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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Meigs
election
chart
'

Page 12

Pick 3:

..

601

ELECTIO\ ·n

Pick 4:

1291

.,

•
.

Low llllllghtln mld.JOs.

Tbunday, cloudy. Cbaace ol
rllln 40 perctnL Hlgb Ill mld-405.

I

JtiVD CVR.an'S FOR SENIOR CIIIZI!'.NS

l'AGE TWEl.VE

WHAT'S HAPPENING??
TuadaJ· Nov-ber 311 :()().. Ad .
Council
.
10-3· Belld
WO!tday- we will be making die bead necklaces from churdl hdJelinJ for sale in lhc c:enltlr craft shop Come
and help wi!h.thilf'un aaft.
·
•
WedDesdaJ· Nov_.,_ 48:30-11 :30 &amp; 1:30-3:30-Fiu shotS- given by lhe Gallia County·
Health Dept.
,

":l•ace

/n.Gallia County

Scenes From
Locks and Dam Tour

Yot. .U , No.131

•Portable (Refillable) .Stationary

·Howar~

unseats JoneS; Lentes tops Story

Thursday· November 510-12-Biood Pressure

~3 "~Y ~ltlrpiece Craft- Jmrie Reynolds will be here to

.
ac
on a pme cone turkey ccnltlrpiece for your Thanbgivmg fable. Fee $12.~. Call446-7000 to register
Tuesdi!J· November 10.
·
·
11 ~00 •. B~day Party- VetelliDS' Day Salute- all velt68Rs arc
cspec;ially IDVJtcd to IUend.
. 10:()()..3:00-Craft sale- We will have a Craft show aloog with the
BiJthday Party.I'IM to do some Chrisimas $hopping.

JI'OUJII

ODe JI'OUP tourlna

tile Yllllo tile anion eDjoyed
tile .....lou ~II day as well u
tile tour tile ctam.

011

COICEIITUTOIS

or

::-1000 for an appointment

~2:-3- Help with HEAP ljiplications
Mollday- Ncm•ber 1611:JO..Leglslalive Info. Bill Medley
.
•
·
·
TueldaJ· Ncmmber 17.
10:30- Matinee- we willseelhc oontroversial mm "J F K" swt
~ing and flllishin~ after lunch. It raiseS
ne~
WedD~J· N::'..';! ~fate U1 day 29 years ago.
I0-12- Blood Pressure
Tbursda7· November 191:30- Board of Trustees
Friday· November 20. 1~:00 ·Th;anksgiving dinner and program- come have Thanbgivmg,dinncr with your center family.
Tuesda7- November 24.
I :00-Widows Gathering Fall Tea .
Tbunda7 &amp; Friday· November U &amp; 27 •
. Thanksgiving Holiday. Cenltlr closed

.=

!:::.!"

many

WE HONOR

wv MOUNTAINEER CARDS I

%e :Ffower !A{po~
675-2100
700 22nd Street. Point Pleasant

e&amp;lth Safety Aida

eW'!leelch~rs

eUri~Y

ifioapital Bed•
oCanes &amp; Crutches
oCommode Chairs
•Walkers
-24 Hour Service

Supplies
~nsu.,.nce

Claims

Proc•eed (Medicare &amp;

Medicaid accepted)

565 Jaclcson Pike • ·Gallipolis, Ohio
"JUST MINUTES FROM HOLZER"

Captain Doclsol!, U.S. Corps
or Enalneers. poillts out where .
the channel ror the new Locks

446·2206

.

••

FREE

Bed Frame with any
Perfect Sleeper Set!

-

--------882-2517

Serta Gantla Firm

ss9

101 Main Street. New Hoven

~:;~~

'e$alea, Rentals, Repairs

1he Meclcal 5hoppe Inc..
be&amp;iJ!s.

liOn, Ea. Pt.

~~~~

5

S141.00 per .,.,.on lncluclng 3mMII. Come 1nd enJciYtl
lhe holiday
In 8aldatown with llghtaMing,
•
enlef'tiiiMiellt and plenty of lhopplngl

.,._ndor

CALl TODIYI SPICE IS liMITED...
417 SKOND AVENUE

GAWPOUS, OHIO
(614) 4466446.

1.:aOH72·2292

Reg.
5219
5599

5649

TWin. E.L Pc.

1101- Reg.

Ful. Ea. Pt.
o..eon. 2 Pt. Set
KiAJ. 3 Pt. Set

$299

sm

$799

Queen. 2 Pc. Set
King. 3 Pc. Set

. sgg

....

1151
l3ll
14"

lMn. Ea. Pt.

llot.lm
Reg

fliH. Ea. Pt.
· Queen. 2 Pc. Set
K1ng. 3 Pc. Set .

5289
5619
5849

..••

- FREE.

ROBERTH~TENBACH

JANET HOWARD

..

sm

'(Oil'

c~r.e' 5169

Full. Ea. Pc.

Oueen. 2 Pc. Set
l(;ng. 3 Pt. Set

Tw;n Ea. Pt.

Rag.
53&lt;9

1tof. 1111
..
1111

1799

-

-

1111

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Stan'
The fate of the Meigs IndustriesJCar1eton School's latest levy
attempt is not yet known, with JiiSt
night's .vote tallies showing it losin• by only eight votes In the unofficial count, A 10181 of 4,945 votes
were east for the levy, with 4,953
votes against iL
However, 79 ballots cast by registered voters who moved before
Oct. 5 but did 110t report their
·change of addri:iJ to the Meigs
County Board of Elections have
not been c·ounted . Also an
unknown number of ballots from
overseas service personnel postmarked before Election Day are not
included in the counL These will be
added on Nov. 14 during the
BlBII of Election's official counL
The Meig' County Health
Department's 1 mill, five -year
replacement levy of 1 mill for five
years was approved by 53 percent,
receiving 5,272 votes. 4,669 votes,
46.97 percent, were cast against the

Disposal of
Old Bedding

,

, . . , _ . Ui

...

"

JOHNLENTES

JAMES SOULSBY

Carleton School levy trails by 8
votes with 79 ballots still out

Perfact Sleeper Plush o/ Firm

,., .nurr JDMJ • ...... •

·--

Reg.
5229
5519
1549

Ful. Ea. Pc

Sertapedlc UHn Firm

•149

Rot. 1m

Pertect SIHptr Firm

119

Mill. Ea. Pc.
!Men. 2 Pt. Set
ICtng. 3 Pt. Set

$81.50 per peniOI'IIncludlnga holiday dinnerllghiiMing ~ lhopplng

CHRISTMAS IN BARDSTOWN, Kt
DECEMBER 5-6

TWin. Ea. Pt.

Serta Comfort Firm
TWin. Eo. Pt. .... Utt

FESnYAl OF UGHTS
NOVEMIER29

579

.......

Reg .
5119

M. Ea. Pt.

BOI.JDAY TUVEL
ADVENTUUS

Rot. 1111

ByBRIAN J. REED

(.Asthma, Bronchitis)

. WedDmdiiJ· N-ber u.

Tb!:".:~~

Hartenbach, Soulsby, Frank
also Meigs County winners

•For the treatment of
respiratory problema

tl!rft walldq

2 SecUono, 16 Pagee 25 _,,,
A lluiUm..tla Inc. -paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 4, 1992

CoPJ~!ed 1182

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

.... UILY, N

,.,, .., ca.o.a ll.tllr.\v·

levy.
·
· Syracuse Village, current expenses,
The Eastern Local School Dis- renewal, 1 mill, five years, for, 274
t,rict was the only district which (62. 70), against, 1.63, (37 .30);
w~n its bid for a t8x levy. Its five , Racine VIllage, current expenses,
mJII, two year levy was approved renewal, 1.7 m~. five years, for,
by 54.62 percent of the votes 263 (63.37), agamst. 152 (36.63);
receiving 1,212 votes in favor anci Middlepon Village Fire Prolcction,
1,007 votes against (4S.38 ~t). renewal, two m!ll, five years, for,
The Soutl!ern LoeaJ School Dis· 682-(61.89),,apnst, 420 (3.8.11).
trict's 5.3 miU, 23 year bond issue
Rutland Village, current expensfor construction of a new K-8 con- es, renewal, two mills, five years,
solidated elementary school and for, 123 (48.62), against, 130
additional rooms onto the Southern (5 1.38); Rutland Village, current
High School buildinl was defeated expenses, additional, two mills,
by a similar margin, 66.22 percent five years, for, 74, (29.84), against,
(1,488 votes). A total of 759 votes 174 (70.16), Rutland Township
HOWARD FRANK
were cast in favor of the levy operating cemeteries, renewal, .3
(33.78 percent).
mill, five years, for the tax levy,
Meigs Local's five mill . five for, 459 (51.81), against, 427
year pennanent improvemen~ levy (48.19); SultOn Township, opera!-_.
request was defeated by 6lJ.37 per· ing cemeteries, renewal, .4 mill ,
cent (3,031 votes). 1,990 votes five. years, for, 904 (58.32), a!l3inst.
were cast for it, or 39.63 percent.
646 (41.68); Scipio Townsh1p fire
Other levies, and 111e resUlts are protection, renewal, .5 mill, one
as follows: Pomeroy Village, cur-. year, for, 283 (62..33), a~ainst, 171
rent expenses, renewal, 1.9 mills (37.67); Letart Townsh1p, operatBy KATHERINE RIZZO
five years, for, 433 votes (49.43 · ing cemeteries, renewal, 1 mill,
Assoc:iated Press Writer
for, 217 (62.54), against,
percent), against, 443 (50.57); five
Bad
blood and bad checks
130 (37 .46).
.
.
spelled bad news for Ohio Reps.
Mary Rose Oakar and Bob
McEwen.
Voters angry at overdrafts and
other perks of office sent Oakar
• packing after 16 years in office and
ended McEwen 's congressional
career at 12 years.
All the other incumbents were
returned to office.
Voters kept their own long-serving lawmakers in office even as
they approved mandatory retirements in a term-limit initiative.
And they helped Democrats keep a
majority of the stale's sealS in
Congress.
.
Before redistricting, the edge
was 11-10. The pared-down delegation for the JICXI decade begins
with a 10-9 Democratic edge.
For McEwen and Oakar, defel!l
came after mean, expensive cam-

McEwen,
Dakar ousted
by voters

r.ears.

paigns.
FIRE UNDER

INVESTIGATION

•

Pome!:J: Fire Cltlef Daan7 Zirkle reported
Wedn ay tlutt tile cause of a Tuesday after·
noon hou1e nre oa Mulberry A venue is still
uader lnvettllalioll. Roweaa Vauaban oWIIed
the bouse, wblc:b wu O«Upled by Kevin Lemley.

Zirkle reported exteDslve beat and. smoke di!ID·
aae, espec:Jally 0D die IKUnd floor ot the bouse,
u well u water damage. Nobod7 'WIIS home at
the time or tbe nre, and no injurle• were report·
ed.

Clinton promises new
.·blood to.change America .
By JOHN KING
AP PoUtltal Writer
· President-elect Bill Clinton
today promised "the new blood,
the new dircc tion" to change
America, casting his victory over
Preaident Bush as a mandate for a
freah economic course. He moved
quickly to shape a Clinton administralion Pd the 100-day agenda he
will submit to a new-look Demo- ·
Cl1lic Con~·
.
Promismg to deal swiftly with .
the shaky economy thlt turned vot·
en against Bush, Clinton was
·~J with his nnsition team to
belin m earnest the search for a
Ca'binet anil a White House· staff
for the fli'St Democratic admll!istrlltion in 12
.I

years.

·

''I'm sure there'll be announcements later this week," campaign
chairman Mickey Kantor told CBS.
Asked whether they would include
Cabinet choieea, Kantor replied,
"I'm not going to jum~ gun,"
"We will leek lhc
and most
able and most committed people
thioughout this country to be a patt
of our team," Clinton pledaed,
promising to consider Republicans
and independenu as well as
l)emocnus. "The American
le
h~ve :!Died to make a new
rung. .
His fust'priority: an economic
stimu'- us package, anchored by
road, bridge and other projects
designed to create jobs quickly.
Clinton also promised legislation

\:fn-

.'

providing bealth care for all Americans within 100 days, and pledged
to push·quictly for 11 famify leave
law, and cam~gn finance reform.
Vice President Din Quayle concecled that Clinton no a belter campsif.! than the Republleans.
'The two words that cost the
Republicans tbe election -· the
.economy and the
· " said
Quayle on ABC. ·~ion ran
a much better campaign and the
economy wasn't.IOOCL"
Unlike Bus!!, 'CiiniDI! ·win worlc
with a Congress of his own party,
ending a dozen yean of divided
government. Women and minorities made dnmaUc gains in congressionat· races, b11t anti-incumContinued on page 12

.

Oakar took out bank loans and
spent more than $600,000.
McEwen spent more than
Continued on page 12

Meigs County
has record
turnout
Meigs County had a record
turnout of re~ i stered voters in
· Tuesday's elecuon.
Of the 14,4:?0 registered voters,
.10,508, a 72.87 percent voted.
The figures include 79 who
voted under the provision of House
BiU 237. That bill allows those registered voters who moved before
()ct. 5 and neJiected to change
their address With the Meigs Coun·
ty Board lif Elections to vote in that
office.
Those 79 ballots, however, were
not included in tbc count of Toesday's election, but will be lidded
into each precinct total wben the
official count takes pllce on Nov.
14. Also to be counted in at that
time will be any bellots &amp;om overseas mili~ penonnel )IOSIIIIIIfked
before Election Day, but no!
received prior to l'llesday.

percent) to President George
SenliDel News Staff
Bush's 3,893 votes (38.18 percent).
The Democratic !relld which has Independent candidate H. Ross
placed Governor Bill Clinton and Perot claimed 2,074 votes (20.34
Senator AI Gore in the White percent). Other presidential candiHouse also placed two new dates took a 10!al of 43 votes.
Democrats in the Meigs County
U.S; Senator John Glenn, a
Courthouse.
Democrat, lost to Lt. Governor
Democrat Janet Howard unseat- Michael PeWine in Meigs County.
ed County Commissioner Richard Glenn received 4,550 votes, or
E. Jones, who has served Meigs 45.62 percent, while DeWine carCounty in that position for 16 ried 4,754 votes (47.66 percent).
years. She received 53.19 percent Martha Kathryn Grevatt took 670
of the vote, or 5.176 votes, to votes, 6.72 percent
Jones' 46.81. percent, 4,555 votes.
Democrat Ted Strickland
Also defeated was Republican received 5,168 votes (52.45 per·Prosecuting Auorney Steven L. cent) to Congressman Bob
Story, who received 47.41 percent McEwen's 4,686 votes (47.55 perof the vote, 4,629 votes, to cent). That race placed two. new
Pomeroy Auorney John Lentes ' candidates on Meigs County's bat'
5,134 votes. He received 52.59 per- lot, with las! year's re-apportioncent of the vote.
ment and Congressman Clarence
A vacant seat on the board of Miller's defeat against McEwen in
county commissioners, lefi by retir- the June primary.
ing Commissioner David Koblentz, , . Other candidates, and their votes
will be filled by RCJII!blican Robert received in Meigs County follow,
Hartenbach. He clmmed 56.62 per- with county winners in bold type:
cent, or 5,400 votes, to Pemocrat Member of State Board of EdUca·
Bill Snouffer's 43.38 percent He lion, lOth District: Dianne Gillen,
received 4,138 votes. Hartenbach is 1,594 votes (25.71 percent), Bill
Johnso~. 1,560 (25.16), Jack A.
a former county sheriff.
Victorious incumbents were Manach1one, 298 (4.81), Virginia
Sheriff James M. Souls by. , who Milner Purdy,l,Ofil! ~(33
37,), and
carried lhe county wi!h 56.46 per- James E. Sanger, Sr.,
.«'0. 1);
cent of the vcitc, 5,«:17, to Republi· · Chief Justice of the Ohio
can Challenger Paul Gerard's 4j7J Coun: Robert H. Gorm , 2,519
votes (43.54 percenl); and County (36.11), J, Ross Haffey, 939
Treasurer Howard E. Frank, with (13:46), Thomas J. Moyer, 3,518
54.30 percent (5,428 votes) to (50.43); Justice of the Ohio
Democrat Maureen Hennessy ' s Supreme Court (1/1/93), Mark P.
45.7 percent, or4,568 votes.
· Painter, 2,922 (41.78) and Francis .
Unopposed candidates, all E. Sweenty, 4,072 (58.22); Justice
Republicans, received the follow- of the Ohio Supreme Court
ing tallies: Clerk ofCouns Larry E. ( 1/2193), John T. Patton, 3,033
Spencer, 7,828; Recorder Emmo- (42.57), Paul E. Pfeifer, 4,092
gene Hamilton, 1,439; Engineer· (57.43).
elect Robert Eason, 7 ,37(; and
Earl B. Stephenson was unopCoroner Douglas D. Hunter, 7,768. posed in his bid for his seat on the
District; stale raees
Fourth District Court of Appeals,
State Representative Mark Mal- · and received 5,6lJ7 votes in Meigs
one, a Democrat from South Point, County.
was narrowly defeated yesterday in
All vote tallies ·are unofficial
Meigs County by Republican Frank pending the Board of Election's
CremeanS' of Gallipolis. Malone official count on November 14. 79
claimed 49.73 percent, 4,905 votes, ballots cast by those who have
while Cremeans took 4,959 VOleS, moved within the county and who
or '50.27 percent
failed to changed 1he1r address
Meigs C01m1y helped elect the before the October 5 deadline have
country's new President, Bill Clin- not been .counted, nor have an
ton, giving him 4,186 vo~ (41.06 undetenmned num~er of ballots
cast by overseas serviCe personnel.

Results of school tax levies
Voting resulls by precinct on the
local school district tax issues were
as follows:
Defeated • Meigs Local School
District, 5 mill, five year, perm•·
nent Improvements levy.
Bedford- for, 176; againsl, 281.
West Chester - for, 42; against,
67.
RuUand- for, 86; against, 16lJ.
East RuUand- for, 109; against,
226.
West Rutland · for, 119; against,
184.
Salem - for, 122; against, 224.
~ddleport First Ward - for, 62;
agatnst, 96.
.
Middleport SecoJid Ward - for,
131; A"ainst, 117.
Middleport Third Ward • for,
102; against, 214.
Middleport Founh Ward - for,
132; against, 221.
aga~~~M~. First Ward • for •. m;
Pomeroy Second Ward • yes
181; against, ·144.
Pomeroy Third Ward • for, 120;
against, 126.
Bradbury - for, 110; against,
151.
Laurel Cliff - for, 112; againsl,
232.
Rock Springs • for, 94 ;
against, I 58.
Scipio · for, 175;.against, 267.
Flaal • ror 1,990; 11alnst,
3,031

Minersville - for, 130; against
226.
'
Racine • for, 156; against, 2U.
Final· ror, 759; aaatn&amp;t, 1,qa
Pllliled • Eutem Local Scltool
District, renewal or 5 mill, two
year, levy, current operating
expenses:
Bedford • for, 2; against, 2.
North Chester - for, 156·
against, 96.
'
South Chester - for, 192;
agains!, 172.
West Chesler - for, 214; ....
A"ainst, ·
139.
Lebonan • for, 19; against. 32.
North Olive - for, 202; against,
144.
South Olive - for, I52; agam
· st
207.
'
Orange - for, 275; against, 215.
Final - tor 1,212; against,
1,007 ·
,

. Meigs

voters reject
twO State isSUeS

Meigs Countians voted in favor
of all three state issues onltlrm limits 'fhen they went to the polls
TueSday, but VOitd against the proposed constitutional amendment
and the labeling issue.
On Issue 2, limiting ltlrms of U.
S. senators and reJRIIC!IIatives, the
vot~ was 5,692 for and 3,237
agamst; on Issue 3, limiting terms
for state senators and representaDdeated • Southern Local tive:', it was 5,735 for and 3,096
School District, 5.3 mill, 23 year$, agamst; and on Issue 4, limiting
bond Issue ror (Onstructfon of state office holders, it wu s 1•2 10
·,·
, J
new K-1 elementary sc:bool •-'d 3,065.
On Issue I the prOposed consti·
addition to biab stltool:
J..cboilan - for, liS; against, 233. tutional amendment, the vote was .
2,869 in favor and 5,895 against.
Letart· for, 96; against, 243.
Racine· Village - for, 140; On Issue 5, the toxic labeling tax
and penalties bill, the vote 'was
agains1, 264. .
Syracu$e Village - for, 122; 3,232 for the issue and 5 757
againstlt ·
'
against, 296.

�~ednnclay,

Commentary
.

Page-2-The Dally Sentlnat

By 'ack Anderson
and

hael Bz"ns·tez"n

. h .... _:_lei ha
adc 't a high
wh. IC.
~
~m ~
rt
~ty. d acbcording to . ~d
revJewe
Y our assocta e
Henry•. le .L:
- ed
I pt
.Wb1 uus teen ag
se
OUidoon, however, the B found
$63 000 for non-emergency addi~to nine homes 00 four reset·
vations _ not to mentioo a raft of
frill itemS 111Jging from carports to
door
~ audit:~ that many of
these "nice-to-have items are not
authorized" under BIA funding
.d r
AbO $4S 000 was
gspeuln: f:;e!h: co~~ioo~. 8 dish_,._
. ill f
in
wdo":..""'a' ano/)lotl,lngs~~ gn:raang~ ~o;
.. W L_:___
difli
'"""""'B
·IA . onal 10acc.. ~~oft
IS SO
""""
ndi . ·
tha d'd
•U~mp==ts di~ 1
that~ wc:R
remodcli These
_
~ ~ ..,.;n.l:.g. interior~
Jet J!IC
..-· g . · .
exte~lor walls, .replacmg ': 1."Y 1
flooring~ '!as~ good condition,
and modernizing kilchens and bathrooms."
. ..
Daschle told us. 'l"!c way t!'at
the BIA bas rWJ the Indian housing

ft

:l:

-3-- . .

Americans going off
governmental diet

diplomacy.
. .JO
. bs, .......
··~rBut it bas only indirect powers over sue h lh'1~gs as creating
ifll money into the most producuve uses, resolvmg health-cii;I"C 1ssues and
m~ of the other considerations addressed during lhe campa1gn.
That, however didn't prevent voters frl&gt;m demanding lhe magical services of government, nor did it deter the can&lt;!i&lt;Jates !fern promising thelil, ·
as if a wave of the wand could produce anythmg desired.
The redevelopment of such an attitude comes after a period in which
YOICn liked government to remove itself from their backs. That, in fact,
Vf8S the rallying cry that helped elect Ronald Reagan president
After ye.n ,during which government had grown, candidate Reagan
promiaed to make government leaner and more efficient, 8!Jd hoped lhereby to llllow the private sector lhe freedom to be miR creauve and produc-

tiv~t Wll

in a ~ the beginning of 1he great political diet, a slim-down
period ~ lasled for most of two terms. But since then, the fattening Pft!·
cess has begun again. Government regulation actually rose under President Bush.
·
.. ·
There is a coro11a1y to the slim down-fatten up poliucal process that
goes on in the individual lives of Americ~s.
. .
To illusttaiC; Working Woman m&amp;gaZlne J"eilO!IS that about~ million
AmericanS ipend more than $30 billion a '!f:M uymg to lose weaght, many
them through !!bout 8,500 commereial wetght•loss programs.
Had lhey never impMed all those calories into their physical systems
in the first place lhey -wouldn't have bad to expend those $30 billion,
which cOllies out to about $450 per person. Tbat'sa terrible I8X for having

might have provided temporary enjoyment, eventually dtstressed the
overcater, bolh physically and psychologically. That too must be added to
the "tu ••
'
.
Jmagine, all -that effort and mooey spent trying to get back to where
they were, and no better off- maybe worse off- than they were before
it all began.

Letters to the editor
Another OOM?
called Mental Graffiti ihat appeares
I have never written a letter to . in the Sunday Times-Sentinal.
Kevin has a very special gift. He
you before, even though there has
lleCn a lot of events or happenings just might be another 0 . 0 . Mcintyre.
. that I w1111ted to complain about.
Keep up the good work Kevin.
I am _,-iting, not to complain,
QydeP. Sanders
but to give some praise to one of
622 Perkins Rd.
your writers. His name is Kevin
Gallipolis,
Ohio
Pinson. I really enjoy his anij:le
Dear Editor,

Bunch of morons
OpieCobb
Middleport. Ohio
Editor's Note: Presumably Mr.
Cobb was referring to an editor's
note which said "Please do not try
any of these stunts on your own.
Spitchy. Speedy and Sc.otty are
profeSSional stunt morons.

Responds to letter ·

...

WASHINGTON (NEA)th-.
Since October a small~ wi . m
the Qinton campaign staff 1n Little
Rock with help from seleeted
Dem~cratic Party insiders, has
been gathering suggestions for toplevel appointments in the new
administralion.
No final decisions have been
made. However, based on off-the·
record interviews -.yith several in
the transition team, certain individuals will probably be in Clinton's
Cabinet, and a short list exists for
most key positions.
The most intense speculation
surrounds secretar¥ of state.
Reportedly, the short hst was down
to two- former Carter administration DeGE· ty Secretary Warren
Christo r, a favorite of the foreign po ·cy establishment, aryl Rep.
Lee Harllilton, D-lnd., a favorite of
Capitol Hill . But the field has
opened up. Democratic National
Chairman Ron. Brown is said to be
lobbying furiously for the. post.
And former President Jimmy
Carter is said very privately to have
expressed interes~: given his ~k
record in the Middle East, the job
probably would be his if he wanted
1t
·
At Defense, the Clinton camp
has ruled out Conner military officers. The list here Is said to be
shon: S'en. Sam Nunn, D-Ga.; Rep.
Les Aspin, D-Wis.; and Rep. Dave
McCurdy, D-Oida. It appeB{S ~e
job is Aspin's if he wants It,
McCurdy's if he doesn't.
Several individuals appear headed for top appointments, and where
they end up will influence other
selectioos. A prime example is former Adm. William Crowe, wllose
endorsement of .Clinton was criti·

rra

··-

cal.
The best guess is that Crowe
will head the CIA, if be wants to,
or become a national security advi·
·

Progressive Policy Institute Vice
President Rob Shapiro (or ideal1y
both, with Rivlin as director and
Shapiro as depoty).
Chairman of Council of Economic Advisors- Harvard professorRobenReich.
.
~
Labor- Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin
or.CiiniDII adviser Ira Magaziner. lf
sor. If he does go 10 the CIA, then HartiD then Magaziner will. go to
McCurdy -one ,of the Hill's fOP the whllll House as domestic poliintelligence experts- would prob- cy advisor.
.
ably run the National Security
Health and Human Services Agency. If Crowe ends I!P at lbe First choice would be Marian
White House, and Asptn takes W~t Edelman. bead of the Chi!Defense, McCurdy could end up at dren s Defense Fund. However, she
the .CIA.
.
is said 10 be Clinton's fust choice
. Another of those sure to be for the Supreme Coun. If lustiee
selected for something is former Blackmon announces that he will
San Antonio Mayor Henry Cis- 51ep down at the end of the term,
neros. He is said to be on the short Clinton will save her for the court.
lists for three posts: Commerce, tr Blackmon wants anotller term,
HUD and Transportation.
Edelman will probably be named to
Here are some Oilier likely peo- HHS with a SIIOIIgdeputy and sueplefor key positioos:
.
cess0r -either Washington State
Attorney General - M1ckey Gov. Booth Gardiner or Arkansas
Kantor, campaign chairman and state health director Joycelyn
high-powered Los Angeles lawyer. · Elden. What would make the ClinShould Kantor become White tonites bawlest would be to name
House chief-of-staff instead. Gardiner secrewy, Elders deputY.,
Arkansas federal judge Richard and let it be known that Wright will
Arnold and former Urban League join die CllWl next year.
President Vernon 1ordan are also · Housing and Urban De_velo.ppossibilities.
·
ment - Cisneros, Loutsvtlle
Commerce- Cisneros, Charles Mayor 1erry ~· or q.icago
Manatt (Kantor's law partner and housing authonty head Vmcent
Democratic fwd-raiser); or com- Lane. (One scenano has Abramson
puter industry executive 1o1m Scul- . coming ill u secretary and.Lane as
ly.
deputy in charge of public housTreasury - lnvestmcnclassmatel
banter ing.)
and Clinton Georgetown
,
Transportation - Ci!neros. or
Roger Altman. Sliould he say no, former Michigan Gov. Jim Blanthen Goldman Sachs co-chairman chard.
Robert Rubin or Manalt.
Agriculture - Carol Tucker
Office of Manlgemcilt and Bud- Foreman, Asst. Sec. under Jimmy
get - former Joint Economic Caner, sister of Clinton's Lt. Gov.
Committee head Alice Rivlin or

Robert}. aaman
.m

~hat am a

'fi&amp;Y:,;:

. bas stood center 11ag1: culate. And bow did he know this?
~d~ed into routines that Well, he had a source, "a promia m Pratiooal people to wonder De(ll Republican," and anyway, the
om PI
facts had ~n confmncd by another fellow, whom h_e name~ and
who is weD known m Washmgton
as a purveyor 1ofweird tales and
when he last checked-his circuit groundless aUegations.
breakers. First, he whipped up 8
And who the hell had the ri~ht
crowd to beg him to run for titc to doubt him, anyway? ''I ap1 su;k
presidency and then abruptly and linld of you all q~on':l'g my
dropped out. Then ho whipped up in1egrity without a basiS for 11," ho
the crowd to be&amp; him to act blct later told a group of reporterS. "I
in. And R~Cendr he went on CBS's _ sic:k ancr tired of you i~ng
"60 Minutea' and informed the the people who can conftrm the
nation that the reason he dlopped llticles when you print or tUn your
out in the lint place was thll all SIOrics."
sorts of mysterious llid nefarious
WttJ there a seasoned journaliSt
C!Oll had been hatthed to desuoy in Ameriea who - knowing a
tmR.epobllC811
' . ::t!tricbters had paranoid when they see one, and
knowing of Perot's coospirali&gt;rial
planned 10 wirellp • office and to "bent_ did not at that point silently ·
wreak havoc on his busineaa, he implole him not to ernbartass himsaid. They had also ICIIernedto dis- self by tCuing us that he's hearing
rupt his daughter's weddi!'g and the Top 40 in his mouth because
had doctored up a dirty pieture of
,,

Joseph Spear

=

r
j:•

b'D"

•

.•

SlepSislllr, Vivian BendalL
A homemaker, she was a member of the Bachtel United
Methodist
Cllurch,
StewartJobnaon VFW Pllll 9926 Ladies
Awilliary, IIIII Smilh-Capehart
Anterican Lcgioo Post 140 Ladies
Awill"
s~in, are bet h~, Oscar: four .daughiCrs, Janie Smith, at
home, Mrs. Clay (Clara) Roney,
Ne Haven Mrs Hem"1" (Poll )
w New' Haven,
· Ellen" Sparks,
Y
Roush,
Akron, Ohio; special loved one; .
two sons and daughters-in-law,
Leland and Sue; Smilh, Mason, ·
·Greg and Laura Wmston, Gallipolis
Ferry; 12 grandchildren, six great·
grandchildren· and several nieces
and nephews.
The funenil wiD be Friday, 1
p.m., at the Foglesong Funeral
Home with the Rev. Joanne Home
aitd Riw. George Hoschar officiating. Burial will be in the Huffman

~artin Morris
Marlin J. Morris, 93, Bash an
Road, Long Bottom, died Tuesday,
Nov. 3, 1992 at the Holzer Medical
Center.
· • Born on Ian. 10, 1899 in
Haroldson CoUnty, Va., he was the
son of John H. Morris and Sarah E.
Royals. He was a retired boilermaker at the Norfolk ·Naval Shipping Yard in Norfolk, Va., and
belonged to the International
Brotherhood of Boilermakers. He
· was a veteran of World War I.
He is survived by his wife, Ada
Beatrice Cash Morris, Long Bot- ,
. tom; a son an4 daughter-in-law,
Clyde J. and 1ean Morris, Long
Bottom •. and grandehildren, Clyde
R. Moms, Long Bottom, and E!IZI·
beth Ann Stewart, Burton, S. C.;
two grandchildren, 10 great-grandchildren, and one great-great·
grandson.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by eight brothers
and five sisters.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 1 p.m. at the Ewing
Funeral Home. The Rev. James
Acree, Sr., will officiate and burial
will be in Meigs Memory Gardens.
Military graveside rites will be held
by the Tuppers Plains Vcterans of
Foreipt Wars S3. ,
.
Fnends may call ·at the funeral
home from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday.

The

Dally Sentinel-Page 3

Cemetery.

.

Friends may call a&amp; the funeral
home Thursdar, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. In lieu o Dowers, the family
requests donations be made to the
Mason EMS.

87 Tile~ Pr~
Colder air will pour into Ohio
tonight in the wake of • fronla1 systern that brought rain to the Slate
today, the National Weather Ser..:·
• - said.
Lows will be in the 30s.
There was a chanCe of psecipita·
tion, possibly in lite form of S!IOW,
for Thursday. Highs were expected
to stay in the low 40s.
.
The record-high trmpera1ure for
this dale at the Columbus weather
'statiQn was 78 degrees in 1987
while the record low was 18 in
1991. Surtset tonikht will be at S:26
p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 7:06
a.m.

in 1973. Sevcnl state and lnuntate
highways were closrp.
The snow was expected to taper
off in Wyoming today, lnd snow in
Minnesota and Wisconsin also was
expected to diminish. Flurries wc:R
anticipated in upper Michigan.
Showers and seattered thunderstorms were predicted for the

Snow fell ):ontinued to fall
today aci'OIS much of the natioa's
midsection. One Wyoming town
luld received more thin 3 feet. .
Rain fell early today in many
East Coast cities, and it was eloudy
along mucb of the West Coast.
AI'OIIIId tile Dation
Snow fell early today in Caspar,
. Wyo., as well as Des Moines,
Iowa, 9.maha, Neb:, Bismark,
. N.D., and Rapid City. S.D.
About· 40s inches of snow fell
Tuesday m heridan, Wyo., and S
1/2 inches in Oteyenne was an inch
more than the previous record set

Weather

Appalachians lnd the Soud• •• u
a cold froilt ere ne• lite Gulf Coast
Rain was expected in the North.
west and Northeast.
Highs IOday were fOrecast in the
30s acrosa much of the northern
Plains; in the 40s in the Great
Buin, central Plains and northern
Great Lakes.

Meigs announcements
Pep band to or&amp;anlu
.
Plans are underway to organize
~ pep bund to play during Southern
High. School basketball games .
Any alumni band members .who
would like to participate are
requested to contact Melissa Stewart, music director, at the high
school at 949-2611.
Racine PTO to Dietl
Racine Elementary PTO will
·meet Mooday at 7 p.m.
Dance planned
Royal Oak Dance Club will
hold a dance Saturday from 8-11
p.m. at Royal Oak Part. Music; .will
be provided by Orlando Columbo.
· Potluck dinner planned
A potluck dinner will be held
following services at Hope Ba1&gt;tist

Name contest winner

Larry R. Hudson, 34345 Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy, correctly
'
Soutlt·Central Oblo
identified the mystery farm which
Tonight, cloudy with a chance appeared in the Ocl. 25 issue of lhe
of rain. Low 3540. Chance of pre- the Sunday Times·Sentincl. He WB!
cipitation 40 percent. Thursday, one of five people to make the cormostly cloudy with a ehance of rect identification and his name
showers. High in the mid-40s. was selected as the winner by lotChance of precipiration 40 ~nt tery. He will receive SS from The
Extended forecast:
Ohio Valley Publishing Co. which
Friday through Sunday:
co-sponsors the contest with the
Fair and cold. Lows 2S-35. Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
Highs 3S4S• .
District. ·

New Car Facility

Church in Middleport oo Nov. 29
at the fellowship ball.
WMU to lllftt
The Womens' Missionary
Union of Hope J)aptist Church in
Middleport will meet Tpesday at
6:30p.m.
Special niKIJt planned
..
A ror.al ambassador recogmtlon
.night will be held Nov. 11 at 7 p.m .
at Hope Baptist Church in Middleport
..
Community Association to .
meet
The Middleport Community
Association will meet Thursday at
7 p.m. at -Middleport Council
chambers. Plans for Christmas promotioos wiD be discussed.

Used Car Facility
'

'

Betty Roush

Jimf:Guyil T~~· and a close Clioton am Y onenu.··
Education- Donna Shillala,. ·,
chancellor of the Uni v~:rsity of
WiSconsin.
Veterans Affairs ,.... Hawaii Sen.
Daniel Akaka (this would also
allow departing Hawaiian Gov.
John Waihee to appoint himself to
the seat or to run for it in a special
electioo)•.
Interior/Environmental Proteclion Agency/Energy - This equation is complicated. Former Arizona Gov. Bruce Babbitt is lhe top
choice at Interior, but he could well
end up as White House chief of ·:
staff. If so, the Interior pOSt could •
go to former Colorado Sen. Tim :
Wir!h, or Idaho attorney general ·;
Larry EchoHawk. But the Clinton ·' •
team would rather have him head :
up the BureaU of Indian Affairs, if .:
he will take the job. Meanwhile, ,•
current Energy Sec. Adm. James ::
Watkins coald be a Bush holdover, •
but if he does not stay, !hen Energy •:
could go to fonner Vermont Gov. :
Madeleine Kunin. If Watkins stays, ·:
Kunin could go to EPA, or she ,
could be the odd person out if Bab-. :
bitt heads Interior and Wirth EPA. •
U.S. Trade Representative - ::
There is a possibility that incum- ·'
bent Carla Hills could be asked 10 · :~
stay on. If not, or if she wants to . ~
leave, look for international trade ••
consultant and academic Dr. Paula '
Stem to get the job. .
.
Office of N~nal Drug ConlrPI •
Policy ("Drug Czar") - Jesse
1ackson. Insiders say the job is his
if he wants it.
Robert Wagman Is a ayndleat·
tel writer ror Newspaper Enter·
prise Association.
•

A ~obouod. me~~~.!'M..~1"!1~~! _!!!~s~~!~ .... , ,. :j

.

c:

II

m=

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•

places and keep calling back. Congressman Miller was in conference
but when he came out, he called
my daughter himself and told her
not to worry. He filled things.
Does anyone remember a pc_nitentiary being offered in Meigs
County in the fifties or sixties or an
airport offer which was turned
down. I'd like to know7
Josephine Ty= ·
122 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.

·Today in history

I

routi:

. ..,._.

t to Wl'\te c~cernmg H. Ross Perot ~y consutute a breach of promue, a~ I
rec~n.tly vow~d I was done v.:1th
polntcs unttl. t~~ eampa1gn
Cacophoi)J
had dimmiS~.
me.
I would argue .t1!&amp;t thiS eolumn
Then when my three daughters
is not abou~ pohucs, but about
ealled and talte4 to Rep. Mary
health- aam lhe ~ss of the
Abel .... would .... up, caU other
stuff betw.een Perot s ~ and bow
he .mi~ht affect lhe VItality of the
nauoo 1uelf'.
.
. · The proble"! wlih Perot IS that
he baa been aaymg lhinp or auclal
importance
cJ:dnced,_!!,~ poundedthc
. ~ .
., ne ~lattd
into
our
ve """'"' over
lef~~ ~!~:Nov. 4• die 309Ib day of 1992. There are 57 days next l'e~ yean, but ~ man b:c:ps
getting ~ die
:,WO.,::·1
Today's Highlight in History:
·
sage.
4b!S
nanoo
Fifty years ago, oo Nov. 4, 1942, ~ Wodd w. u Ax' ~
~ ~t1
. r~treated from El Alamein. in Norlh Afritl m a major vietory'
B~~ its dcf~eit piob~
risk of economiC co IJIIIC
forces commanded by Field Marshal Bernard MontlocnelY
n
not. Thai is _what Perot. has ~n
On this date:
.
. .
saying,
and 1f that cardi~al pomt
In 1842, Abraham Uncoln married Mary Tod41n Springfi kl IU
geis
crowd~d
out by ht~ daffy
In 1884, Democrat Grover Cleveland wu elected 111 llisICfiri ·
n will constitute a
president, defeating Republican James G. Blaine.
t term as demeanor,
tragedy almoll beyond measure.

•

J:

program in the last 20 years has
been a enuine scandal, "They've ·
fritter~ away tbe little resources
that we have. Contractors have ·
ripped the BIA off time and again:
.
.
'bei
Not enough housing wuts are . ng
built, and tl)e IIICS that are built are
built in a shoddy way."
Even the BIA -~ lha!.
housing prognuD IS a di~ter. It S
a program for the neediest of the
needy ·~ we ought !? be getti.ng
the semces to them\, o~ sen1or
~lA official told us. We~ lookmg al the program and we re conce~. We're doing w~t ~ ~
to get 11 cleaned up, but 1ts not jUSt •
(in California). We've got prob·
lerns in other areas, too.:' ·
Even in this "Year of the Amer~ .
f the
ican Indian" improvement o
.
Third-World living conditions ·'
plaguing reservations has been
scant. More than 40 percent of lhe
residents still live below the pover- ·1
ty level.
·
LOOSE LIPS _ Just as the
country was warned thai loose lips · ·
sink ships during Wtrld War II, so
100 ean they sink banks, according :
to the in-house ~rgan of the Federal ,
Deposit lnsurance Corp.
The warning .by the bank regolatory agency was prompted by two · .
reported security br~ches. In the
rust. an agency official was spotted
on the· subway editing a memo
stamped "Confidential" while in .
full view of other passenge~.
.·
In the second, FDIC staffers :
were fingered ftr discussing, on an
agency elevator, "the imminent
failure of a bank whose ·size and .
location presaged problems w~th
cenain customers and the medta.
Worse, one staff member named
the head of the agency, saying he
would need to 'brief him on the
political implications' of the
tmpending failure."'
.
Employees are served notice
that "discussing business mat~rs
in public places has the potential
for embarrassment, and perhaps .·
. dismissal, if not disaster." Staffe':S
1
are also advised to admonish lhetr ·
·indiscreet colleagues by saying, · :
. "Excuse me, but I think there may .
be people on this elevator who .
should not be privy to the informatioo you are discussing."
Jack Anderson and Mlcbael :
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicat~ Inc.

Clinton cabinet.takes 'rough shape

~- than diaL Think of all the money spent on food _that, while it

·. In response to Floyd .Cleland's
leacr in reference to our congresslllf:ll and represenratives, I got sorta
hot. Congressman Miller has been
in~ved in my family when need·
ed the very most. Later when my
daughter wu grown and had an
III'JCIIl PIOblem, my older daughter
rememben:d what he had done for

Catherine Scou Blrtcher, 87, of
Main Street, Pomeroy, died Tues·
day, Nov. 3, 1992 at tbe Utica
Nursing Home in Utica.
She was a houaewife and homemaker.
Born on Oet. 26, 190S at
Chealtire, she was the daughter of
the late Bert Scott and .Cora
. Yeauger Scott.
. Sho is survived by four sisters,
Jeanette Scott, Marjorie Bradbury,
and Juanita Balian!, all of Gallipolis; and Charlotte Gunter,
Charleston, W. Va.; a brother, ·
Lewis Sc9tt, Gallipolis; a special
niece and nephew, Shirley and
Edgar Birtcher, Johnstown; and
several other nieces and nephews. .
Besides ~arents, she was
preceded in
by her husband,
Fred Bincher, two sisters, Lucille
Rathbmn, and Ullian Scott, and a
brother, Charles ScotL ·
Graveside services will be held
Thursday at I I a.m. at the Gravel
Hill Cemetery in Cheshire. The
Rev. Miles Trout will officiate.
There are no ealling hours.
Arrangements were handled by
Ewing Funeral Home.

~ednesday,Nove.nber4,1~

WASHINGTON - Th~ugh COSier kids. There were JUgS oo .the
Congress proclaimed 1992 The floor for the kids to sl~p on at
.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Year of the Americin Indian," a night."
.
.
DII:VOTED TO 1'111: IN'I'BRB8T8 OF 11m IIEIGS-IIASON AREA
draft audit report prepared by the
In one case, acc:ording to the
· De
t portrays the
In tenor ~en . .
Bureau of Indian ~aus 1R terms
that typically desenbc sluml~.,,
not the fede,ral agen_cy that s !he
goveml!'ent S guardian Of lndtan
ROBERT L. WJNGETI
reservauoos. ..
11.1.u:·
Pub6sber
The 30-page lnspec~or Ge~
lt'~l
report says that the BIA sf~~
PAT WIU'lEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
ifomia offices, '!htch ~dmmtsler audit, BIA spent roughly $10,000
.. Assistant Publisher/Controller
GeMral Manager
and manage ho~ 85Sistance for to help CIJ!IIplcte a new houJe on
100 .Indian tribes, have fail~ to the Pcnchlnga Indian Resrnation,
· provide "decent, safe and samtary . · in California, but did not even COD·
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
housing to eligible !~dian fami- nect the plumbing 10 a septic sySwords. All !etten ue subje.:t 10 editing and must be signed with n~e,
lies" because the housmg program· tern. The family couldn't afford the
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
. has been "severely mismanaged . system, 10 it was f~ 10 use a
~hould be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
le toilet · the.._...._.
~..;;..~..;......:;_.,.....;._ _..;._...;......;;__ _ _ _ _ _ _..... and abused."
.
ponab
m_
It reinforces what Sen. Tom
Another. penon on the reservaDaschle, 0 -S.D., a member of !he tioo was liYiq with his wife and
Senate Select Committee on Indian teen-aged clllnghcer jn 111 unfinished
Affairs, hB! witnessed lir$l-haruL
one-bedroom liouse that was 111isa"It's not uncommon to see three ing some exterior walls and slabs
or four people living in a two-bed- of the roof. The daughter was
room home or even 15 to 20 people forced to sleep in a llnaii camping
living in a one or two- bedroom tJailer parted in the bldtjacl. Yet
By JOHN CUNNIFF
home," Daschle to~d u~. "I'ye Bureau officials declined to heed
AP Business Analyst
stayed on a reservatton m South the family's plea for for h.c lp
o NEW YORK. Americans are going off their diet,- their govern- Dakota _with_ a couple that had 20 "despite clearly legitimate needs ·
mental diet- during which they tried t!l s!im down goyemment's waistline. Now they seem ready to _let lhat w111sUine swell agiiiD:
That is another way of saymg that the next presulent will be com~lled ·
to deal·with an old, old notion that from time to time seems to grow like a
weed from the blirial ground of outmoded ideas.
It is the idea tliat something magical can be produced if I8X money is
sent to Washington for processing. Back it will come, some believe, in a
more useful form, such as jobs, bener health care and a stronger economy.
. The idea was promoted by candidates ~ush and Clinton and many ?f
!hale running for Congress: Give us your tired old problems and we wtll
return them to you in the Conn or grand dreams and wonderful accomplishments.
·
In many instances, of c0111'9e, lhere are lhings the government can do
lhll individuals and priYIIIe-sector institutions cannot. lt has special powers to coordinate 111:0grams and enf~~~~:e compliance, for instance.
In that regard, it can .create _wooderful results !hat couldn't be handled
by the private sector, mcludmg a cleaner. envuonment, strengthe~ed
nalional security, ·improved law and order, aide to the needy and effective

For the life of me I can't see
why any paper would print anything put out by Kevm Pinson
(unless it would be Playboy (or
some similar magazine).
The editor sure hit the nail on·
the head when he called the!JI a
bunch of morons.

Catherine Birtcber

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

111 COart Street

Pomeroy-Middlaport, Ohio

--Area deaths-- Colder air will hit Ohio by this evening

Report charges B-A with housing abuses

The Daily Sentinel
.

November 4, 1992

CIA?
And how does til of this affect . '
the message that 1s inextricably · . I
bound up in the Perot persona? l
Will the public. begin to thi~J!i:, per- 1
haps subconsctously, lhat his eco- -· ,
nomic prophecies are as wacky as .: '
he is~ Pray not, else we perish.
We are currently staring at an .. 1
aMual deficit tltJt is nearly $300
b!ll!on and would have been $400 :
btllmn had Coogress not gouen the 'I
election-year jitters and P&lt;ISIIIOOCd ' ·
the closure of bankrupt S.tl.i. We ' \
are starin~ at an accumulatecl debt ·1
of $4.1 trillioo - oo which we a ; 1
paying interest of $300 .billion a I
year, and of which your family 1
share is about $62,000.
.
.~ [
And here is the bad news: Even 1 ,
the rosiest economic sCtnarios pre, :
diet it's going to get much worse. ' '-. t
By 1996, if we are lucky, we•will ·; 1
be stal1ng at a national debt of SS '
trillion.
• ..J
,

!

I

r

Betty Roush, 67, of Mason, died
Tuesday, Nov; 3, 1992, at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Born April 23, t92S, she was a
daughter of the late 1111Des Walter
Hoffman' and MaUd E. (Foglesoog)
Hoffman Young. She was also
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November

The Daily Sentinel ·

Sports

Re.ds trade o~Neill,
DeBerry to·Yan~ees
for AII~Star Kelly

Wednesday,
November
4, 1912 .
.
.

Pittsburgh tops·N.Y. Islanders
2-0 without Lemieux's
offense
wals

NEW YORK (AP) ~ A week
after shating up their front office,
the CJncinnali Reda bepn ..~.. :..~
~
changea 011 the field.
The Reds lnlded outftelder Paul
O'Neill and a minor leaguer to the
New York Yankees for All-Star
outfielder Roberto Kelly on Tuesday in the first of what might be
many moves for both learns.
Kelly, 28, has .a .280 batting
average for his six years in the
major leagues. He hit .272 in 1~2
games for the Yankees in 1992,
with 31 doubles, tO home runs, 66
RBls and 28 stolen bltsea.
He stalled 99 games in center
field and 47 garnea in left field last
season. Kelly drove in two runs roc
, the American League in this year's
All-Star game.'
.
"I feel this is a goocl move for
both teams," new Reds general
manager Iim ·Bowden said;
''Roberto is a five-toOl player. That
is, he is average or above average
in five offensive categories, and we
think he'll be a better player on
Astroturf. He will show more
power for us, and he gives us a IllY
who can steal 30 bases."
"He's got power, and I think
he'll have more JIO!'.er in our stadi' urn than he did m Yankee Stadium
. where theie's a big left field," he
said.
The changes in the Reds' front
OffiCe started last week with Bow·
den replacing Bob ·Quinn. AlSo,
Tony Perez was named manager to
repla(:e Lou Piniella.
. O'Neill, 29, has played his
entire career in the Cincinnati organization. The Reds were disap·
pointed in his produclion this season, when he baned .246 with 19
doubles, 14 homers, 66 RBis and
six stolen ~in 148 games.
"I wa~k~ittle bit,"
said O'Neill; wh "'
alee $3.5
million in 1993 and 1 94. "I've
played in Cincinnati for the last

•'I think I rushCd .a couJ!le ~f
shots 001 there," UJIIJeUX said. . I
cauldn't get ioina· I WIISII'I•skaling
very well. It was one of. those
nights wbcre I was not mating the
right plays.
.
.. .
"It's pretty dJsappnlnnng when
you get that close. It's a record
that' s been around for a long
lime."
.
Rick Toechet and Jeff Dan1els
scored the only goals that the ?en·
guins needed. on Tuesday mgbL
Tom Barrasso made diem stand up
wilh his 16th careershutouL .
Elsewhere in the N."L: It was
Tampa Bay 6,. St. LouiS 4, Wash·
ington 4, Chicago I; Quebec 3,
Hartford 3, and Edmonton 5,
Ottswa2.
Lichtnlng 6, Blues 4
· Chris Kontos scored two goals,
giving him 13 for the season, as ~ ·
Lighbling broke a four-game losing
streak with a victory .o ver the
Blues.
.
Kontos' first goal capped a
ty. who had voiced ·some concerns. three-goal 1iec011!1·JJ«iod burst ~;hal
The same kind of concerns, I sus- snapped
a·2· 2 ue. The exp~mnon
pect that most people have.
Lightning had a season-h1gh 42
.:But if you go bact and look at shots on goal in improving to 5-8what ther said publicly, none of 1.
them sa1d they wauldn' t play
Brett Hull, off to a slow 118ft
aPmsl him. None..... And I won '1. with only five goals in 13 games,
pretend to know what it was that failed to score as the Blues had
made Earvin 100 uncomfortable to their three-game winning streak
In the ftrst period of Tu~:r ·Dilht's NHL game
QUICK STOP - Que~ec•s Bill Lindsay ,
go alad with this. He pointed out. snapped.
.
lD Hllrtlord, Ct., which.resulted In a 3-3 tie. (AP) ·
(rlgbt)
mates
a
quldi:
stop
In
aa
attempt
to
pt
·
tholle concerns were one reason for
• Capitals 4, Blackltawka 1
away lrom hartFord def'eDHmaa Steve Konroy
his decision. bllt he also made clear
Roolcie forward Keith Jones-had
·chac WC(C others... .
•
his fust NUL goal and assist, lead•
In bis written sratement, John' ing the Capitals over the Blackson said, "It has become obvious hawks.
that various controversies sur·
Chicago had its opponunities,
rounding my return are taking · o.utshooting Wasliington 27-25
away from both basketball as a
The Meigs High School girls' problems. Yet girls' spons pro- Academr, volleyball. team:, the
sport and the larger issue of living while coming up empty in five
power-play
attempts.
The
.Caps
athletic
teams will have new uili· grams, receive only ·$1.SO.for every Fayettevtlle (Ark,) H!fh School
with HIV for me and the many
have
not
allowed
a
goal
in
their
last
forms and facilities upgraded $10 given to athletic progra111s basketball team; the 'be eiliall and
people affected."
thanks to a program sponsored by overall, even though almost four volleyball teams of Fremont High
TI)ere is a need for ~oats at 19 shorthanded situations.
. Nordiques 3, Whalers 3
L'eggs and the Women's Sports out of every 10 high school atltletea School, Roseburg, Org.; Joy Ranch
disturbing moments like th1s one,
Quebec center Joe Salcic scored Foundation.
are girls.
Chris~ Sc~ool' s track and field
but it hardly advances the "larger
twice,
including the tying goal with
The school received more than
In responce to this need, L'eggs team; ~llsvll.le, Va.; all.team~ at
issue" referred to above .to try and
close the circle around only the 6:40 left, as the Nordiqucs rallied $2,500 on Sept. 25 for entering a and the Women's Sports Founda· Lake V1ew High School m Chica·
for a tie with the Whalers.
"team dream," ISO-word essays lion developed the L'eggs Dream go, lll.; Mercy~ Scl!ool.volleyNBA players. .
Salcic gained conlrol of a loose thal told. what a girla' sports .learn . Team program. Higb ~ch?Dl all . ball team, Burlmgame, Calif.; 'the
What Magic ·likely feared ~~
over the county wer~ mvJted to basketb~ll and track teall!s of
least as much as the concerns h1s puck along the right boards deep in ·would do If it won a $5,000 pnze.
oPponents - and even some of lhe the Hartford zone, skated to the slot · Eight teams nationwide won the submit their girls' sports teams' RogersVIlle (Tenn. ) M1~dle
School; and the Shelby (M1ch.)
people on his own bench·- would and slapped a IS-footer pest Sean $5,000 prizes. All 395 school that dreams.
A panel of celebrity athletes High School softbf}l team.
voice wen~ the questions the rest of Burke and into the lower right cor- entered, including Meigs Hi~h
School, shared equally in $1 mil- judged the essays. The panel . Th~ Women's ~ports Fo~nda­
us would demand be answered at ner.
OUers 5, Seutors 2
lion fund raised through sales of mcluded fiJure skater Debbi uon t~ a ~onprofll educauonal
every tum.
Scott Mellanby 9COied twice and L'eggs Hosiery.
. Thomas, crtling champion Connie . orgamzauon that' prom'?les and
The lingering doubts ab!&gt;uthis
sexuality, his health and· his very jloaltender Ron Tugnutt was solid . . The athletic department and Paraskevm-Young and tract en~ the sports ~penence fir,
private fears . About whether a m relief to lead the Oilers over · COIChcs of Meigs High School are 1 Ol:f1!1Jiil!" . ~nita Fitzgerald, plus all guts .and women m. sports. The
F~011's program mel~ ed~small cut or scrape at the sran of a Ottawa, extending the Senators~ vefy excited about receivin) the · liigli school giits sport experts.
. prize. The awarding of the prize
They selected two high schools CatlOII, advocacy and recogru.uon II\
game was the reason he played so winless s~ to 11 games. '
scored a power-play . will help ease some of the fmancial from each . of four . regions to tu!dltion•to grant programs lilce the,
miserably afterward or why the goalMellanby
ill
6:27
of,the
flfSI period, then burden placed on the athletic pro- receive the s~.ooo bonus.
L eggs Team Drea'm.
bodies in the lane pai1ed so conveagain
at
I
0:32
to
give
the Oilers a gram to fund itself. .
.
L'eggs is the only corporate
niently on this.or that late drive to
21)lcad after the first 20 minutes.
Many times the teams have to . ~nsor ~a .r·ve $1 milli011 for girls'
thebaskeL
They led 4.{) after two periods.
go without things which may be of h1gh schoo sports. L'.eggs' history
great help to the programs. ,During of supJ!ort for women's athletic
the past tluee yean the girls' teams events includes the L'eggs Mini
have performed very well within Marathon and the L'eg's World
the Tri-Valley ~erence, having Seriea of Tennis. As a d1vision of
won four &lt;;hampionships.
the sara·Lee Corporation, L'eggs is
Studies show that girlll who par- involved With Sara Lee's nnprece·
Odoan ......... 12 ... - - polnla:
11-Cin. AodOI'IOII 31 . 12-YottrlJitown
ticipate in high.. school sports are dented three-year committnent to
A.....IOWIII'ilcblli. I:I-Tn&gt;y2:5. 14,Eu!
more likely to pezfonn better aca- support women's collegiate athlet·
Ooveland Sbaw 11. JS.M.n""' IS . 16a.,.,. N - t l 3.
demically and have a good self ics through the NCAA. The Team
image. They are more likely to Dream p-ogram continues this Ira·
Division ll
exercise throu,hout their lives, dition.
·
T,._
1·Q7) 9-0 ......................... ..311
reducing theil"rists of breast canThe winners of the $5,000 ·
cer, heart disease and other health awards .·are the Faycue (Ala.)
;~)lt "'"""'"'"'""""'"f.;

missed oun. 11w
it."
Umieux was held ICOidess for
the fnt lime in 13 sm- this-·
soo. Prior to Tuesday niJbt, be had
scored at least two points in every
game for tile defending Stanley
Cup champions, who are off to a
torrid 10-1-2 Slirt.
·
Lemieux's 12-game goal-scor·
ing streak was a club record and
· tied for fDIII1b·best in NHL hisiory;
The record is held by Harry
· : Punch'·' Broadbent, who had
goals in 16 conseculive games for
Ouawa in 1921-22. Lemieux has
18 goals ovcnti.

By KEN llAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
Guess what? Mario Lemieux
didn't score and the Pittsburgh
Pcnaulns didn't miss a beat. ·
The New Yott lalapden held
the NUL's leading 8I:Ori!C without.•
point Tuesday ilighl, snapping '!iS
12-game goal streak; but sull
wound up on' the short end of a 2.{)

score.

"We wanted to play a aood
defensive pli!C, bui w~ wanted ~
get some offense gomg, too,
Islanders coach AI Arbour said.
"They put their chances in and we

ComtMJIItii'J

NBA players shouldn't
be made into scapegoats
for Magic's retirement
ByJIMUTKE
AP SJJOrb Writer
It is comforting to blame the
playal for running Magic Iohnson
out of the game. It is comfoning to
think that be lOOt a vote, found his
constituency numbered just one,
· IIIII finding so little support among
his peers, became convinced the
lime had come to move on.
(:omfuling, but~. ..
· Silt~ . dlc~tsofhis
llldden exillront
Moil,
apd you fmd that the blame
aqllllely, al'IIO"'IBiifonnly, 011
the shoulders of the very same people that Magic Iohnson helped
mate rich, Somehow, what was
reJarded before Johnson's rereuremem as ~much more than a
. collection of whispers and half·
spoken RISCrvations had swelled to
a full-throated roar immediately
' after iL
:
"Again, the Magic is Gone;
: Pressured by Teammates and
• Opponents, Iohnson Retires 'For
'· GOod'" read the hC;I!dline in one .
big-city newspaper. Mass Hysle·
• ria Shuts the Door" was the banner
• on another, suggesling the players
had fled from Johnson, en masse,
u from a leper.
"Franldy, that puzzled me,"
Charles Grantham, head of the
NBA Playen Association, started
oft a tel JAIOlte convenatlon Tues·

""""*'

1:J.

da&gt;:·.Up ~mlil the moment be left, it

was clear there was a I'U!iority of
J)laym who had accepted the fact
of conipetlng apinll an individual
Yibo will HIV·I!Oiitive, And there
were otha' peopiC, clearly a minori·

IntheNHL...

--'
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A'll.ANTA HAWD- Wli.ved. Jtad.

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and Dan Cyrulik, calla'.
BOSTON CELTICS - Waivod o.,..
lW\ Mominptu, Clala', and Jucr~ Reece,
forward.
DALLAS MA VERICXS - W1ivcd
Tony Farmer, forward, and Mike Morri...,_ l"ud.
GOLOEN STA'I'E WARIIIORS wuvec~ KCYin s~. pard.
HOUSTON ROCKETS - Waived
Chancellor NichW, forward.
LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS Waived Scbuti.an Nal and Brian Rabilly,
fotwuds .

MILWAUKEE BUCKS -

.......

Waived

Jim Fanner, guud. and Jennn Oldham,
MINNI!SOTA 11MBERWOLVES Waivc.l
&amp;..u.m. cemw.
NEW JERSI!Y NETS - Traded
Mookle &amp;b71oc:k. oun1. anc1
llinoon,
fonrani, ID !he A\liora Jlowlrllar RIIIIICIII

nv...

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Robio-.auri

-·

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Lewd Geter, forwud, u.d Orq Butler, .
oaiANOO MAGIC - Waivocl Dai·

PIIItAbhPmA 76ERS -~---

Jotrllulancl, - · · .... -

-,.fc)'-I!NIJ( SUNS -

Waived
-

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Ouio Millo&lt;,
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and Fred Pogie, comabtdl, lJUm the
~dioa 1q111d. Activated Joa FUhMck,
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II·INolllvlllo41. I}..Ama - -

--·2.

,J

By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Fo~toria and Newark Catholic are
just a week away from sucxcssfully
defendi"'! their Associated Press
poll champions!tips.
Fostona, which leads in Divi·
sion II, and Newark Catholic, the
top team in Division V, not only
Yi:flt last year's poll titles but
backed them up· by winn.ing state
championships 011 the field. ·
. Other leaders heading Into the
final week of the J.X&gt;ll are Cleveland
SL Ignatius in D1vision I, Mentor
Lalce Catholic in Division m and
Warren Kennedy in Division IV.
The poll, released Monday, is
based on balloling by a Sl8te media
panel.
. . . • urth
· St. Ignatius is seelcing 1ts .o
poll crown in the last five years,
missing 'onl~ last season when
Cincinnati Princeton - second to
the Wildcats this week - won it.
St. Ignatius, however, came back to
win the slate championship.
Lake Catholic won the 1990
Division lli poll crown. After finishing third in last yea-'s final poll,
it won its fli'St Slllte champiooship.
Warren Kennedy, the defending
Division IV state champion, hu
never won a poll, yet ill ~2-POint
lead is the largest of any ol.the
divisionalleadln. That w• due, in
part, to a 21-14 loas by last week's
No.2 team, Columbus Academy,
to Gates Mills Gilmoqr.
Akron Manchester, winner of
· the Division IV poD title last ~·
moved up a place to IICCODd beltind
Kennedy wuh CAPE third, Bar·
neaville founh and Brookville ftfth;
The cloBeal 1111:e is ill Division
·V, where Newark Catlloiic holds 811
·ll·poinl edge over second-ranted
St. Henry. Newark Catholic has
won three of the last eight poll
titles and shares the record witJ1
Cincinnati Moelltt for 111011 playoff
chat!tjlionships wid! SCVC'sll.

Still the Green Wave's lead
over si. Henry slipped f~om 30
points a week ago to 11 thu week
despite a 59-7 victory over
Portsmouth Notre Dame. Marion
Pleasant is third, Cedarville fourth ·
wid Loclcland moved up t1uee spotS
to fifth.
.
. :
·St. Ignatius holds at 31-pomt
lead over Princeton, followed by
Cincinnati SL Xavier, E11clid and
Massillon Perry, which climbed
two spots with its 42-27 victory
over lasj week's No.5 team, Lan·
caster. ·

.

T~.

The husky Los Angeles first
baseman was chosen flnl on 22 of
the 24 ballots and received 116
'points overall from the Baseball
Writers Association of America.
Montreal Expos outfielder Moises
Ainu was the runnerup with two
· flist-place votea and 30 points, fol.
lowed by Pittsburgh Pirates tnuctleballer Tim Walcefleld with 29
points.
Karros hit .257 with 20 homers
and 88~Bis. His home run total
· was the highest by a Dodge~~­
ie since Greg Brock also h11 20 m ·
1983, and his RBis s~ Ron
Cey's Los Angeles rookie record of
80 set .in 1973. Karros also led all
rookies this season with 30 doubles.
.
. h.
"We talked about sending 1m
out " Dodgers .manager Tom
· LaS:,rda said of Karros. "But we
decided to keep him because he
worked so hard in spring training ·
that he deserved to come with us.''
After getting one hit in 14 at·
, bats for lhe Dodgers at the end of
the 1991 season, Karros went to
winter ball in Carac8s. venezuela.
Karros hit .113 with six RBis
and no extra-base hits in

• . N1U.al ....... IAIIodaU.

A$. IS.' ;:;t.\143. 14-l!owull llaa
Ita. :11. I
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.. 17. 11·I - - . . Triad 1$. IS.
· - - ........ " '· 1!. ........

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By JIM DONAGHY
NEW YORK .( AP)- Eric Kar·
ros, who nearly played his way out
· of the Los Angeles Dodgers '?fiB·
nization, was selected the Nanonal
League Rookie of the Year on

Fostoria, .Newark .Catholic close
to successful poll title defenses

BlllketbaU

five yem. Pinatripe~ have alwsys
beell ill every tid's mind.''
In 1991, O'Neill bitted .2S6, but
had 28 homers and 91 RBis, show·
ing sipa of bloaorning into a big
run-poduocr. He has a .259 caret~
average with 96 homers·. While
O'Neill liveS' in Cincinniti in the
off-season, some of his family
members live in New Yart.
.
"Paul O'Neill has been a productive plalrz fc;r the Reds," Bow·
den said. 'We wish blm all the
bell in New York. He ahbuld do
-n in Yankee Stadium."
Reds finiahecl aecond in the
NL West last season, eight games
behind Atlanta. Cincinnati had
been picked by manr during the
preseasoo to win the division.
"We're looting for left-hand
bats,;• .Yantees general manager
Gene Michael said. "It llCCIIIS to fit
us. I alWays said we we;re too righthanded. Yailkee Stid!um should be
conducive to his tirid of hitting.' •
The Yankees decided not to
keep outfielder M~l Hall, a lefthanded hitter, once the season
ended. Hall batted .280 with 15
home runs and 81 RBis last year.
The Reds also sent first baseman Joe DeBerry to the Yankees.
DeBerry. 22, hit .240 with 1S
homers and 68 RBis for the Reds'
Class A Cedar Rapids affiliate in
the Midwest League in 1992, his
second pro season : He was the
Reds' No. 3 draft choice in June
1991.
Althoilgh it had been speculated
that owner Marge Sclioll would
attempt to un,load some of the
Reds' high-priced players during
the off-season, Bowden said the
prospect of the expansion draft had
no effect on dealing O'Neill.
"Expansion really isn '1 a factor," Bowden said. "We traded a
guy we were going to protect for
one we're going to proteeL''

-'fhe

L.A.'s Karr.os named
NL Rookie of the Year

.

I

Ohio

The quick, IUY way to col-

orful decorating schemes
withOut abjac:tlonlble paint
oclora. For •lllntllrlor waDs.
Waahable•

Venezuela, and was released three
weeks later by manager Phil
R~.

'His stock really dlopped with
the guys that saw him,.'.' Lasorda
said. "But when we took him to
spring training, we knew the things
we had to work with him on and
we spent a lot of time with him. He
spent a lot of hours and he overcame his defiCiencies.
"Phil Regan said to Qle, 'Hey,
he's not the same bitter.' Natui'ally
he wasn't, or we would have
released him."
Karros regained the Dodgers·
faith during spring training, going
20 for 54 with 11 RBis. It earned
him the first base job and he
believes his winter baD experience
was a critical factor.
"Mentally, it made me a lot
stipnget because I had .to deal with
a lot of adversity,'' he said. "Nothing that ever happens in the big
leagues will compare with what I
went through down there as far the
press and people getting on .me.
"BasebaU down there has a lot
more passion and emotion thlll) it
does here. So, from that standpoint,
it was a good decision.''
The Dodgers had a' miserable
year in I992, finishing 63·99 in the
NLWesL
"I had a lot of ~unities hitting fourth without arryl Strawberry and Eric Davis in the ·lineup," Karros said.

t

lb.

'GENUINE

U.S. GRADE A TYSON/HOLLY FARMS

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Boneless Chicken Breast

PICKENS
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W.VA.

•

DAN'S
Layaway Now
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Christm~s

GIRLS' "HANG TEN''
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'

7~ 14

LATE MODEL WINNER- Larry Road of Albany won the
(..ate Model seaaoa d1amplonsblp at Midway SpeedWIIJ_I~
Crooksville wllere be - over 118 clllrereat drivers and qullijlleel
ror 1111 1' r;.ture evena w•lle making sb triJIII to ¥~dory laJie, He
a11o flalllted ill the top 10 at Midway 14 times.

Bond wins race title, claims $1,000 prize
· Larry Bond of ,Albany won the McCreary Racing Tires and Bullitt
Late Model Season Championship Chassis.

at

Midway · Speedway

Croobville.

'i l

,_

in

He won the trac1c championship
ovet 118 different driven and quaf.
ified for all 16 fealure events mating six trips to victory ' - · He a1ao
finished in the top 10 at Midway 14
limea.
Bond wiD receive a new master·
bilt chassis and $1,000 for h!s
championshi_P. As a reault of h1s
win, he was mviled to Higentown
Speedway in ''The Race of Cham·
pions" on Sllltlrday.
,
He has several sponsor• in the
area that bave ~ him. They
1re Wllaley' s Auto Plru, Facemyet
Lumber Company, Lakeview
P.,tat.es, CounlO' Junction Pizza,

OPEN 9 ar.5 pm Mon. thru Sat.
Except Friday Open Until 8:00 P.M •.

,.

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R~ hike ticket prices
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Cincitmati Reda n Increasing ticket pices for next 11ea1011 but will
slill bave the lowest average !lriGe
in the m¥!r leques.
·
The Redl ufd Tueaday the cost
of a. field-level box seal will go
from $10 10 Sll.SO,IIld green- and
yellow-level box ICIIII will increase
from $9 10 $10.
'
Red, or upper-level reserved
seats, go up SO calls to $6.SO.
In 1992, the averaae ticket Il'ice
in the ~or leagues was $9 .41,
ranging from a low of $7.20 in
Cincinnad to a high Qf $12.90 in
Toronto. •

Gal.

lb.

~ 'IN

Frozen.Young Turkeys
PfPPfRONI OR

MamaRtiSa

Deluxe Pizzas
11-0%. ~llll.

THE DAIRY CASE", CHILLED

Kroger orange Juice

US. GRADE A f1CJ-16·LB. AVG.J

KROGER
RfOULAR SCENT

"iN THE DELI·PASTRY SHOPPE"

Bright
Uqu/11 Bleach

. .. Fresh
Glazed Donuts

Calion

11-oz. DOZ.

,,.
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•

WITH ~'~?ICES LIKf THIS . ..
.WHY SHOP ANYWHERf ELSE?

CONDITIONER OR

White Rain
Shampoo

18.75-oz. 8onur Size

79e

�...•,

Tne o.uy senttnet

ti

Pomeroy-Middle rt, Ohio

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Wedne1day, November 4, 18t2

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10.·00 am &amp; 12:00 pm
Marko the Magie Clown and his
balloon animals kick off the
celebration.

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11111:\111\

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.-

ur i'Add Up The Prices ·
&amp; Take, Home The
Prize" Giveaway!
As part of the celebration,
we're having a grand
opening giveaway. Just guess the
total value of all the great items in
our shopping bag (in front of JC
Penney) &amp; if you come closest, you
win them all! But be wamed .. . this
.is no ordinary shopping bag.*

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2:00pm
. The Athens County Kitchen.
Swinger Band ·charms with their
special brand of music.

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Devon Lybunus might mate

7:30pm
A hoot &amp; hollerin' hoedown with
the Athens Allemanders.

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. · have concerns.';
But Grantham added that the
element of fear among players is
oYCI'Stated.
"Calling this mass hysteria, as
one headline in New York put it, is
a major leap from the minority of
playera who had legitimate concerns about playing with Magic
Johnson," Grantham said. "Mass
hysreria hasn't been demonstrated
here. There ue a lot of questions
that ..vc to be ansWered before we
mg llpiiiSl him.
. leap.into mandatory AIDS testing
among players...
"Each~ bas bis own comGranth!un said any testing profort level, ' NBA Players Associa- cedure would l!ave to be pan of a
tion Cltec:utivc direc:tor Charles labor-management agreemenL
Gillihan aid. "For the most pan,
"There's the problem of false
that comfort JeoJel is ll1at they will positives, who tests and who
play with him (1obnlllll), but they doesn't, when the tests arc to ·be
BJIIILLIAilNAitD

NEW YORK (AP)- Since fear
or AIDS played a role in ending
Mlcic JolmDI's NBA career, the
nextlosic:al step could be .some
fonn or !Iiiii fer playas.
John-, wbo lellrJd positive for
tile AIDS virus lalt year, retired
from the Los ADaelca Laters fer a
second time Mond8y. While he
didn't make bis reuoning clear, a
lllljor fac1or - the ltllcmcniS of
~ ~the dangers of play·
1

Redmen baseball team ends
:fall practice season at 5-l
The Ulliversity of Rio Grande · \he fifth to coast to victory in the
recently completed SCCOild contest, aided by a three for
. 1ts fall pracucc scbedule by split- four performance by Jason L.
tillg a doul&gt;Jeheader with Columbus Wright (freshman, Pomeroy).
~bBU ~

State Community College . at
Columbus.
·
Columi:Jus Stare won the opener
3-2 on a sacrifice fly in the bottom
of the seventh inning, but the Redmen rebounded in the nighll;ap for
10..t win, malcing its fall season
slllc 5-1.

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Mal~

Brow.ns, NFL file suit .against Clevela_nd bars
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Cleveland Browns and the National
Football League have fated a law·
suit against 10 Cleveland area
sports bars, alleging the league's
blackout rule was intentionally vio-

restricted games.
The lawsuit filed Monday
commented as he looked back on had to say," Barkley said. .
alleges
that each of the bars used a
the season. The ream bas IS fmt·
But Barkley said he still
high-powered
antenna or satellite
year and sophomore players com- bcli~ves that other players' fears
dish
to
televise
the Browns home
bined, he added, "matang this a are IDifouncled.
game
Oct.
18
against
the Green
very youn' team, but one with
"I'm not going lo be kissing
lated.
Bay
Packers.
·
good potential.
him, and if he starts bleeding,
. The league and the 1ea111 wlll)t a
"As a direct result of (the tav·
"As for strengths this fall, the they'd lalce him out of the game,"
erns')
willful infringements, the
U.S.
District
Coun
judge
to
declare
pitchers looked for·this early in the Bartley said. "It's ridiculous. PCOf\
(league
and the Browns) were damthat
iny
unauthorized
Browns
year, and the team hit better than pte don't know anything about
aged
in
their ability to protect live
broadcasts
violate
copyright
law
last year to this point," Oglesby 'HIV. Everybody is a doctor an of a
gate
attendance,
ticket sales and
and
federal
communication
law.
Slid.
sudden. I played against the guy
associated
revenues,"
the lawsuit
The
lawsuit
also
asks
that
Matiil
The Redmen will now enter every clay last summer and it never,
stales.
issue
and
order
against
anyone
who
winter cOnditioning and training, in never crossed my mind.
Home games not sold out 72
preparation for its annual season · "But Magic is my friend and televises home games without
hours
Jlrior to a game are not tete·
a~nandtofi~off~
opener in February with a brace of whatever he wants to do is fine
vised
an the lvlme team's market
$100,000
now
and
an
additional
spri~ break gamt.'l played in Pana·
with me. I'm not or would not be
$100,000
if
they
show
other
rna Cuy, Fla.
.
afraid to play widi or against him."

wae miliud

atea, according to the NFL blackout rule.
For the Browns, the blackout
area covers 75 miles from Cleveland's city limits.
About 100 sports bars or rcslaurants in the Cleveland area have
formed a coalition to back what
they believe is their right 10 show
games broadcast on free airwaves,
and they have boycotted a beer
company which sponsors NFL
games.
There are some 25,000 unsold
tickets to the Brown's neM home
game, which will be on Nov. 15
against the San Diego Chargers.

l

You can't miss 150 Twirling
Cowgirls of Athens &amp; Logan.

2:00pm
Somersa.ults and spins from Ohio
University Communivenity
-demonstrations of ballroom
dancing (instructor Chervl
Raymond) and children'~
gymnastics (instructor Kathy
Chasteen). . ·
4:00pm
The Dance Barn delights with
dance and gymnastics.

meu's CI'OIIS co;n,!t ream, backed
by I fint-place

.

by Chad Ben-

:son, won its oWII triangular meet
·last Friday at Stanley L. Evans

;Field. .
; Bensoa. a juniOr from Glenford,

·completed the course in 16:02.7,
followed in second place by Rio
Grande's QJris Smith, who came in
wilh 16: 18J.
Also fmiShing for the Redmen
were Hidemitsu Maeda, third,
16:21.6; Conely Richardson, fourth,
16:31.3; Mart Bennett, fifth,
16:40;8; Mark McFann, ninth,
16:SS.4; Jeff · Roberts, 14th,
17:37.S; XuniJrtb• l'lbyama, 19th,
18:08.3; and Dan Longcay, 24th,
19:21.6.
Placing for .the Rio Striders at
the event were Mart Cline. 11th;
17:08.9; Brian Yacovacci, 18th,
17:S2.2; Chuck Moore, 21st,
18:52.1; Robert Frye, 23rd,
19: 16.1; Counney. Hutchinson,
27th, 21:10.7; and Jason Weeks,

117 •••••••
sinrlag Coupo

!U.S.
No. 1
NEW CROP · Baking

30th, 22:163 •
The Redmen finished with 1S
'points, followed by West V. .nia
WCIIcyan With so, the Rio s~

~I Russet

97,11111 BlufftGII, 107.
The 1e1111 returns to competition
this Saturday in the District 22

~ Potatoes

Olampionships • Cedlrvillc.

Oberlin to complete
rest of football slate ·
OBERLIN, Ohio (AP) -

Qber.

lin•• fnndwll llllll1 will try to play
'lhe finl1l two J1111C11 on illlehodule
'dclpita iajuriea IIIII forced the te1m

to forfeillall wec:tcnd' s game
bee- of 100 few players.
"We are. going to play this
wcc' c:nct 1111111 this point we plan
on playin~ out the rest of our '
schedule, ' sports information .
director Scott Wargo Slid. ."Bar·
· rinJ something haP,PCnins, we '11
Jllay 0111 the ICISOIL '
. .
· ·~ ol'l\ally, the Yeomen (0."
J) t.d 27 pial'*• aftjlallle fer Sat-

!.....-........._~_ .....,.. _ ••

~~.£.....~...,..__....- .•

I FltOM ;.;·;.;~·;;;;. . ~ ·:;;;=;;;;;:;~
16 oz. FRESH

Italian
Bread

Limit I Free Per Family, Pleose

.. . ,•• NOnh Coast Athletic Con·

fcrencc same against Kenyon.
About half of those would have
been u•blc to play last Saturday
;apinot Wittenbe!J, prompting the
tforfciL

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12:30 pm &amp; 3:00pm
Balloon animals from Marko the
Magic Clown. .
·

2:00pm
A musical performance by the
Athens ChUdren's Choir.

Obcdin entered ill Oct. 24 game
:apinlt Alle&amp;heny wi~ 29 players
J.DII its roster, but a tr1111Cr's report
laid 16 or !bose hun in the

·----

56-0ioa.

... Sllunlaf• forfeit elltended
Obetlin' I lOIIDJ atrealt to 26

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FloLI'
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"We do IIIJl pllll on clilcontlnu- ·
• foodllll here It Olalla," llh·
i:fte director Jim Fools told The
Meadville ~ibonc. "I
llaven't~
uboutiL
• "You al,.,.ys
aho11tltids
wintingto
in college right
na_y. Wc:ll, is a golden opporlanuy for a player who is good
enou~rh to play, to ph!y right
'--T'

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yards on 20 carries and touch· er 42-27 in a battle of unbeatens·
downs of 22, 81 and 66 yards in a Canton McKinley
trailed
Reprdle11, No':'heastern still 27-6 win ~r Leipsic.
Youngstown Boardman 24-6 with
pulled out a 20-16 VICtory.
Bellevue's Matt Grant gained 10 minutes left, but rallied fer a 27lt's.toobldLybunus couldn't 2l~yanlsand~onruns!'fS9, 24vietory.
.
be !~kina !WM'Off• from a former 60 and IS yards m a 37·20 Vletory
Lima Perry had just three fust
Bellefontaine qllll'terbact and all- over Willard; Howard East Knox down but still managed to beat
made," he Slid "No one bas ques- ~ reamer, COlby Furlong, who junior Cuey Beckett picked up 214 Bluffton 12·6 Friday . .Perry was
tioned what the full ramifications bas 11,111CC grad~
.
yards on 30 carries and scored on helped by an 83-yard touchdown
· of resting would be."
Ore31?" Stri!Ch ~lied 1ts last l'lllis of 18 and 74 yards in a 21-14 pass from John Austin to Jerry
Grantham agreed that it was game this weetend apmst Colum· win over Cadiz; Ken Oan:e scored McGue and Travis Sloan's 40-)'1111
strange that the AIDS issue was bus Academy l!ec•nse of a lact of three times llld ran for 179 yards in interception return for a touch·
hardly raised during the summer players. ~Y 21 players~ in Ctu:dington'• 36·8 victor~ over down.
..-hen Johnson was on the U.S. a 60-7 bealing at the bands ofnval Galion Nonhmor; !elf Boudinot of
Finally, they don't have acting .
Olympic team. In fact, playe'rs . Ore~!~" ClaY~ wc;eL.
J~nstoY(II Northridge scored five classes at Columbus Grove High
from Australia were openly casti·
Nilcl McKinley s Rich Lcm?D umes 111!'1 IU5hed f~ 236 yards on School. If.they did starting wnr·
gated for expressing doubts.
rushed for 330 yards on ~ c.ncs 21 carncs - sconng on run~ of · back Scott Palte might pi~ up 8
Last weekend, Olympian Karl and ~ four IOUChdowns m a 3~· three, 71 28,89 and 24 yards-m,a prep Oscar.
Malone was one of those express- 27 ~ICIOI")' oyer Warren Howland; 41~ wm over Greenon; Malvern s
Columbus Grove trailed Allen
ing doubts about Johnson's come· Jalce Eye gamed 271 yards on 21 A~n Marshall came back af~r East 2s. 14 and faced a tbird·and·
back.
·
atte~IS 1111! cro~ the ~-llnc m~1r:'g the last three gamel w1th nine call at the Allen East 32 with
·'Last February at the All-Star f«.IUr umes m W1ndham s 40-32 an IRJiary to pass f'!r four scor~s 6:30 remaining. Patte wallred ootof
Game, as Johnson was preparing to y•cUJr&gt;: over Watefk!o; Eric Do~- and run for a fifth an ~ 48-6 wm the huddle and near the sideline,
malce his fJnt appeiiiiiiiCe as a play- mg gained 224 Y~ on 21 camcs. over West Lafayette Radgewood; gesturing animatedly to coach
ersincc his fust retirement, Charlt.&lt;i and ~on D;JIIS,of65, S6 a,nd 21 and lama&amp;! Smith upped his East Mike Fell about what play the Bull·
Bartley was among those who sug- yards m CMstline s 45-18 victory Canton sangle-season rushing dogs should run. ·
gested Johnaon shouldn't play. But over Buckeye Ceniral; the Shennan record to 1,142 yards.
•
With the defense's attention on
Bartley Slid i1 was not because he Taints of Chillicothe Unioto got . Olen tangy captured its first Patte second-team quarterback
was afraid, but because he believed 206 yards rushing and fiye touch- league title IR 35 /ears when it Brian 'Baxter slipped into the back·
Johnson shouldn't ·have to deal downs froln Dan Young In a 66-7 grabbed a paece 0 the Buckeye field and took the snap bitting
with the aggravation. ·
win over Frankfort Adena; Oxford Athletic Conference East Division Palte - who had lalcen ~ff down
Aslced Tuesday if Johnsontoolc Talawanda's Dave. Scherrer had c~o~n with a 14·13 victory over thesideline-fora27·yanlgain. •
his advice, Barkley Slid, "I think 277 yards on20 c.-nes and tluew a Lacldng Valley; Newark Catholic
Two plays later Columbus
that's what it eventually came 2S·yard touchdown pass to Andy bas allowed just 19 points all sea· Grove scored then recovered a
down to."
Layton with 2S ~left to give son, but that's still one more than fumle on the ~nsuin~ ldckoff and
"I was referring to him gelling th~ Braves a 26-~2 VICtory over the 197S G~een Wave, tea111 pulled out a 28-26 v1ctory to stay
out because of the criticism and the Middletown Fenwid:; Geoff Helm· allowed; Alliance Marhngton unbeaten
Fell tuid gotten the play from his
· turmoil," . Barkley said, recalling . linger CQmplered 24 of 39 passes I~?Cited up its farst winning ~
his All-Star statements "I didn't for 272 yards and threw two touch- smce 1963 With a 28-13 v1ctpry brother Kevin the head coach at
want that. because Magi~ is a good down passes in the last two minutes over Dover; Massl!lon Pe~ rot~ Lalcewood High School. Lakewood
guy; and I knew that anonymous to propel Sugarcree~ Garaway over Ut? 450 yards ruslung - mcluding gave up a touchdoWn on the play to
~le would sit aroWld and snipe Tuscarawas Catholic 20·17; Area· Bill Reynolds 207 yards and four Warren Harding two weeks earlier
at him."
dia's Erin Vackert collected 264 touchdowns- in beating Lancast·
·

teams. ·
.
"Rio bas a number of freshmen on:,arltley refused to criticize
"Karl Malone was a man about
who should provide good depth,"
Redmcn Coach Dave Oglesby it - he StoOd up and said what he

WilL

....7· ·
1!

Columbus State's Dye was 1· 1
with two walb to be the hit leader
. for the game. A number of pitchers
were again employed by both

by both reams in the first game,
which saw Rio Grande's Eric
Mel ean (junior, Columbus) go two
for three: at bat to be the leading
hitter for the visitors. Columbus
Stale's Buc:t was two for three with
a pair or doOO!es to help rerord the

f:!:[

1\

and had three carries that covered
more then SOyardupiece.

• The UniversitY of Rio Grande

7:00pm
The dancers and gymnasts of The
Dance Barn do their thing.

\ I 'I
lO:OOam·

Nonheasrem last week when he
gained 232 yards on 28 ~He
9CORid on runs of 14 llld SIX yards

.,NBA to CODSI.de'r AIDS'. test·•Ing tior pI ayers.

·Rio Grande . ·
·runners finish
first in meet.

l

7:00pm
The sweet sounds of the Hocking
Valley Chorus Sweet Adelines.

I

•

•

II

12:00 pm
Martial arts maneuvers from
Athens Tae Kwon Do.

I
I
•

•

/

I

ll:OOam

•

,.

H

The critters make a return
performance with the Federal
Hocking High School F.F.A.
Petting Zoo~

•

• •

I'

4:00pm
Furry critters, courtesy of the
Federal Hocking High School
F.F.A. Petting.Zoo.

• I
•

•

more than JUSI the all-1111111e le8m.
~ Belle~OIIIIil.e ~. left
an 1mpreSSIOP on Spnngf1eld

I7Rlf'" MILLER
AP pall Willet

The Redmen netted four nms in
the fourth inning and t!Jree ~ in

•

The Dally Sentl~7

Lyburtus' pr.olific ~ushing fails to keep Bellefontaine from loss

fall, ICYalll pild1ers

8:00pm
An all out performance by the
Ohio University Dance Squad.

'

Pomeror-Mtddleport, Ohio

Sclwltutk sitklint~

As has been the practice in the

3:00pm
Chuckles and surprises from
Papel the Clown.

.I

•

oody's has come to University
Mall- and we're. w~lcopting
them with a four day grand
opening celebration. There'll
be clowns and cowgirls,
semor swingers and ballroom .
dancers. And while you're here,
pick up one of our spe&lt;:ial coupon
flyers and enjoy savings throughout
·the mall. So come on down, join in
the fun, and welcome Goody's to
the neighborhood.

: Wedn1 r liar, Nov11nber 4, 1992

--

15 oz. Size

•'

~~- - --

Dou•l• Manufaduren'·
Cou~on lveryclay.
Check Store For Details
•'

Price• IHectlwe 1hru
Saturtlay, Nowe•lter 7, 1992
•Quantity Rights Reserved •No Soles To Dealers
. •'

..
·.'

'
'

�-

Wldneedey, November 4, 1992

By The Bend·

The Daily Sentinel

STOKELY

a

Mother should change her son's
n~me regarciless of the inlaws
·

Dar Au Lucien: Seven years
ago, I .became involved wttb a
man who was 111 alcoholic and a
drua addicL I tltoo•p! I loved "J~·
even llnqb be rb:sted oo me and
refused 10 hold down I job.
. Three yaaa ..,, we bad a son.
When I dilcolieecl Jeb was using
druga· in front of our child, I
~-~'a enOugh,• and lett him.
nAIIIIIIIICiy, my parents took us ill
with loving anns.
I returned to college and
demanded tbat Jeb pay child
IUJI(lOit. His visitations are supta'vised by !DC beca•"C' of his substancC
· abUBc, but he cin see his 100 any
time he -ts. He basn'l beelt around
·
for four mqnths, which is pretty
conclusive eviderice that he has no
interest in the child. ·
HYMN SING PLANNED - Hillside Baptist
Little Lambs, Tile Partakers, The Redeemed
After.. a great deal of soulQaartet,
Blood
Coveaant
aad
Linda
Jones.
Church wiD have a hymn slag SUDday at ' p.m.
searching, I decided to change
Siagiag wiD be by The CllUdren or God, God's
James R. Acree Sr., pastor, lavites the pubUe.
my son's last name 10 mine. Jeb
couldn't care less, but his parents
arc furious. They have told tne that
. . if their grandson's name"is changed,
they never .want to see me or my
son again. . ,
Am 1 wrong 10 do this, Ann? Do
Community Calendar items heid and dues are payable. .
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. - you think my son
v,rould want the
Liberty Mountaineers will petform
appear two days before au event
POMEROY - There will be a Saturday at the Senior Citizens name of a man he barely Jcnows, a
aad the day 111 that event. Items
man who never was a father to
must be received weD in advance girl scout leadefs meeting Thursday Cetiler irt Point Pleasant, W.Va.
bim? My family loves my son
to assure publication ia the cal· at the Trinity Church.
dearly,
and so do I. I think he would
TIJPPERS PLAINS - Craft and
endar.
BELPRE - Friendship Night fc. bake sale, Saturday. 9 a.m. to 4 be proud to have our name. Please
WEDNESDAY
District 13, Daughters of America, p.m., St. Paul United Methodist give me yOur thoughts on Ibis. -·
POMEROY • Revival at Ml. will be Thursday at the Belle Church in Tuppers Plains. Sub SINGLE PARENT IN SOUTH
Hennon United Brethml ill Christ Prairie Council, Belpre. A potluck sandwiches will also be available. ·CAROLINA
·
DEAR SOUTH CAROLINA:
Church•, off Texas Road near supper will begin at 6 p.m. folPomeroy, through Sunday, 7:30 lowed by meetillg. All district offiSYRACUSE - Syracuse Ele- Jeb's parents have no business trying
p.m. nightly. Rev. Robert Martley cers to be installed are urged to mentary will hold its fall. carnival 10 manipulate you. If you :w~ to
wiU be the evangelisl. Public invit- attend.
S~y. A soup dinner will begiD change your child's last name, go
.
at
5 p.m. and games will be held ahead and do iL
ed.
RACINE - Racine American from 6-8 p.m. There will also be
Dear Ann LaDders: This is not
MIDDLEPORT - A six-week Legion Post 602 will meet Thurs. entertainmenL
an everyday problem. but it is
biblical background study , day at 7:30 p.m.
one that I am faced with every
Wednesday through Dec. 9 at 7
HENDERSON; W.VA.- The day. Tell me if I am out of line 111
p.m. each Wednesday with Jim
POMEROY - Bi~ Bend Stem- Ga!lia Twirlers Western Square complain.
,
. OliphanL This study will examille wheel Association will meet Thurs- . Dance Club will hold a dance SatMy
beautiful
22-year-old
daughhow God prepared and used lhrce day at 1 p.m. at the Carpenter's urday from 8-11 p.m. at the Hengroups or nations - Hebrews, Hall in Pomeroy. .
derson Community Center in Hen- ter appears 10 be perfectly normal
Greeks and Romans - to establish
derson, W.Va. Rogrr Steele will be until you loot 11 her hands. She
His wcrd. Public invited.
the caller. ·
. FRIDAY
Deutchland's 'Reichs'
RUTLAND - There will be a
B£RLIN; Oermany (AP) POMEROY - There wiii be a ·dance at the Rutland American ~ MIDDLEPORT - A slate paintAdolf
Hider's Third Reich was the
rummage u lithe PoniCI'OY Fmt Legion Hall on Friday from 8 p.m. inll class will be offered by the
BapUit Cbmdl on Wednesday and to midnight with music by .Jeannie '?,tiddleport Arts Council Siturday GCRIIIR state's goveniment from
.
Thursday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
andtheWolfcPack: Public invited. · and Nov. 14 frOm noon to 2 p.m. 193310 1945.
Of
Germany's
two
preceding
~ Meadows is instructor and
STIVERSvn.LE - Kerry DrenLONG BOTTOM - The Paidi ,. the' cost is SIS with materials sup- Reichs, the ftrst was the Holy .
Roman Empire, abolished ill I806.
nan, Elizabeth, W.Va., wiU speak Full Gospel Church in Long ·Bot- plied. '
and
the second was the German
at the Stiversville Word of Faith tom will have preaching and
Empire
under KaiSCI' Wilhelm that
Church on Wednesday and Thurs- singing Friday at7 p.m. with Pastor
SALEM CENTER · - Star
day at 7:30 p.m. Pastor David Dai- Steye Reed and local singing talenL Gnmge and Star Junior Grange will lasted from 1871 to 1918.
ley invites the public.
Public invited. FeUowshtp wiD fol- meet Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at the
low.
grange hall near Salem, Center.
. 111VRSDAY
Potluck suprer will follow the
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Junior
MIDDLEPORT ;· The United meeting. AI members urged to
Fluoride, which is added to
High academic boosters will meet Pentecostal Church in Middleport attend. Officers and committee
water
supplies to prevent tooth
Thuisday at 7 p.m. at the school will have a chicken and noodle din- chainnen arc 10 meet at6:30 p.m.
decay.
is a natwally oa:urring mincafeteria.
ner Friday from 10:30 a.m. to 2
eral found in all water in quantilies
p.m. The cost is $3.50 and eat-in or
POMEROY - Royl!l Oak Dance too Small to have denbil care beneMIDDLEPORT - The Preceptor delivery orders wiD be available. Club will hold a dance Saturday
Beta Beta ChiDtcr. Beta Sigma Phi The menu includes chicken and from 8-11 p.m. at Royal Oak Part. fits.
The nation's rust suc:c:essful silSorority. wilf meet Thursday at noodles, com, coleslaw. hot roll Music will be provided by Orlando
ver
mill.))egan operation in 1860
7:30 p.m. at the home of Ann and choice of cherry, pumpkin-or Columbo.
near
Virginia City, Nev. .
Rupe. Mrs. Rupe will present the ~~~~ pie. For delivery, call 992prosram. Refreshments will be
Sally
served by !he hostess and Clarice
Kra~.
ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
County Pomona Grange wiD meel
DALLAS (AP) - Sally Ride,
RUTLAND - The Rutland Friday at 7:30.p.m . at the Rock America'i
first woman bt space. is
Township Trustees will meet Springs Grange Hall. Racine inspiring othen
with her tales of
Thorsday at 6:30 p.m. at the Rut- Grange will be hosL
the
fear
aDd
fun
or
orbit.
land Fire Station. Public invited.
Ride, one of six women chosen
TUPl'ERS PLAINS - Tuppers for astronautlllining irt 1978, told
REEDSVILLE - The Olive Plains VFW Post No. 9053 and a younJ aullieace at Southern
Township Trustees will meet Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor a
University Monday that
. Thunday II 7:30 p.JiJ. I!' i!tC Shade dance Friday from 8-11 :30 p.m. Methodist
flying
00 the lhuale Challenger irt
River State Forestry Building.
with music by CJ. and the Country 1983 and 1984- frigbtening.
.
Gentlemen.
"I
just
remember
this
over.
. ROCK SPRINGS - The Saliswhelmmg
senac
dwirtgthe
fint
10
bury Township Trustees will meet
SATURDAY
seconds or llimch of lhloluta helpThursday at 7 p.m. at the IOW!Iship
PORTLAND · Hazel Communi- lessness, ··Ride said.
garage.
ty Church will have a hymn sing
Girl Scout Robin Prosser, 13,
Saturday at 7:30 .Jl.m. fealuring the was impressed.
niPPERS PLAINS - The Tup- Haven Singers (Tamara Hayman,
look up and see lhe stan
pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 Rose and Rhonda VanMeter) . and"You
think
she was actually up
Ladies Auxiliary will J¥et Thurs- Edsel Han, pastor, invites the pub- there," Robin
said. "It's someday at 7:30 p.m. Inspect~'ik,wiJJ be lic.
thing to be diJcovercd still."

Community calend~r

News notes

Ride addresses
audience at SMU ·.

Perennials topic of garden club .
program; Atkins installs officers
E'l8 Robson inslalled officers at
the recent meeting of the Rutland
Garden Club hosted by Pearl Canaday. Mrs. Robson used a bird
theme during the installation.
. Installed were Pauli~e Atkins,
president, wise old owl; Dorothy
Woodard, vico-president, cardinal;
Marcia Denison, secretary, q~J ;
and Mqaret Belle Weber, treasurer. roedntmer.. s~ pruented each
officer a cennuc bird.
Mrs. Canaday gave devotions
reading "See the Beauty All
Around Usw IIJd "I Am Still Rich."
The Cfted and Collect wae given
irt unison. Roll call was answered
by ten membeu and.one guest,
Clotine Blackwood, with "A Fall
Flower I Have Dried."
· Mrs. Canaday announced she ·
had purchased bulbs for the
C:~ ill lhe park in lower RutPauline Atkins reported on the

county board meeting, county
meeting and fall regional meetillg
at Nelsonville as well as several
dates for events next year. Those
attending the regional meeting
were Margarelllelle Weber, Pearl
Canaday ~ Neva Nicholson, Eva
Robson, Pauline Atkins and Janet
Bolin. Pauline Atkins and Janet
. Bolin attended die regional board
meeting and county garden club
meeting.
.
Rutland Club received a grade
of 99 00 their Jli'Ogrllll book.
The Meigs County Christmas
flower sliow will be Nov. 21 and
22 at Carlaton School in Syracuse.
Rutland Club is to furnish class
name cards.
Mrs. Canaday had the arrangement for the month featuring balloon plant euculyptus, grus and
otra.
Margaret Belle Weber presented
the program with an. article on
"Perennials for Fall Planting."
.1)

Planting perennials at Ibis ume ot
year the plants can concentrate on
root growth radter than foUqe. She
cautioned apinst ferlilizint IIIII 10
give plenty of water.
.
Kathy Dalton presented
"Autuq~n Greeting•, Sunflower
. Wreathw with or without ICCds the
texllired heads of sunflowers lqJIIt
fascinating focal points .o r dried
ammgements.
Stella Atkins had "Elegant
Aluims" which arc planted in tbe
fall and perform encores every
summer.
.Neva N'ICholson ,!lad lhe !lint for
the month. She told memben 10
remove leaves shading the arass
and from shrubs and flower gardens.
. .
Dorothy Woodard read
"Leavea" from Ideals and closed·
the meeting with "The day you
spend with a apecial friend is a
~l?ier day from beginning to .

Pleue, Ann, wbal do

'

Ann

STORE HOURS
Mot~day

thru S~nday
8 AM-10 PM,

you dtjnk

about her behavior? Should I
say ·anything? If' so, what? -CEO MOM IN VAN
TOMA'IQ.PA
~k MOM: Ava is 22, which
ANN LAMDDS
is past the age of consent in evety
IMAra r '
lll8tC bt the union. I am lllft by Ibis
c-a, 1 ,.. ..
timesheknowseuctlyhow,oufrd
·
·
'tb
has let ber fingernails grow 80 loog :U,!.~ bizalre prcocx:upaltnn WI .
that she loob like a freak. To be
When the novelty wears off and
_........ I 110
.:.;...o of · :lid'
fortwle
uuuuw,
embarrassed by Ibis she gets' woou ~·~g 1
bizarre atrec:tation. Unfortunstely, on manicwa and nail _,ewelry,ll!e
her brolhen think she loob great will ttim them 10 .1 more convenwt'th •",__g claws.
lional length. Unlil then ' you are
u"""' .,.,
Eadt .of "Ava's• nails appem to ·lookilla "10 formidable challenges
be Jbout 6 inches long. Sbe has spent 10 self-control. I hope you are equal
a smaU fortune on them. I never 10 it.
know from one day to the next what · Gem of the Day: we wouldn't
her nails wiD look like. She ~ wocry 10 much about what people
them..___
. ·-" wt'dt naU- "-'-·. tho h f
'f
k
h
~"':d gold ~·;;;,'k;. se~ttJ!Y~ 1 we new ow
You have 10 see it to believe it. I
"""" LtJIIdtrs· ltJitsl booller,
feel like telling her to grow up and "Nufltls tJIId Doo:ies." htJs
.,_ ,.
•1
stop ll')'ina 10 8ltlliCt attention.
everytning 1, om r- olllrtJgeoru y
Ava is totally wrapped up ill this fUIIIIY ro rite poig/IQIIrly illsighrful.
long-nail loot and says she intends Send il stlf-oddressed, lo11g,
to Jet them
. grow indefmitely J.ust 10
business·siu tllve~ IJIId tJ chtcl
see how long they can get. ·
or money order for (rlris incllldts
I don't want to alienate my · poslilgt IJIId lrolldli11g) ro: Nuggets.
anddaughashamedrer
.· butl'mofdeherqlllordiwansa~
.·n·gtedto 'c'o,..AM I.ANitl/1rs6t6~i ~~6~15(6j~
_,_
,,_
thiS
'
.
''
u
leo go,
·
•
· ·
1"""" 1'""
Ctlllllda, selld $6.) .

460UNCE

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.
·IESEIVE THE liGHT TO UMIT QUUnnES
GOOD SUN~,. IOV. 1 thru SAT., IOV. 7; 1992

L d
an erS

SPAGHEnl

O's
14.75 OUNCE

s

$169
Chuck Steak. . . . . . . . ta~ USDA CHOICE BEEF
$199
USDA. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

14 GOLD

BUCKET

Cube Steak............. LB.

TRUN·K SALE
BUTT

Chains
Charms
Earrings
Bracelets.
Rings

··'

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE

KAHN'S ·

$119

.

$269
•

.·

•

Tur

PRIDE

~

I

.

·Sausage_. . . . .

!!.

3 ·
1

APPLE PIE

FILLING
I'

...vnN
MUFFIN MIX
VA~EY BELL •

2.49 ._

5

Russm

DEW FRESH •

BAKING POTATOES

99c
ZESTA
1-uJBOX

' · MOITOII

FROZEN DINNERS

TV D•nners.....9-1o

OCEAN SPRAY

TONY'S FROZEN.

·
•·
PIZZO.......................

•

Sauce...16 oz.

M111CLM

. IATHROOM DSSUE

99c ·

FLAVORm

MAXWEll HOUSE (AD( Fits AI)

MAC. and CHEESE

MASUR IUIID COFFEE

$1 u.ltS

5/

PRICES GOOD WHILE SUPPLIES WT
We Reaene The Ri,ht To Limit Quantitiee
No Coapoaa or Miaimum Pare- ·

.

YOI CAl DO TIE lEST AT C'IOSS'
'l

(

Stokely Pumpkin._n oz.
89' lOOt

IN RACINE SINCE 1860

MORTON •

7'/tOL

$2

99

3UOZ

'

SHOPPER'S VALU ·

SUGAR

99cu•.

Good OnlY ld ttow.U'• Super
Oood Nov. 1 thru 8&amp;, Nov.
Umlt 1 Pw cu•-

70UNCE

$ S9

Margarme. .. . . . ;. . .31J.

10 Ll~ lAG ·

SALTINE CRACKERS

.

1
rua 99
69(
oz• .
ssoo

2%Mdk. . -.. . ._. . GAL

ROUND SnAK

4ROUS

$1

Head Lettuce. . .HEAD

BONELESS TOP IEEF

99(

.

••

PEARL STREET
RACINE, OHIO
949·2550

l,19.

20 OUNCE

(

•

SLAIIACON
5
Ll.

CHERRY .PIE
20 OUNCE

$ 49
Sliced
Bacon.-"LJ.
10x
LOUIS RICH SMOKED
$ 19
KIT~HEN

THANK YOU

FILLING

'

SAT., NOV•.7 - NOON·S PM

FAL1II'S SUCID

SOUP

10.75 oz.

$139

Steak/Roast""·····"-.La..
MIXED
Fryer Parts_.~~.LB. .49 c
-.

FOR MEN &amp; WOMEN
UNBEUEVABLE SAVINGS/

CHICKEN
NOODLE

Round Steak..............LB.

.WAID CROSS'
SONS

'

•

-· TOMATO
JUICE

Wednesday, November 4, 1992
P~~ge

~

The Dally Sentinel

CRISCO SHORTENING

$199

'
3ll.

BEEf.
I0 LB. PACKAGE

CHUCK

8

�Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

.. , P.g! 10-lbe Dally SenUnel

Court. won't rule after all in
Montana·molestation case

TOPS;KOPS meets

The 'Nova' pyramid: If
you come, they will build it

Mary Roush - tile boll weekly loser at the recent meeting of
Ohio TOPS Club No. 570 held at
the Cupenter' I HaD in Pomeroy.
The be8t KOPS lolet was Ola St
Clair. Open bouse was held and·
sevcnl new mcmben WCl'll pracnt
KOPS and TOPS pledges
opened lhe meeting.
The fruit basket was won by
Judy Wolfe. The gadget gift was
won by J'{ancy Manley who came
dressed as a clowil.
·
Peggy Vining sang a son1
which won recognition at Area
Recognition Day In GroveporL .
An article was read about tile
organizali()JI and a skit. "Mind Battle," was performed by Cindy
Faulk, Trina Faulk, Wanda Fault
and Calisia Searls.

.

87 STEPHANIE SCHOROW
tunld an PBS' "This Old House,"
AIIOdlted ,.._Writer
. led lhe lbtee-weelt effort, joined by
BOSTON - · Cue lhe grunis and Oilier Egyplologisu eager ·IO.Iry Olit
groans from exttu b.luling huge their own pet p)'lllllid theories.
blocb of stone. Cue tile cruel
Inevitably, everyone clashed,
EI)'Piian o¥ease&amp; with heavy eye- Ldlna' - lhe purist - kept pushliner and whip lashing at their ing builders 10 slick 10 ancientleehbacks.
niques. Hopkins - lbc Jll'8111lalist
. Wau:b die pyram1ds get built - fig~Rd lbc ancient stonemascns
at lcasl,.u HoD}twood saw it
pmbably operated as be did; that is,
· Bu&amp; maybe it wun't like !hal at IIIey got tile job done by any availall: Maybe the pyramids weren't able..
bwlt by brutalized slaves. Maybe
"You gotta undentand. I was a
IIIey WCl'll ccxnplelcd through a mix loose cannon," Hopkins said in a
of cooperation and coercion ~ phone interview (rom his MasEgyptfa~ arc~itecu screaming sachusetts landscaping busin~ss.
. about design, bftd IIIUlN 1oo1ring "The ('Nova') people were asking
fctward to an afta'-work beer and me to do lhe impossible in a sbon
lhe 'contraciOr puiiiDa OUI his hair, period of time." · .
.
·
moaning, "I gotta deadline to
"I'm used to it," he added. .
meet" .
Wl'th a crew of 4!1 Egyptian
A Halielujah 'Party was held
Maybe ancient construction ,stone masons and laborers, Hoprecen\ly
at the fcUowshlp room of
sites resembled a ~t poject that ldns stnJRgied 10 move huge blocks
Hope
Baptist
Church in Middleaddressed Hnsering mysteries of limestone with ropes and woodpan.
Seasonal
games
WCl'll enjoyed.
about lhe pyranuds by bqilding one en sleds and position them with
Refreshments
of
hotdogs
were
usin* ancient leehniqucs.
centuries-old engineering tech.
served
and
sacks
.
of
treats
were
• This Old Pyramid, !~ airing niqucs..
.
given
tQ
everyone
present
ronlgbt on PBS' "Nova," cbroniThe program shifts from ~om- ·
Attending were
cles the Ciealion of an 18-foot-high putcr graphic-laced analysis by
Carrie
Michael, Jeannie,
pyramid in Em&gt;t under the direc- Lehner on pyramid history 10 Hoplion of Roger-Hopkins, a Sudbury, kins and crew as they put tileory I onathan, Michael and Rebecca
Mass., stonemason, and Mark into practice. Under the pressure by Owen, Sonny McClure, Mart,
Lehner, an archaeologist witillbe academics, Hopkins grouses, "I'll Regina, Josh and Tiffany Simpson,
Debbie, Mark and Nlchole Clay.
University of Chicago's Oriental be as faithful as I can be given I Nancy
Marlowe; Carol Mourning,
Institute.
only have three weeks here."
Chad
Dailey
, Susan, Tim and
·
Compared to tile nearby 480The results are both amusing
Justin
Coleman;
Ashley Miller,
foot•higb Great Pyrami.d of Giza. and insightful as .to what might
Margie,
Beth
and
Mathew
Landers,
the "Nova" pyramid seemed a have occurred 4,000 years ago.on
.
Jackie,
Matthew
and
Jessica
Jussmall task.
the Giza· Plateau. Eventually, the
tice,
Judy,
John
Pat,
Jason
and
Lehner, an academic in an lndi- thcoristi slqlped back and let H~p~in
Riley,
Katie
Pratt,
Pete
and.
J
ana Jones bat. and Hopkins, a nuts- · kins do bis thing. And the pyramid,
Aulona
Quick,
David,
Mary
and
and-bolts New Englander often
.· rea- for the most pan, was builL
Jarrod Bryan, Jiin, Jenny, James,
Pllul and Peter Ditty, Lee, Bron,
Chrissy and Adam Williams.
Salem Center - Orion 'Barrett,
The Meigs Local School Levy ·
Stephanie
Kopec, Brian Bias.
Committee recently sponsored a
Harrisonville
- Jennifer Reeves,
poster contest for students in
John
Stanley,
William
Haning.
·
grades K-6 in the Meigs Local
PomeroyJenny
Mankin,
JessiSchools.
First place .winners received a ca Hamilton, Tonya Litchfield.
Middlepon - Stephanie Wigal,
free pass 10 all Meigs !ligh School
P1a..y
Paige
Bradbury, Tara Wyatt '
home baskelball games, second and
Salisbury - Carson Midkiff;
third place winners each received
Sandi
Gilkey, BiUy Soulsby.
free video rentals and food coupons
Bradbury
- Ashley Burton,
donated from local metcllanls. The
Trent
PaxiDn.
•
theme for the contest was "Improve
Rutland - Mandy Miller, Allison
Our School."
Hays, Derrick Bolin.
Winners are as follows:

BI!!:CHARD CARELLI
laled Press Writer
WASHINOTON . .:_ The
Supreme Court said Tuesday it will
nOf, rule alter all in tile case of a
convicted child molester who was
Imprisoned in Montana after refusins to admit his guilt in a required
therapy program.
Tlie ceiun issued a brief order
dismissing the case as " improvidently granted,'' effectively saying .
it had erred when it agreed to
review lhe case.
The vote was 8-1. I IL'ltiCC Byron
R. White said the case presented a
legal issue that should be resolved.
The action became a distinct
possibility. when. during oral arguments last month, the justices were
told thllt Donald Glenn Imlay is
due to get .out of prison soon no
matter what they deCided.

Hallelujah party
held in-Middleport

PRAYER VIGIL • About three dozen Meigs
Countlaas &amp;llthered at Dave Diles-Park In Middleport just after DOOD Eleetion Day ror a pnyer
vlcll. The emphasis was aot on candidates or
Issues but oa tbe concern or Cbristlans ror their
-------

· country, their llellef Ia the power of prayer, 10d
their need ror piciiDce in carryinc out the wiU
or God. Introductory remuks were by Rev.
Frank Smith, representing tile Middleport Ministerial Assodatlon wllicll spOIISOI'ed the vi&amp;JL

.
s
l•n
the
ne
·
ws.
Name
the
·

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Tom
. Cruise and his agent have set up a
film production s~ at Paramount
in an exclusive multi-picture deal.
Financial terms of the tluec-ycar
contract wcren 't disclosed.
Cruise and Paula Wagner, his .
agent for more 11 years, formed
the production coinpany in Jl)ly.
"Paula Wagner's motion picaure
experience and relalionships in the
industry will make their company a
magnet for lOp writers and direcrors," John Goldwyn, president or
Paramount's Motion Picture

Annual Voice
of Democracy
contest slated
The Olive-Orange Memorial
VFW Post No. 9053 and Ladies

Auxiliary will hold their· fourth
annual VoiCe of Democracy Contest Monday at 7:30p.m.
This year's theme is "My Voice
in America's Future." The contest
is open to all county high school
studcms in the lOth,'llth and 12th
grade.

Speeches are 10 be t1uec 10 five
minutes in length and must follow
Ibis year's theme.
Further information may be
obtained by contacting Merrilee
Bryant at 985-3376. The public is
invited.

Group-Production, said Tuesday.
Cruise began his acting career at
Paramount with the movie
" Taps," and went on to star in
such Paramount hits as "Top
Gun" and " Days ofTbunder."

LONDON (AP) ·- The Sultan
of Brunei, considered the world's
richest man, rnde to Buckingham
Palace in a s~vcn-carriage
e~l?urage .10. kick off his fJtSt state
VISit to Bntain.
.
Sultan Sir Hassanal Bolkiah, 46,
8nd lbc senior of his two wives, are
staying at the palace during their
four-day visit
He exchanged gifts with Qu~n
Elizabeth after arriving Tuesday.
Along with official honors, she
gave him a 230-ycar-old portelain
plate~ and a pair ~f c~ps and
saucers. He gave her a gold bowl.
Brunei, an oil-rich country the
size of Delaware, is on the island or
Borneo in the Pacific Ocean. It
gained independence from Britain
in 1984.
The sultan's wealth is estimated
at $3 7 billion~

cancerous tissue during surgery
Sunday, said hospital spokesman
Ron Wise. He said Miss Hepburn
was in good spirits and should be
rcleased within a week..
Miss Hepburn starred in such
films as "Bieakfast at Tiffany's,"
"Roman Holiday" and "My Fair
Lady.~ · For the ~ six yem, she
has been goodwill ambassador for
UNICEF.

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) London •s tabloids !II'C scrutinizing
Prince Charles and Princess
Diana•s relationship every minute
of their. trip to Korea, but a Buckingham P11lace spokesman today
claimed the lOUt was a success.
The 43-year-old heir to the
British throne and his 31-ycar-old
wife were on the third day of a
four-day lOUt of Korea. the fust by
British royalty.

PROGRAM PRESENTED - Mel1s County .,.
Deputy Sberllr Bob Beetle provided l'ree ftJIIerprU.tln}l
til Mlc!bael.DaVIs and otber community
.
'
\
. I

plan 10 attend the 1992 "Holiday
Happening" sponsored by the
Me1gs County' Extension Office on
Nov. 16 from 10 a.m. to noon at
the Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center.
. The prograin will be presented
by Extension Home Economists
Cindy Oliveri, Meigs County;
Becky Culbenson, Gallia ·county;
Lana Hardy, Lawrence County;

IISUUICE

111 Su•• St.
YO. IIDEPEIIDEIII
HIIBIIIYIIII •

... coum ·
••c• w-a61

'

By JEFF DONN
Asaoeiated Press .Writer
AMHERST, Mass.- A federal
civil rigbts panel on Tuesday called
for more minority recruitment and
multicultural studies at the University of Massachusetts, which is
working to ease racial tensi~ on
' Dcsl,lite evident progress, a

trators, students, and faculty to
' continue to listen to •. and work ·
with, each otilcr so tilat by middecade tensions will have been
reduced," said its Chairwoman,
Dorothy s. Jones.
·
The 13-mcmbcr Maasacbusetts
Advisory Committee to the U.S.
Commission on Civil Rights, an
independent federal agency, is to
release a repon Nov. 9 on .a wave
of unrest at the !chool. Officials
released details of 'the repon Tues-.
day.
It calls for boosting the number
of minority stUdents with moie federal scholarships and fmancial !lid.
as well as heavier student involvement in shaping a culbJtally diverse
curriculum.

Get your free gift for Christmas '92 and extra cash for Christmas '93.
Just open a Christmas Club now and receive a free gift (free serving tray wilh $1 , $2 or$3 per week club; choice of one of three cookie
tins for $5, $10 or $20 per week club) . . . then just make 50 weelcly payments toward your 1993 Ctrrlstmas Club and Peoples Bank will
make the 51st payment for you-that's the Peoples advantage!
---~,

I

Winners of lhe COIIUIIIe Cllntest to nine; and Kris Krawsczyn,
.during the haunted hayride in Adam Walklir,lp 10-13.
·
Sleepy Hollow In Middlepon on
Ugliest- Lacey Blmett, Tommy
Thursday evening have been Lavender. birth to four )'QI'S; John
'announced. In order of first and . Krawsczyn, Sara Reynolclll, five to
nine; and Sara Craig, Zach Mead- .
,SCCOIId the winnera are as follo.ws.
, Prettiest - Ieliica Jewell, Tyler ows. age 10-13.
.
Most original - Jared McKinLittle, binh to four years; Michelle
ney, Brenda Dodson, birth to four
:F~ncb, Channing Burge, five to
·nine; and Andrea Ncutzlil)g, Jen- years; Allen Moore, Mathew
Krawsczyn, age five to nine; and
llifer Neece, age 10-13.
.
· Funniest - Marianda Barnett, Julie Spaun, Wes ~. ag(l 10tyndsey CaseJ.. b!fth .ro four years; 13. .
Carla Smith, Slepllanie Wigal, five
,.
I
. I

$1
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Gi1t Hleclion: a $1 , $2 or $3 pe&lt;- club qualifies lor a tree w.ing ~ay : a 55, $10 0&lt; $20
per weal&lt; dub qualities lor choice of one of lhroe oookio dns..Ask your IBIIeJ.

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• .a"""' 011t-.n1D ..,an 111.,.. 01IM:Itr*. Of lhl lnWI!tl AMru SeMct hll noiltdme

IIIII M1 no 111ngtf u;.ct 1D blt1llp 'lllllhl*lng.

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..I1

MARIETIA

138 Putnam St.
Frontier Shopping Center
.Second &amp; Scammel Sts.
State Route 7, Reno
.Washingt&lt;r ScJlare Center
1 North Court St.
801 East State St.
1902 Washington Blvd.
510 Washington Blvd.
300 Main St.
97 N. S$cond Ave.
~ Public Square
Washington St.
70 N: Plains Rd.

ATHENS
BELPRE
'

LOWELL
·MIDDLEPORT
NELSONVILLE

Sijjna1ure

PXost2 1

Register !101'1 supply of~ may be limited and 6llbject !0 avli~lty.

..

Some minority students and professors have cxpre~ frustration
!hal simila! pledges in tbc past have
failed to yield more progress.
Sandra Rose, a junior and cam-

THE PLAINS

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POMEIOI, OHIO

~*!1/P ~ ~, .

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Woman dies in .hospi~a! after earlier
erroneous declaration of de·ath.

SEATTLE (AP) - A woman
who was found alive at a funeral
home after she was mistakenly
decland 10 be dead two days IIIII
died Tuelday 1110t11inJ at a hospital,
a nursing supervisor uid.
Roberta Jones, 68, of Seattle
died at 5:20 a.m., said the Har:
borvicw Medical center superviIIOf, who declined to give her name
or tlie cause of death.
.
JORCI suffenlcl from colon cancer, a bolpilal official said earlier.
She - cironeoully declalecl dead
Sunday; when a fire department
. medic summoned by a warled outof-IOWII ll!lalive found her lying on

The Sacred Heart Catholic
Church in Pomeroy will have its
annual fall bazaar Nov. 12 with
dinner at 5 p.m.
Dinner consists of cream baked
chicken or ham, homemade noodles, mashed potatoes and gravy,
green beans, hot rolls and choice of
coleslaw, apple sauce or pickled
beets. Cost 1s $5 for adults and
$2.50 for children 12 and under.
Dessert is included.

•

in The Des Moines Register.
Tammy Zywicki, 21, disappeared Aug. 23 while on ber way to
GrinneD College from New Jersey.
Her broken-down.car was found on
Interstate 80 ncar· La Salle, Ill.
Zywicki's blanket-wrapped body
was found Sept. 1 in a ditch off
Interstate 44 in southwest Missouri.

A nationwide search for her
ldUcr has focused on the driver of a
white semi -tractor trailer who
apparently was among the last to
see h\11' alive.
.
the floor of her apanment with .a
Authorities have said there is no
body temperature of 90 degrees- evidence lhe driver was involved in
and no ll(IJlltCIIt JJUisc,
abduction and kiDing, but IIIey
A funcral-liome employee the
would like to talk to him because
noliccd what be thought was faint he mighl have lnformatiQn that
brcatillng u he~an unloading would be helpfulro police.
.
Jones' sbect-co
body from a
stretcher 10 tile 111C1tu81Y Sunday.
Zywicki ·said the two-month
Fire Department medic units investigation into her dau&amp;hter's
were called, confirmed lhe was still death has produced lead's that
alive and rushed her to Har• extend to several statcs.
~w.
.
.
''It' s in a radius of so many
Hospital
spokeanlll
Larry
Zal1n
·
milea, something lite a day's
said abe was treated for hypother- drive," Zywicki said. "It may be
mia. or low body temperature, . sameone In the area, because the
apparently brought on IIY her ill- true~ they're lookl'!g for dldn 't
. neu.
have a sleeper cab on tt."

Bazaar plann~d

RISING TO TilE
C
LENGE

.

· ·DES MOINES, Iowa.(AP)- . including deaths in Ohio and WisThe mother of slain Grinnell Col- consin,Jo Ann Zywicki said Monlege student Tammy Zywicki said day.
"Police have not used ... serial
: investigators are trying to determine if her daughter was the victim killer in so many w~. but apparof a scrialldUer who may be roam- 'ently they're ~~ ~ information," Z)'wJcti sa1d during an
ing die Midwest.
'
AuthOrities have been studying interview from her home in Marlseveral recent murders ·of women, ton, NJ. Sbe was quoted Tucsdsy

To open a 19?3 Christmas Club, complete the form
and return it to any office of Peoples Bank.

I

I request and authorize automatic transfer from (circle onel: ·
. Checking
Regular Savilgs
· ·

mcdiaiOI'S.

'

, .I

~
-·
II~
I Weekly Amount of 1993 Christmas Club
I ~ircle amount and enclose~~or first payment.

NELSONVILLE - Four additional scholarships liave been
awarded to students in Hoelting
College's ceramic engineering
technology program, awards made
possible through a $3,000 contribution from the Logan-Holl Foundation.
ReciJ,Jients of $750 each are:
Walt Cnhfield and Terri Cullison,
both of Nelsonville; Fred Thompson of Racine and Eric Johnson of
Middleport. All are second year
students.
Gail Jordan, lead instructor, said
over $3,000 in scholarship funds
for ceramic engineering iechnology
students was not awarded Ibis year
due to a lack of applicants.
"While some of this money will
be awarded before the end of the
academic year, the b.llance will be
clllried over fa- next fall's l'lo!ards."
Jordan said.

pus activist, said the advisory panel

u , recommending "wonderful.
. wonderful things."
She added· ''When it comes to
the tin\e of making some concrete
decisions ... it never really comes
through. ••
School spokeswoman Kay
Scanlan said "the administration
shares the frustration of those who
have beard these proposals and
plans before." But she said campus
officials •'are very optimistic thai a .
precise program and tim~lc. wUI
be coming out of the mediation·
effons."
·
The advisory committee's repon
is based largely on a September .
1991 campus meeting, before the
latest round of icnsion. Committee
m&amp;nbers beard testimony from 29
panelists, mainly from the Amherst
campus and nearlJy Smith College,
a private women's school in nearlJy
NorthampiOn. ·
The report was undertaken panly to look a~ l?fDBte~ since 12 s~u­
dents were IDJured m a 1986 raclll
brawl ai the University of Massachusetts after a World Series
game.

' of the
roof rafters and tqp plates
stud walls fails, explains a
spokesman.
~
Often, he ~ds. this connection
is simply toe-nailed without other
means of suppon. Instead, building
experts recommend usinj! metal
rafter lies, which greatly mcrease
the strength or the joinL
Although addmg to the construction or repair costs, connections made with rafCer ties can
withstand up to 10 limes the force
required 10 pull apan a toe-nailed
connection.

pointless to continue the therapy
because Imlay refused to admit
resoonsibility for die crime.
'rhe therapist recommended that
Imlay be confined for furdlcr treatment. The only such program in
Montana is at the stale pison, and
a state judge revoked IJJJiay's probation and ordered him to prisoo.
The Montana Supreme Court
last year ruled !hal forcing Imlay to
attend lhe ~' s therapy JllOPIIIl
viotatcd his Fift!J Amenilment right
again&amp;! self-incrimination.
Malting an admission could pn:vcntlmlay from appealing his conviction and might expose him to
prosecution for perjury, bec•Jsc he
testified at his UJal that he was
innocent, the state coun said.
During arguments in the case,
Justice David H. Soutct suggested
the state could avoid such a prOb,
!em by giving a defendsnt legal
immllllity.
The case is Montana vs. Imlay,
91-687.

Scholarships awarded

Victim's .inother says serial killer
is a theory in Zywicki slaying

I Reserve my free gift and open a Christmas Club! I
I ·
I
I Name
Phone
I·
r
I
I~
I

Costume contest winners named

It also says campus police are
not fully trained' to deal with bigotry and sometimes contribute to
tile problem. :
Minority students and faculty
made similar COIIIJllaints at the
Amherst campus in ·september and
October. They cited racial attacks
on blacks and a nmr...:t OCCII(IIIIion
of an administmtfQ.ib.illding.
No one wu seriously injured,
but university officials have botstcred campus security and pledged
other action to calm tens1on and
correct lonastanding injustices.
They afso have sa1d they will
bolster minority recruitment and
multicultptal views in the curricutum, and develop a training program 10 help campus security officcrs deal better with racial probl&amp;ns and minorities.
And they have opened talks
with minority representatives with
help from U.S. Justice Depanment

need obVIOusly exists for adminis-

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BOUND BROOK, NJ. (AP) Owners of wooden {tame houses,
and potential homeowners, can
learn valuable lessons from the ·
devastation caused by Hurricane
Andrew, notes home repair specialists.
Statistics show that the most
heavily damaged structures resulted fnim roofs blowing off in high
winds, according to flouseMaster
or America, a national home
inspection organization.
A roof usually blows off
because the connection between the

Federal civil rights panel calls for
bigger mtnori!J role on campuses

cam~.

~----

Meigs County Sheriff's Department. .PNRC held this special event
in which child identification
records were made ·available
tllrough the Unicare Health Facilities, Inc.

NEW YORK (AP) - Jacque~ · named Sports Personality of the
"I was told she did sing a cooline Kennedy Onassis gave Demo- Year by the American Sportscast- ·pie of songs in a cell," said David
cratic Senate candidate Robe~t crs Association on Tuesdsy for the Watre!l, a spokesman for Davidson
Abrams a vote- at least, a vote of second lime.
'
County Sheriff Hank Hillin. ''From
canfidence - TuCsday as they met
The former Oakland Raiders what I was rold she was very enterat their Manhattan polling ~lace.
coach is a commentator on CBS taining."
"You're going to win.' the for- telecasts ofNFL games.
Anderson, 45, served a 48-bour
mer first lady, smiling broadly,
"John Madden ·is proof that 'one sentence ·one wcckcnd last month
whispered t.o Abrafns as she shook man can have two successful for violating a coun order issued in
his hand.
·careers in a lifetime," said Louis her child-custodv battle ·with exMrs. Onassis greeted Abrams, 0. Schwaru, president of the asso- husband Harold 1'Spook" Stream
his wife, Diane, and their daughters cialion.
Ill. A judge ruled Anderson cursed
Rachel, 16, and Becky, 6, as she
Madden will be honored :at the and ridiculed her ex-husband in
left the Roben F. Kennedy School organization's Dec. 3 awards din- front or their two children.
on Manhattan's Upper East Side.
ncr in New York.
There was no word on whether
The RePublican incumbent, Sen.
or not she sang her hit song "(I
Alfonse !&gt;'Amato, ·voted at the . NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Never Promised You a) Rose GarIsland Park .fi,ehousc, in southern Country singer Lynn AndeEson den." Warren said in a recent interNassau Coui'lty. ,
appar~~~tly sang her way tllrougb a view that Anderson had no com•
recent two-day jail stay for a con- plaints during her sta~.
"She said evecytbing was rme,"
NEW YORK (AP) -. Football· t&amp;npt of coon cilalioo.
he said.
broad~aster John Madden was

Janet Hollingsworth, Athens County; and Program Assistants Jeanette
Ray, AthenS/Vinton Counties and
Jackie Graham, Gallia County.
Participants will receive a program full of matCiia1s and recipes,
create two projects to take home
and sample five snack recipes. Cost
of this annual event is $4, which
!~eludes all materials. .Those plannmg to attend must preregislcr by
Nov. 13. To re~ for the class,
contact the MCJgs County Extension Office. at 992-6696 betw~n
8:30a.m. and 4:30p.m.

ELECTRIC YOUTH- Members or "Electric Youtll" rrom
Melp HIP Sclllool are pldarecl as tbe7 model tllelr new oUdlts ror
the •(ICIJIIIDI eowert • Nov.~:U at l p.m. at tbe IIIP Kllool. Pic·
tured are, troat, S1Uaa Cotterill; ~ row, Tm:e7 G,_ and
Er!• . Waraer; tlllrd row, An1le Searles, Lori McGhee, Kell7
Gruner and April Haley; and bac~, Cynthia Cotterill and K1,J11
CreJIIftiDS.

hers of the community were invited
to take precautionary steps to
insure the well-being of lhe com- ·
munity's children, gnmdchildren or
great-grandchildren.
Working together with the

People in the news

Holiday program planned
Are you looking for new recipes
and ideas 10 share with family and
friends this holiday season? Do you
need a creative.project for a holiday bazaar or gift exchange? If so,

cblldren wb~n a special ~bilci sarety P';'O&amp;tall "
was preseated recently at Pomeroy NursJDII and
Rebabllltatloa Celller.

Child safety program presented .
A special child safety prolP..!I"',
entitled "The· Our Kids ldenufJCation Program for Ctiildren," was
presented recently at Pomeroy
NQtSin~ and Rehabilitation Center.
Res1dents of PNRC and mem-

CIILIS
MUWIMIMSEI .

.

Several justices wid Montana
Attorney Gcnerl!l Marc Racicol and
Imlay' s lawyer, Billy Miller, they
doubted whether a true cootrovcrsy
existed because of Imlay's imminent release.
The coon has the legal authority
to resolve only real c~~~~es and does
not have the power 10 answer theoretical legal questions.
Imlay was convicted of sexually
assaulting a 7-ycar-old girl at his
grocery store in Great Falls in
1989. A state judge sentenced
Imlay 10 five years in prison, but
suspended the sentence on condition he attend a counseling program for sex offenders.
Imlay attended a sex-offender
pro~ six limeil over a six-month
penod but continued to deny
assaulting the girl. The social
worker who 1rCatcd him said it was

Keeping the roof on

Levy winners announced

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
tumor removed liom Audrey·Hepburn's colon 'was cancerous but
doctors were optimistic about bet
prospects for recovery, a hospital
offiCial said.
The 63-year-old aictress was in·
fair condition Tucs4ay at CedarsSinai Medical Center. .
Docrors were able to remove all

1

Ohio

Wedi'IMdly, November 4, 1812

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Keeping our nation free isn-' t an easy j.ob. It takes the combined
efforts of dedicated people who can nse to meet any challenge.
People like the proud men and women of the U.S. Navy. From
the polar ice to.the tropics, t~e Navy rises to' ~he challenge every
day. Representing us, defendmg us and makmg us proud of our
country. All around the world, they're out there for Amorica.

lT'S YOUR NAVY.
'

'

.,

�•

· P1111 12-The Dilly Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, NoV1mblr4,1192 .

·Here's how Meigs Countians voted.. in Thesday's election :
.

rP~

TlTLE Of' OFncE Oil POSITION _.

)#t?riJI!tf.. .

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s a.'!Z/l";r
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» 1'/.

Call 992-2156

»9

/I

/'It ' lf.l
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;so
/I :JS'/II J.J/1
!f•1

W~yPaper

;J.J!.o

. Thunday Paper .

1:00 p.m. Wedneoday

. Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

J-'1
/I
II

5

1

11

Has Part-Time 7:00 to 3:00
and 3:Q0-11 :00 Openings for
State Tested Nurse's Aides.
Salary based on experience.
For More Information
.. Contact Karla Hunter

Happy Ads .

/'-1 ;?-(}

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fill EniMA'rES

985·4473
667-6179

.
In••?
11 yra and up. Earn •
much • you want. full
or pa1t tJn. fntm your
home. No caah

ADC,.IO

..

/11 /:?' .

lnvwbttwtl, be your
own bon, eveii H

SATURDAY,
NOVEMBER 7, 1992 • 10:00 AM

you',. atlll a atudMt.

LOCATED AT 104 ANDERSON STREET IN MASON,
WV. WATCH FOR SIGNS. THE ESTATE'OF THE LATE
MARGARET ROSENBERGER WILL BE SOLD.

when you don't
(814) 371-8153
11-12 and 8-10

Thla·l~thM
kMpa golngw..

Brojhilsola, recliner, 2Norwalkswi'llll ruc:Jun, wicbr chair, mapleCDffaa
!able and end la)lles. Zenith 25' color console lV, free standing elecb:
~replace, wicl&lt;er rocke&lt;, oak llat wall painlad, 3pc. 8asS81lbadloom ~~~~.
2nicecllesiS, early 1d13-nigh1sland, oaklibrarylable, deskand c:l!lir,
2maldling laddertlack chairs handpainlad, apanmenr siu
8
marching maslarsahs, at:hed stemwarv, lllat:hed ..., largecutglua
i&gt;tcher and •.,.. ~ large flo¥al Nippoq - and - .......
Nonliwao&lt;f'ix••t. blOwn .ulass pieces, boWls; ...._ meal jilallet,
handpainted platos, Ausna glass and of111 glass•••· pink bed1110111
lamp, ail lamp, Iampo, floor lamp, dresser se( 181 of Commlllily Wlile
Orchid llaiWitt, German annivemry cb:tl, pocket knU cclllcliol• 2
Remiilg!On and others, large German bisque doll2~. • biUU
'linlage dresses, old.1'811, some mink, beaded pu1111, 'linlage chrmaning
di8Ss. CDIIUITie jewei!Y, molal bank, compacl, oil paintings, Slr1ldvlriua
Concer1 ViOlin da!Od 1737, •ary smd Gibson blnjo, Slilgattwld goillr,
..-man sample, 2ga power loy ears, Raw.Cc¥ ThimbltDrumtSpecill
&amp;olhon, Gr.taphone oak case German mttde, smal ki1chan lljlpilral.
dol ill, inn,
men aladies wald\11, east inln)lmphofd•
&amp;lamp, a&gt;lac:tion 818111 bonl11,set of flevariWirl fiO!l and pans,
Rew-.raooltee Jill(&amp; canislllset, &lt;on skillet, adv. Ins. m*'&gt;ing gilad
tram... Cnlflsman
hand tools, lawnmo•r plus much more.

sEPn~:~:TEMs

.

LAND CLEARING

WATER &amp; SEWER

BAs~€:-rs &amp;

HOMESITES .·.
HAUUNG: umeetone,
LICENSED ond BONDED

CLUB '
'GUN :
SHOOTS
SUNPAVS

gas..,..,

1012Q/'11211 mo.

LUNCH
MASON, WV ..
773-157815
TERIIS: Cult or Check wf1h fD. Ou1 oletate buy. . muat
have 1 current bank letter of cred!t No Exceptional
Not ReBpOnsiblelor accidenll 011001 ot propony
li&lt;ensed and Bonded in Ohio. Kentucky, and Wtll Vir~nla 186

AVAILABLE.

SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOllE SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING

FREE ESTIMATES

992-3838
OFFICE 992·2886
•

WKK'S
HAULING SERYKE
36970WR•ROIII

..SANDP~!Wt
oGRA'vt:L •DIRT
-LIMESTONE

·•

205 North SeCond Ave.

Two injured in accident

I "

r

An 8CCideat r..day II)Oming on Siare Route 7 in Salisbury
Township left two people ~ '
. .
Ell:r,~beth S~ 49,
2 Stare Route 7, Cheshire, and Ou)'
R. Sirplt, 44, 3
Wolfe Pal Road, Pomeroy, were~
to Veterans Memorial Hospital where they were treared and

releued

EMS units answer calls
Nine Cilia for 111istance-were
answered 011 Tuesday and early
Weclnesday by un.its of Meigs
BnwiJCIICY Service~.
On Tue~~!{ at 10:S3 a.m.,
I'Qmcroy sq
went 10 Pomerw
N1nina and Reblbilllltion Ceotit.
BIYira '8arr was !Ibn 10 Vetmlll
J'n•W Holpilal.
A&amp; 12: 18 p.m., Racine unit went
10 c.. ROllS aDd lOOk Icy Tuck·
er to Veterans. At.t2:S? p.m.,
Pamaoy liQUid went 10 Mulben')'
JleiPll. Clareace W!cldlne wu
11bn 10 Veterllll. At 4:0S p.m.,
Racine ~quad went 10 Wells Run
Rolld. Pearl Hawthorne was taken
I

10 Veter~~~~~.

.
At 4:14 p.m., Middle-

.
port unit took Ada Newell from
Overbrook Ceoter 10 Veanns. At
4:20p.m., Pomeroy and Middle·
port units went to Mulberry
Avenue in i'o111eroy for a structure
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A 1984, when 4.6 million people, or
fire. Rowena Vaughan wat the record S million Ohioans went to 73 .6 percent of those regisrered,
owno~~r. At 6:5 I p.m., Po111eroy
the polls Tueaday, Secretary of voted.
squad wlli tent 10 Spring Avenue. Stare Bob Taft aid this rnominJ.
He said tlimout was fueled by
Delbert Pridemore was taken to
Unofficialllllllnls lhow dill 76 the inrense battle by presidenlill
Holzer Medlcal Center. At 12:20 pezcent of Ohio's 6.5 million re$lJ- candidates to capture Ohio's 21
a.m. IOday, Pameroy squad wentiO tered voters cast ballots on Tues- electoral votes, and the five
Main Sftet and took J.acob Schuler day,
sllltewide issues on the ballol.
10 Veterlnl. At 7:10a.m., Middle·
Taft had projeered 1 turnout of
Taft said lhele were 63 villliiO
Port unit went 10 South Second for 4.7 million VOiell, or 72 percent of Ohio by the pmaidenlill •d vice
Lawrence Srewart. who was taken those registeaed.
.
presidential candidales and their
to Holzer..
The previ911~ record was set in . wives.

.

·

Ai:cotdlng 10 the report from the GaDia-Meigs Post of the Slate
Highway l'lirol, S8rptt 'VII southbound on S.R, 7 when Swilher
puUe4 from a pr!vaec driveway into his path.
SIIJCIIt lllrilclt Swisher, causing moderate darrlqe 10 bodl vehicles. Swisher wu cired for failme 10 yield. Sargent's vehicle wu
driven from the ~Ce~~Cind Swisher's remained at the ~Ce~~C. ·

Taft says turnout hif76-percent -·~--~--------~
I I'll

"111 1,

I I !Ill ill I \&lt;II.H IIJ',llli!HJ• I fll I 1!',

'

~oc~~tv.

I

''
,,''
,
I

Patnen.r, OH.
. . . .71

INSURA.NCE
Nd

••I* J. on"""...
l

•

AUYUND-You need to -thl•2 .-•..,....., The
~elillre hae 2 bedraome IIKI a bath. While the
ull*!re apartment haa 3 bedroome and a balh. You
oould Uve In - IIKI ,..., tho Dlher out. Hu a huge
llallkyMI and ganlen epot, yet In lown.
..,...

·;I

lUPI'ER8 PLAIN8 - RIM Run Road .- k.111Jt~
IPF 11lng ~ lhla 3 boclloorn mocUar wtlh 2 billa. ~
loVo 111 como homo ID oook euppor In thle bMutilul
ldtchon IIKIIhon rela In IIDnt of trio llllpl 1. Thla Ia ·
e1111ng an apprax. 1~ - - Wu MS,IIOO.

't '
i

.

I
I

Ii

J•

~·"~

•A Quality AlsuNtl Co•ff'flttor•
20 Yr. Exp.
Call AI, 614-742·2321
1117/lln

Wed•..S.L

IIH-t:l

T~rkeys ................. ~····~···· '175

00

Call (304) 895-3386
after 5 p.m.

UUOIIIIU UIU

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

POMEROY, OK.

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Wfndows
·
Room Additions • Roofing

992•7553

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

COMMERClAL lllid RESIDENTlAL
FREE ESTIMATES

;it'
319MLHI!Iiag

INo l•ft!l•r Calls)

614-949·2101 • 949·2160
or 915·3139

D¥!'~119 .

211219211fn

CnekRoall
.ll.leport, Olllo

lEVIN'S LAWN

AEEMYiu.E - 0na tloor block homo will ptaduco
buldlng. Home lndudN 2 beclrooma. 1 - ~ ....
_ , . . potdt, lioe lot $11,000.
..... • ollerl

949·2391 or
1·100·137·1460

MAINRNAICE

Lawn Mowing.
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
· Shrub and r...

Trlmmlna &amp; ll-•1
R-IoT&amp; Commeooto1
FrMEtl-..

HUN I IRS' PARADISE! liwao• llollcrW Ad., RaeinoApptaL 20.01 will tunllng cal*l ·4CIIc:ll. CJIMI
locallatL Hunllng MUOii Ia juot aftKIIICI lie Cll!liiK 0Mn

.

your-epoltileyoM

.

. I

$t7,CICIO.

RACII! - Con... liiUo - loor " - horne will 3
I b 1 ~ loiM4 lot In RliciM. Cia. ID al ltoaplllna
) and - - - Home ... had ...... ....... ·..a

Alldtttl $ti,CICIO.

· lnckldna-. 1M II I 111o

1HIRI II NO MIIBI , _ T1W1 NOW 10
PURCHUE lHAT 110111 'ftiC.rnl ALWAYI
WANim.. ,GIVE Ul A CALL TODAY AT
. 01!1 • . ,

R!EALnl

IIOLLIY n111011
CUFTS

lOih•••••IL. ....Ie.....
614-1192,2549
CRAFT CLASSES

BP _OIL CO.
HOME HEATING OILS

.DIESEL .FUELS • GASOLINES
We Deliver ln.. ~

. Oct. 211, 6:30pm:
"Lunch Baakat" $14.00
Nov. 9, 6:30pm: "Pie
B•kat" $16.00

Gallia, Meigs, Mas~~ and
Surrounding Counties

SWAGS by Connie:
Nov. 4, 6:30: "Dried
Material Swag"
Call the Ttoii.Y Station
for mora lnlo•
1CW21112/1 mo•

~

\'S;Y
.

1·800·598·5654
or 614·446·1157
We

UNDA'S
PAINTING
&amp; co.

RREWOOD FOR SALE
•

INTERIOR &amp;EXTERIOR
nu unum

llniWD PIICII

HAVE IEFERDKlS

tx7-$275.00 161l7-$450."
OPE111RS llnAWD-Y. HP-$200.00

I.We 6 p.&amp; !.wallossap

With 2 Tranamlttara

Wltll PurcllaH of
R. .lveFREI

Deor PIU OitoHr

.

All H1rtlwootl,
Se•so•ell,
$40.00 •Ioiii
llellwere4.
(614) f92·5449
1at12112

1-:Z.'t2-tin

GUN
FORKED RUN '
SPORTSMAN
CLUB .
SUNDAYS
12:00Noon
Factory choke 12
gauge only
. STARTS.
OCT.-.-..

Vouchara

OUR
STEEL IISULIRD .
RAISED PINEL GAUGE DOOI

-1., Ur Dt It 1• r...

FIREWOOD
FOR SALl

.

· Fish •••••••••••••••••••••••• .'4c;ao per Inch

·

eiDry lag homo with 4 bodoOCIIIIIo elodilc tr.l. 5+ - 1 ,
large llant porch, W btumont, 2 car ~ ooillnlllir,
pawd 11rw1. Jull 8IOWid 4 )'MI'8 old. COME BEEI
RtduodiDPI,IGO.

NEW U11A RD. .- Ranch etrte homo will 3 bodnlome,
1:.1 ballt, 011111111 air, lfi!IIIIIIO, catjiOit, Nbulldlnat.
11J1P10X. e - · OWNE~ ANXIOUS 10 BELL • .HAS
RELOCATED.
AIICINQ 111,100. U., OOilllderl u I n.. ll ollerl

"*"

,'

I
....----..•--.-·----.._-....__
--~--·;.;•;;::;;;;;.;;;'*';;d;;=;;•;.;-;;;;";;;:;;;:::;:''=·-=-===:......;·_ ....

Haa loll ol room 111d haa an lnooma. Buy

'IIJDDllPOAT .._.._.. ..,_ -Thla horne Ia juet whll
the newlj _ . need Ill get elltt.d ln. Hu 1wtt b1 d-n•
...,..... wlfl a rioe liDd kiDhen a 11v1ng
clcMn.
111,1110.

1
I

TROMM BUILDERS

Ah• 6 p.&amp; 614"915-4180

. REDUCED! · MORI•IIa STARt IT WAll "A DEAL"
IIIFOR!. • .NOW IT"B EVEN R I ISU a.ufttl I~

'
POMEROY - llfiMh • - - You nMd 1o lhle
beauftll brick horne. Hae 3 becl.-ne, lal(le living raom,
11M bn --.nt. n a - oargM~Q~.
114,1110.

I

Ufe • HetM • H011e •' Car
• Busiaess .I
.
:
JtH Wamwlasura~e~
NATIONWIDE I
113 W. 81C0.'1CI,

.

bulihae, equlprnen~ IIDCk, and buHnga lot $151,000
or buy bulldlngalot ·
$10,000

I

GAUGES e ADDITIONS • SIDING

Deer Heads....................•,19000

IEUYEIY SERVICE
Sf!!..l Dozer Werk
25.00Per II!UI'

ond TRACIUtOE WORK

I

'

AND mRYTHING UNDERNUTH ·

auppU...
HOURS: 10 am-6 pm

oatt.-erlpeel•l
UNUMITED TANNING

Bt,ILLDO~~ 1_!1ACKHOE

Real Estate General

.

WBaoROOFI II

GRAY'S TAXIDERMY

CHARLIE'S

I,ANDCLEARING,

RACINE- F-Hy Nndtd- For tllla 1:.\ aiDry, H
becnom home will 4 porctwa, Mil buement, dining
100111, ,.,lly - · and ...... oulbul&lt;lng. Good liaCI
lot.
-MIDDI,.EPORT- tleloriNI 'Comer llore - Haa I
.~and 3 rwn'-la down. 81111 your own bu..._

L-Ing avill~lelrom $15.00 par month.

Conn Ia.

FOREVER
BRONZE,·
TANNING

EXCAVATING

AUCTIONEER NOTE: THIS IS AN ALL DAY AUCTION·
BRING ACHAIR I Sl'fND THE DAY.

l

. thtough October 31
Service rat. . ftom $19.95 per month.
lncludea 180 minut• of olf1J011k alr·tl""'.

USED RAILROAD TIES. . 61.·992~7144
IO/I/92Ifll

EXECUTRDC: JOSEPHINE F. KEARNS

..ddleport, OH

•ti•,OltJ.
Herb Sloop Opeli for Fall
ATTN: Looal Craft Shope
andCraften
EUmlnala the mlddt m.,

Factory 12
Gauge Choke ·

BILL SLACK
992·2269

AUCJJONEER: IUCit PEARSON, ..

I

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

;FREE INSTALLATION• With any phone purchaaa

52100 I. L Ul

Hmclcrelled •w~
wr•lhe and potpoufrl

•LIGt-n' HAUUNG :
•FIREWOOD

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.

.

........ -~:

-..c!Agonl

COIIIIIE'S HEllS

TRIM aild
REMOVAL

~

..

[!]

CELLULAR

&amp; EYERUSTIIIGS

SHRUB&amp; TREE

AUCTION CDNDVCUD Bl

'

10..12-'82 tfn

111/11182

sand•.

I

RACINE FIRE
DEPT.
EVERY
SATURDAY
6:30P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shot
Strictly Enforced

949·2826

..

S·

GUN SHOOT

-buywhcienlelrcm

s2soo

-poeads.

.
.,
•

AUFIUII
lrl.. lt .. OrWo

1:00 P.M.

hshn ..., RIHi••

Real Estate General

:
• -N-· •
•
c

~===2=-7=·92=·""~' !=======~I

RAClNE GUN

EStA,.E

!

Wi!lll., A..,

TOTALLY AUTOMOTIVE PEAFOIIIINICE

-12·5-tfn

Do vou liMd. elert

...

~

IEII'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335or
tiS-3561

ReiiiOtltliag
Stop &amp;Compare

PH. 614·992·5591

&amp; Auction

··-•

•

.
Piclt U@o

eCo~lete

992-6472

Public Sale

.8

/f{,
!f9 /?J

~

oe;.......

Dtrt, Gravel and eoal

·.·. ADS ·

/f()

p£!;J.JJ
1"(, ;r'i

)/b)£'

.

e.._wHon~ts

Contact Karla Hunter

CLASSFED

Cjf

'J.-'11 ;;.
p JJ.(I

Salary based on Experience.

you?:

;•N IN
j!C

3~ Hr. Shifts Morning and Evening.

can help

Your

Tum,

HJ.!H

.

WH0-0-0-0 .

''JUUA"
It~

)31 /1-f
/'!(_ j~l

Has Part-Time Openings For
CNA'S. ·

/I-!

/.5

/~/

/I~

/ll~

5'1

I
/II

: /)-7 /33

I
!'16
/II

j/)

/'-19

11'- '

i /'J? fij

73

/'IJ

j~d

17 /57

Jt! /)-~
/'itJ /1

BISSELL' &amp; BURKE
. CONSTRUCTION

'

-;=:;O;V:;E;R::;B~R~O==O;:K~C:;E=N::T=ER=~I ~~~u~~~:~NG

~J ~

)4~

Help Wanted

OVERBROOK CENTER

tOO p.m. Thunday
1:00 p.m. Priday

fteal'*llu 742-2HO

St. Rt. 7
CIIHIIire,.

Pa••ror, Olllo

1:00 p.m. Seta'day
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuelday

:at=::e:·r;
..........

Call 614·992"!.
6637

992..215

IDAY BEOORE PUBLICATION

COPY DEADLINE
M&lt;!llday Paper
Ttieidoy Paper

'-0 J.J7

,)/. )-'1

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

To place an ad

0

s

IP/
1'1~

Quality
Stone Co.

'

~

. NAMES OF Y011NG PIIECJNcrS

fUll&amp; . .
IDIUL IIIWICI

4:30 P. M. D~Y IEFORE
PUILICIDOI

I,;;/

D.l.'s
TOYS

All a..- Vlntlge a
Colnllble
S.. Dlsplly AL• .

QUAUTY PRifT SHOP
25&amp; . .1.....
lllddeput, Ohio
AMFerDIIa

Ev•tintll

114-742-MlO
111111112

, NJEliTIIII[.ITEJI .. on«&lt;N

'.

Wty HI Elfldaaey
» c.•tlllln,' .....
P IQt,FMMIS&amp; ..
NowWal•llteter~

BenneUs Mobile H~~ ~~~~~
UtiSIIhrUclrael 1._
........ CIWa
:Call614144..9416 •1o100-172-5t67
I

'

�•

I

Ohio

4,1192

M · lulltleaa

BORN LOSER

Buildings

-a..&amp;w.Ha..
"

- -

.... -

-11-ll!!llllr-er
~

'" r:t ....,.............

.... A

0

••••

•

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IOW?I-

'
AH,
FRE~ BP£AD ...
ll\E STAff ~ T - - '-~

~1116

UIC£ II WI)J.---...
!iUC£ a' T&lt;»bT TO

~~!ol.WIIY
!IIIOlJLP rooAY II(

Llf'€!

5TAA.T YOUR 01-.'f
&lt;ff ()I THE

MY OIFFEJI&amp;MTJ

311 lotlllo

Real Estate

Pomeroy Middleport,

Plf.ILIT

5

Television
Viewing

folQTI;;

•

WED•• NQV.-4

TIIAT lAilY
PI IIIII

O four
R.arranoa leneu of:
tcrambled words

I

low to lorm l011r simplo words.

•

EVENING

I

ENDORY
2

1 I I I I

'I. I I 1 1~ I.
HURTT
3

•

DON'T SA'&lt;, ''ALWAVS'' !
NOT!-IING IN THIS LIFE
5 ~OR 11ALWAV5 "

Ren tals

_.,_.
I

I . a~~~e~'::x~:.~o~~
Is
I
r yells, "my teacher says I'm
·
II
. L--'--'--'--'---1
going to be famous. She saY-s
HI mess up one more time Im
·I ~ RI IPI EI LI Igoing
to be -----1"
e
Compl~··
1
~

ME CRAZ'i!

6
•

II~

=,"£:,

Apartment · .
. torRent

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... r ,.,. 111 ••• 2201

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....... .

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hold ......... 111 MI.
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Cll• You lot Your Life
Ill. WhMI o f F - Q

(I).

Ju.rr JCI'Iow

ONE OF

AnllqiiM

.

•

1

ID PIA Bowling From
Taylor, MICh. (L)
1B Croaaflte
7:35 (I) Bahford a Son
8:00(2). 11J1 Unaolved
Myilloriea An amaleur
prospector has a UFO
experience: a priSQ:I guard
vanishes. Stereo. 1:;1
ill MOVIE: Scertece (PI 1 of

toi~IUILI'MRIIM"

--

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Cll• TV'o Funnleot
Cc:mnrerclala Host Patrick
Ouffy takes a look at
commercials from ~round lhe
world and lhe Unites States.

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MelroM PIKe Alison
contronls her faellnga for
Keilh: Matt visits his parenls.

Stereo. C
·
fiJ MOVI!: "-1 Sino (2:00)

!

'

Stereo. C
a NoohVIile Now

1D PBTA lllllna Cliallenge
of Champions, men's final
from Las Vegas (T)
1B Lally King LIYol
F - Dowling MMrp
r Wtllel...
iotaa

~ ........,

BillE YORE PAPPY

MH'IIII.

• 110 DBed to l.a~~e your laOfDB,
~ct mur chl!fified qd tpdqy/
15 word. or ..... dqu,
3 papeo, IS.41J paid in adHnce.

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HOUHhokl
Goode

-

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CULM.aoo.l1tt•••

Tr ,111sportdt1on

84

____
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9·:------~----~---

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Plumbing a.
. tiNting

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL ·

Elec:iHcal ..

10~--------------'~----

11_----------------12._____________.;..___

Nov.l,ltlli

13:~---------------14:------------~---15~--~~~7ft-:----~

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LA'INI'I PUIINitUIII
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12 Conaecrett
13 Sandplptr

1401
knowledge

lleatlel' IIIOV•
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17 Hock'f org.
18 DIU Hid .
11 Stretagem
15

21 IUIIntll
ebb1aYIIUon
24 Club21 l'tlnt part
.21 Secondhand
27 Coqau-

llma
43- Paulo
45 Peacock
, loathe•
marking
47 Baaed
50 -and the
BelmanII
51 51.,. over
52 Become

oware of ·
53 Happen (to)
54 Author of
Picnic

DOWN

lcii ~II-J

1 Defeated

21 Whlllpool
30 Flra dally

33 Uncle
34 Grtmllldgao
31 Spirit lamp
3 7 - - Clear
Dar
40 Gee whlzl

6--··

o..rwhelmingly
2 Not tultabll
3 Natural

and ...

Dunne
14 Flower

7 - Hnhana
8 Cllemplon
t1 Kin of mono

ability

4 OA'o
illlgllbor
5 L11g1 truck

......, .... •• N.

IW.
r

Your leederlhlp qualltlea COUld become
more pr0101noed and ellocllw: In I'*
year ahead. Ta. aapeo!l lndlcala you
might be oloted 10 head lip a algnlftcanl
andeaY9&lt; tllat will prove to be WlfY
gratifying. •
.
ICOSU 10 (Oct. ........ 22) Challenges
land 10 - k • your flnar qualltlea le&gt;dly, atpeclilly your courago M1 opll·
mlam. llaC8UM you'r8 not .., to think
Dl yourMif u aloaer,"yoywon't be one.
Trying lo palch up a broken romance?
Tlla Aalro-Graph Malehmaker can help
1-1

you 4ndersland whallo do to makelhi:
relallonshlp work . Mall $2 plus a long,
Hll-addr8AIId, llamped envelope to
Malchmaker, c/o this 11ft111aper, P.O.
Box 91428, CleYtiland, OH 44101-3-428.
IAGITTAIIIUI {Nov. zs-o.o. 21} You
could be rather luc:ky loday In !llluallons
lhal are not of a malarial nalure. You're
still apl lo do well In this area, but
Chance Is nol Nkely lo play o rolo. .
CAPRICORN "(Dec. 22-.lan. 11} Your
belt loday Ia your ablllly to get
along with Individuals from all walks ol
life. In I~~C~. you mlghl haYti to deal with
a feloly Individual who you'll transform
lnlo a pusaycat.
·
AQUARIUI (Jan. :II-FIIII. 11} Do nol
waoto your limo on unproductlvo pursullo today. Conditions are propitious
where your malarial l n t - .,. concerned, but you'll heve Ia - l i whllt
you'll receiYti.

of anolt:er IndiVidual.
TAURUI (Aprll20-l:laJ 2D} If you haYti
some leisure limo loday, try Ia spend It
in a fun acllvily tllal InVOlves
ou,.rs. You'll. function basi loday aa a
participator r-lh811 a loner.
GE. . (liar 21..,_ 2D) Conditions
thai affect your car- and finances ere
qulle favorable today. It's lo your ad·
vanlagelo focus your efforts and allenlion In llleae areu lnaleacl or on side
Issues. .
CANCER (""'* 21-.luly 22) You might
haYti lo face a sltuallon today lhat
you've nagallwly llfttlelpellng.
HG"aoe:, once you become lnvcMid,
you'll be surprisingly bold and 118CUro.
LEO (.luiJ D-Aug. B) lnallnetlve guld· ance Ia a valuable lhallllould not
be lgnoroclloday. Thero .,.lndlc:811ono
you·mey get lnvcMid In~ and
find OUI hft eh:lhe It ieally Ia.

PISCES (Pelt,

VIRGO (Alii- Dolept.ll) Parl'*"'lpe
ahould wortc OUI r81her - lor you 1().
day, •peclally lwO In particular. Ono
deala wllll811 alnbltlclw friend: lha olher
deala wl1h a iPU1ua1
. a..A (lept. D-Olt. II} You are In a

2D-IiiMIII 20) A goal

-•1

yOU'Yti been plliCing consldereta ern·
phula on ,_.lly may be NVICOCI 1().
day, when you como ·to 1a. reallzallon
that II Isn't worth the ellorta you've
been llpendlng.
.U.I (llllrcii21-Aprll11) You 111ighl good~lcyc:leloday,aodon'l
heve an opportunlly to oot lhlnga rlghl be alrllld lo elevalo your llglllo and
today conc.nlng a mlsunderalandlng llrlw: for an objeclhe you . . . too limthai occurred beiWMn you and an u- ld to atternpl priYioully.
soclate. ntis opening may come by wey

.,..,_ln-.

1:11~[:)[.]

[•liJI-JI•l

15 Eacape (II.)
18 Actor Yul 20 ThrM acore
and len
22 By birth
23 410 llomlft

10 Andao on
(abbr.)
11 Act1e11

25 !epia•••
org •

26YOikalilra
rlvar
27 TV ICCellOrv

2t M1dlc.l
aulllx

30

Pledge

31 Glo' club
32Cnt
31 lladt tqUIII

IIJNewo

12

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11

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(2) • ~Low a 0n1e1

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2.
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1

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41 Young
a.rrlng

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'11/1011' AI-LAMMI . . . I I ftJ.1--Uit

9:30 (2) • IIJI Ml:d About You
Jamie takes Paullo lhe
circ:us where he aVOids an
old school chum. Slereo. Q ·
Lourie Hll
Lourie learns her molher is
suffering from a Ilea"
.
condition. Stereo. C
(!) (f) Neld Four Ylan:
MacNei/Lollrer Newollour

A BIB OL' HUB ft

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Help Wlntld

I WleH PEOPLE 'M:lUL..D
TELL ME WI-EN TH&amp;.Y'RE
SOINIS-10 TAKe A NAI='.

8•

5. _______.;,.__ _ __

11

AND Pl.ArSDA LITTLE .
PINEi-~,.ANC~EN .. .

AI for a night 1o avoid
contra!
· chicken pox.
Stereo.
ill) D
e In lho IIHI D1
lho Nlghl (Premiere) Gillespie
tries to protecl Harriet and
E~ne. (PI 2 of 2) Stereo.

.

ACROSS

~(J)8Homo
lmprooenrent Tim stays with

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_,_, _ _
-171.104-11114
Allor7 !!-.~!:...~

The World Almanac&lt;~~ Crossword Puzzle

Berolo (G) (3:00)
9:00 (2) • IIJI S.lnfelcl Jerry and
Baine are confronted by a
stalker atlhe opera. Stereo.

Wanted to Rent

Sill it the Hf!IMy,,by pboDB,

·

8:05 W MOVIE: lila' Groen

At=TER 60400L,
I W&amp;iNTOVE:R

,.....,=.. tumllhed.

.MilL

1B Prinlell. .a t;1

0 Young Rltlari A division
agent is iNounded in a battle

tool

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1bm your cluUflr into c~la,

446-2342
992-2i56

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Home

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explosives expert wanls 1o
even lhe aoore with lhe boys·
father. Slereo. C ·
liD • .,.....,. Hlio, 90210
Brenda's boyfriend from
Parle shows up: Andrea Is in
a car accident. Stereo.

ludaiC ,.,.....llala•.. ..,.... I '
:Hiifl. oH IV- MMJo1a Ill • : I
owner' lt~341f1l 1114-SJI. ~
ZIU.
1

Improvements

11111, . . . or M4 141 22M oJ.

"ltlAT

11'5 AU. OJGR.. .

IOW7I- I

For ..... _ , _ , . , _

_

46 ·space for Rent

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tan\ -- OII0.111W71-7142.

tor ......

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Accnlorlls

1111 Dodge
1111. .

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PwllcSale
rt I o ...,_ Ago · - 1224.

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76

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Want to:
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PIN cto'Wft EXTRA

lllcldllport
1o VIcinity

----·.
.... .
...........

UnOoAiid ~-

ancient

secrets of how lhe pyramids
were bul~ are reYtlaled.
Stereo. C

Serv:ces

Training

.....

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AC. Alii

81 Farm Equipment

Vulnerable: North·South
.Dealer: East

.

(1 :00)
(!) (f) Nova The

+63
+9852

Soot•
Well
Norlll Eut
. It Is good to push your opponents
I NT
mto the wrong contract. But it serves Pass
2+
2+
2•
little purpose if you caMot then find 2+
3+
3+
Pass
the right defense to defeat them.
4+
5•
Pass
Pass
Today's deal occurred during the S +
Pass
Pass
Pass
Women's NEC World Team Olympiad,
Opening lead: • J
in the match between Australia and
Spain. At the first table, the Australian
pair played quietly in four spades. At '-----------------1
the
. second table, the auction went as
g1ven.
th~?
,
1
One no-trump showed 9-11 highPerhaps not expecting partner to
card points and, supposedly, a bal- have five hear_ts, despite a count siganced hand. The mini nO-trump, as it is nal to that effect from Eaat at trlek
called, is a two-edged sword that bal· • one, West led a second heart. Declarer
aDCeS the rislr. of conceding a big pen· ruffed, drew trumps and establiBbed
alty against forcing the opponents to the diamonds, using the spade eight as
start their bidding at the twr&gt;-\eve\.
the re-entry to dummy.
. Here the auction became competi·
Note that if West leads a top.club at
liVe. If North had doubled five hearts, trick three, the contract goes down.
declarer would have gone one or two Declarer must ruff in the dummy, losdown. But when l';ortb didn't double, Ing her late entry. If she draws
South went on lo five spades.
trumps, the diamonds doa't run. U Ia·
West led the heart jack, which held stead sbe tries to ruff another club in
the trick. Next, she cashed the club the.dummy, East overru!fs.
ace. What sbo~ld she play at trick
@"- ......APUIENILU

2) (AI(2:00)

ODIII ........ hon,_~~

•s

By Pllllllp Alder

(I) D

Fc~rrn Suppllr',

•

SOOTH
tAKJ0954

The defense
must be good ·

.1121• F...., Feud

""'•:1
Noun: M.T.W. 10.:00
lUll. to :00 !1:'!:;!."""""' 1:00

uniUmiiiMd, 2 bMt., ~

PHILLIP
ALDER

7:05(1)

..,., L CAN'T l-00~1
..

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2W

NORTH
U+H
t832
.K9 3
+AKQ712
+K
' WEST
EAST
. tJ7
+Q6
. • J 10 7 6
• AQ84 2
+8
+JIOH
+AQJ 1064
+73

Tonight

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...
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PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS I
IN THESE SQUARES

114 1tlo0m.

IWAIN

Llil . ly~~'!"!_ll-ll:30

2~ . . . . . . . . . . ..
a., tw ...., ns-. on 211.

.'h• chuckle quo:ed
the mtumg words

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FIOI

Gallipolis ·
&amp; VIcinity

by hll1ng

SCIIAM-I.ns ANSWERS
Plight · Befit- Yacht- Effect- FIFTY.FEET ·
Have you ever noticed that a dropped penny always
lands at your feet, but when you drop a twenty dollar
bill it blows FIFTY FEET away?

_....._"$!:a

P,V.-1. ,

·
•

-Chow lo10, ,..,_ ~:
AUCnOH
Olloe ...

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...... 114-441-1'144.

30W71-Wfl..

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. . UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
V GET ANSWER
•

PICKIHS fURNITURE

~~·I Qolllpqllo

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·

F -Ie
S.wlna&amp;. Your ANL toiOI
.
lOGo hi. 11-10111 For Cu&lt;Nn1

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Goods

•
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114-tttult.
S1IOI
. --

......_ i lMgll ladroome, .New
HYAC, Corpot. Aoolloble

8

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1 bdrra. Al*b••lt. Mlddhp ut,

IIAUTFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
. . . , _ - - Lal-.,.
...... St. " · Pb-n1 w. Va.
Cwr· tely .....,_~: . 2 F~tl

FORECI.D!!ED I IIEPO -

• · •

you d.,velop from s1ep No. 3 below.

..

......,_ ........
4'

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·. 1 SA I N ~

EVERV NOW AND T~EN, ONCE
lN A WHILE. YOU DRIVE

(I) • (I)
()anh: Belrlncl
lho Scenea A YiaR wllh
RIChard Gere, Jodie Foster,
The Simpsons and Vanossa

acort
37 lltllat
38 Not ......
12 wdt.)
3t111Mctata

Wllloms. (1 :00) Slereo. !;I

llilcnlc

111• 1121• 48 Noun Two

41 l'oretoltl

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