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                  <text>l'age-E4-Sunday Times Sentinel

October 31,1•

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

...,

'Like Water for Chocolate~ . easy bo~k . to ~ead
be near her publisher, Doubleday,
By JOHN BARBOUR
she has taken an apanment on St.
AP Newsfeatures ':"riter
Marks Place, a busy, eclectic street
NEW YOR~ - Wtll success on the edge of Greenwich Village
rum Lawa Esqutvel7 Not likely.
in New York.
.She has J';'SI enJoyed ':"ha! IS the
Across the street, the St. Marks
wnter's eqwvalent to wmnmg the Hotel offers rooms for $25.61 a .
lottery.
night and her neighbors are a comic
Her first novel, " Like Water for book salon and a store called " The
Ch~olate," has printed 550,000 Condom Explosion."
cop1es m the Umted States,
At borne in Mexico City, Laura
500,000 of wh1ch have been sent to still wakes early to get to the mar·
booksellers to fill orders: It has ket when it opens and to chat for a
bee n on the best-seller hsts for couple of hours before there are
almost six months.
many people there She says
. The movie of the same name, through an interpreier that _she
d~tected by her husband, acwr ·'really likes to go, to let thmgs
Alfonso Urau, h~ grossed $18 !'Ill· h
n so that every day will be a
lion, approachmg _$20 m~lhon , so~~f adventure· so she is sort of
which would make 1t the h1ghest- seduced b what's going to hap·
grossing foreign film in U.S. histo·
Y
0 ..
ry. It appears on 122 screens.
pe Attractive, brunette, more an
The Spamsh vers1on of her book unwitting and shy seductress than a
has 42,000 cop•es m pnnl
seducee, she savors both the people
Yet she sull drives her trusted and the food spread out for sale.
Fo~d 9.h~ an~ has no P':!"S to trade Both must be touched, savored,
u m. It s b1g enough she sa~s. smelt
Her 17 -year -old daughter sllll
Food plays a large part in this
drives a prc·sllCcess v.olkswagon..
drama of Ufe; even the title is a ref·
A~ut the only ~1fferences m erence 10 the temperature water
her hfe are concess1ons - faxes
h
before a boil to melt
and answering machines and letters . r~ ~~ S0 tOO the te;,.perature
and interviews, all begrudgingly ~fe~otio~s. '
'
tolerated.
.
. .
h0 me after shopping
She is movmg her flll!lilY mto a
She return}
hours of highly
somewhat larger home m MexiCO for three or ou~ .
Sometimes
City, and conceding to the need to concentrated wnung.

can I. .
.
explam ... Butllts !lot.~omethmg
She likes her new tf temporary · that is broken so eastly.
neighborhood in !'lew . York
w,_ben sh~ is cooking or bat!'~g
because of the proh~er.attQ.n of or just walldng, she feels she ISm .
green grocers th~t mtmtc hof!~e. contact with these ele!Dents !lJat
She loves the cuhnary exploration move her and she finds tt very illu·
here, most recent bemg an adven· minating: She finds that her con·
ture into Afghan food.
cenl!Biion is fairly intense in these
The Esquivel style of writing moments.
refl~ts. her background ~nd her
"I find in every ·activity th e
upbnngmg. Before she_wntes, she energy and 1 can connect myself
appeals to the four basic forces of with each moment"
nature, much as ~ farmer does
In the waning pages of the book,
before sowmg h1s crops. She and in the final scenes of the film,
appeals to air, ftre, water and earth.
there appears the image of Nacha,
She says.this ritual i~. n~ some- the cook who ~e a mother to
th1~g s.~e mvented. It s very T1ta (much as lhe liD&amp;ge of her real,
anc1ent.
.
tyrannical mother appears earher)
So when your characters are m a long after she and the natural moth·
serene state or a state of grace, you er have died.
have to feel that way too before
If these appearances seem
you .c~.~te about it?
supernatural, to Laura ES&lt;JU!vel
• s_..
.
they ar~ as real as ~he ongmal
It IS less !I" ~~tellecbtal process incarnauons. Conf!OI!ling Ute ghost
than a "feeling one, she says. Is of her mother, Ttta IS able to face
she almost in a trance when writ· old fears and deal ;ovith .~m. She
mg?
sends her mother s spun away.
She unde~sta_n~s the question saying she no.longe~ has to obey
and agrees w1th 1tm•the sense that her, she has~ life to hve. Go! . .
she feels when writing she enters
In the ~l'!ma!C scene the ~plllt
into a separate state of meditation.
of Nacha IS Ughnng up a mulbtude
But isn't that a fragile state, cas- of candles in the bridal chamber,
ily shattered by a ringing tele· once ca_ll~d the "d~rk room"
phone?
where Ttta. s mother d~srobed and
"No. No . It is difficult to bathed to h1de from prymg eyes.

when wnter Esq':"vel fc:els stuck,
homemaker Esquivel rettres to the
kitchen where she does all her own
cooking.
.
. .
Her work .m progress ts sctenq:
fiction, e_nt1tled ':The Law of
Love." Wuh a bile like that, som~one says, it is redundant to call It
science fiction. She laughs.
. Her best-selling novel , I 2
monthly install.ments each begm·
ning with a recipC, allows the 5el!·
sonal rituals to brin.,8 in th~ tradi·
lions that interact wtth the hves of
three sisters , the youngest of
~hom, Tita, js forbidden to marry
smce the culture re817"es h~ hfe to
serve her mother until sh~ d1es. The
tale is her escape from th1s slave~.
The story is woven by a fmc
gauze of mysticism totallr alien to
most ~ntemporary Amencan best·
sellers, but not ,un~ommon m the
rest of the world s hterawre.
Laura Esqu1vel used to devote
her .afternoons "? needlepomt and
sewmg, but that IS now punctuated
with answering fax messages and
lettt;rs.
.
. .
. • I really rece1ve a 1!11 of mvua·
uons, and the worst thmg 1s that I
feel guilty sometimes because I
can't ~?swer all the letters," she
says. I would hke to have the
time to go everywhere. But I

•

.

.

Dolphins
defeat
Chiefs

"It was a ~~ry tmpor!ant
moJIIent for me, Ms. Esqut vel .
says. "In the sense-th~tsu.ch a castrating m01her won t .c!tsappear
very easily, these ~~~ons do '!'?t :
disappear very eastly etth~. Traili- .
lions that have to deal w1th love,~
sacred traditions cannot disappear :
very easily."
She is truly surprised at the suc- •
cess of both the book and the
movie in this country, but she has a .:
possible explanation.
. .!
She thmks that the Unued •
States having industrialized early,;
ha_s t~t conf!!Ct with _land, wi~ life, ~
w1th trad111ons, w1th emotions . .,:
Which may be why her boo~ ~nd:
film have had such surpnsmg ·
appeal in this country. Other bookS.:::
have struck the same chord, Amy"'
Tan's "The Joy Luck _Club" and ~
" The Bridges of Mad1son Coun- ~
ty,' • for instances.
.
.
"They deal with the sudden:
recovery of certain spiritual values-;:
and sensibilities ... Amy Tan has.,..
also tried to recover "these fwnily:::
sensibilities, and a)l those things ·,
that deal with feminine health," ,:
she says "This society has de val- ..
ued terribly this kind of thing."
•:.
And yes, she does see ghosts. ·
She even talks to them. Sometimes ;·
she invites them to supper.
·

specials about the former president,
slain in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963,
are scheduled for November. Here
are some projects competing for
viewer attention:
"JFK: Reckless Youth," a fourhour ABC miniseries based on Ute
biography by Nigel Hamilton, will
air 9 p.m.-II p.m. EDT on Sundsy.
Nov. 21 , and Tuesday, Nov. 23.
With Patrick Dempsey starring
as Kennedy from age 15 to 29, the
miniseries concentrates on h1s
Continued from E2
school days, World War II experi·
to read fine print. A sunny spot ence and political baptism.
near a window is great. They need
Kennedy's romance with a forabout six hours of bright, indirect eign journalist who was suspected
light daily. Keep out of direct sun by FBI head J. Edgar Hoover M
and away from drafts, radiators and being a German spy also 1s
hot air registers. It's best if temper- detailed. But producer Judith A.
atures do not exceed 72 degrees m Palone says while the film is sexy,
the day and 60 at night.
it is not sal&lt;~tious.
While they seem to disappear
The intent, Palone said, was to
after the holidays, like fruitcake show the forces of family, person·
and eggnog, they will thrive in a ality and events that combmed to
home year after year w1th proper shape Kennedy's life.
care. The green foliage is quite
"This miniseries is not a black
attraedve.

Poinsettia...

and white depiction, as I think you
see in most Kennedy pieces," she
said.
' II think these are full depictions
of the Kennedy family - and the
Kennedy world. I think we really
created the Kennedy world from
his childhood right up through poli-

5.9°/o
APR
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STARTING AT 518,995

1993 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE
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' View.

Funding said annual per-pupil
spending ranges from about $3,000
to $12,000.
Schools are financed through a
combination oflocal, state and fed·
era! tax money.
Local taxes provided 52.2 percent of school money in fiscal year
1992. The state provided 42.1 per·
cent, and 5.7 percent was from the
[cdcral government.
Local money comes mainly
rrom taxes on real estate and from
school district personal income
taxes.
State money comes from part of
the general revenue fund, the·
account into which personal
income, sales and other tax pro·
cccds are placed, and from the
Ohio Loucry.
The coalition said districts with
low property values must impose
higher tax rates to raise the same
amount of revenue geneJated by
identical rates in wealthy districts.
The Ohio Deparunent of Educa·
tion said 102 property tax levies on
Tuesday's ballot would provide
districts with money to finance
daily operations.
Another 65 levies and 42 bond
issues would suppon school con·
sLruction projects, while 29 districts
arc proposing school district
income taxes.

Eleven killed on Ohio
highways,,ore'Y'Wl!l!kend

I

Violence,
fear mar
Halloween
parties

INSTALLING HYDRANT ·The Chester
Volunteer Fire Department assisted by Blair
Windon who donated and operated the backhoe,
recently lmtalled a dry fire bydrimt in the Her·
·she! McClure pond in Chester Township, Dry

.

fire hydrants are composed or a strainer tbat
goes Into the pond, a hydrant bead, and various
lengths of six inch pipe. Installation or tbe dry
fire hydrant will shorten turn around time for
filling tankers on their way lo fires in the area.

Clinton says he still ·
needs votes for NAFTA

WASlDNGTON (AP) - As the
push for an unpopular Jhree..nation
Mqrray, 211. hometown unavailable, trade pact begins its frenzied final
al~ ~ta~ Pr~ ·
days, President Clinton says he has
Two.double-.{atahty acc:1dents in a single-vehicle accident on U.S . 'won the hearts and minds - but
.
boosted Ohio's weekend traffic 20 in Conneaut.
CHILLICOTHE
Edward not the votes - of the lawmakers
death .!Oll ,to 11, the State Highway
to pass it.
Jerome Br'O.wn, 29, of Cleveland needed
Patrol said.
"I believe we will do it," ClinThe patrol counted traffiC deaths Heights, an~ Robert L. Harris, 37, ton said in preparation for this
·from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight of ClevelanCI, when their car struck week's public relations blitz for the
another car on Ohio 104 north of North American Free Trade Agree·
.Sunday.
Chillicothe..
The dead:
ment. "But it's going to take all
CLEVELAND - Todd Stucin, hands on deck."
SUIIIDAY
GREENVILLE - David L. 18, of Cleve)and, in a one-car acci·
The call to arms was starting
liuckingham, 45 •. and ~mily BliCk· dent on a Cleveland street.
today with remarks and a question·
BEA VER:CREEK- Lorinda L. and-answer session at the Chamber
ingham, 6, of Uruon City, m a twoSmith,
22, of Dayton, in a one-car of Commerce. Businessmen at 210
car collission on a Darke County
crash on a city street.
road. SPRINGFIELD - Tara A.
MASSILLON William
Valentine, 19, of Dalton, when he Davis, 18, of South Vienna, driver
lost control of his car and it flipped in a two-vehicle crash on a Clark
County road.
over along a Stark County road.
'DELAWARE Jane L. FRIDAY NIGHT
URBAN~ - Ricky L. Sum ·
Brabender, 71, of Erie, Pa., in a
two-car collision on U.S. 42 in mers, 18, Springfield, a passenger
in a one-vehicle accident on Ohio
, Delaware County.
The Meigs County Council on
55 in Champaign County.
SATURDAY ,
Aging celebrated 20 years of ser·
CONNEAUT - Steven L.
vice to senior citizens at a reception
ai Ute Multipurpose Senior Center
in Pomeroy on Sunday afternoon.
The council on aging , which
serves as the governing body for
the senior center, was formed in
March,
1972, and services to
Charges are pending against three subjects for the theft of a truck
seniors
began
through the agency a
from the property of William Amos on Douglas Road near Har·
year
later.
•
risonville Thursday, according to a Meigs County Sherifrs Depart·
Susan Oliver, the council's
ment report.
·
·
executive
director, called yester·
The old Diamond T stub nose truck was takeQ in Ute afternoon.
day's
reception
a "milestone, rec·
said Sheriff James M. Soulsby. Upon investigation, deputies learned
optizing
20
years
of providing ser·
that neighbors had seen a red and black pickup pulling Ute stolen
v1ces
to
the
older
adult population
truck.
of
Meigs
County.
•
Later, the red and black pickup truck with three subjectS was
"When I was thinking about
spotted broken down on State _Route 7.. They v:-e!C picked ~p for
what
I' wanted to say today, I start·
questioning and two of the subjects admllted to thvolvement m the
ed
to
make a list of individuals I
inciden~ said Soulsby.
wanted
to thank," Oliver said. ''The
Names are being held pending the filing of charges.

sites throughout the country were
lakin~ part. ·
H1gh-profile endorsements from Nobel Prize winners and former Cabinet secretaries, among
others - will be trumpeted Tuesday. After talking about health care
on Wednesday, Clinton plans to
travel outside Washington on
Thursdsy to promote NAFf A.
The House is scheduled to vote
Nov. 17.
" That's an eternity," Clinton
said last week at the Wall Street
Journal Conference of the Americ·
as. It was the first of lwo speeches
that set the foundation for this

week's promotion.
Clinton claims he has already
passed the "first threshold" by
convincing a majority of legislators
that passing NAFT A is the right
thing to do. He says the trade deal
would pass by secret ballot, a boast
that draws jeers from foes.
"I believe we won the secret
battle," Clinton said.
To win the real battle, aides say
Clinton must convince lawmakers
that they can vote openly for the
unpopular pact without being
thrown out of office.
Opponents, from fonner presiContinued on page 3

Council on aging observes 20
years of service in Meigs County

9,995 OR $199 Per Mo.

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~-Local briefs-__,
Charges pending in truck theft

1993 CHEVY CAVALIER R/S

5 speed, air, stereo/caaaette, LS trim, aluminum wheels

air, cruiH,tlll, caaHtte.

list got so long that it would have
taken the rest of the afternoon. I do
want to express appreciation to the
agencies, organizations, public
officials, churches, Ute news media,
volunteers, past and present board
members and funding agencies for
their support and assistance
throughout these 20 years."
"Special recognition goes to
Eleanor Thomas, who spearheaded
the agency for 18 years," Oliver
said.
Oliver read excefl&gt;IS from the
minutes of the MCCaA's first
board meeting on March 2, 1972,
when the agency was formed.
Clarence Struble was elected president; Mrs. John Moon, vice presi·
dent; Mrs. Hugh Custer, secretary,
and Genrudc Miu:hell , treasurer.

Two entries from the journal of
Leafy Chasteen, a 20-year employ·
ee of the agency were read to the
audience as well. Oliver recognized
Chasteen, Joyce Bunch, Wanda
Vining. Jeanne Braun and Alice
Wamsley liS 20-year employees of
the MCCoA.
Oliver also urged the passage of
the MCCoA 's one-mill levy, which
appears on Tuesday's ballot county-wide.
"We have served for 20 years,"
Oliver said, "and with your ' yes'
vote on Election Day for our levy,
we will serve ror 20 more years."
State Sena tor Jan Michael Long
(D·Circleville) said that he understood the imponance of the agency
because of the panicipation of his
Continued on page 3

No injuries were reported following a deer-car accident Friday
on US 33 around 9:4S p.m.
According to a report from the Meigs County Sherifrs Depart·
men~ Cary R. Clay, Albany, was northbound when he struck a deer
th'at entered the roadway. The deer hit the left-front of the car,
flipPeil up and sln!Ck the windShield, breaking it out, and then
rolled ovet the top of the car.
Damage to Clay's 1986 Subaru was listed as moderate.

Athens police arrest
120 during celebration

Vehicles damaged in wreck

HOURS: MON.-FRI. 9:()0.8:00;
,·
SAT. 9:0-4:00;
,
SUN. 1:oo-5:00

I

Miner damage was inc:umd to both vehicles in an accident near
Jhe intenection of Mulberry and West Second Friday.
l'lxnt:nty police said tltlrDanjel Leonard, 24, Pomeroy, driving a
Mejgs County Slterilf'a Department car, was pulling off Mulberry
onlb Welt~ when lhe vehicle's right frorit bumper caught the
driver'a door on.a car driven by Margaret Bissen, 75, Long Bottom.
'l'heie wen Ito ckltlpns.
.·
Dollar General reported Monday that sometime over the weel:·

.

·'

Cln.-OLDS.·CID.•IBO
.

•

.

'

end thc·store'a front door window \VaS cracked•

OPEN ·

•

•

: Two cited for DUI

SUNDAY

·•

Two tlten w~ ~ited for driving under the influence early Sunday morning, the Oallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
rej)OI1clicl.·~.

'

.

~ . · Paul D. Mltr;heU, 38, 33930 I acks Road, Langville, and Paul V.
; KitzmiUer,34, 43~ Slate Route 141, Racine, were both cited for

-om anc1 drivJnslefl of cen~er.
,..

..
.

''
r

..

By The Associated Press
Real fear edged out the store·
bought variety in some cities this
Halloween .
In Los Angeles, gunmen howling "trick or treat" fired into a
church Sunday night, injuring a
woman standing at the altar, police
said.
" Many people started crying
and praying," said Rosa Basquez,
a pari shioner at Verba De Dios
church.
The victim, 47-year-old Maria
de Jesus Garcia, was in serious
condition after surgery for a stom·
ach wound, police Lt. Earl
Pa ysinger said.
In Fullerton, Calif., two 9-yearold girls out Dick-or-treating were
struck and killed by a pizza deliv·
cry van Sunday evening.
The cousins were just a block
rrom home when they were hit,
police Sgt. Neal Baldwin said.
The accident was under investi·
gation, and the girls' names were
not immediately released pending
notification of relatives. Police
were considering whether to file
charges against the van's driver •.
In Denver, a ·teen-ager etcorting
youngsters on a trick-or·trelll out·
ing was taunted and then shot in
the head by suspected gang members.
Carl Banks, 18, was in critical
condition early today •' Denver
General Hospital, a nursing supervisor said. He was declared brain·
dead two hours after the Sunday
evening shooting. Pollee said they
had no motive in the attack.
In MassachusetJS, wary parents
in two communities kept costumed
children on a short leash - if theY:
let them outat aU.
In Sturbrid$e. where 10-yearold Holly Piiramen was kidnapped
in August and found dead Oct 23,
"People are leery," said Red
Denault. "They're taking their kids
down to the parade at the common
rather than the trick«· treating."
And in Bridgewater, trick-ortreating was canceled after two
killers serving life tenns escaped
rrom the Massachusetts Corrcctionallnstitution. The search for Robert
Dellclo, 51, and Joseph Correia,
38, continued early today.
A church in the southeastern
Texas community of Nederland
offered an alternative version of a
haunted noose. Actors depicted
scenes of abortion, drug use, suicide, Satanism, and the crucifixion,
while another playing an angelic
Christ told visitors it's time to
accept him as savior.
"This is real life," said Sylvia
Oliver, a member of the Triumph
Church. "Overdosing. Suicide.
Alcoholism. Abortion."
Two Boston mothers caught the
lightheaned side of the day they
dressed their youngsters up as Elvis
Presley.
"They've got the body fat.
Look at the cheeks on that tid "
said Kate Robins, the mother
one tiny, pudgy King.
"Elvis took this toddler-like
shape as he got to the end of his
life," said Janet Steinmetz, mother
of the other toddlin' rocker.

of

Deer-car wreck reported

,,

Low tonight In lOs. bear.
Tuesday, sunny, high In mid-50..

2 s.ctiona. 12 " - 35 _,..
AMulllmocblnc............,.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 1, 1993

: He said voters would be moro
:willin~ tO approve higher loCal IJIX
:rates 1f they saw improvell)ents in
•education quality, a reduction in
:the dropout mte, and better results
:rrom proficiency testS.
; Tuesday's election c~m~s
against a backdrop of a mal m
Perry County Common Pleas Court
or a lawsuit that contends the current state system of paying for
·schools is unconstitutional.
About 500 school districts that
make up the Ohio Coalition for
.Equity and Adequacy of School

5

1994 CHEVY S-10 PICKUP

Kicker:

, COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - .
.Taxpayers would approve more
;school levies if they saw better
•results from the money already
:being spent on education, Gov.
:George Voinovich said.
· Voinovich offered that assess;ment in advance of Tuesda)"s elec:tion that finds 239 money 1ssues at
:stake in districtS statewide, Ute low· '
:est number in a general election
·since November 1988.
: An average 44 percent or such
:proposals won approval over the
:last four years.
· "The problem in Ohio today is
:people don't think they're getting
:the result, in many instances, for
:Ute dollars they're invesdng in edu·
;cation," Voinovich said in an inter·

Auto., V&amp;, air, aterao, llr bag.

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Governor: Ta~payers
want school results

1993 CHEVY CORSICA LT

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rural Virginia during the 1930s and eventS as the Dust Bowl devasta· tion of U.S. farmland and to the .•
'40s.
HindenburR aviation disaster.
Continued from E 3
The movie, airing 9 p.m.· II
p.m. EDT Sunday, Nov. 21, is set
•••;.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
in 1963- a time of change for the
' 'A new mine IS bemg started
Waltons and, in the course of a
near
Larder Lake in Ontario, Cana- ·
brief, violent moment in Dallas, for
da.
The
rock is asbestos (as-bes·
the nation.
tos).
We
can use much more
Lics."
Author Earl Hamner Jr., who
asbestos
than
we have been able to ·
Those working on the project created the TV series and who lent
get."
felt the weight of depicting a U.S. his riel\ voice to it as naJTator,
A 1960 item in the fourth-grade
president who still evoli:es strong explains why the reunion movie
issue
on road building:
•·
feelings for many Americans, chose to focus on that time and on
"The
superhighways
built
today
:
Palone said.
the president's death.
will
mean
fewer
traffic
tie-ups
•
"In any biography you have to
He said the film's writers, Claire
when
you
are
ready
to
drive."
•
take some creative license," she Whitaker and Rod Peterson, felt
A prescient piece from 1930: •
said. "But the words (dialogue) . that 1963 represented a year when
"It won't be long before we·-;
come from text and speeches and the Walton characters would have
shall
have a moving picture on our ·
the book. Much of this was said by pr"ogressed significantly in their
radios.
" A more recent issue ·
these people.
lives.
delves
into
TV violence.
~
"We didn't sit down and write a
"And also, as we had so often
From
the
start,
Editor
Johnson
.,:
fairy tale."
done in the series, we could show a
ordained that, "Ours shall be a :
CBS brings fiction and fact representative American family
positive philosophy of optimism" ~
together in "A Walton Thanksgiv- weathering a national tragedy,"
and
in its early years Weekly Read·:
ing," a new TV movie starring Hamner said.
er
tended
to gloss over news that ::
original cast members of the popu·
He noted " The Waltom" series
might
have
been unsettling to chit-:
tar 1972-81 series about a family in had included references to such
dren.
.....

HURRY, B-E,AT, TH)E- , GOBBLINS TO THESE DEALS
AND SAVE, SAVE, SAV'EI

Pick 3:

Page4

Miniseries, movie, specials will recall JFK's assassination
By LYNN ELDER
AP Television Writer
LOS ANGELES - The light
and shadow of John F. Kennedy's
life and death are the focus of a
variety of television programs
marking Ute 30th anniversary of hiS
assassination.
·
A miniseries. movie and news

Ohio Lottery

VETERAN EMPLOYEES RECOGNIZED
• These women were recognized at the Meigs
County Council on Aging's 20th Anniversary
Reception for their 20 ~ears or service to the

Meigs County Senior Center. They are, 1-r,
Joyce Bunch, Wanda Vining, Leafy Chasteen,
Jeanne Braun and Allee Wamsley. (Sentinel
Photo by Brian J. Reed)

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Police
&lt;trrcstcd 120 people durin!; the
annual Hallween celebration in the
city streets late Saturday and early
Sunday.
Police Chief Rick Mayer said
the number of arrests was consisent
with past years. Most arrests were
for disorderly conduct and underage drinking.
At last year's event, 101 people
we re arrested.
About 20,000 people took pan
1n the celebration, but poor weather
held down the wmout, police said .
" I continue to believe this event
is a strain on the community' and
the police department," Mayer
said. "It is a time bomb."

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- Monday, Nowmber 1, 1883'

CQmmentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO 11IE INTERESTS OF 11fE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CJ;IARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETfERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words . All leiters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,

adJjren and telephone number. No unsigned letters will.be published. Le:Uers
shOuld be in good taste. addressing issues, not personalities.

Democrats believe
they see silver lining
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
. COLUMBUS- Ohio's Democrats have had little to cheer about lately but Slate Chairman Harry Meshel took some consolation last week in
an unusual flap thai could cause a split among Republicans.
Joel Hyatt, who plans to seek the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate, also savored the fight over a campaign contributor list among three
Republicans running for lhe GOP Senate nomination.
By wtiek's end, the Republicans claimed 10 have settled the feud. The '
list was back at GOP headquarterS. Bernadi~ Healy, one of the GOP con; tenders, agreed to pay an un~ified amount for ils unauthorized use.
- Three of the Healy camprugn's staff members who formerly worked at
: state headquarters were r~red after being accused of stealing the list. Ms.
: Healy, who has never run for office before, said she knew nothing about
the incident but that it shows "politics stinks."
Meshel, whose own problems include an approaching statewide election without many Democrats anxious 10 run, couldn't resist taking jabs at
the GOP at a news conference in his office that covered various subJects.
. "I lhink its unique that a Republican finally got caught stealing," he
: said, smiling. He also was amused by what he said was Ms. Healy's
• auempt to run for office as an oulsider.
· Hyan, in a Columbus speech, took note of the GOP problem.
"I'm very upset about what is going on on the Republican side," he
said, lOngue-in-cheek But he envisioned a spirited Republican primary
!hat could divide its ranks the fall.
Meshel, with rej!artl to Hyatt - wh&lt;l!ie has been criticized by some
. Democrats for seeking to succeed his father-in-law, Sen. Howard Metzen: baum, said the source should be considered.
"It is possible thai those who are not warm arc interested in running
themselves," Meshel said. He didn't say who he was talking about.
Cuyahoga County Commissioner Mary Boyle and U.S. Rep. Marcy
. Kaptur, D-Toledo, have been mentioned as possible Senate candidates.
Meshel did not say he expecls problems in 1994, other than the chal. lcnge of fund-raisin~ lhat faces all panies. But he did not deny the Demo: cratic slate is still wtde open.
: Little-known State Sen. Roben Burch of Dover, for instance, is the
·only announced candidate for governor. Gov. George Voinovich, a
:Republican. already has raised about $3 million for his expected re-election bid.
"Rob Burch is working his rail off around the state and he is heading
in the right direction," Meshel said.
He also said Rep. Jane Campbell of Cleveland, endorsed by House
·Speaker Vern Riffe or Wheete-:sbtll)!, is still thinking_ ~bout running.
. "And frankly, Bill Brown IS still cons1denng 11, Meshel sa1d, referring to a former three-term attorney general who now practices law in
Columbus.

foday in· history
By The Associated Press
Today is Monday,. Nov. 1,. the 305th day of 1993. There are 60 days
left in the year. Thts ts All Samts Day.
Today's Highlight in History:
bn Nov. 1, 19'2, the United States exploded the first hydrogen bomb in a
lest at Eniwetok in the Marshall Islands.

: ?n"1~~~~helangelo's pa!ntings on lhe ceiling of the Sistine Chapel
·were first exhtblled 10 the public.
·
: In 1755, .a devastating earthquake and its aftershocks killed about
50,000 people in Lisbon, Portugal.
In 1765, the Stamp Act went into effect, prompting stiff resistance
trom American colonists.
: In 1861, Gen. George B. McClelll!'l was made general-in-chief of the
Union armies.
.
· In 1870 the United States Weather Bureau made its first meteorologtcal observ;tions, using reports gathered by telegraph from 24 locations.
In 1936 in a speech m Milan, Italy, Beni10 Mussolini described the
alliance ootween his country and Nazi Germany as an "axis" running
between Rome and Berlin.
: In 1950. two Puer10 Rican nationalists tried to force their way into
Blair House in WashingiOn to assassinate President Harry S. Truman. The
atteJ:Dpl failed, andooe of lhe prur was killed.
:
.
.
· In 1954, the western Afncan natton of Algena began tts rebelhon
against French rule.
In 1973 after the "Saturday Night Massacre," Acting Attorney General Raben H. Boric appointed Leon Jaworski to be the new Watergate
special prosecutor, succeeding Archibald Cox.
In 1987, Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping retired from the Communist
Party's Central Comminee.

Pag• 2 The Dttlly Sentinel
Pometoy •ddlepOrt, Ohl~
Monday, Nqvember 1, 1993

•
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• f. '
"'J

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Pomeroy~lddleport,

· By The ASiociated Prea
The snow on the ground in
northeast Ohio won'·t last long as
tern~ wann 10 tiM; mid-40, to
mi4-SO on •Tuesifay, the Natior1al
Weatbtr SC'lViee said.
Two to four. inches o( lake-

~-

SACRAMENTO, Calif. Sources here told us lhat Wilson
Failed behind-the-scenes negotia- spent more than a year u~ging
tions between Gov. Pete Wilson school choice advocates to rewrite
and pro-school choice politicians the language or their proposition.
best tell whr. Propositton 174 is
doomed 10 frulure this week.
If supporters of the proposition,
which would give approximately
$2,600 per child for parents to
spend at the private ~ool of their
Michael
choice, had listened carefully to
Wilson's confidential advice, they
would have had a much better Among Wiison's chief suggestions
chance at passage this week.
was to insert the words "gradual"
Proponents of the measure, like or "phased" so it wouldn't have a
Joseph Alibrandi, chairman of catastrophic effect on California
Excel (the group sponsoring the sc hools and the slate's budget if it
initiative), are normally allies wilh passed. But the choice advocates
the Republican governor. The GOP wouldn't budge.
has pushed the voucher system as
The last straw for Wilson may
its answer to failing public schools. have come when proponenls made
That's why it was such a telling a secret admission to him. A source
and devastating blow to have Wil- in the governor's ofrtce· told us lhat
son come out against Prop. 174 last Wilson pressed them repeatedly on
month . Wilson's late-breaking how they thought private schools
opposition could have been avoid- could possibly handle a potentially
ed if proponents like Alibrandi had massive transfer of some of Caliheeded his advice.
fornia's 5.3 million schoolchildren

from public to private schools.
Finally, the an$wer came: The
proposition's organizers acknowledged that private schools couldn't
handle a large influx. " We asked
the people at Excel - and we
haven't used this publicly - and
thoy said lhey lhink the maximum
transferring lhat could possibly be
handled is 9 percent over the next
three. to five .Years," the source
said. "That's JUSt the capability 10
respond with classrooms and. teachers.''
Nationwide support. for school
choice has been growing by leaps
and bounds in the last decade. By
the end of last year, legislation
proposing some sort of school
choice was introduced or pending
in 34 states. Twenty-nine governors have indicated support for
choice, up from 20 in 1991. Citizens groups have formed in at least
I 9 states to champion school
choice.
Wilson himself was on record
repeatedly favoring school choice.

1Jy Jack Anderson
and
Binstein

Ke,WeNT fOR 4 R;De

oN THe iNFoRM~T;of\1

HiGHWaY 'll'lD tfe
N{!VeR. C3M€ ~d&lt;·

But he held out his support until
extracting tht. secret admissipn
from supporter&amp; thlt pri vat~
schools couldn't bandl~ the load.
What rqWiy clinched his oppositioo was a California Depal1ment
of Fina~ estimate of:the shortt.erin economic impact on schools
and the budgeL The study concluded lhat the cumulative cost would
be at least $1 billion over the firSt
three yean. lf fewer students converted, the cost could climb to $1.6
biUion.
In an interview with us. Wilson
hinted at his frustration with
friends and allies pusltina Ibis measure.
"The great vulnerability is that
it's front-loaded with eQsts," Wilson said. "lf the Stale at California
were not a government operating
under lhe constnlints of a balanced
budget prOvision in its constitutiop
- a business might be able 10 say,
'We will structure this offering
k!lowing !hat we're going to to~
money in the nrst five years. We II
take the rislc so we can profit in the
next 15.'"
Since a voucher would be less
than half what tbe state currently
pays to school a child, eventually
saViiiJis might be realized. But lhe
nrst 1mpact would be to give the
Sll,600 to parents of students
already in private schools - an
outlay with no offsetting cost-savings.
·
"The .state can't do thai," Wilson said. "I cannot roll the dice
with the taxpayer's. money. Certainly not when tile certainty in the
short term is !hat we will face a
hole in the budget t~at ranges
between $1 ·billion and $1.7 billion."
Wilson'~ opposition ~roved a
devastating loss to the 'Yes on
174" people. It added to the
widespread perception that anyone
getting 25 or more children together and calling, for instance, a
wiu:h's eoycn a school, C9Uld qual•
ify for money from lhc:state. All in
aU, the result in lhc country's most
populous swe is not a representative test of lhe national issue of
school choice. But ·tlleil. Wilson
was telling lhc organizers that all
along.
.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

When a political party explodes
before your eyes, as_lhe Conservatives did in Can~da's national election last week, it is a stunning spectacle. The people's verdict hits with
the impact of a nuclear bomb.
When public confidence in an
entire political system slowly but
steadily erodes, as it has over the
past two decades in the United
States, it is less spectacular but the
eventual consequences are likely to
be equally far-reaching.
The dust has settled in Canada
by now. The rulin$ party for a
decade, the Progresstve Conservatives. find themselves with only
two se81s in ParliamenL There is no
precedent in North American political history for such a wipeout. The
chief ·political beneficiary of lhe
voters cataclysmic discontent was
the Liberal Pany,.which won a
comfortable goverpinc m~ority•.
But the truly sii"1ficant result
was the tranSformauon,of two rambunctious minority parties from
.borderline annoyance to meaningful opposition. The separatis! Bloc
Quebecois, which aims for an independent Quebee, went from eight
to 54 seats in Parliament and the
right-wing Reform Party went from
one 10 52.
What do all these facts and ngures have to do ~i~ t~t part·of

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IJD.

Around tile utiott
Cold, rain and snow sockrd lhe ·East and parts of tbo Midweat apia
today, after a Halloween lhat
looked. more like Christmas iq

Winter storm warnings were
posted today for many areas in th~
Northeast and more snow was
expected.
:
Sunny skies and warmer weather were expected later today in the
Soulh.
.. ·

Vote For

Elmer C.
Newell

.

Chester Townsh!P Trustee
Unex!ll!ecl Tentl

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li·.

-~~....;.-Weather-----·~

·r

day. Lows in the 30s. Hig~s in
'upper 408 to mid-50s. Fatr on
Thursday. Lows in the 30s. Highs
in lhe S.Os. A chance of showers
Friday. Lows in the 30s. Highs in
lhe 4.0s.

Soitlb..(lentral Olilo• ,
T~ight;. titosdy. ~!~r,'tlld. ~old.
~ Low .1!1 .die1UPJ!CT 20s; T~esday,
; mos~y sd!:f~gM(I-!15. .,. ·
· Exlm ,fOrecut: · ,,.,
, WejlpeidaY tbi'O!JIIt',F.riday:
• A ~bii)Ce, of •!tci"(era .W ¢nes-

ATTEND RECEPTION- Congressman Ted
Strlckhind, far left, a1nd State Senator Jan
Michael Long, far rlg l 1t, were among tbose
attending ·Sunday;s rec:.eptioa celebrating tbe
Meigs County Council on Aging's 20th anniv.er-

sary. Pictured with Stricktand and Long, are, 1r, MCCoA Executive Direcjor Susan Oliver;
MCCoA Trustee Charles Blakeslee; and Trustee
President Lloyd Blackwood. (Sentinel Pboto by
Brian J, Reed)

Ending 12-31·95

N.l•ily ......c L ...... 462!0 lrwlo

Dr. '-J OH tiS-Wl

C
0 uncil... Conti~;:_u;_;ed:__fro_;_m_p:.ag.;:e_l__,..,:--:-,----­
mother, Dorothy Long of Middle- man is an island."

Vote

porL Long also presented the -center
"Tho~~ of us who live i.n the
with a proclamation from th.e, Ohio commumbes of Soulhem Ohw are
Senate.
a part of a larger community,"
U.S. Congressman Ted .Strick- Stritldand said. ''We are responsi: ThirtY·se~ M 't'iiicd·anil .tWo jail suspCdded to lhree days, one land· (D-Lucasville), who repre- ble not only for our families and
_others (otfelted tiorid·Wei!t\eid&amp;t:~ . ~ear pro~ation; Amadee Lifebre, · sents Meigs County as a ]part of immediate neighbors, but for olhers
• the MCib· Comlly.,Co~tC!f Jildge · •pomeroy•..DUI, SSOO plus cosls, 10 Ohio's Sixth Congression2tl Dis- as well. That responsibility is
25 year Resident of Chester TWp.
.. PalriCIC-H. O'Brien.:;;; :"{,; •; ' ,. ·, 'days jail suspended to three days, trict, said he was reminded. of lhe exemplified by lhe services offered
• ·Filled :were: Bt'lleo.,l;loffm'an~ . oit.e ·yeat"probation, $250 of fine lyrics o.f a song which sa.y "No through this center."
Attended Chester ttigh School
~ MIDI, WlVL, red:,!i8fiti.$2(tplus and-three days jail to be suspended
·j'
Strickland emphasized the
importance of home-delivered
• coats; ~ ~ •. ~. ,.. upon cotjlpletiqt\ qf residential
Veteran of Kore~n War
• seat ~I; $1!1 plus ~;..Roi)ald treatmenii{Progtam; left or center,
meals, center activities and olher
15 years experience in Road
; P.ri~ Pllmc;roy;!acal:bel¢.$25 $30 plus &amp;lsts; · .
"outteaches" of the MCCoA, and
' J)IJB ~· ~ 14 ~. Rbt- · Ratito'l! Smith, Pomeroy, seat
Units of the Meifs County said lhal such activities also folConstruction
· li.nd;· aut 'licit, $25 plu.a cilsts; belt, $2'5' plus costs; Timothy Emergency Medica S•::rvices lowed guidelines set forlh in the
'Richard 'D; .Cummhis~': Racine, McCarthY, Rutland, speed, $30 responded to seven calls fq,r assis- scriptures.
I want better and safe roads for school
~ speed~ $25 pins c~s$1; Lynn S. ' plus costs; Ge~ald E . Guthrie, tance during lhe weekend. Units
"Jesus told us that we were
responsible for feeding the hungry
: Browti; ,Po'memy, ~.
p!iiB Coolville";" ~peed. $30 plu~ costs: responding included:
buses and all who travel Chester TWp.
~ cOsts; Tatsa N. Kijapplel, CIIICIII- Loretta .AIIcins, ~utland, failure to
and
clolhing
the
naked,
and
even
Saturday- 5:15 p.m. 'Tuppers
Roads. I am very much Interested in thevisiting those who are confmed."
• nati, SllOild;
.P!Jtl~i .Chides . yield frOiD private drive, $20 plus Plains to Umberger Rid!&gt;e Road
~ I: Al.thoiiso; Po~ero){.'~oai. "ticlt, costs; F.d')tiard M. Thacker, Middle- for Dorotl\y Hall who wns trans- Strickland said, "and lhe services
better education for the students of
~ $2S pllis.costs;'"'' · .': ' :·,- ;·:: :~port; seat\belt, $15 plus costs; Patri- ported 10 Veterans Memmial Hos- offered here are true to that callJackie Batter, Mijldfepo(i.·driv- cia ·Ann Allbaugh, Pomeroy, seat pitaJ.
ing."
Eastern Local. I will donate my first
: ing undefihe' i~~~r,,$100 plus bel~ $25 plus costs; Christopher L.
Sunday - 12:41 a.m. Syracuse
, costs, .60. days m jaU )illlpellde!J to Workman, Rutland, seat bel~ $15 to_Mile Hill Road for Eric Roush
years salary to the Eastern Local .
: 10 da~; one
.. 'yeatop&amp;akii •s:ucense plus costll'; Ronald Ross, Parkers- who was transported ttl' VMH:
Continued from page l
Athletic Boosters. By working together · .
•iuspc:itliOn,·!10 daydmDI!Ibilimtion burg, W. Va, speed, $30 plus cosls; 11:20 a.m. Rutland to Coumy Road
:of vehicle, two' y~~ ·prob~tion; seat belt, $25 plus costs; .
55 for Gary Baisden who was dential candidate Ross Perot to
we all can win. I will appreciate your·
. leavi!ll ihe· scene. of an•acc1dent,
Robert Saunders Jr., Btdwell, transported to O'Bleness ~{emorial scads of Democratic congressmen,
cOSts, .30 days jail SUS• seat belt# $15 plus costs; Heather Hospital;, I :23 p.m. Po\'l•eroy to . say !be agreement among the Unitvote &amp; support.
· . . . io.lQ.dl)'l;cqjcuiimt.wilh Jill Klilfii:-Bellefdntaine, speed, Pomeroy Nursing and Ri:habilita- ed States, Mexico aitd Canada
DUI,two.ycan ~ ll1d resti- $30 plus costs; Russell L. tion Center for Mary Doss who was would send thousands of jobs
Pd. for by cancidato Reg., Hayman, 49311 Bissell Rd. Longbottom, Oh,
tutiori; ~ C!f ceolel'; ~~~ Ollly; ..
McCauley, Lancaster, speed, $30 transported to VMH; 4:08 p.m. across the border to Mexico, bene45743.Ph
948-2038
; Ri.&lt;:lwd': Cumn:Una,.ltaci!le, .no plus .. cosls; Janice H. Davis, Tuppeis Plains to State Ro•ute 7 for fiting only big corporations looking
: OL, ,$1(~lplus cos", IO.clllys jail Pllnteroy~· expired registration, $20 Willie Grueser who was r.ransponfor cheap labor
'S a·IO •threC da)'I,'OIIC Y~ plus costs; Kimberly Pickens, ed to Holzer Medical Cet11ter; 4:41
r
lion; specd,,$7A, plus costs, Racine, .speed, $23 plus costs; p.m. Rutland to Jacks Hoad for
'
il\g, SJOO plus.. costs, 10 days Mike Henry, Portland, driving Marcus Ward who was trunsported
·
··
under · fiaancial responsibility toVMH.
,
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action s~sion, $100 plus costs,
The following have endorsed the senior Citizens Levy:
Monday- 12:47 a.m. Pomeroy
five days ,)Iii suspended upon proof to Butternut Avenue fo1r Tammy
of valid OL within 60 days; Grant Kline who refused treattn&lt;!fiL
Meigs County Democratic Executive
Uons Club
'
Reynolds,'1Middleport; DUI, $500
Meigs Ministerial Aasocletion
Committee
.James Sqilth' · ·. .. plus cos(4, I0 days jail spspended
' James o,'Snilili; 74, ot Hilliard, to three. days, 180 day OL suspenSutton Township Trustees
Salem Township Trustees
fonnody pf Mei11 &lt;;Ounty, d,ied sioq and· ope year probauon, $250
Rocksprlnga Grange
Lebanon Township Trustees
, S~y.; OcL, 30, 199~ at.Atbors o( line and three days jail to be sus·
The Meigs County Bookmobile
Scipio Township Trustees
Long Bottom Community Association
. or Hilliald. · .
•
pended u~n completion of resi- will visit the following 'locations
Borli ·in .
Hamlin, W. Va. dential treAtment program; speed,
PI'IC8ptor Beta Beta Sorority
Salisbury Township Trustees
week:
· l'ol!lerpy, he wa~ a $27 plus cO,ts; consuming alcoho~ thisWednesday
- Racin.t,, noon-5
Olive Town1hlp Trustees
Star Grange 1#778
for the City in a mocor:~icle, $100 plus costs; p.m.; Portland, 6-7 p.m.
Orange Township Trustees
Chester Township Trustees
·
aU. S.Navy
Karen Hysell, Pomeroy, teleThursday - Rutlanill, noon-4
phone haras'sment, $25 plus cosls, p.m.; Dexter, 5-6 p.m.; New Lima
Racine Village Council
Pomeroy Merchant Association
10 days jail suspended, one year Road (subdivision), 6:30-·7:30 p.m.
A.D.K. Sorority
Letart Township Trustees
pni~. restraining order issued;
Friday - Tuppers P'llllins, 1-4
St. Paul • St. John E.L.C. W.
Pomeroy Village Council/Mayor of
Thomas ij,ines, C~lville, D!J!· p.m .; Success Road, 4:30-6 :30
$700 plus'.;costs, s1x months Jatl p.m:; Keno, 6:45-7:45 p.nn.
Bedford Township Trustees
Pomeroy
sliSpCn!led 30 dsys, ooe year OL
Saturday - Syracuse Post
Meigs Unit of American Cancer
Meigs Housing (Maples) Board
s~on •. 180 day vehic!e im"!o- Office, 9-2 p.m.; Harrisdnville, 3-5.
Society
bilization, Olle year probl!bOn; driv- p.m.
Middleport Village Council
ing under $uspens1on, $100 plus
Columbia Township Trustees
Meigs County Planning Commission
costs, six m'Onlhs jail suspeOded to
Pomeroy United Methodist Church
Rutland Township Trustees
S days con~!Jrrent ~with DUI, one
year probation; Jeri L. Galloway,
Reedsville United Methodist Church
Hemlock Grange #2049
Walker, W.Va., ~ed, $30 plus
Am Ele Power .................. .38 318
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
XI Gamma Epsilon Sorority
costs; Bre~.&lt;la S. adle, Bidwell,
Ashland Oil... ...................... 34 5/8
Racine United Methodist Men
Meigs County Garden Club
seat belt, $15plus costs;
AT&amp;T ........................ .. .... .57 3/8
Ricky A.' Cadle, Bidwell, seat Banll One:...................... ..... 38 1/8
Racine United Methodist Women
Public Employee's Retirement

~ 37fi.~t4. in :COUIJty court
•

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ROGER HAYMAN

Trustee of Chester Twp.

.-l

. S respon•
.' · s
EM
,
I
to seven ca Is

S3q

,30

Clinton ...

::J'ui

VOTE YES FOR

..'A.re',a .'d' ea. th
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SENIOR CITIZENS LEVY~

.

Meigs bookm4[)bile
schedule slated

f'!

Stocks

...P.attpn,. Vin~ seat bell, $25 plus
i · COS\5; left ofr.;nter, $20 plus cosls;
Jason .A. B' rdette, Vinton, seat
. belt, $15 plus costs; Craig A.
. Durst, ,Shade, seat belt, $25. plus

Charming Shop .......... ........ 14 1/8
Champion Ind.......................... 15
City Holding ...................... 30 7/8
Federal Mogul ....................26 3/8
GOO!)yearT&amp;R ................... 44 3/4
1 --~-End
; t"ncts. .. ~.,(·"'~ a•·:
.
............................... .42
. Forfeiting bonds were: Edward Limited Inc......................... 21 1/4
Chapman; Pickerin~wn, seat bel4 11 ~ilj!ll~l~a Inc. ........ .............. .39
$45; Terry Bailey, hauncey, seat
Bancorp .......................... l4
bel~ $45.
Rax Restaurant. ........ .. ............ .03
Reliance Electric ....... ............... 17
Robbins&amp;Myers ..................... .18
Shoney's Inc........ ..... ......... 23
MEMORIAL
Star Bank .................. .......... 35
-DOrothy 'Wendy Int'l... ..................... .16
Wormington Ind...... .......... 18
discharges - None. ,
ar1: the 10
admissions - Mary I
providrrd
by Adv·estll
,

,,

America that lies below the Cana- or to re-eStablish links of reciprocal what he promisCd and reconnect
dian border'? A lot. piscontent and obligation between the government lhe goveriled with theit
disgust with the established order and the pe()ple.
So far that has proved to be an
are commonplace in the United
'
That is essentially what voters unfuffilled dream. · ·
But
there
is
no·
rush
to
the
in 17 states and 12 cities said' in
approving term timits ror swe and Republicans. llel:ent o~s bave
federal offices last year and olhcn {eawred a "throw the\ i'alcals out" :
joined in saying this wedc. Unless mentality. IJK;umbency 1'811\cr than :
.· .
States as well. From Califomia"'to . ljhe Supreme ~ourt eventilaHy ideolo~ baS been the •
New York, lhe voters have been decidel that ipequlres a constituA bttle QVQr IWO Y~
lhe '
saying in ways large and small that . , tiona! amendment 10 imp!lllillimits Centel PutiliC Aceouniabilit Pit- ;
they are ready for sweeping on congRIIionaiiCtviee, the nun\- ject ran focils ~ ~us
in :
changes in the · identity and her of states anil municipalities three awes. Its findings,•wnllen by
approach o( those who govern wllh term limits will grow expo· pollster Peter Hart, a Democrai,
them.
nentially in the immediate futlll'll. and Doug Bailey·, a R"~plibllcan
Ross Perot is sometimes tre~~ted' · What that will mean is a near-revo- politic~I consultant, ~puld ha~c ; .
like an isolated phenomen9n, a lutionary turnover oo Capi'?l !'Jill . been wntten today. Arnona them. .
unique force of nature whose . and scores of statchllllllel wtlhtn a
money bought him a platfonn !lut decade.
,
.
. .
.
.
whose long-range i111pact on events
_Congre.ss and lhe pres1dent are
Anieni:IIIS .lfe ~tve and
will be minimal. That analysis domg !heir best to guarantee !hat do\Y"belt . . .t llle WI'J lb1np n
makes the mistake of confusing the voter anger will not diinitlish. For goma:' 'l'hcy are c_o.nvinced that ,
messenger wilh lhe messqe.
'
instance, there will he nO meaning- politlctanl In w~ put
It al$0 l#nores i1le fac,t "*PerOt ful campaign reform legislation ·• pre~rvation ~~~~~ or:tllt.p~~lit :, :
the man ll1d ~lhci messalc ari: from th1s Congr~ss. Something in,terea. Mlli:Ybavt lolt ~ .,
both ve~y much .alive. Ask.Jlill called campaign reform will be In tbo cWeunl ~II 1 ~ ·:
Clintoil and ·his polid~ opctillivcl pass¢e!, but tts effects will bC mini- of lnflilenclnl ~ alid the :
if you neejj independent conruma- mal. Incqinbents and millionaires rest arc in 'tltie ~·of !l*nalt. .: •
tion.
will still have massive adVJDtages
~ ' · ' · • ~ ·: "'
•
The pearly 20 million Ameri- in most campaigns.
Hoddlna «.:arter Ill, former ~
cans who voted for Perot last year
Allhough Bill Clinton was elect- . State Deparuneat spoke~m.ali ~
were saying somelhing lhat mil• ed with lhe smallest percentage of and aW.rd·Wiiinlil rejiortet, ~·· ;
lions continue to say today. They the eligible elec!Of&amp;te on his ·side tor ud,publllllei', .. P.~t or·'
no longer bave any faith in lhe abil- · since the election of John Quincy Maln$1reet, 1 W•hlnlttlllo
ity .Of the will of the two estab- . Adams in.1824, he 'took Office on a biNd ielevlsiOn p~uclloil CO!II•i
lished parties to clean up !heir act tide of public: ~ that be ~d do p1ny. .
.,
·
'

1878. SIIIIJCI tonight will be 111 5:29
p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 7:~

Snow blanketed PiuabiiiJh and
Buffalo, N.Y., while rain fell itt
Boston and Portland, Maine. The
mercury dipped to 23 in Des
Moines, Iowa, and 41 in Tampa,

Is Canada's upheav~l our future t~o?
', •

much of lhe rest of tbo week except
for a chance of some showers
Wednesday ll1d Friday.
The n:conl-high tenlperawre for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 80 degrees in 1950
while lhe record low was 24 in

Fla.

NaJ Hentoff

'

effect snow covered the re~ lhis
morning and more was falling.
But forecasters said skies would
clear overnight and bright sunshine
should warm things up rapidly on
Tuesday.
Dry weather should continue

IND.

For 31 years, Peter Melzer, 52,
Most of the press sees no com- trative hearing, Meizer has been
has been a teacher of physics at the
plexity in this s1tuation: Pedophiles removed from.Jhe classlooln and is
Bronx High School of Science in
·should be removed from school. working in a· Board of Education .
New York. He is now a pariah in teachers are concerned about whpre Eric Breindel, editorial page edilllr district orrtee. While .he may not be :
much of the city, having been you draw the line" in what ther are of the New York Post, emphasized rtred after lhc ·hcann&amp; .oi subsc- •
exposed - by hidden cameras on a permitted 10 do on their own, 'but that "the Peter Melzer case (is) quent cowuction; it is very unlike- ~
local television newscast - as a it's the position of the union lhat exceedingly uncomplicated. It ly that he will ever be .in a New :
member of the North American this is where you draw the line." takes a special kind of mindsct not Yol!t City classroom again.
·
Man/Boy Love Association. Melz- (Since then, the union's line has 10 recognize this reality."
The reason, as dtc special t:om- :
er, it turned out, has written for changed and it will assist Melzer.)
Just such a mindset- not sur, missioner of investigatiOns says in
and occasionally edited - the He also has his own experienced prisingly - is that of Norman his tepOrl, for the invcsligation into ·
NAMBLA Bulletin.
constitutional lawyer.
Siegel, executive director of the miseonduc' relating US pedophilia
The revelation that a pedophile
What also may assist Melzer is a New York Civil Uberties Union: by Peter Melzer Is .!hat parents of :
is a New York City teacher led 10 footnote well inside the official "Government bodies cannot penal- Bronx high IChool students will not
an exhaustive report by Edward Stancik report: "We have co.me ize an emoloyee because of lhe give him anyone tb t.eacb. As Rlan,Y .
Stancik, the school system's spe- across no direct evidence that
1
f
• •
· h
parents bavc already pled&amp;ed, their .
cial commissioner of investiga- Melzer has ever overtly acted in an emp oyee s assoctatton w1t a children will boycott liis cfassroom.
"It is impoSiible. to believe,"
tions. Stancik strongly recommend- inappropriate manner with his stu- group that is advocating illeg111
actiVIties
because
mere
associaed that Melzer be fired, or at the dents." This conclusion was tion is not sufficient groUnds. ••
says Stancik, "that seh(l()l ofrteials .
very leas~ be removed from unsu- reached after interviews with,
Also coming to Melzer's would seek to have boycotters
pervised contact with studenls.
among others, "present and former defense was a forceful editorial in declared truant and then obtain
The new chancellor of the members oflhe FBI, the New York The New Yorlc Tunes: "The idea court orders' tiH~omp,el them to
school system, Ramon Cortines City Police Department and repreall8nd Melzer's classes.''
He may Well end his 'years in the
,
a thoughtful. kindly man - was sentatives of olher law enforcement of returning Mr. Melzer to the
unequivocal. Melzer, he said, agencies.''
classroom troubles us. But the idea school system processing forms in
should he dismissed because teach·
Melzer is indignant about all of dismissing a tenured teacher limbo. Meanwhile _ unlike the
an apparently sound record
f
ers are role models and Melzer's !his furor, pointing out that during wilh
because
of
\fiews
ex~
outside
mayor·.'?
Nelli York or iU·.clergy
"advocacy and promotion of ille- all the years he has !aught, no.sexu- the classroom troublei· us more. - Melzer.
has fi'lially brought ,
gal activities makes him unfit to al harassment complaint has been Wilhout evidence of illegal acts or together all tbo warring factions in
serve as a classroom role model."
filed against him. Moreover, he classroom misconduct mere is no the city. They Ullite in tlielr scorn
At first, Melzer's union, the says he has nev.er permitted discusclear way to distinguisH Mr. Me~- . for pedophiles.
·
·
United Federation of Teachers sions about any aspect of sex in his er's case from otherii invoMng · l'l•.t Hebtoft.ls a J!atlonally
traditionally a fierce defender or its classroom. "I have always been
0 • 11
1·· ·
,re~ •all~ty 01 die Flnt ,
1-mea
.Y· 11npopu ar v1ews or A'ileli~flinll"tlle relt of the ,
members' due p~ocess rights conscious," he says. "of lhe pro- . .Po
· abandoned Melzer. Said a priety of my position." There is no unconventtonal Hfesty~''
Actually, pending an adminis- _BID 'otRiahts. ·
spokesman for the union: "Some evidence to contradict this.

I

The Daily Sentinel Pag1 3l

!'OIIIe.-e&amp;s.

A very hard First Amendment case _ _ _ _~

'

•

Ohio

Warmer·weather forecast -for Thesday

OHIO Wt&gt;athcr

Wilson's advice on school choice .goes unhee~ed

•

Berry's Wo'rld

•.

-·

aovemon.

H odding Carter ll1

HospitaJ news

i!'

..··

.........

Association
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce
Middl1port Literary Club
Meigs County Health Department
Gallia-Jackson·Meigs Board of
Alcohol, Drug Addiction, and Mental
Health Services
Meigs County Republican Executive
COmmittee
Whaley's Grocery
Meigs County Retired Teachers
AISoclation

Rocksprings United Methodist
Women
Rocksprings Better Health Club
Middleport Child Conservation
League
Rutland United Methodist Women's
Circle
Meigs Council on Aging's Board of
Trustees
Meigs County Farm Bureau
Pomeroy Eagles Auxiliary 2171
Sl Paul United Mehthodist Women

selr· ,:

THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT
·-

..
Paid for by the Meigs Senior Citizens Levy Committ._,
Jane Walton,
·
4576,, Ttusurer

o,c,, :.

I

"

.I

.,

'.

~ •.~·

a::' - ..••

. ·'

..
')

~

• . l

~

,..

··-

'

'

• '

�Sports

The Daily
.

.

.. Monday, November 1,1~3

'

Sen~el

Monday, Noveml:ler

1893

~roU's

Dolphins beat Chiefs to put
Shula in tie with Halas for wins
BARRY WILNER

-~ P football Writer
o,,n Shu Ia never hides the fact
th:n l·ln rnpionships, not records,
.1re ~~hill mo tivale him. So what
l'du ld b: better than winning anoth-

er Supc•r Bow l in the year he
h~·cornc~

the NFL's winningest

:d:l dl' 1

"II ami when the record is brol '.~ant 11 to be in a year when
th~.-· 11.: ~1111 1..; successful," Shula said

k ll l.

Suncby Jltcr he
~-~r:-l'tT
~I

uw Goorge Halas'

ICTo rd of 324 vic torie s in

,,,n 11'' )(I. JO rout of Kansas City.
tuld them after the game ,

",\, I

tlu t '-"'l:uld make it that much more
llll'~ll llllj!f ll[ for tn C. ''

II" pl oyc rs clearly understand
-

.llld kiillw

how to please the 63-

w Jr -old Shui~L
"IV c rca !I y dedicated ourselves
I(\ 1 ~,~~ 1lm g Lo Lhc Super Bowl," light
.._·rh l 1-\c llll Jackso n said, "because

,,c L!l 11 1~ lh;u would be a great way

c:1p ol I 1hc year for coach Shula.
11 he i ~ go ing lo break a record.
v.~'d ltk.: lwn Lo do it in a year that
lh' \! D ~111 th e way."
ft they go all the way this sea·
tol

son, it wiU be with Scou Milchell
at the helm. In just his second ~
m pi~cc of IDJ\lred Dan Marmo,
Mitchell was magnificent, going
22-for-33 for 344 yards and three
touchdowns.
"I'm sure he's ca ught a lot of
people' s eyes," Shula said. "I
don't know that you could give a
team better quarterbackin~ and
leadership tilan he's given us. '
Mitchell connected on touch·
down passes of 27 yards to Irving
Fryar, eight yards to Keith Byars
and 77 yards to Mark Ingmm as the
Dolphins (6·1) won their fifth
straight.
Next week, Shula can move to
the top of the coaching list at the
New York Jets.
In other games Sunday, it was
Dallas 23, Philadelphia 10; San
Francisco 40, the Los Angeles
Rams 17; Denver 28, Seattle 17;
San Diego 30, the Los Angeles
Raiders 23; New Orleans 20.
Phoenix 17; the New York Jets 10,
the New York Giants 6;. Tampa
Bay 31 , Atlanta 24; Green Bay 17,
Chicago 3; Indianapolis 9, New

'

- • Football *In the NFL ...

Colgate 7, Lahyem 7, tie
Cornell 21, Brown 3
D.trtmouth 39, HIJ'Yud l4
Delaware 21, Mlino 19
Gcorsewwn, D.C. I 0, Catholic U. 0
Hofstn 40, TowiOJI SL 12
lc11n 54, Sima 21
Lchi&amp;h 17, Holy Cross 10
Mauac:husett121, Nonhcas~ 17
Noue Dame 58, Navy 77
Penn 48. YIIC 7
Princeton 14, Columbia 3
St-. John's., NY 37, Duque~~ne 12
Villtnova 14, Rhode Uland 10
W. Miclligon 20, Anny 1
Wagner 22, Marin 6
Welt Virginia43, Syncusc 0

A\tERI CAN CONFERENCE
Eu ltrn Division

rf'arn

PeL PF PA
857 172118
ilufl~l0
5 I 0 .BTJ 135 77
lndi~napolis ...... 3 4 0 .429 104149
~ Y. Jm ..... .. .... 3 4 0 .429 159131
:'\cwEngland ... I 1 0 .125103187
W L T

.... (, 1 0

\!rJrni ...

Cfn tral Di vision

LU: VELAJ\'D

5 2 0 .714 149 130
4 3 0 .'57 1 1681 20

l'ltt5 hu~ gh ...

llnL:ston ......... 3 4
CL'\ CJ~ ;o..· !'d

0

1.. 0 7 0

.429144 14(1

8! 162

_OOQ

South

Ala.-Binningh:tm 23, Wofford II
Alabama 40, Southcm Mia. 0
Alabama St. 7, Alabama AAM 0
Alcorn S L 41, Jacksonville SL 36
Appalachian St. 39, Tn.-Oiatlanooa•

W e~ te rn

K~, ~J-~

Dlllislon
. 5 2 0 .714 110108

Cuy

!knn·r

4 3 0 .571 171 135

I ,\ lhHI~rs .... 4 3 0
Sc,nJ~
4 4 0
s~r' Dr..:go ...... 1 4 0

.57 1 136 133
.500 129 140
.429 114 ISO

:\A Tl01\AL CONFERENCE
[ u ttrn Ulvli!On

T l·J m

\\' L
52
... 5 2
Phd.r.lc lthr o .. 4 3
l'ho..:r:r•
.. 2 6
Doll~s .
\ .Y G"n~-'

Wa ,;hm~'.u n

T PeL PF PA
0 7 141 55102
0 .714 15 1 81
0 .571 138 \56
0 .250 152 !53

...... I S 0

Ct•ntral
l).,rror t
. 6
(; a:cn ll oy .. , .. 4
,\ l rrrr:Cb "l.l .. . 4
t'hrc~~"
3
I ""'P·' IIJ~
. 2
\\\·~ ll' rn

Or'. cJns.. . 6
S"n h~ n u' w 5
N l ~nta
2
l A lhm &gt;
2
'-:.;w

.161

99161

Division
2 0 .750
3 0 .57 1
3 0 .5'71
4 0 .429
5 0 .286

164 140
164 121
112 12A
112 95
99183

DJ .,.b; lon

2
3
6
6

0
0
0
0

.750
.625
.250
.250

183154

210158
17 1222
131192

Grambling St. SO, Tcus Southern 26
.How&amp;zd 34, Mord\wsc 9

KMtudr.)' 26, Mja*•tt SL l1 .
LSU \9,Miuillippi I
Liberty 42. Charleaton Soulhem 6
Louisian.t Tech 17, N. IUinoiJ 16
Mulhall 35, Citadel IS
Miaml4~ Temple 7
N. Carolina A&amp;T 29, BcthuneOx*man 14
N. C.rolina St. 34, Virginia 29
Nicholla SL 28, Southern 14
S. Carolinl St. 38, Delaware St. I~
SE Missouri 17, Austin Peay 7
SW Louisiana 24, San Ja&amp;e St. \3
SW Texu St 22. NW Louisiana IS

Tcnnca.ace55, Swtb C.rolinl3

Su nd av's scores

NY Jw!O,N.Y.Gia n\S6
i)Jli~s ~ ). l'hti•del ph ia 10
No.:w Orluns 20. Phoent a 17
S1n D o ~go 30. L.A . Raiders 23
Sari Fra nciscn40.l.A. Rllms 17
Denver 2M, So.:a!Lie 17
DctrnH 30. f&gt;hnnCiol:l Z7
Opn1
datr:::
CINCINNATI,

CLJ:VICI ..~/\D. llou ston, Piauburgh

Viflinia Tech 31, East Carolli11 12
W. Carolina 56, Newbury 10
W. Kenwc.ky 41, W.lllinoil9
William A Mary 31, hmca Mad ison

\ext wrl'k's game.~
Sun day, Nov. 7
.'-lew England, l p .m.
Do·nwr at CLEVE LAND, I p.m.
!J ul.";,] , , ~~

Y. G1ant~ at Dallas, 1 p.m.
al CtNCINNA'fl. I p.m.
Sdo Dtcgo it M.iruJCiiOll , I p.m.
.~

1'1 LL~tw rgh

ll wston, I p .m.

S. lllinoit l~.lndillna St. 26
Toled11 45, Kent T1
WUconsin l 3, Mithiprr 10

Detroit, t p.m.
4 p.m.

1 ~11.. Ra Ldc!l atChieago,

Mum1 at N.Y. Jeu, 4 p.m.

Yolll'lptoWn St. 31, Buffalo 12

l'h! lad~ l phi• at Phocni.t , 4 p.m.
I ndian~ polis al Washington, 8 p.m.

Open date: Atlanu, L.A . Rami, New
OdC.ilnS, San FBncisco

Monday, Nov. 8
Grucn lhy 11 Kansn City, 9 p.m.

AP Top 25
college poll
The Top 25 tea m1 in The Auociated
Prc.u 199] college footba ll poll, wilh

r&amp;m-

placc vo t e~ in puenlheaea, n;orda
lhroogh Oct. 30, uu l pulnw baaed on 2S

p&lt;lint.s for a ru'L·placc vole &amp;hrou~ Of!C

poU1\ fo r a 2Slh-place vote_ and~~ m
the p revious poll:
\

LUI

Team
W-f..T Pu. WHk
I Aoridll St (62) ....... 8·0.0 1,!550
1
2. Neue Dame ............9&gt;0-0 1,4&amp;0
2
3- Ohio St ................... l -0-0 1,396
l
4 . Mia m.L .................. :6-t·O 1,324
5. Alabama .......; .........7·0- l 1.3()!!
6. Nebruka ................ I·0-0 1,2.82.

7. TennC$.«:e............... 6.1 -l 1,133
8. /\\lbum ................... S-0-0 1,118
9. A(\lida .................... 6-l ·O l ,OSI
10. Tcua AclM ..........1·1·0 951
11. Wqst Vitginla........7·0..0 947

t2. UCLA ...................6-2-0

9ll

4

S
6
8

9
10
11
13 ,

tS

739

17

70S

7

tS. Wixonlin .............7· 1·0
16. Noa1hCarolina._ ...7-2-0
17. Ind iana ..................7-1-0

613 . 11
599
11
!I' 23

18. KanUI St. ..............6.1-1

509

19. Penn St. ............... ..S·l-0

450

20. Oklahoma .............. 6-:Z.O
21 , V;,ginia .................6-2-0

ii:
~~':r:d~. ~:.::::::!t~
2&gt;&lt;.
..............1-t.o

w,..,.,u. 8~
25. V~• Tech ........6-l.-O

2;S ,
1~.

320

1

211

16

129
120

- .

.

'

Southwest
Auburn J I ,AtkaniU 21

Kanaaa I 3, Olclabama St. 6
McNee# SL 21 , S~tun F.Auatin 20
Mia. Valley SL 42. 'Pniric View 6
S.m HOUlton SL 24, NoM TQII 14
Tc.au A&amp;M 37, Southern Mcth. 1J
Tu.as Ouiltian 28, Houlton I 0
Texas Tech 31,Teu•22
Tutu. 31, Middle Tam. 17

Far West

Air Foroe 31, Tu.u-ElPuo 10
Arizona St. 32, Wuhin&amp;tat I?
CS NOdlttid&amp;o 21, CSU'.ctUeo?
Co1ondo St.. 21, NeW MWco 20
E. Wad!inJLOn 38, Idaho St. 7
ldab034,N.AN&lt;om77
Montana 54, Sacnmcn\0 SL 7
Mootaa.a St. 42, Bc:Ue SL 21
Nebrutl 21, Colcradot7
NCNada 31, Prt.ciftc U. 23
N.. Mmco S\, 52, UNLV 40
0.00.., 46, W u - St. 23
~cortland SL 2t, Call'l&gt;t,.SLO t?
Sui Dicoo 2.4, Am1a Podftc 2t
SCIIollhem Cal-42. Cllifcmia l~
S...Cool3t, ~St. 77
UC Onio 2$, SL !oluY'~ Cal. 2t
UClA 31, Arizona 11
Utlb 45, S.. Dqo !II. 41
Utlb SL ll, Bdab.., Y..... S6
W.._ !h. 43, S. Utlb :19
W.-ina32.n-oSt.2S

Ohio li.S. scores
' Satqrday•l octloa

.U... Budotd 20, Aboa IC&lt;nn""' 0
AlrioooC""IIo-22,AbonN. IO
AbOe I!Uet:IO, Atuon a a
AbonGufidoi&gt;IO,Aboni'Uoou&gt;o•6

~!~ '20

Othtrl rec:'el'flaa 'YOI . . t Bonon
Colle&amp;• 85, W11hinatoo 57. Mlchiaan
$t1U 36 Clemton :W, KenuackrlO,
DJinai• t6, Soutbem Ca116. Wuhina&amp;on
s .... I, SW LooDiiana II, BowliJoa Oiocn
2, Miclli&amp;'" I, o..p t.

.

Midwest
Ball St-. 11, E, Michipn 13
Bnwlina Grr.m 30. Miami (OhiD) 2.5
Butler 14, Evansville 12
Cincinnati 13, Mcm~ Sl. 20
Drake 48, Ill Benedictine 33
E. lllinoiJ 3!5, SW Miuouri. St. 13
IllinoU 20, NonhwMenl 13
lndilna I 0, Miehiaan St. 0
Iowa 26, Purdue l 7
Kansas St-. 21, Oklahoma 7
Minouri 37, Iowa SL 34
N. Iowa 20,111in od SL 19
Ohia Sl 24, Pam St-. 6
Ohia Univ. 21, Akrm 13

\\ .&lt;'hmg:lJn at Bwffalo, '9 p.m.

JJ. Loui&amp;ville ..............7· 1·0
!4. Arizona .................7·1..0

26

Daytoo 31, Valpa11Uo 10

Tonigh t's game

al

Rc.crvo 11
Marion Cath. 33, Gn. Loodmuk 0
Newtdr: Cath. 18, Bellaite 12
Saltlbu!J (Pa.) K.i.aki Prep 16, Clev.

Univcnity6

Shaker Hw. 'n, Noanandy 6
SlcutMnvillc C.tb. 29, Coahoctm 14
Tol St. Francia 47, Tol. Scott 0
WamnXcnncdy22,CantmCath. l3
ZanMville R.oaecrana: 21, Southington

0

-*NHL*EASTERN CONFERENCE

Allantlc Dlvlllon
Tum
W L T Pta. CFGA
l'bilad&lt;l[&gt;bio..., 9 3 0 18 S6 43

N.w-....r ....... •

2 0

N.Y. Ranpn .... 1 l t
. Wuhiqtcm ...... 6 7 0
Aorida -······-·· ... 4 S 3

-.16 39 25

N.Y.lalaadcn ... 3 1 I

TampaBay .•..... 3 8 l

lS 46 38
12 42 50
II
7

33 34
37 42

1 23 32

Northeul DI,.Lalon
M......t .......... 1 3 Z
t6
PittlbutJlt ··-····· 1 4 1
15
BoRon ...... ·-····· 4 3 4
12
Queboc.............
6 t
ll
Buffalo.............. 4 1 I
9
Hartford ..... -..... 3 II I
7
Ouawa .~....... . . . .. 2 6 2
6

s

4t 29
38 38
34 27

48 47
45 49
31 47
38 48

Tennessee Tech 3l, Murray St. 16
Troy SL 29, CenL Florida 15

Tarnpo Bay 31. Allanur '24

S(:.lttlc

button 21 , Cia. CAPE IS

Lima Cub. 21, Hiduvillc 20
Lorain Cath. )4, Hudaon Wcalcrn

Tennessee SL 15, Morehead SL 0

Jndoan Jpolts If, New England 6

T~ rn pa lhy 11

Day. Dunbu70. Day. WhitcO

Garfield Hll. Trinity 13, Chardon NDCl. 1 (OT)
Hamilton B•din 34, Dey. Jcft'cnm 0

Oemson 29, Maryland 0
Connecticut 21, Richmmd 3
Davidson 21, Hunpdm·Syd:ncy 14
E. Kmtucky 30, Tcnn.-Martin 0
Aorida 33, Georgia 26
Florida A&amp;M 41 , MOfB&amp;n SL 14
Florida St. S4, Wake Farat 0
Funnan 24, VMI 0
Georgia Tech 47, D.lkc 14

Major college scores
East

· Au1J111plioit I 8, Sc. Pe&amp;a-'1 13
Bolton Colle&amp;e42. Tulane 1&lt;4
BOftM Univ. U; Naw Hamphite 14

B'uckneU 27oPa'dham :21

' C.n.iJiUI 28, SL'francil, Pa. 10

Cent. ConnKticul Sl . 21, S.
Conrte&lt;tkut t4

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Ctntrll Dlvlllon
Team
W L T Pia.
Torontlt ............. 10 I 0
20
SLLwis ........... 1 1 I
1~
Dallu ................ 6 4 2
14
WinnipcJ .......... 6 S I
13
ll&lt;troit """"'""'
1 0
10
OUcago ............ 4 7 2 10

s

GF GA
41 2.S
3~ 31
48 41

49 46

50 52
44 41

Patlfk DM1LM

C.l&amp;...,. ............. 8 3 2
Vancouver ...... _ 1 3 0
l.ol Anpteo ...... 6 S 2
SII1JOM ...~ ....... 3 '

1-

Anohoim ........... 2 8 2
~ ........ 2t0 t

II

46 38

14

38 33

t4 S4 SS
1

28 -+4

6 24 42
l 32 48

S.turda).'ts scores
New Imey S, Philadelphia 3
SL Louia 2, 801ton 1
· N.Y........ 4,1hrtfcmll
4, Otlca.. 3
Osmh J, Qucloec
Fkridl1, Tampa B•r t (0'1')

Pitb.....,

s

Monmi5, Taron\0 l
OttawaS, Dallas 4. OT
Calaary 4, Edmonton 1
BWftlo6_ VanoouYCt 3
Waahirt&amp;lOft 4, SUI. JOIC 2

Sunday's scores

N.Y. ....... ~."Newloneyl
Cal&amp;arY4,1\'lmlooa3 .
Ploili~ 9: ct.ICio '

s.a~-2.~f(OI1

'Tonlallt'•R•mes

SL l.Guilll Hillfcild..""J:lS p.m.
ToteaiOilD.llll, 1:33i p.1111.

With post-game tragedy foremost in mind,

'~isconsin's landmark victory
o~ ver Michigan ·not a big deal.
By DICK BRINSTER
Michigan State 0; No. 18 Kansas 12-yard run With 38 seconds left in
AP Sports Writer
State 21, No. 20 Oklahoma 7: No. the second quarter. Michigan (4-4,
Considering lhe enonnity of the 22 North Carolina State 34, No. 21 2-3) came in ranked 24111.
gam• l, the primary !Ol'ic of conver· Virginia 29: No. 24 Wyoming 32,
satio n in Dairyland should be Wis- Fresno State 28, and No. 25 Vir(Set COLLEGE~ Page 5)
consin's frrst victory over Michi- ginia Tech 31, East Carolina 12.
gan ..in 12 years - and the BadNext for Wisconsin is Wlbeaten
gers' drive for the Rose Bowl.
Ohio State. The Badgers (7-1 overBut the 13-10 victory Saturday all and 4-1 in the Bij! Ten) play
at Camp Randall Stadium was host to the Buckeyes (5.0, 8-0) on
soure.:l by the collapse of reslrain- Sawrday.
ing barriers in the student section
A victory would keel' alive Wisthat ldt 69 injured and 15 hospital- consin's hopes for its first Rose
1 SecanHt~
ized.
Bowl trip in 31 years - since its
So frightening was the incident memorable 42-37 loss to Soulhem
YOUR
at the end of the game ihat ceie- Cal. The-Badgers are virtually
bratin,g Badgers players could think assured of their fUlit overall bowl
AIENTS·SER¥111... ·
of iitU e else.
bid
since 1?84. . "
"l"d give up a win In a second if
Wisconsin buik a 13-3 halftime
I save·d someone 's life," oiTensive lead Saturday on TcrreU Fletcher's
1161~. '' '
tackle Joe Panos said.
Linebacker Yusef Burgess said
his teammate may have done just
that when he entered the student
HI, my name Is Tara
sectiom and began puUing trampled
Wyatt. I'm a 4th grade
people out from under piles of
student at Middleport
huma~•ity . Burgess said one girl
. "just about died" in 'Panos' arms.
Elementary. My mom,
"It was the scariest thing I've
Brenda Phalln, Is a
ever seen," Panos said. "I had to
do what I had to do. A couple of
candidate for Meigs
ihem were blue, Uterally blue. They
Local School Board. With
were trampling on lOl' of each other
and bent over the stands.
3 of us attend.lng school
"Ho:pefuliy everyone will be
In our dlatrlct..and one a
OK, but the win doesn't mean
much ri;ght now."
·
pre-med student at _Ohio
The incident happened when ·
University, she understands the Importance·'n'd
about 12,000 spectators scrambled
out of U~e student sections, breakproblems of our education. In the past 14 yeara
ing dow•n two fences in an elTon 10
Mom has been a room mom, PTO president of
reach the field. Some spectaiOrs fell
and were trampled.
both Middleport and Bradbury Elementary,and
Thirwen people remained hospihas been active In our baseb"ll, basketball and
talized --one tn critical conditJon
- Sunduy night
football program as well as Cub Scouts. She Ia
Elsewhere in ihe Top 25, it was
currently an assistant pr•school teacher and has
No. I Florida State 54, Wake Forbeen for 4 years.
est 0; No·. 2 Notre Dame 58, Navy
27; No. 4-Miami 42, Temple 7; No.
·Now she wants to work for you and your Klda,
5 Alaban.la 40, Southam Mississiptoo.
pi 0; No. 6 Nebraska 21, No. 23
'
Colorado 17; No. 7 Tennessee 55,
Please vote for her on Nov. 2.
Souih C111·otina 3; No.8 Auburn 31,
Arkansas. 21; No. 9 Florida 33
Thank You,
Georgia 26; No. 10 Texas .A~~
37, SMU 13; No. II West Vrrgnua
Tara
43, Syracuse 0; No. 17 Indiana 10,

n

P. '· ·

INDEPE:;;~

, ••••
SIIC.Ecov~v "

T-IIOOJO at &lt;lUobeC: BS p.m.
V*"""i* 11.N.Y.

war..., 7:lS p.m.

PloliOololphli" Florida, 1,3s p.m.

:&amp;c.loaa&amp; Dalroil. 7:35 p.m.
PiuabuiJh II San l01c, 10:35 p.m.

- * Transactions * Football

NaUon•l Footb•IILaaue
LOS ANGELES RAIDERS: Activated

Randy Jordan , Nnnln&amp; blck, trom \he
practice squad. Placed N'M:k BelL runnina
back, oo lhoinactive: lilt.

Hoe key

N1Uoul Hor:bJI.Mpe
MIOHTY DUCKS '
RccaUed An•toli Fodotcw, defcaeman,

ANAHEtM

from San Dieao of the lntematioul
Hoctoylap
FLORIDA PANTHERS : Recalled

tn:m Cinc:innlli or
&lt;hat""""'tioonolllod&lt;OJO ~u.­
IIARTFORD WHALEI(S' Rocollod
lr.: OtlbU.., loA ...... r..n Sprinaneld

I want to be MAYOR of RACINE VILLAGE
I lik:e RACINE! I LIVE HERE! I PAY PROPERTY TAXES,. ·
WAl'ER &amp; SEWER, lind OTHER UTILfi'IES, so, I am concerned
about what happens.

...

·-.

I reallize that ''WE"·-THE TAXPAYERS--Wll..L PAY for the
MAT'CIDNG MONEY from: (1) taxes', (l) increased water rates, OR (3)
reduc.:ed village services.

ITH

Chester Township Trustee
Your Vote and Influence Appreciated

..,lth,,...

Pd. lor by the OMdhloto: on.
Ellgle Aklle Ad.,
Long Butloot, OH. 417~ Ph. Nl-2111

I pledge FISCAL RESPONSffiiLITY when it comes to spending OUR taX

mone:.r

'

I pledge fairness and consistency in operating the Mayor's Court whether ·
the yi()lator lives in or.out of the village·
I pledge to work '}'ith your viUage c:ouncll for and in the best interest of~ · · ·

·

fumbled at the Jets' one on their
first drive and tmned the baU over
on downs after reaching the six in
the rmat seconds .
The Jets (3 -4) broke a threegame slide. thanks to an 18-play.
79-yard drive that toOk up 11:15 of
the third quarter. Brad Baxter
scored from the two.
Buccaneers 31, Falcons 24
At Atlanta, Craig Erickson was
sensat;onal, passing for 318 yards
and four touchdowns as the Bucs
(2-5) built a 31-31ead.
Erickson's hit Vince Workman
for 42 yards, Reggie Cobb for five
before Cobb left with a ~prained
knee, and Horace Copeland, whose
last four receptions have gone for
touchdowns, for 60 and 44 yards.
They stopped the Falcons on
downs at the Tampa Bay nine with
50 seconds left after Atlanta (2·6)
rallied on three touchdown passes
by Bobby Hebert,
•
Packers 17, Bears 3
In the renewal of the league's
oldest rivalry, the host Packers (43) won their third in a row as Reggie White became the ali-time
sacks -leader wi!ll 130 1f}.. He got
two of the Paclccrs' seven sacks of
Jim Harbaugh to move one ahead
of Lawrence Taylor.
Chicago (3-4) has only 112
points in seven games , wuh 4 7

3

!

'

~
~

·
'•'

I'

T6MJMORROW-November lnd·VOTE for FISCAL RESPONSIBILITY

VOiTE ORLAND LEE FLOYD RACINE MAYOR
. '

Miami and remain Wlbe81en in itn
and Zeb Jackson carried 29 times
for 123 yards and a touchdown for
the Falcons. Gordon Benning
caught touchdown passes of 88 and
S2 yards fr;om Danny Smith for
Miami.
·
Ball State also had to come from
behind. The Cardinals lraiied Eastem Michigan 13-8 in the ftrst quarter before going ahead 15·13 early
in the second period on a one-yard
run by Jason Kent and adding Man
Swart's 21-yard field goal with
1:321eft
Mike Neu passed for 124 yards
and Bail State rushed for 187
yards, 88 of them by Kent, against
a defense which had held opponents under I00 yards in five of the
Eagles' previous sill games.
"I !mew we hadn 't run the ball

prevtOUS'Sill

·'

By Tbe Associated Press
Frank Beamer's job was less
than secure after Virginia Tech
ended its 1992 season with a 2-8-1
record, losing .seven of its last eight
games.
·
Now the Holdes are ranked No.
25 in the latest Associated Press
poll, the first Virginia Tech pOll
appearance since being ranked No.
20 in the 1986 postseason poll.
Prior to that, Virginia Tech had not
made the rankings since 1954 when
an undefeated Hokie team was
ranl:ed from No. 14 to No. 16 for
nine consecutive weeks.
Beamer is talking as if this is the
start of something big.
''This is a sign of things tci
come.... There is no question that
the ViJ'~inia Tech program is on the
move,' he said Sunday evening.
"We have everything it takes to
become one of lhe better teams in
the country. Today's ranking is a
step in that direction."
'/.irginia Tech (6-2) gained the
ranking after beating East Carolina
31-12 Sat~rdav . The Hokies .play

Big East rival Boston College next.
Boston College was the leading
vote-getter in the AP poll not to
make the Top 25.
Beamer is looking forward to
the first-ever matchup between the

RE·ElECT

LARRY WEHRUNG
FOR

POMEROY VILLAGE COUNCIL
Your Vote &amp;
Support Appreciated
Poid lor by the condidote, Lorry Wehrung,
1661 Uncoln Hill., Pom•oy, Oh.

A Special Salute to

Veterans

I

•

Please fill out and return your payment to:

1

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VETERAN SALUTE

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L.
Wright
.

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C/0

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· =~·P:ill:m:•:•:y,~OH.:.:4171::•:J

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Major
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AD DEADLINE: Friday,Nov. 5 at 5:00 p.m. Ads must be pre1 paid. Photos may be picked up after Nov. 11.
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Morten Andersen's 38-yard
j fJdd goal with 7:34 remaining pro• vidcd the winning points.
;
Cornerback Aenea's Williams
: r,ot bolh touchdowns for Phoenix
• 2-6). He scoopc:d up Quinn Early's
: umble and returned it 20 yards for
~ his first score.-thcn made an inter·
:· ception and went 46 yards for a
;,. toUChdown.
..'
•· Gene Atkins' sack on· Stev.e
:· Bcuemln early' in the second quar:. tar knocked the Phoenix quarter·
: back from the game with a sore
' knee.
.
:·
Jets 10.-Giants 6
~
The JOia m$de the sh~ totK1
: lrip imaJiitablc a wiming
with
• lots of~ from lhcir hosts.
;
Tbc 'Gilnll (S-2) llQI it1side the
)ll&lt;

r••••••••••••••••••••••••••

I The Daily Sentinel

.

:• 'Out
]ell'.lcorins
10-yaid aline
ilace times They
with·
touchdown.

On November 11, our
nation will pause to pay
tribute to the thousands of
men and women who have
proudly served their
country during times of
crises and peace.
This Veteran's Day, The
Daily Sentinel will publish
a very special tribute
honoring area veterans.
You can join in our salute
by including the veteran In
your life, living or
deceased, who have
served or is currently
serving in any branch of
the U.S. armed forces.
Your Choice of
Two styles:

I'

.

schools.
"That's what you look forward
to in ooilege football - playing the
b1g games."
Beamer has had only two win(See POLL on Page 6)

*************

1

games.

yards.

coming in one game.
Colis 9, Patriots 6
At Indianapolis, Dean Biasucci
outkicked rookie Scott Sisson 3-2.
Biasucci made field goals of 38, 27
and 37 yards, the final one with
2:42 remaining to win it for the
Colts (3·4) . It was the second
straight meeting in which the Colts
beat the PatriotS (1-7) with nothing
but field goals. Indianapolis won 60 last December.
Sisson was 'good from 40 and
26, but missed a 45-yarder.
Lions 30, Vikings 27
At Minneapolis, Anthony Parker
interfered with Brett Perriman on a
fourth-down pass at the one-yard
line with 42 seconds to go. On the
next play, Derrick Moore scored to
give the Lions the lead.
Chris Spielman intercepted Sean
Salisbury's pass with 28 seconds
left, clinching the win for Detroit
(6-2). Minnesota (4-3) had won its
previous 10 games against NFC
Central teams.
Lions cornerback Tim McKyer
was taken to a 'hospital with a back
injury sustained in the third quarter,
where he was being held overnight
for observation.
- The Vikings played most of the
game without Jim McMahon, who
hun his shoulder midway through
the frrst quarter.

well the last three weeks," Bail
State coach Paul Schudcl said. "I
thought we ilccdcd to step it up and
get a little mentally tougher in running the football."
Wasean Tait had 164 yards for
28 carries to lead Toledo against
Kent as the Golden Flashes' losing
slreak, the longest in NCAA Division 1-A, was extended to 13
games. Ainsworth Morgan returned
the opening kickoff 81 yards for
the Rockets.
Anny led the nation with a rushing average of 326 yards per game,
but was held to 170 yards on the
ground by Western Michigan. The
Broncos' Jay McDonagh completed· 22 of 32 pass attempts for 190
yards and threw a game-clinching
two-yard touchdown pass to Ryan
Sylvester in the fourth quaner-.

No. 25 Virginia Tech makes AP poll
for first time since 1986 campaign

&lt;:..:..Co_nu_
·nu_ed_Cro_m_P_ag;_e_4)_ _ _ _ _ __

Saints 20, Cardinals 17
It was nearly all defense at
: Tempe, Ariz.
·'
·
. o: Renaldo Turnbull had three of
: six sacks for New Orleani (6-2),
: which held Phoenix to 143 total

I am for ''GRANTS", IF WE CAN PAY FOR THEM!

down passes from Wayne Cook,
including a 36-yarder to J.J. Stokes
that got the Bruins started, now has
the inside track to the Rose Bowl.
UCLA led 30-0 before the visiting
WildC81S scored.
No. 17 Indlalia 10
Michigan St. 0
The Hoosiers, like Wisconsin a
big surprise in the Big Ten, showed
the visiting Spartans a bit about
defense. In posting its third
shutout, Indiana held Michigan
State to 161 yards.
No. 18 Kansas State 21
No. 20 Oklahoma 7
The Wildcats heat a ranked team
for the ftrst time in 12 years. Chad
May threw for two touchdowns and
ran for a third. But the Sooneers'
offense also was a major contributor. Oklahoma lost ihree of seven
fumbles.
No. 22 Nortb Carolina St. 34
No. ll Virginia l9
Coming off an impressive victory over No. 16 North Carolina, ihe
Cavaliers hit the road with high
hopes. But they blew a 27-17
advantage on the strength of two
fourth-quarter fumbles.
No. l4 Wyoming 32
Fresno State 28
In one of those who-has-thebali-last games, Joe Hughes
pieaset;lthe home crowd with a
seven-yard scoring pass to Mike
Jones with 20 seconds remaining.
The victory was the seventh
slraight for the Cowboys.
No. 25 Virginia Tech 31
East Carolina ll
Dwayne Thomas ran for one
score and caught one of two touchdown passes from Maurice DeShazo. The Hokies' quarterback also
found Antonio Freeman with a 52yard scoring pass.

son. had a pair of one-yard scoring
runs ana threw a toucHdown pass to
Chris Jenkins on a play that covered 65 yards.
The Bobcats' defense was credited with six sacks and Ohio's Tim
Norviei inwcepted two passes. His
first interception in the end zone
halted an Akron drive midway
through the second quamr and his
second stopped the Zips on the
Ohio 40 with 1:171eft and enabled
the Bobcats to run out the clock.
" In the fust half, we played the
best we have all year," said Ohio
coach Tom Lichtenberg. "The kids
came ready to play and I think we
surprised Akron because we ran the
ball so well. They have a very good
defensive football team, but our
oiTensive line played well."
BowUng Green came back from
a 10-0 first-half deficit to defeat

NFL contests ... __

;;- yard run clinched the Cowboys'
• ·fifih successive win after iosmg
: :iheir fUlit two with Smiih holding
••
ni ,out.
•
49ers 40, RaiDs 17
•
;
At San Francisco, the defense
:. took charge, forcing three
: turnovers that led to 21 points and
: geUing seven sacks, ihree by roolde
ai Troy Wilson. The 49ers (5-3) were
: led by linebacker John Johnson, .
:; shaking off a week-long bout wiih
: the flu, and cornerback Michael
• McGruder.
:
1ohnson intercepted a pass and
: had a sack to force a fumble, set• ling Ul' a lJair of scores. Michael
: McGruder got a 32~yard interceplion return touchdown against TJ.
• Rubley, making his first NFL start
~ for the Rams (f-6).
• · Marc Logan scored twice on
: .one-yard runs and Ricky Watters
: also had a one-yard touchdown run.
• . Broacos 28, Seabawkll7
.:
At Denver, where the !lroncos
(4-3) have won 20 of their last 23,
.., John Eiway threw for two scores
: and Robert Delpino ran for two.
.. Elway completed 23 of 36 passes
~·i for 255 yards and Denver JOI four
• · ';ii sacks of heralded rookte'· Rick
: Mirer, who was' 16 of 30 for 201
.. yards with two interceptions.
:
Seattle (4-4) had II penalties for,
: 94 yards. .
·.
:r. Cbllrgei'S 30, Raiders l3
..
Donald Frank~s 1()7,-yard inter; tf-Ception retuni to.uchdown led the
II Chargers (3-4), who had lost their
: last ~- San Diego overtaJIIe Jeff
• l:lostetler's 424 yards passing for
: the host Raiders (4·3).
:
The Chargers hadn't scored
~ fit~ than. 18 points in any of their

i,

.

village, and residents.

~

'

Patrick Lebelu, ~.

o the~Hock~~~ ~

a big step tOward the Big Eight title
by winrung 81 Folsoin Field for the
rust tinle since 1987. Calvin Jones
scored two touchdowns.
No.7 Teoneaee 55
South Carolina 3
The Gamecocks forgot to bring
their defense with them, and five
turnovers made their offense positively offensive. The Volunteers
roiiod up 572 yards against a
defense that had been allowing
fewer lhan 300.
No.8 Auburn 31, Arkansas 21
The Wlbeaten Tigers, one of college football's biggest surptises,
rode a JS:yard interception fort
tie-breakin~ touchdown to victory
at Fayetteville. James Bostic's 12yard run in the final period
wrapped it up.
No. 9 Fforida 33, Geor2ia 26
Tbe Gators survived when a
Georgia touch4own was negated
because a timeout had been called
before the play started. Then Eric
Zeier threw behind all open receiver in the end zone. Errict Rhett had
for 183 yards and two touchdowns
in the Jacksonville slop.
No. 10 Texas A&amp;M 37, SMU 13
The Aggies got three field goals
from Terry Venetoulias and two
touchdowns from Greg Hill. The
result was an easy victory over visiting SMU, the 20th slraight in the
Southwest Conference for Texas
A&amp;M.
No. 11 WVU 43, Syracuse 0
A 90-yard run by Robert Wailcer
- one of two touchdowns for him
- and outstanding defense keyed
the victory by the Mountaineers.
The Orangemen have been shut out
twice in a row.
No. 1l UCLA 37
No. 14 Arizona 17
UCLA, getting a pair of touch-

No. t ·Florlda St. 54
Wake Forest 0
·CharUe.Ward, w~o bruised ribs
in the first half, may p!4y Satimlay
against Maryland, coach Bobby
Bowden said. w~·· inJury lhrcalcned to diminish the satisfaction of
lhc host Seminoles' school-record
tying fourth shutout.
No. l Notre Dame 58, Navy 27
Afler a scare 81 Pbil$delphia, the
Irish mtched lhe nation's longest
winning streak to 16 ~- Notre
Dame lraiied 24-17 at halftime, but
outscored the Middies 41-3 in the
final 30 minutes for its 30th
sttaighi victory over Navy.
No. 3 Obio St. l4
No. 19 Penn St. 6
." Penn State was outclassed as
,- early-season snow blew around
Ohio Stadium, where the Buckeyes
extended their regular-season
unbeaten streak to 14 games. Raymont Harris gained a career-high
· 151 yards and a score for Ohio
State.
No.4 Mlaml4l, Temple 7
The Hurricanes closed within
two victories of Alabama's NCAA
mlirlc of 57 sttaigbt at home. The
Owls, who entered Miami territory
".only twice, could not cope. with
· Ryan Collins. He threw for two
touchdowns and ran for two more.
No. 5 Alabama 40,
Soutbern Mississippi 0
r
In another mismau:h, the visit: ing Eagles were held to 176 yards.·
• Tliat made it easy . for Brian
: Burgdorf. ·He had two scoring
: touchdown-passes in his fUlit slarl,
:: and fteslunen Toderick Malone and
: Brian Steger scored on lonf plays.
No. 6 Nebraska l
,
No.lO Colondo 17
, ..The Cornhuskers, who rarely
: beat a r8nkcd team in the road, took

Sunda,Y's AFC battle in Miami, where the
Dolph1Ds won 30-10 in part because of Mitchell's
three touchdown passl!s. (AP)

Ti..day'&amp;l&amp;mes

Vote For and lellln

ORIS

_(Co-'-ntinu_ed_:..fl'9m_Pag_e4_)_

S•cott Mttchell (right) escapes the clutches of
Kansas City defensive llnemaa Neil Smitb during

c...;,,.. 77, o..bwv LU..idc s

urday, Ball Sta.te and Bowling
Green remained tied for the conference lead wiih 4-0-1 Jea8uc ·records
as the Cardinnls defCllted Eastern
Michigan 18·13 and the: Falcons
downed Miami of .Ohio 30·25 .
Toledo outscored Kent45-27 while
in non-con. ference play, Western
Michigan topped Anny 20-7.
Western Michigan is 4-1, East·
em Michigan 3-2, ,oJcron and Cen·
tra1 Mic~i(!BD 3-3, Ohio 3-4, Toledo 2-3, Miami 1-5 and Kent 0-6 in
league play.
· •
Ohio got all its points in the ftrSt
half against Akron as D.R. Robin-

college football actio~ •••

ESCA~ES DEFENDER- Miami quarterback

Dc.chwood 22. Lutheran W. 1n
Cin. Country Day 20, Ponamoulh
NotreDa!MO
Clev. Catholic 14, Late Cath. 1
Clev. Baa 34, Clcv. Wm Tcda 0
Clcv. Rhodct ZO. Oev. Kennedy 6
CICY. Sooth 22, Cle-.1. Adama 2
Qf;V. SL I&amp;T~•tiua 48, Padua 13
Ocv. VASJ 27, Clrrv. Benedictine II
COl. Waucnm 31, Col SL Clu.da: 0

Two weeks ago when lhe streak
ended,_the _soulh goal post went
down;~ Qobcats have one home
pme remaining, with Mid-American Conference title contender
Western Michigan this.coming Saturday, and a victory against the
Broncos could be cause for enough
celebration to bring down both
posts.
The Bobcats haven't won four
consecutive victories - or three
straight, for that matter - since
1982, when they capllll'cd five in a
row.
Elsewhere in lhe MAC on Sat-

post.

(See NFL on Page 5)

14

G~"'-' ll !h y 11, Ch:cago 3
\lo .o mr 30, !Cull:os Crt)' 10

'

linaland 15; and Detroit 30, Mlnn&lt;\001127.
Tonight's pme has Washington
at BuiTalo.
Off this week were Pittsburgh,
Cleveland, Houston and Cincinnati.
Dolphins 30, Chiefs 10
At Ml4mi, the Chiefs (5-2)
couldn't get unuackcd and lost Joe
Montano and Harvey Williams to
injuries.
Montana left in the second quarter with a reaggravatcd hamstring
problem. He has played in just half
of the Chiefs' 28 quarters this season.
Bryan Cox's jarring tackle
caused a fumble by running back
Harvey Williams, who was motionless on the field for 15 minutes
before being stabili zed and
wheeled oiT on a stn:tcher. He suffered a concussion.
Cowboys 23, Eagles 10
At rainy Philadelphia, Emmitt
Smith ignored the elements - and
the Eagles defense. He rushed for
237 yards, tied for the sixth biggest
output in NFL history, and his 62-

ScorelJoard

win over Akron causes fans to t~ar down goal post

. .lry TIM PUE'r
Alloclated·~- Writer
Winning fOOibiU pmcs is COStin!! the Ohio University alhletic
departnient some extra money and
givinathe Peden Slldiiun grounds
crew some extra wuk. ,
The Bobcau defeated Akron 2113 Saturday for 1heir lhird viciOI'y
in a row after breaking a I5-gamc
losing streak. The pme was lJlayed
on a snowy f~eld snd drew less lhan
3,000 fans, but lhOse who were on
hand were' enlh~utic enough to
tear down ihe stadium's norlh goal

To highlight non-Ohio NFL weekend,

Bv

The Dilly Sentinel .Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~----~~-----;.--~~~~--------------------------------------~~::~::::::~::~~::--------------------------------------~~::~;::::::::::!::~
.:! Despite snow, smaU crowd;
·
.

I
I
I
I

I
I

I
I

Address:

I

Phone

I
1

~

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

The.Daily Sentinel

Arrrl'/1979-92
Desert Storm
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(not actual size)

$10 each
In Honor of
Major
Bob Johnson
Army 1979-92
Desert Stann
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(not actual size)

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Call 992·7569

�....

Page

~The

Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, November

1, 1'1!d

In the NBA's Pacific Division,

. ;:

Will Suns overcome Dumas' exit, ·Barkley's back .woes?
Dy NORMAN MacLEAN
In lhe NBA's Pacific Division,
here is the predicled order of finish
in 1993-94, along with the key
questions for each learn .
Phoenix Suns
Head coach: Paul Westphal.

Will Charles Barkley continue
to play at his All-Star best, despite
a longtime back problem that
caused him to collapse in training
camp?
Arc lhe Suns really as good as
suggesiCd by !heir 62 victories and

trip to lhe NBA Finals, or willlhey
win 10 fewer games this season?
Will point guard Kevin Johnson
bounce back from an injury-filled
regular season (hamsuing) and a
horrendous playom
Seattle Supersonics
Head coach: George Karl.

In the NBA's Midwest Division,

Texas teams expected to take
charge of summit, basement
Dy NORMAN MacLEAN
In the NBA's Midwest Division,
here is the prediciCd order of finish
in !993-94, along with the key
questions for each team.
Houston Rockel~
Head coac h: Rudy Tom janovich.

Will Hakeem Olajuwon play at
the same high level this season as
last, when he was the best center
(sorry, Patrick and David) in the
NBA?
Can Houston win again with the
smallest backcoun in the league, a
unit subjccl to occasional misses at
crunch tim e?

Will the Rockets rewrite their
history. which says they lose intensi ly af1cr a good year - makmg
the Sum mi l the Slum -mit?
San Antonio Spurs
Head coach: John Lucas.
Docs Dav id Robinson know he
has something to prove after a lackluster season - in which he was
passed by Hakeem Olajuwon and
PJtrick Ewing?
Will Lucas' positive attitude

work for a second year in a row
afler laking over from lhe negative
Jerry Tarkanian?
Can this coach reach troubled
but talenled Dennis Rodman (who
was acquired in a trade)? And can
the cl ub fmd a real point guard?
Utab Jazz
Head coach: Jerry Sloan.
How successful will Sloan be
with his sales pilCh about playing
with more intensity and making the
fans forget that early playoff loss?
Is point guard John Stockton
beginning to slip, or were his miniproblems the result of too much
basketball (the 1992 Dream Team
Olympics, etc.)?
.
Can bump-and-gnnd play plus double-teaming Karl Malone
(he was at his usual All-Star clip
despite the Olympics) - wear
down the Jazz, who seem to be gel·
ting old?
Denver Nuggets
Dan Issei.
Can the run and gun Nuggets
make the playoffs?

Martin wins Slick 500,
but Earnhardt closer
to Winston Cup title
Dy MIKE HARRIS
PHOEN IX (AP) - Even an
optimist like Rusty Wallace has to
adm it the 1993 Winston Cup championsh ip is all but over with one
race remaining.

14 at Atlanta Motor Speedway to
wrap up his sixth Winston Cup
championship.
"We feel preuy good about
going to Atlanta now," Earnhardt
said. "It's still not in the bag, but
hopefully we' ll be able to pull it
out. I'd really like to go down there
and win (the race). It ' s been a

Wallace, who had such a hot
hand and such high hopes going
inlo Su nd ay's Slick 50 500 a1
Phoen ix In ternational Raceway, while since we' ve won. "
sa w hi s hopes of catching point
The 42-year-old Earnhardt, who
leader Dale Earnhardt dealt a criti- has six victories this season, last
cal blow by , of alllhings, a flat tire. took the checkered flag in July at
While Mark Martin, the eventu- Talladega, Ala. But he has finished
al race winner, was dominating the well-enough 10 ·. put himself on the
312·1ap event on the one-mile oval, brink of moving within one chamWallace was outrunning Earnhardt pi onship of Richard Petty's record
in th ei r tense duel fo r the $1.25 seven.
million series title until his right
The last time Earnhardt finished
fro nt Lire was cut down on lap 191.
lower than ~4th was in the July
The ensuing pit stop didn 't cost 1992 race at Talladega, when an
him bad ly because all the leaders engine failure relegated him to
.vcrc due for green flag stops. But 40th.
by the time Wallace drove his PonMartin was the class of the field
tiac intO the pits, there was another throughout Sunday's race, leading
more serious problem.
seven times for 254 laps, including
"1 got that flat tire and it ground the final 23. He did have to fend
the sway bar ri ght off of it," he off a late challenge from Ernie
said . " 1 don't know what I ' m lrvan to win for lhe ftfth time this
going to have to do to catch up season and the 12th in his career.
now. I' m a liule disappointed
"We had no idea how we were
because 1 had him (Earnhardt) beat gain~ to run," Martin said. "We
agai n today."
burned a piston early in .th~ last
Wallace, who had finished in practice on Saturday and didn 1 get
th e top five in eight straight races to run but a few laps. We took a
while ~ has ing down Earnhardt tn . guess on the ,setup ba~ed on the
th e titl e race, came into Sunday's experience we ve had thts year and
500 -k il ~ m e ter event down by 72
(crew chiet) Steve Hmiel's notes.
point s. He left trailin g by 126.
"I 'm not sure I could have done
mea ning that Earnhardt, who fm- a beuer job if I'd practiced for
ished founh Sunday, simply has to three days."
finish no worse than 34th on Nov.

How much progress towards
superstardom will 7-foot-1 cenler
Dikembe Mutombo , who has
become an intimidating presence,
make in his third season'!
The NBA lottery enabled the
Nuggets to draft forwards LaPhonso Ellis and Rodney Rogers in the
last two years - liow good will
Rogers, this season's rookie, be?
Minnesota Timberwolves
Head coach: Sidney Lowe.
Expected to be a stop gap, the
coach convinced his players and
the Wolves' owners he could do
the job. Can he?
As forward Christian Laettner
goes, so goes Minnesota. How will
Laettner go? Will he roll up his
sleeves and get to work?
How good is super-scoring
rookie whiz J.R. Rider?
Dallas Mavericks
Head coach: Quinn Buckner.
Can 1992 draft choice Jimn'!y
Jackson and 1993 pick Jamal
Mashburn lead Dallas to
respectability?
Will Buckner - who has no
coaching experience, but understands the modem NBA player curtail the 33-131 gloom of the past
two years?
Can a sacrificing defense get
enough turnovers to feed the Mavs'
attack?
Here are the ftnal 1992-93 regular season standings:
I. Houston: 55-27 (.671); 2. San
Antonio: 49-33 (.598); 3. Utah: 4735 (.573); 4. Denver: 36-46 (.439);
5. Minnesota: 19-63 (.232); 6. Dallas: 11 -71 (.134).

Come on, now l Karl can't be
that good a coach - or is he about
to improve on his 82-42 record
since taking over with the Sanies?
Will his switching, trapping " D"
work again?
Ricky Pierce seems too old at 34
to he SeaUie' s go-to guy, but is this
great three-point shooter going to
defy the odds again?
And is versatile Sam Perkins the
answer at center?
Portland Trail Blazers
Head coach: Rick Adelman.
Since Portland failed to make
the NBA finals for the third time in
four years (with an early exit last
spring), will there be big changes
-including Adelman's departure?
Can Clyde Drexler overcome a
year or injuries and come back to
his former prominence as the team
leader- or will he be traded?
How much will Harvey Grant·
and Chris Dudley help?
Golden State Warriors
Head coach: Don Nelson.
After slipping from 55 wins to
34 , are the Warriors much better
off thanks to getting forward Chris
Webber through a lottery trade
with Orlando?
Where do swin~ man Chris
Mullin and guard T1m Hardaway
fit in the Don Nelson scheme of
things?
With guard Sarunas Marciulion·
is out for the season, can Latrell '

VOTE
FOR

Sprewell, 1992's top pick, hold lhe
fort after doing quill! wen for half
of last year'/
L.A. Cllppen
Head coach: Bob Weiss.
With star forward Danny Manning opting out, can Bob Weiss
establish enough stability to keep
his team alloatf
· Will point guard Mark Jackson
continue his smash off-Broadway
performance?
Can huge center Stanley Roberts
play aU season long the way he did
in the second half last year'!
Sacramento Kings
·He8d coach: Garry SL1ean.
Are they asking too much of
All-Star guard Mitch Richmond,
who doesn't have enough support?
Can star rookie Bobby Hurley
beat out Spud Webb, the 5-foot-7
incumbent at point guard? ·

How will St. Jean improve::
Sacramento's poor defense apinst;
shooting?
~
L.A. Liken
•
Head .coach: Randy Pfund.
%
Without Magic Johnson, Sam;:
Perkins and A.C. Green, can the~.
!..akers evell begin to put a compet-•
itive team on the l1oor?
. ~·
WilJ. starter Vlade Divac bo .
helped ot hurt by the acQUisition o ,...
baclrup center Sam Bowie? . . ::
Is Anthony Peeler the ilnswc- at:
guard - shooting guatd, that is? :
Here are the .C:m81tm-93 regu- ;
tar season standings:
•
1. Phoenix: 62-20 (. 756}; 2.:
Seatde: 'S-21 (.671); 3. Portland: :
Sl-31 (.622); 4. L.A. Clippers: 41· :
41 (.500); S. L.A. Laken: 39-43 •
(.4 76} ; 6. Golden State: 34-48 :.
(.41S); 7. Sacramento: 2S-S1 :
(.305).

IOICI

lowed by Miami (6-1), Alabama
(7-0-1), Nebraska (8-0). Tennessee
(6-1-1), Auburn (8-0), Aorida (6-1)
and Texas A&amp;M (7-1).
West Virginia (7 -0) was I llh,
the lowest ranking of the seven
undefeated teams. The Moun taineers kept their record perfect by
beating Syracuse 43-0.
WyominB (7-1) and North' Carolina State (6-2) also broke into the
Top 25. Wyoming moved in at No.
24 after beating Fresno State 32-28,
and Nonh Carolina State was No.
22 after a 34-29 victory over Virginia.
Rounding out the Top 25 were
UCLA at No. 12, Louisville, Arizona , Wisconsin, North Carolina,
Indiana, Kansas State, Penn State,
Oklahoma, Virginia, North Carolina State, Colorado; Wyoming and
Virginia Tech.
Arizona (7-1) fell seven spots to
No. 14 after losing to UCLA 37-17.
Penn State also plunged seven
notches, to No. 19, following a 24-6 loss to Ohio State:
Kansas State made the biggeat
jump, from No. 2S to No. 18, afler
defeating Oklahoma 21-7.

Voto For aad Support

DALE F. BRICKLlS
C•••litl..o For

Bedford Township Trustee
Election • Nov. 2, 1993
Tllll YOI .
Pllkl lor by - · d - . D. F. BrloldM,
41715 . . , Wltllow Rlclgl Ad.; ..... Oh.

.

)\

-

: ' BREMEN, Ohio (AP)- ldenti: cal twins are running agailist each
: ot,her and three morc candidates for
:' four viUqc.councU seats. But their
election could mean double trouble
: for this central Ohio town, an
:· opponent said.
: Jan and Ann' Hartman, 19, said
. people should vote for them
· because they ·are honest and bUst·
: worthy. They said serving on the
council would be good political
experience for them.
· · "We want to see what polities
· are like,. and since this is our fmt
'time, we fiJ!Ufed we'd start small,"
Ann Hartrnin said. ' 'You've got to
·start somewhere, and we see Bre. ·men as a nice, friendly town:"
· The Hartmans said with five
candidales and four open "seats, it's
11 sure .thing one would be eleeled
·;n this Fairfield County village
"about35 miles southeast of Columbus.
Only three names - Deborah
·Berry, Latricia Johnston and
·incumbent Donald Spangler - are
·on Tuesday's ballot for the four
,!CBts.
· The twins' age and inexperience

.

11 you - concerntd aut the mo.,.. ~·rl "'own of our Mllon,
the remov81 of rellgklue freedom end prey« from the clu•raom,
you need to vote for • Bible Believing Chrletlen E!u.m.nnwn who
will 1tend up for whet t. right. BOB BARTON IS SUCH A IIAN, ·
With y•re of experience' M chel111111n of th• Pomeroy Sc~l
Bo•rd, deep Chrt.tlan conviction, •nd uneempromlelng faith, Bob
Barton will etend for mol'llllty •net Integrity••
VOTE FOR BOB BARTON FOR
MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION.

ROBERT E. BARTON

..,,

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - The to take," said Carole Robinson, an
: decision by MTV to reschedule its MTV spokeswoman.
"Beavis and Butt-head" show to a
She said MTV began looking at
later hour is being seen by some as the content of the show months
· the ftrst step toward toning down before lhe changes.
violence on television.
"The_y had to do something,"
MTV's reaction "not only said Dr. Robert D. Gould, a Man. reflects !he mood of Congress, but hattan psychiatrist and president of
the whole mood out in TV land," the National Coalition on TV Viasaid Richard D' Amato, press ofli· lence. "What network likes to have
· 'cer for the Senate Commerce Com- sponsors read about that?''
mittee. The committee is considerYvette Harris, a developmental
ing three billi regulating television . psychologist at Miami University
violence.
.
in Oxford teaches a course on tele"There's obvious and growing vision's effect on young children.
dissatisfaction with the way pro- She said J.N:OPle do not realize how
gra111ming treats violence," much children imitate shows they
D' Amato said. "People feel have seen. .
"Parents should ~lways monithey're being used." .
A woman in suburban Mol&lt;Wle-- tor, screen and co-v1ew programs
blamed the cable cartoon characters with their children," she said.
for prompting ber 5-y~-old son to . Joc:y O'Neil: a 10-year-old who
PktY with fire. The chdd slarted a hves m the trailer park where the
fii'C· rn~\1\e family's nibliilelfoiiie' · toddler died, said he used to be a
last rhontlt that killed his 2-year-old big fan of "Beavis and Butt-head."
sister.
.
"But now our parents won't let
"We don't believe thai 'Beavis us watch it no more - not since
and Butt-head' is reSponsible for the ?aby died," he ~d . "And we
·what happened in Ohio, but we do don t want.to wau;h tt. !~.used to be
believe lhese were the proper steps run before 1t got v1olenL

,.
~

...

.
''·
••
",.

•13 Years experience on Meigs Local Board
..'
•19 Years business experience In Pomeroy
"
•
•Married to the former Patty Haggy
••' "
•2 Grandchildren attending Southern Local and 3 attending Meigs
Local
•Active member of the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist church slnce1968.
At present time I hold the offices of Christian Education Dl~or,:.
Adult Sunday School Teacher and hold a position on the Official
Board.
'
·

·-

..

I Would Appreciate Your Support on
Election Day, Tuesday, Nov. 2nd

"PAT"
Meigs Co~,tnty

''

.,.

TlllnkYou
Robert E. Barton

School Board
Paid for by the Candidate

•

•

Paid for by cendicW•. 3481ct$11 7, Pollllnly,ptl ~ . :;:

MATTRESS
SALE
Spring Air ·Best Rest
1 yr. Warranty

$88" Twin ea. pc.
$1 08" Full ea. pc.

Serta Sertapedlc
10 yr. Warranty

$119" Twin ea.
$169" Full ea. pc.

Huge inventory of Wallaway recfiners,
rocker/recliners,
Leather
Recliners,
Thermo Massage recliners and Ladies'
down sized recliners.
Berkline quality and comfort guarenteedl
Reg.
Sale
$299 ... Recliner... $239
$369... Recli ner... $299
$419... Recliner.. ,$339

$349" Twin ea.
$479" Full ea.

·Kern birth

' SPECiiU

BERKLINE
RECLINERS

worry Mrs. Berry , a 30-year-old
housewife. She said she is concerned with lhe attention the twirlS
are receiving.
"It doesn' t matter that they're
twins. It's just a novelty that everyone thinkS is cute," she said.
"They're very young 1!8~ con~nt with Bremen the way IllS, and
that's what worries me because
there's a lot of wort thai needs to
be done here." ·
Mrs. Berry said the twins could
make a decis1on on the council that
would affect their father's job.
Andy Hartman is the village street
superintendenL
The twins, however, said they
would abstain from voting on
issues relaled to their father.
The Hartmans said they each
decided separately on the same day
to run as write-in candidates in this
village of aboilt1,400 residents.
Both are sophomores at the Lancaster campus of Ohio University
and plan to commute to the Athens
campus for their junior and senior
years. !an is m~joring in poli~cal.
science; Ann u an accounung
major.

:M TV pressured to back
down on ·'·Beavi~'

•'

To The County Boa~d of Educathtn

announced
Washer

Large capacity

,

Heavy Duty

Large capacity

Dryer

3 cycles

Bui~-in 3
cycles. energy

sayer

size adf.

The Daily Sentinel
Monday, November1, 1993

page-7

Identical twins run -Halloween hi~.&amp;.&amp;. . ·
;· for village council

.,

Top 25 poll ... _&lt;~Co_nu_·n_ued_r_rom_Pa..:...ge_5_)_ __
ning seasons in his six years at Virginia Tech.
While Virginia Tech was mak ing its maiden poll appearance for
the ' 90s Michigan and Washington
dropped' out of the rankings for the
first time this decade.
Mic higan (4 -4), No. 24 last
week, fell out of the poll after losin g to Wisconsin 1?-IO. It's the
first time the Wolvennes have been
unranked since the final regularseason poll in 1987. Was hington (5 -3), No. 19 a
week ago, lost to Arizona State 3217 and dropped out for the fusl
time since 1989. Michigan State (43), a 10-0 loser to Indiana, also fell
out of the Top 25.
Meanwhile, the top two teams
remained unchanged. No. I Aorida
State (8-0) and No. 2 Notre Dame
(9·0) stayed on course for thelf
Nov. 13 showdown at South Bend.
The Seminoles, who shut out
Wake Forest 54 -0 Saturday,
received all 62 ftrst-place votes m
the media poll for the third straight
week. The Fighting Irish rallied in
·' !he second half to beat Navy 58-27.
Ohio State (8-0) was third, fol-

.

Please Vote For and Elect

PATSY A. THOMA

Serta Perfect Sleeper
20 yr. Warranty

·~

.

By
The
Bend
.

Timothy and Judy Kern annouce
·the birth of their daughler, Rebecah
; Anne, on Oct. 3 at Holzer Medical
:Center.
; She weighed eight pounds I I
·ounces and was 21 inches long.
• Paternal srandparents are
:wandl and Darrell Sellers, Sellers
: Ridae. and David and Lana Kern,
~ Washington, D.C. Paternal grea~­
' grand)IBIC!Its ·are AUen and Mawe
:Ball, Pomeroy. Maternal grand: mother is Florence Hite,
· Ducansville, Penn.
: Rebecah is the sister of Gary
- :fl:olter ·at home and Brenda and
:kogerl:.emley,Parkersburg, W.Va.

~·

...

REBECAH KERN

ATTRACTIVE JACK-O-LANTERNS •
Cash prizes totaling $250 were awarded to the
winners in tbe first annual jack-o-lantern contest staged by Andersons of Pomeroy. About 40
residents carved, c:.ostumed, did paste-ons and
hand painted pumpkins for th~ contest which
was judged by Hal Kneen, Meigs County Exten·
sion Agent, Thursday evening. Here emiplclyees

UFO sighters
appear to be
normal people

pose with the entries, from tne tell, Jim Anderson, Pam Rirne, Becky Anderson, and Susan
Salser. The-winners were $100, first place, Sarah
Harris, Chester; $75, second place, Jodi Gumm,
Hemlock Grove; $50, third place, Andrew Philson, Sryacuse; and $ZS, fourth place, Paige .
Cleek, Pomeroy.

•

TRICK OR TREAT •
Ghouls and boys througbout
Meigs County took to the
streets Thursday nigh in the
annual trick or treaf observance. Here, Matt "Batman"
Boyd and Brandon "Dracula"
Knapp take treats from Lena
Mae Maynard in Middleport.

By MALCOLM RITJ'ER
AP Sdeac:e Wrlttr
NEW YORK (AP) - People
who think they've seen a UFO or a
space alien appear to be j~st as
intelligent and psychologically
healthy as other people, a new
study says.
Rese·a rchers found that UFO
reporters scored no J'Orse than
olher people on tests of psychological health, intelligence and fantasyproneness.
They appeared 10 be "very ~or­
mal," said study co-author Patncta
Cross of Carleton University in
Ottawa, Canada.
Many of their reports may just
be misinte!pretations of unfamiliar
sights or experiences, influenc¥
by a prior belief in visits by space
aliens, she said.
Cross, a psychology graduate
student who did the study as her
master's thesis, reports lhe work
with psychologist Nicholas Spanos
and others at Carleton in the
November issue of the Journal of
Abnormal Psychology.
"Our findings clearly contradict
the previously held nolions that
people who seemingly had bizarre
ex periences, such as missing time
and communicating with aliens,
have wild imaginations and arc
easily swayed into believing the
unbel ievablc," the study said.
The study included 49 adults
who said they had seen UFOs, 39
members of the general public and
74 introductory psychology stu•
dents.
Eighteen of the UFO spotters
said they had simply seen something in the sky. The other 31
reponed a more intense experience.
For example, 10 said !hey had seen
a spacecraft close-up, .10 said they
had spotted an alien, seven reported
verbal contact with aliens and eight
cited telepathic contact. Seven
recalled total body paralysis and
eight said time was inexplicably
lost. Two said they were taken up
in a spaceship.
As a whole, the UFO spotters
were more likely than other study
participants to repon belief in visitS
from space aliens.

Garden club ·o.ffets fall gardening tips
Reports on fall activities and
gardening tips for fall were features
of the recent meeting of the Chester
Garden Club held at the home of
Edna Wood.
Members during the meeting
conducted by Betty Dean discussed
the county board meting held at the
Meigs Museum where Pat Holter
and Clarice Krautter served
refreshments. Plans were made for
making table favors for the fall
regional meeting held at Carleton
School and for the craft workshop
at the Chester United Methodist
Church where Kathryn Mora and
Dean {OOk malerials.
Also di scussed was the Meigs
Co unty Showcase flower show
held at Rock Springs Fairgrounds
with several members exhibiting.
Acti vi ties of the regional board
meeting held at the Chester Church
were al so noled.
Pat Holter and Kathryn Mora
were sunshine chairmen for October, and read itt the meeting was a
thank you note from Mr s. Earl
Young for a remembrance.
A second copy of "Carrots Love

Tomatoes", a book on companion
planting, will be provided to the
Meigs County Library by the club.
A bus trip to Wheeling for the
light festival on Jan. 16 and 17 was
noted and while sponsored by the
Rutland Garden Club, is ope n to
members of other clubs. It was
n01ed that Twila Buckley assisted
in decorating tables for both the
an nual Farm Bureau dinner meeting and the Soil and Wa1er ConservaLion annual session.

Maurita Miller is altar flower
c hairman for the month at the
Chester Church.
"Things to do this Month " by
Maye Mora included pruning roses
only to remove dead and or dis·
cased canes and hilling them with
new soil, mulching trees and shrubs
after soil begins to crust from the
co ld, checking established woody
plants. pulling back mulch and
removing weed s that crowd th e
root-stem juncture.
A li ving Christmas tree to plant
outside later should be in the house
no more than a week, she said. She
also suggested leaving a stem piece

attached to pumpkins and winter used "Unexpected Colors in Fruits,
sq ua sh for storage in a cool dry Trees and Flowers" as her topic.
place.
She said that "Black Parrot" and
When cleaning up the garden "Black Beauty" are tulips whose
take the dead and dying vegetable names speak for themselves,
plant parts and compost them , "Superstition" , a black flowerin~
Mora suggested.
iris giving color in early summer.
She said there is still time to gel "Black Devil" , a low growing
spring blooming bulbs into the soil, black pansy , and "Hosta Blue
and then talked about bulbs which Skies"a plant with shocking blue
need to be dug this fall and how to leaves.
store them.
She talked about other plants,
"The Gardener' s Creed" was ornamental grasses with blood red
gi vcn in unison and members foliage, and Alba and Pantaloons
responded to roll call on how !hey which have pure whire flowers.
s ur viv ed the drought of 1993.
Summer Icicle, commonly know
Bu nn y Kuhl and Shirley Roush as Snow-on-the-Mountain, has
were guests.
cool, white leaves often mistaken
Pat Holter not that she carried for flowers, she said.
her wash water to her roses with
Additions to an ornamental vegaltar arrangements at Trinity etable garden are Burgandy, Okra,
Church and flowers for local wed- Royal Burgandy bush and yeUowdings and receptions being the orange cauliflower, reported to be
result of this conservation.
tasty and more nutritious than the
New program books were dis- white variety, Mora poinled ouL
tributed by Wood, program chairThe hostesses, Wood and Jean
man, and Dean reviewed lhe goals Frederick, served a dessen coune.
and projects for this coming year.
Mayc Mora won the door prize.
Garden Gatherings, a monthly
Wednesday night' s meeting will
feature, was by Macil Barton who be held at the home of Maida
Mora.

Columbia heads home with
:medical .data, endurance record Extract from Kudzu may conquer alcohol craving, study shows
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Reg. 359 Glider Rockers SALE
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By MIKE DRAGO
Associated Press Writer
SPACE CENTER, Houston
:·(AP)- Columbia's astronauts
: tlosed their orbiting doctor's office
:.and headeil home today after 14
·.days in space - the longest flight
in shuule l)istory.
·
·
·.' The se\'en aslionauts, espeCially
two physicians, a biochemist and a
;·yeterinarian focusing on medical
·tesearch, worked 18-hour days
: through much of the mission so sci: enlists could ~.Iter '!fldersl"'!d how
,•.the body chanseun we1ghdess' pess . .
:, Columbia was set to Ian!( at
i.I0:06 a.m. EST today at Edwards
;Air Force Base in California's
• wide-oJ,en Mojave Desen. Clear
:,kies and~iht winds provided
:''virtually
ect conditions" for a
;landing,o i8Is said.
': At 14 days, 13 mit~utes, it's
:nearly five hours beyond the
longest shuule flight to date.
: ~nother Columbia crew set that
:mark last year.
· " Throuahout !heir long, arduous
:trip, astronauts were dizzied by
: spmning chairs and whirling dots,
jabbed with needl~s and droppe~
,t;&gt;y bungee cords. ·
~ NASA was thrilled with the
: ~suits. ·
•
.
· ''Cc":~ our accoll\plis~;
ments ex
our expeclatlOns,
said inission scientist Howard
:schneid~r , adding&gt;that the c.rew
:collceled even more data than its
'dgoJ'IlUS schedule 'Called for.

..

"If we would have gotten 80
percent of what we expected we
would have been considered very
successful. So to sum it up, that's
greaL"
In only the second U.S. space
night devoted solely to medical
research, astronauts· studied the
entire human ·anatomy. Experiments covered·head to toe, or head
to tail in !he cases of 48 white rats
aboard.
Astronaut Martin Feltman,
America's first veterinarian in
space, beheaded six or the rodents
and conducted the first animal dissections in space. Nearly all the
rats~ body parts .were preserved so
scientists on Earth can get a
glimpse. at tissue exactly as it
appCars in microgravity,
The surviving 42 rodents will
die for science soon enough some as soon as they're unloaded
from Columbia and the rest up to
two weeks from now.
Researchers aren't done with the
astronauts, either.
The five men and two women
were to be flown to the Johnson
Space Center on stretchers today to
slow the effects of gravity. Then
there ate two more weeks of poking and proddin$ as d:'ey undergo
the same tests as m orbit.
Scientists want to see bow long
it takes for their ~ies to fully
readapt to gravity. NASA program
scientist Frank Sulzman expects
that to be by the end of lhe week.

•

abo ut the usc of kudzu from doc By PAUL RECER
tors in Asia and found that since
AP Science Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)
about 200 A.D. it has been a treatKudzu, an imported nuisance weed ment to suppress alcohol consumpthat often chokes trees in Soulhem tion.
"They make a concoction of it
forests, may contain ex tracts that
conquer the craving for alcohol, a and drink it as tea," said Vallee.
study shows.
To tes t its effect on alcohol
Researchers at Harvard Medical crav ing, the researchers used an
Sc hool, intrigued by the ancient unusual animal called the Syrian
Chinese use of the kudzu roots to golden hamsters. Vallee said this
treat alcoholism, tested compounds animal has the unique characteristic
from the plant on a group of hard- of hav ing a huge appeti te and
drinking hamsters and found that capacity for alcohol.
the rodents voluntarily went on the
''These ham sters will drink
wagon .
alcohol in preference to water," he
Dr. Bert L. Vallee of the Har- said. "It had not been previously
vard Medical School said the appreciated that it prefers alcohol
kud z u extract " ha s been used as much as it does."
widely in China and Japan for cenIn a study to be published Monturie ~ to treat alcoholism. You can
day in the Proceedings of the
buy the stuff in pill form over the Nat ional Academy of Sciences ,
counter in Japan and China."
Vallee and Keung report that if
Vallee and his colleague, Wing- given the choice, the golden hamMing Keung, collected information ster will develop an alcohol con-

sumption rate that. if scaled up to
human size, would be about 40
times greater than the capacity or
the typical human drunk
This was established by giving .
caged ham sters the side-by-side
choice of drink ing from a dish or
pure water or from a dish that conta in ed a 15 percent solution or

alcohol and water. The hamsters
preferred the cocktail and eventually would choose to ignore the plain
water.

Vallee said the researchers iden"
tified the active ingredient in kudzu
as a compound called daidzin. This
was sy nthesized and then injected
into 71 of lhe harnsrers.

Elect

Vote F•r

JOHN F. MU·SSER

FREDERICK M. TUTTLE

Pomeroy Village Council
Your Vote and Support Appreciated

Unnplred Term

Chester township lruste•
1

'*'

Pd. for by - dl
Ft lt•Jek Ill. 1U!1e,
:Mit1 T - Rd., Po11ion1y, OH. &lt;15711, I'll: 111-41.

P•ld lor by Candlcllto, 51511ullM"Y Hta., Pomeroy, Oh.

.I

�·Page

a

The Dally Sentinel

Monday,
Noveli'lbtt'J~\1193
.
.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

"

:Social security, plan
for your retirement
By ED PETERSON
Social Sec-urity manager in
Athens
Typically individuals spend
about 20 years in retiremeDI so it is
important to pian for those years.
Not only can Social Security help
. you financially during your retire. ment years. Social Security repre. sentabves can assist you to plan for
your retirement as well.
Almost anyone about to reach
11ge 62 or anyone age 62 or older
:Who plans to claim Social Security
retirement benefits should contact
: S.ocial Security in advance. In fact,
we encourage individuals to check
. into their Social Security retirement
benefits up to a year before they
actually plan to retire. That's
because some individuals can get
benefits even before they stop
. working. But, before you file for
: your retirement benefits, you
should obtain as much iruormation
· as you can.
· You can do this by calling
Sotial Security's toll-free number,
. 1-800-772-1213, and speaking with '
a teleservice representative. The
representative will answer any
questions you may have, assist you
· in obtaining a benefit estimate, and

advise you when and how to schedule an appoinunent.
If you plan to file for retirement
benefits in 'January, February, and
March, it would be best for you to
call the toll-free number as early as
possible to obtain information
about your retirement because
those are typically our busiest
months.
When you decide to file for
retirement benefits, you might want
to do so by phone. The completed
application IS then mailed to you
for verification, signature, and
return to our office for processing.
Your birth certifu:ate,.and proof of
rece01 wages will be needed at this
stage. You may bring or mail the
original documents or certified
copies to our office, where they
will be photocopied and returned to
you.
A few weeks after you file for
benefits, you'll be notified by mail
of your Social Security monthly
benefit amount and the date it will
begin. You'll also receive a Social
Security booklet explaining your
rights and responsibilities as a beneficiary and how to report changes
thai may affect your benefits.

Election
d,ay dinners
announced
DeJ)IJ'tmeat '

· · Scoa and Loraync Wright Justis
announce the birth of their first
child, a daughter, Leah Elizabeth,
on Aug. 20 B1 Orlando, Fla.
She weighed seven pounds and
was I9 inches long.
Paternal grandparents arc Elmer
and Darlene Newell of Chester.
Paternal great-grandmother is Inzy
. Newell of Chester. Maternal grand: parents are Dale and Alice Wright,
.· lOrmerly of McArthur, but current: I~ living in Orlando, Fla.

LEAH JUSTIS

By NITA LELYVELD
·
Associated Preu Write!"
POTOMAC, Md. (AP) - The
: parents felt reassured. By renting a
· · bus to take their teen-agers to the
. Churchill High School homecoming dance, they thought they had
guaranleed their children's safety.
What they hadn't anticipated
. was that the bus would make .one
extra stop - to an unsupervised
keg pany where the beer flowed
freely.
.
• Or that police would ratd that
party as part '!f a new, aggres~ive
campaign agatnsr underage drinking.
Suddenly, they found themselves blamed - on the front page
of The Washington Pose - for
·encouraging their children's drink•in~. in a story headlined, "Parents
· H1i'e Buses for Teens' Beer Party."
· · Montgomery County is an affluent suburb of Washington, where
teen-agers often drive around in
their own .cars. Some have busy
parents wbo don't keep close traek
of them.
: Now, these parents - like J!B!·
· ents everywh~ who grew u~ m
the liberated 60s - are betng
forced to think seriously about the
prOblems of teen-agers and ak:~.
and· about their own responsibili-

gram. "It's a whole different

.. world:'"

That's what Beverly Shapiro,
one of the mothers who rented the
bus, says she is struggling with
when it comes to her 15-year-old
daughter. '
"I can't tie her up and put her in
a closet," said Shapiro. "I tell her
I'm not trying to spoil her fun. I
just want
her to survive these
..
years •

According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration,
3,000 to S,OOO people between the
ages of IS lind 20 arc killed every
year in alcohol-related crashes. The
message to teen-agers has been
simple: Don't drink and drive.
Some teens think that means it's
stili OK to drink.
"I don't think it's a big deal as
long as people don't drive," said
Sarah Leshner, a 17-year-old
Churchill senior who has been to
several of the keg parties raided by
police. "They just drink to have
fun."
Churchill parent leaders have
been trying to drum their own message into the heads of other Darems.
"Where are the parents when
the kids are throwing these big parties?" asked Dr. Ray Coleman,
who helps run Churchill's School
Community Action Team, which
combats swdent alcohol use. Coleman is a pediattician and the father
of a Churchill junior.
"Where are they when the
drinking is going on in their living

ties.

"We didn't have metal detec:tors in schools. We didn't have
' AIDS. I didn't know 12-year-olds
:who had babies," said Pamela
:seer, executive director of the
Washington Regional Alcohol Pro-

rooms?""

:Health club congregates
A donation was made to Easter
Seals when the Rock Springs Better Health Club met recently at the.
borne of Phyllis Skinner.
.
Skiimer opened the meeting
with 'The l#IJ's Prayer and pledje
tathc flag.
.
Devotions· given by Dorothy
Jeffen were entitled Autumn
TlliCIIry', The Old Snow Storm.wl
Lift Up My Heart.
· · . Roll call and secretary's report
was given by Nancy Morris and
PtiiiCCS Gocglein gave the aeasur-

she was ill. Get well cards were
sent to several in the community,
The program was given by
Dorothy Jeffers. The subJects were
''Tests Tell You Why" by Jeffers,
"CAT Scan Computerized" by
Lenora Leifheit, "The Comeback
Disca.ses" by Helen Blackston,
"Abdominal Uhra Sound" by
Nancy Grueser, "Eiectrocardiogrlllll" by Barbara Fry, "Mammagrapy, what is it?" by Frances Goeglem.
.
·
Tbe contest held by Lenora
Leifheit was won by Nancy
er's report.
Grueser
and Berdina Chase.
A ·ihanll: 'you was .received ~or
the Jift g;-..en _10 Barbin Fry while
'

:To: Reslde•t• ef lotto• Twp.

'-ELECI-

I

.

KENNY WIGGIN:S
Sutto~t ~ow•s•lp Tr11IH

, . ""$&amp; r I •*" O..II!Dn,IIIII....- .....~... Ad.
I

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~o;..~ .~~~ 8A!.•~·5P.JI, • SAT.B-12
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• ..,..,_,. c:;aar.r.,Jo,.Wiud..-.
'.,.,.-~, cn.-r~ F.....J .do u.,.Per lS wordo wilt bo
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• Prloa.of.u (~W !II~ ,.._ 1o ..,_,. priooof od coot

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TUPPER!! ~NB
S..lc o!Mdlence,
lew enforcement,
per.ori.l prol*tlon,
kennel M!VIce, pup• l

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MIDDLEPORT - Kickoff for
the 1993 United Fund for Meigs
County will be held at 5 p.m. Monday at Dave Diles Park in Middleport. The Meigs Band will play,
th ere will be nag raising by the
Boy Scouts, and t~e Rev,_frank
Smith, Fund president, w1ll be
joined for shon speeches by Nancy
Campbell and the Rev. Sharon
Hausman . Refreshments will be
served by the Middleport Arts
Council.
POMEROY - The Meigs Band
Boosters will meet at 7 p.m. in the
Meigs High School band room.
Help is needed with peeling apples
after the meeting.
•-

~

~·

..... ~

RACINE - Regular meeting of
Racine Chapter Order of Eastern
Star. Initiation ceremony. All past
officer;; are encoUraged to auend.
REEDSVILLE -Eastern Athletic Boosters will meet at 7:30 p.m.

in the high school cafeteria.
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Garden Club will meet at 7:30
p.m. at the Middlepon Presbyterian
Church.
LETART FALLS - Letart
Township Trustees will meet at 6
p.m. at the town hall to discuss
adopting the solid waste plan.
RUTI. AND - Rutland Free Will
Baptist Church will have a revival
from Nov. I through 7. Rev. Marvin Markham will be preaching.
Pastor Paul Taylor invites the pub·
lie.

MIDDLEPORT - The Middlepan Arts Council will be offering
the final series or classical Chinese
Tai Chi Ch'uandasses from 7 to 8
p.m . on the first three Mondays in
November at the Arts Council
Chambers on North Second
Avenue. No martialltrts experience
is necessary. Participants should
ware -loose clothing and soft-soled·
shoes. The cost is $15 and is
payable the first night of class.
SYRACUSE - The Sutton
Township Trustees will meet at
7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse Municipal building.

Racine Elementary School has
released its honor roll for the ftrst
nine week session. Students listed
earned an A or B in all subject
areas excluding writing.
First grade: Heather Duffy ,
Holly Duffy, Ashlee Hili, Timmy
Klaiber, Ryan Miller, Joanne Pickens, Craig Randolph, Autumn
Reed, Nikki Rifne, Nicki Tucker,
Bryan Smith and Ryan Smith.
Second grade: Stephanie Bradford, Rosie Chevalier, Cassie Cle-'
land, Sasha Collins, Jessica Hill,
Montana Jerrell, Amy Norman,
Michael Roush and Lis Wamsley.
Third grade: Adam Ball, Bridgeue Barnes, Shane Butler, Brit-

tany Fortune, Jordan Hill, Amy
Lee, Tara Pickens, .Brandon Smith,
Tommy Theiss and Jennifer Walker.
Fourth grade: Amber Duffy,
Tyler Little, Joey Manuel, Rachel
Marshall, Lori Sayre.
Fifth grade: Michael Ball, Kati
Cummins, Macyn Ervin, Jonathan
Evans, Shauna Manuel, Fallon
Roush, Jamie Stemple, Emily
Stivers and Erin Struble.
Six grade: Willie Collins,
Stacey Ervin, Kim Ihle, Stacy
Lyons, Amber Maynard, Kyle Norris, Chris Randolph·, Crystal Rose,
Lena Yoacham, Bobbie Scarberry.
and Brandon Wolfe.

CHESTER WE,LLS
for
~'
OLIVE TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE
Experienced In road work
equipment operator
carpenter
YOUR VOTE ON NOV. 2 APPRECIATED
Plllllor by tile ClnclldiiOIIox 7&amp;A S.R. 241, Long

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sun.-Thurs. 4:10 pm
Fri. &amp;
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Is now accepting

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Including: tin, cast Iron , long and short Iron.
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Short Iron (1811 than 31l) 1.75 per hundr.d .
Motor Cast.....2.00 par hundr.d
. Clnn, dry alum. cane .23 pound
Prices subject to change without notice

Phone 992·5114

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992-22&amp;9

tists, Unitarian Univet:Balbll and
devotees 10f Hare Krishna, New .
Age religion'S and Sa?lnlsm. ·
Pornography and items relared to ·
witchCraft, yoga, ,palm reading and
asttolOSY also are targded.

~

·cr..... ill(llllebls

Wholesale

JUNK CARS.
&amp; TRUCKS

eLIGHTHAULING

USEDRAILROADTIES

SAlE
·

nesses, Moi:Jnons; Chtbtian Scieil-·

During my pa5t term we have: ·
•Paved 3 township roads ·
•Purchased badly.needed ~qolp­
ment.from funds w~ saved by
not taking the health in~un\o~e
.
offered to trustees ·
· . '(

WINTER STORAGE AVAilAILE

~:::uCTION

WANTING

OUTBOARD MoTOI 132"
INBOARD/OUTIOARD 180"

Finished Plecn,

949·JS04

TREE

aRTIFim MKHANK

ll)d Day &amp; Evening

. . ~:~~~~~~U+.~~~ii~HW
43266·
Information
. obtalna,d by

.

~c:cessort..,

Gravel

cations. He called It "a spiritual
operation of renunciation of ali'
involvement with the devil, false.
religions and gods."
·
Items on the :chureh 's "bum-.
list" include materiaiJ relating 10'
Muslim religions, JeboYab'a Wit-·.

·.~

WINTERIZATION SPECIALS

Limestone
Dirt

of God'

.

COUNTRYSIDE
.C~R4MICS
Paint B?'IIIIPM, ·

'HAULING

Rivers'begins new endeavor

'

20yeara
satisfied
cuatomara

' · ·Bisque, Gr..nwaN,

1'GENEUl
.

OWner/Tlm F.uk, Manager
techillclana on every job.

Jlllllorr?a- 15 Yr. Exp.
Trl-c-ty AIM

now.
7f7 1 mo. ,, L_.,!94~S..~308~8~

7131/91/lln

m the Church's Victory Press Publi-

NEW YORK (AP) - Same
host, new spin: Ji&gt;an Rivers says
she's abandpning ·her syndiclited ,
TV taUC shoW in' favot bf new pro- '•
gram with a daily do's8 of din-dishing and home shopping.
The comedian says her "Joan
Rivers Show" will end its fiveyear run on N~w Year's Eve. She'll
replace it Jan. 3 with "Can We

FREE 'Eil111ATEB

Sidewalks
. ·· 992·7878

tAIWIII, OHIO

RESTORATIONINSURANCE CUIUS
24Hour
Emtrgancy Service

J - • Phot,.. • FAX
· ..~Bplllll
Off..,,...,••• Ext.. o.lll

. a OS,

l ..Oo-Ma-0070

MIDDLEPORT - There will be
a missionary service at Wesleyan
MIDDLEPORT - The regular Bible Holiness Otruch.at 7:30p.m.,
stated meeting of Middler.ort with Rev. and Mrs. Sam Davis,
Lodge 363, F. and A. M., wi I be missionaries from Mexico. AU welheld at 7:30 p.m. TueSday at the come.
Masonic Temple. Election of oflicers will be held.
DARWIN - The Bedford Township Volunteer Fire Department
POMEROY- Fraternal Order of Committee wiD meet a1 7:30 at the
Eagles Auxiliary will have sausage Bedford Town Hall.
sandwiches at 7 p.m. Members are
asked 10 bring a dessen or salad. A
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
meeting will follow at 7:30p.m.
Township Trustees will -meet at
6:30p.m. at Pageville Town Hall.
CHESTER -Pomeroy Ordet of
,.
,r ... ,,,.·_·l•,• ~•· .. ,,
· Eastern Srar #182 will meet at 7:30
POMEROY : 'nti liriit''clus for
p.m. at the Chester Masonic Tern- adults illlercsled in lifficiatin high
pie. Officers wear street dresses. scltool basket ball wlll .be .at ~ p.IJI. .·
Refreshments wiU be served.
at Meigs .Hitll School•. Further
information can be oblailied at the ,
POMEROY - Pomeroy Amcri- fmt clau -or ·&amp;om any otlier local
can Legion will hold their annual basketball official. ·
·

.DAMAGE

- !nail?~ of UMe

. p ti

. tir':rOJ.l'.fll,ll .

Wa epaclalla in:
RRE.WATER

Commwclll

Porches,

992-70110.
·9f2·5JSJ;.

TUESDAY

ter, I guess."

WORK

_ Franllt Repair

WY013372

upholltary the
"SPECIAL CARE"

Auldlnllll.•

WHILO'S
." . ; 'Pl!l'JS' ..

SJ)eclallzrng' lri Cuatom

We glva earpatend

818-882..1M

. Come Vl~lt Us.

WEDNESD~Y

phy on boot burning

IYRACUIE, 0H.

with 12 yi'L
, experience at
. PO!\i8fOY, Hof!18 &amp;
A~ and C&amp;A Auto

RUTLAND " Leading Creek :
Conservancy Disttict will ciQl!C ils ;
office at noon for election day.
:

nation conducted similar eveuts
Saturday.
"We've been calling ministers
and encoU1Blling them to live bold
ChristianitY7• he said.
Firefighters were called by a
passer-by who saw the flames.
They said Larkins had the necessarv permits.
1
'He does have a safe setup,"
said West District Fire Chief Dan
Diers. "I'd prefer thai he didn't do
it, but personal feelings don't mat-

1101111
COMIIIICIIIOIIS

l

742·2904

I

UQJIOJfD'

Bill's Tl,..

R.c!Jard CO?IIM tD Ul

'50'Pt!r load

446-9515
CUPIT &amp; UPROLS1EIY CLEDIIII

tCWI/1 mo.

,of Ravenswood
1 announces
1 Richard ~~po,..
11~s Jqlntd,our .sta~.

oyster stew dinner. Members are :
urged to pay their ~994 dues bef~ :
January. I&gt;inner will sta1t at 7 p.m. ·
followed by a meeting at8 p.in.
:

~Not

C.ll 848-2244
etters p.m.

P~aroy, Ohio

Rlilph At

POMEROY - There will be a
revival Nov. 1 - 7 at Calvary Pilgrim Chapel on State Route 143 at
7:30 p.m. nightly. Rev. Kenneth
Hooper from South Datola will be
the evangelist There will be special singing.

Racine. Ample lot,
lanced yard, walking
dlltanca to echool or
church. Ideal tor
young family.

&amp;ExiMior

OWNER: Jalf Wldt.-

•

·Jty OwHr
Locllled on VIne St. In

'

,992-3470

will ,lie.friin!;·, H a.m. to

HOME
FOR SALE

YOUNG'S

36970 lall I• Road ·
Pointroy,·QhJo
•· 'GRAVE~ .SANDI
UMESTONE; TOP SOIL
. &amp; . FILL
.. DIRT '

. Jackal~taUed .

Fire PejlllrtJIIent · ·
.ServlDg .will·be all 'day. Me!IU
·will include doughnuta, hoi dogsJ
bean lioUp, com bread, pie and beverages. ;

RACINE - Racine Village
Council will meet at 7 p.m. at Slar
Mill Park.

.

111-1 -

. . .HAUliNG

I

·Sa~i~butJ Tr111'e1
:
:

VOTE FOR

. '

IIISfALLATIOII

pie,·-~·-,
Colamblll·,l"onshlp Voluteer

Larkins explained his philoso-

Racine honor roll released

11112Wlmci.

Uc. No. 0061-,142

, c.n·

. Fundamentalist group targets books
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) _:_ A fun- Bible Church.
damentalist Christian group dido 't
About a dozen opponents of the
let raw weekend weather interfere book burning carried signs and diswith a book burning.
ttibuted leaflets on the sidewalk in
Members of the Spirit of Life front of the church.
Christian Center set fire to scores
"I'm here to protest something
of books and newspapers Saturday that spreads fear, hate and vionight.
lence," said Amy Mundhenk of
"We want the city and the Centerville, who has protested all
nation to know there arc things that four of Larkin's annual book burnare of God and things that are not ings. "Hitler burned books and the
of God," said the Rev. Donovan A. Jesus I know would not have
Larkins, founder and pastor of the approved."
church, formerly called the Victory
Larkins said churches across the

tor~ou.

·PHONE ,

.

8:~p.m.

Specl.. Elllly Bird
$100 Pavon
Thla ad good lot' 1
FREE card.

VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REF~RENCEI!
614-915~ 1,10 :

5:30p.m. M011u ,will . inci~ ,yegtable aDd bep liOI!P; sandwtcbes,

University Extension; Dale Safrit, ~tiDIIIIls­
tant director, 4rH Youth Developmeat, and
James R. Helt, rormer ual1tant director and
state leader, 4-H Youth Developmea~. The
awards were donated by the Cravat Coal Co. or
Cadiz.

RECOGNIZED • Rachel Downie or Racine
honored ~ntly for 35 y~rs of 4-H volun•
leer work at the 49th annual 4-H Volunteer
Recognition Program at the Ohio State Univer·
sity In Columbus. Awards were presented to her
by, left to right, Tony Puscariab, president, Cravat Coal Co.; Keith Smith, director, Ohio State

~LUB

IN POMEROY

out

By IPPt. on!Y
814-687. PETS

-Solid V'llf)'llnaulatecl
Replaceme~ll Wtndows
oliflilime Warranty
~UIIar?leed lnllallatlon in 3
Waela from Date af Pllrd-.

EAGLES

FREE ESnliATES
Teu the pa!n
of
palntlng. a..t '"' do It
·

ED FOR YOU

EVERY ntUAiDAY

.. 11111101 ·

-_:__

cakollld bevetale&amp; ·.• .
·
Forut lU·Mefbedid Chirdl
S~g

LINDlfS
PAIInll•

III·STATE K·9
ACADEMY

'&gt;' POUCIES ·
"
;
• ~~;;...~ ~~..,... ...1;.. pr.pald

chill, vcgtablc iOUp, hot clop, slopPY joes and ilic-·
Clletter llnlted M'e thodlst
Cburd
Cbiucb W0!11C11 .wiU be serving
lunchea frotilll a.m.-to I p.m.
P1810 lu(lchcs, 10qps, i!Utdwiches,
pies, cakes ll!d beverages wit be
offcretl. ·
.
Racine Methodist Cblli'di.
Serving begins at 1I Lm. by the
UniredMethodist WOII)CII.
Rock Sprlnp Ynlted.Metllodlst
Cburcli ,. ' , ·
· :_.
Serving starts at 10:30 a.m.
Menu will include-vqetable IOUP.
be&amp;!! 10.up, 14011\VIches; pie and

MONDAY

·Maryland County busts
~ teen keg parties, cracks
·_down on dririking

.

.

lnettioa Day dimJer Will include

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received in advance to
assure publication in the calendar.

.
·
:
:
·

. •.

l :.

·,-

'

Community calendar

.announced

'

'

Salem T-blp Volunteer Fire

:First birth

..'

,.

I

.HEAniiG&amp;
'COOLING
.

\

,r ·"~;~..~

!

QUALITY WORK .
&amp;GOOD RATES

Eleo!rlo Fum •ni

t21.00'-.

DAVID ARNOLD
(8111) 882-7474
POMEROY, OliO

--

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortg~~ge ·

-

Rockr R. Hupp, D.C.U. • A..nt
loz 119

C•ll IEIIIEn'S .OIILE
HEAnNI AIID 'COOLIII

Ganlpo??e, Oh.

,.

GENEUL UFE •nd
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE

441-Mt• or Tot? F..e1-IDO-I72-1117
.I

MW411e,ort, Olllo 45760
(614) 143·5264
••

�Page-10-The Dally sentinel
Announcements

8EA1TIE BLVD,TN by Bruce BeaHie

~

3 Announcements
lnycno

knowing

m

~~~3

'N' C~YLE® by Larry Wrl&amp;bt
~.

"-·-·

ACROSS

......

513-~009 or mother, Sl,...22·
4532 call collect.

e..t

~

=...~.Gf~~~
·· • ill . .....

tho

wh.,..bouta ol DaVid Ferry
"Dag•, l)leue contact brother,
C•n'1

~Il~~~~~1,~1~~~----------------------------~- ~P~o~m~e~ro~y~l~Mid~.d~l~~~rt~,~O~hl~o~========~~==============~~~~D~a~lly~~~~~~~1~
-•-· Al.LEYOOP

llondly,

The Rell Thlnglll

Talk To Women Uwa!ll 1•9()0..
2Ba-9t77, Ext. 8905, $3.!111 Per

....

--

PHILLIP

··~

Min. Must Be 18 Yra. Proc1U Co.

ALDER

~2~
·954-M~O-·~-------­
Frtenda In Christ Christian

- ...,., 4""""' •.
1tl7 ......,

Gun Show, Proctorville, OH.
No" 5th, 2P. M. ·8P.M. Now 6th,
9A..M. -9P.U. Proctorville Flr11
Oepat1manl,
Adminlltratlon
BuHdlng , Dealer Space &amp; lnformalion, fi'14-886-5194.

Lfmr. ..... -

.,.., ..... 'I
-1111.
·r

I

,.. ......,

......._
::&amp;,
now

II

'

No

~

,._

u,_,

...... AC, - ·
...,

-TIN40i.
1 - - - Gninil Aln 4 -

-

RaducQ Sa le And Fast With
GoBesa Caplets And E-Vap
Diurallc At Fruth Pharmacy.

"No styling mousse on my
crewcut this time, got it?"

8378 El1 . 1956, $2.99 !Min, 18+
Procall Co. 602-954·7420.

NORTH

...,. EEK AND MEEK

+Q9 3
.lOH
+KJ108
+J86

..

or ·

.. .

4 year old purebred Kaashound,
good watchdog, friendly; 4vr.

sman,

old miniature come,
genlla, 614-949-2898.

9

Wanted to Buy

---....,.--,......:....Don, Junk ~I Sell Vaur Nan.

•••

.

.

FrMDra, YCR't, Ulcrown ...
Air Conditioners, Washers,

Oryera, Etc. &amp;M-256-1238.

Old Mala, Wh ite Cat
Long Hair Blue Eyes, 614-367-

J &amp; O't Auto Puts and Salvage,
alao buying Junk cars &amp; truer....

OSJj

304·7'13-5l43.

lov&amp;s kids. Gumea pig . To gooa

home only. 614-441 -0940 before
~:~_pm
__
•• .::.:'":::"~
' S~p:::m~.~-,--:­
Cut a, female puppr, 8Wks,
rno lher part Chow, fatl'ler Lab.
304-675·1916.

,.

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autoa
With Or Without MOiora. C.ll
Lorry llvoly. 614-388-9303.

Souttr.

Aoducod

Q 000

Nlct

Pass
Pass

S Bod-

AHocfiod Oa_rogu, 2 AC,
11/L NO Aru How: Q7,!;oo, 814388-eeo&amp;.

-~

... _.
-~·

···f

Statoly
Or
Apa~monto, Oaroge·
Aptm-.t,

Full Lot. 1M Grape. OniHI)OII•,
Auction Novembet lth, 1814-2451203.

388~906.

·····-··--- - -

female dog part Fox
loves lo catch mice.
wlchlldre·n. 614-245·5533

Top Prlcoo Pold: All Old U.S.
t•rrle.
Oold Rln¥•· Sllvor Colno,
good Colno,
Oold Colna. II..S. Coin Sl1op,

Fr~ Klttans, To Good Hom•

Only! Ca ll After 5:30 P.M. 614245-5 951.

Kltl &amp;ns To

G~od

Tiger Male With Wh ite Paws, Uttor Trained , 614·446-3'\24 An., 6

P.M.

qe ....1•

~

"$400" Or MON A WHk, At
Homo, No Emorionco Nocooaary, Ru•h h.ob Self Add,....

pina, good co ndition. last plunk
was In tunA. you haul away

Spaa ... 3-'111-1429.

614-245-5533
Puppies, 11wks o ld, black, black

&amp; lan. 304-882-2012.

Aeroblcllnatructar, Clav's C.ve
Fltneu Centar. 304-372·2272.

a ll , 614-992·7574 .

Vard Sale Lehovvrs, must takt

a II . 304-675-5782.

73 Yans &amp; 4 WD'I
1tlf Dodat VIi&gt; 'H,

Auto Body AePIIrman NNded

1111Fonl~.=~

74

Rooms

llpollo Dolly Tribuno1 _825 Thlnl

VtrJ

FOR SALE: IIPINET -eoN80LI
PIANO Wllftled, All~ al'lllble
PtriJ To - . I.Gw _...,
~- '-ally. Col f.

or after tpm,

58

Ac........totlont b throo men,
ahoww, cae. TY. mlcrowav..

'"lrlgeralor,
off patidng.
.._.....
pttvato
tntn~nce, nve mlnut• above
Oavtn, f14fi2·77VI btlont 4pm

AVON HOLIDAY • Choose Your
Own Hou,., 1ncorn1, And

~ERE'S TjjE WORLD WAR I

:-- FRANK AND ERNEST
- ~------~~~----------------~

MotorcYc.IH

IRS

Fruita &amp;

~

PAY

TAXSS

PON'T WANT TO PAY
MY FAI, S~A~~ Of
TAxes. ~ vi ANT
TO Pi1Y S"OMfONe
~l.St' S FAI~ S'ttA,t .

Ltvc ~ lock

Buall'IUI

76

Toole, Aetw1110ea,
Work By Yonl Or fly Job, TWith Own

T~·~·~~~~~--~7
:J Family Sale: Monday, Wadnasdav, 9-li, 230 Linwood Drive.

5 Family Remodeling Yard Sale:
Just OH While Road, 112 Mile
Past Chartals Hilla Eat1ta1,
Watch For Signs, 10A.M. -4 P.M.
Nav 5th , 6th, Rain, Shine.

FumHure, 111 Second Aftnue,

10110.

wanted

&amp;Auction

Rid Paai'Rn Auctton Company,
full time 1uctlonMr, oomptete

9

l.kl.n..cl

304-

~

In an MtabliltMtd
propt11y . . .tgenCJ lull
or part llrM, training pm!i'dld,
draw ~g~lnat a0111mlsMon tor
firM 3 montha. Bind raume to:
~ler,
P.O. Box 10711

Nortb
I NT

Eut
2.

2+

3t

Pass

Dill.

All pass

D€.VE.l..OPJtlh 1-..
.--.... N~TV
IN YOUR

m~v?

U!'!'E.R. (.£ff

dtJy of fniJ.
HISTORY: On thi s day in
1835, the S..:ond Seminole War broke
out in Florida. as the tribe resi sted
forced relocation and U.S . confi sca tion
of its lands. The war continued until

I'M ul.l6T
601NG-10
WING-IT.

to leave.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Benvenuto
I Cellini (1500-1571) , sculptor; Stephen
Crane (187.1-1900), writer; Grantlan d
Rice (1881H954l , sportswriter
'

. . . _.--..gIn

thll nGWIPIPtf' 1J JUbftd tO

41 HOIJIIIS lor Rent

-~

ouniiOE

I MONDAY

FURNISHINGS:

Wrouahl lwln Table W/4 ct.ltw:

to-·ont.,m.......

Fon 8octt ~ Chair Nt·
Oanltn Arch Way'. .121.00
'

lfttltallonor-

--to

tamllal*"
ot..,
-·..,ouch...,_,..,

or~

MX

origin,

TrJnsportatton

Oecon~ted stoneware, wall tel•
phon.., old l• m.-1 old ther-

Surface MI.- Noodod For Out
01 Stole Work. Oporotorw
Anllqu... Noodod For End t.oodor, 8hovot.

81

-r
b--

.-18

oro,..._ on on oquot
-""'"Y

Rc&lt;JI Eslale

HOme

WATER IJNIIPICIAL: 114 lnoh

whltlllslnvloloUonoflho
law. OUr
ara helllby
Informed thllal du1: IIMUQJ
tlt&lt;eotllodln 1ltlo

momatera, old clocu 1ntlque

W:C"·, And
Orlllt&lt;iltOour,.Ctrttiiid
- -honlo.

SPI VICCS

Imitation 0&lt; - l i o n . '

actr'el1~1 forrMielllda

SURFACE MINERS

RuM Moore, owner. 114·192·
252tli. We buy ..t1taa.

Rentals

TNs .._
.... not
'knoM1glfaccept

Antique• 1nd us8d furniture, no
Item too large or too amall, will, 1tol!ton,
buy one piece or complete
Sl.tto.uu
household, call O.by Martin,
614-992-71141.

:100 Pit 111.11; 1 -

--.0111.

:100 Pit

hUO: Aott lw~t,

WATER

STOAAOI TAII&lt;I
a.-..1 FDA

-And -

S loci._, Dtntnoi
Aoon:!, Kitchen
Full - , ,

lliPO.It, ·~· .

~'""

IIOiiE
For -- E - . ,- , _·
..... Ohio, 1..f00.U'7.1121.

114!1!_t!kou.
11400
8112;
114-44H712.
..

Tran.part.Uan, Room
And
B01rd ProvJd;d, P•r tf,112.00

.

Weekly. C o l l 1 - l

,,BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Building

Supptlll

•

...·-·.

TuiiOdi!,•.Nc... 2, 1~
Situattona .lmpo;ttnt~ yO. pe~nally, ••

The entire PI!~ fell dNd 111nt.

For the first time Iince 111yone QOUid tl1tiimblt,

one ot the membera VOied ".Y.."

love
36 Lon refined
37 Swiat rtvor
38 Stupid

+A

I 1843, when the Seminoles were force d

.......... Ohio 487110.

Wanted to Buy

furniture. Riverine

Auto Pans &amp;
·Ac:ceiiiJ"'•

WELL ...
/ WAAiDO
Y&lt;X! HAV£

IVE DECIDED I'M NOT
t901N6: TO HAY;:. A
PURPOBE .. .

- on,_, -..lliiiiiOn.

Public Sale

173-578~ .

11·1

r.1erchandtse

a

ur. · lnaurance ..,..

guardsman

Dill.

1

FULLER BRUSH. lloko your
Chrlt1mu Fllllwlhlo yNr, Elm
12001mo., aparo u- ~'11-

crosses

11 Beige
12 Antlered

26 Aacllnod
28 Small vehicle
29 Border
30 Prophet
32--lh•
Mood tor

here

41 Eztklel'a
nickname
42 Roglon
43- and pans
45 Parka tor wild
46
47
49
51
52

animal&amp;

Expel
LL.B.
Speck
Year (Sp.)
Entertainer
- Sumac

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebrity Cipt,. ervll1ogrllt'll ... CtMI«&lt; from quotations bv famous people, pas! and
Each lett.- In lhe CiPMr standi lOr IMO!h«. T~y '• clutt: P -.quais r.

YTYKtY

LKNtWKY

SNFTWKY.
ZRFOEW
RW

PVG

IRWU

YFUW

ZVFZRI

F K W

RFDW
F

M VI

l)l'e;SMt

M N J W

IV
F 0 S

XV K

KWFYVO . '

LFSW

TRNMMNTY .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : " Interviews are really hard for me. If I'm smar1 ,
il 's only in the songs. It's not in me.'' - (Songwriter) M ar k Eitzel.

TNlTDAIIY

,uzr1u

...,

C.~

WOlD

v~

- - - - - - lditad lay
OReorrange lette rs of
four scrambled words
low ro form fo1.1r words

H. U D L 0 P

IIII
IDIXOE

I

Today is the 305th
of l993 and the

lho Fodond Fok Houolng Ad
of 1968- ...... lllogot

etrvicl.

Wffi

animal

Sorrow
Grtttinga
Horn food
eo.rclon
Entertainer
- llcEnllre
25 Royol ,

tura. 304 882 2484.
LIMITED OFFER
11!14 MxlO, only 4yll loft on
nole, mike 2 peymen11 &amp; mt:WI
lnl304-7115-711t.

EXTRA INCOME
EARNSZOO.IIOO
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vice, P.O. Bax130125, Mllml 1 Fl
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Garage Sale- Nov. 1&amp;2, t-1, Er- · High Eomlngal Pan /Filii nmo
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(Dorcas). Good winter clothe-. Retun•. llo Expt~rlenet. OWn
1-fOI~.
24
all sizes, star1t0, luther coat, lOt Houos,
Hou
...
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auction

......

'fHA.vE.&gt;

45831.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

19
21
22
23
24

3 room ..._ tr.ller w/ ft.•mJ.

GaHipollo, ~332.

Ful &amp; P•~·Timt llonagor • ·
Styllol, Far llopUtobiOI
Solon, hn-to Opanlngo.
ALL Yard Salea Must Bt Pold In Houra Florlblt, 111 Ul 424l
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
!he day before the ad Is Ia run. Full-nmo ottlct -Solt1 Potitlon,
Trovol A..
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m. With _,.., To: CLA
Friday. Monday edition • 2.:00 qulrod. Sond 212, oJo Olllllpollil Dolly Tri.....
p.m. Satu rday.
• 1125 Third AvoniHI, Oalllpotla, Oil

163,0hlo l WMI Vlroinla,

..

~ BORNLQSER

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Ezparioncod Ctopat lnttlllltft

hind Spri ng Vallav Cinema.
Ma ternny, Baby Clolhea.L Infant,
Girls, Ladl••· Mena t.&lt;lothea,

•

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Suppi••'S
&amp;

Ftnanctal

3 Family Gar~ge Sale: 9-?
Friday 1115, Magnolia Drlva, B•

container
311 Strolchea

Four weeks ago I featured Larry
Cohen's new rubric, 'Eight never, nine
ever. • This means that, during a part·
IICOre battle, if you and your partner
have only eight combined trumps, you
should compete at the tw..level but
stop bidding if the opponents go to the
three--leveL However, if you have nine
trumps, compete at the three-level but
don't go to the four·level.
North on today's deal probably
wishes he bad read that article before
going to Washington, D.C.. for the
Summer North American Bridge
Championships.
West decided be was too strong for a
simple one-spade overcal~ hence his
first-round double. North now made
an ill·advised bid. With sucb sterile
distribution and a zillion losers, two
diamonds is perfect. The main problem with one n.. trump came on the
second round . North just couldn't resist showing his diamond
West, facing partner's bid and
at four tricks. went for the
- but the result exceeded his
expectations.
West led off with his two top
showing a doubleton in the process.
cashed the heart ace and spade ace be-l
fore giving partner a spade ruff.
cashed the club queen, on whic.•h.,;;.:l.:l
dlsCantecniiS heart' lour. NOW "
fenders had a mini-crossrulf:
ruff, spade rulf, heart ruff.
Are you keeping count? That's
first nine tricks to East-West. Oe;olatc-1
er showed his trump suit and ~Uf!g!st-1
eel be could manage the rest.
down was a cooiUOO to East-West.
Isn't it amazing how often it wmch I
well to support partner at the
poss!ble ~ppo'!_'!"'tv.

PRESSURE A&amp;AIN
FROM ~fADQUARTER5.
RAIN AND MLIO, ...
DESPAIR ...

.. FL'IlN6 ACE SJTTIN6 IN A
SMALL FRENCH CAFE ..
'"
T~E'WAR DRA65 ON ...
HE IS DEPRESSED..

~RS

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

(2 wda.)
9 Frequently
(pool.)
10 Heraldic

4 Actron Baalngor
5- de France
6 Stocking•
7 Allud4t
I Handy

By Pbllllp Alder

'.

bt ult
lo work.

21

eum

Wlltr

Don't overbid
those trumps

~

::-._..,
..... . . .
v....... . .....

Furnished

Gallipolis Aru. Prior Experience
NacnsaiJ.
Send
Rnume To; C\.A 213. clo Gal-

Yard Sale

1 Singing bird
2 Flrat-rate
(2 wda.)
3 Futuro allyl.'

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40 The on11

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1016:!. ·
'
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21) Today
you could be quite lucky, but not necessari-

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) The eKira
funds you'll soon be needing to do or have
something special you 've been wanting
looks like they'll be there when required.
Assets may start to grow as of today.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) The secret to

ly In material ways as the world deems
good fortune. tt will ·be regarding sometHing
thot won1 rust or can't be stolen.

game; even aspects of it that are serious or

your success today is to treat lite like a

establish too many objectives for yourself

boring. Have tun , but also play to win.
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) If you're looking lor the blueb ird ol happmess today .
don't go searching for it outside of your own

today . Restrict your focus to the most

envirot'ls. It's very llEiar to you and to per·

CAPRICORN (Dtc. 22-Jan. 19) You're tn a
good achievement cycle, provided you don't

meaningful.
sons w~h whom .you want to share things.
AQUARIUS (.Ia~. 20-fob. 19) Today you LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Normally you know
could do boner than usual In competitive the nght t.hinge to say to people and today
tnvotvemonta.' PfOVIdlct vou dOn't underrate . ish't apt to 1!11 an e•ception. The only diHer-

!

your competition and you have the wllllo 1 ence, hQwever. Is you ·may have a larger

win.
PISCES (Fob. 20-M._rch 20) Some unantlc·
tpated changes might occur today In an
area ollmportancoto you. If you're flexible
and roll w111t eVents, II could prove to be to
your uHimatO advantage.
ARIES (Morch 21·Aprtt It) Your quick wit
and dellghdui charm are two ot ,our beat
88&amp;1&gt;1S today. Mulual benefits are likflly from
altuallons where you deal with others on a

crowd to chiiTO then usual.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) Cond~ions in .
general are rather lavorable tor you today,
especially situations pertain ing lo your
matertal affairs or finances.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Your ability to
spread sunshine and uplifting thoughts to
others contributes mightily to your poputerily today. Some people need a smile more
then they niled fOOd.

•
•

PIINT NLNUIED LETTERS
IN THESE SQ\JAIIfS

I'

rrrl'tl'l

GET ANSWER

I

.

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

UNSCIAMBlf lETTERS TO

1111111

Gunner- Await · \Mlicfl . Enmity - THEY are RIGHT
My fri_
end would not budge from her original opinion on
a senstttve tssue . It seems to me thai human beings are
never more frightemng than when lhey are convinced
beyond doubt that THEY are RIGHT

NOVEMBER 11

�,.•
Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Mo11day, Novembel1, 1~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Oversized produce

Karpov reclaims world chess .~
title
·after winning streak · :::
.

Beat of the Bend... .

'

by Bob Hoeflich
A nice idea is materializing at
lhe Star MiD Park in Racine for lhe
upcoming Christmas holiday season.
Entitled Christmas in the Park,
the event has been scheduled for
Dec.9.
Now to get ready for lhe new
activity, those involved are seeldng
any kind of outside Christmas
lights which will be used to decorate the park and particularly a
large community tree which will be
placed !here. So if you have lights
around that you are willing to
donate to lhe project. please give
Charlotte Wamsley, 949-2926, or
Eva Teaford, 949·2692, a ring so
that arrangements can he made for
getting the lights into their hands.
Those interested in helping wilh
the project or who have input
which might help make th~ event
really a night to remember are
invited to auend an organizational
meeting to be held at 7 p.m. on
Monday, Nov. 8. at the park building. A program will be planned
along with other features.

BIG TURNIP - George Sellers of Racine doesn't have any big
secrets to growing big turnips, he says they just grow like that.
Sellers, shown here with a 7 pound turnip, says he bas several
other big ones in his garden.

The high on a hill home of the
late Pat and Clara Lochary is once
more occupied.
The home. now owned by Jan
and Charles Lochary who reside in
Illinois, is located at 114 High St..
Pomeroy, and has been basically
unoccupied for several years fol·
lowing lhe deaths of Mr. and Mrs.
Lochary. Charles and Jan and !heir
relatives have been using the house
for rare get-away vacations.
Charles and Jan had been planning
on retiring to the home but as
retirement nears they found that
plans appeared to be pulling lhem
in directions other than Pomeroy.
So the house was rented to Cork
and Paige Cleek who were living in
Columbus. Paige who had been
employed wilh lhe Express Divi·
sion of The Limited resigned her
job as did Cork and lhe couple and
their daughter, Hannah, moved
back to Pomeroy. They've slaved
for weeks on end repairing and

redecorating the interior of the
Lochary home and have now
moved in. By the way, lhe loc:alion
offers some of the most spectacular
views of the river and Mason
County. W. Va, lhat you'll fmd in
Pomeroy.
Edna Stoban who lives at 502
E. Main St., Pomeroy, underwent
major surgery late last week at
Pleasant Valley HosP.ital in Point
Pleasant. Cards w11l reach her
there. The zip code is 25550,

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP)Russian ~dmaster Anatoly Kar·
pov reg&amp;lned the FlDE world chess
championship today by playing a
draw against Jan Timman.
The victqry came in the 21th
game of lhe International Chess
Federation match for lhe disputed
world title.
Karpov, , who pia red black,
needed only a half-pomt to reach
12 1/2 and take lhe match, accepted
Timman's offer of the draw after
the 19th move. The Dutch grand-

And here's a story wilh a nice
touch.
lona Hup~ who lives near Long
Bottom rece1ved a beautiful floral
bouquet complete wilh helium baJ.
loons on October 27, the birthday
anniversary of her son, Rocky
Hupp.
Mrs. Hupp read the attached
card which srud:
"It's a boy. Thanks a million,
Mom. Yourson,Rocky".
Rocky is the local agent for
American General Insurance. His
mother has severe rheumatoid
arthritis and is confined to bed
most of the time. However, I'm
told she always has a smile ready
for everyone. She also apparently
has a mighty thoughtful son.

Southern honor
roll announced ·
Sou1hern Junior High School
has released its honor roll for lhe
flfSt nine week grading period.
Seventh grade s!Udents listed on
the honor roll are Jesse Little. Jennifer Carlton, Christa Circle, Ashli
Davis, Bobby Johnson, Kara King,
Jennifer Morris, Jason RouSh, Kim
Sayre and JesSica ~iss.
Eighth graders making grades to
be listed are Cynthia Caldwell,
Nikki Robinson, Evan Struble,
Erica Arnott, Chad Clark, Crystal
Coleman, Ashley McKinney, John
MatsOn, Jessica Roush, Stephanie
Stemple, Ranetta Wheeler and
Billy Young.

Martha and Jack Greenaway
who spent the summer in Meigs
Couniy, as lhey traditionally do,
left Friday for Palm Beach Gar·
dens, Florida, where ther will
spend lhe winter. What w11h the
weather which attacked Salllrday it
seems they certainly used good
timing in their depanure. Some
weekend wasn't it? But this, too,
shaD pass so do keep smiling.

Bills
defeat
Redskins

tho:

.

Ohio Lottery

master won. only two giU!lCS in
series. ,.
••
The Russian champipn ~iU take;
home about $440,000, Tunman :
about $2601000. ~v w~ ~ld :
champion ·from 1915' 85 until he.
was delhro~ by .Garry Kasparov. •

Pick 3:
319
Pick 4:
9909
Buckeye 5:
13-18-20-30-37

Page4

The FIDE title was Vl!Cated '
when the chess body stripped Kas- .~
parov of the championship for :
refusing to pi&amp;)' in th~ champ!- ;
onship match w11h English grand· •
master Nigel ShQrt in Manchester, :
England under FIDE auspices.
:

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446·4524

7

Vol. 44, NO. 131

Pomeroy·MI~dleport,

lluttl....-alnc.

1 8oallor.10 i'llele :15 cento
Alllil•1 ollalllc. ....._

Ohio, Tuesday, November 2, 1993

Ohioans vote on issues, elect mayors
By Tbe Assoclated·Press
A bond issue to improve and
maintain Ohio's state parks and a
chaner amendment iii Cincinnati
lhat would repeal a provision lhat
forbids discrimination against
homosexuals were among the
issues facing voters today.
Voters also were asked to elect
mayors in Cleveland, Toledo, Day·
. ton and Youngstown. And 238
school money issues were on ballots statew;pe.
Secrelary of State Bob Taft pre·
dieted that 49 percent of the state's
6.2 million registered vocers would
vote today. He said the turnout
could be higher in places wilh hotly
contested races, such as Toledo
where
. the mayoral race has drawn

Vote·for
and

Re·Eiect

.

ED DURST

much interest.
Antoinette Szuch, ciin:ctor of the
Lucas County Board of Elections,
said she had not received any num·
hers on voter tumouL
"I still think it wiD be about 60
percent, which is a little better l)lan
average," she said.
Reports from the Franklin
County Board of Elections indicated a low turnouL
"The feedback from various
locations is that it's- going to be a
very light day," said Peggy How·
en, an elections supervisor.
She said the lack of highly visible issues, not cold weather, was
keeping.voterS away.
K'thy Curran, administrative
assis'!mt at Hamilton County Board

of Elections, said election officials
had no indication about the turnout.
One statewide issue is at stake, a
proposed constitutional amendment
that w~uld authorize lhe state to
borrow $200 million for improving
state ·and local parks and natural
resources.
Gov. George Voinovich and
legislative leaders' of bolh panics
supported the issue. The only oppo-sition came from Ohioans· for
Responsible Government, a small
group that favors using money
from boat rentals and other park
user fees to pay off the bonds.
Voters in Cincinnati considered
whether to repeal language in lhe
c\ty's ,human rights ordinance lhat
forbjds discrimination against

homosexuals.
Proponents of Issue 3 urged voters to repeal "special rights for
homosexuals." A vote for lhe issue
would reoeallhe orovision.
Opponents, including the gay
rights group Stonewall Union, said
a vote for lhe issue would further
bigotry and anti-gay discriminatioo.
Cleveland Mayor Michael R.
White appeared assured of re-elec·
tion to a second term in a race
against neWComer David Lee Rock
in the nonpartisan electioo.
The mayoral1'11Ce in Toledo has
drawn lhe most interest. Councilmen Michael Ferner and Carty
Finkbeiner are competing in .the
nonpartisan race to replace two-

term incumbent John McHugh,
who decided not to seek re -election.
Toledo is returning to a '"strong
mayor" form of government.
Under lhe current system, a city
manager holds most adrninisuative
power.
Ferner's supporters have said
Finkbeiner cannot be trusted to run
the city because he changes his
position on issues.
Finkbeiner has criticized Ferner
for having '"socialist tendencies,"
referring to Ferner's social activism
in the community.
Incumbent Democrat Richard
Clay Dixon sought a third tenn in a
race a$ainst Republican Mike
Turner m Dayton, while ,incumbent

Salisbury Township Trustee

ByCHARLENEHOE~CH

.,

;\t OGETHER .. J
\

PA'TR:I011'1C DUTY- Meigs Couallaas are luralag out today
to
candidates and Issues Including a one-miD, county
Le!l. Here, Ruth ~oore or Pomeroy, casts
wide
her vote at the
Fae Station.
-

SWEET POTATO- Elson Spencer, showing they just grow
'em big in Racine, displays a 7 pound sweet potato he unearthed
from his garden.

Miss America addresses
issue with President Clinton
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) Miss America, Kimberly Clarice
Aiken isn't just a pretty face. She
also p'ushes her socia~ agenda any
time she can, mcludmg recently
with President Clinton.
Miss Aiken met with Clinton
and Hillary Rodham Clinton ~or
about five minutes at the Whne
House and asked if she could help
in the national campaign for the
homeless. Vice President Gore and
his wife, Tipper, also were at the
meeting.
"I' d like to be included somehow, in any capa_city," she told
Clinton Saturday mght.
Clinton encouraged her to meet
with Housing Secretary Henry Cisneros, whom she had already been
scheduled to meet next week. The
president also commended her for

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Last week, Miss Aiken, 19, who
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Youngstown Mayor Patrick
Ungaro, a Democrat, sought a sa;.
ond term against Republican
Thomas Provino.
In Cincinnati, 21 candidates and
a write-in hopeful vied b council.
The top vote-geuer becomes
mayor.
Also on the ballot in Cincinnati
were proposals to allow lhe city
schoo district to issue up to $348
million in bonds to repair or
replace school buildings and add
about 200 officers to a 933-offlcer
force.
School issues on today's baUot
included 102 property tax levies,
I 07 issues to support construction
projects and 29 income tax issues.

United
Fund drive
underway

FOR
The world got its first look at
lhe sunken remains of lhe Titanic
in !986 as videotapes of the British
luxury liner were released by
researchers from Woods Hole
Ocellllographic Institution.

1.- tollldllla •ld·3k partly eloudy. Wodnelday, dwdy,
blah aear 50.

,

3 arrested for poaching
Three Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
residents face charges of spotlighting of deer with possessiOn of a
firearm and possession of deer
parts following their arrest Monday
morning by Meigs County Game
ProtectOr Keith Wood.
Brian Lee, 33, and Thomas
Bumgardner, 19, were released
Monday .from the Middleport Jail
upon receiving summonses to
appear in MeigS County Coun, said
Wood.
They are charged with third·
degree misdemeanor counrs of
spotlighting of deer with posses·
sion of a firearm and possession of
deer pans.
Kathy Perry, 34, was arraigned
in Meigs County Court Monday
where- she pleaded innocent to the
charges. She was ttansported back
to the Gallia County Jail in lieu of
$500 bond on each charge.
She is charged with rust-degree
misdemeanor counts of spotlight·

ing of deer with possession of a
firearm and possession of deer
parts . .
Wood said this is second time
Perry has been arrested for spot·
lighting warranting lhe more serious misdemeanor charges.
Wood said the uio was arrested
Monday after he observed them
spotlighting deer on Cottrill Road
near Harrisonville around 12:50
a.m.
Officers confiscated two rifles.
sporlights and the car allegedly
used by lhe three.
The investigation is continuing,
Wood said.
"We've· had a lot of problems
with spotlighting in that area,"
Wood commented. Local residents
have been' asSisting officers in controlling spotlighting, he added.
Perry also faces Gallia County
chlirges of carrying a concealed
weapon for allegedly possessing of
a switchblade knife.

September leading indicators
build on strong Augl;lst gain
By DAVE SKIDMORE
Associated Press Writer
WASHINOTON (AP) - The
government's economic forecasting
gauge f11se0.5 percent in September,
lhe Commerce Department said today, signaling moderate growth into
1994.
The advance in lhe Index of Lead·
i~g Indicators foUowed a strong 0.9
percent gain in AugusL The index
had been unchanged in July and up a
slight 0.1 percent in June, so Septem'·
her marked the fourth month without
a decline.
. the indeX is intended to forecast
the economy six to nine moolhs in
advance.
Today's report fits wilh analysts'
belief !hat lhe ecqnomy, after lapsing
in tlie fust ·half of Ibis year to an
annualized growth rate of 1.4 perceo~ is expanding at a moderate rate
of about 3 percenL
'"It appears that the economy is
gaining some momentum in lhefourlh
quarter, ".saideconomistLynnReaser
of First Interstate Bancorp in Los
Angeles. "On ~e. I Jhink the
Bhort·term outlook looks quite posi·

live."

Six of the index's forwanl:looldng

~

indicators were positive in. September. In order of their impact from
largest to smallest, they were:
-An inc~ in the inflation-adjus.ted money supply.
-A riSe in new orders 'for consumer goods.
-A gain in building penni!S.

-Ali advance in sl,!lCk prices as
measured .by lhe Standard &amp; Poors
500.
-.b.n uptielc in consumers' expec·
tations as measured by a University
of Michigan survey.
-An increase in lhe inflation-ad·
justed bacldog of orders at factories
for dW'Bble goods such as cars and
computers.
The negative indicatorll, ordered
·from lhe greatest to smallest impact,
were:
-A speedup in business delivery
times, a sign of decreased demand.
-A drop in contniCts and ordcm
for new commercial buildings and
business ~uipment.
I
-A rise in applications for unem·
ployment benefits to an average of
381,000 weeldy in Sejitemher from
378,000 in August.
~.

UNITED 'FUND KICKOFF ·. Making a dlt~
rerence WIIS the theme oltalks give a by the Rev.
Sharoa Hausman, at the microphone, the Rev.
Frank Smith, staading, presldeat or the United
Fund ror MeiRS County, the Rev. Mark Morrow

and Meigs Couaty Auditor Nancy Campbell.
The ftrst annual fund drive of the new organiza·
lion will be conducted during November and
December.

Pomeroy Council discusses fate
of village's old ladder truck
By JIM FREEMAN
Seatlnel NeW!i Starr
The fate of an old fire truck and
construction of little league base·
ball fields were amon~ the items
discussed at Monday n1ght's meet·_
i~g of lhe Pomeroy Village Coun·
cil.
Councilman John Blaellnar
updated council on problems wilh
the Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Department's ladder truck.
The truck, has a problem with
the driveline lhat is beyond eco·
nomic repair, Blaetmar said.
"It is the recommendation of
.(Fire Chief Danny Zirkle) lhat the
truck be pulled froni service and
advertised for sale," he added.
Councilman Thomas Werry
concurred, "lhe cost to repair it is
beyond our means." Werry estimat·
ed repair cost at about $10,000.
The truck, purchased new by the
village in 1947, is essentially "a
parade truck," said Blaettnar. The
truck carries no hoses and the origi·
nal ladders, while in good shape,
are made of wood and are of no use
to the fire department, he added,
Following the fire chief's rec·
ommendation, council voted to put
lhe truck up for sale.
The proposed Pomeroy Youth
Leagll!l baseball f~elds got a boost
from council after it met wilh Ben·
nie Wright concerning construction
of lhe two fields.
.
"We need to get lhe backstops
up so ~le can see we're making
pro~ Wright said.
' We need to stan soliciting for
funds to get lhe project rolling by
spring ... which is only five months
away," he reminded.
Council then authorized the
spending of up to $3,000 from the
ViUage's recreadon fund to assist in
cOnstruction of lhe fields, which
will be located between lhe old
Pomeroy Junior High School build·
ing and tlie Meigs High School
Football Field.
In other action, CQWICil:
- Approved the minutes from
lhe OcL Ill meeting. .
-Approved the mayor's report
of $3,374.
- Gav~ first reading to a con·

-'\..........,,
i.

•

DEALERSHIP RECOGNIZED - Pomeroy Village Council
Moaday night recognized Don Tate Cbevrolet-Oidsmobile-Cadil·
lac-Geo Inc. or East Main Street for its recent landscaping projecL
· Here, Mayor Bruce Reed, left, presents Roger Jessie, Doa Tale
president and general manager, with a ~rtilicate recognizing the
beautification project
tract from Columbus Southern
Power for maintaining the village's
285 streetlights for $2,541.15.
....;. Authorized Village Administrator John Anderson to bid for a
new water pump.
- Recognized Don Tate
Chevrolet-Oldsmobile-Cadillac·
Geo Inc. of East Main Street for its
recent landscaping project. Mayor

Bruce Reed presented Roger Jessie,
Don Tate president and general
manager, wilh a certificate recognizing lhe beautificalion projecl
Present were council members
Betty Baronick, Blaettnar. Scoll
Dillon, Larry Wehrung, Werry and
BiU Young. Clerk-Treasurer Kathy
Hysell and Mayor Reed.

---Local briefs----.
To close Wednesday
The Meigs County Board of Elections office on Mulberry
Avenue, Pomeroy, will be closed Wednesday all day. Rita Smith,
director, announCed today.

Man cited for DUI
Allen L. Kong ll, 28, 143 N. First {'.ve., Middleport. was cited
early this morning for driving Wider lhe influence and driving left of
center, the GaUia-Meigs Post or the State Highway Pauol reported.

Sentinel NeW!i Starr
'"Collectively we can make a
difference," srud the Rev. Frank
"Smith, president of the United
Fund for Meigs County, which had
its fust annual fund drive kickoff
Monday night at Dave Diles Park
in Middleport.
After giving a brief history of
ltol(,.th_s;_,U~!l~!Lf~!!d . (or ~eigs
County came miObemg. Smith
talked about community pride and
dignity and how giving through the
United Fund for distribution to
social service agencies will help
achieve lhaL
'"If we are to ever malce a difference, it is now." said Smith.
He introduced board members,
Gary Evans, Jim Tompkins,
Chlorus Gaul, Ernie Sisson. Susan
Oliver, Tom Dooley, Vickie Morrow, Debbie Haptonstall, John
Riebel , Sieve Story, and Emma
Paugh. He also credited Paula
Thacker, former executive director
of the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce, for her role in organizing the local United Fund.
·
Smith explained that with the
United Fund here~ Meigs County
residents can now direct their
human service dollars back into
their own community through pay·
roll dedoction at businesses.
He was referring to employers
already into a payroll deduction
program where money given by
Meigs Countians is now going into
either the Gallia or Athens County
United Way programs. This is
occurring at several places including the Southern Ohio Coal Co.
and Gavin, according to Smith.
Last week letters went out to
Meigs County businesses asking
their support by offering payroll
deducllon programs to their
employees.
The kickoff opened with music
by the Meigs Marauder Band, lhe
pledge of aUegiance led by Middle·
port Boy Scout Troop 245. and
pmyer by lhe Rev. Mark Morrow
who described the United Fund as a
"venture of love and charity".
Also speaking at lhe fund drive
kickoff were Nancy Campbell.
Meigs County Auditor. and the
Rev. Sltaron Hausman, Methodist
minister.
Campbell called the newly &lt;r~a­
nized United Fund for Me1gs
County an opportunity to direct
human service dollars back into the
community. She ·referred to the
!heme 'Together... !' and said lhat
by working together through the
United Fund, a pennanent resowce
for organizations is created.
In her comments, Hausman said
the "importance we place on things
are gauged by the investments we
make". She stressed rhe need for
communitr value living in time of
individualistic trends.
"Through helping each other
we can make a difference," said
Hausman who called for the com.
munity to use its "creative energy
toward community value living".
On hand to serve refreshments
to the less than 50 who turned out
for the fund drive kickoff were
members of the Middleport Arts
Council.
The fund drive will be held during November and December.
1.

'

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