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November&amp;,

OH-Polnt P'-nt, WV

9ffice thief pilfers from co-worker .·
By BRUCE WILLIAMS
l:fow do I recoup my losses from
a lbicf In lbe olfice7 Uttlc by little,
be bas lakeD about $2,500 from my
handbag wblle it w11 ben~ my
desk 11 I uled tbe ladles room.
The thief and I are tbe only one~
~~ in tbe oftic:e llld I actually
saw bim in tbc act one day wbco I
was retumloa to my desk. Tbls
crook oo loager bas access to my
bmdbag. He mates over $100,000
a year, wblJe I make about $22.000.
How do I avoid a suit for libel
or slander wbeD I've seen tile mao
Invade my purse and take mouey
and lmpoataot documents? - E.B.,
West Chester, Pa.
·

llone~v

RECOGNIZED BY.UNION- Eldon "Whitey" Walbam, 71,
Middleport, waa recolnlzecl recently by repreaentatlva or tlae
Brlckbyen and AWed Cnfbmen International Uolon. Honorinl
Walburn, center, were Eel Fry, BAC repraentatlve, left, and BW
Nb:, Soutbern Oblo District repreaentatlve or tbe carpenter•'

1r~ 1

DEAR E.B.: You certainly have
every right ro coafroot tbls lodividual, but tbe repereussioos c:ould be
diflicuiL You say you are tbe only
ones working In the office. You
didn't indicate If be Is a supervisor
of some kind. But obYiously. since
be makca five timea your Income,
be must have some influeoce witbin tbe mnpaoy; perllapa even owning iL
I seriously doubt tbat you will
be able to recoup r,our losses. Coo~~ bim woo t do a wbole Jot
of good. because be knows be stole
it; and be knows you know be stole
·it. Wbat possible reason is tbere for
bini to admit it, unless be suddenly
"gets reli&amp;ion"?
If I were vou. I'd stay away
from this fellow and keep a tight
&amp;rip on my purse. Wbeoeyer you
leave your desk you'll have to take
your valuable~ with you and lock
tbc desk. Alternatively, you might
be able to lock your purse in the
desk.
Unhappily. people like tbls
aeep are a fact of life. But since

unloa.

Meigs bricklayer recognized
MIDDLEPORT Eldon
"Wbitey" Walbum, 78, of Middlepon bas received a mnmc:ooation
from tbe Obio Senate in recognition of bla SO yews 11 a member of
tbe Brlcklayen and Allied Craftsmenlntematiooal. Local32.
The certifiCIIIC Ia signed by Senator Stanley J. Arooff, president of
tbe Oblo Senate and Sen . Jan
Michael Long, 17th Senatorial DisUicL
The commendation follows tbe
rcc:ent recognition of bls ball-century of service to Local 32 wbe~e
be was presented a gold walcb by
Ed Frye. Inremational representative.
·

.,"'eas

J ~u~

Walbwn, 78, bll been a bricklayer since 1937 and a member of
Local 32 for more than SO years.
He Ia still active in ooncrete work
and bricklaying. His company is
cwrendy building new sidewalks in
tbe Meigs County village of
Racine.
He Wll also.recognized recently
by tbc Bricklayers and Allied
Craftsmen Iotemaliooal Uoioo as a
nominee for local officer of tbe
year.
A former Navy "Seabee", be
helped construct tbe filst Am6iaio
Church in Nagasaki, Japan. and Ia
clllsilied 11 .an atomic veteran.by
tbe federalaoveromenL

ycu .surely DCCd your job, you are may well be a wise move foi you, t1oo. • ;
101 m a JlOS!tion to putllln jeop- but remember that it does not sup(Send your qaeatlona tot .
I1'Ciy by matio~ tb1a mauer a publit plant tbc ~ fou will. ·
Smart MoneJ, P.O. Box 50), j
laaue. As for libellnd slaDder, )'Oil
Given wbat I have told you, a .Elfen, I'L 34680. Qaeatlon1 of'
can aet younelf Io seriOIIi trouble aood utate planner, probably an pnenllateftlt will be lltiWIM ) ~
If you make accusations tbat you attorney knowledaeable In these In filture coiUIIIIII. 0w1o1 to tlai '
CIIIIIOt substantiate. wblcb I think
areas, is tbe penoo you should be ~ol- or -u, penoaal nplhl l1
wo~ld be tbe case here. At least consul till&amp;. It seems to me that caDDDI be proYided.)
~ ~cut YO!!" lOisei by koowlna you'v.e been settina some pretty
(for Information on bow to !
What s bappenioJ 8lld now are tak· ' good llllYice, siven tbe disposition co1111D111llcata electroolcally w1111 j
ina tile apJI'Opnale security mea- of your current wealth.
tbll coltldllllllt and otlaen, contaet i
sures.
Bruce williams II a wrltar fCII' America OnUate br ca111as 1..-.'
Newapaper Enterprlle Allocla· 817-6364, ut. 8317.) ·
i
DEAR BRUCE: Do you rcmn·
'
i
mend 1 liYing trust for 1 married
NEW SHENNIU Farm Tractors
e~le with two grown c:hildren?
Loutaiana Is a mnmilllity paopeaty
Diesel 23 HP • 2 &amp; 4 Wheel Drive
lllW!, but our laws are a little difl'erLive Lift 3 ptHutch, Standard Cab #1 '
ent ander tile Napolcoolc c:oc~e.
were told we must mention our
2 Wheel Drive,$5500.00 4 Wheel Drive $8,250.00
c:blldren in our will and we have

we

done so.

Most of our e1tate is in aonuitie1
and lnsuraotc polieitl so tbat tile
moniu will pay us outside of our
estate. Givco tbla and tbe fact that
we do have a will, are living trusts
to our advantaae? Please don't
mention our initials or town
because it's sucb a small place. Louisiana Reader .
DEAR READER: As you have
noted, Louisiana operates under a
slightly diffetent legal system from
lbe balance of our country. This is
parlirularly true in terms of wban
one c:an and must remember in
their es• planning. I would cerlaioly bow to the advice of tbe local
expert wbo bas already been advising you in tbls mattet.
Living ttusts have a c:ouple of
advantaae~; you rettin oontrol during your lifetime, but tbc proceeds
in tbe trust pass outs~ lbe probate
COUll. Understand that there Is lltde
01 DO 181 adYBDtage here. but tbere
is a dtgree of efficienCY. that one
docs not achieve In a will. A ttust

Complete Line a KING KUTIER Equipment
Kutters 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 &amp; 10ft.
Rear Blades 6. 7, &amp;8ft. Regular &amp; heavy duty
Used Ford, Massey Ferguson, H Tractors field ready
1OO's of used items to choose from
Come see these at

JOINS STAFF • Leo
NEW STAFF MEMBER·
Va...•e ... jaiDid llle lllalf of Woodland Centera, Inc.
Woodland Centen, Inc. u
a•--llle acldltloo of Jolm
bullllm ..., ... He ... a BS
Davll, Pb. D., to l&amp;lltalf. Alu
de1r•• t'rom Bowllaa Green
oatpatlent tlle!:rut, lie will
r.mll7 and
State Unhel'lltJ wllere lae . provide lociiYid
-Jared Je
pro-·- - 1roap. COPnltllnl IUYictl,
dlldloo -.-a~. A natlft
DaYII, wlao NCeiYed lllil cloctcJI-.
or P~J, Va= worked
ata le c:UnlraJ .-ydaolou t'rom
pnYiouly Ill a
t accoenTemr,l• UniYerlltJ, worked
.tent ICII' c,pru Foot Miner.!
preY ODIIJ lor tile Santa Fe
Co. aDd u a coantJ CHUDIIIndian llolpltalln Santa l'e, N.
.a-m-sa~. Peak. NeYacla.
M.

WASHINGTON (AP) Unemployment dipped to a fouryear low l11t montb and hourly
waae~ rose at tbe flltcll pace in 11
yean- good DCWI for WOiktn but
a fresb si&amp;ll to economists tbat
lntereat rate• will bo aolnJ up

_.,.,.11111111

1467 Jackson Pike (Old US 35 West)
Gallipolis, OH

Phone 446·9777 or 446·2484

.

. - ·-- ... -· ---- ·-·-x-.
c.Jll&lt;!dly tQflllon llllonnat10a ·

..At&gt;iJ_.A'~6J -. ~

weets. "

j

turca,

The sbakeop w11 presented a
Inc.
fallout from tbe Oct. 11 ruble
IMkl for biller litllllf.
craah, wbleh bad raised serious' . Mll,rl..tlwlcll
. ..
·- · ...........
questions about tbe state of Rua·
P.O. BOX 614 '
. RIPLEY, Wv. 26271
:u=·~s
But11101e broldly, it 1
~ ecoaomi~Y·
tile Cabinet' a anountlDJ '

_....,.,. TraMd For!

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1989 CHEVROLET CAMARO RS MODEL
Extra sharp, V-8, air, auto. We sold It new. Only

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COMMJSSIONEIIS HONOR I'EDERAL-MOG'OL • Du1et1
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G - tlae Galla ec.-tr 0
I d - psu- &amp;'-plant
u riard lor 25 ,..... 111. O'*teaa""'l operation Ill t1ae me•••lllt)'.
Pldland ablm, ldllo ~t .... .._., P1ainlll, ........ -n•pr;

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. lliiGihl, .tee prarldant Ill. VA

·an:z
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1992 DODGE DAKOTA

· The advantages••~"'*'tromD-

1

Long bed, V-8, air, auto, only 37,000 mllea, extra
clean and It's a 4-Wheel Drive. See It nowl

A. you lr)' to urive 11 tbe 'rlabt wbeo you retire? Tliat will depeDd !
CCIIIllilutioe of lnvutmentl lor 011 bow mucb money you make :
your ~calar nccdl, tbere are oow (llld bow IIIUdl you eqlCCl to .
101110 by CjUCIIklllto COIIIIider.
.llllkc jlllt before you retlle), wlllt .

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•

We want to make you a customer. Thanks again
for everyone's support. We are your
"Homttown Dealer".
Mike Sergent; Carl Bandera, Dave Wirth,
Lerry Thlldon, Jim Walker or Roger Dillard!

tiDd of UfCitYie you bavc IIOW llld :

wliat ldDd of Ufeatyle you waot to i
bave wblleredrcd.
Will you bave any addlllooal
retirement 111et1? Do you bavc
pension 01 ay otiJer type of retiremcot plio money ~ aide? Do you
baYe uvlnaa or lDvutmenu tbat
you plio 111 1110 111 IUJiport younelf
duriDI retlremeotf-Doca your
apouse bave moaey set u1cle In a
relircmallicc::ouot?
· ·
Once you consider queatlons
lite tbeac, you can be&amp;ID to coaatruct a well-diveralfleclldiremc:nt
pMfolio.
,
.
Jay CaldWIU II an lntalnwt
Broker for Tile Oblo CODIIpnJ
Jn Ill G1DipoU10flke.

• GEO • OLDSMOBILE

Galllpolla' Hometown Dealer

1616 IASTIIII¥1.

IILUPOUS, 01.
"6·3672 or 1·100·521·0014 , ' ',

'

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1

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en tine

'

Vol. 45, NO. 131
Copyright 1994

f

I

• I

' 35 cefttl
2 Seetlona. 12 P19H
A Multimedia Inc.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 7, 1994

UNION, S.C. (AP) ·..::.. Su1ao
Smith was a suicidal "nervoua
wreck" and a1moii went to a
WllrlY pave wltb ber )'Otllll boya,
but decided fmaDy to get out of the '
car and let ber cbllclrcn drown
aJone. ltCalldina to bet police COli·
feslioaa,
.
"I wanted eo end my Ufe 10 bad
and wa In my car, ready to ao ·
down tbal ramp Into tile Wlltt:r llld I
did ao (lUI way, but I stopped,"
Mrs. Sailth said 1o lbe written ~fessloo, CNN RDOrted S.iiPdaY. I
went 11.U. and l atoppecl. Tben I
aotoutoftbecaradletYOISSwrcct.
· "I daoppcd to die lowcat wbeo I ·
.allowed my cblldrell to ao down
tbal
lato tbe water without
me.J
otf rUooiDa and acream.ina. 'Ob Gocl, ob Cfocl no. Wbat
bave I dDac." tile con1ca1on 11:111.
, David Bruc:k, Mra. Smitb' a
.lawyer, told 'l1le A110(:lited Prell
tbal tile CNN report was accurale.
·B)Il be denied ~ report In t1te Nov.
· .14 tuue ol NtwnVId, ,wblcb said
~ Si1tllll waldlecl ber 3-)'elf-old 1
aoo, Mii;beeJ,,IIIUIIle eo act out of
bls afety-seat as the car rollecl Into

':&amp;

..

II

393256

I

~ ... '

I

Kicker:

New...,.;

Election

vexes

"He's saying we won't find aoytbiol. Wbat you bave to realize in
this case Is the delivery of 14
babies were made·in tbe bome."
Rose, a 54-year-old farmer, and
bls 19-year-old daugbler remain io
tbe one-story wbite farm bouse,
Soulsby said
Rose and bls wife, Mary, bad at
least 17 cblldten, 16 ol them still
Uvina, Soulsby said. One ebild died
from crib death in 1984 and w11 .
buried in a nearby cemetery, be
added.
The five children living in tbe
home, raosins from 9 to 15 years
old, we~e placed in a foster bome
on a temporary basis last Thursday
by a c:ourt order. Meigs County
Prosecutor Jobn Lentes said.
quutl0111 dufina a preu coofereoce Io Pomeroy.
MEETING THE PRESS -:- Melg1 County
A month ago, Rose's wife w11
Autboritlu were lnvatJaatinl tbe poiSiblUIJ of
Prosecl!linl Attorney John Lentes, left, and
admitted at the Southeast Psycbione
or more bodies burled In a Racine farm.
Sheriff
Ja111e1
Soulsby,
center,
llstaned
Saturday
attic Hospital in Athens because of
(AP)
u
BCI
cbler
lnYutlgator
Terry
Neely
11111wered
mental and emotional problems, .
Lentes said.
"Our excavation fouod materials
week to analyze tbe evidence and tbinf you accept," Neely said.
Tllil BCI taraeted eight areas for tbeo
in
states
of decoDiposition - food.
week we could tell If "We rc confident in the fact that
tbe seatdl -:- with specially-trained wbat next
we found really proves any- what we bave noted bll evidentiary farm animals and tbrec vehicles in
ooas rocusins on suspicious swu
various stages of rus~" Neely said.
· value."
·
- rcmovina tbc soil layer by layer; tbio8."
Tests will be completed on tbe
Through
tbe
barrage
of
media
covThe
seareb
was
complicated
Neely said. About 80 percent of tile
potential evidence' at BCI beade!'g~ and tbe lack of any major
because
one
area
bad
20
years
of
search was a::f.leted by 10 a.m. fmdmgs, Neely said he remains trash dumped in it, Neely said. quaners, be added.
Sunday, be
.
"We don't know if this potenundatlnted.
Rose bad brought four truckloads
"Some 'Of tbe material we found
tial
evidence (proves) that there's
"Wbeo you're dealing with fra&amp;- of soil to fill io the land - so the
will require microscopic analysis in mented ioformalion that's distorted search began below this dirt, be been a violation of a crime," Neely
a lab," Neely said. "It will take this because of tbe years it's just some- added.
. said.

· McPeek said.
Some of tbe items may have
been too deep underground to fmd
tbem, be added.
"Maybe tbele's nev~r been anythin&amp; out there. If there's allesalions been made we need to track
down 8lld pursue tbem." be added.
"If I don't present tbe area to them
(the do's), it's not tbeir fault tbey
missed tL"
McPedt said he works to deveiop tbe natural huntlof iostlocts of
bls dogs. The drives melude hunt,
fetc:b, play and retrieve - but
hunting remains the most tmportaoL
· . A dog's olfactory sense Is more
tbaD 1,000 times more sensitive
than humans, McPeek said.
Only one in 86 dogs he tests
actual!): make it through bls trainina. McPeek added. He selects
many of bls dogs from Europe and·
loots at tbell1 blmself.
Tbe search for physical evidence oo Rose's Mile Hill Road
farm ended Sunday. Bureau of
Criminal Investigation and ldcotilication autborities are taking potential eYidence found at tbe site back
to the BCIIabonilory for testing,
BCI's Terry Neely said.

SPECIAL INVESTIGATOR - Tbe aearcb for barled boclielln
llac:lne wu conducted by • specialized taam ollnYatlpton, par·
llcnlarly Sam, a 5-year-old black labrador. Sun, lbowa ben wltb
bll owner and trainer Benjle McPeek, and a bloodllound MU'Ched
tlae Harold Roae Sr. rarm ror I total or 30 boun Friday tlarougb
Sanclay, McPeek uld.
.

EPA urges
dioxin study
on pulp mill

Town grieves as slain
children are interred

rice .......... or dae

at of UAW Local1615; Bldd
Local16115; Br- Gnlr, plant 1
1&amp;-F-,pr tldaatoflllec-runlad!JIInanaiCinadl
... plla&amp;'• h - I"'IIOII"Ct =wnspr.

· Wben do you wut to rellre1
Tile JODDIU yoa are, tile more
.daDe JOii llave 10 ride out upsllld
cloWDIID die JllitbCI; So you're In
a ,IOOd polidoal to take llllvantaie
ofIJOWib-oriell~ atock loYeJt•
lllellll. 'l1le c:loiC1' you are to retiremeat, tile. more you'll probably
Wllllto pacr~ tile asacta you've
· IIXt
tile yc111811d tile
leal lilcllned ycu'D be Ill take mucll
riak . wltil tile doUara you've
· ·-am•=ed. (However, don't foraet
· dlllllatfledcl!' doclll't Slop W&lt;Jikio&amp;
. j1llt bccim• you do. You may Willi
· IO,.COI.... ICIDC arowth-«icnted
iaYeatmenU even 11 you near

6-14-16-33-40-43

Page4

North American Seareil Dogs net_work, McPeek said doas "beat tbc
bell out of any machine.~
Me~ bll trained 13 dogs for
tbe Obto State Highway Patrol,
dogs for police in Houston aitd
Akron, from oortbeast states
By GEORGE ABATE
tbrou&amp;Jl tbe south, he added. OurSentinel NtWI Stair
.
in1
tile -1988 OlympiC: games in
Sam's hlgbly-tralned nose
Seoul.
Soutb Korea, McPeek's
ensured ~tborltlt1 were lookiog in
do
as
searched
fc:ir nattotics and
tbe right places when tbey seard1ed
for children•s remains behind a explosiva.
But, despite tbe bigb-profile
Racine farm.
searches
bls doas bave participated
Sam, a 5-yel}t-Oid blac:k
in,
tbla
weekend's
wort proved an
labrador, and a bloodhound
even
greater
cballcoac,
be added;
scoured the Harold Rose Sr. farin ·
"lf
aoytbillg,
it's
more
intrlauFriday tbrougb Sunday, owner
ing
to.me,"
McPeek
said.
"You're
Benjie Mc:Pedt said Sunday.
"Tbey call me tbc 8UIII of polkc jluttina together pieces that DO ODe
else c:an with a damn do&amp;."
dolls." McPeek said.
The two dogs' searcb of tbe
Recent asslanmenta for his
farm was successful, with
Rose
superior doas included searcbioa
several
"blts," lle added.
for bodies following tbc rec:ent
"Tbey
can eliminate areas," be
Pittsburgh allport area plane aasb
said.
"It
would
tate many men to
8lld loeating a Huron woman four
docaotbcdo.!ame
thinK
tbese. two dogs
fays after sbc committed suicide.] .
The dol• followed a ICCDt a balf
The searc:b was a ::r,roverbial
'mile to a small farm pond 8lld lbeo
needle
in the baystac:k • since no
tbcy Jumped 1o tbe pond. sbowma
specific
areas we~e dulaoated to
divers tbe exact spot wbere tbe
searcb
and
the poten~ eYideoce
body lay, Mc:Pect said
was
so
old
and fragQieoted,
An executive director of tbe

Some homes try to sepruate
you from the environment
Our homes make yoo a
partofit'

MOSCOW (AP) - Boris
Yeltslo' s JOYaiiiiiCIIIWU In arow•
Ins disarray Friclay w1111 t11e rcaianation of a top advocate of ccooomlc reform and tile IIJlPOiniDICDt
of tile tblrd lloancc minlst« in four

7%1
Super Lotto:

Trainer's special
sleuths utilized
by law agencies

Both have leather, only 200 miles.
See tnem now! Both are 1995 Models!

1990.

Pick4:

S·p ecially-trained dogs aid
in search 9f Meig$ farm

1-Red Cutlass 4 Dr.
1-White Cutlass 4 Dr.

President Clinton trumpeted lbe
news of falUn&amp; UDCIDploymcnt jtlll
before tile midterm elcc:ti0111, sayIn&amp; it showed bls administration
bas "delivered· wbal tile Amttlam
people have IODJ waotcd."
. 'I1Ie Labor~ saki Friday tile joblcaa rate declined from
~.9 peaceut to ~.8 percent In Octo.. bcr, tbe IOMSt level Iince October

967

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel Newa Stair
Investigators uncovered about
two handfuls of potential evidence
after nearly tbrec days of excavlling a Racine farm for children•s
bodies, Bureau of Crimlnallnvestillations and Identification chief
investiJator Tary Neely said Sunday.
Wbile the portiOII of the probe
focusing on pbysical evidence
ended at 12:45 p.m. Sunday, the
investigation of allegations against
Rose will oontinue. Mei~s County
Sberlff Jamea Soulsby said.
Family members of U.Oid Rose
Sr. told authorities remains may
have been burled on tbe Mile Hill
Road property behind some sbeds
and bama. Due 10 tbc COIIteDt Of tbe
~r~. Soulsby said he bad to
mvcsugatc tile allegations.
The sheriff refused to mnment
on whether charges could be filed
aaainst Rose solely on family
members' information.
Tbg pbasc of !!!e invcslig!llio!!
does not focus on cblld or sexual
abuse, Soulsby said. Tbe eourse of
future legal action will be decided
by Meigs Couoty Prosecutor John
Lcotes, be added.
"(Rose) ba! denied doins aoytbinl out tbere," SQulsby said,

.Just Arrived

qaio.

Pick 3:

No bodies found at Racine
farm; BCI to test findings

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT CENTER

Solheim Cup .• Oldsmobile
Courtesy Cars!

.Business briefs

Browns,
Bengals
triumph

·Search ends

•e

REPRESENT '75 YEARS OF SERVICE • T11ae
repreteal 75 ,.an of aenke lo Olllo Valletlr::-k In Ga
Pint row, left to rlpt (willa ,_... laa pareD
~ are LIIJ ole7
(10), IlaJPIOIId PG1cJn (10); T- Sllepllerd
and Naner Rille,
10. Standlna, left to rJabt are PeliDJ
Moll7 Tarbett
(10), Jim Dalle7, preallfat IIIII CEO;
IPd Mike
Prudl(5).

Ohio Lottery

'I

tbe lake.
"It's false. It's made up,"
Bruck told The AP. "The sheriff
bas never beard of sucb an account
and oeitbet bas tbe solicitor."
MJs. Smith, 23, Is cbarled with
murder in the deaths of Michael
aud bis 14-montb-oltt brother.
Alex, wllo drowned in the. back
seal ol bet Mazda 11it sank in Jolm
D. LOlli Lite near here.
"Tbey're bomo where tbey ·
beloo1.' • the Rev. Bob Cato told
tbe hundreds of p,eople at their
funeral Sunday. 'Tbe)"re bome
wbere:tbere'a no more pain, oo
more IDIUhh, no more people
ICI'CIIIIiD&amp;IetOII tbc ariel lrylns
eo act In a wool qewlse. And ya, ·
Diliiii\R media llklna ui for stateIIICIIII."
.
A$ tbe muftled criel of moumen arew loUder, booodol off brict
walil ll tbe small Buffalo United
Metilodill Cburcb, "Away iii a
Manaer" played over spea1ten.
David Smitb, bil abouldera
bowed ad a bandkcrcblet: Jtlflln•
Ilia sobs, lben followed bls sons'f
lilii~ casket out of tbe cbun:b and

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Buckeye

voters
By JOHN McCARTHY
Aaoclatad Prell Writer
Logan, Obio, is only SO mile~
soulbeast of tile lillie capital. But It
might as well be light yean away
say ·residents preparioa to vote
Tuesday.
The mood Ia angry - Dot Just In
the Appalachian footbilla, but In
cities, suburbs and fann1 around
tile state.
Tbe Associated Pren spoke
wltb two dozen people around
Ohio about tbeir conc:ema as Election Day apJI'D8Cbcl. .
To Logan residents, Coluanbus
is bome to two of lbe town 'a 11J01ts
heroes. AU-American Katie S'mitb
leads tbe Ohio State woaoeo'a balketball team, while place-kieter
Josb Jackson leads tbe football
team in scOOoj.
0n· a recent S:itunlay a1'temooo,
some of tbe town's 6,725 relidcnts
listened on the radio 11 Jackson
helped tbe Buckeyes bCat Purdue.
Or tbey spent tbe day Wlldlioa 111e
leaves on tbe towering 1ree1 of lbe
Wayne National Forest reueat into
aotumo.
But mention tbe names Gcoqe
Voioovieb or ~ob Burch, or Joel
Hyatt Of Mike DeWine, and tbo
smiles tum to frowns.
Nanette Swinehart, who h11
lived io Logan all her life, Is 1
guidance counselor in the loc:al
school system . Two issues are
important to her: abortioo rights
and education funding. Especially
education funding.
Sbe supports a lawsuit flied in
neigbba'iog Peny County wbere a
judge declared tbe state's fundioj
formula uncoostitutioual bccansc i(
unfairly rewards wealthy school
dislricts.
.
Leadina the opposition to tbe
suit is Voinovicb, a popular Republican seeking a second four-year
tenD as governor.
·
Swinehart. 39, said poor, IJIII'IC·
ly populated southeastern Obio
school districiS can only raise about
one-tenth tbe money that wealthier
- and more Republican - dll. trlcts can raise with tbe same tu·
rale.
"He (VoinoYich) doeso't aeem
to see that as a problem. He knowa
we don't bavc the mass of voten·
like be bas in Clevelaild so be just
blows us otf," sbc said.
So Swinehart is votinJ for
Democrat Burcb.
"I don't even know what he.
stands for, but I toow wbat.
Voinovicb stands for," sbe said.
Other voters felt their cooccani
were mostly isnored in Columbus
and in Wasblnaton.
Outside tbe Jeep plant io Tole- ·
do, Ted Goodman wondered how ·
DeWine, a RepubliCIII, lOCI Hy111;
a Democrat. would belp tbal finan.
cially battered city Bet baf;k on ill
feet. The city bas lost thousands ol
jobs since tbe 1970s to areas witb
lower wages and utility rates.
"I've seeo quite a few companies puU out of bere. I've ICCII a lot
of people with 30-pius yeara
seniority lose tbcir jobs, a lot of
•people with that mucb time 1os1na
!thm medical benefits. It just
doesn't cit it." said OOoc!man, a
36-year-old Demoent from Bowling Green.
,

CHARLESTON, ·.-1. Va. (AP)
- FecJen1 environmental officials
say Welt Vqioia officials made
loconeCt ellimales in detcrmioiDg
tbe leYel of dioxin a proposed
Masoo Coon
. ty pulp mill could discharge into tbc Obfo River.
Mary Sancbez, 47, ofToledo, Ia'
1 U.S. 9!v:ronmental Protection
a
divorced
mother of four and·
Agency officials have urged a
arandmotber
of seven. She u 1:
study Of tbc currcot dioxin levels in
worted 16 .years at Jeep 11 a pro-·
tbe river.
. But Eli McCoy, deputy director duction worker. She basn •t made; '
of the state Divisiou of Environ- up ber mind about tile Senate race. :
"The oply tblna I bow abotlt:
mental Prolection. Slid tbc agency
Hyatt
is lie founded a law ru:m hut I'
bll adeqnate information·.
don't
~
where 11e ltiDda oa111e:.
The EPA has coocluded dioxin
Issue.
DcWioe?
It aecma ute be' a'
~ caoccr and reproductive lnd
developmen ... diaordcn. Dioxins a:tways runnina for aometlalna .. : .
~ ·
are produced by 'VIrious industrial Saoc:bcz said.
lo
tbe
wealthy
kburbl
east
processes. iocludioa tbe bleacblna
of pulp and paper that uses chlo- Cleveland, Adele Adler IDd ber· '
llus~d owu IDd run two Adler~
rine.
•• '
The mill needs a federal penoit, Sporting Goods Slorcs.
~ticiao&amp;
blame
eiCil
otber
~or:·
issued by tbe state agcocy, to dissociety' allis but voters m,.t IICitCipl:: charge waste into tbe river.
-:
The amount of toxic chemicals ' some respoosi'Wity, sbe said.
"I
always
vote,"
lliid'
Adler
..,
:•.
(COntinaed on Page J)
of1Beachwood.
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THE FACE OF GIUI!F- Tile lace of DaYid Sanllll reflected
lall IIDDJ M Itt - tiCCII'tad bJ lllil tJDC1e, DoDJ Smltb, and Ills
ataPDIDdaer, s- Sanlda, aftR ..m- for 1111 two 10111 Sunday In
Bulralo, S.C. (AI') '
Into an overcast day. They .were
burled nearby, 11 tbc BoppaviDe
United Methodist Cbun:JI cem~-

police drawing based on ber
dcaaiplion was tranSmitted nationwide, and after her coDfesslon,
tcry.
·
· muy blacks across tbe country
'111c boys were found Thunclay, expased uaer that sbc blamed a
oioe ·days after tbclr mother told black mao, and !bat so many
police a black mao with a au11 believed bcr.
drove off wltb her ~bllcJJen . ,A

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~~~~oncla~!Y·~N~o~vet~m~be~r7~,~1!894~~-~---..:...________!Po~m~e~r~o~~·::!I~AI~dd~le~p~o~rt,~O~h~lo~------------~The~~D~al~ly~Sentl~~ne~!:l::!PI4~01:;.·:a!.··

,~ -commentar
WASHING'ION - The Clinton

Ill COIIJ't Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

··..

. admiolalralloo is stuck 00 the IUSb

of an elephantine foreign policy
dilemma.

.f'U.l'KDIA.NC.
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ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher

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CIIAIU.ENE HOEFLICH
Genenl Ma~~~~ger •

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

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I.J!TI1!RS OF OPINION aJe welcome. They lbould be less than 300
wollh long. All !etten are subject to editin' and must be signed with name,
oddreoa and telepbone number. No unsigned !etten will be publisbed. Lettcn
sbould be in &amp;ood ture, addressing iuuea, not penonalitiea.

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Mourning doves under
. gun ag~in in Senate
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Preas Writer
•
COLUMBUS - Mourning doves may fmd themselves under the gun
'., 8l a postdec:lion legislative session wbem lam-e duck is usually the main

' coune.

Bureaucrats from 124 nations
are converging this week on Ft.
Lauderdale, Fla., for tbe 20th
anniversary of the U.N. Convention
on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), the landmark agreement that governs .the
global trade in animals threatened
with extinction. For the third
straight meeting, one of the most
controversial items on the agenda
will be the f8le or the African elephant, which was threatened with
extinction until CllES outlawed all
commercial trade in elephant parts
in 1989.
Less than five years later, South
Africa's new leader, Nelson Mao·
deJa. wants lotematiooal approval
for a plan that would allow bis
country to export elephant meat
and bides. Predictably eoougb,
Mao!lela. s plan bas raised the, ire of
conservationists around the world,
who helped engineer the ban in the
flf5l place.
The elephant issue will force the

Clinton administration to choose
between two weighty objectives:
Staying true to the earth-friendly
lmase it projected in 1992, w~o

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein .
Vice P'esident AI Gore helped
make environmentalism a defmiog
plank or tbe Clinton platform; and
supporting Maodela. a saint among
world leaders since his lriumphant
election as the fi(Sl post-apartheid
pre5ident of South Africa.
"It poses a classic conflict,"
one senior admiolstratioo official
told UJ. "(South Africa) is already
culling the elephant, so do you
want to throw the bides on the rubbish dump,.or do you want to ship
lbem to... a bool G0111p8DY in Texas.
whicb is the only place in the world
where they make elepbant·sklo
boots."
'Ibis official told us the White
House is trying to enginner a cpm.
promise that would allow South

.

Senate Agricuhun: Cbainnan Ben Gaeth, R·Defiance, plans to c:all for
a vote on a bill that would add the state's estimated 4 million mourning
doves to the game biid list.
·
· The bill, whicb has beeD peoding ill the Senate since House appoval ill
Mar, 1993, would allow an lllliDJll) bunting season of the bird. ·
'We'm going to have a, vote up or down," Gaeth said ill an illterview
last week.
· Senators a~e to meet for a brjef session the week ol Nov. 14 before
adjourning b the year. .
The term lame duck refers 10 legi.slaJon wbo, bec:anse of relimnent or
defeat !D .Tuesday' s election, will not relum for the new two-year session
that begins ill January.
Gaeth, the lead Senate advocate for the bill, lust a bid for quick action
in May 1993 within hours after his COOIIIIiuee rerommended the legisla·
lion for passage. Opponents cautioned against putting the bill on a fast
track that might geoerare a QIIISlitueot backlash.
The bill bas been pending since lbeo. Gaetb said lime is running out.
"Well, it's getting late in the session. You've got to take your last lick.
That'll be the Wt session we have. Either then or never. We're too close
DOW to DOl give it tty," be said.
Proponents said dove bunting promotes management of a natural
JeSOun:e, and tbal 37 other states permit sucb seasons.
()ppooeots said bunting would inaease incidental Jglls of similar binls,
and diain limited Ohio DiviSion ol Wildlife suptilxt froni existing wildlife
IIUIII88ement programs.
The Humane Society ol the United States sounded an .alarm about die
bill's apparent new lease on life.
·
•
Sandy Rowland. director of the group's Great Lakes Regional Office,
· said postelection sessions wm ~ to handle critical issues.
: . "This is an issue in wblcb IIO(bm* is broken, therefore no lime should
be spent trying to fiX it,'' Rowland said in a news release.
•7.;: The society described mourning cloves as gentle ~ard binls wi!lJ no
: : · overpopulation problems. It said the four-ounce btrds do not prov1de a
:? major food source.

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~~:· Today in his_
tory ·

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~· Jly, Tile Allodttted r•t
. Today Is Monday, Nov. 7, the 31lth day of 1994. Tbere are S4 days

:: .:.left in the yell'.
.
: :, • Today's higbligbt in blsWry:
•t . Fifty yean ago, on Nov. 7, 1C)44, Presldeot Roosevelt won an Dllplec:C·
: • -dented fourdl term in office, dcfcaling 'lbomaS E. Dewey.

·: . On Ibis dale:
.
:;
Jo 1874, the Republkao Party was symbolized as 111 elephant in a car: • t0011 chwD by 'lbOIIIaa Nastin 8~~per'a Weekly.
•:
Jo 1893, the al8lc of Colorado p1Dted liS WOIIIellthe right to vote.
:~
Jo 1916, Republlcao Jeannette Rankin of MontaDa .became the first

: • woman elected to Coogreu.

.
·:
Ill 1917, Russia's Bolshevik Revolution took place as fon:ea led by
:: Vladimir llyicb Ltalo om threw the provialooal govemmeut ol Aleuo. • der ICetensky.
;:
In 1918, during World War I, 1D CITDIICOUJ report from the Uolled
: : Preaa that Ill armistice bad boeD ligiled set off celebmtions across the

•·, counuy.

:~

· In 1929, the MllleUIII ol Modem Art in New York Oty opened !0 tbe
.
•• •••.publif:.
.
•
~:. · Ill 1940, the middle lec:liOII of the TIICOIIUl NBII'Ows Bridge m Wub·

.- .. ingto!l state c;oi!Jpri during a wloclatorm.
lo 1962, Ricblrd M. Nixon, baviq lOll California'~ gullernai!JIII race,
':-held wbat be called Ilia "last pial CQIIfaeoce," telling reporlCill; ''You
: ·~:woo't .bave Nlml to kkt'lmlld Uymii'C."
•&gt; In 1962, former ftnt lady f!euor ltcolevelt died ill New Ylllk City,
: :: lo 1963, die all.CIOIIICidy "It's a Mad, Mad. Mid, Mad
: -:w~·· bad 1ea wOrld~ 1a Hollywood.
- ·; :: 1o 1972, Paee'dmii'&amp;!JD wu re-dec:tcd In a tandstidc over Dcmocral
: : .:'

em.....

~ : {~'i~

ovarode Pmideut Nixon's veto of -.e W• Powcn
• : Act, flbidlllmilla dlief executive's powa-'to wage war wilboat c:ongrea-

.::;siouliJ010ioOYIL
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Berry•s World

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'Whet'•.the matter - you don't know about
·."'~''It
..._w. . down' lilt offices on Fridays?• ·

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Africa to Cllport fmisbed products, official said.
'· ' ,
which would move the boot trade · Maodela's 'ovcnmieat.malato South Africa. The compromise tains that a paniallif\iDS of pse ban
would ,;ve Maodela a foothold in woul(l not hlJI1 $outh Atfica ~surf.·
the small but lucrative elepl!ant· ing elepbant populalion,. but wou d
akin boot market. Elephant-skin provide desperately, nc:ed.ed hard
boots bave traditionally been the currency for Mandel!! s regiiJie.
bfloiS of princes and potelllBlCS, as
But some feel die nia1 issue in
elephant bide makes some of the Ibis deb8lC iS iv&lt;iry, wblcb was the
world's lllOSl durable Jeatber.
chief motivation bebin\1 the whole"Before Nelson Maodela's sale slaughter that depleted the ele·
(election), Soutb Africa wouldn't pbaot .populatioo in the 1980s.
have bad a chance of getting this "When the ban passed. less than
kind of resolution, •• the official five years ago, 7Q,I:J(Xl, kl .~!JO.OOO
said. "Now all of a sudden, the elephants wm being ilOidiCd each
world is saying, 'If Maodela wants year in Africa." said 'Allan Thorn·
It, maybe we should listen to ton, bead of EnvirODmentallovestibim."' AltbouRb America only bas gatioos Agency; a london-based
one vote in the CITES meeting, its group that Is fi,~ting South
position will be pivotal in deciding Africa's proposal. ,lbe enforcebow JO!IIIY other couolriel vote on meot effc.u couldo l s!ID_d up to
the issue.
.
· · · the -power of lbe potlcbilia· gangs,
A White House official involved · wbk.b were fueled. by ~lotema·
in the debate told our associaiC Jan tional criminal ·~yndi~atca" that
Moller that a fmal decision probe- . were malci~g .millions (rom the
bly won't be made until after the global trade m 1vory.
·
meelina begins. "No matter where
~ince the ban was imposed. die
we GOlDe out, it's go~ to be at least Afncan elephant bas ~me one
considered in part refle~tive of or tbe-J!feal succesu_~lCS of the
(South Africa's) record of responsi- conservation mov'emeilt. The
ble management of elephants, •• tbli . worldwide p~ qfJ .v;c~ ~ plum·
meted, and the black ·mm..et that
qnce thrived bas been severely c:oosttaloed. Bot it bas also left South
Africa with a large inventory of
i¥ory. that slts.practicall¥..useless.
· Tlie cons'ervationisiS·1ielicve that
dowolisting the eklpbant would
soon bring the iv&lt;JII)' marltet back
where-it w.S. · ·: -- ·
"There-'s oq quesilon·that It's
just a scam to reopen .the ivory
trade.''· said .Craig Van Note. who
beads a coalition 11f'-2~ oonservatioo ·ancl •aoll;nill• we !fan~• groups;
"There .-e missive stockpiles of
ivory left .by poacliers who want to
unload that stockpile:·They've
taken a bath·on what they bought at
bigh prices, since what they .bave
iso'treally valuable.'''"
·
This isn' t the fust lime South
Africa bas lried to wiggle.out from
the rigid ·cbtistrallits ot:tbe CITES
ban. At the last meeting, lo-1992,
South'African President F.W. DeK·
Jerk· proposed a similar measure,
wblcb ·was ·tutned down in the face
or strong opposition. · · ·
Now it remains. to ,be seen
· wlletlfer Maoaela'ftbanit'cao persuade America to reverse itself on
one of tbC·J'aDdmlirlt achievements
of ibe ootise..Vatlon.movell\ent.
Jack Ancl,non ,, p,!,\,l\11cbael
Blostein are wrllen for Unlled
'
Feature Syndicate, Inc:.

.

- is the very idea of due proc:ess.
basic fairness. Or, as defmed by
Justice William Brennan: "Due
process asks whether. the worth of

NatHentoff
an individual bas been ackoowl·
edged ... if due p-oCeas values are to
be preserved in the bureaucratic
state of the late 20th century,' it
may be essential that officials possess passion - the same passion
that would put lbem 1o touch with
the dreams and disappololmeoiS ol
those with whom they deal."
I have talked to college presidents and provosts about the par·
tous state of passionless. alleged
due process ,on tbeir campuses.
Their invariable.aoswer 'is that they
are utterly averse to bringing in the
lawyers and the JeSt of the adver·
sary system In the courts wjlb
which the rest of 08 deal.
AJ one college president put It,
"lbls is famUy. We don't 'prosecute' people.'' Yet these "family"
disciplinary proceedings can and
sometimes do result in students
being suspended or expelled pertoaneot marks On thetr records,
closing off entrances Jo graduate
sebooJ and to certain jObs,
Jo a recent case Federal District
Judge Vincent B~oderick of the
Secoad Circ1,1it gave colle4es
urseot advice as to bow to bnng
·

sons, Earl Clifford Adkins Jr. of Brancbtand. and Mark Allen Adkins of
Saodyville, W.Va.; aild a graodsat.
She waa also preceded in death by a sister, Joyce Workman, and an

W.VA.

Archie M. Dorst

l Partly s~nny skies siated
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for region on Electi9n Day

• BJ Tbe AIIGdatld Pnll

a.m.

Weather forecast:
Today ...Partly sunny north·
east. .. Mostly sunny elsewhere.
Highs from the mid 50s to lower
60s.
Tonlgbt... Mostly clear. Lows
from lbe mid 30s ID lower 40s.
.
Tuesday ...Partly sunny and a lit·
tie warmer with highs in the 60s.
Extencllll forecul:
- Wedliesday...A chance of rain.
Lows lo the 40s and highs fran the
mid SOs to mid 60s.
Thursday .. .Fair. Lows 35 to 40
and highs 45 to 50.
Friday ...Falr. Lows in the 30s
andhigbs in the SOs.

TempcraliU'ca dipped to ncar
freezin~~mucb of Obio early
today. .
bad i below-freez.
log 30 dc&amp;Joea.
Clear ~~ cteatec1 by a blgb
prciiiii'C lyalem wiD allow. daytime
warmth to escape into the atmosJ)IIcrc qlin IOoigbt, the Naliooal
• Weat.brr Service said. Lows of 3.5: 40napec:ted.
Sklea wUI be partly sunny on
Tuesday with flip in the 60s.
.
The mud·hilb tempcntltlre for
Ibis dale Ill the Columbus weather
statioa waa 78 degrees Ia .1938
wbllc tbe record low· was 20 in
1971. Suoseltooigbt wW be at S:23
p.m. llld sunrise TuesdaY at 7:09

·~ EPA

:'
(Coa"ntd r.- Pqel)
: lbll 1111 be dlac:blqed Ullllet suc.b
, _.,. 'J..IIased 111 Taow Iillich of 1
: ...-·

chemical is already in tbe river ..
. State envi~oo~ental officials
assumed the dioJUD le~el was r.ero
when they granted a discharge per-

: Uoita of tbc Meigs County
: Bmeraeacy Medical Service
: rec:uded 16 calli for "li'IIDce Frl·
: da Sllllrday aad Sllllday. Unill

with the EPA Watet Management
Division, said tbe state-should
reassess its findings.
"In light. of concerns raised
about poteoual elevated levels of
dioxin in tbe Obio R.i ver. we
believe the aiaumptioo of zero
dioxin back around In tbe 011111
River In calculali_ng the p~rm~~
Umi~ b diollin Is mappropn81C,
- MO«M WfOie in an Oct. 31 memo
to 11a1e oftlc:lal.s.
!-forrla satd bla :;::;, w~uld
assiat the llalO ill de
I dioxIa levels in flab llssue and seCilment
in the river
David Nla&amp;b•n, director of
state ~ivislon, said bls agency It
· P!_partDI backJI'OUIId lnformatloq
011 water quality tests and ftsb lis·
lUI: for the federal agency.
"lbeJ doll't know what we'vo
got," Callasllan said. "We\ro
going to put all that toJelbct'. Wo
want to .~tisfy every legitimate
coocern.
Gov. 0.0 Cllperton has been
a suoaa ~tdvocale o.f the JDill,
whicll be '-YI would bring 600 per.
i:~tal · bave sailS

. ~ iPCiude¢
: ....- Clllll'fiUl VI'Q

6•19 .JII Saturday, ~ooda

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• lload •u•" fire Gloria Bmer
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; 4:~-P.IIL SalunJI)', ~
• Volu8111W f1ro ~1. North
: JeCOII4 AvtiiPe, llllOk~ o4or,
•---''

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Oil
• 10:0 1 p.na. Sa•urclay, Flallcr
: """' Bet.b' SIIVCQ. lnlllported !0
' ~ • t.fcdlcal Ceacer by

: Koltllllllol:

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p *SIIada, PQwcll
~ · 1ntolll. VMfl·
. : · 4 a~y, Ovlllb«K*
; I« Ada
VMJI

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!1•2l. p.'':1c:~I!Y· l'le•aaot

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n:sa a.•.

:: Rl4ie
~

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lauirdiy.

Jatpr4' ay PNI{C,
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Loo Road.

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Boddlaa 'Carier'ttl, for-r
St~t• Debirtmtiil .-ii.lllullil•
·lllld"•Wanl-wlnoiDI ~·lilt.
· tor~ plih!Wier,'tl pa ..... ~
.. ~ • .w~ D.C"'

'f!YioJ, J«MC,M • M1oo

• ·

bers and gues!-' age 10 and up, ~bll·

Tbe Rock Springs United
Melbodist Women will serve sand·
wicbes, soup and desserts Tuesday
at the cburcb. atarliing at 11 a.m.

dreu under DtDe eat free. Reg!ster
with Mildred Ziegler before.eanng.

will

Modem WoociiDindinner
Modem Woodmen of America,
Burlingham Camp 7230, dinner 8l
Dale's Smorgasbord, noon to 2 p.m
Sunday, Nov. 13. $2.50 for mem-

.

Annual bazaar set
Tbe annual fall bazaar of the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church,
Pomeroy, will be held Thursday
with serving to begin at 4:30 p.m.
Cost of the dinner is $5 for adults
and $2.50 for children, 12 and
under. Crafts will be sold, games
played, and door prizes awarded
during tbe eveoillg.
.

COLUMBUS (AP) -

Ohio

points Monday by the Ohio Depart·
ment of Agriculture:

Hospital news
·

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday admissions -11011e.
Saturday dilcbar&amp;"' - Bonnie
~. Racloe.
Slloda)' admissions - Rodney

~. Rlicioe.

SQDday discharges - DODC.
HOJ.ZER MEDICAL CENTER
Dlschrges Nov. 4 - David
Sword, J&gt;velyn Melton, Mrs.
Mlcbaei ·Roacb and son, Leslie
Shepherd, Mrs. Orion Briel and
dauglller.
DIK...Illea Nov. 5 - Lee Fer.ell, Jonalllon Ross, Mary Barnette.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Cbristy, son. Apple GrQve, W.Va.
Dlsclt,rges No¥. II - Mrs.
Olarles ()llristy and sop, Elizabeth
Bumeu, Verlio Henderson, came
Gibbs.
Blrtb ~Mr. and tdrs. Kevin
Byrd, son, Oak Hill.
{PiibU.hed wttb pe..,...loa)

MAKE IT A1\UI.L
QSE WANJ ADS, .·
A
. ~

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Attempted burglary probed
The Meigs County Sheriffs· Department is invea_!iaalina 10
attempted burglary at the Belva Willard residence on ~~~ ·
Road.
According to a sberift'a report, Willard beard a nolle IIOUIId 2
a.m. Sallllllay, beard glass ll'eak on tJie kilcbea dool'llld went to the
kitcbeo and yelled, causing the IUJpecl to Oee.
Willard llllempted to call for help, but the pbooc - dead.
Late Saturday morning, a neighbor discuvered that telepbooe
lines bad been cuL lo addition, sungtauca were found in her yard. It'
was also discovered that vehicles belongillg to David Reed bad been
enteled and sunglasses and cbaoge, along widl a weed cal« in an
open garage, bad been stolen.
,
At the Reed JeSidence, deputies lcamed that Reed' a oeigbbor,
Sreve Story, bad two tires flattened. Telephone lines at the Story
residence bad been cuL

Woman cited in accident
An Akron woman was cited followillg a two-car aa:ideDl ll lbe
intersection of U.S. Route 33 and State Route 7 in Pomeroy Satur·
day morning .
According tothe Pomeroy Police Department, a 1975 Ford Mustang driven by Johnny A. Kline, 23, of Tuppen PlaiOI, -IIOPPed
at the intersection when bis car was sii'IICk fian belliDd by a H193
Ford Taurus driven by Rebecca C. Grifflllt, 32.
No injuries we~e report. Damqe to Kline's car wu reported as
light wblle DO damage waa reported to Griffitb' 1 car.
Griffith was cited for asstD'Cd clear distance.

Leading Creek issues boil order .

Genealogical Society to meet

The Meigs Genealogical Society
will meet Tuesday at S: 15 p.m. at
the Meigs Museum .

Union approves Shell contract

Bartows and gilts: mostly 50
cents lower; demand light to moderate.

U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs .. counuy
points 27 .00-28.00, instances
28.5()..28.75; plants 28.00-29.75.
U.S.. 2-3, l30-260 lbs., couotty
pointt25.00-V ,00.
Prices fro111 The Producers Livestock Associalion:
Cattle: steady to 2.00 lower.
Slaughter s~rs: choice 60.11070.00; select !2.25-64.00.
Slaughter j!ejfers: choice 60.0070.23; select ~5.00-6l.OO.
1
Cows: steady to l.OO lower; all
cows S125 and dowtj.
Bqlls: steady to ::tOO lower; all
buUs ~ .00 and down,
Veal catve5: 10,00 to 20.00
bigbQt; cboice 175.00 and down.

-:::o~- Flowers
"SoyLo~Wo&lt;hFrom!"
··

levels of dloxtDuli03ie rivet' aniJ
have Uf8cd tllo OIJCIIIIO!, Panoos 4
Whittemore Jnc, o.f Rye Brook,
N.Y., to'* ~leacbmg.~hnlqueJ
that woul4 Pill mlease dioxms.

A driver and her four pauc:nacn suataioed minor inJuriel SaW·
day afternoon when lbeir vebide waa llrUCit fian behind, l.be Oil•
lia-Meigs Poat of the Stale Hilbway l'llnll reportccl
·
Driver Melody A. King, 21, 33151 Happyllollow Road. MJddle. '
port, and passengers Debbie L. Y01t, 33; and Joillua B. Y01t, 8, ·
both of 35402 Loop Road, Rutland. IDd Patricia A. Kina. 53, lllo
of 331Sl Happy Hollow Road, were tranlported by tbe Gallla
County Emergency Medical Service to Holzer Medical Center
wbele they we~e treated for strain and released
·
Aa:ordiog to the accident report, Kin&amp; was soudlbouocl on Su :
Route 7 near Addison wbeo she waa struck fian behind by Belllel
Belcher, 73, South Point. King bad IIOpped to make a left turn loiO
a private drivewa,y.
. Damage to both cars was sligbL The crasb moaios llllder iDvCIIi·
gation, the palrol said.
·

Leading Creek Conservancy District cUJtomers in portions of
Salisbury Towosbip are being advised to boil tbeir water.
Areas affected by the order include all ol County Road 22 (Laurel Clift), east of Towosbip Road 208 (Burdette Road), all of TOWII·
ship Road 78 (Willow Creek Road) and all of Towosblp Road 205
(Goeglein Road).
A four-loeb water maio ruptured Saturday along Laurel Cliff
Road, causing the problem. LCCD offJCiall said.
Tbe order will remain in effect until fwtbcr notice. Residcnl&amp; n
advised to boil all drinking and cooking water for three minutes
before use.

Today's livestock r~port
direct bog pices at selected buying

Four injured in two-car crash

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - A oew three-year e&amp;llttacl
between Shell Chemical Co. and Local 644 ol the Uoiled Rubber
Workers was appoved in voting by the local Salluday.
The vote was 303-106 ill favor ol the ClOIItract, whicb will expire
Nov. 5, 1997. A IOia1 ol 537 employees are covered by the aan:emenL

--- - .

Straigfi,t.
&amp; !J{pJJsli
:Funeraf:Honre
~venswood,~;~04)~21$2

PrenHd- Atn

Poatneed
SEftVING JACKSON (WV.) MASON (WV.)
AND MI!IGS

COUNTIES

POMERQV
. •·
FLOWER SHOP
106 Butternut Ave. Pml'eroy. OH •

(614) 992-6454.

:~ ~£.li&amp;.m.aor
-~~..--~':~~-·~-~~===(=800:):43:3:-6;10=3==~====~!!!!~

;....~,~:::= FRED HOFFMAN
· ·The P..Uy Sf'Qdnel

Yo111 County Coa,mla•loqer

D-tlieatell to ProvitiJJig Jolls
'
atttlln4uslrlfllaptl.Business
Oro~h In ••ils Cpunt'!
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Boll) a11d raised in Southern O~ io.
Lon ~-tjme resident of Lucasville.

Fo~er Sheriff of Scioto County- 16 years.

IIIIF•IIII

FRED
HOFFMAN
YaarC.nty
,.,.,..-, c.,.,,, Whftfl ro ,.,,.,,,.,All Of.,,, Cou•trl

Pilei for by lilt Clndidltt, Frtclltolfn!an, 25e So. Fourth Ave.,Middleport,Ohio 45760

Attended numerous law and government in-service
training courses .
Married 38 years to Jackie; 4 sons; 8 grandchildren.

FOR. STATE

.......

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SENAT~ ·

IIII VI'II- .,.. tr ~~- """'.....,. r- ut· ~..._,._..u...._

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Current Scioto Co4nty Commissioner · 9 y~ars .

Graduate of the Ohio State Patrol Academy.

..,,..;_DoLa
_ __Cllft
_ ...
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. It

John Kn11uff is someone who cjlllge! things done for South,m
Ohio in the state Senate. He's e~perie nced, tough or cnrne, '!'ld
will help us g~t our fair .share from sljlto government as a full -lime
state SClnatpr.

Fonner Ohio State . Highway Patrolman
• 10 years .
'

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St.dll :

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Eledioll DaJ cUnner aet

Forest Run ID .bave dinner
An election day dinner
be
served 8l tbe Forest Run Metbo(!ist
Church Tuesday, II a.m. to 6 p.m.
Soup saodwicbes, desserts. Take·
out orders welcome.

; EMS logs16 calls mit~v~li~arealooaldiredor

. Dilijor,Of.llces to.tbe hlJIIIIIl bidder,
wil~i. tlle 'proceeds' app{i~d to tbe
• national debt. and tbe airwaves
freed· up fo' more. tabloid Dewa
· sbows or other fllllill 'fam. SIDce
1 ~.i.l ,ll,P,.I)Wit!J,jl' II!JfQial, COD·
· DectiOII· betweea 4Ditars apcnl IDd
! eJectiODI won, It '&amp;tlld"tiWaraue4
that ~...QII~es Jlf. IIIla, tidy pro. ced~J!e• would-eot · arouly dev...te
. fiom the likely results otllie lnldi'; II&lt;Uhiltii:tlrilpi'&lt;i(:Cii; __ -~.
.
• NQt ev!i"Y.~ .)Pf~.mcadl a mil; lloo dolfarl'~'to ooy a JI'Qililc:al job II
'. am"'tinilll!OOalie. some; llb OWe .
N&lt;!(lh o('Y~, ~ ~~Jc.dl&amp;ll
· IJI!IIIQ.~s w,bo C9!1Y~ tbclu• saods clf,tmall,pvaa.tbat'llllly they
can pr,ot~c;t f,rec!I.PP,J. fr~m tlait
1
sreateM:mVio.l.tof.liU. :ll!c Unilcd

.

.Meigs announcements

urges dioxin study

.. ~~ou ~ld simply allilauc

plllf.

Ardlie M. Dorst, 81, of Columbus, died Sunday, Nov. 6, 1994 at the
Riverside Methodist Hospital. Columbus.
Born March 19, 1913 in Olester, lbe son of the late Jacob and Rose
Powell Dorst, be was a lltalionary engineer at Ohio State Uolversity.
.
He is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Linda and Bradie GaJri.
son of Cold Springs, TelUIS; daughters, Donna Martin of Parkersb~g,
W.Va., Betty Harding of Columbus, and Dianna Niocebelser ol Coolv~e;
sons, Walter D&lt;nt or Delaware, and Garry and Joanna Dorst of Wasblogtoo, Pa.; brothers. Carl and F.mest Dorst of Chester, ~'Pearl Dorst of
Baltimore; and 10 grandcbildren and five great-gmodcbildten.
He was preceded lo deadl by IWO brothers and two sisters.
Services will be 11 a.m. Thursday In the Ewing Funeral Home, .
Pomeroy. Burial will follow at the Keebaugb Cemetery in Chester.
Friends may c:all between·7-9 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral home.

•

""'

'Stalel'iioVemmeot,-

Infant daughter, Delcns.
Services will be 7 tonight ill the Straight-Tucker .t Roush Fuoeml
Home, Raveoawood, with the Rev. Jack Gwinn and the Rev. Emmitt
Adkins officialing. Additiooal services will be 11 a.m. Wednesday In the
McGee-Handley Funeral Home, West Hamlin, W.Va., w~th the Rev.
wunam Hughes and the Rev. Emmiu Adkins officiating.
Burial will be in the Fraokllo Cemetery, Brancbland. Friends may c:a11
at the Straight·Tucker &amp; Roush Funeml Home today fran S-9 p.m. and 8l
the McGee-Handley Funeml Home Tuesday from 5-9 p.m.

• IColumbus Iss• I

proper

The demeaning campaign of lind anyone wbci conducted a lb8l the oj,posiiii c:iiiulidate is rciiJ.
1994Js at an end, and DOt a 8CCODd wholly positive race. Jbe point of Jy a polldcal werewolf.
too soon. Tbe -winners and their eacb exerdse waa to demool:re the
It the tactic:&amp; were nasty, tile
supporter~ may find satbfldloo In · opposition. Thoac.teleVision adver· price liga were obscene.
·
11, but few other Americans can. If
1
Tbe practice of millionaires
polidcs dida't bavca bad name
Hoddlng Carter Ill · lising tbc:!!f own money to buy their
before, it would have earned one
way ioiQ bigb office did not begl,n
over the past 100 days.
lisements whlcb used computer · Ia 1994. Political cartoons of a ceoTbat II DOl a panUan complaint graphica to slowly alter an oppo- tuty II&amp;O Often portiayed the U.S.
or sour grapea fian a disappointed nent'a floc called to mind those old S~nate ~ a riel! man's club. Teo
loser. MOlt oulalmea a ·lllicertaln Lilia Cb~ey movie&amp; ID l!lblc;b a years ago, John D. (Jay) Rockeas thla Is wri~. Yei wbc&gt; except decent. kindly Lon tllil)ed into ·a feller IV Spent $12 million to win
ideologuea and campaiao hired slavertna. ·murderoui werewolf election to the Senate from Weit
guns~ be happy llbout the l!Oll· bei'on y,our·cy91..11 bad ~g to · Virginia, population about 2 ~UIlea of polarizaliOD? .
·do -~~ the ~ world aliCJ,e~- lion. Tbat puts the $25 mlllion tliit
A.dcmOCI'IIC)' sucb .. oun, his- llilllfto do with ICiriog the c!j&lt;tcDS Republican senatprial candidate
torically baled on minority rigbts out of yOu.
·
r · Micbael .Huffio&amp;too ..-·this v~
111 well u mpity rule, wut not ·\. ~ maken of horror movies try in Callfomia. population 30 mqIons endure u a zero simi same.' to 1Ju11i1 a Jarac audience and keep Uoo. loto ~ somowbat different petElec:tioli calllpalgns wblda drive tire ' it~~ bl4:k felt more. Contem- apeCilve."1
• :·
~
electoral.e Into biuaty divided lac- porary politic_. !beater llo 't
But it Cloeao't cbange·the under·
lions are the eoeinlca of aover- premised on a mauiDCiience, bow- lylna. Md totally unacceptable,
• oaoce, wblda relicl oo c:omprom1se evea:1.Ralber than •imlas for record point lbal.bema very ricb' 11 oolla
,, rather than total victory. Ail,tbori" ttlmouta, the im~01 of clivi- way to becomial a fuodamcntll
lilian regimes give the winners fuU siveoea-_ are nlcbe marketcers, :remeat for bol~~=~ public
·sway; oun ii pi'CIIIIsed on cbecks · They want l() lliscounlae the other
• 'lbal mates it a
bard to
and W1111mr ,
.
side~a voters and activate their undcrsland w11y wedoll't have lbe
The unreleadna nauincaa at this o.wn. The fewer l't'bo voce. the bet· ·COUIIIC of our corruption IDd fcxW
year's c~ . wal unprececleatcd. ter, 10 loa&amp; as those who tum out c:un:=t llaJda IQ tbCir IQalcal.llUDot 10 ~~say. It waallard ID are credulous coougb to believe elusion. The Federal i!lectlona

Loreua Jo Dean Adklos, S9, 809 Gallatin St., Ravenswood, W.Va.,
died Sunday, Nov. ~. 1994 at her residence.
Born Sept. 11, 1935 lo Lincoln Cl\unty, W.Va., daughter of the late
· Joseph Dl:an and Maljoric Isaac Dean of Branchland, W.Va., she waa a
housewife and noember of the Ravenswood Monday Night Bowlillg

~villg ill addition to her mother lii'C her husband, Earl Adklos: two

fairness into their disciplinary lions or Internal adjudications to
machinery so that they can avoid lUnl inl!l abu~ve eventS:" .
being brougbtloto an aauat cqun. · tfealso·. a~_vl~~d. P,~~i.diog an
room. Outside lawsuits sbould be accuseil stuilciit Willi notice as to
avoided, Judge Broderick believes, the slibst'a'dce o( tlle"all~gatiooa
because those suits "would have a again~~ him or ber, Including a
'cbilling effect' on
IIUIII88C· · desCription of wbat the ~ahideot bas
ment of the institutions."
·
done ... together ·with ·an explanaBroderick sealed the file on Ibis lion' of the discipUnaty action
case lest the parties. and others, whicll migbl be impo~;·, .
"be unnecessarily Injured If
Tile accused, be(ore .. appe.,mg
cbar~es untested and unproved for the b~g. should'~ able to
c:ootaioed in the file became public provide •:any stateiii!!D.~. docuknowledge."
ments, affidavits, or other-materials
lbe case concerned a drunken to be·offered in' defense." The
student who "engaged In sexual accused, said Ju&lt;!ge BrOderick, also
misconduct'' with a female stu- should be permitted· to suggest perdent. A comrade of bis then sons to lie interviewed in his
allegedly took her undergarments deien$e c..:. and 'the queations to be
and bid them in a wooded area. .put.totheJD;· ,_ '• .:'' .. ' .
While expulsi111 of the fust student
Broderick omittecJ the·right to
-and Sll$pensioo for one semester cross-examine imd'lo 'permit the
of the second student- was being student's ' advi~~r to be actively
considered. "they wm given less involved in the procee~ jpg. Furtbao'two hOurs" to decide wbeiber theiuiore, a$ Gary fiVe!a; director
the rust would accept voluntary of Judicial Prograins a1 ibe Uoiverwithdraw-' and, for the second stu· sity of'Maixland (CJl,l~g~ Park),
dent, c:ommunity se!'vice.
emJI.basizes,•.those appototed to
- Tb1s hardly bemg exemplary bearing ~ ilK!ulil ~ ~· ID
due proces,s, both students sued m bear~ before dccidiljg them.
Broderick'i fedeml court for dam·
Nat ...enloff Is a nationally
ages. ~~did Dot disclose ~ reociWited apth~r!tY oit.tbe Fint
c{eclSIOD 10 the case, but be d1d Amendmept aad t,ll:• rest of the
advise 1!11 colleges to develop more · Bi11 oqUgb~. · '' ' . ,
precise due process procedures. To
(F-or lnf~rmatlo" on bow to
!XI avoided,~ said, are "e~~~g- co.-.••Mcate electrohlcally witb
mg or pursumg f~ or malicloUJ · tlil• cn!u!Qlll•l anct ~tilers, oon· .
· charges, or pcrmitung investlga- tad Amerll:ll' OnUne ·hy caWna 1·
·
·
800-al7-6364, ext. 8317.)

Crawling out of the political. m_i~e·,.; ·.:' .J.: :.:·

Loretta Jo Adkins

coodilionsandblgb

MICH.

Star Chamber.tactics haunt campuses..
From the 15th 10 the 17th centu·
ry, the most fe&amp;Jed court in England was the Star Chamber, wblcb
held its sessions in seael, deliverlog cruel and arbiuary judgments.
On occasion lbe Star Chamber
expedited its work by obtaining
confessions tbrougb torture.
lbe spirit of the Star Chamber
- but not the use of torture lives on in the disciplinary proceedings at a considerable number
ol American colleges and universities. For years, I have read tran·
scripts or these proceedings and
have interviewed participants.
At some schools, sympathetic
professors can be advisers to defendants, but the adviser often is not
allowed to speak IQ the Coon or to
cross-examine wiloesses. The rules
of evidence are frequently abandooe'd so that, for example, hearsay
becomes part of the offiCial record.
Tbe bearing panel generally ·
coUJists of students, faculty members and administrators who customarily have little or DO traiolng in
judicial procedures.
·
If C:oovicted, the defendant can
appeal but usually the juclicial tem·
perall!.ent and experience of those
slUing at the appellate level hardly
offer hope that suolipt. will suddenly enter these ~gs.
Wbat is surely lacking at these
loslitutioos - fian the more prestigious to the lesser-koowo entleges

!:u.~;!..for

.....

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- -·Area deaths-- Local ~ew~_ ill_B__rlef:

OHI O V'JcJ th c l

!

·Mandel a ·hopes to lift ~lephant ban

The Daily Sentinel

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• ·- •... ,.,.;a;

; Mondey,tiovemb8r 7, 1994

The Daily Senti.l)el

'Sports

.~ In "ther NFL action,

Monday, November 7, 1_994

·

bas given me. 1bls II my calling."
In only bis ~d career start
and bls sixth NFL game, the 23year-old Blake couldn' t get bls
team a toucbdowo but be helped set
up Doua Pelfrey for a Bengala'
club-recad six fu:ld soals and that
was enough.
Subbing for the second straight
game for David Kllnaler, wbo bas
a.sprained right knee, Blake riddled .
the Seabawks' secondary for 387
yards on a 31-for-43 perf01111811CC.
II was tbe best sinsle-game
passing game by a Cincinruld quarterback In live years since Boomer
Esiasoo bad 490 yards against the
Los Angeles Rams Ocl 7, 1990.
Blake set up Pelfrey's 26-yard
game-winning fu:ld goal with 6:46
left In overtime with a 76-yard pass
10 rookie Damay Scoll Unwlillng

Bil sk e tb a ll

to risk a fumble II' an lnlerception.
coach Don Sbula immediately summooed Pelfrey 01110 the fleld.
Blake and the Beogals came 10
Seattle full of confidence afrer their

Tile Top :ZS -

All.llo Dltlolooi

k::.,:.l. . .......-! \ ,f'! '

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23-20 loss to two-time defending
Super Bowl champion last week.
Blake was 14-for-32 for 243 y&amp;lds
and two touchdowns against the
Cowboys in a game Cincinnati bad
a 14-0 fust-balf lead.
Blake bas given the ooce clirectionless Beogals some direction,
bis teammates said.
"Jeff gives us a different view
of wbat's going to bapper;a every
Sunday," defensive tackle Keith
Rucker said. "Winning is about
team cbemislry and our cbemislry
is bettet with Jeff. My intention is
10 finish .500 and I can guarnntee
(See BEN GALS on Page 5)

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after lbe catcla during Sunday's AFC 1ame In
Seattle, when the Beapll won 20-17 to pin lbelr
ftnt win or the ••IIIL (.AP)

year- and scored tbe game's only
touchdown on a one-yard pass

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Saturday'• ICOlres

Ooldca Stile 101, Deliver 104

IU1l...s11Z.LA.Oippeo~9'
SeoWc llO,Uiob 103

DeDYCI' It OallM, I :lO p.IL

Mia!N at Ooldca Stlle, IO:JO p.m.

lbe lint qn8rter or Sunday's AFC game In Cleveland, wlaere lbe BroWDI woo 13-Ci In part because

of Hoard's ll31yard effort and·bli touchdown
·

~: . . .. . . . . lf~ ~ .Ham~

Ohio H.S. scores

Roger L. ·

- KJ[~NE
for

Cony :IS,- I L l -0

ao. a.-l•ll, CJo. c-ue o

JUDGE" ·~

CJo. lobllfaJ 36, Cit. CoUiawoocJ o
CJo.-, lO, CJo. llllodooO
Clt.Soullll9.CJo.loiiDAdomol
lloJ. - · l i.Doy. Willie]
Ill ,.-Ia W.. 3l. C - l l
Olintllo ll, CJo. Uocola Weol 6

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lldlll Vtll.lO, OIJIIIOII 13

~~L-ll,MIIfru·

-0

MMtillaa 42, Clltol

Mc~Dity

41

~~...,.. Cllbollc 14, ao. vNSJ
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a-a.tldlll Dubu1y I

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W- ,...... 41, WlmlllfoWlaad

Court of Appeals

EXPERIENCED

10 Years as Probate Juvenile Judge
4 Years as County Prosecutor

IMPARTIAL

Reputation for Fairness

HARD WORKING

Respects People - Good Listener

N . by~.... lOr Judf.!. S \\'11""'. Trtaft. Jl10 ..uhvilloi!·Fau6.dd ltd.. .WW.IIc. Uh.. Jl\Ol

Wllntlt:zz, Wlloellq(W.VL)CcaL

C/0
• The Deily Sentinel

John Carey~ Record:
·. ttelped Pillsbury ExP1111d and Create 600 New

Jobl.

.

.

John Carey worked hard to bring about the creatton
of 600 new jobs and a $120 million investment tn
the City of Wellston.
2) Created a Revolving Loan Fund for
Businesses.
.
Over 100 jobs have been created or retained 1n the
City of Wellston because of this program.
3) Established an Enterprise Zone for Wellston.
John Carey made sure that the City of Wellston
was designated an Enterprise Zone. This has.
enabled two existing industries to expand the1r
Investments in the community and has encouraged
another to locate here.

4) Worked to Reopen the McNallyPlttaburg'Plant.
The plant was vacated in 1987 before John
Carey became Mayor. He has worked to
attract two small industries and two other .
tenants to the facilitY which has resulted in
jobs for many.
·
·
5) Lad the Effort to Revitalize Downtown
Wellston.
John Carey worked wilh community, state
and local leaders to bring hundreds of
thousands of dollars In to revlt..alize
downtown Wellston, which resulted In the
restoration of Wellston Pride Park Depot.

Pro~~n Ability

to Bring Jobs to·
. Southern Ohio.

111 Court St
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OPEN DATE: Jadillllp&gt;llo, WllbJq.

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Ue

Oldlhomo 30, ~ 13
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TwltloaSl. 70. PnltloVlawlO
Tew~34. Te. . IO

Doywo SO, Cooc:udlo. SLP. 1
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I 0
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hl!DOii.:::..........4 2 iJ

6 l 0 .667
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43ZJ56
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4 5 0 .4-14
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Nortbwa11n ...2 4 0 3 5 1 . .319
Iowa .....•.......... .! 4 1 3 5 1 .389
Miol-. ....... .1 5 0 3 6 0 .333

lodiaa1 ............. 2

Saturday'• IKlOres

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Ml&lt;hlllll4.5. I'Wdlle 23

JUiao112l,loli-17"
OJDOSTAT£24,

W- 3

Thll WHk'l slate-Sat.

Other Ohio
college scores
Mlclwut lntercoU.alale

Ashlaod 31. N. Midlipa 3f

North Coast
Athletic Coalennce
AlleJii"'Y :ZZ, Qlio Wolleyul4
DeDliOD 31, c. WfllliWnl20
Ewllwn lS, Obtdlo 3
leayoal4, WOOII« 0
Ohio Athletic Conferelice
Blldwla·Wil._ lO, QiioNortiln9
. -a22.-.u
John ConoU 17.llinm 0
Mouat Ulloa 56, c.ptll 0
Mllltiaaum41,011arbeia 9

Bengals....

you everybody In this locker room ·Cincinnati' s other 'points came
wants 10 do tbat, too."
wben Alfred Williams sacked
Seattle quarterback Ric~ Mirer Mirer in the end zone fll' a safety
bad a lackluster day, going 13-for- In lbe first period.
32 for 181 yards. He was not interThe Bengals ended a JS-gamc
cepted, but be didn't throw any road losing streak and banded the
IOucbdown passes, either.
Seabawks (3-6) their fll\b consec:uBlake credited tbe Bengals' . live loss before a disappointed
offensive line for a lot of bis sue- crowd of 46,630.
cess. He's been sacked only once
The Seabawb lbougbt they bad
in bis lwo starts. Seattle rookie the Cincinnati game woo wbea
Sam Adams reached bim in the Steve Smith scored on a ooe-yard'
fourtb quarter.
run witb 9:07 left in lbe fourth
Pelfrey kicked a 36-yard field quarter for a 17-14 lead. But the
goal In the opening quarter, a 44- Bengals came back with ID 11yarder in the secood, a 36-yarder In play, 70-yard drive to position Pelthe lbird and 47- and 28-yarders in frey for bis 28-yard f!Cid goal with
the fourth.
4:27 remaining in regulation time.

Vote "Yes" For Your Children
Vote "Yes" on 3 yr~ 4 mill

Renewal Levy
Keep Southern Local
School District
Southern Local
Teacher's Assoc.
Paid for by Southern Local Teachers Assoc.

of Mideast CoD"'Iea

BhiflloD ZO, DefiUCOI2
'.

Major college scores
Eul

Mld.Stata Aaodalloa
TiffiaJ1. Tlyl,.l7
·

Noa-coateniKli.ICIIoa
aactaallli 21, Troy Sl. l4

Air Force to. Annr 6
BollOD U~v. 26. CoDDildkut ·g
Bruwa l3, Hlmrd 17
........,14.Cohlmlllll3

Doytoa 50, CoiiCOftlll. SI.P 7
Milooe 39. Thiel 6

J .

Tho. . Moro 41. Moult Sl.looqlh 17
WllmlafDD JJ,lhlllllll
You...owaSL 77, Bulfllo 3
. ·-~·.·.~

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" the 11•• coil "90Vtry rlltl
: or National Gaa • Oil
" CorpolliiJOn, tht oper~tlo~
:: of )It Purchlltd Gil
" AdJu•tment · CIIUit, 1nd
: related mltltr•· · Thla
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C · begin 1t 10:00 ..... on'
" November 21, 1. ., •! the
: office• or the Cornmlaalon,
~
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THE PU81JC .UTIUTII.
COIIIMI$SION OF

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lly: Gary E. Vlgotlto,

. •

.(11) 7; 1TC

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~!tillY

Rake in a gTeat,deal :
Sne Up to 21% OH Rfl. SVhscrlptlo• R1to
·

SubKrtbll lor 13 netrnnd PlY $11.50
SuiiKrtbll lor ze Weeka and PlY.._..,
SubKrlbll lor 52 ftlltt and PlY $85.00

on loans this fall!

Clty ____________;__PhOne - - - - - -

Right now, interest rates on personal
loans are falling during the Bank One
Fall Loan Sale. We're offering loans
starting from $1 000 for a fixed , simple
interest rate oo'I.90% (1 2.66% APR) · '
with up to 48 months to repay. •

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save a pile on interest!

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Cll994 BANC ONE CORPORATION 'All direct loans
subject to credit approval. On a $3.500 loan for 48 mol\ths ·

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loan processing fee. Offer expin-s November 24, 1994.

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the payment would be 893.31 with ail effectivt APR of ' t!J
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Whate~,~er it takei'.
Bank Clnf. Alhem.NA

Cl l994 BANC ONE CORPORATION

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education, home improvement, consolidation or whatever you choose - at an
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No more untlniely Interruptions.
No more seerehlng lor change on collection dey.
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(ContiruJCd from Page 4)

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Slmlord «1, Morpa St. :14
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COO..ll8. Troy SL :14

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Koal 11 Mioml
W. Micblpo II Toledo

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W. Mldllpo 15, 01110 3

CUM!LAND III'IIIJ&gt;delphil, I p.m

In Honoi'of
MaJor
BobJohneon

'

""""We l4

c-9.-•1
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Ailbln 3&amp;, I!IIF Clrolillll
B........COOJ:na 31,

England lhreata at the end. Stevon
Moore gathered In an 0111ide kick
with 2:10 left, and Mike Caldwell
intercepted Drew Bledsoe's Hall
Mary pass as time expired.
Winds gustins 10 40 mpb and
intermitteor rains played bavoc
with tbe lOp-ranked paning game
of New England's Bledsoe. He
threw for 166 yards. oearty balf of
it in tbe fourth :ter, and was
intercepted four
. Eric Turner
bad two of tbe interceptions.
Tbe Browns, off to. their best
start since 1965, kepi the Patriots
from scoring a IOuebdowo for tbe
second straigbt week. Matt Babr
scored New England's points on
field goals in the third and founb
quarters; Matt Stover kicked two
for Cleveland.
Rypien filled In respectably for
Vinny Testaverde- wbo was rested after aetling COIICU&amp;Sions in eacb
of the previous two games -going
14-of-28 for 164 yards wilb one
IOucbdown and one ln~oo.
But it was a New &amp;.11\ind mistake tbal set up Hoard's go-abead
10ucbdown early in tbe fourth quar·
ter. Patriots cornerback Maurice
Hurst was called for pass inlerference wben be grabbed Keenan
McCardell in the end zone early In
the fourth quarter, a 22-yard penalty that put lbe ball at the one-yard
line.
Two Cleveland running plays
gained nothing, and Hoard lben
made an over-the-shoulder grab of
Rypien's IOucbdowo pass, juggling
it before pulling it In as be fell in
tbc rigbt side of tbc end zone.
Bolb teams bad impressive goalline stands. Cleveland defensive
tackle James Jones, lined up at running back. was stolllied for no gilin
at the New En81arid two on founb
down in tbc rust quarter, and tbc
Patriots settled for a shon fteld goal
by Babr after a.fust-and-goal at tbe
Cleveland five in lhe lbird quarter .
Hoard bad Cleveland's first
I 00-yard rushing performance
since Tommy Varden last September. Hoard's fumble at the Cleveland 31, thougb, put the Patriots
into position for theit first field

ed Miami over the Indianapolis New Yodt Jeta 22. Bulfalo 17: 'ille
Cotta 22-21 after Dan Marino raJ- Los Angelea Rama 27, Deover11;
lied lbc Dolphins.
Sao Francitce 37, Wasblngton 2,2;
· Gary Anderson's 40-yarder tor Chicago 20, Tampa Bay 6, ud·
Pitt&amp;bllrgb in overtime beat the Gfeen Bay 38, Detroil30.
·
Houatoo Oilen 12-9.
Tonight, the New Yort Giaota
"I' VC been through it 10 many play at £iallas.
.
:
times. That's wbat kicking II all
Like the CJwgen. Raiden. Oilabout," Anderson said. "1m just · ers and Steelers, the BensaJa
glad that we bad one more kick couldn •t scored a touchdow~.
tban tbey did."
eitbcr. Pelfrey gave lbem all die
Pelfrey, Stoyanovicb and offense they needed,lbougb.
:
Afler be made klcka ol 36, "4,
Aoderson were beroes, but Sao
Diego's Jobn Carney and the Los 36, 47 and 28 yardl, CinciiUlaiiiCt
Angeles Raiders' Jeff Iaeger wisb up bis winning 26-yalller wilb
they could do it over again.
left on a 76-yard pass from Je(f
Carney's miss on a 47-yarder Blalte 10 Darnay Scou.
•
witb 8:01 remaining cost lbe
Dolphins n, Colti2J
•
Chargers, wbo lost 10-9 10 Atlanta,
At Miami. a fowtb-quarrer lnterwblle Iaeger missed twice In a 13-3 ceplion dido •t ratlie Marino (30loss to Kansas City: Neilber lbe for-41 fll' 261 yards).
:.
Chargers nor the Raiders scored a
Cornerback Ray B11cbaou
IOucbdown.
appeared 10 clincb a viCIII'y for tbe
"The or ly lbougbtl bad is tball Colts (4-o) wbeo be returned ID
wisb I bad it baclc," said Carne~. lnrerceptioo 28 yards for a IOUcbwbose kick that strayed wide rigbl down with 7:32 left
ended a slleak of 21 straight sueMarino rallied the Dolpbina (7r
cessful auempts.
2) wilb a 28-yard IOUCbdowo pal
In otber games Sunday, it was 10 OJ McDufi'IC wltb 3:S2lefl, anct
Minnesota 21, New Orleans 20; tile Dolphins got the ball right bact
Pbiladelpbia 17, Arizona 7; the
(See Nn oa r.p ')

l'hlllldelphli H. Ariloao 7

N.Y. lell :12,Bulfolo 17
CINCINNA1120. Stlltlel7 (C11)
LA. - 7 7. Dcawr21
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M i - 21, New llrlaal 20
Pllllbl&amp;rlh 12,Howloa 9 (OT)
AllllllllO, SID llklo 9
Saa l'!uclKo 37. Wllhl..... Z2
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Love, ' Your Farrify

Dutv--...----------

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.. :.: ....... 5 • 0 J56 161 193

Sullday'a alxJnl

o..ert Stonn

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&lt;llif:IF:ZO, t...,.Biy6
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LA.- -·-· 4 5 0 .4-44 162 177
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auDSTATEIIIadiou
........... Midlipa

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24
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3 6 0 .333 203 233

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Midlli)IIISrllt 35, Nortilwro~ap 17

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

MaJor ·

I

6!Z
614
603
JZ7
301
Z4!1

BOSU .............. 7 0 0 · 9 I 0 .900
C. 1.11&lt;:11 ••.••••••••• 7 I 0 .I Z 0 .100
W. Mid! ........... l l D 1 Z 0 .771
Toledo..............! l I 5 3 I .611
Miam1 ...•.••...••..4 3 0 4 5 I .4!0
Bill Sl .............. l 3 1 3 5 1 .319
1!. Midi. .......... 3 4 0 3 6 0 .333
1Coal ................2 s o l 1 o .m
..............070090.000
01110 .....,........0 7 . 0 0 9 0 .000

Ilea.................

In Honorol

In Honor Of:
1
1 (name
with rank) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ •
1

Z19

. CLBVELAND.. 7 Z 0 .m 193 111
1'11111&gt;..... ......... 6 3 0 .667 153 146
CINCIIIIIAn •. I I 0 .111 141 Z%0

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I VETERAN SALUTE

0 .556 195
0.556 163
0 .400 Z16
0 .333 11-4

1 l 0 .771
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Boy......... 5 4 0 J56
Dolrol :.:....•••.... • 5 0 .5-44
T-BIJ ... -. Z 7 0 .Z:ZZ

vw.o.. ,, w... a-..14

11

Big Ten standings

loll. . DIY....

On November 11, our
nation will pause to pay
tribute to the thousands of
men and women who have
proudly rerved their
country during times of
crls~s and peace.
This Veteran's Day, The
Dally Sentinel will publish
a very special tribute
honoring area veterans.
You can join In our salute
by Including the veteran In
'your life, living or
deceased, who have
served or Is currently
serving.In any branch.of
the U.S. armed forces.
Your Choice of
Two styles:

10
21

(Continued fmn Pa&amp;e 4)

quhrter. .
The Browns witbstood two New

T-St.36,11aroir1U

.1! L I ll' L I ta.

NFL standings

Veterans

II

6SO

AkroaiiBIIlSL

Tullda)"•.a a-

*************
A Special· Salute to

616

Thll week'• slate-Sat•.

LA.LIDniiNtw York. 7•30p.m.
MIDDeooll lllloltoll. 7:30 p.DL
Houatoo II CLBVELAND.I p.m.

Butrolo.............. 5 4
N.Y. loll ........... 5 4
lodiuopolll ..•... 4 6
New EoaJoad.... 3 6

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Saturday••...,,.

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

AYmi! ,B-ooo•II(2C11)
Sl.lo11114, fll&gt;llll«l
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Suac!itfiKGrt

Leroy Hoard mn for 123 yards
- the first 100-yard game by a
Cleveland rusher in more lbao a

6

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Amid a dearth oftoucbdowos,
kickers were key In the NFL' s
Weelt 10.
In addition 10 Doug Pelfrey's
six field goals belplng the Cincinnati Beogala beat the Seaule Seabawll:&amp; 20-17 In overlime, Pete
SIOyanovicb's kick In overtime lift-

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By CHUCK MELVIN
Cl.EVELAND (AP)- Bill Parcells taught Bill Bellchick well.
Too well.
Using the 1111111C type of ball-control offense and stifling defense
that were once the trademarks of
Parcells' New York Giants teams.
lbe Cleveland Browns beat the
Nil\\! England Patriots 13-6 Sunday.
Belicbick was ParcellS' assistant
for eight years In New York before
becoming bead coacb of tbc
Browns (7-2) In 1991. PllfCCUs is in
bis second year coaching New
El)gland (3-6), wbicb bas lost foil'

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NBA itandlnp

Browns beat Patriots .13-6

caleb. (AP)

.

By Tile Alloclalld rr.

DOWNED _ Clllc:bmatl tlgbt end Troy Sadowsld (87) pa down after bebln&amp; bit by lbe Sealtie Seabawkl' TeiT)' WCJO!Ien (90) and a telllllllllle

BREAKS AWAY - Cleveland ruoolna back
Leroy Hoard (left) breaks Into lbe dear after aMtina put New Enalaod delellllve backs Rod Smllb
(ll) and MJI'OD Guyton (29) oa a :st-yard run In

. ··

The Deily Sentlnen.III-FPI
....Iagt•1o-e5

~Field _
goals help Dolphins and Steelers record victories

-Be·ngals roar after beatin.g
:seahawks 20-17 in overt1me
ByJIMCOUR
· SEATll.E (AP) - It took the
· NFL three years to discover Jeff
Blake. He a&gt;uld bave saved those
pro fOOiball experts wbo make all
thoJC important personnel deciSlooa some time.
The six-foot quarterback from
East Carolina said be knew all
·along be bad what it lOOk to play
pro fOOiball. Thanks to Blake, lhe
Cincinnati Bengals bave finally
won a game. too.
· "No, I'm not surprised." Blaltc
said after leading the Cincinnati
·"Bcngals to their fnt victory of the
season Sunday, a 20-17 overtime
decisloa over Seattle in the Kingdome.
"I've always known wbat I can
do,'' be said. "It just took someone
·10 believe In me. I know wbat God

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio

II

I

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�..
.. ..
·~ ~

Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-MI~dlepor\

5

Ohio

MOJ1d~y. NovemtJ;~: 7, ~ 994i
I

:In the 10th round,

By The Bend

"

'

A New Generation of Leadership
Fighting to Protect Ohio's Working Families

~ Foreman

knocks out Moorer
to capture heavyweight title

·By TIM DAHLBERG
Ienger with a figbt plan that was
. LAS VEGAS (AP) - Mike working to perfcctloo, neva- giving
:'l)sal remains in prison. Saneooe Foreman enough room to extend
named Oliver McCall owns part d
bis arms and land bis best solid,
lbe Iitle. But in lhe split ~ it thumping punch.
iook George Foreman to land one
All Moorer had to do, it seemed,
crasbilig rlgbt band, heavyweight was fmlsb the fight. It turned out to
.boxing sprung to life once again.
be lhe one lhing be couldn't do.
· Tbe shocking punch that nat"He should bllve never stood in
tened Michael Moorer in lhe lOth front of me," Foreman said. "I'm
round Saturday night made the a straigbt rlgbt-banded pUDCber and
preaching, hamburger-chomping sooner or later
going to bit
Foreman a heavyweight champion you."
again, 20 yean after be lostlhe Iitle
And bit bim be did. Mter a simto Mnbammad Allin Zaire.
ilar combination a few seconds ear. It may have come in a fight lier bit its mark and moved Moorer
.Foreman was losing badly. but tbat back a few inches. Foreman landed
it came at all was amazing enougb.
a left jab to the face. The rigbt band
. Had Moorer been able to stand that followed it crashed squarely on
up seven more minutes, Foreman's Moorer's jaw, sending bim spmwlauecr would have Cllded. Instead, ing backwards to lhe canvas, blood
atlhe age of 45 be succeeded in bis spurting rrom a gasb on bis lip.
improbable bid to became the oldAs Moorer lay unable to do any·est man to win the heavyweight thing butllfi bis bead briefly, refertitle.
ec Joe Cortez counted bim out at
"It's like the song, 'When You 2:03 of the lOth round. Foreman
·Wish Upon a Star Your Dreams went to a neutral comer wbere be
Come True,"' Foreman said. · got on bis knees, bowed bis bead
''WeD, look at me tonight."
on tbe
post and prayed as lhe
But don'tlook too closely. Sun- crowd of 2,121 ~pled in pande_glasses bid eyes made swollen and monium.
:lumpy by Moorer's insistent rlgbt
"I got lackadaisical," said
·jab and penetrating books. ·
Moorer, wbo lost bis first figbt in
- For nearly 10 rounds, Moorer the firSt' defense of the WBA and
domin••ed on tbe inside in a figbt IBF titles be won from Evander
largely fought in tbe center of lhe Holyfield. "I just got caught It's a
ring. He pressured lhe aging cbal-

I'm

rinf

. .'

A wreath-decorating workshop
Jean Frederict and Edna WoOd ·
Dear Alia Lalden: Does qe ·
was
a
feature
of
the
November
were
appointed to bandle the sunreally llllke a difference after a
' meeting of the Cheater Ganlen club ablne project for November.
Anr'i
perDt reaches 6S? It IICCilil to me
beld at the bane of Maida M0111.
Mrs. Wood, vice peaident, 0011that eneray is a lot more important
Varioua kinds of bells were rea- dueled tbe meeting in 'the ablc:ilcc
thanap.
tured on. grapevine wreaths - , of Betty Dean, president, wbo was
IIIII 83 $Ill feel areal I met 1
"ua&amp;4, LaoAngotoo
three with crafted bells, two witb in Bowllns Green Jlllticlpadng in a
man wllo is 78, and we got a1ona
small glittered bells, itnd tiny clay · mcetinJ there Ia her role of state
WQ!IderfuUy weD. After five or six
a....;...---~=~ flower llOl bells SJl!'liY-painted gold publicity chairman of the Ohio
dllca, I decided to teD "Joe" I wu _' enjoy tbe Gems arid complain
and ailver for a large wreath. Edna Association of Garden Clubs and
83. He took me out a couple of limes lhey do not appear. Thousandt have wood, program chairman provide!~ an acaedited OAGC judge.
after that, and thea out or the blue, suggested that I put lhem into a · the. working material lor tbe proThe garden creed in unisoions
he said, "I'm sorry, but you are too booklet.
ject.
by Edna Wood wbicb inc_luded
So, dear readers, here's my new
1bc wreaths will be delivered 10 inspirational readings, "Smiles:
olcUcrme."
Aim, I'm in good health, and I get booklet, called "ACoUectionofMy Overbrook Center and Veterans "Contentment': and "Slow Me
Memorial Extended Care Facllity Down Lool" alms with a ThanksIIIOUDd with DO trouble. When my
Favorite
Gems
of
the
Day."
I
hope
for usc during the bollday season.
giving prayer. For roll call memhair llarled to tum gray, I turned
100
they
wiD
be
your
favorites,
•
· Kathryn Mora and Lula Tobin bers commented what tbey Faised
blonde. EveryOQe says I could
To get a copy, send a self-ad- will conduct a therapy craft W&lt;llk- in lheir gardens either to eat-or to
easily pus for 60. I. ~'t act my
dresraedc,hlonec!·
busillCSS-r
moo.eymonle'
.enr~or
SS sbop at Chester FJI'JIICDtary Scbool, d~corate for Tban~~~~ving .
ap, and I certainly. don't feci iL I and
0
"'
''
a contribuUon to the month's tbera- Answers included pump
JlOlaewdle every day' and am a very (thiColls
incl~ ~Annge~~PingO) py program. ,
toes, sage, squash, sweet potatoes,
good dancer.
.
to:
ecuon, ""'
........ ., . .
· My friends teD me to forget about
Box
11562,
Chicago,
Ill: 60611f0 l'ncfi~a
·
Joe, but it's not that cis)'. I think I OS62. (In Canada, send $6.)
·
r~ I'
11
t~;i
·have fallen for the old IUC'a1 even
Dear Ann LaRders: I am a 24Plans for Increasing support to Kathyn Jolinson and Lynn Runy~n
though he SIIIC wouldlt't win any Year-old woman who did a very
lhe Obio Villley Christian Assem- singing a dueL Devotions by Dons
beauty COOlest. '
One
foolish
thing when'thI was" 16. 1 bly Camp at DarwiD
. were made Carder was on "Chry santh emums
·
The last time we went out. Joe mght
when 1 was WI a CIJIZY guy,
wben tbe Women's Fellowship met of Life".
.IDCIIIioncd rathercasuilly that he has had too ·much to drink, aM be tOok recently at tbe Bradbtl'y Cburcb of
Linda Bates presided at the metbcett dating his ais!Cr-in·law ever me to a tattoo parlor and had his Christ.
ing with 27 members answering
since his wif~ away five years name biuoncd on my hand, aloog •
A program concerning lhe camp roll call. Officers' reports were
11&amp;0·
.
was x:;!ented by Karlita· Stump
: Do you think I have a chance, or with • heart and • red rose.
,lhaveinterviewedforsevaaljobs and
Shuler. Tbey~RSCDteda
:should I give up on him? -- since then, but once that tattoo is video of activities for youtb and
··JNFATIJATED IN OIDO
spotted, I don't stand a chance. adults available at the camp site,
A canmunity Halloween party
: DEAR 0m0:· Even though you Please tell me how much il will cast and urged continued support for the was hosted by the Basban Ladies
:are 83 and Joe is 78, I think you to get this miserable thing remo~.- ministry.
Auxiliary last week.
·need a young~ man. Look for - SAD AND SORRY IN LA LA
Also dlacussed was the WMPO
Costumes were judged and cbil·someone who isn't dating .his LAND
Ministry wbicb the churches sup- dren winnin prizes were AudrionDEAR LA LA: I contacted pon.
·
na Pullins, \ravia Tultle, Andrea
sister-in-law. I have ahunclt that she
Suzanne L. Kilmer, M.D., who is an
Tbe area family Thanksgiving Maxson, and James Dailey, in lhe
has the inside track.
DEAR FRIENDS: A few years -tant clinical professor at the dinner for Meigs County Churches birth 10 three 1ears old category;
qo; I hit on ~idea of adding some Universi•y of California/Davis of Christ was announced for Nov. Justin Brownmg, Jarrod Bentz,
words or ·distilled wisdom and Medical School and ,spccializcl in . 21. Other missions to support were Megan Varney, and Joey D,ailey,
11111dom thoughts at the end of the dermatology and laser swgery. l was discpssed and it was noted that rour to six year olds; Jennifer Harsince no •iris are entering Bible
column. I called these anecdotes my told the cost or tattoo removal
tbe
College
Ibis fall and that support is
•
$400
$200
Gems of the l)ay. I had DO idea lhe ~!"U: ~ 10
.or
not needed, lhen additional money
Gems would beCome so popular.
can go into other programs.
Readers from all over lhe world
My ~ice to anyone considering
Group singing led by Tina Lamhave written to say how much they a tattoo IS II) stay away from this bert opened the meeting with
foolishness.

=.ra;::;;;.ct ,

Robert L. Burch

Peter Lawson Jones

Lee Fisher

for Governor

for Lieutenant Governor

Attorney General

r="eJ IOW.Shl'p
1

Dan Brady ·'
for Secretary of State

Barbara Sykes
(or Treasurer of State

:Cavaliers top Hornets 115-107

~·

. Beth teams have beCII hampered
by injuries to key players Ibis year,
butlhe Cavaliers bad lhe edge with
Mark Price connecting from long
range ll!ld the team's control of lhe
llackboards throughout
: "I think you saw two teams in
similar situations. I think tbey're
going to set a litUe bit healthier

quicker lhan we are, getting Alonzo
Mourning back," Price said.
"When you lose key players, you
bave to bave other guys step up to
lhe plate.
'"Tyrone stepped up big," be
said. ''They were concentrating
because I bad a good first half.
They were really doubling me bard
and lhey left other guys open. We
moved lhe ball around, got it to Ty
and be really went to work down
there."
Price bad 27 points and 11
assists for Cleveland. John
Williams added 17 points, 10
rebounds and four blocked shots.
Cleveland bit' seven or nine
three-pointers, while the Hornets
were 3-for-11 behind the shorter

Hill got nine of bis points in lhe
fii'SI four minutes of the third period, helping the Cavaliers widen
their four-point halftime edge to
73-64 at IJle 8:23 mark. Successive
baskets· by Robert Parish helped
Charlotte get back to 75-70 with
. ti:2lto play, but the Cavaliers went
on lin II..(} run over the next three
minutes, going up 86-7~ after Hill
bit the back end of a two-sbot foul
with 3:44Ieft in lbe quarter.
Charlotte, qain playing without
Mourning, sliced the gap to six
points tbree Umes in the fourth
period, the last on a Muggsy
Bo.~tues jumper with 4:06 left for a
108-102 score. But lbe Hornets got
no closer and watched Cleveland

control lbe ball for a key 70-second
stretcb with lhe help of offensive
rebounding to bold onto tbe victory.
"We can't get two or three guys '
Into tbe flow right now ... satd i
Charlotte coacb Allan Bristow,
whose team hasn't been 0-2 sinCe
lhe 1991-92 season. "We can't get
any kind of rbytbm going uo
offense or defense.•'
Scott Burrell bad 21 points to
lead Charlotte, which started its
season Friday night in Cbica,o.
Larry Johnson and Roben Pansb
bad 16 apiece, and Jolmson added
10 rebounds. Bogues and Michael
Adams each bad I0 assists.
Mourning is sidelined with in 1
injured big toe, but is expected to '
reltlm next week.
Bo!h teams bit 47.8 percent '0~
their fwld goals in lhe first quarter,
but the difference was the three- ,
point shooting. Cleveland hit all
four it attempted and was 6-for~ in
lhe bllf, while Charlouc missed Its
two in the period.
The Cavaliers ran up a· 14-point
lead early in the second quarter
behind Price's long-range sbooting.
Danny Ferry's leaning 16-footer
with 8:25 left lifted Cleveland to a
42-281ead.
. .
Cleveland was up-S7-47 after
Hill's buket wit!l I :21 left, but
Charloue responded with a 7-2
spun lhat ended on Burrell's layup
with 1.9 seconds remaining for a
S9-S5 deficit

and five sacks against Arizona (36).
Cunningbam was lS-for-24 for
201 yards and also chipped in 63
yards on eigbt carries for Pbiladelpbia (7-2). Barnett's scoring pauca
were for 47 and SO yards as lie
caught a Career-best 11 passes for
173 yanls.

· Jets ll, Bills 17
At East Rutherford, N.J., tbe
Jets (S-4) gotlheir second win over
Butraio (S-4) Ibis season.
Boomer Esiason, forced out or
the aame twice with ankle InjUries,
hit Rob Moore ·with a four-yard
touchdown pass late In the third
quarter.

arc.

Joel Hyatt

J. Ross Haffey

Alice Robie Resnick

for U.S. Senate

for Justice,
Ohio Supreme Court

Justice
Ohio Supreme Court

AIDS patients are given
malaria in hopes of cure
·,

Ted Strickland
For Congress

Jan Michael Long
State Senate

Mark Malone
For Representative

NFL action.. :...:.&lt;ConUnucd_....:..:....;.rrom:.:.:.:..:..Pag.:::;e;.:.:S):.....__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

ln'limc for Stoyanovich to kick tbe
winner.
.
: Steelen ll, OUen 9 (OT)

: At Houston, Gary Brown's fumble. lhe only twnover of the l!ame.
ac.t up Anderson' a wioning field

g~ also bad ldc:ks of SO,
39 and 37 yards.
.
: AI Del Greco made kicks or 32
~ 49 yards before bia 38-yarder
with seven seconds left in regulalion lied it at 9. Tbe Oilm (1-8)
lostlheir fifth in a row.
Falcons 10. Qarpn t
At AllanJa, Ic{t Gcorac threw a
nine-yard touclldow1l puato Ter·
incc Mathis in the flnt IJllllttCt 8IICI
Norm J!!lmsoo'a 23-yuo llel4 goal
·proved 10 be die~ points tor
· the Falallll (,_.).
The ClwJen (7-2), with Gale
GUbert aa.t~na fol t1tc ln,Jured scan
Humphries, had a touclldown
Cllled back beclt&amp;&lt;e of Ill intcrf'erCtlai )iellalty•
;
CIIJeiJ 13, Ralclen.3
; AI Kansas City, the Oliefa (6-3)
~ulleil within one aame of San
EMeJO in the AFC Wcat, tbaDka to
!licit defenae. wbich bad liven up
9S Jl')iDtl ia -.~ thtee previoua

Willdbreakers should have read

40%off
100 E. Main

•
I

~ AUDITOR OF STATE
RANDALl W. S\\SEV·

'

ChooSe an4 term
.from
29 to ~9 months.

~ Mclall·~ Mllmeaota (7-2)
. A ,-.., a. 13 e.{' after New
1i

two lleld

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felt••• -~ •ceil_two lDiiiOvers

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. Minumum deposit: $ SOO.OO. This CD b llltomatically rtocwible.
. P~ty for ~ly withdrawal. A.P.Y. is mil able u ·of the date

11, OlniiMII 'J
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of this iSJue, ""t is subjecf to change.

phio Valley _Bank
1~ ·

446-6639

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1111. 11111 carrap1110 1IMI

.
.
[81 4TH DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

-- -

WH.IAM K. SHAW

~

.

l

'

Tbe Commualty Calendar Is
published as a free aervlce to
. non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetlnp and apeclal
events. The calendar Ia not
designed to promote aalea or
fund railerl of any type. Items
an printed u !lpiiCe permlta and
caJmot be guaranteed to run a
I(Mclflc nlllllber ol dayL

'

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•

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

LETART- Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 6 p.m., ornce
building.
RACINE - Racine Village
Council, 7 p.m. Monday, regular
meeting, Star Mill Parle.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
Amateur Gardeners, 7 p.m .
We&lt;tnesday, home or Jean Moore.
RlTJl.AND - Revival services
at Rutalnd Free Will Baptist .
Cburcb, 7 pm. each eveing.' Rick
Weaver, evangelist. Pastor Paul
Tayla inviles the public.

gowds and mums.
Tbe Meigs County Christmas
Flower Show was announced for
Nov. 26 and 27 at Carleton Scbool,
Syracuse. "On Christmas Day in·
the Morning" will be the theme.
Assigned classes for Chester Club
are Class 14, "Simcrgistic Design";
Class 17. "Sec the Sunrise on lhe
Show"; Class 18, "look, Thirty·
two Dear Tracks in lhe Snow"; and
Class 20, "The Reason for It AU"
featuring lhe Christmas Madonna.
Club work assignments for lhe
entryway tbeme display and ~lass
name cards. Four members will
provide sandwiches and cookies for
lhe lunch break. Club members will
meet at Eleanor Kniiht's home on
Nthov. 1~ at 1 p.m for a work session
e assignments.
Five members atlended lhe fall

Se OVC camp donatiOnS
given and get-well cards were
signed for several who are iU.
Refreshments we·~ served and
the next meeting was announced
for Dec. 1 at 7:30 at lhe Bradford
Church of Christ A bible quiz was
beld following lhe meeting.

DEMOCRAT FOR
·MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER

-.

• Resident of Meigs County,for 33 years
• Graduate of Ohi_
o Univer~ity
• Retired Teacher from Meigs Local
• Past Co-owner Middleport Hardware Business
• Past member of United mine Workers and United Rubber Workers'
• 4 year Veteran United States Navy

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Paid lor by candidate, 2420 June St., Syracuse, Oh 45779
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was reported. They were Mra..;
·1Dean, Jean Frederick, Mauri~ •
Miller Pau1inc Ridenour IIIII LID
· Tobin: A report wu ai~ea on the.';
activities of tbe day. The club'{·
1993 p;publicity book received..:
grade or 9'7\ !bird higbeat In the";
state. Maye Mora was publicltt.:
chairman for the 1991-92 11111 91\
ycin.
~
Pat Holler Maida t-fora,
Mrs. Dean made door hanai':U
featuring straw hat facea for
:
auction aalhe regional mretina.IC
was noted lhat Mn. Dean judJCCI ..:
faU flower show a1 Troy in Rep
4, at wbub she did 14 arrua~
menta featuring her collection oft
madonnas.
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The OAGC bulb orders we~ ·
distributed. Mn. Miller piacc lllliiF;
flowers at the Chester MethodlsC:
Church in October, it was noted;:
The Christmas party waJ.;
announced for 6:30 Dec. 7 aC:
Seylers House or Treasures. Mrs;'
Mora and assistant bosteas May~Mora served a dessert coune. Mrs,
Wood and Mrs. Frederick wOI(

an«:

door prizes.

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Jlllll8 CIQS
•MULUI MUSSEl.
. ~NSUUIICE ·
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ris, Timmy Ball, Jobn Curtis,
Michael Millbonc, and Holly Rose,
seven to nine yearolds.
In tbe adult costume category,
lhe winners were Kathy Johnson.
Terri Browning, Roxann Harris,
and Donna Carnahan. Audrionna
Pullins and Joshua Weaver won lhe
cake walk. The qlces were baked
by Jean Spencer.

111 Sutt.'ld lt., f»GMII'Df

YOUR IIDIN-11
AGEID RIVIH

MEIGS coum
SliCE I. l6l

•

•.
t•.e
•
ID _Ite IS
free

•

This Is Your Invitation To Sell Any Item For $100.00 or Less
And Advertise It FREE.
Simply Clip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted),
Fill In Your Ad and Mail It To Us or Drop It Off At Our Office.
Your Ad Will Run For One Week.
'

ONE ITEM- ONE FREE AD PER WEEK
(NOTE: 15 WORD LIMIT AND YOUR SELLING PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
(SORRY, THIS DOES NOT APPLY TO YARD SALES)

NAME: _____________________.___________

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PHONE=----------------~---------------

MAll,. T O : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

. The Daily· Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
- (Offer Expires November 15, 1994)

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, regional mectin&amp; ll McArlltur ~

POMEROY -Au shots wiD be
given at the Meigs County Health
Department from 9 to 11 a.m. and
Ito 3 p.m. Wednesday.

ELECT
JACK SLAVIN

Paid for by MeigJ County Democratic Executive Committee .:
.. · : ~ane Frymyer - Treas. Gilkey Ridge Ad, Sha~ ~
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TUESDAY NOVEMBER 8

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sbip Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p.m.,
Syracuse Municipal Building.

RUTLAND - Rutland Fire
MONDAY
RACINE - Racine Chapter Department Ladies Auxiliary,' spe134 OES regular meeting 7:30p.m. cial session, Monday, 7 p.m. at
Rutland Fire Station. Plans for
SYRACUSE - Suttoa Town- turkey dinner.

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You can take this
sample ballot
into voting booth
· with you
'•

[8i ,STATE SENATE - 17TH DISTRICT
W4 MICHAB. UNi ·
,
[8j &amp;TATE IIIJltiiESENTA1'1VI • 14TH DllrfttCT
MARK A. MAUlE · , _ ·: .
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Member FDIC

.

J. ROSS HAFFEY
ALICE IDlE RESNICK

HVArr
[81 'lr~- TO CONGRES~'
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1111. 1'1111 "#IIIICIIIG VIlli

~ JUSTICE OF 1lE SUPREME COURT

. [81 ~CRETARY OF STATE
BRADY
.
[81 TREASURER OF STATE
. BARBAIIA SYKES [81 'JiTED STATES SENATE

left._

•. ~

JACK R. SLAVIN

~ . JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT

oalll auaigbt ·alllle ll ~whead
S
• : . Vl!dltP 21, ~ Jl
; AtM"itw~l, W~m~~Mooll'a
St-~ . . 10 ·Cll!drY llmaii with
a\'C ~
the Sa1Dt1 (3-

Cll

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~ COUNTY COMMISSIONER

Pomeroy

.. 'lbe Raiden (4-S) loll dtek' ICY•

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Jaclt Slavin
Meigs County
Commissioner

.M:IGS COLMY DEMOCRATIC PARTY leiS YOU TO VOTE FOR TtESE CAM&gt;DATES

BUTTONS &amp;·BOWS

·~
C"~~IIId

~ ....

William K. Sliaw
4th District Court
ofAppeals

Good Nov. 7 to Nov. 12

wilter turoec1 albort
~ frolll Joe Montana lnto a S7-

!edh."

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CINCINNA11 (AP)- The sur- · fled."
Heimlich and his co-researchers
1co.11 wl!o in!I'C!!!d a lifesaving
Heimlich, c;re~~!or or lhe Heim- bave agre~d&gt;aot to discuss any
teclmique f« choking vlctiml bas lich Maneuver, and bis supporters details until tbe project is complete
been trylnf II) cure AIDS patients said critics bave not reviewed bis and results are submitted to a peerin China w1th doses of malaria, 1be research protocol, misinterpreted reviewed mcdlcal journal.
CincinnaU Enquller reported Sun- existing scientific evidence and
He was careful to avoid inllaling
lhe hopes of AIDS patients.
day.
overstated potential risks.
The experiment has shocked- · Tbe research is safe for patlents
''Tbe only thing I will say Is
aoveroment instltutlona, AIDS and will test a theory tl!at is worth lhat if we were not encouraged by
researchers and patient advocates, eXploring, be said.
the results so far, we would not be
although doctors agree tbat the
"Billions or dollars bave been continuing our work," Heimlich
strain of malaria used is easily cur- spent looking for a vaccine or a said.
able.
·
drug to fight AIDS," Heimlich
Heimlich gave the newspaper
Dr. Henry Heimlich of Cincin- said. ''Yet last year at the intema- his experimental protocol, a
naU persuaded entertainers and tional AIDS conference jn Japan, detailed blueprint that describes
other pbilantbropists to donate the report Issued said, 'We have no how .the research project will be
about $200,000' for an experiment progress to repon.' I bave no desire conducted.
The protocol calls for repeatedly
that critlc:s said exposes ¢sperate to dignirr. these criticisms with a
· inducing malaria fever in up 10 30
patients to a dangerous and ques- response
tionable treatment
Ma!arla could help treat AIDS AIDS patients. Eacb. patient would
"ijo evidence currently exists 10 patients because it naturally stimu- go lhrougb 10 or more revers under
indicate tbat malaria infection Jates a strong immune system close medical supervision. They
later would be cured of malaria and
would bcneflcWly affect the course response, Heimlich said. ·
of HIV infection," states the offiPubliShed reports say Heimlich monitored ror signs lbat AIDS bad
cial policy of tlie U.S. CCIIters for bas treated at least nine patients in been atrected.
In May, an insliwlional review
Disease Control and Prevention. China since last 'JCI!l· Heimlicl! will
"Without evldepce ... ibe use of not reveal bow many be bas treated board or the Great Lakes Associainduced malaria iofection in HIV or where they live, the newspaper tion of Clinical Medicine, a
infected individuals caunot be justi- said.
research evaluation organization,
approved tbe research.

---Community calendar---

...cORRECTION... ·

.

Auxiliary holds children's party

To start off their season,
By TOM FOREMAN Jr.
CHARLOTIE, N.C. (AP)While lhe Cleveland Cavaliers and
lhe Charlotte Hornets wait for key
~layers to overcome injuries,
Tyrone Hill showed the Cavaliers
:tbal lhey might not have to worry
:ID the meantime.
· Hill scored 14 of bis 20 points
in lhe third period as the Cavaliers
.llroke a five-same losing streak in
.8Ca500 Clpell!lrs with a 115-107 vic:tory over 'the Hornets Saturday
·night.
: "It was just one of those situa· tiona where there were a lot of
open sbots,'' said Hill, wbo bit 8of-10 field goals but declined tbe
role of being catalyst until center
'· Brad Daugherty and guard Jobn
:Billie can come back.
~ • "We don't have thal kind of
&lt;team where we've got one player
:wbo can just take up lhe game for
'40 minuteS." Hill said. "We need
eyerybody collectively."
" The last time Cleveland won a
season-opCIIing game was on Nov.
A, 1988, in a 133-93 victory in_
~barlotte, the Hornets' inaugural

..

Monday, November 7,

Chester Garden ·Club holds workshop

Landers

for Auditor of State

The Dally Sentinef
18M·
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Randall Sweeney

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~-------·_.;.·-·.;,,._~---...:..-----....:.------------.:.•;":.;.':;.--------------~------~~------1'14-·.;:g;.e_r.:~; , ··.\
.This 83 year-old stlould look
~:
-for another younger man
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part or boxing. I'm going 10 have to
live with it."
Foranan was clad in tbe same,
tbougb slightly expanded, red
trunks be wore 20 years and six
days earlier wben be lost tbe
beavyweigbt title to AU. This time,
thougb, it would be Foranan scoring the shocking upset
With one punch, be exorcised
lhe demons tbat,bave haunted bim
for two decades and helped spur
him to a comeback bid cigbt yean
ago.
"The main goal was to be
heavyweight champion or tbe
world and stop being introduced as
the former beavywelgbt ~pion
of the world," Foreman said.
But fQr Moorer's tactical mistake, be would have never bad lhe
cbance. Moorer was caught standing stilL in perfect range for Foreman to snap the right band across
bis)aw.
'He didn't sec the punch coming," said Moorer's uainer, Teddy
Atlas. "That was tbe best punch
George threw all night. That was
what we were afraid of.''
"All be (Moorer) bad ,to do was
use lhe jab and move side 10 side,"
said Larry Holmes, Foreman's fellow geriatric boxer who is scheduled to meet McOIU Ian. 21 in bis
bid for the WBC version or the i
tide.

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-: Pag~t

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel

,.1'" .•·:

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sentinel
---·The Deily
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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~ New booklet addre.sses women's Social-Security qU~jt~~1f.
·&lt;'

· :~By ED PETERSON
.• Atbelil SS mauaaer

:-

This Cree booklet is not just for
:·' the more than 60 .million women in
c.tbe Nation'I wort force. We hope
' every woman will read "Social
;:security: What Every Woman
' 'Should Know."
. This new booklet tells bow
:':work may affect a woman's benefits if sbe is divorced, widowed, or
.a widow carina for her deceased
.' spouse's preschool or school-age
~·cbil&lt;hn.

.;.: It tells bow her mililary service
;Jnay count toward Social Security,
· and explains bow a government
.pension may arrcct her Social
~ ·Security benefits. Social Security
··answers these and other questions
--Sbe may have about its programs in
this new publication.
The information in the booklet
. recognizes tbe changing role of
;women, especially the increase in
.:the number of women in the
. Nation's work force. For example,
;.!be booklet explains the protection
a working woman and her family
:.Jlave if she becomes disabled or
'dies or when sbe retires. It also
:explains whP~ benefits a wife or
"
'

widow and ber childrell can get on you're calling for this publication,
the basis of her husband's work it's best to call at other times .
record and how remarriage or
199~ CHANGES ANNOUNCED
divorce affects benefits.
Social Security and SupplemenThis booklet is not intended to tal Security Income (SSI) benefits
provide a complete explanation of . will increasi: 2.8 percent, beginoing
the Social Seelirity p-egram. It's a with the payments that Social
guide to those provisions thai are, Security beneficiaries receive.Jan.
or can be, of particular interest to 3 and SSI recipients receive on
you and every woman.
Del:. 30, 1994. The automatic costThis new booklet is available at of-living adjuslment is made annuthe Athens Social Securi.ty office. ally.
Or, call Social Security's toll free
For Social Security beneficiaoumber,1-800-7721213, between 7 ries, the average monthly benefit
am. and 7 p.m. oo business days amount for all retired workers will
and ask to have a copy sent to you. rise from $679 to $698. The maxiOur lines are busiest early in the mum federal SSI monthly payment
week and ~ly in the mouth, so if to an individual will rise from $446

to $458. For a couple, the maxi- retirem~nt benefits is 10 years. The P~ ~as1111!1;B~,flt Es~
mum federal SSI payment will rise credits stay on your Social Security mate Statement. ~~tciDCJ!l
from $669 to $687. Some states record for life and •o with you sbould '&amp;irlve abounwb . lcs after
c
.....Jrm;
add a supplement to the federal from job to job.
you seii4·1A~ -._..
. ·.. ' ·.~mn. .
payment.
-Social Security b_enefits are . • ~.JSI.na.et yo.u-*1 Y.apply•
Social Security and SSI benefits designed as a base of -retirement ing lOr SOC!arSc:cunty ~~~. the
increase automatically each year income oo which you can build to' bigher'tllc·beiiefir ybu"eventually
based on the rise in the ConsUIIIel suit your own lifestyle through prt.
reocivc'\till ·.be: ~Ple'.wbo relire
Price Index for Urban Wage
vale insurance, savings, invest- · · before age 65·receive reductd benEarners and Cler!cal Workers ments, etc. Tb!l benefits replace efits..Peoplewhokeepworkingand
(CPI-W) from the third quarter. of about 42 percent of the preretlre- I'Ciire.after 6S .have "delayed retire:'
one year through the corresponding ment income of people with aver- · mentJlre~ts" applied IQ·tllcir bene•
period of the next. This year's • age lifetime earnings.
fits.-The benefit increases. between
mcrease in th~ CPI-W was 2.8 per• Anybody can get an estimate age.65 ~d 6!1 )ly -~ mu~ as 1~
cent.
of the Soclal Security benefits they pereent for thoSe attainiDJ! qe 7Q
DID YOU KNOW
can get when they retire by calling in 1994. Those attaining age 70 111
-The most work you need to the Social Security Administration future years cb 1!~. tqj:f:increas7,
be fully insured .for Social Security (1-8()().772"1213) and asking for a - es.
·

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Til COUNTY RECYCLING
OPEN f DAYS AWEll FOR YOUR COIMIIIENCE
IIOIL·FIL 9-6: SAT. &amp; SUN. 9-3
45. IlL fer ......,
Pt. Pleasant Flea Market
Now Open 9:00 to 5:00 Daily
430 Main St.
New &amp; U.sed Merchandise

Dinner starts at 4:30
Prizes, GM188, Crafts,

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·; Historians agree that about
.3,500 blacks were lynched in the
t:Jnited States frOm. the 1880s to the
J960s. Cameron said his research
lndicates a mudl b!Jber number.
• "The first tw!l years of the
reconstruction, 1865-67, over
50,000 of ul'/ were lynched in this
country," be 118id. "YI~n thouaaod got a1M&amp;y with 9111' lives and
Jn estimated 35.~et death.
People don't .know llie history.
~y don't teaeb it in scbool."
(• His own auack took place on a
'Munmer'a night in 1930 in Marion,
Ind., after Cameron. t,hen 16, and
=·friends dec1ded to rob
Cameron said be tonk a aun.
·walked up to a parked car and
ordered the white couple out. But
be recognized the man as a cus!l)llier at bis sboesbine stand. He
A;anded the gun to his friend and

ran.
•• Shots rang out behind him
. ·

Dried Materials
Pot pourrlauppliel
Herbal Crafts

NOncE TO BIDDERS
The llolnl of Education of

Eaatern Local School
Dlttrlct dtolroo to rocalve
. . _ _ - : - - - - - - oeelod bide "for rr... t
1· Clrdofl'hll*a
tnaurance
covering
celonder yaar1HII.
In order to Ill contldorod,
I wii!J)d Uke to ell aeated bide thell be
61·--k Keith 1 _.... roco!vod lly;,lht Tr111urer'a
•
olllco by t2:00 noon on
so
very
.milch
for
Dtc:embar 1, 1914, end will
.
.
Ill opened allhal time. The
. duni111 up my . lnrd of Educet!on
, property and a big ,,...,., lh• right to eccopt
'
.
end/or roltct any ond til
thanks to the VIUage part1 of any and all blda.

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...,.,.....

BolniE'!~~=

of Middleport for
haull...,lt away.
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SchOol Dtalrlct
31800SR7
Rtodtvlllt, Ohla 45772
EIOIH Boaton, Troaaurer

~lncerely,

Lula Mae Qulvey

~======
'1 Clrd of Thankl

-Honesty. Integrity. Hard work. Growing up
on elevators for .his Capitol Hill office building,
with eight brothers and sisters near Portsmouth, he fought them at every step. When·federal
they're values Ted Strickland learned early and
heavies tried to close a Meigs Count¥ coal ...
learned well ... values he's . - - - -- - - - L - - - - - - - - , mine, Strickland stopped · '
putting to work for you in
them and saved BOO jobs;:· ;
Washington, D.C.
And when state officials
.
...
He knows you can't
refused to clean;_ up a ,· .:"'
spe~d what you don't haye.
burning dump .in Lawrence"
And he wants ~ongress to
County, o:ur congressman .
live by that.rule just like
1
the rest of us. Maybe that's
why he went out on a limb
job done.
to support last year's deficit,
Ted Strickland isn't
reduction bill. Or why he
afraid 'to support' ihe " ·l · .... ~president whe~ he's right.......
returns $342 of his monthly
. salary to the U.S. Treasury
And he's not.afraid to·: .··· r..•·
to reduce the deficit, and
fight the pre~.i~e~t..t9. _·'i:"'~~~:
refuses to take taxpayer,
defend your right,j ~ . ·,-:-:k.
including your,S~cqP,cl'- · ..,
funded healthcare
insurance. Or why he pays
Amendment rrght; J:as a
his own business travel and phone expenses
lawful American, to keep and bear arms.
when he's working here in the home district.
They're the kinds of things you'd exp~ct from
When's the last time you heard of a congressman a Methodist minister like Ted Stricklapd ~ but ' ·
doing something like that?
not, unfortunately, from-a U.S; Congressman. ···
Ted Strickland knows he works for you. So
That's why we need him to continue fighting
when Congress wanted to squander $6.6 million on Capitol Hill.
',·

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· Vatarans Memorial

been raped ed the town's residents. At
nightfall the mob broke through the
)iii door.
•
: ~ twO .frleilda were beaten and

Vote for Honesty, Integrity at!d ~Hard Work~-~~~-~ . ;.

' ·rt'
was
to look down from
aocond atory and see all the

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In Memory of
Leda Mae Kraeuter
who passed away a
. yearagoon
Nov. 7, 1993

Hoapltal, Doctors'
Manaflelds, Kusnlr, _and

"•

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SWAP SHOP
One mile out
143 from Rt. 7

Tuu.~Weci.-Frt.-s.t.

1-6
.Craftsmen Toola '

•Toya
oGiuaware
Loeda of Mlac.
Buy-Sell-

·sav1t1

.....
.,,n.ac••

For All•lor

u•••

KENNEL

Brad for

Quality Sid

l':=~c:~2. siOiy flame home on 2iots, 3 bedrooms, N.G.

Ij
wooellloor1ng.
ASKING $11,500
II ::.::v~=~li~IIITICe
17.912+ acres of vacant ground.
j
Groat bull\llng location. Clokto town I
.

ASKING $25,0110

T•rnparamanl
Spodllzlng In Pall-colols
tor thow and companions.
Stud •rvlct &amp; puppill,
young acllila fortele.
48760 Milo Hill Rd.

Rlclne,Oh

'-

f14-11404487

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
GUN SHOOTS
.SAT., 6:30 P.M.

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

II

Co1tradl11
&amp;Excnall11 ·
992-4103

1Cfoi17Mn

TOP SOIL,
FILL DIRT,
LIUESTONE
Delivered

Locally

992·3838
= = i·'

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.
laltrlor &amp;
Exterior

the pain out
lpairlllng. lat ... do It

v.ry -nablo.
FI'MEatliMIM
Befol'l $ p.m. lerle

for U.S. Co

·t:r.u

· • Paid for by the N(lA Political Victory' Fund and not authorized by any candidate or candidate'li comm~uee.
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ltiiiiNHART..- .. - - ....-....---..·------·7&lt;124357
· tllfiiiY La " ..,. L.-.... _ ................... " ....... 112-tittt
ICA1HY C' I I

•ND..- ...-..._,__ _:.._. .-.. -.. .112-1111

OI .. C!, ·--·~........ to-....- -.. .., ...... - .... ..... 112-2211

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Pt FzvW
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cmt

gciOd wtchildrwl.-lo good ' - Ook ........

only. 304-17114&amp;1.

992-4119 AI rn..Owitr l·IOo-291·5600

dlliftr.
2 11011 --.
ldlltnt, . . '11 111g1o
~
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~Coi-=W1!.
.
irib,
·~-Ply
o.nn.n
WlreMirlld
Point.- • 4
.......... ~~

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y.,. Old , _ !IPIIdo- Lanai !,i&gt;c*lna for Pt Jill
HalreciMio\tibid'-Dog,l Doi... - T... _IIIThllr

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New Homea• VI nyl Sldlng New
.
I
Garages • Replacement W ndows
Room Additions • Roofing ·

.

Poot Oonnan . _ . , ~

i

COMMERCIAL
8nd RESIDENTIAL ·.
.
. FREE FSTIMATES

I

.---Tow.t~Fer:A

v.. or.r,11u11oaL

.,_,. II

o:c-. c.rr ~
Gowklg

~':a~.......,-. ::=.~:

,_

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i P.M.

Col

I

614·992·7643
(No Sun,day Calla)

Graded Benefit Whole Ufe is now available The
plan offers coverage of up to $10,000 with no
-physical exam and no health que.stions asked on
the application. Ages 40-80

Pomei'Oy,

Mlddllpol1
&amp; VIcinity

ROCKY R. HUPP
P,merlcan General Life &amp; Accident Ins. Co.
P.O. B.ox 189
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

110 - h _.., I' I

1144
F!ldoy,N.

'Q

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614-843·5264

--Ceoll.....-.
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f•J , ........ PiaU III ·

All YMI- 11uo1
In
IIOn.-Fd.
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tor a rr- '*' ...,.
·
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1:tiiiiM h
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4 ....... Col

Life • .Medicare • Cancer • Fire

1:011pon , . . ,
L~H~e;!al!!!th!.:•_!A::cc;!!id~en~t,:;•~~.:·!,!IRA~·~~!:...J SUllclor.....,
lo.DI "'·

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _, So-y
E l -. ...

On--.

Of-

Kenny's A~to Rental ::-~:;.:-.=:-·=
Kenny's Is the place io co•e
when yoy need a car rental.
We IIIIVI CllrJ lind Vllnll
Kenny'a Auto Center
264 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

1-800-486-1590

pt, Plaaunt
&amp; VIcinity
aa.men1 • • IICI)Ud , _
oa rlahl ol eo. Quonl Dopol.
Nov. 1111 a 1111. .......,. aa~~&gt;­
tng, ....... _ ......

8

·Bus. (614) 446-9971

&amp;14-~180

RACINE

Mower Clinic
949-2804
Complete Chain
Saw Service &amp; Parts
Echo Saw's in stock
Christmas Layaway
Available on
Weedeatera &amp;
chain saw.

ROBERT IISSEI.l
CONSTRUCTION
•NewHomea
•Garages
.COmplete

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

F1n anc 131

FREE ESnMATES
915-4471 rizHM

HAULING
Umestone
&amp; Gravel

...............
Joei.SIJN

SAYRE TRUCIUNG

Lose Weight

"Oris...

'-'C...Uf..la-or/1
Altlllw~ 446-S196

· 614-742·21~1

_,___

~~·--

and Removed
MIL Joba.

BIH Slack
992·2269

,_
'

=."t7"• t='•
-. ......., ......... --·
1o,..., ""' - "' ....... -

:=;,

011 Itt~ Ce•~lete Aute li~y Rep1lr

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stotts

614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome
StattRt33 ~
Dnln, Ohio ~

' '.... ... . ,_. "" c i994 N~tibnal RiA~ A~tar ~n

'.

..... ............ ,., •

Groll On •••
To iEMI . _
....._ ,.._.
I S...U Block PuPPJ, I1C-m- A - - 0 . . Lito
2131.
tor ToT- ~
2• • ....,1 ~.1 blooll. ~ox-.awl I; • wv

iiil!' White Awning"

IISSELL
'IUILDERSI INC..
.

'Widt_..,OI_....,.,.
!!llo-

IIIMUge.
Al&amp;rS p.m.

S~rubt Shapped·

bciOSC,IOIDCODC yelled out

4

"VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"
110 Court SL Pomeroy, Ohio -

•'Look(or.tbe Red

~

....,•.

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

,

•

30W7H404.

~~ .!=======~

12Galge
Factory Cltab Oily

,...-

......

-hlnl'o !Jnooory,
- .......
em.- ;::::=.:::..::;~-:-:----:==
. . . . . . . WV. C11o1D11 OJ £Y II

. Back Hot
Senlet
Harfor S.l•
DnldWIIUams

Ugtat Hauling, .,

· · .L

'

IIIPLIIIIBI

Cocker Spanlala

'

·· ~ dlltllo lllda't beea !Dvolved in the ·
~- The mob let him go and '
·;
him ID die jail.

I

IU'I

Pomeroy,

iayhegl beiDa committed on my

·

NEW l USED PAJITS FOR
ALL IIAKES lliODELS .
112-711J OR
·-tn.&amp;sn QR
TOLL FREE 1--101·1•1·0071
DARWIN, OHIO

(FREE EBnMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Dl
092-6215

• 1iw9 budcl!ta,.. Cameron recalls.
He 100 wu t3te6 outslde and
... . ~ 4 DoOle - placed around

Calllei'On ·served four years in
u an accessory to
!i
pter, Almost a lifetime
• ; liiler.lbe ictli'ed ll9ila- engineer and ·
~.ta..abt liiSUll'lan was paniOocd.
I • ill fGbi•J Jl)93.

Fl'lme Repair

work

...

)

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing In Culitom I

Because she was so
, dearlo us
for Sale
Wltheral for their
Her memory will live
(Ill
dedicated and
on,
614-992·5515
· prof-.Ionai services
Just as the fragrance
11rt1Jifn
during the lengthy
of a rose
-- - ·: ~lnesa and d8alh of our
Stillllngers when it's
J&amp;L INSULATION
husband and father.
gone
Our ilncenl gratitude
The beauty that was
• • part
--2772
alao the the Ewing
her's alone
Ollloe lloln: lloii.-Frl.
Funeral Home, mlnillter . In thoughts is with us
1:00 --':30""'
Tremblay, the
VInyl l Alum. Biding.
still
. Roofing. VInyl
pallbeara18, and aft who
And in our hearts lhat
Rep18cernent
c:onlribiAad flowera,
love her
,
Wlndowa,
Blown
food, ~ and prayera.
She still lives and
lneulllllon, Storm
May God richly bless
always will.
Dool'l, Storm
each of you for your
Wlndowe, Gll'llgM.
Dolores
Wolfe
Sisters
concem 'and
Free&amp;....._
and Family
lh01911fulness.
Roberta Maidens and
The C8l1 Bailey Family
'fOUNG'B
Family
CARPENTER
SERVICE
_ _ _...__ _ _ _ _..;__ _ _ _ _ l•floa,m Addltlone
Rtll Ettale General
. a...IIM
oElectrlcel l Plumbing
-Rooting
'
I -~~~•rloi l Exterior
P81ntlngelao concrete

7 Jual out of p_.,.,. nice 2 story frame rome approx.
3 bodiOOIM, bath, ne- carpet, newer gas furnace,
pine paneling In the kllchen. Large front porch, nice
I stc..g. bulking.
$28,0110 maka en offer!

CIM~,-

9.49-2168

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

'

3 Announc:emems
~:.::.:~~~~;;;j
...... cun. ...........
...,
Now
Pra: 1 IFlll
o-t ,...... c.a...h
....,.

FREE ESTIMATES

In Memory

' I

On Thesday, November 8, .

i:c ~bad

(10) 2•, 31; (11) 7,

2

To ille enilre stall ol ille
Pomeroy Nuraing and
Rehabilitation Center.
the n!lralng ataff of

:;:s:: ;d;:·;i~·

'·' Alllhtee teen-agers were arrest-

· ·ltZt

DAVE'S

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Guner Cleanh1g
Painting

Want AdS

NMr'llltaV.•••
. They 'MI1I AI "-1

• Cuato• llade
• Solid vinyl
replacement
window•
• Frt,l Esti111t11
• $200 lnatallad
Call For batalla

_,._,...,;....~...:....,..,'="

Howard L.

...&lt;~. 'lbe next daYi news that the
~~"" ·.. bad died - ~md false rumors

-~

Now open for FaN
Season
Wed. thru Sat 9-5
. S(»clallzlng:

Goods

museum

One black history professor
)pplau.ded Cameron, who wrote a
·book delalbing liis lynching tilled
"A Time of Terror," and gives
:speeches aimed at counteracting
;resent-day KKK activities, for
preservin' this biUer his&amp;~.
. "The 1dea is to never forget,"
~d William L. Van Deburg, a pro:ressor at the Unlvc;nity or Wisconsin-Madison. "I know that each
:;eneratlon of atudeQts bas to be
~eintioduced to the IDOre negative
JISpCCiS of bla:k bistoty dmt don't
l:u:?.rtrayed in the popular

614-247-4035

Thu~~November10

~opens

i)ened..'

o••·

Coaale'•
Rlvtr Her.. aatl
Enrlasti•1•

Bazaar

.survivor

mbe.

992·5114

Annual Sacred Heart Church

\.

'

1C·SC hill ....... fer flaHt... c..
. We Buy All Non Ferroua Meblls
Cll1 FOI·CUIUII PRICES

NOTICE!

:~Lynching

. MILWAUKEE (AP)- After ,.,
·64 years, Jamca Cameron remembers every detail of the night an
·enraged mob dragsed him.from his
jail cell, beat him and slipped a
-noose arojllld his neck. Two other
]!lack men died that night at the
'tiands of the mob. Cameron was
$1Ved at the last minute.
' Now he's doewnC'Itcd his story
-and that of other lynchings for what
lie's called America'·s Black Holocaust Museum . a collection opening Wednesday io a dilapidated
-'former boxing club in downtown
Milwaukee.
.
: Ropes from a Ku Klux Klan
a ceremooial KKK iifte that
'Spits fare from its barrel instead of
bullets, leiters describinl! lyocb;lJigS, and stark black and white
.photographs of black men twistinl!
yom ropes are 111119Dg lbe llfl:l!acts.
J)oe piclllre ihows the lYDcbinl! be
:SIJIVived.
: · The soft-spoken Cameron, now
80. with grey hair and a lrim mus·18Che, calls it his "Chamber of
Horrors."
,
.• "We might have to have a nurse. ·
on duty here," Cameron said. "I'm
going to do just like, the J~wisb
·polocaust museum. I m gotng to
let it all bang out, just like it hap-

,.,.•• Te.,
............

..

•

�.

~

. .

.

. ..

- "

.. . - . ..

-

'

Page 1G-"i'he Dally sentinel

Monday, November 7, 1884

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

!'Monday, November 7,1994 .

The Dally Sentinel Peg•

OhiO

~1

' :'

'·

NEA Crossword Puzzle
38 T8fdllr .

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDE;R

.

BEATTIE BL VD,TM by Brute Beattie

" I,

~

I

'fov

Go•Y~

CAU, Till~

AN real estate actventsing In

A

I'M.'f'E

tt&gt;s newspaper Is sublec11o
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes h Illegal
to advertise ~a ny preference,
llmnauon or dtscr1mlnallon
based 0n ~·color, religion,
sex famlllal atus or national
ortgin, o ny intention to
make an sudl preference,
limitation or dl~r1mtnatl0n. •

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accept

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Our readers are hereby
informed that all dweHings
advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal .
opportunity basis.

...

And

•.

or

I

1'1111-Up Truoll

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1IGII

.

.....

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advertisements for real estate
which ts In viOlation of ttle taw.

H•

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......................
Clllw.1:'1ft

120 ..... liquid ,...,.... . .
...... .......or,MI,f14.'JU.

TNs newspap8r will not
knowllng~

1lil Clift ... ...........: Clift . . . llllr, 1 - Food
llnlnoo I; 1. . Peill " - ' 1 :

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Of Clw:alol'o. Puliw

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WHO'S COOKIN'
SUPPER

2 ...... LMnl " - ......
Qood Conollioii, uo. 114471-

1111.

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31 Homtl lor Sale

.

1•
4•

UNCLE SNUFFY II
AN' I'M SORRY YOU
CAN'T EAT WITH US

4

Pass

27 FOOd
apecilliat

Pass 2 •
Pass
Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead: • Q

50 I{Oll CAN LEARN
HOW TO SPELL AND
MULTtPL'I' FRACTIONS

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YOV,

A~ YOU P,eSiiN6

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............. 1$ Tt4AT y/~~T IT

lf7

l. wAS ~OPIN6 IT

~AS

MY AG~ lr~SeT
IIJTTON.

'Apanment
torRent
- 14lr10 2 .....
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- - ......., Coldlan.
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fumlehocl
and
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Ntf. YOU 601N6
J:lE.Io',OC,itj~i. eM~t.&gt;?li~Hi'l: 'fu eE eANt&gt; 10 VOfE Fat., na1 ?'

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33 Fannetor Sale
24.1
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Wmhouoo, 1101111. 111m, -

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29 Ri-in
Belgium
31Numbera
35Chi- .

51

HOUMholcl
Goods
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~......._111711.114-

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COUNrRY I'UIIIIITIIIIE
FOr 1111: 1• fool o..t• And
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fool · DuwiiPI .. .fiMIIo
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PII~ .... OIO,tl4 4411111.
oofa.ehofN,ourle,......
....... ........._ IIIII• . Ill. I,

,_ .. Wino Com Cllbo
, . ..... ·1 1tat11aa

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

STR!Kf ABLOWN
WAR ON
HIGH PRICES. SHOP Tl-£ CLASSfiEOS.

~ Pt. - . . !OWllo

LAYIE'I FURNITU.
Coo pI • llolllo tumiiiit!JHn&amp;iihlnaa

Houra: lion .... N. .,......

~~~~.

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e.'llllt.

Pets for Sale

per . P.O. Box 4465. New Vprk , NY · you'll do better pleading your own case
t0163. ·
than by letting a surrogale speak lor you.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Follow . GEMINI (May 21·June 20) You,might
your hunches today. especially in malari· have to give up some of what you wenl in .
al allairs. The suggestions of friends order to cui a deal loday. II you won't
aren1 apllo measure up lo your insights. compromise . lhings could cbme lo a
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jen. 19) standstill.
.Business and pleasure won'l mix well CANCER (June 2hluly 221. Overlooking
loday. Do one or the other, but don't minor character liaws in your 'compan·
attempt bpth. Onll mlghl succeed al lile ions loday willl\81p them overlook yours.
olhefs expense. ·
· •
This can only slrltngthen your relalion·
AQUARIUS·(Jen. 20-Feb. 19Uhe lac· ships.
•
&gt;
•.
Ilea you use today, eilher good or bad, LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) This can be a
_ · • Tuescjay, Nov. 8, t994
· .will 'be lalked about by others . 1 very producllve day for you If you use
"
~
'"""'· ~· '
,,
I
p ·
you m.iet While traveling· in the Fortun~lely, your chart indlcales your standard procedures. Evan small modili· .
~r~s yeaf might 'help in commercial nobler 1rans will be more visible.
calions could be colf"lerproductive
~~ Orice you llllabliah a contact, PISCES (Fob•. 20-llarch 20) SROnding today.
·
time ~ lriendS ihou~ prove enjciyal!le VIRGO !Aug. 23,8epl.
The impres·
BeoRPIO (Oct 211-Nov' 22) Good lor· . loday. However, don 1 let one person ~you Hmake on new people IOday win
t - ·1 yours today Hyw evaluate aHua· datermine activities lor the group.
probably be favorable and lasting.
1'!!1'' blgctlliely Fantasies dilule your AAtE$ (MIIrGh 21·April 1tlln business Remember lo avoid e•aggeratlng how
1'i.~· ~now wh.;e 1o look
romance deAtJ.ngs .today. condlllons aren't optl· much you own.
.
~ you'll find '!'fi6 ~~~r~·Griph . nun, ~ they are ~Ke good. The secre1 1 LIBRA (Sept. 2S-()cl. 22) An opportunity
Milchmaker loiatahlly re"oeal~ .w~lch is to do the·very J;lell you can.
for fmanoial gain Is. likely. today: You
slilns are iomantll.uy· pet'IIICI lor you. \T~URut (April 20-May 20) If you have mighii)OI gel alllhat 1s oftered. hoWever.
Mail $2 to.Matchmaker, c/O•tlliS new&amp;Pa· to negoliale an importanl maHer loday. ~use ol hidden coals.

BERNICE
SEDEOSOL

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.9 Alao

so~·aorg;

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by LUIS Campos
Cetebrity Cipller c7tplograms are craat9d from qootaiiOfls by lamous people, past and present

Each eller~nthe .c'Phe~t~~~~her.

'HCSL

TDI

W C S I D P :

VSCH

PLZJ

N C I D X. •

NAL

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Today'selue: XBQUBisY

VCS

HKUAOLO

P K Y l

UCHRDPX

- · _ •

U E N

A K H

JCVNTOOO

0 L PC .

WDX

'

. PREVI()US SOLUTION: ' I'm a woman pushing lorty dressed• in Sear Junipr,.
Miss . I'm 5o southern I'm related 16 myseH: - Brett Butler.
·

..

I

MUFSOA

,. - . ,-. , . . . .,. . . ,.-. , ":"',•
I Is I
I

"

Two old timers were criticizing the nights TV fare. "I re~ember.· one said. "when
• . . .
bloopers only happened ceca, . , . . . . - - - - - -..... sionally and weren't a whole
A WR N 0 R
'television·----- -."

~ T A G .E A •
~~
1

O Complete

the chuckle quoted
by filling in the m1ssing words
you de ... elop from step No. 3 below.

~~ic!~~!~ER LETTERs TO

I\ I I I I I I I

SCIAM4.m ANSWUS

c.1or T.v.

.:...tM·••"in...

G:au1M

piCked

.. --time
(neV8f)

6

1110.

==-= . . . . .

o10 Movellboul
furtively
41 Rowing tool•
.2 Single llem
· 43 Ready to be · ·

8 , PRINT
NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

•

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F....... Ajll. I IR t2tl

~ Unllnlohid ... Mpllo .,....,. UIIIMieo Paid Ml '-"'Ava.
Oallipollo 114 441 4tlt Allor
7p.nl.

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r.lerch ~ndtse

11111rto
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1ng. ....,., ~o~aoa. 1 ,.., ~ ............. 1111!111'1
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1at N1'11. CJn1r
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FORIALI
IIOIILIIIOIII
__
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Nllt.lt&gt; CF ~'(· OWN

&amp; Lt vestoch

ttM ClaJion Eoohwind. MIH,
porlloiiJ
I
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aond. 114 411 liMO

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Fcnn Su1;plies

litho,
110e11,
llonlod Lal .,....

:

·~

2a·c- botore ·•

Top or bottom,
take your pick ·
Mark Twain, in .one of his character·
istic moods, satd, " Probable nor'east
to sou'west winds, varying to th e
southard and westard and eastard and
points between; high and low barome·
ter, sweeping round from place to
place; probable areas of rain, snow,
hail, and drought, succeeded or pre·
ceded by earthquakes with thunder
and lightning."
Which two of these words. apply in
today's deal? How should South
weather the storm brewing in four
hearts against a spade lead'
When the dummy appeared, South
saw that he could afford two trump
losers, but not three. And after win ning trick one in hand with the spade
king and cashing the heart ace, he
could continue with a low heart or
with the heart jack lor 10).
Both would work if the suit was di:
viding 3·3. But if the opposing hearts
were 4·2, declarer realized he had to
find either East or West with honor·
doubleton. So, at trick three, declarer
continued with a low heart. And when
West had to win with lhe king, South
smiled inwardly to himself.
South won West's spade continuation in the dummy, cashed the dia·
mond ace, ruffed a diamond in hand
and drove out East's heart queen.
DeClarer ruffed the next ~pade, drew
East's last trump and forted out the
club ace. He had one trump left with
which to ruff the fourth round of
spades -all he needed.
When you can play high or low, con·
sider both carefully.
Phillip· Alder has just published
his new book, Gel Smarter al
Bridge. II is available, autographed
upon request. for SU.95 ind. p&amp;p
from P:o. Box 169, Roslyn Heights, ·
NY 11577·0169.

Peralsn
· 17 O.f uNCI in
ligl'lll
.
19 Oxygeomor ·•.
22 Guided
·•
23 Tiny akin
·
opening
:
24 Feltllfulnosa ::
25 Esrlhonwn ~
pol
·:
26 Shortlllllor ;.

By Phillip Alder

114 112 Mllel•

7 -Aviv
8 Opp.oiNNW
9 Wheel tracks
10 VP'a superior
11 Ancient

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
Soulh
West North East

:r:.:~t=.:l'-.
'

•

3t Apr.15agcy.

oiO lmpeulvo
1 Cry of pain
•1 Vouroend
51nundmine
8 LPapaed
.. One, no mattor
12 Joint
which
131mlta1H
14 Yorklhire river 45 Soutlleell
Aalin holldlly
15 Land muoure
11 Having natural 47 liqueur
50 Auiolant
ebiiHy
51 Tear
18 Still
19 Roman bronze 52 Mrs. Charles
Chaplin
20 Actual being
53 Boxer Max·21 Irritates
23 Middle East . 54 SauH - Marie
55 Corner
org.
56 The King - 25 Aquatic
mammal
DOWN
26 12 o'clock
30 Expreuing
I Approve
praiH
3Z Those holding 2 lndellni.ta
3 Sureneu
otllce
4 TV's-Haw
33 Pol cover
5 Author Joyce
34 PriVati
converulion
Cerol. 36 Windflower
6 Arrow poison

Mellow· Pants • IM!ich • Velvet· ALL at ONCE .
"Time seems to be going by so slowly and t'm bored,"
,the young lad told his mother. 'Time," his mom replied
keeps everything from hap~ning ALL at ONCE'
·

�"

f

Page :12-The Dally Se.ntlnel

.

-

Pomeroy-MiddleJ)Qrt, Ohio

Monday, Novembet 7, 1994: ·

Campaigns -still pushing for ~doriations· ~-

Ohio News in Brief:
Official agrees to plea bargain --

-

.

WOit.

Firefighter· reprimanded in death

CLE~AND - -A lieutenant in tbe city's fire department bas
been reprimanded after a dnmken firelighter be was supervising feU
to bis death.
.
LL Noel Caraballo )'VIIS suspended without pay for one sbift and
given a one-month demotion. The suspension and demotion will
cost him aboui $900 In salary, Safety Director William Denihao
said.
On July 23, Micbael ShauBbnessy, 32, feU from the roof of a fU'C
station onto a dock, eben Into the Cuyahoga River, f~religbten said.
He died of bead Injuries.
-The Cuyahoga County coroner's office said Sbaugbnessy bad a
blood·alcobol level of 0.26 percent. A driver is considered drunk
under Obio law if be bas a blood-alcohol level of 0.10 percent
Caraballo failed to take wrrectlve action or report to supervisors
tblU Sbausbnessy waa drunk and unable to perform bis duties, Deniban said In a lcttcr.
The investigation was unable to detem1ine wby SbauBbnessy
was on the roof,

"

LegiSlator sorry for slapping girl
NAPOLEON - A state lellisJalor said be is SOIT)' be slapped a
leeD·age l!lri Wbo WU at a party with bis daugbler.
Stale Rep. Lyoa Wacbtmann, R·Napoleon, said Friday tba1 be
mistakenly slapped tbe IS-year-old on Sept. 25 after be and three
other parents removed lbeir children from a party were alcohol was
bein&amp; ~rved to minors.
.
, _
All were drivlnsln Wacbtmann's van, wbicb be stopped on the
way bome to discipline bis daugbter. In the dart, Wacbtmann said
be slapped anotbcr girl by mistake.
He said the girl's parents were present at tbe time and be apologized.
Wacbtmann sa.ld be believes an anonymous call tippioa orr lbe
Henry C01111ty Department of Human Services was politically moti-

By KATHERINE RIZZO
Auotlated Prea Writer ·
WASHINGTON - Special·
Interest mOney Is flowlna fast Into
tlsbt Ohio coogreasionaf w:ea, as
lbe campalps prcsa-for lbe cash to
push thrOugh to Tuesday's elecdoo.
In northeast Ohio's 13th Congressional Dislrict, cballeoser Greg
Wbite is flush witb casb from fel·
low Republicans and business
sroups. His campaip bad a cash
balance of $65,000 as of Oct. 19,
and since then bas brought in at
least $81,000 more.
White is trylna to oust Rep.
Sherrod Brown, one of four fresh.
man Democrats In Obio wbo
Rq!Ublicans targeted as wlnerable
Ibis year.
Brown, with the belt:n unloos
and lbe advantase of
beocy,
outspeot Wbite $780,000 to
$390,000 golns into the campaign' s final weeks.
Brown, too, bas coUectecl a lot
of last-minute cbei:ks. Reports on
file Saturday at the Federal Elcclion Commission showed be bas
taken in at least $S6,SOO sinoe Oct.
20, wben be reported $75,000 in
tbe bank.
Fellow freshman Reo. Eric Fmgerbut in northeastern Ohio's 19tb
District is in tbe same boat, but bis
race is considered even closer than
Brown's, widl most analysts cate·

IIIIOthet S4tOOO for tile DIDollato- ,
QUI paisa

. Police get earful at summit

GOP threat to net gains
fuels Democrat$' worries
By MIKE FEINSILBER
Aaodated rn. Writer
In a mud-splattered midterm
eleclioo,lbe American people were
votins today 011 wbedler to~
DBiioo a sharp c:bange of ·
.
Worried Dcmoaats -lbe pKty of
ll:liviJt IIOVCI'IIIIICDI- teitcd lbey
tould lose control of the Senate,
and Republicans reached for the
House, too.
President Clinton, whose own
unpopularity bas been a drag for
hlapartylnmany-p8JUoflbecountry, decamped in Washington fol·
lowing a campaisn In wblcb sov·,
ernment Itself was a dominant
issue. "Don't turn back," be
pleaded widl voters In an exhlus·
live Millnesota-to-Delaware elec·
tiooeve swlna.
Everyooe qreecl tbatlbe uneasy
mood of the voterS favored the
Republicans. For Dcmocnts, the
question was whether tbey could
llmlt tbeq IOISCII.
The GOP'hlm't coouolled both
lbe House and Senate in 40 years.
Even if the Republicans fall short
of that In today' s ballolinB. they
felt sure of bloclting mucb of the
Clinton agenda for die next two

.

'

Ito also was expected to rule •
today 011 a de(ensc motlcio to sup- :
press evidence seized from Simp- •
son's Ford Bronco Oil,the; grounds :
:!,~~tc:s~~~rglarlzed wbile In ~

.

'
· Jury selection tesumcs Tuesdar. :
Attorneys an: now sean:blna for rs:
alternate jurora to step In if any
lbe 12 already seated becomes ill,:
eocoun~n p,ersoall emergencies, ~
or disobeys tile judge~.i _.mwlilloo
10 avoid all media coverage or lbe

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~--

•• #. • .

inctcen con
·
scats also were at stake.
publican
Voinovicb campaigned for a second
term against state Sen. Rob Burcb, D-Dover, and indepeudeot Billy
Inmon. Weekend polls said Voinovicb bad a big lead amons voters
surveyed.
Voten also considered candidates for state auditor, tteasurer,
attorney general and two seats onlbe Ohio Supreme Court.
Republicans looked for sains in tbe Legislature and state offu:es.
They are tryins to break a two-decade lock tba1 Democrats bave bad
on die Ohio House or Representatives. Democrat$ now bold a 53-46
advantage. And the Democrats tried to make inroads Into the GOP's
2()..13 bold OD the Obio Senate.
Four statewide issues were 011 die ballot - coostitutional amend·
ments that would rcduoe cleatb penalty appeals. eobance lbe rights
of a1me victims, streoglben Ohio's prepaid college tuition program
and abolisb a penny-a-can soft drink tax.

~rge

pellio,, and it would not surprise
any o us if we win conuol of the
House. A few months ago, I
believed tbat was impossible."

WICKLiffE (AP) - A Fl&lt;Xida
man remained In pollee custody
today Ia a bo:.l:t~· accascd of
walking into a
scbool wltba
abotgun, killlna a custodian and
lnjurinl three otbcr men. No llU·
cleats wac burL
Keith A. Ledcier, )7, whose
last known addreu was In Venloe, ·
Pia., will be cbarscd with one
count of qgravated murder and
tbree counll of "lt'l!pled ~vUeel ·murder roi- Monday' a lboiitlags,
Police Cblef Jim Fox said.
- Autbodtlea did not know a
motive for the abootlnl•· wbicb
Injured an 111lstant principal, a
. )IOIIccman and a teacher.
Lcdep willlsted today In Ill·
lafiiCtOry condition at Rlcbmond
HeJabts OeacraJ iloepllll ¥t11 JUDlbcit woundl.
Police laid the sbootina began
at about ~ p.m. wben Lpdef_er,
clleased -ID a dirt jactet, pouibly
· Croal a ~ outfit, walked
· Into Wickliffe Middle School,
abou&amp; IS IDIIcseast-ofCicveliDd.
· Tlaya Krilllll:t.' 11, ooe or die
·
-

--

VETERAN VOTER - Ramona Compton or Lincoln HID cub
her votes at lite Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department early today. Compton said abe nmal!l!l most Interested In the outcome~ or bJP· er education Uld rood tu Issues. Polls will nmaln open untU 7:30
tonlpt. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

At stake U1is lear were 36 govcmorsbips. with Republicans likcly
The Republicans DCCded to take to claim lbe 11oo's share; 35 Senate
40 I:lclnocntic House scats to win scats; and 435 seats in the House,
control, installing the combative ·wbicb hlso't been run by Reoubli,
Newt ~sri~ as speaker.

bower's fllll teiUI.
Clinron spent eight beetle days
on the campaign trail, describlns
today's vOle as a choice "between
bope and fear, tomonowand yes-

F;i;d;t;hJr~~;;;i;;

:

Rose family as 'quiet'

''"''''" MADNESS - Melp Coaaty wu
bombarded by televlalon c:ameru, ftoodUgbta,
•ellcoptera and repnrten over tbe weekend.
Here, loc•l •ad •tate law earorcement beld •
I

of wodc to be done. It takes every·
one worldns."
Many of the problems witb
juvenile crime In cities is directly
linked to the lack of punishment
and few responsibilities placed on
cbildren, she added.
Jim Wickline, lbe closest oeiBb·
bor 10 tbe Rose family, rents some
of bis land .to the Roses to graze
lbeir cattle 011.
Farm life entails Joos. bard days
- wltb tbe children working

School shooting rampage
leaves one dead, three hurt

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. CHARIJ!STOr( W.VL - A IIOien Olaricstoo police crulrer
ICaaawba River, polloe ~. · Iii.- fC!QIId file "badly damaged" cruiser Sunday after they
: -.., 4lie tncki-:-J.:ao tile river, said U. R.A 'lbomp!oa.
·~ ·
De~·
._ tajr.ea from tile home of Di:t. TIIDOiby
w11o liwl eill of tbe city, eilber late Friday or early Satur·

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TV coverage Irks
.·neighbors around
Racine ares farm

29

-.

.·'

By Tbe Auotllted Prell
The 1994 campaign came 10 an end today as Obiosns beaded for
die polls 10 elect a new U.S. senaror, a governor and other stalewide
and federal officebolden.
'
Seactary of State Bob Taft, wbo is a candidate for re-election,
predicted about 3.4 million people, or 55 percent of Ohio's eligible
voters, would so to lbe polls.
Ohioans will send a new senator to WasbiDJIOD to replace
Democrat Howard MctzCDbaum, wbo is retiring afler three terms.
Republican Mike DcWine and Democrat Joel Hyatt said on Moo- .
day tbcy were confident of victory, wbile independent candidate
Joswb Slovenec tried 10 set voters to listen to bis anti-abortion

c

ByGEORGEABATE .
Sentinel NeWII Slall'
Helicopters roared overhead.
Televiaion OoodliBbts kept nelab·
bon awake. Reporters continually
called and shoved mlcropboocs at
ncigbbon and family members.
1bla weekend Racine was blmbardcd by media .from Columbus to
Cbarleaton, W.Va., about claims
tba1 infanta' bodlea were burled 011
tlie farm ill Harold Rose Sr.
Investigators called off tbe
search for lbe remai!l5 Sunday after
finding about two handfuls of
potential evldeDcc, ,but supposedly
DO bodica, oJrlcials said. Reaulta pf
the searcb will not be known for at
least a week.
City TV llalions IIIII dicit viewers have a warped perecptloo of the
Rose family since they don't ·
understand tbc riiiOI'I of farm life, ·
aald Lola Proffitt, will! operateS a
60-aae farm about a mile from the
Roles.
· "I was born and raised on a
farm," Profflu-said. "Tberc'a a lot

,._

Ohio vote turnout
estimated at 55%

Spotlight
htts ·Meigs
residents -:

MENTADENT

''

years of bis pcaideocy.
Even some Dem,ocratlc Party
titans - names like Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy or Massachusetts,
Gov. Mario Cu01,11o of New York
and House Speaker Thomas Foley
of Wasbinston - sweated out
cbillleogea by an untested seoera·
tion of cindidates. Part of tba1 generati011 bears its own famous lin·
cage - lite Jeb and Gcorse W.
Bush, former 1'\'esident Busb's SODS
wbo are nmning to oust incumbent
governors In Florida and Texas,
and Mitt Romney, Kennedy's
opponent,, the soli of a former
Micbigan sovcmor.
·
"We are on the verse of a
Republican resurgence,'' said
Roser Stone, a GOP stratesist.
Democratic Sen. Sam Nunn of
Georsla conceded that bls party
" wal at risk or bcavy lossea, saylns
die Dcmocrals' cbances of il:ceplnB
Senate control were "no better
dian 50-50." Republicans need¢
to win seven Democratic seats 10
take control of lbe Senate . .
Republican tactician Eddie
Mabe optimistically commented,
"The probability tba1 we will have
control of the Senate seems com-

--.

1 Sectlon1,10PagM 35-*
AMultimedia Inc. New IIll "'t-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday~ November 8, 1994

Election jitters

.PRICES EFFECTIVE NOVEMBER 7 THRU 13;1894

,:: Woman shot for using driveway

.
-:
'•

3-12-23-24-27

VoL 45, NO. 132

- publicity, said Oioroo, who once ~
served as Arkansas' attorney gener- ~
ai.
••

limea loaccurate reporting, bul COD·
tends "we can all coexist pearefuJ.
ly.''
.
Olbers - among tbem Preaiclent
Clinton - question whether tbe
sensatloo•lired coverage endangers
Simpson's fipt to a fair trial.
Clintolf,aaid Sunday be was
"troubled' ~· by the amount or pretrial publicity, and particularly b)'
the televising of the pretrial proceediDss.
"It would bave been better if
tbc pretrlil bearlnss hadn't" been
televised, Cfuiton said In an inter·
view with ONN' s Larry Kina.
·
"I tbink ·there can be a fair trial,
but It's mucb more difficult to
empanel a jury" because or tbe

EVEREADY

, ~ ............. IIIJ!IIisted

BuckeyeS:

Copyright 11184

Hundreds attend museum opening

ELKVIEW, W.Va.- A rural Kanawha County man shot a
WOIIIBD rldlnsln a car tbat pulled Into bis driveway to tum around,
lberiffI olliciala said.
• . . : Cbarlea Bisbo~ of Elkview was charged with malicious
: ·WOIIIIdinB In tbe
· g o( Donrla Smldl on Saturday nlllht, offi·
clala said.
•
_. Slllitb, 31, of Sissonville, was shot in tbe neck. Sbe waaln Salis. factory condition Sunday at Ollarleston Area Medical Center, a
' ' nuraiD aupervisor said.
.
.
said Smitb and lbe driver, Leiba Brown, decided to tum
arouad wbllc $ooldDJ for SOIIICOIIC In tbe area. They said tile two
. womeD dl4 aot lalow Bisbop.
; · B = was freed on $200,000 bond, pollee said.
' ' 1D
ga10n released no fll'tber lnformatloo.
•.. Blabop could not be reacbcd for comment because hla telepbooc

2-4-9-0

.
en tine

.PHARMACY

CINCINNATI- They came, they played, lbey siBSied wildly.
Huadrecls cbildreo attended Saturday's q~eniog of the Cbiklren•s
Muaeum of Ciocinna«i, Director Marilyn C.ooc!man said. More thaD
. 1,100 people toured lbe museum.
The building features life-sized toys, make-believe worlds and
:- ·scientifiC experiments.
:
"It'1 Dot your typical mose\uD experienoe," said parent ~yon
. Saraero of West CheSter.
l
_ One of lbe most popular attractions was a cbalr attached to pul·
ley&amp;. Cblldren wbo sat In the cbalr could bolst themselves into die
air.
In anotbc( room, visiton played instruments, lncludinB xylopbonel and a slant harp.
Otbetvialllln bulit.tbioss from wood.
"I'm buildiDs a wood birdhouse for my mom," said Sarah Lanla:a, 10, ofMasoa. "It' sa surprise."
·
Brad Ma\lrer of Maineville and bis cousin, Clayton Maurer or
Greccnvillc, both 10, ran on a treadmill 10 make a series.or briBbtly
colored sears whir and swirl.
"It's die only place like Ibis," Brad said. "It's just fun."

Pick4:

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tbaldle result was fairly and impar·
tiallr achieved,·' media lawyer
Kell Sager wrote In a memorandum to the conrt.
The news organizatloos see it as
a FirSt Amendment issne.
"We have a riBbt to be in tbe
courtroom," said KCBS·TV news
director Lany PerreL
If Ito orders a blackout, the
beariDB today may provide tbe last
televised Simpson trial proceeding.
Simpson is 'beinll tried for-the
murders of bls ex-wife, Nicole
Brown Simpson, and ber friend
Ronald Goldman.
Perret says be understands
judge's frustration over the some-

RITE
AID

Henry County Sberitr Jobn Nyc said DO cbarses bave been filed
and bis office was oot.lnvestigaling.

3-0-2

0

be, the public can have coofulenie

· By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
Auotlated Prell Writer
LOS ANGELES- Worried
that a camera In lbe courtroom may
compromise OJ. SimJ!S9n's rlsbt
. to a fair trial, Superior Court Judsc
Lance Ito is cons~g wbetber to
pull the plus on electrooic media.·
Today, 15 new• organizations
are scheduled 10 try to talk Ito out
ofit
·
Tbey will argue that access to
the ~ourtroom is critical as the
jurors begin to w\l!p lbe evidence~
"It is even more Important that
tile public have access to as much
Information as possible about this
stage of the procecdlnss. so that
whatever lbe ultimate outcome may

Pick3:

Page4

Media plea~s case for O.J. ·trial coverage .~

-

TOLEDO - ~ldeots IXllllplaincd about loud music and crack
houses and SOIIIC criticized polioe offioen for laclting sensitivity
durins a public "Summit oo Safety."
_
About 7S residents _ptbered on Saturday in Qty Council cbam·
bel's to talk to Mayor carty Flqil:belncr, police Cbief Gerald Galvin,
fU'C OliefMikc Bell andolbercity offu:ials.
,
"I tbink it is aiwa~ good for city adminisiJ'IIlons to set input
from lbe ~unity,' Fmkbelner said. "It's Bood tQ get it ilinx:dy
and lllalgbt from the ncigbbodliiolls, .. Residents were interested In lbe plans for CDII!Diunity policing
and deceotralil!llioo.
·
D. Mlcbael Collins, president of the Toledo Police Patrolman's ·
Aasociatioo, said be was there to "liBure out what's goiila oo' • with
lbe department's plan.
"I'm searcbiog for clues," Collins said.
Council member Jeanine Petry said there should be a detailed
outllnc·or lbe decenttalization plan. The plan discusses reopening a
~loscd police station and chlnsmg some employees' duties.
The mayor said be intends to bold similar Informational forums
twice cacb year.

AI or Oct., 19, Mann bad leu ~
durlna the last bait or ' moDCy to wort Y(ldl ~ -CJ!abot, :
Oc:tobet. :
-- but tiotb have been reverilllly fulld· •
1'
· !:
Tbat'sadU far bc.biDd hla oppo- raisins. - .' -·' ··nent's total, but it comea at a auMann bas lddecii!Ue• IIIOdler ~
ciai lime In lbe caDil!I!!Jn.
· $33,'SOO to die $79,000 be bad ~:
Ney bad coll~tJcd_ $202,000 -1_oina Into die bome a~. and ~
from PACi :as or Oct. 19, and siDce - -Cbabot baa edcled $30,500 to lbe ~
tben baa 11Cbered at least another $1"4S,90S be previously bad on :.
$27,000. Exact totals won't be baDd.
:
known until after the election;
•
before the eleclion, campal1n•
Tbe other Ohio freshman the ~
must ~ptly report only checks GOPurgetecl waa ~-Ted Sttlck· :
~¥bat ~~e is consid- ::~in soudlern Ob o'a 6dl Dis· ~
ered one or 1be stale's closest coo~
Cbailenser Frank Cremeans, :
tes~notb~r is beinB wa1ed in who paid for almost hla entire ~ ~
Cincinnati, where Rep. David mary out of bla, own -~et,
:
Mann, J)..()bio, is In the fiBbt of hla bad &amp;iBnlficant help t'rdai natiooal •
liticai life against Republican Republicans in ienerai-election :
""-L
fund·raisins.
::
teve Chabot In lbe 1st Disu,..
_ Cremeans reported a cash bal· :
Mann basn't bad a single easy ance of $101,(100 on_Oct. 19, and "
m(liJICnt.
since -tlitn bas added at least ~
Or1anized labor decided early $26,000 more; &amp;tricldaod bad ;
011 to withhold support as punlsb· $!07,000 1n die b~ 011 Oct. 19 :
ment for some vOles be cast; a bit·
ter primary asainst an African· and since tbeo baa brought in :
American legislator bruised bis another Stl,OOO. :
relationship with black voten; be
•
bad to apologize for a race-bllltiog
Cremeans bas been doing so :
commercial be said was aired acci· well tbat some wealthy donors •
dentally after be rejected it as ~ bave been giving the maximum =:
campaisn tactic; and Republicans $1,000 personal contrib!ltlon and :.targeted liis contest as one tl!at anotber-$1,000 to compensate Oe· ;
would set maximum financial sup- means for bls out-of-pocket •
port.
expenses from the primary.
· :
..•

gorizlng It as too close to call.
Finsedlut, too, baS been able to
rely 0111be beneftta of lncumbellcy
- to outspend bis Republican cbal·
tenser, Steven LaTourette,
$704,000 10 $492,000 as of Oct.
19.
Fioserbutand LaTourette ba4
about the same amount of casb on
band lbe last time lbey flied complete reports, but since tbcn Fmserbut bas dominat~d tbe money
scramble, pulllos In at least
$44,00010 LaTourette's $20,000.
Allother bls-cbeck beneficiary
bas been 18th District candidate
Greg DiDonato, wbo Is uying to
retain for the Democrats the seat
· tba1 Rep. Douglas Applesate is giv·
iog up.
•
AppleBate's retirement set up a
free-for-all that created an opportuoity for Republicans to capture the
eastern Ohio seat for tbc fmt time
In two generations.
The GOP nominee, state Sen.
· Bob Ney, was considered the early
favorite, but DiDonato baS kept lbe
pressure on, and a financial blitz
helped largely by organized labor
bas helped bim over lbe last 2 112
weeks.
As of Oct. 19, the DiDonato
campaign bad talco in $97,000
from political action committees,
or ·PACs. Supplemental reports
showed the PACs added at least

Ohio Lottery

Dallas·dumps
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COLUMBus -A former dty official c:bQed with accepdng at
least $120,000 ia l'lllNIIltina rcea from plvate lrms baS qrcec~ to a
plea bargain, actordlng to court dncmnents.
•
Joseph A. Ridseway Jr., SS, or suburban Bexley, bad faced a
mlsdePM'.anor CDDtllct-of·lnterest charge in Franklin County Municipal Court
Tbe ailesed Ktlvlty occurred between Sepcember 1986 and
November 1992, when Ridsew~ SetVed as city enslneer and later
as director of lbe Public Semcc Department, court record showed.
Ridgeway R4recd to plead DO contest 011 Nov. 21 to ·a misde.meanor edlics VIolation and to pay $20,000 In restitution. The rcsti·
tuti011 will be split betweeu lbe city and lbe Obio Etblcs Ownmission.
Rld1eway a&gt;uld be sentenced 10 a maximum of six monlbs in iail
and fmed up to $1,000.
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"We loot at it as a mauer of poor judgment, not anYibing mall·
f!OOS." said Rldseway's attorney, James D. Gilbert ot Columbus.
We have every reason to believe It was Inadvertent. He certainly Is
remorsefUl ror anything wrons."
The Ethics Comm!Mion started the lnvestisation about two rears
aso lnro "many coosultios en1ineen and development fums' and
at least ODC olber city employee is continuins, officials said.
No cbarges have been filed against any companies. Tbc firms
geoerally perfilrmed bisbway construction and traffic ensfneerins

v~

.•'
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SOO-studeots at the end of lbeir day,
was in lbe school oflioe when lbe
gunman entered.
"I was really scared that guy
waa soma to come after me. I start·
ed crying and I ran to my class·
room." sbe said. "Then lbe tescbet
said (()( ~ycryone to get down ou
tile Door.
.
Sbe aaid lbe sunman demancled
to sec Auistant Principal Jamea J.
Andenon, St. Anderson was &amp;bot,
but was trcalcd and released from a
local boapltal•
.Custodian Peler ~; 41,
confronted the gunman and wu
kiUcd. ,
•
.
Qfflcer Tllomu 'Schmidt, 47,
pnrsucd· 1M auaman down ballwaya and wu lbot aeveral limes.
He wu ID critical condition at •
MetroHealth Medical Center lu

Clcveliad.

The Cleveland Plai11 D1tii1T
today tha~ the JI!Dman
tbCa bit a .IC'OeD·Jradc a1rt In lbe ·
side with the butt ofbll aua.
Teacher Lowell Grimm, 50, of
Wickllfre; pushed lbe Slri to dty
In a gymn•ID!II
report~d

preu coorenoce Saturday willa llbout :ZO media
npraentatlva from Colambu to Cbarlatoo,
W.VL'

before and after school, be added.
The size of Ibis family may shock
today's urban dwellers, but larse
farm families were quite common
and needed to complete all the
cbores.

Wicldioc, wbo taught many of
the children at Southern Junior
High School, said be bas been
bounded by lbe media and kept up
at DiBbt by their floodlights.
· "I'm offended by tbe way it's
been doDC," Wickline said.

AlthouBb it's not fashionable 10
spank children, there remains a flllC
line between tousbiove and abuse,
be added. Wilb a family as large as
the Roses, tbere could be little
room f()( bad bellavior, be added.
"I've never seen bim do anythinK to any of lbe ltids," Wickline
said. "They bad chores they were
responsible for, but they didn't
w&lt;irk tbat bard. A little discipline
never burts."
(Continued on Pal!e 3)

By GEORGE ABATE .
Sentinel NtWII Statr
Harold and Mary Rose's family
was quiet and private, JJeigbbon
and friends said, wbicb is wby
recent allegations bave come as a
shock,
Tbe Roses· 10 cbildreo were all
weU-bchlved, disciplined but withdrawn, neighbors said.
tnvcstigators sropped searcbins
for infants' remains behind the
Racine farm of Harold Rose Sr.
Sunday, but lbe investigation will
CDDtioue despite die facl DO bodies
were found, Meigs Count)' Sberitr
JIIIDCS Soulsby said.
Lola Proffitt. wbo operates a 60acre farm about a mile from the
Roses, said ber children bave
grown up and gone to school with
the "polite" Rose children.
"They don't get into trouble,"
Proffitt said. "Wbeo they walked
down to catch tbe bus to school
they were always clean."
AbQ.ut 26 years ago, Proffitt
helped~ Rose deliver a child.
"Sbe's been tbrougb a lot,"
Proffitt said, describios ber as a
small woman wbo never left the
bome because of her responsibilitie&amp; "Witb lbat many kids can you
imaBine die laundry and foodT'
P,llj&gt;ple questioned wby nearly
ail tbc;'· children were born in tbc
home; but many of the children's
birtbs came suddenly, she added.

· Witb so many cbildren, the old·
est ones tended to help raise tbe
younger ones, Proffitt said.
Jim Wickline, the 'losest neigh·
bor to die Rose family, bas rented
bis land for 12 years to the Roses to
graze their cattle.
"The family bas always been
de~ent to us ... Harold's always
been good to me," Wickline said.
"They're a personal family and
keep to themselves_ Everybody baS
a ript 10 live tbe way they wanL"
Rural neighbors tend to mind
their own business, be added.
"I've beard so many rumon I
doo'l ltoow what to believe,"
Wicil:line said. "I teadl scbool and
know tbe kids. I felt so sorry for
the kids. I just can't believe anything."
During slllllliler nights, some ri
the children would sit near the
stone bridge at tbe edge of tbe
propeny and sins. be added.
"They were happy kids," Wickline said, adding tbe older cbildren
have all gone on to se1 jobs and be
successful. "I bope they can get
their family back together. Those
ltids were so close."
Gene Ftsber, owner of Fairplain
Tractor Sales near Ripley, W.VL,
said Rose painted traCtors for bim. "I haven'l bad any dealings witb
bim for over a year," Fisber said.
"His price got so bigb I decided DOl
{Continued on Page 3)

Pomeroy eyes federal grant :
for additional p~lice officer ·

By JJM FREEMAN
Sentinel NeWII Slllr
Tb.e vlllase of Pomeroy may
receive some of tbe benef~ of lbe
recent federal crime bill in lbe form
of a new nisbt watchman or foot
patrolman.

Pomeroy Councilman J obo
Musser updated IXIUIICiloo a feeleral pant wbicb ml}' enable lbc viJ.
lage to bire a fuii·WDC patrolman.
The srant will pay 75 percent or
a new officer's wases. be said.
if a new offiOCI' is blred. hla or
bet dutiu may Involve SetYin8 as a
DiBbt waldunan or as a foot pabOI·
man in lbe downtown area.
Council advised Musser to furtber lnvcstipte lbe srant
In other law enforcement matten, councilmen Scott Dillon and
Bill Haptonstail Doted they bad
received complaiDts over tile new
speed limit on Lincoln Hill. The
speed llmlt on tbe biU was recently
reduced to 20 mllea per bour, too
slow aci:ordlna to some people,
they sal~imprcsalon u·~-· tbe new
'lbc
....
speed limit is \mncccsslll')',and tbat

enforcement 'of the old speed llmla;
was all that was needed to reduce·
tbe amount of speeding on die biD,;
they said
- ·
Council requested extra patrol:
on Lincoln Heights to coo trot:
speeding.
In addition, 'ouncil met willa
Jackie Tanner, wbo owns propcny•
at the junction of Maio and•
Ebenezer streets across from ~;
McDonald's restaurant
.•
Tanner indicated be was ~
to donate tbe land for constructl~
of a mcrae lane from Ebene:r:ci;
onto Main 10 help make the bus~•
inlersectioo safer.
··~
Council also discussed lbe pc»:•
sibility of inslaillns a traffic li~ :
or warning lisbt at the intersectioo., :
Council approved Cbriatmai•
bonuses for emp~/;.C::, totaiiDt!
$5,000. Fun-time,
· ~!
cea will receive $200 wbilc 11:11~
part-time em{lloyees, and new or
limited part-time employees, 1riJl •
receive $150 and $50 respectively. ',
' Also, council approved iuuila a
beer and wine license to tbe lfir
(Continued on'Paae 3)

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