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Recent Gallia.County·Farm,
City· Day events are reviewed

Ohio Lottery

Eastern
wallops
Southern

;.

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' in which lhe beef was roasted.
By LOIS M. SNYDER,
·~ilh people of ill ages.
.
The ice cream :and mille was·
Gallia County S&amp;WCD
The McKeans were gractous
Program AdminiStrator
.
hosts who also added to the da)' served by members o{ lhe Galli&amp; ·
GALLIPOLIS - Thanks to the with exhibits and sales of home County Diary PromQtion commit- ·
efforts ot several local businesses grown &lt;produce including Indian tee. Our thanks to John and PCnise1 '
and the Gallia Soil and Water Con- com, pumpkins, and assorted vari- Payne, Lori Lee, Renet, and Reue
servation Dislrict, the 12th Annual eties of gourds I!Jid squas.b which Carmic,hael, Karen Taylor and
Farm City Day proved to be a Bile- lhey will continue 10 sell on a sea- DoMB Taylor. A lot of neighbors·
and friends provided additional ..
cessful event Activities began with sOnal basis.
·
a wagon lOur of lhe McKean FamiA big thank you goes outiO lhe tractors and wagons for the farm'
ly Farm.
McKean .FaJIIily Farm and all of 10ur. Our thanks 10 Kaii Burleson;. .
The McKeans raise vegetables, the businesses and individuals who Mike Hughes (Gallia SWCD~
BUSINESS CHANGE •
hay, IObaCco, have a cow/calf oper- helped present to the public· the Supervisor), John Carmichael,
The.Sandy and Beaver luur·
ation
and practice forest manage- hard work and dedication of the tv.arlc Jividen (Gallia SWCD'
ance Company hu acquired
S tpervisor), ~ Bill Howard,.
:::::
PROVIDE DECORATIONS. The Gallia County Farm
ment. Too, stops included Intro- American farmer .
.
the
Suttoa
and
Chester
Farm::::Bureau Youth Group, advisors and women's committee provided
duction to th~ Farm by Gallia · · Major financial contributions Lawrence Tawney, Bill Tawn~.
ers
Mutualluurance
Co.,
and
::::" decorations ror the 1994 banquet and the youth demonstrated
SWCD SuperviSO~ La~rencc: B':B'· were from Ohio Valley Bank, Star Jason Howard, Tom Woodwafd,:
the policies will now be ser·
Blaine Taylor, Ray Hughes, Scott·.
:"~rbat tbe best dressed farmers are wearing for safety. Left to right
dell,
Wa~r 9uahty w1th D1str1ct Bank, Unity Savings &amp; Loan, and
viced by the Lamber.t InsurDonahue, Rob Massie, and:
. are Kyle Deel, McKinnsey Saunders and Allison Terry. Rear •
Conservabomst
Patty
Dyer;
Pasture
Bank
One.
Other
contributors
were
ance Agency, Pomeroy. SaHy
Lawrence BurdeU.
: Katie. Shoemaker, women's chairperson; Jackie Graham, past
and
Fora~e
Management
wilh
SCS
Oallia
County
Farm
Bureau,
Gallia
Lambert, aaent, announced
Soup beans were cooked by·
· youth advisor and Darla Saunders, new youth advisor.
Agronomist Bob Hendershot; Beef 'County Dairy Promotion Commit·
the acquisition or the new
·.
. \
.
Production
with
O.S.U.
Cooperstee Broughton's McDonald's and GJllia SWCD Supervisor Jim: ·
conipany Friday. Sl!e said tbaf
live Ex!Casion Agent Ed Vollbof!!; Br~wn's IGA. '
'
Howard and Virgil Carr. Our!·
. anyone in need of policy or
thanks to B·arb and Amy ' Mills, ·:
M~na~ement
wllh
G~Uta
·
Helping
serve
the
roast
beef
and
Forest
claims·servlces from Sutton
.
Belh
and Tim Bromfield, and Drea- ,·
SW&lt;;:D
D1stnct
Foreste~
Cm~y
hamburgers
were
Lois
Snyder,
Dis·
and Chester should contact
rna
Jividen
wl)p helped serve the :
Jenkins;
Vegetable
.Producuon
~~~~~
trict
Program
Administrator
for
her omce located at 115 Eut
t::;.....don Coordinator,
and conviction for arson, malicious
beans.
·
O.S.U
Cooperauve
ExtensiOn
Gallia
SWCD
Connie
Massie
Second St. The telephone
jJIDla County Farm Bureau
injury 10 property, and for stealing
Agent
Howe
Neihm
and
Col.lin
Erica
Massie,
Edie
Bostic,
Annetre
Businesses
and
agencies
assist,'
;
number is 992-6641.
M_cKean •. and Tobacco PJ:~ucuon and Jim Clark, and Kim Sheets and ing wilh equipment WllJC Ball Fur- ·.
GALLIPOLIS • Four new any eligible I_D~ed yebicle,
·
w1.1h Gallia SWCD Techmc1an Buz J:Ierb Schuette, and Merle Howard. niture, Skaggs ApCliance Service, .
;lfusrees were elected 10 three years . . ~ob Batley, Dtrector of titer'
terms during a recent meeting of Galha County EMS presentefl a
Mills.
.
The beef was produced by Jim Bob Evans Farms, nc., 0.0. Mcln·
· Upon returnmg from lhe tour, Howard, supervisor for Gallia lyre Park District, Gallia County ·
:·tile Gallia County Farm Bureau.
summary of the proposed 911
guests. were treated 10 a free lunch SWCD and was processed by Barr Litter Control, Farm Credit Ser- '
:...· . Reelected were: c. A. Duncan emergency sy~tem. ,The Farm
. of roast. be~f sandwiches, soup C 1sto.;. Meats. The meat was v;ces, aild Galli a County Farm :
~d Patty Dyer. Newly elected Bureau, through Its policy develop' beans, nulk, tce cream and c~. coolced by Rob Massie, Galli a BJreau. Also, thanks to the Gallia
::ttustees were Glenn Grahlirn and ment process. has long ~ a sui?"
Lemonade was s~rv.ed by Galha SWCD Supervisor and Paul QuQ· A ;adcmy FFA for parking cars,
·[,any Shong.
porter of the unplementaUon of this
:
County
CommiSSioners Ken can; past supervisor. The .Phio at d Aaron Metzler, Deputy Sheriff
; Clllirman Paul Shoemaker con- system.
·Farmer,
Harold
Saunders, and B 'Cf Council provided a financial for traffic control.
o'ilucted the meeting with Bob PowHarold
Montgom_ery.
donation.
·
Thanks go out .to the Gallipolis
' eU ~tin.l! the resolutiol)s, all of
The Farm Bureau has the Green
D1ily Tribune for coveting Farm .
.
Attende~s enJoyed 4~monstraWe
would
like
to
thanlc
Jack
';V{h1ch wen!" adopted by the mem- Reflective House number signs
:
uons of chain saw $CUlpung by Lee Jaclcson for the loan of his cooker CtyDay.
Cates, Safety City by Donna
;;bclsbip.
Stale Trustee Elizabeth Cooper- available for saleat a cost of $7.()()
Sanders of Columbos &amp; Southern
·.n~ ~nted the Star Awards 10 each, including 2 sets of numbers,
Electric, and the Enviroseape Non·Patty Dyer Information Coordina- to help individuals better mar~
·point Source Pollution model by
·cor, Ka""' Michael and Bob PoweU, their property for emergency vehi·
,_
cles 10 find them. These signs are
Con'rue White.
Membership, Katie Shoemaker, available at the Gallia Soil &amp; Water
Other exhibits included farm
Women's Committee and Jackie Conservation Dislrict office in the
. KATHY McDANIEL
tquipmcnt displays by Jividen's
Graham, Safety Committee.
C.H. McKenzie AgricQ!tural Cenand Altizer's· · Farm ~upply,
. A silver plow award was pre- ter next 10 lhe Fairgrounds.
Van~'s Log Doll Houses &amp; Barns,
sented to Kay Michael and Bob
Mike McConnell, ODNR Divi·
and
Farm Business Planning AnalPOwell for a 7% farmer fain in sion of Wildlife made a presentaysis
by Glenn Graham, instructor
membership. A Golden ractor !ion on the· pro~ irnplementa·
wilh
Buckeye Hills Career Center.
.award was presented 10 Paul Shoe- tion of Sunday hilllbng. Through a
LONG BOTTOM - Kathy Gallia County EMS performed a
·maker as President for a 7% overall . survey question the Farm B.ure~u McDaniel recently accepted the simulated rescue including the
: g'ain in membership.
·
· members present showed theu dis- position of area captain wilh TOPS
transport of an excited volunteer in
. It was announced lhat the $500.
~ewani Prqg1am is being inciaised · approval of the proposed changes (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) Clubs · the Health' Net-Helicopter. Th&amp; rescue squad members were, Brad
Inc.
to a $1500. Reward Program for • in the hunting season.
She will be responsible for ere· Ray, Terrance Hopkins, Eug~ne
EMS DEMONSTRATION· A squd from GaWI C
' .cIUatJr's ...
The Fanit Bureau Youth Group ating public aw81'CIICSS·Of TOPS in Valentine, Donna Massie, ·and
Emergency Medlral Services stages a delilonstratlou (flrDI
.
and advisors put on a skit of what tlie Meigs, Gallia, Jackson and Vince Bell.
dent) durln~r the receat Farm/City Day activities on die lola · ·.~
Vincon
county
areas
in
addition
to
Horse
drawn
wagop
rides, given
lhe best dressed .farmers are wear·
'
McKean Farm otr SR 518.
popular .
ing. Kyle Dee!, Mckinnsey Saun· assisting current chapters and by Ray
ders and Allison Terry modeled a founding new chapters.
TOPS is a non-profit weight
selection of prorective bals, glasses
loss
orgaiiization emph·asizing a
!iy Li~ Mead~ws
and face masks/b~thing appara-.
.
supwrt
n•tworlt. For more infortUses.
'
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.
:" GALLIPOLIS · Farmers in .
The University of Rio Gr.agde mation, she can be tontacted llt
·iocal Administrat·ive Area 2 Chorale Group entertained the 614-949-2486 0' 614-367-0274.
(LAA-2), which included Addison, audience with several selections
She resides near Long BotiOm ·
Gallipolis, Green, Clay, and Perry covering a variety of music styles.
with her husband, Luke, and sons
T'Ownships, have lhe opportunity to
James and Adam.
oominate persons ·they feel would
btst serve lheir fare community in ll!e upcoming ASC Community
C)lmmittee election
· ·
- In a change from previous years,
oominating petitions will not be
1990 FORD
ii)ailed to i_ndividual eligible voters
~titions say now be requested at
DUALLY .
the ASCS Office Completed peti.'
4 dr., F350 XLT
dOns must be received.in die count¥ office by close of business OctoLariet, 7.3L
ttcr 31, 1994 In generals anyone
Deisel, Automatic,
eligible 10 participate in any ASCS
program, may be a candidate for
Cab lights, air
illll community ASC committee.
A14o, air cond., tilt, cruile, caaaette, rear
AIC, spoiler, caaaalle, till, delay • •
cond., cruise, tilt,
: A list of all Known eligible vot·
defogger, power door locks, spoiler, delay
alUminUm Wheels. rear defogger, lc]aded.
for .LAA-2 is available at the
set-up ror 5th
~SCS Oft'ici,There are possibly
Only
Only
wheel.
~gible voters who are .not on our
.
P.er 1119'11h
Down
Per month
'500
Down
.¢ unty off'JCe recon!s If you are not
Includes
$400
under
30
allowance.
10,6115
to·
(614)
(614)
mrc whether or not you are listed,
finance, Sale Price 11
after rtbate. so
The
help us update our register by call·
667-3350
667-3350
illg the county office.
42945
Call
• NOTICE - The coancy-office
Stale Route 7
John Reeves
i;u be.~IOsed Monday;OtiP~ 10
94 GRAND PRIX SE
in obsetvance of Columbus Day.
Coolville,
Ll1a Headows Is the County
Ohio
Exec alive Director or the GaiDa
A;grlcultural Stabilization and
Conservat1011 Service. ·

Plrk 3:

165

Pick 4:
6SU
Super Lotto:
2-8-11-18-25-39

PageS

Kicker:
669815

a1
..... N0.11f

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 10, 1994

CopV'Wd11M

draws larg~ crowd
to area over weekend
STERNWHEEL RACES - Paddlewheeler
races are a traditional part ot the annual Big
Bend Sternwbeel Fesdval. Here, the Rufus B. D

and the P.A. Deany square orr for a water·
churning dash dowu the Ohio River. The P.A.
Denny won.

Union apprentices raze old
Rutland High School ~building
'By GEORGE ABATE
If! September,lhe Local IS Ohio a better Job for a company's doUar.
. Sendne1 News Stair
Operating Engineers Apprentice They're more effic1ent," Hager
The 79-year-old Rutland High program agreed to pulverize the said. "We would like 10 encourage
School finally 'slammed to .the building after Malone's request. more people to apply for the
ground this week thanks 10 the IOil _The school house - which had (apprenticeship) program."
Applications can be sent in
of area volunteers.
been vacant for 26 years -was
Local officials - particularly reduced 10 bricks and twisted metal year-round to the Logan office,
Hager said. Fact sheets are sent 10
Joe Bolin .:... searched for more in justlhree days this week.
than a year to fmd someone to level
"It's certainlY. part of my job tO applicants in December, with
this condemned building for free, help if they can t ge~it done," Mal- screening in February and testing
Rutland maintenance supervisor one said. "I tty to help people help in March, Hager said. The apprenDale Hart said.
lhemselves."
' . tices lhen begin working that sum.
"If it luidn't been built as good
Two apprentices knocked the mer with contraciOrs.
After a four-year period that
as it was it would have been down structure down since the village
~
"
could no1 affool contractprs aml&lt;lhe includes at least 160 hours of trainf~::~~!~ the job
would not compete with oljler ing :f ye'af·the apprentices become
helped
union work, said John Hag!'r, journeymen, Hager atl~,.d. Union
sc~ .
.
.
· regional coordinaiOr for the .union dues pay for the apprentice training
and refresher training for journey·
· State Rep. Mark Malone, D- apprentice program.
SOI!dt.Point, made 'BOrne calls in - · Tllday's heavy-equipment Or2.'· men.
"We always try to tecruit
Abgu•t after the Ohio National ators tleed to understand sophlstiand women," said site
minorities
Guard told the· village its equip- cated machinery, even relymg on
supervisor Bob Davidson. "The
ment could not tear down this laser technology, Hager said.
three-sq,ry, lhree-brick-tl)ick SIJUc·
"Union engineers are better most important lhing is to have a
ture.
trained, ~ore qualified and can ,do .
Continued on page 3

·ele~ti'on

·94SUNBIRD

- "-Lending a helping crane-~
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. ilona wMh :~ leattMw

•s,ooo••

tl Now Accepting New Accounts .
i/ We DehYer Only Clean B.P. Fuels··
tl Courteous Dependable·:D~Iiveries
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.. We Accept HEAP Vouchers

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. BR &gt;ao.·.;co~ .
LARRY I. MI"ER

.TODAY 446•1157 •

98·5654
' . . ·.

Sentinel Newsslllll'
Bright, sunny skies and WB!"!!
daytime tempeiatures greeled VISI·
tors and participants in the fifth
annual Big Bend Sternwheel Festi·
val held in Pomeroy Thursday, Friday and Saturday. 1n contrast, last
year's festival was hampered by
cool temperatures and rain.
"I lhooght we had a tremendous
crowd," said Meigs Coonty Parks
DireciOr Mary Powell. Thirty-eight
of Ohio's 88 counties and 10 states
were represented at the festival,
according 10 Powell's license plate
survey. .
.
While no off'tcial attendance figures were taken, Powell estimated
that up to 10,000 people worked
their way thrOugh lhe festival dur·
ing the three-day event Also boost·
ing attendance was the annual toy
l'Jin by the Meigs C-ounty Bilcers
Association which drew about !50 .
motorcycles and their riders early
Saturday afternoon.
The festival got underway
Thursday afternoon with the senior
citizens' cruise on the P.A. Denny ·
and culminated wilh frreworks Sat·
urday night Festival events includ·
ed cruises, concessions, live enter·
tainment and the popular chili
cookoff.
Winners in the chili cookoff,
which included 17 entries, were, in
order by category: Individual- C:
L Cafe, Lynn Arms and Cathy
Workman; Texas Bobs, Bob Workman and Bob Arms; Mitch and
Lisa Meadows; Commercial - 0
Denise Bunce, attorney at law;
'·
Mason Veterans of Foreign Wars;
Dottie Turner Realty.
New this year was an award for
AWARD-WINNING CHILI- Texas Bobs chili '!oa two
the most original site. The award
awards during the annual chili coolcoff event at tbe B1g Bend
went 10 Texas Bobs which featured
Sternwbeel Festival: most original site and second place In the
a pioneer motif and chili cooked
individual category. Here, ''Texas Bob" Workman prepares the
over an open frre.
award·winning brew.
Event organizer Sherman Mills
said he and co-organizer Belva
MiUer are already making plans for the cookoff and also thanked of Dunbar; Hobby Ill, Bryan
next year's chili cookoff. Mills Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop 249 for
Honaker of Nitro, W.Va.; U.S.S.
lhanked those who participated in assisting in the cleanup.
Mudsock, Carl and Jaclcie Wright
Boats and owners attending the of Millwood, W.Va.; Virginia, Jim
festival included: Rufus B. II, Lew and Mary Donna Davis of Minand Linda Wendell o[ St. Albans, e•sville; Princess Margy, Pete
~w:va.; Brenda J., Tom and Brenda Grassie of Dunbar, W.Va.; Lucy
Howard of Blue Rock; Bonnie Dee, B.. Charlie Bonnet of Poc:a, W.Va.;
John
and Bonnie Dennis, Pomeroy; C 1arlie B., Chuck Ewing of Point
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- A permit coordinator with the Old Glory, Dave and Donna Pieasant, W.Va.; P.A. Denny, Law·
state Division of Environmental Schlosser of Lowell; Gambler, son W. Hamilton Jr., CharlesiOn,
Protection wants 10 know if a pro- Gary and Marilyn Marton of Park- W.Va.; Bill's Toy, Bill Rizer of
, posed pulp ~ill . in. Mason County ersburg, W.Va.; Jenny B., Rick and Minersville and the Ruddy Duck,
Debbie Burden of Lowell; Lak1e Wally Veneable of MorgantoWn,
will release d1oxm miD lllf.
Karl Dettinger, who works ~t Marie, Bill Reese and Gary Fisher W.Va.
the division's Office of Air Quali ·
ty, wants to know if the mill will
release dioxin into the ll1f by bum·
ing sludge from its wastewater
treatment plant
The $1.1 million mill along the
Ohio River at Apple Grove is being
('proposed by Parsons &amp; Whittemore
Inc. of Rye, N.Y.
Deuinger also wants lhe company 10 explain why it can't use new
technology, whtch bypasses the
output of dioxin created by chlorine bleaching.
.
The mill, which already has
water pollution and landfill per·
mits! is a~aiting a lhird permit concemmg au quality.
.
Deuinger has written several letters aSking Parsons &amp; Whittemore
Ville President C. Kenneth God·
dard for more information about
thi'two iSsUeS.
Dettinger said he has received
no response so far .
Gov. Gaston Capenon favors
the project, which promises 600
permanent jobs as well as consb'Uc·
tion woJt. · ·
An Environmental Protection
Agency report last monlh conclud·
ed that incineration of chlorine
compounds is a major source of
dioxin emissions in the United
States.
Aboul 1.1 billion pounds of pulp
wastewater sludge w.ere
1990 by mills lhat chloHERBS AND ANTIQUES - Pomeroy's mlai-PIIJi featand
bleach pulp, the EPA says.
dioxin is released irito the an herb rest ud antique display Saturday for tlae Flftla .uu.l Bll
and deposited ·on grass and Bead Sternwlleel Fesdval. Here ABita MIJS!ltr and ller daqllter',
the repon Slid. The chemical Plige of Racine look over colored c:ona diSplayed ir ID •tlca-e
is
consumed by cows and chlld:s bi&amp;h-iow' waaoa. lbe corn bid been dyed • deep nd by
other animals. and humans arc Bobbie Karr who sugested t)'ID&amp;It lato buDdies f1l tlaree fOil .....
exposed by eating, food that ,has lnt:. (Photo by Charlene Hoeflich)
been ·col1181Dinated, it said. .
I

Permit official
questions mill's
emissions

t.:=::=:=:==::=:J

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ByJIMFR~N

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$216'0· .

Allu•••

Sternwheel Festival·,

McDaniel ·
accepts post

f'24,1oadad809 .

1tolll-,10,....- .
lno.tt IJ J

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Lowtua!ptta . . dar...a

cold. TlllldaJ, .-y.llll' ta
upper•

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N!~: !~~e~~e~~m!~!:~o~~est

:Communit\'
:committee

w

The Ohio Operatin11
En11lneers traln101 program do01ted&lt;tbe equip·
ment ind wofk ot two
appreatlces to knilek down
the old Rutland Hlah
Scbool last week. Pictured
on the lett, Lanasvllle
nadve John Brlcldes oper·
ated tile crane that toppled
this three-story brick build·
ing. The 7!1-ye...--old structure stood auused tor ~'
years. ,Above, Mike. Hen~
derson or New Plymoutll
scrapes the debris with 1
bad: hoe.·(Sentinel· photos
by Georae Abate)
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Monda~~o~r10,1994 .

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Commentar

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Page " 2-The Dally senttnel ~

OHIO Weather

Pomeroy Middleport, ,9ftlo :
Monda~, October 10, 1~
'

Tut!lclay, Oct. 11

111 Coart Street
PomUOJ, Ohio

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publllber

CIIAilLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

GeMnl Manapr

LI!TI'I!RS. 01' OPINION are welcome. They lbould be leu IbiD 300
wmlllona. Alllottm ..., mbject to editins aDd Dlllll be siped with ,..,e,
....._ aDd tekpbooe oumba. No unsicood 1o1tcn will be published. Lettm
lbould be iD aood llltc, addreuinc iuuea, not pnooalilies.

Deadline for publication
of election letters Nov. 2
Tile Daily SeatiDel welcomes letters regarding the .Nov. 8 geaeral
elecdoa. Howewr, ID the IDterest of furoas, ao election letters will be

llft9ted lifter 1 2 - on WedDesday, Nov. 2.
.
IDdlridula abould address Issues and Dot peraoDSlitles.
Letten parely eadoniDg aaDdidates wHI Dot be used.
Letten abould be 300 words or less, preferably typed. AU letten
are aullject .to edltlq aDd and must lie lllped with ame, address
aDd telepbODe aamber. Te~hoDe a_umben will Dot be published. No
DMiped !etten wiD be publislled. Letten sbould be ID good taste.

By Jack Anderson
and
· Michael Blnsteln

tM YOUR FN~ 6011MO'THER.
. '(OU 6ET JI-IRE'f 'tMtiES·

t

Immigration loomihg
as key political issue
By WALTER R.MEARS

-

AJPSDedaiC~ondeDt

WASHINGTON - Emotional, divisive and ~tent. the immigra-

tiOn issue Oaring in stare election campaigns this year carries a message

for President Clinton and prospective Republican cballengers in 1996.
It's not going aW!IY· the concern i§ j!IOwing. and steps to srem illegal
immignllionlnay weD be a major issue m lhc next campaign for the Whi~
HouSe..
At this point. says Barbara Jordan, the fonner TelUIS congresswoman
now heading the U.S. Commission on Immigration Refonn, the rhetoric is
~~_!lg eff'!ns_'!!deal with "one of the most_complex and emotional .
tssues o!Our ume.
.
Her commisSion· has just issued its fmt recommendations, for tightened borders, denial of all but emergency public services to illegal aliens,
and for a COOlputcrized registry that would use Social Security numbers
and data from the Immigration and Naturalization Service to prevent
undocumenled workers from getting jobs.
That worker verification proposal has stirred conlrOversy with civil libertarians. The adminisuation has endorsed the objective, but not the system the commission said Clinton should set up i!p_mediate!y as a pilot pi'Q-

~Urn proposals, over the signature of a black woman political leader,

hme1f a proven champion of civil liberties. Ms. Jordan now is a IJfOfcssor
at the Uruversity of TClUIS.
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• BuT NOT If IT MEANS
~EGOVE~MENT
ISG01HG TO~

INVOLVEP.
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J~ Anderson and Michael
B•asteJD are writers for Uaited
F~e SJDdlcate, Inc.

Letters.to ·t.he . editor Crim-e -fighting starts
It's time to spe~ up
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Dell' editor,

growth to Gallia County and the
. I have qaletly watc:hed as Ibis area. Frank is the best candidate
JIIPCl time and ume again c1rec1aes southern Ohio •has had in many
IIJI neptive and personal attackl' .years.
...,,;,.t rny friend Frank Cremeanl.
· Let me tell you, Frank Cre. Wdl; no men. It's time to stop mean8 doesn't need this job, but we
1111iii' ..,'jlownPr.nlcCre-.
needh .Frankindthe .wont fwah&gt;:· Frank
' frllkWill~-- fln&amp;c:ooare..- •• tnvcst~ . a 1ot o •• own.
• • . from I!Oi&amp;hborin&amp; Giilia IIIODCy for the benefit of our c:omCOiiltr 1iDco 1916 wben Bob' • munity. Whoa we run Fraak Creswkl,.Cmiareaam•P· I .._.~we 1111 ~County
becluiC I was It&amp; and the llCI •down and this affeca

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Mankind came out of the forest
and fiellls and into community fot
safety and civilization. Nellher
world leaps' to mind when we think
of today'a cities. In ways *Be and
small, our increasingly urbanized
world more closely resembles an
~bic wilderness lluui a i:(&gt;Uecuve ulwark against a common
threat. Things won't get better until
men of us not only decide !hat our
cities must improve, but also
demonstrate that we are willing to

i:r~if':J:.AeO:: out~~O:::.':dtli win t:J=~~·!::~~o

.....aw a~ ,.W·.WIIitl to ditain anyway, Frank' is well-liked 1J1d
Much of the political response
.;;;ii'4 ,J;i...., of doiliin tor 'popular all-- this ·~ This has focused on quick-fix national

.........,,._. cJIYeJ4jplllear oa. the area is fliiiODI for mnnin&amp; down
·~111 111o riv«.
elected officials, How. can we '
1111 __., ..., olf -.1
' expect 10 aet JOOd people 10 nm?
· • It's a sllamO Iiiii diipaco. .
(JII!Ia ild lilliM. ComitY
· ,bj ,..,...... I 'tllint they are
Our falwe II aiiiiiC hele. ·
JW~t.,iii:'
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.-; ,..._., Oift! ,eaton ,..e need
Ri~oGrande
J!YIDS
Pl-.: Q 1
Ad Ia froal this .
,~ . . 1111&lt;... lJrouiht ~ and
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remedies such as the omDibus
crime bill of 1994. The. administntion p~ofeues to believe it will
make a noteworthy difference fpr
· the better. •and some of the m~'.Urc's $39 billion may ~ctually
affec.t the pr~blem; tf o~Jy
margrnally. For tnstance, pulling
m()!'C poli~ Cl! !be streeU sbou1d

· ·. T*r's Birdldaya: ~ lflnl'!l PIDter is 64. F~ illi9eis=~ '::~;eofl:'crime bill is
.... ';.W $teYCDIOD m la 64. Entettatner Ben Vereen IS 48. SIDF . ; voodooc:riminologyor.,cial
"badfl.et.IGIIa 1139. Sillier~ Ttl:1er is 36.
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'hla!P'l toi 1'o!ll7: ',:f~Pdce II Jellli
. vely easy to beilt what stings is
_ . , ' ~ H.L. ~; ~"- ~ writer li!d edlla'

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w are legislation WJii!Ped up ill
taw-and-order bunting. To note
tlnly ooe of its familiar defectl, few

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_.......____Weather------South·CeDtral Ohio
Tonight.. .Ciear and cold with
frost likely. Low 30 to 35. Ught
and variable winds.
Tuesday ...Mostly sun.ny. High
near65.

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----Area death--

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Margaret Russell

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Margaret Elizabeth "Mickey" RusseU, 75, POmeroy •.4ied this morning,
Monday, Oct. 10, 1994, at Holzet Medical Cenrer in GaU'ipolis.
Born OcL 21, 1918; in Minersville, daughter of the. late Otto and Anna
Mcintosh Hartenbach, she was a .member of the Minersville United
Methodist Church and retired from the Pomeroy Warer Deparunent
She is survived by a brother and sister-in-law, Robert C. and Viola
Hartenbach of Pomero)': a sister. Dorothy Ann Hartenbach of Middlepon;
a nephew, Srephen Hartenbach-ofPomeroy and a niece, Deborah Grueser
ofPomeroy. .
,
She was preceded in death by her husiland, Charles RusseU.
Services wiD be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with the Rev. Deron Newman officiating. Burial will follow in
Beech Grove cemetery in Pomeroy. - ·
.
Friends may call Tuesday from 2-4 ar!'l 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

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Two Meigs youths were treated and released from Veterans
Memorial Hospital Saturday for injitries received in a one-car crssh
on Rutland Township Road 47 (Junior Ward).
Brandy L. Call, 17, 345977 Junior Ward Road, Pomeroy, the
dri,ver, and passenger Cindy A. Call, 17, ~~940 Dexter Ro~d. ''Larigsville, were taken to VMH by the .Metgs EMS, the GalhaMeigs Post of the Stare Highway Pauol S81d.
. The patrQI said Brandy Call Will northbound, 313 feet !lorth o
County Road 10 (Jacks) at 12:50 p.m. when he car went off the
right stde of the road and struck an embankment The car was moderately dam~ed,lhc palrOI said.

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Meigs Economic
Development news
By JULIA H. THORN'{.ON,
Meigs COunty Economic
Development Director
Last month I explained the
. elltended area seriice. proceedings
between Pomeroy and Mason,
W.Va., and that a public hearing
would be scheduled for a later dare.
I have recently
contacled by
Scott Farkas, attorney examiner for
the Public Utilities Commission, as
to the date and time of the pub!ic
heating; which will be held Nov.
16 at 10 a.m. at the Senior Citizens
Center.
If you are interested in tele'phone calls becoming toll-free
between the Pome!:1Jy and Mason
exchanges, please contact IJie
immediately at (614) 992-5005. I
need to compile a Jist of residents,
concerned citizens and businesses
who would be willing to speak at
this hearing.
' A further update on last month
includes the connector route meeting between SEORC and Gov.
Voinovich. Voinovich stressed his
· commitment to·Access Ohio and
the completion of U.S. Route 33,
which would open ·our county up to
development and job creation.
Septe!llber and October have
brought the beautiful foliage and a
few more bright spots to our county. One of those bright spots I am
referring to is the new location of
BFG (Burton Flower and Garden)
to Portland. I have been working
with BFG sinee January because,
as I stated upon acceptance of this

been

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PubliC Notice
Maurice "ne Rocket" Richard ,
played on eipt Montresl Cllladicn
-Stanley Cup championship reams. ·

350'1 .11(G), 5705.19,5705.25

Notice Is hereby given
that In pursuance of a
Rooolulion of the Board of
Townohlp Truotaeo. of lho
(VSn JJJ.Ht)
Townohlp of Salem, Solem
Center, Ohio, paoold on the
MllmM •'IIOJ on._ Molldoy tllnlulb
26th day of July, 1994 thoro
Frilloy, Ill CGurl St.. Pvmny. Olllo. by lie
0111o Y•ner Pltllllllll• eo_,_ _ _
will be oubmltted to 1 vote
r.... Po-oy, Oblo 457~ . I'll. 992-2156.
of tho people of uid
S..1 eloio .,......pold" Po. . .y.Obl.o.
oubdlvi .. on at a General
Elecllqn to be held In the
-.1bo.Wocillod Prw,udlbt,Olllo
TownJ!IIIP of Salem, Ohio, ot
N""P'P*AI..........
the regulor ploces of voting
therein, on the 8th doy of
November, 1994, tho.
Tb•
Dally
SeoUoel.
Ill
Court
II.,
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quaotlon of levying a lex, In
........,,(Jblo 4S769.
exceao of the ten· mill
IUU&lt;mP'I10N IA'IU
llmltotlon, for tho benafil of
Selom
Town1hlp for the
Ooo-.!.•.•._ ..... - •. - ..................$1.40
purpoto of Melntelnlng end
operoling cernetenee.
~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::t~
Said lex being: A r1newal
of on oxl11ing tex of 1/2 mill
•
SINGLICOPYPIICI
at--a rltl not exceeding 1/2
llolly.... .........................:::.......... :... ... :l! c.a·
·mille for Mch one doller of
valuation, Which emounta to
S.-lllon oo~......uloo~tbo.;::r _,
five
cent• ($0.05) for ooch
.. -tolliOOol
Dolly
niHM
01 I duel.
Ji&amp; Of 12 JDOilb b•ll.
one hundred doltoro of
Vlllullion, lor five (5) yHI'I.
QdwUI ....--- ~
The Polt1 lor ..td Eloctlon
No •bocr{ptloa by moll ~ to or•
will open 11 8:30 o'clock
- -.,.n
........
anllol&gt;le.
A.M. l nd romoln open until
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7:30 o'clock P.fil : of 'llid
M.ULSUIBCRIP1IONI
day.
-.....,o.. c...q .
Dated Sept. 28, I1184
IS w-. ............ -.... -..;-... -·-··...J21.14
f
· By order of tho
~ w-.............--·-·--··---·--·S4lt6
8011rd of Election•,
'2 - .........
.-.... ·- --·-·-...
·--..
.$14.76
~c-q
of Meigs County, Ohio.
. , - .,_,___ ............._ ._ ,__.......J2)AIJ
Henry L Hunter, Chairman
Rita 0.' Smith, Director.
~=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~.=.
(10110, 17, 24, 31; 4TC

The Daily .Sentinel

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Tuesday at the school. All
urged to attend.

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MALONE DELIVERS - State Rep. Mark Malone, D·Soutb
Point, fulfJiled Ills pledge to bring down tile old R•tland High
School last week. Here, MaloDe (al right) gets a few words or
advise from Laiigsville native JobD Brlckles on swiDging lbe
wrecking ball. Maloae,eoDtacted lb~ Local 18 Obio Operating
Engineen Apprentice program wbo agreed to demolish tile building for free. (SentiDel photo by George Abale)
.

buse, VMH:
12:50 p.m. Saturday, volunteer
fire department and squads to a
motor-vehicle 'accident on Dexter
Road, Cindy caD, VMH.
.
SYRACUSE
1:55 p.m. Sunday, Pomeroy
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center,
Susie Windon, VMH.
. TUPPERS PLAINS
12: II p:m. Saturday, Betzing
Road, Inez Pooler, St. Joseph 's
Hospital;
, 2: 10 a.m . Sunday., Betzing
Road, Ida Pooler, St. Joseph 's Hospita!.

Hospl"tal news·

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Friday admissions - Ac!_a
Keesee, Pomeroy: Hazel Six,
Pomeroy; Alexander May,
Pomeroy
Friday discharges - Robert Jeffers, Syracuse; Elnora Ingels, Mid-

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Revival set
The Long Bottom Un ited
Me thodist Churcl). will hold a
tevival at 7 p.m. Thursday tluough
Sunday. Norman Butler is evange- ,
list All are welcome.
Board to meet
Eastern Local School District
levy commiuee, 7 p.m. at the high
sc hool.
Grange meetiDg announced
Th e Rock Springs Grange will
mce l at 8 p.m. Thursday at the haD.
Rutland Council to meet
Rutland Council will meet at 7
p.m. Tuesday at llte Civic Center.
Preceptor meeting set
"
The Preceptor Beta Beta will ,1
mcel at 7:30 p.m'l\)llursday at the
Episcopal Parish House.

Union
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Continued from page 1

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
answered 12 calls for assistance
Saturday and Sunday. Units
responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
3:08 II:Jil: Saturday, state Route
124, asststed Rutlaf!d at motorvehicle accident, Ray Arthur, Veterans Memorial Hospital;
1:37 p.m. Sunday, Page Street,
James Webster, VMH;
3:28 p.m. Sunday, Pearl Street,
Carl Stewart, Holzer Medical Center.
POMEROY
1:38 a.m. Saturday, East Main
Street, Kenneth Roush, VMH;
. 12:55 p.m. Saturday, Dexter
Road, asststed Rutland at motorvVehicle accident, Brandy Call,
MH.
RACINE
11:36 p.m. Sunday, Racine Volunteer Fire Department and squad
to stare Route 124, Marilyn Kibble,
treate&lt;! at scene.
RUTI..AND
1:20 a.m. Saturday, state Route
143, Gatha L. Alvarado, VMH;
· 2:31 a.m. Saturday, Rtitiand
Volunteer Fire Department and
squads to a motor-vehicle ai:c:ident
on Salem School Lot · Ro•d. ,
Michelle Shuler and Terry Asb'

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Elmer and Martha Burn,a Vf'"
B ownell Avenpe, Middle~ :
marked their 66th wetfdiiig
ru.niversary last Sunday, OcL 2.''
There was only one ilraWbitc~ - "
Elmer was confmed to the Holz(lr ' Medical Center, where he- 'had' ' ;
undergone major surgery. He is •
muing good progress, l 'm hapPr .;
tc report. The couple has! two ·~ ·
dt-ughters, Mary Margaret Lewis
and Carolyn Roush. Carolyn nlade •
a big banner noting the 66th·J
ar.niversary which was displayed in
Elmer's room.
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The Middleport Arts Couifcil 'was awarded a $6,000 develop.•
mental grant by the Ohio A'rts' !
Council for 1995 under the state !
. or~anization's minority progr\lm. ;
Thts was one or tile top amounf% ; awruded in Ohio, so the Middlpport
01 ganization has a feather in its _
c1.p. That should help everyope to . ·
k~..ep smiling.
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Boosters lo meet
The Southern Junior High
Boosters will meet at 6:30 p.m.

EMS logs 12 weekend calls

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON .
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL UMITAnON
Revised Code, Secllons

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being revived by the bank.
i
Here's how the' conteat worb.
You piclt up a doll .at the 'bluk~ ~
you costume that doll l n one of •
four calej!oriCS which in!:l~Jdei .~ ; ~
tiest, bndal, character aniJ .l9M •
style dress. Patterns are avaiJable -'
the bank and at various faliric IP4 v
craft shops, or ,you may want Jb ~
create your own design to ~Y, , •
make your ~try a woric of art. .
~
' The winner in each of the .foui ·:
categories will receive a $1!X),Jiiv- ;
ings bond and all four winners ~ I
entered in the grand prize COJ!f!SS~· ~
which offeJS a $200 savings tiQ114. }
for the prize.
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All of the cosuuned doUs IIC ,~ . ;;
be back at the b8n1c no J'a'u!r ~ \
Nov . 18 and after the entncs' IIC '
judged and displayed, ~ do~s-~JJ
be donaled to underpnvlle~ cliP;:;;.
dren.
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If you need any more detailS ,iiJSt,.stop by the bank. Seems ,l.ik~.~ 0 .
great conteSt in which everyone is. a I
winner. Good of the bank to SJIC?9.•
sor it.
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Yard sale set
A yard sale wiD be held between
9 a.m.-3 p.m. Thw:sday and Friday
at the Long Bouom Community
building.
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Injury reported in Saturday crash

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Meigs announcements

A Reedsville woman received minor injuries in a one-vehicle
accident Sunday on State Route 124, the State Highway PalrOI said.
Marilyn E. Kibble, 18, 42249 Kaylor Road, was treated at llte
scene by the Racine EMS, the pauol said.
Kibbl~ was rounding a left curve in Sutton Township at II :28
a.m. when she encountered wet pavement, lost conuol of her pickup
truck.- went off the left side of the road and struck a tree stump,
accordin$ Ill the report.
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The ptclrup was severely damaged and Kibble was ctled for failure to conuol.

A CoolviUe youth JCCeived minor injuries in a two-car coUision
Saturday alo the intersection of State R'oute ,7 and County Road-26
(Flatwoods), the Stare Highway Patrol said. · ·
Jonathan J. Avis, 16,45866 State Route 681, refused treatment at
the scene,'the patrol said.
.
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Avis was eastbound on Flatwoods al 12:25 a.m. when he fatled
to _yield from a stop sign, entered SR 7 ..nd struck a northbound .car
dnven by Aaron S. Brown,. 18, 44960 Sunny Hollow Road ,
Pomeroy, in the left side, the pabOI sajd.
·
The collision forced Brown's car to suike two mailboxes before
coming to a stop, according to the report.
.
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Both vehicles were severely damaged and Avts was ctled for
failure to yield.
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The second annual Meigs County Showcase will lake place this
Saturday and Sunday at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds and that
should wrap up what has been a
goodly measure of these types of
festivals or whatever over the past
fewwceks.
.
HopefuUy, the weather wiD hold
up one more weekend. Last year,
the Showcase didn 't fair all that
weU weatherwise, but it couldn' t
happen twice in a row, could it?
Naaawl
. The Showcase will go from. I 0
a.m. to 8 p.m. on Saturday and
from 12 iioon to 6 p.m·. on Sunday
and it appean that attrac;tions -this
year have been expanded, so that' ~
a srep in the right direction.
I'm advised tharthere is to be a
wide range of musical entertainment for the event. And -there wiD
be a kiddie tractor pull, alway s
popular with the younger set:
antique and classic car displays
plus a classic car cruise-in on Sunday: a display of antique tractors, a
petting zoo, historical di splays:
herbal and craft displays: demonstrations of pioneer skills; a model
train exhibit; displays from local
festivals,
businesses
and
entrepreneurs: a flow er show ,
youth soccer on butlt Saturday and
Sunday afternoons and a quilt
block contest. Promoters of the
Showcase also promise that there
will be a variety of good food on
the grounds so all in all you should
be able to find something which
wiD turn you on. A foliage tour will
~Js o be offered and the leaves
should be about al llteii peale next
weekend.
There is no admission charge
and you can't beat that. If you need
a.complete schedule of events and
entenain.ment, contact the Extension Office, 992-6696, or the
Meigs !'ark District Office, 9912239.

position, we need to work with
what we. already have in Meigs
County naturally.
BFG has eight other locations in
New York, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Ohio. BFG services bedding plant and produce growers
with a complete line of SUpPlies.
They will be releasing theu own
press release soon and expect to be
open for business by December.
A second bright spot is doublefold. Joe Bolin spurred the demolition of the abandoned and dangerous Rutland High School with the
wonderful assistance of John
Hager, area cOordinator of the Ohio
Operating Engineers Apprenticeship Fund. Joe has also been named
the outstanding member of Buckeye Hills Resource, Conservation
and Development association. Joe,
, a Meigs ·County resident, --:as
selected among members from rune
other counties.
ne third of the bright spots is
A lot of you expert seamstresses
the success of our Industrial Develshould
get ·into the Fanners Bank
opment/Attraction Workshop. Our
Dress-A:Doll
Contest, whi.c;h is
second meeting brouaht J~:Sil!e!!~
with .actual plans of their own for
the county and more of our township truStees attended. We have all
been given homework, which DlnDer at Center
needs to be compleled by the next
nere will be a public lasagna
meeting, and IS I understand, the dinner Thursday from ~ to 6:30
OSU 'Ell tension develqpment pro- p.JII. at the Senior Citizens Center.
fessionals are checkmg on our Music will be played follo~ing the
progress, so fmish up the compila- dinner by The Classics and an
tion of your community infrastruc- offering will be taken for the musiture.
cians.
This month's quote: "Act as
though it were impossible to fail."
Teachers to meet
The Meigs Retired Teachers
Association will meet at noon Saturday at the Trinity Church for a
luncheon. ReportS made on ORTA
meeting.

Reedsville woman hurt in accident

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.Local News in Brief:
Two injured in QII.!!·Car accidlmt

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ExteDded rorecast
.
Wednesday ... Fprr. Lows from
the middle 30s northeast to the
lower 40s .southwest Highs 60 to
65.
Thursday and Friday. Lows in
the 40s and highs 65 to 70.

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believe that the scores of new vandalism. For the manager, 32- ~I things to do than try to,
death-penil]ty crimes added to th~ ear-old Jeff PritcheU. ''it wouldn't preserve these tiny urban oases of
1
federal code will have a measur- ~right to stop caring.'' ·.
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beauty, and with almost 300 mur- ,
- able implct 011 public safety. They
So PritcheU goes out WJth pamt dcr aases so far this year, they are · •
and roUer each lime the side wall p:obab.ly. right. But the t~ieves :~~
Woo's Food Market is c:overed swim in a sea of public aequies- •
Hodd/ng Carter Ill of
with graffiti, foar times over a cencc. There are almost always ·,
piled them on, nonelbeless, hciping three-week perio4, eight or more wilne~ to their snall;h-and-rut~,. ~
that their consdllleniS Would equile times over the preceding two activities. If the onlookers ·Would ·•
tough talk with tangible retults.
montha. r ~ is not the only place in
tUe the. time and trouble to liOte ·r
And·thal, unfortunately, Is the the neigh~ which bas been li,.ense numbers llld offer 10 tellify ~ 1·
open ICCICL eon,.ea l1lll the prea- wgeted, bat it is the o~!L::ne ir. court, the pme could be brought
ident Republicans and where the clecilioll was not
to under control.
· ·
Democrata - have given w what roD over and play dead. He thinks.
That is· the sad ptlrt about !he ~
we seem to want, a slopn•sttewn his world a a-class neighbors ~on of QUI' urbtrn .environ-' c
substitute for 'tile hard busineaa of delerve something m~ for their ment, however. The Jeff Pritdleltli
JCClalmiD&amp; out streetlllllll COIDJJIU• reDt
a 1ueet mama by are few and far between;c-MO.t.of· •
·
·
ua·don't want to lie bothered by ·
niiies. Feei·SOOCI rbeloric and bot- visual
low lawa IIC - t to JliPer over
A. ew moie Jeff P.riiChetls and · . JCtiiJ8 individaaily. bchllf of the •
our unwillinpeu to act on oar West 0•" Lai!C, 11\e alteet that c&lt;.mmoD good. Even fewer are ·;
own behalf or to pay the cost of a holdl wOil•a Food Mlitct. would willin&amp; to iakc the riik of COIIlbel· . \
meaningful atllck on crime. We ~axe a toila *'Ptilct,loward being iDg criine head-on.
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want "someiJpdy" to clo.the job for i fully fuactiODiDI community.
But it takes countless indiVidual :·•
us, preferably with the llrOke or a Fmlher down the ~-aeaboard,. ~~
. i,si_.~ns to rea~re ,civiliZI!~~n' s " •
wand, which usually ~uarantees a few men people wuwag to like .........
thai when '•spmething ' is clone, .personal · relponsi)ility could . ',_ Hoddlna Cuter 111, rormer ·~:
like the ~.bill, it is a baud.
, A recent sbf in the Philadel- :::'~=~~~ State Departmelit spoj(esm~ti ;~ .
, wflerc 'dlieves aDd IIWIU'd·wiDDIDI ftpol'ter~edl· 1
Dhia Inguirer provided' diifereat lem in W.
.
rob
street
plmters
aim~
as" quick. tor -~ pub~r. II prealdeat 'of
kind of example. It
about a
ly as they 1ft filled with plants,and MaiDStreet, I Waslllnat!l!l, D.(:',, ' ' ' .
greenery.
.
lNised television production IOIJ!• _ _.
endleu battle
neightmood
The poliee say they have more .,.ay.

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ACCIDENT SCENE .:.: Marilyn Kibble was treated at the
scene of tllil oae-vehlde a~ldeDt Sunday al TaDDC!r's Run Road
aDd state Route 124, accordiDa to Oblo State Patrol reports. Kib(, ~e, of ReedsvUie, was charged with faUure to maiDtaiD control.
Tile RaciDe Voluuteer Fire Departmeat responded to the acddeDt
at 11:32 a.m. SuDday, reports stated. (SentiDel photo coartesy ol
- tile RaeiDe Volunteer Fire Department)

disease.'.' . .. . . .. , 1 .. ., .,.,. '
·
Most people who have the vinJS.
Dr. Kuvm added, don't know it.
(Not at fmt when early treabllCnt i
could help.) There is no way, he' •
went on, to stop the epidemic with- :
out doctors being able to rest peapie to delrmtine who's infecled. He
looks toward the kind of test that
I
"will be as COOlman as the cholesterol tesL"
. Lesley Stahi, the reporter on
"5.0 Minutes" segment, p~::~~
o'"" however, that ' 'when-F
~.ate Rep. SuZ.nne Jacobs
SU'ed a biD tha~ would require
,prer,rant women to take an AIDS
test' -thereby also indicating the
HIV status of the developing
human being within - "she :
immediately found herself attacked •
_ by wom!lft's·groups, P.Y activists, : ~
and the American Ctvil Liberties 1
Union.'' The ACLU is every bit as 1'
rigid in this area as the fundarnen- . r
ia!ist right
.
'
The ACLU's roc~s. as always, l
is on civil liberties and civil rights. :
BJt, as Ik Kuvin says, "Where :
are the rights of the uninfccled?"
•
And who are the unmistakable '!
enemies of the people?
Nat Hentorf rs a Datioaally 1
rnoWDed authority on the Firat '
AmeDdmeDt and .the rest of the :
B.UofRiallts.
:
(For Information on bow to ,.:
cunmuaicat,e electrODieuly with
tbls columDist and otbers, contact America OniiDe by calling 1·
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
''

at home

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Silence death _ _ _ _ _~-- '

'C;

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IND.

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IMansfield !w I~

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~e:

by Bob Hoeflich

-'

·buked.

The bravest publis_ official I widespread tes~g. as is tht} case Disease Clioie at Bellevue Hospi· She said the immigration debate must be put back into civil terms. have ever known was ur. Stql~ with non-politicized infectiouS dis- taJ: "If we know (by ~ting) that
"We cannot and should not allow immigrants to become the scapegoats Joseph, New York City's COOlffiis- ~ases . As a rcsull, there were the mother is HIV-positive and the
for all our social ills," she said.
sioner of health during the 1980s. posrers around New Yorlc vilifying infant is too, w.e will not lose the
Then again, civility never has ruled in times of stress over immigra- He had the admirable stubbomness
child in the fmt month. If we don't
tion, and this is one, especially ,a}opg the Sun Belt bolder states where of Dr. Stockman in Ibsen's "An
&amp;I
H
ff
know, the baby dies." ·
iUegal immigrants are a costly J.lllllilem and a political target
· Enemy of the People" -the pub- .
nEff . enfO
· And Tom Stoddard, a prominent
In California, it is a double JSSUC - in the campaign for gov~or. and lie health physician who infuriated
.
.
AIDS activist who believes in the
in the debate over a ballot proposition that would deny virtually all gov- the citizenry becaust he exposed him as an enemy of prtvacy: he primacy of privacy, noted in a New
ernment services to illegal aliens. That would iochlllc public education, the fact that the town's tourist- was spat upon and otherwise Y.;rt Times~ piece last sumeven though the Supteme Com:t ruled in 1982 that it cannot be denied.
attracting baths were poUuted and harassed: and both his home and mer:
·
office became fortresses. Eventual•'A 1992 Sllldy at Howard UniRepublican Gov. Pete Wilson supportS the measure, which draws sub- had to be shut down.
stantial majorities in California public opinion polls.
.
In New York, Dr. Joseph was ly, Steve Joseph was driven from vcrsity Hospital in Washington...
He's already gone to court duee times, filing suits that demand more attacked relentlessly as an enemy his job.
disclosed !hilt 41 percent of the
Meanwhile, ACT -UP - an ; · pie who died of AIDS in the
than $10 billion from the federal government to cover state costs incurred of the AIDS establisbmcnt It conital had never been diagnosed
sisted, as now, of leading public aggressive AIDS lobbying group
because of illegal immigration.
.it."
.
Wilson also has asked Attorney General Janet Reno to declare an healllt officials, gay groups and lhc and a fi~rcc enemy of Joseph !l!lfflPOII emergency. She told him he shouldn't ' 'get caught up in pol- American Civil Uberties Union- was putting posters around the city ·stoddard believes that they
all of whom, from the begimting of calling for more research on AIDS. never came in for treatment
tllcs.
Forget that. .
.
.
the AIDS epidemic, have given pri- Their message was Silence Death. !&gt;efause they didn't know "there is
The ~ssue has helped Wilson come back in the polls to claim a narrow vacy an overwhelming priority They did not realize that by being hope." Much more likely, silence
against informing the infected, they -' laCk of resting and contact tracre-clectiOil ed&amp;e over Democnt Kalhlee&gt;l Brown. She opposes the "Save over saving lives.
Steve Joseph iosisled that AIDS, too were accomplices of fatal · ing- equaled death.
· Our State" ball?' .I"OJKIS!tion as !10 more .than ~~g. ~ut adv~s
·At long last, in addition to
BDtion to make 11 unposs1ble for illexal aliens to get ~tis m the Uruled is a public health ~ not a political silence.
- . problem . Accordingly, he.
Helen Mathews Smith, AIDS
swes. and to keep them out wi,th bMier patrols with military backup.
ne power of the AIDS es~ seems to be becoming de-politiThis ID a state that will be pivotal in the 1996 presidential election, s1r0ngly advocated contact tracing
wid! S4 electoral votes to the wmner, 20 pi'JCCIIt of lhc majority that wiD so that those infecled would reveal lishment to enforCe silence was cized in some quartets. 1bere are,
whom they had slep~ with since recently notod by Helen Mathews for instance, few more influential
over illegal immigraniS isn't a Republican
many of the latter were unaware ·Smith, former editor of MD map- pu~lic fDIUIIIs than "60 Minutes":
and in September, Dr. Sanford
it's """ !lone by five states, among them Florida. 1111!1 Democratic Gov. that they~ now at risk of them- zinc, in .~ W.,U Street Journal:
~ Cltilcs. He's trying to fend off the challenge of Jeb Bush, 41, son
selves being infccled.
"With the backing of Gov. Kuvip, a specialist in infectious
. Around t h ae.t = ·ew York Mario Cuomo, (the late) State diBCISCS, led off a segment by sayof the former ~t, and immigration is one of the issues.
nt surveyed a - Health Commissioocr David Axel- ir.g' - with \he forthriglltness of
In catiforrua. the attorney general unveiled Opemdon Gatekeeper, call- City Health De
ilia it the most comprehensive and aggressive border palrOI effort in histo- sizable number of · ecled women rod refused to cllssii~S as ·a S.eve Joseph:
in East Harlem. Hardly any had sexually tranimitted · . • As a
"We are now in the midst of the
ry·But those pieces don't add up to the policy Clio~ ~ going to need to known, during sex, .that dJeir hus- result, the leSiiog and \wtner-noti· world's worst epidemic (carried
bands or companions hid been fication that applied to syphilis and by) lhc most serious genn that bas
deal with the problem - and answer the issue.
infecled. The women were furious gonorrhea do not apply to HIV" in that the globe has ever experienced.
·
And il's the fmt lime in the history
. EDiTOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mean, vke prealdeat aDd CGIUm· at having been kept so vulnerably New York.
alit lor The AIIIOCiated Press, Ua reported oD Waablagtoa ud ignoranL
Smith also
Aditya Kaul; · of' public health or medicine that a
eetlow" politics for more tlwl JO ,_..
Joseph
also
advocated director 'of the
· tric IDfeclious disease has been treated as a secret

mar~.:a.oo

Anderson initially learned of the
arms-for-hostages ne$otiattons
from his captors, and tn the last
year of his captivity from radio
reports after the Iran-contra affair
htd been expoSed.
"They always thought they
were going to win," Anderson says
of his captors. " They always
thought they were going to get
· what they wanted. Tile arms for
hostages dealing gave them some
indication we were willing' to deal.
In the end, it took a long lirile to
convince them they were not going
to get what they wanled, they were
not going to get anything for us
(remaining hostages)."
UNDER THE DOME - The
dog-eat-dog political fight over
healdl care reform has not been for
naught
While Congress failed to pass a
health care bill to cover the 37 millit.n Americans without insunulce,
hl.alth reform for animals sailed
tl.·ough Congress in the waning
dE.ys of the session thanks ·to the
efferu of Sen. HoweU Heflin, DAta.
Heflin's biD - which he say•
will giv~eterin8rians "more flexibility i
way they treat their
piUients" - is an ironic end·to the
second year of the do-nothing
lt3rd Congress.
Federal law currently prohibits
veterinarians from prescribing to a
dog, for ex,ample, either human
medicine or medication intended
for a horse. Heflin uys that vets
"are often forced to choose
between. not administering
m-:dicine t!Jat they believe would
.hc:lp an animal or administering
that medicine outside the permits
of the Jaw."
A Heflin spokesman added that
fe 1eral Jaw was technically broken
w.len former President. George
Bush's dog, Millie, was treated for
lymphocytic thyroiditis with a drug
that was not approved for use on
dogs. "The White House has a
long history of treating their pets
w:.th l!uman medicine" in violation
of the Jaw, a Heflin spokesman

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IToleclol63" I

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puts every American at risk."
" North and respects itis record as a
· North is under fire from his two Marine.
political opponents for his role in
But on a political level, Ander'~
arranging secret weapons sales to son assails North as dangerous and
unfit for the Senate: ' 'OUie North
is an ideologue. And when he is in
pursuit of his goal he is perfectly
willing 10 sacrifice any ~iple or
law in order to achieve IL I happen
to think he is a personable man and
a likable man, but I wouldn't trust
lnln in excblllge for the release of him not to break any laws that he
American hostages, and later lying thought inconvenient" Anderson
to Congress about it. He's serling is not supporting either of North's
to deflect criticism by ~g that political opponents, Sen. Charles
his excesses were " noble ' because Robb, D-Va., or former Virginia
they were done in an effort to save Attorney General Marshall ColeAmerican lives.
'
man.
Anderson, who was working as
In 1985 and 1986, North had
an Associated Press reporter in been a key pial:.~ an operation in
Beirut when he was kidnapped br. Which profits
the secret Iranithe Islamic Jihad in 1984, has until an anns sUes - CS9IIIII:ially ~&amp;nsom
now kept his own counsel about for U.S. hostages - were funneled
North during this year's Virginia to anti-Communist guerrillas in
race. Despite 2,454 days of captivi- Nicaragua. North's 19g9 criminal
ty - much of it spent in filthy convictions in· federal court, for
basements, chained to his bed by . lying to Congress and other wrongthe leg - Anderson is remarkably doings, were Iatt.r ovemuned on.a
free of rancor. He says he's fond of tecluticality. . .

Beat of the. Bend ...

MICH.

Ex-hostage
frowns on North~s actions
.
WASHINGTON - Republican
Senate candidate Oliver North is
seeking to rewrite his role in the
arms-for-hostages scandal from liar
.O· liberator. But former American
hostage Terry Anderson contends
that North's covert and illegal
operation prolonged his captivity.
"When you agree to pay for
hostages, what (the tenorists) do is
go out and get some more
hostages," Anderson explained
during a recent interview. " I know
Col. North was trying to get me out
of )lison. I am grateful for his concern, and President Reagan and
everybody involved. It was just' a
big, bad mistake that, in some judgments, cost the res1 of us a couPle
more years in prison."
.
Anderson believes that by cresting a "marltet" for hoslages, North
had unwittin$1y provided an incentive for the kidnapping of addition- '
al Americans in the Middle East:
"By paying for hostages you make
the kidnapping of Americans
worthwhile. It should have been the
predicted result That kind of action

OhiO !-

Accu·W~ forecast

•

The l)aily Sentinel

.

Homecoming set
The Morningstar. United · 1
Method ist Churc h will hold a
homecoming !his Sunday. Worship ~
services at lQ_un,, Sunday··school.:
al II a.m., potluck dinner at•l2:30 •
p.t)l. , and afternoon sqvices at 1:3Q. :;.,
p.m.
.

good work elltic."
Journeymen can stan at $20 per
hc•ur, but the work demandsiong
hours and the potential for being
out of work during the winl er
month s, Davidson said. Often,
opel)ltors must travel up to 100
.i '
mile! to sires in the state.
.I
"ne training is our bread and
Marcus Allen, playing fo r the ·,,
bt•Uer.· If we can 't provide good, Los Angeles !Wders, had a string ·
qualified people to do work the of II games NShmg for 100 yards ·.j•.
u10i.on won ' t remain strong," or more.
Davi~n said.
Ar~projects complete~ by
union opcratoJS include the Gavin
and Kyger Creek power plants,
peving and bridge wmk, he added.
"We get a lot of good people
frJm th is part of the state since
many work as kids .on farm s,"
Davidson said. Only four Gallia
residen ts and one Meigs resident
are currently enrolled in the trainir.~ program, he added.
.
Recently , there's been more
\I&lt;Jrk available than operators, r: ~v i d so n said . Higher sk illed
workers can weather downturns in
llte economy, he added .
"The marlcet now for operators
nt'eds people who are fairly versatile" with equipment frot:n bulldoz.er &gt; to cranes and graders, he added.
For more information about the
apprentice program, call 385-2567.

'"Co•plete Medical/Surgical Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat lncludint~ .

dl~urday admissions -

Peter
Arthur, Vinton : Hilda Harris,
Pomeroy; Delbert Ours, Portland
Saturday discharges - none
Sunday admissions - Thomas
Andason, Rutland: Susie Windon,

· .~discharges.. .!. none

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The· Daily

Sports

·

In the latest NFL action, ·

.

October fb, 1994

Se~tinel

.

.~ E~st~

wallops
Southern ·45•15·

Chargers now
5-0; Broncos .also win
.

Broncosl6, Seattle 9
series in 1989. Their only vic,tory
was a 17-0 wild-card playoff wm in
Denver (1-4) broke a seven1992.
game losing streak dating to last ,
A cmJer-high 12S yards rushiflg · season, leaving Cincinnati as the
by Natrone Means and a defense NFL's only winless team.
that held Monla!lll without a UJUCII·
John Elway scored on a shon
dQwn pass in S5 ~ were lhe run: and Jason Elam kicked three
keys. It's San Diego s beat stan field goals for the Broncos.
since the 1961 team opened 11-0
The host Seahawks (3·3) lost
and reached the AFL championship three fumbles, 8Jid Rick Mim' was
game.
inlerccptcd twice.
In other games Sunday, Denver ·
49ers 27, Lions 21
beat Seattle 16-9, San Francisco
At Pontiac, Mich., San Francisdowned Detroit 27-21, Dallas co (4·2), coming off a 40-8 embf'crushed Arizona 38-3, Philadelllhia rassment by Philadelphia, won ·tiS
beat Washington 21-17, the Los fifth in a row against Detroit (24).
Angeles Raiden edged New Eng- Fullback William Floyd lllll for two
land 21-17, Chicago beat New 10uchdowns in his first NFL stan.
West.
Orleans 17-7, Green Bay took the
Cowbo'fS 38, CardiDals 3
"Being on top of tbe NFL, Los Angeles Rams 24-17, Bllffalo
Buddy Ryan's seven-game hex
there' a a lot of preasure on us," defealed Miami 21-11, the New .on Dallas ended with his wmt loss
. San Diego liMbacker lonior Seau Yen Jets downed Indianapolis 16- as an NFL bead coach. Emmitt
said. "Joe Montana is a legend. 6 and Atlanta beat Tampa Bay 34- Smith, playing despite a sore right
This is I bi aa:omplishmeoL I've 13.
hamstring, scored twice and Troy
never been ~-0 in my life."
Minnesota visits the New Yen 'Aikman threw two touchdown
The Chargen bad been 0-8 in Giants IDnight. Cincinnati, Cleve- passes as the Cowboys (4-1)
regular-season games against land, HousiOn and Pittsburgh bad snapped a seven-game losing streak
Kansas City since sweeping the byes.
10Ryan.
Smith ran only nine times for 22
yards before leaving at halftime.
Jay Schroeder tluew three interceptions in the rtrSt half for the visLEXINGTON, Va. (AP) Marshall and Appalachian Stale for iting Cardinals (1-4), who suffered
NCAA Division I-AA's No. 1 team the Southern Conference lead at 3· five interCeptions overall.
is 6-0 and haSn't faced a serious 0 each. Marshall travels to
Eagles21, Redsldns 17
challen.se yeL That has Marshall Appalachian Stale (4-1) the follow· · Philadelphia safety Greg Jacking week. _
soo intercepted Heath Shuler's pass
coach Jun Donnan wmied.
"It'll be more of a challenge at his own three with 47 seconds
After the Thundering Herd
trounced VMI 49-7 on Saturday, next week," said offensive guard remajning til 1ceep the E.agleJ (4-1}
Donnan ssid he is conccmed about Dan Boslet, who sat down with the in a tie for tint in the NFC East.
· Rookie Charlie Gamer bad his
how Marshall will fare against rest of the offensive sW1ers at halfsecond 100-yard game in two
sttonger owoncnts in the season's time ~nst VM1 (0-S, 0-3).
The Held rolled up 490 yards in weeks, rushing for 122 yards on 28
stretch run.
Marshall bas outscored its oppo- · offense, while VMI bad 26S yards, carries as the Eagles won their
nents 288-58, with its closest game mosdy in the second half, in -losing foW'Ih ina row.
. · a 24-10 victory over Tennessee its lOth consecutive game.
Shuler finished I 0-for-27 with
Marshall led 28-0 in the first 1L6 yards and two 10ochdowns for
Tech.
· ·"We haven't been challenged quarter as quarterback Todd DQn- the visiting Redskins (1-5).
Ralden 21, Patriots 17
: except by Tennessee Tech. 1'!11 nan led the Herd 10 IOUChdowns on
its
fii'Sl
four
possessions.
At
Foxboro, cornerback Terry
· . concerned about when the cmnch
Donnan was 18 of 22 passing McDaniel returoed an interception
: · gets on," Donnan ssid.
·
:: The crunch begins this week- for 274 yards. Erik Thomas led the fli' a IOUchdown, and the second of
. end, when lhe Herd hosts Western Herd wtth 93 yards on 12 ca¢es hls three pickoffs set up the decid. . (4 -2), wh'.ICh ~
. ~ W!.'th·•. and Tim Martin caught seven pass- ing score a11 LoJ Anaelcs (2-3)
; :. .Carohna
es for 77 yards.
. ·
·
slOpped ~w England's three-game

.MarshaU bombs VMI 49-7

•

i'

Steve Walsh remained unbeaten

in three games as chicago's 'starling quarterback.

.
Walsh directed two Ion~ sccor.d-half scoring drives, passmg for
1'4 yards, and Lewis Tillman
n shed for 100 yards and a !ouchdown for the Bean (4,2).
Morten Andersen, one of the
best kicken in NFL history, strugg:ed with his footing at Soldier
Field and bad two field goals
blacked fii the Saints (2-4).
,.l'llcken 24, Ramll7
At Green Bay, Jerome Bettis,
the NFL 's No. 2 rusher, was held
to 6S yards rushing on 22 carries as
Goeen Bay (3-3) recovered from a
I''-3 halftime deficit by scoring 21
st:aight points. Ro~ert Brooks
returned a punt ·as yards for a
IOuchdown.
Bellis had four consecuti.ve 100yard games for the Rams (2-4).
BIDs 21, Dolphins 11
Thurman Thomas ran for two
tcdchdowns as Buffalo (4-2) won
a[ home and moved iniO a firstp: lCC tie with the Dolphins (4-2) in
tt.e AFC EasL
Dan Marino was 20 of 43 for
212yards.
, Jets 16, Colts 6
New York (3-3) -snapped a fiveyear home losing streak against
Indianapolis (2-4) in a game
marked by inept offenses.
Backup running back Adrian
Murrell keyed the decisive seoring
drive late in the final quarter with a
19-yard run, and Boomer Esiason
hit Johnny Mitchell with a oneyard touchdown pass for the Jets'
first IOuchdown against the Colts in
three years.
Nick Lowery kicked three field
. &amp;Qa!s.

TOUGH DAY -A beaten Joe Montana bends over to catch bls
breath after bis final paas fell incomplete in the Kansas City Cblefs'
20-6 Joss to tbe bosl San Diego Chargers Sunday. Montana, wbo
fought 99-delree beat as weD as the NFL's only still-unbeaten team,
failed to throw a touchdown pass for the second stralgbt week. (AP)

Southern's vanity volleyball
Renee Turley had a ~k for
team completed a big week and Soulhern. •
·
likewise boosted their record 10 10.:
For Alexander, Angie Dixon
7 ov~ and 8-S in the Tri-Valley and Susan Clark led Alex with
Conference's Hocking Division eight points, Tracey Worley five,
with a 7-IS, 15-7, and 15-9 triumph Lynn L'Heureux four, Amy
over Alexander.
·
l.ovesy two, Andi RolsiOn four.
Bea Lisle led the way with 10
Southern won the reserve game
points and three aces, while Jess 17-15 and,).S-10.
Codner bad seven points, six kills . Amber Thomas led the way
and an ace. Sammi sisson had with 10 points and seven aces, with
seven points, an ace, three kills-and one lcill and two assists. Keri Cald·
eight assists.
well bad another good game with
Sisson is enjoying a gteal year, five po\nts. two aces, two kills arnJ
in one way or another figurinj! 'in two asststs.
over half of Southern's pomts.
Valerie Cundiff had. four points
scored with gteat serving, spiking, and four aces and one·ltill; Emily
and liSSists (sets),
_ 'Duhl CourpoiniS and two ac;cs; BriAndtea Moore had another simi- anne Proffitt three points, two kills,
larly gteal game with four points, a block and two aces; Missy Smith
an ace, a learn-high nine kills and two points, and Hillery Harris a
five assists. Jenny Cummins had point and an aGe.
four points, three aces, three kills
For Alexander Mandy Thompand one assiS\. Amy Weaver had · son bad 11, J(:. Russell seven, Steph
four ~~Dints and two nces. Kendra Lanning three, Janette Starling
Noms had one point. Jonna three and Mej!&amp;n McCable one.
Manuel bad three kills, and Jenn · Southern 1s 14-3 at the reserve .
Lawrence had one.
level and 11-2 in the TVC.

-

CONFERENCE

,Duke"breaks into AP Top 25
poll for first time since 1989

............ 4 l 0 liiGI 160 1211
Now&amp;,load ... 3 l o.5mm "'
N.Y.Ju---· 3 3 0 .5m 92 1111
II

--·

2 4 0 .333 113 121

By TOM FOREMAN Jr. .
DURHAM, N.C. (AP)- It's
itot unusual for the Clemson-Duke
ma!Chup.il.to involve a team in the
college J!Otball rankirigs. It's just
that the team has never been the
Blue Devils.
This weekend, it's unbeaten
Duke (5-0) that can look doWn its
nose, if it wants, at a lowly com~
pctiror as the Blue Devils debut at
No. 25 in The Associated Press
Poll. The Tigers, for a change,
aren't even getting votes.
"We're happy we're ranked, but
in all honesty, unless there's a
strike coming up, you can't get too
exciled about it right now because
it's really more important where it
(leads) 10," Duke ~trst·YC!I;f COOC:h
Fred Ooldsmith SSid on htnadto
show Sunda): night. .
"I tliink 1f somehow we can be
fortunate a~d win an~ther ball
game or two in the I)Cxtfew weeks,
then you kind of get solidified in
that Top 2S,'' Goldsmith said.
"Rigbt now, we're one of those
bubble 2S learns."
. The man who led Duke to its
last ranking remains atop the latest
poll.
'
Steve Spurrier, who coached
Dulce 10 a be for the Atlantic Coast
C::onfcrence title and led the Blue
Devils 10 as high as 20th in the AP
poll in 19$9, bas Florida on top or
this week's poll. Nebraska is second.
.
·
The Gators, received 44 firstplace voleS and 1,527 points after
beating LSU 42-18 Saturday. The
Combusken got 12 ftrsts and 1,461
points after defeating Oklal!oma
State 32-3.
·
Idle Penn Sta~ moved up one

c.tniCIJM!I.AND.. 4 I D.1m Ill 5I
__., ____ 3 2 0.101 100 101
·---· I 4 0 31110 '19 tZJ
CN:INI!An..
o 5 o .ooo 11 1)9

w-.s. Dlop......
5 0 D 1.00 134

14
5 l D .600 90 10
·----.. 3 3 D .5m 130 16

s - Cllj .....
-

Ohio H.S. scores

LA.-·-· l 3 D AGO 116 141 ·
- . . ,.. - ..·-· I 4 0 31110 101 146

--

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

. R ____. . ~ UUPi
N1
N.Y.
·---·
W........ ....

cJ:........
I

•

II

---

4
3
I
I

I D.100 127 12
I D .750 101 110
4 o·31110 49 111
5 D .IQ 112 1111

•

· c.tni-

CI!iolp.---·

4 2 0 liiGI 113 101
·s
...... s a o.AGO 101 u .
O!oa ..,___ , 3 3 11 JCIO 107 14

w-4:

- -- -· 2
0 .333 106 1211
. T-laJ--· 2 4 0.333 10 Ill

......,,_1 .. -

-- · 44 22 00 liiGI
liiGI 131
112
............
154 U1
LA. ~-· 2 4 0 .333 14 1119
-CMIMI..,. 2 4 0 .333 97 131

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Do11M:II.AIIoaill3

LA.

Bla Tea standings

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TaaJDr•.,.•A.Y.OIIdl.9pa.

o 51 o.m
I 0 3 2 0 .fCIII
Ol!ltiL.· I I 0 4 2 0 M7
_ _ _;._t I D 3 2 0 AGO ,
~IL-l I 0 2 3 0 A4IO
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----......030 241.335
IF " o.......O 3 D 2 4 0 .333

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OOIJ)BII STA111'WAliU"": AA............. ., . . •Oalofo.
paorCl!IMJ,_,_ ,,,,...

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Mld.Siatel Football Allilc.
TIIBa14,~10

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1111 _ . . fll .. NIIA'o ..... fll

...'-·'......

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Open·1().8 Monday thru Saturday 12·5 S!Jnday

,STAR SPORTS

ca••s

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Southern golfers
advance to D-Ill .
district 'lnkfest

0

~.J;

~

'

. 'Mtnimum.deposit: $2,500.00

-

uded-Trimble'a IC;slez (81) and

Valley ,Ba~ . .

' .

''

·~

'

.. The district IOUnlament'will be
!held Tuesday at_ 10 a.m. at River
;Grcen1s Golf Course in West
·~yette. .

('

.

:~~idual players ~advanCing
:ton.

'·

.,

--

~layen from Fairfteld and Hunting-

I

-

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

'

The Soitthem golf learn stonned
iniD Jaycee Golf Course in Chilli;
cothe for the sectional tournament
and ftred a 338 to advance; .10 dis·
' trict play.in DivisiOII mgolf.
· Southern, under coach Jim
AndCrson, fmished third out of 13
· teams to advance. The ·lOp three
learnS and the lOp three individual
scorers move 01110 diStrict play.
Ross Southeastern came in with
·the best learn scae with a 332, followed by Adena's 334. Southern
was not far behind with a 338,
; ahead of· HuntingiDn Ross (341 ),
, Fairfield (345), North Adams
: (360), Crooksville (360), Paint Vtil. ley (368) and Trimble
: Rounding out the rest of
: was Lyncbbw'g With a 404,
·.
:Oak (42SO, Zane Trace (440) and .
' Eastern (471).
: Southerit's Jason Shuler came in
·with a 79, just one stroke beh_ind
:the meet medaljsL Tel11J111181C Ryan ,
·Williams came in with an 83, while
:Ry811 Norris fired an 86. Brian
:AndersOn and Mason Fisher each
:shot 90 to help the' Tornadoes

·. . . :r. .....

Mlntrnum d8pos~: $500.0(1'

O~o

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,,

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=

Scoring summary

DcMrtmmt

Eas1ern: Bissell 3-yd. run (run
failed), 4:S4 1st qtr.
,
Eastern: Buckley 3-yd. run (run
failed), II :28 2nd qtr.
Southern: Maynard 1-yd. run
(Lisle lticlc), 7:42 2nd qtr.
Easte B' 11 8 yd run (ki k
m: 2nd
tSseqtr. · ·
c
failed), 3:26
F.astan: Sheets, 2-yd. run (Sheets

,

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...
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Straiglit- 'Iuc~r f!i!l{pusli '.
1'unera(!/{ome
Ravenswood', WV· (304) 27~2152
Preneed- Atneed- Postneed
SERVING JACKSON (WV.) MASON (WV.)

r.

I

E

rtrStdowns .................... ll
21 ·
Rushing yards ................l!4 . 416
Passing yards ............... l24
9
Total yards...................208
425
Comp.-atL ................ 11-20
1-3
InterceptiOIIS thrown ....... 1
0
Fumbles-lost ................2-2 · 1-1 ·
Penalties-yds. .............8-90 14-130
Punting-avg. ...............S-29
1-35

AND MEIGS (OH.) COUNTIES
JOE ROUSH
RUSSELL STRAIGHT o1

••
I•
II
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Pat Newland, the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Dennis Newland af Tuppers
Plains, recently made the traveling
squad for defending. chal!lpi~n
Glenville State UmVerslly m
GlenviDe, W.Va.
·
A freshman, Newland, a TriValley Conference back-of-the
year and all-district first-team
selection, was a key member of
Dave Barr's 6-4 T.VC runner-up
Eastern Eagles in the 1993 season.
He joins former Eastern 1earnmate
Robert Reed on the squsd.

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"'N TI-fE T" in Middleport
Call 992-4422
J

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J

Newland makes
Glenville State's
traveling squact

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ter rl Satunl17 nigbt's home game against Soutberu. The EA&amp;lea won
45-IS to push their record to a Meigs Count7·l&gt;est 4-2. (Photo by
Scott Wolfe)
secmd half, but did 1101 offer up an run), :06 2nd qtr. ·
aerial.
Easlern: Sheets 14-yd. run (ict
Easttrn will go 10 Stewart 10 face failed) 10:20 3rd qtr.
Fcdenl Hocking for another Ohio
Eastern: Smith 76-yd. run (kick
Division 'arne Friday, while failed), S:31 3rd qtr.
So~thern _wtll host Trimble for its
Southern: Ash 3-yd. run (Evans
homecoming game.
pasS f{om Maynard), 8:S4 4th qtr.
OJW1Cr 11111111 ·
Eastern: McDaniel, 40-yard run
Soo~ ................O 7 0 8 15 (McDaniel kick), 4:SO 4th qtr.
Eastern .......: ..........6 20 12 7 = 4S . lieam· Stat'lstiCS

a

spot to No. 3 and Colorado rose
one place to No.4 after downing
Missouri 38-23. Penn State
received two ftrSt-place voleS and
1,427 poin~, while Colorado got
fourfti'sts and 1,410points.
· Michigan climbed two notches
10 No.5 with a 40-20 vW1ory ever
Micbigan State, Auburn jumped
three spots to No. .6 following a 4218 win over Mississippi State, and
Texas A&amp;M rose three places ·to
No. 7 after humbling Houston 387.
~
Miami; which fell out of the
Top 10 '!fO ~ ago after losing
to Washtnj!IOn, Jum~ from No.
) 13 10 No. 8 after beaung Florida
State 34-20. The Seminoles
dr.J~ from ~o. 3 10 No. II, the
first um~ they VCl been out of the
Top I 0 S'!!CC 1990.
Washmgton moved up three
P!aces 10 No. 9 followi~ a 34-20
vtctory over San Jose ~tate, and
Alabama went up one spot 10 No .
1~ ~ter beating Southern MissisSlppl14o6: .
.
Texas 1,8 ~2th, folloWed by Colorado Stale, Arizona, North Caroli·na, Kansas State, Notre Dame,
Syracuse, V~nia Tech, Washington Stale, Utlth, Oklahoma, Wisconsin, BoSIOn College and Duke.
Arizona fell eight spots after
losing to Colorado State 21-16,
while Notre Dame plunged nine
notches after falling 10 Boston College 30-11.
'
Boston College (2-2) moved
iniD the Top 2S for the 'first time
this season. Duli:e (S-Q), which
didil't play Saturday, is ranked for
the rtrst since time 1989.
- · Ohio Stale and Nonb Carolina
Stale \lropped out of ,the Top 25 .,

~~poi

AUTOGRAPH SALE
,,
49.95
Ken Griffey Jr.... :.; ............. 149.95
49.95
Frank Thomas .................. 149.95
Dan Marlno~ ..........;............ 159.95. · · ..59.95_ ..
Troy Aikman ...................... 159.95
59.95 ·
Plus many more players .avallable...Call or stop In
CertHicate of Authenticity Wfth all autograph~.
.
Layaway Now For Christmas .
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throut'

SHS spikers top Alexander

.........
a____ ... HSM~
I

mark.

au

Belllll7, Saln117

NFL standinp

IMj=

Eastern in a third·down situation
but bent just enouJh 10 give EHS
four first downs m the opening
drive. SHS stopped tbe Sheets
conv~ run and Eastern led, 6-0
at the 4:S4
. Southern marched into Easlem
tenitory on its first possession, but
the Tornadoes' hopes went awry
when defensive end Jeff Stethem
and Sheets plowed Maynard 011 the
quarterback option and forced a
fumble. Eastern's Micah Otto
recoycred. The ftrst frame ended at
&amp;Surprising 6-0 tally.
Four plays later Eastern
capitalized on the mistake as
Buckley squirted in from three yards
out at the 11:28 mar1t in the second
period. The 10uchdown was set up
by; 1 S4 spinner, quu1Cibscll: option
that saw Bowen pick up 20 yards.
BUCKLEY SCORES - Eutern running back Ryan Buckley (16)
The Bowen conversion run failed as gets up shortly afttr StOring from tbree yards out in the second quar·
the score stood 12..().
On the DCJtt possessioo, a couple
of EHS penalues put Southern in yard run by the junior. He also player each tipped the ball before
possession to do some damage. added the extras wtth a run off Chris Brian Liter dove in for the
Evans bad a good run into EHS Bailey's block with six seconds left interception.
Eastern coach Dave Barr said
territory, thenMaynud bit Eric fora26-7 halftimescae. ·
"I'm
pleased of the effort our kicb
Jones wtth a 17-yard pass 10 the 12
With the exception of a couple
put
in
and the fact they remained a
.. yards and .~ llliJCII&lt;!own.
yard line. Evans ran eight yards 10 killer ·mistakes, SHS htad coach Joe
class
act in the heat of the
Sheets ts working on a tboussnll the three, then~ bade with a run Hemsley was pleased with his
competition. I ssw 8' lot of things we
yard season as he J.IOW bas 676 yards 10 the one-foot line. Maynard burst learn's lint half efforL
on the year w1th four games
for the score before Travis . At halftime Eastern had 112 total did right tonight and I saw some
remaining. The junior also had 41 Lisle s kick was good for a 12-7 yards and Southern 77 yards.
·
things we need 10 improve on. This
return yards for 139 all -purpose score at the 7:42 mar1t.
Eastern let its starten play one was a good win to start off the
ylrds.·
Southern mistakes and Eastern's possession in the second half, then league season."
Eastern's defense was led by
· Southern was led by sophomore persis1ence then set the tone for the turned the reins over 10 its younger
running back Jamie Evans with 10 rest of the game. Sheets gave EHS players, who played with much Buckley, Bissell and Stethem with
carries . for 43 yard_s and ·a -~ fJCid position,~. a bard inlensity.
·
~~it; while Mike Smiih had five,
. convernon catch, sophomore liit and ensuing fumble nearly
Sheets had a 14-yard run with
ve, Liter and McDaniel four
. quarterback Jesse Maynard had changed the complexion of the 10:20 left to stan the second half, eachB.
h.
· seven carries for 38 yar~s and a game. Eastern's Otto ssv~ the day after EHS root the iick. The drive
vans ad I 3 SQlos tackles for
touclrdown. Freshman M1ke Ash . with the recov~ and EHS-was off was aided by two 15-yard SHS Southern.
Southern receivers were led by
. had a IOIIChdown.
10 the races. Twice SHS ~Eastern · penalties that gave EHS a golden
Tbe. outcome of ~e game was at ~~ and long. Both umes, EHS opportunity. The Bowen kick was Eric .Iones (3· 78), Page1(4-24) and
most likely no surpnse, bo~e~er, capttalized,thc second on a. 22-yard low and void 10 make the score 32- Jay McKelvey (2-17). Maynard did
. the score was somewhat deceiVIng, run down the s1deltne by 7
all of the SHS passing, while Bowen
eve~ though ~~~tern. totally B~ssell.Bowen then had a IO~yard · Southern threatened on its next was l-3for Eastern. Freshman Steve
. dominated the SIBIISUCS with a very third down conven 10 the 14. BtSSCU possession when Maynard drilled a Durst guided the Eagles in the
' controlled running game. The rolled left and was caught for what 55-yard ~ 10 Jones Bissell ssved
closeness .or the first.balf prod~ looked 10 ~an ~i,Bht-yard Joss, but a touc,bdown. On the ~t play, SHS -Sports briefs.-Pro basketbaD
· some amuous moments as bard bits sheer athletic abtlity saw the cnfty coughed up the ball and Eric Hill
SEATTLE (AP) - Shawn
. and exceptional play from both senior. stop dead, make an about made the recovery for the Eagles
sidcs'highlisJ!ted the ~QR.
f~e to the right fo~ an eight-yard
On the second _play f;om Kemp resolved his differences with
Jllot wanbng to gtve away too _gatn. He then· ran stx yards on·the scrimmage, junior Mike Smith burst the Seaufe SuperSonics and remany ~ecrets to the four league R?t play for the score. The Bowen through the line, then won a 76-yard signed with the team.
The 6-fOOI-10 forward will next
scouts m the stands, Eastern coach kick was blocked 10 make the score foot race 10 the goal line for a big
year
a seven-year extension
Dave Barr wished tci establish a 18-7 at the 3:26 mark.
score Steve Durst's kick fell sbon, worthbegin
a
10tal
of $25.4 million. He
running ,ga_me and keep it.simple.
,Still a. close game, Eastern hoped the~ 38-7 at the 5:3111U1lk.
averaged
18.1
points , 10.8
· Bastern dtd both, allowmg the 10 rally. tts1 trOOps before the half.
In the fourth round Maynard had
rebounds and 2.1 blocks last seaEagles 10 keep th41jr g.adget plays Bowen nao a great kick-off and .the a 28-yard run, then E~ans a six Y&amp;l
Baseball
and most passm~ plays 01! the bact EHS defef!SC swarmed Southern Jllll scnmble to set up a lhree-yard Mil son.
NEW
YORK
(AP) - Ed
burner. Southern s exceptional play shy of their own 20. SHS looked 10 Ash touchdow 11 • A Maynard-toLynch,
a
Conner
pitcher
and one of
almost had Barr and the Eagles get out of the bole when Maynard Evans pass coliipleted the scoring
baseball's
most
promising
young
~ 10 dig deep in10 their bag threaded the needle 10 Brian Pagel for a 38-15 tally at the 8:54 mark.
executives,
will
become
general
oflricks.
.
foral2-yard",On the next play,
Adam McDaniel completed the
E~ ~ ftrSt when 11 ~the Ryan B.ockley made a tremend~s scorin~ on a 40-yard ramble . manager of the Chicago Cobs
opemng ktck a~d ~ethod1cally defenstve play to break up btg McDaruel added the extra-point kick roday, The Associated Press has
mm:ched dOWf!fteld tn 14 plays, Southern pass play 30-yards to finalize the scoring at ~5-15. learned.
Lynch, 38, had been a special
endmg the senes on a three-yard - downlield. Southern then fumbled at McDaniel later broke off another
assistant
10 New Yen Mets geneml
. Bissell run. Eastern's "Killer B' s", the 28-yard line, where Stethem 40-yard run in which Jones ssved
manager
Joe Mcilvaine since
Bissell, Buckley and Bowen along made the recovery and 'EHS lOOk touchdown.
~eptember 1993. He was director
. with "S!man" Sheets gave meaning over with 1:26 left. A nine-yard,
On Southern's next possessi~~~~o of player development for the San
to the 'three yards and a cloud or split-rip pass 10 ~beets lOCi: the ball Chip Sut!lc broke up a 40tyard SHS Diego Padres from November 1990
dust' theory. Southern often caught 10 the two yard line 10 set up a two- pass play. Suttle and a Southern until
Uhe .

~w Bledaoc, who entered the
8f'1I1C as the league's passinf leader, tluew for 321 yards for his fifth
3(X).yard ~ins day or the season
for New England (3-3).
.

Footbal l
~CAN

B7 SCO'IT WOLfE
. Sea~ Comspolldent
' PliCdrlvlng 416 yards on the
ground with 21 first downs, the
Baslan llaglea JI08'ed Ill impeasive
~ 45·15 trii!Diph over
. the rival Southern Tornadoes at
tern's Shade Riyer Stadium
Saturday nigbL
Dave Barr's Eagles are now 4-2
overall and 1·0 in Tri- Valley
Coof'erence play~ Southern drops 10
1-5 and 0-1 mthe league. .
Much , has been satd of
s_outhern s young troops, an,d
nghtfully so: ho~evcr, Eastern s
young ~ l1lrDed tn a perform~
that outsbmed even the fust-hne
Eagle players. Adam McDaniel, a S9, 155-pound sophomore led the
Eagles in rushing wiLit S carries ~or
~~ y~ and a. touchd.own, while
JUDior Mike Smtth earned the ball
twice for 80 yards and a touchdown.
Eagle mainstay Jason Sheets carried
the ball 19 times for 89 yards, two
10\JC~ and a ~versi~; while
Charlie Bissell camed 17 bmes for
82 yards and two touchdowns.
: Eastern's Ryan Buckley had 16

winning streik.

Scoreboard
•.

·'

:~ In 33rd Installment of series,

Monday, October 10,1994
PiPI .4
\.

·

B7 MIKE 11LAM
Aaloc:llted ..... Writer
The San Diego Chargers are
dressing lhe Wllf they did in 1961.
and they're playina lhe 11me, too.
For the tuit tfme in 33 yean,
San Diego is ~.llld lhe O.gas
got lhere by holding Joe Monlllll
and his Kansas City Chiefs without
a lOIICbdown for lhe secOnd straight
. game.
Wearing their "throwbaCk"
sky-blue jeneys and white helmels
wi!)l yellow lightning bolts, the
Chargen beat Kansaa Citr 20-6
Sunday to remain the NFL s 011ly
undefellled team. The victory gave
them a two-game lead in lhe AR::

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By The Bend

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llonday~~ber10,1994

l-'!1·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ,

Tile DailY Sentinel
Monday, OCtober 10, 1994

GUN ClUI
GUN SHOOTS
FRIDAY NIGHTS

l New Mason Family
~ · Restaurant .
·Home Cooked Meals
Daily Specials

!
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:

l

MEIGS HOMECOMING COURT Tllra Renee Erwin; (Andenons), Amber BlackSellior ~ala Ellzlheth Audenon, pictured ceowell with eKOrt Robert Baker, and Eddena Jo
ter wltll ller escort, David Anderson, was Russfll escorted by Adam Wyatt. Tbe nower
a owued Melp llomecomlui queen ID pre-game . bearer was Ryan Danna Davis, daugkter .or Dan
ceremonies at tile Melp-Wellston footbaU game and Rbonda David, Pomeroy, and ·;be crown
Friday nigllt at Bob Roberts Field. Making up
bearer was Cbrlstopller VaDReetll, 800 of Jolin
tbe coart were from tbe left, Adam Hendrix and Gloria Van Reetll, Pomeroy. Tbe crown was
e&amp;cortlag Jacl,a Swlrtz, Matt Barrett escorting donated by Clark's Jewelry.

Recognizin.g the value of your
pocial Security protection
lly ED PETERSON,

pated the breakup of that nation.
SS manager, Atbeos
The IBM executives who were
i Let's loot at some snapshots worrying about creating conference
fJOI1I the American landscape of
room size computers could not
1959 - and then l8lk about Social foresee the day when they would
Security. In 1959:
readily produce desktop models.
- American students practiced The McDonald Brothers who sold
atomic bomb driUs as oflen as they the rights to the company's franwent through fire drills;
chises in 1960 Could not have fore. - The New York Tunes report· seen the day when there would be
~interest in "smaUer electroruc
more than 20,000 McDonald's
computers requiring less than 1,000 nationwide.
3quare feet of floor space;"
Two continuing strengths of the
-McDonald's opened its IOOth American people are our optimism
f~ise.._ _
.
_.. ____ l!Dd ipgri!!Jity. An~ any problems
What do these events from 1959 down the line with ihe Social Secu- ·
have to do with Social Security in
_rity system should not give rise to ',
1994?
doom and gloom forecasts.
Well, 1959 was 35 years in the
The system is currently sound
past. Today, many financial ana· - and is, in facl, running a healthy
lysts and other commentators have surplus. Another generation will
noted that 35 years in the future the . pass before annual surplus funds
n~tion's Social S-:curity system drop to a "break even" level. And
wtll face a financtal crossroads. whtie there are long-range difficulThe trust funds used to pay benefits ties, there is ample time and strong
will be exhausted and the system public support across the generawill be in a defteit situation.
tions for maintaining our system.
Something, dley say, has got to
There is every reason to ellpcct
be dO!IC to pre.vent that happen'!tg.
that 35 years in the future, 'people
It ts underuably true that adjust- reading about 1994 concerns with
ments in the sy~tem will ~ to
the Soc.ial Security system wiD say,
be made someume early m the next ·- "lmagme them worrying about
century.
that." •
But the 1959 51!1Pshot reminds
Misleading Advertising
~ that the future w~l usually
If you've ever received an offer
~ !JS - and 1R ways we can- from a seemingly official governnot ll!ltiCipate.ln 19?9. studeJ:tts
ment agency offering to help you
worried about atomic war With .~e with Social Security are of~e ed
U.S.S.R could never have anttctr

tree.

Organizations offering to help,
usuaUy at a charge of SIS and often
more, are only preying on unsuspecting citizens. Remember, all
business with Soi:ial Security can
be done at SOcial Security office ...
absolutely free of charge.
Extra Credits for Delayed Retirement
A lot of people think they have
ta start collecting Social Security
benefits when they reach 65. Well
that just isn't so. You can cootinue
to work and put off. collecting
Sc.cial S.eeuriiy. If you do, you 'II
earn exua benefits when you do
retire. Bul, be sure to stop by your
local Social Security office before
your 65th birthday anyway ... to
sign up for Medicare so you 'II be
pro1ected when you reach 65.
If you live in Meigs County ,
consider contacting the Athens
Social
Security office at 221 1/2 N
Columbus Rd.
·
Social Security and AIDS
Willie most people tilink Social
Security is for older people, the
nation's old age insurance prognun
has an. increased importance in the
Ii·,es of a number of young men
and women.

Tracey lienee' Grueler anci
Eddie Thoma~ Vant.f:atre Il
exc"l!"ged wedding vows m a doubie-nng ceremony on ~une 18 at
~:30 .p.m. at Hope BapUSt Church

. ·Mary GMser Shade was maid
oi honor. Her dress ,;,as black
baroque satin featuring pouffed
sleeves and sweetheart neckline.
Chrissy Williams, cousin of the
m Middl~ .
bride, wore a matching styled dress
The bnde u the daught.er of · In teal. Nicole McDaniel wore a
James and Donna Grueser, Middle- teal and white dress of baroque
pon. and the groom is the son of satin which featured an overlay
Eddie and Connie VanMatre of skirt fastened with satin bows. The
Mason.
lhaid of honor and bridesmaid carThe Rev. Dave Bryan performed ried lace fans with black and teal
the ceremony following a progr:IJII roses and satiri streamers Tile
of music by Sharon Hawley, (lower-girl carried a teal croCheted ·
pianist, and Sam Cowan, soloist. •basket. •
The two also had duets.
1im Grueser brother of the
The sanctuary was decorated bride, served as beat man and Benwith candles and English ivy and at ton Hall was ~msman. Ushen
the front was a brilss archway, two were Adam Williams, cousin of the
brass fer~ holders, and the unity ·bride; ·and Ryan Lemley. Ring
candle which were lighted u a part bearer was Weston Roberts Cousin
of the wedding ceremony.
. ·of the groom.
'
Given in marriage by her par- ... The groom wore a blact tuxedo
ents, and escorted to the altar by w:ith teal tie and cummerbund, and
her father, the bride wore a floor- a boqtonniere of black and teal
lenglh satin gown, fashioned with a rosebuds. ·The best man, grooms·
heart-shaped neck and back open- · man and ushers all wore .boutonlog. The gown was heavily beaded nieres of black and teal rosebuds.
with pearls and iridescents. The A':J of the wedding flowers were
pouf sleeves and skirt featured ~ged by the bride.
·
sheer illusion appliques. Her semi- - •Fdr her daughter's wedding
cathedral train wu edged with lace MB&lt; Grueser wore a teal streei
and accc:nted wi!h sheer illusion lenglh dress with a l'!"g lace jacket
and seqwned appliques. Her finger- Mn. VanMalre was m an off-white
· tip veil &lt;&gt;f sheer illusion fell from a tea-length dress with pearl aceent
V-shaped headband which was and both mothers had teal and
covered with.satin and pearl and black silk rose corsages. Guests
iridesccnts. The bride designed her were registered by Anesa VanMa·
headpiece.
.
tre, sister of the groom.
She carried a cascading bouquet
A reception was held at the
of white, teal and black silt roses. American Legion ball in MiddleThe bouquet wu adorned with ivy, port. The lighted fountain, threepearls and black and teal satm tiered cake was topped with lace
bows-and streamers tied into lovers and crystal swans m heart formatoots. Slle wore pearl dro)) earrings tion. The cake featured two bridges
which had belonged to her great leading ao side two-tiered · cakes
grandmother, Elva Davis, .diamond .wnich sat on pedestals. Accents
stud eiuring$ botrowed from her - included ivy and baby's breath
mother and a gold ~et. a gift of black ribbons and IC8I roses.
the groom. Her "something borThe couple reside in Raleigh,
rowed" was a "lucky" six-pence for l'i. C.
her shoe from Catherine Williams.

'

.

.

.

Community·calendar

Karen D. Lambert ~ith is a
trooiJcr with the Ohio Slate High·

way Patrol stationed at the
Lebanon Post in Warren County
· since her graduation from the
Academy on June 8, 1994.
She is the daughter of Roger and
June Mowery and Mr. and Mrs.
James P. Lamben, and is married
to Phil Smith, formerly of Rutland.
Trooper Smith graduated from
Meigs High School in 1990 and
from Hocking CoUege in }992 with
an asSociate degree in police sci·
ence. "

.
·
·

1

.

'- - --

•

'

J'iovember 982. ·.

·

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room AddiUons • Roofing

. COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL .,
FREE ESTIMATES

W. 1111 •rvlca at lhe lop becauM It hu llnyo bean our
firat priority! In fact. -v. r.8 •MtJ. «&gt; •riolt•, ,.. rnoy
M,...dy I» Olllhl IMIY lb your hoU•f
.
-PROGRA'AIINGStarting at $7.96/monlh lor 13 chemela on up lo •• many a s
.your heart delirao.
·
-SALESDithea rqng In size from 10 fMI ciNr down to 18 incheo.
- PAYMENT PLAN VII, - Clll tak.a calhl -or- eo
at ceoh -orpeymenlalor 411 monlht ulow u -month.

614·992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

=· -

11&lt;1-MW487 •

.

RACINE

Mower Clinic
949-2804 .
Complete Chain
Saw Service &amp; Parts
Echo Saw's in stock
Christmas Layaway

Real Estate General .

.
•

· Available on

2wgaraga,3

walllr.

ASKING SM,IIOO
LONG BOTTOM- One KM of Rlvtr huntage lull one mile
north of FO!bd Run boat ramp. GREAT CAMPING SITEI
·
. ASKING Sts,OOO

Heather Marie McCann, ·daugh·
ter of Mark and Deborah Craft
McCann, Belpre, recently celebrated her fourth birthday.
A ballet&gt;lna the.me was carried
.out Attending were her maternal
g•andparents, Robert and Carol
Cmft, and an aunl, Jeannine Craft,
Tuppers Plains. Sending gifts were
her paternal grilndparents, Charles
and Emma McCann, Charleston,
~· Va.; Danny and Adrene Hopkins, Elizabeth; W. Va., and Karen
ar&lt;d Tyler Bartlett, Stewart.

BOTTOM-

153+ - • with 1 t/2 t1o1y frame home
1"PfiiOX. 2 yoara old wilh 3-4 bedroomt, 3 balht, diohwuher,
ralligaralor, dii!IOMI. cen'nllllr. elecllio hMI pump,
1'==~~llrM~ TPC water; Eutem thcool dtotrict, ooma
LONG

.'
I

II

exn

,_, bam, ohecl, pond, liM gao to

I ~:±.:~~ lnlil IIMI, 411 bedloorn unllnlohed. Thlt
m

''

BINGO
EVERY TH!JRSDAY
·EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
8:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good for 1
FREE card;
Lie. No~ 0051-342

ttf2.41D2 In

l

POMEROY· CMW Rei- Thlt 2 IIOIY, conlllllporar)o home. 1+
old lncludea,--c.._bediOOIIIt, 2 112 batht, double glut
Win00..11, cerpa~ heel pump w/C.A., C&amp;S elec., TPC waltr,
TV 11111nn1. dilhwuher, ralriallaiOr, microwave,
range &amp; hood, fiNj)Mice, 11111ic link, bar &amp; 2 car garage wilh
dooropenera on 1+ IKft, ASKlNG St10,000 VERY NICEII
MINERSVILLE- 2 IIOIY frame hofiiA will 2 bec1100111t, balli,
N.G.F.A hell~ 8011101'+ lot Home h a l - wiring, ca~peting
&amp; roof. Cable hook~p. fRill! porch ol71124. Local8d on paved
abMl
.
ASKING S2t,SOO

NEW HOPE RD.• Nice 1 ftoor ~ home lhet lndudM 2-3
bedroomt, 1 bath, 2 cer garage: outbulldingo, fenoed yard,
garden area, blin&lt;b, AIC, paneling. urpa~ alec. h•t pump
and cellar.
ASKING 135,000

twdlina~W,

SHERAI HART--..-.- -·- ..- - ....----·742~2357
HENRY E. CLELAND U1.:.----·- · -- - - --1182-t111
KATHY CLELAND--- - .. --·-··-·- --- -1182-t111
omCE..- -- - - - · - - - - - - - " ""'"':•• 112·2251

PUBLIC NOTICE
Saturday, O~to!ler 15,
1994, at 10:00 · a.m., lhe
Home National Bank, Third
Street, Racine , Ohio , will
offer for oelo at public
auction, on the Bank
parking lollhe following:
1987
GIIIC
SSL

APOLOGY/REFUND

Conversion Van,

Serial

Numb•r·
1GKOM15Zohb514793
1984 Plymouth VOF \(1~,
S e ·r Ia I
Number
2P4FH51G2ER222205
1988 Oldtmoblle Cutlao
Clerr•
- SN
2G3AJ51R2J9362351
....~· of lhe _sale . are
The Home Notional eank
reserve• the right to reje~t
any or all bids or to ramovo
any unit' from the sale at any
time.
'
In order tq lnapect any ol
the above nemed property
prior
to
the
sale
a tilng . me~ta

may be made

by calllhg 949-2210.
(10) 4, ~. 9; 10, 12. 14; 6TC '

Public tlotice
I

The object of the
complotnt It lo oblaln li
divorce from you and lhe
dtmond lalhal said Plalnlilf
be granted a divorce from
you; that a reaoonablo
dlvlolon of tho poroonol
property be mode; thai a
reaoonable dhllolon of lhe
marllal debta, II any, be
made: and for 1uch olhar
relief at may be proper In
law and/or equity be
granted. ·
You are required to
onawor the complalnl wllhln
twenty-alght (28) dayo alter
the 1111 publication of thlt
notice, which will be
publlthed once each week
for olx ouccolllvo w11k1,
and lhe laal publlcallon will
be made on October 24,
1994.
In cote of your failure 10
anawer or olhorwlte .
reopond Ill pormltVd IIY the.
Ohio Rulli
Procedure
withino"'the Civil
lime
·

...

&gt;;

L.~i.o:·~---~-__..~___._ _........, '~
" ••

1182-2086 '

HAULING
Umestone ·Gravel &amp; Coal

Come
see
•
us at; .•

Reaso•••le Rates
loell. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING

..w .... ,..

KENNY'S AUTO CENTER

Getllpolla, Oh.
Or C.tl Ua At 446-11971 and

Aame::=~~

Uglit Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped
and Removed

·Heating, Inc.·

Bill Slaclc
'992·2269

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

9

Announcements

• Custom Made
• Solid vinyl
replacement
windows
~ F;ee Estimates
• S200 Installed
Call For Details

·DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

lly new
~

Peartt

CIIIWMN!
Of 'Tfl

s.,..

wanted to Buy

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

3 Announcements
Abnl
J

,...y No

.'

Decorated ol-ra, •N ,
""""-· old tom..· old 11w&lt;- ·
. . . - - . old CiOCI.o; arrllquo ~
tumfturt. RlvtriM AnllquOa. .

. .- ·

olcl

farm, locolod on

Gumme Rd, alao known M C.ln
Rldgo •.
· Cotroopond With Slntlo Women
From Eaalom E&amp;orop0 And Tho
Fo,....r USSR. Write: Maury
Hfrwchkom, 125 Fulton St., Far-

mingdale, N.Y. 11735.

Ona mila out
143 from Rt. 7
Tuas.-Wed.-Fri.-Sat.
1-6
&gt;Craftsman Tools

•Toys
oGiatswara
Loads of Misc.

Buy-Sell-Trade
11W11H.

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
GUN SHOOTS
SAT., 6:30 P.M.

NEWTRAVEL ·
A(;ENCY

•

Rlverbend Travel
Adventures

12 Gaige
Factory (hoke Oily

701 Art Lewis St.
Middleport, Ohio
. 45768.

Bashan Btilcllll

Phone: 992·6926

-

Uc. No. 0182·27

71:11JD1 TFN

. .ILift WIIDOW IYIIIMI

Pomeroy, Ohio

CW1Q'D2tfn

949·2038 . . /,
949-2749
'

TOLL FREE 1-100·141·0070
DARWIN, OHIO

7355

ti21Mo

(FREE ESTIMATES)

Starting Sun. Oct.
9th Raclna Legion .•
Post 1802 6:45 pm "
This ad good for 1 'o
FREE CARD
·.·

eu-m; oR

446-7400
800-757-PELLET

114-11112-7587

Painting also concrete
work

BINGO

NEW l USED PA!ITS FOR
ALLIIAKES l MODELS
tU·7013 OR

Gelllpolla, Oh.

41464 SWobar Rd.

-Interior &amp; Exterior

.,

614-IIBW180-

Only

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Speclali,Jing 111 Cuatom
Frame Repair

386 State At. 160
w/Nationwldti Ina.

ro-oy, Oh. 457ft

oNawGe~Wgea

meUIIge.

Atrar6 p.m.

..

Pellet Stoves

Mls. Jobs.

·ao.tse-

o£1ectric81 &amp; Plumbing
oflooflng

Free Eatlmatas

BeloiW 6 p.m. laav•

,r

Oiw2DY. .·~

ofloom Addltiona

hU tho pllln out of
painllng. Lat 1a do It for
you. V.., naunelde

Ev1nlngo By AppL

AntlqueC.ra, .

YOUNG'S

laterior&amp;
Etlterlor

12 Gauge
Factory

Cuatom

CARPENTER SERVICE

LINDA'S
PIINnNG &amp; CO.

IIOW STAilTIIIG
Forketl Ru1
Sportsma1
Gu• Clult
Gua Shoot
Ivery Suailay
1:00 P.M.

....... _,., • .,{Na
I....,. \I Aua. R.,.tal."

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

Notice Is hereby given
that, In pursuance ot a
resolution of the Board of
Township Trustees ot the Education of the Southern
Townahlp of SuHon, Racine, Local School Distrlcl, Ohio,
Ohio, passed on the 4th day adopted on July 25, 1994,
ol July, 1994 there will be there will be aubmllted lo a
submUted to a vote of the vote of the eleclors of said
people ol sold oub~lvislon School District al the
11 a General Election to be election lo be held In said
held In lhe Township of School District al the
Sutton, Ohio, at 111e regular regular places of voting
places of voting therein, on therein on Tuesday the 8th
the 8th day of November, day of November, 1994, the
1994 , the question of question ollevying a tax In
In excess ~f e xcess of the le r mill
levying •
~
lhe ten mill limitation , tor
limitation for the benefit of
the benefit of sun on the Southern loca l Sc hdol
· t 1
Township for the purpose of 01 olroc
or the purpose of
Public Notice

Coaale's o•io .

a.,......

liver
Everlastil~gs

'.X'

Fire protection.

614-247-4035.

. Yard Sale

7

Now ope~ for Fa'ft .
Season
Wed. thru Sat. 9·5

current expenses at a rate

tilled, judgomtnl by
Said tax being : A renewal not exceeding 4.0 mills for
deloull ..,111 be rendered of an .existing tax of 1 miii'BI each one dollar ot valuatloll',
.ogalntl you for~tht rollof 8 role not exceeding 1 (one) which amounts to 40 c ants
~ubllc Notice
d,manded In tho complalnL mllll lor each one dollar of lor eech on e hund red
Larry E. Spancer, valuation, which amountato dollars of valuation , for
NOTICE .
Cieri&lt; oflhe Court of •tan cenlt ($0. tO) for each three years commencing
TO 'fHE DEFENDANT,
Common one hundred dollars of with 1 levy on tho 1994 tax
RONALD DIGANGI, WHOSE
·Piaao, Molga County, Ohio · valuilljon, lor ftve (5) years. list and duplicate. Said tax
RESIDENCE IS UNKNOWN:
Cou.rthouoo, w11t Second
Thl Polls lor : said constitutes the renawal of
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
. Slrftl'' Elocllon will open 11 6:30 an · oxlttlng levy. If a
COURT OF MEIGS
Pomeroy, Ohio 115711 o' clock A.M. and • remain majority oftho volero voting
CQUNTY, OH!?.___
By: U.rlent Hlrrlaon, opan unlll 7:30 o'clock P.M . thereon vole In favor
Courthou.., Will -vncl
Daputy of aold dey.
•
thereof, said levy will be
Streat•.Pomeroy, Ohio 45781 (9) 11, 21;
Oeted Sept. 2t, 1994 ftrodt pdlac od on the thax II at
. , Klrinalha Digangi,
(10) 3, 10, 17, 2•:.6TC
ey order oflhl Board ot on
up 11cote lor t e tax
· Mldcltopori,OH457110,
· Eleclions, year 1994,for collection In
PlalnUif
of Melgo County. Ohio. tho calendar year 1995.
Call No. M-DR-311
PubliC Notice
- Henry L. Hunter, Chelrmen . The f!OII• tor said ol~ctlon
Vt.
·
' .
Rite D Smith Ol!oclor. will ba open al 6:30· o clock
. NA nl .........
· ·
(
· '
. ' Tc
a.m. 1~d will remain open
Ron llld ~..,an'!",,.,__
NOtiCE OF ELECTION .ON 10) 10, 17, 24, 31, 4
. until/.:30 o'clock p. m. of
realdoncolt unknown,
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF ·
oald al.
Daftndmt
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION . '
p bile N 1
Doled· epl 26 1~
- Pltlnllfl tile brouglil' lhlt
Reviled Code, Sectlono
U
ot C8
.
.
. By.c);d.r of l he
NOTICI; OF ELECIIQN ON
eoi rd of Election• of
action 111mlng you •• lht 3501 .11(G), 5706.111, 5705.25
Dalenclailt. In , the. abov• • Nbtlco Ia hero~y given
TAX LEVY IN •
Melgo County, Ohio
namad· court by filing her that In purau1nce of a
E)(CESS OF THE TE ~ MIU.
Alta D. Smith
LIMITATION
(10) tO, 17, 2¢, 31 : 4TC
compll!lnt. on Feb'rvary 28,. Rtlolullon ollho Board of

,,

Let us take
the worry
. out of
renting
. a car.

Convertible TCIIM.

i

•

KENNY'$~~~,;:=....,

s.t CovaiW &amp; Carpet

HENRY E. CLELAND...._ ..............~---·--·--11112-t111
TRACY BRINAGER------·--'··-""·-..- - Mt-2431

1994.

-

Jess' Complete
Auto Upholstery

ABKit&lt;IG S185,000

Public Notice

-

614-742·2138

. chainsaw.

dahowali114N', diii)OIII,
~.:-.:.;;;&amp;;. payne winclowo,

Celebrates fourth
birthday

.

-1-

Weedeaters &amp;

II"

~yea'lledalettuof~Ja-

•

-IERVICE-

Temperament
~~ng In Part~ono
lOr ehow and companlona.
Stud 11111ice &amp; 1J141pl•,
young Ulill for UJ..
48750 lila Hill Rd.
AIICina, Oh

5801'11p8t.,llld ... p.rt
F,_Eallm....
7121Mn

P.lace: Kelly's Komer •
lima: 8:00 til ?
Featuring: Dee &amp; Dallas
When- October 29th
. Halloween Party
Costume Judging Free Food

-Military

inJ'ort!lild-

Bred for

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY

'-

There- were five tickets missing
·.fo'rm the . recent quilt .raffle held on
.·september. 10, 1994 by the
· 6,edford Tovvnship Volunteer Fire
·.Department Committee. A one
·dollar
refund is being offered to
,
news~- ·.anyone providing a ticket stub
. . .
tidll.
Mlellael T. HoUnd
any of the missing
Matheny, who joined the Navy · bearing
. Navy ,Seaman Michael T. Hoiin
.
December
1990,
has
been
land, soli of Ro~rt and Carolyn
Holland of Cheshire, recently wigned to Fleet Training Cencer , numbers. If you purchased a ticket
~CE AND ELIZABETH JOHNSON
· reported fill' duty aboard the sub- in Norfolt,'VL
t5earing any of the following
._,
marin~.s.s. Boston out of Gro.
Kelly(:.Headtr . '
mlm~ers: 0291, 0292, 0293, 0294.
Navy
~lly C.
; . Legg;-John~~ti
::=r.!,~~~ Kyger Hensler, Seaman~~
son Qf Daniel ancr Patty
Hensler of ltiCine, recently com- ·.or .0295. ·Please contact Mildred
'··
AliA Leu IICI Bruce and Mn. Doll Jolmlon of Portland,
,
~d JOiiiiOD were united in and lhC Plm"'D of Mr.lnd.Mrs.
· S~ven F. Wilson
. f!!!~Jj~sic training in Great ·.Zieg!er at 992-n?O for a prompt
.
·1111 W29 It die HeM- William . McKelvey
of
Navy Airm111 Stev~ F. Wlbon,
i1 'l'otdr i Tem.
Ravenawood, W.Va. and Mr. and son of Fred and Kelh Wilson of
Hensler ll&amp;duated from South- •
~y was Milo 1'11010011 JolmlonofLewi.
A!Jlany, R:~CC~~tly tepxted b ~ etn High Scliool in 1994.
refund.. We apologize for any
6y tile. Rev. Terry V.
'A buffet nap1io11 WIS hckl'bn With Sea Control Squadron ·29 1R
Kevlu L. Jainel .
,
• .. ·
-.
. -, ·· May 21 bY 111e groom'• JIII'OIIll• s.~.eaur._ . .
.
l!iiclo is tho daughter of their home. Cake was ·served by .. cb~~sCt(~ Alclllll- · Nayy ~tty Officer First Class ·incon:vience this may have c~used.
Kevin L. l)ioies, son of B1mer and
• ~0 Up ·aad Sandra Legg, · S111111 J~ sistcr·i!J:Iaw of the '
.
m
•
·
·- Sincerely,
Wanda James of' Mason, W, Va.,
,,
II• r aville, W.VL Slle ' ~· Medina Pool~ ~ of die
De~ E Matllen
,
......upter of Mr•.and bride, and Rudl Hopkins, friend of
N
. om' Third' Clas ·recently completed a 'six-month
Bedford Township,
Charlie William a, Sum- the bride.
II!Y
cer
s deployment to the Western Pacific
Following a short stay in Pigeon Dennu E. .Matheny, a 1980 · on the repair ship USS Jason.
.W; VL a tile !ale Mr.
Volunteer Fire -Dept, Committee ·
.AlldMJDy Legg. d
·
Tenn., the couple now Alexander ·High School gradua!C,
James i'oined the Navy in .

=·

1-tDNI1...,11
&amp;14-tll-aa1o

.

. , -IERVICE•
youR 9ADSFAQDON &amp; Our Succell bagino &amp; ende with
MIVIcel So, when your oatelllla lan'l working right we'r.
hera to helpl By phone or In ,.,-.- ..tMin you call,
- wll be !lwei

'October 14th Friday
Star Board Entertainment
Karaoke/ Background $1hglng

I-E
'

--~~~ ··of· ~· .

.·
.

· Quality and

-

Trooper Lambert
stationed with .
OSP at Lebanon .

H1111111 CHILDS
MULLIN MUSSEl
INSUUICI '

.

Cocker SpMieli

...,.

2·,.

B&amp;L
ELEOIOIIKS '
LanyRupe~ ·~·e ·

'

KAREN SMITH

That's because people with
AIDS, 9f the HIV infecnon, auto·
maticalfy qualify for disability payments when they are 00 longer able . The Community Calendar is
TUESDAY
tc. work. And those w.ho do not published as a free service to nonTUPPERS PLAINS - The
h&amp;ve enough work credits through profit groups wishing to announce Tuppers Plains Sewer District will
Social Security can often qualify meetings and special events. The meet at 10 a.m. Tuesday at the
for payments under Supplemental calendar is not designed to promote Tuppers Plains-Chester Water DisSecurity Income.
1
f dr ·
f
.One of the fust thin~s an.yone sa es or un alsers 0 any type. trict office..
·'•
Items are printed as space permits
· •·
who is diagnosed as m positive and cannot be guaranteed to run a .&gt;-.
. WEDNESDAY
•
should do is cootact Social Security specifiC number of days.
·
•
for a Penonal Earnings and Benefit
.I•
Estimate Statement ... to find out
POMEROY
Revival
the amount of benefits he or she
MONDAY
We(fnesday through Sunday, Lauwlll receive if his or her disability
POMEROY ,...- The Big Bend rei Clilf Free Methodisl'Chureh, 7
claim is approved. Last year, Social Farm Antique Club, Monday 7:30 · p.m. each day except Sunday •
~r.c~!Y. paid .out more than '$600 p.m. at the Meigs County Fair 10:30 a.m. Rey, Gene Gill. Music
111 Second st.,~
million m SociaJ. Security and SSI • Board office. · -~ · by Sunrise. ·
YOUR
IDIIf .
payments to people with AIDS.
.
roMEROY • Breathe Easy to
POMEROY- The .Bedford ineet at 2 j).m. in The Conference
AIEIIIS S Ill
Township Trustees will meet Mon· ROOin at Veteran's Memorial HasMEIGS C ITY
day at 7 p.m. at the town ball.
piuil. Leona.Lei(heit, R.N, will
SINCE 1161
MIDDLEPORT _ Disabled speal about dealing with chronic
American Veterans and Ladies iU~. '
·
Auxiliary, meeting Monday, 7 p.m. •. •· •
:
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) at Middleport American Legion r-:.~--------------------.'
•
-'- Forty-seven years aC!Cf ,breaking hall.
•••
the sound bamer, Cbuck Yeager
. . ~·
RACINE - The Racine Board
says he can't break his flying habit.
"I can't stoP.. Technology is · of Public Affairs will meet in regumoving so fast, if I took a year off lar session Monday, 10 a.m. at the
anne~.
·
l'd never catch up," he said.
Yeager, 71, said be spends
LETART FALLS - The
about two weeks ev·ery month
Letllrt-Portland
P'I'O, 7 p.m. Mon- .
trainin at EdwardS Air Fm:e Bale
day • the Lelart Falls grade school. ·
in Cal~ornia.
·
Yeager, the fust person to break Open house to be observed, Supt
the sound barrier, retired from the Bob Ord to speak, and refresh"'
·
Air FIX'Ce as a brigadier genenl in meniS to be ,Served.
. .,
.
'
1975.
.
.

·Yeager still
.likes to fly

12 Gc.ge O.ly
l..lntetl: 740
Badhre, 680 Frolt

Steaks, SandwicheS Open Daily 7 am - 8 pm
Sundays 7 am - 5 pm
New Owners.

. EDDIE AND TRACEY VANMATRE II

Grueser-VanMatre II

6:30P.M.

KENNEL

;·

BISSELL IUILDEIS, ~~~

Specializing:
Dried Matsrials
Pot pourri suppllee
Heibal Crafts

Gilllpolis
&amp; VicinHy
ALL Yard -

Sunday odHIUI •

NEW-REPAIR
GuHers
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
' .Palntl~g

ROBERT IISSEU
CONSTRUCTION
•NawHomaa
oGaragas
oCornpleta

Ramodillng

FREE ESTIMATES

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

9~9-2168

tiS-4473

i/I .... TFN

..
. I

p.m.

2~

Fr1d1J.

-y

8

Public Sale

p.m. 5a!Urdlly.

Howard L. Writesel
ROORNG .

lluol 8o Paid In

lodvance. DEAOUHE: 2:00 p.rn.
tho day beloro tho od lo to Nn.

odMion • 2:00

.

&amp; Auction
Aiel!,..,_, Auction~.
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�Monday; October 10, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport,' Ohio

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ACROSS

BEATfiE BLVD.TM by Bruce Bealtie

44 ' Apartment
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CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

.

Celebr~ t v Crpher cn,ptograms ~ re CH!aled !rom Quolahons by tamous OOOt'Jie. past and oresent

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·PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'When Nature has worl&lt; to be done, she creates a .&gt;i
genius to do"-' - Ralph Waldo Emerson .
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Bridge is a great game because it
transcends international barriers. A
new book containing an interesting
collection .of deals, "On the Other
Hand,"· has been written by Kathie
Wei-Sender, who came to the United
States from China, and· Martin Hoff.
man, who was born in Czechoslovakia
and reached the United States a couple of years ag0 via England. It is publis hOlt by C&amp;T 1800·525·4718, $12.95!. I
noticed lhat a few of the analyses are
truncated, leaving the reader to do
some thinking. Perhaps you consider
this to be a good feature; perhaps you
don't.
Today's deal from the book is the
sort that mosl players would get
wrong. You are shown the Nort_h :
South hands pnd asked to plan the
play in six hearts. West having led a
lowtrump. .
Nortl! mtghl" have been bidding ·
game in a 4-3 fit, but he had a rufling
value in his singleton spade .
South won the first trick with the
heart ace over East 's queen . He
cashed lhe spade ace, ruffed a spade
in the dummy, crossed lo hand with a
club and ruffed another spade , with
dummy's heart king. However. now
South had to lose two tricks, a club

· As the authors point out, the fatal
error a&lt;eurred
at trick one . AI South
.
was going to have to ruff two spades
in the dummy, he should have put up
dummy's heart king. A spade to the
ace, a spade ruff, a diamond ruff, a
spade ruff and a club to the ace are
followed by the heart ace. When the
queen drops, South draws West's last
trump and claims. conceding a olub
·
trick.
The heart finesse was a Greek gift.

•

1 Bucllooon Aporlmunl,

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31 Map abbr.
32Metldoa
33 - ond Chong
38 Unluon

1 Rogue
2 Broadcasting
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7 High card .
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I attended a bridal shower recently . I discovered that
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r.ler ch~llUISC

which signs are roman.tically perlect lor you . Mail 52 to Matchmaker. cto
thl s 'he wspaper. P.O. Box 4465 . New
York. N.Y .. 10163.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) When oth· ·

accomplished.
...
ARIES(M8rch21·Aprilf9) Youre "capable ol handling d•fl•cult•es roaay . buc
unl ess yo u ar e th o rough . th ere ·s a_
chance ttiat what you 110 up m1ghl later

ers treat you kindly . you 're usuall y the ; ,unravel. Make sure you de a liOmplete
type who tnes to rec •procate . Toda y . l job .
·

however.'you mighl step out ol character ' TAURUS (April 2o-May 20) II you make
and be more of a taker than (I giver.
: any changes at work today be sure the
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-0ec. 21) paoterns you establ•sh do noc creace a
Expenses cootd get out ol hand today il . whole sel ol new problems . There·s a
you assoctate wifh persons who are able possibility they m1ght.
{O spend more freely than you Abide by , GEMINI (May 21·June 20) lmporo ~n c
your budgetary standards. not the•rs. to arrangements should not be made hast•ly
avoid problems.
loday . Take your t1me . II you rump lhe
CAPRICORN tDec. -22-Jan. 19) This IS gun . you m1ght 1\ave 10 endure an
' one of chose days when you might lail to ""comfortable silualion lor a long 11me to
r ' · d., Occ '11 1994
leave well enough alone. lnlerlenng w1Ch come.
ues, a~ .
· ·
someth1n.g I haC IS presently runn ing CANCER (June 21-July 22) Be sure to
1
You- (Clay beeome lr volved in several · smoothly ¢ould creale unn6cessary com· be"at home today ·il you're hav1ng anyone
exciting new prlcjects 1n the yea~ ahead. t plicalions. ·
.·
·
come to do work around the house. II
. • ~cweveri-be mindlul of what you redOing AQUARIUS (Jan: 20-Fub. 19) Friend ~ there is no supervision . the results could
"and lrL (lt til ~eep loo .many irons in the ; will pe prepared tQ accept you despile all be exloemely disappointing .
·
1: ol your shortcomings today . as long as LEO (July 23· Aug. 22) Do not lake 11
ftre:. ·' • · ' •·
~IBR~j~pt. ;.()et, 23) You should be • you're prepared lo accepllhem as lhey upon yourse~ today to critique your co·
extremely eft live today when dealing : are. II you t/egin llnding fault wilh them. ,, workers . What you say might evo~e
With t
ating on your wavelength . expect similar treatment.
! respof!S&amp;s you won't enjoy hearing.
• Alth · ~~~ - · . O"u run into opposition . your PISCES (Feb. 20·Morch 20) Once ~ VIRGO (Aug_. 23-Sept. 22) Your luck 1n
sioo&gt;lll•Qhl get g~rbled . Know touchy 1ssue cs resolved today. forget 11 f1nancllll dealings today could be definite·
11
~ 1i co look for rolnance and you'U lind and lei it 11~ . If you start to rehash il. you ly limned. so don't press il. Be grateful lor
)1. ~ . Aslro·Graph Matchmaker instantly co'u ld quickly- defeal all I hat" s been small Qain~ .

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· Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

"

. l~lamic

militants take cred·it ·
t6r attack;on J·erusa.lem .m,an
L.

WORKING IN SPACE - Pilot Terrence
Wilcutt, left, and commander Mlehael Baker
looked out tbe l'ront windows from Endeavour's

'night deck Sunday. The radar mapp~g Dllsaion
Is scheduled tor· landing Tuesday In Florida.
(AP)

Endeavour's ~rew making ·
most of extra day in space

"

By GWEN ACKERMAN
not let them harm the ~ proAssoelated-Prell Writer
, cess."
JERUSALEM- The militant .: Faisal Hosseini, the PLO's
Islamic group Hamas claimed. '. spokesman on Jerusalem affain,
responsibility today for a terror condemned the ldllinas on .lsrael
· attack in which two Arabs armed radio, sayinJ the PLO wu against
with assault riflea and hand the "ldlling of civilians, whether
grenades opened fare on a street Israelis or Palestinians....
crowded with ouldoor cafes,ldlling
He called for expansion of
two peo_Pie and wounding 13 Palestine Liberation Organization
before being cut down.
authority in the West Bank as a
,_ The Palestinian auackers ldlled way 10 stop attacks and contended
an off-duty Israeli woman soldier the PLO· was doing all it could 10
and a Palestinian bystander. Police prevent violence. "We cannot have
said the woonded mcluded a U.S. .full security when we do not have
diplomat, Scott Dubstein, was hit full control," he raid The Associat·
by grenade fragments.
ed Press. .
, Police and private citizens with
Angry Israelis gathered at the
handguns reiUI1lCd lire and the two shooting site IOday ar shopkeepers
assaifants, who wore red bandannas and cafe owners swept up glass and
and carried AK-47 Kalashnikov children gathered around a tree
rifles, fell dead in the stone-paved trunk to dig ou.t a buUct. Some
Yoel Solomon Street shortly before ·.cafes reopened and served. b~midnighL
fast.
U.S; Secretary of State Warren
Youths shouted slogans against
Christopher called on PLO leader Rabin for making peace with the
Vasser Arafat.IO reaff11111 his com· Palestinians. "Rabin go home,"
miunent 10 the ~ce process by shouted a group of about 20 teen·
strongtr, denouncmg the atlllck and agen.
acting 'as fmnly aa he can against
In a leaflet sent to news agen'that kind of incidenL''
cies today, the Muallm fundamen·
"I think Chairman Arafat talist group Ham• said the attack
should respond and condemn it came in revenge for the Oct. 8,
strongly," Christopher said. "That 1990, shooting of 17 Palestinians
is~ or his.~i~nL"
.
by Israeli police during clashes outPrime Miruster Y1tzhak Rabm, · side Jerusalem's AI Aqsa Mosque.
who ~s threatened to slow the
"Our bold military operations
e_x~ston of auiOROmy ~or ~ales· will 1101 cease as tong as there is an
~~~~ns unless. ~at reii}S m. the Jsmeli soldier left on our occupied
militant~, sa1d w~ w11l ftg~t land," the Hamas leaflet said.
Hamas With all our nught and will
The leaflet identified the .
assailants as Hassan Abbas from

the Gaza Strip and lsaanl Mu~
:
•IDC1 ndio said ·Jawhari wu a . ·
PLO po~ who urived from
Egypt reccltdy. PL0 _police clenied
Jawbari was a policeman, ancj
Hamu offlciila said Jawhari, 24,
was an Egyptian national who
came 10 Oaza on a touriat visa ·in
July and l'requeoted the Sheik Rad·
wan mosque, a center of lilamic
militants.
· Abbu, who spent two yean in
jail for being a Hamu setivist, was
the former driver of lmad Aql, a
Hamas.leader killed by Ineli sol- .
diers last year, Palestinian and
Israeli sources said.
The attack Sunday coincided
with the arrivll of Christopher,
who was in the King David Hotel a
few blocks away at the time of the
shootings. A security aten V(aS.
ordered and the hotel waa sealed
otT for the rest of the night and into
tt.' morning, snarling Jerusalem.
tr..ffic at rush hour.
The gunmen 'Opened fire at
1~ :30 p.m. Sunday in a crowded
downtown pedestrian mall line:d
with restaurants. Witnesses said
.fewer people than usual were sit·
ling outside becauiiC it had rained·
earlier in the evening.
·
"It's OlD' worst nightmare come
· true," said Keith Sprague, an
immigrant from New York City,
wilo spoke to a reporter in the Ami··
g.1s Mexican restaurant littered
with broken glass and scores of·
sheD casings.
lsmlil Jawhari from Egypt.

Scientists will combine the
last April.
,
Emitting microwaves in three images, taken from slightly differ·
frequencies to give irifages three- ent angles 127 miles up, 10 produce
dimensional quality, the radar 3-D 10pographic maps accUrate in
scanned the icy Southern Ocean for elevation to within six yards. The
oceanographers examining waves best maps now are accurate .to
within I0 yards.
and currents.
The six-man shuttJe.crew has
Other wgets included Mexico's
Yucatan Peninsula for a geology kept busy by taking photographs
study and North Carolina's Duke and video to complement the radar
Forest, where ecologists are im!lges. About 14,000 frames of
attempting 10 map vegetation and fibn are aboard the space shuttle.
Some of the weelcend observadetermine seasonal changes.
·
Endeavour spent the weekend tions were lost because one of three
maneuvering to repeat its orbital radar-data recorders failed Satur·
'
path every 24 hours so mountains, day. The recorder was replaced, but
just
how
much
information
was
uted
the
reports,
saying
none
of
and
one
bullet
hole in the plastic
forests and deserts · could be
GENEVA (AP) ,... The probe. P
lost
won't
be
known
until
after
the
·
chalet
victims,
Some
of
whom
were
bag,"
he
said.
scanned from the exact same spot
in10 the deaths of 53 members of a
flight. Officials say it could range doomsday cult spread to France burned beyond recognition, have
in space on consecutive days.
from a few minutes 10 10 hours.
"Someone or a group of DCODie
and Australia, as investigators been identified.
checked reports that cult leaders ,. It is not ki\own whether the went completely berserk,'''PiOer
.
•
may have been involved in arms cult's other leader, Luc Jouret, a told repmers.
traffielling and money taunderina. . Bel$ian physician who lived in -- On Monday, -Australian Associ• •
The newest mystery was why Switzerland and Canada; was a.red Press re)XIIted that di Mambro
bved at the ~~ Coast, a popular
the passpons of Joseph di Mambro, among the dead~
a cult leader, and his wife, JoceSwitzerland has issued an inter· beach reson m Queensland state,
lyne, were delivered to the French national warmnt for the arrest of be~een ~ov~~ 1~3 and last
WASHINGTON (AP) largest wilderness area outside of five~dy delay in approving the Interior Ministry in Paris. In a Jouret and di Mambro on suspicion Apnl, while tmmt~tlOn recor~s
Among the final acts of the 103 Alaska, putting 6.6 million acres mess cost the Treasury at least statement Sunday, the ministry o( arson and premeditated homi- ~ tha~Jouret VISited Allllralia
five times SIIICC 1989.
Congress were bills to preserve under increased federal protection. · $12 million. Under a tempomry would not say if it knew who sent 'd
millions of acres of California Two new national parks would be $125 million budget passed this the passports or why they did.
ct Some of the cult members were . The ne':"s agency als~ cited .
desert, pay Gulf War veterans for a created as well as a I.S million· summer, the SEC had· been able 10
· The .bodies of 48 cult followers
· · 1
d · -ii b t s ·
unconfirme'd reports that dt Mammysterious illness, and make mak· acre national preserve in the desert collect on1y I·SOih of I pen;ent of were discovered Wednesday in the ~rfi~f~ reft'~~:r~e ~ssibtl~~; bro and 12AothcrRc~,_mtmbe.A
. rs itled
'' ' , ·
ers of dietary supplements 10 drop area of southeastern California.
the total amount of the securities rubble of fires at dlree chalell and a that llliDC took their own lives:
10 go 10. yers ....... on . ug. •13•.·
Untx!wen health clllmL
'
~ ' Most or I \he land already reg~ down llhanlly from tbe I farm in SwitzerlaDd. Pivt ollier
&lt;~-1\mons 13 vlctlma fC)Und at a .- 1993, f(l( ~ Blal:k Friday •
""'"r1
'The Sertnte approved a suing of belong! to ibe'federal govemlllelit. usliill fee of1·29di·or-t--peu::ent'' ' ' tiOcfies wete fcund in a charred farin in the western Swiss village at 'but were li!fused penniision 1iy
last-minute bills. all sent 10 Presi·
More than 10,000 Persian Gulf.,
• The Senate gave final approval chalet the cult leaders owned north of'Cheiry, some we-e shot repeat· park ra_Dfers· 'ne sne, m cen~l
dent Clinton for his signature, on veterans are expected to be~eflt.J 10 a 'bill that would require makers of Montreal.
·
. edly in the head, then hooded with ~ustral!i s _remote OUtback regton,
which unanimous agreement had from the bill granting compensa· of dietary supplements t.o s)low
Family members in Sion, plastic bags, said investlgativl! 1s ~onstd~ sacred by the coonbeen reached before adjourning lion for undiagnosed or undefmable they are safe and_drop claif!!S that Switzerland, said they identified di Judge Andre Piller.
try sa~~ people..
,
1be Pilinch connection ftrst 8111· .
Saturday. Congress plans 10 return - IUnesses reported after the war.
the products cure or prevent tUn~. Mambro, a French-Canadian who
''One person had two bullet
briefly for a special post-election
Many veterans who fought in . • The Ho11se voted 10 change tts · lived in Switzerland, among the
~n ~~.~deYt~.
holes
in the head but no holes in facederedan~Bflldatn.ay
ID elite IIICCn....,.y
VICC
session devoted 10 mtificalion of a the Persian Gulf War liav~ com· mternal rules and apply worker victims recovered fronl the Swiss
world trade pact.
·
·
plained that they are suffering from · safety, civil rights and other laws 10 chalets. Swiss media reported that the plastic.bag on the head. Anoth· at an empty viila the cult used in :
er had three bullet holes in the head southern Fmnce.
The House completed its regular a variety of illnesses linked 10 their the thousands of people it employs, his wife's body also was found.
business shortly after midnight Fri- activities dUring the war with Iraq.
• Senate Minority Leader Bob
Swiss authorities, however, disday.
In many cases, they have com· Dole, ~-Kan., voicing unspecified .-------------~-------.----~------~--.,.
A bill that would have allowed plained of de~ilitating illne!l&amp;es ~ GOP objections, ref~sed to go
~overnors 10 control ~ m:nount ~f sympiO~S With no. clear diagnosts along with an attempt · by
mterstate garbage com~g miO thett of what IS wrong w_1th them.. .
.Democmts 10 approve by unanistates feU by the waystde. Support·
In other last-mmute legtslauve mous voice vote a $1 bilhon meaers said one senaiOr had.put. a hold action:
·
sure aimed mainly at improving the
on the legtslatron, blocking Its pas• The Seflllte approved the Secu· health of minorities. Dole's move
sage.
riti~s and Exchange Commission's killed the legislation for this year.
The desert bill will create the $305J,million annual budget. A
.
By,MIKE DRAGO
Associated Press Writer
SPACE CENTER, Houston The radar aboard Endeavour
scanned ocean currents near the
Antarctic Circle and forests in
North Carolina today as scientists
worked to make the most of the
shuttle's extra day in space.
Endeavour was originally sehed·
uled to land in Florida today after
10 days, but NASA last week
extended the mission until Tuesday
so the radar could conduct addi·
tidnal Earth mapping.
As of Sunday, the $366 million
U.S. and European mdar had col·
leered enough data 10 fill nearly 52
miles of tape, officials said. It fust
flew in space aboard Endeavour

Info

.abOut
State Issue ·4

Tu.t u hails 'divine intervention'
for saving S. Africa from war

• of national impor· • eve~t ... a transfiguration occur·
inter-faith events
By GENE KRAMER ...........
renee ... a true mountainiOp experitance.
Associated Press Writer
Bursts of applause punctuated ence.
v,(ASHINGTON - South
"You walked into the polling
Africa, "on the verge of a ghastly the worda of the visiting Anglican
archbishop
of
Cape
Town
and
winbooth
and emerged a rotaUy differcivil war," was spared by divine
ent,
transfigured
person.
ner
of
the
1984
Nobel
Peace
Prize.
intervention and reborn as one
"A black person went in
nation seeking healing, reconcilia· He requested clapping specifically
lion and unity, says the country's for the two South African presi- remembering how his dignity was
dents, praising De Klerk for the trodden under foot for so many a
most famous churchman.
"It is God's doing," assisted by courage to free Mandela from long year. He emerged on the other
Nelson Mandela and P.W. de prison and launch reconciliation, side and said, 'Hey, I'm free, my
KICI'k, the country's fiTSl blaclt and and ilcscribing Mandela as "a dignity has been resiOred, I'm a
last white president, plus love, remarkable person ... a wonderful child of Ood."'
.
·
Whites experienced "what we
prayers and economic pressure gift 10 the world."
The first mu1tir11cial election sought 10 teU them for so long, lbat
from apartheid foes around the
world, Archbishop Desmond Tutu that installed Mandcla as president you won't be free until we are
in April marked his country's turn- free." Weighed down b "guilt for
said in a rousing sermon Sunday.
ing
point, Tutu said. Tension was all the privileges that ~ experiA predominantly white congrehigh
and the endless wailing lines enced .and enjoyed so unJustlY for
~ation of nearly 3,000 jOined Tutu
m an exuberant celebration of the of vOters ~ "a recipe for disas- sa long," he said, they emerged
collapse of apartheid. It was an · ter" and mayhem for anyone want· from the election "trusfigured,''
with a feeling of "I'm free, the
unusual service even for the lOwer· ing 10 start trouble.
But unexpectedly, he. said, the burde!l' has been lifted fr_o111 my
ing National Catbedml, seat of the
·
spiritual shoulder."
U.S. ,Episcopal Church and site of voting proved to be

An Ohio CO\Irt ruled that
Ohio's existing constittttional prohibition on food taxes
only prohibits certain retail
taxes on food. The co\lrt
ruled that wholesale taxes
· s\lch as the new wholesale
beverage tax could legally be
Imposed by the state.

What a YES Vote on
State Issue .4 Will Do
'.

I ~Cil o~.., ~lines.
P'

I

;l.

.,

• i '"'

Hidden taxes on food especlaly . ,
hun people who c•n least lfford
to !MY ~ seniors and flfitiUes with
children.

E

.'

I

m

We're
on 4: Stop Taxes on Food Committee - a committee of over 150,000 Ohloa~s from all walks of life joining '
. together to stop taxes on food. If vou'd lUre more info[mil·
tion about Issue 4, or if you'd like to join our commit~.
please s1ve us a call at 1-800-362-8611. Thankyou.

V()te YES on .lssile 4 ~

r=e

~

m vote on State Issue. 4. ·

il

Pick 4:
6226
Buckeye 5:

167937

1.-IIIILIPt Ill 401, cleU".

WedaadiJ,IIWIJ. HI&amp;Jt

apper60L

•

ell tine
'M41,N0.112
CGpvrltht tiM

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tue8day, October 11,1994

1 llectlon, 10 . . . . . . _ ..
AMu1tlmeclll '!'0- ,._lp 'II

lax landlords targeted -Fire prevention week-----Middleport to step up code enforcement
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Stan
. Middleport wiU tighten its grip
on negligent landlords by setting
.inspection fees and increasing
enforcement, vil~e officials said
at Monday's counctl meeting.
· Council passed the fust of ltaerequired readings of a revamped
bwlding code ordinance tsy a 4-l
:margin. Councilman Paul Gemrd
dissented.
· · The maJority of the 13-page
.document mvolves new requirementa for landklrds who refuse 10
. make improvements to rental P.TDP'
erty, Mayor Dewey Horton said.
A $2S·per-year annual permit
fee for inspection, along witli a $2S
fee each time a tenant leaves an
apartment, will be levied against all
l~dlords in ~e village, Horton

Honon $aid. "It clarifies what is nuisance ordinances and other mcl~l­
inspected. The. sinks must work. ordinances.
The commodes must work. There's
·"This ordinance does comply
no reason 10 rent a place that needs with state laws for access," Horron
glass in the windows."
·
said, adding village officials have
About 400 rental properties are spent more than nine months
located in this village, but only 70 prepating the rules.
But Gerard questioned the need
are considered substandard, said
Councilwoman Beth Stivers, the for the ordinance change.
coordinator of the rule changes.
"There's nothin$ in the law that
"This is primarily for slum· says you can't do 1t now," Gerard
lords," Stivers said.· "I think it will S81d. "I think we can use the ordiimprove the qlialit)' of buildings."
nance we have now. •
The ordinance mtends to beauti·
Council may 1&gt;e upset about lax
fy the village and keep tenants safe landlords, but Gerard asked why
- while ensuring village property landlords weren't included in the
value does not fall, she added.
· rule-writing process.
"We've got to start somewhe~e,"
"I'm against dancing III'Ound in
Stivers said. "Not 'much has been circles. We talk about domg it, but
done by the health department."
we don't fill it,• Gerard said. "Tell
The ordinance is modeled after a me how things are going to be
Lancaster ·rule, Horton said. changed."
said.
Pomeroy passed a similar law six
Councilman Nick Robinson
Meigs County firemen are
"It will make a landlord a lot months ago, he added. The old added many !n the community will
the rounds or schools
making
:more vigilant who they rent to," ordinances were scattered among
(Continued on Page 3)
this week telllag youngsters
bow to be sate from fire and .
what to do It tbey happen to
be caugbt In a burning building. "Learn aot .to bura" Is U!e
By GEORGE ABATE
"Why can't ·we apply for It now employee at $6. ~0 an hour 10 help
theme or the advice given by
Sentinel NeWI Staff
_and it give us some time to administer a Rf!cine housing grant.
tbe raremen, who telllddJ not
Middlepon will apply for a pair - decide?'' Councilman Mick Childs The village ~¥ill be reimbursed
to play wltb matches or
through a· state grant. for this
of Issue 11 projecl grants IO·pave asked.
cigarette lighters, plan an
village streets, Village Council
In other action, council will money, Mayor Dewey HollOn said.
escape route from tbelr bed·
decided Monday.
accept apl.'lications for tax abate· The housing grant program will
rooms, roll on tlte ground If
. The . first project will cost ments for Improvements completed take about 18 months and requires
their clothes caleb fire, and
$67,276:60 to pave South Second between May 14, 1984 and Oct. I, 16 hours a week of work from
encourage their famines to be
·Street ~~~tween Mill and Custer 1991: All applications are due by Lest~.
""
·
sure tbe home's s.moke detee·
streets. The 11 percent village Dec. 31 this year.
In other business, council:
tors are lh good operating
match would require the village
Council President Bob Gilmore
• urged business people and rescondition, In the top pboto,
_PIIY _$7,400, saidJean TrusiiCII, viJ. . cast the orux dislenting vote.
id~ts to attend a 7 p.m . .Thursday ,
Pomeroy firemea Jelf Sbank,
'"J11Vf1*11Mnri'initrir~ - " :_:_,.-·
"It's poltnuafl~ng&lt;a"t8D ... meeting atJ4Mqii.,W,:Va., senior
asfistant chlet, left, and Lt. new pumper, a $196,000 piece
about Sparky, tbe Fire Dog,
T c socond 'prllject wit! cost ofwonns,"Oilmoreslld '
buildina"t&lt;i discuss makingtele·
Stacey Sbank share tips on or equipment, for the youngwhicb was used in t•e pro·
$23,143.28 to' pave Nonh Second
If residents already received a phone calls have local charges on
fire prevention witb Pomeroy sters to see. At bottom,
gram
on fire prevention. (Sea·
Avenue aide streets and will tax break, the).' cannot get more communities along the Ohio River.
kindergarten students. They Michael Blaettnar 1lstens
tinel
photos
by Charlene Hoe• set a strategic planning meet·
require a $2,6ll match. The side·- fund$, Counctlman Paul Gerard
took the department's brand
nicb)
intently
as
Shank
tallls
to
him
streets are Rutland, Walnut, Coal ~aid. The applications will be ing for the village at 6 p.m. Tucs·
'
and Race.
screened to ensure the· improve- day in council chambers. All inter·
~deadline for applyiilg to this ments actually were made, he ested business people and residents
round of grant&amp; IS OcL 17, Trussell added.
·
should attend, especially from the
said. HalF the costs for these .pro·
Council also hired Brenda schools, Councilman Ntck Robinjects are due 10 curb requirements. . Leslie as a Part:~ime, telnpomry
(Continued on Page 3)
KUWAIT (AP) - U.S. and the troops are moving south rather 'l'hursday, was a routine rotation
Kuwaiti officials today disputed than moving ngrth,"
and training exercise that did not
The U.S. ambassador· lo the threaten Kuwait
Iraq's assertions that it was pulling
ils elite Republican Guard units United Nations, Madeleine K.
Saddam Hussein's f!XCCS invad·
away from the Kuwaiti border.
Albright~ backed up that assessed Kuwait in August 1990 and
, The Iraqi news agency quoted ment
occupied it for seven months until
military sources in Baghdad as sayShe said Gen . John Sha· being driven out by U.S.-Ied (orccs.
A debate between the two candi·
Disagreements ~ween the two debate off the ground."
dates in tbe 94th House District camps surfaced thts week over
On Monday, Carey sent a letter ing the Repu~lican Guards began likashvili, chairman of the Joint
Washington considered Iraq's
race is on schedule for this week· armngements for the debate. But to Malone indicating uncertainty heading toward the Iraqi city of Chiefs of Staff, told her there is
end, bui not before both sides James said the debate waa finalized over Malone· appearing at the Basra on Monday. The report, "evidence they are still moving latest military movements to be
accused each other of trying the Mondlly night and will proceed.
debate. He said he found it "disap- monitored in Cyprus, said the with· from north to south with reinforce- another menace to Kuwait and
sabotage the evenL
.
"We have now gotten the Carey pointing that you are unable to drawal "is still going on intensive· ments, and no evidence that they warned Baghdad to back off. To
ly today."
are moving from south to north." ·
back up that warning, President
Incumbent State Rep. Mark A. campaijP! back on track, and the honor your agreemellt."
Malone, D-Solith Point, and his debate IS on," Malone said. "I am
The Carey letter acknowledged · .. However, Kuwait's foreign min . .... u,s, off.icials have said some Clinton·orderod ·54,!XXJ U.S. troops
Republican challenger, Wellston looking ·forward to discussing the that efforts 10 get the debate hosted ister of information, in an interview . 80,000 Iraqi tfoops were either to the region and put 15,!XXJ more
Mayll' John A. Carey Jr., are set 10 :issues with John on Sunday. It by the League of Women Voters this morning from Kuwait, said ·deployed in southern Iraq, just on standby.
He has also assigned more than
debate 7:30 p.m. Sundar. at the . shpuld be fun."
.
were unsuccessful, but noted !llat there was "no clear evidence" of north of the Kuwaiti border, or
heading that way. The forces were
combat aircraft, including a.
University of Rio Grande s Wood . Carey spokesman Jeff Liv· WMGG-FM of Gallipolis has an Iraqi troop withdrawal.
"On the conlrary; we are seeing backed by about 700 tanks.
and the aircraft carrier
Hall
auditorium,
Malone ingston said Carey is anxious to agreed to find a neutral replace·
a massing of troops," Sheik Saud
Baghdad has repeatedly claimed
Washington and its
spokesmjln Ian James said this proceed with the debate and would meot 10 moderate.
Nasser
ai-Sabah
iold
NBC.
"And
that
the
buildup,
whi'ch
began
....-1);~:-b'&lt;JUP 10 the re~ion.
morning.
agree to "anything to get this
(Coatinued O!J Page 3)

Council to pursue paving grants

_:..,;._·

U.S. disputes withdrawal claims

Malone-Carey debate to proceed

POINT PLEAS~. W.VL Grounll was broken Saturday for.
the $100 million expansilll.l projeCt
at Shell Chemical's Point Pleasant
Polyester Plant, the same day the
plant cele~rated its 35th _anniver·

'l (1) stop the hidden tax
o
~erages, (2) prohibit any hidden taxes on food and ,
d Ingredients, and (3) probiblt taxes on p~ckages that
c tain food . .

'·

~ Perot diseuued lnlq, Haiti and
world 'trade. He inltoduce:d .each
topic by oudininl fl!s ·ow~ VJews,

A

811

Shell launches expansion·
of Mason County facility

Needed

Fans cheer Perot,s ·radio show-~
. Perot criticized Clinton's han-, sure they don't do something .
dling of the U.S. military in Haiti, stupid with our armed forces.''
The· new radio host ~ept his
Iraq and Somalia. sa~ the country has lost respect around the · show moving quickly, hurrying
callers along to IICCOIIImodate !Je.
world.
· "The worst situation .you can quent COJJIIIICfCial breaks IIIII what
have is an inexperienCed, insecure . he said was a busy switchboard.
Several callers disagreed with
ri8lcing ~ peop~'s lives.
was ever a lime when we Perot, but most were sllpi)OJ1en.
"You've got 'em on tbe run,
needed a sti'ong· president who
undentood war, it's right now," Ross," gushed Shane ill Bakensaid Perot, an independent candi- field, Calif.
·
date for president in 1992.
Paul in Cleveland !Old Perot, a
Perot told a caller who had billionaire: "I'm getting sick of all
served in the Air Force, "You this liberal media bias. Why don't
you buy NBC?"
·
understand."
"See, you've worn the uniform.
Perot responded with a laugh,
Most of those gu):S up there "It's overpriced right now."
I
skipped ouh We've got to make
I

.

Why a YES Vote on
State Issue 4 Is

:'a

By SUSAN IUGHTOWER
Ataoclated Prell Writer
DALLAS - To a folksy, up·
tempo fiddle tunc, Ross Perot
began, l!is new weekly ndio show
Suildiy night with the words:
"Good eve11ing, this i,s Ross.
We're gonna shake em up
.. tonighL"
Durin&amp; the lint broldcast of the
nationll calt-in lliow, "Listening
10 America," Paol' spent m!l(:h of
1 his linle taking swlpet ll.PresideJ:It
Clintal. Last wcct. Paot ursed his .
~rrs to vote Republican this

ation

Pick 3:

. PageS

Authorities.eye ne·w myst~Jries ·
surrounding Swiss cult deaths

·Flurry oflast-minute bills sent
to Clinton-as session adjourns

I

Vikings
defeat
Giants

I

,to Stop Taxes on.foOd:.&gt;&gt;

~ng with the groundb~ng
ceremony, the company hosted a
cookout, as well as many activities
for Shell employees and their fami·
lies, along With invited guests.
The groundbrealdng was first
announced Friday by Gov. Gaston
CaperiOn. He said the expansion
will add about SO jobs at the 6SOemploy'!C plan~ will .
the
The expansion
mc:Je~SC
. . plant's capacity by 30 percent, and
comes four months after another
expansion increaiiCd its capacity by
3S pen:eriL .
Plant Manager Wayne Love
ga~ openina remarks prior to the
, groundbreaking. State Sen. Oshel
Craigo commended Shell for being
a great corporate citizen, ind for
contributing much to West Vir. ginia.
I
.
.
Bill Bar~er, president of the
Mason County Area Chamber of
Comm~. announced Love as the
new cham~resident f'!r next
year, and in
ecd Lucillc Jdorpn, economic development IIIII·
tanl:;~·on:Wile's
· Bobbebalf,
Wile.laYing
Morgan
the
lbanlred Sbel fer
ill vote f confidence in Welt Vir-

( .

(,'

"

.

.

ginia by ex~,l'
Several offi · took part in the
groundbreaking, includiilg Howard
Samples, an account manager for
the Goodyear plant, which later
became Shell. Samples was the
first person 10 come onto the site
· that is now Point Pleasant SheD, to
begin construction in 1958.
Others assisting in the ground·
breaking were Sadie Bailes, repre·
senting the· Mason County Com·
mission; Michael Scllarda. Pleasant
Valley Hospital administmiOr and·
member of the Governor's Office
of Economic and Community I
Development; House of Delegates
member Debbie Phillips; Rolland
Phillips, manager, Business Retcn·
lion and Expansion for West Virainia; Don Rollins, local URW
president; Terry Peninger, general
manager of Shell's polyester bus!·
ness: Jeff Black, operations center ·
manager for the expansion: Dick:
Oblath, researt:h and development
manager of Shell in Akron: Bob.
Klus, project manager for the
pxpansion; Steve Bunoo, business .
manager for Tri-State .Buildlna
Trades; and: 011 Madrid· of J6bn ·
Brown ConsiiUCdon Co,
· The expansion is nee~e.d
because the lllftet fat ita product,
polyester !Wns for food pactqes
and bevenae boulea, has a 28 per·
eent growth, according to

_tiger. .

(Continued on Pllae 3)

••

EXPANSION GROUNDJUlEAKING ..,. Gt'i!und ,_, broken
Saturday for tile $100 mDlloa eJIPI I• at Shell Chemical's Point
Plea&amp;IDt Polyester PlaaL Tbe aroudbreakinl was beld on the
35tii1Dldftl'lar1 vi tile opealnf vi die plant, ftlch was tormerly
GQ!Idyear. Amoag thoeillreiklag = d , not In order, were
MUOII Couaty Commillloner Sadie
; Mille Sellards ot tbe
Governor's Ofllee ot Ee~011lc aad Community Develop!Den~;
State Sea. Oaltel Cnlp; Ho•ae or Delegates member Debbte
Pldlllpa; Llldlle Morpa, -'c:: developmeilt 111ilta11t to U.S.

Rep. Bob Wise; BW Barker, president ~ .tbe ~ Coaatr.Aral ·
Chamber of Commerce; Rolland Pbilh_ps, ma..ger, Bltlshiess
Retention and Expaasion for West Vlr&amp;~nia; Doa Rollias, local
•
URW president; Terr:J Persln1er, Shell's leaeral maucer of
polyester buslaesa; Jeff Black, ~nshn operatiollll ce~~ter . ....,.
er; Dick Oblatb, R&amp;D ft1811118r trom Uroil; Boll KJq, expatllioa
project manqer; Steve Burton, Tri·State Bulldlq Tndes; Md Gil
Madrid, Jobn Browa Construction.

•

..

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