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•

By The Bend

The Daily Se.n tinel
Monday, November 8, 1993 ·
PJGII . ·1.0p

JX)rt.

"In Miami, I met two of the
girls on the trip and they were in
Salvation Army clothes and each
had all their things in one big backpack," said Samosky, a Clark
County native and senior at Witten·
ber~ University.
'I thought Oh, my God. I mean
1 was preppie and I liked comforts ."
From the airport to Belmopan,
Belize, to the research station
where Samosky would spend the
next five weeks studying river
ecology, she was taken progres·
sively further from the comforts of
her Walnut Hills home.
At the research station, drinking
wa1er was collected in a cistern and
inquiries on the availability of ice
were answered with laughter.
Samoskv and other students

•
w·

..

·~

Guitar duet to perform Bargain .hunters ·to blame for dissatisfaction "
at FFA convention
die
lllllr1ri
Ann
•

A Southern High School guitar
duet left Saturday for a week in
Kansas City, Mo. where they wiD
be competing in the talent contest
at the National fFA Convention.
Stephanie Sayre and Fred Matson were selected to compete in the
national contest after performing at
the state convention in June held at
Ohio State University.
The song which won them the
stale title was "Michelle" by Paul
McCartney. Slephanie, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Sayre. plays
bass guitar, and Fred, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Matson, plays
lead guitar.
In Kansas City they will compete for national honors before the
approximately 30,000 people who
are expected to atlend.
Sayre and Matson were selected
as one of 40 entertainers to perform
at 1he convention.
'· ll.~ · .
In addition to competitions,
they are also scheduled to play for
several other programs at the

De.- Ann l•ndel'll: I would lite
to respond to "Blue 1n Ohio." the
IIIOCha' who wu concaacd a11out
her 17-yeat-old sexually active
daugh

teen-agers with the desite to smoke.
There is no ccmpelliag biological
urge to amoke. Sexual ·urgea,
however, are Inborn, glandular and
honnonal, and teen-agers must learn
responsible ways o( dealing with
them. The more they know, the
better their chances of staying out
or trouble. And, yes, I· approve of
sex education in schools. If some
kids don't get it there, they just don't
get iL Period.
Dear Alln Landen: That horror
story from North Jersey about
building a new home really got 10

national convention where they
wiU spend the week.
Three other members of Southern FFA are making the trip to
y:~wudisappoinling.
ANN LANDERS
Missouri. Th~y are Jessica Sayre, You said plralla can do only 10
t 41993, 1M: ADceJt..
Chris Hamm, and Jeff Rose. Aaron much ·and once iDnocalce is loll.
Tlll)tiSyltdlule
Sayre and Mike Duhl are serving as there is no bringing it bact. It
Crellori Syltdlcole",
chaperones for the group. Mr. and
Mrs . Matson also traveled to IOtlllded as if you wm just giving
Kansas City for the convention.
up.
sex bef01e marriage and·to JllliCiic:e
Various organizations and indi·
I urge you 10 give this (n)blem monogamy afterward. We need to
viduals have contributed to the more thought k is not a lost cause. explain these reasons to our kids.
expense of the trip for the students.
I offer the 1ollowing examples:
Over and over. Don't underestimate
Besides being active in the fFA, .- A CXIIICelltrated effort to educate their intelligence. They wiU listen.
both Sayre and Matson are people about the dangers of
We owe it to our children
involved in numerous other school IIIIIDkinl bas bad positive msults. to educate them about sexual
and community activities.
The surgeon gcnc:nl's wamiDg in responsibility. Fifth grade is not too
They are members of the C\Wf ail and oo ciglreue packs bas 80011. (In 80IIIC C88CII, it may be 1110
National Honor Society, the Quiz made .an impact. Smoking is no late.) If, u a nation, we would
Bowl te~m, on St~dent Coun~il, longerconJiden:d cool.
11tac1t aexual iJrelponsibility with
and. are mvo1ved m com.mumty
lncleased knowledge of nutrition the same diligence that we baJde
affatrs and volunteer semce P!U· has resulted in healthier eating tOOaa:o lbule, the futum would be
grams. Sayr~ serves on the Metgs babila. J'coplc ~ ~ label&amp; • -~ ~ ~1«. Pleuc don't
County Jon~ Falt.~O!IJII,JIId ':'-·• to ftnd' out libW'"mllch fit ~d ' at.e up ·•l JtiCK ' IN"-PROVO
~~:f~n~acme Post602, Amen· bow ~any calories they are · UTAH •
.
'
consummg.
DEAR PROVO: Me, gtve up?
There .-e a number of sociologi- Never!
cal, psychological, medical. ethical
I would caution you, however,
and legal raaons to abstain from qainst equaling the aexualqes in

L anderS

me.

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day ot that event. Items
must be received in advance to
assure publication in the eaten·
dar.

Trustees will hold their regular
monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at the
town hall.

'

Ilea price, and after jOb is
they. want to mate expensive
cbaqcs bul don't want the COlt 10

goup.

'

I wish people would stop blamiaj
the conlnlclon. Too often it's th.e
bqain hlllllm who are tupilitsilll5
for shoddy work. They want a lot of
things done after' the deal is madc!i
but they don't want to pay for it .:,
WESTERLY, R.I.
.1
DEAR WEST: I RJCeived sevaal
team ccmplainins about ~
tors. but youts CllDC up.with a JRtl.!

10lid defense. Thank you on behalf

of 1111 contriiCIOI'S, who will applaud
rve been a conttactor for 30 years whal you have written.
.
and have never had a dissatisfied
Oeln of the Day: Never go to a
customer. All my homes carry a doctll' whose office planls have died.
!().year w..-anty.l do not doubt lhat
Ftelbtg pru6UTtd to ilave trU?.
there are crooks in the business. You How we/1-iltfOI'IIfed art yoa? Wrll.l
will 6nd them in .every profession. for AM Landtr1' booklet "Sa IJIId
But the public perception is that tilt Tttll·ager. • Se11d a self-ad·
bll.riltus-lize - ·
bu!'!len ~ve I!10R than.~ir ·~./(lllg,
IJIId a clltcl: or moM)' order for
Many people who build their own $3.65 (this iiiCiuder po1togt tJIId
homes do not chect a COillractor's haNIIillg) to: TttM, clo AM IAIIreputation to find out if his dtrr, P.O. Boz 11562, ChictJgo, Ill.
CtiSIOilleiJ wen: satisfied with biB 60611-0562. (111 Ca11adiJ, stlld
WOtt. Too often, people lid: for the $4.45.)

=·

Community calendar

Heart drug study results disappoint researchers .

By PAUL RAEBURN
AP Science Editor
TUESDAY
ATI.ANT A (AP) - A study of
heart patieniS failed to confll'lll a
CHESlER -The Chester Town· nnding
that magnesium injections
MONDAY
ship Trustees will hold their regular
given
immediately
afler a heart
monthly meeting at 9 a.m. at the
attaclt
could
!educe
deaths.
CHESHIRE - Women Alive Chesler Town Hall.
The study did show that one
will meet at Kyger Creek Club
drug
safely !educes heart pain and
POMEROY • The regular
House at 7 p.m . There will be a
another
reduces the odds of dying
thanksgiving dinner and a devo· monthly meeting of Meigs County from a heart auack.
tiona! speaker. For more informa· forty and. eight will be held at the
In I992, British researchers
Pomeroy American Legion Post studied
lion call992·2469.
2,300 patients and found
with dinner starting at 7:30 p.m.
of magnesium cut
that
injections
RACINE - Racine Board of Members are asked to attend and · heart attack deaths by 25 percent,
Public Affairs will meet at 10 a.m. bring a gucSL
generating great excilement among
at Star Mill Park.
cardiologists.
TUPPERS PLAINS • Meigs
~ut the results of a study of
POMEROY - Disabled Ameri- County Chamber of Commerce 58,000 heart attack patients around
can Veterans and Ladies Auxiliary will have a general membership the world showed that magnesium
will hold their regular monthly meetiflg at the Tuppers ~lains produced no significant decrease in
VFW Post at 7 p.m. Meal will be mortality, one study participant
meeting at 7 p.m.
provided. For more information said. The results of the larger study
DARWIN • Bedford Township call992-5005. ·
were reported Sunday in conjunction with the annual meeting of the
American Heart Association.
"Tht most ~blc explaoation
(of the contradictory ~Its) is that
the previous trials have been too
small,'' said Dr. Lars'Wilhelmsen
By DONNA CASSATA
lion a general medical research of the Eastern Hospital in Golhem- ·
Associated Press Writer
fund. Money for the WOJI!en's cen· burg, Sweden. "It's important to
WASHINGTON (AP) - When ter, perhaps not a full $40 million, have large trials."
it came to nmling $40 million for a will come from the new!)' enlarged
Magnesium is safe and easy to
women's health research center for $200 million general research pic.
use, and doctors had thought it
the military, male lawmakers didn't
Among those who made the might become a valuable weapon
offer to cut a tank or a weapon or su11gestion was Texas Sen. Kay in the fight to save lives after heart
even a single missile.
Batley HutchisoJI, R- Texas, the attacks.
Until the din from women grew only woman on the Armed Ser· The study also examined the
too loud, their solution was 10 raid vices Committee.
effect of drugs called mononitrates,
last year's defense budget for
The issue caine on the heels of which had been shown in studies of
money already allocated to. breast the Senate's wrenching debate over
cancer research.
sexual harassment charges against
" The .o.nly thing they touch is Sen. Bob Packwood 8ild whether
women'sllealth money. They can't the Oregon Republican .bad to tum
find it anywhere else," complained over his diaries to tbe Ethics comFran Visco, president of the mittee.
.
National Breast Cancer Coalition
It closely followed a visit by
and a breast cancer survivor. "It's women's groups to the White
Velma taylor celebrated her
a little pool of money set aside for House where ther, delivered petiwomen."
tions with 2.6 mtllion signat~~res
86th birthday(on Nov. 1 at her
home. ncar Racine. Following a
The skirmish over the breast urging continued research 10 ~potlliCk diitner,' thc afternoon was
cancer funds ended quickly . The catebreastcanccr.
idea originated with committee
Add to that the JCOres of women · spent visiting and reminiaciag.
staffers operating on an initial now in the Houle- 48 .:...11111 the
AttcndiiiJ were Harold and
report that the $210 million set Senate ,_. seven, the still taw
f'yo:-s,s.:.:mer
'l'le~'sHari)'tep
· e·_:n"sonRaubndy
aside in laSI year's budget had tiot images of Anita HiU lind Clarence ,
'
been obligated. Lawmakers then Thomas reviVOd by the Packwood
Don A., Gene.
Lf!We and
learned thete had been requests for . debate and the oft·tepe~ted phrase, Allen Hud&amp;OJI, Joy' Odor and
the funds.
.
"they don'tget IL"
CaiUin, JQyce Marriner and
"That wasn't among the optioos
Rep. Patricia Schroeder, DStebri~te,n. ~l OcmeanaEdle• Jay 8!ld
for .vt:ly long,'' Sen. Sam Nunn, .D- Colo., who bad aponac))"ed tho . . tlllna c..,..ena. .
Hub!l8nf,
Oa., chainitail of the Armed Ser- health center 1114 iho wai'lled law·
Scou, Becky and Michelle Ours,
vicel Commilloe. said Friday:
m.akcrs they would be "walldng &lt; • Bettyoa 'CUrfn.lin.
. S~ fickens and ,
Instead, HoUse and~ nego- into a hornet's IICII~' if ~confer·
DaVid 8!Bm'D·. · · ·
tiatorS wrangling over the defense ence committh Jiied to d'.l! jaw · · · ~g a gift was ~ claagbtet,
biD decided to increase by $20 mil· last year's money
.
·'
Doris WiliOn ofBroobville,illa.

Congress getting the message
on funding research for women

86th birthday
celebrated

about 2,000 patients to reduce mor·
tality after hj:811 attacks.
Again, the new study was a dis·
appointment, failing to find ,any
reductioJI in death rates from
mononitrates. It did find, however,
that the drugs safely and effectively
reduced chest pain following heart
auacks.
"This dru~ is very useful, and
we can give tt without any prob·
Iems," Wilhelmsen said.
The findings might come as a
surprise to inany American doctors,
who prescribe nitrales much more
often than their counterpa~ts in
England.
About 70 percent of the·Ameri·
can patients in .the study were talc·
ing nitrates, compared to about 18
percent of the study patients in
England, said Dr. Rory Collins of
Oxford University, the overall
coordinatcr of the sllldy.
In the third pan of the srudy, the
researchers found that a drug called
Captojlril, one of a class of drugs
called ACE inhibitors, reduced
deaths from 7.33 percent after five
weeks to 6.87 percent, a reduction
unlike! y to be due to chance.
It was especially useful in
patients who had massive heart
auacks, in which the heart's ability
to pump was seriously impaired,
Wilhelmsen said.
Some researchers have criticized
the need for such large trials, sug·
gesting that smaller trials can produce nearly•the same data more
rapidly and at less expense.
'
But the startling fmdings with

magnesium argue against that ettaeks and treatments, and some
view, Wilhelmsen said.
have been followed up to six
The new trial included patients months.
&lt;lrawn from 1,000 hospitals in 30
The three drugs in the trial were
countries in Europe, North arid given to patients ·in different com·South America, Australia and else- binations, but the study was set up
where around the world, Wilhelm· so that each drug was given indi,
sen said.
vidually to half or the patients and
The.patients were followed for a placebo was given to the other
ra-t_leas_t_fiv_e_wee
__ts_ar_ter_th;..c_ir;..h;..eart;.;;.;._ha_lr_.
.
.

HERElACAlE

.•

.

"FORE" YOU

'

IN THE .
ClAtCflfD AM

·

THANKS·
To The Voters of Pon~er.oy For
Your Support.
JOHN MUSSER·
I

~

Pllld for by C.ndktate, 616 Mulberry Hie., Pofi!!IIOY, Oh.

Williams &amp; 4••oc. lnsu
101-M~hanlc

StrHt
Ohio 45769

h.

0

I

Kosar

Pick 3:

cut by

081
Pick 4:

1114
Buckeye 5:

~·

with the School of Field Sllldies, a gy study ptogram in southern India.
Having worlted ·with elep~!J'
Because of problems during 'that and being amazed by their near-:
private a~ency that arranges eco·
logical field studies for college ' trial run, the prograni has not been human intelligence, Samosk-y:
decided to investigate primate•
credit, slept three to a tent on plat· repeated, Samosky said.
The occasional elephant charge research.
·~
forms raised above the jungle floor
to minimize the intrusion .of rain wasn't a problem. Nor-were India's
"But the monkeys (at the prl(· :
and creatures.
customs, such as the need for serve) were so used .to p.eople, :
The system was imperfect
women to avoid addressinl! or they'd come and sit with you oil ·
"The first week I was there, I making eye-contact with unfamtliar benches," she said.
.
·
"I understand the need to :
was praying for a deadly illness so men.
I could go home," she said. "But
The education was up to par. acquaint people with animals, but I :
after two weeks, I started to like The two Indians in charge of the thought it was sad, and I decided to ·
• iL"
program are considered the world's concentrate on something else::
She learned how to travellight.
top elephant-ecologist and ele- That's when they offered the soUd·
waste program."
•
" I only had one bag coming phant-~eterinarian. Samosky said.
Barbados,
like
other
develope&amp;
home. I gave the rest away," she
Customs was another matter.
said.
Students were subjected to innu· islands with little landfill spact•
And after two summers doing merable hassles over their visas, offers a microcosm of the world'(
environmental research in the trop- laptOp computers and other equip- solid-waste disposal problems, an¢
ics, Samosty has learned a few ment they were bringing to the sub- Samosky was given a chance toworlc on a solution.
;
thin~s about herself.
continent
With
two
other
students,
they;
' You learn to know what you
But the worst thing was the eledefinitely n~; you push your lim- phant poachers, who operale with a put together a survey on people't•
attitudes toward recyclin$ an&lt;i;
its," she said. "You don't realize private army.
how much you can take until you
There was no such worry last waste disposal. They mtemewcd:
go to places like this."
summer on the Caribbean island of 327 Barbadians and put 10gether C
series of reports that will help th«f
Samosky earned enrollment in Barbados.
the•school with her published
The accommodations on Barba· Ministry of Health in its waste'
research on Ohio's white -tailed dos were so nice- running water, reduction, recycling and inegaf
deer population, which she wrote electricity, swimming pools and a dum)!ing-prevention campaigns. ,;..
' We were able to make aft
as a Denison University student
wildlife preserve - they were disThC summer after her 1991 trip appointing afler two summers in immediate contribution and that''~!'
what· I've always wanted to do,' (:
to Central America, Samosky set the wild, Samosky said.
·
~
out again with the School for Field . But the worlt helped her refine Samosky said. , _
Studies on Its nrst elephant-ecolo- her career goals.
·.••

By BILL MONAGHAN
SpriDifleld News-Sun
SPRINGPIELD, Ohio (AP) Tisha Samosky was going to the
jungle. So she went to the nearest
Banana Republic oullet and loaded
up on safari outfits.
She packed them, along with her
Walkman, pillows and other vital
gear, into a three-piece, all-leather
set of Eddie Bauer lug¥age and
headed 10 Miami lnlemational Air-

Ohio Lottery

Browns

Student learns about self,_life in jungle

IN COMPETITION • Stephanie Sayre and Fred Mauon will
compete in a talent show at the National FFA Convention In
Kansas City, Mo. Ibis week. Earlier this year they won the state
FFA talent contest held In Columbus which qoalit'led them to compete ror the national title. (fS Photo by Charlene Hoeflich)

·.

It's hard to sboot holes
through our coverage..
Stop In or call for a ·
quote and yte'll gl~
you our best shot.

PageS

Voi. 44,N0.138

Specia~ist tells

·'

,.'

~'

' '..

Low loail:bl 11011ad 30, part.

ly doudy. Wedneeday, partly
IUDDJ, b.li:b ID mld·50..

1 Section, tO P"9" 35 canto
A Mullion.... Inc. !Mwapapw

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 9, 1993

Mulllmodl•tno.

REDA members

Regionalization future trend in economic develop-ment
"If there is a trend in economic
development it's toward regionalization," a specialist in the neld
told mem~rs of the Regional Economic Development Association
Monday,
With increased competition and
dwindling financial resoun:es, Bill
Snyder, a former economic development director with Columbus
Southern Power, said, "Over the
next five to 10 years, very few
counties will be able to 'do it
alone."
REDA membership consists of
nearly two dozen business and
industrial leaders from Mason
County, W. Va., and Gallia, Jackson, Meigs and Vinton counties in

Ohio. The association's stated mission is to expand economic development throughout the region.
"One of the givens of economic
development," Snyder said, "is that
no industrial prospect comes
around and looks at a county - they
look at a region.
"Economic development is not
dead," he added, "but, it has cer·
tainly changed . People that
wouldn't talk to one another nve
years ago because of old football
rivalries are now coming together
and cooperating."
Snyder said this new level of
cooperation results from the real·
ization that communities, "Need to
leverage their money and leverage

their efforts.
Snyder pointed to commercial
exporting as a major growth area in
the field of economic development.
"In many parts of the world
there are maJOr demlinds for Amer·
ican products," he said. 11tere is a
lot of demand, but there is a lot of
red tape.
"We have to teaCh people how
to export...how to make exporting
user friendly," Snyder concluded .
Tuesday's meeting included
reports on comrany visitations and
a discussion o a need to solidify
and clarify the mission of the
newly-formed association.
Organized in September, the
groups first major project involved

a continuing series of visitations to
area businesses and industries
designed to determine existing
needs of established fll'llls.
A first round of visitations
involved contacts with representa·
tives of Facemyre Lumber in
Meigs County, the Pillsbury plant
in Jackson County, and Gallia
County's Bob Evans Farms.
Over the past month, REDA
teams visited the offices of the
Southern Ohio Coal Company,
near Wilkesville in Gallia County,
and Shell Chemical, in Apple
Grove, W.Va.
·
The .illitial contacts, visitation
committees reponed, brought forward numerous suggestions . ·

Coal strike
may ,end
shortly

mislJiiilcc.'' .· .

!nciOOing the development of a leg·
tslative agenda • of the local wood
industry, a need to draw labor
intensive industries to the area, and
cooperative efforts between Bob
Evans Farms and regional tourism
groups.
Additional concerns expressed
by the corporate leaders included
the. need for improvements in edu·
cation, enhancement of the ttans·
portation infrastructure, a regional
approach to grants writing, and
area-wide support for specific projects, such as the proposaliO de vel·
op a regional atrport in Mason
County.
In a focused discussion of the
goals, objectives and mission of the

association, concern was exp-essed
that other regional economic development agencies might perceive
the REDA as a competitive, rather
than cooperalive, body.
"As we clarify our mission,"
REDA president Jim Kessinger,
Oak Hill, "we must make it clear
that our purpose is to work in con·
cert with the efforts of existing
agencies."
The University of Rio Grande,
through the ausptces of its newlf·
developed Center for Economtc
Development, hosted Monday's
meeting.
The next full meeting of the
REDA will be Monday, Jan. 31, at
7 p.m., at the University of Rio
Grande.

Middleport Council OKs
'buy local' resolution

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Gov. Gaston Caperton says he's
cautiously optimistic that a 6month coal strike will be senled
soon, before more damage is done
to West Virginia's economy.
"Now is the time to settle this
strike before the financial diffaculties get any w~,'' Caperton said
Monday. "The (strikers') families,
tho-'wllo!C· coinll!linity, even. dalci
·~, Jiiltieen ,liiijjilacil·b
y

Maft Muchow, director of
reaearch for the Illite Deplll'liilent
of Tax and Revenue, said Monday
that the ilrike is costing the state $2
million a month in lOst coal severililee.taxci.
The state's financial experts
provided for "some· son of downPomeroy. Here Martha Poole, left, and Rutlt
SOLARIUM R!ADING ROOM • Llgltt,
turn in the coal industry" when
Steams enjoy the new facility, while Ruth Pow·
bright, and so invldng with its comfortable furthey budgeted for the previous
ers, right, works on arranging some or the read·
niture Is the newly cOmpleted solarium reading
year, Muchow said. Thus, the ftrst
ing materials. (Photo by Charlene Hoeftlcb)
room at the Meigs County Public Library In
months of the strike did not affect
the state's inoome estimates.
.. ''But-we didn't expect the strike
to go on this long," Muchow said.
"Just since July I, we're $4.5 million short of our estimates, and
that'sall coal strike relaterl."
The UMW began its strike May
10 in a dispute over job security
and future em)lloymcnt for UMW
members. The union says it has
The Meigs County Public with its decor in Williamsburg blue patrons will use to start up the sysabout 17,500 miners on strike in Library, which moved into new and rose.
tem has not been completed.
seven stales in Appalachia and the quarters in 1989 on West Main
Numerous children and adult
The parking problem created by
Midwest.
Street in Pomeroy; continues to the addition of programs at the programs are being added to the
Caperton said Monday that a expand its facilities as well as its library has been partially eliminat- library agenda. In addition to the
special mediator's briefmg on the collection of books and materials, ed by the addition of 10 new regular story hours, special proweekend's marathon negotiations and program offerings for children spaces.
grams for children are featured on a
has given him hope that the long and adults.
They arc located on West Main monthly ba sis. This month the
di~ule wiD be seuled soon.
The most recent addition is a Street on the river side across from library will observe Children's
"For the fliSt time, I would say solarium reading room · which has the library. The area has been Book Week with three special pro·
that I'm cautiousjy optimistic,'' been added to the main floor blacktopped and a guard rail grams.
Caperton .said. "Be sure you put libllll)'.
On Nov. 16, youngsters will be
installed.
that 'cautiously' in there."
making
personalized bulletin
The 29 by 12 foot structure
Plans are moving forward for a
Negotiators for the United Mine with glass ex lending along one side computer search system to be in boards, on Nov . 17 a purple
Worlters and the Bituminous Coal and over the top has bceit furnished operation by the end of the year or dinosaur will visit to entertain the
Oper~tors Association .met late into
with a comfortable sofa and chairs, in early 1994. The computers are in boys and girls, and on Nov. 18, a
the night Saturday and Sunday, takreading tables and racks. It's bright place at the library, but the work of special workshop will be held
ing few bn:W. They reconvened at and light and exttemely inviting preparing new library cards which where the children will make soda
10 a.m. Monday, according to,the
bot~e aquariums.
woman who ans1fered the telephone at the Washington, D.C.,
offiCes of mediator Bill Usety. She
declined 10 give her name.
Calls to Usery's office late
Monday were answered by a
recording.
Usety earlier said he planned to
keep the two sides at the table until
a settlement was reached. While
The Division-of Public Works
Georxe Kaitsa, department chief
By JOHN CHALFANT
mediatin~ the UMW's 1989 negoti·
put
the total at $15 million, includ·
financiaf
ofrteer,
said
the
ad
agency
Associated Press Writer
ations wtth The Pittston Co., Uscty
mg
$11.5 million for construction.
wiU
teeeive
$70,000,
or
1.6
percent
COLUMBUS - Don't be sur·
kept the two sides at the table for
A
previous
estimate pegged con·
92 consecutive hours before an prised if ads touting Ohio's busi- of the total. The rest of the money struction coSts
at $10 million.
ness climate start showing up more goes to produce the ads and buy
agreement was n:ach!:cf.
,
Controllers released $3.5 mil·
broadcast time or print space..
Meanwhile, a top UMW offteial in national newspapers and maga.
lion
for the Lucasville prison. An
Kaitsa
said
$500,000
the
depart·
zines
or
on
radio
and
TV.
in West Vitginia said Monday that
April
riot involving 409 prisoners
ment
spent
on
such
promotion
in
The
state
Controlling
Board
there will be no settlement unless
the last state bud•et •enerated a claimed the lives of a guard and
Eastern Associated Coal Corp. released $4.4 million for a 20·
increase in calls to a tele- nine inmates.
sharp
month
marketing
program
to
agrees to rehire strikers who were
The Ohio Department of Rcha·
pho~~ hot line for business
for
the
state's
increase
exposure
ftred for what the company said economic development programs.
bilitation and Correction was given
tnq~JU~CS ,
was picket line violence.
Sen. Jeff Johnson, D-Cleveland, $2 million to begin restoration of
In other acuon Mon(lay, the
L-Block, site of the disturbance.
said
l)e wanted better evidence.
board released ·$13.5 milhon to
"There will be total amnesty for help pay for initial costs or three
"The returd ori investment The bi$gest chunk of the money,
an our folks or we won't go blck,'' prison construction projects at question has got to be more sub- $1.1 million, goes to MoodyNolan
said Howard Green, a member of Lucasville, Caldwell and St. stantial than il)creased fhone Lui., Columbus, as associate archi·
. ..
the ullion's governing board (CJJ!e· Clairsvillo.
cans;•'· Uid Johnson, one o seven teet.
senting DistriCt 17, covering southAnother $1.5 million will be
The Ohio Department of Devel- members on the board.
em West Virginia and easlem Ken· opment won' approval of a $4.4
Kailsa said an independent comused to hire the Knowlton Contucky.
million coillilll:t with BSBLeff and pany 'WaS hired 10 track results of
struction
Co., Dublin, for initial
Squiceiarini, Columbus, to handle a calls receivcid from businesses.
building worlt. .
"I waqt to be clear on t~at. business marlceting campaign that
Cosu of re~iiB a coUblock
Fred Forbes, public workS direc·
There wein't be any contract wtth- in the past hu included spots on
that riotin1 btlllllllS traShed at the
tor,
said the goal is 10 have L·Block
out all our people going back, .. CNN and ads ill the Wall Street
Southern Ohio Corroctional Faciliblck
in service within five months.
0Jeertsaid.
ty wen: revised tqiWard Monday.
Journal.

Meigs Library continues

to expand its facilities

Ohio to spend $4.4 million
on marketing programs

or

..

2-9-15·27-30

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
A resolution to give ftrst prefer·
ence on projects to local contractors and ·supplii'ZS of miiiCI'ials even
when a lower bid is received was
passed by Middleport Village
Council at Monday night's meeting.
Council's resolution which
passed by unanimous vote provides
that in cases where the cost vari·
ante is not more than five percent
a'i1d 1111 other niquimnents are satis'
fled, then the in-county bid may be
accepted.
The resolution points to the vii·
Iage's desire 10 encourage the use
of local contractors and suppliers
because of their support for the
community through jobs, taxes and
contributions.
No Smoking Ordinance
Following a lengthy discussion,
Council by a vote of four to two,
gave a first reading to an ordinance
prohibiting smoking in Middlepon
village offices, buildings and
enclosed structures.
The ordinance must have three
readings and be adopted before it
becomes law.
It provides for posting of "No

Smoking" signs and penalties for
violators, ranging from $25 for the
first offense to $100 for .the founh
offense.
While Councilman Bob Gilmore
seconded the motion for the first
reading, he was one of the two vot·
ing against it. Miclt Childs also
voted ""no". Since the jail is in Middleport Village hall, Gitinore cited
the problem the proposed ordinance will present for prisoners
who smoke. It was pointed out that
while employees ellA leave the
building to smoke, that is not an
option for prisoners.
The need to protect non-smok.
ers was stressed by Council members, Gerard, Judy Crooks and
James Clatworthy who voted in
favor or the ordinance, as did Jack
Sauerficld.
Grant Applications
Council authorized Jean
Trussell, grants coordinator, to proceed with the energy conservation
grant application with the Ohio
Department or Development.
The grant amount would be 50
percent of the project cost or
$8.555 . The work would involve
installation O[ Storm windows,
Contiaued on Page J

.---Local briefs-Official ballot count Saturday
The Meigs County Board of Elections will meet at It a.m. Saturday to conduct the official count of ballots cast in the Nov. 2 election, Rita Smith, director, announced.
Smith said that 34 ballots cast under provisions of House Bill
237 wiU be counted into the ftnalligures at that time. Absentee ballots were included in the re~ar election returns. Those 34 voters
voted in the Board of Elections office bccat:se they had failed to
change their address p-ior 10 the October deadline.
A race which could vety well be affected by the addition of those
34 ballots, 13 of which are from Salisbury Township. is the Salisbur~ Township uustee race. In that race, Bernard D. Gilkey
recetved 623 votes and l:.arry R. Thomas 621.

Man sentenced on birthday
A Pomeroy man received an unpleasant birthday gift Monday in
the Meigs County Court of Common Pleas when he was sentenced
on a charge of breaking and entering.
Curtis Leroy Wud, who turned 22 Monday. received an ISmonth sentence which will be suspended upon completion of a six.
month program at the Southeastern Probationary Treatment Alter·
native Center in Nelsonville. In addition, he was ordered to pay
prosecution costs of $500. court costs and received five years probation.
Ward pleaded guilty in the Sept. 27 breaking and entering of
Vance Grocery in Harrisonville in which cigarettes and smokeless
tobacco products were stolen.
He received credit for 41 days served in the Meigs County Jail.

Veterans Day observances
are planned for Thu~sday
Veterans Day observances will
be held Thursday at II a.m. in
front of the Meigs County Courthouse, conducted by the Drew
Webster Post of the American
Legloo. The service of veterans of
aU wars will be remembcml.
According to Post Commander
ChliCk Kitchen, Jerry Gust from the
University of Rio Grande will be
the featured speaker.
Gust is a O.S. Air Fon:e veteran
of the Korean Conflict. He was
raised on a farm in northwestern
Minnesota and is a graduate of the
University of Delaware with a
degree in psychology. He earned a
Masters of Business Administra·

lion at Ohio University.
A frequent speaker on subjects
i~cluding ma~ageme_nt by objecttves, leadershtp, IDObvation com.
munications, safety, self and 'subor'
dinate development and threats to
the American free entetprise system, he has spoken to groups
throughout Ohio, as well as New
York City, Dallas and Chic.go.
Kitchen invites all veterans in
the county, veterans organizations
and all citizens 10 be a J111t of Ibis
program. Following the aervl~e
beaDs will be served at the
can Legion building in Poincroy
Everyonc is invited 10 attend.
·

Ameri:

�•

Tuleday, November, 9, 1993

Commentary

Page--2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, November, 9,1993

· ·AccU·weatiter• forecast for

The Dally

Both parties p:ut spin on results

~entirtel

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO 'DIE IJIITER£81'8 OF 11IE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETI'ERS OF OPINlON are welcome. They sbould be less than 300
words. All leiters are subject Ill edi~og and musl be signed with name

address and ttlepbooe number. No unSigned letters will be published. Leu.~
should be m good taste, addressmg issues, nol personalities.

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers

WASHINGTON
- The
had scarcely(NEA)
been counted
ballots
when politicians narties and
activists of various • r
ing 10 put their o~pi:: ~results
Most of these vt
e.
rally e~ough were alm::~t~l'"
panisan.
•
m Y
Republicans
Dem
11
in big troublebeca~sc
the~;~
. the three big victories of the
George Allen over Democrat Maryyear:
Sue Terry for Vir inia
Christine Todd
~::~;
James Florio in New Jersey· and
Rudolph Giuliani over incu~bent
New York May~»" David Dinkins
Democrats counter that each
race stands on its own merits and
lhat Terry, Aorio and Dinkins.each
lost for a different reason.
Democrats insist !hat there were no
overriding anti-Democratic themes
in this set of off-year elections.
Objectively however the
results were not good news for the
Democnus. lf lhe results show anything, it is that voters are sti11 an
and stilll"ant change. By and Jargryge
•

By The Associated Press
Excerpts of recent Ohio editorials Of national and slatewide interest·
The (Cleveland) Philo Dealer, Nov. 7
·
, Sh~ld a SOC(.iety. ~ populated by twins and triplets? Should parents
g•v~ birth.to thC~ Siblings years apan? Should they be able to use one of
theu duplicate children for spare body parts?
.
Those are some of the ethical and practical questions we must ask uw··....L
selves in the wake of the lateSt scientific advance: human ·ctoning
, The news is great for _infertile couples who may have greate; success
w11h extra embryos, butu should be troublesome to the rest of us. Jusl
because we can clone humans, should we?
Everyone -common folk, doctorr, scientists - must be a pan !If the
debate and ~nsensu~ about the new world we might create by cloning.
, Not to discuss IbiS matter would leave cloning in the hands of scienlls~. They may be s!'larl enough 10 create cookie-culler humans. But
we re lhe ones who will have 10 son them out.

Whftman

Robert}. Wagman

e:ounai.

I GaVe liP Sii"TiNIS 01-1
l'1Y F~ot!T fbR'c:H.

! GaVe liP WaLI(iNcS
iN 1Ha PaRK.

.

save
..:~.,.

The Cincinnati Enquirer, Nov. 6
'
-x:
UP Golt-15 O(ff
School vouchers !ost California-. but a statewide poll found vouch, • .:Hr..
er suppon at an all·wne high of two-thirds. What gives?
~' n11 o
'There were .flaws in the California law. But another reason for defeat
w~
the. $!~ million spent by teacher unions
on scare-lactic ads to mainlain their gnp on schools.
. ·
P~r.ents are tired. of a government-schools monopoly that delivers
salanes. qual•ty wh1le costs escalate for layers of bureaucmcy and rising
Voucher plans that offer about $2,500 per sludent empower parents to
shop for the best education- public or pnvate.
qm•: George .V~inovich wants to spend about $12.5 million to test
cho•ce m a few distrtcts.
. UnforbiDately:.teacber
and other opponents "are already crankmg up the troops for a legislative battle next year, Voinovich said
. Unless the public ~s up, even a test could be sabotaged by 'special ""'-_..;;..._ _ _~

i~

· : · · man~aun~
· most.
out " !ntuauve
~um.e felons be pven life sen~e~~ces wuh no parole.
Voter Bll.ger against politicians
showed up m the passage of term·
limit Pf!lJlOsals in New York City
and Maine, and New Jersey voters
that is really worrying people. pasiCd a measure to allow for the
From New York to Seattle 17 ' recall _or elected ~fficials. AJso,
majcr cities elected mayors (aciuaJ. voters m New Yor1r. s large Monroe
ly !here will he runoffs in Atlanta a~d Suffollt counties, and in the
and Miami). The one unifying fac· c.•I&gt;: of Plallsburgh, a!ll"'!lved term
lOr in all these races was that crime
hnuts for ~ty 81_KI ctty officials.
was the key issue in every one. The ~wney, ~alif., did the same for
results showed that in communities cuy council m~~f!!bers. .
where crime is the issue, angry votThe vot~rs negauve mood
ers will try to tum incumbents or showed up 1n votes on gay-rights
incumbent parties out of office. In measures. In Cincinnati and in
New York:, it was former prosec:u- Lewiston •. Maine, voters rolled
tor Giuliani who was the narrow back gay ':'Shts measures that had
winner. In Detroit, it was former ~ prev.IOuSif. approved by the
judge Dennis Aiihez.
City
while voters said no 10
Fear of crime showed up in a gay f!ghts in a non-binding refen:n·
Texas vote approving a $1 billion dum m Portsmouth, N.H.
.
bond issue 10-&amp;uild new prisons But some votes ran counter 10
the state's fourth prison bond issue lhe trend. Washington state voters
since 198?- In Washington state, !'Cf~ 10 rollbaclc a $1 billion legvoters easily passed what is ·being ISiative tax. package meant to balcalled the "three slrikes and you're ance the state budget and pay for
voten twned
incumbents out
saying
no to various
.. whil
n e
Atlhe localle el~ 8•
v it IS cnme nollhe economy, 18Xes or budgets

:rUtlo!'"'"'r·L·ra~
$3Ve liP P~IVii.JGI oN
~,...,.&lt;!'
r Ql'l

1\.

~lf'IGCI;;..

~.i'f'1
j;W

I K~PT ltfV GUN$f

dech~mg

u~ions

:::d::::~:::~4deservesatry.

lf anyone~stiU, ~ any ·doubts ~ the Oni~ ~~ and.m!l$,! ot~ .
world are undergomg profound changes, then recent el'ection resurts
should be eye-openers. ·
On lhe national and international level, lhe voten' mood seem to be to
bool aut whoever is in. And in doesn't matter if lhey are conservative or
liberal.
Republicans wilh conservative bents were winners in major contests in
lhe United Slates- for mayor of'New York City and for governors of
VirginiaandNewJersey.
It wasn' t a good time to be an incumbent in Israel either. The revered
Teddy Kollek, who has been mayor of Jerusalem of 28 years and who
seemed to be invulnerable, was ousted by a conservative.
But even more stunning was what happened in·Canada, where conservatives, not liberals, got the boot. The Conserv&amp;ll've•• had held !57 seats 1·n·
Parliament. Ther, were reduced to a measly two scats!
Because of differences in the American and Canadian systems an elccti~n with ~much of a drastic change.Pf!&gt;bably won't happen here, but
w11h the anu-mcumbent mood, we are st11lm for some big changes.
SteubenvUie Herald-Star, Nov. 3
With alllhe concern on moral values, it was refreshing to see a National Opinion Reseilrch Center study indicated that 85 percent of American
SJXlUSCS are faithful.
The survey found little variance in the percentage of failhfulness in
five separate studies.over the last five years.
Some researchers speculated lhe failhfulness level could be due to the
fear of AIDS, but the poll discounted lhat belief, with married couples
overwhelmingly indicaung their habits had not varied by that fear.
Let's hope the faithfulness level continues to improve.
•
ID

h IS
• t0

'U0 d
left~~~~esday, N!~.~~e~~%Pr;~993.
ay

ry

Bas~ball owners:
who
needs
oJ
As I stare mto the abyss of four
darlc and·dismal months without
baseball, the pain associnted with
Post Season Syndrome seems more
acute than usual There are two reasons for this: ·
1. we have just witnessed the
second World Series in six years to
bepbiyedentirelyonsyntheticsod.
2. We have seen baseba1l's last
true pennant race, thanks to 8
heret1cal reorganization scheme
dreamt U,P by a motley coUection of
mill•'onaues whose 6"~
_ _, IS
· apparently limitless.:
Indeed, 1 propose to launch our
long jouriley into the four-month
· "'"'UiliU
,_.__,~~~ y I
. bYdemonstraung,
void
think, that baseball owners are the
most ClliDially disadvantaged group
of millionaires to be found on the
planet.
I heat your protestations. Football owners are worse, .you say. 1
will let the late Edward Bennett
Williams - brilliant lawyer
minority owner of the Washingtori
Re&lt;jskins, maJO· rity owner 'of the
Bal wnore
·
Orioles - spea1t for me.
"The dumbest NFL ownez is C!Jual
to the smartest baseball owner,' he
once said

•
There are 52 days

'

lhrough the years. who srild Babe
Ruth to the New York Yankee 1
s
r

health-care ~form. The IJieasure
would have. bed fu'!JTC tax gowth
to average 1ncom~ m the slate. In
North Carolina, where state bar·
rowing Is rare, votera approved a
record $740 million in bonds for
SIBle co11eges, .water projects and
parks. Votera in Ohio approved a
$200 million bond issue for pa11cs
and natural resoun:es.
•
Supporters of school vouchers
- whi:h places into pamrts' hands
public fu~ds th!Jt they can ~se to
send thou ch1ldre.n to P!.1vate
schools .- . .sa.y t~e de~eat ~r t~e
voucher mllialive u~·CaJi!omm will
no~ slow doWn thell' nationaJ: c:ampwgn.
.
.. '!'h~ Calif~mia school vou9her
m1tialive, wb1ch would have g1yen
parents about $2,600 a year, faded
by about a 71 percent to 29 percent.
The California lo.ss is being
blamed on lhe fact ·that opponents,
led by powerful teachef! unions,
out-spent supporters by more· than
10-~1_. ~~that ~ose w~ drafted
the. m•hat1ve d1d not ,hsten to
national voucher pro!F.'ents and
allow for a phase-in ~. Opponents argued the initi&amp;tive would
cost cash-strapped California $2
billion in the fll'St two years mainly
to fund students already in nonpublic schools. Supporters of .
vouchers say they expect some
form of their JmlllOSIII to either be ·
debated by stite 1egislators, or be
on state ballots in 1994 in Colorado, Georgia, Aorida, Michigan,
New Jersey, Ohio and Oregon.
They even say they believe they
can qualify anolher voucher initiative 10 California in November
1994.
Finally, in two of the most

hS
JOSep ifJear

B 1 R d. S
os on e
ox owner Harry
[~Who moved the Dodgers to

~~tern~~~lie~.r~~Yp~w!~~

ered God's grass with that
unspeakablv odl'ous substance
&lt;
called artificial
turf'l Houston
As
tros owner Judge Roy Hofheinz.
At this point, 1 could rest my
case
against
the ecceotric
collection
of car
dealers,
cowboys,
pizza
makers, magnates and deve£opers
who own baseball teams and confide.ntly await the verdict of any J'ury
th Ia d
m e n • but that would leave
100 much of the tale wtiOid. Con·
sider some recent transgressions:
h - TheY.ha~ continued to abide
t e esca uon 10 phiyers' salaries
until the avemge is now wen above
$1
million.
a result,
now for
costsa
a family
ofAs
four
aboutit$IOO
day at the park. Monthly premiums
for cable rclevision· ....-. channels
.,...._
are nearly unaffordable and pay-

18

However: supporters of this resolution also believe that if the 'udi·
ciary was balancing two se~ of

Sen. ran M.. Long
J'

constitutional rights. victims'
interest would be much less likely
to be ignored.
Advocates of the constitutional
amendment contend this would
offer a permanency to victims'
rights far beyond that of statuiOry
ri~ts.ln addition, courts are nlore
willing 10 use injunctions and wrirs
of mandamus to en forte constitu·
tiona! rights than statutory rights.
Currently, 14 states have similar
amendments .to their respective
constitutions and many more are
considering such amendments.
In a rel111ed .~De&amp;sure, Senator
Robert D. Netllo has recently intraduced S-·- BiiJ 206 w·bich would
protect victims by limiting tl!eir.lia·
bility for any injury received or
caused by an intruder on the vic·
tims' property. This le,islation
w~uld help assure ~t VICtims of
en~, such 81 burglary ,aDd ln:l- ·
pasamg, cannot be helcl financially .
y IICCO!"'lllble if the peljlelraiOr is
mtenuonally · or 4C¢id~tua!IY '
· harmed while committing the ·
crime, If enacted, vf~tlms would
hllve the rillht to plotecl
and
J1101101Y wiihout fear of being 111C1t
~~'!!'l*"iltor ex liis ~ily It i
.....,.
.
The Ohio Senate is·a11o consid·
ering Senate BiiJ 186,sponaol'ed by

=:r
fi4

CIB

by

-------·
-' ·.··-·.;.
;..; -' Weather
.
.
Soutll~&lt;;eatl'lll Obto ·.

Thursday tbrou&amp;b s.t.rdly:
'I.:onight,. ~anly cloudy. J_ow
Fair on Thursday and Frida~·
&amp;found •30
.... n · d
1 • ""'"S 1·rr
20s aild •n..
Hi
.· , ··. ·: "" es !BY, partY '""w · upper
"""·
sunny~
1n the mid·SOs. ~
45-S5. A chance of showers Satur·
Extea , ecJ ~~ , · . .
.day. Low~ 35-40/ Highs in the 50s.

:!f!!

·
,
.
,
A
'
·
,
•
d
~·. .--.-.... ,·_,rea .

posslbibly of bat!. and pretnal
releaseAalofdef&amp;J!ianfL
be f
s ways, 1 I may
o any

· 'b
Bet'ty J' ..ROJIS

d;ssolutions
"

've·
couples recel
marriage JicenSeS

,

Lottery results.

HO$pital news

y'

I

lnll~oflbe
.
•
fCIIOII.

.'

'

&lt;"

adding extra insulation, door
replacement, replacing old furnaces
With energy efficient ones, and
~ezoning the heating in the buildmg.
With the work energy savings
are expected to be about 30 percent
or $2,194 ·a year which means lhat
lhc paybaclc for lhe cost of the project would come in less than four
years,TrusseU said. Energy savings
mmts are contingent on recouping
the Cl&lt;pel18C within five years.
Trussell said that from October
1992 10 October 1993, the gas and
electric bills for village hall totaled
$7,313. Deadline for applying for
the grant is Friday. If it is granted
then the viUage wiU have a year in
which 10 do the work, according 10
Trussell.
Revitali2ation
Mayor Dewey Horton talked
about the Middleport downtown
revitalization program and
announced a meeting to be held
Friday !II OverbrOok Center, 3:45
p.m. wnh Lisa McDaniel of the
Ohio Deparunent of Development

'

Eaatera craft sllow
There wiD be a craft show !pOIIsored by the band boosttn 81 East·

em High SdlllOI on Saturday from
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. There will be a
large variety of crafts, food and
entertainment. Everyone is welcome.

Rouad nd square daace
planned
A round and square dance sponsored by lhC Tuppers Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 9053
Ladies Auxiliary wiiJ be held Friday from 8· 11:30 p.m. at the post.
.Music by .cJ. IIDilthe Coonty Gentlemen With Red Carr and Melvin
Cross calling. Everyone welcome.

Horton encouraged business
people who are interested in the
revitalization of lhe downtown, as
well as community leaders to
attend the meeting.
The village's project last year
was not funded. Horton slreSSed the
importance of leuing the Depart~ent of Development reprcsentauve· tnow lhat the community is
behind the project
Other Bulneas
.
Adopted at the meeting was an
ordinance which increases the
charge for new water meter taps
from $125 to $325. Cos! of malerials was the reason given for the
needed increase as recommended
~~Middleport Board or Public
Tom Dooley, president of the
Middleport Community Association, met with Council to taUt about
the "buy local" dialogue with the
Meip Local Board of Education.
Dooley reported on meetings
with the board and of programs
ptoposcd. He noted that the district
•s compilinl a list of ilems which
IChools JIIUI:huc l1td wlrid1 loc:al"

·---- =

'No ....~pi}O .. bJ. moil pormiucl Ia ""'
· ---.~·io...uoble.
....... .
,
,

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HANDMADE HOLIDAY TREASURES ..&gt;.

CRAFT SHOW

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lS ')\'etb..:.......... .:.•.,.,,.... ,,,,;I1••• .,. .........$21 ,U ·

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21 Wttla..•....~•.~.....•;:·············..·•·.........so
12 ,~ :..................................,...JIIAO 1

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the
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Blair Windon · ·

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by c_..itt, 44114 Rus~l Rll.; PUII'Off. OH
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Am Ele Power ...................35 1/2
Ashland Oil... .....................34 l/2

AT&amp;T ................................56 3,18
Bank One ...........................37 3,18
~ans.. ,....................... l8 1/l
ng Shop .................. 13 5,18
~~Ind ......................... .l5
~lding ......................33 1/2
Good ~...................25 1/2
ye.
..................43 314
t:sted~.........................44 114
Multim . .. ......................20 5,18
Point edia Inc..................36 l/2
Rax Bancoop ......................... .14
RestauranL........ .............. 03
Re~ Electtic ....... :....... .16 718
=~&amp;Mycrs ................ l61/l
S
Ys Inc ......................21 7,18
w~~-; .............................. .35
w ~ ll... ..................... 163,18
orlhmgton Ind ................ 17 314
Slock reports are the '10:30
a.m. q~tes provided b7 Advest
ol Gallipolis.

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446·4514

7

Experts

I&gt; '

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111

people who will how

oday.

yulerday dida 'I happen

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Shop RMtland Furnhurt to41 y for lilt
1!111111 ttltcllon dul•t our tltrt·
Wldt tnlngs b-1111 Choott IIDM
dlntHn, curios, roclltn TY •1
.C.R.'t, and •••· AHart 1~ 1i~t 011
salt, and r11dy lor fru dtltmy{

Route 62 North
Point Pleasant

'•\:'

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omorrow w~y lht lhlags thty

GUARD
ARMORY

.
·· ,; .,

Informal. Lint 1 reads 'How
did you urn In 1113?• lint
111ds, •come on, 111lly, how

Is knowing
you shouldn't do.

NATIONAL •· •

by:
M11son County
Homemakers
W11lum14 High School Home Economics Clllsses
GFWC·Point Pleumt Junior Womlln's Club

".

ym's In forma will b1 mn

lm1"h?'

November 13 &amp; 14, 1993
Saturday, 10 a.m.· 6 p.m.
Sunday,12 nQon • 5 p.m.

fo~ your·5upporf for

r

Stocks

Parent-teacher
meetings set

THANKS ·

'•

~ IIIII dilbt.to ,I.J the '*lier may
Nmltl• - - ~ 'll1o Doll;oa • dnl. mar 11 ~th HI&amp; o.tk wtU t.

Srt

;)

so.

Harrbonv!Ue LocJee to meet
Harrisonville Lod11e 1411 will
meet on Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
Work in the Enter Prentice Degree.
RefreshmeniS will foUow. AU miL'l toi masons welcome.

.

Sli&lt;GLICOI'Y ,
Pille£
Dolly..,,,.,,. ,,,,,,,,., ,., ,,,., :~ ...... - 3 5 ~

811 . . . . . rblra BIIMd Gil ol
the 01111 of Alllka.
'
L.ow tlouds were 1preadia1
alan&amp; tbe coast froiD aort•era
W81blacton, while •iah douds
1IIOVCd further inland and lhowas
developed througiiiU the ....
In the southeast, moist air off
the Atlantic will increa~~t the
chartCe Qf rain along ~·s east
~ whe~ heavy rain feU Monday, mcludmg 5.28 inches in four
hours in Miami.
!be low temperature for the
DllbOII Monday was 1 degree above
zero at Bemidji, Minn. The high
temperature Monday was 86
degrees It Homestead, Fla.
'High !Cm~tures loday were
r~ 1D tile 40s and
in the
Midwest', the Northeast and the
Plcific; Northwest, SOs and 60s in
the Southwest ud 601 imd 70s in
California, southern Texas and
Florida.
.

businesses might supply on a com·
petitive price basis. Dooley also
tal1ted about a proposed mere han IS •
coupon program as a possible fund
raiser for the schools.
The mayor appointed Gerard
and
Childs 10 the F'II'CIDen 's DepenThe Meigs Local School District
dency
Board.
wiU be holding pan:nt·ieachez COD·
The
need for changing signs on
ferences on Tuesday, Nov. 23,
Route
7
directing II10IOrists to Midfrom 6-9 p.m. llld on Wednesday,
dleport
was
pointed out by Crooks.
Nov. 24, from 9 a.m. to 110111. 'StuShe
said
that
one sign says the vildents will not he iii attendance on
lage
is
three
miles
and that a secNov. 24, 25,26 or29.
ond
sign
says
two
miles
while in
The conferences are being held
fact
Middleport
is
only
ibout
one
to allow the parents and teachers to
discuss pupil JliOIIre5S and to keep mile off the highway. The Ohio
the parents and schools informed Deparonent of Transportation will
aboul student activities as they be coni8Cted.
Gilmore· reported that about
relate to school behavia.- and per2,500
allended the community Halformance.
loween
party sponsored by Feeney~
Sur.erintendent William L.
Bennett
Post 128, American
Buck ey urges parents to take
Legion,
and
lhe Village at Sleepy
advantage of this or.portunity 10
Hollow
near
the
marin!L
taUt to their children s rcachcn. A
The
mayor's
rei?Ort showed
more effective educatiooal progmm
receipts
of
$3,843.50
m October.
can result from this exchange of
By
resolution
was~
setting
A
information and ideas, he added
Nov.
21-27
as
Family
Life
Week
in
hopefully.
Dave
Parents will receive a leuer Middlepmt, a progmm of lhe ScotGrate
desctibing the conference schedul- tish Rite Masonic Order.
A
special
commendation
for
ing procedure along wilh informaof
tion on lhe conferences. Students failhfulness was given 10 CouncilRltlt.d
will be bringing tliis information man Jack Satterfield. In his 14
home during the week of Nov. IS.
years on Council, he has never
F1nHue
Further questions regarding missed a regular meeting. Salterlhese conferences should be direct· field's term on Council expires
ed to the children's school of atten· Dec. 31 and he did not seek re· IFnislrrlllon Ia not 1having anyone
dance.
election.
yourstH.

•

1

wiD lake place on Sunday 11 12:30
p.m. The turkey will be fumisbed.
Everyone iJ wek:ome.

Ooo Y•.....,,.,.,,.,,,... , •• ,,,,_,$1120

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D;vo•.·'"eS and

Berry's
Wor-;1;-'d'T"-------,
·
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.
Wmston Varney

K:

assembly
assis!l!Dce to you on ~esc or any
othez ISSues, do not hesitate to contact my office. My ad!Rss is Ohio
Senate, Statehouse,.ltoo'm 134,
Columbus, Ohio 43266 d6o4 and
my phone number is (614) 466 8156.

'

were Jorec:ut m101,.... lllld ceo.

. Nonlrwa! and IIOithwat CalifOI'IQ

Middleport council Cootlaued l'rom Paae 1

fire involving a pickup uucli
owned by Charlie Warth; 10:48
. Beity 'i. R~Ush, 79, Pof!leroy, •. Winston E Varney 73 of p.m. Chester Volunteer Fire
died Nov. 8. 11193. ·I t Holzer Medi··
• •
· Department to Pomeroy Pike for a
cal Center in G1111Polil. · •· '
~l~~~onday, Nov. 8• possible structure fire at the resi·
ofBeu:y Barker
· Bonr1uly'7, l!H4,ln Long'Bot·
5• 1920• in dence
tom, she waa
. ·.the ....,6"''"'
~·~---8h••r of m·e Williaf!IIIOD.
,Bar._ · July
Saturday12:S3'a.m. Middle
W.Va., «&lt;Il of the late
.
•
late Isaac C. and· Mary Metcalf Henry C. and ·Ma&amp;lie Stratton port to Cole Street for Chris RayMadrt ud a ri:dred .moot~ea:b· Varney he was a iellled IIIIChiliist bwn who was transported to VMH;
er
1M Che$ter Grade ·SchOol for~ AJ~ a memb«•of 1:35 a.m. Columbia Township Fire
in the Basten! Local School Dis· the Gallipolis Elks ~e III07 Mct Department to S~ School Road
tricL
the Steel Workers Union. .
. for a S!ructure ftre on property
In addition, she was a member
Survivois include his wife, belongmg to Doug Lather; 3:~3
ofhtuhrechCh,Ceshtere•'tUe
· rniDtedauM\':!ettherods lo.sft Geraldine Varney; four sons and ~mad.
0 T3up~rs PAnlaihns toK:rbowl nship
C
........:.. United thodist daughters-in-law Winston E and
12 lor
ur 1 b e who
Connie Varney Ji. of Beulah, N.D., was found dead .on arrival; 4:43
America• ~......
Women, Racine OJder of~ f?ast· ferry and ·Faith Varne of Port· a.m. Tuppers P11Uns to Recdsv•lle
em Star, Ches~r PUt Counc~ors . land,.Kent Varney or ·uJ:g Bottom for Joe Grey who •was transported
Club and theM~~ ~ty Retired · and. TOdd Varne of Lon Bottom· to VMH; 7:16 a.m. Pomeroy to
T~ ~IBliOII. .
th.ree daughter/and sols-in-law' Pomeroy Pike for Jessie ·Jarrell
She .IS ~vC!" by bet husband Ruth and Torn Comer, Bonnie and who was .transported to VM.H
of 60 years, ~ll'flil Roush; a daugh· . Bill Tawney and Frances and Jim before bem~ transported to St.
ter ~nd son~m-law, Mary J. and Skidmore all of Galli olis· 14 Mary's Hos(Jltal; 9:19a.m. MiddleDavid Bamng~ of belpre; sons grandchildien and one ~.grind. p~rt to Pearl Street for Florence
and daughters·m-la';', Larry and child
R1chards w~o was transported to
Sh1rley Roush of ·V.:mter Haven,
Other survivors include brothers Hol:rer Medicl!i Center; 2:50 p.m.
Fla., and Don and Diane Roush of Claude v · f Ri h
d v
Racme 10 Stale Rourc 338 for Ron~meroy; liv.e grandchildren and ·and tar! 'ra~ ~om~s:mor vr~: nie Pickens who was transported to
e•ght grandch!ldren:
.
ginia Beach, Va., and a sister, Mary VMH; 3:38 p.m. Pomeroy to. Pea..,~, ~vors incluc!e brothers Thacker of Switzer w Va.
cock Avenue for Rosa Ohhnger
B1U lifltlacl; of Pomeroy and Don
He was preccd~ i~ death by a w.ho was. transported to VMH
Matlack orl.alre Worth;l'la.
broth Harold C V
before bemg transported 10 Pleas. Sbe was Jl!l'CCded in death by a ~n ·
· amey, and one ant VaUey Hospital; 6:28p.m. RutSISter. Jo White, and a brother,
Servic'es will be held Th rsda
l~d to State Route 325 for Thelma
Robert Matlack.
F
u
Y
F1neyard
who was transported to
E
.
1
d Serv~ will beEc"!''lucted Fri· ~ith ~~·:!v.
B::a~fr.=~ ~: 1030 P·i!)· ~litland to Meigs
ay at. p.m. at w!ng Funeral ing. Burial will follow ·n Oh' Valme for Wdham Loures who
Home m Pomeroy w!d! the Rc:v. Icy Memory Gardens Gall' ~·
was transported to PVH; 10:55
•
Sharon Hausman offteiating. Burial
F · d
lpo IS.
p.m. Syracuse 10 YeUowbush Road
wilt'followinChesterCemetery.
nen s may ca 11 Wednesday for Tom Baldwin who was transFriends may ca11 from 5-9 p.m. from 5•9 p.m. at the fwteral home.
ported to HMC; 10:55 .m. Mid·
Thurs4ay at the funeral home
dleport to Lincoln /treet for
where memorial services will be
Shirley Roush who was trallsported
held by the Racine OES al-6:30
,
10 PVH.
.
1 ."
p.~. and th!l Ches~r D ofA at 7
Sunday - 7 p.m. Pomeroy to
p.m.
~omeroy Nursing and Rehabilita11on Center for Susie LeMaster
who was lnlnsported to VMH; 8:20
The following divorce and dis- p.m. ·Rutla~d to College Avenue
.
solution ·actions were recently for Roy Ellis who was transported
The following couples were recorded in the Meigs County to VMH; 8:48 p.m. Rutland to
recently granted marriage licenses Court bf Judge Fred W. Crow m.
Hysell Run Road for Shelby Davis
in lhC-Mei&amp;s County Probate Court
Filing roc dissolution were Mark who was transported to HMC;
ofJudgeRobertBuct:
Edward Boyd and Tammy Louise 10:20 p.m. Middleport to Page
Phillip Matlhew Smith, 19, Rut· Boyd, bo!)l of Tuppers Plains; San· Street for Freda Hart who was
land, and ~n DtAnn ,Lambert, dra Fraz1er, Tuppers Plains, and tr~nsported to PVH; 10:21 p.m.
21, Po~neroy; NichOlas Jay McK- CharlesFrazier,.Pomeroy.
Middleport 10 Logan Street for
ni~t; 25; ftD!Il.oreitA·May 4uder·
In addition Beverly A. Brandy Pruitt who was transported
m11l, 23. both of Rutland; Eber Buchanan filed for divorce from to PVH.
O~Del! Pickens _Jr., 22, Syrac11$e, Bi11 E. BuChanan, both of Tuppers
Monday - 7:04 a.m. Racine 10
and Velessa Dawnenc Hunnell, 19 Plains.
Bald Knob-Stiversville Road for
Racine.
·
'
Dissolutions were granted to Winston Varney who was dead
Richard Douglas Darst Jr. and upon arrival; 9:39a.m. Syrac~ 10
Dorothy Allen Darst; Betty Jo Fourth Street for Ernest Tr1plett
Wise ,and Charles A. Wise· Debra
ho
_ _, v
L. ·Kinnison and James R.' Kinni· w was ttan•....--10 MH.
Units of the Meigs County
son.
A divorce was gnuucd Nov. 1 10 Emergency Medical Service
Pauicia' Kay ·Hawley from James responded 10 five calls for assis!BDCC overnight. Units responding
Joseph Hawley.
mcludcd:
,
Monday- 10:4S a.m. Syracuse
to Pomeroy Nursing ind Rehabilitation Center for Carey Kramer
The ~... ~tmel
who was transported to Veterans
VETERANS MEMORIAL
(IJSI'IJU:!Ift) '
Memorial
Hospital; II :44 a.m.
Tuesday admissions - Ernest
PubWehed ev~ .r'w.oo./Mo~IJ tbrouah
Syracuse
to
Pearl and Cross streets
Frldoy, Ill COiltt SC., Po.....,y, Obio by the . Triplett, Syracuse, and Gary ROIC,
for
Gina
Knotts
who was transportOblo Vtl!oy l)lbliii11DI Co-IMulllmodla . Pomeroy.
ed
to
Pleasant
Valley Hospital;
Ioc., Pomemy; Oblo •5769, PI!, 992-2156.
Tuesday discharges - Gertrude
Saoond • ' - - polcl• fo"*!'Y• Oblo.
2:08
p.m.
Racine
to Oak Grove
Finlaw, Pomeroy.
Roild for Virgil Dill who was trans·
-.Tho AuoeiiiDd P,..., and the Olllo
New&amp;p~p~r ~Ilia•, Hatiout AdYwtillq
poricd to VMH prior to transport to
llolzer Medical Center
Rcprae1tllJ"· Br~~~~.twn Nnapll* Salu.
Grant
Medical Center In Columbus
733 Third A"l'u.ue, New York, Haw Y~t'
No•. I dlsehr&amp;es: , Walter via LifeFiiaht
10011,
' ' '
at 5:'10 p.m .; 2:S9
Edwards, Lula Gll.more, Lewis p.m. Mlddfeport
to South Fourth
GiUand, Laura MdiOII, Donna Nib- Avenue for Rhonda
POSTMAS11lll: Seod- dwl... ~nio
.Stobart who
Dill)' SeDtiDel, 111 Caud SL, Poairoy, ()Ida
·crt, 'Franklin Lemley, John Jones, was treated it the scene; 11:28 p.m.
45769, ·. •
-;&gt;, ...
John Waugh and Carol Moore. .
to State Route 325 for
•
IUIIICUI'TioN IIATIS
N"'' I birth: Mr. a11d Mrs. Rutland
1r c.m.... Moear.·•••
·
Walter
Perry who was transporleil
Daryl Dempicy, aon, Oak HiU.
·oao w.a. ......................... - ...................SI.&lt;!O
to Holzer Mcilical Center.

·

r

·

eat

- They are making a tawdry '
tourney of ~ game with Ibis silly .
scheme.~ spin the two leagues into
tl!r~~ diVtslons each and let each
diVISIOn leader and B wildcard team
m each league compete in, two
rounds of playoffs for the pennant
Th.ese greedy scoundrels would
1
co onze Casablanca if lhey lhqught
they could make an Cl&lt;tra dime out
oflt
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

1610.

hS

from.

.

llartbera portion• of Maine and
Ne1l( lfaalpl1liJe. O.,llillly lltica

Turkey dinner
The annual turkey dinnc:r to be
served by lhe TuJlPCIS Plains Fire
Depanm~u Auxiliary will be Sat·
urday w1th serving beginning at
4:30 p.m. The cost will be $5 and
the ~enu wi11 include turkey and
Units of th~ .Meigs County dressmg, potatoes, homemade noodles, green beans, cole slaw and
Emergency Medical Service roll, as well as dessert and bever·
responded to 22 caUl roc MSistance
age.
during the weekend. Units n:sponding,included:•.
Tba';'~&amp;lvm 1
Friday - 2: ...p.m. Middleport Alfred
Thanksg1v1ng basket dinner at
to S~camore' Street ror Esther
McKinney who was ~ to Alfred United Methodist Church
Veterans Memorial Hospital; 3:59
P:m. Salem Township Volunteer
Fue
Squadl&gt;epartmeqt
10 Parker Runand
for aRutland
vehicle

EMS answers
22 calls·during
weekend

gene~al

Be~y ~~~erybewhte.
h
0
n:q~ VICUIDS ~ '!at all cnti~lstaudi'es of the Judthl(lll?C.ess, mc . ng arrest, . e

48"

W. VA.

. .,
.ey hav~ ~en ope~aung
w1thout a commiSSioner Since they
ganged up on Fay Vincent in
Septem)ler 1992, and forced ·his .
res•gnaaon. Among the candidates
who have b~n considered as a '
replacement IS former Republican
member of Congress and Labor ·
Secretary Lynn Martin. !lot one
owner recently told the Associated
Press lhat "her interview was window dressing
' s no wa Y
•
• There 1
we're gomg to allow a woman to
teU ~ w~ 10 do." If lhat fool is .
ever Identified, he should be bound
and
gagaed
and left
on Pat
S hrocd
y
.
~gh
ez
s
doorstep
m
the
dead of
01
· .

.
I I

IND.

watched contests of the year, San
Francisco voters approved Proposilion BB allowing 24-year veteran
police Officer Bob Geary 10 use his
ventriloquist's dummy,, Orficer
Brendan O'.Smarty, while on
patrol, despite objections from
police
usesquiet
lhe
dummycommanders.
10 do things Geary
like help
do~estic disputes. And In Piqua,
Obio, voten refused 10 let Roxie, a
miniature potbellied pig, live in
town. City law forbids agricultural
animals within the city limits.
Robert Wagmau Is a syodlcat·
ed writer for New11p11per Enter·

I.

much of the Welt and South loday
B71'11e AIIOdated Preis
Fair weather will.CODtinue over .while the l!ast Cout and Ohio Val:
Ohio foc a few more !lay1, forecast· ley en~ Wilmer tcmperllllrel.
Precipitation in New England
en ay. ~ pn:asure c:ovcrins lhC
e81tem thtrd of tbe nation will promised to be confined to the
remaia llllionary lhroush Friday.
keeping Ohio dry. Showers are
poaibiC Ill Sllllnlay:
The National Weather Service
'
.
aays highs will be mostly in the
upp« 40s and low SOs. Overaight Poat 9053 to meet
. Tuppezi ~ VFW Post 9053
1owJ wiiJ be in t1ie uj;per 201 and
will meet Wednesday ll 7:30 at die
30s.
.
The RCOIII·hillh' ICIIIJICI'IIIU!C for post home. All members are
thiJ date 11 the Columblls weather eiiCOUr1ged 10 ailend.
station was 76 degrees ia 1975 Revival
while the record tow was 18 in
There will be 1 n:vival at the
1991. Sunaet tonight will bell S:21 F'II'St
Baptist Cllurch in Middl •
p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at
from
Nov. 13- 17~&amp;7 p.m.~;
7:11 LID.
• .
and
Sunday
It 10: 15 a.m. w· the
Aroud the natlol
Rev·
Chllrles
Rain and clouds loomed over the evangelist Norris of Racine u

Meigs announcements

theiii?don.

ner gam IS JUS! aroun the cor·
·
,
. - Thenchest among lhem have
tried 10 buy success by signing free
~gents to outrageously remuneralive contracts. Fof!unately for ,those
of us whjlapprecia\C hom~·grown
talent, they have fwled m~ly.
The ~ew.York Mets, who (lllld outlandish slans to the likes of Bobby
Bonilla aild Eddie Murray won
only 59 ....-·"""""' ·~'·
""" year. Eac'h VICtory cost them $650,000.
-TheY have readmiUed 10 their .
ranks Cincinnati Reds owner
M11rge
S~ho t t, suspen ded 1ast
•b
Fe ru'ary for allegedly saying
insensitive thi~ about minorities
and George SIClnbrenner, suspend:
ed in 1990 for associating with a
known gambler. Steinbrenner,
arguably the biggest buffoon ever
to own a team, managed to bite his
tongue until September before publicly . disputing the Yankees •
''courage.l'. Never mind tha·t the
Yankees played much better than
expec~ ill year. Never mind that
they bave.:a starting pitcher Jim
Abbott, who was born withoot one
hand. George says they were gut·
,
.,.

':!~~~~~:s 0~~~~!~v~onsidered

0

IToledo

The verily my theais has~
·
ieW &lt;
·
de~o~strilled
p\ir iui.Fover ·aaaui · Cjj" ~~· ~gular· ~ base· ICSII~~D.'f,.George,!~ Boss,

•

Today's Highlight in History:
fC!II yictimized twice - first by the
On Nov. 9, 1938, bands of Nazis began roaming lhe streets of Gerc.nmutal. lhen by lhe criminal jus·
many and Austria, lootinf and burning synagogues as wen as Jewish- uce system. Many times, vicums
owned stores and houses m a pogrom that became known as ."Krista11- feel that the aiminaljustice system
nacht" IX' "Crystal Night."
in which they are involved .pays
On this dale:
more attention to the offender's
In 1872, fire destroyed nearly 1,000 buildi,ngs in Baston.
rights than lheir own.
In 1918, Germany's Kaisn Wilhelm n announced he would abdicate.
In an 1\IICIIIpl to give victims of
He then fled to tile Netherlands.
crime a larger role· and stronger
In !935. United Mine Workers President John L. Lewis and other labor voice in the criminal justice sys·
leaders formed the Commiiree for Induslrial Organization as part of the tern, the Ohio General Assembly
American Federation of Labor.
has, ovez the yem, passed le~In !953, the U.S, Supreme Court upheld a 1922 ruling !hat major· tion that would expand the nghts
league baseball did not come within the scope of federal antitrust laws.
and .role qf victinis in the systeln.
In 19S3,author-poetDylanThornasdiedinNewYorlcauge39.
Vanous statutes now exist which
In 1963, twin disasters slruck Japan as some 450 minezs were ldlled in grant victims of crime certain
a coal-dust explosion, and 160 people died In a 1rain aash.
· rights including the right .to com·
In 196S, the ~~ NortheaSt blaclcout occurred as several states and pe~sation, the right to have their
parts of Canada were lilt by a series or power failures lasting man: than 13 VOtceS heard dtrough victim impact
hourS.
statements, and the rljht to be noliIn 19671 a Saturn V ~carrying an unmanpcd Apo11o spacecraft lied at vari~· stages of the crlmibllstell off from Cape Kennedy on a suix:essfill test flight. .
· '
na1 proceedings · ·
In 1970, former French president Charles De,Gaulle died at age 79.
.the Ohio House Is currently
Ill 1989. communist East Germany tltrew open irs bOrders, allowing con. s_lderina a bill
.' which would ·-L~
.._
.... W
"
"""'
citizenS to travd "!"'ly to~"' est
• .
VICtims ntghta one step further.
1111990, SOviet Presiden~ Mikhail S. Godl!lchev signed a historic non· House Joint Resolution 3, iptro~treaty wi!b Germany, winning _praise from German leaden foc dpcecl earliet this Yea&amp;: by Reprc·
hiS role in tile ~ul fa,ll ofthe Berlin WaU.
~
.
~lalivo Ka~ W~, would
Ten yeari aao: .Ptesldenl ~eagan arrived iD' Tokyo'with his wife, ' give Votera .tlle.c!WICe ·tlfdecide
Nancy, !0 belin a ~-long visitiO Japan and South Korea foctalks ~ w~ther tQ add a. Victims' righiS
econom1c and secqnty I!ISIJCS.
,
amendment 10 lhe Ohio Constitu·
five , . 1110: FOrmer Attomc~ Gerieiallolin N. Mitche11, a major tioo. '
.
'
figure In the w~ scandal during the NixOII administration. died in Many~ wonder why we need
Wish~ at qe.7s: .
.
a COI1Stnuuonal amendment to
·Oi'J!I' Y~ aao: Russian President Boris Yeltsin, visiting London, secure victirrii' ri11h11 when there
a~_for help ln.n:sched!ilil),g his ·tountry's debt, ·and urjcd ~ntish ai'l\ already lar--• .on tile books
bulin IIIU 10 IIIWIL
•.'
'
. . ,
which offer these (ightl. S~
Today'a B!nllcWYI= Actreu Hcdy I.am.-r is IMJ. Forinc:r Vice~~ . of tlie House Joint Resolution 3
SP,ii'O T. Aif1eW iJ 7~.• SI)CXIICU!er i:llaltie Jonea is 63. Baaetwll execu- ~~t!"uo~tnalw~~h~~.d ge!!'l.·dela~ence.'
live Whitoy lk!'Zolll 62.1.~· Carl S8pn iJ ·S9, SeQ. BOb Gm-·,
• ._ .. If ""' ,,
him, J&gt;.P!il.,ls S7.. ~t:a1Fc:rrigno 1141.
&lt;\MI apinst statutory nghts of.:vic·
,
,
·
·
urns, the rights of defendlnts most

•

=
..,:1

a!""'~r·'•u
;&gt;e "
~-

'

Pqt 3

·High.pressure dome to keep ~eather fair

. Wednaday, Nov.1.
MICH.

'

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

7 SHOWIOOIIS

II WAIIliOUSU

Rutland Furnitll'e
••• 124, lilllllt..

742-2211

�Ohio .·

J:he Dail~ S~nti.ri;el
November,'

Sports

·

.

1\llld,y,

,

.

In attempt to end feud with BtllchU:k,

1883
Pq 4

·Browns cut Kosar after nine seasons

Kansas·city uses Green Bay
turnovers to notch 23-16thC leadwin
Lana, who is out indefinitely wilh 1
strained ·hamstring. As· it hu all
season, the Kansas City offensespuuen:d under Krieg.
Enter Dan Saleaumua, the
Chiefs nose laclde who n:ooven:d a
rumble and ran it 16 yards for a
IIIIIIOYCI'S.
touchdown
and forced another
It hadn't been ihll way this year
rumble
to
stop
the Packers inside
until Monday when the Gn:en Bay the five.
Packers save the ball awar six
With the Chiefs leading 20-16
times - three on intcrcepuons, with
about six minutes left, Packers
thn:e on fumbles- in a 23-16loss
running
back Darrell Thompson
10 the Chiefs.
"I knew tumoven would decide fumbled atJhe Kansas City 2 when
this football game," Packers head he took a hard hit from Salcaumua.
coach Mike Holmgren said after The baU skipped into the end zone
Green Bay's three-game winning and was covered by Chiefs
streak ended. "Kansas City can linebacker Tracy Rogers.
"I was trying all the way for the
pressure you. But it was the
fumble,"
Saleaumua said: "We
turrovcrs. It just makes me sick. I
worked
on
it (forcing turnovers) a
can't describe it in words.
·
lot
in
practice.
We emphasized iL
''Two of the four games we lost,
We
saw
that
our
ratio is way down,
we lost in the last five seconds.
and
we'n:
going
to keep emphasiz.
This one we lost because we had
ing
iL"
six turnovers."
. "There was a little gap and I
"Sick .. and "disgusting" were
tned
to squeeze through it,"
two of the mon: common words in
Thompson
..said. "He hit me and I
lhe Packers locicClroom as they fell
lost
the
ball.
I feel tenible. It can
10 4-4 while the Chiefs stayed on
happen
any
time.
This time, it just
top of the AFC West at6-2.
happened
at
the
wrong
time."
"Not only did we beat ourself,
Derrick
Thomas
stripped
FaYJ"C
we killed ourself," said safety
of
the
ball
and
Saleaumua
picked
it
Leroy Butler.
up
early
in
the
third
quarter
to
Dave Krieg started in place of
Kansas City quan.edlack Joe Mon- score the second touchdown of his
career. The to11chdown gave ihe

By CRAIG HORST
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) The Kansas City Chiefs have prid·
ed themselves during the Marty
Schouenheimer era on beins
among the 1capc lea *'Is in forcing

Chiefs
back at 10-9.
· "I carne around the comer and ·
their q11811crback pumped the ball
befon: he threw - that was one of
the few limes he did it in the game
-and that rve me the opportunily to knoc tho ball loose and
Saleaumua is a ball magnet "
Thomas said.
'
Greenli!a 'ot within 20-16
after a 37- · kickoff n:turn to lhe
Packers 4 by Marcus Wilson ,
Favn: thn:w a 21-yard pass to Sterling Sharpe and !hen found Jackie
Harrie for a 3S-yard touchdown
pass !are in the fourth quarter.
A 47-yard run by Todd McNair
led to Nick Lowery's aecond field
goal later in the qilarter, and the
Chiefs ended Green Bay's hopes
when Martin Bayless intercepted
Favn: with less than two minutes
lefL Favre's receiver on the play
was lmockcd down.
Chris Jacke ldcked faeld goals of
23, Sl and 19 }'lll'lls in the first half
to give the Packers a 9-3 lead. The
kicks gave Jacte 100 can:er field
~oals, mating him eligible for
mclusion 6n the all-time accuracy
lisL He ranks fourth.
Lowery made field goals of 23
and 40 yards. He is the all-time
leader in accuracy, having made
320 of 400 attempts for 80 percent.

among

·~ , .

]0

N.Y. Rangers strike Tampa Bay Lightning 6-3
By KEN RAPPOPORT

Amonte slid on his beUy behind
. f
the goal line That was the firat of out,~ steam. •
taken Steve Larmer long to ·get Larmer's aili. at 6·49 of the fi
W,e knew It was the f.CtJI,gllll,le
liOiiced in NewYort.
'od,
it pvc thoRangen 1~ of a ftv~;game ~ad, trtp, satd
No wonder. In his first three
t.am:aer, and we didn t ~ly waut
games with the Rangcn, Larmer
tikbnen, who scored 1 goal in "? gt ve thCRI ~ny confidence, or
has acored six poinla- including the first period, set up Lanner in ~~~them II!Y •dcas that,~Y wen:
1!0 goals in Monday night's 6-3 the slot aaain with the Rangers 80~t~ f!:' ~ ~3~ 't They
ViC:IOl'y over the Tampa Bly Llsbt- shorthanded at 1:20 of the aecond,
·
•
·
nllw.
and the all-star right wing put scored goal~ 16 seco~s apart m
brmer played 11 seasons in anothu past Ughtning goalrendcr the first pertod by Tikkanen and
Chi&amp;:lao
.
Daren Puppa
Larmer, at 6:33 and 6:49. Even
Monday night, Larmer added
They addCd to it with second- though the Ug~g cut the lead to
twO Jt08is to hia Ranger to1a1.
period Boals by Messier and Adam one on Petr K.li~ s shot ,from the
"lie's one or the belt two-way Graves, in another shorthanded si,t- slot ,at ~6:27, 11 JUSI wasn t Tampa
players in the league," said uation.
Ba{;s.mghL
·
Rangers captain Mark Messier.
Now it was S-1 and it was all .~. "!'" ~h bcaf.!...PuthirdJ,!PI fDonrom
"And he's jelled bcautifull~" with the scorina the ~~crs needed to u"' potnt at : 0 o u"'
,
his new linematea, Esa Ttkkanen extend ttieli curn:nt unbearen streak aid D~ne bad a goal for TliJ!Ipa
·and TOlly Amontc.
to seven gamca '6-0-l). The L ' ht- Bay tn the se~ond and Brtan·
"Hike,.~""'"~
"'•"'ft•.. ,with them•" said mn.g.
·
had thetr
·' wtnless
·
Ill
Bradley
in the thinl.
streak
Goaltender
Mike Richter won
~~;~'!'~ S I good hockey CX'n:" to
~1).
his fifth straight pme.

ilitdtiWDle Fairland
Vlnt"n

NEW YORK (AP)- It hasn't

!J
&amp;feat!

5·Wbeele~lbUrl

8

----

'

II

AMERICAN CONFEUNCE

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TOROIITO MAPLE LEAfS, SiJnod
S:rlYiia Lfte~bvu , detOntt'man, to •
mUi,....oonlnCt.

Football

Nlllonal Football Llll"l
CLBVELAND BROWNS' Wolvcd
lloaolololor.~'*'

a-UII,Iilll-100
OUcqo 106. AdunaiO
101, Uoab 100

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•

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'

SLAMMIN' -Jut to prove ihatlhe Orlando
Mqlc's SbaquiUe O'Neallsn'l the only one who
can sbake fiher1lau lloardl, Tampa Bay .right
wlncmaa Mlkael Anderson slAms New York

.

..
Raqen
Jay Weill to the boards dur·
lng the second period of Mciaday Dllbl'a NHL
game Ia New York's MadlsQn Square Garden;
where lbe Ranaen woo 6-J. (AP)
.

By,8!~;,!a:tt"ER

• M' h 1 J rdaner ho ed
Whentcaeor
s d' sw
f
h
.
Pp 81 Ch tcago ~a tum or. I ~
home opener agamst the Mtamt
Heat, :he '!J~st!~~o bad he ·
probab Y WIS
L
He sh'!uld have shown llP on
Monday RIJhL
The undermanned Bulls recoven:d from a 24·point loss 48 hours
earlier and routed the Atlanta
Hawks l06-80.
Not 9DIY Wll;!l Jo~ not in the
stands, Scotllc Ptppen, Scott
Williams and John Paxson were
not on the court. .
"I thought this was a game we
should have had," Atlanta coach
Lenny Wilkens said after emerging
from a locker room closed for 20
minutes while he lectured his play"I
I b to l
fro this
ers. , ;-van
earn m
game.
WhatChicago'siU.Armstrong
learned was that ihe ejection of
~oach Phil Jackson had • positive
tmpact.
With five minutes left in the
d th. B I'" ,_.,. 38
.
fitrst half
an . e. .u "'. uaumg •
3Q, Jl!Cbon was ~11 wtih a double
~hrucal by official Mark WUIIderhch for argums; a loo~-bal1 cal)
and was automatically ejeclcd.
Atlanta's Domimque Wilkins,
who scored
. 12 consecutive points
.

in the peri~d, canned both free
throws to gtvc the Hawks a 40-30
lead ·
But the Bulls rallied and tied die
game at 4:4 when Pete Myers made
a 50-footshotaithebuzzer.
"When I saw that, (the ejection)
1 got fired up," said Armstrong,
who ted· the Bulls with 23 points
"I got focused. 1 took it personal!·
and it was 8 walce-u call We
to fightforeverythin~." '
Jackson said he "did not
deserve" the first technical, but
"did deserve to be IOSScd"
•'In this league, the refs wiU not
take an~ guff .. he said.
The Butii who lost Pi n 10
ihe injured lisi with rendinitfffn his
.
·
.
nght ankle! took conttol wtth a 41 •
1~ surge .10 ~e second ~a! f. He
miSsed ~IS ..ftrsl game Stnce the
1988-89 season.
Wilki led tli Ha ks .th 17
.
ns
e w wt
pomts. ~yers added 15 for the
Bu~~~cy King, who added 12
· ·
P01·'!ts, aI,so thoug hI th e CJCCUon
mouvalcd the team.
"Phil always fights for his layers," King said. "We have a fot of
pride...
Elsewhere it was Seaule ·101
. '
0
·'
Utah 100, and Boston 1 8, Mtlwaukee 100. •

.J

ad Which published on 11/02/93 is being reptinted due to an error made on the
Review.
,
·
inconvenience this
have caused.
READER AOO IN TillS ~ON PREPARED

BY OJNIRACTMJVERTISING.INC.
AURJOfiTSRESERVED 01993

Celtlca 108, Bucka 100
Boston sean:hing ·for someone
' the death·.of Reggte
·
to score after
Lewis had seven layers 'in dbuble
fi
• as they~ Milwaukee
•sr..eseach of their other 'two
ames a win and a loss the Celtics
g ·' do ble-fi
'
N,
had SIX .u
tgun: scon:rs. 0
one. h~s liad m.ore !han Robert•
Pan~h ·• 20 potnt' 1~ a seasontthinkwecandepcndon
any on~ gur, to '!ave ~ h~! ha~d
every mg~t, PariJh said. Wen:,
not~~ of team." ·
,_ ~
ThiS ~e. S~, Dou$las ""'
Boston ~th 19 pomta, Parish had·
18 and Dino. ~A.15:''Milwaulcee '
was led by Eric Mlitdoclt wiih 22. '
SsperSonla 101, Jazz 100. ,
Ricky Pierce made a 15-foot.
iumpcr with 11 S seconds remain:
&lt;
• • ·s '
· .. · .,
mg, gtvmg cattle a ·ytCtory ovu
Utahiniiliroadopcner.
'

--.

........,

WILUS, Texas (A.I') - Friends
and relatives remember Cle\'eland
lndjans .pitch" Cliff Young as a
man who made it to the major
·tcagtles but never forgot the people
back home.
Young, 29, died Thuradliy lllhen
he drove his b'I!Ck into a ltCC near
his homeiown· of Willis, about 45
miles north of Houston. Services
were held Sunday at Willis High
School auditaium.
"Cliff was reaching out to be all
he could be in major league ball.
The hun and grief is inexplicable,''
the Rev. Leroy Thompson told
about 600 mourners.
.

Division V
· 17-1-Steubenville
Centtal 10.9000. 2-New
Central

Slate Auto's a~eady

aratcd hiS lhoulder, making Kosar

the starter again for Sunday's 2914 loas to Innver. Kosar had
respectable statistics in that one,
passing for 226 yards and· two
touchdowns, but he was sacked six

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
court decision reinstating two hish

a ~~ CII!Pilcd in

.

Our lobbies will be·closed
Thursday, Nov~ 11
in.obsenance ofveterm' snty.

you have 24-hour ace ESS to your
aa:oun~ ~ ~ oltbeyear
at our supetrellei' madilites.

Marietta

'

llownloMl OIBoe, Setond al'uUiam Sln!el!
Fronder &lt;lmoe, Fronder hpping Caller

80!Eist'Siale !lreet
190Z W~DfOD llouiMrd

2'14 EAST MAIN, ·
. POMEROY .
.
. 992~8687
.

.
".A.
....
,.,.~ .
· 1••-• eo;.....nr..

time like thiL A man you've been
a hot summer widl Ia now
=~ve.
said Indians Manager Mike
"He had a lot of love in his
heart for the ~arne and p::rle.
We'D miss him, ' Hargrove
·
Young's widow, 'l'amara, 24,
attended the service .with the couple'stwo 1001.
"Words don't expm the love I
have for you," she said.
"Cliff, my love, I li'On 't say
'good-bye' or even 'see you
later,"' she said befon: breaking
down.
The Youngs were married in
1987 and had two children: Clifford Jr.. 6, and Cameron, 3. The

throuf!t

Kosar llid several NFL teams
had exprcaiCd iniCfell in aigning
him, but he declined to say wbich
ones. Among 1ca1111 pouibly looting fpr a startins or t.ctup qllllrlerback an: Philadelphia, wl!ich has
lost Randall Cunningham and
Bubby Brister; Miami, which lost
Dau Marino; Kansas City, whose
coach, Marty Schotrenheimer, was
Kosar's ftrsl NFL coach; Dallas,
whose coach, Jimmy Jolmson, was
Kosar's coach in coUege; and Minnesota, Atlanta and New Orleans.

family lived in the modest twobedroom home ~ Young gn:w
up.
Earlier, Willis High School
baseball coach Danny Freeman
talked of the lepcy or hope that
Young lefl hia community.
"I remember him coming out to
practice and not havinJ enOUJh
money to cat," Freeman satd.
"Here was a poor kid ll'bo bad the
opponunity and took it .He was a
gn:at competitor."
Youns wu a fifth·round draft
pick when he ptalcd from hip
school in 1983. He was drafted by
the Monln:al Expol and went on to
play for the Toronto Blue Jays and
the Oakland Athletlca.

.........:. . . . . . . . . ..'13,495.

~= =~!=:. :=~

111112 HONDA ACCORD EX. 4 door, auto., poww
,
moon roof, llr, crulu, pow. win. &amp; lockl, rnr lpoiler ....

15, 995

11K11 HONDAACCORDEXWAGON,
,
power aunrool, luggage rack. air, atareo, IOMied....... ......

14, 595

11110 HONDA ACCORD EX. 4 door 1ir, auto.,
,
P. moon roof, CO changer, sle1110 cUIIIle, lomedl.....

11 , 995

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

'6,495

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

'5,995

11811 HONDA ACCORD LXI, 2 door
white, loaded................................... ., ..................................

'9,995

11K11 CHEVY CAVAUER RS, 2 door
lie, silver, automatic ................................................... .........

'7,995

~~r!:~~~~.~~~:.~.~~. .. . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . .'11 ,500
11K11 BUICK CENTURY, 4 door
light blue, air ............, ..........................................................

'9,495

111111 BUICK SKYLARK. 4 door
automatic,llr, blua ...............................................................

'9,495

11110 FORD ESCORT. 2 door,
automatic, air ................................................. .....................

'6,495

11110 CHRYSLER 6th AVENUE,

bur~ndy, loaded with optiona .......................... .................. '9,600

lelpre
'lbel'lll• 70 N. Plllm lid., &lt;00n11y Comen 91opjing Plm
Odler ob In LoM!II, Middleport, N t !IJIIIIe, and Reno

.... . .... . . . . ... . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . ..'4,995

~=~:"~~

1111 FORD FESTIVA,
Red, !'HIICOIIOII1y..... .. ...... ........... .. ....................................

'2,495

!':!~t~~~:. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . '4,595

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

~~ =~:.·

'5,495

~=-~~~:

'895

1..1 Pl.YIIOUTH,

'695

K-cw, 4 door ....... ................................. ., ...................................

•

ATHENS HONDA CARS
"THE HN'PY HONDA PEOPf..E'
110 E. ltlllllt. • AtlwM, Ohio
... 1111 .
UMd c.

•

"
I

llltil~.

!':!~~~~~::::d! · · ·· . .. ......................................... '4,995

Seoond &amp; Salnmel &amp;s. DIM-up
AlbcDs I North Court !lreet

•

'
Modell wu asked to compare
the relcaae of ICoar with his 1963
~~~Brown, ll'bo founded
the
. in 1946.
"This may be more dirrtcult,
given die relatlo111hip I bid widl
·Bernie. which I did not have with
Paul, and e~ tbe n:latlonship
thai Bernie
witll the community
at larJe." Moelhaid. ·
Tlir'Oe y~ after Paul Brol!ln
wu fired, Hall ·Of Fame fullback
Jim Brown nOrcd • .p 30 to pursue an actinl-- a move that
lhacted BIOWIII fans like no other,

!':,~~~~: .... ., . . . . ...._
. ..................................... '4,495

lnJ8er Olloe, ~ngiOO Q!nler

*

thil~

~~!.Z-~: . . . . . . . . . . . ....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . '4,995

But if you~ an A1M card
with one of tbese symbols. ..

.Let us 11!11 you just

'"i \•

110-buddle offcDac, Wbiell let !litn
l:lll~nt.....
.
"l cliill'treel 1 bYe to didtnd
myaalf PI' my pilod cli!llll.'' lllo . _
P'l\1l wecb 1110 !Co. Ilia d a
aevea-year, $21 mlllioll c:oeltlet
that would pay him $5.35 ;nufloo
iii sa1lry ..-d signjoglJIIIIIIMI- It
wu not 11111'10111 ~. but bt lllid he
would be paid his full salary for

1 spcc;i~ ~­

cauon program outside the district
of the pan:nts' n:aidenc:y is eUgible
at the school the student attends.
Goodwin is in a special education program at WCSia'ViUe North.
He hves with an aunt and uncle
who are his legal guardians.
Gillie last week issued a temporary restrainin$ order restoring the
two forfeited viCtories.
Westerville North coach Ron
Balconi expressed relief after the
decision.
"The weight's taken off our
shoulders," he said.
Westerville North becomes the
80th and final team in the playoffs.
which begin this weekend. It will
play against Mount Vernon at Marion on Friday.
If the f~Jrfcits had stood, Westerville North would have finished
sixth in Region 3 of Division 1.
Making the playoffs arc the top
four teams in each of 20 n:sions as
listed in the OHSAA computer
rankings.
Because the judge disallowed
lhc forfeits, Westerville North finished second in the region, dropping Lima Senior to fifth.
'

·.

how much your savings
\'-1(1 be.

f9r 80.7 yards li'IJ)I five toucb·
'ClowN, thn:e illtercoPiionS ... 21
aaclal, In his - · he ha'l dtlowa
83 illten:epQonl in 3,218 IDiJIPII,
the beat- Waception lido in '
NFL hialorY. He took the Brotval
II) thiee AJfC championlhip pmca
in the 19801. .
Belichid:, however, said it
beca~pare.nt as ibis ICIIon
~ that Kour's skiDs had
diminished. Modell said he first
beca•. COIICCIIICd about a poss!ble
eroaion in Kosar's ability last
December, when !Co. came bck
- perhaps too soon - frcm a broken ankle.
' "I think he's been hurt so
much," Modell said. "I think it
started when (Lloyd) Bllli'IISt hit
him in Kantu City on a blind-side
blitz (In 1988). He has lakm more
punijhmr:at than any quartcrbck I
haVe know ill this lcaguc.••
Kosar bristled when he heard
that Beliclricl; and Modell had criticized his ability.
''I think personalities probably
p~ed a liule bit in it," Kosar said.
'I m really proud of what I've
done in Cleveland and how I've
conducted myself ihroush a roush
time. I really don't waut to lower
myself 10 some of the justifying of
decisions that has gone on around
here. It's kind of hun me personally, because I feel comfortable and
confident about ihe way I've been
throwing the baD."
He noted that the Browns' only

''He was the first peraon from
the community to make it to the
m~r leagues. He tried hard to
m it and he did make i~ and set
a goal for you and proved to ·you
that you can make it," Thompson
said.
Young was the third Indians
pitcher to die in an accident tltis
year. Ste"~&lt;e Olin and Tim Cn:ws
died in a March 22 boating accident in central Florida.
Several members of the Cleveland Indians attended the BCtVice,
including pitcher Bob Ojeda, who
was injured in the Man:h accidmL
"What can you n:ally aay at a

lcl*premiumsl:anbe

reduced,evenitnOJe by
insUring both y~n car .
. and horrie Wilfl the S"te'
Auto Companies;

IJOillta ~~~jo• Denvao on SII!IIIIY
oD !be-. he-79oflll . came after they hid ••• h d 10 a

timca.

Reinstatement of wins puts
Westerville North in playoffs

~

IG-JOp.m.

....

17.

' Cincinnati
. Huber Heights Wa~ ~"·~'"'
· Cincinnati Colerain 14.

the Browns beron:· Belichick w..
hired in 1991.
Todd Philcox, who bcSIIQ ihe
season as a third-string quarterback, becomes the llal'tel', backed
up by recently re-signed ~rad
Goebel. The Browns will sian a
third quan.Cibac:k thia week; former
Ohio State quartcrbldt Tom Tupa
had a tryout Moaday.
Several rana picketed outside
the team's camp in proiCSI of tbc
decision, and huridreda packed a
hotel banquet room 10 hear~.
weekly radio show Monday night.
cheerins him enthn•iaatictlly.
· "I love the city and the fans "
said Kosar, a native of Boardnlin,
Ohio, who pduated a year ~ly
from the University of Miami so
Cleveland could choose him in the
1985 supplemental draft "That's
the thing that's helped me l:ecp my
sanity the last few weeks."
Kosar began the season as the
Browns' stancr, althouJh the offseason hirins or former college
teammate Viliny Tcstavcrde as a
backup had him looking over his
shoulder all season. Belichick soon
began usins Testaverde in n:lief,
benchina Kosar in ihe second half
of thn:e consecutive games, then
finally made Tcstaverde his start«
for game six.
· One 1!8ft1.C later, Tcallverde acp-

Teammates, relatives, remember Cliff Young

school football victories has put
WeswviUe North in the state play·
offs.
The Ohio High School Athletic
Association acccpaed the decision
made Monday by Franklin County
Common Pleas Judge William
GiUie.
"He's made a decision and
whether we'n: disappointed or not,
we have to go with it,'' said
OHSAA commissioner Clair Muscaro.
The ruling bumps Lima Senior
from the playoffs.
The state governing body for
high school athletics had ordered
Westerville i'iorth to forfeit two
early season victories because the
guardianship of player Larry Goodwin, a sophomore transfer, had not
been finalized.
.
The association cilcd a rule that
prohibits students from playins for
an Ohio school if their parents live
out of state. Goodwin's jJIIlCilts Uve
in Louisville, Ky.
Gillie cited auolher association
rule in his decision. That rule says

1

NCAA I·AA poll

,..,.

'

o~Lt~~NewYort.

A~ • tllolt, 9 ......

HUN1111CIDON VAUBY, Pl. (AP)
- 'l'lto top :zs _. io ... 19fS · Dl¥ioloo 1-M (.-npoll, ...
~· ·,
......... N... 6, ..... poioiO ••• lon

Dlvlslon IV
13-l·New .Middletown
14.2SOO. 2-Gatcs Mills
3-Warren
I::Z~~~~pu~ · 4-Akron
5-Nortll Lima
6-Aurora

Bulls defeat Haw·ks by 26 points.

...-.-........
'

6 (tie)·')Villiamsport
Nelson¥1lle· York
~ ·Columbus Briggs
9·ColpmbPs DeSales
lO,Ironton Rock Hlll

Despite missing Pippen, Paxson a_nd Williams,

ClioiF'· Mil-1:30 ......
LA. ~AUD•Iwa

By CHUCK MELVIN
BEREA, Ohio (AP) - The
team that fired Paul Brol!ln and
watched Jim Brown .;etiro in his
·prime has dcno it aaain.
The Cleveland IJnrrms, llil1 tied
for fll'll place in the AFC Ccnlrll ·
D!vision, stunned~~ and fins
alike
. Monday by
y rdca~ng
Bernie Kosar, one or
11101t pop. ular athletes in the city's history.
"All I can say to ihe tans is,
bear with us," owner Art Modell
said. "Wc'n: doins· everything we
possibly CID to win. We feel this is
the right move, and only time will
tell whether our judjpnmt was correct or not. ••
The move ended a iiOnlly threeyear relationship between Kosar,
who will tum 30 on Nov. 2S, and
head coach Bill Belichlck, who ·
never let him run the offense the
way Kosar thought it should be.
Kosar's strength always has
been his ability to eltploit defenses
by calling new playa at the line or
scrimmage; Belic.hick didn't want
to relinquish t~at much control,
preferring a more scripted attack
that is better suited to a more
mobile qLUII'telback.
"I've known for a while that I
don't really fit into their plans,"
Kosar said in a telephone Interview. "Bill has his' way of dolna
things. That' s been shown by the
way they've been getting rid of die
players who were here before he .
7-0nviUe 10.2000. 8.()ak got hen:."
Of the ~2 players on the
8.~00.
rosrer, only II wen: with
Browns'
8.000.

�'

By The Bend

D~
a
ilrlentiri~
. . - nWdlly, NOvember, 1,1~

The·
.

. " :1.

I!J' •i[i

'

.

)'

Tuesday, November, 9, 1
'

Page . 8 :

--------================~~----~----------------~~~----------~--~J-. 1

DAVIISOI'S

Abusive couple shoUld seek therapy:\
·
l
..

~Alp! I •!!let: Todly,.wlli)e pcnonal relatioa1bip just as
.
waitiq for I ll'lill to pua' II a imponllll?
rii1nll4 .aoN'nJ, I Jrilpad a ,..,.,
I'm not • iDiruder by llllule, bill
when
I WIICIIed you lhil ~'llo
ccqJIO
re.-vlew
..-..
I Wll ==~ Cll'l
by die
filet dill
lbcy

bodl 1111.-Jly aood-!octina
wbal· •""h'!y, I saw the - . .
bit die man in -.e face.
The &amp;uy didn't 1bow ' much
reiC:Iioo, wbi!:b "CC 1«1 to me lbll
llhe ~ ~ bit bita before. I
could 1ee them 1hout1n1 and
ychlqina hlnb words. Wheo the
'f!'O!IIIll bpnt 10 the Door to pick up
Dnolhi,ftl, die 111ft lried to dlob Ill I could lhint - thll oae ol you
Ia. 'l'lln Wll more lhoUling IIICI is aoing 10 get seriously hwt IIOOIWl'
or laler.
--·~·Way.

Ann

M~ore-Curry
'

..

•

I hope yell llie tbilllli Je&amp;llelp.

The 111111 made I move, IIIII lhe
Oiacbed, . duowing her bands up
proleclively. Aa lhey pulled into the
~ 1lne IIIII puaed me, I saw her
hil him .,.m.
· · Ana, I doa'ttnow iflbey will see
this, bill fd like to send a mess p
to lhole lY/0. Here it Ia.
Attention: The Couple in tbe
While Pbnliac. J11ea1e get 110111C help.
You wouldn't think twice aboul
calling an expert ., ldvile you on a
tax poblem, w~ you? Isn't )'OUr

aelhany Jill Moore and Robei:l Paul Curry were unired in marriage
Aug. 23 at SL John's Chapel in Middletown.
Bethany is the daughter. of .Karen I!Jid Buddy Moore formerly of
Middleport. She is the granddaughter of George and the late Jean
Shamblin of Gallipolis and Ted and Clara Riley of Middleport
Robert is the son of Mal)' Jo and Ken Curry of Middletown.
The ceremony was perfOrmed by Father ]aspm.
The maid of honor was Debbie Rl¢liff. The bridesmaids were Jodi
Ranegar, Myca Haynes, Beclcy Strimple, Kelly Douglas and Kelly
GBrm'. Meghan Haynes tleiVed as flower girl.
.
The best man was Jeremy Scbastion. Jbe groomsmen were Brent
~. Mike Wenz; R~cbard Barnes, Kmny Curry and Tom OsusL
AdamCurry. ~asnngbearer. .
.
The brides Wore a chapellmglh sating gown with a portrait neclcline and shan beD sleeves.. The bodice and tulle skirt were decorated
with appliqued pearlS iuld·sequins. She wote a tulle veil bead piece
aaached to a pearl and sequin crown.
· A rm:ption followed the ceremony at Elks Golf and COuntry Club
in Hamilton, Ohio.
After a ·wedding trip to Cocoa Beach, Fla. and Disney World the
couple will reside in Great Lakes, ru.
Bethany is .the li graduate of Lemon Monroe High School and
Miami Uruveisity. She is employed at Manhattan Diamonds of Ghicago, UI.
Robert is a ~duate of Middletown High School. He is stationed at
the U.S. Navy m Great Lakes, IU.
Public

- CONCBRNBD IN MICHIGAN
DE.U CONCBRNBD: I doa'l
know boW 111MY MlcNpn '*'IIIII
who 11M white ~Win..., 1lialng
each otller, but I, too; bQpc the
couple ye11 witn m ~ wiU.ee lbil.
'I'hlnb for~.
.
.
Dar Allal•!!llen: WbCG.1 wa
3 yean old, I devel~ ICDte
.,..,. t.faly piiOplc ~¥,0 lhilllkia·
condilioa It: Clft . . . . lniiD 'ildly
dry llldn to larF IJ&amp;ee~inlrula'.

:·.!.1 ·
,.

,..
' .
; ~~ ~
~
. ; ;,~" foodl, k - u 'if J bad :

'

I

My_c:aewuiadlelaaeriJ'OUP•
Whea ••I wu a ·cbUd, .ootber ,...... _..,. a 1111tac1e.: Tqdav;·my •
childleD,WOuld lilt bold.my . .! ,,• ,. llniociodllllll clear. •
re.rialdiadlluuii-CW!JIIIou'. . Pme, Alii!, liiiR _. ~ ~
(It luot)I ~
.. .
. . lOeb= :"'~~
- ~ 1 will! 1 bad._~
m)' 1lllldl at nigllt to lreep
. ·' ·~ lt puao. fl
a:a~H41in my sleep. Myei!Jowl, Jll!ll!l~!l(pW. 'I" ~Yr
:
kDoOI ~ liect wac Je!illlll raw ~It(~ &gt;.~1
,
11101t 1:1 the limo. &amp;:Na€1~"~· the 11,1~FRBBIJI(J!HILlY:
l
lllbwould.OOWifmy~bcldy,, •r Y!Ja for a illlalr!lllll'coUicbllqe •
My ~ IQOt - 10 a ~. ~ k •PoOd a11ciJiN c:iis
dermatologi•u. The. dil.sn2•i• , "bdL'·1'nic!D
. ••·*- ' dowl: is Well
¥lried fnlm "IOO ,Iilucb lll'CII &gt; !tD •" Wili'tli~dle time ~anif'md.ey; • yell
"lllcqlc 10pc11, IIDIIP 111!1 dull.· we .. ·hiM ·•••l"CIIIIIIiitled · • · ·
-,
followed an o1 111e ad¥ice 10 the
:
llllalr with no ftliU!ts, ~. Lfelt
Gem of the Day: There is Jiever I; :
JUilty about the tloctcr ~0.1,11111 WJOiil time to do the right tbina, . ;
came to accept the eczema u .,
··
IOIIICihing I would have rorewr. . ·· ·• ·
" ·
p/I;INFbtr a "'l'd.!mr. wllo 1
· Two ~ qo,I met the man 1' "'
WUIIed 10'spent1 the real ol my Uf6 &gt;.prp.!for wflat?.WIIo ltMdl wlttut :
wllb. He lold me be didn'l CII'C .I!ldiit'·riTM ANI 1 tllldtr1 Gilliefor Bridu• •
.the rallbel, bull W.S uhamed •to•••litu alh!llt·aiu~wri: Utit.ti ,q-ac~:'1
have him 10uch meL When we ~lollf, lltid-err-llllaklpe
bec•me ""JIIecl, I went 10 111 tuN~· .a ·c(lecl ·or lllfllii:Y. 'O,def for .
aDerPt • uid aly eczema millil•'1'S.f.lf '(tliil 'lllcl~~ #*are Gild'
be btd nled llllppily ~p~~~$400 lttwf'irt-11 w: BrldU; c/o,AM Laa- I
lor . teatlng. It tamed out I wu ,fler,, P.O.•Boit 11562, CNctJ,o,/U. ';
.uerp: to lHoods.
·
60611-0.562 . (!11 Ca11adtJ, 1111d
Aft« two weeta of eliminalitlg $4.4.S,J·,
:
'

woalillltM!

. ..

l
lAIN
33151 .... ""' .... '
•...., ow. 45771
6l4-ttr-SM4
I...-.7M·DIE

·e,

I

Come by and regilter
for . ft'M Baltety to be
~en ·away ·December

·maa:J&amp; '

24. 111~. No purchue

DAY BEFORE PUBUCATION
l:OOp.m. Solur4ay
1:00 p.m. M&lt;1rlday
I:00 p.m. T...say..
·· I:IDp.m. w•...uy ·
,&lt;JOOpJI!. ~
. ,.• l;®.p..m. Frt4aY

I

.,Witt,.

I

. .... .

.,

~

'

RA'RS'': '·

Daye

,

1

• I

!

e. · ft

Kale ' . O..er is w~~
$4.00
-~ r.$ .20
$6.00
.s .30

15
3
. 15.
6
' 15
$9.00
' 1 5 .42
10
15
$13.00
$ .60
Monthly 15
$1.30/day
$.05/day
Rates are for ~naecutlve
bro~ 'IP'days will be
c~ fOieadt
a4s.l ';:
~,momth

Buam..,

that a condilion caned hypertrophic ketball 0~ foolball, and 90 pe~i 0!'1100~5 ~nough ~ '!liSqUat_i(y alh~
cardiomyopathy underlies.about SO were male.
fetes'flom compeuuon. However, ,
percent of cases. This inherited
The second most COIDmOn cause . s~mettmes· lhe probtem·s·'are not-.,1
condition involves a lhic~ning of of death , in these athietes was , ·d1~v]~ until an athlfte collaps·
the wall of the heart's main pump- inborn defects in the ~es that ·•es.
· · ·' '
,
ing chamber. . .
supply blood 111 th,e heart,. T'h6y '' •. O!.~er pp~qtial cau~ ~f albHowever, thts IS not lhe only accounted for aliout 15 ~ni of "" letes deatlls ·mcludC Mllfan syn- •
hazard to weD-conditioned.athletes. the cases studied1 Such al!nOnnan. -~ ~,Jieart valve defomlilics and or.'
Maron's study found that llbout 10 ties can Sllddenly cut off blp,c}jl 1to,, • }e8&amp;llll of.the !le8rl ~·'.tc ,, , ~
other inheritid heart abnotmalities · the heart. :resdltlna ill a beait'tliJICi(.uJ1 1·Dr.&lt;Wiliianl SII'O!Ijl'Ot'ttiCIMCdi~
can ~a use sudden deatli d!Jring · !\nolher oc;c~sional ~ause,~il;;_&lt;~ c;ourge·oc ~~~oiloi!Jg •¢ :!
cxerc1se.
sudden death 111 .athletes·. Wl!t ·'l~¥sical· and ~g a fiiiJiilY hi~
Maron presented his .flndi~gs myocarc!itis! a scarrin~ of hp~ ·:·tilCjlll.o~ tuin Ill' ~·ll'i!,blerns·Z
Monday at the annual scienufic muscle tJw results from. mOamJiu~· ~ !W!ft;youngsters JOin athletiC pro-v'
meeti~g ~f the American Heart tion. ~~is ~iausecJ by virl;l'i!if~li,oJ!s 'r· . . , l \i,atory \)( Jiiipting ciurinsf:l
Assoc1a1ton. He analyzed the and other ~ems. Th~ ., . .~ s~~~~!ti J,S,fr9,!,~e!ltl)', 11 c.lue to:;$
deatps of athletes between the ages bly what k1lled both L·e lm ·at;t~ .. I~
.
.
';
of 13 and 40 nearly an of whom Gathers.
·
· . · ·"':·il' .• ••, ·", · ' .,, • ·
~
~ied during~~ soon after com~J!lti- . Maron said these ..tbree.co)ldi• ~,J~-; ": ·'.
.h..
• ~ ,
tton or pracuce. Most played bas- t10ns are often constdcred· tQ -11¢ .•1· •'
{l
@.aOJ,y r
:,

By DANIEL Q. HANEY

Wolds

1

~t

Rare heart defect blamed in half of sudden deaths-in athletes ··
AP Sdeace Writer
AlLANTA (AP)- A single,
rare inherited hearl defect is to
blame in aboul half of an cases in
which athletes drop dead on bas·
ketball courtS and playing fJCids, a
study concludes.
.
While cocaine occasionally triggers fatal heart problems in athletes, docto·rs ·say unrecognized
congeniJll) problems are far more
common causes.
Though uncommon, such sud·
den dt:&amp;lhs oflen get wide auention,
especially when they strike star
athletes, such as basketball playm
Hank Gathers of Loyola Mary.
mount :Uni~ersity in Los Angeles,
who d1ed 10 1990, and Reggie
Lewis of the Boston Celtics, who
dim this year.
Dr. Barry·J. Maron of the Minneapolis Heart Institute surveyed
nearly 100 such deaths and found

PLa.IQJJ

_uay

...

\c

',

AUTO

QUALITY WORK

PARTS

&amp;GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD

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

· Specializing In Custom
Frame Rapar

(814) 882·7474
POMEROY, OHIO

AlliiiiiUIIIOIIU

992·7011er·
992·550
erTOLL •111
1-100.141 0070
IARWII, OliO

.DAN'S

TUIISMISSION
&amp;AUTO,REPAIR
Specializing In
Automatic
Transmissions
368 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
1192-i321

PHONE
INSIALLinON

COUNTRYSIDE
CERAMICS

Jacks 11111811ed
Exte111lonl run to

Bisque, GrHnware,
Paint BNahn,

614-367-0421

..

JOHN TEAIOU
I

., ••..,

FOR

Locatid on VIne Sl In

'r."=:.an.

.

•f2'N....~"
106 ~llemUIAvt. f'an11101'
llq)e~·ionce

Come

Acceuorlu,
Finished Plec:u,
11nd Oily &amp; Evening
ClaaHI available
now.

Located In Eastern Meigs County. 1 to 5
· acre tracts available. Tuppers Plains &amp;
Chester water; electric available, on site
Hptlc tanks &amp; roads to each lot
approved. Partially wooded with rolling
hills.
. From $5,000 up

.......

but could

oBACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER

•TRUCKING

~

1304) 773·5585

EICAYADNG

WINTER HOURS
Sun.·Thurs. 4-10 pm
Fri. &amp; Sal., • pm-?
,..,.,lllllllltlrllif

(6l 4)
_
667 6628

Now.,

Shade River SaddleCUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
.36358 SA 7

Chester, Oh. 45720
985·3406

EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
INPqMEROY
"" 6:46 p.m.
Sptc:ltl Etrty Bird
$100 Payoll
Thlt ad good lor 1
FREEoerd.
Lie. No. 0061-342

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

GENEUl

lox 189
......port, o•lo 45760
(614) 143·5264~~~1

· CERTIFIED MKHANIC
OUTJOAID MOTOR 132" ·

lj

·~

New Homes 1 VInyl Siding
New Garages 1 Replacement Windows
Room Additions 1 Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESlDENTIAL
~WEE ESTIMATES

614-992·7643
(lo hnday Callt)

TRI-COUNTY RECYCLING
Ia now accepting all ferrous metala
Including: tin, cut Iron , long 11nd ahort Iron.
Must be a mall enough to be moved by hand.
Short Iron (leaa than 3ft.) 1.76 par hundred
Motor Calt.....2.00 pac hundl'lld
Clean, dry alum. cana .23 pound
Prlcea subJect to change without notice
Located at the corner of S.R. 143 and 7

HAUliNG
Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992-7878
7nl1mo.

EXCAVATING

BUUDOZEA BACKHoE
and mACi&lt;ilO£ WORK

AVAILABlE.

SEPJIC SYS'ItMS,

HOlE liTES 11M1
TRAILER liTES

I.ANOCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYIINSTAUED
UMESTONE-lRUCKJNG
FREE ESnMATES

992·3838
SIRII &amp; TREE
IIIMt••

446-9515
CARPEl &amp; UPHOLmRY CLONING
I
We give caipel and
upboltlery the
"SPECIAL CARE"
they d nrvell

'dlllf*Y (on alte)
'fine fabrlcl
cltlnlng

WV013372

We apeclalla In:
RRE&amp;WATER

DAMAGE
RESTORATIONINSURANCE CLAIMS

24Hour
Emergency Service

Gtry Bany, Ownarmm Faulk, Ml!nager

REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
of'IREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
12.3().92-tfn

ROIEII •••• ll
CONnRUcnON
•New Homes

Celllhd 1tchnlclana on avity lob.

. I~IOAID/OUTIOARD 'SO"
WINTE- STORAGE AYAIWLE

I

,_, .

2112/92Jifn

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUIUNCE COMPANY
Rocky R. Hupp, D.c.u. •Agent

oiled._,

TUPPERS PLAINS
BMic
law enforcement,

., CallGeae Riggs98~3594 -

Phone 992·5114

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

TRI·SIATE l·t
ACADEMY
peraonll proteetlon,
kennel tef\'lc:e, pupe &amp;
young doge lor tilt.
By IPfiL only
..f14-667-PETS

....19-00· Ifn

' ltWHH - · pd.

could

l
'.

304-n3-5533
Open 6 .Dey'a A Week

HOME SITES

WINTERIZATION S~CIALS
.

CALL

•

848-3086

D.A. .OSTON

Ma1011, WY

PutlUC Notice

.

.•

w-.....

Autl)oriMC:I: Brlggt •
Stratton MTD, Ry.n,

Cloted Sundlly
949·210.

Outside Buildings
FrH Eatlmatea

~
(Former Muon Lan••l ·
aid Pot11111Y Stt'ltls .

'

\,
"\ , 'f,l\ .
\ ~.

..... au. 5lwJ

•EACLE
ANES . I:I~====~~~==~======~
•DOZERS
lr-

dlitlnee to aehool or
church. Ideal for
young family.
Call148-2244
· lifter:&amp; p;m.

~

• Low, wide eo and 70 • sett..

UCINI
MOWER CUNIC
WILIIIILUY
Plrfs ... Senlce

Hou111 IJe. M-F lo3 S.L

DHf•ent Rooms and

,.

Senior Cltlzena
742-2443

I.D.C. Atp81r C.ntw
PICKUP 111d DEUVERY

.,.....

W

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

.......... all M•k.. 8Modela!

.85·4473
.

')

FURNACES

l~pnk You'

, SERVIa
. OWi
36'.. 11~::··-

·
Sentinel

lj, •

(:laa.ffieds

, I

1'

COOJIIG

.

'11'. 'Ilea a

'

-

IM~In

'

Assldlntlel6
Commercial
IM1lllllll- of u,_
JIIOka • Ph- • FAX

POMEROY • Pomeroy AA Ww
meet at,the Pomeroy Mqnicipal.
Building AildiiOOum' at 7:p.m: Poi
more in1onnation can 992-57~. ' .

I

-·

992-6215
Pomoroy, Ohio

11MI2-1111

Racine. Ample lot,

DALE. HART '
:

10% Dlolcount

SYRACUSE, OH.

f.nced yard, welklng

riljsaicd'!n p;ayer.

'

(FREE EITIMATE!II ·

'
CO-UIICITIOIIS

Fall festival__
held at Hillside

. ,su!ort ,.,··

Plumbing,
Electric, etc.

......

RACINE - Southern High
School Athletic Boosters will meet
at 7:30p.m. in lhe high school
cafeteria.

I

Carpentry,

UWJWN&amp;I

all ant

~ R~fne Village
Voter$ for y~ur

All types of

V.C. YOUNG Ill

614~992·7553

MIDDLEPORT • ThC MiddleCommunity Association will
meet 7 p.m. at Peoples Bank in
Middleport AD welcOme.
.1

Work
llld Plumbing

Plllna,.

::t.etart F~ Ele~:.s~hool~

cam

POMIIOY
HOMIIEPIII

• Exterior

'

Any Cildition

port

. Hillsille B~ Church recendy
held a fall festiVal which got underway at noon with Joe Humphrey
~in prayer.
ShOnly after a lunch llf ,polatO .
101111 IIIII chili was served the activitiel got started. Games included I
.balloon .rel~y race, fishing game, ·
musical chain and many more. AD ·
children
. -='Ill
.•
-~· won pnzes.
.
11 FoiiOwlai thbt event, the ladies
of the ch~Kii alpked a wild animal
ilintler which 1liCillded fried iqilir. rei, deer rout 'llld deer 8lelb witli
loCI ollide dlllbel abel desaettl. The
evenillg ·mdecl u Pastor Acree dis-

YOUNG'S

.:C

···

,

,.

;

CARPENTER' SERVICE

. 1110110

Porches,
' •'
·Patios,
S.ldewalks
. . 992-7878

,I

Community Calendar Items
,.~as released.its honar wU for theit:
THURSDAY
appear two da11 before u evmt
(im nin~. week grading period.8
and the day ol that neat. Items
""'R ·, R. egu1ar meeung
• f LISted were:
,,;&gt;
CHES· ·'"
o .., , Fint g'iadB, " S ·
::-o
l!lliSt be r~lnd Ia advance to
assure publleatloa In tbe calen- the Sha'ile River Lodge . ~~~2 i.~clok~ Kise;-Nl:Je 1!.=~~
F~AM. All master ~. ~vttell .. KYJ~ ~ ~ Fe!K;ia waiJI,rown. ~ ~
.,,dar.
' to ~~~e~, Refreshm.ents Will be
.second ~rade . ..._ Michaett ·
TUESDAY
served.
Depue~ Oavtd G!oeckner,·Adam;;
ROCK SPRINGS R~""""' ·
)ohnsof1, Tabitha Jones, Paige-::
CHESTER • The Chestrz Town- •
.
· • ~.,..ngs · Musset; Jenny Pioffiu, Calvin.RiU.!
ship Trustees will bold their reJUiar Grange meettng at 8 p.m. Members ~ Arlllrea Tedford.
;_.
monthly meeting at 9 a.m. at the encouraged to auend. .
.
, .. ·Tbird-grlde- JBSOI\ .Curfman :-.1
ChesterTown'Hall
·
;·~··1v~~ [a'wfl
····~o:ro':..&gt; •'&lt;:n_}r~
'
POMEROY - Drew Webst~t: •"~ ·· · · ~· """'""':._..,..,.!!
Post 1139· will bold a meeting con- Alan ~oor~. Altson Smtih and
POMEROY - The regular
. · ·
·
· · Stephan.ie Wilson
·
·
monthly meeting of Meigs COunty cernmg .p~OJ!?Sed change~ to-t_!)e 1 DH.ih1~te ~ i ~
forty and eight will be held ai the Post Consutuuon and By-Litws. · · ..-·ou"'"'..:.
i' ·· OY.
Pomeroy American Legion Post
ntnuuary unmy 1\ulherwith' dinner starting at 7:30 p.m.
POMEROY - Sacred HeaFt ..!!?nand JBS()II Caplinger. ''·
Members are asked to attend and Catholic Church will have their TTi'l'-+-:·~·--:--~..._...___~
bring a guesL
annual faU bazaar with dinner SWI•
~,.,~~
ing at 4:30p.m. Cost for the c!i!!~·
1!
TUPPERS PLAINS - Meigs wiD be $:1· for adults and $2.50 Jor
County Chamber of Commerce children 12 and under. There ·will
will have a general membership also be games, a fancy stand andi
•
meeting at the Tuppers Plains baked goods stand.
VFW Post at 7 p.m. Meal will be
provided. For more information
call 992-SOOS.

POMERQY • The Meigs County Gmealogical Society will meet
5: IS p.m . lit the Meigs .Counly
Museum on Butternut Avenue in
Pomeroy. ·

Fact'
' ory a..b
. . ~ .
12g... uly.
Beglnlllng Od. 3

HEAnrtG &amp;

WANTING
·TO~ BUY
JU,NK CARs·
. &amp;'TRUCKS

........

..

1 ""·

.,!~oil released . ~~

__;..Community calendar

f .

EVERY .SUNDAY
AT I P.M.
RAONE GUN QUI

AR..OLD'S
·PLUMBING,·

';

~

319114 .a..~...

GUll

NquW.dto r~erand
don1 have to be present
to win,

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
.;,WORK

~ .·

.

'

~-~

1$1AYEI,i.,
UMEST@NJ,. TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL Dltl

992-.3470

·Mflmory Mates - Poitrslts
Spec/Ill Occasions

THE
PHOTO PLACE
109 High Street
Pomeroy
Bob and Charlene Hoeflich

lnetllled DOIIIpiUI wllh

..............w..

CHRISTMAS
TREES

�•

Page

8 The Dally Sentinel
BEATTIE BLVD.™ by BruceBeattie

3 . Announcements

1883

OhiO
41 HoUIII for Rent

In Chrlol Chrlotlon
Doling - . - C)lwlo.
tloo llrr, ...... c:hrioiiM
-..... Coli, 100 11:1........
No ~9.11iEW.I No t'JIInal

Pomeroy-Middle~rtr

The Dally Sentinel

Ohio

KIT 'N'.(::ARLYLE® by Larry Wrlpl
·'

.

5t

ACROSS

....... z - · 1M

Ylond sc.
411-17211
• •no polo, "
'-·
· -

JUOI 11iO lllale at Your ~11 .
1
· --Ell. 7317 tz.•

. .. wl ....... -

· pluo

no

e Room St-lc
Stow, C.ll Alter 2 P.M. ,,......_
OUI.

-

!l~c

s ....._...Dining

NORTH
+QH
• .'-161

1112, 814-441-1712.

•a

Nlco Z '"' s boclroorn houM 111

Pomerowlorrtni«MIIon

4

Giveaway

rr v.AS

Nlco • Lot For Ronl, Vwy
Ctoon, IIZ?Mio. Ptuo DopooH,
Porter Anro. 114-241-111'14.

Z 1/Z Yoar Old · Black l Rod
Gorman Shophonl, 114-1*1136.
23"' oorwol• TV, rweda rep~~lr,

R:)LrTI(£I.LL'(

86

50 fltaNNPIY
54 BaiCr'led

55 s.t.d

ln•Milnlo

118...,...' motu
58 Jlltllp lUll
50 Snick ond 61 Curronl
tY•nta
62 D(no

1

I ~: =:,r:_~oae•
28 Upelolro

room

+J
•Ktoeu
•stoe7

o\KH I

Nrto -

47 RIIIIOr'ld

orr

EAST

QZ

/¥'0i1VA1tD

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

114-112.a!U.

WEST
10981

..........

41 Aulllor Um-

&amp;Nobleman
12 From 1 tingle
,........,u.o
14 And others
~!!!!!!!!~I
(2 Wdl.)
1s Co11
, 18 Drop alowly
17 Brllleh ochool
D· t -8$
18 L1K- 20 Aug. lime

+KQJtl

- -··no polo, 114IM·noo.
aon~

ofllce

44 Of ..fllld.

EVIIII

!!!!

KHchon"' Full Boaamont,
.....,.., S400 uopoott, 114-446-

42For"en

1 SwNI pobtto
4 ActriH -

PHILLIP
ALDER

:r"a-= ...........

........
- .. ,.Yla.-11
Co.IOHM--.

31 Enlorlllner
· - Sumoc
32 Rololld
34 Port of Will'
dow 1ramo
35 RIYtr In $pain
37 -Picone
39 Guido's high
noll

+~t2

SOIJTH

+AU I!

•s.

• Ql2
+A107

40 Gravel

DOWN
1 O• hornell

2 Dlllued
3 Type ot IIIII

7 P1red!H•

4

Undorwo~d

8 SIIICIJ

5

-~rothlng

g PubliC

wut,~ando

..,...,..

drtnk

10CIIIz.,.11 Anllered
onlmall

6 Singer Horne

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
4 Klttt,., 7 Montt., Ralud In- AVON I All Aro.. I Shirley

aida, 114--44S.3721.

mobil• ttom.,
Mlnorovlllo oroo 1 NfoNnctO •
dtpoo~ roqulroa, 1114-tlll2-11777
oftor Dpm.
2

Spoon, 3~14:ZV.

8 PupPi-. Part Bttg.. 6 Mother £am Extl'l Chrlalmll Money
F,.. To Good Home, 614·256· OHict Wotbrw I Deflvery Help
1434.
NMdtd. Good Pay, fltxlblt
Houra. Apply In Person Mon
t Month Old Dog, 112 Shaphard .frt,
10-3,· 500 Second Avenue,
and,112 A~trallan 1514-371-1836.
Galllpoll-. Upstalra, 814..446Five week old pupt, 36157 8518.
Rocksprlngt Rd., Wyatt Sam

AI real estate IMMH'!alnQ In
thiS newspaper il subfad lo
tho Federal Fair Hooslng Ad
o1 1968 which mokoS Illegal
to adVeltiM •any prefe1'911C8,
llnwtatlon or &lt;iscnnlnallon

EXTRA INCOME
Rot tOld.
EARN $200-$500
frM KHten1, To Good Home WEEKLYc MAILING TRAVEL

baSed on f11C8 , cokJr, religion,

GUIDES.~or

Information .. nd
Hlf-addrneecl stamped en245-5151.
velope 10: 8 I B Malllng Ser~
Khltnt to good horne, 614-992- vice, P.O. Box 830525, Miami, Fl

Only! C1ll After 5:30 P.M. 614-

sex famiNaiSialus or nallonal

origin, or any lnlenllon 1o
make any sud'l pre1erence,

33163.

2210.

Mmltallon or dlsaimlnalion."

Male eh•p dog, 114-11112·2754.

Lite lneu111nce Hill peraon
In an estabUshlcl
NHdl Good Home: 1 YNr Old want1d
property &amp; casualty egency, full
WMt Sponocl Oluo Eyocl or
part tlmt, ll'llnlng pn&gt;vldld,
Ftmall Great O.nl, 1514-256d111w ag•lnlt comml11k&gt;n tor
1433.
first 3 monthl. Send rnum• to:
Recruher, P.O.
Box 1079,
Martett1, Ohio 45750.

Ttl'S newspaper will no!

Mdroom

· BARNEY
.

2 bod_, troller, Nf &amp; dop, Rt.

I GOT SO MANY
THINGS TO

12 N. loculi Ra on right, no
polo. 304475-10711.

----T'l
...,..
Soft---·

3 Bedroonw:, $2501Mo. Plua
Dlpoalt
R1ferenceej 2 Bed·

rooms,

a

1225/Mo, DepoaH
814-2564101.

Reference~,

a

Musical

57

Instruments

neec11 rtPIII'H: .,, tee ael

3 Sldroom1, G11 HNt, 'In 0.1·

llpollo, 814-4441-2003, · -

1408.

-Size
Queen . . .

Home: 2 BMiroome,
R•rence And De~ A•
qulrod, 114-083-4607 Afttr I P.M.
Mobil•

-........

Ploor
.. 4

-Color
T.V. wHh --h'ICR,4'_T_ 58
ond 4 Cholrw oncl

OrLoavollooaago.

1131.

l&lt;nowlngly """"''
a&lt;tveltlsemerislor real estate
whld1 Is In violation of l_lll
law. OUr f811dtl'l are hereby
lnlormecllhsl all dweUin{l!l
advertised In lht&amp; newspaper

!'~--·hood I ......
........ tm; youth .... · -

Quilt All-., , _ - T o

.. M

Ch......._~·

F,mn

taoo

Kina Prl- '"""

•~v"

1!1 wotto, Ilks ,_, foil, 1

Avonuo, Polnl Ptuoant, wv 44
Apartment
FHA Appraved, 304-1175-1271.
for Rent
FOR SALE· Z boclnoorn ha&lt;ao,
11.2 aCre In COIII'Itry, Aaclna ana, 2bdrm. apts., Iatif electric, apnew double p11ne un.an wfn.. pllanCis tumllhed, laundr,y
d - , lui bo-nt 1 outbuild- room t.cllltlu doH to 11ehool
Ing, - y to hMI, lu'oi oil tu.. In tawn. Appl(c,atlona avallablli
""""· $26,000, 8'14-Mfi.ZMO o~ at: VIllage ·c,..n Apl1. 141 or
calf 114-tlf2.3711. EOII.
tor 1:30 p.m.
GOVERNMENT HOMES From $1 2br., .all •llctrlc, appllanc:a fur(U Ropolrl. Dollnquont Tu nlahlld, eta. to .:hooll
RipONIIalonl. vour 810NI I churchu. Llwela;J
Ar.. (1 -2-1000, Ext. GH- Apto., Now Hoven. 304-1182-3'116.
10180 For CurTOnt Ropo UoL

Pr-"r·

lol:t: okt., m1Je Be:agll,
wlblack A brown. Aleo,

1 1/4 ..... da.mond
~­
..... I 112. whltrr gold oottlqal
$87!. 304.e~ or ... Paft
1t John110n'• Supermt~rllel

- h 9t

llldd-, 1 •

z

bedroom lumlllhlcf aPartment•,
utMitloo pold, rlop. l rot. 304-

882-2511.

Beech Streit. MIMI 1 crt, 1

lftlcltr!cy oportmont,
utiiHIM pold, clop, I rot. 304882-215M.

room

Fumlohocl Small
Hou•, .-mo. Pluo Utllltloo

Cornp.lot!Y

c.u

And o.-n. 814 u1 0338.
lleloro1p.m.
.Counlryoldo Aot. an 188. 2 Bodr,;m~:· GiD, WID .-.,p1
h . - lloQuiiOd
114-4*4222 or 114-141-21,..

PubliC 8ale

&amp;Auction

will do llgh1
tMM•·h•pl~. cooking, run tr·
ronde, or kiop ._ny with
lndlvlduol. Will provldo ....,.....
- tOr you. Roaaontblo. Phono
114-0112-11038 on)'11mo.

Rick P M . - - Cornpony,
tuM time •uctlonMr, compllt.e
ouotlon MrYioe.
Ltcenoad
toee,Ohlo ' WMI Vlrglnlo, t··Timo.

rcacr.r·•

:=,
cr.-b~!'l."" c:.::l
tlonll'l2&amp;, Phone: 114 411 . .2.

s-.

rwn1, ID lor only 11771mo., caii1·

M•nor

M

Wanted to Buy

!:1:

AI

-lor·

--ndo

L*'Y ~t· 114 ~·· , ... , .

w......,!l Pint,
To Buy: 8tatldlng Tl.,.
Prlcoi, 114bor

Good

38MIOf.

' ' I.
'
Snock /Sodo Ala. $1,200 IWk
Pol. GIMt lnv111-IIOMII.o354 41 Houses tor Rent
Vtndlng R0&lt;11o: For SoiL 2 Bed..,_ Ronch"-~ Evon• ,.,.lltr·loto"" - · olty wlf&amp;l'
Solid CUh
Halghto,
Dopoolt, - · 304o87NIN.
Hlgh .-fllo, ·Loclf IM«Iono. 114'4484117.
- !qu(pmont. 1 - 2AI4 11361
WOI,.FF TANNING BEDS
.,_ Com~.,_ Home Unl•,
from $118.00,
Lot .....,
Ac~ manthty po~o
low .. $18.00, ooll todrr! FREt

sc.._.

auor-.

Lorn,-.

NEW

~ ~log,

""·
11
AVONI AI .,..;., Nlllll 11t,. .
- o r _ . • ~....lflhor
.., . , .. llorllrn. 104 - 2141
or 1x100 112 lUI.
AYOII HOLIDAY • Your
Houn, :::-:., And
As- s!W, AY... WOflt

own

HoUri; ' Bellina "'
No DOOR /IXIOII.
111~.

1a:

1--.

Re&lt;JI Estate

M Z T' I

AOTEJMTLBEF

MT

..

f... fW)(£, A C:OUJE.,

Boata &amp; MO!o,.
tor salt

75

ru...... " cr:t.i£f.. 5fmE.t.
c\
n.lO ~ &lt;I ~ a--!

,_h•-r::,Porlr
,.,. ., .'?!Jm
.

Uveatoek

1114
' llrr
.Aflo

d, 1

'

~E!!DS.

.

ooo, .....

21111104.

~

Auto Partl&amp;

Nov. 9, 1993
.11!111~111Ut

Today is the 3I31h
day of 1993 and the

49th

-n.

AI'*'" .U.."'* ~ f!Poclol

, .. 5S

!llrll .....

::;;:.":"~~P.M.
ted. ............ ~tot·
4 P.ll. · Qn FrldoJ. All Conotan._,o w-. ' 114-11122322, O r - 3111. '

Building .

SUppllta
llooll, ........ -*· C:S.iodo.
-._Unloto,
Wlntoro, Hlo Onncle, 0H Col 114-

Z4U1Z'L

-

-

Rillllluaa 1om
Elorctrlc Hooptlol Bod In Good AKC Q~
10, 1111. . . boh,
CondHion, fZIO No ......., Oct
Dap atrl. . Wll Hold . Pw'
C.l... 114 311 lilt.
C h - I IM 11111241 ....
-10-10.
Eloctrlc$50.
'""'"'
end ovono,
11WI2·7103I«C
AI 8ltoto.
11
_ ,ROQ.
. Old- 1/{J; PIIGII
Hound.
SlloHultortedf-~

· ~~ePa AWAY AT
O:U...E6E. [;0 'IOU HAVE

MY DA.D~WECAN'T
C:VaJ ~w HAV1t-E

AN 0~ BROT14EQ'i

AN Ol-DER BRO'THER .. .

l.ET AL..ONe: ee:ND HIM
TO COL• res .

... CoiYoO 1121

-~

'

79

Campera &amp;

tt0f1181 .

j

64

1

Hoy, &amp;qUliN - , $1.80 l up.
hf.,.y
only plcoup; SCM.f'IS....

ITUESDAY

Scrv1CC'i

.Hay.&amp; G,.ln

-81~-H;~--:
81

Flrnood' All tt..da I 11tt11 I«C ..... .....,_
Dollvored f40 Plci!.Up ..-. ..1101 ..... .. flrol
114-211-1311 Or 11WII7o'IIIZI - · otirtocl, 114-1112.:11111.
E'ltnlnp.
AKC - - A - n Po~l ,
-Coloroof Cookar lainllt p
DIM TaU D: .• ..i, biw
R...,.,..., lorn: 1011111 NOW

a.;:

G-.1 Eloctrlc
Htavy Duty . .

wi- 1l1b.

-711t.

~"'7
''='~
AtooAvallablt.e--.

AKC Atalotored FeiMit ......
luni llool!oi!UiHI 7 ....... Old,

· ~
GoodtM With
Chlrl-.
t100o D!tfo:'
ue
-.E-.,..t14 4411111,
Me II ' a;MI , _ Clillw,
lttar.flwr.C c;ea.. Iilla M ,

-·--·
-on

. . .turePL;tut•,MI~

-Aoollng,wort~":,:-.
.

RC

T.....,

' Poildlo;

...

Tr .Ills por 1:1 11 on
and a long , sell-addressed ,

ASTRO-GRAPH

71 , Aut~• for Sale
-.-~~Nih .....
C::
ooniiMan. ......-.; •~
1111 a""* ... ~::=;~:.
PS, PI, /IIJ, WOIII•, 1100•.

. . Oklo CUI. Clom, 4 dr., outo.,'

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

~

Pltm!)lng &amp;
Heating

;,,..=:_::::.:::-,~",.!:
· :::!'t::_~w~,~c~,::-~:
lnototlollon Anll

....

·Certln.d. ,..111 Mill,
olll. 11t 2111111.~ '

Electrical

Ceinmer

J

... ~

a.

Re(rtgemlon

•,

enve-

lope 10 Astro- Graph , c/o this newspaper,

P.O. Box 4465 , New York, NY. 10163. Be
sure to state your zodiac sign .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-llec. 21) There is
a season for sowing and a seasori for reaping. This is a period where you will be paid
back in larger measures by persons you

have helped.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·Jon. 19) Exciting
developments could be in the offl09 tor you
where yowr social life is concerned. Bolh otd
and new friends may play big roles in yo ur
affair&amp;.
·. AOUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19) ll's 1if1tl, tor
1 you 10 start elevaling your sights where
your ambit ious objectives are concerned .
Wednoodly, Nov. 10,1993
Once you get o'n a roll, remarkable acllleve·
)'
menrs are possible.
The year ahead could turn out lo be an PISCES (Fob. :zo.March 20) Something Is
e~remeiy favor8b~ period tor you w~h ~&lt;&gt;!• pre sently stirring thai could produce an
ot exciting deve)opmenls. SelloHy obi &amp;~· .;. advanrageous ettect upon your tulure
lives and pursue •lhem vigorously.
·
hopes and plans. Prepare yoursell for your
SCORPIO (Oci. 24-Nov • 22) Persons you tomorrows and look forward to lhem.
once fell Compelled to please may now do a. · ARIES (!larch 21·Aplil It) It you've been
role reversal and reel lmpellet;l 'f please ' contemplating a dari09 move, maneuver or
~ . ,There has ·been a big cl1an~ regard· adjuslmenl where your career is concemed .
ing lhe mantel o1 leadamhlps. You re )n the . this could be the lime to do it. Trends are
Cl!tbird sea) now. Scorpio, rreat yourseH loa looking strong .
tiirthdaY gift. Send tor your Astro·G.reph pre·' TAURUS (April 2().11ey 20) Today you and
dictions for the year ahead by maoling $1 .25 you' male might be required to make two

.'·

~ 'V!Rtao·ll.
CorDI!·
I .
Roclriif
.,_
, ...
Dlpollt.l14 f.tt4T aL

82

day of fall.

••

significant dec1sions lhat may have long
reaching effects. Fortunately, you bo th have

good ludgment.
•
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) A loyal lriend
who is concerned about your personal we i·
fare might offer you some unusual advice
loday.·Even though it might soond slrange,
wrestle w ith it until you understand it s

essence.
CANCER (Juno 21.July 22) It things have
been a trifle hectic lor you lately, this is a
good day to sort them out and reorganize
your life . Chance s for , success a re

enhanced once you're back on track
LEO (July 23·Aug . 22) Do not 101 se ll·
doubls inllmldate you today, because you
have &amp;Kcellent chances tor producing the
types of end results you desire. Think win.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-hpl. 22) Chance could
one, a strong endoniemenl tor your efforts
today. lllool!.. like you might say the right
things at lhe right Hme to lhe right person
whO can creale a fortunate happening.
LIBRA (Sopt. 23·0c1 . 23) You' re now
ent ering an extremely

significant cycle ,

especially where your tinanc"'S or material
needs are concerned . If you handle things
properly . surpluses will supplant your

wants.

---"&lt;

hi~D)lY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1989, the Berlin Wall, a symbol of the
Cold War for 28 years, was tom down .
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS' Benjamin '
Banneker (1731 · 1806), astronomer ;
Ivan Turgenev 0818· 1883), novelist;
Stanford White (185H906), architect;
Spiro Agnew 0 918-), U.S. politician, is
75; Carl Sagan 0934·), astronomer, is
59; Bob Gibson 0935·), baseball star,
is 58 .

~~~~
'
:-:--'-~-:-~-:-~-

•

Sign seen hanging in our
K A RME
2 local auto repair shop: "They
--r"~-r-1--i ~ Will Never Be Able To Recall
. . . L . . All The Autos To Replace The
r-"7-:-~:-:~---. Loose Nuts Behind The - ·

It--.1-.,

ADKIISIWO... ~

'

· Motor

'*lllo. '"""

,.___ _

.

:12112oftorlpm.

Ant....,_.

Condl-.

D M T l U

B S 0

ltod • . . .

--CI:UOA;~

AI&gt;Onnoonto In Middleport. From
U0Z. C.lll14-t1112-11St. EOH.

Don,

HoriiiJ ·""""'"'·

'It

c-r-.
441-4173 olor~
.....
..,..,. ..-·... a1ol-•

,.,..., T~ ,_,
830, NOrth "" 81.
out, ICI'OM froln

=:,.Prlco

1nd

BLUOTB

l T A

low to form lour words

.I

77WICII.

Comtnomorotlvo . HaH · Dolor
Coin 102Cio Qngon T!oll EF To
Roducid..... fM-241.
Fumlohod Aportmonl, Utii-

room apartmenla

JECMOZ

AMDDOFOTPO

0 four
Reorronlile l1tters of
Kramblld words

0

on""":;!""'

Syr. warranty, hom•o:rnera ln-

.Ut'llnce. lnd 1 yur of lrM lot

ROBNODT

880

1'- ·

Pold, 1 Boclroom, Upololro,
Second AvenUI, GaiiiDOile. No CONCRETE IPtmC TAIIKII
Ptrto"-~cotlont Corodliloro, 614- 1,!100 O.llon, 11:128; .ET iiOI
441....,,
(No Bond Flllor lleqll!rod)
11,4111;
Ron
Enno
E
Grldoua living. 1 oncl 2 bod- Jackeon, Ohio 1oiON3J.fal.
·

111M Redmon 14170, - . ... lncluct. lklrtktg etepe, blocka,

.

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

Equot Houolng 0ppor.

1
tunlla.

l

s

~-Willi·­

c..tltlc.otoo Acooplod. 814-441· Uon; tiOO, 114 4•e Ullt.
1100

' BSOFO'Z

BSOLBOF.

w.._

Filii Avonuo,
H - Gollrpotlo.
-Second
1114- Goad llhllpord Churah. 441·1800 Ienior, Dlaablorl, • TrM Farm. J04.ol7lo404'I.
Hondtcopped• 1 &amp; a .... _ ,
UnUo. Ronto DUocl On Adlulted Cloth Cor Cover For CoMite Or
lnconio. FMHA Suboldlzocf, HUD Slmttor 8lucl Cor, Good Concii-

110M374238.
Houoo TraiiOI' With Houaa Typo Nice, dun, 2br. lpilrtment, w/d
end- lumHurt, no T l T t.wft Sonllce, lawn, Rool 12xM In GoOd Condhfon, hoak-up,
Nf., dip., no peta. 304•em toal ..,. or too email. will land-otna. otump ,.,...., Fumhurw 11,000, No sun- 175-11182.
bUy pleCO or c:ompiOtt and IMt cfMnup. 904-~ day Calle, 814 388 87'06.
hol••hald call O.bf Martin, or 1-IIOCH38·1440.
One bedroom apirtment•
114-1112·'11141.
$2211/mo. lncluclto utiNtln, fliiil
Trl Stoho Tr• Service- IOflolng, 33 Farms for Sale
_...,Y dopoolt, no polo; 114o.aONild t(onewl,., Will .... lrtmmlng, trM :wnov11, 1iump
. -----pllpnll!, old lompo old thllr· Nmoval. FfM •IIIMt... Call 21or., 1 1/Z both troltor oro 11 114 ;;.11112;;;..;-221=18;..
drHied w.Hilu..,OOO, n'.Dmltlrs. okl CiOCiw: antique 1*112·Z312 If no .,..., luwt acr•,
45
Lotori, wv. 30W'III4 .
Furnished
turnlwo. AI.....M Antlq- name. number on machiM.
RuM Moore, owner. 114-0e:z·
Rooms
W)ll bobyolt In my homo, full or 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
ZtiZI.WtbuyHIIfeo.
pari-time, before I 1ft• ~hool,
J"'* hi Bell Uo Yow fl&lt;on. have ....,.nee~ . J04.871..3211. 10 AcrN 1111. WHh o T . - .
WM!na lllojor Appt.._,
a-. o Good Sorlna. Atoo
~
TV'o,
Attilgorotoro,
County Wotor ond EloctiiC Gooo
PrNDJS, VCfrl. llcrDWi\1411 1
Throuah tho Land, 10 lllnutM
Finanetal
from TMn on Puton Ad. U.
Atr
Wuhllrti
DrYon, Copy MochlnM, Etc.
king $28,~or llaka Uo an Of.
tor&amp;M-441
t
1'14-211-12311.
21
Business
J 1 D'a Auto Pan. 1nd S.lviQI,
SEVERAL 7· ACRE PARCELl: Room~· tor rent .. w..k or month.
OpponunHy
alao buying Junk cara I trucli1.
llrrlgo Counly, ...... Twp.l ~.20/mo. O.lllo Hotot.
304·7l'W343.
SUO/ 110ra. Remote, belullfu
INOTICEI
land; • .,~~.~r·uro end 111111. Slooplng -~h cooking.
OHIO VAI.LEY PUBLISHING CO. Coli
tor
mop. 1-t~
Alto
trollor
·
·
Allloook'IIPL
thot you do bulf. U41,Athono,OH.
C.ll aftlr 2:00 p.m.,
,.,._m.
with pooplt you know1 and
I8SI, ... _ wv.
10 Hnd througn tho
Wlnled To IIIJ' Jwok Autoo NOT
rn111 until you hav• lnYMttglled
Rentals
With Or WI- llalorL Coli tho ollorlng.
for Rent

9

C:ELEBRITY CIPHER

CNbrtty Qpnw cryptogrlml we cnated tram quotdOnl Dy ~~ ~. pau and PNMM.
EliCh letter In the c~ptw lltnel• tor 8nQt:hw,
c1ur. R aqua~~

Sot From SWIVel Kitchen CI!IIN,
10 SI&gt;Md B~la Uka -·$50, Cftoap All For $10, 114o44f.2157.
611~3005
S.-1 Unci Doooo IIIII 91- l f l l o r $:10 .14-446-4127.
1081 Portt- boot 18 Mercury motor, ~; 11117 ..,. SrnHh •
mooloi 14,
tlquo Glboon guitar, conol~
81001 '!a. !'fa~ ......
tlon, $400; 38&amp; SX P'ocltlnl loll. ........
p~mp.rrr.AClcomputor wHh 107 ~~on~ · t~o~vo, donl12go.
3~ up:dtilrgun,...w.·sr
14" VGA monhor, 1800; 114-182..
3517.
SCaln- 11001 Loa Burning
2 Eloctrlc Recliner un cttolr-. $50, tl4 .1. 3141.
114 446 4484.
2 Pltco Living Room SU(te Good
Condhlon, $'ICIO, 080 114-4410111.
Bunlono tamh!g bod · 2
Yamohllwlhomt
loud · 11" """*• Cryolll lun WollewDOt.1
&amp;.,....,..
IliOn ._ , ., on !hom,
5200M. 304-175-7211.
· - - ·- \$1200
t-.i Frlm,.
2~11. oquorkmoo, ftoh' I oo- . .~ 11
$150M. 1·7Sgat. •
S.m-vlllo'lonnyiiiH!Ikle
qu1rluin. tlah I IOO"JCrlle,
~­
QOO; 304-87W52t.
Oitlco has fuh llno ilzM .....
All Hond Plecod Qulft T - lor flouao. JuniQr kkll 4 10
Sola NO. 114:1.. 1117.
•
XXXL Compoclve - · FriS.J.Sun, noon tiN
All Wood Tobit 160.114 245 1171. othoN doya I llli4-2'll'
1881.
Alum. llorm Door Wlh , 018•
And SciHna IIZII: :llzll $40, ,.,........ Vloumlll ......... • . .
814-211-11131.
~ II
f171•...-.. --~ .. .
Blue •phlro ring, triZII I, Chrlotm• PrMontl 304-TJI. Worm llomlng - l o ...._.., 40,000 BTU, 'tiOD. 31M- .
1111311. '

-Oiloo.

lady

FEARIN6 A FIERI'
I Ltl~AT'S A SUPPER
EX:PLOSION,I-lE LEAP5 0151-1 DOING ON
FROM TilE COCKP IT~ Tt.IE RUNWA'I ?~

':t•·

w-.

long-hotrod dog. Kld'o
304-1175-451111.

-

+K

ZJI4.

ol••

3 Boclroom Houoo, Jrrlt..-o

111112 10180 Tralltr. IW9o
Spoclouo A-... With c-.
rol c.mnao Throughout. Throo
Boci..,_,-Two Bell!. Hugo Gordin ~ In Mut• hlh. Onr
1200 Sq. Ft. L.oto 01
Hu All Tho Extru. Llvocllo
Loa Tllon Ono YHr. Excotltnl
CondHion, lluot S.. To AP'
.......... Coli
114-24'1-2032
Leave M•uge H No Anaw.,,

lead:

RMiiltla car elereo ~

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

lorry, 614-448-1157.

G'-tlc , _ yord aaloFriiloy ond Sotu~
Nov. 12 l
13. Third Sti'MI,
• acroe~
from bort&gt;or ohop. Fumlturo,
1ppllance•, houMw1,.., top,
loll of mlec.

Pass
Pass

PD.oo tell 1111• 7:'""
· 114-~
r~ · ;,
·•

2 Bedroom Houoo With mont Off 511, AI Cfty UtiiMiool
$38,500 Firm, Flnonco, Col

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Pass

IIIIi ·~

31 Homes for sale

77W711.

WITH UNBHIE'IABLE
SKILL ~E 6l!IDE5
T~E STRICKEN

Supp'trs

&amp; I.IVf·~lock

' lllhllll huiCII I _ , . _...

Pua

Pua

;;PEANUTS

. . wAINt•, m. 114 • aua.

are available on an equal
-unity basis,

8

1115
a...,
- - 1/Z tolt
plcll-up,
305 ~. ··ou~o., toQI
booM; 70,000 ....... ~-..
251'11.

au-t . . . ..., bed, nnr ....t-

Pass

Eul

t+
u

By Phillip Alder

1114
· 4ctl.. llopd...
$1100l'tinl
lltm. ~·

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

a lllcrwawo

Hutch. llltchlng .... ' .,........

It
It

Nortb

Let us get
organized

72 TruCks for Sale

Clorlnlf 1144'JII.27ZI.

w...

~ning

LOWEEZ.Y·-CAN
I BORRY A
PENCIL AN'
A PIECE OF
PAPER?

BORRY FROM
LOWEEZ.Y-UH••

Sootb

-

Puzzle

NEA Crouword

... · 1201 North lloln,
HUD -011, 1300. Alto. 4br.

PIIQI t

I

I

I

GIULEG

f:,~-~,......"'T~-.;:~~..~-=-rl-1 G)

.

.

_

_

.

_

.

Comp lete the chyc kle quoted
b y t•ll •ng in the m•u•no words
you d evelop from step No 3 below.

r 1• r r 1

NUMBERED lETTERS IN
1 ,,,NT
THESE 5QUARES

,
1•

I ~~·~:~~~ lETTERS

I IIIII

_

•

_

_

•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Openly • Basic • Gravy - Mumble-- BABY to SLEEP
Lawyer to client 'Did you commrt this cnme? 1want
the truth." "No, sir," the client replied finnly. "I can prove
rt tool My wife can swear I was tn the nursery singing the
BABY to SLEEP.'
. _,

NOVEMBER 9 1.

�•

~
•'

Tuesday, November, 9, 19~' •

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

· P.age 10-The Dally Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

Cavs
win first

He wants building codes revised ;
for stairs with 11-inch treads and 7• ~
inch risers. His proposal .prom'pted :
~ lobbyinll blitz froln lhe National '
As~ociauon of Home Builders, ;
wh1ch contends that larger stairs •
would add at least 150 square feet ;
and $1,500 in costs to a typical :
house.
•

Pick 3:
401
Pick 4:

cage game

6364
Buckeye 5:
7-8-15-18-35

Page ·4

•

I

NAHB 's Richard Meyer dis- f
missed Templer's work, saying ;
people fall when stairn are improp· '
erly lighled, have loose carpeting :
or have objects placed in the way. :

by Bob Hoeflich
will be sent home Ill recuperate for
30 days before undergoing the second. Friends are planning a benefit
on his behalf and have set the date
for Nov. 20. I'll fall you in more
on that as plans progress.
Dorothy Hutchinson of Columbus dropped a note in regard to the
recent observance of the 103rd
binhday of Marcia Karr of Syracuse. Dorothy and her twin brother, Donald, ar~ Marcia's cousins
and coincidenlally share the same
birthday date-not the same year,
of course. Dorothy and Donald are
"only 74" as Dorothy puts it
The units of your Meigs County
Emergency Services were not just
loafin~ around during October.
· Umts made 244 runs taking 122
patients Ill Veterans Memorial Hospital; 29 to Holzer Medical Center;
14 to Pleasant Valley and 22 to
other hospitals. Runs per unit
included Columbia, one; Middlepan, 60; Olive, 11; Pomeroy, 66;
Racine, 20; RuUand, 40; Syracuse,
. 27, and Tuppers Plains, 19.
In addition, the services made
73 transfer runs and handled three
aero-medical runs during the
month.

Bob White of C8rr Road, that's
between Alfred and Darwin, is having some health problems lmd was
scheduled to undergo the rust of
two surgeries at the Cleveland
Clinic yesterday.
Following the farst operation he

Probably no one questions the
opinion that deer are certainly
beautiful animals. By the same
token, if you're reading accounts of
highway accidents in which deer
play a part. no one can doubt that
the deer population, indeed, does
need Ill be tnmmed down.
You may or may not like Ross
Perot However, he does appear to
be beneficial as a pan of our country's system of checks and balances. It's not a pleasant task, but
somebody beuer be doing it. Do
keep smiling.

Study finds junk food ads
a growing health hazard
of children's television
By DANIEL Q. HANEY
AP Science Writer
ATLANTA (AP)- Violencepacked car100ns are not the only
potential hazard of too much Satur·
day morning TV. A swdy finds a
sharp increase recently in ads for
high-fat foods aimed at youngsters.
Criticism of children's television usually focuses on the mayhem in the programs themselves.
However, earlier research has
shown that the more TV youngsters
watch, the fatter they are and the
higher their blood cholesterol levels.
The latest study, released Monday, shows that the advertising for
fast-food chains and packaged
meals, such as canned spaghetti,
has suddenly doubled after remain·
ing constant at about 20 percent of
commercials for two decades. And
an even bigger proportion of these
ads than ever before are faUed with
images of fauy fried chicken, hamburgers and pizza.
"You can get a healthy meal at

-Group to perfonn
'fhe Pfeifers, a gospel group
whtch presents everything from
four-part acappella harmonies to
instruments, will be at the
Reedsville !'lazarene Church. at 7
p.m. on
llld. S~y nighiL
The .
Jl'OUP IS leal weekly
on ~levtston staUOIII acrosa the
nation and arc coosl(lered dynamic
petfot DIUS. The lev.]ohn Douglas
mvircs the public to allend.

::;T

'

a fast food restaurant. But a child
watching television doesn '1 get to
see those," said Lisa C. Cohn, a
nutritionist who conducted the
study with Dr. Thomas J. Stare at
Columbia-Presbyterian Medical
Center in New York.
Cohn and Stare set out to see
what happened on television after
the National Cholesterol Education
Program drew up new dietary
guidelines for children and teenagers in 1991.
The eating rules suggest that
youngsters cut their daily intake of
fat to less then 30 percent of tolal
calories. Saturated fat should make
up no more than 1.0 percent of calories. Currently, U.S. children gel
about 36 percent of their daily calories from fat, and 14 percent is sat·
orated fat.
On May t5, t886, Emily Dickinson
died of nephritis in Amherst, Mass.
She had not left her home since t865.

Thank You .
For Your Vote
of ·confidence
Robert Beegle
Paid lor by Canddall, 6th St. Racine

BARBARA STREISAND
LAS VEGAS .(AP) - People
- people who have tickets Ill Bar·
bra Streisand's New Year's concerts in Las Vegas -are the lucidest people in lhe world.
Or so they must think.
Tickets for both shows at the
1S,200-seat MOM Grand sold out
hours after they went on sale Sunday at prices ranging from $50 to
$1,000, hotel spokesman Tom
Brundy said. They're Streisand's
first non-charity shows in 27 years.
Streisand's current album,
"Back to Broadway," rockeled Ill
No. I on the Billboard charts in its
farst week. She has 21 platinum and
37 gold records.

•••

NEW YORK (AP)- !'-UOmey
General Janet Reno, Amencan Red
Cross head Eli~abeth Dole,
Supreme Court Jusuce Ru!it Bader
Gmsburg and screenwnter and
director Nora Ephron are among
Glamour magazine's Women of lhe
Year.
.
,
D?le was Cited for strong leaders.h•p,when niltur)l;l di_saste~s
stnk.~. ; _Reno for t~ki~J! b1.g
steps , Gmsbur~,Cor bemg a falf
f?rce for change ; and Ephr!&gt;n for
. placln.g wo~en -.a~~ a wnterm the d1~ect11r s ch8lr.
. The hst announced Mo~day also
mcludes poet laureate R1ta Dove,
Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders,
sex crimes prosecutor Linda
Fairstein, .i?Ckey Julie Krone, documentary fllmmal_ce_r Anna Dev~re
S'!'llh and geneuc1st Mary-Ciatre
Kmg.
·
•••
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)
- Debonair actor Roger Moore is
home again and recuperating nicely, thank you.
Moore, best known for playing
suave British secret agent James
Bond, had surgery to remove an
enlarged prostate Nov. 2 at CedarsSinai Medical Center, his
spokesman Jerry Pam said. The 65year-old actor went,home Sunday.

Moore d•d. not have prostate
cancer, Pam S81d.
Moore lOOk over the ~ond ro!e
from Sean C~~e;rr. playmg 007 ~.~
such films as Ltve and Let D1e,
"The Spy Who Loved Me" and
"A View to a Kill."
•••
' NEW YORK (AP) - Katie
Couric and Bryant Gumbel admit
that broadcasting NBC's "Today"
show from the sueetsofNew York
could be a little dicey.
But the network is belling $15
million it'll be a hiL
The morning show· is scheduled
to move into a new glass-fronted,
street-level studio in Rockefeller
Center by mid-1994. Currently,
"Today'' is broadcast from a third·
floor swdio.
"I'm a little bit concerned about
what kind of antics people will pull
outside the window, but hoping
that it won't get too out of conuol," Couric said.
"Now we're going to have to
clean up our manners when we're
off the air," Gumbel said.
·
''Now with Tom Brokaw ·&amp;
Katie Couric" will also broadcast
from the street-level studio.

!:'11'·1

•••

CONYERS, Ga. (AP) Howard Rollins, co-star of televi-

sion's "In lhe Heat of lhe Night" :
is out of jail again
A friend post~d $10,000 bond
Monday for RoUins, who had been:
in jail since his arrest Saturday on
charge of driving under the influ-'
ence.
·;
The 42-year-old actor was:
arrested after his car was seen:
weaving in traffic, Police Chief
Roland Vau~hn said.
11 was hiS fafth arrest in a yearand a half for allegedly driving:
drunk, reclcJessly or 100 fast
:
Rollins plays lawyer and former
policeman Virpl Tibbs in the TV.
series, which 1s filmed in nearby.
Covington and stars Carroll·
O'Connor
'
His chiuacter was reintroduced·
to the series just last weelc after an
absence caused by Rollins' five- ·
week jail term for a probation via-·
lation.
·
•••

a:

·. "It's going to be nip and tuck,
. l)ut if we hold spending down, we
can fanish lhis year with the money
we have," Middleport Mayor
· Dewey Horton told Council mem-·
bers at Monday night's regular
meeting.
Horton said that be is receiving
· good cooperation from all village
employees who are working to cut
. d!)wn on purchases and to hold
·costs down in other ways.
At lhe end of Octllbcr there was
. a b .. lance of $43,907.36 in all
funds, according to the repon of
. Clerk· Treasurer Teri Hockman.
However, 13 of the 21 village
· funds showed dertcits.
. Funds with balances were gen.ceral fund, $28,844 .~0; water sys·
-tern improvement, $359.55; water
$15,962.11; sanitary sewer,
$1,741.95; Ohio Department of
.Natural Resources waterways,
$1 ,244.97; water meter trusts.
$26,371.62; the revolving loan
fund, $16,404.89; and the refuse
fund, $8,680.56, for a total of
$99,609.85.
.
All' other funds showed deficits
totaling $55,702.44.
. ~ T!'~-~.t roointenance,
$1~,;~; mm•-&amp;oiJ, $2,018.82;
(ire equipment, ·$S',801.S8: fire
truck, $4,701.56; tree planting,
$1,359.19; economic development,
$8,024.89; pul)lic uansportation,
$4,093.09; recreation, $15,400.52;
cemetery, $3,338.32; arts council,
$1,635.53; Issue 2, $1,380.35;
Betsy Ross housing project,
$3,245.70, and tree removal
$2,655.
Receipts into all funds for Octo·
ber were $95,089 .13 while disbursements tlltaled $103,871.84.

There are 24 major and minor mu·
sical scales. The word scale derives ·
from the Italian word "scala." mean· ·
ing step or stairway.
The names ol the months come
!rom the ancient Roman calendar
April comes from "aperio;· the Latin
word meaning "to open.'1

By-JAMES HANNAH

·

disposing or something thro~gh
open burning, and that's not
allowed by law."
Paul said he had thought the fire
was a symbOlic gesture and that
wood was the only thing burned.
But he said several people complained after the latest bonfue that
books and reconds were burned.
During the OcL 30 fue, city fuefighters were called to the church
parking lot, but left after inspecting
the site.
Larkins acknowledged that portions of books have been used to
light the fires.
"And if the rue burned low we
used them to keep the fire goi~g,"
he said.
But he said no laws were braken.
"It mi!lhl be a matter of their
interpretaoon," he said.
Paul said his agency doesn 'I
want to penalize anybody. It only
wants only to make sure everyone
knows what the law says.
"This is not a big deal," Paul
said. "We just want to make Sure
that things Sta? under contra[" ·
Larkins S8ld Paul's agency sent
the letter without investigating. He
also believes someone who opposes the rues is manipulating the govemment.
"We've had fire chiefs out here
every time," he said. "We've
,
d
. .
never one •t pnvate1y. Its never
been don~ !n a ~me~: hidden....
We k;now II s polibcal.

''

,,~

e.

Business
loans may
be availa.ble

11/1/93
thru 11114/93

A federal program providing
loans for community and business
development projects could make
money available to new businesses
in Meigs County.

•

According to John R. Lentes,
pres.ident of the Meigs County
Reg1onal Planning Commission,
the U. S. Department of Agriculture, through the Farme ; Home
Administration, offers a rural
deyelopment loan program which
targets nual development
The loan program, entitled the
F:mHA intermediary Relending
Program, l!lakes funds available to
business facilities and community
development projects in ntra1 areas
(defined as areas with populations
less than 25,000). Loans of up Ill
$2 million are made by FmHA to
i~terrnedia~ie~. such as the plannJng comm1ss1on, who then relend
the money to the ultimate recipi·
ents. A maximum of $150,000 rna?
~ loaned to each ultimate recipient.

o·ELINQUENT REAL E.STATE
PROPERTY NOTICE
Ia compliance wit• provlslans of Sectla1 5721.03 of the
Revised Code of t•e State of o•la, there wUI be publsHd
on November 22•d aad November 29, 1993, In t•ls
•ewspaper, ci delillqtelt Iaad list co1talnlng the description
of tile property as It appears 01 t•e tax 1st, the aame of
the person I• whose IICIIIt the property Is listed, the amont
of taxes 11d pnahtes due and 1apald.
Eac• perso• c•araed wit• real property taxes aad
pe1ahlts MY pay tt•e f1ll amo1nt of taxes it the Meigs
Conly Treas~rer's OHke ~y 4:30p.m. 01 Novemller 18,
1993, to avoid p~~atfo1.
·
. Tile avoid addltla1al l•terest charge, a taxpayer lillY
eater IIIIo a wrHte• agreem11t with the Coaaty.Treasurer·
to pay oae·flft. (1 /5) 0' .... dellnqtelt taxes, plus an
c.rre1t taxes due prior to December 1, 1993.
Ust wiiH ready for plhlkatla•
Novemkr 22 and Novllllller 29
Naacy Pcder ·Cant~MI .
Meigs Couity Auclflr

..
Get 3 great items all for one low price now at
Dairy Queen~ Everyones favorite, a big, juicy
1/3. pound • Double Cheeseburger. Add large size
fnes, and a huge 21 ounce soft drink

~~~h=~~i~~~~~.
~
~i
last long at your participating ·
Dairy Queen• Brazier• store.

wflls
..
0
(jOL

'

I

'•·

/llb. pn:~ weight

'1

•

•
•

We lreat You Righr
Oalry Outen"tknt t1t proud 1190!11Kn aflhe Chlknft.. flll'acll
Telethon, which benelltt'IOeal J\QipltaiiiOr oNidrwl.

•

•

Nitwort1

Sun - Thurs. 10 B.fltl. tq 9 p.m., frl. - Sat. ·til 10 p.m.

700N. 2nd Middleport, OR

99_2·3377

;

I

1
••

(

..•'

The panicipating intermediary is
required to establish a revolving
loan program to administer the
funds, so that collections from
lOans to the recipients in excess of
rieccessary operating expenses and
ctebt payments can be used for
more loans to ultimate recipients.
. · Any type of legal entity, including individuals and private and
public organizations may receive
loan funds lhrbugh the intermediat.Y agency. Loans may be uaed to
tstablish new businesses, expand
existing business, creation of
employment opportunities, saving
existing jobs, or community development projects.
· Loans are scheduled for repay·
mcnt over a period of up to 30
years at one percent interest per
ahnum.
.
: Questions relating to the Intermediary Relending Program may
be directed to Lenies at 992-6371.

3 Seettona. 21 P~~ge~ 3 1 - ·
A Multlmedle lne. NIJII IP JifJW

Miller rape case

Attorneys say
jury prejudice,
call for new trial

•

Book burning to be doused
Assoc:iated Press Writer
. J?A YT~N. Ohio (AP) .- A
mmtster 58!d he has ~o mtenuon of
stoppmg h1s church s ~nual bon·
fare even though polluuo!l-control
regulators have warned h1m about
burning books.
The Rev. Donovan Larkins, pastor of the. Spirit of Life Christia_n
C.enter,, Sat~ Monday the church IS
consulung Its attooley.
',',We' re. not goin~. to s,tand idly
by, Larkms wd. Were Just a
church that wants to help people,
and, we're g'!ing to help peopl~.
We re not 'omg to be hmdered m
do':'~~·'
.
....,...,,s S8l.d· the. cburch held 1ts
fourth annual burmng Oct 30. He
said th~ bumin(!S _demonstrate his
church s re~unci80on of books and
other matenal relaled to pomograp,hy, the occ~t and what he called
f~;;t gods. ,
. ..
,
We won t stop 11, he sa1d.
"We .have ~ver dl?ne anything in
v10~uon of c11y ordinances, and~
don t '!\an to v1olate those ord1·
nances.
.
B~t John Paul, SUJX:MSOr of the
RegiOnal ~" Pollutton Control .
Agency, S8ld ~e has sent ~e group
a letter warmng that thetr perm1t
allows them to bum only clean, dry
wood.
. .
. If they bum books, they w~U be
v1olattng the law, the lettq wd. A
violation of the ordinance could
lead to a $100 fine.
"There are pollution prob!ems," said Paul. "They would be

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November
,... 10, 1993

:Village
may end
•
:year In
black

Streisand tickets sell for big bucks .;

Beat of the Bend...
Athens will be holding its annual Christmas parade this Friday
weD before the turl:ey is cooked.
On !.he other hand, Pomeroy is
waiting until the Sunday after
Thanksgiving, Nov. 28, to stage its
annual parade welcoming in the
ChristmaS season. Busy Tony Dingus, director of the Meigs High
School award winning band, is
heading the parade for Pomeroy
merchants.
Tony is
also in !.he process of organizing a
jazz band of about 16 students who
will be performing in lhe Big Bend
Minstrel Association's musical to
be presenled at 8:10p.m. on Satur·
day night, Nov. 27, at the Meigs
Junior Hi~h School in Middleport,
the evenmg before the parade.
This will mark the first lime that
insuumenlal students from the high
school have been represenred by a
group and everyone is looking forward to that. The jazz band will
present two numbers during the
production.
Meanwhile, back Ill the parade.
It will form at I p.m. at the rear of
the former Pomeroy Junior High
School and will move out at 2 p.m.
Tony is urgin$ everyone to take
part and a registration form will
appear in The Daily Sentinel later
!.his week. Theme for the parade
will be Christmas Along the River
and there will be no judging of
floats and other units, as I understand it.
Certainly other communities of
the county wiD also be welcoming
in the holiday season with special
events and their plans will
undoubtedly be forthcoming.

."\lol. _., NO. 139
Mu111medll Inc.

Names in the news

DIABETES PROCLAMATION- Pomeroy Mayor Bruce
Reed proclaimed November to be National Diabetes Month in the
village during a brief ceremony Monday afternoon. Here, Reed
signs the proclamation while Donna Zuspan, vice president or tbe
South Central Chapter of the American Diabetes Association,
looks on.

•

a -1

That's true, too, Templer said .:
But he said his experiments, funded ~
by the National Science Founda.;_!
tion, prove stair shape is a lar$e :
problem. ~nd, he adds,, the steps m \
many staircases aren t even the •
same size -a sure way to trip 111111- !
ple up.
• f .,t

Low ton!pt oround 31, clear.
Tbundly, pardy IIIDIIy, blp Ia
mld-50..

NAFTA DEBATE- VIce President AI
Gore and Ross Perot talk with television talk
show host Larry King during a break on
CNN's "Larry King Live" in Washington

Tuesday. Gore and Perot debated the North
American Free Trade Agreement. Gore said
that Perot would profit from the defeat or
NAFTA. (AP)

Gore and Perot debate NAFTA,
prepare for House showdown
WASHINGTON (AP) The hardfought campaign over
the North 1\plerican free Trade
AgreementJS'J\'eadinJii ,\l!W&amp;rcl a
House showdown jlfter a quarrelsom~ debate piuing Vice
President AI Gore against Ross
Perot- chart for chan and quip
for sardonic quip.
"The politics of negativism
and fear only go so far," said
Gore during Tuesday night's
encounter on CNN. He suggested that billionaire Perot's opposition resulted in part from his
political ambitions and business
interests.
"Our problem is we do the
world's dumbest trade agreements," countered the onetime
presidential candidate. He said
that despite the backin11 of President Clinton and all hving former presidents, the agreement
remains unpopular because it
will destroy American jobs.
For all the one-liners and disagreements over trade policy,
though, there was no clear connection between the debate and
the fate of the treaty that would
link Canada, the United States

and Mexico in the world's
largest free trade zone.
The' votes that count wlll be
cas~" ne11t Wednesday in-- the
House - where supponers concede they ·are well short of a
majority - and later in the Senate if the legislation makes it
that far.
Clinton is making daily telephone calls to lawmakers. Gore
arranged a factory tour in Denver today to tout the agreement,
and aides said several business
exec uti vcs from the forest and
paper product industries would
express support in an appearance before White House
reponcrs.
For his part. Perot lined up
media interviews for today, and
had anti-NAFTA rallies scheduled in Detroit and Seattle over
the new several days.
Both sides are lobbying
intensely in a battle that has
divided the Democratic party
and thrown Clinton and many
Republicans into an unlikely
coalition.
Fighting from behind, the
While House trumpeted five

declarations of support during
on Tuesday, then arranged for
~tep. Jim Bacchus, D-Fia., to
announc.c. his support within
moments of the end of the
debate.
Clinton and NAFTA backers
hoped for momentum from the
debate, a confrontation in which
Perot and Gore sat elbow-to·
elbow for 90 minutes around
Larry King's interview table.
Perot, famous for using
charts in his 30-minute campaign commercials, came to the
debate with one designed to
show that the American trade
surplus with Mexico was less
beneficial than NAFTA suppon.
ers claim. But Gore had a chart
of his own, designed to show
the reverse.
Perot had a photograph, as
well , a picture of slums surrounding a Mexican manufac turing plant, and he said it
demonstrated · his claim that
Mc.ico exploits its workers.
Gore countered with a photograph of two long-ago lawmalcers who sponsored restrictive
Continued on
3

Rotary views mine presentation
Members of the Middleport·
Pomeroy Rotary Club watched a
video presentation by Gene
Triplett, president of the Rotary
club. on the Crown City Mining
Company for the program at the
Monday night meeung.
The Crown City Mining Company conducted a a strip mining
operation near the Gallia-Lawrence
Countr border. Gene worked at the
operaoon from 1978 to 1988.
Another local resident worldng
at the operation was Dick Freeman,
Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy, who
worked on both the big shovel and
the dragline for many 'years. The
shovel according to Freeman had a
histllry of its own. The shovel was
being built .and operated in Indiana
in 1935 and, after being used there
for many years, was dismantled
and brought to the Crown City
operation and reassembled in 1970.
The shovel had a capacity of 35
tons in the bucket, but later the
bucket size was reduced for better
operation. The dragline bucket was
II cubic fards. Both the shovel and
the draghne, according Ill Triplett
were used to remove the overbur·
den over the coal seam. Triplett
indicaled the overburden could be
removed to a depth of 120 feet if
necessary.
The dragline. was operated on a
24 hours a day, seven days a week,
basis with a tlltal crew of eight men
for lhc week. Only the oiler and the
operatllr were on lhe draa line and
shovel during any eight liour. period.
The trucks were also of huge
capacity being able to handle 50
tons or coal a bip. Triplett also said
tl.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Nen Staff
Auomeys representing convicted rapist George William Miller
Jr., 52, of Middlepon are seeking a
new trial for their client.
Miller was found guilty in the
Meigs County Court of Common
Pleas on Oct. 22 of three counts of
rape which occurred between June
I and Aug. 31 , 1988.
In a motion faled Friday in the
Meigs County Coon of Common
Pleas, attllmeys Harry R. Reinhart
and Gerald G. Simmons, both of
Columbus, claim the jury that
heard the case was prejudiced
against Miller.
Calling the extent of juror mis'
conduct "tremendous", Reinhan
and Simmons maintained the jury
pool "was COJ!Ipletely infesled with
the knowledge of (Miller's prior
conviction."
Although the motion was faled
Friday, it was ordered sealed
because it connicted with an order
by Judge Dan W. Favreau not to
publish the names of jurors. An
amended motion, with the names of
the jurors deleted, was made available to The Daily Sentinel Tuesday.
· The crucial element discussed in
the motion is that jurors had knowledge of Miller's prior rape convic-

lion which, upon appeal, was
ordered to be retried with a prelimi·
nary trial date scheduled for Dec.
14.
The motion faled states Miller's
sister-in-law observed several
instances of juror misconduct
The sister-in-law reporred she
overheard a porential juror, during
jury selection, tell others that
Miller had a )?rior rape conviction.
Three of the JUIOI'S who were present during the conversation were
among the final jury panel that
heard !.he case, Reinhan and Simmons assened.
In her affidavit, she said the
mother or the victim stllod outside
and discussed Miller's prior conviction with jurors present. In addition , the mother of the alleged victim in the earlier case. commented
that Miller "did the same thing to
my boys".
Additional affidavits from
Miller's wife and daughter suppon
the sister-in-law's claims. AU three
reported hearing jurors mentioning
Miller's prior conviction.
Jurors convicled Miller following a brief deliberation and Favreau
of McConnelsville, hearing the
case by assignment, ordered a presentence investigation.
Miller is scheduled for sentencing at noon on Nov. 19.

Coal strike

Congressmen briefed
on strike negotiations
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
"Everyone understands that
- The Clinton administration things are at a delicate point right
intensified its efforts to resolve a now, and no one wants 10 upset lhat
Uniled Mine Workers strike, giving balance," Wise said.
an optimistic repon to coalfield
''Things might leak out that
congressmen.
could possibly be harmful. (so) we
Labor Secretary Roben Reich dido 't press for details," be said.
and special mediator Bill Usery on
Rep. Frank McCloskey. D-lnd.,
Tuesday briefed coalfield congress- said Reich and Usery cautioned the
men who had expressed concern congressmen "to be very general"
that the administration was not in their public starements. .
doing enough to resolve the six"Usery described the outlook as
month dispute.
'optimistic'," McCloskey said.
"I did come away with the "Anything can change or blow up
impression that the administration or go wrong at any time, but 1
has picked up its efforts," said guess they're on the verge of a setRep. Bob W1se, D-W.Va. Last tlemcnt"
week Wise drafted a letter, also
Negotiators. for the two sides
signed by 13 other U.S. House • met until midnight Monday and
members, requesting the briefmg.
reconvened at 10 a.m. Tuesday
Usery and Reich thought accordinz to a statement by
progress had been made, Wise said. Usery's efface. The two sides also
''But I'm not comfortable until I met throughout the weekend.
hear an announcement" that a set·
The meetings are being conducttlement has been reached, he said.
ed in a Washington, D.C.. hotel.
The UMW began its strike May
Calls to Usery's office late
10 against selected members of the Tuesday were answered by a
Bituminous Coal 0peratllrs Associ- recording.
ation in a dispute over job security
Usery said earlier that he
and future employment for union planned to keep the two sides at the
members. The union says it has table until a seulement was
17,500_ members o~ strike in se~en reach~d . While mediating the
slates m Appalach1a and the Mid- UMW s 1989 negotiations The
west
.
.
Pittston Co., Usery kept the two
W1se sa•d the briefmg Tuesdar. sides at the table for 92 consecutive
held at a House offace building 10 hours before an agreement was
Washington , D.C., was long on reached.
optimism but shon on specifics.

,.....-- Local briefs-B&amp;E investigated by police

MINING VIDEO - Gene Triplett, preslde•t or the Middle·
port-Pomeroy Rotary Club presented a video on tbe former
CI'OWII City MlniDg Compmy operation durln1 the elub's rqular
Mond•y nlzbt meetlne.
the biggest bulldozer had a blade
eight feet high and 24 feet long.
Other coal loading equipment was
smaller.
The club members appeared
very interested in the video of an
industry which is not as large now
as in early years. The Crown City
operation was closed in 1986,
according to Triplett, and the next
two years were spent in reclaiming .
the pits developed.

In other buiiness lhe club elect·
ed officers for the year 1994-95 so
they could be reporled in Decem •
ber to international headquaners in
Evanstlln, IU. The officers who will
take office in July 1'994 will be:
Jon Perrin, president; LlQyd Blackwood, vice president; John Anderson, secretary, and Hal Kneen, trea·
surer. The ladies or the Heath
Church served the meal.
-~

A brealcing and entering at McClure's Restaurant in Pomeroy is
under investigation by Pomeroy Police.
Jim McClure who manages the restaurant reported to police that
when he came Ill work Wednesday morning he found the side door
had been forced open to gain ~ntry and 'that a safe had been
removed. The amount of money 10 lhe safe was not disclosed by
offic18ls.
The incident took place sometime after lhe restaurant closed 11
ll p.m. Tuesday night, police said.

Pomeroy accident probed
Minor damage was incurred to two vehicles in an accident Tuesday night on lhe West Main Street bridge underpass•
Pomeroy police said that TamUene K. Pettit, 35, of Pomeroy had
Stllpped the 1990 Ford stalionwagon she was driving at the slOp sign
before entering West Main when her vehicle was struck from
behmd by a 1991 Chevrolet truck driven by Raben Cunningham of
Syracuse.
. There was light damag~ to both vehicles. Neither driver was
Cited.
Continued on PaJ!e 3
/

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