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By
The
Bend
.

Brian and Jayne Collins
announce the birth of their second
child, a girl, Baylee Brianne
Collins on September 3 at Marietta
Memorial Hospital. She weighed 8
pounds and 13 ounces.
Maternal grandparents are Joyce
and Elton Ritchie, Coolville. Paternal grandparents are Larry Collins,
Long Bottom and Teresa Collins,
Marietta.
Bay1ee was welcomed home by
her brother, Dakota, 16 months.

BA~LEECOLU~

Lee birthday
celebrated
Amber Nicole Lee, daugtber of
Trince Lee, Pomeroy and Laurence
Lee, Jr., Shade, celebrated her
ninth birthday with a Snow White
theme.
In attendance or ·sending gifts
were grandparents Cora and
Lawrence Lee, Sr., Sid and Carol
Hayman, and Rachel Wilson;
brothers and sisters, David, Larry·
and Natasba Lee; cousins, Scott
and Brittany Chapell, Brenna Hayman, Jerry, Dtana and Brian
Fredrick; aunts and uncles, Ryan,
Robert and Rita Hayman, Sandy
and Rick Chapell, Kim Lee and
friend Cassie Brawne.

Hudson rewarded for
leadership abilities
Heath Hudson has been featured
in this year's edition of the United
·States Achievement for an award in
Leadership and Student Council
Achievements.
A senior at Meigs High School,
he is enrolled in college preparatory classes and is president of his
class. He is co-captain and a fouryear varsity letterman for the
Marauder football team.
He is involved in Student Council, French Club, and is a member

of the wrestling team, where he
was named All Tri-Valley Conference lasi year. He is a four-year letterman in track.
Hudson is a member of The Fellowship of Christian Athletes
and attends Faith Tabernacle
Church. He is th~ son of Mary
Hudson, of Pomeroy, and the late
Bryant Hudson. He JS the grandson
of Geage Hudson of Pomeroy, and
~- and MIS. William Arthur Sr. of
Ripley, W.Va

by Bob Hoeflich
Big congratulations are in order have known somebody·who knew
for Stephanie Sayre and Fred Mat- somebody or else the ruling on the
son, Southern High School students dividing line wasn't carved in
ar.d members of the school's s10ne. At any rate that was the way
Future Farmers of America Chap- it was. How soon we forget, eh
ter.
Mazie? Check it out with Dorothy.
After winning top honors in She remembers that she was not m
·Ohio competition with their instru- the "Bucktown" gang because she
mental presentations. Stephanie lived above Lincoln.
and Fred have been selected as one
The Bucktown references
-of the 40 acts to entenain at the didn't seem to have verv much
annual National FFA Convention effect on me and frankly, I was
to be held next month in Kansas glad to go to PaJt SL Somehow, I
City, Mo. Acts selected from always felt the tall. Central School .
~ross the nation entertain several
looked like it was about 10 topple.
audiences during the convention Pat Sherman Mills who attended
including service club luncheons the school tells me that a pan of it
and at the Crown Center shopping was condemned before the building
complex.
.
was abandoned.
Stephanie and Fred will present
_ __
their instrumental act at an audition
And a couple more birthday
on Nov. 8 or 9 in Kansas Citr, and girls.
through that auditi!lfl they wUI be
Bernice Hawk, a lifelong Meigs
placed in the various perfonnances resident, observed her 95th birthslots throughout the week. The day Friday. Her address is Hemtwo Southern High School students Jock Grove Road, Pomeroy. . '
have been advised that their primaMiddl~'s Terry. Byer marked
ry purpose convention week s~!l'd her 89th bfrthday on Saturday, Ocl
be the talent pro8J111!1. Competition 2. On the following day, her son
to be. one of the 40• acts was and daughter-in-Jaw, Charles and
extremely keen and Stephanie· and Helen, took her to an -orchard in
Fred have been advised to prepare Jackson County for apples, cider
"very rigorously" for their upcom- and sorghum and then dinner at
ing perfonnances.
Bob Evans in Rio Grande. Son,
Sinee the d~o will be represent- Bob and his family, presented her
ing not only Meigs County but also. with gifts and money. Terry also
the State of Ohio, contributions to · · received 24 cards from friends and
help with their expenses are bei~W relatives. Terry woFked at the
accepted. Donations to either stu· Meigs Senior Citizens &lt;':enter for
dent or both may be sent to 4 7440 20 years but doesil 't get there too
Morning Star Road, Racine, Ohio frequently any more.
. 45771. By the way, FFA has
412,788 members.
Seems like we have a good deal
of longevity going in. Meigs CounMazie Hannahs and Dorothy ty. And that's spectal. Do keep
Jenkins relived some memories of smiling.
long ago with the recent mention of
the. Park Street SChool .on Middleport's Gravel Hill in thiJ column. · ' r
Neither Mazie nor ·oorothy
Toe to Toe
attended the school which later
became an ice cream plant among
Most birds have four toes on each
Other things. Dorothy ,recallS thai foot: .three in front and one 'behind.
she atiended the uptown Middle· However, members of the ~t and
part Central School as did Mazie•. woodpecker-fainilies- including road
Mazie though bas forgotten abou, runners, cuckoos and kingfishe~ i
have two toes that pc)int forward and
~ schoolllwes.
-. ,
Let me ~fresh your memOry on two that point backward.
that, ..Mazie. Your schoolmates
Were everyooe.you•knew who was
.Jour age or about y.our age ''way
back then" wh!l lived above LinCl)ln SL 1boac_bdow Lincoln SL,
the area known as ''Buckto\¥11",
1 some time at the Part Sinlet
ScbdoiJ
•
\.
However. there w~ a few
exceJ!tioas and some ·k ids who.
The largl II 18nd gorge 1,. the
lived a bit on the loWer' tide of die world
Z7'l'·mlle
.
. Grand
LinColn.~L line'were permiaed 10 Cllnyon11Inthe
Arlzotla.
aiitend Cenll'll ... :Jbeir
. . Jl8fCI9 must

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• Jane Molter was leader for. the
program "Technology: Employ It
for One Another" at the Sepiember
meetin~ of the Racine United
Methodist Women.
Scripture was read from First
Peter. All members joined in discussing how technological changes
at home, offioe and the church have
influnce4 the way thin!ls are now
accomplished and quesuoned if the
church has made use of the new
technologies. Prayer closed the
program.
In opening the business meeting, Lee Lee welcomed everyone
and all joined in repeating the
· Lord's Prayer. The UMW purpose
was repeated by the group and the
UMW song was sung and accompained by Ruth Steams.
.
The secretary's n:pon was given

Dear ADa Leaden: Reoenlly.
you prinll!d a 1eaer from a man
tllanking a truclJ: driver for saving
his life. He was f'lllinl ulcep while
driving, and a truck driver kept
blowing bis bern to keep bim awake.
This ill a fascin"ing coi!M;idcnoe
because IOIDeOite saved my life,IOO,
and il alao happened 33 yeara ago.
I was working on the Garrison
Dam in Rivenlalc, N.D. At that time,
it was the largest earth-filled dam in
the warkL I was working on top of a
136-foot surge tank wlien a mne
hit me in the bl!ct with a cable,
tbrowing me off the tank. I was
headod for dte concretc below, with
no chanoe of slniVII, when a man
by the name of FII!Yd Hartman
grabbed me by die neck. He bad his
safety belt on and Clllght me about
halfway dowll sa I pasaed by bim.
I was lakeD to dte hospital with a
few broken ribs llld didn't Jet a
c:ltanoe 10 thank bim. That was his
fiist and last clay on that job, and I
don't know wbc:tc be went. So thank
you. Floyd Hanman, for saving my
life. ·- ROGER W. DAUB,
CENTER. N.D.
DEAR ROOER: What a tarific

counaelor ·said we were made for
cachlllbcr.l posq.oned the wedding
~-Jack wouldn't continue with

Ann

Vol. 44, NO. 111

·lotulllmedlalnc.

~g

!Ullyl I !tope Floyd llartaWI 11CCS
this and wrilu to let me know. Orif anyone knoWs wbc:tc Royd is, wiD
you please .end him this column and
tdl him I W1111 1D bear from him?
He ihouJd write ID me in care of the
Chicago Tribune. ru keep an eye
peeled for his lcaler.
Dear Am Ianden; hm 37 Yean
old and have aever married.l·daled
a 35-yar-old divoroed man for five
yean. "Jack" and I were very muc:b
Ia love. I wore bla eagagement ring
for a year, . and we talked of
maniage, but we bickered a lot. I
asswiled this .was just our style of
CCIIImllllication.
We decided to get premarital
couaaeling about our DCVa"-ending
81JU111CDII. One COIIIBdor aai4 our
values were 100 clificqdt. Another

10 you. it's sort of a

·~" ofhitn. I say, not nccessy..
Uy. I .enjoy walking behind my wife
becatt... she has a tcirific fanny and
looki peat when she walks. --

CONCORDIA, KAN;

DEAR CON.: Some might

think it's lither sweet. Thanb for
writing. ru bet t1te1e will.be Iota or
gucssins pii!CI in Conc:cirdia IOday.
Do youlttwe qlltstioM obolll sa,
bill 110 OM to talk to? Anlll...anders'
booklet, "Sa flNitM . Teen-Ager,"
Is frtink liiJd UJ lilt poilll. Send a

to,.,. busilless-n"

envelope and tJ ~Mck or inoM}' ordo for $3.65 (IIIU illdlldes postoge
and ltandiUJg) to: TteliS, .c/o AM
LtlndNs, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
JU. 60611-0562. (Ill CtWJda, send
$4.45.)

Community Calendar ·Items
appear two days bel'ore an eveat
·aad the day or that eveat. Items
must be received In advance to
aasure publication In the calendar.
'
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Marilyn
Meier will tei!Ch sweatshirt painting at the MiddlepOrt Arts Council
at 7 p.m. Participants must bring
their own shirts, j&gt;aints and brushes
will be provided. Cost is $10. Call
992-5983 or 992-2675 for more
information.

POMEROY - The Meigs County Garden Club's fall meeting will
be beld at dte Meigs County Museum at 7:30 p.m. All garden club
officers and members are welcome.
MIDDLBPORT - There will be
a revival at Ash Street Free Will
Baptist Church· from Oct. 11-16
starting at 7:30 p.m. nightly with
Evan~elist Paul Thompson from
Cincmnati and special singing .
Everyone is welcome.

CHESHIRE - Women Alive
will meet at 7 p.m. in the Kyger
Creek Oub house. There wiU be a
devotional speaker, craft demonstration and refreshments.

general membership meeting for
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce at 7:30 a.m. at the Senior
Citizens Center. The topic will be
the senior citizens levy.

RACINE - Racine Board of
Public Affairs will meet at 10 a.m.
in the village hall. .
'

WEDNESDAY
CHESTER - There will be a
revival at the Chester Nazarene
Church Oct .. 13 - 17 at 7 p.m·.
nightly and 6:30 on Sunday with
Evangelist David Canfield from
Russell, Ky.

POMEROY - Pomeroy Elementary PTO will hold itS regular meeting 'at·7 p.m. in the school gym.
Everyone is welcome. 5th graders
wiU 1Jf0vide entertainmenL
1
POMEROY • Disabled AmeriCOOLVll.LE .- There will -be a
can Veterans and Auxiliary will revival 81 Whites Chapel WeSleyan
DARWIN - The Bedford Town- bold their monthly meeting at the Church Oct; 11 - 17 with Evange· list Kermit Farlow. Everyone is
ship Trustees will have their regu- · Hall at 7 p.m.
welcome.
lar monthly meeting at 7 p.m. in

TOPS members congregate
Both meetings were opened in
pmyer followed by the singing of
the Happy·Song and the reciting of
the TOPS pledge.
The best TOPS losers were Jean
Kahler and Jeannette McDonald.
The KOPS pledge was recited. The
best KOPS losers were ,Linnie
Aleshire and Bernice Durst. The
best stork loser was Bernice Durst.
·Jeannette MCDonald won both
gadget gifts and MaidQ Long and
Ruby Fowler won the fruit baskets.
T.C. Ervin received a charm
bmcelet for being half way to her

COOLVIT.LE - There will be a
hunter safety course Oct. 13 - 15r .....and Oct. 20 - 22 from 6:30 to 9:30
p.m. at the Coolville Lions Club •
Building. For more information or
to register call 667-3831, Ed Rood
at 667-6348 or Ed Wigal at 6676657.

TUESDAY

goal and a charm for losing six
consecutive weeks.
Articles on curbing cravings,
eating out and the benefits of walking were discussed.
Members sang to the best losers.
The TOPS IIOH 570 held two
meetings recendy.

POMEROY - There will. be a

or

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U FORURONCO IIILT 414 2.1 vsi ktllded,M.........S7;49S .
U CH,EV. SI0 IWU 414 u vs. .;,.o:·.,~
';.';;S1f15 ,
9.1OIEY IWER 414 4 Dr~ .u va, .~.t,.ne.-$1 S,$QO
87 CHEY. 510.m. CAI414 PICKUP ..................-$6495 ·
~ fOtD f150:302 VB; JtWI'O, ~lr, till, cruiH
· $6995
17.DODGE D250 Jtava,IIUtD~
~
$5995 '
, II CIIV. 1/2 JON auto., .alr, utJ'Uharp--__,$7495
17 fOID 'UNGU ILT lalglletl • ..........M.~--$41'5
15 FORD FISO ILT auto-Air. utr~~ wrp
.. $4695
. 14 CHEV.% TON CONVERSION VAN \tery nlce-~$4995

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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
Visitors this weekend to "Showcase, Meigs County" ·at the Rock
Springs Fairground will be able to
see a wide variety of exhibits and
demonstrations mnging from apple
butter making to archery, from
chair caning to classic cars.
Scheduled to open Friday with a
County" this weekend. He poses here with a
CLASSICS - Roy Grueser will be displaying
ribbon cutting at 2 p.m. with sever1927 Model T pickup and a 1914 touring car.
four of his antique Fords at "Showcase, Meigs
al state officials and other dignitaries attending, the activities will
continue through Sunday.
Hours of the showcase arc Friday, noon to·6 p.m., ~aturday,
10:00 a.m. to 8 .p.m. and Sunday,
noon to 6:00 p.m. Everything is
free and the public is invited to
attend.
For·the younger set the Southern
FFA will ha'iC a petting zoo in the
RIO GRANDE - Repons on comsheep barn 4rea where youngsters pany visitations and a discussion of
will have an opportilnlty to interact developing a regional outdoor drama
with various farm animals.
highlighted a meeting of the Regional
A kiddie tractor pull has been Economic Development Association
scheduled for 4:00 p.m. on Satur- Monday.
day and Sunday in the show arena.
recent1y-f~i group consists
Various prizes will be awarded and ofThe
·business and
nearly two
registration for this activity is
industrial
Jeade
s
from
Mason
$1.00: Registration for the tractor
County,
W.Va.,
and
Gallia.
Jackson,
pull will be available each day at
Meigs and Vinton counties iii Ohio.
3:30n.m.
- ctmpingc Xliitiits by Forked ·'l'llp WOtbillvn'nmted miSSionis1!3 ·
Run State Park' Rent-A-Camp pro- expand economic development ·
throughoilt the region.
gram and elements of the 91st OVI
The University of Rio Grande,
Company B Civil War Living Histhrough
the auspioes of its newlytory will give Showcase visitors a
taste Qf camping from the present developed Cenler for Economic Deback to the Civil War era. The velopment, hosted the meeting.
Chester Bowhunters will have a
Oi'ganizC!I in September, the groups
display and feature demonstrations first pro~t involved visitations to
throughout the weekend.
area businesses wid industries deThe Meigs County Historical signed to deteonine existing needs of
Society will host a display down by established f11'111s.
the log cabin on the fairgrounds
The fm:t round of visitations inand feature an opportunity to take volved contacts with representatives
pan in a living history project on
ECONOMIC
-BarryM.Dorsey,
of -Facemyre Lumber in Meigs
Saturday.
of
Rio
Grande
addresses
members or the
President
or
the
University
Meigs County Senior Citizens' Co\lllty, the Pillsbury plant in JackCenter volunteers will be making son County, and Gallia County's Bob Regional Economic Development Association at a Monday evening
meeting. The association, which focuses on ec01i'omic development on a
homemade apple butter on Satur- Evans Farms.
regional basis, meets at the university througb the auspices or the
The
initial
contacts,
visitation
comday and people attending will have
school's
·recently formed Center for Economic Develop)llent.
mittees reported, brought forward
a chance to sample the product.
Other outdoor displays will suggestions for enhanced considerFollowing a wide-ranging discusinclude the Bookmobile sponsored ation - including the development of and area-wide support for specific
by the Meigs County Library, Ohio a legislative agenda - of the local projectS, such as the proposal to de- sion of the need for a regional apDepartment of Natuml Resources wood indusuy, a need to draw labor velop a regional airport in Mason proach to the development and proand a cruise-in on Sunday after- intensive induslries to the area. and County.
motion of tourism, Greg Miller, Ph.D.,
noon. Registration for the cruise-in
cooperative effons between Bob The second round of corpomte visi- the University of Rio Grande's direcwill be available at noon and cost is Evans Farms and regional tourism tations, to be held in October, will tor of theater, addressed the possibilS5.00. This activity is being spongroups.
initiate contact with Shell Chemical ity of establishing an outdoor drama
sored by the Oldies But Goodies
Additional concerns expressed by Co., in WeSt Virginia, as weB as the presentation.
Car Club, and prizes wiT! be awardthe COI])Orate .leaders included the Ohio flfllls, Southern Ohio Coal Co., ·Acctirding to Miller, four such proed 10 the top 20, best of show, origneed for improvements ilj education, the Gavin Power Plant, Adellman ductions- each of which receives fundinal and best of show, modified.
a
regional·approach to grantswriting, Lumber, and Merillat Induslries.
Cont_inueil on page 3
Cruise-in awards will be pr~nted
at 4:00p.m.
Rounding out the outdoor activities will food booths sponsored by
the Lions Club, Harrisonville
P.T.O., Senior Citizens, Carmel
Sutton Church, Star Mill Park,
Eastern Band Boosters and Sweet
Greetings.
Other exhibits in Commercial
By JIM FREEMAN
tee is trying to further develop the (17 :49) and.Jon Perrin (17:57).
Building One include antique cars
Top five woman runners were
Sentinel News Staff
fireworks display and is taking
(pre-1945), antique tractors, model
Despite persistent rain showers • donations for next year's fireworks. Angela Malone (19:43), Lori Kelly
trains by the Meigs Division of which occasionally moistened
Apparently wet weather is chili (27:26), Sherron Barnett (28:00),
Southeastern Ohio Railroad Asso- those attending the 1993 Big Bend weather judging by the number of Susan Grueser (28:48) and Cathy
ciation, Meigs County Senior Citi- Stern wheel Festival Saturday, the participants in this year's chili Atchison (29:16).
zens; JQ)ln Hetzer, trapping; and event, in the words of Stemwheel cookoff.
Male winners in the following
several craftsmen.
Committee Chainnan Larry Banks,
According to cookoff organizer age groups were: 15-19- Crock· The Junior Fair Building will was "pretty successful."
Sherry Warner, 17 teams and indi- ett Roush (18:08) and Bill Toundas
'have a wide variety of educational
Near-perfect fall weather Thurs- viduals panicipated in this year's (18 :23); 20-29 - Jim Freeman
and commercial displays. A high- day and Friday gave out to cooler culinary conquest, easily doubling (24:25) and Sean Walton (26:24);
light of the building will be a flow- tempcmturcs and showers Saturday last year's ligures.
30-39 -Robert Musser (18:35)
er show featuring the Meigs Coun- morning around 10, but if the rain ·
Chili cookoff winners were, in and Mitch Meadows (24:46); 40-49
ty theme song wriuen by Roger and was supposed to keep festival order by class: corporate - Mike Carter (18 :05) and Gary
Mary Gilmore. This show is open turnout low, it wall not evident by Coolville Lions Club, Big Bend Donavan (19:59); 50 and over to the. public .for .exhibit, and will the large. number of people partici- Fimess and Teaford ~calty; indi- Larry May and Ken Holley.
be a People's Choice Show. There pating or simply watching such vidual - Jim Warder, Mike
Andrea Neutzling was first in
are classes for arrangements,_speci- events as the SK run/walk, stem- Canan, Bonnie and John Dennis the women's 14 and under group
mens including flowers, sunflowers wheeler races, chili cnok-off and and"Bob Arms (tie). ·
with a time of 35:33 while
and pumpkins and a judge's class. . the -Herbal Harvest and Country
The min Saturday began as run- wheelchair winners were Tom ·
. Meigs County Agriculture will Fair.
ners in the third annual Big Bend Lowery (31 :33) and James Ferrell
also be showcased in t11e Junior
The festivity began quietly Stern wheel Festival 5K Run/Walk (47:10).
.
Fair Building in an exhibition high- Thursday with cruises aboard the were getting-ready to run from the
Thirty-six walkers .participated
lighting ·the .major sources .or . sterilwheeler P.A. Denny and Mason, W.Va., levee ·to the in the event with Glen Carpenter
income and products from Metgs ended with a bang Saturday , Pomeroy parking lot approximately finishing flfSt with a time of 31:03.
Co~nty and examples of the prodevening ils hundreds braved falling 3.1 miles away.
Sponsors of the event were .
ucts. ·
.
temperatures and chilling down"The number of participants was Vaughn's Cardinal and Peoples
Winning entries from this ~ear's pours to watch 'fueworks lisht the downa little bit," said organizer Bank of Point Pleasant, Mason and
Soap Box Derby will be on dtsplay sky above the Pomeroy river front.
Mike Kennedy, ''but everybody ran New Haven. Helen .Fields, reprein the J unio~ Fair Buildins. Show_ In between; revelers of all 'ages good times·. This is a ~ery fast senting Peoples Bank of Mason,
case visluirs will luive an opponu- found P.leilty of enJertainment rang- course."
served as starter and Don Vaughn
nity to take a closer look at the ing from rock-n.rolliO tountry and
Nathan Baloy was fastest over- handed out prizes. .
workmanship of these unique vehi- western, from cmfts and herbs to all coverjng the distance in 16 minAnother poJ)ular crowd pleaser
cles.
an 'abundance or country ouisine utes and 46 seconds.• Following Saturday was the Herbal Harvest
Eastern, Meigs and Southern sure to please. .
were Jeff Jones (1 '7:2S), Phillip and Country Fair which, due to the
Banks said the festival commit- Edmonds (17: 3S), Richard Haft
· Continued on Pll!lt 3 '
~ontinued on page 3

Festival 'pretty successful'
despite contrary climate

Five countries account for over 75
percent
all foreign direci inveatment in the United States. The 'leading· foreign ,investor is the United
Kingdom; with $106.1 billion lnvealed·
here.

Ill

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the town ii811.

:. . . hill.... ' .· .

·VDhta canfield &amp;oi ......

A lluiiiiRI ltlalnc. .........

Horton named new mayor

REDA focuses oii company
visitations, discusses tourism

ccnsidc:llblt IXIIIIIIICIIl vulgar, bull

1..-ln 40s, cloudy.
Wedllelday, parUyolllllly. High
Ia mid-50s

1 s.ctlon. 10 ..... 3li con .. .

Pomeroy·Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 12, 1993

Fridayat2

"JIOWU lb'ugle.• Sbe wants to be

self-oddrused,

.Pick 4:
. 6817
Buckeye 5:
10-12-15-17-35

will begin

bim.

moved

656

Showcase
activities

111m!
Dear Ana LOden: I've written
clor.as oflelten 110 you in my brad.
but this one loeB to the post offioe.
It's about the woman who never
Wllb beside ber husband. Sbe ill
always • least three stepS ahead of

die ~g. Also, be wanted ID
elope; and I wanted a church
weddills- .
.
LaaJanuary, I went over !0 Jack's
houae ind caught him with hill
secretary.It ll!mCd out this 21-yearold ·jliplld tb1ng bad
in
with him. Jack insiBis that be doesn't
love hCr, but she coob and clearJS
for bim, which I never did.
Am, we've l!een ~ eacb other
behind the aeereltlry's back. We
tFC that we love each other, but
· he's aQaid be hasn't the wiUpower
or aelf-Gscipline 1D Rlllain b'ue ID
me. lllill WIIIIID marry him.
I went to a doctor who told me .I
was depreacd I've tried dlling other
IIICII, but I ha\&lt;e·no desire for them.
What should I do? - INDIANAPOUSDILI3MMA
DEAR INDIANAPOLIS: It
aounds 10 me as if the rocks in Jack's
bead matCh the laolea in yours. I
caution you, however,. against
marrying this Rmleo un1eas be gees
rid of dte aec:rellry aad agree&amp; -ID
joilll CDIIIIIeling; If be refu8es -drop

Pick 3:

-PageS

the fellowship.
Several members are planning
to attend 10 District UMW Leader•
ship Enrichment Day on Oct. 16 Jlt
Belpre, St. Mark's UMC. Cost is
$5 and resetvations can still be
made by calling an officer.
Refreshements were served by
Margie West and Lee Lee. Get
weell cards were signed during the
social time.
Attending were Alice Wolf~.
Vicki Hill, Karen Walker, Dorothy
McKenzie, Margie West, Clara
Mae Sar~ent, Sharon Hubbard, Ewi
Mae Htll, Jane Molter, Rutll:
Stearns, Margery Roush, Chris
Hill, Frances Robens, Nancy Ervip
and Lee Lee.
,
·
The next mc;eting will be Oct·
25 at 7:30 p.m. at the church. All
members please uy to attend.

A November election day dinner
wil be served. Note cards personal- ·
ized with a sketch of the church
will be orderetl. A donaiion was
sent to the Blanket Program,
The Campaign for Children Program will continue thro11gh 1994
and a form was completed to be
sent 10 the District.
The nominating committee
chairman, l;tta Mae Hill, presented
the slate of officers for 1994 and
noted they are the present officers.
The group accepted and voted to
retain Lee Lee, F.esident; Mar~ie
West, vice-presJdent; Chris Hill,
secretary; ClaJa 'Mile Sargent, treasurer.
Craft making and sewing will be
continuing at the church every
Monday at 9:30 a.m. All women
are invited to participate or join in

by Chris Hill 8nd correspondence
was read. A letter was read by
Mike Euler who survived a bad
vehicle wreck almost 5 years ago.
UMW have been faithful in sending cards 10 him monthly.
.
The treaswer report was gtven
by ClaJa Mac Sargent. The penny
fund collection was taken and sick
calls reported.
Margie West reported on the
annual District UMW Day.held in
Marietta recently. Attending the
day were Lee Lee, Jane Molter,
Margie West and Frances Roberts.
Lee Lee was installed as a new
member of the Athens District
nominating committee for 1994. ·
Several items of busineess were
discussed and attended to. The
1994 mission pledge was
increased.

Man grabbed by the neck and saved

s
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p
•
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Community calen4~

Beat of the Bend...

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•••
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Monday, OCtober 11, 19~

•

Ohio Lottery

Phillies
edge
Braves

Technology program presented .at meeting

Collins
second birth
announced

A"MBERLEE

The Dally· Sentinel

Middleport
Council honors
Fred Hoffman
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
AfJer serving more than 19
years as mayor of Middleport, Fred
Hoffman submitted his resignation
to Middleport Village Council
Monday night
Wednesday he moves into the
position of Meigs County Commissioner to which he was appointed
by the Meigs Co~nty Republican
Pany central committee last week.
He fills the unexpired term of
resigned commissioner, Manning
Roush.
·
Hoffman has served four full
terms as mayor of Middlepon and
was in his fifth term which expires
on Dec . 31, 1995. Dewey Horton
as president of Council steps into
that unexpired term.
It was in I 974 that Hoffman
went from president of Council to
mayor upon the death of Mayor
John Zerkle.
As a tribute to Hoffman and his
contributions to the village, Horton,
on behalf of Council, presented
him with a plaque. The mscription
~ "in appreciation for 19 years
of'dcrucllted service as Mayor of
Middlepon".
During the meeting former
Councilman Bob Gilmore was
appointed to fill the unexpired term
of the late William (Bucky) Walters. Gilmore is one of two candidates for Council seats whose
names will be on the November
ballot. Mick Childs is the other
candidate. Both are without opposition. With Horton moving into the
mayor's post, there will still be a
vacancy on Middleport Village
Council. An appointment to Horton's unexpired term is expected to
be made at the next meeting.
Council authorized Hoffman to
hold court on Oct. 18 pending Horton's completion of required tnlining.
Projects and Changes
A first reading was given to an
ordinance increasing the water and
sewer tap charge from $225 to
$325 . The increase was recommended by the Board of Public
Affairs.
Council again postpOned action
on bids on the Broadway-Logan
Street draina~e project. Two bids
had been received, one from Weber
Construction at Reedsville for
$13,143, and the second from
TAM Construction, Lancaster-for

Sl2,481. Both bids are in line with
specifications, Engineer Eugene
Triplett reported.
Councilmen Paul Gerard and
James Clatworthy at last night's
meeting said they wanted to go
with the high bid because Weber is
a local contractor and uses local
workers, despite the fact that it will
cost the village $662 more.
Since members seemed uncertain as 10 whether they are required
to accept the low bid, action was
postponed until Solicitor Linda
Warner canobe contacted for a ruling.
On a request for a D-1 liquor
permit from the owAer of Chris'
Diner, located in. the former Middleport Lunch Room building on
North Second, Council decided to
request a hearing at the county seat
It was generally agreed that taking
no action and allowing the permit
to go through and beer 10 be served
there has the "potential to create
some problems."
The proposed solid waste management plan of Gallia, Jackson,
Meigs and Vin10n Qlunties was
presented 10 "Council by· Hoffman.
No action was taken pending
review by members.
Activities
Trick or treat night was set for
Thursday, Oct. 28, 6 to 7 p.m. That
same night, Feeney-Bennett Post
128. American Legion, will hold its
annual community halloween party
at Sleepy Hollow iocated near the
marina off Page Street.
Tom Dooley, president of the
Middleport Community Association, reported on the CatfJSb Festival noting that $1,300 was cleared
on the activity. He noted that the
name of the annual event is under
considemtion for change.
Dooley also reported that Middleport will be at Showcase, Meigs
County, this weekend. A video has
been prepared and will be continuously presented during the Showcase, and photos of early Middleport will be displayed.
He also noted that United Fund
for Meigs County has been estab~ ·
lished and the official kickoff will
come on Nov, I.
The Rev. Kris Robinson had
pmyer preceding the meeting.
Attending were Hoffman, Council members, Horton, Clatwonhy,
Judy Crooks, Gerard and Satterfield, Dooley and Gilmore.

PRESENTED PLAQUE • Fred Holl'man, mayor of Middleport ror the ~ast 19 yea!'5, was presented a plaque or appreciation
at Monday night's meetmg or Village Council. Dewey Horton 1ert,
wh~ moves from president of Council to mayor, made the pr~sen­
tahon.

•

Cristopher issues
WASHINGTON (AP)- Secretary of State Warren Christopher
warned today Haitian military and
police leaders are inviting the reimposition of "severe economic sanctions" br obstructing the arrival of
scores o noncombat U.S. forces in
Haiti. ·
Christopher said Army chief
Raoul Cedras and police commander Michel Francois violated the

commitments they undertook last
July when they agreed to allow lhe
rcstomtion of democracy in Haiti.
Under that agreement, ousted
President Jean-Bertrand Aristide is
due to return 10 Haiti at the end of
the month. About 170 U.S. and 26
Canadian noncombat forces were
due to land in Haiti on Monday but
'Were blocked by forces opposed to
the return of democracy,

\

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�Commentary
111 COurt Street
Pomeror, Olilo
DEVOTZD TO 'J'IIB INTBRBBTB OF 'J'IIB IIEIGS-IIASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
MARGAR.Ef I EHEW
Controller

LETffiRS OF OPINION ""' welcome. They should be less than 300
I\'OtdJ. All !ellen are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
oddress and telepbone number. No unsigned leuers will be publisbed. l&lt;tters
sbould be in good lUte, addreasin&amp; issues, not personalities.

Change in California
primary date will alter.
race for White House

Two Africans in the African
diaspora, Flip Wilson and Frantz
Fanon, have come up with what
should be America's next step in ·
Somalia.
Pull out
My reversal of suppon for the
current U.S. policy wasn't arrived
at without a wrenching reappraisal.
When the missioQ began, sending
food and troops to Somalia was the
humanitarian thing to do. It was an
implementation of the ''inasmuch''
factor of foreign policr. "lnas·
much as ye have done thts to these
the least of my brethren, ye have
done it unto me.''
Sometimes policy can be determined by personal predilections. In
my instance, negritude· was a fac tor. Omar Mohallim, Somalia's
current vice president, chosen in a
unity conference of the country's
clan leaders, is a longtime close

personal friend ol mine.
Will pulling out of Somalia feed
its people or solve its complete
, breakdown in law and order? Not

Chuck Stone
as

Jon~

as the "Madman of
Mogadtshu," Gen. Mohammed
Farah Aidid, can control the coon·
!~)'Side. Unable to capture or defeat
htm, the U.N. and U.S. troops
should withdraw.
Withdrawal does not mean a
defeat of the Bush-initialed policy
in Somalia. But it does mean that
the United St8tes cannot impi&gt;se
freedom on a people who don't
want it. The arrogance of that
imposition has been one of Ameri·
can foreign policy's most tragic
fallacies.
The fallacy is skewered in Flip

All AP News Analysis
iRE CAPTAIN HA£
By WALTER R. MEI\RS
lURNED ON THE
A.P Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON (AP) - A powerhouse in electing presidents,
California has been only an afterthought in nominating them. That's
changing, and so will the race for the White House in 1996.
Instead of waiting until the end or the season, ~alifornia will
hOld its presidential primary on March 26, and the date makes all
the difference.
For Republicans out to challenge President Clinton, that means
an intense and costly campai~ thai almost surely will be sellled
quickly. with nominee-in-watting chosen by early spring.
That same, swift timetable would apply to any Democratic rebellion against a second Clinton term.
.
In·party challenges seldom succeed - the last three have been
losers - but they .can drag on, diStractions that can be costly in
time, money and campaign attention. That will be less likely with·
out the California primary as a final target.
.
With the ~hange in California's schedule, and Ohio joining a
three-state Midwestern combination one week earlier, the so-called
Super Tuesday primary elections in the South will be part of a
Super March, the closest thing yet to a national primary.
11uu's all but cenain to settle the major pany contests, leaving
Ross Perot's role the last question mark. He has sai~ he doesn't plan
to run, but nor that he won't There's even been speculation that the
third man of 1992 might wind up entering Republican primaries in
1996.
'
Gov. Pete Wilson said when he signed the California primary biU
that voters in the largest state have had one of the smallest roles in
The United States Department nizations, as well as local commu·
picking nominees. Next time, he said, they'U vote early enough "so
of
Housing and Urban Develop- nities. Groups including the Ameri!hal the race wiU be a contest and ... Californians can still make a
ment
(HUD), in an effon to pro- can Planning Association (APA)
difference.''
vide
quality
service via efficient and the Council of State and ComAll the difference, perhaps, among Republicans, since California
and
effective
methods continues to
will be awarding nearly 20 l&gt;crcent of the delegate votes it will take
conduct
a
"Reinvent
HUD" proto win the nomination, and the primary victor will get them all.
.
cess,
which
is
part
of
an overall
At tljis"point, the earlier primary in California would seem an
Clintoo
Administtation
initiative
in
lldvllllllge fOI' the be&amp;! known GOP prOIIpects, people like Sen. Bob
order
to
improve
delivery
of
govDole of Kansas, the minority leader; and Jack Kemp, a veteran of
ernmental services.
munity Development Agencies
Congress, the Ca11inet, and, early in his pro football career, the San
As of this time, suggestions and (CQSCDA) pratsed HUD for its
Diego Quugers. Gov. Wilson had been considered a potential cancomments range from changing efforts and encouraged the admindidate in' 1996, but he is in political trouble at horne, up for a second
HUD's name to the Department of istration to lfd the agency of a menterm next year against difficult odds. He said he didn't even think of
Community Development to spe- tality that has "often been accused
presidential candidacy when he signed the ~ary bill.
cific issues related to regulations. of.... .laying out a multitude of
In additionro the California change, Ohto has moved up its presHUD is also reviewing its state· detailed requirements that frequentidential primary. to the third Tuesday in March, joining Michigan
ment of mission of "Helping Peo- ly impede the accomplishments of
IJld !Uinois.
ple Create Communities of Oppor- its ·central goals and that usually
'So the 1996 competition begins, as before, with the Iowa caucus'
tunity"
and four commitment prines and the New Hampshire primary as the preview rounds, then
ciples:
community,
family SUpP&lt;?rt. produce inefficiencies in the use of
shifts immediately into the big states, where the nominating dele·
economic lift, and individual nghts •ts ~es."
g81eS are.
.
organizations also Jli:OVided
and responsibilities.
Super Tuesday, the Southem primary set including Texas and
with
HUD
· 1 d'
·other
· beneficial ideas
To complete this task HUD is me
Florida. is the second week in March, then the Midwes~ then Caliu 10g putting more focus on
soliciting comments and sugges- urban
fornia.
economics, redefining the
tions from numerous national orga- role of.the agency as a teacher
That's going to !!COd travel, televis_ion an~ advert\sing ~.soaring, a plus for candidates who can build thetr campatgn treaSunes tn ··• "
advance. a problem for the upstart who might gain 11- sendoff in
Jowa and New Hampshire, but would have to shift immediately into
a national campaign.
If our precious democracy' is to s~­ the Klan," the president of the
Change the calendar and rules and the whole ~ changes,
vive very far into the new millenni· organization told reporters, Griffin
which is why California lost its nominatin,g clout 10 the first place.
urn, it will be mainly through the "is in direct conflict with the misWhen nominations were contested at nabonal conventions, a big
efforts
of such principled and si&lt;ltl of the NAACP."
state with the last word could have a major impact, But modem
courageous
and noble people as
conventions only ratify what already has been decided in primary
Anthony
Griffm.
elections, and by the time Californta voted, one candidate almost
He is the Galveston, Texas,
always had won a nominating majority.
'
attorney who argued that the Texas
The California primary hadn't been decisive since George
Knights of the Ku Klux Klan have
McGovern cemented his Democratic victory there in 1972.
a First Amendment right to deny
After that, Wilson said, "we had a pan, but largely as fmanciers
The truth is exactly the opposite.
law enfon:ement authorities access The First Amendment does not
of races in other states," since early campaign stopS there usually
to its membership lists. All groups exist to protect the majority's
were fund-raising efforts. The assemblyman who sponsored the pnhave this right, be said; the Klan is speech rights. What would be the
mary. bill, Jim Costa, a Fresno Democrat, said C.. ifornia had
no exception.
become 'an automatic teller machine for presidential carididates.
point of a law to defend that which
Anthony Griffm is a black man. most people believe? It exists to
Next time, California's primary clout will match its muscle in the
Because he represented the Klan, protect mtnority speech; unpopular
November election, when the victor there gains 20 pen:ent of the
the Texas chapter of the National spc:ech, the ldnd of speech thai civil
electoral votes it takes to win the White House.
Association for the Advancement nghts militants used to press their.
EDITQR'S NOTE ....,. "alter R. Mears, v!ce president and
of
Colored People fired him as its cause ir\ the face of majority opincctlwnnllt ror Tbe AIIIOclated Pms, bas reported oa Washing·
general
counsel. .
ion that stood in adamant opposi.
ton aad national politics ror 1J111re than 30 years.
Why would a prominent civil lion, armed with dogs and firerights attorney who has fought in hoses.
the trenches for 16 years represent
If there were no constitutional
a racist organization like the KKK? guarantee of free speech, would an
Cenainly not because he suppons 80 percent white majority suffer
the Klan, he said, but because he the rantings of Louis Farrakhan?
believes in the principle of free The harangues of Jesse Jackson?
speech.
.
I'm not so sure.
Anthony Griffin knows some·
Thirty years a~o. a group of
thing that too many inteUigent peo- civil
rights activtS!S led by A.
ple fail to grasp: There can be no
Philip
Randolph published an
such thing as selective freedom. As advertisement
The New York
Thomas Paine put it two centuries Times censuringmtlie
city of Mont- ,
ago: "He that would make his own
gomery;
Ala.,
for
its
treatment of
liberty must $l18fd even his eoemy
blacks.
The
ad
was
fraught
with
from OJlPI'CSSion; for if h.e- violates
inaccuracies
and
the
police
comthis duty he establishes a precedent
missioner s.ued for libel. He was
thai will reach himself." · ·
awuded
$500,000 and the verdict
, Anthony Griffin knows that
was
upheld
by the Alabama
(LT)I(GT)you C81U10l be secure in
Supreme
Couit.
.
your freeiiOm to speak Ullless you
At
the
time,
there
was
no
funher
are willing to protect the speech
recourse.
Libel
was
a
matter
for the
you hate the mosL(LT)P(GT) "II is
state
couns
to
adjudicate.'
But
the
hard ... to give free speech rot those defendants appealed ,to tlie U.S.
we .bate," he told a Chicago Tri·
~. arguing they had a
bune reponer, "but thai is what the Supreme
constitutional
right to criticiZe govBill of Rights is all about. It is to ernment offtcials.
protect those we hate; those who
!!Jid guess what? The Principles
stand .up on street corners and bolhc
or
rtee
speech and press once again
er·us,inpublic,"
the rescue of civil rijhts.
rode
to
How ·. sad that the- Texas The Supreme
Coun carved out a
NAACP, a minority organization First Ame9dment defense for peothat but for the piolections afflrded ple accused of libelinJ public offiby the Flllt Ameridment illight well ~ials and New York TllllCS v. Sulli"A ntJW iSsue 'of IBX·frH municipal bonds?
, be a marginal player in oui ~iety, van remain$ to this day !Jr1C of the ·
does not comprehend thiJ funda- most imwnant rulings of the cen·
Sounds greatl./'1/ .take $350,000 worth.·
mental concept. "By representing
.
. tury.

a

MICH.

•

IToledo I 500 I

~
M~a-ns-fi-eld-,j-51-.-.,.

Sen.]an M. Long

.·...

IND.

!
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Joseph Spear

Berry•s World ·

1

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•lcolumbus!54•

I

Two admitted
after vehicle
strikes tree
W. VA' .

4,~,~~~~
Shcw;ers T-sc01171s Rain

Flurrios

snow

leo

(f-.
Sunny Pr.

Vis Associat9d Press Gr4pficsNet

Cloudy

Clolldy

C1993 Accu-Weath•r. Inc.

------Weather-----South-Central Ohio
Tonight, dcc;reasing cloudiness.
Low around 40. Wednesday, panty
sunny. High in 1he mid-50s.
Extended forecast:

Thursday through Saturday:
Fair on Thurs(lay. Lows 35-40.
Highs 55-60. A chance of showers
Friday and Saturday. Lows 40-45.
Highs in the 60s.

Area deaths-Marjorie Halliday .

Franklin Varian

Marjorie Biddle Halliday, 84,
455 First Avenue, Gallipolis, died
Monday, October 11, 1993 at her
residence.
She ,was born January 5, 1909 in
New Haven, W.Va., daughter of
1he late Dr. John Sabine Biddle and
Elizabelh Dorcas Biddle.
She attended Ohio Weslyan
University and was a graduate of
Ohio State University. Mrs. Halliday al&gt;o taught at Gallia Academy
High School and the University of
Arkansas. She recently established
a scholarship at the University of
Rio Grande to benefit women's
physical education majors.
Mrs. Halliday was a member of
the Episcopal Church Women, the
Gallipolis Ladies Golf Association
and lhc Thursday Club. She served
on the Gallia County Publi~
Library Board for 40 years.
.
Survivors include her husband,
J6lm E.. Halliday, whom she married July 12. 1932; two dau~hters,
Anne Jenkins of Gallipolis and
Mary B. Pike of Tallahassee, Fla;
five gf3ndchildren and three great
grandchildren and one sis ter,
Ernestine Miller of Columbus.
She was preceded in death by
one son, Dr. Thomas D. Halliday.
Services will be held II a.m.
Wednesday at Saint Peter's Episcopal Church wi1h the Rev. Donald
Greenwood officiating. Burial will
be in Mound Hill Cemetery.
Arrangements are under the direction of Waugh · Halley-Wood
Funeral Home.
Memorial contributions may be
made to Saint Peter's Episcopal
Church or Bossard Memorial
- Library.

Comprehensive Housing Affordability Strate~ (CHAS).
Reinventmg HUD consists of
two distinct teams: management
ex'cellence - which is focusing on
impf!lving budgetary, J.&gt;C!'SOnf!el,
tratmng and other admtmstrative
areas; and policy design - which
!s focusing in policy and program
•ssues.
The reinvention process is
expected . to help HUD prepare its
fii;CBI year 1995 budget request. set
parameters for its 1994 legislative
mitiative and make specific
improvements in existing regulalions and procedures.
A~ always, if you have any
9uesllons about thts or any other
tssue, please feel free to contact
me • senator J an M'1chael Long
Statehouse, Room 134, Columbus:
OH 43215 m; call me at (614) 4668156.
'
_

is a hero, and he deserves a medal.
If our free system miraculously
manages to survive the onslaughts
of ideologues of left and right, it
will be because the Anthony
Griffins of this world saved us
from ourselves.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Monday admissions - Crystal
Richmond, Rudand; Pearl Powell,
Long Bottom; Osel Sears, Middleport, and Helen Sams, Middleport
Monday discharges - Opal
Basim, Long Bollom.

Today in hist()ry
By The A.!sociated Press
Today is Tuesday, October 12th, the 285th day of 1993. There are 80
days left in the year.
· .
Today's Highlight in Histor)l:
On Oct. 12, 1492; Old Style calendar; Oct. 21st New Style, Christopher Columbus arrived with his expedition in the present-da• Bahamas.
On this date:
I
In 1861, the Confederate ironclad Manassas attacked the nonhero ship
· Richmond on the·Mississippi River.
'
·
In 1870, Gen. ~ben E.~ died in Lexington, Va, at age 63.
In 1915, English nurse Edith Cavell was executed by the Germans in
occup~ Belgium during World War I.
·.
In ~933,,bank roblier John DiUinger ,escaped from a jail in Allen Coun- :
ty, Ohio, w1th the help of his gang, who ldlled the sheriff.
In 1942, in one of his so-called ftreside chats, President Franklin D.
Roo!tevelt recommended the drafting of 18· and 19-ye,ar-old men.
. ;
In 1942, U.S. Attorney General Francis Biddle announced that Italian :
n~tionals in the United States would no longer be consi~ered enemy
aliens.
...
.
In 1960, Soviet premier Nildla Khrushchev disrupted a U.N. General
Assembly session by pounding his desk with a shoe durinf!!!i:pute.
·· In 197~. ~dent N'Uton no~ House minority
Gerald R.
FmdofMichigan to socceed Sprro T. Agnew as vice president.
:
In 198S, a Lebanese new~ published a photograph of what wu '
purported·to be the lifeless bOdy of American hostage Wilflam Buckley
:
In 1987, In HouSIOI), Vice President George Bush formally taunctied· :
his quest for the·Republican presidential nllnlmation. '
' ,In 1987, former ,Kansas Gov. Alfred M. Landon died at his Topeka
hoiJte at age 100.
·
Ten. yean ap&gt;:,Followins extended negotiations with Congress President ~gao St$Ded lcgial8tion authorizing U.S. Marine peacelteej,crs to
relll8ln 10 Lebation for 18 more months.
·
'
Five~ IIJO: Federal ptC)OOC~tors aniiOIUICed that Sundstrand Corp
· hid agreed to P'c:ad gililty to fnlad c~ and pay a $11.5 million seale:
mentlor qvsbilling the Pentagaa for auplane'Jlllrts over five YCII'I
One_year ago: More than SSQ people wele idUed when an·earihauakc
~ .5.9on the Richtet ~ sttuct 9airo.I!&amp;YPL The l'fobdl&gt;r!Ze
10 11ledicme was awarded 10 Americans EdWln Kre6$ -!ltd Edniond'FISCher
.
,
. Toclay's Birthdays: CD!JlCdian·activist Dick Gregory is 61.· filirmer i
·Sen. lake Gam, R•Utah, JS 61. Opera sinser Luciano Pavarotti is .58 l
Sportsc~ter Tony. Kubelc l~ 58. ABC roponer Chris Wallace it 46: I
Actl'ess·llllp, S~ Anton ,t~ 43. B..,.U'player Sid FCt'11811dez iJ 31. . l
Actor Adam Rich 1125. Actor Kilt Cameron 1123.
.j

l.

Youngstown

-(1-(1-

There is no such thing as 'selective' freedom
Anthony Griffin did precisely
the right thing when he defended
the free speech rights of an organization he personally regards as
repugnant. What he did took guts.
He did not deserve to be ftred. He

P~.

r:l

Reinventing Housing and Urban Development

I

When the American Hean Asso- saturated fat, cholesterol and sodi- Read the New Food Label' will '
ciation changed the nanie of its um."
show lhem how shopping for lownational nutrition event ·from Food.
The 1993 HeanFest, held local- fat food products will be easier and
Festival to HeanF:est this year, they ly and nationwide Oct. 11-17, in quicker."
changed more than just the name.
more than 6,()00 grocery stores and
Part of the reason that this .
"This year, we are offering.con- other siteS, aims to reach more than year's HeartFest will be bigger
sumeq mote educational mate!'ials. five million American consumers than ever is that it is being sponl)lan ever before," said Linda King with healthy nutrition information. sored by a group of food manufacof the Meigs County OSU· Exten"Citizens of Meigs County can turers. These companies will
sion Office and HeartFest volunteer - get our new brochure, 'How to underwrite the cost of lhe educaof the Meigs County American Shop Sman to Help Your Hean.' It tional brochures and will advenise
Heart Association.
shows shoppers how tO cut the fat the HcanFest event in national con"At HeartFest, consumers will · in their diet easily and painlessly " sumer magazines. In addition, in
'
find two new brochures to help said King.
the brochure 'How to Shop Sman
them choose a diet low in total fat,
"They will also learn how to to Help Your Hean' sponsors will
read and understand the Food and ofrer coupons for their own low-fat
Drug Administration's new food food products.
label requirements that will appear
Vaughan's, Kroger and Foodon all packaged foods by May of land are participating in the event
next year. Our brochure, 'How to with materials being distributed by

Accu· Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and higb temperatures .

Wilson's-ctaSsic- ~ hysterical- bined might of the United Nations
ly funny - moiiOiogue on Christo- and the United States troops at bay.
pher Columli~ discovering Ameri- _"My country, right or wrong,"
may have been proclaimed by an
ca.
According to the ~ospel of Wil- American, but the Somalians have
son, Columbus arrtves at some clasped the idea with jingoistic fer·
unchartered land and tells "a fme vor. ,
Flip WilSon's jest has a serious
lillie West Indian chick" staniling
on the shore, "My name is ChristO- side. Third World philosopher
pher Columbus. I'm goin' to dis- Frantz Faiton defined it when he
cover America. I'm gain' to dis· realized the limitations to educating
oppressed Africans to embrace a
cover y' all. ' '
The disgusted Indian maiden new spirit of independence.
rejects his Eurocentric benevo"If the building of a bridge does
lence. "We don't want to be dis- not enrich the awareness of those
covered. You can't discover who work on it," Fanon wrote in
nobody if they don't want to be his epochal "The Wretched of the
Eanh," "then thai hridge ought not '
disCovered."
Right now, the Somalians don't to be built, and the citizens can go
want to be discovered. Native sup- on swimming across the river or
pen for Aidid is swelling, nurtured goin$ by boat."
·
· '
by a pride (even among his eneAidid Is not interested in build· '
mies) that this raggle-taggle tin sol- ing any bridges or improvin~ his .
dier has been able to hold the com- country. His sole purpose in .life is
to stay in power, even if it means
destroying.his people.
·
America has no alternative but
to withdraw from a widening quagmire that is beginning to take on
the historical overtones of the Dien
Bien Phu-Vietnam vacuum. Eisenhower filled it and Texan. Lyndon
Johnson turned it into an Asian version of the Alamo. ·
Are any alternatives left if
America pulls out? Indeed. First,
let private a~encies take over the
care and feeding of Somalia.
Secondly, make U.S. withdrawal conditional. If the people supPort
Aidid, fine - let them hang with
him. But if they become convinced
he's a murderous despot, let them
capture and hang him. The United
States can then resume its rebuild·'
ing efforts.
America can't abolish Somalia's
trl&gt;uble. As former State Department Policy Planner Charles B,
Marshall once wrote: "The test for
a nation ... (is) not in abolishing
trouble; but its success in keeping
trouble manageable." That's exactly why Flip Wilson's Christopher
Columbus succeeded. ·

"

Holzer Medical Center
Oct. 11 discharges: Cody Sin clair, Philip Snody, Mrs. Mrs.
Mauhew Bokovitz and son, Carroll
Downard , Leda Kraeutcr, Jennie
Gilliland, Marilyn Bow lin g,
Kathryn Mathews, Evelyn Preston ,
Guy Bing, Charlene Goodman,
Bclh Fisher and Lillian Marcum.
Oct. II births :' Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Guelthig, son, Pomeroy. Mr.
and Mrs. George Lambert, son,
Jackson .

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-!IH)
Published evrry afternoon, Monday throusJl :
Friday, 111 Court St., Pomemy, Ohio by the ·
Qttio Valley 1\lbi!JbiDI Company/Multlmedll i
lie.• Pomeroy, Ohio .4$769, Ph. 992-2156. ·.'
SeooDd cllll ~~paid st Pomeroy, Ohio.

F

lril' D "F k' .. V ·
ran m · ra~ 1e artan,
59, formerly of Chfton, W.va .. ,
dted Monday, Oc~ II, 1993, at his
home m Columbus after.a lung ill·
ness.
.
.
Bom June 24, 1934, m Clifton,
he was the son of the late Charley
and Eva Vanan.
He was a veteran of the Korean
War and retired from AT&amp;T in
Columbus after 25 years.
He is survived by his wife, Con·
stance Varian, a son, Franklin
Dwayne Varian, and a daughter
and son-in-law, Maria-Lynn and
Bob 'Presley, all of Columbus.
Other survivors include a brother, William Edward Vari'an of
Clifton; five sisters, Lora AndersOn
of Clifton, Joanna Council of
Langsville, Laura Clark of Kirkland , Ill., Ida Council of Sharp,
Ky., and Carol June Lee of Columbus, and several nieces · and
nephews.
He was preceded in death by his
parents; two brothers, Charles and
Har·ry; a sister, Rose Dills, and
nephews.
Services will be held at 10 a.m.
Thursday at the Rutherford Funeral
Home, . 2383 N. High St., Worthington. Friends may call from 2·4
and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday at the
fun eral home.

Two girls remai~ hospitalized
today following a one-vehicle acci·
dent Monday morning which left
them both seriously injured.
Driver Cynthia D. Duty, 16,
2041 White Hollow Road, Patriot.
was transported to Holzer Medical
Center by Gallia County Emergen·
cy Med1cal Service. A hospital
spokeswoman reported Duty was
admitted for observation and
remains in stable condition.
Her passenger, Samantha G.
Robinson, 14, 2041 White Hollow
Road, Patriot, was flown by Life·
Flight emergency helicopter service to Grant Medical Center in
Columbus where she was admitted
and remains in riur condition.
According to an accident repon
from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol, Duty was
northbound on State Route 775 in
Walnut Township when lhe vehicle
went off the right side of the road
and struck a tree. The patrol listed
unsafe speed as the contributing
• factor.
Duty was cited for failure to
control. The vehicle sustained
heavy, disablil)g damage and was
towed from the scene. Neither girl
was wearing a scat belt.

James Watterson
James "Jimmy" Leonard Watter·
son, Jr., 58, of Apple Grove, died
Monday, October II , 1993, at his
home.
He was a farmer, a former school
bus driver for . the Mason County
Board of Education, a former su·
pervisor for the WV State Depan·
ment of Highways (MaSon County
Garage), he was involved in several
other businesses, attended the
Mount Union United Methodist
Church and was a graduate of Han·
nan High School.
Born February 24, 1935 in Apple
Grove, he was a son of the late
Leonard and Dorothy (Shiflet) Wat·
terson.
He is survived by his wife,
Janice (Gillispie) Watterson; a
daughter, Janie Watterson of Apple
Grove; three sons, Stevie Wauerson
of Southside, David Watterson and
Ernie Watterson, both of Apple
Grove; a brother, Roben A. "Bob"
Watterson of Henderson; nine
grandchildren and two step·
grandchildren.
Service will be held at 1 p.m.
Thursday, October 14, at the Crow·
Husscll ' Funeral Home Point
Pleasant, with Rev. ' Marlin
CampbeU, Rev. J . Odell Bush and
Max Spurlock officiating. Burial
wiU follow in Apple Grove.
·
Visiting hours will be held at the
funeral horne on Wednesday, Oc- ·
tober 13, from 6-9 p.m.

F esti'Va J",

Continued frolll"page I
weather, was moved to the Anderson Furniture and Appliance storefront from the mini-park. The event
was sponsored by .the Pomeroy
Merchant's Association and the
Herbal Harvester's Society.
· Pomeroy businesses reported
mixed results from the festival.
Tim Glaze, manager of Sweet
Greetings, said the rain Saturday
knocked business down by about
half. The shop remained open extra
hours throughout the festi•al.
However, Glaze added, anything
that happens in Pomeroy is an

-----Meigs announcements----Square dance to be held
Long Bot1om Community Association will have a round and
square danc.e at the Long Bottom
Community Center on Saturday,
Oct. .16 from 8 to II p.m. with
music by the True Country Ram.
biers. Cost is $5 per couple, $3 for
single, $1 for children under 12 and
free for children 3 and under.

Showcase ...

REDA ...

~1 .(/)

One Y.......... .......... ,........................ -

.. $83.20

SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Otrily......................................... -

3S Cenll

Attention Seniors

Q'UILITY PRINT

MIDDLE PORi

SHOP

DEPARTMENt STORE

.'

992·3141

w-..... . . . . . . . . . . .

w-............................ ......-.............

62
·,.,

w-.....................................,...

588.40
.

A•nouncements
Name Cards
Memory looks
Jewelry
Party Supplies

_,_,:
n

·CARHARR

Subttriberl not detl.rlq 10 ply the ccler may
remit 111 ldv..ee dltocl to tbe Daily Sentinel
oa 11lne, 111 or 12 month bill .. Cmllt will be
fvea '*lief each week.
No a~b~~:rlpiJou b)' mall peimitted io area
where home Clrricr ~fa IYailable.
Mall s..-...,.~on.
lAMe Mtl• Counl)'
I) Weeb ... :........................................... ..$21 .84
2 6 -............................................. .$43.16
l2 w-..... _......................................... ..1&amp;•1.76
O.lold• !&gt;Wao Coouotr
t3
$23.40
26
$1s.so

~

.•

.

'

'~ertw~rtt
·

.

7

meeI Th ursday

Deposit, Shop and
Compare!
See Our Large Selection Of

o..-.
....... ... ...............
ODe Monlh ................................ ... ...... ........$6.95

Correction

"Me? Become a foster parent?
No Way!"

Before You Pay Your

SUBSCIUI'I'lON RAn:s
11 Carrier or Molar R011te

Department will have a hog roast
on Oct. 16 starting at II a.m. The
menu includes roast pork, baked
beans, cole slaw, a roll, potato
wedges and a drink . Cost of the
meal is $4 for adults and $2 for
chi ldren . From 9 - II a.m. local
calls for take out and· delivery will
be accepted. Call 742-2110. There
will also be a tractor pull on Oct.
17. Weigh in will be a noon and
pulling will start at I p.m. There
will be a 50 percent payback.

Continued from page 1
Eastern band concert
In the Sunday Times-Sentinel of
The Eastern Concert Band will School Districts will each have an Oct. 10, a seventh-grade Meigs
present its ftrst concert of lhe year exhibit in ihe Junioi'Fair Bu ilding. Junior Hig h School fo01ball player
at 3 p.m. in the high school gym on In addition, Meigs Nursing Stu- was incorrec tly identified as J.R.
Oct. 17 at 3 p.m. The free program dents will be providing blood,pres- Rifne in Fred W. Crow's column .
is being billed as a "Homecoming sure check-ups.
The correct name is J .R. Rtfe.
asse~
Other groups housed in the
Concen."
In some instances, the weather
Junior Fair Building will include
aided local establishments due to Chester UMC hymn sing
Meigs County Parks District, Vet- EMS answers one call
people seeking shelter from the
eran's
Memorial•Hospital, Meigs
There will be a hymn sing at the
Units of the Meigs County
rain.
·
Coumy
Healtll Dcpartmenl, MinisChester United Melhodist Church
Emergency
Medical Service
Susan Salser, an employee at on Oct. 16 a1 7 p.m .
terial Association, Expanded Food
responded
to
one
call for assistance
Anderson Furniture and Appliance,
and Nutrition Education Program
overnight.
The
Racine squad
said rain brought the people inside Head Start accepting applica- and Food Stamp Nutrition Educaresponded
to
State
Route 124 at
the store.
tion Program in coopera1ion wilh
tions
12:4
1
p.m.
Monday
for Misty
"We had a fairly good Saturday
The Gallia-Meigs Head Start Ohio Stale Universily Extension, Grucscr who was transported to
and had some good sales," she said.
Meigs County Litter Preveytion, .
·
Business was also booming FriEastern Holiday Crafts Show, Hill- Holzer Medical Center.
side Baptist Church, Epling's
day and Saturday at the Court
1·Street
Marine Service Station in
Grill, said owner Leon McKSPRING VALLEY ,CI~E~_A
night.
Continued from page 1 •
Reedsville. Meigs Industries,
446-4524
• ' . "' "
In addition to the establish· ing subsidy from the state - are cur- Meigs County Library, Meigs
Community Education Program,
ment's regular customers, the busi- rently staged in Ohio.
ness was full of people traveling
"These nostalgia productions carry Twin Brooks Bait Shop, Marine
wilh lhe stemwheelers, he said. A common elements," Miller said, "that Services, Middleport Community
lot of poople complained about the emphasize heritage, a reliving of the Association and Arts Council.
Southern FFA and Girl Scouts.
sale of alcohol at the festival, he pas~ and a search for roots."
Soulhem
FHA will have a display
said, but it did not make any differMiller said an existing prodoction,
in
the
Commercial
Building Annex
ence here.
"Out of the Red Brush," could be
in
addition
to
local
crafters.
Of all the stern wheel festivals modified to ftt the stage and thematic
There will be somelhing for
on the Ohio River, the boaters said requirements of outdoor theater. ,
everyone
at the Showcase, Meigs
they like the Pomeroy and Marietta
"It's a proven piece that has played
festivals best, he said, They said successfully throughout Ohio before County. A wide array of businesses ·
will be exhibi1ing, artists will be
the people here arc more friendly·
thousands of people," Miller said.
displaying
and demon s1111ting, and
A statement Banks made earlier
"Out of the Red Brush" was ftrsl
lhere
will
be
a variety of entenain·
backs it up.
stagedattheUniversityofRioGrande
mem
on
lhe
hill
stage.
"The boaters had a good time," ir\ 1987. Since that time, the play _
Banks said. "Everyone says they adapted from a 1954 novel by former
will be back ."
superintendent of Jackson County
"I want to thank all the volun- S hoo
tcers we had because we couldn 't c lsKermitDaugherty -hasiOured
do it without them."
statewide with financial suppon from
Banks sai d 21 sternwheclers theOhioArtsCo~ncil.
participated in lhe feslival.
REDApresidentJim Kessinger,Oak
T
Hill; appointed a committee to study
.1. 0
tourism issues, with aspeciftc;charge
Due to lhe lack of a quorum at to examine the feasibility of developBelieve it or not, this was once the feeling
the regular meeting time last ing regional outdoor drama.
of many people who are now and have
Thursday, Syracuse Village CQ!tn·
The nel...t meeting of the REDA will
cit will meet this Thursday at 7 be Monday, Nov. 8, at7 p.m., at the
been successful foster parents. Making the
p.m. at village hall.
University of Rio Grande.
,....;;==========~====~

The Meigs County Bookmobile
will change its schedule this weekend. Both Saturday and Sunday lhe
bookmobile will be at Showcase,
Meigs County instead of traveling
to The Maples, Overbrook,
Pomeroy Pike, and Chester on Friday, and Rutland, Danville and
Salem Center on Saturday.

POSTMASTER! Send addtel1 changes to The

program IS continuing to accept
enrollment applications to fill
vacancies that occur throughout the
current-school year. Children 3' • 5
will be considered for enrollme'nt
based on income eligibility. For an
enrollment application or additional information about the program
call the Meigs Head Start Center at
992-3088.

Scipio VFD hog roast and tractor
Racine VFD chicken BBQ
Racine Volunteer Fire Depart- pull
Scipio Township Volunteer Fire
m~nt will have il chicken BBQ on
Su'nday, Oct 17 starting at II a.m.
at the station.

Schedule changed

OaUy Seotloel, I L1 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
4l769.

Parks/Recreationtrourism office Monday, to
help pay ror the rehabilitation or the Portland
levee. Ron Epling, len, an!l Lawrence Hayman,
trustees or the club, make the presentation.

HELP FOR LEVEE WORK • The Forked
Run Sportsman Club presented a $100 check to
Mary . Powell, director, Meigs County

Repruentatlve. Bruham Newapaper Sales,
10011.

~

1hc Meigs County Agricultural
Extension Service under the direc.
tion of Cindi Oli•eri. In addition,
HeartFest will be conducted with
groups at the Senior Ccn~. Veter·
ans Memorial Hospital Extended
Care, Meigs High School, Easlerli
High School, Southern Junior and
Senior High, Pomeroy Elementary
and lhe Meigs County Agricultural
Extension Service.
"There will be something for
everyone at HeartFes~" King commented. "It is a hean-to-hean mes·
sage from the American Heart
Association to the people of Meigs
County. We want to show how to
prevent heart disease, America's
number one ldller. Low-fat eating
is a big pan of that answer."

,.

Member: 1be Allocllted Preu. ud the Ohio
Newspaper AJtodll.ioo, National Advertilins
733 Third Avenue, NeW York, New York

~

The Dally Sentinel P-ae ·3

Local grocers participate in HeartFest '93 event

Wednesday, Oct.l3

•

instead of enforcer, improving
communication among area HUD
offiCes, and developing a standardized set of regulations for all how;·
ing programs.
Many of the specifiC regulatoiy
suggesliOIIS. such as inQ'easing the
federal prevailing wage and soflening the relocation requirements, are
similar to suggestions qwle by the
Paperwork Reduction Task Force.
·
c·
While only 8 portion of the suggestions offered by the various task
force groups were implemented, ·
practitioners are optimistic that
HUD is serious in its efforts 10
realize positive change.
HUD Assistant Secretary
Andrew Cuomo, for instance; is a
strong advocate of the reinvention
process and consistently vot'ces
concern about the need to reduce
the demanding and burdensome
requirements invoi'Ved with the

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

America can not cure Somalia's ills .

The Daily Sentinel

CHAJlLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

[lUnday, October ·12, 1993

Page 2-tThe Dally sentinel
Pomeroy.-Middleport, Ohio
Tueaday, October 12, 1993

OVER 30 YE,ARS EXPERIENCE

355 MILL ST
• MIDDLEPORT ~
992-3345

... .

commitment can be difficult. But it can
lead to many rewarding experiences- and
the knowledge that you're doing something
that really matters.

The Meigs County Department of Human
Services needs caring adults to provide
temporary homes to children of all ages.
Financial reimbursement, training, and
case management are provided by the
Agency.
· Help us make the most important
investment we can· our children! Call now
at 992-2117 for information.
••

�.

---.--·

·-

. ... . .... .

···---

'

.....

~

.•

...

...,

'~

N.,

.

'' ..... .. ·--

-....- ---· ··-'

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.... -··· ........

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'

Sports

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
·

In the NLCS,

1liesday, October 12, 1993
·page-4

to sellle the score with the Bills,
who beatlhe Oilers 41-38 in the
greatest comeback - or the most
colossal collapse - in NFL history
last January.
Instead, the Bills (4-1) settled
the outcome early wid! a 2\-0 blitz.
in the second quaner. .
.,
Tied at 7-7 on touchdown catches by Buffalo's Don Beebe and
Houston's Leonard Harris, the Bills
started lhe second quaner with an
87-yard drive that ended when
Andre Reed made a leaping, twisting catch in the end zone fpr a 24yard touchdown.
Reed got free again on the Bills'
next possession, took a Jim Kelly
pass and then cut past several Oilers to lrot into the end zone for a
39-yard touchdown score. .
It was Buffalo's second-longest
pass completion of the season .and
Reed said the BiDs' willingness to
throw deep o;tade a big difference.
"I think the main key tonight
was that we threw the ball long,"
he said. "We weren't doing that
the fll'St four games and the defenses kind of thought we couldn't go
long."
Houston's third turnover of the
game, a fumble by Haywood Jef- _
fues that came at lhe end of a 26yard reception, led to the Bills'
third touchdown of the quarter.
Thurman Thomas, who had 24
carries for 92 yards, ran six times

in a nine-play drive that ended
when he burst through several
missed tackles for the seven-yard
touchdown lhat put the Bills up 287.
It was a draniatic explosion for a
Buffalo offense that scored only
one touchdown in each of its last
three games.
"Our offense played well, but
they got a hig help from the
defense," coach Marv Levy said.
" They got seven takeaways and
during lhe course of the game, that
mates a heck of a difference."
"I think it was probably lhe best
defense we've played smce I've
been here," said Bruce Smith, who
got one of the four sacks. "We put
a tremendous amount of pressure
on them and that's what we wanted
to do going into the game."
The result was a disgusted and
disappointed Moon.
·
"What's wrong with us?" he
asked . "We're running out of
excuses. I've analyzed, psychoanalyzed and analyzed some more
the last few weeks.''
Pardee declined to say whether
Cody Carlson, who replaced Moon
in lhe third quartet, would stay as
starter, adding, "We have an awful
lot of things to work on, to think
abouL''
The bottom line?
"We're not a good-looking
team right now," Pardee said.

YES! -Phi ladelphia center fielder Lenny
Dykstra celebrates with teammale Todd Pratt
after the Phillies' 4-3 win in 10 innings over the

AERIAL FLIGHT on the gridiron isn't
restricted to pigskins, as Buffalo running back
Kenneth Davis (23) demonstrates to Houston
defensive back Bubba McDowell in the first quar-

ter of Monday night's AFC game in Buffalo, N.Y.,
where the Dills won 35-7 to become one of four
NFL teams with a 4-1 mark after five weeks. (AP).

Last Saturday's 3-2loss to Findlay on the road may have put a
cloud on the University of Rio
Grande soccer team's playoff
hopes, but the Redmen and Coach
Scott Morrissey are pursuing all
opportunities in District 22 that
will provide them wtth another
postseason benh.
The Redmen started this week at
5-7-2 overall and arc 2-3 within the
district, where lhey took fifth place
last week. Within the Mid-Ohio
Conference, Rio Grande was 2-1
for third place as lhis week began.
At Findlay, the Oilers took the

lead in the first five minutes, but
the Redmen fought back and tied
things up at the 15-minute mark of
the half after Steve Nagy worked
the ball around and fired it in for
the Redmen' s ftrSt ~oal.
The game remamed deadlocked
at halftime, but the Redmen gained
a 2-1 lead 58 seconds into the period when Tad Ferguson maneuvered
the ball over to Josh Mauer who
took it in for the goal, a "super job"
in Morrissey's estimation.
"After that we kind of played to
keep from losing, and there's a difference between that and playing to

win," the coach said. "Findlay just
kept us on the run and rammed the
ball down our throats for two more
goals. It was kind of frustrating,
because we had made some
changes in the game and the guys
have to be touj!h enough to accept
those changes.
The Redmen were credited wid!
15 shots on goal and the Oilers
recorded 21. Freshman Doug Murray speUed Jim Egner as goalkeeper, and Morrissey noted that Murray did a "good job" in his premiere appearance at the net. Both
he and his Findlay counterpan had
nine saves each.
The Redmen posted a 2-1 loss in
overtime Oct. li against Otterbein
on the Cardinals' field, and while
the result wasn't what Morrissey
anticipated, he fOWld no fault with
the team's effort
"The only thing that's keeping
The University of Rio Grande Malone's Jolui Murray in 24:43.
us unsuccessful is we cannot put
cross country teams, ranked ninth
Bonnie Evans maintained her the ball in the back of the ne~" he
last week by the NAIA for lhe frrst hold on the !01' spot in Redwomen said.
time in four years, continued the running by finiShing seventh out of
The Redmen, however, took
season last Friday by partic,ipating 231 athletes entered with' a time of solace in the fact that their attack
in the Ohio lntercollegtate Corss 18:25. Adrianne Harris was 80th in has steadily improved all season.
Country Championships at the 20:14, followed by Rob~ Egelhoff
Against Otterbein, the hosts
Methodist Seminary in Delaware.
m t~e 153rd spot at 2~.28. Angel posted a goal 30 minutes into the
The Redmen fmished ninth out Robmson netted 175th m 21:54 and game and held lhe Redmen at bay
of a field of 36 .teams with 234 Jen~ifer Beyer was 21~1h. in 23:1.1. . until the half. Rio Grande freshman
oints and the Red women, also Taking first place mdt~tdually ~n Ken Dinwiddie collected the ball
rompeting against 36 squads, fin- I lhe ~was Theresa Kaine of Ohto from 25 yards out and booted the
ished in 24th place with 634 . . Sta~e m 18:08.
ball into the Otterbein net at the 65Miami University was overall winIt was different, ~d good for minuoo mark in the second half to
ner of bod! races.
our people be~~use tt s the same tie the game.
Wid! 231 runners entered in the type of co'!lpebbo~ we would face
The Cardinals broke the deadmen's race, junior Chris Smith' tn the natiOnal~, cross country lock in the first extra period on
[om Ashland fmished first for Rio mentor Bob Wtlley commented. what Morrissey termed a "nice
Grande in 29th place wid! a time of "Hopefully,: we learned from the individual effort" by an Otterbein
26·48 foUowed by Scott Wenger in expenence.
.
.
forward.
3l;t ~ilh 26:54. Hidemitsu Maeda
The teams return to acnon thts
"We're playing well, 'yet I
finished 38th in 27:07, while Marl&lt; weekend, ":'th some_ of the athle~ expected it to be a much different
Bennett was 67th in 27:46. Chad coll)petmg m !he Wdmmgton Invt- kind of game," the coach said. "I
Benson was 69th in 27:42, Chris tattonal on Fnll!ly ~d othe~ uav- have no complaints about the guys'
Rowland netted 73rd in 27:51, and eltng to the Umv~1ty of Wtscon- effon.",
Condy Richardson finished lllth sm-Parkstde meet m Kenosha on
The Redmen hosted Mount Verin 28:31. First place finisher was Saturday.
non Nazarene this afternoon.

Rio Grande runners
place in All-Ohio meet

ScoreiJoar(l
- • Baseball • -

Chi ~I~O .

ToniRht
Toronlo (Stewut l -0) al Olicago (fer·
na ndel 0-l),ll:l2 p.m.

Wrdnesday
Tonwno &amp;l Chic1go, 8:12p.m., if necessary

lI

NL playoffs

·

Thuraday

Allanta 1t Phibdclphia, 8:1 2p.m., if
necusary.

- * NFL*AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Eutern Ohi.Jon

I
I

Tum

W L T PeL PF PA

Buffalo..............
Miami. ..............
lndianapoW ......
N.Y. Jcu ....... - ..
New Enala,ml.. ..

4
4
2
2
1

I
I
3
3

0
0
0
0
&lt;4 0

.800 116 67
.300 101 II
.400 61102
.400139106
.200 74 140

Cen lul DlvlJion

CLEVELAND .. 3
......... 3
Hou11-on............ I
CINCINNATI .. 0
Pi\~bw-Jh

1
1
4
S

0
0
0
0

.600
.600
.200
.000

93 90
108 7!
18 114
51106

Vlncouver4,Edmonla'll
N.Y. Ranaus S, Wuhingtm 2

Minncsou ..
3 2 0 .600 66 82
Gn:c., lhy ........ . 2 3 0 .400 110 104
Tampa Day ...
I 4 0 .200 54122
Western Division
New Orleans ..... S 0 0 1.000 · 134 74
SanFrancilco ... 3 2 0 .600\25101
L.A. Ram• ........ 2 3 0 ,400 77 106
ALlam&amp; ........ ...... 0 .S 0 .000 91 152

Monda1'1 acore
Phil•de.lphl a 4, Atlanta 3 (10 inn .);
Philaddphi• leads aeries 3-2
Wednada7
All•nt.a (Maddua. 1-0) at Philadelphia
(Gfeene-0-1), 3:07 or 8:12p.m.

Mooueal. 1, Ba~lCI'Il (tie)

3 2 0 .600 18 90

Dcuou ..

AL playoffs

Monday's scores

Cenlnl DM.1lon
3 2 0 .600 97 .S9

Tonight's games
Winnipeg 11 New Jeney, 7:35p.m.
Buffalo It Phill~phia, 7:35 p.m.
-Pitubtqh at Fkrida, 7:35p.m.
au~ 80 "
a,3s p.m.

o.u..,

N.Y. Islanden 11 Los Angr.lea, 10:3~

p.m.

Monday's score
Buffalo 35, HoultOn 1

Wednesday's games

•

Mootrcalat Htnf'ord,1 :J5 p.m.
Quebec 1t N.Y. Ranaen, 7:'35 p.m.

-*NHL*-

WathinJ101'1&amp;t T~UJ, 7:35p.m.

8.m.

St. l..ou11at Deuoi.t, _7 :35
Edmonton at Anaheim, I :35 p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
i\lllntlt Dlvll&amp;on

Team

W L T

~ts.

New Jersey .......
Philadelphia ......
N.Y. Rangers ....
Rorida ..............
N.Y. blandCfl ...
Tampt Bay .. .. .

3 0 0
2 I 0
2" 2 0
I I I
I 2 0
0 3 0
W11kingwn ...... 0 4 0

CFCA

6 14 8
4 13 10
4 15 13
3
9 9
2 6 10
0
5 9
0 13 23

Norlkelllil Dlvblon
B01ton .............. 2 1 I

Monttul ........... 2 I
Pinsbural\ ... :..... 2 2
Qu.... ........
I I
Bullolo.............. I 2
Hartford ............ 1 2
Otwlwa .............. 0 1

S

15 12

I

S 13 10

0
I

4
3

0

2

0

2

I

1 10 12

12
IS
II
8

14
16
13
11

- * Transactions • Baseball
Amtrlcan Luaue

CLEVELAND INDIANS : Named
Buddy Bell infield coach, Luis hue:
bWI.pen COIC:h, Ola.die Mmud hiuins: inIINCIOr and Phil Repn pitchinl COic:b.
TEXAS RANGEJS: Announced \hey
will nOl ex erNe \he 1994 contnc:t opt.lon.s
on Charlie Leibrandt and Cnia Lc1rena,
pi;chcn.
National

COLORADO ROCKIES' Announced

they will not e11end I C(lll.lriCI lo
Coi~OIIIfiold«.

Wulem Dt•ltlo•
Kansaa Oty ...... .C 1 0 .100

13 64

Oon,., ..:........... 3 2 0 .600 119. 9S
L.A . Raiders ..... 3 2 0 .600 90 13
Seat!.le ............... 3 2 0 .600 9l 73
San Dieao ......... 2 3 0 .400 70 110

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Ct~~tral

Dhkkln
w L T I'll. CFG:A

'Fum
Toronto ............. 3 0 0
SLl&lt;iUiJ ........... 2 0 0
Chic:aJO .... ........ I 1 I .
O.Uu................ I 1 I
Winnipq .......... I I I
Dcvoit .............. I 2 0

6

13 •

3
2

12

11
14 IS

6
4

11

4 12 I
3 9 9
3 ll 13

Eutem Dtvllloll

W L T Pel. PF PA
4 I 0 .100 1:14 61
l'llilo4elploio ..... 4 I 0 .100 1!8111
' J)olloo ...:........... 3 2 0 .600 I~ '7S
Tum

N. Y . Ot.n~.......

Phot~~iA .............

I • 0 .200
99
WolhiniiOn ...... I 4 0 .200 9312:1

Luau•

Patine Dlvldon
3 o o.
Edmooll&lt;&gt;l ......... 210
LacAnada ...... 2 t o
Van0011vcr ........ 2 1 0
Anoh..., ........... 0 2 0
SonJ-............ 0 3 o
c~.,.,.

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

4
97
4 11 to

4 10 I
0 S II
0 6 14

Alex.

BasketbaU

Nollon~ llublblll Aaoitatloo
CUCAOO BtJILS: Sianod Will Pu·
due, oentcl', 10 a mubi,..- QOI!tnct exten•
lien.
•
DALLAS MAVERICKS : Woivod
Stetrond John•on a'rid 'J"im Broob,

~lANA

PACERS: Sianed Rogpe
J&lt;&gt;don, ....... .
PW!:ADI!LPWA 76ERS: Acquued

s...

a..;.,,- ·- ....

lndW.. Po&lt;:.

fot I · 1~4 toeond•tound draft pick.
Walv..t Tony Dwa.n, forward.
SACRAMENTO KINOS : W1ived
Cl'l

MeJ.vitl,Niwb.na and Shaun Mannina•.

.,...u. ...t Doii Bintonhdm.., r....ud.

PENNY AEIKER

TYSON ROSE

EHS chooses Aeiker, Rose
as·Athletes of the Month
Penny Aeiker and Tyson Rose
were chosen as the Eastern High
School Athletes of the Month for
September.
Aeiker, an honor student, is
active in many activities in and out
of school, where she was nominated for the award by volleyball
coach Don Jackson. Aeiker, the
daughter of Pat and Cindy Aeiker
of Pomeroy, is a four-year member
of the volleyball, basketball and
softball squads and Varsity "E"
Club and Student Council.
She was a cheerleader one year,
senior class treasurer, student council president and treasurer, a yearbook staffer (two years), a metnber
of Who's Who Among America's
High School students, and a member of Buckeye Girls' State. She
has participated in 4-H for eight
years, summer softball nine years,
and was an office aid one year. She
is also a member of lhe American

Free Enterprise and Leadership
Conference and was recently
crowned Middlepon's Catfish Festival Queen.
Tyson Rose, the son of Arch
and Debbie Rose of Long Bottom,
was nominated for his outstanding
effons on the football field under
coach Dave Barr's tutelage.
Tyson has played football and
baseball four years and has lettered
in football all four years, while also
being a member of the Varsity "E"
Club. Rose has lettered in baseball
three years, a member of the
National Honor Society, the NHS
vice president, one year; a member
of the -Honors Tutorial College, 4H eight yem, and has had perfect
attendance two years.
Tyson is an honor student and a
member of Who's Who Among
American High School Students
while also participating in classes
at the University of Rio Grande.

Bruce expected to be named
Cleveland Thunderbolts' coach
CLEVELAND (AP) - Former
Ohio .State football coach Earle
Bruce is expected to be named
head coach of the Cleveland Thunderbolts of the Arena Football
League.
The team plans to make the
announcement today.
Bruce, contacted early today by
telephone at his Columbus .home,
said he did not wish to tallc then.
But he confirmed the appointment on Columbus radio station
WTVN this morning. Bruce is an
Ohio State football analyst for the
station.
·
On Sept. 8, Thunderbolts general manager Jeff Kuczek interviewed Bruce, for whom he played
at Ohio State in the mid-I980s.
Bruce coached the Buckeyes
from 1979 to 1987. His teams were
8ig Ten champions in 1979 and
1984, and were co-champions in
1981 and 1986. He was fired in
1987.
Bruce coached at NCAA Division 1-AA Nonhem Iowa ill' 1988
before going to ,Colprado State,
where he coached folir seasons. He
was fired after the 1992 season
.
'

--Sports·briefs - -

amid allegations by .the university
that he verbally and physically
abused players.
In August , th e Thunderbolts
fired Dave Whinham after a 2-10
season. Whinham was 6-26 in three
seasons, including 0-10 with the
expansion Columbus Thunderbolts
in 1991.

Buketbll1
. ST.,GEORGE, Utah (J\P)Karl Malone, in the midst of contract negotiations with the Utali •
Jazz, will miss exhibition gatnes
Friday and Saturday in Hawaii to
', attend the funeral of his former ·
brother-in-law, who was murdered.
The body Qf Dean is Mosley, 36,
was found before dawn Sunday by
customers at a convenience store in
Homer, La. Mosley was a cleric and
had been stabbed a dozen time~ in
an11pparent robbery.

MUNCIE, Ind. (AP) - Coach
Dick Hunsaker's job could be
endangered by an investigation into
violations of NCAA rules by the
Ball State basketball program, university president John Worthen
said.
The university and the NCAA
are looking into allegations that
recruit Don Fisher of Flint, Mich.,
improperly received wages in
advance for work hy performed for
Muncie businessman F. Scou
Brown.
Hunsaker has a four-year contract, but Wonhen told The Muncie
S1ar: :'All of our coaches have
contracts that specify that any violations of a serious nature of an
NCAA regulation would certainly
raise the question about their con-

·-

in 55 kiDs, three blocks and ~8 digs
agatnst.the Cougars, sparkmg ti.te
offenstve battle that .tool: R•.o
Grande to lhe t&lt;:&gt;P. Her sts~r KeUtna added 28 ktlls, a servmg ace,
two blocks and 21 dtgs to the
effon. The work became a key element in the fmal game, whtch took
32 mmutes to play as both stdes
sought to toptheoth~r.
"I thtnk that havm~ the crowd
we .had there that mgh\, b~mg
behmd us was very helpful, Ftelds
said.
. .. R
B
In other stausucs, enee urns
added six kills, Deana Smith four,
Kristy Lindsey three, and
Stephanie McLaughlin and
Michele Warne had one each.
Smith and Warne had two blocks
each, while in digs Lindsey bolstered the defense with 23. Smith
had 18, Warne II , Burns five, Carrie Tatman four and McLaughlin
two.
Following a well -earned oneday respite, the Redwomen
returned to action last Saturday on
the road at Tiffin, handing the
Dragons quick losses of 15-2, 15-9,
15-9 and solidifying their hold on
the MOC tiUe at 7-1.
"Tiffin, I thought, would be betRACE OF CHAMPIONS- Dob Adams Jr. of Racine will be
ter than they were because they had
competing in Flemington, New Jersey later this month as a result of
already
beaten Mount Vernon,"
winning the UMP modified "Sunoco Race of Champions" qualify"Our serving was the
Fields
said.
ing event at Skyline Speedway in September. Adams, the 1993 Skykey
there.
It
was
very good."
line Speedway UMP Modified champion will be joining qualifiers
Billina
Cooper
again led in kills
from across the United States for this event. Adams, a master of
with
26,
Kellina
Cooper offered
short track dirt racing , will be taking his act to the super-fast
nine,
Burns
four,
McLaughlin
''Monster 1/2 mile" asphalt of Flemington Speedway, operated by
Smith
two
and
one each
three,
Paul Kuhl in Flemington, NJ. Besides being asphalt, the track has a
came
from
Lindsey
and
Warne.
tricky contour as is best described as a "sq uare oval" .because of its
The
Coopers
each
had
a
block,
Tatdistinct four-corner configuration.
man had two serving aces, and Billina Cooper and Lindsey recorded
one each. In digs, Billina Cooper
led with eight, Kellina Cooper and
Lindsey netted seven each, Smith
and Warne had five apiece, and
· Burns and Tatman were credited
wilh two each.
The Redwomen are 15-8 as this
week began and will play Shawnee
State tonight.

''I'm very , very happy with
where we're at now," University of
Rio Grande volleybaU coach Patsy
Fields remarked as the Red women
toppled Mid-Ohio Conference
leader Mount Vernon Nazarene and
aced a weekend match with Tiffin
to seize frrst place in the MOC.
Last week's victories have
fueled Rio Grande' s hopes of a
third consecutive conference championship, a dream that Fields and
her team might have abandoned if
they hadn '1 shrugged off the sea-

.. '
'

'

tinuation."

Hunsaker, contacted ·Monday
night by the newspaper, said he had
not been fired . Athletic director
Don Purvis also said Monday night
he had not been told of any firing.
Fisher received a $1 ,200
advance on his wages from Brown
to pay ~ummer school tuition, the
newspaper.said. Fisher worked at a
variety of maintenance jobs at
Brown's financial services company and at Brown's farm north of
Muncie.
As a Proposition 48 student,
Fisher could not receive scholarship benefits during his freshman
year.
After paying the summer school
tuition, Fisher returned home to
Flint, Mich., and enrolled in junior
college . A source then contacted
the NCAA alleging that improper
payments had been made to Fisher,
the Star said.
Worthen said major violations
of NCAA rules appeared to have
been committed.
''It appears some Proposition 48
men's basketball players during the
freshmen year they were sitting out
· and not eligible for athletic grants
did receive extra compensation outside of what is allowed. That's
pretty serious," Worthen said. .

REVIVAL

....
TRACK CHAMPION - Racine's Bob A~ams. J~ , recently
claimed the 1993 Skyline Speedway track champ1.o~s~•P m the UMP
Modified and full-blown Super Late Model d1v1s1ons. The Late
Model championship was his eighth in ,th e last 10 years as Adams
has dominated the local racing scene. Th.is .year Adams drives !or
the Morrison Motorsports/C TI/J,D. Dnlltng Jl,acmg team,. wtth
McDonald 's and Keystone Deer as sponsors.

.

Barkley convinced he'll need
back surgery in near future

'·

. '

'

'·

6:00 .p~m.
'Evangelst ·

D_avid ·Cantfeld from R·

"....

.•

... ·-r •·

~

; -

..
. '"1

By STEVE WILSTEIN
ATLANT~ (AP) The
Philadelphia PhtUies arc the dream
of every factory and office team in
the country, proving it ain't the
paunch that mattm, it's the punch.
They're Len Dykstra spitting
out tobacco juice, brown stains on
his chin and shin, hustling to the
plate in the IOih inning Mon~y.
geuing the job done with a linedrive homer to beat the Atlanta
Brues4-3.
They're John Kruk, basebaU's
cross between Bluto and Belushi,
thumping a dQuble, driving in the
ftrst run in the fust inning to point
the Phillies toward their third victory in five games in the best-ofseven NL Playoffs.
They're Mitch Williams, the
wildest and craziest of the bunch,
skateboarding through the ninthinning again, wiping out starter
Cun Schilling's four-hit, 3-0 gem
throu$h 8 1/3 innings, giving up
the tymg run and strutting away a
grinning winner once more.
They're Pete lncaviglia going
splat in left field and making the
catch, tumbling over the bullpen
fence chasing a foul ball , running
madly to lhird on an error of his
pop-up, doing anything it takes to
win even if it's beyond his limit
They're catcher Darren Daulton,
slyly sticking out his foot to block
the plate and prevent one run, scoring another of his own with a
homer in the ninth that provided a
crucial cushion.
They're rude, crude, funny and
smart - and one victory away
from a National League pennant
and a visit to the World Series.

They don't have the elegant
starting staff of the Braves, who
can boast two Cy Young winners:
Greg Maddux, set to go Wedncsday, and Tom Glavine, ready for
Game 7 if necessary.
Dykstra, whose ninth-inning
homer ~ave the New York Mets a
dramauc 6-5 playoff victory over
Houston on the same date seven
years ago, drove a 3-2 pitch from
Mark Wohlers .over the right-centerfield fence with one out in the
lOth and quickly remembered
1986.
The Braves carne into this season with a lofty 104 victories,
seven more lhan the Phillies in the
regular season. Then the Braves
slapped the Phillies around in
Garnes 2 and 3, reinfon:ing lhe perception that the two teams were on
differentlevels. The PhiUies resented that
"There was a lot said about our
club, that we weren't supposed to
be on the same field with these
guys," said manager Jim Fregosi,
who promotes the Phillies' "usagainst-them" attitude . "Well .
we' re a solid club, a good club.
And 1 couldn't be prouder of these
guys."
Schilling is pitching like the
best He could be the ftrst playoff
MVP with an 0-0 record. He struck
out 10 in the first game, nine on
Monday, and both times he paved
the way to victoties.
"I can't say enough about the
pitching from Danny Jackson and
Curt Schilling these last two days,"
Dykstra said. "Those two guys are
the reason we're going back to
Philadelphia up 3-2. They both ·

pitched lheir butts off."
Schilling bree.zed into the ninth
but feU victim to his own mistalce
and one of his teammate's.
Schillinf walked Blauser to lead
off, then Kim Batiste, who replaced
Dave Hollins in lhe eighth allegedly for defense, failed to eome up
with Ron Gant's gnlllllder to lhinl.
That was it for SchiUing.
" I gave everything I had after
the seventh ," Schilling said. "I
was on adrenaline alter that.''
In came Williams, also an
instant disaster in Games 1 and4.
fred McGriff singled on the
first pitch to make it 3-1. David
Justice's sacrifice Oy to left pulled
the Braves within,a run.
Then Terry Pendleton lined a
single to center, moving McGriff to
second. Up came Francisco Cabrera. It was his two-run single off
Stan Belinda with two outs in the
ninth that won Game 7 and the
pennant for the Braves last year
against Pittsburgh .
Could it happen again?
Almost.
" I was just trying to hit the
baU," Cabrera said. "I didn't have
time to think about last year. If I
had, I'd lose my concentration."
He bounced a two-hopper just
pa st shortstop Kevin Stocker as
McGriff scored the tying run and
Pendleton sped to third. Marl:
Lemke - 5 for 10 in his career
against Williams, including that
drive Milt Thompson caught in
front of the left field wall. Sunday
night - carne up and missed the
winning hit by about a yard -· a
drive to leftlhat landed a few feet
foul.

Meigs reserves post 32-6 win over Well~ton
Travis Abbott completed 10 of
19 passes for 194 yards and three
touchdowns, and Mike Marshall
pulled in six passes for 136 yards
and two touchdowns and also
added a 39-yard punt return for a
touchdown to lead the Meigs
reserve footbaU team to a 32-6 win
over WeUston at Bob Robens Field
Monday evening.
Robert Qualls returned the
opening kickoff 20 yards to give
Meigs good field position at the
Wellston 42 -yard line. Six plays
later, Abbott fired a 34-yard scoring strike to Paul Pullins, Abbott
hooked up with Mike Marshall for
the extra points and the Marauders
held a 8-0 lead with 6:30 left in the
period.
After the Marauder kickoff
Wellston drove 62 yards in 16
plays and scored when Brian Shaw

hit Kevin Young with a 10-yard
scoring pass on fourth and five.
The extra points was no good and
the Marauders held a 8-6 lead with
8:28 left in the half.
Meigs put togelher a seven play
58-yard drive after the ensuing
Wellston kickoff to take a 14-6
lead. This time Abbott hooked -up
with Marshall from 16 yards out
with 5:04 left in the half.
A Wellston fumble set up the
next Meigs touchdown. Adam Barrett recovered a Golden Rocket
fumble at the Meigs 32-yard line.
On the first play Abbott fired a 68yard scoring pass to Marshall. The
extra points failed, but Meigs held
a 20-6 lead at lhe 2:13 mark of the
half.
Meigs increased the lead to 28-6
at the 7:48 mark of the third period
when Mike Marshall fielded a shan
Wellston punt and raced 39 yards

for a touchdown, James Parsons
added the extra points.
The Marauders closed out the
scorin g with two fourth period
safeties. ""he first came when a bad
snap on a Wellston sailed out of the
end zone with 4:51 lefL The games
final points carne with 31 seconds
left when Mike Jarvis tackled the
Ryan Stevens in the end zone.
Israel Grimm led the Marauder
ground game with eight carries for
58 yards. Parsons added seven carries for 31 yards. Pullins also had a
good game receiving with three
catches for 60 yards.
Bryan Murdoch led Wellston
with nine carries for 24 yards.
Shaw hit three of six in the air for
26 yards and a touchdown, Young
pulled in two for 18 yards.
The Little Marauders (3-2-1)
wdl host Nel sonville-York next
Monday evening.

BULLETIN BOARD
NOW
AVAILABLE

IN THE

By

7:00.p~m. Nightly

Sunday Evening

son's rocky stan.
But sheer dctennination has put
the Redwomen back into the top
spot, as weD as the hard work that
highlighted their 15-8, 10-15, 1513, 12-15 , 18 -16 victory over
Mount Vernon last Thursday in
Lyne Center.
"It was the hardest I've seen our
team play yet," Fields said. "Both
team s play ed extremely hard,
because neither wanted to lose."
Billina Cooper, three-time conference player of the week, pumped

.

AT THE

CHESTER
NAZARENE CHURCH
OCTOBER 13·17

host Atlanta Braves in Game .5 of the National
teague playoffs Mo!'day night. The Phillies lead
the best-of-seven senes 3-2. (AP)

Victories propel RG volleyball
team to conference top spot

Ball State,
NCAA probe
payment to
Hunsacker

Redmen kickers fall 3-2 to Findlay

'" ',.

Phillies edge Braves 4-3 in 10
innings to take 3-2 series lead

Moon 'thoroughly disgusted'
in Oilers' 35-7 defeat to Bills
By JOHN F. BONFA Til
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP)
- This time, it was the Houston
Oilers who needed the comeback.
The comeback never came.
Continuing a skid that started
when they blew a 35-3 lead in losing to lhe Buffalo Bills in last season's playoffs, lhe Oilers feU apart
again m a 35-7 loss to the BtUs on
Monday nighL
Asked how he felt after the
game, Warren Moon, benched for
the second time this season, probably spoke for many Houston fans:
"Thoroughly disgusted and very
dtsappointed. "
.
.
That's what a three-mtereepllon,
three-sack, one-fumble performance will do to you. And those
were just the misfortunes that
(JcfeU Moon.
All told, the Oilers lost three
fum bles, threw four interceptions
and surrendered four sacks.
Com bined with Houston's
underachieving 1-3 stan, it was lhe
kind of abymsal effon that can get
a coach flted. Not surpisingly, Jack
Pardee deflected questions about
his job security after lhe game.
"I'm worried about the team.
That's my one worry," the embat~ed coach said. "I don't have control over al)ything else. We're not
the team we have been. We've ~ot
a lot of work to get back to lhat'
Houston figured to be motivated

.

Earlier Monday, Emerson
8y MEL REISNER
inj
ec ted radioac tive ink into
FLAGSTAFF, Ari z. (AP) in the last of a cluster of
Barkley
Despite a medical finding that
•
diag
nos
ti
c tec hniques. Then ~e
fatigue caused his collapse the seccleared
Barkley's
return to the
ond day of training camp, Charles
team.
Barkley is convinced he'll need
On Sunday, the tests induded
back surgery someday.
magnetic
re so nance tmagmg, a
Barkley, who plans to play. l:-"0
CAT-scan,
and neurological ptocemore seasons sa1d tealn phys1c1arr
·
Ricljllrd Emer~on apProved his plan dures.
Barkley restricted himself Monto pf&gt;t.off !he operat1on until retireday night to ri(ling a n e,xerctse
ment.
" I don 't think I could take a bicycle, stretching, runmng and
year out of my life - not at 30," shooting baskets. He sa•~ he wou!d
Barkley said Monday after the 140· not scrimmage or parttctpate tn
mile drive· from Phoen•x to drills "fpr a couple of days."
However, Suns trainer Joe ProsAa~staff. ·
'I look at how it affected Larry ki and coach Paul Westphal
Bird who's a friend of mine, and I wouldn't rule out Barkley's particicarl' i close it lilce that,,. Batkley pation Friday night in the team's
first exhibition game, at home
continued.
against
Golden State.
Bird had back surgery in June
"It
will be interesting to sec
1991, and his production for the
how
.he
'fecls tomorrow after what
Boston Celtics dropped sharply the
he
did
tonight.
~ · Proski said.
final yh,ar of his career.
.
. '('
i l.

.

'

Dave
Grate
of
·Rutland
Furniture

(

If basketball had never been
invented, where would they hold
the high school dances.
•••
What this country needs is more
people raising beans and tewer
people spilling them.
•••
When someone refers to a
purchase as an investment, that
usually means they paid too
much tor it.
•••
Sign in store window: "We
repair do-h-you rae" jobs."
•••

What some speakers lack in
depth they make up for in
length.

•••

LAY·A·WAY
NOW
FOR
CHRISTMAS AT RUTLAND
FURNITURE, THE PI.,ACE FOR
ALL. OF YOUR ·HOME FUR·
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I&gt;

992·2156
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•••

7 SHOWROOMS

11 WARIIIOUSIS

Rutland Furniture

Rt. 12UIW oit.

. 742-2211

Call. By 2:00.
P.M. Friday for(Sunday. Edition
.

�.,

.. '
OhiO

•

The Daily ~~~~!1

By The Bend

··The Area's Number 1
.
· Ma~ketplace

----------~~·------------------------------------------------~----------------~~--~--~~--~----~~------~--------------·-----P·ag--e~_e.f

J
Madonna hits .1
'

Catholic panel makes
recommendations

By JAMES HANNAH
Associated Press Writer
DAYTON , Ohio (AP) - A
consolidation of the city's Roman
Catholi c parishes because of
dec lining auendance and fewer
priests could be completed w1thm
four years if approved by church
officials.
Patrick Donnelly, of the Dayton
Central Ministry Task Force 2000,
sa id Monday lllatthe recommendati ons are part or a preliminary
report sc~t to. Archdiocese of
Cincinnati, wh1ch has authorny
over the Dayton parishes.
"Many archdioceses are going
through similar processes to deal
with the issues that result from the
priest shortage," Donnelly said.
•'And if you look at just inner-city
parishes, you'll find (parishioner)
numbers that have declined over
the past 20 years."
Average auendance at weekend
Masses at the city's 17 parishes has
fallen from 20,000 in 1970 to about
8.000 in 1992, said Donnelly, a
sociology professor at the University of Dayton.
The taSk force has been working
on a reorganization plan for Dayton 's Catholic churches,for more
than two years.
Sister Mary Ann Walsh, a
spokeswoman for the U.S. Calllolic
Conference in Washington, saiid the
drop in attendance also, may be due
to the fact people also are moving
more and changing churches.
"The shift where people are

.
Cku•4fled P-Be• c~n~er lias

People 'in the news

follouJizw telephone esc#uJnge1 ...

,, '

, .~

Australia

impact that pareata bave on their
chilclmt {bod! positive and ncgalive),
and how this is refledcd in thcir
children's general ·altitude and
ability to fll into aociety.
I asked my sllldents'this question:
"How can you, 11 a parent, reduce
your son's or daughu:r's chant:e of
rommiaing suicide?" The foHowing
answer was written by a senior
Sllldcnt:
"The most important thing you can
do is show your 'dlildrell ¥011 care .
about them for who lhcy ere, not for
what lhcy acaxnplish. Teacb diem
bow to cope with problems and how
to handle failwe. Be a good role
model If you deal wiih problema
well and keep things io proper
petspedive, tbcy will pick up on iL
Praise them wben they succeed 10

going to church is a significant facSYDNEY, Australia (AP) -- ~
tor," she said.
Toss
another shrimp on the barbie 1
She also said fewer men are
for
Madonna.
)
becoming priests.
pop
queen
may
_
a
dd
an
extra
,
.
·The
"One solution the church' has
Sydney
concert
to
her
schcdul'",
~
seen is one p.a stor serving two
filling a void created when M1chael l
parishe$, if that's possible," she
Jackson canceled the Australian leg
said. "The closing of a church is a
of
his tour. But she's not in it just
very emotional experience for
for the concert. ·
some people.' So IIley try not to do
"I am coming to Australia aild, ,
that. I I
damn
it, 1am going to have a good ',
Under the task force's recomtime " Madonna was quoted as ~
mendations, four of.the city's 17
telling television interviewers.
parishes would be phased out.
"I have heard about the surfers. 1.
Church buildings would become
I
want
to see kangaroos. And I i
ministerial outreach centers or
want
to.
hear everyone say 'G'day '
chapels open only for weekend serto me."
viceS.
The-Australian part or Jacks~n·s
"We're not proposing the elimi"Dangerous"
world lour - Sydnation or closing of any churches,"
ney
on
Dec.
3-4
and Melbourne on
Donnelly said. "The churches are
Dec.
7
,was
canceled
last week,
staying open, .but they would sort
with
promoters
claiming
it would
of lose their auiOnomy."
witb Nancy Casteel, R.N., tbey look at one of
CHILD SAFETY MONTH UNDERWAY·
be
logi
stically
impractical
for the
If implemented, nine priests
Bertie Saunders, R.N., CPNA, left, Assistant
tbe door prizes to be given away Oct. 23, a bike
tour
to
be
brought
here.
·
would setve as pastors for the !3
safety helmet.
Manager/Nursing, Holzer Clinic discusses tbe
Madonna's
Australian
promot~;r,
remaining parishes. Eight of !hose
upcoming Cbildbood Safety and Prevention Fair
Michael Chugg, said Monday that ;,.
parishes would share four priests.
talks
wcJe under way to fill at least -~
Donnelly said the recommendaone
gfthetwo Sydney dates,
v
tions will be followed by a more
·
adding
it
to
dates
already
set
in
!
detailed report on church finances.
Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne and ::
If the recommendations are
with teen ·pregnancy wul be
A special observance of Child dren. and lead screenings.·
.......
~
approved, lhe reorganization could Health Month, with emphasis on
Through the many exhibits at stressed. Another focus will be on
MIDDLEFIELD, Conn. (AP)be completed wilhin four years.
prevention, is being planned jointly !his First Annual Childhood Saiety bicycle, ftre, seat belt and car seat She may be the first daughter, but ~­
Calls to the archdiocese on by the Holzer Medical Center Pedi- and Prevention Fair, strong empha- safety, along .with the many facets
she can still get some time on her .
Monday were not returned.
, anic Unit, the Pedianicians and the sis will be placed on the hazards of of horne safety habits.
own
in relative privacy.
··
Holzer Clinic Pediatric Depart- drugs, smoking, poisons; and the
Door prizes will be given and
Chelsea
Clinton
went
largely
·:
Church officials told the Dayton menL
combination of drinking and driv- refreshments will be. served. Chil- unnoticed Saturday at the sprawl- :
Daily News that Cincinnati ArchThe event planned for Oct. 23 ing.
.
dren must present a current immu- ing Lyman Orchard, where she ,.,
bishop Daniel Pilarczyk would not 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in llle French Five
The significance Of good nuni- nization record and be accomparespond until he receives the final Hundred Room at the Hospital will lion and the prevention of problems nied by a parent to receive an . picked a bag of Golden Delicious '...:
report later this year.
offer free immunizations for chHimmunization.
apples.
"She. was just another kid, as far .,·J'
as I knew," said Phil Merriam, ·
who works part-time at Lyman's.
"She was as friendly and pleasant -as anyone. When I found out later
who she was, I said 'Holy Moses!'''
for your estale,. you have a perfect
will print iL - A.M., DARLING- didn't have any specifiC n:asons but
Chelsea's parents, President
advised me 10 •think about it for a
right 10 do whatever you wish with Clinton and first lady Hillary Rod- ~
TON, WIS.
iL
DEAR WIS.: Your student while. • In other words, Ann, no one
ham Clinton, spent lhe day at"Yafe ;~
wants
me
close
to
lhem.
One more thought-· are there I!IY Law School for their 20th reunion. ;,~
deserves an A for that response. The
I did not mention the fact that it
grandchildren who have shown 111
essay demonsualed a great deal of
Arter paying for her bag of II!
wu the doctor's idea that I move interest in you?-Maybe one or two apples, Chelsea agreed 10 pose·for G
insight and III8IW'e thillking.
healIll reasons. When
might amount to something if they pictures but turned down ·requests ' •
~d you, A.M., are a superb near .!hem
I
told
the
docta
how
my
children
were assured of 1 finl-class for autoi!raphs, said Diane Macala, "1
taiChc:r to encourage your students
«'AA•~~:atioo. Please c:onsider iL
10 explore real-life problems and responded, he was shocked. In
a Lyman's employee.
'''1
retrospect, I guess I must have been
By the 'time word of her visit ,;
Gem of rhe Day: The acid iest of
discuss how 10 deal with them.
themselves,
Dear Ann Landen: Since I'm a lousy mother. I am, however,
good miiiiiiCIS is acting like. ~ve ~ad spread, Chelse~~ had al(ea~y_ ,..,
bill don~ 10 ovatx.nl; at !beY will gelling cia in years, I recently asked baffled becanse I never bied to take
left. ·'
.
never bean1 rhe jotc beflft.
be unable 10 handle failure. When my children whallhcy thought about over their lives and have been very
"-:~
Plan11i11g a weddi11g? What's
lhings go WIOIII, let lhcm know you my moving so I could be close 10 independent ever since -r lost my riglu? W/ult's !flro11g? "Tile """
NEW YORK (AP) - So.me ~ t
lllilllove them: Don't put on a lot of one of them. Their replies were quite husband.
advice
from Betty Fnedan: L'ive ~;
Landers.GMide for Brides" will re(RIISIR \JeclnM' you want to rdiw
life
to
the
fullest, no mauer whai _;
unseuling.
I don't want to be vindictive, Ann, liew 'JO~~~' ~ty. Seird a self-adyour
age.
·
' :.
}0111' owa childhoocl dreams. Let
One said, "l(s 100 cold here in the but I'm deeply burt and am dressed, lo11g, biUilltss-size tnvt/ope
"Denial of age is lethal," the . '
thcm be tbemaclves and give lhcm winter. You WOOid be betlt.r off close considering changins my will and tutd a check or money order for
feminist author said in Glamour "
unconditionlllovc."
.
10 another member of the family.• leaving whatever I have to friends $3.65 (this iiiCIIIdes postage tutd magazine's November issue. "To ,
I thought dtillllldent'a answer wu Another said, 'I think you should whO care. What do you lhink'l - handling) til: Brides, c/o AM l..an·
the de11ree that women are still ;
pofouncl. and It applies i1ot only 10 stay where you are because you bave ANY MOTIIBR, ANY TOWN
ders, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, 111. caught m a definition of themselves -~
suicide prevention, but to many of friends there and our neighbodlood
DEAR ANY TOWN: I can 60611-0562. (111 Ca11ada, se11d based on a juvenile sexuality, IIley .,
lhc other IIOCial problems that our is getting dangerous. • The others undersland why you feel hurt. As $4 .45.)
can't appreciate the glamour of ,,
country is experiencing. I hope you
their
''

an ad
CaU992-2156
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pally

ia
Trlb.U.~i nochiliC • - lB,OOO·· boH

The Massachusetts-based scientists were named co-recipients of
the Nobel Prize in medicine and
will share an $825,000 prize.
"It felt good this morning,
folks,'' Sharp said at a news conference hours after his wake-up call
from the Nobel commiuce in
Stockholm, Sweden.
"Everybody doing science
wants to feel they are going to
make a discovery that everrbody
will look up to," RobertS sa•d at a
separate news conference. "But I
think there's a different kind of sat-

986

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today's basic research in biology, way we expected, so we followed
as well as for more medically ori- through to find out," he.said.
, en ted research concerning the · Sharp said he was "fortunate to
development of cancer and other be in the right place at the right
diseases."
time doing the rigHt experiment."
Scientists found that in humans
He added: "If we hadn't made
and other higher organisms, DNA this discovery, within six months
includes separated gene segments there would have been 10 other
that contain informati~n to build labs making the discovery. The
protems along w1th 'nonsense field was so primed to look at the
DNA," or introns, that has no pro- structure of genes that it would
tein message.
have bce'n made by many other labTo construct working proteins oratories.''
from such gene segments, cells
Roberts was working at the
have to assemble correctly the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory on
information from them. When !his Long Island, N.Y., and Sharp. was
process goes awry, the result can at MIT. '!;hey were studying the
be cancer or other diseases.
genetic material in adenovirus, a
Some scientists believe that the virus !hat causes the common cold.
physical rearrangement of gene
Both Roberts and' Shary made
segments may speed lhe evolution presentations about their discoverof man and other higher animals.
ies at a meeting in Cold. Spring
Roberts said he "stumbled'' Harbor in 1977. Almost immediupon the discovery.
ately afterward, other scientists
"We were looking for some- made similar discoveries about
thing completely differcn~ and qther kinds of genes.
things didn't quite work out the
"It was a discovery lllat within

949·2168

36358 SR 7

toes, green beans and corn, roll,
beverage and Mexican fruit cake.
Following lhe dinner music will '
be played by The Classics, with a
free will offering taken for the
musicians. The first Classics ·
Friends Award will be presented to
Bob and Charlene Hoeflich during

Athens/Hocking/Vinton
and
Meigs/Gallia/Jackson counties.
HRS has three divisions to pro- ·
vide dhlg and alcohol prevention,
intervenuon and treatment services ..
to Southeast Ohio-community
services. which includes prevention
and community education and
intervention programming; outpatient services, which provides outpatient clinics in Athens, Hocking,
Vinton, and Meigs counties; and
residential services, which offers
residential treatment for adolescents at B'assett House and for
women . at the Rural Women's
~ceovery Program.
I

·~·

D.A. BOSTON
EICAVAnNG
(614)
667·6628

· IOIERT IISSELL
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the evening. The public is invited
Slate Auto's already
to attend.
· lowptemiumscanbe
The eighth annu81 arts·and crafts
reduced even more by
show is scheduled fpr Friday, Nov. 1
insuring both your car
'
5 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Several
area craftpersons will be present
· and home with the $t11te ·
with a wide variety of handmade
Auto Companies.
crafts for holiday decoratin~ and
gifts. Several tables are ava1lable
Let us Jell you just
for any craftsperson who would
bow much your savings
like to auend. Those interested
·can
be.
should call the center at 992-2161
for a sp:K&lt;e reservation.
,The AARP "~5 , Alive- ~lure
'Driver" course ·will be offered on ·
Nov. 9 and 10 frol!l 10 a.m .
nooi\ and 110 3p,:m.
day. 'Th;s.
defensive drivti1g and refreshe'i'
training course can be US&lt;~d (Of a
discount on au10mobile· insurance
2l4 EAST MAIN
by · some companies. lfhose
. ' ,\' POMEROY
enrolling should dieclc' with tlleir
individual carrier about driver's .
992-6687
traini'ng course discount. Cettifi•.
cates will bC presented at the com·~
pletion of the cij111t hour training.
·
. ' ·
Cost is $8 regiStration for tlic
.
· ...,. Auto :
course. Those intl!leSled should call
cOmrpe"le•
llle Center at 992-216110 rcglS!ef.
·"'---..-~~~&gt;..,
·· .._:...,.._.....

IIJO 1tc

985-3406

was 1.1
asked what a woman in
20s
should do to ensure a fabulous old
age.
"I'd tell her 10 live her life to
the fullest at whatever period she is in,'' she replied. "Bw Uve it know- _
ing il' s going to change.

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.A1l P.M.

Shade River Saddle.

EXCAVATING

..•

monlhs was obsolete,'' Sharp said.
"Everybody, everywhere knew
about it. You worked 10 years to
discover it and within two weeks,
you couldn 't give a ialk about it
because everybody in the room
knew what you were going to
say."
Sharp said he knew the discovery was "different," but hc .didn't
realize its impact.
.
"Did I lcnow that it was going
to mushroom into ttle case where
99 percent of all our genes arc
expressed this way a~d become a
whole field of science? No,'' he
said. "But it was a liulc giggly as •
we were working through it, trying
to figure out-just wharw~ were
doing."

EVERY SUNDAY

til 1

...

isfactionthat cqmes when you realize that all of your colleagues also
think it was a great discovery."
Sharp, 49, a native of Falmouth,
Ky. heads lhe biology department
at the Massachuseus· Institute of
Technology. Roberts, 50, a native
of Derby, England, works at New
England Biolabs in Beverly, ~s.,
Their work changed sc•ent1sts
understanding about DNA makeup
and helped launch the field of
biotechnology.
Genes had been thought to be
unbroken segments along strands
of DNA. Roberts and Sharp discovcrcd lllat individual genes can also
be discontinuQUs.
"Everybody lhought that genes
were laid out in exactly the same
way, and so it came as a tremendous surprise at the time,'' Ro1Jerts
said in an interview.
The Nobel Assembly of the
Karolinska lristitute said Sharp and
Roberts' research "has been of
fundamental importance for

GUll SHOOT

Beginning Od. 3

742·2904

ti-1H211n

$-18-83-tln

for

Health Recovery Services, a non O'Leary; M.D., Joint Commission
profit agency providing substance president. ''The_organization should
abUse prevention, intervention an'!, be commended for its commitment
treatment service's'- to Southeast to providin( quali1y care to the
Ohi.o since 1975, has been ac!lredlt· pcQP,IeJn its tot;nnilmity."
ed with commendation by the Joint · ' We are txti'emely pleased to
Commission on Accreilitation'of , have achievec! this"'Jiistinction,''
Heaiihcare Organizations.
: said Kenneth H. PK:kaing, execuThis is the highest level of tive direc10r or Heallh RecOvery
accreditation aw~ by lhe Joint Services. 'Jteceiving accre{l.itation
Commission, the 'nation's oldest with commendation is .an honor
and largest accrediting bOdy.
that will insplte us to continue to
"Receiving accreditatiort with 'improve our services 10 our clients
comme~da!ion i's a li&amp;nificint . and the community."•
achievement, one ~at rec:or::uzc;s
Health Recovery Se~vices
exemplary ~rformanc:e bY•
tit (HRS) is panlally funded by the
Recovery Services,~ slid Dennis . Alcohol, Drul Addiction, aft!!
·
. ~·
Men~ Heald! _Servif,S Boards of
_,

au;ra.......

I • ',

~

6711-1'1. " - " '
4&amp;1 '+oa
$76-Applo Gro•o
77li-JI-D
881-New Ba•ea
895-Lotort

41- Ho.._ fer Rent
42- Mobile Hom• for Renl
43-- Farnv for ReDl
44-- Ap.rtment for Rent
· 4$- F lll"'lilhed Room•

,

Health service receives recognition

11

383-VIn&amp;oD
245-RioG....re
2Sc&gt;-G.,... Dloa.

RATES

.,

The Meigs County Senior Cen- States performing gospel music.
ter has several activities planned The public is invited to attend the
for the next few weeks.
· performance.
,
The regular evening dinner will
On Thursday, Oct. 14 at 12:45 also be on Oct. 14 with serving
p.m., Bruce Stone, a former Meigs from 5 to 6 p.m. Cost for the meal
Coun1y resident will entertain.
js $4 per person. The menu will be
Stone travels throughout the United chicken and noodles, mashed pota-

&lt;

867-GmWrr

992-MWdloport/
Pomen117

667-CooMIIe

J

Senior center announces monthly activities

oa,J

Wedneoday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

·446-Colltpollo

I

Child health month observed at HMC

Two scientists co-winners o.f nobel prize for medicine

own .

DAY BEFORE PUBUCATICN
I :00 p.m. Saturday
I :00 p.m. Monday
I:OOp.m. T~•Y
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday
tOO p.m. Thwaday
I:OO.p.m. Friday

Tueoday Paper

MoN. thru FR1. 8A.M.-5P.M:.- SAT.8-12

l

'

By KEN GUGGENHEIM
Associaled Press Writer
CJ\MBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) In 1977, two scientists separately
studying the virus that causes the
common cold discovered ali
unknown structure for genes that
revolutionized genetics and helped.
other researchers earn a Nobel
Prize.
On Monday, Phillip A. Sharp
and Richard L Roberts. won their

5&amp;-- Fo..U.. 6 \':n111•W.
For:Solo.,T..-

Gallla County Melp County M111011 Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area'Code 3M

Teen gives lesson on positive child rearing
Dear Ann boden: I teach bealth
to high.school aenion. We,dillCIISI a
wide range of topics, illcluding lhc

·-

Pomeroy Home a
Auto
Come Ylllt u.. ·

We 11 ' cla'Mlll:
RRE.WATER

DAM"GE

REBTQRATIONINSUAANCE CLAIMS
24HDur

�Sentinel

Ohio

BEATfiE BLVD."' by Bruce Beattie

3

Apartment
for Rent

44

Announcemlilta

The

KIT 'N' CAilLYLEill by Larry Wrtpt

NEA Crouword 'Pu-zzle
ACROII

PHILLIP
ALDER

n

ltltiiV

'1

nee

Or

Al&gt;ol1rnonlo,
·
Full
Lal. 14 ~
Q-Golftoallo,
Auotlon lth,
IM-24652111.
.

NORTH

IMI ""' ~I Ill Db ~~.Wo,

......

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

~
2 __

Fumlahed
Rooma

$138.:10 por month, 14' wldo
_ .. homo. lnoluclao oldrtlng,
. , _ Ollb!!plolo ..,...,. ana

45

~-lol-.1-

RoomoiDrront·- ar_.th.
ltort112'
"' t120hno. Holol.
114 4 1580.

,....

-moo~.
~471
.. ..

t•·ia..
••~:;\

~,::~.!.,..

46 SpaceforRent
304-117MII84.
llobll homo apa- 1Dr rwnt.
SilacM tor '""' """""' ot
$65/mo., SM-812-2'18l

47 Wanted to Rent

-..n::s:::

54 MlscellaiiiiOUa
I.AA....,...,hancfl88

;·,:rrll

jup1:r~r,

&amp; Lloc;,tuck

---w,

-on

Loos: Small
Torrltr,
Plpar Rood, VInton, OH lllaolng
Slnco lOIS~ 814-388 8591 Or 114'
39l.ast4, "owardl

7

AVON I AI Aroaa I Shlrtoy

Yard Sale

Outaldo alooa to Vlntanchonio wllh oddllton, 2o - . ar looo, oo110IO w.nt oftar!
121,800, ..u IJOSing Agant Rlllh
llo-. 1113472-11535 or 1.-.

Oonorol llolntonanoo, Pollllng1
Yard Work Wlndowo Woahoo
Outtoro Cleonod Uaht Houllng,
Commorlcol, Roaldi"lllel, Slovo:

=
Lifo

lnouNnoa oalea wonl8d 1n an oo?obllohod

cuu,.:h,agencr.,

PI ~p•rtr 1
full
or pert lime, t
IN••fd•d~
draw -e-lnll oDmmlnkln for
flrwl 3 montha. Sand ........ to:
Rocrultor, P.O. Bo1 1071,
41750..

...,....,Ohio

114-446-1~.

Oaoogoo Portablo SaMnlll, don~

eur~nce,

...._. . . 1nand 1 yur or fr• lot

111111, all tor only $'1771mo., call 1·

54:1-7118. H_,h RoaMy, Inc.

33 Fannalor Sale

Dutar,

OliO

Ohio, IIIIGo Coun?y,
- · Q booutllul
houooO, 11:J.214.SOII

haul yow to tho mill luot
..11304-1711·1157.

oftar t:30p.m.

IIIIo Poulo'o Day Cona Cantor
Jll.l' I lUI. -11:30 P.ll. Quolhy
Lavina Coro For All ChlldiWI
Our 11 Oool. Part·Tlmo, Ful~
Tlmo, Fod. AoalatlncoAvallablo.
Coil For lnfDnnollon Or Vlolt. Inlint /Toddler IM-448-11227. Pr.
School.
khoologo,
BIA
Schoo?, 114-44U224"• .

SEVERAL 7• ACRE PARCELS:
llolga County, ...... Twp.
ISlA' ocna. IIOmolo, booutltui
lol1d;
"
ond hnil.
Coli lar
. mop. 1-114-H:t1545, AIMno,OH.

="""•

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

=r:m'"

Rentals

WIU bobvoft, In my homo, ••·

Nfaro-. 304·7'73-

41 Houses tor Rent

Financial

.KJ 3
.... Q709432

.KQ
t5

T.,.,. 412 ....... lopd,

Rodnoy

3 Bod,_ - .

E

.. Pold In
,_, Daocllow: t : - tho
botoN tho ad lo lo nm,
iMlay odnJon. 1;GOpm Frtdoy,
Mondoy
odhlon
1D:DOo.m.
Boturday.

21
__

Business
OpportunHy

_.:;.;:;::;,;;;,:.::!...-INOTlCEI

OHIO VALLEY PUBUSIINO CO.
- n d o Shot rou die buolo
wlh poop1o you k.-1 ond
NOr to oand . . _ tlw-n tho
moll un?ll rou hnti ln-lgotod
thoa........_
·
·-.. ...

L0C11 .......~
- Route: "..,. A
,....
Po41n1 • Boll.
1SI:t-'llnd.
-

•

HAVE A SEAT
ELVINEY ! ! '

S?ovo •

IIAoiOI7 TELIPIIDNI CO. Nvw
~:~ring. Tw?w I I 10,

lnos-.,

or

D

OOIIIplltl

-In,

4'

· - · 40' fionogo Tsollar,

.. ....
I p

71 Vlno

.
Pt\V,

PQSSTtON.
PROGRESS
ExiOS- For
Ssnort-lllridod Poroono In Tho

Squilo.

R----.1~

~.Throo ODanlnDa

me. w. buy .......

.._ -

Of A Lo110 lftlorFirm. Thlo 1o An

=='I!!f!-lfo
noslonol -

FLIFNL

\'ou Hood

.....

Csl*..-,
A--~

Wlllod To luy: Junk Autoe
With Or Motaro. Cll

To .... Wartlll _ •wvAf.
W 'a 1¢1 wa. We , _ . .
C pi I C OUUt llfl Dill·
!l-lci' 1 \ Dln7ll Md 401K
Pion Md c r111o Tsolnlng
Preulaue .,_.,..
No?ll- I y. lnoomo - -

Wollod To -.,y; Old UprlgltS

.,_,. -

a

7E

_ SDIELIBEUFD .V

G D I X

c

J

J

UAXJEL

SITZJALF

u..s,. 114111 1111.

t:=e.;..

sa.

3 room hDuoo ~n
0.111
Nowly carpo?od, oq
with

-ond.,.

-.s.

TIIAT DAILY
'VUSII

s.-.

lriolcln ~~de~ 2

Bolha. 0.111
No Poto,

w.-.

1012.

0ryw

cnr

1250,

OnJan Eloeteta F.rigldalns . _
Pota; 171; Ta...,_n lllcfawave, $Hi

e-.

No

Colltll4otll24541.
•
LA'INE'S FURNITURE
eomnoso honio ?umiso.....-.lli!lnao
Houra: Mort ••, N ............
0322. I mllloo cu5 Bulovll?o Ad.
Fnao Dallvory.

I

1

P I K

o A r1

2

11 111

I

ROGAC

AutoPa"-&amp;

DATEBOOK

-

Oct. 12, 1993

lllsn?hona,w

he~~'-~"

ork-·-

a

MY FRelS

:::.
g::.Cutlaoa
l•poorno, Nowtr IDa ond
iii4J.
ion. MIO. f1447l. ,,_-,con bo hoord, 114o
l4t"N

oax tomllol aiiSut or natlonill

....-n. ar "onyln?antlon lo

day of 1993 and the
21st day of fall .

).fORTY MEE:KLE AND WINTHROP

SWAiN
AUCTION a RJRNITURE. a
Olivo •• Oollfpollo. - . Uoosl

55

Building
Suppllea

-

~*-von Roblolt, cu5o.,

· - . . 1 - · 1100.~.

78

IIIIf
u I".-~-~
I rI r I
3

MY NOM'e VAO " IM 0 EA.NER.

YE:eTERQ.4-Y.

J

Clmplng
Equipment

TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Dick Grego ry !1932 -l, comedian -political activist.
os 61 ; Luciano Pavarolli &lt;1935-1. lyric
tenor. is 58; Tony Kubek 11936-1, baseball star-broadcaster . is 57; Susan
Anton U950-J, actress-singer, is 43: Sid
Fern~ndez I 1962-1, baseball player, is
31 ; Kork Cameron 11970-l, actor. is 23

1---.

TNI no,..Papor wll nat

l&lt;n0w11111yfor
"""""'
acMIIIIemlnll
real

---....., _____

-

_
.. ln-ollhl
llw.our_ . . .....,

ITUESDAY

....

,

lnf-!hls?al~

•

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1792, builders laid the cornerstone or
the White House.

r-~----------------~
HAVE 'IOU ~SEe-~ A~
CHEM!Hie WAYOI.rrOF A ·
VACUUM CUio\.'IER~

60r~50 INtO

advortlaodlnlhlaow-r

E G G0
_

1

r

.

_

_

The mother tucked her tour
year old into bed and said
"You were a good boy today ·
dear." Thanks, mom;· the

-~.::.-:...;:......::.;.:~--l~
repl!ed·
SROt-IOR

1 1 I 18

7
L_.J.__.L.-1..-1.._ L _

f9

0

boy

·and you were a ....

Complete the cnuckle quoted
by l 1fl.ng in lhe m•ss•ng words
yOu develop from step No J below

P~INT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

ANSWEIS
. Visual • Orbit - Puffy - Mature • FIRST
"You're an old timer, " said gramps. "il you can remembe~ when a woman went on her second honeymoon
. With her FIRST husband."

-

OCTOBER12I

ojlporMty-

as:-=

To Gal - Aslblr.,., Conftdon!?ol
Jn.

Plono, 114 441-321

·--tilt~10:00
A.?l.
·7:oo P.ll. Tuoodor

-~:tlU4US71
A-od
1M'

a

CNol

Apartment
fOr Rent

Classifieds
) 44~-2~42

' 992~2156
.

675-1333
f

I I

'

year ahead by
i
and a iOn&lt;),';-:-:=:-=::::-""-l...L~-..l.-L...J
self-addressed. stamped envelope 10 Astra· ARIES (March 21·April 19) lnS!illing har-.
.. Graph. c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box 4465, many and order in your work place today
New York . NY. 10163. Be sure to S!ale will be apprecia&lt;ed by co-workers . They, in
your zodiac sign.
turn . wtll follow any positive example you
SCORPIO (Oc!. 24·Nov. 22) Today you set
might feel~ very strong need lor compan- · TA~RUS (April 20-May 20) Instinctively
BERNICE
ionship, yet you may be e&gt;&lt;tremely selective you II know today that the best way to cope
BEDE OSOL regarding wi,rh whom you'll pal around. The V.:llh an a.nt1s~ctal person is to smother
choic:es youn make will fullill your require· hom/her w1th kondness and affection . It's a
menls.
sure ftre approach.
SAQITTAI'IIUS (Nov. 23·Dac. 21) 11 your GEMINI (May 21·Juno 20) Today the
goals seem rather effortless to achieve grea~er port1on of your efforts and energies
today , it ·might be due to the tact you 're are likely to be devoted to providing, more
motivated by unsJ'Ifish urges. 11 always for p~rsons for w[lom you 're reSpQnsible .
seems a bit easier when we're doing some· Th1s IS a powerful motivator.
/
thing lor others.
CANCER (Juno 21.July 22) You• enthusi·
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22.J•n. 19) You have asm could be conlagious loday when assoprotited from a painful . pas! e•perience and · coates see your ~erb lor living. I! will help
loday you mighl be able to put your wisdom them: to feel a bit better about themselves
• ·. •
.
.
to use. It has some!hing to do wilh main- and lofe as well.
Your cha~ lndocales your potentoal tor doi~g ! taining relationships..
- ·
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You're in lin interlt)ings of a substantoal na!ur~ are better on AOU,ARIUS (Jill. 20-Felf. 1l) An lmportanl eshng cycle where. you could do bene• lor
tl:(e year ahead,'!W' lhey've been tor some ; career objaclive can be ach ieved today. bul you~elf on generaling addilional earnings or
lome. Pul your time, eflorts and talen!s !o It might require a second or even a third oncome. Be on lhe cons1an1 lookoul lor
CO(IStructwe uMs. ..
,
effM t.o do so. o.,ce.you se! your sights on lhlngs thai could make or save you rnorJOy.
LIBRA (1!-f!l· 23·0ct. 23) Its not wrong your ,l~~l. never v..r from your courS8. : ·vtRO,O (Aug. 23·Sopt•• 22) You're a good
today to le7.vqur g.eneroslty prevail over PISC!ES (Feb. zb-M•rch 20) Your lntelll· _salesperson !odaY· You re not likely' to P!O·.
Y.QUr practlc;lillty. MilCh Is lrequenlly expect· gent manner and ability to appreciale every- mot~ or try !o sell something in which you
"&lt;! lrom Persons to whom mu"" lias OO,n one's point of view eould put you in the role don t bella~e. ~our prospecls woll admire
giyen. l,)bra. lreat yoorseff to a birthday gffl. ol an arbilralor or peace maker Ieday . your credlbihty and wan! to do business with
$end tor your Aslro-Graph predlcllons for 1 Theyva picked !he right parson.
... you.

.

~~

.

J

XJCDUJN

'I

I.My

UTA

OUFVZDTJCIM.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The goal Is to win major titles and stay at the
to~ of the game. That's what I'm Jrylng to do." - Pete Sampras.

._or, -

............. ,_ ..... ...,_..
,. ...,=
G a l - To
APIIII tll!oollll·

HDL

RT_ALEZHUTA .

Today is the 28&gt;th

..... rnt audh p&lt;ol-.
lmna!lon Of -lion.'

IIAfo!AOER TRAIHEE

TIL

G 0 7Z L

AcCIIIOI'IH

buad on rocos, color, sallglon,

LOIAogTo:

phonoo,
- .oldold··~old
Olllquo

-

AU
.·.·:·:·:···········
$ .4~ :r z

ReJI EstJie

Tlno
PPoroo4'---lonalllaloa Poaft-

7 "ol-•ltolo:-

tumlt....

+10

_,,....._

•

M 1001-IIIIIVOrlliMg In

ond- fumlt\n, no
Mom too lorgo or too - . will
buy OM , . . .

Pass

441 UDI, Ortll4o441-1401.

11111 _ , . . _ .. """"""•• '
1111 F - Folr Houolng Ad.
ai11C18 wloldl ...... Mlllogol
lo-....YptWtosorooo,
. . - ..........ion

Ant~

••••••

5 SwMI potato
6 Of no Yolua

J.D..,_.,,--,....!:!
llsliolsca. 12"

_.,.lol

wamed to Buy

3TtnnesMt
- Fosd
4 Sandy

&lt;PEANUTS

parlonae - . l'or lnfDr.
Sillllon Co?l 1-111-4111 Ext.
FMI2 I A.ll. 4 P.?l. 7 Daya.
No Expafonoel 19110 To 19G0
WookiY
-OO!inll
FHA lllort- Roluncla. Owii
1_.-141- Ext.nl.

114-

1 Chlol
2 Dla?urbanca

By Pbilllp Alder

•

AeoailnltorvloeRo. . - . Clponlaro. No Ex·

&amp;Auction

DOWN

EllII
Pass
PB!S
p ...

%..I'REE
412

11117. ·

llagllo

THAR

Froo11Vhno, Nlco ISICii]· Hotooln!
W.anor I o,., So? u Now 1
Yoar Worronty, ftOi Eoch;

o.E.

53 Strongt

54 WrllwCllller
55 Exhaua7odly
511 Mlnq and

plnlltdo
31 Ctn. prov.
32 Opert
horolno

$11.110, coli
NEW Color Ootalog, 1

Public Sale

::..to'f.k... Oobr

3 NT

Nortb

Opening lead:

Whlre-. -

Appl-.

52 BIJ w?ndow

The real-life wife
in fiction

OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Wra'1ht Iron Tablo W/4 Chols.;
Fon oc?c Roollng Chair $58•
G1rd1n Arch W•v'• fQSJ.OO
'

Sit-

Well

1 Bodroot1111 In GaiApollo, 114- Tokoa It, 111448Mti),

WO?.FFTANNUIQ IEDI
Unlto,

low •

•

9

. I.

Soolll

,

BARNEY

t?aOo D!mo.
linn.
..,.._,
- • -- .....
*""""""'

VI'RA RJRNITURE
114-44t-31SI Or 114-C41-4421
'10 DAY BAllE A8 C.UH
OR RENT-2.owN (NO DEPOSIT)

$5.00. 2 l.ocotlono •Booldo "lluto
Auction Or 4 lllloo Out 14t
Opon I A.ll. To I P.".llon -Sat.
Eloetllc Rongo 30" WhMo, .-a;
Ou Ro~ 31" $71: Dsyor K.,.
-A ,71; Wa- CU. Ill;
•hta-or Hot Polll Almond,
Uko !Mw, 1 Yoar Worronty, $211;

43 Drlveinto
44 ShowJ floioor
48 F•U•III

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

T.,. 4WDht*&gt;lsld.
1n1ok. 1114
~~-. lll2 1011 • ._

Household
Goods

Boddlng ·Twin IIIII Sot $88, Full
SID 1101 Quoon $141 Sal; 4
Drlwor Choo? 144.85; Cor lod'o,
Bunk lod'a, Poolor Boda. FuM
Llno Of SouthwoOI..., VStartl~ At 120.00; lnclanollany
ShoP" • a Slzoa SUostlng AI

13 Stupid
' 14 Oetrolt lttm
15 T""pertd
1SFI'IIdfrom
rlllrlllfl7
18 Hrowllliln
wrMIII
11 Rulllllr on
pencil
· 21 Altornoy llllrd
24 Srrtlll
orvanlama

21 Tritt to

t40Wo. ~ I Rolaroneoa S?roiol, Oa?Uoollo, 114-44&amp;-7311,
=~ Aftor I P.ll. 114-ae- -1.-c~~Wo~Dt.

Lei-,
'CCIII~F.... monl~-llll

Yord ...... -

51

5 lllxlcan
ola..
· 12 LMMiz.-

I'tL BE RIGHT

==========

Rohtaonosor

rto.
c:an-olo?- fnlm SiH.OO, .._,

::.~· ..... olot'-. .....

8

E6R TREE SERVICE. l~,
Trimming, Y,.. RIII'KWal,

AVON CHRISTMAS Sallo AI
Work Or Homo. Av010go 19 414
Hourty. Plua Fanlutlc Ill•
countal Door·To-Door Opllonol.

Hotp Won!OIHMpcNIOiblo, ture, ldull to work wlvouth el
rtok. High ochool dip"'- , .
qultod, oomo hlahoo oducotlon
3 Family Oarogo Sale Hull prolonod. Flollll*o hoUro I poy
Ridge Ad. Pannlnalon'a. Mon., boood on oduco!lon ond 011•
TUII. l Wtcl. 1-1. Fumlllft, DM!oneo. llual hovo Nlloblo
Curtalna, Bod~, ~. ironoportatlon. Sand roouma I
Smalllloya Clol
lluch Men loltor to Ac11on Youth
lilac. 3 Millo 011 R o 7 lloulh Core, l!'~t lo1 ItS, Pt. PleOHnl,
Toon'o Run On Bloclan Rd. Fol· WV25ouo.EOE
low Signa.
HVAC INSTALLER Noodod.
3 F1mlly: Wednndey And
Far llord Working,
b1o lndlvlduol To AdCI
Th..-y, Rm On Loft
On Shoal C..... Rood, Crown To Work " - · Ful~11mo Poolcny.
lion Whh Good SaiesY And
a.notna. Only Expar*ALL Yord Saleo llual Bo Pold In
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Advo,_, DEADUNE: Z:GO p.m. Poople
Rooumo -And Aofiioncoo
tho cloy bo- tho ad lo to run. Dan lnmln Eleotric, Inc., 1241
Sundoy odltlan • 2:00 p.01. Rd., Albano, Ohio 4S!DS.
Frtdoy. llondoy odnlon • a:ao
Loodlntl
1rovo1 In H~~~&gt;p.m. Saturdly.
llngton aooko --ldo oolo
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Log Choln, 31 Looolto Cl-.
For ~'-RHo "Kinnor,
111-F, e:ONG0.1--445-21111.

4 la..U, coqiCI!I Oal.
141.11, IIOXI to 8toto Htahwoy
(Iongo, At.J. 'lomo old tlllnao.

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Slooplng _ , . whh OO!Jidn9,
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Coli oftoo: 2:00 p.m., 304-773501,
WY.

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�OCtober

Ohio

Community calendar
Church Oct. 13 • 17 at 7 p.m .
nightly and 6:30 on Sunday' with
Evangelist David Canfield from
Russell, Ky.

TUESDAY
POMEROY • There will be a
general membership meeting for
Meigs County Chamber of Commeree at 7:30 a.m. at the Senior
Cititens Center. The 10pic wiU be
the senior citizens levy.

COOL VILLE • There will be a
hunter safety course Oct. 13 · 15
and Oct. 20 • 22 from 6:30 JD 9:30
p.m. at the Coolville Lions Club
Building. For more information nr
10 register call 667-3831, Ed Rood
at 667-6348 or Ed Wigal at 6676657.

RUTLAND • There will be a
revival at the Rutland Church of
the Nazarene Oct. 12 • 17 at 7 p.m.
nightly and 6:30 p.m. Sunday with
the Rev, Jesse Tipton and the Sisson family singing.

Second
birthday
celebrated

RUTLAND • Heath United
Methodist Church Eleanor Circle
will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the hqme
of Margaret Hiber.
•

THURSDAY
POMEROY • Pomeroy group of
AA and AI Anon wiU meet 7 p.m.
at Sacred Hean Catholic Church. ·
For information call 992-5763.

WEDNESDAY
CALEE REEVES

TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
Plains Vete,rans of Foreign Wars
Posi 9053 will meet at 7:30p.m. at
post home. All memberS' encouraged 10 auend.

CHESTER • There will be a
revival at the Chester Nazarene

POMEROY • Preceptor Beta
Beta will meet in the home of
Charloue Elberfield at 6:30 p.m.
Word session on craft project.
Hostesses will be Clarice Krautter
and Reva Vaughn.
ROCK SPRINGS • Rock

will meet
session at
p.m. at the
Prosecutmg AliOmey's
117 West
Second Street to
the zooSprings Grange -will meet at 8 p.m. in$ ordinance proposed by th~
in lhe hall.
Obve Township Zoning Commi$;
sion. This will be 11 public meeting
. t'
•
POMEROY • There will be a and public input and C01J1mentJ
dinner at the Senior Citizens Center will be taken. Anyone iliteresled in
with serving from S to 6 p.m. Cost the zoning issue is encouraged to
for the meal is $4 per person, with auend.
:
·a menu of chicken and noodl~s .
POMEROY · There will be 4
mashed potatoes, green beans and spaghetti
dinner with the MeigJ
'corn, roll, beverage and Mexican High School
Football team froni
fruit cake . Following the dinner
there will be music bf The Clas- 5:15. 6:15p.m. in the high~~
sics . The first ClaSSics Friends cafeteria. A small donauon 1~
'
award will be presented to Bob and required for you can cal
Charlene Hoeflich at 6: IS p.m. The
CHESTilR • Shade River Lodg~:
public is invited to auend.
#453 F &amp; AM will meet at 8 p.~
All master masons are invited fi?
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun· attend. Refreshments will b~
ty Regional Planning Commission served.
'

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•

ADVERTISED ITEM POliCY: each Of these advertised items 1s reQuired to be readily available
for sale in each Kroger Store. exceot as spec1fi&lt;:ally noted in this ad. If we do run out of an
advertised item, we w~l offer you your choice of a COil'lllarable 1tem. when ava1lable.
reflecting the same savings or a ra1ncheck which will entitle vou to purchase the advert1sed
item at the advertised price within 30 days Only one vendor couPOn will be accepted per
1tem ourchased.

COPYRIGHT 1883 • TliE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD
.
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 13, THROUGH THURSDAY, OCT. 14, 1883 IN POMEROY.
WE RESERVE TliE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANT111ES. NONE SOt.p TO DEALERS,,

Calee Marie, Reeves, daughter
of Bryan and Susan Reeves of
Pomeroy, recently celebrated her
second birthday with a party at her
home. The theme was Barney and
Friends.
Attending were: Charles and
Sandy King, maternal grandparents; Bob and Margie Reeves,
paternal grandparents; Dorothy
Reeves, paternal great-grandmother; Roy and Mary Gillilan, paternal
great-grandparents; Ed, Sue and
Jessica King; Paul, Linda and
Missy Darnell; Charlie King and
Robbie and Brandi Reeves.

I
"Dedicated to enriching and
improving the life of Senior Citizens
in Ma.ron, Ga/lia and Meigs countie.r.

2 Days Only! Wed. ·a Thurs., Oct;~ 13 • 1~4-----,
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HEATHER McCANN

McCann

_birthday
celebrated
Healhez Marie McCann, daughter of Mark and Deborah McCann,
celebrated her third birthday Sepl
12 at her home.
Attending were malmlal grandparents, Robert and Carol Craft,
aunt, Jeannine Craft, cousins, Tyler
Bartlett and Karen Bartlett. Sending Jifts were maternal greatgramlparents Gay and Laura Fields
and paternal great-grandmother,
Myrtle Craft.

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Meigs showcase to be Oct. 15
.Planning for the Meigs County
Showcase has been going on
since last September. . Cochairmen of !his event are Mary
Powell, Meigs County Park
District and Cindy Oliveri,
Extension Agent, Meigs County
Extension Office. They have
worked · wllh a committee of
volunteers · lo coordinate !he
Showcase being held Octobez 15
thru 17 at lhe Meigs County
Faqrounds. It promises 10 have
somclblng for everyooe. .
The PIKJIOSC. of the activity is to
promote Meigs County Festivals,
activities, IBient and craftspeople.
Government officials have been
invited to auend opening
· ceremonies on Friday, October
15.
Publicity for !he event has
included severat"'hio magazine

In .Qallia County

publications, local and regional creations and a chance 10 sample
newspapers and !he Ohio homemade applebutter prepared
Department of Development by the Meigs Senior Center
brochures . Displays at !he Retired Senior Volunteet
faitgrounds will inClude annual . Program. Another feature of the
activities and events, educational weekend will include a Meigs
displays and demonstrations of County Aower Show. The theme
pioneer skills. Antique tractors, of !he show is "Hean of !he
classic cars and model trains will Valley'',
be on display. A kiddie tractor
Good food and local enterpull sure to please lhe younger Lainment will rouud out !he
crowd \viii be held Saturday at 4 weekend activities. Meigs County
p.m." .
~
businesses including vegetable,
Representatives from the 91st nower and fruit producers will
Ohio
\\llunteer Infantry display !he latest in technology
Company B will present a Civil for !he growing horticulture
War Living History and have · a iodu$lry in Meigs County.
camp throughout the Showcase.
Door prize drawings will be
Also for !hose attending !here held throughout !he weekend.
will be the opponunity 10 buy This event Is open 1o the public
crafts by local artists, including and FREE of CHARGE. Come
baskel makers, walking slicks, out for an enjoyable time, some
dried flower arrangements, herbal good food and good company.

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DAVID FEllY
Fon Jackson, Columbia, S.C.
Army Pvl I David H. Fetty H has
completed basic training KeUy Air
Force Base.
Fetty is the son of David H.
Fetty of Rural Route 2, Point Pleasant, W.Va., and Rhonda S. Fetty of
55 S. Third Ave., Middleport.

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The Orientation to Non-tradi·
tiona! Occupations for Women
(ONOW) class is accepting applications for the Fall Quarter at Tri
County Vocational School Adult
Education Division.
Carolyn Fisk, coordinator for
ONOW advises that the emphasis
is on women learning about nontraditional careers and how to
brcalc the barriers to non-traditional
employmcnL
She' said that women loolcing for
a new career in high-paying traditionally male jobs, particularly
throu11h on-the-job training, those
who enjoy working with your
hands, and like strenuous physical
activity, should come in fcir assessment at Room 301 of the Vocational School, S. R 691, Nelsonville.
Following assessment, 15
women will be chosen for the free
eight weck course; the only cost is
a SIS.OO registration fee. There is
placement· assistaJICe for gradneles
of the GNO,W proJrarp.. Studehts
have been placed toto Operating
Engineers Union, Amaqda Bent
Bolt, Cl~y,pool Electrif. a.nd
A:T&amp;T. Many ~ 'have Wllll~
in llliniRJ prpgram~to fwlhettheir
education in. ~-~ areas.
'rhose intenial in -die l'nlo
8JIIID, may call ·
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Class offered at
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PATH helps the homeless
During the dog days of summer, whirring fans and the bum
of air conditioners help to set off
uncomfonably high temperatures.
Few of us arc concerned with
keeping warm. In fact, most of us
are looking forWard to the crisp,
chill winds of approaching fall,

but for the unfortunate homeless er into the equation, exacerbates
population the anticipation of an already humiliating and disautumn is a grim reminder of turbing experience. The expericold days and dreary nights ence of not having a place of
ahead. Surviving day to day with- one's own. . . a place most of us
cui adequate shelter during the lalce for granted•. . a place called
warmer months is difficult home. However, a smaU group or
enough. Adding inclement weath- caring individuals in our community banded tog_ether dranng
upoplheiJ:,coiiecti.ve' talents, time
· and eneli)' and decided that they
would try to make a difference.
This magnanimous team of
women attend !he Gallia County
Senior Center in Gallipolis, Oh,io.
Their nimble fingers toiled away
creating four more beautiful
afghans for the homeless (they
made four others earlier this
year), and presented them 10 Ms.
Janel Downie, L.S.W., Coordinator of PATH (Projects for Assistance iii Transition from Homeleasness). Ms. Dowriie staled that
all !he af~hans made, were and
will, be distributed 10 the home. · (Continued·on Page 7)

p..._

~
for tile Melp County Sho...,.. to he
at
the Melp County Falrp'OIInds, October 15, 16 111111 17 are Rev.

William Mlddlea-rtb, AUce W..fe, Retired Senior V..anteer
Dlredor, Senior Cldze• Center, Patty Pldtens, Trolly Station,
Mary Powell, Parka District Director, and Jean 'l'ruaell,
Middleport R-inK Specl•l!ot

In Mason County

Quilting an every day activity
Quilling is an everyday activity
at !he Point Pleasant Senior
Center. We have either juss begun
or just finished or working on a
quilt. A lot of good times are

. enjoyed, sitting right next 10 your
friends and feDow quilters.
Others regular in allendance are
Mary McDaaiel, Carrie Forshee,
Grace &lt;llergwin, Velma Sargent.

�</text>
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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <name>varian</name>
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    <tag tagId="235">
      <name>watterson</name>
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</item>
