign, are represe~tatives from the following classes: kindergarten, Jennlrer Partlow; first
grade, Rachel Gardner; secOnd grade, Kristin Barley; lhlrd grade, David Butcher; fourth grade,
·
Jay Greea; fifth grade, Tasha Green; sixth grade, Albert Steams.

A friend is someone Who
knows you and still likes you.

•••

Lots of people believe In the
two-party sysieiTH)ne on
Friday, and one on Saturday.
It's not true 'that you can't get
something for nothing. You get
fiflee!Y"Yaars . for sending
nothing to the IRS.

•• •

Effiaftlt. quiet and nmosion-mahnt "ith I'I'IOft'
.tfadMI air dtUVft)'

The Dest time to think about
retl~ment Is before your boss
does.

..
·•

GoHer to group ahead. "Do
you mind If we play through?
l'va · just heard · that · my
~uaband ., aerlously III." · ·

By KEVIN·KELLY._ -- ... - - ·-boar-d--of-el_lucation and go on
OVP News Editor
strike, a uniop spokesperson said.
GALLIPOLIS - The unions
· With Tuesday's vote, a wallcout
representing teachers and support · by the Gallia Local Education
staff in the Gallia County Local Ass()!:iation and the Gallia Local
School
Disirict
voted Suppofl Staff Association would
"overwhelmingly" Tuesday tp not occur ~ntil Oct. _17. · · .
reject a contract offer from the_
The strike vote IS not effecuve.

Gall/a authorities
hunt for suspect
IIHII# eel murder.
. QALU;PO~
are searcbillg "

~erf1in6 Mei,p/

M,.,,. &amp; Gall.ia

SERVICE .
HIGH EFFICIENCY HEAT PUMPS &amp; FURNACES

Rutland Furniture
1t. i24, 1"'-' Cl. 742·221 I

~

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•

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-

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#

,.·

,,.

....

35615 OAK•HILL RD.
CHESTER, Ott 45720

1

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614-185-4222
'.

. 1«JJ.767-4223

I
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I

By JOHN McCARmY
Associated Press Writer
Gov. George Voinovich is not
running for anything other than his
own re-election on Nov. 8.
But he said in northeast Ohio on
Tuesday that it's possible he would
help a Republican national ticket in
1996.
Voinovich and Democratic
opponent Rob Burch ·held an
impromptu·news cooference after a
candidates' forum in' Willoughby.
Also on Tuesday, Democratic
Senate ' candidate Jo.el· Hy~ttt's
campaign criticized Republican
opponent Mike DcWine for
supporting a program•that helped
,prisoner'S get college educations.
De Wine shot back that the
program, which Con$ress has
outlawed, helped immals turn
their lives around an revented
them from committi
other
crimes.
And Republican attorney
general
candidate . Betty
· Montgomery released a television
ad that her campaign hopes will
raise her name recognition.
Voinovich and Burch spoke
with reporters after the forum
which The News-Herald of
Willoughby · and Lakeland
Commllnity College co-sponsored.
"I can teD you I am not running
" for vice president, I'ID not running
for president," Voinovich said.

·'But ... if someone came to me Con~ess in August voted. to stop
and said, 'We think that you would giving the grants to inmates. The
help a Republican ticlcet as its vice program provides tuition to low- .
presidential candidate,' for income applicants who may receive
someone to say I wouldn't listen to as much as $2,300 a year.
"Average Ohioans whose own
that, I'd turn it down, that's
children
can't qualify for P.ell
nonsense," he said.
Voinovich and Burch also grants and who are truly struggling
challenged each other's views of to help put their kids through
college will be outraged by Mr.
the state's economic progress.
Burch said statistics from the DeWine's position," Butland said ·
Ohio ·DeparUnent of Development in a news release.
DeWine said the grants helped
gave the state an artificially !tigh
ranking in a mapzine article aboqt inmates trair for jobs once they
were released and helped keep
business CXJliiiiSIOn.
• Ohio was listed as having 689 them from .returning 10 prison.
."We try to prepare them so that
new .or expanded businesses in
we
lower the repeat offender rate,"
1993, compared with 386 for
DeWi'
ne said at. his campaign
second-place Texas.
He said the deparunent "paid office. "If we can lower it 10
people to track down every percent ilr .15 percent we're going
mstance of development" while to save the taxpayers a great deal of
other states were less exact in their money and we're going to spare a
.Jot of victims from ·being victims of
figures.
. '
"That's all nonsense," crime.''
Montgomery
and
her
Voinovich ~plied heatedl).
· "Even if we did a better .job of Democratic opponeni; incumbent
kCI'ping track of our statisticsothan bee Fisher. tried to make good
some other staies, 10 be 300 ahead impressions this week as they
-in new facilities and plant premiered television commercials.
Montgomery focused on her II
expansions is an indicatjon that we
are really l!!alcing progress," he years as a prosecutor' in Wood
County in northwest Ohio and on
said.
·
~
In Columbus, Hyatt campa1gn her fight in the state Senate for
spokCsman Dale Outland criticized tougher criminal sentencing laws.
Fisher's all, which began a fiveDeWjne for supporting the prisoner
week
run Monday. features John
grants while i:ampaign ads po~y
Walsh,
a friend of Fisher who
him as being tough on cnme .
Works to find missing children.

r

Commissioners' candidates
brief Middleport association
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News St&amp;Jr
The Middleport Community
Association listened to comm'ents
from the two candidates vying for
the Meigs County Commissioners
seat at its monthly meeting Tuesday nighL
.
· ·
Both candidates emphasized
their commitment to ereatinJ jobs
and establishing industrial s1tes in
the county.
Chrrent Commissioner Fred
Hoffman said he prides himself on
establishment of the rural enterprise zones, organization of the
county economic development
office, negotiating a contract with
the Department of Human Services, and earning more than $1
million in grants for a Racine hous- .
ing program and new water lines
for the Leading Creek Conservancy
District
.
Hoffman, a Rep~blican, 'said he
will continue to push industrial site
creation. water and sewage cover..
age to county residents and adequate housing.
"What we need are tied-down
sites," Hoffman said. "Meigs
County has no control over the
property. You have to have c~el}:·

thing there including electric and community association annoonced
sewage."
the ending bala~ce had jumped
Democratic -candidate Jack from $2,189.99 in August to
Slavin said he will push to·see the $4 ,481.67 in October. The
highways in the county developed.
~ddlepon River Festival ~ipts
"We supposedly have 17 -which are not all in- totaled
industrial sites nQlV," Slavin said_ $8,687.10. The expenses were
"We need to develop our county $6.104.13.
instead of letting it go. We need to
Expenses for the festival
do whatever we can to better Meigs included: $12 to R·iver Cities
County."
.
Times, $14.16 to Columbus
Slavin said he has. a desire to be Southern Power, $17.95 to
a c&lt;immissioner. describing himself Middleport Flower Shop, $32.18 to
as apeople person.
Columbus Southern Power $250 to
."I have lots of ideas ." Slavin WMPO, and about $600 U, Magic ·
S81d. He added he would lilce to see- ·· 101.
at least one of th~ commissioners in
The rain during the festival
the office at all ames.
made it difficult to coordinate all
The $28,000 a year job has the groups, association president
occupied between 3,0 ~ 40 h~ Tom Dooley said.
aweekofH~ff~~~:an -sum~,heS81d.
. ~·we were planning for the
Hoffman swd h1s.comm1tmen_t to b1ggest ever," Dooley said. "We
the county has been a full·t1me had a follow-up meeting and had SQ
effon. .
many positive things on ft. The rain
. Slavin, an experienced teac~er may ha~e been badebut a lot of
m the county, added he would like good things came ouf-df it. From
to see more. emphasis on education • now on we'll plan for rain."
to reduce crune.
Don Tate Motors, th e major
But Hoffman countered the sponosor, was pleased with. the
countr has one of t!Je lowest cn~e event. The car company has the
rates m the .area. Wtth a respons1ve first refusal right next year.for the
sheriff's department.
th.--ee-on-threc tournament, he said
In regular business, t.he
(Continued oD Pale 3)
.

--Democratic
open
house
Gallia Local unions ·vote.to strike

•••

7SIIOWIOOIIS.

Voinovich ~ot ruling
out run for VP in 1996

The MeiJIS Mettopolitan Housing Authonty has received additional funding of $382,660 for
rental assistance to low income
families over the next five years.
Word of the additional funding
from the U.S. Department of Housing and UJban Development came '
to Jean Trussell, the I!Uthority's
executive directa', from U.S. Rep.
Ted Stri~ldand.
The funding will allow the
authority to assist an additional 20
·households in the COIDity. ·
.
: · Currently. under the Section 8..
:rental assistance prognlni, 74 fami- .
· lie~ are bein~ assisted, Trussell
•. :said. The additional funding being
.added to the program brings the
·total annual operating income to
:$365,9654, according to the direc·
·tor.
..
.
.
: . Rental payments on behalf of
:eligible households allow these
·funds 10 be ciJculated in die coun•
• :ty. thus providing an economic
:boost to the local economy •. she
· added.
The Meigs Housing Authority
·was reactivated in 1990. The
:governing board of directors for the
authqrity Include Jo!Jn Wee~s.
president: Florence Richards! VJce
president; and Paul Reed, AQiold
· The old RudaJ!Il Hlall Sdlool Is bein&amp;IQril.down. this week.
Johnson ari(I JQily C~.
.· Tbe proJect Is ahead'ilr sdle.d!l!e and shollld&gt;be .coDJPieted -by
·'· Th'e-purpose of the program,
this week, said Bob Oavld!oli ofthe Locall18 Ohio Operating
~ng to Trussell, is to provide .
Engineers Apprentice program. Joha Brlckles of Darwin and
rental assistance to low mcome
another apprentice are working on tbe project. Brickles will nohouseholds for safe, decent,
Jsb bis fourth and final year in the apprenticeship program next
sanitary housing in Meigs County. ·- · June. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)
.
(Continued oa Paee 3) .
L...................;,...,.._...;........;.................................;........, j

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2 Secllone, 12 , . . . . - A lluhlmiCIIIInc. tMw ~ 1111r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 5, _1994 ·

:'Housi~g Rutland demolition
~fund.ing
~awarded ·

P1: PLEASANT, WV 25550
304-675-7254

I

... ~· . ~ ......· .~·.

- Authorities

until 10 days after state agencies·
are notified, said Gary Phillips.
chief negotiator for the teachers'
association.
.
Both associations met in
separate closed meetings at the
Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds
(Coatioued on Page 3)

AFT finds 3.2 percent raise
in Ohio teacher salaries
,,

a suspect in the

By The Aaaoc:lated Preas
Tuesday nis'llt lllol't'mg_death of
. The average teacher salarj in Ohio
a Crown City
• f6r the 1993-94 school year was 3.2 ·
The · victim, Eddie A.
percent higherthan the previous year,
Ferguson, 41, was shot near his
the American Federation ofTeachers
-•l.O.....a and .- n - . . . t to SL
·--""'
.......,...,.said Tuesday. .
Marys Hospital in Huntington,
The average salary in Ohio .was
W.Va., where he was
$35,912, the ·sso,OOO-member reapronounced dead, Chief Deputy
era«ion said.
bennis Salisb'm' of the Gallia
-The average · salary nationwide
;~nty Sheriffs Depilrunent'
reached $35,813, a 2.3 percent inThe department deClined to
crease that was the smallest in 35
release any further information
years.
·
·
·
. until the suspeCt is~
The National Education Associa.__ _ _.;.._ _.,~-~ · tion, which has 2.2 milllon members,

,,
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. 9-7-9-3

7/ee~~

::C·

c:'fivc-JIII

Pick3:·
4-0-4
Pick 4:

-School gets-new sign----.

memben

..

cSouthern VB .
team defeats
Eastern

were

~u~!!~ w~!~:. P.~~~,~,~~~~tP!:d~e~~.~-~~~~~~~J~. ~.rl!~.~J~~....

Allclclatect.l'rell Writer
·
involved with drug addiction. This . no one had ever found a hnk
WASHINGTON (AP) - The "priming" may predispose girls to between· prenatal exposure and the
tendency to smoke.
·
daughters of women who smoke smoke, Kandel contended.
during pregnancy arc much more
But smoking mothers didn't
''It 1s a very interesting and
likely to smoke themselves, sug- have that effect on their sons, rais- ~rovocative paper," said Dr. Nigel
ges'!!fi nicotine may somehow bio- ing the possibility that male hor- Paneth, an expert on pediatric epi·
logi y "prime" the. fetal brain to m~nes protect male fetuses, she demiolog.~ at ~ichigan State Unirespond years later, a new study said.
versny. If thts really happens.
conlellds.
·
.
''What this really shows is there from a biological point of view ...
b) today's American Journal of . may _be subtle effects on brain that's very in~f!guing."
PUblic Health, Dr. Denise Kandel fuacuo~ that won't become BPPII!';
But he cauuoned that the ~suits
may _mean _daught«:rs are s1mply
of Columbia University reports ~e ent unul 13, 14, 15 years later,
first documented link between chit- Kandel said. ''It's another reason copymg therr mothers, even though
dren's tendency to smoke and pre· women shouldn!t smoke."
Kandel tried to conttol for that posnatal expOsure to nicotine.
Animal.studies have shown pre- sibility. .
Sl!e theorized tbat nicotine, natal nicotine does affect certain
Cl\ildren. do imitille their smok·.
which can cross ilie pi&amp;centa barri- '. brain activity onc.e 'the animal is ing parents. But Kandel studied
er stimulates a fetus receptors for grown. But scientists never pursued 192 New York children for 19

Ohio Lottery

.,

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estimated t!J.e average 1993-94 raise .
in the cm)ntry at 2. ?.percent.
The nation's teachers unions said
teachers are negotiating slightly bigger salary increases this year.
American Federation of Teachers
officialssaidcoiuract settlements thus . ·
far this year included raises of about 3
percent.
· The AFT's annual survey:of federal and state tlepanments of educa· ·
tion showed, tha t teachers in Con·
necticut had the highest average sal:
ary , $50,3R9,and those in Mississippi
had the lowest, $25,153 .

·Tbe Melp Couaty Democnts opeaed' their Malo Street bfadquarten in Pomeroy Tuesday.
From left'are State Sea. Jn Michael Loaa, State Rep. Mark Malone, County Commissioner
JUet Howard, Fourth District Court fl Appeals c:udidate BID Sbaw, County Commissioner en·
clldate Jaek Slavlll, Sllerlff James Soulsby ud Democntlc: Chail'woJilan Sue Malson. Tbe olflcel
will bt opeD frcllllll a.m.•S p.m. M011clay throllp Friday alld !I Lm.•llt)OII Saturday. Tbe Deao- ·
cnt dbmer Ww bolt lieuteoiot JIOVei'IIOI' C8lldldilie·Pettr La~u Jones at 6 p.m. Oct. 15. (Sea1
tioel photo by George Abate)
. •
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