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Ohio Lottery

Football
previews
I

Pick 3:
7-3·5
Pick 4:
4-6-3-6

Page4

Super Lotto:
8-12-13-16-3647
Kicker:
9-9·5·2-3-8

Low toaiabt In 50s, sbowen
Ukely. Friday, partly cloudy,
•tab Ill mld·SO..

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a1
Vol 44, NO. 135

Mulllnleclalnc.

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By JIM FREI!;MAN
Sentinel Ne'WS Staft
The Meigs County Board of
Commissioners approved the Community Housing Improvement
Strategy (CHIS) recently completed by the Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency. .
'·
During the commissioners' regular meeting Wednesday, GMCAA
DirecJOr Sid Edwards described the
ems as a 1001 that will be used by
the state when considering housing
improvement grants for Meigs
County.
The CHIS pairits a bleak piciW'C
of lhe ho!!Sing SIOCk in the county,
Edwards said. In most cases, there
are·a number of problems with the
homes.
It's not just Meigs County, all of
southeastern Ohio has poor housing
stock, he pointed.
The CHIS outlines the percemage of families in the county that
are low· to ·moderate-income
(LMI). Funhermore, figures are tallied for individual townships and
villages
Appio,uma~ety S3 percent of the
families in the' county are low- to
moderate-income, according to the

~

ems.

ben:

Oliver reminded the commis:
sion lhlit the Meigs County Council
on Aging still needs county support
as many grants depend on a show
ofiQCIII suppon.
·
She also urged the commission
to seek out seniors who need ass istance,
"If you know anybody who
needs assistance, please let us
know. We need everybody's eyes
and ears."
·
Afterwards, Cindy Oliveri from
the Meigs County branch of ,the
Ohio State l!niversity AgricultUral
Extension Agency, accompanied
by Joyce McDowell, acting director of the south district of the
extension agency, updated the
commission on lhe extension agen- ..
cy's annual report
·
Oliveri pointed out some of the
services offered by the office
including pesticide applicator trairling and certification, parenting
classes for at-risk parents, youth
development activities and pressure
canner testing and food preserva11· · · • · 11·
onAiS:,~':'Bin:hfield of Birchfield's Funeral Home in Rutland
app~achid t!ie,commission ~0~cemmg fUneral ex~ses· for JOdi-

"" ' ' ' •,
~~~t:~!:!:~CHIS to · ge~geopl~." ~li~eldb esedxp~ned
7

. .._. ·.

··

GROUND BREAKING CEREMONY •
Ground was broken for the construction of
Water's Edge Apartment~ in Syracuse Wednesday afte.~noou. Taking part Iii the ceremony
were from the left, Tom Wolfe, Home National
Bank, Syracuse Mayor Jim PaP,I!, Councilman,

a·roun
' d b·rok en fi. or ·

Kenneth Buckley; developers, Nancy Faber
Growney, Greg Bailey and Jim Cli«ord, and
Arthur Howard Winer of Winer and Associates,
Inc., 1\larletta, the project consultant. (Photo by
Charlene Hoeftich]

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HEALTH CARE - Preslcleu~ BID Clinton
waves to the a owd ptllered at Ambrlclie Hlgb
School ·In ,\mbrldge, Pa.; Wednesday. Sharing
tbe platl'orm witb tbe preslcleat are, from left to

rljlil, U.S. senator Harris W'olrord (D-Pa.) Con·
gressman Ron Klink (D-Pa.) and U.S. Senator
Arlen Specter (R-Pa.). Cllutoa was introducing
bis bealtb care plan. (AP)

Congressmen seek
help to end cQal strike
'
HUNTINGTON,
W.Va. (AP)
- ·Congressmen from the seven ·
states affecteil by a S 3/4:montJi- .
long coal strike asked the Clinton administration and U.S.
Labor'Secretary Robert Reich
for help in ~olvilll the dispqte.
The United Mine Workers
and the BjtumiiiOUS Coal, ~­
tors .AssoC~ reiUlnell to t11e
ncgotiatjng table Wednesda in
. WashingtQn, D.C., for !he t~rst
time since tallq broke off DeL

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comn/ex

Insurance industry split over reforms

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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Seutinel News S11dJ'
A "school bucks" promotion
geared to encourage residents to
shop locally was outlined at
Wednesday's meeting of the
Pomeroy Merchants Association
held in the Bank One conference
room.
A proposal was fresented •by
Annie Chapman o Chapman" s
Shoes in response to activities of
local merchants to come up with a
plan to increase business by pro- ·
viding an incentive for local pur·
chasing.
As explained by Chapman, the
emphasis of the '"school bucks"
promotion would be to get residents to purchase from local merchants, then for the merthaniS to
return a small perceRtage of ihe
money spent with them to the

It was generally agreed by the ·
merchants attending that five per..:
cent of the purchase price woutci be
given in "bucks" to be la'tu
redeemed for cash through a II!CI'" ·
chants "bank". If the plan as pro1:'
posed is implemented,, merehailll
would purehase ~" lhrou&amp;li a
lan~caping, ~ncrete wBlks, a.~d merchants'
"bank" for dislribution·
~ng areas m the complex whJCh
to
their
custaners,
with the~­
JS .being-f~ with (unds Jr~m
~
tthoolnheri
'Iii~ )lii:the Home National Bank of Racine
cerilficate"s
tlirough
the siime.
and the Midland Mongage Corpo'"bank
....
ration.
The proposal set forth calls for
The project is expected to be
completed in six months, according contributions from each panicipaing merchant, probably $20, for the
to Bailey.
Rental infonnation and applies- start-up of the program.
A copy of the proposal was
tions can be obtained by calling
373-8880 or 992-7943. Elderly given _to Tom Dooley, president of
with low and medium income will the Middlepcn Merchants Associabe considered for residency in the tion, to be reviewed since the two
new complex which has had 18 grou~ plan to work cooperatively
units approved for rental assis- on a 'buy loc:al" plan.
Once a plan is completed. then
tance.
Continued on Page 3

tm en [

ana~

e ·~:~~1M!~~ ,fCJI!I .ur

.

........

Merchants
outline plan
to aid local
schools

G.round ~or construction of.an ~uildings: J?acb apar!~ent will
~or _a ,eldetly Musmg apartment compl~x .1ncl~. a livmg room/dinmg room,
.n-:.~~~af:!!J~~~i,fl:l~,-reeung .. __ .cfe!.ri,~?,R,Iie mran~ ~~ !l!', f!di· . • in S.yracuse .V.:!IS·R~·.ccrc::.-_ -f!!JIJI;Iib.:o".ilb,.W~.~ ~wer, ~·
,....,..,,"''W~:::.~-!9:~~ e9J!IIIY. ten~ iid '\filii! Fesnll!IF~f1i'it,lii'ea mom~at. the SJtc.Wednesday·after- fully equ1pped kicchen w1th apphHousmg ,AuUIIlllty, _..~, Hobstet- nliTSJ!Ig llome. .
· ,, .
noon.
.
ances.
ter, ~ep,artme~t of H~man SerBin;hfield Slid he foresee.ph1s
Water's Edge A~artments is
Two of the apartments will be
vices; ~usan 0bv~r. ~elgs Cou~ty !Jecontmg a more common prob1em being constructed on about five especially designed for the handiCouncil on Al!!ng, Gar! Dill, m the ru~ure:
acres at the southern edge of the capped, All will be .U conditioned
C~s~r Township Trus!ee, Elmer
Afi!z 11\'Ymg they v:-o~ explore village by the corporation, Water's wiili individual heat contmls.
Bruley, Bedford Township.T~tee. for gwdelt~t:S· commJSstoners met Edge Apartments of Syracuse,
There
will
be
a
and Jon Jacobs, Health Depart- ~ly With Health lleJlar!nlent developers, Ore~ Bailey and Jim community/laundry room and
menL ~- .
.
Duector Jon Jacobs and .Assisiant Clifford of Me1gs County, and meeting facilities where residents
_Followmg the CHIS meetmg, Prosecutor Charles ~ntght who Nancy Faber Growney ot Raleigh, can enjoy recreational activities.
Ohve~ o~fered her thanks to the smd they would look mto the mat- N.c. ·
The four buildings will be build
commtss1o.n fo~ placing the sue- ter.
. .
. .
The 20 one-bedroom apanrnents facing each with an interior open
cessful_Semor CtbZen~ ~vy on the
In other matters. commJSStoners:
will be in four one-tloor brick court.
Ballot and for supporting tt.
Continued on Page 3
Plans have also been niade for
su. ml .

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AMuMim.... lno. -

Commissioners .give
nod to CAA's _plan for
hou~ing improvement

IN
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.:e.w~eR~-e:.w~"JJ:-~:.';;H.:.-e:.~-e:.a~~~-e~-.e.'B.'IH::IH:.R"JH:.8Wf:.~~8'M:.a~. ·

zleOti-, 11,.... 35 _,..

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 4, 1993

West Virginia Democrats Bob
Wise, Alan Mollohan and Nick
Rahal!, asked for a meeting with
Reich, citing.concerns about the
strike's effect on their states'
economies
In a lcuer, they demanded to
know "what the Labor Department has.done up to this point to
encourage ,a settlement and to
discuss vossiblc options for
fuiW'C 'acUon." ·
The congressmen also cited
'
the breakoff in lalkllast l)lotlth.
22. ' ' '
'
Special ,nediator Bill Usel)' ·
Reich spokesman BoQ
wameil them to • 'be prelliTCd ,to Zachariasiewicz said he had not
rel)'l!lin 11ntll a suq:esSfp! resolu- seen the letter Wednesday and
tion can bC achieved." '
· declined ro say whether the
At the same time.:,J:4 coal- labor secretary would meet with
field co!fjres.smen, including the congressmen.

WASHINGTON (AP)- The
health insurance industry, smarting
from Hillary Rodham Clinton •s
slap, is split between big companies already racing toward lhe type
of reforms the White House wants
and smaller ones worried that
they'll be driven out of business.
The Health Insurance Association of America, the sponsor of
those "Harry and Louise" ads that
the first lady said were full of lies,
actually represents just 3S percent
of the private insurance industry
and has lost four of its biggest
members in the past two years.
Prudential Insurance Co., stayed
in the trade group, but refused to
kick in for the $6.5 million ad campaign that has aroused Mrs. Clinton's wrath. "We thought the tone
was 100 negative," said Prudential
spokesman Kevin Heine.
Bill Gradison, a former Republi·can congressman from Ohio who
took the helm of the insurers' troubled trade group in January. said
Wednesday he was puzzled at till:.
harsh rhetoric the White House has

turned on the industry.
ensure Americans can go to the
He said the HIAA has raised OOI:tor of their choice.
valid questions about how Clin"We don't agree with that busiton's plan would work and what ness about choice at all," said John
the impact of its cap on insurance D. Moynahan, executive vice presipremiums would be. Other groups, dent of Metropolitan Life Insurance
including nonprofit insurers and Co., which along with Aetna
doctors, share some of those same Cigna and Travelers defected fnn
concerns, he said.
IHAA in the past two years. "ManBernard Tresnowski, president aged competition will provide more
of lhe Blue Cross and Blue Shield sound choice to the American pubAssociation, sent Mrs. Clinton a lic than they've ever had before." ·
leuer Friday saying he was "deeply
~ four companies and Prudisturbed'' by her remarks.
dential have formed an Alliance for
Tresnowski said it was unfonu- Managed Competition to lobby for
nate that HIAA "has chosen to ma~y of the changes Clinton is
aggressively challenge your health lalking abouL
care refonn initiative" with its ads,
But HIAA says it suppons many ·
but ''it is also unfonunate that you of .those principles, 100, including
have chosen to paint all insurers universal coverage, letting people
with the same brush."
keep msuran.ce when they change
An earlier round of HIAA ads JObs and endmg exclus1ons fiJr prewarned that the draft Clinton plan existing conditions.
would let "'government bureauAnd Gradison says his concerns
crats" decide what health plans about premium caps and exclusive
Americans could join. The bill mandatory health insurance pur:
Clinton sent Congress last week chasing cooperatives are widely
scrapped a limit on fee-for-service
shared.
plans and took other measures to
Continued on Page 3

Wildfires die down; hotspots plague firefighters
MALIBU, Calif. (AP) - Helicopters swooped up Topanga
Canyon ferrying giant buckets of
ocean water as an army of firefighters stepped ·up their assault
Wednesday. on a wildfire that
claimed 200 homes in this celebrity
seaside town.
The bot, dry desert winds that
fed Tuesday's fii'CStorm died down
overnight. Erratic gusts Wednesday
from the sea and the mountains
swirled embers of name from the
brush, posing 1 threat to homes.
"The winds, thank God, have
died down, which have allowed the
crews. to gain the upper hand,"
Gov. Pete Wilson said.
A huge cloud·. of. black smoke
hung over the seaside enclave that
is hOme; to such celebriticilas Bruce
· Willis, Demi Moore; Burgess
M~itll, Mark Hamill and Mel ·
Gibson. Evacuees tWimcd on bicycles ~ rollerskales bec8119C police
closed off a 45-mile stretch of the
Pacific•Coast Highway.

Among the victims was actor
Sean Penn, wh05e $4 million Spanish-style mansion was destroyed.
"I don't know if he evacuated
or if he was there at the time," said
his publicist Carol Stone. Penn
wasn't immediately available for
commenL
Arson investigators located
where the fU"C broke out, but didn 't
immediately know whether it was
seL
The fU"C destroyed 200 canyon
ranches and seaside mansions and
charred 35,000 acres as it roared
through. this mlle•wide; 27· milelong coastal strip.
It was the latest in a series that
has burned DIOl'e than 1,000 homes
and 215,000 acres In Southern California in the past I 1/2 wectcs.
As the winds subsided Wednesday, nearly· S,OOO firefighters
stepped up their atuick on volatile
hot spots. The blaze remained out
of control. The Santa Ana winds

were expected 10 end Wednesday
night, and cooler weather near the
coast was predicted fct- Thursday.
Twin-rotor Chinook helicopters
dumped buckets into the ccean and
swooped up Topanga Canyon to
bomb names. with salt water. .
C-130 atr tankers carry1ng
orange fire retardant pamted the
canyon's east wall tO stop fue from
c::Jing toward lhe densely popuI
Pacific Palisades area of Los
Angeles. At least one home was
destroyed Wednesday as Tuna
Canyon went up in names.
Malibu Colony was spared, as
was Peppenliqe University, w~ere
300 students spenr Tuesday n1ght
in lhe gymnasium as flames roared
past campus.
The J. Paul Getty ~useum was
safe, a spokeswoman SBid.
Flames slashed through y~ds
around canyon retreats belo11g1ng
to Gibson, Charles Bronson, Dicli:
Van Dyke and former Sen. John
Tunney.

In tront of a coastal highway
home owned by stars Willis ana
Moore, the actor's new blaclt :
Porsche was covered with white '

ash.

~, -~:

"He and his ~fe and the kids
lefllast night," sai neighbor and '
caretaker Artie Cir ncione. Trie
couple have two ch · dren and IIR!
expecting their thinl.
.•
Cun Pierose was among the ~
lucky ones. He stayed up all night •
hosing down his $1 miU 1on ocean• •
view home.
•
''Was it worth risking mr, tif~? : ~.
Probably not," Pierose said. 'But!: ·
live on a cut de sac . And I had ::
some room to work. So I thoughi ;
I'd try iL"
:
Sheriff's deputies and California ;
Highway P1trol offiCers patrolled .:
empty streets to prevent looting, ~ •
":hrec men found stacking televi- : . ·
stons on the beach were arrested · -,
for investigation of looting, said · :·
Deputy Inna Becerra.
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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 4,1993

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel

r

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Qne '
The Milw.ukee outbreak was
of the country's foremost ·business- not unique. The ·Centers for DlaDEVOTED TO T1R INnRESTB OF 11IE MEIGS-IIIASON AREA
men hiS come out of retirement to ease Control estiinates that 900,000
try to taclde what many believe is a people a year become ill from
mounting health crisis: providing
clean drinking water for all AmeriJ,. ,,.. OCt
cans.
.Gus Grant capped a distinROBERT L. WINGETT
guished corporate career when he drinking contaminated water, and
Publbher
founded Sprjnt, the long-distance · that some 900 die. Gnuit said he
telephone company. After years as decided to get into the horne water
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
its chief executive, be sold the treatment business because the
~ARGARET LEHEW
company for a significant sum and ' problem is getJing worse.
·
General Manager
Controller
retired to Arizona. But now he will
"For a hundred years we had
run a small companr dedicated 10 the world's cleanest drinking
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less than 300
developing
innovauve home and water," says Grant "But over the
• words . All letters are subject ro editing and must be signed with name,
offtee
water-treaunent
products.
past 20 years water quality has
; address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed. Let~«s
Water Chef, based in Scottsdale, been steadily declining becanse all
. sbnuld be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
Ariz., just began production .of sorts of new industrial pollutants
state-of-the-art water "appliances" and contamilllltes have been gelling
- a term for home water filtering into the water ~upply. In many
systems that con,tain hifh-technolo- cases we do not even have lhe techgy "reverse osmosis' filters that nology yet to test for these new
remove a wide range of both Organ· contaminates, let alone ensure ·they
ic and inorganic containinates from are removed from the water supwater arriving from the municipal ply."
···
By The As,wclated Press
systems.
The two laws governing drink. Excerpts of recent Ohio editorials of national and statewide interest:
Water contamination made ing water arc the Clean W&amp;JG: Act
The (Zanesville) Times Recorder, Oct. 26
. headlines earlier this year when and the Safe Drinking Water Act
· The national convention of lhe Girl Scouts of America acted wisely in 370,000 people in;,Milwaukee Both must be renewed by the end
,voting overwhelmingly to allow members to follow their conscience in became ill from a paras.ite that got of 1994 and Congress has staned
lh~ wording of the scout oath.
into the municipal w&amp;JG: supply.
the process.
· The Girl Scouts have not been embroiled in the controversy and legal
~ (il "93
41'-'lt~~-"'-disputes that have ensnared the Boy Scouts over the same tssue: This
HUlM~
acuon will ensure thai the organization stays clear of such disputes and
sertds the message that it can include the diverse religious and edtical sys~ms that exist side by side in the United States.
The measure keeps the Girl Scout promise's official wording intact but
iillows individual scouts to substitute for "God" another word or words
ihat they consider more appropriate to their spiritual beliefs.
· ' The Girl Scouts have long taught 10lerance and understandin~ of other
~pie and cultures. That the vote was so one-sided is a clear mdication
that members have learned those lessons.

'

.

Draft reauthOrization. legislation
would toughen clean 11'1ter standards and &amp;~ vast SUIIIS to
help bring lOcal water companies
up to the new s~dards. Of the
nation's 200,000 water systems,
experts say, .many m:e very small
systems that simply .do not have the
money to upgrade their facilities,
while many of the ·lartest systems
wen~ built before Wodil War I and
still rely on decades-old technolo- ·
gy.
Orant was recently in Washington tallting with key legislators
about his plan to help people in the
neat lerm who carmot afford to buy
his company's kind.of ltigh-tech
solution to water purity problems.
"It is going to be years, maybe
decadeS, before all water systems
can be brought up to the level they
need be. The new amendments in
Congress call for requiring testing
for 17 pollutants. But the new Califomia water purity law calls for
testing for and eliminating 65
organic and inorganic substances.
We need to help .JICO.Pie now."
Grant's idea 18 simply"'"" water
stamps. They would work like food

u"a·uman

Robert

iit.nov~tive

Excerpts from other
(&gt;hio newspapers

Rlltl'-

Bucyrus Telegraph-Forum, Oct. 27
You've heard about "uptalk?" It's replaced "Valley girl" talk? We
luiil picked it up, 100, even thinking about writing an editorial about it?
But then Connie Chung on NBC got the jump on us? So here we are,
playing catch-up and writing about it ~yway? ·
.
You noticed', just liten, five declarauve sentences. each of them ending
in a question mark where a period ought to go? And now, you know how
~~is called ·:~talk?". And that !\K' ~g~ge SJ?CCi~,ists have, naturally,
a fancier descnplloo of 11, namely nsmg mtonabOn?
· It's supposed to sound more communicative? Softer? More agreeable?
Less, uh, authoritative? ·
We bet that some pundit is going to ponder lite Meaning of Uptalk?
Llke how we have turned the world into one big question mark? And lost
. !he c~fidence to assen anything good, true and beautiful? Period.
The Columbus Dispatch, Nov. 1
.
• History .says the Continental Congress was so concerned about scandals involving•Gen. George Washington's army that it created lhe office
.of.insp,ector genqal.
.
. . .
.
"Today more ihan two centunes later, With billtons of dollars flowmg
this way and tl!at; !here is a far greater need for inspectors general to sniff
otlt waste and fraud.
The CliniOn administration's proposals 10 "re!ny~~t" govem~e~t
.unfonuitately inclUde a plan to broaden the responSibtliues of these inditviduais 5o theY beeome, in effect. management consultants. As such, lhey
ip~um..bly would pay more attention to recommending improvements
.ratfd less ill attention to rooting out scoundrels.
~ On b81ancc, it's a bad idea.
.
·,. Some critics say these irivestigators have a body-count mentallly and
:.;have managers cowering, afnJid to innovate.
:-; ;; 1ohn GU:nn, Ohio's' senior senator, is a firm, longtime ally ,?f the
."inSpectors general. He still believes, "The IGs are a force for good.
:; : Indeed. Without !hem, same rascals might pick the federal turkey clean
·&gt;to the bones.

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iAkron Beacon Jouraal, Oct. 31

.

• · :Vem Riffe wanted it both ways last week on camprugn-finance reform.
:The House speaker Complained ·that a legislative conference committee
'IW stalled in iis effort to reconcile differences between House and Senate
~¢!ions of refonn. ~e also rejected a serious compromise proposal from
I(Jov. George VoinovJCh.
.: "There are several b'Oiibling aspects of the proposal. But that's what
7c6in~ises are all about, cutting the difference, living with somedting
:(hat ts less lhail ideal.
·
·. F9r years. the two parties have quarreled over the political conuibu;tlOhs of labor unions. ReiJublicans, quite rigMy. would lilce to see unions
:rlice the' same restrictions that corpomtions do. Democmts say no way.
• : · The governor bas found an inuiguing middle ground. Under his plan,
~lilons could continue to use dues for poUtical donations. Individual union
ilriembers, however, could refuse or limit the use of their dues. Most sig1iificaillly, Voinovich would ban "in-kind" conlributions by organized
,:ljlbor, such as,phone banks.
· . Voinovich also reached out to Democmts on ihe matter of contribution
'and spending·limits. He, in effect. adopted a scheme initiated by Riffe.
; · On improving disclosure, the governor has combined many promising

:pfOJ)OS8ls.

.

&amp;hoing other proposals in the Stalehouse, the governor would require
1:onuibuton of $100 or more to identif'y their employers. That. however,
~eaves a Jarse loophole, inviting the kind of political money laundering
ithal erode$ CO!Ifidence in government. Why not ask each contributor tQ
~dentifyrhis ot 1\er employer?
··
: Give the governor ,crediL His proposal may not be perfect But it does
)UIIOUIItiO ~ promisi~g framework. .
.'
• Voinovtch ha5 pomted the way. Willlawnlakers follow?

••

Berry's World

"AMA1.1~. il&gt;IERe'S ~A OK 'EVEF:'f'THIN6 EVER coNCEM:v sv 1t1~
~U Mo\N M\NP-~CCPi, OHOU~~·, ANTI·iRUST I.AWt;, 11

savings:'

,,,,,

•
Cincinnati

Grant says he has talked wuh
the heads of major botJ,Ied water
companies and lhey are interested.
He has received some cautious
encowagement on Capitol Hill, ~d
his idea is beginning to get at!l:ntion.
·
In the meantime, Grant interjects another interesting view into
the current clean water debate.
Only a very small percentage of
water entering a household is used
for drinking. By one estimate only
about 1 percent is used for drinlcing
or cooking. But the plan is to spend
more than $100 billion trying to
upgrade municipal water treaunent
facilities with the goal that every
drop of water reaching every
household will be as pure as possible.
''That really doesn't make much
sense," says Grant. "Assuming
that it is possible to reach this goal
of absolutely pure water for every
household ~and most experts say
that it's not possible unless the
technology improves and we spend
a lot more than the $100 billion
they are lalldng about- is it really
cost-effective to deliver drinking
quality water to every lawn sprinlder'l
"In many European counuies
they purify the water only to a level .
safe enough to bathe' in or wash
your clothes in or to brush your
teeth with," he added. "The water
used for drinking or cooking i~
either bottled or home filtered . In
the long run such a sr.stem wiD be
vastly cheaper and will be healthier."
Robert Wagman· is a syndicated writer for Newspaper Enterprise Assoc;lation.

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, showers lilcely. mainly
after midnight. Low near 50.
CDanee of rain 70 percent. Friday,
cloudy early with a chance of
showers, then becoming partly
cloudy. High in the mid-SOs.
Chance of ~n SO percent.
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¥11Jur Catdone, 72, of Racine
died Thursday, Nov. 3, 1993, at the
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Extended Care Unit in Pomeroy
foUowing an extended iUness.
Born April 5, 1921, in Brooklyn, N.Y., son of the late Domenick
and Antonette PassareUa Cardone,
he was a veteran of World War II
and a member of lhe Racine Baptist
Church.
In addition, he was a member of
the Racine Masonic Lodge 461,
helped purchase equipment and
organize the Center F1re Department where he was fJCe chief for
severaJ .years. He alsa w~ all a
custodian for Fort Frye Schools .for
several years and worlc.ed for Pennock Brother's Construction for 10
yearsHe· IS
· SUrVI.· Ve d bY, h.'IS WI'fe,
LuciUe Stiers cardone, tO whom he
was married March 7, 1944; a
daughter, loanne Barnes of Orlando, Fla.; a son, Paul Domoniclc

Health ...
Continued from Pa•e 1
Executives of several of the
companies in the' Alliance for Managed COmpetition readily acknowledge ihat they, too, are worried
about Clinton's plan to ~ap how
much health insurance premiums
would IJe .allowed to rise each year.
And they say the insurance purchasing alliances should be downsized ,!0 deal with the small busi- ·
n~ss market, as lhey would be in
lite managed competition bill sponsored by Rep. Jim Cooper, DTenn., and 49 others. Cooper
would· malce these cooperatives
mandi\I'Jry for businesses with I00
or fewer employees; Clinton ·would
put e¥iiy business with up to 5,000
worlcels in them. ·
Laurie Sullivan, Aebla Life &amp;
CasuaJty Co.'s vice president for.
federal government relations, said
her .company quit the HIAA
because "our business and ultimately our policy interests just
were DO longer in 'sync."
"We are gelling ready for what
we think is a different and better
world in terms of health care," she
said. "Managed care is very different from the fee-for-service indemnity business most of the HIAA
members are in."

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Aliolher conversation - unreI've seldom enjoyed a brouhaha · tudes about fatherhood have New York Times. He added: 1ated !)tit occurring in the middle of
'more than the oil slick created ~~~d over the last couple of "David·... let the guys down,,and . the Williams discussions ,;._gives
when Houston Oilers right tackle
.
he let hundreds of thousands of me ~op11, A 42-year-old friend, a
David Williams played hooky from
I was surprised at the un,willing- , fans Jkiwn." ·
divorced fa!J* sh&amp;!fing' c~y in
football recently to stay w1th his "
·
May)le that's why 1. wes really the same ~lty' as his ex,wife, tells
wife and newborn baby.
h.
.surprised When men 1 knew in me_that 1\JS }3.year-o~ son came .
Let me say right up front that I
ara
VeTSr,t ee
Williams' fathe~'s 'and grandfa- . home from school one day and
didn't immediately side with
·
.
.
!her's generations,- guvs I'd cer- dianked·hi.m for not mo~:f. away
Williams, ellCCJ!I on his decision to ness of young~ m~ ! talked Wt\11 tainly define as ••maclio'' .- sided Jike·his frien4&amp;' divorced'
.
be with his wife during her labor to fmd fault with Wil.liams, who IS - •
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• ,. •
• ·The fatlienald "One of dJem
and the birth - which the Oilers 27 years old. But I'D•never be awe fi 11~!~tplay~. ,.
Its JU~t .a just spends a·few weeks' in the
brass had ~~~:iven him per- if they really aided whh him, or · IX? . ·~- w
are QUC pn- sunimer'wilb his dad, ind lite other
mission 10 do, · ' g him to catch • th.oug.ht wom~n !"i~ht flay them onues? a 62·year-old · Kor~!l one sees his dad every couple of
up with the team later. While I alive 1f they didJ! t_glYC the po~- ~ar vela'an,
the ,1)18Cho-1st mOnths..I told.l!im,·SP,n•. there~s no
believe without argnmcnt thai~ ca,Jly c,omct response; 1\hOU~t 11
, lhe.group. · . · , m~. 11le ~~ way ·l'd move. You're t~e most
owe tlieir faiDilieS .lots of time all '!'JihiJU,st be a agn of,thcir,aenera; · moments of a child 8 life. ... you re imponant thing in my bfe, and
year-round, except !n circum- uon. a con~ to DaUas Cowboys nev~f_gonna set them moments nothlittr could kc:w me awa&gt;; fnlm
stances beyond theu control, . owner Jerry Jones, 51, whose ,son ba!ck. . ·
.
)1)11.""
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WilHanui'mikea fiat of money lo 's!lid he was··~:! lllfC;ihlilbl'a I . ', 0• ve~ and ,'!ver a'atn, .J heard . ,11ie l!oy's f8ther,• , u.Jarteleplay a very few football gamc1 a . bfe-or-death auuauon, hu father men wting like .the Alan Aida- vision broldcllter, e~J*ob!lbly
year. 1 didn't thiJi: it unreasonable . ·wo.uld choo~ him ovet football, .. typea a lot of women have bee!l nutke twice the mQIIOy ~· mate~ by ·
that the Oik:rJ ~· him 1D come althqugh "1t'd depend •on the ' sayinJthey~(at~whe~llt lnoviDgtoalalgeuiiarlcet,
.
play one of those games the day game." · ' ,,
. ·.'
·, ·' cornea to ·some
SJ, ,....,. having
, May ·)'Oti Jive lOng aild JllOilpCI,
after his son was born. ·
•
Also a hug removed from ldda) for the last 20 ~ears, 1 .~ Scot CoOper Willlallls. May you
And ·on&lt;:etheriglueous indigna- Williams' gc:n~rl!lion Ia Oilers' . ~~en badbunot oilly ·be~~ grow ID·be till and strong as
lion of cplwnnilts lll!d ~men~-' · off~ii~e ·!i~e c&lt;*;li B«!b Young, '.' . w., ~ I were al8o ~.-'Il l , your dad; and ma~ ile ~h y0u !he
tors o,yllo couldn't believe , the Sl 1 whcl compared ~ tililitioil. to ..
Its one ~;or ii llf*lt,· p~ ~responsibility to fami. audllcuy of those· ruffiana who being called up 10 war and l'efuling ~ o( ~ ~ P"-:- frtlil ~- ly anct ded1ca~n to work ...
would TEA:R A NEWBORN · to go. "My wife tol41110 lhe was 10S outatde lite walt•nL,.
room to the wisdolll t(l keep them iii balBAB'V .· RIGHT FROM HJS having' i1 baby and I llid, Honey, ex~inS binll wjtb
Wl\'1\a, ance~ .
. .,
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Sarafi O•eratreet Ia a atudl· FATHER:'S ARMS!IfJ, clc11re4 I've' s.~! 'to go play 'II football ' . ~~~ ~~ihfcr. for thom ro,comm~t away, we were left widi ·an absorb- game, "i oung,. a former 'NFL .
o time 10 a child undl it • catecl Writer tot ~ewsjlaper Ent· .
ing portrait of just how much alii- star, was quoted as saying in ~ grDVfD· ·.
··
. gerprile AllodatloD;
· :

The Daily Sentinel
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Pul:lU.hed ev«r aftemooa, MoDdlf thtouJb.

Fridly, 111 Cowt St., Pomeroy, Ohio by the .

t ·

Ohio Val loy 1'\Jblilhioa Coq&gt;~~~yholuiUmodia
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156.
Secoad clul J&gt;O'!'i• paid al Pumeroy,'Ohio.
Member: 'lbe Anoclated Preu, ud the Ohio
Newapipft Alaocill.lon, N'IJODII Adwrti.liiJ
Reprenlitltlve, Branhlm NeWJpl!p« Sales,

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C 11113 by N!A. Inc.

"Give me the

usual!~

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svesl':iuP:nollllATBS
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o.eVfOel:..........:.......................................st.60
11 c.m•·or Motor Rout•

Olio Moolll. ......:.............................. .........$6.93
0.0 Yw.:....................................... ,_,,$83.20

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Dlilj........................................,__;_,lS CeDII

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aot d!oirllll\0 por lho conler l""Y

remit Ia "dlreci!P The Dally Seotlael
oo a-111.,; 12.111&lt;1D!h'Milo. Crodll wW be

a~---"'!k
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,..-. haoa!i ..ntr ~ IIIVIiliblo.
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26 ..... ,.........:....................... ,........ .$&gt;43.16

52 w.a ...................,..; .. ,,.........:...........$14.76
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Send llddteaa dlanaet to The
Dolly S..Uoel, Ill Co\01 SL, Pumeroy, Ohio

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POSTMASTER~

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733 ·ThJrd Aveaue, New York.
10017. .

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Arthur Cardone

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Extended forecast:
Saturday through Monday:
Cold with snow flurries likely.
Snow squalls in the northeast.
Lows in upper 20s to mid-30s.
Highs in the 30s. Fair on Sunday
and Monday. Lows in the 20s.
Highs in the 30s Sunday and 40s
Monday.

---·Area deaths--

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Continued rrom Page 1
Chapman and Dooley; along with
Jill Johnson who was appointed to
the committee, wiD go bnck to the
. Meigs Local School Board of Education not only with a proposal for
lhe school bucks program, but also
to further discuss the schools' use
of local businestes for purchasing
materials and supplies.
Dooley noted that Jane Fry,
school boatd treasurer, is DOw compiling a list of items which the
schools buy so that local men:hants
wiU have an opponunity to bid for
the business.
With local businesses being
constantly asked for conuibutions
to the schools, the merchants associations are worldng toward getting
some program in place where more
school purchasing is done locally.
United Fund
Discussed at the meeting was
the newly organized United Fund
for Meigs County and its kickoff
Monday for a first fund drive. Dooley, 1reasurer of that group, spoke
about the advantages of a local
United Fund.
He said that conuibutions from
Meigs Countians· givilijl through
paymll deductions illlhell' employment now go into Athens or Gallia
County United Fund programs.
With the local Uruted Fund, that
money will be coming into Meigs
County. Local 'human service
agencies can 'now apply for funding
through the local United Fund.
Dooley disuibuted applications to
be used for that JllDllOSC.
Holiday Happenlugs
Christmas activities discussed at
the meeting included the open
bouse and parade to be held on the
Sunday .after Thanksgiving. It was
noted that Curly Wiles will be in
the role of Santa and that his secvices niay be available to local
men:hants for in-house.programs.
In cooperation with the merchants, Pomeroy Village Council
voted recently to "free" the meters
for the holiday season.
Promotional activities and
advertising programs were discussed during the meeting conducted by Joe Clark.

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d Strick/a d

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Merchants ...
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make curriculum decisions for
However, I am opposed to the
local school disuicts, it will only public's tax dollars being used to
set standards bY. which participat- ,fund religious schools, because I
ingcf.rograrns will be assessed. ,
believe it violales the Constitutionoals 2000 does not affect any al principle of the separation of
'T!
existing federal prognuns for edu- church and state. For most of our
.1.
cation, and states do not have to history, one of the unique things
participate if they do not :wish to do about American society has been
gressional District. where 32 per- so.
our public schools. Our public educent of adults, 2S years. and older, Dettactors ofth~ legislation invoke cation syslem, funded by the taxdo not have a high school diploma. the public's fear of federally payer, is the underlying sttength of
Much of this biD orisinated in bureaucratizing our public school our society. A well trained work1990 .under the collaborat~on of systems. This is simply not the force and an informed electpmte
then-President Bush and the case. By lhe second year Of the pro- · has kept our 217 ycar-old'democranation's governors. The Clinton gram, 85 percent of the funding cy intact in the midst of a world
administration adopted their reform will be gomg 10 1ocl!i school dis- where .many other nations have
principles set forth in 1990 and uicts. The fcderarrole will be pri- constantll struggled for the least
Cl"'lfted ·them inloGoals 2000.
marily in setting and asSessing 1 amount o viabiUty. In this coun1ry,
In the past, most efforts at edu- standards, a.od encourasfng s111te we have in the past grappled with
cation ri:forrn have dealt with only and local programs 10 meet their problems in education, but there
parts of the syslem. This endeav~ own guidelines.
has always been one constant - a
ts aimed at the whole, and will
Opponents of the bill in Wash· commitmeht 10 public education.
reinvigoratC state and' local reform inglim urged members of Cqngress
Abandoning this •cOmmitment
efforts, thiough grants to ihc stales to Sll{lport legis~oo which would by promotina so-called. school
to develop and applf.their dWII ~ P.rov1de , money for so-called . chou;e}s in~rentl~ unfair. to the
grams. Participat,ng stat~s will · 'schooL choice" pro~m,s. These lali·Jli!Yl,h,i!jCiiiJ:II!1!')' 'llld ul~ly
base programs on the seven goals Jli'08Ili1IIS give panents Vollche~ for ,to our cltilllren. ~chool choJCC S!fi~;
and:accompanying nltional educa- the dollar value of tHeir child's ply moves '!IJ'OIIIId resoun:es, Withtion standards.
"
education which· can be used out ~illg the underlying prob,
These standatd4 will. be set by toward the cost ot eductiion at .', !ems · ,like drugs. &lt;violence and
the National ·Education. ~tandards ·.· another $Chbol • publiC Ql' piivaie, ~lfuing test~· Oi!C !&gt;fAme~~ If!lpro~mentCounc!I.
,.
seculat or religiouS, Having myself 1ca's grca~t, tradi_tions IS 1ts publiC
This national pilnel will draw l.ll! chOsen .to have auended a w~ll- schools; let s J;ebwld them.
'
members from dlMiducalion, busi•"'' known Oliistiln.eoUese,Ttriin'
Government's obligation is to
ness and labor cOmmunities; from Jy underslal)d the value ·or a reli- . publ,jc !IChools and to taxpayers.
all over the U.S. It won't serve as a gious edtJCatiM.
Goals 2000 is b'Ue·to both.
"national school board."·It Will 11PJ
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Putting ·ymlr fanrlly before foOth~li

PA.

IND.

plined environment conducive
to learning.
It's hard to argue with these
goals, especiaily in the 6th Con-

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IMansfield ls2" I··

Goals 2·000: Fixing public education
WASHINGTON - Rather lhan
tear down our public education systern and use it as the whipping boy
for all of society's iUs, we need to
recognize that schools are having
to do more than they've ever been
expected 10 do.
. With more children from single·
parent homes and a society that has
grown to be more prone to violerice, the answer 10 improving
American education does not tie in
tearing down our public schools by
using tax dollars for private
schools. We need to commit ourselves to fixing our public schools.
That is the aim of legislation
passed by the House ofReP.!'lsentatives just last week. The bill, Goals
2000, establishes seven goals to be
met by public schools by the year
2000. They are:
•All children will start school
ready to learn;
•The high school gmduation rate
will go up 10 at least 90 percen~
•All children will demonslrale
proficiency in challenging subjects
at grades 4, 8 and 12;
• Programs will be available to
help teachers Improve their siriUs;
•American students wiD be ftcSt
in the world in math and science;
• Every American will be lilerare, and
·Every school will be drug-free,
violence-free and provide a disci-

By The Associated Press
Ohioans will awaken to a mild
and pleasant day on Friday; then
things will go steadily downhill,
the Nstional Weather Service said.
Readings around 50 degJCeS Friday morning will'be lhe warmest o(
the day. By evening, the mercury
will be dipping through the 40s and
snow flumes wiU be arriving in the
state, fOI'ecaflers said.
An advancing cold front will
spread snow showers and flurries
across the swe Friday night with
temperatures dipping toto the 20s.
The colder weather will continue

MICH.

stamps and allow the poor and
elderly to buy filtered bouled water '.
for drinking. and cooking. 'J1he
water would be supplied byrthe
commercial bottled water companies nationwide. and they would
redeem the water stamps for tax
credits.
"I think the government would
end up saving money in the long
run," Grant says. "How many of
the 900,000 people made ill by bad
water cath year are on Medicare or
Medicaid? I'm confident that what
the Treasury would lose in income
from the tax credits, they would
more than mate up in ·health care

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Ohio weather to get nasty this weekend ··.

• F'rlda)', Nov. S
AccU-Weather• forecast for

firm

The Dally Sentinel Pq1

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OHIO Weather

Pe»meroy-Middlepqrt, P-hlo • .
Thursday, November 4, 1993

Sprint foJin~er runs

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohfo

Cardone of Racine; six grandchildren; five sisters and one brother.
He was preceded in death by
one brother and one sister.
Graveside services will be held
Sunday at 2:30 p.m. at Smith
Chapel Olmelery, Route 83, Beverly. No visitation wiU be held.
Memorial conlributions may be
made to the Racine Baptist Church
or the Vetemns Memorial Hospital
Extended Care Unit
Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport is in charge of anangements.

Larry Thrley

,.

Larry Turley, 55, of Hartford,
W. Va. died Wednesday, Nov. 3,
1993, at the Veterans Adminisuation Hospital in Lexington, Ky.
Arrangements
will
be
announced by the· Foglesong
Funeral Home.
· ·
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More than lt2
of school
issues rejected

I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Local school officials who thought
voters might be more receptive to
income taxes than real estate levies
now know that is not necessarily
the case.
The Ohio Department of Education said only one of 29 school dislrict income taxes at stake in Tuesday's election was approved
"The income tax issues too,k
quite a hit," John Goff, an assislalll
state school superintendent, said
Wednesday ..
"I think there had been a bit of
trend to do a tittle bit better !here,
but this one obviously didn't follow
that uend at all," he said.
The only income tax that passed
was a 0.75 percent proposal in the
Pandora-Gilboa disuict of Putnam
County.
,
Statewide, voters rejected 56
percent of the 239 school money
issues on the fall ballot
The passage mte of 44 percent
was about average f~ recent years:
But it was the ftfth year in a row'
that voters have not approved more ·
than.50 percent of school issues on
fall ballots.
"I think voters are very cautious ·1
right now about voting more1
taxes," Goff said. For one thing,'
they may be apprehensive about the
prospect· of paying higher federal
taxes to finance a national health
care program.
The department said 29 districts
that are receiving state-guaranteed
loans ro avoid financial deficits
sulmlitted real estate or income tax
· proppsals Tuesday. Issues were ''
approvc,d in II of those dislricts.
Wealthier schools were not
immune from defeat. Voters in
Worthiilg~n ·approv~ ~ $7.2 mil- .
lion bond ISSue fo( butlding renovations, but rejected a $3.8 million .
bond plan for computers in class- "
rooms and a $9..5 million bond
issue to build a fourth middle
school.
' "That's a pretty well-to-Po dislrict," said Goff. a resident or the
Columbus suburb•. "There's been a .
great 'debate going .on thria~ut .
how taX money •Is used ... I dtink
are gelli!lJ more sophilticat· '
ed in terms ·of uying to analyze
w~t's aoing (Ill/.
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Oregon's Crater Lake was formed
when, some 7,000 years ago, the lop
pi a mounlajn collapsed during a vol·
·canic eruption, then filled with raiti·
. water.

3

Stocks
Am Ele Power .................. .35 718
Ashland Oi1 ........................ 34 3/4
AT&amp;T.. .............................. 56 3/4
Bank One ........................ ........ .37
Bob Evans ................................ l9
Charming Shop .................. l3 3/4
Champion Ind. .............. ..... 14 1{2
&lt;:;jty Holding ...................... 30 718
Federal Mogul ................... 25 3/4
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................44 1/4
Lands End ..........................42 318
Limited Inc .............................. 21
Multimedia Inc....................... .36
Point Bancorp .......................... 14
Rax Restaurant ....................... .03
Reliance Elecuic ...................... 17
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 16 3/4
Shoney's Inc...................... 22 3/4
Slar Bank ........................... 34 1{2
Wendy Int'l........................ l6 318
Wonhington Ind................ 17 !{2
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes providid by Advest
of Gallipolis.
.,

through the weekend.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 78 degrees in 1987
while ihe record low was 18 in
1991. Sunset tonight will be al 5:26
p.m. and sunrJse Friday at 7:05
a.m.
Around the nation
Suons winds continued across
the Northwest IOday as gales that
rocked Montana and Wyoming
tbreatened to bring the nation· s rust
blizzard to the upper Midwest
High i.inds Wednesday reached
as far south as Colorado, with gusts

of 90 mph reported in Browning,
Mont, and 80 mpb near Wheatland, Wyo.
A blizzard was expected to
strilt:e the upper Midwest, moving
from the Minnesota-South Dakota
border toward northern Wiscatsin.
The heaviest snow threatened
l1le storm system's cold northwest
IWtlt, from northeast North Dakota
10ward Dulutli, Minn.
Scattered showers and thunderstorms will develop along the middle and lower Mississippi Valley as
part of the same storm front
1n the Nonheast, sharply colder

..----Local briefs------.
House damaged in.blaze
A t,.ong B&lt;;'llorD residence sustained heavy damage in a struc~
ftre thiS monung.
According to Racine Fire Chief John Holman, ftrefightcrs from
the Bashan and Racine volunteer ftre depanments were summoned
to the Charles Hensley residence at 51559 Rainbow Ridge Road at
8 : 17~~
.
The upstairs of the two-story frame house was totalled in the
blaze, Holman said, adding that the downstairs received some wa1er
damage.
The probable cause of the fJCe was elecuical, Holman added.
The occupants were in the home at the time of the blaze but were
not injured, Holman reported. A Bashan ftreftghter, Randy Friend,
was lrcated at the scene by the Racine squad.
Four trucks and 13 fuefighters from the Racine VFD and two
tnicks and five men from the Bashan VFD responed, Holman said.
Firefighters were on scene for about one hour and 45 minutes.
The propeny was owned by John Evans, he said.

Deer-vehicle accidents probed
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Department reponed
four recent deer-vehicle accidents. No injuries were reponed.
John R. Dunn, Lowell, was on SR 681 east of Tuppers Plains
Tuesday around- 3:30 p.m. when he struck a six-point buck. The
1990 Dodge pickup truck, owned by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, sustained moderate damage m the collision. The deer had to
be destroyed.
George Lowery. New Lima Road, HarrisonviUe, was northbound
on SR 143 Tuesday around 6 p.m. when he struck a small button
buck. Light damage was listed to his 1988 Oldsmobile.
Franklin Wolfe, Racine, was westbound on SR 124 Tuesday
around 6:05p.m. and struck a deer that ran into the path of his 1992
Chevrolet S-10 pickup truck. Moderate damage was listed to the
front of lite truck.
.
Erma J. King, Coolville, was traveling on SR 681 Wednesday
around 3:02p.m. when she sb'Uck a deer that ran into the roadway.
Moderate damage was listed to her 1988 Chevrolet Corsica

Deputies investigate B&amp;E
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department is investigating a breaking and entering that occurred at the Tuppers Plains School late
Tuesday afternoon.
According to Sheriff James M. Soulsby, attempts were made to
enter the doors on the upstairs room. An investigation is continuing,
Soulsby said.

Man transported, to ORC
A 30-year-clld Middleport man was transported to Orieni Reception Center after having his probation revolred by lhe Meigs County
Coun of Common Pleas.
Tommy Quillen was arrested Oct. 18 by Syracuse Police on driving U~Jder the influence, resisting anes~ driving under suspension
and destruction of propeny.

Commission ...
Continued rrom Page 1
- Approved · the following
uansfers: $2,000 from the Counly
Infirmary's contract services fund
to its SU£ply fund; $1,100 from the
Board of County Commissioner's
payroU fund to its equipment fund
and $4,400 from its payroll fund to
the oontract repair fund .
- Paid weekly bills of
$69,821.84.
- Approved hiring Gerald
Eblin of Eblin's Electric 10 upgrade
wiring in the recorder's office and
treasurer's office for $750 and
$250, respectively.
- Approved purchase of a
refrigerator and clothes dryer for
$1,058 from Rutland Furniture.
The appliance are to be used for the
county infirmary.
Present were Commission President Robert Hartenbach, Vice President Janet Howard Taclreu, Commissioner Fred Hoffman and Cleric
Gloria Kloes.

air was expected to return, with :
clouds above northern New Yorlc '•
and Vermont and suillbine funller 1
IIOUth. Warm weather may llllb a :
corneba!:k in Florida, w~ frigid :
temperatures this week broke •
dcc:alb-old ~.
;
Temperatures were forecast In :
the 20s lnd 30s in the ~ the ;
.40s and SOs in the PacifiC North- ~
weat, the 30s and 40s in New Ens- :
land aad the 60s and 70s in 111011 of .
California.
•
The nation 's high temperature ;
Wednesday was 93 degrees at Fall- •
brook. Calif.
:

EMS responds ·'
to six calls
•
•
Units of the Meigs Countf
Emergency Medical Service
responded to sill caliJ for llliJtanc!
overnight. Units responcfirig
include:
·•
Wednesday - 10:22 a.m. S~­
cuse to Elmwood Apartmenta tor
Vicltie Boso who was treated ai die
scene; 2:40 p.m. Pomeroy lo
Pomeroy Pike for J.R. Blackwell
who was uansported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; 8:43 ~m.
Pomeroy to Pomeroy Pilce for
Mitch who was transporte to
VMH.

Thursday- 12:07 a.m. Rudaild
to Main Street for Dolly Cleltlld
who was transported to Hol~q
Medical Center; 3:16 a.m.l'llmeiDj
to South Fourth Avenue in Midllle~
port for Rhonda Stover who w-.s
treated at the scene; 8:20 a.m.
Bashan and Racine volunteer rue
de, .nments and Racine sqi!IICI"ui
Rainbow Ridge for a suucture Cite:
The Racine squad 1reated ·rwefiS!Jt~
er Randy Friend at lhe scene.

..

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL '
Wednesday admissions
Clarence Putts, Midd1coort.
Wednesday discharges Mabel Pearman, Middleport.

. ..

Holzer Medieal Ceater · ·:
Nov. 1 discbaraea= Paul Saunders, Jonathan Atkins, Rebecca
Waters, Betty Rodgers, Sheryl .
Gilbert and Paul Smith. ·
· • ·
Nov. I birth: Mr. and M~s.
Buddy Malone, daughter, Paaiot. :
Fuss 1l1ld Fealliera
. ..
The long, beautifultrmn of the peacock is not its actual tail, which. is
comparatively short. The resplendent
plumage consists of eloiiJatecUeath·
ers that grow on the lower part of the
back above the tail and extend far
beyond it.
SPRING VAll[Y c;~JEr~A
446·4524

7

Correction
Bob Gilmore was appointed to
Middleport Village Council at last
month's meeting to ftll a vacancy
created by the death of William
(Bucky) Walters. It was incorrectly
reported in a story on election
results that he ftlled the vacancy of
Jack Sauerfield. Satlerfield still
serves on Middleport Village
Council. He did not seek re-election. The Daily Sentinel apologizes
for the error.

COLONY THEATRE
lOHIGHT

THEGOODSONR

MACAU~Y CULKIN IN
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARllHC FRIDAY
TOM HANKS, IIEG AYAH If

SLEEPLESS IN SEATILE Po
SHOW TillE
FRI. 6 SAT. 7:30 6 9:30
SUN. TliRU THURS.
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION $2.00
446-®23

•

544 RICHLAND AVE. • 593-8697

7 Day Anniversary Sale
ng

Prices
.
Slashed,........

as low as

.

-FREE

·~&amp; Dr,lnk
Salarctay&amp;
Sanckry

5.99%
'

FREE VIdeo Player
With Parchase of
Vehicle FrldCif.

Great
Deals all
week longl

'-iSaturday &amp;

••
•

HOURS 9 am to 8

•

•

,.

�November

. Sports

Th~

·

Eastern to host Alexander in battle for
This week at Eastern High
School Dave Barr's Eastern Eagles
have die ~ity to claim a part
of the Trt- Valley Conference
Hocking River tide with a win over
guest Alexander.
Last week, senior speedster Pat
Newland scored three touchdowoa
as the Eastern Eagles posted all
their points in the first half, en
route to a 31-6 Tri-Valley Cooference Hocking River Division victory over the Miller Falcons.
The vicoory by Eastern (3~1 !n
the TVC) keeps them well wtthin
striking dislallCC for a share of the
TVC Hocking River Division tide
with Alexander (4-0 in the TVC).
The title race will be decided Friday as Easrem hosts Alexander in,
the fmal game of the year. Alexander clinched at least a share of the

title with a 22.7 win at Southern IO·zard run with. 9:00 left in the .
last weekend. An imminent win by hal, Kaylor's extra-point kick was
Trimble over MillC:C w®!d actually on the lll!Kk. as ~ICI'IIled 19-0,.
throw the TVC ude drive _Into _a
Newlan~ mtshandled ~ . kick,
three-way tie and· result m tn- only to ~ve tt rewVered by Eagle.
champions.
.
teammate Ryan Buclcley, who went
Should Eastern lose, Alex wms on for a 79-yard kick retun1 tol)Choutright
·
down.
.
. . .
Friday, Eastern b~tc? out o~ the . . Newland· also pic~ed off a
gates early. as Pnme nme Miller pass ~~Dd returned, 1172 yards
Bonzo" Newland found the end fpr his third touchdown of the
zone from 37 yards out 81 the 9:08 · night. The PAT run failed.
.
mark in the ftrSt q~. The .kick . 'T he rushing leader for the
by Randy Kaylor failed, and ~t- ·· Eag~e'S was Newland with sev_en
ern led 6-0. The Eagles strwct ~ames f()r 93 yards. Arbaugh fmagain at the 4:35 mart in the fust , ished with 9 carriesfor 32 yards.
quarter, as ~ewland led .,a· 53-yard · Robert Reed was 2 of 8 passing ·
foot race to the end.zone. The PAT for 22 yards and had three interceprun failed and Eastern led 12-0.
tions for Eastern. Brian Bowen,
In the' second quarter, Eastern who also ra~ the Eagles' off~nse,
continued their offensive domi- was _0-3 passmg and bad one mternance. Wes Arbaugh scored on a cepuon.

week, Sou~,pul r.ogethera drive

that resulted m a score by Aaron
Drummer, the SHS ·WOrkhorse, on
a O!IC-YII"!.dr!ve.llflc Jones booted
t!t~ extra-pomt ktck throug~ the
upnghts and the score was ued at
7·7.
.
. .
A defe!ISIVe struggle highhghted the rest of the half and Alex held
the six-point lead.
A scoreless third quarter again
saw good defensive play from both
sides, however, Southern conllnually kept Alex in the hole.
At one point, Southern had a
second and goal from the seven,
but a run and two pass plays failed.
An Alexander penalty gave SHS
another chance, but that pass also
did not hit its target. On third
down, Billy Jones ·caught what
looked to be a touchdown, but
came down well out of the endzone, incomplete.
, One Southern drive resulted in a
fumble, which was recovered by
Bobby Meelcs.
Drumme,r led Southern with 20
carries for 100 yards, and WiUiams
had 7 for 35. Cleland added four
for!O.
Trenton Cleland passed 30 times

S~ fiir 64 yards.
Leadmg recetvers were Jones
(2-18), Drummer (2-16) and Cass .
Clel:and (2-32).
. Drummer led t~e SHS offe~se
wtth 1_0 taclcles, _while Jamey SIDI!IJ
had rurie, and etght each by Jamte
Evans, Donald Sha~fer, and Ca;&gt;s
Clt:land. Sam Sham and Cr~1g
Kmght each had seven. Sm1th,
Ryan Adams, and Tucker WiUiams
each had sacks and ~rummer a
caused-fumble, and Sham the fumble recovery.
.
Federal Hocking has been a
team on the move. Since their
glamour yean of the early 1970s,
Federal has slipped to 'mediocrity
on an annual basis. Mter a 1-9 sesson last year, Federal is on the way
up, but much lilce Southern, doesn't
show it in 'the won-loss ·column
where they show a 2-7 mark overall and 1-3 league slate. ·
Two weeks ago, the Lancers
nearly played spoiler ·to·Eastern's
homecoming. Eastern Trailed 20-'
13 at one p&lt;iint and had to rslly'late
in the game for a 28-20.win . .
Federal runs basically out of aT
set with Tim Farley a 6-1, 175pound junior as the signal-caller.
and completed

•1

;ag~ins~ archrival-Bel-pFe
seconds or the final score would
have been worse.
Belpre is led o~ the ground by
tailback Eric Williams, a 6-foot·l,
167-pound junior who· has gained
618 yards in 107 carnes. Quarter'
back Todd LoreniZ also can get the
1
;
Eag
es.
'll
'"'~"
.~
n
to.th
te
t
J'ob
done on the ground.· The 6-0,
· • .Belpt;e wt ''I"'U 1
~ con .s
• with 54 record overilll and 1-2 m 174-pound .senior has gained 308
: the Tri. valley Conferepce•s Ohio yNds in 66 carries.
.
· Ri~r Division. The Golden ~les
Belpre can also -iio to the air
are coached by RsJph Holder;. who when they have to, Lo.rentz has
is in his ,33rd year as the hesd,man complete4 S6 of 123 for 932 yards
· at the WashingtOn ~ounty-Sc\1001.
and )-hree touchdowns, ~s, favo~te
: Holder'haS more th,n .2()() wins recetvers have been Wtlliam.s wnh
: to hit' fredil and has won numerous IS catche~ for 164 yard~. and
· : confcrenc~ championships.' Only Heslh_P.el!ms (1~-300). · · ·
• 1 o ofi Holder'S'-tcams have sufMetgs IS co~mg off a 3$-7 loss
.: Wlosing se8sons, In lhC ~ 1.0 . last ~.eek te V_mton County That
-~
the Goldei\'Eagles .~av~· a SC?re IS 0 0! •ndicauv~ of the game.
~~4 ~inning pen:cntage, Wlhnmg Wtth II mmutes left m the contest,
79 games and losing 2S. . .
·, th~ ~uders W!7C down 14-7 and
• Belpre~s· o'nl' win in the divi· • drivmg for the tymg seore but cap1e
· : sion came over Wellston 14.-12. ' up sho!(_on a fourth and one P!ay.
: Last week·llie Golden t;ag!es lost ' ~ Vikings·then. scaled 21 pomts
• toNelsOnviUe 27"2l.: ln ~-.game 10 th_e finaiiO mmu~ofthec~n: Belpre· gave 'up 290 yards rushing test mcluding the final seven With
. : to junior standOut Justin Gail. Two 28 seconds le(L
'·
.
weeks ago, Vintop County relied
Most of the people that _haye folover Belpre 46: 13 ~ a 11 amst the lowed the Maraud~rs wtll agr~e
· : Vikings, Belpre scored m the r~ that head coach M1ke Chancey s

a

ears

crew is' im improving team. Ail
y~ long the Marauders have not
quit and they have an-outstanding
attitude.
.,
Fullback- Scott Peterson led the
Mar1111der Jlrcund attack last week
with 11 carries for 95 ya(ds. Israel
Grimm, playing in place of the
injured Jered Hill, picked up 34
yards iii 11 carries.
Sopl!omore quarterback Brent
Hat\'S9Jl continues -to improve hitting eight of 17 in. the air for 94
yards:·Chad Duncan pulled in three
passes for 45 yards, David Fetty
had his best game of the year with
three catches for 21 yards. Reath
Hudson caught two passes for 28
yards.
Twelve seniorS
be putting
on the maroon and gold for the last
time. They include Chad Duncan,
Jeremy Grimm, Jason George, Tom
Cremeans, Heath Hudson, Mitch
Jacks~ Scott Peterson, Jake
Kennedy, Mau Oark, Jeff Dowell,
Chad Deskins, and· Shawn Cremeans.
KiGk-off for the season's final
:ontest is 7:30

will

G'ovr
SPENCER OSBORNE
Staff Writer .

By

they shoulc! have more c.ompany time$ the Falcons' second-half
this week with any of at least six total.
- WbiiDPcd again.
people draped all over them. But
Serlior Tommy Mayes has been
: FOr the secorld time in its histo- on the other band, the Falcon~ may the Falcons' go.to running back in.
: ry,, ,River Vall~y·s football team . focus op the ~weep from taJ!back thanat~mo~~
.•·HotlW
his'!g26etayardsu·ilorn•.ten.. t
' bltw lead'at hOme, and the result Jasoo .JenkillS, wbicll may _Open up
·~·
"~·,.
· ·Wll ·the same as it had been all r the mi4!iUe for Cook and Denney. . the Wirt County·game put him sec- ~·
those·times the Raiders fell behind
Semor quarterback Paul Covey, ond to freshman Dale Johnson, .
• carl -a loss.
'
whose 94-yard aerial .effort.last who led ·Fatcon rushers with 28·. .
• :iut more was lost than last Fri- week was the closest.any Ratd~ The passing.game barely moved
; day's game against Coal G~ve, , has ~orne to the ~entury IJ!Brlc.·tn the ball f~ with its 36 yards on
: whicll the Hornets won 50-14. The passmg yardage this y~. wtll ha~e 3-for-10 passing 'by senior Jason·
• Raiders frittered away their last one last shQt to reach 11 ~r puss 11. King.
~ chance win more games than last He threw the Ratders s~cond
In their few triumphs, the
· year' 5 3·7 club. Now they must be touc~down pass and the club s fifth Raiders have blanked their oppo•8
to58 of the season to Coot
nents 14-0 in t1ie firSt Quarters and
sconng
•
held off thelf fl"'•
· content
mart with matching that ream
The Falcons, 27-6loseB to Wirt
..,... 21-17 af.rer !haL
.
The Raiders (2-7) will host County in their home finale last Their maq~, losses have shown
; Donnie Van MeteJ's Wah am a week, have. thro!lg~out the _season impolenCC tl!rougbout, especially in
: White Falcons (4-S) in .the .season struggled ~·th wmrung co~IStendy the second quarters, periods in
• finale Friday hoping to snUff a los- (see the hneup ·chart), whtch coat .which they were ouiScored 77-0.
: ins sll'Cik that has grown -to five them a shot at the West Virginia
Ratlnp report
" · : proes. while the F~cons are look- Class A playoffs, but there have
The OHSAA computer ranking
· mg 10 fmish 5-S sgam. ,
been sonie ~nstlll!ts.
.)• !'eJlO!I.~ Ri~er Va!leY stiU at33rd
l)e(eulve expedatlciiiS
Their VICtOrieS have been ·m DIVISion 11 S Repon 8.
• River Valley head cOllch Jack marked by tough defense in the · Other Soufl!eas• Ohio Atblet·
; James told hiS troOpS Monday thai rlfSt three quarten and 'heavy SCCll'• jc ·League teams in Region 8' and
. ; he expected the Falcons to run ing in the fii'St quaner. In fact, tl)e'. their rankings are Gallia Academy
•. ,. either a S-2 or a S-3 defense, but FaiCOlls scored more points (42) in (eight}l). Jaek~n (23rd), Athens
: ~ van Meter said he p!an$,to run a 4- the opening CJUII'lttl of their vieto- (34th) lind Wllll'CCI ~ (3Sib). In
·i 4 defense' despite having to do ~ than their opPoneou had (39). Div.!siop l's ~:Jion . 3, SBOAL
. ~- some shufllina a team he said is throughout thoie g1111ca. HDW~~ver, entnes Lqgan,
~ fell 10
'l "between illnea llld injury."
tbCit lOsses bilye been the ?f.1P081~. · 21st and 35th, rapeetively,,
· • rr Raiclet'fullbecks Adam Den- The Falcons have more pomts (2S) . The rest~River. Veney s oppo: ; ! ne and ~ike Cook ·found the , in the final quarters of~ gantes nents·~ '!Jell' ranld~gs are ~1911
IOUih on 'the arOund sgainst . than they scored in the previous (fltst' lll D1vision ~I s .R~$ton 1!) .
~
huge clefenders the Coa! Greve . three frlrnes of thole ~ (21). Coal_ Q~ve (13th m .QivtSJon IV. s}
"Hornets "'-they play~ hke the The_losses also show tticlr.Coes · Reg_t_~n JS), Oak Hill (18th !n.
' ·Milnsten of the Midway that they ICOI'ing 19 points In·the Bnthaifto Re~on 15), South P~int (!9th!"
·'
ble in their collective fashion .· \vahama'• IS bul ro~ng back Reg.ton ·tt) and Metgs (34th m
Cment- Sel!l ·out last .week, after halftime to score 93, three Reg~on 11). •

..!.a:',

a

w

: : ; fn8

', : fi!

•

~

.I

.,

·":

.1

•

a

Th1,1rsday, November 4, 1993
.
pag-....4

division·tit-e

· yards WJd one IOuehdown, while broke ~/De bjg 'runsdoaild, Ale~
Rosier· carried 'ten ·times for 26 som~ 'btg numben wn to
.
. yards. Roa!er' is m~e o~ a pow~r · open a 13-7 pme.
. .
player, while Roa_s IS .\lutck to htt . · Soudjern, s defense.tept Alex ~
, the hole and qutck tn .the ope!! t!J~. hole. ~~~~of the rught. .~.
Jield. Ross and ~·s Newlanil · w1th a ~lllllar style, perbap~ some- ·
· ·are COIJ1il!UMie ~Ia~. ..,
.what q~ck(:r, hOpes to dO~ 88!11C·
1
.Al~~er _poses a clua1 threst.
. Muchofthellll!etl)equickA!ex
. much lilce most goo4 reams. They hne proteeled.WIIt!"er, &amp;Jthoilgl) .he
, can~~ !he.bill ,well:with quarter- . w~ sack.ed.three Ul'lles._Alex ~~es
back liric Wagner .at the helm: He on Its qwctness ~f lhe hne.to niilkeks
:ovent4-9 ~t week for 53 yards and hoi~ and the qwckness of tts '*:
•s a~h~g i;iJe 1000-yard mat:k toh.tt ti!e holes..
,
.
as lie did.81 Meigs the year before.
Allm all, this should~ qutrc a
Wagner •s also a talente,d TUnner game.
. ,, ,
.
and a sman player, much m~Qntrol · ..Bill! _satd,_ It s great to ~no,w
of the Alex offense.
r
gomg mto thi$ final. game thatc we
Although Alex racked up some . have a chance to wm or share ~
good numbers overall 81 Southern, . IC!I!Iue. We've gpt lhe OJ!P;OrtUD!I)I,:
those s~ y&lt;ould ~ve been 111uch ,. and we are capab!e of playmg'With
m~ diminished !'illhout the lastS- ' Alexander. '!fe v,e got to come
6 mmutes !&gt;f,the giiiQe, Where Ross ready,to P~Y- .
·
·
••
Game ume ts 7:30 at Easrem.

. .

Feder~I~,· Ho·cking
backs, Chris ~wis SOI!ICtimes:gets

the call and gJv.es Fedei'al three·sets

or good, strong legs in the backfield. . . ·
.
.
Each of tie 'backs have good
credentials as
go along
Daniel
Ke11neth

H~nt, .'YhO seems tp be Farley's
pn~ target
Fnday's game should~ a good
game, !&gt;ut Southern ~opes it can
en~ the season on.a high note· and
brmg ~e.lhe WID from Stewart.
pam~ ume IS 7,:30.
,. . 1 "

tin NHL action,
.

The

.

•.

'

;D~spite di~atiled list, Maple

. Leafs keep
piling up·victories
.
,.....
.
~
· By The Alsoclated Press
•
Tb~ Toronto MaPle Leats have the NHL's ~st
· record and one of its loogest injured lists.
· · . Right wirig Ni.Icolai Boric~evsky became the·
~"1~ Maple Leaf casualty Wednesday nil!ht when
~he ~ a rib and susllintd an !lbdominal injury in
: . a6-3vJCtory oveitheFloridaPanthers. .
ae. _, hlut when he was cbec,t.ed into the boards
~ in the fii'St periOd Borscbevsky RitWned to the bench
;...,for !he start of the second period and 1oo1t ·several
..... hott shifts., but was unable to continue. He was
:::tatcn to a hospital by ambulance and tests were
' ·,scheduled for today to determine the extent of the
.. njury.
.
.
, ·
,
;.-:: "toronto improved to 11· ·1-1, but its .lineup is
:.:;already olissing defenseman Todd Gill (groin mus• "(:le), ~ forwards Pete Zerel (back) and Rob Peanon
'"~).All are out ~finitely.
·
:: .Tbst hasn't prevented the winning from ~=Gntinu::--1ng as, Dave An'dreychuk scored twi~~~ ~nd D9ug
,..Yilmour collected four assists in Floridli's firSt ·game
, n Capada.
•,
: Andreychuk has 12 goals in the 13 games and his
;eight power-play goals fead tlie league.
' ·
_; ''Guys have been going ilown right and left but,
;.:regardless of who we put in the lineup, we have a
~-high enoll(!h ~onfidence level to'believe we can win
1
;:;!lOYgame, 'Andr¢ychultsaid '···
... Wendel Clark, Glenn Anderson, Dave Ellett and
:...Ken Baumgartner also scored for Toronto, which bad
' :four goals in the second period.
.,.; -Jesse Belan.s;er, Jamie Leach and Brent Severyn
·:SCored for Florida. '
··
:: In other games Wednesday night, it was: Pitts·
-~burgh 6,'Buffalo 2; Calgary 6, Hanford 3; Montreal
·1, Tampa 'Bay 0; the New York Rangers 6, Vancou;· ver 3; St. Louis 3, Winnjpeg 0; Ottawa 7, ·Edmonton
7'3; Los Angeles 3, New Jersey 2; and An8.heim 5, ·
: Dallas 4.
·
'·7 Penguins 6, Sabres 2 .- Jaromir Jagr had two
· goals and two assists as the Penguins snapped the
' Sabres' unbeaten Strealc at four games in a neutral·
...site game 81 Sacrsrnento, Calif. Jagr's first goal carne
•.two minutes into the second period and tied the game
...2-2. Joey Mullen scored on a rebound ·ofa shot by
- Jagr4:05later.
.
'· PiliSburgh's Mario Lemieux, who ~ored his firSt

.

'

~

F "

goal of the seasoi! Tuesday night agamst San Jose,
sat out with back problems.
.
Flames 6, Whalen 3 - Joel OUo had three of
Calgilry's four third·period goals and Mike Vernon .
stopped 37 shots. Gary Roberts, Paul Ranbeim and
AI Macinnis also scored for the Flames. Dcfenscman
James Patrick, acquitCd from the New York Rangers
on T!iCS&lt;Iay. had two goals for lhe ~· ' .
·Cauadleus 1, Lllhtnlng 0 - Vmcent DamphO\ISSe'.s first-periQII goal .was all !)le scoring .as
Patrick Roy registered.his .second shutout in. his last
four siarts. He made 37 saves in his 22nd career
shutoUt. The yisiting Lightning outshot Montreal by
16.
Raugera 6, Canudts 3 - Steve Larmer scored in
'lis Rangers debut as the Canucks lost on the road for
· the first time this season. Larmer, obtained from
Chicsgo in a three-way deal with Hartfon;J on Tuesday, !l)ade it 4-0 as the Rangers took a 6-0 lead after
two periods. Sergei Nemchinov had two goals fot the
Rangen.
Blues 3, Jets 0 - Brendan Shanahan had two
gnats and Curtis JOSCJ)h made 29 saves as the visiting
Blues won their foui1li in a row. Tolly Httac brQk(: a
scoreless tie seven minutes into the second period.
Senators 7, Oilers 5 - Russian rookie Alexei
Yashin had three goals .and two assists as Ottawa
held off Edmonton, which .rallied to tie the game S-S.
. Yashin's ninlh goal of the season was the game-win· ner. Former Oilers defenseman Norm Maciver had
one goal and assisted on all of Yashin's goals .
Shayne Corson and defeilseman Igor Kravchuk
scored power-play ~oals 40 seconds. apan to tie the
game S-S ~fore vistting Ottawa pulled away.
Kings 3, Devlls-2 - Dave Taylor broke the
game's fmal tie with 4:16 to play and Wayne Gretzkr had a goal and an assist to up his league-leading
pomt total to 31. Kelly Hrudey had 52 saves for lhe
Kings.
Mighty Ducks 5, Stars 4 - Anatoli Semenov
had two goals aod two assists, including the gamewinner with 1:30 to play as the Mighty Ducks ended
a six-game losing strealc. Garry Valk tied it 4-4 on a
pass from Semenov with 3:13 left to play. The visit. ing Stan, who led 2-0, took a 3-2 lead with 1:1 I'left
in the second period on Mike Modano's 12th goal of
the season, but Mart Ferner lied it less than two minutes into the third with his ftrst NHL goal.

;u.s. Olympic luge team finds huge
:surprise in attack by,neo-Nazis
•By JIM UTKE
AP Sports Writer
;;.: Th~ U.S. Olympic· ~uge te!lm
.,.didn't travel·· a few tho~~S~Rd miles
:io fmd a cruSade: Even so, it found

"I've been coming here for four
years now, and Duncan has ~en
coming over since the early 1980s.
We .never encountered . anything
like this.
.·
- them.
. .
"Now I'm not naive," said1Pip,,. Last Friday evening, a half· Ieins, the 1992 junior wQrld cham;.doren .of the sledders had gone to pion. "I know racism is a Jiroblem
•have a few beers 'al a' bar in the m-the Stares, too. But penondlly,
~town· of O~rhof;
.th~y 'were . th,e worSt thing that ever hap~ed
;tralilln~il'%ihaf£use'd t6"be"East''• urme.lil'IIQme was -somebodydriv•
';Get:mal)y:. Before thp night was ,ill_g by ip &amp;\car, rolli~g do;wnilhe
:throllgh, a gang of rieO-Nazi s!cin- )Yindow tind'yelling, "Nigger!'' and
•headS m.·eveniualiy numbered IS then driving on.
·
.
~would intimi~te team member
·',' This," he paused, "was
:Gordy . Sheer: who Is Je,wish, . ~~.Much, milCh worse." · i
;repeatedly ins~lt team member "· P..olice. a{riYed an hour later,
'Robert Pipkins, who is black, alid arrested five of the skinheads, aild
~unch anchtolllp Duncan Kennedy, told the .Americans .to Jack them,a two-time Olyn)pian who tried to
s~l.ves in lheir rooms and take
;distract th~m long enough to let down any signs identifying thenf.as
•Piplcill~ get out the!·door..
U.S. lugers. Sheer stacked the fur·
- "SllrllriSe!IZ", Pipkins said dur- nirure in his riiom sgainstthe door.
: ing a tefephcine interview Tuesday Pipkins barely slept.
• from lhe team's hotel in Austria.
"We feel more secure now that
~ "Totally.
· ·
'
we're in Austria," he said, "and
~
'
:

where

~ Rivef~Valley
to ;hoSt Wahama
.
.

.

Farley does g!&gt;Od j~b on the uansition as does 'trenton Cleland
and'hli can throw the ball much lik~
the Southern
Federal
the ground,
and Keith

~ Meigs to end season Friday
. By DAVE HARRIS .
• The Meigs Maraudet_s wtll try
· and end the 1993 foot~! sesson
on an up note when the Marauders
·travel to Belpre F,iiday c\oening to
; iilngle with the arcMva1 Golden

~VC

Receiving leaders for· Eastern
were Scou Golden with one cau:h
for II _yards. RyiiJI ~uckley also
hauled m ~-J!'Il!S for U yards. .
. Defenstvel)' for Eas~. Charlie
Bissell ~ wilb 1,2 la!:kles.; Randy
Kayl?r futished_Wllh 10 tsc£1es and
two mt~rceptlons , Golden and
Jared Rtdenhou_r each had n\Jie
tacilles. B~ey added etght tack·
les, anci.Mike Laughery had seven
stops for Easrcrn. .
Matt Ross, the •Spartans 5-11,
168.pound SOJiho~ tailback, and
semor fullback Matt Ros~er have
eq11ally shared the spotlight for
Alexa.nder. _R osier was the key
for;ce m Alexander's drubbing of
Trililble earlier in the year,liowever, he Wll$ll't much·of~ lac19r last
week as Soud)em shu! him down.
Ross rush~d 22 um~s for 180

Southern to conclude season Frida·y ~s.
Last Friday, great running from
the Alexander backfield and a
strong fourth quarter allowed the
Alexander Spartans to break open a ·
close 13-7 contest late in the fourth
quarter, when the Spartans scored
nine points to defeat the Southern ·
Tornadoes 22· 7 at Roger Lee
Adams Memorial Field in Racine.
The final score was not a true indi·
cation of the game's actual close'
nes{.his week, Southern tries to
push toward a more respectable
record of 4-6, however,-that. mark
does not truly indicate the high
level of play Southern ·hils 'exhibited throughout the season. Given a
break or 2-3 points here and there,
it well could have been a 7-3 season.
.
.
,
Friday's contest was actually
decided in the last five minutes of
the game.
Alexander, clinching at least a
share of the tide in its division, is
ondefeated -in the .Hocking River
division of the Tri-Valley Confer·
ence and 5-4 overall. Southern
dropped to 1-3 and 3-6 overall.
: Aitheendofthe first frame last
•

Daily. S_ent~·el

1993

ScoreiJoard

'1

:
:

'

- • NHL • ...::... .'

•:

EASTERN CONFERENCE

•'

W L T Pu; GFGI\

Alii..Wphi• ...... 10 3 0

N.Y.IW!ps .... I s· I
Nowloney ....... I 3 0
w.......... ...... 6 7 0
Florido ... ........... 4 7 !
N.Y.!Wndeft... ! I I
Tampa Bay ....... 3 10 1

•

•
'

20 60 &lt;46

17 52 41
16 41 28
12 42 50
11 39 44
7 31 44
7 30 41

Norello.utlll•loloo '
Monloal ........... I 3 2 II
~ ........ . I 4 · 1
18
~-··----···· 6 6 1 13
·a - .:,........ 4 4 4 12
Bulfolo...- ....... 4 I l ' • , 9
OU.wo .............. 3 6. 2 , , ,
llullord ..... ...... 3 10 I
7

'TEXAS ,RANGERS: E•;..l.lcd ·moit
t994opliooa~CiioiiJ...,CIUificlder.
Nll&amp;onallap

Atlantic Dl¥1111oa

Tam

·'

42 29
47 43
56 49
:15 33
lfl 55
4.1 53
36. 57

WESTERN CONFERENCE

CIDCAGO CIJBS: S..1 Eri' Yclllin&amp;,
infielder, owiall10 Jow1 ~ dle American
Auocilli&lt;lft.

· Basketball
Nat-.1 B•btMII Allaclallon

. CIUCAGO BVLLS: W1ivcd Corey

wi.l!Wtu:, au.,ct.

DALLAS MAVBRitKS: Waived
Modon W'oloy, J,UUd.
INDIANA PACERS: Waivod Thomu
Hill, auu&lt;t.
ORLANDO MAGIC: WaJved Mike
,luuOllno, &amp;Uard. Placed Todd Lichti.
aum~. lftd Andlcmy eooo. r - on lhe
inju.rod liSt..,r
'
•.•
PHILAOELPHrA 76ERS' W oived •
Keriny s ........... ~Food,~.....
Ralph LoWit, f~(wud; and Alvaro

we're all a iitde more aware, that's
·for ·sure. The more we ta1k(:d about
it among ourselves; the more we
fek like it was important to inake a
statement. We're public figures, in
a sense, and that gave us a ...Uque
opportunity.
"Like everyb&lt;?dY els~. we'd
heard abou! th~ vtol~nce •!! Germany. about thmgs iilc~ thiS, and
never thought lilld'I!"Ythi~g n,CCI!ed
. to_be,~~ne.. Somotun~s. !'1plcins
s81d,, u tai~s some~.mg lilce tht$
to drive a pomt home. . . .
As events would ~ave It, there
were any num~r o~ways. for the
lugers to accomplish that. The
attack on Kennedy made the front
!'!'Bes.or most GenJ181!,newspapc:n.
A Shameful Act, one datly
labeled the ~uact.
Apol~g·e~ from .t~~ German
SJXlrtmg. offictals, pohbc1ans across
the reg!on and the townspeo~le
PQ!Iled mto the U.S. luge assocl8tion, and alongside them, promises
or tighter security.
The mayor of O~rhof, a town
of 3,000 once used by the East Ger- ·
. man Olympic team as a . winte~
training site, took the U.S.lugers td
brealcfast on Saturday and pleaded
with them not to boycou the World
Cup meet scheduled there for January. Though U.S. luge oflicials
were prepared to do just that if the
athleres bad concerns for their own
safety, what mayor Hartmut
Goe~l could not have known at
the time was how eagerly the
Americans were already plotting
their return to Oberhof. On Monday, every one of the sledden went
back on the hill, including
Kennedy, and punch¢ the time
clock during their runs within one
one-hundredth of each other.

Tllhrnn, cerucr.
'· PORTLkND TRAIL BLAZERS:

--Sports briefs--

Hockey
Waivod O.ve Jahn&amp;on aNI EWCK Pony,
CMtral Dlvllloll l
BUFFAI.O,
N.Y. (AP) - Bufy..,.
W· L T. P11. GFGI\
1!1W'lo· Pl..... Korin Thompooo. '"""'·
f~lo
Sabres
right
wing Alexander
onlho lnjwed liol. ,
, .'
" TOI'Oili.O .......... ,•• ll .' I 1 23 1 56 31
·l •
'
\' So.~ ..-~ .... 9 2 · 1 ,19 42 33 ' '
Mogilny, who tied for the NHL
-FOC!Iholl
'· • ·- Dollio•........,.,,. 6 ~ ~ u ~ "'
lead with 76 goals last season,
1• Winnipe&amp; .......~· · li 6 1
N•-1-KJ.oope . .
.13 49 49 l
·signed
a contract with a reported
,.
Dowll .............. 6 7 0· 12 .56 S3
• CINCINNATI BBNOALS : Clai!aod
Ron Cupenter, ufa.y, llfJ waivon from
Chi&lt;lao ............ 4 7 2
10 44 47
$2.7 base salary for the next four
' the Mirtnclou. Vlldnp.
seasons . Mogilny, 24, has four
OR.EEN BAY PACX:.BRS : Claimed
Podlk Dhillon
-goals
and two assists in three
-Calpey ............. 9 ! ' 2 20 .52 41
Antho .. )' Mqra••·. wide receiver, orr
Vanoouwr ........ I 4 0 _16 43 40
walven fram &amp;ho OUcap 8euL "
games this season after missing
LooAn ........... 7 5 2 16 57 57
KANSAS CITY CIIII!FS: Sipod lahn
nine games with a leg injury.
.......... ........... 3 8 2
I 2946
Sllll&gt;b-. Nnnina blc:k. WaiWid Leon.ud
Hockey
San Jc.o............ 3 9 2
I ll 47
Clrilllll, .. o.ul. Slpd ..... v..
- . . ......... 211 1
5 n 55
ODENTON, Md. (AP) - Dale
~1~:~=?.~.d
Hunter returned to practice with the
Ltmtr McOrtu•. •d•tr, and Brueo
Washington Capitals, nine days
· ~ Mn Nn*•· Rel....a lvGrY, Loo
earlier
thao originally mandated in
Do.W wn.a..
· his suspensibn for a late hit on New
Waived Ran CuDcur, lll•J·
York Islanders star Pierre Turgeon
·NEw ENCJl,\M) PA11UOI'S : Added
in a playoff game April 29. Hunter
Dou&amp; Stene, offon.alwo llaemu, 10 1he ·
ro"er and ·Bryaa Hoota, defendn
was suspended for the preseason
lineman. to &amp;he pr~clioe ~qUd.. "
l!nd 21 regular-season games and
fined $150,000: ,
. \ Hockey
.
. N•u.oiH..,Loopo
,
Hockey
BUFFALO SABltES: Sl1aod
TOROI\{'1'0
(AP) - Ottawa
Al•under r,loaUa), ri&amp;hl wina, 10 a
Alexandn:
Daigle, the fust
center
aildtijeu oonuw:t.
.
HARTfOIU) WHALBRS,,&gt;\ ....... 10
overall pick in theNHL draft, is the
_,. wUblloD-., WI ...... Clolmecl
NHL rookie of the month for OctoBob MeOW, •et..-aa; oft wtivfll '
ber.
Daigle, 18, had @t'least one
-dlollowYooll-.
WI ANO~ ltiNGI : A..olrod
point in his flfSI seven games and
•Ooq; HR4il~ •.t-•••· fr9llt llaa
finished OciOber.with Six goals and
Hahleird Wlltleft•for W~ro Potvi.ft,
·
~ht
assists in 10 gariles.'
-~
.
• NIW ~ rii.ANDiiQ: . _ •
, Teunis
··. ·o.a a,.._., ..,....... Brt11.1.
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -,lilt wiali ... -~-.rip~
Second-seeded Zina Garrison-Jack~~ :Soh wo oldie ""-lioool
beat Tracy Austin 6-0, 6-2, in
T.Jcp~y~ClHI'NINb:s.tTlm . son
the second·round of the Bank of lhe
' ::'J!i~d, rl&amp;ht winJ, aad «Normaa~ ·'
West •Classic. Austin, the for111er
,,
· " Od. de(...-., . ~ Adanu ot'tbe
' ; Ia_...... HocktJ l.oque.RKtllod
top-ra'nked player attemjning a
Qdl i.IPianl,
!'moo A.......
comeback at age 30, won only five
. J;...:.;.~~~-.,;,..;.:...,__....,-:-....,....;,....;;.._,______. _
points on her serve. .

--..--a.
--.-dlepndiu . . ..

.'

dol-

..•

••

~

..

r

... ..

SLAMMED - Pittsbur£h center Roa Frauds third period of Wednesday night'&amp; eame ill Sacra(lel't) slaD15 Buffalo delenseman PhiiUpe Boucher menlo, Calif., where the Penpiu woa 6-2. (AP) ··
to the boards while goiug for the puck during the

Ohio State not only Rose Bowl
contender in game vs. Wisconsin
By RICK WARNER
AP Football Writer
The 15th-ranked Badgers of
Wisconsin can take a giant step
toward their rli'St Rose Bowl since
1963 by beating No. 3 Ohio Stare
Sawrday."Tbe game wiD be played

at Camp Rand8II Stadium in Mlidison, where more than 70 people
were injured during a crowd stampede after last week's win over
Michigan.
In order to concentrate on Ohio
State, the 'Badgers have stop)led

talking about the traumatic incident, which included life-saving
rescues by several Wisconsin play.
ers.
Badger head coach Barry
Alvarez knows his team can•t
(See PICKS 011 Pqe 6)
-

~

*************
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honoring area veterans•
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by including the veteran In
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Thursday, November 4,1993. -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

For 1993-94 season,

Mississinawa Valley's
Enis has rushing mark within reach
.
~

B,- RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports W~r
Cwtis Enis now has 2,393 yards
rushing and 36 touchdowns. And
one game lefl in his high-school

career.

Enis. who has indicated he wiD
sign with Penn State on the first
day allowed for letters of intent,
has piled up huge numbers at
Union City Mississinewa Valley
High School.
With the Blaclchawks out of the
playoffs, En is will be competing
against history this weekend. The ·
Ohio schoolboy records for rushing
yardage and touchdowns can be his
with one more big game.
The current records were set last
season by Columbus Brookhaven's
Charles Henley, who rushed for
2,580 yards and 37 touchdowns on
318 carries. However. Henley had
13 games to reach his totals.

.,

A 6-foot-3, 232-pound running
back who will likely play linebacker at Penn State, Emsjaincd 321
yards on 29 carries an scored on
runs oftwo, 42, 54, 27, four and 22
yards in the Blackhawks' 47-24
victory over Twin Valley South
last week.
Elsewhere around Ohio
gridirons, James Yun of Rocky
River rushed for 342 yards and five
touchdowns on 28 carries - 281
yards and all of the touchdowns
coming the second half- in a 4336 victory over Fairview Park
Fairview; Charles .Woodson scored
on runs of 21, one, three, two and
nine and 24 y~rd~ ~nd had 258
yards on 27 carncs 1D JUSt over half
of Fremont Ross' 42-0 victory over
Napoleo~; Northwood's Troy
Fowler gained 308yards on 26 carries and scored on runs of 35, 60,
48 and 32 yards In a 48-32 win

over Gibsonburg; Orwell Grand
Valley's .Pat M~oney had 262
yards on 28 carries and scored
three times in a 3S-6 victory over
Thompson Ledgemont; Painesville
Riverside's Jeff Fisher picked up
264 yards on 36 carries and scored
all the pomts on runs of 62 and
seven yards in a 12-6 victory over
Jefferson Area; Josh' Whitman had
228 yards on 24 aucmpts and
scored three times in Arcadia's 29·
22loss to Leipsic.
Tony Pannunzio broke his own
Canfield school record when he ran
for 334 yards against Salem;
Anthony Stout collected 21S yards
on only 14 carries and scored &lt;!n
runs of 43, 33, 47 and s1x yards m
Patrick Henry's 42-0 w1n over
S~erwood Fairview; Keith Kern of
Liberty Center had 197 yards on 22
carries in a 21-16 win over Bryan;
Wau~·s Cory 9riggs com!Jleted
only e1ght passes m a 40--21 v1ctory
over Archbold, but they accounted
for 306 yards and touchdowns cov-

ering 80, 39, 30,38 and 2S yards:
Toledo SL John's tailback Ken
Jones broke his own week-old
record for rushing yards by picking
up 27S in a 38-12 win over Waite;
David Little finished with an even
200 yards on 29 attempts in Oregon
Clay's 28-0 victory over Dayton
Meadowdale; Buckeye Valley's
Chad Livermore had a dislocated
thumb on his throwing hand but
still passed for two touchdowns
ljlld rushed for 165/ards and two
mo're scores in a 3 -18 win over
Marion River- Valley; Ken Garee
pocketed 255 yards on 36 carries
and scored five touchdowns as
Cardington ~Northmor4~·14.
Crooksvlile s Jason Tokie carried 30 times for 245 yards and a
touchdown.in a 33-9 win over New
Concord John Glenn: Monte
Shriner broke his own Thornville
Sherida_n record for ~ushing
yardage m a season as he hltl,209;
Andrae Turner has ·2,081 yards
rushin~ this year to give him

.

';

~

_

After SEC investigation,

games. As one of only six teams Associated Press poll.
that have yet to be beaten or tied,
"It's possible," White said.
the No. 8 Tigers have to be consid· "We're just going to have to do
ered a candidate for No. I.
. our part. But we know It's going to
"I'm excited to be in this posi- be tough to do with no TV and no
tion," offensive lineman Wayne bowl bid."
Gandy said. "We're pretty healthy
But it could happen.
right now. If we continue to play
"If they're the only undefeated,
ball like we've been playing, untied team on the night of Jan. I,
everybody will be watching on they would get my first-place
New Year's Day.to see what hap- vote," sui«! ESPN commentator
pens."
Beano Cook, who votes in the AP
That's all Auburn can do on poll and had Auburn fifth on his
New Year's Day: wall:h.
latest ballot. "I go by the way a
The Tigers are prohibited from team performs. Aubum has done
going to a bowl because of NCAA everything in a tough league.''
probation. They also were barred
Here's one scenario that could
from television, which means they propel the Tigers to a national
are a mystery to most voters in The championship:
No. I Florida State beats No. 2
Notre Dame, but loses to No. 9
Florida, a team that was defeated
by Auburn 38·35. No. 3 Ohio State
loses either to Wisconsin, Michi·
gan or in the Rose Bowl. No. 4
Miami lpses to No. 13 West Virginia. No. 5 Alabama is beaten by

Family tree has more
to do with Daniel's
·punting.than helium
: THE ACCUSED Is an lnnoceat man, veteran roc:ke~ Billy Joel
would bne said about Auburn punter Terry Daniel, shown
.Wednesda7 at'tbe Tieers' practice r.eld In Auburn,- All. Daniel\ tbe
patlall'aleldln&amp; eollqlate punter wltb a 48.3-yard av.era&amp;e, g111ned
attelldall wllea, ~lssilslppl State bead eoacb Jackie SberriD accused
. AubUD ot p~pln1 bellum Into Its footballs. (AP)
'

College football picks ...

· ·(Continued from ~e S)
ifford anr distractions against ftrStplace Olno State, which leads Wiscons;D by one game in the ~ig Ten
.

No. 17 Indiana (plus 10 112)
at No. 19 Penn St.
First meeting between the
schools ... PENN ST. 14· 13.
No. 18 Kansas St.
race.
(minus 7) at Iowa St.
. the Buckeyes (8-0, 5-0) are off
Wildcats lead Big Eight in paSstO their best start since 1979 and
4te seeking revenge for last year's ing ... KANSAS ST. 28-14.
No. 20 Oklahoma
20-16 loss at Wisconsin. But the
(minus 11) at Missouri
Badgers (7-1, 4-1) are confi~ent
Sooners have beaten Tigers nine
they can beat the Buckeyes agam.
Led by Brent Moss, the league's straigtu times ... OKLAHOMA 31·
.top rusher with a 13S-yard average, 21.
Wake Forest (plus 23)
Wisconsin has the No. I offense in
at No. 11 Virgi•ia
ihe Big Ten. However, the Badgers
George
Welsh 10·1 vs. ~mon
'fiill be facing an O~io S~ate
- ~fensc giving up only 14 pomts Deacons ... VIRGINIA 45-10.
No. 22 N. Caroliu St.
F.game.
.
.
(minus 10) at Duke
, Wisconsin 1s good, but Ohto
Wolfpack riding four-game win·
State is beuer. The Buckeyes, who
are 6 1/2-point favori~fS, will I?e ning streak ... N.C. ST. 27-21.
No. 23 Colorado
spending New Year s Day m
(minus
16) at Oklahoma SL
Pasadena ... omo ST. 21-17.
Cowboys have lost four straight
No. 1 Florida St.
... COLORADO 27-14.
(no line) at Maryland
No. 15 Virglnill Tecb
Seminoles warm up for South
(plus 3) at Bostoo College
Bend showdown ... FLORIDA ST.
Eagles have won 'five straight
SS-0.
after 0·2 start ... BOSTON COLLEGE 2.8·24.
No. 4 M18DII (minus 29)
at Pittsburgh
Last week: 14-3 (straight); 8-7
Hurricanes have never lost a Big (spread).
East pmc ... MIAMI 4S-7.
Season: 130-29 (straight): 73-67

--

LSU (plus 15)

o:-

;

.,w.....

(spread).

"I would like ·to thank Jackie Sher·
By PAUL NEWBERRY
rill
for making the accusation. He's
AUBURN, Ala. (AP)
kind
of made me real popular
Despite . leading the nation,
overnight."
Auburn· s Terry Daniel was as
For SI, Daniel punted two balls
obscure as most punters. Then
onll.Jilled with heliwn, the other
along came Jaclde Sherrill.
loaded
with air - . I0 times each.
"Everywhere I go, they say,
The
helium
ball had an average dis'Hey Heliwn, how you doin~?' and
tance
of
57.7
yards with a hang
'What's up Helium?"' Dan1el said
time
of
4.66
seconds;
·the air ball
with a grin. "Even at our last game
against Arkansas ... coach (Danny) went an average of 59.8 yards with
Ford came up and said, .'Let me see a hang time of 4.93 seconds.
"Giving Jaclcie his beat case ,that ball. Let me check it ouL •"
Daniel, who grew up in the that the 'initial velocity of ihe ball is
small east Alabama town of Valley, inversely proportional .to 'its weig~t
is reveling in all the atlention he -helium would still be detrimental to the tiajectory. bealusc lighter ...
has received since word brolce last
week that Sherrill, the Mississippi objects, even traveling· ~ the same
State coach, had accused Auburn of speed as heavier objects, are more__
susceptible to the opposing forces ·
pumping helium into its footballs.
of
wind resistance," physicjst
Later, Sherrill denied that he
Stephen
Knowlton told the maga·
thought Daniel was using the
zine.
lighter-than-air gas when he punted
"The helium was heavier than
twice for a 56.5-yMd average in
air,"
Daniel said. "That ball felt
State's Oct. 9 loss to the No.8
had water in iL It would go
like
it'
Tigers. Sherrill did concede that he
up
in
the
air and just die. ••
asked for an investigation.
Daniel's
success can probably
The balls were confiscated and
sent to the Southeastern Confer- be traced to his family tree. His
ence office. The verdict Daniel has grandfather was a punter. So was
used nothing but air to lead the his father. who earned all-state
honors at a Georgia high school. At
nation with a 48.3-yard average.
"It was kind of a compliment," 6-foot-1, 230 {&gt;O'lnds,..Daniel cerhe said. "It was like, 'He's got to tainly has the SIZe to bOOt the ball a
be doinl! SQinethin~ with those long way.
Daniel walked on at Alabama
balls to Ieick like thaL ••
Since then. newspapers around but never got a chance to play. So
the country have conducted their he transferred to Auburn, where he
own tests to determine if helium carne out of nowhere last season to
balls travel farther than those filled win the punlinjl job and wound up
with just plain old air. Sports lllus· 17th in the· nation with a 42.6-yard
trated even -carne to campus to con· average.
This season, he has been even
duct its own tongue-in -cheek
longer.
Daniel can recall only two
experiment witll Daniel and an
bad
puntsone for 3S yards, the
Auburn physicist.
other
for
37
in a game against
"I've enjoyed it," Daniel said.
Vanderbilt when he was ill.

THIN· YOU EIGS
COUNTY·VGIERS!

..

Auburn in the Nov. 20 season ·"
finale. No. 6 Nebraslca is upset by ·.
Olclahoma. No. 7 Tennessee, which · · ~
already has a loss and a tie, proba- ::
bly would be passed by Auburn if ~:
the Tigers ended up 11-0.
·
"Obviously, it's possible, but ,·
how probable is it?" head coach "
Terry Bowden said. "I would say ,
the probability of that happening is" ,
well below SO pcrcenL"
,"
The Tigers should win Satur~
day's homecoming game against.'
New Mexico State, but the .final. :
contests are in the Southeastern
Conference. They go to Georgia on
Nov. 13 before retwning home to ~
finish the season against Alabama, ·..
the defending national champion. ..
Two teams have fmished No. I
in the AP poU while serving proba- .
tion. Auburn. ironically, was the .·,
ftrSt in 1957, but that was at a lime ..
when the final ranlcings came out ..
before the bowls. Olclahoma did it ·
in 1974 under a fonnat similar to"'
today's polling. .
,.

easier with MJ's exit
.

.RIC·~&lt;ieHUCK
MELVIN
LD. Ohio {AP)- Of

'

.

cent shooter during the pmeaiOn;
Ttrone Hill; a badly _needed
t1iis much, the Cleveland Cavaliers rcboullde~ acquired from Golden
are 'fCII19D8bly certairn Their 1993- State for a 1994 rust-round.pick;
94 season won't end on another John 'BaU1e, a shootins· &amp;nard
impossible jump shot by Mic!)ael whose playing time cottld increue
Jordan.
dramatically because be played f(lr .
That, in itself. is reason for~- Fratello for - several :yean in '
mism 0.1) a team lhat has been elini- Atl.anta, aqd Gerald Madkins, ~
inated ·by Jordan and the Chicago UCLA graduate who was the COn··
Bulls four times in its last five trips linen tal Basketball Association •s·
to the playoffs.
rookie of the year last season.
Add a new coacb, Mik~ Frate!· · Under Wilkens, Clevellind built
Io, and a rOOkie, Chris MU!s. who a rq~utation as a finesse team that '
was good enou~ to lead the team didn't have the· toughness to surin scoring durmg the preseason, vive the playoffs. Tho fiery Frate!·
and that l)uickly. the Cavaliers are lo, according to Battle, brings an '
feeling hlte honest-to-goodness entirely diiierent ~ality to the
contenders.
team.
' ''!'think a lot of people's expec"One is laid baclc. and one is DR
lations will be up,.' • J;K?int ~uard on the ·nODI' iunning the sidelines, •
Mark Price said. ' Built's gomg 10 Ba!lle said. "When a ~t play is
be tough. We're just trying to con· made, one is nodding his !lead, saycentrale on learning the new sys- ing, 'Great .J;~biy.' And the other one•
tern. Befoce we can walk; we have is ·pallijlg you 'lllid high-living and
to crawl. It's going to be almost just doing the things that say. 'I
Iilce starting over for a lOt of us. ••
want' another one. •
The Cavaliers reached a turning
"Lenny won a lot of games
poin.t last spring when Jordan and here. but he could not figure out •.
the Bulls embarrassed them by with this team, how do we move
sweeping four straight games in the · on, how do we get past Chicago.
second round of the playoffs. Jor· We just coUld not fi&amp;IUC it out."
dan re-emphasizing tiis supremacy
The most obvious change in
· by hitting a jumper at the'liuzzer,in style is on defense, where Fratello
Game 4. Coach Lenny Wilkens. frequently employs a full-court
tired of the repeated failures, final· trap. His offense is less regimented
ly gave up. resigning and moving than Wilkens' and features only a
few }!lays.
·
to Allanta.
Former Atlanta coach Mike
'lt'c!oesn't reaHy matter how
Fratello then left NBC to ~over many plays you have, •• Fratello
the Cavs, and when Jordan decided said "What matleis is, do you usc
to retire, Fratello found himself in the right plays with tbe guys that
charge of one of the favorites to are on the Boor? If you have three
succeed the Bulls as Eastern Con- or four .series with options, and you
ference champions.
execute the: options that pertain to
"That would be a dream come those people, yoo can execute."
true," Mills said. "Making it to the
The Cavs, who open the season
NBA is one thing. But to make it at home Friday night against MiJ.
all the way would be a whole dif· waukee. won't be completely
fercnt level."
healthy. Nance has been hobbled
Cleveland's nucleus remains by a sore knee throughout the pre·
unchanged, featuring three All· season. and Brandon probably will
Stars - Price, center .Brad Daugh· miss a couple of weeks because of
mononucleosis that prevented him
eny and forward Larry Nance who are in their seventh season from playing at all during the pre·
together.
season.
·
They'll be ~urrounded by the
But Price has recovered from
best depth the Cavaliers have ever the sore thumb and Daugherty from
bad, with John Williams providing the sore knee that bothered them
~lp at all three fron11:oun spots, during the playoffs, and both are
"fl:rrell Brandon challenging Pril:e anxious to et11se the memory of the
~ playing time and Mills likely to . Chicago sweep.
c.ack the starting lin~up at small
"I wish we could have compet·
rorward soon, if not immediately. ed a little beuer with Chicago in
Qcrald Wilkins will Sllllt at shoot· the end," Daugheny said. "They
igg guard, Which remains.the shal· just mentally took us away from
lowest position on the'team.
what we wanted to do, and qf
'·Mills,"&amp;'il'I\Tizona pjoducfcho· course Michael's an invariable
n 22nd overall in this year's that's rCally tough to overcome.
cJtaft, av~ed 13.6 w~ts in eight
"We'j~~St have to get better as a
PJ:eseasOn games. He may replace . team: You can't just keep taking
~me of the outside offense that the same horses to the trough and
Was lost when Craig Ehlo left for try to. beat somebody that way. It '
4tJailta as a free agent and some of just doesn't work. We have to try
J:!je inside defense lost when Mike to make ourselves better, whether
§imde1s was let go.
it's through acquiring people or
•• Helping off the bench will be doing something different. Hope~ny Ferry, an aggressive 55 per- fully we've done that this year."
;;,";
·
. ·

a

ta 's MaUl"dux gets
Awa ..d .
.I. 4
N
~ L'.s Cy Voung

~···.:. JU
~
·'~n
r1
t'

I I

, By CAROLYN S. CARLSON
, An.ANTA (AP)- Greg Mad- - h'IS seco
· nd
dux ·says wmnmg
straightNLCyYoungAwardhelps
ease the sting of missing the World
Series
• Maddux was 20--10 with a major
tllague-leading 2.36 ERA in his
first season witll the NL west

Gl ·
h
Yo~ng w~ner_ Tom avme. w 0
finiShed thlfd m ·the vOllng for the
1993award
"I didn' 1·real! .tch thi year to
.
YPI .. s
wm another_ C~ You!Jg. Maddux
smd from hts orne m Las Vegas.
B"The main goal of ~~~~ne~n ~~
r~ves was 10 y.e 0. . e or
Senes, and thi~.ume wm 11. But we

eham
ionCy
Allanta
won
•h.. 1~
Young"Braves.
with theHe
Cllica·

up shor:t.
. came
Maddux,
JUst 7-8 a week befo~e
..the All-Star break, won 13 of hts
!og~b{vednesday, he became the last I~ decisioljs i_n l~ading _the
l:irst pitcher to win the award in Braves surge to_theu_thrrd s~ght
consecutive years with different NL West champKIDShlp. The _nghl·
JUms.
hand~ !!lade 36 starts and p11ch_ed
$
"Not too many ~f us liave an . 267 lADings. led the league w1th
ipponunity to .win twQ. and that ei~hl ~omptete_ games and was.
lieans a lot to me peraonally," he third w1th 197 ~eouts.
C3id. "You change teams and you
Maddux ~on h1s rtrsl ~of the
ouant to make a llood ftrSt impres- · playoffs agamst Ph1ladelph~, ~ut
:ion I feel like r~"ve done thaL And lost Game 6 when the Phllhes
&amp;ow" I want to have a chance to clinched the pennan~.10 Madd'!l'
l!lve
, itch iJi a World Series.'~ ·
up live earnlld,runs •5 ~· 3 mn~ngs
,.~. Maddux said he became ·afree iri ihatloss. _He was' ~It m the. ~~h~
~;', tht&amp;tterliis20-i,h.2.18llRA~ !eg_by •a line ' dr.iv~ in the f1r~t
. ouilg year in Chicago liecause • 1 mrung and never ,801- mto a groove.
n, 81 felt I hid a bCtter cbance to get
Maddux rece!ved 22 _of the 28
~to a World Series if I changed ftrSt•place votes lD balloung _by the
lbns."
Basc~all Writers. Associ~uon of
• The Bl'llvcs siped him to a five- Amenca. He ~as1Iy outdistanced
iear, $28 milf1on contract and 'San Francisco's Bill ~wift and
111ade him ·, the No. 1 starter in a ~o_hn Burkeu and _Glavme -:- all
iltation that includes 1991 Cy w1lh more v1ctones but h1gher

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JETCLEANN

DISHWASHERS

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CHRISSY TAYLOR1

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II volleyball players

from Gallia and Meigs Counties
receiving Southeast District 13 all·
star honors, four will jqjn three
other seniors in participating in the
district's all-star matches Saturday
at Logan-Hocking Middle School.
Among those on Division 1-11
teams receiving all-star status were
Gallia Academy •s Brandi Munn
and ·Mindy Pope, Meigs' Chrissy
Taylor, River Valley's Alicia Ward
and Niclcie Meade. Receiving honorable mention was Gallia Academy junior Misty Coleman.
, River Va 11 ey •s Tonya Drummond, Gallia Academy's Jamie
Humphreys, Meigs" Lisa Fackler,
Taylor and Ward, all seniors,. will
be the ~lavers joining veterans such ·
as Loganrs Melissa Cooper. Tarni

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· Hampshire, Tez Kraft and Jamie
Smith, Athens' Christy May, Jack·
son's Amy Pratt and South Point's .
I essica Baise in the 3 p.m. match. 'Among those on Division lll-IV
teams receiving all-star status were _
Eastern's Penny Aeiker, Jessica
Karr and Jaime Wilson and Southern's Andrea Moore and Sammi
Sisson.
Aeiker and Wilson, the seniors
in the Meigs group, will join fellow
seniors Jaime Rolston (Alexander).
Katie Smith (Chesapeake), Erin
Snedder (Federal Hocking), Kristin
Inman (Nelsonville· York), Jennifer
Adkins, Stacy Adkins and Anita
Carney (Oak Hill) and Chasity
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1992

PHARMACISTS

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::

Unbeaten Auburn eyes chance to make No. 1
By PAUL NEWBERRY
AUBURN, Ala. (AP)- Stan
White knows the odds are against
Auburn.
"We have to have some other
teams get knocked o,ff," the senior
quarterback said. "And we defi·
nitely have to win the rest of our
games."
Still, just the fact that White and
his Auburfi teammates are even
tallcing about the possibility of winning a national championship
would have been scoffed at a few
months ago.
A team that began the season
with modest goals - perhaps its
first winning record since 1990 has instead won its first eight

Cavaliers can breathe

'·

Youngstown Austintown Fitch's water. Speck now has 1,822 ¥~
schoof record; Mark Thobe had 19 to break the previous school mark
tackles, a pass interception and two of 1,617 set by Tony Borgerding in
touchdowns in Marion Local's 32· 1986. The 378 yards betlered a
21 win over New Bremen; Mike Borgerding record of 308. As a .
Nalls had 2S9 .yards and four team, SL Henry ran for 418 yards-"
touchdowns as Dayton Dunbar and piled up 537 yards of 'total :
edged Colonel White 70-0.
offense for two more school ··
Todd Good caught a 24-yard records.
_-,
touchdown pass, ran 18 yards for
Madison and Paines\jlle River·
another score, returned an intercep- side meet Friday with a lot riding···
lion 42 yards for a touchdown and on the game. Madison, whicli has ·
blocked a punt to set up another won its Jast13 games, is seeking' its :.
score in Eaton's 42-0 victory over first unbeaten season since 1973.- ·
New Lebanon Dixie; Nelsonville· Riverside is shooting for a share of
York's Justin Gail set game (290) its fourth straight Northeastern·' ;
and season (1,736) marks for Conference title.
•
yardage in a 27-21 victory over
Lancaster Fisher Catholic can- ·
Belpre; and Chad Cavendar com· lock up its first unbeaten season·::
pleted all four of his passes for ever and ftrSt winning record since ·'
three touchdowns and. 143 yards in 1990 with a victory over winless' ,
Jamestown Greenev1ew's 40-13 New Albany Friday· Fostoria·came
win over Waynesville.
back from a 12-7 hairtime deficit to'' '
Doug ~peck totaled 378 yards beat Toledo Whiuner 28-12 for its ' :
on 40 carnes and scored on runs of 31st consecutive regular-season~
one, 32, 19 and II yards in St . victory.
•
Henry's 42-27 victory over Cold·
·•

Despite NCAA-levied probation,

at No. 5 Alabama
Palmer is nation's best all-purpose player ... ALABAMA 42· 7.
No. ' Nebraska
(no lille) at Kansas
, Jayhawks haven •t beaten
Huskers since 1968 ... NEBRASKA 311-14.
·
No. 13 LoulsvlUe
· · (plus 13) at No. 7 Teaamee
Vols are 4-0 vs. Cardinals ...
TENNESSEE 45-38.
:
'NIW Mexko SL
(no line) at No. 8 Auburn.
- Tigers off to best start s1nce
i971 ... AUBURN 44·10.
.
sw Loullianl
: (no lilt) at No.9 ~Ida
Gators 7-0 vs. B1g West ...
fLORIDA 42·24.
· Rutam (plus 17)
at No. f1 West Vlrllnla
· Kelchner is nation's leading
-ser ... W. VJROINI.'. 44-21.
No. 11 UCLA (mlllua 7)
.-st.
- &amp;ruins are headed for Rose
Bowl ... UCLA 31·21.
·
O.ss• &lt;Piad)
. II 1"10. 14 1rJ.u
:., ·Ducts llaveli't won in Tucson
sJice1983 .•• AJUZONA 21-14.
: . c..... (plu 13)
' ' ' It No.l6 ...... CHu
T• Heell _, nino-ll!ile los·
iiiJ . . . VI. Tiprl ... N. CAR,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
0

Ohio scholastic sidelight
'

Thursday, November 4, 1993

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Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

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It alsa•allo_ws the military to
intervene in domestic crises "to
mg a .Jongsta~!dmg Sovtet policy, protect lhe constitutional system."
RuSSJa n~v.: IS .ready to !au~c~
Valery Manilov, deputy sccrenu~lear miSsiles m a fii'St ~e If 11 tary of the country's top policyor 1 ~ allies are attacked With ~n- making Security Council, rejected
ve_nll~nal weapons, a top officJal suggeslions that provision signified
said edne~y.
an expanded role for the anny fol.
The Unued States and other lowing ~lOber's viol~.
Western powers have ~epea~y
The nots by hard-hne parharefu~ed to rule out a fust stnke, ment supporters, which l::ille;d
~gu.m~ !i)at such a pledge would dozens of people in Moscow,
dul'!m1s~ the deterrent value of. · prompted Yeltsin to send tanks and
the_tr n.u.clear a~senals and limit troops 10 flush out def18Dtlawmak· ·
theu mi,illary oplll?n~. . · .
ers from the parliament building.
The_~ew Russi~ policy IS part
This provision ''reflects the
of a .military ~lnne ~ppr11ved by objective reality of our society,
President Bons Yeltsm on Tues- which is passing through a tranSii
day. The docume!l~ had been tion period," Manilov said at a
demanded. by the m1h!M&gt;' .as ~ay- news conference.
• '
m~nt fo~ Its support m his fight
Manilov said the new doctrine
With parliament last ~onth.
allows use of nuclear weapons
The, 23-p!ge d~tn.ne ~~ that ' ~against states, nuclear or nonRussia s ~Ilitary ?'ISS1on 1S P',llllll!'· nuclear, which have undertaken
1ly d~fensiYe and f!tat no nauon IS aggression against Russia or sup·
considered a poiential enemy ·
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Lalayalle

Loh:s:-

't.lassach ... tls
Michigan TeCh
• Mlddlt Tanneasee
• Murray Slate
McNae..
New Hall'lpthlre
"Ne~rtNtwt.

' NOf'l Ctrollna A &amp; T
• NOf'lhem towa
NW lou'-iana
• Pennsyl ..nia
Por11and Stale
S.F. Auatin
Sam Houaton
• 'Samtord
Southern U
SI . Marya,Calil
sw Miuoutl ·
Tenntltff Tteh

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,,~

NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO · '

Slit•

' Wtstem Carolina

":"aate

I
· • WIA•m
Young~town

......

l&lt;rmy

Easlern Michigan

L.S.U.

Oregon
New Mexico State
Miami, Ohio

'v'itglnia Tech

Kent State
• Arizona Smte

• Oklahoma State
SW Louisiana

·Maryland

Te•as EI-Paso
Ba~or

Minnesota
Nonhern Illinois
• Iowa State
• 'Vanderbilt

Nevada-Las Vegas
• Pinsburgh
Purdue
Nonhwestern
' Memphis State

Arkansas
• Arkansas

~

State

• Kansas

Idaho S1a1e
Clemson

·Duke
• Wisconsin

• Missouri
Indiana

20

30

24

41

20

22

33
20

27
28
23

30

18

.
"17

27
17
22

34

19

••

32

20

16

23

21

26
22
38
21

28

36

24

30
26
22

29

31
14

20
28
19
27

28

21
20
IS

28
35
25
34

31
27

13
23
6
10
0
15
21
6
16
20
10
3
7
21
17
10
16
21
19
7
7
15
20
20
19
13
7
10
14
17
15
21
27

'Nevada
Stanlord
Tulane

17

12
•3
15
13
28
10
21
16
16
8
14
7
12

Temple ·
Louisville

T.C.U.

Michigan
• East Carolina
' Washington State
• Hawaii
Central

Pacilic
Wake Forest
• Oregon State
Rutgers
•

• Ohio

14

14

' S.M.U.

u.

Major Colleges- Dlv. 1·AA

ALabams -Birmingham
• Alcorn
Arkansas-Pine Stull
'Bos1on U.
' Cal Poly·SLO
• Canlral Conllflclicut
' Canlral Florid•
Cilalfll
COiple
• ConneCi icul
• COI'nelt
D1r1mouth
Davidson
' g:r.oo

• M1ta all

992·3322

26
26
34

U.C.LA
Utah
• Utah State
· Vrglnla

·- 1'11;last"Second Street
·~- · · .:. Pomeroy1 ·0hie-·
....
992-2342

31
28
40
24

·Tennessee
'Te11as Tech
• TOledo
Tulsa

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN. MUSSER
- INSURANCE

35
22
36
27
23
33
22
38
37
45
27
29
34
20
24
34
23
39
29
37
26
21
30
33
41
28
21
25
28
34
26

• Southern California

'IUHO

':5; LARRY RYCKMAN

. M SCOW (~P) -;Abandon-

Prescriptio·n
Shop

106 N. 2nd, Middleport

16
7
14
7
12
10
16
17

• Butler

1.4/sslsslppi Val~y
' Prairie View
Bulla~ U.
Cal Slale Northridge
Sl. Peler's
Uberty
• Tennessae-Challanooga
• Fordham
• Rhode leland
Yalv
• Columbia
'Cenlra
Ultlana
Towson
' San Diego U.
' ' 8E Mluot.rri
• Mon11na Stale
. CIMI'It»rland. Tan,n.
FurnUm
' Alabama Stale
• Brown
South Carolina Slate
' Soulhern llinols
• Texas Soulhern
' N01'1hea&amp;lern
Morg1n State
• H~ Cross
• B
nell
Eaat Tennessee
Richmond
• \latpar~iao
Austin Pea~
Morehead tale
• SW Ta.r:aa
• Villanova
Cl\l.rfeSion Southern
Oalaware Stale
Moorhead State
' Eallarn llllnola
Prlncalon
' Soulharn Utah
• N011h Teus
' NiohOHI Slate
Tennutee-MarM
' FIOI'Ida A I M
' Weslern Naw MeJico
• wastern lllinola
• Tanneaue Statt
Waatetn Kentucky
Nor1hern Arizona

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Indiana State

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30

• Albrlg

31

• Bloomlburg
Bowdo~

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' EUI Slfoudlburg
lndl1na U., Pa .
• llhaca
• ltbanon Yallty
• Mtrehanl Marine
' Milklr$vllle
·New Hawn
• Pl~moulh
R. .I
Sllppety Rock
Soulhem Connecllout
Wesl Chesler Slate
·Wilkes
WOtcesler Ttch

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17

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13
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20
23
38
20
24
36

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' Indianapolis
Carthage
Mid-America Naurene
• Gr1celand
Lulher
NW Mlasourl
' Nebr..ka-Keamey
Fort lewis
' Cornell, low•

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20

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33

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• Mor1house
' Newberry
Nonh Alab&amp;ma
• North Carolina Central
Ouachita
Presbyterian
Randolph-Macon
• Shepherd
lelia A &amp; M-l&lt; ingsville
Trinhy, Tex .
• Washinglon a lee
• Wet! GtOlgla
' Wast Llberl~
West Virgin a WeateYan
, ' Wofford

21
33
24

21
33

21

28
32

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20

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21

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oncordia, Neb.
Nortt.rn Colorado
Soulh D1kota U .
SI.Jo~'o
Kanua llle~an
NE Mlaaouri
Concordia, Wis .
NW OklahOma
Illinois Bentdlctlne
Culver.Siockton
SW Mtnnesola Stale
O.oloon

21
15

,C-Ion••
.....

SALES • SERVICE

INSTALLATION

17

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Hialllffidon&lt;y
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hwty

....... iiiMok"

Weathertron*
Heat Pump
XL 1200
Super Efficiency

14

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14

15

20

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10

20
14

21
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Eaal TtlCII Stata
• HoWIIrd Paynt
Wingate
Alabama A &amp; M
Tenntasae Wuley1n
'U'lingstone
Savanhah Slate
W.ynnbur9
• Weal Virginia Tech
Methodill
' Ark.lnaa&amp;-Uonltc.llo
' Mus Hill

14

3
20

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8

10
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13
17
20
13

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13

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Central Arkanaas
Milts
laea McCrae
• \'aldoaa
ICentudt~ Slall
• Arbn111 T~teh
' Gardntr·Webb
' Brldgawl..r, Va.
Weal Vlr~ria Stale
' Abilene htls11an
'Sawanea
Gultlotd
0.111 Slale
Fairmont

••6
16

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IT

21

12

UWliNGS.COATS

......

.

By CHARJ.ENE L. FU
BElliNG (AP)- A new collection of .works by senior leader
Deng Xiaoping sheds light on
China's tough line in dispules with
Washington, saying, any Chinese
leader who caves in to U.S.
demands would fall from power.
Relations remain tense over
U.S. complaints that China's gov:c
emment does not re~t itS citizens' basic human nghts. erects
barriers to imports of American
goods and ignores treaties on curbing inlemational arms sales.
On Tuesday, the Clinton administration tltrootened to impose trade
sanctions unless China makes signfficant progress in removing trade
barriers by Dec. 31.
Slatements by Deng, in a book
published Tuesday, give some

. . tt2•5141

THE NEw GOLD STAltfDARD IN

•

CHICKEN TASTE

••

21

21

,.•••
•••

'Concord

Elon

Rock~ Uounlaln
S.n r&amp;ncisco State
' Simon FraMr

.....

12

21
20

' Cal Stala Ha~wlrd
Southern Oregon
Cal L.ulheran
' Weatem WaShington
' Clartmoni-Mudd
Whhrorlh
L&amp;Veme
Cal &amp;ata Chico
' Eaatem OAII)On

14

13
21

••17

20

12

2.

....

(row's Family Restaurant
228 WEST MAIN
992·5432

POMEROY

7RB BOB ·HIRMON PRO
BUFFAL0.......................33

Baum
Lumber

..NEW ENGLAND.14

By ANNIE CABRERA
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
(AP)- The man who led the fight
against El Salvador's U.S.-baclt:ed
government says recent auacks on
former guerrillas have jeopardized
the 1992 accords that ended the
country's civil war.
The most recent attack came
Wednesday, when i.hree $unmen
ambushed Gabriel Quilitamlla out·
side his hon\e in San Jorge, 95
miles east of the capital,. faid
Joaquin Villalobos, head of the
Farabundo Marti. National Liberation Front.
! 'This could lead to a critical sit·
uation; " Villalobos told reporters.
He said the accords would fall
appart unless President Al£redo
Cristiani acts to stop rightist death
squads blamed for recent killings.
Two former guerrillas have been
killed in the past week, and a toial
of 24 have been slain by unidentified gunmen since the U.N.-brokercil accords were signed in January 1992, ending 12.years of civil

In the seas.on's first game, the Bills, led by Jim Kelly (four ID passes), Thurman Thomas (114 yards
rushing) and Andre Reed (110 yards receiving), beat up on the Patriots, 38-14. More to come?.
••CLEYEJ.,AND ............. 26
DENVER .................. 2l
The Broncos have beaten the Browns the past two years, both times in Ohio, but this .year the Browns'
defense should handle John Elway and his high-scoring but strangely inconsistent offense.

N.Y. GlANTS-....... 24
This Is not only a huge game but the week's best matchpp, with both teams among the NFC leaders on
**DALLAS ...................... 30

CHESTEi. OHIO

TAMPA BAY ............ 16
Five weeks go in 'Ilunpa, the Uons led the Buccaneers 10-0 before giving up 27 ~wered points -

992-$627

including three third-quarter TDs -to hand the Bucs their first win of the season. Not this time. .
"*HOUSTON .................. 27
SEATTI.E.-....- -.. 17
Depending on the locals' pati~nce. playing at home may or may not be an advantage for the star-crossed
Oilers; who ever thought a win against Cincinnati would be so blg7 This would be, too.

When The Tune Comes
See. Us For Your 1994
Graduation
· Announcements.

•*"DETROIT .................... 23

Peoples

Bank

. L.A, RAIDERS ................21

••CIHCAG0..- .......20

With a gut feeling that has nothing to do with statistics, we're going out on a limb with the Raiders.
Stats seldom seem to matter much with either of these teams, which haven't played since '90.

People Get More From
Peoples Bank .

MIAMI .............................28

QUALITY -PRINT

**N.Y." JETS ............. 23

·sHOP

In one of the biggest of a handful of upsets In Week 'IWo, the Jets beat the Dolphins 24-14, as Boomer
Eslason threw for.323 yards.and N.Y.'s defense forced five fumbles. It won't happen again.

Mason • Point Pleasant • New Haven
Member FDIC

Y•local

MIDDLEPOn

both sides of the ball. In '92 the Cowboys defeated a different Giants team twice, 34;-28 and 30-3.

985·3301 or 985:-3330

•

**MINNESOTA ...... __,.31

SAN DIEG0-----21

In the midst of a tight NFC Central race, the Vikings badly need a win, and the Chargers are without a
leader at QB .... the kind of team Minnesota's defense can hurt. They haven't met in eight years. ·
*"PHOENIX .................... 24
PWLADELPWA .... 22
Here's a pick we never thought we'd lllilke, but If you throw out Phqenlx's · loss to New England a month
ago, the Cardinals have been looking better since their season-opening 23-171oss to Pl)llly.

255 Mill St.
Middleport
992·3345

war.

I

' Chest.,, Ohio

••CINCINNATI--12 ..
The first time the Stee1ers and Bengals,niet, in September, both were 0-2, which turned .o ut to be bad
news for the Bengals.. 'J1!ey were blown outt 34-7, and the rematch does!i't look to be'much clqser.
·
*!WASWNGTON.-.-27 .. - ' IND~NAP0t.IS;.;".24 ,
Why not the ~olts? Call it the rh~m or the seasan: 'After the Redskins' em~!lllassingly big loss to
Phoenix, a week off to think abotitit &amp;.lid a.battle \Yfth Buffalo, Ryplen &amp; Co. will let 'et rip.
(MIIndly)
. ""KANSAS CITY.....--.30
GREENBAY...- ...... 23
•
1be Chiefs ~·t as good as their record,but this matcilup's relevant stat is ckfense against the passi the
Packers are last in the NFC. K.C. and G.~. haven't met since 17-3 Chiefs win in '90.
.· ,
· (Open date: Atlanta, L.A. Rams, New Orleans, San Francisco)

•

.

.

. ., \

RIDE
OUR·'. S
·· 'If: &amp;·&amp;PPLIANCI ·
· GIS SEmCE

. CHESRA

The doctrine also renecu Russia's role as a great power, "with
interests in many parts of the
world, which it intends to defend
primarily by political, peaceful
means," he said.
One of the regions that Russia

considers of national interest
because of its~ proUn· .
ity is the Persian OU!f,lnd it "will
continue to take part in (mltma·
tiona!) efforts to resolve problems
of maintalnin&amp; peace and stability"
ihae. Manilov ~

•

"

., 915·3301 I ;

..
•'

•

FLORENCE, Italy (AP) -Fire
broke out in a highway tunnel fol· ·
lowing a cbain·reactioll collision
today involving two dozen vehi.
cles. At least four people were
kiucd; poli'7 said.
· Twenty cars and four ·uucl::s
~ere invol~ in the pileup on the
superhighway belw4!Cil Bologna
and Flor&amp;ce.
.
. 'I'h~ ai:cic!e~t in the Rioveg$io
tuMCI cauSed hnes as long as rune
miles along Iialy's busiest 'high_way .
"

· HAMELIN ·.:_ Backed up b;r seeurlty
men, BritaiD's Quee11 Elizabeth n .(riebt} waves
well-wlsbers during ller visit Wednesday to
,
To
•• ·
reere-

to

role or tbt "'ed Piper in celebntloa of:
ber
Tbe monarch plaDDed a visit to an aniy:
base today. (AP)

12

ONTHS
.

The New Tandy®
As•yaspen

alii paper.
-The lallc PIWII'

imposed trade sanc~~ns and barred
sales of some mliUary-related
goods.
.
.
D_en_g told ~IXon: "For China to
beg IS unpo.ss1ble. It doesn't matter
•f f!le sancuons ~~ 100 yean, the
Chmese JXI?Ple ':':"1 never beg for
them to~ bf~ •
.
. .
He said Chma. s _natiOnal di~ty
would not perm1t It to cave m to
outs!depressw:es.
. ' If any Chme_se leader m:UCes a
mistake on th1s tssue! he wtll fall
from power. The Chmes~.people
w~ll never forgive h1m, Deng
said.
.
.
The comments are contamed m
the thlfd volume '!f "The.~elecled
~orks of Deng X1~10g. It contams 119 of Deng s speeches and
essays frrnn t982 to 1992, many of
them pubhshe_d for the first tune._
The book ts pan of a campat~
to glorify the s9-~-old leader ~n
h1s final years and ensure that h1s
eco~omi~ modernization policies
sumve his death. The volume follows the publication in September
of a biography of Deng by his
youngest daughter.

Tba abilitY to co•ct to the worldl
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Four killed intunnel
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.. ,

killed during the war.between left·
ist rebels and a succession of U.S.·
supported governments.

More than 75,000 people were

· PITTSBURGH ..;....... _,29

'l

insights into why relations have
failed to improve and why China
steadfastly.rebuffs U.S ..pressure.
"The United States should take .
the initiative to put an end to the
past," Deng told Richard Nixon at
an October 1989 meeting, where he
asked lhe former president to convey his suggestions for repairing
relations to President Bush.
"China can'ttake the initiative," Deng said "That's because
the United States is a powerful
country, China is a weak country.
China is the victim."
·
The United Slales led the West·
em world in imposing sanctions on
China to proteSt the bloody military
crackdown on the Tiananmen
Square democracy movement in
June 1989. Washington suspended
high-level diplomatic contacts
•
'

Attacks on former guerillas
accords ' FMLN says
threaten
.

Suaday a Moaday, · · · - · · , .., 1113

TIACTOIS and
IIDIIGMOWOS

states it will continue to possess
them ''at the minimum expedient
level' " ManiloVS81'd•
He said Russia regards nuclear
w~ns as a deterrent, necessary
10 prevent the escalation of local
coi)Oicts into a full-blown war.' •

or a computer.

Deng's book sheds light on China stand

Fisher
Funeral. Home
.•a ns..a • Owloefi~ter

10

Other Game• - Far Welt

• Azusa
' Cai-Dawla ·
Canlral Washington
' Colorado MIMI
Hutnboldl
• Lewia &amp; Clark
' Occidental
Pacl1ic Lutheran
Pomona-Pitzer
' Pugal Sound
• Redlands
• Sonoma State
Wnlem Oreoon

7RANE .

21

Other Games -South &amp; Southwest

• Abany, Ga
' Angelo Slale
Carson-Naw.man
• Calawb•
' Clark 1
Cumberland . Kw .
Fayanevilkl
• Fort Vallay
• FrOfltburg
Glan'llllt
• Hampden-Srdney
Hardi~
lenoir· hyne
' ~vlngalon

COOLING.

13

sw Bapllll

•
•

AND ,

27

Upper Iowa
Northwelllern, Iowa
Mlssourl-ROita
'
'

HEAnNG

0

~rlin

"2829

WARNER

12

.. Cenlral Methodist
• Sa~n1w Yalley
Bet any, Kin .
• Wayne Slate, Mk:h.
Manchtlltt
Marlena
Northwood
• Grlnntl
Oakot1 Wesleyan

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-3671

17

1i
• H1allng1
28 _ 'LA~Ion
37
Was burn

/

wise," Olmert said in an Israel the nighttime takeover of homes in
Radio imerview.
the Silwan neighborhood, set off
A major consideration in Palestinian protests and turned the
approving new construction pro- areas into permanent flashpoints of
jects would be 10 "ensure complete violence .
rule of the people of Israeli over it
KoUek' tried to stop some of the
(the city)," he said.
projects, calling them too provoca"This will lead to an escalation tive, but to no avail.
of confrontations between Arabs
Even though Kollek opposed
and Jews," said Hanna Amira, a Arabs and Jews living together in
PLO official and newspaper editor the same neighborhood, it was
in Jerusalem.
under his 28 years in power ·that
Palestinians in east Jerusalem Israel built a ring of Jewish suburbs
did not respond to Kollek' s cam· around east Jerusalem.
paign appeals to save the city from
In July, city officials said that
a right-wing leadership. They for the first time Jews outnumbered
maintained lheir traditional boycott Arabs in east Jerusalem, 165,00 to
of city elections for fear of creating 160,000.
the impression that they accept
The mayor has no role in t8lks
Israeli control of the city.
over the future slatus of Jerusalem,
The future of the city is the but can set the tone for relations
toughest issue in Mideast peace bewteeen Arabs and Israelis in a
negotiations.
city with a hair-trigger temper
Israel, which has controlled when it comes to religion and poli·western Jerusalem since 1948, tics.
annexed the eastern sector in 1967
An official close to Prime Minafter capturing it from Jordan. In ister Yitzhak Rabin said Wednes1980, it declared that an indivisible day that the national government,
Jerusalem was the eternal capital of not City Hall, would set policy on
the Jewish Stale.
Jerusalem, and in this case try to
Arabs demand that lhe eastern prevent provocations. The official
sector become the capital of a spoke on condition of anonymity.
future Palestinian state.
Elon said the government would
Israel's previous government find it difficult to confront Olmert
gave Jewish settler groups full because Rabin has pledged to keep
backing in buying or seizing prop- Jerusalem united under Israeli
erty in Arab neighborhoods.
. sovereignty and opposes a PalesSome of lhe operations, such as tinian state with east Jerusalem as
its capital.
,don't .cO~.£~U!,C?Ji,~Jl9!~er;_.

ANDERSON'S

24
10

Other Games - Midwest

Adrian
Ashland
• Augustana, Ill.
· Baker
Benedicline
' Cenlralla.a
• Cenlral MiBsOtJrl
Central Oklahoma
• Chadron
Coo
' O.liance
Doane
Easl Cenh1l Oklahom1
• ·emporia Slate
Evangel
Fenis
• Friends
Grand Valley
' Hanover
' Heidelberg
• Hillsdale
Illinois Cdlege
Iowa WeJII!yan
• Kenyon
• Loras
' Midland LU1heran
' Mluourl SouUMirn
' Mluourl Weatern
'Muakingum
NE Oklaholftl
Nebraska Wesleyan
' North Dakota State
• Nof'lh Dakota U.
• Nof'lharn Michlg~n
Panhandlt Stale
PiUsburg Stale
• Quincy
SE Okliilhomiil
Trin~y . Ill.
' W!ll~am Jewell
Winona Slate
' WiHenbefg _

rr~

'Is

By KARIN LAUD
JERUSALEM (AP) - At the
15 shacks set up illegally by Jewish
settlers in an Arab neighborhood,
the paths or. Jerusalem's new
mayor and the man he defeated
diverge.
Teddy Kollek wanted them
demolislied. Ehud Olmert, who
unseated Kollek in Tuesday's
municipal elections. said Wednesday that he probably would let the
seulers build even more.
Jews, he said, should be able to
live in any part of the city.
Rabbi Benny Elon had lhe huts
erected this fall next to his Beit
Orot seminary on the slopes of the
Mount of Olives.
He and other Jewish settler leaders see the hawkis)l Olmert as an
aUy in their campaign to build Jewish bridgeheads throughout Arab
east Jerusalem and cement Israeli
control over the entire city.
''There are other'J)Iots of land in
the city where we can build thousands of units," Elon said Wedn~;S·
day.
Hours after being elected,
Olmert declared· his support for
Jewish settlement in Arab neighborhoods and said he would likely
issue a building permit to Bcit
OroL
''Every Jew can purchase property anywhere in Jerusalem and
anywhere in the lan!l o( Israel and I

23

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"Russia·reserves the right 10 use
all means at its disposal to repulse
aggression and crush the ag.,.essors." Manilov said. "This in
line wiih the positions of the Unit·
ed States Great Britain and
France." '
Former Soviet leader Leonid
Brezhnev, speaking at the Uniled
Nations in June 1982, made a uni-·
lateral commitment not to use
nuclear weapons fltSl in an effort to
score propaganda points against the
United Stat6!.
That policy formed the backbone of the Soviet Union's military
and political strategy for years.
Soviet authorities often criucized
the U.S. refusal to make a similar
pledge during their attempt 10 rally
European public opinion against
the deployment of new U.S. missiles in the 1980s.
The new Russian strategy
declares Russia hopes 10 eliminate
nuclear weapons someday, but

Je-wish settlers in Arab enclave
get ally in Olmert after his election

''I w~I.•

20

CM"t'"Y Slat•

•
•
•
•

"

13

Wellem Connealc\lt

The Dally Sentinel Paga 9

Russia to fire nuclear weapons in first strike if it, allies attacked

Catch All The
Excitement!

FURNITURE, JEWELRY
cind RADIO SHACK

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio

1

Football93

INGELS

··

Thursday, November 4, _1993

Thursday,
November 4, 199~I
.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

••

�. ..·
'• ":

'

November beard club. -

hypes th~ hirsute
By MICHELLE LOCKE
Associated Press Writer
BERKELEY. Calif. (AP)- A
new movement was sprouiCd by a
happily hirsute §011{1 with a manly
message for their baldFaced
bi'ethren: Put down that razor!
'"It's a liberating feeling," said
Kevin O'Yare, "king" of the
November Beard Club. "It gets to
be"kind of a piin having to shave
365 days a year."
· The club's mission is to get as
many people as possible to call a
hair-removal hiatus for the month
of"November.
~·The simple belief that because
life has given us the power to grow
facial hair, then, by golly, we
should (at least for a month, anyway) , is what holds this. group
together," a news release S81d.
Club members know that some
think there's folly in follicles, but
they're ready to, well, beard the
opposition, said club founder Wid
president, Tahd Frentzel.
· "Pan of being male is having
f11cial hair. So I thought if maybe
there was a month where it was OK
to grow a beard, more men would
take advantage of this and let
Mother Nature have her way with
their faces," Frentzel said.
Frentzel has been growing a
beard in the chilly month of
· November for seven years, deciding to make it a club effort in 1988.
The group has 1111out 40 hair-appar·
elliS in the SWI Francisco Bay area.
Bearded ladies, fake or otherwise, are welcome.
• .The group's format is fairly simple: Meet .in Selltemb~r to plot ·
strategy, recruit tn October, take
pictures in November, then cap the.
month off with a display Of new
growth.
·
Styles vary from the chin cur· ·
tain, a Lincolnesque roll of hair
that skins the face, stretching from
ear to ear, to the Franz-Josef, ·an .
elaborate sidebum and mustache

~atedPG-13

••V2 (out o1 nve)
MGMJ.!Idures
(NoW p/Qyl11g till/It Spring Valley
CiMma 7. Check local listings for
I~)

.•••. .

Maile Ilnlew

By KEVIN PINSO~

•

• · Whenever there's a new trend in
fr!&lt;me nlaking, .UoUywood milks it
6)r Jl]l its worth.
•; But this old ·cow - Nfad Magaiine style satire brouaht to life by
ioofy, cartoonish acting - has
~n dly for IJ.Uite a while now, but
~Town IS still tugging al the

• : Fal~llnstinc! follows ~ tradi·
!Son of Loaded·Weapo" I, which
tpllows the tradition of NaUd Gwr,
Wllich follows the tradition of Airplal.el ... .and so on
. and so on. Noth-

.

'.

'*

. 0r:

~·ti'IIC Meigs Coun\Y Chapter #53

t·

I'

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~

.

~

.

\

SPLASH

By LINDA A. JOHNSON
AMocilted Press Writer
TRENTON, NJ. (AP) -Child
firebugs seem to. be multiplying,
Wid they are not JUSt playing with
~atches anymore, says a fii'C safety
mstructor who blames relevision.
Barbara Lewis of St. Barnabas
Bum Foundation teaches the dan·
gers of fire at school assemblies
PTA meetings and the fmmdation·~
Fire Starters program, which brings
young fuebugs inside the horrorfilled bum unit at St. Barnabas
Medical Center in Livingston.
She and a co-worker also take
about 1.500 third-graders a month
through the foundiltion's 28-foot
mobile fire safety house, which
fealures hazards for kids to spot
and fake smoke that forces them to
flee down a ladder from a secondstory window,
Lewis says mote and more parents are bringing children - aged
18 down to 6 - to the Fire Starters
11rogram after catching them mak·
mg Molotov cocktails, igniting the

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SOUTHERN QUii BOWL • With a score
of 1·1, the Southern quiz team wiD meet Trimble
tonight (Thursday) at Southern Higb School. On
the team are, lert to.right, front, Jeremy Ray·
mood, Brian Allen, Stephanie Sayre, David

· LET IT GROW· Tahd Frentzel, president otNovember Beard
Club, ~bows off his t-shlrt that features a variety of facial hair .
types, m EmeryvUie, Cllllr., Monday. A new movement was sprout·
ed by a happily hirsute group·wlth a manly messaJ:e fro their bal&lt;l·
faced brethren: Put down that razor! Tbe club's misSion Is 10' J:et
as many people as possible to call a hair-removal biatus for the
month of November. (AP Photo/Oakland Tribune, Ron .Rlesterer)
combo.
In addition to Honest Abe, club
models include Ivan the Terrible,
Stonewall Jackson and, of course,
ZZTop.
Beard bravado was running
rampant as Frentzel and O'Hare
("Yes, that is my real name")

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watA;hed their whiskers wax.
"We're men and we do what we
want," said O' Hare, who is
Frentzel's second in command. So
why does he plan to depilate in
Decembel'?
,.
"I promised my girlfriend," he
said.

j93 THUNDERBIRD
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'ing new here.
Basic 111/itinct's explicit sex.
.
Instinct spoofs two Michael
Some of the gags work, but
Douglas/films, Basic Instinct and most don't- a high-speed bumper.
Flila/ Allraction, in which the hero car chase, lovers who smoke unlit
becomes entangled with danger- cigareltes and a crook who wears a
ously unhinged women (played by stocking over his head even when
Sharon Stone and Glenn Close, he makes his coun appearance.
respectively).
Assante, usually seen in much
Armand Assante plays the com- tpittier roles (such as a drUg dealer
bined Douglas roles as Ned Ravine, m Q&amp;:A), cuts his flfSt comedic role ·
an attorney who moonlights as a preuy well, but the character seems
cop - firSt he arrests crooks. then to have been poured from the same
he represents them and gets them mold as Leslie Nielson's Naked
G1111 role.
,
off the hook.
Movie goers already know the
Ravine is seduced by an icepick wielding blonde who is obses· plot, Wid the gags are no better or
sive, possessive and homicidal- a worse than has been seen in the
50!50 mix of Stone's Wid Close's long string of satirical movies since
characters. He also has a wife who Airplane! poked fun at airline diswants 10 kill him for his megabucks aster movies.
The idea, when new, was enrer.
insurance policy and a purehearted
taining. Now it's just worn out
secretary with a dark past.
The plot combines both films;
Kt~ln Pinson Is a stqfj writer
spoofing everr.thing from Fatal
Ohio Valley Publ/s/Jing.
for
Attraction's boiled bunny scene to

chance of survival as radical cystectomy, removal of the bladder
and pelvic lymph nodes. That
surgery is now done when the cait·
cer has spread to surrounding muscle.
.Most such patients then have to
unnate thrpugh a catherer into a
bag.
.. About52,!JOO Americans wiD be
diagnosed w1th bladder cancer this
year, and aboutiO.OOO will die.
The' method was used on 53
patients. Doctors removed their
tumors and gave them chemotheraPY and radiation. After four years
o~ follow-up, abqut half w~re sliD
alive w•th no s•gn of spreading canccr. ·. . . .
This IS s1m1lar to results of radical ~urgery. However, the doctors
cauuoned that a study comparing
the two.approaches head to head
must be conducted before they .can

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be sure the combination apptoach
works as well.
Side effects were one drawback;
Three,quarters of .the J?Btients suf·
fered nausea and vomittng.
In an accompanying editorial,
Dr. Howard I. Scher of Memorial
Sloan· Kettering Cancer Cenrer in
New Yorlc agreed that not all blad· '
d,er cancer patients need radical
surgery. "Bladder cancer is nordifferent from other tumors," he
wrote. .
·
However, Dr. John Libertino of
the Lahey Clinic in Burlington
Mass..•cautioned that new surgicai
techniques that create an artificial
internal bladder may be better
because they spare patients the rig- ·
ors of chemotherapy.
"The PUbliC sbould DOl be COD·
fused into thinking this is SlaJldard:
therapy. It's experimental " he
said.
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Justis,
· · J ... H.arris; second row, Amy
· Weaver, David Pickens, Matt Morrow, and
Ryan Williams; and third row, Fred MaiSon,
James Smith, and Michael McKelvey. Not pic·
tured is Jason Hudson. Kim Phillips is the
team's coacli.

Co'llmunity Calendar items
CARPENTER • The Carpen~r
appear two days before an nent Baptist Church will have their
and the llay or that event. Items annual supper anil bazaar with.
must be received in advance 'to serving beginning at6 p.m.
aSsure publication in the caleD•
dar.
TIJPPERS PLAINS • Saint Paul
United Methodist Church annual
THURSDAY
bazaar Wid bake sale will be Nov . S
and 6 from 9 a.m. to' 4 p.m. The
POMEROY • Pomeroy group of event is being sponsored by the
AA and AI-Anon will meet at 7 W~ling Workers.
p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic
Church . For more information call
TIJPPERS PLAINS - There will
992-5763.
be a round and square dance sponsored by the ladies auxiliary at
PORTLAND • Frank Carl, Tuppers Plains VFW post 9053
author and family life speaker, will from 8 to II :30 p.m. Music will be
give a Bible-centered look at . by True Country Ramblers. I_l:ed
America's family and young peo· Cross will be caller.
pie in a multi-media presemation at
First Church of the Nazarene on
POMEROY • The eight annual
Nov. 4 • 6 at 7 p.m. nighlly.
arts and crafts show will be held at
ttoe Meigs Couhty ·Senio£.Citizens;;
'
. · LIFTON
· Th'ere wil.i be a Center from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Over
~night revival at Clifton T~r· 20 artisians will have a wide vari·
nacle Church from Nov. 4 - 6 at 7 Oiy ol homemade crafts for sale.
p.m. nightly with. Evangelist Food will tie available from noon
Michael Vance of Columbus. The to 5 p.m. The public is invited to
public is invited.
auend.
.
'
RUTI.AND - The Meigs County
Health Department will hold free
immunization clinics at the Rutland
Fire Department from 9 to ll a.m .
and at the Salem Township Fire
Department from I to•3 p.m. for
children ages 2 months to kindergarten age. Parents ~e asked to
bring the child's immunization
rcl:ord, For more information call
992-6626or 985-4195.

ROCK SPRINGS • Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet at 7
p.m. at the Rock Springs Township
HalL

LONG BOTTOM • Faith Full
Gospel Church will have preaching
and singing at 7 p.m. P~tor Steve
Reed invites the public.

'----------------.....1
Th k
f
I fl'
W. ·Dav1d Gra•am

__________ _________.
Paldlor""'~CookAd.;Pomeroy,OH
~_.

•

•
'

Gibson , Di~k Van Dyke and Gary
Busey.
.

Tha•k• for yo•r
support fro• the
people of Racine
Village.
Orland Lee Floyd
Paid for by 1ho '*l&lt;i&lt;lal8 Orland Lee
Floyilllox 123 Four1h St. l'lacirw, 011

LOTTRIDGE • Lottridge Com·
munity Center will sponsor a smor·
gasbord from noon to 1:30 p.m.
Cost is $5 for adults and $2.50 for
children. Carry out will be available. Everyone is welcome .
REEDS VILLE - There will be a
ham and turkey dinner sponsored
by the Racine Elementary PTO at
Southern High School from 11 a.m.
to 2 p.m. Cost is $4 for adults and
$3 for children. Carry out is wei·
come.

HARRISONVILLE • Har·
risonville Elementary School will
REEDSVILLE • Olive Town· have a fall festival from 5 to 8 p.m.
ship Trustees will meet at 7:30 p.m. Dinner will be served from 5 to 6
at the Shade RiveJ State Forestry p.m. There will also be games, raf.
liuilding on Joppa Road.
fles. a white elephant sale and craft
tables. For more information. call
HOCKiNGPORT - There will 742-2630.
be around and square dance from 8
to II p.m. at the Reynolds BuildPOMEROY • The Grubb Famiing; Music will be by Out of the ly Singers will perform at Old
Blue. Caller will be Jo~n Russell. Bethel Free Will aaptist Church.
Everyone is welcome. No alcohol Preaching by Rev. Bob Grubb.
will be allowed.
Everyone is welcome.

r

ROCK SPRINGS • First Southern Baptist Church will have a
revival Nov. 7 - 14 at 7 p.m. nightly. A nursery will be provided fot
all services. Evangelist wiU be Rev,
Clifford B. Coleman. There will be
special singing with Rev. Charles
Walters.

SAVEUPTO

I
I

SALEM CENTER • Star
Grange 8778 and Star Junior
CHESTER • lzaak Walton
Grange #878 will meet in n:gularl$ League slug shoots stan at I p.m.
session at 7:30 p.m. at the Grange f \ at the lzaak Walton Farm on Boy
Hall.·Christine Napier and Pauline Scout Cal!ljl Road. Smooth bore or
Rife, deleete• to SUite Grange rifled llureb should be used, no
Session wtll J!ive their reports . scopes.

L

•

•

Penn's neighbor Ed Harris. who
starred in "The Right Stuff," said
Penn and his family were fine, but
the house he once shared with
Madonna was guued Wednesday .
by the fire that cascaded down the
rocky foothills of the community.
Two hundred homes were
destroyed and one person killed in
the latest of wildfires that have
plagued Southern California for a
week and a half.
Harris' home, which he shares
with actress Amy Madigan, was
untouched, as were the million-dollar estates of Larry Hagman, Den·
nis :Weaver, Cbaiies B.wnson ,.
Mark Hamill , Richard Gcrc, Mel

SUNDAY

,

·

Moscow is a safer alremalivc.
"The hazard of having a couple
gigaton bombs in orbit around the
Eanh greally exceeds the threat diiC ·
to asreroids," Melosh said.
NASA estimates an asteroid t&gt;f '
1.2 miles in diameter will hit Earth
once every 500,000 years, killin4
more than I billion people.

CARPENTER • Carpenter Bap·
tist Church will have its annual
supper and bazaar with serving
begtnning at6 p.m.

FRIDAY

figl!ting the eating disorder bulimia
and addiction to drugs and alcollol
He said he was hospitalized in
1990 and later joined Alcoholics
Anonymous, Narcotics Anonymous, Overeaters Anonymous Wid·
Bulimics Anonymous.
•••
AUCKLAND, New ~ealand
(AP) - Sam NeiU, the anthropolo~ist who learns .to like children .in.
'Jurassic Park," .was honored by'
his native country as enrertainez of
the YIW·
.
Neill lives in Los Angeles and
wasn't on hand lo receive the
award Tue¢ay at a ~mony . .
"I feel honored Ill be named.thiS
year's recipient," he said in • state·

reponed today in the British journal Nature that a giant orbiting mirror could focus a tight beam of sunlight on the asteroid, vaporizing
enough of it to move it slowly
aside.
HJ. Melosh of the University of
Arizona said the idea he developed
with I.V. Nemchinov of the Institute for Dynamics of Geospheres in

TORCH · Camp 1110900 Mod·
ern Woodmen of America will
sponsor a smorgasbord dinner from
4 to 8 .J?.m. at the Tmch Community Bualding to benefit the UMC
food pantry. This will be a match·
ing fund benefit. Every donation
will be 4oubled up to $1,250 by the
Woodmen. The dinner is free with
a donation. The public is inviiCd to
attend.

MILTON • Mountaineer Opery
House will present Doyle Lawson
'rUPPE'R.S PLAINS - Tuppers and Quicksilver at 8 p.m. .
Plains Post #9053 Ladies Auxiliary
will have a meeting at 7:30 p.m. at
the post home. Dues will be due.
SATURDAY
All members are encouraged to
attend.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge #411 stated meet· TUPPERS PLAINS · The ing at 7:30p.m. Election of officers
Orange Township Trustees will for 1994 will be held. Refreshmeet at 7:30 p.m. at the home of ments will be served. All master
Clerk Patty Calaway.
masons welcome.

LONDON (AP) - Elton John
was upset and Wlgry over a false
new~ repon that he lived on a
bizarre diet, spitting out chewed
fool! rather than swallowing it, his
mlll'la*er told a jury.
·
.
. ''fhe rarticle disturbed him
dee{lly,"lolin Reid testified during
a trial on the rqckec's libel compfaiilf'a pinit tl'le Simday Mirror.
'f'!e tabloid admilled the story
wasn't true but said it didn't know
that last December when .it printed
it under the headline: "Elton's diet
of deaih·~:· .
' John· ~d the paper acted recklessly by failing to check its facts.
He told the High Coun jury on
Monda'S&gt; thai he spent 16 years

I '

••••••••••••••••••••••••••llliiii

There's never
been a better time
to get a Bank One
Home Equity Une:"
Interest rates are
still at some of the
lowest levels in
years. And your
mterest=ents
are tax uctible
·in most cases, an

PUbljcation falsely reports John's diet

Paid for by eandldale, Main St. Racine •.Oh

•

of these producers or whoevu does .
these shows and just bring them iri
and let them see these (child bur:J1 •
victims) because every day they ;
have to go through tonure," Lerwas
says. "It's a living hell. "
·
She does bring children in !hi ·
Fire Starters JlfOIIraJD through the
bum unit, to show them that swi· :
ing a fue for fun can leave tbept
hospitalized, in excruciating pam ·
for mon1hs and permanently .
scarred.
Four boys aged I0 Ill. 18, whose ·
parents said they were "Beavis and
Butt-head" viewers, were there
Sept. 2 after they tied tin cans
together, filled one with gasoline
and ignited it in Rumson.
·. :
Two weeks later, Kalby Dundee
brought in her 6-year-old daughter,
Erin, after caiChing her behindtheir
Union home about to drop matches
into a bucket the girl had filled .
with gasoline.
"I can 't believe I wu seconds
away from losing her." Dundee :
says.

Wildfire gives.celebrities a real-life thriller

By JEFF WILSON
Associated Press Wrilel'
MALIBU, Calif. (AP)- Sean
Penn lost his $4 million Spanish·
style villa to the wildfires, but
many other Hollywood stars came
home to nothing more serious than
broken windows and ash on the
Porsche.
"The windows blew out and it
POMEROY ·Pomeroy Elemen- scorched the side, but my sprin·
tary School will have its fall festi- klers inside never even activated,"
val from 5 to 8:30p.m. The cafete· actor Mau Salinger of "Picket
ria will be open all evening. Games Fences" said outside his concrete·
will begin at 6:30 P·lll· until 8 p.m. and·slass home in the star-studded
}'ickets for the games will be sold seasade commu~ity . "God saved
lit IO,for $1. A ,haunled boule ...,u,.- us, 1-gueas, butJt \s·hanl to Joolo'·nr
occu11y the entire second floor. the rest of iL"
Admission
cents for
ndults ilnd 25will
centsbeforSO
children.
r

People in the news

Larry Wolf• ·

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - An
asteroid on a collision course with
Earth could be diverted from its
doomsday path by a concentrated
sunbeam, researchers suggest.
Some researchers have proposed
an orbiting nuclear bomb as the
most practical way to slap away a
threatening asteroid.
But two planetary scientists

Potluck refreshments will· follow
lhe meeting. All members are
urged Ill atrend.
TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
Plains VFW Post 9053 Ladies
Auxiliary will have its annual
turkey supper at 4 n.m. at the oost
hOme. Cost for .the dinner wilt be
$5 for adults and $2.50 for childreJ1
12 and under. The menu will
include turkey, dressing, mashed
potatoes, noodles, green beans,
cole slaw, dessen, tea and coffee.
Carry out will be available.

spray from aerosol cans or rolling
burning, gasoline-soaked tennis
balls- down city streets. A Sussex
County judge recently sent two 13year-olds there for burning down
an l!bandoned mansion.
"It's amazing what they think
of," Lewis says. " When you ask
them. they say that they've seen it
on telev ision" and wen: curious.
Parents of five children in the
program during September said
their kids • dangerous ideas carne
from watching MTV 's controversial "Beavis and Butt-head" show.
St. Barnabas executives wrote to
MTV complaining about the show,
which features an animated pair of
dimwiued boys who like to bum
things. Three weeks later, the show
was blamed for a 5-year-old
Moraine, Ohio, boy setting a fire
that killed his 2-year-old sister Oct
6. Amid public outcry MTV deleted references to fii'C from " Beavis
and Bull·head" and moved it to a
later hour.
"I would just like to get some

Sunbeam via orbiting mirror could zap asteroid ..

Community calendar

ROCK 'SPRINGS • Church
Women Ullited will hold World
Community Day at I :30 p.m. at
Rock Springs Methodist Church.
Church dues of SS are due and $5
gift blanket certificates can be pur·
chased.,

Than·ks for your
· suPport!
. I~

. ...

'93
CONVERTIBLE

4 Dr., Loaded I

an . you or your n uence
.. and
·su·p· ·p·•o rl · in the
· · ~:Oiga~ounty:l'::ioner
~t Hofr!llan atterided to help
: ; C!d-:::oo;r=:~:~6?ir!c~J Novepdaer 2nd election.

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

Burn foundation says firebugs
multiplying, blames TV influence :·:,

'93 ESCORT .JIIGO.N

r &lt;,' 00 &gt;.,;;

~ tbel&gt;isablcd American Veterans 1"'"~-~~---~.;...----~~~--....o;.,
hilda special ,.ung on Mondliy,
:~.;:r::=:~.:t3m~

. .. ~~ww .... !l~ma·
; : :..;.. 870 8qnla 10 ,_. funds for
·; : iiifi .lliO.ietL 'The p will be awlrd• ' "·.' ..........
atfcin the
coun .,.,
v-""" ~=·

Thuraday, November 4, 1813
Pqe 1t.

'\!

..

•

'

•

•

" .~f'fr··~.

E&gt;isabled
•

feterans
.
· &amp;old.meeting

~

The Daily Sentinel

"LOADED"

~ew treatment may avoid radical surgery

: ', By ()ANIEL Q. HANEY
,·
AP Science Writer
j : BOSTON (AP)- A new com.qination treatment,for bladder can·
may allow· victims 10 continue
lb.urinate Jl011118lly instead of haviitg t.o wear a plastic bag under
dteir clothing for the rest of their
l)ves.
1: . Doctors from Massachuseus ·
(lenetal Hospital found that the
rtchnique "-- a combination of
sQrgeey, chemotherapy' and radia·
tieD...:. appears to let plllients avoid
c:Qmplete removal of their bladders,
which is now the standard treat·
tt(enL
. ' However, they cautioned that
.;11 bclter ~tment is necessary: to
i~rove survtval Wid reduce s1de
e~~·
·
, • "This iS not the new Wtswer to
tlit disease. It's a direction," said
Doriald s. Kaufman, prineipal
author ol the ~pon•. He a11d c~l19&amp;11eS reportelltheu findings m
·='·s New England Joornal of
.
me
: ·The dcictors fOID\d that the·new
tr~atmtnl produces as good a

._NGE~

\

Slap stick humor needs a rest
F.afallnstlnct

'.93

WAS *13,716.®

..
j

·'

By The Bend .
"

'

ment.

Neill's latest role is that of jilted
husband in "The Piano," about
New Zealand seulers last cen111ry.
It won best piclurc at the Cannes
Film Festival this year.
.
•••
•1 . NEW YORK (AP) - Jackie
~isflghtingfortherightlllbe

,
I
I

IN CLOSING COSTS.

advanta~e you

.J

recording of the
deed. Services
don 't~wtth
other
sof
that would cost
financing.*
Sou as much as
Best of all, you
400.
pay no closing
To apply for a
costs-including
home e'H:1ty line,
attorney's fees and stop bo e nearest
aftpraisill ch~es, Bank ne.
gus the cost o the
Or, if r,o~refer, simp y I us
tie search and

at 446-0902 or
1-800677-4994.
And cut your closing
. costs down to

SIZe.

--

BANK!EOIIE.
Whatever it takeS:
Rank

One.""""'- NA

Memtxr mrc

politically incorrect.
.
Cpmedy Cenual filed a federal
awsuit on Tuesday Ill block Muon .'
from using the plu'ase on Broadway
since it's also the title of a new
series lin the cable channel.
"People could get confused,"
said Steven Paul Marie, the chan.lid's lawyer. "It lends 10 dilute the
rights Ill the name thit we've built
up and spent a lot of money on."

·

,,

&lt;•

�•

•

•

2-The
The

NotfC:e
NOY:f~ l~ ~=ERS
Public

PUbliC Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

~f

the Tr_u..,
eeld -riii·N-1-p-le-,.;_L_I_m...;,lt,;..elj:...':....-4-4-24
·The Tuppero Plalna• 11 provided by Lew (1) uNd Em 1 ro on
Avenue,
~W
1M2 GIIC Van, It rlino, and p
C...
ater at" Dlatrlct li (t) uNd 1180 ·l.nlernatlonal
orker1burg, Welt Vlrglnlo
Inviting blda lor 1 1813 8
doM
28,04 upon peymont of
end/or 11N C.b &amp; Chl..la
~ llol;::,.":'ti.e right to $45.00, None of which will
15,000 lbo. GVW Super Duty Olllcellnd r.jiCioll b.a..
bo rlfundecl.
Truck with the following
By ordot of the Bcerd of
Special 1ttent1on by the
apeclflcetlono:
Education.
oontriiCtor 11 to be dlreclld
Sou
to . lollnorlty . Bualnea1
Engine
Qptlon 1 • 460 ga1 full
Looel Enterprlee requlremonto 11
Injected
·
Dlalllct atlpulated \ ·within .tho
01nnlt E·Hill, Trelaurw
S~p'-tary Condltlona.
Option 2 • 7.311tot diesel
.
Box 171
Rear End Gear Rallo
Racine, Ohio 45771 · lddoro ere required to
5.13 w1 th dlnll engine
(11) 2, 3, 4, 5, 7; STC
c om ply WEith the Ulnorl!)'
8 ua 1noaa ntorprlao (UBe)
4.10 w1lh gila onglno
137" wholl b11o
roqulromento aot lonh In
Dual reerwholla
SIICIIon 11~ .07 of the Ohio
11uo1 full tanka
Public Notice
RIIVIaod CIJ!Ie, and rule 114S·apeod atandard m1nual
1·32 · pf •tho 'Ohio
tranoml1alon
Admlnlatrotlve CoCie. In
ADVERTISEMENT
part, thl1 meant that any
8-ply mud end anow t1r11
· n11
· FOR· BIDS
Bidder on Controct 93·1 to
Power at-lng and power
brako1
Village of Pomeroy
the
extoilt that 11
33151 ..... ~.... ..
Heavy duty vlnylaeots
320 Ea1t Main Street
au~&gt;contracte work,. aha II
• ..., .,.,. 45771 .
Rubbor floor mats
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
award eubcontrecta io Stale
Dome lamp
Separate eealod BIDS for Certified Minority ilualn••
614·992-5344
Clgarenellghter
tho con1tructlon of Witer Enter'prliaeo In en eg;rogate
J-I00,714·niE
AM &amp; FM radio
Syatem . llnprovemente. dOllar value of'no 1e 11 than
Rod In color
Contract 13·1, Woter live '• percent (5%) ,of the
Eoch bid ahould also Storoge Focllltlea will be P!lme Co.n troct. Bidder
procurement octlvltlee. fQ.r
reflect with and without received bY the Vllloao
Come by and reg,lstel···l
trod•ln of a 1989 truck with Pomer~y at the -,.....
CQniracl' 8~·1 'to the e¥tent
for,
free Banery
be
mechonlca bod. lntereated Burgeea &amp; Nlple, ~~~ ·that Ia procure• malorlofa·
and/or oervlcea, olioll reoull · given away December
blddora can call the Dlatrlct 4424 Emeraon
otflco to make appointment Pt.rkeraburg, Weal
'In the oword of procurement
24,. 1993. No purchase
to view 1989 truck.
20104 until 12:00
Cont~aota to Stita Cerilfled
required to register and
Tho blda muat be noon(locolllme),
lnorlty
Bualneaa
don't have tp be present
accompanied by a 100% bid 1, 1893 ond then
·aald
In en .oggrogata
to win.
bond, and performance office publicly opened lnd dollar Voluo of not leaa than
·
•·
two . percent (2%) of tho
bond to the lull amount of rad aloud.
each propoaal.
Tho ·work covered bY. tho prime Contract;
docurit'e n
Proapectlvo Blddera may
Bids will be opened
Monday, November 8th, at ~;~~:~:~:~~:the •fol.lowlng addrou lnqulrlea to:
2:00 p.m. at the Dlatrlct'o
quonlltloa.
Burgeaa . &amp; Nlplo, Limited,
· 3·1, Woter 4424 Emerson Avenue,
offlcelocatod Just off Route
Parkersburg, Weat VIrginia
7 al 39561 Bar 30 Road,
.,
whoae mailing oddre1a Ia
• 57,000· ~104, (304) 485'8541 .
39561 Bar 30 Road,
_glul-coated bolted
The. VIllage of Pomeroy
grq~nd water atoroge r-rvea the right to reJect
Rot$fnllle, Ohio 45m. The.
(614) 36 • .1878
and ·• valve vault, any a.nd all Blda or tct
Dlatrlct reaervea tho right to
ltocltecl wllh
waive any lnformalltlee and
with foundatiOno, lncreaae or decroaae or
RAINBOW TROUT
1o rolect any/and all bldo.
plumbing •and omit ony Item or Item a
160 Nollll, 111 Rl. pooU&amp;4,
Tuppera Plalno·Cheater
with the and/or award to the lowest
Clortc Chapel Ad., Bldwtll.
Woter Dlatrlct
app.ertalnlng
rum
riGht
'" milo.
Bonk
ftolil
By:- Horold H. Blackaton, I'• W~K.
Prnldent ofthe
a
a at I m a to d
BOard of Director&amp;
conatructlon coot Ia $96,600
(10) 27, 31 (11)4, 7; 4TC
aa of October, 1993.

Sc=

··•The
Area's N1J1nber I
.
.

POME,OY
HOIJJ REPAIR
All tyP,H of -~
'C.rpentry, ·.
.f'lumblng, •
. · Electric, .etc.
10% DIOscount
Senior Chlzena '
742·2443

The contract jj,acumenta

PubliC N~lce

PUBLIC · NOTICE
Seoled propolala will be
received by lho Bo~fd of
E:ducotlon of Southern
Lo.,.l School Dlotrlct "Of
ltaclne, Ohio 11 tho
Tieeourer'e office until 2:00
p:m. on November fl, 1993
oild et that time opened by

may bo o11mlned II:
Vlllogo of Pomeroy, 320
Eaot Main Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
.
Burg••• &amp; Nlple, Umlled,
4424 Emeroon Avenue,
Parkeraburg, Wool VIrginia
26104.
•
Copl11 of the Contract
Documento
moy bo
purcho1od at: Burgeaa &amp;

'

7(l2193

,t.
.·i LONDON (AP) - Prin~ess i
Di&amp;.!a today ridiculed reports d;lat
,

.

r,

'.he is 1Uff¢ng a recunence of .an

'e6ting disorder she once descn'bed ,

as sicmming from a "spiral or '
aecret despair."
· In a rare impromptu speech.
. qilin8 ~ocldngly told an audience
q(-cltlriiY wmers they were lucky
ia'hlve bee at their London meet·

ilj; ·

·

''I was supposed _10 have my
down the 1oo (toilet) for most ·
. of the day. I ant supposed to be
, draggCII .off the minute I leave here
· :tU"en in' white coats," Diana
· , ·
;,:•If it is all right with you. I
thought I would postpone my ·nervilus brealcdown 10 a more appropPale moinent. It is amazing what
a migraine can.b;lng· on,'' the 32~~Cad

. (

.

'

~ f:;ott~ry

.

,......

GE

SHRUB &amp;.JRIE .·

HAQ,LIN,, .

·· RE~OYAl

ii.u,.

,,

"~IGHtiH~~LIN~

Days
1
3

·r·

992-lll.wlepo.V

388-VIaloa

98SO, ....
1143-Pordoad

,ofiR§WqoD '
BIL:It SI:.ACK
992·2269
USED RAILROAD
, TIES
.

64.......... Dill. '
S79.WoL.t

$6.00

$ .30
$ .42

z-la Me.oorr
3-- AtmOUDC811118Dll

llulletin lloard•• .$6.00'lnch per day

CIA.SSD'IfiiiS
GETBFSUL'l"S • FASrf

'

PHONE
INSTALUDON

SVRACIJIE, OH.
61Mt2-6118
R IJ 111111 &amp;

. Jacks Installed
Extanslons run to
DHtarent Rooms and

'··

Frie Estlmataa

614-367.0421

, I 11

36-lleol Ettate Woatad

1:1\l\1lor Sola

,.__v •. - a 4 1FD'o

Motorcye&amp;.
Bow Mo..,.. lor Solo

44- Apart.eat for a..,
45- Funioheol Roo,..
46-- Spoee lor Beat
47- 'll'oatad to Rmt
4.8- Eqvi,_...t for Heat

a

Auto p..,. A: "--riooJ
Autollepoir

c..,-. ......

,.,

Pl..t.JacAU..tiot
Eu.aYaW.,
Electrical&amp; w •...,.u.~
M-C....roiBauliroc
Mobile Ho. . Repair

I -Room Addition•

HAVE REFERENCES

614·915·4110
8112111311 mo. pd

. (FREE E8TIMATEJI

Dill'S

V.C. YOUNG Ill
9_92-62J5, ~

TRAIIS.ISSIOII
&amp; AU'O REPAUl
Speelalitlng il1

Pom-y, _Ohio
.10-92-tflt

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK. LOADER
•TRUCKING

Automatic
Transmlasions
368 Ealt Main St.
Pomeroy, 'Ohio
9112~1

36358 SA 7

' &amp;COAL
',.
...
.
.

-

·R•IOIIIbi., Rates

Joe · N.[ ~yre

SAYRE TRUCKING
' ..614-'742-2138 '-

·~

SERVIa
36970 WI• Road
· POMOJ, Oldo

( 'I

II

'

I \. II

-

EVERY SUNDAY ·. 614·992·7144
4/29/93
AT I P.M.
RACINE GUN CLUB
EVERY TiiURSDAY

Beglnnllg Oct. 3

CLUB

_,

'

'

•'

I

I:

', Gutter Cfeilnlng

C11ll
I•I···At .

FREE .ESTIMATES

/

M1\)

GaiiM.
• · Dowi; pauli ·

...

.742·2904 '

-1 .

NEW-IEPAIR

HUnll liD COOLIII

GolllpoNa, Oh.

446·9515
CARPET &amp; UPHOUTEU CLUIII. .

6:45p.m.
$100 Payoff
Thla ad good lor 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

Painting ,

:949-2168
S.t$:11CS-Ifn

(3M) 773·5515
WINTER HOURS
. Sun.-Thurs. ....-10 pm
FrL A s.t., 4 pn~-:7

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

l"dt..,.I'Y (on elte)
•gene,.. ciMnlng
"odor1relttment

24Hour
Emergency

s.mc.

20

CUSTOM DESIGNED FOR YOU
oSolid Vinyl Insulated
Replacement Windows
-Lifetime Warranty
-Guaranteed Installation in 3

Weeks from Date of furchue
!-,AVE liP TO Si
:·, rJ
YUUR HEATitJ,~ 811 L ',

IIII'IIUII

Located at the corner of s.A. 143 and 7

Phone 992·5114
.

performance proflea.

.

New Homes • VInyl Siding

•ro...r

O.ytona Radial 60 and 70 Serl11
• Low, Wide 60 lind 70. Settee

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Two olrong llberglaoo beltt
Aggrllllvolrelld deolgn
Smooth rtdlng polyeater cord
body.

New Garages • Replacement Windows :
Room AddHiona • Roofing
··

Lac ' cl '"' Vln• St. In
Rac,lne. Ample lot,
yitr'cl, -lklng
d....,_ ·to achool or
church. Ideal for
young !emily.

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

f~cM

:

"SPECIAL CARE"
they deurvell

WV013372
We epeclttlla In:
• FIRE • WATER
DAMAGE
RESTORATIONINSURANCE CLAIMS

Prk:elaubjec:t to change without notice

I .OME
, FOR SALE

' ...... wv

We give carpet end
upholetery the

now accepting all ferrous metals
Including: tin, cut Iron , long and abort Iron.
Must be amtlllenough to be moved by hand:
Short Iron (lisa than 3 ft.) 1.75 per hundr.cl
, Motor Calt.....2.110 per hundred
Clean, dry alum. c:ana .23 pound

Spac;"'_E.arly Bird

Ifill P111 IJf Streets

"*'411 or Toll F- t-.?2-6117

Ia ·

IN POMEROY

(Forrilclr Maeon ~~

$31.00 -

TRI-COUNTY RECYCLING

EAGLES

LUIES

:'WATER

01~~

can lEHNEn'S MOBILE HOME .·

Call Gene Riggs 985·3594

IllGO

Factory Clloke,
12 .......,.

I)

Located In Eastern Meigs County. 1 to 5
acre tracts available. Tuppers Plains &amp;.
Cheater water; electric available, on site
Hptic tanka &amp; roads to each lot
approved. Partially wooded with rollin~
hills.
From $5,000 up

31t04 i.e•••••
CrMklo..
Mltldleport, o•1o

· GUI SHOOT

I

THE
PHOTO PLACE

HO.SITES

';."&amp;
'?\'

.,

I

I ' \ I

'·

Bob and Charlene Hoeflich

.'

.

$25.00 mo.

Pomeroy

....

DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 992-7474
POMEROY, OliO

992·3470

~so,.,.o

\'1

109 Hlgh'Street

DIVIDSOII'S
·PLUMBIH. ,flum~&gt;ing
,...

QUALITY WORK
&amp;.GOOD RATES

.

~

I

Pomeroy Home &amp;
Auto and C&amp;A Auto
Come VIall Us.

GRAVEio SAND,
UMESTOIIE, TOP SOIL
&amp; flU DIRT

1WhU..s ,

FURNACES

Goo

Memory Mates - Portraits
Special Occasions

wllh12yra.
experience It

PLUMIIIG,
HEIDNG &amp; ·
COOLING ·

- ..

Mobile and Doublewlde owners.•.

318/ttn

....

.

ATTENTION

985·3406

4-1 &amp;-93-lllt

l:iill:clw

199

MARINE SERVICES

7/3119tllfn

Chester, Oh. 45720

Richard CORIHIIO

'

Sa tl~ aD llak.. 8 Mod• ·

IAIWII, OliO

CUSTOM SADDLES·,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

(614)
667·6621

'laMeD·

'HAULING·

ortOU Fill
1400.14i·0070

Shade River Saddle

I;).A. .OSTON
EICIYATJIIG ·

1111111113

.

'

992•7011 or
912-SiSJ

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
lox 119
. . MIM.IIao.d£·01tioA57.60 ..
(614) 143·5264 &amp;114J11311fn

Painting

.announcM
Richard Moore
has joined our ....111. 1

'

AU.UIU~IIONU

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage ·

1-EIIoctl~cial end Plumbing

Blll'anre

now.

OUTBOARD MOTOR s32"
INJOARD/OUTIOARD saO"
WINTER STORAGE lVAILAIU

IIW&amp; ... NIUftl '

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
.ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

CARPENTER SERVICE

of Ravenawood

~UCIItiMI available

WINTERIZATION
SPKIAI.S·
~
. CERTIFIED MECHANIC
.•

'

~ERY wu:gNABLE

For Children becoming ,'
Big Brothers and Sisters
Tuesday, November 91h
6:30p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Administrative
Conference ROOm
Call 675·4340 Ext. 230
lo register

, Flnltlilld P~,
and Day &amp; Evening

PillS

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair

10oM3

painting. lei me do It

Kids &amp; Baby Program

'

~

as- Lou A: Ae...,.

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of

9_
92·3967 ti;li: detail_s

~

WIWD'S

Outside Buildings

K.,lyatom

Olf-1'1-1111 Ext. • Dell
FREE ESnMATES
Jott Uorrio ·15 Yr. Exp.
TJI.County .Areo

lmRIOR

Weight Control
Holiday Season Spedall
. Thru Nov. 14
'
8 weeks· Only '79;95
Diet and Exercise Plan
at
Big Bend Health &amp;
.
,fitn~ss

.

JOilb • Phon• • FAX

LINDA'S
PAINnNG

.87 Mill St. Middleport

'

•

I

81- Upbolot«y

M'n

•MoroPower
•More Mileage
• Lower Emlaalona .

.•

1

I '

,._a..- l'ullclj·p

14-- Bwbaeu Tl'aiaias
15-- School. &amp; l•truetioa
16- llodio, TV A: CD Repow
17-Mloe.llueo..
1&amp;-- Wantod To Do

Auclioa

I'

I

r"f

13-l.u......

II- 'tl'...tad to Bur

_,IIU
COUUIICAIIOIIS

12-311-92·11lt

Arts &amp; Crafts Show
Meigs Counly Senior
Citizens Center
NovemberS
10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

1110101 41~

11- Help Wantad
U- SU...tioaoll'ooled

4-Ci..away
S..lloppy Ado
6- Loot ..d Fouad
7- Loot ..d Fouad
~ l'IIWie Sale A:

~

'

'

3%- M""ilo H._ for Sale
lB- r .... for S.lo

I

I' \

'

\

41- &amp;-for Ileal
42- M""ilo Ho..ea lor a...,
43- Panu for Real

Over ts'words
$4.00
$ .20

lnalliflodloo\o af Uneo

•llltll aut

94.,.......
742-'•h=·

Rate

Words
15
15
15

Centinorclal

C&amp;-2

247-LolonFoL

'

,i

year-old princiss said, referring to
rel:x&gt;rts,she had been suffe'ring from
a lnigrai~e .earlier \his week when·
she was plioiOgraphed·wilh tears in
her eyes."'
Dame Barbara Cart1ar)d, who is
distantly n:lated 10 Dian~. by marrlage, ~aid Wednesday ·night that ,
the pnncess had been suffering 1
from bulimia. ·
·
"I had· heard she had had a
slight attack of. bulimia,'' ·Dame
Barbara, ,92, told the British nation·
al news agency Press Association
in an interview.
'
The romance novelist's daughter
Raine was Diana's stepmother.
Diana's fatllerdied in A.mll-992. ·
. Buckingham Palace ro(usecno '
comment on Dame Barbara's ·
re11181b.

neunites man .with his dog
.

Dlol.

I

.·~.

~-

'

675-l'l. 1'1......
458 ._.
576-AI'fle c......
773' M!
882-New Rnea
895-Let...
937-Bdolo

Pomerey

24S..IloGnaole
25~., ..

6
$9.00
10
15
$13.00
$ .60
Monthly 15
$1.30/day
$.05/day
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
Buoin... C..rd--.$17.00/lnclt per momth

the CaUipolU Daily1'rilnme, reaebi~t~ o-..er 18.000 IM,ma

UMESTONE,
GRAVEL; TOPSOIL

, ,
(AP) - A man his dog, Pooch, which had ·been
. who used hill appearance on tbe missing for several wceb.
Cindy Munko of suburban
'
oltio Lottery' a. weeklf television
; , ; ~ 10 publicize •his search for his Garfield Heights noticed the pic·
ture and recognized the dog_as one
· • • mJsalng l1og now baa his pet back.
; ;_ ' Kenny Stout of Akron won she had found roaming in Aleron.
' ' ns nn11 011 the "CUb Explosion She tQnUICted the 1\)tlery's head·
' ' '' ~~'!&amp;&gt;'" llhoYt. On SalitrdaY' s. quli~ters, !lnd· lottery emp!oy,ees
llfow whiCh is televised across · arr~nged Monday's reumon of
0111o.'s• tlitplayed • pieture.or Slilut aild Pooch.
,,

Thunday Paper
Friday fll""' .
Sunday Pal""' ,

,)

'

.
·cL£VELAN0

Tuesday Popor
Weclneoday Paper

446-Golllpolb
3674'o:Nre

T... .

667.,(ooh!L

day aflei' publication to
Cor.rec:Uoa ·
' : • AcL that m•l be paid ill ad"Uce·a.r'e:
Card of Tbaako
HoJipy Ado
In M-.oram
Yard Saleo
.
• A el...,itoed ad•o .......mt pl.~ Ia tho Tbo
Senti110l
(except C""atroed D;,pla7, Buoin--. Cor.[ or .Lopl
·
No~oo) willalooiapP.,.r iJ&gt; tho Pohit l'leuutlltp..r ...d

_piana suffering anew
from eating disorder
•

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WANT "
ADS
WORK!

By DANIEL J. WA'KIN
Thousands of ordinary Romans,
AJsoclated Press WJ'Iter
including men:haniS from the slteet
ROME (AP) - Italians bid a in downtown Rome where Fellini
last farewell tmlay to Federico lived, crowded into the church and
Pjlllini, _the man who chronicled spilled into the huge square out·
the((, flalilboyance. exuberance and stde.
tindemess on ftlm for 40 years.
The five-time Oscar winner died
; About 15,000 people altended Sunday at 73 after spending two
the direcl0l's'f1Uiel81 in SL Mary or weeks in a coma brought on by a
the An~IS -chureh, built arotu1d the heart altack.
ruins of an ·ancient Roman bath.
. F~I.Iihi's wife. of. SO years and
.M;Uioos more wlllclted.:a live ll:le- ,leadmg lady, Gtuhetta Masin a,
vjsibn broadcastofthec:e,emony.
entered the church with Fellini's ·
• It was one or the rnoie unifying sister Maddalena. Masina wept
111Q11lCIIts in this fracturiJig country, behind dark glasses, burying her
-,here separatism has become a h~d ·in' the collar of hec coaL
growing issue. tu1ions are fighting
Applause filled the basilica
the government's financial pro- when the coffin was brought in,
gram and a huge corruption sCandal . flanked PY ~plumed. sword-bear·
flas shaken most areas of society.
ing Carabin!Cn' pcilice in.ceremoni- ,
: In his homily, Cardinal Achille al dr~ss. A trumpet and organ
. Silvestrini praised Fellini as a played musk: by Nino Rota, who .
Jienius whose "~erson al'l;d a~t · composed many or the scores for
~~taught about a tullty of feelmg m FeUini' s 20 movies.
sqch a delicate moment in national
Applause broke out again after
'life:" .
the ~hurch cere111onY for the direc..
,... The counlry's politjcal leaders lOr, whose wodt: at times riled the ·
j&lt;lined fellow directorS and Several Vatican. MaSina waved farewell, a ~
. qf Fellini' s leading actors in the rosary danglinJ from her ftilgers ,
. church. French actress Anouk
Italy's president. and the leaders •
Aimee, who ~"in ''La Dolce oLits two houses.of Parliament
fita" and "8 1/2.'' was there, as greeled tier.
:
_
:Y.:ell as Italy's S11ndra Milo of
,Outside, thousands of people
' ' Juliet or the Spirits" and "8 milled arotu1d behind police barri·
112:"
cades in. a seene reminiscent of ·
:· Internationally known directors Fellini's films . Nuns, tourists
Michelangelo AniOnioni and Fran- police, offi~ workers and re~
. co·ZeffueUi also attended, ' ·
were in the crowd, l:iehind rows of .

t. ,\

.

.

'

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
l:OOp.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. MOI)day
l:OOp.m. Tllftday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
1:00 p.m. Friday

.Monday Pal""'

,.• Retei'l'e dilcout for acL paid ia ad•aDce.
A ,
• F,.O Ado: CI•.Ow~7 aaci'FotiJid ado uoder 15 W.rda willh:a
~·1· •• ~ ch~rp.
;.
'
: ~ • Price ~fad for~ eapitalle~..- il .douhle price of ad eod
~ 7poinJ,I~typeoalyuHCI ' ·
Seatine! !- 'aqt' hlpobljble for eno'r ,,after f.rrt day (cbec;k
for error. f1nt day aclnuu ia paper). CaD before 2:00 p.nt.

..

r

CLOSED SUNDAY

.

c;GPY DEADLINE

I I\ I \ ' I I 1

Gallla County MeJct COIUlty M.-on Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Areo Code 304

. • Ad. oullide Lb8 c~.wtt)' )'OU: ad rw., aUit he prepUd

Jtaly bids:farew·ell to
Fellini · at;funeral

--

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MoN. ~· FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.B-12

.

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,

Call99'2-2IS6

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nsw-nas:·

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Ckm(Ji.ed pages COller rlie
"follouins t~lephone esclwragea...

.I.U •.I(,I.lClL\JIU

Limestone
Dirt
Gravel'
992-7878

Marketplace

.

•,

fiPE ESTIMATES

614-992-76.3
,.. S.HIIy Cllls)

C.UI4e-2244
lbr8p.m.

2112192/lfn

111t.1811 mo.

10·-

(l'DitiiU[·~ ........

Sn: NLA I. FOR THL I&gt;LAI
~

·

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Pomeroy..,..Middleport, Ohio

,,

BEA'M'IE BLVD.TM by Brute Beattie

33

Fanns

for 5ale

~ Wanted to Rent'
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Thursday, November 4, 1993.

d..'.,~, ~..!~!!!':

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ClwiMion

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KIT 'N' CARLYU::® by ~ry Wright

.I 71

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Goods
YI'RA FURNITURE
114-4484151 0r 81• Ul 4411
'to DAY SAMEAS CASH
OR RENT..2.0WN (NO DEPOSil)

'81 GUC ·314 ton piCk- 454.
oulo., 101,000
tlr•
olndnd om~~.
~
._ ~

HOUI88 for 'Rent

~~--~

Giveaway
1 Smoll Kilton 1 3 11- Colo;
••
To Gl'loowor, 11 4 441 •·~·
B-•
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PEANUTS

you will - until the last few pages get the impression tbat the opponents
of the pre-emptor always die.
'l'bis boot tletcribel mucb moderD
warfare: va~ veniODI of the MuJtl;
two-under, two-way aad tratlllfer pr.
empll; and so on. However, along with
descriptions of tbe methods, you are
given recommended defenses. For a
serious partllershlp, this is a UJelul

1

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H€JICS ~'( SEJ-IIOR. PIC.T~ It-!
OUR
SU\00.. 'IEAAf&gt;OOK I

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\oJH~T oot!l IT SA'&lt; fs.m.R ~·
~lOR PIC.T~ 7

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I COULD GET
OUT OF

WISH 1loi~ 'M:I&lt;E
~EWAY...

TRY 6A.TIN6 IT
WITH A FORK.

EATING: HER
TERRIBLE
6CUP.

- AND SO ro;,.,,v
1He fleUIS(OA}/S/

/11ol/&amp;1fE:Jvr.

i,TAURUS CAprii2Q.Ma, 20) Adhe1elo lesl·

lions today by mailing $1 .25 and a long ,
seH·8Cl!lressed, stamped envelope 10 Astrcr
Graph. c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box 4465,
New York. N. Y. 10163. Be sure lo stale
your zOdiac sign.
SAGmARIUS CNov. 23-Dec. 21) II you .
are unduly curious loday, there IS a possi·
bil lly you might be drawn into a friend 's
affairs resulting in some complications for
which you didn't bargain. Mind your own p's
and q's _
CAPRICORN (Oec. 22-Jon. 19) II al all
possible, try lo avoid bringing suboldinanls
'Into decision making today . They could
-offer a lo1 of input, with \18')' little of ij being

ed .o r proven methods and procedures
fnstaad ol experimenting wilh s hortcuts
:oday where your work is concerned . The
i hOrt route could turn out to be the long
oay around.
BERNICE
lEIIINI (Mo' 21-.June 20) Somelh 1ng in
Vhieh you're presenUy involVed should be
BEDE0$0L
·Ieiding you a larger return than you' re
aceivlng.·Re·examine this sltualion loday
&gt;&amp;CHI toow ~ can be improved upon.
:ANCER (JuM 21.Jul)o 22) Tactics lrom
lhieh you've derived desirable end results
1ighl not be effective on an endeavor on
lhieh you'll be worjcing today. This silua·
const~rctive.
oo's basic elements differ consideoably.
·
AQUARIUS CJan. 2D·Feb. 19) Today 11
(July 23-Aug. 22) Be optimistic today
might be you r lol lo delegate assignments
'lgaldlng the oulcome of e\/Sills, bul don't
10 others. Untonul1ately, you mar pic(c per·
uild your hopes upon unrealistic assess·
Ill the year aheae~&gt;you could be luCkier lhan sons lor tllell affablitjet Instead of tor thell
1en1s. II you dO, something could burst
ueuailn_yoUr ileallngo wHh 'foreigners or lor· capabUijles,
our btbble:
8ign merchandise. Take J)a1n1 to b1Mid rela· PISCES (Feb. 2Q.IIarch 20) KMp In mind
'IRGO (Aug. 23·8tpt. 22) In order 10
tionsl]ipa both commercially an,&lt;~ socially.
today thai any gambles you take Should be
npreee a frielid lode' whO is a bit better off
scbRPIO (Oot. 24-Nov. 22) Today you in •proportion to what you hope to gain _ •an you are materiall, , you might try to
rillghl be more oecrlllve about IQ!IItthl~ Donl bet a dollar H the best you can do is
1atcll h111her spending haDits. This could
than the mailer warranl8. This could win back a dime.
Jm 011110 be rather foolitlh.
tltprlv• yOU ot receMIIg val~ irilorma· ARIEl CMarch 21 -Aprll 11) Your male
IBRA (llopl. 23-CicL 23) In order to tuffill
tlor).tiom t,tlnd whO ociuld h8lp ~· Get a might be dillicull to please today. even our ombiliOIIt Olljectives today, you miglil
ju~ on lila by undtr~ta~ding lhe intlu· when yo~ make special concessions. l'ou
ot share lalrly willlan8810Cia1e whO had a
which are govemlng you in the year must let your spouse realize you are half of
and in your &amp;uo&lt;lk Don't expect this per· ·
ahead: Send tor your Alfro·Graph predic· the clocisiOn making process.
on 10 help you aga;r1.
•

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VTNNIOIUAI,
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CXLOTUHYQU.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Tllere are certain lhlngo yOU to haw. You
cannot -~"" a civilization and .,..., anarchy." - (CrHicJ S1111loy Crouch.

........

I

·fCIIU'club
South would pus over lbe double,
waiting for her, North, to remove to
four clubl if lbe beld tbat suit. Sbe as·
sumed four clubs was natural.
Tbe 'lucky" lead allowed decllartiit
to win the fint foUl' trlcu,
was still 1700 poiDts away. 'l'be Dutcll
rode out of lbe Valley of De&amp;th and
iDto lbe final.

Today is the 308th
day of 1993 and tile
44th day of fall.

t

. r HATE MY MOM'S eaJP.

Alter several successes for preempts, the book ends with a monumen·
tal disaster. It occurred tluriDg tbe
semifinals of the IB89 Women's World
'l'eam CbampiOIIShip. Near the end af
the match, Germany led the Nether·
lands by a moderate margin. Ia ooe
room, the German West played in four
spades, making with an overtrick. 'l'be
German pair in the second room did
sllgblly worse.
'l'be three-heart opening showed ei·
ther a normal tflree.beart pre-empt
a lone. solid club suit with no side
or king. Beta111e of ber· heart bol•diJitl.
South Ullumed lbe latter;

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Nov. 4; 1993

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(Magnus Books, U7.95, 800·27t-2a2l),

OKA'f. FLYIN6ACE . YOU'VE
HAD ENOUSH ... 'IOU D

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2

Pre-empts to tbe right of
empta to the left of
pre-empte In
front of them, into the
rode modem bridge nta•m
you read 'Pre-empte
Sabine Zenkel aad
Antleneil

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By Pllllllp Alder

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Into the Valley
of Death

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Opening lead: •

DOG'!! YOU GOT TO WATCH
THAT SCALPEL ! I

2 Rotlon
3Sorplo/:' b'

Fltlttrlld
07Numeroue
68 P•cel of lend

Vulnerable: North-South
De&amp;ler: West

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down•
35 llounllln
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131(11 lope
(2 wdo., II.)
114 t.ntrat
AMrlean Oil

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62 21:,of

Farnala hot

EAST

;-;=--,.· --=-:::-:-:--..--:------:- ~~.-~?_!lnlll~.• ~1.~. u41
11187 ~Dokato 1
3 lodn10n10, 2 Both Homo In ••• dot "" ~
~-'II •- Dro-r ChMI MUI; Cor Bed'o,
Ex-nl
Hlon, ",200. 814~· Nlco &amp; Cloln, Bunk Bod'o, - o r Bodo. Full
-...so, 11• 441 3010
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10- ~
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s cons ructton prOJeCt won't be finished
In Addoon, Nlco • Cloon, Ylow SIShaorii"Jl AI $20.00; lncjlono Monr
.,..,.,.~ . •
~;;'~!M'M si;;.;'"~ -,
till it's put our kids through college."
01 River, S271/Mo. Ptuo DopooH - poo I Slzoo Slortlng AI
w&lt;&gt;.llfltf
1on1 Corldlllon, lnolde
Out, 1
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853
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P.ll. 1
1442. - I
9 Wanted to Buy
18 Wanted to Do
a BR homo • . _ to rown, dock, Now Fl~ooo 9 - . , . , •oo
1tn Cho1ty S.10, T!,hoo,_ u :
tlroploco, 2 cor corport. goo Eo h N
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0 :L hoot, conlorol olr. 1421. 114.lllrvlooo Sh-r •
114 t41tiiU, Aftor 4 P.ll._
t.onllh Color r.v_ 25" Conoolo, Wonlod lo Buy: J101k Auloo Trl 11o1o ,._ S o - tooolng, ""-"'"""
Tub .-.eo Eoah, lt4-24U1&amp;2 A~ 54 Miscellaneous
wo.u, 114-317·1111.
WHh Or Wit.,... Motoro. Coli lrlmmlna, tno romovol, .ilhfmp
8 P.M.
·
61 Fann Equipment
1tn Ford Truek F-150&lt; ' L.ortot
Lorry LMI)o, 114 311 83CI3.
reOMVo[ Freo ootlmol... COli 3 rvom ho,.o In Oolllpollo. GOOO USED APPLIANCES
Merchandise
With Towing Pocugo, o14-38&amp;- ',
6
Lost &amp; Found
•-·2312 It no onowor loon Nowly coiPOied, &amp; Fumlohed,
1&amp;02.
- - number on mochlno.
114 448 0813.
Wooloota, dryoro, rofrige&lt;-., 81.
s·~-·~ ·
, . . _ F-uoon .., Troctor c-:;:.::_=-:::--:--:-::-o:·-·~
.._ . sa?.: Appllancea 71;QuCIII
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For
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c ..om Pull, ...150· 2110 M~
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Found: e~lklo nt with ooUar,
Employment
Serv
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3br.
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pluo
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only 1 tow monlho old, Mid'
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F~nancial
trenct requ 1red, no -~--··_................
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1'1~ With Bench,
=~ LDw Houn, $1,UOi :::7853:--.-:--:-:::--:--=---:----:~ ~
dloporloroo, l-ol7711.
polo. 304-882·2081.
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With A
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""
•nae Roll ,....., Equl
- · ••• '-':':7..:=:7.:-:=::'-==:-:- Chowolot, Ford, Dadgo,. pickup ,'
1111
Houoo 3 Bodroomo Dining HoodR~ral~
, t.,.. Ha1Froo, '!_o1'5ntnt0. .,..;-··,.
- · • - POLE IIIIILDING SPECIAL bodo. Short or long. No ruot. ,.
1
Room, KHchonL Full BoHmonl,
- • 1
••
30'x40'8'. Polnlod 81111 Sktoo 304..75.e2111
.r
Business
Crooll R'a., 114-lll2..28tnl.
"&amp;4011" Or U... A Wook, AI 21 "
$4001Uo. $400 IJOpooll, 814-44&amp;- 8
1·1858.
Slolnlooo Olool Loa Bumlng Gomi- SIHI Root; 11'xa1
·
'
L.ool: S Englloh Coonhoundo, 2 Homo, No EX111rloc- 11112, 114-441-m:L
~oo fnoort WRh a - Stool Stldo•t:TES' Mon Door. Dump Touck Ono Ton 11111 Ford •
Opportunity
Holpolnl Woa..r I Oryor Polr, 114-441-3141
. • • - ERE
0 I
u - - F·350 Dloool43 000 Mlloo,l Ton '
moloo, 1 tomalo, TNT OliO on !UJ, ltuoh $1.80 Soli Add..INOTICEI
Nlco 2 ot 3 bodroom houoo In Good CondH~~: 17 Cu. Fl.
' .
.
..,,_.
' ""' ~- Eloc:trlc Uft, bcoUont Cond~ :
01:1. 23. John Coole, 111111·704- !!~
Emlllopo To: DIA
5
Chool FrHzor
CondHion, Slondord I Ft. Truak Topper BuHdoro W00-3S2·I04 ·
lion, Aaklng: 18,40111 Con Bo 1
241..ot213 colltct, or 304-875- ~-P.O. 8ol It, Hrn.boro, OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHINII CO. Po111tf0Y lar ront or oolo on
rocommondo thai you do 1Juo1.
1 4001-, no polo, 114- 185, 614-317.01112. ·
With W-o $100, , _ 1kar Grodor, T - Strip!!!~ Soon AI: 41TSocond ,.. .,.,.,Or •
2210.
_
AVON 1 AI - · I Shllloll ,_. wllh pooplo Y"" kMW1ond
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
31111.
Strlpe &amp; Grldoo, O.Or ..., Coll814o44e.4513.
•
Loot: Milo CoUto
Doa. Bpooro, IOWl&amp;-14211.
NOT 10 IOnd money lhrougn tho Thill bodovorn ...._ unfur. Co
...
Sl
Stlcllo An ·Now, tf4.311.82U
Mooon/CIIfton oraL 30(.'7n;
moll uniD 'ou havo ln11001fgoled niMod, 110110 ond Nirlg~r~tor,
mploto homo hlm~l=- -por nalo Wotor Bod With Loco! Dloblbulor For Supor
51711
.~ All .,
lho otlwlng.
~---- and dopooll ,. 0322.
Hou11: Mor&gt;Sol, e.s.
HAter, $100._17111.
Grodor.
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD'I
·
~·- 1
.
o ro
3 mlloo ou1 Bulovlllo Rd.
Yard Sale
~';l' ~. ~~~b~~ Locol VondlnS Routo: $1,200 A ~rod, no lnoldo polo, 114-882- Froo Oolhtory.
Som wlllo'o """'
1853 CJ 38 Joop, wlm lock oulo,•
7
63
., , _
~ .
:'er::f:onlla. Muot Soll.1.PICKENS FURNrTURE
~
,_.,.,...,_L_Iv_e_st.,.o!"ck-::-...,..,,_.... L~ h 10111ng vohlclo, mo. 114-: .
1
581·
Auto iact, Ropolnnon Noodod
42 Mobile Homes
Now/Uood
flouao. J . - lddo 4 to ..,.., 3 112 1 roor cild Roalolorld
:
11172 Chivy ...,. holt 4WD .
0o111pon. · Prior Ex- 23
Professional
HO&lt;Joohold lumlohlng. 112 mi. XXXL- Cornpollvo · I'll- Limoua n bul~ 114..112-'lfoa.
-~· Sand
for Rent
Jorricho Rd. PL Ploaoont, wv, Sot-8101, ,_, liD I:OOI&gt;m, AI Club Co.l. ., l14-441-21011 At. g - - . _ 305 onglno. monuol ,
Gallipolis
.._
l ~•
Services
ooll -·14110.
....,. doyo • houro. 304-2J:!.:
ftM w -"•
fronomlnloi1, now clutali 1 • mt
o: """""'
• Clo 0 ,..
12X50, two bedroom, remodeled
8155.
,.., fJ:30 "'· • e-..ayt, Anytime
·
'
VIcinity
llpolle ~IJ Tri...ll_!~, $28 Third , --"I •lnlorlor, g• hOOI nloo yard, two
SWAIN
Wookondo.·
_ . . plato, S120Ct tkm. 304- &lt;
3 · Fomlly , . _
e.? A-uo, Golllpollo, "" 45131.
~ -v• Yoaro And Money mlloo Out Now Umo Rd. In Rut· AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. $2 1
PT..IIoAF
I::--:-:':-::-:--::====-:-:- 575-:mM
I ...,~.,..Ia Ori¥O
On your Uortgogo land,I14-JIIll-2803 oftor lpm on OllnSI.,Golllpolo. -llJtiod w'll:.t"':.r I oxtro~~""•l:'t ButchorCoi-,Coi1Aftor7P.M.
.
:
Friday 111 ,
1 ... AVON HOUOAY • Choooo Y011r Without -noln• Colli- woolulo•L
hlmHura, ~q :Miom • 304..71o7l28 dop.'
114-388,QIIIt.
18811 Bronco II XLT i&gt;ka., ~J '
hind Sprlr~t~
l~nomo. ·- Oion Houro, Income And I8U80II fGr Oolou:i
'
Work booto.l
H.
.
oulo., 11,000ml., $mill -or wm :
Malornll}', Bibr Clot
lntont, Ro••do. -Avorago i8. $14
2 bodroomtnllor ~ &amp; dop Do
~'111 11orn1- W - - Four Goooo .. loch, Tou AI~ Indo w Hondo 4-w-. 304- ,
Glrto, a:.dloo, ...,..
hoo. !!ourlr Sol~ II Wofll Or
S2 N. Loc&amp;lii Ad';;, rfghl;;;:; Woohar'r. Drvor, Rotrtgorolor, 81~' With siim Pltlo, • ,.,. 114-441-2141
17Ht130 oftor5pm.
1
r.,..
II !DOOR. polo. 304-17!1.10:/e.
~::..,, .V.MI~=. Al·14-~- =~~~=-=~~~~~~· Ha,, Good QuoiMv, Squora Ballo, 18811 Ro._ Y11 4WD, 11110, olr, i
I Fom~ Romodollng Yllnl SolO: I:,;;:..;.;,:;;...,.,...::-..,..-::---,-,2 bodroom mobllo homo, AI. ma.
$1.2(1 Por loll, I~
........ Uft - · lnl. ........ '
Juot
Whlto - · 112 Milo ~orkl Exeollonl Pori Ao'!!l Oolllpotlo, Ohio. 304-flJ.
WAliA UNE SPECIAL: 314 Inch Roglot•ed 8tondord- moro, omlfrn I I - .._Ito, . hlah !
Paot Chartolo Hilla MEol-,
Pn&gt;ducll AI · Coli
5IVII.
53
Antiques
:ZOO PIN $11.1~;, 1 Inch 200 PSI o-oncod rldor on'". 304o171- mi._ oond., f4110o. ~ i
Wotch For Siano, lOA. . -4 P.M. Toll Froo, 1-800o417o65111, EKI.
..,...,....._._;,.;:.;.,;,.;___ hUG; Ron IV.~=Iooo, 7101 ., 514-44fi.3708 '''
171-S4f.
j
Nov lth,llh, Roln, Slllno.
.,3.
.
2br. llollor, located 2ml. from Anllq,. curved glooo -rotary, Jaokoon, Ohla,;1
28.
·
__ ,
ALL YoniSoloo MUOI le Pold..
EXTIIA INCOME
Hovon In """""Y· 3Q4.J73. MQO,I14ott2·7103.
WAlER STOIIAQE . TANKS 64
Hay &amp; Grain
74 Motorcyclea
Advonoo. DEADLINE: 2:011 p.m.
EARN s:zoo.MOO
B
AI
Abovll And. Ground FDA ::-,-=...:.=--=::-::-- "::::=-"::""-:-~6:=,......,,........
tho do' botorolllo lid Ia 10 Nn. WEEKLY~ MAILING TRAVEL
3 Bodroo. ., $210/llo. Pluo
uy or loll. 11111M Antlq..o, A.,_ed FOr Poloblo Wota&lt; Hoy, oquoro boloolc $1.111 • up. ltt2 Hondo CIIIOOF supo;:
124 E. MoHoulnStreo~ onT.WRl 12~ ·Ron E - Into....-, J...,.: S.!urdo, only pic up. 304-el&amp;- - ' • . , . . _ corllltlon, ......-.
sundo, edhlon - 2:00 p.m. GUIDES..., lnfofmotlon oond
~n I Rotoroncoo; 2 Bod· 1Pomor
Friday. _ , odhlon - 2:00 ooll 1ddr noed otomood on.
roomo, $22Mio DopooH 1
oy.
ro: M. · • 10:w oon, Ohio t - 2 1 .
31110.
lorn point, ohorp, f1200, 114-- •
..... to: 1 1 8 Mol II~ 8orAll noa1 oolala OltlariiU!g 1n
R-oncoo. ~~~..801.
a.m. lo 1:00 p.m., Sunde' 1:00 "-i;;;;;i;;;;';-i~~;i~ieiij
1111 oftor 5pm.
••:
p.m. . _ , .
vlco, P.O. lox 1311528, Mloml, F1
lhii""""'P-11 lllbJOCitO
M
lo 8:00p.m. l14ott2•2121.
Waarlnnor For Solo: ExCOI..,. M1"!'!,.M.Yo :'luoro baloo, $1/oo., .,..
_
1,
1
1
4
M
bor
Frida,, II 1 llo S31U.
lho Fodera! Folr Houllng ACI
obi II homo lor ron! In Roclno,
Condhlon, Coil .114 441 3481, ·Or
·~110,
, _ Gold Wing Loorlod, E'"'*, ,
SouthOIPartor,...., umh.n, :::;:~==::-::=-::-::-:::ort~··~
•
514-IIIU858.
54 MISC81_18n80U8
114-441o0m.
R..,nd~'-ot•-·.-por~lo, lonl Condlllon, Low Milo_ ,,
Clothoo And-· h - .
""•h loml-1 Part /Full limo
--~·mo... ollogol
- - ,.,. ••
12,100 114-441.f714 Aftilr 4 P.lln&lt;
j,"~~
1 ··- ~·
t • ·r - llobllo - : 2 Bodroomo,
Merchandise
800 pound baloo, Will lood, call .
'
·
•
101111""
~
Uortgogo
a
IIII'P··-~~.
-ronco
And
Ro55
Building
814-Me.2201.
11180 ···-~ rD 210 R, ~-• • - ,
OlnlfiO Solo: 1illl llh, ,llol, ... 1181undo. No Ex.......,.o OWn
lmlllllon or clacrimlnlllon
....,. ""
~··
hind Old 8._ lcllool. Wlntor Houro, . 1o101 f4e.oo41.' 24
qulrld, ~11113-41!07 !tor I P.M. 2 Ploao Uvlna SIAle Good
Supp
· lieS
320.2 oftor ......
,
_:: :
based on race, color, rtiQion,
Or Laeve .....age.
ConcUtlon1 $100, 080 614-441v.
CfOihoo; ..,...,,. Go1111o, Mloc. Moura.
-larrlllllllolusornlllonol
0116.
BIOctc, brick,- 111 _ ..,_
1110YomohaV~•"!.""~ ' '
0..... - : Roulo 211 l Ill 7 Uta lnouronco ~Of!Qin, or ony lnlonllan lo
Nloo 2 Bodroorn Uobllo Homo,
... lnt""' ole. Clo~ Winmon, oKtroo. 3,....,..._., . , ,
Soutfi 11141111, 1111/13 Th.n, Frl, • -~-• In 1
-~- · - -..~-'oro-·,
Slolo Routo 211 A-. A • ' - Alum. Storm Door With Glooo , _ 1o &amp;,!...._ 0H
.
. - "
001 I •-•
n
And
Dopoo11
Roqulrld,114-251o
And
~ono
Slzo:
35x71
$40,
_.,
__
....,
Call
1141-8111111d
~CC,Iooi
.. &lt;
tTIII.
:O::::~:O.":'~~r.:g::::~~
lmllolfon or clscrlnllnallon.'
82Sl
614-251-1138.
Z4U12t
71 Autos lor Sale
mi._ hiiOO.
' . "( ~
Pt. Pflatl8nt
;::;:-,
'fnio ·bodroorn troller"" ront 1n - · Soiling Chrlllmoo 56 , Pets tor Sale
'Ill Oklo
4 dr., 'oulo., 1711o17h. ·
.
··VICI"Itv
IIMru
TNs neW!Ipapor wll not
Pomoro, oroo, tatol-rlc, oall Flowor Anron_,w Aorooo
cloon, nw n-. 'hlllh mlloo, 75 Boats
Motonl
· 1
on•~
uarton""'bt.l!·~
lox 1011,
,' ilno~l)locoopl
·--231211 n o · - ploooo From
Roytiu,..
-· · .... .._~
110011. oondlllon, 114011; 114-MS.
·'
0
•
llti R""'"'!lll• Thur-8ot, ~
o&lt;Mnloomonlolor root ootllo
norno, numbllr ol rnochlno Konougo, W-ndo. 114-2111- GroOmlna. AI lnido
4:111.
for Sale ·
'
Molloon ~~.,:.:;;: =:a~~ ondolry tomo,l14WIIICIIIOinYiolltlonollhl
ondwo'llgot bookwllh-you.
1327,1144481435.
JulleWoQ.CoHI14 U
18113 Chevy 112 T Plck.Up Good 1114 Sid- PIOrty IIIRao. ·WHh
~-:L..
low. OUr- oro ..NIIy
Voty Nlco 3 led..- - • • lloautlhiiKJng ..,. Wlloobod, 1 AI«: Dobonnon Pirpplu, Aloo, Condlllon,lf4oMI.7047.
llltoury, Dutbooril, 1'1d" llotot,
001 • .,n lloluro, , _ nolblo oduK
-c-~
lnlormod thllllf-.
· Hamoln VInton Aroo, 1300/Uo. • Drowor,. I Storogo Comport. AI«: Malo Dobormon 01uc1 ..,.
h-··
Aloo .WHh Troll or, M.OOO, 114- '
10
•'
·w/Youth 11 .Rille a,.. ,,
odllonloodlnlhlono-r
o.-H, Rotoronct Roqulrld, mont llluooed - · vlao. 814-21MIII Allor 1:30 - · - Sll~roy 57,000 2514104,
.
·
lnoldo Moving - · . . . , _ , tomUioo, lA In oeclol OOIVIcoo
.,. llllllblo on on oquol
IM.31N811.
Hoodbor;_niiiOO; 114 381 IIIII ' ~.;.1..:_-"!'iar Or .
·:!'11J!.ed, :.:: ,;'; iiT:t:f 76
Aut
11. P~ I Ill: t po dlnotlo 001, -lrod, .., . - In oooo
owortunll}'
Apartment
Bedroom Fumh~~r~,
Allor 5·P.II. Or 814 m 0113.
0 Parts &amp;
44
......-an
tumlu,.,
ltookl ntMBIIfNnl _pc.......,._ Action ~~~~~=====~
~~-•
-M
•uc
RoalotA • - -~1
A""•••-rfe
.....,.. I40mo lntorh•, orofto, Youth Cof!I...Rl 1 lox ~. Pl.
for Rent
~: fli""'For All; ' ..;.;.. :C:,.,...,. Coobr
1t7l Chow lrnpolo Good Cond~
....;...,"""'
8
- . olo4hoo, ·~otolhoo, P l -.... 21180101. ..._. 31 Homes tor Sale
Coblnot, 111. 114-2fii.17:ZO, 114- .... ToM-· Dow etnn, llon,twl4WCI!IO.
2 11uak , ........ -, ~
.. •
:""..;.:'"' 304.m.
. ,.... ...,'"";.doliiioll'iol/1111S;;;i;;~·~i;.'""N;;-;;;
a Bod-m. Gorogo ~rtmont. 448-7735.
'
.
=11'ipool~: ~
11171 IIOrcurr &amp;phor, 1111· $2711. 1 llumn lnoutilod
'
;:~~==•=-u::;::;-1- lmTnlllloll'· mon or 2 Bodroom 11ouoo WHh a- l:'.O,:O~,::,"'':'•t&amp;:,~'Jll"'r.: Bluo oophln nni, otzo !&lt;~ fGr Cllrfitmooi' 8
Sorttco
ond oKiorlor In =·~I
- 1 lmptoyoo.. , _ - , : , oouplo 1D IIIJ with to ,.., old •Oil Stt, AM CIIJ Ulllhloo. qulrld, 1•• _••• ·-•.
~ ne.ot-. Prooonll ..,..773- · Aloo A"llotllo. f14.m.ml.
,
,
•poJIZOO, 114-M..HII.
·
• •
..~ NoY. t, t:-:OGpm,.
rnon -.. limo ovory athtr -IL 131,1100 Firm, 1'1- Coli
~~·~
:u 1.11
i
·
1171 1
-::;:.;A;.:rto.~•:;•;:b,7:::_,....:=.;;;..
-.:"'::=I Colll14-t4Ntof.
IMr¥• 114-441-1117.·
'
AI«: RMI!Iorld
a-,' P8,-P~ulctl
LoSo-lnW""',
MO
or·
no,_ - . • -.,
2bdmo. opto., tolol oloc:trlc, II&gt;' Buck Slon Medium u.od 2 ..,__.._..
Col
2538, Or
17-JII18.
Ylnl Solo, 117 I,IJneiMII Plzu ........, lop , lndroom - . , - - pllonooa hlmlohed, loundi'y So
..50 l14-241-3500'
,.,,..,~.,.,
lie,
atl• II•, .., 1
1~
.
,
'~- dollvory
•---.
A - Pol~ P~nt WV room lociiHioo{oalooo to oc•~·
aoono,
•
·
MlnlaiUro Plnoahlr, Pttd'
'
·
IlL ... obo lnoulllod, lrUalc •
WV . . . .' · ~/:""
·~
11,;..~
ft-•
E
A--•1'1~...
-~-o
---'111- - - ,_.,
~•Appro." ed,-·-·"'In town.~ ollono ovalllblo Coller IIi ~. br-·• now, · ._on
•
....u...., · •••• - · --..1
1,_.,.,, oomplolo
• - • ..,...· '.
'
OOii
' "--ion.
PI\ ·~·
W
ri"UUO-•••
-~••ll1D.
VII~ noon Alllo. 149 ., $18.111,114-882
- ..111. .. ~
o..hunll • 1....... -MCM•
pi.. oomplolo
RIM 8U~MW
-of ••-1• ...,
1o1ne.
,.
r
.,
;
.
.
II:
oor,
Nno
.
.
..
,
.
,
1
Yllogi -Inn, .
FOR SAI.a- 2 L * - houu, coli 11M 82-3711. EOii.
AI«: ~ 13 Wlco, llole, 001 oporo porto, onglno, I,.,.,, llldaot Trenlmloo...., u.od l •
112 .... In _ , . , lloolno ..... 2Lr., oil olootrlc, lflplloncoo ..... ~:.":.. .:~ J:.r~ Vwy ~.114
Pomeroy,
lrono. ulo, ,CY'., Interior, (lin; .. tuTI, Ill .._. otlltlng ......
-,.
. . .- .h!-,n~!loi."'Pit~ , _ clouLio pono tiiWn .ell- nl-. . . _ lo ochoolo
~NG
Soncl fl",._.....,.
doro, ~ gill!. ortg, whool ownor ftoi-2Uoll77. - . 1
Midd..._..
.._- ·- liN.
· o1o 1111- 1ng, _ , 10 churohoo. Louroll·-,
..,..,._, Sole,
~afGr covoro,
-· ota.
'
~
"'t""' •
=
T o...,.
: CLA
...,!'"'buildo1 1ur- ·
no
,485; Ron E·~•
- EntorDrlooo,_
tea; 114~~fP'
. •
wHI -not·po~
out.
5-2151 21115.
&amp; VICinity
DillY T - . 1121 Third ,_, ta,oao, 1M-iii=2Mo .~ Aplo.,
Hovon. 304oet2·:rTI8.
Joe_,, Ohio 1-..sl'fiZI, •ft•Bpm.
1111 lonkl, ono ton truc11 :
-~~-::::::-::::::-=::-;;:::;::"::: -A - Oilllpollo,' OH lor 8:30p.m.
3 Roome • Both Fumlohad, El~rlc ron~~ nd Boogloo, good gun dogo, ooll or =~-=ft:i-:--~=-...,.w~___,l,---111.,whooli, ,.~ malo, '
iii
Yard- lo Pllld In
H
~-- v
ra
r t. •-, mo•- ond ~--•-o, 1••- ••• -·~•.
ong no 1 0 • oto. D. • A •·ioG;Aipioy,, M
~. ~ ;
Ati\-.Doocllno:1:00!1mt.. - ' a Houoo ol ' - GCl'IER.... ENTHOuESFrom$1 VugoCioon~•w•lni,T.~~1_oclrlc, ov-MO,
·71a.
;.'2."2135.,.,.....
~ AII;,PS,IIII,oruiao, . ~.wl"' 3'12483JorlN ~·-: ,
_ , - lho od 1o to-, 10illullomut-._P_ (U Ropo.l,;~o::-!!~1 J.~, p:{.,,.,.'!;,e:~lliOOG.'Pold, 1'1...,._ For Solo: Plck.Up
dOwol-loclco,...,.;.•CIO'
'
•
lnl_.oliwlng. Wo nood Property - -.... . . - . · Looil Or Dwnp TNCk Lood, Wo O.lmollon pupo tor oolo, elx ::'laT~o,c oil numblll milch, 76
Csmplng
:
tundoY ociiJon. 1:011pon Frldoy, le ~ odlllon - . m . pu!-tlmo IIIII lui
ArN ~
~. EKI. QH. BEAUTIFUL ,APARTMEN1'8 AT Doitvor 114-4- o l d , 514-88~.
wl
lnlorfor,'jlro~ cor,
lotuo*J.
ilnd 1111- holpoN. Mood ono 1010 . CU.._ Ropo Llot.
BUDGET PRICII AT JACKSON
'
'
n.... ~. •- •---- ""e-'--locud up, M, ' 304Equipment
:
-. - ......... ... For
ESTATES. 138' Joclcoon 'Ptu 1'1--: All lllniMtcado lplll 11,.,., 1 12 M~ _ .. , - · .......
Cllnp-llov. M,IIIUSR ~.=;:~r
Dollvorod $40 Plck.Up LaOd.
-· 1
llo ·Dut Al.141 1m Ford LTD, Low
. Mlloqo, 180 ' 'WIIdomreo· Yutran, 2111.,
143, ono mloo froon Ill. t .N
-loL'WII ·~ =o:nl,?h!.d:orOI~Uifll Antfllnl- froonl2tlllmo.Wolklolhopl 114-251-1311
Or. 114-SIJ-'11121 w.,,. Shoomour, I~ Good Condllon, COli l14-251- hlltJ
=
·oxo.
.
::"
. I: -~-G-Ied. 1 h.~
~
lloa loor
·
Colll14o441..a5ea.
EOH.
Evonl01113
owic~,
f04
aa
•
Too
For
eon;.
..
~.
'
1117,AIIoriP.M.
.
?
•
.
111
- - II •N
-1111,
Then 'lou
W·- •
- h 81. Mldd-, 1 • 2 Form 81
Ex
0..-n••n·• Colt
CFA
'1
I
- · llotoo, ·
·~ 10:-:00pm.
Thla ~oo~Uctoi,'"~ -i\omiohocfopo~monlo, chlno;Ani:Fiotr.:::..:;.; Slo~'imono. e~l413144 ---.Holchbock, 79
Cempera&amp;
I
1
·
w. _ , L-=.lrod.-......
....
Withr
Aftor7:oop.m.
r.tOto;Homea
- . , ·-: -....-.
_ - .~~~-...., 11111 • 111
L lonil
-~
;;
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wfll do Olllnto \f!lll..,. In your
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1111 non, 2Lr~~ odolod, lur- t75.f112.
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1148~877.
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tl67 Chrplor Lo8oron, AII-FM
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Trti lllni, lrM -Uof,
'1114 Cloylon mobil homo, homo, 1 milo -~~ 1o, 111M 8110011 Blcotoo .... t,
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I:,:~:..;:-::;-::==::;__:::...~ $250/mo., l14-t411o282l,
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·
Ploll.u~ Dol'"!\'; Qurgoo .
1NI Redmon -tnllor; 14xlD 01oo bocfroom _ _., . ...m.Roally, 114-44
_
Part, To moko Low Monthly . 1117 Hondo CRX-11, """' Crooll
•114 ~14.
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Bod
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OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Wrought Iron Toblo Wl4 Cholro;
Fon Bock Roeld~ -·lr •-·,
Gordon Arch Woy·•
.. M~~.OO ,_

51 lock.... .

t8 'Gardon loolo
20 t.Papead
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_

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47

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13 Mature
14 lillllcaltr11Mr
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...

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----------~~---:
72 Trucks for Sale
•

Household -

Rentals

ALDER

1117 Chevy Z..24 v.. l~lnt...,_f'\
T11M Good Colldlllcift, ,.., 1
~iii;
114- ~

tt41, Mllne,OH.

4:

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430xhlrM45 DOll

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ACROSS

1tt2 Dodgo lhod'!_"!... 2 Dr.O:
17,000 llllol, Auto, ""' tt ...,.,,

IE'IiAAL 7- ACRE MICELI:

v-

NEA Cro•sword Puzzl•

BalD Gil:

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,..... I

1tft PIV. IAccllitft, 4 '!6o.32,000

35 L.ota a Acruge

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1100 . . 8010 .... .,., ....

The Dally

Al,.LEY

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' '

&lt;Wf-t~, ifffl ·--TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1922, English archaeologist Howard
Carter djscovered the tomb of King Tu·
tankhamen near Luxor, Egypt

TODAY'S
BIRTHDAYS :
B .F .
Goodrich (184H888), manufacturer;
Will Rogers 0879- 1935) , humorist;
Walter Cronkite 0916· l . broadcast
journalist, is 77; Art Carney Cl918· l,
actor, is 75 ; Loretta Swit (1937· 1, actress , is 56; Robert Mappl ethorpe
(1946·1989), photographer-

to

0111 ~r:e:

~~~:::::_..J_'-_..J_.., penl by beinQ Ulankf'ul tliatthey

r

~O....!B~B:...;A~R~S_,~~·'::;aren~'ta:::,a?~ as Uley Ulink U1e1r
7 I' 19
Q Comploio the chuckle quorOd

I I 1

by filling in the missing words
...-'-·-'-·-'-·-'-·.......J.L......J wou develop
from lfop No. 3 bolow.

8
I)

PRINT NUMifi!O
l!TT!RS

I' 1 r r I' I' I' I'

UNSCRAMBLE FORI

ANSW!R

2

rI

111111111

SCUM-UTS~

Wealth - Rusty- Daunt, Entail· THAT WAY
Aller a Sf&gt;31 I had wi'!l my sister, Granny calmed me
down by telling me that, The trouble with an argument is
that after att is said and done most people refuse to leave
it THAT WAY'

1

�Page-16-The Dally Sentinel

Historic Russian cathedral ·

She said, he said:
co~stars talk
about 'Zelda'
By FRAZIER MOORE
AP Television Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - She was
Zelda, dubbed " the fmt American
flapper'' of lhe Roaring '20s. Precoctous and spectacular, she was
skilled as a writer, painter, dancer.
But despite her otherworldly radiance, she would live in the shadow
of her husband ... until it drove her
mad.
He was Scott, the Jazz Age
shooting star who wrote "The
Beautiful and the Damned," "Tender is the Night" and "The Great
Gatsby."
They met in 1918 at a summer
dance, and together these golden
soulmates helped fashion . the
decade to come.
A lifestyle of the rich and
famous that would make Robin
Leach drool in his Perrier-Jouet,
the story of Zelda and F. Scott
Fitzgerald is dramatized in the rollicking yet heart-breaking
"Zelda," which premieres on the
TNT cable network Sunday at 8
p.m. EST, with encores at 10 ·p.m.
and midnight.
She is Natasha Richardson, the
gifted young actress who last
graced the airwaves in last winter's

consecrated in Red Square --;.

·'Suddenly Last Summer." Outfitted in what used to be called a
granny dress, her feet tucked up
under her on her publicist's couch,
she laiks about Zelda.
He is Timothy Hutton, bestknown ro audiences for such films
as "Taps" and "Ordinary People." Contemplatively leaning way
back in his chair in his Manhattan
hotel room, he laiks about Scott.
SHE: "The first time Tim and I
met to rehearse, he brought me a
painting done by Zelda!"
HE: "I remember1,1d that a
friend owned the painting, and
when I asked her about it, she said,
'I'm trying to sell it.' I bought it
and took it straight down to the
rehearsal in a taxi. It wasn't even
wrapped.''

SHE: "I was speechless. A real
paintin$ done in the last few weeks
of her life!"
HE: "What's it ofl It could be
almost anything. At times it looks
like flowers, or maybe a human
profile. It's hard 10 tell.''
SHE: "After that, we got on
like a house on ftre. The ~recror
nicknamed us the Bobbsey
Twins.''
HE: "We never had to do lhat

FITZGERALD FOR TV • Thpothy Hutton and Natasha
Richardson star as writer F. Scott Fitzgerald and his glamorons
wire, Zelda, In the TNT television production or "Zelda," which
premieres on Sunday, Nov. 7. (AP Photo. TNT)

stow dance of avoidance, wondering if we could trust lhe other person.' '
SHE: "You're not lovers,
you're actors, and you have to be
able to trust each other and feed off

Nudist colony poses
problems for clothed minds

·
Dear Ann Landers: This is in
response to ·x.t..." the woman
whose husband visited 1 nudist club
and now would like her 10 visit, too.
rd like 10 offer her a few pointers.
I'm a woman who has been a
nudist for I 3 years. I belong to 1
club and visit regularly. I love
getting up in the morning and
walking outside naked. The
surroundings are beautiful. TaU fir
trees, wildflowa:s, birds chirping and
the quiet sounds of any campground.
It is wonderful ro feel·the warm air
or cool rain on your skin.
When nude, all people are equal.
You can't telllhe business tycoons
from lhe laborers. I don't know the
last names of my fellow club
members, oor do I know what type
of worlt: they do. I couldn't cane less.
I am not there 10 look at their
bodies.
· I've been married for 30 years. My
-h11sband is also a member. My
warning 10 X.L. is 10 not let her
husband go alone and make sure he
is interested in nudity for the right
IQSOIIS. Most of us are monogamous
and family-oriented, but some
:people join nudist clubs because they
·think free sex will be available. A
-nudist environment ·can be
dangerous 10 a married couple if
their relationship isn't rock-solid.
Most nudi~ts are open and
unashamed of their bodies. SinRie
.as· well as married people join
:nndist clubs. But just as in a clothed
;world, some have no respect for the

Ann
Lan ders
sanctity of maniage.
Most clubs now allow nude
dancing. Some also allow alcohoL
If you or your spouse have
problems with llltllding parlies or
social events in a clothed world
(flirting, etc.), you will have three
times the problems in a nudist world
Can you Uilagine dancing naked .with
someone to whom you are
physically att.racted7 Add alcohol,
and it becomes a potentially highrisk situation.
Clubs do not pull your
membership if you have lin
ex11'811larital affair, but most clubs
requi.Je notarized permission from a
spouse for a married person to join
without.their spouse joining also. GOOD l..UCK FROM A NUDIST
IN OREGON
DEAR OREGON: Your leuer was
veryinforrnauv~anditbroughtout

possible problems that potenual
nudists should be aware of. Thank
you for the conslrUCtiYC input.
Dear Ann Landers: A while
back, you printed leUas from people
who complained about being called
"sugar," "babe" and "honey" by

waitresses. Several readers wrote in
to say it wss OK with them. Well,
recendy, my husband and I have
encountered a new brand of
familiarity.
I'm 4S, and "Jerry" ia S1. We love
ID eat· out and enjoy trying new
restaurants. N"me times out of I0,
our server (usiially aorneone in his
tce111 or 20s) refas to us throughout
the meal as "You auys." We fmd

this annoying.
Even if we get excellent service,
we will tip less if the server calls us
"You guys. • There must be othen
out ~ who feel as we do, or do
you think we are too stuffy7 •• L.B ..
VISALIA, C~LIF.
D~ VISALIA: "You guys" ia
certainly no way to address
cusromen. lnslead of lijiping less,
why not set them straight in a
non-beHigerent, insttuaive way and
leave 20 percent? If they are even
modetalely intelligent, you will have
done them a favor.
Lo1U!Some? Take charge of yow
life and t11n1 it aroJUtd. Write for
AM Latukrs' new booklet, ''How to

A flower festival was discussed
for May. The group is asking for ,
input from flower growers. Those
who would like to have some input
are asked to· call Lillian Weese
after 5 p.m. at 949-2034 with comments.
.
A vote of appreciation for items
contributed to the yard sale was
given by the jp9up,, ' ,
MembeQ'.a!$0 ei\tend a welCome
to any interested CQ(Ilmunity residents to join the . community
improvement group. Meetings are
held on the fourth Tuesday of each
month at 6:30p.m.
·

what the other's doing, and let that
be the point of it aU. It's like being
able to flirt outrageously while
knowing that it's not going 10 get
you into trouble."
HE: "I think we helpe!l each
other let go. Scott and Zelda egged
each other on, and that's what we
did to play lhem."

~===:::===;___=-=-;--;---:;-;---;--, ' .

Bolh Thomas Wotre•s "'Look •.
Homeward, Angel " and William •
Faulkner ' • "'The Sound and the
f!l 'Y~' Wet!;p~_blbhed_i!!.!~29 ,

.'

GOLDEN
RIPE
BANANAS

Farmers Bank and Savings Co.
•
•
announces expanszon proJect
•

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Senlinel News Starr
Construction of a new threelane, drive-thru banking facility
will get underway next week and

' BAKING
POTAIOES

•2~19

'$

$

TWO CONVEtfENr LOCATIONS:
24110 ~ Aw. (ICrOII from KMart), Gallipolis • &amp;14-446-1711

H

busi.Mss-siu envelo~ and a cMck
or lr!ORY order for $4.15 (this ill·
eludes postage and handling) to:

--~

114 Milt No/111 af PomeroY-Muon Brld~·· Mason. 304-773-5721
7 DAYS A WEEK· MONDAY-SATURDAY, 8-7; SUNDAY, 10-6

Friends, cloAMLiuukrs,P.O. Boz
11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611.()562. (In
und $5.05.)

I PIRI:·FDR
IT. 7 IN DOWNIOWN

I

•

(Over30)

MONTHS
FINANCING
$600.00.............0nly $25.00 AMonth
$1200.00 ..........0nly $$0.00 A Month
$2400.00.........0nly $100.00.A Month
liDO POB nr.J BOUDAJI
PJUDAY AND IATilllDAT
.

I

you;

/&lt;.) Keep ~g.

..

• · B) Run.
,
C) Scoop them up, take them

.

'
''

•

y

home and hOpe they hafllh in your
house.
•
An unidentified peasant chose
C) recently and came home one
day to fmd his hut literally crawling with SO infant pythons - a
rem.arkable 0 percent mortality
rate, Congolese radio reported
Wedneadav •. .

their customers for access to over
I,IOO JEANIE ATM's throughout
Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana,
West
Virginia
In addition the JEANIE card can

installation
of automatedfollo""''·'·~!tiqg
teller ture
maclli~,A!IlPPPU:nt..Yt,\ll
soon after that at the Farmers Bank ly with the main
and Savings co: iii Pomeroy.
tunnel under the parking
The
Announcement .bf the planned third Jane will use the deal drawer. ·
expansion was made today by Paul
Kloes said lhat there will be no
Klees, chief executive officer, and change in the hours of operation for
Paul Reed, president.
the drive-thru facility.
Contract for the work on the
In announcing the construction
new drive-thru has been awarded to of lhe new three lane drive-thru 10
Wesam Construction. The project replace the single lane one now in
is expected to be completed by operation, the banking officials
mid-February.
acknowledged some customer
According to Klees and Reed, a inconvenience which will result
structure will be built on the east while the construction is underway,
side of the parking lot next to the
"Just bear with us,:!. said Kloes.
building occupied by Banks ConOnce that phase is completed,
struction.
then the bank will move forward on
A portion of the parking lot will installation or a JEANIE automated
be converted into three lanes for teller machine (ATM) network,
drive·thru hank customers who will Reed said.
enter from Second Street and exit
An ATM will be located at the
onro Main Street.
main office in Pomeroy. According
While this will result in a 10 lhe bank officials, plans .call for
3,000 JEANIE cards 10 be issued to

Stations in the ·
Klees.
This will permit customers to make
deposits at any JEANIE or money
station in Ohio.
The ATM installation wiU be a
"first" for Meigs County, Klees
and Reed reponed,
The Farmers Banlc and Savings
Co. wtth $69 million in assets will
be joining 45 new members to the
JEANIE Network in I993. These
institutions add over 210 ATM
locations and nearly 220,000 cardholders 10 the network.
The new drive-thru and automated teller machine network make
the second major improvement in
facilities which lhe bank has undertaken this decade. In 1991·92 the
bank was completely renovated and
expanded 10 include the entire second floor.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Opposition to changing the
nation s health care industry is
nothing new, Hillary Rodham Clio·
ton told a gathering at Marshall
· University.
At least three other presidents,
including Franklin Roosevelt,
Harry Truman and Richard Nixon,
tried and failed to revise the way

;
.

I

FRIDAY I All TIL I PM
SATURDAY I All nL 5 PM

~e!~::~~~~~-··,be~~::at~=~~~:s~~tall~·on~sr ·~~

the United States delivers health
care, she said.
"Harry Truman saw in 1945
exactly what was going ro happen
to our health care system. but as
tough and strong-minded as he
was, he couldn't get past the opposition," Mrs. Clinron said.
"Well we're still going ro have
opposition. Some people don ' t

----Local briefs---...

DINEnES &lt;over 26J

Deputies investigate B&amp;E
Depuues of the Meigs County Sheriff's Department are investigating the apparent breaking and entering of the Portland Elementary School.
According 10 a report from Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby, a subject or subjecJs entered the buildin~ Wednesday
evening or Thursday moming ihrough a broken rear wmdow,
Each classroom door was forced open and glass in the kitchen
door was broken, Soulsby reported. The storage areas in the gym
were also entered, he added,
A small amount of money was taken from kitchen, Soulsby said.
The subject or subjects exited the building by removing the
screws from a hasp on the gym door, he reported.

'

LIVING ROOM
SUITES (Over 70) .

Two cited to county court
Two people were cited 10 appear in Meigs County Court on traf.
fie violations Thursday night. Cited by deputies were: Alvin
Richard Harris, 57, of Buffalo, W.Va., on charges of driving under
lhe influence and left of center, and Emma Moodispaugh, Middle·
port, on charges of passing a stopped school bus in Middleport.

'

Man charged after accident.
A Pomeroy man was charged with failure 10 yield following an
accident Wednesday evening on West Main Street, Pomeroy.
.
Pomeroy police reported that Oscar ]. Qualls, 81, Kerr St.,
Pomeroy, pulled from a service station onto. West Msin into the .
path of a car driven by Kendra North, 16, Racine,
While .neither were injured lhere was light damage to the passens_er side headlight area of the North car and to the front end of the
QuaUs vehicle.
\

FREE DiUYERY
UYIWAYIOW
••&gt;
• ,,

•
•

cloudy, blab ID mld-301.

'

•

,I'

the culverts have already been
replaced. The village will prepare
new specifications and re-advertise
for the work.
Assistant Syracuse Fire Chief
Eber Pickens asked permission 10
purchase ftre hose for the department. The cost is $2,828. Council
approved the purchase.
He also noted that the depart·
ment has received a 100 percent
grant Jrom Support Resources, Inc.
or Columbus for a smoke machine
to be used for mask training.
Pickens and Council both commended youngsters of lhe community for their excellent behavior on .
trick or treat nighL
. :
Mayor Pape appointed Dennis·
Wolfe and Don Shaffer to the ftre-·
men's dependency board.
Newly-elected members, Larry
Lavender and Eber Pickens, Jr.,
week.
Two bids on culvert work who will take office in January
received by Council were rejected attended. Others there were Clerkbecause the scope of the work has Treasurer Janice Lawson, and
changed. During the recent paving Council members, Kenny Buckley,
work done in the village, some of Don Shafer, Dennis W~_&gt;lfe , Bill
Roush and
Crow.

cuse water supply is secure.
It was mentioned by Bob
Wingett, grants administraror for
the village, that at one time he had
heard Mayor Herman London say
that Syracuse's wells were served
by an "underground river".
Syracuse and Pomeroy have
separate wells and Pomeroy owns
the land on which its wells are
located.
Council postponed action on a
water meter proposal from the
Board of Poblic Affairs. The board
decided 10 defer action on meters
for customers outside the village
because of lhe cost involved.
Mayor Pape reported on the
ground breaking for the Waters
Edge Apartment Complex. a
$700,000 project. Constroction is
expected to get underway next

and

.,.

--

OBSERVES WEEK • National Medltal
Records Week, Nov. 1-S, was observed at Veter·
ans Memorial Hospital Wednesday with a
departmental luncheon. In the picture, clock·
wise from left, are Barbara Woodyard, Joyce
Manuel, department employees; Karen Brozak,
extended care facility medical record supervisor,

and Joyce Redman, department employee.
Supervisor or the Medical Records Departmeat
at VMH is Sue Stone, not pictured. The Medical
Records Department collects maay kinds ot data
from a variety ot sources, monitors the Integrity
of the information, ensures appropriate access to
health records and manages the analysis and use
or this data.

Lawmaker wants PUCO
to phase in rate hikes

Health care road show stops in Huntington

. Peasant peddles plethora of pythons
· BRAZZAVILLE, Congo (AP)
...__You're walking, alone in the
~ junaJO and come acroas
. SO eag• that may or may not
belong ro liD enormous snake. Do

decrease in the number of parking
spaces, there will remain an adequate parking area for customers,
Klees said.
Two of the three lanes will fea-

•

FREE

REFRIGERATORS

TV's

\

RECLINERS &lt;over so)

SUITES

left,
execunext week are rrom
tive vice president; Jon Karschnlk, vice president; Paullleed; president and Paul Kloes, chief
executive officer.

CONSTRUCTI
Farmers Bank and Sa•fini~S Co.'s site looking
over the building plans for the new three lane
drive-tbru which will get under construction

IIAifJI($ · !

Low tonl&amp;bt In mld-301, part·
17 cloudy. Saturday, panly

Syracuse mayor is told
additional water usage will
~ot hurt village's supply
By Kathryn Crow
Sentinel Ccirrespondent
A- proposal by Pomeroy and
Middleport officials 10 join forces
to supply residents of those two
commuruties with water and how it
might affect Syracuse's water supply was a subject of discussion
when Syracuse Village officials
met Thursday night at village hall.
Syracuse officials' concern centered around the fact that the wells
which provide water for Pomeroy
residents are in Syracuse and the
possibility of additional water
usage from those wells 10 provide
Middleport residents might create a
shortage in lhe toog term.
Mayor James Pape said that he
was "told that it would not hurt
Syracuse's supply".
Currently Syracuse has an
agreement with Pomeroy where
each will supfly water to ·the other
in lhe event o any problems. It was
stressed during the meeting that the
village has no problem with any
arrangement as long as the Syra-

tliinlc this is right, because they
were born lucky. They were born
healthy or they were born wealthy
and they like it just the way it is."
Mrs. Clinton was at Marshall
University on Thursday to win support for a proposed massive overhaul of the nation's health care system.
President and Mrs. Clinton
kicked off the national tour
Wednesday by presenting, copies of
lhe $S paperback at a public library
in Ambridge, Pa.

CINCINNATI (AP) - A state
lawmaker said he wants 10 give the
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio authority to phase in utility
rate increases.
The Ohio Supreme Court ruled
Wednesday that the commission
does not have that power. The
court's ruling means Cincinnati and
Columbus utility cus10mers will
see their electnc bills increase
soon,
The president did not accompaState Rep. Frank Sawyer, D-.
ny his wife to Huntington but Mansfield, chairman of the House
instead visited Lexington, Ky ., Public Utilities Committee, said
about 114 miles to the wes~ 10 pro- Thursday he would support enactmote the North American Free ing a law 10 give lhe PUCO authorTrade Agreement.
ity to phase in utility rates. He said
Huntington is alongside the that would spare customers from
Ohio River, near the conjunction of being hit with a big increase all at
West Virginia, Ohio and Kentucky. once.
Mrs. Clinton chose Marshall
"I think that makes perfect
University because the school sense," Sawyer said. "I thought
focuses on training primary care the PUCO had that authority, but
doctors, especially for rural or evidently, thcydon't."
other underserved aneas.
Sawyer said he would want to
confer with Craig .Glazer, the
She was joined by Marshall PUCO's chairman, 10 draft the law.
President J. Wade GiHey, who said
State Sen. Richard Finan, Rthe Marshall medical school is Cincinnati, chairman of the Ways
among those leading the nation "in and Means Committee which hanlhe production of rural .health care dles utility legislation in the Senate,
pro(essionals."
said he would be willing to consid"If. every school had this er giving that authority to the
emphasis, we would not have some PUCO. He declined 10 say whether
of the problems we had today," he personally would suppon it.
Mrs. Clinton said. "We would
The Ohio consumers' counsel
have enough family practice physi- would be interested in the concepl
cians.' '
because the court's ruling leaves
Several Marshall medical stu- consumers vulnerable to having to
dents heard Mrs. Clinton's speech, . pay large rate increases at once.
and she rresented auto~raphed said Doug Flowers, a spokesman
copies o the 136•page 'Health for lhe agency, which represents
Security" book ro some of the stu- consumers in utility rate cases.
dents at lhe campus bookstore.
The rulint came in appeals of

,,
...

increases granted to Ci:llumbus
Southern Power Co. and Cincinnati
Gas &amp; Electric Co.
PUCO personnel began trying to
figure out how much the increase
will be for customers of the utili-

lies. Theolwo utilities serve a combined 1.3 million business and residential electric cusromers.
PUCO spokeswoman Stacie
Gilg said she did not know when
the commission wiU decide.

OUT WITH THE OLD- Worken prep•re a 40-foot section ot:
wall at the Robert C. Byrd Locks and Dam for demollti011 Thurs- ·
day afternoon. Holes drDied tbrougbout the wan were ftlled with a .
nlttoelycerin-based 1el wllkb was set oil' with a percussion wne at
about 4:30 p.m. Dennis Huehes, acting resident en1lneer •t the
locks, said the old Will was destroyed becaue it protrudes Into the
new locks' water Intake area and resb leta tile flow ot Wlter. The
Army Corpa ot Ellldneers plaas to lllllall a boom ID tbe 1re1 nidi
was occupied by tbe wall. Htqba 111d the boom wiD be used to
remove Ice and debris from tbe lntlke area. (OVP pboto by Kevin
Pinson)

,,

•

..

2s..tiOM,12P. . . 311_,11
A Multlmecl•lno. News~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, November 5, 1993

TRIVIA

APPLE BUnER • UDE IN A COPPER KEnLE
PINTS $2.98
(CIIIWIOI FLAVORED)
QUARTS $4.99

c

Vol. 44, NO. 136
Multlmodi•lno.

Richard Allenborough made his ~
film debut in Noel Coward's 1942 -::
gem, "'In Which We Serve ,"' co dire~ ted_bl'J.he_y~.u .ng· David. Lean.

,,•• ,..,_r... tH ,..,. •••,.- ,., ..,,, .............

•

•

~;::::::::::~:;:=:::::~:::;:-;:;:1~

WE WILL MIX OR MATCH VARIETIES OF ANY QUANTITY OF APPLES
TO THE CUSTOMER'S SAnsFACTION!

CALIFORNIA
RED ORWNIIE
UEDLESS GRAPES

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ZO I.B. (1./Z BUSHEL) 'S.49 ti Busaa *9.98
AVAilAt1 111f71.

Woody Allen's complaint
against prosecuto~ dismisse4 ·

, WALLINGFORD, Conn. (AP) he believed Allen hJU! c~mm1tted
_ A state disciplinary panel ruled the cnme but ~t he dido t wantro
a prosecuror did nothing wrong in lhe pu.t the child through the ordeal
saying he believed Woody Allen of a trial.
. .
•
molested his adopted daughter but
One commtsslOn m~'!et; Supenot preiSing charges.
rior c~ Mge A. WIIJiar!l M~Rejecting a complaint from tolese, cnbclzed Maco sa~mg, I
fo.llen ·against the proSecutor, the think ~· Maco coul~ easily have
Criminal justice Commission said accomplished the desired result by
w~ there was no evidance chQ&lt;&gt;sing his la~guage ~?re care- .
mat States Atrorney Frank Maco fully and more discreedy,
had violated the canon of ethics for
Allen's attorney, Elkan
lawyers.
Abramowitz, said that Allen .g~ a
Maco -announced Sept. 24 that fair hearing before the commwton
he was dropPing his investigation and that his goal wasn't ~o hu~t
into allepuons ~ Anen SCJtually Maco, but to make s~ the public
abused his then 7-year-old daugh- understood that Maces comments
ter, Dytan: N prosecutor said that weren't true.

two most precious and venera«i(J
icons from a state conection.
"
The announcement ended .a
long-running dispute between the
church and museum officials over
who owns the religious "paintingi
- the "Virf!in of Vladimir" arfit
the "Holy Tnnity."
•·
The church wanted the icons
back, but museum experts cotl'[plained humi~ty and temperatu~,
changes in ancient stone cathedrals'
would ruin the paintings. Som(
critics claimed museum officials ~
were more interested in savin'g .
their jobs.
~
Yeltsin said lhe icons would hi:,
kept in special conditions thit
would guarantee \heir safet~. Hb :
told Alexy about his decision·at 111Jl .
cathedral gares.
• ·
Alexy thanked Yeltsin, saying :
the chun:h would "pray for ~:
and accord in the homeland" ill"
front of the icons.

For Canning, ••king, O.r Julf Pial• Good Eating,
Check Be&amp;'• Selection Of Healthy, llutrltiett &amp; Delloioua APPLES I

Make Friends and Stop Being
I...ontly. Send a self-addressed. long.

·Christmas in park plans set
Plans for ChriStmas in the Parle
were discussed when the Racine
Area Community Organization met
recently at the park.
During the meeting conducted
by Frank Cleland, president,
arrangeme11ts were made to sponsor a Christmas decorating conteSt.
Five prizes will be awarded.
.
The meeting opc;oed with the 14
members at~~ili)iF singing
"America" follo\fed w1tll prayer by
Cleland.
.'t'· •
Lillian Weese gave the secretary's report followed by Tonja
Hunter with the treasurer's report.

By VLADIMIR ISACHENXOV
Alloclaled Preu Writer
"MOSCOW (AP)- T!lc head of
lhe Russian Ortborlox Church and
priests in flowing gold, black and
white robes today reconsecrated a
cathedral in Red S~uare that was
destroyed on Stalin s orders more
than a half-centurY ago.
The rebuilding of the Kazan
Cathedral symoblized the rising
fortunes of the church since the
collapse of the Soviet Union. Presi·
dent Boris Yeltsin and, other senior
· government leaders attended the
ceremony watched by hundreds of
people holding candles as a choir
sang.
A few hundred yards away from
the cathedral stands the tomb of
· Lenin, the father of Russian communism . City officials want to
close lhe romb and remove Lenin's
body to sever ties with the Communist past.
The cathedral, one of the most
important holy sites in Russia, was
tom down in 1936 on the orders of
Stalin, who wanted to crush the
Orthodox Church. The 300-yearold cathedral was destroyed to
clear the way for military parades
held by the Communists in Red
Square.
Work on rebuilding the cathe·
drat began in 1992, funded by government and public doilations. The
squat pink building, with gold
domes and crosses, stands next to
lhe famous GUM department store.
Yeltsin told Patriarch Alexy II,
head of the church, that the govern·
ment wo_uld return the country's

Ohio Lottery

.

Thursday, November 4, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

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