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                  <text>Page D-B-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Stamper, Hupp
recognized by

. Redmen

rmn

LEXINGTON, KY. - Sara
Stamper and Sbearell Hupp,
employees of the SuperAmerlca
stores In Gallipolis and Kanauga,
have been recognized for out·
standing performance concern·
tng tile company's Customer
ServiCe Awareness Program ac·
cording .to R.J. Maxwell, senior
vice president and general man·
ager of SuperAmerlca's South·
ern Division.
.
Candidates are observed and
evaluated with respect to.
friendly attitude, appe~rance,
professiOnalism, efficiency, use
of Intercom and telephone
etiquette.
For their commitment to ser.
vice excellence letter of com·
· rnendatlon and a special "Ser·
vice Attitude" award. ·

STORE HOURS

· Monday thr:u Sunday

,

Vol.41 , No. t48

Restraining order JUed against Meigs BOE
.

CLEVELAND (UPil - Frl·
;11ay's winning Ohio Lottery
' numbers:
Plck·3

49
Po· rk·· Lo·•n ••••••••
· La. $1
.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF LOIN ..
$ s9
T-Bone Steak....... 4·
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF BONELESS
Chuck Roast ••••·!a;•• $1 99
1'14

LB.

231111.

•· ncket sale~~: $266;585. Payoff:

. : $97,!100.

•
CardA
;:: siX ol hearts.
nllle.of clubs.
seven of diamonds.
queen of sP.cles.
Ticket sales: 1100,933. Payoff:
•~.440.
.

"*
Meigs County Common Pleas the Meigs Count)' Board of ElecCourt Judge Fred W. Crow liT has lions from mixing those ballots cast
signed a Temponuy Restnlining by regular absentee ballot and those
Order in a case filed by the Ohio cast on Elll(:tion Day by walk-ins at
Democratic Pany and Attorney the ·board office on Mechanic
General Candidate Lee Fisher.
StreeL The order will be in effect
An identical case has been filed forl4 days.
in all 88 counties in Ohio, due to
Several other technical proce- ·
the close count of tile ballots cast in dures are also provided for under
the Ohio .Attorney General's race the terms of the restraining order.
earlier this month.
59 people, according to Board of
The restraining order, in p!ll1, Elections Clerk Barbara Smith,
prohibits the Secretary of State and ~oted as walk-ins at the Meigs .

County Board of Elections office
on November 6, while 758 others
voled by regular absentee ballol
Approximately 900 votes currently · separate Fisher from his .
Republican opponent, Paul PCeifer
state,wide, and a recount is
believed to be l\11 almost certainty
after the official count is compleled.
The case in Meigs County was
filed by Pmneroy Attorney John R.
Lentes.
·

(
Whole Fryers ••• !·~... 49
.
Chicken Leg 1/4' s••• ~'o 49&lt;

.SRADE ~ .

.

.

. .

FLAVORITE

8
7
$
69
Bologna ••••••••••• ~••• . 1

Wieners ••••••• ~ .•••!

1
;...

ECKRICH

. .

LB.

,,

ft( :

............t~~ r;·J:_,:'""'

ALMOST READY FOR WORKERS - Con·
slructlon Is essentially complete on Southern Ohio
Coal Company's Salem Portal office complex
located near Wilkesville. Abont 2511 workers

.

$1
8
9
2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••
7
9
(
Eggs
Large
••••••••••••
Sl 49
PLASnC GALLON

•

GRADE A

DOZEN

)

BAN QUE! - 28-32 O_Z.

CHICKEN DRESSING

•

21

''

..

Family Entrees ••••

6

f

34.5

oz.

MAIWIUIIOiSI

MAmR ILIND

COfFEE

•

-Cool Whip •••••••••••••
8

$379

CARNAnON

PINTO BEANS

EVAP. MILK

2/Sl

GM11 at ....., S.,. Valto
hell !lew. II tloru !lew. 24, 1990

already ,report to the ne.w faciUty which bouses
showers and changing rooms for employees, a
training room •. Iamproom and communications
center.

1201.
TAU CAN

2f$1

hell at Pew••• Super Valu
GM !lew. II tloru No•. 24, 1990

CAIRO, Egypt . (UP I) - A
senior Arab diplomat said Mon·
day that Iraqi President Saddam
! Hussein's plan to start releasirig
' foreign hostages Christmas day
is a ' bid for time, while exiled
Kuwaiti officials called It a ploy
to distract world attention from
the emirate Saddam Invaded
Aug. 2.
In a surprise move, Iraq
announced Sunday It would release the 3,000 foreigners held in
Iraq and Kuwait in batches from
Dec. 25 to March 25. World
leaders, Including President
Bush, condemned the move as ·a
"cynical ploy."
The Cairo-based Arab dlplo·
mat said by offering to release
~ the hostages, Saddam may also
l!e sending a signal to the West
that he Is looking for a compromIse to the crisis touched off by his
lnvuton and annexation of the

oll·rtch emirate.
"What we heard · from their
official . statements and from
Saddam himself Indicate the
Iraqis are now ready to negotiate
with the United States and Saudi
Arabia over the criSis without
any pn!condltions," he said .
"Time is Important for both
sides, " the high-ranking dlplo·
mat, who asked not to be
Identified, told United Press
International.
He said Iraq· would benelft If
the U.S.-dominated multlna·
tlona.l force delayed a military
strike until after the hostages are
released because the weather
·wm grow hot again, making any
offensive action difficult.
.
U.S. opinion is also changing
with the seasons. Polls show
fewer and fewer Americans are
supporting Bush's Persian Gulf
policy as the months drag on. ·

oz.

·5 LB.
BAG

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Mayor Dan Rinehart, who had
made himself scarce much of
last week when allegations sur· ·

faced that he had been romanti·
cally Involved with a cabinet
member, has admitted to . that
affair.

State Route 124 at Indian Run near Reedsville will close during
the day beginning on Monday, so that Ohio Department of Transpor·
tation crews may begin removing a rock overhang at that site.
Acconling to an OOOT spokesperson, the road will re-cpen each
evening at 6 p.m. The work should be completed, according 10 the
spokesperson, on Wednesday afternoon.

Sl 59

v•

'"" "' ,..,.... Soper
Geed No•. II thni No•. 24, lt90

.·rn Taif, Saudi Arabia . .the
headquarters of the exiled Ku·
waltl government, a senior Kuwaiti minister said Saddam·s
decision to release hostages was
Intended to distract the world
from what Kuwaitis see as .the
main Issue - the occupation of
Kuwait.
" The Iraqi regime Is using the
hostages card every time It feels
the Impact of the international
economic sanctions," acting In·
formation minister Jassim Ya·
coub told the official Kuwait
News Agency In a statement.
''By using the hostages, Iraq is
seeking to distract the world
public opinion from the major
goal- the Implementation of the
U.N. Security Council resolu·
lions calling for the withdrawal
of the Iraqi trooops and the
restoration of the legitimacy to
Kuwl'-lt," the minister said.

After several years of working
with 12 contractors and 34
· subcontractors, Ron Miller Is
seeing a major project at South·
ern ·Ohio Coal Company's Meigs
Division coming to a close.
Finishing touches are being
put onto the new Salem Portal
complex for the -Meigs No. 31
mine which Includes an office
facility for up to 300 employees.
Miller, construction project
engineer for American Electric
Power's Fuel Supply Depart·
ment, has been involved with
most of the work at the complex
. -since ·site d~eloprnent began In .
1986. The shaft· - located mid·
way between Wllkesvtlle and
Salem Center off State Route 124
- .was Initially built as an Intake
shaft !or the former Raccoon No.
3 mine.
With the shaft came an electri·
cal substation to power newer
sections of the · mine and .a
100,000-gallon water, tank to pro·
vide an emergency water supply
to fight fires. Later on, a rock
dust bin and an emulsion building
were also Installed at the site.
Emulsion is a nonflammable
hydraulic fluid used by longwall
milling machines . It Is supplied
through a borehole to under·
ground workings !rom the Salem
site to lessen transport time.
When plans to merge the Meigs
No. 1 and Raccoon No. 3 mines
firmed up In early 1987, planning
began for the portal and ·of!lce
facility. The new complex In·
eludes a two-story, total-electric,
18,000-square:foot building.

Showers and chapgtng rooms
for employees are on the first·
floor of the building, along with
of!lces !or the general . mine
supervisor, safety supervisor
and mine supervisors. A training
room, lamproom, communica·
lions center and waiting area are
also located on the main floor.
The second floor houses offices
for the general superintendent,
mine superintendent, resident
engineer and human resources
supervisor as well as a confer·
ence room and a drafting room. A
short bridge connects the of!lce
building: to the elevator sllaft,
Mlller says.
Miners have been using the
elevator shaft" to report to work at
nearby longwall and continuous·
miner sectiOns since October
.1989. says AI Hlllacd, general
superintendent, This shortened
their underground travel time by
close to five miles and resulted In
Increased efficiencies at the
mine.
Now that the building is essen·
tlally complete. a majority of the
employees who once entered the
mine through the Parker Run
portal-located at theslteofthe
Meigs Division Preparation
Plant just east of Salem Centerhave begun reporting to the new
facility.
"We'll be keeping part of the
office staff at Parker Run ,"
Hillard says . "Furthermore,
we'll con Unue to u tlllze both
facilities because work In the
mine will sometimes be closer to
Parker Run and at other times

view on allowing people to vote,
suddenly are wanting to chal·
lenge the "'walk-In"' votes, which
were cast under a new state law
by those who moved at least 30
days before the election but
failed to change their address.
One reason may be that demographic examinations show that
m~ of those votes are In areas
that were favorable toward
Pfeifer.
"I'm prepared to live by ihe
Continued on pag 10

Rutillnd
vil16ge released
from suit
.
.
The Village of Rutland has been released from a civil suit filed on
August 27 by a Rutland woman.
In a court ~try filed on Friday, Meigs County Cor,ninon Pleas
Court Jlldgc Fred W. Crow m denied motions to dismiss the case
that were filed by Mtlgs County SheritJ James M. Soulsby and
Deputy Jeff Miller and dismissed the cbmplaint as named against the
(Ocmtlnued On Pace 10) · ·
'

oy,

I •.

.

Rinehart told Columbus radio
station WTVN Saturaay morning
that he'd be In his office Monday .
He called the station "from a
wooded area outside of Colum·
bus" Saturday, and during a
30-mlnute on-air conversation ·
with talk show host Bob Conners,
admitted having the affair with
his Human Services Director
Brenda Dodrlll who is In the'
midst of a divorce.
"When I said there was nothing
going on, I flat wasn't telling the
truth," Rinehart said of statements he made earlier In the
s!pllmer when questioned about
his private life.
The mayor's Involvement with
Doclrlll surfa~ed last Wedn~day
after divorce documents flied In
a Franklin County court linked
Dodrill.with Rinehart.
This affair wa5 reported only
days before the deadline Rinehart !lad been given to decide h~
Continued on page 10 .

wlll be nearer to the Salem
portal."
Most of the support people for
underground wor.k, such as track
layers and belt workers, stlll
enter at the Parker Run portal,
Hlllard says.
In all, about 460 employees still
work at Parker Run, including
members of the roving orew and
those who work In the prep plant
and shop, Hlllard adds. Currently, 250 workers repol't to the
Salem facility.
Continued on page 10

p,
i, l . .
\.7 . more'
to head
•
.promotion
group

A group to handle special activities and promotions in Middleport was organized Sunday afternoon at a meeting of 20 mer·
chants, businessmen lind interesled
indivdiduals at Middleport village
hall.
Purpose of the organization is to
replace the Middleport Chamber of
Commerce which merged into the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce.
Officers were elected and include
Bob Gilmore, president; Don
Vaughan , vice president; Dick
Owen, secretary-treasurer; and
Brian Johnson, publiciLy chairman.
Emphasis of Sunday's meeting in
addition to getting organized was
setting up a Christmas parade for
the community. The parade was
scheduled for Monday, Dec. 3, at 6
p.m. Tentative plans call for it to
organize in lower Middleport and
go to North Second on the Sears
parking lot where Santa will distribute treats. In the event or rain,
Santa will be in the djive-through
at Central Trust. Named to the
paraile committee were Dottie Tur·
Continued on page 10

Clark
executed

.

..

Road closed near Reedsville

DOMINO SUGAR

.
such as protecting the privacy of
the voter and the Integrity of
each vote, for their pasltlons on
handling "walk· in'' votes that
could determine the outcome.
They are bac_ked by the Ohio
Democratic Party and the Ohio
Republican Party, respectively.
The bottom line is. they wantto
win, and will do almost anything
to accomplish that goal. .
For example:
-Fisher and the Democrats,
who have long taken a liberal

Columbus Mayor Rinehart
admits to having
an affair
.
,------Local briefs-'__,

BIRDSEYE

PEAK

:~~

·-!'"-

Diplomat .says hostage plan
is just another bid for time

FLAVORITE

oz.
Stove Top •••••••••••••
THANK YOU CHERRY
. oz·••
P.1e F'll.
1 1ng •••••••••••

.....

' "

,

-

.

$11
'
9
Sausage •••••••••••••••
.

COLUMBUS ~ There· s nothing like a close election between two lawyers to bring out
the best In legal maneuvering
and the worst In hypocrisy.
And that Is what the state
attor!ley general's race- wh]ch
may be the closest and longest in
Ohio history -seems to be doing.
Democrat Lee Fisher, who Is
leading by 959 votes out of 3.3
million cast, and Republican
Paul Pfeifer are clUng all kinds
of highly· principled reasons.

Finishing ·touc~Jes being put
.
on project for Meigs Mine 31

• •

HOMEMADE

: 030.

• Ticket sales: $1,402,606.50.
"payoff: $415,330.
:
Plck·4

.

Pfeifer,.Fisher continUe to fight for votes

Continued trom D-1

;Loitery numbel'8

50s.

1 Saction, 10Pages 25 CentS
A Multimedia Inc. Newipeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 19, 1990

.Copyrighted 1990

1'It to 4i.

••

Low near 40 tonight. Tues·
day·, mostly sunny. High near
60. ThankSgiving Day outlook,
chance of showers. Highs In

PRICES .EFFECIII'E SUN., NOV. 18 THRU SAT., NOV. 24, 1990

Stocks ...

·300.86.

. '

•

RUTI..AND • Cti8rles· R. Eads,
Maintenance Mechanic-A at the
Ohio Valley Electric Corponion's
Kyger Creek Plant; recently
received his anniversary award for
' 35 years' service to the company. ·
Eads joined OVEC on Nov. 8,
1955 as · a laborer in the
"labor/janitor department. That same
year he tranSferred. to the
·ni&amp;intenance department where he
advanced
to
maintenance
mechanic-A in 1973. Eads and ·his
wife, JoAnn, reside in Rutland.

On the American Stock Ex·
change, the Amex Market Value
Index rose 6.49 to close Friday at
297.52. Advance~ led declines
457-343 among the 984 issues
traded.
Amex volume totaled
50,647,295 shares, compared with
49,209,665 traded a week earlier
and 59,807,200 traded In the same
week a year ago. .
Fruit of the Loom led the Am ex
actives. off 'It to· 6% . A group of
Investors, FL Management, flied
to acquire less than 15 percent of
the stock. It said the move was
for investment purposes bu 1said
It retained the right to decide in
the future whether It would be
:desirable to try and Influence
management.
· The National Association of
·Securities Dealers composite in·
dex rose 8.91 to end the week at

Page3

Super Lotto
3-10.13·18-51-53
Kicker 368309

5-D;B-S

298 SECOND ST.
. POMEROY, OH.

Amadeus
approve contract

Eads receives awanl
35 years senoice

capture
tourney

Pick-3: 415
Pick4: 7184
Cards: 2-H; 9-C;

8 AM·lO PM

Sabre~

FORT WORTH, Texas (UPI) .
- Sabre Travel Informa.tlon
Network, the market-dominant
computer reservation system of
American Airlines, said Friday it
will book up with Europe" s
Amadeus Global Travel Dlstrl·
button S)lstem. further boosting
Its market share.
Amadeus Is Europe' s largest
travel distribution system and Is
owned by Air France, Iberia
Airlines of Spain, Lufthansa
German Air Unes and the Scan·
dlnavlan Alrlin.es System, SAS:
The linkup will allow Sabre to
extend its market In Europe,
where American has been ex·.
·pandlng vigorously as part of Its
strategy to become a global
carrier.
In Europe. Amadeus competes
with GalUeo, a computer reser·
vatlon system which I:S partly
owned by Covla Corp., the
reservatiOn system of a key
American rival, Chicago-based
Unlted.Airllnes.
Under their agreement signed
In Pa.rls, Amadeus and Sabre will .
offer a joint product worldwide to
respond to the increasing demand of both travel agents and
travel service suppliers foref!ec·
tlve and comprehensive global
electronic distribution.
The two companies will develop tog~ther the technology
necessary to make a joint pro·
duct. The joint program will be
Implemented in two phases.
In the first phase, Amadeus
and Sabre will provide the travel
agents wlthb a connection to both
Amadeus and Sabre databases
and processing centers. "{his will
be tn the form of a multl·access
connection between Sabre sub·
scribers arid Amadeus founder
airlines systems, and of a by·
pass connection for Amadeus
·subscribers to Sabre as well.

Ohio Lottery

STARKE, Fla . (UPI) - Ro·
bert Raymond Clark was executed in Florida's electric chair
Monday for the 1977 kidnapping
and murder of a businessman .
Clark was granted a tempor·
ary stay Saturday by the U.S.
. 11th District Court of Appeals In
Atlanta to allow the Supreme
Court time to hear the case. But
the Supreme Court denied his
appeal Sunday by In 8-1 vote.

BAIKft.BANGBB - Toni Skeea, mlae lupeetor for Southem
Ohio Coli Cempany'l Melp No. S1 mine, brlap the basket to h!UIII .
.... clotllel wtlllln nacb Ia !IDe ol the changing rooms at the
compllll)''l newest facility near Wllke•ville.
.
~

The stay expired at 7 a.m. EDT
Monday and Clark was executed
at 7:08a.m. at the Florida State
Prison In Starke.
He made no last statement.
Witnesses said the only visible
signs of the execution was smoke
rising from Clark's right leg,
which jerked when the current
was appUed.
Clark was condemened for the ·
1977 kidnapping and murder of
Pinellas . ;::ounty businessman ·
David Drake and was on hiS fifth
death warra~.

'

�MCHICI&amp;t, Nw.nber 19, 1990

·commentary
. . f

'

.

The Daily Sentittel

'

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE 'iNTERESTS OF THE MEIGS:MAioN' .\IlEA
Jl~ .

~m~t

"

.
•

,...,...._,._- r,.-.-..adu=- ,

~v

.'

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

.

-•
CHULENE SOEFLICR
Geaeral Manapr

• •
P.\T Wlll'J'EIIEAD
A88l!ltul Publlaber/ Conlreller .

.: ,

A MEMBER ol The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the Amer ican Newspaper Publishers Asooclatlon.

'

LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shouldbe less than 300
: : words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
, name, address and telephone number, No unsigned leiters wUI be pub• , lls.hed. Letters should beln good taste, addressing Issues, not personal!·
ties.
"'·,.

'

-~ :Election

entrenches GOP
in Senate, Dems in House

By LEE LEONARD
UPI statehogse Reporter
COLUMBUS- While the executive branch of Ohio government Is
• getting a modest facellft, the legislative branch will become even
more entrencl)ed In the status quo as a result ofthls month's elections.
There will be a new Republican governqr, a new Republican
secretary of state and maybe a new Republican attorney general.
But · on the second floor of the Statehouse, majority Senate
• Republicans and House Democrats further solldlfled themselves by
galnlilg two seats. House Democrats will.have a lopsided 61-38 margin
of control, and the Senate GOP will dominate 21-12.
One reason for this Is the Influence of money on campaigns. The
rich get richer around the Statehouse. Success begets success. Many
lobbyists want to be not on the "right" side but on the winning side. So
they give to winners .
The first visible result of the elections came when a group of
disenchanted Democratic .s enators unhorsed veteran Sen. Harry
Meshel, D- Youngstown, from his minority leadership position. With
• him went Sen. Neal Zimmers Jr., D-Dayton; the assistant minority
leader.
Meshel was punished !or three straight losing campaigns since he
was Senate president In 1983-84.
The small Demoratlc caucus will be headed by .Sen. Robert Boggs,
D- Jefferson, who is one of the.Senate's experts on education and Is
viewed as an Idealist rather than a pragmatist. .
Look for the. Democrats to be a noisy minority, challenging the
programs of the Republican administration of George Volnovlch at
every turn and proposing alternative solutions.
Oddly, the RepubliCan caucus may be getting too large~ Senate
. President Stanley 1\ronoff of Cincinnati now has 21 senators to keep
: ' happy. No doubt there will be some grumblers who feel left out,
possibly leading to cliques.
Sen. Richard I:lnan, R-CinclMatl, was elevate~) to the No. 2
leadership position last week, possibly setting some.sortof record. No
one can remember when the top two senators came from the same
city. I! senators. 'from other areas of the state .perceive any unfair
I dealings, there could be trouble.
.
In addition, Sen. Roy Ray of Akron, just beginning his second term,
leaped over 10 senators with more seniority Into the fourth leadership
,
position, perhaps creating some jealousies. ·
Over In the House, Speaker Vernal Riffe J:r., D-Wheelersburg,
tightened his grip, picking up two seats In a Republican year with a
remarkable display of .hard work and polltlcal savvy.
Rille Is poised to block any partisan Republican legislation that
Volnovlch and the Senate Republlcns might try to roll through the
, General Assembly, and he will be a tough negotiator on state Issues.
Rille also Is the last Democratic hope In the Statehouse, as Gov.
Richard Celeste joins Secretary of State Sherrod Brown and Attorney
General Anthony Celebrezze Jr. In political retirement. The Speaker
will exert his jnfluence as the state's top Democrat.
On the minority side, the troops may be growing .restless. Many
. , conservatives have been chafing for the last eight years under the
leadership of Rep. Corwin Nixon, R-Lebanon, who has been minority
leader since 1979. The shriveling caucus may prompt them to do what
Boggs did to Meshel.
. RepUbliCans gained control of the state Apportionment Board,
whiCh will draw new districts more Favorable to Republicans next
year.
This may give heart to the GOP about gaining a majority In the
' House, but Riffe has gained new energy from the election results. He
' has abandoned thoughts of retirement and will defend hls majority
' with vigor, even In adverse districts. It may take the Republicans
most of the next decade, If not longer, to capture the House.

Berry's World
...,.

'

'I\

P&amp;ll'- 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

--Sports briefs-•,

Monday, Nav«nber 19, 1990

Basketball
Cleveland Cavaliers forward
John " Hot Rod '' Williams will be
out of action for four to six weeks
according to doctors who exarri·
!ned William 's Injured left foot,
which he ~pralned In Friday
night's game against Milwaukee.
The Cavaliers made no move to
try ·and replace Williams for the
time he is recuperating·.
'

•

.

..

...

.

Nuclear
chiefs
thick
as
.
WASHINGTON - The nation's nuclear power plants many of them stlllln thell: teens
- are showing dangerous signs
of, aging. But the nuclear·
doctors In Washington ~on' t
want to sign the death warrant
yet. They're too busy attaching··
life-support systems .
Perhaps never before has the
nuclear power Industry enjoyed
such an alllance of nuclear
advocates In positions of power
In Washington. Kenneth Carr,
head of the federal Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, Is a
former commanding officer of
a nuclear submarine. El)ergy
Secretary ·Jarnes Watkins also
C8J'IIe up through the ranks In
the nuclear Navy to be chief of
Naval Operations. (Behind
Watkins' back, some call the
Energy Department "S .S.
DOE" In honor of his stl!f Navy
persona.)
Watkins Is likely to be even
more vocal about nuclear
power In . light of the Persian
Gulf crisis. Energy Department Insiders told our associate

Jim Lynch that Watkins "had
his head handed to him" by
White House Chief of Staff John
Sununu for the clumsy National.
·Energy Strategy he has been
·toying with while Saddam Hus, seln tries to corner the oU
market. The most Insightful
advice the department has
offered during the crisis hilS
·been to tell drivers to keep
plenty of air In their tires.
Don't count on ' the White
House to rein In the nuclear
zealots. Sununu also Is an
advocate of nuclear power. And.
President Bush himself Isn't
worried about the nuclear
·thing. When he was asked If his
appolntmentofWatklns meant
a resurgence of the nuclear
power Industry, Bush report- ·
edly exclaimed, "I hope so! "
For the first time since 1979,
when Three Mile Island melted
the public enthusiasm for nuclear power, therearemurmurlngs about adding new nuclear
plants. And the Bush team Is
talking of extending the lifetimes of the existing nuclear

thieves~Jac_k_A_nde_rso_n_

plants beyond their 40-year
license periods.
The Energy Department re·
centiy offered to finance two
qpcom!ng appljcatlons by private electrlcal .companles askIng to ex tend the lifetimes of
their nuclear power plants by
another 20 years.
Not to be oqtdone, the NRC
stafC qulety proposed cutting
back on Its team Inspections of
nuclear plants, which average
about slx times a year. Carr
read the proposal and didn't
like the suggestion of four
Inspections · a year. Two Is
plenty, he said.
So, there you have the game
plan. As the nuclear plants
grow brittle ~th age, the
governtnent cuts ·· back on Inspections and looks for ways to
extend the lifetimes of the
·
plants.
There are more than 100
nuclear power plants In the
United States, each of them
licensed to run for 40 years.
Only three have made It to the
half-way mark. Despite the fact

•'

that the oldest plants are
nowhere near their projected
lifetime, plenty of ofd.age problems have surfaced. Fourteen
of the plants are pel'ITianeotly
closed, and nine of'those hadn't
even made It to their lOth
birthday. ,
1n · NRC vernacular, " more
vigilant" . has . turned out to
mean asleep at the wheel.
As bead of the NRC, Carr
says he wants to allay public
fears about nuclear power. But
he clearly underestimates the
depth of those fears. He told a
Boston audience last month
that the publiC really doesn't
want to understand nuclear
power. "Like my wife and the
car .. ::She just wants to know It
runs when she get In ft .... She
doesn't want to know what
makes It run."
Carr's sense of humor doesn't
stop there. When It comes to ·
allegations that he Is too Intimate with the nuclear Industry
he Is supposed to regillate, Carr
quips, "I'm very careful about
whom I go to bed With."

SPRIN6 VAllEY CINEMA
446

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BRINGS EXPERIENCE - Coach Dawn Heideman will be the ·
new head coach of the · Eastern Eaglettes basketball team.
Heideman, ail Ohio University graduate, is the ihird all-time field
goal shooler In OU history and fifth overall in rebounds.
_ ~RN GIRLS' · VARSITY BASKET·
Eastern girls' varsity llaskethall team
,-is looking forward to a fine season. Although
/ young, the Eaglettes have been gaining valuable
varsity experience the past few years and are
looking (or a winning season under new head
coach DaWII Heideman. Front,I-r, Michelle

especially unlucky -and subject properly or kill your entire
really not.
ourselves to 23-pound turkeys?
extended family with salmonella
I am not against eating turkey,
I know I'll be accused ot trying poisoning- whUethey ~It around
either. Even though there's a to ruin the entire turkey lnd1-1stry, ·your very own dining-room
nice lady who travels around In a but ever since I was Introduced to "!able!
van with her pet turkeys, trying the law of supply and demand in
Ins lead, you have to plan
to .convince people what smart, Economics 101, I've thought it ahead a day or two to let a dead
affectionate birds they are .a nd un-Amerlcan to try to force animal the size of a Ford Fiesta
henceforth they should not be people to demand something just defrost In your refrigerator
killed and eaten. Pigs are cute, because there was a large supply (don 't worry- perhaps It will be
. too, and I have yet to swear off Industry already n place .
cold enough to put the other food
barbecued pork.
If we start eating something we out on the back stoop); and hope
However, I have yet to meet a like fo~ holidays Instead - say t,hat when you're ready to cook It,
person-who counts roast turkey big, golden platters of fried Its Inner regions aren't still
among his or her favorite foods. chicken- let the turkey Industry frozen.
I'll admit that on occasion most convert some of their plants to
If they are, as per the Instrucof us have eaten a succulent, processing chicken.
tions In Booklet 48-C ("Food, "'un
perfectly cooked piece of turkey
Think about It: First, since and Death?") from the Food and
breast. But If we're keeping most of us only cook 23- pound Drug Administration, you clear
score, we've all beeJ:t treated to -t keys once or twice a year and all the dishes out of the kitchen
are
es at It, we've sentenced sink (see "back stoop," above)
mor~ !eat!tery pieces of overdone
ws the duty to two and lay the turkey under a
gobbler than we have sublime whoever
breast.
days of nervous stomach.
stream of cold water· until It
Why two days, you ask?
Let's face It, turkey Is not our
defrosts.
First, you have to defrost the
greatest national dish. In fact, If
Send youngest child Into living
all the animals we eat had to thing. And if you think that all room to entertain waiting diners
compete In a popularity poll, I'd you have · to do Is take the with highlights of the last five
be surprised If turkey beat out Incredible Hulk out of the freezer episodes of "The Slmpsons."
opposun\.
and leave It on the counter
While a houseful of relatives
So why In the name of Colonel overnight, you haven't seen any wander through your kitchen as
Sanders do we take one of our· of the daytime programs that · you mash potatoes, fill Iced-tea
greatest national holidays- and warn you all through November glasses and · unmold the
the week thereafter If we're to either defrost the turkey Cranberry-Yam Surprise, ·you

I'J)

1990 b_. _NEA, tnc

"Read my lips. I like broccoli going to eat it. .. '

and I'm

have to cook the darned thing all
morning and hope it's ready
when everything else Is. There
will be a pop-up thermometer In
one of the drumsticks to tell you
when It's done, b~t Booklet 48-C
has warned you not to trust lt.
And whUe we're on the subject,
Is there any reason we have to eat
pumpkin ple When there are
entire supermarket shelves full
of chocolate just waiting to be
made Into chocolate,cream pies?
What, you say, because the
pilgrims dld It almost 400 years
ago? Since they had ·a choice of
either pumpkin, squash or possibly polson berry pie, I hardly
think their selection should qualIfy for four centuries of
preference.
This year, I'm letting the
family decide the Thanksgiving
menu. I have ·a feeling we'll eat
cashew chicken, · tater tots and
Hostess cream-fiUed cupcakes.
But at least It will all be done at
the same time and we won't have
to eat leftovers for a week .

STEER
1HIS

D~~tory

William Rusher

•

GTE technology
. is enhapciijg
commurucatlons.

Rio .Grande edges MaJone 103-98
to claim Bevo Francis men's title

Sarah Overstreet

Does America have the will to fight?

~~

Oilers
topple
Browns

ByBOBKEIM
UPI Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (UPil
· Warren Moon celebrated his
birthday by proving he wasn't
ready for retirement.
The Houston quarterback, who
turned· 34 Sunday, threw for 322
yards and five touchdowns - to
five different receivers -to lead
the Oilers to a 35-23 victory over
Cleveland In the debut of Browns
head coach Jim Shofner.
"I feel younger today," said
Moon, who had thrown 16 Interceptions and nlnetouchdowns In
11 previous games against Cleveland . ."You get to be this old and
people start looking at you a little
different and say you 're getting
old and want to put you out to
pasture soon.
"But I think 1 rose to the
occasion today and showed them
I still got a few games left ln'm e."
Moon completed 24 of 32 passes
as Houston, 5-5, snapped a
two-game losing streak In which
they scored just 25 points: Sunday, the Oilers racked up their
&amp;econd-hlghesf point . total of the
pass to a teammate during Saturday night's Bevo
year .
BASELINE PASS - Wblle going airborne In
Francis Classic championship contest at Lyne
The Oilers broke the game
front of two Malone College players, Rio Grande
Center., which the Redmen won 103-98.
open by scoring 21 fourth-quarter
frontman Brad Shubert (left) launches a baseline
points against Cleveland, 2-8.
•
Moon completeq passes to
seven different receivers, rais-·.
lng his touchdown total to 24. He
has now exceeded 300 yards
passing in three straight games
and seven times this year. 'Hls
touchdown passes went three
Rio Grande Redmen head
InterView. "They say the most from Rio Grande; Rowe and Jlm
yards to Lorenzo White, 46 yards .
coach· John Lawhorn said hls
valuable player belongs to me. lt Kish ·of Malone; and Shawnee
to Haywood Jefflres, 37 yards to
team would have to play beyond
doesn't belong to me. It belongs Slate's Craig Allemeier.
Curtis Duncan, 23 yards to Tony
to the team."
Its capabilities In Saturday's
Now 3-0, Rio .Grande will next
Jones, and seven yards to Ernes f
championship game with DisThe Redmen shot 54 percent play Shawnee State at home
Givins .
from the lleld (51-95) and was 86 Tuesday ; Nov. 27. Malone enters
trict 22 title owner Malone In the
Duncan caught seven passes ,
percent (12-14) from the .free the Calvin (Mich. ) Tournament
Bevo Francis Classic, and
for I30 yards , while .Cleveland 's
throw line to reverse .a healthy on Friday.
proved It could do so when It
Webster Slaughter caught slx for
Malone lead In the first hall and Box scores:
·edged the Pioneers 103-98.
104.
grimly hang onto It until the end .
Cleveland, which got first half
Gary Harrison, the senior point
RIO GRANDE ( 103) - Gary .
The Pioneers, bene!! tlng from a Harrison·, 11-2-9-35; Mark Erstouchdowns on a 13-yard Bernie
guard from·Oalllpolls , bested his
29-point flnlsh by Todd Rowe·, laq, 0-2-2-8; Brad Schubert, 6-5-0Kosar pass to Ozzle Newsome
high of 33 points from last season
were
·
47
percent
(37-79)
on
and a one-yard run by Derrick
with a 35-marker performance
16; Troy Donaldson, 2-0-4;. Jeff
shooting and connected on 14 of.l5 Brown, 8-4-0-20; Tim Christian,
Gainer, led 16-14 when Jerry
against t!i.e visitors to be named
foul shot attempts for 93 percent 1-0-2; Darius Williams, 7-3-1-18 .
Kaurlc kicked a 22-yard 'field
the m!l!lt valuable player of the
goa) with 5:34 left in the third
to k~p the Redmen hustling all TOTALS 35-16-12-103.
men's tournament. It was also
quarter. ',
MALONE (98) - Phll Gebthrough the game.
• .
the first time· the Redmen had
"We had no sooner sat down hardt, 2-4-2;16; Sam Stanford,
BufMoon and the Oilers scored
won their own tournament since
1986.
.
touchdowns on their first three
after the National Anthem and 4-1-9; Walt Wilson, 4-3-0-16; Todd
"I want to ~ say one thing,"
Malone had 10 points on the Rowe, 4-3-6-29; Jim Klsh, 10-6-26;
possessions In the fourth quarter
board," Lawhorn commented . Matt Miglich, 1-0-2; Jon Blose,
to give the Browns their longest
Harrison said !n a post-game
losing streak since 1984, when
"We were very lucky to win , 1-0-2. TOTALS 27-10-14-98.
they also lost five In a row.
here."
Halftime score : Rio Grande 57,
Shofner replaced Bud Carson
Boosted by Harrison's shooting Malone 53.
The Daily Sentinel
and nearly equal rebounding 135
Continued on page 4
for Rio Grande to Malone's 37),
SHAWNEE STATE (92) f IJSPS 1411-Ht)
Rlo Grande seized the lead near Craig Allemeler, 6-1-13; Larry
A Dlvllloa of Multimedia, lac.
the close of the first half and went Tiller, 8-5-21; Steve Jettinghoff,
Published every afternoon , Monday
ahead by four enter ing the 6-1-13; Eric Barnes, 4-1-9; Travis
through Friday, 111 Cpurt St. , Po- ·
second period . Malone recap- Merry, 1 - 1 ~3; Alan Alley , 4-2-10;
mert,Y, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pubtured the lead once In tthe second Todd Fox, 7-0-H; Bobby Johnlishing Company/Multimedia, . Inc.,
WAY:
Pomeroy, Ohio 457419, Ph. 992·2156. Sohalf, but lost it again to Rlo son, 2-3-7; Craig Gilliland. 1-1-3.
cond class poltage paid al Pomeroy, 1
· Grande's three-point shooting.
TOTALS 39-13-92.
Ohio. . .
,•.. J.
SUMMIT CHRISTIAN (72) .
'
As
the
weather
gets coo\er ~ke It li
"We ·played one-on-one, but
Member: United Press International,
Steve Wltzkl, 1-1-0-5; Bob Mann,
polnt to keep the gaa tank mor.e than
Inland Dally Press Alloctatlon and thedidn't play defense," Pioneer
half full , to reduce condensation.
4-2-4-24; Corey. Laster .. 5-0-10;
Ohio NNspal)@r Auoclatton. National
Advertlltnr Repretentatlve, Branham · head coach Hal Smith said as
Walter Green, 2-1-5; Matt
Stllrone spray helps ' keep rubber
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
Malone suffered Its second loss of
Misner, 6-4-16; Windell Tubbs,
gaskets from drying and era~ktng. Use
New York, New York 10017.
the new season. "It was a very
1-1-1-6; Anthony Smith, 2-0-4 ;
tt around thedoors, trunkUd, windows,
physical game in which Rio shot
pq;'I'MASTER: Send addrtSI chan~
whereVel'. Mlntr l'118lntenaJl(. like that
Mark
Hull,
-1-0-2,
TOTALS
22-3to Tho Dolly Set\tlnel. 111 Court St.,
the ball well, controlled things,
k~ a car youne lona:er.
11-72.
. Pomeroy, Ohlo41rnl9.
was more aggressive than we
Halftime score: Shawnee State
Fi'6nt-whfel brakes* usually wear
were and played together. We
8Uli8CBIJ"'''IN Ro\TE8
U,
Summit (:hrlsllan :19.
quickest. When you hear a high·
Br Canter or Melor Routo
are not going to beat anybody the
pitched .squeal or chirp from the froot
One Week .... .. .......... ... ..... .... .. ... .. SUO
of' the car, 1t usually meens tllat brakeOne Month .................................16.10 , way we're playing."
One Ytor ............ ..... ................ 11'1.110
pads shoud be replaced. Don't put off
In other highlights, Harrison . ~-Sports briefs-posted eight assists and Brad
IINOLII OOPl'
service.
. l ·fr *
Boxing
PRICE
Rowe
·In
Schubert,
who
covered
Eleclr..,lc htel lnlectlon utlllzol '
1'
Dally ...................... ........ , .... 25 Cent•
Chris Eubank of Eirltaln won
the second half and held him to
pump and no:u:let to spray Ju•t tht
the WBO middleweight title In
!iubscrlbers not de~ Iring ~o pay thPcar.
right amclmt of fuel -at Just thertght
six points, snatched seven rerier may ~emit In advance direct to
Birmingham,
·knocking out felHme- ~nto the air comlnetnto the en·
bounds.
Rowe
was
credited
with
'Ibe DaUy Sentinel on a 3, &amp;or 12 month
gtne. It take~ over tbe wcrk ot tbecar·
low Briton and defending chamballs. Cfedlt wtll bfo given carrier NCh
nine boards.
buretor and does It more efficiently.·
week .
plan
Nigel
Benn
In
the
ninth
Earller, Shawnee State cap.........
round. Eubank took a standing
New-Used Car• Do It Yourtelt: TeetNo aubo&lt;rlpti&lt;HII by moll permltte&lt;llrt
tured the consolation round with
drive a terrtftc new ror ..te-model
area where home carrier tervlce 11
count In the eighth round, but his
Summit Christian (Ind .), 92-72
available.
'
utted) car 01 Smllb ~~-Moten.
appeared
to
be
caused
as
fall
when Larry Tiller poured In 21
much by a slip as a punch from
11111-pl(eloo
points on a balanced team effort.
. _ ...... Coul7
Benn.
One round later, Benn was
Bob Mann posted 24 for the
13 w..u .................................. $11.21
unable
to recover from a flurry of
211 w..u ......; ... ,.. .. ...................m.llfl
Falcons. ·
'!2 w..u ...........,...................... 174.11&amp;
punches from the. challenger, .
In addition· ~o Harrison bell)g
ftlotl74
and
American. referee Richard
named most . valuable player,
13 w....................................... $20.11(1
SOOIDif . .
Steele had llo choice but to stol'
2!1
uo.~
members. of the All-Tournament
12 w..... ............,.... ,................ $75.10
P•
1 ON.
the fight.
..
,
, team Include Erslan and Brown

'

would have been delighted to see reason, the war stretches o~t Into
It pursued aggressively, but were a long, bloody semi-stalemate,
disgusted with Lyndon Johnson's must we watch whUe the congreshesitation waltz.
sional Democrats IP'OW more
When Nixon ordered the bom- Interested In lnfilctlng wounds on
bardment of Hanoi, Le Due Tho George Bush, and earning Brow- sure, It's .been ··nearly threehot·footed It to the Paris peace nie points with the voters for
quarters of a century since the
conference so fast he won the
their masterly hindsight, than In
American people went to war of
Nobel Peace Prize. The "ac- pushing the struggle on to a
what might 'plausibly be called
cords" reached there would have successful conclusion?
their own volition (don't forget
preserved the status quo ante, ·
And how about the American
that we were abruptly kicked Into
and were repudiated by the
people? LiStening to TV com·
World War II), and maybe the
North VIetnamese only when .the
mentators muse about t.he possiwill to do so hlis simplY died.
Democratic Congress crippled bility of "American boys coming After all,lt wasn'tlnAmertca but
Nixon · so thoroughly that he
home In' body bags," one can
In Sparta that mothers sent U)elr
couldn't order retaliation against foresee all too clearly the kind of
sons all to war "with the comHanoi.
"war coverage" that will flood
mand, "Come back IIIIth your
But that brings me to my first · American hOmes night after
shield or on It" -I.e., victorious
serious concern. The American
night. No civilian population has or dead.
people have gotten to thinking · ever had to face such a barrage,
Yet It was Oliver Wendell
It's clever, or amusing, or and It Is fair to ask how long a · Holmes Jr. wbo observed that
something, to give the presidsociety as diverse and compas"Every society resll on the death
ency to the Republicans and
sionate as ours could be expected of men." And It was a still
Conlll'ea to ~ Democrats. The to stand lt.
IP'eater American, contemplat·
VIetnam disaster was an early
Certainly, I have been sur- lng a far more ruinous war thah
example of the sort of partisan
prised at the pumber of other·
brawl that can lead to, even If the wise typically conservative any we now face In the Middle
East, wbo said: "Fellow citizens,
result Is an Ignominious defeat friends of mine with sons ·or we cannot escape hlltory . ... The
· for the nation.
.
. military age who are showing up
Are we running that risk In the · on the "anti-war" side of the fiery lr~l through Wltlch we PBII
wW light us down 111 honor or
,Middle East!? If, for whatever Middle Eastern ~uestlon. To be
dllhonor to the last generation. ~

Metzger, Jenny Roush, Tiffany Gardner. Second
row-Head Coach Dawn Heideman, Lorrie
Baker, Jaime Wilson, Tabby Phillips, ~uzanne
· Clay, Nora Eastman, and Assistant Coach
Tammy Capehart. Third row-Ruby Burke, Lee
Gillilan, Karen Morris, Penny Aeiker. Fourth
row-Aubrey West, Debbie Gray, and Stephanie
Otto•.

~·!he

Thanksgiving turkey is .for the birds
I am not against turkey. I'm

4~Z4

'f

TALK WITH ~IN\ SAM...
~e~~ DISCtlf&gt;SeD THIS WAR
T~ING WITM eveR'IONe
Et?e IN W WORLD excePT
~IS OWN PARQNT; !~

Before Preslderit Bush gtves
the signal for an all-out attack on
Saddam Hussein's Iraq, I hope he
satisfies himself on one point that
Is critical to success: Does the
American nation any longer have
the guts to fight and win a war?
Please don't misunderstand
me: I am by no means convlnct!d
that the answer to that question Is
"No." But our experience In
VIetnam, pll~s various other
considerations of even more
recent vintage, certainly make
the question a legitimate one. If
we are going to commit our
troops to a bloody desert war, let
us first be very sure that our
national will II up to the test.
Actually, I don't happen to
believe that the VIetnam .War
proves otherwise. The doves like
to tblnk they won that arpment,
sapping America's will with tbelr
Interminable marches, etc. But
poll&amp; taken at the time make It
clear that they never represented a maJority oftheAmertcan
people. The ll)ajorttles that ultl·
mately opposed the l"ar always
Included a large lei!Mnt that

_The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

**.

*.

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·
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SMITH·NBSON
.MOTOIS, INC.

·

w.-.-····~
. . .. . . . . ,. . . . .,. . .,. .

1

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•

;r

VJ

'

So is Dale Dotson.
..

At GTE , computers scan our telephone
network 24 hours a day to help us find problems early and fix them fast. But there's more
than just technology at work in our communities.lt's our people - like Dale Dotson - who
actively support their-hometowns through
community involvement programs like GTE 's
Speakers Bureau. ·
GTE employees volunteer to speak to scores
' of schools and community groups each year . ..
helping students discover the vast potential·of
fiber optics . . . showing senior citizens the
best,ways to handle nuisance calls . . . or discussing key issues like economic development
with local business leaders.
Our Speakers Bureau is one of many ways
we· re involved in your community. So don't
just think of GTE as people in the communications business ... think of us as people in the ·
business of cothmunicatlljg.
For more information on GTE's Speakers
Bureau OF•other·GTE community involvement
programs, calll-800-282-6749.

·-

•

•

•

THE POWER IS ON

•,'

�'
."

('"'""

PIG•

Mar.dliv. Nchanber18, 1890

4 The Dlitr SantiNI!

Fairtnont State edges Rio for women's tide
"We're doiag thlDgs well, but
we're not sboOtlng," Rio Grande
Redwomert head coach Doug
Foote reflected after losing 77-73
to Fairmont State (W.Va.) In the
women's championship game of
the Bevo , Francis Classic
Saturday.
Although junior center Ann
Barnltz had 18 points and sophomore forward Debbie Fredrick
fired In 17 for the Redwomen, Rio
Grande shot 37 percent (28-73)
from the field to Fairmont
State's S1 percent (30-'21, preventing the hosts from getdng
over the hump In several close
scoring situations.
"I thoUght we played hard, but
the big key In the game was, we
were up 4-0 In the first three
minutes and then Fairmont went
on a 27-polnt run. We spent the
whole time getting back Into the
game," Foote added.
In spite of this, Foote praised
the work done ·by juniors Ann
, Barnltz and Kathy Snyder on
both ends or the floor. Snyder

TAKE'! AIM ..,.. Rio Grande 'forward Kathy Snyder takes aim as
llbe prepares to sink two of her 11 points during Saturday night's
~vo Francis Classic cllanlplonshlp game agatnst Fainnont State
at LyDI! Ceater, which &amp;he West Vlrpmaas woa 77-73.

UPI ratings

Warren Harding. {13-01, Sunday , 2
p.m .

!\"EW YORK cUPI J.- Th eUnlted

Press

International

Board

of

Coaches Top 25 college foOI: ball
ratings, wUh record and first -place
votes in pal't'ntheses. 101al point !~&gt;
( basfod on 15 polnts for first place.
14 for second, eK'. ), and last week's

ranking.
Team
Pola•s
1. Colorado (45} 110-1-11 ... .....8(»2

2. Miami j31 j7-21 ................. 7003
3. Georgia Tl'Ch t4t 19..0.1 J .... 638 5
4. Brigham Young 121 (9-1 l , ..6M 4

5. Tt&gt;xas (1) (8-11 ............... ...601 6
6. Nebraska (9-H .. ... ........ :~ ..490 9
7. Washlngtcn c9-2 J ..... .... ... ...469 8
8. Notre DamE' (8-2) ..............448 t
9. FlOrida Stat~ 18-21 ....... b•• • 442 10

10. penn Sta te iS-21 .;.,. .... , ... 304 14
11 . Iowa t8-2) ........ ...... .. .. ... 283 12
12. Te-Messee f6·2·2f .
.. 263 13
13. Clemson 19·2) .,... ........ 13615
14. Virginia !8-21 ....... ... ......... 105 7
15. Michigan 1i-J1 ............. , .. 9716
16. Southern Cal t8-2- J ' ......... 3819
17. (tie ) Missi sSippi !8-21 .. , ... ..11 11
11. (tie) Ohio State t7-2-l t :.... 3118
19. Louis\1Ji e (9·1·1) .......... .... 27 17
20. Jlltnoh l7·lJ .............. .. .... 14 24
·21. Auburn 17·2·1 \ .... ..... ....... ..12 21
22. Tex,as A&amp;M 17·2·11 ... f. .... ..10 20
23. (tie) San Jose Sl. t8-2-H .. 9 )'J R
23. (tie l Michigan 51. •6-3-lf ... 92 1
25. Bay lor 46-3·1) ... ............ .. . $ NR
NR - not ranked
Others receivi ng votes: Alabama . "Louisiana Tech . OrE&gt;gon ,
Southern Mi s sissi ppi.
The national char:npion w1ll TP ·
cetve a $3 2,000 noo -arhlelic scholarship. frcrn the Gerrits Fou ndation
and United Press International,
By agreement with theAmPrlcan
Football Coaches Association.
teams barred frcm releviston appearances or postseasm play or
having lost more than 20 pert'ent of
their loocball scholarships are
inPiigible for the Top 25 and
national championshiP co nsldE"ration by the UPI Board ol Coaches.
Those schods arlf:' F1ortda. Houstoo. Memphis State. Oklahoma and
· Oklahoma State.

Weekend results
Obto C.Ut~;e Football Resulhi
By Unilled Press International
~urday , Now. 17

Ohio State 35, Wisconsln 10
Ball Srate 23. Ohio Univ 6
Kenr Stare 25. Easte-rn Michigan H
Weslern Michigan 31, Mi ami .17
Toledo 43, Arkansas State 28
Alabama 45, Clneinna1i 7
Youngstow-n Stare 38, Main e 17
NCAA Divllton 01 P'layolls
Dayton 2t. Augu stana (Ill ) 14
AJiegher;tY {Pa,) 2G, Mount Union 15

'

'

This Week's
Ohio Coll e ~~:e Football Schtltule
Saturday , Nov 2-t
Mi chiga n at Ohi o Stale
O~io

Olvhtlon II
AI MasSllon
, Columbu s DeSal es 111-21 vs S1.
Marys Memorial 113-0 ), Sat urd ay ,
7 p,m.
Dlvl5ion Ill
AI Massillon
Richfield Revere 113·0) vs Ham illa'l Badin 111 ·21, F'rkJa)'. i p.m .
Dh·i151on 1\1

i\1 Mauilloo
Loudom•ille t13-01 ·vs Versailles
!12-l t. Frkla y. l ::ll p.m .
l»lvislon \ '
AI Massillon
St. Henry (] 3-0l vs Sa ndu sky SL
Marys (11- 21. Saturday . 1: 30 p.m .
This Week' s
Ohio College
Basketball Schedul('

Monday, Nov 19
Lake Erie at Ohio Domin ican

Tuesday, No\' 'lU
Heidelberg at De fian ce
Mount Union at Th iel. tPa
Blufrtt;fl. at Ohio Nort hern
CaSe ReserVE' at Car n E&gt;gi~Mellon

rPaJ
WllmingtCJl at Kenyon
Oberlin at Mt Vernoo Nazarf'fle
t~rban a at Shawnee St
WedneMiay, Nov 21
Marietta at Wooster
OU-Belmbnt at Denison
Ohio Dominican at Ohio Wes leyan
Conrordla t Mich l at Findlay
Thur5day, :-.ov 22
No ga m es schEduled
Frklay, Nov 23
Urbana~~ Central St
Illinois Stat Da y ton
Toledo at Mau l Ciassk
Cincinnati Bcarcat Classic
Cedarville at Wilfrid Lau Tier T nv
·
Walsh K ot C ToumPy
Malone at Calvin College Tny
Saturday. 1\:o,· U
Evansv1lle at Miami
Akroo at Kansas St
' Towsoo St (Md ) at Da yton
Blufft01 at Youngst own St
Central St at As h la nd
Baldwin-Wallace at Obprlin
Capital at Ohio Wesleyan
KPnyon at Hiram
Johq ~r"rcil a t Case RPSf'r \-"t"
Nazareth at Ohio Northern
Thomas More at Wittpnberg
Toledo at Maut Classic
Cinci nnati Bearcat Classic
CedarvUJe a t Wilfrid Lau rler Tny
Walsh K C Tourney
Malone at Calvi n Collrs: e Tny
North Coast ln\•ltaional
SundMy. Nov ~5
BethunP COokman at Oh io St
Toledo at Maul Ciassir
North Coast Inv itati onal
WaJ s h K of C Tourn ey

or

o•lo Collea-e Buii:ethall Reo~ults
Satunlay,

~O\' ,

li

Case Rl'ser''t' 81, Brand eis i -1
Ke nyon 93. Thi el 1Pa 1 74

Ashland 103. Wa yne Staff' 79
Cumberl?nd IKy l 7fi. Findlay 73
Edinboro /Pa l 101. Mt Vernon 90

Capital Alumni Classlr

H1A:h School Footh;loll

Playoff Semifinals
Saturda)' , Nov . 11

Dlvb!.loo I
At Akh:wt Rubber

'iRrwt'

Warren Ha rding 27. Sandusk)' 14
AI Dayton Welcome S.adhun
Cincinnati Princetoo34. Piqua 7
Di vision Ill

AI Canloo Fawcett Sladlum
Richfield ReverE" 31. Youngs Mooney 21

AI Dublin llich Schom

Champion~p

Calvin 1Ml ch 1 79. Ca pita l 76
. Consolation
Pik e\'illf' l Ky18 l, Whltlcr 1Ca l if l63
Cedarville tnvkatlonaJ
Cham plonship
Westrrn Ont ario 109. Cedarvill&lt;' 100
Consolation
lnd W('sleyan 82. Roberts Wes leya n
£0
Ohio 'hsle)·an
l(jwanlsToumey
ChMmpioaship

Ham iltoo Badin 28. Lidlln g Vallr.v
6

Ohio Wes leyan 87. Defiance 75
Consolation
Wa y nesburg tPa l .93, lincoln t Pa J

Slate HIJh School
Football Palrla(!i
P~ !. rin~s for next weekend 's 19t h
annual Ohio High Scholl. Athl~tk

73
Bevo Frands Classic
Championship
Rio Grande 103. Mal onr 98

Association footbaJJ playof f &lt;'h am·
p ion ~ hlp

games:
Dl\lhdon I
Ai AkrGn Rubber Bowl
Cincinnati Princet m 1U -2t vs

CensoJatt011
Shawnee St92, SummttC,h r lst \an 72
Urbana Hall of Famf' Toumey
Champion8hlp
Cf'orgetO\I.'n cKy \ 96. Goshen nnd l

76

Blair beat Hauck In head-tohead races.·In both the 500 and
:100o meter races. Blair also
)lelped her teammates to vlctocy
:In the 3000-meter relay.
Eric F1alm, 1988 world allaround champion and an OlympiC silver medalist In the 1500,
edged Germany's Peter Adeberg
-In the IKJO and the 1500. F1alm
imclerWent arthroscopic surgery
· -to billeft knee over the summer.

r

TJte teams were nearly equal
on reboundillg, with Fairmont
State recording 34 to · Rio
Grande's 31. Barnltz had eight
boards, with Snyder and Kidwell
contributing six each. Sebrlna
Wilson hit 22 points to lead the
opposition and Monteleone
topped the boards with seven.

By RICK VANSANT

lime. Bussey played a big parlin
wreckll)g that play.
UPI Sport~! Writer
CINCINNATI (UP!) - R~
The Steelers lined up for an
placement safety Barney Bussey apparent 21-yard field goal try by
figured he would be picked on by Anderson. But holder Dan StryPittsburgh· Sunday night In- zlnski dashed around right end
stead, it was Bussey picking with the ball and headed for the
apart the Steelers.
end zone. Stryzlnskl leaped for
. Bussey, replacing lnju~d All- the goal as he was undercut by
Pro David Fulcher, returned a Bussey at the three-yard line and
fumble 70 yards for a touchdown came down about 3JI Inch shy of
and made a key tackle on a fake the goal line.
tfield goal to pace Cincinnati to a
"Out of the corner of my eye, I
27-3 pasting or Pittsburgh that saw the holder make a move,"
gave the Bengals undisputed - said Bussey. "I had a man I had
possession of first place In the to stay with In the end zone in
AFC Central Division.
case or a pass, but there came a
Cincinnati, 6-4, and Pittsburgh, lime when I had to let him go and
5-5, came into the game tied for get the guy with the baiL I didn' t
first. The · loss dropped the know If I stopped hlm ,short of tlie
Steelers into a second-place tie goaL I just knew it was going to
with Houston.
be close. "
" I thought Pittsburgh would
It was a lot closer than
· come at me all night, but they
Pittsburgh head coach Chuck
didn't," said Bussey. "You've Noll expected because he had
got to figure that opponents are decided at the last Instant to call
going to test you untU you gel out off the fake. However, kicker
\here and show what you can do. "
Anderson didn't get the message.
. Bussey's fumble return late In
''It was half a fake field goal,"
the third period gave Cincinnati a
Noll explained with a laugh.
24-0 lead and put the game away, "Oitly the kicker didn't know it
Pittsburgh's Louis Lipps, run- wasn't a fake."
ning a r_everse, fumbled after
"I told Gary to go ahead and
being hit by Rickey Dixon. kick the ball, but he dldn't.hear
Bussey grabbed the bouncing · me," said' StryzlnskL \'I didn 't
ball at the Steelers' 30 and raced want to get hit holding the ball, so
untouched to the end zone.
I took off running."
"I got caught up in that reverse
Beyond being able to laugh off
a ilttle bit," Bussey said. "But I the ".half-fake field goal," Noll
started to recover and got over to wasn't able to smile at anything
help out Rickey made a great hit else.
and I just happened to be In the
"Cincinnati took it to us pretty
right place at the right time. The good," he said. "The¥ controlled
ball bounced right up to me and I the line of scrimmage on both
took off."
offense and defense. They madl'
Pittsburgh, which_ managed all the breaks. We didn' t block
only,.-31-yard field goal by Gary anyone. We didn't tackle
Anderson In the fourth -quarter, anyone."
missed scoring a touchdown on a
Cincinnati's James Brooks
4th and goal fake field -goal by was definitely tough to tackle.
about an _inch just before half-

Oilers... _c_o_n_un_u_ed_rr_om__:_p_ag::_e_J_ _ _ _ _ _ __
Nov. 5, but u.nable to prevent the
Browns from losing their fifth
straight game. Oeveland Is In
the basement of the AFC Central
Division.

The Browns played well for
three quarters, with Shofner
opening up the 'offense. The
Browns' defen~ recorded five
sacks against 'Moon. But . the
team fell apart In the final 15
minutes.
" ll 's not a whole lot difterentin
this position than It was (two
weeks ago after a 42-0 loss to
Buffalo)." said J hofner, the
eighth coach in Browns history.
"Losing Isn't good. I think we' ll
have some fun before the year Is
over. I think we had some fun out
there today, although In this
business, and it is a business and
not a game, the fun comes In
winning. "
Kosar completed 25 of 35
passes for 279 yards . and was
picked orr twice and sacked three
times.
On the first play of th~ fourth
quarter, former Brown Gerald
McNeil returned a line drive punt
26 yar&lt;ls to set up the scoring pass
to Duncan that putt he Oilers up,
21-16. Alter another poor Oeveland punt, Allen Pinkett ran 38

MEIGS COUNTY RESIDENTS

-·
-··
I
I
--I---·-·-·
T
--·
Woul~ you like ~o purchase a SOx 100 ft. build·
ing lot in a good location .for only S3500?
Would you like to build a new home and pay
no real estate taxes for 15 years?
Would yoli-like to have up to ssooo FREE
for siti improvements on your building loti

-----

'

If youl do, Contact Jean Trussell, Housing
Specialist, for further information.
Phone (614) 992-6712

237 lace StrHf, Midclltport Village Offices

yards with a screen pass to set up
the pass to Tony Jones In the
right corner of the end zone.
" We came into the game
knowing we wanted to throw the
ball deeper. to get more big
plays," said Moon, who completed four passes for more than
30 yards. " You need some big
plays every now and then."
Bubba McDowell, beaten on
Newsome's touchdown, then
picked off Kosar and returned
the ball to the Cleveland 2S to set
up Givins' scoring play .

The scat back, who recently complained that the Bengals weren' t
aggressive enough while losing
three or their previous lour
games, rushed 105. yards In 20
carries.
"It was time for us to step up
and play," said Brooks. "We
attacked Pittsburgh Instead of
the Steelers attacking us."
The Steelers get a chance for
revenge In just two weeks when
the Bengals travel to Pittsburgh.
"But the scariest game for us
won't be that game," said
Bengals head coach Sam Wyche.
"All we're going to be hearing
about now Is Pittsburgh In two
weeks. But the sc.arlest game for
us Is going to be next week
against the Colts. That's the one

Star Grange m e e t s - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

we've got to watch out for and
make sure we're not surprised."
While Boomer Eslason passed
only 16 t1n1es Sunday night
(completing 10 for 134 yards), the
Bengals rushed 40 times for 178
yards. Ickey Woods scored on a
five-yard run and Craig Taylor
scored on a one-yard run.
Cincinnati's Jim Breech
kicked field goals or 21 and 23
yards and extended his NFLrecord scoi1ng streak to 159
games.
Pittsburgh's Bubby Brister
completed 14 of 27 passes for only
112 yards.
"Cincinnati beat us all over the
field," said Brister. "No excuses.
We just goi an old-fashioned
beating."

National

Bukelblll

on the SVAC courts
Tuesday - Ironton St. Joe at·
Kyger Creek, -Eastern at Miller'
Wedaesday - North GalUa at
Unioto ·

the Govenor'a omee of Arf•h""'·

•

By United Press International
KIRKLAND OFFSTAGE: Actress Sally Kirkland was fired
from an off- Broadway production after she stopped the play
seven minutes Into a preview performance and demanded that
Itt start again. Kirkland, who had been starring with Chad Lowe
and Felicity Huffman In "GrQtesque Love Songs," said she
stopped the show because a prop had !alien onstage. "I
apologized to the ~:ast later and brought them flowers," spe told
The New York Times. "It never occurred to me it would become
such 1i' monster to management because I'd been getting
Incredible response from the audiences." Kirkland has been
replaced by Suzanne Collins.
, ,
'PRETTY WOMAN' UGLY TO ALTMAN: Robert Altman
has little tolerance for conventional movies. Altman, director of
"MASH," "Nashv!lle" and, most recently, "Vincent and
Theo," went with his wife recently to see "Pretty Woman." But
Altman walked out on the box-office hll. "It's a terrible movie,"
he told The Washington Post "I know that It's supposed to be
some kind of fairy talle but I was so offended by It that I walked
out My wife stayed bull said, 'I'm jusfnot going to let them do ·
this to me ."
·
NO WEDDING PLANS FOR EVANS: Linda Evans Isn't
rushing Into marriage Yfith New Age musician Yanni, 36. "Can
we be In love lor a Uttle while before we make that decision?"
Evans. 48, says. "Why do we have to wreck a good thing right
now when we're just llvlng II out? It'll happen II it's going to

'

p.m .
N~TIONALFODTBALLLEAGUE

Eutera Conlerenc e

Atlanlte ,Divi!Jion
Team
W LPd.
Boston ......... .... ......... .. ...... 7 2 .778
New York .... ..... ......... ....... 6 3 .667
Philadelphia .. .... .. ...... ....... 54 . 5~
r.11amt. .... ............ ...... .. .... .. 3 5 .:175
Washlngtm ............... .. .... ,. 2· 6 .250
New Jersey ........... .. .......... 2 7 .222

SundayReoola
NY Giants 20. Dei rolt 0

'

Central Dlvil6on
DOtroiL. ......... .. .... :.. ...... .. ,6 2 .750
MJiwaukee ......... .. ...... ,, ..... 6 3 .667
Cle\-eland ......... ................ 6 ~ .600
Chleago ......... .. ........... ...... 5 5.500
Char!OtiP ............. ............ . 5 !'i .500
Atlanta ........... .. ................ 4 5 .444
Jndlana . .. ...................... ... . 4 5 .444
Wes&amp;er• Conlerence
· Midwest Division

Team

\\' L Ptt.

San Antooio
Dallas
Houston
Utah
Minn('Sota
Orlando

52
53
s4
~ .;
36
' 3h
1~

Dem'e-r

.714
.6 Z~

..'i55

.375
.Jll
.333
.111

Pacific nt ..lllion
Portland
9 o 1.001
Goldl"fl Stair
7 3 .700
Phoen i"
53 .625
LA Clippers
.t 5 .444
Seat lie
·
.1 4 .429 · .
LA Lakers
J 5 .375
Sacra ml"nl o
0 7 .000 ·

Saturday Game5
Boston 102. WashinRtcn 90
Charlot te 112..Cle\"eland 100
Orlando 96, Indiana 89
De! rolt91 . Allanta 8.3
NE'W York 106. Philadelphia 79
Mllwaukee-lll, New Je-r:!t'y 99
HoustOO 117, MlamllOO
San Antooi o 128, Phoenix 114
Po rlland 143, Denver 112
Chicago 11 6, St&gt;att le 95
Colden State 112, Sacramt&gt;nt o l11
Sunday RE!fiults
Uta h 103. Minnesota 94
·LA Lakers 115, GokJl"n Sta tr 9:1
Portland 125, Chica~o 112
LA Clippers 78, Seattk&gt; 65

Mond., Gameo

Upooming altractions

,..---People in -the news----------:-----,

New Jersey at Seat tit&gt;, 10 p.m.
Orlando at . Golden State. 10:30

Associ alton

Cha otlf&gt; at Philadelphia . 7:.10
p.m .
Utah at MllwaukPP.. 8: JO P.m .
LA Lake-rs at Denver, 9: 30 p.m .
Tuellday Game5
Sacrame-nto at Washlngtcn, 7~ :10
p.m .
~
·Atlan ta &lt;II Charlo!((&gt;, 7: 30p.m .
IX'troit at Miami , 7: 30p.m .
Houston at Nrw Yortc. 8 p.m .
~lnne-srta at Dallas. 8: JO p.m .

Buffalo 14, New England 0
Washlngtoo 31. New Orleans 17
Houstoo 35. Cleveland 23 ·
Philadelphia 24, Atlanta 23
Kansas City 27, San Diego 10
Indianapolis 17. NY j't:t s 14

Grt'en Bay 24, PhOI'ntX 21
Minnesota 24. Seat tie 21
San Franc!Sl'o l1 , Tampa Bay 7
ChlcagQ 16, Dl&gt;nvE'r 13 !OTI
Dallas 24, LA Rams: 21
Clndnnat\ 27, Pittsburgh 3
Monday Game
I.: A R al dE'rs at Miami, 9 p.m .
Thursday,, Now. 2!
De.n wr at Detroit, 12: JO p.m .
Washin~~ttoo at Dallas. 3 P·J!l·

"
pumpkin pies ror ~beir Tbaaksgiving dlnaer oa
Thursday. Sludents in tbe first grade Classfl! 11t
· the school prepared tbeir own dinner lasl week,
including chicken and stuffing.

MAKING PUMPKIN PIE • Mrs. Emma Ash·
ley, first grade leather ut Middleport Elementary, is pictured assisting students in . making
.

•

Pro resultS

,,'

'

CAPS ~egins support group

Sunday, No\' , u: '
Atlan ta at Nt&gt;W Ork&gt;ans. 1 p .m .
Chicago at Minnesota , 1 p.m.
Indianapolis at Clndnnat I, 1 p.m .
Miami at Cleveland, 1 p.m .
NY Giants a t Philadelphia , 1 p.m .
Tampa Ba y vs. Green Bay at
Milwaukee. 1 p.m .
Piltsbu[J:h at NY Jrts, 4 p .m . •
~ Ne-w EnRiand at Pho:ntx, 4 p.m .
Ka nsa s City at LA Raiders. 4
p.m .
LA ·Rams ~ t San Frant:lsco, 4

Community Assault Prevention
Services, Jackson, Gallia and
Meigs, has been a new program for
~ . people age 15 to senior citizens. As
. . part of the program, ,a peer SUP.pon
l group for survivors of rape will be
started.
All group sessions are free and
·private. The director, who has 35

years experience In counseling and
an LPN, will be present
The first meeting will be held
Nov. 27 from 10 a.m. to nonn at the
Allison Health Department, 200
Main SL, Room 211!, Jackson.

.Sauvage birth

SPat tie at San DlegQ, 8 p.m .
Monday, Now. tl
Buffalo at Houston, 9 p.m .

Greg ·and. Cathy Sauvage,
Pomeroy, are annooncing the birth '
of !heir first child, a daughter, Kat• lyn Marie, on OcL 2 at Holzer
! Medical Center.
·
1 The infant weighed eight pounds
• three ounces and was 21 inches
: long. Maternal gnndparents are
• David and Carla Caiter, Pomeroy.
; Great P-dparents are Carl and
~ Sara DiU, Pomeroy, and Mrs. Ethel
~ Caner, Portland Oregon.
• Paternal
grandparents
are
: Jodeena Hysell, Casselberry, Fla.,
• and Carl and Susie Sauvage,
; Mason, W.Va. Great ·grandparents
; are Helen Sauvage, Syracuse; and
• Ray and Billie Dawson, Mason,
~ W.Va.

HOCKEY LEAGUE

Saturday Results
New Jersey 3, Philadelphia 2
Boston I , Montwal J, OT
Hartford 4. Was hlngtm 2
Chicago 7, Quebfi(' 2
Detroit 8. Torooto4
Calgary 3. Bufralo 3, OT
St . Louis 3, Minnesnta 2
Los Angeles 2, Pittsburgh 1, OT
Monday Reslllla
New Jt&gt;r!l.'y 4, Philadelphia 1 •
Ed mootm 3, NY Jslande&lt;ts 1
Winnipeg 4, St . louis J

Mollda,y Games

BoSton at Torcrno, 7 ~ 35 p.m.
Montreal at Queb«. 7:35p.m.
Minnesota at NY Rangers, 7: 35
p.m .
Washln~ICI\ at DE-troit, 7:35p.m .
Chicago at Vancouver.IO: 35p.m .
TueiMia)' Gamflll
Winnipeg at St. Louis, 8; 35 p.m.
Chicago at Edmootoo, 9: 35p.m.
N~Jersey at Los~Pies,l0:35

p.m.

992-3643

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' '

Thanks."'

The group voted to' serve the
Loyal
Men
and · Womert's
Christmas dinner on Dec. 8. Kathy
BlJlcer and Angie Gilkey are to
decorate .and the dinner will be .
prepared by Regina ·Swift. Thelma
Boyer, Nora Rice, and Clyda AJ.
lenswonh.
The group also voted to serve the
50th wedding anniversary reception
for Clay and Geneva Tuttle in
February. The committee for tl!is is
to be Regina Swift, Kathy Baker,
Thelma Boyer and Nettie Boyer.
_It w_as announced thai a hymn .
smg will be held by the church on
the second and fourth Tuesday :or
November at Overbrook Center. :
Community Thanksgiving services will be held Sunday at the
Middleport First Baptist Church. .
Hostesses for the evening were
Regina Swift, Ellamae Daugbeity,
Clyda Allensworth, Nora Rice and'
Grace Hawley from the Loyal
Bereans class.
The closing prayer was given by
Kathy Baker, .

Woodmen have meeting

Van Dyke baby shower

Dickens is
recognized

KATLYN SAUV_AGE

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
·GENERAL ALLERGIST
'

"WE HAVE HEARINC AIDS"

A Thanksgiving program was

(304) 675-1244

DR. ZENNIA DAYO,

TUESDAY
NIGHT
SPECIAL

LAURA C. BABLE

Bable birth

Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. (Lena)
Bable,
Columbus, . formerly of
:· ' It was noted thai the present
Racine,
are
announcing the binb of
: officers will remain the same for
their first child. a daugllttc, Laura
:· lleltl year,
·: The group will hold a Cluistmas Christine, on 'Nov. 11 at SL Ann's
Hospital in WesterViUe.
:~ party on Dec. 4 at noah at which
The infant weighed seven
'• lime secret sistm will be revealed.
~ A $100 donation was made to the pounds three ounces and was 20
: Meigs Cooperative Parish.
_ and a half inches long.
Matemal grandparents are Mr.
;· others aiiCDding were Dons
-' Koenig, Patricia Hall, Bulah and Mrs. Lalry .(Hedy) Laudermilt,
Racine, and tile late James M.
~· Maxey, Mildred Caldwell, Glenna
-: Sanders, and Pastor Sha'on Bable. Paternal grandparents Bill
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mann, Colum~ Hauiman.
bus.:
G~eat grandmother is Mrs.
:: The .- meetins closed witll the .
Goldie L. Ingels, Mason, W:Va.
~~Lord'sPrayerCircle. _
J

A "Something Chirstmas" auction was held when the Philatllea
Women met for their November
meeting wilh Kathy Ihle as
auctioneer.
Maryln Wilcox presided at the
meetin11 which opened With prayer
by Regma Sw1ft and the Philathea
Song.
Dorothy , Roach gave the
secretary's report, Fari.e Cole the
treasurer's report and Mildrod
Riley the flower and card report
Thank you cards were read from
Overbrook Center for Halloween
favors for the residents and frOm .
Dorotlly Roach · for a "love gift'
presented to ber from the group.
N_ames -on the prayer list were
Ken and Mildred Carson, Mae Nelson, Carl Roach, Georgia Wehnmg,
Joe Bishop, David Darst, Dennis
and Terri Hockman and Thunnan
Carsey.
For devotions Regina Swift read
· the I OOth Pslam and Ellamae
Daugherty gave a reading, "Give

A pJayer of Thanksgiving for the plans for a MWA matching fund
coontry and tllose in the armed for· drive to benefit the Torch Methodist
ces in the Middle East was given Church Community Center. A silby Rev. Harold Alloway-Prid.dy to ver march was conducted for
open the Thanksgiving celebration CARE, and members brought conof
Camp - 10900,
Modem tributions for a Thanksgiving food
Woodsmen of America meeting at basket for a needy family.
tbe C!JOiville Lion's Club on Ar·
Prizes were won by C.W. Henmisticc Day.
derson, Cricket Pullins, Jean Hawk
Congratulatipns were extended and_Jason Pullins, Alfred; Maxine·
to Estller Smitll, Chester, for her · Rader, Jim Rader, Travis Rader,
election as state councilor of. the Wayne Caldwell, Robert Smith,
Daughters of America. Thanks Bruce Bigley, and Sam Dulaney,
were given to Pat Hall, Thelma Coolville; Valerie Dunfee and Don
Henderson and Beuy Dunfee for Dunfee Little Hocking· Doris and
~ir help _in ,coordinating . the Ron Eastman, Pomeroy; Helen
Desert Sh1eld
letter wntiiii"iiiibens, Whitehall; Calvin Hawk
pro~t.
.
. . and Kay McPherson, Tuppers
Edith Van Dyke, ~epresentmg Plains; and Roben Henry, AmesAtllens County Cancer Soc1ety, ville.
made hemocult packets avrulable to
Marjorie Malone led in singing
aU. !he sched_ule was announced traditional Thanlcs~ving songs.
for unmumzatiOns at the county
The MWA Chrisimas party and
health ~cpartmenL
_ oyster stew supper will be held at
A baby shower honoring Kelley decoration. The cake was baked by
David Scarberry, ~utn;ach. assls- Coolville Lions Club on Dec. 9
tant. medicare Alzhe1mer s D1sease, from 4-6 p.m.
Ann Van Dyke, infant daughter of Sonia Circle.
Rydell and Brenda Lee Van Dyke,
Attending were Evelyn Davis, Research . Progra_m, Parke_rsburg,
Cards and cheer plates were sent
Kansas City, Mo., was held Beverly and Natllaniel Davis, Elsie W.Va., outlined his work w1th that to shut im and the closing was
recently at tbe home of Suzie Me- White, Sonia and Tyler Circle, project.
.
given by Kathy Alloway-Priddy.
Frances Henderson summar1zed
Kay.
·
Kathy, Ryan and Karlie Troyce,
HosteSses were Kem Ballard and Karen, Cody and Lindsey Hunter,
Suzie McKay.
Donna Jean Baker, Thelma Eddy,
'
A pink and white theme wilh Linda Van Dyke, E;velyn Hollon,
Keith Little, R.S., Director of . property, lhe prospective buyers
Teddy Bears was carried out. The Rose Wolfe, Sheila Speneer, Wilma Environmental
Health, .Meigs should check witll the county
table was covered with a lace table· Ballard, Diane and Andrew Bissell, County Health Department. has is- health department to ascertain if the
cover, along witll a floral anange· · · Mary K. Rose, Sandy Philson, sued an advisory to any person who property is served by a sanitary
ment and streamer&amp; A teddy bear Serena and Jorden Robinson.
may be planning to purchase real sewerage system, and if 1101,
with a balloon was also used as
Sendinl! gifts were Gloria and eslate in Meigs County on which to whether tile property can be apLoren Oiler, Mabel Goff, Becky build a home or install a mobi)e proved for the installation of a
· Pullins, Kathleen Bissell, Louise home.
·
private home sewage disposal sysPitzer, Thelma White, Sadie Trustem.
Before any purchasing of such
seD; Charlayne Crisp and Joan Ann
r. . ·
Bank One, Athens, Senior Lockhart
-------Games were played and prizes
Champs program, in cooperation
given.
'ljhe
door
prize
was
won
by
witll the American Association of
ftJ/'(//11/!I!Iilfj./fJn;r: J 1/!!!lfj..
Retired Persons (AARP) · recently . Rose Wolfe.
. sponsored a "55 Alive Malllre Driv- .
ing" course with Instructor Burton
DeVeau at the Ohio Unlversily Inn.
1\venty·five peoP.Ie from Athem,
Glouster, Nelsonville, Logan and
Pomeroy, oompleted the course;
Faye Dickens, an employee of
"Everyone thought the course was the SuperAmerica store in
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
very worthwhile. The instructor Pomeroy, has been recognized for
was good and there was a lot of outstanding perfonnance concernclass participation," said Maxine ing the company's Customer SerGriffith, Senior Champs director. vice Awareness Program.
"It made. us more conscious of
..
'
Candidates are observed and
good driving Conditions."
evaluated with respect to friendly
"55 Alive" is a speciaUy desig- attitude,
appearance,
'profesned eight-hour classroom course sionalism, efficiency, use of inttcand the first nationwide com- com and telephone etiquette.
prehensive curriculum designed
For her commiunent to service
especially 'for the older driver. "The excellence, Dickens received, a cer,'
participants were vety apprec_iative tificate of appreciation, a letter of .
of Bank One sponsoring the commendation and a special "Sercourse," Griffitll said.
vice Attitude" award.

...

IDWnt • - Ollyl ONLY
Served with whlj,ped pota-, ohidllll
griY\1. cole 118w, hot roH 1nd llu1Urlorl'f, no 1ubl11tu1M ••oiPI bever...
Willi eddltlonof priwl.

s345
FOI liST

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLL

·CIGW~s

Y IESTAUIANT

PH. 991·5·32

POMIIOY, OH.

• , ..._... llentuclly F.W Clllcbl!
'

'

'

M.D~

For Health Reasons I'm Closing My
Middleport Office
Effective 11/30/90.
I will continue nursing home and
part time emergency
room work.
.
.

: bazaar.

Wordprocessing Services Include:

Auction heads .November meeting

!/;J#J/1/)J

f presented at the recent meeting of

; the St. Paul Willing Workers of the
• Tup~rs Plains United Methodist
, Church.
.
• Evelyn Spencer presided at the
. meeting which opened witll psalm
and prayer.
,
"
Reading were given by Hazel
Barnhill, Joanna Weaver, Edna
Hannon, Mae Vineyanl and Evelyn
: Spencer. Each member present
• gave a reilson for being thankful.
: • There were 40 sick calls reported
:·· and birthdays celebrated in
•: November were Louise Clllln:ee
:- and Mildred Brooks.
:: A profit of $1.200 was made
.: from the Christmas · and CI'aft

outstanding granger . award ar.J
public speaking award.
Pauy Dyer wiD 1epresent Obio at
the National Grange Convention in
Witcha, Kan. to giver ber speech.
Chip Macomber's painting, Ashley
Colwell's project and Byran Col·
well's 'bicentennial craft will be
judged at the national convention.
The group's aMual Thanksgiv·
ing $upper will be held Saturday at
6:30 p.m. at the Salem Center l!tre
Station.

Senior Champs

:_Willing Workers meet
:

happen but It's a ~great time right now." But life wasn't so
-blissful when former husband John Derek left her for a 16year-old, Evans tells People magazine. ''To l;lestandlng there In,
the market and burst Into tears l!ecause I didn'-t haye a clue
what I wanted :... II WitS horrible," she says. "I just went home
and cried, 'How do I live without him? He's-gone.'" Landing the
role of Krystle on "Dynasty" turned her life around.
"('Dynasty') was like an answer to a prayer," Evans says.
"Ani) then every year I'd think, 'Stay on the air _so I can pay orr
my house and pay orr my car and then I'll have a home and
never have to worry about being thrown out or somewhere."'
SPEAKING OF MOVIES: French actor Gerard Depardleu
says the language barrier Is lnconsequenllalln-themovlewor-ld.
He recently finished filming "Green Card," the story of a
marriage of convenience that also stars Andie MacDowell, In
New York. ''Working fn English with American cast and crew Is
not difficult," he said. "No different than working with
Bulgarians, ltai,Ians, Algerians and .Indlans, all of which I have
done. Movre people around the world are all a family. They wor~
the same. A prop man Is a prop man, no matter what country
you are In. You can tell, I don't speak very well English. I have a
lot of trouble. But the character I play In 'Green Card' Is
supposed to have languagP trouble too." Depardieu Is now
considering starring In an epic biography of Christopher
Columbus that Ridley Scott will direct. "Who knows what
accent Columbus has?" Depardleu asks.

third
place
to
Chelsea
Montgomery; shrinkie magnets
sixth -place to Chip Macomber; poster contest third place to Chris
Midkiff; 1990 grange recruittc
award to ()pal Dyer; membership
award to Star Grange; to Star
Junior Grange were Ohio State
Grange Deaf Fund Certificate and
National Grange Booster Certifi·
cate; BJ)d to Linda Montgomery,
junior leader, was a grange leadership certificate. Patty Dyer received

Health department issues advisory

p.m.

N~TIONAL

''Thanksgiving, Remembering
011f Blessings" was the theme for
the program conducted at the recent
mee~~ of Star Gran~·
R ·ng included 'Jbanksgiving
Song" by
Krebs, "We Made
It Feast" by Pauline Rife, "In a
Dish of Sand" bv Rick Macomber,
"Psalm
IOO"
bY Larry
Mon!gomery, "Our Thanks to God"
by Freda S,mith. "Over the River
and ThrOugh the Woods" 'was sung
by aU and each person responded
by sharing a ~giving memory
or something for wh.ich lhey were
tlumi&gt;ful. ,
_
Patty Dyer, delegate to State
Grange Session reported on ·
resolutions and repons given at the
session.
Awards were presenled to Star
Grange and Star Junior Grange
members that were awarded at state
session, Including first place to
Chip Macomber on his acrylic
painting; 1990 grange family of the
year award to l.aJTy, Linda, Eric
and Chelsea Montgomery; holiday
theme project first place ,to Ashley
Colwell; bicentennial craft first
place to Bryan Colwell; decorated
sweat.nirt sixth place to Cindy
Midkiff; certificate for creative
writing to Chelsea Montgomery;
color people photo second place to
Eric Montgomety; tree picttires
second place to Chris Midkiff imd

r.aw.

Scoreboard ...

'lbla aervlce is provided tbrwp tile jotat eflorU of tile Vllillp
of Mlddleporl aad

Monday, November 19, 1990
Page 6 ·

----

For a Resume ihat interviews as well as you do!

....,_spons briefs---

Speedskatlng
American Bonnie Blair, 1988
Olympic gold medalist and world
record- holder In the 500 meters,
:breezed past defending World
·Sprint champion Angela Hauck
:Of Germany In the llrst-ever
'USA-Germany Speedskatlng
Challenge In Lake Placid, N.Y.

up."

By The Bend

From the foul line, Rio Grande TOTAU ts-f-11·'1'1.
FAIRMONT STATE CTJ) was 79 percent· (11-14) and
Usa Monteleollf', 4-2-10; Laurie
Falrmoat was 63 U0-16).
In theconsolationround, Notre HerriDgton, 2-0-4: 8ebrlna WliDame (Oblo), led by Dessa son, 4-4-2-22; Loti Smith, 2-3-4-17;
Dzubak's 16-poinl performance, Kristina Nay, 3-1-7; Jodi Wood, ,
crested to a ~ victory over .4-1-9; Sheila Fansler, 3-0-6; JesKenyon. Nicole , Dunn was high slxa Abbuhl,1-0-2. TOTALSU-7·
scorer for ~nyon's Ladles with 10-'77Halftime
..,ore:
Falrmoat
14.
Sta&amp;e
45,
Rio
Grucle
31.
Named to the All-Tournament
team were Barnltz and Snyder
NOTRE DAME (71) - MI!rom Rio Grande; Notre Dame's
chelle
McHenry, 3-1-7; Michelle
Dzubak; and Monteleone and
Hess,
2-1-5;
Angela Neff, 2-5-9;
Lori Smith from Fairmont. FairRosie
Schneider,
6-2-14; Selene .
mont's Wilson was chosen the
Rich,
3-0-G;
HoWe
Kslezyk,
3-2-8;
most valuable player.
Dessa
Dzubak,
4-2-2-16;
Lisa
'rhe Redwomen (2-1) are Idle
until Friday, when they f'nter Oravecz, 1-0-2; Amy Blcan, 3-0-6;
first-round action or the Food. Erin Kvach, 1-0-2. TOTALS 28-2World Classic at Cumberland 13-75.
KENYON ( U.) - Diane RoCollege In Williamsburg, Ky.
chat, 2-S-9; Beth Burtey, 1-1·7-12;
Box scores:
RIO GRANDE (73) - Jeanl Va!igllan Carroll, 1-1-3; Nicole
Couch, 1-1-0-S; Gena Norris, Dunn, 6-2-14; Shelley · Webb,
2-1-0-7; Debbie Fredrick, 1-3-6- 1-0-2; Sarah Pratt, 0-3-3. TOTALS
'
17; Kerri Kidwell, 4-2-10; Ann 11-1-18-43.
Halftime
score:
Notre Dame
~rnltz, 8-2-18; .Stephanie Gu35,
Kea)'oa
16.
dorf, 2-1-5; Kathy Snyder, 5-1-11.

Bengals snap losing streak, topple Steelers

'

--

covered the Lady Falcons' top
scorer, Usa Monteleone, and
held her IQ 10 points.
Jim BriDkman's team kept the
Redwomen at bay by a distance
of 10 or more points throughout
the first half, although Rio
Grande entered the remaining 20
minutes wl1b a nine-point defiCit.
Barnltz, Sayder, Fredrick 3Jid
Kerri Kidwell were successful in
narrowing the visitors' lead In
the chisinlj' minutes, but timely
trips to the foul line helped
Fairmont stay ahead.
''Fairmont is a very good team
and we play very alike, " Foote
noted. "Our ladles never gave

The Daily Sentinel

'

.

Your records may be pidced up before dosing.
After 11/30 you may call on Mondays 2 p.111• .
to 5 .p.m. at 304-•82·2730 to make arrangements.
I will try to help situate you or you may go to the
doctor of your choice.

Dr. Zennia Dayo
·

·

Box 359

New Haven, W. Vf!J •

'

�.-

Pon.auy-Midcleport. Ohio

Page-6-The Deily Sentinel

Monday, November 19, 1990

Ohio

.Court lets stand onler against CNN - .Crosby hospitalized after wreck
case. In which the judge who
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
lssuoo the restraining order does
~ - ~upreme Court refused to lift a
not even know the content of the
:- • restra ining order barring Cable
tapes.
;
News Network from broadcas tStarr argued the · restraint
'
lng tapes of te)ephone conversashould
be allowed so the court
lions between imprisoned form er
"can
make
the factual findings
Panama nia n dictator Manuel
to
determine whether
necessary
I ..Noriega and his lawyer s.
an
Injunction
is justlflro."
' ' Atlanta-based CNN, In an
•, ?mergency a ppeal, had asked
The ruling runs counte r to the
high court's historical refusal to
•
t)le high co ur t to decide whether
allow prior strlllnton the publica~ federal judg~ ' s temporary
tion or broadcast of news.
injunction ba rring · CNN from
In his di ssent, Marshall called
broadcas ting the tapes for 10
the case "of extraordlnaryconse&lt;lay's and orde ring that they first
quence lor freroom of the press."
be reviewed by a federal magisHe wrote: "Our precedents
trate violated its freedom of
make unmistakably clear that
speec h.
any prior restraints of expres: : Butln a 7-2 r uling Sunday,wlth
sion comes to this court bearing a
;;. : jllstices Thurgood Mar shall and
heavy presumption against Its
:;· )Sandra Day O'Connor dlssentC •;ng, the Suprem e Court let stand ·constitutional validity and that
the proponent .of this, drastl.c
.,. the tem porary restraln.l ng order
remedy carries a heavy burden
::_: Jrom U.S. District Judge William
of
showing justification for Its
: · : Hoeveler, which was upheld by
Imposition.
I do not see how the
· ·- the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of
prior
restraint
Imposed In this
; _: Appea ls.
be
reconciled
with these
case
can
:--· .: Noriega, imprisoned the past
teachings."
r -;;t1 months, is awaiting trial on
CNN has already aired ·a
t:" 'federal drug tra!!icking charges.
portion o! the tapes, putting Itself
.._ : His lawyer s contend that tele·
in possible contempt of court.
- · 'pho ne tapes wer e illegally made.
The network claims that at least
They said tha t br oadcas t of the
r tapes wou ld violate Noriega' s · one tape includes conversations
between Noriega and his lawySixth Amendme nt right to a fair
ers, although what has aired to
• ·trial and also m aintained that the
: ·sa nctity of attorney- client com- · date was a discussion between
Noriega and a secretary for one
: · munication s hould take preceOf his attorneys. ·
• • dence over the free press issue.
In an agreement reached last
:
The Bush a dministration enCNN said It would stop
week,
: ·.- .tered the fray Saturday with an
airing
the tapes until the high
i · • unusua l government demand for
court
could
rule .on the issue. In
:
prior restrai nt.
return, Hoeveler Issued a stay on
~ ' " Solicitor General Kenneth
the contempt proceedings and on
• • · Starr acknowledged th at a "lasthis order thai the network turn
: 'tng prior res tr aint on publication
the tapes for review by a
over
l .. may be justifie d only In the most
federal
magistrate.
1 - ~xtraordi nary c ircumstances."
Jn
papers
filed with the Su·
but cited the " peculiar circumpreme
Court,
the network had
\'" • sta nces" of. the CNN- Noriega

1

.....

'•
••

argued,
"Gagging CNN will
neither cure nor avoid any
breach by the prosecution: It will
serve only to punish a news
mrolum, which has talthfully
executed Its constitutional role
by reporting on . criminal pl:oceedlngs and allegations of un,
lawful governmen)al action."
CNN cited a 1976 Supreme
Court ruling In the case of
Nebraska Press Association vs.
Stuart In which the justices
overturneo:! a , ban on retrial·
publication of a murder defend,
ant's cop!essions. In the ruling,
·the court referred to prior
restraint as "the most serious
and the least tolerable infringement" upon a free press.
In Its most ceJebtated prior
restraint case,' the 1971 New York
Times vs. United States, the
Supreme Court allowed the newspaper to publish the so-called
Pentagon Papers.
·Noriega signed a waiver allow Ing the froeral prison to monitor
·some of his telepbone conversations. Noriega's lawyers claim
the waiver does not ex tend to
tbelr discussions wltb him.
The court battle Is being waged
In the backdrop of what the
dispute ultimately will do to the
government's prosection of Korlega, who was taken from
Panama after the U.S. Invasion
of Panama last December.
Indictments returned against
Noriega in Miami and Tampa In
1988 charge him with marijuana
smuggling .and providing a drugtrafficking and money launderIng sanctuary for South An:iertcan drUg smugglers. Noriega
faces a maximum penalty of 145
years In prison and a $1.1 million
fine .

:Suppressing anger may be deadly

J

!;

!

BOSTON (UPI ) -Women who nottoshowtheirangerhadtwlce
do not show t he a nger they feel the death rate of those with high
could be mak ing a deadly mis- blood pressure b:ut low suptake, a Mi chigan researcher
pressed anger scores, Julius
. says.
found. Men with )lronchlal condiA's urvey of 372 women and 324 tions and high suppressed anger
,
men found that Wome n who also had double the mortality
:
habit ually suppressed high lev- risk.
' · els of anger were three time s
e · more likely to die than those who
· Tbe study also discovered that
,. • did not, alth ough the same was
men with a lilgh degree of
i not true lor men, Mara Julius of suppressed anger but low blood
l ,-.,ihe Univer sity a! . Michigan pressure wer&lt;' four times less
likely lo die than those who were
: Sc hool of Public . Health said
1
Sunday .
both angry and did not show it
\
During an 18-year period,
and had high blood pressure.
; women in Julius' study who Julius said that indicates anger
1 ·scored high on a scale of Itself does not appear to be a
; '' 'suppressed anger had triple the
mortality risk for men.
death rate Of those who scored
Those in the study ranged In
; low, she told a meeting in Boston age between 30 and 69 In 1971.
.of the Gerontological Society of Julius trackro their mortality
l ···America.
rates through 1989; adjusting for
'
Am ong me n, however , anger
age, weight , blood pressure, the
'• _ _J;Uppression appeared to play a condition of their lungs and
role in morlality rates only for bronchial pa ssages, education
T
those who had high blood pres- and smoking habits. During the
sure or chronic bronchial condi- · study per iod, 17.3 percent of the
~
!Ions, she sa id .
men and 9.4 percent of women
, . Me n with systolic blood pres- died.
: sure o! 140 and above who tended
To determine the levels of their

•
•
:
•

j· ·

i

i

i

anger and how they showed it,
Julius asked the study partlcipants to describe now angry they
wo.uid feet If their spouses yelled
at .tnem for something they did
not do or if a policeman did the
same thing. They also were
asked tochooseaphrasedescrlbing how vigorously they would
protest .
Julius found that about 40
percent of each sex was likely 1.0
react by tryingnotto show anger.
However, "men were more likely
to report suppressing anger In
the marital confrontation while
women were more likely to
report suppressing anger In the
policeman confrontation," she
said.
While It appears that expressing anger Is a healthier' way of
coping, Julius said this " does not
meanoneshouldrantandraveat
the slightest provocation·.
"I believe . in the reflective
method of coping with anger count to 10, or higher, and then
deal directly but calmly with the
Issue that provoked the anger,"
she added.

~ = Frank suffers mild heart attack

!'

BOSTO N (UPI ) - Rep. Barney Fra nk, 0 -Mass., s uffered a
1 mild heart attack after exerclsi ing at a health club and was
• recover ing at a hospita l, a
• hos pital spokeswoman said.
The co ngressman from Massa' ch u·se tts' 4ih bistrici, who won
' re-election this yea r after a
' : House pro be of his relationship
, with a male prostitu te, was
l " res ting comfortably" Sunday In
l the intensive care unit of Beth
l Israel ijospltal, hospital spokes' woman Kate Robins said .
l Fra nk, 50, of Newton, Mass.,
' experienced c hest pains Saturday night upon leaving a local
health club where he had been
exercising, Ro bins said .
' ,. He c hecked into the hospital
' at 8:30p.m. lor an examination
.• J! nd was diagnosed as having
·: • ~ ad a mild heart attack. Robins
:

~
'

said .
1
t
"Congress m an

Frank

~ad

• been In excellent health prior to
! this incident ," Dr. William
.Crossman, cardiologist-In-chief

t
'•.·

'•'

l

at Beth Israel, said In a statement Sunday . "His quick action
In going to the hospital to seek
medical treatment prevented a
more serious incident. I'm
pleased to say treatment seems
to be working. He has no other
medical problems."
The hospital said results of an
electrocardiogram, which traces
the contraction of the heart
muscle, revealed blockage of
Frank 's left anterior descending
coronary artery..
Doctors administered an enzyme that dissolves blood clots
but had to perform an angloplas ty - a surgical procedure to
expand a blood vessel- at 1 a.m.
Sunday after tests showed the
clotting problem was continuing.
Members of Frank's family
were visiting him at the hospital,
authorities said.
Frank was elected to his sixth
term earlier this month, easily
defeating Republican challenger
John Soto.

Astronauts ready for re-entry

1
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
"Whenever we 've passed close to
Saudi Arabia, we could not help
' (UP[)..: The Atlantis astronauts
but think of our soldiers , sailors,
, radioed greetings to the "brave
airmen and Marines deployed
•, ·warriors" of operation Desert
' 'Shie ld and pa cked up for landing . there for Desert Shield."
Monday, presumably leaving a ·
" As the holiday season approaches, the multt-servtcecrew
• myster ious Pentagon sateiUte
1 behind in orbit.
of Atlantis wishes those brave
warriors peace and a speeqy
F lying upside down over the
Indian Ocean, shuttle com- 'r eturn home. Our prayers are for
them and their !amllles."
; m ander Richard Covey and
• c o-pil 9t Frank Culbe rtson
planned to fire Atlantis's twlr)
The mysterious satellite
braking rockets one orbit early,
launched from Atlantis Friday
sources said, to kick off an
may one day be used to spy on the
' hourlong glide to a 1: 48 p.m. PST
Persian Gulf region, although the
, )andlng at Edwards Air Force
purpose and capability of the
Pentagon payload are far from
• -Base, Calif.
clear.
Breaking three days of official
., .tadlo silence Sunday, the as troThe shuttle was clearly visible
na uts sent greetings to U.S.
to observers at the Cape Canav·
troops stationed In Saudi Arabia,
eral, Fla., launch site Sunday
the firs t ti me comments from the
evening as It sailed overhead. a
crew · of a mUIIary shuttle mis- brUllant, swift:movtng "star" '
that slowly disappeared from
sion have been releasro.
· •'To the men and ·women or
view as It passed Into Ear.th's
shadow.
Desert. Shield," Covey said.

I

,

I

A leading liberal. Frank Is
known for his keen wit and
debating skills . His career survived an Ethics Committee
probe this year of his earlier
relationship with male prostitute
Steve Goble.
Frank, an acknowledgeil homosexual, said he Initially paid
Goble for sex In 1985 and later
hired him with personal funds as
an aide. He claims he fired Goble
In 1987 after learning Gl&gt;ble was
operating a prostitution ring out
of Frank's Capitol Hill
apartment.
The House formally reprimanded Frank for imprqper
actions In his relationship with
Gobi e.
A spokesperson for the congressman was not immediately
available for comment.

afternoon.
LOS ANGELES t l)PI)
. Slnget-5ongwrlter David Crosby
Pollee said there was no
was hospitalized In fair condition lnd.lcatlon that Crosby, who bas
Sunday after he crashed his
spe11t time In jail on drug and
motorcycle In hts San Fernando weapons c'h arges and who has
Valley neighborhood and broke waged a highly public battle to
tbree bones, authorities said .·
'stay sober, was impaired at the
The 49-year-old musician, who tim e of the accident, which
was the Crosby In the singing occurred about 1: 10 p.m.
group Crosby, Stills, Nash &amp;
Crosby was In his neighborYoung, broke his left leg and hood traveltng south at about 25
ankle and left shoulder when he' mph when he, lost control on a
lost control on a curve and his curve and the bike .went down on
.powerful, Harley · Davidson mo~
him on the left sld{. Officer Greg
torcycle fell on . him Saturday Pfeifle said.
·
·
·

t~rns

World's oldest person

PALATKA, Fla. (UPI) -The has ever been au thentica.ted as
world's oldest person celebrated having lived Jonger, .'Shlgechlyo
her 116th birthday with a "Sweet Izumi of Japan, who died In 1986
16 Again" party and a ~ongratu­
at age 120, acconUng to the
latory call from former Presl- Gulnness Book.
dimt Ronald Reagan.
When White was born in
Carrie C. Joyner White is Gadsden County, Fla., Nov. 18,
certltlro by the Guit\ness Book of · 1874, Ulysses , S. Grant was
Records as the oldest living president of the United States.
person in the world and the oldest
Former !;'resident Ronald Rea American ever. Only one person gan sent her a recorded birthday

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
SALE
SHERIFF'S SALE
OF
REAL ESTATE
CASE NO . 90-CV-101
PURSUANT TO ORC
SECTION 2329.28
W. E. ENGLE,
Ptolntill

801, Deed Recorda of Melgo
Co., Ohio . ·
ALSO EXCEPTING the
real estate described in e
lend contract recordect !n
Volume 144, Pogo 986,
Melgo County Mongogo Re·
cords, to wit: Situated in the
Township of Columbia ,
County of M'elgo, State of
Ohio, the following real
eltate: Situated In Frettion
12, T. 9, R. 15, Columbia
Township. Meigs Co .• Ohio,
and being a pen of a 81 .6
acre tract described in Vo ·
lumo 268, Pogo 219. Meigo
Co . Deed Record•. Meigs
Co., Ohio end being more
penicularly described as follows: Commencing at •
fence · corner at the southnlt corner of Fraction 12,
T. 9, R. 15 of the Ohio
Company Purchase. thence
North 0 degreoo 33' Ealt,
1005.20(0oed998.261toa
railroad a pike in public roed,
oold teilway oplka being the
Nonhuot corner of a 61.5
acre tract described in Votume 137. Page 735, Mejgo
Co . Deed Recorda; said
railroad epike also being
South zero degrees 33'
Walt, 239.87' from the
Northwest corner of Section
3; thence South 0 degrees
33' Well 98.00' tci o point:
thence North 89 degroeo 27'
Welt , 30.00' to a point;
thence 9 d,greea 33' WaJt
2'/3.02' to e raHrood aplite,
said railroad spike being the
place of beginning for the
tract herein described ;
thence South .O degreaa 33'
Wnt. 306.67' to an iron pin:
thence South 73 degrees
53' 38" Wool, 305.67' to an
~on pili; thence South 73
degrees 63' 36" West
344.27' to an iron pin,
thence North 88 degrees 42'
Wel1! 343.97'toanironpin;
thence South 83 aegrees
31' East. 668.68' to a
railroad spike; said railroad
spike being the piece of
beginning an.d containing
6 .68 ocroo.
Subjecttoallrightsofway
and usementa of record.
References: VOl. 304, Page
878. ·and Vol. 302, Pogo
173. and Vol. 290, Page 21.
Moigo Co. Ooeda Records.
ALSO EXCEPTING FROM
PARCEL ONE iho following
two tracts of real estate.
to-wit: Situated In ' the
Township of Columbia,
County of Melgo end Steto
of Ohio. Alld in Section 3.
Town 9, Range 15 of the
Ohio Company's Purchate,
and more particularly d•acrlbed aa tollow1:
FIRST TRACT: Beginning
South 387.59 feet from the
Northwest comer of slid
Section 3; thence North
along the Wett line of aaid
Section 3, 14818ot; thence
South 14 degrooo Eeat 138
loot: thence South 78 de·
greet Welt 25 felt to the
place of beginning and contllining .03 of an acre. more
or leu. including the parcel
commencing at a fence
comar ot the aoutheolt
corner of Fraction 12. T. 9.
R. 16. of the Ohio Company
Purhcase; thence N. 0 de·
grees 33 E 907.20' to a

vs.

STEVEN A. O!Gl!O.
ETAL.
Defendants
In Pursuance of en Order
of Sale from the Court of
Common Ptou. Melgo
County. dated Naverriber 2.
1990. In tho above titled
action. 1will offer for 1111 et
publlc auction. et the front
door of the Courthouu In
Pomeroy, Ohio in the abovenamed county, on Fridoy,
December 21~ 1990 at
10:00 o.r.n.. the following
deacribod raol ellete ,11uated in the Township of
Columbia; County of Moigo,
ond$toteol0hio.ondbelng
\ two (2) parcels located wut
of Co. Rd. 143 and N.o nh
and adjacent to the
Cerpenter-Dyeaville Rd.- to
wit:

PARCEL ONE (11: FIRST
TRACT: The following reel
mete situate in the Town·
lhlp of Cotumblo. County of
Metgo end State of Ohio,
and In the Eelt half of
Fraction No. '1 2, Town- 9,
Range 15. of the Ohio
Company's Purchase, and
bounded 11 follows. to wtt:
Beginning •t the Southeast
comer of aaid Fraction et 1
stage where a white oak 12
·inches · in diameter . bears
north 53 degree• E11t 1.
diate.n t 18 Iinke; thence
North 60Vo~ rods toe ateke;
tttence South to the South
line of Said Fraetian; thence
eest to the place of begin·
nlng, enimlted et 61 Yo~
acrtl, more or le11.
Reference: VOl. 241 ,
Page 315, Deed Records of
M~gl CO., OHIO.
EXCEPT THE FOLLOW·
lNG ; Commencing at a
fence comer at the aoutheeat corner of Fraction 12.
T. 9, R. 16. of the Ohio
Company Purchase; thence
. N 0 degroeo 33'E, 1008 .20'
(998.25" deodi toe rollroed
opilteln tho public rood. uld
railroad sp. . 1110 being the
nonheoatcomoroltho81.5
acre tract; end being S 0
dogreoa 33' W. 239.67 lett
from the northweat comer
of Section 3, end oloo being
the place of beginning for
the tract of tenet herein
cllurlbed; thence along the
IIIII tlno of Froctlon 12, S 0
degree• 33' W, 98.00' to •
railroad apike; thence. North
89 degr111 27' Waot, 30.00
to • point; thllnce South 9
dog-• 33'Woot273.02' to
1 rettroad oplco; thence N 83
dog-• 31" W. 868.11' to
en Iron pin In Grantor' a north
line; thence elong Grantor's
nort~ line N 89 degreft, 43'
E. 882.86' to a railroad
tplke. uid railroad ap•e
being tho place of beginning
and containing 6.05 ecru.
Subject to oil rlghto of way
and eeumenta of record.
Roferonce: Vol. 279, Pen

'

Ov!r 15 Words
.20
.30

$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1 .30/ day

1!i
15

15

MOBILE HOME FURNACES • HEAT PUMPS
All FURNACE PARTS

Custom Drapee

36 Yelll'll Experteace
614-992·1321
113 Mirth s.c....

DOml s. " ....OlD
HOU8EioLOTB•FARM8
•COMMERCIAL
WE NEED USTINGS!
11-5-90-tln

.10
· .05/ day

Stoekll

Hand Tufting

Hom. 614-992-5692

.42..

Mow I•

Of Ml ••le~ort
UPHOLSTERY

205 N. S.Contl Str•i
MIDDLEPORT, Olio 4576
Office 614·992·2116

run&amp; . broken up d-rs will bechMQed

- G1veawey 1nd Found 1ds under 15 w ords will be

d.,.s It no ch•ge.

• Pnc~ of ~d tor ell CIPilal letters is doubte price of ad eo11 .
7 PGtnt line 1ype onlv u~o~d .
·
"Sen1inM i1 !'or rnpon1 lble for error !I after first dJV . !Check
fo1 errors f~rat_ drt ld runs in pa~rf . Call Defore 2 :00 ~ . m.

di!H 1her pubhC:II'IIOn to mike correction .

.-

be paid In advance Ire
Happv Ada
In Memoriam
Vlf'd 511•
C1rd at Thtnkt

MOBILE
·HEATING &amp; COOLING

We Say Whet Wo Do .
We Do Whet Wfi Say
.

MONDAY P,A PER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

... .i.ft\t

PAY BEFORE PUBliCATION
. ;""" 1 1:00 A .M . SATURDAY

-

2:00P.M MONDAY

-

2 :00P.M . TUESOAY

2 - ln Memory

-

2 ·00 P .M . FRIDAY

Classified pa~es . cot·er the
foUfJtcing telephone exchanges ...
Gellie Co., mtv

Meigs County

Meaon Co., WV
Area Code 304

446-Gallipolis
367-Ch81hire
388-Vinton

992-Middleport

675-Pt . Pleaunt

~66-Guyen D~st.
643-Arabi• Oist .
~79 - Walnat

247-Letart faits
949 - Rscine
742 - Rutland

Pom~ttoy

245-Aig Grande

458-leon
576 - Apple Grovt

986 - CI'\etter
8~3 - Portlend

54-Misc . ~erchandie•

Located on Saffortl Sch... ld. eft If.
16141 446-94a •• 1·100-171-5967

11-lt.t.f.IL

773-Milon

882-New Haven

57-Muticellnatrum-'tS

58-Fruila 6 Veg•abl•
59-For Sill Of Trade

Servtces
11 - Help Wanted
12- Situetjon Wanted

13 - lnturence

·

1 6 - Schooli &amp; Instruction
1&amp; - ·Radio. TV &amp; CBRepeir
17 - Miscellan.aus

18-Wented To Do

21-Buain•• Opporlunity
22-Monev to Loan
23 - Prot•eionel Services

31 - Homn for Sale
32- Mobile Homes for Safe
33-F.ums for Sale
34 ..... Busin•• Bu~dings
JS - Lot1 &amp; Acr..ge
36-R..I Estate Wanted

•

63- Livettock
64 - Hav &amp; Grein

.

667 - Coolville

41 -Houses for Rent
42 - Mabit• Hom" for Ren1
43-Farms for Rent
44-Apartment for Rent
45- Furnished Room1
46-Space for Rant
47-wa,ted to Rent
48 - Equipment for Rent

Get Recuftc ·fact.

49 - For

l•••

&lt;

Valley DriYe, Point Plellanl, .WV 251!60 (304) 8~.

(·

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

71 - AutoeforSIIe
72 - Trucks fcir S•le
?3 - Vani 6 4 WVD ' s
74 - Motorcycl•
75 - Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
76-Auto Parts &amp; Acc:•sori•
77- -Auto Rep1ir
7B - Camping Equipment

79-Campers &amp; Motor Homes

'•

83- hewatinl

Refttgeration
85- Generat H..,ling
88-Mo~ile Home Repair
87- Upholetery

-

36496 SM11111UII ID.
lmAIID, OliO

· · 10-01-'80-1 mo.

•..

I ,

•'

PAINTING

Lei me do
tf or you.
Very Rtason.le
have ReferencK

.....

Read the Best Seller

pr.,-

Read the

f\DS

cu......

RACINE
GUN CLUB

GUN SHOOTS

1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
J 2 GtiUp Factory
Choke only
SHOOTS START
SEPT 16, 1990

Sept. 4,tln

LOCATED IN SmON TOWNSHIP
OFF DORCAS ROAD.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM ,nd
REMOVAL

CALL

FARMERS BANK

"LIGHT HAULING
*FIREWOOD

992-2136
PubliC Notice ..

thank all our

relatives 1nd frlonda
for the klndn•• ·
exhltuled to ue at
tho dMih of our

mather,

FLO STRICKLAND

for the tkr•t•s, food,
villto ...d cardt.
SpiiCiltl thanlta to AI

H-on for hla condna wordl, Ewing
Funeral Home, Oer·
aid Powell for tho
mualc, v.a-111 M&amp;.
morlal Hoapllal, .,.d
Amerlaare
NuNing
Home for tho ·wonderful care glwn her.
Pandora Colllna

d

3/&amp;/'90/tln

BISSELL-·
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IUII.T
HOMES &amp; GARAGEt
PH. 949·2801.
e~r las. 949·2160
. Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16-86-tfn

COMPLm
ELECTRICAL SERVICE
Residential and
Commercial

. R£WIIING AND
TROUilE SHOOTIIG
Certified Electrlclatn
frM

BILL SLACK
992-2269

Public Notice
Dote:

11 16 90
' ' APPROVEO:

usm RAILROAD nEs

Chorleo Mouger, lor ll~---..,.,.~6-:,!:~~:J
JOSEPH J. SOMMER, I·'
.
Director
··- ·
Department of Netural
Reeource1
MOVING SALE
Doto: 11·15-90
111119.28. 2tc
CARPENTER

GUNS &amp; AMMO

1 . caret of Thanks
The Fomly Of
HUGH BEARHS
Would like to thonk oil
tholr frlenda, neighbora
end rolotivea ,or tho
prayera. cerda. flowers,
food and auppo" given
uo ot the' d..th of our
huobond ond loth• .
Speclllt thlnkl to Rov.
K.thrYn Riley,

v-..·

Mornorlol
HootMtll
·Nuralng S'-'1,
CerdoC

Core Nu,..,

w.,_,·.

Audlory Motnt.a. PornElniiUOIIC'f Squad
,..,._,Dr. Wwb;.,.
1ond end 81011, ...._,.

Vallly Home Heolth C.
N - end Altlee. Ewing
" - H o m e - the
P.llna&amp;
Your lhoughtluinooa
ond caring WN
op-iatodond
aomfonlng.
Will LoulH; Bon Ran;
Doughier end
lon-tn-Liw, Mr. and
Mra. • - l"hhllpe
MCIG..II

I

Et'-t•

BANKS .
CONSTRUCnON

992·5009
10-1 •••.

100 ACRES WITH
APPROXIMATELY 2 ACRE
POND, GAS WELL AND
FREE GAS.

L

. \.

PHONE

PROPERTY .FOR SALE

We would like lo

Fishing Suppll•

Phoj'l'
Bills Here

Raal Estate General

Clrd of Thanks

Atrcils From POst OHko
217 E. Soc. P-oy
POMEIOY, OliO

11·6·90·1 mo.

I'

'I

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We

949-2206 .

10-10-'90-1 mo.

1

pd.

Now lotatiott:
161 North Socond
'l'ddllpOft, Ohio 45760

BASHEN RD.;
RACINE

614-985-4180

FlED MBE SUB-CONTRACTOR&amp; AND 8UPPUERS
MAY CONTACT THE STATE
EQUAL EMPLOYMENT CO·
PRDINATOR IV CAWNO
18141 411.8380 OR THE MtNOR!lY IIU$tN!IS DEVEL•
OJIMENT DlVIIION BY CAL·
UNO (1141 4118-1700 OR
TOU FREE ON 1-1800) 282·
1086.
APPIIOVED FOR PUBL!·
CATION IN Tho Dilly Sontlnol, Pomeroy, Ohio on November I I ond 28, 1190.
RECOMMENDED:
TIM L. DIERINGER, Chill
Dlvialon of Roclamotio~.

110.

PLUM.ING &amp; HEAnNG

cuniNG.
SKINNING,
WRAPPING

pain~i,.

..,.Y

r--

10-24 I

HILL'S DEER
CUfiiNG

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of

IN THE .
NEW WINTER HOURS
COMMON PLEA&amp; COURT
OF
Sun. thru Wed. 4 pm-12 am
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
Thurs.: 11 am-12 am .
CHRISTMAS IDEAS
. PROBATE DIVISION
Fri.
&amp;
Sat
11
am·
1
am
IN THE MATTER OF THE
1. Luxuriou.s Blue Fox Coat new
ADOPTION Of
condition,
cost $3,000 $900
DAVID EARL VANCE
firm. 2. Simco Western 'saddle
Co11 No. 28.B07
TO: ETTA NOEL .KEUY
with silver trim, $600.
. You ire hereby notified
614/742-2636 •
lhotyouhevobllnnomodoa
putotivo mother of Oovid
Eorl Vonco. thia octlon haa
onlgnod CoN No.
· GET AN AVERAGE COUCH AND
, 288071n tho Common Pl...
Coun, Probate Dlvloton,
CHAIR CLEANED FOR ONLY
Molga County, Pomeroy,
139.95
Oh!O 411719. ,
CALL
446-4604 or
Tho object of the Petition
•
304-675-2295
'' · Ia I" odopt 111d Dovld Eort
CAPTAIN
STEAMER
CLEANERS
Yonce by the Petitio- and
Get two aver~ge size rooms •fl:OO each.
dlveotlng you of oil porental
OFfER EX~RES NOV. 30 19!10
right.
You are requw.ct to an• - tho Pet111on within
·• ~eight doya or object
' to tile grentlng of the odop·
tion within • -ty-llght
dlya otter the lollt publico·
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
tlon of thla notice, which wMI
be · po.ibtl- on• oech SQUARE OFFICES OF THE
olao be purchoaod with. DANCE WITH THE PROVIWllk lor th- aon_,tlvo OHIO DEPARTMENT OF cllsh In the exiiCt •mount. SIONS OF THE JANUARY
woelto. The !ut publlcltlon NATURAL RESOURCES. Plena 8nd epeclflcatione be- 27,
1972
EXECUTIVE
wilt be mode on the 21th &lt;loy THE ESTIMATE FOil THIS come tile property of the. ORDER 8~ THE OOVER·
of Novomblr. 1890, ondtho
!'ROJECT AS
DETER- proopoctl¥• biddera end no NOR OF
OHIO, AND
-ty-etght doya w~t aom· MINED BY THE .DIVISION refund witt be made. Addl· AMENDED
EXECUTIVE
monee on !hot dote. In c111 OF RECLAMATION IS tionel Information may be ORDER 84-9, FEBRUARY
,of llllure to . . , _ or otherIBB,092.00.
.
obtelnod from tho Oivioion 15, 1984, EQUAL EMPLOYWIN reepond I I requlrod by
A pre-bill mooting will bo of
Raclomotlon. Deport· MENT OPPORTUNITY CONtho Ohio Ruleo of Clvl Pro- held on Tueocloy, December ment of Natural Reaources. DfTIONB ARE APPUCAILE
coclure, Juclgmont by defoutt 4, 1990 et 11:00 o.m. lithe 1 IIIII Fountoln
lquore. TO THIS BID. WAGE RATES
Buttdlng H, s-nd Floor, E8TABUSHEO IN ACCOR·
witt be
ogolnat you
ond tho Petition grentod lor
Coploo of the Plono, Spe- ·Cotumbua,
Ohio 43224. DANCE WITH
SEcnON
tho relief demondod In tho olllootiono
ond propolll tPhono: 11141285·10581.
11113.18 M1d 1513.37 OF
Pethton dotod November I, lom11 will be lorwonlod
Eoch bid mull be ocoam· THE REVISED COOE ARE
1990.
from tile Olvllllon of Roola- ponied by 1 liD GUA· ALSO APPLICABLE TO
Robert E. Buck, Judge motlon, Deportment of Na- RANTY, mooting tho roqul· THIS BID.
.~
tural Reaourcea. upon re- romenta ollloctlon 1113.54
Court
of Common
I
Probate Dlvlelon oolpt of 1 chocll In tho of tho Ohio Rovtlod Code.
•I
onc1 odCONTRACTORS ARE AD· .. Bidld ore
Melge County, Ohio omount of 111.00 mode
to: DEPARTMENT
to
thl
D-nmont
VISED
.
THAT
IN
ACCOR·
poyoblo
l
(11112, 18, 21. 3tc
OF NATURAL REIOURCEI,
of NotutOt Rooourcoo. Th111
•
OIVIItON OF RECLAMA·
l
nON,
1811!
fOUNTAIN
Public Notice
&amp;QUARE, BUILDING H, SECOND
FLOOR, COLUM·
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
BUS, OHIO 43224. No bid·
Soetod propouta wilt be
dor mtl\' Withdrew hil bid
rocolvocl II tho:
within aillty 11101 doya-tho
OtVtltON OF
-..t dll8 of tile opening
RECLAMATION
therool.
.
DEPARTMENT OF
Tho Director of Noturlll
NATURAL RESOURCES
Rooour- .....,.. tho right
1BIII FOUNTAIN SQUARE
to r.ject ony olr ott bida. or to
- SECOND FLOOR
oCCIIfll ·tile bid, which om·
COLUMBUS, OHIO 43224
b r - Mlch comblnotton at,
unlM Wodnoocloy, December
tlmeti propoa.la ·11 may
11,1110et 11:00o.m. ond
promote the lnt-11 of
oponod ....,_"- for lurtheltoto.
ntohlng the mot-to onc1
Ao provided In Section
Pllformlng the 18or lor tile
123.111 of tho Ohio Rt·
....,dOn and oonetruatiDn
vtlod Code .,d Admtn!otro·
of:
tlvo Rule 123:2·11·02 of
MAIIKEL MINING 0·111
the Deponmont of AdmtnRECLAMATION PROJECT
lllrltivl lorvtooa, tho CON·
MliiOI COUNTY, OHIO
TRACTOR ohotl m... wwy
RECLAMATION PROJECT
- n to lftMIN that certi•
NUMIEII MCJ.8Jt.22·F
IIIII minority buolniOo aub·
In IDD Drdlrtoe with the Plini
aonuoctoro •d moterlol·
end lpoaltl•tloM
mon ponlclpoto In the conby the DEPARTMENT OF
treat. Tho totol voluo of oub·
NATURAL RESOURCES,
aontrecta -•rtlod to end
· THE DIVISION OF RECLAmeterlole
•d. llfVicea
MATION,
COLUMBUS.
purchelld !rom minority
OHIO, ltDI
WIU IE
ltullnuna llllill be • lilt
I
OPENED IN THI THIIIO
forth In the apoolllaetlo,.,
FLDOII
CONFIIIENCI
CONniACfOIIt IIEQUifl.
!lOOM OF 1111 CIUlLO.
lNG AIIIITANCI IN II·
INIJ HI Of THE FOUNTAIN
,.OMc:un.
I

or Stoklr
286-2689

•4-!6-86-tln

992 -5335 or 915-3561

"At Reasonallle l'rku"
n

Lump

·No SUNDA l CAUS

LINDA'S

POMEROY, OHIO

sso.oo·.......

PH. 94f·2801
or RoL 949-2860

OUARANTEEDI
FREE ESTIMATES
111-11 mo.

DOMINO'S PIZZA

4 TON MIN. LIMIT

"'FrH Estimates''

NEVER CLEAN YOUR
GUTTERS AGAIN

MICROWAVE ,
OVEN HPAII'
ALL MAlES
Bring It In Or Wit
. Pick Up.
KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

•

UNLIMITED

···"- ....'

.

INTERIOR • EXTERIOR

Public Notice

COAL

BISSELL / / •
SIDING CO.'

~ H"::lf!Jet ·

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

Add-.

10-12·'90·t ma.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Banks
Construction

I

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION
992·664B or
698·6164

Gun•

81- · Home lmpra..,.m.nts
82 - PILJmbtng r. He.atng

84-!lectric"

NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

OPEN MON.-SAT. 10·5
742-2421

12 Gauge Shotgun• Ootly
Strictly Enfarced
9-25-'!lt-tln

Servtces

•Remodeling end
Home Repairs .
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

Buy, Sell or Trade

Factory Chalco

BULLETIN BOARD

••
•'

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL.

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp;
SUPPLIES
S.. Ul far Your
Sporting NHds

a'! Gutter

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On N_,_ 9, 1910, In
the Moigo County Proboto
C""rt. c.. No. 28820, Charlene McClung, 1 270 SunMt
Rood, Morton, Ohio, 43302,
oncl Ronotd 0. Smith, 4111118
Bourn
Pom.ov.
Ohio, 457418, oppi&gt;lnlod
eo.e._.. of t h e - of
Dolo E. Smith, d
, Iota
of 4111118 Blum Addition, Po..-y, Molgo County, Ohio.
411789.
RobenE. Buck,
Probeto Judge
Leno K. Neaaolrood, Cte..
1111·1!1. 26; 11213. 3tc

!

P

GUN SHOOT

Transportal ion

992·6009

.:•

leasant Valley .Hospltalls plered to welcOme E. Neal OrieL\, M.D. and Emy L OilvaruOtteza. M.D.. to Its medical SCIIIJ. The husband and wife pedlatrldans open their olllce at 2907
jadt5on Avenue, POint Pleasant on Nov. 1. Prior to comins to I'Oir\t Pleasant, the doctors
complelled tine-year reslderldes with -the Department of Pediatrics at Uncoln MediQI and Mental
HealthCentefln New'(ork. Dr. Neal oneza, who was r'~ t&amp;:lltchlefresklentdurlnsthe ftnal year
ol .his reslde!ICY progran,, has a special interest In necl!\ltOIOSY and endocrinology. Dr. Emy
OllvararOrteza has a spedallnterest In allergy and demiatology~ Both doctors are board qualllled
In ~. and belong to the American · Aaldany of ~ and the American Medical
Asloc:latlon. The parents of a 16-mont!HIId cJaushter, Melissa Rose. they enjOy tennis, the movies
and the theatre. Appointments lot children and adolescents may be made beSinnlnSlbullday;·Oct.
25, bycaiUns (304) 675-4107. 0111ce hours are9 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays.

Pomtroy, Ohio

11/14/ttn

66- S. .d &amp; Fen Wiler

PI••

'

EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Ojlll'ator
614•992-6120

Middleport. Ohio

~95-letart

937-Buifalo

Con1pliite Grooming
for ·All lrtlds

992·2772 742-2251
539 Bryan .Plac8

81 ~ Farm Equipment

62 - Wanted to Buy

GROOM
ROOM

JAMES KEESEE

Form ~llllllltP.S
llr Liveslut:k

141

The

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Windows
•Roofing
•Insulation

65- BLJildiftg Sua-pU•
56-P11t for Sale

Emplnynn:nl

Real Est ate

Area Code 614

fheaCode614

53- Antiquet

4 - diV811WI'r"
5 - Happy Ad1

.1 4 - Busin «&lt;SS·Treinir,~

- 2 :00P.M . WEDNESDAY
- 2 :00P .M. THURSDAY

:J&amp;l
INSULATION

51 - Household Gooda
&amp;2-lportJng Gooctt

3-Annoucementt

•A class;tied ·~·n~ment pl1c«t in The Daily Sent1ne1 1e• ·
capt "7 cl•s•f•ed dtspi'Y. Bua in•s C1rd and leg., notices)
w~ lila. app~er In lhe Pl. Pl•••nt Register and the Galli ·
polls D11ly Tr.~ne, reaching 0111r 18.000 homeJ.
COPY DEADLINE -

Mer chandise

1-Card ot Thenkt

6 ..:..Loatand 'Found
.
7 '"!'" Vard Sale (peid in advancet
8 '- Public Sale&amp; Au Ction
9 - Wented 10 Buy

•Ads that must

PUblic Notice

Introducing Dr. E. Neal Orteza
and Dr. Emy ·Oiivarez·Orteza

,

u .oo

16

OUI&lt;I;deMeigs, G•llia or Maion counliel must be pre·

FRIDA'( PAPE~
SU~DAY PAPER

Want Ads

•_

t5

Rote

lT y

'R~'~';.:,• · so. ditcount tor eds ~id in actvanee,

le••

The fomi~ of profes~ionals ·

3

Monthly

w-

.

Words

6
10

CAIN'S

),

,

Days

y

message he taped in Bever Jy
Hills .
·
· "I Just wanted you to know
there will be a prayer for you In
my heart while I'm In church
today," Reagan told Mrs. White.
White has 'Jived for the lastfour
years at the Putnam Memorial
Nursing Home tn Palatka, where
·more than 200 people ate ice
cream and birthday cake under a
tent at an afternoon lawn party

,,

·~
-yjjjjH 1: 1-1 Rc ;,

RATES

TO PLACf AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
, 8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

"F
• r~rt

railroad oplke, which io the 111ke; thence 111t fer
piece of beginning lor the enough to rn11lal 10 eoree
tr.-ct of land herein det· then,ce r,orth 11 chefn1 end
crlbed; thence S. 0 degreea 17 llnka to o atllle; thence
33' W., 273.02' along tho Wolt to the p- of bqln·
1111 Uno Frectlon 12 to 1 nlng, cont.lnlng 10 ecrei. It
DOint; thence N. 19 degrMI · being \h• dealgn to oanvo~
27' W., 30.00' to o point; 10 acre a off the
ond of
thence ·N. 0 dogr11o 33' E: tract of land formerly
273.02 too point: thence N. doodod to Oovld C, Wood bv
89 degreea17' E 30.00'toa Jolleh W. Steward end
railroad sp•e. said point w!f11. Sep1ombor 18,1886.
being tho place of beginning, ·Atao tho following preml..a:
oeld property being 1 troct of Sltuote ·in Columbia Townland epproxlmotely 273:02 ahlp, Molga County, Ohio,
feet long and 30 faet wide,
being In Section P!fo. 9 end
bordering th1 land conveyed 15, being o pon of Froctlon
to Patrick C. McGee by 2. In Town No.9, Range15
Denny Yahlni in Volume of the Ohio Cornpeny·•
301. Pogo 858 of tho Molgo Purah111; Beginning 28
County Deed ....,rda ond roda ond 13 tlnka aouth of
being e Iormor pon of the the nonhe11t corner of said
11 .5 ocra tract doocrlbad In FriCtion 2; thence well 118
Volume 288, Poge 219, roda ta the ..... line of said
Meigs County Dited recorda.
FriCtion otthe mlddto oluld
S.ld tronolet Ia aub[ect to
fraction; thence nonh to the
the Granton retention of 1
place of bqlnnlng containright of Way for ingr••• end ing 101 ecree more or Ie...
egrau over the gravel road excepting 10 acroa heretoon nld property.
lore deodod end convoyed to
SECOND TRACT: Com· EdWonl B. Brake In the
mencing It 1 reilroad a pice in .authwest corner of ••'d
tho public rood (Corponter tract of lend; 1110 excepting
Hilt Road[ , said rol!rood
15.33 ecru in tile nonhw·
spike also being· the nor- lit corner of ukt about
theeat comer of tho 81.8 H10rlbed tract now owned
acre tract described in Vo· by W. W. Slaoon: end oloo
fume 288, Pogo 211. Mllgo except 40 ecrealn the no:th
County Deed Recordt, and hall of 11id Fraction 2 now
being S. 0 degr111 22' W.,
owned by Jeeu W. Sl11on;
239.87'1rom the nonhwell leaving • belonco of 38.67
corner of Section 3: thence ' "''" · Intended to be In·
along the Northllne of the dudld In thla conveyence.
6.06 acre tract conveyed by
Atoo the following deoSteven Giglio and Chrilllne , cribed r..l eltete aftuated in
Giglio to Denny Yahinl and tho Townohlp of Cotumblo,
Ann Blackwell, as recorded County of Moiga ond State
in Volume 279, Pogo 805 of of Ohio ond bounded end
tho , Molga , County Deed deaarlbed •• follows, to wh: '
Recorda, S. 99 degreeo 43' Commencing at 1 atelce 93
W. IB2.B5' to tho plica of
rodund 58/100rodanonh
begiMing, ..id point bel~g
of the southwelt corner of
the Northeatt corner of this
Fl'lctlon 3; thence north
tract: thence S. 0 dogreeo 113.17 rada; thence _ , to
4B' E. 1.47.29' to o point; the center of the township
thence N. 83 dogreeo 58' rood; lhencooouthortydlrecW., 743.32' to a point: tion following the center of
thence N. 89 degree.• 43' E..
aold rood to tho nonh line of
604. 12' to tho place of Thomaa Throcll:morton·a
beginning. being 3.04acrea.
fond; thence WHt to the
more or len . Deed . Referptaco of bqlnnlng oatl'
ence; Volume 240. page
meted et 47 acres be the
1049. and Volume 306,
aeme mare or leu . S:eid
Page 290, end Volume 308,
above deocrlbed Perce! Two
Page 292, end Volume 218.
121 being in olt 195.17 ocroa,
Page 219 .
more or leas. Aefenlno1:
Sold preml..a epprailod Volume 2111, poge 411 end
at seventeen thouupd eight
Volume . 211, Pogo 4189.
hundred dollars (U7,800),
Deed Rocordo of Melga
ahd Cannot be told tor Ieee
County. Ohio. Subject to
than two-thirda of thet
••mente, letlua, mineral
amount.
arente and Mcumbrancee Of
PARCEL TWO (2): Comr8cord. DHd R'•terenc1: Vomencing at the northeaat ~mo 313, Pogo 98 Molga,
comer of Fraction 3 In
County D11d Record. Sold
Columbia Township; thence
proml111 opprollld et SixtySouth about 94 roda or to Nino thou oond lix hundred
the northeast cori'Mir of
dollora (fl9.100) end conThomaa Throckmorton land;
not till · aold for
tHen \
thence wut lbout174 roda two-thlrda of thet omount.
to tttll w11t line of aaid
Torma of S.toi Ton PerFraction; thence north to the
cent n 0"1 Cllh or conlfled
northwett corner of ..id
chock In hend.on dey of11te
FriCtion 3; tHence eaot ' with be fence to 111 pold upon
along the north line of said
-Froction to tho piece of delivery ofJoinel
M. lotaby
beginning, lltimeted at
Sheriff, Motga Co .• Ohio
102.15 ecrea. more or 1111.
Frederick B. KleckhOJer. Jr.
Alao, tht . following real
Attllrney tor 'PtaintHI
eltete in Townaf'llp of Co111119. 28; (1213, 3tc
lumbia, County of Melgo,
end atate of Ohio, to-wit:
Cmmencing26 chalnaaouth
of the northwen comer of . Newr 'ltlaa a Vac:alloll
Section 3 In Nid Townolllp
They Vt\:lrk AI 'MI1
of Cotumblo: thence South
19 chain• and 17. tlnko to a

'

Bu 1ness Services

• The Area's "umber 1 Mark~tplace

116

Public Notice

•

Classifie

Crosby was taken io Encino
Hospital then later transferred to
Cedars- Sinal hospital In Los
Angeles where the bones were
reset.
Hospllal spokesman Ron Wise
satd Crosby spent Saturday night
in the Intensive care,unlt but was
transferred to a private room
Sunday.
His condition was listed as fair.
" He's doing fine," Wise said.
It was not lmmrolately known
how long Crosby would remain
hospitalized.

The Daily s.ntinBI-Page-7

911 Hysall St.
. Middleport, Oh.

992·2034

1 100 .Remlnglon
Slug Guns ·
870 Remington
Slug Guns
Ithaca Slug Guns
11-13-1 mo.

USED APPUANCES
90 DAl WA'nAIITY
WASH£1$-$100 up
OIIYEJ$-$69 up
· .
IEFIIGEIATOI$-$100 up •

,RAIIGES-811-Eioc.-$125 up
FIEIZER$-1125 up
·
IICRO OVEN5-$79 up

lEN'S APPUANCE
SEIVI(E .
992-5335 ... 115·3561
..._ ........ OffiCe
.

. .POIIIIOJ;..,_ ..
· ·---· 10/10/'19 tin

andre:
~· radiiators· and
heater cores. We can
also ocid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
PA1" HILL FOlD
. . 992-2196
Middleport;

YOUNG'S
CARPENm SERVKE

-Room Addltlona
-Gutter Work
-Etectrlcot ·• Plumbing
- Concrete Work
-Roofing
-Interior 1: bterlor
Pointing
IFREE ESTIMATESI

V.

C. YOUNG II
992·6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

1t/t4/tln

BISSEll &amp; BUIKE
CONSTRUCDON
•N•w 'Hom••

•Garages

•Complete
· R,tmotlellng
Stop &amp; Compart
Fr" Estimatts

985-4473 .
667-6179
B.UILDING &amp;
REMODEUNG
Commercial •
Ralidential
•Roofing
•Siding

•Windowa·
1111'1 II Wll1h lleitt -;1

BANKS
CONSTRUCnON
992·&amp;009
'

111-1-1 ...

·

�Pilei• 8-lhe Daily Sentinel

l\t1onday, November 19, 1990

r~: 1r1c unc crnent s

42 Mobile Homes

LAFF-A-DAY

,.

ror Rent

Monday, November 19, 1990

· -

. ~~~-~r: I

Gooda

.. .._-and
wat• lumllhlcl, .......... CII ,..
~3J.m.~Ad, Point

No hwollng .. Ir-Ing on
~"'to.~
Crab

..... ':

2br Mobile HofM. at !UWF -L
11447W111.

No Homtlng or Troo-lllil on

3br llobiiO Homo lor R!"', " n l - .. unlumiOiood. ....,_,
2p.loo.

propo11y of Roymcind .Soiolh,
Gllllpolll Ferry, WV.
.

":::,:3liil Noon

,

~

--0127.

I

a• ..
..... ,.._-

HIOIIIIiil
or
Glon
McCoy
~Y on At. 2 1
Ridge.
.

Extno ..... 14oi7D 2br, -

.=.=:
• --

a
AvaUabte

llpolfo, OH 4_..

Giveaway
2--1-.ttonl
wlolte, 7 -luo aid, 3CIU7So _ _ _...__,__ __
7114
'
11
tlelp Wanted
3 month aid lolltono. lloclo, .... ..:..;._~.;:;.~;;.;.;,;.;;._ _
ond m~ilkolond fwnooiO. Llllor Cuirently
occoptlng
.• fi"
pllcalloM for lull ar porHimo
dontol loyvlo110 pooftlon. 111101
loo llconAd lc proctlcl In tho

IIIIo &lt;I Ohio. Roou- may loo
holnd.
Mill: clo 041, c/o llllllpoiiO
·
Box aprlnp, twin ala. f1418i2. O.lty Trtbunl, 12.5 Third Ave,
1122.
911ilpolla, OH 45131.
F.. olzo mottno ond bol Euy Wootol EICOIIOnl Poyl Aaoprlngo, 3CIUI5-3002.
. . .biO ProoMII' ol homo. Col

. . . R-Illa, 114-3'1U401.
Lldlooo WTIII walch found - r
Biillono l and tho Under
m oto.... Clll tho
o.ny s.ntlojii1141H2~.1SS.

i.Qsr: Hoovy donlm cool, mol
Dllld lining. n-o llno collar on
l=lltwood• Rl)ld nur chwch.on

S1turolay nlglol..114-tt2•7302.•
·1.411: Lldlooo Gold wrlol wolcll,
o.,.l oloopo, 4 1011 on ...h oklo,
oOblloly In Golllpollo, probobly

r.wdre.. shop. A•ardl 114-38&amp;-

114,51.

Gallipolis
&amp; Vlcfnlty
All Void S.ln lluol Ba Pold In
Act&lt;o-. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
t!Mo doy 1oo1oro tho od lo to run.
Solndoy odlllon • 2:00 p.m.
Frldly. llo~olay odKion • 2:00
p.m. Soturdly.

..

1230.

&amp; Auction
Rick Poanon -ion Company
now booking auctions, IX·
Dlllence tn1ke1 It'll dlff•,.nc•.
K•nl~o~cky,

YloJII!olo, 1104-77W785.

w...

441-4040.

tlomes for Sale

44

co ~::z

atmoephel'l, $34,000.
.3711, efter &amp;p.m.

ALL 00\I.J.M'( ·

*"'

-.. 0-.---·

~&lt;STIG/~

tot411.-.............. 1711." - IH
1101ond
.. "' t121. -

COLL~,

a 1G
""'~-.4-­
a.......
.._,liDdon
.. - .. or"'r\1N'oom
"""'"*·IUIIM.
!loool

fW!.V~...

~t.JCITIU.
(..1~!

L/&gt;Jfl F!rOV.

.... Otin Cotolnola I, I,
gun. loci
lloloy ...
....
_ 1:11. -

Horwe• &amp; Ponlll; 514-441-2107.
&amp;1+-1504.

11&lt;1-446-t168.

now

service

Dlrec·

Coordlnllor In

addition to Social Service Ex·
perienc:e, Individual must 1lso
~.... ttrong 1klllsln Market1!'19 Census Development I
COmmllment to Quality Patient
Care. ~mpetitlvt S.!1ry &amp;
Benefit Package. Send eon.
Hdentlal
Rnurna tb Ad·
mln.tntor, Four Windt Nuralng

....

llan~gu

Joe~·

poshlon far _..

vice OJllonlzatlon f&lt;&gt;Vorln;
SouthHitim Ohio. Prefw put

e:oo !1)1ill • lil

11

Help Wanted

-lao

TO
6ECOME A WAITER SOMEDAV?

PROSABLI{, lo!OWEVER,
NOT TI4E SORT OF TI.IIN6
TO PUT ON A F,ESUME ..

... cnz

12,500 CREDIT CARDI
a..-ood- dooY oppi&lt;WIII
Allo C!i•IIIJ for I(() dopooR
VISMIC lnd'coofo·............ 1·
~IEJt 02524.

ful.

Sand rnume, InCluding

vounteer up.rtence, to: AmY Jo
Sommers, 923 M•rdec St .• WHt
AYOfj - All Coil Morilyn Union, OH 468t3. (E.O.E.}
- 3 0 4 812 2145.
HOME TYPISTS, PC uure
roMdod. $35,000 potonllal.
AN. SOUTH CENTR-'L OHIO
tf you IN lnteni!ltad In • •lllng Dolollo. (1) 805-687-6000 Ext. B- I n lho lliiiiO Col!nly ..... 4512,
wtoy not conoldor AN.? Sand uo
Business
lnfornoltlon ....... your. 14
Mlf and JCiiir - " lolotory wo
Training
Wll oontiiCt: you for 1n Interview.
llond To: AN. South Control Retrain
NowiiiSouthustem
Ohio ATTN: lllrfoallng, 710 Bulin. . College,
Spring Valley
W.llr St. Ponomouth, Ohio Plou. Coil Today, 114-446-436711
45682.
Roglllorollon fiO.OS.1ZliiB.

a oecuNenQ

'tla~.

YEAH, 8UT I

FortuneQ
())I Drum of J ..nnle
CIJ ())CIIn- E - Q

mur loiJI No expo~.... 18 Wanted to Do
n
ry. EO&lt;COIIonl poyl Work .:.,:__,,:..;..::.;,::,:..:.,:..:..:.__
tit homO, Coil toll frH: 1 - B11utlf\' your cor l proloo:l II
lltW213.
·
lfom wfntor oa11 I g~ma. E•pon
IUio e...nlng Inside &amp; out.
lloolooiiDrvg
Counoolor lo Rlvonldo Auto Dololllng. 104~ CCM

nllllng, edU111Ionl,
pc 11 ltllto.tt, lie. In end out

44&amp;-1110.

........ olltlng. Clulllllcatlono: High School otudont wt1 do
......_.. DlgrN, c.o.c. or hOuee clllnlng or babya~';/.
evening• Of wMkende. 11114
•
C.A.C. - I N .
dtllral. IMtd ,....... 12-10. 15514.
tO 10: P.A.C.T.l. 1 At.l2,
271-

Exijonco

NowaHour
·
II]} • Night Court Q
(1Z • Curren! Affair Q
IIJ MacGyver Q

7:30 (2J •

D Motorw- llluatrelecl

. .iHfY fAY T'Ht5 $How
1$ TAfl6t=TING TffE

a Croaaflre

7:35 W The Jeffenona
1:00 (2J
IIJ Freoh Prince of

J, G8°UP.

e

a.t Air Thanksgl'llng turns

into a disaster after the kids
cook the dinner. Stereo. t:;1
&lt;Il MOVIE: The l!moklaat
Club jR} (2:00)

tor Sale
$500 Down On Sllect Used
Homee. Payment• A• Low All

Call EIH• HOlM C.n·

,., a11..aD0-589-5'111.

1983 Scottsd•l•, 12x10. 2br, all
cont. a~. oxtro nlco, 614-

:.":il15t,814-44U885.

a

1D8714x70, Cllyton Fantasy 2br,
2 bath, h ... pump Ioiii of eKtrat.
304-4175-242!.

(:j:12)

'',.

Antiquo Morblo Top Stlndo, 614-

317-G513.

.

1120/lon, ........
·
$1-,
lllolfLII-n'o
F"""", Rt.
1o12
o.m.. J04.t31.
Ia Food

33 Farms for Sale

2011.

212

304472-41405 or 372·2!711.

LOTS FOR SALE In Golllpollo
Ferry. Will accept trailer., city

Wltlf available. Phone 304-875-

2722.
Rout• 2 Alhton, 1 acre lotek 3
miiiO oouth Golllpollo Lac o,
pubUc wat.,, no rellrlctlont,
11om1 with river frontage, :J04.
5711-Z331.

Rentals

lllglo VNrO Dly Core Contor
oiOpondobiO,

atrucUon
2516.

workera,

304-882·
.

Space for Rent

roglltor 30W715-51147.
IIIII Pau18'1 Day c. ... Cwlter.
SolO, o,_biO, clllldcln. M·F
I I.IIL • 1:30 p.m. lao! 2 •10.
. after - · Drop.lno
···~liM. 114-441-1224.

Forl8ase

Homelltll 24G ChalniiW; King
Woodfumaco, 114-251-12211.

20x40 Solar Pool C&lt;wor I M•lll•
Dining Hulc!o1 $79 IICh. Clll
Rhlll4-246-..7110'10lliifl.
30.01 RIIIO wHh ooopo, 304-&lt;1752443 oftor I p.IIL
4 door bour ond 5 door
· 2 1ow to~ olr • ..,...

55

Building
Suppllea

71

lorfclo, -010. ~= WI.,.
wla-Blook,••)lntolo,
ton, •lo Gnndo, OH can 114241o8121.

Q-

,sa__P_et_s,....,fo_r...,Sa--:le,...~

-oon. 304-171:. ·
Groom IOid Supply ~
5 112 goifo!o Aquo~um coonpiOto.
AH brMciO. All
114 4... 1241
..... Plil Food 0....

Autoa tor sate

1170 Non. 2 -~-::· $1,000;
o.1.o, Clll114-44
.·

"

1;

~"":.•=:~~

=.:::

Serv1ces

lmprovilments

.;r.

o

BARN,EY
WHAT'S
·ALL THAT
: RACKET?

1

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

-

8U11.D11G IIA'IERIALS SALES

choln of
I lied •• orod loullalng noatorlol
. ~~- hoo on -lng lor In10 tau ...,......btiKy
lor .. of bulldlliil
_....
In
tho
Polnl
PIJII()N.

-

__.!poliO ........ '"'

'.

._.VIc
=::,kup, end doii¥Ory. 114- j .
.....

Business
Opportunity

er-11. Rd. Pari-, 8up.

,

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

INO!lCEI
OHIO YALLIV PUBLISHING CO.
room....,. thai you do buolwllh poopiO you k.-, lnd
NOT 1 0 - - t " ' - h lho
..., unll Jlilloa,.ln-lgatod

COnlr'o Plumbing
andHaotlna
-•ndPrno

lho ollorlng.

llllllpollo, Ololo

-~~~·~·~·~·~··~~~~--~;

111111- ... . - roqulrod

· EARN $11,000
..... &amp;::c:wtnllt OUIItllnctlng No MMing, P.T., nlld local peroon to 101¥ln nat'lbrooocf cancly
ti.OOO ..... ooqulrod. '1·
~ -712-1414.

Ellelrlcal &amp;

::'::Ia.. "t.:"'- Cf.

=..::::.....-lono.
:2i):'l:11o~ ~

Retrlgel'lllon

U, l.toogo locol O-lio&amp; drink YOnd•
, WV 21110.
lng route, will Hli 111 or pert,
___ _..._ . On Rhw repeat
buei,...•,
uci.lr~~
ClrW ....,..._,_,
• IOcotlcno, ,obovoo O¥orogo InGold ~......,_., - - como, 211·2t2·t4t0.
. IIJC.Q. .. for you, 1=::::!.:==::::._ __
,_ koloolo-tlon 17.10 Yondlliif Acuto, Locol for 1110
toii.KA. .loll llr&lt;!';j 5I Cloy CHEAP: Muot ooll qulcloly 1 Lioll
I:2711-:::..:2S5=2·~-----

Polnl

lor - · _ , . -

Money to Loan

'c"'R"'E"'D"rr,....,Pw.,.,;s. -:oo=Lo,:..;.,c"'R"'eo=rr

lit 112.
E.aOIIIenl Inc-::~ workl
Asumbe• •mpll
ucte It
Ext. 5214.

n-. • - -

CARD. VllaiMtootorcord guoron·
teed. Cash Advancea, no
aecurhy dapoalt, no credit
chock. f·900-226.Q048. $19.95

24....,.,

'"·

.. ·-=/-.-

.......
:"'ro.w.

l.o.t.NS BV MAIL
CIOtti . . - lor Up lo IS,OOO In 72 houoL We
Futlotlmo. 114-211- can holp you gal 1 olgnOturo
Loon By Moll. 1-t100.24&amp;oll!OO.
$9.95foo.

f

CLANeiN' HER
COWBELL II

THREE-ALARM
•oSSIPU

Hou. I mobile hame, 2 bedooom~lohod

Now

.

or unfumloloool.

, WY. 3041882~4M

' 3 . ............ - .
nqulmol. Col 114-441o

aorsp.m.

O!oo food.- - . lltf4.l7l.
2722.
'

I

a

a

0

Rood,_,.,, 41111..
::.:~~;!:=!I"'I:i!:f'l:,01:-..:::• ~ 22
1

ELVINEY'S OUT
AT TH' FENCE

Sototlc Tonk Punooliii15t0._Gollll , ·
Co. RON EVANS ENTEAP•ISES,
JacliMn, OH HOO-I37..1121.
''
''
DIWe
Servtce, : :

u_.
21

'

,.

F1nanc1al
. . -. :rm--r:onllll.
DoiiiiL (I}
Ext. 1-

MY HIP PO::Ker.

--~~ 2 - ·

Wlllcoooloor -otyln my loonoo.

PC

ANYMORE.

NOT BINCE I 6t'IRTEO OI.RRYING
MY SNA!c:e ARO!.JND IN

•

AKC ....lhlh 111
. ... poiPII'/. '12 ... old~ IOid
.,,_., popor - ·
and
~
. . . ,_.. mol DooohiiMod
poop I171.10W1141. .

114/lt2.aTI'I.

TYPISTS,

SHe USED 1l4
SLIT NOT

---------.
. ;zt~
J ~:
81
Home ·

AKC r , _ CoeUr Bponill
poopo. 1~.
·
·

AND WINTRHOP

-~

Boluty Ollon oqul-nt for -·Coli 114 441 ia31.
ul•. Jor ..... oell 304-175- A.K.C. Rllllllr.cf Andale,._..
~~~aid, 1144Mioroftor 1:00, 1711-14tt.
f15 ony 11... 7 mil• NcNih on
At. :Z. 30W7WTI3.

e

Budaol Tronomlulono, UMd I -&lt;'
rabuln, •artlng t1 $01; 814-245-; ..,..(
5177, 114-rJI-.2213.
~~ .

--··--'·
tm

econo
1IJE. £(an.!ISIS ?
OR "'

$15. for both, :J04.875-2tOZ ohor ' ,
·
1:30PM.
''
2.P 201x71 R15 Stliclod onow '' ·
tlra, Ulld. Z.P 1i5X71 R14 : •
:fal.ar tread, ~Md 814-m· ~;

,, J' ,

p....,_

8:30 (2J Cl 101
When
lha clan gattoers lor
ThanksgMng, Tod has
surpriaing news. Steroo. Q
(II) ((2)
Major Dad Jf. blind
date lor Hol')wachuk may
lead to marriage. Slareo. Q
1211 On Stege
D NFL Mondoy Night
Mag.,.lno
9:00 (2) C1 101 MOVII!:
'Thlnkaglvlng Day' Nac
M - , Night at the Mavin
(2:00) Stereo. C
CIJ ()) Cl Allj: 'Mondor Night
FaotbaiiQ
Cll -'moiiCan Experlonce C
(J) Amerlcon Experlonce Q
0 IIJ Ill Murploy Brawn
Murphy Is held hoslaga by a
group of eco~terrorists.
Slereo. I;!
·
11J WWF SUNtvor Slrlal
Showdown Featuring live
excijing matches and
exclusive intenrlews. (R)
1211 Nalflvllle Now
D llodybuldlng NPC USA
Championships, men's
compe@on from Raleigh.
N.C. (T)
a Larry King Llvel
D Beauty and lhe Beall Q
9:30
1121 • Oetolgnln; wCha~ono enrolls In college,
and Anthony Is made a full
partner. Stereo. Q
10:00 (]) Newa ·
· Cll Ill 20 Yaara of Wall
• - WHk Twenty years of
Wall .$1reel Week With Louis
Rukayser, television's
longest running lnd mosl
respected nnanclal news
show, is calebraled.
((2)
frlalo of Rolle
O'Neill Rosie gels the blues
a1 she defends a Singer
chargod with extortion.
Slereo. 1;1
.
II]} • SUir Trek: The Nell
Generollon
D Unlimited HydrOIIIIne
Racing Budweiser Cup on
Mission Bay from San Diego
(T]
.
a CNN Evening Newa
8 700 Club With Pat

'.

2 rfma lor 1184· Chevy pick up,

Transportation

Cub Tooct.. wllh Cuftlnton,

Country llobiiO H - Porlc,
F1cou10 SS, of '-101'·
~~·lo,porto, - · Coli
........liml• .

49

lkiiVt,

1185 Ford Rll'tger, 4x4, Farmall ~ ald. ........ 114/lQ.

Roome for ron! - - k or monlh.
$1201ono. Gllllo Hotll.
814 4 01180.
Slooplliif rooono wHh ooololliif.
Allo trolor' - · All hook..,po.
C.ll 1f11r 2:DG . p.m., 304-713SUI,IIIeanWV.

lk:enM, quality child CIN. Mon-

flrlbriclt
llnod. Good oondKici!', - thon

Merchandise

Storti~ o1

46

Wa orllumer

If '-tOO A'SK M£. ,
11-1£ (jXJ~'51101J IS .. .

. VInton Auto Sa~o. Foreign &amp; "'
Dom Po~• buying junk coro.
f14.388.1082.
... .,

54 Miscellaneous

TrooiiOr 1o1 for nn1, ..-.1m.

oloy JhN Frldoy, 7:30 Ill 5:30.
Foi' more lntorm~tlon or to

:sa.

Elir _, for •10 11oo hoy. 10417W2211.
Hoy for Solo. ao- .. 11-hy.
Round Solooo In tho Flold. 114241 511111

Q:lpnl•lon dr1U1r $85 and
dining room IUitl 1175. JENNY
UNOlood $55. Solid ook choroy
w1lnut
taiHI
eollecttbte

g-WIJO.I14-3f?.7201.

J•,..
rico Roa , Point Pleuant, WV

NDRTR
tQJ5

JAMES
JACOB'i

CIJ 1121e 1!-lnment
Tonight Stereo. Q
Cll&amp; Mama'a Family
illl e Three' a Company

MacGyvor goes undercover
after a llbor organizer Is
murderod. Stereo. C
Cll Ill Fire on lilt lflnt
Techl'iologicol innovatiOns aid
in preparations for natural
disasters. Stereo. ·c
(II) ((2) Ill Evening Shade
Tho town gets logether to
tutor the football team In
algebra. Stereo. C
II]} ID MOYIE: Hafoopray (PG}
(2:00)
11J Murdor, She Wrote 1;1
12!1 On Stage
D NFL Monday Night
Matclt-Up
Prin\eNawa
D Beauty and the Beaot 1;1
8:05 (I) MOVIE: Guyana Tregecly:
The Story of Jim Jonea

Roome available for 2 or 3 con·

ANSWIIS
Upland- Realm- Holst- Toucsn -IMPORTANT
Woman to neighbor, "Every household should have a
filing cabinet upon which to stack IMPORTANT papers.'

(!) Nlglot Cour1 Q

614-245-5476.

Approx. 1 aciW, wooded loll,
ctty wateril owner fi,anelng 1

I I I .1 I I I

SCI•~ LITI

1111 g Jeopardy! Q

Cll ()) • Maca,..,

Rooms

UNSCRAMII.E AIOYE lETrERS
TO GET ANSWfl

D Scarecrow ond Mra. King
7:05 W Hippy Oap

Dbt Wide, 3br, 2 baths, new
c1rpet In living room, dining
room, 2 dlckl, ttorage bldg.

Road, city Water "av1ll1ble,
$5,000. 304-576-2668.

•

aMonoyllne

18 TO

Furnished

PRINT NUMBERED LETTE.RS IN
THESE SQUAIES

D Sportac:emer

SaWT'rtde. 1987 Forrest Park

l, - · Ohoo 41114. IIIFM, JOooonalolo,
l.o.E.

110111

Ill MIICHell L.._.

(!)

biiHment, pool, one acre. Nlc•l
304-4111Wt2t.

45

1= l

•

"""' Gtlfltth

8:35 W Andy Grifflllo
. 7:00 (2J Cl ·1111 0 Wheel of

'NOOLOO'T ~IJIC...

L.oton oroo, 1 112 otory, full

Acn. 7 mlln out JorrytO Run

.~ I' I I I

...;.P,....:O~Z;...;A,;...T~~ J

(J) 3-2·1 Contac1

1141448.e325 evenings. WUI fin·
anc•.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

I

FROCEF

C1J Abbott lnd Ca11110
~~-~,._8 Q

3br opt 81. Rt. 14\ ..... ..
Qopooll lloqulmol. 114-44WDfl'

61~7311.

I

8:05"" en.rty Hlllbllllea

D lportaLook
D Maniac Ma1181on Stereo.
Q

Big 4br Dakota Farm Home,
bullt for you, $25,995 end up.

....,. ol floe
lour ocrambl.d - . to.
low to form four ~mple -.fa.

8WorlciToday

Apartment
tor Rent

acr1 term In S•l•m
Township, wooded. Owner will
carry conlract. 614·742·2852.

O Reorrange

D Baanan Sterao. Q

II]} •

Tho American Colocor SoclliiJ
n..ta 1 p~~rt-tlme Execullvt1

lnoowlodgo of fund-rolling help.

Q

fM'INILT
PIUUI

1:30 ljl!CI 0 NIC Nightly Newt

JecUOn, Ohio. 114-281-6522.

community
NIOWCII 1
U•
perience a 1 volurit11r, and
10m1 office ex~nc:e. Some

a a•

illl.ALFC
IIJ Car1oon Expre11
DMo10-

w:

Diroctor for Molgo Cou~ Pool·
t~ NCJUirH knoW'
• of

(I) •

())Chorlnln~Q
3-2·1 Contac1

WllAT IF I

W.ntod ta Buy: Standing nm· el'perlence ln dlract NIM and
sm~n 'or large ecNig.t, 614- rwcruttlng. S•nd r..ume 1o:
SliM Mlnage_r,_ P.O. · Box 371,
317,71119, ofttr 7 P.IIL
.Ponomouth, 01o1o 45682.
Wanted· To Buy: Junk Autoo
S..klng dependeble pereoh to
wllh
or wlohout
- · Coli feed, tralnil &amp; 111rc1H Quarter
L,orrJ ....
y. 614 318-1203.
Hcnn. ......nee. I'IIQUired.

Employment Serv1ces

•

EVENING

(U

$125/mo.

MON., NOV. 19

(J)IqulreOne

llllllalanfrl ....,h d'
•PO
IOid "" 10 ..... ...,. oaM Willi •n ro uN 0re11t. ' fill.
oul
Rd. Oooon t A.ll. to
5 P.ll. lion, llono .... Coli 1114-

...

-1'-

-..-.

(!)

.

3 bedroomt house, lind ·c on·
troct; 304-&lt;175-5104.

•

l'tD,

MA.~me? 11.1

-t:m ..

-

•

vcwl M'l

'!Ht:l.l ~

....., _ . . . . . . "'lo . . . .
up. bUnk .... -····· .....
loUr- 1110 ·..
full or twin I'll, 11m

boX...,._
• • oiod .... -

~~~NC(!

.

.......

'T elevision
Viewing

32 Mobile Homes

Social

1

e;vw

. 1/JJ(...A .

I BR, 13001mo.; Z BR, ~:i
2br, Kerr OH. 5 min. from Holzer a ,_,. 1 loll~711. "''
• ...
Hoepltal, $25,000. 814-448-9637, utiUtlooo Included.

Progreuive Nursing Facility It
ICCifll~ appncatlana for

aon, OH 45140.

wBnted to Buy

-·

Now THing Appllcatlont 11 G•l·
llpoll• Domlna'e for Drfvll'l. 614-

Foo:lllly, 215 Stth Avenue,

9

-

!&gt;V~~ L'(
__.-- fOLilt:? , ..
/~~"
TH~

GOVERNMENT HOMES ~om $1 aftorlp.m.
ropolrf. Dollnqu.nt tu
..,..,.,.,, 2 beclroome, ntce,
pooportr. A.~senlona. Your ...304-417UI04.
oru (1 80H87.f000 Ext. GH·
45&amp;2 tor current repo 1111.
pootunlty Em~.
BEAUTIFUL APARTIIENTll AT
BUDGET PR~ AT JACKSON
laoollna lnouro.,.. Conopony fOR SALE BY OWNER· 2101 ESTATES
11341 Jactooon Pfluo
"'kl 1ndlvkh.-1 to own 1nCI J o - Avo., pooolbiO buiil- , _ $1~ Wolfo to ohoo l
roome,
operate their own ln~urance nea location, 7
mo¥10o. Coll14 441 Z5NJ EOH.
r~modaled, nlcl lot. R•ady to
Wo olfwr "' lo 130,000 m0110 ln. $42,000. Phono 304·
por par pluo looooollloo lo otan.
DeiUII, 1br, 7DO aq. ft. ODftoo
&amp;711-8111.
YII'IIIMiy looMed, llove, refrlg,
Av1rage Income• now al
100,000. All training provided. For ull or rwnt. 3 bedroom fumiOhod. 1235 pluo iilllltloi,
For confidential lnii~J.w Corl· houoo,
405 Spring A¥0,, 114 u1 2t5l . ·
t1ct G10rg1 Puchovlc:h 514-775- Pomeroy. 6141446-7389 d1y1,
tht
diNc:lor
of
nursing,
Phwor-.1 Clrt Center, 17U
Plnoc- Drhn, GolllpoiiO,
01o1o. -7112. Eq•l Op-

torfAdmlnlone

Public Sale

Ll*""· OhiO,

dlttlrentl81

with
._......
flollbiO
ochodullng ovollabiO. Contoot

Modlcol Ltb Technologist or
Mtodlcol Toclonologloll full limo
ond pan limo pooH ono. 'Coli
Pononnol, Plooount Volley
Hoopltal, 304.e75-4240. EOEIAA.
INTELLIGENCE
.lOBS.
All
bronc'-. US Cullomo, DEA,
ole. Now Hiring. Coli (1} IOS-a7·
.1000 Elot. K-10188.

Yard Sale

8

wasr-,

Competitive

Found- FomaiO Rodbono coon
cf+tlowar BallvUIO Locluo I o.. .

-

UnhomiOhod -10 homo lor
nnt. ·ldlof lor couple .. 1 poro
son, doll to town. no Pilla. 114445-31114, 114-256,11102 """""
tp.IIL

2br, houu edge of town, Inside
city llmll• on .818 1cr• lot,

81 4

en

tCA.Il~IT

LAYNE'S FURIITURI
ond ....... prlood tiN 10 - · T-110 ond ..
to tta I Ida • tlrlll
to
1111. Pnffn111 ta21 10, $171.•

qulrod. Coli Lola~• oli 114for 313.
lnloroooltlon. - - 3 bedroom hoUM, one 1cr1 441-7mO!r441 4
Elot.
wooded 101. Rocksprlngo, Ohio. 3 lumiOhod _,... I lollh,
lnomtdll)l oponlngt IVIIIIbiO 114-892.5225
cle•n, na ptlla. Rater.nce a
•fter 6pm.
for luii.Unoo ololft . ouporvloor.
dopooll nqulMjl .............. .

Lost&amp; Found

7:

-

Real Estate

31

1.

•nq...30'mol.
14:,

llobiiO for · - · , ...
niOhod wtth • - a dryor.
1250 por month Ill.. dopjooft
ond utiiKioo. l\4flll2·liml,
SmoH troller In lllno...UIO, Olo.
for 1 ldult 114/M241t1.

..... ........ -... ... ..... ..-.....
,,.....~

4

6

Dec.

114 448 0201.

H--rclo~2· Bol 1043, Ill~

lroliild. 114/IID-n41.
1 poo~ ,._,., 3-lonoiolo.
•-~-·
· "'"'" 1 otro'""'
~··
.,. ..
3

Go!'

==PI•i!:;,..::r·

Uillltoclood? 81ngloo s...
Communlcollon With You. eon.
-lol
Info.
WriiO:

-

HousehOld

2 _

~

P~-MkldiaP&lt;wt, OhiO

1~~~~~~~;~, ,,. .
1
===--.'·
..

.•

,

where to look tor romance and you'll have already lormulated might be subfind it. The Astro-Graph Matchmaker jecled to some con81ructlve adjustR~~~~~~--· lnst.antly rl""'als which signs are roman- ments today when you reaelwo some
,.
tlcally perfect for you. Mall $2to Match- new and unusual Information you pril'/lmaker. clo this newspaper, P.O. Box ously lacl&lt;ed.
91428, Cle\181and, OH 44101-3428.
QE. . . (Iller 21-.lune 2D) A repeal per·
SAGITTARIUS (New. 23-0ec. 21) II you formance might be In the olllrog now reare preHntly Involved In a slluatlon that garding an arrangemenl that provided
BERNICE
can be meanlrogful to you monetarily, try you with a email windfall racanlly. The
BEDEOSOL to got II finaliZed 10 ·your satisfaction clrcumslancee lhll were prevalent then
within the next lew daye.
are llmllar loday.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 1t) Person- CANCER (J- 21..Julr 21) Be a gOOd
, .........;....;._ _ _ _ 11 inlerest will have a beller chance of ·. l i s - today, eapeclally If you are oloar"
beln; advanced today II your plans are lng time with a pert911 who has the type
not too tightly struclured, The -ret 10 of mental lllrlbutll you respect and
your I&lt;.'C c 111 will be your ability to moke admire. He/sloe may MY someth(ng you
quiCk adjuotrnenta.
can put Ia lmmedllte uee.
AGUAIIIUI (.loll. 110-Fib. 1t) You'll be LaO (Julrii-Aug.21) The espectllndlbetter able to IIH up developments ac- ,cate that -~~~ng tortultouo mlghl
curalely today II you ~eelhe Information occur tor you today wl*e yOur work or
prll'lldecl by your faculllel both lntu- - I • - ned. H w11 be ol an unNcw.liii.111G
llhloly and deducthnly. Each ,_ 110 uee. .UIUII neton and may require e coPilCH (... 10 Mr oiiiO) Someone work• 10 palnllt out.
vourrllt-...u and lhe urge to travel you've .-.tly met through an Qld VIIGO (Atlg. a lopL 21) Anliough you
and acquire knOII'II~ lhrough per- lr-loln 1 position to Introduce you to
put on -.y 111rt or an.ctatlonl tG&gt;
aonal axperllnCII could grow atronger • o new IOCIII clre1e H you c1toooe to d• lily, lor _ . dllflauH lo - b e ,
In you In ttoe year eloold, Thll noed con ' .Wiop lhll -aclotlon. It could be tun.
you will
more dynamic lmpreo.
be grotllled through nurnorauo oloort Alllll ~ 11·Aprll1tl Do not giW
11on on othtlrl thlln - ' ·
trlpo rllhlr lhfl 1 lonG journey.
·
up today when your object..,.. appeor a..M ...... a Dol a) Try to lUI'·
ICG. 10 (CiciL ....... 21) Your llblllty . to be urnecltable ond - · E-1 • prlaa ttoe fMIIIr todlly by doing 1 0 - on your t.otla • quality thlt wll -ld tate• aaurprlllng tum ond put vic- . tiling dlfllrlnl allher In ttoe fooda you
aM you ttoe edge avw ollterl'today, eo- ~ tory In your grasp within I he lwtnkllng 01 prepare or by Inviting ov. people wilD
poc1o11y H you're iiWOI'Iecl In lltuat!Ono ; an eye.
.
Ill wll ontov.
that,_ .competitive...,_,.,_ Know ITAUIIUe (Apr!!....., 10) Plans you

Roberlapn
10:30 12!1 Crooll and Chaee

11:00 (2J •

1111 G:ll e IIJ Newa

(]) Night Courll;l

Cll NewaWIIIOit
II]}

0

IAraenlo
HaU 1;1
iaml VIce Stereo.

12!1 On Stage

1D IJSB-' World Jet Ski Tour
Women's Tour Wrap-Up from
Chicago In
Monolyllne
11:30 (2J
IIJ Tonlgltt &amp;how
Stereo.
(I) Nakll

a

e

(l)luropean Joulntl

1:-"'
an:Ponlght
.On.._
Dipntoeenw

DlpottoTonlght

0 IINUirltlld t!ta ..... Q

·=·I·

12:00 (I) ()). Neon

-·t

«Je

ae•

..-a •

Tall .....
CISL.ale

~lqwl""'
.Naoh
... How

..........,

D NPL'e •Mint Marioiiibll

In 'Ill Wake Up 1111 Echoll

12:01 (I) National OG~I"'DIMirapli-llclo!

'

lbploNr

U·»...

•JD862
U74
+K 10

....

WEST
tKU3

...
'

EAST
+to az

•Qt074

tAQJ32

+lOBI

+Jan

·'

+943

Safety play
eliminates guess

SOUTH
tA74
.AKS3

tK5

tAQ62

By James Jaroloy

Vulnerable: North-South

Dealer.-Soutbo- - - - - ·- -

Look whal bappened here. West
doubled, but East had all the trumps. S..tb
West Nor,. Eut
Pass
3+•
Pllill
Should that have been a surprise to · 2NT
Pass 3NT
Paa
South? Probably not. Ezperienced s•
Obi.
All Pllill_. . •
player." know that ~· defender will ! ..
•Jacoby transfer .
sometunes double when he knows his
partner must hold a trump stack. ·
Opening lead: + 5
South was 1111ilty of lazy bridge. He
played dUII)my's club 10 at trick one,
winnlnK the trick. Decla...,.. eould now
guarantee his contract by leading the
heart nine from dummy. II East
played low, so should South. The only no cboice except to ruff a coocl club,
way that South could now lose his dou- draw East's last trump aacl tbea try
bled cont 1 · ld be 1·r East ot
the spade finesse. No dice. Dowa - ·
g on
rae wou
West's offside double should ~-lead with unusual trump length and
-·~
came throtllh the kinK of diamonds. warned declarer. Notice that lettlqlnstead ofleading the beart nine, de- the heart nine ride at Irick two t:a11110t ·
darer played a heart back to his ace, lose the contract. II West wiaa the
apectlng the doubler to bold a trump queen or 10, the A-K will subeeq-UJ .
trick. Wben West showed O.t, South pick up the suit. Decla...,.. t:111 thea
was dead In the water. He played a pitch two diamonds from c1ummJ 011: ·
club to dummy's king and led the beart the A-Q of clubs, and live up a dill· •
nine. East covered, won the nen heart m~d a~ a spade to make the doubled ;
trick and played a diamond. Declarer
J~,.,-. 'Jf~CdtT 011 ...._.,• . went up w1th the kinK; West won the . 'Jf~CdtTOIICirriOUW"(IIIr'HtoarrltUt.t­
ace and tried to casb the Q-J. Declarer uo. llote Oo&lt;JI/d Jf~CdtTJ •~e _
0j :
ruffed the third diamond and now had - . - . 1kJlb .... po•lk•a•, ,...,.., ·
1

..

CIIJ.!!

•••lllililf

CROSSWORD
. by

THOMAS JOSEPH

•

41 W~hout
DOWN

ACROSS
1 "Simp-

sons" boy

•

1 Funda-

5 -·
mental
Kettering
2 Still
Institute
kicking
10 ,here
3 Air
ought to
lraffic
be-l'
aid
11 Dropped
4 FII!PP&amp;r's
suggesera
lions ·
5 Sure
13 Flank
winner
14 Boxefs
6 Bedding
combina•
Iabrie
lion
7 Unit
15 Scon
8 'Way 1o
novel
gol"
17 In the
II Famous
london ...
pasl
18 Sure
prison
.19 Naughty
12 Thinga·
20 Hoslel
mabob
21- bene
16 Set of
22 Got by
25 Trmed

Yesterday' a ·AniWW
cards
21 Pol~•

contents

21 Hiatus

rarusal

30 Sports

hall

221ndian

pony

31 Ev~a·s

23AIIowing

last

future
changes

name
320ne-

24Aione-

bandits

25 Maryland

plar""

36 Grammar

27 Mil

.....................-

...

armed·

ment

case

(abbr.)

:{w~h)

26 "Grey·
stoke"'
extras
27 Spot or
. Tabby,
e.g.
28longing
29 Maybe
33 Actress
Merkel
34 Clothing
35 Parody;

., '·
~. ·

.....
.

.

..

...
.. .•
..

...

takeoll
37 Pianist

Peter
38Sheathe
39 Granny or

· ··~

square
40 Hinder

DAILY CRYPJ'OQlJOl'ES-Here'a bow towerk II:

....

1111S

•

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

..

..
'.

One letler stands lor another. In this sample A illllld
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single 'letten,
11p01b ophes, the length and formation ol the words are all
hlnti. Each day the code letten are different.

UK

•+.J

annoQU01U

n ..,
U

'

HOO
PQ

..

QLUQ

PK

SOROM

KOOEK:
PQ

AUS'Q

UK

HJKN

PQ'K

X.IKQ

H.IGG

KWVFOM.-CPS
LJHHUMZ
Y I i e'• C.»»&gt; . t Iss WHEN YOU H£A8 /1

MOUHI'AIN WAS MOVED, BEUEVE IT; BUT Wta
YOU HEAR SOMEONE CHANGED HIS CHARAC
TER.
BEUEVE IT. -ARABIC PROVEfB

DOlfT

•

.

'

•'

.

....

�Page

1o-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Novembilr 19, 1990

Ponwoy-Midclaport. Ohio

'

Ohio [.Alttery

Some rain predicted around Ohio today
By United Press In&amp;ernalklnal
Sunshine will return to the
Clouds that began to arrive In Buckeye State Tuesday. and
Ohio late Sunday, should linger temperatures will rise Into the
over the Buckeye State through· mid to upper 50s.
out the day.
The weather map shows high
Northeastern Ohio will have a pressure stretching south from
slight chance of showers lor eastern Canada across Ohio to
the southeastern states. A weak
Monday night.
Temperatures will arange cold front extended from low
from the mid 40s to mid 50s while · pre~,sure over Hudson Bay; to
Lake Superior. To the west, low
lows fall Into the 30s.

pressure was developing over the
central Rockies with a cold front
extending west to, California.
The axis of htgn pressure will
move east and be along the
eastern seaboard by Tuesday
morning. The weak cold front
over the western Great,,Lakes
will move across the central and
eas tern Great Lakes Monday
before dissipa ting.

.Major Hoople's

Meanw)llle, the low over the
central Rockies will move to the
western Dakotas by Tuesday
morning With the cold front
extending south to Arizona.
There is a chance ol showers
Wednesday and Thursday, but
fair weather is expected Friday.
Highs will be In the 60s Wednes·
\lay, In the 50s Thursday, and In
the 40s Friday. Lows will be In the
40s Wednesday and. Thursday ·
• and In the 30s Frt&lt;!av.
,

Page4

Continued from page 1
Other construction Involved ;
b\lllding a sewage treatment ,
plant for -the complex, an em· ,
ployee parking area and a
heliport which can be used by _
emergency helicopter services.
Ftll material for the parking area
and heliport consisted of bottom ,
ash from Ohio Power's Gavin
Plant.
Bottom ash 'rs one of several.,'
ash products created as a bypro-· .
duct of burning coal at a power
plant. Coal ash was also used In a
cement mixture poured for the •·
heliport's landing pad.

---Weather------

_ _....;:;:
-u;,..
·

South Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly Cloudy. Low
around 40. Light · and variable
winds . Chance ol rain 20 percent.
Tuesday, mostly sunny with
the high around 60.
Thanksgiving Day outlook, a
chance of ~bowers. Highs in the
50s . Lows in the 40s.

Ohio Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Chance of showers Wednesday and Thursday . Fair Friday.
Highs In the 60s Wednesday, In
the 50s Thursday and in the 40s
Friday. Lows in the 40s
Wednesday and Thursday and
ln the 30s Friday.

(Continued From Page 1)
Village.
.
The case, filed by R11tland resident Phyllis Spangler, thm~gh her ·
attorney Charles H. Knight, alleged wrongdoing by several Rutland
police officers and sheriff's deputies at the time of her arrest in

1989.

Arson charges were brought against Spangler following her arrest
and were later dismissed.

Pfeifer..

Continued from page 1

manager . "We don't want anyb·
outcome," said Pfeifer.
.
ody
sticking us with the rap of
· -Pfeifer and the Republicans,
l
slowing
down the count."
who flayed Secretary of State
,,
,,.
-P(elfer
and Republican State
Sherrod Brown mercilessly dur·
Chatrm~n
Robert
Bennett, who
lng the campaign lor allegedly
normally
want
to
ensure that
falling to do his job, tnought he
only
eligible
voters
vote, .com·
was doing a superior job last
week when he order the boards of platned about' over· scrutinizing
election to mingle the walk-In the walk-In votes .
They said if thOse ballots are
· ballots with the rest.
Fisher wanted theni separated segregated, . ''the voters whO
so they can be subject to voted on election day are going to
challenge later, and wentto court have somebody handllng their'
to buck his Democratic col· balloi and looking at it."
Both Fisher and }'fetfer said
league's directive.
-Fisher, who accused Pfeifer during the campaign that It
of trying to stall the count until hypocrisy were a crime. the
Republican Robert Taft takes other one would be doing time.
They may have been correct,
office as secretary of state In
tl!ey would have plenty of
and
January, now appears to be the
to do It before this race is
time
one erecting the legal blockade.
over.
After all, the recount hasn't
"We' re trying not to obstruct
the vote count," said Kent even begun yet.
Markus, Fisher's campaign

Meigs announcements
Revival
Evangelist will be Pastor Lawrence
The Hobson Church of Christ Bush. Special singing nightly.
and Christian Union will be in Public invited.
revival Nov. 26-Dec. I with Pastor
Theron Dutham and Rev. Bob
Hymn sing
Manley. Services will be held at 7
The Mount Olive Communily
Church will .have a hymn sing Dec.
p.m.
1 at 7 p.m. Russ Spencer and the
Dance
Southern Hills Oospel Singers and
·The Senior Citizens Dance Club Joy Singers from Mount Olive. Pas·
will be held Friday from 8-11 p.m. tor Lawrence Bush invites the
Music will be by the HapPY Hollow public.
Boys, Athens. The pubhc is invited
and those attending are to bring
Harrisonville Seniors
snaclcs for the snack table.
The
Harrisonville
Senior
Citlzens will have a potluck supper
.
Represeniative
meeting to elect officers on Nov. 27
A representative from the Social at 5:30 p.m. All members urged to
Security Administration will be at auend. Bring table service.
the Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center on Wednesday from 10 a.m.
MiddlepOrt PTO
to noon.
The Middlepo~ PTO will have
its November meeting on Tuesday
Revival
at 7 p.m. Assistant Prosecuting At·
The Mount Olive Community toniey Linda Warner will be the
Church will have revival Wednes- guest speaker. .She will speak on
day through Sunday at 7 p.m. the subject of drugs. Public is invited.

Columbus ... continued from page~ ,
was would seek re-election. Last mayor's office and local party
summer he said he wouind 'I, leaders had given him a deadline
saying he wanted to spend more for his decision so that others
could make their decisions. He's
time with his famtlv.
In August, Rinehart separated expected to decide within three
from his wife Carol and moved weeks whether he'll seek a third
into an apartment. Howeve(, he term.
Rinehart wouldn't say if he Is In
denied at that time there was
love
with Dodrill; who is 12 years
another woman.
his
junior.
But :he said she Is Is
In recent weeks he had been
.
''deeply
fond
of Brenda and she Is
considering another try ai the
of me."
The documents filed last week
Indicate Dodrill, 32, said Rinehart began pursuing her in
.·' Continued from page 1
March and that she agreed In
ner, Carol Baker, Ron Raymond May to go to bed with htm .
Dodrill and her husband Doug '
and Dr. Nick Robinson.
Matteson
had separated in the
Other committees named were
spring,'but
didn't file for dtsso!umembership, Jimmie Cain and Dot·
tie Turner; and telephone commit· tton until July . matteson tiled for
tee, Mary Lou Boggs, Ruth. Durst, divorce . Oct. 30 and DodrUI
Jean Gilmore and Gerry Parsons. countersued last week. She Is
Merchants not attending the meel· seeking CllStodY of their 111-montin~ will be contacted and asked to old son.
Rinehart also said Saturday
jotn in the activities of the new orhis
22-year marriage ts over.
·ganization.
The first meeting of the group
was set for Thursday, Dec. 6 at 5:30
p.m. at Middleport Village Cooncll
chambeis in village hall.
.
It was emphasized during the or- HaJTY Surfat!e
Harry Surface of Middlepon
gm.tizational meeting that the group .
will be more than a merchants as- died Monday morning at Holzer
sociation, that busineSsmen ' and all Medical Center following an ex·
interested individuals will be in- tende!l illness.
Anangcments will be announced
vited to join.There will be a special
membership fee f&lt;l' individuals, .it later by Fisher Funeral Home in
Middleport.
was decided.
I.

Gilmore...

Area.deaths

NEW FACILiTY- 1\ new cornplexlor Southern
Ohio Coal Company's Meigs Division provides

olllces for a uumber·ol departments, Including the
survey p~ lor the M~lgs No. 31 mine.

'

Vol.41, No.149 ·
Copyrighted 1990

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News StaiT ·

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday admissions: Janet
Oiler, Racine.
S11turday discharges: Juanitii
Wamsley, Dollie Workman and
Leona Roach.
Sunday . admissions: France~ ·
Foster, Racine.
Sunday discharges: Roy Brick-.

· on one s1de .ot tile street, arid ad·
jacent to the offices of ·The Daily ·
Sentinel on the other.
Th ill
ill
A one-year lease on the Coun
e v age w pay rent in the
Street mini-parks in Pomeroy was amount of $100 per year for both
executed by Pomeroy Village . parks.
In _othe_r action at Monday night'.s
Colll!cil :ovhen it met on Monday
evenmg m regular session at Vil- meeting, council members voted to
lage Hall.
·
appropriate $200 toward a pany or
The mini parks are owned by gifts for all hourly employees of the
village, and voted unarumOusly to
PQmeroy Attorney J.B. O'Brien
close all .
ffi
.
and ·are located on either side of '
·
VI 11 age o ces exceptmg
·Court Street, next to the building the pollceJ department on Monday,
· : occupied by Wil·Car Sundiy Store December 24,_enabling employees ...

to have a long holiday weekend.
Council al$o diseussed the vii!age's need for a donated Christmas

tree. It is the usual practice of the
village to accept donated trees from
village residents for use as the viilag Chris
H
e
tmas tree. owever, to
date, no tree has been donaled for
that purpose.
Leaf pick-up dates in the village
ha bee
Pick · the
ve
n set
up m
first
and second ward will be on Monday, NoveJilber 26. Leaves in the
thitd ward will be . picked up on

and whether any of the'lr actions
"How can our system of
violated Senate rules.
government maintain the ap·
All five say they did nothing
pearance and reality of integrity
that reasonably can be called
as these trends continue?" Ben·
anything beyond cqnstituent sernett asked.
vice- a basic ,.nd accepted part
"Now, none of this is an ex&lt;;use
ofthe life of an elected legislator.
for wrongdoing, If -wrol!gdoing·
Several of the senators, however,
occurred," Bennett added. "It Is,
say the .Keating Five case
however . :. a booming warning
underscores the need for an
that unless these trends are
overhaul of campaign finJnce
recognized and dealt with, we
laws, a cause that has been
will have more cases llkethls and
stifled by partisan bickering for
the reputation of this body and its
several years.
.
members will be in utter ruin."
Robert Bennett, the commit·
Cranston. who begins radiation
tee's special counsel who has
therapy Monday for prostate
spent a year probing the case,
cancer and is not seeking re·
said ·he understood the frustra·
election, argued that nothing he
ttons of the five senators, along
did, including the contacts wtth
with the 95 other members of the
bank regulators on behalf of
Senate. The cost of mounting a .major contributor Keating, vlopolitical caQ'lpatgn Is skyrocket!ated the law or senate rules. He .
log, Bennett said, at the same
said . both the laWs and rules
time constituents increasingly
shpuld be change~. but added
are seeking help in. dealing with · "we can't change the rules In
the government bureaucracy.
midstream" and that his act!vi·

Martinez candidate for drug czar
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Flor·
ida Gov. Bob Martinez Is the
leading candidate to replace
William Bennett as federal anti·
drug chief, while Bennett is the
top choiCe to head theRepublican
National .Committee, . officials
' .
say..

White House press secretary
Marlin Fitzwater said Sunday
that Martinez, defeated in his
Nov. 6 re-election bid by Democrat Lawton Chiles, has the
inside track for the drug-fighting

Job.

Meanwhile, Republican sour-

EMS responds to calls
Units of the Meigs County
Eme~;gency
Medical
Service
responded to a minor fire, an accident where two were injured, and
nine emergency medical calls over
the weekend.
~At 1:18 p.m. Saturday · the
Pomeroy Fire Department was cal·
led to the Regina Hwnphre)os
residence on Libeny Lane for an
electrical box fire. Damage, was
mmor.
The Columbia First Responders
and the Rutland EMS unit were called at 5:11 p.m. Sunday to Cottrill
Read where a motor vehicle accident had occurred. Charles Christian and Chuck Green were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital where
they were treated and released.
At 11 :44 a.m. the Rudand emergency squad went to the State
Route 124 residence of Ernestine
Williams and lransported her to
Ve~s Memorial. Hospital; at
7:16 p.m. the Syracuse squad took
Patricia DeMoss from her residence

on State Route 124 in MinersviUe,
to Pleasant Valley Hospital; at 8:42
p.m. lhe Pomeroy unit aansponed
Adria Eblin from State Route 143
to the Holzer Medical Center.
On Sunday at 10:58 a.m. the
Racine unit went to Antiquity for
Catherine Wolfe who was taken to
the Holzer Medical Center; at 1: 15
p.m. the Racine. unit 1ransported
Francis Foster from ber home on
Third St, Racine, to Veterans; and
at 1:43 p.m the Middleport unit
took Janice Daniels from her home
on South Third to Holzer Medical
Center.
At 5:12 p.m the Syracuse squad
was called for Helen Grace WitIiams, College Road, who was
taken to Veterans; at 6:37 p.m. the
Syracuse unit went to River
Heighrs ApartmeniS for Charles
Ray Deen who was taken to Holzer,
and at 9:08 p.m the Middleport
squad took Ella Reitmire from her
Page Street home to Pleasant Valley
Hospital:

Report winner in Super .Lotto game
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Ohe
Super Lotto ticket from Saturday
night's drawing is worth $3
mUI!on.
Ohio Lottery . officials said
SJillday just one ticket from the
W-301, 455 tn sales has the
numbers 3, 10 13, 18, 51, and 51.
The holder of that ticket can
redeem It at a regional lottery
office and become eligible for the
prize money to be paid out over a
26-year period.
Wednesday's jackpot Is $5
lnllllon.
One hundred tickets have live
of the numbers and are worth
$5,000 each. Another 5,916 have
lour numbers and are worth $100,
while 131,247 have · three
numbers.
The Kicker number was 368309
and there's one ticket with tbat
number, making It worth
$100,000. Out of the $7116,721 worth
of tickets, five had the llrst fiVe
number,, each worth $5,000; 69

had the first four, making them
each worth $1,000; 681 had the
first three, good of $100 and 6,896
,had the first two. for $10 each.

ces said Bennett, 47, who served
as director of the Office of
National Drug Policy Control for
20 months, has agreed to take the
RNC post and that an announcement ts expected next week.
Bennett resigned as director of
the Office of National Drug
Polley Control earlier this
month, effective on or about
Thanksgiving Day.
Fitzwater said no announcement has been set on the possible
nomination of Martinez, but
confirmed an earlier report that
the outgoing Florida governor Is
" the leading candidate" to head
the anti· drug office.

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As ollQ: 30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of munl, Ellis &amp; Loewl
. Am Electric Power ........ ..... 28%
Ashland 011 ........................28%
AT&amp;T ................................. 32%
Bob Evans .... ......... .. .. ......... 12%
Charming Shoppes .. .. .. . .. ...... 9
City Holding Co. ......... ........17¥,
Federal Mogul.. .. .... : .......... . l2% .
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 15%
Key Centurion .... .. .. ....... .....11%
Lands' End ... , ......... .. .... ...... ll1h
Limited Inc ................. ....... 14%
Multimedia Inc . ......... ... .. .... 55%
Rax Restaurants...... .. ...... ... %
Robbins &amp; Myers ......... ..... .. . 17
Shoney's Inc . ....................... 11
Star Bank ......... .... .. ......... . ..15Y,
Wendy's Int'l. .......... ... ..... ... 6%
Worthington Ind .......... .. ......20%

ties can only be judged within the :
framework of extstln'g statutes . .
Keating was a constituent of al l:
five senators, with his Lincoln :
Savings and Loan, whose 1989 !allure will cause American :
taxpayers some $2 billion, based·
tn California, tts pare.n t company:
based on Arlzoria and chartered ;
In Ohio and with the same ·
company owning a major Michl· :
gan hotel.
.
"Can you rationally refuse to ·
give"Jegal and proper help at any:
time to someone who seems to ·
have a reasonable grievance :
because he has contributed to:
your campaign?" Cranston:
asked. "Can you only help people ·
who haven't contributed? Or -can:
you only help people who haven't·
contributed lately• How -lately?
And what about the people who
might contribute In .the future?"
Bennett told the three DemO'
crats and three Republicans on ·
the ethics committee that "this
case ill going to force upon you
the ol:!ligat!on of giving guidance
on the .ltmlts qf constituent

....

.•

INSURANCE·
'
-111 Second St., Pomeroy

,.

. LAPIDARY COLLECTION' DONATED •
,. Howard Nolan, Syracuse, bas doaated a pordon
of bis lapidary (stones and rocks) collection to
tbe Meigs Co~nty ~blic. Library in !'onieroy.
• Among the SO ttems .m thts collectiog ·are Brazil

Agate, Tbunderegg from Oregon, Bruneau
Jasper,· Brazil Amethyst, Obio Flint and Meigs
County Jade. The collection will be on spectal
display at the library throughout tbe rest of the
montb.
.

·~ .SEORC officials-release

:· ~ew ~ighway brochures today
A new brochure JUS~ rei~ by
_ the S~~tem Oh1o Reg~'?flal .
.Council d~s the SEORC Hig_hway Agenda m. Southeastern Oh1o
~ accomplished by the year
..
·
.
The . SEORC Highwa&gt;: Users
omm11!00
program . mcludes .

:C

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) ; rhree more Army Reserve units
.: and one Army National Guard
· • unit In Ohio have been activated
, as part of the U.S. military
• buildup In the Persian Gulf.
~ Monday's call-up brings to 20
: the total number ol Army Re-

projects affecting 12 Southeastern
Ohio Counties.
.G. Kenner Bus~!, clulirman of the
Highway Committee, stated that
the CoiJ!mittee 's pro~ includes
the .startJDg of c~sttuction _on .five
pro)CCts, ex~t:mg flannmg on
on~, the reacuvauon o planning on

· serve units of the 83rd Command
that have been mobilized since
th~ gulf crisis began In August,
sa1d Major Tom Chupka, a
command spokesman. ·
A total of three Ohio Army
National Guard units have been
activated as part of Operation

::·- Llcal briefs.------.
'

.

•

!

•· Warner honored

I•

.,
,,
'

•

.•

'

byNat~nwide

Jeff Warner, local Nationwide agen~, has been selected·as the
Marietta Districl Agent of the Month fo( October, James G. Barr
.·
'
special age~t with ':'fa~on'!"idc Insurance annoonced today.
The Marietta D1smct IS composed of 19 agents covering eight
counties in Southern Ohio.
. ''Tiie people of _Nation~ide take pride in recognizing Jeff, who by
VIrtUe of outstanding semce in Multiple Line Production, ·including
life, mutual funds, and group qualifies him for this honor," said Barr.

Squads
respond. to seven calls
.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services units responded to
· · seven calls for asSistance on Monday and early Tuesday.
At 11:46 a.m. on Monday, Racine squad wu ~ect to Fifth Street
to the Bob Roy residence to investigate a smote Odor. At 11:24 a.m.,
. Rutland squad was dispall:hed 10 Meip Mine No. 2 for Danny Scar,. · berry, who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
• · . At 4:1 ?p.m., Rudand squad was oalled to New Uma Road for a
diesel sptll, and returned to the station at 4:55 p.m. At 7:29 p.m.,
Rudand went to Happy Hollow Road fll' Claude Withrow. He was
taken to Veterans. At 10:41 p.m. Syracuse fire department and
Syracuse squad went to an auto accident in Minersville. Tom Young
refused. treaune.nt and Joena Stump was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. ·
·
-~
,
At ~:57 a.m. on Tuesday, Rutland squad was dispatched 10 Beech
• Grove Road. Eva McKinney T~as taken to VetenD!s. At 6:29 a.m.,
Racine squad was called to Karr Road for Jim Carnahan. He was
taka! to VelmJIS,
:
.
'

•

·
th
drail tha
·
·
ments on ~ guar_
t was mNaylor's Run Hill;
·
sMaintalledsearlier thlsKrofall ooMaWest . - entertained a resident request
treet near
ger.
yor
submitted to Youn
gardin
Seyl,er _stated his interest in the vii·
stockpiling of garbag
rege atg thethe
lage s mstallation of stone walls at entrance to Beech G
C
·
· ·
h
guardrail
rove emetery·
~ntersecnons w ere
was
• discussed. status of
mstalled.
·
meters on Mul""~ A
,_.~,g
- · discussed the progress on h
be
~., venue which
replacemenrof stones at the foot of
lrre en P!aced elsewhere. in the
L' 1 11
.
· v ~e unul new meters are
mea n emce,
.
received;
- heard a res1dent request submtt·
• set a special
·.
M
ted to oom1cil member Bill Yoong day for the
meetmg ~n '?0 •
for a cotP.'!ration limit sign near health . ·
purpose _of dtscussmg
Laurel Cliff at Spring Avenue and . employ:S~ce policieS for village

_,...,R'

iinuation .of a property bond in the legal counsel, .en,tered a noi guilty
amount of $25,000.
·
plea to both charges.
Bond was set by Crow in the
Causey's trial ' was set for
amount
of $5,000, .with 10 percent
January 28 at 9 a.m.
, .
Ronald Johnson of Vlntot:~. who cash allowed
. Johnson is scheduled to go to tri·W~s also indicted on Thursday, was
represented in couit yesterday by al ~fore a jury on January 14. ,
Both· Causey and Johnson were
Gljllipolis Attorney William Con-.
previously bound over to the grand
ley. ·
·
Johnsoo was lndicted on two jury by County Court Judge Patrick
. drug-related charges: one count of · H. O'Brien following preliminary
cultivation of rruirijuana, a fourth- hearings in that coun.
A third defendant, Donald Eddegree felony, and · possession of
three times the bulk amount · of wards of Pomeroy, is expected to
marijuana, a felony of the third de- enter a plea on a charge of grand
theft auto and three counts of
gree.
After Judge Crow read the in• breaking and entering before Judge
dicunent and advised JohnSon of Crow on Tuesday mpming.
his rights, : Johnson, tllrough his
'
..
~·"
.'

S~prefne Courf o.-ders

four, and feasibility studies on two
.projects.
The brochure states that, ''the
key to a healthier regional economy
and a better future filr the people of
Southeastern Ohio is a highway
system, on par with that of the rest
Continued on page 16
·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The Ohio Supreme Court has
halted the counting of "walk-In"
ballots from the Nov. 6 election fn
the continuing dispute ov~r the
attorney general's race.
. Monday's court order left the
door open for.legal challenges to ·
18, 820 uncounted votes cast at
boards of elections on Election .
Day under a new state law.
However, t)1e Su,Preme Court
was expected to !\sue another
ruling Tue"day on a request, by •
the Ohio Republican Party to
move ahead with the vote count. .
That means the court ' could
modify Monday's court order.
The uncounted •votes could
decide the outcome of the attar- '

ney general's election since, in ReJlubltcans aksed the Supreme
unofficial results, Democrat Lee Court to block Fisher's request.
Fisher finiShed just 959 votes
Fisher should not be permitted
ahead of Repul)l!can Paul
to chang"' the rules for the
Pfeiffer .
counting of th e " 237" ballots,
The disputed votes were cast GOP attorney William Wilkinson
under provisions of House . Bill
told the Supreme Court Monday.
237, which became law and then "I don 't believe we need to
went into effect tn July. It ·suspend the constitution to allow
permits people who ate regisSenator Fisher to have some
tered to vote who move within a
special counting process In his
county more than 30 days prior to
effort to attain the office of
a.n election to cast ballots at their
attorney general."
local board of elections.
James Rishel, lawyer for the
Democrats, said Fisher wants to
Fisher and the Democrats filed
suits in 88 counties Friday preserve his right to challenge
walk-In votes .•That opportunity
seeking to have the so-called
would be lost If the votes are
" walk-In" votes counted separately from the other Election l'l:ounted and mixed with the rest
Day ballots. Pfeifer and the
·continued on page 16

Four more Ohio units are activated

.•

I

16 Pagn 26 Cente -.

halt to counting walk-in ballots

r::

.. .

~

Oliio

the standards which currently
exist, you Inevitably gtve guidance for the future."
Bennett also said drawing
these lines could have a "chilling'
effect on the performance on
constituent service · in the
future."
Riegle told reporters, "Jus't ·
speakin'g for myself, I think there ·
Is something wrong with the '
system. ... I don't think It's
inherently unethical, but I don't ·
think It works . the way It should
and I don't think It looks right. In ·
a sense this case Is almost an :
Illustration of that."
•
During Its last two sessions, :
Congress hl!s been - unable to:
oraft campaign finance reform
~gtslat!on, with Republican f!Ubusters · crushing Democrat-backed proposals. Both parties :
say they want campaign finance
reform, although Democrats In· ,
sist it must Include ceilings on ·
spending by candidates, and
Republicans refuse to accept
that provision.

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SEIVING
MEIGS COUNH
SINCE 1868

TUesday, November 27, and fourth
ward leaves will be picked up on
Wednesday, November 28.
·
Council also appointed a Fire
Department Dependency Committ
· ·
f
il
be
ee, consiSilnj! o counc mem rs
Beuy Baromck and BiU Young,
firemen {and council· members)
Brian Shank and Thomas Werry,
and Village Clerk Brenda Morris.
The ·Fire Department Depen·
dency Committee is appoinied each
. year m compliance with state law.
Council discpssed gQOd com-

John M. ,Causey of Reedsville
pled not guilty to a charge of aggravated murder qn Monday mom·
ing. Causey was one of two !)efeadants who were arraigned . before
. Meigs Comity . Cop1mon. rPleas
. Coun Judge Fred W. Crow, ITI, -fol!
lowing their indictments on
Thursday by the Meigs County
Grand.Jury. o •
Causey, who was represented in
coun on Monday by Meigs County
Public Defender Charles H. Knight,
is accused of shooting and lcilling
his next-dOor neighbor, Edmund
Shamp on October 27.
Causey ~ remanded to !he cus·
tody of. the Meigs County Sheriff
pending his execution of the con:

f~~:~nt ~e.;~~~·acihon~S::~~~-.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

:S~ion,

A MuJtlmedie Inc. New ~Peper

Causey pleads ·not guil.t y to
aggravated murder charge

'Keating Five' hearing will res,;,m;eyt~day
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Just
how far a member of Congress
can go In assisting a constituent,
particularly one who hascoritr!buted campaign money, Is an
tssue in sharp focus during
Senate hearings Into the links
between five s~nl)tors and an
indicted savings and loan
kingpin. ·
The so-called Keating Five
senators - Sens. Alan Cranston,
D-Cal!f., DenniS DeConclnt, DAriz ., John Glenn, D.Qhio, John
McCain, R-Ariz., and Donald
Riegle, D-Mich. -received $1.3
mUllan In donations to re- elec·
tlon campaigns or pet causes
from Charles Keating Jr., who
now faces racketeering charges
In California.
,
The hearings before the Senate
Ethics Committee, which re·
some Monday, are to determine
whether the live applied improper pressure upon bank regu·
lators on the behest of Keating

2

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 20, 1990

PQmeroy WuncU extends lease on mini·p·.arks

Hospital news

r----Local briefs---.

Low tonight In mid 40s.
ParUy cloudy Wednesday.
ffigb In upper 60s. Chance of
rain 20 percent.

•

t

- Finishing...
WEATHER MAP - The eastern third ol the country wiD see
mostly sunny skies and mUd temperatures under high pressure,
with the excepdon of the extreme Northeast where there could be a
lew scattered showers. A storm system will be movln11 through the
central United states. The Rockies should see most ol the
precipitation, but there Is also a chance of showers In Minnesota,
central Texas and the Northwest. Western Nebraska wUJalso have
a sUght chance of light snow. ( (UPI)

Pick-3: 184
Pick-4: 1817
Cards: 7-H;
5-C'; ~D; K.S

•

Desert Shield. The 5694th Engi.neering Detachment of Shreve In
Wayne County was the latest unit
called to duty.
Army Reserve members of the
350th Medical Hospital Co. In
Canton, the 320th Adjutant General Co .. In pnclnnati, and the
432nd Medical Laboratory Co. In
Columbus are to report to their '
home stations Wednesday.
The 350th, with about 400
personnel, Is a comprehensive
medical ·and surgical care unJt
that provides hospitalization for
all classes of patients, Including
surgical patients. That unit w!l!
be sent to Fort Benjamin Harrison til Indiana. .
The 320th ts a postal service
unit capable of receiving and
dtstrtbu ttng all types of mall. The
100-person unit will be sent to
Fort Sheridan In IfUnols.
" The 432nd has 'five members
-whose mission Is to Inspect food
stuffs and ass.ure lood service
·sanitation In the field. It also Is to
be sent to Fort Benjamin
Harrison.
Chupka said the units will
spend several daYs at their home
stations preparing lor departure
to their assigned mobilization
sites,
· The Guard engtngeering det·
achment, .with about 20
members, Is capable of general ·
flrellgbting duties. It Is scheTOBOGANS DONATED • Blandle Scng,
duled to assemble on Wednesday
riJbt,
a raldent of Overbrook Ceater Ill Midand proceed to Its mobilization
,
dleport,
crocheted 19 ' tobclpas wblch she ·
station In Fort Benjamin Harrl·
donated
to
Bank ODe .In Pomeroy for Its Coats
·son on Saturday.
·

for Kids procram. Pldured accepting the donation on belullf of the bank II Gerrl Walton Wbo
over!;ees tbe Coats for Kids procram.

li

i

(

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