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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

NBA

Pick 3:
075

action in
full swing

PiC:k 4:

4115
Super Lotto:
1-9-10-21-43-44

Page4

Kicker:
I

644412

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c:oolor. Frtclay, -J·IIIP Ia

e -n tine

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\o\11. U, NO. t :M

2 Sec1101111, 11 p. . 3 5 -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Novem.ber 10, 1994

~ght1tl4

A Mulllmeclllne. Nlllll,..,.

PUCO hearing to study phone call service
By GEORGE ABATE
1
Sentluel NeWI Starr
_
Area business md community leaders are urging resldeniS to attend
next week' a public bearing about lifting toll charges on calls between
MaSon, W.Va., and tl,te Polileroy-Middleport area.
The Public Ulilities Commission of Ohio has scheduled the bearing for
10 a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 16 at the Meigs County Senior Ci~ Center.
lbe bearln&amp; is a formal mauer, with sworo md unsworn testimony
taken. Only sworn testimony will be used as official evidence to help tbe
tclephoile companies' lawyers and the commission make a ruling, accord· ·ing to a release from tbe PUCO.
.
, Currendy, calls between the Pomeroy-Middleport area and the Mason·
·New Haven, W.Va., area arc long distance- which burts .local biiSinesses, said Donald Vaugban owner of srocery stores on both sidea of the
. Obio River.
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Clinton _
e

. "I think it's time to take down the walls between the two eominunities.
We're really just one,'' Vaughan said. "It's imponant. I hope we do more
than just Ialit this time."
Previous altemptS to drop lonJ ilistance char'es failed, Meigs County
COII)Diissioner Fred Hoffman wd Tuesday. Pomt Pleasant, W.Va.,Jmd
Gallipolis have had local pbone cbarges for years, Hoffmm added.
"There's a lot of stroll! ties ·on both sides of the river- family and
business,'' Hoffman said. It's less than half a mile and it's sort of ridiculobS to be dlarged that mucb."
.
'"!e key to setting the extra cbarges dropped will be a large l~al
showmg, Hoffman said.
·
. "Unless a lot of people growl, we won't get it changed,'.' Hoffman said.
:'You ~~ the squeaky wbeel aets the arease." .
Me1gs ~..:ounty Chamber of Commerce Pres1dent Paul Reed emphasized removing the lollg-dislance cbarge must be done to strengthen area

.--...--..st-election future

President takes·

some of blame

for GOP's rout

ByNANCYBENAC
Aaoclated Pnit Writer
WASHINGTON - Reorientinc his.presidetM:y toward a
Republican-led Congress, a
c~tened ~sident Clinton is
' promlain&amp; to seek common
ground bU'l tnsisting he will
figbt my return "to the policies
· that failed us before."
. In hil fll'lt public .!IPJl!!UIUICC
Since . elec~ons, Clinton
a "sbare of res~nsi­
for the Democrata StUD-

Letter Writing Crosses the Generations

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Recently members of the · Doug Mitchell, the purpose of the
University of Rio Grande Retired event was to celebrate- the
and Senior Volunteer Program lea'rning and friendship~ that
panicipated
in
an developed between the
intergenerational project offered · youngsters and senior volunteers.
by th~ O.S.U._ Co_operative Cooperativ_e Extension Home
Extension Serv1ce. 10 Gall1a· Economics Agent, Rebecca
County. The proJect slated · Culbertson who coordinated lhe
"G~andleners·: is a 10 ~eek letter ten week' project, presented
wntmg proJeCt de~1gned to various games and activities that
en~;ourag~
learn1ng . and encouraged
Grandletter
understanding between children participants to share what they
and older persons.
had learned about one another
Nine senior volunt~ers _were during the ~ener writing projecl.
«:: matched one on one w1th mne 4- In addition, refreshments and
'H children for a weekly , lett~; g&lt;W'! conversati()n were enjoyed
exchange that dealt with mpl~s 'liy all.
.
.
such as: Friendship, family and
It was apparent by the exchange
heritage, generosity and love, of smiles, hugs and gifts, ·that
responsibility and courage, friendships were made by 11111ny
respect fpr elders, helpfulness, . of the youngsters and senior
sadness and grief, con(lict and volunteers that will continue for a
violence and competition and long time to come.
juslice. Upon the completion of
If you are interested on being a
the proj~ct, the se~ior volunteer pari of a f~ure "Grandletters"
and the1r respective pen-pals project, pled'e contact the GaDia
attended_ a par.ty at the C.H. Coope_rative Extension Office or
McKe·nz1e Agncultural Center. the Areawide RSVP office.
According to RSVP Director,

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do not beUevc that ~ can

tmlrlt,to,so blclt-eo the da~ ot

"Gn!ldletters" participants topped
met for tbe.ftnt time.

t~elr

ten wee.ks of letter wrltlli&amp; wltb a party whea
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Velma Harshman
is October .
resident of the :month at ~Pinecrest
.

Social Secutity questions and answers

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Velma Harshman has been
selected October Resident of the
Mo~th at i'inecresl Care Center.
Velma was born and raised on a
far!Jl In Barnsville, Ohio. She
· marr!ed Robert Valentine, March
2, 1934 and moved to Wheeling,
West Virginia. Velma has one son,
Richard Valentine, who lives in
Gallipolis.
Velma worked as ,an aide at
Ohio Valley General Hospital, the
~ed Cross; and was a ·Cadet
Nurse forthe V~ Hospitals.
Velm~ was chosen Resident of
the . Month. by th.e Resident
Council, \&gt;f which 'she is the Vit:e .
President She is very active in
group activities.
She enjoys sewing, crafts, and
reading old History books. Velma
would. like to invite ~er many
·frien'ds in the community to stop
. ;by 'pinecrest for a visil. .

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Q. How d~s Sodal Security ·getting checks, you should contact
ftpre !PY beneftt amount?
us atiout 3 months before your
A. Your Social Security benefit 65th birthday to sign up for
is a percentage of your earnings . Medicare. You can sign up for
VELMA HARSHMAN
averaged over your working Medicare even if you d.on't -plan
lifetime. A worker with average to retire at 65 .._
$466 may qualify for a federal disregarded, a persOn who earns
earnings can _expecl a retirement Q. Wjlat pen:ent of my s~latj for self-•"llpioyed people.
benefit that represents ·about 42 goes towards Soda I Securjt)" Q. What's the aYence monthly sSI payment: Because a larger up to $97.7 a month may reCeive a
federil payment. ·
percent of his or her pre- t•xes? ·
'
Social Security · retirement portion of eirned income
retirement earnings. To get a free
A. In 1994, you and your beneftt?
'
estimate of your benefils, call employer each pay 7.65 percent · A. The ave.ragC!' monthly .Social ·
Social Security at 1-800· 772- -of your grou llalery, • up ·to Securi~): benefit in .1994 . for i
1213.
. $60,600. If you're"self-employed, retired Individual Is $674. The
Q. How do I apply for you pay 15.3 perceht of your avera§e monthly Social Security
Medicare?
taxable income into Social benefit anioJtnt for a retired
I
s
A. If you're already. getting Security, up to $60,600. If you couple is $1,140.
~
Social Security tetire111en1 Of / make more 1han $60,600 in 1994, Q. I understand -that I can ban
disability bene{ill or railroad you continue·to pay the Medicare .Ome Income and · still receive
retirement c.h~ wc:t,l c:onllet portion of the ~iai _SC:curity tax $upplement Se~urlty Income
you a few · moJitlli before you on tbe· rest of YQUr eamings.. The p~yments. About how much
bec:Omtl
eli&amp;A&gt;Ie for -MediCare and Medicare -portioJI of- the tax is lncomearitl allowed?.
.
1
1
g!ve you the lilf~ you nCed ' 1.4' pertent fot', eJI!p!oyers an~ ·A. Generally, a jJerson who,hu
. • •~ n &lt;tl #' • .atQ. ; .~uY
JI!·
~ ,; 'f .Yf/11,~;1 ·~l.~~fiY. , emni,Oy~~. ~~.and 2.9.I f'!leJ~ent
. uriearn.e~ jncome,. o·( ,IC$!1&gt; Jb'n~l.,.. 0
f lo ,./w:t~ .r. ••,V,tli \4 ~ .. r,.rlti&gt;• f 1 ~ -.~~ /T~ Ill&gt;' o ._ O. llri ~ • ,lo • f •
,-· , ~ It l, . .. I ~ I / ,~ , I ~ I ' o ,,

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explodln4 deficits, which f- ~
bellcvc wdilld lead to a weater
ec011omy, to lost jobs and to a
!BOre di(flcult future for ourselves ·aod our cbildnm .... !!e
aaid at a sometimes rambling
IICWI conference Wednesday. ·
CllnlOII, his voice stiU hoarse
from the frenzied final days of
the campaign, said he bad gotten
the message sent by dissatisfied
Americans, but added: "You ·
know, a lot of us haven't had a
lot of sleep and we're aoing to
need a few days to digest all
these results."
Ecboing one of bis themes
from the campaign trail, Clinton
suggested voter mger was partly
a product of mispercepllon and
·alienation: Americans don't
know what he's accomplished
and they feel isolated frtllll gov·
emm~t.
"It's something we have to
find a way to crack," Clinton
said. "It's not asimple issue."
Tumin' back to the business
of govem1ng, the president was
delivering a major economic
and foreign
address

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REPUBLICAN PLANNIN(; - U.S. Rep. Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., adjusted tbe microphone on
hli tie wblle 1pellldng to tbe media Wednelday In Roswel~ Ga., a suburb or Atlanta. Gingrich,
ellpeCted to be tbe next speaker of tbe House, spent most of tbe day In calls with his toll!lerntlve
brain tnut In tbe House. (AP)
~
at Georgetown University to set
tbe stage for bis departure Friday for Asia, where be' will
aaend the second annual swrunit
of tbe Asia-Pacific Economic
Cooperation conference. 1 •
Foreign policy is 011~, area
where Clinton's adviser$ hope
be will shine as his dealings
with Congress become more difficull
With a lame-duck DeoiQcratic Con,ress returning to town
later thts month, Clinton ~hal-

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aar;r::'ille Republicans take
cbarge In Jmuary, Clinton said,
they will have "a larger respon·
sibility for acting in tbe best
inJerest of the Americm people.
1 reacb out to them today md 1
aslt them 10 join me in the center
of the public debate where the
best ideas for the next genera·
lion (){ American progress must

'&lt;

come."
Tbe president reiterated bis
commitment to key elements of
bis domestic agenda, including
some form of bealth care and
political reforms.
·
But at the same time, be said
be'd like to work with .Congress
in a way that is "botb nonpolilical and more cenlrist" He even
volunteered a kindly mention of
a few elements in tbe Republicans' so-called Contract With
America. sucb as welfare refom1
and the line-item veto.

Merchants detail
holiday celebration
plans.for· ~Qmeroy
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Newa Slllfr
Holiday decorating of downtown Pomeroy to ~nrry out the
"Hometown Christmas" tbeme
along witb plans for the annuai
parade and musical programs, were
discussed at Wednesdafs meeting
or the Pomeroy Merchants Association in tbe Bank: One offices.
Arrangements were made for
members to meet at 5 p.m. Monday
at Pomeroy village ball to repair
tbe slrings· of ligbiS and otber c1ecorations In prejlaration for banging
by villaae workers.
·
The need for some ·electrical
problems 10 be corrected was nOted
and it was decided to contact a
local electrician to handle the wort.
The Christmas banners will be
hung and the ligbted decorations
put in place prior to the merebanIS •
open liouse and the parade on the
Sunday after Thanksgiving.
The merchants heard a report
from Jill Joboson about a request of
Seyler's House of Treasures to bost
Santa and serve refreshments after
the parade on tbe parking lot adjacent to that busineSs.
It was decided 1that a moo: confined area is needed because of the
age and number of children
involved, and that "kids are more
locked in and safer" in the minipark.
•
However, Seyler's will be invit·
ed to participate in lhe afler·parade
activilies, witb lhe restaurant sparticipation to be acknowledged in
some visible way.
Toney Dingess is chairman of
the Nov. 27 parade, wbich forms at
I e.m. near the old junior higb
budding and move into the downtown at 2 p.m.
Again this year, village council
bas agreed to "free" the meters

from Nov. 23 througi! ~ew Year' s
Day to encourage 'local shopping.
. Sheets with b~liday greetings
y.-111 be ~sed tii_Side cle~ pi~!!$
bags to cover the meter heads, u
was decided. Tbe sco_uts will be
asked to han~le covenng the. 300
m.eters and w11l be rewarded w1th a
trip to a local restaurant for refreahments.
. It was asreed that agai~ this
re~r Pomeroy studen~s will be
IDVI~ to. derorale the PIDC tteea to
be _attached to ~. parldnt meter
poles along -Mam, Second a.od
Court streets. A discussio~ ,WJ!S
held on bow to mate the VISit to
Pomeroy's downtown mO!C ~joy­
able for tbe students, and u was
deci~d that jlerbaps in additioo to
servmg bot chocolate, Santa couJd
be in lbe mini-park to visit with the
students ..
In lhell' art classes at the school,
. the students create colorful oruaments and-o~ dec:o!;atioos for the
trees. The pnncipal will be contacted to complete plans for annual
project of the students.
Cost of the trees is $7 and they
can be p1clced up from Anderson's
parking lot. on Dec. I in preparation
for decorauon on Dec. 2.
Merchants do DO! ~ave to be
members of the assooatiOD to take
part in making the town more fes·
live, _either ~gh a ~ oc Jeneral decorating of the1r bus1ness.
Anyone ~an purchase a tree and
talce part m the school's ~of
decora~~~~ the10.. .,
.
.
. OuUiJIID~ bu1!dings With white
hgbiS IS lll!au.' bemg enco~ged by
the association, and reSidentS of
downtown apartments are beins
asked to decorate their balconies.
A borne ligb_ting contest was
proposed after 11 was noted that
(Continued on Page 3)

•~~!!~~~s~.:~,?JJ~~~~.~--~~e,!!~·e~~~.~~~.~!:.

the citation as in~approprlate and serious violations for improperly · take action aslilnst 'otporate bad
unwarranted," G~allaJiber said. securing tbe equipment, OSHA actors wbo put competilive advanCOIInectlOD With a death last May IS ''The company, union md employ- said.
tage over tbe safety of their
~xcessive, a spokesman for tbe ees arc dihsentJy wort1n1 on safe• 'Today's citations against employers."
Jackson County company said.
ty. We feel this action is just totally Ravenswood Aluminum are part of
·Dewey Tayloc, bead of the UnitThe 9~~~patlol!al Safety and u~warranted. We're rev1ewing the a coordinaled effort by the Depart- ed Steelworkers local lhat repreHealtb 1\UUUnl&amp;lratioo announced Citation and wUI dedde wba~ action ment of Labor to bring tbe full seniS the plant's workers, said the.
the fine Wedn_esday. The Labor nygbtbe approp~."
.\
· force of tbe law to bear against rme was justified because tbe plant
Department satd it was th~ IJ!O~t / . ~ fme resulted fran the aeatb employers wbo fail to foUo~ basic has had a history of fatal accidents
OSlJA bas fined a West V~r~m11 ofuuUwrigbt worker Jerry But.cber, safety standards," said Labor Sec- in lbe past five years.
company. Ravenswood Alummum. 55, last May 13.
retary Robert ~icb..
"Having said tha~ we bave no
bas,~P to IS days to ap~
.
OSHA said Butcher was killed
Assistant Secretary of Labor particular satisfaction in tbe fact
rust of all, the fatalily that IS · when a piece of equipment weigh- Joseph Dear, hea~f OSHA, that the canpany is being charged
cited, we certainly view a~ a iJ!g 3,700 pounds fell on top of a~
J
willl the $2 million penalty," Taytra&amp;edY to~ oompany,the famil~: bUD. Another worker was able to
~~All wockers should be able to
lor said. "We certainly wouldn't
th~ commumty md employees,
get out of the way, OS"!" said.
do tbeir jobs witbout fear of injury trade the $2 million penalty for the
sa1d Ravenswood Aluminum
Ravenswood Alummum· offi- due .to employer indifference," life of Jerry Butcher."
spokesman Pat ~r.
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A $2.1 mllho~ f1ne agaio~t

Ravens~ood. Aluuunum Corp. .~n

.Jury selection underway in Persons case
Trial set to open
on charges ffled
against fugitive

arrested in September in Blount due toi motion flied by .bis attor- to -Meigs County Sheriff James
Soulsby.
· County, Ala.,. on cbarges of posses- ney, William Safranct.
In July, be escaped into the
ArreaiCd at the bCginnin&amp; of this
sion of marijuana, driving under
Mason
County, W.Va., woods after
tbe influence and assaulting a year on feloay auto theft charges
a
West
Virainia trooper arrested
and
felony
fleeing
charges
in
police ofllcu, Meigs County Pros·him,
Soulsby
said. At thai time, the
Meigs
County,
Penons
ba4
been
eaJtor Jolin Lenles said.
charges
w
ere
dropped because be
'
awaiting
trial
when
be
leaped
out
Persons - who liai fled from
lly GEORGE ABATE
of
1
treatment
room
at
Veterans
was
atill
•
to
appear for a bearing
Obio and West Virginia officials
S.ntlael NtWI Starr
.
: '.The jury trial of a Meigs COUhty · on multiple occasions - sllllds Mernorial Hospilal iD April, Lentes lattr.
Pcnoaa·was then arrested again
fuplivc begm witb jury selectjoo trial today for felony Oeeingud said.
- He was captured IK10D ~ter .in ·. after lie did not appear for an
this momiDa in the Meigs County grand theft 11110 charges, IKlCDrding
Parkersbura,
W.Va.; and was Augusl hearing - leading to his
.Court Of Common Pl....
to alWt files.
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re~
by
authorities,
pending an escape from authorities in a pleas·
DeSpite previous e~s. Per· .David M. Penons, 31, wbo bas.
extradilioo
bearing.
But
be did not ants Co~nty, W.Va., cornfield,
iddressea .in West Columbia, sons entered the courtroom Ibis
appear
for
this
hearing,
IICC:Ording Leotes said.
m~l!ll
uncuffed
and
unshackled
w;vi., and Lons Bottom •.was

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lenged legislators to "put mter·
national affairs'above politics"
and approve 8 world trade

"In order to bave any significant economic development Ibis communi·
cation barrier must be tnocked down," Reed said. "This communicati011
barrier really puts a red 11ag between the communities."
Reed added that he does not want to insult the telephone COIII)IIIIIies,
especially since Bell Atlantill West Virginia Inc. alre;ldy expressed inter"..
est in making the cbange in a previous hearing in Mason.
A member of the chambers' beard of directors is a Mason resident and
the chamber continues to look to improve md belp all existing and future
businesses, Reed said.
Reed, president ot Farmers Bank: in P&lt;DJeroy, said about 33 peroent of
Mason and Hartford, W.Va., residents bave accounts with the bank. The
long distanCe can simply adds to bosiness costs, be a.dcl¢,
Questioas about testifying at a public bearing em be directed to the
PUCO censumer bodinc at l·~PUCO. A deaf line is availab~ by
•calling l-800-686-IS70.

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NEW CERTD'ICATION - Stratep: Health Mobile Senlc:el,
Clw"leston, W.Va., bas rec:eiYed IIIIJIIIIIIIInPIIY c:ertllkatlon now
required under new federal laws. Maminograpben MldaeDe J1v.
ny, left,_and Theresa MeadoWI lire aeen wltb 1 IIIIIIIIIDOp'aphy
unit at Veten.. Memorial Hlllplllll tbat tbey are now Yilltln&amp; 011 1 ·
recular bull to proYide INiml'ftOII'IIphy aenicu ror tiM .OipltaL A
pbyaklan'a order Ia needed for -1111111DP'aphy, whlda II beileftdal
in early detection of breast cancer In w-n.
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'Commentar
lt·'s values,

The Daily Sentinel
111 Co11rt Street
Pomel01, Oblo

ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General MllDager "

.... MAR.G~ L~W
Controller

lEITERS OF OPINION 11C welcome. They lbould be Ieos thaD 300
words long. Allletun ~n .Ubjec:tiO editing and musl be Ji&amp;oed wilb nome,
addreaa and telephone number. No unsigned letten will be published. l..elltn

abould be in good llllc, odcbealiog issues, DOl ponoollilioa.

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Letters tQ the editor
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Recognizes former club memers

Bolin's. Delcns Whitlock's, Susan
Cleland's,
Doris Will's, Linda
Chatter Club was organized in
Mary Myer's, Donna
Hubbard's,
1953, 41 years a,o. forty-one
Jack's
and
Isabelle Couch's ..
years of many dehgbtful friends
and journeys bave come and gone. ' November's meeting will be beld
Every monlh we meet at some at Rulli Young's bome.
This is a rememberancc of diose
member's bome. We play games,
members
n9 longer with us and
we bave bate sales, we go out to
also
diose
wbo were left out of die
eat two times a year, we have ·
paper
by
me
dlis year.
refreshments at each meeting.
Susan Cleland
This year so far meetings bave
Pomeroy
been a,Vanjce Fetty's, Brenda

Dear F4itor,

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The Republicans won big: die
Senate, the House, die governorsbips. But wby?
Losers always bave excuses,
excu\ es, excuses. Tbts time die
Democrats are in fuU dlroat. And
so we bear: "It's wbat ~ns in
an off-year election,' "Tbe
turnout was wrong," "It was negative advertising," "There was bale
in the air,'' "ij was Clinton's
unpopularity," "It was bad communications," "It was the Reli·gious Ri'bt," "The 'voiers want
change,' "It was a dirty campaign," "It was anti-incumbenl,"
"It was anti-government." These
are die same people wbo in 1984
said Reagan beat Moodale because
Mondale didn't loot good on television.
Rarely willloscts say the obvious. Wbicb is: "We lost because
people don't agree widl our ideas."
They will almost never say, "If we
don't change our ideas our situation will get still worse." When
dlings get still worse it's called
"political re-alignment," wbicb is
uptown language for a new em.
But ideas do matter in elections.

~~

as in life. The pattern of thinking
reflected in Tuesday' s landslide
was fairly clear, generally wise,
and In recent years identified wilh

•

blame (BLANK) a lot, somewbat,
only a litUe, or not at all?" The
results: (Answering "a lot")
"Republicans In Congress" 2S
percent; ''Large corporations'' 2g
Ben Wattenberg percent: "President Clinton" 32
percent· "Demoaats in Congress"
.Republicans. The driving force was 36 pe~t; ''The news media'' 43
"values," a rubric about whicb die percent· "The moral decline of
public believes, widl some meril, people g; genCnll" 57 percent.
the l:&gt;emocrats arc sqnisby. ·
A Washington Post-ABC poll
Consider some recent public .showed 68 percent of the public
opinion polls:
• regarded "social issues" as "the
A Wall Street Journal poll most important problem," while
asked: "Please tell me which of only 13 percent sald it was "ceolhese statements comes closest to nomic issues." Otber more specific
your point of view: STATEMENT surveys showed dlat crime or the
A: The social and economic prob- deterioration of family values was
lems tba1 face America are mainly the No. I issue.
·
'die result of a decline in moral valA front-page story In The Wasbues. STATEMENT B: The social ington Post headlined "Disilluand economic problems lhat face sioned Public. Pull Social Issues at
America are mainly die result or Top of Campaign." Or, to put it
fmancial pressures and strains 'on more ~(f. "It's not tbe econothe family." The results: Moral my, stupid.' '
values: S4 percent Financial Pres·
Mucb bas been made of die idea
sures: 34 percent
that the vote was ·' 'anti-governA Newsweek poll asked: "How ment." I don't believe it. Voters
much do you blame eacb of dlesc are not idiots. They voted "anti·
people and groups for die problems. wbat-goveniment-does" on the

~

tbey oppose new taxes mainly

because diose taxCI will buy men
of wbat lbey don't like. ADd wbile

....
,M-an-sfi8ld. .....,...,54-·...,.1•

Ameritan liberalhm·baa made
some great conbibutiOIII, In recent
years it bas rostetcd die social erosion dlat vo~ fear.
F!dler Prime Minister Marsaret
~tcber bas noted. comclly, dial
a large part of major political
change involv~s cbanginl. ~be
ground upon wbicb ·the ~SIUOD
must play. And so, Sen. Ted
Kennedy stressed ho\1\' very strongly be bas always fa:vorcd "tough
law enf~nt" We bea;rd Tennessee Se~. JIDI Sasser (wtdl a 95
percent nwng .by die liberai.Americans for Democ:tatic Actioll) ~!
for .a ''return to simple values,
parucutarly prayer In lbe acbool. .
So Tuesday' I results are fine.
The voten bave COI11lCIIY idendfled
the problem. If America is in
dedine, if America founders. it will
not be because of its economy,
wbicb is a powerhouse. Our central
!lilemma, values, wbicb sbows its
race under a variety of l!ibels . crime, welfare, race, family, wbat
schools tcacb, quotas, and social
issues. to begin a very long list is an ancient one. It concerns
whether freedom and order c:an co-

INO.

~

cone ..was a tiictie and a pound of
Dear Editor,
I would lite to add a few tandy at die 5&amp;10 was a dime. .
Lew got bis'first car In die early
: yesteryear prices and some .busi'40s,
a 1930 Chevrolet We would
" nesses that Mr. Harrison didn't
take
Mom
to town on cbec~ day.
n mention.
. My brother Lou attended ·She would give us $1 and we
Pomeroy High School in tbe late would go to the Old Liberty opemted by Ned Manchini and. get a
~. '30s and I in die early '40s.
' Now, we-were poor people, Pop dozen bot dogs witb the best sauce
.. was a disabled coal miner and &lt;lrew you ever ate for a dollar.
Lew would give me four and be
a small oompensation cbeck twice
: a 'mondl. Mom would lceep out $1 would eat eight. Yes, you guessed
· for Lew's luncb wbicb wa~ a dime it. be was bigger dian me.
Virgil Walter
. a day and later the same for me. · -- -- - .
Racine
Yon could get a hot dog or cblll
for a nickel apiece. A big ice aeam

·.~

Shares spirit

.. · Recently my pastor, Dr. Paul D. scription io the Reader's Digest
: Fi!Zgerald. wbo also happens to be began in 1962, an assigned reading
· my husband, cballen~ed eacb per- · in ber class. Eacb mondl wben that
;:;. son In our coogregauoo to coDtact ~ure of print comes in lbe Diail,
: 10 people wb.o bad greatly influ- I tum first .to KJt Pays to Enrich
It was ~lion eve and I was sit- eDOugh Bbollllt to believe 'it will at tyranny imposed on us by tbe the same standar~ to wblcb we
.;. enccd us and to express tbants to Your Word Power" and I dlint of ling at my e001puter tenninal in die least wreak bavoc with programs English monarchy. The other must bold ourselves peQonally: If
: lbem for tbelr generosity in sbaring Miss Smith.
editorial department p~tting in die approved in some cases by voters believes tbe founders meant for us we bave to balance our privaiC bud·
~ dlemselves.
·
Earl Young was assigned to last leuers-to-tbe-edllor before and in odlen by legislators, They to elect representatives to vote on gets, why doesn't tbe c:ountty? Pro..
H~ further encouraged us to
tcacb algebra and physics, but wbat Missouri voters went to the polls.
tax-measures in our stead. To do grams costing a lot ~y be benefi: cballenge our 10 special people to _ be Jaught ~as mutb more valuable
otberwise'
is to so bog die wbeels of cial, but just bow vaiUible are IIIey
Sarah Overstreet government
: contact ·tO persons who bad tb:ui-equauons and formulas. Mr. ~;s~r~:!nm~ ~;~e~;:~
dlat we'll be forever wben weighed against !be national
• impacted their life. Would you Young modeled perfection of wbicb will never see tbe light of
mired
in
the
minutiae of getting debt?
·
: assist me In recognizing a few motive and desire to achieve in die day, aldlough we've been printing bave wriueu letters warning of die voter approvallhat we'll never get
To
put
it
simply,
aiiiCI!Ibcrsbip
; Meigs CounUans who ga~ c!'eglly midst of trials and jlain. I was in his letters on tbe same subject for dire consequences of die curtail- anydling done.
,
to tbe Y may be good for tbe famiof themselves In impacting my class dlat November day in 1963 moodls. Tiley are !be reposiui'y"of ment of lllis' program or dlat proThe
philosophical
argument
ly,
'lut'if you're way over budget
.;: life?
wben the news of President a passion I've never seen in my IS gram, many of them spurred on by streicbcs to die s!Cwardsbip of tax . and losing ground to credit-card
•
Harold and Helen Blackston Kennedy's assassination came. He years of reporting, all oo ''Hancock die possibility of their own. jobs money since die inception of ibe intere~t. it's time to cancel the
: were our neighbors in · Rock steadied our adolescent shock wldl II,'' a tax-limitation amendment being axed.
Therein die figllt became per- Great Society, and we add anolher membership to all die fancy equip: Springs. Their home was always bis calmness. There is a young man wblcb Is one or sevCGI around the
side to die mix atlhis point. That ment and get your exercise by
:: open. Their backyard was 'It play- in die college class I am teaching country seeking voter approval dlis sonal, and tberein we bad a cbancc side believes we bave gpne about walking down die road and doing
to view a major pbilosopbical
: ground. Helen's station wagon Ibis semc;ster whose bands remind elecUon.
It is a complicated amendment agreement wbicb will be driving doing good with all tba1 tax money push-ups in tbe living room.
,. became an ambulance on Labor me of Mr. Young, and I bave
collected, so wby is everyone io
By lbe time you read lhis, Han·
~ Day In 19S6 wben I was seriously shared ·With bim the indomitable In its constructioo, so e001plex tbat tax reform for some time.
worked
up?
coclt
U and tbe oilier stale tax~limi•
Many
w.riters
in
favor
of
HanCinjured. They modeled family to an spirit of m)' bigh stbool bero, Earl legal minds all over die state and
Tbe
first
side
is
disgusted
at
talion
measures will be eilhcr law
country disagree on exaroy wbat It .cock U were incensed lhat tbe odler
~ only cbild with a widowed modler.
Yonng. 1bank you, Mr." Young.
it
believes
Is
an
"entitlement·
or
bistory.
But if legislatOrs don't
: Their love for me temains•steadfast
Suzanna Fitzgerald says and what it would do. Yet side dare tell THEM' they didn't
ted"
culture
wbicb
bas
bred
bear
them
as
a wake-up call dlat
• and draws a large circle to enoomSomerset. Ky. many of die writers of die letters bave die right to vole on tax mea· ·
ndency
almost
into
our
DNA.
lheir
electora!e
is lootln8 for diem
~ pass my husband and our cbi~.
(Editor's note: Susanna was loolting over my shoulder said they sures. Tbe tpne of .many on the · Ye1 anodler side believes we need to lighlen .up spending
habits, IIIey
;: Elladene WatSOD was my Sun- reared in Rotk Sprlnp, daupter tan do wbat dlese legal minds can- other side was bow dare THEY
some
sort
of
brakes
on
taxes
and
are.
Comatose.
lhink:
or
cutting
progr'ams
!bat
bave
: day school teacber. Sbe was so or Maxine Arnold Wagner. She not, wbich is to understand it perspending, but would like to see an
Sarab Overstreet Is ""-late
very faithful to a restless and graduated from Pomeroy HIRII fectly. It will, IIIey say, put bitt done sucb good lhings for so many. understandable measure wbicb Editorial Page Editor at the
Tbe argument went as far back
: squ1rmy buncb of children. Sbe Scboolin 1965, earned a bache- into tbe bands df voten die power
as
die founding falhers: One side won't cut vital services before we Sprlnglleld (Mo.) NeWI-Leader.
to
.
control
bow
mucb
of
tbeir
:" told us lhat we wen: vr;ry important lor'• degree at Olivet Nazarene
bave a chance for moo: gradual and
(For Information on bow to
• to her and reminded some grumpy Colleae 1n 1971, completed ber money is taken for taxes and wbat . believed our forebears meant for us studied reform.
communicate
electronlcall:r with
to have absolute conuol of bow
• saints of tbe cburcb dlat we were Dllltel'lin social work In 19115 at is done widl tbat moner. . .
The
basic
underpinning
of
mucb
this
columnist
and others; con·
Odlers say IIIey tan t tmders!lmd mucb we are taxed and bow dlat
~ saints in protess. I loved to sit the Unlvenlty oiMlllourl, and II
of
dlis
emotion
is
die
belief
tbat
our
tact
America
Online
by caWng 1·
: close to ber because sbe always a practicing psycho-therapist and it completely, but tbey know money is spenl, as a ielief from tbe legislators don't bold dlemselves to· 800-SZ7-6364, ext. 8317.)
':_smelled good . 1 remember widl adjund Instructor at the lJnlver- great fondness the energy sbe 1 1ty of Kentucky Community
• expeodcd Ill my bcbalf and I tbank Colleges System. She and ber
: God for bcr.
·
busband Paul bave two cblldren,
'
.
: Miss Helen. Smith was my Jason, zs, a graduate of Nortb
(
: ~English teacber at PHS. Part College of Cbl~o, and
- Becaue ci ber I am an above aver- now living 1n Boston,
Katie,
Faced wilh a conservative'Cbni- . ~ be will otfe~ big-government - arid come up with majoi. prcipos. retain Hillary Clinton•s 80als of
: aae apellcr and an avid reader of 16, a blgh school junior.)
naled I04tb Congress, die Clinton
old Democr~ts who dol!"nate If's to band over more responsibili- u~i versa! coverage and cost c:onmost any prinled media. My subadministration is planning to unveil the Democrauc c:aucuses •n the • ty for managing dOOiestic programs wnmenc, but will start slowly 'wldl
a new "New Democrat" agenda House and Senate and may attract a to die states and localiUes and cul simple insurance reforms and sub,,,
after die election.
.•
die federal bureai!Cil!Cy even more &amp;idies to guarantee coverage for
•••
But there's reason to doubt
11
v
d
,
aggressively dian Vice President AI children and pregnant wilmen.
wbelher tbe pcesident can be nidi•. .
&lt;LOn nOD [8Cae GOre's "reinventing government"
Outside bealth care ellperiS say
II
cal enougb a reformer to attract tbe
•
envisions.
that wbile Mrs. Clinton and ber
.,
disaffecled vocen be needs to win lib.eral Democratic cbalienger in
Clinton also will·pusb campaign ~ief .adviser, Ira Maaazi!ler, bave
re-elealooln 1996.
1996.
·,
i
fmanoc and lobbying reform lesis- gtv~ up autbority over ~=~·
·An early sign of tbe new Clinlllll
Clinton, hoWever, seems to bave latloo, plus undef'med measures to drafting process, die two
ttilt to die center Is first lady HillarY litUe cboice but 10 bead rightward "redefllie relations with tbe ate Wbite House coo••"natcln or
•....
ltodbam Clinton'• replacement
if be hopes to get any programs
radler tban please It" health policy decllici';.inatcing,
•
the adminislrjllion' s top slrl!tegist tbrougb Congress and attract disaf- Coogresa,
presumably including tbe line-item Chris Jennings and Iennii'C.. Klein.
on bealth care re(orm. In additioo.• 1 fected Ross Perot voters.
veto.
are dose aides 10 Mn. Clinton.
. •""
a Jaslt force under Deputy·Cl!lcf of
In December, the Democratic
The
Gearan
task
force
also
bas
Clinton's strategy for tbe 104111
"'•
Staff Mark Gearan is studying a Leadership Council, the defming been , tbinklnf about ways to Conaress
•
seems to be to offer
battery of reform proposals group.for "New Democrats," will address what s perceived as a .Republicans a c:!f:aUve ialtUIJc
designed to revive die anti-insider COOle out wilh Pflli)OSals for "nidi· "mOral crisis" in ·~- nauon· parU ·
.
""'
,
y oo beallh care, We are reform 'and
imase Clinton tried to project in cal ref!dl" o(tl\e. government and by emphasizing
•••
abstinence as tbe tbe budget. Bill .If OOP ooojaeratlon
·1992
"progressive altetnaUves" to term
•
· The Wbile HoUse llili is projcc:t- limits and balanced budget amend- prefe~ means or coottolllng teen is not f~g an4dle ~l!li­
pregnancy under welfare reform c.ana .insast on pusbing a niilical·
·ing JDidterm election losses sanal1 ments. It seems unlikely that.die and
' .••,.,
partly by stressing Clinton's nabt agenda, CliniOn will inslead
enough to keep Demoaats in con· president tan go as far as the DLC dedication to religions freedom.
run as a TnDDanesque aandidate in
••
tro1 of bodl bouscsof ~but tbinks be most
·
·
Last year, with lltUc fanfare, 1996 ag i t 1 "d
. ·
ttae agenda is being,plaQned wldl' . Tbe DLC agenda Includes deep CliBton proposed and signed 1 Congress.'~ ns , . ~~:notbin
8
1be certainty in mind lhat Republi- cuts in 'subsidies and tax bRat&amp;· for Religious FReda$ Act deslpcl to
...
The DLC altemadve·ls for Cli,ai~
•
cans will be more ~werful than business as a means of fuildin8 new limit die aovernment's ability to ton to leapfrog the llepubli.cani
•
IIIey are now and will pu,5h amill-. invesllllents in education and sc:i- interfere widl die practice of tell· wldl a reform agenda even' more
••
tantly anti-government agenda encc; replacement of federal boui•
glon.
ambitious tban tbeira, and usc
by constitutional ame.nd· . ing and oilier social programs
topped
-~
. 'widl
,
. ""
·
On
1die bealth "" froait, the bowlJ fr001 "old J;lemocri.tt'· ~ u
ments. (or a balanCed budget and voudlcn to 80 ~y to indlvidu· Wbite' House last wcct confarmed pan of !be evidence d!l&amp; ...... IC!d;
....•
term limits.
als; arid diSID8JIIling some federal reports dial planning 9f new legis- oua.
·
!I"
•
The clangera Clibton faces in tbe depart!Dcnts.
,,
laUoo
is
now
lbe
joint
responsibill.
It'
a
a
"~;;,.
·
bat
next.two yean 1110 bls prqlOS&amp;ls .
atrateay, but w.
Aides say Oipton will propose a ty of Bob Rubin, ciJalrm8D of tbe .else lias ~
••' ,,
may
seem
bland
wben
stacked
slimmed-down
health
care
plan,
"Don't
tell
me,
let
me
guess.
,You·re
here
to
Na~onal Economic Council, imd
(Mo~OIIdradra II•U.C.·
••
againsl GOP radicalism llld (2) to reintroduce his 1993 welfare Wbite Hl,lUI!C dclmcatlc policy cblcf : Uve editor or Roll c.a, ~at: ,._
claim membership In our tribe.~
, ;:&lt;
811
tbe extent dial be tries to be a ceo· reform proposal. ~ continue, bla
•• v
~~·ClintOn
proposal
wui
.
'
paper
or
Ca(lltol
HDL)
.
'.
\
deficlt-cuttin~ economic pro,Rtam

(f

F.

•

'
-

as

Merchants detail .plans

Fal~ts=ail'J:!:'~of

Stocks

At a meeting of about 600 students, teachers and parents on
Tuesday night, Superintendent
David Tanski told tbe crowd, "We
bave to beal."
The session was intended to
begin die healing for Ill~ COOIII!Unity Sbaten by Monday's rampage.
No children were burt.
No classes were held Tuesday or
Wednesday for die school's 500
students.
Tbe alleged gunman, Keidl A.
Ledeger, 37, was a paranoid
schizophrenic, a relative said.
Ledeger, a formet:.. Wickliffe Middle School student, faces aggravat- ·
ed murder and atlempted aggmvated murder charges.
Ledeger was wounded in the
rigbt band, right foot. abdomen .and
buttotks during a sbootout with
pollee. He was in guarded condi·
tion today at Richmond Hll.igbts
General Hospital.

WICKLIFFE (AP) - A crisis
counseling team planned to help
students today in coping with a
sbooting dial left a scbool custodian dead and tbree otbers wounded.
Principal Gordon Gerber sald
Wednesday Jbat teachers at Wickliffe Middle School bad been in
meetings lbe past two days trying
to handle dleir own feelings about
the shOotings and dlscw;s bow tbey
could help students when classes
resumed today.
.funeral servites for scbool custodian Peter Christopher. 41, were
scheduled for Friday at Our Lady
of Mount Carmel Chuocb.

Hospital news

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admissions Emma Searls, Pomeroy.
Wednesday di.scbarges- Mac
L b. Middleport
iFoLZER Mtl:DICAL CENTER
Dlscbarges Nov: 9 - Tyler
Ward, Brian Pace, Mrs. David
Star Bau .................................... -.38
McArdlur and son, Glenn Marr,
WIDdy lnt'L .......,...................14 3/4
Ward, Phyllis Cline, Anna
· Jh~
Sentinel Wortblnatoo lod................- .....-..22 Mary
Daniels,
Jessica Herdman, Brandy
Stock nporll are the lli:JO Lm.
Hysell.
(1JSrl JI).NI)
quotes provided by Adveot ·or
Blrtb - Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
~ t"'f - - , ...,..,. llin&gt;ulfl ·
GaWpolls.
·•
·Haner,
SOD, Gallipolis.
JlddiJ. Ill c.t . ..._ , , Olllo. by... ' ...............;;~;;;............;;;;;111....;;!1
(Publlsbed with pe~on)
llllo,'I'I!Jir Nllillbi ~1M!!'..... i
1

.

be..

FREE ESTIMATES

P. -

.

I

~,. !rMfci*A .,......... aalo

Nt:aqq
..... : . ,•"; . I ')!'Ill

OOQQ

I
I
I

~

.., .
...
'

m

'

.I

'

I:

IPl'c:INIY DINGISS
·
WI1GS IDGII SCHOOL ¥NO
· 43091 POUIIO'f PID. •
I'OWIIOT, OHIO ..~

I
I
PHOtE-112·7141~0FFICE)

----- --.....
·.

.., ,,.~

II

was

An unidentified 20-year-old
Clay County, W.Va .• man and a
IS-year-old Meigs County youdl
are facing charges In an attempled
burglary and dlefts on Rocksprings
Road near Pomeroy Saturday
morning, according to Meigs
County SberiffJ ames M. Sonisby.
"The 2 a.m. Saturday altelppted
burglary at the residence or 97year-old Belva Willard on Rocksprings Roatf bas been cleared, as
well at the theft of a weed eater
from Steve Story's garage and a
weed eater from David Reed's, the
cutting of tractor wiring and puncturln.f tractor tires at GeiX'ge Carper's, said Soulsby.
,
Soulsby said the individuals
were first inu:rviewed Saturday. A
few days later it was learned dial
Mrs. Carper bad talked to an indlvidual wbo bad c001e to her door ill

Th,e parent o~ ~ jpv~~
CODIICICd and bia.IIIOIIIcr bi:oug.bt
him to ~be sbe.rlfr.a dcp;utincitt
Wednesday afternoon: Aller being
confrQIIted with die jnformation .
dlat bad been obl&amp;inld, die· youlb
confessed bis ~ iD· tile lf(les of
incidents and tmpDCljted the older
suspect.
.
:· .
Soulsby. said tbe prosccatiag
auomey's office lndk;aled it would
ilttempt to exl,radite die man from
West Virginia. ·
Charges of attcmptcd aggravated burglary, two coonII of felony
tbefl involvin, tbe weect.earcn, llld
two ooubll o vandalivn for puncturing tht: Jractor tires are cxpcct,ad
to be filed today, be said.
The prosecuting ~1 is also
cbecking on die proper charges to
file for cutting die telephone wires
at lbe Willard residence and Story

·•
Meigs
EMS ·
Units record
• ht ·
II

custody of the parent' pending die
filing o.r charges and a ~caring in
die Me1gs County Juventle C01111. ·

eI g

ca s

'

'•

141-2,01

~ .·

:::::~

::r:.: ~~~~~ ·~~:

ginia Slate Police in Clay County
as soon as IIIey are flied.

· Units~ tbe Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
answered eight calls for assistance
Wednesday. Units responding
included:

. POMEROY
8:09 a.m., Mulberry Avenue,
Emma Searles, VMH;
8:34 a.m,, Pomeroy Volunteer
Fire Departmenl, Pomeroy Nursina
and Rehabilitation Center, false
alarm, Middleport VFD and Rut·
land squad assisled;
2:51 p.m., Overbrook Center,
Lola Bohlen, VMH.
RACINE .
12:30 p.m., Main Sueet. Brittany Fortune, VMH.
RUTLAND
5:02p.m., Meigs Mine Two,
. Dave McComas.
SYRACUSE
3:08 p.m., Setond Street, Von nie Todd ll, VMH;
3:51 p.m., Syracuse Fm: Station,
Pamela K. McKinney, VMH.
TUPPERS PLAINS
8:38 am:, Tuppers Plains VFD,
brusb fm: on Wes Arbaugh proper· ·
ty, Tuppers Plains squad assisted.

COLONY THEATRE
TONIGHT
HARRISON FORO

CLEAR AND PRESENT
DANGER PG-13
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING .fRIDAY
PAULY SHORE
IN THE ARMY NOW PG
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION $2.00
4A6'0923

Startilg

FAMOUS

3''

$

CloSIOIII

Peal and Stick

In Stock T1rf
9s!vcl

V"llyl Tile

$4

_,1

,.

W.Va. man, Meigs juvenile··
fac~ charges in burglt~rie~· . .

VInyl
Flooring

-.,

·1'11....,· Ololo &lt;15'169, ft. 1192-1156. cl=

, -............. JliooliontJ. Olllo

-

i
. ...

..

... - . .
FUNDS FOR SOLID WASTE - Jhit Beckner, iert. .,llltlr·.
Information. coordinator for the Gallla,Jackloil•Melp..Vinloli·
Solid Wute Management DlJtrld, pr-IIU Jiln J~~ , .
lor the Melp County Health Department, with • $4,1100 daedl .....
Ita 101ld waste program. Tilt lllOile)' C:OIIIel from a pcirtlon OI.Jie
luncb generated from 'tipplnc lees at district landnfb, GalJta 8n4 ,
Vinton counties also received llnanclal uslstanc:e.
.
·

PIICIS IHAI WILL
FLOOI YOU

EXPERT INSTALLATION

:D8ily

•r

.--

.

~~~~itU:;~":6:1oYP:M~~ -~~o.:~=ga:~~~or ~' ~~ju~eruTe-wis released to tbe

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
.-;- A Huiltlngton teen-ager has ton.
"They opera!C on die pay telebcell.=
·~iwacd wllh two counts of phone
over there ... Tb~y all bave
fust .
murder in tbe dealbs of
pagers.
They operolle wide open out
~l ,
, Oblo. men.
m
the
middle
of the street,'' be
J.1aik .Andio!ly Washington, 17,
sald.
'
ilmli:d
'Wccbsda
and
taken
Wlf . Y.
to t!lf! Dunbu Yp.utb Facihty,
wbere be was b.eld without bond.
J19lice ~ 1obn Noble laid.
Was4anaton Ia c:barged with Am Ele r-er .................- ....31 114
~g D'Angelo Hicks, 18, and
~- ..--..--....·-··-···.......,.59 118
Alllland ou ........ - .................38 118
Juan Sallie, 17, on Oct 22. . .
AT&amp;T .................................... .541/l
.. ',Of(i!;Crs fo.und tbe two lying Baak One ............. ...............,........l8
W Evau-.........................10 518
·out.side a bouse, both sbot in die Champion
Ind ....................... .14 Ill
beal1 police said. Qty Cotmcilman CUrml. . S!oop
........,_ ... ......6 718
BW Taylor said be bad previously City HolcllD&amp; ...- .....;._,,............34
complained to polic:e about drug Federal M~ul.- ....... - ....·....lll/l
attlvity In die neigbborbood. He Goody- T&amp;R ..................-.35 318
owns tbe bouse, one of S3 rental K·aart -··-......................~ . .16 311
propcrUe• be bas in Huntington, Ludi End ......................- ....17 118
Um:lted I.aC. .....--.. --..- ....20 !18
CabcU County reoon1s show.
·
1ac..... ~-~..--.U 711
.Taylor did not say wbo,rents the Multimedia
Polat
Baaeorp
........__.;,;;;........19
bouse and said lie did not know
•
....._
Elec:trlc-------.30
518
wby ~ llldSallie wen:.tbere;
Robbllll • Myen•• -_.,::;.17 Ill
. T)IY.lor said tbe area is "die bot Royal Dutcla.........................lO!I 314
Sboaey'• lnc ........,......~...--.14 518

Can·· Ciinton be a new 'New Democ·rat'?
M

·Meigs announcements

Suspect held i·n twin killings Counselors aid students
spot" for drug dealing in Hunting-

!

Berris World

Vannie E. Roush, 88, of New Haven, W.Va., died Thursday, Nov. 10,
1994 at die Pleasant Valley Nursing Care Center.
.
Born Aug. 12, 1906 in Graham Slation, W.Va., she was a daughter of
die late J:Jenry D. and Addle F. (Roush) Oblinger. Sbe was a homemaker
and a member()( die New Haven Uniu:d Methodist Cburcb.
·
Sbe was also preceded in death by ber husband, Hazen H. Roush; a
son, Harold E. Roush; tbree brotbers, William H., Pearl J. and Ardlur P.
Oblinger; and two grandsons.
Survivors include a daughter and son-in-law, Wanda L. and Leroy
I
• James of Mason. W.Va.; a son and daugbler~in-law, Virgil G. and Nancy
B:r 'ne Alloelated Pre•
a.m.
· G. Rousb of New Haven; nine grandchildren; and 22 great-grandchildren
. Temperatures could dip Into tbe
~eather forecast:
and a great-g'real-grandcbild.
Today ... Raln ending soudleast
mld-20s under clear sties over
Services will be Saturday at I p.m. in the Foglesong Funeral Home,
nonbcrn Obio tonight, forecasteR by mid-morning, dlen clearing and Mason, widl Rev. Eldon Shingleton officiating. Burial will foUow in Grasaid.· Lingeriilg clouds in tbe soudl becoming mostly sunny in the ham Cemetery. Friends may call at lbe funeral bome Friday from 6-8 p.m.
willlceepreadings In tbe 30s.
afternoon. Sunny or becoming
Sunny but cool is die foretast sunny elsewhere. Highs in the
· for ·Friday. Temperatures will be lowertomidSOs.
. mosUy in die lower SOs.
Tonlgbt ... Clear and cooler.
'lbe last of die rain moved out Lows in .lbe upper 20s to ·lower 30s.
will be The Sing_ing Sloan Family,
of the state early today as a low
Friday...Sunny. Highs lower 50s Revival in progreu
lbe
Children of God, tbe Family of
Revival
will
be
held
at
die
Full
pressure sy·stem and associated northeast to upper 50s far soodl.
God.
lbe Country Gospel Singers, '
Gospel
Ligb!bouse
on
Hiland
Road
cold front pushed rapidly to tbe
Extended forecast:
soutbealt
Saturday... Fair. Lows in the 30s near Pomeroy until Sunday widl Brodler Lesley Allen, die Happy
Tbe National Weather Service and highs in the upper 50s to lower Betty Bater and the Joyful Sounds. Hearts, Herb Dickens. Family, Bob
Richards and otbers. The Rev.
S~ia:s start 7:30 nigblly. All weisald rainfall amounts Wednesday 60s.
Margaret Robinson, pastor, Invites
measured between a balf-incb and
Sunday ... Fair ... Except for a COOIC.
die
public.
incb.
chance of showers late in die day.
The record-bigb temperature for Lows in die upper 30s' to mid 40s Library dosed Friday
·
dlis dale at die Columbus weather · and bigbs in die lower and mid 60s.
Tbe Meigs County Public Spo~ ba'!lluet poat_poned
The
Me1gs
Aihletk
Sports
~an. station was 71 degrees In 1949
Monday...A chance of showers. Library will be closed Friday in
'··-·Wblle-tbe-record low was 19 In ·--Lows in .the .40s and bighs in-the.....observance. of Veterans Day•.Rudl
19S7. Sunset tonight will be at S:20 upper SOs to mid 60s.
Powers, librarian, announced
N~v. 21. M~ rolls and bevemges
~ p.m. and sunrise Friday at 7:12
today.
Wllibe fumisbed.
Garden Club to meet
Tbe Wildwood Garden Club
F.utwill meet at I p.m. Wednesday at
(Contlnaed from Page 1)
·a means of attracting shoppers into die Kountry Kitchen.
em,
Meigs
and
Soudlern
Future
none was beld·last year. For many die downtown shopping area durHomemalcers of America will be
years,. die Winding Trail Garden ing tbe boliday season.
held a1 Eastern Higb Scbool ThursCreative writing workshop
Club sponsored tbe oontest, but disA tbank you note will bi: sent to .
day from 6: IS to 9 p.m. New officontinued it last year due to tlie . die Court Street Grill for belp widl
The Meigs County Library wiD cers will be iustallcd, cootie, candy
expense of prizes. It was decided to tbe Halloween party during tbe bost a free creative writing wort- and Christmas ornament contests
revive tbe cpatest lhis year, perhaps Midnight Madness sale laSt mondl, shop widl Ohio University Distin- will be held, cr.afts will be dis·in c:ooperation with tbe garden · wbicb was described by merchants guished English Professor J act played by Cindi Oliveri, Meigs
club.
• .
as a success.
Manbe.ws from 9:3Q a.m.-12;30 Exten5ion Agent, and lberc will be
.r ·. 'pCialls of die Categories of die
Councilman George· Wright p.m. Nov. 19. Participant~ must door prizes and refreshments. All
contest and prizes to be donaled by reported on money wbicb may be register before, by calling 992- FHA members of the county are
merclwlls will be announced later. available for usc in hiring an addi- 5813 or 992-5713, or stop at die welc001e:
Te!ltiitiY~ p)ans. were made. for a tiona! policeman for Pomeroy. library.
.
J?rosi!JDI.followms die judgtng ol . Merchants suggested dlat il foot
Home ~eboollng meeting
.tbe .J aome, decorations, with · patrl&gt;lman might be effective in Hog Rout planned
A group of Meigs families wbo
annouilcement of die winners to coouolling IIQIIIC of tile. downtown
There will be a bog roast at the teach their cbildren at home will
, Cll~ · from. tbc; stag~ area, wh~re problems particularly at nighL
Believers Fellowship Ministry, meet at 7 p.m. Nov. IS at 28471
.,,wi!.l ·~ e!!ICr1a!DIIIent dunng
Tbe next meeting was set for Rutland, on Sa,turday beginning at Bnsban Road.·For more delalls, call
. lbe~vCIJillg.
Dec. 7.
11 a.m. The cburcb is lotated on 949-3119.
· Entcrtalnpacnt was proposed as
New Lima Road. Featured singers

Get out the blankets tonight

.Yoters ~ave had it _with loose spending

.....

Vannie E. Roush

W. VA:

Therefore what? Insofar as tbe
problems are political, die cure is
political. What liberalism b'as
caused, conservatism sboukl try to
cure.
Or libenllism can cbange. That's
wbat Clinton's "New Democrat"
_philosophy was supposed to do, in
an ever-more liberal Democratic
pany. But Clinton cbosc to not; or
could not, do lhat in tbe fint balf of
his term. If be doean't do It in die
second balf, we will bave tbat
political realignment
Ben Wattenberg, a Mnior fel.tow at the AmeJicaa.EaterpriH
Institute, Is ll!e hoat of the weekly
public television· program,
"Think Tank". ·
(For rnfor~tlon onJtow Jo
communicate electronlcaUy with
tbls colama!Jt and ot•erl, con·
tact America Online by caWngl·
800-8:Z7-6364, ext. 8317.)

Recalls yesteryear prices

(f:
•leo1um11usls7• I

exist.

•

....

Maly Ann Baird, SB, P001eroy, died Wedlleaday, Nov; 9, ,1994 at ber
slsler'a residence In Kanauga.
Born Feb. 21, 1936 in AddisOD Townsblp, Gallla County, daughter of
die lale S11cy and Nellie Halfhill ·Baird, abc was a waitress at Crow' a
Steak House In P001eroy for 34 years and a member of die Camfllign
Baptist Cl!urdlln Addison.
Surviving are four sisten and brotben-in-law, Gnlcc lllld Ray Cbellcy
of Kanauga, Nora and Oscar Corbin of Gallipolis, Ann and Flllllk Rytber
of Pomeroy, and Sylvia Mayes of Adlens; and several nietes and
nepbcWs, and great-niea:s and great-nephews. Also surviving is an aunt,
Phyllis B111111 of Evergreen.
She was p-cceded In death by a sister, Stella Burns; and by a brodler,
Cbarles Baird.
Servites will be Saturday at 1 p.m. In die Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, wilhlbe Rev. Dawn Spaulding officiating. Burial will follow ip
Cal;npalgn Cree1t Cemetery. Friends may &lt;:all at tbe fwieral bome Friday
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
·

lroledol58" I

tba1 mate you dissalisfJCd? Do you issues ibCy care 11101t aboi1t. Thus,

t

'

Mary Ann Baird

MICH.

•

The

--Area.deaths--

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Ohio
Page-2.:...The DaUv, S8ritfne1
Pomeroy-MI~dleport; Ohio
Thursday,
November
10,1994
. .. .. . .. . ... ,. . . -·

,

a

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' ·.

99~
M-T-W·F9-5
Thur. 9-12
Sal9-2
(614) 992·7021

�The Daily

Sports

S~nti.pel

l'hur.dey, Novamber 10. 1994 ·

In NHL l!fbor negotiations,

Bettm~an

nnirsday, November 1o, 199:4
. P1g1 . 4

In the 'N8A,

Kiri,gs, Rockets, Nets, Sixers and Lakers among victors
our ~uys 10 .~flld !&gt;D after building
lbe b1g lead.
.
Sacramento blew an 18-pomt
lead ln'lbe thil;d quarter, and SeatUe
led by a point wilb 4:45 left to
play. Then the Kings went on an
11-1 run.
"Thill wasn't us aut there,"
~.onics guard Nate McMillan said.
~ac was 11?, energy on tbe floor.
This IS not us.
In other NBA games Wednesday night, it was Houston 109,
Indiana 104; Orlando 130, Charloue 128; New Jersey 110, Olicago
109; Pbiladelpbia 98, Washinfton
97; lbe Los Angeles Lalcers 22,
Minnesota .99; San Antonio 109,
Utab 101; and Phoenix I 06,
Atlama 102.
Sbawu Kemp led the Sonics, the
defending Pacific Division cbamps

who were upset in !be fii'Sl round or llie court with trasb. ·
Magic rallied from an 18-poinl
tbe playoff~, .wl.tb 21 points.
MiUer had 25 points Cor the Pac- deficit.
Sarunas MarCJulioms added 20.
ers.
Alonzo Mourning who sat out
Two free throws by rookie
Maalc 1301 Hornets 128 (OT)
· '
Michael Smith putlbe Kings aliead
Sbaquille O'Neal's 46 points
for good, 90-89 with 4:35 left In and 20 acbounds belped keep OJU.
lbe game.
lone winless. ·
Rockets 109, Pacers 104
Nidc Anderson's layup willi one
.Hakeem Olajuwon bad. 43 second left iu overtime aave visit·
points •. 16 rebounds ~nd e1ght ing Orlando the victory aftedhe
blocks for llie RockeiS m a game
delayed 10 minutes wben tile
crowd at Market Square Arena
BEYOND HIS REACH threw trasb on lbe floor to protest a
That'• where Phoenix center
foul call.
Danny Mannina (left) aeu the
Willi the RockeiS leading by a
ball In relation to tbe reach of
point, Reggie Miller attempted a
Atlanta pard Stacey Augmon In
tbe first quarter of Wedneaday
three-point shot willi nine seconds
left, but was called for an offensive
nlaht'• NBA aame In Phoenix,
where the Suns won 106-102.
foul. Angry fans, who bad already
(AP)
seen Indiana coacb Larry Brown
ejected in llie fust quaner, pelted

the fltSl tbree games of lbe season
with a toe injury, liolsbed with 26
(See NitA on Pap 5)

Basketball

=:

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.s
j
z.

.667
.667

.m

l l~
2 .000

1o11111111 ......................o

RY~ BROOK, N.Y. (AP)New sate. New mediator. Pcrllaps
·new bope.
. Then ~· 1be same old DCJollalOrs with lbe same old positions
were due at _lbe bugaining table
today in the baseball slrikc talks,
mating movement unliltely.
AcliD&amp; commissiooer Bud Selig
planned 10 be allbe table wben
talks resume at aa executive resort
nartb ef New YOrk City. Thesession, just the fifth since players
struclc Aug. 12. will me fii'Stacal
DCBoliallng meeting run by media·
lor William J Usery who was
appointed by .be Clinoon adminis·
Jratiao Oct. 14.
As each day passes It's less
likely tbe strilce will ebd 'before tbe

•

2J

C....oiiiiYW..
Mllwl!lkio .............. l
0 1.00
Dllroll .....................2 1 .667
ladi......................J I .667
Cblcqo ................... 2 2 -~
a.BVI!UHD ......... I I J00
-

Rher~lde,

War·

rcuvlllt.Hta. 2.5. 13·Midlaoa 23. 14 (Ue}
JACKSON, Maoyavlllt 21. 16-Col. l..r.
peaduco 16. ll·Holilld Spriqlleld 15.

J

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I

II·Mat-13. 19-You. Cblley 12.

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,

Mid-·-..

Dlvllloolll

.Ill

Doavw .....................2
S.. Alloalo. .......~ ..2
Ulall ........................ l
llallll. ..................... .l

Mlaa-................0

.667
.667

IJ
IJ

2 JOO

2

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4 .000

2
4

I
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I
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TILE MARINERS: Nuoed Or·
illdo Gomez ...qcr; Boyaal'lice pildl·
·S

wat ........

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ba.

OtMn ,_.t.lnl 12 or . . . pollltlr
II·Ntw Latdoa 44. ll.CJe. BeaecllcUae
43. u.c;,, wyomlaf (21
14·

-IOI.SeollleiOO

s1.

Toalpl'•&amp;•m•

Loulaville Aflulau 27. S·IIANNIBAL
RIVER 24. li&gt;lllllvUit 0 . l'lotll. .

MliWaulru at Cl.ti\IELAND, 7:!0
p.m.
~-lllln!ll, 7:30p.m.
Ori-·-Yort,lp.m.
Clppon, IO:JOp.a
- · - . I O:JOp.l!l.

_

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Frlday'i gam•

DlvblooV

~onolllco (II) 1~ ........................~

2.CIL M-Ill (6) 1~..................267
3-Wtllavilli (~~~ ........,.............. ... 250
"'Supruect
y (2) 1~ ..........220
s.c:::~) 1~..................................217
6-S
YleCotb. Co!tl.l·2 .............. 130
7·Wooclo!leld Mo... CeoL 9-1. .. ,.....123

·· ·

- . . ........ Hop.m
Dltlllo. Plllildolpltil, 7:30 p.nL
,._, • Wl!lbiDI,IOD, 7:30p.m.

Cbl- •MIIDOIDII,I p.m.
Goldoa Slllo • Ullb. 9 p.m.
-·Seollle.IOp.m.
Do.•••LA. ......,IO:JOp.m

IO.Atroa Mudtta1Jrl~ ....................69

Oilton .......... 11 .. · - ...... .
11 -Dc lphos Je(Ctrtol 34. 12-Sulllvaa
Black River 23. 13 (tie)·Columblau

Football

u:.

Crutvlew, Elmore Woodmort 17.

uwlaliutl Tri-Coullty Nonl! 14.

Division VI

Sports Network's
NCAA 1-AA poll
IIIJNTINOOON VAUJ!Y, Pa. (AP)
- The lop 25 te11111 lo tbo Spolll Not.
wort Dl¥1aloa 1-M roothll poll, with

J.llclphol SLICII!a'o (It) 10.0 ...........295
2·Mc!Joalld(7) IIJ.O ..........................m
3-0a. Coualr)' Illy (2) 10.0...............229
4-Ctdatvllle (5) 10.0...........................223
S.O..villt (2) I~ ............................ 110
6-PORTSM011111 EAST (I) 1~ ..... 11l

l

Ia pnatbelol, recorda
Llol

~~St.(st:rctl~~
2. M
(3) ....11-1.0 14!1!
4

1 Oruti&gt;IU., SL ($)..·..11-0-0
4.-(l) ................. J.I.()
5.-liDa ..................I·I.O
6. Tto• St. ...................7·2.0
7,....,, UDiv. (1) ..... 1·1.(1
L B.loolllc:ty ............1·2.0
9.1- Mtdlooa .......1·1.0
10. loilt SL· (1) .......... 1-1-0
II. MeN.. St. .......... 7·2.0
12. Appolodli.. SL (1)7·2.0
13. l'touylvula .........7.0.0
14. N.lowo .................6-&gt;0
15. N. Tew ...... ........6·2·1
16. c.... Aorido .........6-&gt;0
11. Mid. r ........ St.7·2.0
II. W. CaroliDL .........~3-0.
19. Newlllq&gt;oltire ....l-1.0
20. Willilm ol Miry ...7·&gt;0
21. AlcorJ SL ..............6-2·1
22 S.F. Auatia ............4-3-2
23. Holoro ..................I-I.O

U. OcorpS........ J...O
U.S, C.UUuSt. .......7·a.O

136.5

3

1
9
10
IS
II
13
14 .

1110

TI4

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19
20
21
22
23

•? 1 to 3.7 cubic Inell engines

Z5

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Sheridan collece poll
o

' PrrTSBUltOH (AP)- Tbo kip 10

""-.u

"""" Ia tbo

-·will! ~~n~.,-.­

~= roconla tlwoul)l No•. 6
o

~.,,51.(1) .........~ ~

.. s. Cwullol St. ..................1·2.0

o

:

·Q

S. -ylt.,O&amp; .................J.I-0
6.-.1&lt;. ........................ .6-H
7.J-a ........................6-&gt;0
I . ...................................7-2.0
t.V..... 1&lt;. .......................6-3-0
1 0 . - SL ....... .!.. ........1-3-0

5S
53

n

20

II

Toirrnoo-lted hardle for
superior balance and easy
handfing
.
Safety package indudes

0

' .

catcher
ProfesSional hard-chrome
cylinder bare
Semi-rigid anti-vibration
systam for more comfort.
able cutting
.
Automll!;ic and manuel oilers

• Lightwailt¢

COLUMIUJ, 01t1o (AP) - Roor o
-IIUII ol_ipado . . . . . . . . _
-.-oa~o
-."-1
· - lo tbo nUl 1,... ....._
-poll lor Tbo ~ Prioa,..,. Oltlo

.....

I

···1011-•• . . '

IU.. lolaool Alblollc Alee!•lol ..tit . ·
·alo•, .....

.... (b.,..._la,. I

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IN·----------· .
~ ......... (I)P.I--- ---211 •
Cloliitala(2) 10.0..-- ---219"

ffli"!:~U.--------fO&amp;&amp;
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~ lbe ~xt ~II so, Sell&amp; saJd. Committee chairman from J~

Certainly if people want to send
people, lliey're welcome to send
them. I'm 'oiug to ask tbe GMs 10
taJJr; aliou~ ll ~JSl tbemselves: I
would think m. tbe ~ some will
go and some WJU DOl.
Players and owners also spent
Wedne.lday assessing tbe elections.
Tbey ~on't how wbetber lbe
Repubbcau takeover of Congress
wi~ alf~ effons 10 ~trip baseball
of liS anottust e~pliOD.
.
House J ud1c1uy Commlllee
cbaumau Jack B~ks, D-Texas,
wbo helped pusb a bill aut of commiltee last 01011tb, lost bis race fO"
ac-election and will be replaced by
Rep. Henry Hyde, R·W.
In the Senate, Scu. Orrin Hatcb,

Biden D-Del Biden and Hatcb
voted~ . 1 the titruU bill last
June, b~~l'tatcb tfen changed his
mind and became a ro-spoosor.
"We have bad broad bipartisan
support and il's gelling broader,"
FCI!r said "Other than tbat I'm 1101
goin&amp;IO CaouncuL..
~ief House spoosor Mftf
·

from Massillon Jackson, was .an
early cOIIlmitmeDt Ibis spring. He
avcraaed 23.4 points aud 7. 7
rebounds a game last year wbile
earning first-team aJI.Qbio bon&lt;n.
Mansfield Senior's Sean Tuclc·
er a 6-7 forwud, committed 10
oiuo State but plans to wail until
the spring siping period. He aver·
aged 18 points and 9.8 rdJounds I
year IJO IS I juoiO'.
Shaull SllliiCIOOk oC Westqvillc
Nortb, a 6-6 fOlWtl'd. ~ 111 aver·
age of 19.5 points per game in his .

field.
Tbe Bobcats also locked up
Damion Washington, a third-team
ali-Obioan who scored 20.5 points
game last year at Toledo Waite
but will play this season Cor Toledo
Scotl.
Cincinnati added fonlball-baskelball star Melvin Leven. who led
Cleveland Villa Angela:SL losepb
10 a state championship iu Marcb.
Levell averaged 20 poiniS and
seven rebounds a game a year ago.
Wrighl Stale went the fartbestto
gel a recruit. Six-fool- II Zdenek
Kos is a nali ve of Czecboslovakia
wlio lives iu Klostemeuburg, Ausuia. He will play this yeu as a
freshman at St. Calbarine (Ky.)
luniO" College and will enroU wilb
lbe Raiders in 1995.

juoiO" seasao last year.
Obio State also aot commit·
meats from 6-3 Nesbalm Colemau
or Toledo ·SL Jolin's (15 points, 7
acbounds a game); 6-6 Jason Sin·
~=or Detroit's Aquinas High
.
(18 poiuts, 13 tebound.l); 69 Seou Gtaduey of Louisville (Ky.)
Ballard (122 points, 7.3 rebounds);
and East CaniOD' s Malt Hawanl. a
6·10 ceu1er who averaged 19.9
points and 12 rebounds a game last
year IS a junior.
Obio University added a pair or
6-7 players from oul of slate:
junior-coUege transfer Paul Morris
and California bigb school player
Matt Jager. Morris, wbo also
playg! f~I a year iu Siuppore, was
flflb in lhe nalioo a year ago wilb
bis 67 perceut shooting fr~ ~~

Dave's S~all
Engine Repair
253 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 992-3922

. ..
'c '

DRY AN HOFFMAN

BEAm HUDSON

H~dson makes

Mount Union's
football team
as wide receiver

Hoffman crackCampbellsville'$
football roster
I '

'

The Daily Sentinel
I

1

/t!mingfon.

for Cftristmas!

. I

Ill COURT ST. ·

( .

992-2155.

BIRCHFIELD
FUNERAL HOME

'

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'

.

'

.

•

1

1
1,

I

'

.·

'

0

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$1o99

Laga'!J)ag

•

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9 99

4.49

to

/

M-=cu••acw.

' I

re-election and llie cliief Senate
spaosor Howanl Metzeuhamn I&gt;Obio is'rctiriog.
Rep. Pat Williams, D-Mont.,
lield a heuiug 133t month on bis
biU 10 impose biudiug arbitration
but will be replaced as chairman of
the House Education and Labor
Committee by .William Goodlin&amp;.
R-Pa.

a

99

7

~hlo B.S. .medJa poll
.

Pbdhes co·gen~ parlllcr Dave
Montgcmery, MUwaukce Brewers
general counsel Wemdy Selig-Prieb
aud former St. Louis Cudinals
CEO ~tuart Meyer.
. U~on !Jead Dooald Febr: !"bo
Jives .m this auburb, ~be JOiucd
by nane players: Kev1n Brown,
Brell Buller, David Coue, Tom
Glavine, Orel Hershiser, Scott
Sanderson. Bob Scanlan; Curt
Stbil~g and BJ. ~urbolf.
Selig, wbo dido 1 allow clubs.IO
send general managers 10 lbe WID·
ter meetings 1331 yeu, said
Wednesday it was possible lbe ·
GMs would be allowed 10 go lliis
year. The major league ponion of
meetings, whicb are in Dallas,
would be Dec. S.7 if GMs go.

a

Chain Elrake"'/Hand Guard,
sefety trigger and chain

-ola• Poll ol block "'I·

i~~i'iOiiiO)::t:~

between lhe MIUJ!os ancl tbe New
Yarlt Mets OII.April2,
"I told Bill i'JI do wbatever is
!""""'swr," Seli&amp; Slid Wednesday
m J:"''m!x, wbere ownen ~lode
tbeir ~~ SIJaJeJ)' meetings..
. Selia. •aended his fii'Sl bllrgammg sess1011 on Sept. 9, wben owners ~ejected tbe players' plan of a
1.6petccntla1011mmuellldpayrolls of lbe Jaraat leaDIS. Ownen.
who pi'CK':"~ ':~cap plan 011
June. 14, slill iDSill 011 it.
_SIX otber III8JII&amp;CIIIelll ~
laJives are 10 8l1end lbe bargaining,
wbieb is vbMuled 10 nm lllrougb
Sunday: Bos1on Red Sox cbid
executive o~ Jobn _HarringtoD,
Colorado RocJcies cbairman Jeny
McMorris, Atlanta Braves JJresi·

:

12
16
11

6:17
Sl2
514
4:17
314
241
193
177
145

(SecTALKS on Pap 7)

:a'B

I

719
649

season.
In an interview Wednesday
night wilb The CaiUidian Press,
Burke said that Monday's talks

i

TITAN®
TOUGH

5
6
I

1346
I))J
1309
1211
1125
1114
1065
1025

Burke reversed bis posilion
from last week wbc:u be said be Celt
lbe NHl.. was aJ risk of losing tbe

•own

7-Colunltlllo (2) 10.0........................141
1-SL Heory 1·2......................................91

U.Oulltllov. 6, ovcnll poiDII lid I"OVI·
. ......ldiiJ

soo."

were "a a JOOd llllft. It .U die
besl discnssjao we lllld in maoths
lbc next meetinJ is key in m7'
mind bcc:N1se tbat good start could ·
tuna into momentum or It could
Jrind 10 a bait."
While otben in 1be hoctey cam·
mlllily wcre1101 ovaly optin1i"ic.
lbe)' did 1101 completely dism~. lbe

'S RECYCLE

!lao

Ita

opllmistic that a deal can tie
'Mlllred out iu lime to save die sea·

BIG!

a.s,.. aro,. • - Ualoa 11-1 ........... 11
9-Lort CHy llllcbyt Trail !1-1 ...... ,.......76

~·MI-U.,Ip.m.

they could be playiDg ~y by
the firll of December," ~d the
soma:, lpealr;iu&amp; 011 lbe c:ooditioll
be not be ideulified. "A lot will
binge on tmiiOIIOW's mee"rc"
NHL ~ommissioner Garv

"E\'a)'lhiuJ dcp:nds 011 bow well
lbe meeting goca Thwsday. Bullbe
fact lhallhey met Monday 8lld are
meeting apm Thwsday is a majO"
lJrealcJhroup. 1'hey- did make some
beadway (ID MIDday)."
In an ESPN radio interview
Weduesday, Brian Bulb, vice
presidcut iu cba'le of boctey operatio~s for lbe NHL, said, ''I am

Worthy to retire today

3-~(6)1~ ...........243
4-NELSONVIUJ!.YORK (I) I~ ... 238
5-0irville (I) 11-1 ................................. 155
f.You. Mooitoy (I) '1-2 ....................... 144
7·Broatrillo !1-1 .............................., ... 117
1-CoaboclDO (I) !1-1 ..........,,,,,.... ,.,,.,79
9-WIIEELERSBUilO (I) 1·1 ...............74
IO.BntOI!IIold (I) !1-1 ............................ .52 .

LA. ...... Ill,MI.-.99
Sill Alloalol09, UIIIIIOI
-106,Allalloll02

mism.
"If lbe 111Jb c:u~tlnuc Ibis way,

Bettmau and uniou head B'ob
Goodenow planned to bold !belt
second JQee1inJ o1 die weeliOday,
poaibly iD Buffalo. N.Y. The two
prime neaotiaton in lbe dispute
mel fO' KWill boun Monday..This
-':$ tbe fint lime die lidea lalbd
twlceiumeweetsinccOcl.4-S.
"There ~ SliD a lot of ilsues
on lbe table,'' lbe source said.

Bryan Hoffl!!.a.!!, tlle. sQ!I !Jf .
George and Joan Hoffman of 2S
Ri vervlew Drive, Middleport, is a
Former Meigs gridiron Slllldoul redsbirl freshman an lhe 1994
Heath Hudson is a mem~ of 1be Campbellsville College foolball
defending NCAA Divi~iQn Ill team.
national champion Mount Union
Hoffman, a 1993 Meigs Higb
momel
ciled
iu
Nartb
Carolina,
and
Purple
Raiders for tbe 1994 seasao: Stbool gradualc, is a wide receiver
INGLEWOOD. Calif. (AP) Hudson is the soo of Mary Hud- Cor Ron F'mley' s Tigers.
Those gaudy, higb-flyiug days of basn 't been with lbe LakeiS since.
"Willi
lbe
new
Laker
sys1em,
sou
of 37070 Ball Ruu Rd.,
Campbellsville College, fouod·
•'Sbowtime'' are over.
lots
or
new
players
and
a
new
Tbe
freshman
bislory
Pomeroy.
ed
in 1906, is located in south C:Cn·
Goue, too, ue the performers
COIICb.
il
was
a
good
lime
Cor
bim''
majO'
and
1994
Meigs
Hip
Scbool
tta1
KenliiCky. 'J'be college is affiliwho turned the Los A/Jaeles Lakers
•
into NBA cbamplons aud lbe 10 aclire, said Perkins, wba played graduate. The S-Coot· II, 170- ated with the Kentucky Baptisl
witb Wortby on lbe Lakers and on pouod Hudson is on lbe Purple Convention.
Forum iniO Hollywood South.
·a
University of North Carolina Raiden' roster as a wide n:ceiver.
lbe iustitution bas an enrollJames Worthy, 1be last "Show·
team
lbal starred Midlael Jordan.
Mount Union is a privale, liberal ment of I ,260, wbicb is the lugest
lime" Jilllr;, is rcliriog today. ending
Wortby,' a seven-time All-Star arts college loeaiOO in Alliance.
ever in the history of lbe college.
his 12-year NBA career and oomand
MVP of lbe 1988 NBA F'mals,
pleliDg lbe fmal hreakup oC one or
joined lbe Lalcers in I 982 33 :.be
basJr;cjpi!S!I:~~teiJBIIU' s BJC31 acts.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Magic No. I draft selection. The 6-foot-9
forward helped lead lhe LakeiS 10
~~= Mkbael Cooper and Kurt tbree NBA cbampionsliips during
Rl
have all retired. Byron
Scott now plays Cor llie Indiana tbe 1980s.
"James Was differen~" Johnson
Pacers. A.C. Green is with lbe
l'boenill Suns and Pat Riley coacb- 10ld the New Yor.t Daily News on ·.
Tuesday nigbt, wben lbe Lakers
es lbe New Yode Knicks.
•
"I bale to see bim go. James IOSI 117-113 10 lhe Knicks. "Funwas a big part of all .lbe Lalcers damcutally, I compare him 10 Larry
cbampiousbip teams," said Sam Bird as lhe best fundamental playPcddDs or tbe Seattle SuperSonics. ers I've ever seen."
MUDS!
Wonby bas two years left on a
"He deserves a lot of accolades. I
spate 10 James about il, and be 1old cootract lbal calls f~I $12.4 million
me be was bappy about his deci- - $7.2 million lliis season and
sion to come oul al l.bis lime. I $5.2 million in 1995-96.
"The Laker organization has
tbink his decision 10 come out .was
given
every indication tbat should
lberigbt me."
Jaines
reliac now, they intend 10
Wortby. 33. started Ibis season
503 MILL STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
honor
lbe contract fully," his
oo lbe iujun:d Jist because of ten·
Is
AniiOUJKing
New
Business
Hows
EHedive
Nov. 14tiJ
Frank WbeaiOn, sai&lt;! earlier
RETIRING TODAY II the to. AD&amp;ela Lllun' James Worth)' dinilis iu bis left lcnee and wasn't agenl,
Ibis week.
9:00 a.111. to 4:00 p.11. Moaday tin friday
(No. 4l,
dlll'lni a 1!189 pla)'olf pme aplnst the Dallal M.aver- being counted 011 by new !XJ3Cb Del
Worthy averaged 17.6 points
Harris
10
play
11
promioent
role.
He
kb), lbe 1111t memberofthetcam's "Showtlme"era of the 1910s. Tbe
left ihe team last monlb wben his and S.l rebounds CO' bis career and
~year-otd WOitiiJ', a awn-time at-star, Is nft'erlnc from tendinitis
leaves as lbe S4tb leading scorer iu
in Ids left knee. (AP)
NBA his10ry wilb 16,320 points.
Last season, be played in 80 games
1
: ,.,, Jll
A ••• ---~~~om~in~·Kd~fiom~~~e~4~&gt;--------------~---------------- and averaged 10.2 points. 2.3
rebounds and 20 minules a game
Keviu Johnson made fOur free - all career lows. ·
: points iu his seaso~ debut. Larry
Spun 109, Jazz 101
• Johnson bid 2S poiL.s CO' the HarSan Antonio snapped a seven· throws ill the 1331 I I seconds to
''W)len he was in his prime,"
: DCts. and Dell Curry added 20.
game acgulu-seasou losiug streak keep AUanta winless.
Riley said, "I can guarantee you
Danny Manning scored 16 or lbere wasn'l anybody who could
NctlllG, Bulls 109
to the Utab Jazz, wbo also beat
SPORTSMAN
. Kenny ~:s jumper with lbem in lbc Western Conference his 30 points iu the lbird period for IOUCb bim."
.: I 7 sec~ds R:DWnmg gave New ,playoffs.
Phoenix.
,
SPECULS
• Jersey Its fii'St victory after lbree ·
David Robinson bad 30 ints
OJarles Bartley missed bis thinJ
~= under uew coach Butch ancJ 17 ac~~· !IJid Sean lmiou slr'aigbt game, this lime with the If somethinc would
Ou. Earlier, be was out willi an eye
· B · . bad 22 In
scoacd 21 mts 1n lbe Alamodhappen tome
: BeDOil eDJIIIIUil
po IS ome.
illjury.
: and 13 acbaunds f~ lbe Nets, Wi!O
Kul M one led Utab wilb 23
Ken Norman bad 22 points Cor today, my funeral
: blew alate l~po~t lead but still points an S rebounds. John
"SLUGGERS"
lbe visitiug Hawks, wbile Stacey
. managed. to "':llllbea home opener. Stotktou added 19 points and 13
Augmoo and Steve Smith cadi bad anoanaement would
Deer Slugs
: ~come. P1ppeo scored, seven assists. FeiiOn Spencer scored 14
I7. Allanta got Smith, wbo staned, be madeby .. o
• slllllgbt poJ!IIS for tbe Bulb m a ~3- poillls.
and Grant Long lliis week in a
12,16, or 20 gauge
: 3 ruu. T0111.Kulcoc eveo!'tal'r lied
SUDS 106, lf,awb 102
trade with tbe Miami Heat
My
spouse
• lbe game at 106 by puWDg m lbe
0 My son or daughter
: rebound of WiU Perdue's follow
; with 23 secxmds to play.
0 More than one of my
•
76en 98, Bulleb 'n
children
. Dana Barros' stole lbe ball and
0 A good friend or
· !!lade a layup wilb seven secmds
neighbor
~ left 10 give Pbiladelphia its fwt
1
lead of the game and uew c:oacb
• 0 One or both of my
•Jolm Lucas bis fii'Sl vkloly.
parents
Jeff Malone bad 22 points Cor
0 I'm not sure
t-e 76ers, including U in l.be
22 Long
C Expres~
rourtb period wbeu Philadelpbia
Rifle
Steel
•
Small
Funeral planning makes good
rillied from Ill 18-poiut deficit
game 6 &amp; 7Y. shot
Tom Gusliotta Jed lbe visiting .
Rimfire SO pk Shot.Shells
sense. , Call us for your FREE
llullels wilb 19 points alid I 0 ·
Cartridge
· · 12 ga. n shot
loads 12 or 20 ga.
copy o( the 20-page booklet,
iebciuods, and Rex Cbapllll!li alio
"A Guide Planning Ahead".
lllld 19.
IAbn Ill, T~rwoiYII,?!'
There is no obligation.
CLIFFHANGER
· lbe MiliDesota Timberwtilves
Jemes C. Bl~chfleld
lOOk lheir COQIJb double-digit loss
MensWomens
Vine St. &amp; Third Ave.
634 E. Main St.
OWner.()peretor
Ill u mzy pmea Ibis season.
Childrens (2-6)
: Rookie Eddie J oou bad 3 I
Gallipolis, OH
Pomeroy, OH
'points and Cedric CebaiiOI 2S u
die vlsitin&amp; Lakers smotbered Min~ with their pressure defense
! .orations
and farted 23 turoovers.
VISA
. Mon-Fri 7-6:30; Sat. 8-5 Sun 10-4
~on- Hi 7-5:30; Sat. 8-5
·: -I t - die 14111 Slrligblloss far
MASTER
99~·5627
llllln
&amp;tNit,
PO.
Box
111
:the Wolves, dating bac:k to lastsea. OJSCOVE~
,IOII.dsaWI Rider Jed Minnesota
We Sell Hunting License, Deer Tags &amp; Wetland Stamps
IIIIIIUPOII'
Rutl.ncl, Oh. 4&amp;775
,,nib !7 pailltl.
.

l.otmutowa Val. View (13) I~ ...291
2·W-• (I) 1~ ............................276

01'-.

votta

ror • ayw_toba oamed IU.

ba.

Ita

WedMIC!ay'a ICOfel

firat·plleo

Brioa

Division IV

·)09, 11!&lt;11... 104
-Ieney 110,
109
llliildolfl!lo 91, Wl!lbiqloa '17
o,t- ISO, a..-121 (01)

-

~ired

OIMn r.c.IYiq 12 Cll' . . . I'QIAlll
II·Loadoalll. IH!Iyoii!W .. (I) }1, 11Loullville26. 14-Can!Oo Ceal. c.tl!. ll.

-DhW..

GoldoaSIIU ............s o 1.00
.................. .2 0 1.00
- . -............. l
0 1.00
............................2 I .667
LA. ....................2 2 -~
Seollle ...................... l I -~
LA. CJippon ...........o 2 .ooo

BOSTON RED SOX:

Loon~, pitcher, from tbe Moatrell Elpo1

I·Siet!baa¥ille (19) 1~ .................. ,..300
:J..Belolt w.. (3) 1~ ............240
3-SIIERDlAN (I) 1~ .......................226
4-Col. DoSollo (3) I~ ......................209
5-Avoo Lob (I) 1~ ......................... 197
.. 6-Linlti·Mo... (l) 1~ ..................161-·
HRONI'ON Il-l ,..... ~ ........................ 141
1-llomilloa Bl!dlo (I) 9-1 ......................19
og.QJIII (I) !1-1.. ....................................15
IO.Btlloltoll-1 .......................................41

WESTERN CONFERENCE
l! L fsl.
;_ ~··""1"'·"~'~".... 4..... 0. "",l ,OQ

BuebaU
Amerk•IA ....•
BALTIMORE ORIOLES: Named
Moe Drabowaky minor leaauc pltchlna

llltooocb:Rop'-ooocb:aodSpycla' Webb tnl . ., ol E - ol Uii Nodb-

Ila

Ita

COLUJdBUS, Oblo (AP)Obio State bas taken strides to
acstoclc its law supply of players
and taleul is it ·took iu seven players on lbe first day Cor signing
DaJiooalleaers of intent.
Two big QICII, two guahJs and
three swingmen made commit·
meats to lbe Buckeyes aud coach
Randy Ayus on Wednesclay. Ohio
State lias bad, two players lr.IDSfer
and lbree otben dismissed from tbe
team since last spring.
Jamie Bosley, a 6-foot·l guard

Transactions

IDJtructnt.

could resume next moolb, and a
1eque offic:iallllso cqRIICid opi·

Four-Ohio universities get 11 national/etters of intent

City Bel.hcll4. ll·Doll lllnliD Northtra
12.

f!~·i:;;;;i(3i'io::ii:::::m

ll (tlo)· P•iacnlfle

J

4 .000 ..

.................... .0

ba.

06en ncetTbla 12 ., .... polatR

.ooo

a.-.......... _._,o I

Othtn nnl•lna 12 or .. ._.. ,Galla

S.C.y. Folio Will! leoull 11-1 ................. 11
6-CiL ADd.... (1)9-1 ...................... 149
7·Col. w......a!l-l ........................... lal
1-llolluc:o (I) 11-1 .................................62
9-Wub. 01 Mlomi Troco I· 2 .............. 31
IO.Uaiolllowa Lakel·2 ......................... lS

2
2

.ooo

J

11-Thompaoo Ledaemont 29. 12-Tipp

I·COIIDI (17) 1~ ............................... 311
2-PiqllO (10) I~ ................................210

t1 ~
l

Dlvlsloa D

Ila

AtlullcD!.Iola

Odudo....................z
Wlllli'IIDD .............2
-Jeney ..............1
JIN!ele~ll ............. l
......................0

!1-Btlllovllic 9·1 ....................................79
IO·t.ipliC 9-1 ........................................51

(Ue}Aboa O.tleld, Loacaater 13.

NBA standings ·

~York ............. J

. 0t1ton ..-.toa 11 or .... palallt
II·ShWrllla. 32. l2·Sir0!1Pvillel9. ll

•· .

.~.!!~to b~!'!..~,!l!!i~9w~!~...~~~~ . !!tl~~~n...e~~~~.!i~..~s !2.~~--- ..

Scoreboard

·'

Paae 5

and Goodenow to meet for second time this week

By KEN ltAI'POPORT
NEW YORK (AP)- It may be
possible to save tbe NHL seasou
after all.
Following several weeb of no
positive news, liopeful sips ue
beginnlns to surface iD lbe NHI..
labor dispute. A managemeut
soiii'CC IOid The Associated Press
Wednesday it's possible lhe season

.

By Tile Allloclated PJ:eas . • .
Watcb out, Pacific DIVISion.
The S~niO Kings are off 10 a
2.() SIUl ifterbeatillg lbe division's
twa S~JCSl teams.
'J'be Kings, wbo lost Ill games
lbe last two seasons and baven't
won 30 games for an NBA·record
eight seilson.s, jumped on lbe
Plioeolx Suns m lbe season opener,
lben defU!ed lbe SeatUe SuperSonics 108-IOOWednesday night.
Oneoflbe league's worstdefenslve tcams last season, the visiting
Kings beallbe Sonics at lbeir owu
game, holding lbem to 45 perceut
sliootlng1 Mitcb Richmond scored
28 points and Walt Williams added
19 for SaaameniO.
"This is a tremendous -wili for
our franchise," Kings coacb. Garry
St. Jean said. "I'm so hap~y for

1be Dally Sentinel

PomeroY-Middleport; Ohio

.'

O'DEU LUMBER CO.
.,
'

446-1276

992-5500

I
I

�_..._.._. ,..,

P~ge

Thurlde~ Nol!ember 10,1894

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

8 The Dally Seritinel

•

Wisconsin's Moss arrested
on ~ocaine possession ·charg.-

Football '94.
Catch All The
Excitement! -

Support These
Fine Area
Businesses!

24Hour
Banking
Seven Days A
Week

.INGELS
FURNITURE, JEWELRY
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1111.. Nov.12-MIIorCoiiiiiB-DIV.1•A
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lanllaJ IDII ~oallay, ln. 11-14

DALLAS ....................31 ••SAN FRANCIS.,CO.l8
~
·t
The Cowboys have taken three straight from the 49ers, including a 26-17 victory in the '93 regular season .
· and a dominating 38-21 win in the NFC championship. S.F. cait stay close if it can JUn.
·
••DENVER ................ 24 SEATILE ..................... 19
,
i,'
Fo.rcing !i~e Seah~wk turnovers, the Bronco defense led the way to Denver's first win five weeks agci,"t6-9.
W1th theu :mprov:ng offense, the Broncos should make it five in a row over the .'Hawks. ,
:; ·
**DETROIT............... 17 TAMPA BAY ............... IO
,'
Six wee.ks ago in Tampa,. roo~e running ba(:k Enict Rhett fired up the Buccaneers, who upset ihe m~takepl:One Uons 24-14. Detroit can t afford to g:ve away another win to a team it should beat.
·· ·
••GREEN BAY .......... 22 N.Y. JETS ..................... IC5
Here's another game in which defense· specifically the Packers'- will dominate, with the Jets unproductive
thus far. N.Y. has beaten G.B. five of the six times they've met, most recently in '91. ·
· ':
HOUSTON ................. 15 ••ctNCINNATI ........... t4
When the winless Oilers faced the winless Bengals seven weeks ago, Houston escaped with a 20-13 win.
·They're not playing for much except pride: Cincinnati bas lost seven st$ight to the Oilers.
.
.. KANSAS CITY ...... 29 SAN DIEG0 ................ 27
.
.~
With Natrone Means running for 125 yards and the Charger defense stifling the Chiefs, S.D.'~ 20-6.win in
October gained the NFI;s respect. This time K.C. will win \)ecause it needs a win more.
.
.
L.A. RAIDERS ........... 23 .. LA. RAMS ..... ,.......:.20 ·
.
Statistically, the battle of LA ..Iooks close, with similarly mediocre offenles and defenses. The Raicle&amp;havc ·
won five of se:ven games in this series, including the most recent matchup, in '91.
**MIAMI .....:.............. 28 CHICAG0.................... 19
The Bears defend well against the pass, which shouid keep this,game close, but th.e Dolphins can run; too.
' Thcrre five for ~X against~r~o, winning their lasl~ling, in '?t.J6-13 ill 01'.
·, ' . i;1 :,, ~
·t ·
ESOO'A ............. 2C5
NEW ENGI,AND ..... 21
.
The Patriots, Who will corqe out passing; have been a handful f!ll' the Vildnp, wirming three of their fiVe
·games. But N.E. 's nonexistent defense will give Mirine~ta too manyciift~nsive choices.
, :::~: ..
·
··
,
• **NEW _ORLEANS... 24 ATI:ANTA.....:............. : 2~
.
, ; ~ ..~ . .
On.e of t11e week s best games, matchmg two solid passing games but only one mpecta\)le put def4Mie, the
Sain!S'· Last year N.O. won in Atlanl&amp;, 34-31, ""d the Falcons.gol eveg.ln N.O., 26-15 .
I
.
••N.Y. GIANTS ......... 20 ARIZONA:.:.:.,......... ;.. :13 .
.
In the second week of tile se~, OB Dave Brown threw two to pu'ses.that put the Giants up ea' ty. and
they wenlol!)o beat the Card1nalt 20-17. N.Y. gets the nod mostly because it's a home game. ·
••PHILADELPHIA ... 32 CLEVELAND .............. 27
.
This should be the game of.lhC week, tliojlgh lbe Eagles are the clear favorite •• the Browns' reeoni looks
better.than ~ BT\)WIIs; ,Philllilephia W01!32-30 threC years .ago, the.·lai! lime they met. ·
.
t
(Monday) . .
·
J
uprrrsBURGH:....... 21 · BUFFAL0 .................... 20
· '
.f!
On the way to.a 23-0 wi.n last year, Pittsburgh's defense demolished the Bills, limiting thein to nine first
downs .and'. knocking Jim Kelly out of the game. The Steeiers love Moliday-nighJ games. ·
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By DENNIS GEORGATOS
SANTA CLARA, .Calif. (AP)
= .!Cell Noiton Jr. bas a personal
Slake in Sllllday's Dallas-San Francisco game that goes beyond the
rivalry between the teams.
A Pro Bowl linebacker for the
Cowboys, NOiton joined the 49en
as a free agent prior to thia scasoD.
He'll be facing bis former. team·
mates for the ftnt time in the game
lhal's a replily of the past two NFC
championship games. Dallas woo
both en route to consecutive Super·
Bowl lilies.
"This is a very exciting lime, a
very emotional time," Nonon said
Wednesday. "I have a lot of good

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:but is happy to play again

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Reg. 99'
big games, and in the 1 early years
lostalotofbiggames. ·
"We sit back and go through
our scouting reports, and they're
': SHE'S BACK! - Daplte loalng to Germany's Anke Huber
.
justthinkinf about the size and
In
weight, and I m lhipking. 'Man, we
· ~ leta Wednaday, former tennis pbeilom Jeanlfer CaprlaU Ruh·
bad some good times together."'
: e1 her pearll while Ieavlna the court. It wueaprlaU's nnt match
Last season, Norton led tbe '
• after alS·month absence from competition. (AP)
Col'(boys with a career-bigb 159
/
tackles, I0 for losses, and he came
to San'Fraocisco as the cornerstone
of a defensive makeover aimed at
closing the talent gap with Dallas.
The 49ers (7-2) also bqled Nortoo's defection would weaken the
By BUCKY GLEASON
net and broke Huber's serve
Cowboys (8-1), but Dallas replaced
: PHILADELPHIA (AP) -len- moments later with a deep return
him with Robert Jones and weath: nifer Capiali returned to the same lhal Huber was ull!lble to handle.
NHL /lc.
ered other free agency departures
Individual
ng Cards by Carleton
: that made her a multimillionaire
"Sbe bit ibe ball well,'' Huber
8 S. ••
and a coaching transition to enter
. and was blamed for pullins her life said. "She made a few mistakes,
(Continued from Page 5) ·
Sunday with the league's best
BUY 1, GET 1 FREE
'. in a dumper,
and I'm SID"e she'll gel better in the poSSibility that negotiators could record.
(of Equal or Less Value)
Although not in best form, next couple of months. She played find an end to tl!e longest work
For Norton, the 1!1\llsitioll to a
' · ~~ .an iJ!Iprcsslvc show· fine. __
.
. stoppage In league history. Now· in new team and a new system has not
ina aaainst Anke Huber on
"After she practices, and she its 40th day tbe lockout has gone as smoothly. He is stiU trying
Wednesday night before losing 6-4, plays in a few more tournaments, · ·already led ~teague to cancel 14 to adjust to San Ftancisco's defeo3-6, 6-1 in the opening rouodofthe she gol!!g to come back the same as games from each team's schedule. sive schemes.
$750,000 Virginia Slims of before.
A total of 227 scheduled games
"It's like night and day," NorPhiladelphia.
Capriali had not played a tour· have been missed.
·
ton said. ''In Dallas' defense.
. "It's great to he tw:k." Capriljli nament match s~. Aull• 31. ~3.
NH L Players Association everything was the same. Here, you
said. ''My tennis felt strong ancl when she was eliminaled by bnlc· spokesman Steve McAllister said can play four or five different sets
·better than in the last tournament! known Leila Meskbi In the first tbe report that the season could per motion.
played. It was better than it was in round of the U.~ . Open,. .
stan next month "sounded prenv
"I always pride on making
the last few tournaments."
Frustrated wit~ inJurt~s. and optimistic,'' And an agent, speak- plays in the backfield, being very
, The groundstrokes that carried burned out by tenms, Capnau left ing 011 the condition he 001 be ideo· excited. Having fun is the reason I
. . . . . .
'her from junior ~gy to among the tour and reiWlled to high schooL lifted, said, "I don't sense the same play this game, and I haven't been
: I
.the best 111ayers 111 the world were · in Florida. Three months later, she . optimism."
·
.
having a lot fun. In recent weeks,
Han•~ina. R. Ph.
Mon. thru Sai. 8:00 a.in. to 9:00p.m.
there, but She appeared to lire in the was given a citation for walkin. g
Goodenow said WednCsday the I've been feeling a lot better about
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.
·final sc:L
away from a department ,store wtth union did not make ·any specific being here.''
PRESCRIPTION
PH . 992·2955
. ,. A win woyld, hav11 given a$15 ring.
. .
proposal to the league at Monday's
He is lied for the team lead in
E. Main Frienqly SeiVice Pomeroy, Oh .
:Capriati a.c ban¢ to take tldvantage
l..a:U May, Capria~. was arrested meeting. The sides are at odds over tackles with ·39, and be forced a
Week ·
1ill9
·of top-seeded Conchita Martinez's f'?J'misde~ manJuana posses- a tax plan to raise money for Slllall- fumble in last Sunday's 37-22 win
fli'St-rouod ~to Ntllhalie Tauziat, s1on while staying in a Coral market teams, salary arbitratioDt at Washington.
For Capriati. the lii8ICb was !10' Gables,. Fla., motel room. Two and a rookie salary cap.
,__ _ _ _ _ __....__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _......_ _ _ _ _ _..,..._ _ __,
about winnin&amp; 8114-l~g. but SIDI·- -compamons,-a 20-year-old man
"Since the league rejected our
plyplaying-escapmgfiX'89min· and a 17-year-old runaway, were last proposal on Oct. 10 we have
·~ - .
utes from a troubled year to play charged with canying beroin and .not !~lade anolhtr pro~ill - nut ·
the sport that ICI her apart from · eraelii eoeaine,
.
. ·' at
Goodenow told Tilt C/l111J·
everyone else.
On Wednesday, Capri ali dian Press. ·
"I just wan~ t~ ,PlaY m~ be~! ~much thinner than she did
But there apparently has been
. whateyer thai I~, , she satd. My in a police mug sbol taken ~ter the some progress in the negotiations.
_goal nght now 1':'! t to be No. 1. I May. 8!fCSt. In that p1cture, A source with. knowled~~ of tl!e
just want to play.
Capriati s face looked bloated and league's bargaming pos:uon wd
Capriati pounded the same she wore a ring in her nose.
ihere bas been movement on sever.grouod$11'Ws that made her a six·
C;qjriali blamed her early sue- a1 other issues from mana~ement's
lime tournament winner, but with cess for many of her problems, but side including arbitrauon and
leas consistency. He~ .serve topped now more ma~ure, sh~ wants to g~teed conllllcts.
.out at 96 mpb, but 11 was mostly make sure her life doesn trun awry
•'There are still a lot of issues
ineffective against her 19-year-old again.
on the table " the source said,
·Gemwl foe.
"!learned tball really love this "Everything depends on how weU
In the ~pening g~e. Capriali game,'' Capriati s~d. "I experi- the meeting goes Thursday. But the
·looked as if she hadn t been away enccd a lot. I got w1ser. I learned fact that they met Monday and are
from the tour at all. She won the what makes me happy, and I meeting again Thursday is a major
'
fli'St point when Huber bit into the learned a lot about myself."
breakthrough. They did make some
headway (on Monday)."

DI$COVER WHY
PEOPLE SAY, fllJIP'• Wt han the

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Billfolds by Amity

Norton to face ex-teammates ·
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SOCCER TEAM • 'Titf hppen J,'IUu 1m1 II• Itt lint toeeer
c:luh. Tbe faD - l w lnc:lucled Wlllanclllnl prac:tb and leamlna tile rulel or toeeer. Tilt team pla)'l Oil tile Alltellleld nut lo
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Dally Sentinel

Poineroy-MiddleJ)ort, Ohio

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must play better tban tbey did last
week. wllen tbey gave up two
IOucbdowns In tbe final two minutes of a 35-29 win over Indiana
" We weren't quire as sbarp as
we've been," Paterno said. "We
got a lillie sloppy at tbe end."
Saturday's game matches Penn
State' s explosive offense agaimt
Illinois' dynamic defense. The
Lions are leading tile nation in rotal
offense (533.5 yards p_er game) and
sec;ond in scoring (48.4 points),
while the llllnl are fourth in rotal
defense (253.6 yards) and second
in points allowed (11.3).
.
Tbe beart of tile Illinois defense
is a llnebacklng corps led by Dana
Howard and Simeon Rice. Howard
leads tbe Big Ten wltb 117 tatldes,
and Rice bas a .league-best 16
sacks.
However, tbey baven't faced an
offense like Penn State's, which
has averaged 7.6 yards per play and
scored 91 percent of tile time after
reacbillg tbe opponent's ·20-yard

line:
In Ibis case. good offense beats
good defense. The Lions, favored
by 11 112 points, silnply bave 100
many weapons ... PENN ST. 31-14.
Tonight
San DleaoSL
(plua 10) at No. 23 BYU
Cougars win shootout ... BYU
42-40.
.

touchdown against Canes defense
tills season ... MIAM138-0.
~o. 6 Alabama (mlaul2 Ill)
at No.lO Mlalalppl St.
Tide Is 11-0 at Starkville ...
ALABAMA 21-17.
No. 7 Colorado
(mlnus13) at K•nu•
Buffs
for Fiesta Bowl...
.COLORADO 3 -17.
.No. I Florida St. {mlnua 13)
Saturday
vs. Notn Dame at Orlando
No.1 Nebraska
Last year's Game of tbe Century
(mlnua33) at Iowa SL
isn 't even game of the day ...
Monumental mismatch
FLORIDA ST. 38-14.
NEBRASKA 52-10.
No. 1J Texas A&amp;M
Georala (plu• 12)
(mlnual:Z} at LoubvUle
Aggies" ftrst trip to Louisville ...
at No. 3 Auburn
_
Long day for Eric Zeier ... 1EXAS A&amp;M 24-17.
Arkansas SL (plua3l)
AUBURN 44-17.
at No. 10 Colorado SL
South Carolina (plua28)
Indians 0-8 vs. Division 1-A ...
at No. 4 Florida
Gators clinch SEC East title ... COLORADO ST. 44-0.
No. 11 Kansu SL
FLORIDM5-21. •
{minus 15) at Mbsourl
Pllllburgb (plua ~)
Wildcats haven't won at Misat No. 5 MlaiQI
No Big East team bas scored souri since 1985 ... KANSAS ST.

No. 1Z Utall
(mlaut7) at Air farce

After 0-3 start, Falcons have
won six straight ... UfAH 27-21.
No.ll Arizona (piU13)
at No. 17 Southern Cal
Winner stays alive In Pac-10
no: ... SOUfHERN CAL 17-10.
. • No.14 Syracuae (plua6lll)
at No. l5 Bolton College
Eagles unbeaten in last six
games ... BOSTON COLLEGE 3124.
·

headinf

can't

iield at""' home. I
underlland sltould not bli llloweci 10 continue. clteck out all the possibilities.
why my:mocher-in-law loii!diis go Babita .uld veri yoimg cltildren do
Dear ADD Landers: A story in
Ann
oo. I'm SID ·if she ~·IINillt her 1101 belong II formal weddings. This The Wall Street Journal by Canie
:Landers daughter 80111Clhing cOuld be wodred has been IJ!Y.JIC!II• for as long as · Dolan mentioned some inJercSting
out. but she chooses 10 do nOihing.
I have been writing the column, so scholarship opportunities. 111 bel if
Jack feel~. that he Is being youean blame me. · · ·
you printed them, some of your
punished by, .his family:.t or not
Dear Aim Laadera: A few years readers would profi t from the
including the baby at our w~g. I aso. you nil a column that listed information.
Dar AU ....dei-a: A
lalow he is hurt that WCIIUO Joncer 10111e unusual scholarships that not
In 1988, the University of
I wrote 10 you about my fUIIICC'&amp; invited tQ . boliday and birthday many people were aware of. I would California was not able 10 lind 1
family being VfllY llp8Ct tbal I did celebrations. I
'
be very grateful if you would run recipieiu for a scholarship fund
· notWIItlinfantsatmywedding. You
Jack's brother is getting •married that column again . Than~ nearly $400,000. They were
. gave me tbe Btlpporll needed, and I 90011. Sllould I try 10 men4.fencea • -- EAGER SCOUT . IN T
looting for a needy Jewish orphan
was grareful.
tbe wedding? We want to ~- part of MIDWEST
wanted 10 be an aeronautical
' My sister-in-law refused 10 attend . tbe family again. It hurts 10 be left
DEAR SCOUT: Here's an excerpt engineer.
tbe wed4ing without her 'baby and out of everything. Please allvise. -- of the column. you are referring 10.
Rylin Gatling, a Pocomoo City.
vOMd never 10 speak to me or my OUT-LAWED IN BARRB. MASS. It ran in 1988. I urge all high school . Md., received $7,000 a year from
husband again. "Jack" and I are not
DEAR OUT-LAWED: By all students, especially those i~ North Carolina State because of his
invited 10 any holiday family means, speak to your mother'in-law in Harvard oi' Amherst. two of the name._John GatlinR. a Raleigh
RBiherings, which are almost always · about Ibis spiteful exc.J~ttfion. It finest schools in the country, to

witb ninth vicrory ... DUKE 21-20.
Mlnne10ta (plua23)
at No. 1!1 Mldalaan
Wolverines 2·3 at borne this
season ... MICIDGAN 38-14.
Marylmd (plua15)
at No. Z1 VJrahlla
~:. Cavs bave an interception in 13
consecutive games ... VIRGINIA
42-21.
CaUfomla (plu U Ill)
at No. n WublnatoD
Bears haven't ~ten Husklea
since 1976 ... WAiHINGTON 3110.
"
r -- ·
No; 24 WuJdnaton SL
{minus Sill) at Onpn St.
Cougar~ have won 10 stralgbt
over Beaven ... WASHINGTON
ST. 21-14.

35-14. ·

No. 15 Oregon
(rinus 3) at Stanford
Ducks' Rose Bowl' bopes are
dashed ... STANFORD 24-21.
Rlatpn (plus14lll)
at No. 16 VlraJnla Tech
Hokies have 10-gamc bome
winning streak ... VIRGINIA
TECH 31-21.
No. 18 Duke (plua3)
"
at N; CaroU1111 SL
Blue Devils tie school record

year.. .

·Satellite instrument$
·map atomic oxygen

Last week: 1~5 (straight); 1010 (spread).
·
Season: 126-40 (straight); 70-86

: By MIKE DRAGO
Alloclatecl Prea Writer
SPACE CENTER, Houston
(AP) - A German satellite
released from shutUe Atlantis last
week bas produced a first-of-itskind global map of oxygen particles tbat scientists believe help cool
tbe Earth, a researcher said IOday.
Dirk Offermann, a scientist from
the University of Wuppertal in .
Germany, said findings from .an
atmospheric; monitor aboard the
$35 million sareUire could lead to a
better understanding of atomic oxygen.
. . The particles, fonned wben tile
sun's ultraviolet rays smash oxygen
-motecules in the straiOspbere into
· single atoms, arc believed 10 function as a coolin&amp; layer in tbe
Ealth' s upper atmosphere. Offermann wants to know bow and wby.
· . He said the monitor, which uses
: infrared telescopes to measure 14
; atmospheric gases per second in
· tbree directions, has produced a
: global map ·or atOmic oxygen dis. tribution 62 miles high.
: Such· measurements bave been ·
: produced before by instruments

(spread).

Steelers looking to return to plateau visited by 1970s teams
By ALAN ROBINSON .
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Only a
year ago, the Pittsburgh Steelers
seemed poised to join -the Cowboys. Bills and 49ers among tbe
NFL's elite francbiscl.
.
They seemed to have tbe
momentum, talent and drive 10 ao
further lhan any Steelers team since
tlieir four Super Bowl champions
of the 1970s. They certainly. convinced the defending AFC cbampion Bins. embarrassing tbem 23-0 in
a Monday night game.
Unfortunately for the Steelers,
pcn:cption was not reality.
"All of our veteranl slacked off
at tbe end," All-Pro cornerback
Rod woodson said; looking back
on a 3-4 fmisb thai nearly eliminated Piusburgh froln tbe playoffs.

Now, exactly 20 years after former coach Chuck Non was polishing what what to become among
tile greatest teams in NFL bisrory,
tbe Steelers seem to be on the
verge of elite staws again.
ln 1974, Noll had just benched
whip-arm quarterback Joe Gilliam,
who so loved 10 pass be considered
any run to be a gadget play, replacing biln with Terry Bradshaw. Joe
Greene was at bls intimidating, belmet-flinging besL Mel Blount was
such a suffocating defender, he single-handedly forced tlie· NFL to
rewrite its bump-11!111-run rule.
And the srearest rooldc class in
blsrory- Lynn Swann, Jack Lambert, John Stallworth and Mike
Webster - was finally g-rowing
tomfortable with life in the NFL.
~

And when It finally came they bave not one, but two defendtogether, the Steelers won an ers among tbe sack lead.ers:
unprecedented four Super Bowls in ' linebackers Greg Lloyd and Kev11!
six years.
Greene, with seven apiece.
Now. a generation of towelThey are on a pace to nearly
waving fans later, Noll and most of matda the team-record S2 sacks
those players are in tbe Pro Foot- they had In a 14-game _season in
ball Hall of Fame, and a new class 1974. And tbeir defense Is more
of Steclers are talking of regaining- lhan just quartelback-unfriendlytile glory.
their 11 touchdowns allowed are
Tbe Steclers (6-3), wbo play the the fewest in tbe Jea&amp;ue.
four-tilDe defending AFC cbampi"You can't play mucb better
on Bills 011 Monday night, haven't defensively tban wbat we're playbeen so fOOd defensively since ing," said defensive end Ray Seals,
every kid s athletic wardrobe was who bad tbree sacks Sunday In a
incomplete without a Mean Joe jer- 12-9 overtime victory in Housron.
sey.
"We're really racking up tile
They lead the AFC with 29 sacks."
sacks, only tbree fewer tllan NFL
Offensively, tbese Steelers d011't
leader Dallas. Only two·y~ after compare 10 the Bradshaw~Franco- .
finisbing near tile bottom.In sac4 Swann-Stallwortb reams, but when

Barry Foster went down witb a
sprained knee four weeks ago, tbe
offense didn't go witll biln. Rookie
Bam Morril bas supplanted biln ·as
tbeteam'sreachingleader.
Tbe challenfe for the Steelers
now is 10 keep tl going. And, once
again, tlleirbiggestcltallengemight
be a demandina down-tile-stretch
schedule; their ftrst nine opponents
were 31-SO, but tile next seven are
38-25 - and their floal tbree
(Philadelphia, Cleveland and San
Dieao) are 21-6.
.
Regardless, Woodson thinks
tbese Steelers arc better equipped
pbyslcally· and psycholosicaily to
withstand the pressures of anotller
tough StreiCh of opponents.
"It doesn't malce any difference
whether the other teams are on or

off, the only team we can control ia
the Steelers," Woodson said
Wednesday. "As long as we tum It
on, that's all that matters
"We have a .tough way to go,
but I think we're a lot more consistent than we were the last two
years. We not nearly as up and
\fown as we were. Last year, the
veterans sort of slacked off at tbe
end ... but we're PfOJ!CsslnS now,
and we're Improving.'
·
Tbe schedule - wblcb also
iocludes Miami, the Los Angeles
Raiders and CincinnaU - ml-ht
determine how much they ve
ilnprovlid.
"The only thing we can do Is
play each one, one by .one, week !IY
week," Woodson said. "We've got
to wony about the Steelers. notlbc
otberteams."

Ex-OSU grid star charged with stealing and writing bad checks in four states
-COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - · ney's office.
.
.
Soutbwestc'm Ohio In H~irton.
Authorities. in four states have
!he Las Vegas. Metropo~1tan The otben are in Califomta. Col·aeGu&amp;od former Ohio State and · Po!!~ ~!lilt IS CQn~liDS 3 orado and Nevada.
NFL qtl811elbadl: Art Scblichrer of separate investig~on of Schlithter .
If Scbllchtcr pleads aui~ty as
bouncinJ or stealing more than for allegedly passmg had checks 10 expected, be faces a maumum
$400,000 iD checks Ibis year, Tire casinos that total as much as penalty of up 10 two years in feder5200•000• t11e newspaper reported 81 prison and a S4o,ooo fine, said
·columbiiS Dispalcll reported. Federal and local authorities lilY IOday. . .
John Ham. assistant U.S. attorney.
Schlichter has been writinJ bad
Schlichter staJred at Ohio State
Scbllcbter is being represented
checltf ~~ ,g:~~Yng check~., ~en • ~pre . be .Wl\5 ,drafted In tbe fu_~t • in the ~. 1&gt;&gt;'.Las Ve&amp;tiS. atromcy
makin~ otitto bilnself.
'
\'Oultd by the lndlanapolil Colts in, Frank Ctemen, wllo would not
· Scb ter, 34, was e11pecte,d 10 1982. He sat out tile 1983 season commeqt Wednesday.
_
piead auUty today in Las Vegas 10 wben tllen-NFL CCII'lllissioner Pete
In ailotber hivestlgatlon, tbe
a fcdcral cbarge of bank fraud for R~zelle suspended hiln for gam- Nortb Las Vegas Police Departallegedly writlilj $175,000 in' bid bhns. ScbU~JUIIt returne4&lt;J&lt;Ii·~, · -lilent ba&amp;·askcd the Cll,rk County
cbecb durin&amp; four monlhs.
Colts for the 1984 and 1985 sea- prosecuror to Issue an arrest war" It's sad I remember wben be sons.
rant against Schlichter for passing
was the quaitaback at Ohio Stale:- · A_ federal cbarse accuses $15.250 in Rxged checks.
Then he sotro the pros and got iniO ScbHchter of defrauding eight
Scbllcbter was living In Las
trouble," said Eric Jorgensoo, chief banks In four atates of U7S,OOO Vegas earlier this year, but now
deputy in charge of fraud for tile from May through A~gust. One of lives in Indianapolis, said Merlyn
Clark CountY (Nev.) district titiOr- tile banks is F'ust NBIIonal Banlc of Sblverdecker, his lawyer in Cincin.
.
natl.

NO's Miller charged for part
··n check-forgl"ng scheme

gC:d~u~c~~dic:O~~~~c~:n~~

felony charges of stealing more
than $50,000 from a suburban
CHICAGO (AP) - Notre said Wednesday that Miller was Cincinnati bank by illegally accessDame receiver Michael Miller is charged in February 1993 with ing accounis. J1e was indicted on
charged in Texas in wbal prosccu- misdemeanor assault and bodily three counts of compllcl~y and
· · ......
·"'- h"lUIDg
- a f&lt;e.......,
-·•·
counts ofisgrand
tllen.to enter a
1011 caD a scheme 10 steal and f!l'Je mJury
student · three
Schlichter
ex-"'""
in
a
dormitory
at
tile
University
of
,__
cbccka 10 buy $50,000 wortb of aarHousron. Miller was sentenced 10 auilty plea in tllat case-Dec. 15,
linc tk:Ull. clothes and alcollot.
six
months' prqbation and fined Shiverdecker said. He faces uo 10
Miller turned himself In
Wednesday, one day after Notre $200. Notre Dame officials would 30 years in prison and a $10,000
Dame coach Lou Holtz announced not say Wednesday wbetber tlley fine on each complicity cbarae. as
well as more 'tban three years in
witllout explanation thai MiUer had knew of that illcident. ,
prison
on tbe theft cbaraes.
len the unlvers\ty.
· MiUer was·being held 011 $5,000
bond. If convicted on a charge of
organized criminal ,jiCtivity, be
could be sentenced ttl' 10 years in
prisOII.
,.
Two other Notre Dame players
admitled buyina discounted airline
SPEIDEL FASHION BRACELETS
tickets from MIUer over the past 18
months, said Detective Rodney
Glendening of tbe Fon Bend County (Texas) Sheriffs Department.
He said tlley would not be charged.
"I'm going to give them !,he
benefit of tbe doUbt." GlendeninJ
said. "Hopefully, tbey were just
beint stupid."
·
Miller went to Notre Dame in ·
1991 as one of tbe nation's lOp
hl&amp;h school recruiiS, but returned
home 10 Missouri Oty. Texas. after
injuring a hamstring m tile pre-season.
He came back to sc;bool last
ytM and bad, 12 receptions for 184
yards and ooe touChdown. He bad
seven catches for 142 yards Ibis
season aaainat Nortbwestem, but
The Holiday Season is the perfect time to show how much
only 10 more in six or Notre
you care. And a Speide!Braa.let is the perfect gift. Come in
Dame'• next seven a·ames. He
today and put your feelings into words. Engrave a message
milscd a game with back and bamonly the two of you understand.
'..!JAD
llrinl injuries.
.
He mlued several practices in
EXPRESS• Y0,URSEL F'
~
the last few weeks and was demotEngr!lV&amp;~les . 1
ed from hi&amp; ·atartins job .for J81!1CS
, qa!t!it Brigbain Youna and NaVy.
Glcinderiln'l said he told Holtz in
Sp~cial Thii' Wee~nd
Auault t11at he needed til talk 10
MiUer, but did not teD tbe COICII
1hll t.tUJer wa thc llfiCI Of a crilllTen Letters or
engraved·
111111 invcstlpliCII. Holtz declined 10
~ ··
Wodllclday.
·
.
· Millenu llldir'r4 Oct. 2S, but
OlcndcniD&amp; said be did not notify .
10% 'Dtnlln:Jfofiry'our ~
Notre' Dull
untU Nov.•;
4 bec'l"" ... ~ --*4 10 lll'CSl
FREE PARKING" ,
lWO Te:iallliCii- ~ il die
_, ~ '
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selleiM.ltOI L Oq:y nunatfill JIWILIY
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• FINANCING AVAILABLE
• 01 'J)aeldll. GJer&lt;_
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.' 1 .......IIW! ~ willl Miller. .
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tJ ~ttuisitions

le••
FREE .
•

been f~.

check 10 a poccry store oo Oct. 8
tba1 ~gedly bounced.
Police ftJcd a n:port oa tbe complaint Tuesday. No charges had

Police in lbe Columbus suburb
of Upper Arlington were investl·
gat ina a complaliu against
Scbllcbter for writing a $1,150

PBSSln&amp; a bad cbcck is 1 foanltdegree felony. Tbe JICIIIIliY lU I! 1.0
five years In prison and a $2,SOO
fine.

t

.._.

••

-

churches, concerts and rev1vals,
they !lave appeare~ on. ~lage at
-. urda , Nov. 19 at a free concert at county and state faus aii~oss the
lhetiOII Family RcUC!It in Mbany. . natiOII lnclll!ling tbe ,~~o .S!~te ·
~ad ·. aeJectOd·as tbe ."Top Fair. TbCy have pcttormcu o~ stage:
oGet of 1~1 ,bf&lt;'tliifllli&amp;natloilal~ and tele¥ision-w1tll many Bf. ll;le ,rap
CountrY·aosPcl Music ASsociation. · gospel aroups and spealceB m tile
tile White~ have alsO been included nation.
• . .
.
in the Gos 1 Voice "Who' s Who
The pub~c IS .mvttel! tO'!tbe free
in Gospel ~usic" for 1995. They.. concert whlclt will begm ti 6 p.m.
were also nominated for vocal duo at Zion, located off state Route 681
for 1994 by the Cbtistlan Co~nty ~ ne~ Al'?BDY· Tbe WJjltes will
Music Association Of Nasbv1l18, SIDg their nationally charledocar ~~­
Tenn.
es as they appear with I
SIDgmg
· In addition to performing in talent from tile area.

as.

Tbe charter was draped for
James Weber when Hemlock
Grange 2149 met recently at the
hall.
The meeting foUowcd a dinner
attended by 20 members. There
·was group singing of "The Beautiful Lenona We Learn in the
Qnnge:", and tbe flaa presentation
by Mars-:et Haning.
. Heleb Qulvey aave the standing
committee report. Plans were made
for a soup dinner til the next meet-·
in&amp; for a pecan sale after Tbenksaiving.
. Ziba Midkiff, legislative agent.

Even with a system as safe and secure as your natural gas
service, a leak could occur. That's why you anp your family
1

In cltlea, towns, or suburban areas.

report oo' drug. awarene~s liD~ !¥
upc001ing dccUOII. He wUllbe JBlll·
tor for Decembel'. Reporu,ld iD were
Bernice Hawk and Etta Culliilnsl
Jessie White. uSed "Tb3nksgiving" as tbe theme of the program.
Readings included • A Time to
Remember" by Rosalie Stol)&lt;; '1be
Little Pushes' by Golda Reed;
"Politics and Government" by
Muriel Bradford; "God's Been
Good To Me" by Bob Reecl'1bere
was group singlns of "'re~ ~ Thy
Faithfulness. A contest wa'S held
before tbe closing song, "y ood,.
night Grangers. "

played iu part in tbe narration,
according 10 tile reviewed. Fox bas
preserved for us many descriptions
of tile beauty of tile regi011 and the
speech and values of Jhc mOUDtain

. Tbe Middleport Literary Club
met recently at the borne of Mrs.
David Bowen where two reviews
of books differing widely in style
and in tbe era portrayed by tbe
authors were reviewed.
Mn. Eileen Buck presented tbe
romantic novel "The Trail of the
I...ODesomc Pine," ftrst published in
1908. The title oftbis book is more
memorable tban the name of its
autbor, Jobn Fox Jr. Tbe main cbaracter, however, reflects much of
tile author's life.
The reviewed said tbat Jobn Fox
was a well educated young man
wlio drifted through several ~
until fate brought biln to tile Cumberland Mountains wbere be
engaged in the great coal boom tbat
swept the region between 1890 11J1!1
1920. The bero of the novel expenenccs tbc successes and failures of
tllis time in history including bis
romance with a "native daughter"
of the region.
·
Tbe significance of Fox' writing
is its basis in historic fact, the c;onflitt between eastern investors and
tbe unlettered inhabitants and ·an
emphasis on tile · reudin"' which

fo~-ery differeni was tbe next

book which was reviewed by Mn.
Faye Wallace, Maya Angelou' s "I
Know Wby tile Cqed Bird Sings,"
blisbed in 1970. This is tile autoC'tograpby of a young black
WOIDl'n, reared by her strong grandmother, who survived many hardships including rape. •
'
Her talented spirit, however,
overcame obstacles as sbe studied
dancing, taught music and drama
and was l!omina•ed for an Emmy
for her role in tbe television versi011
or "Roots."
Numerous artistic successes
resulted In an Invitation 10 recite an
original pOc:m at President Clinton's inauguration on Jan . 20,
1993.
Mn. Wallace coocluded her presentation witb a reading of that
same poelJI, "On the Pulse of
Moming."

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MS-OOS 6 21, Windows 3.11. AST Works 1 and PFS Works. Three
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24 p.oyme~!o · ol S•9 00 l ol a' pay...., nil· $1• 16 00

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49
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Outside some cities and towns, a natural gas leak may .

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aM Nf ,. '""'"'""AI ~ yO&lt;J dO 11(11 m~ • P vou• p.., cll~&lt;e '" """ ol '"""'' &gt;1~1· ~ lhf' .wworl &lt;;&amp;e lOw
p.1,.n•enK w ll De r.to911 1 "~ ll•yner u..e 10 IP"If! '-lll!"'. l us.P la oe5 ;,pploc•tllr 10 ,.rn.r purc~d"' Mrmlr&gt;!y P.l V

mesSiiQ&amp; lor !fiends accesSible only by

In parka or rural areas.

· ~~

P"-"'~""· "' &lt;ow •~ S.9 00 I·~ • IJ I..., "''ll&gt;&lt;&gt;ul •~"" ' u&lt;P I&gt; • &lt;uC~ a• O,L "' •' "" Ue&gt;n! ~ ~.l

Dual microcasselle operation . Private

.-

representative arrives.

w.,,

Middleport Literary
Club reviews books

Gospel rec:Ording artists Mike

Hemlock Grange meets

SOME COMMON SENSE WAYS
TO DETECT AGAS LEAK.
should le!lm some basic safety rules.

't -

bee•··

:and Sbala White will perform Sat-

lbe years. It' a somct!Una we talked tenberg,. Alleaheny., Obi~,Wca· •
about
t' recruited tbem
leyu, Deiiliciii and Kcnyoii wete
freshmen, ~w it' a exciting 10 sec tbe lOp five in voting by botbJI.Ic •
the reauly so close," Kenyon media and cnochcs.
coach Bill H. Brown said.
Wittenberg baa three startera
Tbe top five teams were tbe back from lalt year's 'cOI!ference
same in both .polls: Kenyon fol- cllamDiolla tbll went24-4. lowed by Wittenbers, Wons1 ;r,
"1'hc reslilts are more rejGSCDOhio Wealcyan and Denison.
tatlve of past results and tradltioll.
Witten~ bas two starters back · Tbe conference no: will be detet·
from a 30-2 team lhal finished lhlrd mined 'by bow well everyone's
in tbe Divisi011 mnational touma- . youna players P,C!!orm as tbe seamenL
son )W8fCIISCS. ' Willenbei'J COIICb
In the women's balloting, Wit- Pam Evans said.

wflea

aboard permanent satellite~ or durIng brief rocket nights, but always,
at much bigber. altitudes. NASA
said.
Offermann's work, like all the
experiments being conducted during Atlantis' 11-day flight. is basic .
research aimed at giving futlire scientistS a basis for comparis.on.
NASA scien,tist Ernest Hilsenratb, who's In charge oC':JIII ozone
monitor flying on the ;shuttle,
stressed that it's a tedious process
witll lillie fanfare.
. ;(
"Tbere aren't any realicliscover- .
ies" Hilsenrath said_Weclnesday.
"What we' re doing now .is providing a baseline for measurements for .
tile fublre.... I call it a legacy for
eavironmental investigator. in the
next century."
: -,
·
Atlantis holds four primary suneneqlY monitors and three ozone
mom tors. one of wbicb !bas been
broken since early in tbe flighL
The satellite, carrying two
CRJW MEMBER . Frencb iistronaur Jeaa-Fralicob Clenoy
instruments, was released.by astro4taiiiiutratea bow to gatc;b a floating water bubble during a telenauts last week and is 10 be picked
.YIHd lntenlew form Atlantis's Dlgbtdeck Wednelday. Clenoy
up Satunlly for tile ride home.
aJIIWered questlo• from European Journallsb- (AP Photo/NASA
Atlantis and its six-member
TV)
crew arc due back Monda~.,

'

~Aim: Thil il in fiiiPC V ID' 1
your Gem of the Day dlllllid ~ ;
ldvanta&amp;C of bein&amp; a audill - you
don't luiVc: 10 lit -.ad iD a "' 1
bathing suiL"
'
A disadvantage Of beinl a llllllill
- you don't look as plOd • you
would if you Ill lrDlllll iD a wei
bathing suiL - KYRAN IN OIDO
AM Ltutders' booklet,
t»td Doozies, • ltas everydriltg , _
the outrageoMSly fiiiiiiY to the poifa- ·
antly insighl{ld. Serul a ~elf-ad·
drtswl,long, busineu-lize e1111tlopl
aild a check or moMy order for $5
soun:c.'
(this illclii!Us postagt&gt; twJI!tPd«'l)
Ann, please continue 10 urge to: N11ggets, clo AM Ltwlen, P.O.
students who want financial help 10 Box. 11562, C/Ucago, Ill. 60611·
be aggressive about inquiring. They . 0562. (In Clllllllla, selld $6.)
just might hit tbe jackpot.

bvsinessman, set up the Si.2
millioo fund several y~ ago to
give ail ~ucational edge to students
named Gatling.
Harvard offers scholanhip1 10
students named l'eltnoyet, Downer
and Ellis, regardleu of need.
Christina Schreiber received a
$14,000 scholarship
she ia
a dcsccndant of William Floyd, 1
Long Island fanner.
Amherst College baa a
scholarship for a "worthy lllldent of
moderate ability who faila 10 win a
prize or get help from 111y other

: National gospel. duo to;j.
•perform at free concett .

Keny·on, Wittenberg NCAC's pr•season basketball leaders
SPRINGFIELD, O~lo (AP) Kenyoa' s 111ea·ihti'\Yltmitfi!¥8' I"
women were K,jQcted as the tcan11
10 ~ in lhc NClltb Coast pmfei'·
encc Wedneaday In f!C·SCUIIn ballotqla,1by tbe k;que .. ~,, fii!J_
media! . ·'
~
•.-:-..1 .J1 ... '" "' , .•
Kenyon, 24-4 a year ago, bas
four starters back. including fmtteam all-NCAC performers Chris
Donovan and Jamie Harless.
"HopefuUy, it's an lndicati011 of
tile respect that our young men
bave attained in transition tbrough

tl

0

Bride-to-be excluded baby . and gets excluded herself .

to get into Rose Bowl
By RICK WARNER
AP FootbaU Writer
Tbe last time Pam State played
in the R,ose Bowl, Warren Harding
was president, Jack Dempsey was
beavywcigbt c;bampion and Joe
Paterno wasn't born.
Tbe sec;ond-ranked Nlttany
Lions can raum 10 Pasadena wilb a
vittory at Dlinois on Saturday. A
win would dincb tbe Big Ten
championship for tbe Lions, wbose
only previous Rose Bowl. appearance was a 14-3 loss 10 Southern
Cal in 1923.
"Growing ~ in Big Ten coun" try, I always tbOught about playing
in tbe Rose Bowl," said tailback
-Ki-Jana Carter, wbo is from Westerville, Obio. "It's tbe granddaddy
of them all, tbe most prestigious of
all tbe bowl games."
If Penn State wins tbe Rose
Bowland goes undefeated, it could
win tbe national c;bampionsbip if
No. 1 Nebtaska stumbles. To keep
tbose title bopea alive, tbe L111ns

The Dally Sentinel . Page

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thuraday, November 10,1994

Thuradiy, Novem~r 10; 1994

·'

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Space-saver! Feature! re·
diaJ. base-to-handset pag1ng
a'nd auto·sel security code.

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1oil NoRrH Sfeotl) AVENlE • MIOOI.EPORT, OHIO 45760

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�· Page-1D-The Dally Sentinel

P,omeroy..:....&amp;tiddleport, Ohio

By ANNE B. ADAMS and
NANCY NASH-CUMMING._S
DEAR READERS: We bave a
ton or Feedback to catch up on, so
we are devoting this column to
·:your letters and ideas on questions
Chat bad us "Stumped."
: RECIPE: Lucy S. of Aurora,
" Ill., was looking for a recipe for
· Brown Sugar Pie for ber 80-year· old mODI! We received many varialions on tile recipe from our read'" en:. Tbis one is from S.M .R. in
· Aurora, Ill.
Brown Sugar (Chess) Pie
Pie pastry for one 9-inch crust
I bolt (16 ounces) light brown
· sugar
4 eggs, large
114 cup milk
1-112 teaspoons vanilla
112 reaspoon salt
112 cup butter or margarine,
melred
Pre beat oven to 325 . Blend
" together brown sugar, eggs, milk,
vanilla and salt. Mix in butter a lit; · tie at a time, pour filling into
. unbal::ed P.ie shell and bake about I
" boor, unul fluffy and golden. Cool
· pie to room temperature before
~ se.rving . Filling will settle and
thlcl::en.
MORJ;: ON .NON-DETER·

GENT LAUNDRY SOAPS: N.H.
Mack of Ocala, Fla., writes Chat
Kirl::' s Coco Hardwater Castile
(bar) Soap is excellent for removing "ring around the collar."
Mailo Wolf of Doylestown, Pa..
recommends Orvus s.oap. Sbe
wrlres: "It is horse soap and sold in
tack shops. Museums use it for tex·
tiles. It is expensive but goes a long
way."
·
Both these soaps are made by
Procter ~ Gamble. If you can't
find them m your area. g1ve P&amp;G a
c1lati-8Q0.262-1637.
,
Lorraine Marek: of Los Angeles
recommends White J&lt;iing Natural
Laundry Soap, which IS a 100 percent powdered soap, and, since
Ivory Snow "went detergent,'' Ibis
is tile only real soap we've come
across. That is lbe good news.
~be not-so-good news is tllat
Hu1sb Detergent Inc., Salt Lake
Cuy. Utab (1-800- 776-6702),
wbicb makes tile soap, does not
currently marl::et lbeir product in
tbe eastern half or the country. It
can be ordered only by tile case
(12- to 45-ounce boxes for $40 to
S4S; tllis includes shipping and
handling).
For tbose of our readers Wbo
would like a bolt ratller tban an

entire case~ we suggest you asl:: a
rood cooperative or bealtb
food/products store in your area if
tlley would be interested in ordering a case from the eompany.
.DOLL HEADS, HANDS AND
FEET: Mildred Canaf&amp;Jt of Vernon,
Texas, was looking for these for
her crocheted Slinky dolls.
Vera Hartung of Kittaning, Pa.,
writes: "The·se can Ill: gotren from
Kirchen Brotllers Crafts Box 1016
Skokie, JL 60076. 'They bav~
everytlling in tile line of doll maleing you could want"
Glenda Adams -of Pon Arthur
Texas, writes tbat Mildred ca~
order clown bands,. beads and feet
from CR's Crafts Box 8 Leland
IA 50453. Botb the abov~ catalog~
cost $2.
WRAP-AROUND •'SOCK
COASTERS" : Tbank you, dear
Readers, for sending crochet patterns for making tllese coasters (we
llave forwatded them on to Mildred
Holzricbter of Ell:: Grove Ill.) as
well as a source for ready-m~de
wrap-around terry coasters (Miles
Kimball, 41 West Eigbtb Ave.
Oshkosh, WI 54906, item 566620).'
Finally, Jean Chappel · of
McHenry, Ill., writes: " I have 10
children and 13 grandchildren and

-

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~ arown s
_ugar pie is a sweet -treat

Tbe following !and transfers
"were recorded recently in die office
of Meigs County Recorder Emmagene Hamilton:
Right of way. George W. and
Mary F. Price to Monongahela
Power Company, Olive, 106.25
acres;
Right of way, J obn E. and
Louise M. Scbrlfi to MPC, Olive,
3.5 acres;
Right of way, Dwight Honal::er
to MPC. OUve, 1 acre;
.
Right of way, Jobn L. and Susan
L. Suttle to MPC, Olive, S acres;
Right of way, Greta Suttle to
MPC, Olive, 67 acres;
Rigbt of way, Ralph B. and
Regena Koffel to MPC, Olive, 28

have used tbe tops of- old socl::s as
wrap-around coasters for both
glasses and pop cans. Easier to
bold and keep bands from getting
cold."
Write til "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
P.O. Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048.
Questions of general interest will
appear in the column. Due to the
volume of mail, personal replies
cannot be provided.
· Anne B. Adams and Nancy
Nash-Cummings are co·authon
or "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Whetstone) and "Detir Anne and Nan:
Two Prize Problem-Solvers
Sbare Their Secrets" (Bantam).
To order, call1·800-888·1ll0.
Copyrlgbll994 NEWSPAPElt
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(For Information on bow to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact Amerlea Online by caiUng 1·
800-827-6364, exL 8317.)

am:s;

Right of way, James and Connie
Rucker to MPC, Olive, 22 acres;
Deed, Juditll A. Hysell to John
W. Hysell, Chester;
Deed, Wilbert J. McClain to
Darlene T. Warner, Lebanon, 160

aaes;

Affidavit, Jerry, Charles E. and
Garnet Eads to Louise Eads;
Deed~ Julius Samuel and Gladys
Elizabeth MeGbee·io Allen R. and
Henrieua Jaclcs, Rutland, 85 acres;
Deed, Edwin Stanley Cozart,

.

..

Deed, John R. and Jean F. Koehler to Robert Michael and
Sbaron Lynn Rhodes, Pomeroy
. parcels;
Deed, Mary V. Mora Kautz to
Joseph R. m and Hazel M. Turner,
Chester;
Deed, Patrick L. and Julie Lawson to Carma J. and David A.
Trout. Columbia;
Deed, Cbester H. Hutton to Paul
F. and Betty J. Dill, Salisbury Par· .

ny OU-COM's mobile bealtb
immunization unit wbicb' provides
free immunizations for children in
Soutlleaster11 Ohio.
The public awareness campaign
hopes to educare area women in the
following three aspects: breast self· ·
eJtalllination, breast clinical examination and
Screen-

ingserviceswillbegininJailuary.
Darla Ficl::le, a member of
ACCESS, said tbe pro~ram Is
"unique ill tllat it will provide com~
plete breast bealtb services to
women. There will be no need for
lbe women to see more lban one
doctor. Tbe program will make
tbose services accessible and

affordable."
.
'!'be request was submitted by
OU-COM's Consortium for Health
Education in Appalachia Obio
(CHEAO) in collaboration witb
ACCESS and the Appalachia Lead·
ersbip Initiative on Cancer. OUCOM was ooe of 32 in a pool of
300 applicants__na!_i()nw_ide to be

I

Children turn
in toy guns
in buyback.

PETER.

booster every spring. Sucb a program will markedly diminish your.
reactions to poison ivy.
DEAR DR. GOTT: I've been on
a low dose of prednisone for the
past couple of years. I'm in my
30s. My doctor bas suggested I get
a flu shot eacb year because of my
chronic disease and my dally intake
of prednisone. However, the last
lime I bad my prednisone refilled,
the instruction&amp; at tile pharmacy
were to avoid vaccines while tak·
ing tile drug. Now I'm really confused.
DEAR READER: Because
prednisone (a cortisone drug)
mbibits tile immune sysrem. people
taking tills medicine should avoid
"live" vaccines (tllose containing

CLEVELAND (AP)- Cbil·.
dren carrying m:acbine suns. piiiOII
and rifles filed into an cJemcntiWY
living microorganisms). Vaccines scbool and turned ill about 100 fD)'
such as flu shots Chat contain killed weapona in eltCbange for toy 1MB
gift a!rtifiCiteS. Jollipop5 and .riiJla
microorganisms are safe to use.
Follow your doctor's advice; treats.
your pharmacist is merely being ' The youngsters broalbt tile ....
to Captain Artllur Rotll ElemmW)' .
properly cautious.
- Copyright 1994 NEWSPA· School in suburban Glenville OD Wednesday as part of a tciy 1111
PER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
~(For Information on bow to buyback.
"Even
toy
guns
are llot life ·
commun!Cile eledronlCIIIy wltb
this columnist and other•, con- because tlley represent vlolena:,"
tact AmeriCI Onllne by CIIUng I· said kindergarten teacher Bc:llrlc:?
Osbey, who organized the buybidt.
800-827-6364, exL 8317.)
Sbe said tile toy guns would be
lhrown away.
. A letter went to parents lalt
wcel:: telling tllem about the fluy"I l::now there are women who back and asking Chat youngsters not
Ire my age, some widows, some bring any real guns or weapona.
Ms. Osbey said sbe bad not
wbo bave never married, wbo relbeard
of other toy weapon buy·
ish tile fact that I'm there with Ibis
bacl::s
in
{)Ilia schools. Sbe st.anccl
character, wbo really love tile fact
planning
tile program in Septem· ·
tbat Jessica gets· out there and
ber,
but
interest
didn't peat until a
messes in witb life. I think it's
14-year-old
East
Cleveland boy
wonderful to be able to represent
was
fatally
shot
wben
be poillted a
that, even to tile smallest degree, on
pellet
gun
at
a
police
officer last
television."
I
week.
·
The offiCer thought the boy wa
balding a real gun, police said
Second-grader Lorenzo Harris,
7, said be lost interest in bis toy
gun after tile killing of Jeffrey Bell
and decided to bring the gun to
scbool.
"A toy gun can get you killed if
somebody tlliDI::s it's real." be said.
Kennelh DeJeaocq, 9, parted
with tllree of bis four toy guns. He
said be didn't tum In his Supersoal::er water gun.
"llil::e it too _m~~;· be said..

Gracious-plenty talent: ~Murder,_ She Wrote's" Angela Lansbury
By FRAZIER MOORE
AP Televlsloa Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP)- You
could come up with many reasons
wby ".Murder, Sbe Wrote" bas
beeD a Top 10 ratings mainstay for
more lban a decade . .
One reason would be Its go·
down-easy formula. Airing at 8
p.m. EST Sundays on CBS, it's the
perfect elixir to fmish off the weekend.
It also bas a warm, fainily
reunioo flavor thanks to tile guest
stars wbo populate each bour more Chan 1,300 of them since the
Sbow began in 1984.
· But maybe the best eltplanatioo
bas to do witll the cbaracler 'of Jessica Fletcher, played by Angela
Lan~bqry. Jessica solves murders,
of course. About 250 by now, with,
. for lbe record, only one-fiftb ~
them taldns place in ''tranquil'
CabotCove.
·

eel;

Deed, Bernard V. and Deny J.
Fultz, Rulh B. Arnold to D and 8
Fencing Inc., Pomeroy, 561100

~:. Ohio -University College of Osteopathic Medicine gets brea~t cancer grant
The Ohio University College of zations (NABCO). The purpose of
,','Osteopatllic Medicine (OU-COM) the ooe year grant is to increase the
·:recently received a $20,000 grant availability and·use of breast bealtll
for breast cancer education efforts services and educaiion programs
. in Appalacbia
among Appalachian women in
· Tbe funding, secured tbrougb . southeasrem Ohio.
•".tile efforts of the Athens County
The grant will be used to estab.. Caneea:.Education and Support Ser- lisb an outreach campaign directed
· vices .(ACCESS) and OU-COM, at Appalachian women, and will
' was provided by the AVON Breast include a mobile mammography
Health Access Fund and is admin- van, provided in conjunction witll
. istered through the National Riverside Metllodist Hospital. The
Alliance of Breast Cancer Organi- mammography van will accompa-

-

By PETER H. GO'IT, M.D.
vomiting. The gastric acid in tile year-old male and never bad a reac, DEAR DR. GOTr: I'm experi- vomit will cause deterioration of tion to poison ivy until six years
~IK1inll cavities and problems witll denial enamel, leadina to cavities.
ago. The reaction seems to get
my ~til. My dentist informed me
Therefore, unless you vomit more severe eacb year. Wbat
Chat part of my problem could pos- periodically (in wbicb case you changes occur after SO to cause tills
sibly be from tile saliva and acidity need medical attention), follow to happen? Is there a treatment for
ill my stomach. I do have irrlrable your dentist's advice about suitable poisoo ivy?
bowel problems and am curious if oral ~ygiene and tile use of fluoride
DEAR READER: Altbougb
increasingly severe reactions to
tl!ere Ia a connection. ·
to strengthen your teelb.
DEAR READER: There is ordiTo give you more information poisoo ivy are not related to age,
narily no CODDection between den· on your irritable bowel problems, I lhey can be devasl$ting, because
tal disease and irritable bowd syn- am sending you a free copy of my witll each bout of blisters your
drome, a cbronic conditioa mlllked Health Report ''Irritable Bowel body becomes more sensitive to the
by poor digestion. gas, constipation Syndrome." Other readers wbo juices of tile ivy plant
.,, and/or dialrbea.
You should ask your doctor
would like a copy should send $2
There is. however, a relation plus a long, · self-addressed, about desensitization injections
between dental disease aild eating stamped envelope to P.O. Bolt wilb a product called Poison Ivy
disorders, especially bulimia, 2433, New Yorl::, NY 10163. Be Extract. You initially would
receive three injections, spaced a
":'b!cb is characterized by binge sure to mention tile title.
catmg followed by self-induced
DEAR DR. GOTT: I'm a S6· week or so apart, followed by a

dec:easecl, to Don and Donna Rose,
Racine lot:
Deed, J. B. and Robeit C.
0' Brien to Paul Keitll and Kirol)'o
J. Boring, Olive. 116 acre;
Deed, Beneficial Mortgise
Company to Daniel S. B·lack,
Lebanon, .75 acre;
·
Deed, Elza Gilmore to Leslie
Richard and Ruby Kathleen Court·
ney, Pomeroy lot.
Affidavit, Donald Brewer,
deceased, to Pauline S. Brewer,
Oliv~•.45 acre;
.
Deed, Mary M. Shuler to Monty
R. and Paula L. Hart, Letart

parcels;

·

Does bowel disorder lead to ca-vities?

Land transfers_posted

ASK ANNE II NAN

--

- hio
Pomero~lddleport, _
O

Tl)u_o'tday, November 10, 1994

Thursday, November 10; 1994

funded and lbe only recipient in tile
. state of Obio.

· ACCESS will bold an open
bouse Friday, Nov . .18, from 8 to
10 a.m. at tbe Athens Public
Library , Area residents can find
out more about tile group, its activities and tile AVON granl. Refresh·
ments will be served!

.'
f

And she does it while displaying
tile most infallibly good manners of
any cbaracter in lelevision.
In an age decried for its rude·
ness, and on a medium that seems
to·glorify ill breeding, tbe everrefined Jessica Fletcher reigns as
tile nation's antidote to Roseanne
Conner and AI Bundy; a role model
for courtesy, cane what may. ·
In Ibis respect, Jessica isn't so
different from the actress wbo
plays ber.
On a rare day off, Lansbury bas
invited a reporter to tile Bel Air
llomO she shares with ber cat Lolly
and ber husband of 45 years, Peter
Sbaw, a former MGM production
executive wbo is.beavily involved
with ber series.
Sbe bums cheerily in lbe kitcbeo
as she pre~s tea '(ber own blend
of Lipton s and Typboo). Then,
seUiing in ber airy !ivins room. she
turns ber attention to tile grande

dame of TV heroines.
"It doesn't represent in any way
a stretcb, as we call it, to play Jessica Fletcber," concedes Lansb~,
exhibiting as she tall::s Jessica s
assertive cock of tbe bead and
empbatic bunching of her bands.
Probably not. In some 44
movies, the London-born actress
bas played a full spectrum of roles,
illcluding robust villainesses, and
sbe Is a four:time Tony _AW!!I'!I·
winniilg Broadway musical star.
"But to play Jessica, a role that
bas sucb enormous, universal
appeal - Chat was an accomplishment I never eltpecred ill my entire
life." Lansbury says. "I thought
'Murder; Sbe Wrote' would .last
maybe a year or two, and that
would have been fine. But it seems
to have become an instiDition.''
So wbat's ber theory on the
show's staying power?
"It says tllat problems can be

solved, mysteries can t&gt;e unravelled," Lansbury explains. "That
life's anarchy can be straightened
out.''

But reaching Chat state of order
lsn' t as easy as it looks, a fact that
Lansbury, being executive producer as well as star of ber series,
knows all too well.
"To malce an episode work, you
have to bave an interestiug yarn,"
sbe says. •'and presenll!!c I!Y~ience
witll a set of clues and witll suspects, showillg bow tlley might or
might not lie suspicious."
'
. Meanwllile, you can't let tllings
degenerate into "Murder, Sbe
Rote." .
"I really don't want Jessica just
walking lbrougb these scripts. I
don't want her to be a questionand-answer machine. You bave to
introduce elements putting ber in
danger. I want a litUe cballenge for
me.

WJIO.O.O.O

can~
you

CLASSfiED
ADS

---......_--Community calendar--~----

1
..-,.
' ..

,. Tile Community C1lendar II
pijbllahed 11 1 free aervlce to
Dllo·prorlt aroupa wishing to
•II!Miunce meetlnp IDd 1peclal
c1lend1r Ia not
1,'¥ent1.
dealgned to promote 11le1 or
fland rabera of any lype. Items
·are ~ted 11 apace permits and
cannot be 11u•r•nteed to run 1

Beat of the Bend ...

T..

by Bob Hoeflich
·~;

The f111t full cast rehearsal. for
_the upcoming Meigs County Talent
It was a senlimental journey to
:;Showcase of 1994 wlll be held at Sunbury Park, N. Y., recently for
the Pomeroy Vlllage Hall auditori- Janet Leffie.
.•.um at 3 p.m. Sunday. The show
Janet and lbree otller nieces-all
';;W\11 be SIB&amp;ed at tile Meigs Junior residents outside tile county- of
~'High School in Middleport on FriMaj. (ret) Glenna Rummel along
...day and Slllurday evenings, Nov. wilb Glenna's sister, Alberta
~S and 26.
Hawse of Barberton, made tile lrip
:· Meanwhile, Mary Wise of tile to see Glenna, former long•time
· Middleport Art Council and Sandy resident of Meigs County. Janet
tannarelll of tile Meigs Division of r reports Chat Gle11na is in good
::the American Heart Association, .bealtb ancJ. is doing well even
··$ponsors of this year's show report though she misses the Old Ohio
• Chat advance ticlcets for the musical- and lbe home folks. Glenna bas
::"will go_on sale this weekend in sev- · gained about 20 pounds and is get. erallotations ill Pomeroy and Mid- ting along fine at tile retirement
~eport.
home in Sunbury, designed for
retired officers of lbe Salvation
.
· - · A very special thanks came Army.
::U.rougb to Patty Calaway, secreIncidentally, while on tile trip,
-~. and tile Meigs County Cham,
tile group did venture forth to see
.: ller of Commerce, from Sandy tile bright lights of Atlantic City••Black, consultant of donor and loved the experience of Chat
: ~ resources for the lri·Stale bJoodmo·! :bile.
Tbe annual craft sale held at
~~ Tbe tbanl::s . came via letter
Eastern Higb School and Ibis is a
• tllanking Patty and lbe chamber lor . biggie will be tills Saturday from 9
: coordinating a blood drive on Fri- a.m. to 4 p.m. There will be over
·: day, Oct 28. Thirty-silt pints of 80 crafters on band for lbe show
~ blood were contributed to tile pro- · and sale. Tbe annual event has
.,. gram wilh 14 persons beillg first grown 1i1ce ClliZY over the past few
~ time donors. B·Jack reports that
years and is well attended.
: blood is "the gift of life" and points
,!out tllat lives were saved lhrougb
Earlier Ibis week I reported Chat
: tile October 28 blood donations.
Olive Weber, former resident of
P110eroy, bad moved to Martet St.
.;; Former Meigs resident, Bob Jay, in Parkersburg. Olive bas now
; now bf Columbus dropped by a been moved again and likes the
,::copy of The Spokesman Review current location a lot beuer. She's
;printed in Spokane, Wasb., and now at the Obio Valley Health
"sent to bim by a friend.
· Care Center, Route S, Box 146,
.:. A publication contains a story Parkersburg, W. Va., 26101. She's
-:telling of the pleasant experiences been having some problems recent·-of passengers aboard the Mississip- ly and I'm sure would appreciate
:pi Queen on tile Obio and Missis- sane supportive word from you.
,;.sippi Rivers. Besides color photos
i)bowing passenger activity aad
I've beard so many people say
:accommodations, tbe publication tba( summer flew by them and they
.{eatures a large picture of tile Delta can't believe Chat we are approach:'Queen passing ·by Pomeroy witll log Tbanl::sgiving and Christmas
.;Jbe picturesque business section in
holidays already. By ~olly, tbere's
~background.
·
hardly time to teep SDUiing. .

~cnundMrofdayL

· THVRSDAY
C!-IESTER - Regular meetiug,
Sliade River Lodge 4S3. F&amp;AM.
Chester, Thursday 7:30 p.m. wilb
election of officers. Refreshments.
~k

32!~
39!~

Tuppers
'Plains VFW, Post, 9053, ThllfSIIay,
7'30p:m. atpostbome.
•'
POMEROY- Rock Springs..
Qrange, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the

59~?

--lullllre
lllltlrlll

Pnce!locid with excllange

~1.

~

Everyday Low Price

•

7.

.... '"'.

.

'

'

\

Something for Everyone
Help yourself .&amp; your fire department
Shop with us.
All new merchandise.
Auctioneer Col. W. Keith Molden #4318
Sponsored by Rutland Fire Dept.

Cash - Eats - Pos. ID

.1

u•••
~llt!L.

MDr-.
Gil sc llloekl
for mosl cars

,·

LIFETIME WARRANTY

LIFETIME WARRANTY

{

f!oVUIOr-

Now and then an opportunity
-comes along that really
STANDS OUT.

~ _.
~:.

':

-

. ·· PREMIERE • AcloFI Tom
and wife
.. N~\e Kidman llllile for pboiOIJ'IIphen as they
Wllk.~J~to the movie. tbuter for the· premiere o(

Geffen Pldura' ''Interview wltb the Vampire"
Wednesday In Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Michael
C.ullleld)

3 dimensions of opportunity... choose the option you prefer.

Enrollment
resumed in
Cflncer study

1Month Rate 4.SOo/o ~ 4.60°/o A.P.Y.
14 Month Rate S.2So/o • S.39o/o A.P.Y.
21 Month Rate 6.00% •6.18% A.P.Y~

\ PITTSBURGH (AP) - Seven

dloiltbs lifter federal officials shut

tlicm down, researchers have
resumed enrolling women in a
study Cltamiolng whether a paten·
.._lly harmful drus can prevent
~~east

canoer. .

.

;', The $68 mlllion study was sill·

p4nded Ia April after it was
reveilcd that the sroup overseeing
die prqject bad aca:pted fraudulent
data on other breast cancer
research. ,
.
Tbc National Cancer Institute
lift~ .tile group' a suspension In
Jllne, but enrollmeDt could not
!¥uillc until federal officials and
boapitala approved changes In
· p~ieo. t consent forms to better
'\
~orm volunteen ofpossible sldeljfe~ts of the drul ~iilg tested,
- """Oilfen. ·
·
~~ The drug bas been linked to
'lterii!C cancer, and new particl·
ts,~USl now qree to a uterine ·
~when tllcy enter tbe.atudy. _
,. be Un!versity ofPittaburgb
~ Center lllllll!out 10 otber.
~ een~e~~ n partlcipatlnl in ·
·t~~e study. , Before resuming
W:cdoesdal, researchers bad
catolled 1 ,000 of the tar1eted .

"*·

c. a r
· e

Saturday November 12, 1994
-Ruttand Fire Department
Toys- Tools - Gift Wrap - Clocks • Dolls
and much much more

3)99

1997

!:

·

'AUCTION

fill

~ -Society scrapbook_
;...
. --

·-,

, Christmas

.

Dual Terminal Baneries
Everyrlly Low Prk:t
tDT700

.........
111111'111
. Prices
wMh exchange

-

CHILDREN'S BOOK WEEK ' I8DI for their October meeting. Tbe
': Tbe Meigs County Public meeting room and tables were dec·
:;1-ibr,lt)' wlll celebrate cbildten'a orated In a pumpl::in .and apple
-took week Nov. I~ lhroub 19. Tbe theme. Favors were apples.
~ibrary will offer two free cbil· .
Sylvia Sayre gave the dinner
U!ren' s Christmas craft programs.
grace. ·
;: The flrn.program will be at 7
Following dinner, a sboi1 busiNov. IS and tile second will ness meeting was conducted by
at 7 p.m. Nov. 17 at tbe Peggy ~wards. A letlef was read
eroy branch.
on an update of tile illness ofa
; Participants must register at the daSAD•te lind IJ!e members signed
'lJ'oo!eroy or Middleport libraries lie a card to be mailed.
.
, ,a11e Bookmobile, ot by calling 992, Plana for tile Nove!Dber meeting
:f81l
·
were
Metnbers wlll meet at
~PRECIATION LVNCIIEON
Middleport Frulh's parkillg lot at
• Ia recognition of National , 4:~5 p.m. on ~v. ·IS and carpool
~zbeimer'a Monlh a caregiver's Jt~!:,e~_is' Fam11y Re&amp;tal!railt in
lnnd!eon wlll be held
..,_,.
the Scni,or Cillzcnl Ceil
,- . Marjorie Wa,Jbum covered tile
history ~f the apple ·rrom Bible
·.. Resa'YIIiOIIl n to be made-by timca to present-times.
. .
lriday at tbe ceuter, Uuora
AJ~endin1 were Connie SmJtb,
. · ~orLinda Friend, 992-2161. Ginnie ·WI&amp;iloa, Carol Roaab,
' ' '"' FoUow1q tile dinner JIII!CI will Mary, Jewell, Gerll!41ne Rouab,
-~
· ~r.~.Uicl
.
liVi,~
. ." w
_ jU be Pegsy Edwirds, Shirley Tuc:ker,
Sue Allcaawottb, Hazel Smith,
Jan'E Smllh, Itev. Jo·Ann Hem,
• : ~GEI.ESS CL~A~
·, Marie Pettit, ),Wjorie Walburn,
• • • Ageleu Clalcmatea m·et at Sylvia Sayre, Carol Workman,
~ ~ylef'' HOI&amp;IJ (lf 'fl:eas!Rilatau- -~~U JoiW and Berni~ Smilb.

...
TUPPERS PLAINS -

POMEROY -Preceptor Beta Institute group will be at tile Rose Public invited.
Beta Chapter, Beta 'Sigma Phi of Sbaron Holiness Cburcb Friday
Sorority. Thursday. Members are to at 7 p.m. 1be church, pastored by
SATURDAY
take craft items to Joan Corder's Dewey King, is located off Depot
DANVILLE . Danville
. Street in Rutland.
bome at 6 p.m:
·Cburcb of Christ weelcend services,
Saturday, 7 p.m. and Sunday, 10:30
POMEROY - God's Bible a.m. and 6 p.m. Denver Hill, FosMIDPLEPORT · Meigs
Junior High .School combined _Scbool Quartet wiD sing at the Cal- ter, W. Va .• speaker, public invited.
Booster Association Groups, vary Pilgrim Chapel on Roure 143
Thursday, 7 p.m in school cafete- Friday at 7:30 p.m. Tbe Rev. Vic. SUNDAY
ria. All parents, teacbel'$ and con- tor Rousb; pastor, invites the pubPOMEROYThe Pomeroy 12
cerned individuals invited to lic.
&amp; J2 Sunday at 7 p.m. at Sacred
anend.
Heart Church.
TUPPERS PLAINS- WeekPOMEROY - Pomeroy Group end revival, St. Paul United
MONDAY
of AA. Thursday, Pomeroy Munic- Metbodist.Church, Tuppers Plains,
POMEROY
- Big Bend Farin
ipal building, 7 p.m.
Friday. Saturday, .Sunday, 7 p.m. Antique Club, Monday,
7:30 p.m.
Special singing. Saturday night secretary's office on tbe Rocl::
FRIDAY
Youtll night
Springs Fairgrounds.
POMEROY - Tbe Lir ense
Bureau will be closed F• iday in
POMEROY- Return Jonathan
CHESHIRE- Woinen Alive,
_observance of Veterans Day and Meigs Chapter, DAR. Friday,l:30 Monday,
7 p.m. Kyger Creek Clubwilrreopen Saturday 8 to 12noon. parisb house. Herman and Nancy bouse. Devotional and Tbanksgiv·
·- ScbuJ displayillg tlleir preparation ing dinner.
·
RI.TILAND - .Thompson Bible and prllducts from
Jacob

....
-·

.•

.. ._GALLIPOLIS

., ..

OPEN ·SEVEN DAYS A.WEEK
I ·.

Store Hours: 8-a.m.to 8 p.m. ~Y through,Frlday,
8 1.m. to 7 p.m. SaiUrdly-tancll 1.m. ~ ,f p.m. Su~

•'·

'

209 Upper Rlyer Road ·
44&amp;-38q7

"
'

....
. I

t

Rec,y'c!inil Donated hems:
Glass
Ncwpapers
Computer Paper

Plasti' I &amp; 2
Magazines
White Office Paper

Tin Cans
Phone Books
Cardboard ·

Your Bankfot~...

Byyin11 tbe followin11 items:
Aluminum cans
Motor Cast
Copper W'lfC
AutOmatic Tnins.
Elcelric Starters

Aluniinum Sheet
COpper &amp; Brass
Stainless Steel
CAT. Copveners
Radiators

Cast Aluminum
Shon Iron
Die Cast"
Electric Motors
Batteries

Bank
FB &amp;Farmers
Savings Company
211 Wnt Sec:ond street
., ..a.. ..a.. "\J P.O. Box 626
"
.UV4P.SP
Pomeroy, OH 45769
61411192-2136

Routt 1

P.O. Box338
Tuppers Plaine, OH 45783
6141667-3161

Member F.D.I.C.
Subslllllllal penalty lor e811y withdrawal
You must villi either Fanners Bank location to open tills CD.
Af'V Ia on Alll&gt;mllltlon for Anrotl Peroentoge Yield.

EQUAl OPi'OfmJNITY

LENDER

l~®j)~panf,1. _

'.

I.

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~·

•

�•
. Page-12-The

Ohio

November 10, 1994
J

'KINGS
S'ERVISTAR
liARDWARE

CONGRATULATIONS
TO·THE
M·EIGS .MARAUDERS
MARCHING BAND
ON AN OUTSTANDING
COMPETITION SEASON

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

McDonald's
of
POMEROY, OH.
992·5600

e
VALLEY
LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY

DIRECTOR: TONEY DINGESS
ASSISTED BY: JENNIFER MORTON, DAVE DEEM, SUSAN CLARK, MELISSA STEWART,
JOY O'BRIEN &amp; JAMIE SOLOMON
~

992·2121
POMEROY, OH.

BAUM
.
LUMBER
COMPANY
.

. 985·3301
OH.

GRAVELY
TRACTOR
·
.,

K&amp;C
JEWELERS
992'!3715
· POMEROY, OH.
0

1

·lburBank~ ..

I
' I

'

..
'

-..
•

H .2•J311
POIIJ':DY, . .
•

•

Are Yau Too Busy for Running &amp;rands?
Let Errand Boy Do the
for You.
(all-800..806-9482
•992·5710.

ft 7643
614• 99 il"

-- . -

oCriftlman Tools
•Toys

.

• ZANESVILLE BONANZA OF BANDS
CLASS A

• PHILO CHALLANGE
Superior Rating

3rd Place Band
2nd Place Flag Corp
1st Place Field Commanders
Rating 1 (Superior)

· • BELPRE 1NVITATIONAL
CLASS A
1st Place Band
Best of Show Flag Corps
Best of Show Field Commanders
Best of Show Soloists
Best of Show Music
Best of Show General Effect
Best of Show Ma~chlng
Grand Champion Band
Rating 1 (Superior)

• RIVERVIEW INVITATIONAL
CLA~SA
Overall Percussion
Rating 1 (Superior)

• MARIETTA BAND-A·RAMA
1st Place Band
1st Place Field Commanders
1st Place Percussion
I
Overall Percussion
Overall Field Commanders
Overall General Effect
Grand Champion Band
Fl'atlng 1 (Superior)

• CLAYMONT'ROUND-UP
CLASS A
1st P!ace Band
2nd Overall Flag Corps
2nd Overall Field Commanders
2nd Overall Percussion
Best of Show Marching
Best of Show Music
Grand Champion Band
Rating of 1 (Superior)

Per~usslon

Superior
Field Commanders Superior
Flag Corps Excellant
Overall Band Superior

Mr. Dingess and the Marauder Band would like t~ take ~his
opportunity to thank Susan Clark, ./)a'!e Deem, .J.oy
0 'Brien; Jamie Solomon, and Melissa Stewart for their hard
work and th~ir dedi~ated effort in making our program .one
in which we can aU be proud~
CROW~S

FAMILY
RESTAUUNT ·
\. 992~5432
:'POMIIOY,ON.

QUALITY
PRINT
SHOP

·.· ADOLPH'S
.·DAIRY
VALLEY ·

MIDDLEPORT
.
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

FORKED RUN
SPOilSMAN
CLUB

BANK

. Startl•1 Sl•g
Match••
Friday, low. 11
6a30
Sw•clay, llov. 13

, UCINE 949·2210
SYUCUSI 992·6333

1:00

FRUTH
PHARMACY

992·3345
MIDDUPORT, ON.

992·2556
.. POMIIOY,OH.,

992·6121·
•DDLIPOU, OHIO
II

j

•

the pnce of 20 year

.

(614l 388·9865
P.6. Box220
Blct.wl~

Oh 46814

ROIPT BISSELL
(OHSTilKTION
oGiragu
.Complete ·
Remodeling ,
stop &amp; Compare

FREE ESnMATES

tl5-447l

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Ugl\t Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mls. Jobs.

Bill Slack
992·2269

THE
DAILY
SENTINEL

HAULING
Linestone
&amp; Gravel

...............
JHI.S.JN

SAYRE TRU(I(ING
6'14·742·2131
'

I~

Failing inspections will
cost nursing homes

y fll1 Jnr· t,W,-111 H

ROORNG
NEW·REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts ·
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
94~2168
111-TFN

(FREE E&amp;nMATES)
V.C. YOUNG II
· DVZ-4215

PoineroY, Ohio

Affllr I p.m.
. 114-IIW110-

POMEROY, OH.

VETEUNS.
MEMORIAL
HOSPITAl
I

RACINE

FIRE DEPT.

992·2104
POMEROY, ON~
II

~

992·5141
MIDDLEPORT, ON.
•
\

I

. ..

Po I I oiol. orR
. . . Duo To ....,.._ S.

- - - -

1111

:

Wt

~114;;:14~1....;;-~c.nt~
· -:-a:iiiOiiiii
ovwbo
1 100 ~

Gallipolis

.......,=-..,1&lt;:=;zs :

K

-.

cn.n T. . . . Till. . Park. Anllquoo, Kldo ctolhM, Cotlodcn

:
10 .
borldl-.g,
,... lor ow 111ft if&amp; ·
........ Of . . . In Mel OOR'f/rt?
on oppllcotlon. - . , .o4;.t,_.;;;.;i,

llovlng Solo. II Soulh lloln 8L,
Vlnt101. Sot. - · 12th llln&gt;lpon.

::-:

lo.

-

Kennyis Auto Rental
Kenny's is the place ·Jo come
when you need a car rental.
w. ll•ve
v•••,

litOIItfn

c., ••,

...
_ :!:~':!:III,,::Oiilo=.,::41M..~--::=

· ~~ 0.::.. :::.~"u.ll:::~ :-~714 ~

.... - .
131K/Wr. .

'Room T- ..r '-Cholni; 1.oeo1 F1no1 _ , .F.. :
Fow-,
SIOYO,
11ono /On "n.... 'looh.........
~-·-BoD
Ill
Nonhups-nd--

=~ 'I,O:':,F~

Clolhlng, Etc. ,

Yonl Solo Jay

Dr. Frldoy

..r

A.;~

"''7

CucoaJiL( w!
To lo 'MkM. -ToSCCS
Ill,

tng

P.O.-

=-

IWr. 011-.

~ =si~~-=

P.O. lo1

531, Km. OH 4IIG.

1·800-486-1590

264 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

••

~ lholl ......... - -·:ai"-Srool,-.
.

s._tu-rdoo_y_.•_e-:---- - - T o

Kenny's Auto.C.ntlr

•

••
•
'·I

;

~
...
W. -..,.::
•• ~.,U0'8 10
Af1n ..r AN'L
AN'L

&amp; VlclnHy

Bla yonl oolo. 511 ·i l11.
'Thuoo., Frt . Sol.

.

:
=~:
t.. :.!..= ··
-IP.II.,AIIoriP.M. -

~omo. Fri.OnlyU.

Pomitroy,

Bus. (614) 446-9971

-- "

Mklciiepon

-

&amp; VlclnHy

Trnf.

~ (SEPTA)
7 w. _,........,...
t

......

NEfF willa; Ofllo41JW4
.
AI Yonl loin lluot lo Plld In ........ton ...., on1r bo of&gt;.
ArlnMo. Dlodlno: i:GIIIno lito loloiod ooicl ooiumod to
clay ... od lo lo run, ~- Olilo ol
~1:00piio _ ,
Ollloo
llondo7 IO:OO..m. (OIIE
1011 _...,
Sotunlioy.
flono .............. - - ·
....... llMMoJ ..r Frtdooy, 1 lito OIIEI - . , Dooollno ...
112
~ . ...,:
I no II Noowo,.,_ 21,

Roofing. VInyl

I

= - -=
.._.,.....c11.
. . . . , . . . . a..- ·-·
1111- ICCim!lll!

.....,;.,"1.~.:::"'c'!:,~

,_,_

.-........ --·
...
-··--__.....---liP'

fi&gt;.
••!!.•,..tar ...
the
1

- '

12 Gaige
Factory Goke ewy

,,

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

lack Hoe .
Stnlce

Rick Poo.- Auction Conoponr,

lull limo

GUN SHOOTS _ ~~=·:..
SAT., 6:30 P.M.
hHral

D::r.

ouct-r, - • •

IUctlon
lervk:e.
licensed
HG,Ohlo l Woal Vlrglnlo, 304-

C.tractl•t
&amp; Excnatllt

011 Step Cemplete Aufe 8e4y Repair

773-5785.

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

Uconoo

Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

a.-.,_ i~._-'_'_2_-4_1_•~-~~~~-71111_.

•.,.........

I

=-

, _ . . _ - _..... o4

c....... , ...

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1~3/TFN

992•5114

State At. 33 ~
_Darwin, Ohio ~

AMBERWOOD

GLARK'S
JEWELRY
S.TORE !.

Cotlo

Yonl- F.r.-lot., N 5220181. Pl-illllr
Rt. :141, .... 1 -1r;jj Long' 01
lononi
haldlyL p •• ,

aasa

Joe and Susan Clark

.

T......,. c-

0o11 . . -

Yard Sale

1

WL·FOI CUIIEIT PRJCES

.

fNe .EetlmatM
a.....
......:...
1

.p.m.~·

·

Mlao-.Noptoonoc.t

HT.I

•rr ·;

We Buy All Non Ferrousllletall •

wO'rk

RepiKement
WindoM, Blown
.
.....
lnaulltlon, ..wrm
Doore, Storm
Window., Ganlgea.
F- Eallruloa

mu ..ge.

::'a~.::'~== ~ 1'':3 17: 10 "'.::

· · · - · · •••••
1C·SC ....
.., ,.1111 for flaHelltl as.

oftooflng
olnterlor l Exterior
Painting llleo concrete

s:GD-4:Hpa
Vlnyll Alum. Slclng.

.........

:..:r.:-.. ·r,. "-:..':

&amp;.IARO.

111,._ , Laot: I Y/0 -

-Electrical&amp; Plumbing

l•ter r 1
•bterior

T... lie ,..,. out of ·
....ling. ....... do • ...
you. V.., nuatllibla.

' h1cm1. ·-·

. .. - -"'-""·,..
_..,.,~
--~·-~-"'"-"',""!--~-~~
- • IShlllhOrd MIX E l - -Noor
Sout._..,m
0111.
:

· Pafl•l To••r 45 Cu;_ for cle••

1111

UNDI'S .
J&amp;L INSULATION
PAI~DNiol &amp; CO. . ·~L~rf

By CHIUSTOPHER CONNELL
Associated Press Writer
'
WASHINGTON (AP) - Nursing homes that •
flunk inspections will face fmcs of up to $10,000 a
day under a fmalrule published 10day by the Clinton
administration.
The new regulations enforcing a 1987 law ~w
inspectors to target facilities with 'bronic quahty
·CockerKENNE~
·
problems fC»" the toughest inspections.
Spenlela
Until now, the maio weapon tbat.fedenil and s~le
Bred lor
Inspectors bad was the lbreal of cullillg off a nursmg
Quality and
bome•s eligibility fC»" Medicaid funds.
·
Temperament
· Tbe new rule effective in six months, allows fines
9t! 1 cie'z!roe In Part-coiOII
of up to $1 o,ooo' a day and other sanctions b quality
leW lltow It'd companlonl.
Sllld ....... • pupploo,
violations.
.
,
Ulilaforuto.
Paul Willging, execuuve vtce president of the
~&amp;o
Mile Hill Rd. ·
American Health Care Associalioo, wblcb n:Iesents
.RKine,Oh
11 000 nursing bomcs run for profit, c:alled the rule
114 841.2417
"~ step forward" lbal wiU help to identify poor cate
quickly and correct iL .
.
He said that by wocenlnlling reso~ on Jll?blcm homes, tbc government ~U no longer waste Jim.
ited resources on minor oversagbts.
,
..
. He also applauded the government ~ .decisaoo to
allow an informal dispute _rcs~lution_process. to
!CIOive disagreements over vao~ons, wtthout gomg
·lverlatl•l•
to altlrt or an administrative bearing.
. 614-247-4035
Tbe final regulation. wbicb appears in today' s
Now 01111n for Fd
Fedenll Register, limits t1!,c autbority of sov~nt
Seaaon
inapccton to ~tan ex~nded survey of a n~g
Wed. lhru Set H
, bome "to situations in which substandanl quality of
Sf»cllltitg:
care bas been ideo lifted.''
__ ..
Dried Ma.tll'illl
· But the Health Care Fllllllldng Administralion ..,..
Pot pourrlauppliM
tbe states will still "have complete discretion to /
examine any and all aspects of a facility's perfor·
Hetbal Crafla
mance in order to determine compliance,'' the rule L.._.....;_ __.
IIAICS.
. .
It allows the aovemment to charge interest on
ciVil peaaltles against ouniog bomcs and to red~
WHALEY'S AUTO
tbe peaalty by 35 percent it a nuning home waives
PARTS
its rl&amp;bt to a bearing within 60 days of tbe lint
Splcl..'dng In cu.tom ·
DOIIAU.ouning homes co~ by Medicare and Med·
. ftwM Repelr
lcaid mull be inspected annually·
lEI &amp; USED PARTI FOI
Medicare pays nursing home bills for people wbo
ALL MAUl &amp;MODELl
.cc1 skilled ounins, but not custtvlial c:are, after a
112•711101
tbe fedtnl·stale ·insuranc:e proaram. for
··•tt,..noa .
· tbc poor pays 42 percent of nuniog bomc. bills.
TOLL FREE t.aH 14, H71 ' ·
Almoat t~tbirds of tbe 1.5 miHioo ~ iD
DAU.,OIIIO
aunlna boliDes have lbclr bi1&amp; paid In part or'w~
. '
7JitJtt ,..
by MediCaid.
.
' .'

992·2155
POMEROY, OH.

·

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
oftoom Acldltlona
oNewGaregee

·

t.., ... -

........ e~UM-5210.

1..-t-

Howard L. Writ'-el

,

OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEK FOR YOUR (0NVINI£NQ" : ~:!'~~~:\"~~~,.!-~:"0:. 41~~ot-Fw~ t t ,.,
MON.-FRL 9-6; SAT. &amp;SUN. 9-3
.. _CIII1-G14-446-7410.
~.!,.-,::,:~

992·395 4

.

Found: 011..- "-· trolllc tldll :::..Go
on 3S.Wcoli to 10, Sbitltl'1 OlfiCol ..,....._
•
.
ctly
L
Holp _ . . , _
_
·
2
LOST c- _...., - · . - ~.. 11
· W.IBIII«Idwloii 11! ..'!_IR~~R ' : Oi)Oo-.Pirf.Tinii1WD-

Whlto Eng;loh Polntor

"

•New Homes

...

992·6491
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

FISHER
FUNEUL
HOME

Gel25 yr. ihlnales for

Loads of Misc.

Buy-Sell·Trade
_,_

With Much Pridef

• STATE FINALS

Fal Special

oGianware

HOME
NATIONAL
.

Concrele, Etc.

1-6

992·2955
POMEROY, ON.

AWARDS AND HONORS
.

Room);dditona
Siding .

=.

lngl~P.O.
. OH411P. loll 3M, RID ·.

Loll &amp;' Founcl

-----....,;,·---C--C-L-IN-G..., i.:"il4~~=~ U%! ........ ~ TRI COUNTY IE Y
' LO~
!-!..!,

WE HAVE A· I TOP SO IL FOR SALE

HOllE IIIPROYEJIENT
Roofino, Siding

6

l.aol· Corfn
-. - :
cun.
, _ 'ca.-y,
"': coloi'Od,
s- tonllr,
Aldgo/S...,.r
Cowtowh,
· Rd. .,.. .W..'e Co., togo, ~~304~171~1~40::_1-:-=--=-: :--:::--

(No Sunday Calls)

,

tiO\'J OFFEf11 NG GENERAL HAULING

Onemlleout
143 from Rt.·7
TUM.~Wid•.fri..SIIt

=:Eia.:p

::t=

,:0: '='· ~·

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL ·,
. FREEESTIMATES
.
··

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanka cleaned a pottlble tolletl nmtllll.
DaHy, Meldy a monthly rental ~tes.
Job a11e1 • Cemp Sltel' Fll1tlly Reunlon1 l Plt1ies

~nt

'"'· -

~., .. . - _.., '* ~=- ~-

s c.noo Kill. . s _._ 0141, &amp;m 'lllouoi.,. ~ En71111 •
..._. IWI tt.oo NMW. M-

••

• · New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • RePlacement Windows
R001n Additions • Roofing

Co.

F m"tq

wv. - . .._ u. T• 1w - . -

=:a':"'u:-'...J!,""=

Co.

BISSELL BUILDERS~ INC..

'

.....

MANLEY'S

~~oo-.,

GIVeaway .
1!'"'~~~~••:__-:-:-,----:-:::::::4
:.121..,Zonl1Zonll....,..,.:h;:_:..:::.:m•.:.;:"•:!:ITV'"".,...;,.,.-

..- - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . . ,

MIDIBN SUrrAftlll .

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

-

.-w

AIMip II .fll.
o..t AI Woifl-.l'lollllo
lllpl, Dtoc01 ""' No /DoOr. 11&gt;-

-Colllomlll,l14.~Z:Jt
1 •
lfJ 7 I owe. Will YA 211C1Z.
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire
Swivel f.~~
Some ..,...'lllllo _, 1 n
1
Hellth • Accident • Annuity • IRA • Mortgage
Ropolr
Fot IWfr!l, Air eon•onlng, l .
..Y,
L....,:.:::;:::.:.:;.:==.:..:.:::.:.:::.~;.;;.;...:;,;.;;;,;:::;::_...J Two ml111d . , _ ......... "Don ~ . _ In and Utile Ann" 114-0ft.l411.
Or IIOnd -....;TO: Y - - • :

· Complete Une cit Erraad Service.

Saturday, Nov. 12, 9 am·4 pm
EMS Gym, Rt. 7
Food, entertainment, door prizes,
75 local craftsman.

Bank

~.

614-843·5264

675·5955

Pr-..g

Clolnl-llfY,
toni'• Q-.y,

ROCKY R. HUPP
American General Life &amp; Accident Ins.
P.O. Box 189
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
CRAFT FAIR

'

DOWNINGCHILDS MULLEN·
.
IISUitiiCE

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

Construction

SWISHER·
LOHSE
PHARMACY

Sal•• and Service
992·2975
POMEROY, OH.

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

lt/1/U

992·6451
POMEROY, OH.

=
---Cn• __,__ .
AIRiiiMiiiiliY

8ooU lroni - . , V..V lolgo.

. PrlooNO.OOIIMIZ·'IIM

Umeetone, Sand, Gravel end Coal

, INGELS
FURNITURE
&amp; JEWELRY

EWING ·
FUNEUL
HOME

a•a.,;;;;. :

Autllerluii.A..nc- .......nl....,

Tup,.rs Plains, Oh.
98$·3315

. 992·5627
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

992·2635
MIDDLEPORT; OH.

A'ION I AI AI-. I ..,_, :

------~·---- --~~Ma
3 Annoui'IC8I1Uirlts
AI .._. : '
·f!onny Rogoro c - Tour =a=llor~ . . . . . :

(614) 992·7434

THE SOUTHFORK INN ·
SHOWBAR Open At 5:00P.M. Daily
Closed Sunday
. GIRLS·GIRLS·GIRLS

:

'Help wanted

'11

An no unc erne 111 s

Y.Our Tots/ Comfort Assured Dealer
Low Rate - Financing Available
Call Today for Free Estimate

PDK

.

CU\SSIAED RDS

· Salts, Strvict &amp; Installation·

221 West Second St.
· Po•eroy, Oh.
992·2136
St. Rt. 7

PLACE and
LOCKER 219

Readthe

Morrison's Heating·&amp; Coohng

" 112 W. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OH
992·6376

_

n.. SHOE ·

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag.-13.

FICE SERVICE
&amp; SUPPLY

( Fs J Farmers

992·6611

Pomero~lddleport, Oh!o

•

Auctl..- Cot. OVcor

E. Click,

t 754-14 1 llondod,
304-89S-3430.
Auctlono ...., Frtdov-8oturdly,
7pm, ML Alto Auction, AI. 2-33

"''oaroodo", Ron Potoo, BUI
Moooo, g.-loo, ptuo loCo
..,..1 Ed Frulor1130.

9

.W In 1M • p1nWon of
m II illi """"lnt In lloo -.g
-ondlholdli:llon.Aiao•
In
dolly ...
-tolllly o4 ~ ....... , .....

.

"""*"' •

........ . - - .

.....- . ....., poolowii-100
etw.ta. LftL ch11: ....., food

uage..,....,.••cw•

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

Abllly to ttl In .., -

1cl1

• ·

,....

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.....

.._.tolon II ..

o1u11oo

,_,....

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m;;
1

• - 1n

olonol"""'-

lnlllu-

Wanted to Buy

.

,wz,_

'

•
•

SlftLLifES

I&amp;L ELECTRONICS C))
lMry Rupo &amp; Aa-.'1
'

:a;

-SERVICE-

lral priority! In IIICI. "1\411 taJr• MI'Vic1l 10 Mlioul, H may
~1M on tt. •Y It&gt; yo&lt;Jrlrou•r

- PROGIWIIIING-

S1arting at $7.96hnonth tor 13 chaMela on"' It&gt; as many as
your heart dflllraa.
-SALES- ·
•
D*tla ranging In slzellom 10 IHI cteardown to 18 hchta.

'

IU'I

-PAYMENT PLAN-

aiiPLIUCI

y.., we can laQ callhl -or· 110 daya 111M •• cull -or·
poymenll for 41 monllo ulow u $35hnonlh.

.,....
...... •lldft •••• m ••••

IDVICI

-SERVICEyouR SADSEACJ)ON &amp; Our Succou bogin1 &amp; ondo with

ForAII•Ior

oorvic:ef. So, wh.., your ooleiWie iW11 worldng righ~ _.,.
he,. to .._,, Bv phone or In poroon • wh4n you cell,
-wii/MihotW
'""""

u... App~rw....

·c.u

• Solid vinyl

Deli vered
Lo&lt;lllly

992·383 8
I

I

J I D'l Auto Pooto and Soolwogo,
IIUrtng -D,Jutok

...... •
toudai. AIOo••... oalo. :J04.
773-5343 or m.5033.

Olclor rypo _, - . hond
crank or motor,

....._,.2-2710.

Rod Pontloc Pau-. 114-2458441
ot p1no an _.togo or
-.lf4.tl2.7110.

lump

.

\

!'
l

,... Tow- Complalo- ·
Zllfte~l-.- .

-

-=
..

·--...,

j

~~w, ......: -

Top Plld: AI · 'Old U.S.
Co1no, Clotd Rlnal. CoiM.
Clotd Cotno. M.T.S. Coin !ltlap,
1St s-nd A - Wlpola. ·

11

HI_, Wlnt8d

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....., .'

----~
-~~to...
iuol •
.

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

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doni,

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t ·
-lot~to~

i

loMud, rnu ••h .,...._

I= . . . - =·

AN
~- I d In llllllng?
' loalr:,::l(l II, HADE Inc.

•'Lootlor.Jbe·Red ~ White Anini"
992-4119 Aln- hili- l.aoo-291-56t0

•'

•

WI-~·--=
·

..

.

Cillo-

Yont-

Employ·nent Serv1ces

-viSIT OUR SHOWRoOir
110 Court St. Potn!~Y· Ohio -

.
At ~ Air,
Tlllnl .
........... Gollpollo. ... .

Qui- Dunod Ughl ~ .

11111.

• $200 Installed
Call For Details

-To~.

Fw

,.,..., To ...,, """'"" To Buy

windows
~ Fre.e Esllmatll

-=== .

,v.,.
Wilt .. a.octood, AI&gt;PI&amp;,In .....

.......... 3

·1114.
Core- ··EldortJ In
, _ . . _ :.
- · , . OniJ Ful Or PWf. •
llono,
411 M2t

I*"--·,,......

reP,.Iacement
l

w.·.. =~--

Mood Ouolt
~""- .
s.mco
T-.......
And 11&gt;- •

w...od t~ ""' -ndlng tlrnbor 18 · Wanted to Do

1

~.-6_1_.,_9_92_"5_5.::!=~:....~ ' ; Custom Made ·

TOP SOIL,
FILL DIRT,
Llr.iES TONE

'

l

1-IDN31-IIta
114-811:1-3310

W. 611 MNice at the lop bocauoo It hu -'-Y• been oui

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NEA Crossword Puzzle

·aiUDOE
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

BEATriE BLVD!M by Bruce Beattie
NO TH
•A 10 4
•Q 10 7 5
tJ 10 6 5

IH0-91

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EAST

WEST
•K.732

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tA 7 2
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SOUTH

F111di1CIJI

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DODISIN' TH'
PINE (ONES fl

WHAT DO

YOU CALL tT,

JUGHAtD?

"I vote we find someone else to car pool with!"

Rc.11 Est&lt;Jtc

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

31 HomM for Sale

a

44

Apartment
torRent

55

··.......... ""'·
..=.-- ...._

Ac...

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11o111 11111op

• Dlf . . ._ ..... ca- ..,...,
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Building

A S~ARPNE55iN T~E
AIR .. SMOKE RISIN6
FROM C~tMNE'(S ...

l'umlollal Apt. 2 IR Ullllloe Pold .., ....
11t .t• ttll Mlr

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OF T~E
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ESTMU, Ill ......... Plla
EOH.

won over six. There were various

............... ,112
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ERNEST

f.-T_SAYS. OfA, fMN~. IT B~O~E MY ~~AilT
~fA, '(OV {'10 L.ON6f, &amp;.OVf ME
k.JANT AI..!. YOU!t PIC.TUI!t$ ANO
.1-.ETTf,$ rAe~. l AM SfNl&gt;lf'/6
::4 C. ARTON OF PIC. TurfS AM&gt;
~t.TTE/l.f VIA frE16tiT EXPrfSS. .•.
PLEAs'f PIG~ OUT Ttif ONfS .· • • •·
. Tt-fAT A,f YOU~!.
FAITtifULL.Y,
f,ANGINf. ''
11

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111,000
IN,
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1111 Olda •
lrouahlm, Chlreall
Gaiii"CalolllooL ti,D.

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

32 Mobile HomM
tor Sale

•

1171 ....,.., Home,Zia•---

-~--1111.
Good Col ....... · · - ·

bonuses lor honors: the number of
dou.bles and redoubles was unrestricted; there was no vulnerability.
The dealer eil her ~e l ected the
trump Sljit or said, " I pass it to you,
partner: · !Now you know wl)ere
"Pass" came fromJ
Some players understood the tactics
better than others, as wit.nessed by
this deal from the match.
When the Portland Club sat North ·
South, Soutll passed• an error with an
unbalanced hand . North went wilh
spades, because that was the cheap·
est suit. East doubled happily. Best
delens~ holds declarer to one trick .
but South was allowed to win two
tricks . England collected 24 points 15 x
2 x double = 20 + 4 lor honors) .
The England dealer bid diamonds .
East doubled, of course, and North
found a well -timed redouble. Despite
the trump attack. declarer wo'n nine
tricks: one spade, three hearts. lour
diamonds and one club ruff in the
dummy. That gave England another
96 points 13 x 6 x redouble = 72 + 24
for honors) .
England won the match 384·214.

Fumlahed •

1113 ..,._ MJm, I IR, 1 1IZ

IIIII, lulll_. ...._.. IIICI
DIIIIWISIW. NIW ClrDeli 18100.
Allor 1tMn 114-44H1:0;

devlcee
47 Muolcal
compoalllon
49 Earliest born
50 Llktft41HI
51 Trlala
52 Slekel's partn.,

DOWN
1 Austere
2 Broadway
mualcet
3 Rule
4 Female sheep
5 Of the voice
box
6 Female
pronoun
7 Shade tree
&amp;'Foots
9 Musical

compoelllon
10 Beemlrch
t2 Crippled
13 Spring, fill,

etc.

East
Dbl.
End

No, the bidding diagram is.n't a total
misprint All will be revealed in a mo·
ment.
~
It is 100 years since bridge in its
original form was . played at the
Portland Club in London. To celebrate
this centenary, a match was arranged
between teams representing England
and the Portland Club. The players
had to use the 1894 rules,. in which the
dealer always declared the contract.
Scoring was different, with "pades
worth lwo points, clubs four. dia ·
monds six, hearts eight and no-trump
12. The points counted only lor tricks

IIEAI1II'UI. APAII'IIIENII AT

4 1•*•-. I Pull ....., 10

c....,_-

44 Weighing

By Phillip Alder

0~~~--•• •• 11t ••• -Ave.,
ttll Mtr
l'Jo.M..
••

1 Germen
philosopher
6 lntterltorl
11 Declarlllon
13 Rar..y
14 TV'e Geraldo 15 Fancy fur
16 Sault- Marie
17 Non-profll org.
19 Room In a
harem
20 Rigor
22 Believe-not
23 Scold
24 L.erge villages
26 Tennl1 unil
28 Compoaer
Rorem
29 Ball30 Capuchin
monkey
31 Gresk leiter
33 Map •Ill!•.
35 Belonging to
us

A century
of bridge

SUppl...

VIal UlltlltM, 30W'/IoiiCM.

37 Clemency
41 CGmpaupt.
42 Eye part
43 Actreu

O~Jening lead: • · 4

NEA. tnc:.

-·

2

Vulnerable: - • ·
Dealer: South
South
West North
e
Pass
Redbl.

11t •• 1441 1Ni .............
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..... · -..... --.1111.
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aJ

'.'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luia Campos

Celsbrify Ciphar cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people past and~~
Each letter r11he Cipher 11ands tor another. Todsy's clue· A eqUals D

BE

UMDO

BSO

J 0 .

J LV 0 Z ·

N S l B

MZ

UMCMTI

M

RFOLBS

D MT A

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B S L B

N E F B S

NEFV .· '

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BLTAK.
YOZZMPL
PREVIOUS SOLUTION• "Politics consisls in ct'oosong between the disaslrous
and lhe unpalatable." - John Kenneth Galbraith.
10

0 1994 by NEA. Inc

fiAT
PIZILII

O loorrango

·loners ol lhe

lour ocramblod words I&gt;.
tow to form four words.

- HODRCI

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TANCE

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L-...&amp;.-L-...&amp;.-L-...J ..

r da
got
ck
together with her boyfriend after
__,.,'1\"5
a. big argument. ~That just ·
proves," my husband said, "ad,__....__,__.._.:.L.._, " versily shows you that a tire isn't
R E P E X ·T
the only thing that can be .. - - hg~r,-r-,7;-·
,-.--1-cjR.~mplele lhe chuckle quoled
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Rooms

MZ

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by ftll•ng '" fhe "u~ing words
L-"+-'--'--'--'-~ vou develop from Step No. 3 below.

GeiAa HoleL

11t••••

8

5URE ~ l'r'\ UOINC:, TO &amp;E
A STI\R 1&gt;1 HOLLY¥10CD

SOMEO"V 1
1

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PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS I
IN THESE SQUARES

I( NOW

AM I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

46 Space for Rent
2~
Ollloo lpeoo
In
Golllpollt,
.,._
?1111.

STRIKE A BLOW IN THE WAR ON

HIGH PRICfS. SHOP THE CLASSFIEOS.

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I IR Nllr Ciorpll. MXII IUIO.
2 IR ellllndal IJI. 10JIII.

Utmost- Lunge - Ducat- Repent- GET OUT
Wise advice given to me by a favorite aunt: "It's easier
to stay out of trouble than it is to GET OUT of it."

RQBOTMAN
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BERNICE
BEDEOSOL
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'"the year !\head, .you might discover

two waya·to put Y.Our creativ~y lo O,ood
use . If ·~roperly diveloped , lhese

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al!fi!iu8s'wm"· tncreaae your eamtnqs.
~'(Ocl..i4'Hov. 22) Meet chaite89es l elou;cefully today. If you do
tt\111111 ' in a diain141rested way. Y9U aren't
- t o get"What you want. Get a jump
orUtfe by understandn&gt;g the influences
wlb:ch g91Jern you In the Ye~r •head.
Si\llll~:, your Astrq-(;raph P!edoctoons
t~y maohng ,Sl.25 to "-tro·Griph,
c/o this ne~. P.O. Box t'85, New

tiY

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York, NY 10163. Be sure to slate your yield . the other side isn 'l apt to back
zodiac sign.
,
down either. .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) 'itou GEMINI"(May 21-Jurte 20) II you 're manhave ample reseoves ol endurance. but ag1ng a situation tor someone else loday.
instead ot drawing from these today. you · lie forewarned: You may get blamed for
may squander your energy.
·' ''
his/her previous mistakes. Take care not
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) II yo4'je lo let this happen.
putting together a social group today, CANCER (June 21-July 22) Today y,oor
selecllriends who gel along well. One'or . finaooal footing may prove less sure than
two mismatches could spoil eveoyoni!I'S you suppose. Brace you,rsell and protect
tun. ·
your interests.
AQUARIUS (.i.n. 20.Feb. 19) Have faith LEO, (July 23-Aug. , 22) Your triends
in your abilities today. beCause it could might bend ~ver backwards to 8SS!Sl,you
·make ·your ·life easier. ConvetSely, :n rl&gt;u , today. However, not ~v.eryone ." y,o~r .
don't feel ybu're t-ot, chani:es aoe yo~'re friend.· Walch .out lor those who try to
not: .
. ·•.
block your path.
.
PISCES (Feb. 2o-Mercll 201 Although VIRG.o . (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22) The~e s a
YOU! ·intentions are good , your actions possJblhty you might lind yourself
may .;;,. misinteiJ)reled today. Toeal close involved with people you resent The
frlenda extremely catetuly.
probtem is old. but the memooy is toesh .
ARIES (March 21 ·Aprll It) You / Today. try to torgive and forget .
.
chances of gratifying your ambitious .L IIIRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Le« .to your
urges are goo(! today, but loy nQI to mis· own devoces you co~ld tum a prolrt today.
uae per$011S ·whose a$Sistance yoo need.. Too much 1nput from others, tllough, may
TAURUS (April »May 20) Bite fh8 bul· unwind yoor eHorts and leave you wi,th a
' 181 ·and ma~e..poncessions instead of deficit
··
complications today . If you refuse to
Cll99f NEWSPAPER EN'l'ERPRISE ASSN.
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�.Cavs

Philippines emerging from U.S. -shsdow
I bave bccll compilinsan agco·
Jobs Bill II was presented
da of speatm for tbc PUCO public · which consists of several aids tO
hearins on Nov. 16 at 10 a.m. at businesses iDcludius the Horticul·
the Senior Citizen• Center. It is tureJLiveSioek SlniC1ure Sales Tax
nece•'•ry to have all facets of our Exemption, Export Tax Credit,
callipJIRil rqRaCDted iD order to R.eseardl Development Tax Credit,
establilb the oeed for tbc 'toll free Jobs Creation Tax Credit, WarecalliDS betwccD tbc 992 excbiDsc bouse Inven~ory Tax Exemption,
and the Mason, W,VL, excbanse. Manufactunng Machinery and
Please call me at 992-5005 if you Equipment Tax Credit and the
wish to represent your Interest Ill Ohio Defense Conversion Assistbis mauer,
tance Fund.
Due to the Rutilod Scbool beiDg
These arc efforts of Governor
dcmotisbed by the Oblo ()pcratiog VoiDovicb to bclp busineu through
Engineen Apprenticeship triioini teu&amp;b tlmea, so that iD tum Obioaoa
(a oon-profit organization), I have wilT stay employed. Voinovicb's
discovered a new opportunity for busiDcss aidS DOt only keep them
both our youth and abady work· going and their e~pleyees
ing men and women.
employed, but also serve as an
On Oct 20, 196S the lntema· enticement to bring business to
tional Union of Operating Eogi- Ohio and possibly Meigs County,
neen Local No. 18 and the Labor because not all of our states are
Relations Division of the Ohio pro-busiDess
·
Contractors Association and the
Mary Powell and 1 fmisbcd our
Associated General Contractors of · two-part grant writing seminar for
America Inc,, entered Into an private fOIIIlCJatlC1Ds•. These monies
agreement creating the Ohio ()per· are available for a wide variety of
a:l. Enaloecrs Apprenticeship projects and 1 am excited to write a
I: . This fund was established to sraot proposal to obtaiD some of
uaio men and women to become tbcse lllllllics for needed projects 111
skilled operating cogiDeen. This our county. Bob 011more and 1are
joiDt body recognizCd the need for looking at foundations who may
qualified people to fill the ranks of fund recreational projects such as
the operating engineers. Today, tbc Middtport Pool. Mr. Gilmore
through their cooperation, the pro- Is a very enthusiastic person to
11ram continues to srow. with the work with wbo Is DOt afraid ofa lit·
industry creating skilled manpower tie wmt.
to meet the demands of this and
Amy Wolfe of Wolfe &amp; Associfuture gcoeratloos.
ates Accounting and I attended a
Any person who il physically government procurement seminar
abletodotheworkoftheopcratiog in Huotinglon, W.Va. Amy and I
engineers is eligible to apply for arc Interested In the ability of
acceptanec in a four-year appren- · Meigs County buslneues bcins
ticcsblp prograDl. AD application able to sell their services and/or
fee of only $10 Is the only fee products to the .state and federal
involved and tbc applicalklo period govemmcot. ~re are many stepS
is held for two weeks during the to go through, but if a business ·
first pan of the year. Following a would be lucky enough to land a
preliminary testing period, top government contract, the work
scorins applicants wlU then. partici- would be well worth it.
pate In a 120.bour pre-apprenticeNov. 30 is right around the cor, ship Orientation, which completes ncr. That is the date of our .next
the screening process. Successful Industrial Attraction Workshop at
· applicants are then Indentured into Carleton School at 6:30 p.m. Rut: tbe Ohio Opcratlns Ensiacers land's representative, Jim Birch·
: Apprenticeship. Indenturing field, bas already completed the
· insures only lralnlng, not employ- community profile of Rutland•. Is
. menL
yours flolsbed for your COIIIIIIIIIIII)',
The training consists of H32!· and do you know if your commuoiMat, mobile crane, laser-assisted ty Is even belni represented? I
· and controlled machines, grader hope to sec you there with your
: and other equipment. Please call lnfoonatioo completed. If you have
John HJiger at 385-2567 if you any questions ~lease call.
· would like further information.
This month s quote: "Tbe great·
Ail Ohio Department of Devcl· en thing in Ibis world Is not so
opmcnt Region II Advisory Com- much where we arc, but in what
mlttcc meeting that I atiCDded pre- direction we are moviDg."
sented useful iDformation.

By ROBERT IL REID
Allodated rr- Writer
. MANILA, Pbllippines - Wb~n
President CUntoo arrives Saturday
in Ibis former U.S. colony, be will
find a llllioD emeralDs &amp;om America's shadow and trying to redefine
its plaoe in Asia ind the world.
It is also a nation sceklns ·to
catch up with Its more prosperous
Southeast Asian neigbbon, which
soared past as the Philippines
endured nearly 30 yean of ·SOCial
and political unrestMuch of whai Presitlent Clinton
will sec during bis two-day visit
wiU serve as a reminder of the per·
vasive influen~"lhat the United
States wielded over the Philippines
after it seized tbe islands from
Spain in 1898 after the Spanish·
American War.
English remains an official Jan.
guage, along wi.lh FliiF,o. Nwner·
ous prominent Filipinos bold
degrees from Americ;pa universi·
ties. including 'President Fidel
Ramos, a sraduatc of West Point
and the University of Illinois.
The hotel where Clinton will
stay was wbere Gen . Douglas·
MacArthur lived when be served as
commander or the U.S.-Pbilippinc
military before World War II. His
chief of staff .was a lieutenant
colonel named Dwight D. Eisen-

bower.
One of Manila's major streets II
named after former. President
William Howard Taft, who once
served as sovcmor-general or the
Pbili lnes.
~re than 17,000 American scr·
vloe members tiDed in World War
II are buried in the U.S. Military
Cemetery in suburban Makati,
largest in the Pacific.
Memories of the Japanese siege
of Corregidor and the notorious
"Bataan Death March" remained
etched in the memory of Americans born before the war.
More than 40,000 Filipinos still
emigrate annually to the United
States. Jbousands more visit there
each year, many to disappear Ill the
large Filipino community as illegal
aliens.
Despite all that, attitudes arc .
cbang111g. The generation that
revered America for driving out the
Japanese Is dyiDg ouL
America is still the Philippines'
largest trading partner. But Asia's
economic boom bas brou4ht a
flood of investmeniS from Tuwao,
Japan and South Korea. Japanese
karaoke clubs and restaurants are
the latest entertainment fads.
Hundreds or thousands of Fil·
ipinos work throughout East Asia
· and the Persian Gulf as laborers,

nurseund housekeepers.
· ·
"Tbtre.' a a more distributed
Idea of the world," political lei·
ence Professor Alex Magno said.
'~Filipinos have discovered Asia,
for one thiDg. We discOvered only
lately that our bac~ yard Is our
front yard." . .
RamOs bas focused his foreign
policy on shoring up ties to other
Southeast Asian countries. After
taking office In 1992, be visited
neigbl)Ora sucb as Thailand,
MalayJif, and Singapore before
making: lis first trip as president to
the Uoi"" States last year.
Three factors account for lbe
change: expanded usc or Filipino,

or 1'il1a1oi, In the aeboola ·and
·broailc:iilt lilcdla; tbc regional ecoJ191114: boOm: and the 1992 pullout
of U.S. forces after ocarly a oentu- '
ry.
.
..
Since )be 1970s, J!Ublic schools
have taught Ill FUipiDo ntbcr than
English. Although Ensllsb II aWl
widely used Ill universities, about
1uilf the pupils quit sc:bool after the
sixth grade.
Not all agree with the change.
Champions of English argue ibat
fluency in ~ world language opens
the door to' jobs abroad as well as
cultural, tcclmlcal and profesUonal
resources.
·

ably lighter q~~ery of the same mao,
wbo said be didn't think Simpson
was guilty because he could have
easily fled to Canada wben be was
in Chicago the morning after the
killings.
"Have you ever bad the life·
cxperienc,c that things aren't
always as they seem?" the judge
asked,
Tbe mao said he bad.
"Do you know who Milli
Vaoilli is?" the judge asked, a ref·
~re!ICC to the disgraced lip-synch·
mg pop IIJ'OUp.
"No,~'• ihe man said.
''Too bad,'' said the judge.
. Earlier, while Ito was questionIDS a firehouse recertionist; the
su.bject ot the woman s Doberman
pinscher came ,up. The judge
offered that be, too, bas a Doberman, which be named GUlis after
the old TV character Dobie Gillis,
"Get it?" be asked to laughter
in the courtroom.
Meanwhile, Distiict Attorney
Gil Garcetti told reporters be was
appointing Deputy District Attorney Christopher Darden to the
prosecution team, bringing .its total
to seven la~cn - the largest in
the offacc's history.
Darden; a 13-ycar veteran, Is the
first black penon on the team.
Garcetti dco1ed charges that Dard·
en was appointed to gain sympathy
with the jurors, eight or 12 of
whom are black.
"It could very easily backfue,"
Garcetti said. "There could be a
juror who says, 'Are you just
bringing bim on just because be's
black?' The answer Is obviously
no."'

FARMERS BAN'K
Pomeroy, Ohio
Lobby and Pr·l.v~ups
will ·be

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Vol. 45, NO, 135
Copyright 1994 ,

He bad blOod around his mouth
and on his shirt when officers ·
arrived, Lewis said.
Burgess said he acted in a fit ~ .
rage.
"He was growlins at me and
they let him run ·loose for at least
four years," Burgess said, "He
was messins witb my dogs and
messing with me every time 1
walked byibcrc."
McComas did not have a listed
telephone number.

lbe lower 60s.

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1 Section, 14 Pagea 35 cenll
A Multimedia Inc. N-•P•I*

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Novemb3r 11, 1994

Money
for job
creation

· Perso~s fa~es sentencing
on theft, fleeing charges
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel Newi Staff
A Meigs CoiDlty fugiti've stared
forward without flinching and bis
mother llurst intO tears when a jury
convicted him on two felony
charges Thursday afternoon in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
David M. Persons, who bas
addresses in West Columbia,
W.Va., and Long Bottom, was
found guilty of stealing a Jeep from
a bar this March and leading .
authorities on a 100-mile per bour, .
nine-mile chase on State Route 7
toward Eastern High School.
The 32-year-old Meigs native
. could be sentenced later Ibis month
to more than three years in jail. but
be also is set for a ,later Meigs
County trial on felony charges of
escape and theft, Meigs Prosecutor
John Lentes said.
"Persons bas been a problem to
the system for years," Lentes said,
adding that Persons bas escaped
many times from Ohio and West
VirJinia authorities.

Low Joalpl Ia 301, doer ud

windy. Salurday, IUBIIJ· HIP Ia

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Guilty-verdict

'T ll seek the maximum sen··
tence. I can't believe be could
come imo the courtroom, concoct
this story and show no remorse,"
Lentes added.
Pe~sons' testimony about the
events of the morning of March 5
contradicted statemeniS by witness·
es at the bar and authorities. Persons' attorney, William Safranek,
admitte'd Persons may have fled
from police, but the owner or the
vehicle let Persons drive iL
Persons· said be showed up at
The Cove (lbe Watering Hole) to
meet a woman be knew from Park·
ersbur¥, W,Va., and when he
couldn t find her be decided to
mingle with people wbo were
standing around a red 1979 Jeep
Cherokee.
Since the bar was closing. Persons got behind the wheel of the
Jeep with another man and tbe
owner of .the Jeep. Micbael Seyler,
and drove south toward Pomeroy 10
pick up some beer. Persons tesli·
fled.
· Seyler "nipped out" when a

REDA annbunces
$6.8 million set
aside for loans

By KEVIN KELLY
OV.P News Editor
Another building block in
regional job creation efforts bas
been added through the establishment or a business loan pool by
eight area banks, members of lbe
Regional Economic Development
Association learned Thursday.
PERSONS VERDICT - Dnld Penoru, at
fugitive on numerous occasions, Persons could
Announcement of the loan pool
appear for another trial on felony escape and
left, remained expreulonieu as • Meigs'County
W!l5 'made at a REDA mectins at
thdt charges l•ter this month, officialS added.
Common Pleas Court jury,convicted biro Tburs·
the University of Rio Grande,
day. Tbe Melp County native may be lmprls·
At Persons' right Is public defender William ·
where the organization's goals for
·
oned for at least three years, omclals said. A Safranek.
1995 were also outlined.
Jeffrey E. Smith. member of
cruiser flashed its lights behind be added. Then, as the state trooper
The pair sped north on SR 7. the REDA executive committee
them because there was marijuana followed them, the other mao in the passed a roadblock at Five Points and executive vice president at
set by a Meigs deputy and coolin· Ollio Valley Bank, said the banks
in the Jeep, Persons added.
· car climbed into the front seat.
As Persons pulled lhe Jeep off
"I was scared because I bad pot ued toward Eastern Higb Scbcol, wiU make available $6.8 million to
onto Dark Hollow Road at about 30 on me," Persons said in explairung Persons said. When police forced be used for expansion by existing
area businesses, or new companies
miles per hour Seyler jumped ou~ wby be fled.
_
(Continued on Page 3)
seeking 10 locate in southeastern
Ohio ,counties or in Mason County,
W.ViL
Smith, flanked by representaCHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) Ohio River at lhe Apple Grove site. waste-water discharge permit, conduct the tesiS nei:essary to prop- posed miD."
tives from the panicipating inslitu·
- The state' Environmental Quality
Dioxin, a byproduct of bleach- which is being appealed by lhe erly evaluate the level or dioxin
Studies conducted by the U.S. lions, said flrDlS contacting REDA
B~ard bas suspe~ded a waste-water ing pulp and paper wi!h chlorine, is O.bio Valley Environmental Coali- currently in the Ohio River, s~d Fish and Wildlife Service indicate about finiUlcing options will be
.
ijlscllarsc ~rmll for a propose.d. ' suspec1cd of ca~S\DB cancer .~d uoo, lhe Affil!ated Const~uctlo_n Perry McDAniel, a Charleston bigb levels of dioxin in fisb sam- directed to the loan pool.
ples·taken neat the· sile.
··--A loan application can be made :" \St t~l~P..'IIIld ,papcr1Dillln· L ntbi~jlilaltb problCiil,s. , _:-- ·.--t,..-· ;l 1:~'F!!!!~,Iii1.D.'&amp;Ild·~ ·eiti~ ·· ·attllmi:}I*'Pfilsentbig the·gi'O\It&gt;s7'
· ~nouiiiY'.
. , , ' ·.·-:
Gov. Gaston CaQcrtoa bas- been :u:~s. · "' 1 · ..
.
"Howevcf. tlil:se actions should
Also the U.S. Environmental at one of the banb and is' subject to
·Thc' llijlinl made the decision a strong baclccr of the project proThey accused tbe division of have been taken two years ago Protection Agency agreed abe divi- . review by the banks. If approved,
~.J; ~the state Division·of· posed.by Parsons &amp; Whiuemore of
making technical errors when it before issuing the permi~ not two sion erred in estimating back- !be loan wiU be forwarded baclc to
~~co@ ~tcction asked ror Rye Brool(, N.Y. Company offiissued the permit. including incor- months after," he said. "We would ground dioxin levels at zero and lbe bank where the application
a delay' iii ~as 00 apJical or ·cials have. said the project could rectl_y ~s~ing tb~re ~s currently hope t1lat DEP is finally moving in was pushing the stale 10 conduct originaaed with a recommendation
io make the loan.
tbe permit, The agency said it create 600 JobS.
no diOJUD ID the Ob10 River,
_the correct direction, to probibit further tests.
"Eighl instiwtions agreed to put
wanted to do more tests to deter·
Divi·sion Director David C.
"DEP is finally beginning to any dioxin emissions from the proaside
tbeir competitive na1ure, if
mine current dioxin levels in the Callaghan on Aug. S issued the
you wm. to assls1 tleve!QJI~!lt
efforts," Smith explained. "The
beauty of il is, these banks operate
in more than one county and this
project actually extends into two
states.
."It's a regional approach to creating
a funding mechanism for
Meigs sheriffs office, Commission
By JJM FREEMAN
small
loans,
another component in
President
Fred
Hoffman
noted
the
Sentinel News Staff
tbe
.
box
for
REDA to use as a
Wilkesville
site
would
be
more
The Meigs County Board of
recruiamenttool,"
he added.
easily
accessible
to
all
four
cotln·
Commissioners and Sheriff James
The participating banks ;nclude·
M. Soulsby met' Thursday to dis- ties due 10 iiS central location.
OVB, Saar Bank, Bank One of GalSoulsby said the existing jail
cuss a proposed regional jail to
li
a County, Bank One of Meigs
serve Gallia, Jaclcson. Meigs and could possibly be used as a tempoCounty.
Peoples Bank of Mariet·
rary balding facility.
Vinton COIDlties.
ta's
Middleport
office. Vinton
In
addition,
commissioners
and
The board cu~tomarily meets
County
National
Bank. Peoples
Soulsby
discussed
the
sale
of
Friday afternoons in the. Meigs
Bank
of
Point
Pleasant.
W.Va,, and '
approximately
1,500
fuearms
the
County Courthouse, but met ThursBank
One
of
Point
Pleasant.
county
acquired
during
an
earlier
day 11ftemoon this week due to
Following tbe presentation,
forfeiture case.
today's Veterans Day boliday ..
REDA Executive Director R.V.
Tbc fuearms were seized earlier
Although commissioners and
"Buddy" Graham announced the
Soulsby said they would prefer to from the Middleport home and
group's
goals for next year, which
business
of
Robert
D.
Fife,
wbom
have a new jail in Meigs CoiDlty to
included
esaablisbment or the loan
officials
said
was
operating
an
illereplace tbc existing, &amp;JinS facility~
pool.
gal
pawn
shop.
Currently
!be
Soulsby noted that "something bas
Its other plans are to create 400
fuearms are being stored at a Jocato be done."
.
new jobs in the area, slalt worlc ODCommission Vice President .tion in Middleport for $250 a
industrial parks in Gallia and
Janet Howard Taclcett said ibe jail month,
Mason
counties to attract busiDcss
"We
need
to
make
a
decision,"
committee has discussed a site in
create
a
comprehensive relention'
Soulsby
said.
"We
need
to
get
rid
Gallia County on State Route 160
and expansion program, and facili,
near Holzer Medical Center. In oftbem."
Commission Vke President Janet Howard TackIDRE A VETERAN - County and Yllla11e
tate highway projects.
the board agreed to contact per. addition, officials are ronsidering a
ell and Pomeroy Mayor John W, Blaennar sign
ollklals Thurllday signed • proclamation declar·
REDA bas already·made moves
· site iD ViDton County and a nearby haps two people to inventory and
the proc:l•matlon while Mu Cale, veterans ser·
log November u "Hire • Vetenn Month.'' Here,
toward
reactivaling an industrial
location in Meigs County near compile a list of the fuearms, fol vice
officer,
and
Gary
Cash,
local
Yeterags
seated from left, Racine Mayor Jeff Thornton,
park
site
in Gallia County off State
lowing wbicb they may advenise
Wilkesville.
employment
representative,
from
left,
observe.
Meigs County Commissioner Robert Harten·
Route
850
belween Bidwell and
Although all three sites are for bids in a trade joumal.
bach, Commission President Fred Hoffm•n,
(Continued
on Page 3)
(Continued on Page 3)
about the same distance from the

a

Environmental panel suspends pulp mill water permit

an

&amp; *Up .......... to
: ~ · .Qnllfled Ap,U•IIIJ .

.Sheriff, commission ·
discuss sites for jail·

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ON '94 &amp; '95 5electioa

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NO EXTRA CHARGE

Republicans craft new agenda

Clinton challenges GOP
.to strengthen economy

YOUI PIICI
OILY

tiT AIY II SYOCI CAl 01 YIUC:I AY s49&amp;1

01 ,011~~ AIY POD,

LiiCOLI, 01 .ICUIY YO
·
YOUI SPICIFICADOIS AY NO EXTRA CHARG~!

I

Nove111ber 11th
.~ . 1111le.Jeanie.~-chlnels. open 24 Hours a day

Pick 4:
0906
Buckeye 5:
8-17-26-31-37

.

CLOSED FRIDAY·
. ·· In observance of Veterans Day ·

694

Page4

Juror belie_v.~s O.J.
innocent in murders
By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
Auocl•ted Preu Writer
LOS ANGELES - It was
among Superior Court .Judge Lance
Ito's toughest calls: a prospective
alternate juror wbo thought OJ.
Simpson was innocent but insisted
he could put those views aside and
jud~e the case on the faciS.
'I don't mean this to be a sexist
comment," the judge said, "but
man-to-man: •Are you being
straight with me on this?"
"Yes," the mao said, "I am/ '
And so be siayed. Ito turned
doim a prosecution request to dis·
miss the man for cause and allowed
him - and five others who made
the CUI Wednesday -tO return
Dec. S for peremptory challenges,
when a final~~ or IS alternates
p~bly w11l be picked. Two
prospcciS were disinissed.
The ope-on-one questioning
coded the truncated coun week,
which will resume Monday after a
·break for Vcleraos Day.
Havins finished the grueling
task of seatiDg 12 jurors last week
- but with opening statements stlU
two mQntbs away - the lawyers
" and judse are in the early stages of
pickinf alternates from a pool of
about 00 people to bear the case ·
against' Simpson; who is charged
with murdering his ex-wife Nioole
Browo Simpson and her friend
Ronald Goldman.
The qucstiooios bas been Ions
and tiring. Everyone in the courtroom was gettinf puncby Wednesday, desllite Ito luoiting each side's
questioning of each prospect to IS
miDutes.
·
Ito followed his serious "manto-maD" questioa ~ith a ~idcr·

Pick 3:

beat
Bucks

You heard It right: man bites dog
HUNTINGTON, W,Va. (AP)
- A oiai1 was charRed wltb biting
his ncigllbor' s dog, police said.
William Bursess, 39, was
cbaraed with one count of ciueJty
to animals. public intoxication and
two counts of battery on Monday,
said police records clerk Myra
Lewis oa Wedoesdar. She did DOt
~~o~ Jtow serious the dog's
lnJUI'ICI'Were.
Burgess also was accused of
assaulting his ocishbor, Lori
McCOmas, oolicc said.

Ohio Lottery ·

..

ByALANFRAM
.Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - OverhaulBy NANCY BENAC
"There is Ibis feeling that we're
ing
the income tax; snuffing out a
Alloclated Preu Writer
waiting for the other shoe to drop,"
congressional probe or the IQbacco
WA:SHINGTON - Seeking • he said: Americans "plainly ...
industry, slashing foreign ai'll common srounct on foreign and want ~s to be strong and secure and
Republicans are busily seoing their
economic policy, President Clinton to lead lbcm into the next centugoals for a new, more conservative
Tbursday challenged Republicans ry ·"
Congress.
,
who will take control of Congress
"They want us to rebuild the
GOP lawmakers likely to chair
to work with him to expand world American dream. to stop playing
committees in the Congress th\lt
trade and strengthen the economy politics now and start pulling
convenes In January say their Elec• together,'' Clinton said. ."I IQiow
at 11o1ne
tion Day landslide ~as a popular
· "Tbb should DOt be a partisan · we can .do it."
.
call to rein in a govemmeor that
Issue," Ointon said in a speech' at
Clinton, who leaves Friday for
. bas become too big, too costly and
his alma mater, Georgetown Uni· the Philippines ~d the Asia-Pacific
too unresponsive. And for the nrst
versity's School or Foreign Ser- ~I)OIIIiC _Cooperation ~erencc
PRESIDENT CLINTON
time in 40 years, their control of
vice. "If we continue to work m bidonc11a, said Clpandins world
together oo this trade lss~~e ... we trade was critical to the natioo' 1 America leaders in Miami and a House and Senate panels will •ive
congressional vote later this month tbcm a huge advaotsgc in moving
can agree On ways to help all our economic security. . .
legislation that does exactly that.
people make their way in the new
He identified the APEC CO!lfer- on a new world ll8dc agrecmcot.
On tbc world ll8dc Vote, Cli!aton ·
"Clearly, the public doesn't
global economy."
cnce as me of "tbrec crucial buildClio ion said the message of ing blocks" to promoting wQrld · urged members of Congress to . want so much government." Sen.
Tuesday's elections was-that Amer· ·cc:OOooilc ties that be will pursue in "put aside &lt;U. partisan differences Pete Doulcnici, R-N.M., reiiUnins
icaos reel insecure about their ceo- tbc oClt month. The other two are a and do what's right fonD Ameri· to bis old job as chairman of the
Senate Budget Committee, said in
•nomicfuture.
December summit with Latin can~."
I

\

I

an inlerview Thursday. "We have
to go out and get rid of some of
government"
Without offering specifics,
Domenici said his committee
would look for programs "!bat
aren't really working to sec what
we can get rid of." He also said it
would move quickly to strengthen
the president's ability to erase indi·
vidual hems in spending bills and
to endorse a constitutional amend·
ment that would require a balanced
budget.
Behind tbe scenes. the GOP
S-cnate staff is considering a plan
that would trim federal spending by
$SOO billion to $700 billion
through the year 2002, said one
Republican aide who spolce on condition or anonymity. The plan is
. aimed at achieving a bal8nced budgel by then and paying for $100
billion worth of tax cuts for tbe
middle class, the aide said.

Domenici said he would sect
suppon fa- a plan be bas advanced
wilh Sen. Sam Nunn. 0-Ga .• dra· ·
matically reshaping the income tax.
People V!Ould deduct their savings
and invesanents from lbeir incomes
and pay tax only on the difference,
wbicb be said would encourasc
Americans to save money.
The man wbo will probably
chair the House Ways and Means
Coouoiucc .said Thursday that one
or bis long-range goals is to elimi·
nate the income tax altogether,.
replacing it with perhaps a national
sales tax.
More immediately, R~p ill
Archer, R-Texas. said the
writing panel would. move '\Ui y oa
several tait cut plans. IDCIUdiDJ
reductions in the levies paid by
sg.me beuer-off Social. Security
1recipients, people who save IIIOIICY
for future medical usc and famillea
with children .

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