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Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolle, OH-Polnt ~t. wv

undey nmee 'Sentinel

ittomologists say·gout
medicine combats roaches
I

; WASHINGTON (AP) - Agri·
ure Department researchers
they have found a solution to
pesky problem of coclcroaches:
JOUt medicine called allopurinol
lb8t wipes out entire roach populajionJ in four 10 six weeks.
', Agricultural Research Service
~ntomologists say the medication
prevents the 'blanufacture of uric
tad in both humans and ri:Jaches.
·t n humans, the l!()id contributes .to
the painful joint condition . In
:ioaches; it is needed by inseminat·
)d females to develop embryos.
' "Without the crucial uric acid,
females simply can't reproduce,"
.laid Daniel R. Sliiter, who works at
lhe AAS Medical and Veterinary
J;ntomology Laboratory in
Gainesville Fla ·
" ~e and 'coliea~ues ha~e con·

.

dueled ICSts on thOusands of Ger·
man cockroaches, "the type city
dweUers know so weU," according
to a USDA announcement of their
fmdings.
·
The coclaoaches were fed plain
rat chow and chow laced with the
druJ~. In four 10 six weeks, the populauon feeding on the treated rat
chow diejl off, Suiter said
ARS and the Univ1,1rsity of
Florida share a patent on the new
use for allopurinol, l)everal compa·
nies have exp~essed interest in
developing a commercial cock·
roach exterminator using their tech·
nology.
The drug hu been used safely
by people for over 30 years. so a
company interesh led in markell'ng it
as a cockroac contro1 can re1y on
the toxicological studies that ~ave

.iParts and functions ·
·of the old flint mills
~

.

.

•

~

~ GALLIPOLIS • The balance was harder on the stones than
1)'11d was a curved iron bar sunk to wheat. The Dansal cr,mlc, the pur·
.a precise position in the center of pose of the Dansal was 10 shake the
~e capstone eye. II balances the shoe and regulate the flow of grain
:PJlstone to provide running accu· into the milL Also, the descender
18Cy while grinding wheat 10 make 'was a covered machine built with
llower. Bedstone. the bottom stone. one end rower than the other to
~as sometimes referred 10 as the
move grain .in a mill by a motion
:,neither stone. It was placed 'in a produced by gmvicy. ·
ifued posil)on.
.
SubmiJted by Wendell Tope,
1. The bees wiilgs rough particles Earth
Team volunteer.
• r bran liulls from buckwheat or
!lmylhinJ or anything that could tear
'II holo m the bolting silks. Bolting
die process of separating flour
Clli!CINNATI (AP)- Dennis '
:{rom bran, or wlieat by using fine Sullivan Jr. is retiring April 1 as
cloth to save as silk. A. bolt· executive vice president and chief
~eel was usually a six or ei~hl financial officer of Cincinnati Bell
frames covered with boltmg Inc.
~loth and as they revolved, the
Sullivan, 60, joined the cc:impa~und product passed ·through and ny in 1983 as executive vice presi ·
~e flour was separated from the dent and assumed his current posi ·
· 5«an. Brayer, the beam supporting tion in 1987.
'»e bridge tree which serves as a
Sullivan said Friday he will join
:tever, was used to raise or lower a Cincinnati public relations firm
, •:jhc capstone breast wheel.
as an investment consultant
-' As water struck the breast
., :iwheel below its axle, the wheel
HAMILTON; Ohio (AP) - A
·;turned against the current. The lawsuit against Champion· Inlerna·
.water srayed in the bucketS for only donal Corp. alleging theft of trade
· :On~ quarte.r revolution then the secrets .was settled after two days
~eight of the waler caused them to of testimony in Butler County
."Cmpcy.
Common Pleas Court. ·
:,. Bridge Tree, the heavy wooden
Fairfield business executive
~'cross piece under the bedstone Wendell Judd had said Champion
:.::Which supported the lower end of stole his pro~ess for recycling
·lhe spindle, could be moved up or papermaking wastes, which he
·~wn by action of the brayer to demonstrated to the company in
ildjust the action of the captstone March 1988.
,...hen grinding. Buhrstone rock was Defensl} lawyers liaid the proused in making millstones.
.cess used by Champion was the
~ CapSIORe, the runner or revolv· result of 25 years of research.
Terms of the seUlcment weren't
jnj millstone, was on top of the
S~IRdle, and the carding mill on the · disclosed.
machines was used to clean, sepa·
talC, and process wool, and to chop
LEBANON; Ohio (AP)- A.
porn, wheat, oats, and barley.
. former accountant sentenced last
, , All this was ground together month for taking $510,000 of his
and used to feed horses, cattle, clients • money, is facing similar
hogs, and chickens. Cockeye, the charges.
Robert McComas, 53, of
;octet in the middle of the balance
IJ.Rd, and cockhead the upper end Mason, was indicted last week by a
jjf the spindle w~ made 10 fit the Warren County grand jury on
charges alleging he tOQk $10,800
~ye conveyer, a device made
ind inserted in any part of the from the owner of the Pure Joy
Jhrist mill 10 convey any product RestauranL
The money was to go to the
of the mill.
I The fine lines cracked between state for $ales taxes, but wasn't forthe furrows on the surface of the warded, Prosecutor Tim Oliver
jnillstones were made with a facing said. McComas was indicted on
pr cracking pick when redoing the charges of grand theft, failure to
groves in the ghrist wheel. A crack· file sales tax receipts and failure 10
ing pick was used 10 dress the cut· remit sales taxes.
McComas previously was con· g edge of a mill wheel in order
make the fine while flo~r for victed of taking $510,000 from
ing bread, cakes, and p1es. It Imperial Temporary Services of
was very .essential that the buhr Fairfield and from a client, Carol
ttones be dressed ill least every two Parker, wbo had given hill'! money
10 pay tax bills from 1990. He was
jlleeks or more often.
, Some ghrits were harder on the sentenced to five to 15 years in
Slcne than others, for instance corn prison in that case.

Business briefs

:was

.

already been conducted. tile
announcement said.
" When you're looting at the
development of a new compound,
one of the biggest costs is toxicological data," Suiter said
·
But additional studies proving
environmental safety may be needed for Environmental Protection
Agency approval for the new use of
allopilrinol, he said.
.
Removed rrom survey .
The Agriculture Department is
removing some parts of Florida
from the list of citrus canker survey
areas.
Regular inspections for citrus
canker will no longer be required
of trees, plants and groves producing regulated fruit in the areas
removed from the list, the depart·
ment announced this.month.
Florida is the only state where
citrus canker currenlly exists. To
p.J:Cvent the disease from spreading,
certain areas have been placed
under quarantin'e, and regulated
articles are subject to interstate
movement restrictions.
Survey areas are outside the
quarantine areas and serve as con·
tainment or buffer zones.
Removed from the survey areas
are parts of Hillsborough and Man·
atee counties and all of Sarasota
County.
"We are pleased that no infestations have been found in these
areas since they were placed under
observatLon," said B. Glen Lee,
deputy administrator for plant protection and quarantine with the
.Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service.
"There has been a ~ignificant
reduction in new citrus canter. out·
breaks in recent years," he ' said·.
No citrus canter has been detected
in Florida since January.

Rice imports should
reach new record

/

Ndvember 15,1992

u.·. s. op_ens agricultural

Bengals,
Browns
lose again

trade office aewIn Mexico City
bakery

WASHINGTON {AP)- A
sunflower seods for use in
qricullUrll U'lde office has been products ot as a snack food.
opened in Mexico City to help
"Since coofectionary lllllfiower
American farmers and exporters · seed Is virtually unknown in
tap the ~owing market for U.S. France, penetrallng the market
produCts m thai country.
would require long-term and
"U.S. agricultural exports to aggressive promotionllaetions,"
Mexico in 1992 are expected to saysa report in the November issue
swpass $3.5 billion, more than 20 ofUSDA'sAgExportermapzine.
percent abQve..last year's record
There also are marketing opporand about triple the level of $1.2 tunities there for peanuts, tlie rqlOit
• billion in 198-7," said Ann M. Ven· said.
·
eman, deputy secretary of a¢.cul"The French are snacking more
· ture~ who participated in a nbbo!l· · and, aecording .to research studies, .
cuttmg ceremony for the office this . nuts are a popular snilc!t among
..
·
. French customers," it said
· week.
,She said that by the end of the . "Per capita consumption of
15-year transition period called for snack products in France is low
under the recently negotiated North . vis-i-vts other European Cornmu- ·
CERTIFIED • Steve Rime
American Free Trade Agreement. nity countries," it said "'lbere ill
or Racine bas reached the sta· ·~nn"!!ll U.S . agricultUral e~~rts room for growth and peanu·ts
tus of certified sales manacer
will htely be $1.S to $2 billion shailld benefit from any expansion,
at Taylor Motors Chrysler,
higher than without NAFI'A."
in this food sector."
Plymouth, Dodge, 1nd Nlssan,
.. Theagrecment has yet to be ratThe report added: ''It is also ,
under Chrysler Corp.'s sales
•f•~d ~Y Congress, where critics important 10 emphasize the distinc· ~
certirleallon
program .
chum ·!t could cost. Ame':ican jobs tive quality of U.S. peanuts, com- .
Requirements lnilude comple·
and bnng products mto thiS councry pared to other origins, 10 counter
lion or tralnlnc seminars, · th~t hav~ not been subjected to the competition from other supplymaintaining a certified sales
stnn~ent health and environmental ing countries, particularly China."
stan, and exceeding customer . requ1l'CIIIents. .
·
~tlsfactlon standards.
Veneman said much of the Butter production up
·
.recent growth in U.S. tann exports
WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. '
to Mexico results from Mexican butter production during September
trade liberalization that began jn was 90. million pou~. 10 percent :
1987,. and 10 economjc benefits for . above the same month last year and
Mexico from those reforms.
6 percent above August of this ·
.
The office, operated by USDNs year.
.
Foreign Agricultural Service, will
pro~ote sal.es of U.S. farm products m Mexico and !JCfVC as a contact point for Mexican importers
· IND I.D.
seekmg 10 buy products from the
I
United States.
The FAS now opemte..s 15 agricultural trade offices in major mar,;
RtadLia
kets ~~ Europe, .Latin AmeriC!l,.
Africa, Asia and the Middle·East.
5
TES

Page4

Yol. 43, No. 144

Clinton, Democrat

424 SECOND IVE. ·
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

JOINS STAFF· Dallal
Sayre hu joined Uae stair at
Mark's Auto Sales u a sales·
man. He was formerly a Iiles·
man at Taylor Motors In
Atheas and Pat Hill Cbrysler
in Middleport. He resides In
Middleport with his wire,
Anita and son, AUJtln. He may
be contacted at 992-3011.

GREETS LEADERS • Hillary Clinton
greets House Majority Leader Richard
Gephardt, of Missouri, right, and House Speak·.
er Tom Foley, or Washington as president-elect
Clinton, len looks on late Sunday at the Gonr·

The Ohio .Department of Transportation is taking jiiiOther Slep Orl
the way to building the fll'St section
or a connector road that will eventually run from Rock Springs to
Great Bend and the RiiChie Bridge
at Ravenswood, W.Va.
Starting today, ODOT employees began walking the proposed
·path for the road .from Rock
Springs to Five Points, and selecting sites for soil testing. John
Dowler, deputy director of District
10 of ODOT, and Tom Hedrick,
head of District IO's location and
design department. report that area
residents may even see a bulldozer
on.site this week, clearing the way

O'DELl lUMBER·
E. MAIN ST.

REGAL

1992BUICK
SKYLARK

1992 'PONTIAC
SUNBIRI) SE

.,_ t.ntaatic gu
aopp!Kiate ... atyto
'...! dllign. Ene!VY tlfident. big,
BTU, llld dMn bumil)g. Styt..
i11c:1u$ r.mote cont.,.led, ~fee.
ejlnding, 2 and 3·1idad, MIO•
hpiOCN lo

olt"Tncl and in...ta.

... lhllll -

at II O'Dell loca-

1992BUICK

CENTURY
The warmth of wood ...
the convenience of gas..

Cozy Glo
Ceramic

---Local Briefs-----.

179• 95 NAT •

Ofjici(,!,ls urged to attend meeting

2111.1&amp; LP

11" &amp; 30" allo avalllble
'

J99.95 NAT

.

Glo flreDelux•
311.116 LP Frtoe!Aid Oak ,
IIVIIW!Ie ' 24" s.t

229.95 NAT
. LP
Ul.tl

.1992 PONTIAC
TRANSPORT VAN

1992 PONTIAC
LEMANS

O'DELL LUMBER CO.
I

' -

'!BEST LITTLE LUMBER YARD IN TOWN"
: 134 E. IIIAif IT.

VINE STREET AT THIRD AVE.
QAWPOU8 441-127.1 .

'

for the rigs that ·will drill for the
soil samples.
Hedrick said that property owners along the road alignment were
notified by leller that work would
begin this week.
"I undersrand that many residents are still skep~ical that the
connector road frot11 Rock Springs
10 the bridge will be built, because
of the number of ·years the project
)las been discussed but no action
taken," Dowler said. "However,
Gov.Cf!lor George V. Voinovich is
commllled 10 using ODOT and the
building of highways as a iool for
economic development in south· ··
eastern Ohio. Because of the gover-

Trailers to be used as rental properties, such things as cieaning
units outside of those placed in a up weeds and disposing of trash .
trailer park can no longer he locat- The -Mayor was asked by Counci.l
ed in Racine, according 10 an ordi- to evaluate thq problem and take
nance passed by Racine Village whatever ac'tion is necessary
against property owners.
Council.
Glenn Rizer, maintenance
At last week's meeting of counsupervisor,
reported that the co,mcil, the ordinance was adopted after
pactor
truck
is workin~ 10 advanthe required third reading deSPite a
llille
in
the
village
but that there is
protest from Mrs~ Shirley Miller,
sttll
space
for
more
trash cusCross Street, who charged it distomers.
He
also
reminded
residents
criminates against trailer owners.
that
leaves,
old
tires,
furniture,
bat·
·council explained that trailers
teries
and
used
motor
oil
cannot
be
now in place and used as rental
hauled
10
the
landfill.
units are not affected by the new
• Mayor Frank Cleland reported
Iegisliltion. It was.also noted that it
that
the street paving has been
does not apply to anyone who
coinpleled.
Council Jtecessed until 7
wants 10 establish a trailer park in
accordance with state regulations. ·
p.m. toni~ht (Monday). Mrs. Miller
The ordinance wa,s passed in ,m her discussion before council
response to a complaint from a del- said. that some residents think that
egation of citizens, Council told recessed sessions are closed. Coun·
Mrs. Miller.
cil eniphasiud that all meetings are
Mrs. Miller also lodged com- open to the public, be they regular,
plaints against several l'roperty recessed or special.
owners for not maintainmg their

y... muet -

...

nor's Mansioa in Little Rock, Ark" The democratic leaders held their rJCSt m~ting over din·
ner to 'discuss ways to break tbe Washington
gridlock and push through a quick-action agen·
da. (AP)

Racine Council adopts
new trailer ordinance

O'DELLS
•

map plan to end gridlock
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) President-elect Clinton emerged
from his fll'St post-election meeting
with Democratic leaders of
Congress with what his spokesman
called their "general strong commitment" to move quicldy on his
domestic agenda and end the leg·
islative gridlock in Washington.
The House and Senate leaders
spent more than 3 hours with Clin·
ton at the Arkansas governor' s
mansion Sunday night, discussing
over dinner a wide range of issues
where Clinton needs congressional
action 10 make good on his promis·
es.
, Senate Majority Leader George
MiiChell of Maine said the meeting ·
was "informative and helpful,"
centered around "plans and hopes
for the new year and a new beginning."
House Speaker Thomas S.
Foley, D-Wash., said he had high
hopes, and the ,aroup.would begin
to lay out some details at a news
conference today.
''I think that everybody's ready
10 move forward on the same prior. ities," said George Stephanopoulos; Ciinton's chief spokesman.
"The details are always going 10 be
worked out but I think we have a
general strong commjtment to

move forward on those priorities."
Beyond any specific agreements
that may come out of the meetings
in Little Rock and another, broader
set of discussions between Clinton
and congressional leaders of both
parties· later this week in Washington , Stephanopoulos said the feel·
ing and the symbolism of the meet·
ing was important.
"I think tonight the leaders and
the president got together and
cemented their relationship and are
ready 10 worl: together," he said.
Before the mee ting, Clinton
said, "We've got a big job 10 do
and we've got 10 do it together."
In addition 10 Clinton, Mitchell
and Foley, House Majority Leader
Richard Gephardt of Missouri ,
Vice President-elect AI Gore, and
Clinton' s wife Hillary allended the
private dinner: Aides joined them
afterward for coffee.
·Clinton is almost certain to get
strong congressional cooperation
for his top priority, an economic
stimulus package which includes
iax breaks for new investment.
Congress passed similar legislation
last year, only 10 see it vetoed by
President Bush because. it also
included a tax increase on th e
wealthy to offset the costs.
The president-elect is also looking to Congress to increase spend·

ing $20 billion a year on road,
bridges, communications systems
and other infrastructure projects,
offset by cuts in military spending.
Congress will have no trouble
delivering a·family leave bill for
Clinton 10 sign, guaranteeing peo·
pie can get their jobs back if they
have to take unpaid time off for
new babies or family medical
emergencies. It also passed in tlie
last Congress but Democrats failed
to override Bush' s veto.
·
Health care, ethics law reform,
and a higher education spending
program - tied to a commitment
from student recipients to perform
public service work in their communities - also are high on Clinton 's list But those initiatives may
wait well beyond · Clinton's
promised initi31 100-day legislative
thrust

And there is no guaranlee that
Clinton, like some new presidents;
will enjoy a honeymoon period
with the loyal opposition. Senate
Republican Leader Bob Dole of
Kansas served notice in a television
interview Sunday that GOP members are " not going to be patsies
and floor mats and rubber stamps: ~
"We're going 10 try to be help·
ful, but at the same time, we are a
national party," Dole said.

·'t'retiminary workfo·r first -se-ctionof connector ro~d to bridge.begins

NEW AT

1992 BUICK

A Multimedia Inc. Ne-p.oper

Senate Majority Leader Mitchell
says meeting 'informative, helpful'

'

Colftlflil
He•fitg Detig•

le~ders

TAWNEY STUDIO

Correction

ltrolutlo•ary

1 Sectton, 1o Pegea,25 e&lt;i1!t.

_Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 16, 1992

-Coj&gt;Yrlghted 1992

~HOTOS
MIN

Potential market
WASHINGTON (AP)- Amer·
ican trade experts say there is a
potential market in France for U.S.

Low ton ight in upper 30s.
Tuesday, partly cloudy. High In
50s.

....

Lottery numbers

••

Pick 3:
984
Pick 4:
9860
Super Lotto:
16-18-24-26-37-45
Kicker :
379867

PASSPORT

WASHINGTON (AP)- Peru's
rice imports should reaeh a record
400,000 tons this year and U.S.
exports are expeeled·to rise accord,
ingly, say trade spCcialists.
The U.S. market share is about
25 ~ri;ent of Peruvian .rice imports
and IS valued at $30 million, says a
report in this month's issue of
'
USDKs AgExporter·magazine.
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
"This represents a doublin¥ of ~riday night's Ohio Lottery selecthe S4,000 tons (worth $15 million) tions:
of U.S. rice exported 10 Peru in Pick 3 Numbers
1991," it said. "Peru is Latin
. 2-6·7
America's third largest rice iniport
(two, six, seven)
market, after Mexico and Brazil. •• ' Pick 4 Numbers
8-5-8-4
{eight, five. eight, four)
Buckeye 5
GALLIPOLIS • Sheryl Walters
15-17-19-34-37
has joined the sales staff of Russell
(fifteen, seventeen, nineteen
Wpod's 'fum in Gallipolis, and not thirty-four, thirty-seven)
'
Sheryl Waters as reported in last
The Super LotiO jackpot is $4
week's Sunday Times-Sentinel.
million.

1992 PONTIAC
GRANDAM

Ohio Lottery

\

POMEROY 112~

Township Truslees fnim Gallia and Meigs Counties are encouraged to attend the Co111munity Housing Improvement Strategy
Meeting on Thursday at the following locations.
·
In Gallia County the meeting is scheduled for 9 a.m. in the com·
missioners' office.
In Meigs County the meeting is at 1:30 p.m. in the Common ·
Pleas Coun Room.
·
'
The meeting pertains to housing for low-moderate income citi·
zens in all townships and the citY of Gallipolis.
Further information may be obtained by contact Sid Edwards,
executive director, Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency, at
992-6629 or 367-7341.
Continued on Pille 3

I'

I'

nor's commitment, area residents
may see the first section of highway under construction by 1994."
"Also because of the governor's
commitment to highways in o'ur
part of the state," Dowler said,
"District 10 took a calculated risk
and is designing the plans for the
highway before an environmental
study on the project is finished."
Several years.agQ, under the
Celeste Administration, ODOT
hired a consulting firm, Woodruff
and Associates, to prepare an environment study, but the fmal document was never compiled. That
firm was later let gn, and ODOT is
now negotiating with a Columbus
fmn, which will be responsible for
compiling the environmental docu·
ment

Regional
·m eeting set
November 23

been collected for the community. The distribu·
ITEMS COLLECTED • The Meigs County
lion
of the goods is the responsibility of the Ohio
Chiropractic: Clinic in Middleport again this
Eta
Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority. Picyear sponsored the "Doctors With a Heart" protured,
1-r,
are Russ Bergdoll, office manager;
gram. Through this program the clinic traded .
Kim
Dent,
Ohio Eta Phi vice-president; Becky
chiropractic services for non-perishable food
Triplett,
Ohio
Eta Phi president; Dr. Nancy
items tliat will be given to needy families over
Kime
and
Dr
•.
Nick
Robinson holding their son,
the holidays. Bf the end of the day on Saturday
Ben Robinson.
a total of 773 p1eces or non-perishable items had

A regional meeting for local
officials interested in applying for
mi!limum security misdemeanant
jail funds will be held at the Meigs
County Courthouse on November
23 from 10 a.m. 10 noon.
The meeting was announced by
Lt. Governor Mike De Wine and
Gary C. Mohr, director of the GovCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ernor's Office of Criminal Justice Secretary of State Bob Taft says
Services.
some changes he wants would
Minimum security misde · strengthen the agency that handles
meanant jails are designed 10 house allegations of election law viola·
non-violent. sentenced misde- tions.
meanants convicted of minor
But the pam\1 still might not be
crimes. primarily drunk driving.
able to resolve last-minute charges
"It is important fo~ the ·state to before an election.
work closely with local communiT;lft said he is working with the
ties on inllovativ.e programs such as · Ohio Elections Commission on legthis in order 10 help solve Ohio's islation that would make the fivecritical prison crowding problem," member panel more independent,
said DeWine.
.
and provide it with staff support
"We hope these regional meet· apart from his office.
.ings will encourage counties and
The commission acted last week
municipalities in applying for mini- on several complaints of unfair
mum security misdemeanant jail practices filed by candidates or
funds. ~ Mohr said. "We look forgroups. The election wa s over
ward to working creatively with before the allegations were heard,
them 10 secure funding fiJI' new or and Taft said he doubts it would be
renovated facilities 10 ease their feasible to create a system th at
overcrowding problems. We urge would work in advance of ballot·
all qualifying entities to attend a
in g.
"Whether it could hear matters
regional meetinj!." ·
Space is limtled for the meeting, l'rior to an election, it seems to me
to be held in the Meigs County 11 would have 10 meet ... every day,
Common Pleas Courtroon!. Those and it would have 10 be a permainterested in attending are asked to nent standing body, at least for a
contact Economic· Development period of time before the election,"
Director Paula Thacker at 992Taft said in an interview.
5005 before Friday. The Meigs
"I don't know if that's practical,
County meeting is one of five
I don'tlcnow if that's affordable in
meetings to be hel'd across t~e
terms of paying elections commis·
Stale.
sioners on a full· time basis;" he

Taft seeks stronger elections commission

'

'

. said.
Taft said charges fil ed in the
heat of a campaign may or may not
be justified , and are difficult to sort
ouL

" In some cases someone may
derive an unfair benefit from making a charge that is not adjudicated
Continued on page 3

Ten weekend.fatalities
recorded on Ohio highways
By The Associated Press
The deaths of a father and son in
a crash on a rural Fulton County
road on Sunday increased Ohio's
weekend traffic fatality count to 10,
the State Highway Patrol said
The patrol counted traffic deaths
from 6 p.m. Frid ay to midnight
Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
WAUSEON -· John E. Wilson,
38, and son, Roy L. Wilson, 20, of
Delta, when theor car collided with ·
a truck on a Fulton Councy road
LANCASTER - Helen L.
Rouse, 80, of Lancaster, in a two·
car accident on a Lancaster street
RAVENNA - John Mcintyre,
32, hometown unavailable , in a
one-car crash on Oh io · 59 in
Portage County.
SATURDAY
GREENVILLE - Eugene R.

Selander, 62, of Greenville, when
two trucks collided on U.S. 36 in
Darke County.
NEW PHILAD ELPHIA ·James M. Foulk, 19, of Warren, a
passenger of a car that struck a disabled vehicle parked along Interstate: 77 in Tuscarawas County.
SPRINGFIELD - Jennifer A.
Coop~r. 18, of Alexandria, Ind 1,
driver of a car in a two-car accident
on Interstate 70 in Clark County.
CHILLICOTHE Larry
Howsman, 25, hometown unavail- ·
able, in a one-car crash on Ohio
I04 in Ross County.
YOUNGSTOWN - Shelby J.
Linden, 9, of Niles, a pedestrian hit
by a ttuck on a street in Austintown
in Mahoning County.
CIRCLEVILLE - Angela K.
Stephens, 18, of Kingston, driver of
a car in a two-car crash on a Pick.
away County road.

,..

�•

,.

I·

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
•

111 COIIrt Street

Pomero,, Ohio
' DEvOTED TO 'I'IR IN'I'ZRaTII OJ' THE IIEIOS.I!IASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsber/ControDer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH .
General Manager

I.EITI!RS OF OI'INION .,.. welcome. They obould be le~s than 300
1ft oubject to editing ll)d must be signed with nome,
:· address and telephone number. No unsigned Ienon will be published. letters
should be in good Wte, oddleSiing issu.,, oot personalities.
wonlo. All !etten

GOP governors shifting
through rubble of defeat

Monday, November 18,1112

Page-2- The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, November 16, 1992

•

~y.~ov.17
Accu-Weather• forec8$t for

Will it be Secretary of State Powel'? .
Here in the nation's capital,
George C. Marshall' .... "
where ·the only
vy industry is
Consider the geopolitical Pow·
the Ql8king of Short Lists, the mul·
ell : As Ronald Reagan's last
titade of makers .have fallen short
• national security adviser (and
with their new' fall line of Short diplomacy. The list is headed by deputy adviser), Ppwell helped
Lists for Secreta!)' of State.
Gen . G~orge C. Marshall, who restore an apparatus shattered by ·
They've given a grateful nation became Truman's secretary of state the Iran-contra scandal ., - and
all the smart hu,nches: Warren - and whose Marshall Plan gave oversaw planning for two superChristopher (who says running lhe life to Europe..
power summits. As George Bush's
transition means sayonara to a secAnother reason Clinton should military chief, J:&gt;owell was both a
retaryship), Sen. Sam Nunn (highly pick Powell is, simply, th;u it is voice of rational caution and a
able secret choice of Democratic !'ight. Clinton campatjP1ed promis- leader in forging aDd keeping lhe
centrists who know State, not mg that !be faces of hiS administra- global coalition !bat waged the PerDefense, is what he wants), et al.
tion will look like the faces of sian Gulf War.
. But the listrneisters have over- America. There is no better wa,v
Consider the consumate-tearnlooked lhe person whom Bill Clin- lhan to name the fust Mro-Amen- player Powell: Modem presidents
ton should most want for secretary can secretary of state.
(until Bush) were crippled by rivalofstate: Gen. Colin Powell.
In an impressive new book, ries of national security insecurity.
The main reason Clinton should "Colin Powell: Soldier/Statesman Nixon and FC)ld suffered Kissinger .
select Powell is that his qualifica- - Statesman/Soldier,'' author vs..Laird. Carter endured Vance vs.
tions are outstanding. Powell, Howard Means noted: "The 'Black Brzezinski. Reagan dozed through
chairin.an of the Joint Chiefs of Eisenhower' lag, indeed, has been outright uncivil war: Haig vs.
Staff and former Reagan national much hung around Colin Powell's . Weinberger, Haigl¥5; Allen; then
security adviser, is already on his- · neck, with all !bat implies about Shultz vs. Weinberger, which eretory's short list of Americans dis- life after the military ... he is, if ated the notorious vacuum thai
tinguished iii both the military and anything, rriueh closer to the '~)lack gave rise to diplo-Rambo Ollie

Martin Schram

b
. .ea

.,

$••-

Norlb, et al. It was Powell, as NSC
adv iser, who resisted the last
zealots and ended funding of
Nicaragua's contras.
Powell's resume has but one
blemish: Newly discovered notes
of ex-Defense Secrerary Weinberger show his then-military adviser,
Powell, told him Hawk missiles
"can' t be given to Israel or Iran
(wilhout) Cong(ressional) notification." But in a congressional deposition, Powell merely said: " We
may have tallcC(I about it briefly,
but I have no specific recollection
if we did, or if we did, what was
said about iL" Not untriJe, but not
really candid.
Says biographer Means: "Pow·
ell learned what he wanted to learn
- and didn't learn the things that
he could have learned but dido ' 1
want to know." Hopefully, Powell
learned from lhat !be full extent of
constitutional duty and lhe folly of
misplaced loyalty.
A note of on-target irony: Ex- .
Reagan official Elliott Abrams
(who was convicted of Iran-Contra
misdeeds) told Means months
before the '92 election: "My guess
is Powell's a DemocraL... On for·
eign policy, I'd say he's a Ointon·
Gore type of Democrat/' And
Jesse Jackson (who may never
before have shared a paragraph
with Ablllllls) says of Powell: "His .
distaste for the Wi!Ue Horton campaign is well known. He has a
sense of dignity that he doesn't .
negotiate away.' .
•
America has moved beyond !be •
tinM when presidents will promise ·
to place blacks in high places, but
tl\en merely place blacks in high- :.
but-traditionally black places that :·
are presumed to have a large black :
constituency; see LoUis Sullivan at :
Health and Human Services, also :
·the portrait wall of ex-sees at Hous- •
ing and Urban Development. Clin- ·
ton know.s that a New Covenant :
.administration with blacks relegated to old-time traditional black •
positions would be worse than :
wrong. It would be an insult to us l
aU.
·
'
Martin Schram is a syndicated J
writer for Newspaper Enterprise .,
Association.
:
•'

By WALTER R. MEARS
~~-·"&gt;eli!OI' :
f:'!'PI
AP Spec!al Correspondent
HIHhE
WASHINGTON - Republicans are looking for ways to pick up
• !be pieces, wilh a !binned rank of governors beginning !be effort,
just as their political forebears did when !be GOP was in Ibis fix
• before.
That was 28 years ago, when Republican times were even won;e,
and some politicians were saying !be party wall fuiished as a major
force. But after !be wipeout of 1964, Republicans lost only ()!le out
.. of six presidential elections, and !bat one narrowly, before Demo. crat Bill Clinton beat President Bush.
" The tendency when there's a defeat of Ibis magnitude and of
Ibis hurtfulness and of Ibis -Ibis enormity. is to criticize. to fmd
somebody to blame," Bush said a week after his defeat
.
"The idea that this party has seen its demise - and I love these
little analysts, lhese media that I tried to annoy and failed ·- to hear
!bern analyze it all, you'd think that Ibis ... party is out of here," lhe
beaten president said, his syntax sounding rather like Ross Perot's.
•·
"I don't believe it for one single minute."
.
But his defeat; and !be party's, were close compared with the
drubbing !be GOP took in 1964. Democrat Lyndon B. Johnson won
61 percent of !be vore and 44 smtes;. Barry Goldwater got onl,v 39
percenL Democrats held 68 Senate seats and a !55-vote margm in .
theHouse.
,
. While Bush lost by five percentage points, RepubliCllJlS managed
. minimal gains in their House minority and a standoff in lhe Senate.
In 1964, more lhan half the nation's eligible voters considered
themselves to be Democrats, doubling !be number who identified
themselves as Republicaris.
.
t·
A survey just before Ibis election showed 35 perCent considered
lbemselves Democrats, 29 percent Republicans, the rest indepen"The cable company would like to apologizF for any unseC:nhly charges on
: dent of either major party.
their services In the past. ... They're.lnviting us to subscribe fo.the
· So the GOP numbers are more encouraging afllir this defeat
Wheli !be Democrats last won the White House, in 1976, Jimmy
Apology Channel."
·
. Carter beat an incumben! who had never been elected and was bur·
dened both by economic woes and by Watergate, an issue height•'
ened by the pardon of Richard Nixon. For all !bat, President Gerald
••
Ford almost managed .to hold on.
.
•I
When Ford lost, Ronald Reagan was just off stage, already
•
I
'
. readying the campaign that won in 1980. Reagan's conservatives
Daniels," he sai(!, lite controversy Salem, unproved allegations could j
Recently,
Randy
Daniels,
a
forwere the coming force, but the losen didn't face !be ltind cif split
"would have impeded his ability to ''lead, quite literally, to death. A !
mer television reporter - who has
they'd had to cope with after 1964, and are likely to face again now.
do the job, and I thiplc. this is where return to those days is not · :
also been a press secretary to vari· Ford says he considers himself a moderate, .and that's where lhe
Randy came ouL .. 1 .It's a problem progresS.''
;
Meanwhile,
:lhere
was
no
bear·
ous political ·figures - was
party ougbt to be. He said the winning Democrats "moved toward
Daniels has filed a defamation •
ing of lhe charges against Daniels. of what's good for, lhe mayor and
·~ appointed a deputy mayor in lhe
the center, and unfortunately, with our convention, we got the
suit against Barbara Wood. There ;
c1ty of New York. Just before !be There was no confrontation. There what's good for ~Y·"
image of being too far to the right."
.
What was good for the mayor will be depositions, cross-examina. ;
was
no
due
process
for
Daniels.
mayor,
David
Dinkins,
was
to
Republican governors .were galhering Sa!urday in Lake Geneva.
' introduce Daniels to the media, There certainly waS no presump- was for Daniels to be a gOod sol- tion, and maybe the truth will he •
Wis., to look at what happened in lhese elections ·and lalk about
who knew him anyway, wocd sud- tion of innocence in most of the dier and resign. Mter heartfelt dis- determined. But thatwill take some .,\
· what's nexL
.
denly
came that Daniels had been press coverage of Daniels . He -cussions with Bill Lynch and a few time, and even if Daniels is vindiVice President Dan Quayle addresses them Monday at a session
accused
by Barbara Wood, a eable vowed to fight to clear his name, other high official3,jn !be Dinkins cated, there will ·be, as the mayor .
on the implications and challenges of the 1992 elections. They're
administration, Daniels waJked .lhe has said, many ''who will never,
television
reporter, of sexually but they all say that
hearing from GOP congressional leaders, from outgoing Cabinet
plank.
i
ever believe him." ·
What
of
!be
mayor'?
Absent
any
harassing her five years ago when
: members, from pollsters, and from some of the people deemed likeOne
of
the
few
journalists
who
Not only reporters and editors
proof
of
the
charges,
would
he
they both worked for the borough
ly to seek to become party chairman in January.
did not joi'n the J!Osse was Jim were - in Ellis Cose' s words - •
president
of
Manhattan.
·
stand
by
Daniels?
.Well,
you
see,
This session of !be Republican Governors Association will be
Randy Daniels lost the deputy David Dinkins told the Daily Dwyer of Newsday, who wrote that quite comfortable in their smug ·
dealing with questions echoing some that eame up when !be same
mayor job after a ferocious barrage News, no matter what happens, once the charges were made, presumptions of guilt. Hardly any. outfi~ then only two years old, con~ened afiCr the 1964 GOP defeat.
from lhe New York press, particu- ··there will still be a percentage of Daniels should 1\0t have taken one in the city mentioned the pre- · ·
· Their numbers are comparable- 18 Republican governors now,
larly columni$IS. They said lhc for- people who will never, ever believe o[fice ''until an inquiry was made. sumption of innocence. Not even
· 17 then.
But ... he shouldn't have been civil libertarians, including the
mer prime minister of the him.''
Their clout may not be. ln.l964, the governors were !be base of
Bahamas, for whom Daniels has
The man was too heavy to carry. thrown overboard Without an inves- feminists among them -. and lhere
. moderate power in a party that had turned to the right and lost by
are a good many.
worked, had shady connections.
The most instructive comment tigation."
· the widest popular vote margin in history. Governors like Romney
Ellis
Cose,
ediulrial
page
editor
It might have helped if law pro- '
And
in
the
new
job,
he
was
really
in this lesson plan for a high school
-' of Michigan, Rockefeller of New York and Scranton of Pennsylvaof
lhe
Daily
News,
titled
one
of
his
fessor
Anita Hill had suggested that ,
going to take the taxF.)'In' money civics class came from Bill Lynch,
nia wanted to tum it back to the center. They spent more time lalk- '
own
columns,
"S&lt;f.!:
harass
crimes
.
in
such
cases, due process ought .
as a very highly patd press agent the mayor's closeat a&lt;Jviser. He told
ing 10 party leaders lhan listening to lhem. .
thwart
due
process~
"
Unlike
most
not
to
be
so carelessly discard¢. :
for lhe mayor, It was said. There- The New York Times that "the
. Those governors helped engineer the quick shift from conservaof
his
ravenous
colleagues
in
the
Neither
she
nor Clarence Thomas ·'
fore, he should be removed, and the legal system and the court of public
tive control of the party apparatus to a new party chairman who
papers
and
on
tet'evision,
Cose.
·
got much due process as they '
sexual harassment charges, some in opinion are two different courts,
· dealt in nuts and bolts organiZalion, and wouldn't say a word about
the press emphasized, liad come at ·and I think lhe court of public opin- noted lhat sexual harassment is not became famous. 'Iltey survived, but ·•
policy or philosophy.
'
"such a unique offense that the Randy Daniels may be another ·
just the right time to do justlhat
ion took over here."
·
This time the lines aren't so clear. There will be a new party
making
of the charge is tantamount story. ·
·
Judge Roy Bean, who was the . That's what happened ·iii Salem
chairman, to be elected late in January. Rich Bond, Bush's man at
to
proving
iL
.•.
.
only law west of the Pecos for in the time of Cotton Mather. But it
Nat Hentoff is a nationally
GOP headquarters, is resigning. Rival factions are lining up !heir
"In the days when being a renowned authority on the First
quite a while, would have under- is not the divines and the devout
candidates to succeed him.
stood that reasoning. If a defendant laity ·who now create· lhe court of Communist was considered worse Amendment and the rest of the Bill ::
The centrist-conservative split is more complex; it now involves
than being a murderer, (such ofRighiS.
before him was accused oC rustling, public opinion. It is the press.
'
lhe religious right and the growing organizational muscle of Pat
'•
and if the evidence was. foggy,
Bill Lvnch went on to nail the unproved charges) effectively
Robertson's Christian Coalition.
Nat Hen torr .Is a syndicated •
nonetheless, since some folks said coffin shut on !be question of pos- smeared many previously good
__..;._
writer
for Newspaper Enterprise :names.
And
in
a
time
when
witches
he c~eated at cards, he must be a sible innocence. "Even iJ an
EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R. Mears. vice president and
were
lhought
to
roam
!be
Streets
of
Association.
rustler too. Hang him.
inquiry had vindicated Mr.
columnist for The Associated Press, hM reported on Washing.
ton and national polities for more than 30 years.

-

·sexual harassment a~d due process
Nat Rentoff .

Lette-rs to the editor
Parent comments on suspension
To add more conflict, it is
. This letter is in regard to afterdegrading. terrifying and mentally
school suspension.
· I have a second grader at the upsetting for grade school children
Pcimeroy Elementary School. He ,to have to serve time out, not at
was given two days after school their own school, but a bigger
suwension for defending himself.
sehnol.
·These children have to leave by
I feel that if !bey should have
bus at 2:45 from the school to go to after school suspension, at least it
the high school where the after should be at their own school
school suspension sessions are . where lhey are more likely not to
held. It is up to the individual par- feel intimidated or scared out of
eDt to get the student horne. .
. their wits, not at a · much bigger
·This means that lhese kids stt school with older kids. At least
out !here from 3:30 to 6:30 with a lhen parent$ who do not have tranS·
10 minute break. Also it means that portation could take ·lhem somein lhe meantime they &amp;\so have to lhing to eat.
wait to eat. I always have supper
Please, if there are other parents
ready for my ltids as· soon as they who feel this is unjust, voice your
come home from school. This opinion. These are our children.
means they now have to wait.
Suzanne Gilmore
• 329 Mechanic St, Pomeroy.

Today in history
.
By Tile Alloc:lated Prell ·
.
Today is Monday, Nov. 16,1he 32ht day of 1992. There 1re 4S days
left in the year.
·
·:
.
.
Today's Hi&amp;liliJhl in Hisloly:
On Nov. 16,-193'3, lhe United States and lhe Soviet Union eatabliaht"
diPlomatic. rela!ions.
'
.

How to form re~ponsive governnlent

The new president, as usual, is
inund,ated with advice from pundits, academics, job-seekers and
adversaries. Most of it is self-serving and selr-evident. What follows
is or a somewhat different order.
For those seeking high-minded sentiments and good government platitudes, read no further.
.The new president's fust priority 1s not- repeat, not- to form a
bipartisan government. His first
task is to build a responsible,
responsive administration. Properly
understood, lhat is a partisan task.
He has been given an opportunity
by lhe dectorate. He will fashion It
in10 a mandate only if he staffs his
government with people whose
first loyalty is to htm, to his program and to !be broad Democratic
Party agenda.
That mean$, first. that he must
resist lhe impulse to choose his
major appointees on the basis of
their resumes alone. Washington
and lhe nation are ftlled with men
and women who have dedicated
their lives tQ the single-minded
pursuit of trophies fir their entry in
Who's Who. Some of them are
quite able. Some are almost as
good as their presa clippings. Many
are simply careerists whose chief
talent is in cultivating !be media. .
I

'

•

'

noble or leader too enlightened to .Home Administration state direc- ''
betray. They are useful as writers tors to second-Iev.el off!cials at !be ·
of learned pieces in policy maga- U.S. Information Agency . The
.
_
zines. They are worthless as allies. purge should be as ruthless, abrupt
This is not a ~ommendatiOI! ·w and thorough as that employed by ·•
But few of them give a damn
a\'Out BtU Clinton. They were grab- . appoint mediocnties, so long as · the new Reagan team in 1981. If · •
bmg for the brass nng of advance- !bey are faithful followers. To the !be resume commandos are basicalment before.he came on .the see~ contrary, it is a ~eminder that the ly .amoral and therefore suspect as .
and they wtll be grabbmf. for 11 nation is full of smart people, but alhes, the Reagan-Bush appointees
after he leaves. '!'heY ~ul~be left . that smart is not enougli. This will are actively hostile. They should be
to play w1V1 lheu ambttJOIISo:' What be a Clinton presidency. The treated as the vanquished enemy,
Prcstdent Chnton nee~s a~ men administration should be run by not as the impartial public servants ';
Clinton people, as bright as any they will pretend 10 he.
and women who put h.tm fust ·
not stoog.e~, but loyalists. Fortu- and trustworthy in the crunch.
Third~ though definitely not ..
nately, he IS sur:r!J~nded by such
The president-elect knows this,
~ple, .wh~ abtliues are as un«!e· if only becllliS\I he has been a keen least, the .new administration ·,
~table as then commitment to h!m student of recent political history. should not flallc at the meaning of '•
ts clear. They are !be people w!lh He saw what happened to the the jlenerational chan~e the new .
whom he should ~taff the Whue Carter administration staffed at the pres1dent and vice pres1dent repre- ·
House and f!te Cab1oeL
.
top by people•, who, with rare sent. Bill Clinton and AI Gore were
There will '!II bleats and wh~- exceptions, were not Carterites. He born after World War II and after
pers Y"hen an~ tf he~ so. M~a saw how much was accomplished Franklin Roosevelt, which means ·:
toadtes of thts ..yasht~gton em1- by lhe first Reagan administration, they were defmed by neither. '11\eir
ne~ce
t~~t Will ~nte ~~ Mr. where every major player was a election was a page-turner, even
Chnton s parochtallsm and Ronald Reagan person through and more than was !be election of John .
:•narrow base.'' ~hey should~ thtough. And he benefited directly F. Kennedy. Their appointees ' ·
Ignored. Ev.ery prestdent g~verns m from the .self-serving betrayals that should reflect lhat reality.
·
~ sna~e ptt. As the .g01.ng gets charaeJerized the Bush adrilinistra·
mcreasmgly tough, whteh 1talways tion's last year. ·
·
Hodding Carter III, rormer .,
State
Departme11t spokesman ,
does, ~ mu.st ~ve eo~de~ce that
The second, equally partisan
the k~tves m h!s adv1sc:rs hands point is that the president-elect and award-winning reporter, edl· •:
are atmed at hu enemtes r.ath~r should lo.se no time in prying tor and pubUsher, Is president or
than at h!s back. The capual s Republican appointees out of the MainStreet, • Washington, D.C.· ,
resume brigades are full of people bureaucratic woodwork . That . based. television productloa 'com- ·,
;
who have never met a cause too means everything from Farmers pany and a writer for NEA.

Hodding Carter III

or

•

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'J .

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.\

Mild,. but wet weather forecast next few days ~

OHIO \Veathcr
canditkllll

IICH.

''' ) '
[Mansfield
INO.

!53" I•,

~.

..

'

•

By Tile A.uc:llted Prill.
Milder and rainy weather is
f~ for Ohio, lhlllb to a warm
front tUt wu bringing in wann
southetly breezes. Some rain was
Jll*l'ble.
.
And the Natiollal Wealher Service .aid lhe milder wealher was
likely to stick around through
W....._,ay.
The record·high iempt.raawe for
this elate M lhe Columbus wealher
station was 72 deareea in 1953
while the .rec:ord low was 12 in'
1813. S11111et toaight will be at S:l4
p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 7:19
a.m.

Around the nation
A new disWrbance was CKpected to
The disturbance !bat dumped spread light snow from Minnesota
mm: lhan a foot of snow over parts across tlie Great Laltes toward
of ·the Great Lakea region was western Peruisylvania and western
expected 10 tun\ north toward !be New Yort. with areas of rain and
Canadian maritimes today.
. sleet falling south of !be band of
Sides early today were clear snow.
across much of the Soulh. Fog and
Two ~pie. were ltilled on lhe
clouds shrouded the West Coast snow-sliclcened Pennsylvania Turn·
from Los Angeles to Seattle.
pike late Sunday when the driver
ForecasterS said lhe disturbance, lost control and slid into a truck,
created when cold winds sweep authorities said.
across the relatively warm lake
About 24 inches or snow fell on
waters, could produce a few morn- Boston, N.Y ., about 25 miles
ing snow showers in northeast southeast of Buffalo. between FriMaine.
. day and Sunday.
·
.
Bot !be clearing won'tlast long.
Highs for today were forecast to

be iii ihe 20s iii IIOI1hein Maine; in-:
lhe 30s acrosa lhe Nottheast and •
not1hem G- l...lka; iii lhe 40s iii :
v·trgUita,
· · iniD lhe Ohio .v a11e y and •
acrosa the northern Plains; in the •
50s across much of !be nation's :
mid-section; in the 60s aeroas ;
much of !be South; and iii lhe 70s •
in southern Florida and in the :
Soulhwest.
:
The temperature in Anaconda, •
MonL, reached 58 degrees on Sun- I
day, breaking the record high of 57 t
set in 1953.
,
The nation's high for ihe day :
was 86 degrees, at Coolidge, Gila •
Bend and Phoenix, Ariz., and Glendale, Calif.
•

!

Typical family's ability to buy home hfts 18~year high
WASIDNGTON (AP) - The
typiAI American family'spility to
buy a home jumped m lhe third
qllllta' 1D its highest level iii mote
lhan 18 yean, boosted by falling
mllltgllge rates Mid rising incomes,
.a real eitatc trade group said today,
Tbe National As.soc:iation of

W.VA.

l'fo

•

- - - - - - W e a t h e r - - -•- Soutli-Ce•traJ Ohio
.
~lor­
Tonight, partly eloudy. Low in
Wecbln hy lllrcNP Friday:
WednCW.y, fair. Lows in the
the upper 30s. Tuesday, mostly
cloudy wilh a 'Slight clutpce of rain. 30s. Hips iii mid-408 to. mid-50s.
High iii !be mid-SOs. The ehance of Tlaasday IIIII Friday, fair. Lows in
rain is 30 percent
mid-20s to mid-30s. Highs mostly
in lhe40s.

--Local briefs... ---.
COIIIblued froia ii-. 1

Two deer-11ehicle wrecks probed

scene.

Campaign signs remo11ed .

The Meigs County Department d. Utter Conwl is in the )Jioce&amp;i
of. removing Ibis
year's
campeip signs
froni lheI c:ounty's land._
'
.
'

scape.

.

.

Acc:ording to Boud of Eleclibns Diftctor Rita Smith, paper signs
will be deStroyed. and wooden signs which are removed will be
stored at lhe department's offices on Union Avenue iJI. Pomeroy.
Candidates who wish to pick up lheir wooden eampeip sips may
dO so during regular hours..

--Area deaths-Harry E. Rhodes

Richard Reuter

Richard Merrill R~uter. 83, of
Harry E. Rhodes, 82, Point
Ball Run Road iii Pomeroy, died on PleiiSIIIIt, died Sunday, Nov. 1S,
Sunday, Novembtz 1S, 1992 at his · 1992, Mlhe Jefters Nursing Home,
residence.
Millwood, W.VL
He was born on August 17,
1909, in Meigs County~ son of lhe
late William H. and Ella May
Epple Reuter.. He W;aS a retired
truck driver.
Survivin,g are a daughter, Mn.
Earl (Patricia E.) Springer, Colum·
bus; a son, Wallace L. (Junetta)
Reuter, Pomeroy; a lrolher, Gerald
(Artie) Reuter, Pomeroy; two sisters, Mrs. George (Lydia)
Drumheller, Everett, WashingiOD,
and Mrs. John (Madaline) James,
Dallas, Texas; three grandsons: W.
Jan (Della) Reuter, Pomeroy,
Richard W. Teague, Pomeroy, and
Bruce Reuter. Tallahassee, Fla.;
three granddaughters: Mrs. Joe
(Elaine) Piccione and Beth A.
Teague, bolh of Columbus, and
Terry Reuter, Seattle, Wash.; and
six great•grandchillftn.
Besides his parents, he was prec:eded in death by two sons, Bruce
and R. Jan Reuter.
Funaal services will be held on
Wednesday at II .a.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home iii l'olne'roy. ·Burial
will follow in Rivcnicw Cemetay.
Frien~;;b call at the funeral
home on
y from 2 10 4 and 7
to 9 p.m.

Taft...

C011tlnued rro. p-ael

prior to !be election,•' he said.
"In other cases, someone may .
derive political advantaSe from fil·
ing a complaint in response to an
opponent's charge even though lhe
matter is not resolved prior to !be
election," Taft said.
He'said lhe changes being con:'"
sidered are not part of campaip
financ:e bills pending iii lhe Legislature.
Current law provides· for four
members of lhe commission to be
·appointed by tho aeaetary of state.
Those four then appoint a fifth
member who senes a ehairman.
· The seaetary of IIBie is required to
provide !be tcehnical, professional
and clerical employees the .panel.
~.

'

Being considered is a system in
which lhe commissinfl .would~­
ate apart from Taft's offtee,
although his staff could eontinue to
file c:omplaints.

'

He was bam Aug. 21. 1910 in
Weleh, W.Va., son of tbe late
Charles W. and Bessie (Lane)
Rhodes.
·
He was a retired supervisor in
maintenance at Foote Mineral
Company, a former employee of
the Marlena Shippiaa Company
and Keystone ConstnK:tion Company. He attended schools in
Wyoming County, W.VL, IDll was
a membtz of MU.tum Lodge 119,
AFclAM, and the Frantlin ComllliDIIIry RAM.
He is M'IMd by his wif~ Myrtie M. (Aken) Rhodes; two dlughters, Sac R. Cdwicts of Audullon,
Pena., and Janet M. Rhodes of
Aiken, S.C.; one son, Harry E.
Rhodes Jr., of Roanob, VL; five
81•idchildren; two grc:at-gqndchildren; IIIII 1Cve1a1 brothen atd sisters.

Graveaide lervices will be held
10 a.m. Wedaesday at Kirkland
Memorial Gardens, aear Point
Pleasant, wilh the Rev. Louia A.
Bussell officiating. Burial will follow.
•
There will be no visitation.
·Arrangements are under the
direelion of Crow-Russell Funmd
Home.
Ia lieu of flowers, donations
may be lDildc to a ehlrity or cluth
ofchoice.
·

Lotter..+
results .
1
CLEV;ELAND (AP) ;- The~e
were no 1iekels sold nammg all SIX
numbers selected in Saturday's

Su~ ~ dra'!"iDIIO 'W~s­

clay s ~ac:kpot will. be $8 mtllion.
lhe Ohio Loaay IIIII.
Plck3Nuaben
9-8-4
.
(Dine. eight, four)
Plck4Nuaben

9-8-6-0 .
(Dine.- six. zero)
Super Lotto
·
16-18-24-26-3745

(sixteen, eiJbteen, twenty-four,
twenty4ix, thirtY~•ven, flllty-five)
Klclter
3-7-9-8-6-7
.
(lhree, seveo, nine, eight, six,

•ven)
"

•

•

••

Realtors said its Housing Mfordability ~dex rose to 127, up from
119.4 m lhe second .quarter and
110.6 in !be July'Septembtz period
of 1.991. It was the highest since
!be mdex .reached 127.8 iii the second Quarter of 1974.
The index measures !be ability

cum • m VJw~. lnc.

· The Gallia-Meigs Poll of lhe State Highway Palrol investigated
two dcet·vehic:le accidcllts Saamlay on S"tatc Route 7 in Salisbury
Township.
. .
A vehicle driven by George F. Mora, 37, 34803 Baer Road,
Racine, sustained moderate and disabling damage Salunlay morning
when it slnlCic a dcet.
According to lhe ~ Mora was soulhbound on S.R. 7 when a
deer ran into his palh. Mora struck lhe deer,1tilling it .
No injuries wen: rqottid.·Mora's vehicle was towed from lhe
scene.
Donny R. Tillis, 17, Salem Street. Rutland, also esraped injury
when !be vehicle he was driving was struck by a deer Saturday
eVening. ·
·
Acc:ording to lhe report. Tillis WM northbound on S.R. 7 when a
deer ran into lhe roadway and slruck his vehicle.
· The vehicle sustained moderate damage and was driven from lhe

••

RUSSIAN ARMY GO HOME • An old
lngush aestures while be tries to persuade a
Russian army officer Suudaylo leave llie village
or Nlii'Zll• .20 miles northeast
or Vladlkavkaz In
.

When lhe index measures 100, :
of a family earning the median
income to purchase a median- the median family income equals :
priced previOusly owned home. the amount needed to pun:hase ,a~
The median means half of the median-priced home using convenincomes are more and half are less, tional financing and a 20 percent
or that half of the homes cost more down payment. The median
income in the third quarter was
and half eostless.
$36,612.
Thus, half of lhe families iii lhe
nation earned 127 percent of the
$28,831 in income needed to purchase a home, whose median price
in lhe lhird quarter was $103,500.
But potential fust-time buyers
did not rare as well. An index measuring !heir ability to buy a starter
home with an $88,000 median
price was just 83.4, meaning half of
lhese .famtlies did ·not earn the necessary $28,240 median income.
The median income of these families was $23,555.
Still, the first-time buyer index
was an improvement from !be 73 .4
level during the third quaner or
1991.
·"This is very good news, but
!here are still many first-time buyers w~Jo renwn locked Out of home
ownership becituse of the difficulty
in raising a ddwn payment," said
Realtors President Dorcas T.
HelfanL
Almon R. "Bud" Smith , the
association's executive vice president, attributed !be improvement in
both indexes to lower interest rates
resulting in lower monthly mongage payments and a rise in median
incomes.
Thirty-year, fixed-rate mortgages avelllged 7.88 percent during
Ing\lshella for Russia. There are reports· or
lhe lhird quarter;down from 9.31
increased etJmlc violence in the region, but the
percent during the same period of
Russian army coitlioues to protect all the board1991. The median income in lhe
ers oriugushetiL (AP)
overall index was up 13.1 percent
from $32,361 in !be July-September quarter of 1991. The median
income of !be flfSt·time buyer fam. ily was up 1.4 percent from
$23,219 a year earlier.

Lithuania poised to .return
Coritinunists to poWer
VILNIUS. Lithuania (AP) The fust republic to brealt away
from the Soviet Union appeared
Sun.day to be on the verge of
returning former Communists to
power iii a bitterly c:ontested parJia:
mentary elec:tion.
.
Lilhuanian voten angered by
factory shutdowns, soaring prices
and lack of hot water said as lhey
left the polls lhat lhey were ready
to give lhe former Communists a
chance to restore economic order.
Leadtn of the fonncc Lilhuanian Communist Party, now called
the Democratie Labor Party, promised lhat if they won, !bey
would safeguard Uthuania's independence and continue to build a
.Westc:m-style market economy.
· But they also said lhey would
improve trade relations with. Russia
and demand better terms from lhe
International ·Monetary Fund,
b.as forced Lithuania to
govanment wages and hold
public spending iii return for
lOin.
Sajudis, the anti-Communist
party that led Lithuania to independence iii 1990, has "done very lit·
tie in lhe past two years," Andrei

Kobzar, 30, said as he cast his hallot ai a high school in downtown
Vilnius.
"Actually, they've done a lotto make our life imp&lt;issible," said
his wife, Valentina, an unemployed
waitress. "Everything is bad JIOW.
We live. in a such a hole, with-two
kids. I have no job, no welfare pay·
ments!'

More economic bad news
appeared on lhe eve of lhe election
when the daily newspaper Tiesa
reported that industrial production
has tumbled 48.5 ~nt this year.
According to other recent
rewrts. one-lhird or .all factories
have closed or sharply cut back
employment, Consumer prices
have jumped 2,200 percent since
1990, and fuel is in sueh short supply !bat central heating plants shut
off hot water to most -homes just as
winter set iii.
Many Lithuanians blame Sajudis and its leader, Vytautas Landsbtzgis, for lhe failing economy.
In the first round of voting on
OcL 25, the backlash led to a surprise victory for the Democratic
Labor Party. Of 141 parliament
seats, !be former Communists won

-·'- Meigs announcem~nts __
AAtomeet
The Pomeroy group of AA will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart Calholic Church in
Pomeroy. Call 992-5763 for information.

CCL to meet .
The Middleport Child Conservation League will host a "Hobo"
party Thursday at 6:30 p.m: at !be
Rock Springs Uniied Methodist
Church. Members of the South
Central Disaict of Ohio Child Conservation League will be !be guests.

LodRetomm
Racine lodge No. 461 FclAM
will meet Nov. 24 at 7:30 p.m. for
. Library board to meet
the election of officers. All mem. The Meigs County Public
bers are encouraged to attend. Ltbrary Board of Trustees will
Refresluneqts will be served.
meet Thutsday at I p.m. at the
library in Pomeroy. ·
Health dub to meet
The Rock Springs Better Heallh
Democrats to meet
Club will meet Thursday at I p.m.
The Meigs County Democratic
at lhe home of Frances Goeglein.
Executive Committee will m·eet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at !be CarAthletic boolters to meet
penters Hall.
The Soulhem Athletic Boosters
will meet Wt:!llneiday al 7 p.m. at
lhe high school.
Revf\oal
Revival at Wesley-Allegheny
Chun:h in Coolville will be Tues.
clay through Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
nightly with Rev. William Cope of
Salem. Glen Easterling, pastor,
invites !be public.
TbaakqlviDg services
Thanksgiving service at Long
Bottom United Melhodiat Chun:h
will be Sunday M 7:30p.m.. Everyone welcome.

4ll, while Sajudis got just 18 -

Meigs squads have
weekend
a busy
. Meigs Emergency Services

stunning drop from the 97 seats it
had won_two years ago.

units answered the following calls
for assistance over the weekend:
Saturday at 12:51 a.m., Middleport
•
station to Broadway Street; electri.cal frre at the Libby Tullah resi·
dence; 4:09 am.; Racine unit treatVeterans Memorial
ed Mark Proffitt at the station; 7:38
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS- a.m., Rutl311d and Columbia units
Clarenee.Searls, Bidwell, and Nita to County ROad I, Edith Lyons to
Jane Brown, Pomeroy.
0 ' B leness Memorial Hospital;
SATURDAY DISCHARGES - 10:23 am.. Rutland unit to Crouser
None.
Road, Danny Shain to Veterans
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
Memorial Hospital; II :29 a.m.
None.
Rutland squad to Bailey Run Road'
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
Delcie Roush to Holzer Medical
None.
Center; 2:27 p.m., Middleport unit
to Village Green Apartments, Lorena Ackerman to Holzer; 7:23 p.m.,
Pomeroy squad IQ State Route 681
West, Carol Wines treated but not
Am Ele Power....................30 7/8 transported; 7:28 p.m., Middleport
Ashland Oil........................ 24 .7/8 squad to Overbrook Center, Nellie
AT&amp;T..................... ............46
Bernard to Pleasant Valley HospiBank One...........................48 1/4 tal; 7:28 p.m., Middleport unit to
Bob Evans ......................... 19 3/4 Overbrook, Robert Sherwin to
Charming Shop..................37 5/8 Pleasant Valley; 8:42p.m., MiddleCity Holding ...................... 17 3/4 port squad to Page Street, Marilyn
Federal Mogul....................IS 7/8 Bishop treated at scene; 10:02 am,
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................70 114 Sunday, Racine squad to Hoback
~y Centurion ............. :.....20 3/4
Road, Karen Pickens to Veterans;
Lands End..........................24 5/8 5:55 p.m., Pomeroy squad to Ball ·
Limited Inc............ .. .:....... 23 7/8 Run Road, Richard Reuter,' treated
Multimedia Inc. .................27
6ut not transponed; 5:S6 p.m.,
Rax RestauranL ................. II/32
Middleport squad to Headley
·Reliance Electric...... .......... 17 3/8 Street, Lawrence Stewart to Holzer,_
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 14
Shoney's Inc......................22
•
The Daily Senliuel
Star Bank ........ ...................33 3/8
Wendy I.nt'l.. .. ....................l3 1/2
[UBPBIIS...,)
Worthington Ind................ 23 318
Puhliobod ..ery allenooa, Monday •'
~ Fridoy, Itt Coon ~. Ponwo.,
Stock reports are the 10:30
Oblo by lbe Ohio Valley Pld.tiolai.C
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
CompuyiM•Itimectia Jae., PomtiO)I .,
Ellis and Loewi or Gallipolis.
Oldo 45~, Pb. 1182·21118. .~ •

Hospital ·news

Stocks

.--------.,:

.

,_....,_.atP . OJ,OIH..

''

EATER

WITH A CHOICE!·

M&amp;albor. Tt.e Aooodalod Prwa, ud 11M
: Ohio Newopaper Auocialloa, N - ..,
· AdTwlbta; ReprUen&amp;ati••, Bruham. ,J...
' N.,....per Saleo, 73ll Thi..t Jwwo-.

. Now Yarll, New Yarii!OOI7. .

•

,

I POSTMASTER:Send---to ·: ;
. Tho Dally Senlinel, lll Court 81., ·;
Pumeau), OHio 46'188.
·
BUii8CIUPTION IL\TU
ByContor ... . . _ . _ . . .
.•

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OlloWeot. ..........................................St.IO

Olio MOIIIII.................................. ;......ts.llli

,
ODe 'Yeu.................................._,.MI.JO ·•
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Pille&amp;

Daily.........................................-.llli C...lo

..........

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HWI-CIIUS

IISUIWICE

111 SICI.. St..,,...,.
YO.IIDEPII.IT ·
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'·

�Mondly, November 16,1992

~ sports

In NAJA District 22 pliJ1oJ1s

Redwomen spikers exit with 37-9 mark
~bene of ally athletic team injuries- worked against lhe University of Rio Grande volley"-11
team at a time when it needed all of
its playcn bcalthy, resulting in an
c.ly dcpmtw"e for lhe Redwomcn
from lhe District 22 Playoffs Friday.
The Redwomen defeated Ohio
Dominican 11-15, 15-8, 13-15, 1510, 17-15 in the opener, but a
sprain suffered by freshman hitter
Amy Hambel damaged the team's
chances to the point that it feU to
Cedarville 9-15, 13-15, 3-lS .and
left the .postseason action.
But. a bright spot was to be
found when the dist(ict and MidOhio Conference coaches selected
Rio Grande's Billina Cooper, a~.
junior from Jackson, as the district
and MOC Player of the Year, capping off an outstanding ~ for
· the former all-around Jackson High
· School athlete, who was a threetime player of the week selection
during the regular season.
· "1 was teally pltascd for BiUina,
because nobody deserved it more,"

ID lbe NFL•••
AMEIUCA.N CONJIEIIENCI!

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T77

Ohio high sdlool
rootball playoffs

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;r•

By CHUCK MELVIN

for jarring the baU loose. Stanley
Richard recovered.
"I think I caused the fumble,''
anxiety. It's a 45-yard p~s that Carrington said. "Gill says he
miabt-or llligbtiiOl- get to you canoed it. So we've got to wait on
be(on: lhe safety does.
the film. But whoever caused it,
"I was boping the ball would I'm glad be did iL"
come down. I said. 'Man. I hope he
• 'I' 11 throw the ball 500,000
doesn't tip this.'" Miller said after more times to Eric and he'll hold
he caught a 45-yard touchdown onto it 500,000 times," Tomczak
pass .from Stan Humphries with said. "He was trying to make a
two minutes left a the San Diego play. I can't think where we'd be
Chargers beat the Cleveland without Eric. One play's not going
Browns 14-13 Sunday.
to bury bim."
.
Tbe win was the fifth in six
Uritil Metcalf fumbled, tbe
games for the Chargers (5-S), who game· bore a scary resemblance to
have rebounded from an ().4 start the Chargers' 16-14 Joss to Kansas
and are now allowing themselves City last week. In that one, they
to talk playoffs.
also led 14-13 until Nick Lowery
"This is a very significant win kicked a last-minute flCld goal. ·
for OQr, team,'' coach Bobby Ross
"We had a sbot to win last
said. "It had alllhe elements of an week, and maybe last week helped
old, throw-back game. and that's us this week, to see what it takes to
what I like. To win one like that on win,'' Humphries said.
the road is really significanL" .Humphries completed 19 of 32
Although they surrendered 385 passes for 234 yards and two
total yards, in the end it was the· touchdowns. Shawn Jefferson
Chargers' AFC-leading defen11e caught the fust one, a 26-yarder set
that won it. Mike Tomczak was up by Carrington's 69-yard interdriving the Browns. (5-5) toward a c:eption re111111 in tbe finl quarter.
potential game-winning field goal : ~ Otargers didn't SCOie again
until Eric Metcalf, sandwiched until MiUer ~ot behind cornerbact
between two defende!' after mak- Frank Min~ufield and safety Eric
ing a 13-yard recepuon, fumbled Turner wath 2:05 remammg.
tlte baU away at the San Diego 38 Humphries, who had overthrown a
• with 52 seconds left. ·
receiver in lhe end zone on the preDanen Carrington and Gill Byrd vious play, nearly overcompensatboth deserved, and claimed, credit ed.

WLT ... GI'GA

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2
2

. By BARRY WILNER
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(AP) - Oh, the suffering!
Tbe New York Jets are going
through growing pains wirb their
young quarterback, Browning
Nagle. The Cincinnati Ben&amp;Jils
have a veteran passer in Boomer
Esiason, but they've struggled witb
inexperience just about everywhere
else on offense. ·
Tbe Jets overcame their woes
just a little better than the Bengals
on Sunday. New Y.ork built·a 17..0
lead and held on for a 17-14 victory.
"I' Ulake a win any way we can
get it,'' said Nagle, who was 8 for
24 with two interceptions and also
bruised his foot late in the game. "I
thought we were playing so well
.the whole game, controling the
clock. But chen, in the fourth quar'ff· we hit tbe wall.' '
·
The Bengals, meanwhile, fmally
scaled the Jets' defensive wall, getting touchdowns on runs of five
and 17 yards by Derrick Fenner,
who had all 92 of bis rushing yards
in the last period.
But the Jets staged a long drive
that ate .up .enout~~ · of the clock to
force Cmcmnau 1nto a desperate
final drive that failed. ·.
"We bavc a lot of new.P.YI our
the!'e,'' Bengals coach Dav1d Shula
said. "It takes time to build iappOrt
and communication."
·
"There were receivers that were
open who should bavc been hit,"
said Esiason (11 for 33, with two
interceptions and three sacks).
''There were balls thrown dlar
should have been caught. There
were times when I would look for a
man and he Wllll't where he was
~lObe.''
.
.
lncinnati (4:6) gained only 227
yards, 79 in lhe air, showing why
the Bengals are ranted 27th in
passing. New York (3-7) couldn't
take advantage of a pas! defense
ranked dead-last and gained mly
98 of its271 yards in the air.
· So it was up to the running
games and die dcfCDICS.
Penner, operating in a liurry-up
attack tbat the Bengals stopped
using two weeks ago because it
was 100 confusing for many players, dominated the fourth quarter.
Earlier, Brad Blltter ran for a oneyard score, twice blocked Mike
Frier. on Tcrance Malbis' 10-yard

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"I dido ' t want to overthrow
him, so I guess I did underthrow
him jusl a little 'b it,'' Humphries
said. "I looked to Shawn like I was
going to hit him again for a touchdown. The safety kind of moved
over a liUie bit, and I tluew it oVer
top, behind him."
"It wasn't a blown coverage,
but we obviously didn't get it covered,'' Cleveland coach Bill
Belichick said.
Miller caught seven ·pasllel for
110 yards, his fourth 100-yard
game in six weelcs.
Cleveland, which trailed 7-3 at
halftime, took a 10-7 lead wben
Tomczak and Michael Jackson
conilected on a 24;yard IOUChdown
pass early in the fourth quarter. It .
capped a remarkable drive that
slartcd at the Oeveland 1-yard line.
Tomczak compleled five passes
for 104 yards on the drive, overcoming a couple of ~ties.
Ronnie Harmon s ·second fumble of the day gave lhe baU back to
ihe Browns at the San Diego 26
with seven minutes left, but after
Jackson ran 21 yards to lhe 5 on an
end-around, they had to settle for a
field goal.
Tomczak completed 18 of 32
passes for 322 yards, his third
career 300-yard perforniance, but
he was intercepted .twice. U!wyer
Tillman caught eight passes for 148
yards, his first career 100-yard
game.

MAIDENS AT TilE NET - With one of ber teammates to her
len going airborne, Southera's Christi Maidens (12) goes up to
spike the ball across the net ia Sunday's District 13 Nortb-Soutb
S'enior All-Star match at Racine, wbch the South team won three
games to on!!·

South team defeats North
in District 13 all-star match
The South AU-Stars defeated the
North All-Stars when the District'
13 VoUeybaU Coaches Association
held tbe annual North-South senior
All-Star game Sunday before a
large crowd at Charles W. Hayman
Gymnasium in Racine.
The South squad won the ftrst
two games, 15-13, 15-12, but the
North came back to push the best,
of-five series to the fourth gan\e.
Members 'Of the winning South
squad were Megan Wolfe and
Christi Maidens of Soutbem; Lorri
Hauldren, Kelli Hemby, and Amy
Hemby of Gallia Academy; Sally
Saunders and Christi Ratliff of
River VaUey; Jennifer Donta and
Heathe_r Fox of Oak Hill; and
Heather Exline and Jule Coffey of
Jacbon.
.
.
·The Soutb··was coa~hed by
Richard HiunillllD of Oak HiU and
Jackie Knight of Gallia Academy.
. Members of the North squad
included Stephanie Otto of Eastern,
· Yvette Young of Meigs, Toni Six,

Christina Warren, Debra Blackburn
and Heather Gail of NelsonviUe-·
York, Moll¥ Mingua, Anna Downs
and Christina Sollie of Trimble,
Cyndy Wasko of Athens and Steph
Holcomb of Logan.
The North was coached by Alan
Swank of Athens and Ron Conner
of Nelsonville-York. Conner was
the Division III Coach of tbe Year.
Logan's Deborah Angle was the
Division I Coach of the Year.
Chuck Dorsey of Jackson earned
those honors in' Division II, and ·
Rhonda Eveland of Trimble did the
same in Division IV.
Megan Wolfe, Southern, will
represent the District in the state
Senior All-Star series to be played
next weelc.
Jamie Wilson, a junior at Eastern was bononiblc mention to the
District All-Star team.
Southern coach Suzanne Wolfe
hosted the tournament, the first
ever to be held at Southern High
School.

N.Y. Jets edge Cincinnati 17-14

--

T -· - - - I

minutes or Sunday's AFC game in Cleveland. wbicb tbe Chargers won14-13. (AP)

a.EVELAND (AP) - Anthony Miller knows the definition of

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
T-

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s.:nei&amp;ht~;:!=:

Redwomen cagers fall in·opener to
Findlay
.

rmat

San Diego tops Cleveland 14-13

19

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M.Y. '-11.CINCIIIKATI 14

7

FATAL FUMBLE~ Clenlnd taaalag
back Eric: Mekall {ll) fiDDIIIa after lleing bit
lly San. .Ditgo defeader
Staley Rlellud Ia the
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Redwomen Coach Patsy Fields
said. "But leaving the t.ourDIIDCIIt
10 early IUdl a "i"''JJP"intnw!l IIIII Smilb IIIII liL C..... .....S
for the 1eam. It w• a JOOd rrnou, 11 blOcks, Kellina Cooper bad
but I do wish it hid been bellcr for IC-,IIId Hambel bad two.
die kids, llld injwief juJt bit Ul It
the wrong time
.
Billina Cooper pUDCbcd in 20 "
Tbe Redw~men had. already killa against Cedarville, with her
been hurt by the loss of 1110ther llilf.er lidding five, Smlda tine and
freshman. MichclJe Turner, due to s~ two. Kellina Cooper, Smith
a shoulder injury. But in die rust IIIII Chapman bid ooe llniq contest against ODC, the team apiece, wbile Spears bad four dip
"played super, super-hard ... they and Billina Cooper three. Ia blocks. .
played their hcaru out," Fields Billina Cooper hadJour and Chip.said, to notch a win.
rmm thnle.
That victory was keyed by
~ disui.ct championship apia
Cooper's offensive work, which . went to defending title holder
included a record 45 kiDs, in addi· Mount St. 1o~epb at the end of
tion to 11 digs and nine blocks competi~ SabJn!Y.·
against the Lady Panchen. Her sisIn addition to Billina Cooper's
ter Kellin4 was responsible for 19 hofior, die district and conference
1ri11s, wbile Deline Smith and Ham- selected Smith, a freshman froln
bel had six, S!ephanie McLaqhlin ~. W.Va.,IQ lhe All-Dis·
BILLINA COOPER
and Michelle Spears three each, Jo trict and MOC second teams. KelliMOC
Player ol tile Year
Cbapman two, and Kristy Lindsey na c;:oopcr wiln honorable mention
one.
· from the district and was chOICD
Spears and Kelllna Cooper had for the All-MOC FreshmaD Team. year ICIIIII.
The Redwomcn ended the seatwo serving aces each, while KeUi- Smith also received honorable
na Cooper aJid Lindsey were each mention on the conference fu;st- son at 37-9.

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TD run on a reverse and made up
When Cincinnati closed within a
for the absence of Blair Thomas field goal, the Jets offense did what
(groin injury).
was necessary. Sparked by Pat
"I knew I would get the ball,'' Chaffey's 32-yard run, the Jets
said Blltter, who gained 72 yards moved to lhe Cincinnati 19 before
but was more interested in dis- Cary Blanchard missed a 36-yard
cussing his blocking. "Once or ~eld goal. But they ICft 100 little
twice, I've gotten a block like thaL ume and too many yards for the
The first time I hit him, he was inexperienced Bengals, even with
chasing Freeman (McNeil). Then the veteran leadersbip ofFsi&amp;SM.
he was trying 10 chase the ball the
"We're try,iRg to gel used to
othet way when Terance got it and w~a.t defenses"are doing to ua,''
I just waited for bim to come back Es1ason said. "It's all a teaming
to me. Terence didn't even know process and we bave so many new
who made the block. He asked me faces. This team still has to grow."
if I saw him dancing in the end
zone. I said I was gening up off the --Sports briefs---turf."
Tennis
The Jets let the Bengals off the
ANTWERP, Belgium (APjturf a little la!cr- Soon, it was 17Sixth-seeded Richard Klajicek beat
14, dianb to the no-huddle.
"I think initially it caught us Marie Woodforde 6-2, 6-2 iti the
off-guard,' .' cornerback James final of the EuPJpean Community
Hasty said'. "I don't think we . Championship on Sunday. The 20adjusted well at rust ... I think they year-old Dutchman, who earned
recognized that we were a little soft $144,00, climbed from 13th to lOth
in the ATP Tour rankings.
IIIII down on JlCiliOilnel."

SIGN UP TO
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Go..... '

A flagging ftrSt half game was
not redeemed by an improved later
performance by the University of
Rio Gr1111de women's basketball
team Saturday when it lost its season opener 79-74 at the University
of Findlay.
In spite of the Redwomen plac,
ing four players - veterans Gena
Norris, Michelle Crouse and
Stephanie Gudorf, in addition to
n&lt;;wcomer Lori Hamilton - in
double-figure scoring, the Red·
women were unable to overcome
an opening period showing that
saw them net only 12 of 31
attempts fi'om the field and connect
on half or their four opportunities
at the foul line.
Findlay, which also debuted for

the 1992~93 season, was boosted
by ·a 25-point finish by forward
Heather Huffman and an edge on
rebounding to make the difference.
The Lady Oilers led by a dozen
points at the half, but Dave SmaUey's Rio Grande crew rallied Oil the
wodr;. of il$ more experienced mem~
hers, including post player Hamilton, the former Gallia Academy
High School standout who trans-.
ferred to Rio Grande this season
from LaSalle Univenity.
Hamilton led the Redwomen
effort by hitting seven of lJ
attempts from the floor and three of
·four free throw tries to hit ·17
points, while. Crouse uid Gudorf
wen: each credited with 14 markers, and Norris had 11. Gudorf and
Norris were responsible for a 10ial

.
of six of the team's successflll tri- tries for 72.2 percenL
fecra shots, wbile Gudorf and Tri~ Redwomen ~ to action •
cia Col~ns each had five of Ri~ . at home Tuesday at 7 p.m. in Lyne

Center ~&amp;~inst Wilbcrfcxte.

Grande s 33 boards to lead thetr
teammates in that calegory. Huffman had 11 of the hosts' 42
rebounds. Scoring four points ror
Findlay was Melanie Miller, a
sophompre guard fi'om Onoville
who played ror the Redwomen
team coached by Doug Foote last
season.
Overall, the Red women shot
46.9 percent from tbe field (30-65,
eight of 21 from the three for 38.1
percent) and bit six of 10 foul
attempts for 60 patCDL rmdlay did
only slightly betler on shooting
with 4S.S pen:ent (33-68, 0-l from
tbe three) but enjoyed a better
game at the line by neaing 13 of 18

Box ICOIC:
•
FINDLAY (79)- Joelle Gottfried 5-0-1 O· Heather Huffman
11-3-lS· Re~kah Wbitl 3-0-6:
Nicole
7-2-16; C~y
means 2-4-8· Jeooi McGraw 146;
Trenkamp, 2..()..4;
MiUer, 2..()..4. TOTALS 33-13r79.
RIO GRANDE (74) - Stacey
Ritter, 3-1-7; Tricia Collins, 4-1:~9;
Gena Norris, 1-3-0-11; Stephanie
Gui:Jorf, 2-3-1-14; Michelle CroUSe,
5 2 (\ 14 Lori
.
• -v- ;
Hamilton, 7-3-17.
TOTALS lZ-8-6-74.
Halrtlme score: Findlay 38,
Rio Gl'lllldt Ui.

ere:

dJe-.

Lori

Mda.iie

In latest NBA action,

Lakers ·edge Warriors; Kings
down Cavaliers
.
.

'

By Tbe Associated Press
'i
Even though it's early. the
Golden State Warriors have to be
worried about a four-game losing
streak.
"We're not playing that well
and I don't know why," Chris
Mullin said after Sunday nigl!t's
105-102 loss 10 the Los Angeles
Lakcrs. "A lot of our games seem
to be the same way. They're close,
but when we get into a flow, we
just don't seem 10 keep it going for
any length of time."
Sedate Threatt, the Lakers'
replacement for Magic Johnson,
scored 24 points as Los Angeles
won at home for the first time in
three tries this season.
· Threatt made 10 of 18 shots,
with seven assists and f0\11 steals.
He played 40 minutes as coach
Randy Pfund brings· young guards
Anthony Peeler and Duane Cooper
along slowly.

"Sedate is a fighter, and when
we need him, he'll be there,"
James Worthy said. "When it's
time for him to get a little rest,
we're goin~ave to develop
Peeler and
·at that ~ition.
As far as he cab go each rught, I'm
not sure. We've got 10 moniur bis
minutes and don't wear bim out too
milCh."
Billy Owens scored 24 points
and Tim Hardaway 21 for the Warriors, who bave skidded since win·
ning their opening two P.JI!CS·
Golden State tra1led by 14
points late in the first quarter
before rallying 10 a 55-53 lia1ftime
leadbehindOwens' 14poinuanda
25-14 rebounding edge.
·
Jeff Grayer's jumper with 4:50
left in the second quarter gave
Golden State its ftrst lead at 47-46.
A layup by rookie ·Keith Jennings
34 seconds later capped1 a I0-0 run
in a 2:20 span.
·

' '

'

In other games, New Jersey
stopped Washington 111-104, Milwaukee ·beat Denver 115-98 and
Sacramento defeated Cleveland
109-107,
Neu 111, Ballell104'
~n ~ scomd 16 of bis
3Z pomts m the fourth quarter for
New ~eney. Derrick Coleman had
20 pomts and 14 rebounds for the
Nets.
Pervis Ellison led the Bullets
with 22 points and 11 rebounds,
Rex Chapman scored 21 points,
an~ rookie Tom Gugliotta hid 19
pomtsand IS rebounds.
New Jersey made just two of irs
ftrSt J2shotsandfeUbehind 154,
but closed to 34-30 at the end of
one.~ Nets used a 27-8 scrca1t to
take a 59.:441ead.
Buc:lllll5, Nuaell91
Blue Edwards scored a careerbigh 32 points for Milwaukee and
rookie Anthony Avent added 28.

,'.

Chris Jacqon led tbe visiting
Nu$8Cb with 20 poiniS. LaPhonso
Elhs, Bryant Stith and Reggie
Williams each had 19 for Denver.
Edwards, who a1ao giabbcd nine
mbounda, scored nine points in the
decisive third quarter, including
· five in a 7..0 spurt,
:
KIDp 109, Cavallen 107 ·
Mitch Richmond scored 31
poinu and Wayman Tisdale led a
10-0 fourth,quartcr run for SacramenlO.
Rookie Walt Williams scorcd ~I
points for. die Kings, including 10
m the third quarter, and Liori'el
Simmons and Tisdale fmished wtth
17pointseach.
· ·
John WIUiams scored 27 poirits
and arabbcd 11 rebounds for tbe
visiting Cavaliers.
,
Cleveland had a 91•90 lead w\lh
9:44 left after a basket lly
Williaml. Tisdale then scored six
points durjng lhe 10-0 run that gaye
the Kings a 99-90 lead with 6:22 to

Krzyzewski enjoys not being focal
point of Duke's b.asket~all program ~:::;~:;:~ :
play.

THE KING'S FAREWELL - NASCAR veteran Richard Petty
hugs bis wife, Lynda, as approximately 165,000 fans at the Hooters
500 at Hampton, Ga. pay tribute to tbe king or stock car racing.
Petty's final race was cut sllort by a crash in tbe early going. {AP)

Early-lap crash CUtS short
cAR race·
Petty 's last N AS
of his year-long, self-orchestrated

By MIKE HARRIS
HAMPTON, Ga. (AP) - In 35
years as a driver and several more
· as a youngster watching his father
race, Richard Petty never saw anything like iL
An hoilr after Sunday's season·
ending Hooters 500, most of the
record NASCAR crowd estimated
at 165,000 was still in the stands
and infield at Atlanla Motor Speed. way, still cheering his every move
. · to the bright blue skies.
_T~y w~e payinll J!omage to
the king of stock eat racing on the
day when he stepped out of his car
for lhe last lime a,i a professional
driver.
·
"It was the dang\lest thing I
ever seen,'' Petty said. "When 'tbc
race was .over, dido 't nobody go
anywhere."
· It was Petty, now S5, who
draged and led stock car racing
into the mainstream of American
.sports. ~ did ir with grace, class
and humor, winning thousands of
fans b himself and the sport along
the way.
"I gueaa I'm glad it's over, but
.my feeling of relief is more from
the family standpoint,'' Petty said

r,

goodbye todrivin".
He ended bis illustrious career
on a bittersweet note, crashing
early .in the race and coming back
in his battered No. 43 to ~un the
~nallap and take a.curtain call ,tap
ul front of the wtldly cheenng
crowd.
"I was tryin.g to stay out of
everybody's way abd dangcd if I
didn't ~et in a wreck anyway,"
Petty Slid.
·.
Petty said that·after the wm:k he
waited in hiSteam's trailer, knowing it was all over but·the last slow
lap and the final tribute. ·
''My three daughters came in
and tbey were crying and my wife,
Lynda, was crying, I. saw how glad
they were that it was over with and
· I guess I was relieved for them. 1
had mixed emotions but right now 1
feel good about iL"
Petty led a pace lap, lost a lap to
the JeacU!rs early, was involved 10 ·a
crash that all but ended his race
day, chen came back for the unique
curtain call, driving onto the 1.522mile oval in his battered· Pontiai:
one lap from the end of lhe race to
take hiS rmat checkered flag.

. By JIM LITKE
AP Sports Writer
Mike Krzyzewski sounds
unusually calm waiting in the
wings as the curtain goes up on
what is ~aranrecd to be the most
demandmg performlilnce of his
coaching ciueer. The explanaLion
can be found in wbat I&lt;rzyzewski
might fon&lt;Uy recall as his "How-l·
spent-my-i$UIIlrner" essay.
"It was nice leiuning tbat there
are a lot more people walking
around in a much bigger spotlight
than me," he said from the Duke
basketbaU offlCC the oilier day. "It
was nice walking around in this
really charged basketball environ·
ment and not being! the focal point.
Not even close.
"Of course," he added, "wallcing around behind Michael Jordan,
Magic Johnson and Larry Bird
might have had something to do
with it.''
.
· For. those wdh re.ally shon
memones, ~yzewsk1 spent th1s
past summer 1ft basketbal!·mad
Barcelona as, one of three ~siStants
· (Seton Ha}l s P J . Cat:lestmo and
.Cleveland s Lenny Wilkens were
the others) to~ Team coach
C.huck f?aly. Smce _there was. prec10us htll~ teachmg requued,
. Krzyzews~1. ~ooj;_ a~vantage of,a
rare opponumty to kick ~on .die
bench and do some SIU~ymg hunse~.'Wh 1 · did 1 ·. k ?" h
a~.e se ~ i pte. up. . e
repeat~. That I really liked bet~g
an ass1stan.L In fact, I told my ~~ts that if I ever ~me back, 11 s
gbmg to be as J1!1 ~tanL It w~ a
lot more ~un than bellll ~ble
every ume somethtng goes
WfQng.''
He is. chu~kling softly IS he said
these thmgs .mto !he telephone, or
at least you 1magme he must bavc
been.
. .
. Fm: those wtth .JUit ~ metnQ:
nes, Jt bears remembenng that
, under Coach K, Duke has won
back-to-back NCAA champi-

onships, the ftrSt time that neat littie trick was turned since 1973, and
has been to the FinaJ .Four five
straight years and six of the last
seven.
Early in bis career, ~wski,
a graduate of West Pomt who
played for and then served his
coaching apprenticeship under
gruff Bobby Knight, might have
been crushed under the weight of
similar expectations,
He was just 33 when he landed
the job at Duke in 1980. an
unknown commodiiy sandwiched
between venerable Dean Smith at
North Carolina and excitable Jim
Valvano at North Carolina State.
He was srubbom and impatient and
convinced he could do everything
himself through sheer force of will.
He was also losing often in those
first few years, and his cause
wasn't helped wh. en Smith, in
1982, and Valvano, the year after
that, won national championships
on either side of him.
'
Things pretty mucl) bottomed
out in the 1983 Atlantic Coast Conference toumameDf. when the Blue
Devils lost to Virginia by 43 points
in the quartcrftnals. The lesion lhat
loss drove home for Krzyzewski
was lhe same one that he'd teamed
while growing up, tbe same one
he'd teamed at West Point years
earlier- and the same one he saw
conrumed once more this summer
in the way Daly handled the Dream
Team.
Little surprise, then, that
Krzyzewski's calm this late fall
afternoon seemed so unshakable.
-.~ 'The fact was that all these
guys who were the best at what
they do were able to put their individual concerns below that of lhe
group. What Chuck did was identify a goal and convince lhem of the
need to wo~k together, then he

trusted them to meet their individual..e&amp;ponsibilities lhemselvea.
"People have lhe miJconc:epOon
that Michael Jordan juat walb out
on lhe court and doesn'l jWeplle. It
did me a world of good 10 see bow
mucb be actually prepares. I'll
ne- forget seeing how emy Karl
Malone showed up in the weight
room each morning, or bow late
Chris Mullin was on tbe bicycle
late most aftemoons .••
''What Chuck achieved was
similar to wbat you lry to do with
any team, whether it's in sports or
business or your family. You don't
need the motivation of some outside source saying you need 10 win
this. Yougea your kids and yourself to ask,"· Krzyzewski said,
"why shouldn't we want to win
this for ourselves?"

:

at Georgetown
The University of Rio Grande
men's ba*rtball tesm went to 2..0
on the new season and netted the
championship of the GeorgetoWn
(Ky' ) Classic Saturday when it
edged Georgetown 80-78 in the
titlepme.
Senior forward Jeff Brown bit.a
career record of 36 points apinst
the Tigers to net the victory an,d
avenge a home court loss to
Georgetown early in the 1991-92
campaign.~ Rcdmen led 40-34
at halftime,
Rio Grande defeated die Rattlers
of Texas-based SL Mary's College
Friday to advance to t&amp;e championship tilL Furdier delailJ on both
games will appear in Tuesday's

Trlb!IM.

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22 CaL CO Long RIO. S~als
·$10.9511trl

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UIIIID.YI.

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•ED, NOSI I 111011 •MLEIIY
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SUITE 112 VALLEY DRIVE. PT. PLEASANT
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�By The Bend

·The Daily Sentinel
··

.~•

Monday, November 11, 1992

Monday, No.vember 16, 1992
Page 6

Reader upset with Ann's response
De.- Au I •'""n: You really ·
blew your r J ... to "Fouued ana
Furiout in Tello: 111 e.•
The wife, lllll1ied 40 ,_. and
the modlet of five. wrote about
her "bbrt!7 old pt.• She WM in
good bellth bat no IOIIpr intaelted
in sex. Your response made it
8011114 ai if IOIIICIItin&amp; were wrong
widl her. You IIJUI'I"d that she get
professjme1 l!elp, aa if she were
menlllly iU or IOII!IIIhins.
.
If you didn't se1 a zillion
complaints for that answer, you
should have. I'll bel a 101 of women
who read your column are also
plain fed up with sex. If you want a
poll that WiD knock your socks
off, ask your fen!lle resden, "How
many of yoo hate sex and wc¥cl be
happy not to have to bOther .with it

,''
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·';:,; •

FIRE SAFETY DISCUSSED • Tbe Pomeroy

~ ~ Fire Department Yisited Salisbury Elementary
I':: reeeatly to dilcasl lire aalety. Students leJ~rned

w.· the Importance olthe smoke detector and the

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need to change the battery on a regular basis.

Students were allowed to try oa the heavy cloth·
ing that the fll'e fightera wear to protect th~m
from the intense heat. Firefighters that visited
the school were Jdf Shank, Stacey Shank, Brent
Zirkle; Todd Smith, Mike VanMeter and OrvUie
Hill ·

·Community calendar

~ ------~--------------------~~----------------~~-----

Community Calendar items
ippear two da,s before ail event
and ,the da;y or that event. Items
llalllt be received wen in advance
· ' to assure publieation in the cal·
endar.

S
~

MONDAY
•
RACINE • Racine Village
r: Council will meet in recessed ses"'
~ sion Monday 81 7 p.m. 81 Star Mill
• Park.

::-

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Poet's corner

~ •, It is against the law to kiD, at
:&lt;"·reasa that's whal we're told
·. Then why do we pay doctors to
iiU the most helpless of the fold
1
If they kiD a cop, that's murder,
! in theJII'St degree
·
;
Y&gt;a killin~ ·helpless babies is
• just part of bemg free
Women have their rights, they
! were banded down by God
l • She will be under man until she
iies beneath the sod
1
God never gave womam the
; .rjghtto be the hCad .
: · • She will play $Ctond fiddle until
• ,-the day she's deJid
.I ,·;, • If women would only be willing
L tO be' what they were created for
then
she might push
r~,old Satan' a·dislance from her lloor.

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.POMEROY • Last chance for · Plans wiD be made fot the Christhunter education class starting . mas party,on Dec.ember U.
Monday. CaD 992-63llto pre-reg- .
ister.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY • Pomeroy MerRUTLAND - Leading Creek chants Association, Wednesday,
Conservancy District will hold its 8:30 a.m .. Bank One conference
regular meeting Mooday 81 7 p.m. room. All members attend.
Public invited.
POMEROY • The Middleport
Literary
Club will meet Wednesday
STIVERS VILLE • Stiversville
at
2
p.m.
81 the Meigs County Pub. Word of Faith Church will hold
lic
Library
in Pomeroy with Mrs.
revival Monday through WednesDaniel
Thomas,
hostess. Mrs. Roy
. day' at 7:30 p.m. nJ ghtly with
Holter
will
review
"A Thousand
Brother Tommy Carpenter. Pastor
Acres" by Jane Smiley.. Roll call
David Dailey invites the public.
will be '\a personal farm experi·
ence...
TUESDAY
GALLIPOLIS • Lafayette
SYRACUSE . • The Third .
Shrine No. 44, White Shrine .of
Jerusalem, Gallipolis, supreme Wednesday Homemakers Club will
inspection, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. meet Wednesday at the Syracuse
Catered dinner 81 6 p.m.
Municipallluilding. All are wei·
come. Bring old Christmas cards
POMEROY • Regular meeting, and scissors.
Drew Webster Post No. 39, Ameti·
can Legion, Tuesday. Tbanksgiv- · MIDDLEPORT • Jim Oliphant
ing dinner·at 7 p.m. and meeting at will conduct a bible study class
8 p.m. All members urged to Wednesday at 7 'p.m. at the First
attend.
Baptist Church in Middleport.
·

IIIDd.

"The mail room loob Jib a clip 1e
- . We have pul ill! extra help.
The employeM Ire Wlllkina tbJWc !IIICII'ing. ~ IIIOd to pra:tic:1lly
lbiftJ and 'fled mo.it. yel dJe maD· qpeme ~em. 1 weet.lfl"dlle"
hqlaeem., mulriPlY lib rataiL" bad IIUied ·me like that I ~
Wu I mpriled ll the OI•IC.,.IIIl? bavellldbima1 •e~
'·
No. I could have gueaed the way it
Tcxubna: I hate sex. I wu
would 80· But I never dresmed that relieved whH! my hlllblnd died. My
more than 90.000 women would-be pr Dl h•band is OD heart piiii11J4
inOved to express themlel~ on . IS impolenL I(s heaven to beJ101d
SUCb an inlimlte IUbjecL Nor would and cnddlecL
'
' '
I have prediclcd the pm:entages or
~?·
'
Eurelta, .Calif.: I Vote 110. If my
I'll bet you wouldn't have the · the puaion with which 10 many olcl man were over the hDI, I'd •
nerve to print the results... ST. women deecribed their sex lives. The for higb-ICI!ool necldng, '-' u Ions
Pti'mRSBURG .
pealelt revelation, however, iS wbat u be's able ., llhake the waDs and
DBAR ST. PB'm: in 1984, I the poll •ys about men u Ioven. wake up the downstairs neighbors, I
did the poll you sugested, and the ae.ty, diiR is trooble in pndile. want to get in 011 the action. .
results didn'1 surprise me in the Here ia whit that poll revealed:
Yes, dear readels, it was the most
least. They were exactly what I
Seventy-two pen:ent of the re- iniU'esting mail rd had in a tong
expected You can~ write a column spondents said, "yes" - they would time.
like mine for 37 years and not learn be ~tent 10 be held close and
Dr~~gs are . ev~~rywMre. They're
something.
treated tenderly and forgeJ about easy 10 get, easy to USt aNI tvtll
·On Nov, 4, . 1984, I asked the "the ICL" A fu1140 percent of those easier to get ltooktd 011./f you /talle
following question: "Would you be · wanting to forget about "the act" qiiUiiofls abolll drugs, you fltlflAM
cootent to be held close and treated were under 40 years old. That W.S Landers' bOokltt, '7M Lowdown on
tenderly and forget about 'the act"l .. the most surpriSing aspect of the Dope." Selld a ulf-addre~td,lot~g,
R!lflly YES or NO and add qne line sllrvey.
busilltss·sirt tllvelope lllld 11 clltck
Many of the 28 pereent who voted · or mo~~ey order /or $3~65 (litis i
.. 'I am over (or under) 40 years of.
age.' No sigJ!IIure is necessary."
"M" aaid they needed the sexual ncludes po1tt1gt aNI lttutdling) 10:
A few Weeks later, I reporced to c:limu to relie~ physical IU!Jion. •Lowdow11, ·c/o. AM Landers, P.O.
my readers
laid received more Almost u .many said they needed Box 11562, ChictJgo, 111. 60611than
lelpOI!ICs. I tolcllhetn, the ultimate in sratification and
0562. (If! Clllllldo. send $4.45.)

&gt;q~~ce~nGlenna ~anders, ~e$~~ie:.!dS: ~~:~;~u~

POMEROY • Ladies AuxiliarY.,
POMEROY • Alzheimers Sup·
Veterans Memorial Hospital, w11l port Group, We&lt;lnesday, l-3 p.m.,
meet on Tueksday at 1:30 p.m. Meigs County Senior Citizens Center.
·

-People in·the news......._

Woman was made to have chi!make a home for
c man
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Phil interview published Saturday in the
i:.r• . Killing babies before they 're
Hartman doesn't want President- Los Angeles Times.
~ 1iom is Jl9l part of God's plan
~
. •
If equal rights is whal they are elect Clinton to be bothered by his
" Saturday Night Live" impersonNEW BRUNSWICK, NJ. (AP)
~ • J!I!Shins, even taking command
· -Dionne Warwick said songwrit·
1•
Where is that babies rights, ation.
" I don't want him to be offend- ers Burt Bacharach and Hal David
; when killed by your evil hand?
~
. I know God is making up a ed," Hartman said, noting that he · fit her like a tailor-made dress.
.It took a few phone caDs, but the
I number, th\lse babies are part i t's voted for Clinton.
" Whatever I say or do, I want singer got the two together to write
l true
.
-· But stop and try to consider the him to know that I'm on his side, a song for ht:r new album, to be
and I'm a fan. I'm a satirist, and released SOO!J.
one that's counting you
r · The lawmaker who is in favor of satire 'on the surfai:e can seem cut· · ' ' There is something special
ting and mean, but it's my job to about their songs because they
1 6onorin_g this lmgodly crime
would write them especially for
•
Is as guilty as the woman or impersonate him on network TV."
With Clinton moving into the me," Warwick said in a recent
: doctor and will pay at the end of
White House in January, Hartman intervie~.
.
.
: time ·
STUDENTS OF THE MONTH • Sludents of the montb for
expects
to
be
doing
a
lot
of
imperHer
fmt
Top
10
smgle
was
a
- This world is growing more evil
October at Pomeroy Elementary are, front, 1-r, David Boling,
sonating. Not lost on Hartman is . Bacharach-Dav\~ ~ong, "Don ' t
· with the setting of each day's sun
Ryan Stone and Chris Pi~kens; and back, Jimmy,Yeauger, Missy
'
But the day is coming when the knowledge that the NBC ·Make Me Over, m 1962. WarLehew
ud Heidi F1sher. They were selected for Kood behavior and
show's
Dana
Carvey
was
paid
as
wick
won
a;Grammy
for
"Do
You
there'D be no place to run.
I
·good
grades
lor the week.
much
as
$30,000
an
appearance
to
Kn.
o
w
The
Way
To
San
Jose,"
als_o
I
.
.
speak
at
sales
meetings
and
busi·
wntten
by
the
two.
The
new
song
IS
1
God will sort out the people and
ness conferences as President ' called "Sunny Weather Lover."
I .put them where they belong
Bush.
Warwick, a New Jersey native,
I .' But it' s too late then for the
"I
can't
emphasize
how
IJliiCh
I
will
celebrate 30· years in show
J'" kiUer to ~ing a sad sring
like
this
gig,"
Hartman
said
in
an
business
with a New Brunswick
· Judgment will be handed out
less than 1 percent ot its new prod·
LOS ANGELES (AP) concert
Nov.
22 to benefit a theater
r.r lllld iustice handed to all
· " Roseanne" co-star Sara Gilbert ucts.
company.
'
Again it will be too late to give
"Eliminating animal testins ...
joined about 50 animal rights
; lbe Maker a caD
·
is
their
corporate goal," Sullivan
activists outside the home of fellow
,
All of you in favor of killing the
nigh~
said.
television actress CybiU Shepherd,
, tiniest people on earth
The Reorganized Church of to protest Miss Shepherd's work
:
Why not wait a while and kill
a cosmetics company.
Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, for The
i him after his binb?
People for the Ethical
1· &gt; There is no difference in the
Portland-Racine, met recently for
Trealment of Animals, which orga·
The Chester Council No. 323,
family nighL
. crm.e, whether before or after
nized
the
demonstration,
claims
Daughters
of America, met recent·
· Members and friends enjoyed a
~ • When you come to face God, be
Paris-based
L'Oreal
cosmetics
tor·
1
t
the
hall
'th B
Cl land ·
8
·program of worship, fellowship tures animals to test its products.
' lUTe it will end your laughter
Y
· WI
rma e
'
and games. The kitchen became the
~ ~ . Murder is murder, in time you
_The activists said they hopejl ~~ra~s to the Christian and
gathering place for soupbeans,
' wiD surely see
·
·
Miss
Shepherd would us:e her clout American flags opened the meeting
l When you face your Maker and
cornbread and desSert.
Ill
change
the company ~ researoh and lhe first stanza of the "Star
~ · have to say it was me.
·
methods.
· SpansJed 'Banner" was suns. ScripHarney Peat In South Dakota, at
~
Telephone
cal,ls
to
a
ture w•·read from Psalms and roD
, It was me who JWied my baby,
7,242 feet, Is the tallat peak between spokeswoman for M1ss Shepherd caD
was taken.
: before be had a chance to see
the Roekla IIIII the Alpl.
went unansw~ Sunday.
The friendship meetin_g at Bei: His little heart stopped beating
AthletlcteamaatCentralMicblpn
John
D.
Sulhv_an,
a,New
Ym;k
pe
was noted during which mem• aU because of me
are
known
u
the
Chippewas.
auorney
represenlln~
L
~·
S81d
hers
were installed in offtce.
• Try 10 explain to your Maker, it
Is just fiX equal rights
.
, - - - - - -....-----th-e_co.m,.;pan....;y...,uses-.,.an!'~;,;mal...,.tes
....ll-ng;..on.,
Alta Ballard and Goldie
!,, . Then scream for mercy when
Fredrick were reported ilL Dorodly
' ~turns out your lights
Myers is in the hospital. Betty
TORY RAYNES
, There's no tuming back then,
. Ybung has a new great-srand- .. - darlaless you'll face
' •· You'D know for sure; you have
•·'Diiued out on God's savins srace
Mr. and Mn. Wally Raynes of
.. The darkness and sloom will
,,, Ill)' WIUI you IUR:Vcr
Middleport an1101mce the birih of
;: , God's aalvatioa you'll experi- their lim child, a daughter, Tory
110 never
.
Amaada.
Put your h~d on stiaight and
Tory was born Oct. 23, 11:23
···look where you're bound It's easy • p.m., at Holzer Medical Center.
·•' to get in,
· but a way out
Maternal grandparents are Glenn
Confidence.
- will never be found.
·and Shirley Fields, and paternal
•
grandparents are Dayllln and
,, I
Mary F. Smith Lucille Raynes, all of Mason.
32109 Higley Rd.
The modlet is the former Audrey
Melp Co. Clerk of
MiddlqJOrt,
Ohio
Fidda.
.
'
C

~ ··.dren and help

Actresses join aniriwl activitist
'

.Family

New arrival

held

-•

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Bes.
SelleJ
Read
. the t

THANKS.

m.

CLRSSIAED RDS

TUI!day Paper
. Wedneoday Paper

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MoN. thru FRI.

8A .M.- 5P.M. -

1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. W~ esday
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od 1'11110 auol M prepoid
• Reooi.. .U..Ooaa1lor odo paid Ia od•aaee.
• Freio Ado: m--Y....! Fouad ado uadorl5 wonlo willloe
rua3cla,.ai..O........
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• Prioo of od for aU ..pilalleuen It doul&gt;lo price of od cool
• 7 po1at U.. typo oaly UHCI
I SeallMI. il DO( hlponiihJe for fln'OI'I af&amp;er r11'1td.y (eheck
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day afler puhlicatloa &amp;o •De corroctioa ·
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Happy Ado
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Yard Saloo
; A cl..iflod odverlioe...al plocod iD lho 'CaDipelio Daily
TriJ.u,. (acepl Cluoil'ood Dloploy, Buo~ Card or i4ol
Nollcoo) will aloo appear ia lhe Poiat Plouoat Repur ud
lhe DtUiy Seatiao!, ""•hi"l o,.~ 18,000 lioaoo

446-G.WpoU.
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992-Midd!opor!l
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985-a....e. ·

388-Viatoti

245-ltle Gnade
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843-PoJ1laod
247-Letort F.U.

64S-A.abia Dlot..

949-Rociae
742-Rulload
667-CooJ.IIle

'379-Walaul

There will be an area sh6wing
of World Wide Pictures new "Eye
of the Storm" at the Rutland
Church of God on Thursday at 7
p.m. Pastor John ,Corcoran invites
the public. Further information
may be obtained by calling 7422060.
.Eye of the Storm stars Connie
Sellecca and 1eff Conaway with
Deborah Tucker. It deals with a
television journalist rewming home
from covering the Persian· Gulf
War and his. producer who are
~iven the task of "keeping the ratmgs high." It ~s With the journalist experiencing senuine peace
in the midst of. the storms that
en~ulf him. It addresses viral, timely 1ssues very relevant to today 's
society. Families wiU be captivated
by this· contemporary story of what
faces (Jlany single parents and their
children as c8reers are juggled with
personal relationships.
·

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63- LiH~tock
64-- Hay &amp;: Grain
6:&gt;- Sood &amp; Fcrtili&amp;cr
71- Auloo lor Sale
72- Tnaclu for Sole
73-- You &amp; 4 WD'o
74- Motoreyde.
75- &amp;at8 &amp; Mol.On for Sale
76- Auto Porto &amp; Aco .... ricol
77- Auto Repair
78- Ca~pins; Equip•enl t

8

51- HoUHI!old Coodo
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53-AatiqUCI
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5:;- Buildi"ff Suppli•

•

Gallia, Meigs, Mason and
Surrounding Counties

CELLULARONE

1·800·598·5654
or 614·446·1157

...............
...................
Been wailing foro
ID DVrchose ocellulor {irone?
,.

·-

TIME ONLY

$6995

s.rva rata
from $11U5
per month

311452 SA 7,

E:u:antins
Electrical &amp; Rcfrigcn•tio~

C...craiHoullns

1185-4381 or

GI:JN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SUNDAYS
12:00 Noon
Factory cho~e 12
gauge only
STARTS

Mobile Home Repair

'

Pub lie Notice

PUBUC NOTICE
ORC Chap. 3745 and OAC
The following were re' Chap1. 3745-47 and 3746-5
oelvldlprepared br tha Ohio for raqulremllllill.
Environmental Protat:tlon
Analllaitlfle&amp; of Ren.wal
Ag11toy
(OEPA)
...
1
wllk.
of
P-It lo Install
4:30 M.
Effective dat•• of final Ohio P-• Company
IICtiona 1111d leau- data 295 Springville Ln.
of propo1ed 1111llona 1111d of PomlfOY, Ohio
dran
.r.c.c~.
11-04-112 Air; ' r=jJi~~~;~~
Final ec11ons
ac11oneeramay
be Effacllv•
Facility Data:
o..crlptlon:
appallled, In writing, within Gaaollne dispensing facility
30 u,. of tha data of 111111 w/1-550 gal. r.:ouna and 1·
nollca, to The Environment· 550 gel. d eael storage
1983 FORD BRONCO
al Board of Awt.w, Rm. 300, lanka.
Auto., PS, PB, new tires,
238 E. T - BL, Columbua, Application No. 06-3548
N!!• •••
OH., 43215. Notice of .any This l!nalecllon not precadnew muffler. 73,000 low
POM·POM,
aw-1 altai bellied with tha ad by proposed action and
miles. 13300 OBO,
dlreclor wl!hln 3 daye; Ia appNIIIble lo EBR.
TUMBLING,
Proposed ao11on• will (11) 16, Ito
614-992-7733
beoome llnlll unlws a writ- I.;_,;_,;__ _ _ ___
BATON TWIRLING
,.., edJudloation hurlng
Pu.b llc Notice
All Age• Welcome
,...,.., Ia eubmiltad wltl1in ____;__________
Special Clau 3-6
30 daya of the laauanca
l&gt;l011CE TO BIDDERS
YearOidll
dalill; or the director ravial.lle Board of Education of
For More Information
lha proponcl Eastern Loc1l School
..:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~aelwllhdrawa
Csll 304-273-3721
desirN to receive
action. Ally paraon may
Real Estate General
aubmn oomma'nte 1111dlor a •••led bids f1&gt;r fl .. t 1a..---oW4K.U11W:!U

IULLEIIH BOARD DEADLINE
P. DAY .EFORE
PUBLICAIION

NYA HALL

a.....

i

~;;;;;;;;~===~;;i~~~,

608 lAST MAIN

'

I

POMEROY, OHIO

mNIIIIIJwithin
regarding
anyofdraft
,aoU•IIII
30 daya
the

lncloalad. • Acllon", ae
uaacl . above doea not
lneluda NCelpt of a verified
oomplalnL lhltlnlflclllll publie lntareel exfata, a public
...Ung may be held. Aa to
any aollon, lnoluclng receipt
of verified complalnla, any
penon may oblllln nollca of
fur!har IICtlone, and adell·
Ilona! Information. Unl••
atherwl.. provld•d In
Notloea of particular
aollona, Ill communication•
ehall be aenl to: HNrlng
Qerlc, OEPA, P. 0. Boxl0411,
Columbue, OH., 43266-0148
Ph. (114) S.U:2115. Con1ult

Insurance
cov•rlng caien•
dar
year 11183.
In order to be conaidared,
all •.. alacl bide ehall b•received by the Tr...ur•'•
office by 12:00 noon on
Dec11ttber 11, 1tll2, 1111d will
be OPintd allhatlime.
Tlii"ll'oard of Education
reeervea the right to accept
·
reject any and all
par1a of any and ell blda.
Board of Education
Eastern Local School
Dialrlcl
381100 SA 7
Reedavllla, Ohio 45772
EloiNIIoaton, Tr•aurer
Phone 614-885-4331
C11)16, 23, 30; (12) 7, 4tc

Near Albany, apiH Ioyer hom• wilh 4
2 balh1, decking, garaga. applianc:ee, ball-.
~t wllh worklhop, motion lighting, lrult liMe, shed,
wood . ... 8.35 ...,... t54,800.
'
'
f41EW UITING • MIDOLEPORT.- FroniiL - 1Yo 11Dry
home wilh 4·bedoaoma, I balh, on lot of 75x100+ , hlltdwoockarpat llooring, F.A.N.Q. hNt, paved olrHt, ralax·
Ina river view. $311,800.

NOV. 30 "Wall Baaklt" by
Pa,...:30 p.m. f14.00
NOV. 28 a 28: "Happy
Holiday Open Hou••"
HOURS:
Mon.-SaL 1~ pm
Sunday: 1-6 p.m.
Call the Trolley Station for
more into.
1111261'11211 mo.

1••11 lour Work

$15.00 P• lour

IWONAill UTU

992·7553

tEW UBnNG - CR 20 - 2+ acras with older ·1 lloor

POIIIROY, OL

MOTHERS AT HPME
Chrlatmaa Income!
Eaay work from
home. No eaah start
up. Start at once and
you'll never have to
worry about
Chrlabnaa money
agalnllnc:ome that ·
keeps going when
you can't,
(614) 378-6153
9am·12pmand
6pm·10pm

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Gara1es
·
•Complete ·
Remod•ling
Stop &amp; Compare
FIIEE ESTIMATES

AACIIIE - 2 llory brick home with 3 badroom1, 2 fira~ central air, oc!Nflld potdl, a very Mil carad lor

.

667~6179

2-7-92-lfn

~

l),l(,'s

FARM TOYS
All Scales • VIntage &amp;
Colleclable
See Display At ..
QUALITY PRINT SHOP
255 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio
Aok For Dallas
Eveningo
614-742~020

10113192

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

949·2391 or
1·800·137·1460
Lawn Mowing,

Fertlllrlng, Weeding,
· and Seeding.
· Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal
Aooidlnllai 6 Comm«Cial
FiM EltlrMt:M

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

BUUDO~ 1_BACICHOE

IIDOU!POAT - Ona noor fraiM home wilh 2 l!ednloml.
U ba"ment ~. apple ttNI. just outlide ollown.
811,000.

and TRACMUE WORK
AVAILABLE,
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES
LANDCLEARtNG.

COWtiEACJAL • ILDIMG - W. Main, Polnii'Oy - UIOO
good locallon,

DRIVEWAYSINSTAWD
UMEITONE-TRUCKING

WEATMEA DOPN'T BLOW OUR BUVERII
UITINGI TO MEET THEIR DEMANDII
=~~/: CALL TODAY IF YOU'D UICE TO UIT
I
HOIII, PROPERTY OR IUIINE881.
·.

'

Vouchers

We

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN
SHOOTS'
SUNDAYS

1:00 P.M.
Factory 12
Gauge Choke

FREE ESTIMATES

HAULING ..,
LIMESTONE, ,,
·GRAVEL &amp; COAl

Reasonable rates
JOE N. SAYRE'':
SAYRE TRUCKING

14-742-2138
.
GRAY'S TAXIDERMY
1Ot29fll211 mo .

.
S ROO
Deer Heads....................
19~~
Turk8ys ...........................'17500
Fish .....-................. ~ ...5400 per inch
Call (304) 895-3386
•n
after 5 p.m.

"

RACINE FIRE
DEPT.
EVERY
SATURDAY
6:30P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shot
Strictly Enforced
10·12· '92tfn

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

EXCAVATING ·

home. f4UOO.

'

11. .

GUN SHOOT

985·4473

11-13·'112·1 mo.

17,500.

'-iY. 111MI1d af1!8.113,000.

614-892-25411
CRAFT CLASSES

DEliVERY SERVICE

lrMII hoUN witlt'2·3 -bedroomo, lhed and older bam.
Gaa ..,- hall, paneling, caiJNII &amp; ha~ looting.

n. 4 bedroom ..,.nment upatalra,

cuns
1011a. . . . .., ......,...

SMALL DOZER
WORK
DRIVEWAY WORI
and LIMEnONE

=~UI~~liNG. -

eq.

..

TROLLEY STITIOI

CHARLIE'S

1

,.

.LIMITED .

r.!_.'i:~1ce

pe

We Deliver In•..

."c.. (614)446-9416 or1-800··112·5967

.
AulholtudAgonl
TOTALLY AUTOMOTIVE PERFORMANCE

pt...,bias &amp; Heatias

Upholuery

HOME HEATING OILS
DIESEl FUELS • GASOLINE$

Bennetts Mobile Home He,atirtg &amp; Cooling
1391 SaHord School lid.
Gall;olls, Olio

6
q P
62- w... ooc~ IO Buy

Public Notice

Bt:L LETIN JH).\RD

~ll'l'l.ll::­

:--1· I{\ IU&gt;

1·:

. hal TriM

BP OIL CO.

Quality Hi EHideacy
Air Conditioners, Heat ·
P1mps, Furnaces &amp;
Now Water Heaters.

,\ 11\L:--'IU&lt;.J...

49--For'--

.Door Plus Ope••r

773-Muoo
882-N'ew Huen
895- Lelort
. 937- Bulfolo

1'\1\\1

48- ~quip•eat for Heat

12- Situation~ Wanted
13-- la•maac:e
14-- Buoiaooo Troiai"l
IS- Schoolo &amp; lutructioa
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB R~ir
17- Miocelloaoouo
18-ll'uo.d To Do

4-Ci--y
:;..... Happy Ado

~

41- Houa for Rent
42- Mobile Homeo (or Rcot
43--- Fanu fOI' ReDt
44- Apart.eatlor Rat
45- Fun .. lted Room•
46-·Space for Real
.47- Waaoodto Real

11- 0.1p Waaood

...

.ICROWIVE OVEN
VCR

Call 614·912~

56-PebforSale
51- MU1tcal lnalrumen'u
sa-,. Fnib &amp; Vcg~lableo
59-- For Sale or Tracla

\I I" I \TI·:

32- Mobile Homa for Sale
33- Farm• for Sale
34- B111i,.... Buildinp
3:;- Lob &amp; Aereap

Rates are for consecutive runs, brokm up days will be

2112192/tfn

111711fn·

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS &amp; ·,
HOME SITES
HAULING ~ Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED ond BONDED

PH. 614·992-5591

12-5-tfn
._______
_,_r

SHRUB &amp; TREE
' II

TRIM and
REMOVAL :~
•LIGHT HAULING ·
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK .,
'

992-2269

4-4-92·1ht

FU TREE SERVICE

Tr..... T...._I_wl
· Fraol'silotiiiat
20%-M llh.- ..
wlllllllls.._ ·742·2UO
••

11·1S.'t2-1 mo. .
•,)

YOUNG'S ·CARPENTER SERVICJ

~ Acidlllone

All Hardwood,
Seaso•••,
$40.00. load'
tlellvtrt•.
(614) 992·5449

.

"'

-Gutw Work
..d Pltlinblrilf
.c~ec~r~ca~

-Aoollng

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

.

USED RAILROAD TIE~

~nWior

.

a Exterior

Painting
•
(FREE E811MATE8) • ~

V. C. YOUNG Ill .,
992-6215

&gt;

P.-oy, Olllo ,.;
. 11-2-112-tfn

Announcements
3 Announcements-' ·
Guyal Ltve Glrl1 Are ·Waltlrw-To
T1lk To Youll 1-II00-860.D7n
EXt 834~. $3.9i Por Min. Must
. Bo 18 Yro. Unlalar Co. (6021 G31·
0615.

No hunllng on our pro!Mfty
Maxine Diddle Sefltrs 1nd 1.11:

992·3838

lian Proffitt.

\..J

Nollce no hunting or t11isplli·

lng on 'h•. L.lwrs Farm, Oal•
llpoil1 F1ny, WV. Prtvlouo I*·
mlta are Vokl.

LARRY SPENCER
c.ts

Rldue1 Solo And Fool Wilh
GoB111 Coplolo And E-V1p
Dlurollc AI Fruth Pharrn1cy.

'

1...---..-----

(No Su!lllay Calla)

' RATES

992·2259

daughter.
Mary 1o Barringer thanked
those who called ud sent cards
during her stay in the hospital.
Bnna Cleland read a ~ fnim
Bulah Maxey, one of the ~
' who moved to Florida.
· ·
The Past Councilor's Club wiU
meet Wednesday at 7 p.m.
Attending were Jean Fredrick,
Erma C~land, Cbarlotte Grant,
Lora Damewood, Miry Holter,
Ethel Orr, Deny Roush, Katheryn
Baum, Elizabeth Hayes, Bvereu
Grant, Bsther Smith, Mary Bar·
rinser, JoAnn Baum and Belly
YOWII.
'

·

Stone Co. ·

Gallla County Melga County M1110n Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

..

Movie
to be
'
shown Nov. 20

~JAYMll
I
. QUG I lf_y

Claui,fied page' c011er the
follotflills telephone e%changea .. .

r-----.....,..-.-.:wiiiT.miiiii~----j 36- Real E.1ate Waao.d

#

C.hester D of A meets .

lo tht toters of ·
Mtlgs County for
Thtlr Volt of

-.

...

Mond4y Paper

charged for each day as separate ads.

turkey for the ann'ual Thanksgiving
church dinner provided lly the
group.
'
Pro2ram .Particiyants with the
theme r.Our Days o Thanks"•were
Doris Koenig, l;1dna Harmon, Mil. dred Brooks, Mildred Caldwell and
. ,J;velyn Spei!Cer. .
The{C were 54 s1ck caDs reponed.
.
Cake and IC~ cream were .~ed
to celebrate Mildred Brooks birthday.
Attending were Beulah Zumbach, Mae Vineyard, Glenna
Sanders, Terri Soulsby , Jo~nn~
Weaver, .Patricia Hall, Mildred
Caldwell, Edna Harmo.n, Bvelyn
Spencer, H~l Barnhill, Mildred
Brooks and Doris Koenig. . 1
The Christmas celebralioil will
be held Dec. 1 with a potluck dinncr at noon. Secret sisters and gifts
will be revealed. . ·
The group closed with the
Lord's Prayer.

614-949·2101 • 949·2160
or 985·3139

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

COPY DEADLINE

:caJI992-2156

.

._I
9o.ooo

prCS!.dent; Tern Soulsby, VICe-pres- make .a building fund payment A
ldent; Mildred Brooks, secretary; donation of $100 was also made to
and Patricia Hall, ueas~r. ·
' the church and the group will supG!enna Sanders ~1ded ~I the port a fence building program
meebng thai ~ with ~pture when called upon.
from Psalms. The Earth IS the
Evelyn Spencer will bake the

'

. To place an ad

bme." ·
Fmm ((.-City: I'm 55 iad 'Wiie
yu. Cl!cldJlnc ia the bell pirt. My
fir!ll 1lusblnd wu i.......lhe and

Officers were elected when the Lord's" was read and Joanna
Willing Workers of the St. Paul Weaver gave the opening prayer.
United Methodist Church of Tup· Reports were given by Mildred
pers Plains met recently for an all Brooks and Patricia Hall:
da
it
·
·

FREE ESTIMATES

•• Ouolity bsurerl Coat,.dor•
20 Yr. Exp. ·
Call II, 614-742·2328

1 .

...,_'1·ro- *'*'*

Willing Workers elect officers

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

TROMM BUILDERS

A -

Landers

New Homes • VInyl Siding
.
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

AND mtnHING UNDERNUTH
GAUGES e IDDinONS e SIDING .

lesa would make them
-r----"!"!""""""""""""""'
.... uythiDJ
Ann
feel explniled 11!11
ia Anclllnp wrole,
"' liD 26 and Willi three childnln,
10 obviously I ·need more than
c:onveraation. Afler I have mv
flallly, rd PtJ17 ICide
bedroon!a. Sex
do a thing

. BISSELL · BUILDERS, INC.:

BID

\.

I '·

I

•.•

.,

�I
I

i&lt;

i!

\

:r;

~

Jfi

EVENING
(J) • we tmJ •
1121. iiJ ......
(I) 81tvedltr lite Bell

e:00 t2l •

~--~----~----~~ · ~~~~--------~

lquii,. OM TV Stereo.

;

The guide for our norseback
ride realty looked like aR au. . . . . . _ t~ntic cowboy. Much to my
:: d;smay, after losing his way,
r~-,L-A::-:F:--:G-U~R-=~~ he called for directions on h1s

1 1 1

NASCAA

llll World Today

0 Rln Tlh Tin, K·l Cop E;J

·

1:06(1) Three'• compcny
8:30(2). i1J NBC
E;J
(J) Ed Mc:M8hon'1 St.r
Sssrch .
(J). ()) e ABC Newl E;J
11) Wl1.- In lite World II
Ca1111&amp;n So:ndlego? Stereo.

....ie

i

17 I I I 18

e

-0·-~~~~~e.ohe

Ste

EdiUon

11) (!)

.---------...... ,,
NORTH
+K763
.Q 102
K3
K QJ 10

BRIDGE

Q

Merrie'd ••. Willi
Clliklren C
l!llD ~rdvl C

lft.Lr Tre~: ifie Next
Generation []
1121e Enterti:'fnman1 Tonight
Stereo. Q
0 Quantum Leap Stereo. Q
ID SporlsC.nter ·
llll Moneyllne
ID LHs Goeo On Stereo. 1;1
7:05 (J) Bswtrly HUiblllee
7:30 (2) • iiJ Jeoperdy!.C
(J) The JelfttrHns Q.,:
(J) 0 Entertainment Tonight
Stereo. E;J
You Bet Your Life
Ill D Wheel ol F-ne Q
(II • Family Feud
ID Sct:eap Talk
8Crooon,.
7:35 (J) Sanford l Son
8:00 (2)
iiJ F,.lh Prince of
Bsi·Air Will defends his u~cle
in court against a political
rival's cherges. Stereo. 1;1
G&gt; MOVIE: l'ony Exprsn

ASSISTAH(f

·"

()) e

·· - )

a

ALLEYOOP
Call 614·

Alder (G) (2:00)

Ill. ()) 0 FBI: The Untokl
Storl" An Army sergeant is
found dead, propped up
ainst a tombstone. Stereo.

i

. CoiM; Gold Rlntt, 81- COIM,
Oold Colno. M.T.S. Coin Shop,

151 ~ Awonuo, Clalllpollo.

l'fo- to bu¥;·
m~l"'. .c.n

(!) Space Age Stereo.

ID iiJ • Evaning Shade.
Wood feels threatened when
Ava wins an award. Stereo.

uilod ricllnt

8 e.m.· 1 p.m .•

Motf· :s.y 114·256-1410.

R•

MOVIE: 'Die Hard' Fox
Nlgi:t at lite Movlsl (A) (2:30)
Stereo.
0 Murder, She Wrote E;J
(II Crook end ChoN
ID NFL Monday Night
Match·Up
llll PrimeNswa 1;1

"

E111ployment Serv1ces

..

79

Dsllcllva A heroin supplier
Is wanted lor the deaths of
lour people. Stereo. C
l!llD C Haart.a Afire
Georgie Anne sees a
lheraplst to help her adjust
to writing again. Stereo. 1;1
0 NFL Monday Night
Magazine Buffalo BHis
former quarterback Jack
Kemp and Miami Dolphins
utility back Jim Jensen; 1990
Silts-Dolphins playoH game;
1974 Bills·Dolphlns game.
9:00 (2) 8 i1J MOVIE: 'A CNid
Loa! Fono¥tr' NBC Monday
Nlgltl at the Movlae (2:00)
Stereo. C
(J). Wll ABC Mondlty
Nlglil Footbi:H Buffalo Bills
al Miami Dolphins (L) Stereo .

e

1il'lAT W.I&gt;O,A
81&amp; Hel-P.

Serv1ces

BASEMENT

WATERPROOFINCJ

Ur-.cl~
- -furil!ohod
........
....
Locol ...........
F,_ 0111,...... Cll ,.:
114-237-41481, do, or night
Rogoro B-menl
ling.

_____.....

Curl.. Homo
.._
y.,. Expor-

lmpoonmeMo: · ·
On Oldor •

Female companion whh minimal

care dutltl for elder1yo woman,
willing to ne~latt live-In ar

FounciMion

Worll.

~

BARNEY

•

K!tchene And lllhL F,.. ~
llmet•l ....... Cll, No Job
Tao Big O r - 1 1 - - . ; .

wHkfy waan. Mtrctrvlllt aru.
614·216-138'7 after 5 p.m.

·

Dn11 ~ llachlne And ~
V-=wm a.,_· ..... FNi ,
Plck.Up And Deflwr!. Gnrte~
CrHII Aotld,l1t 441-6214.
•.·:.

Noodod: 100 Poop.. To l.oH
Now. No Will Power
N
d. Br•nd N.w, 1ocrr.
Natural, 100% GlurantMCI. Clll
303-IIIUZ13.
W:~~L

Wol.._

,

IS YORE UNCI.£
SNUFFY HOME,
JU6HAID?

.... plu!Ming, hoOting,

r,:~lllh&gt;g,

..,_ -

- ·

(2:00)

t

Sorv....

'

•.,....,.. ....n. -wv ··

n _
s e1...,._,_ Iii,. 1!1...• • - 'f
_

Sopllo Tonk........_

11111... 5

82

BIDE QS(!)l,

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

,,.111111'1 -Ina And~
lnllol.. llon And Strvlol. IISE!I
Clrtllled. R......... lol, Contmer·
ciiL llWIII-1111. ·

84
Business
Opponunlty

---·

ficnt.Ji,

ed

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Wllldv Prlcld Righi MUll Bell 1·

41 Housea for Rent

1M,_,._.

r"f.::i.
'!- ...., T•_llg er
..
- •••.a 2ln:i:.
Chnon&gt;l Worll, A1rJ Klnlll
'Do

......

I7N27I ARJIIiM.

-11{;

.,

,
'

-

~

-

Rollilna. IIUPUPER lUll·
OPPOIITUNITY Oldor 1oo

' .

Clio,·ClrrJOioC
And C2
- Allo
· -Wllh
·
:Cl Gnlcarv.
Ll: •a._
II_
:c:lu dn
lllodMI
..........
PrloldTo
~I

:'

AI: . . .000 114 Ill 1024.

._..._a

--

..-.•a
......._......
,_

.

'*

*

'rr'IIIA~

lf you're ., ·..-:!Old
mlgltl- w:-•ln
. . . . . . . . . . yow ......., ,, 4 . .

llcwtlhlp may . . . oui ..... JOU'N;.t

=~oat.
1101 to p:tble .... frllndllodaf.-

1111' ~ lgnE •ll . . . . ~· •
ct..oe au I sdl - · · OOIIId_..

-

II) II you're looking

. . . .. ,,..... IJIIIIILiiw today that

,_....._. _,...., don'l aettla tor Ia.
Ol1afJ . . ._. . . . Willi • lll1le negotlaii'!D, you
. . . . . . . . . to a lltlitllte CIMI.
....... D II J I Ill Wllei't con- ~
7 . . . . . ......
. . . . . . . lallay. try 10 mild'
21
1 1 •blacll 11tat are too I*·
- - .,. you Ill' tlllm. Focul on lun

'I pqp ''a

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.
..--•.,..,..
,..• • · na
. _..

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Co. RON EVANS lNTE
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Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

By Pbllllp Alder ·
Every year in late summer and ear·
ly fall, bridge books come in through
the 'lloor almost as quickly as dead
leaves. Publisher.~ are hoping to profit
from tbe Christmas buying period.
This week l will look at six of these
books.
The "Bridge Player's Companion"
by Larry Harris ($11 .95', C&amp;T Bridge
Supplies, 800·525-4718) is an enter·
tainiDg but oddball book. It is intended
as an aid to duplicate bridge for the
non-serious player. Almost half of the
148 pages are used to explain the laws.
But it is done in a light style With lots
of diagrams and many hints, tips and
warnings.
.
The second pa.rt gives some advice
on strategy. This is a mixed bag, with
everything from "Eight ever, nine
never• to the Law of Total Tricks and
the Principle of Restricted Choice.
Finally, there is an analysis of some
conventiOILS, most of which are popu·
Jar, but some much less so.
There is a fair amount of humor.
For example, the author suggests that

Well Nor..
Pasi 2NT'
4+
Pass 'Pass
• Jacoby Forcing Raise

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lead."

,,,·.:

Today's deal features a play mry: · '
one should know. Against four spades, · ·
West leads the heart tilne. You mUll .,
call for dummy's quein. If is cleat · ·,
that East has the A-J of hearts. With :":
th~ giveo~istribution, if il:stead ,00'·'
play the heart two or 10, you wilt 1-: :;
four tricks: one spade, two hearts and ·
one club. But if you play dtiiEly'.=- ·
heart queen, East cani!Ot retiltD u..~,::
suit without giving away a trick. In..)"
instant, you establish the clubs for a :
heart discard.
. " •I

Aoiewar to Prevlouo Puule

WlldarMhan
36 Take tho bUI
37 Rellgloue
movement

1 Lant clear
II Aid In
dlagnolfng
13 One who
enIlito
14 Beauty IPOt
15 Actreu
f;arrow
18 llallsn
currency

01111nlzar
• -Chavez
40 - piUI ulli'15

41

a...ballar

Hodge•
42- Yonce
45 firm device
47 Buddhism
type
50 Do tarn: work
51· Tear apart
52 Flying HUCtr
(abbr.)
53 Choir voice
54 Balle

17 Conlulld
18 Baaball

player Mal -

111 American
Indian

20 Donkaye
21 Enzyme

22 E11t Ql Tenn.
23 Recunlng
pattern
26 Hot caroal

lngr~nto

se So:cluctld

quantity
3 ExclamaUon
of annoyance
4 Accomplleh
5 Mletroat
8 Select group
7Arld
8 - tor two

vaney

31 Whl~
32 58, Roman

57 Eden

33 Amorouo
look
34 Aclor Kruger
35-

DOWN
1 Short IaUer
2 Fixed

of 1M Queen The

look far tO:iiSitaalilll you'llnd l.ltlia

.

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21 Portion out
22 UIIIOpiiiiU.
Clttd
23 Handle of a

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24 Aboml:llble
lnOWIHn
25 Order of

.

27 TWill of

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211 Actor Alan- ·•
30 Unple-t ' : ~

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48 Ntwll
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " Hey, you don't have to be this unaOciiY'Per-on
make your martc on lila. You've )u11 got to be yourself." - Garth

Brooks.

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10:30 II]). Nlghl Court Q

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11 Nautical ltrnl ,
12 AfftnnaUona ;. ,
20 Perlormsnce ;

28 PnltecUon·

Mourners pay tribute to their
bartender friend John
Hanoocl&lt;. Stereo. Q
10:00@ Nsws
tmJ D a:D e N&lt;Notlllltii:IM•~mm
Expoeure HoiHng'meets the
daughter he never knew and
Shelly S!Lrts ·cnanglng.
Stereo, "i!
Gil Funny Biililldlt With
Charlie ChaM XI More
country music sters fall prey
to Charlie Chaae's hijinks.
(1 :00)
1D PBTA Blllsrds Tour
ChompiOnship, men's
semfflnallrom Memphis,
Tann.(T)

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II Dec. hoHday ,
ID Singer Diana

Wllales
28 Egg call

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9:30 !Ill D 1121•· Love 6 War

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3g Labor

llll Falltsr DowHng Mjotarieo

News

.'

after you ·have just gone for '!700, you ·:
should say to your partner, "They" ·.
could .have killed me with a trumP,: ·

4x4 Advenlure from Guyana
(T)
llll Leny King Uval Q

· 1t:00!2l• m

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Opening}ead: • 9

!Ill Nelhvllla Now
@ Off ROOd Redng Ultima" ·

Ron'a TV
opoclollzlnt
In J".niUI ............ olhor..__...._..,_

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The crew meets Miles'
paren!a and they are not
whBI an~ expects.
Stereo.
II) WWF
me Time

I re-lluil1 - - In llooll, RqN ..,
EVANS, JACK-. OH. 1 537-115211.
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Majesty The Queen's
accession to the throne.

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SOUTH

40th anniversary ot Her

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poroon to cloon oma/1
oHice In New ~nn areo. 1 cloy
por wolk. Cll on Tuooday NeW. WIN ..,. lor lody In my home,
bed polioM prolerrod,
17 - " 12:00 • 3:00. 304- lnyolld
reaonabl•, ~ care, 114-M~
882-2123. ,
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ACROSS

Ill• !llO American

............ Price llecluoed. INttl .....

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Motor Homes
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S.tf
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LMna R-, ........., FuiiBolh • '
Lol8 OtSI_.. Specri,lncl 11 i
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.

EAST

The World AI:QJ.anac®Crossword·Puale· :

gunslinger seeks re~nge;
Teaspoon's third wife turns
up. Stereo. Q
8:05 (J) MOVIE: WarGameo (PG)
(2:15)
8:30 (2)
iiJ 81-.n Blossom
examines lhe family
genealogy after Joey tears
he was adopted. Stereo. Q

campers&amp;

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WEST
10 2

The book burst
of the season

llll Yci:lilg Riden A

Transportation

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PHILLIP
ALDER

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IRS

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UNSCRAMBlE lETTERs
FOR ANSWER
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)'Ou develop from step No. 3 below.

Gunner • Koran - Showy • Riches - SHARING
A man confided to a co-worker, "My wife and I argued
all the time so we went to a marriage counselor. We
stilt argue but we call it SHARING!"
•

RoManne Stereo. 1:;1

1:35 (I) Andy Grilfltll
7:00 \31D iiJ Wheel of Fortune

I

quoted

by filling in the missing words

)

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

ID Up CioN
liD New Zono

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.

PRINT NUMBERED
lETTERS IN SQUARES

8

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lqUIIre One TV Stereo.

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1D Checkfrom Atlanta

COLTUC

•

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'

FFA elects officer team
at national convention .

Your ·Social Security
By ED PETERSON
Social Seeurlty
Manager in Athens
Recently, 1 read a book about a
family's life during th.~ "Gr~at
Depression." The book, 'Growmg
Up" by Russell Baker, describes
hard-luck stories and-events.most
people read in history books &lt;ir are
told by grandparents. Russell Baker
lived one of those stories.
BakJ:r'Ji book brings the depression era into focus for people
whose vision of history is blurred
by the good life. For me, it also
illustrates one of the reasons why
we have a Social Security system
in this country.
Many young people question the
need for Sociill Security and often
assume that they will be able to
take care of their own financial
needs wilhout any help from the
government. As one ypung man
recently told me, "If people could
make it on their own before we had
Soeial Security, they ought to be
able to malce it on theii' own now
without the. govelnment's help . "
Baker's book shows that many
people weren't "malcing it" before
Social Security. '
Following liis father's death,
Balcer's mother, left with three
small children-including an 18
month-old baby girl-had many
tough decisions to make. Among
the toughest was deciding to give
up the little baby, Audrey .
Baker writes: "The giving up of
AUdrey was done in a time of
shock and depression for my moth· '
er. After my father's funeral, when
the undertaker was paid, my moth·
er was left with a few dollars of
. insurance l)IOney, a worthless

· Monday, .November 16, 1992

Poinaroy Middleport, Ohio

P11g1 10-The Dally S.ntlnel

model T, several chails. a table 10
eat from, a couple of mail-order
beds, a crib, three small children,
no way to earn a Jiving, and no
prospects for the future. " A few
days later, Baker's aunt arrived to
pick up his little sister. "My mOiher
helped them carry out the crib and
boxes packed with .baby clothes.
When the car was loaded, my
mother bundled Audrey into blankets carried her outside, handed
her in Aunt Goldie, and lcissed her
good-bye."
,
That' scene struck a nerve w1th
me because every week, recently·
widowed young to middle-ag~d
men and women. with small chll·
dren in tow visil the :ehillicothe
Social Security office to rile for
survivors benefits. Each one, of
course, is grieving because of ~e
loss of a loved one, but each one IS
also very grateful for the Soci.al
Security benefits he or she will
receive. Unlike Balcer's family,
they have bright prospects·for the
future because Social Security is
there for them.
Survivors benefits are paid to
widows and widowers at any age if
they're caring for children under
the age of 16. Children can continue to receive benefits until 115, or
up to age 19 if they're Still in hi~h
school. Widows and widowers wnh
no young children can receive ben·
efits at60, or as early as 50 if they
have a disability.
When young people criticize the
value of Social Security; they often
fail to take these benefits into
account. Soc'ial Security survivors
benefits help ensure that stones
like Baker's and that of his little
sister Audrey remain the stuff of
history . .

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) dent is John Kleiboeker, io, of.
National FFA delegates have elect· Suius City, Mo. Kleiboektt' raised .
ed the six·DICIIIber ream of officers purebred illd commercial beef cat·:
th.at will lead the organizatio.n tie for his supervised program.
•
through 1993. One of rbe officen IS
Todd Hingson, 19, of live Oat,
from Ohio.
Fla .. is the southern region vice
Travis Park, 20, of Franklin, president. Soybeans, watennelon .
Ind., was elected ~ident Satur- and tobacco comprised Hingson's :
day. Park's supervised ~ultural s0pervised program •. . I .
.
experM:nce program was m diversiThe western regton 1cc ~~­
fled crop and livestock operation dent is Dennis Degner, 19, of Mal·
and hay and straw baling. He is a ·one, Texas. Degner's supervise!lsophomore at Purdue University program was a purebred Anj~us ;
majoring in agriculiural education, beef cattle operation. He also
and will take a year's leave. of miut:et steers. ·
.
al5sence from his studies to serve
· During their year of SCIVicc, the •
his term as presidenL ·
national officers will each travel
Kevin White, 20, of Redding, more than 200,000 miles for
Calif., was named secretary. appearances on behalf of the FFA.
White's supervised program was in The national officers rei?Tesent:
marketing and-breeding swine, members to officials in &amp;()Vern· :
agricultural sales and SCIVicc land· ment, business, education .til agri•':·
scape deve~t
.
culture.
•
Rick Perlcins, 19, of Bloomville,
The National FFA has 401,574 •
Ohio is the eastern region vice members in 7,4561ocal chaplen in_
p(Csidcnt. Perlcins raises registered the United States, Puerto Rico,
Hampshire sheep an~ crops, .and Guam and the V~ Islands. FFA ;
works on a farm for his supervised members are prepanng for careen··
program.
in the science, busineSs and teCh·'
The central ~egion vice presi· ' nology of agriculture.
,
.~

DENTAL C.ARE DISCUSSED· Dr. Craig Mathews, D.D.S.,
recently visited Salisbury Elementary, He Showed a film on tbe
proper process to complete to noss and brusb your Ieeth. He used
as bis model, Horace tbe Horse, and bad a student, Justin Starrett,
demonstrate. Dr•.Mathews also discussed the educ~lion wbicb is
·necessary to become a dentist as .p art of the ongoing career educa·
lion program at Salisbury.
·

.

Potato potpourri
IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (AP) Americans consume about 80
pounds of potatoes annually and
one-third come from Idaho, more
than from any other state. Here are
. some "tater tips" from the Idaho
Potilto Commission:
- What should I look for in
choosing russet potatoes? A rounded or elongated shape, with few
eyes, a net-textured skin and a deep
russet brown coiOI'.
- Should I wash potatoes
before storing th!lm? No. Damp·
ness can cause decay.
~ Where should I store them?
In a cool, dark well-ventilated
place. They'll· keep for several
w~ at45 to .50 degrees Fahren·
heiL Never refrigerale SPuds.
- Should I bake Idaho potatoes
in aluminum foil? No. That holds
in the moisture and steams them,
giving a ·~boiled" taste and tell·

STAMP COLLECTING DISCUSSED • Mar·
garet Edwards, Rutland Postmaster, recently
visited Salisbury Elementary to talk to students
about October being National Stamp Collecting
Mouth. Students were given information on bow

~,

.

'

•
•

·

C-4 t PlooHI Col« Film

MOTRINif1
' CAPlETS
TABLETS OR
2' '~

239

him and bls passenger, Curtis Jones, age and address unreported,
inside. Ford was pronounced dead at the scene and Jones was listed In fair condition at Cabeii·Hunlington Hospital, Huntington,
W.Va. Workers used tbe crane shown above to assist in removing
the two men from the wreckage. (OVP photo by Kris Cochran)

r.&amp;ETS&lt;O'S

219

SUDAFED
SEVERE COI..D
FORMULA
TABLETS OR
CAPlETS JD'S

•
.ROBITUSSIN

W.XIWUII STRENGTH

~~"ccxo299

.fOZ.

s5&amp;~~.s~~;:n~o~-:sf~re:a~~ ~o~~~~:_cehisOctoberarrest

EFFERDENT
OEHTVFfE CLEANSEif

Sato Price
less Afail

SUAVE

In R8batfl

ANTI-I'E.ItSPIIfANT &amp;

f:x~Joz.
OZ.

SOLID

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OR SUPER STICK
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Yoor,Cost
Allor
Rebate

239
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FREE
. '

V.Jiur•s t •ve ry day at H1te 1\ui

N'ICE THROAT
LOZENGES

ASSORTED

149

FLAVORS

1J6'S

V05SHAMPOO

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CORRECTOL

329

TASI.ETS
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CHEESE CURLS
1.75 oz. Bon• a.g

. COKE
12 Pltcll, 12 oz.
Cans

STAYFREE
MAXI PADS

011249

Zf'
~ lCING
ULTIU
PUIS
20'S OR lA. TRA

THERAC.M
•
ORrHfRAO~~
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1.10'5

.

Pt. US NlrE 11'$

C1lAFI' BAZAAR PLANNED • Beta Sigma
Phi Sororltlel Ill Melp County will present a
craft bazaar oa Nov. 21 aad 29 In tbe ornce

PRICES QHWEEI&lt;LY SfiECIALS EFFECTIVE NOVI!...d::" 18 THROUGH NOVEMBER 22. 1812 • SOME !TE.US WAY NOT BEAVMAIL~INAU. IT()f1£&amp;

·

apace of KeaDy Uti (tormerly Main Street
Plaa). The •auar Ia llelna or1anlzed by tbe
Pftuptor Beta' Beta Ctlapter whb partlcipatJon
planned from the other sorority chapters of

300 E. Mala • Pomeroy, Ohio •992·2586
•

'.

·One man was lcilled and another Equipment Sales to lift the truck,
injured in a tractor-trailer accident freeing the occupants.
on U.S. 35 near the Silver Memori·
Jones was transported by
al Bridge in Gallipolis Township HealthNet emergency helicopter
Tuesday ·around 6:45a.m .
transport to Cabeii-Huntington
Dead is Leroy H. Ford, 51, of HoSPital. A hospital spokeswoman
2016 E. 93rd St., Chicago.
said he was listed in fair condition.
Ford was eastbound.on U.S. 35
Ford was pronounced dead at
traveling at a high rate of speed the scene and transported to the
when he lost control of his Ford Waugh- Halley· Wood Funeral
9000 in ~ right curve, reported Lt. Home in Gallipolis.
Robert J, Woodford, commander of
The Gallipolis, Rio Grande and
t'he Gallia-Meigs Po~t of the State Point Pleasant, W. Va., fire departHighway Patrol.
ments, and the Gallia County and
The truck went off the left side Point Pleasant emergency medical
of the road and overturned onto its services were on the scene.
side, trapping Ford and his passenAccording to Woodford, Ford
ger, Curtis Jones, age and address was the owner/operator of the
unreported, inside.
truck. The trailer. owned by PST,
It took almost three hours for contained a load of popcorn.
rescue workers to extract the two
The accident was Gallia Counmen from the wreckage. Workers ty's fifth highway fatality of the
used a crane from Southeastern year.

TRANSPORTING VICTIM - Arter being was later listed in fair condition by a Cabell·
trapped
in an overturned tractor-trailer for Huntington Hospital spokeswoman. The driver
ley.
LeMaster was arrested by agents
almost three hours. Curtis Jones, age and or the truck Leroy H. Ford Jr., 51, or Chicago,
from the FBI and Ohio Bureau of
address unreported, is rushed lo a waiting was not so lucky. He was pronounced dead at
Criminal Investigation in Lakeland,
HealtbNet helicopter by rescue workets. Jones the scene. (OVP photo by Kris Cochran)
Aa. last week after he indicated
,1""'ln-o...,rd_er_to_se-:-p-that '11e wanted to surrender to Ohio _co..::u::.:nts==of::.;k.:.:idn_a_;_p_pi.:.:na_an_d:.a-co-u-nt_A...,tli,-en_s_C_oun_t_y_J81...,
of aggravated robbery. His trial is aratc him from Drennan, who has
autltodties.
been incarcerated in the Meigs
Arrested in mid-October was set for January 4.
Fred Drerman, 30, of Ravenswood,
W.Va., who was charged with four
t
counts of aggravated murder, two ua1y 12. He is being housed in the
A major environmental seule·
ment that closes the book on a
seven year battle over the Cozan
Landfill, located near Coolville in
Athens County, has been negotiat·
ed by At10rney General Lee Fisher.
Under the settlement, the
' .
Manville Corpomtion has agreed to
, '
\
establish a $3.9 million trust fund
to clean up the landfill,
The landfiU was designed to be
a solid waste landfill but was shut
down in 1985 by the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency for vio·
lations of state solid waste laws:
Fisher said that the negotiated
settlement creating the $2.9 million
fund was approved by the U. S.
Bankruptcy COurt for the Southern
. DistrictofNewYorkonOct. 30.

3"0f&lt;II"~PMM

'

One man killed,
another injured
in truck wreck

The second defen.dant in tl\e
Halley murder·case was artaigned
on Monday ~fore Meigs County
Common Pleas Court Judge Fred
W.Crowm.
William LeMaster II, 26, of
Racine, was indicted on Friday and
entered a plea of not guilty yesterday mornmg. He is charged with
four counts of aggravated murder
with death penalty specifications in
the murders of Jeffrey L. Halley,
36, and his 12 year-old son, Jeffrey
S. Halley, both of Gallipolis.
The H'alleys' bodies were found
in two separate locations in Meigs
County. Jeffrey L. Halley's
remains were located near P9rtland
in September, 1991, and Jeffrey S. ·
Halley's in April on Seller's Ridge.
Last month, Prosecuting Attorney
Steven L. Story ·said that he
believed the deaths followed a&lt;drug
transaeli&lt;in involving the elder Hal·

represented devil worship.
Stan Rosenfield, DeVito's Los
Angeles-based publicist, said Sa.t·
urday the actor read about Bate·
man's dilemma and has sent Penguin IIICIChandise 10 the teen-ager.
''Danny was very upset to know
that his character was being con·
nected to devil worship," Rosen·
field said.
·
Colorado City is an isolated
town of about 2,400 people on the

(

Low tonight around 40.

Wednesday, parUy cloudy. High
In SO$.

'

•

1 Section,.10 Pagea 25 canto
A Multimedia Inc. Newapoper '

.. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 17, 1992

LeMaster
arraigned;
trial-slated
January 12

-Names in the news-

CHICAGO (AP) - Actor Don
Ameche, dise jockey Casey Kasem .
and co~ntry music's Grand Old
Opry have joined broadcasting's
. finest in the Radio Hall of Fame.
They were among the five
,inductees Sunday. The others were
ABC radio pioneer Leonard Gold·
enson and Detroit morning radio ·
personality J.P. McCarthy.
Ameche, star of movies includ·
ing "Cocoon," co-starred J.ears
ago in the radio program ·'The
Bickersons."
.i(asem hosts "Casey's Top 40"
and "Casey's Countdown," two
syndicated popular music ·shows.
ABO Radio's Paul Harvey was ·
host of the ceremony Sunday at the
Museum of Broadcast Colhmunications.
NEW ORLEANS (AP)- Blues
CHELSI RITCHIE
singer Doctor John, famed banjo
player Danny Barker and several
Irt IS
more of the city's biggest musical
Charles A. and Lori-D. Ritchie, sws had them dancing in the aisles
Racine, announce the birth of a Saturday at a school fair.
·
The second annual "Gospel and
S
daughter, Chelsi Diane, on ept. 5 Jazz Festival" was held to raise
at SL Joseph's Hospital in Parkers- money for the music program at the
burg, W.Va.
'
Lafayeue Elementary School.
She weighed seven pounds and
"Support that good music,"
10 ounces and was 20 and one-half Doctor John told·listeners.
.
inches long:
Allen. Toussaint, ~omposer of
Maternal grandparents are Mr. hundreds of hits like "Southern
and Mrs. Larry Dugan, Pomeroy • Nights," sat in on piano for some
and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Faulk, blues with Willie Tee, another of
Urbans.
. the city's headline keyboard artists.
Paternal grandmother is Mrs.
Willie Humphry, 92 rear-old
Violet Ritchie, Middleport
clarinetist from PreservatiOn Hall,
Other chi~dren are Larry J. performed with Brian O'Connell
Ritchie and Chuck Ritchie Jr., both from their traditional ja,zz album,
of Racine, and Carry Ritchie, "Two Clarinets on the Front
Lehigh Acres, Fla.
Porch."

VoL 43, No.145
Copyrlghr.d 1992

FATAL WRECK- A Cblcago man w~s killed and his passen•
.:er injured in Ibis tractor-trailer wreck on U.S. 35 near tbe Silver
Memorial Bridge Tuesday morning. Leniy H. Ford, 51, or 2016 E.
93rd St.:; Chicago, W. eastbound on U.S. 35 wben his .truck went
off tbe left side ol t•e road and overturned onto its side, trapping

TO PERFORM · ·The Kevin Spencer Family or Shelby, a new
southern country gospel group that organized In June 11192, will
perform at the Rutland Freewill Baptist Cburcb ou Nov. 22 at 2
p.m. Tbe group consists of Kevin Spencer, bis wife; Tammy, and
ber brother, Michael Hunter. Spencer wrote tbe 11191 bit, "Let's
Meet By tbe River." The group will perform along wltb Reflections
Trio. Rev. Paui·Taylor invites tbe public.
_

I

1615

•

to start their stamp collection. Mrs. DorOtbJ •
Chaney, rd'tb grade teacher, helps tbe students •
at Salisbury witb their interest in stamp coiled·
ing.
·
•

Check your list and save at RiteAid

.

Page4

Pick 3:
634
Pick 4:

.

Holiday Savings

Arizona-Utah border.

Buffalo
defeats
Miami

lli1Se8:

lute.

COLORADO CITY, Ariz. (AP)
- A teen-ager sent home from
school for wearing a Penguin Tshirt from this summer's "Batman
Returns" movie got some support
from the web·footed villain himself, in the person of Danny DeVito. .
James Ba1eman, 14, was told to
go home and change on Nov. 4 by
Colorado City School District Principal Lawrence Steed. _
Bateman's mother, Trudie, said
Sreed deemed the 'f.-shin inappro·
priate for school and claimed it also

Ohio Lottery

!;

Oh.io Eta Pbl; XI Gamma Epsilon and XI
Gamma Mu. A variety ol hndmade craft Items ·
will be available during tbe bazaar. Plctlll'ed are
Ann Rupe, Norma Custer and Charlotte Elber·
reid members ortbe Precepter Beta Beta Cbap·
ter.'as they work on several of the items ror the·
baz~r.

Pomeroy Village Council
discusses cooperative
revitalization narrative
By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff
_Will coopemtion between Middlepon and Pomeroy assist the two
villages in obtaining revitalization
monies?
That question was discussed
when Pomeroy Village Council
met in regular session Monday
night. Jean Trussell, who is coOrdi·
nating a revitalization project for
Middlepon, arid John Musser, president of the Pomeroy Downtown
Revitalization Committee. dis·
cussed a cooperative venture
between the two villages, and how
it could improve both communities' chances of bein~ funded.
Each village is eligible for up to
$400,000 in matching grant monies
for downtown revitalization
through the Ohio Department of
Development, and Mike Stroth of
SBA Consultants of Jackson. is
working with both villages (in different capacities) in the application
procedure. It was Stroth, Trussell
said, who first recommended that
the villages present a unified narra·
tive with separate grant applica·
lions.
Trussell explained th~ Middle·
pon and Pomeroy could be the first
communities which neighbor one
another to file applications using a
joint narrative such as that pro-

posed by Suoth.
"We have .a unique situation
which -I:OIIld make a differeooe in
the outcome of our funding,"
Trussell said. "We wouldn't be
combining Our applications, but we
would be using an application narrative which intertwines the two
villageS. This might include maps,
photographs, drawings, or other
items which outline the historic
relationship between Pomeroy and
Middlepon."
Memtx;rs of council were receptive 10 the proposal because it provides an oppOrtunity for Middlepan and Pomeroy to work together.
Councilman John Blaettnar
called it an "excellent idea", but
council agreed that their final
approval would depend on the
reaction from the merchants in
Pomeroy who have pledged to participale. Although opposition is not
expected. Musser agreed to check
with those involved and report
back to council.
Council voted to give Christmas
bonuses to all village employees.
$200 will be given to full-time
employees, and $150 to part-time
Continued on 3

S.ettlement ends 7
year land~'illfiighl
'J

The fund will also be used for
any maintenance required at the
landfill during the 30 year period of
restoration. If there are any funds
remaining, they wiD be transferred
to the Ohio Environmental E4uca·
lion and Charitable Trust.

Levy recount set Nov. 24

The ·agreement comes almost a
year after Fisher settled a criminal
action against Manville for illegally
dumping hazardous waste in the
solid waste landfill. Fisher had
charged Manville with illegally
sbipping untested hazardous waste
from its Vienna, W. Va. plant to
the Cozart Landfill. Last Decem·
bcr, Manville pled guilty and
agreed to the establishment of a $1
million trust fund, the largest cor·
pomle criminal environmental settlement in Ohio Histtwy.

An official recount has been set
for November '2 4 to confirm the
results of the official count of bal·
lots cast on Election Day, due.t~
the close results of the Meigs
Board of Mental Retai'dation and
Developmental Disabilities levy . .
Following the official count on
Saturday, the MRJDD levy came
out seven votes ahead, and state
law requires a recount when the
margin is less than one half of one
percent. The flllai vote count on the
levy was 4,989 against to 4,996.
The recount will begin at 3 p.m.

Fisher noted that tWo trust funds
with two different purposes have
been established as a result of liti·
gation against Manville. The $3.9
million trust fund settles the civil
suit and will be used to clean up rbe
landfill. The $1 million trust fund,
established as the Ohio Environ·
mental Education and Charitable
Trust, settled the criminal suit and
is used for environmental education
and the' investigation, enforcement
and prosecution of environmental
cases.

li

SALLY WATSON

Continue search
for missing teen
A search for a Pomeroy teenager
missing for over a week is under·
way.
Pomeroy Chief of Police Gerald
Rought reponed Monday that Sally
Ann Watson, IS, of 202 1/2 Spring
Ave. II¥ not been seen since Nov• .
I 0. She has short blond hair and
blue eyes, is five. foot eight inches ·
· in height and weighs approximately , )
140pounds.
When she disappearecf she was
wearing a light blue windbreaker
· and blue jeans decomted with red
roses according 10 her father, Marl·
on WalSOn.
Anyone with information abou!
the teenager is asked to contact the
: Pomeroy Police Department, 992·
6411.
.

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