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D8 SUnday Tim• Sentinel

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Getilpolls, oH Point Plelllnt,'Yiv

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OctoJ)er 1&amp;.198i .

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WASHINGTON (Ary ~ The
Agriculture Deputmelltu propos·
ing to amend its resulauons to
allow horses with swamp fever to
be transported direcdy to alaughter
from Slate to Slate without having
to be blanded.
Under the ~· horses that
have tested positive for .equine
infectious anemia, commonly
known as swamp fever, would be
moved by permit in .sealed trailers,
the USDA said in a Sl8lelllCnL
The USDA said a proposed
4J11Cndlilent, published Ia the OcL 6
issue of Federal Register, would be
"an alternative to the horses being
officially identified prior to .tbe
intersla!C movement wllh a hot iron
.or chemical brand, freeze-marking

r

or i,ir.taUOO."

' This proposed ch1111ge in the
regulations would provide owners
of equ!ne infectious anemia reactors w1th an ..altemalive me&amp;Qs of
handling their aniJIIaiS while pre.

MYSTERY FARM -This week's mystery you ma7 wia a $5 prize from toe Oblo VaHey
farm, featured by tbe Meigs Soil aad Water Publisb1ag Co. Leave your aame, addrCSII ud ·
CODSCrvatlon District, is located IOIIH!where Ia telepboae aumher with your card or letter. No
Melp County. Individuals wishing ;o partici- telephone calls will be accepted. All coolest
pate Ia tile weekly coolest may do 10 by guessing eatries should be turned Ia to the r•ewsr.per
tile farm's owaer. Jast mail, or droL) oil' your Olr'ICe by 4 p.m. each Wedaesday. ID case 0 I de,
pas to the GaiUpolis Dally Tribune, 825 Third . tbe wlaaer will be chosea by lottery. Next week,
Ave., GaUipolls, Ohio, 45631, or Tbe Dally Sea· a Gallia Couaty farm will be featured by the
tlael, 111 Court SL, Pomeroy, ~lo,_ 45769, aDd Gallia Soil aad Water Coaservadoa District.

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v~nting '!tC spread of this commarucable d1sease."
The revision defmes an ~uine
infectious anemia reactor as 'any
horse, ass, mule, pony, or zebra"
subjected to an official test and
found positive.
The proposed change in USDA
regulations was developed in
responae to concerns about brand·
ing·complicalions. Branding can
cause distress to the h!&gt;rse •s skin,
and freeze-marking cin take up to
two weeks to become visible wuting time and endangering neg·
alive-testing horses that could be
exposed to the disease while the
brand sets.
A blood-borne viral disease of
animals in the horse family, swamp
fever is charscterized by sudden
fever. swelling of the legs and
lower body parts, severe weight
loss and anemia. It is spread by
horse flles.and other bitin$ insects.
No treatment or vaccme exists

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f!JI' swamp fe¥~,'.11111 about 1; n,UI;
lion of the 6 million to 10 ~
horses in the United States are •
ed annually for the virus. The
USDA said typically under U1
percent, or fewer thll) l,'lOO, Qf
domestic horses Lit4ied test ~
live.
c

Ohio Lottery

Bengals
•
·-rema1n
winless

Ag department has new propos~1 ·. ~
for handling of swamp fever horses ·l
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Pick 3:

239

Pick 4:
'0792

Super Lotto:

11~'18-20-3045-46 .

Page4

Kicker: ·
296245

en tine

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Those wishinsto comment 011
the proposal C&amp;r) send an origilllil
and three copies of wriuen rcmlllkl
referring to docket number 94-0(IIJ
1 on or before Dec. S, to Chief.
Regulatory Analysis and Devdop;
ment, PPD, APJUS, USDA, ~
804 Federal Bldg., 6SOS Bel~~
Rd., H.Y!';sville, ~· 20782. Any1
one w1shmg to rev1ew commenlf
already sent to die agency should
call 202-690-2817 to arrange tAl
visit the comment readin~qi
(1'141) of the A~culture ·
:;
ment's South Building in W ' . ·
ton. D.C.
:

Vol.41,110.1tl

Capyrlghl t•

1leotlon, 10,.... • - -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 17, 1994

AMIIllrlleclalno. Nw p .. u

.Showcase

Malone,
Carey ·
debate

Annual event shows o«
best in Meips arts1 crafts
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentlael News surr
The exhibits were .in!Cresting, the music wu lively, the food w~ laSty,
the.weather wu wonderful. and the people came - hundreds of them for
1994 Showcase Meigs County.
.
·
Brin&amp;ing the Rock Springs Fairgrounds alive for the weekend were ·
activities rangins from a cruise-in to craft displays, from pioneer skill
demonstrations to school exhibits, antique farm machlaery to artistic
flower arrangements, model traills ta"mighty ttactors, and hand-woven
baskels 10 hind-crafted bird houses.
There wu something for everyone.
It was the IClCOIIII year fa Showcase, co-8p0llll0red by the Meigs County !;'art District and the Meigs County Extension Service.
.
Its purpose was to display the talents of local artisans, musicians,
craftsmen and coUectors.
While the goal wu to iet outsiders ir.. to see wbal Meigs County has to
offer as a tourist destination, the reality of the weekend attendance was
that most of those there were local residents.
There was only a sprinkling of out-of-county and out-of·state cars in
the parking lots,
I
•
Dan l)leff, ~tor of the Governor's Office of Appalachia, came in for
the ribbon-culling ceremony to kick off Showcase Saturday. He w&amp;S '
. joined for the ribbon cutting by State Rep. Mark Malone, Commissioners
Fred Hoffman and Janet Howard Tackett, Meigs Extensioa Asent Cindy
Oliveri, and Park District Director Mary Powell.
• ·
Oliveri and Powell extended greetings and introduced county and
other officials auending. The ribbon cuUing was followed by a reception.
A program of Appalachian music wu presented as a pan of the opening ceremony by Roger and Mary Gilmon:.
That wu the beginning of music, ~..hich contiilued both afternoons
and included The Hillside Baptist Churcil. Denver Rice, Joy Singers. Middlebranch, Mountain Top Singe~$, and tne Dailey Family Singers on Sat.urday. and music students cl Sharon Hawley, the Church of Christ youth
choir, Dee and Dallas, and the Church of Christ barber shop quartet, -on
Sunday, The Orda' of the Arrow Indian dancers also performed Sundsy,
.All of the entertainment
in ··~~~t at midwaJ_ CCIIte!

Barrick, assistaat director, 4-H youth developmeat'. Toay Puscarich, president, Cravat Coal
Co.; Graham and Tlay McComb, presldeat,
Oblo 4-H Fouadatloa. The awards were doDated
by the Cravat Coal Co., Cadiz.

GRAHAM. HONORED • Glen Graham
(seeoad from ril!ht) of Patriot was hoaored for
35 years of 4-il voluateer work at the 50th
aanual 4-H Volunteer Recogaitioa 1'rogram
Oct. 5 at Ohio State University ia Colualbus.
Preseatlag tbe awards were (left to ript) Kirby

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Candidates clash
over authorship
of education plan

RUG WEAVING DEMONSTRATIONAmong the pioneer skills demonstrated at Show·
case Meigs County over the weekeall was rug

weaving by Doana Davidson, Rutlaad, oa au
antique loom.
·

took=
· r#9'~~~Peop:c'Bi.i7Mi~~·~ -·
· In' the log cabin, die Mei County Historical Society displa Cct zommemorati've items fcx- the 17fth annivcnay of Meigs County
outside
served cornbread and beans.
the ~ Citiuns Center codt.cla(Jple bulla' in a copper keale over
ail open
groups of boys and girls Jifayed soccer, pioneer skills were
demOliSirated, and the peaang zoo proved a a popular place with' youngsters.
AD kinds of crafts were for ssle and there were also educational
exhibits by several civic and sodaJ orgarizations.
(Coatlaued oa Page 3) •· ·

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rae,

McGuire, River VaHey; Secretary, John Fllgett,.
Oak ·Hill; Treuurer, Kevla Mallaa, Oak Hill;
Reporter, Roy Luady, Oak Hill; Semtlael, aild
Herchel Wilcox, Wellstoa. Studeat uvlsor Is
Keaa7 Staley, Oak Hill. The lastrudor Is Tom
Jeak1as. Left to right are Mahan, Staley,
McGuire, Bowers, Fugett, Luady aad Wilcox.

FFA OFFICERS ELECTED· The agrkul·
tural, recreational aad diesel mecbaalcs· pro·
gram at Buckeye Hills Cueer Ceater, Rio
Graude, receatly elected FFA omcen for the
1994-95 school year. They are: Presideat Jasoa
Bowers, River Valley; VIce Pre~ldeat, Ben

Business briefs-

BBVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)
-Three of Hollywood's moguls
are teaming up to start a new SIUdio
in one of the industry's biggest
ccimbinations of l8lent since Char·
lie Chaplin, D.W. Griffith, Douglas
Fairbanks and Mary Pickford
founded a movie empire.
Directiil' Steven Spielberg, film
and recordlag enttepreneur David
Oeffen and· former Disney studios
chief Jeffrey
Katzenberg
announced Wednesday they are
joining forces to produce movies,
TV shows, musi~ and interactive
media.
- The line said they will be equal
financial and managerial partners
in the stilHmnamed company,

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expected 16 OJ?Cn at an undetermined location In early 1995.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
nation's farmers are posting a stunning recovery from last year: s .
floods and drought, harvesting
m:ord crops of rom and soybeans.
The Agrlcullure Department on
Wednesday forecast the com bar·
vest at 9.6 billion bushels and fiJY·
beans at 2.46 billion bushels.
The bumper crops will knock
down prices received by fiii'JilCFS,
mising the prospect of higher govenunept spending 10 maintain farm
inl:omc, but the bulging bins sbopld
ha_ve no rn$r impact on
, consumer
(AP)_ or;- scramb~g -·
to shore up Russta s econom1c
recovery President Boris Yeltsin
fired Finance Minister Sergei
Dubinin and asked lawmakers to

7o"scow

.sadt Central Bank chairman V~
Ginshchenko for letting the ruble

collapse.
The bank moved Wednesday to

proP -ujJ the Russian.currency aft.ec
1ts ailirming 27 percent·plll!lge on
"Biack ·Tuesday." The ruble regained 4.8 ~reent of its value
after a nearly $90 million bailout
the bank on die Moscow. in~"·
exchange.

WE'lL GO
TOE·TO-TOE WIIH
ANYBODY

. from lhe tint timt you Nip them on.

ftlfLMI fllftU

111 Wll'fW

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JoiAINI'Isl

- - -- - - ---- - 280 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT

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17!! : ...... ILU.

· liCit ol Broda Stai!ICJ Peld·
. . wbo will lie repraelltml

· tk compuJ Ill MelP Coallty.
' CeUalli'OJie bas I Vlrletr of
~wire...,

· ·" •Yleea

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c:oamulcatloa ser·
aacl prodaefl; raql11

,_Yalce_to~ .

'- ;; bacia;,171teaa. A aatlve o~

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MiillfC;!.'Er~
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Sutton &amp; Cheater Policyholders who are In need of
pOlicy or clalma 11rvlce wiJI please contact:
r
Sally Lambert
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Lambert lnsuran~ Agincy ,
115 East Second Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio 45760

,_eel

'-::1f7!
II AtheJII.
;: Slie CUI be
at CeUa. ...o.i, JJII 1100. · '
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The Sandy &amp; Beaver Insurance Co. has
acquired the Sutton &amp; C~ester
Farmers Mutual Insurance Co.
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effective Sept. 1&amp;, 1894•

JOINS FIRM - Cella·
Jar()De 8lliiOIIIlCfll the empioJ·

B7 BRIAN J, REED
Seatlael Correspoadeat
Sweeping education reforms are
at the top of the agenda for the
Democratic gubernatorial ticket,
and those reforms were outlined by
the party's candidale· for lieuJCnant
governor at a Meigs County Democratic l"arty function Saturday.
Peter Lawson. Jones of Cleveland was the keynote ~at the
party's annual fal! dmner at the
Meigs County Multipurpose Senior

.Phone 992-6641

Jones wu introduced by longtimefriendEnosSinger,recentpast
president of the Democratic Party
m Washington County, as well u
bein&amp; a Meigs County businessman.
"1 was in Pomeroy 18 ~ears
a$1)." Jones said at the beginrung of
his ~- "I was a pan of what
was called the 'Peanut Brigade,'
and we engaged in old-fashioned
campaigning with leaflets in batbershops and beauty salons and
icical businesses in small towns like
this one." .
Jones wu referring to his wOJt,
primarily as a speechwriler in the
1976 campaign of Jimmy ~arter

and Walter Mondale.
''The Democrats had good fortunc the last time I was in
Pomeroy. and there's no reason
why we can't do it spin."
On the issue of education, Jones
inUOduced a theme by ssying that
"somebody's in the governor's
mansiou, but nobody's home."
Jones emphasized reform by
S!lying "it's not going to happen
through the lottery, or through an
inheritance tax."
Effective education is directly
linked 10 economic development,
Jones said, and the Rob
Burch/Pelec Lawson Jones ticket is
proposing a plan 10 lake a countyby-county survey of educational
needs, followed by the development ofa fair funding method.
· A primary ,key in reforming
· education funding is 10 reduce the
reliance on real property taxes,
Jones said, and the Democrats are
proposing a 50 percent reduction in
the real estate tax burden toward
education over a five-year period.
That reduction would take place
in annual 10 percent increments,
and would be replaced by sales
taxes, state income taxes, or the

closing of loopholes in the current
tax system. Jones em~ that
this rep~ment funding would be
determined by a ballot iSSI!e in May
should the Democratic ticket is
elected.
Jones said that lottery-generaled
income for schools could be
increased to 55 cents per dollar
from the current rate of 40 cents by
a cut in merchandising and promotion and other overhead expenses.
"It's tirne In nul &lt;:nmP.O"" in thai
gc.vemor's mansion who knows the
needs of the middle class, lower
class and the poor, because the
affluent need government less than
the rest of us," Jone~ said. 'That's
the kind of leadership that Rob
Burch and I can offer."
Jones announc!ld that he and
Republican opponent Nancy Hoi·
lister would debate Nov. 3 in Mari·
et:a. He also auacked Gov. George
VJinovich •s unwillingness 10 agree
1G debaiC Burch.
"It's a ttagedy that there weren't
m•&gt;re debates in this campaign,"
Jones noted. "So many candidates
OJ;t out of debates for frivolous rea- ,
sons, and that demeans and
(CooliD~ed on Page 3)

Meigs residents advised to take
care before firing up furnaces.

RE&lt;~
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· ANIOUN
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Meigs County Commlssioaers Fred Holl'maa
aad Jaaet Howard Tackett, Dan N~f1~ director
day with a ribboa-cuttlng eeremoay. Takiag or the Goveraor's omce or Apval61chia, aDd
part were, from left, State Rep. Mark Maloae, , Mary Powell, Meigs Park Distr1t1. Showcase
Cindy Oliveri, Meigs Couaty Exteasioa Oftice, took place oa tbe Rock Springs Fairgrouads.

Lieutenant governor candidate
outlines reforms to Democrats

Center.

.
Onlv Red Wing makco hoot• like "'""'A,.,lid stt..:lsl1ank. Oil and w.oter
mistan" And. fit that'scomfonable

RIBBON.CUTTING CEREMONY- Show·

case Meip County wu alrk:iaUy opeaed Satur·

87 GF.()RGE ABATE .1
Seatbael News Starr
~ bomcownen who are f1rinjl up furnaces for the fJCSt time
this year should beware, area health
officials said.
Last winter, an eiderl)' Lol)g
Boaom couple dled.la dle1r home
from carbon monoxide polsonlag.
This yea-, people should take a few
precaulions lo proteCt their fsmilies, laid Zane Beegle, WliWian
with tbe Meigs County Health
~llriCIIL
.
H aomeone thinks they have a
~lem, cbeclt It out quickly. It
C8ll kill you. The biaselt problem
Is the .burning cham6er," Beegle
said. "A Crick will form 1111d the
byproduct of bumlas natural gas is

PETTING ZOO POPULAR - Four-year-old Meliada BarDhart, daughter ol Tom and Barbara Barabart, Syracuse, was quite
likeD witb "BaBa," an African pygmy owaed by Leora Salser of
Raclae. Tbe petdag 7AIO at Showcase Meigs County had a variety
or aaimals including peacocks, turkeys, guinea pigs, goats and
dogs.
'

By KEVIN KELLY
OVP News Editor
The fmt face-to-face meeting
between the two candidates for the
94th House District seat found
incumbent State Rep. Mark A.
Malone and challenger John A.
Carey Jr. mostly in agreement ·on
the issues - until they clashed
over the aulhorship of Carey's education plan. ·
Malone, D-South Point, afld
Republican hopeful Carey were on
hand for a swiftly-paced debate
Sunday at the University of Rio
Grande co-sponsored by the university an~ W_MGG-FM/WJEHAM of Gallipolis.
·
Toward the debate's end the
candidates were allowed to ask
each other a question. Malone,
apparently stun$ by criticism of his
voting record m Carey's closing
stalement, asked Carey if the education proposal Carey unveiled a
rew weeks ago was his plan or the
work of "Columbus bosses."
"It is my plan," Carey rel0r1ed.
"I kind of resent this theme in your
campaign , •. 1 CID IWMt011 my own
and 1 don't need anybody to teD me
what to do."
As Malone and Carey shook
hands, Malone spokesman Ian
James exhorted media representa·
lives with charges that Carey's plan
is a rehash of other Republicans'
ideas and produced a packet of
newspaper articles to bact his
claim.

"This plan is a fraud," James
said. "I think John Carey should
apologize to the voters of the 94th
District for this kind of misrepresentation."
Carey later acknowledged that
the plan came from Republican
sources, but said he backs il ,
because he feels it will work for the
district
"It is a Republican plan, I sup.
port it, and I make no apologies for
it," he said. "Mr. Malone bas in the
past issued the same news releases
on issues that Mary Abel has, so
that doesn't necessarily mean he
doesn't believe in wbat her releases
say."
· The flap provided the oaly frre·
works surrounding the debate,
which focused mainly on the candi·
dates' positions on education and
jobs.
Both were in agreemenl
'increased fun'tling is required 10
solve problems in the stale's educa- ·
tiona! system, although Carey felt il
was a "shame" it lOOk a lawsuit and
a ~ecent court ruling on equity
funding to stir the legislature to
SL;ion.
Malone countered that $1 SO
million is being poured into the
state's neediest school districts to
relieve funding inequity and more
will be coming,
He added that he was against
Gov. George Voinovich' s decision
10 appeal the Perry County equity
rnling and that the legislature
(Coalinued oa Page 3)

t

Detection cards have been availcarbon monoxide."
Carbon monoxide is so haz- able for years, but since no sound is
ardous because it is colorless and made when triggered they may go
days without being noticed, accord· odorless, Beegle added.
But if one smells natural gu, ing to ~ release from the Ohio State
University.
this may indicate a problem.
Carbon monoxide is easily
• U &lt;;OJK:enled about the JII'O,ISIICCt
for this hazard, residents should absorbed into the skin and can
crack a window to eire~ fresh cause lieadaches, dizziness, oausea
air, be added. During the time it and fatigue, said OSU' s Richard
tak~s for a beatia&amp; specialist to Nelson.
•
"Low levels of exposure that ·
arrive, if t~te window is cnJCked,
build up over time 11e more danthe residents should be ilafe. ·
"U later you say thefve stiD not . JCIOUS than short-term, hif.h-level
solved your problem, we'll get the exposure," Nelson ·said. 'Lethal
Ohio Health Departmeat ~tor levels of gas in the blood system
to look," Beesle uld. Sophillic:atod can be reached within minutes and monitoring equipment read levels symJ!IOII'S npldly grow more seri·
of carbon mQIIOllide, carbon diox· . ous.
..
ide and oxygen.
(Cootlaued on Page 3)

SHS HOMJ:COMING COURT- Tbe 1994
Soudlem High School HODiecomlng Court cooslated or tbe followlar, from left: .:aadidate
Keadra NoiTII aad escort Maloa FisLer, caadi· ' ·
date Braad7 Rouih aad escort Brian ,\udenon,
cudldate Erkl D..P. aDd escort Graal Cirde,
eapdldate Courtaey Roush aad escort Matt

Morrow, 1994 Hoaecomlng Queea Tracy Piekett ud escort Kevin· lhle, Jualor Attendant Jea·
niter Cummiu ud escort JISOII Shuler, ~
more Attea'dant Amber Tllomas aad eaeort
Adam R011sh ud Freshmu Attendaat ADela
Maitord lad escort DIDDJ Sayre. Allin, sbowllll
ftower girl Adelle Rice and crowa bearer Joey
I,
Eakins.

"

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Commentar

Monday, October 17,1994

WASHINGTON- Just minutes after his arrival for a private
visit to Kuwait in April, retired
&lt;len. Norman Schw~rzkopf was
asked by a reporter about the continued threat of Iraqi ruler Saddam
Hussein.
"Saddarn who?" Schwarzkopf
mockingly replied. "I'm not worried about Saddam Hussein .... I
think I've already given a description of what I think of his military
strength."
.
Schwarzkopf's off-the-cuff
comments may seem out of touch
given recent events, but our experience in the Persian Gulf suggests
Schwarzkopf's remarks were an
accurate portrayal of the current
state .of military readiness in
Kuwait.
Our associaCe Jan Moller
accompanied Schwarzkopf and his
family on their trip to Kuwait the retired general's fli'Sl visit since
shortly after the Gulf War.
Schwarzkopf was lhere to show his
family the sights and sounds of the
cou.ntry he helped liberate three
. years earlier. The trip was kept pri- .

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Coo!roller

LETil!RS Of OPINION m welcome. They lbould be Jess 1ban 300
WOlds Jooa. All )etten are subject to oditin&amp; llld muat be signod with nome,
lddra1 llld telepbone number. No IWignod Jetten will be publiJbod. ullen
lbould be in 1nod tute, adclrcaains i1111e1, not penonolities.

Deadline for publication
of election letters Nov. 2
Tbe Dally Sentinel welcomes letters regarding the ~ov. 8 general
election, However, in tbe iutereal of fairness, DO election letters will be
aceepted after U n0011 on Wednesday, Noll'. Z.
IDdlvlduals should address Issues and not persoulltles.
· Letten purely endorsing candidates will not be used.
~l'!i should be 300 words or less, preferably typed. AU !etten
are subject to edltin&amp; and and must be slped with name, address
and telephone number. Telephone numbers will not be published. No
unsigned letters will be pubUshed. Letters should be iu good taste.

vate, partly in light of the assassination plot that greeted former
President Bush during his 1993
return to Kuwait, and partly

think, iS a direct result ot the war.''

Sc~warzkopf was quick to cau·
tion that Kuwait's security remains
weauy dependent on keeping the
mternational sanctions m place
until lrsq fully complies with the
By Jack Anderson United
Nations resolutions
imposed after the cease-fire and
something it has failed to do so far.
"Quite frankly, I don't think
Michael Binstein Saddam
Hussein is a threat to
because, in Schwarzkopr s words, Kuwait at this time. His armor was
"the last thing in the world I want- severely beaten, his air force was
ed was the international press fol- destroyed, his nuclear, chemical
lowing me around everywhere."
and biological capability was
Kuwait may look restored on destroyed," Schwarzkopf said.
the surface. but it's a country that's "What I do worry about is what
been changed forever by the Gulf happens if the sanctions eventually
War. Although scars remain, and are lifted, Iraq starts selling oil, the
Saddam Hussein is sti)l rsttling his price of oil goes up and Saddam
saber north of ihe border, starts making a lot of money. Then
Schwarzkopf believes the war has they use that money and s&amp;art to
added a degree of openness to buy technology from firms that are
Kuwait's soctety.
moo: interested in their boUom line
"I think there's an openness th1n they are in what's morally
here - a political openness, an rii~hL"
equal rights openness - that does
Although recent events have
surprise me, given that this is an pr Jven ~yond doubt that Saddam
Arab and an Islamic counuy," rem•ins a volatile and unpreSchwarz!topf told us._ ''That, I di·;table threat to the region, our

you /'iave a RiGHT To

a !:awveR. iF '{ov cal'! 'T
.3FF'oRD

a tiiGif-PoWeJ?eD

Gel,eBRiTY

Derel'lse ,-eaM,

a NiCe CeLL WiLL Be
aPPoiNTeD FoR' You.

The inner president
By JILL LAWRENCE
AP Polltkal Writer
WASHINGTON -First it was opel' season on Bill Clinton's legislative plans. Now even his psyche isn't sah
.
According to the latest armchair diagnoses in national magazines,
ClintOn is:
- A premature adult who felt "primal abandonment" and used his
rage "\o drive forward, mediating ever-higher levels of conflicL" MOther Jones.
·-A co-de~ndent enabler suffering from "Multiple President Djsorder," who 'is ' so open to suggestion as to be practically an empath." The New Yorker.
- An obsessive-compulsive incapable of creativity, logical thought or
[Ifill decisions, utterly dependent on his wife to "compensale for that
helpless state" and on the public for app:oval and validation. -Reason.
George Bush probably spoke for all presidents past and future in his
iliSIISte for what he called "going on the cou~h.'' ·
.
.
· -Thili doesn't stop amateur analysts- and some professionals- from
expounding on the iMer wiring of chief executives. But practiced from a
distance, often by partisans, it's a dangerous game.
"The field qllfcldy lends itself to garbage," says Princeton scholar
Fred Greenstein, author of two books on presidenlial leadership. "It can
readily become sheer bashing rather than character analysis."
Bruce Mazlish of the Massachusetts lilstiWte of Technology probed the
political psyche in pioneering biographies of.Richard Nixon, Henry
Kissinger and Jimmy Carter during the 1970s. Early in the decade Dulce
University's Jarries David Barber publis.'ied ''Presidential Character" featUring psy&lt;:hotogical proftles of presidents fwm Taft to NW..
.· .
Now rt'$ a rare political figure who hasn't been stretched out on the
figurative couch, often posthumously. Just this week a public tele-.ision
documentary on Franlclin D. Roosevelt examined the impact of his domi·
neering mother, his infirm father, his isolated childhood and his dour
wife.
.
: Clinton is undergoing contemporaneous'; mostly hostile dissection on a
p,ar with Nixon. The mood of the time!. and Ointon's elusive nature are
two reasons. ·
· "The more jagged and complicated the figure is, the more tempted
~le are 10 become overwrought in t.teir analyses," Greenstein said.
'Nobody tried to be Freudian with Je;ry Ford. It wasn't worlh it. But
there was an enormous body of work on Nixon.''
This month's 'New Yorker piece by Michael Kelly, his second len~y
excavation of the president's psyche, postulates a pathological relattonship between Clinton and Carter.
: Kelly also cOntends that Clinton's 1.1oods swing from bellicosity to
iildeciston and speculaleS that this rna) be the fust administration with
mmtop aides who've gone through therapy than military service.
· An even more negative analysis is fo&lt;~nd in the November issue of lhe
conservative magazine Reason. Author :&lt;:dith Efron tries in more than 20
pages to prove Clinton is mentally impat'ed.
She claims his tortured deciSion-making, perfectiortism, over-concern
with details, inability to set priorities and hunger for approval all are clinical symptoms of obsessive-compulsive disease.
Greenstein said Clinton's flaws may ile real, but they are "garden vari·
el)'" problems - not signals to bring on the Prozac or the straitjacket.
'the real illness "is unbelievably incaP"Citating," he said. "Ointon is a
penon of enormous vitality and resilience."
The liberal Mother Jones magazine might be expected to interpret
Clinton's p~yche sympathetically. But its November-December issue
~es that "in countless tiny ways, Ointon has proven himself a man
!Kit 10 be ttusted.''
..
: 'That's mild stuff compared to Efron'J contention that Hillary R.odham
Clinton "is to Clinton's mind what a pa&lt;:emalcer is 10 a heart."

In 1974, a student, Marco I;&gt;eFumis Jr., claimed that his 14th
Amendment rights had been violat·
ed because he had been denied
entrance to the Urtiversity Or Washin~ton Law School. The urtiversity s affirmative action policy, he
claimed, had discriminated against
him because of his color, which
was white.
William 0. Douglas, arguably
the most liberal justi~ in the history of the Supreme Court, had very
strong feelings about the case, as
he told me one day.
•~The f:cfual Protection Clause,"
he wrote, ' commands the elimination of racial barriers, not their creation in order to satisfy our theory
as to how society ought to be organized .... A segregated admissions
process creates suggestions of stigma and caste no less than a segregated c hiss room.... One other
assumption must be clearly disproved: that blacks or browns cannot make it on their individual
meriL That is a stamp of inferiority
that a state is not permitted to place
on any lawyer."
Except among some conserva-,
lives, little attention has been paid
to Justi~ Douglas' clear reading Of
the 14th Amendment (equal protec·
lion of the laws). A reckless illus·
trstion of what happens these days
when universities have discarded
the 14th Amendment has been
reported by Scott Jaschilc in a
recent Chronicle of Higher Education:

: :EDITOR'S NOTE - JUJ Lawrenre covers politics and the presl·
for The Associated Press.

'

;I

"At.tht; Uni~~ity, ll.fWiw!!n·
sin at Madison ..; mmilrlcy and nonminority students do not compete
for the same slots. Millard Storey,

i

•

t90.

1\

. • ur;doubledly g"!UPS such as these · ~
has may in praclrce 'be the principal ·~
re'lOrted in The Washington Post, btnefrciaries of it.
"~ &gt;l'o one has ever claimed that the
"But a poor Appalachian white, ·,
J&gt;iscataway school district discrimi- or a second generstion Chinese in .~
nated against blacks in hiring or S411 Francisco, or some other ·l
NatHentoff
promoting teachers. These ~ the .\ :nerican whose lineage is so·,,
director of undergraduate admis- conditions under which the d; verse as to defy ethnic.labels, ?
sions, said that all minority stu- Supreme Court has consistently m 1y demonstrate simi18r potential ·!
dents who are capable of succeed· ruled that reverse discrimination is aLd thus be accorded favorable ::
ing at Madison are admitted. White justiftable."
e&lt; ·nsideration by the (Admissions)
applicants then compete for the
Furthermore, the Piscataway Clllllilittee.''
~
remaining places. Minority stu- district bas long hired a higher perBy "potenlial," Douglas meant .~,
dents, Mr. Storey said, 'IJ'C admit· centagc of blacks than "the per- tt.e ability to oveiCOIJie barriers of :!
ted at a somewhat lower level and centage of .qualified blacks in the poverty. or other handi':£s. For
on a non-competitive basis.' Many labor pool."
m:ltance, he noted, "A b1 · appli. ·'
white applicants who could sucThis way around the 14th CBII~ who pulllld himself out or-the"
ceed at.Madison are rejected, he Anendment is sometimes called gl)ett~ into a junior college may ·.~
added.''
"diversity." A plainer way of . thereby demonsu:ate a level of : ~
Largely forgotten at a number of P'-'tting it in this case is that the mtltivation, perseverance and abili- ..,
universities and in the Justice Civil Rights Division of lhe Justi~ ty .that shows an admissions com· ,;;
Department's Civil Rights Oivision D~par1ment is unabashedly plaxing m.uee more promise for law study ·
is what Justice Lewis Powell said the rs~ card - with nary a word tt.m the son of a rich alumnus who :1
in the historic 1978 Bille case. from that former professor of con- aclii~ved better grades at Harvard. '"
Powell, in his swing vote, did stitutionallaw, Bill Clinton, who
''That applicant would be .,.
indeed rule ,that in admissions pro- di J speak ilp vehemently when he. . of(ered admission not ·because he ";
grams, m~ may be constdered as di~ wtth a politically perilous wdS blaclc, but because as an indi- ;!
one factor among manx,
hsuce Department decision in a v;Jual he has shown the potenlial.''
Powell added: 'Preferring pornography case.
.
As Assistant AttOrney General ·"
members of any one group for no
Much of these bunco .games Deval Patrick has shown in his own ; ,
reason other than race or ethnic ori- about affirmative action could have career - until he surrendeied to:;!
gin is discrimination for its own been avoided if another William 0. the politics of mce.
· 'n
sake. This the Constitution for- Dou~Ias JIOiicy had been adopted
Nat Hentofr Is a nationally
bids."
.
- ' making decisions on the basis renowned authority on tbe First .:J
ret the U.S. Auarney General, of individual attribuleS, rather than Amendment and the rest or the :;
~!
Je:1et Reno, has approved the deci- according to a preference solely on Bill or Rigllts.
.
(For Information on bow to ;,
si·AI of ber civil rights chief, Deval the b.ms of race.
"Such a policy," Douglas communicate electronically with
P!.trick, to change course and supp.n a New Jersey School Board's emphasized, "would not be limited tbis columnist and others, con- .:
tact America Online by calllnl1· ·~
f~o'ing of a white teacher sole.!Y to tc. blaclcs or Chicanos or Filipinos
or
American
Indians
although
800-827-636.4,
ext. 8317.)
.J
kt.ep a black ':~ on staff. (Both

.,

the Democmts should be hoping
for just such a decisi~e defeat:
Responsibility without power for
two more years.would be the worst

aN equally q~f~.)
.. , ·
Yet, 'aS' Malcolm Gladwell

Gingrich and Sen. Bob Dole, the
two R~ublican leaden, he should
focus hts attention on three ot four
big issues and keep it there.
The biggest of all is the CCOII9my, where he would be leading
Hodding
Carter
111
.
from strength. He ~0\dd throw the
possible outcome. allowmg Repub- Republicans' own rhetoric back at
licans to obstruct everything and them, noting their erroneous
take the blame for nothing. The prophecies of disaster after the
national mood would be even more budget battle 1111d upper-income l8ll
sour than it is today, iftbal's possi- increase in 1993. The !!lowing
ble •. and the J;&gt;emocratic Party employment statistics and steady
would be beld responsible. Bill economic growth ever since should ·
Clinton would beCome the centu- be his ~ troops. And he should
ry's eighth one-term 'president
offer a. new economic game plan
It docs not have 10 end that way that features continued redress 'of
no matte,r what happens next ·the balance between the Mll-off,
month. Assuming the American who grow steadily ricber, 111d the
people have DOl lqcvocabJy
75 pen:ent of the Jiol!uiadon whose
· up their minds abOut Clinton, he. incOni~l Stagnate Or lfOW more.
still bas a chance to tum things grudgtogly. In other worils, he
around. lt.would take severll deci- sb&gt;uld crellll'll to the party's roois
sive breaks wil!l Ihe n... but it is and draw iustenance, however
ceriiUiJy ··bte. ,_, ·
yneasy it mabs 101110 of his fat-cat
First, t:':.ottld make a virtue . tc.nttibulors.
out or necessjty and try 10 convince
Knowing that defeat IIi certain,
. the eongrasiolial· Democmts 10 de) he should nonetheless make
the same. Unable to pass much or Congress confront health care
his remaioiog JliUiiram in' the face ·agairi, streSSing the need fBI' univerof the kind of yard-dog partisan sal coverage and pmability. All the
opposition )lfOIIIiied by Rep. Newt polls say large majorities of Ameri·
'
.

made

"
,J

·-.•

,,

-"

• • •• .•

' - -- ~

·I

MalaStreet, a WalbiDpoa, D.c..

t

puy.

'

based ~levlsion prodlldioll C91D· ':
..

'

,.

I
•

- • •.•••••

want both. He should insist on :
warkable welfare reform, which :
craries with it ~th a delnand that ;
the able-bodied fe!:ipients wort and . l
promise that public-sector jobs will , j
be available as a last resort: And be : ,
should force protectjon of the envi- :
ronment back to the top of the ·• •
table, casting his proposals as an ·· :
a!t~mpt to reclailn the public's , ;
'&lt;l!'B:term ~·~ t!Je bqg pen : 1
o:· pnvate eJtploitatlon. · . · · . ,
In other words, .be should run
hc3 presidency for two years as a
rr.an o~ Democratic C!)nvictions,' ; 1
w1ich IS to say as Harry Truman · I
!llll his in the face of a Republican
Congress between 1946 and 1948. , !
AJ with Truman then, all the wise ;
m~ and political prophets will say .: :
such an approacli is either ludi- : •
cr Jus or self-de.~eating. As with
Tnlman then, such an apJ?roaeb .•
could well rescue ·the. prestdent's ,; ··
taaaed fortune
' .
!
Hodillng l.:arter UI,' former I
State Department spokesman • 2
and
award·wlnnlnJI
tor 'and
publisber, Iarepor~;~~C.:
praideat or I'.
Will

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• • .- . · · -·---

- · ·---

-~

· -

II

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·r - .. '
.. .. ,

.

Shtriff investigates shooting

Haggy

W.VA.

'
--·-·-··-·--·--·---'---

Clouds serve.as harbinger
of rain by middle of week
Weather forecast:
By Tbe Assodated Press
Today ... Sunny. Highs from
The. weather's been positively
gorgeous, but into every life a liUie around 70 northeast to near 80
southwest.
rain must fall.
Tonight.. .Increasing cloudiToday's sunny skies are eJtpect·
ed 10 give way to increasing cloudi- ness.. .EliCepl mostly clear far east.
ness tonight. Clouds will begin Lows from aroWid 40 northeast 10
entering western Ohio shortly after the lower SOs south,
TUesday...Considerable cloudisunset and are eltpectcd 10 continue
spreading eastward. Overnight ness west with a chance of mainly
afternoon showers. Partly cloudy
lows will be in the 40s statewide.
It will be partly to mostly east. Highs in the 70s.
.
Extended forecast:
cloudy across the state on Tuesday,
Tuesday rtight. ..Showers lilcely.
with a charrce of afternoon showen
west. Most areas will sec hiJ!Is in Lows in the SQs.
the 70s. Rain is likely statewide on
Wednesday ... A chance of showTuesday rtight.
en and thunderstorms. Highs in the
· The record hisJI for this date at upper 60s to lower 70s.
the Columbus weather station is 83, · Thursday... A chance of showers.
set in 1968. The record low is 26, Lows upper 40s to lower 50s.
set in 1977.
Hildts in the 60s.
Sunset today will be at 6:49
Friday...Fair. Lows in the 40s.
p.m. Sunrise on Tuesday will be at Highs in the 60s.
7:4Sa.m.

Lieutenant governor•..
(Cootlnued from Page 1)
ti :s, and it's worlring for all of us."
deSJlldes the political process."
"llilce being a pan of the majorFrances Strickland, wife of U.S. it v leadership in the Ohio House of
. Rep. Ted' Stricklaflil, D-Lucasville, Representatives," Malone said. "If
s~oke on behalf of ber husband. WP. don't wort to keep this leader·
Stoe said the Strickland campaiga is slip team, you're going 10 be stuck
optimistic about Strickland's '1\ith Frank Cremeans, and 'John
cbances for re-election by•a allOns Curey, and John Knauff, and the
miqliru · · •· · · ·· '
' · guy that Jack Slavin's trying·to get
Mn. Sbickland, who serves as rid of!'
volunteer chief of staff for her hus"It's true that our polls look real
band's congressional office, and as " good,'' Malone said, "but the only
campaign manager, cited the·- poll that counts is the one on Nov.
results of a new poll. which places 8." St~ick!and 20 pomts ahead cit GalParty Chairman Sue Maison,
li'lolis businessman Frank Cre- who served as emcee for the ·
n: 'l8IIS.
evening, introduced Jack Slavin,
She also announced that the sec- the Democratic candidate for coun·
or.d debate betw~ the two candi- ty commissioner, as well as Lentes,
dates would be held on Tuesday in Sheriff James M. Soulsby and
County Commissioner Janet
. Ironton.
"(Cremeans)isltmanyoulcnew Howard Tackett. Prominent
better than we did befm this cam• Democrsts from several surroundpaign swted," Mrs. Suiclclarid ing counties, Including Washing·
said, "so you know that he doesn't ton, Gallia, Athens, Noble,
SC".':m to articulate his thoughts very Lawren~. and Pike counties were
well, and when .he does, they're alsorecognized:JudgeAlanGolds·
Jiieu:y scary thoughts."
berry from Athens County ComState Rep. Mart Malone, D- · mon Pleas Court; Mayor Joe
Sooth Point, began his I'CIIIBiks by Matthews of Marie~Ja and his wife,
aeking how many of those attend- Sally; and U.S. Marshal Alan
ing were customers of the Tuppen Smith. Also introduced was Susan
Plains-Chester Water District,.or Oliver, director of the Meigs Coonknew customers of the districL
ty Colmcil on AginJ!.
"Mark Malone saved those cosOther speakers mcluded Susan
tomen $500,000," be said, refer· Shaw, wh9 spoke on behalf of her
ring to legislation sponsored by husband, William Shaw, candidate
him earlier this year relating to cost for court or appeals judge, and Jim
o' line relocation.
Brushhart
Pike County, who
Malone also noted his work on spoke on behalf of Randall
tl.e flooding at the Meigs Mines Sweeney: candidate for Ohio audiru•d advocacy on behalf of local tor, as well as the statewide ticket.
f~tnners during flooding and hail·
An estimated crowd of 100 peost.&gt;rms last year.
pie were in attendance, according
"How did I do it?." Malone to Maison.
asked, "I worked closely with Ted
s ~riclclaod, State Sen. Jan Michael
Long, the governor, (Prosecuting
0Splt8 neWS
Atome)') Ioltn Lentes and anyone
e:JC wbo could belp. That's pollVETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday admissions- none.
Saturday discharges - Pauline
Smith,
Reedsville.
The Daily Sentinel
Sunday admissions - Mary
(tllrlllll-NI)
Chapman, Pomeroy.
· S'undadd discharges - William
...........
Noodoy
Kin • Mi Jepm. '
PddiJ,
Ill0\oirJ
Cowl......._,
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a.Jo 45769, ..... 9!11-21".
Dlieltar1e• Oet. 14 - Kyle
Dray, Nancy Clark, Martha Antler·
........, TbiMa cln..,.. rr., lid 1be Obll
sou. Mn. Chris Lawley and daugh·
Nt:aqqn Aau I I
tc!r, Phyllis. Oliver, Margery
Wedge,
Brenda Clarkson, Elisa
I'OI'I"MU1D• ..... lddlwl ewsxb 10
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Tbo Dally loatlaol, Ill Coull St.,, . Lawrei!CO. Julia Neetamp.
-.,,(lblo 4578.
Blrtu - Mr. and Mn. Chris
Lawley, claupter, Oak Hill; Mr.
. · ~IATII
and Mrs. Harold Stewart, so'n,
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Mn. Todd Nibe!'t. 'dlaahter, Gal·
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Cndii wlllltoli _ _ _ lipol9; Mr. and Mil. JIIOii lWach.
daughter, Point 1'1--. W.Va. .
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• I

Denver Ray Meadows, 69, of Mason, W.Va., died Sunday, Oct 16,
1994 at Ple,asant Valley Hospital.
Born Feb. 13, 1925 in Poca, W.Va., he was a son of the late Alfred
Thomas and Mary Elkn (Simmons) Mtadows, He was also preceded in
death by a son, Charles Edward Meadows Sr.; brother, Alfred Thomas
Meadows; and two sislers, Phyllis Higginbotham and Wilma Meadows.
He was a crusher opemtor a1 Foote Mineral Corp.-American Alloys
Inc.
Surviving are his wife, Erma M. Buchanan Meadows; daughter 8lld
son-in-law, Carolyn Sue and Wayne R. Jewell of Mason: two sons and
daughters-in-law, Harold Ray and Shirley A. Meadows, James Keith and
Jonrtie Belinda Meadows, all of Mason; five grandchildren, three great·
grandChildren; a brother, Glen Meadows of Poca; sisters, Francis Gillispie
and Opal Lett, both of Poca, and Julia DeWeese of New Haven, W.Va.;
and Special friends, Brian Warth and Raleigh Robie.
Services will be 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the Haven of Rest Mausoleum,
Red House, W.Va., with Pastors Pete Trembly, Willard Bellard, Wayne
Jewell and Mandy Chaffms officiating, Burial will be in the Haven of
Rest Memorial Gardens. Friends' ll\lly call Wednesday from 6-9 p.m. in
the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, and one hour prior to the servi~
Thutsday in Red House.
.

Edward
F. Rickard Jr.
Edward F. Rickard Jr., 52, of Middleport, died Saturday,
l

Marcia Gail Torgeson _
Marcia Gail Jacobson Wiemuth Torgt.Wn! 54! of I;ak~ Zurich, Ill., died
Sawrday Oct 15 1994 at Lake Forest Hospttal m lllinms.
Sbe ~ survived by her parents, Donald Leslie Jacobson of Chicago,
and Ruth lone Connahan of Escabana, Mich.: two daughters, Terry Jean
Wiemuth Michelsen and Cathleen Susan Torgeson; a son, William John
Toregeson UI; two hr91Jlers, Roger Kenneth Jacobson and Wi~ Warren Droesser: two sisters, Barbara Jean Droesse Hellelcson Skinner, and
Diana Lynn bmesser Weiler Baltus; a wmpanion, Thomas Earl TuJner.
and several stepchildren including Jill Turner Riv~, Demian Thomas,
Pauiclt Glenn Turner, Lianna Lynn Edward Vmcent Turner, and
Mlidysori Siree and Jace Nevin.
'
_. · · ·
Graveside services will be 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Standish Cemetery,
Dexter. The Rev. Samuel Basye will officiate. Arrangements are being
completed by the Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland.

Squads answer 13 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergenc/ Medical Service
answered 3 calls for assistance
over the weekend. Units respond·
ing included:
SATURDAY
POMEROY
9:57 a.m., Ball Run Road,
William Gibbs, Holzer Medical
Center;
6:37 p.m., Village Green Apart·
ments, Angie Foulkrod, Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
MIDDLEPORT
10:32 a.m.• Hill Street, Donna
Curtis, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
PAGEVILLE
10:19 p.m., Gibson Ridge Road,
motor vehicle accident, victim
gone on arrival.
RUTLAND
11:28 p.m., Gibson Ridge Road,
assist with motor vehicle accidellt,
Michelle Lemaitre, O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital and then Grani

Medical Center.
SYRACUSE
2:23 p.m., Number 9 Road,
Richard Lee Grady, who w~ treat·
edalscene.
SUNDAY
POMEROY
8:32 a.m., Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center, Harry
Gillian, VMH.
MIDDLEPORT
10:51 a.m., Page Street, James
Weber,HMC;
2:2A p.m.• County Road 55, auto
frre with no injuries;
2:53 p.m., Page Street, Adda
Newell, VMH;
7:26 p.m., Noble Summit Road,
Kennelh Carsey, HMC.
'
SYRACUSE
4:02 p.m., Condor Street, Mary
Chapman, VMH.
SALEM TOWNSHlP
6:04 p.m., Buck Run Road, autO
rrre with no injuries. •

The incident remains under investigation.

Pomeroy B&amp;Es foiled
Two separate break-ins were stopped over the weelcend, butoo
arrests were made, according to the Pomeroy Police Depart{nent .
reports.
,:
. One offt~r spotted a pair of young men trying to enter a side .
wmdow of Karen Haggy's Lincoln Hill home early this morning.
and chased after them, records show. Allother offrcer assisted witli '
lhe chase•. but the suspects were already gone. ·
.· ·.
Overnrght Saturday. someone tried to Icicle in a door ljl Ken ·
McCullough's Mulberry Avenue home, b,ut occupants alerted the
poli~ and the suspect fled, reports slaiCC'.
'
The incidents remain under investigation.

Pomeroy woman found dead
A Pomeroy woman was found dead ( n her porch Saturday night;
no foul play is suspected, Pomeroy Police Chief Jerry Rough~
S81d.
Karen Haggy, SO, of Lincoln Hill, is believed 10 have died Friday
night, Rou11ht said. Dr. James Witherell said an autopsy is being
performed m Columbus and results are not available, but there was
nothing suspicious at the scene.
Three of her four dogs were taken to the dog pound, Roughr
added.
·
b~t

(Cootinued from Page 1)
should be allowed ~to do what is
right" for the schools.
"We haven't gotten to the meat
of the problem: reform," Malone
said '"That needs to slllrt at the top
with the administration in the Ohio
Department of Education, people
who haven't seen !he inside of a
classroom in 20 years and who
have created an administrative
nightmare for the schools."
Both candidates voiced oppositi &gt;n to·"values-outcome" education, and Carey said he supports a
return to the basics in the class-

enti~ments.

Iii addition, the area must be
receptive to new technology and' .
li .Its with educational institutions•
t( provide the training, Carey
atded.
"Leave no stone unturned in
at.racting new jobs 10 the area." he
SL.d

.. Stocks
h..et -

,

i/4

·------------53

»

IloloEVADI

,Meigs residents
(Continued fr~ Page 1)
One other cause of carbon
monoxide poisoning is if snow
covers up vents or chimneys, Beegle said.
Unvented kerosene heaters are
also considered unsafe, he added
Newer trailers, which are more
airtight than ever, can be especially
problematic, Beegle said.
With kerosene heaters and all
heaters some basic !iP.S include:
• keep drapes, children and animals away;
• do not idle cars inside garage;
• use proper fuel in kerosene
heaters;
• it only takes a matter of minutes for a uailer to burn to the
ground; and
• if a kerosene heater is bought,
buy one lhat is circular and place il
in the middle of the floor.
Beware of making homes and
apartments too air-proof, l!eegle
acded. A vent and adequate air
e~change is still needed, he said.
Also, during the winter months
radon rears its ugly head, he said.
"Radon is more likely to collect
in the winter because it's closed up
and.l!ecause radon goes to low
pressure areas," Beegle said. "In
tt.e winter, high pressure is outside
and low.pressure is inside."
One other tip is keep an eye on
elderly relatives and neighbors who
may ndt be able to mortitor problems, he added.

Z.lll1
Cbarml"' Shop-----·7 511·
Cblllllploa Incl.

City Holdln&amp;-----

----------.16

Multlmoclla 1~~~:. ·------.21314
P"'nl BOil«&lt;p
--U

------24

Reliance Eledrlc
7/1
Rol&gt;blno &amp; Myers..-----17111
Sbooey'sloe.----14114·
114. ,
Star BaDk
Wendy IDt'L-------.14111
WortbiDgton lnd.-------lll/4
Stoc:k reporls on the 10:30 a.a.

---------40

quotes provided by Advut o
GaWpolls.

Council meetin(l set
Rutland will hold a spcciti ~
council meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday
at village hall.
'··

Straight- 'Iuc~r &amp; 1(,pus/i,

1'uner:alJlome

Ravenswood, wv. (304) 273-2152
Prented- Atnead- Potbilld
SERVING JACKSON (WV.) MASON {WY.)
AND MEIGS (OH.) COUNTlES
JOE ROUSH
II
\

''

12

Foderol MCJPI
Z2 l/1
GoodyearT&amp;:R------35111.
K-mut
3/a
Lands End ----------.11 511
Llmltecllnc.-----18111'

· Foi lar, llose &amp; Thr,at Including

·•

~

work together to provide ready-to-: ·
use industrial sites as business

1.------------------------------.;
,. Colilflete Medical/~urgical Care

. II. ......... WI.
caii....,._.I44IDIIIIL• ....•IIw
....., of Ati~1 .PPO &amp; li4tr~I ...II.PPO .

•,

Malone said retention of current . ·
joJs is important and Cited efforts
b~l the state, plrticulaity in support·
ir.g clean coal technology, as ways
o: preserving the mining industry
ir the districL
·
~m.
~
"I support anything to help the
"We need to prioritize education
in our state budget, but more cull industry because we need to · .
importantly, we need to teach the P• otect those jobs and that indus' .
b&amp;sics so students who take the tr! ," he said.
ninth grade proficiency examination have the basics needed 10 graduate," he said.
The candidates alao auppon a.
Aia ~
.-1~ • ... '"31
·cooperative effort toward JOb creAbo.
--------'1
ation and economic development in
Aslllancl ou - - - - - . 3 7 l/1
the district. Carey promoled his
AT&amp;T
7/S
belief that communities need to
BuiiODe.
-----lll/4

(Continued from Page 1)
A cruise-in by the Oldies but Goodies Car &lt;.:lob was held Saturday
with ttophies being awarded in several categories.
.
Winning best of show original was Doug Ford of Millfield with a 1967
Shelby, and taking best of show modified was Mike Johnson of Pomeroy.
Trophies were also awarded 10 the "top 20" and the recipients were
Roger Shoulds, Carol Johnson, Robe. t Meier, Pete Hendricks, Dave
Allen, Brenda Keels, Branson Collin, ('en and Ann Goins, Dave Allen,
Ron Lemon, Rudy Stewart, Raleigh Robinson, Tim Norton, Fred Wolfe,
Rosalyn Stewart. Olen Sharp, Ken fleming, Mark and Becky Robinette;
Bill and Becky Lambert and Tim Wilsor..
Witt~ in the flower show, which csrried out the I75th anniversary of
. Meigs County theme "Honoring the Past and Looking to the Future," was
~yssa Holter, best of show in arrange'Dents; and Peggy Crane, best in
honiculture.displays, a basket of gourds Janet Bolin was show chairman,
and judging was by pqlUlar vote of the ' ;ewers.
.In the Ohio Sw Quilt Block conleSt, Pat Jones took first, April Smith,
secood, and Donna Davidson, third. Tht y received quilt batting as prizes
from the project spoi\SOI', The Fab~c Shcp,
.
Bunny Kuhn was in charge of the contest and will be putting the
blocks into a quilt to be auctioned off ¥. ith the proceeds to go into spoo. soling a quiltshow in 1~s.

. I .. lllv.u.r•laa

..
,

Malone, Carey debate...

Showcase Meigs County

John' I. ada,

~· ,.. ·

supervisor.

OcL 15, 1~

at the Western Baptist Hospital, Paducah, Ky.
.
.
Born June 6, 1942 in Mason, W.Va., he was a son of Maxine 0. Hes·
son Riclcard, who resides in Mason, und •he late Edward F. Rickard Sr.
A deckhand for American Electric Co. and Indiana-Michigan Electric
Co.. he was a member of the St. Josef.!! Catholic Church, Mason, Ameri·
can Quarter Horse Association, Amarillo, Texas, and USWA Local1481 1
of Point Pleasant,. W.Va.
.
Surviving, in addition to his mother, are his wife, Carolyn K. Dexter
Riclcard; daughter,and son' in-law, D'Lynn R. and James E. Kee!!:CC Jr. of
Middlepon; three sons, John W. Salta of Letart, W.Va., and Ryan E.
Riclcard and Carl A1 Riclcard, both of Midlllepon; granddaughter, Angela
F. Keesee of Middlepon; sister, ¥aclcie 0 . Lavender of Mason; sister and
brother-in-law, Mary Ann and Kim B. Neal of Mason: and several meces
and nephews.
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in the Fofilesong Fu~eral. Hom~.
Mason, with the Rev. James E. Keesee Sr. officl8llllg. Bunal will be m
the Sunrise Memorial Gardens. Friencs may call at the funeral home
today from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. A Rosary service will be conducted by
Father Melvin Averman at the funeral home toni~ht at 7:30.

.· .

An argument between two Darwin neighbcJn,S~llliJI!l
ended in shota fued and one ioan being taken to'veter..dqiiui'ill
Hospital, according to the Meigs County Sheriff's 'J)epartiliellt
reports.
.
Charles E. Pauley, of Gold Ridge Road, was charged with feb, &gt;
nious aggravated assault and will be arraigned in Meigs CountY . .,
Court later today, Sheriff James Soulsby wd
. I I'
Pauley allegedly fired one shot into tt.e air with a .22-caliber rjfte '
and then fired another shot tba1 hit the victim in the hip, ~
said. Odrey Reed, 61, also pf Gold Ridge Road, was taka\ by .p1~ · I·
vate car to Veterans Memorial Hospital for the gun WQIIlld
·
Pauley was not incarcerated over the weelcend, but appeared voluntarily before the sheriff this I!IOI'Ding, he added.
•
Reed was transferred from VMH !.'&gt; Holzer Medical Center,
where.be was later treated and released, according to a nursin&amp;

Denver Ray Meadows

'

- Better equipment. Just out·
si.le Kuwait City sits a compound'
stoclced with United States militacy
e"uipment. If another invasion·
were to happen, Kuwait would not
have to wait six months for the
United States to move its military :
equipment into place. As recent
events have shown, the new system·,
allows an American-led fighting ·
fu~ to be deployed in days - not ;
weeks and rnollths as before. ·
- More reliable 'allies. Two of .,
S.!ddam's most prominent booSters ;
dr:.ring the Gulf War have made
overtures to the other .side. Where ,
Kuwait once feared that its Arab •
b:others were plotting with Sad- :
,d m, Jordan's King Hussein and ,,
th PLO's Yasir Arafat are now at.:
p ace with lsrsel. Neither party is :
p epared to forgo their heightened
it :ernational stature by again siding.,
wttb Saddam Hussein against .
KJwait.
... ·
Despite the advunces•.nobody in.•'•
KJwait or elsewhere believes this ;
is the last time America will be
ftrced to intervene in the Persian 1!
Gulf. As one con~ional military ·.•&lt;
a~&lt;alyst was qutck to point out: .,,
"What.everyone has to remember
i! that if it isn't Iraq, it's Iran. If it ·.i
isll't Saddam, it's Saddam II .... ,.
'P.Iis is a prelude to at least a quar- ~
tu-century of American engage- !
rr :nt in this region."
\•
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Fr:ature Syndicate, Inc.

.

The game is up for the
Democrats and Bill Clinton in
1994. That•s the conventional wisdom, and it happens to be right.
The real question is whether 1994's
disaster dooms both the president
and his party in 1996. The answer
is, not necessarily.
To take the bad news fust, the
Democrats, may not lose numerical
control of the Senate and/Or the
' House.• but they arc going to lose
political conlrol. The Republicans
are going to add at least five qr ~
Senale 8C8I8 and 3S or mm House
seats, j,ust short of a majority in
each chamber. .
A small.~ ligni~t ~ty
~the~ DemOCIIIII will be
tdeOIOJIC:aJ SOUJ mate.s !If t~e
. Republicans; A '-1er ~ty ~
be traumauzed by. thetr party s
debacle. and detemuned 10 put as
much disllnl:e.as possible .betweea
themselyea llhil.,tlic preiideiiL The
Republicans "!'II have ·a veto at
wont and wodrlng control at beat.
That scenario obviously
1 becomes explicit rather than
imJ?~t It: the. GOP actually willS a
maJOritY tn ellhcr House or both.
'' Yet as counterintultiv~ as it seems,

L~

home.
.
..
· ..Born Aug. 28, 19-M in Meigs County, she was the daughter of the.late
Okey Luther and Irene Collins Haggy.
.
She is survived by her sister, Mary Layne of Cheshire; and brothen,
James Haggy of Springfield, and Alvin Haggy of Bolivar.
She was preceded in death by her brother, Russell Haggy.
Services will be 1 p.m. Thursday in the Ewing FunerifHome, with the
Rev. Charles Jones officiating. Burial will follow in the Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home between 6-8 p.m.
Wednesday.

vi lit provided evidence that Kuwai~
. is far better prepared to deter an:
invasion than it was four years ago3
s...veral factors account for the dif~
furen~:
,
- Better soldiers. Shortly;
before our departure, we saw the•
first demon~trstion of Native Fury,;
a joint military exercise where~
American, British and Kuwaiti •
troops defended against a mock:
lniqi invasion just south of the Iraqi :
Jx,rder. Tht; exercise took place in :
the middle of the desert, amidst '
hundreds of Iniqi tanks left behind I
after the brief ground war in 1991.:
·Though the Kuwaiti army still :
pt..les in comparison with Saddam 's •
n Juilt forces, there is no longer a i
c' ance of Saddam launchinJ! an l
e' ght-hour invasion lilce he d1d in •

Taking the higll road to victory .

Berry•s World

~

Karen

)CareD L. Haagy, SO, of Pomeroy,J!ied Saturday, Oct. 15, 1994 at her

Does 14th Amendment protect all·?

d~

....... .

--Area deaths--

OHIO Weather
Tuesday, Oct. IS

Kuwait's military won't get fooled again

111 Court Street
POmeioj, Ohio

o,...r •

Pomeroy-ft'lddleport, Ohio

fORCUt

The Daily Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Geaenl Manager

,

.;
Page-2-The Dally sentinel .:..
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio :
MOnday, October 17, _1994 1

f'

�•
•

Sports

·The Daily Sent~¢1 ~· ·

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MOildaY, Octobell17, 1994

NHL 'labor dispute continues

Moilday, OCtober 17r 1094 ~.

.

1

, . 4 ':

.

,_

49ers wallop Falcons 42-3; Chargers win ag.~in
By The As&amp;oellted rn. .
Who
die NFL bas to be a
teamspm
•
Certainly not Deiiln Sanders,
who again starred solo Sunday in
San Francisco's 42-3 rout of the
Ailanla Falcons.
Playing for the first time lpinst
the Falcons in the city where he
played fOOibali for five years and
baseball for four, Smders made the
most of the moment
He retum!ld an interceptioo 93
yards for a tcuehdown. got in a fist.
light with Andre Rison and then Ill
on the bench for the second half
wilh a groin injury. After the game,
Sanders and Rison met near mid·
field and bugged - twice . .
Sanders overshadowed Steve
·Young's nca--perfect clay- 15 of
16 for 143 yards and four TD passes
- and left no doubt about the
&gt;
best team in the NFC West. The
49ezs are 5-2, the Falcoos 4-3.
"This is my house," Sanders

sar

said. "I built this house."
Added Young: "You see him
¥,Cl into a fit~bt and you think,
What's he domg?' Then he retmns
an interception 93 r.ards for a
touchdown. It.'s a trtbute to his
playing ability ...
In other games Sunday, San
Diego beat New Orleans 36-22,
Dallas defeated Philadelphia 24-13,
Miami edged the Los An~eles
Raiders 20-17 in overtime, Arizona
took Washington 19-16 in overtime, the Los Ant~eles Rams beat
the New York Gtants 17-10, the
New Yodr:. Jets downed New England 24-17, Pittsburgh topped
Cincinnati 14-10 and Indianapolis
stopped Buffalo 27-17.
Kansas City is at Denver on
Monday night. Cleveland beat
Houston 11-8 on Thursday.
The 49ers jwftjjed to a 21.0 lead
in the rli'St 15:06 on Young's 1().
yard TD pass to Ricky Watters,

Tim McDonald's 49-yard TD Falcons never had a chance as
return of a Craig Heyward fumble Ailanta bad six turnovers. Young
and Young's 1-yard TO pass to wes replaced by ElVis Grbll: early
' the lhild quarter
Jerry Rice.
Then the gaD~e went into Prime cbll'pl'&amp; 36, s.m'ta u
At New Orleans, San Diego (6Time. Just 3:22 into the second
o;
temained
unbeaten as Natrone
quarter, 'Sanders lockecl. up with his
W-eans
bad
three
TDs and 120
former teammate ani! when ibe
play ended, Sanders swung first yards and John Carney added five
and each playec got in a few JiliiiiCh· tield goals. The Chargers, who
es before officials stepped m and scored on their first five possessions, are off to their best start
penalized the cornerback.
The play led to a 34-yard fteld since going I 1.0 10 open the 1961
goal b)' Norm Johnson and set up season.
Stan Humphries was 17 of 29
an exctting sequence as the Falcons
got the J&gt;all again and moved 10 the for 186 yards, while Means' TD
49ers' 10 on a pass interference runs carne from I, 8 and 16 ylris.
call against Sanders. Three plays Camey's field J!'(ll1s were from 49,
later, Sanders intercepted Jeff 3i , 29,29 and 28 yards. The Saints
George's pass raced down the side- are 2-5.
line past the Atlanta bench. He Cowboys U, Eqles 13
At lrving, Te~. Troy ~
turned and started pointing at the
Falcons and talking to them as he bad two m passes, Emmitt Smith
went into his patented high-step had 106 yards and a lliXJie and Dallas intercepted Randall Cunning·
routine.
At lhe half, it was 28-3 and the . ham· four times to take over sole
~of rust place in the NFC
Early in the lhild period. Dallas
(5·1) made it 21-7 when Darren
Wcxx!p;j,icb:d off Cunningham
at the
es' 31 and Aikman followed with a 14-yard m pass to
Jay Novacek.
Rookie Charlie Garner, who
n.shed for over I00 yards in the

puit iWo gamCs-f;,;Phuadelphia (4·
2), was held 10 57 yards on 11 carries. Dolpbllls 20, Raiders 17, Of
At Miami, Bernie Parmilee
rushed for a career-high ISO yards,
including a 26-~ dash IO·set up
Pete Stoyanovtch's 29-yard field
goal 5:46 in!O overtime. Parmalee
also recovered a fumbled pynt by
Tim Brown to set up the tying ID
in the fourth quarter.
Despite Dan Marino's subpar
outing (17 of 37 for 186 yards and
two TDs), Miami (5·2) moved into
sole possession of rtrst place in lbe
Ar"CEast.
The Raiders (2-4) had their own
problems, with Jeff Hostetler (8 of
~3 for 95 yards and one ID) argu·
iq with coach An Shell on sidelit:es after being benched late in ll!e
rust half.
Cvdlnalll19, Recbldns 16, OT
At WashingJon, Steve Beuerlein
thcew a tying ID pass with 19 sec·
m ds left in regulation and Todd
P~terson kicked a 29-yard field
glal with five minutes left in over- ,
time for Arizona (2-4). Redslrins
n: 1lde Heath Shuler was intercept·
ed live times, the final time by
Terry Hoage, who returned it to lhe
~ashi!JgJon 12 .and set up the winrung kick. The Redslrins are 1-6.
Rams 17, Giants IO
· At Anaheim, c;aJif., Chris Miller

.•
'

O'DONNELL SACKED • Claclnnatl's
Alfred Wlllllms (!14) IIICb Plt11bur11b qlllll1er·
bllck NeU O'l'lc!!M!I Ill SDDCII)''I pme Ill Pitts-

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21. lllodoan w-

STATE COLLEGE. Pa. (AP)Just because Joe Paterno thinks
Domet4
football polls are silly doesn't
N, Dol...... 21.-S~ ·koopb
19
mean liis Nittany Lions aren't
New lAndon 52. Norwall&lt; St. PouiiO
excited
about being ranked No. 1
s..d.U.y SL Mayo IS, a-1
for the fust time since 1986.
ThCIIII*'ft I odiJ""Ciftt A». JW\011
Bodlohirotl
The poll and the possibility !&gt;f a
y....,._ c..Jo. :ZO,I-·S.WI4
national title the lOp ranking brings
My.-C..... POillboiian: more important at Penn State
EAST
.
than at other Big Ten schools, tail"""r
30, Loulnilko 2!1
.back Ki-Jana Carter said.
B-39,Siala6
a..... c.u.. 4.5,
21
"Since we were an independent
BoitGD U. !S;"Nctb rem 14
for so long, we always wanted the
Brown 20,11dy C... II
C.. Com«ti&lt;ut 5L :!A, Spoiqliold
national championship because
:zo
that's all we bad to look for," be
Comeii29;B.- 21
-..,do 14, Yolo 13
said. "UsuaJiy, everyone in the Big
l'loddo A&amp;M ll, Dalaw"" Slll
Ten
just guns for the Rose Bowl
FrmilinA Mmloolt t4, lloooplmm.
D.C.7
·
. and that's iL We want it a!J."
Hanarof3S,Colpro%7
/
Penn State (6-0), whose last tide .
tllinGU SL 1?, B"!f~ 7
was in '86, lOOk over the lOp spot
in The Associated Press college
football poll Sunday, while Notte
• Dame chopped out of the l'llllltings
for the rtrst time since 1986.
The Nittany Lions, No. 3 last
week, moved up after they beat
Michigan 31-24 and f01111er No. 1
Florida lost 10 Auburn 36-33 SIIIID'·
day•
managing in winter ball. Although
Penn State received 19 firstthere were times when be won- place votes and 1,48r points. ibe
dered whether any big league team
would take a rookie manager of his
age, he was certain that he wasn't
wasting his time.
' 'Each year that I went dOw"
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Falthere I learned something, I began con's FutuJ_e broke tho track's
to study the game and putinto three-year-old pacing record ·in
practice my thoughts," he said. winning the fealllre race Saturday
"For me it was invaluable. Maybe night at the Lebanon Raceway•.
I wasn't ready tb in8Dage three or
Falcoll's Future, with
$1
four years ago, but now I really fe,el 1 million in earninlf, won by 10
that I'm fully ptepared." ·
lengths in 1:55. The winner paid
Regan was given a two-year $2.10, 2.20,.2.10. Sbarp· J~ paid
.coolrsc! '!ith it ~!ub !)Jll!ooJor the_ . $1.20, 2.10 10 JJI8Qo and SlaP Pan
third year. He replaces Johnn)' · $2.20 to .,.,..,
•''
Oa~. who was rued on SIP- 26.
· Oates lost his job for faillna to
coax enough win's I)Ut of Balli·
more's high-priced llneup. Repn
is convinced he can do beiRI: ·
"I always (elt ~ If I becaine a
manager in the m~~.... leagues,·.I
wanted to
to a~ lhll could
811 "l:tbink thla ball ,
win .. he s8idi'
club can ivin.'I think it can win the
playoffs,· I think it can win th
. e
W
r
~~:::-talking about a' plan :
that wO!jld .take ~ yean,•f(iur ,, .
_,., or tlve .._,..,.. he added. "I ·
•-·
•-·

u-.vwov.n. 21, v.

llooodo,, Od. J3
au..,.
.. -~ t pm.
CillciMoll11 et...lood, I p.m.
Lao Allp lloml a1 Now Ollano. I
pm.
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Sooal&lt;11Konaoo
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4 , 4...p.m.
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OPBN DAm 11u11a1o, Miomi. New
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3

Regan named
Orioles manager
. BALTIMORE (AP) - When
Phil Regan finished his playing
career in 1972, he was amazed at
how little he knew about the fmcr
points of baseball.
"I thought, like most players,
that I really knew the game. Then
when I tried 10 fel into coaching, 1
found out I dido t know as li!DCh as
I tltouallll did." he said.·
Repn inlelldy studied the game
as a college coach, big league scout
and winle!'lciP,c managec. At the
, IUnl of the decide, he atiU wasn't
'confident ~ in his abilities to
apply for 't IIIW&amp;crill.i® intbc_
~
·
· N~. bowevu, Regan is convinced that be'a ready. The Balli·
more Orioles dtink so, too, and on
Sunday named him lhe lith man-

•

Field Ill RJtcille. Pictllred are,
place
ners, row oDe, J.r, Tommy Roberta, Bobby
R!!pe, Ad!J!II BJtll, Matllew Wamer, ud Ben
Holter. Secolld row&amp;colld place, BD!y ~­
lwt, Brice HUI, Danlei 'ROR, Jason LsudefmtiL
Tlllrd row, tlllrd place-TOIUI Thela, Matt Asll,
atld Garr.U Karr

Daniel captures '94
women's
golf"
title
'

game,

....,

.•:

0,

· :
'

r

.Choose an~ t.dm ·

dayS Miami (4-1) did not play. Next: at 'west Virginia. Saturday.
. 9: Washington (5·1) beat Arizona State 35-14. Next: at Oregon, ·

~liahama (7.0) beat Tennessee 17-ll' Next: vs. Mississippi,
Saturday.
...-·~t:vs. a emson.-.......
~.h y.
11 FloridaStatc(4·1&gt;·did notp1aY·•·
.... .

l
''

'

,.

..

12: Texas (4·1) did not play. Next: 1t Rice, Sunday. Next: vs.
Southern Methodist. Saturday.
13. Colorado State (7.0) beat Texas J)-Paso 47-9. Next: vs. No.
21 Utah, Saturday.
14. Arizona (5·1) beat No. 20 Wash&gt;OgJon State 10-7. Next: vs.
UCLA. Satwday.
v· 0 • •
15. North ~lina (5·1) beat Marylaad 41-17. Next: at uguua.
Saturday.
·
16. Kat1sas State (4-1) lost to No. 2 Nebraska 17-6. Next: at No.
4 Colorado Sa&amp;ll'day. • -- - . ..
..
17. NoUc Dame (4-3) lost io BrighYn Young 21-14. Next: vs.
Navy,OcL 29.
18. Syracuse (5-1) did not play. Nelli:~ Temple, Sanmlay. .
19. Virginia Tech (6-1) beat East Carolina 27-20. Next: vs. Pins, burlh.Saturday.
.
20. Washington Slate (4·2) lost 10 No. 14 Arizona 10-7. Next: at
Arizona State, 'Saturday.
· ·
21. Ulllh (6-0) beat Hawaii 14-3. Nett at No. 13 COlontdo State,

Sa~klaboma (3-3) lost to 'No. 4 Colorado 45-7. Nexi: .at

' Mi;...,.,., .;,.it: $ SOO.OO. Thio CD is alllomoli&lt;llly ....,.able.

Kus1s, Satunlay.

Ptnalty for early wilhdmwl!l. A.P.Y. isavailabid u of

23. Wilconlin

the dale of Ibis lu.., but io subject to &lt;hanae.

~-2-1)

.

•

tied Purdue ~7-27.

.

Sa~.

.

N
u:••• ~.
IIXt: vs...................

.

24. Boston COllego (3·2) beat TemJ!I~ 45-28. Next: vs. Rllll!ers .•

~~ (6-0) beal Clemson.19-t3. t 'ext: at Wake t;oresl. Satur·
.. .

day.

,,

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'

'.

Volleyball
tournament
pairings

.

· - ~ · -·

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",-,·--·- ... . ... .......... ,.. ...... ....... ... ··'·········---·-···------ - ·······

Sports briefs-

GOLF
. VIRGINIA WATER, England
(AP)- u.s. Open champion Ernie
Els of South Africa beat Colin
Montgomerie of Scotland 4 and 2
in the 36-llole rmal of the World
Ma h Pia Cham · nshi 0 n S
u:
Y
ptO
P
un·
dayEis earned $240,000, the wgest ·~·
winning~ in European ~i . :;:

:.

G~

Reach Over
J8,000 Homes
In .file fri·County Areal

Miller (Ill), Beaver Eastern
(!12) Franltlin FUJ118CC GrtJCn (113),

and 'Racine Southern .(4) We£? all
seeded in the nine-team Sectional
Volleyball tournament to be held
October 22 at Ross Southeastern
High School in Richmmdaie: ~
winners will advance to the clistr!tL
Trimble, 9-7, meeiS ~ville
Eastern 4-13, at2 p.m. The wmner
of lbat~ IIICCb ~·lo-B,
at 4 p.m. That winner~ advance
to lbe dislrict at l...uc~Pillc Valley.
Miller, 12-6 faces J'c?rlSIROUth
East. 2-12. at 3 p.m.. while Beava
Eastern faces Jrollton SL 1~,().13,
at s p.m._Each of those WJRDera
will advlnceln the finale. Green. 10.7. faces
Sym~ Valley, 8-7, at 6 p.m.

AD DEADLINE
TUESDAY, OCT.18, 1994
Call Dave or Bob
For More Information
992·2155

Beulah Park results
"

GROVE CITY, Ohio (AP)- .
Grsnny'a Adversary, ridden :by
Colleen Tauzin; won Sunday'a
Bculab f'lrk fcllure b)' a IIIXIO, COY·
erinl the mile in 1:40.59.
',

•
'

_.,.... .

-

On
Friday, Oct. 21,

'•'

:

I

To Appear In The
Paint Pleasant Register,
Gallipolis Dally Tribuna,
and The Daily Sentinel

Hiiw Top.25 fared

·

.

-""est

.....
·co.m .
... ••••.

really disappointed with the way
we played,'' Hodgin said.

GUIDE

·,.'

'

•

wi~C'.!t\ for~. but 1 was

FALL RUNTI

.- .

_, .
..,.

of

29 t.o ?9 months.

Schrader
breezes
to victory

the ball for 42 minutes, 40 seconds
in the game.
"The defense really rose up and
played well. h was btg victory for
us," lim Donnan said. "To this
point this is the best team that
we've' played."
Greene, playing with a sprained
foot, was 8 of 14 passing for 72
yards. .
"We just didn't answer the
bell " said Western Carolina coach
Ste;e Hodgin. "I thought we had
something going early in the sec·
ond half bitt we fumbled the ball
back to ihem after moving it weU.
Then we made a lot of mistakes •·

NEW

Lions also are No. 1 in the USA 1), Alabama (7.0), Washington (5Today-CNN coaches' poll.
I) ar. ' l"l&lt;Xida State (4-1).
Colorado (6-0), which routed
·; _ , · A&amp;M rose one spot after
Oklahoma 45-7, was second in lbe beau, .· naylor 41-21, idle Miami
AP media poll with 15 first-place climbed one notch and Alabama
votes and 1,474 points. Nebraska jumped two places after defealing
(7·0) was third with 25 rli'Sts and Tennessee 17-13. Washington
1,463 points after beating Kansas remained No.9 following a 35-14
State 17-6.
victtl'}i ovec Arizona State, 11"1 idle
Auburn (7.0), which bas won 18 Fk!rida State moved .up one spot.
straight sames, was fourth with · Michigan is 11th, followed by"
three first-place votes and 1,402 . Colorado State, Texas, Apz!)na,
poiniS. Flonda (5-1), No. 1 for liv~ North CIJQiina. Syracuse, Virginia
coosecutive weeks, fell to ftfth.
Tech, Utah, Kansas State, Duke,
Paterno says be doesn't care Brighi!JII Young, Boston COllege,
about Penn State )leing ranked No. W&amp;Shington State, Ohio State and
I, at least not until the Nittany V rginia.
Lions have locked ,up a Rose Bowl
Michigan slipped six spotS and
btlth.
KanJis State dropped three. Duke
"We have five tough games to rc.so five notches after beating
pia " he said. "We'll see what the C:.emson 19-13.
por.~ have to say after the five
Brigham Y~. Ohio State and
games."
Varginia moved tnto the Top 25,
If the Niuany Lions defeat No. · whlle NOlle Dame, Wisconsin and
24 Ohio State, Indiana, Illinois, Oklahoma fell out
Northwestern and Michigan State,
. BYU's 21-14 victory over Nacre
they'D be headed to the Rose Bowl D'llile dropped the Fijlbting lrish
with an Ul!blemished record and I (4-3) OUt the rankings for the
shotat Paterno's third national title. fnst time sinc:e Lou HOltz's inauguThe bottom five of the Top 10 · r a l - in South Bend.
·
an: Texas A&amp;M (6-0), Miami (4·
.. .

. ·. ..from

Marshall un.disPuted league·
leader after 38-14 triumph

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) early in the fourth quarter with die
- Chris Parter ran for 180 yards other $l8rters as Marsballled 3S.1.
On its third drive of the pt!te,
and three touchdowns as Marshall,
the No. I team .in NCAA Division Marshall covered 92 yards on four
1-AA, breezed past Westan Caroli· plays, including a ~4 - pus from
Gatorade Punt, Pass, and Kick na for a 38-14 Southern Confer- Donnan to Tim Martin followed by
Twelve young Meigs County racy.
The top finishCrs from each ~c team champions. The 10p four fin. ence victory Saturday.
football fus were winners Blnong
Martin's 42-yard run on a reverse.
/the many tJtat had the opportunity group at the local competition will isben within each qe bracket from
The Thundering Herd (7.0, 4-0 ~ended the drive with a acorto eUlibtl their football skills when advance to the sectional. The win- the J!C?OI of 30 team champions will conference) knocked Westa'll Car- tng run.
the Meigs County Park District ners of the sectional competition qualify for the national futals at the olina (4-3, 3-1) out of a tie for first
~h Jim ~nan. ~ quarter·
hosted tbe locai'NFL Gatorade will have their scores compared AFC playoff game in Janulry.
place and took sole possession of back s Cather, SBld that dril(e set the
· The Meigs fli'St place winners first after Appalachian State (3· I) tone for the game.
Punt , Pass, and Kick competition wilh other sectional champions; the
recently .at Roaer Lee Adams top five scorers from the pool of will progress 1Q. the NFL Gatorade lost to Georgia Southern.
"That was cri~cal. to move the
sectiaiaJ champions advance to the Punt, Pass, and Kick Sectional
Memorial Field in Racine.
"We're on a mission rillhl now. b~ll 9~. y_ards _m a ~ew York
The NFL Gatorade Punt. Pass State Team Championship, to be Competition at the Athens High We're in the zone," said ~ mmure, Jim Ddnnan SBid.
and Kick contest is a football com- held at the Cincinnati Bengals vs. School Stadium in Athens, Satur- defensive back Jayson Grayson,
The Herd outgained the Cata·
petition that allows youngsters to IndWtapolis COlts game at Cincin- day, October 29 at 1 p.m.
who had one of two interceptions mounts 4SI yards to 245 and held
. For further information, please off Catamounts quarterback Chad
showi:ase their talents in punting, nati Novenlber 20.
Age group champions at this contact Mary Powell of the Meigs Greene.
passing, and place kicking with
Thistledown results .
'
'scores based on distance and accu· level will be declared NFL County Park District at 992-2239.
The Herd SCOICd on its first four
NORTI:I RANDALL, Ohio
possessions of the first baJf 10 take (AP) - Grooms Girl. wilh Robert
a 24.0 lead and led 24·7 at halftime McWhorter in the saddle, swept to
after outgaining the Catamounts the outside at the 16th pole and
355 yards to 104.
scored a win by 2 1-2 lengths SIDI·
Parker ran 61 yards on the day in Thistledown's featured
game's second play for a score and $7,000 Joy Returned Purse.
later added a pair of 1-yard scmng
Grooms Girl went the six fur·
.
.
.
runs, finishing with 35 carries. longs in I: 12 4-5 and paid $9.60,
NAPLES, Fla. (AP) - Beth Toray Japan Queens Cup m
Todd Donnan was 14 of 24 passing $6 and $3.40. Mea Neartic:, the
Daniel, powered by four straight November is the only official
for 205 yards with a 53-yard touch· longshot in the fteld, was the place
birdies to begin her back nine, shot money event left on the schedule. '
Calif. (AP) down toss io Tharen Todd in the horse and returned $23.80 and
a course record 7-under-par 65
"Only on~ person could have KenBAKERSFIELD,
Schrader, his chief rivals vic- first quarter.
$5.80. The show was Loy.·Lake,
Sundat to win the World Otampi· hurt me in this toumllllel!t. and she timized by tire and mechanical
Both players went to the bench
onshipofWomen'sGolf. ·
.
went out and did it," Davies said.
$3.20.
problems, breezed to a lO.second
The outcome sets the stage for "She'sa great champion."
Sunday in the NASCA1t
111"'-----z
next tilontll's t.Qumllllenl .in Japan,
Daniel also moves into tbD lead victory
Spears Manufacturing 300 at Mesa
whore Daniel and Laura Davies for Player of the Year bona~. one Marin Raceway.
will be bidding to become the point in front of Davies.
Schrsder, who averaged 60.525
LPG A's top money winner and
"I just got on a roll today and mph
in a caution-plagued event,
Player of the Year.
- .rode it.'' Daniel said. "I think that brought his Lumina to the check·
Daniel used an excellent putting was the best pJJring round I've bad ered Hag almost a baJf lap ahead of
touch to beat Elaine Crosby by in my life."
·
roolrie Doug George, wbo drove a
three stroke$ while dealing Davies,
The 16-year. ve~eran needed
Ford
Thundelbird.
the tbird-pl&amp;ce finisher a big set- only 23 putts, With JUst 10 on the
Larry Gunselman finRookie
back
·
'
back nine to claim her fourth victo.
ished third in a Ilontiac Grand Prix,
. D~vies, who arrived at Naples ry ~season and 31st oversll.
the final drivec to complete all 300
National Golf Club with an
1 ve putted well all week, and laps around the half-mile asphalt
$80 965 lead over Daniel in the as the week went on I started read· oval. Jeff Davis and Steve Sellers
m~y race, had said She wasn't as ing them .a I~ better," Daniel said.
completed the top five, both in
interested in winning as she was in
Her birdie putts came from 12,
Tltunderbirds.
. finishing ahead of Daniel and mC?v- 20.,~. 20, 12:40 and 6 feet.
Schrader's second Winston
ing closer to her ftrst money WID·
Every '!'De I~ up, there West Series victory was worth
niDDtitle. .
. she was rolling the .ball m from all
from a purse of $63,275.
Now, .t'ter collecting $105,000, ovec the place," ~ Crosby, who $10,000
Schrader didn't lead the 150Daniel trails Davies • .total of shot 72 after leadtng by three mile race until almost halfway,
$667,652 by only $10,96~. The strokesattheendoftbreerounds.
then led most of the way. Schrader
took over for the rutal time, from
Mike Chase, on the 245th lap and
was unchallenged after Chase's
Chevrolet Lumina cut a tire and hit
the outside retaining wall.
Engine trouble eliminated .third
'
By The Allllnciated Press ·
.
and
fourth starters Gary Collins
How the top 25 teams in the Assoc~'.led Press' college football
and PJ . Jones and left outside front
poll fared Saturday:
.
row qualifier Ron Hornaday Jr., a
1. florida (5-1) lost to No.6 Aubun 36-33. Next: 'vs. Georgta.
three-time series winner thiS year,
Oct29.
.
in 14th place.
2. Nebraska (7.()) beat No. 16 KansaJ State 17-6. Nellt: at Mis·
There were 15 lead chan11es
souri, Saturday.
.
among five drivers and 15 caubon
· 3. Penn State (6.()) beat No. 5 Mich'gan 31-24. Next: vs. Ohio ·· periods because of sin~ spins
State, Ocj. 29.
·
and oil and debris on the track.
4. COlorado (6.0) beat No. 22 Okiahcana45-7. Next: vs. No. 16
Chase, who finished 11 laps
Kansas State, Saturday.
·
behind in eighth position, retains
s. Michigan (4·2) lost to No. 3 Penn Slate 31-24. Next: at Illithe series championship lead over
nois, Saturday.
Hornaday, I !)95 to I ,942, wilh two
6. Auburn (7.0) beat No. I florida 36-33. Next: vs. Arkansas,
mces remaining on the schedule.
Oct29.
.
.
7. Texas A&amp;M (6.()) beat Baylor 41-21. Next: vs. Rtce, Satur-

yards in 10 plays, with Mills, who '
earlier lost hts starting job to Andre
Hastings, gaining 17 yards on a
reverse to the Bengais' 14. O'Doo·
nell found Williams in the end zone ·•
five plays later and now has 12 .•.
touchdown passes and just two
interceptions in six starts against ,1,
Cincinnati.
With Klingler out momentarily
with blurred vision and Hollas··
given little time 10 warm up, offen· ~
·sive coordinator Bruce Coslet gam- •
bled by calling a pass on first-and· • ·
10 from the Bengals' 20. It wan
big mistake.
:·
Steelen linebacker Levon Kirk· ·•
land made a diving cau:h of Hollas •
undertbrown pass at the Bengals'
3:1. for his rtrst career interception.
0 'Donnell then twiCe found Eric
G:een on 12-yard catches before
"
hitting Mills for the touchdown ':
with 42 seconds left in the half.
.. ;,
"'"""~ 1~:r.
rest~el"recurned
qf' die
biitand
M~
16-of-29 for 143 yards. O'Donn , · "
under constant pressure by a ·
defense that had only three sacks
before Sunday, was 15-for-22 for ,! '
190 yards and no interceplions.

I

team. MI:Sorley would be the first The· Stars said Varvio is lilrdy to ·
established NHL player. to join a be n:called once the labor dilpute ~ ' ·,.
•. ~~
minor league 1e1111 since the lock· acalcd.
Meanwhile, officials of tbe ·
OUL
Others, like Kulri. are starting 10 Swedish Elile I..equC said StllldaJ
move around the globe u players that PoubeiK, the 1iighly acclaimed ·'
explore their options to play hock- rookie of the Quebec Nordiciues;
could play for his old 1e1111 MoDo · .·c
ey in other Jeaauea.
The Kings laid Sunday tbat in a weelc. Fouberg has received ·
Kurri will return to his native Fm- permission from the Nordiques to •
land and pia in tbC Finnish League plar, in Sweden during the lockout.
'It's going 10 be very expensive
during the~ loclrouL
.
10
pay
insurance for a player like.
"1 was hoping we. could get
Peter,
but
we hope to solve it this
thing~ng," Kurri said of the
NHL
silllation. "But I feel a week so he can play on Sunday,"
need to keep playing at this stage MoDo spokesman Bengt Hedin
of my career. I need ice (time). I said in Stockholm.
Six other NHL players have
need to play, it's as simple as
expressed
interest in playing for
that."
The 34-.year-old Kurri, No. 10 their old Swedish team [)iurKarden ~
on the NHL's careq goal-scoring of SIOckholm during the work stop-· . · ~
list with 555 and No. 2 on the play· page: goaltender Tommy Soder- ,..
off list with 102, will join Teemu strom of the New York Islanders, ·'
Selanne of the Winnipeg Jets with defensemen Tommy Albelin of the
their old team in Finland. Along New Jersey Devils, Arto Blomsten
with Kurri and Selanne, Dallas' of the Wimipeg Jets and forwards
Jarkko Varvio also was on his way Mats Sundin of the Toronto MaPle
u.afs, Marlusz Czerbwslri of the
toF'tnland
The Dallas Stars sent the right B.&gt;ston Bruins and Johan
wing 10 HPK of the Ftnnish league. G'UpeDiov of the San Jose Slwb.

Punt, Pass, kick winners named

Lebanon results

I

'

worked cut. ~ would probably play Tuesday mght when the
Thunder hosiS the San Diego Gulls.
"He is ellpected to come into
town to skate (Sunday or Monday)," Gallant said.
·
In p1ayinJ. for the Thunder,
McSorley wtll join his brother,
Chris, an assistant coach with the

'·

Penn State takes over
No.1· spot in-AP ratings

Loulnilko Aqulau :n' w......

K&lt;mody :zo

P!a ." .
· ~allant said if things coilld be

' L'

.,er ~ the hilla'y of the franchise.
RejiBD. 57 • got the brunt of his
exiiU'ence from 10 years of managing in tlie Dominican Republic
and' Venezuela·winter leagues.
Before the baseball strike canceled
the season. ~gan was the Cleveland Indians' pitclting coach, 111d
he ipent acven years as a IICOUl for
the Los~· DoclaenHis moil im~t -co bow·
e-.er. was the expedclice bC piled ~we cal! witJ ne~t.'fCik."

l
jl.

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Soa Dlooo 36,- Orloollo 22
I

Oolplo'"lolf"""' 41, Limo l'&lt;oay 0
Blyiio Calli. 41. Cudllllls-..,
Hadoar 21. Seu1hlnpoa

Cbolk•b
P..- St. Wmdollll22.- B. 0
Oufiel4 21 •At.oo C..-H- 0
Hwlibd Ri.Var 35, au Hi1.16
lteaeDaJ Alter 20, a..Mali-

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AMDICAI'I CONJUI!oiCI

. Plialooqlo
.·~

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IWdon t7,ar
Now YOlk Ia :M,llow&amp;alond 17
Slafnac:looo42.AIIuaf
LooAnfo!oo .... I7,NowYod&lt;Oi•

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11
14

717

0

:;:=Lao.U..

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O.y. Moodowclolo 33, O.y. P o -

Milml

9
II

'164

c..oaa. VoD. 20, W..... (W.Vo.)
Motloaaat3
~it"'de.J\IlicaDe 24. Cia.

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Arizoaol9, wu~Uapa t6,ar
P1-.p 14.~d tO
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Cle. Bo,...'*1le19, CudtnC.th. 6

0.714 196 134
3 0.571 t41 154
u;...., 3 4 U29 101 119
Now Odeoao 2 ' 0.216 119 174

1,131
1,130
l,t21
I,Q21

4-2-0 m
1~ 126

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TlooT'I':IS

Pittsburgh's lead to 14-7.
But despite being constantly
given good field position by a
defense that sacked O'Donnell four
times during one six-play sequence
and eight times ovetall, the Bengals
managed only.. a 47~yard rteld goal
by Pelfrey wilh 8:48 remaining.
Foster, who had four 100-yaril
games in as many career starts
against Cincinnati, twisted.his left
knee while being pulled down for a
3-ym:d loss on the second play of
the game and dido 't return. His SIB·
tus for next Sunday's game at the
New York Giants has not yet been
determined.
Rookie Bam Morris replaced
Fosti'Z and lldd 82 yards on 21 carries, wilh all but 22 yards coming
in a second half in which Pitts·
burgh coosistently moved the ball
between the 30s but.still couldn't
score.
The Benpls labored the.. aame
way offen!lfvely iri .the first half.
driving 13 plays- from their 20 10
the Steelers' 35 before l:&gt;errick
Fenner was stopped for a !·yard
gain on a fourtb·and-2 swing pass.
• The Steelers promptly drove 66

.

{13 of 26 for i97 yards) threw two t
first-quarter touchdown passes 19 yards to Isaac Bruce and 12
yards to. Tony I&gt;myton - and the
Rams (3.-4) handed the Giants (3-3) · ·
their third straight lo,s. Dave
Brown had anolher poor outing (IS ·,
of 27 for 165 and two intercep:
tioltS) for the Giants, while.Jerome
Bettis had-30 carries for 88 yards
for the Rams. Rodney Hanpton
scored on 27-yard run for the
Giants.
Jets 24, Patriots 17
At East Rutherford, NJ., Johnny
Johnson rushed for 122 yards, Brad
Baxter bad two short 'tos and the
Jets overcame six sacks and two
btmovers by shutting down Drew
Bledsoe (22 of 41 for 242 yards
and one interception). Boomer Esi- ·
ason, still boihered by an ankle
injury, lost two fumbles and was 12
of 17 for I07 yards.
Colts l7, Bills 17
At Orchard Park, N.Y., Jim Harbaugh threw for 206 yards and two
TDs and the Bills fell out of rtrst in
the AFC East Harbaugh was 18 of
22 before leaving in the fourth
quarter with a bruised throwing
hand. On Don Majkowski's. first
pass, he hit floyd Turner for a ~9yard touchdown score- the Colts' ,
ftrst fourth-quarter TD all year- t
10 make it 24-10 with.8:14 to go.
.

Bengals remain winless
PITTSBURGH (AP) - The
Piusbwgb Steelen bad Barry Fos·
ter for only one carry and still
found a way.to win. The Cincinnati
Bengals inissed David Kliuglec for
one play and it cost them a loss.
The Steelen, slowed offensively
after Foster injured his knee, turned
an inltlCeption of Don HOilas' only
pass this season into Neil O'Don·
nell's 14-yard touchdown pass to
Ernie Mills and a 14-10 victory
Sunday over Cincinnati.
. O'Donnell also threw a I 3-yard
touc.hdown pass to John L.
Williams as the Steelers (4-2)
scored all of their points in just
over three minutes of the SCCOI!d
quarter to beat the winless Bengals
(0-6) for the seventh Sllaight time.
Pittsburgh bogged down after
that without Foster, the AFC'ssecond-Ieading t:USher. bitt die Bens.aJs
couldn't c:onvert numerous IICOnll8
opportunjtiel and their only tcueh..- dowti carile ot\ a fake'Wield·goat. v ,..,
Lee Johnson, lining liP to hold
for kicker Doug Pelfrey, shoveled
the ball to blocking back Jeff
Cothran for a 7-yard touchdown
piSS early in the lhild quarter to cut

By JEN RAPPoPORT
AP Hockey Writer
Jar! Kmri is going blck to F'm·
land. Peter Fon1ttzi to Sweden and .Marty McSorley looks like
he's laded for Las Vegas.
They are 101ong several NHL
playm loolrin&amp; ror WOit during the
NHL 's currentlockouL
A spokesman for the Las Vegas
Thunder confirmed Sunday the
International Hockey League team
is "very, very closo!' to a deal with
McSorley, the Los Angeles Kings'
veteran forward-defensanan.
"We're hoping (the deal is)
done," said Kevin Gallant. public
relations director for the Thunder.
"He wanted to stay in shape and

I

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Page'

·e

The DallY .~tlnel

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday; OCtober 17, 1894:
• ..

•
5

-

.Mother's tragedy becomes prime ·time entertainment
J)e~r Aaa Laadera: I sot
cli,vmllct wben my 1011 wu a.baby.
B!CIIIbouabllaldlcllllniagcfrom\
hell, lnow:r let my 1011 Steve know
how awful i was.. Por .lhc next IS
yan, be en~ Ilia fithcr'a love
and oompanjonllhip.
·
: Last April, Steve WCIIt for his
~ cvcry-ll!'Jer-w~ visit to
11(1 falilel'. While the two of them
~bike ridins, Steve was bit by a
truck driven by a 19-year-:eld. He
Wllokillcd instandy. No rccklcasness .
or alcohol 'Nil involved. No charges
wem filed. The young driver was
~ct. This ~ident c;ould have
hlppeacd to anyone.
"
· The media was absolutely
heartleaa. The pi.c tures ·in the
hewsplper wem enough to sickeil
811)' ~ who saw them. Photos
~)be ICCidcntwem on TV less than

4S minutes after I was told about it
When I went to my molhcits horne
to notify her, abc was already
watcbing it on tile news.
For weeks, I would not look at a
TV far fear of seeing Steve's crushed
bicytlc. I thOught the worst was
finally behind me, but last week, I
received .a phone message saying
one of the news llations was doing
an interview with my son's falhcr. I
turned on the TV, and there was my
child's crusheQ bike and the
accident scene 1had bied so hard to
avoid, All those hideous memories I
had succeeded in putting in the
back of my mind came rushing
forward.
1am heartsick. My son was every
mother's dream of a child. Is "news·
that &lt;ifnponant? Do people really
enjoy ttagedy that much? Where has

compassion gone? I need some
answers. •• LISA DANER IN

journalism srabs the reaclcn. It's u
simple as ihat.
MIDLOTHIAN, VA.
Dear .ADD Landen:, The lou«
DEAR LISA: I shall not llf.Cmpt you published a while back from an ·
to apologize for what often appears .overwcisht woman who was
to be . ~ insensitivity on die part . offended when iskcd ·if slie wu
· of the media. but I will try to pregnant reminded me of an
explain iL Ratings are the lite's blood experience I had many years 1110·
of the television news business. In
My two pfidlwfll*n, 18'11 5
order to get viewers, the TV
reporters go afrer the sensational, the and 6, ~ told ... tbeir llllll wu
dnunatic •• a story that has a great going 10 have a llaby. They both
deal of human interesL They are not w= aware rl "die facts of life.•
concerned about the families of the Later, I O'lerbearcl a ooavcnation
victims. Cold? Rulhlcss? Yes, but between the two rl them lhlt -u
IIOtJICihing lite dill:
TV news is a business.
The 6-ycar-old aid, "Do you
I often have deplored cJose:.ups .
of mourners at the funerals of
celebrities, but those shots are the
ones that TV, magazines and '
newspapers ani interested in because
tbe public laps it up. Tabloid

.Reynolds addresses political
·correctness at DAR meeting

bc&amp;vc Auntie Lu Ia Pill to have a
baby? Sbe iuo lkinay ." _
Tile S:year-old Nplied, "I coulcl
believe it a lot better If it wu
Onndma." - S11IL LAUOHINO

Nk)nda~October17,1994

)

. •'

---,:
.A:nn
Landers

UIELLIIII

INCAUPolooA
DBAR.CALIFORNIA: And I am

Oem of tbe Day: Don't usume
everyone II aSunday drlvcr.lt mlibt
be a Friday driver ltilllooking for a
place to pirt.
/1 life paulllg )'011 by? WQIII to
impro11t yow IOdollki!ls? Wrmfor

blUilteu-.riu IIIW!k/pe tllld a clwck ·

OT lri/JMy Order for $4./J (llfil

ill• :

eludes postage tllld lltuldlillg)

I(); :

Public Notice

NOTICE OF EtiCTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCI;$S OF
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
Aevlood Code, Sections
3501.11(G), 5705.19, 5705.25
Notice 11 hereby given
that In purouance of a
Aeaolu11on of the Board of
Township Truotees of the
Townahlp of Salem, Salem
Canter, Ohio, palled on the
26th day o! July, 111114 thoro
will be submitted to a vote
of the people of uld
· aubdlvl,alon at a General
Election to be held In the
Township of Solem, Ohio, at
~ ~lia eo~lector. "~s
the regular plac01 of voting
brlil~ back memones and 11ves
therein, on the 8th day of
ev'o rybqdy a fall taste of the
Nov...,btr, 19114, the
~·· .. ~
· quetlllon of levying o lox, In
. :Tile video festival, dubbed die
exceu of the ten mill
limitation, lor the benefit of
"WOrld Serious," was org~izod
Salam Townthlp lor the
.....7 ~ JIPI!P called the Committee·to
pyrpoat of Mtlnhllnlng a_nd
"
· Jlltimacy in Buebl11. The ·
Oll!rtlllng Ctrntltrftl,
_, .
beenpuihing the idea Qf
·- SifcJ iaxlieiJ!a: A re~efOel
·
an old~f1111hioned ballpark
of an axtatlngtax of t/2 mill
at a rate not axcttdlng 1/2
downtown.
mlila lor ttiCh o"' dollar of
Durillll lhc summer, the~tl
valuation, which ........ nta to
l)linted a replllioo·aized
five
($0.05) lor each
• one cents
hundrid dollar• of
held o n
. = lot it said~
be the
OCt lite.
.
..
vafutlllon, lor nve (5) yaara.
The Pollalor Hid Etec:llon
die ltrike having sc~ .
will
open at 1:30 o'clock
the wcidci SerieS for lhc fUJI wne
A.M. and remain open until
-.
~
1904
the
lfOIIP
aDotber
llliC:C
,,
•
7:30 o'clock P.M. of said
day.
cJuco tapromote 1ts - ·
·
Dated Sept. 26, 11194
'TIIil d our anaws ~· a mt.bc:F
· By order oflhe
......... and llllbef ~t- '
Board of Electlone,
, jJif • to.''" buct;U ~ ~dt
of M•lga County, Ohio.
' our 1C11D ID fUll pJace, ' aai4 Jim
Hanry L Hupter, Chairmen
Alit D. SmHh, Dlrte:lor.
1'J'_ .U;. a clownrown ·~
(10) 10, 17, 24, 31 ; 4TC
... ~of t!lcJCO!D".:'! llid

cz:.
· w· ·

..w

KCidupobamlll oe .._.,l

11562, Clricago,IU. 6061UJS62. (Ill ·
Callllda, IIIJil $SM.)
:

DR.GOTT

f

r

•

•

Art Lewis St.
Middleport, Ohio

701

. 45768
.

'

Phone: 992-6926

-RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
GUN SHOOTS
SAT., 6:30 P.M.
12 Gaige
Factory Clloke Oily
Basllt.B-119

'

"

T0.$44,1100.00

HENRY 1!. CU!LAHD--_:.,_"_._ ___,112..111
TRACY BRINACEA...--- - ·- - -- - -"·14..2431
SHEAR! HART--"- -""" '' _ _ _ :____ _ ,742•2$57
HENRY E. CLELAND AI..- -·- -··---- -·-·-··112_.1 11
KAlliY Cl.ELAN0----- -"------- "112..111
oma:....- - - ··----·- - - - - -- -- - ·112-22511
Public Notice
.. ..._.,

..

. '\

*

Public Notice .

.,,,
"'
•l

'v

••

•

,

ONE ITEM- ONE FREE AD PER WEEK

·.I

(NOTE: 15 WORD LIMIT AND YOUR SELLING PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
.
·
(SORRY, THIS DOES NOT APPLY TO YARD SALES)
,
.

,)

•T

...

emergency requirementa oft

NAME=------------------~~~~~~~~--

'the achi&gt;ol district.
Said tax being: A rentwar ·
of an existing tax of 4.4
milia at 1 rete not exceeding
4.4 milia lor each one dolltr
of valuotlon, which amountt
to forty-tour ctnta ($0.441 ,
lor each one hundred .. '
dollar~ of valuation, lor two
(2) yeare..
The Pollalor uld Election
.'
will open at 1:30 o'clock.
A.M . and remain open unjll
7:30 o'clock P.M. of. tald
doy
Dlltd Sept. 26, 111114
By order oftht Board of .

PHONE=------------~------------~--~

'.

MAIL

TO:··- ------------------_.;.---

.,j'

..
•I

:;

....

The Daily Sentinel

Ele~lona, '

•

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Qhlo 457&amp;9
(Offer Expires November 15, 1994) ·

'-------------~~---- ~--~·.'!, '
...

I -'

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.. , ·- __..

-..

~-

Kenny's Auto Cent.r
264 Upper River Rd.
Gall~lis, OH 45631

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice Ia given that
numerous subscribers ot
the Pomeroy Exchange of
GTE North Incorporated
have flied a petition wllh the
Public Utilities Commlulon
of Ohio aeoklng tho
Institution of 1wo-way,
nonoptlonal extended area
aervice · between the
Pomeroy Exchange and the
Mason Exchange of Bell
, Atlantic Weal VIrginia, Inc.
and the New Haven
Exchange or Citizens
·Telecommunications
Company ot Woat Virginia:
The Commission has
scheduled,thla mattar. Case
No. 92·2046-TP·.PEX, for
public hearlng at 10:00 p.m.,
on Wednnday, Novsomblor
Hi. 1994 at tho an or
Citizens Center, Mulberry
His .. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769·
Any Interested person may
obtoln further Information
by directing an Inquiry to
tho , Public Utllltlu
Commission of Ohio, 160
East .Broad · Strtlt,
Columb·ua, Ohio 43266 •
3713.
(10) 17, 24,31 ; 3TC

Starting Sun. Oct
9th Racine Legion
POIII602 6:45 pm
T~ls ad good for 1
FREE CARD

949·2038
949-2749
Uc. No. 0182·27

WHALEY'S AUTO

PARTS
Specializing In Cuatom
.Frame Repair
NEW·&amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL IIAKES &amp; IIODELS
U2·70U OR
112·5552 OR
TOLL FREE 1.. 00·141·1070
DARWIN, OHIO
7f.a11D1 ~

.,.....

ForAD•Ior

NOTICE
TO THE DEFENDANT,
RONALD DIGANGI, WHOSE
RESIDENCE IS UNKNOWN:
IN lliE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Courthoun, Welt Second
strttt, Pomeroy, Ohio 411761
Kannotha Dlgongl,
Middleport, OH 45760,
Plllnllff
Can No. 94-DB-38
VI.
Ronald Dlgongl, whoat
r~aldenctlo unknown,
poltndon!
Plaintiff hoa brought lhla
action nomlng you at the
Dtiltndanl In the obovt·
named court by tiling her
complolnt on February 2~,
111114.
The · obJect of 1ht
complaint 11 to obtain a
dlvorca tram you and the
demand lethal Hid Plaintiff
bt grontod a divorce from
you:· that a rottonabla
dlvlalon of '"' ptroonll
property bt made; that 1
reeaantblt dlvl1lon of the
merllal debto, II 1ny, ba
made; and lor such other
rtlltl u may be prop11 In
lew and/or · equity be
Public Notice
· granted.
_ ....;....:;,;;.;;__ ____....,..
You are required to
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON anawer lht compl1tnt within
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF twenty-tight (21) d1y1 alter
THE TEN MILL UMITATION ' tht tall publication of lhl~
- Atvlttd Coda, Stctlona
notlot, which will ·be
3!501.11(G), a~.tt, 57015.25 pulllllhed once each lf"k
Notice It ·hereby ghian ·lor tlx euccaaalva wteko,
that, tn purauance of a and lhl leal publication will
reaolutlon of the Botrd of

Tab the pain out of
PlifiUng. IAI Ill' do It for
you. v.ry -nabla.

F,.. Eatlmalal
Befora 8 P·"'· luva
menaue.
Affllr 8 p.m.
814-1185-4180- -- . -·
-· -

l1ed Appliaaces
for Salt
Call

lack Hoe
Senlce
Hay for Sale
Dnl• Wlllla111

....,.

-

C01tractl•t
&amp; lxc.a vallll
~ "2'"4'103

10117Mn

.............
ao..,

per ,.111 far flilneMCI Cllls.

We Buy All Non Ferrous Metals

CALL FOR CURJEIIT PRICES

992·5114

t~11Nfl

a Solid

1W13/TFN

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY
1182-2086

.ILift WillOW mtEMI

550 Page St., Middleport

Fr•Eallm7/2Mfll

llade

vinyl

Announcemenls

replacement
windows
• Free Estimates
• $200 Installed
Call For Details
•VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"
110 Court St.. Po11!9rpy, Ohio "Look for. the Reel and White Awning"

992-4119 AI Tro• Owler 1·800.291-5600

HAULING

Pu..,._.: Two 1.2
Burr, t1WIIf4l'OO.

3

U11estone .
Gravel &amp; .Coal

Lab, &amp; 1.2

Hulky, One W Lab, A W PI

pu.,.__

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

Wllntlld

To

Buy:

J.....

Wot

Wllh Or WllhoLC llol- Col.

LMrr Lholy. 114 311 1111

1 mlxld brMcl
COlONel W.nled To Bur: PI:' 1h iill
blond, ton. .-y ~ II• Toblo, 11n1p Poe.....
175-4501.
11WMit11.
Cata to ahwacJ to good home. ;::WII::nt=lld~l;::o=:8:uy-: -:Rod
:-:--::--::..
IIWif-'1210.
- - . 114-146-421:1.
.

Joe II. Sayre

Young . - - . flol.llll-4281 . .

SAYRE TRUCKING

6

-·-

614·742·2131

Lost &amp; Found

LOST _ , P.,ltl cllun:h, b11t
ub pert Shophord, - n g
red collllr, named ........,.. ~

Top -

Pold: AI Old U.S.

CoiN. Gold Ringo, Silver Colno,
Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin 8tlop.
1S'I s.cond A~ Oll'r '
·
W.ntod to Buy: Utod lloblo
Homo Coli 1111-441-0111.
'

1171·1111.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Addition•
-New Garage•
oEiectrleal &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
ofnterlor &amp; Exterior
Painting alao concrete
work
(FREE ESnMATES)
V.C.. YOUNG Ill
882-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

UCINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
fRIDAY NIGHTS
6:30P.M.
12 Gatrge Otly
Untltecl: 740
Ba'"ore, 680 Frail

llr'HW2tfn

Jess' Com£/ete
Auto Upbo stery
Headllnera, Cuatom

s..t CoveN &amp; C.rpet
Convertible Top1,
AnilqueC.N,
Boat Sella
zo r... Cxptr1tnct
41484 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, Oh. 457&amp;1
114-112-7587

&amp;

R.1rkhn~~

Tr.rill't Sri·":.
OttVI." I:. t~'':o. St&gt;p!H

Sy·. tl'nr·. \'J.tt.r 6

s. , ·~·_,,. ,

Lrn•"•. L.md Ch.·.H tt 'q
Trur:krtH_I llll"l":.torH· ."-.
Fill Drrl To p Snrl

RP. ro.;orJ.rbh· R.~!P ~
f c.!t"l!.llt''&gt;

992·3838

IIOW S1AI1111G
forked Ru•
Sportsma•
Gu1 Club
Gu1 s•oot
Ivery Su1day
1:00 P.M.

DAVE'S
SW.IP SHOP
One mila out
143 from Rt. 7
1i1118.-Wad••Frl •-sat.
1-6

oCraftsman Tools
•Toys
oGiauwara
Loads of Misc.

12GBuge
Factory Only

=:::;:;~~,_~-~
!
-"--- - - - - ____ _..;._..;,_ AMBERWOOD
KENNE~

Public Notice
Larry E. Spencer,

Cocker Spanlele
Bred for
Qullllty and
Tef1l!OIInteni
.
Pa -ooro,.
Spodllzl!l(l In 11
lor lhow and comPifllona.
Stud Nrvlot &amp; ,...,.,....
--"""· ,
youngaci.tttatortaioR.
48750 Mile HU d.
Racine, Oh
11+04~487 ·

be mido on October 24,
Clerk oltht court of
111114.
Common
In Cllt of rour ftllurt to
Pleas, Mtlga County, Ohio
anawer or otherwltt
Courthoutt, weal Second
roapond oa permitted by the
•
S!ratt o
Ohio Rulea of C.tvll
Pomeroy, Ohio 457611
Prac-ure
-•
wlthln the time
By: Morleno Horrtton,
stated, Judgement · by
D uty
de.lault will ba rendered ·
op
.agolnat you 'lor tho relief ~~~~~; ~; t7, 24 ; &amp;TC
dtmandod !Illite complaint.
.. . 1

'

Ev4rla•ti•l•
614-247-4035
Now open for Fall
Season
Wed. thru Sat. 9·5

Specializing:
Dried Materials
Pot pourri supplies

Herbal Crafts

•New Homes
OGaragea
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
915-4473
.

~J

Lott:
Bilek
And
Whh
Auotrallan Shophonl. Noo~ond
lla!e, Uahl £po, llltolna
Slnco di:t Mh In Vlnlon. Coli

S3illryM Pt.oe

Middleport
112·2772
Olllc:e Houra: Mon..fri.
; 1:00 ..,..3:30pm
VInyl &amp; Alum. Skiing,
1
Roofing, Vlny
' Rapl~eement

Wlndowa, Blown

lneulatlon, Stonn
Doora, Stonn ·

a.ragae,

Free Eattm-

114 1

7

Yard Sale

Gutter Cl88n1ng
Painting

FREE ESnMATES
9:49-2168 .,

, _ TFN
61

Help wanted

"" -·• AVON

Cllrltl. . -

":a111r1tvn

I na Ilona. •m blJoo

a po S
&amp; VIcinity

31a-112·2ll46 or 1
1-431&amp;.
1 ·Dr'- NMdod To Ft1 ,.._
Pooltlon For Toom Attn

-..o
s Doro

-h

A
Wook.
Horrio
w - Aoolicont
.., . ....

4 FomiiY Slit: Frttloy A SltUI' COl Wttll bC&lt;Iblta ~
do Ocl 21ot 22nd 1151 Knl,. mtnl. 1 Yoor Ovot Tho Rood Ex·
B~k Rd, Ooli\potio, 'OH 114-441- oorlonoo. Ex~ Poy
0331.
Coro Pion, I
-5685.
ALL Yonl Slloo lluol lo Pold In - n Croollorw -ltlng I
Advo,_. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m. onlh..lutlc lndlvldlllla to tho cloy bltono tlto lid It to run. ,_ tonttooy, &amp; . - hlglt

tom-

Suntloy odhiCOI • 2:00 p.m. -1-loy,
pralll.
Frldoy. llondoy lldhlon • 2:00 For oppl., 1-.u-2417.

p.m. Saturday.
AIM •-ny hot opon1ng ""
SAlt
Con10111ry on Acoounllng Aaolttant, T.....Tuoocioy 10111. t :oa _,......, ••""'*- ,.-.
to 1:00
wldo VOtloty at !lulloo, wo wt1
Ylnl

lnt_.,.... __

l roltt In _....., ,_........ "

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

wn•·to: a.. ~' o/0 Pl.
P I - Aoaltlor, 200 MOtn a .,
Pl.

All Yard Sl*lluallo Polclln

~Doo~l': ·~ocr:~

Suntloy lldhion- 1:OOpm Frldoy,
llondoy
odlllon
10:ooo.m.

-....,"WV 211150EOE.

AVON CHRISTIWI SALES
A-11-tM ........ Pl.. FM-

_ .. lllac-al Sell

ot .......

ttoma Mall. Twrltory Clpdcrill'la .
llJO.lll2-4731.
"

Solurdoy.
llovlrjo dlnotto 101, 1
clltlr-. 2 too-; ooto ont1 - .
...ttnor; coffoo toblo; ont1 toblo;
2 11m111; -dlobt; btd hmt;

Avon Wonto lndMcluolo - ted In £omlna 81 -tM /Hr. llo
ODor To Door.1.a tiiiiU.

8

ahlft, -

motalrtto, 2 -

;114-24!-3313.

Public SBie
&amp; Auction

Avon.- 5 . . _ Would Ulta To Soli Awon, 114-

4411311

. . , . _ • cook noodocl. ...
bl oblo to -

-

Rick ........ Auction Company,

tuN time .uctlaneer, oomptMe
rL=====•:M:::-~· ~I aucttan
tJcHoward L: Writesel ~' woot Vlrglnlo. -

ROORNG
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
D ·
t
OWnSpOU S

11

121,000 ..30,000 FtRST YEAR
FREE COl A
DRIVER TRAINING
Phil ~on f14.3tii.I7SI H VCMI W.nl To Drtvo For A
Reword.
Company Thol Con Give You
lllsolng: aoldoMon puppY And y- Famlty ~~~-Col
whhouf collar. mlaolng · ,,,_ OUr RocNior Penny 1..ro.!ID4
Frldoy, Buiii*j,lli/Kingobury Rd 5351 To Schodulo A " - To
oru, 114-~_.103 ., 114-8tl2· F-lnWvlow.
155""::;3.:;__ _ _ _ __ 1 AVON I All ¥No I .....,
Spooto,304475-Ma.

71'l2184

J&amp;LINSULAJION

Windon,

3211'

- --G-1-11_1_
1 ___

(ONSTRUOION

St •l VICC

-

River Her•• ••d

Excavating Co.
CDm ph ·lt• How,t · f,

a.

Co11it'1 o•io

ROBERT BISSELL

Bu!ldo;rn~J

Employment Services

Lott one col Neylon AWl - .
blue point Hlmalopn, lomtlt,
dtcll-. rong heir, 114-1112-

Howard

Buy-Sell·Trade

Public Notice

1c-sc

Now Serving Melga,
Galli• a Athene Co.

61 ..992·5515

-

OPEN 1 DAYS AWHit FOR YOUR (ONVENIENCl ·
MON.·FRL 9-6; SAT. ~ SUN. 9-3
Pttyl•1 Today •s c IlL for cleaa dry

&lt;aU 1-800.806-9482
or 992·571 0

lV.IIItl4

laterior &amp;
b.erlor

Public Notice

TRI COUNTY RECYCLING

Are Yau Too Busy for Running &amp;rands?
let &amp;rand Boy Do the
for You.

..

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

1·800-486-1590

Bus. (614) 446-9971

~ ERRANDBOY
Complete Une of Errand Service.

Bill Slack
992·2269
BINGO

(No Sunday Calls)

~

Dll'l
IPPLIIICI
IDIICI

Public Notice .

Education of the Southern
Local School District, Ohio,
adopted on July 25, 1994,
there will be submitted to a
vote of tho electors of aald
School Dlatrlc1 at the
election to bo held In aald
.School District at the
regular - place ~ of voting
· Township of Su«on, Racine, therein on Tuesday tho 8th
Ohio, passed on the 4th day day of November, 1994, the
of July, 1994 there will be questior'! of levying a tax In
submitted to a vote of the excess of the ten · mlll
people of aald subdlvlalon limitation for tho benefit of
at a tleneral Election to be tho Southern Local School
held in the Township of District lor the purpose of
Sutton, Ohio, at the regular current expense• at a rate
places of voting therein, on not exceed ing 4.0 mills for
tho 8th day of November, each one dollar of valuation,
1994, the question of which amounts to 40 cents
levying a tax, In excess of lor each one hundred
the ten mill limitation, for dollars of valuation, lor
the benefit of Sutton three years commencing
Townsh.lp tor the purpose ot with 1 levy on the 1994 lox
llat and dupllcate.-Sald tax
· Fire protection.
Said tax being: A renewal constitute• the renewal of.
of an eidatlng tax of 1 mill at an existing levy. II a
a rate not exceeding 1 (one) majority of tho voters voting
mills tor eac.h one dollar of thereon vote In favor
valuation, Which amounts to thereof, oald levy will be
ten cents ($0.10) -lor each first placed on the tax flat
one hundred ·dollars of and duplicate lor tho lax
v•Luation, for five (5) years. year 1994 tor collection In
The Polls lor aald tho calendar year 1995.
Election will open at 6:30 The polls tor said election
o'clock A.M . and remain will be open el 6:30 o'clock
open unt!l 7:30 o'clock P.M. a.m. and will remain open
until 7:30 o'clock p.m. of
of said day.
Oated Sept. 26, 1994 said day.
By order of the Board of Dated: Sept. 26, 1994
By Order of the
Elections,
Board
of Elections of
of Meigs County, Ohio.
Meigs County, Ohio
- Henry L. Hunter, Chairman
Rita D. Smith
Rita D. !.mllh, Director. (10) 10, 17, 24, 31
; 4TC
(10) 10, 17, 24,31 ; 4TC

This Is Your Invitation To Sell Any Item For $100.00 or Less
And Advertise It FREE.
Simply Clip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted),
Fill In Your Ad and Mall It To Us or Drop It Off At Our Office.
Your Ad •Will Run For One Week.

949-2804
Complete Chain ·
Saw ~mce &amp; Parts
Ecllo Saw's in stock
Christmas Layaway
Available on
Weedealers &amp;
chain saw.

Llgl\t Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mls. Jobs.

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF'
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
Revised Code, Section•
3501 .11 (G), 5705.19, 5705.25
Notice Is hereby given
lh•t In purouanco of a
Resolution of the Board of.
Tciwnshlp Trustees of the

• '

Mower Clinic

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

•
..'

614-992·7643

Kenny's is the place to ·come
when you need a car rental.
We llave C11rs 11nd V11111/

a Cuato111

·'.. .

FREE ESTIMATES

Kenny's Auto Rental

RACINE

l1/281114

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL ·,

7355

- .,... lllenl

NEW TRAVEL
AGENCY
Rlverbend Travel
Adventures

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

386 State Rt. 160
w/Natlonwlde Ina.
Glllllpolla, Oh.
446-7400
800-757-PELLET

-SERVICE- .
YOUR SADSFACDON &amp; OUr SUcctta btglna &amp; tndl with
aervlotl So, .men your tai'lllta lan'l wart&lt;ing rlgh~ we•,.
herw to htlpl By phone or In ptiiOII- 'Mien you call,

PETER.
GO'IT, ·M.D.

BISSELL IUILDEIS, INC.

Heating, Ina:
Pellet Stoves

-SALEIDithea nlllging In lizo from 10 1M1 cleardo1&gt;11 to 181ndlaa.
-PAYMENT PLANY... we can lllw calhl -or· 110 d!IY• aame aa calh -or·
paymel)ll for 48 monlla ulow 11 $35/month.

..------------------------------------~ .,•l

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL LIMITATION
Aevlaed Code, Soctlona
3501.11(G), 5705.19, 5705.25
Nollci II hereby given
that In pureuence of a
Aeaolullon of tho Board of
Education of the Eastern
Local Sc hool District,
Aoodavillo, Ohio, pa10od on
tho 20th day of July, 1994
there will be aubmltted to e ·
vole of the people of aald
subdivision 11 1 ·General
Election to be hold In tho
Eaatorn Local School
Dlttrlct' of Aelidavllle, Ohio,
at tile regular places of _
voting therein, on the 8th .
day of November, 11194, tho ·
question of levying a tax, In
excess of tho tan. mill
limitation, lor the bentllt of
Eastern Local School.
District lor the purpoao of
, Providing
lor .the

.

*"*

- PROGIWIIIINOSlarting at $7.95/monlh lor 13 chamela on up to a1 many as
your helll detlr8a.

Friellli.r, do Alllll..lwlus, P.O. Boz :

I to 5 Wtelcd8ya
Evanlnga BY Appl

.

Envuoflame ::~-

.

ai1M4',. on,.. .,.Y to your hou•r

By PEI'E!R H. GOTf, M.D.
you that your sexual interest and
DEAR DR. OOTI': Some tiQIC ability wiD improve once you have
'
. ago you wrote lbout lhc effects of been sober for several months, you
alcohol on the human system. One may need to address the other
of these, in men, wu the loss of an issues 1 mentioned if you are to
erection - impotence. For many return to your " pre-alcohol days."
years I drank my~ into a Slate of
See a urologist Such a specialist
unconsciousness JUSt about every wiD question and examine you to .orthopedist for a .back p-oblem, he .
nigbt. Boy, were you rigbL I've identity any treatable clisorders and menboned the term "clonus" as he ·
been S0ber for over ICYOII months will work. with your family doctor examined my feet What is tbe .,;.,~
and wonder if the effects of alcohol to diagnose unsuspected physical
-o
wiD abate? WiD 1 ever raum to my ailments (and detrimental activi- nificance of this term and can it be ,
pre-~1
·
tics) that contribute to your prob- treaDiedElR READER: Clonus,
DEAR days?
READER:
Potency lcm
depends on· man.Y factors that · In addition, the urologist will which is a difficulty controlling ;
include both phySical. and mental offer techniques, ranging from rapid tensing and relaxing of II)US· ;
aspects.
injections into the penis to penile clcs, usualldiyrdreflccts han underlyinl
. g:
For example, u you noted, alco- implants, which can restore your ~k:su.so er, sue as mu llp1e ;
hoi adversely affects a OWl's scxu-. potency.
In my 's'\!inion;~·ents with this :
1
al abilities. Other physical considTo Jive you more information,
disorder s ould
exam1'ned by ".
eratioiiS - such as aevere illneaa, am sending you a free copy of my
,
diabetes,. man1 medications, and Health Report " Impotence." Other neurologists.
·
·
the normal agma process- also readers who would like a copy
CopyriJ_bt 1994 NEWSPA- :
may cause erectile dysfunction.
should send $2 plus a long, self- PER ENTF.RPRISE ASSN.
:
(For information oa bow to ·
Cominon mental conditions may . addressed, stamped envelope to
also lead to impotence. These P.O. Box 2433, New York, NY coll!.m!l~!c:ate eleetrOIIIcally with J
include stress, depression, fatigue, 10163. Be sure to mention lhc title.
tills columnist and otben, con- ··'
and boredOm with one's partner.
DEAR DR. GOIT: During the tact Anitrk:a Onlne by calllq 1- Therefore, while I can assure course of an examination by my 800-8%7-6~ ext. 8317.)
l

evenL

of Melga County, Ohio.
Henry L Hunter, Chelrman
Rite ,D. SmHh, Dlrec:tor.
(10) 17, 24, 31; 3TC
I
'

:13::'

-SERVICEWe Uti Nrvice at the top
it hu llwaya bNn our
firal priority! In fact. 'WI lrllce NMo. 10 Nriou•, ,.. tniiY

Lotiety.• Sad a ref~ loiiB. :

Alct;Jhol abuse may
lead to impotence

Faux World Series attracts fans
AIIOC:iated Press Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) -The
Cincinnati Reds came to play the
World Series over the weekend.
So what if the only players there
Saiurday were on a video of cham·
pionsbip highlights and taps were
illtbaed at a parltinaJ ot painted to
foot lib a baseball field?
· A little detail like tl!e strike
couldn't deter a few hWKked base·
ball buffs from celebrating what
i.hcy're sure would have been
another World Series appearance
by the Reds.
' 'A lot of ~le are starved for
balc'wU," said Ditk Hinds, a~­

~.my Rupe a~··

icwJe,,.,_ booicllt, "HtiW tq:
Mau Frielllh allll Stop Bei11r:

wes-

the team was not affiliated with' the

--

~·

B&amp;l ElECTRONKS E))

"StiR Lauahing in Qkaso."'lbanb
for a deliptful lctrt:r. It is 11t1Te 10 AM

live my~ a,lift.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7 ·

Real Eltate. General

..

"Call it 'politically correct',
doubleweaJt or euphemisms, but
recognize this fact: the language
and persuasiveness of today is a
very conscious use of language and
values as a weapon and tool by
those in power to achieve their.
ends at our expense. ·
"We laugh and dismiss politically correct language as empty or
meaningless words at our own
peril. We must remember that the
greatesr weapon of power,
exploitation, manipulation and
opjlicssion is language."
That was the admonition of Mrs.
Ronald E. Reynolds; state organiz·
ing secretary. Daughters of the
American Revolution, speaking at
the October meeting of Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter held at
Grace Episcopal Church, Pomeroy. .
SPEAKER ON POLITICAL CORREC'I'NF.sS - Mn. Rould
In the post Orwellian era • the
E. Reyuolds, right, talked on the daa&amp;en proposed by the palltkal
mid 80's on - there has been a slow
correct movement when.she addressed ~etum Jonathan Melaa
insidious attempt to influence our
Chapter,
Dau1bten of the American Revolutloa. ReyuoldJ Is D
thoughts, Mrs. Reynolds said.
ofllc:er
with
the Oblo DAR.I'k:tarfd with her are local DAR mem· The "thought police", she said,
ben,
Mn.
Pearl
Mora, Mn. Clarenc&lt;! Struble, ud Miss Elean«
are the media, some yoliticians,
Smith,
loall
regen~
and most frightening o all - DWIY
liberal minded educators. Unfortu.
nately there are some liberal mind- of nostalgia or the warm appeal of cLiturai (white) and Third World
ed judges, lawyers and so-called · the idealized 1950's family as illus- n&lt;:nwhite.
psychologists participating, she bated in "Father Knows Best".
Reynolds said that the"feel good
added. ·.
•
She said these things are the se1f-esteem movement" has caused
"Twenty years ago obscene work of people who will not face gudes to be unrelated to perforphone callers were creeps who that the 1960's are over, and that mancebecause they are desig'ned to
enjoyed harassins women with the family is in crisis and some- pl:ase, not to measure· or to guide
heavy breathing and references to thing needs to be done.
students about strengths or weakobscene acts. Now, like Richard
She cited the disability rights nesses. She ®scnbeQ it as a "let's
Brendzen who res,igned .as prcsi· movement, where you must pick .pretend" system where the
clent of Americ:ali UniVenity; they ' tllroOgh,a blizzard'of oupherllism1: '·"•urc ia Off,to. oxc:el and iludenla
are blameless victims of an uncon· the inconvenienced; the de,·elop- tend to relax and expect ,high
trollable impulse disorder. mentally disabled, handicapped, rewards for low output
.
Brendzen even hauled along a the uniquely abled, the differently
"It is only by~ aware of the
docile psychiabist who argued that_ _abled, the exceptional, the injury pervasiveness of Pobtical CorrectBrendzen's habit was a shadow survivors and people with differing . ness and ill f'!nction as~ tool of.
attempt to repair a childhood prob- abilities." she said.
.
ro;ial, c:oononuc and political eon•
Jcin", said Reynolds. ..
"A receilt bulletin from the trd that we Clll begin to fight those
She · pointed out that these movement lets us know that Porky w'to w&lt;?Wd ~ language and val"uncontrollable forces" have been P~. formerly a stutterer. should be lli'S agamst us, Reynolds concludpiling up at a record rate.
listed as speed! impaired; whereas, ~- .
_ "We now have Pete Rose's dis· Mr. Magoo Is visually handicapped
Miss Eleanor Smith, regent of
order (pathological gambling). ar.d Captain Hook is onhopedically R ·.tunf Jonathan Meigs Chipler,
Marion Barry's disease (alcoholism impaired", sbe·addei:J.
p1esided at the meeting. She
and womaniZing) and Brendzen' s
Reynolds charged that from the ar nounced the next meeting to be
impulse, along die dread disease of Pentagon to feel good self- ht ld on Friday, Novc:mber 11, at
'c~tffeinism' (which has already esteemers, everyone seems to be tt.! Grace Church w1th speakers
been cited in a criminal case or conbibuting. to the steady debase- &amp;rman and Nancy Schul on ''The
tWo. We have inhalant abuse and ment of the ¥other Tongue- Prooucts of Jacob's Sheep."
solemn 1istinss for difficulties of entrenched euphemisms include
Refreshments were served by
ordinary lite (arithmetic and read· senior (old), differently sized the hostess committee; Mrs. Pearl
ing problems), And, believe it or (obese), meaningful downturn Mora, Mrs. Clarence Struble, Miss
not, these are all ~red in the Diag- (recession), work stoppage (s)rike), Lucille Smith, Miss Eleanor Smith,
nostic and Statisucal Manual of m:d undocumented worlters (illegal Mrs. Anna Cleland and Mrs.
FnmcesRoberts.
American Psychiatry", Reynolds al'ens). .
said.
·
She said that on the political
Prior to the meeting members of
1
• Sbe accused the media of ~ost
correct fro~t, we have dominant the local chapter attended the
daily jeering of the "Ozz1e and crJ!UfC (m81!1Stream), under-repre- funeral of DAR member, Mrs.
Harriet" syndrome, deriding the se.1red grwps (blacks, Indians, and M via Skinner Foster.
goal of the intact family as a form Lt.tinos), survivor (victim), mono-

Bj SONJA BARISIC

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. ~~ ~-:' L'=:
304..~.
9 Wantad to Buy
a.n I.Jie Cllro
Truoita, 1111 Or
SmHh -Ito, ·
&amp;otom A-ut, Oolttpolla.

Earn

"!' to _l2ICIII

'

por -

pwm. •
mtnl nNndo. no _ , . , _ •
•11· ~1111 .... . ..

prng

~

7

"-•=

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....... 104-17W710.

- - /Wilt,_. Wanllld AI
The Addllon Oub, 114 4.. 1?a
Or Apply In p.,_,,

Or

:;;;;;iro, o1t1 :!:1..ontlqut
lumltn. Atvoiiiw~.fctuOo.
Ruot .._., · 114-1112:1521. We buy • -

1:11124tn.

bar \. Erollltnt P8yt ,.._
.nblo .......... AI Hotni. Col
Toll F-, ~ 1a1,

m.

....

~.7.ti.
I Ifill- '
··-•:·~·
. . .. For - - lntanMtion:

tn''",•
---~
......
Andr llllrtln t-11111110 111•
ao.

�' . .r

Monday, Octo&amp;Mtr 17, 1994

Pomeroy...o....Middleport, Ohio

"

October 17, 1994

Ohio

.

·'

The Daily

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
\

BEA'ITIE BLVD.r" by Bruce Beattie
•K Q 9 5

¥J I 0
tKQ!073
410 8

54 MIIC81181180UI

EAST

Merchandise

-- .....-·-

4JI0643
¥8 2

Hoot,_,-,_ ...
..,,_
1 . _ 2 Tan HMI P1o111p, Nl!ll

44

Apanment
for Rent

18
4A9754

SOUTH
42
¥KQ9643
t AJ 6 2
4K Q

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: East
South West North East

WHAT A

DAD BURN

SCAREOY
CAT!!

I •
2•

OHOH !! HERE
SHE.COMES WITH
HER SKILLET!!

Pass
Pass

I •
4•

Fltota=

1T
5
Of
9 1 : l nell
lnlta.
12 'Goaalpy
Barren
13 Genuine
14 Fsmoua uncle
15 Wooden
vesaela
16 Abominable
Snowman
17 Gun grp.
18 Flblaa
20 Prepares for
print
22 Still
23 Compoaer
Rorem
24 Greek lalend
27 Workera· aaan.
29 Painter of
ballerinas
33 Chtnged
35 Identical
38 Secluded
. ! .allay

~now
40
01-1

-A111rdlen

.....,

Llftlalllln

C...lui~IIOU..Iol

Or- ,... -

lind Cow,

Dodge Dakota Exlondod
Cob, LL ~ Loodod. 114-

441 lttl Ni
E........

~1101

l:

.....

~,...,...,

42 - Cen't Hurry
Love
43 Sign Of UHnl
44 Clam genua
48 Roman005
48 Faahlon
50 Chtf'a anlre
53 .Frozen water
54 Kind of test
56 Petroleum
grp.
58 I think, thor•
fore-59 lies1 of
pheaaanll
60 Miners'
material a
61 Demon
62 Oceana
63 Dama-Hosa
pronunciation

4 Palatable
5 Linda Evans ·· ·

DOWN

9 -II

Shocking? ·
role
10 Rowers
6 Born
11 Actl8aa
7 Swallowed
Thurman
8 OmiUecllrom
-....,,....,..,.... 19 Beneficiary Of
.,.
awHI
21
I.e., In full
1
""
24 ChariiCter In
. Othello
25 Spanish pot
26 Let 11 stand
28 Singer

1 Sp. title
2 Cheero barfly
3 Dark

.-+--+-'-1

Pass
Pass
All pass

•3

Anlll30 PrOfit
31 Bulle1a (al.)
32 Source .

Is it high
or low?

34~ry

38 Placal

39 Swelling
41 Stockings
45 Eagle' a neat
47 Engine aound
48 Swindle
49 Non-permanent wkr.
51 Grand Ole 52 - -&lt;ICHWII
53. Roman 3
55 Pallndromlt
nama
57 Jefferson
Davia' grp.

Uveatock
PROBABLY IF liE SEEM5
~E CURIOUS ABOVT TJ.IIN65 ..

'•.

~to,.,..,.......

37 Unaurpeued

.

·'
••
•

1

1VE ALWAV5 WONDERED
WllAT ANNA KARENINA
EVER SAW IN
COUNT VRONSKif'..

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos

_._

Ceilbrtry Cflhtt ~ .,. CMied from quotatioN by llmoul peope, pM1 lftd ~
&amp;.::h
in the Clpl\tr ltlndllor lflOChlr. Todq"t CW: F fQUIIt K

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W- S L R C

D N I J 8

(EINXBJJLNRTV

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CNVX81)

U NM EV8 J .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Old unreconstructed hippie that I am, rve been tl}'ing
to cause as much trouble as I can.' - David Crosby.

WOlD
IAMI

'BORN LOSER
· ~

- . . .._-=
Q~ Julio

AcC8880rl88
31110.10 Trlldt

\9.1&amp; •

nr.

Willi• ......... tsb

lull

IIO.D0.11t tt11•1

Pompo...t Plla br Bonn. clog
~hlng.al......:

,

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- Nil 1&gt;. ~1&gt;.~ ~ LEA!'lE~t ...

Auto Pans&amp;

56 PetaforSale

0211.

~y ~~IIH.IFE.I~ l'AAT

llMNODA

I

-

!lo!l.

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,

_K_L__,~~~,~
-:.:

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_
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I wanted to find something
1 1
nasty to say about a new class1 . .
mate. "Just remember,· my mom
,...__,._ _.,....._____ tectured. "when you spread dirt
-rs,..N,.....u.,..G,..,-U...-F.,.--l·,you will lose - - - - - -' 11

Trans po rtat 1on

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----.
- . =.
--···-

.....
Old, -

lllrllng Ti Run, -

Me ........... Coaloar ............... t;3'
1i
Qudly,
"'' Prtwiie
fWIId ......
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1

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Ill dllne, I Lllltoi'l TD e t Fnm,lklmWI.-_ ....
Dlw CIIWa ..... , ...

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Real Estate

1711.

Rentals
5I

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_.....~

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••~~WD•

....... :a .....

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.

THESE SQUARES

I

""'"'"'· llhluot

am. 114-t1N311, -

79

campe~a

;

MotorHomea

'

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

ill

~ And Awning, $1,-_
11t'IU • •.
-- v,,

Goods

Serv1ces

KILLS IUAII 11uJ INFOIICI!R
Flea~.. . _ .•
vwd.
ID-1
l n l - II: 1110 I'II!D AND
O'DELL WIIHR.

82

Farn1 Suppl1e:;

Plumbing a

Heating .

&amp; L1vc stoc k

Elec:trtcal

a·

Refrlg11'811on

........
--~
.......................

oloinlllil and II...,... Have
a.-Jotpllnter,WPUoncl

1141111211

which signs are romantically pertect far advantage ol you.
you . Mail $2 to Matchmaker, c/o thts ARIES (March 21-Aprll 191 Beware of
newspaper, P.O. Box 4465, New York , inclinations to do things against your bel·
N.Y. t0163.
ter judgment today. Back off in sttuations
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) It might ba where your chances of success are slim.
wise today to temporarily postpone com- TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You might
plicated tasks until you have lim~ to thor- be a bit too curious for your own good
oughly study tl)em . Speed could spell today. There's a possibiltty you may ask
!rouble.
.
c•
probing questions thai someone prelers
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .. 21 ). Today not to answer.
·
you're likely to manage your resources GEMINI (May 2hlune 20) If you borrow
prudantly and effectively. as you usually something from a friend today be certain
do. However., there is a ch&amp;nce you to return it in the same condition in which
. ' might do somethiQg VllfY rash that could you received it. Treat the possessions of
ruin your record.
others with respect.
. CAPRICOt;IN (Dec. 22-.lah. 19) 'roday CANCER (June 21-July 22). On not veeTyesday, Oct. 18. 1!i94 .
you're likely to have adequate dnve and mate abOUt major issues.tqday. If you fail
Your ambitions could ba assisted in .the motivation. but you may prove weak in to take a fimi'position, it will not only con_year ahead by several .close lnends , your methods and not ba able to achieve fuse your associates. it will anger them.
gOing oul of their way to help you . KO!SP youroblectives.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22,) Today. owing to
a reeord ol their efforts so that you can AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) Don't your impatience. you.might st~rt a project
repay them at a later date.
betray the trust of 1W0 friends who· have before having lh~ backup you need. Yout .
UBRA (Sept. 23-()ct. ,23) You could be placed y0 u in 'their ·cot\fldence today. If · lack of knowledge could prove disas- I
eventuiltly lleld acc:ountlble for promtSOS they wantad others to know what you 1 trous.
·
.
;
you make today. Don't ·agree to do some· were told. they .would ' have made the VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Be vel}' care- 1
• thing you're hoping you can wiggle out of , announcem~ts themselves.
ful in romantic situations, especially il l
dowti.
the'
nne.
Know
·where
to
,
l
ook
for
l&gt;ISCEI
(Feb.
»March
20)
Be
kind
and
you're
InvOlved with someone who has .
1
• romance and you'll tirid II. The Astro- generous io the deservi ng today. bu! been deceitful. There's a chance you ,
1
Graph Matchmaker Instantly reveals don'l lel ' an artful manipulator take might ba victimized aQilin.
.

{

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-

~;- ---

Complete tho chuckle quoted
by f,Jitng in tfle miuing words
you develop lrom step No. 3 betow .
IN

.

UNSCRAMILE AIIOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

I' I' I'

r I' r I

1111111

SCIIAM-I.n'S ANSWERS

1171
Traval Troller,
"'
....
~umlllng,
EleCblo
a•
or, Ali Concltlonlf.

Household

I I e

~ PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS

IlK, 4

;;;;;.;u, I ol II .."""""'~
$11110,--;a
-

16

L.---'.L-..1.-..1.-..1.-J..--1.

.- BIG NATE

..,_ft

Merchandise

rI I '

'II TNna Am, 401 IUICIIIIIIIo, 4

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

4

1

71 Autoa for Sale

2 Fuli ..... PuDI. •
Willie Old t2l lilall;1· Ful

I

DRYUD

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I'

Cajole - Grosh- Trock- Embalm - SUBJECT
Mom to teenager. "Don't always just think of yourself." The teen laughed and replied, "Weill think I'm the
most Interesting SUBJECT 1

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Page 10-Tbe Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middl,port, Ohio

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Monday, October 17,1994

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·~Mutant protein holds hope for reversing heart dis~ase
B7 JANE E. ALLEN
AP Scleace Writer
· LOS ANGELES (AP) Cristofaro Pomaroli and Rosa GioYIIIolli had a son ·in 1780 in their·
analltown ill Italy, never knowing
they bequeathed a genetic legacy
thai offers hope for reversing heart
disease two c:cnlUrics later.
The boy ' s descendants in
Ljmone inherited a genetic defect
01at proteCts them from the ~e
of Westan'living - fatty deposits
01at clOg the arteries.
The 38 lucky carriers have a
simple mutalioo in a protein of socalled good cholesterol that lets
them cat red meat, sausage and but·
t~r
without artery-clogging
deposits.
They range in age from the

teens to nearly 90. And lhey have
never worried about strokes or
heart auacts since longevity runs
in the family.
•'They arc almost all smokers.
They eat lite hell, lhe worst diet,"
said lhe University of Milan's Dr.
Cesare Sirtori, who screened residents of Limone for lhe miracle
mutatioo.
Ever sinc;c Sirtori discovezed lhe
mutatioo, called Apolipoprolein At Milano for the university where
he is a pharmacology professor,
doctors have wondered about harnessing its power to euminate coro-

FOR STATE
1
ARGUMENT AGAINST STATE
1
BALLOT LANGUAGE, EXPLANATIONS, ARGUMENTS
AND RESOLUTIONS FOR AMENDMENTS TO THE OHIO
VOTE FOR ISSUE 1
THIS~ SIMPLY WILL N~ DO WHAT rr CLAIMS. Tbia pro.:
CONSTITUTION PROPOSED BY .THE GENERAL .·
SUPPORT SWIFI' JU~CE IN omo
. polll abou1d be defeated because:
A$8EMBLY AND BALLOT LANGOAGE, ARGUMENTS A~rdina to the current law, a ~rson sentenced to death in Ohio hu the 1 . It will not liplificantly ~, time between 1 ""''*ftW of delth
AND THE FULL TEXT OF AN AMENDMENT TO THE right to an appeals proc;caa thlt eontains two s1ep11 on the 11111e Jevet: The
and elleCUiioD.
(
.•
OHIO CONSTITUTION PROPOSED BY INITIATIVE PETI- Court of Appea1a and ~ Ohio Supreme~· luue I 1CCb to delete the
.
.
Court of Appelb 11tep m an effort to lllrel!mhne the proceu and mike the
2 . It increases the rill: that an innocent person will be execnted.
TION TO BE SU--~ITTED TO THE VOTEF.IS AT THE system more efticient. I . . I w01 gtve p a - comlded llld ..a-:ec~
GENERAL ELECTION, NOVEMBER 8, 1994.
to datil 1D 0111o a dlred 1J11MA1 to
0b1o Sa..- CGart.
Ohio' s deatb ~ cues arc now reviewed by one of the 12 diltrid c:ourU

then end up manufacturing it on
their own,' said Dr. Prediman K.
Shah, director of the canliac care
unit at Cedars-Sinai Medical Centet in Los Angeles.
Shah leads a U.S.-Swedish team
examining the more immediate
potential to reduce the deadly
reclogging that occurs after a
blocked vessel has been cleared
with balloon angioplasty surgery.
In the October issue of the
American Heart Association journal Circulatioo, Shah reports injections of a genetically engineered
version of the protein dramatieally
reduced the reclogging of rabbits'
coronary arteries.
Before and after the surgery,
eight.rabbits got injections of Apo
Milano attached to a fat molecule

nary artery disease.

"Eventually it is not inconc;civable lhat the gene could be transferred to the liver or other organs
of very high-risk people who could

the

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO ~e:::;::s~~:~~::=~o:~::!C:::
THE OHIO Co.NSTITUTION ~.:e~::~~~~:mu~ev:=~w::v~
the

worry food
pantries
By JENNIFER DIXON
Alsociated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP} - Food
pantries around the country are
worried about closing their doors to
hungry Americans this winter as
the federal government cuts the
· amount of food it provides 10 them.
. In a money-~vin~~ mQVC !ly ~e
Clinton admm1strauon, the Agnculture Department will spend just
~25 million this fiscal year to supply food banks and other programs
for Jhe poor with flour, com meal,
canned vegeta!&gt;les, fruits and
meats.
Last year, USDA distributed
$80 milhon in commodities under
The Emergency Food Assistance
Program, or TEFAP, known for the
great cheese and butter giveaways
of the 1980s.
·
Food bank directors say they
cannot expect the private sector to
mate up for the loss in commodities because donations from manufacturen and grocers are declining,
due to greater efficiency and less

ne Community Calendar Ia :
published as a free service to &gt;
non-prolll groups wlshlna to -:
announce meetings and special : :
events. The calendar Is not :•
designed to promote sales or •:
fundralsers of any type. ~tema :::
In! printed as space permltil aud :-.
cannot be auaraateed to rail a :::
spectne number of days.
.:: ·

APPLE BUTIER TIMEThe Meigs County Senior Citizens demonstrated bow to
make apple butter In a CQpper
kettle over an open fire during
Showcase !'.f_eiga County.l.ere
Sampson Hall wbo lives at
The Maples In Pomeroy stirs
tbe apple butter, while Jeff
Hanning dips It up for the
jars. Nearly 200 pints were
readied for sale from the one

MONDAY
:;
RACINE - Racine Villa$e :,
Council meeting Monday m ··
recessed ~ 7 p.m. at Star Mill :
Park.
..

kettle.

MASON, W.Va. - Women ::
Alive meeting 7 p.m. Monday in ::
Mason Call m-2952 or m-2469 ~
for
information.
.
:,

more

POMEROY - VMH Women's ::
Auxiliary meeting 1:30 p.m. Mon- ~
day in the hospital conference ::;

room.

LETART FALLS -

At the same lime; poverty IS on
the ilse and food bank directors say
growing numbers of families with
cliildrell and the worlcing poor are
turning to local pantries for a bag
of groceries.
A sbldy earlier Ibis year by Sec01\d Harvest, a nationwide network
of-food banks, found that nearly 26
million Americans rely on food
pantries, soup kitchens and emertel!CY'feedill&amp; pltlliilill.
- · "The impact (of the cuts) is
gQing to be very dramatic,'' said
Dick Goebel, executive director of
the S~nd Harvest SL Paul Food
Bank in Minnesota.
· Goebel said he is especially concerned about rural food banks
mltionwide, as well as in his own
stite because fedt!ral commodities
tend 'to account for a high percentage of the food they distribute.

the offic:c building.

Bj MAUREEN JOHNSON
Alloclated Press Writer .
·LONDON (AP) - In a stunning departure from royal ttadition,
Prince Charles bared his soul Sunday in an aulhorized biography lhat
says his overbearing father forced
him into a loveless marriage wilh
Princess Diana.
" How could I have got it all so
\vrong'l" Charles, 45, lamented in
1986 .,.- five years after his marriage - in one of the letters quoted
in the book.
Many observers saw aulhorizatioll of the book as a huge gamble

:

EAST MEIGS - Eastttn Ath- •
letic Boosters Monday, 8 p.m. or :
after volleyball game.
·
TUESDAY
•
RACINE - Home schooling :
meeting for parents meeting 7 p.m. •
Tuesday at 28471 Bashan Road; :
·near Racine. For more inf11111tlion, ~
c:all949-3119.

OHIO STAR QUILT- Meigs women made blocks for the
O.llio Star quUt to be completed, tben sold to provide funds for a
quilt show next year. Those creating tbe winning blocks judged on
tbe basis of workmanship, accuracy and color coordiaation were
Pat Jones, first, not pictured; April Smitb, ten, second, and Donna
Davidson, third, center, with Bunny Kuhl, project chairman. The
contest was sponsored by The Fabric Shop.

SOCCER DEMONSTRATION - Tbese five and six year olds
are among the hundred or io )'Oungsters Involved tbis faD In soccer, a uew sport to Meigs County. As 11 part or tbe Sbowcase Meigs
County proaram, tbey bad games both Saturday aad Sund!ly
afternoon at tbe fairgrounds.

Charles bares soul on loveless marriage in authorized
Prince takes a
frank stance on
five years with
Lady Diana

Letart :

Trustees meeting 7 p.m. Monday at :

.

.~

~

by the heir to the British throne an apparent attempt to revive
accepl!lnce of him as the future
Icing by being unusually frank.
Buckingham Palace said
Charles has no regrets about cooperatinj! for the biography, which
descnbcs him as bu'Jiied and
mocked as a child and tra(lplld in a
nightmare marriage with a bored,
bulimic, self-absorbed and obses·
sively jealous young wife.
To the dismay of traditionalists;
Charles gave author Jonathan Dimbleby long inlerviews and unprecedented access to thousands of his
private letters and diaries for the
book, "The Princ;c of Wales."
"It is a boot of very great historical importance," satd constibltiona! expert Lord St. John of
Fawsley. "It will have a major
effect 9n the whole current debate
about the monarch and the royal
family ..-. The prince has put his
cards on the table."

· The biography, "The Princ:c of
Wales," wiiich The Sunday Times
began seriaiq:ing, is the latest boot
about the failed marriages of
Queen Elizabeth ll's elder sons,
Charles and Princ;c Andrew.
In the most rec:cnt publication,
two weeks ago, Diana's former riding instructor, ex-army Maj. James
Hewitt,.claimed he had a five-year
affair with Diana starling in I986.
Dimbleby did not allow Charles
a veto over the contents and
refused to make some requested
changes, Alan Percival, a Buclcingham Palace spokesman told the AP.
" It would be fair to call it an
authorized account in that Jonathan
Dim bleby was given substantial
acc:css to archival material, letters
and diaries- as you would expect
for a serious author," said Percival.
Charles married the 20-year-old
Lady Diana Spencer, a nur.sery
school teacher and daughttt of an

earl, in a 1981 wedding that was
watched around the globe.
The couple formally separated
'in December tm. They have two
children, Prince William, 12, and
Princ:c Harry, 10.
In television interview with
Dimbleby in June, Char_les
acknowledged that he had been
unfaithful to Diana, but said it was
only aftt.t their marriage coUapsecl
Charles named no names. Questio..ned by Dimbleby, he said that
C$milla Parker Bowles, 47 - an
army officer's wife who is widely
reputed to he his mistress - was
· m
..d would remain among his closes; friends.
Dimbleby wrote lhat Charles'
f~~. Prince Philip, fiVe him. an
ulumatum to marry Diana, saytng
st.e would otherwise be compromised after news got out lhat she
had visited Charles at Balmoral, the
queen's Scottish castle.

--..--:.!..........._
·

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)~ -····~--&gt;. ·~- ..

biog~aphy

Philip argued Diana had "no
past" and was young enough to be
molded into the future queen.

RACINE - Alpha Delta Kappa ~
will observe Founder's Day and its .:
30th anniversary at 7:30p.m. Tues- .:
·day at the Rac:irie United Methodist ~
Church.
::;

..

POMEROY Veterans·· ~
Memorial Hospital Auxiliar)o, 1:30 ;,:
p.m. Tuesday in the hoSpital con- :'
ferenc:c room.

BEDFORD - Bedford Town- :.
ship Volunteer Fire Departnttnt ..;
Committee, 7 p.m. Tuesday a1 :!
township hall.
.,
POMEROY- FOE AUlliliar)';·""
:.':
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
•::

'.,!
Dimbleby said Diana had vio- .
WEDNESDAY
, :!
lent mood swings, constant suspiRACINE - Homeowners Iliad •·
cions about Mrs. Parter Bo.wles,
mutilated herself with small cuts in rental owners in Racine shoul~ : .
her wrists and sat sobbing for attend a 7:30 p.m. Wednesday ·:
meeting at the Racine F'U'C Hall to :
h•·urs.
·/
learn 'bout grants for low-income •
property.
.
The biography ·says by I 986
' .
C!tarles wrote to an unidentified
SYRACUSE
Third
Wednes"
•
ccrrcspondent that he felt "In a
day
Homemakers
Club,
Wednes•
:
ki~d of cage ... longing to he free."
''How awful incompatability is, day, 1(J a.m. Syracuse Mu!Jicipal •
Building. t&gt;otluck at nobn. Wen on ~
qJ,d how dreadfully destructive it
Christmas
favors, Tate seis- :
c; n be for . the players in this sors and hottray
glue
guns.
cYtraonlinarY. dmma. It has all the
ir.gredients of a Greek tragedy ... I
RUTLAND - Rutland Fire :
nt ver thought it would end up lite
Department
.Ladies· AuXiliary, ~
lhd.' '
.
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at Rutl8nd :
The boot will be published by Fire statiOn. Final plans for turtey :
L_ttleBrown on Nov. 3.
supper, Nov. 17.
·

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••

BREAST CANCER:

followed by a tour of the
O'Bleness Mammography Unit
MONDAY, OCTOBER 24-7:00 P.M.
O'BLENESS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

,.

'

P11tE SAFETY - Memben of tbe l'dJ4dle-

- __ port Vohdlteer Fire Depwtment tl.,llt uea eleaeiital')' stlldeatl aboat nre safety last week.
, ;r ~nd .llere are .O.e or tile wlaaen or the

Kllool'• poster coatest wltb the nreftabters.
't

•.-

.

,

.

From left are· (froat rinr) ~econd erader Cllet
Wlaal, fint grader Eric VanMeter and nrst
arader 1Corey Sllea, aloD&amp; wltb (back row) llrenabters Chuck Tucker, Sllawn Bilker, Don
Stivers, Doa ·Geary, Brace Swift and Brlau
Conde. (Sentiuel pHto by George Abate)

other-... .........

""""cue.

l

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
.
'

the

of_. ...

.

1::::1

Dr. Regine Neptune~ Ceran, general surgeon, will discuss prevention,
diagnosis and treatment of this disease, which will affect one in nine
American women during their lifetime. Her topics wiU Include:
• basic breast anatomy ·
• who is at risk
• benigh breast disease as it relates to breast cancer
• relationship of diet and breast cancer a COIMIIIIIily ltealtll CIII'IWIIellllrvi« of ·
• treatment options
~ O'BLENESS MEMORIAL HOSPfrAL
55. Hoapltal Drive, Ath1111, Ohio
. 583-5551
.
.•

COURT.

,,
, I

the

1

Regine Neptune- Ceran, D.O.

I

the

re::r::::-

E.MPLom.·

The Importance of Early Detection
a public lecture and discussion with

to 11semble and review the recorda of the cue • mucb p-.er laJatb, cutting into .&amp;gcct time-saving. Individuala on both aidea of the iuue ....,C
that these mandated appeals may iDCreue the Ohio SUpreme Court'a hurdell
and cueload.

Ohio SUpreme Court. This court pves the cue the HJDC RYJCW u wu pven
by, the court of appeals and nilkea a decision. II tGtal, fnlal
day tbat This proposal should be defeated _because it selectively denies 1 right of ap:
datil llllt.mee WMlmpoled, to day tbat tbe Supreme CGul't Jllves peal only to those subject to the lillie's most extreme peaalty, death.
Its declaiGa, aa avenp of !lYe yean may have pllllld.
., PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
This proposal should be defeated because it opens our death pedllty law ~
Ohioans abou1d vote in favor ofluue 1 because it is a reuoDable 11tep toward a lengthy and expensive eoostihllional challenge. The U.S. Supreme CouJt
(Propoed by RaolutloD of
Geaenl ~, of Oblo)
reforming our current judicial system. Too often criminlb arc lllowed to baa never upheld a death penalty sta111te allowing fc!wer 1eveb of 1J1PC11 in
manipulate
and exploit our judicial process tbrough endless appeala thlt lake capital cues than in other cues.
_ To .....t Sedloas 2 ud 3 of Artlde IV of COIIIIItuyears
to
~view. Meanwhile, the familica of victims wait for fiDa1 justic;c to
lloa of
State of Oblo.
be administered. Unfonunalely, many families are still wailing. Support for This proposal should be defeated because it incrcuea the risk thlt an iJmo.
1-. lis 111pport for t11ese lwmlllel.
ceat person will be executed. There have been several iMhnra where pee,
TOCiiANGE THE PROCEDURE FOR APPEALS OF CASES IN
pie convicted and awaiting \be death penalty have been fabdy coovicted&lt;
WIDCH THE DEATH PENALTY IS IMPOSED, T8IS AMENDSUPPORTERS OF ~ 1
This measure should be defeated 10 we can 110lve the problem in wayalbal
MENT WILL:
I Gove1rnor Georae Voinovich
carry leu risk of executing the wrong person.
I At:torocy General Lee Fisher
1. REMOVE JtlRISDICTION FROM 11IE COURTS OF AP·
Ohio Prosecuting Altomeys Association
VOTE NO ON ISSUE 1.
PEALS TO REVIEW DEATH PENALTY CASES ON DIRECT
APPEAL.
ICC)~m"Jl'EETO PREPARE ARGUMENT FOR ISSUE i
COMMI'ITEE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT AGAINST ISSUE 1
State Rcprcscntatlve Jolmnic Maier
Repraentative Mary Abel
2. PROVIDE FOR DIRECT APPEALS OF DEATH PENALTY
State Representative Barbara Pringle
Repraentalive 1. Donald MOCIIey
CASES TO THE OHIO SUPREME COURT FROM THE
state·
Rqrisentalive
Mike
Fox
Representative Vmon Sykes
CouRTS OF cOMMON PLEAS OR OTHER COURTS OF
Senator
Nancy
Chiles
Dix
·
Senator
Ben E. Espy
RECORD INFERIOR TO THE COURT OF APPEALS.
Senator Anthony~· S:;:inae:::a:.:..----~-~~
Senator Merle Karns
JSSVE 1
p1o&lt;c ...t llood or the abaeot judae. A ma-(d)- (SlID .-.of pWiio or,......,....
3. APPLY TO CASES IN WIDCH THE DEATH PENALTY IS
TEXT Of PIIOPOiiED
jorilyoftheoupremocowtsballbe-y ~. the oupremo cowtmoy direct 111y
IMPOSED FOR OFFENSES COMMITI'ED ON OR AF'JlR
CONS'ITruTIONAL AMENDMENT to caulitute a ~ or to IOIIllor I court of appeok to COI1ify ita leCOid to 1be
JANUARY I, 1995.
~IIUplaDC court, 1114 1111)' review ... alfirm,
(Subolilllle Howe JoiDI RooolutliJII No. f5)
(B)( I) Tbe 1111pte1110 COUll oball have
modify. or ~eVa~e the jud,.- of the court
(""-'ed Semle loial ]laoluliuu No. 9)
oriJiDol jurildictioo iD the followiotl:
of appealo;
IP ADOPJ'ED, TIDS AMENDMENT WILL BE EFFECTIVE
(a) Quo WIIIIIIID;
'ier lfi Tbe 1111pte1110 court sbaiJ review l'ropooina to eaact Secliuu 6 d Anicle VI d .
Propolill&amp; 1 0 - Sec:liooa21114 3 of AltiJANUARY I, 1995.
cle IV of the Coostllulillll of the Slole of
the COOIIittotioo of the 5I-. of Obio to
(b) M1Mam11;
1114 affinn, modify. or
~:::I
Ohio to pve the Supremo Court jurildil:(c) Habou corpa1;
in Ill)' cue ccniliod by IDY court
IIJiborize tbe lllitiuu mdita IOid ot .. be '
A ~ yes vote Is DeCellli8l)o for Jlllisa&amp;e.
IOid tbllareto be paid Oom lbe Ollio Tllilillll in direct oppeola in dolllb pendly . . .
(d) Prollibilillll;
JIUIIUIIII to 'aoction 3 (B)(4) of IIIia
tiuu TnMI Pond to be "'''''D''ed by tbe ftdl
u 1 maaer of riaht, lhua ........U., the
(c) PrO&lt;ot!oado;
(3) No tow ohall be puood or ode made
juriodictkJa of the cowta of oppeola on
(I) ID aoy .,.... oo review u may be
wbmby aoy penoo ohall be prevaad from
faith 1114 cndit of lbe - ........
dial propom.
YES
direct review in dellh peno1ty ....
IIOCCIIII)' to ill aJIIIIIIefe detenuiualiuu;
iuvotiua the oriainal juriodictiuu or ..
SHALL THE PROPOSED
(J) Admilliuu to the pracUoc or law. the
IIUplaDC court.
Be it...alvod by 1be Goaen1"
II)' of
AMENDMENT BE ADOFI'ED7 ·
Be il raolvod by the Oeoeral Auembly of ctirip!!oe of ..... ., admillod, ... a l l (C) Tbe docilions iD all . . . iD lbe
.... 5I-. of Ohio, thre&amp;-fillllo oflbe - .
NO
the- of Ohio, thre&amp;-fiftbs of the .......... ........ roliOiin&amp; to the pradice of law.
........ courtaball be ........... ........ eleclod 10"""" CODCIIIIill ......... '
(2) Tbe ........ COUll ohall .... apthe ....... therefor.
clocled to """" bouie COIICIIITia&amp; bereiD, dill
thoR aball be ......... 10 the-.. of lbe
thoR sbaiJ be ......il!ed to the clectDn of the pclliOio jurildictioo u followl:
Sec:liuu 3. (A) Tbe- aball be divided
in the preacribod by law • lbe .
llale, ill the,.._ pmcribed by tow II the
(a) In _.ta from the COUIII of _.ta
by law imo """"*' appollale dillric:ll iopnl cla:liuu 10 be bold oa.lbe In TWa-nlelocdoa to be bdd ... the ftrll TUes- U I llllllef of rJabt io the l'ollowioi:
d wbidl !bon: - be I COUll of oppeollcm- doy after lllo fine Moudoy ia No•Wibri 1\I!N, '
day after the fine Monday ill November 1994.
(i) C.. oriJiui01in1 in the COUIII of
tilliDa ofduoejudaa. Laws nay be puood • propoaal toeaact ..... EXPLANATION FOR STATE ISSUE 1
.
'
inct . 1 the ...... of judp in aoy diatrict
• propoul toiiDNIISecliou21114 3 of Ani- appealo;
ly followina Sectiuu ' of Anicle VI of the
(u prepared by the Oblo· Ballot BOard)
(H) Caa• ill •lhialt .._ I I 1 .., ltao
wbereill the volume ofbuaiueu nay ~
... IV of the Coo1ti1U1ioo of the Slalo ofObio
Coutillllio. of Obio 10 read • followa:
to read u followo:
•
·
audt addilional judae or judaa. In dillricb
·
~
~ c- iovolvq queati0111 lrilioa
....U.. addi«iooa) judp, tbroe judp sbaiJ
ARTICLE VI
Currently, I cue iD which the death penalty iB imposed iB reviewed or
ARTICLE IV
uoder the COIIIIilulion of the Uoilod Stlla or
panicipole in the beariui m1 dilpoaitioo of
Sectiuu 6. (A) TO INCREASE OPfORsufficiency by a district court of appeals con&amp;iBting of at least three
Secliuu 2 . (A)Tbe.........,Oillllobaii,IDIIil of dti&amp; ·
Tbe"""' aball hold_.,. iD TUNITIES TO THE RESIDENTS OF nos
1 JIIOI!''~~· Tbia portion of the appeals process takes on the average from one OChcrwile provided by tow, ~of oeveo
(b)"'_... from the cowta of appeal•
c:ooo~y of the diJtrict u the -ny STATE POR HIOHER EDUCATION, rr IS .
HBRBBY DE'I'I!IUo(llll! TO BI!JN THE
two years. If the death penalty is upheld, the cue is then reviewed by judeeo, who 111a11 be kuawn • die cbicfjullile in cuct1 of felooy oa leave fine obllinod, ~ arioea. Tbe CDWIIy """miaiuum d PUBIJC INTI!ItBST AND A PROPI!R •
th
nalty'
o
erturned
by
the
Court
of
1114jultilloa.
IDcaoeofthe-orclaabili·
(&lt;)IN
DIRECI'
APPIW.SFR.OMTHE
COUDiyohallpn&gt;Yidea~aod...,._
18
C
If the dea
Ohio Sup
PUBIJC PUil'OSl! I'OR. THE STATE TO ·
reme ourt.
~
v
ty of the c:11ief juatic:c, the Judie 11a&gt;iD8 the COURTS OP COMMON PLEAS OR
place for the c:owt of oppeola to hold c:owt.
MAINTAlN A PROGR.ut FOR 1111! SAL1!
Appeala, appeal to the Ohio Supreme Court is discretionary·
........... of,_
_. aervice upoa the COIIII UI'HI!Il COURTS,()!' iU!COIID lNPI!IUOil
(B)( I) Tbe cowta of oppeo11 aball have
OF
rorrJON CRI!DITS SUCH THAT 1111! '
:i:ub.the-;:;;cDefju&amp;til:e. lfaoy- TO THE COuRT OF APPEALS AS A origillal jwiJIIicliuu iD the foiJowina:
PROCEEDS
OP SUCH CRI!DITS PUR• If adopted, the amendi!Wit will eliminate the review ·of death JlCIIIIty ~ of the court sba11 be uuablc:, by ......, of W· MA'ITilR OP RIGHT IN CASES IN
(a) Quo wamoto;
CHASED POR THE BEM!PIT OF A Pl!ltbyadiatrictcourtofappealsandprovidelhatthelecasesbercvJCWcddirect- neu, dillbility or dilqullilicaliu, to bear. WHICH THE DEATH PENALTY HAS
(b) M-nw,.;
SON THEN ARBSIDI!Nr OF 11IIS STATE
·
the Ohi0 S
Court' 8 ooaaider ...t decide • c:auoe or ...,.., the BEEN IMPOSED;
(c) Habou COIJIUI;
SHALL BE GUARA!m!I!D TO COVER A ·
This
Jy by the Ohio Supreme Court.
may "'Creue •.t-' upreme
,.,~
.. ...: ...;~ ••~ ... :...:...of the~
(d) ~·-·.
ofthe
nd cbiefjulioeortheKiillac:lliefjuatic:cuay
.,.,.-.. ·-·, • - r·n~
SPECIFIED AMOUNT WHEN APPU1!D .
Tbe
edappeal
nd
burden ind cueload in these rna ats.
_.,....on
arne - diro&lt;t
cowtof 1 ppealuolil .-liDp of adminia1ralive oftioen or apo(e) Pro....,oio;
TO THE COST OF TUmON AT AMY
STATE INSTITUTION OF HIGHER
~m~Jent~~"'=·Ol:ul~d~not:!,~afti!ec~ct~re:vt:·e:w:_:of~dea~
. - ~th~~=nalty~~cas=se=s~b~y~fede:!:ral~=courts!!._..:witb~:J:~~~::C~coun=~io~the:.,.~cieo::.,:u:!:2.!be:.:::!:::.!~::·---, oec:eiiiJ)
(f) Ia lilY c:auoe on review u may be.
to ill ........ . . . . . -.
EDUCATION, AND THE SAME OR A
(2) Courts of appeab sbaiJ have lllCh
DIPPERENT AMOUNT WHEN.APPUI!ll
ARGUMENT FOR STATE ISSUE 2
TO THE COST OP TIJITION AT ANY
jurildictioo u IIIIJ be provided by law to
OTHER INSTITUTION OP lOOKER ·
review 1114 aflinu, modifY. or .....,.
1 . Currently, there are laws regarding crime victims, but there are constitu- jnd_.. or filial orden of the cowta of EDUCATION, AS MAY BE PROVIDI!D
tional rights that protect the ICCIISed. In a judicial setting, when a judge leCOid inferior to the COWl of appealo within BY(I!)LAW.
TUmON CREDrrs PRo:
the diiOiri&lt;:t oai_. I!XCEPT THAT COURTS GRAMTHE
must weigh the laws of the victim against the conatitutional rights of the OF
AND
THE QHIO TUmON .
APPEALS SHALL NOT HAVE
accused, the constitutional rights will prevail. The proposed amendment JURISDICTION TO REVII!W ON DIRJlCT TRUST FUND PREVIOUSLY CRIIATED
BY LAW, WHICH TERMS INCLUDE
wil) mean that when judges mike decisions, they will weigh the constitu- APPEALAJUDOMENT THAT IMPOSES ANY SUCCESSOR TO THAT PR001tAM
SENTENCE OP DEATH. COURTS OF 011 FUND, SHAlL BE CONTINUI!D sua:
PROPOSED CONSTITVTIONAL AMENDMENT
tional rights of both the victim and the accused. The tiiDcndmcnt will not A
APPEALS sbaiJ have aucb _.... juriadiclECT TO THE SAME LAWS, I!XCI!P'I' AS
tate away any rights of the accused. II will, however, give the rights
tiuu 11 may be proridod by law to review IIIII MAY III!REAFI'ER Bl! AMI!NDI!D. TO
(Propoled by Resotutioa of tbe Gmeral Aaembly of Oblo)
victimll of criminal offenses ecpll standing and protection in 0111' stale eon- alfirm, modify, or rcvene finalordon or ac· SECURE THE GUAIWm!ES 1U!QU111!D
tieD of wlmjnjlfrative oflicen or qmciel.
BY DIVISION (A) OF THIS SI!CTJON,
To aa.cJ Attlde I. of
Oblo.COIIIdtutloo by
lddltloo·
stitution. Issue 2 is a question of balance.
(3) Amajority of the judp hearina the
THE
GENERAL ASSEMBLY SHALl. 111of Sectloa lOa.
c:auoe sbaiJ be ...-uy to render ajudptett. PROPRIATE MONEY SUFPICENT ro
filial OPPSET ANY DBPICIRNCY THAT OC2 . The eonstibltionai8J!!!lNimeat wiD serve as a guide to 0111' stale lawmakers J•vl_.. of the 0011111
CURS IN THE QIOO TUmON TRUsT
OlcqJI 11 provided ill IIOCiioo 2(B)(2) of IIIia
. TO AJiliORD VICI'IMS OF CRIMINAL OFFENSES·CONS'IT11.1in passing victim rights legislation. Our constitution serves as our highest lltil:le. No judplall reoullintl from olrial by FUND, AT ANY TIME NECESSARY TO .
TIONAL RIGHTS, THIS AMENDMENT WILL:
authority and statement of public policy. Lawmakers will know it iB the jury sbaiJ be ~e~~mod oo the ...;,Itt of the MAKE PAYMENT OF THE PULL
AMOUNT OF ANY rumON PAYMBNT
will of its citizens that victims of crime should have a right to reasonable evidmco OlcqJI by thellOOCUll1:lll:e of all ..... 011
REPUND THAT WOULD HAVE
1. REQUIRE THAT VICTIMS OF CRIME BE ACCORDED
judp
hearina
the
......
and
appropriate
notjcc,
infnqnaRon.
accgs,
and
protcctjon,
and
a
JIDI!·
BEEN
REQUDU!D BY ATUmON PAY·
FAIRNESS, DIGNITY AND RESPECT IN 11IE CRIMINAL
(4) Wbenowl- die jadp of 1 court of apMENT CONTRACT, I!XCI!P'I' POR THE .
in&amp;flll..llllc.
in
the
criniinal
justic;c
process.
peala
find
dill
a
jud,.upon
wbicll
they
JVSI'ICE SYSTEM.
CONTRACT'S LIMIT OF PAYMBNT TO
.... apood il in oooftict willl • judptett proMONEY AVAILAIIL£ IN THE TRUST
DlliiDtod upoa die ..... .,-by aoy- PUND. NOI'WITHSTANDINGjEC11()N.
has
2. AS PROVIDED BY LAW, REQUIRE THAT VICTIMS OF
3 . The Constitution protects certain fundamental rights thlt every p..non
court of appea1o of 111c: - · the judp aball
29 OF ARTICLE.D. Op THIS ~NSTITU.
CRIME BE GIVEN REASONABLE AND APPROPRIATE
and thlt no mher ~non. institution, or governmelt can taD away or deny. certify the leCOid of the cue to the ...,._. TION, OR THE LIMITATION OF ATUI•
NO'I1CE, INPORMA110N, ACCESS, AND PROTECI'ION AND
TtON PAYMENT CONTRACT !X·
The Bill of Rights 10 the Cbllslitution of the United States and Article I,
for review 1114 filial ~. •
BEPORE THE EI'PI!CTIVII
A MEANINGFUL ROLE IN THE CRIMINAL JUS11CE
Section I0 of the Ohio Constitution were adopted so thlt no one, who 1111111J11U,.t.a;'.,:: ~: .!:~ ECIJTED
DATE OF nos SECllON, SUCH APPROCESS. '
iB IICCIISCd of commitliJia a crime, can be denied the rigbls that are
PROPRIATIONS MAY Bl! MADE BY A.
MAJORITY OP THE MENBER!I
enumerated there. However, there iB no corresponding scelion in either
I!JIPEC1lVE DATE AND REPEAL
U adopled by a majority of the elec:ton ELECTED TO EACH HOUSE OF THE
IP ADOPI'ED, THIS AMENDMENT WILL NOT GIVE ANY
Constitution to protect the fundamental rights of victims of crime. The
.., dti&amp; .,.,,.,.,•• the 1 ...,,...,1 GENERAL ASSI!MBLY, AND 11111 PUU.
PERSON NEW OR ADDmONAL RIGH18 TO APPEAL OR
fbNiame11tal
rights
ofvictima
to
he
treated
with
fJimcu,
djgnjty. IJI!I
cmJIIIIW)' I. 1995, 1114••- AMOUNT OF ANY SUCH BNi1ANCBD
MODD'Y A COURT DECISION, ABRIDGE ANY OTHER
rumoN PAYMENT OR REPUND MAY
resoect need to be in the fnndameutal law of our lillie, the Ohio l:;::s.~'"':·..,. 2 1114 3 of Miele IV of..., BEDISBURSBDTOANDACCEPIEDBY
RIGHT GUARANTEED BY THE U.S. OR OHIO CONS'IT11.1of the - of Obio sbaiJ be THE BENEI'I~Y OR PIJRCHASBR.
Constitution.
011 dial etrectiYe dale.
TIONS, OR CREATE A LI!GAL CLAIM FOR COI'di'ENSA110N
TO THESE ENDS THERE ts HBRBBY
OR DAMAGIS AGAINST THE STATE OF OmO, ITS
PLBDOED THE FULL PAITH AND
SCHEDULE
COMMITTEE TO PREPARE ABGUMENT FOR ISSUE 2
POLD'ICAL SUBDIVISIONS OR ANY PUBIJC OMCER OR
CREDrr AND TAXING POWER OF THE
Uponlbeadoptiuuofdle•• ....... Sec- STATE.
2 ...t 3 of Anicle IV of the C -ALL ASSETS THAT ARB
•
~
Representative Katherine H. Walsh
of the 5I-. of Obio, the Oeoeral MAINTAINED IN THE QIIIO TUJ110N
IP ADOPI'ED, THIS AMENDMENT WILL BE EFFECTI.VE
alloll the ttmood Code of TRUST FUND SHAll. Bl! USED SOULy
Representative Sean Lopu
I'OR. THE PURPOSES OF THAT FUND.
IMMEDIATELY.
RcpreaentaliVr: Tim Greenwood
"' ... Obio !lupmM Court.
HOWIIVIIR, IF THE PROGRAM IS 111R••
I
to Sec:0a. 2 aod 3 of Af.
MINATED OR THE PUND IS LlA ~ 7e8 vote II IIIC
•y for p T 1!.
of 111e QwWinm .t Ollio _.mw QUIDATED, THE R1!MA1N1N0 ASSETS.
ARGU)WENT AGAINST STATE ISSUE 2
llbe c u - - ' of a - o f doodlapply AFI1!R THE OBLIGATIONS OF 1111t
FUND HAVE BEEN SATISPIBD IN ACill wldcb I of doodl il
CORDANCE
Willi LAW SHAU. II!
_ __.+-YES---I
SHALL TBi PROPOSED
1
TRANSPBRRBD TO THE OENDAI;
No~
waalllbmillcd
lpillllthe
ptojlolcd
COIIIIillllionaiiiiiCIIdmellt.
~=~~=
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?
.REVI!NUE FUND OF THE STATB.
No member of the General Auembly voted apinat the amendment.
NO
LAWS SHALL BE PASSED, WHICH
MAY PRECliDI! AND BE MADE CON- ,
TINOENT UPON THE ADOPTION OP
'J1IIS AMENDMENT BY 11111 I!LICTORS, TO PROVIDB THAT l'lmllll
OF 11IB ' I!NITIID
OR CONDucr OF THE TUmON CUDfts
nos CONmnmoN, AND DOBS NOr PROGRAM SHALL B1! CONSI:n'IJNr
CRBATB ANY CAUSB OP ACI10N I'OR. Wl1111111S AMIINDMI!NT. N!7I1IINo IN
COMPBNSATION OR DAMAOBS nus AMENDMENT SHAlL II CONAOAINrl' 11IB STATE, ANY POUI1CAL STRUED TQ ft.OIIIIll' OR lllllftiCt
S!JIDMSklN OP TIIB S'I'ATB, ANY 01'- ANY AMENDMENTS ro TIIB LAW
JIDII.IIMPLOYI!I, OR MliiNT OP 11111 OOVIliNINO 11IB TUli10N CIIIXI'l
STATB OR OF AMY I'OlJTICAL SUB- PROGRAM OR THE .gHIO nJn10N
DIVISION, Olt ANY OI'I'ICEil OF THE TRUST I'UND 111AT ARB .NO!' 1J11C0N.t

.------------------.the
the
1 the
the

Cut backs

of appeal . Without thia lower court review, SIIJI!mle Court Jllllioea will iunle

.

'

•

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-

'.

.

'

SISTI!NT wmt

nos ANIINDMIII!T· ·

�•'

...'

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'

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.:

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_•
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•&lt;

PROPOSED CONSTI'IUI10NAL AMENDMENT

..

&lt;h111101ed by Relolulloa of die &lt;&gt;-raJ A,wmbly of Olllo)

.,

.Chiefs
defeat
Broncos

Pick 3:
645
Pick 4:
2714
BuckeyeS:
1-11-18-29-36:

PageS

'

\

;

Ohio Lottery .

'

1

.

To ..-d Artlde VI ol die Olllo Coasdtutlon by die
acldltloa ol Sedloo 6.

en tine

TO INCREASE OPPORTVNITIII'B ro THE RESIDENTS OF TilE
STATE OF OHIO fOR BIGBII.IDVCATION AND10 IINCOURAGI
omo FAMILII!S 10 SAVI AIIEAD TO Btl"tiR AWORD BIGBD
EDUCATION, THIS AMINDMENT WILL:

1. ALLOW 111ESI'ATE10 MAINTAIN Al'llOGIWf FOR Till SALE
OF TV1'110N CRIDITS WBEIIIY TilE PROCIIIIDS OF SUCH
CREDITS PURCIIASID FOR THE IIINIITt OF SI'ATE RESIDINTS .
ARE GUARANTEI!D BY TilE STATI TO COVER A SPECIFIED
AMOUNT WHEN APPLIED TO TilE COST OF TUITION AT ANY
STATE INSI11VI10N OFIIIGIIEII!IJUCATION AND 1111! SAME OR
JD'FEIIENT AMOUNt W8IN APPLIID TO THE COST OF m- · PiDally, tbe'amendmmJ would require tbal all assets maintainccl in the Ohio
TION AT ANY OI1Bit IDGBIR EDUCATION INS'ITI11tiON AS MAY
TuitioD Trust Pond be usccl solely for the purposes of the fund. If the fund
BE PROVIDED BY LAW.
ia licptin' I ~.any nmainiiiiiSidB would be li'liiiiferred to the gencrsl'revauc
fund of the state.
2. TO 11EQ111RE THAT mT10N CUDn'S PAID FROM THE TUITIONCIEIIITSPIOGRAM AND TBI OHIO tvm0N TRUST ftJND
BE SUPI'Oirl'iD IY-111EitJU. FMI'B AND CUDri OF THE SI'ATE
ARGUMENT FOR STATE ISSUE 3

Val 41, NO. 117

· ccp~1114

ARGUMENT AGAINST STATE ISSUE 3

*

OF OmO AND UQVIUTBIPASSAGEOP LAWS FOR THE CONDUCT OF fBI Tm10NCRI!DD'S PIOGIAM CON~ Wll'll

3. REQUIRE TIIEGENIIIlAL ASSEMBLY 10 API'ROPIIIATE MONEY
TO OFFSET ANY DEriCIENCY IN THE omo TUITION TRUST
FUND TO GtrAilANTII THE PAYMINT OF TBI ftiLL AMOONT
OF ANY T1JITION PAYMENT QR lWUND RIQUIIlED BY AmTIONPA\'MENI'CONTRACT.z.~Al.LOWAM.UORITYOPTBE

MEMBERS OF EACH BOUSE w THEGBNIIAL ASSIMIILY10 APPllOPRIA11 J1JNDS POll fBI PAYMENT OP ANY TUITION PAYMENT CONTRAct PliiMOUSLY INTIIID INTO.
4. REQlJIUTHAT .ALL OHIO TUD10N TRUST ftJND ASSETS IE
USEDFORTHEftlii'OSIOPTBI~~t...i!..'!!IIPUNDISU­
QUIDATED, REQUIRE 111AT ANY UMAil'lll'ftj ASSETS II
TRANSFERRED 10 THE GINEIW. IIVIN1JE ftJND OF 1BI

STATE.

IF ADOn'ED, TmS AMENDMENT WILL BE EPPECTIVI

Since iDI:eplioo, the qeocy's Plepaid Tuitioo Prosram bas more than 31,SOO
dlildn!n earolled, 11a bcellllfely and ~Y inveated by Public Employees
Rdbomeut SyMa IIIOIIIIY ,,.:C sa• and 11a more than S1 1'3 million in asse~~~.

IMMI!DIATELY.

A -.Jorlly J8 t * II •

ry far ......

gram'• vllue, equity and affonlability. To ensure its cootiJiuccl affordability
ancl'eaa!l!e !IIQI'e Qbio c;hi"!~ w !!ll&lt;:q~ !!i&amp;bcr ~on, IlK! M ·, for-

SHALL THE PIOI'OSED
AMENDMI!NT IE ADOPtED?

--+--.,..j

SSP..

EXPLANATION FOR STATE ISSUE 3
(as preplll'eCI by the Obio a.Dot lkllrd)
"

'

The amendment would requ!Je ·tbat tuition credits l"id from the tuition
credits program and the.Ohio Tuition Trust Pond be lupportcd by the full
faith and credit of tbo SUite of Obio. The •IIM"dment would also require the
passage qf lawa to provide tbal fulure ~ of~ tuition credits proarun
be consistent witb the IIIICildment.

By GEORGE AQATE
water line would extend along ButSentiDel News Sllff
ternut to the Marathon station.
Area drivers mu.$t modify !heir Blaettnar said. The project would
speeds on some Pomeroy .b.yways, cost $329,000 - requiring a 12
following action at Pomeroy Vii- percent ma~h from the village if. .
lage Council's Monday meeting.
the grant is ac!!uired.
In an emergency vote. council
Design and engineering studies
dropped ihe spbed limit from 25 to have all been completed for !his
20 miles per hour on Uncoln Hill project making funding !he last
from Lincoln Heights to the bottom Step, he added.
of !he hill and the entire length of
Pomeroy will also seek a
Osborn StreeL
·
$44,000 reereation grant to upgrade
But oourtc;il decided to keep the tbe baseball fields' concession
"no left IUnl" rule for drivers enter- stands, lights 811d rest rooms, Blacting Main Street from Butternut tnar saiil. The Pomeroy Youth
A
League has already pledged to
. . "=~roy police and safety cover the 25 per~en.~ .,!!lalch. or
au!lloridea had recommended !hat $~ 1,000, so .tbe projeCt wtll cost !he
ono-way Osborn Street have speed . VIllage nothing, he 8dded.
bumps IIIStalled, Mayor JQhn Blael- _ . B~aettnar B;1so su"ested council
tnar said, But, Blacunar countered cons!~er seunng !lstde money ~or
!his would affect snow removal acqutr!ng. recreatnon. grtl!ll montes
efforts.
for b~nldnng a walking p~!h from
Councilman Lany Wehrung ~ vt~age han !D Kroger s on ~
suggested a poliCe cruiser sit on· ~ver stde of Main S~ To stabt·
botb streets. to stop tbe speccling l!ze ~ground and build the fourproblem - and prevent children foot-wtde path could totll $28,000,
from bein killed.
hi' added.
.
.
"I donfl care if it's two in !he
In otJ;ter acboo, council:
afternoon or two at night, they
• Shifted $40,000 from .the
come down Lincoln Hill at 50 $t 9.000 general fund balance mto
· milesperhour,"Webrungsaid.
111: street fund.to pay for salllfi:es
I
Councilman Bill Young voicccl at.d recent pavmg, Blaeunar ~d.
concern !hat posting a lowrr speed ! .e street fund has no way of ~~­
limit and more signs would not m~ revenue except !hrouJ!h mintEASTERN QUEEN CANDIDATES- E¥tem High School is
slow drivers.
!"91 !Jas tax 811~ motor vehtcle reggeariDg up ror Ibis weekend's 1111nllll Homecoming activities. This
"We're letting !he tail wag tbe IS(lllbon collecuons, he added.
year's calldldates for Homecoming Queen, from left, are Becky
dog here. We need to enforce Ibis."
The street fund spends about
Driggs, Amy Redoviau, Heidi Nelson iiucl Jessial CheVIIIier. Atteu·Young said.
$1~,000 each month -.hal~ of
dants from other cla!IHS Include: freshmen, Billy Pooler; sop•oIn other business, coWJcil agreed whtch goes to wages of Its etght
more, Tracy Wblte; and junior, Crystal Summerfield. Tbe queen
be crowned during lbe balftim~ or Friday's game agal~st
will
to pursue grants for a Butternut emplo~.
.
...
Avenue water line and improve• will.mvestJgate !h~ possibiliJy
.Trimble. Oilier activities include Olympic evea!S betweea h1gh
·school students Friday afternoon and a semi-formal dance after
·ments to the Pomeroy baseball of leastng rooms 1n the old
fields.
P001eroy tligh School to !he Meigs
the foot baD game. (Seatine! photo by George Abate)
The one-111ile long, 10-inch
\Continued ou Page 3)

-REMOVES PRESSURE ,TO KEEP nJmON LOW: the lcveraae
wbicb the Trust Fund migb! have uaccl to COD!rol tuition COlli ia PlimiJWrd ,

The propoecclanw:odi!Ml!C bas brolld-bucd, bi-paitisan support: stale leadership IUJIIIOIU ita p
Jinecill aid adnmslnton endorse Issue 3 bra•!"'
advance family savings dccraaiel reliance O!IIICIII'CC linancial aid and burdeilsome lltlldealloana, opening pter accesa to education.

-DISCRIMINATES: low income families cannot afford to Contribute
to a college savings IICCOIIDt.

.VOTE NO ON ISSUE 3!

COMMI'ITEE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT FOR ISSUE 3
Senator Richard H. Pinan
SeNih" loben R. Cupp

COMMITI'EE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT AGAINST ISStJE 3

RepJ-..tative Michael 0. Vcricb
Repre:sentalive llublra H. loyd

State Representative Edward F. Kasputis

...

_______

The atneJICIJJ!Clll would allow the Stale of Ohio to mai•in a prop'UII for .~==~~~!,!White~'~----...,;,
the sale of tuiJion eredita ancl to guaraatee tbe proceeda of the credits IIOld.
The guarantee would cover a spcciftod aiDOOBI of the cost of tuitioolll any
ARGUMENT FOR STATE ISSUE 4
state inslilutioo of bigbcr cclucation lll&lt;l.tbe aune or ·a differeDt unount of
the cost of tuition at any adler ~ emJCidioJi illltilution as may be provided
I
•
VOTE '"lm.'' ON ISSUE 4 - TO STOP TAXES ON FOOD
by law.
, ·
.
.

State Representative Joan

_.!

W. Lawrence

EXPLANATION AND ARGUMENT AGAINSI' SI'ATE ISSUE 4

STATE ISSUE 4 1a a constitutionll amendment to repeal a state tax on soda
pop Don't be misled intO believing it eliminates taxes on food. Since 1936
~ on Issue 4 will restore Ohio's tradition of protecting consumers Ohi~'s Constitvtioo bas prohibited stale taxes on fool! off the premisea wbele
The llllle!ldmen! would llso require the Oeneral Assembly to approp1iate A
from payms taxes on food.
. sold. · · ·
·
money to offset any defielency in the Ohi~ :rumon Trust Pond to~
ihe payment of lbc IIlli amount of any tulboD payment or refund required Wbe the c:onatitutionality 0 f 1
bolesal soft drink tax
ballengccl
·
by a tuition payment.cootract, an&lt;1 allow a majority of the members of each . n
.
new w.
e. . . ,
V.:U
~.
.
This imendment is beil!g proposed primarily by,out-of-atate soda pop ven·
house of the 0enen1 Allembly to appropriate fundi for tbc payment of any m 1992• the eowt rulina ~ a g1p111g bole .m Ohio 8 constitubon, which dora wbich seek to usc the Ohio COIIStitution to pJOJDOte their limited special
tuition paymeat contnl:t previoualy entered into.
had lleen tbollpt to prohibit food taxes.
interests. Here are five reasot111 why every Obio voter - and taxpayer -

m.

--::-::":::'::":r'::'::::--:-:;:-:::~:;;~~Ut;__.The court ruled tbat retail food taxes are indeccl illegll. But, it c:oacludccl should vote NO on ISSUE 4. '

DMENT
..ONSTITUTION.~~-,:,..u: ~:c=~
C

tbat wlllllmlc taxes on food are legal!
loopbolc. and restoreObio·sc:onstitu-

- - - - - -...- - - - - - - - - - -... Spccifically,lsaue 4 will prohibil wholesale taxes on food-and other hidden
taxes on food ili'pdients and food paclraging. It llso will repeal the 1992
PROPOSED CO~AL AMENDMENT ·
soft dlink tax. .
·
·~
(Piopa.d'lly fnillltlft Pedllon)

4

~

Jepealina the aoft
tax will niJt affect ellilting state . .
. The
reveaue8 JO into die Oeneral Fund, and are not~ to any . · area.

To iaaeH ~ XD of die Oblo CoaadtudoD by the
addition of Sedloa 13.
.

I. Tujgs (pgd Ia W!!!JI. food tUa apecially bun !hoie who can least
allri to pay; IIICb as familiea witb dlilclrell and seniors on fixed

illllO'IW.

2, AllpwipB Sate wm'MD' 19 mts;t hiMcp 'I'" on fnnd will 1e1 a
deniM"' P""9"kn', The stale is already lookina al new food taxes
to raiae revenues.
·
['

1. PROIDBITING THE CtJRREN1 WHOLESALE TAX ON
SOFr DRINKS AND (,)TBER «;ARBONATED, NONALCOBOIJC BIVIUlAGII.

BONATED, NON-ALCOBOUC 11\'DAGES, OR JOOD FOR
HUMAN CONSUMPTION, OR '1111Wt INGRIDIENTS OR
PACKAGING.
.
.

I.At's l'llllre llUI' c:cJIIItitl.a-1 tradition of prohibitina food ~

'

3. PROIIIBITJNG KNACTMIN.TOI' A TAXON THE SALE TO
OR. ~481 aY A . MANVJ~,..PR~
PACKAGIIl.' OR am1h. ·or sort PJUNU, C~·

... a•J"""" pa m furtbcr,

HUMAN CONSUMPI'IQt(;· OR ; i&amp;IIJl INGUDIINTS OR

coMMITta TO PRIPAU .UGVMKNT FOR ISSUE 4

......

JoiD IIIII' INC!id "•nd ~of ttwneqds of om-. in votina

BONATID,NC&gt;N;~~,ORfOODIOil

.

IF AbOrrJD, 'I'Bil~~IE~30
DAYS~ ·ADCWJJOIII. I ' , . :i ~· •, . •,
~

A . nJ I) ,1. "'!-

lit JP s 12

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~

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_,

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'

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'

'

m.

.

011

.

·

DIBNTS Oil rrs PACKAGINO; (2) UPON
ANY SALB OR PllltCHASI!.OF SUCH
I'I'I!MS SOLD TO OR PUlCHASJ!D BY A
MANUPACTUilEil,
pllOCESSOil,
PACKAOil. DISTRIBUTOil OR
Plriljiili ~ JIOOD JIOl liUM,'N
~.oartsllQig)II!NI'S: .
JIOl uu·IN m TaADB.OilBUSINIISS,
01, (3) 1M ANY UTAJLTIANSACI'ION.
ON ANY fACJCAIJIM0111AT.lxxo!TAJNS
Rl9Q JIOliiUNAN C0N1UMP1'1QN ON

•. , i..

IIXC:DITAllll OllOPFTHIPIJI"G"'WHIIU*&gt;LD.
~ ·fuUolls ~ na IIICTION.
IUU.·~-,.....,._.,..,(1) fOOD ~ RUMAN COICSUMPnoN

UPON ANY ~ IWJ! Ol SIWJ. INCLUDE NON·ALCOHOUC
WHOU!SAU!JIVIlQ!ASBOP,:ooJIOR. I!IIVEJtAOES. 1111S SIICI'IO~ SHALL·

.,

I

'

· NO......,.oaartaJa_ • .....:._

. ~II Af)OPI'ID7

'

(PI~"" !tJiiiiiM PolilloJ!)

lf'll.-.._, .. . . . .,..... at
OMo: •
• , :
Al'licii ' XD at .. . &lt;*D e1 · t • ll
·
·
....... .., llll ..... at~~ ..... ..,.
liall13. • . IW: .

SBAJ.j. TBiftOPOSID

"

.

lli8VI4
T1XT or PROI'OSID
COJIIS'ImJTIONAL AMBNDMINT

.

j ••

'

=========-=~
I

'

state funds available for cducalion
and childrens programs in Ohio. The ~ pop tax genentea $130 :
million per budget period, whicb Is needed to 8UJIIIOil educatiO'I a!Jd .
other vitll prop'UDS for children.

(3) If passed, ISSUE 4 will reduce

,\EPA official will
urge dioxin-free

pulp m111 plant

(4) Coosumers don't pay Ohio's pop tax. The soda pop coqJeDies do.
Marketplace COI!lpdition continues to bold down pop prices al the
store.

CHARLESTON, W.Va.(~
- A U.S. Environmentll Protection Agency official.says he
will urge developers of a proposed pulp mill in Mason County to consider new bleaching
technologies !hat ~o not create
dio~.
·
"I'm going to make a strong
pitch," said EPA Region III
· Administrator Peter Kostmayer.
"We'd like them to think about
alternative tecbnologies .in terms
. ofbleec:hing."
Kosanayer visited West Vir·
glnia on Monday and •
witb
feaden ~ various envit,onmentll
and labor groups.
Parsons &amp; Whiuemore Inc.,
hued in Rye Brook, N.Y., has
said the S1.1 billion project
would create 600 permanent
jobs in Apple Grove, located
: alon$ the Ohio River between
. Hunungton and Point PleasanL .
Developers say !he mill meets
· c:mrent EPA 8lllldardl
The itate Division of Bnvi. ronmental Protection in August
· issued industrial-landfill and
water-pollution permili to the
developers. The (JIOJeclls l'!li!ing 111 air-pollution permit.
, KOIU!IIyer said pranoliiJI I
mill that would aot produce
' dioldn falls in line with the Clio• ton administration's aoal of
encoufNing iodUitry to reduce
::llid eiimiriate pollution when
. possible.

I

(S)

before

Diaoa Wiotethalter
Dan Schonhoft
STOP TAXES ON FOOD COMMI'ITEB

.

· 4. PROIDID'ING ENA~ or UTAIL TAUS ON
PACKAGINQ 'I'IIAT CONTAINS SOIT DIUNKS, OI'III!Oit CAR·
BONATED, NON-ALCOBOUC lbtVDAGIS, OR FOOD P0R
HUMAN c~ON; . . ..
.
'

I

To balarice lbe state budget and prevent cuts in ICbool fuudio&amp;, the
wboleslle pop tax was approvccl in 1992 by a biputisan majority in
tbe atate,.Jegis!ature and Governor George Voioovich. Passlge of
ISSUE 4 could result in harmful cuts in education and other state pro- ·
3. JMicm. whnlee'c M'P on food are ultjmetcly maw' (jp to COIIgrams - or it will necessitate the adoption of another tax bike more
mgnm • The soft drink tax already costs c:onaumcrs $70 million Ill·
objectionable to conawners.
Dually. Fulure wh1llenle food taxes oou1d 00111 us hundred&amp; of millions On November 8tb. vote NO on ISSUE 41
of ikJ,Itm more per year.
·

'
z. PROIDBITING KNACI'MINT
or A WBOLIS.ALE TAX ON
THE SALE OR· I'URCBAsli: or SOFt DIINKS, CAR-

'

tion SOUI'CC for children or adults. So they sbould be subject to taxation just like other non-food products. It's only fair.
·

•

.

PACKAGiNG.

(2) State law bas never defined soft clrinb as food: They are NOT a DU!ri-

We liiJC you to suppon Iaaue 4 bealuse:

CURRENT SacnON 3(C) OF AR11CLE XD PROIDBITS
TAXES ON 11IE SALE OR I'URCBASEOfPOOD FOR HUMAN
CONSUMP'110N OPP THE PIIMISES WIIERI SOLD. '11111:
AMENDMENT WOULD EXPAND TBI CURRENT RESTRIC·
TION~ BY:

·.

(I) Contrary to its supporters' misleading claims, ISSUE4 ia nota reliCtion to atax on food. Its purpose is to prohibit the currem wholelalc
tax ooaoftdrinb iDd otbercarboaatcd. non-a1cobolic beventp. The
tax amounts to a penay a can, .which is modest and fair.

.

' COMMITI'EE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT AGAINST ISSUE 4
R. Gregory Browning

=·AC:.,~ng·

NOT AFPBCTTHE llXTIINI'TO WHICH
lido XVI, Secdoa I atlboCwij•• 1attk
THE LBVY OR COLLI!CTION OP SAL!!S
Sllle of Ol!lo - ' a OOIIIIa
OR OTHER EXCISE TAXES ON THE
ltETAIL SAL!! Oil UTAIL PUilCHA811
OP FOOD FOR HUMAN CONSIIMPI'ION ·
IS PERMriTBD Oil PllOIIIIIITIID BY
SECTION :ICC) OF 11IIS All'I'ICIJ!.

OfPICE OP TIIIIKRITNIY
OP ITATE Of OliO .
I, !lob Taft, Soa-y at SIMI, do '-by
corlify "'"' "'" ............. "'" !loll lUI at

...... I 'I

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JIIGPGIOII

......

.u..bly -'l!loc! Ia .. atat Sllle Jl!ftiiiiiiD At-

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...
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MarkRell
I. Jobn Reimers

I '

I

By KEVIN PINSON
OVP News Staff
,
. .
CHESHIRE - Two parties
involved in a sexual harassment
complaint at the Guiding Hand
School were ready to settle !he
issue Monday night, but could not
because !he Jhirl! p!1!1y •s attorney
was not presenL
"We thought tbat it would be
resolvccl tonighJ." said Prosecuting
Auomey Brent Saunders, who rei!:
resents !he Gallia County Board 6f
Mental Retardation and Developmentll Disabilities.
Saunders and !he board met in
executive session for about half an
hour witb !he attorney of Guiding
Hand Superintendent Jobn Riffe.
Riffe was placed on 30-day
leave in September. The board
agreed Monday to exL...ld !he leave,
which would end ·, hursday. until
!he matter is resolved.
The. superinJendent's dismissal
is being sought by supporters of
Kelly Davis. a program nurse who
says she was termina!ed in June
because she filed a sexual harass·
ment complaint against the superintendent

The prosecu!OI' did 1101 COI!IIIIellt
on !he agreement, but said it could
not be acted upon bel:ause Davis"
attomey. Richard Walla' of Lop!,
was not present at the meeting.
Saunders said he failed 1 letter
Thursday and made six pbope calls
to inform Wallar of tbe meetins,
but was· never contacted.
Riffe will continue working for
the school on home assignment
until a decision is reached.
.. At Ibis point he has not been
terminated," Saunders said. "'But he
is not going to be back in this
building until this matter is
resolved.~

Saunders advised the boll'll not
to wait another month, but to call a
special meeting as 50011 as Wallar
is available to respond to !he agreement
Davis said she spoke with her
attorney Friday and was under the
impression that Wallar was
infoimed of tbe meeting, but not
asked to attend.
In August, !he State Personnel
Board of Review instructed the
r.'fRDD board to reinstate navis
(Continued on Pqe 3)

Negotiators meeting
to avert Gallia strike
GALLIPOLIS - Negotiators
were meeting !his afternoon in a
last-ditch attempt to avert a strike
by teachers and suPJXYI staff in the
Gallia County Local School Dis-

Wednesday.
Letters to parents from the distiicl administtation explaioins !he
situation were sent home with studeniS Monday.
trict
The associations rejected wbat
Should bargaining fail again . was called a "final" offer by tbe
today, ~ work stoppage by !he Gal- board of education on new conlia Local Education Association traciS on Oct. 4 and voted 10 authoand the Gallia Local Suppon Staff rize a strike. Noti(ication of tbe
Association begins at 5 a.m .
(Continued from h~~t 3)

Poll: healtf\ ~ ·
crisis no ~i~
deal in Ohio

Trade summit opens
as Ohio hopes to get
bigger slice of pi~

I

CINCINNATI (AP)- Two!hirds of !he Ohioans surveyed said

break into smaller groups to dis!hey did not believe !here was a
cuss banking and insurance.
naJional health care crisis. a
telecommunications, lr811sportation
statewide poll reported Monday.
and other sectors of international
The Ohio Poll found that 3S.I
trade.
percent thought the healtb care sysTbe goal is to standardize as ·
tem was in a crisis, and 34.4 permuch of the process as poSsible cent lhought it had major problems
from .electronic messages to cusbut was not in crisis. The poll said
Joms 'documents, said Kamran
26.3 percent -said tbe problems
Kusari. spokesman for the UN
were 1101 major and could be fixed
Conference on Trade and Developby !he end of the decade, and 4.2
menL
percent had other opinions.
"This is the ftrst time loolting at
· The poll said S1.1 percent of
every sector together in relation to
!hose responding said !hey would
each other," Kusari said. "Trade
he more inclined to !I'USt stale aovwill nevrr be m01e efficient !han its
e(nment to reform the system .
least efficient sector."
while 28.9 penlCIII said they WOIIki
On Wednesday, UN Secretary·
trust Washington to oo the job.
Genenl Bou!I'OS Bou!I'OS-Gabli and
or Ohioans questioned. 2.6 perU.S. Commerce Secretary Ron
cent said both governnteniS should
Brown will help deliver the Columbe involved; 12:5 ~I said nei- ·
bus Declaration 011 Trade EfficienJRADE SUMMIT - All Iaiaae ·ot die Earth projected as
!her should; IDd 4.8 Pcn:eat said
Ray Willker of the United Ki~Jadomapoke at tile World SUI!Imit OD
cy.
they didn't Jmow.
1'rlde Efllcle!ICy ill Columbal Moadly. Tbe pi o{ tiN! summit Is
The declaration, tl)e culmination
· In a similar Ohio Poll repou;ad •
to brlq toatfter tiie United Nations' tnlde miDisten and sellior
of two years of meetings on trade
in October 1993, 47 perceat said
efficie!ICy, consists of a mix ofJ!Ol·
onldall will -yon, mualelpalleaden ud bllllille!IS e1endves
they would trust ata1e go~et!IQW
frGm throupoat the world to promote laterutloul trlcle lbroqll
icy reconimendations and pracucal
to do ref~mn, and 33 pereeat
steps to belp countries reduce · aew ...,_.tlall tediDCitops and electronic commerce. (AP)
favored WashingiOII.
bureaucratic barriers to l!'llde.
The University of Ciacinnad
H the stepS are implement¢, the
and The Cincinnati Post SJIOiliOr
UN estimates tbat countries ~ CUI meeting.
The city
spend more tban the ·Ohio Poll. Tbe univerlity'a
S1 billion a year off !he cos! of
In general, it )ooked like the Sl million on security for the sum- Insli!Ute for Policy R~ condoing buSiness.
· start of any large convention. mit. That's in addition to the ducted the poll Sept. 14-23, daiaa
Monday's opening session of e1 C.lp! f('r the large number of uni· $SOO.OOO !he city chipped in 10 pay . telephone interviews with •lllldcl!i
the summit wu llevoted mainly to fc med Columbus police officers ftr the delegates' hotel and travel sample of ~1 adults statewide. :
housekeeping items, including s&lt; altered inside and outside !he cts!S.
The poll had a margin error of
'
electing .officers' for a UN trade cmvention Center.
three percentage poinJs.

By PAUL SOUHRADA
f o\isoelated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Corporate
Columbus plays host today to trade
officials from around !he worlcf.
Some of !he nearly 1,000 delegates attending the World Summit
on Thiele EffiCiency will leave the
mini-United Nations in the Greater
Columbus Convention Center to
tour seven) corporate headQuarters.
There, local business leaders
will try to develop future trading
relationships.
Scheduled stops on the summit's second dar include ComPIIServe informanon services. The
Limited Inc. retailing chain, Chern. ical Abstracts Service and the
Huntington National Bank Service
Center.
.
. "We need to inclalse the pres. ence of Columbus and Ohio com·
paniea in international markets,"
said Jona!hu York, president of
the Greater Columbus Chamber of

Comm_mce.

.

. If that happens, the $2 million
!he city is lipendiag to put on the
five-day sbow for repreaentatives
of 130 countiles will return many
times over, YOlk said.
The goal of the summit Is to
make. inlemllional .trading easier,
, particularly fat small· .and mccliumsiZed busineaes.
'
. In ~ tours, *lcRaleS will

will

•

•'

•

.

'

I
I·

I • liP IF

GH superintendent's
case still unresolved

:speed reduction

--STATE COMPETES WITH PRlVATE INVESTMENTS: people
wbo.can alford to prepay tuitipD can do so without ata1e help.

mal, c:oastitulioaaly-mmhC:d ""full 'faitb and credit" is needed.

NO

a_..

only tbat itsu!llOrted "all the steps tate:. by Presi!lent Saddam HusSein to
ccl StateS of fomenting a new crisis in 1he Gulf in oilk:z to get more rev- . ·
g!lll'lllltee lraqt securiJy and ... to get the sancli0111 imposed on Iraq lift·
enue from tbe ruling families in Kuwait811d Saudi Arabia.
·
ed.''
.
In its daily editorial, Baghdad Obst 'Vtr called Saudi Arabi,a's King
Las! week, Russian Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev brokered a deal
Fahd !he "Kmg of Decadence .. and sa J he should drop his claim to be
in which Saddam plcclged to accept Kuwait's independence. and !hen !he custodian of Islam's hoi y shrines in Mec a and Medina.
Security Council would set a date for lifting a ban on Iraqi oil sales
"The crisis over Kuwait has left him .takccl to the feet," it said. "Ho is
imposed aflt'r the August1990 invasion Jf KuwaiL
in reality no more than a servant to the ttievel who come &amp;om across the
'The deal came after an estimated 70,000 Iraqi soldiers massed on the · ·Atlantic Ocean to pi Wider our oil riche·. leaving large parts of the Arab
Kuwaiti border earlier !his month, precipitating !he largest Western
world .so desperately poor."
·
buildup in !he region since the 1991 Gulf war.
Since sanctions forced Iraqi oil of · !he market, Saudi Arabia, !he
Iraq has now withdrawn most of tbe soldiers. But it appears to be
world's tqJ oil Jl'O(Iucer, made' up mos of the shortfall. boosting ouJput
s!alling on the pledge to recognize Kuw1.iL
from about 5 million barrels a day to more tban g million barrels. Traders
Today, Baghdad's only English,Janguage newspaper accused !he Unit·
say OPEC has no plans yet to handle the return of Iraqi oil, which they
call a major wildcard iri the oil futures Irarket

·Pomeroy ouncil
:approves treet ,

-TRUST FUNDNOI' SELF.stJPIIORTING: when this lqi""'im was
passed six years ago, it was to be illdepeodent of ata1e goverDIIICIIt and
investors bad no claim on the Oeuenl Revenue Fund. Now they will have
first claim 011 the GRPI

Recent lepationiJII*d by the Oeoerll Asaembly bas improvcd the pro-

VIS

:By NED.. MacFARQUHAR
Associated Press Writer
.
-· : · BAGHDAD, Iraq -After au the troop movemenJS, !h~ saber rauling,
:!he diplomatic posturing. the dispute wilh Saddam H~em comes do~
· to !his: What is the wotld going to do about the sancuons tbat are cnp, lin Iraq?
·: p fs Russia and ·!he United States c:ashed over !he issue; Baghdad
: stallCd on a pledge 10 1ee0gnize Kuwait's independence, a key demand
:before sanctions will be li{ted
.
,
. .
.
. The Revolutionary Command Coui'Ctl, Iraq s lop dectst~n-malung
:body, reoortedly had approved the decision to recogruze Kuwatt on Satur. day. Parlianient hail been expected tp JObber-stamp !he move Monday. .
; It did not. .After a closed-door meet ng. the National Assembly satd

VOTE NO;

-INSURES PERSoNAL SAVINGS PLANS: the inveator would be
Pe"W of hr!C 3 'will IIJI qjs n~c• or met Ohio hJPIYM more. It is assured of a fixed return when college tuitioo crcclits are piii'Cllas4ld
needed to demoollrate to lbe lnlemal Revenue Service tbat the Prepaid Tui- . regardless of earnings on Trust Fund investments.
tioo froaram qullifi~ for fcdenl tax exemption. This ""stamp of approvll''
will enable the program to c:cmnue providing an affordable means for families -COMMITS STATE TAXING POWER: sbould the invatmcnt of colto prq11y Aature biJber education at competitive prices.
lege tuition funds be insufficient to cover future tuitioo, tax-payers will
have to pay the difference. In a time of difficult budget cboices, wbcre
AJJ altlfe qeocy, lbe Autbority bas many checks and balances to safeguard raising taxes or reducins spending are opti0111, guuanteeing perDIIi sava lbcally-tolllld prop'UII for ita piJiicipantl. The funds are sufficient to meet ings is wrong.
future obliplions. Pulqe of Iaaue 3 will officially back the Aulbority witb
lbe Slale'i eodorlomeat, laliafyina federal guidelillea.
-GUARANTEES PAYMENT: an absolutec:onstitutiooll guarutee is
made only for lang-term debt for stale buildings. Ouarantecing payment
The Obio Tuition Trut Auihority was mated in 1989 as a stale agency to for personal college savings IICCClWits is BAD PUBUC POUCYl
provide Obio fwmi!W with a safe, simple and affordable way to prepay the .
00111 of lJl8ber educalioll in 1111111 ilaaements. Alao, scbolanbipll can DOW -'-IRS QUFSI'IONS: lmemal Revenue SeNice will tax Trust Fund earnbe mated by Clllpollllioaa or otber Olpnirr-o~~~ ~ prepay tuition for Children ings unless the program Ia stale bac:kccl. In reality these: are private savfrom funiliea who cannot afford advanced savmgs.
'
ings and should remain so.

TmS AMENDMI!NT.

J1ect1on. 10 ......

Allultlmrcl!ll lne. t!J

U.S., Russia clash over Iraqi sanctions

. THE OHIO CONSTITUTION SHOULD tml BE AMEJ11DED TO
PLEDGE STATE TAXES TO GUARANTEE PERSONAL COLLEGE
nJmON SAVINGSI

REASONS TO

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 18, 1994

I

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