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P1ge 16-The Dally senuner

.

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

Ex-sister-in~law

r

'

(

By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
biliiies to raiBc bolh legal and facAssociated Press Writer
tual issues, and we are fulfilling
LOS ANGELES - Denise our responsibility by raising all
Brown sat quietly in court listening legal issues that should be raised.''
to OJ. Simpson's lawyers argueThe Simpson camp has ttied again - lhat evidence should he so far unsuccessfully ~ to supthrown out of her former brother- press virtually every blood sample, ·
in-law's murder case.
piece of clothing and scrap of PaRer
Then she quietly delivered her found at Ms. Brown's house, Sill'lp- ·
me&amp;'lige.
son's esrate and in his Bronco and
Wcaring a button reading Bentley.
·
"Remember Nicole Brown and
MS. Brown's comments came
Ronald 'Goldman,' ' Ms. Brown during a busy day, as attorneys and
bypassed the media mob in the prosecutors dueled before Superior
main courlhouse press room, went Court Judge Lance Ito over eviupstairs to the office used by court dence seized by aulhorjties. Among
beat reporters, and expressed her the highlights:
frulillllbon atlhe defense's strategy. ' • Ito allowed a hearing to con"If OJ. is so innocent, why are tirwe today on whether items
lhey trying to suppress all the evi- seized from Simpson's Bronco are
dence?" she asked, her voiced admissible.- He appeared on the
tinged with sarcasm.
verge of tuling m favor of the
"I've never seen this before;," defense to lhrow out some items
said Ms. Brown, 37.
not listed on a search wanant but
DEFENSE.CONSULTATION- O.J. Slmpsoo spoke with his
'Asked to explain, she quoted yielded to a prosecutor's request to
attorney, Robert Shapiro, during Simpson's pretrial betll'iag Ia
from Simfson '.s famous innocent hold off until more evidence is preLos Aogeles Wedaesday. Simpson's ex-slater-in-law, Deaise
plea: "He s 100 pereent innocent? sented.
BI'OWII, uoapectedly walked Into the courthope pl'tllll room and
Keep the evidence lhen." .
• The defense formally asked
e:rprealed
her frutradon at Slmpson'slepl tacliea.' (AP)
Through most of the proceed- the j~ to ~elude all DNA: eviings, Ms. Brown, her sisters and dence, mcluding tests suggesbllg a
"Genetic testing is like the
parents have sat in the courtroom mall:h between blood drops at the search of Simpson's closet that
JUSt a few feet from Simpson. Their crime scene and Simpson s blood. same day. Lange said Simpson unlocking of a box," attorney Gercomments about the case have been The 107-page motion alleged slop- . accompanied him into the closet alt Uelmen said. "Genetic .testing
as circumspect as· they have been · py police and lab wert and argued when he seized a pair of tennis ol tlood can show a persoo's sexual nistory; medical history, family
that DNA testing and analysis shoes.
rare.
•
Ito
quickly
disposed
of
a
h•&gt;tory, very private information.
Wednesday was the fust time amt't gtlll'Ally accepted in lhe sciany member of Ms. Simpson's entific: community or by the courts. defense b1d to explore whether a There is no urgency to support that
• Simpson became animated and pQlice detective lied under oath testing without a wananL"
family had publicly questioned the
"Interesting and novel," Ito
way Simpson is fighting charges mouthed "That's a lie·" when about rea&amp;Qns for entering Simpson's
estate.'ln
a
highly
technical
responded
- but unsupported by
that he murdered his ex-wife and Detective Tom Lange testified that
ruling,
Ito
said
the
liefense
missed
the
law.
although Simpson's fust attorney
Goldman.
• The defense reiterated its conSimpson lawyer Robert Shapiro wasn't present clurinJ Simpson's its chance to pursue the issue during
the
prelimmary
bearing.
ten
lion that police, including the
half-hour
intuview
w1th
police
the
responded by saying that the attorlillY after the killings, lhe attorney . •Ito upheld lhe testing of blood lead ·investigator in the case, lied
neys are doing their job.
found on Simpson's driveway on the witness stand during
"Clearly, Denise Brown is a rel- 11M !IC"lllission to auend.
·
Sunpson also smiled, shook his dc.spite defense arguments that Jiminary ~.about wh~
ative of a victim and she's not a
should
have
obtained
a
.
entered
Sunpson
s
eslatc
WI
Ia
pollee
lawyer," Shapirp said, "and head and mouthed the words "He's
sean:h
warrant
fUSL
'
warrant.
The
judge
was
unconlying"
when
Lange
described
a
laW}'ers have professional responsir
vinced.

e.

Signature Serl11, V-8,
Climate Control, all
equip., tilt, crulle, AM1rFM,
eaM., leather.

shut down Wednesday because pf a
bad sensor. NASA scrambled to
put together a computer program to
bypass the sensor, but it wasn't
ready in time for the spill. Instead,
asttonaut.Daniel Bursch operated
the jets manually.
WCJ:IICI' Alpers, a University of
Hamburg oceanographer in charge
of the experiment, wants to know
whether the radar can distinguish
between an-oil spill and the 1181UI81Iy occurring film produced by ftsh
and plankton. Space radar operat-.
ing in one frequency can't tell the.
difference: Endeavoui' s radar has
three frequencies.
Scientists lrope that ·such
advanced radar, orbiting permanently, could allow for quicker
detection and cleanup of oil spills.
The steering jet problem halted
practically all radar observations
late Wednesday. The surveys con-

~·airport accord was reached
after hours of negotiations between
Bosnian· Serb leaders and Yasusbi
Akashi, the chief U.N. re~ta·
live for the former Yugosta=·
Akashi went to the talks
ed
wilh a NATO threat of expan
air power against the Bosnian

. Serbs.

.

"They seem to be extremely
. unhappy with NATO's strong
stand,' Akashi said Wednesda)'.
Sarajevo airport, which 1s to
rcqpen later today, has been closed

The CJtchange, involving a total
because of Serb threats to shoot at
planes since a NATO air sttike on a of nearly 300 prisonus, was to be
Serb tank Sept 22 in retaliation for carried out in a series of shuttles
Serb assaults on French peacekeep- across the bridge over several
ers. The capital has relied on the hours.
Tbe prisoner swap almost colU.N. airlift for about 80 percent of
lapsed. when Serbs .sent about 120
its food and other needs.
The Seros reportedly demanded Muslims across the bridge Wednespartial control. of the airport, hand- day afternoon after forcing them
,1
ed over to the U.N •.in July 1992. from their homes.
Akashi dismissed the idea.
The swap lhen teetered on failAfter a nearly 10-hour delay, the ure at least twice more during lastexc.hange of prisoners of war at minute negotiations 011 the final
Sarajevo's Brotherhood and Unity
bridge got under way around dawn.
Two U.N. armored personnel
carriers trjlnsported Serbs from
government-held Sarajevo to a
Serb-held part of the city- Two
other U.N. vehicles loaded with
Muslim POWs then crossed the
bridge into government-held Sarajevo.
·

Shop. Acquisitions Before
Buying a Diamond
We Will Save You
·$ $$

•

s9,449
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The CIA has long

bUn hostile

to Aristide, who durin~ his years as
a leftist parish priest m the 1980s
strongly auacked it and lhe Bush
administtation for backing Haiti's
' ahen·military rulers.
Last year, the CIA ttied to discredit Aristide by circulating a
report.claiming that he was mental.ly ill. However, ,President Clinton
said he didn't believe-the·rcport;-·
and CNN later repcirted that the
doctor cited as its source didn't
exisL
"
~le to~,publishedFnday.
On Monday,_U.S. troops who
· ·'fii article, a cojly::Ofwbicli was were sent to Haiti SePL 19 to pre~
faxed Wednesday to The Associat- pare for Aristide's return stormed
ed Press, says COnstanronce wu FRAPH headquarters in Port-auan employee of the CIA. ·
Prince and arrested mm lhan two
Members of his Fnint1for the dozen memben. .
AdVIIICCIIIellt and Progtess of Haiti
But Constant, one the most
. have tortured 10d kilfed scores of feared men in Haiti, wun·' t taken
pro-democracy_activists since lhe into custody. Although Arislide's
group was founded a year 110.
~ demanded his arrest. the
AtJempl8 to reacb ,U.S. Embassy · Umted Slates organized ·&amp;press
,; spokeamll!l Stanley ·Scbraaer in conference Tuesday for Constant,
Port-au-Prince to comment-Oil the wllo claimed be renounced viorep'ort Wednesday ev,e nin• wtre lence and called on Haitians to
unsuccessful. ' ·
work 10g1ether.

or

I

J

., '

HUGE SELECTION OF- - . •SOLITAIRES
•CLUSTERS
•DINNER RINGS

Outstanding QuaUty
,
Open Monday• 9-6
,
. ., n..-.1, lf'edneacloy, TlaiU'Idoy &amp; Saaardo:r 9-S
Frlllay• 9-8

. Vlu

·FIMnclntl Av~l1ble .,
10 D1Y1 SliM As C•ltt

· Dl1cover

M/C

.~(QV.ISirri09{$
. !JIi)£1£ J'ElJtVE£1?3
1

11 MILL STREET

992-6250

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .
(

Low toai&amp;Jatla·se., car.
SIIIIDJ, IIIIIDJ. High Ia upper '7tl.

•

.

Legislature to eye domestic law revision
By JOHN CHALFANT
·Associated Press Writer
. COLUMBUS - State legislators will requo to the Capitol after die '
·Nov. 8 election for a brief voting session lhat had bee~ expected but, up ·
until now, not scheduled. .
,
. That changed when Senate President Stanley Aronoff, R·Cincinnati,
·said on Thursday \hat the Senate probably would meet Nov. 15 and Nov.
16, wilh a possible third day Nov. 17.
. The House will meet the same week, but Speaker Vern Riffe, DWheelersburg has not identified specific session dates.
. Aronoff said be, Riffe, and Gov. George Voinovich agreed in a preliminB!1, discussion to keep the session relatvely brief.
•
' With that in mind, every effort will be made to work out agreements
between the two houses and lhe executive in advance," Aronoff silid in an
. interview.
Among lhe legislation likely to surface is a Senate rewrite of a House

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Pomeroy-Middlaport, Ohio, Friday, October 7, 1994

~18M

1993 MERCURY
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bill to strengthen enforcement of domestic violence laws.
Tbe Senate Judiciary Committee this week rec0111mended for passage a
system to designate arrest as the preferred course of action for police to
follow in such cases. It would make arrest mandatory when an a court
protecuon order was violated.
·
Also possible: action on a bill to extend state regulation of costly new
medical equipment or services that hospitals and other health care
providers want to offer. The program expires Nov. 30 unless renewed
under a bill pending in a Senate committee.
Aronoff said action was doubtful on a c_omprehensive overhaul of
criminal sentencing laws that a special Ohio Supreme Court panel recommended, partly because of uncenainty over costs and its implications.
"The majority of the crime package that is left unfinished will be the
first item of business in the Jan'!8'}' 1995 session," he said.
Apparently not on lhe agenda IS a pay raise bill for local elected offi-

cials or·legislators.
"I don't see it in the cards. It's sor: of been rejected out of hand,"
Aronoff said "The governor has indicated over and over again that he
would not accept pay raise legislation in a post-election session and we've
taken him at his word."
Also unlikely is action on a campaign finance reform bill pending in a
conference committee. Aronoff said he has seen no ·signal of a break in an
impas~ over limits on in-kind union conttibutions.
-" Hope springs eternal. Nothing would make me happier, but there is
no agreement that has come out of the conference committee," Aronoff
said. "However, I've seen miracles in the past."
Initiative petition drives are under way on behalf of sharply different
campaign fmance proposals from Com100n Cause!Ohio and Voinovich. If
the competing bills are introduced next year and legislators fail fu act,
both could wind up on the November.l9'15 ballot.
·

.Congress
seeks U.S.
.withdrawal .
.from Haiti

Syracuse say thanks.
·for pool funding aid
By KATHRYN CROW
Sentinel Correspondent
·
· A plaque was presented to lhe
Meigs Count)' CommissionerS for
financial aSSIStance with London
Pool expenses at Thursday night.' s
meeting of Synlcusc Village Coon-

Dairy Bar, and the Country Bobbin, formerly The Berry Basket; an
artS and crafts business. The mayor
expressed appreciation for the new
businesses and on behalf of council
extended best wishes for success in
lhe ventures.
ci!,_
_ _
Fire Chief Ebet Pickens Sr.
• On hand to aceept the ph!que advised council that letl~rs are
from Mayor James Pape and Coun- being sent to the owners/heirs of
cil President Kathryn Crow was six properties in town which are in
Commissioner Fred Hoffman.
the process of being condeinned.
At the beginning of the swimThe resignation of Don' Shaffer
ming season, funding in the amount from council was accepted with
of $!1,000 was provided by the regret Shaffer has moved from ~
commiSsioners to be IYJPlied to the village, makins him ineligible to
pool indebtedness imd general serve. Council has 30 days in
operating expenses.
wbi~, 1q ,118Rle a replacement Pal!e
It was reported during the meet- oomnlendell. Shaffer for IUs worl!:
ing that the _ppol. "bro&amp;;e even" this ·on-council and noted thaf liis conyear and that it now has no debL · tributions to the village will be
In accepting the award for lhe . missed.
commission, Hoffman expressed
It was reported that lhe villageappreciation for the pool and other owned house has been rented.
recrC!Itional facilities provided by. _ . A bid on the dump truck for
lhe vtllage for use by county res1- $1,250 was reJected as beirig too
dents.
low. Council discussed purchase of
Council noted two new business a ton or three-quarter-ton truck for
operations in town - The Corner village use.
I
Restaurant, formerly the Syracuse
·Councilman Dennis Wolfe

PLAQUE OF APPRECIATION- ColDIIiis·
sioner Fred Hoffman, center, on bebalr oC the
. Meigs Conaty Com-missioners, accepted 11
plaque ~m SY!f~cuse ~iUage Council Thursday
reported that the Midget Football
League and the Syracuse Min-

nigbl in appreciation or the $5,000 contribution
made by the rounty to help pay ror repl!llrs and
general operating expenses London Pool over
the summer. Mayor James Pape and Council
President Kathryn Crow made the presentation.

or

ersville Sports Boosters want ·to rooms have been .removed.
rent the building in which resr.
(Continued on Pa~:e 3)

Voinovich spreads' wealth; DeWine denies using spy
1994 DODGE
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· Report charges CIA aided
start of right-wing militia
By LISA M. HAMM
Associated PresS Writer
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP)
- U.S. intelligence agencies
helped launch FRAPH, the right·
wing group that has laJ'Ofized and
killed supporters of exiled Pres!·
dent Jean-Berlrartd Aristide, The
N/Jlion magazine reports.
FRAPH's leader, Emmanuel
Constant, said ·U.S &gt;"~lfficiall -wanted a force "that could balance"
Aristide' s pro-democracy move· ment, the ~ ~ iD an ani-

numbers of prisoners involved.
The. International Committee of
the Red Cross, which helped
arrange the swap, said it would
release a detailed breakdown of the
numbers on either side after the
exchange was c001pleted.
The Bosnian Seros are trying to
expel all non-Serbs from the (0
percent of Bosnia they control.
Thousands of Muslims have been
expelled from Serb-held areas in
norihern and central Bo~nia in
recent weeks.

Page4

Vol. 41, NO. 110

Bosnian. Serbs, ,officials
launch POW swap
.
By MAUD S. BEELMAN
Associated Presti Writer
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina- Bosnia's Serbs and government forces b~gan one of the
largest prisoner swaps of their war
today, and the Serbs agreed to
allow the airpon in Sarajeovo to

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·
Local Trade.

'
tinued
for a few hours using larger,
less precise jets on Endeavour to
tilt the shuttle and radar in the
proper direclipn.
·
. Those jets used so much fuel,
however, that flight controllers
decided it wasn't worth it and suspended alt but the most irnporlailt
radar observations,
Elwly today, BUnch wu told to ·
operate the jets manually for some
surveys. The computer program to
fix the jet problem was sent up
after the tpill observation, and
NASA said no further problems
were CJtpccted.
NASA teamed wilh the German
and Ilalian space agencies to build
the $3()6 miUion radar. It is gathering images of nearly 600 targets
around the world, including rain
forests, volcanoes and ancient river
channels bUried in the Sahant.
EndeavoU(' s 10-day voyage is
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1993 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL

Shuttle radar eyes Ge,rman o_
i l spi.ll
By MIKE DRAGO
watched the arriving images with
Associated Press Writer
scientists in Houston. "There was
SPACE CENTER, Houston- great applause."
German oceanographers dumped
Spaunhorst said researchers
106 gallons of diesel oil into the thought they could discern the oil
Norlh Sea today to find out how from the algae, "but scientists are
well' the powerful radar aboard cautious neoole. They're asking for
shuttle Endeavour de~ts slicks .24 hours.~'-~
·
from orbiL
Workers on awo oil-recovery
The oil was spilled
a ship ships started cleaning up the mess
about 18 miles west o Sylt, a Ger- as soon as Endeavour passed. They
man island near Denmart's soulh- expected to finish within two
em border, two hours before the hours, Spaunhorst said.
shuttle passed 138 miles ovallead.
Researchers promised the oil
Twenty-six gallons of algae prod- slick would cover no more than
ucts were dUmped IICB!by ui see if -one-_quarter square mile, and they
· · the radar could detect the differ- took pains to reaasure environmenence.
talisiS that plenty of precautions
In televised radar images were.taken.
·
beamed to the ground,, the spill
Mission Control and astronauts
showed up as dark, oblong spots in had to work around a problem with
a se~ia-toned image.
shuttle steering jets in order to scan
' We could see it brilliantly the spill.
cleal'," said German space agency
The six tiny steering jets that
spokesman Franz 'Spaunhorst, who precisely aim the radar instruments

_·Ohio Lottery

KSU snaps
jinx with
21-13 win

of o.·J. "' frustrated
with legal ·ploys

.

.-•7,449

not talking mtich about iL
By ROOD AUBREY
Spokespeople for state Treasurer man 's name, which neither camAssociated Press Writer
"The governor has made seri- Ken Blackwell and state auditor paign.would release.
" They sent him up to worm his
While Ohio Oov. Geor~e ous commitments to key Republi- cimdidate Jim Petro also said
way into the campaign organizaVoinovich' s campaign shares 1ts . can candidates," Voinovich cam- money was on the way.
weallh, a spokesman for Lt Gov. paign spokeswoman Caryn CanOne Democratic campaign tion," said Hyatt spokesman Dale
Mike DeWine denies using a spy to disky S8ld Thursday night.
spokeswoman questioned whether Butland. "It's a dirty trick not
try and obtain a wealth of informaShe declined to talk about spe- the money will compromise the . befitting a candidate for the Senate."
tion.
cific donations, which will show up candidate's independence.
DeWine spokesman Barry BenIn other Ohio political news. in a campaign finance report due
"Gov. Voinovich''s substantial
candidates in the 1st Conp-essional OcL 27.
investment in that campaign would nett said the man accused of spying
Disttict ,in soulhwest OhiO continShe also would not discuss how make our opponent clearly behold· is a college student who volqnteers
ued ataacking each other in com- Voinovich decides where his cam- ·en to the financial and political on many Republican campaigns.
"For some reason that's beyond
mercials on tQpics including assault paign money will go. "The gover- suoport of her largest client,' ' said
weapons and college grll!lts for nor makes the fmal decision based L.~sa Brown, a spokeswoman for me, he ~ent into the Hvatt headAttorney General Lee Fisher. quarters," Bennett said.
prisoners.
on a variety of things," she said.
Voinovich, a Republican, raised · State Sen. Betty Montgomery of Montgomery denied the charge.
In the 1st Congressional District
about $7 million in his race for re- Dayton, lhe Republican candidate
Also on Th\lfS([ay, lhe U.S. Sen- race, Republican Steve Chabot is
election against Democratic state for attorney general, said she has ate campaign of Democrat Joel running a 30-second cbmmercial
Sen. Rob Burch of Dover.
received $100,000, " ... as have, I Hyatt said it caught a DeWi'!C spy attacking Democrat David Mann
The Voinovich campaign is think, most of the statewide office in Hyatt's Cleveland headquarters. for voting for legislation that
spreading its money around, but candidates.''
A staff member recognized the makes prisoners eligible for P~ ll

Judge gives
green light
to evidence

.-----.. Stern wheel festival activity- -------.

LOS ANGELES (AP) Rebuffed again in their efforts I()
keep evi&lt;Jence from jurors, O.J.
~~ 1~- simjlsoDii ;lawyers accused nm,.,__._,_
cutors of failing to provide c~ial
DNA test information and wagmg
"ttial by forensic ambush."
Delays in performing tests and
turning over data on test methods
and safeguards gives Simpson's
teaJil 'toci little time to detect mistakes, said Barry Scheck, the
defense legal expe,r in DNA blood
analysis. · •
_ D,epuiy Distpct Alto~~ Lisa
Kahn~" the prosecution's DN-'
expert, demed any wrongdoing.
Superior Coun Judge Liitce Ito
saiil she hid 8clcli'!Ded'flve of the- defense's 11 compltin!l: .~ Qt.l)er
/
six were to be liken up Tuesday.
Earlier in the day, Ito rulci that
bits of hair, fibers 1and sp1attcn of
blood in Simpson s Ford Bronco
were' properly seized and may be
~ted as evidence.
Simpson, 47, IllS pleadM inno-·
cent to murderina .his el(•wife
Nicole Brown Simpson .and her
friend RonAld Ooldman' outside
Ms. Simpson's condominium on
Juno 12. 1ury iiOklctioo Is pocecd·
• in&amp;, opening.arsuments aren't
CJt)leCfed until Noven~ber.
·

OVili p
~ ~

~ ·i.­
,_...~~.-

Hamilton chided Congress for ::
eccepting the watered-down resolu- '
tioo l'llber lhan .going on record as
,authoriiing the mission.
..

·.

" It's a classical congressioaal
dodge,' ' 1\C said. "We leave no fill.
gerprinls by Jl¥.SiDg tlw llllad·
ment~Wlllt
we ba
Ia p.o., :;
teet o political
wllll we ·•
haye
· cxercile our COli·
stitutional~lity."
:; '

~ ··

-.

G·ants - a federal program that
gi•es low- and middle-income high
school students money for college.
Mann countered with an ad criticizing Chabot's opposi lion to the
ban on assault ~apon s wh ich
Congress recently approved.
Elsewhere in Ohio politics:
• Hyatt' s campaign accu sed
DeWinc of deliberately skipping a
joint appearance before a newspaper's editorial board.
Hyau attended the sessipn
Wednesday. with the editorial board
of The News-Herald of Willoughby. The board planned to interview
the candidates togelher.
Bennett said he thought he had
put the appearance on the cam paign schedule, but he apparently
did not

By JIM ABRAMS
Associated Press Writer ';\
WASHINGTON ...., A divided
Congress says American troops
should leave Halll as soon as possi·
ble but is stopping short of impos- .
ing a deadline for President ClinUlll
to end the mission.
Both lhe Senate and the House
approved non-binding resolutions
on Haiti on Thursday that also criticized Clinton for not seeking congressional approval before CQIIIIRilting U.S. troops. The resolutions
also required a stallelllelll from lhD
president within seven days on his
national security objectives in
Haiti.
They directed lhe secretary of
state to report bY Jan. 1 on human
rights violations by both the Aris- ..
tide government and the militaryled regime that overthrew him iD
1991.
/
The votes followed hours of
debate in bolh chambers marked by
Republican sniping at Clinton's
Haiti policy and Democllllic warnings lhat legislating a deadline for
the mission posed a danger to ·
American soldiers in the f1eld
•
In
Norfolk,
Va.,
on
Thursday,
·
Clinton, told troops just back from
the Caribbean that !pings were ·
going well.
" Thanks 10 your efforts, the
Haitian people are moving from
fear to freedom ,' ' Clinton told
about 1,500 sailors and officers
who gave him a polite reception.
" Much has been asked of you and
you have delivered."
The Senate resolution, passed
91 -8, was a compromise worked
out by Majority Leader George
Mitchell, D-Maine, and Minority
Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., follow ing a strong appeal from the White
House and ihe Pentagon. not to
handcuff an ongoing operation by
setting a specific withdrawal dale. .
The House settled on the same
language in a bill championed by .
Armed Services· Committee Chair- :
man Ronald Dellums, D·Cillif.,
after rejecting two olher resolutions
lhat put tighter restrictions on the
mission. The lawmakers approved :
the Delllllll$ version 258-167, then :
reaffliTIIed it in a 236-182 vote for ..
· final passage of the bill.
·
The Republican-supported.proposal, defeated 225-WS, sought an
immediate, orderly withdrawal and ,
said Congress would vote no later than Jan. 21, 1995, on requiring lhe :
pn:;ident to remove all troops wilh- ·
.
1nJOdays.
House Foreign Affairs Chair- ·
man Lee Hamifton, D-Ind., and , :
Rep. Robert Torricelti , D-NJ ., ·-.
sponsored language authorizing the
Haiti mission until March I , and
providing for a vClte after Feb. 1 on
tendin that nn•O.....:• n•:- I
· :fCat.ed\98-2~-~~·· 1 wu

:

I

~ut lhe de~ boiled

~~over

1stration's Haiti policy.

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·Commentar

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WASHINOTON - Nearly two meet again early in lhe week.
years aftcr.Jobbying his way into
Espy was eager to make the case
the Clinton cabinet, Agriculture lhal ~ shouldn't be judged before
Secretary Mike Espy spent last , the independent counsel - who is
weekend lobbying White House
.t1..UMDIA.INC.
Chief of Staff Leon Panetta 10 save By Jack Anderson '1
his job in the face of an ethics
investigation.
ROBERT L. WINGETr
and
(
.
Espy returned to his office fol- •
Publllher
~'h
f-8,
,
.
,
lowing a late Friday afternoon
IC
ae
'UinSfem
M
While House meeting will! l'anetta ......;.....;.;;..;;..;..;..;;.;..;;..;...~. ....;..;....;..;....;..;_
believing that he would be forced
CHARLENE HOEFLICH ·
· MARGARET LEHEW r to acsign over :Jtc weekend, accord- probing...whether Espr violated federal laws by acceptmg gifts from
Genenl Muager
Controller
ing to Espy.aides, because of the companies ani! individuals doing
impending completion of a White business wilh Agriculture - comHouse counsel's report on Espy. pletes his separate investigation.
LI!TIERS OF OPINION are wek:ome. They should be less than 300
Espy aides even privately discussed Espy won a stay of execution, but it
wonk Ioiii. All Ietten are oubjecl lo editin&amp; llld must be ·signed wilb name,
the possibility of a Monday press may only last until Panetta formalllddreaa llld telepbooo number. No uoalcood Ietten will be publisbod. l.clten
conference
to announce the resig- ly receives the White House counabould be ia &amp;ood taste, addreasinc iuuea, oot personalities.
nation.
sci's ~rt.
,("
"I thought I was gone Friday,"
It f./as only two weeks ago that
Espy told confidants over the Espy got a warm embrace from
weekend. "They're afraid I'm a President Clinton himself.
liability to the prc,aident.''
Moments before a joint press conThroughout the weekend Espy ference at the Agriculture Departpleaded for more lime and anolher ment on an unrelated matter, ClinBy JOHN CUNNIFF
·
meeting with Panetta, according to ton threw his arm around Espy and
~Business Analyst
knowledgeable sources. The two whispered: ."I'm sorry you have to
NEW YORK -It isn't easy to say whelher lhe public sector beats out men had another conversation on go tluoo~h this."
the private sector in repeating its eirors, but what is certain is !hat a lot of Sunday night and were expected to
Espy s closeness with Clinton
errors seem to be in the repeat mode.
-·
Government's most oft-repeated enor is one evei'YQne recognizes: It
keeps promising more than it can deliver, spending more dian it budgeiS,
and raising taxes while claiming to cut diem. Over and over and over

Repeating the.errors?

agai~ private sec~r can match it, having at various times f~rgotien lhal

.~

'

GLaD We DiDN't

iNvaDe!

.

~=~;, assure us they w~ll never again be trapped funding
default-prone foreign entities, even though The Wall Sueet Journal
repons.they recently were exposed to lhe nme or $89 billion to develop-

..::;~1

!ng
Milken, jailed for his junk bond 'ventures, is often praised
today for his farsightedness, since many of the companies he helped
: fmance have grown into powerful giants able to compete on the world
I

MICH.

Espy told friends after the dinner.
"I thought, 'Wow, it can't be this
easy.•••
Espy's rise and fall bears
JXI?Piictic le$tirnony to die fact lhal
11 hasn't been easy. He has made
his share of opponents by pushing a
reformist agenda and taking on ·
some of Agriculture's biggest
sacred cows.
Ironically, two days before
Espy •s meeting with Panetta, the
House rassed Espy's reorganization bil - die ftrst major overhaul
of die USDA since tlie 1930s. The
plan is expected to shut down 14 of
the USDA's 43 agencies, eliminaiC
· 7,500 jobs, close 1,200 county field
offices and save $2.5 billion.
Down on the farm, Espy has
.harvested a crop of allieS. "I don't
kr1ow anything about !his investigation,',' says North Carolina Agriculture Commissioner Jim Graham,
the 73-year-old dean ·or the state
agriculture chiefs, who llas worked
with nine agriculture SI\CtellU'ies.
•'But I know one lhing: Espy got
10.000 metric tons of polk carcasses - the equivalent of 264.000
hogs - shiplled to ~ussia on his.
recent trip tliere. It was a rnajo~:
breaklhrough, not only for ... hog·
states." .
.
Although Clinton is also a
friend and a fan, Espy aides suspect
that Panetta and other White House
aides want to "make an example"
of him, and perhaps deflect growing criticism that the White House
has been too lax on government .
etaics. Beshles the Whitewater
investigation, die Justice Department is reviewing whether Housing
and Urban Development Secretary
He~ Cisneros lied .to the FBI dur-.
ing htS backgrouod·check.
But one close adviser to Clinton
told our associate Ed Henry 'that
Cisneros has stronger ties to the
White House than Espy: "Put" it
this way: There aren't50 people (at ·
. the White House) who would walk
in front of a car for El;py. But I·
think they would for Cisneros."
,R
Cisneros would be_wise to heed
the counsel of Espy, however, who
recently told a friend about Washo-=::=1
ington: "It's amazing how fast it
goes. They take you up, and then
they uilce you down."
.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Bi~JS!elo are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, I~~-

So casually have they re-emerged and grown under lhe noses of regulators.lhat it pro~ wonder about whelher.they ever were ezrors. They
wm m~ ~ry in tl!e 19.~~ •. l!l!! !~linking ~l!Mg\li, Now. l!!ey:~e .

, scene

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W.VA.

:Chance of showers clo~ds
. By Tbe Associated PresS
· Clouds will be on the increase
tonight across the northern and
. western portions of the Slate ahead
· of a cold fronL The soulhellllt will
. remain moStly clear. Temprl8ture5
will bottom oot in the fower to
· ·.mid-50s Slatewide.
: The cold front will bring a
chance of showers and thunderstorms into the forecast for Satur. day across northwest Ohio while
· the rest of the slate will be partly
. sunny.' Temperatures will reach
from die lower to mid-70s in the
: north and west and the upper 70s in
lhe southeast.
Skies were clear statewide
·.overnight with ternperalUteS from 5 . to· 10 degrees warmer than·
Wednesday nighL
: The record hiah on this date in
. Col urn bus was 88 in 1941. The

--...... ...

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........ Tbo ,_ I 'I'Na. oodllit Oblo
I

~-- ' ~

Nsatifi%•4111 , '', a

....

... to

no 1&gt;1111 loou-,J, Ill Court sc.,
,.• .,.Q!oi!&gt;4S'UII·

9:49p.m. volunteer fare departmi:nt and ~Ud to Slate Route 5S4,
Cheshire, for a chimney (ue at die

·

Joseph's Hospital;
4:4J.lm., Slate Route 7. Jason
Parker, VMH. ·

t

fall;

Meigs fair planning slated

"But some day the sun will
shine;
"Some folks can lose !he blues
in !heir hearts;.
"But when I think of you .. ."
Come now. You can do this.
After all, die song is only 50 years
old.

u

· Rac:loe to ftJIIIJ hydranll
·'

·lllliodcaJ

,..;;;;:·;:;~:-;~:_...., . ~'-lt

=.:.::=.

c:;Y ~~totiCJI

....

{,

,

VETERANS MEMORIAL

=

sc~~· ~~M\ l;th ~
t; ca112' weawn

Dlsehar'es Oct. 7 - Mrs.
. Glenn Davu and son, Joanne
R h D
Lo treth B lab
ous • ano
ngsMyen,
• . Floyd
eu .
Dawson,
Lemoyne
Neal, Teddy Mullins, Emma
James, Heaven Dailoy. .
. (Publldled with permltllon) .

c:i• -

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·.

Hospl"tal news

Meigs announceme_n
s =~=:a~-=-:~·
p:rn. each eveninJI. The Rev. HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

. Otvill.e Griffilh will be lhe SJICalter.
T.hc R.:aci!l..ll VIJ!a&amp;e · Wate( '--e· R•". David Bryan invues die
., c:.ntor•.._loi!IO ..~
: , Dc~ir~rnent will · lie ~'&amp;shins ,... &lt;&gt;Y
·•• • • ~ r:·ant·s 'thr·o~hout ;.cr'to
p"ubllc..
Oloo'folllt.·-···-~-.,.. ···-~-~-~~""
uc ' "er.
u
O.IIIDitla........----... - - -...-·...
'II
be
acolored
during
OlooYw ...".... ~ ... -~.... ~.~-·-·~-... sauo_ ~':r;. 1
Duc:e to be held · .
.. . , IIIIClLI ClOPrl'll~ ..
•'
. . The BeUos and Bealil Western
11o11y
·
IS C. {
·
· tiD ·~ '
· Square Dance Club will host a
11
1
Meiss
....... ~.-~~'IIIIIICiolllpoiiiDoll' .~ •-soc:lcly will hold ill anrniil meetpolO will
the
AA
:.:~,::-MoiL
lnt ~unday at th'e ~Q!Ja CouniY .. otvJe .""uate dancell
. invllild.
, .
.
. Muaeum •.Videoe at .. :~poi!J., will _, ...
No ••• t lh4 ,, be followed b)' I 6:30 r.m, diJmer DbJDer &amp;o be MrYtd •
....,._.....,_...
.
· and 7:30 _p_.m, UnUI .tin&amp;.
'The Wilkoa 0r1np 271 6 will be
IWLif!IIO!i'IICIHI
.. JUiervU {7 ~by caUlrls 992· ICl'viq I lfCik and chickol) buffet
nw.a ...~~~~-·.a•... ; 3810 !)~rough Sltllrday. ,.,~
to~
~ lie Salurdly at the J&gt;ylhi,.--~-"'~~o~ --~~--·Ms.tf• ,· · · .
·'
·111 ,, . In ·WIIkelvllle, 4 ., 7 p.m
S2w.J&amp;---~~----~--..JI4," Revival •mceUDDOIIIICICI
-:-o"'.., sc for ldul.ll
. and $2(50 for
a-qlloWICI6c:o.tJ
. · 1be Hope B:.dst Church, 570 "' .. "
............--...... ·r··~~ .a!M
a·rant
. St., Mid
have cbildret\ 12 and
·
•
u_w.a
,.
w.a.-~----·---·-~·~...ti!JO
nw.a-~--··--··--~-..JIIM
reviv~ services,
t. 16:l9 at 7
IIJIIaiPI'IGI4M'I'D .

:·

_,., .

c- St.; _ , . , Olio, byllit

....;....-............... _,Ciooo.

a

•I

The Meip County Historical Society will hold its annual meeting and dinner Sunday at the Meigs County Museurn.
.
Videos of the Battle of Buffmgton Island re-enac.unem will be
.. shown at 5:30 p.m., followed by a 6:30 p.m. dinner. The meeting
will be held at 7:30p.m.
To reserve a $7 dinner, call the museum at 992-3810 through
Saturday.

The 1995 Meigs COQ!lty Fair may be 10 rnonths away, but planning has already begun.
All Junior Fair market livestock project members, pf!!Cnts, advisors and buyers are invited to a meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday at lhe
Meigs High School cafeteria, said David "Chip" Haggerty, county
extension agent for 4-H.
This meeting's agenda will include electing representatives on
the Meigs County Market Livestock Sale &amp; Show Committee for
each market species. The species are beef, sheep, swine, rabbit,
pouluy and dairy, Haggerty added. All those attending should share
suggestions, concerns arid recommendations.
"This is a very important meeting and we hope that you will plan
to attend," he added.
Please call Haggerty at992-6696 for more information.

Investigators eye murder
theory behind cult deaths
GRANGES-SUR-SALV AN: lerice and' appeared Ill "have been .
·
Switzerland (AP) - Investigators put 10 sleep.'
Some of the 23 victims found 45
are piecing togelher whelher some
of 48 members of a doomsday cult . miles away in a burning hillside .
foupd dead this week were mur- farmhouse in Cheiry had been
dered, and not willing participants injected with "a powerful, violent" drug that could have killed
in a mass suicide.
"We have elements.now that them, Piller said.
Some had their hands bound and
clearly indicated there may have
plastic
hags tied around their heads.
been an execution," investigating
The victims belonged to a mysjudge Andre Piller said Thursday.
He said 20 victims had bullet terious group called the Order. of
wounds in their heads and evidence the Solar Tradition, led by Belgian
indicates they could not have shot doctor Luc Jouret.
Jouret's disappearance continthemselves. "There was certainly
ues
to mystify police, who are
another person who put several
bullets into the heads of lhese vic- searching for him. "I ·don't know if
he's alive or dead," Piller said
tims," he said.
However, Piller said the bullets
could have been a "coup de grace"
intended to finish off victims who
were still alive. No weapons were
found near lhe bodies.
...... Elc . . _
"""
AIUD.-"-q 711
Friends and family members of
Ashland OD }'
16 Ill
some of the dead have been
AT&amp;T--"
51711
adamant that their loved ones
Bank One-Z9 Ill
would not have killed themselves.
Bob F:VUII
?.0 ill
Authorities were not discounlamploa lad.
74 1/4
ing a possible mass suicide by cult
iii'JiliDa Sbop-.7 Ill
members.
lty Holdtaa
n
They won't have answer until . Federol MCIIul·--27 112
autopsies are completed.
GoodyearDR33112
Police said the 25 bodies found
K-mart'-"--"----16 511
Wednesday in s'ki chalets near the
Lands End---· -~191/1
Limited IIIC.-,
- 1 1 3JI
southwestern village of OrangesMultimedia*-19
Sur-Salvan showed no signs of vioPoint BIUICCirJI.- 1J

Stocks

l

Clarification
Joyce E. Fry, Rutland, who ~as
recently forfeited $500 m the Middleport Maydr's Court for driving
under the influence is not Joyce E.
Frye of Rutland who owns Frye's
Cycle Shop.

RellaJKe Eledrlc _" _ _ _2,4 711
Robbli18 lo: Myen....--"_;._19 3/.4
Sb&lt;iney's Inc .."--"--"--13 111·

Star Bank --"--"-----·40 1/4

Wendy lnt'L ""--"---.14 Ill
Worthlnglon lnd..--"-----21
Stock reports are lhe 10:30 LID.
quotes provided by Advest o
GaWpolls.

·::etih';f.:t~~!.B:a:i!~ EMS units record 7 calls

0b1o Yoollq l'lii!IIIWII ~Mulliilldll
. .... .......,..... 4SH9; JOb. 992-2156.

· Deadline for ·
.
of election letters ov. 2.·

·)

Historical society meeting set
·

.
Middleport's Beulah White will
Several people passmg me on
die street over the past week have mark her 93rd birthday on next
Monday, OcL 10.
commented:
Looking back, many of you will .
"You must have been a beautiremember
Beulah from her days at
ful baby."
.
I considered it quite a compli- the old Mary Jane Restaurant ment until it dawned on me that and wasn't that a fanwtic place?
they were giying me the title to ~ later' the Marlin Restaurant .and
tune 14 in the "Whatsa Name of- then at Dudley's. Flower Shop in
That Song Contest."
.
Middleport. Beulah sang with the
choir
of the Middleport First Bap, Twenty-seven readers correctly
identified tune 14 and there are tist Church for about 60 years.
Cards will reach her at Oversome new names ft!JIOng the partieipants. Naming die tune correctly brook CCI)ter, 333 Page St, Room
were Margaret Bailey • Pomeroy; 208, East Wing, Middleport.
Martha Hoover,. Pomeroy; Nancy
I believe to a point in laking the
Moose Portland.• Suzanne Wol'e
'' • · advice of the expens when it comes
Racine;• Bonnie Conde,
Middleport;
Mazie Hannahs, Pomeroy; Rita to diet and exercise. However, Pm
White, Cheshire; Marie Boyd, not overboard on eilher. Methinks
Racine; Marie Bush, Racine: you might live only about 20 min· ·Dorothy Jeffers, Pomeroy; Linda utes longer and diose could be the
Jenkins, Pomeroy; Pauline Wolfe, worst 20 minutes of yoqr life. I
Racine; John Story, Pomeroy; Ruth believe I'm inclined to lead into the ·
Young, Middleport; Maurisha Nel- line of philosophy that recom son, Middleport; Esther Frecker, mends you enjoy yourself- it's
Racine; Betty Reibel, Pomeroy; later dian you think. Do keep smil"Betty Denny, -Middleport; Loretta ing.

....,-. .......,_.

83tf.r .

~

The FOurth District Coun of Appeals will convene at 9:30 a.m.
on Thursday, Oct 13 in the Gallia County Courthouse 10 consider
cases from Gallia and Meigs counties. The coun reviews all cases
heard in lower courts in which a decision has been appealed. The
court serves 14 counties in southeastern Ohio.

Deed, Ellsworth J.. and Ann F. Madhu B. Graham, Pomeroy par- 1.84 acres:
Right of way, Clifford Scott Jr.
'
Holden to Don V. and ionnic G. .cel; '
and
Palricia Ellen Scott to CSP,
Right
of
way,
Wan!~&amp;
and
DonBurke, SaleiJI ~Is; • ti ·.,
- gencrHamiltotl:
· · · · · ··
_, Deed, Ruth A: Smiih tli Re~a ald H. W)letll::at!ll.Robert and Tana C:1esfer, 4. 7064 acres:
Right of way, Donald W. and
S. Wellman ro~Coliirnbus Soulhem
Deed, Paul A. Childs to Joyce Anil Ward, Po!neroy~Is; .
Barbara
J. Crabtree to CSP,
Power,
Scipio
parcels;
·
Childs. Columbia tracts;
. Deed, Harold L. Eag~ .to C~yRight
of
way,
S1anley
Reese
and
Columbia
parcels;
Deed, Robert and Mennice B. ton P. and l{aren M. ~n. Olive
Right of w"Jiy, John W. and
Arleen Schwalbauch to CSP, SciHamplOIIto Steven and Kelly Lam- • parcels;
. .
"
Mary
L. Donaldson to CSP,
pio
parcels;
·
. bcrt,Rutllmd. 53.'n acres:
.Deed, Robert C. Ka~•. et al., to
Right of way, Glenn is and Columbia, 5.01 acres;
Deed Marilyn S. Burke t~ - .Mary C. Mora Kautz, Chester:
Deed, Charles and Martha Kay
Michael T. Burke, Chester;
Deed, Roland E. and 'Sherry S. Dolores Hoffman to CSP, Chester,
Wheeler
to -Charles K. and Angela
. Rigbt of way, .Ernest and P~- Goodwin to Mau~ew · T. and 4.35 acres:
K.
Hall,
Sutton,
1.004 acres;
Right
of
way,
Henry
and
Mary
·cia Calaway to ~uppers Plams- Angela C. Huxley, ~dc!J~rt parDeed,
Ronald
and Cecelia
Hunter
to
CSP,
Chester,
.5
acre;
. Chester Water Dtstrlct.- Orange, eel;
. ·
Dougan
to
Scott
E
D
0 and Ellen
Right
of
way,
Roy
Jr.
and
97 75 ~·
· Affidavit, Mary t,;. Kauff,
.
· ·Right of way, Evcreu Calaway • deceased, to George W. Kauff, Eunice L. Jones to CSP, 42 .10 Smith, Columbia parcels;
Deed, Terry Stobart to Hobert
peres:
to TPCWD, Orange, 56.9318 acres:
Pomeroy ~el:
. .
Right of way, Stephen M. and arod Lorena (Joggins, Pomeroy lots.
: Right of way, Richard L. and
Deed, Wilma G. Well to Eileen
Janice
R. Weber to CSP, Chester,
· June A. Bearhs to TPCWD, Agnes Welker, Pomeroy lots;
3.262
acres:
·chester,44.11 acres:
Right of way, 'Vanessa
Right of way, Roger W. and
Right of way, Theodore P. and K!'ukoneen to IJuckeye R~ Elec:
· (Coatinued from Page 1)
Daisy
V. Frecker 10 CSP, Chesler,
· Carol J. Sauber to TPCWD, Bed- uac CooperaUve, Bedford, 65 acres,
The building is located near the
· 'ford 160 50 acres·
Right of way, Brian and Davina 80acres;
Right of way, Ross Junior and tennis courts. Council agreed to
Right o'r way, Michl A. and Willis 10 BREC, Rutlarid, 1.7972
Gertrude M. Stewart to CSP, Rut- rent to the two groups for $100
Teresa M. King to TPCWD, acres;
each a year. Wolfe also noted that
Chester, 3.05 acres;
.
Right of .w~y, Ronald E. and land, 22.45 acres;
Right of way, Edilh M. Welch there is a water leak at the dugout
Right of way, Dana Kelly F1ck Carole A. Phillips, Salem, 28 ac~;
and repair work was aulhorized.
to TPCWD Chester 33 acres:
Right of way, Mike and Tracy to CSP, Scipio, 20.54 acres:
Right
of
way,
Clarence
and
Arrangements were made to
· Right of way, Gerald W. and Chapman to BREC, Columbia, 2
Mary
A.
Mullins
to
CSP,
Letart,
I
remove
the boat docks from the
,.
.
Joyce A; Burke to TPCWD, . acres: .
river on OcL 16, and to winterize
· Orange, 4.25 acres:
Right of way, Southern Ohro acre;
Rij!ht of way, Eugene R. and lhe pool sometime !his ~onth.
· Right of way, Nancy L. artd Coal Company to BREC!, Salem,
Dennis
Facemyer t_o CSP,
Pickens was authon~ed to go
Mark.Findling to TPCWD. Orange, 11.n ~;
.
Columbia,
98.3 acres:
ahead withethe purchase of one
102.51 acres:
Right of way, Roger D. WarnsRight of way, Harold P. and mobile and one hand-held radio at
. Right of way, Ro_yce A. ~nd ley to BREC, Rutland, 74.34 and
Mary
Jones to CSP, Columbia a total .cost of $1,600 for use by die
· Lucille Newell to TPCWD, Obve, 4.9 acres;
.
fare department.
. 15.962 acres:
.
..
Deed,, Robert I.... and Theresa parcels;
Right of way , Mark W. and
The mayor's report showed colCertificate, Georgia Pauline Ellen I;&gt;1xon and Ltn~~ L. apd
Rose deceased, to Scott Allen Robert Whitlatch to DaVId G. and Gwen A. Hall to CSP, Chester, lections from fines of $794 for
Ours ~d Marviil Edwards Bickers,
September.
Janice Lawson reported balances in the various village funds
as follows: general $22,602,07:
Greg Davidson residence, Pomeroy street construction, $9,244.30;
highway $7,989.15; fire .depatt. ~.~and Vica J. Abbott. . Units of the Moigs,. County VFD assisted.
.
rnent. $3,656.50; water, $6,418.95;
· Foreman and Abbott, to Ppuland Emergency Medical Service
POMEROY
answered
seyen
calls
for
assistance
' Mary K. Rice. Middleport parcels;
3:25 a.in., Lincoln Hill, Paul pool, $4,397.10; guaranty meter,
.
.
TbW!jday. Units responding inclUd$2,901.28; and cemetery, $82.44.
Warner,
Holzer" Medical Cenler.
ed:
Attending were Pape; council
. MIDDLEPORT .
'
RACINE
members
Larry Lavender, Bill
a.m., Page Street, Sybil
7:08 p.m., Southern High Roush, Dennis
Wolfe, Katie Crow,
The Daily Sentinel B'arr6:50
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
School, Ty Johnson, VMH.
. Eller Pickens Jr., and Don Shaffer;
"6;11 p.m.. North Front Avenue,
TUPPERS PLAINS .
(lllrnLl'Ml
Genevieve
Demoskey,
refused
12:51
p.m., Tuppers Plains Ele- Police Officer Ryan Hall; and Fire
~
ueaanent;
mentary, Ashley W~lch, St. Chief Eber Pickens Sr.
_ , , Ill

0: ·

.

Weather forecast: ·
Today ... Sunny. Highs in the
70s.
·
·
TonighL.,.Increasing ~loudiness.
Lows in the SOs.
'L
Saturday ... Partly c~oudy · A
chance of shower&amp; or 'th.understorms northwest third. Highs in
.
.
the 70s.
,.._._nded
forecast:
.,.,...,
f
Saturday night ... A chance ~
showers or lhunderstonns. Lows m
the 50s.
Sunday... A chance of showers.
Highs In the 60s. •
Monday .. .Fair. Lows in lhe. 40s.
Highs in the upper ~Os. to mtddle
60s.
Tuesday...Fair. Lows in the 40s.
Highs in lhe 60s.

'

Appeals court to convene

Syracuse says

: no

·

Suiasettonight at 7:05. ~.rn. Sun-

rise Saturday at 7:35 a.m •.l,

Beegle, Pomeroy; Frances Roberts,
Gallipolis; Mary Andrews,
Hilliard; Johneua Chapman,
Pomeroy; Louise Gloeckner,
Pomeroy; Grace Holter, Racine;
Maxine Russell, Crooksville;
Ramona Hawk, Pomeroif, and
Margie Weaver, Racine.
The name coming out of lhe hat
to win the $5 pm.e was !hat of John
StoJY. Your cheek will be i_n the
man, John. And keep in mind, I'd
rather owe you the five the rest of
my life dian to beat you out or iL
. Now for tune 15. Here are the
clue words of the song copyrighted
in 1944:
"Into each heart some tears must

1

;~s;liit~~ Adv~ntist ceremony s~m~dl1s humi.lity ;

;

record low was29 in 1952.

.

. The Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol, Drug Addictioo
· and Mental Heallh Services will bold its regular meeting at 6 p.m.
on Monday, OcL 17 at the board office in Gallipolis. The meeting is
usually held at 7 p.m: on the tliird Monday of lhe month.

The following land uansfers
wererecordc'&lt;d recently in the office
of Meigs County Recorder Ernmo-

Wants debates in all counties

'.

GJM Board slates meeting

·Land transfers released by recorder's office

·- Letters to the edi,t or

'.

Local News in Brief:

a

recau

~

In case you don't ~ have
enough planneil for thi~ weekend,
you can add one more activity at
least.
The annual meeting of the
Meigs Colinty Pioneer and Historical Society has been set for Sunday
at the Meigs Museum. The program portion of the meeting will
begin at 5:30 p.m. with a dinner to
• · be served at 6:30 p.m. and the business session followin,11 at 7:30p.m.
Cost for the dinner IS $7: and ~ou
rniglit still be able to squeeze m a
reservation by calling 992-3810 .
Saturday is die final day on which
reservations will be aceepted. •
Next weekend die society will
be laking part in the second annual
Meigs County Showcase, which
- will be held at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds on Saturday and Sunday, Oct. IS and 16. The society
will be hosting at the old lpg cabin
and will be selling soup beans and
cornbread there. If that doesn't
' tickle your fancy, die organization
will probably also offer hot dogs.

·weekend's weather scene

Billarycare has .- lnet i.ts.end_
· --~

.

The Dilly

· by Bob .Hoeflich

•·

: Writing in B·usiness Week magazine, former Treasury .official Paul
: Craig Roberls even )JliJIIOIIcd Milken as a )iotenlial Treasury secretary,
contending "his presence would elevate die moral tone of the entire
adrninistralion ...
In his 1993 State of die Union "employer mandates," and arbi- veto. Moreover, it is per(ectly clear · foreverJhe Muslim drive to conNobody can dernonsttate that unanlici~ events won't shock into a
new awareness the current supporters~or Junk bonds and big loans to less address. the newly elected Bill trary government rationing of that, though he and his legislative quer wet/fern Europe.
Now, and particularly in the
. developed nations. Current success iends to postpOne worries into the Clinton stood before a Congress everythin~ from medical services allies have vowed to come back
wholly controlled by his own party to doctors specialties - all to be next year and renew die battle, !hey new Congress, whelher they con. future. /
.
will face a more Republican (and trol it or not. it is im)l0113nt for lhe
; The !JisP.Y of bu,9ness is rife with examples of costly errors defended and announced that universal
hence more conservative, and less Republicans Ill be seen as moving
health
ca.re
coverage
would
be
me
William
A.
Rusher
· · at the ~ by their big-name practitioners, and seen as enors only on
central
aim
of
his
administration.
coor._erative)
Congress. Bill Clin- responsibly to refonn diose aspeciS
: ~flection and only after the bust.
'
·
To
show
that
he
meant
it,
he
waved
cpforced
by
heavy
fines
and
long
s
dream
of adding universal of out current hCI!Ith care syste!D
ton
Remember when it was said you couldn't go wrong in real estale? But
everything ·went. wrong, not just for the small local investors.but the a pen in front of the assembled prison sentences, and run by a vast goverl_lrnent-run health care to that require i!: notably by providing
lawmakers and warned them he new federal bureaucracy of agen- FDR's Social Security and Lyndon "portabilitY'' (i.e., from one job to
·· biggest investors in lhe world. (lbey're touting 'real esta1e all over again).
. And do you
when you .Couldn't go wron$ in gold? And not SO would veto anything less. He !hen cies, commissions, boards and Johnson's Medicare and Medicaid' another), and coverage, at an
appro~ri~te cost, of {Ire-existing
is in ruins.
.,
: long ago when the "smart" money was making itm cattle feeding? And appointed die first lady as chief of czars.
huge
task
force
to
draf~
a
health
a
It
didn't
take
long
for
die
Amercondiuons.
Private insurance must .
Modem
American
liberalism
is
· ·· before that in Dutch tulips? ·
care bill.
ican peopl11 to learn the basic out- a protean lhing, and it is dangerous be readily·available, and subsidized .
Mr. Clinton had been advertised lines of La Rodham's vision, and to assume that it has come to the where absolutely necessary. If lhe •
during the campaign, by himself soon thereafter legislatOrs of both end of its socialist road, on health cost of such insurance must rise to ·
and others, as.a "new Democrat." parties began fleeing from it as if it care or anything else. But the meet die high expectations of die ;
refreshingly free fr'om the ohl were some new and particularly national revulsion against the insuf-· public regarding quality medical •
. q .J
~
Democratic tendency to regard Big deadly sort of plague.
ferable arrogance and sheer incom- care, this mus't be defended as far
...
Government as the solution to all
Yes, lhere are problems, most of petence of government as a solver better dian government control and .
problems. But when the Clintons' them easily remediable, with of human problems has grown so rationing.
:
But Billarycare is dead.
~
After tltis they were talking health care bill finally emer~ed, it America's current system of health greB\ lhal it is hard to envision the
. Dear Editor,
.
William Rusher is a Distin- •
On Sept. 25 I had the opporturu- about how lhey would run the sixth was clear that the hberal care (lhe best in lhe world, by the democratic socialists who call
way}.
And
yes,
we
must
come
to
goaisbed
Fellow of the Claremont :
themselves "liberals" winning
ty to go to Marietta to a debate district. Cremeans was talking Democrats, like the Bourbons, had
grips
with
lhe
fact
!hat
the
Arneri:
Institute
for the Study of States- '
about
our
forefalhers
and
how
lhey
learned
nothing
and
forgotten
nolhhereafter
many
struggles
to
impose
between Congressman SUickland
can
people
demand
such
care
but
manshlp
and
Political Philosophy :
r&amp;!l
the
country
and
how
he
would
ing.
socialist
solutions
on
major
prob: and Mr. Cremeans. This was my
are
reluctant
to
pay
for
it
themand
a
syndicated
writer for :
run
the
country
on
a
book
of
values
Their
bill
was
a
grotesque
bellslems
faciog
the
country.
: first debate. I was curious about
· thefr views on bow they intended to and a gun. 1about feU off IllY chair. and-whistles caricature of a gov. selves. But very few people think • The defeat of the Clintons' Newspaper Enterprise Asaocla- •
:
·
: run lhe country. And boy did I fmd The man wants to run the country ernment-run health care plan: a the solution is to ilnpose Hillary's health care bill may thus come to tloo"
(For Information on how to :
with a gun. Our couritry was found- mons~us cornb~nalion, ~f cOm~­ medical dictatorship on the U.S. - be recognized as socialism's Battle
ouL .
.
·
of Poitiers - die pOlitical equiva- communicate electronically with··•
· Mr. Cremeans feels that we do ed by men who believed in one sory_ health alltances . (mearung population.
In
the
event,
Mr.
Clinton's
own
·
nation
under
God,
and
the
Bible.·
•
rnedacal
chain~gangs).
f~ced
by
lent of die famous battle of A.D. this c:olu'mnlst and others, eon- :
not need government run.ds. H_e
Democratic
Congress
couldn't
1
also
tliought
they
were
trying
huge
new
taxes
d1sgu1sed
as
732
·in which Charles Martel turned ta~t America OoUoe by caWngl- .
. wants to raise funds by asking pneven pass a lesser bill for him to back the Arab forces and ended 8CO..Sl7-6364, ext. 8317.)
· ~
. vate citizens and small and.large to take guns off the street, not tak:ll'
.., ·
: bu$inesses to pay for 11ridges,
· : schools, sewers and roads.
· Congre:nman Stric!cland' s
: response was that they bad triec;l
. . !his in the put. The citizens ~d Bible? What are Cremeans' values?
EDITOR'S NOTE:The follow- washed and dried my feet, then I is distinsuished from other church- sider it as wrong to disregard the ·
not take their money and put 1t Ill
Now after sitting through ·the log column Is the Rrst In a series put my shoes and socks back on es in rnamly two ways.
laws of health as to disobey the·
. the system; lhey wanted to pocket ·whole debate, I am old enough to or periodic: releases called "A and I washed and dried his feet.
The Adventists worship on Sat- . moral law. There must be some.. know what Hilla lried to do during straJtger goes to church." In Tlie other men in the room were urday becauSe Ibis, they feel, is lhe thing _to ~t, for th.eir averjlge life
• iL
:
Cremeans started talking about WorlcJ War U. and I tell you folks · these columns, George Plagenz
Sabbath ordained in the' Bible. span is 16 years longer than for
· family values and why he would be that, 1 hope that Mr. Cremeans and will critique churc:h services or .Geor.we R. n•aMn•""! (''And~ the sevenlh day God fm- non-Adventists. (Adventist ministhe 'best candidate. This is bec:ause Congressman Sttlckland will come various denominations.
~
r1u~v •
ished tlie work that he had done ters are vegetarianr as are many lay
: he has a wife and lhree children. and dellate in al114 ~ties so the
·
..
and bei'CStell"- Gen. 2:2.) · ~ AdvenlisiS.) ·
.'- He: feeb that he is very.family ori- people will mow whateacli Ciiidi-- - We were preparing To receive doing the same for each other. ·
These
good
people,
known
for
Other Christians believe the
:: entated. Then he looked at SUick- date stands f~" and how they feel the Lol'!f's Supper when die pastor , When. we we~e finished, we Sabbath
their
extensive
wades
of
mercy
ip
was ~&gt;hanged to Sunday
.: lalld and said, "Ted, you wouldn't about the future and bow they want instructed lhe men in the congrega- made a ctrcle agam and several of after Christ's
heallh
and
medicl\1
care,
are
war
resurrection, but
-• aiulcrsl8Dd beCause you have no to run the country. I teU you what. lion to retii:e to one of the rooms lhe men /ave thanks for what lhe
Adventists
dispute
~. The Gospel ahead of other Christians in theu
: diiJdren." Aft« that remark I I!~ it reallr ~~tares me to think what ctownstairs and the women to Lord ha done for them in their of John says the disciples.
after lhe understanding of wliat lhe Bible
: hisses, and boos. Also a_person kind o per1011 will represent our another room.
lives or •ed for prayers for them- resurri'ctiorl; gathered togelher on means when it says the body is
• behind me said. "That the Pope has country. ·
· I followed along with the 30 selves or somebody else in need.
:
"the first day of the week" (Sun- "God's temp~."
children
eilller."
··
..
;
C
Gelwp
l'llaen•
Is
a
syndlc:a~~
Lee
Layne
other
men.
When
we
got
to
the
I
can't
remember
when
I
have
da'I) but this' AcMntists ~·
.
"
.· ,,
Racine room we all stood around in a cir- been so moved by anything that has was
nqt .to inaug~ a aew
ab-' ed writer for Newspaper Eater~ ··
•
; ..
cle. The man next to me asked, gone on in .a church service. The balh but was just a~ expe- prise Alodatlon.
(For
lnfiirmtltlCia
on
how
to
"Do you have someone to .serve simplicity with which.llais act of dient. · , •
·
·
'J
·
,
vou?" When I said no tflot know~ .humility was ~ed thro.. ..a. and
·The other thing that seiS Adven- communJcate elec:tr0111eally willa
: ~Editor, · · ·
··
.~ld .Ba:~ ~=
ln~ whit he wa8 referring to), lie die unself'-conSCiousliess o~very~ tists Bpl!lt is ~- belief lhal heallh · tliiS'coliliii.iilst 'illld ·otbei'i, COil·
: Well. I thouSht everybody knew
. .DightB. Not only said hew~ be glad to setve me. . body (with the exception of me)
is a vifl!liJIIt of religion. They cqn- .tact Amerka Online 1i ' calllnc 1800~~~ eXJ;
: ll)at all J~~Cicllt R~ans and Ore: havo·I .been 10 those places with
"~ 1!fe we going Ill do?" I · brQught lei!I'S to my eyes.
. ',.
cianl !*J~bt ~ diseue of ~ . inCa I tbought _ . oomosexual- ~·
I could not help ~t wonder how
lOll~• ceased to ha~e chr~ l'w hid • least ~-good off'acer 1 . . ?'e ar~. &amp;oing to wub ei!Ch ~ the -~ (wi~ their more ojabopub~ication
IIICI eli~ rny~y from thought milht .be gay. Wake up, other s feet, he ltJid.
.
~ stocking ~t I!Jlll) ~ mBIIII: the r.:c rA ,the ~· lea!JDg notli- Crel!leans. They're everywhere.
I looked ~d the room and mg the openwon m their room.. So
· ins~ IIICICIIt ~behind. Thc:re Now, there il o11e homosexual I saw ICV!Jil pai1a fUied Jil,th wattt, I asked: l was .told that ~nst JUS!
: are. ~~, two modCf!l states, would JJOt lite to .haw in a trench so~e dippe,. ~ about ~ wash -put ~ stockinged feet mto tbC
· IWY llld' O'R:ece who claim some
'th
from .... other side basins- aloa&amp; wi&amp;b IOIIJC towela. Wllllr m the basin. The 1f0CkNa. 1
. .
·
· • - ·
.
·
· a int much debatecl by WI me-one. • u"' ·
·
·~Whatdofdo?" I lllkt4
--.rec~, dryquicldy
· '
1V DaiiJ Seatlnel weleelaelletten reprdlal tlie N.O¥. 8 a-rat
~=-r=j ..fmOdernscholars.
~~d •yealtJ~~ ~ ~ho ~e ~ • "I:n &amp;et the water," said mx Then wo all went lid U..., . ele lh•. H...,.wr,la tlle.Intawtot,..,._,a,oe~ ~will be
1
w~ " no wan
m a . nc
partner, who was a Sllldy lineman for the Lor4's Supper. This cere• ~ afltr U li!JOa on_Wedneaday, NO¥.~ .. - , .
.
• Ai to Mr. Oemeans' p t on
: bolD&amp; ,mid ., be in a foXhole with ~afraiJ:·~C:Cms~ . for the loC:a1 electric utility c:ornpa- many is something· thai is done • · · .~fld~~==:::m
~~..:!.~~.
,11 &lt; 1 boiiJolexuaL I've had 11 months 18
.
·
....
:
all
ny.
"You
~ off your shoes and four times a year in Seventh-Day
loQ""ra
pu
Yea
.
""' '"'·
.
, · :
every c!'llnty 501uoat
voters socks and sit down on the cliair. ''
Adventist churehea.
. 1.
• · ~i'B should be lOll wordl or te., preferabiJ typed. AD &lt;leneri·•
· •Cll ilelq of beiJig in trenChes and
fc~. 1 am a Korean W~yeter- 'f'aY. see arid heiU' wllllll,ou are: • · . AJ' l~k would have !t. I had
This denomittation of 750,000 .a re subject to _edltlns alld and must be llped '~ name, aclclrell;
·
·
ob
.,s;;:ddie
b~g
hole
m
one
sock
but
11
made
no
members
in the United States is and telephone number. TelePhone nWD~n will DOt lie plillllilled.'.N«
111, biWJa ealtled that war rn the
1
· 1 · · ··
eroy d1fference. He knelt down and orthodoJ in lllliny of its beliefs but ·· unsJsoed !etten will be pabllabed. Leltei's lhould be illleiOd ~· -~
'

Gaus-already Jn mUttary

-·-·- ·---- ··-

Beat of the Bend ...

Accu·W~ forecast for

dales back to !heir days toJerhilr on
the Democratic LeadershiP Coqncil. II was during a DLC dinner
honmng President-elect Clinton on
Dec. 5, 1992, lhal Espy may have
secu~ed a cabin.et appoin~ment.
Resuve over h1s career tn the
·House of Represe~tatives, Espy
attended the DLC dinner where he.
knew he'd see Clinton. Espy
du&amp;ed behind die stage and scribbled "Ten Reasons Mike Espy
Should Be Agriculture Secretary"
on the back of an envelope. He
tucked it into his pocket and
returned to his table.
Espy Sp()tted Warren Christopher, who served as the presidentelect's ttansilion chief, and handed
him the envelone to deliver In C.lin- .
ton. When Clinton arrived he shook
hailds with Esl!Y. who told Clinton
that Christopfier was holding the
note.
.
"Warren, where's my note?"
Clinton asked. Later in the evening,
Espy caught Clinton's eye from
across the table. Clinton smiled and
gave him a big thumbs-up.
"I .almost choked on 'my food,"

I'M So

the customer is king, !hat quality counts and !hat service is part of every
deal, not just a string of words that mllke a catchy slogan.
Bolh sectors, however, seem to slw:e in a couple of repeat perforrnances that in the past almost sank some of lhe baggest names in business, cost savers and borrowers .billiona of dollars; and put some people in
'ail
..
J No. 1: The biggest names in banking are shipping billions of dollars to ·
developing nations again. Among them are some of lhe 1980s' biggest
losers to defaulting bonowers, including "Citibank and BankAmerica.
· \_(_ t~~o. 2: Junk bonds are back, and booming. You may recognize these as
'liillb-risk, high-retuin securities that in th~t.t..l?80s were said in the
aggregate to amoun~ to a great fraud. The businessts flOW bigger dian
ever.
.
While both junk bonda and foreign loans were publicly discussed with
dismay.and disgust only a few years ago, lhey are·now not just back in the
picture, but accepted - not only without criticism, but with praise

~.

OHIO Weather
Saturday, Oct. 8

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo

'

-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

"Espy's time may be runn·ing out

The Daily .Sentinel

IDS~.

•

•

la:on will
..

ONIIV!JINQ

. -AbiiiiiON 11.00
Ul 1111

..

lJoitt{jJni(Jbnif!lltl
Relax! Let us prepare dinner for. you. Stop by
Grace Episcopal Church before every "home"
Meigs Football game for a hearty meal~hig
dinner from 5:30 pm to 7_:30 pm. · . .
.

•0We're conveniently located .
adjacent to Marauder Stadium.
• Walk to the gam~ after dinner.
(jra:a 'Episcopal Cnu~ ·'
3261£ast !Main Street
Pomeroy) O!J£992·3968
'1M !R.IfJ, tDIWi4 .st. "Pf4ntitr
!/(It tor

�,. .

·sports

.

(

.

Friday, October 7, ·1994_

•

The Dally.Sentinel

.

On the NFL scene~

'

Pligil ••

In iegard to football programs,

M,a·rs·hall, West
Virginia T~ch
worlds apart ··

:defeats·
Kansas
:21-13

By DOUG TUCKER
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP)The last time Kansas State won a
, foolball game in the home of its
most hated rival, not one current
Wildcals player had even been

..

By MATT HARVEY
held Stadium, which wasn'tmuch ;
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) m-&gt;re than an overblown high;
- As the crow llies, the campuses school field.
of West Vir~inia Tech and MarMarshall University Football ;
shall University are 64 miles apart. Stadium, built in 1991, has been '
The trip by car isn't much posh enoujlh ro'serve as the site of
born.
longer, aithough slow-moving coal the 1-AA title game since 1992.
;
Clyde Johnson, the oldest KlniCks or Sunday drivers can make
"We had a~ team in 1987 '"
Staler laking part in Thursday
it seem that way on the curvy, P~n
'Bill now we've g~t :
night's 21-13 victory over Klulsas,
mountainous
part
of
the
two·
lane
'8
j!Ood
football
program. Every- ~
was born in 1970. That's one year
just
outside
the
Teeh
campus.
·
thinji'S
upgraded.
lust look at the i
after Kansas Sll!te' s last victory in
,,
But
in
terms
of
success
for
the
sudium
and
the
facilily
building." ,
Lawrence prior to Chad May's
fOOiball
programs
at
Tech
and
MlrManhall's
televi$1Pn
exposure :
brilliant pas!ing display that gave
shall,
the
Pacific
IUid
Atlantic
could
·
'hc:lps,
too.
ThrQugh
agreements:
lhe W iIdeals something they've
lit into the gap, with room left over w;th cable netwodcs IJld a Hpnting- .
yearned for even more than a vic·
for
Lake Eric.
~
ton-area station, Manhall was telc· :
tory in Lawrence.
Marshall
won
the
NCAA
1-AA
·
v,'II!CJ 14 of IS times last season.
,
"We've lacked respect around t . ·
'
championship
in
I992,
finished
"No
one
else
in
the country has '
I
here and this program hasn 't,been
runner-up in 1991 and 1993 and is m:m: media exposure that way than::
that' good," said May, who hit 33 !c X!
ranked No. 1 in 1-AA. Not even we do," said athletic director Lee.:
of 44 passes for 379 yards and one
Florida State can boast of equal Moon. "~otre ~am.e doesn't get ;
touchdown. He was DOl intercepted
sucoess in the same p;riod.
·
oct 12 regular-season telecasts plus :
OUT OF MY WAY! - Kaasas State ruaaiag bait or Thursday algbt's Shocker State aad BIB
·and was hardly ever pressured by a
West
Virfinia
Tech
entered
this
a
txlwl game."
,·
flustered, frustrated Jayhawks b1Kk JJ, Smith (22) dellnrs au ia-your-race sdlr· Eight grudge match ID Lawreace, Kaa., where the
weekend
w1th
a
36-game
losing
West
Virginia
Tee~
probably
:
arm to Kaasas ulety Kwamle Lassiter Ia the first WUdcats woa 21·13. (AP)
defense.
sueak that started before the Chica- will never even be a ' L1Uie Mar· ~
"We're just oow starting to get starter.
ded the north goMx&gt;sL
2) with post patterns, crossing pat·
go Bulls even BEGAN their string shall."
a litde respect I think everybody's
"We had a lot of trouble ~ning
"I didn't see it because I was in terns, screen passes,lbovel passes
of t~ree straight NBA cham piMontgomery, ti. city of about :·
starting 10 recognize this.''
to May," Kansas coac.h Glen the middle of tht celebration," K· and bombs.
onships.
2,500 nesOed in the Kanawha River '
· Now 4-0 and ranked No. 19, Mason said. "We stayed with the State running back JJ. Smith said.
At halftime the Wildcats had
Joe Blauser has been on both Valley, just doesn't have the ;
Kansas State's victoiy sets up )lOS· same stuff that we had been using, "I just think our fans were hyped. one rushing yard, 27 I passing
sides.
.~. resources of Huntington, popula· ·
sibly the biggest game in_school but the prolilem is when you're Things arc changing around. We yards and a 14-0 lead. It was the
He was a graduate assistant at tillll about 58,000. ·
·
history. No. 2 Nebraska, unbeaten giving up yards you want to blitz. tore them up. I guess they just seventh time in his 16-gamc .
Marshall in 1992 when the Herd
Tech's academic program is
going into a game with Oklahoma And that puts guys in man-to-man thought they had 10 tear something Kansas State career that tile 6-foot·
won the tide on Willy Merrick's fc.;used on engineering and, as the :
State this S_aturday, will be at coverage."
up."
2, 220-)!0und senior had thrown
last-second field ~- And he has name indicates, other technical ~
· Kansas State on Oct IS.
At the game's end, the largely
"I'm sorry it haP.pened," formilrethan300yanls.
witnessed IS Slral$ht losses since degrees. Marshall has wide-ranging :
The Husk.ers remember May pro-Kansascrowdofnearly49,000 Kansas State coach B1ll Snyder
he became head trainer at Tech last .IIUidemic programs.
The Wildcats bad a 21-0 lead
weD. He hit a Big Eight-record 489 sat in mute displeasure as several said.
seasoo.
But Tech can win football !
before Kansas scored twice in the
:"yards against Nebraska last year, hundred K-State fans ran onto the
. "~i~ning the natiolllll champi· games under the right conditions. ~
May, 13-2-1 as K-State's fourth quarter to make it interest·
: one of only two losses he's suf- enemy field and gleefully disman- slarter, befuddled the Jayhawks (3· ing.
onsh1p m 1992 was the greatest
·current coach !lob Gobel ·
thrill m the world," Blauser said. proved it in an earlier, one~ year :
: fered in 1'6 games asK-State's
•
'
•
r
"I think a win fll' this team would stint at Tech in 1989 when the ·.
be exacdy the same as Marshall Golden Bears went 7·2·1 and ,
winning the '92 national chalnpi- played in the NAJA Division I •
.
onship on Merrick's kick.
playoffs.
:
·I LINCOl-N. Neb. (AP) -'So tied off a vein' believed to be con· · plained of ·a sore ·calf.before ' the tie off a surface vein that had a
"I think w~ they w~n t.hlit ftrSt - Tech 's_biggest problem hu ;
•far, only the doctors are saying· tributing 10 the clots. He said the victory over UCLA on Sept. 17and smaller blood clot.
· game, that w1ll be theu nauonal been continuity. After Gobel left ,
:Nebraska quarterback Tommie Fra- operation went well.
the fust ~lot was discovered Sept.
That smaller vein probably had champi~mship," he said. "That for West Virginia State because of ;
!zier is out for the season.
Frazier, 20, a junior from 25.
rubbed a~airist the larJ!.er inner game will mean more to them than a .run-in with the administration ·
• Followin·g a half-hour surgery Bradenton, Aa., should remain in
The ftrSt clot was dissolved with vein, causmg the second clot, Gan- any ~ther ":In or_ any o~J!er ga10e Tech kept Jim Marsh as an interim :
:Thursday for recurring bloOd clots the hospital for a week 10 10 days bloo!l thinners and enzymes over gahar said. Gangahar had warned they II ha~e m tlleu bves.
coach for a $CBS01i' before deciding !
:in his right leg, doctors said he and avoid physical comact for three four days. But less than a week that a recllll'Cnce of the clot would
lbere,IS hope. ,
not to renew his conttacL
•
~shouldn't have physical contact for
to six months, Gangahar said.
once
lost
games
as
Tech
then
hited
Kevin
Bradley
!
·
Marshall
after he left the hospital, Frazier mean Frazier would be out for the
'three to six months. That would
Dr. Lonnie Albers, Nebraska's returned.
nlethcx!i.cally
as
.Tech.
!n
fact,
the
·Under
Bradley's
one-year
:
rest of the season.
lmean Frazier could not return director of athletic medicine, said
. The second clot was dissolved , No. 2 Nebraska (S-0) will play Herd had.l9 straight losing seasons tenure, Tech COIOmilled two eligi- :
tbefore Jan.~,
w after the college the need to keep Frazier on blood- with medication earlier this week, host to Oklahoma State (3-1) Salur- before fmaUy going 6-S in 1984.
bility infractions 'that resulted in a· ·
•oo\1'1 seaso . ·
thinners will keep him away from and Ii'razier underwent surgery to djly.
And Marshall's rebUilding was two-year NAIA probation. The ·
1 Coach ~
borne has kept a contaCt sports "for what appears to
as difficult as any school's, ever, Golden ):lears also had to forfeit
:brave face de~ite the all but cer- be the rest of the season."
since the uni~ersity's f~tball pro- their three. wins and one tie that
:tat~.lossofFraz1er for the ~n.
. Playing contact sports while on
g.ram was w1ped out m a 1970· season, wh1ch means the college is
•
The doctors have 1ndicated he blood-thinners would be dangerous
plane crash.
threatening the ail-time collegiate
•won't play, but you never say because of the risk of internal
. A mark of the sueeess of c~h futility mark of 50 straijlht losses
;never in athletics," Osborne said _ bleedin~ if there is an_.inj_ury.
J~ Donnan, who. has a .~38 wm• mstead of having "Just" 27
\)
.
.
.
mng
percentage smce takmg over straight defeats.
•lhts week. ·
· Fraz1er was hosp1tahzed TuesHUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
''We're excited to get back
Enter Gobel again in 1992
~ Dr. Deepak Gangahar, a cardiQ- day after a blood clot was discov- - Marshall coach Jim Donnan home in front of the Corps," Stew- in I990, is that the story about
~~ascular surgeon, said the opc:rae.red in his right leg for ihe second believes Saturday's Southern Con- . an said. "It will be a challenge for Marsh~ll is no longer just "The
"It's hard to build a pr~gram
:uon at Bryan Memonal Hospital Ltme m two weeks. He·first com- ference game against VMI will be our guys, but this is what you live Crash.
when you go through four coaching
Marshall senior receiver Shawn changes in four years " Lucas said
•
especially tough because it's home- for, to play the No. I team in the •
Goodwyn
has witnessed the trans- "When I came here i~ 1989 I can'i
country.,.
coming for the Keydets.
: Francis seeks vacant . OSU coaching spot
formation:
·
say how many freshmen ~e had
The Herd defense will also have
VMI has suffered from a weak
"When I was in high school, but I know there was quite a few:
~
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _..._ piled ill June to fill lhe fulltime to contend with sophomore running offense thai has averaged 254 yards
~Ohio State may be on the verge of assistant's spot
back Thomas Haskins, who leads per game and a conference-low my coach said somebody from When I finished in 1992, we had
~arshall' was in~rested in me," three seniors."
:hiring former Buckeye star Jerry
"At that time, Jerry was given Division 1-AA programs with an I4.8 points per game. .
•Francis 10 replace assiStant basket· strong consideration," Ayers said.
average 142 yards rushing per
But Marshall assistant coach satd Goodwyn, a native of Sussex,
Sports briefs:ball coach Ken Turner, wlio died
Francis is a Columbus native game.
Mickey Matthews said that's no va. "I said, 'Who's Marshall?'
And he said. 'You know, the team
BasebaU
:sept. 28 after suffering a heart and Wehrle High School graduate
Keydel first-year head coach reason for tl!e Herd to relax. ·
•auack.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AJ')who started in 126 'of 133 games Bill Stewan said he's looking for·
"Anytime you work with I9- 'that died in the plane crash.' And I
: Th~ Columbus Dispatch said for the Buckeyes in a career that ward 10 returning home after three year-oid kids, anythin' can hap· had heard of !haL"
The Aorida Supreme Court struck
~Francis, 27, was coach Randy ended with the I988-89 season. He weeks on the road.
West Virginia tech student down almost all of baseball's 72pen," Matthews said. 'We have
~Ayers' No. 2 choice when, OSU stands 14th in career scoring at
good strength on both sides of the assistant coach Shawn Lucas, a year-old antitrust exemption, saybaD, but anything can happen in a player in Montgomery through ing the exemption appbes only to
~hired Turner last June.
• OSU with 1,486 points.
Ayers indicated on Thursday he
I992, knows all about MarShall's the reserve system, not the overall
. ball game." ·
He currently is an assistant at ·
basiness of tile sport.
'Among the "anythings" NCAA · success.
,was going back to the list his com- Buder University.
"They'on .....
tnn, and we'Division 1-AA No. I MarshaU (S-0
ov
·~ try·
The ruling clears the way for
overall, 2-0 Southern Conference) ing to get there," Lucas said. "I investigations into whether Nation·
will be on guard against' is guess thtit's the kind of proj!fam · al League owners conspired in
Tonight
turnovers,
·
maybe we •have 10 build after.'
1992 to keep the San Francisco
A\hens at Gallipolis (homecomBut
it
would
be
easy~jet
lost
Giants
from moving to SL Peten·
VMI
(0-4,
0-2)
has
forced
11
ing)
.
. NEW IERSHY Nltn: Siped Htic
trying
10
follow
Marsluil
s
ioad
to
burg,
Fla.
·
turnovers
in
its
last
four
outings
Transactions
Jackson at River Valley (home"Sioopy" Flood,.......
.
u~a.
~
Basebal
against Marshall.
OIU.ANOO IIAOJC: Sipool .....,
coming)
.
'l'llaiDp&lt;~~. -.
Put
of
tile
success
revolves
SAN
FRANCISCO
(AP) ~
Center
J.D.
Cyrus,
Marshall's
Wells"'n at Meigs (homecomPHILAOI!LPHIA ·761!11S: Woi..d
around
$34
million
the
school
Two-time
NatiOllll
League
batting
he
senior
offensive
captain,
said
, _ , llowkioa, ....... Aloood .. ing)
•
.uh: Oant Bam~'. pant. Clll a OM-y.r
spent
to
build
a
stadium
and
facilichampjon
Willie
McGee,
pitcher
endorses
Matthews'
one
game
a1
a
Point Pleasant at Poca .
S;p.d Dmlcil Alooon, r........_
time philosophy as the Herd ties building this decade. The Bud Black, outfielder Dave Mar·
lnrilod Lloyd Otnioll, r...,on~, ,. ....,.
Lo,gan at Marietta
·
marches toward a fourth consecu- building alone is almost as large as tinez and rtrSt baseman Todd Ben·
Alexander at Trimble
ina~ Sl1P1311SONICS: Siped
zinger were placed on waivers by
tive
NCAA-Division I·AA champi· th:parking.lotatTech's stadium.
Belpre at Warren Local
Dontonio WlaatMJd 11141 Pall Orolllm,
tony
Petersen
played
for
Mar.
the San Francisco Giants.
onship
game
appearance.
·
forwank.
~
Federal Hocking at Miller
VANCOUVD lWrnt!llf.l: N1mod
shall
in
1987,
when
the
Herd
also
1be four will become unrestrict·
Keydets
have
our
atten·
"The
Nelsonville· York at Vinton
Onocl:
ol bookotbtll
fbished
runner-up
in
-1-AA.
Now,
ed
free agents. Should any of the
lion
this
week
and
we'll
be
ready
c
he's
an
assistant
coach
under
Donplayers
re-sign with ·111e Giants, the
~--~-L
for
them,''
C"yrus
said.
'
C
ve at Fairland
nan.
Peters11n
's
career
began·
and
team
now
would be able to cut
Kickoff
will
be
I:30
p.m.
SaturMiami r~lce at Col. Bishop
111
er.ded
at
,MarshaU's
decrepit
Fairtheir'
salaries
'more than the maxi·
day
in
Lexington,
va.
·
.
CHICAGO BI!ARS: W.,vod Ryon
Hardey
Wllni&amp;lal, cipl •4. Aedvated DafWln
mum
20
wrcens-_
_
1roili~t Portsmouth.
lrclana, ua-.ckef, from tho practice
As a collegian It UCLA, Jadtie
Robinson starred in baseball, foot"'tREI!N BAY PACKERS: Waived
Saturday
ball, basketball and lrle~
Rollin lluollton, llnobodtor. Rc-tipod
..,
Southern at Eastern
Clluloallooa.al!toliva .......
MIAW'OOI.PIUNS: A-....od lho
Hannan at Hamlin
As a youngster, boxing great
..w...t ol Najee Wllltd'aa. cWeulve
?
.
''Sugar Ray" Robinlon was 1 sidebodt.
Note: Wahama has an open date walk dancer In New York.

,~,
....
1

ARMSTEAD HONORED. -

wd.

i,, Nebraska's Ftazier sidelined

.
Oh1o River Be~

·.

.

. . . . .,

1'

· 1...--~--

GRAVElY TRACTOR
. · SALES ~ SERVICE .; .
21M Condor SL

PoiMI'OJ:oK

IPIINI AND ,. .. '
IUIIIIEIHOUIS
.
MON.-FRI. II:IJO.Il:_OO
SAT.li:CI0-12:00

tot
.a~

HI
• • •,

Hot Buttered Roll .
CoHee or SmiiiDrlnk-

I'

,$

•

co-·

· ment''

I

Vitlt oar.retlil ••• , for
Ollo River Beut doll•···••••iet....eat•~·
htr.;tir.. far•ltare ••• re•i• fit•r••~~·
•••n 11ide •y ot~er 111111ftetare~• ,lid
., .
1 -hole lot morel
..

·

; That's not what.genenil manag: er Harry Sinden of the Boston Bm·
• ins thought foilowing 'WednesclJy's
! session with the union. Sinden
: blasted Goodenow for not liargain·
• ing in good faith.
. ,/
: Devils owner John McMullen,
' meanwhile, questioned Goode; now' s in~lliiJetic.~ in a pres$~ferencc brisdmg w,tth barbs.
: ~w refused to get into a ·
: war ·of worda with McMullen and
.. : Sinden, who were tullling .owners _
·and team manag~t ~~~ta-

,.
I

.

By KEN RAPPOPORT
tives called into the talks for the
. NE"f YORK '(AP) -The ~ ·· f'trSt time this week.
: .
season IS on hold. Now, the NHL s
LamorieUo seemed just as frus .
labor talks arc SIOJl)ling, too.
1rated Thursday as McMullen did
After consecutive days of bar- Wednesday.
gaining, both sides arc far ·apartHe said there won'tbe a hockey
both philosophicaUy and geograph- season unless Goodenow. haS faith
icaUy speaking.
.,...
in the financial picture being pre" NHL co~missioner Gary sented to him by the league. LamDettman was m New York today oriello also said he fel~ Dettman
·awaiting a new ~~I from~ was too'generous ·with his proposPlayers Assoc1a11on . executive als 10 the union.
·
director Bob Goodenow. Goode"I think Gary Bett!l'tan went
now was in Toronto. working out quite a distance with yesterday's
details.
proposals," Lamoriello' said. "I
"We are developidg and think right now he undeCstands the
researching a counter·p!DJlOsal. but support he has from the owners
I don't kn_ow w~ther 1t would be because he took more of a giant
ready (Fnday), Goodenow told step forward and weht a litde furC_ana~ian Press in a phone inlAY,- ther than maybe a few of us
v1~w m To~nto on Th~y .. I thought he should have.''
will not predict a day when It will
Added Bob Clarke .president
be readr,. These are C&lt;!mplicated and general manaf,e~ of _t~e
matro~.
. .
. · Pbiladelphia Ayers: ' If anythmg,
.Goodenow ~d 1t would not be- 4ese players should be tying their
"1radic,ally ~ifferent" rro!,!!)IIE wagons to Dettman. He's done
P ayers previOUS proposa s.
more in two years than .has ever
Goodenow fl~w ~ Toronto ~n been done in this league. I don't
Thursday after rejCCUng ~ ~ s think Goodenow has any intention
latest propo~al and prom1smg to of anybody playing hockey."
come
w1th one ofare
hu working
own.
Theback
negotiators
under an OcL IS deadline. That's
the target date Dettman has given
to start the -delayed season.
Dettman postponed the beginning
by two wt~~ks in hopes that a new
labor agreement can be reached by
' then.
,
So far, 30 games have been
' poS'J!Oned.
' I don't know if anyolle knows .
• what Bob Goodenow wants," said
~ Lou Lamoriello, gllf)eral manager
t of the New Jersey Devils. "I hope
: it's to get a fair bargaining agree.

i '

"·

I

~NHL labor talks now on hold

204 N. Second Ave.
Middlepon,.OH 4S760
•
614/992-4QSS

GreenEl;IM

tllelr name, show orr tlae plaque tbey woo for
bavlal tbe best-eapaeered car of Its dass •

)

!.

t'

BEST OF ITS CLASS - Doa aad Gloria
Oars, proprleton or the racin1 ftrm that bears

crown

N....!.r!'.:O

~e .

llelaa.!1111J18C1 Mill Bncket World FIDIII.

•

Da-_... .

__

rew N-lllk nee •DNMJDCer 8W'BIIIIIrlr. tbortly.

Team Kanawha Valley claimed several top while' driving his 1986 Trans Am. Sheldon
honors at the IHRA World Bracket Finals, held . Gerlacb, also of New Haven, made it to the fifth
: last weekead at Norwalk.
round of the Pro Division before his elimination.
·
Keith Smith d Gallipolis took second driving 1
Ciady Armstead of Patriot, a senior at River
. . 1989 C!!ll~ oymed by~&amp;: Gloria Ours Racing Valley_High. School, was aamed Miss .Bracket
· . of
C1ty. 'Ian Snyder, one d the owners d World Finals.
· Kanawha Valley Dragway Park in Southside,
KVDP was given tbe Homer Award, wbic'h is
W.Va., finished third in the Tnck Operators .race. given 10 one track per year;
The team finished lOth because of mechanical
. In the specialty awards, the aforementioned.
Cudass ·won the Best Engineered Pull-Bodied Car problemi on several cars.
prize.
Regular racing will resmne Saturday at KVDP.
In regular CCllllpelition, Richie Gerlach of New Gates will open at noon. Time trials will be at 2
Haven. W.VL fUJiabed third in the Super Division · _P·m: El~ons will be at7 p.m.

.

Scoreboard

1

Kanawha Valley Dragway Park
. claims several top honors ··

Marshall must not take VMI ·
·lightly in homecoming game

'

With

lldmlnra rllbt IMidad, Cindy Armllelld atands wltb

,,

f·or remainder of the season

This week
in H.S. football

.

Chiefs favored to remove
Chargers .from unbeaten list

Friday, October 7, 1814

'.

K~State

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,

Lamoriello said. he couldn't
understand how the union could
. reject the league's most recent proposals, which revolved around tax
plans to help small-111arket teams .
The first propased a flat gate
receipt tax and a further reduction
in a payroll tax. ·The second called
for teams to have a tax on every
dollar spent on payroll revenue.
The key issue in tile stalemated
ta11cs is how revenue is divided !(&gt;
help small-market teams. Both
sides have offered tax proposals to
provide money for those teams.
The league wants to tax a lelim's
payroll to generate revenues. The
players say the tax will have tile
same effect as a salary cap, a plan
a6amandy opposed by the union.
The NHLPA lias proposed the top
16 revenue-generating teams be
weds 112 percent on payrolls and
g!Je receipts, with the money going
ir..o a pool for teams in smaU markets.
·
Along with the tax issue, negotiators are at odds over a rookie
salary cap, salary arbitration and
free agency. ,

[:IJ3EI:3.t:IJ3ti~BEI~Bt!!~~

Prices Are

By DAVE GOLDBERG
had a few mixed feelings about ble in the Kingdome. TbiJ iiD't ill
AP Football Writer
.
· beating son David last wedc.
the Kingdome, but the Broncos
Just when they were about to go
Some=,Marv Levy doesn't have aU the trouble they need.
SEAHAWKS, 3I-I8
4-0, the Kansas City Cltiefs were fit in that c ory. ·
·
shocked two weeb ago by the Los
OOLP ll. 31·26
Wasbia&amp;toa (plalJ Vl)
Angeles Rams, probably the
'Mioaeiota (plus 11/2)
at PbllacleiDbia
Heath Shuler is fearning more ·
biggest~ in the NFL this.year.
at N.Y. GlaDis (Monday)
· Now, after ' a wcck-·off, the Chiefs
The Giants weren' I good about the NFL than he wanta to
go to San Diego against the only enough to be 4-0, so they aren't. know.
team that lS 4-0.
The Vikings' loss last week may
EAGLES, 37·11
Two things at wort here:
have been a case of Arizona being
New Orleaas
1-The Chiefs probably weren't too good tobe0-4. · ·
·
(plus 3 1/2) at Chicago
C(Uite good enough to be 4-0, parWe know Cris Carter can catch.
Steve Walsh against one of tile
ucularly since they had the emo- If Jake Reed and Qadry Ismail join teams that didn't think he was good
·enough.
tiona! reunion between Joe Mon- . him ...
He isn't
tana and the 49eis two weeb eariiVIKINGS, 27-20
er. Tiley managed to stay up for the
Arizona (plas )3) at Dallas
SAINTS, 23-20
IDdiaaapolis
Falcons bulst
went flat against the
Buddy's on a roll.
Rams. . •
·
For one game, anyway.
(plus 5) at N.Y. Jets
2-The C
ers probably aren't
COWBOYS, 22·13
These games have a way of end·
quite good enough to be 4-0. But
San·Franclsco
ing 9-6 or 6-3. There's more scoring this year.
.
they are, thanks to a litde g~ for(minus 5) at Detroit
JETS,12-9
tune and a lot of gutsy play, partieCharlie Garner riddled the ~
ularly by Stan Humphries. Then Francisro defense, so imagi!le w. t
Tampa Bay ,
(plus 6 1/1) at Atlallta
they got the week off to heal Barry Sanders can do. St' I,
(Humphries' knee, among other Sanders has run for 297 yards and a
Tampa's special teams accOunt·
injuries).
7.8 average the past two weeks and ~ for two touchdowns last week.
Adanta has Franlc Gansz, the speAre they good enough 10 be 5- the Lions are 0-2.
07
.
.
49ERS, 32-25
cial teams gllfll.'
FALCONS, 24-11
The oddsmakers say they arc L.A. Raiders (plus 3)
L.A. Rams (miaus 8)
by a point, or less than the home
at New England
at Green Bay
field. advantage.
The odds alone tell you what
If you lose 8-5 at hOme, it gets
Fme, but Montana has a way of Bill Parcells has done for the Patrimaking od~ look silly. PartictJI!Irly ots. The other edge: Parcells knows W\Jrse on the road.
PACKERS, 18-5.
on a week s rest after a hOrrtble Jeff Hostetler and how to defend
game.
against him
Last week: 5-7 (spread); 6-6
CHIEFS, 24-15
PA1RIOTS 37-33
(straight up)
·
Deaver (pi~ 31/2) at ~attle
Miami (plus 3) at B.rlfalo
Season:
29-34-3
(spread);
37-29
The Broncos always have trou(straight up)
Don Shula won't admit il but he

Western Michig~n, Bowling Green have
best chance of .staying on top of MAC .
By RUSTY MILLER
Kent 28-6 outside MAC
would be winless except for defeat·
AP Sporlll Writer
has been shut out once.
ing Aleron 32-I6..
..for years, the Big Ten Conference was 'known as the "Big Two
and the Litde Eight"
The Mid-American Conference,
always hopeful of duplicating the
Big Ten's success, has stolen a
page from its JDuscular neighbor. ·
Welcome to the MAC's "Big
Two and Utde Folir." .
At the top of the MAC stand
elite teams such as Western Michigan (5-0 overall) and Bowling
··'~
Green (4-1). But there is a chasm
between those teams and winless
MAC affiliates Eastern Michigan,
Akron and Ohio University.
How wide is that chasm? Con·
sider these facts dealing with the
haves (Western Michigan and
Bowling Green) and the have-nots
(KeDI, Ohio, Akron and Eastern
But if you carry an A~ card with one of these symbols...
Michigan):
- Eastern Michigan and Houston share the nation's longest Divi'sion 1-A losing string with 10
defeats in a row. This marks a vir·
tual slraDglehold the MAC has held
you have 24-hour access to your accounts •
on the dubious distinction during
every day of the year at our SuperTeller machines.
the paSt three years.
. . Follow along closely: Eastern
Michigan inherited the "nation's
Athens ·
Marietta
Belpre
Lowell
Middlepon
longest" dishonor when -Kent,
373-3t55
593· 7761 423.-75 16
8%-2369
992-6661
'which had lost I7 in a row dating
from the last time it defeated
Nelsonville
NewMk
The Plains ron only
Aleron, toppled the Zips again Sept.
753-1955
788-8820 797-1547 376-7123
17. Kent had becllme the nation's
losingest team when Ohio snapped
a 15-game losing skid with a 15-10
·-·
victory last Oct. 16 over- who
else? - Kent.
-The bottom four arc a combined 1-16 overall and I-ll in the
conference: Akron was outscored
32-7, Eastern 73-3, Ohio 35-16 am!

Our lobbies will be closed
Monday, October 10
in observance of Colwnbus Day. :

.I I

AT

,41

BUnONS &amp; BOWS

•- SS,III**

~
11111111 '14 am AITII
1m••• ca1s1•wa•

OaQBIR 7 &amp; OOOBER 8 .

Remaining
Summer

84 Month FINANCING·

Spring
· Jackets

12~o~&amp;up

lr••t for falllll

75%-off

40%off

• EDndld Cl8lls
• DoMr $idt Air Big
• Aelr AkiHIIl
• Ar6-lod&lt; Blakes
• /&gt;it Concition
• AUomiDC CNeniMI
•PIS

•Tft

•P/8

• AUrron Rllrilg Boillls

aaan11111wn
S·SI!Jfl Pa• ·.

•Cruise
·AIM'MCass

• Well E&lt;iuwed'

• Pll'llncbw$

• Pilocl&lt;s
•4 Galt CNirs
-~

.Chrlstmai
OutRts

~1,481

lltw.orn to I•L

30%off

•'

IRING'Us YOUR DRYCLEAitiNG

,.

I'

3 DAY SERVICE

~.

100E.MainSI.

992-6177

pwntr· Vickie _(Grate) Felrell

I

' '

• Powt1 Wndows • Akriun
• Power Door Locks WIMS
• AIM'M Stereo
• LOided!
• Til. Ccrosole
• Custom Cloth
Bu:kel Seals

'

.. .IYiftM
"

I

•

"

.

'

�.

...
•

.

.

,,

'

.
.'

OCtober 7, 1994

.Kung :Fu classes set _

I

The Middleport Arts Council
will offer classtcal Chinese Kl!llg
Fu arts classes from 7:30-8:30 p.m.
O;L 10, 17 and 24 at the arts COI!Il•
.cil center.
Richard B. C,hambers, director
.of the Lao Tsu Taoist sanctuary
will conduct an inuoduction to
Shaolin Chin {seize) Na {conuol).
1be counciL has offered classes
for three years in the Yang style
, Tai Chi Ch 'uan fonns. The Shaolin
Kl!llg Fu styles of SOIIIhem China
will be featured also.
Although no fighting system
solely uses Chin Na, almost all
. Kung Fu .styles use this method
with other combat techniques.
Even Japan and Korea's· martial
arts have been affected by this Chinese mlttia1 structure.
Chin Na is a seizing an much

Star Grange collects :·
·me&gt;ney for.deaf school -~

like Jujitsu and Aikido. The classes
will focus on the theory and pnnciples of ttaining the. fingers; hands

and arms .to develop speed and
power.
.
Instruction will explOJP,the general rules for the grabbing',Chin Na
conbOI along with countering and
escaping.
;
Advanced Chin Na training
includes pfessing and strilri~ntech·
Diques that· divide mu5cles an tendons, misplace bones, st I the
breath and fmally employ,th irifa·
mous Tien Hsueh and - Mak
techniques.
This series costs $15. For more
infonnation about the classes, call
992-2675.

A $SO donation was made to the
State Grange .project of c,ollecting
mOI_II')' for the purch~ of sports
eqwpment for the Ohio School for
the Deaf when $tar Grange 778
met ~ntly at the hall.
.
J_ams Macomber, deaf pro~ect
Chl!flllan. re~&gt;rted on t~e proJect
nottng that state offtctals have
asked for contributions.
Lecturer Vicki Smith talked
· about October and Master Pauy
Dyer conducted the meetmg, Read·
ings included: "Great Pumpkin's
Com in' To Town" by Opal Dyer;
"Enthusiasm" by Rachel Ashley;

RICHARD CHAMBERS

"Excuse Me Riddles" with ever}-··:
one panicipating; "October Ckx;k"::
by Carolyn Gardner; and "The:
Power of lhe Tongue" by Smith. :
Eldon Barrows, legislative-:
chairman, re~ned on effons by::
the Ohio LegiSlature to pass a law •
to tax Social Security benefits.
:
• The annual chicken barbecue ·
was a success it was noted.
·.
The annu~l Halloween party:
was announced for 6:30p.m. OcL '
15 with Costume judging followed
by potluck supper and -fun and
games . A haunted house will be :
held

. PUBLIC ·

NOTIFICATION
INVENTORY
ORDERED SOLD.
GOODS TO BE
EXPEDITED .TO
PUBLIC SUNDAYIII
:e
a .·,
. TAYLOR JONES

.

..

Jones birth ·
announced
Jeff and Linda Jones of Middle-

port announce lhe binh of their sec-

·ond son, Taylor Alexander, born
Sept. 13 at the Holzer Medical

hrc••••
••••
1M .
pt~hl for ., ••••· pt~rso•l
onCE:

12 MONTHS
FREE FINANCING

APPLIANCES AID CARPET
6 MONTHS
SAME AS CASH
(With Approved Credit)

HERE'S THE
NEWS

-+

checks,lllsler(ani,V1M
and/or acceplaW. cretlll
"

THIS IS APUBUC SALE AND SHAUl£
CONDUOED ON THE PREMISES SUNDAYI

SUNDAY.
NOON
.12
•
TIL 6 PM

NO INTEREST, NO PAYMENT IF PAID BY OCTOBER 1995!!
(WITH APPROVED CREDIT)

Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Jones have anoth·

•

ON ANY PURCHASE OF FURNITURE OVER $599

er son, Bradley.
Grandparents are Frank and
Diane Jones, Reedsville, and Olen
• - and.Gfllf:e Thoma. Chester.

'

Society
scrapbook

Ol:TOBER 9Tt(1994

VAUGHN·BASSEn * FLEXSTEEL * CALDWELL * RESTONIC .
ENGLAND· CORSAIR * IMPERIAL * GIBSON * ZENlTii * COROLLA
CWSICS * SPRING AIR * CIL.DWELL * STOIIEVILLE * HOOVER
JIMSO·N * CATNAPPER .

DEAN'S LIST

.

·
Hockin!!· Col\ege recently
annol!llced tiS Dean•s List for the
summer quarte~r-d\liit. JIU.!ten~s
earnin!J this honor included:
Christma Cooper of Racine;_
Michelle Donovan of Coolville;
Laurance Ebersbach of Syracuse;
Misty Hayman of Syracuse; Fredetick Thomas of Cheshire; and ·Mary Woods of Middleport.

"

.. . -·

-

~

_....__

.October 2-8,
~~ ·

'

WJDTES ELECfED
Robin and Bobbie White of
Coolville, children of Robert and
Dove White, were elected vicepresident of the senior class and
president of the SOJ!hOmore class,
respectively, at Oh10 Valley Cotlege, Prukersburg, W.Va.
Robin is a senior majoring in
elementary education while Bobbie
is a sophomore majoring· in
accounting.

The Differences
We Mak·e

This Page Sponsored By These Many Fine ~u~inesses
National4-H Week
National 4-H Week
·Sug~r Run Flour Mills

PAGEANT OF BANDS
The Fon Frye band will host the
· 13th annual pageant of bands on
O .~t-. lSth at the Cadet Stadium
be-hind Fori Frye High School !P
B ;verly. The_contest 'is. an Oh10
Music Educators Association sanctioned event. Admission is $3 for ,
ac.ults and $2 for students. Refreshments will be sold,
CHILD HEALTH MONTH
Area McDonald's restaurants
will help promote the need for children's immunizations during October- Child Health Monlh.
Many children are not protected
against preventable1 life-~re&lt;!ten­
ing through proper 1!Dmum_zauons.
McDonald's restaurants Wtll have ·
free immunization information an~
lists of community activities and
times children can get immunized.
Area immunization sites can be
to se;t up the shots =hil- .

i

October 2-8, 1994

October 2-l.h 1994

POMEROY, OHIO

992·21)5

ley Lu111ber &amp; Supply Ingels Furniture and Jewelry ~
MIDDLEPORt, OHIO

The Shoe Place and-Locker·
2l
-

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·5627

K&amp;C Jewelers
'
.

'

1
i

992·3785
'

'

POMEROY, OHIO

'

Quali-ty _Print Sh,p. ~
'

. •

.I

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO.

•

a • ,

.

·'

'

U~INE,

'

OHIO

(

-

-

..

·

.

OHIO

· Williams &amp;AssoCiates ·
Insurance
""'~

POMEROY, OHIO

.

~.

.. . . . . .

'

SUNDAY 12 NOON TIL 6 PM

NOT $6999,95

ARMOIRE
ENRRTAINMENT

FREE DELIVERY AND
FREE SET•UPI
19" COLOR TV

5 DRAWER-CHEST
Oak Finish

_SUNDAY

12 MONTHS
FREE FINANCING

$2 29 99

12
.fi .
MONTHS
FREE
FINANCING

Y

Q18111 SeIs NOT $999•95............ SUNDA,,

' ·.
King Sets NOT $1299.95 .............SUNDAY
CLAUDE GABLE
QUEEN SLEEP SOfA
SUNDAY
95

$488

9 PIECE QUEEIIIIIII

DINING ROOM SUITE
W~h China, cherry finish , all wood table, 6
chairs, china, 1Blh century styling .

NOT $2599.95

544995 set
ss99'5 set

NOT $699.95

Blue dol woven small seole .
Lifetime lnlme warranty.

NOr $ltt,95 ,

SUNDAY

·

•

ALL PICTURES,

RECLINERS

LAMPS &amp; _
MIRR
. ORS

Tufted back recliners, padded
back, no sag springs and solid
hardWood frames .

6 HOURS ONLY
rHIS SUNDAY OIILY
95
SUNDAY
'

1/_
/2 OFJ

$119

1399

, SUNDAY

YOUR CHOICE: WING CHAIR
OR SWMl ROCKER

Count&lt;y dinette, pine finish all wood,

SUNDAYs 11997

•

95

Blue dot woven small scale. Lifetime frame warranty.

formica top on able lor durabiily.

NOT $499.95

SUNDAY

.

5

SOFA- CHAIR

FUU SIZE MATTRESS SETS
252

~

3499 95

5

SUNDiY

NO PAYMENT, HO INTEREST IF
BALANCE PAID BY OaOBER 1995

SUNDAY.....
SPRING AIR MATTRESS $ETS
!"!iu:·~~F~t::'!':.,;,.. C&lt;&gt;l,
PINE HUTCH
Grand Award Collection Ultimate
NoT 'SunAY s 119n
.
,
~!;;;;;;;;======~
5
Glass,Doors
Twin Sets NOT $69.9S .., ..............SUNDAY 5299 set
SUNDAY '279'5
534995 set
TABLE &amp; 4CHAIRS
.--------, F~ll Sets NOT $799.95 ................ SUNDAY

·. -MIDDLEPORT,
'

Military news
Jonathan E'. Bissell, a 1990
School graduale. was
recently promoted from Specialist
Four to Sergeii!L ·
.
Bissell, son of Naomi BilleD of
Basban iDd Glen Bissell of Racine,
joined the Army ill SeptciJlber.
1990.and -~ serving a three-year
totr with the First Bllllalion, 228th
. Avialion Rogiment in Panama.
Eastern High

•

,,I

, RUTLAND, OHIO

"

The ultlmate·ln formal dining by Crescent

234

,5

523495
SOFA

Mauve contemporary, 5 yr.
cover Uletlme lnlme warranty.

NOr $1199.95

SUNDAY

,..----;=-=-----------.
RESIONIC MAnRESS &amp; 101
SPRINGS CLOSEOUTS
ILL AT ~ OFF

RECUNING LOVESEAT: Blue, s year guarantee
Ufetime mechanism warranty. 2 Recliners for
One Price. NOT $1699.95
SUNDAY $5~.95

'

..• .

I

PAYMENT
NO
INTEREST

All wood, single dressar w/mirror, 4 dwr..
chast, lull or qileen headboard w/frame.

$229'5

IF BALANCE
PAID IY
lEGAL UQUIDATION OF QUAliTY
OCTOBER 1.995
FURNITURE SUIDAY

101 $499.95 .
SUI DAY

•
' !

••

I
'I

French style.

Beige &amp; teal floral cover. some burgundy.
NOT$2399.85 '
SU~DAY

iiO
JIMSO' OAIClJW:If BEDROOM

'42995

cover.

12 MONTHS
FRIE
FINANCING

Birchfield Funeral Hoine
742·2333

GIBSON 15 CU. FT. REFRIGEUTOR
9
SUNDAY 5 489~
SOLID CHERRY 9 PC. DINING ROOM SUITE

Washers - Dryers • Refrigerators - TV's · VCR's • Ranges. All available It Empire
Appliances ·and TV's, VCR/s have 6 .
MONTHS
SAME
AS
CASH
FREE
FINANCING~ Thai's no payment or Interest
balance paid by April 1995. So let Empire
handle your appliance needs.
~u•~ • GIBSON • CROSLEY

SOFA,CHAIR-OTTOMAN: . Country

, "YOUR BANK FOR' LIFE"
POMEROY
' TUPPERS PLAINS

I,

•

SUNDAYS 1039'5

NOON
IIL -6 PM
SUNDAY

far111ers lrank

'

•

·=

6
HOURS
-SUNDAY

1..nprlng Mattress

' 915·3161

992·3985

:

MIDOLEPORI, .

992·5020

·swisher &amp;Lohse Pharmacy ·
POMEROY~

F::;,;l,

POMEROY, OHIO

The Secret Is Out And The Heat Is Onl

Fruth Phar~acy
'

•

1

,;

992·2432

OHIO

992·2955

OHIO

Crow's Family Resta·urant

Veterans Memtrial
Hosplt~l . '
104 '

ational Bank-SYUCUSE
9.92·6531

•

992·2975

King Hardware

POMEROY, OHIO

992·2556

,

..·R•••~s Excavat-ing

OHIO

. '

Fisher·Funeral Home
.

POMEROY, OHIO

·'992·2342

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SAERVICE

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

· Downi_ng·Childs·Mullen·Musser
lnsura.-ce ·

'

n

~THE

Ewing F"neral Home
992·2121 ·

CHESTER, OHIO

985·3301

·Adolph's Dairy VaUey

MIDDLEPORt, OHIO

992·3345

MIDDLEPORT; OHIO

992·2635

Baum Lu111ber Co.

"FLEXSTEEL" SOFA CHAIR
South West Prlnt-Ufetime spring and
frame warranty o~ balM .. Sofa: beige
background wilh rust green blue print
Chair: blue w/rust NOT $2899.95

-

$999.95

�DIG• ·

8 The Dally Sentinel

. I

Friday, OCtober 7, 1~

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

.

..

··''friday, October?, 1914

.-

ApostOliC

Church of Chnst

"'

.......,,weo~~~~c~ec..

Muon,W.VL
PuU&gt;r. OreaOIY A. Jabnl&lt;m
Sunday School- IO:OOa.m.
Olildn:n'o O.unih - II a.m. .
Wonhip - II a.m. A 6p.m.
llluilday Bible Sludy • 7 D.lll.

ll•ip• Baplhl Churdt (S..-.o)

\•••lOr: Rev. O.vid Bryan ·
•. Swtolay ldlool - 9:4S om.
WUIIhip • II Lm. and 1 p.m.

, Keno Cltun:b IIICitrlll
Wonbip-9:30a.m.
Sunday Sdiool • 10:30 Lm.

!70 o.... St., Middlepod

Wednelday S.Mc:e - 7 p.m.

a....

........... llldpCIMordl ..
......., Jadt O&gt;lcan&gt;ve
s-toy School -9-.3o a.m.
Wonhip - ICI-.30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wodneldliy SeMc:ea - 6:30p.m.

Free WUI Bopllol c.....
Alh Sbecl, Middlepoll
Pa110r. Let Hayman
S11unlay SeMc:e- 7:30 p.m.
Sunday Schooi · ·IO a.m.
Worship - II a.m.,
Wednclday SeMc:e-7:30 pm.

a....

Sunday School· 9:30am.
Wonhip - 10:., un:
Puuw Ojl'lnt Bapllll
Po-. Paul S1in1Gn
ButMainSL
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -ICI-.30a.m.
PlnlSaw .... - . .
41872 ""''*OJ Pike
Pular. B. LomarO'Bryllll
.Sunday School- 9-.30 a.m.
Wonhip -10:45 ....._,7:00p.m.
Wodaclday SeMc:ea -7:00p.m.
' F1nl ...... Clnlrdt .
6lh utd Palmer SL,"Middloport
' •Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Wonhip • tO: IS LIIL, 7:00p.m.
.
A.B.Y.- 5:30p.m.
• Lonl'l s.-r .., Sunday
Woclilelday Senlce-7:00p.m.

..

. RadDe F1nl Bapllll
Youtb Paa-. Aanm
Sunday School· 9-.30 ......

v-.

. WOIIhiP-10:40&amp;.111., 7:00p.m.
Wehiday SoMcoo -7:00p.m.

MLUIIGwBas:

Dolrer
PuiOr. Woody CaD
Sunday H...U., - 6:30p.m.
Tbullday Service - 6o30 p.m.

Raciao,OII

LupYJUe Clirllllaa Cllurcll
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcchcaday Servioo 7:30p.m.

, _: ..... Bad Sbulor
s.day School · 10:30 a.m.
.
Wonllip- 9-.30 a.m.

7:00p.m.

SLJob.-zwCII_...

S...Cwllr

. Jlllolda ..... a.St. RL 143 jolt aiJRL 7

......, a...,_
R. Aaeo. Sr.
·Schoai·IOa.m.

=

·11&amp;.~~~.,6p.m.
Servia~ -7p.m.

r

BallluJ

Putor: K..-h Baker
Suaday School .- 10 a.m.
Wonhip · hm. j
WOilncodaySCrvicea - tO a.m.
Canatl
Putor: K..-h Baker
.
s...day School - 9:30a.m.
Wonbip- t0:4S Lm. (2nd A 4lh S1111)
'
Mara
... Siar
PaiiGr. K..-h Baker
s...s.y School - 9:45a.m.
Wonhip • 10;30 Lm.
Thunday SIMCIII · 7:30p.m.

.

Cll. . .

Pastor: Shonlll Hau1111111
Wonhip - 9Lm.
Sunday Sdioal- 10 Lm.
Thunday SeMc:ea - 7 p.m.

Rallud Cluordl 16God

.,_,~~ L. Sean
Sundly
- 10 .....
Wonbip - II Lm., 6 p.m.
Wednoaclay Servicoa •.1 p.m.

a ',.. F. .w.Wp
CII-161111N..,....
Palllll': , .... w. DDuaiU

()\\;(( 5frUf Q3oo~l
13 Mill StrMt
Mld.eport. Ohio 41710

11141112-1117 - IIIB·OOKSI
CHURCH IUPPLIES • .IUBLES. ..

.

FilE &amp; SAFETY
'

A I'
. Hj+)Jdea! .
•

I •

'SAliS &amp; SEIYKI

992-7075

-a...

Ridt Stu.pJI
Suaday School- 9-.30 ......

.
.
Nationwide Ins. Co.
I
~

ol Columbus, 0.
lOA W. Main
· · 991-'UII Pomeroy
-

S.COtill Ave.
........,.,,Ollie
..

172 Notth

~
~

FISHER
FUNERAL 'HOME
26• South 2nd

1

-

'hu'li be floating on o clofid With
fhe·buys you'll find In the
ckissi(ieds.

POMEIOY OHIO 99•
.
·
~'
"·6677
.
BILL QUICKEL

I•

Middleport ·

221 W;.Mail! .Sf., Pomt~or

I •

'·

.

EWING FUNERAL HOME
"lllj!il i1~· nntl St•rl'it·~ .41u·a.-."

·

· 214 E. Main

992·5130··Pomeroy ·

I .

\
t

'

P-r•y

'

....

· ~·. ~., ,
.

992-2121

••

5

..

' _.., ,..,.,

I'L

P~roY.
&amp; VIcinity
:11511........, Rd., . . . . . vt.
Ohio~ ahlnll IIIII
WIIPO ilodlot Ollllon), U• daJo
Oet- .... .......... -

1121/ltl .

-

BINGO

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES .
CLUB
IN POMEROY

Ugllt Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped·
and Removed
·Mis. Jobs.

tloating, Inc.

6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
S100 Payoff
Thla ad good for 1

lill Slack

-Con,vf#tulafioru
·Charlotte &amp; Ron.
On Your

Fr!UY. On font. .

Middleport

Pomwoy, Oh. 4S7&amp;8
t14-11112-7117

Happy Ads

Pellet Stoves
386 Steta Rt. 180

FREE card.

992·2269

Lie. No. 0051·342

11auD:Ztfn

w/Natlonwlde lne.
Glllllpolla, Oh.
446-7400
800.757· PELLET

7355

-25th

HAULING

RACINE

An.raiwraary

Mower Clinic

Umestone
Gravel &amp; Coal

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

·949-2804

Complete Chain
Saw Service &amp; Parts

Public Notice

NOtiCE TO BIDDERS
EchO Saw's In stock
PURCHASE OF SIX
SCHOOL BUSES FOR
Christmas Layaway
MEIGS LOCAL
Available on
Public Notice
SCMOOL DISTRICT
Sealed propcloala will be
· Weedealers &amp;
LEGAL NOTICE
received by the Board of
· :Chainsaw. ·
· Notlca Ia hereby glv1111 EducatiDn of the Meigs
lhot tha Board of Ed~tiDn Local School Dlatrlcl of
of tho Malg1 L-1 Bahool Pomeroy, Ohio, ot the
Dletrlot, 320 Eaat Moln Treaouror'a Olllce until
Straat, Pomeroy, Ohio 12:00 noon, EDT, on
45788, wiU oller lor .... by Monday, October 3 I, 1994,
-lad blcl at 12:00 noon, and al that time opened by
EDT, OciOHr 17, 111M, the the Treaaurer of aald Board,
lollowlnfltatno:
t•bulated , and a report
; Th- 3) Planol
.thereof made to said Board
· One 1) Former llat•l at 111 next regular
Building
acheduled meeting as
All aaalad •nvalopaa prDvldail to law tor alx (6) 71
oontalnlng bkt1 ere to loa pa11enger sohool buaas,
merkad ota•rly on the occordlng to apilcltlcallons
outslcla.
.
ot oald board of education.
Utnlted: 740
Torma olula will loa ouh
School bu s bids will to
-or chaok with poeltlva recalvtd with raapect to the •
~re,
)llllltlflcetlon.
cheaals and bodv tvpo and
. 1128184
Slid Boord , _ , . , lha will state that lhe bus whan
right to welve lnfornlllltlla, aaaembled and prior to
to aocapl or Nlacl any and dalivarv comply with all
aU,orpartebfany•n4all ochoo l
dlolrlct
blcla.
specifications, all uletv
111
11a1p loollf SotiDOf o1atrtat regulation• . and cu rront
.lane flY,
Ohio Minimum Standarda
320E.Ibln ......."'for
School
, llua
P.O. loll 271 ConstructiDn ot tht
PPotaa01a.,CI..
Il'. Ohio 48711 Department ot Education
(I) 2J, "0.110) 7, 14; 4TC
pursuant to Sactlon 4511..76
of the Ohio Revllld Code
end all other pertinent
provlslono Df law.
Pubilc Notice
1:00 P.M.
Specification•
and
lnslrucllono to bidder• may
PUBUC NOtiCE .
12Gauge
Tht Meigs Metropolitan be obtained al tho oHice of
Factory Only
Houelng Authority llo•rd Dl the Traaauror, 320 Eaat Main
Director• will hDid 1 Special Street, Pomerov. Ohio
•
Mooting of the Bo•rd an 4S768.
Oct. 10,1994 at Middleport • A ~ertllltd chec.k payable
VIllage Hall, 237 Race lo. the Tralisuror ot tt)a
Street, Mlddlapor1, Ohio at · above board·ql education or
12:00 .P.M. lor the purpo11 a aatlalact 0 ry bid ~ond
ill2-2081
of conolllerotllln of executJd by· the bidder and
ISO
.....
lit., llldllop ut
· su~m1111on of funding the surety companv. In an
F-Eili!HIM
amount
equ'al
to
fizzle
applic•tlona approval and
percent (5%1 of tho bid ahall
authorization bV the BDerd.
Joan Truioell ' be ·submitted with each bid.
Said board of education
Executive Director
reserves 'the rlghl to waive
: (10) 7: 1TC
lnlormalltleO', to accept or p·•IN~NG
C9o
reject anv and all or parts"''
A
•any and all bids.
No Bide can ba wlthdr•wn
•
tor at leaat 130) dayo alter
the achad11led closing time
the
- out
tor receipt of bldo.
p11iln~~;Lai ua tit It
'Mala• local
-n.r&amp;
Board of Educallon
FI'M Eetlmat.t
Jane Fry Troasurar
a.rore.,f P·!'l. llave
320 Eeat Main Street
malialgt.
P.O. Box 212
' · ·· Pomeroy, Ohio 45768
NfW
~ .II8~RL

Joel. Sayre .

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742·2138

AMBERWOOD ·

Cocker~~~~!~
lor
Bred

Quality and

Temperament
Spoclalzing In Part-color~
lor allow and companions.
Stud aervlce &amp; puppiaL
young ac*llla for IIIIa.
48750 Mile Hill Ad.
Reclna,Oh

814-840-2487

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

NOW SJAIJING
Forked
Sportsma1
Gu1 Club

Specializing in Cuetom
Frame Repair

•ILift wmaow m aa••
• Cuatom llade· ·
• Solid vlnrl

repiiCement
windows
• Fre1 Estimates
• $200 Installed
Call Fot Details

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

•VISIT OUR SHOWROOM•
110 Court St. Poll!9rcy, 0Ai'o
"Look Cor the Red and White Awning"

992-4119 AI Tn• OwH!' 1·800..291·5600

Complete Une of Errand Service.
Are You Too Busy for Rwni•g &amp;rands?
Let Errand Boy Do the
for You.
Caii1-80H06-9482
or992·5710

'NEW I USED PARTS FOR
ALL !lAKES &amp; IIODELS
tt2·70UOR
112·5563 OR
TOLL FREE 1-110·141·0071
DARWIN, OHIO
7111111 TFN

'- ~~rial

. . -992-2104

:

tto.tal

' '115 E. Momorilol Dr. .

• .

'BINGO

&amp;

Starting Sun. Oct.
8th Racine Legion

.

P-1
.

28;4"{6 .

.

8 1 ..

: ra

ad good for 1
FREE CARD .

,,

.

1.
(

I' I

.

949·2038
949·2749 Uc. No. 0182-27

of Pomeroy;
Diehl, Nalhan
Diehl, all of
l!lld Mrs. Joe
W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
•
Daniel and Deborah Black, 8lld
James, Aaron , Danielle and
Heather Black, all of Plant City,
Fla., were WJable 10 allCnd. Deborlh Black is Belva Bolin's daugh·
I

I

.

.

Several ~hildren and great·
II!*JII!chi!dren of Mrs. Bolin were

8ls6 unable 10 auend.

'•

Remodeling
Stop l CompBI'II
FREE ESTIMATES
. 915-4473

Co11ie's Olalo
llverlerlts••tl
lverluthlt• ·

of~

ler, l

I•Niaw Homes

This

1 80

first Gordon-Faber-Bolin Bolin of Plani City, Fla.; Harold R.
·family reunion was heJsl Labor Day Faber and Lyddia Oarvin of Grand
at the home of Leon and Christine Prairie, .Texas; Mr. and Mrs.
. Sllitm Jiear Hemlock Grove. ·
Charles Sc:hul.er, Tommy and
'· . . Th~ threc;~ay event invol!~ 'An$el Schuler, all of St.'
. camp;ng, v11111ng and playmg Chursville; Loretll Burt Slld Lee
· games. In oblelvance ,of bet 12nd . Gilkuson of Cerroll; Mrs) Troy
: birthday, Mrs. Belva Bolin was Peugh and Meghan Peugh of
: honored wiih gifiS, cards, and. a H~ Mr. and Mrs. Otis Wright
·~
·
end Leo 'a nd Sara~ Wright of
Gilkerson prlyed the guitar' Grove Oty.
..
.
·
: and sang during 8 ~unc!iy ~vening..
Ot)lers attellding included Mr.
· wieneri'OISL
•
• and Mrs. ~cff Long, Jenny,
~ . Attending wore Mrs. Belva Micbacl, Oarret and Jesse Long, all

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

P.oat 1602 8:45 pm

I

Fam!IY
reunion

FURHITUIIE·&amp; Hii RDWARE
. Homtlite Sliw$·

·"/Htitl•l «••fir Iiiii c:'J.I,;"

, 106 Muiitrry lu.

-PAYMENT PLANYaa, wa can toke caohl -or- 80 days aama 11 caah -or·
paymanta tor 48 montha ulow ul3ii/monlh.
- IEAYICjE.
youR SATISfACTION l Our Silccal8 begins&amp; andl wilh
Mrvicel So, when your atalita !.11'1 wolldng righ~ we'l8
h818.to haipl Bv phone or In pa11011- whln you call,

0'

rlor &amp;
rio
late r

(row's Family ResttU..arit·'

Established 1913

·Love, Fro~

r.

SUPPLY

,.,..,........_,....

') ' .. 992-543'2 •.

(No Sunday Calls)

-IALEIOilhll (lllging In liD hvm 101Mt ciHrdown to 18 indies.

-011 Olll. lfO,- Good

. • ...•.

RIDENOUR.

\

I

.

. RAIWUNGS.COATS

!
-~

we Fill Do&lt;ton' .
·
PrescripUon&gt; .
tt2·1'55
Pom.,oy

I

'

·•

·• •

614·992·7643

uP lo aa mllly as

airio BODY

0 ·~ ·.~,:
,._

Stanlng at S7.115hnon1h lor 13 chDnnlll on
.your heart dllii8L

D·4EARY'S

..........-

NC'fiNO:

xour ,_..r .

-PAO~-

mey

~I

•••, s•oo• ,

w~ Servloo. ,,.....

··- PHMMM:Y . : --

• ~9'2-2975

Ida u.w ........... Clorla
2 Ill miles DWIII al Reedavillo
.... s...a-t24
'"""" Rev. Rollort Maddey.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 7:30p.m.
Wedoelday S'crvioa ·.7:30

W~ · IOUL,7pm.

.1
· .: 1~.QUICKEL

Harr-Uon

n--

s..tay Sdoool· 9 .....

.

SWISHER &amp; lQHSE

(. r-r~r. OH• .

•I

s;.,.. BallotiNewT-n•t
'·
Sil IUd.,
.
Pallor. 0.: Sy6olollricbr

s,..-o .... flllll N.....,•

, 20:4 Cliiiclodt;

992-5141

. Pallor. Rabat Saadon
Sunday Scbool· 9:30 LID
Wonhip. 10:30 LIIL, 7:30 ~Wedaeiday Sav1coa • '1:30 p.ni.

c.....

.,

-~yaiJCR.Il

Swoday School - 10 a.m.
B..... 7:30pm.
Tllllday A Tbunday ·7:30p.m.
N-S•III•IMC..,..
~ Wcni!IP • 2:30p.m.; ,·
'llilndaY ......... 7:30p.m.

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wornp - 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedoeldoy Semcea -7 p.m.

.GRAVELY TRA(TOR SAlES .

•

T-c

~=:;.:.:~~
Pa-.R..,.tr-

p;,J. PAULEY, AGENT~

'

ML.IIInlell Uatled .......
... Cllrill Cloardo

1181 priority! In feet. 'Wt ,.._ •lVII» 111 Nltoul, ...,
.fN/Iy.l» "" , . liLY b

HeadUMN, Cuetom
Slat~ 1 earpltt
Convertible Tope,
Antique CaN,
Boat Seale
Owr ID y..,. £itpttlfnce
41414 Slll'char Ad.

Olen&amp;Louiae

680)n•t

Untted Brethren

Rt. ,..,.,_...,.at~
Po-= Rev. a..bon B. ' Sr. ·
Sunday School • 9-.30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10'.30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wrr • y Servicle - 1 pm.

Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6p.m.
Wedoeldoy Servicea. 7 p.m.

.

.

Wonhip • 10:4S a.m., 7:30p.m.
Weclneoday 7:30p.m.

Putor: tt.w. Owle&amp; Malh

~~7p.m.

SNOUFFEI

Lonallocwm

Sunday School-9:30a.m.

'"""" o,....,

"~~ '

·•

Fallll c..ot CII-

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

We Mat NMce at lhe top betel 1M ~ Ilea alwoya been our

Galli polIa
&amp; VIcinity

12G.ge0.1y

'

.

Jes.s' Complete
Auto Upholstery

Anniwraory
· Oetober 6, 1994

UCINE
QUN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
FRIDAY NIGHTS
6:30P.M.

Mlddiopert·PreobJ!Irla
Sanda)' Sdoool· t Lm.
Wonhip . 10 a.m.

Seventh-D ay Adventtst

Suaday adlool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip· 7p.m.
Wecboldly Servi"" - 7 p.m.

Mldlllflft C..n:lo lillie N - .
A. Omdilf
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip-10:30a.m.,6:30p.m.
Wdlelday Servic:eo • 7 p.m.

\

Banloao... .......,..,_ Cll- .
WCJ!IIIip • 9 Lm.
s...day Sehciol · 9:4Sam.
:

M - CUpll Cllu.....

Pular. Rl:v. Owle&amp; Math
Sunday Sc:bool • 9:30 ......
Wanlip · l0:30a.m.
Wodnuday Services -7:30p.m.

Slwm Hauoman
Sunday School •9LID.
Woiahlp • 10 a.m.
Tueldly Senieol · 7:30p.m.

........, Gary Hinoa
~ Sdlool - 9:30 LDl.

s...day School - 10 a.m.
. Wonhip- II a.m.

LanyJiaw,~

p.m.

'I'll~ 1'11111181. 1'1111

a...tcr ·

S,..-FlniUIIItol ..._.,..._ ·
'"""" Rl:v. Kri-. RoWum

.

:... IERVI,CE -

New Hon:-s • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

Pomeroy, -"''"'--

:Joy

Presbytenan

Cla1ollla Fd......lp C..tor
Salim St., Rudutd ,
, ra-: Rdllrt B. Muloer
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 11:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
w.........,. ServiClC -7 p.m.

p.m.

Wonhip- 9:30a.m.
SmdiYSdioal-10:30a.m.
UMYP $,..tay 6:30p.m.

· N.WLirea..... arc...

."

s...day Scbool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -1~:30a.m., 7 p.m.

lllllled ......

._...

CUftOIITalift- Cu...
&lt;litton, W.Va.
Sunday Scbool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip-7 ......
Tbundl)' semce -7 p.m.

Pentecostal

w-~ - 7p.m.

LGIIIa-

Cllan:lo 16~ rii'I'GptotcJ
OJ. Wllilo Rd. all St. Rt. 160
.,_, pJ . C!w&gt;mooo
s-ioy School- lo a.m.
V{onbip - 11 Lm.
Wedaoaday Servicea -7 p.m.

.

MI.OIY•.C..,•IIIJ C.....
' '"""" l..aWIIIIallluoh
Suaday Scbool- 9:30 11:111.
·'
B • ·7p.m.

Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
Smday Sdioal- 10:30 a.m.

.

I

Dt_.C..,••IIJ a ....

Pular.C'i"Rondolph

S,....o F1nl Cll- 16 God
APfle ad SoaJnd su.
Po-. Rl:v. DoVid R.....U
Sionday Sdloolaad Wallhip- 10 a.m.
!!....... Serviooo- 7 p.m.
Wednoaclay Servicea - 7 p.m.

-~7:00p.m.
W"to
-7:00p.m.
Friday- :00 p.m.

lbzol C..n..tl)' Cll•eil
OlfRL 124
r.....: Bdlol Hort
iboday Sdoool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30a.m., 7:30pm.

TordiCIIRd.

.

1/4

ApallalleJI'IIIII
mile palll'..n Moi&amp;• oil New Lima Rd.
Puuir: Willi181 Van Meier

w.......,.,

H.ai........ CII0111111 StnCI
. Sundly School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a:m.
Wedacaday Servicea - 8 p.m.

Sunday Sc:bool- 9:30 .....
Wonhip • II am., 6:30p.m.

MLMariU a .... riG...
Racine
l'lllor: Rl:v. J - s-didd .
Sunday School- 9:4S Lift.
.
llwninJ-7p.m.
Wedaoaday Servicea -7 p.m.

Wol

Parillo

PUBLIC NO'l!ICE
Saturdav, Oclober 15,
.1994, at 10:00 a.m., the
Home Nollonal Bank, Third
Street, Racine, OhiD, will
offer tor aalo at public
auction, on tho Bonk
parking IDt tho following:
1987
GMC
SSL
Converalon Van, Serial
Number
IGKDMI5Zohb514793
. 198!1 Plymouth VOF Van, •
$erial
Number
'P4FH51G2ER222205
• 1918 OldamDbllo Cutlaa
Clorra
.
SN
2G3AJ51 R2JII362351
Torma of tha a alo are
cash.
·
The Homo National Bank
re•ervea the right to rojoct
• &amp;I)V or all bide 01 to remove
any unit from the sale at any
lime.
In ·ordor to lnapoct ony of
tho. above nomod property
prior
to
tho
aale
ar~angement1 may ba ma~•
calllng8411-2210.
.(10) 4, 7, t, 10, 12, 14; &amp;TC

Cltu,... Ill1 - Cbrlll,

1411 Brida- St., Synocwe .
PaiiGr. Roy (Mike) 'I1tompoan
Saaday School - 10 a.m.
B...U.·6p.m.
Servicle -7 p.m.

llellleiCIIu""'
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip - IOa.m.
Wodncaday S'crvioa - 10 a.m .

Atrnd
Putor: Slwao lllwmiD

Public Notice ·

.s,........ MIIIIoa

Tuaday ServiCIII • 7 p.m.

c-•·•
"-a.-

Mt~at

:::'".L

,

...

8112-621$

btl&amp;llll••··

Fallll 'hiMnl- Cbon:lo
Bailey Run Rood
Pallor. Rl:v. Bmmcu RawiCCI.
·Smday School- 10:00 a.m .
Bvalina7 p.m.
Thanday Service - 7 p.m.·

W~ · 9a.m.

ML Oll¥t Uallwl Mllloocllt
Off 124 bebind Willwvillo
PUI«: Rl:v. Raid&gt; Sllirol
Sunday Sc:bool -l:36 a.m.
WonhiJI· 10'.30 Lm.,'7 p.m.
1 Thunday Savlcoa -7 p.m.

. 45768

·- -

BISSELL .UILDEIS, ltlt. ., ·

Q·'

I&amp;L
ELECTRONICS
L.ony Rupe
I AIMo.'a

-Electrical &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
olnterlor &amp; Exterior
Palntlngalao concrete
work
.
· (FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG 1!1

FwR... ntiHs
(11992-2403

_ ae.Joldq U'oCIIO...
SOO 1'1· 2adAw., Middlepool
'""""......,_, Ponman
School - 10 a.m.
w
y Seovioa -7 p.m.

s...day ScbooiiO a.m.
Bvmin£;,;.;"P.m.
Widnaday
' - 7:30p.m.

CoaiYIIe Uwll&lt;!d MelloGdlll r.tllo
Putor: Helm Klioo
CeoMDeCIII....
Main&amp;Pillh!lt.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Wodno141y Service -7 p.m.

Church of God

.

......,Som~··

.....

a.-·

H - Cllrllllaa Ulloa
Middle!xloi. Ohio
Sunday Scl.ool, 10 a.m.
Sunday ........ 7:30p.m.
Woolnoaday, 7:30p.m.

·'

515 Pearl St., Middloporl

Paotor: Kao MSuaday Schooi · IO a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m. aad 7 p.m.

Old Deater Bl... Clorlllla
Sunday Sdlool: 10 a.m.
Mllnli!'l W~: II a.m.
a......, Wonhip: 1 p.m.

' .

Sd'ftm!De w..... ., ......
Pulor: David lloiley
S...day Scbool9:30 a.m.
Bvaaiila·7p.m.

Ml+hoport c.-IIIJ Cloardl

EuiLalut
PuUr. Kao Moller
Suaday School- 10 a.m.
Wonlilt -9 a.m.
w. tdov -7 p.m.

G....,_llaWMtlh 1 W
Wonhip- 9:30Lm. (Ill&amp; 2ad Sjm),
7:30p.m. ('3nlol ..... Sun)
W.......y SaW:e -7:30p.m. .

llanfood,W.Va.
Pular. Rov, David M&lt;ManiJ
Sladay School- II Lat.
w,::~; 9:30a.m.. 7:30p.m.
w
y SeMc:ea - 7:30p.m.

•

Tile Sal..tloa A,.J
IU Buaemut Ave., l'omeiOJ.
Sunday Sdtool-10:30a.m.
Wonloip - IO:OOa.m., 7:30p.m.

Wonhip - 10:4S a.m. (li1&amp;'3n1Som)

Ha1l'eod C..rdo IIICIIrllllo
Clutllla Uoloa

Wonbip - IOLIIL, 7.p.m.
WetJ 1 "a) Savic&gt;a • 7 p.m.

Smday School · 10 a.m.

Putor: K..-h Baker

Chrt s ttan Unton

"m."=t=r='
......, 1 - B. Kooieo

"-""•

'"""" Floronco Smilb
Wonhip - 9 a.m.

Untted Methodist

Wonhis&gt; - 11 a.m., 7:30p.m. .
W..tn.aday Servicle -7:30p.m.

Pulor. Rev. IWiand Wildman
O.unih • 9: IS a.m.

Suaday School - 9:30a.m.

Reodnlllo Cll- fiCIIrlol
Pulor. l'llilip Stwm
Suadly Scbool: 9::10 a.m.
Wonhip SeMc:e: IQ-.30 a.m.
Bible SmdY. W~y.6:30 p.m. .

"

IM!Iae8-16PnJ•
JlwtiDaham mun:h elf a.... 33)
'""""Rabat v- ,
Suaday wonbip • 10 a.m.
WedDeaclay IIOI\Iico • 6:30p.m.

Wcnhip - 10'.30 a.m.

Mlddlepod, Ohio

CARPE;NNTTEEtAR'"s~~IV!Ciil

WTEII
HIGH SCHOOL
AUDROIII.
Steak.._
$5.50 . . .
$3.50 dlllni.

Calwary Plflrln Cll8pll ·
HanUooMIIo Rood
Putor: Rev. Vlctor Rdilh
s...day Scbool9:30 am.

a ....

TrlllllJ c........,.... a..,...

'

Wonhip -9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

• 9:30a.m. utd 7 p.m.

~ - 7p.m.

Putor: Rao Jlioloe
Suaday School - ll: IS a.m.
Wonhip- tO:IS un.

su- . .

'"""" a- zSundly """"" - toje) a.m.

w•

W

Lutheran

H•lodt G10ve Clnl ....

01c1 a.11 Fnt
BapdliiCII...
2!1101 SL RL 7, Middkpoot
Saoiday School · 10 .....
B....... -7:30 ......
'llllnlay Samcol • 7:30

w

-7 p.m. .
Servi--7p.m.

LIM1J ClorWU c.....

a.m.
....... . 6:30p.m.
.
WedDailay Sorvioa • 6:3Cip.m.

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

.·

.

&lt;•

Wonhip • IQ-.30 a.m.
Thunday Servlcoo • 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Satnts

PuiOr. Joocpb B. Holkiaa
S-y School •9 a.m.
WonhiJI- 10 a.m.,'7 p.m.
w......a.y SeMc:ea • 1 p.m.

Puror : JoeN.

..,..,s.m_

=r:·-·

lllctar1 ma. Curdo .. Cllrlll

~ School-9.

a.....-

701 Art Lawls St.

oRoom Addition•

00011111,
1994,7:12P.&amp;

Pa!.:'School
s!!""'-R9:30a.m.
eod

Paotar: 'l'benlllllllobam
s...day- 9:30a.m. ODd 7 p.oiL
Wodaooclay - 7 p.m.

.
y Cllllb Fellowlllip, Suaday • 6 p.m.
AnhuCralme
Sunday
School9:30 .....

........... CII_...oi..._CIIrlll
16._ DIJ Sa1lll
l'onlwld-Kac:in Rd.
.l'lllor: Jllllico o.-r
Sunday School- 9:30 .....
Wonloip ·lll'.3QLm.
Wodnelday Services -7:30p.m.

AIIIUAL lilm11

~~~m~oa.ate c.-IIIJ

s...day School - 9: IS a.m.
W~ · IQa.m.

P11111r. Rl:v. ROJ McCany

i.

FAIIIIIIIAU

327 Modoaolk: St., Pome...,.
'""""Rl:v. Maopm J. ROOinl&lt;ll
&gt;-....Senicea: Wedaeatlay, 7:30p.m.
Suadoy, 2:30p.m.

. a-~

Sladay School - 9:30a.m.

w

Ottwr Churches

Tile lllllnL'I' Flllowlblp Mllllll"7

Putor:Keilh Rader

'ltutlaad C0111mua11J Cb.....

Bradford Churdl Ill Cltrlll
Comer Ill St. RL 124 A Bradbuly Rd.
H'""adiat: Dordc Slump
Yodh Mini-= Mad&lt; NClllor ·
Sunday School - 9:30 ......
Wonhip • 8:00a.m., tlf-.30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

ILa••J

Po-. Rablot B. RolliaSundly School- 9:15 ......

P..-. Pal.u Tmmblay
Sladay School · 9:30a.m.
· WonhiJI - 10'.30 a.m. aad 7 p.m.
W"edneaday Service- 7:00p.m.

PUIUCIOnCE
•EIGSCOUm

l!ridw - foDowohip service 7 p.m.

Lul'll Clllri'Nt M - C I I -

PUI«: llu&amp;a&gt;e B. UDda wood
Smday Sc:bool- 9:30 it.m.
Wonbip- 10:30 a.m., 1p.m .

l'llur. Bill Lialo
Sundly sdlloi· IOa.m.
. _). WanhiP- tla.m.,1:30 p.m. ·
WodnOJay SoMcoo- 7:30p.m.

'

a,. H...._Cb.....

Rlverben• Travel
A•ventures·

-New 0.111gn

New Ba- Cillo... lllllle N - Pulor. Gloodoa Scooud
Soaday School ~ 9:30 LID.
Wonbip · 10:30 am., 7 p.m.
Wllllnoiday SeMc:ea - 7 p.m.

w

Wonhip • 10 a.m.

Wonhip • 10:30 Lm.
Bible Study"rueoday - I0 a.m.

RutiaDd Cb.,... or Cbrill

WOdnelday SeMc:ea - 7:30p.m.

.....Cbopll
Paotor: Floronco Smith
Sunday School• 9 Lmo

NEW TRAVEL
AGENCY

·Phone: 992·6926

3 Announcemanta

...... .... Golpel Cllll'dl

PUI«: Rabat Manley
Sundly School · 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip • 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday SeMc:e 07:30p.m.

Wonhip • 10:30 LID.
y Olllh MeeUna . !:30 p.m.
-B...U..a SeMce - 7 p.m.
Wednoaday, Bible Study · 7 p.m.

su-a-~

)

Hytoll

Bradllllr)' Cli.,... or Clu1ll
Puur. Tom Runyoo
s...o~ay School - 9:30a.m.

.,,_.,IIIOIIIb.

MloemtDe
PaiiGr. Dmla Newmwo
Sunday School -9 ......
Wonbip • 10 a.m.

Sunday achool - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednoaday SeMce -7:30p.m.

...

,12Galge
FDCtory Clloke Oily

N-••

Pwtlud Flnl Cll- a( 1111
. Po-. John w. DooJalu
s...day School -10:00 a.m.
. Wonbip -6:30p.m.
Wedoelday'SeMc:ei - 7 p.m.

Haiti (Midlltpart)
Putor: Vemaaaye SuDivaa
Sunday Sehool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m. .

Weoleya Billie Holm.CIItordl
7S Pearl St.. Middlopllt. .
Putor: Rl:v. Jolm NOville

'l'llpptnl'la.. Cb.,... ar Cltl1ot
PuiOr. Bill Winoa
Smday Sehool - 9a.m.
Wonhip · 9:4S a.m., 6:30p.m.

..1

. F-a••

PUI«: Doroa Newman
Sunday School - 10om.
· Wonhip-hm.
·
Thurlday S.Mc:ea -6:30p.m.

Pine c,....,; 111111e H,._ Clturcll
l/2milo aiJRL 325
Putor: Rl:v. O'Dell Manley
Sundly School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • IQ-.30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wodneadiy SeMc:e ·7:30p.m.

YARD SALE ·
PAUL HILL RESIDENCE
LETART FALLS
OCTOBER 7"10th
10 M,IV'I,·

a o - Cll- 161111 N..n.e
Pulor: Sznuel Buye
Saaday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedoaday Senicea -7 p.m.

Fla"""""'

a-16Sbi'GIHtB-Citurcll
l..eadina c...k Rd.,IWII.ond
Pu!or. R.av. Dewey Kma
Sladay acboal- 9:30a.m.
Smday wonhip -7 p.m. · •
Wednoaday pnyer meelin&amp;-7 p.m.

lJ• o ..... orCbrtll
Pomeroy, HuritcnvilleRd. (RLI43)
PuiOr. Rapr w......
Sladay School· 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - ICI-.30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wocktesday Servicea - 7 p.m.

5

PUI«: Koilh Rader
s...day Sc:bool- 10 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m.

Sunday acboal- 9:30 Lm.
Sunday wonbip • 10:3S Lm. A 7 p.m.
Child:m'a chuclt - 10:35 a.m. Youlh6p.m.
Wodnelday prayer service -7 p.m,

'

'"""" Rl:v. Hcd&gt;at Gni&amp;
Scbool- 9:30a.m.
• II Lm.; 6p.m.
w .
y SeMc:ea - 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip -9Lm.

O.tlleHDIB•Cio310$7 Slate Rowe 325, Lanpvlle
Pular. Rev. Ridt Moloyed

FIRE DEPT.
.GUM SHOOTS
SAT!, 6:30'P.M.

Cloe!olw'CII.a Ill liNN_,_

Put!."'K:f.~Rador

Holllless

.... olCiuiot

Youtb MiDia1cr: BiD Fnr.ior
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
.
Wonhip- 8:15,1Qo.30a.m., 7p.m.
Woclneoday Service• - 7 p.m.

aullaDd Flnl Bapdlil

Wodaooclay~.,oop.m.

Middleport Clturcll 16 Cbl111
Slh UldMain
Pulor. AI Han~at

Bapttst

..

-~ Sc:bool -9:45...... .

33226 Otilclral'a Home Rd.
Sundaf School · II a.m.
. \Vonhip - IOLm., 6 p.m.
Wcdncaday Servicea - 7 p.m.

LIM1J """"'/;.'%.'· !',cw
P.O.Bcol467,
t-

OJ CIMordl oltiM.N,._, . . . 'l'loamll Md'ma
. . . , Sdloal · 9:30a.m.
Wcnhip • 10'.30 am. Wid 6 p.m.
w ........y Sorvioa . 7 p.m.

..=&amp;!:'N!.!!.

........, Clltordo IIICIIrill
212 w. Maio St.
Pulor. ~w Miloa
s...&lt;!"Y School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 am.. 7 p.m.
Woclneoday Servica . 7 p.m.

Assembly of God

P

c-.. a..

Eptscopal

.1

Employment Ser1 1\f''

614-'247-4035
Now open lor Fal

Season

Wed. thru Sat. 9-5
Spec/Mlzing:

Dried Matlrillt
Pot pourri auppllel
Helbal Cralla
I

'

�·'
•

\

Friday, OCtober 7, 1114

Poineroy-Uiddleport, Otilo

as 1830e dllnce
3SDIMiofld37 Pouring

.ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

1 Stitua4Aklln ·

38FuHby

Meting

dii!IIIOIIna

40 Pr0111 on blink
8 Dec. holldlly
-acct.
12 ~ a~lp pqf.

-

41 Sine-non
43Anwar46 Congealed
50 Unrefined
meta Ia
51 DealgnerC11alnl
52 - Light Up My
Lila
53 Cultivate the
land
54 River In France
55 Norma56 Slam vlaltor
57VeaHII
56 Picnic peat

13 Flnnlah 111'11

KIT 'N' CARLYLM by Larry Wrtpt

... .
•J

10·7·94

9 4 2

Creta
16 Legume

• 9 6 5 2

17 BaTIOI
18 Packages

•Qt.0853
EAST
•B 6 3
•K Q 9 7 4

·-

..
•J 9 7 6 4
SOUTH

•AKQI07
•J 8 6
t A Q 10 4

•A

,

Vulnerable : East-West
De;ller: West
South

BARNEY

4•

JUGHA'ID· -WHILE YORE
UNCLE SNUFFY
IS Ol'F FLOAT .
FISHIN' -----

J

Dbl.

Dbl
Redbl.

14 Flrat:&lt;ate'
(2 wda.)
15 Mountain on

West

North

t•

Pass

East
4•

Pass
Pass
Pass.
Pass

Pass
Pass
5•
Pass

5•
Obi.
Pass

Hall-n
beverav&amp;
Mll.IChOOI
Can. prov.
Hebrew
measure
26 Thin woocl'
llrlpa
30 Intermediate
DOWN
(pre!.)
____.---'
31 Seat
1 Jeot
33 - Paulo
2 Govt. farm
34 Poaseaalv'
agency
pronoun
3 Gravel rlclgea

4 Salting ahlp
5 Walks
unateadlly
6 Macawa
1 Over there
8 MusicianCugat

5•

Opening lead: • 8

The call
is unpredictable
By Phillip Alder
Yesterday I featured a deal in which
the defender not on opening lead used
PE:ANUTS
a Lightner Double. It asked partner to II.J,--1-+--+find the side suit in which he was void.
I TIIOU61-1T 51-le WAS
It was the only way to defeat a fiveIAIRITIN6 ONL'f' TO ME ..
heart contract. However, we all know
about the poet's best.Jaid schemes.
TIIEN 51-16 TELLS ME
Today's deal occurred during the
SHE liAS TI-IIRT'I' OTIIER
Summer Nationals in San Diegp last
PEN PALS!
July. East doubled five spades, ex ·
peeling the play to go: diamond . ruff,
CELEBRITY CIPHER
heart to West's ace, diamond ruff. But
by Lull Campos
he was sadly wrong. He shoulli\have
c.twity ~r cryplograma are CrHied from quo&amp;llklria by IM"~GUS ~ . put and ~
realized. as South did. that'NortA was
bch let!ei ntht Qphef standi tor anoetwr . T~ dw: N...,. C
unlikely to remove the double of five
'IWIIJ
JEGVOM
·WEC . I BOT
GB
Yll
hearts unless void in hearts.
West led the diamond eight , 'his
FRANK &amp; ERNEST
highest spot-card. as a suit-preference
RBJII,
C,WII
NOIIEGIIC
E
FIIJSVC
~'"""!~:--:------.....- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , signal for hearts . East ruffed and
switched to a club. The declarer, Blair
G•
RB
S G . ' ~ 0 JLZ H W
I E Z R B:
m Seidler"of Fair Lawn, N.J ., won with
3 his ace, ruffed a heart in the dummy
IIUIIOCBJ.
~ and ruffed a club high in hand, bring- PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I've gone thro~h the loop-de-loop roller couter ride
~I /liNG
[ ing down West's king.
in my career, and I'm still standing."- 08borah Norville.
m
As West was known to have started
t
~ with five diamonds, two clubs- iind"al
t."' least five hearts, he had ·at most one
&gt;' spade. Seidler ruffed another heart in
l~lte~ ~, CLU I. POLlAN
the dummy, played a spade to his ace
Reorronge
letters
of the
~ and ruffed the heart jack with dum ·
four tcrambled word1 bemy's spade jack. The diamond 10 dis·
krw to form . four words.
lll!!!!!!!!!::~~~:!!~~!c~·"'::!".:!'"'~
·
:
•
~_'l!_!l-\~l":::;~~~-'~0~-~7~
appeared on dummy's club queen and
:;:
declarer conceded one. diamond trick.
E A R I MG
Contract made for plus 1,000.
BORN LOSER
The moral i'i, that just because you
~
can
take a rufiat trick one, it doesn't
TilE f\ECJ( 1-JIT~
'I'OJ AA\1€: f&gt;...
I
~:!~;~~:~i~ll~
mean you will defeat the
Tl\£ t'AA'AA! WAAT 1,
. ~T\'JE~OC
.
- unless it is a grand slam,
(£~ lf£,1~
course.. And even 'then. in your
' H1U,I'U.. ... t
nightmare, declarer overruffs!
M Tto:£T

Fc~rrn Su p fJ,ICS

&amp; L1 ves toc k

I&gt;EPT. Of .IAN ITAT 101'1
NOw

IFol\
I
~ -~

0

--..

(

r::~:.~' S@\\.~1A-J££!fis· - ::::

WRAPUIIIIIniM

41111oo OUI Rl.1ft

__
~-·-Fwo•olol•·
AndA~_..._

....oo; lllnlttle • tMI.otl;

IJvtng !1o0M II. • .
~,::::.
,......
"""
.................
Wufiin..,...

1

.,...._...

llcounllon. • Ill. H Wed. H;
l'orgot Our RIPO. . .

PRIC£5! .

Dooo,

l1oln.

I

~ ·

~-

as wh.en you realize you for,...1-.-:E:-::S-::-E-:P:-:-L~Y--.,.got to remove the •• - - -

"

~==~~~JJ!~~~~
•

:a:r....~~-=~

I attended a bridal shower
I I. I. I:.:~ · gift
recently. I discovered that a
never seems so cheap

WR 0 GL

.
5
_ .16 .

c

4pno.

I

.

I. I. 1
.

.

7
_

18
_

I Q

•Complete the chuc&lt;le quoted

_

.

by t.lhng in the missu'g words

'--..&amp;,..--'"--'--'--'--' you develop from step No. 3 below.

\'

I

54 IIICellaneoul
MerchlnciiM

•

You'll be (looting on a cloud with
the buys you'll find in the
classifieds.

SPI VICf·S

M

:,
.
,
=·
s:-.
anor- ......

Hay I G111ln

1 IIIII 2 .....

~....!!:~:

~In llld-= ,,...,

.......
llodlm 1

Clll I

......

••*-'• ,........

~I fliltiiilj.-~

Rentals

l..ol.~

Graph
instantly reveals
which signs are romantically ~rfect lor
you. Mail $2 to Matchmaker. 'clo this
newspaper, P.O. 80l( 4465. ~ew York.
N.Y. 10163.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22i Today if
you do something social with friends
where each has to pay lor their participation, don't volunteeo to be the treasurer. It
could end up being very hard on your .

ARIES ~March 21-April 19) There are
indications today that you might place too
much asignJiicance on getting approval
trom others. Th,; might impel you to try
so hard, you m1ss.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) In ma)ters
that affect youlinanciall)i, rt might be w1se
to keep outsiders out of your affairs
today. Their inlerlerence could crea te
complications.
'
'

. . . . . . . . . . • pu:sem
: •Rru·~ - ("'ov. 2'3'-Dec
· • .!.&gt;)Things
. ..
8" 0
•
"
.,
21
· you do .not personally initiate today ailin't
apt to get your lull support. ~~stead of
being cooperativv. y9u migh! be t:ontrary.
CAPRICORif (Dec'. 22-Jan. 19) It's
· important you have tJle coura~ of your
•
conviCtions today and stand up, lor your
11194
•
Saturday. Oct. B,
, · qwn Ideas. They might be challenged by
. Chlngel lor the 11811er are probable lor· Others, so be p(eparild to have ,lhe forti· the year ahead y.here you~· work or tu~ tp defend them.
iter li ·concerned. Several rnlluentlal AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. HI) Where
: . . . - . trilghl stan hel~ you from your l!nan~lal affairs are CQII~erned
bel*1d scenee. ,
'
today, there s i chance you rni!lfi! expel!LIBRA (fept\' DC~Ct. 23) 'I:!Y to attend . once 1011'8 ~(llfort, ~~~~~ if you
to our duties aa promptly as posaible are lnvolv!ld wtlh close friends. • , .
: ~y. As time licks on, your dilve and PI!CES (Feb. 20-March 20). C~~enging
-;tidustriOU&amp;'180S ten~• to wane and y,ou developments m•ght not bnng Pill yo~r
coufd ~ ~re( unfirliahed enciHvor&amp; better qualities today. ~van lhOU!Jh you n
·n your ~ke' Kn,ow where to look for be capable of overcomrng obstacles, you
,t m•nct ' 'nd ybu'llljnd lt . The ,Astro.· ,might Still toss in the towel premarorely.

OI!MINI (May 21 ' June 20) A majol
objective is reachable today . ~ you act in
the first person. Allies or associates could
hamper your progress instead of helping
it.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You· might
have some.difficulty today keeping .your
priorities In order. You'll be much more
easily motivated to. do none.ssential
things than you wiM be to be productive . .
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Tryin~ to mix
'business with pl,aure could be an
: uii8UCC888ftli blend today.' Either do one
thing oi thl other, bu1 don't attempt 10 do
ttoem ~sty.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Persons with
whom you'o'e involved today may make
decisions ~ you wyou're reluctaht 10 do
so for yourseH. What they decide might
be 90od lor them, but not neceasarify lor,
. you.
·

ASTRO·GBAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

5

the

1

ro.

...

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SCRAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
Purely- Viola- Tasty- Cheery- YEARS

"No one is an over night success," the talent agent
told his new client. "Behind every successful person:
he continued . "there are manv unsuccessful YEARS ."

�~•

,.- .. ··-:

-·~ ~r···~-r~·--.,.- 7...

··r:· ~ .......- .... .. _ , ., ,_.. 'P'·;·-, -· -~·- ,,·-

.

·

Pegl 12-llle Dally SenUnel

.\
\

Friday, Oc&amp;obet7, 1894

Poineroy.....MJddleport, OhiO

.

-

-----~Community,. calendar--_,;.....,---......~ .
The Commpnlty Calen~r Is
published as) free service to
non·proflt aro,nps wishing to
announce meetlnas ..d special
nents. The calendar Is not
'deslaned to promote sales or
rundralsers of an7 t7pe. Items
are Printed u space permillland
cannot be paranteed to run a
specific: nWDber or days. ·

7230;

Woodmen of America, Camp
Halloween party Saturday, 6:30
p.m at the Burlingham Modern
Woodmen Hall. Refresllments.
Members and families invited:

SUNDAY ··

REEDSVILLE 1_ Olive Town·
ship Bpard of Trusreea meeting 8
a.m: Saturday at Shade River
Forestty Office.

FRl~AY

POMEROY_ Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters pf the
American Revolution, 1:30 p.m. .Friday at Episcopal Church parish
hall. Rae Reynolds to speak.

HARRISONVILLE An
Hawaiian luau to honor Betty Bishop, deputy grand mauon, will be
held at the Harrisonville Masonic
Lodge hall, Saturday at•6:30 p.m.
There will be potluck refreshments.
LO'ITRIDGE - Countty music

News anchor negotiates freedom . Page AS

cen. .

night, Loaridge Community
tcr, all bjulds welcome, 7 to mid·
nighL •

POMEROY Carleton .
Church, Kingsbury Road, home•
coming Sunday, Su~da
school,
9:30a.m.; morning
· • I0:30
a.m. poduck dinner at 12: p.m;....._
afteknoon program at2 p.m. featur·
ing The Gospel Tones of
Charleston, W. '1/a.

RUU.AND _ Rudand Church
of Christ 16Sth anniversary, Sun·
day. Sunday school at 9:30 a.m.;
worship at 10:30 a.m.; basket dinner at noon, afternoon program, 2
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
p.m. Speaker, Bill Carter, pastor,
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, and Evange·
New Marshfield Church of Christ. line Chapter 172, Order of the
Special music.
Eastern Stir, will host an open
SYRACUSE - Homecoming reception Sunday at 2 p:m. at the
Syracuse Firs~ Ch~rch of God, Middleport Masonic Temple for
10:30 a.m. serviCe; dmner at noon, James Clatworthy who recently
became a 33rd degree Mason.
followed by afternoon service.

..

profiles author
•Featured on ,.ge 8·1

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College foot~all action . Page c1
J

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nnts -

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A Mult1m ed1a In c. Newspaper

Vo l 29 . l~ o 3c•

r.1t rl cll rprn i .Pn m,'roy -G all tpo ll s- fJt PI C' as ant . O cto bc • 9 . 1994

Teachers, staff file •intent to strike• notices

DON 'TATE MOTORS, INC.

.

'

.Board president: Meeting to avoid work stoppage 'possible'

tw~:~~:o~.~~~:

By KEVIN KELLy
will meet with the unions to avert the strike.
work between the unions and to offer
Tlmta·Stntlntl Steff
•.J-. 'Woodall said the district is studying long-range fina_n· "every. opPQrtynity" for all. sides to .
GALLIPOLIS- The Gallia County Local Educalion cia I projections to determine if a salary increase can be come back to the table, Phillips ex·
Association and the Galli a' local Support Staff Associa· offered.
j&gt;lained.
· tion each filed official notifica·
"I do see that we will meet
"We purposely chose the 19th as a
· tion of intent to strike Friday
with them again." he said. "The strike date to prov1de a reasonable
with the school district adminis·
··
· · ·
·· ·
·
boarddoesn ' twantastrike, but amount of time to settle before we have
tration and the S.tate EmployIWim;~, ~~~~jf (&gt;fdotent• .~ . ~tl!te it depends on how reasonable to take this action," he said.
· ment Relations Board.
hotffl~lo"l Fd4~W; Ule liiarl!Jsfdate· everyone wants to be."
Another bargaining session would

fund since 1990 and
is projected.to have
it&lt; debt paid by June
1\195, but Woodall
emphasized that
paying off the loans
'&lt;"ill not translate
into extra funds for
the district.

da~~~:~r~o:.~1k~~~e~~~~e:~:~:~ =~~~~-~~~Oc'~~~.Ltnlons b~~e~:i~~~r~~~: ~as~:~·~~~ ~~~~i~ s~theduled by the board,

THE GMC CENTER

Wednesday, Oct. 19 at .5 a.m.,
·Tuesday after negotiators pre,
senled membership with what
said ·Gary Phillips. chief nego- .
tiator for the GCLEA.
Phillips called the board's·"final offer" on new contracts.
The strike is not effective untillOworking days after the
The offe/'was rejected by an "overwhelming" majority,
notificalion, Phillips expiained.
Phillips said.
·
However, Gallia Local Board of Education President
The associations did not file notification until Friday
. David Woodall said Saturday Ihat it is possible the board
beca'Use l)f the time needed to coordinate the paper·

SAVE!

"We are hopeful they will give it one
more try;" he said." Again. we are not
opposed to meeting anywhere, any·
time to reachase!tlement.l don' t know
what more we can do."
Woodall said negotiations have heen complicated by
the' district being in the state loan fund.

94th District

SAVE!
·SAVE! ·

By GEORGE ABATE
Tlmaa..Sentlnel Staff
POMEROY - Both 94th Ohiu
.House candidates agree business and
job creation will remain a defining
issue in this November's race.
Incumbent Mark Malone, D·South
Point, and challenger John Carey1
R· Wellston. touted their accomplish·
ments ineconomicdevelopmentthis
week . The 94th District encompasses
Jill of Meigs. Gall!a and Jil~kson
~·~tie~ ·and'" inost 1 of·tawreiice

·ctmnly: ·

~-·.:..·

..

..
WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation's unemployment rate fell to 5.9
percent in September. a four-year low .' the gov~ rnme nt reported Friday. The
stock market initially soared at 1he news, bUIIater fell back with more moderate
ga ins, while bond prices remained

:candidates·outline
goals, achievements

"94"
GMC ~TON PICKUP
.
ve, auto., air,
7,000 miles.

a loan fund situation require s approv al from the
state. and the district would have to certify to the state it has the money to
pay for the increase," he explained.
Continued on page A2

U.S. jobless rate
at four-year low

race focuses
on·business

'

cr~~~cniha~~~~~~:~

[irm.
President Clinton said the repon
was :' fresh evidence ' that his eco- ·
nomic program is working.
The president left' open the door
for some type of middle-cla.s tax
cut, but said he would nol back such
a move "at the expense of the eco·
nomi~~ecovery for that ~~me middle
class.
Reaction to the employment re · ·
port among wary investors was tern ·
pered by news that the nation 's non·
farm payrolls grew by just 239.000
jobs. fewer than the 250.000 ex·
peeled.
Nearly 2.5 million jobs have lleen
added I his year. Clinton said4.6 million jobs have been created during

·

~*'liP •• :rH~~-.-..,..;· ,.

UNEMPLOYMENT

8.0'11. .

1.5

ONDJ FIIAilJJ AS

Mark Meloni
1111S 11M
, ·Malgnc 1sai9 .~e will ruO. O)l his ,
CHANGI IN PAl RQLL , S
record of ftghtirig to retain atea jobs .
imd voting to help create new·ones.
Malone earned high marks from
the Ohio Manufacturing Association for his votes on key business
laws during the last two yeafl!; ac·
're getting
our economic
hts"We
20- month
presidency.
cording to a release from Malone 's
·house in order: · the president said
office. ·
during a White House news conferOf 13 key legislative issues,
ence. "Jobs arc being created at
Malone voted with the OMA' s stance
home .' '
on 10 of them , he said.
The unemployment rate fell from
"We need jobs, nol handouts in
6.1 percent in August.
this district. That"s the way I've
The administration hai led the posivoted," Malone said. "Business is
tive
economic news while; sim ul tathe
Meigs
County
Board
of
Commissipncrs
lhe engine that keeps our economy By JIM FREEMAN
neously
trying 10 calm jillery investors, who·worry I hal a rnhust ~conomy wi ll
The
highway
department
Closed
the
16-by-11
0
foolS
pan
running. We need to keep that en- Tlmes·Sentlnel stan
fuel
inflation
and lower the va lu e of.lheir holdings.
to
all
traffic
two
weeks
ago.
The
bridge
was
closed
earlier
gine running smoothly."
POMEROY - The Meigs County Board ofCommis·
Laura
d'
Andrea
Tyson, the president's chie f economic adviSer. Iold report·
truck
and
bus
traffic
aftcr,inspectors
discovered
a
defecto
Malone ·, votes on the legislalion sioners are requesting Ohio Public Works Commission
ers
that
nothing
in
the
repon would make the administration change its forecast
tive
crossmember
undernea
th
the
bridge
deck
.
A
gap
also
included: for. enteq~rise zone; for, off1c1als VISit the county to tour a closed cu ~nty bndge.
thai
economic
growlh
will slow slightl y next ye1,"r while inllalion will pick up
appeared
between
the
crussmember
(a
large
1-bcam)
and
Bureau of Worker 's· Compensation
The move comes as a move by the commiSSion 1o secure
on
ly
modestly
.
The
administration
is predicting thai prices wi ll r"c :1 .2 pcrccn1
the
bridge
's
upper
superslructure
.
audit exc":'ption; for, clean air title _ ,/undmg for ~ n~w bn.dgc t~ replace ~n ag•ng, one -lane
in
1995,
compa
red
to
a
2.9
~rccnt
incrcilse forecast lin this year.
Gravel
was
dumped
al
both
ends
and
barricades
se
t
up
to
five : for. mle f1ve amendment; filr, IQJ&gt;ntlge on Ba~h?~ R~ad wh1ch crosses the Shade R1ver
..Thpc
have
been
rrion:
jobs
created
in high-w11gt.: indu ~ llic~ thi ~ year than
·
keep
vehicles
off
the
bridge
.
wastcfecs; lor.cleanclosurc;against, near Keno. Me1gs H•ghway Department offlwlls were
in
the
prcv.
i
ous
five
years
cgmhincd."
Ty
~o nc said .
Highway
department
office
manage.r
Dave
Spencer
said
worker' s compensation·reform; fur, noll fled earlier last wee\&lt; that the1r r~quest for eme~gcncy
"
L
abor
Secretary
Roher!
Retch
"
'"lthe
emplo
yment repon provided · 'neithe
department's
main
concern
is
nur
about
the
bridge,
recycling loans; for, sexual harass· fund•,~g hadbeen den1ed by the public workscomm!S~&lt;on .
ther
cause
for
worry
among
bond
uat!c"
on
Wall
Streel nor concern a.mong ·
rather
the
department's
main
concern
is
I
he
alternate
mutes
ment · fur defense conversion· for
The act ton followed a meetmg between thcco mm•ss1on
those
who
fcitr
th
at
the
econom
y
1
"
;,
lnwlllg
dnw
n.
··
ContinUed on page A2
· ' co~tlnued on page A2, ' and c?unty officials Friday during I he _weekly meeting~f

i

!~5~S~i1

"92" V6,
CHEVROLET no PICKUP
auto., air, Tahoe.

1192" CHEVROLET
no PICKUP
auto., air,
·

V6,

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Tahoe, fiberglass, 19,000 miles.

$121499

"93"
OLDS CUTWS CIEU
·
· V6, auto.,aalr and much more

State denies emergency aid for new bridge

119) 11 Auto.,
OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME
.
alr,tllt,
P.• win. locks.

5

1,695---.

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r-----------------------------------------------------------~

Clinton warns .Saddam, News capsules
orders·military .buildup Ohio AG to join appeal
11

.

'

89" CHEY.
CAPRICE lS BROUGHAM
Loaded, only 35,000 mi., one owner.

$1 0999
1

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.119Q" CHEVROlET CORSICA
,

ss,995

V6, auto.,a air, one owner.

"88" ;HONDA
ACCORD Ll

"92!' BUICK
CENTURY

Nice car, auto., air and more.

V6, auto.,alr, loaded.

~

ss 995

•

"86" OLDS
98 REGENCY
Loaded
.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Moving swiftly to counter an Iraqi buildup of
troops near Kuwait, President Clinton warned Iraq not to repeat "the mistakes
of the past' ' and underscored his message with a show of military might.
Clinton ordered I he aircraft carrier USS George Washington and ships laden
wilh supplies for the Army and Maririe Corps to steam toward the Persian Gulf
region and increased air reconnaissance in the area, P.entagon officials said.
"It would be a grave mistake for (Iraqi
leader) Saddam Hussein to believe that for
any reason the United States .would have
weakened its resolve on the same issues that
involved us in that conflict just a few years
ago, ' ' Clinton said at a news conference Friday.
. .
· Referring tot he 1990 invasio,nof Kuwait,
reversed by a U.S.-Ied allied mililary force,
tire president said the Iraqis " should not be
misled inlo thinking they can repeat the mistakes qf the past. "
Oefense Secretary William Perry said the
Iraqi troop movements were "not routine and
are not.typical of what we've seen in the·pasl
ISSUES WARNING
and lherefore cause us concern. '. The United
President Clinton has placed 'States has a "very substantial capabHity" in
U.S. troops on alert In re· thea rea andwmildbeready for any necessary
sponse to Iraqi troop move· deployment, he said..
.
ments near the Kuwaiti bor·
Clinton sought to·put forward a stern but
·
·
measuted response to a situation whose-por,
der.
tent.s were murky~
·
Senior Pentagon officials,.speaking on condition of anbnymity, said the;
pr~ved ahead with precauliona.ry steps in part because of the length ·
time it takes for U.S. forces to move mto the regton.
The George Washington was traveling ro the Red Sea from the Adriatic, and
s e~pected to arrive by 'Sunday night. From thai loca!ion, its airctaft would
be in a position to strike Iraq if necessary.
.
Also dispatched toward the Gulf were wa,rships normally based at the Indian
'OCean island of Diego Garcia.
·
In addition, Clinton called for an updated target list for potential air strikes
by Tomahawk c'rujse missiles and sent a fou.r-ship amphibious assault group
carrying ~.000 Marines from the southern Persian Gulf nonh toward,!&lt;uwait.

5

4;?95

~--.~
, ~r--c~~~=-~----~---------------

\
,.,/

sa,-995

"92" OLDS
CUT~S SUPREME
V6, auto, air, loaded I .

58,995
I

.

Open
Suncl'ays

.

DON TATE MOTORS,. INC~

.
301 (. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO
..

~

.

-

614·992·6614, 1·100·137·1 094

Hours:
Mon.-Fri.
9:0Ch'I:OO
I
Sit. 9:01H:OO

Sun. I :00.5:00
I .

r

'

.

.

r

'

\ '

in drunken-driving case

GOOD MORNING
Union files charges against SEOEMS

Today's Times-Sentinel
18 Srrtions · 184 Pa1ts

Chargee have been flied againat an area ambulance
service, alleging It hu ln)lmldated workers prior to the
Oc:t. 19 vote on whetherto unionize, the United Mine
Workera Auoclatlon •nnounced Friday.
Tile UMWA llled the complaint wlth€he .National·
Labor Relatione Board, charging that the outheastern
Ol],lo Emergency Medical Service has " arused and
dlll:lpllned union supporters and comm td other preelection labor taw vlollllons."
__
SEOEMS operates In Athens, VInton, Jackson and
Lawrence countlts.

TROY , Ohio (AP) - Ohio Attorney General
Lee Fisher said Friday he will join a local prosecu·
tor in appealing a municipal court ruling thai the
state's drunken-driving penalties are unconstitu·
tiona I.
Piqua City Prosecutor Elizabeth Guttman filed a
notice ·of appeal Thursday in Miami County Mu·
nicipal Court.
Fis~er agreed to act as co·counse.l and has as·
signed attorneys in his office to assist Ms. Guttman.
"Ohio 's drunk-driving ·law is a tough law thai
work.~. and it is in every citizen's interest to see that those who break the law
&lt;eceive swift, sure punishment," Fisher said.
Under the new , tougher penalties enacted about a year ago, motorists
arrested for drunken driving can lose their license~ on the spol if they fail or
refuse a blood"-alcohol or chemical tests.
·
R__~~at offe~ifers and !tJ!llori,sts .'rho drive u_nder_suspension m~y ~ave '
their license plates and registrations 1m pounded, their veh1cles 1mmobthzed
or their vehicles forfeited; depending on the number of previous violations.
On Sept. 7, Miami Counly Municipal JudgeWilliam Kessler rul ed Ihat the
penalties are unconstitutional.
•
.
Ke~sler said th~ 1 penaltics are excessive, put un~qoal 1 butdens on motorist ·
and violate the d'ue-process clause of the Const1tut10n by allowmg for the
seizure of vehicles and denying ,mQtorists the right 10 drive before a hearing
. is held.
4.
'

U. nio.n reaches tentative accor~ w. ith Kroger

•
CHARLESTON, W.Va. iAPj - The Un~ed FOod and Commercial
Workers union reached a tentative agr~ment with Kroger Co. on a new
contract foi about 4,000 workers, union officials said. -;
Union officials would not .release details of the pact that would cover 50
stores in easlern Kentucky, sou.theastern Ohio and West virginia. About
3,StXrof the worlccrs are in West Virginia. · .
Union members are scheduled to vole on the proposal Sunday. wheh the
current contract expires. Members have rejected two earlier pmposals.
Kroger is based in CincfnnatG
·
·
'

Rockefeller working
With COal COmpanieS

Business
Calendars
Classi lieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituaries
Sports
Along the River
Weather

Dl
82&amp;4

DJ·7
Insert
A4

AJ
A6
Cl·8
Bl

A2

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) _
Sen. Jay Rockefeller is working to
Columns
resolve the problems of compa~
facing bankruplcy be'au~~ of a i99Z .
lawdesigned .to preserve health ben· Fred-trOW
•
efits fur 200,()()(1 retired coallniners. Jjm Sapds
" They arc ~oing 10 come up with a Cbuek Stone
r~mcdy for these folks ," Laura Quinn.
spokeswoman for Rockefeller. D-. Bruce Williams
I
w.y a., sa•~._. Fn'day.
Rockefeller urged passage of the
Coa l Industry Retiree Health Benefit Act oft \192. The acl required spmecoal
companies ro resume payments to the trust functs that p.y benefits to retired
United Mine Workers union members.
The funds ' financial solvency w:is threatened by a series of _court rul \~gs
t~at adcjed beneficiaries while allowing companies to stop contributing tolhe
1ru~t fund. · ··
·
.
·
Under the act, companies that previously. participated in the furids were
required to take responsibility for health benefits for their own retiree-\. In
addition, they were required to resume payments to cover so-called- "or·
phan •· retirees, whose companies no loriger exist. •
A number of companies criticized the law. saying i.f'would force lhem into
bankruptcy.

II

,.

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