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•
P1ge-:1o-The Dilly Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

PICTURE YOUR .CHILD
AMONG THE...

Ohio Lottery

River Valley
girls down
Meigs 47-41

PickJ:
696
Pick 4:

1100
BuckeyeS:

Page4

8-14-~-28-34

•

en tine
VoL 45, NO. 145
Copyrlght1994

"Patter of Lltde Feet'', won tbe best of show award for Betty Dean.
It featund live alouy black v - of varylll&amp; he!Ptl lllled wttb
holly, nd aad wllllte carnations, aad white ntsun.ta vtne. Held at
Carleton Sc:Hol, the Chrlltmalftower sbow Is an annnal event for
tbe Melp Cetmty Garden au.. Association.

Evelyn Hollon, Ben Crane win sweepstake
honors; Betty Dean captur~s best ·ot show
fourth respectively, were as follows:
Artistic Arrangements
Tbe creative .talents of Meigs
"I bear tbe patter of little feet", a
County Garden Qub memben was synergistic design: Betty Dean, Pat
well displayed iD artistic arrange- Holler, Shclia Curtis. and Evelyn
mcnts, wreaths and swags, crafts Hollon.
and gift wrappings, at the "On
"Breakfast first", a Christmas
Christmas Day in the Morning" breakfast table: Marge Fetty, Betty
flower show staged over lbe week· Milhoan, Debbie Miller, and
end at tbe Carleton School, Syra- Pauline Atkins.
cuse.
"We'll now bave morning
Berried branches and blooming prayer", religious aura: .Alice
houseplants were featured in the Thompson, Peggy Crane, Karlita
specimen categories where the Stump, and Evelyn Hollon.
sweepstake award winners were
"See the sunrise on the snow",
Evelyn Hollon in the senior divi- usin$ lots of glitter. Peggy Crane,
sion, and Ben·CI3De in the junior Sbelia Taylor, Pal Holler, and Judy
division.
Bunger.
.
Gilded and glittered pine cones,
"Look thirty-two deer tracks in
bells and baubles, all nicely the snow", featuring tbe use of artilrimmed in red and green, accenled ficial snow: Evelyn Hollon. Sbelia
the numerous wreaths and swags Taylor, Heidi Elberfeld, and
on display, and tbe use of plant Gladys Cummins.
material for gift wrappings and
"Ooh!, The tree!", an illuminary
crafty things was shown by the design: Shelia Curtis, Kathryn
euibitors.
Mora, Peggy Crane and Janet
The holiday arrangement class- . Bolin.
es ranged from modernistic designs
"The reason for it all", with
called "illuminaries" featuring a modern Madonna, Melanie Slethcombination of flowers and lights em, Betty Dean, Sbelia Taylor, and
thl!! bli~~ an~ !l!Wicd. to tbnse . Janet Bolin;-'With tradilionat
with a religious aura.
Madonna, Alice Thompson, Peggy
Betty Dean captured best of Crane, Gladys Cummins, and
show in artistic design with her Sharon JewelL
arran~ement in "Patter of Little
"And now 1 can rest", featuring
Feet", a "synergistic" using five tteasured wood: Melanie Stetbem,
glossy black vases in a patb filled _ _Ann Holler Mienefe, Evelyn Hoiwith holly, red and white carna- lon,lllld Gladys Cummins.
tioDs and wbite mitsumata.
In tbe junior division, blue ribHer daugbter, Melanie Sletbem, boos went to Holley Loper and
took reserve best of show with a Kyle Loper. ·
desip f~g a modem MadonHoliday Decorations
na with carved palm spathe, holly
Outdoor wreaths: Betty MilBy CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff

and two
large
spiderfor
mums,
in tbe
class,
"The
Reason
It All".
In
the junior division, best of show
went to Kyle Loper.
Sheila Taylor received the ribbon for the most creative design
made with lotus pods, dried bolly
witb gold mesh intenwined, all in a
modem ceramic vase.
Faye Collins of Minford, an
accrediled judge of tbe Ohio Association of Garden Clubs, judged lhe
show. The special euibits were by
Obio River Herbs, Mei~s County
Liller Control, and Franc1s florists.
Winners in the various classes
of the show, listed first through

Our special page(s)

BEST OF SHOW - This artistic arranae-t Ia the clau

NOVEL GJiiT WRAPPED- Here Juon Mora looks over the
novel way Betty Dean pl't wnpped a shoveL The blue ribbon winner created a snowman's head complete with tobogan for her
entry In tbe boUday decontiOIU cateaoey at the weekend's flower
show held at Carleton School, Syracuse.

. boan, Sbelia Taylor, Alice Thomp- liuits: Ben Crane, blue ribbon.
son, Karen Werry.
Christmas cactu~: Alice ThompIndoor wreaths: Connie Hill, son.
Sbelia Curtis, Karen Werry, and
African violets; Evelyn Hollon,
Evelyn HoUon.
Karen Werry, and Alice ThompSwags or wall banging, outdoor: son.
Alice Thompson, Juanita ·wm.
Blooming houseplants: Alice
Thompson and Karen Werry.•
Karen Werry, Shelia Taylor.
Swag or wall banging, indoor:
Foliage houseplants" Evelyn
Gladys Cummins, Connie Hill, Hollon and Karen Werry.
Berried bi3Dcbes, Gladys Cum·Evelyn Hollon, Neva Nicholson.
PacJcase decorations for a child: · mins.
Broadleaf evergreen: Evelyn
Carrie Elbelfeld, Evelyn Hollon, no
tblrd, no fourth.
Hollon Betty Dean, Heidi Elbelfeld
Adult package decorations: and Alice Thompson.
Narrow leaf evergreen: Karen
Betty Dean, Evelyn Hollon, Sbelia
Curtis, and Karen Werry.
. Werry, Juanita Will. Betty Dean,
Horticulture/Specimens
tbird and fourtb.
Dried roadside malerial, junior . · Spruce: Evelyn HoUon, flfSt and
tbird, Karen Werry, second.
division: Ben CI3De, all four places
Otber evergreen: Alice ThompEvergreen branches: Ben Crane,
all four places.
son, Heidi Elberfeld and Betty
Animal or cbaracler made from Dean.

"For Children Only"

Middleport invests in computer system

(16 years of age or younger)

Will be published
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23RD
in the

The·Daily Sentinel

season

$1000

tbe

tbe

in·Oh•n-- Brutal end meets serial killer

whose crimes repulsed nation

....... tncloMIIIf ldd lllld,
.-...ped emzlopl IDntum your

,_

MONDAY
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Garden Club will bold its regular
meeting Monday at the home of
MarillricRiu. New Lima Road.
LONG BOTTOM -The Long
Bottom Community Association
will host a dinner for bunters
beginning at 4 p.m. Monday
lhrough Wednesday al the COIIIIDU·
nity building.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Veterans Service Commission
meeting Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Veterans Service office.

PORTLAND Lebanon
Township Trustees, Monday, 7
p.m. at tbe townsbip·building.
MIDDLii~ORT ~ Tho OH
KAN Coin Qub will meet Monday
at Burkett barber shop in Middlepon. Social bour and trading session at 7 p.m. prior to meeting.
Refreshments. New members welcome.

Official Entry
Form

~!~~!~~~~l~tbe

were on state game lands in
easlem
Crawford County when
OJ!Cning day
~
s deer bunting ·• ()DC of their rifles accidentally
selison
at least two hunten · dischatgedl according to John
dead, several others injured and
A. M):Kelii!V· ~ Pennsylvll,Jia .
Game COIIIIiliSaiori'OffiGCr•• :.- ·
a father and son missing.
The commission toolc both ·
James R. Palmer, 50, of ·
and wm ·exainine them.
1 .. ' Sp~~gl}oro was fatally s_hot in
Mcl{elllop
did not
. , . ·the P4• apparently by his~:
WKifl!lftyjWJ.; . ' afthe pair were loading thC~i·
rifles, autborities said.
·. ·
He was pronounced dead just
fOr
At
accidenbefore noon Monday. A bullet .
bad enlered his neck and cxi~
tally shot
in southfrom his chest, according to
western Pennsylvania, said Matt
Crawford County coroner G.
Hough, a Pennsylvania Game
Arden Hughes.
~ommission supervisor. Neither
Palmer and his son, Bri~. . Injury was life threatening, he
. S8ld. .

TUESDAY
CHESHIRE - Free clothing
day, Tuesday, 9 a.m. to noon at
Cheshire.
•

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·t'o\iersial trade treaty heads for House ~howdown
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Food Fresh Not

re11rvea the right to reject
any or all bide or to remove
any unit from the 1111 11

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oGallo&lt;1 Sto&lt;age
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(11t 28 (12) 5, 12, 3 TC

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Per Picture :. .
Prepaid

When You Know Exactly
What You Want.

In ordllr to lnepact 1ny of
the above property prior to
the Hie errtngamanll may
be made by ceiling 94112210.

. Comp~lerS will save tbe village SVGA monitor and an LQ-S70
In other business, council .-iume - smce many forms must be prillla'.
mously
accepted the second of
filled out in triplicale for the state
Middleport resident Bob F'uber three readings to give the villap
and federal authOOties, he added.
will donate his lime to write the employees annual Cbriltlllas
Council unanimously bought
computer propam needed to link bonus. But, council rescinded a
system at $1,377 from MicroCenter tbe different departtilents together. previous motion that would ~e
in Columbus. It will include a The slrength of
system will be paid for
bolllllel fnJm ooipdl
Value Series Computer with 420 its ability to expand in the future, members' llllariea.
megabyte hard drive, 14-inch Fisher said.
(CmtiDDed oa Pqe 3)

Community calendar·-

s.turdlly, December 17,
1994, et 10:00 e.m., the
Home National Bank, Third
Street, Recine, Ohio, will
offer for etle at public
auction, on the Bank
.,.king lot, the following:
1991 Ford AlroS1ar Van
Serial Number

1FMDA31X8MAB01957

By GEORGE ABATE
system to streamline and sj,eed time tbe council can see these outSentinel News Staff
along its budget process, Mayor lays, Horton said.
Middleport Village Council Dewev Horton said.
"One of tbe things the audita's
agreed Monday to purchase a com"ltrs no SCCJet The village bu office is upset witb is, we're buyputer system b the village finance had financial difficulty," Horton ing things on faith tbat we'll have
department
said. "However; the auditors have the money," Horton said. To comThe Ohio Auditor's office, recommended we need more up-10- bat tbis, Hllrton said be has shifted
which u currently auditing the ~­ dale infmnation."
· responsibility for p.urchases to
lage, suggested the villagC buy the
Expenses are a month old by the depar1ment beads.

-ONLY-

PubliC Notice

Term• of ihe eale are

1 Section, 10 Pagla H oenlll
A Multimedtlllnc. Nawapllpar

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 29, 1994

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"I think it's important we pass it relatively handily to send that message to the Senate,'' said Rep. Sleny Hoyer of Maryland, the fourtb-ranlcing Democrat m the House.
·
: .
At a crowded pep ~y in the East Room on M~nday. the admaustration produced a letter Signed by two fof!DCC Republican ~•dents, G:raJd
Ford and George Bush, and DemocratJunmy Caner. urgmg congressional
approval
·
"It is 'not a Republican agreenicnt or a Democratic one," Cli~ton.Sllid
"It is an Amcn.can agrtei!!CDt. des•gned to benefit all ~.~encan peopie m every r.egton of our country, from every wall of life.
.
The pact slashes tariffs by an average of 38 percent ~ld~de !Uid
e•pands the rules of world trade. into new areas such as agnculture, services and the protecuon of copynghts and patents. It creates .a more now. .
~
trad ";_,
d el' ..-erful World Trade Organ•?-3Don to re eree
e ......,..tcs. an , unmates
the·power of any one country to block an adverse trade "'ling; . ·. ·
·
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sco~ tiic piesident's message ala meeting coday of business e•ecutives in
the.Cajjit.QI.• .,. &gt;.,
.
Rep :Sam GibbOns D-Fia toll! reponers he expected about 270 of the
434 memberS of the House,;,· Vote in favor of ratifying the lateSt round of
the General ~ton TarifTs and Trade.
.
GibbOns as acting ·chaiiman of the House Ways and Means Commit·n ...~ ~riATT f,
· the 11
debate hed led to last just
~u'r h~wt~·:,
orcea m
oor
' sc u
·
Tbe agreeirllnt is suppoiled by House leaders of both parties, with th.e
exception pf the tbird-ranting Democrat, Whip David Bonior of Michl·
an Even·ali 0 ' · nt, Re Duncan Hunler R-Calif conceded his side
~o~ld be)llrmv":h a
of ISO to 180•voleS. ·•
Pro
,.15,.{. cl de ..
. S-•" .N
G' . h R "a outgoing
(!Onen m u IIICommg ~"""'er ewt mgnc , "' ., .
Speaker Thomas Foley, D-Wash outgoing Majority Leader R1chard
and
Mino.,. Leader R bert M. h 1 R·lll
.
0 ep,bardt, "M
..,. 0., . '"""u•l
nty
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.
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WASHINO:WN- ~Wiba1tm SUJlPC;lrttng a htS~O~C 124-natton trade
~ll'd;_are hopmg a ~led 100-vole VICtory margm ilftb~ H'?'J&amp;e today
wtU buill! mornenlU!D JDihe Senare where~ outcome n;m8111S m doubt
Even as, House leallers prepared. to begm Congress first lame-duck
session in f2 yWa; two presumed Sena1e supporters of the ~t- Ma_x
::~cus1 D Mont., iiftd.Hallt B!Own, R-Colo.- announced tbe11 oppoSI.· .
·
,
.
·
.
.
~~~an eye toward 'rblasday s crucial Senate vole, Pres1~nt CHn100
tele~honed waveri~g lliwll!~c-.1 on ~~ndar aft~r assembling tbe ~onomtc stars from eJgbt P,t~Yi~MJ~adrmmstraDons m a rally at the Wh11e
House
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Sl nt A.! 9&lt;?re; accompanied bY, U.S. Trade Representauve
Mickey Kantor and Agnculturc Secretary Mike Espy, planned to under-

10-I.Mio
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·SIIongWw~

Deadbne: Friday, Dec. 16 at 3 P.~
Mail or bring the entry fQrm to:

&amp;JEWELRY, INC.

The Daily Sentinel
,
.

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111 Court St
Po~eroy, Ohio 45769

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dowat~: Po•eroy. ne S.b·•·Lace batiia
te01 were aaoq die 1111111 dlaf twirled their
Wll)'itbrOIIpllle • • - drlllle.
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�1\JIIday, NcM!miJ8r 2i,11184
OHIO Weather

Commentar
The 'Daily Sentinel

Bipartisanship lives In analyst and ~.ormer aide to •-·-.
Congress, Ill least under last week's 1
"""""
agreement on tbe GA1T world ng. Senate Budget Committee
trade pact, but .a major test will Chairman Pete Domenici, R-N.M. .
"
come next year over a more
Alice Riviin, former director of
obscure issue: "dynamic scoring" ••
of the fedecal budget.
morton Kondrsclre
Republicans, especially in the CBO and now director of OMB
ROBERT L. WINGE1T
House, are convinced lhat tax cuts says that in a faceoff between th~
Publisher
w!ll in~ease federal revenues by admi.nistration and Congress on
sumulatlng economic growth and sc
c
that this conce~t should govern
orang, ongress can pass a
bd ·
"d~cally" scored budge~ but
CHARLENE HOE(LICH
MARGARET LEHEW
u
geung.
The
linton
administrathe
pre~•dent can veto appropriaGe.nl Ma118ger
Controller
tim~ is dead .set against the idea, lions bills tllat be believes will
settmg up a fundamental conflict expand the deficit.
over
budget policy.
But this is a recipe for massive
U!Tl'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They obould be 1..s than 300
House Republicans are lilcely to grid! k
'bl
loll&amp;. Alllellen are subjecl to editing and must be signed with name
insist that the next director of the
oc - possl Yeven a shutJ and lelepiloDO nlllllber. No unsigned !ellen will be published. l.etle~
Congressional Budget Office incor- down of federal agencies.
lboald be In good tule, addreuin&amp; illuea, oo1 penoollliliea.
,
po.rate '. 'dynamic budgeting" m·to ment
Thebecame
static-vs.-dynamic
part of the argu·
nowhis esllmates, while the White defused struggle over GATI when
House's Office of Management and Senate GOP Leader Bob Dole tried
Budget is detennined to stick to so- to bargain for favorable adminisb'a·
called "static" estimates, scoring lion consideration of a capital gains
tax cuts as revenue losers and tax tax cu~ wbicb Republicans believe
increases
as revenueforgainers.
Top candidates
the Congres- WI·u cause the ecOIIomy to surge,
"
sional Budget Office job reportedly : . :l=s~g up for any rev·
Meigs Division of the American
Dear Editor
.
are John Cogan, a former budget
Tbe administration refused to
. We just·came borne from attend· Heart Association and the Middle- official in the Reagan administra· give Dole more than a promise that
.. : ins the Bis Bend Minstrel Associa- pan Arts Council for sponsoring lion now at the Hoover Institution capital gains cuts will get "serious
doo!a pn:acotalion of Meigs Couo· the show.
California; John Makin of the consideration" next year, but did
The 29 acts were all entenaining in
, ty Talent Showcase of 1994 "Mus!·
American
Enterprise Institute; and
k
1
cal Memories at the House of Blue and tastefully produced. I fully Steve Bell, a Solomon Brotllers wor out so utions to satisfy his
r-------.;.co;.n.;,ce;;:ms about the powers of the
' Lights". My,busband commented · re11lize the efforts of many people
and
many
long
hours
went
into
this
.. .to me.• "they did a fantastic job.
: SomeOne II!IJbt to wright a letter to production. We were so imJICssed
with each and every one.
The Editor." I felt as be did.
Fony yem ago I bad lhe pleaIn the days of drugs, murders,
sure
of being there for the first prowars, ud rumors of wars, bow
duction
and each-year they get bet·
areat It was to spend a couple of
ter
and
better. I bad tears in my
hours gain&amp; back to tile music and
eyes
as
Sam
Cowan sans "America
fun times of days past and relax
IFid enjoy the efforts of many. It is the Beautiful" because I aslc you
where but in America can borne·
~ i Grand Fioale to Thanks·
&amp;irJI!I Weekend. Each participant town, Meigs County fqlks put
• excelled. We are a talented com' togelher a fun filled, clean, enjoyable e_vening and contribute to two
; illuoity.
· Thank you, Bob Hoeflich, for worthy causes and "Keep on
•nother well produced show. 1 Smilin' ...
T'..anks Bob!
seem to remember having said that
Sincerely
to you many times before. You·def·
MaJjorie M. Walburn
' initely kept us smiling and happy
Middleport
wllh !his show.
Our heartfelt tllanks 1o the

·~NC.

=

to the editor

.Another good production

new World Trade Organization
(like!y to be headed by outgoing
Mex1can President Carlos Salinas
de Gortari) and about special
breaks for the Wasbington Post Co.
and olher bidden for cellular data
band licenses.
Almost cenainly, though, both
the House and Senate will pass
capital pillS tall cuts next year, and
almost cataioly the admioiatralioo
will oppose them. The tax rate 011
the increased value of stocks, real
estate and other assets now is 28
percent, wbile the top rate for
wages, dividellds and other "ordi·
nary'' income is 39.6 percent.
Rep. Bill Archer, R-Teua, the
new Ways and Means chairmaD
bas advocated oo capital &amp;aios ~
at all, although even House Republicans aren't likely to go that far.
Dole aides say that senators are
talking about cuts down to IS, 18,
or 20 peroenL
President Clinton's 1993 economic plan installed the current
differential between capital gains
and ordinary income, but
Democra'ts oppose further reduc~ons bec•1se they primarily benefit
ncb people and - under "static"
scoriog - rost more money lhan
they bring in.
.

1

Maybe OMB lmd CBO could do
tho S'!*s toselber and let bipani-

Everyone working together
made our Thanksgiving a good
one. Hope to have these good peo~pie wtXking wilh us next year.
·
Mary Pickens, Edna Hunnell, and
the
Syracuse Fire Department. Sym·
cuse.

·

===~n~:.tb:u~~ pu~li-

Akron Beacon Journal, Nov. 28
On Nov. 8. voters sent an urunistalcable message: Things bave got to
: cbange. Throughout the campaign we heard both incumbents and chal·
: Jengers say education funding was a top priority.
• Now a panel of school-finance experts for the State Board of Educa: tioD has given legislators an opportunity to put their votes where their
: campaign !WDmises were.
•
: ' Tbe panel, appointed ill the wake of the Perry County ruling that
• Obio's school funding method is unconstitutional, bas called for raising
:•$3 biUion annoally for Obio's schools.
: In November, a little more than half of the school-tax issues passed.
: But tbe state task force proposal would, in effect, raise to 25 mills from 21
• mills the basic property tax support r~uired of all school districts before
: stale aid .would kick in.
: · The task force set a per-pupil minimum suppon level of $4,350, up
:. f!OI!I the present $3,035. We~thier districts would ante up more local
: l'esources. than less-wealthy dJstncts. That's bow state basic aid works
• ·now.
: The state task force recommendation flies in the face of the evidence
, tbal0bio needs to wean itself from dependence on the property tax.
•' Creativity and tenacity in addressing the admitted inequity among
! school districts wiU be key to Ohio's solving its school funding and edu: Q!1i011 reform problems.
: Reglirdless of lhe solution, Ohio can't affad to ignore the plight of its
scbools any longer.
.
1

: The Clndnnad Enquirer, Nov. 27
: Ohio's top cop can go after organized crime, bust Medicaid fraud,
; crack down on drug dealers and prosecute polluters. But when it comes to
: c~J!!ion at the highest state levels, the auomey general is Barney Fife
• w1lboUt a bullet
·
, · Under cunent law, st.a~;C officers are under the authority of local prose: cutors - usually Franklin County (Columbus~. The executive branch,
: i'r!duding the governor. also answers .to the state mspector general.
, 1 But county prosecutors are uneqUipped to tackle costly, complex, polit·
: ically f1anllilal)le cbarges against Ohio's most powerful leaders.
: And tile inspector general is appointed by the governor - hardly an
• inclqJCndent, arm's lenglh watch dog.
:. ' AtiOC!IeY&lt;Generai Lee FISher (a Democrat) bas IJI'O)lOSed an Anti-Cor·
; niplion BiliAo -extcod !he AG's powers:.AIIhough be is leaving office,
: heiDI tepliC"d by election wmner Repubhcan Betty Montgomery, F'lsher
• ,.ys tile Jieed·now is grearer than before.
'
;. NOfi, tllat Republic:ans own Ohio, including tile attorney general's
ofti¢'C; eytl! tile tllreat (If partisan witch bunts is gvne. One party can't
. : pa1ce lllelf ..:..es.,edauy if the state's top cop is shooting blanks. .
•

•

: '4 'f - "Nt,...,_.,;Nov. 23 ' ,
·

••

1

nfNaklrltJ Tilalportation safetY
Suety Board ~ended lhat corn..,p~~~~e~ •1*4 10
standards as tile big jetJ. The Fed·

,..a A¥illlal

lbe SliDe
AdmW~Iioll sboald not

dawdle in putting these recom-

tJwleps iMO effect. '
'
'Die OcL 31 aMII tl4111 AmcricaD Eagle flight in wbidl68 people died
_ , biW lddod pRIIIII_'C on the ~portation board, even though the
("II t U nales oa1y IIFPIY to planes Wltll 30 or fewer sealS.
•
. ne 11fetY bM'd WIII1S ihe new rules imposed on planes with 20 or
~ - . ~ ~iaw:e volunlary for the 1().. to 19-seaters. The
FM .,... ..- diem 111811datory for even the lO;seaters, and do so by
1

die ... """" Jell'· .

I. bate. to keep

barpin~n th.e

~s to be lettlng it alone. ~=:::
active (and, I'm proud to say, cardcarryin~) pundi~ I am compelled to
beat lh1s dead horse at least until
the arms of my fellow pundits get
tired.

. We can't say we weren't warned
that the culture was about to take a
sharp turn to tbe dull . In her
dotage, for example, Madonna bas
produced a n.:w CD that is almost
demure in comparison to her previous output. "Forrest Gump' • was a
recent major bit, with its message
lhat mental defectives wltll ethics
will win over confused, abused
women wilhout ethics.
Sniffmg the air of the millenni·
urn, President Clinton and Dianne
Feinstein have both stated their tentalive approval of, if not prayer·in
scbool, then "a moment of
silence" in school.
All of wbich makes me wonder:
What the bell is a liberal, anyway?
I know what liberals used to be:
guys with trimmed beards and
underfed women in blaclt. woeful,
psychoanalyzed to the max, cuncemed, caring, etc. (And McGovem, of course, !hough I no longer
remember exactly what be stood
f01.)
Those liberals are, atao;, extinct.
Nowadays, the term liberal seems

to include bureaucrats, television
producen, people who like cats,

~~u$.e~~nafe:::s• :~f~~~g·
1

1Bn

Sh

1

0818S

turalists, actors, and (of course) the
media.
I'd never really thought of
myself as a liberal before, but I
guess I am, in the eyes of the times
at least. Don't get me wrong. I ani
anti-Republican. But that's just
because a drunken Republican
threw me down a fligbt of stairs in
1966 in response to an imagined
slight to his wife. My politics are
personal, in.otherwords, notpolitical. I've never been unjustly
accosted physically by a liberal.
That goes a long way with me, ide·
ologically speaking.
So, I'm of two minds here. On
the one band, with Republicans in
power, we will no longer have to
J!retend to admire Barbra Streisand,
President Clinton or Murphy
Brown - this is a dcfmite plus in
my book. On the other band, what?
What do conservatives believe
. in? A smaller government? Well,
OK, that's not much of a flag to
salute. What happened to pompous
and grandiose dreams? In ancient
times, conservatives used to open
their veins In a batll wbeo IIley
thought the republic was beaded in
.
.

a wrong direction. Nowada 5 the
just filibuster. I suppose .6'ai·s

~

lef?:

~~;::~ever wistful. The

imw;:::Lth
.
. The right reads Victorian nov,
. ese conserv~uves? . els. The left analyzes them~
'I_bey re a m1xed lot (as m1xed as
A ~servative checks his pockh~erals), including both George ets. A liberal dances. '
Will and neo-Nazis, ~te ~ilson
. The ri&amp;bt glan~ at its watch
and Pa~ Buctwoao, .empae-builders discreetly. The left 1s just getting
and anti-bureauaatic bureauaats.
started.
·
Let's try~~ this "?wn=
~e left attends a meetins that
I~ you believe m ~g lists, the nght bas organized.
yo~ re a co~servative . If you
The J!:ft weeps. The rigi!t snick·
beli~vc in a itifferent reading list. ers.
you re a liberal.
Tbe left snicken. The right is
Conservatives believe in seating enraged.
arrangements Ill a party. Liberals
The right weeps. The left mates
will go to a party only if there's a brocblll\lS.
con~us as to whether a party is
The left take meetings. 'llleright
justified.
actually have tbem.
Conservatives admire poetry.
The right knows how to act
Liberals may admire poetry if they what it wants. The left is still articcan come to a consensus as to ulating ita issoes.
wb~ther Emily Dickinson was a . ·Right and left agree thai ~vacy
lesbian or not
IS a problem.
Let's cut to the chase. How
We'll see now, won't we?
many ~atives does it take to
(To receive a complimentary
screw m a light.bulb? None, ideal· Ian Shoales newsletter, call 1ly. How many liberals? Hey, liber- 800-989-DUCK or write Duck's
als don't worry about that kind of Breath, 408 Broad St.; Nevada
stuff.
. .
City, CA 95959.)
.
. Consc;:rvatlves can be generous
lao Shoal•• It a syndicated
With theu mooey. Uberals can be writer for NeWipllper Eaeerprill
generous with yoon.
Allodallon.
·
A conservative never gets
(For Information on llow to
drunk. A liberal gets drunk more COiiliilllllic:ate electronically wtdl
often than be should.
tills col8DIIIlst aFid otller1, COD•
redA conservative bas a thousand tad America OaiiM by ca1Uaa 1·
. neckties, a h'beral but one.
80Q.827~ en 8317.)

Clarence T~om_as' nightmare returns
Supreme Court Justice Cllftoce
Thomas. is said to be a !eligious
man, but my guess is be d rather
serve a since
hitch in bell than relive the
months
October
.
1991
Not'tllat the rust few yean of
his life were a_ piece of cake. He
was born into allj~ poverty abln·
.dooed by b1s fallier and -ted as
a dllld for the~ of biukin.
Rescoed by a grandfather and
educailld by nuns, be ID8FJI&amp;Ccl to
put himself throuJh Holy Cross
College and Yale law Sdlool He
became chaimuio of the Equal
Employment Opportunity Colomlslloo lrll982, moved to the fedc:nl
appcaiJ court beocb ib 1990 and
was ilflill!nttd in July 1991 to the
U.S. SIIIRme CouiJ.
Thai'1 wbcll hi&amp; days of agoay
began. The
conservative 'lbornu
was castiaated by the National
Auoclatioa for the AdvaDCCmeDt
of Colored People as • ''rcactiooary," bllslered by feminists as
"insensitive " 81141 eommanded by
Jesse Jacb&lt;in to express ''c:ootri·

'

11011. Then a former colleague told
the Senate Judic1&amp;ry Committee
that Thomas bad sexually harassed
lier
·
·

and say that I ·as an ignorant
insensitive beasi of a white ma1e:
never fully undentood what the
f
. tile rust pla.ce.
uss was about m
Josenh Snear
=~ =p=rytbir:1
I"
I"
be atcbed dirt t . 00·
The charges were "drowninJ 1 w
YmoVICI
occamy life, my career and my intepi· s on, that be once utter~ ,diose
ty," Thomas subsequently teatl- ::~::~:~we.a .lill~
fled. One illgbt, b1s wife later laid, go out with him
where
lbe
Tbomas aC:tually writhed on tile h
was
floor in palo. ·
arassment? He never aaked 'for
Now comes a book, "Strao
seJtual favors. He never slavered
Justice: The Sellins of Clare.:: ;:l~ssesood ·C:t aotheybody • a!!obbc
Thomas," by Wan Street Journal . 1
'
yery w~..,
reporters Jane Mayer and Jill '!IS brute.
·
.,
Abramson, and Thoma&amp; is heiDI
Tbal iJ ifJ.ou believed aUAw
forced to live those dadt days all :::esaldd
Tb, 0I mad IIOl[· Hill badj bfol·
over again. The writeraapeot three
• rom one o to
yCIII'I 00 the piojea but ac~cnt~wl- another. Sbe bad kept in reaular
edge IIIey c8rmot prove the haiau- ~~ with him utu her yean in
ment charaes· ajainst Thomas.
= = m o80s t telling of
· They c:oocludc, however, that the , sub.tao~ -.u
witneUes to
• ''prer,&gt;Dderanc:C of evidence aua·
her dtapa of baua·
1
gests ' that Justice Thomas '!lied
~
ICVelllwilhodler WC1F1C11
under 011111."
tified
Tbomu lea·
Let me 10 back to the
,

:d

:0

~&amp;ionlog

!:'i...s

So~ :":f!'! ~"'!"Iiich
q,,

' · tr:

.·--

Dillrlbuted by United J'eatare
Syadkate, Inc.
END Morton Koadrllcke 11ZII-H

What is a liber~l, anywa.y ?

By The Associated P~ss
,Editorials of statewide and natiooal interest from Ohio newspapers:

1

Copyrlabt 1994, Roll Call

N~

·.

from other
.'oExcerpts
h
10 newspapers

••

sansbip stay alive a liUie longer.
(MortoD Kollldracke Is execud\'e editor of Roll Cal, 111e aewspaper of C.pltol HID.)

bard doing cooking, serving, deliv·
ering and clean up.

a

oo
•

,

I

WVA.

Meigs announcements
Shower~ T-,_ RBI
Me A•• 'fllwiPtea

Fllitriea

.

G.,...,.,

Ice

Sulny Pt

•

,

Jou~Ja :r.,:r .. allfildlcata4

=~a:.. •Wiplper lutajalll!

,..

(I' or laror-tloa oa •••

·~
t4

=-=~-~..,.
co
a _....,,colt,·

'!:a~u·· ~~
.-

Cloudy

The
We•ther forecast:
Ohioans are in for some brisk
Today ... Panty cloudy extreme
; faD weather wilh a few snow flur- n~rth ... Mostly sunny elsewhere.
ries ·pgssible over the neJtt few H1gh in the lower 40s north to
days, forecasters said.
around 50 in the far south.
· A troup of low pressure movTonisbt ... Cioudy north with a
. ing ~ tile Great Lakes regioo few flurries late ... Snow showers
· tonigtit 'will Jllllduce some flurries . likely in the extreme nonbeast lare.
· in oortbem Ohio and perhaps some Partly cloudy south. Lows 25 to 30.
SDOW. showers aloog tile Iakefron~
Wednesday ... Snow showers
. the Nadonal Weatbcr Service said. likely in the morning extreme
Lows will be in tile mid and northeast. Mostly cloudy north
upper20a.
with a few morning snow OurThe flurries may linger on ries ...Becoming partly cloudy in
Wednesday morning under cloudy the uternoon. Partly cloudy south.
skies. Temperatures on Wednesday Highs 3S to 45.
·
· will reach the upper 30s in the
Extended forecast:
north and mid40s soulh.
Tbursday ... Fair. Lows in tile
The record-bigh temperature for 20s. Highs in lhe mid 40s to lower
this date at the Columbus wealher 50s.
.
station was 70 degrees in 1927
Friday...Fair. Lows in the upper
while the record low was 3 in 1887. 20s and lower 30s. Hiahs in tile
Sunset ttlnight wiU be at 5:08 p.m. upper 40s to the mid 50s.
and sunrise Wednesday at 7:33 . Saturday ...Fair and mild. Lows
a.m• .
3S to 40. Highs 55 to 60.
.

With Serbs winning, U.S.
seeks to renew peace talks
By BARRY SCHWEID
AP Diplomatic: Writer
. ~A,S~G'J'C?N -.The Clinton
adm1.n~strauon .1s trymg to draw
Bosn!B s Serbs mto peace talks by
~ to reopen a rejected inrer~plan. · · . :
...
~ mam Inducement IS a poiitical ue between Serbs in Bosma and
lbo~ . ~j:I'P$3 , th.Q h9rder in Serbia,
at~ougli admmistration officials
S31d Monday other c.banges in the
P!an were open to discussion pro~VI~ the Serbs accepted Bosnia as
an mdeJ.X:ndent country.
. Pres1d~nt Clin~on's senior fore1g~ policy adv1sers met at the
While House, and Secretary of
State Warren Christopher prepared
lo fly to Brussels, Belgium, on
Wednesday to discuss what his
SJJ.Dicesman termed "a lot of ideas"
~Jth th.e .NATO and Russian fore1~ mwst.en. The administration
~ec1ded ~ try to ~ a cease-fuc
.m. the besJej!ed ~uslim enclave of
Bibac, offiCials said.
U.S. o~cials ruled out sending
2,000 ~nc:s who are offshore in
. the Adriauc mto the c~flict to try
!D n:scue 60,000 Mushms trapped
m Bibac.
.
But th~~ S31d there was a "real
.prospect U.N. peacekeepers
would~ wi~drawn from.the line
.of f~. m wh•ch case Marines and
po~s1~ly other ~.S. uoops would
ass1st m e.vacuatlng th~. .
One. h1gh-level C?fficial re.JOC!ed
the nouon of allowmg a federation
of Serbs t!Jroughout what once was
Yu¥fS~av~.

. It s s1mply not true that we
Greater Setof State Peter
T~off .S31d _early today on ABCT'( s N1ght~me program. Tamoff
~·d the Umted Stares had g~tten
some measure of cooperauon''
from lhe Belgrade government in
~·•!.countenance a
b1a, Jln~rsecretary

. ..

-

recent weeks ·in closing some bor·
der areas between Serbia and porlions of Bosnia populated by Serbs.
Dealing with the war has split
the United States and the Europeans. The allies are resentful that
lhH~. llfU!!!. !J,S.~ l!.~acekeeping

troops m Bosma, wlillellieUiilteil
States is irritated that the United
Nations and the allies have prevented NATO from making a sustained bombing of Serb positions to
-enforce the U.N. designation of
Bibac as a "safe area."
British Defense Secfetary Mal·
calm Rifkind said Monday it was
disgraceful for U.S. politicians to
blame Britain for the debacle in
Bosnia.
"I think when we have thousands of brave British soldiers
some of whom have lost their lives:
in Bosnia ... it ill becomes people
in countries who have not provided
a single soldier on the ground to
make that kind of criticism,"
Rilkind said. '
Republican Sen. Bob Dole, the
incoming Senate majority leader,
said Sunday that "the British and
French, and primarily the British"
were to blame for "a com Jete
breakdown" of NATO's missfon in
Bosnia.
Respondin~ to Rifkind's criti·
cism, Dole, m Brussels for the
NATO meeting, said today he did
not think the U.N. protection force .
was serving any useful purpose and
should be withdrawn.
. "Cenainly, I have no quarrel
with the bravery of the British
forces," Dole also said on Night·
line. "But what's their purpose
there? :.. Maybe it's time we tried
another optioo, that's pulling out of
Bosnia, lifting the arms embargo
and giving the Bosnians a chance
to defend themselves ••
·

'

'The Daily Sentinel

will meet at 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. Chester Erwin.
Mrs. Wendell Hoover will ·review
Different Seasons and ·other writ·
mgs of Stephen King. Mrs. Erwin
and Mrs. David Bowen wiU present
musical selections.
Christmas tea planned
A Christmas tea for volunteers
a! the Racine .Elementary and
Icmdergarten w11l be held at the
high sc~l cafeteria ThUIS!Iay at 7
p.m. Children attending with their
parents will be supervised and
entertained.

bu:T.

Youth

I.ntem8liOna1 Party, or Yip-

pies. They were major playcn dur·

mg anti-Vietnam War demOIIItra·
lions in 1968 ouuide lbe Democratic National Convention in
Chicago.
The next year, President
Nixon's new administration
brought federal COIIIpiracy indict·
menta against eight llldicals. Black
Panther leader Bobby Seale and
seven others, including Robin and
Hoffman, were cbargr:d witll coo·
spiracy to incite violence and
crossing state lines with intent to
riot.
'
U.S. District Judge Julius Hoff.
man severed Seale's case from the
others and ordered him bound,and
gagged when he protested rulings.
The trial of the others - the Cbica·
go Seven - began in September
1969 and was a 4 1(2-mOIItb spectacle.
Wild-haired defendants Rubin,
Hayden, Hoffman, Rennie Davis,
David Dellinger, John Froioes l!lld
Lee Weiner wore judicial robes
into the courtroom. They and their
attorneys were cited for contempt
of court nearly 200 times. tho~h
all but IS of the citations were dis·
missed. •
All seven were acquitted of conspiracy; all but Froines and Weiner
were convicred of intent to rioL
Rubin, Hoffman, Davis, Dellinger
and Hayden were sentenced to
prison, but the U.S. 7th Circuit
Court of Appeals overturned their
convictioos. citing errors by Judge
Hoffman.

Cantata scbeduled
A Christmas cantata will be presented under the direction of Sue
Matheny at the Mount Hermon
U.B. Church at 7:30p.m. Sunday.
The program title is ''The Gift of
ChriStmas." The public is invited to
Meeting location changed
attend. ·
.
Due to the fact state auditors
Class to start
will be using the facilities at Star
The Midnight Cloggers will · Mill Park, Racine Village Council
(Condouecllrom Page 1)
ly burned wfli be removed when
conduct a beginners clogging class will meet at the annex Monday at 1
Councilmen Paul Gerard and the Meigs County Health Depart- ·
at Pomeroy Village Hall for eight p.m.
Nick Robinson voted for taking meat $et5 adequare fwlds, he said.
weeks beginning Monday, 6-7:30
$10 from the $30 they earn at each
• hired PJ. Richmond to fiD the
Dinner reservations due
~.m. There is a $2 jJer person dona·
meeting. Council members Bob patrolman position vacated by
uon.
Today is the final day to make Gilmore and Beth Stivers voted . Ryan Hall. Richmond wiU start at
reservat:Jons for the annoal Christ- against the motion. Hortoo, break· $6.67 per hour, working a 40-hour
mas dinner at the Meigs County ing 11\(l tie, voted against taking the · week. Richmond was highly qualiBazaar set for Friday
The
Enterprise United Museum. The dinner will be served money from their salaries. Council· fied and had donated numerous
Methodist Church will bold a at 6:30 p.m. Friday. Entertainment men Mick Childs and Jim Clatwor- hours to the village, Horton said.
baz.aar at the Carpenter's Hall, will be provided by the Historical thy were absenL
• was updated on the action of
Mam Street, Pomeroy, Friday, 8 Society Singers. The traditional
Therefore, if the third reading the ~trategi~ pianninl! commiltee.
a.m. to S p.m.
open house will be on Sunday from passes at the next council meeting, Robmson S31d the Oh10 State Unii-S p.m. with a special emphasis on the employees will get bonuses and versity Cooperative Extension SerBarbie dolls from the past 3S yem. it will be paid for from the general, vice will help establish a workshop
Literary Club to ~;~~eet
The Middlepon Literar)l Club
water, sewer, street, cemetery and with local business people and
safety funds, Horton said.
individuals to draw up plans for
~ bonuses for the 23 employ- future economic development.
ees wiU cost $2,050, but an individDennis Hockman, who has
INDIANAPOUS (AP) - For- affect a 1996 presidential run she ual ha~ donated $1,000 reducing attended lhe village and county
•
the village's expenses, Horton said. development meetings, said the
mer Vice President Dan Quayle bas said.
In ot)ler acli011 ~il:
extensiOn servic~ will present
The Republican was considered
been hospitalized for a blood clot
.
'
entefeifinfu
a
1995
contrBci
~and foeus whiGh GompaD
likely
Clllldidote,
·· nr one 15f His rungs, a hosplllil
Quayle,
47!
"was
complaining
with
Columbus
F'ucwolks
Co.
now
nies
wiU be sought.
spokeswoman said today.
of
progressive.
shortness
of
to
ensure
operators
will
be
avail•
heard that the annual ChristQuayle was admitted to University Hospital in Indianapolis about brea~." Perry said. "During the able to set off the annual FOUI1b of mas parade will be held at 6 p.m.
5:30 p.m. EST Monday, said evenmg, a team of physicians July firewolks. The fireworks wiU Thursday, with free photographs
spokeswoman Pam Perry of the determined he had a clot that trav- cost about $3,200. The Middleport taken with Santa Claus in the Pea.Volunteer Fire Department is pl~s Bank parking 101 afterwards,
Indiana University Medical Center eled to his lung."
spending $450 for the deposit.
S31d Tom Dooley, presidenl of the
Perry
did
not
know
which
lung
which includes the hospital.
'
•
discussed
future
steps
the
viiMiddleport Community Associathe
clot
was
in
or
what
caused
it
She said he was expected to be
la&amp;e
will
take
against
lax
landlords.
lion.
Several merchants said tbey
She
said
be
was
in
stable
condition.
hospitalized about a week. Doctors
Perry ~id not know if Quayle Earlier this year, an ordinance tar· had the most sales aclivity after
expect a full recovery, but it is too
early to tell how his illness would · had any bistory of heart or circula- geted at these landlords failed. Bob Thanlcsgiving in recen1 years, Dontion problems.
Fisher said council capitulated to ley added.
the renters and the village must not
• learned the Middleport Volunforgeqlbout resolving dilapidated teer Fire Departmenl will hold an
propertles.
honorary dinner at 6:30 p.m.
Councilman
Robinson
said
the
Thursday
a1 the fire hall. Social
Four calls for medical assistance office of Dr. D.R. Westmoreland
proposed
ordinance
that
died
has
hour
will
begin
a16p.m.
and a frre call were answered by for treatmeoL
valuable
information
and
the
issue
units of the Meigs Courity Emer·
POMEROY
not be dropped.
gency Medical Service Monday.
4:54 p.m. to Jones Road for must
Horton
said the village will
The calls answered were as fol- Crystal Shockey, taken to Veterans
meet
with
landlords and other
lows:
Memorial Hospital.
meJ!lbers
of
~e community uter
MIDDL-EPORT
5:17p.m., to Mulberry Avenue Cbrisbnas to discuss
revamping the
11:50 a.m., to Meigs Mine II for for Eloise Adams, laken to VMH.
currellt
·
rules.
The
work
of council
Gerald ~ibbs, transponed to the
RACINE
members in creating the legislation
10:53 p.m. to Barringer Road will not be discarded, Horton
for Mary Evans, lransponed to added.
By
VMH.
In related concerns about runTRANSFERS
Dave
VETERANS MEMORIAL
down property, a house that recent6:02
p.m.
University
Air-Care
Monday a,dmissions - Edward
Grate
of Dayton, transfer of Edward
Wood, Columbus.
Monday discharges - Fannie Wood, Columbus, from VMH to
of
the Dayton Veterans AdministraDurst, Portland.
Am Ele Power ·--------.. -..33
Rutland
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER · tion Hospital.
Akzo.--•-----------.55 318
FIRE
CALL
Discharges Nov. 28 - Mrs
Ashland OU
1/2
furniture
6:30 p.m., Middleport Fire
Timothy Dotson and daughter·
AT&amp;T·-------------A15~
to
671
Soulh
Third
Deparlment
Yvonne Sellers, Dillon Bentley'
Bank On•.-----------l6 114
We can 't all be heroes.
Vernon Blevins.
' Ave. for a possible structure fire at
Bob Evans-----------.20 1/2
Champion Ind.
Someone has to sit on the
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. William the home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Vaughan. The call was canceled a
Charming Sbop--------.6 5~
curb and clap as they go by.
Beach, daughrer, Wellston.
few minutes laler.
City HoldiJis
&lt;Published wtth permissrn&gt;
Federal MOKUI·--------.20
Any child can tell you that lhe
Goodyear
T&amp;R __.;. ___ ....33 3/4
sole
purpose of a middle
K·mart - ·--------·--·14 5~
name
is so he can tell when
Lands End --------··--·16 518
Limited Inc.----------·19 718
he's really in trouble .
Multlmed18lnc.
718
Point Bancorp ·---·-·---..1.9
When was the last time you
Reliance EtKtrlc
718
passed a furniture store that
Robbins &amp; Myers....-----·17 3/4
wasn't
having a sale?
Royal Dulcb .....------108 118
•••
Sboney's Inc ....................... - .13 518
"You
must
think
I'm a perfect
Slar Bank
518
Wendy lni'L --·--------.13 3/4
idiot." "Oh, nobody's perfect."

Middleport invests...

Dan Quayle hospitalized

EMS units log .four calls

Hospital news

----------.34

--------..15

---------32

.. .

1~

...

-------.30

---------.35

- -.-pold•Fo-y,Qiio.
~

Food basket applications
The Meigs United Methodist
Cooperative Parish will be taking
applications for food baskets Dee.
5, 6 and 7, at 311 Condor St from
9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. The project is
for low-income families only. The
dates,in Monday's Daily Stlllintl
were macc:urate.

WS ANGELI!S (AP) - Jerry
Rubio, the 8CIMit wbo bclped Jive
19608 anti-- pro1e11a their zany
countercultore qualities and
became a symbol of his aeneration's conversion to
·
'tal·
ism in the 191b,
The Chic:qo Seven defendant
and Yippie founder-turned-yuppie
businessmln died Mooday. He bad
been at the University of California, Los Angeles, Medical Center
since Nov. 14, wla be was bit by
a car while jaywalking across
Wilshire Boulevard near his Brent·
wood home.
He suffered cardiac arrest at
7:45 p.m., said bospital spokesman
Angel BmcaiiiODtea.
A merry pranksier of the anti·
Vietnam War movement, Rubin
often appeared shinless 111 proleSIS,
wearing an Uncle Sam hat and
brandishing a toy M-16 rifle.
Turning to spiritualism in the
1970s and venture capitalism in the
1980s, Rubin evolved from a
bearded radical to a tailored businessman selling health foods. He
said he cut bis hair and shaved so
people would listen.
"He got caught in the youth
rebellions of the ·~ ... said Tom
Hayden, a fellow activist who is
POW 8 Stale SCDII!!ll'. ''llut he had an
organizing instinct. He was il.T.
Barnum, if you wUL He had a flair
for the dramatic and how to marlcet
a message."
Rubin and a band of radicals
.that included the tare Abbie Hoffman and Paul Krassner formed the

·-------.211

(t!SPI ZIJ.Hij

eo-

That. put plainly IFid simply, 11
a ~rock of kimchi. l •woald be
m1ghtily shocked if uy fairly
selected Jury in tile land'fouod
Cllreace 'I'bOmaJ S!lllty baaed oa
this new "evidence."
The •!hors found two people •
tile EEOC at the time who laid
they bad beard that Thomas made
tbC pubic hail temaik. The 111t11or1
fOI)Od a video store owner Who~
Thomas was a~· b1a ''Dot
a notolious one." olseJt flbU. 'I1IC
autllon' found four womca whci
they claim c:onoborated Hill's
ct.-ges.
·
1

Cloudy

·· BySeasonal
weather toFecHt
Associated Praa

Ob» Ylllt1....,.1iblll
1-itJ...u.
lie., ...,_.,, Dido 4$769, I'll. 99:1·2156.

· ·

----Area death~-- Famed '6 ,s activist
Jerry Ru in is dead
Helen F. Smith
Helen F: Smitll, 79, of Frank-Smi!b Road, Wellston, formerly of
Pomeroy, died Sunday, Nov. 27, 1994 at the Oak Hill Community Medi·
cal Center.
Born on Jan. ~· 191S .at Wellston, she ~as the daughter of the late
Ffll!lk and Kare Kisor Sm1th. She was a retired school teacher with ihe
Me~gs County school systenl. _
Miss Smitl) graduated from Wellston High School, and received her
bachelor of SCI~ and master's ~grees from Ohio U!iiversity. She was a
member of the Meigs County Retired Teachers Association and the Meigs
County ?tonec:r and His~D!kal Society.
SurviYon mc1ude a SISter, Margaret Keele of Wellston· nieces and
nephews, Lucinda Fonnyduval of California, Ed Formydu~al and Tim
Formyduval, both of Wellstoo, Terry Formyduval of Cincinnati Sandra
Cun!fiiT and Frank Keele, both of Wellston, and Michael Keck 'of Missoun.
Balesides her parents, she was preceded in death by a sister, Lois Formyduv .
. Services will be Thursday .at 10 a.m. in the Rogers Funeral Home
Wellston. The Rev. A.B. Maloy wiU officiate and burial will be in Sale~
Cemetery, Wellston. Friends may call at the funeral home Wednesday
from 5-9 p.m.

IND.

Pul&gt;umN • .., - - · Noldlyllmop.
Frlclly,)ll c- Sl., . . . _ ,, Obio by ....

~ ':;.:'=een lis.coven
ual"-··- wu,
iodccd;
a sex ,_.....,.,
·

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1

Apcu.WearbeJ8 forecast

Some Democrats, such as tile
Progressive Policy lnstiture'a Rob
Shapiro, agree with Republicans
that the United SlateS is at a CCIII·
petitive disadvantage because its
taxes 011 capital are bigbes than in
other countries, but they argue that
the answer is to indell new invest·
ments so they will not be taxed for
inaeases in value due to iollation.
Indexing conceivably could be
the basis of a bipartisan compromise on taxes next year, along wilh
a tax cut for middle-class families.
But agreement on ''scoring"
will be more difficult because it' a
almost a matter of religious differ·
ence between tbe parties.
Rivlin calls dynamic scoring
"nonsense" and "dishonest."
Incoming House Speaker Newt
Gingrich, R-Ga., once called her
attitude "socialist." and ibcomin
Hot~se Majority Leader Die~
Anney, R-Texas, a former college
professor, says, "I'd fluolt ber in
freshman economic~.''
'
The Republicans say that tile
best example of the truth of
"dynamic scoring" - and the
error of "static storing" - was
the 1990 luxury tall on airplanes
and boats, which reduced revenue
because sales dried up, forcing the
tax to be repealed.
1'bt«eticany, a sroring compromise pusht to be possible. Even
Democrats agree tbat GATIIariff
cuts will have "supply side"
effects that will boolt the ~Y
and raise revenue in the IODJ nm.
WbHe Rivlio and HQuie Republicans Joust. there are a few c:ooter
heads on the scene, sucli as
Domenici and Bob Rubio, cbairIDIII of the White Houae.' s National
Economic Council, wbo worry that
"dynaolic scorins" can be over·
done, leading to "rosy scenarios"
that will allow defiCits to balloon.
Before going for ."dynamic"
budgeting, Domenici would like to
see sane studies done the subject.

Dinner a success
Dear Editor
The third aimual community
'lbaoksgiving dinner was a success
because of so many who helped.
,: .. We served 57 dinners at the_~. llon-;Dad 21 carryouts and i,Iellv'
. ered 213 dinners to shutins.
That would not have been possi·
ble without the money and supplies given, tbose wbo donated
., pies. an the pc ' pie who worked so

-------

Bipartisanship lives on in GATT

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohlo

~ Letters

-~

Wednesday, Nov. 30

hge 2 :rhe Dlllly s8ntlne1
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ot,lo
1\Jeiday, Novema. 28, 1894

'Jhe Dltliy Sentinel

Ohio

n. •••

l•'ed Pre., lid tbe QUo
N.....,..*lln=lrUoL

Wol1blnglon Ind.------.19 3/4
Stock r~portsantbe 10:30 Lm.
quotes provided by Ailvelt of
Gallipolis.

l'llii1MoU1'UlSnd-..- to
Tbo Dolly Soatiool. Ill CourJ St.
-..y,Ollio 45'1\19.
•

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...

Most. of us are confident we
could move mountains, if only
someone would clear the

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tESTIVE FLOAT- N-lloata rolied
up Main Street durlDI tb aa11aal llolldaJ
puade S.lldaJ ......_. '111e TriDltJ Cburdt
. float, pldured alloft, - a.e Ill the iloata tUt

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laelpecl nalDcl • rltkrata lllllle true •euinl Ill
tbe bollday - - · (Sntbtei pboto by GeoJ'Ie
Abate) ' ·

II WAIIIIOUSlS

Rutland Furniture
'Rt. 124,1111114 0.. 742-2211

.

�I

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

1\leedey, November 2i, 1ai4
Page--4

1\leldly, Nowmber 29, 11194

·

=

Outcb free throw &amp;booting and
big buckets goiug down lbe
stretch, coupled by a weD-balanced
scoring attack, led the Eastern's
Lady Eagles to a S4-49 road win
over Nelsonville-York Monday
night in the season opener for both
clubs.
The Buckeyes jumped Into a 8-2
lead during the ftrSt few minutes of
tbe game, but Eastern's defense
stiffened and held the Buckeyes
M:oreless the last three-plus minutes of tbe frame. Eastern's Jessica
Karr, a 13.1 points-per-game scorer
one year ago, picked up her secood
foul and sat out the la1t pan of the
initial frame, leaving the ballbandling chores to Amy Redovian, Jessica Radford and Nicole Nelson Ill
point.
Nelson drilled a two poiul goal
from the wing, tbeo at the ~
drilled a three pointer 10 lie the
score at 8-8, giving Eastern a big
lift.
Karr picked up ber third foul
witb six minutes left in the second
period. Redovian picl::ed up tbe
slack, !coring five points in the
pcriO!I as N· Y maintained a twoto-four point lead tllrougbout the
second round
Evans bit a free throw to cut the
score to 20-18 as Eastern took pos·
session with 10 seconds left on the
clock. Nelson whipped the ball to
the left wing, wbere sophomore
Martie Holter, bot off a 13-point
night in the reserve game, drilled a
three-pointer, lifting Eastern to a
21-20balftimelead.
Tied at several points throughout tbe third frame, Eastern led
sev~

TAKING
under lbe basket •ntidpation or a
rellouDd 1re River VaUey Raiders HeicU Haab (11) and Cindy Arm·
llte8d ud Melp Marauder Taryn Doidge during M011day night's seasoD opener at Mei1a Hl1b Scbool, where lbe Raiders came rrom
beblad tom 47-41. (Dave Harris photo}
·

VaIIey g I.rIs beat
.
RIVer

mucb of the way, but could not
sbake the Buckeyes. Karr came
back to score eight in the frame
with complimentary efforts from
Rebecca Evans (five), sophomore
Patsy Aeiker (four} and Redovian
(lwo).
N-Y had balanced scoring iu the
frame wilb six fran Sarah Ogg and
four eacb by Lindsey Shumway
and Alicia Adams, but Eastern led
40-38 a1 the end of the frame.
Eastern built up a 44-40 lead by
tbe midpoint of tbe final round,
tolally dominating tbe boards with
Evans and Aeiker at tbe posts .
Redovian, Karr and Nelson were
integral in the offensive drive, but
Eastern turned the ball over tbn:e
slraigbt times on its next three pos·
sessions. N-Y capitalized witb
Ogg's lbree·point goal and
Shumway' 1 glass shot to take a 4544 Ially, prompting Eastern to call
a lime out with 2:S8 left.
Karr was lost on the next possession, fouling the bot shooting
Ogg, wbo missed three straight free
throws off the tbree point attempt
Like a well-oiled machine, Eastern
' matCiied llacl: Into the game with
two big goals by Amy Redovian
and another key jumper by Nelson.
Evans grabbed a rebound and
was fouled, giving Eastern the 5247 lead with 56 seconds left, but
Shumway scared off the low screen
to make II S2-49. As Eastern pulled
1hc ball 0111 front for the good shot,
Nelson was fouled for the bonus,
but missed. Jill Shaffer forced up a
hurried tbree as EHS shut down tbe
inside witb Aeiker ~trabbin~t the

rebound llld dlppm8 off to Netson ca Karr 6-0-0=12, Rebecca Evans
wbo drilled bolb ends of tbe bonus · 346-12, Nicole Nelsoo 3·1-:Z..l1,
with 21 seconds lcftas EHS rolled Patsy Aelker 1-0-2•4, Martie
Holter 0-1· 0•3 . Tol•l•: 18·:Z·
on to tbe wiD.
Melissa Guess, Jessica Radford 1V20=S4

and Beth Bay were credited with
Nellonvllle·York
playing great defensive games for
(8-1l-18-11=49}
Eastern in a great team win. Evans,
Sarah
Ogg S·1-2o:lS, JID Shafer
Redovian an\1 Karr eacb bad 12,
3·1-3•12,
Heather Cagg 2·0-0a4,
while Nelson added 11 and Aeiker
four. Ogg bad IS for N-Y and Lindsey Shumway 6-0.{).12, Alicia Hall 0-0-2o:2, Angle Adams 2·
Shumway and Shaffer 12 each.
Aeiker, who bad 14 rebounds, 0-0=4. To&amp;U: 18-l-7nt..et
was followed in thai department by
Evans' II and Redovian's seven of Southern boys
Eas1em' s total 44. N-Y bad 34
rebounds, led by Shumway's eight to begin 1994·95
and Shaffer's seven.
season Saturday
Eastern bit 18-65 twos and 2-3
threes from tbe field, wbile bitting
The Southern boys' basketball
12·20 a1 the line. The team posted
team
will kick off Its 1994-9S lea·
eight steals, five assists AJJd had 21
~n Saturday at 11:4S am. against
turnovers.
N-Y bit 18-SO fJCid goals and 2- Portsmouth East as pari of the
9 tbn:es, while bitting 7-11 at the McDonald's Holiday· Classic 11
Obio University's Cbillicotbe
line. No other slats were available.
After leading the entire reM:tve brancb in Cbillicolbc.
Soutbern' s bexl game will be an
game, Eastern was dropped by five
.
on
Friday, Dec. 9at Trimble.
of Nelsonville's varsity players 2827. .wbile l!lso bei!!&amp; wbistled for
19 fouls to N· Y's five. Eastern
never sbot a free throw.
Holter led Eastern witb 13,
wbile MicbeUe Caldwell added six
and Crystal Holsinger bad four.
Heather Cagg bad eigbl for the
wiuners.
Eastern will go to Albany to
play Alexander ThttrSday.
.

River Valley bit 17 of so from
the floor for 36% including one of ·
eigbt from long range. The winners
hit 12 of 26 from the line for 46%. River Valley bad 41 rebounds witb
Armstead puUing in 13 and Meade
getting 11. River Valley bad 19
turnovers, 10 assists (led by Sta, Jn's four} and 19 steals, wilb
Armstead and Staton getting four
eacb.
Meigs bit 13 of 38 from lbe
floor for 34%, including one of
four from tllree-f!iul range. Tbe
Marauders hit 1 of 19 from the
line for 63%. Meigs pulled in 19
reoouilliS, ~lib Compsloo grtibblug ·
six, and had 19 turnovers. Meigs
bad six assists, witb Laura Eastman
getting three, and bad 10 steals,
with Compston and Melissa Clif·
ford eadJ getting six.

in AP cage poll,·

.River Valley's Lady Raiders
By JEFF DONN
ouiiCOred Meiss 7-0 in the final
AMHERST, Mass. (AP) -For
3:24 of the same and went on to
Marcus Camby, the journey from
defeat the MlriiUdcn 47-41 MooNumber None to Number One bor· day evening Ill Larry R. Morrison
ders on the impossible.
Gymnasium in the season Qpener
"It feels a little crazy. I still
for both teams.
don't think it's sunk in yet," the
The Raiders, wbo claimed their
sophomore center for the Universiftnt-ever win over 1hc Marauders,
ty of Massachusetts said.
took advantage of Ice-cold Meigs
But across this 22,000-student
sbooling 10 jump out 10 an early
campus in western Massachusetts,
12-3 lead. Meigs pulled to within
it was sinking in nicely Monday.
14-711l the end oflhe period on two
Students and staffers were reveling
in the national attention lavished
Cynthia Cotterill fre~ throws.
Mcfgs was jj)jlCIOlilt Diily ooe of
upon lhcir first top-ranked-basket•
10 tint-period shots.
ball team.
Bolb teams bit a dry spell 10
"We're not used to the limestart the second period. Amber
light like a North Carolina or Duke
BlackwcD scored the period's ftrSt
or someone who is always winning
points wbeo slle bit a tbree-pointer
championships," Lyle Core, a
three and a half miuutes into thesenior, said during a break in a
period. Two free !brows by VanesRiver Valley made it a clean pickup baslcetbaU game.
aa Compston, wbo led the Maraud- sweep by
tbe reserve conA team that went 10-18 for the
er ICOfCfl witb 12 poinlli, cui River test 36-24. Je · er Queen led the season as recently as 1989, the
Valley's lead to 14-12 aldie 4:1S winners with nine points, Jennifer Minutemen became a Top 25 teams
IIUII'k.
Martin added eigbl. Carissa Asb in January 1992 for the ftrsl lime.
But Amber Slaton, wbo led all and CAJJdlce Miller led Meigs witb . Even in the early 1970s with Julius
scorers with 14 points, nailed a elgbt eacb.
'
E1 ving perfecting his above-thethree pointer to start lbe Raiders on
rim offense, the Minutemen
a 6-0 run, wbicb helped the Raiders
Thursday's agenda will bave remained unranked.
10 a 20-14 lead at the 2:04 mark. River Valley bosling Marietta and
But this season ' s team,
Meigs came baclt to tie the game Meigs llaveling to Nelsooville to anchored by forward Lou Roe, has
wilb 27 seconds left on Alicia face NelsmviUe-Yorlc.
become the fJist in New England to
Haggy's bucket before Blackwell's
-•- •-•climb to the top of the national
basket gave the Marauden a 22-20
River V•IIey
runldngs. Connecticut reached No.
lead with 10 seconds lefL
(14-6-11-15=47}
2 last season. Boston College
Meigs increased the lead to 28Vanessa Short 2-0-0=4, Amber gained its best spot at No. 6 a
21 with 6:04 left in the period on a Staton 4-1·3= 14, Erin Conley. 2..().. decade ago.
ComPSIOD bucket, but tbe Raiders 0=4, Sarah Ward 3.()·2=8, Nickie
Massachusetts rocketed past
fought back to tie !be game al 30 Meade 2-0·5=9, Cindy Armstead ' ·them all on the strength of Friday's
on a Staton bucket with 3:03 lefL 3.()-2=8. Tot.ls: 16-1-12::47
season-opening 104·80 blowout of
1
Meigs took a 36·32 lead Into the
defending NCAA champion
Onal clahl minutes wben BlackweD
Meigs
Arkansas, lhen ranked ftrSt but now
pJRXJ with 36lcrt iu the quarter.
(7-15-14-5=41}
fourth. The national media panel
Both tcamS traded buckets in the
Amber Blackwell 2-1 -4= 11 polled by The Associated Press
final period, but Anne Brown Melissa Clifford 2~.
gave lhe Minutemen all but seven
.cored on a lay-in with 3:24 left to Compston 3~12, Anne Brown of 65 first-place votes, lifting it
live Meigs a 41 -40 lelld. Tbat 2-0-0=4, CyntbiaCotterill 0-0-2=2, from lhird place.
jJrovcd 10 be the Marauders' final Cheryl Jewell 2-0-0..4, Ashley
"It doesn 'I help this early,"
p01n11. Statoo sparked the Raiders Roacb 1-0-0=2, Allcia Haggy 1-0- said coach John Calipari, ever vigidown the stretch willi ber team's 0=2. Totals: ll-1·12=41
!ant to keep up his team's competifmalae~n points.
live intensity.
Calipari, 35, who has rebuilt the
team from scratch in his seven
years at the helm, knows that giants

ou sitting at No. 14

spots · in the poll , leapfrogging Alaska Shooout, came in the rankNorth Carolina, which received six logs at No. 15. Arizona State was
!~t-place votes after beating Texas last ranked in tbe 1991-92 season.
10 1ts season-opener.
Ohio University, the preseason
Kentucky, which .had the other NIT champions which included
fJtSt-place vote, moved up one ~t Virginia and New Mexico State
10 third and Arkansas; which 'among its four victories, moved
bounced back with a 97-79 victory from 23rd to 14th.
over Georgetown, dropped 1o
UCLA moved from sixth to fifth
fourth.
and was followed in the Top Ten
Three teams used early season by Duke, Kansas, Florida, Arizona
tournament victories to vault into and Cincinnati.
the top 15.
,
Maryland, whicb dropped from
Arizona State, wh ich beat seventh, led the Second Ten folMichigan and Maryland in winning lowed by Arizena State, Wisconthe Maui Invitational debuted in sin, Ohio University, Minnesota,
the poD this season at No. 12, while Connecticut, Michigan, Michigan
Minnesota, which beat Arizona in State, Georgetown and Georgia
its three-game run to win the J reat Tech.

. .. .... . . . ...~ ~ m

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!OJ

Tontcbt'l pma

LA. Laten It New JctiCiy, 7:30p.m.
New York It Wllhiii_,R, 7:30 p.m.
Sac:runealo Ill Miami. 7:30p.m.
Olwl.otte at Allauta, 7:30p.m.
Rloeoll It Mllwauue. I:JO p.m.
MilliiCIIOia II DaiiM, 1:30 p.m.
Dcnva 11 HOUlton, 1;30 p.m.
Ubh II Portland.IO p.m
L.A. Clippeta 11 Ooldca State, 10:30

EDlbltloa
Mkblpa 9S, Hljll p;.. A.mcricol3
. Mkblpa St. I S , - Ill Al:tioD 5I

Other Ohio men's
college sc:ores

p.m.

Non..,.arorence IICiioD

Wedaoocl.y'• p.,.

1&amp;1)01116, Thlel66

Mlornill O.lolte_ 7:30p.m.
L.A. Laken 11 CLEVELAND, 7:30

Football

p.m.

Phouitll OtieaJo, I p.m.
Sao Aaoalo .. - . 10 p.m.

effidtndes lhan l'otn-rntiOI\II
compmsot~. lt pves lht
t:onapl12 offK:Wnq

NFL standings

AP Top 25 college poll

ntin5tupt~

5EIB. Seasonal lnrl!)

o-KWI\C')' latinp.

makln&amp; h 1M......,..
IIYirll ~for

mosl dnnaruhnc
.,vironrMntt.

r...

Miami ...............
N.Y. leta ...... .....
Bullllo...... ........
New I!DtliOcL.
IDdiaacopoU. ......

Loll

r...
.... .n.:w.J
I.M··~&lt;••" (51) ..... t-O 1.616

Scroll (Omptn)On on
.... Conctpt 12 ...
N&lt;Mcll&gt;y I ..... , ...
limilfd .-arranty.

2. Nortb CaroHIIO (6) ...... 1-0
J. K&lt;otucky(l) .............. l-0
4. Atbllla .....................l-1
S. UCLA ........................ 1-0
6. 1&gt;ute ...........................2-0
7. Koaua ..........,.....•... ...l-0
I. Floricla .. .......... :........... l-0
9, ArizoDI.,,,,,,. , .... .. I.,,;]..)
10. CINCINNAn .......... l-0
II. Mlt)'lood .................. 2·1
12. ArizODI SL .............. ).()
13. Wiac:oaaiD................. I-0

'
-

IS. MinDeiOta ........... ... ... 3-0
16. CoDDC&lt;Iicut.. ...... ...... l-0
17. Mlclllpo ..................H
II. Midtipo SL. ........... ~
19. Oecqdc&gt;Wli ..............0-1
20. Oecqil Ted! ............ t-O
2l. Wcotofotcot ............. I-O
22. Syro&lt;1110 ................... 0-1
ll.VIr!llala .................... l-1
24. VIUODo\'1 .................2· 1
2l. NewMeliOOSL ....... ).I

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tlhcitnl 11r dtlivtry

Efflciml air dfl.ivtry 11
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1,322
1.256
1,165
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361
344
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CHESTER, OH 45720

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pt PLEASANT, WV 25550
304-675-7254

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t:::::'J
16, Oaa.iud,T- 55
St. 73, WU...,Oo, Dol. 57
92,--~79

BlotCI!uUMIO, ... b#· 81.71

200

0
0
0
0

10

the minora ud became 1 Cree

MINNESOTA TWINS: SODt Mike
Trombley, pltd8, oulrllbiiD Silt LoU
of tbe Plctne Cat [..eque.
TORONJ'O BLVE fAYS : Sat WWio
CIDat&lt;, outlleld«, OWIJI!liD Syn&lt;~~~e of
tllolDI«DDlloDII ........
NlllkauiLe..•

ATLANTA BRAVES : Seat Jerry
JColler, Matt Mumy aad Brian Bart,
pltcbeta, aad Tray Huahea, outfielder,
CND'IJI&gt;I 10 llidlmolld o( lbo _ . . . ,

~CAOO

CUBS: Named Dave
Trembley maaaacr or Daytoaa ot the
Florid~~ Sllle t.-ue.
COLORADO ROCJ'(JES: Named
Oeue Glyaa rruncw-lelpe illllrUaioa c:oordi.Dator. AJlllouaced thll Cllat Hurdle.
minor·lcaaue hi nina laatnl&lt;:tor, Brad
Milia. ........ II Colcndo Strinp of Ill&lt;
Almricu Alloclllioa; FrW: Fwk, t!KtcbIIIJ c:oach "Colcndo Sprlap; IUidOlla. hiltioa illltructor at Colorado
Spriap, will rctun1.. Rcuaiaacd Bruce
Orabam, trllner ll Colorldo Sprtup, to
OwMUer or the Arimaa Rookie Laaue.
Promoted Keith Dl.aJ_pr, traiDclt a ~ew
Hava of tbe f.lltln LeteM. to Colcndo
Sfi liji. AoaouiiCiil tbt Piul ~vella,

mnaaer at New HIVn, aad Scott
Bndley, c:oach 11 New - . Willrotllll.
Promoted Chuck l!alnda, pltdll'f coad!
at Ceatral Valley of tbe Cahforala
l.eque, aad Man: OuUfiOI, trliDfl' ll
AIIM¥ille or 1bo South Allulic Leque. 10
New Havco. Promoted Billlbya, lt1ID·
qer II CI!Dtral Vtlley, to Sllem of the
Caroli110 Lcope. -iped Billy CliampioD, pitcbiDR coadlll New HtveD, 10
pilching coach al Sllem; Toay Torchia,
naa.aacr 11 Aatwvllle, to COMtJ: 11 SaJom;
ud DiU Borowakl, lra!D&lt;rll Albevllle,ID
llliDtr al. Salem. Prormled Bill Mcauite,
coach .at A1heville, to m~.~~-cr. Aa·
DOUDced that JICt LlnJibe. pndUDJ co.cb
II Aahcville, will r-.. a-~tlled lim
Epplld, coad! II Centtal Voi!Oy, 10 filii·
hiJf COICh al. AJbev\lle, lheD m1U1« II
0.10dl«. Promcted BIU S._.o, lnUer
II B eDd or the NonbWCII Leaaue. to
Aabe¥ilk. Promoted PJ. Cony, .........
11 Chaodler Ia tho Ari&amp;DII Rookie
· Leape. to DliDIJer It Portlaad Ia llle
North- t.eque_ Promoced Stu Kylea,
pitchiaa co.:h al Bead, aad AI 81..-,
_., II Belld. to l'lxtiiOd. Named Clrea
Barber ltllaer at PortlaDCI. Allaouaced
th1t Mike l!r1; 1oa, pltdliDJ coach at
O.IUidl«, and Rollllllo
coad!
II 0\aodler, will td\n.
IIOUSlON ASTROS: Alllowl&lt;edllle
mipatioD or Tim Hellmuth, director of
plo)'&lt;lldmiaillnlloa. Nunod Tim ~Vpt­
,.. director of mljor- ud mJaor-lea,Ue
player rehtiou.
LOS ANOELES DODDERS : Seat
Mib BUJCb, ru11: b~~emu, oulriJb: to AI·
buqucrque o( lb&lt; J'lclnc Coaot t...,.c.
PIII&lt;Od lorry Brooill, cat--ou~ieldcr,
OD waiwet~ («the purpoee of JiviAI tu
lmCODdit.ional relcuo.
NEW YORK MI!TS: A~= P•e
lbrDJac:b, pl.-, from lb&lt;
• AI... lor a pi•JU or plo,... to be llalmd.
ST. LOUIS CARDINAL&amp; A."'u;red
Ramoa Cwaballo, laneldcr,
tbc Al·
lantl Brave&amp; for • plays- to be umed ud
Mliped him to Loultville of tbe Americu Auoc:iatioa.

t

IAAF's waiver requirement
designed to reduce lawsuits
matter funher can request 1hc case
be heard before an independent
arbitration panel.
t ..__
Winner said the Council'sfUlD.'g
would have no effect on an athlete's civil rights.
"We're merely aaking 1hcm 10
foDow the process we ha~." W'mner &amp;aid. ''There is no violalioo or
infringement on their civil liberties.··
Court.
The IAAF wants to avoid being
In a move designed to speed up· involved in costly legal battltl,
disciplinary action for those who such as the one waged against the
flunk drug tests, t1ie council voted federation by runner Butch
to dispense with the mandatory Reynolds. Reynolds, a fOI'IIlCf Obio
testing of an athltte's "B" sample Stale track star, sued the IAAF
if the "A" sample has been tested over a disputed positive drug 1Cat
positive.
and won a $27 million settlement,
The pledge to abide by internal which was later overturned on
appeals p-ocedores will be included appeal.
on a form the athletes sign when
The council, wrapping up a
they submit to a drug test, and is three-day meeting, made other
designed 10 make court action a moves designed to cui down 011 die
means of last resort for athletes.
bureaucracy surrounding drug"The form stipulates that tile related cases.
athlete agrees that aU disputes aris·
The Council decided that 011ly
ing from doping control will be laboratories that can report directly
resolved in accordance with IAAF to the IAAF will be allowed 10
arbitration
rules,"
IAAF carry OUI cJrus tests,
spokesman Christopher Winner
''In ccrtam countries they are
said. "That essentially means obliged to inform their govemmeDI
before an athlete goes to.lhe coons or their national federation ftrsl,"
he or she is obliged to go tluough Winner said "The 1AAF doesn ' I
our system fi!SL''
get i1 ftrSt and it causes snafus. We
Athletes who test positive are want lhe results directly and simulentitled to a hearing, under IAAF taneously arid we will not use lab!
rules. Those who wish to take the that do not do that."

BARCELONA, Spain (AP} Truck and field's internaliooal governing body has moved to discourage athletes from going to court to
challenge its drug-related rulings.
The International Amateur Athletic Federation's COWICil decided
on Tuesday to require athletes to
sign a waiver agreeing to resolve
all drug-related disputes wilhin lhe
sport's guidelines before going to

LIS' .WIN,ER?

.REM

rrom

Don't Get Caught
WithoutYour Passport
.
.

5 IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY

.513 224 21!
.5(!0 267 2~
.500 230 262
.417 227 226

--

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Arizl&gt;.............. 5 1 o .417 154 m
WllhiqtoD ...... 210 0 .167 246 331

C..oi4 0 .661 lll 201

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~ ..... . .. . 1
Oreca Bay ......... 6
Dotroll .. ..... :: ..... 6
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5 0 .!II 261 liS
6 0 .500 2!16 214
' o·.500 ~44 m
9 0 .150 165 261

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When you have thai m~ch ground ~learance to se~ over traffic, a ~w ~dy
175-horsepower, V-6 engme at your ?tsposal, ~d availabl~ f?mwhee_t ~lnve
to negotiate the most uncooperative of terrams and dnvmg condmons,
.you can do just about whatever you please. The Passpon LX 11 0 D.!\.
I•

MOIIday'aKOn
s..-..!S.NewOd_J.

Transactions

1!ut

•lioatll

lll m
255 2!13
245 266
243 2!11

w-.9 J o .750 291
!
6
6
7

meat

toudldowns in the leCOIICI qllllttl'.
"Those fumbles were rully
tough,'' Brent Jone11 Slid. "If dill
hadD't luJalpened, I wouldll't WIDl
to guess W6at die ICOre mi&amp;bt bavc
'beera.·
Neilher would the Sainll.
"The me as ~ an offensive
rr.am as ~ is,' Sainll a.:b Jini
Mora said "Most teams that play
these guys don't have 1hc defensive
penonnel to match up with these
guys. The 49ers have always been
so good offensively down lhrougb
the years that it's hard to say with a
lot of assurance that they're as
good as I've ever seen, but they
sure aren't the worst. They're a
heck of a team. I'm glad we doll'l
have to play them again.''

~
- ~~~ .~m~
Plillldclph!l ...... 1 5 0 .SIJ 243 214

0Joclllllll7l. R-61
Dutmouth II , Cut Couectieul St.
75(01')
r lloJiwn16,WIIIIIaiiOO.M477
lloquoo• 61, llidlmolld 56
Ufa,...I7,S - 6 l
- 1 0 3, W-64
ll, I.Ablll&gt; 7'J (01') .
~. BRIWI 71

-lalalld

.500
.lOll
.!00
.417

-·

lllal Joe Or..,._ pitd&gt;er, doclillod . . lp·

Ill the SaiiU 12111t up New~

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

college scons

l

0
0
0
0

17'l
141
liJ
l6l

7
OODYO' .............. 6
I.A. Raidrn ..... 6
Selltle .......... ..... 5

Major men's

Se,ing Meigl, Mruon &amp;: GallitJ
SERVICE ·
HI"H ~FFICIENCY HEAT PUMPS &amp; FURNACES
35815 OAK HILL RD.
.

6
6
6
7

213
266
201
167

~City ......

w.......,..

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Otbr rent.IDa Toklll Jad.JIDI u,:,
., BriJb.m YOWII ll4, IUIDOil 106. TeUI
101, TulliO 102, O.O.p
97,
A!ab... 71, Purdue71 , 0kl.lllomaSL 64,
Ml•lldppl St. .Sl, Texu Tecb 4S, low•
St. 43, St. lohll'a Jl, Templol5 1-0,Utab
19. LSU 17. CllUOillla 13, M-bil 13,
w-. I&lt;Dtuckyll, Florida SL I, N.C.
O.lotla7, LouiivUie 5, SL Lcuia 4, Qt.
lailc&gt;n I. B..IOD Colleoo l. Bolle St. I,
Coppo SL I, Dal'lull, Vif8WoTechl.

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C..oiPiltlbl&lt;lb ......... 9 J 0 .7SO
CU!VI'LANIL 9 3 0 .750
CINCINNAn .. 210 0 .167
Ho... a............ Ill 0 .OIJ

2

1,506
1,441

-...-

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

· The tor, 2l tclltll ID Tho AIIOC:IIted
Prell' col eae butetball poll, with firlt·
place TOla in ~em!acl, m:on1 ttnup
Nov. T1, tolal polnta bued 011 lS poilU
(or a fLnt·place vote tbroup. ODC pol.at Cor
o2Sth-pll&lt;e ¥0«, ud.,....... rukiii]J;

.......
CAilFORNIA ANOELS: .u.ou-1

Walsh, who urns 63 Wednesday, returned to Stanford in 1992
after coaching the San Francisco
49ers to three Super Bowl titles. He
left after two straight losing seasons witb lhe Cardinal.
The white-haired coach had two
years remaining on a flve·year con·
tract. He will become a special
assistant to Stanford athletic director Ted Leland.
Leland said Walsh now will
focus on fundra1sing, as well as
creation of a coaching development
program and a sports research insli·
lute al Stanford. But Walsh said
he 'II also be available to advise his
successor.
Walsh said his age was beComing more of an issue as he tried to
'ltcruit around the country.
"I was being asked the question, 'How long are you going to
coach?' Thai started as soon as I
came back 10 S Ianford, and has
become more critical this year," he
said. "Could I logically 'and legiti·
mately recruit while feelin' that I
was soon go~ng to lea~~ JOb7"

bact 86 yardl, and ODe by y 011118

wouldn't say we were in peak efficiency, but for playing here in lhe
Dome against lhiJ rr.am, we probably moved the ball as weD as we
have in a l011g time.' '
They moved it a total of 461
yards compared to 222 for New
Orleans - 191 rushing and 270
passing. Young completed 24 of
30, including the four touchdowns.
II was the fourth time this season
be's thrown four touchdowns. He
was sacked twice for II yards, but
did not throw an interception.
" It was hard to get to him, and
even when you brought pressure he
got his man ," Saints linebacker
Darion Conner said. "II was really
frusttating out there.''
Not that the 49ers were flawless.
Two fumbles - one by Ricky
Watters that Tyrone Hughes ran

F-.

IIlii&gt; Poll!, N.C. 61, ou..toela 59

Detroit at Boltoll, ?:30 p.m.
Saauneoto at Orlaado, 7:!0 p.m.

Saoil ·

FarWMl

-· Bou.. u, Poctlllld14
Freaoo SL 79, ~1De76
ldollo SL 1'1, W~-Oreea Bay II (01')
MoolaDI67, WMhlafoa 56
New Melloo St. 99. W. New M01lco
71
S. Utoll IJ, SWT- SL 49
- Sail DittO St. 76, SCNIIIera Cal CoU.
54
St. 74, Lewla-CtarUL 65

w-

2.5
J

I.A. Clippcn ...........0 11 .000

1•. omo UNIV ............. 4-0

• Wrapped
• Frozen

SEMilloUrl90,~1!1

Wla.-Pwtllde 10, WIL·M i - 79

Ookloo sw ............7
I.A. t.Wrl ..............7

split-a,...,ator

ru. 1 0 . -.69

Moo,u... l2, UNLV 74 (OJ')
N. lllillll1179, Wlcblla SL T7
OIDO ST. II , Ilrele174

1.5
1.5

(OJ')

Sell!le .................. ....l

-

prlaed than· hurtN~ooly said,
from the
33310 IASHAN RD.
RACINE, OH
· 4tdldo Of hb mouth.
Beyrooty llid dllt inimedlately
949·2416
lol~ the punchel. represenra- .__-------~~-.;...-.....,;_...J

·. lldlauJIIJ~e was

CI£VI!LANIL. ......7
Dooroll. ....................7
1Ddlaa...................7
Cblcqo....................6
O.loae .................!
M I -.............. J
~ ......................

t.::'D
~RNEE,~~

PRECISION DEER PROCESSING ·.

• Skinned
• Cut

4

Milo. Valley St. I ! , - St. T7
Mloo-1 St. 106, SB Luu111oaa 67
N. c..IIDa St. 101, H....t 60
Old Domillloll'l'!, Cln&gt;lillll65
tlldford 16,c...-y,NJ. 56
Samford 75, Nottll o.o.p 55
TtOII.-Io!lrtiDI6, S.. Fruc:ilco SL 61
T - St. 96, B. T - S L 79
VM196, Bluellold Coli. 7'J
W. ClruliDII02, MiiUplll

C.Uoi-

t;GAN

vaness.:

or.
.
.
ried about enemies on the coun.
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) uves of both ftgbters separated "There will be a lot of added presFanner champion Riddick Bowe them.
.
. sure. There wiD be a bull' s eye in
'IOI a head stan 011 his Continental
Bowe expressed no remorse, our back," he said.
1\mericaa heavyweight champi- Beyrooty said, adding that Donald
"II a1 b ·
t~ ·
'th' ~ Donald
left the press conference almost
so nngs ou ear m any
on ship bout wt - · 3 .
•
opponent,'' rr.ammate Dana Dingle
Bowc and·Donald, who meet immediately after the incident. added. "H they fear you, they
SaturdaY night at Caesatt Palace in Bowe stayed around to answer copld come out 100 tigfit."
questions.
The team h' h ·
··
Las Vegas, were ftelding quesli011s more
"Heck, no," Bowe sat'd when
'w tc IS prucucmg at
at a Forum news conlierence Mon·
5:30 a.m. all week to keep its edge
day when without warning, the asked if he regretted throwing the after beating the Razorbacks, is
talkinJ SlOP~ ,and Bowe began punches.
now tryinll to sharpen its focus on
punchtng.
.
"This was tlte first time in all · Saturday'~' s game agaiilsl No. 7
"All during the question-and- theJcars that I've gone to these Kansas in Anaheim, Calif. The
answer period, they had been mum- kin of press conferences that a Minutemen are bent on escaping a
bling 10 each other," said John guy was actually hit," Beyrooty repeat of last season, when the
memory of the'• overu'me "iC'"""
Beyrooty, director ·Of -public rela. said.
lions for Forum Boxing. "But it u.ledSa!ourrda11yroniugnbdst's. boDounallids,sc2h7ed,J·s· over No. 1 No~ Carolina' faded
" 2
w1'1h a loss t'n the next gam 10
Wu n'l neee1sllrily an exchange of
Insults or derogator)l comments 16-0 whh 12 knockouts. Bowe,
e
more like boasiful talk.Be"
'd, also 27' is 34-1 wilh 29 knockouts.
Ka~. Min(!temeri moved up two
All of a lUdden. yronty S81
Bowe threw a shon left hand itnd
then a rlghL Both punches struck
Donald near the mouth.
FormaJiy Hill's Deer Cutting
••t didn't ICC the left because I
. was bloc:ked bY, Bowc,'' Be~
·llid. ''Bveryonc 10~ me about 11.
· But I did seo the nghL It lande4

Wloml76.-- 59

Alllollc-

New Ycrt-.. .............6
Bottoa............... .......6
Newllney ..............6
4
l'lllledelplli1 .............4
Mlami. .....................J

•V

canF~r~~v;Zt~2~by was:

...._10, &amp;ul•e$9
Ooorpl1, Ooorp- ~
0eor1i1 Ted! !10, Coll1ll C.OIIDI71
Clnod&gt;!illa SL II, T_Adill.... 7'!
Morea' 16, SL l.oo 10

NBA standings

POMEROY
992-6687

chronological age can unilmtalld
that. I love football and have
thrived on it. But the job of head
coseh is an exhauslin~ J&lt;&gt;b.• and 81
this stage in my life 11 s time for
somebody else to do iL"

ScorclJoard
Ba sketball

wm:f.

So we' punches Dona /d
during
new,s conference
,

"I just{ellthat this was an
appropriate time to move to another stage of my life," Walsh said
Monday in annoWICing his resignation as Stanford's coach.
"Anyone who looks at my

By ROB GLOSTER
STANFORD, Calif. (AP)Bill Walsh decided ihat even with
his knowledge and experience, he's
gotten too old for the rigors of college coaching.

State Aulo's already low
premiums can be
reduced even more by
insuring both your car
and home with the State
Auto Companies.

Amy Redovian 5-0-2=12. Jessi·

his year under McCartney, helping
quarterback Kordell Stewart
become the Big Eight's career total
yards leader. Known as a good
communicator, Neuheisel received
strong support from players many of whom showed up for his
press conference.
"I'm excited," said ·sophomore
quarterback Koy Detmer, who figures to take over next year for the
depaning Stewart. "He helped me
to be a better quarterback, and he's
a great gu~ who gets along with
everybody. ' .

Walsh steps down as Stanford's head football coach

DISCOUNT

(8-1J.19-14=S4)

wilh 10 wins or more aDd lhe lllh · sessions in lhe second half and no ,
playoff benh in 12 yean, it sound- . points. Their first drive ended with
ed a bit.hollow.
Deion Sanders intercepting Jim
The Saints (4-8) did make it rei- Everett's pass in the end zone and
atively cloie at halftime, ttailing taking it back to lhe 34-yard line,
just 20-14 at the break, only to setting up Young's fourth touchwatch the 49ers (10-2) hold the ball down pass, a 43-yardet 10 Nate
for 9:02 in lhe thin! quarter while Singleton.
drivinjl 71 yards on 14 plays. San
"1 felt on occasion we played
Franctsco then converted for two pretty ~ood." coach George Seifert
points, stretching its lead to 28-14 said. ' Certainly the passing auact
and killing any hope New Orleans of Steve and whomever he was
had of fighting back.
throwing lhe ball to was effective. I
New Orleans had just two pos:

By AARON J, LOPEZ
Regents held two ·executive ses· Division I, Neuheisel inherits a
BOULDER, Colo.(APl- Rick sions Monday and then unanimous· successful .program buill from
Neuheisel fi~ures he IS eligible to ly accepted athletic director Bill scratch by McCartney 13 years
run for president in two years, so Marolt's recommendation to hire ago. McCanney brought Neuheisel
he should be able to handle his new Neuheisel as BiD McCartney's sue· to Colorado to cooch receivers and
position as bead coach 81 the Uni- cessor.
quarterbacks. Now, he's tbe man
versity of Colorado.
"II was an ex!J'emely difficult who will replace McCartney after
"There 's lots of young ~le decision to make," Marolt said. the Fiesta Bowl on Jan. 2.
across our nation that are domg "But the thing I really like about
"I'm thrilled for Colorado,"
fantastic things in all sorts of Rick Neuheisel is he's energetic, said McCartney, who announced
endeavors," Neuheisel, 33, said he's full of enthusiasm, and the his resignation Nov. 19. "This is a
after he was hired Monday. "I was youth of our country need to look very exciting chapter. Rick
just thankful that they dido 't hold to leaders who are full of life and Neuheisel is a very gifted young
that against me. Besides, my mom have thai spark to make the differ- man equipped to do what's neces·
said it was OK.''
sary."
ence.''
The university's Board of
Neuheisel accomplished a lot in
One of the youngest coaches in

II 0.\1 E

-·~·-·Eutem

like we dominated, and maybe we
did in the end, but it certainly
didn't feel that way going into halflime," quarterback Steve Young
s~id. "We're playing pretty well
nght now, but I don't think we can
110 into a championship game need·
mg 1.11 score 30 or 35 points."
Modesty is a nice commodity,
but after beating the Saints 35·14
on their home turf Monday !light,
notching the lith NFC West title in
14 years, the 12th sttai.11ht season

Colorado names Neuhei.sel new head football coach

A l iTO

Meigs 47-41 in opener UMass gets first No. 1 ranking
BSeyn~~~~l
....... ........-.......-u

Niners beat Saints 35-14 to capture NFC_West title again
By MARY FOSTER
· NEW ORLEANS (AP) Come on San Francisco, admit iL
You're the team cities across the
COUJUry dream of having.
Even when you mess up, you're
superior•.Fumble the ball,· get your
quarterback sacked, let the other
guys log a few big plays. In the
end, you're just toying with your
opponent, just like you were Mon.
da~ night against the New Orleans
Samts.
''Thirty· five points may look

Eastern girls down Nelsonville-York 54-49

'
1he Deliy Sentinel Pill . I

Pom«&lt;y-Middleport, Ohio

.........

BaiiiiMill

"

~

IIOSTON lED SOX; ToOIDJ
- . . . . _ o f - oltllo RoricJa
Stile Loop: loll CJray pltdllq Df
s-ota; uc1 Bob Clem ...._or w.
co or lb&lt; tllo New Yoot-r.u Lcope. ,..
aouaced lhll feliJ Maldoudo, IDIDIItr
ollb&lt; Red So&amp; of 11M Oolf Colot '-'"'
will """" 11011 .-oa. Namocl Sammy
I!IU. mlaor leque pltdllq !"""d'llll«,
ud SttYI BrtYI miaor IMP• battilll .

Athens

Cars

81 0 E. STATE ST. - ATHENS, OHIO

NEW CAR DEPARTMENT

594·8555'

USED CAR DEPARTMENT

594·2114 .

: L-----------~------------~
•'
..

�..
Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Widow's earnings may not affect children's benefits . .
By Ed Peterson
SodaI Security
Manaaer In Athens
A 49-year old widow recently
called our office and asked "I
· receive monthly Social Secu~ity
cbecks because 1 have two teenage
cbildren in my care. But 1 need to
· increase the family income. If 1 go
to work, will the children and 1 stop
receiving Social Security?''
The widow was relieved to learn
lhat her cbildreo will not lose their
benefits if sbe goes to work. How·
. ever, because her benefits will be
subjeclto the annual earnings limit
lhe molher's benefits will b~
reduced Sl for every $2 she earns
over $8,040 in 1994 ($8 160 IN

reach 18, or 19 if lhey are still in
scbool full time. A cbild' s benefits
can continue beyond age 19 if be or
sbe is disabled.
More information about benefit
reductions and children's benefits
is found in these fact sheets that are
avail~ble from your locaJ .Social
Secunty office: How Work Affects
Your Soc1al Secunty Benefits
(SSA Pub. No. 05·10069) and
Soc1al Secur1ty Benefits for Chi!dren (Pub. No. 05-10085). You can
call 1-800-772-1213 between 7
a.m. and 7 o.m. on business days
and aslc to have a copy sent to you.
Our lines are busiest early in the
wee~ and early in the month, 5:0 if
~ou r~ calhng for these pubhcations, u's bestlo call at olher times.

1995).
'
The amoun1 of 1he children· s
benefits will nol be affected by
their mother's earnings. Their benefiiS will stop, however, when they

Do you know lbal if you receive
Supplemental Securily Income
(SSI), you have a responsibilily 10

report changes in your living
arrangements tu us? This is not dif·
ficult at all. All you need to know
is what to report, when to tepon,
and bow to repon.
The changes in your living
arrangements you need to report
include: If you move or change
your addres1; if someone moves
mto or outfof your household,
someone m .Your household dies, or
1f som~ne m your bouseb.old has a
ba.byi 1f you get help Wllh food,
utllllles, rent, or mortgage; or if
yo~ enter or leave a residenl.ial
msbtubon, hospllal, skiUed nursmg
facility, nursing home, inrermediale
care facilil~, halfway bouse, jail,
pnson, pubhc emergency sheller or
any other kind of i~stilution; and or
If you leave the Urn ted Stales.
Yo.u .musl report a change in
your livmg arrangements within 10
days afler lhe month 11 happens.

---Community calendar

SATURDAY
RACINE - Polluclc dinner to
precede regular meeting of Racine
Grange, 6.p.m Saturday at the
Grange ball. Canned goods to be
WEDNESDAY
brought for Meigs Coop Parish,
POMEROY Board of also fruil for baskets.
Trustees, Meigs County Public
Library, I p.m. Wednesday at the
library.
SUNJ&gt;4Y
I
POMEROY - A Christmas
SYRACUSE Industrial cantata direcled by Sue Matheny, at
~ttrilction workshop se1 for tonight the Mount Hennon U.B. Church,
IS canceled. The meeting will be
7:30 p.m. Sunday. Title "The Gift
rescheduled at 6:30 p.m. Dec. 14 at or Chrislmas." Public invited.
Carleton School.

POMEROY - Revival Tuesday to Sunday al 7:30 p.m. nightly
at Calvary Pilgrim Chapel on State
' Reule 143: Rev. and Mrs. Bill and
: Naomi Tillis will be evangelisl and
. singers. Rev. Victor Rousb, pastor
'
: invileS the public.
''
HARRISONVILLE - Har; risonville Lodge 411, F&amp;AM. Sat·

:.W'day, 7:30 p.m. at Masonic Tern·

PICTURE YO
CHILD
AMONG THE .. ~

Now Open For
Christmas Season
Poinsettias-6 colors
Poinsettia Baskets
Foliage Baskets
Christmas Trees
For the.Joved ones •
Monument Sprays, vases &amp;
Grave blankets.
Hubbard's Greenhouse
Syracuse, Ohio
·
992-5776
Open Daily 9-5
Sunday 12-5

'

· r-----------------------~----------------------------~

GOOD;IYEAR
..

ttf

1:00 ..a:ao pm ·

VInyl It Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
lhplacement
WindOn, Blown
lnaulatlon, Storm
DooN,Storm
Window., Garagee.
FreeEellrn....
1-1..

r
~~
liH

Our special page(s)

~

"For Children Only"
(16 years of age or younger)

wm be published
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23RD

l

.,.,,N

10117/1111

g~

.,.
....
I;.

....
"''·
;:...~

915-4473

Classifieds ·

~ ::

lllrnpod envelope to rotum your
photo

446-2342
99 2-215 6
675-1333

~

't.~~

r.
t&gt;

~J~;======~r:======~
~': Pub~ Notice
Public Notice

WHIT!WAll

........
...

ft--~~~~~~--

.Official Entry

St:I.OS

';;;. · IN THE COURT OF

£
~O:::..W:10
"'"
CaM No JM.C¥.221

Form
•Aou•r

·•· L .......

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

III.IO

P22SI7III1tl
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.....
117.10

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§
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GOOD}frEAR
w•ANtH.•• Ar/•11

GOOD}frEAR

t,;,..rwJ lor S•rrlrol
.., 0• ' Oft riM flood

7~dllcolbed u followl:

GOGDjt'iEAII
PERfOitMANCE RADIAL
IAOLI 0'1'+•
81ZE
SALE PRICE
P215/60A14
$120.00
P205/60il15
P215/65R15
P215165R15

$117.00
$118.00
$124.00

P225/70R15

$126.00

P21518()R16

$122.00

P195/711R15

P20S/55R16

£

Hlr"-r Htmt1No1,

tm/011 «HI ,.,formanct

'"'to

$110.00
$131.00

'

CIJIIIJIJIIIIJ
AQUA-FLOW
~-Wt.LTRAC.TION..I'ASSENGEil

...

(O'I'er ed by " Oual·~ ~u1 Warronr..

P185170R14 .
P195/70R14

P205/70R14
P195175R14

P205/75R14
P205185R15
P205170R15
P2)5170R15

S&lt;IIU"+C'

161.20

$04.30
$71.00
$65.65

P1B5/70R14
P195/70R14
P205/70R14
P205/70R15
P215/70R15
P205/B5R15

WHITE
.;

e

TIRE

~-

S65,5o

ell

.;

BLACK

1:

...c.s
Q)

$72.80
$711.85
$70.55

$44.75
$47.85
$48.45
$51.25

$53.95 .
$55.53
$57.75

P2ostisA15

P215/75R15
P225!70R15
P235/70R15

HIGH TRACTION RADIAL

(304) 675·3930
426 Viand St.

Q)

~

z
.
.-=.d... ell

-u
~

$59.90
$62.05
$65.15
$68.55

I

I .

-g
-§
ell

0

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...
'0
ell
ell

ell

.....

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....
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Nov. 21, 11113.
But with your ,......

r.n blhlnd

you
Till

0

· m.-ltl of Ill· our
tun t111111.
Till IIWI we lhartcl,

~

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

'1

PaiiiCIIWIY Juat
one y111 ago toCIIV.

UJ

Mail or bring the entry form to:

wry

lp ICIII

and thl loW .110111
you left II'Otlnd, lUll
to lhow how much
you cai'ICI.
You brOught I rrt of
· auntltlnl Into tltll
llfl of'mlnl.
.You'll be 101'8\W lowd
and mltlld until thl
p1111ntJ ol.tl time,
Whln yow eplrlt once
ageln will be jolnN

withI ani
"""'·
eorry you gone lnd miM you
. grwtly,
Lcwlelllld lllllly
mltlld br VCU'

-.Eva.

'
I

"

]

' ;j
...
0

Deadline: Friday~ Dec. 16 at 3 P.M.

Point Pleasant·

TRIPLETT .
Born Feb. 4, t 129.

~

.§'

SNOW TIRES
P155/80R13
P165/80R13
P175/80R13
P185/80R13
P1Bs/75R14
P195/75R:14
P205/75R14

In Loving Memory
Of ERNEST {Trip)

.....

$71.30

.;

:-

--~: '·~~~~~~~~
In

~

$67.115

.;

....u~

Q)

M8.95

$72.90
S7UO
$78.30

PARCEL ONE:,Illllllt In
I' the Townthlp of Sallabury,
;i County of lltlal end State
~ ' , of Ohio: BEGfNNING at 1
~'Point located In thl
!~ North•rly edge of Cheater
~ - Road (S.R. 7), eald point
: :being N. 114' 37' E. 152.21
~fill frolll thii.E. 01
, , 1 1 Acrl lot owned by w.c.
' ·end Thelma Herman,
'' "eall~Y't 1 Acre Lot", 11
1'
d1d In Vol 181 p..
'J.'JICOr
•·
0200; thence from•Ukl 'point
of boglnnlng and p111lng
through property ownac1 by
••Kethy Andeuon 11
l.! recorded In Vol. 2118, Pg.
"'.325, N, 27' 52' w. 12.52 fHt
:ito a 518" IIHI Iron pin 111;
• ·!hence continuing N. 27' 52'
~w. 101.27
1 511" etHI
&lt;•pin HI; 11o1nca S. 12' 117' w.
~311.00 IHl to a point; thlnCI
t ·N. 27' 52' W.10.12 fHt to a
!';point loceted In tha
f. corporation lint of the

tt;

w•ANot.••rD

ALL SIASON HIGH

va.

...

OUTLINE WHITE

LETTER SIZE

l'llilioHft,

:C..,_ u., Et AI,
Dell,......
~. Clarence '\.11 and RoM
~. Ellen LH will like notice
~"that on the lth day of
.- 'Ocloblr, 11M the Plaintiff
';filed Ha complaint agalnat
youlnthiCourlofCannon
t .'PIHI of 111101 County, 0to1o
r
eating the Court to
equ
.,.
•..termln8te
any lntereof that
'i·'you · hiv• In the pram I•••

,~ .. rl .. f1

INVIeTA

. llld • .,. Tlutt, H

' '

,..

7 ('"1•1

~., ~ "' c w ~

PUBLICAliOH

~:
{;.:

"Qu11Hiy /1111" Mtl"onry
1.11? ~

Hoi~· POll

)..
"'

t:.ooiJ}frEAII

..,. , • • , ," , ..

., .
I

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

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

614-843-5264
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire
Heahh • Accident • Annuity • IRA • Mortgage

Autlulriud Amnfe41nlf41111lel'd U.a._
1111/82

•

NEW &amp; USED
ITEMS

MODERN SUrrAftOI

.CHRISTMAS TREES.
IUDFORD'S
.

POMEROY, OHIO
Septle tanks cleaned &amp; portebie tolleUII'IHitad.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental ralel.
Job Illes • Camp Sitea ' F1111lly Reunion• &amp;l'lr1iel

FRESH CUT TREES AYAILAILE
OR CUT YOUR OWl

NOW OF FE RING GENERAL HAULIN G

Craft Shop
Located on Cherry Ridge: From At. 33, tuln East
at OaJWin onto At. 681. Go 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Rd, 1 1/2 miles to tree farm.
WATCH FOR SIGNS. 10:00 am til dark
Nov. 25 thru Dec. 24.

711 South Third
Middleport
Hours: 10:00A.M.
to 4:00 P.M. Dally
1112Mfn

f._

P21317~5

General Practice of Law including:
Divorces, Real Estate &amp; Business

(614) 992·7434

MARKET

r+'l

Limestone, Send, GNvel and Coal
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR S ALE

U

ted &amp; B

ded 20
992-3954

ience

I

t.mergrn cv Ph o rw 98 5-3 418

't f

GOOD}frEAII

""""''"'
P22sn5Ris

m

Your Total Comfort Assured Dealer
Low Rate - Financing Available
Call Today for Free.Estimate

11 ~ ' 1 " " • I, I

J&amp;D FLEA

105 Second St., Pomeroy, OH.
(above Bank One)

~.J...
~ Tel. No. (614) 992·5730 ~.J...-'»

Sales, Senice &amp; lnstallatio1

Phone 247·2206

CONSTRUCTION

AnORNEY AT LAW

Morrison's Heating &amp;CooUng

Bring new warmlh
into your homes for
lhe Ho lidays.

IIOWOPfll

FREE ESTIMATES

\\'·

~

SIZE

-

ROBERT BISSELL
oNewHomu
oGeragea
.Complete
Remodeling :
Stop l Compare

.tt
.
r
ft
t-..
-I.

614-742·2131

tr cttsures .

$1QOGames
$40Games
Coverall

Resident and Small Electrical Repair
(Lamps Welcome)
Home Repair Also
992·5251
992·7162
John
Doug

SAYRE TRUCKING

hltrll

DENISE L.BUNCE

IN A STATE OF SHOCK.

Joe I. S.yre

Strvlct
H-,for Salt
Dnld WIIOan11

,q .

. $} ooo

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

WEDNESDAY
NIGHT BINGO
THURSDAY NIGHT
SPECIAL
PAPER GAME

Coat~a.dlal
&amp; Excnatl•i
992-4103

Now Acceptlngllew Clle111

OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU

tHllt. llltT!
Not you. your home'
Will crea le ~ new
look for any room
using you r
collf&gt;clablf&gt;s and

~....

-ONLY-

- ...··

Uinestone
&amp; Gravel

la~lcH01

~

The Daily Sentinel

'

ANNOUNCEMENT

O&amp;E ELEt'fRI~

AMVETS

.::

in the

PtooH oncloH oolf-eddrooood,

. ~'r~
.
..

..._
--2772
Mon.-Fri.

~

Per Picture •
Prepaid

•
•
•

'

~

eersonlbereportisabout. ·

pie. Open installallon of offiCei'S by
David Fox, district. depuly grand
master. Special music by Jane
Wise. Refresbments.

TUESDAY
CHESHIRE - Free clothing
. day, Tuesday, 9 a.m. lo noon al
Cbesbire.

You should report a cbange even 1f
you're late. If you don't report a
change, you may miss out on
money you need if the cbange will
mean you can get a bigger check,
or you may get too much money
and have to pay it back.
If you don't repon a change or if
you make a false statement and get
money you aren •t supposed to
Social Security will make you pay
baclc the money. You may also
have 10 pay a fine, face imprisonment, or both.
You can malce your report by
calling Social Security's toll-free
number 1-800-772-1213 from 7
a.m. to '1lm. any busin~ss day.
The best times 1o call are laler in
lhe week and laler in lhe monlh to
avoid busy lelepbone lines.
You can also report by mail or
in person. If you mail your report,
be sure il sbows: The name of lhe

Vllllgl of Pom1roy; tt.nce

~~ ~!«icf:.m!':

Howard L. Wrltesel
ROOANG
HOMl IIIPIOYEIIENTI
NEW-REPAIR
~=~~~~
Gutters
Siding
Downspouts
Concrete, Etc.
Fall Special
Gutter Cleaning
2
Painting
G:!. ~:i~8l;!ar

(61 388·9865
~0

--.-0--.-.--.

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages o Replacement Windows
RoOm Additions o Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

CHRISTMAS
TREES &amp;
WREATHS

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
1111104TFN

Ready Nov. 23
$10&amp; Up
Open 10 am • 9pm
Bob S1towdenrs Lot

45614

APJILIIIICI
IUIICI
F ...-Mlo.Lo

RACINE
. FIRE DEPt.
GUN SHOOTS
SAT., 6:30 P.M.
r2Gaige

S.R. 124

to I point, bllng common
eomtr to Katllv Andtruft '
Or
-IIYr
and Robert D. File; thence
lruds
110n11 wtth property nne In . , Used !'r!iatcu•
common with the above
peril••· s. a• 15' E. :n.to
for 1e
1111 to 1 511" IIHI pin all;
Ctll
Factory c•oke Oily
llolncaJ:I!fd(nulng S. 26' 15'
BasaB•ilcllg
E. 71.81 '"' to a 511" atHI
614-992·5.515
pin HI; thence continuing
11121114
10111Mn
s. 26' 15' E. 11.77 fall to a
potni In the Northerly line of
C11Ht1r Road; thence along
Publlc·Notlce
wllh ..ld ChHier Road, S.
17' 111' W. 70.187 1111 to the In Sallabury Township,
place of BEGINNING end Melga County, Ohio:
containing 0.215 Acree, BEGINNING Eaeterly 150.5
more or ..... aa d11lgnllod fill along the Chooter Rood
Bred for
on "Map Showing Survey (S.R. 7) frOm the S.E. corner
Quality and
lor Kethy. Andereon, of a 1 Acre tract or lot on
Temperament
situated In the VIllage of the North oldo of eold Road
Pomeroy,
Sella b u r y conveyed by Elizabeth Jay Specializing In Part....,.o~
Townahlp, lltlge County, and Martin Joy to George lor show and eompanions.
Ohio, Scale 1" + 4 40', dllod Jay, September 29, 1911, Stud 1101Vice &amp; puppies,
May 21, 111115," flllflnCt to Vol. 107, Pg. 157, Melga young adollalor sale.
48750 Mile Hill Rd.
llld mep being made herein County, Ohto Deed Records
Racine, Oh
to
which
reference
Is
lor ell pertinent pu~..a.
614-1148-2487
PARCEL TWO: Situate In hereby made lor •
the VIllage of Po·meroy, deecrlp&amp;lon thereol; thence
Sall1bury ToWIIIhlp, llelga N. 20' 15' Will to land now
Public Notice
County, Ohio: BEGINNING or formerly owned by &lt;Clara
Ill I point N. 81' 30' Eulll4 M. Dow; thenco In ,~ North
fHI from the S.E. comer of and baterly direction along RFP.
Seated bide and Bid
• 1 Acre tot on the North Clara M. Dow'a line to a
eldt of the .Ch11tor Road polnl where 1 line running Bonds must be received ol
(Stile Route 7) In the VIllage S. 28' 15' Eaal wllllntoraect the office of tho Melge
of Pomeroy conveyed by aald Chiller Road 70 feel County Commla1lonera,
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ellzab"h Jey and Martin Northeaaterly from lhe Courthouse,
45769
by
10:00
a.m. on
place
of
beginning;
thence
Jey to George Jay by d11d
recorded In Vol. 10, Pg. 157, S. 81' 50' Well along told Friday, December 30, 1994,
Melga County Dud roed . to the pleco of and witt be opened and read
Rec:onla, reference to which BEGINNING. and containing aloud at2:00 p.m. on Friday,
le hereby made to; • 112 Acre, more or 1111, 1/4 December, 30, 1994, In
detcrlptlon thereof; thence Acrethereol being oltuato In accordance with the
apeclflcallorie outlined In
N. 61' 30' Eaat elong eald the Vlllego of Pomeroy and the
RFP.
A . bid
North elde of eald road 87.5 1/4 Acre In the Township of
Sellebury, lllolga County, epeeillcallons pecket may
bo picked up et tho olflee of
to lend
nowN. or
1111;
thence
28' formerly
t5' W11t Ohio.
owned
Clare II. Dow;
FOR LAST SOURCE OF the Counly Court, Pomeroy,
J.. thonett·S.&gt;Uih eiOflg·Ciere M,· TITI.E SEE D.a. 2115, f'!g. 325 ..Ohio between lha-llourLOt_
Dow's llne to the end D.B. 2117, Pg. 50, lllolge 9:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.
corporation line to the N.E. County, Ohio Recorde of Monday through Friday.
The Boord of Mol go
comer of a 0.25 Acre lot Dude.
deaerlbed In daad from
Parcel
Noe.
16· County Commlulonere
Emeetlne·Partlow to Velvey 01114114.000; 11·01963.000, r111rv11 lht rlghtlo accept
Keye deled October 25, 16-011185.000, 1&amp;-0111547.000 or reject eny or oil bldo
and/or eny port lhorool and
1M8 and recorded. In D.l. and 18-0111548.000.
112, Pg. 327 of the lltlga
The Plelnllfl requeata lhal will award 1 contract to lhat
County D11d Recorda; eald premlaoa lie sold, your bidder which Ia In tho b11t
lhlnce S. 31' 30' Eaat along lntlrlll therein loroclolld lntoreal ol Metga County.
Unde Bentz,
the Eaat line of eatd Keya and lor any other relief 11
llelga County Court Cleric
lot to the piiCI of Beginning ehell lie juetanll oqu~eble.
and conllllnlng 0.50 Acrea,
You ere required lo , (11) 22, 211; 2TC
enaW.r
t~e eeld complaint
more or 1111, 0.40 Acrea
thereof llelng In the Vlllege by the 4th dey of Fobruary,
u.._b!;,;;lc;..,N;.;,ot~lc:e;;....~
of P - y and o,10. Acrla 1115 or Judgtl!l!!!l ~Y ___P..,
llelng In •the Townahlp of Deleull will be rendered .
Slllabury, llelga County, egelnat you.
NOTICE OF
Ohio.
David H. McCown,
DRAWING JUROAS
PARCEL THREE: Situate
Rog. No. Ooo8600, A ~-" Cod1 S 2313 20
---'-----l
A
. llorneyfor Plaintiff
ev.....
• ec:.
·
Office of Comml11lonere
(11)
211;
of
Jurore,
lllalge
County,
8
PubUcSale
112) '· 13• 20• 27 ; (1) 3; &amp;TC Ohio Novemller ae, 111S4
l Auction
To All Whom It Iiley
Concern:
PubliC Notice
on Wodn11dey, the 7th
dey of Decembor 111114, 11
lHSJI'ICISI
PUIUC NOTICE
REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL 8:30 o'clock, A.M,, ol tho
COMPUTERIZID COUNTY office of the Commloalonere
of Jurllrt of Mtlgl County,
COURT SYSU., MEIGS
~'-tIs Mvlng
Ohio, Jurore will lie publicly
COUNTY, OHIO
driwn for the Januery 111115
NOTICE
TO
BiDDERS
I
Auctiot
A pro-bid conference Will Term of the Common Pl111
County.
tllls 'SDI•day, Dtc. 3 be held 11 1.0:30 e.m. Court of ealdWIIIICI
Brecfford
December I, 1tll4, at the
, 1.0. McCoy
at ... Statiolt,·
office of the llelga County
Commlatlonera of Jurora
COUrt Cltrk, CcourthOUII,
will be held at
"-roy, Ohio 45711 to theDrawing
Mila• County Board of
ttllow potentlel lilddare to
view the' current County Elecllone at 112 llull!trry
Court operetlon and 11k Ave Pomeroy, Ohio
QUIIIIOnl rel1f1il to lhll (11) 211; 1TC

AMBERWOOD

Cocker~~~!~

Yolnt•fi't

7:00p&amp;wllh
. .........ts.

w•••·

Rutla•tl, Ohio

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
NEW I USED PARTS FOA
ALL IIAKES I IIODELS
112·71U OR
·112-SSUOR
TOLL FREE 1·100-141·1078
DARWIN, OHIO
7131111 TFN

BINGO

BEST RECEPTION

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp;CO.
l•fer'IOr &amp;
EJ[Ierior

Tab the pain out of
palnllng. Let uo do It for
·you...v.ry. . _ . . . .
FIM Eetlmllel
llefo,. 6 p.m. leave

_..ge.
Afflr 6 p.m.
614-885-4180

TilES
RUTLAND, OH
Homegrown-Carefully
Sheared Scolch &amp;
While Pine 4' &amp; Up wilh
a greal seleclion of
larger lrees.
Call742·2143 or
742-2979

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP
One mile out
143 from Rt. 7
Tues. • Wad. - Fri. • Sat.
1-41
• Cl'lftlman Tools
•Toya
•Gun•
Loads of Miac:.

Buy-sell-Trade
992·2060 1"""1 m~.

TRI COUNTY RECYCLING
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FOR YOUR CONVENIENa
MON.·FRI. 9-6; SAT. &amp; SUN. 9·3

Paying Today 55 4 Ill. lor clean dry
alu•i••• ca•s. .

.. -

Racine American
Legion Post 602
Now having Bingo
every Sunday Night
Starting 6:45 pm
Doors opim 4:30 pm
The more people
playing the bigger
the pay-off.
Seve ad for 1 free card.
949-2038 or 949-2044

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB

1e-sc Bonus per pound for Rattenetl c1111s.
We Buy All Non Ferrous Metals

CALL FOR CURRENT PRICES

.•u.m

992·5114

WIIIDGW IYI liMB

J ~Custom llade

1•Solid vinyl
•

replacement
windows
• Free Estimates
o $200 Installed

Call For Details

Starting Slug
Matches
Friday, Nov. 11

.

6:30

•viSIT OUR SHOWROOM•
110 Court St. pomg~ey, OAiO

"Look !or the Red and While Awning"

9924119 AI Tro- Ow~erJ-IOD-291·5600

Su1tday, Nov. 13
1:00
II GIS
CHRISTMAS TREES
Choose and
cui your lree.
(or we'll cut il for you)
Riggs Tree Farm
39507 Rocksprings Rd.
.. (al corner OfUS AI. 33)
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-5702
Carol &amp; David Riggs

Kenny's Auto Rental
Kenny's is the place to co••
when you need a car rental.
We ltave '"" 11ad raasf
- - 1- ---1

-

----··--

c

-

-·-

Kenny's Auto Canter
264 Upper River Rd.

Gailipolis, OH 45631

1·800-486·1590

Bus. (614) 446-9971

11fi!1/94

-

WEill'S
CNIISTIW

(No Sunday Calls)

Maplewood Lake
St. Rt. 124
Racine, OH

Call949·2734

For tbe best in satellite
sales and service conlact
Bryan of
Best Reception.
-We have even better
and quicker service.
-Over 10 yrs
experience
· Service on all syslem
lypes.
- Besl prices all around
lhe area.
992·2903 or 992-6320

614·992'7643

Cundiff's
Custom
Cut

614-742·3051

J

·,

FREE ESTIMATES ·

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Ugtlt Hauling, .
Shrubs Shapped

and Removed
Mls. Jobs.

8111 Slack
992·2269

Ott Ste~ Ct11~ltft Autt

•••r

Rt~alr

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome
State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

--

tint~

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addition•
oNew Ga..Jilla ·
-Elec1rlc•llt Plumbing
-Roofing
olnterlor a Exterior
Pall'ting•lao concrltl
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.Cf. YOUNG II
H2-41215
.
PotnlfOy, Ohio
tft0112 ""

II

I

I

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC •

I .

�'.

Ohio

Pomeroy---Middleport, Ohio

.-

.

NEA Cro••word

..__

ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER
BEATTIE BLVD.TM by Bruce Beattie

AP nou ncemcn t s
Elloctlvo

1m~..,.

trnpl8111'.1g

for Rent

..

3 Announcements

45

r:umiShed

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

....... tobuJ·••-

Rooms

=.~~~

~ =-~=1!:: -·~~~~~·~·~·~110~----

•nd

n

lant Condition, On P-a laC In
Choehlrw Aft• I P.M. ~

L - 8mhh F111M I-"
Grove Rd., RIAI.Ind ..... to -

7171.

hunlera, theft and deetructlon of

.......

- - ar I• -

121111 With b11 ~ 2 R-lorrant·-ormonth.
2 liMN,__., ~ Starting o t - - Clalllo HolaL
...._

110

on Ev..u

42 Mobile Homes

NOR'Df

, .,.
4

Truckl for Sill

Plcll--

-Allll, C.l
t/4 Aller
ChevyI PJI. 114-441No

Pf"'llerry. o\11 wrttt.n pennlto ""'

r

car\ceUocll

1711.

No hulollng of any kind on my
farm on liUtch_.l Rd., Racine.
ConnW Er'lel..,, owner. 1

1llll Chewy ~ lan, • .,.. dMI, ..... I1441NIII.

·.

Cllow 1-10 ~p 4
........ ¥8, .......11141.

No Hunting or T._..,ng at
anytime. Raymond D. Smhh.
NO hunting or trwaDUIIng at

WEST
•Q 8 7 4

EAST
•A 10 53

910 9 8 5
• 8 6 2 .

96 3

.74

•A J 8

Proce..lng

4

DMri

Rent Or w o.. Land Contrac:t a
............, Netural Oaa Fur&gt;

Giveaway

2" Iron plpt, 200' for ec:rwp only1

MOlt In O.llpolla. 114 411 2003
Or 1-1401, 1-T P.M.

614-V92·7'0f5.
Ado,.blo Pupploto: llothar lo
Sooglo,.Will So Small Doga, 614-

"We raised lhree boys.
emergency room
back hOme gives frequenl flyer miles."

.

Th- bedroom . . - homo In
Pomeroy, 2 lull !lethe whh gatden tub, ........ niCely
romodeiH on 2 112,..,.. luot

Complllto• Sat Funk • WegneJI
outeldl Pomeroy oorponllon
EncycloNdla'a 614-44~525 A~
llmho. t37Sinoo. plut1 d-"
'Employment Serv1ces 11 Help Wanted
tar 4:30 P.ll.
and ......,_. Avollebl.l lmmadlatoly, wloptlon to buy
Frool 4 klnane • 3 adun Cllta.
Raaponalbto aclun will do avallobto, 114-902-7272.
614-441-0438.
11 Help Wanted
~~~~~ Two badroom lrallar In 1~ppara
Full blooded Saaglaa 304475·
1618.
'
AVON I All Arwaa I Shirley Evening houro only, P-roy, Plalna, t200· piJa dlpoen and
Spaaro, 3044711-14211.
lla- lloow Haven erwaa. 304- l-"'-'llt_loe_;.'l_r4_1;.;8.;.J.3481.;...;.;.·_ __
Kina ala mattr•u tor waterbtd
uk lor April or loan
614·1192-3917.
• An anaaal AVON Chrlot!IIH -~ 88245711
n maeo.
44
Apartment
Ina awto, eam b1Jc:f· Marilyn
Malo ilil6any, boon rieuterod, 30l-882-2145
or t
11112..358.
-ling 211 Yn. E&gt;JO.
for Rent
good huntl"ll dog, very gantla,
F... Eotlmlltea. 114-2.._
814·Jit2·3012.
ATTENTION hlahly motl..tad
Calland Seve
taam ploy- 1hli McDonald·•
Puppln, to good home only. roatouront In - . . . . . , WY
304-875-0818.
.
ha lm!MCIIItellllland par1~1me
poeltlona lor ahlfta batweon
Pupp!Ho·oll black, pert Golden !iam
and 4pm. ~training
1 ladrooon ~-For Rent,
R.triavar/ lab aiHJ Chow, 4
Oallloollo
Ston · a
program oo 110 o1Darlonca 1e
mal..,3 .. 114-112·2405. rwqulrecl.
Ralrfgerator Fum
, 114-245CompotMive 1113.
Two email gu hootn, 114-t112· Paid llrtlldrye on. Fraa Trllaone PlootograpiMw o\vollabto .,-::-:------15144.
unllorma,
rote lr&gt;. . _ In 10 dl!ye. Very lll!arel lor Woddlnge &amp; Other E..nta 1 ladroom Unlum- ApanCIII
Kovln lf4.441.1611 o\ltor 5 mont Rengo, Rofrlg"'!for, Diepaid v-lon ptan.••
6 Lost &amp; FQund
_...
Gerega
Pnovldad.
pan-clmen. -lcel benatl• p.m.
De!IOilt. R o - Aoqulrad,
a111llobto
(oenatn
-rlctlone
Found: Mmale Coon doa
1H Flr8t Avenue, AMr, Qal..
brown/ whhe apoto, 114...,; ljlply). If lntaraatad, otap by
llpolla, 114-441-2161.
F
1nanc1al
MCDOnelcre
ol
lloo-.ori
ancl
3462 oHar 6 pm.
pick .., an eppllcatlon.
Found: Largo Ring With 12

aut- a- ""

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete homo· lumlohlnao.
Hourw: lllon.aot, H. 1~

OU2, I mllot o1A lulavllle llcl.

Frwe Dotlvery.

··

,, . ~.,

...

#

~,.~

,~

Q , . . .,. NEA. ft.

Merchandise

1117 Chnv

56

Whit• ~ puppiM lor •II.
114-1112' •
.

ll.lslcal

lnstnunem
Peevey -

.......... With

For lalo, F,.. EQ t7S; Y....... Dnnf25; Y - DX100 K~
t40 A Tnloll Load. S4l 110,114
441411211 ARer 4:311 , ...
"ltlcliad Cell814 3111120.

Flrawood
~.

Gualnr

Hoo•-d FU111fe!11np

And o\pplla..._ 11aa- Sat• •
tat.OO; .DI- · tlllt.OO;
Living 11oM! St. • lltii.OO; Badroome a. • 1371.011;

Relllglnt.,. •
W.aliano IDryerw

llangH

•

Hourw lion. · Sat. H Wecl. H;
oon, Forgot our REPO. soo-

tlon.

Flrawood ......

lllcilotJ • .... UMcl -

~erN~~

llfgM

-11·111,t211.
-lpm.
.. - ·

FJrewood. mlud, I
tllld
ha.-od, t/4 lon IIIII -.one~ • otukad, .... 114-

•uto.

homo

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

.

446-3851.

.......

64

=. . .
---.
Pick-Up

Touoll -

~~~~-~

FOOOI

Juot
- - • Chew. Lona
•
~ .._ Otlwe, 1144410440,1~. .
.

I see TllERe's

J.lERE'S TI-lE WORLD WAR I
FLVIN6 ACE WALKIN6
BACK TO TI-lE AERODROME .

d~,

8ARRACK5..

Pa~a, Paint, m AoAO:
S.rloue Colla Only, ti,OOO, 114-

all

Hay a. Grain

1117 l'lynocMh ,.,.get, 2.11.;
Ill;, uo., ..-, ••· AIIIFII
HO. oond.;

GIM.':o::lz1::

u-.

-CheVy 414 . . _ ~ 1111oa, 1 OWner,
111M, lf4.441.7717,

:=,.

11t I.• - IIU.

·
1181 Chevrolot Aatrowan 711.000
llllaa, ollr, Crulot, 1ll!t 4 :~
a..r
.. And Bonch - ·
Condition, ..il-. CheVy 1-141

74

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

11111 ll..tang, I cvl, auto., PS,
ere. lntarioi, t4200. IOU7S- 75

Loot: old mi lo Colllo whh looM
coll1r, ubla and whHa, Amber·

3110.

1m Fonl LTD Cloocl Cond. t..
llllago. 114-245-1012

gor Rd. vlclnhy, .14-11411-24111.

Public Sale
6 Auction

"'

AUI&gt;UBOrt

llll11

"' .,
!1.·

~

SO{,feTY

IJ

Moton:yclea

·

1
4. d.

Jm
111
P!!;
~ ®

....

"r 1";
_
,.
~- Q
• ~
o

BORN LOSER

Boats a. Motora
for Sale

v~fC.,SIR, l'/1\~D "'

=~=~~..:·
0..
With a.i.

YOU'V£ ~ 5EJJED I~ Tile.
r--:=:--., ,_ _.....

II force

="-.c:=.'i~ eon.

Rick Poe,_. Ao,octlon CompenJ,

78

full time auctioneer, compltite

auction HrVIce. l..lc:..168,0hlo 6 Weat Vlrglrilo, 304-

Auto Psrta &amp;

t•

WltiJ' KIIID OF

1111 C!vriNr IABinln c:onver.
llble. GoOd Condition, 12.411,

1171.

--~.

ftoor, 4 - .

bath, 110 ...................
.......... 114-1112.znl eher
1:00pm.

.

camperaa.

••

::

van ~·

1111 as llonle Carlo :st:'~oo'::" S:'oiiiiiiM. 30447W012
llhlrt
lualllllot, o\11 ...,.,._ ::;:--j
1184 Ford c-.- llllin , _ 111711 :14 Pl. Cloaa o\llotor Home ·
Condition, Aoldng: .,.._ Allar On Dodae ......_._
'
IP.M.-D.
11181 Tnnro Ani 111g11 Pallor&gt;
_,.,. Pulrilge A-1 Conlltlon,

e:t.llalfc;;;;lr":d't'!:!ilo~ ;.
.
• t3,100, tiWiHZn.
::

•

,.'

Improvements __ r,.
---..::::=::::;:..;.;.;.::.
BASEMENT
•·

·
WATERPROOFING
!
-.ciltlonel lllotlnoo - ·
-~
......._Orlurioloohod
Cell
,___,_
ltWIJi
-telollahel1171.
" - w• .,.....,.
' ....
. b-

-

.

otomo

lh ~.neWSj!llper Is

siJD)ect 10
Housing Act
of l968 which makes it !Regal
th~ FedorarF,Ir

to awctii~itlse •any preference,
umnatJon or discrtm.lna1ton

on mce, cotor. religion,
sta,tua or national '

ae~ lemlllal

'

I• \

1W5 newspaper Mnnot

a

&lt;fi~=~:~:~•ccept
real estate
tnVIolation ollht law.

42 Mobile Hoines

readers are hereby

· that all dW8IIIngs
In lhla newtptper

torRent

an~l

Ofli)Oittlnlly bails. f

/

"Hell, Ben, you qatch a rew bulleta through yo11r
hat during every holdup, and I'm finally gonna
eay I ain't ever been much !mprell88d."

ASTRQ-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

.A~" feal estate advertising In

,,

oa

Y 11

AEO

UBOM

WBHIIAVZ

GWEJ

BZ A . '

PIIEOC

ABOGP

PI!VJF

-

WBZUIIC .
BZSLIIO
I.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I resent being tabbed as greedy . I could hendll
dumb." - !Detroit Tigers exQCUtive) Mike ll~ch.
·

'=~~;~' S~\\~lA-&amp;£~s·
Nllatl ..., Ct.AY I. I'OUAN
0 lour
Roorrooge le11en of
ocrambled -do

111e
be-

lqw tg fQrm fgyr wor9s.

P E P Al A
CQSIT

I~ I I I I· 1...
Ny NA

I:"'

"They are so successful,·
my .friend observed of our
1 I I
new neighbors. "I think really
successful people make more
,.---.,.........,.,....,.,.....,...-=---. money than their children - -

I1

-ll"e -~:m·~;eto

!he chuckle quo1ed

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

Grouch - Ninth • Doubt- Peaked • BUDGET
Overheard at voting ptace: "If a politician will spend
millions to get elected to a job that pays peanuts, can we
expect them to balance the BUDGET?"

:

:::----:-Home:-----i:

r:

EJR

NWIIMOAVZ

PIIEOC

SCIAM-UTS ANSWEIS

we lillY c:... Anr Concltlon •
114 ttl PART or ~311 lOGo ;

Serv1ces
Tap .PI1c:M Paid: o\11 Old U.S.
eorne. Cold Ringe s - Cotna,
Gold•Colno. II.T.s. Cotn Bhap,
151 s-nd ........... Oallpollo.

CBUIIGSUIIC

8

IS
A

~· Itt! _,...... ._- ~

4110.

114x811t1Z.

sc

CIILIIJQP

OF 'UNTtTLEP"'

1111 - - aw. M - ·
Motor Homes
- ownar, tow milage. I04-f7S. 1m 0oc1ga 300 y,_....,.
Twin
Rlvere T -leW,_
-HOD
·
Ina IQllltlcotl...
1br.
auloolilfud apl. rar oldertr end
hendlcappad. EOH 3114-175-

VII

'G. B

~

114441-1171.

Air Contltlonenll Wallhera,
Dryora,_ Ccrw llacnl-. Powor
Toolo, Etc. 814-256·1231.

.. .-

by Lull Cempol
~c_....
--~by-Eich litlefin lhl ciphef
ltlndl tor 10011ef. Todly'l t:IW: R ~ D

Wll'( GNE IT /'o. TITLE

1111 Otdl!noblle ~-a.m. 79

FrMDr8, VCA'I, MicrGWIVU.

141115

TITLE! liS "UilTtTLEO" !

Neg.l-..mAIIarl~

~~~

A.~

' OO'ITLE.t&gt;"? lT

C.mero E - Concltlon,
Ropla....
•

Ru.. Wo
-buy
. ,utateo.
- -· 114-t112·
2521.
0on1 Junk ntsou Uo Y- NanWorking 11aJor Applloncel,
Color T.V. 'e. Reblgelotoro,

m

CELEBRITY CIPHER

by f1l ling in the missing worch
1..-.L...-.L...-.L....J.L.....J.L.....J you develop
from step No. 3 below.

-

l'nla.; '111 n Plw llctNf

3•

3 NT

Pass
Pass
Pass
All _pass

..-1_Ir-IN_Uir-E-,1.,...;_,1,.,..8

nooo, ......ea ....

momot- old clocu, enrlq,.
lumhlft. Rlvarlne o\ntlq,.a.

Dbl.
2•

0

11111 PlYmouth Conq- Tur11o,
ellv• halchbecll, - a , PS. PI, Pll POL, dud,

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

-r

1184 Chrpler Full
· GOod Shape, 1100, 114Zitl-1487.

Cloan Lato llodtl C.ro Or
Trucko, 11187 Or ~
SmHh Buick -loc 1_,
Eaotom o\vonuo, o.JIIpoilo.
Docoratad . , _ , ., waQ
phon•, . old lampa 1 old tlwo

..,.l
On or dlscnmlnatlon."
- ,_ .i....,..

procllmatlon
&amp;s-ofgluo
7 Explollve
(lbbr.)

5 6
L-..L----1.1...-J..--l.--1

8421

Wanted to Buy

Origin. or any lntan1lon to
,... eny ouch pmeronce.

bone

8 Llger
10 Cltrutl huH
11 Feehlon
16 Tiller
21 fltWde

.J-.....,.,........,....,.......,.--1.

1183 White Iuick Park Ava.
Whhe VInyl Tap. tt,400. lf4.441.

AuctlonMr Cot. Oac• E. Click,
Llcenae • 7114-114 &amp; londad,
304-8111-3430.

•

37LIIa . .l
3t Brltleh ICior

After an unusually scientific auclion
backtowin.
lor Hamman and his partner, Bobby
Wolff, our hero was in three no-trump.
Hamman won the heart lead in the
dummy and called lor the club queen.
East won with the ace and switched to
the diamond king, but Hamman ducked
in his hand aM unblocked dummy's
jack. Now came a low diamond to de·
clarer's 10. Hamman calmly led a low
club from hand, keeping communication between his hand and the dummy.
Luckily, East had the jack. West had
the jack, a &amp;witch to the spade queen
would defeat the contract.&gt; •
In his dedication, Hamman thanks
the theorists who devised five-card rnaand the forcing one·no·trump re·
snr•no• lor giving "many talented oppo1 noent! weapon s they couldn't beat me
with ." I can 't help thinking that it
doesn ' l matter what methods
Hamman's opponents use: They rate to
lose.

AcC8110rleS

773-5785.

IJiad.i,..
-· •
Ot7S. . IIQblte
.

agency

rijijt;:::::::::::::jt~======~==~j:::::::::::::::;c;:::~========~~:J~~
~~

11111 Honda B-1011. u.....
t,o_, - . Upl, tDJO. .
30447N411.

71 · Autos tor Sale

875-8873.

I WONDER WHO ·.
TloiAT 15 STANDING
IN TRE DOORWA't'...

STILL A LI6~T
ON IN THE

.
11111 FUI- ...,_ 414 llani

Transpo rtation

Un...._
- . , , 2nd

36 Gov1. term

The top-ranked player in lhe world is
Bob Hamman, from Dallas . Now you
can read about his lile in "At the Table,"
by Hamman and Brent Manley .
Published by DBM Publications, it is
available from The Bridge World, 39
West 94th Street. New York, NY 10025·
7124 lor $17.20.
It is hard not to be impressed by
Hamman·s determination to win and
his relusal to allow a bad result to influ·
ence his play on a later deal. cor course,
it helps to have as lew bad boards as
Hamman .I
Today's deal was easy lor Hamman .
It occurred during the final of the 1977
·Bermuda Bowl in Manila. At one point.
his leam was 67 points down. but came

oiiC 11am a.L. s.w.a.
U..-.114-211-

-

Pick-Up ~ l.,,llo!r ~
Squono beloL tUI to IZ.OO per Paint, v.., 4 .Cytlncler, Nice
Truck, t2,100, ~ Or
g..... 30W7S-3110.
114-2564251.
.....
a"""-. - · - .

ayaa different colora. Flva Mile,
Hendtraon area. Reward! 3Q4.

Want~ To BUJ: Wanteil ;:

pronoun

I Rnembllng

By Phillip Alder

241 0311

Will Ba Given, Vlclnhy: Approl.
Naar Plw Hut, OaiiiiiOIIo, 6144411.0922.

9

350Uikero·

South--"

2 Whimper
3 Holly
4 Wool fiber
5 Olllcllll

Hamman's life
and times

,_,

Int· MU8Ntl4 ........

RowrrdiiM-441·1312.
Loot: HubCap II Found Rewant

8

33 ConijNIII pl.
34 Type of curve

Opening lead: • Io

1171 ...... Coli, loy!., a.pd.j

-n -.t-

Loot! Brown c ..hlon To A
Couch Approx. 313 ott 01 588
BotwHn Tha 8 Milo llartcar Eoat
Bound .. t1 GaiiiiiOIIe, 125

Loeb rwala, Blu•..._.lw

0

rholt """'

n · vans a. 4 WD's

61 Fann Equipment

llegr.tond
A.l bnullng end D.II.I.R

Rewardl lf4-

3t

4 oyl., .4 ::.., 71,000
orlglnll mllea, -good
......
lruOII. 111dng UIIO ot lrilda, 11o

Pets for Sale

57

Pass
2•
2 NT

HOW DO YOU LIKE MY
BODACIOUS CHILl, PAW?

==~·---1-10,
...... u

""fi4L'1

54 Mlacellaneoua

Up Truck, 614'441-2222.
FoWJd: 11}\111 tprown and whlta
dog, UUio Hocking/ SA 124
vicinity, call to 10, 114-318-0110.
Loot: Block /Whhe Cockor
Spaniol o\lao Orov c.t, Kanauga

Pel.

421ntvery

I t

Keys, HouM Keya. C.r Key1,
Found laying In Fronl 01 Pick·

Area, F•mllr

(2 ....... ) .

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East
South
West Nor1b East

I

446-38!17. '

Q .9 3

OOhbectlon

41 111111111

t Hob:.
41 Public vehicle
· 12 wawn 1111rt111 41 HlllowMn
rround
lllant
13 !Iouth of Neb. 411 Pr1.......
14 The Mil
-15 Anlmelo with • 50 L1~\~
trunkl
53
.,,.,
17 Old age
114 Merit
18 V1111 o1111111C 55 ~month
1t Ending lor C~ln 55 Rodentol
20 Weird
57 llerln rocklo
22 Bullring cry
58 Othet wiN
23 Ac1or Newhe~
24 Engine rround
DOWN
27 lome twtna
31 Wy11t32 Wllght un111
1 lndllnl

• 7 4 2
t A 10 7 4
•K 6 5 3 2

Claa rVs•nltary, cooler ~.
s moked dHr available. Cr~~w­
ford's Oroc.ry, Henderaon WV.
304-675-5C04.

t K

'

Pu~zle

40 Paltllc

--erm1

: s Cepeble of

SOUTH
•J

anytime on -chart• YDit F1rm1.

Now

11 ·211-H

•K 9 6 2
•A K Q J
• J 5
•Q 10 9

i '1

......

'

,.

cally perfect lor you . Mail $2 to
Matchmaker, clo th•s ne~spaper , P.O .
lkix 4465. New York. NY 10163.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jin. 18) Others
might base thetr ho~s on lrraltonal WISh·
es today. but you could be dtfferenl. You
have grounda to be expeclanl.
AQUARIUS (J~n. :ZO.Fib. 191. Today you
moghl be luck•er than usual tn lma.nctal
alfatrs . Assert yourself and don t let
opportunilies pass you by.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Merch 20) Concern
Wednesday, Nov. 30. 1994
' yoursell With present activilles thai could
You have a knack for making friends, and affect your future. lmmedlale needs are
in the year ahead. this 11\fY· serve you •less omportant today.
well. Some qllhe alliances and relatlon-I ARIES _(IIIrch 2.1 ·Aprll1t) There I~ a
ships you establieh could prove valuable possibility for proftt today lrom a foeld you
In unexpected ways.
have already tolled. Stay aiM
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Don't TAURUS (April :ZO.MeY 20) Progress can
rock lhe boat today. S1ly out of your own be made today through tradtloonal tech·
way in arrangements lhat are presenlly nlques rathe~ than workong wtth the
running amooJhly. Let luck run its COijrae. unlested. Don t lhrow our lhe old before
Know where 10 look lor romance and you quality lha new.
yW'II find H. The Aalro-Graph MatChmaker GEMINI (May 21-,June _20) Concentrate
lllllanlly r~ala wttlch signa are romanti· your energtes on an Obiecltve lhal really

,,

. coun·rs today. You could end up with a
• meaningful rawarQ.
CANCER (June 21.July 221 Your best
asset today could be your talent tor managing slicky siluations. You know how to
solve problems without ruflling leathers.
LEO (July 23•Aug. 22) Do not let
changes or shifting conditions inlimidale
you today. If you don't get raHied, fNery1thing will wortc out advantageously.
! VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If you treat
olhers as you would like to be treated
today. others will imitate your cooperalive

!

spirit.

·

LIBRA_(Sept. ~ 23) Your poesi&gt;ill·
ties lor personal gain look good allhla
time. Stay on top of aituatlons lhet heve_
lhe potential to yield multiple harvests.
SCORPIO (Oct 2~-Nov. 22) Someone
close to you might have diflicu\'Y getting a
handle on !hinge today. This will not be .
true ·or youl thoLigh, and your organizationa! qualities could even help rectify
his/her mislakes.

.,

�.•
;o.-1'1'18 Dilly Sentinel

: Plgl

'llllldiY, November 28, 1tM

Ponwoy-Middi..,Grt,
Ohio
.
-

'

Emergency HEAP and regular HEAP continue
Beat 'of the Bend ...

·

by Bob Hoeflich

Beaaoflbe Beod
Tile4 ollulkey? Me, 1110. How·
·ever, DilDY of you remember lbe
old sayiug, "Waste DOt, want DOt"
so we've got to bang in lillie. 1bat
bird cu'tlast fcnver. Can It?
'

Mrs. Stella Altius bas been
retumed to her bome io lbe Har·
rlaonvllle area and abe wanta to
tbank yoo for tbe lovely cards aod
'prayers. Sbe baa been c:ouflncd to
,tbe Holzer Medical Center for tbe
past mootb rctuperatlna from a
brotenbip.

--

Dec:ember Ia roUIDg rigbt In OD
us and I wanted to rculiDd you that
tbc Rutland Emergeocy Medical
Servicel will be balding Ita 8IIIIUIIl
Cbrislmaa bazaar from 9 a.m. to s
:p.m. tbla Sallllday, Dec:. 3.
There will be all sorta of craft
people oo band wltb tbeif wares. If
·you w111t to be amoog 'em. 0011tact
,Marsha Elliott at 742-2233 or
JoaDD Eads at 742-3078. You get
· 'im eight foot apue for $10. The
'.bazaar will feature also refreab:tnenta, door prizes and C.J. and tbe
Country Geotlemen will be on
band to CDtertaiD you from 2 to 4
·p.m.

' Gcnla1 Bob and Hazel DucldiDg

:_wUI be holding a holiday season
opco bouse for tbcir family and
frleDda at tbe1r borne, 60.5 Sixtb St.
in RaciDC from 7 to 9 p.m. 1111 Sat'IUday, Dec. 10.
All 11 rooms of the Dudding
home ~ dec:orated exteosively far
lhe seasoo as are tbe porches of
tbeir resideDce. So please make a
.POle of tbat 8Dd drop by for a visit
-witb Bob and HazeL 'lbal's really a
Dice tblng lbey're doing.

• Chuck and Daisy Blakeslee of
-J.jucoln Heights, Pomeroy, really

·have spent tbelr retiremellt "oo tbe
road''. WeD, OD tbc road. the water
and io tbe air, you migbt say io
Jravellng. They've oow visiled five

CODiilleDta.
They·recently returned home
from a IS-day cruise tour which
toot tbem to Arrica. Among tbe
~~Dints of interest they visited was
Casablanca. I wonder if Sam is still
playing • As Time Goes By". On
Ibis trip, Chuck and Daisy eveo
lOde a camel ride. Note tbat I didn't
say they "enjoyed" a camel ride.
I'm not sure about that.
Not soooer getting home pracU·
cally tbat tbe Blateslees took off
for Wichita, Kansas, to spend
'lbantsgivlng witb tbeir daughter,
Palricia Circle, and their grandchildren, Mark Circle, and Mary ADD
Circle Ham.

both tbe inaime guidelineS uid the

The applitation period for botb
Emergency and Resular HEAP
programs coDtinues far the 1994-95
heating season. Botb programs
offer ODe-time &amp;Ssistaoce per beat·
ing season to income eligible
households.
Emergency HEAP is a crisis
intervention program desigoed to
relieve beat· related emergencies for
households experiencing disconnection, tbreat of disconnect.ioo, or
bulk fuel tbat will last oo longer
tban I0 days.
Regular HEAP is additional
beating assislaDce available to lowincome Ohioans. Assistance in
completing tbese applications cao
also be provided by HEAP staff at
tbe Community Action Cheshire
office andJor Outreach offices in
Gallia and Meigs County.
To be eligible for tbe program.

emergency requirement must be
met. Household income is defined
as gross income of all household
members, except eaDed iDcome of
dependent minors 18 years of age.
Allowable annual income for a
one person household is
$11,040.00,
two
persons
$14,760.00, tbree persons
S18,480.00, four persons
$22,200.00,
five
persons
$25,920.00,
six
persons
$29,640.00, and add $3,720.00 for
each IDdividual member.
Applications are also available
for tbe Regular HEAP proRram
which is additional beating assistance of a non-emergency nature.
The income guidelines are the same
for botb programs. The deadline for
Regular HEAP applications is
March 31, 1995.

Thought you might want to
mow about Dorotba-we lllways
calicd her Dorothy- Winebrenner
NeuiZling.
Her birtbday is coming up oo
December 7, Pearl Harbor Day,
and she williiiXids your boost She
is currently residiug at Darst's Pri·
vate Care Home, 33164 Cbildreo's
Home Road, Pomeroy, and cards
will reach ber there.
Dorotby was a resident of LiDcolD Hill for oearly SO years. She
and bcr husband, Richard, were
married Jm. 24, 1942. and Dorotby
was. tbc oWDcr-operato' of Neut·
21inf I Belllty Sbql. above the BCD
Franklin Store in Pomeroy, from
tbe 1940's uotU the mid 1970's.
She also worked as a senior frieud
serving as a driver for tbe Meigs
County Senia Qtizcus Ccula'.
The Neutzllng home wbicb she
and Richard built in 1952 haS been
sold to Randall and Cindy Russell
and tbeir two small daughters.
Please be sure to let Dorotby
bear from you. She oeeds to mow
tbat she has friends out there and
they do care.

---

"'

IJJeclal.

only bothers you wben tbe wind
blows so MODday must bave been a
disaster. Do keep smiling.

Page4 .

'

Buckeye 5:

.

5-12-17-18-33

•

en tine

Sorority dinner planned
A CbrisbDas dinner '9 be held at
tbe Holiday Inn on Dec. 6 at 6:30 ·
p.m. was planned wheo Xi Gamma
Mu chapter of Beat Sigma Pbl
Sorority met recently at tbe Red
Rosoter Restaurant In Gallipolis.
At tbe Christmas dinner a gift
exchange wiU be held witb secret
sisr«s to be revealed at tbat time.
Presents are 10 be wrapped In wbite
paper witb red bows.

· All Ta~ning
Lotions

- ·sheila Harris presided at the
meeting which was followed by ao
evening at tbe movies.
At an earlier meeting held at the
Bradbury Church of Christ, a do
your own tiling auction was held
with Mrs. Harris as auctioneer.
Members were reminded by Kay
Atkins, service chairman, to bring
items to be distributed to Serenity.
House to tbe next meeting.

Vol. 46, NO. 147
Copyrteht 1994

1/2 Price

Following tbe potluck the outAs a ldctoff to boliday obser- side CbrisbDas tree will be lighled
vances at tbe Center, a potluck sup- as a memorial to deceased mem·per and ellliil'lalmiieot will be beld bers and friend&amp;. There win be
tbere Friday. The supper wlll be Chris~ music aud singing, and
served at 4:30 p.m. al)d those tbe Big Bend Cloggers will present
auending are inviled to tate a cov- a Christmas program at 6:30p.m.
ered dish. Table service, meat and The public is invited to_atteod.
beverage will be fumisbed.

f•Z

T~i
. Pomtroy, OH 46768

200 West SeeoJICI Street
992-6255

·•

2 Sectiona, 14 P~ 35 centa
A MUIIImeclll Inc. Newl~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 30, 1994

GATT backers turn attention to Senate
WASHINGI'ON (AP)- Witb House approval of a sweeping 124lllllioo trade accord behind It, the Clinton admiolstratlon Ia tumlng its
auentiOD to shoring up support for the pact in tbc Senate: ·
The Hoose coocliided Tour bours of sometimes llllpasslooed. sometimes .perlillctory debate Tuesday by ratifying, 288-146, a vast expansion
oftbe Genenl Agreement OD Taritls and Trade.
"'Ibis vote dcmoilslratea Ill tbc Americali people tbat Democrats and
Republl!:aJII cu wodc togetber in the national interest," PresideD! CliniOO
said lo a statement lmmedi•tely afterward.
Favoring tbe accord were 167 Democrats I!Dd 121 Republic;ans.
Elgbty·Dilic DemoaBta, 56 RepuWC8111 and 11DC iDdepclldcot oppoiCII it
'

.

- ~·-~-

.. ~ ..

.

.

The margil) or viCtory I'C{!I'CSCDted a victory for Clinton. wbo had
worked the telephones tbrougbOut tbc day talldDg 10 mdtcided lawmakers. and it was the tint posHiectiCJD test of whether the Wbite House and
Republicans wbo will CODtrol Capiftll Hill in January Clll ooopc:mc.
''The eyes of tbe w«1d II'C oow 1111 lbe UDited Slates Senate,'· CliniOO
declared.
Continuing the first lame-duct session of Coogress in 12 years, tbe
Senate was beginnin&amp; a scbeduled 20 hours ol debate todAy, witb a vote
set for Thursday.
Senate Republican leader Bob Dole, wbo aDDOUDced his support last
week~ said r.:om Brussels, Bell!ium. that be believed the Senate would

Cr1sp gets temporary
confinement at home

Gift Certificates Available ·

ooce the seasoo is passed. tbe orna- Heights. Pomeroy.

• The C11181DeDII cost $S each and

may go to the Outreach office lo
tbe1r county.
The telephone number for tbe ·
. Cheshire office is 367-734I~r
Gallia county and 992-6620 or :n..•
6629 ror ·Meigs couoty. The Ga1lia
county Outreach office telephone
number Ia 388-8232 and tbe Meigs
county outreach number is 9925605. The toll·free bodine number
for inquires on Regular H~AP
applicatioos is J.80().282.o880.

..--.::·

SHOW palm spathe
witb
mums won reserve best of show ID artbtlc
arrangements ror Melanie S.tethem at the weekend's Christmas
Dower show held at Carleton SchooL
·

Pick 3:
876
Pick4:
7568

Williams
All-Ohio

· office oo Fridays, but applicaota

Tann.ing $2 0
.1 5 Sess1ons
.
'3 .0. ·Sess1ons
Tann.ing $3·0

1 mow. 'lbal bole In your bead

ment will be given to tbe purchaser
as a teepsate of tbe recogDitillll.
·· ·All ptocceda from tbe ptoject
will be used iD tbe bome delivered
meal program. Donations can be
made at !be Center or handled by
mail to Box 722, Mulberry

~ Meigs'

it

proceeds from project will go toward meal·program
: WoodeD stocking ornaments
·wm be used to decorate the "Tree
;,f Ugbts" at tbe Meigs Multipuriloae 'Senior Ceoter tbls yeat and
'lesldents are encouraged to place
:u omament oo tbc tree in memory
J1f a loved ooe or to booor IOIDCODC

Applicalions for .botb programs
cao be made at the Gallia County
Outrench office, 863 Porter Rd.,
Porter, Monday tbru Friday from
9:00 tol2:00 aod 1:00 tbru 3:3~
The Meigs Outreadl offu:e, 3935\'
Union Ave., Pomeroy accepts ,
applications Mooday tbrougb fri.
day from 9:00 to12:00 and 1:00 to
3:30. The Cbesbire office hours are
9:30 to 12:00 and 1:00 to 3:30,
Monday tbru Thursday. No appli·
cations are tateo at tbe Cheshire

Ohio Lottery

Jack Crisp, the former director
of the LeadiDI Creek COIISCI'VIIICY
Dislrict. must stay In au Ohio llllne
uodl antborldes cao find a prison
tbat will bouae him, visiting Mor·
gao Cou!ltY Iudge Dan Favreau
~ Tuesday ID Meigs County
CdimDCJD Pleas Court.
Also, tbe $50,000 caab bond
polll:cl against Crisp was daopped,
to be replaced by a $50,000 person·
·al rec:ognl7lii!C'A: bond, Faweau said.
lo February, Crisp was seotenc:ed to 18 DIODiha in jill for five
misdemeanor counts of reteivlng
impoper compenaatloo for bonuses. Due to hia healtb, Crisp had not
begun bia jaU tenD. Crisp, 63, has
lived In Bayd County, Ky.
· "The prosecutor is mating
llllaDgemeots becanse of bia medical condltiOD," Favreau said. The
new prosecuting attoroey iD tbe S·
· year-case Is Meigs County ~
cutor
Leotes.

pass the deal iD a cloSe VOle. .
Treasury Secretary Lloyd BCIIISCD and tbe pro-GATI floor leaders iD
tbc Senate -Daniel Pattick Moyoihan of New Ycrt and Bob Packwood
of Oregoo - were scheduled to addreas a rally today of business executives preparin~ a last-minute lobbying push for the aa:mL
The executives 8l:d administralioo coolend GATI will creaae hundreds
of tbousands of new American jobs by cullil)a worldwide lariffs by 38
perceot and expanding the rules of world ti'ade to new areas such as apiculture and services.
Opponents claim it woul!l pmllit multinatiooal corporate giauta Ill shift
productioo to low-wage counlries overseas aud ship tbelr goods bact to
the lucralive Amerie111 ~

criminal cases in a county theD tbat
attorney canoot act as special Pros·
ecuta, Lentes said. Toy had served
as special prosecutor io Ibis case
since January 1990, taking over for
Fred W. Crow Ill, the current
Meigs commoo pleas judge.
Crisp must stay witb ~ family
member aud cannot leave tbe bane
except for a medical emergency,
Favreau said. Wbea Crisp leaves
the home he must cootact autborl·
ties.

Crisp will tem~y stay in a
bote! outside Me1gs County while
more permaDCnt arrangements are
made at a family member's home
to allow for bis bed and supply
oeeds, Leotes said.
Recent court files by Crisp's
doctors noted thai Crisp's CODdinoo
remains serious. Crisp hassuffered
heart attacks, narrowing of ~
arteries aud a complete OCGiusion
of tbe right coronary artery oo
.JAIICl~~~ whldl he h~d angloplas~ .~t·
11!!-liib~!~•
~~ dQde&amp; ment. according Ill doaoh. ..
.
6ii:lle'· ·-f'"a'ncw oplillcib
Crisp's attorn~r.. William
&amp;aiD l'lllle•C(qt:i The order cledd- Eachus. has claimed If Crisp .were
ed .thlllf an alllln1cy has bandied--- _.(Contllllled 08 Page 3) '

f.,

••CIIIIell

s.uspects in robbery,
rap~- given probation
PRI
U.~.U.A.

ECKRICH . $119
BOLOGNA
.

LB.

lHUilt

KRAFT

YELLOW 59c
ONIONS

BONELESS BEEF

CHUCK ROAST
$119 LB. .

PARKAY

MARGARINE

3# .BAG ..

CARNATION

r---------------------,
COUPON
GOLD MEDAL FLOUR BErn CROCKER CAV.E MIXES BOUNTY PAPER .
I
TOWELS
BUY ONE GET ONE I " BUY ONE GET ONE
.~OLL
Umlt 1
COUPON

BROWN BERRY

STUFFING
BUY ONE GET ONE

1.1~l2

COUPON

FREE
FREE
FREE ~m:
----------.J L.----··-·.;;--.
. ; _________~~:~l
. ____ L-------------•-------

1--··-·-··..;;;,;;.•• .;;:__
.

.J

I

'

\

p0 -w ELL'S
I•

.

I

..

&lt;I

··SALi P..CES CiOOD WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 30TH ONLY • NO RAIN CHECKS
I

"'

-·

..
--·

-r

LB.

MAXWELL HOUSE
MASTER BLEND COFFEE

~-~--·~--=-·----··-·---· LK~
$1 12 .oz.
COUPON

39c

.

39c

L---------------------~

STORE HOURS
MONDAYTHRUSUNDAY
BAM ·10 PM
298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY
'

"

B:r GEORGE ABATE
aad JIM ftEEMAN
Seutloel News Slalf
· Two Meigs County men who
pleadecl guilty last moolb to felony
. cliarg~s - but not the iJ!itia1
charges of rapiDg ~d robbmg a
Syracuse WOIII8D llsl May - were
sentenced to five years probatioo
Tuesday.
Timothy "Bo" Willis of SyraCU$e and David SiP.J,aD 9f Portland
bad a six-moo.th Jail sentence for
felony obstrucling jusliee suspended to probation, visiting Morgan
County JudJe Dan Favreau

ordered.
''
Both must pay $1,000 to the
Meigs County Trust Fund and
auend six months of counseling. ·
The pair were earlier charged
along with Middleport's Bengy
Rhoades of taking a Syracuse
woman from the Old Uberty Bar in
Pomeroy to a secluded location on
the Flood Road near Pomeroy. She
then was allegedly gang-raped and
abandoned.
Earlier this year, Rhoades pleaded guilty 10 charges of gross sexual
imposition and tlieft and is serving
(Continued 08 Page 3)

BIG BUCKS - Larr bucks were harvelhd , _ acrou the
county during tb• Orst two days or tbls year'• deer/gun MUOn.
.Alfred's John White, above at left, shot his lint back ever, at 10..

Authorities: shooting deaths appear to be self-inflicted
Two receot uorelated aboodog
deaths in Meigs County were
apparently lbe result of self·iDfllcted gunshot womds, officials lellla·
lively determiocd.
The body of Ivan Halliday, 57,
~f StroDgs Run Road. Deal Salem

Isolation didn't suit
Dahmer, lawyer says
MADISON, Wis. (AP) - As
iovestlgators worked to answer
qiiCIIiODS surrouodiDg tbc .death ol
_J.cfl'my Dahmer. bia la!ll')'er said lbe
serial tiller dldo't want tbc JCSUictive 'liviDI conditions that could
bave saved him.
"He waoted to be in with the
general (prlion) population. He
tlldo't WIBlt to sit in a hole Ill day
Ioog," Stephen J. Eisenberg said
....
rueDahmer,
-Y·
a native of Ohio. was
found In a pool of blood iD a gym•
oaaium bathroom .be bad been
cleaning early Moaday at
Columbia Correctiooallostitutioo
in Portase. Preliminary 11utopsy
results showed he died of multiple
atu11 fraclures and braiD lnU1D8.
AD iDIDale wbo had been dean·
ing anotbcr nearby bathroom when
attacked remained In critical CODdi·
tiOD wltb head lnlurlea at UDiverslty Hospital late Tueaday oight.
A lblrd prlSOIIer who had bCeD
working ·with tbe two men on a
cle!IJIDg c1eta11 was ideodfied as the
IUSpecl iD tbc slaylug. ComctiODs
Seaellly Micbacl Sullivan said tbe
tblee were tbe oDiy iomates In tbe
IYDI • tbc time of tbq aaack. '
A bloody broom handle was
foaDd oear Dahmer, but authorities
haclo't determined if It was the
m.ner weapoo.
Thlt - ODC of many questioDI
·unanawmd u IDveatlgllorl from
tbc state Justice Deparllllent and
Columbia County ShCriff"a ~meat eean:bed tbc prison ~.

conducted interviews 8Dd reviewed
the crime scene Tuesday.
Sullivao wouldn't specify where
were at tbat time,
twO gmudnlld a
officer were in tbe
area.
said one of the
guards had left tbe gym for a time
to bring iD inmates for workouts.
DaluDer. arrested at bia Milwaukee apartmeot in July 1991, coofessed to tilling 17 men and boys
.
ha
over 13 years and IOIDeliDles vlog sex wltb and C81111ibalizlng the
corpses.
He was the larget of au attack iD
prison last July, wben an inmate
tried to cut his throat, but the
weapon, a razor blade auacbed to .a
plastic handle, fell apart before 1t .
could burt Dahmer.
Dahmer bad bceD kept in isola·
lion at the prison for a year befcn
tbc staff cletenDined )1e could mix
. witb otber pr1soDm. Sullivan said.
Eisenberg said he aud Dahmer
. never disCUSsed his living anange· meats and he dido't mow whether
Da1uner could bave requested men •
Secure quartaa1
But If Dallmer had wanted to be
in isolalioo, the lawyer said. "!'m
sure it would bave been very SUD·
pie to obtain !bat -just commit
some prisOD violaliODS."
The Rev. Roy Ratcliff, who
baptized Dahmer In Malin a
prison iDfinnary whlrlpoo bath,
said Dabmer hid told him he p
erally gotlllon1 well wltb other
lomaw.

Center, was found Tuesday around
1:25 p.m. in a bam in Salem Tnwn-

sbip, assislaDt prosecuting attomey
Chris Tenoglia said tbla m9111iDg.
Teooglia said the body'was sent
to tbe Franklin Countv Corooer' •

Office for a~topsy. The incideoi
remains under investigation, be
said.
Meanwhile, Sheriff James M.
Soulsby said this morning tbe Nov.
23 sbootiDg death of a Langsville
man was likely self-inflicled, per-

Thomas MOCR, 31, Stalie Route
124, was shot in the head shortly
before II p.m. in his home, report1
stated.
Soulsby said the Moore shoot,
lng remains under investigatiOD.

Middleport
hristmas kettles out--- parade
set
for Thursday

The brlaht reel kettles fJI the Salvatloa Army art out and volupteers are ringinJ! their bells to .
encourage coutrlbutlou to the Anly's annual Christmas jlrojed of rememberiDg the uofortu •
nate. This year the kettles are at Powell's Super Valu, Fnodland and Pamlda. Pictured is Carol
Slltllllan, a YUioteer It tile Pvweli's Jocadoo, The moaey collected between now aod Christmas
will be ued to buy food for the more tbu 100 ballets to be prepll'ed ror families iD aeed, and to
buy tOJS for Ulldrea w1ao •IPt oot otl1enrise receive uy. Families may register to be remembered from 10 IJI!.-110011 od 1-4 PJL OD
aod 7 at tbe Salvation Army beadquaners, Butternut Aveoue, Potaero,. (Seadllel pboto lly Cllarleue H~h)

nee. '

"

r·

haps accidentally.

Only 24 shopping days uotil
CbrisbDas. Are yoo n:ady?
· To get you in a more festivemood, Middleport win bold its
annual CbrisbDas.parade bel!inning
at 6 p.m. Thursday.
Anyone inleresled in participallng should go 10 the llaiJr, Queen.
where tbe procession wdl form,
said Tom Dooley. Middleport
CoDUDunity Associatioo presidcllt.
The parade will bead soutb oo
North Seco~;~d Avenue, mate a
right !Urn .at tbe at the •r• onto
Mill, continue on S.outh Third
A venue to Main Street, ium left
onto Main Streei and tbeo bact
onto South Second Avenue. The
parade will end in tbc Dave Diles
Park area. said Dooley. who will
coordinale !be parade.
Area parents may get a free~
tograph ol their cbildren witb SIDII
Claus at Peoples Bank. The Big
Bend Cloggers will perform in tbe
bank's p;utlng lot after tbe parade.
Participating Middleport businesses will remain open until 8
p.m. for sboppe!S tbat evening•.The
town's mercbauts bave done an
excellem job in coordinating tbia
year's gift give-away, Dooley
added.

A lotal ol36 businesses ue t:;·
ticipating in the weekly JW11 1•~ .
People may register elcb weet fJI
tbc five weeks and every 'l'bunday
tbe winnera will be 8I!IIOIJI1Ced ·

(Contlnlied ....... 3)

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