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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
"

"There are several positions 10
fill, from individuals who actually
wear the chemical suits, 10 keeping
track of people, providing medical
services, rigbt down 10 preparing
food for team members," said
Stricklen. "Many of lbe jobs we are
trying to mt need no training. We
are simply looking f~ persons who
are willing to be part of a support
group when an emergency situation

occws.··

Anyone ·interested in being a
part of the Hazardous Materials
Response Team is invited 10 attend
a meeting on Monday, Nov. 21 at7
p.m. at the Gallia County Senior
Center, 220 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
For more information contact
Stricklen at (304) 675-1150, exten·
sion 228.

,....
'

\ .· ~

By HAL KNEEN
.
POMEROY - After_spendin~ a
few hours last week VISiting w1th
some of tile local greenhouse operaton, I realize that the CbrislDI&amp;S
season is just around the comer.
Our local growers bave an exceptionally good lookinf crop of ~
white, pink and mulucolored pornscttias this fall, doe 10 ~ growers
diligent care and the brig~t sunny
fall days. The bustle of filling polS,
potting up new "mother" plaDIS for
future collings, recovering the
greenhouses an~ even some new
constructio~ wtll keep several
Meigs CounlianS busy m the COOl·
ing weeks. • •

ExtensiOn Corner

Have bouse mice become boarders in your borne? The cool auiUDID
days beckon mice back into the
home. Losses due to undetected
mice in homes h'ave ortim been
es·•--·-' 10 be g-·•- Jban tosses
caused by rats. A single breeding
lUlldiQ&gt;

'""""

pair and ·their offspring can give
rise 10 a population ot 34,376 mice
in ·ust one year.
JMice C()IISume the same kinds of
food and beverages humans do.
Mice are nibblers feeding IS 10 20
·limes a day. Nesu are found mostly
in the structural voids of walls,
ceilings and noots. Mice can enter
an area through a crack or hOle the
diameter of a pencil.
Mice may be controlled with the
strategic placements of adhesive
anti
ulaDIS baits, mecban::"traps
structural modificalion of the building foundation and
entrances. Light infestations of
mice can be removed by use or
snap traps. These should be placed
along walls between objects or by
boles so that tbe trigger is in the
route of travel. One of the most
attractive baits for traps is peanut
butter other b•'ts include: bacon
•
~
rind, meat, cheese, or soft candy.
Traps sbould be Checked. emptied
.

and reset once or twice a day.
.
Calls from homeowners are still
caning in 00 the ladybeetle and Oy
sit1!81ion. Yes, lhesc pestS are bothcrsome, esp,ccially if in the borne.
However, indiscriminate use of
pesticides that are not la~led for
the pest or for interior usc IS not the
answer! The vacuum cleaner or Oy
swatter are better immediate controt measures. In the long run, filling cracks around wind';'WS and lbe
roof line will greatly tmpede the
entrance or these pests. If time
and/or money is a consider;~tion
start with the southern and western
exposed part of the bouse. ~ememb,:r that these pests are msects
(told-blooded) so as colder u:mper·
atures ~ve the prob!em wtll tesson unul warmer spnng ~empera·
lures return. For further ·~formalion ask for fact sheets wntten up
on the control of these pests. Please
· Offi
992
call the Extenston
1ce at
6696.
Reminder 10 all unlicensed pes,
.

':1

·

licide applicaiOI's! A Help Self~'r'
to ass1st you. 10 taking the 'll bo
Dept. of Agnculture test WI e
held on Novem.ber 14th from 1-4
p.m. at the Meigs Cou~ty t?xtension office. This seSSJon IS n~t
mandato'r. In the fmt hour I wt!l
~ rev1ewtng b?W to read a ~ll~1de label, ba~1c spr~y pracuces,
life cycles ~f mscctidlscaselwceds
and the pestiCide laws ~ou n~ to
folJ?w. The rest of tile _~ will.be
avmlable to assiSt you m answe':l"g
your specific questions. Revtew
~aterials, sold at cost, can be
p1cked up ~~ our office.
.
The Obto Dep~ent of ~~nculture wtll be giVIng th.e ~sucide
Test on Nove~bcr 22 slarll~g at 3 ·
p.m. at lbe Metgs County LibraryPomeroy branch.
Hal K~en lJ the Agricultur· .
a 1/H or tic u ltu rai/N atu rat
Resources Agent for The Ohio
State Unl
lty EKtenslon Meigs
vers
•
County.

.

By EDWARD VOLLBORN
GAlliPOLIS • Tbe Fall 1994
Agricultural Outlook meeting will
be held Monday, November 14,
starting at7 p.m. at the Lewis FamUyRestaurantinJackson.
The Jackson County Farmer's
Club is hosting this year's event.
Dr. Allan E. Lines, OSU Extension
Economist, will be tbe featured
speaker. He wut discuss the 1995
outlook for the general economy
and some aspects of international
trade. He will discuss the outlook
for feed grain and livestock includ- .
ing com. soybeans, wheat. beef catde, and other commodities of interest
Late reservations should be
made immediately by calling
Bryson R. Carter 286-2tn or Dave
Samples 286-5044.

Far~

S~:;~~rsc~
~~itinf 10 bar:
th . fields until moisture lev0

:ow

ves e1r
15 cent
els drop be. De ~tmeni of A ri·
ul~ ~b:ki.{g nominationsgfor
c . 1
the various com·
apC:.~n~;!':a~ng
committees To
;::, 1 Y •dered for appointme~l to
const

• ••• .
A VOl•dlng

Nation's farm count
lowest since 1850

ANNOUNCEMENT
Open House

COntinued from D-1
without a hassle . Give the nearest
Federal Reserve Bank a call and
they will tell you exactly bow to
accomplish the money transfer.
(Send your questions to:
Smart Money, P.O. Box SOJ,
Elfera, FL 34680. Que1tlons of
general interest wiD be answered
In future columns. Owing to the
~olume or mall, personal ~pita
cannot be provided,)
Bruce WIUlams II a syncll
. 'l't'lter for Newspaper Enterp
Auocladon.

" (For Information on bow to
.commnnicllte electronically with
this columnist and otben, con·
tact America Online lly caW1111 1·
800-827-4364. ext. 8317.)

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 oentll
A Multimedia Inc. N-IJIIlper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 14, 1994

t994

By MINDY KERNS
OVP News Stall
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va • The push is on by
. supporters of the Apple Grove Pulp and Paper mill,
but now the group includes endorsements by some
:bard-hillers from state organizations.
Steve Roberts, president of the West Virginia
.Chamber of Commerce (C of C), and David Flan·riery, auorney and chairman of the Environmental
and Land Use Committee of the stale C of C. made
:their first of many visits with area news media in
Point Pleasant Friday.
Tired of the negative environmentalists getting
much of the publicity, they are presenting members
or the media with commentaries in favor of the mill.
· Friday's announcement of the Division or Environmental Protection (DEP) asking for a delay in
bearings on an appeal of the waste-water discharge
permit was not particularly surprising, according to

Flannery.
"I don 't read any more into it than !bey were just
· acting cautiously." Flannery said. "It's positive as far
as I'm concerned."
Flannery said be was not sure why lbe stale Envirimmental Quality Board suspended the permit since lbe office was closed Friday for lbe holiday.
He said the Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) !bought the DEP didn't bave enough information io determine current dioxin levels in tile Ohio
River atllle Apple Grove site, altllough DEP stated it
· does feel it bas the proper data.
DEP simply agreed to go back, gel the added data,
and prove ii was right all along, Flannery said.
Jack Fruth, a mem~ of lbe Mason County Economic Development Authority, who auended the
meeting agreed. "II could be very positive," Fruth
said.
"DEP was in a position wbere this was going to

.At.;t~.

'

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

A·mericans...
COntinued from D-1
theory because the economy is
doing pretty well ~d yet peop!e
are still unhappy wtth the party to
power," said Raymond D. Horton,
a ~rofessor at Columbia University s graduate business school.
"This suggests that a kind of crass,
materialistic interpretation of the
national electoral process doesn't
fiL''

TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
'
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 7 P.M. ON TUESDAYS
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT
(304) 675-1675

SALE
ENDS
DEC.1, 1994

SALE
STARTS

10-9-94

12, 16, 20 GA. 5 Pack

Rifle Slugs

1\

REMINGTON
SLUGGER
I oz. Hollow Point
Rined Slug Loads
flatS-Pack

• Flatter trajectory

• Less wind deOection
• Made in U.S.A.

NOll fJ041 675·2111 •lOCATED lilT 10 IWOI COim fiiiiiOUIDI
r

no• 1au111
• • " . filiAl, t.H AMOO ••
NO g.saOO Pill IUIUI, lhOO AIWIOO PM
r .

J

·
.

offered to their regular patients, a ..ree treat·
ment, and to new patients, a free comprehensive
examination and necessary x-rays. The food colleded Saturday was taken Ill tbe United
Methodist Cooperative Parish to be used in holi·
day food baskets. Len to rlghl are Dr. Robin·
son, Dr. Klrne, Dr. Shannon Johnson, Gabriel
Jenkins who assisted wil~ the loading, and Debbie Lowery of Ohio Eta Phi Chapter.

FOOD COLLECTED - Ohio Eta Pbl
Chapter, Beta Sigma Pbl Sorority, and the
Meigs County Cblropracllc Clinic, Dr. N. W.
Robinson and Dr. N. P. Klme, Joined forcesSat·
urday In their slxlh annual "Doctor wllb a
Heart" program to coDed food for needy faml·
lies. In 'exchange for non-perishable food Items
with a value of $10 or more, the chiropractors

..,

Meigs County Board updated
on DARE activities in schools
Final arrangements for a Drug
Abuse Resistance Education
(DARE) program to get underway
in Meigs County schools on Jan. 3
have been made by the Meigs
County Board of .Education.
Meeting last week, the board
beard bow the program will work
in the schools from Superintendent
Jobn D. Riebel Sr.
He said that Mony Wood,
deputy with the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department, bas been
bired to bandle the program for
fifth a,nd sixth graders in tbe
schools.
For the remainde of this ·school
year, the program will be carried
out with a grant~ f $11.340
received by the she 'ff s department. For next year, Riebel said
that probably some or lbe drug free
school !JlOnies wiD be used to belp
finance the program. whicb bas as
its emphasis encouraging students

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Probes
of alleged public corruption have
run ipto obstacles because of
Ohio's political and government
suuctures, the Akron Beacon Jourlial reported.
·The investigations can be difficult because state and federal law
Rumpke Waste Inc.- based in
enforcement authorities report to
Cincinnati
- will construct and
politically connected prosecutors,
operate
lbe
Beech
Hollow Sanitary
the newspaper reponed Sunday. .
Landfill
in
Jackson
County,
In addition, lawmakers have not
to
a
Sands
Hill
Waste
according
acted on proposals to appoint a special prosecutor to investigate Services release Mondlly.
The silt is set for completion by
alleged corruption in the Legisla·
next
October, said Bonny Huffman,
Jure, the newspaper said.
spokesw0111an
for Sands HUI,
The Beacon Journal said AttorThe
creation
of this site is
ney. General Lee Fisher bad not
imperative
to
the
continued
operasougbt approval from the governor:
.tion
.
,
of
the
or General Assembly to conduct
Gallia/Jackson/Meigs/Vintoil
solid
his own investigation.
A pbone message seeking com- waste district, said Scoll Copley
ment was left at Fisher' s office spokesman for tbe local waSte district
today.
'Currently, the GJMV district
Without action from lbe Legisbas
only one operating landfill,
'lature or attorney general, invesliwhich
is located in GaiUa County,
galing alleged corruption ~ been
Copley
said. This site has applied
left 10 county prosecutors with limfor
an
expansion,
but continues to
ited resources, ·the newspaper said.

to say "no" to-drugs, along with

teaching responsibility, self-respect
and self-discipline.
Riebel said that while most o(
the uniformed officer's time will be
in suuctured classroom settings, he
will also be doing some informal
instruction, like during noon peri·
ods and recesses, on a small group
or individual basis.
A sched L!Ie of school visits has
not been se~ Riebel said.
Several staff positions, certified
and non-certified, were filled during lbe meeting.
Michelle Frazier, a certified
teacher. working on certification in
speech and bearing, was released
by lbe board as a substitute speech
therapist on recommendation of the
State Department of Education.
She will work through December.
Hired to fill that position effective Jan. 3, for the remainder of the
school year, was Jena Tengolia of

Pomeroy. Tengolia is currently a
speech, therapist wilb Carleton
School.
The board approved school bus
driver certificates for C.T. Chapman, Patricia Marcum, Carolyn
Gillilan, Eric Diddle, Patricia Page
and Jerry Holley.
William Gee and Ted Palmer
were bired as substitute teacbers'on
an as-needed basis, and an amended course of study was approved
for the auto mechanics program.
Appropriation modifications
were made by the board , wbicb
also accepted the treasurer's repon
from Carole Gilkey for review. The
annual Christmas dinner for staff
and board members was
armounccd.
Attending were Rieb el; Jeff
Harris, president; Robert Barton.
vice president; and Howard Caldwell and 1.0. McCoy.

Investigators have determined
bullets fired by a 15-year law
enforcement veteran of the Mason
County Sheriffs Department killed
a 17-year-old Gallipolis Ferry teen
Saturday afternoon on Red Mud
Ridge. The teen was a suspect of
car theft.
Sgt. G.L. Clark of the Point
Pleasant Detachment-West Virginia State Police said John McCoy
shot Jeremy Michael Halley three
times.
McCoy and three-year veteran
Linden Miller have bolb been suspended, with pay, pending a state
police investigation into lbe death
of Halley, according to Mason
County Sberill Ernie Watterson.
Sgt. Clarlc said Halley was seen
in a field on Red Mud Ridge in a
vehicle stolen from a woman in
Cheshire, Obio. The woman's relative s, wbo lived in the Red Mud
Ridge area, kept Halley with tile
car Saturday until Miller and
M&lt;.Coy arrived.
Halley was handcuffed behind
his back and placed in lbe back seat
or Miller' s vehicle, wbilc the
depu.lies were conducting a crime
scene examination of the stolen
vehicle, which 'was parked approxfmately 20 feet from the cruiser.
Halley worlced th e handcil ffs ·
around to bis front and jumped
over the seal into the driver's side
and started to drive off, Clark said.
Clark said the deputies ran
towards the vehicle yelling for HalIcy to stop. M&lt;.Coy shot at the rear
tire and missed. Miller shot at tile
front tire. striking it and lbcn fired
into the grill of the cruiser. The
vehicle lben lllmed toward Miller.
and McCoy, who was at lbe right
rear p~enger door of the crui. •r.

I

~

'

wail on a decision.
The Gallia site could close
between March and April, be
·added.
A Vinton County landfill has
been proposed but the contract bas
been granted, Copley added.
"It's very important That could
be our main funding mechanism,"
Copley said. "Instead of raising
taxes we solely exist 'on tipping

not

fees."

'

Tbese funds will belp pay for
recycling, waste reduction, education and clean-up activities, Copley
said.
The Sands Hill site is expected
to operate for 20 years - reducing
the disiBDce area haulers must travel, Copley added.
Sands Hill committed to build·

ing a landfill in 1990. Four yew:s
ago, the state was in the midst ofa
capacity crisis. but today lbat rcnsts
has passed, according to a Sands
Hill release.
Sa~ds Hill bad to choose
between accepting traSh from local
collection businesses or long-baul
waste, the release stated.
• As life-long residents or this
area we considered lbe disposal of
long-haul waste unacceptable,"
Huffman said.
·
Rumpke is a family-owneq.andoperaled waste landfilling, hauling
and recycling company. The
Cincinnati-based company operates
eight hlndfills and eight recycling
facilities and does not accept longhaul waste at any of its landfills.

shot through tbe open window,
apparently billing Halley three
times. The cruiser rolled down tbe
field and came to rest approximate·
ly 70 feel away.
According to Sgt. Clark, the
cruiser and weapons have been sent
10 th e State Police Lab in
Charleston for testing. The body
was taken to the State Medical
Examiner's office.
Clarlc said Friday night that the
Jackson County Sheriffs Department informed him that the stolen
vehicle Halley was apparently driving bad been seen in Evans. Halley
reportedly got gasoline at an Evans
station and left without paying for
i~ according to lbe sergeant.
When asked if aiminal charges
would be filed against Deputy
McCoy, Mason County Prosecuting Auomey Damon Morgan said
he is waiting to receive reports on
the investigation from the stale
police and no decision will be
made until be can confer witb
investigators. Morgan anticipated
that if lltere are any criminal proceedings, it will go through the
grand jury.
Halley was the son of David and
Kallty (Sheets) Halley and was a
student at Point Pleasant High
School. He was a member of the
Cannan Missionary Baptist Church.
The fu'neral service will be held
Wednesday, November 16, at 2
p.m. at the Cannan Missionary
Baptist Cburcb. Visitation will be
held Tuesday from 6-9 p.m. at lbe
Willis Funeral Home, Gallipolis.
The investigation is being conducted by First Sgt. F.D. Beasley
of the Hunting ion Detachment,
Tpr. Eddie Starcher and Clark of
the local detacb.menl

Gordon heads for Florida
MIAM1 (AP)- Tropical Stann 9,200 students in lhe Florida Keys,
Gordon stirred up turbulent seas . and more than 16,000 homes and
and horizontal 'fain driven by 50 businesses lost power.
mpb winds in Florida today after
"We can't gel school buses on
killing 25 people in Haiti and two the highway." said Monroe County
in Jamaica. Wind gusts or 120 mpb schools spokeswoman Janet Hayes
were reported in Cuba.
in Key West. "We understand in
The landing of lbe space shuttle the Upper Keys it's pretty rough ....
Allantis was diverted to California but down here it jusi looks like a
as
seas stretched to Jack - little rain-squally day."
s~~~~sc~b~o~ol~w~~~c~an~ce~le~d~fo~r---

·'

Rumpke Waste selected
for Jackson, landfill site

REMINGTON SLUGGER"
RIFLED SLUGS

POIIII PliAIAIII, W¥ 25550

Investigation of fatal
shooting continues

~--~llement 10

Political
structure
limits probe ·

• Speeds up to 1760 fps

•

cca=

eocOurije residents of a ccmmunity to work together 10 identify and
solve local school problems, said
Donald Van Meter, a Columbu ·
consuliBDl working with the group.
"You can't pass down edicts,"
be said. "You've got to get local
CODIIDUIIilies 10 take the lead."
Broadly, the group's goals are:
- To create high performance
schools by raising the pc;rformance
of all Ohio schools, teachers and
students.
- To improve accountability
for results.
- To ensure that parents, businesses and communities are
involved in the education of Ohio's
children.
,
- To ensure lbal every child
bas equal access 10 a quality education.
Ted Sanders, state superintendent of public instruction, and
Robert Wehling, scni~ vice president for Procter &amp; Gamble Co.,
bead the coalition, which spent
more than a year to reach consensus.
Members include the Ohio Edu·
cation Association, Ohio Federa- ·
tion of Teachers, AFL-CIO, state
Cbamber of Commerce and Busi·
ness Roundtable, Ashland Oil,
Goodyear, Cincinnati Gas &amp; Elec·
trlc Co., the Children's Defense
Fund, Urban League and the
Catholic Conference of Ohio.

perhaps dcslrOy, lbe mill.
Damron said the ACT's negative ad campaign,
launched because of fear the contract for construction
might go to a union-free contractor , ran under the
label, "Cancer Creek."
Damron said the group spent more than $250,000
aimed at water quality standards that would discourage or kill the mill.
"Here's the most unbelievable detail," Damron
wrote. "The Manufacturers Assoc iation (and Parsons
and Whittemore) arc willine to senle for a S1811dard
which will only allow 'one drop of dioxin in a body
of water wbicb is 2,500 acres on the surface and six
miles deep.'
"Tbe union said no. that's not enough, and of
courSe our friends 'in lbe environmental community
have joined in. Industry officials say that it would
take 10,000 years of operations at the proposed plant
to produce just one pound of dioxin."

constantly come up by lbe environmentalists. Now
wben they .come back, DEP can say, 'Here's the
information. We knew what we were doing and now
we're granting the permit."'
Other local officials aucnding Friday's meeting
were Buddy Graham, Regional Economic Development Association Executive Director; John Wiseman,
local businessman; Ada Scoll, executive director or
the Mason County Chamber of Commerce; and
Charles Lanham. economic development authority
member.
In tbe commentaries presented by Roberts and
Flannery, K.O. Damron. vice president of lbe West
Virginia Mining and Reclamation Association, said
the unions are using the environment to block
progress.
Damron charged the Affiliated Construction
Trades Foundation (ACf) or the AR.-CIO adopted
an environmental slogan and used it to delay, and

· COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) School reform must come from the
bottom up, not the top down, a
group of corporate executives,
, labor leaders and community
activists said.
·
· The group, called Ohio's BEST
for Building Excellent Schools for
Today and the 21st century, scheduled a news conference today to
release its goals.

To offer free services
GALLIPOLIS • Star Bank will
now offer free temporary banking
services to goests of the Ronald .
McDonald House of Greater
Cincinnati.
Star Bank Is the flfSl bank in the
Unites States to bave an arrange·
ment or this type with a Ronald
McDonald House.
The program was developed by
Star Bank. in conjunction with the
Ronald McDonald House, 10 help
families of children being trealed at
Cincinnati's Children's Hospital
Medical Center.

Low toalghtln SO., raiD.
Tuesday, rain. High Ia lbe 601.

Push is on by supporters of pulp mill

'

1

REFRESHMENTS
Celebratm One Year in Business

Kicker:

1/ol. 45, NO. 136

~Copyright

you may
prize
the Ohio Valley
Publlshlng Co. Leave your name, addreu and
telephone number wltb your card or letter. No
telephone calls will be accepted. All contest
eQtrles should be \Uroed In to the newsraper
nftlce by 4 p.m. each Wednaday.ln cue o a de,
the winner wiQ be di-n by,- lotleey. Next week,
a Meigs County farm will be featured by the
Melp Soil and Water Conservation District.

MYSTERY FARM - Tbll week's mysleey
farm, featured by tbe Gallla Soli and Water
Co111ervaUon Dlltrlct, II located aomewbere In
GaUia County. lndivlduala wlahlng to pardci'
pale In tile weekly CODielt may cJo·ao·by peuln&amp; ·
the farm'• owner. Juat mall, or clrop otr your
gue11 to tbe Gallpoill Dally Tribune, 825 Tltlrd
Ave~ Galllpolla, Ohio, 45631, or Tbe Dally Sen·
Unel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, and

ATIORNEY AT LAW

Tel. No. (614) 992-5730
Friday, November 18, 1994 2:00- 7:00p.m.

Super Lotto:
12-~~37-38-40

Coalition
agrees on
school
.agenda

DENISE L. BUNCE
-105 W. Second St., Pomeroy, OH
(above Bank One)

9238 .

enttne

subject to the assessment of their
respective commodity. Members
are appointed by the Director. .
Questions should be directed to
Kirby Hidy (614-466-6198) or
Bruce Benedict (614-752-9712).
Edward Vollborn is Galll'll
County's agricultural utenslon
agenL

Third quarter earnings
show increase at OVB

c:-t -

Picj{ 4:

•

Flashes ·

Burley tobacco marketing season will start Monday, November
21. There is a lot of concern about
this year's market with the pool
still holding nearly one year's production. Efforts are being made by
.
v
ll
per
share
was
also
due
primarily
10
various groups to meet with com.
~GALLIPOL1 S - Ob. 10 a ey iocreased net interest Income and a pany officials to devise a plan to
Bane C~. reported thtrd q~ decrease in provision for loan loss- reduce "pool" boldings.
1994 nelt,ncome of S589,100.o
es. All earnings per sbare are
The dally sale allocation to
$.80 per share compared wuh adjusted r~ the stock split of April each warellouse wut be about the
$523,700 or $.74 per share for the 27, 1994. In 1993, the Bane Corp. same as tile last muplc of yean. It
same p~nod las_t year,- The 12 ·5 adopted FASB 109, "Accounting Is lmportallt that you ~lain regpercent •ncrease ~ net mco~ and for Income Taxes." The required ular communication with your ·
the 8.1 percenttncrease 10 nel" .al!ruJJioJtJV.J!S effectiYe~fo.t. flscal.. , w"""ousethmupnwtheseason.
ln~me per abare for _u.e
yellrSiieginning after December IS,
Harvest progress as of Novempenod was . due P~tmanli'odt~ 1992. Tbis accounting change
IDiproved_ net m!efCSt tncomc
decreased net income in 1993 by
decrease mprovmon for loan toss- $74.6 thousand.
es. Ohio Valle Bane Corp is a one
Shareholders or lbe record date
•
bank holdin/company with Ohio~ .of ~ctober 25, .1994. ~av~ been
Continued from D-1
Valle Bank as its subsidiary: muted a deposll ~~llftcallon or yourchildgraduatesfromhighschool.
wbicbyoperat~s office~ In Gallia, ~eel:! '::.a:du~~n~~f~ Consider the following:
Jackson_ and Pike.Counll~.
of directors on October 11 , 1994 _ • More conservative stocks-ean be a
. ~ettnC';'me for the nme month Sbarebolders enrolled in the divi- goodinveslmentwithfiveorsoyears
penod ending September 30, 1994 dcnd reinvestment plaD .,.;11 receive lefllo save, but be conservative and
was $1,766.?00 or $2.42 per sbare a statement In mid November stay away from agg.-sive growth
compared wtth $1.493.~or $2.11 reOecling the reinvestment of their equities.
per~ a year ago. 'f!tis 18·3 per· cash dividends on the sbates they ·• Variable annuities*-made up of
sub-accounts, which are similar to
cent mcreas!l to net.mcol!'e and bold under the plan.
14.7 percentmcrease m net mcome
mutual fund&lt;;, but enable you lo borrow the money when the tuition bill
comes in and pay it back at your ~n
pace. Some annuities don' I require
you to pay it back at all. Meanwhile,
your savings are growing lax«ferred.
• STRIPS (Separate Trading of RegWASHINGTON (AP)-Amer· Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, Mis· istered Interest and Principal Securiica bas fewer than 2 million farms, sissippi, North Carolina and Ten- ties)-Ttlese investments are zerocoupon bonds which are the compothe lowest count since Millard F'lll- nessee.
The report noted a significant nent parts of U.S. treasury notes and
more succeeded Zachary Taylor as
president.
. shift in milk cows between 1987 bonds. They sell at a discount from
The Census Bureau reported and 1992. During tbat period large face value and pay only principal al
Wednesday that the number of declines were reponed in Wiscon- maturity. They're available from three
farms has fallen to 1,925,300, sin, Minnesota, New York, Ohio month maturities up to 30be matched
fewest since 1850. The peak year ! and Pennsylvania, wbicb collec- with tuition bill due dates.
• Short-term treasuries-U.S. treawas !935, when there were 6.8 mil· 1 tively lost 514,948.
.
.
Gains
were
~rted
m
Califorsury securities offer bills, notes and
lion.
.
While the number of farms IS . nia, Texas, Wasbmgton, Idaho and bonds with maturities ranging from
down, the just-released report from New Mexico, which together add!ll three months up to 30 years. They are
the 1992 Census of Agriculture 314,595 milk cows.
backed by the full faith and credit of
While bog-raising remained · the U.S. government and therefore
said more efficient methods boost·
sU'ong in Midwestern states-such as are considered quite sare: Your ined output to $163 billion.
And farms are gelling bigger. Iowa, DUnois and Minnesota. North vestment adviser can inform you of
Between 1987 and 1992 average Carolina experienced a I08 percent current rates.
farm size increased from 462 acres increase, the report noted.
If your child is going off to college
Censuses of agriculture were
10 491 acres.
in
the next year or two and you haven't
The report found an overall done every I0 years unlit 1920 and
saved
much yet, don't panic. Consult
increase of mo~ than a million then every five years unlit 1950; .
your
investment
adviser.
acres In ~I'll' an&lt;f\a shift eastward since then they have been stagMark
Smith
..
an
lnv..,•mbnoJ11111111nl-ar
during the 10~Y~ from 1982 to gered, but have occurred about lor A - Inc. o1 Gailipolia.
1992. Califomta, Anzona, New every five years.__ ____ ..
Mexico, Oklaboma and Texas took
1 4 million acres out of cotton dur·
i~g the decade, wbile 2.1 million
acres or colton were added in

542

844055

P~fress. A~erage 1!'0~~uree~~~~r ~g!fttee. ~ inlividull\ must be

ber 6 was almost identical to ~t
year. The Ohio soybean harvest ;IS
essentially complete. The O~to
corn harvest ":as about two-thirds
complete, runnmg about 10 percent
abeadofthefiveyearaverage.
Both our area along the southern
lip of Ohio and the no~l comer
of Ohio remain well behind the rest
of the state on corn harvest

Pick 3:

Page4

Burley tobacco season starts No!·!~-·

M&amp;..

EMPLOYEES RECOGNIZED • Tbeae Ohio Valley Bank
employee• were reaontly reCGplzed lor ftve yean of nrvlce. Seal·
ed left to rlgbt are Steve HID, Darren Blake, Bob Hennu:r and
Frieda Greathouse. StandiDg, left to right an Debbie Moore, Mary
Buck, OVB President and CEO Jamu L. Dlllle;r, Lorle Dean and
Lori S.unden.

Sometimes.•.

Browns,
Bengals
post wins

Christmas season is just around the corne~ _

Response team
seeks members
GALLIPOLIS - Representatives
from Akzo Nobel Chemicals, Inc.,
located in Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.,
are in the process of organizing a
Hazardous Materials Response
Team, according 10 Bill Stricklen,
safety manager at Akzo.
"Tbe need for a Hazardous
Materials Response Team exists
due to the volumes of chemicals
which move through or are banl)led
in the area," said Stri~klen. "A
group of trained personnel to handle a chemical release or spill
resulting from a highway, rail or
river inciden~ is of great value."
The HMR team, wbich will provide sci-vices in Meigs and Gallia
counties in Ohio and Mason County in West Virginia, would consist
of several people doing a wide
range of jobs.

November 13,1994

Pomeroy-:-Middleport-G~IIipolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Page-DB-Sunday Times-Sentinel

•

I

I

I
LEST WE FORGET - Meigs County vtlerans bo00red their
fallen comrades with speeches, ·gun salutes and patriolk songs Frl·
day at the fool of the county courthouse. Pollltl'oy's Charles Lewis
salutes the Oag during Taps. Lewis Is a veteran or the World War
U, Korea and V~lnall)o anti lost h!J leg In 1957 at the outbreak of
the Vietnam confllcL ''I'd do It again. 1 would ftgbt ror the flail and
my·country at~aln," Lewis said .
1

,

I

•

�Monday; Novel!lber 14, 1994

Comlnentar
The Daily Sentinel ·
Ill Court Street
, Pomeroy, Ohio

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LE1TERS OF OPINION .,. welcome. They should be leso than 300
words long. All letters 11e subject to editing snd must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Clinton, Democrats
sick over the election
By WALTER R.MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - No burry, would-be White House challengers are
saying. The 1996 presidential campaign can wait.
It won't and lhey won't.
'We've got plenty ot time to WOrry about lhe next election," President
Clinton said. "The American people are sick of the one they just bad... "
Clinton and lhe DemocraiS certainly are, wilh resurgent Republicans in
. command of Congress for lhe fust time i!l four decades, a sweep in which
no GOP incumbent was defeated, only Democrats.
And next election, the incumbent in chief would be atop the Democrat·
ic ticket, seeking his second term. The lineup of White House-minded
, Republicans is already forming, and in prqmising circumstances like
these, none of them wants to be at Jbe rear.
Once 1996 liegins, it's all going to happen in a burry. l)y the end or
that March, about three-quarters of the delegates needed to win the
Republican nomination will have been elected. It will be costly, quickly,
with-expensive big slate presidential primaries shifting to the start of the
schedule instead of coming at the end, as in past campaigns.
So it's going to tate early money, raised in 1995, for a shO! at winning
what almost certainly will be a political sprint, not a marathon. How much
is guesswork; $20 million, $25 miUion, perh3JlS.
.
What isn't guesswork is that there wtll be a Republican crowd compel· .
ing to raise it. That's the pattern in open nomination years, when one
party or lhe other is choosing a challenger to take on an incumbent.
Clinton's campaign was the exception. At bis midterm, President Bush
was riding so higb in job approval polls lhat a succession of likely chal·
lengers recalled th~y ba4 other things to do. Clinton was nominated over a
fragile field, while Bush was plunging toward defeat
While lhat broke one pattern, it proved another: in politics, nothing is
permanent except change. Clinton looks vulnerable now; he swallows
blame for what happened to the Democrats on Tuesday, his job approval
rating in voter exit polling was a slagnant 44 percent; more of those voters
said they'd opt for a Republican for president in 1996 lhan for him, 36
percent to 31 percent.
Another bleak slatlstlc: only about two-lhirds of lhe people wbo said ·
they had voted for Clinton in 1992 told exit interviewers they would again
in 1996, about a·quarter of them said they didn't know, about 10 percent
said lhey would prefer a Republican or an independent.
Numbers like those entice Republican challengers.
Sen. Phil Gramm of Texas, on a roll as chairman of the campaign for
GOP senators tbls year, said presidential ambitions won't affect bis job
performance, but be isn't going to defer them.
"You're going to see a lot of people wbo figure the job is going to be
open," said Gramm, making his tv interview rounds with frequent
reminders that he campaigned for Republicans in 41 states over the past
three months.
, ·
Sen. Bob Dole, the Republican leader, was at it all fall, as were other
prospective candidates. Dole, now to become majority leader, said be will
decide by March I whether to run in 1996, as he did in 1988.
·Campaigning for the ticket in the off-year builds credits that help when
it comes primary and convention time. Take Richard Nixon, who took the
niad for GOP candidates in 1966 and took a big boost toward the White
House when lhey gained 48 seats.
·
Tbe prospective field bas familiar and new faces- former Republican
Cabinet members like Lamar Alexander, James A. Baker III, Dick
Cheney, Jack Kemp, former Vice President Dan Quayle, and a crop of reelected R.epublican governors, people like William Weld of Massachusetts, Tommy Thompson of Wisconsin, John Engler of Michigan.
George Voinovich of Ohio.
Gov. Pete Wilson of California, comeback winner in the Slate with 20
percent of the electoral votes it will take to elect a PJCsident, has said
repearedly that he's not interested in 1996, and bad his campaign manager
reiterated that on Election Day.
· But be hasn't said flatly oo, hasn't promised to slay put and serve the
full term )Without rurming for president.
And even that wouldn't necessarily bold. Bill Clinton said that wben
be was governor of Arkansas, two years before be won the White House.

Page-2-The Dally Sentlnei
Pomeroy-Middleport, ·Ohio
Monday, November 14, 1994

WASHiNGTON .:.._ Even in a.
town infamous for its revolvingdoor culture, the story of former
federal drug-buster Michael Abbell
is unique. •
Abbell served as a high-ranking
Justice Department attorney who
spear beaded tbe government's
efforts to extradite drug lords to the
United States until be left his post
in 1984 and began representing the
reputed leader of Colombia's Cali
cocaine cartel.
Now Abbell is under SC111tiny by
a federal grand jury in Miami for
allegedly obstructing a government
probe into lhe activities or some of
the same drug kingpins he once
sought to bring to justice.
On Sept. 9, federal agents raided
Abbell's Washington, D.C., law
office and several law firms in
Miami in connection with a probe
of the Cali cartel being conducted
by the Soulhem District of florida.
Among other matters, prosecutors
arc investigating whetber Abbell
and other lawyers crossed the line
separating legal represenlation and
obstruction of justice on behalf of
their Cali clients.
Although the search warrants

are sealed, sources say federal
agents are investigating whether
the lawyers advised their Cali
clients regarding money laundering

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
and bow to thwan investigators. No
criminal charges have been filed to
date.
Legal observers note that coordinated raids on law ftrmS are rare
and require the approval of senior
Justice Department officials. loves·
tigators are said to be receiving
assistance in lhe probe from Harold
Ackerman, a Miami vegetable
importer convicted in 1993 of
smuggling 22 tons of cocaine into
the United States in shipments of
frozen broccoli and concrete fence
posts. Last year, Ackerman's
seized computer records led agents
to some 5 tons of cocaine con·
cealed in coffee packages.
Abbell declined to comment on
the raids. But according to a recent
report in the Washington 11ewsletter

"OOJ Alert," be bas petitioned the
D.C. district court to have bis
records returned or at least placed
in coun custody.
.If charges are eventually leveled
against Abbell, it would mark a
stunning role reversal ror a 17-year
veteran of the Justice Depanment,
who served as director and later as
deputy director of the department's
office of intemational,affairs.
After leaving lhe post in 1984,
Abbell began advising Gilberta
Rodriguez Orejuela, the reputed
chief of lhe Cali cartel, on how to
· avoid extradition. In a move !bat
enra~ed bis former Justice col·
leagues, Abbell testified as an
expert witness for Rodriguez in
1985. Rodriguez bad been arrested
in Spain and raced extradition to
tbe United States. Although tbe
Spanish judge rejected his testimony, Abbcll helped get his client
returned to Colombia, where he
was later freed. U.S. officials say
Rodriguez and his Cali associates
now control over 70 percent of the
world's cocaine trade.
In an interview with our associ·
ate Dean Boyd earlier lhis year,
Abbell said his decision to repre·

MY FOOD TASTES DIFFf~tNT...
I~ IT MIS'SING ~OMETHING ?

Tuesday, Nov.lS

By The Aaoc:Jated Press
I p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 7: 17 ·
The rain will taper off tonight! am.
across Ohio but skies will reuprin
overcast on Tuesday. Lows torugbt
.
.
.
Inm:ast.ngly be~vy ram fell .this
will be in the 40s and highs on
Tuesday mostly in tbe 50s, tbe mornmg m Fionda as Trop,.cal
National Weatber Service said.
Storm Goolon approi!Cbed, wh1le a
Fair weather is expected on Winter storm ~a~ ~ady. battered
Wednesday and Thursday before . Ulah be~ swtrling mto Colorado
there is a chance of rain again on and Wyommg today.
.
Friday, forecasters said.
Gordon was local~ 255 mtles
The record-high temperature for southe!l't of Mt~t ~ts mommg,
olhis·date at the Columbus weather and .wmds at Mtamt Beach were
station was 74 degrees in 1909 gustmg up to 45 mpb. Tbe sll~rm
while tbe record low was 12 in was. expected .to btl tbc Flonda
1986. Sunset tonight will be at 5:16 Stral!s late tomgbt or early Tues·

sent Rodriguez was no different
tllan that of countless other prose· \ "
cutors who have departed govern- 1
ment to represent criminal defendants:
"It's no different than representing any other accused defen·
dan!. He's entitled to legal repre·
sentation just like anybQdy else;,
And, as a lawyer, I've never been
asked to do anythin~ that is profes·
sionally improper.' Abbell noted
lhat he received a conflict-of-interest waiver from Justice prior to rep·
resenting Rodriguez.
Other sources say that Abbell's
services for the cartel have extend·
ed well beyond the couruoom in
recent years .• "There's a difference
between protecting someone' s
rights in the courtroom and lobbying for them in Washington," says
one D.C. attorney.
In 1989, Abbcll drew criticism
when be lobbied a Senate commit·
tee to adopt amendments to mutual
legal assistance treaties, involving
tbe United States and Colombia,
which Justice officials said would
benefit bis Cali clients. The amend·
ments were never adopted by the
Senate, but Abbell failed to ·inform
the committee that be was a lawyer
for the cartel at lhe time. Abbell
bas since defended bis non-disclosure by arguing lhat his appearance
before tile Senate was not on behalf .
of lhe Cali cartel, but as a representative of the National Association
or Criminal Defense Lawyers.
That same year, Abbell also
unsuccessfully lobbied tbe State
Deparbllent to allow his clients to
'srand trial in the United Slates and
later to serve lheir sentences in
. Colombia. Last year, Abbell traveled to Colombia to try to negotiate
settlements for some 60 traffickers
with Gustavo de Greiff, Colombia's chief prosecu~ at the time.
Allhough de Greiff S. no deal with
Rodriguez, who U.S. officials say
continues his drug trafficking activities, the Colombian prosecutor
later granted several kingpins
lenient sentences in exchange for
their swrender.
Those deals drew strong protests
from the governments of both lhe
United States and Colombia
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Today in history

bave to put forlh at trial. And she
will bave an additional polemical
advantage by charging !bat the
president, rather than honestly
· dealing with her accusations, bas
decided to bide behind presidential
immunity.
The same rebuttal applies to
Clinton's concern tbat if Paula
Jones' suit goes forward, the digni.ty of the office of president will be
diminished. Bill Clinton has noted
rather plaintively that in lhe pres·
ence of a world leader, he was
asked questions by reporters about
Paula Jones' lawsuit.
But, as the ACLU says in its
brief, the dignity of the presidency
cannot be effectively preserved in
this context by granting the presi·
dent immunity from her lawsuit:
"The real damage to the reputation
or the president comes not from the
court proceedings, but from the
factual allegations themselves and
the media attention surrounding
them." Fundamentally, moreover,
"tbe presid~ncy is not dignified by
placing the president above the law
and beyond lhe reach of the citizenry."
As for1be warning that the separation of powers will be damaged
by not granting the president this
immunity from lhe court action, the
former professor or constitutional
Jaw in Arkansas should remember
that lhe autbority of the Supreme

Court to review ac.tiQns of the otl!er
branches goes back to Marbury v.
Madison (1803).
Tbe essential case for Paula
Jones getting her day in court before so much time goes by that
the memories of wimesses fade is underlined at the end of tbe .
ACLU's amicus brief: ·
"The nation has an interest in
ensuring lhat our system of justice ... is available to all of its people, regardless of whether the party
(in the lawsuit) is high-born or low,
holds bigb office or does not
"That interest - that com·
pelling interest - is far more
important than the facts of this
case. That interest, combined with
the other interest o( plaintiffs seek·
ing redress for harm, argues against
adopting a rule that automatically
immunizes tile president from civil
suits during the duration of his
incumbency."
It is the granting of such immunity to tbe president tbat would
indeed lower the dignity of the
office.
Nat Hentorr Is a naflonally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment a9d tbe rest of the
Bill of Rights. (
(For lnforl\latlqn~ bow to
communicate e~~nk~lly with
this columnist and others, contact America Online by calling 1801)·8%7-6364, ext. 8317.)

·Reshaping the Democratic Party

mspired

:minstet

Yean

,,

Around the nation

MICH.

Will Paula Jones be··heard in court?

Paula Jones bas a new friend dent as a way or subverting the
that is, the American Civil Liber· popular will as expressed thfougb
ties Union bas filed a friend of the elections.
court brier on her behalf before
Also, Clinton says through his
Judge Susan Webber Wright in the
United Slates Disttict Coun for the
NatHentoff
Eastern District of Arkansas. The
lead ACLl! attorney is Chris . lawyers that bombarding the presi·
Hansen, an exceptionally skilled dent wilh lawsuits would erode the
and principled civil liberties advo- separation between !be executive
and judicial branches and, most
cate.
In the brief, Hansen emphasizes intriguingly, tbe president main·
tbat the ACLU "takes no position tains lhat sucb lawsuits wiU underon tbe .uuth or falsity" of Paula mine the dignity or the presidency.
The ACLU points out tbat a
Jones' allegations that the presi·
dent, while governor of Arkansas, judge would take account of partie·
made unwanted sexual advances. ular demands on tbe president's
She was then working for the state time and adjust the course. of the
and claims that wben she did not case accordingly. Actually, there
succumb to those advances, her are long stretches or time when the
employment suffered. Paula Jones principals in a case are not needed
also insists, and the ACLU agrees, in court at all as their lawyers duel
!bat the main purpose of. her suit is before lhe judge.
not money damages hut to redeem
As for lhe notion lhat the presi·
ber reputation after all tbe press 11/nt must have immunity if the
reports of her audience wilh the ~ular will is not to be thwarted,
governor.
,
there is no case law supporting that
Although the alleged incident imaginative contention. Nor does it
took place before Bill Clinton bold up outside the Jaw. As Chris
became president, be maintains that Hansen notes, if Paula Jones'
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum·. be should be granted immunity in charges are summarily dismissed or
nist ror Tbe Associated Press, bas reported on Washington and this case to prevent his being dis· delayed until tbe end of Clinton's
uacted over considerable periods or · presidency, "lhe plaintiff will still
national politics for more than 30 years.
time from bis crucial duties as pres· be free to bold a press conference
ident. Furthermore, adds Clinton, at wbicb sbe makes public her
permitting the Paula Jones suit to grievances."
'
go forward might well encourage a
She can then cite, as vividly as
parade of litigants to sue the presi· she likes, the evidence she would
By The Aaoclated Prell
.
·
Today is Monday, Nov. 14, the 3Jgth day of 1994. There are 47 days
left in the year.
·
·
Today' a Higbllgbt in History:
On Nov. 14, 1889,
by Jule&amp; Verne, New York World ~ner
OK, so you're a Demccrat and more conservative than the DemoNelllc Bly (Eiizabelh Cochrane) set out to travel around the world m Jess tbe world has just collapsed all cratic Party. They will then leap to
around you. Wbat do you do?
the conclusion lhat the Democratic
than 80 days (She succeeded, making lhe ttip in 72 days.)
FtrSt,
you
admit
your
party
bad
Party
should promptly move to the
On this date:
. Di ..
fi
bl' bed
it coming. This doesn't mean con1o 1851, Herman Melville's novel "Moby ck ~ irSt pu ,IS
ceding that lhe Republicans, on the
Hodding Carter Ill
iD the United States.
.
· Pre ide
: .• 1o 1881, Charles J. Guireau went on trtal for assasslnaung
s nt basis eilher of tbeir recent White
House record or of their utterly cemer.
:Garfield. (Guiteau was convicted and bang~ the foll~wing year·)
Olhers will argue that the nation
: · 1o 1889, JawarbarW Nebru, the fus_t pnme DUmster ~f mdependent demagogic promises, are entitled to
the people's trust, hut it does mean does not need two Republican par:~~~~·British Broadcasting Corporatioo began its domestic radio admitting that the Demoaats bave ties, and that it is time to build a
not been worthy of it, primarily new Democratic coalition along
:se~!m, President Roosevelt proclaimed the Philippine Islands. a free because they long ago became a more traditional lines. This means
constellation of power-sharing fac- expanding the party base by ener. COOIJIIOIIwealth
.
: 1o '1940. durlng world War n, German planes destroyed most or the tions revolving around an intellec- gizing tl!e millions of Americans
tual.vacuum.
· wbo have decided tbe system
' English town of Coventry.
.
.
; 1o 1943. Leonard Bernstein, the 25-year-old assistant conductor of~
Second, you avoid the serious doesn't work on their behalf. It
:New York PbilbarmOnic, made bis debQt with the orchestra as he filled to mistake or trying to make President means that Democrats should
Clinton the scapegoat for the state- embrace rat~er than avoid pop•for the alliog·Bruno Walter during a natl~y broadcast concert.
: 1o 1943, an Ameriean torpedo w!l' DIIStakenly ftred at. ~e _u.s. !JaUle- by-slate, disttict-by-disttict disaster ulism. In a time of international
•ship Iowa, wbicb was carrying President Roosevelt and bts JOIDI chtefs !0 ·of Nov. 8. There are plenty of conglomerates and big business-big
:the Tebran confmnce; ·the torpedo exploded harmlessly m the Iowa s things for which be can and should government alliances, the party
be blamed, but at most be deserves . should again speak for the common
:wake.
n...bestra recorded "Opus only a partial share or the blame for man rjl!ber than the major conttibu: 1o 1944, SO years ago, Tommy Dorsey and va•
this one.
tors.
·No. I" for RCA Victor.
·.
.
· .
Third, you spend the next few
Whatever the next steps may be,
: 1o 1968. Yale University announced 11 was gomg co-educauonal.
years
trying
to
refashion
your
party
·
honest
self-appraisal is an essential
• 1o 1969 Apollo 12 blasted off for the mooo from Cape Kennedy.
• 1o 19'1i the' Dow Jones lndusttial Average closed above the I000 ~vel into a coherent whole with some- precondition. First and foremost,
t!ting approa~bing the Repub)icans' the pilny must accept that it cannot
:for the fii'Sl time, ending the day at I 00~.16.
. . . .
be all lhings to all people, keeping
: 1o 1973, Britain's Princess Anne married Capt. Mark ~illips tn West- discipline.
Abbey (however, they divorced in 1992, and Princess Anne reTbe devil will he .in the details, the presiden~·s example .in mind.
of course, and you wtllliot lack for
Second, tt must realtze lhat lhe
•IJI8Iried )
il
: Teo
!!.fO' Astrooauts aboard the s~ shuUle Discovery plucked advice about wbicb way to move. past is past. That means there is
:a·ICCOlld IIICilire from abit and secured 11 in the spacecraft's cargo bay Some will say1 lhe obvious, which virtually no point in seeking credit
:.-: !bC second aua:essful salv_age mission in two days.
.
is that the present electorate is for the social safety net that

'

Rain forecast for parts of Ohi~ this evening

OHIO Weather
Aceu-W~ forecast for

Former Justice lawyer· comes under scrutiny

cocoons the middle class. ' Most
Americans take it as tbeir due, to be lhe party that meets the chalratlier than as ,a hard-won accom- lenge and benefits from it
Nor does a move to incorporate
plishment of the Democratic Party.
new
Americans into a recharged
Tbe voters want to know bow
Democratic Party mean writing off
politicians intend to.make government work in lhe future, not how everyone else, a sure prescription
for permanent minority status.
they made it wid in lhe past.
· There are quake-sized fault lines in
Finally, the Democrats must the new Republican coalition· to
concede that the building blocks of exploit Try as they may to paper
a Winning party will not include a!l over their differences, the liberusri·
tbe supports of lhe old structure. an and fluthoritarian wings of the
For instance, growing prosperity GOP are going to fmd it difficult to
plus residual resenbllent about tbe coexist once they are fighting over
Democrats' central role in the civil pany direction rather than against·
rights revolution mean that white Democrats. For instance, the Chris-'
Southern Protestants are going to tian Coalition speaks for a vastly
vote Republican f~r the foreseeab,le different America from that· en vi·
future, JUst as wbtle Anglo-Saxon sioned by Republicans in the ·
Protestants bave usually, done booming suburbs or Norlhern Vir· '
everywhere else. It is precisely ginia, a point driven home by the .
because the roots or resurgent defeat of senatorial candidate Oliv·
Republicanism
planted deeply er Norlh in a race almost any orthoin the wbite South that the roots of dox Republican would have won. ·
a resurgent Democratic Party can·
All' of this should be considered
not be.
as Democrats make their way
'But that leaves a vast territory .through the rubble.
open for development. At the end
Hodding Carter Ill, former
of this century, the ethnic and
Department spokesman ·.
State
racial race of America is changing
and
award-winning
reporter, edl·
as rapidly as it was when tbe 19th
century was winding down. Now as tor and publisher, Is pnsldent of
then, politics can be one of tbe MalnStreet, a Washington, D.c •• :
tools of assimilation. Now as then, based television production 'comth~ Demoaatic Party is jlositioned pany.

are

The Qaiiy Sentinel Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

IToledo lsoo I
,,,,,

IMansfield l54• I•
'''''

• IColumbus ls6• I

day.
In the West, heavy snow was
falling this morning in Colorado as
the storm thai dumped nearly 3 feet
of snow in parts of Utab on Sunday
moved in.
A .
A cold front stretching l'rorlt the
western Great Lakes to ,portb-central Texas brouabt' sbofiers alona
its ·leading edge. Mostly mild temperatures were forecast in tbe
Northeast, but the cold front was
expected to drop temperatures there
by e31ly Tuesday.
·
.
In the Pacific Norlhwcst, light ,
rain was falling in Washington as a

"

'J

Pacifte storm systtm moved iD1and.
The storm was expected 10 bring
increased rain and wind to tbe
region, with snow at upper eleva·
lions.
Temperatures were in the 40s
and 50s in !be nortbern and central
states; the 60s and 70s iD the East
and South with a few spots in
Texas and florida in the 80s.
Tbe nation's bot spots Sunday
were both in Texas, with Laredo
and Cotulla bitting 87 degrees; the
cold spot was Truckee, Calif~ at 5
below.

Clinton calls for human rights improvements in China
,,,,,
'''''

W.VA.

S:.my

Pt

Cloud{ Cloud{

C1994Accu-Woalhor, tnc.

-----Weather-----

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP)President Clinton today pressed for
additional human rights improvements in China and sought a consensus for keeping tbe beat on
Norlh Korea to honor its nuclear
promises. IJ.e also pledged an
"open door ' in working with
Republicans at home.
·
After separate sessions wilh top
Asian leaders, Ointon promised to

EMS logs 17 calls

South-Central o•Jo
Tonight...Periods of rain. Low
in the lower 50s. Southwest winds
10 to 15 mpb becoming norlhwest
toward daybreak. Chance or rain go
percent
Tuesday ... Rain likely. High near
60. Oiance of rain 60 percent.

Extended rorec:ast
Units of tbe Meigs County
Wednesday ...Fair. Lows in the Emergency Medical Center
30s and higbs SO to SS.
answered 17 calls for assistance
Tbursday .. .Falr. Lows 30 to 35 Saturday and Sunday. Units
and bigbs in lhe SOs.
responding included:
Friday ... A chance of showers.
MIDDLEPORT
Lows in the middle 40s to lower · 8:44 p.m. Saturday, Soulh Third
50s and bigbs in the 60s.
Avenue, Ray Foster, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
2:08 p.m. Saturday, Overbrook
Center, Lola Barber, VMH;
4:27 p.m. Saturday, Middleport
Volunteer Fire Department, brush
fue on Nibert Road;
11:26 p.m. Saturday, Middle~rt
Dorsel D. Bentz, 66, of Lakemore, died Friday, Nov. 11, 1994, at his VFD, Gibson Road, automatic
home.
b tired alarm;
11:18 a.m. Sunday, Overbrook
Born in Alfred, the son of the late John and Vesta Bentz, e re
Center,
Leota Schaeffer, VMH.
from Kocb Engineering. He was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II, a
POMEROY
member of the VFW Post 8975, the Lakemore Army Navy Garrison 273
8
am.
Sunday,
state Route 681
and the Akron Karting Oub.
.
He is survived by his wife, Marie Bentz; dnagbters and sons:m·law, East, Cbad Allen, refused treat·
Sharon and Jerry Taylor, and Brenda and Larry Baum, all o! Spnngfie~d ment;
8:56 a.m. Sunday, Enterprise
Township, and Valerie and Dave Holloway of Mogadore; stx grandchilRoad,
Lena Nesseiroad, VMH.
dren; brother, Malcom Bentz of Texas; and sister, Mildred Cbetto of
RACINE
AJcron.
.
3:44
p.m.
Saturday, Vine. Street,
He was preceded in dealh by his granddaughter, Angela Taylor.
Services will be at 11 am. Tuesday at the Hopkins-Lawver Funeral ~qgerTheiss, dead upon amval;
' 4:20 p.DI. Saturday, Bailey
Home, wilh .the Rev. G. Rod Taylor olliCiatiilg. Biitial will follow iii the
Road ' William Cleland,.. Holzer
Hillside Memorial Park.
Friends may call between 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Monday at the funeral Medical Center;
home.

-Area·deaths-oorsel D. Bentz

Jeremy Halley
Jeremy Michael Halley, 17, Route 1, Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., died Saturday Sept. 12, 1994. He was a Point Pleasant (W.Va.) High School sblilent a'nd member of the Canaan Missionary Baptist Church.
Born July 3, 1977 in Gallipolis, be was the son of David and Kathy
Sheets Halley.
·
.
f.
Survivors include bis parents; one_sister, Gretcben (Davtd) Rainey o
Gallipolis Ferry; one brother, Bryan Halley of Point. Pleasant; m~mal
grandparents, Willard and Gwen Sheets or Crown Ctty; paternal grand·
parents, James and Rena Halley of Gallipolis; .mate~ .great grandpar- ·
ents Weldon Strait and Melva Sheets, both of Gabpobs; and paternal
greai grandmother, Maridell Halley of Gallipolis.
. Friends may call 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesday at lhe Willis Funeral Home and
one boor prior to services, which will be beld 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
Canaan Missionary Baptist Cbureh with the Rev. Garland M.ontgomery
officiating. Burial will be in the Ridgelawn Cemetery, MercervtUe.
Pallbearers will be Tom Sheets, Willard Sheets, Daniel Sheets, Bryan
Halley, Keith Hall~y, Seth Montgomery and Greg Montgomery.

Bradford Powell
Biadford POwell, 76, of Cbillicotbe, died Monday, Nov. 14, 1994, at
the V.A. Hospital in Chillicothe.
Born July 4, 1918, in Rutland, the son of lhe late Ben and Nora Brad·
ford Powell, he was a dentist.
.
·
He is survived by his sister, Janice Powell Hebble of Oak Ridge,
Tenn.; and several nieces and nephews.
· Arrangements will be made later by !be Ewing Funeral Home.

Roger G. Theiss
Roger G. Theiss, 66, of Racine, died Saturday, Nov. 12, 1994, at his
home.
·
Born May 9, 1928, in Racine, the son of the late Paul and Marie E.
Wilcoxen Theiss, he was a retired superintendent of mainlenance at Kyger
Creek Power Plant. He was a member of the Bethany United Methodist
Church, the Racine American Legion Post.602 and an Army veteran.
He is survived by his wife, Janet Hill of Racine; daughters, Beth A.
Theiss of Gallipolis and Barbara Rupe of Racine; son and daughter-inlaw, Bany and Chong Tbei~s of Day~n; sister, Pauline J:lill of Le~a;rt
Falls; sister and brother·in-Jaw, Margte and Larry Gutbne of Bonme
Ferry, Idaho; step-daughter, Susan Gooch of Port Orange, fla.; stepdaughters and sons-in-law, Teresa and Michael Gaddy or New Berry,
fla, Cynthia and James Scou of Pomeroy, and Juli and Homer Newell of
Hartford, W.Va; step-sons, Steven Nease of POlileroy, TIDlotby Nease of
florida, David and Karen Nease of Tomahawk, Wise., and Scou and Carman Nease of Racine; '12 grandchildren; and 10 step-grandchildren.
Services will be a1 I p.m. Tuesday at the Letart Falls Cemetery Chapel,
with the Rev. Kenneth Baker officiating. Burial will follow in the Letart
Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call between 7-9 p.m. Monday at the Ewing Funeral
Home or one ·hour before the service. In lieu or flowers, donations may be
made to the local Heart Fund.

Divorces and
dissolutions
Tbe following actions to end
marriage were ftled recently in the
office of Meigs County Clerk of
Courts Larry Spencer:
Dissolution asked: Zane A,lan
• Beegle, Syracuse. and Heidi Sue
Beegle, Syracuse, Nov. 9.
·
Divorces asked: Alicia Kay
Hooten, Pomeroy, from Robert P.
Hooten Jr., Columbia, Tenn., Nov.
·4; Rose M. Asher, Langsville, from
.Jimmy D. Asber, Huntington,
W.Va., Nov. 9; Stepbe,n A.
Foulkrod Sr., Pomeroy,, from
ADa~ Marie FQullrtlld, P~X~~eroy.

expand ties across the Pacific, saying the United States is "getting
stronger in this region." U.S. offi·
cials predicted endorsement on
Tuesday of a U.S.-promoted statement calling for •'open and free
uade" through the region by no
later lhan the year 2020.
At a news conference in the gar·
den of the U.S. ambassador's resi·
dence, Clinton said he would "use

7:53 a.m. Sunday, Basban Road,
Jerod Mills, VMH:
12:45 p.m. Sunday, state Route
338, brush fue on Jay Hall property.
REEDSVILLE
7:22 p.m. Satorday, slate Route
124 at Long Bottom, Micbael J.
Dailey, VMH.
RUTLAND
12:23 p.m. Sunday, Carpenter
Hill Road, Edward Maksimczak,

HMC.
SYRACUSE
8:03 p.m. Sunday, Condor
Street, Denise Clark, VMH.
TUPPERS PLAINS
6:27 am. Saturday, Vanderboof
Road, Lyle Showalter, St. Joseph's
Hospital;
12:30 p.m. Saturday, motor·
vehicle accident on state Route
248, Jacklyn Spaun, HMC, Jay
Fisher, VMH, Syracuse squad,
Tuppers Plains and Chester VIDs
assisted;
9:52 p.m. Sunday, motor-vehicle accident on state Route 7,
Michelle Donovan, refused treat·
ment, Tuppers Plains and Chester
VFDs assisted.

Deputies probe several
deer, auto accidents

Deputies of the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department have been
busv since the middle or last week
filling out accident reports stem·
ming from deer/vehicle collisions.
No injuries wac reported.
First, at 6:43 a.m. Tbursd~y,
Alva L. Sullivan, Gallipolis, was
northbound on state Route 7 north
of Five Points wben he struck and
killed a deer that ran into lhe path
of bis 1993 Chevrolet pickup truck.
Damage to the truck was listed as
moderate.
Thursday night around 6:30,
Robert M. O'Brien, Shade, was
northbound on U.S. 33 at Darwin
when be struck and killed a deer
that ran into the road. Damage to

Hosoital news

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

tbe front of bis 19g7 Chevrolet
Chevette was listed as heavy.
Carol J. Cross, Langsville, was
eastbound on state Route 143 Fri·
day around 5:15 a.m. when she
struck a deer that walked into the
path of her 1993 Ford, causing
moderate damage.
Around 6:1S p.m. Friday, Frederick J. Blaettnar, Pomeroy, was
northbound on U.S. 33 in a 1989
Ford and struck a deer that ran
back into the roadway after cross·
ing in front of bis car. Damage to
the car was listed as moderate.
Donald Maxson, Basban Road,
was eastbound on county Road 30
Friday around 8 p.m. and struck a
deer tliat ran into lhe road causing
ligbt to moderate damage to his
1993 Chevrolet van.
Berry W. O'Brien, Racine, was
soulhbound on Amberger Road in
Sutton Township Saturday around
6:30 p.m. when be struck a deer
that jumped onto the road causing
moderate damage to bis 1986 Ford
Escort.

whatever influence I have in a ~i·
live way" to press for human ngbts
reform, both in China and lndone·
sia
He denied suggestions be was
backing away from human rights
concerns in pressing for more trade
with Asia and said he raised the
issue pointedly in a face·to-face
meeting with Chinese President
Jiang Zanin.
"The United States, perhaps
more than any other country in the
world, consistently and regularly

raises human rights issues," UID·
ton said bef&lt;R the formal opemng
of !be IS-nation Asian Pacific Economic Cooperation forum (APEC).
"We made it' absolutely cleaJ
that in order for the United States'
relationship witb China to fully
flower, there had to be progress on
all fronts,'' Clinton said.
Later, Secretary of State Warren
Christopher told CNN that some
sanctions remain in place on China
dating back to tbe Tiananmcn
Square riot in June 1989

Eight die on Ohio
roads over weekend
By The Associated Press
Weekend traffic accidents
claimed eight lives in Ohio, includ·
ing three in one wreck, !be State
Highway Patrol said.
· Tbe patrol counted weekend
traffic fatalities from 6 p.m. Friday
tbrougb midnight Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
COLUMBUS_ Brett l Bran·
iff, 12, of Columbus, when suuck
by a car wben be darted into a
neighborhood street
MARION -James S. Arue~ ·
sia, 29, of Marion, in a one-vehicle
accident on a Marion County road.
SATURDAy

CHILLICOTHE - Charles F.
House, 53, and wife , Janet L .
House, 49, of Piketon, and Ronald
Kirk, 28, Chillicothe, wben a pick·
up truck containing the Houses col·
lided wilh a van driven by Kirk on
Ohio 104 in Ross County.
AKRON - Midgeue Sepia, 18,
of Akron, pedesttian hit by a truck
on an.Akron city street.
WAVERLY- StevenS . Hall,
24, or Waverly, driver in a truck
accident on a Pike Coonty road .
FRIDAY NIGHT
LISBON William D.
Kramer, 35, of Toronto, Ohio, driver in a one-car crash on Ohio 14 iii
Columbiana County.

Meigs announcements
Auxiliary to meet
Women's Auxiliary, Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Tuesday, I:30
p.m conference room. Final plans
for fund raisers. Hostesses will be
Betty Sayre, Helen Hill, and
Jeanette Lawrence.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ,_.................31 J/4
Atu.o .........-...... --.. --·-···-.571/l
Ashlud OU ........................37718
AT&amp;T ...,.,.. ___ ,,,. __,,_....54 118
Buk Oae .............................. .l7 1/ll

Boll EYau ...............................lO 118
Cbamploa lnd........................zs Ill
Cbarmlnc Sltop .. - ......................7
City Holdlag .................................31

Federel MCJ&amp;ul .......................lt 318
Goodyear T&amp;R -·~.................35 318
K-mart _ ................................. 16 114
Lucls End ............................. l7lll

lrutallatlon !let
A special meeting of Racine
Lodge 461, Free and Accepted
Masons, will be beld Wednesday
7:30 p.m. Open installation will be
held ror David W. Fox as district
deputy grand master of the 12lh
Masonic District Refreshments.

GaUl polls.
Nov. 11 discharges - Robert
Hollanbaugb, Andrew Hunt,
Jacqualin Anderson, MaJjorie Holliday, Mrs. Dennis Haner and son,
Cheyney
Finwich,
Molly
O'Rourke, Mrs. Steve Hysell and
Saturday around 7:15p.m., Bo
daughter, Dorothy Sedgwick, Emil
Frazier,
Racine, was northbound on
Tliehta, Isabell Stone, Etla Payne,
U.S
.
33
near Pomeroy when he
Debra Sick, Mrs. Virgil Willet and
struck
a
deer
that caused moderate
daughter and WiUiam Blackwood.
damage
to
his
1994 Toyola pickup
Nov. 1l discharges - Adam
truck.
Davis, Ethel Boswell, Kevin RipDeer/vehicle accidents occur
peth and Goldie Sibley.
most
frequenOy in the early mom·
Nov. ll births • Mr. and Mrs.
ing
and
evening bours around dawn.
Mark Ball son of WellSton, Mr. and
and
dusk.
Mrs. Charles Burcbett of Oak f1ill
"Deer are on the move this time
and Mr. and Mrs. William Davis
or
year,"
Sheriff James M. Soulsby
daughter of Oak Hill.
.
cautioned.
" "Drive carefully and
Nov. 13 dlsc:harges - Raymond
Miller, Mrs. William Davis and be alert for deer along the road.
daughter, Mrs. Mark Ball and son, Slow down or stop," be said. ''You
can never tell which way they will
Doris Lillico and Harry Freman.
go."
(Published with permission)

~

Legion to meet
Racine American Legion Post
602 wiU meet Thursday at the post
home, 6:30p.m .
Free dinner planned
A free 'lbanksgiving dinner will
be served Thanksgiving Day, Nov.
24, at the Racine American Legion
ball of Post 602 to anyone wbo is
alone or might not olherwise have a
dirmer. Serving will begin at 11:30
a.m.

The Daily Sentinel
'

(llSfS ZU-MI)

PllbUIIIed •""' lftenooa, Moodly -~~~
Frldoy. Ill Coon St .• ...,...., . Obio• ., a.
Oblo Volley Publlibl .. ~,-­
be., p.,.-.y, OIUo 4.57'11. Ph. !192-~156 .

--'!be
.... -J'-led
Oid·
N.._AIIodaOloo.

-y.OIIio.

J&gt;r... ood .... Oblo

'*'

POS'IMUTDr ScDd .W...
xtioM to
Tbe D1Uy Seatioel, 111 Court St .•
Pomoroy,Oblo 4l769.

SUISCRIPilllli 11An:5

S1NGL1 COP\' PRICI
hl!y .............................................. -... l5CSul&gt;laibon.,.

.-n,. 10 poy lhe corrior-

. - ill - " " " .. Tbc Clollipolla Dolly
Tribue 01 1 three. Iii or 12 motdl b-.ia.
CJ'edi1 wUJ be JiWI cmier ~ 'lirCt.

No .IUblaiptioll by mail pa111ittod i1 . . .
where home Cll'rier Ml'\'tCt iJ 1Yiillble.

MAIL SVJSCRIP110NS

-Gollioc-,

llW-. ...............................................$21.14
26 Woeb..........-....................................$43.16
ll Woea.................................................SU.76

·.................................................
- O.O.U. G.W. c_, $21.~
I 3 Weela
26 Weeb.................................................$4!.50
ll Woeb........ ................................... -... $11 .~

Pomeroy, OH 45769

992-6255

DI)YIIIIICHILDS
MULLIIMUSSEI
IISUUICE

Straiglit- f[uc~r &amp; ~usli

f'unera! !Jlome

1t1S•cDnd at., Pomeror ,

·Ravenswood, WV- (304) 273-2152
Preneed- Atneed- Postneed
SERVING JACKSON (WV.) MASON (WV.)
AND MEIGS (OH.) COUNTlES

YOUIIIDIPIIDIIT
AIEITS IEIVIII

••ascou•n
SIICEII61

Main St

,

o.. v-....,............. ...............................sauo

~:C~~ Middleport; Paul Layne.

200 West Second Street

'

., CaTior.-·::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::t:

·- - -.-

Hospital news
~=:=~~~:~Lola
Sabirday diScharges - none
Sunday admissions- none
Sunday discharges- none

I

Umlled Inc. ........................... .ZO 518

Multimedia Inc....... - ......~....l8 711
Point Baacorp ..............................19
Rella ace Electric ..... __ .........30 1/4
Robltlni"' Myen ................... 17lll
Royal Duk:lt ......................... 109 1111
Sboney'olnc....... - ................. 14 Ill
Star Ba,nk .............................. .37 518
Wendy lnt'L ........................... 14 711
Wcirtlttactoa lnd ................... .ll l/4
Stock reporlo are lite 10:30 a.m.
quotes pro•lded by Adnsl o

ROUSH
/

j

•

•

••

�'

'
CLEVELAND 26, Pl11-pbla7
CINCINNA1ll4, HDUIIOD ll
New EI&gt;JIIaod 26, MiDDeooll20 (OT) '
Sao Dieao 14. Kwai City 1J
Sao fnllcisco ll. Doll• 14.
LA. Rald111 20, LA. Rllllll7
Green Bay 17. N.Y. JetslO
DeaYer 17, Se.ttle 10
Detroit 14, Tampa Bay 9 ·
OPEN DATI&gt; 14diaoopolio, Wulliaa·

Basketball
NBA standings
Al...lkDI-

Ida

lil

.W L fd.

Wuhinatoo .............. 4
New York.. ............. )
Orlaodo ................... )
B01toa ...................... l
New Jeney .............. l

I
I
l
3
5

.100
.750
.600
.2SO
.167

Phii!Wielphia ............ 1
Mioml ... . . .......0

5
4

.167
.000·

.l
I
2.5
3.5

too

Tonight's game

3.5

2 .600
2 .600
.100
.100
Milwaukee ............ 2 12 .500
Chwlone ................. 2 3 .400
A.t.Janll .. .................. l 5 .167

Week Uslate
SW~ • .,., No.,.lt
CLEVELAND ll K111111 City, I p.m
Detroit at OU.eaao, l p.m.
Groen Bay 11. Buffalo, I p.m.
lndiiJIIPOiis ll CINCINNATI, I p.m

Detroit.. ....... ........... 3
IDdiaoa .....................J

:i l

~'1E'i:ANii::

.l
.l
.l
I
l .l

Mid••• DIYbiOD
.W L Ed.

lil

I .750
) .750
4 .)3)

I.S
l
2
4

Houston .......... ........6
Denver ........ .......... 4
Dollu ....................... l
Sao Antonio ............. l
Ulah ......................... 2
Minrw:aota ................ o

0
I

1.00
.100

6

.000

Division 0

Mono,, No•.ll

AP Top 25 college poll
The Top 2$ tcanw io The Alaocilled
PreN colleac roOLball poll, wilh rn~ - placo
votca io parcothc1c1, record• lhroucb
Nov. 12, total poioll b.ed oo 25 poiatl
for a fttat·pla'.:C YOtc throuah ooc poaot for
a 25th-place vote , ud raDkiDI io 1he previoua poll:

I
U

l.l

2

l.l
l

Lui

Ium

Saturday's scores
Orlando 116, Pbiladclphia 103
0\II]OitC 113, Detroit \00
Indiana 93, CLEVELAND 86
HbuSIOD 100, New Jeney 14
8o1ton 114, MinDUOll101
WilihinatOD 109, Miami 99
Dollu 124. O.i&lt;aao 120 (OT)
San Antonio 101 , New York 12
Deovor Ill. UlahiiO
Phocni1 101. L.A. Cippe:nlOI
Golden State 121 . LA. laken 99
Sr.tl"'mtnlo lOS. All1nta 97

.B.wd fla.l!.uk

1. Nebrub(l9) .... ,... u.o.o l.m
l . Peon Sl. (ll) ........... 9.{).0 1.109

1
l

l . Florida .................... 8-1-0 1,351

4

4. Alobama ................ JO.().O l ,lll
6
5
l . Miomi ..................... I+O l.lll
6. Aubura .................... 9-{).1 1.24{1
3
7. Coloraclo ................ 9·,1 ·0 1.237
7
I . AoridaSt ..... - ........ 8-1-0 1.116
8
9. Tcltu A&amp;M ..-........ 9-G-l 1,024
9
10. Colo- St...........9+0 927
10
II. KanSM So .............. H·O 870
II
ll. Oreaon .................. l·l-0 856
15
13. Soutllero Cai .........H ·O ill
17
14. Vir&amp;lnlaToc:h ........ l·2.0 741
16
ll. MichiiP' ......:........ 1·J.O 616
19
16.
7·2·0 s21
21
17. Ba~too Collcp ..... ~2-1 417
ll
18. Wuhi,.Wo ........... H-0 434 22
19. Ariwr. .................7-3-0 334
ll
20. Bri&amp;ham Youoi1 .... 9-:Z.O 303 ll
21 . Ullil ...................... l·l-0 302
ll
22. Ohio St. ................. l·l-0 Jll
ll. Miulnlppl St. ...... 7·J.O 230 lO
24. Duke ...................... l·l-0 204 , II
ll. N. CaroliDI Sl. ...... 7-l.O 174 -

Sunday'11eore

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

SOIIllo Ill, LA. Clippen 90

Tonlgbt'a pme
New Yorltll Ullll, 9 p.m

Tuesdoy'agames

SCiltlo Ill New Jcncy, 7:30p.m.
WllhiDJIOn II Orlando, 7:30p.m.
Dallal a Miami , 7:JO·p.m. ·
Boaoo 11 Atlanta, 7:30p.m. ·
Ouriotte al CLBVELAND, 7:30p.m.
Pl&gt;iladolpllia al Detroit, 7:30p.m.
San Antonio II Denver, I p.m.
Indiana II Milwaukee. 8:30 p.OL
Sacramento 11 Houston, 1:30 p.m.
Phoeni1at Portland, 10 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at L.A. Clippen. 10:30
p.m.
.
MIMIIOiaatOoldea Stat., l0:30 p.m.

1:30p.m

Rayland Buckeye Local (11·0) VI.
Col s. Wall enon (10- l) at Su lsberaer
Memorial Stadium. Zanrcville. 7:30p.m.
Cd i ~a (11 ·9&gt; vs. Piqua (11.0) 11 Troy
Memonal SLad•um ,1:30 p.m.

69, N,e'lad1 14, Notre Dame 10. Baylor 9.
Central Michipa 9, W•hinJlOD State 7,
Teu&amp; ~. Oeoraial, Tenaeuee 1.

MAC standings
Onnll

r....
.llLI.WLifd.
I·C. Midi ........ B I 0 9 l 0 .118

Ohio college scores

BowliD&amp; Orccn7 I 0 9 2 0 .Ill
Tolodo .............. 4 2 I 6 3 I .122
W. Mldl ........... 5 2 0 1 2 0 .771

Saturday'• action
pla1

Malone 92, Coroentooe 74 •
Wlllb 94, Wilba"forc:e 62

Mla)ni ..............S l 0
"IIIII SL .............4 l I

l S I .lOO
4 5 I .410

E. Midi ............~ j 0 4_ 6 0 .4011
Keot.. ...............2 6 0 l 8 o .200

Tourn•tnl adloa

Alaoo ............... o 1 o o 10 o .000
OIDO ............:::O I 0 0 10 0 .000
1-Clioched eooferenae lille

Urbaaa Pepli Tlpolr

Ch. .piCMIIhlp
Urbana 106, Cent. St, Ohio 14
Thlrcl pl'. u .
Mieh. OuiltJaa 79, Fanshawe, Cauda

Saturday•sscores
Ball Sl. 31, AkrDD 28
CeDI. Micllij~ao 36, Bowlloa O~eco '33
E. Michi&amp;aol4, OIDO ll
Miami, Ohio 24, Kent 14
ToledO 37, W. MlcflitiD 34

67
E..lbltloo
AINdCI in Actio a 106, Codlnille 19

AP Top 25 wom!!n 's
pre·season college poll

Monroe Lemoo·Mooroe (11 :o) v1 .
Loudon (10·1) al Welcome Stadium, Daytoo, 7:l0 p.m.

Division IV
Cle. Beaediclioe (9·2) VI. Brookfield
at Roosevelt Stadium, Kent, 7:30

(1 0. 1)
p.m.

Wauseon {11·0) vs. Orrville {10-1) at
Donnell Sladlum, Findlay, 7:30p.m.
WHEELERSDURO (9·1) VS . NELSONVILLE· YORK (11 ·0 ) at Spartan
Municipal Stadium, Porumouth , 7:30
p.m.
Germutown Valley View (11 ·0) v1.
Cincinnati Wyomina (10-1) at Fairfield
Stat!ium, 7:30 p.m.
·

Division V
R~alonal

nnals-Frlclar
Atroa Maochcslcr (I · 0) VI ,
Wellsville (11-0) at Falcoo Stadium,
Youoastowo, 7:30p.m.
Smithville (9·2) n Carey (11 ·0) at
Ram Field, MansOeld, 7:30 p.m. ·
Lore City Buckeye Trail (10· 1) n
Suaar Grove Berne Union (10· 1) a1 White
Field, Newatk, 7:30p.m.
Venaillu ( 11·0) va. Cin ci nnati
Mwiemonl (11.0) at Northmont, O aytoo,
BOp.m.

ball poll, with rnt·placo vota iA PlfCD·
1993-9-4 rewed, total pointl biiOd
01 lS pol Db Cor 1 ttr. piiCe vole dro\l&amp;h
olie pola1 ror a 2't.h place vo1e IDd Juc
&amp;CuoD's final rukina:

Iuoi

Pe1111S1. ............6
0100 ST.........S
Mi&lt;lliaan ..........s
Dllooil ..............4
Mi&lt;lliaan so. .... 4
WiJ&lt;oDJio ........ )
Purdll&lt; ............. .l
lowa ................. l

I

1mw1 &amp; ·hal

I. Teooeuee (26) ........ .31·2
2. Purdue (2) .................29-5
J. Loui1iana Tech (1) ... 31·4
4. Connecticul (I) ......... J0.3
l . Stanford .......
...ll-6
6. N. Carolioa (l) ........ ll-2
7. Virainia .................... 27·5
a. Alabama ...................26-7
9. To. . Toc:h ............... 21·5
10. PeDD Sl. ................... 21· 3
II. Colorado .................lH
11. Vaoderbiii ..............2.S-I
ll. lowa........................ll ·7
14. Florida .................... ll-7
ll. KaniM .................... lJ-6
16. Aotidllot'I ............ 2.S·4
17. WuhiD&amp;ton ......... 13-1
II. 0 . Wuhlnaton .......1J,.I
19. Goorll•.... ............. l1·11
20. Telll ...................... 22-9
21 . W. Keotuety ..... .'.. 24-10
22. Selon Hall .............. 21·1
2l. Tew A&amp;IM ........... 24-9
24. Mluiulppi ............. 24-9
21. Southr:rD Cai ........... 26--C

7'12

I

734

8

713

6

690

)

619
1!16
571
162

II
•
10
16

lOO

l
ll

146
144

9
l

413

l!l4
343
301
276
l1l

Eost

74

7

Pioneer League
Midwest lnterwlleglate
Ashlud 43, St. FranCis, Ill . 0

North Coast
Athletic Conference
Alle&amp;hcoy 13, Oberlin 0
Earlham 42, De1isoa 21
Ohio Wesleyan 42. Kenyon 24

Oblo Athletic Conference

Capitall6, Ollabeln ll
Heidelbera 3-4, Ohio Northern 20
Joha Carroll 9, Baldwin· Wallace 0
Marietta 7, MUikinaum 6
Mounl Union 33, Hiram 0

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Euiii'IIDIYW.

.W L I U fA r.t.

•'
'

ll9
Ill
173
216
210

117
171
114
lll
239

CtotroiDICLEVELAND .. r l 0 .100
PiliiiMrab ........ 6 l 0 .667
CINCINNAll .. l I 0 .200
HoUIIOR ............ I 9 0 .100

219
Ill
173
147

Ill
146
251
lll

WHI.,aDIYW•
SID Dieao......... I 2 0 .100
~Cloy ...... 6 4 o .600
LA. IIaiderJ .. ,, ' S 0.500
lilaYW .............. 4 6 0 .400
3 7 0 .lOCI

243 164
195 , 19:1
203 222

s.u................

Association
or Mideast Colleges
Thorms More 52, Blutnon 17

Mld.Stales Association

Findlay 49, Toylor 7

Non-coDference action

C..aeale Mello• so, c.. w-. 1
c..tnl SL II,Jac:Doaville St. 17
11ffiD 39, Faim»nt St 21·
TrblilJ, Tu. 31, WOOICir 0
WllmlllfUa S9, Moull SL Jooq&gt;b 49
Wlloolllioll, ODCilllllll7
Wln•b«J3l, Dl. Bonadlcllaoll

220 243

19S t!lll

YOIIIliii-Sl.l l . - - 9

Ohio high school

NA110NAL CONIIERII.NCE

li!ll:.
. . .. . ~. . 'l)ti MWt ·
Pl&gt;lladoipllll ...,.. 7 3 0 .7110 216 174

............. ' 6 0 AiiO 126 till
" N.Y.OI-....... 3 .1 0 .:!00 171 220
Wllill....a ...... 2 I 0 .200 220 l79

Oa. SLXaYior21, 11111iiiAIIl7
Oa. Colnlo 42.DIJ. Wayoo 33
a.. Sl. ....1.. 30, -lloijJIU ll
Dublia 37, ...._ 24 (lOT}
--Yillo 36, a.tlid 29
Waullloa WuhJaatoa 3S PremoDI
..... ll
- - - 21,HIIIIri 14'

c..roiDt.W..

..

w--

.2110 1:1&lt;1

. .••• 2 0 .1110
,.. ---· ' ' 0 .$00
4 6 0 AiiO
Now ato...... 4 6 0 AIIO

LA.--···

-v
-YI

0 .600 lOS 143
0 .$00 " ' 2t7

r,....., . .-. o

'

Cutoa Wc:IClaMJ 17, Tol. SL Joha'a

01.... ........... 6 4 0 AiiO 172 112

DIOoil............ 2' '1

Saturday'• adion
14

..-·~ ··" 7 3 0 .700 224 164

ar.. ..,........ ' •

playoff scores
Dlololool

m

WoiiiYIIII D, -Yillo Cllll. tl

:195 116
200 ll6
179 197
2119 :161

14 - - 20, JIORI'SI,j()UJ11!AST
.
~32.Clo. ~IIIJ21

0.1 1._36, Dla&gt;illo IS

in life is

.

Soutb

:i

Sl. 25
AJab1m1 St. 33, Mill. Valley St 24
AJcoroSI.47, TroySt.44
Appalachian St. 12, W. Carolina 7
Auburn 23, Geor&amp;~a 23, tie
,
Citadel !14, VM114
Clermou 20. Oeoraia ~b 10 r.:
Davidson 37, Bridacwalet,Va.
E. Tenncuce St. 30, liT·Cbanaaoop
AJabam~29, Misaiuippi

.Aorida 48 , South Carolina 17
Aoridlll A&amp;:M 13, Gramblio! St. 0
Aorida St. 23, Notre Dame 6
Georaia Southern 66, Gleoville St. 13
lllinoi1 St. 27, Middle Tcan. 27, lie
Jackson St. .S2, Prairie View7
JIJTICI Madiloo 48, Cpuoccticul 20
Uberty 40, New Havea 22
Mlrlllall ll, Furmaa 14
McNecae St. 28, NW L.ouisiaoa7
Miami 17,1'i1Ubwih 12
Minisaiippi 38, Tulane 0
Moraan Sl. H . Howard 14
N. Carolina St. 24, O..ke 23
NE Louisiana 11 . Kentu cky 14
North Carolina SO. Wate Forest 0
NorthTuu 31,Nicholi1St.l1
Samford 43. Aullio Peav Vi
Sao Jose St. 27, Louisiana T~h 6
SoulhcroMi11. lO,LSU 17
Uf·MII'lin 21, Morehead St. 7
Teone~~ee 24, Memphis I)
TeDBeuet St. 24, Munay St. 21
Tuu A&amp;tM 26, Louinille 10
Valparaiso 30, Ky . We~le~an 21
VirJinia46, Maryland 21
Virginia Tech 41. Rutaer• 34
Wor(ord 54, Charlu:lon Southern JJ

_

This Is Your Invitation To Sell Any Item For $100.00 or Less
And Advertise It FREE.
Simply Clip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted),
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Midwest
Colondo 51 , Koolu 26
Drlte 19, St. Amtf01c 0
E. JlliDOil 21, W. KeDtUCt)' 20
EvaDJville 42. Auron 2l
IWIM Sl. 21, Millollrt II
N. lowa 39, S. Dliooil 7 '
Nellnob 21.1ows Sl. 12
W. Dlioo~ 4!1. Bulfllo 7
Wilallllioll. CiDcielllll 7

Southwest

Arbuai30,N.I1Uoo~

l7
Boylor 19, Rice 14
frNDD 51. 10. To111·EI Puo 30 (lie)
Oldlltona ll, Oklahoma SL 14
SOIIUun Uolv. ll, Telll SotDhero 10
Sllpheo F.AUIIIol4, SW TeaM Sl. l9
Tlllll&lt;ll, lloultoo ll
TeSM Ctriollao 3l , S..lhen Melh. l4
TOIII Tedll9, SW Loulolaal 7
Tukoll, SW lltluouri Slll

Southern's fall athletes were &lt;.:onferent e all-academic selecboqored with an awards banquet tions. Jason Shuler was honored as
and potluck meal Saturday night at a fust-tcam aii-1VC selection with
Southern High School's Charles a 38.2 scoring average, one of the
W. Hayman Gymnasium in Racine. best in the league.
SHS principal Gordon Fisher
Southern's golf team recently
gave lhe welcoming address and completed another successful sea·
served as master of ceremonies for son, posting a 68-45 overall record
the Southern Athletic Boosters for fourth place in the conference.
Club-sponsored event
Southern was in the thick of the
Barbara Lawrence honored TVC race throughout the season
members of her I 994 cheerleading before becoming one of three
squad, praising the girls for lheir 'teams in a 15-leam sectional to
fine effort. Lawrence noted that advance to the district tournament
because the girls cheer during bas· at West Lafayette. Members or the
ketball season as well, additional squad are Anderson, Fisher, Ryan
awards would be presented at the Williams, Ryan Hill, Shuler, Chris
conclusion of basketball season.
Ball Matt Bradford, Kevin Fields,
Members of the cheerleading Jason Lawrence, Ryan Norris and
varsity cbeerleading squad are Tyson Evans.
Brandy Roush , Tracy Pickett.
Head volleyball mentor Jenni
Camilla Yoacham, Amy Northup,
Tassi
Cummins,
Jennifer Roush then honored members of
Lawrence, Tara Michael, Kim the 1994 volleyball squad, which
Roush, Angie Carleton and Kristen pos1ed an 11 -10 overall record,
Hensler.
which was good for third in the
Golf coach Jim Anderson hon- conference. The Southern reserves
ored members of his 1994 golf posted a second-place flnisb in the
club, which featured Mason Fisher 1VC.
I!Dd Brian Anderson as Tri~.Y_alley ~ Fresb01an volleyball pla~ers

•

Lynn Caldwell, Emily Duhl,
Hillary Harris, Brianne Proffitt,
Missy Smith, Amber Thomas and

!

L

--

Andrea Moore, Jess Codner, Kendra Norris and
Samml Sisson. Absent was Renee Turley.

;::':';1

SENIOR WARRIORS- Earnlne special senior awards were
Steve Edwards (right) and Eric Jones.

quarterback Todd Donnan.
"It would be all right with me.
I'd like to say that I chased a Heisman hopeful around," said defensive lineman Will Everett. "Bring
him on up here.'·
Whatever the opponent, Donnan
said, the Herd is aiming at a fourth
consecutive appearance in the 1-AA
championship game and its fifth
overall. Marshall is 1-3 in the title
game, willlling in 1992.
"Anyone we play will have
trouble coming up here and playing. It gives us tremendous advantage to play here," Donnan said. "I
won't be satisfied unless we win it

GOLFERS HONORED - These four golfers
have been a big part or Southern's program over

the past several years. Pidured are (L·R) senior
Ryan Williams, senior Mason Fisher, Bri~n
Anderson, Jason Shuler and coach Jim ~nderson.

.an:!

Donnan threw for 264 yards and
four touchdowns as Marshall overpowered Furman (3 -7, 2-5), outgaining the Paladins 498 yards to
212 and allowing them past midfielil only twice.
.
Donnan was 22-of-33 passing,
while Chris Parker ran for Ill
yards on 24 carries, including an
18-yard score, and Ricky Carter
bad eight caoches for 95 yards and
two touchdowns.
(

Benga/s win again ..._.!:(C~o~nu~·n~ued~fro~m:,:P~aaa:e:..::4t-)- - - .
own ll-yard line with 1:13 left and keep up with the defense. But the

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

tling Cor Matt Stover's 35-yard to scramble and make plays."
field goal that made itl0-0.
Cunningham scrambled out
It was about then Eagles coach once in the second quarler and
Rich Kotite lcnew be was in trou- be aved a long ball toward Fred
ble.
.
Barnell, which resulted in a 47"We just couldn' t get going and yard pass interference call on
you could feel i~" be said.
_ Langham.
Tbe Ea111es were able to turn
The Browns, who lead the
league in fewest points (118) and that miscue into their' only score, a
touchdowns ( 13) allowed in the 15-yard touchdown run by Vaughn
NFL knew they would have to Hebron. But other than that, Cunauack the Eagles offensive line.
ningham and his receivers couldn't
·' Our defense took away the come up with the big plays needed
run •• Johnson said. ''Then all of a to recover from a slow start.
sudden you've got Randall trying
Stover would bit three more
Eric Metcalf's 22-yard punt field goals and Ernest Byner closed
return set up Cleve land at the the scoring wilh a 4-yard run that
Eagles 18. four plays later, Mark came after Cunningham lost a fwnd
b
ble at the Cleveland 13.
: Rypien threw a thrce-yar touc •
Browns coach Bill Belicbick
: down pass to Mark Carrier and the called it the conswnmate team vicBrowns were up 7-0 three mmutes
into the game.
tory.
The Eagles gained six yards in
"I think this game is going to
·
cost Art (Modell, the Browns
three plays on their next posses- owner) a lillie money because I
sion. Cleveland ·got the ball at its
23 and moved again; getting as far gave everyone a game ball," be
as the Philadelphia nine before set-__sru_·d_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

...

gave Blalce the time be needed for
more magic. He ·~it running back
Harold Green on a slant out of the
backfield for a "31-yard gain, then
stood in against heavy pressure to
complete a 50-yarder to Pickens.
The 6-foot-2 receiver jumped over
6-fool Cris Dishman to gather in
the jump ball atlbe Houston 22.

offense held its own Sunday bebmd
two backups.
Tolliver, making his second
start in three weeks for an injured
Cody Carlson, completed 20-of-34
for 152 yards and a pair of touchdowns. Lorenzo White toOk over
when Gary Brown bruised his knee
in the fii'SI balf and rush~d for 95
yards on 16 carries. including a 17:
B.lalce picked himself up, hand- yard touchdown that put the Oilers
: ed off a couple times, then turned ahead 24-17 in lbe 1hlrd quarter.
· ·matters over to Pelfrey, who bil six
Blake threw a 50-yard touch: field goals last week in ~ 20-17 down pass to Pickens to tic i~ then
: overtime victory over Seattle.
beaded for the X-ray f09m while
Blake finished 23-of-33 for 354 Tolliver led the Oileu down the
yards and the ftrst fOL!f·touchdown field for !heir go-ahead score.
. perfonnance by a Bengals quanerBengals running back Steve
· back since 1989. Pickens bad II Broussard was taken off lbe field ·
calches for 188 yards and three on a stretcher after getting leveled
··touchdowns.
while blocking with four minutes
. The Oilers have slruggled to left in the game. There was no
. iheir first losing seasdn since 1986 word on the seriousness of his
because their offense has failed to injury.

Cynthia CaldweU.
Members of the varsity squad
included Jessika Codner, Andrea
Moore, Kendra Norris, Amy
Weaver, Jennifer Cummins, Jennier Lawrence, Bea Lisle, Jonna
Manuel, Sammi Sisson and Renee
Turley.
Special volleyball awards went
to Weaver (defensive specialist and
all-academic team), Moore (most
kills with 80 and all-academic
team), Codner (110% award), Norris (best serving percentage-94%l
and Sisson (Most aces and assists,
best spiking and setting percentage
with a 94%). Turley, wbo was
absent. bad the most blocks. Sisson
also was a first-team all-TVC
seleclion , while she and Moore
were first-team all -District 13
choices. Moore was also an honorable-mention ,.all-TVC selection.

__

VOLLEYBALL HONOREES - Special vol·
leyball awards went to (L-R) Amy Weaver,

First-year bead football coach
Joe Hemsley honored members of
his 1994 grid team, cbaracterizing
!hem as the team of lbe future.
Hemsley stated, "The effort was
fantastic. Next year we'll take it
one step further. We bad 22 players
that legitimately earned a letter. I
can't say enough about their dedication. I want 10 see a lot of them
in the wail room Ibis off season."
Southern bad seven freshmen
and six sophomores, wbich 'compri se beuer than half the team.
Freshman honorees included Derek
Smith, Mall Rime. Joe Flowers,
Scooter Fryar, Jason Writesel, Mau
Dill and Michael Ash. Ash was one
of the leading rushers and receivers
on the team. Sophomores included
Tyson Buckley, Jamie Evans,
Danny Ftsber, Joe Kirby Jr., Travis
Lisle and Jesse Maynard . David
Rose was the manager.
Evans, a sophomore running
back, rushed for more than 500
yards and two 100-yard games
while leading the team with 103
tackles (74 solos included) and five
fumbl e recoveri es. Evans was
named the team' s top defensive
play~'f. Evans was also recognized
for earning first-team 3Uifri- Valley Conference honors:
Another sophomore , Jesse
Maync.rd threw for more than '700
yard s passing and led the team at
quarterback to earn the Best Offensive Player Award. Hemsley indi cated that Maynard could very well
be lhe f~tst Southern passer 1o reach
the 3,000 yard mark, say in g "it's
not out of the queslion."
Southern juniors honored were
Jason Barnell, Paul Flowers, John
Harmon , Jeremy. John ston. Jay
McKelvey, Brian Pagel and Nick
Smith . Earning . special senior
awards were Ste ve Edwards and
Eric Jones.
Special Awards included "No
Fear" awards prese nted 10 Brian
Pagel, Mall (Pork) Dill and Milce
Ash. Most Improved Awards went
to Paul Flowers and Jay McKelvey.
FISher announced those athletes
who earned TVC all-academic sla- ·
tus. Tb"ft is achieved by students
meeting the criteria of letiCring in a
varsity spon and maintaining a 3.5
grade-poitlt average or above. Most
of Southern's athletes were in the
3.8 range 01 better. Jennifer
Lawrence led the elite list with a
4.0 average, with Kendra Norris at
3.97 3 and the others very close
behind. Other nominees were Amy
Weaver, Mason Fisher, Brian
Anderson, Jason Barnett, Andrea
Moore and Jay McKelvey.
Fisher gave the closing address.
Stephanie Ash gave the benediction.

'•

•'·'

I

,,
I.
I.

John Olerud, star first baseman
for Toronto, went directl y to the
Blue Jays from Washington Slate
Universoty.
.
FOORALL AWARDS PRESENTED- The following athletes
earned special recognition at Southern's fall sports banquet Satur- ·
day. In front are (L·R) Brian Pagel and Mall Dill. Seated are Eric
Jones, Jeremy Johnston and S_ttve Edwards. Standing are Paul FlowerS, Jamie Evans, Jesse Maynard, Jay McKehey and Jason Barnett.

,,

IO,ICE
On Saturday, November 19,1994, from 8:00 a .m. until
4:00 p.m., the Leading Creek Conservancy District will be
installing a new valve on their 250,000 gallon elevated
storage tank near Danville. In order to install the valve, 'this
tank, which supplies all water to the majority of our
customers on the east end of the water system, must be
drained and out of service during this time period.

·Beef

· Horae
· O.ao')'
• POultry

• RaDtlll
·Pat FOOds

18% BUCKEYE DOG FOOD
50 LBS. -

'8.30

12% BEEF PELLETS

so Las.- '4.55

1994 DEER
CHECKING STATION
FEEDS

* NAPA AUTO PARTS
*INTERSTATE BATTERIES
*GROCERIES

Non . . F,i.
S'OO A M. • g,oo PM
sat
6:00A.M. · WhiG PM

WE ARE YOUR ONE STOP .
* GAS* DIESEL* GROCERY* FEED

WORTH THE IJNIIII-

All customers east of Danville on SR 325, SR 124, SR 7,
SR 143, SR 684, and all county, township, etc. roads off
from these state roads will be supplied by the District's
20,000 gallon tank on Horner Hill. Because this tank will
provide only a limited volume of watet,' .the District urges· all
customers to prepare for this outage by stocking up on
Fr.iday night and by conserving water on Saturday. After
service is restored, the District's employees will be flushing
·all lines, so customer can expect some discoloration for the
next few days. After service is restored, al'l customers in
the affected area should boil all water used for human
consumption for 3 minutes until further notice.
Those customers at lower elevations may not
experience any slgni!lcant changes In their water pressure,
however, . please be considerate of those on the higher
elevatic;ms and use water only when absolutely necessary.
The more water drained down from the hills, the more air
the District has to flush and the longer time to restore
service to all. Your cooperation during this period will be
greatly appreciated.
I

I

Brent A BoliJI,' General Manager
, Leading Creek ConHrvancy District
II

I .

I'

were Crystal B8J'IIet~ Valerie Cun- Warden, Kelly Swisher, Ranelta
diff, Jenny Friend, Jayroe Miller, Wheeler and Jennifer Yeauger.
Jenny Roush, Hillery Turley, Stacy ·
Reserve players included Keri

Browns win .. --..:&lt;::::Co;..;;nu;;;;."n;;;.:ued;.:;.;:;_fro;..;;m;.;.P.;;;:ag:.:.e.:.:4l_ ___

East Carolina 23, Cent. Aorida 20

Da)'loo 42, San Dieao 24

NFL stBildings

801ton Collcac 31, S)'I'Kllse 0
Boston U. 21 , Anny l2
,
Brown '27, Dartmouth 14
Colaate 31, Bucbcll7
Columbia 38, Corncll33
Delaware St. 28, Rhode lJI111d 26
Duqueue 14, Cani1ius 0 ·
Oeoraetown, D.C. 41, St. Peter' a 7
Hof11ta 41, Delaware 41 , tic
Lafa)&lt;lte l4,Fordllam6
Ldliih 29. Holy C1011ll
M•ist 4.S , Siena 19
Monmouth , N.J. 14, Ceot. Counect.icut

ll

Southern~s fall athletes honored at awards banquet

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Although Marshall is taking a
IJrief re~pite nQw, th~! i!~ ~gular
season is over, it's still keeping an
eye on the Southern Conference
race and the NCAA Division 1-AA
playoffs.
. The Thundering Herd (10-1, 7-1
conference),•ranked No. 2 in Divi• sion 1-AA, .fmished Salurday with a
35-14 victory ·over Furman.
Marshall is practically assured
of a playoff berth and will have
next weekend off before beginning
the postseason.
It is half a game ahead of
Appalachian SLaiC (6-1), which fin-ishes its conference schedule next
week against VMI.
If Appalachian State somehow
loses at home to winless VMI (0·
10), Marshall will win the title. If
Appy State wins, il will share the
title with the Herd,
There bas been speculation that
Marshail will host Alcorn State and
its Heisman Trophy-contending
quarterback, Steve McNair, in a
first-round' gapte.
"I'd love it. I'd like to see what
be can do in person," said Herd

New Hrmplllite 21 , Villaooval4
Northenstern 23, Maine 16
Penn 33, Hwvtttd 0
Princeton 19, Yllle6
Robert Moo-i1 37, Mercyllunt 27
StJoho's, NY21 , Jona7
~
Towson St 48, 5. Conoectian 0
Waper ll, Sl. Frao&lt;~, Po. 13
West Viraillia .S.S, Temple 11
Yo110ptowo St. 21, Mwacbweltl 9

I)

Other Ohio
college scores

Football

Miami ............... 1 l 0 .100
Buffalo.............. l 4 0 .ll6
N.Y. leu ........... S l 0 .,00
todiwpDI~ ..... 4 6 0 .400
New EI&gt;JIIaod .... 4 6 0 .400

St

0 .300

Notthwcatau II PcllO Scate
ladiaoa at Pwdue
llliDOil at.WiJCODiiD
Iowa at Minneaota

Ott..n reee.. lne 't'otltt Clemson 68 ,
OHIO ST. 156, Oklohomo SL l2, Rutpn
45, AubwD 42, OreFD SL 21, Marytaad
27, CreiJhloD 17, Notre Dame U, DePN
12, Viralnia Teeh II, SID D1e1o St. 6, .
Toledo 6, Mioauota S, Moolaaa S,
Stephea p, Auatln S, Wiscouia 4, M•·
queue 3, Orcaou 3, BOWUNO OREEN
2, NW Louisl ~ 2. New Mclleo St. I ,
Soulha'D Methoda~; I.

Ira

1.00
.121
.100
.600
.100
.llO
.lOO
.410
0 .500
I .llO

Mic:hipilt OIDOSTATE

14

l)

0
0
o
o
o
I
l
I

This week's slate.Sat.

ll

••8l

9
I
1
6
s
l
4
4

Saturdoy'ucores

I)

199
116
99
91

0
0
o
o
o
I
l
I

L I fd. ,

PenD Sr.~e ,,,llliooil 31 •
OIDOSTATE ll,lndlaoal1
Mic:hipa 38, MialleiOtl '22
Michipa So•e 42, Pllrdue 30
Iowa 49, Nonhwellera 13
WUcoasin l8, CioeiaDili 7

20
' ll
19
II

lll

0
2
2
3
l
l
)
4

I ~.ll

\

Major college scores

Onnll ·

0
l
3
4
l
4
4
l
Indiana ............. l l 0 l 5
Nor1hweotera .. .l l 0 l 6
Mii'Ulcaotl ........ l 6 0 1 7

Lui

Iuaa

.W L

during Houston's go-ahead drive.
He returned to a standing ovation bounded off the cart and led
the 'Ben gals to a win that·erased
their tag as the NH..' s worst team
- the Oilers are in the basement
alone now.
Carl Pickens turned a one-band·
ed catch into a game-tying 2{}-yard
touchdown reception with 2:34 left,
the final moment in a 71-yard drive
in which Blake somehow dodged
the all-out blitzes long enough to
get rid of the ball.
· '
The Bengals took over on their
(See BEN GALS on Page 5)

The Daily Sentlne~age . 5

Marshall hands Furman 35-14
loss in regular-season closer

Rc&amp;Jonal Rnai.. S•t~~rii•T
Mc[Nnald (11 .0) VI . New Washington
Bu ckeye Ceottal (1 0· 1) 11 Lake S'luc
Streak Stadium. Harlville. 7 p.m.
Dclpho1 St. John 's (11·0) vs. L.eip5ic
(10.1) at Lima Stadium, 7 p.m.
Beallsville (10· 11 vs . Columbiana (11 ·
0) at Hardina Stadium. Steubenville . _7
p.m.
.
Cedarville (11-0) VI. St. Henry (~1) at
Wertz Stadium. Piqua, 7 p.m.

Big Ten standings
' c:..t;:_

1661h draft pick in 1992 wbo won
AFC offensive player of the week
honors last week by throwing for
387 yards in only his second ~
start. His encore Sunday was sunply fairylale as be bounced off. the
X-ray table to lead two late drives
on his bruised Iefl ankle.
The Oilers (1-9) were on the
verge of breaking lheir losing
streak - now at six games when Billy Joe Tolliver threw a
five-yard touchdown pass to Webster SlaughiCr for a 31-241ead with
5:51 left. Blake was carted to the
locker room for X-rays on his ankle

Division VI

Preu' prCICUOn womn'• ~Ileac t.ket·
thea~,

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Jeff
Blake may piiSS for more yards and
win bigger games in his career, llut
none will be more theatrical.
Limping severely on a bruised
ankle that required X-rays in the
fourth quarter, Blake threw four
touchdowns passes Sunday and a
50-yard completion that set up the
Cincinnati Bengals' second straight
win. Doug Pelfrey bil a 40-yard
field goal as time ran out for a 3431 victory over the Houston Oilers.
The victory added to the already
immense legend of Blake - a

R•1ion.l fin.ls-FrldiJ

Ball State at Kent
OHJOIIAkroD
Toledo at E. MiehiPD
W. Michipa M SW Louiliau

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio

Bengals b~at Oilers 34-31
to get secohd straight win

p.m.

This week's slate.Sat.

Tho Top 2S leama in the A.Noeiatod

when Philadelphia's Herschel
Walker returned the ball to the
Eagles 22. But Rich Miano was
caught holding, pushing Philadelphia back to its 12.
The backward movement didn't
stop there. After a one-yard run,
Randaii Cunningham threw a pass
that bounced off Mark Bava ro's
hands and was nearly intercepted
by Antonio Langham . On third
down, Michael Dean Perry sacked
Cunningham, forcing the Eagles tcr
punt from lbeir two.
"I don't know if it set the tone,
but it sure got us on the board," ·
Perry said. "We wanted to get after
Randall, and make him aware of ·
the rush. You can't let him get a ·
chance to look down. field. If you
get to him quick, it was going to
disrupt his groove."
(See BROWNS on Page 5)

With help from Blake's arm,

Division 111
Realontl nnab-Frld~J
Beloit W. Bram:h ( 11-0) vs. Twins;bwa
Chamberlin (8-1) at Mollenkopf SLadium,
Wamn. 7:10p.m.
Avon Lake (1 1·0) vs. Clyde (11)· 1) II
Sttobel Field, Sandusky , 1:30 p.m.
Cots. DcSaJet (11 ·0) vs . Steubenville
(11 -0) 8l Fawcett Stadium, Canton, 7:30

Olhen nctldna 'ote11 SYfiC\liC Ill,

Air Force-4,6. North Carolina S'S, Illiooil

Co..t.

N~NMU~~lernct

Realonll nnalt·FridiJ
O.ardoo (11·01 vo. Parma Padua (9·2)
'at DiBiDio Stadiwn. Euclid, 7:30p.m. '
C\Jy. Fall I Walsh Jesuit (10· 1) VI. 0..
fiaace (10· 1) at Arlin Field, Mansfield,

N.Y. OiaDllat Houatoo, 9 p.m.

6

Pwllk DhUI011
Goldco Stale ............ S 0 1.00
Portland ................... 3 0 1.00
Sacramento .............. )
I .1S9
Sesltle ...................... l
I .110
PhOenia .................... J 2 .600
L.A. Lakm ...... ........l
4 .m
L.A. Clippao ...........0 l .000

players going to get their just due?
By JOHN F. BONFATII
PHILADELPHIA (AP)- Max· This ~ame right here was a respect
.
i~Jobnson knows who's in first lhing. •
Cleveland
(8-2)
cenainly
earned
p
in lhe AFC Cenlral. And, as
s e nearly corrected a shopper a lot of respecl from the Eagles,
who also came into the game 7-2
while slmlling through a mall but who were considered signifiit's not the Pittsburgh Steelers.
It's the team Maxine's son Pep- canlly beuer than the Browns. if
per plays on , the Cleveland only because they had played better
Browns, whose status as .the NH..'s competition.
"They're very effective running
least-known Super Bowl contender
is bound to change following their and passing the ball. They came up
26· 7 domination of the Pbiladel· with the big play when they needed
it," Eagles linebacker Bill
pbia Eagles on Sunday.
.
Johnson told tbe story about his Romanowski said. "They beat us
mother as be spoke about Browns in all phases of the game."
The Browns moved the ball well
and bow tbey have been glossed
over - even in Cleveland - when with a low-risk offense. But, as bas
been the case all season for Clevetalk turns to lhe AFC' s top teams.
"People still are wondering if, land, it was a bani-tackling defense
without the baseball strike, the and high-quality special teams play
Indians were going to win the pen- · that set up the victory.
It started on the opening kickoff.
nant," be said . "When are the

Westerville South (10· 1) va . Dublin
(10-1 ) at Upper Arlinaton Memorial Stl·
diurn, 7 p.m
Cin . Colerain (11 ·0) n . Cia . St.
Xavier (9-1) al Nippen Stadium. Ciocin· ,
natJ, 7:30p.m

Philadelphia II. ArlzoDI. 4 p.m.
TaJllla Bay at Seattle, 4 p.m.
L.A. Rams at San Francisco, I p.m.

Monday, November 14,1994
·
Page--4

Browns defeat Eagles 26·7

Ohio high school
playoff pairings

Akton, 1:30 p.m.

Atlanta 11 Deaver, 4 p.m
New Orlewll LA. R~ dlll. 4 p.m.

N.Y. Jell II MiaDaotl, 4 p.m.

Ium

Now WIIIIIID)IIoo BU&lt;keyo Ceolral 12,
CUylhop HelihU 9
St. Heory ll. Tipp Cily Bethel 3

. Dl&gt;lslon I

WllhiDI\011 II Dallu, I p.m.

The ·Daily Sentinel

0

Reldonll nn~~t-Sahardlr
Cle. St.lanaliw (10· 1) va. Stronpville
(1{).1 ) a1 Byero Field. Parma, 7 p.m.
Canton McKioley (9·2 ) VI. Massillon
Wash inal on (10-1) at Rubber Bowl ,

Miami at PiUsbW'&amp;h, I p.m
San Dieao 11 New EaaJand, 1 p.m

WESTERN CONFERENCE

McDouaJd 17, Thompaou Led&amp;eJDODt

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Here n
lhe pairinaa for lhe reaional aemifinala
and fioala of the Ohio Hiah School fool·
ball playoffs.

Buffalo ll Pihlbuf'lh, 9 p.m.

l .S

Sports

LeiPiit 20, Dvla Hardin Nortlleru 0

Monday, NoVember 14, 1994

, I

"'

'

I

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'

�~ Page -~The Daily Sentinel

....
'

Monday; Nove_mb8r 14, 1994

Pomeroy-Middlep,ort, Ohio

~ ~------~------------~--~-----------~----~~--------------------------~----~--

Nowm'* 14, 1914

Readers__·across the country give ·911 system thumbs-up
·

Ann
Landers

and good luck, des.' Her warmth ., Three limes, my wife has had to caD
andcooceminademefeelasthough 911 on my behalf. Each lime, the

a strong arm were around my
shoulders.
.
.
The paramedics were ternfic.
~,::-.&lt;;:.~':.
Th~y ~ad my hus~nd breathing
c••.,,., .,.,.....
a~ m about a .mmute and took
htm to the hospual. Th~ same
Dear Ann Landers: I read the . young men called tJM: hospuallater
letter praising the 911 service in . to see !low he w~ domg.
Saaamento. This is to let you know
My ~usband died four days later,
that Stockton, Calif., alSo has a lot but I wtU always be grate~ul to those
to brag abouL
wonderful_~ple who tried so hard
Three years ago, my husband 10 save hiS hfe. •• AUDREY IN
coltapsedifu the middle of the nighL STOCKTON
I caUed 911, and the dispatcher kept
FROM SAN PABLO, CALIF.:
me on the line, giving instruelions You asked how many other cities
on what to do until the emergency could brag about their 911
vehicle arrived. Before she rang off, emergency services. Well, I live in
she said. "Keep your courage up, San Pablo, and ours, too, is terrific.

~

,

;
!

~

:

•

,
;
:
•
:.

response came within three minutes.
Twice, the paramedics needed to use
lifesavin,l! techniques. Another time,
our neighbors called 911 because
someone had broken into our house.
To make emergency service work,
two things are required: a good
emergency service and alen, caring
neighbors. we have both.
FaD River, Mass.: My ex-fl&amp;liCC
lried 10 get into my house through
the window. 1 called 911 at 3 a.m.,
and the response was immediate.
They arrested the so-and-so for
violating a restraining order and he
never bothered me after that:
Big Lake, Minn.: A thunderstorm
knocked out our phone system. We

hve 6 miles from the nearest town
4 mil.es from the main highway anci
SO m1les from the Twin Cities. Later
that evening, a police car appeared.
The officer asked if my husband and
I were having "a domestic." I said,
"No. My husband isn\ even home.'
The officer said, "Well, we had a
911 signal from your phone, and the
dispatcher could not· call you back,
so we thought we'd beacr check it
ouL" Our phone was fixed the next
day.
Garland, Texas: My spouse and I
manage an apartment complex.
Reeently, a child was playing with
the phone and accidentally dialed
911 and hung up. Dispatchers caUed
back and spoke with the mother. She
said, "Everything is fmc," but they

kept her on the line alld sent two
police cars out to make certain. They
arrived within three minUtes. If our
911 service responds that well to a
fall!l atann, you can rest assume! !hey
wiU be Johnny on the spot for real
emergencies.
·
Louisville, Ky.: Several months
ago, I was awakened by a man who
wu duowing nx:ks at my bedroom
window· and tearing my screens. I
am a 29-year-old single woman, and
this scared me 10 death. I called 911,
and a love! y lady srayed on the
phone until the police arrived. I
thank my lucky stars the dispatcher
was there •• not only for
instructions on how to defend
myself but for the emotional

WANTED: COMMUNTY SKILLS IN81RUCT·

suppon as welL

DEAR READERS: Thanks to the
hundreds who wrote 10 brq abOut
their 911 servica. With 10 lltuclt
negativism m. days, m. 1..-.
of praise wm ll'ltly refreshinJ. ;
~"

Is /ift passi11g 1011 by? WGIIl' 10
improvt your sodalll:ills? Wrilt for
Ann Ltuukrs' lltW bo/Mkt, "HtJW.to

Make Frie11ds and Stop Being

LoM/y.• Send Q st/f~. long,
biiSintss·sizt t1111t/opt and a cW
or mot~ty ortkr for $4.15 (this 111c/1/Ms postage and luwllillg) tp:
Friends, clo Ann l.Dnderl. P.O. B'Jix

11562,Chicago,IU.606ll.a562.(1n

COIIIJd4. send $5.05.)

•

cinating when be killed Polonius,
who says iii the play: "Though this
be madness, ye( there is method In
't.''

the prosecution, led by Cook
County Board President Richard
Phelan and William Bauer, former
chief judge of the 7th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals, argued Hamlet
was a brilliant tactician plotting to
avenge his father's murder.
Almost .700 people paid $200
each to attend tbe sold-out trial Saturday nigl;ll at the An Institute of
Chicago. The event was part of the
fifth annual Chicago Humanities

Festival, and the money will be actor in a fur-lined tunic, sat glumused to subsidize otberofestival ly and uttered no "to be, or not to
events. Kennedy, wbo devised the be" soliloquies.
·
.
idea to put Hamle't on Uial, said be
He was surrounded by "the
intended the sbow to be education- heartache and the thousand natural
al.
.
shocks" of lawyers wearing eKpenLawyers presented opening sive suits and sipping mineral
statements, questioned two expert water, resisting any urge to call
witnesses and gave closing argu- them ''arrant knaves, all."
ments before a jury of local gov- . The often whimsical trial
ernment officials and intellectuals. focused on the scene in Shake·
The panel ruled I0-2 that Hamlet speare's tragedy when Hamlet
was sane and, thus, responsible for beard rustling behind a curtain,
his actions.
lunged with bis sword and killed
The defendant, played by an the_biding Polonius.

Doctors have 'bad hair days,' too
perately to help ouier unfortunates
health-care system.
- By PETER H. GOTI, M.D.
I should tell you that on some who are somehow less well-off
DEAR DR. GOTT: I read your
·. column regularly and notice tbat days, my hair stands up straight all tban we, and - finally, be persuad·
your picture depicts you with day. At otber times, when I am ed for a few hours that it could
. messy bair on the back of your readilig a good book or goilig to the have been worse after all. This is
theater, my hair probably lies flaL now the fashion.
~ head. The picture does not change.
Therefore, if you don't mind,
: I realize that neat hair does not · rm not too sure about Ibis, but I' II
: indicate your capabilities as a doc- check it out with my secretary, who I'm going to take the position that
my messy hair is the consequence
:· tor, however, surely your b3ir can- is amazingly perceptive.
Maybe my picture .is sort of an of being a helpless victim of the
: · not be in disarray EVERY day. Is it
· · possible that you could have anoth- average representation, showing present health-care debacle, which
'· er photo taken on a beuer "hair only balr my hair (on the back) is unlikely to be reformed, because
day"? It would certainly display standing up. Actually. my hair isn't tbe president has been unable to
that great; I just have a lot of it.
present a viable alternative to
: your distinguished good looks.
There's an irresistible compul- Congress.
DEAR READER: Although
In short, it's Bill Clinton's (ault.
I've never made a big issue out Qf sion sweeping over the American
Believe me, with my loots ,
- it, !JIY hair is probably_messy public righ! nqw: l!!e urge to be a
: . because I wear it short and have a victim. A victim of anything; it another photo simply isn't going to
doesn't matter. By becoming a help.
· .cowlick.
However, I suppose we must nation of victims, we can ignore
DEAR DR. GOTT: Is there any• consider alternative explanations. responsibility for our actions, thing better for gout than Zostrix7
- Now that you bring it up, I proba- behavior and thinking. Then we
DEAR READER: Zostrix is a
. ' bly have more "bad hair days" can feel powerless and resentful, cream that is useful in treatilig the
::.. now than I used to. This is because blame others for our deficiencies, pain of certain nerve disorders,
: · I, like other practicing physicians, join a self-help group, spend an such as diabetic neuropathy. II is
·· am increasingly affected by the hour a week whining about our lot not appropriate as an acute treat;· cbaos and disarray of the present in life, wallow in self-pity, try des- ment for gout; colchicine or anti'

~

NYPD Blue's' producer's comments
.: ·at .seminar on racism spark debate
1

. By LYNN ELBEit
That drew criticiSm from Carol
. · AP Television Writer
Munday Lawrence, chairwoman of
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Sup- tbe Writers Guild of America. porters of the producer and co-ere- West's black writers committee.
.. ator of "NYPD Blue" said hon."This man is an employer of
esty, not a racist rant, was the writers. He has revealed attitudes
~· intent of bis comments at a semiliar
shared by others in the industry."
: last month.
she said, noting that a small numDavid Milch, a writer known for ber of TV and fibn projects - less
•. thoughtful, provocative work, said than 4 percent- are written by
, ·
his remarks at the Oct. 15 writers .minorities.
workshop, which included his
The seminar comments were
labelilig himself racist, were taken reported Friday in The Washington
Pos,l. which received an audio tape
out of context.
"Racism is a tenible, terrible of tbe proceedings.
Franklyn Ajaye, a black comedi·
· thing, and David was trying to
· challenge the writers to look at an and writer at tbe seminar, said
their own prejudices," said the be was not offended by Milch's
Rev. Chris Donahue, trustee of the remarks.
Human Family Educational and
"I don't reaiiX think be's
Cultural Institute, sponsor of the racist," Ajaye said. 'I've had dealings with bim in the past and never
· seminar.
In discussing a previous seminar felt that."
He noted that "NYPD Blue"
be held for writers, Milch said that
· four of the 30 wbo auended went character Andy Sipowicz (actor
; on to success. "None of them are Dennis Franz) saw his racism chalblack. None of tbe black writing lenged last season by his black
commander, Lt. Arthur Fancy
was any good." he said.
,J

GOTT, M.D.

inflammatory drugs, such as
Indocin, are preferable.
Attacks or painful gouty arthritis
can often be prevented by taking
daily doses of the prescription
medicines Zyloprim or Colbenemid. Your doctor can advise you. .

Milch issued a statement and
declined 'to be interviewed. He and
series co-creator Steven Bocbco
affirmed their commitment 'to
diversity.
"The seminar I gave was an
attempt to describe the processes of
writing and not a presentation of
political or social values," Milch
said. "Even though my COllliJlents
were distorted and taken out of
context, I apologize to anyone who
may now interpret them !5 offensive ot hunful.

'·

. KODYWOLFE

Glass
Newpapers
Computer Paper

~ Wolfe

birth.
:ann'ounced
' Joe and BcttyAoa Wolfe,
· Pomeroy, armouuce the birth of_a
; son Kody Dean, Oct. 6, at tbe
• Holier Medical Center, Gallipolis+ ·
: The Infant weighed seven
pounds, II ounces and was 21
·. mclles tong.
! Maternal grandp11rents are
1
: Joseph· and Alberta Loftis of .
· Pomeroy. Paternal grandparents are
· WiiS6111 1114 Anna Wolfe of Racilie.

Overbrook Center

"•\.1l·, .

l

I

''I have never conducted business in a racist manner and Steven
Bochco and I remain committed 10
finding qualified writers, minority
or otherwise."

Plastic I &amp; 2
Magazines
White Office Paper

AIUillinum Sheet
Copper &amp; Brass
Stainless Steel
CAT. Converters
Radiators

Public Notice

Pubic Nollce

Wtth ........ FIN Pro11C110n
RESOLUTION 11.14
IJgiJICIII ln Mila• County In
BE IT RESOI:VED, by the
Council of the Vlllqe of 11111-ofOhlo.
PASSED Nov. 7, 11114
Pomeroy, 11111111111111'1:
Kelby HyHII,
That the Vltlege of
Cllfk·
TmiiUI'8r
Po1111roy hereby wteb11 to
John lluiHr, PNeldent
antar Into an egreemenl (11) 14,
21; 2TC

.

Real Estate General

••
••

•••

••
•
••
••
~

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I

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•

CHESTER- Sr 248- This beau1Hul1

floor slonellrame home

MIDDLEPORT· Hartinger Plwy.· This nice one floor frame
hOme features 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, utility room, 2 fireplaces,
newer FANG furnace, perma-payne windows, paneling,
caiJ)GI &amp; vinyl flooring, front silting porch and shed.
ASKING $35,0110

'

POMEROY· Crew Rd.· This 2 story, contemporary home, 1+
years old Includes, 4 bedrooms. 2 112 baths, double glass
windows. caiJ)Gt, heat pump wiC.A.. C &amp; S elec., TPC water,
patio, deck, TV anl9111111, dishwasher. relrigara1or, microwave,
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N.G.F.A. heal, 80x100+ lot Home has newer wiring,
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on paved street.
ASKING $29,500
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bedrooms, 1 bath, 2 car garage. ou1buildlngs. fenced yard,
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ASKING $43,500
HENRY E. CLELAND.......................................... 992-6191
TRACY BRINAGER.............................................94&amp;-2439
SMERRI HI\AT.....................................................742·2357
HENRY E. CLELANQ IH ....................................... 992-6191
KATHY ClfLAND................................................ 992-6191
OFRCE................................................................. 992-2259
FAX ....................................................................... 992-6009

12 ~ieces of Chicken
or 11/2 Rotisserie Chicken

At the movies:
~Miracle on
34th Street'

•

By BOB THOMAS
Aaodltted Pnss Writer
.
As a prolific maker of popular entertainments,
Jobn Hups often bas been disdained by film crilics.
They IIII8Ck such juvenile offerings of the producer·
writer-director u "Pretty In Pink." "Sixteen Candles" and "Ferris Bueller's Day Off."
He receives grudging credit for more acceptable
: films such u ''The Breakfast Club," "Planes. Trains
: and AuiOliiObiles" and "Home Alone."·

95

•
•

No Coupons Neccessary
Offer Good Thru November 30, 1994

:

News thai John Hughes planned to remake "Mira-

: c:le on 34th Street" must have chilled these same
critics. Af'lcr all, George Seaton's sentimental classic

suaar.

·

: oe ~osp~m~(:udo 11• Wbal redeemed the t947 original

CROW'S
FAMILY. RESTAURANT

: wi's die flawless jlerformanoe of Edmund Gwenn u

: JCria Kriaale. Ricbard Atteoborouab ,delivers tbe
;" ume fOr die 1994 "Miracle OD 34tb S!RlCL" He Is
· ~
.
:
Huabes' ICript ptaces the rum In tbe context or
: todlly'a ~at atore wan. Elizabeth P'eltlns, an
• exccudve or the old-line Cote Stote. finds the per· .
: · feet Santa Cleua fot the IIOI'e' s Cbrislmas season. He
: Ia etteery, bearded. roty-poly, a wbiz with kids. He
: even calb hlmvlfKris Knngle.

.

992-5432

·

In trulb, it was not sueb a b!ld Idea. SllaJtdy modemlt.ed, Jbe piece bas the advantage ofcolor. and a bit

/

\

• Craftsman Toole
• Toya
•Guns
Loads of Mlac.
Buy-Sell-Trade
992 •2060 Hll!/1 mo.

. Pomer~y

r.

·.

105 Second St., Pomeroy, OH.
(above Bank One)
~..L"-" Tel. No. (614) 992-5730 ~..L"-"
General Practice of Law including:
Divorces, Real Estate &amp; Business 111, 11 , mo.

m

BISSELL BUILDERS, IIIC.

Stud Nrvice &amp; puppies,
yoong eclltts lor aale.

Locally

Raclne,Oh

992·3838

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages e Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Specializing ln Part-colors

tor show anc1 companions.
48750 Mill Hill Rd.
614-848-2487

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Ugllt Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mls. Jobs.

Bill Slack
992·2269

lack Hoe
S.nlca
Hay for Sale
Dol• Wllllalftl
Gnlral
C.atractlag
I bCIYitlag

'1

1'1

~:\:! tr'!::'::.O.~

Prlco sso.oo 114-el2-7194

4

&amp;Gravel

~

'

VInyl a Alum. Siding,

Rooting, VInyl
Aepleemenl
Wl!ldoWII, Blown
lnau!Mion, Storm
. Doo1'8,Storm
Wl!ldoWII, Gltregu.
F,..Eatlm....
tiHIMtmo.

Howard L. Wrltesel
ROORNG
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

American General Life &amp; Accident Ins. Co.

949-2168

.,,_rfN

INSU LATE NOW!
Up t o 800 Sq. Ft. of 6"

fJI,mr ,-Jil Owens-Corning
l n~u l ation

Attrcs Walls.

5 1q2.00.

Cretwspace

BROOKS IN SU L ATION
985-4345

Sllaoting Match
Baley Run Rd.
legian Farm
Tine 1:00 pm Nov. 20
Fadary Cholte Guns

614·843·5264
Lifc • Medicare • Cancer • Fire
Health • Accident • Annuity •IRA • Mortgage

R~id~ons.

~:::::::::::::::==========~
..

Concrete, Etc.
Fall Special
Get 25 yr. shingles for
the pnce of 20 year
(61~ 388·9865
P. . Box220
Bidwell, Oh 45614

Kenny's Auto RentaI
Kenny's Is the place to come
when ·you need a car rental.
We h11rte C11rs 1111d VII liS!

. CONSTRUOION
•New Homes
•Garages
oComplete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
915-4473
7fDJSO

Kenny's Auto Center
264 Upper River Rd.

.• OH 45631
B
(614) 446 9971
GallipoliS
L.,-.,;.......;.
_ _ _ _ _ _us_.

In order to be considered,

~

ial;;;;
..~.=;whll;;,io~ca1;:-;lo;;,;;ib;i;e.;l
opoytd. 30W75~

CD C.. • Disco, ~..:.~..:.~=· ~
Port&lt;lng Lot Au- 313
&amp;unctrng, 114-446• ·
9314.
~-. CioN• naodad.
1.011: Roworctl z Huoldeo Bioca ~• Rid On Adom.-.tlll Rood fRio FIIII-Tllnl Sorvtce TICIInlclon
Orondo AI... 11 Found Or Hava For -lng. 1Ur Cond!Jior!lno, 1
lnlormo11on, Pleaoo call 114-24S. AolllgonJIOn, AIIDiv In 946
. _3;.;.·--•14-_38_~_-m.:.:...:.•·-------l OrSind_....,to:Yotiio-LOST: WhMe Engi!M Polnlor ""'
'-I~ P.oo ~- -· AJo
1o. 0114'1iriJ..
- -.
011
Wl1h Rid Colllt In' T h o - -...,

Rldgo
AroL
REWARD For Go
Go-.,
RM.um, c.n
, ..~llhO.
~
- - no
5 NIIIIJ,
n U110

Yard Sale

7

614-992-6223

Chuck Stotts

Free

Estimates
. Insurance Work Welcome

!!hart Naito.,

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Qaily, weekly &amp; monthly renllll rates.
Job sites • Camp SHes • Family Reunlolls ol Parties

All Yard s.too Muot ao Paid 1n
Adva,.,., OEAOUNE: 2:00 p.111.

f

...

£11*1,

Holpor, - . .

::-::-:--=eun-=.--......,.....,-:-...----=-..,~·""~· a.-,.

~.!:bold'":~....ldz:O10 ;.:: :=~ :~PJ:.'f:.:= ::;
Fridoy. Mond1y ldklon
p.m. Saturdoy.
8
Public Sale
&amp; Auction

- 2:00 W l l -

-·

· lor
Nllural, a.,.,..,.,..
Roc..,._-.
CALL:
~

100'11.

Ooo(t10)

ou Hll a - Trucldng e-.,.,...,....,.....--,-----1
PMY - . Peal olonill OTR
Rick P'"roon Auc:llon CGmpany, Dri- Due To £ . . . - Sero

=·•9

rw·- .

Dmws W11 "-vo:
I) High Eomlnga • 8onuo

Dri... Who Tallo Prtda In Tholr

t::.=:"'t-.~~'7 ~.~

12

wanted to Buy

S100 caohlor good 1144 copy ol onlle1ofe c.m..
5 P.M.: eaa
Aft• 5 P.M.-~
c.11
1
"Tho aam-·• MI ........ Cooh _14-2~"".:..':.::.304:..:.·:.,_,--,....._ _
- · ond old oil
614-93-4195

1-

old ..
old ,..._
:;;;;;;.;,., old T~~~

-

Oon, ""'*

20

992-3954

•

· flMI2-

"!*"'

F,..ara, ~R'a, 111ci - Condl~
.w-.,
~~~14-258-!231. Powr
IUr

Emergency Phone 985-34 18

11

r 11r1

r-------,

DU'I
IPPidiiCI
SIRIICI
ForAII•ier

lr•••
use•a,pli••••
1Ctf111Wft

Morrison's Heating &amp;Coohng
Sales, Service &amp; Installation
Your Total Comfort Assured Dealer ·
Low Rate- Financing Available
Call Today for Free Estimate .

(614) 992·7434

.._

AutJJerlu4A....-• ,._.....,......,

Pornat'Oy,

~

2526. Wo buy . ...._
II Soli U. Y- No!&gt;-..Jng
Appll _.,
Color
T.V. a,
Rohtgonton,

WE HAVE A-1 TOP SO IL FOR SAL E
HCIBdo

Ooowllld 01-ra, wol
A- - . , -

Limestone, Sand, Gl'llvel and Coal

=:

~. ~~f:. 7M-'JU.-4~/1~'...,.._.
noodocl,'

-

t11":'L~l~a:._
Into. Call (211) '1'111-

Sto"

~lelllon

1:-

IA.M.4P.M.,

Sun OH581,
. -=:POST=A::-L-;,JO=::BS~--

Sla11 $1'1.41/hr.lo tor • - opplleltloo In . coli 2111-7'111301 ut. WV541, ...,_....,

Tno:l&lt;s, 19117 Modolo Or - ·
Smhh Buick Pon1\oe 11100 Sun-Fd.
Eallom Avonuo, Galllpolia.
::-Sm.t--::-17'1oc--=-ol-::Fitm:--::-Soo-cld
:-c,.-F-ul

--

S.le
C•ll
614-992·5515

18~216

Donltflr

Col

;~::~:

lor othor old
polnllnt~~.

for

.

M-

I

- - - - - I ~,~·:::·"=~":t;;.:-~

304-4115-3430.

614-811~1811

ESTIMATES)
V.&lt;;. YOUNG II

o;o.iop:

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE ~~ ~~: ~ L5:~~""'='ol ~ ....

NOW OFFERING GENERAL HA ULING

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addldona
oNew Gltl'llgee
-Electrical a Plumbing
-Rooting
Iotn1terior a Exterior
Paintlngaleo concrete

.

\..all: Ford
Vlc:lnfty
01
From cny

lrodmUio. 114-

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

CUSTC*ER

Roc-

367-0481

Bashaa Builcl119

.11510 30t-815-

5231 AM"'i

Kitten•, 4 white wJspoie, 2 ¥lee Selklna PT ......., 10
callcoo, l 1 malo Booglo, 3 ,._ Cow -aT
AI Local
0...
\d::._•1:..:.14:.-::·w.t~-71::80::.
..,..,----,-,...,-J HoOfth
Caro Facility. ~ 1012 Dartlmo Hra !Wk.· 11uot 1e
Klttano,TciAGoodHoma,lnalda -Aot=lco Orlonlocl,Whhout Dogo,I14-379-2W.
T...,., E- ......_
llllllul Nol ~Small mo\o hOUMdog. pa~ But~
To Elm lb1ro Spent.
Torrlor, part PoldngoM. 304-&lt;UII......_ To
~h
.
-Corp.
- ;..:..::.,_-..,..-.,...,...---1
Srilort
lltm 'non:
Sm.t\1 mostly . Coll\o - · Dr., 12,
011 43701,
houtakojll,
lralnod, goMt Alln: Lori Wlcllhlm. 1-I00-2St·
wlkldo, vary loving, 114-8411-2111 ::17111.;.;::...=---:--:::-::--::•nytlmo.
Elm ~- Sl!'ftln!l En..._ ttoo 11o1n1, Ado
6 lost &amp; Found
..._ S.mpao~ ~ To:
\..all: 3 Monlh Puppy, Blu!M Hll'o Enlwp'
• P.o. a- .U.
Groy Whh Brown . lllrldngo, •p[lgow, -YA251112.
_ _ R_otd
...c..
' '-*-:179-......:...IIOI_l_ ._ _ EnJ Wo!IJI ~ Port AI.

•

FCKiory noke Ollly

11

' -IER~ 0~ lor-

RACINE
State Rt. 33
"""1"8'·
01
Darwin, Oh.lo
~~:!
ToP:f=:, ~ A~
FIRE DEPT.
Thool,. On Oct 1VI3. 114-441GUN SHOOTS r~========'1112=1-======~~ 11114.
A good Motorirld
SAT., 6:30 P.M.
MODERN SANrrATION
C\oan Loll Modal Cora Or
12Gauge

of ~ 11 M
;:;'lo

114-Mf.2111anytl- .

----------------llu\1
limo aUCI-r, complllo
ouctlon
oorvtca.
uc.1
Oet Step Ce11plett Aute Bo4~ Repair
Vlrglnil. -

Interior &amp;
Public Notice
Exterior
lf1l plln out
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
lei uo do It for
The Boord of Education of I p•lntlng.
Ywyr-nebl&amp;
Eutorn Local Scllool
F,.. Eetlrnet..
Dlolrlct deolrea 1o receive
Betol'll6
p.m. IMve
aeeled bids lor i1oe1
-mee..ga.
1naurence
covering
calendar year 1995.
Atrar6 p.m.
all ot~lld bids shall be
received by the Troaourer'o
office by 12:00 noon on
Docombor 1. 1994, and will
be opened at that time. The
Boord of Educa11on
rlltrYel the right to ICCIPt
ondlor roloct any ond oil
perta oleny and on bldo. ,
Boerd of Education
Eaetem Locel
• School Dlllrlcl
38900SR 7
R"lf.VIIIt, Ohio 45772
Elolot Booton, Trooourer
(10)24,31;(11)7,14;4TC

-----...J

1-1!00·486·1590

-

.,._.711\,

1

1:00

ROBERT BISSEU

7-7... or

Cofad-...

z.--.

ROCKY R. HUPP

Roofin~ Siding

-

- I l l - - I n Lana y...,
c.ra.
Un ,,.,

10 good homo,

c:•nllr

S••day, Nov. 13

HOME IMPROVEMENT

-cot

=

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

.MANLEY'S

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

1\oek , _ . , Lob, QIMI ....-.

992·5114

6:30

1-llla-

\lnor 11'11necl, tjoclowild. :J04475.

CALL FOR CURRENT PRICES

Starting Slug
Matches
Friday, Nov. 11

AVON st HOIJOAY
Avwogo sa .fll Hou~r -...
AI Woit -Hqme, FIOII* Hourwl
-~ No .,_ /Daor. ..,_
clop. llop.
Cer1HJod !lining _ , . ,
PooHinie ....... _

~33.:.:72::...--:-:-;-:---:-:-:--I ~ li..d JR tw..

aluminum cans.
1C -Sc Bonus per pound for flattened cans.
We Buy All Non Ferrous Metals

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB

J01.112..2Mior~.

Aduft woiiiM'. 30447W3117.

- .

OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEK FOR YOUR CONVENIENQ
MON.-FRI. 9·6; SAT. &amp; SUN. 9·3
Paying Today 55C Ill. for clean dry

SAYRE TRUCKING

AI w..l AVIlN Clv1ol- Ina Olalla, oom l!lg M. lllltlrn

:_~~~· e w-Old,

TRI COUNTY RECYCLING

l•te•
loe N. Sayre

AVON I AI - . , I lhlrtey
Spoo ... - -·

Giveaway

Bl~ek

Re•so••ltle

:;:

4 WhHo ~ Hllred Kin-

(No Sundtly Calls)

Help Wantacl

11

Now
Pr-ng
lleM1
Cloanlanbry, coOior Upt,
emoked cM.r •vellable. Crawlonl't G.-y, Hondorton, WV.
304-417W404.

614-992·7643

Umestone

Employment Serv;ces

3 Announcements

FREE ESTIMATES

HAULING

·-

CLRSSIFIED RDS
Announcements

Ill"

614·742·2138

m

Read the

•viSIT OUR SHOWROOW'
110 Court St. Pomsr:cy, Ohio
''Look ror the Red and White Awnln&amp;"

JI

wraca -

D'l Aulo 1'11'11 and SIJV1g0,

buying

1rucb.-

I

b - 304-

7'7So&amp;343..

Wonl1o buy: -ouront lll!loo

•51114.
cr.t..

or -

· 304-TI'S-

Wonlld to bu\" nlld•
1-.
114-tiZ-*2.

nmo !On CaM ~ ~niclanl. Must Be D1p1 1 p

W.:

R_,..blo, Comminoct,
To a. Trolntd. tonct
R_,. To SCC5 P.O. lloiiM,

lng

;;:K"::.:'~·OH:;.:-::45147-=::3:._
. -.o--:-:---:-Sm.tQ Local Fino S1oJ&lt;Jng p..
Tlmo On CaH Cloanlng " " ' Send R•umoToliCCSP.O. 8o1
531, Kor!, OH 45143.
WANTED: COIIIIUNITY SIULLI!
INSTRUCTOR p,.lllona Avoll'
oblo To T - Commurifty Ani
Po.-..1 51dl1o To An AcJu11 Wllh
I.Mrnlng Umlllllono In 11111aa
County.-HOURS: (11 40 Hre iW11
(Uvo-ln): 1:30 ..:30
:1:30
-1:30 P.ll., ll.f; Sloop .0.W A.

A.ll:

=

qulrad; Vocotlon .. - .
ouo Sldlla Tolonto ...._,
Hlah ScllooJ
VaJ1o1

a..-,
~~"t=3

Driving ~lonoa, Ani -.,

:t!".,.Aulc:r_, 1
11-..._
_R........ TnlniM

Old clgorollo llg"'-, 111111 bol·
tloa, IOunloln pa,.,

...-., ~~-... _ . . . .
Stor Wora ond Slor TNi . _;
01by lllrtln, 114--11141.

Wo!Wid To Buy: JUnll Auloo
Wllh Or WllhoOI llolora. Call
Lorry
y, 814 3. m1.

ProvtclodSt~•• satoryl:: J5.
JS.OO ltlr, 1i
• •
nt-ld

c:.nec.

A1 1-.e3l.z301 No
Lll•
Tllln 1-. Equej 0,.
porlunlly E...,.,,

Codllo

WANTED: CO IIMUNITY IKIUI
INSTRUCTOR poolltan ..... II
Top Pilei: AI Old U.S. · IO 1 - CIOINMWIIr llllf Colno,- Ringo, S - Qolna, 101101 1D 111 ldull l1llh
Oolc! Colna.
COin lltop, looming - . . . . . In .....
151 - A - ClolllpoiiL
Coul)ly. Hourw: 1'1 ..._....
(llvMI): 1:3N:tcioiot· ,...
W.l'llld To Bur:
t:~ Nt 1111 .. Q
Urlld ..... Home, •
lfi.IIN.t:
lttloe..._.• •
0111.
bonolb: 121 12 tww. (II~
so cclliOi-11 Col 10om Sol 11w t:ICIIoit ..,.;;
atuoll r AI 1,._..1101 Lav. ::::~., v....:~=
Ill I II
I - - f:lgll';.. ...
L
. · lnl

l T.S
.

Wantec11: f.?

* ....

•-=

••-"·

~=i:Z"n............
;:

-

........ 11117 IN.

....... "!'"'"!+' ..........

~ ._,
-.H
.... I;
... Coolt.ll' . . . . . . .

Trolnlng S!.IIMii, ..

_
no -

thin 1t.at-t4. .....

Opportunly lrt...,.,.

•..

I

I
J.

AnORNEY AI LAW

Delivered

Quality and

Te.rament

Now Accepting New Clle•t• •

DENISE LBUNCE

992-4119 AI T...- OwW 1·800.291-5600

Bred for

3 Announcements

PLUS
•1 Pint Cole Slaw
• 1 Pint Baked Beans
•1 Pint Ma.shed Potatoes
·• 1·Pint Gra.vy
• 6 Biscuits

228 West Main

One mile out

TOP SOIL,
FILL DIRT,
LIMESTONE

1:00~:30pm

: '"'"·"' . ·'•· "Off1Q.992.;2259

Family Restaurant ·
aadKFC

.

AMBERWOOD
Cocker· KENNE~
Spaniels

Alar,... ......
.. ~lltp ort
1112·2712
Oflloe Houn: Mon.-Fri.

November Special at

.

713t...1 TFN

ANNOUNCEMENT

• Custom llade ·
• Solid vinyl
rtplacement
windows
• Free Estimates
• $200 Installed
Call For Details

143 from Rt. 7
Tull. • Wed. • Fri. • Sat.
1-6

J&amp;L INSULATION

•

hu brought endless cbeer every holiday season.
Sun:ly 1n the banda of Hughes it would turn to spun
Cast Aluminum
Short Iron
Die Cast
Electric Motors
Batteries

DARWIN, OHIO

WJIMW maa••

P.O. Box 189
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

•,;

..

Tin Cans.
Phone Books
Cardboard

TOLL FREE 1·100·14f.007t

•ILirY

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

10117/lln

•..
•

' Pilld for by Moi!JII County R~ubllcan· hrty, Eugene J'llplott, Chlllrma~
.
P.O. Box 448, Pomeroy, Oh. 457~

only$14

I

••

: • dacls, family room. fireplace, hottub, dishwasher. disposal,
' partial basement, heal pump w/C.A.,Iriple payne windows.
ASKING $94,900

Crow~

WHALEY'S AUTO
. I
PARTS
&amp;!Miclellzlngln CullOm
&lt;fl'llme Rlf)lllr
IIEW l USED PARTS FOR
ALL lUKES a MODELS
· IU.fiii .OR
au:ssn OR

992-4103

t

l·

Buyin&amp; the followin11 items:
Aluminum cans
Motor Cast "''
Copper Wire
Automatic Trans.
Eleelric Starters

A I 00 Bed Long Tenn Care Center
In Middleport Is Seeking A Social
Worker/admissions Coordinator To
Join Our Management l'eam. The
Facility Is Undergoing A Rebuilding
Of Its Manasement Team And Seeks
A Motivated Penon To Join Us. LSW
Is Preferred. We Offer A Competitin
Sal~;~ry And Benefit Package. Send
Resume To David Snyder, 333 Page
Street, Middleport, Ohio, 45760.
Fax (614) 992-7406.

• on 4.3+ acres Includes 3 bedroOmS, 2 b811ls, 2 car garage, 3

Recyclin&amp; Donated Items:

~

. ' . ••

.

.I

(White/Dark Combination only)

.'
..
.,

The Meigs County
Republican Party
Would -Like to Thank
Everyone Who Voted
In The
november 8 Election

To give you more information, I
am sending. you a free copy of my
Health Report "About Gout."
Other.readers who would like a
copy should send $2 plus a long,
self-addressed, stamped envelope
to P.O. Box 2433, New York, NY
10163. Be sure to mention the title.
Copyright 11194 NEWSPA·
PER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(For Information on bow to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America OnUne by calling 1·
800-817-6364, exL 8317.)

suicide. They are about a situation
of a mao caught in all' immoral
world," Stone said. "Those are
reflections on the human condi·
tion/ '
Dr. James Cavanau~h, !I Rush
Medical College psycbtatrtst wbo
supported the defense, laughed
when asked why Claudius w·as
planning to send Hamlet to Eng land if not to be killed.
"It was because the king realized be was mad and would receive
better psycbiaUic treaanent in England," he answered.
In one of tbe evening's few
solemn moments, Montgomery
gave an impassioned. closing argument, describing Hamlet as a man
driven mad by the loss of his
father.
"What I have described 10 you
is a man overwhelmed bT, intense
feelings and emotions, • Montgomery ·said. "He had an. inner
conllict that could only be resolved
by striking out."

(James McDaniel). Milch has written other episodes of the ABC
show denouncing racism. Ajaye
said.

'•

.

PETER.

In Shakespeare's tragedy, Hamlet initially believes he ldlled l&lt;.ing
Claudius, who earlier bad killed his
father.
'
The prosecution argued Hamlet
rationally tried to kill Claudius to
avenge his father and only feigned
madness to protect himself.
"At the time of the actual slaying. Prince Hamlet knew precisely
what he was doing," Phelan said.
"He was not suffering from any
mental disorder."
Dr. Alan Stone, a professor of
law llt\d psychiatry at Harvard, testified that the prince was sane. even
though the play depicts Hamlet
conversing with the ghost of his
dead father.
Hamlet was not hallucinating
the ghost because the ghost was
real, Stone said. Nor was Hamlet
paranoid, be said, because everyone in the play really was against
him; and be was not suicidal, only
philosophical.
"Those speeches are not about

I
I
!

To be, or not to be -guilty? The question at Hamlet's murder trial
,;.· By RAVI NESSMAN
·•. Associated Press Writer
...
CHICAGO (AP) - There was
melbod 10 his madness.
-.
At least that's what a majority
~, of Hamlet's jury decided.
Supreme Coun Justice Anthony
: Kennedy presided as top lawyers
· and doctors gathered to put Shakespeare's melancboly Dane on Ilia!
~ for murder.
In a rhapsody of words, Chicago
auorneys George Cotsirilos and
: : James Montgomery led the
defense, arguing that tbe prince
• was clinically depressed and haUu-

OR potalllons aYIIIIIble to tMoh community
lllld per80MI aldlls to an acluft with letlmlng
limitation a In Malge County. HOURS: (1) 40
hrs./Wic. (lift-In); 8:30-8:30 am; 3:30-9:30 pm,
M-F; siMp-over rsqulrsd; vacatlonllnaurance baneftta; (2) 32 hrs./wk. (live-In): 10 am
Sat. lhru 8:30 am Mon.; eleep-over required;
vacation beneflta. Various akllll and talents
naeded. High sea-l degree, valid driver's
license, goOd driving record, three years
licensed driving experience, and adequate
automobile Insurance coverage required.
Trelnlng provided. Salary: $5.001hr. to start.
If lntereatld conblct Cecilia at 1-800-531·
2302 no later than 11n1194. Equal
Opportunity Employlf.

{

�-

Pa~e

&amp; The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

3·papers

Tribune 446-2342 Sentinel992-21 56 Register 675-1333
BEATTIE BLVD.'" by Bruce Beattie
Oltlco

Spoc:o

In

~ CIAIUpolle, I , . _

71111.

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:MJrta ....,_ Bultdlna

For
~or ~~ l,.._m-4341 ., .,...
E-"'ga.

18 ·. WJnted to Do
Acl &amp;; SIMOI. CO!nptltl tiel

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Olllce Sullo With
Prt- Tollotln- Fh
~:~ C.N llorrio Huklna
I
OriM-441-2512.

Qonnt llllntononco, Pol!f!"'IJ

1fT Wanted to Rent

3

~41·11114.

Wlndowl woun.. Clolnld
LIQhl Hauling,
Commollcll, Aooldlntlll, Stovo:
114-446-4141.
Yard -

-Ina.

Walllld To A... Apor1..-:
1250/Mo., AC,
Doecont
Nolahbor11ood, 1-2 Cir O.rago,
K~cllon, 1-2 Bldroomo, Both I

o-gM Por11btl SIWIIII~.•cton1
houl your loGO to tho 11101 jut

Shower, Wooher/Oryat Hoolwp,

·-1-1205.

coii:IOW71-1M7.

Merchandis e

54 Miscellaneous
u..n:hanciiH

3 days
6 days
10 days
Monthly

1

6.00
9.00
1
13.00
1
1.30 I day

15 words or less
15 words or less
15 words or less
15 words or less

1

.

The Dally Sentinel-Pea•

Ohio

MQ.nday, November 14, 1994
A.LLEYOOP

Ov er 15 words

Classified Line Ads
2 A-

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39
41
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Brltleh gun

Never (poet.)

1 Folk singer
Campus Pl.
Burl Skin problem
5 Large tuba
Bird ol peace
9 Salamander
Doing a
12 Low area
gardening
13 Algonquian
chore
Indian
49 Have lifo
14 Mal de53 Entire
15 Newspoper
54 Strength
opinion column 56 Female
17 One
57 Hawaiian
(Sco.t.)
lnalru~ents
181rish.poet
58 Disney • The19 Conductor
King
Eugene_
59 Printer's
21 Ia In debt
measures
23 Southern
60 Bold
state (abbr.)
61 Does
24 Not on
needlework
27 Starting from
(2 wds.)
DOWN
29 Newspaper
1 Actress
paragraph
Judith32 Flshea with a
2 - mec:um
net ·
(handbook)
34 Interior
36 Angry outburst 3 Lamb's pen
name
37 .Rejected

..
•

•

'

4
5
6
7

Fracas
TV accaiiO'Y
Songlike
Rip
8 City In
Alabama
9 Aura

2

Right play,
happy partner

,.

By Phillip Alder

PF.A Nl IT .&lt;;

F·nanc1al

21

,. TilE SECRET
TO LIFE 15 TO
6E OLDER
T~AN 'r'OUR

Business

Opponunlty
INOTICEI

L~WN~ ''

OHIO VALLEY PUILISHING CO.
_
.... thot you do - , _ wllh poopll you=,and

NOTIO--t
nthl
1111U until you hive In- lei
tho olllrlng.
VENDING ROUTE: Won1 014

Rich Quick. WIU Got A Slottdy
Colh - . Prtcld to Sell. 1·

IOWZN712.

All realeslate adVertising In
lhls newspaper Is stAljeet lo •
the Federal Fair Housll1g Act
of 1968 which makeslllllogal
to advertise "any preference.
llml1atlon or dlscrtmlnatlon
baiOd on race, color, religion,
se&lt;la-lstatus or national
origin, or any lntontlon to
milkl any aucl\ prefafenco,
1lmtt81kJn or dtwilw*..UU.•.• •

BORN LOSER'-·

,.YE:':l, I''£ C:W DED
.

This newspaper will not
knowllngly accept
advenlsemenls for real estate
Which lain lilolallon ollhelaw.
Our readers are hereby
lnlormed that all dwellngs
advertised In lhls newspaper
are available on an equal
oppootunlty basi&amp;

v NO... I'/t\ f\FRND liJ~ N€V€R ~
. VERY cmD IN ~IE/'U

TO lf.AVE MY BODY
TO

An anonymous philo sopher sa id .
" Beg in low. speak slow: lake fire. ri se
higher: when most impresserl be self·
possessed: at the end wax warm. and
sit dowrr'in a stonn ...
Wouldn't it be great if all speeches
fo l lowed I h al patter n : Howeve r .
som e tim es p eo pl e !'ay t he wr on g
lh in gs. And . in bridge. players make
lh e wron g plays. But n ot always . On
loday ·s deal. Doug Doub . an expert
from Co nneclicut. found th e ri ghl
pla y. ··contrav.c ning· the te xtbook in
th e process.
So uth opl cd not t o op e n two no ~
trump. presumablv because he down ·
graded th e ,\ K ~ doubll'ton of dia ·
monds llul when Nort h offe red a
single club rai se. South took a shol at
the most likely game.
The deal occurred during th e quar
l erfJnal s of this years Grand National
Teams ~ Wh en New England sa l North ·
South . th e We st for Chicago led a
spade. South won .in th e dummy and
played a club. having no trouble when
lhe king appeared.
When New England sal East .West.
Frank Merblu·m led th e diamond lwo.
Hi s partner. Doub . saw thai i t was
possible. but unlikely. that thi s wa s
from th e K·Q·R·2 of diamonds, givin g
declarer A IO· doubleton . Bu t Doub
was willing to take t hat n sk in eX ·
change for retainin g his diamond jack
as an entry card to the 13th diamond.
Doub played th ird hand low . dropping
the three.
Declarer had to attack cl ubs. but
now the defense had no trouble taking
three diamond and two club tricks l o
defeat lhe contract.
Watch those spots and think care·
fully aboul entries.

ITS TftAIIITIOI'l,
I SAID. THATS
t'l'( SEAT ! I

ALWIWS

1 HE RE ~

78

Sll

11-1~ 1·5

WHAT

THIS IS Wt-t E~E
I 51T I l
t4AVE TO

StT HE RE

Clrnplng

I

'

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "There 's no such thrng as a crowded battlelield.
Battlellelds are lonely places.· - Lt. General Allred M. Gray.

....

won

r~!:t~~' S©~Jfi~-lt
E~s·
Edltod loy ClAY I . P O l l A N - - - - - iearrange le"ofl of
0 four
tcrombled word!

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RYME LT

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Home

.J
ASTRO·GR,APH

,_, ...... .lol.-

mation you rece1ved from a th1rd party
newspaper. P.O. Bo• 4465. New York. Resist the temptation to embellish or to
modify even a Single word
NY 10163.
BERNICE
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec . 21) Your GEMINI (May 21·June 20) II IS 1mpera·
BEDE OSOL financial 1nstincts are accurate today. Do 11ve to discard old. tneffective methods 1f
not allow fear or self·doubt to keep you you want to 1ncrease your product1v1ty
from doing what your intuilion directs.
loday . Explore new pro ce dure s fo r
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22 -Jan . 19) Be improving your operat1on.
ready to run if two casual acQuaintances CANCER (June 21 -J~Iy 22) Someone
try to invoiV'e you in a shady busines s else's successful gamble might nol pay
deal today . What they prt&gt;pose could be olf lor you today . You don ' t know as
financially devaslating and illegal.
much about tbe situat1on as they do. so
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) When don't take lhe ri sks.
today 's decis ions reqwre quick thinking . LEO (July 23·Aug . 22) Spontaneous
you 'll be enormously successlul. When activities could turn out lo, be lois ol lun
Tuesday . Nov . 15.. t994 • .
you deliberate too long, however, you 'll today . The same might not be true aboul
an event you ·ve been ptann1ng lor'
Assoc 1ale with progressive individuals .1n lose your edge.
PISCES
(Fe6.
2G-March
20)
You
should
.
tonight:
it's too structured.
the comi ng year . These arQ the people.
pertorm
all
your
duties
competently
today
VIRGO
(Aug . 23·Sept . 2~.) If you
·ca pable of inspiring you in your ca reer
as long as you don't bite oH more than promised to do somelh1ng ,fo"'i'a friend
and personallile.
·
tOday, keep your word even il 11 is difficuli
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Bad llmtn g you can chew.
may prevent you rrom achieving some· ARIES (Morch 21 -Aprll 19) Look lor a ~nd more inconiJentent ' than you anticl·
·
thrng today. Try not to act prematur~ly, trusted and dependable partner in an paled.
endeavor
today.
Finishing
in
the
black
:Or
LIBRA
(Sept.
23-()et.
23) Try to calcu·
but don ' t overcompensate by roakrng
your move\ too lale. Know where to look in the red will be delermlned by yo,ur lale your expenditures today and budget
yoursell accordingly . Include a few
'
•
lor romaflce and you·lllind it. The Astra· associate.
TAURUS
(April
20-May
20)
Be
vely
buffers
In your plan so unplanned exlrav·
Graph Ma lchmaker inslantly reve al s
careful
today
when
passing
along
inlor·
agance
won't lip the boat.
which signs are~ ronlantically pe1ect lor
you . Ma1l $2 to . Matchmaker . c lo tht s

·~

Plumbing a.
Heating

Flimlshtld
Rooms

63

o~

Uvestoelc
,

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Complere rhe chuckle quoled
by illlmg •n the missino words

vou develop from step No. 3 below .

1

ROBOTMAN

81

.,
"•.'·•
....

TAKE

HIGH PRICES. SHOP THE CLASSIFIEDS.

Dooicl lncl ......
•ct·MIId 1111tiiDDI ......
4:pm

.

UAHKCL .

(ZASVGKXOM}

Camper· Check· Youth • Author · TAKE THEM

Qutto

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SCJAM.I.m ANSWERS

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ENWMCU .'

NWC

'(OUR

STRIKE ABLOW IN THE WAR ON

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OAAK

IAASO

OKAY,
OK.A.'( t

Equipment

Rental s

:nil·

DNSSZSVDO

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$100 - h .

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Eact- letter 1n IM c1pher st.:~.nds lor another TodBy's clue P eouals G

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Homes tor Sale

lA, 14.U.

by Luis Campos
CeleD111~

After listening to a bevy of
5
1
: tloring guest speakers I've conI'-·.....J..-.L.--l.~J._...J
eluded that more people would
.--R-E....,,-~",..-T-E-H----. ~~~~-a-~e~ i~t~~~ didn't already _

3 D1*oolft Mauee I 2 Car

1172 - . I

CELEBRITY ·;IPHER

F H I WF

Real Estate
~

',

•

W~ had just finished paying off the cost of an extravagant summer vacation. My husband claims that for
everyone ready to take a vacation there's someone
ready to TAKE THEM'

,..
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. Page-1o-The Dally Sentinel

Monday, November 1.4, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·.New vaccine program: Frustration vs. excitement- in rocky start ·
·

VACCINATIONS • Donna Steed, left, Is joined by her children,
Colby l 1/l, front center; Farrah, 18, right; and Jared, 4 1/l, at
her home In Greensboro, N.C., Nov. 4. Steed bas been trying
unsuccessfully to get her children vaccinated under the federal
government's free vaccine program.(AP Pboto/KeUie McCann)

By LAURAN NEERGAARD
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)
Donna Steed eagerly awaited lhe
government's new free vaccine
program to give her tbree children
their final shots. But one montb;
one loophole and .lots of arguing
later, Vaccines for Children hasn't
given 11er family a single immu·
, nization
"It's' lhc biggest rigamarole,"
tbe Greensboro, N.C., molher con·
tends.
The government insists Steed's
frustration is atypical. But tbe program is getting a mixed reviewfrom wary doctors who won't sign
up to one state so satisfied lhat it's
expanding lhe program.
"There are still some tbings to
iron out," acknowledged Dr. David
Satcher, director of tbe Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention,
which runs lhe program. "Bull
tbink we're making significant
progress." •
Vaccines for Children is part of
lhe $500 million Childhood lmmu·
nization Initiative to get 90 percent
of America's children properly
immunized by age 2. The initiative

aiiDs to educate parents, teach ~octors to identify unvaccinated cbil·
dren, alleviate overcrowded public
clinics and research a one-dose
vaccine.
Vaccines for Children, wbicb
began Oct. I, tackles the costs.
Every impoverished, uninsured,
Indian or Eskimo child gets free
shots from any public clinic and
participating private doctors. · Cbil·
dren whose insurance doeSn't cover
vaccines get free shots at special
clinics. ,
Some states already rate lhe pro·
gram a success. Soulh Carolina is
· investing $2.5 million in state
f~nds sci 230 private doctors can
vaccinate lhe underinsured for free
as well.
:·we're real enlhusiastic," said
Kristine Smith of New York's
Health Department, which expects
1,200 participating doctors' offices
to alleviate overcrowded public
clinics.
"It will relieve pressure on us,"
agreed Marianne Barclay, a public
health nurse in Arizona, where lhe
program doubled vaccine funding
to $10 million.
·
But critics say Vaccines for

Children bas serious flaws.
Steed wanted her lhree underin·
sured children vaccinated a~ainst
the liver-destroying hepatitis B
vU,.s. Butlhe program bas a loopbole: Funding problems reslricred
that vacCine alone to toddlers, even
though hepatitis B lhreatens mostly
teen-agers, who typically contract
it through needle-sharing drug ·
abuse and sexual contact
·
Tbal.,lpeanl Sleed bad only one
child eligible for lhe free shots but she spent October bunting
unsuccessfully for a Nortb Carolina
clinic to give lhem.
Private doctors can' t yet partici·
pate in 26 states because lhey have
no way to get the free vaccine.
Drug manufacturers and Congress
killed CDC's plan to deliver tbat
vaccine itself. COC now hopes to
have manufacturers making !hose
deliveries by January.
But "it's kind of hard to sign up
doctors ,wben you can't guarantee
!bema delivery date," said Richard
McGarvey of Pennsylvania's
Heallh Department, which got lired
of lhe federal delay and is developing its own system.

Pleas~nt

PoiNT PLEASANT, W.Va. A major celebration, including tbe
appearance of two governors, will
kick-off the opening of the new
·Point Pleasant Heilig-Meyers store
in lhe former G.C. Murphy bdilding at 408 Main St
The grand opening, which will
fearure West Virginia Gov. Gaston
Caperton and Kentucky Gov.
Brereton Jones, is Tuesday, Nov.
15 at 4 p.m. To date, the company
opened 52 new stores in 1994,
none of which boaslell a state governor at its grand opening.
"As far as I know, there bas

also based in Chicago, was added
to tbe roster.
Combining the advljlltages of a
local store and a large chain,
Heilig-Meyers offers low prices,
free delivery and in-store credit to
its customers, officials said. Its
merchandise mix includes furnl· ·
ture; carpel, beddin$, jewelry,
appliances and electrorucs.
The retailer also sponsors Mike
Wallace in Winston Cup Racing,
driving Thunderbird No. 90,
backed by veteran car owner Junie
Donlavey of Ricllmond, Va., and
Ford Motor Co.

never been a grand opening like
Ibis at any of our olher Heilig-Meyers stores," said Store Manager
Dave McNutt. "We're very excited
about the grand openin$ event, but
we're even more excned to get
things rolling and show folks what
we have for lhem."
Heilig-Meyers has more than
600 stores nationwide, and is the
largest home fwnishings retailer in
the country.
Despite its size, lhe chain prides
itself on primarily serving residents
in tbe nation's smaller cities witb
populations or less lhan 50,000,

like Point Pleasant, store officials Warehouse Manager Anthony bas come a long way since its sin·
said.
Thornton, as well as 14 other gle-store beginning in Goldsboro, ·
"We're a national company witll employees. Heilig-Meyers operates N.C. The company's corporate
a community altitude," said Senior 23 stores in West Virginia and e~ansion program has resulted in
Vice President H.C. Poythress . . employs 398 people statewide.
many takeovers, including lhe Jan·
"We open locations in smaller
A sale event is scheduled from uary 1994 acquisition of 92 stores
cities and encourage our managers the grand opening, through Nov. in Arizona, California, New Medto gel involved in community 19. Every visitor will receive a free co, Nevada and Texas.
activities. We want lhem to get to gift and an opportunity to register
Although Heilig-Meyers looks
know lhe city and its people." ·
to win a $2,500 shopping spree first for locations in smaller com·
McNutt has been a member of during the "Grand Opening Cele- munilies, the company is no
the Heilig-Meyers team for more bration." McNutt added tbat special stranger to the big city. In June
lhan four years. Joining McNutt at storewide savings arc also part of 1993 the retailer acquired Chicago
tbe 18,000 square foot Point Pleas- the five-day event.
based L. Fish Furniture, an 11-store
ant Heilig-Meyers will be Credit
Founded in 1913 by two Lilhua- chain. In 1994, Nelson Brolhers
Manager Wayne Pennington and nian immigrants, Heilig-Meyers Furniture, a nine store operation,

Steelers
•
defeat
Bills

Olhers simply fear government
programs. Al~ougb Vaccines for
Children requli'CS only a one·p~e
form ~r pauen~ Dr. Kennetb Polin
of Cb1cago s~.ld s.~cb ~r~gra!Ds
u~ually evo~~e mlo admirusiJ'auve
mghtmares.
.
"It's ~d of a stut;lld p~gram,
not .attackin~ lhe ng~IISSUC, co~­
plamed Phliadelpb1a Dr. Fred~IC
Nelson, who contends public elm·
ics already adequat~ly handle tbe
demand for free vaccme.
,
Such comments fl'l:'strate COC.s
Satcher, who says h1s prog~ IS
but one .Part. of a ~olll:preben~IVe
figbtagamstiiiUIIum~~on bamers.
~e notes lhal chDICS now !U'e
staymg open late to h.elp working
parents, tb~t t~?e Na.uon~l G~ar~
helped vaccmauon drive~ m Ml~hl·
gan, lhat lhe Hf?pe for Kids prOJC7t
educates low-mcome parents m
Harlem.
.
He's working on~ controv~rsies specifi~ to Va~m~s for Cb~dren. CO:C IS mvesugaung Steeds
problem m Norlh Carohna, Satcher
is barnstorming lhe country to push
tlle p~ogram and .t~e governm~nt
may hft lhe bepauus B age restric·
uon.

Heilig-Meyers home furnishing store to open in Point

,I

Auxiliary contributes to Veterans hospital
A contribution was made to the
Chillicothe Veterans Administration Hospital for a Veteran's Day
birtbday party when Lewis-Manley
Auxiliary Unit 263 met recently at
Dale's Restaurant.
Ada Franklin was hostess for
the meeting conducted by Lorene
Goggins, president
It was noted during the meeting
that lhe unit bad received several
certificates of awards from the
Department of Ohio. They included
an award for lhe chaplain's prayer
book, Annette Johnson, chairman;
third place on children and youth
and the Children's Welfare Foun-

Community
calendar
The Community Calendar Is
published as a rree senlce to
non·profll groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
events. The nlendar Is not
deslgaed to promote sales on'
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
c:annot be guaranteed· to run a
specific number or days.
MONDAY
POMEROY - Big Bend Farm
Antique Club, .Monday, 7:30 p.m.
secretary's office on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds.
CHESHIRE - Women Alive,
Monday, 7 p.m. Kyger Creek Clubbouse. Devotional and Thanksgiving dinner.
RACINE - Racine Board of
,Public Mfairs, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
at lhe annex in Racine.
DARWIN - Bedford Township Trustees, 7 p.m. Monday at
· lOWI)bali.
POR11.AND - Poittand!Letart
J7I'O wiD meet Monday at 7 p.m. at
the grade school.
TUESDAY
· RUTI..AND - Leading Creek
Conservancy District board meet·
ing, Tuesday, 5 p.m. at Its office.
Public invited.
't
BEDPORD - Bedford Volun·
tcer' Firc Department Committee,
Tuesd3y,m 7 p.m at town ball.
.
1

WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE -Tblrd Wednes·
day Homemakers Club, We~~es­
day, 10 Lm. at Syi'ICUse MuniCipal
Jull4ina.
-

. dation, and first place -in the district, Aorence Richards, chairman.
Olher ·awards received by the
Auxiliary were for Americanism,
Margaret Bowles, chairman; community service, Mrs. Johnson,
chairman; and veterans affairs and
rehabilitation, Tomiko Lewis,
chairman.
A gold ribbon was received for
meeting membership quota by January 1994. A citation for meritori·
ous service was also received by
lheunit
Tbe annual Christmas dinner
was planned for Dec. 13 at lhe Mt
, Moriah Baptist Church at 6 p,m.
Special ~uests were will be Ameri·

can Legion veterans.
Mrs. Bowles read a poem,
"America" by Marie A. Florian.
Mrs. Richards reported from The
Firing Line noting that at the
American Legion national convention held in Minnesota a resolution
w;15 made urging all government
agencies to insure tbat all the
American flags they raise are made
in America, and to urge that the
American public buy American.
At the convention it was also
resolved that Congress be asked to
award the Four Chaplains postbu·
mously lhe congressional medal of
honor of lheir heroism wbicb cost
lhem their lives Feb. 3, 1943.

all employees participate in an
employer-sponsored pension plan.
· Today financial planners are
telling people to diversify their
retirement investments and start
retirement planning early. These
are essentially tbe same messages
Social Security bas been telling
workers over the years. While
Social Security guarantees one leg, .
you will need to actively and .
aggressivel~ pursue lhe olher two if ·
you are going .to maintain your
•standard of living in retirement.
Today it's more important than
ever for you to pay heed to Ibis
message if you hope to enjoy the
benefits of a longer, beallhier and
more productive life.

'

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Stslf
Middleport Council may give
lhe village employees' !heir annual
Cbrisbnas bonuses, despite continuing financial headaches. But as an
act of good failh, tbe six council
members could take a pay cut to
ensure the money is not removed
from the budget
The board voted 5-0 on lhe first
of three ordinance readings to
allow for lhe bonuses during its
regular meeting Monday night
By a 3·2 margin, the council
also agreed on tbe fii'St reading of
lhe ordinance that would reduce

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A Meigs County native's girl·
friend died in what authorities are
calling an accidental shooting Sunday night, according to a Belpre
Police official.
Mike Cremeans, 20, of Belpre
and formerly of Meigs County,
called Belpre Police at about 10: 15
p.m. Sunday reporting his girlfriend bad been sjlol, Sgt. David
Garvey said Tuesday morning.
When B'elpre authorities arrived
Kri~len Stegner, 23, of Belpre, was
dead, Garvey said. Stegner died
from a single shotgun shot to lhe
bead, he added.
"(Cremeans) claimed it was an
accidental disc;.barge in the bedroom" of their Hill Street apart·
ment, Garvey said. "He advised us
be was wiping it down when it
went off."
The incident' remains under
investigation and no charges have
been filed, with results from the
Franklin County Coroner still
pending, be added.

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Joe's Country M/(f., fl{utfaml fJJept. Store
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wages for attending meetings from
"It's customary to have Christ$30 per meeting to $20 a meeting.
mas bonuses," Horton said. ''We're
· Councilmen Paul Gerard, Mick in considerable beuer condition
Childs and Jim Clatwortby voted lhan last year."
for Ibis measure, while Councilman
Councilman Gerard said the
Bob Gilmore and Councilwoman board agrees the workers have
Belh Stivers voted against it. Coun- earned bonuses.
cilman Nick Robinson did not
"Can we afford it? When we
anend Monday's meeting.
appropriated a budget in January
The 18 full-time employees for wages and benefits- this
would get $100 each and tbe five $1,050- will it put us over lhe
part-lime employees would get $50 budgetr' Gerard asked.
each, Mayor Dewey Horton said.
"We've asked lhem to sacrifice
To pay for the bonuses wbicb total all year long. It would be a good
$2,050, lhe village would have to faith effort on our part" to take lhe
come up wilh $1,050 since $1,000 ' pay cut, be added.
.
bad already been donated, Horton
Whether tbe village ends the
said.
year in lhe black and all lhe bills

Trade-Ins Accepted On Some Models

THE FABRIC SHOP ..
POMEROY, OHIO • 992·2284
Opei1 9 to 5 Monday thru Saturday

• Qualified Appliants

are paid is still uncertain, Gerard
said.
Council President Gilmore said
most employees arc earning mini·
mum wages and rely on lhe bonuses to buy presents. But, be disagreed about taking the money
from lhe board's pockets instead of
lhe general fund.
"(The village employees) will
consider it charity . It' s not.
They' v,e earned it," Gilmore said.
Councilwoman Stivers said lhe
bonus needed to be given to boost
morale of the employees since they
bad to shoulder shorter hours and
reductions in income.
In olher business, council agreed

. Shooting
·. death under
investigation

In a 5

Open Tues.·Sat. 9:30·4:30 &amp; 7·9 p.m ·
Classes Tuesday-Friday
10 a.m.·12 noon &amp;7 p.m.·9 p.m.

1

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Low lonlghtln 40s, doudy.
Wednesday, sunny. High In lhe
5&amp;.

1 Section, 1o Paget 35 cenll
A Multimedia Inc. Newopal*·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 15, 1994

A Pomeroy man charged with
attempted murder and felonious
. assault in the poisoninB or anolher
. Pomeroy man in 1989 pleaded not
guilty to lhe charges Ibis morning
during an arraiJ!nment bearing in
lhe Meigs County Court of Common Pleas.
Danny Zirkle and Sarah Snouf·
fer, .also of Pomeroy, were· indicll)d
by a Meigs County grand jury on
Oct 19. The indicunent stems from
the poisoning of Gary Snouffer,
Mrs. Snouffer's fonner husband.
Snouffer was pois&lt;!Jled in during
the fall Gf.-UlS9--wiib ·lirxnlc, a ·heavy metal tbat accumulates in the
body until alethal dose is reached. - - ·
Zirkle appeared with bis attorney, I. Carson Crow, who waived
reading of lhe indictment and pos·
sible penalties.
Judge Robert Buck, pr1:siding
for lhe purpose of arraignment, said
discovery will be made wilhin two
weeks or request and setan_initiaL
motion bearing for Friday at 9:30
a.m. In addition, Buck set lhe fmal
pretrial bearing for Feb. 6 at 10
a.m. and lhe trial for Feb. 15 at 9
a.m.
Zirkle was released on his own ·
recognizance.
Mrs. Snouffer's arraignment is
scheduled for Friday at 8:30 a.m. in
tbe Meigs County Court of ComGETTING READY - Christmas Is coming ' Annie Chapman, Jill Johnson, front right, and
mon Pleas.
Jim Anderson, or the Pomeroy Merchants Assoand viUage decorations were prepared Monday
•
night for banging by ·Pomeroy village employees
ciation. They were given a helping band by Mrs~
Johnson's young son, Patric:k.
today. Here replacing bulbs on the large candy
canes and trees are front left, Susan Clark,

253 N. 2ND AVE. .
MIDDLEPORT
Formerly Prescription Shop Location

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1-5-9-22-27

not guilty

Opening Tuesday, November 15th

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Zirkle
pleads

COV.f}(P1(1 Slf£Jf£ .
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Middleport may give ,,employees .bonuses

County Area

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Veil. 45, NO. 137
Copyright 1994

IDhn A. Wade,
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Page4

Social Security plays important role in successful retirement plan
often found in tbe level of planning who works and pays Social Securi·
By ED PETERSON
Social Security Manager, Athens lhat goes into tbe retirement deci- ty taxes. 'file worker is supposed to ·
use tbe otber two to build up a level
The concept of retirement is sion. This means lhal the young of
income consistent wilh his or ber
worker
needs
to
understand
lhe
role
undergoing a radical change. A
iifestyle.
that
Social
Security,
tbe
~:omp!!!ly
person approaching age 65 today
Most experts agree that people
bas a life expectancy of 85. At the pension, and his own private initia· twn or lhe century, lhe.,average life tives should play in providing for need about 80 percent or their preretirement earnings to maintain
expectancy was 47. Healthier · retirement
tbe
Social
Security
proSince
!heir lifestyle in retirement. Social
lifestyles and medical advances are
making it possible for older people gram was launched in 1935, social Security replaces about 42 percent
to continue to be productive far planners have viewed retirement · of the income of workers with
mcome as a lhree legged stool con· average lifetime earnings.
.
longer.
sisting
of Social Security as one
In tbe face of concerns about tbe
One result is that retirement
plannins is bec:omlng more impor- leg, private pensions as anolher, future of Social Security, some
tant than ever if for no olher reason · and savings and investments, people are suggesting lhat we rely
tban ·you have to plan for a longer including insurance, as a third. more on private means and less on
period of lime. It is becoming Social Security provides .lhe anchor govt;rnment programs.
inaea.singly clear tbatthe basis for leg, tbe source of income guaranAlso_ fewer lhan 59 percent of
a successful retirement is most teed by government to everyone

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Lawmen probe
Ravenswood
robbery ·
The owner of a Ravenswood,
W.Va. area service station who
thought be was selling a customer a
~ of cigarettes early Ibis mornIDJI instead found himself looking
down the barrel of .45-caliber
semiantomalic pistol.
Deputies of lhe Jackson C&lt;1unty,
W.Va. Sheriffs Department are
investiRaling the armed robbery of
Contlrtlled on page 3 ·

TOYS FOR SICK TOTS - For more tba'lt
lO years the granges of Meigs County have
taken on the project of providing stulfed toys for
children who are Ill and being given medical 1
treatment ar Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Grange members delivered another supply to

Christmas plans by Tom Dooley,
president of the Middleport Communily Association. The village's
stores will bold an open bouse from
1-5 p.m. Nov . 27 and a Christmas
parade at 6 p.m. Dec. I , Dooley
said. Also. merchants are pleased
with new parking enforcement that
fines parking violators, be added.
- beard from John Ash who
asked council to fu a curb near his
Norlh Fiflh S1ree1 home and slow
down traffic in lhe area.
- took no action on concerns
about dilapidated rental property in
the village, following an ordi·
nance' s defeal a! the last council
meeting.

Accused poacher
pleads·innocent
to felony assault,
fleeing charges
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel news stafT
A Charleston, W.Va. man
accused of trying to seize a Divi·
sion of Wildlife game protector's
handgun during a struggle early
Friday morning was formally
charged on two felony counts Monday . .
Michael R. Barker, 49, wu
charged wilh felonious assault and
felony fleeing . The charges s1em
from an automobile chase lhrougb
western Meigs County and parts of
Vinton County Friday morning
after game officials allegedly
,observed people using the car to
spotlight deer.
Barker, represemed by Pomeroy
attorney_Steve Story, pleaded innocent before Meigs Coun1y Court
Judge Patrick H. O'Brien to bolh
felony counts and two misde-

meanor counts, reckless operatioa
and failure to stop for a stop sign.
Assistant prosecutor Chris
Tenaglia said Barker will also be
charged with several bunting violations.
Tenaglia, wbo asked for bond to
be set at $1 million with 10 percent
cash allowed ($100,000), cited lhe
serious naturl! of the charge and •
said Barker has a history of wildlife
offenses dating back to 1975.
"We're lucky to have our
wildlife officer here today and not
six feet underground," be added.
Story, asking for a lesser bond,
said that a $1 million bood would
be "outside the bounds of reason."
O'Brien set bond at $500,000
with 10 percent cash allowed
($50,000) and scheduled a preliminary bearing for Friday at 2 p.m. If .
Continued on page3

Holiday spending will be up
11 percent, survey reveals
ClNClNNATI (AP)- This holiday season could be aboutll
percent more expensive than a year ago.
Spending Is expec:ted to Increase by an average of $68 a person compared with last year, according to a survey by tbe
accounting firm or Deloitle &amp; Touc:be.
The 11 percent Increase would be one or the largest since the
survey was begun nine years ago, Robert MaUnowski or Deloltte
&amp; Touche said Monday.
"Clearly the mood Is one or optimism for both relailers and
consumers," be said.
By the numbers, 77 percent or the relailers surveyed nationwide said they expecled sales to Increase this holiday season. A
year- ago, only 63 percent were that confident.
Although shoppers plan to spend more, they also wanl better
deals.
Fifty-seven percent of the people surveyed said the y planned
to do most of their shopping at discount stores; 42 percent said
they would shop at national chain stores.
Deloille &amp; Touche's holiday projections were based on a mail
survey of 1,014 retailers and a telephone survey or 1,005 consumer, both conducted during October.
,

Six survive as car plunges
100 feet into Kanawha River

'•t'

I

to meet in executive session to dis·
cuss. finan~ial matters. The Daily
Senunel obJected to Ibis action, but
obliged since it regarded information from lhe state auditor's office.
In action related to the audit,
council unanimously voted to pass
an emergency ordinance lhat will
change the language about mayor's
court bonds, but not lhe actions.
In other action, council:
- will seek to transfer $10,000
to tbe water improvements fund
from the revolving loan fund to
upgrade the village's wells and
bring itJnto compliance. The board
voted 3~1, with Gerard dissenting.
- was updated on merchants'

the b01pltal Monday, and here Rhonda Dailey,
R.N., dlre~.Pr of nurses, second from right,
acc:epts the toys from grange members, len to
right, Norm• Lee, 1eated, of Harrisonville ·
Gr~~:pe; Joule Wblte ol Hemlock, and Barbara
Fry o Rock Sprlnp.
1

CHARLESTON. W.Va. (AP)
- Six teen-agers, includiag four
players for lhe state's top· ranked
high school football team, survived
when lheir car plunged 100 feet
down an embankmenl into lbe
Kanawha River.
"The fact that lhe driver was
ejected and was not killed was really fascinating to me.~· police Lt
Jerry Riffe said early today. "Usually when you have a wreck where
people arc ejected from lhe vehicle
it's almost always· a fatality or avery critical injury."
:
Police 5aid lhe accident happened Monday on a four-lane street
lhat parallels tbe river for 4 112
miles through the heart of the city.
The driver, Elizabelh Rowsey,
16, of Charleston, apparently lost
control after running over round,
incb-bigh renectors designed io
separate lanes, Riffe said.
The car jumped a foot-high cwb
and hit a post before hurtling into
lhe 1river, Riffe said. The embankment starts wilh a grassy 70-foot

dtopoff to a narrow sightseeing
patll, then drops lhe rest of tbe way
over boulders.
Riffe said lhe river was about 10
feel deep where tlle car sank. He
was unsure bow tbe passengers
escaped because police hatl not
been able to inlerview them.
No charges were filed, be said.
Rowsey suffered bead and cbeat
injuries. She was in ~ood coodilioa
today at Charleston Area Meclieai
Center. Jennifer .Jones, 16, of a.ct,
was treated at tbe hospital and
. released.
The foul' DuPont High Schcioi
football players, juniors Jay Jooes,
J.T. Erby and Chris Robinson llld
senior Sam Singleton, were trea1cc1
at Charleston-area hospitals 8Dd
released, DuPont Athletics Ditector
Jim Fout said.
DuPont, a two-lime defendilia
champion in West Virginia's larxci·
school division, is lhe No. 1 seed ill
Ibis year's tournament It is ldlctluled to play No. 8 St. AlbanS in a 1
Class AAA quarterfinal Friday.

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