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Paga E4-Sunday Tlmea ~ Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant
-

I

'

•

J

wv

November 7, 1

Ohio Lottery

Holyfield
defeats
Bowe

Pick 3:

019
Pick 4:

3471
Super Lotto:
1-13-14-16-27-43

PageS

1~ lAY~ ~N1YI

Kicker:
379743

' - wnlcJtt around 30, clear.

Tlltlday,IIIDDY, blcJt ncorSO.

O~~N All DAY

~~uroay, ~ am·~ ~m
Voi.44,N0.137

HURRY III ·WHILI SELECliOIIS ~llE GRATEI ••• LAYAWAY NO.W FOR
Country 2pc. llkll chacit print..... ........................:.............. .......'6Q8 ...........•499
Early American 2 pc. Mlod . . 111uo fknl..... . '799 ..... .o5o1L... . . •449
Colonial2 pc.bonc11HII.&amp;olid.graen.......................... '14811... . ~0811. . ......'799
Traditio na lzpc. mWI-print..... ..... ................. ..... . '8111L.....'E811..........'529
Tradltional2 pc. pea&lt;~~sl!ipo . . . . ............ . •rHIIL. 'IIIIIL ......•589
Curved Sectional Reclining Ends .............o1SGS.....'111l5. .......•899
Cont. 3pc. beiga'luode
. look" ookllim.........:........................'2195......~saa..........'975
Traditional3 pc. 'OYe!IIJt!ed" ............ ..:.....................'2350.....•rm....'1 088
Traditions Is pc. mulkolor. ookllim ................ ......... '1~. .....'1299.........'999
SouthwestSotwvebonct! ...t.. ............................... mw. .... '1399......81099
Cont. 3 pc. oak lrim. mul1i-print...............................................~699..... '1299........•888
Country 3pc. ~ue prinl-. Iring cllair.............. . ... '1699.......'1 199.. .,'799
Early American 3 pc. bll1wn 110111 ..............................'18911.......~~-...•1199
Cont 3pc. beiga •.m. 111n1w pillows......................................'1990.......'1~...'1 099
Traditional3 pc......,IIDIII.........................................'2399......~899....11399
Loveseats LMgt Selr cllon..................................'549J&amp;III... y..,,Choice.....'299

DINING ROOM SUITES
3 Pc. Oak Drop Leaf &amp; 2 Chairs ..................... ..'31i......'238 ...........'199
5Pc.
Country Oak,38x48llblt,4110011Chrlt
.................l.i68......'330............•299
.
.
5 Pc. WhHe Table, Maple Seat Chalrs. ............w ..... .'4811............'399
5Pc. Chrome Set,gt•lo(i llblt,4blutvllvetchalrt. .'481L ...'330.............'199
Pastel f!O)tters
b§autWully di!llliled
aiOp a (lainty,
genuine
porcelain box.
Basket weave
style mirrors the
expensive look·
a-likes sold In fine

.

BEDDING

·... IIO·· PAJMIIIT TILl

LIST SAlE N#IIVERSNIY
PIIICE PRICE
PRICE

LIVING ROOM SUITES

LIST SAlE Nllli'IERSNIY
PIIICE PIIICE PRICE

TWIN SIZE
Miss-Match Finn.......
........................ 11:~~~ .... p:.......'78
Day Sleeper·Finn ................................................ •rsiL..•1rseo.pc. . ...'89
Serta Gentle Touch........................................ .... '179.... .'1211• p:.....'99
Serta Ultra Finn .......................... .................. .'2211'1791111p:. . 1129
FULL SIZE
Eclipse Fleetwood Firm......................... .. . . . . . .'11111..... '149• p:...... '99
Ther-A-Pedlc Sovereign.......................... . . . . . .•m.....'1 79• p:. . 1129
Serta Spine Saver..................
...............'291L'21111111"" 1179
Serta Premium Luxury . . .
. ·~s•L.,. ... "" '249
, QUEENSIZE
Eclipse Fleetwgod Firm................ .......................-.29.....'3311110l ......•249
Serta Premier.................... .............................................. '41111 ....'31111110l......'329
Serta Spine,Saver..............
H... .... '568 ......'418110l ..... 1369
Serta Extra Flrrn..............................................................9......'41111 ..r.....•429

APPLIANC ES
Gibson 15cu.FT.FIOIIF181,r...0....................... .. . . .'5111 ... .'548.......... 499
Gibson 17 cu.FT. 3Shllveo, obi.cnspar......... ...... • . .'51111.........'539
....
Kelvlnator 18 cu.FT. ra~cneoeledSheiY81. .~ ..'719........ 19..........•s49
Gibson 18. 6cu.FT. :~llhoi... F....orohelf................. '1311...... .'6311..........'569
Gibson 18.6 cu.FT. ~~~ooo- ..... ~.k0dod. .'8119.......olllll ......•699
Kelvinator 20.6cu. FT.~--.u-.'868.....'7'611.........!679
Kelvinator 19.6cu.FT. -.--.--.~188. ..'111111 ......8849
Gibson 22.1 CU.FT.SideiiSide,ice&amp;wat.................... .'1400......'1299. . . '1 099
Premier 36".Gas Range Dipl dock. ............. '529... '41111 .......•459
Kelvinator 30" Gas RangeWN~eOnly ......................'3211..........'299
Gibson 30" Elec. Self.or-.1 Laedolt ............................ 79.......621L. . . . '569
Kelvinator30" EleC.Cioct.blad&lt;mwindaw. ........os1a.........~a.........'429
Maytag 30" Elec. w.-.- orolm......................'529 ........'41111...•....•439
Maytag Auto. Washer !Mgt lob, 2c:ydll............ .os:~a..........'41111•• ••479
Maytag Elec. Dryer Au1o. ll!yC4nn~......................... ............1a ...*399
~ibson Auto. WasheremLMgtrub. . ...............'41111..........1449.......•419
GibSon ~lee. D,Yerr... ll!y............................... _..1t. .......'379.....!329

Welfare
reform
begins to
take shape

jewelry.stores.

Shapes
and styles
val)' with
availability.

Use tor tiny
treasures or as
~accent piece.

BEDROOM SUITES

LIST · SAlE
PRICE PRICE

NIINEIISiil'r
PRICE

5 Pc. BasseHe Cherry Suhe Tester Bed........'1299. . .'8118...........1699
5 Pc. Cont. Black Mirror Fronts Incl. stllld ...'1399. . .'M...........'788

•

•

4llc.Bic/Grlen, BIUPiumYifllhld,Qak,-.....'11118.....'111111.. , ........'699

4 Pc. Oak-Pediment Mlrror·Pedlrnent Head..'7111L. '511tL..... •479
4 Pc. Oak-Door Dresser-Door ChesL

............ .....'549..........•399
5 Pc. P~Hutch Mirror-Poster Bed ......... '1299... .'11118...........'749
4 Pc. Oak-Large Places-Door Dresser............'1399. . .'11119...........'799
5 Pc. Dark Pine-Ltd. Mirror-Poster Bed ....... '15111L.~1119.......... •899
6Pc. Pine-Paul Bunyan Bed, night stand lnci...~6Qg.. ..'1299.....•1088
6 Pc. Nostalgic Maple
Beautiful Pieces, stand 1nc1...........................'2111111......M ....•1999

CURIOS &amp; GUN CABINETS
Light Oak CUrio, llmpered gtua,llgh~ 11111 entry.....'3111.......'22i.......'198 ·
Light Oak Comer Curio, n~t.. ............................. '418....'3211.........'289
Light Oak Curio; 32"wklt,IIChJd IDp........ . ....~.......0:....,.....*319
Howard Miller Clock/Curlo,lllldlumoak............. .'725.....~.........'399
Round Front Curio, no•lllgtc oak................................. .'5119...:... -........'389
Cherry Comer Curio, etchld g~~u, pJdl111111tiDp.....'8119.,•••'11119,.......•579
Pine Curio, lllvllld gtua daor, plalll groove alltlvti....J . . .os~L .....*289
Oak 8.!lun, PI•IDI dlrptay, 3 gllll daora.........................'8119......'111111........'569
Pine 12 Gun, llli:trld dDorl, llgh!M......................- ......'849.:.......8. . . . .*399

ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS
&amp; ACCESSORIES

'ust SALE·

PIIICE PRta;

Al\WA'ERSI4RY

PRICE

Blanket Ch8$t Ollt·linlshed011lnslcle......................'3ii.... .oz49............'219
Oak Cedar Chest padded top........ .........................'388 .... ..'3211 .......*279
Cherry or Oak Ent. 54"1all, di1War.............. . ... '6311.....~.... ....•429
Cont. Light Oak Ent.stcrage doori.....................'21L . .~Ii8..........~'129
Pine Finish Ent. 50" wide, 27"TV capablt~W.......... .'31111.......'249. ..........s199
Oakoi-ChtrryEnt.srwldo,;--•
..,..._...'51111......1.168...........'399
.
.
Oak Flrllih Desk lltlo(i,48"wldt,4llrgl drftn....oa......'DI..........•199
PlneSecrttafyBaMdl'opAd,3drlwlri. . . . .:. . . ...J&amp; ......
.. ., ........'189
T

7 Pc. Dark Pine Set, 21eafl, &amp;cllalt•............................'5119.....o.c39...........'389
7Pc. Oak Set,4ZIIIIIblt,a..,.......wtvin,l_.:....w ......'631L ...........*549
'

7Pc. Oak Bow Back ChalrSeJ, ovallable...............'581L. .'4.411............!369

•sag

7Pc. Country Oak, llblt, 21N1o,e..,..boclla~~~~to. ....•10811. ....'799 ..............

6Pc. Solid Oak,dlopltiiiO"IIblt,4chllrla-.....'10811.....'8119..·........... '739
9 Pc. Nostalgic Oak SuHe
a..loot!Mit, '""""'" ...... huicMiullll ........... ..'2299....

.'1699............. 11288

RECLINERS &amp; CHAIRS
Carlye Recliner, 2way, co1or dloice...................... ,... '22ll..... .o1a1.. . . '139
Unique Recliner, Heater-Vilral01,2oo1ors................. '368 .....'211tL.........'229 ,
catnapperRecllner, lidapodlll,3cxm............... . 3311.....oa.e ........'199
catnapper Wall Reclln.er, Beige dleck ................'531L...I121L........'349
Flexsteel Wall Recliner, Bile velvtl, rol badt..... 72.....io1211 ............'369
•
Flexsteel Rocker/Recliner, auo~r&amp;a~o'l.IIIW--'687......tol99. .........'389
catnapper Rocker/Recliner, GrlenorBiua...........'G......'349............'299
Flexsteel Rocker/Recllner,.o.."""".................'712...... '529............'399
catnapparRocker/Recllner,Mu~&gt;Cc~ar..............o3G......oz79.......... .'229
la·Z·Boy Rocker/Recliner, Rllll .... 4co~on.......~ ....'349............'299
la·Z-Boy Rocker/Re.cllnerCa~co~~~,llolgoPmt..'saiL. '419............*359 ·
..
La-Z-BoyChaise Rocker/RecUner, Btue. ......-.'slllt. '468...........'399
CharlsmaDecoratorChalr,~ ..... . '3111. ....'22ll ........_'189
Swinger Rocker, Oak-Blue Prirt...................................'349......ozaL. ...... •199
. Charisma Swivel Rocker, Mauw01Biue...................'379.... '21111............'229

TELEVISIONS

LIST

'

SAlE !.'fWEilSIIrt

PRICE PRICE

.

PRICE

Zenith 13'1Color, ~.....................................'289.....t2&amp;L.... . ..'229
J

Zenith 19" Color, Clble~,c~~~n:o~Ieablnet......... .o:~at....'289.............'249
Zenith 20" Remote, -.....,.., ................:. . '11118......'330...........'299
.
Zenith 25" Remote,.ilbltmocW,~ ..................... ... '41111......... "..'429
Zenith 27'' Remote, ~lllldol,sp.3-...........'E811......'G............*539
Zenith 25" Remote, comote,oakorpi,......................E29.... :. .....'569
zenith 2T' Remote, COOIOII,oekcablnlt....................•79rL. • ......... . '629
Zenltt127'' R,mote, -.~.,..~en, VCRo~cnge............'lllill.....o7G..........'679
Zenith 32" Remote, JtnouroundiOilnd............~ 3110......~ 188............'999

.

SOFA SLEE PERS

LIST Soii.E
. PRICE PIIICE

,

IIIIINf1lSNfY

PRICE

Pillow Arm Q&amp;Jeen Size, raa1 prirl.......... . .'799 ...... ...........•488'
Early Amettcan Queen, nrstA~~oeprint ......... 'lllll..............'559
Q~een Size SouihvMIIm Prtnt ............................. 79. . .os48 ........•469
TradltlonaiQu~n. Bkla, 7' mtlll-. ..............,.......'8811 ......'lllll......... .'649
Traditional Queen, bolgtlmauw ~~~..:................'8119......'111111......... !579
Flexs,teel FuiiSize, 81"" plald..."...........".....: .......'llllll.....~_ ......"'569
.

'

'

WASHINGTON lAP) RefOJ:llling welfare is now such a
popular idea that Republicans are
racing to beat President Clinton to
the punch while ·moderate
Democrats press the White House
to overhaul the system in time for
their 1994 campaigns.
House Republicans just finished
their version of welfare reform legislation and plan to introduce the
154-page bill Wednesday. II would
end welfare to most non-citizens,
re~uire mothers who apply for
aS!Ilstance to identify thell' child's
father, and limits lifetime benefits
totwoym~
·
Centrist Democr&amp;JS, meanwhile.
have sent notice to a White House
that needs their votes that they
intend to help the president keep
~is c~paign promises ~ impose
ltme lirlllts and work reqwrements.
"We want him to know that he
does not have to back down and
seule for window dressing around
the edges and leave the dry rot to
continue to wCaken the entire struCture," said Rep: Nathan Deal, DGa.
Moderate Democ;:rats say the
administration is under pressure
from liberals and lhe welfare
bllfe8UCI1ICY that runs welfare programs from Washington to the
CQ...IIlltilll, 1!14 'C= ~· ~.,._t, 1!.,-IIY ·

... I ·
~ ,...,.,, """'~
' 'SOme wonie'n's giOiips and wei-

,~~
. 1'

fane riglits activiSts Jiave deep ·misgivings about two-year lime limits
and "make-work jobs" for welfane
~pients.
..
· "W.hat you (\ave is activist
groups ... who don't fmd fault with
th~ existing system," said Rep.
Eric Fingerhut, D-Ohio, who once
managed a job placement and training ·program for welfare recipients
iii Cleveland. "1bey're an important and respected constitu~cy in
the Democratic Party and have ·
great ability to influence the
debate."
Fingerhut and lawmakers who
call themselves the "Mainstream
Forum" outlined their priorities at
a recent Capitol news conference.
The r'hetorrc was spicy and the
message clear: they're not about to
be left .out when the welfare reform
bii!Cprint is drawn.
Many were onh&amp;J!PY about the
president's $500 brllicin budget·
cutting biD and their lack of a role
in crafting the plan.
•'The subtle message is that the
Continued .on page 3 ,

1 Soclion, 10 ..... :Ill - ·
AMultlmec:blftc. N&amp;IIIPIFJr

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 8, 1993

lluHIIMdlolnc.

Negotiators seek
strike settlement,
pressures mount

First
Lady calls
for fewer

specialists
WASHINGTON (AP) -

F'U'St tady Hillary Rodham Clin·

ton came to the defense of the
family doctor, telling a young
medical student "it's about lime
we start thinking about the common good" and not just career
choices that may be more lucrative.
Mrs. Clinton's remarks c811!C
during questions from the audi·
ence Sunday a1 a c;onference of
medical educators where several
medical students said tl)ey saw
no advanta$e to goirig into general practrce where pay and
pres~r~e is lower than among
specialists.
"It's about lime that we stan
thinking about the common
~ood, the national interest,
mstead of just individuals in our
country," she told one studenL
. The student at the University
of Chicago medical school had
complained during questions
that she had come from a poor
. family, had struggled 10 gel to
medical school and said she
now felt '' disadvantaged all
over again" because she had to
commit to general practice to
get a low interest education
loan.
· ~ 'I'm SQ(cy&gt;Y.P.U f~l. per$0nal­
ly disadvant;~ged;H.~ (USI bldy
replied.
·
.
A few minutes earlier another student a.uending;the conven·
tion of the Association of Amer·•

KEYNtlTE ADDRESS - First Lady HUlary
pares tf! give ~ keyuOte address to tbe Assoclad011 ·

pre·
American Medical Colleges 104tb annual meedng Sunday. Mrs. Clio·
ton discussed the administration's bealtb care plan. (AP)
She said the-administration's
ican Medical Colleges also comhealth care reforms hope "to
plained about the disadvan~es
reverse
that description" by
of primary practice medicrne
enhancing
the status of general
over specialization.
practitioners.
"Why should I choose priThe primary care physician is
mary care when generalists do
key
to the success of the Clinton
not receive the same respect,
health
care proposals that are
recognition or reimbursements
aimed
at
providing care for all
that other medical specialists
Americans.
often initially
receive?" David Knutson, a
through
a
general
practitioner,
third-year medical student at the
or family doctor.
University of Iowa, asked the
Seventy percent of the pracfii'Stlady, who had just finished
ticing
physicians are in specialioutlining the president's health
·es,
comJl!lled,to
3Q ~for
ClUl: ~~ plans,_.. . ..
'
·
generll
·pnictil;e;""''ll4
'~S pe.rcent
Mrs..CJiiiiQil · ~aid the"''''wa ·
of
the
medical
students
aimst11dcnt's characterization "is
ing
at
specialties,
compared
to
unfortunately an accurate
.15
percent
for
general
practice,
description" of the situation in
she said.
the medical profession today.

are

CHARLESTON. W.Va. (AP)
- The weekend passed with litde
word from the Washington, D.C ..
hotel suite where coal operators
and the United Mine Workers are
working on a contract under the
eye of a federal mediator.
The talks resumed Wednesday
after a two-week recess, "conlin·
ued almost non-stop" tluough Friday evening, then went on tlirough
the weekend, mediator Bill Usery
said.
"Every effort must be made to
find a mutually acceptable agree·
mcnt." Usery said late Friday
night.
At the time, Usery also said be
was "optimistic that a seulement
can be reached soon," raisin,g
hopes that an end was in sight to
the UMW's strike against selected
members of the Bituminous Coal
Operators Association.
But spokesmen for the operators
and the UMW said there was nothing new to repon Sunday nighL
The UMW began its strike May
10 in a dispute over job security
·and future employment for UMW
members. The union says it has
about 17,500 members on strike in
seven states in Appalachia and the
Midwest.
As the snike ne&amp;B the 6-month
mark. political, and financial pres·
sure is mounting on both sides.
On Thursday. Labor Secretary
Robert Reich met separately with
each side's negotiators. He also

met with the chief executives of
some of lhe operatorS' parent companies, Usery said.
Reich "expressed the absolute
necessity for everyone involved to
find a fair and responsible solu·
lion," Usery said.
The meetings followed a leuer
to Reich from 14 coal-state con~essmen who demanded to know
' what the Labor Depanment has
done ... to encourage a seulemenL••
Third-quarter earnings and coal
production show the effects of the
work stoppage on the operators.
And the UMW's largest district,
Charleston-based District 17.
reportedly has laid off secretaries
and elecled officers.
According to recent statistics:
--Coal production cast of lbe
Mississippi was down 7.6 pen:cnt
to 407 million tons in the third
quaner from 441 million rons in the
same period last year. Of the ~
Eastern coal producing SlaW, lUi·
nois' production was down 25.1
percent, followed by 111 11.7 per·
cent decline in West Virginia
-Ashland Coal Inc. sales
droJ)Jled $44 mUiion ~een July
and- September. 1be company said
production was down 47 percent at
its Habet Mining subsidiary and npercent at its Dal· Tcx operations. ·
More than I:OQO Aslti!OO e•iiJIIOJ·
ees are on stiilce; ·
- ;· · -· ·
-Rochester' .l: Plltsbuiift COil
Co. production at its Slrikebound
Continued oo page 3

State
senate
to
begin
Despite Perot, labor opposition,
Clinto~ predicts NAFTA victory hearings on ethics bill
.o')J

WASHINGTON (i)P) - President Clinton portrays himself as
being in an uphill struggle against
the one-liners of Ross.Perot and the
pre_ssure of organize!! labor but
rnststs he can salvage the North
American Free Trade Agreement.
"I thi!lk we'll make it," he said
Sunday.
In a wide-ranging interview on
NBC's "Meet the Press," Clinton
also said North Korea must not be
allowed to develop a nuclr.;lr bomb,
confirmed that U.S. troops will
resume street patrols in Somalia
and declined to criticize Russian
President Boris Yeltsin for delaying a promised early presidential
election.

On the trade pact, Clinton said hundreds of thousands of dollars
he is 30 votes shon in the House, from labor groups as a candidate,
and attributed mucn of his prob- and another example of how the
trade deal has spawned odd
lems to union opposition.
"At least for the undecided alliances.
Interviewed later on ''CNN Late
Democrats, our big problem is the
raw muscle - the sort of naked Edition," AFL·CIO Secretar~ ­
pressure- that the labor forces Treilsurer Thomas Donahue sard
his "gut response" when he heard
have put on," Clinton said.
He accused labor of resorting to Clinton's characterization "was to .
"roughshod, musclebound lac - be angry. I thought it was a cheap
tics," including threatening to end shot. No need for iL It is simply not ·
financial support for lawmakers true.''
But the labor federation 's No. 2
who support the trade deal and to
field candidates against them at official acknowledged that " it 's
perfectly true that some of our
election time.
. It was a striking remarlc from a affiliates have taken the position
Continued on Page 3
Democratic president who muscled

Lack of repeat offenders
law frustrates officials
CINCINNATI (AP) - In some
states, a three-time offender convicted of a violent crime automatically receives a life sentence with
no chance for parole. Ohio lawmakers erased a similar law from
the books in 1974.
Ohio is among 33 states that do
not require repeat offenders to
serve mandatory, long-term sentences. Habitual criminals often
receive the same punishment as
fii'St·timc offenders, The Cincinnati
Enquirer reported Sunday.
" The system right now is dis·
honest." said David Diroll, executive director of the Ohio Criminal
Sentencing Commission, an agency
fanned three years ago to overhaul
the state's handling of repeat
offenders and sentencing guide·
lines.
"There are some people some really, really bad people who need to be put in prison fer a
very long time. And often, that cannot and does not happen. There ane
some PP._S that need l'IXed."
Oh1o s 25 prisons are among the
most crowded in the counuy. They
were designed to hold 21,800
inmates but boused 40,121 in the
Ohio Deparunent of RehabUiJalion
and Correction's latest count,
released last month.
Jerome Kunkel, an assistant
Hamilion County prosecutor, lllid
be feels frustrated b'y a system that
allows repeat offenders to be freed.
"You obviously feel sorry for

the victim. People in the community , law-abiding citizens, assume
these kind of people are locked
up," Kunkel said.
" We do what we can to get
them convicted, but then they' re
out of our hands. With these kind
of people, it' s just a matter of time.
it seems, before you get them back.
again.''

Kunkel handled the case of Benjamin Blackwell, who was given
sho&lt;;k probation last month after
serving seven months of a threeiO
IS-year sentence.
In October 1992, Blackwell
walked into his suburban Lincoln
Heights home and beat his wife
after fmding her in bed with another man, the newspaper reported. As
her stepdaughter tried to call
police. Blackwell attacked her,
brcalcing her jaw and aeveral teeth.
He was convicted on two counts
of felonious assault
Hamilton County Common
Pleas Judge William .Mathews said
he granted shock probalion because
the original sentence was too
severe and Blackwell suffered
"mental battery" when he surprised bi5 wife.
. · Blackwell was coQvicted of a
1961 rape in New Mex.ico and a
1973 murder and assault in Colum-

bus

·

•;This is a $.UY who had three
felonies and sun escaped the system," Kunkel said. "That's one of
the ttagedies of the ase.''

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Hearings begin iri the Senate this
week on House-passed legislation
that would ban speaking fees for
lawmakers and require stricter
financial disclosure .fer public officials and lobbyists.
A three-member Senate subcommittee wUI take public testimonY. Tuesday and Wednesday on the
brll, which would req~ all public
officials to disclose annually the
source and amount of any outside
income.
Sen. Richard Finan, R-Cincinnati, chairman or the subcommittee, said local government officials
and congressional representatives,
who are defoned as public officials,
would be affected by the bill.
"The bill is full of inconsistencies," Finan said. "The inconsistencies will have to be cleaned up,
or the legislators won't know what
the ethics law says."
Finan said he has no timetable
for completing action.
"I want to see what testimony
we get and what suggestions filter
through," he said.
Sena1e President Sta~~~ J.
Aronoff, R-Cincinnati. had · the

bill would yass in some form by
the end o the year but now
believes iI will not be ready until
January.
House members set out to ban
speaking. fees after allegations that
Rep. Paul Jones, D-Ravenna, used
his position as chairman of the
House Health and Retirement
Committee to attract $500 fees for
personal appearances with groups
mterested in health-care legislation.
Jones has denied any wrongdoing. He stepped aside temporarily
as chairman of the commiaee' and
asked the House Ethics Committee
for an investigation.
On Tuesday, a House-Senate
conference committee on campiugn
reform will continue deliberations
on increased disclosure, as well as
new spending and connibulion limrts.
''The campaign finance issue
has at its core the public's concern
that connibutors are improperly or
unduly affecting the outcome of
public policy," said Sen Roben
Cupp, R-Lima, the c~ of the
committee. "That's the Simc issue
that's pushing the ethics isSue.••

--Local briefs--commission to meet at 2 p.m.
The Meigs County Board of Commissioners will hold its weetty
meeting at 2 p.m. Wednesday instead of its normal time of 10 a.m
at the commission office in the Meigs County Cowthouse.
•

Man cited for DUI
A 23-year-old Athens man was cited to Meigs County Coun 011
charges of driving under the influence and left of center.
Mark A. Loeber was ciled after bein~ by Meigs CQunty
sheriff's deputies on State Route 7 near
.
This is Loeber's second arrest for om. the sherifrs depattmcnt
reported.

Deer-vehicle wrecks reported
Authorities irivestigated two deer-vehicle wrecks recently.
A Deparuncnt. of Natural RCSOW'CCS, Division of Parks, pickup
truek received modenle damage in a deer-vehicle collision on s R. ·
124 near Reedsville Thursday evening.
'
According 10 a n:port from the Meigs County Sherifrs Depart.
men~ Dale C. Rockhold, Reedsville, was drivin~ when a deer ran
into the path of the 1989 Dodge truck. The collision occuned about
six-tenths of a mile from the enuance to Forked ~un State Park.
Tbe front grill and fender of a truck was damigod in a deer accident on Hiland Road lbout 7 Lm. Monday
·'
Pomeroy Police !liid thai. a Mid-Ohio ConlraC!OrS truck driven by
Jeffrey Munney of McConneisvillostruclt aild 1tilled a deer when it
ran across the road near the intersection of Hiland and Mulbelcy.

�Commentary

Monday, November 8, 1993
Page 2- The Dally ~nllnel

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Monday, NoVImber8,1883

OHIO Weather

·-

Clinton won' t be able 10 reinvent
the entire government, but he and
his science adviser John H. GibDBVOTI:D TO THlt ll'ITEliE8T8 OF THE IIEIQS..IIASON AREA
bons, have already laid the groundwork for a " Big Bang"-type revision of the government's $76 billion science budget Almost unnoticed, the pair have put reorientalion
of federal research and develROBERT L WINGETf
opment on a fas t track that may
Publisher
forever change the R&amp;D work,
even if Clin10n is only a one-tenn
CHARLEIIIE HOEFLICH
~ARGARET LEHEW
president.
General~anager
Controlier
Past science advisers have ttied
bul failed to manage the llirection
lE'ITERS Of OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less than 300
of go~mment science and techno!wonts. All lOiters are subject to editing and must be signed with name
ogy. lnleragency lurf batlles and
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed. Le~
opposition from the Offsce of~should be in sood Wle, addressing issues, oot personalities.
agement and Budge! - wh ich
resists yielding any budget-setting
authority - rendered the work of
most science advisers largely
meaningless. The difference now IS
that OMB Director Leon Panetta
has already privately BKrCed to a
DearThsir: d. h d
I' I
be admitled." And,
friendly takeover of R&amp;D budget
e me ta as one lit e to
, " ... Students attend private ·planning
by Gibbons and a newly
inform the public about lhe vouch· schools must be residents of the formed National
Science and Techer J?lan proposed by Gov • George disuict in which the private school
Vomovich and Rep. Michael fox is located in order to be eligible for
(R-Hamilton) and State Sen. Coop- vouchers under this Plan. •
er ~der (R-Hillsboro) to be illlroWhile Ibis provision is being
du
this month except 10 repeat promoted as a plan to benefit low
the statements of Voinovich and income families, the language says
some Ohio legislators that ''public "up to 20 percent of the student
schoolsaren'tdoinatheirjl)b."
bod
lbe
h h' ldr (I
1 take iSSUe wrth that and all
y muS
SUC C I en OW.
other statemenlS which Voinovich income) who can attend the private
school in exchange for the voucher,
so often uses to degrade public
1 10
ddi · nal · · ·
education in this slate. Teachers Pus peroenta uo tuluon·m
don't teach kids to shoot guns, and cash or 10 services." Everyone over
ou·can't make a silk purse out of a that 20 percent will fall into a
Y
range wh1ch goes anywhere from
sow's ear. In many cases where middle income to wealthy, children
children are not receiving suppon already being educated in private
at holne or are being abused emo- schools by their parents choice,
tionally arid physically, success is children of parents who have
keeping the c:hild alive, unpregnant, already chosen 10 make a fmancial
drug-free, and in schQol long commitment to private/parochial
enough to graduate.
school education and who can well
1 am mosa angered, however, by afford it.
the faclthat in creating the voucher
The target date fu' implementaplan, Voinovich is dumping all tion by all school districts is
public schools into one barrel September 1998. The only school
1mplying that aU public_schools are districts which can panicipate in
inferior 10 all private/parochial lhe pilot program are Cleveland,
schools. Publi'c schools are Akron, Toledo, Columbus, Cincin·
required 10 give their siUdents state nati, and Youngstown. In Califor·
profiCiency teSIS. Priva~e~Parochial nia residenlS were allowed to vote
schools are not. There is no
th .L
h ·
whe er uoey wanted t err tax
State wide data to validale on
dollars 10 be used 10 educate chiiVoinovich's assllmption. National dren in private/parochial schools
data shows that while public which requires both sides of the
schools faD behind private schools issue 10 educate the public com'"!e poor suffer more injustice
at the lower levels, by the senior pletely on lhe plan. In Ohio, 1he
year (when many academicallr plan, even as a "pilot program." is than Justice in the couns. Bw even
poor students have dropped out) being crammed qown our throalS a prominent figure, with plenty of
public schools are equal to f.ri, with the public bemg giveri little or money .to hire expensive lawyers,
vale/parochial schools in ·per or- no infonnation exce~t to say that can fait 10 get anything resembling
mance, and, in some cases, outper- "public schools aren t doing their fairness. .
Consider Woody Allen. Recentfonn them in math and science.
job.•
The plan as proposed reponedly ly, lhe state's attorney for lhe
The voucher plan won 'I be as
cost effective as ilS writers say . will do away with many of the Litchfield Judicial District in ConHow can it ~ssibly be when pri- mandales presenlly required of necticut - Frank S. Maco v~ parochial schools are present- public schools. Private/parochial declared thai he was dropping the
ly receiving $107,067,012 of public schools won't be mandaled to do criminal case against Woody Alien
funds or $450 for each of the anything more than they were as of who had been accused of sexually
220,000 non-public sludents in July 1992. For public sch.ools the molesting his adopted daughler,
Ohio, and the ultimate goal is to one mandate that won't be done Dylan Farrow. Ordinarily, Allen
provide at least $2,250 per each away with is thai they must educate would have been much relieved by
non-public student of public all students, regardless of race, tharannouncement.
The prosecu10r, however, went
money. Nor does it provide true gender, income, academic ability.
"-L-:--•.
"or
example,
language
in
•
·
·
"'"""" r•
oamlly suppon, emotional stability, on 10 declare publicly that he did
the bill says:
discipline, or disability. Private have probable cause to prosecute
• "Choice acknowledges the schools can chose whom they want Allen, but he had dropped the
right of parents to .... choose the to educate.
charges because the 8-year-old at
schools which will develop the
That is what makes the differ- issue was "fragile" and "regreshi,hest potential of the individual ence between a public and private sive under stress." Therefore, said
child." But alas.
school education. But the roll of ~co, he was nol going to "take
' • "Private schools will be per- our leP.slature should be to educate that child across the coals of the
milled to discriminate on· the b;lsis all ch1ldren through public educa- criminal process."
In his press conference, the
of gender." Further,
tion, not fund private education for
proseculOr made no mention of the
• "Learning disabled studenlS a select few.
will be required to be admitted."
The bill is a ruse, and I urge all fact .that physicians and other
however in anotller section it reads, Ohio citizens 10 learn more about expens at Yale-New Haven Hospi• "A private school mal' elect 1·1
tal had examined the child and
not 10 accept any exn funding fer · ·
found
no physical evidence of
Barbara M. Cape,
learning disabled students in which
They
believed that her imagabuse.
5065 BayhiU Drive,
; . neither the statute (state statute)
ination
had·led
to her s10ry, or that
Powell, Ohio
doc the regulations (whiCh apply .to
she
had
been
coached.
Barbara ~. Cape Is 1 10-year
¢ucating LD children) will apply . member or the Olentangy Local
So the child is now spared from
to that school." Further,
· . Board ol Education In Delaware
' • "SludenlS with handicapping County or Ohio.
¢onditions will not be required to

11 1 Court Street
Pomeror, Ohio

Letters to the editor
Kids, taxes, and a ruse

Sources describe it as the
National Security Council of Science. It is so imponant 10 Clinton

less-presidentially favored programs like military R&amp;D to more
favored ones like environmental
science. ••
Our own review of the memo
with SOUIWi intimate with the science reorientation project underscores its most imponant thrusts:
Military R&amp;D, which currentlr makes up aboul 60 pen::ent
of al federal research dollars, will
be cut back 10 SO pen::enl or less of
the science budget. This will be
done partly by "re-aligning R&amp;D
in laboratories managed by the
Depanment of Energy, NASA, the
Department of Defense and other
agencies to increase their conttibulions to commercial competitiveness, reflecting the administration's
intent to shifl:.\t&amp;:D emphasis from
milill!ry to ci~"
.
.....: The science
wi11 favor
applied science over 1·c science
_ meaning .!l!at the govemrrient's
hand would tip toward cost- effeclive science projeclS with applications for ~.111.erican consumers

B r k A .l
y JQC nu.eTSOn
d

an
;~hael
B•ns*e;n , 11

lY.lH&lt;

"

•' "

that he is expected to chair it per·
sonally _ cutting down on the
kind of budgetary bickering that
would occur if Gibbons, or even
Vice Presidenl AI Gore, were
chainnan.
The council's blueprint _
affecting more than 700 national
laboratorij:B - is an Aug: 17 internal memo to aU Cabinet secretaries
and was obtained by our associate
Dale Van Alta. One of its rare
aspects is that il is co-si$ned by
Gibbons and Panella, g1ving il
unusual government-wide c.louL
The
conrrrms Clinton's
inlent
many

.

·

.

···· ·

·

- ... .

budC

~

.

basic
sc1~ce plllJCCIS I!Jte the supercon·
ducbng super ~oll1der. . .
.
. - The Clinton adm1mstrauon
mtends .to spawn a ~ew era of
cooperanon between pnvate .corporate resea!Ch and g~vernment
~h, ws!h c~ons dem~n·
StraUng thesr smcenty by pulUng
~P at l~t half the cost of coopemuve plllJ&lt;:CIS·
.
- Clinto~ and Gibbons ap~
~ favor projects .hke developmg
new techno!~gtes for cleaner,
more fuel-efftc1ent cars that can
run ~n domeslicai!Y produced
fu:Js .and ~hnolog_ses ~t create
a ~~onal mfonnauo~ tnfras~f!!C·
lure -. such as the mformauon
SUP_C;rbighway !Ou!edbyGo~
While a SlgtlifiC8llt amount of
work needS to be done before the
~ew R~D model can be~ effec~velf. the mC~_Do reads, the proJCCI IS o~ such 1mpo~ce that we
feel obhga~ed ~~ begm work as
soon as poSSI~le.
And there IS loiS of work to do.
The memo asks each agency of the
fedCI'Ill government to do the fol·
lowing three things by February:
identify every dollar it spends on ,
R&amp;D, categorize each prograln into
one of I0 sec1ors and prioritize
them. It is the third step - priori·
tizing - that is causing subter·
ranean earthquakes throughout the
government. BureaucralS rightly
reckon !hat any pro$rams they
assign a low priority will disappear
from the budget.
The Clinlon science iniliative
will send tremors through the
whole government, not just science. Some of the mosl defining
technological developments this
century - such as aircratt, satellites, microchips and computerS were first developed as defense
projects. IBM was spawned by and
grew on government contracts.
Even deficit gadfly Ross Perot
made his money on the back of
government contraclS. The only'
remainln~ mystery for political scienlists IS whether teinveDling
research pro·ves as rancorous as
reinventing government
Jack Alldenon and Mike Binstein are 'f!l'iters ror United Fealure Syndl~te, Inc.
·

Woody Allen: convicted before trial

Today in history

.

"

• In 1889,Monllll&amp;becarne the41ststate.
' In 1904 Preaident TlleodoJe.Roosevelt, who had succeeded the assas~naral w-.lliam McKiriley, was e~ted 10 a term in his own righl as he
pee~ Dan~ AIUlll b. I;'um.
·
, Jn 1923 Mcil Hider launched his frrst attempt at seizing power with a
(~ in Munich; Germany, that came to be knoV(R as the Beer-Hall

~i932. New York Gov. Franklin D. ~ooseveli defeated incumbenl
~erbm HooYer fer lhe znsidency of the United States.

Jn 1933, P'lllidert .J1ranldin D. Roosevelt crested,. by executive order,
1
die CiVil WOib lcdminisntion, designed to mate jobs for more than 4

P.i:-:;.{~n Torch began during World War II as U.S. and
Brililb for!:ea linded in French North Africa. .
\
1111950, dilrla)l die Korean conflict, the ftrSt jet-plane battle took pll.ee
11 u.S. 1Jt FGRio U Russell J. Brown shot down a Nonh Korean MiO.. l.5.Ja 19Ci0, Jh
Democratic Sen. Iobn F. Kennedy defeated

•*"'

'liceFt sldrrdWhlnl M. NlliOlloffcr dle,ptcsidency.

• ••• fi black
·In l~.lldwanl W. Brooke Mllsslcliusetts becat!le u"" 1rst
10
bUl clldiO 1M u.s. Senate by popular VOle.
·
Tell ~ 1101 Dealocral W. WilsOn Goode was elected die first bl8ck
~ iJ1 ~ Damoaa1 Manha Layne Collins was elecled die

ftntf

hjDUWIIOfolJCaltucky.

.

FI;:tT.'C ';-;,~.:;=~a:.: the JR~idential elec-

!\:!ii
--II!!
~

Jlll .....

.,..IICIIl
••

,_,oldie............. Some3SO,OOO people mi-

Ylolence. '

'

.

I

,!{;

toifJ

en~,

a child molester. w..orse, his own
child.
1
In the Connecticut Law Tribune,
a legal journal, Joseph Keefe, an
attorney. noted that although
Woody Allen has filed complainlS
_ demanding disciplinary action
by the state bar against prosecutor
Maco _ he is beyond help.
"Twenty years from now," Keefe
poinlS 001 , people are going to say,
"Wasn't he the person who was
involved with his daughter?' •
William Dow Ill, chairman of
the Connecticul Bar Association's
Criminal Justice Section, lays out
the shroud for Allen: "II leaves
him being a convicted child
molester withoul the benefit of a
trial."

And in The New York Times,
. Columbia Law School professor
Gerald Lynch; an eminenlly fair
former prosecutor, said: "It's
always inappropriate for a prosecutor 10 say anything about a case in
which no charges are brouJ!hL And
to say, We think the guy IS guilty'
is outrageous..
As always there are' good sol-

aU !!;n'!:!::':S~o~:fi::'~::l::r~ ing half C!r less of lhe amount of lion, no ~ ~eves that «;ongress forces ·s1ill b'etd an airport that
vices read aloud in the chancello- f~ c~!dered ~essary for sub- ~~ ~ Still for Anlericl!n par- could han~ lal'ge cargo planes. As
ries of E
and the halls of offi- s1stence. !Jtere IS no ps, electric- uc!~uon. Y~t after Som.aha llfld for ~ung them, "It would give
cia I wa~gton. Like Pontius tty or runnmg water, and most fam- . Haiu, few believe the J!RSident ~ ou~ NATO figll~er, pl~nes, .~o'(V
Pilate the Wcsl's leaders have
any taste for a showdown wuh pomUessly and expens1vel~ over•
Cong~ss a"C!ut !he usc of U.S. flrllig Boshi~n a!r space, someostenlliuously washed their hands
oflhe Balbn tragedy, throwing the
fOI,'CCIID mlllli;Jialional !JIIClltlons. thing wonh dolO)!, ' she wrote, . '
excess waler of blame on each ilies have already burn! their W1~ Americanill
be Ntrojlpi,A• bowevA_s to why 11 must be done,
other wheneVer someone questions domestic furniture," the Financial er, u... ~ '!i
no ~A'TO kiilte.
Williams m_ade tl_le case: "To SlOp
their moralily and courage. Times said. What is true of Saraje:
. Des,Ptte..that background, the the) ast fltckersng embe~s. ?f a
Bosnia's friends have for the most vo is the same, or worse, elsewhere F~ial Times~ Is some- bra~ ·!lltempt to create a CIVilized
part, resign'eci them~elves lo the in what remains of an independent thing more·!han:a futile lasl-gasp · mu.ltl~thnic socletr, from being
inevitable.
Bosnia.
g~stu~e. It !S actually workal)l.e. el111llgulshcd forever...
..
·
But 001 everyone. Here and
All of this is happening in areas smce 11 !'CQUlfCS o~ that the,UmtIt may be lli!Jt In fact there is 'no
there, ounged voices continue to supPOsedlY protected by the United e~ Nauons a~d , ATO make a world.commun1ty, no NATO.w&lt;ril
assaull the closed doors of con- NauoiiS and despite repeated warn- dsrect connecllon between. wo~ds the ~1!11~ ~d no .se111e of sbari\'e
science. Pel'hilps Bosnia can never ings and promises from NATO. As a11~ dee~s. !\bOut. humamtarsan . leflm a United States whOse pea.
regain control of all the lands )hat re~ently as Aug. 2, the Nonh rebef. ,Arrlif~; unlike convclys ~.n plo are so btlsy feeling $C?fry for
were once within ilS sovereign bor' Adantic Council termed the situa- land, do ~ot directly chaiiCIJgO mdi- ~selves ~ the)' are willllli to
ders they say But there is no rea- lion ,;unatcq,table" and promised tary en~m:lement. '!bey do make · blink at mass murder.
son 'why the Bbsnlan peOple musl ''immediate preparations for good. 00, the_110-Called world comIf so, so..ethin_g else. must ~
be destroyed along with their undenaldng, in the event that the mumty ~ ,p_romlse l!l sustaiD: the . staled clear~)'. It was atleill JK!IIInation.
strangulation of Sarajevo and other PCDJI!e wsthin the. besseJICI! area,
. ble fOI' IIIII$,! people to claini they
The most eloquent rQCent appeal areas continue ... stronger measures
H1story prov1des a dsrect and kn~w ·nolhtng of' the Holocaust ,
for action befOre it is ioo late 1:ame including air strikes against those useful.precedenL In tho ~0-and-a- · until II was 'too laic. There was lit- ,
in an editorial In the Financial responsible." ,
. half "!onihs of the Berh,n tbow- ·lie timely COVCI'8Je of Pol Pot's · ;
Times of London'on OcL 25 · Not•
Word a, all words, and lying down m 1948-49, the. Weat illliply ''1Tla$S nillnlen In Canlbodia, which :
· ing the two steps c01 wad ~ sle
. p woods at tlllt. When·NATO. mi~- leaped OVOil the .R~•Baat Oer- in any .eveilt came so c:loaely IJliC:lll .{
back campaign by Serbs and Croats terS met 1181 month, they· did thCil' m!ID blocklde. Its airlift produced 2 ' the' heeb Qf our lgilominioua with-'
to StraniJo
lemlining ~us1im bes~ to ipn !lie~ si~on I!II~On tons or aid. The siege, of drawal from Vietnam that there ~
" qfe areas," It uguec1 llll'OIIgly for enurel~•..Now the member nauona s~.~-~ lasled m~XJths .~. was no realistic possibility of '
immediate alrllfta, not 11r drOPs. to. pledge troopl to ~force whatever . buiiO.... JUSl60,000 tons olwtS7 American InterVentiOn.
,
I.
provide f.opcl, mediciliC. clothes and • peiCe 1~1 IS filially extract- . : : : have ~- ~vlded by ~
~~·~ 10 the isolated enclaves BrJ4 ed; from the BOitlian government, .' .
the
I • .
'f
Hodillne Carter J[J,''ror'-a~r
c1ues.. .
.
an .-nent which If over Miclied BosnlA'• cham mos inv~·;:C
State Department lptikesman
. .Wttho.u! s.uch. !l ,determ1~ed can Bale~-~ 101D1t of , Shlrley'WiPi.:-:r, . · rnemJjer• .and IWird-Winnlaa reporter, edlreaponse, there .wJII be lilrvauon diltlletnbel-otllld ta'ill.
of Parli.nent and Ca~ . .
tor Ud,publlber, b pretlciGt ot (
, and death on a lllU3ive stale this
But e.en dial proatilllla holloW.
,
.
- - 11111111ter MilliS- 1 Wllhl ....... D c ,
win~r. In the Bosnian capital of In the lblence or iii' all-out cam- In Great•Britain, ln.• ~t letter, bMed te~loli prild~~~ c:Om: ;
Sara)Cvo, most residCRIS aie teceiv- palgn by the·Clinton ldmliliStrl-' she IIPted•tlu!t Bosni8R government pany.
·
-

Hodding Carter Ill

rc

o-:::f

ls

b
.
o

on

I )llJ="Maa•ws 'II••· D£.,upwtofa ,tribute
.

1

'

Vt4t I rn Ileal! I"'W""' ·~ the Sll,183 -

Nat R

diers -. ~ P!&amp;Yers who ar_e loyal wood~ leg!"
.
.
to thetr msutuuons and theu: eay- . So, m q,nnecucut, and not only
cl1ecks, The ~onorable John Bailey. m Connecuc~t, ~ ~owed credo
Co_nn~~ti!;ut'~"~hie,f st,a~'s anpr- of, the Arn~an JUSI1CC ·.IYSiem .~
ney, actuillly !l1i5 S&amp;Jd that the pros- mnoc~nt until proven guilty - has
ecutor, Frank Maca, adhered to the been mterred, along with Woody
Rules of PrOfessional Conducl Allen's reputation.
when he publicly staled'bis belief
Meanwhile, New York state
that Woody Allen - without a child welfare investigators have
trial, withoul ·~ue process- sexu- deCided to end their investigation
ally molested his daughter.
into whether Woody Allen sexually
Mr. Bail ~y needs lo take a molested his adopted daughter.
course with Kate Stith, a Yale law Their conclusion: There is no basis
professor specializing in criminal for the accusation. The· stale
law. She told The 'New York Department of Social Services told
Tilnes: "I've never heard of anoth- AUen: "No credible evidence was
ercasewhereaprosecutcrspokeso found that the child named in his
direclly and so inapproprialely report has ·been·abused·or'lllaltreat•·
aboul a cas~ he wasn't going to i:d."
prosecute." Kate Stith used to be a
But that story was given brief
federal prosec~tcr.
space on an inside page of The
Anolher good soldier, State's New York Times. The judgment of
Attorney Patticia Swords, assures the Connecticut prosecutor thai
one and aU that this hanging prose- Woody Allen is guilty - even
cutor, Maco, is "an excellenl pros- . though·be'll never have a chance to
ecutor with a lot of experience. . prove his innocence in a counroom
He's very intelli,ent. He knows - received much wider play.
and understallds cruninallaw."
In 1906, an attorney, John .DudUnder,11tariding the law ·' -- as ley, wrote an article, Law Versus
Supreme Coun fustice Benjamin Common Sense: ''The lawyers talk
Cardozoused:toemphasize .,;- does about law. Why, it's not law we
not always. lead to an understand- wanl, but justice."
ing of justice~ Or, as Finley· Peter
Dunne said at the beginning of the
century:
,
Nat Hentort Is a nationally ·
"I tell ye tho man's right when renowuerl authority on the First
~e says, Justice is blind.' Blind she All!endmeat and the rest of the

W~s~ c~rving headsto~;· aro;n· B~snia

By The Associated Press
, Today is Mond4y, Nov. 8, the 312th day pf1993. There are 53 days
left in the yesr. ·
· ·
Today's Hi&amp;hlight in History:
. Two hundred )'Cjlll ago, on Nov. 8, 1793, the Louvre in Paris began
admiuing the public, evon though the museum had been offscially open
;inceAu~ ··

· Ondlisdale:

being involved in a triql, ~ut
Woody Allen has now been sugmatized for the rest of his life and pro~ly. in his bbitpll'ri.C$"1.....; all_·
·
·
·
·
··

'.

'

By Tile A-liNd Press
Typically bright. crisp fall
weather is forecast for Ohio
dtrOu&amp;h die firll hilt or this.wect.
The :lilltionll WOI!her Service said
sides wiU be J*lly 10 ITIOidy sunny
and temperatures will climb to
around so depes.
The lhowers JUJ8Y rellD1l by Friday, but
will continue
to be near
tO mild southwesterly winds. Clear skies will
allow the mert:UI'Y 10 dip in10 the
upper 20s and 30s In the overnight

cooditiona

MICH.

&lt;;!!!1!~~esi~n~!J2cfefOCU~i~~f.l~!l£~ro~{(~!c!~ity-Wiven

Tht D_.ly Sentinel Pag• . 3

Crisp fall weather forecast through Thursday·

·Tuesday, Nov. 9 : .
Accu-Weather' forecut for

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•
ITole&lt;kl I 48" I

T=

• lcotumbusl49"

I

boon.

The ftiCOJd-high temJ)e181We for
this date at the Columbus weather

station was 74 dearees in 1945
while the record low was 13 in
1971. Sunset tonight will be II 5:22
p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 7:10

a.m.

•

Arounll the aatioll
Clouds spreld acroa die upper
Midwest, and into northern New
York and New En~ this morning, brin$ing the pOssibility of
snow flumes.
Further south, unseasonably
chilly temperatures llld clear lkies
JRCiorninated. with a record low of
18 degrees in Jonesville, Ark.,
ovemighL
High temperatures ranged from

10 10 IS degrees below nonna1 in
the Mid-Adanlic repon Sunday.
Skies are expected to clear, but
temperatures will remain low ,
falling into the 20s tonight in much ·
of the Tennesaee Valley. ·
LocaUy heavy rains 1re possible
across much of Florida today and "
10nigbt, with downpours forecast
for eastern Texas as well.
Clouds creeping east brought
the possibility of light snow to the
upper Midwest and Great Plains
today.
' Western New York and nonhwestern Vermonl also saw clouds
ovemighl. and there's a chance of
•

flilrries today in uppale New York. •
but skies rem aiaed clear rarmer
south.
Predawn 'temperatures ran~
frolll lhe low 20J into the mid
•
while winds near the Great Lakes
gusted at 20 mph,
Vcry cold temperatures were
expecled in mountainous regions o(
the West, with some readings
below 10 deptes but expected 10
rebound inlO die SOs by this mer-

noon.

In the northwest, skies were
clear and temperatures seasonably
low.

;

Sunday's high temperiiiR was :
85 degrees at Coral Springs, FlL
:

Gene stud~ may·off way to diagnose Alzheimer's

------Weather----South-Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly clear. Low
around 30. Tuesday, mostly sunny
with a high around SO.
Extended forecast:

Wednelday throueb Friday:
Fair on Wednesday and Thursday. Lows in the upper 20s and low
30s. Highs 45-SO. Chance of showers Friday. Lows in the 30s. Highs
in the 50s. ·
•

WASHINGTON (AP) - A new
understanding about how a gene
influences Alzheimer's disease
offers fresh hope fOI" a diagnostic
teSt and, eventually, a drug to prevent the memory-robbing disorder.
At a symposium Sunday spon·
sored by die fedc2al Nationallnsti·
tote on Aging, a series of new stud·
ies showed that one form of a gene
called apolipoprotein·E, or apoE,
may protect some people from
developing Alzheimer's disease,
while a flawed form of the same
gene substantially increases the
risk. The research , originated by a
Duke University team led by Dr.
Allen Roses, showed that a rare
form of the gene, called apoE2,

appears to protect people from
developing Alzheimer's disease,
but•another form of the acne,
apoE4, results in a substantially
greater risk of developing the dis-

ease.

" This is a major discovery thai
moves Alzheimer's research to a
new and high~ level,'' said Stuan
Roth of the Alzheimer's Associalion. "It offers real hope for the
manafement of Alzheimer's dis-

ease.'

"There is almost universal
agreemenl now about the imp_ortance of apoE in Alzheimer s, "
said Dr. Rober! Katzman of the
University of California , San
.Diego. He said lhe discovery. for
the frrst time, offers the possibility
of developing a drug that would
copy the natural protective action
against Alzheimer's that may be
day from 2-4 and 7-9 p. m.
provided by the awE2 gene.
Members of the mililary will
"This could hBve a very, very
conduct graveside riteS.
major ilnpact," said Katzman.

---------- A rea deaths·- ---------

A sia1ement from the National
lnstiwte on Aging called the apoE
gene discovery " a breakthrough in
Alzheimer's research. a disease
that has baffled researchers for
over 20 years.''
Roses announced earlier this
year that he and his group .had
proven that people with the apoE4
gene had an increased risk of
developing Alzheimer's.
In the body, each cell has two
copies of the apoE gene, which is

NAFTA ...

Continued from Pa&amp;e 1
that they will not support people
who cause job loss 10 their members." He said labor will " gel
over" its rift with Clinlon over
NAFTA and emphasized that the
trade pact with Canada and Mexico
is basically the only "one issue on
which we disagree with Bill Clinton...
· ·
Appearing at an .anti-NAFTA
rally in Tampa, Fla., Perot latched
onto a Clinton remark about how
Continued from page 1
subsidiaries was down 2 million he chafes at sometime's being a virtual prisoner in the White House to
tons as of Oct. 31. Company Presi- ' taunt
the presidenL
dent Thomas Gaiges said striking
"The presidenl of the Uni)~d
employees had lost $9 million in
States
was on one of the mornmg
wages.
shows
today and said. 'I feel lone-Earnings fellj8·percent in the
ly,
I
feel
isolated from the Amerithird quarter for A'anson PLC. the
can
people.'
He could have been
JIBrC!!I compl!Ry of Peabody Hold· here, right?"- Perot
shouted. " If he
mg Co. wh1ch owns Peabody Coal
would
come
out
and
spend lime
Co. and Eastern Associated Coal
Co. Hanson has said the strike with you, he would understand that
would cost it about $44 million for this thing will devastate the Amerithe quaner.
can people."
-Arch Mineral Coop. President
Clinton said in his interview that
Steve Leer distributed a memo 10 Perot is "the master of the oneaU employees OcL 20 saying "the liner and the emotional retort." but
strike continues beyond what any· predicted Vice President AI Gore
one would have predicted .. .' we . will 'fare well in Tuesday nighl's
must now take measures to con~~~~=·st the fonn~
~:~·~ash-saving measures,
Lee asked employees 10 "voluntari ly defer non-essential dental or
medical visits.''
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
-UMW District!? laid off seeNov. 5 discbarges - Dorothy
relaries and several elected offi- Krebs, Mrs. Larry Stevens and
cials, the Charleston Paily Mail daughter, Mervin Silve;r. Darrell
reported earlier in the week. Dis- Herdman, Eber Lew1s, Vicki
trict 17 President Bob Phalen did Hogan. Shirley Fetty, L:arry
not return messages seeldng conftr- Willard and Donna Hndge.
mation.
Nov. 5 births- Mr. and Mrs.
"It isn"llike we have no iocen- Randall Christian, son, Oak Hill.
tive 10 get a settlement,' ' said Mr. and Mrs. Richard Maier ,
CONSOL Inc. Vice Presideht Tom daughter, Pedro.
Hoffman, spokesman for the operaNov. 6 discharges- Jack Picktors· negotiating committee. "This ens , Mrs. Edward Campbell and
is costing millions.''
son, Mrs. Buddy Malone and
rr========="""'l' daughter, Cheyenne Goodrich,
Mrs. Richard Maier and daughter,
Wallace Saunders, Russia Copley,
Mrs. Randall Christian and son,
Am Ele Power..........................35
and Joyce Bartimus.
Ashland Oil... ..................... 34 J/8
Nov. 7 dischar&amp;es - Linsey
AT&amp;T ................................ 56 I/8
Bush, Barbara Shaulis. ~ichael
Bank One ...........................36 7/8
Davis, Martha Vennari and GeorBob Evaris.......................... l8 1{1.
giana Jenkins.
Charming Shop .................. 13 3!8
VETERANS M~ORIAL
Champion Ind. ................... 14 1{1.
Friday
admissions - Rhonda
Oty Holding ...................... 33 1{1.
Stov~.
Middleport.
.
Federal Mogul ................... 25 3/8
Friday
dischar!!es
- Mary Carr
·
GoudyearT&amp;:R ........ ,.........43 1/4
Lands End ..........................42 1/4 and Walter Wears, both of
Limited Inc...................... .. 20 1/8 Pomeroy.
Saturday admissions- None.
Multimedia Inc . ................. 36 1/8
Saturday discharges ~ Rhonda
Point Bancoop ................. ........ .14
SlOver,
Middleport.
Rax Restaurant.. ......................03
Sunday
admissions - Clarence
Reliance Electtic ................ l6 718
Messer,
Pomeroy.
Robbins&amp;:Myers ...................... 16
Sunday discharges - Robert
Shoney' s Inc ............................22
Barrett,
Middleport.
Star Bank ...........................34 3/4
Wendy lnt'l... ......... ....... ..... l6 318
Wonhington lnd ........... ..... l6 3{4
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
Stock reports are tbe 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
446·4524
ol GallipoUs.

.
Funeral
services
will
be held at
Clay Golden
Wednesday
at
the
White1
p.m.
Clay Carl Golden, 79, of Stew- Blower Fu~ Home in Coolville.
an. died Sunday, Nov. 7,1993, at
D Obi'
Coolville at h1s daughter's resi- Burial will be m the Torch Celne· R
tery
at
Torch.
Friends
may
call
at
osa
•
mger
dence.
the
.{uneral
horne
Tuesday
from
7
•
Rosa
D.
01111nger.
78, Pomeroy.
Bprn on April 3, 1914 in
109p.m.
died
Sunday,
Nov.
7, 1993, at
CoolVille, he was the son of ihe late
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
Charles and Bertha Walton Golden. Arthur Kibble
Pleasant, W.Va.
He worked for die Guard Rail Construction Co. for many years and
·Funeral services for Arthur H.
A housewife and homemaker,
then went into the limber business Kibble, 63, TuJIIICrs Plains, who she was born June 21 , 1915, in
for himself.
died Nov. 6, 1993, wi!l be held Athens County., daughter of the late
He is survived by his wife. Tuesday at I p.m. at '?t'hite-Biower Pearl and Belle Tittle.
She was a member of the
Audrey Dunfee Golden, of Stewan; . FUDellll Home, CoolvJ!~, not at 11
a son and daughter-in-law, Clay a.sls . as reported earher by the. Lutheran Church and affiliated
with the l',feigs County Senior Citiand Qndy Golden of Stewan; two fuDCI'!" home. ·
daughters and sons-in-law, Bertha
Friends may call today from 2-4 zens Center.
Surviving is a daughter-in-law,
and Jim Stone of Coolville, and and 7-9 p.m. at the funcnll home.
Gall
Ohlinger, Pomeroy; two
Judy .and Chris Dicken of Little Leda Kraeuter
grandchildren,
Jeffrey and Jennifer
Hocking; a stepson and step daugh·
·
·
ter-in-law, Ralph and Diana DunL:eda _Mae Kraeuter, 61, of Ohlinger, both of Pomeroy; and
fee of Cutler; three brothers, Racme, died Slllll!ay•. Nov. 7, 1993 seven grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by
Clarence Golden of Carroll , D! !l'C.Pomeroy Nursmg and Rebaher husband, Troy Ohlinger Sr..
Woody Golden .o f Canaanville; and b11itauon Center.
.
Roy Golden of Nelsonville; three
Born on June 4, 1932 at Racme, and a son, Troy Ohlinger Jr.
sisters, 1neze Devaux and Dorothy she was the dau.ghter of Eldon
Services will be held II a.m.
Shanka;.both of Bl!ltinrore, Md. and Kra~uter or Rac'll~. ~ncl tll~_.late
:=r~ .
Milllred Wagner of Lancaster; L~1lle Byers Kraeuter•. She was a
seven grandcbild{en, and several reured ho~e econo~1cs school Hines of 1ciating. Burial will folnieces and nephews. He was pre- teacher havm.g taught m t!Je Aman- low in Beech Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call Wednesday
cedi:d iq death by his parenlS and da, Nels~nvl!le and ~e1gs Local
foui brothers .Cliff John Ralph school dutncta. She. graduated from 7-9 p.m.
and Howar,d. '
· ·'
'
from Ohio University in 19!53. •
N.eIsOD· D• Watson
Funeral ser.vices will 'be held
She was a member of the Racme
Thursday at 1 p.m at White-Blower United. Mt!bbdist Qsurch, ~r
Nelson David Watson, 81 ,
Funeral Home· in Coolville. The Council 323, Daugh~ of Amen- Pomeroy, died Sunday, Nov. 7,
Rev, John ~insker will officiate ca. the Pas~. C~unc1l~rs Club of 1993, at Holzer Medical Center in
and burial will be in the Torch Chester Council. Racme Chapter GaUipolis.
Cemetery. Friends may call at the 134, ~of the ~~m Star,l!'d
Born Jan. 13. 1912. ir) East Livfuneral home. Wednesday. 3 to 5 the Amencan Vocalloilal Assocsa- erpool, he was the son of the' late
p.m..and 7 10 9 p.m.
lion.
Leo and Jerusha Pickens'WalSon.
In addition to her father, she is He was a carpenter and a member
Carolyn Hapney
survived by two sisters and broth- of the Hillside Baptist Oturch.
ers-in-law, Dolores and Larry
Surviving are five daughters and
Carolyn S. Hapney, 56, of Wolfe and Robena and pale Maid- sons-in -Ia w, Opal and Clarence
Coolville, died Saturday, Nov. 6, ens. a niece and her husband, Laren Conger of Ponland, Christine and
1993, .at Camden-Clark Memorial Mae and Tony Rifne, another Harold Rose of Racine, Sharlene
Hospital, Parkersburg, W. Va. after niece, Chrisli Maidens, and a and Roben Foreman of Pomeroy,
an extended illness.
nephew Colin ~aidens, all ·Of Tabitha and Edward Howard of
She was born in Coolville, a Racine; a ne.Phew and his wife, Pomeroy and Pauletta WalSon; four
daughter of the late Alva and Sarah Kent and Jod1 Wolfe of Kingston; sons and daughters-in-law, S18Rley
Sh,anks Baker. She was a h()me- one great niece' Whilney Riffie of E. and Evelyn Watson of RuUand,
maker, and a member of the King- Racine, and three great ilephews, Marion and Edith Watson of
dom Oturch, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Wesley Riffle. Ryan and Kort Pomeroy, Rick Watson of
Surviving are her husband, Rus- Wolfe, along with several cousins.
Pomeroy, Terry WalSOn of Racine;
sell Hapney; four sons, Michael
Funeral services will be held 33 grandchildren and 24 grealHapney of Uttle Hocking, Donald Wednesday &amp;\ I p.m. al the Ewing grandchildren.
Hapney and Rbben Hapney, both Funeral Home, Pomeroy. The Rev.
Also surviving is a sister•.Cora
of Torch, and Larry Hapney of Ken ~olter will officiate and'burial Jacobson of Tucson, Ariz., and a
Parkersburg, W.Va.; 1wo daugh- will be in the Letan Falls Ceme- brother, Walter Watson of Park.ersters; Regina ~oss of Coolville, and tery. Friends,may call at the funeral
burg, W.Va.
Cynthia Hapney of Torch; six home Tuesday from 2 to 4 and 7 10
He was preceded in death by a
grandchildren; three bro\hers. ·Ray- 9 p.m.
.
wife, Mary Watson Pickens; a son,
mond Baker of Vincent, Olen
Memorial services will be con· Larry Robert WalSon; two brothers,
Baker of Alws, Okla., and Harold dueled by the Eastern Star at 6:30 Clyde and Russell WalSOn, and a
Bater of Sacramento, Calif.; and p.m. and by the Daughters of sister, Ruby Swain.
one·siSter ~ Brooks of Cleve- America at 7 p.m.
Services will be held 10 a.m.
II!Jlil.
,
Wednesday al Ewing Funeral
She was preceded in death by Nathan Moore
Home in Pomeroy with the Rev.
one sister, Thelma Sanders.
Nathan (Nate) ~oore, 53, of Paul Taylor officiating. Burial will
Hartford, W. Va., died Sunday, foUow in Beech Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call Tuesday from
Nov.
7, 1993, at Holzer ~edical
· The Dally Sentinel
2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
l!::::=::;;;i;;;======l
Center.
(USPS 2Jl.Mt)
He was born Ianuary 8, 1940, in
Publlhed every aftemoon, Monday dwouah
Glasgow, W. Va., son of the late ------Meigs announcements----Fric!ly, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio by the .
O!tlo Volley PubtlahiDa C.mp~~~yholu!Umodla . Ralph w. Moore, s~.. and Benha .
Jae., Pomeroy, Ohio •s769, Ph. 992-2156.
H. M~. who SJ1nr1ves. He mar- Community association to meet
on Buw:mut A•enue in Pomeroy.
Secold CIMI pou..e pald It Pomwy, QUo,
ried Marilyn Smith, wbo survives
The ~iddleport Community
Tho Alooc:llled Pnol. ud lloe Olllo · along witlt lhree daughters, P!l"'
Aasociation
will meet 7 p.m. Tues- Rocksprings Grante meetlna
NeWiplper Auodlllion, NatJoaal Ad\'ei'UIJq
Honaker, Hanford, W. Va.; Nma day at ~es Bank in Middlepon.
The Rocksprings Grange will
RepraentK.Ive, Br.ahlm Nowtptpw SliM.
Moore,
Rand,
W.
Va.,
and
A
n
gie
meet
Thursday at 8 p.m. Membcn
133 Ttllrd Anauc, New York. Nf w York
All welcome.
Brown, Lizemores, W. Va; two
10017. I
.
encouraged 10 aaend.
step-dauiJiters, Pllricia Shamblin Genealoclc:a1 society meetlne
POSTMAS'IU.: Send llddr., dllllet to 'lbt
and ~ichelle Shamblin, both of slated
OaliJ·SeD.tluel, Ill Cowl SL, Pometoy, Ohio
SHS Athletic Boosters
'
-45769,1
Hartford; two sisters, ~ MulSouthern High School Athletic
The
Meigs
County
Genealogical
'
' SUasCIIIPI10N RATES
lett and Debbie ~oore, both of Society will meet S: IS p.m. Tues- Boosters wiU meet Tuesday Ill 7:30
(BilliG IOCIII Dlllft IIDa
a, c.rl• • Motor Ra.l•
I " '1'111 1'ftla
Glasgow and one brother, Ralph day at tile Meigs County Museum' p.m. in the high school cafeteria.
a.. w.~t................................................. .st.tiO
;[rt Clltt riCATIS &amp;Y~I~ I
W. Moore, Jr., of SL Albans, W.
00. Mojollo. :_..... ,................................_•..$6.9l
oo. v-.........................................- ..S83.l0 Va. Six grandchildren survive.
SIIIGLI COPY ,
~; Moon: was was a tiverbcel
.
I'IUCI
. pilot fer 28 years. He was • U. S.
DIUJ•-"""'"''"''""""';,,.,.,.w.... 3.5 CeD.tl
· Navy Verenn, and a member of the
suliocraMn
,., c~oo~.i,.
Church ' of: the Nazarene, and
red II lldYMCII dJnct
Dill)' Seltilel
oo I dll., ... « t2 ..,.llo baoiL Coodll wUI be
Smith-Capehan VFW Post 9926,
.. ... ..-...:~~net.
.
~.w.v..
.
No llll)ecrlp6oDI by mail permiUt4 iD WtM
DOWN
PEIIONTH
API
Services
will
be
held
2 p.m.,
_...,.. ............-to.
Tuesdayf November 9, 1993, at the
Foglesong Funeral Home In
.
.-Molp
~. W. Va., with Rev~ KeiJneth
I! ..........................- ................ .$21.84
l6 ~ ... ~ " ' '"""'+·· .... " ......,.,........ .143.16
B.
NCidcihiser offic~ . . .
l l -.,...,.,.. ,,.,,,.,,,,.:...M"'"'"""'''"JM,76
Burial will be In Sunriso MemOOoiMo Molp Cwoll'

Coal...

J::'=::::

Hospital news

Stocks

7

Welfare ...
Continued from page 1
mainsuearn Democrais liked what
they heard and don' t want to' sec •
the core of his ref01111 - lirne-ljmited assistance - compromised,•' .
said Will ~hall. pre$idenl ol the
Progressive Policy lnstilute, 1
WashingtOn think tank has tics to•
the centrist Democratic teidmNp:
Council . One of the DLC 's.
founders was Bill Clinton when he
was a govemor.
House Republicans also like the ,
idea of time limilS, work R:qui- :
ments.
,
"What we ' ve set fo rward is •
consistent with what Ointon cam-.
palgned on,'' said Rep. Rick Santo- .
rum of Pennsylvania, ranking
Republican on the House Ways and~
Means subcommittee with jurisdic- .
tion over welfare programs.
"We're not going to back off."
'
The GOP's legislation wo.u ld•
ban public assistance to most noncitizens. It gives welfare rec:i~u ­
two years from die time they join
the rolls 10 find or prepare for a;
job. If they don't have ajob It !he':
end of two years, they would bave
to panicipate in a work program ,
established by the state.
•
The bill would also require
mothers on welfare 10 cooperate•
with their state child support"
enforcement agency 10 establish ·
paternity, and fathers with children ·
on welfare would be required to
pay child support or work. States:
could refuse 10 pay welfare benefits.'
to unmarried teen parcnlS.
,
A Republican skeptic of the '
plan. Rep. Jan ~eyers of Kansas•.
said it sets up il "giant federal"
work program that won't func- ·
lion.' '

"I don ' t know why they can ' t
look at the record and see that this.
is ellBCtly the same thing we did in~
1988. They'll spend $10 billion 10·
$1 S billion and nothing will happen. They'll have less than 1 JICI'- ,
cenl of th e welfare population:
working," said Meyers, who favors
ending Aid to Families with ,
Dependent Children. and giving the ;
money to the states m the f!l'ln of a
block grant for indi~ent families.

Could your family
afford to take
care of you?
Health care for senior ciliuns
is e&gt;cpensi..... So ~ risk )'OUr
life savings or )'OUr lomily"s
6nanciol status by no1 J"I'Oiing
for !he future. Call us for oR !he
details about tluliuuwido'slong
Term Health C..... Plan.

-li!WDI·

·NOVDIBU FINANCING SPECIA£ *

"'I'IY.,. _,. ·""'
to,..

. ' · -·.,..=·

II -

..........-.......................... _ .... .$23.40

21 Wlllll....-.,...........t ..••:..···""'"'"'''.M$:.50·

152

¥.,..............................:......
..

;40

0
•10°
FOIOIIYW

s10°0

rial Oardens.

. Friends m~y call a,t tho
Folleaotig Funtol Home oo Mon-.

...

,,

.

0%

I

on chromosome 19. About 79 )JCI'-:
cent of the population has _- least:
one copy of an apoE ·variiJJt called •
E3. There are about .14 percen(
with at least one copy of E4, and.
only about 7 percent with copies of'_
a third variant called E2.
The apoE research, which was
supporled by olher researchen
reporting at Sunday's symposium;
showed that people with two COllies
of the E4 gene had 11 10 17 times
greater risk of developing'
Alzheimer's. Even with only .one.
E4 gene, the risk was about five
times grealer than arnons people
with no E4 genes.

JEFF WAINEI
INSUUNCE

113 .... 21111 ......
Po•roy, OL 45769
Pll. 614/H2·5479

.NATIONWmE
Q~~tt!-!C!

�•

The .Daily

I

Sent~el

"

Bt9LIK£!}! p~~t~?o:!~u !ith~~?!~! T~!:O~YJ!~
o111r, cRalllsabouL

.

'I've known John as a fn~nd
fqr a lot of years. You could Just
see the conftdeiK:e. the comfOII fac·
101', lbat he has with dtal oft'euc,"
K:osar said Sunday after Elway
threw for 244 yards and three
touchdowns as the Deaver Broncos
beattheCievclandBrowns29-l~.
EIWiy etnered ~ same leadins

and

tl'!e NFL 1n passmg yardage,
aiiCIIlpiS
IOQ!:hdown ~·as
quanerbaclt or Cite AFC s hi11tes1
scoring te110 His satrinl ~ to

Shamon Sharpe brought his . _ .
10181 to IS, only seven away from
the career high of 22 be set in
198S.
'"I just think now, with his
offensive coordinator from college
(Jim Fassel) and a lot of new
~around him- they rully
re-dtd their offensive line in the
offseason - you could just sec his
confidence when he goes back "
Kosar said.
'
The Browns (5-3) haven't been
nearly as kind to Kosar, installing a
conservative offense that coach Bill
Belichick decided could be beu.er
run by Vinny Testaverde Kosar
started Sunda after
Ccks

Soalb

- • Football • -

--

AMERICAN CONFDENCE
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Tcnn.oo45, Lou.iMlle 10
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is nursing a separated shoulder.
" I really don't fee! like. I've
been ~one tbat long," Kosar said.
"It didn't feel any different from
any other 811ln."
Denver (S-3) took control early,
missing a cbance to score on their
first possession when Robert
Delpino fumbled near the Cleve·
land goal line, buiiCOring on their
third and fourth series on Elway's
touchdown passes to Milburn and
Russell.
Milburn caught a 1wo-yarder on
a rollout to the ri&amp;ht, set up by
Elway's 56-yard pass to Vance
Johnson Russell found a seam in
h B ·
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of their most impressive and repre·
sen ted the team's biggest comeback in Cowher's two seasons as
coach.
Pretty? No. Telling? Yes.
"We've really matured from lhe
standpoint of being able to deal
with adversity," Cowher said
They made their OlNII adversily
against a learn that's known noth·
ing but adversity. Darryl Williams
returned an interception 97 yards ·
for a touchdown and O'Donnell
fumbled away the next snap from
center, selling up Jay Schroeder's
7-yard to~chdown pass to Jeff
Query.
With 3:50 left in the rii'St half,
the Bengals were ahead 16-0 and
sensing this could be the week they
finally won. The 51,202 fans at
Riverfront Stadium were.celebrat·
ing and 0' Donnell was 'lrYing' '10"
figure oul what was happening.
(See STEELERS on Pale 5)

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.FOR MORE. INFORltATION . ,

'

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1Atc6

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'

C•ll ·l y 2:00 '·'-'··Friday.
for .Su1day Edition
'
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'
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'

'

By ED SCHUYLER JR.
The fight was a passionate one,
LAS VEGAS (AP)- New !'flark~d by sharp exchang~s,
heavxweight champion Evander mcluding three after die bell ending
Holyfield was in a cfmcb with Rid- the founh, ninth and flnal rounds.
dick Bowe when he looked up and
'.'1 think we've got to do .it
saw ascary sign of lite times.
agam," the 26-year-old Bowe wd
Holyfield quickly backed away at a news conference with Holy·
from Bowe and took a step to lhe field .Sunday. "It was extremely
right, continuing to look toward close."
Bowe's comer.
Judge Patricia Jarman scored it
IIS-114 and Jerry Roth scored it
1 "1 didn't know what he was
running from," Bowe said
115-113 for Holyfield. Judge
. Holyfield had seen a man Chuck Giampa scored illl4-ll4.
strapped into a propeller-driven
'"If I fight again, we'll do it
parajllider crash into the rope~. again," the 32-year-old Holyfield
causmg the seventh round of hts said. but added, "It comes down to
UJ)e-n:gainins victory to be halted who I get the most money with."
for 21 minutes Saturday nildtL
The 6-foot-S Bowe won the ftrst
,. "It was scary," HolyrlCid said three rounds on 1wo of the off'tcials
~~~didn't know if the man had cards and 1wo of the ftrst three on
~ething or not. What were his the third. Holyfield won rounds 4,
intentioos?"
S and 6 on au three cards and had
"Athletes are asking that qu~tion Bowe on the verge of a knockdown
more and more as fans increasingly in the fifth.
in_vade their pJaying fields and
Bowe, who appeared to be in
~orne a threat, to lite competitors shape at 246 pounds, was asked if
and themselves.
"I thought about thai ,irl who
&amp;OJ stabhed," Holyflel\1 wd, refer•
•••
ring to tennis star Monica Seles. (Continued from Page 4)
sllC was stabbed durinf! a match at
f!iimburg, Germany, thtS year by a
"They played great defense. For
fan upset that Selea was ranked an 0..8 team, they really surprised
ahead of Stefli Graf.
me," O'Donnell said. "They're a
James Miller, .30, of Las Vegas. good football team defensively."
was arrested and cltarKed with dan·
In the next 3:SO, O'Donnell and
gcrous flying Saturdiy night. He the Steelers showed how good they
wa5 released on $200 bail at 2:38 can be offensively.
Sundii
The Bengals had decided 10 sura.mWhy Mfiier flew into the arena prise Pillsburgh by blitzing a loL
was not blown. A telephone call to ~ce the Stec:l~ figured that out,
what W8S thought to be hiS teSi• 0 Donnell~ It look eBSf•
dence brought forth this recorded
.He read a bbtt and saw tigh~ end
message:
.
Enc Green ~n down ,the m1ddle
•"I've never jwnped off a bridge of the fie!~. O'~nnell s soft pass
with a bungee cord attached to me . htt Green m strtdc for a 71-yard
before ·while 'ltolding on~ a .phone t?I!Ch~ play, the longest or lhe
~er. Who called me cbtclteit? usht.cnd s~.
.
The stadtum went s1len1. The
I' !I! not chicken? If I· don't live
th. ough this, please leave your fans. knew the game ~d turned and
name and number.
so did the Steelers.
.
"One. two three aiiijr«A:!"
"You're down I~ pomls and
,;.The fight can stand on its own loo~\ng for some~hmg to spa.rt
at;, conversation piece· especially r,au. · receiver Dw~ght Stone S8ld.
in 'the wlte of Bowe·i twO quiet 'I dbft't think we could have called
viC'IOrics over Michael Doltes ~ · a better play."
.
Jease ferguson in defense or tbe The S~ers aot the ball back
IQf and WBA titles and Lennox and did it,agai!IJ ctittirig the half·
L! wis • unimpreasive .yins over lime dcftc:it lo lo-14 when O'Donr'oi\ 1'ucker and Frank Bnmo.
, nell fOIIIIII Meail H.Oge open ror a
had said that his main nine-yard touchdOwn pass with
~ when' he loll 10 Bowe pn a ei&amp;ltt IIIICOild,s left.
·
I2:JQmd ltecisiOn last' Nov. 13 was . 1'be BeJiia1s had lOSt au or their
t1\il he was 100 intent in aylna to momentum.
liliilct OUt BoWe. ·
. .
"That'a what the - ~ Ia all
'JIIll!filty night/ he often fought abjlut," Bengala quanerback lay
· itiP!o Willi the much blUer Bowe, SCbrOodor li8ld. "Teams are evenly
biii he lito 11tyed ·awry quito a bit mall:hed. Guys ~ Clll make big
BOwo loU of movement. PlaY~ beve to atqi up and make big
blm off blllnee.
playa. They did II today."
(
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!
·

Tuesday'111111•

EA$1'UN CONFI!RINCE
Tiooi '
WL .... OI

Las Vqas, wtiere Holyfield won lo regain the title
he lost to him last year. (AP)

Holyfield beats Bowe to recapture
heavyweight title after crash delay

- •.

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..~.2 0I 1.000
.........
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BOOM! - Riddick Bowe (ricbt)·laads a long
lert to lbe nose or Evaader Holyfteld durin1 Satur·
diy n~JII~MYlfN'!IF, ~~a.vnrelllll ~ltle r.,bt In

·'

!:oiL 27, r - 1

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10 shota
J.lllle while the
Cl!ppen Win ,....1111 OUl to • 13.0

'

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s=' ,_ ••1Mukwt Clth. 6

SuD1131,Kinp 110
Kevin Iohnson sc:orM 32 points
and had 14 assists while Charles
Barkley added 26 points as
Phoenix held. o~ Sacramenta. Phoenix
from its
opening ni&amp;hlloa to the Los Angcles Laken by dominating under the
basket, outrebounding. the Kings
SS-38;
,
Mitch Richmond tried to keep
Sacramento close after die Kings
feU behind by as much as 36 in the
third quarter, scoring 25 points
·

·/ '

~5,.....,_4

Pontmouth Neue Demo 41, Madilon
-27
Soodlllky SL 1\luy'• 21, r.w... Ediooo
7
Sllabr H•. 21, OuftaW, Hta. Trinit'

The school contends thai because
Goodwin has a learning disability
and .requires special education,
state and federal laws and the
OHSAA 's brlaws allow him to
participate 1n athletics at the
school, regardless of guardianship.
Four of last year ' s rive state
champions - Cleveland St.
Ignatius in Division I, SL Marys in
Division n. Cincinnati Academy of
Physical Education in Division IV
and SL Henry in Division V- will
be returning to defend dleir lilies.
The only 1992 winner not !0 make
the playoffs was Mentor Lake
Catholic, which finished 24th in
Region 9 of Division Ill.
St. Ignatius will be.altenlplin,S to
make 11 three champtonsh1ps m a
row and five titles in the last six
years in the big-school division.
The Wildcats also won titles in
1988, 19891111d 1991.
St. Marys and SL Henry will be
gain¥ after their third championshtps in four years. Both also
won division honors in 1990 .
CAPE is a lwo-lime stale champi·
on, with .previous victories in 1985
and 1986.
Cincinnati Moeller and Newarlc
Catholic both will be ancmpeing to
win their eighth state crown.
Moeller won .division champi- ·
unships in 1975, 1976, 1977,.1979,
1980, 1982 and 1985 while Newarlc
Catholic took stale titles in 1978,
1982, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987 and
1991 and will be lrying to·reaclt lhe
semifinals for the 18th lime in the
tournament's 22-year history.
Moeller is a 13-lime semifinalisL
Twelve other former state champions also are in the playoffs. They
are Cincinnati Princeton (1978,
1983 and 1987) and Canton
McKinley (1981) in Division I;
Fostoria (1991) in Division II;
Cleveland Benedictine (1973, 1980
and 1981), Ironton (1979 and 1989)
and Hamilton Badin (1990) in
Division Ill; Carey (1975),
Crooksville (1977), Versailles
(1990) and Warren Kennedy
(1991) in Division IV and Marion
Pleasant (1972) and McComb
(1983) in Division V.

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~-

$8~00

THIS SPACE
$12100

Judge William Gillie on Wednes·
day issued a temporary resuaining
order reversing the OHSAA decisian pending the outcome of the
hearing.
If the forfeits stand, Westerville
North will finish sixth in Region 3
of Division I and will not enter the
playoffs. which involve the top
four teams in each of 20 regions as
listed in the OHSAA's computer
rankings. But if the forfeits are dis·
allowed, Westerville North will
finish second in the region, bumping Lima Senior from a playoff
spot
The OHSAA ordered the forfeits-because it said the guardianof Westeryille North player
Goodwm, a

~.

Tunpo Bay ali.Y. . . . _ 7,35 p.m.

. (I'Ll Jtcmcdy

COLUMBUS Ohio (AP)The fteld for this 'year's stale high
schoolfootbellptayoffsiscomplete
-almost.
Seventy-nine teams know with
certaiitty that they will be involved
in postseason action this weekend.
But it's up to a judge to determine
the 80th and final spot when he
rules on an eligibility case after a
hearing tOday.
The case mvoiYes lwo early-season vil;:tories b)' Westerville North
High Schoolm which the Ohio
High School Athletic Association
deiCflllined an ineUgt'ble player was
used.
·
The OHSAA ordered that the
victories be .fo~feited, ~ut t~e
school took the ISSue 10 Franklm .

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THIS SPACE

W'onnll"'l,- I (tie)
CUclp),S'
pO

:t~t 12 points,IOinthesec- ~::-

'•

',

4,8olfolo 3

Ironton, Fairland to meet in state playoffs

.--

CALL
.NOW

v......,. 5, P..U.0 ""'olp'Pbi12

=mille Cowtb ..,.a
WJth;.ue . :~
t'1
~ • Ylllln
W:!!:'wi~~=·
&amp;ee
-nu Dell
_ ihe l..ol A t,to
·~' . "!6 ..-.
, •"'cr
Cltpper.;,:~=~'!.,-hOme
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•
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•

'

THIS SPACE

poinll and Matk Price scored 19
Nell 99, Spun 73
rorCievdand.
Derrick Coleman scored 29
Elsewhere in ~fie NBA it was poiniS and Kenny Anderton a4ded
New Jersey 99, San AntOnio 73; 19 u the visiting Jl!cw Jeney Nels
Phoenix 132, Sacramento 110; defeated San Antonio~73.
Deaver 99, the Los An eles Cti •
Coleman also contrtbuted 13
pen 97; and HOUSIOD 1~. ~ re~ounds and Anderson had 10
92.
8SSISIS.
San Antonio was led by Willie
Andcnon with 14 points
Dale

~.

B·engals still winless

SuDday'ollCOI'H

tip-in of a miJSed shot by Stll'ks
Pill the Knicb ahead ror good at
109-107 with two minutes left.
Ma~n dlen ~- a 15-footer and
EWlllg ICIIIed It wtth four foul shots
down the alrelch.
Brad Dausheny had 26 poin11
and II rebounds, Danny Ferry
matched his career high with 21
·

.-..

. -.

MllmJ ,._ 31, O.y.l&lt;lr..... 6
0 ..
Nlami 27• , ........... Nowlllt C.th. 19, Col. Ac141my 3
N...... Sl. ...., :M, M.. I .w. 7

.

ioJ

Tanh!bt'l Pnl•

U...Catb. 33,~ 13
LoninElol23, Lonin.SoS....,olmo&gt;iono I
l.u1bmd Yl. 42, C6tumbio 16
- 6 1, 1-scio6

6

:.1

'

TOIOIMSPP t•'hS
St. Louil6. ,.. 1 5 (0'1')
................ l'ltto..... 3

-

,_ .

ot.5
60
5I
57
64

Colaa74,-l

LU•Calh. 21,0.. VA..SJ7

1Ak111M St. Bdwud 21,,-.. tJ
I ¢dl1001• 3D, Pllbpan Hatdinat•
IMDoa·Monroa •2. MW1ctown

50
65
36
36
42

S.Jimtmd 3

llowbn 21,lllyrio C.lh. 0

. .t(

""!W· .. ·'·~~&gt;Ii ' ' " ')t'&gt;or,.

59 50

2

Florida 3, Q.- I
New Jenor 2. S..."JOH 1

E - Ridp 37, u.toon. 7

. "&gt;' o)tr

, w~-~~~·~{}~~~· :if{&lt; -1 "·
MAKES CATCH - Cleveland safety Eric: Turner ·(19) watches
Denver wide receiver Vance Jobosoo make tbe caleb or Ibis Jobn
Elway pass to complete a Sli-yard pass play in lite second qoarter or
Sunday's AFC game in Cleveland, where tbe Broncos woo 19-14.
Tbe caleb set up lbe Broncos' first touchdown. (AP)

limes.
.
.
The Knicb' defense took over
in o-ume, limiting the Cavs to l·
of-9 shootinJ and holding them
scorelen ~m 1be field over the
final row mtnutea.
Ewing, Charles Oakley and
Anthony Mason each scored four
points in the extra period. Oakley's
·

•

59 56

..W..
,._""''·-···
N.Y.

...,.,

31
54
49
57

Saturda~'l l&lt;lll'fl

N.Y. ._4,

PRIIIIa.t St. lOMph 32, Po1l0ria S&amp;.

w-..o

1

OPGA.
64 37

41
ll
51
l6

..

AVAILABLE
IN THE

52 59
9 5059

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Saturday's action

-

NOW

Ohio H~S.scores
Alina E. 26,Aiuon B - 0
Alina Oufiold 40, Alina N. 14
Atrul K
on 6, Ab:. PlNuae 0

m
ree-pomter
th atn ~orced ovcnillte.
New ~ode
CMnlllallJ,JlOI!ed 1 I!S-107 vtc:toey:,at die Richf!Cid CoJ\sellm. .
' S~. ,who had mis$ed rune of
~
~S::idesanttbata ~ed.
witb
.... . b tt
03
1·7 ~ 1.,..m
reg• ..on.
·
.. To be able to gel,off a three
if!/en they know that s thcr.only
1 ing t~at can ~e~t lh~!" u. an
accomplislunc:nt 10 )~If... Kmcks
coach Pat Rd~y said. 1ohn Is
Capable of oWing ~ shoes, ~
~had adgood lthOU:·'"Lh He got his
egs un ern~
tm, e wenl up
SI!:Ong, and I ve SCCII that too

':1;:

BULLETIN BOA:RD

13 ll060
1

~~=-:ec':pom~and
1

'

10

Oa.owo ........... ,. 4 6 2
Blllfllo.............. 4 9 1
Hartftn ............ 3 II 1

~ng

liY
a big fttSI-half lead Sunday _mgltt. ~~ could 1101 ho!d on as

By JOE KAY
week.
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
The Broncos ran for 159 yards, Pittsburgh Steelers are trying to
the most allowed by the Browns · change their illl88e. The NFL's top
defensive team wants 10 be known
this season.
.
Kosar was 16-of-30 for 226 for its offense, too.
"Offensively,
we've
been
movyards, n11mbers that were inflated
by the late touchdown drive. He ing the ball the last rive weeks
against everybody," coach B.ill
was sacked six times.
Eric Metcalf, who returned lwo Cowher said. "As I told the team,
punts for touchdowns in Cleve- the only ~~COple that can slop us
land's previous game, fielded only right now ts us."
The Steelers did a good job of
one punt, a fair catch.
that in lbe rii'St half Sunday, helpThe loss was the most lopsided ing the winless Cincinnati Bengais
al home in Bill Belichick's three go ahead 16-0 on a pair of
turnovers. Then lbey got moving
years as the Browns' coach.
"We were 5-2 coming into behind Neil O'Donnell, who lhrcw
today, and we didn't get here play- two touchdown passes in a 24-16
ing the way we did today," victory that left them tied with
Belichick said. "We were out- Cleveland atop lhe AFC Central
played, outcoached, out-every- Division.
The Steelers (5·3) have won five
thing. I thougtu lhe bye week was
last weelc. but we made it look like of their last six games and have
averaged 30 points per game in that
it was this week."
span. Their latest victory was one

20 55 55
II ot.533
17 4640

- . .... ....... I 4 2
s ................... 6 4 l

';~·ea~cnsho~theirstuff

his calf muscle in practice last .

r....,.o., .......

llillf

Pnu ·

York Knl~
~w
an
1

:J:·

son.

;~:.:~~=ti!~r::J:~
umes for 82 yards desp1te strauung

.a send dle' N

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...

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u.~~!_1t~JIIII1P« ~lbRon

·-,... wuu .... ...., poilU, wt T1

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llliued~rust

u--•n•

.

.
Y ';"---.. led the Clippers
Wllh 33 pomts.
·
Rocket&amp; 106. ~ Bluen '1
Hakee~ Olajuwon •aco~ 29
pomts, 1,2. '!' die fourlb quaner, to
~~er vtS::f'J !::*'fcl~.:!otl'l?*t·
;n .1•B':a::, J:_~ · r,
tal .
.
Ill
1t11t or
fust WIIC 1 ~ 1986.
..
Cliff RobinJon
25 JXII!IIS
for Portland
Keany Sinitb
added 20 for die

'.
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the fact that he had to reduce from
closcto300poundshunhim.
"I don't think lhe weight was a
factor," he said. "Evander just
fought better."
Bowe also didn't think the 21minute delay in the seventh round
hurt him, although he appeared to
have his legs back and was dominating lhe action witb left jabs and
combinations 10 the head when
Miller dropped in. Holyfield controlled the action when the round
resumed.
Mill&amp;'s chu~ called a parasail, ·
caught m the ltghts on the nng
canopy and he was swung into lhe
ropes. When he fell to the arena
noo~, several fans started beating
on htm,
The cage enclosing Miller's propeller hit Bernard Brooks Sr. of
Washington on the head. Brooks, a
men:'ber of Bowe's entourage,
required sbtches.
'~ ,

O'Donnell hit passes of 19, 17
and 21 yards in a 10-play, 58-yard
drive 10 the winning points. Barry
Foster scored from one yard out to
put Pittsburgh ahead early in the
fourth quaner. He finished with
I20 yards rushing.
Gary Anderson added a 23-yard
field goal with 4:31 left, finishing
off a 1 1/2-minute drive that finished off the tired Ben~als.
"The one thing we ve been able
to do is wear teams down,"
Cowher said.
The ilengals h~ve worn out all
explanations ror the third 0-8 start
in franchise history. The least·
experienced learn in the NFL ean
slay with teams, because six of irs
defeats bave been by no more than
13 points. But it lOOks lite a bunch
of rookies when lhe game is on the
line in the second half.
"I think that may have something to do with it," coacli Dave
Shula said. "When it comes 10
crunch time in the ballaame, we're
not gelling it done in alf'pbalcs...
By c:ontrast;.touib S)lOIB brotJ8ht
out the best in the SleelQ'S on Sunday. They repoa'tedly converted
long·:tanla&amp;l: downa, with O'Don·
nelf hutingll pas8cl of 10 yards or
more•

r-

SAVEUPTO

,

1

I
I

I·
There's never
been a better time
to get a Bank One

advantage you
don't get With
other types of
Home Equity Une:" financing.*
Best of all, you
Interest rates are
still at some of the pay no closiltg
costs-including
lowest levels in
attorneys fees and
years. And your

recording of the
deed. Services
that would cost
you as much as
:&gt;400.
To apply for a
home equtty line,
stop by the nearest
mterest payments appraisal charges, BaiikOne.
are tax deductible plus the cost of the · Or, if you prefer, simply call us
in most cases, ait ' title search and

at 446-0902 or
1-800677-4994.
And cut your closLI,Ig costs down to

BANKEONE.
SIZe.

~r.ier it takes:
-Ono.~NA

-FiliC

''•

•"Guys are making bil plays,"
wd O'Donnell, who completed 14
?_f 34 pus •nempts ,fot: 244 yards.
'?~ bcllevcs mIL Wben it's
lhtrd-and-lotur 1 everybody says
'Let's make iL 1'1
'

•

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.. l .H!! .)

::!;i.W:.,

·•

Steeler.'S w;n

tf.t"

'

The Deily S•ntlnal Page 5

sets
stage
for
Knicks'
115-107
win
over
Cavs
in
OT
.
·
: 'l'lll~~
~

10 ~ C~mc:r,-~~out
.• With Michllel Jordan.110 1
• •
!"'let
=f~ ~=d~11 Cava;
fl
. •10 v
one
:vonrcntes
r·
make!
the!
~hConh
re _ ce ma s a ong wtl t e•

the safety awal by
looking to the other side o the
field, for a 38-yard touchdown.
In between, Reggie Riv.ers
blocked a ·punt by Cleveland's
Brian Hansen oul of the end zone
for a safety that. contributed to Denver's 16-0 halftime lead.
,
In the third quarter. Sharpe
caught a 33-yard touchdown pass
that was a carbon copy of Russell's
reception.
·
The key to all the long passes,
Elwa&gt;: said, was the work of the
offenstve line.
.
"I got so much bme to thro~.
and I was able to look off 1he1r
safeties," he said. "You can infiu·
ence them with your eyes. Their
whole defense is that way, and we
did it a couple times lo their
linebacl&lt;en...
Cleveland didn't get into Den·
ver territory until late in the first
half, on a drive that ended with a
missed 49-yard field goal. Kosar
rmally got the Browns moving by
using a no-huddle offense in the
third quarter, driving 69 yards in
nine plays capped by an eight-yard
touchdown pass to Michael JackThat was it, however, until
Kosar connected with Jackson
again on a meaningless 38-yard
touchdown with 12 seconds left in
the game. By then, the Broncos had
consumed much of the second half
with two long drives capped by
JasonEiam's rteld goals.
Elway, who has a 9·2 career
mark against Cleveland, completed
17-of-23 passes, including four

~~arks

.

'

Pomeroy Mlddlepor'., Ohio

I

In theNBA;

...

. Monday, November 8, .1983
Page 4 · :.

, CLEVELAND (AP) - John
Elway. having perhaps tho fiiiCII
year or bis career, is aeuing tho
kind of protec:tion Bernie Kosar

•

Monday, Nowmber 8, 1'"

'

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"

Pomeroy--Middleport, OhiO

Monday, November I, 1993.

Little corner of little llf:ck in Littleton, W.Va . - ~
By DAVID WILIQSON
"-dated Preu Writer
LITTLETON - W.Va; (~) Moun!UI oil
broupt JW'OSPCI'·
ity to Ibis old rail stop JUSt off
PvannIIYIYBDia
I . •I ..,....,wealem
·-.....
COl'·
ner. That was bef~ m'!l' of town
bJI!RCd down. the oil dried up, the
railroad pulled out, the Internal
Revenue Service noeed around, an4
the state pollee swooped in.
Even the officials wbo run the
place now ~ant to give up and
head for the hills.
~ut the~ won't allow Liuleton s !'JIYill'. City ~der and five
council members to qll!tal! at once.
~ they must,re&amp;Jgn m waves
1n hopes some of the 300 or so
other residents will take their
P~ and keep government operabl!¥j1•8 frustrating" 'd Co .1
.
~ S8l
unci •
woman Lmda White, who rdled a
vacancy only four months ago.
"You g~ in an~ y~u don't know
~hat you re gettmg mro. '!Rd then
1f you ,;want out, you re not
allowed.
.
A day af~ the current ofrlcials
toolc offi~ m SeJ!tember 199~, lhe
state pohce seJZed the city's
~ecor~s a_s pan of state auditor's
mvesuganon. .
That was JUSt after the state
ordered a new election because lhe

oa

DESERTED • Ll&amp;de&amp;on, W.
stands In front or two former
Littleton 011 Saturday.
Mouotain oil once llrolJibl prosperity lo this old raU slop just off
Penasylvanla's southwest corner. Tbal was before most of the
town burned dowa, ,the oD dried up, tbe raDroad pulled out, the
Iateraal Revue Service DOlled arouad and the state poUc:e &amp;WODped
ln. Now even tbe city olrk:lals want to give up and head for the
biDs. (AP Photo, Chuck Sauce)

last City Couocil members did not
. .
set a date for lhc cxpirad'on of their
ttnns.
.
.
theTI!a~t
w~~~t
aft« ~_!RSS SI1d
u....
in -bC:l
ac o...,..
SocialI Securi
and ,;itb·
holding ~axes from 198~ to 1992.
..Alii could ~
'Oh
God What did 1 1 wasir . '~.~
said ·Ma.- T~e ~~B 1
. '·
u
! lhmk we fmally ~the rown 00
::ef~Jreki w::.rr:~. to
That, 100 was bef~g.:SC Mooday, when e~Cille quit, including
the 34-year-old OmoUski llld Steve
Ornouskl, the mayor's husband,
who triples up as C:OWlCilman an4
cit
lice chief
~J:::.e claimed health problems.
Some claimed lhcy were just mov·
ing elsewhere. _Some pointed to
ceaseless political feuds.
"I couldn't take anymore of this
hassle " said Councilwoman Leona
71.
Ornouski said it's anyone's
guess what 0111as will do Mondar.
morning at a swe-ordered counc:tl
meeting to act on resignations 111d
nominate replac:ements.
But for a town with a dwindling
tax base and ao annual budget of
only $23,000, small-town politics
is merely ratclleting the~~ up
a notch.

3 000

are

in -~C:~ War. Btg deal?
It's too~ to find statues of
•
·
•
•
• .L
women m
ilshin~,
a City_
Wlu•

=

sta~~ qual~?' asthep~!l1

. For msl8nee, m .
·
tol's Swuary Hall, only SIX of the
9.5 hero~c: fi~ ~~men.
,
: That s the way 1t ~ m:ound the
country, too. When u comes to
being immortalized,in b~nze or
marble, WO!Jle!l geuborphrifl.
"It's really ouuageons," said
Rep. Pat Schroeder J&gt;.Colo. "It's
always puzzled me, even in my
own city of Denver..._. W,e had statues to buffaloes but ~dn t have one
to women anywhere.
In Washington even horses do
better than women. The lar,esl
equestrian statue in the Umt~d
States, that of Ulysses S. Grant m
the saddle, is in the capital city·
And on~ of the . s1x s\atues ~f
women m Washmgton s public
parks portrays Joan .of Arc on a
horse.
.
The new sculpture near the Vtet·
narn memorial is the flfSI honoring

served in Vietnam.
In sculpture, women tend to
have names·like Freedom or Serenity. They are all~gories, not real
people; or fantas1es, hke Mother

di&lt;l!'~The sculpture is a work of G~ stalue of Freedom was just
deception" said Ted Sampley, bo' ted'-A.. the
fth Cap'
-' h
h
u
s
v
IS
._... to
top o c
.1·
1
w~o pub. IS ~s t e · · , , eu:ran tot dome after her first cle~~~ing m
Dlhc1Sp81Cfal h !n Kms1:0n, ~-~&amp;!Yes
se unpressl~
encan
women wer~ servmg_ shoulder·t~
s~oulder, ;"'lth men m combat m
V1etnam.
· .
Nurses _and doctors served m lhe
r~: ~ wd..
. .
It s quite dtfflcult to know_
what's forward an4 ~when nurses were killed in Vietnam by shrapnel," said Karen Johns~n, who

served,~ Y~d:.as

811

130 years. From the $fOUR~, 288
feet below, most tounsts m1stakc
her for an 1ndi8ll warrior - male,
of course.
"Probably up to the 1920s,
women were not in a position
wh~ lhcy did imyihiD$ that got
them memorialirod," wd George
G
r u1p1ure . lh

s:.::~~:um of~~

C8ll

An. "They were shown as lhc

~~~ Fo~ symbol or allegorical clement;
women seemed to embody the
abstract as opposed to the specif-

nurse. . ou
vc to, orw
to be hit by monar fii'C.
"What is realistic: is that the
men being ai~ evac!U'te~ in hel!;
copte~ ":~re '" t_helr umforms,
she 5:8'd. Often It was a nurse. or
mh c1dd!c ~~ 0 w~r3 a~t ~~~ ~0;1~!
0
. m~ti~·lice.:!~atall"
talcing I k
.
j f lhc
Vie~ :C~~J:rb: ::..Oes
dead
i .
.gbl f
0 f 58000
•, at I DralJ!Il
.•
P'
~
a
o._
them .em e. 0 • 1 0'.000 women

ic ..
. The exception, he sa s, is JOBII
of Arc, wbo serves the ~ble purpose of symbolic and real.
Schroeder Sbe tells these sto·
ries:
-Martha Washington spent all
~winters with George and the
Continental Army during the Revo1utionary War. A:fterward, abe
asked Congress to reimbUil!C her.

LUTHER CAMrsELL

M!'
:ha~~t
Georg' Wash' · r

"T
i:~e las~
wbo g~ it~~~
insisted that she be paid,,

;!i

-S~ Ludington rode ~ugh

!lr

the ~nure state
Conne_c u.cut
wammg,
"The
Bnush
- But
commg,
the British are coming."
Paul
Revere was able to gel Henry
Wadsworth Lon ..fellow to write
about his liuJe m'rdnight rid o 1
through BOSIOO.
c nY
-The Boston Tea Part isn't
the entire story "The first ~asn't
in Boston it wi.s in the Carolinas
A
, f
b
d ·.~ro'!J:. o women oarde a
= h , IP 8lld threw the tea over-One of the Revolutio
sol·
diers buried in the cem~y at
West Point is a woman, Margaret
corb'1 ~· Her gravestone
-- h
h
s o~ er
= n g by a cannon holdmg a
Stephen Grove, the military
academ 's historian sa s Corbin
ac:comp~nied her h~sb~d, John,
when be joined the lstCom yof
Pennsylvania artillery
was
k_illed during an assa_ult by Hes·
IIIIlS, and she took bu place and
pafomlolld his duties mullllhe was
wounded.

if:

Backers of 2 Live Crew say that
a ruling against lhcm would severe•
I&gt;: c_wtail the an of satire.
•
"If-you wanted to do a parod~
it would l!e Jilce the undergrouJ!jJ ·
perfonnanees behind the Iron Cut'
lain. Put a ~ atlhe door," said
political satirist Russell.
:;
But songwriters say 111 adversi
ruling would limit their ability 10
millce ~y off !heir wort.
_•
Hit songs like "Oh, Prett}i
Wom111" have a fmanc:iallife long
after they -slip down the charts:
Publishers like Acuff·Rose jealousi
Iy guard -the use of copyrights. •IJ!
neither court papers nor intervieWs
would they reveal what lhc Orbi;
son-Dees song brings in each year.
"That song is responsible foi.
lnost of my income," Dees saiil;
anowing only that he tnakes well
over $100,000 a, year. He lives m
Lampe, Mo., 111d still writes song$.
One eJtample of the amount of
money involved: Bristol·Myen eo:
paid the estattls of Richard Rodgers
and Oscar Hainmerstein II
$232,500 to use "I'm Gonna Waslf
That Man Ri2ht Out of My Hair"
in a TV ad. "Man" was replaced
wilh "gray."
Van Helen's heavy metal ver·
sion of "Pretty Woman" and tbe
Julia Roberts movie were big moneymakefs for .Dees and Acuff.
Rose.
The copyright owners mjected:a
luc:J'Biive offer to license the SOJ1&amp;
for use in a fast·food commercia.!,
Dees said. ·
,,
· Acuff·Rose lawyers argued that
2 Live C~w·s version c:beapentd
the song and limited future inco~
possibilities. Songwriters like PJii.
ton and Jackson say if the ra~
go unpunished, it leiS anyone do
what they Willi with a song, call •ft
parody and avoid payment
.,
'

acc:olln~s. , hous~t~~ cars~
c:hallge m any of u.._ Items
til* your SSI payments go up or
~.Mser the SSI program, income
includes cash, checks, and other
thinp you get tb8l can be used for
food,,clothing, or shelter. Changes

Beta chapter makes grand plans
- HSomething Grand ia Being. Mc:Cullouah. Martha McPhail,
Planned" was the·lhcmc of a~y Donna Byer, Carolyn Grueser 8lld
be1d by PlecepiOI' Beta Beta
. Je~~~ Powell.
w o1 Beta SigJIIII Phi Sorority
Members attending were J111c
. lat Mlek 11 tbe home of Eleanor · , WaHon. Joan. Corder, Cl~rice
· - ,K!IUtter, Charlotte Elberfeld, Ann
'l'bllluil.
·
·dri.
th · Rupe, Norma Custer, Belly
~ suea11 were vcn ~ e Ohlinger, Velma Rue, Donna
while chauffeur-driven Jones, Ma!da Mora, Jean Werry
Ouesla were Carol Adami. Rutb and Roee SIUDII.
Riffte, Dorothy Sayre, Carol

·=.:.

Wednesdiy Paper
Thumday Paper
Friday Paper

SWlday Paper

,,,

..

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&lt;iii Jt

,

Noveliber 13th ~ Novelnlier·17th
y·

Complete ~edlcai/S~rglcal Care
For E•, Nose &amp;·Throat InclUding

6th • Pa,!m~r Sts. Middleport

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1:00 j&gt;.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Mcnclay
1:00 p.m. Tueoday
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday
100 p.m. ThW'Sday
1:00 p.m. Friday

NOnce OF SALE
By vlrtue.'ol •n Order of
,Sale l81ued out of the
'Common Ploaa Court of
:a.leig1 County, Ohio, In the
.lola•• of lloonk One, Athena,
NA, ·Pialntlll, va. · C1rl1
;§mlth,. et II., Dol•nd1nl1,
!"P"n 1 Judgmant lhorlln
il'nderecl, boilng C111 No.
U.C.V-141 In Mid Cour~ I
~II ollw lor Hlelllhelront
iloor of Ute -~urthou.. In
fl'.omwoy, Molga County,
fj)hlo,, on. tho Znd Clay of

•

EVERYONE-wELCOME

l

Aulhorlad: Brtgga I

992•7011.,
9t2•SSSJ .
orTOU Fill
1·100.141 0070

uoedGoll

Clubo,

, ll'ophlla
PlaqiJoo

MVIJfORT

618-992.41166

HOME
FOR SALE
ltyOwaer

Loc.ted on VIne SL In
R•clne. Ample lot,
,fenced yard, w•lklng
dlat•nce to echool or
church. Ideal for
young f•mlly.
Call 949-2244
after&amp; p.m.
1cna/1 mo.

...

Hullh

Decamber, 1813, II 10:00

e.m., the following l1nd1
and ,_menta, loc1iect ai

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY

11 ..... Btr-~ Mlcldlap ilrt,

OH 45760. A corilphlo legll
deacrlptlon of tho 1111
ealallla u lollow'c:
Situ1te In tha Yilt. of
- Mlddoport, Counl)j of Meigl
i and IIIII of Ohio, Balna Lot
; Number thlrty·lln (35) In
t lower Pomaror., now
Incorporlllld nto 1nd
mec1o 1 p.rt of the Vlft~g~ of
lldcloport, Ohio.
Reforenoa Deed: Volume
307, Paga 255, Malga

l

EAGLES
CLUB

r111u••Ung an ~pp~li~~l;;- 1 I

IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
SP'eclal Earty Bird

front:

GIIIIN10bon Mllpl!lotiril
ol Alcollol, Drug Ailclollon
111d Men... HNilll-.m,$100 Payofl
414 Se_a andATllla ad good for 1
P.O. Bo;r 114·
FREE card.
Ollllpolla, Ohio ~1
PMM 814 4II 3022
Lie. No. 0051-342
The a-d 11 ,atrlvlng to
m•lnteln . 1 b1l1noid l~':!:::::!::::!:!l
rapr11entat1on
of 1;
community miMIHire and
would welcome minority or

~~~~~~~-

lor'a P8Jtoll N-bor 110)272. !Re.ll. El!t.lte appr•I•ect it:
_,,000.00. Tho rill 111.111
_...ot btlaold lor 1M1 then
1ppr111ec1

OF CASH
_
R
IS BEl JE
THAN
A
.
· . , , ltf;;~~
GARAGE· t - SERVIa
36970WI•ICIIII
,,'Of
. "···,.,.
'
\

-

·

·

D.A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING
(614)
667·6628

f
' U'

.......

-'

.
\

...

.

'

s..

t.w enfon:ement,
peraon•l protection,
kennel aen~lce, Pllfl8 &amp;
young doge for aale.
ByiiCiplOnly
814487.fiETS

~!:::::::::::::::::i::ICII2ttl mo.

=====~ GENERAL
BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows .
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
~E ESTIMATES

HAULING
Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992~7878

llo S.llday Calls)

b Hli!g poilt l»&gt;llld lloMnp

2112192/tfn

Shade River Saddle S

TRI-COUNTY REaCLING

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
Chester, Oh. 45720
985·3406

Is now accepting all farrous metala
Including: tin, cast Iron , long and short iron.
Muat be small enough to be moved by hand.
Short Iron (leaa than 3 ft.) 1.75 per hundred
Motor Cast.....2.00 per hundred
Clean, dry alum. cans .23 pound
Prices subject to change without notlca
Located at the corner of S.R. 143 and 7

Phone 992·5114

3111'\ln .

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage ,

~9515 .

CARPET &amp; UPHOUTIRY CLUNING

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

.

/
lox 189
Mlddltport, Olllo 45760
(614) 843·5264

WV013372

WeiJIICI•Ila In:
RREIWATER
DAMAGE
RESTORA110N·
INSURANCE CLAIMS
24Hour

WINTERIZATION SPECIALS

Emergency Service
20 yeara of Gary Barty, Ownermm Faulk, Manager
: lllliafled
C.rtifled technicians on 1/Nery job.

OUTBOARD MOTOI'Jrl
INIOA,D/OUTBOA-D•IO"

EXCAVATING

BUU.OO~Ji~
IIJid '""'CI\J'IUt: WORK
AVAILABLE.

SEPllC SYS!EMI,

HOME SITES llld
TRAILERL
LANOCLE

DRIVEWAYS INSt

UMESTONE-lRlJCIOHG
FREE ES'IlMATES

992-3838
SHRUI&amp;ml
IRIM•atl
REMOVAL
oLIGHT HAULING
-FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
12-30-9:!-lln

ROIERT IISSELL

co11mucnoN

ll~lew Homes

cUllorne II

WINTER STORAGE AVAILAiLE
· 'Ia tlcla&amp; aU Mall•• fl ModeIa_!

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

915·4473
71'l2193

Mates - -Portraits
Special Occasions

-THE

-

LIME$'JOIII, TOP SOIL
'I FIUI DIRT

TUPPERS PlAINS
lc obedience,

u

614·992·7643

CERTIFIED MECWIC

-

I Locatt!d

Call-Gene Rfggs 985·3594

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

TRI.STATE 1·9
ACADEMY ·

HOME SITES

Tr~County AIN

, Fri. &amp; Sat., 4 pm·?

36358 SA 7

Auto a~ C&amp;A Auto
Corne VIsit Us.

KoySyawn
Off........... Ext.. 0...
FREE ESnMATEI

R11lden1816

773·5515

Rlehard Moore

In Eastern Meigs County. 1 to 5
tracts available. Tuppers Plains &amp;
c:hE~tt~r water; electric availabie, on site
tanks &amp; roads to each lot
approved. Partially wooded with rolling
hills.
From $5,000 up

SYRACUSE, OH.

WINTER HOURS
Sun.·Thurs. 4-10 pm

'

949-3086

1o.v.ll3

614·985·4110

911':. ,..'-'

949·2104

haa joined our ...... 1
Richard comiM to
with 12 yra.
experience at
Pomeroy Home &amp;

IIOIIIS •.
COMUIICITIOIS

(~04)

Special RIWA. Dayton

Jacks Installed '
Extensions run to
Different Rooma arid
Outside Buildings

VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

Serl•

Truckload S~ Pric•
,,.•
• ..1i.

Bill's nra
of Ravenswood
announcea

and Pameroy Stree~
laSGn, wv

I

pertorm.nce proll11.
• Two tl!ong llbergllla bellt
• Aggretllve tN&amp;d delljpl
• Smoolh rlclng palyoltor cord
body.

COUNTRYSIDE
CERAMICS

(Former Mason Lanes)

'

ClollldSU~

614·992·1553

lllplllr,

,I O 0

• Low, wide 60 IIJid 70 · Sar1ee

PHONE
IIISTALLAnON

EAGLE
LANES

,'

PICKUP ..,d DEUVERY
Houra 111- M-F w SaL

DIIWII, OliO

FREE ESTIMATES

~

Slnlllan MTD,IIylm,
I.D.C. R1pllr Center

now.

-

&gt;

w.-1.-s

614-367-0421

OWIID: Jeff WllbniJ.
',·

IU ...... IMIIIU

lmRIOR

992·3470
·-

Specializing In Custom .
Frame Repair

.Free Estimates

Public Notice

I

UCIIIE
MOWER CUIIIC

PAIIIJIIIG

-.

-

•

Daytona Radial 60 and 70

742·2904

WALIEI AllEY
P1111s -' Stnb
Mowen· Clltll S.ws

.............-,,lii.Yr,.V.

of Alcohol, Drllll
IJid Mental HHIII
Ia appolneect ~ the
of thl Ohio Depwtment

C•ll '
Ralplllt

Any Condition

IWIIW3

~

•so ,., IO•tl

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

992-6321

(

1625 Gallons

WHALEY'S IUIO
PAllS

Specializing in
Automatic
Transmissions
368 Eaat Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

I

WATER
HAULING

PO!ftii'OY, Ohio

DAN'S
TUNSMJSSION
&amp; AUTO REPAIR

; .I
)

· imo.

(FREE EB'IIIIA'JU) .

11121/ttn

WetiCI from OIH of Pun:hlee

614-742·2138

Bisque, Greenware,
Paint Bruahea,
Acceasorlea,
Finished Plecea,
and Day &amp; Evening
Clasaes available

-,

, Shellll of Jhlga County
·(ti) .1. 1,1iUio

Evenlnga.7:.00 pm Sunday 10:15 am
'

WANTING
TO.BUY
· JUNKCARS ·
·&amp;.TRUCKS·

DAYBI!R&gt;RE

Public Notice

'T~erv or.= M. aoii~a~

1

Evange,llt Rev~ Charles Norris

Jalln I.

Yard Sal•

'
JOHN
TEAFORD

~farm• of ella:· Celli on

:.

'

1n 1 1110.

Sacred Heart Church Bazaar
Thursday November 11th DinnerGames-Fancy Stand Dinner
4:30· Adults $5.00
Children unclar 12·$2.50
Everyone, Welcome

~~lrdo . the

First Baptist Church
'

Porches, ·
·Patios,
Sidewalks
, ; 992-7878

~:=; ....,A__HA------L_
--1

J

1

: WORK

Dominqs Pizza
. is now-Offering • ,
Meatball &amp; Philly Steak Subs
1 Free Bag of Chips &amp; 1 Free
Drink with each purchase

•. :' IIIII Milia Ia oubject

. •I

COIItRETE-

~.,me WaiTanty

oG.....-.nteed llllldation_in 3

SAYRE TRUCKING

V.C. YOUNG Ill , .
992-6215

DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 992-7474
POMEROY, OHIO

Re~WIIldowe

Joe N. Sayre

Pllntlng

QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES

&lt;Solid Virfil '""'dsttd

RNtOillbii.FIIllet

~

AR·IIOLD'S
PLUMBING,
HEADIIG &amp;
. _COOLING

DESIGNED FOR YOU

UMESTONE,
GR~VE~ TpPSOIL
- &amp;.COAl

-Gulllr Work

....,lea • Phon• • FAX

•Pre•leaa known •• 111

:

:

Conlmorclll
lnalllilliOno of UIIM

.-... itniel, Mlclclllport, OH

,

'

'

..a.ctricollnd Plumbing

8/1211311 .mo. pel

~W.!YDiedlloo~.

ftiVD /

.

YOUNG'S

Take the pain out of
painting. Let me do h
for you ~

~

..

.......

"•

.fttllrlor l ExiMlor

• A cluailled advo..U......t plaeed ill the TJ.e Doily S...tioel
(except Cluoif..d Dioplay, Buill- Card or Lop!
Noticeo) will .too appear ill the Poilll Plouut Ropier ....d
· the Galli~lio Doily Tril&gt;woe, no~hi"'l OYW 18,000 ......

DEADLINE
_ Monday Paper
Tul!llday Paper

:.,...

•

CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Allllllloo•

1130

CLOSED SUNDAY

Ia Mentoriut

,

HAUUIIG

. - 4/2t/nlfl

·Factory (Hle, .
12gllljeo•ly.
Beginning Od. 3

day aflct puhlitat.ioa to make correeUoa
• Ad. that mUll be paid i.a advance ue:
Card of Thelu
Happy Ado

•

'

EVERY SUNDAY
AT 1 P.M.
'RACINE GUN CLUB

rua 3"d•)'l•t ao charp.
• Priee of ad for aU eapitallettera i1 double price of ld cotl
• 7 point l1De type oaly ued
• Se~t~t.i..Del il aol re~poa~ible for etron afwr fll'lt day (check
for erron rll'lt day ad niDI iD paper). CaD halore2 :00 P·•·

started a public row with law offi~
cers over censorship.
~
At issue here is the concept of
"fair use" of a copyright Lawyer$
on both sides want to establis~
whether someone may freely bor;
row a portion of an artistic work
for parody or whether the C!lJlyright
owner controls such usage. Lowet
coons have split on·the issue.

By DAVID BAUDER
Associated Press Writer
William Dees, who wrote the
flirtatious "Oh, Pretty Wom111"
with the late singer Roy Orbison,
detested 2 Live Crew's ribald
rewrite of tbe 1964 rock classi~.
"It's like if SOineone asks you if
they could use tbe car," be said.
"We said no, but they take it atld
paint it all different colon."
A dispute over the rap remake
has reached the U.S . S,upreme
Court and turned into' a test of
copyriJht law's strength and the
boundaries of satire.
Doll;r Parton, Michael Jackson,
comed1an Mark Russell and the
publishers of Mad,Magazine are.
among those who·have flied briefs
with lhe court on both sides of •lhe
case, which will be argued Nov. 9.
"There's plenty of money
involved," sa1d lawyer Stephen
Kaye, who represents the estates of
mgwri~ llving Berlin, George
GerShwin; Cole Pdner 111d others
battling 2 Live C~w.
The light beg111 in 1989, when
the raunchy rappers asked Acuff.
Rose Music Inc:., the powerful
Nashville music publisher that
owns tbe copyrighl to "Oh, Pretty
Woman," for permission to make
changes in the song.
Suaigbt remakes are no problem
after a song is recorded, as lon$ as
writers and publishers ~ c~ted
111d ~ive royalties. But rewrites
fall into murkier legal territory.
Ac:uff-Rose ~fused pemussi011.
2 Live Crew went ahead 111yway,
borrowinf the song's trademark
guitar rif for verses that taunt a
"big hairy woman," a "bald-head·

Changes in resources.may affect ·social _security payments
affect
:-2
even~
Socla
~ives
~ou d1~,
•!

.•
•

Rapper takes on "Oh, Pretty ;
Woman" copyright case
~

ClA!!IflfO AOt
Fill THf

not
your check for the first 2
months after lhe
There m:e
penalties for. not reporUng changes
or for m!lkmg _false S!Jitcments
about changes m rour 1ncome or
resources. In addition, if you have
received .a~ ovelpayment, you'll
have to pay It back.
You -can report changes by
·
·
, •• the s 'at
p~one. e1ther. to u•e A ns OCI
Sec!'l'lty,oflaflce (59~~8) or by
c:alhng Soc I Secunty s toll fr~
number, t-80().772·1213.

0

:

31904i.Htla.,
CrMiciMtl
llitltlltport, o•1o
614·992·7144

GUN SHOOT

• Ad1 outUde the county your ad r\IDI muat he prepaid
• Receive dYcoUDtfor ad. paid ia ad•ance.
• Free Ado , Gmaway and Found odl under l5 wo..C. will I.e

''

Journalist criticized for photographing Diana in gym

If someon~ moves mto or out of
Y&lt;?'Jr home,_ If 5:0meone who hves
w1th
If you or someon.e
who lives :OV~th ~ou has a baby, !f
you start _hvmg m someone else s
home, or you move out of ~~e·
one else s home, your lmng
arrangements may have c:h111g~
and this must be reponed to Social
·
Sc:cun1y.
YoU should report changes in
of these circumstances to
10
after,
the

Carpentry,
Plumbing,
Electric, etc.
1Q% Dlollcount
Senior Citizens

POLICIES

FThc r:':g &lt;?f ~-at Vai-

~~ n~ see

I

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.8-12

By JIM ABRAMS
debates whether.-screen violence together now in a continuing effort "I'm not in favor of censorship,
Auoclated Preas Writer
contributes to violence on the over the next year to eJtile gratu· but I am in favor of people sLindWASHfNG')'ON (AP)- Holly· nation's streets.
itous violenee wherever it el&lt;ists." ' ing up and accepting the responsi·
wo_od has already s!irted. ~ucing
Attorney General Jan~t. Reno
"There is a great current run - bility for the product they pro·
violeitce on the fall TV lineup and testified to a Senate commttlee'last · ning through the creative commu· duce."
·
is committed to cuaing even m~·- month that while govemmentinler· nity irying to do something about
Selleck said it was "scapegoat·
insists lhe p~sident of the ~onon vention was not the-best option, "if violence, to make it politically ing to point to Hollywood or the
Pic~ Association of Amenc:a.
significant voluntary steps are not incorrect," Valenti said.
news media or 111ybody else when
"Many of the people who are . taken soon, government ai:tion will
Also on ABC, actor-producer really it rests with the individual'
'rom Selleck cautioned ,llgainst and the individual's own sense of
criticizing television today neve~ be imperative."
watch television," Jack Valenu
Valenti said his family was "fed government intrusion buC'agreed values an4 ethics."
said Sunday on ABC's ''This up 111d frustraled like all of Ameri- that HoUywood bears a responsibil·
Valenti also said that in the end
Week With David Brinkley.".
ca with the murder and mayhem ity forits product
"you take responsibility for your
· Valenti was defending BIIJRdus- thai slalks our streets wilh a malig·
"I'm not sure Senator (Paul) children and I take responsibility
try that has come under increased Rlllt fidelity."
Simon or Janet Reno would be bet· for mine.·' Asked about obscenities
criticism, and threats of govern- · He said the entire film and ter arbittatprs than the public in on HBO shows, he said, "If you ed woman" and a .. lwo.. timin'
woman."
ment regulation, as the nation broa~cast industry is "joined what we should see," SeUeck said. don'tlikc it, C&amp;flcel iL"
The publishers sued, claiming
copypght infringemenL
"You're not doing 111ythin$ to
By MICHAEL WEST
in skintight c:)'Ciing shorts and 1ccJ. papers.
sion of privacy by the p.ess illegal, harm the copyright You're JUSI
having fun,' said Luther CampAlroelated Preas Writer
tard lying 011 her back on an excr"Tlie Princess of Wales has he said.
•
noted with distress a~d a deep
The lftlllilendent new9p11pe!r said bell, leader of 2 Live Qew. "I've
• LONDON (AP) - Princess else machine.
Diana expressed "distress and a
On Sunday, its weekly sister sense of outrage that w1thout her the intrOduction of a law to curb had it done to myself a few times
- on 'Saturday Night Live,' they
deep sense of outrage" today over paper, the Sunday Mirror, pub- knowledge or consent, perspnal p~s intruSion was inevitable. ·
Legislators condemned what imitated me and had fun with my
the pllblic:ation of sneak pho- lislled five nearly identical close-up photographs of her w~ taken by
tograpbs of her working out in a pictures it said were taken at the mew of a bidden camera,'' said they called a flagrant bniach of the records.•'
Legal challenges are nothing
gym.
LA Fitness Club in west London. lawyer Mi~ de Ref!~.
newspaper industry's voluntary
Britain's latest pedi: 81 iLl royals , The gym owner was qUOied as say· .
"The (1!1nce~·s !'lfVJsers ~for conduct code. The code was draWn new to 2 Live Crew. Their album
81 play prompted a wail of ouuage ing he snapped the shots with a their pan cons1denng what legal
up this year in response 10 criticism "As Nasty ·As They W111na Be"
from lawmakers and predictions hidden camera.
action may be appropriate,'' he an4 says -~ pictures taken wilhthe vrcss will pay dearly by
In a statement issued by her said.
.
out pemussion on pri\lllle property
spumng legal restrictions to safe- lawyers, .Diana, wbo bas separated
Home _SecreiJ!ry . M1chael are only justified in cases of public:
pant privacy from intrusions by from Prinee Charles. thanked law. Howard sa1d pubhc:allon of the concern.
joumalists.
.
makers and other newspapers for photographs was "thoroughly
Sunday Mirror Editor Colin
The Daily Mirmr today pub- condemninJl the "gross intrusion" deplorable.". Th~ government will Myler said the "slunning"-photos
lished three pictures of Diana, 32, into her pnvacy by the two news- consider legislation cto make inva- exposed a_iecuritY loophole.

in income) include c:hlllges in your
spouse's or child's income. And if
a child who
SSI starts or
stops working, or is age 18·21 and
starts or stops attending school,
lhose changes needs to be reported
to Social Security, 100.
Resources include the things
Ch
you own .
anges t~ your
resources commonly Include
chan es in the value of bank
acco!.ts SIOI'ks or bonds certili·
cates of d 't, Chrismw 1 b
aCCOjlnts. ~~need to re~uif
you, your spouse, or your child
buy, sell, or become the bwner of
any real estate, a Cat, or personal
property.

All types of

Call992-2156

ROYORiliSoN

'5.'

PLU.QJJ
. --~!··_
~ . - ..

., !'N4utaw"

Carman,

Valenti says Hollywood moving against violence

ETERSON
B{
p lty mana1er In
::."tbens
rec:eivin Su IemenIfyou_arel
(lSI)'tncfits
tal sec:unt.}' ncome
r ibilit '
your benefits a::J:;:{be ~hang~
for SSI may be f
Y· ontbly
in the amount o your m
our living arrangements,
Income. Y
( uch as banlc
and in _your ~sources s

wruti

•The Area's
Number 1
Marketplace

Tqe gender gap in public statuary ~~ows
By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL
women wbo served in the military.
Auoc!lted Preas Writer
It is, controversial, like the war
WASHINGTON (AP) - A itself. It depicts ~ fatigue-dad
statue is being dedicated on Veter- w0 men, one 's.eated on a pile of
ans Day_ to the worn~ who served ~dbags cradling a wounded sol·

....,.........

Lik
f the old commuru'
The nearest shopping arrd
e m111y 0
• I'CilaUnlnLI are more thaD ao hour'i
ties sprinkle4 along ~ U.S. drive away
.
•
250 in IIOdhem Wesc Vifiirua, Iii· - "There just no jobl"'
lie remains of Littleton except a said. "You have to dri~e so fat
oc:ay ~.,
..... a......
-.
!
~
r:- Om...,.
away. for work an4 _......
wuoo. IS ~
The b1g fire mthe 1930s burned ~
is IIOibing here. No gas sta
down one end of lilWII. It \vas n_ever ums, no restswanl$, no doctors, nq
~built,.
bars."
•
An uneven sidewalk begins 81
Her son Bobby, 20, is tesi
the 1111'11-Df·tbe·c:anury Bank of Lit· diplomatic '
•
lleton, noll! c~ and endsat lhc
"It's just dead, " he said!
sm.au. White City HaD a IJUarler- "There isn' t anything for anybody;
mtle away. Milly storefronts are 1 wouldn' t advise anybody to movo
boarded up.
~-"
·
..:

.

.

'

PHOTOPLA(E
109 High Street

Pomeroy
Bob and Ch1u1e1ne HoeflicH

.,

.

,

••

�Monday, November 8, 1~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Qhlo

Page 8 The Deily Sentll'lel

The Dall!l Se ntinel-Page-~

.

KIT
- 'NI CARLYLE~
. by Larry Wriafll

HOUIIhold
. Goods·

BEATI'IE BLVD."' by Bruce Beanie

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

November 8, 1993

NJ:A Cros•.word Puzzle
ACIIOII

48e-

1Ctuy-

5F-IIew

PHILLIP
ALDER

42 Mobile Homes

for Rant

•u

NORTH

11-1,11

.K

EAST

.K5

•Qu

t74
.AI052

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West
.

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.ABOUT YORE BUTTER AN'
EGG MONEY--UH--1 LOST
IT ALL IN
TH' CARD .
GAME

. MAW II
. I NEED
,. TO TALK
· TO YOU

53=• -de
57 Donker
55 Shouler
58 lledlcinll

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22 Growing out
24 Wild llhHp
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Opening lead: • 4

An expert
at both games
By PWWp Alder

••

PEANUTS
. . I'T' 15 DAWN .:
~R.E '5 1ME WORLD

WM 11

FLVIN6 ACE WALKING
AERODROME

..

·

SOME PEOPLE HAVE •
D065 Wi-10 6ARK A
LOT,OR 016 HOLES IN
TilE GARDEN, OR ...

1-tE CLIM65 INTO
NOW, THE EA~LY MORNING QUIET
THE COCKPIT OF
1S SHATTERED BY THE ROAR OF
HIS SOPWIT~ CAMEL , ntE 110 l-IP LE R~ONE ENGINE!
Ar-lD ADJUSTS THE
SUTTON HAR-NESS ...

I

:fRANK AND ERNEST
GallipoliS
&amp; VICinity

ACS

ALL Yonl Slloo- 81 Plld In

p.m.-J.

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Al-L.ow~t&gt;

LIFE
INS.

Advanco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the dor bo- the ad lo to run.
lundor - . . • 2:00 p.m.
FrldoJ. ......, adNion • 2:00

8

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•

Bobby Fischer once claimed that
could take a chess expert and turn
into a good bridge player, but that
converse wasn'l true.
Perhaps be's rigbt, perhaps
., Certainly many top bridge players
gin life as chess players. Why do
move to bridge~ Because it is·
er game? More sociable? Or 'bec:aw~el
Olie mistake doesn't make you an automatic loser?
'
Irina Levi tina is a national cbampi·
011 at both games: Bora in Le~~~:.:::
she became one of Russia's best
players, but in Ul90 she moved to
Jersey. She bas won the U.S. Wo[nen's I
Chess Championship for the last
years. And in July she woa the Wo1m·l
en's Knockout Teams national hri'I•PI
title.
On today's deal from the final, Le••i· l
tina and her team gained useful points.
AI both
tables,
West led
a lo:~:~;
against
three
no-trump,
South
East's king with the ace. On a
cated deal, Levitina's teammate
Greenberg ran the diamood seven
trick two. East won with the are and
retlimed a spade to her partner's jack.
West exited with a low club. A moment later Greenberg claimed 10
tricks: one spade, two hearts, five diamoods and two clubs.
At the other table, Soatb started
with a diamond to the queen. Levitina's partner, Dorothy Truscott,
played well by ducking. Declarer led a
heart to her ace, followed by another
diamond to the king. East woa with
the ace and returned a spade. With the
diamond
as an entry, Levitina
cleared
spades. Declarer -lost
three
and two diamond tricks

I

Auto Pi11ts &amp;

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Lawyer to client "Did you
commit this crime? 1want lhe
truth ." "No, sir," the client re. _ . •
plied firmly. "I can prove it too!
My wile can swear I was in the
r-1--::-E-M__B_U_L_M_ __,, nursery singing the ·-· to - - •

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Comp lete _the chuck l_
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by f•ll•ng •n the miu.ng words
you develop from step No. 3 below .

I'
ISCRAM
I ILETSIANSWERS
Ito I I -I I I I

P~INT NUMBERED
c

lfTTUS

.-

Mutton - Bring • Juice • Gopher - GO HOME
Asked whether his wife was a good cook the army
general laughed and replied, "I'm tha only general you'll
,, ever sae wfio packs a lunch to GO HOME."
~

NOVEMBERS!

'.'..._
\ · ~·

==~~~==~~--~~~-81
Home
'~

,Help wanted.

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

···-

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1895, physicist Wilhelm Konrad Roent·
gen discovered X-rays.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Edmund
Halley (1656· 1742), astronomer-math·
emalician; Margaret Mitchell (1900·
19491, novelist; Katharine Hepburn
(1909-l , actress, is 84; Chrisliaan
Barnard (1922·), surgeon, is 71; Patti
Page (1927·1, singer, is 66; Morley
Safer (1931-), journalist, is 62; Bonnie
Raitt (1949·1, singer, is 44; Mary Hart
0951-), TV personality, is 42.

I MONDAY

...........

'
Employment Serv1ces

E.ICh litter In ttMI dphw ~for anott.r. Totlry 'l clcM:

RY VAG

·u Oldo CUL Clorn, 4 dr., Iiiia.,
Fumlahad Aportmtnl, Utllltl•
Pakl, 1 lachcm, Upttalra.
Sooond Avenue, GIIIII&gt;OIIo, No
Polo, Eocollant Condition, 114441-0523.
•

CELEBRITY CIPHER- ··

Celebrity ClPMr aypto;rtma .,. creeted trom quotatlont by t.rnoua PMC* PM1 Md ~

L_____:=:::==-=======~~~~~~:::~~:_:__:___.:____J•.
BORN LOSER
,..

71 . Autos tor Sale
JID'oAuto-lllicllolv~~~o
oloo buVtnl lu&lt;* I trucb.
304-'m'U43.

Co) 1H3 by NEA , Inc.

,l

21

'
••'

•

nentals

r.terchandtse

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

41 HOUIM
for. Rant
.
.
'

dev~
~ou'll pia~ a i role.
You belong up lroot calling lhe shots and
you'll Hgure out a wa~ to gel there.
GEMINI (MIJ 21-.luM 20) Balancing sev·
oral endeavors simultaneous!~ is somelhlng that gives ~ou an edge ove r your
opposHion today. You might put on a per·
lormance lhal will win acclaims lrom ~our
associafea.
CANCER {June 21-July 22) Sometimes
It's unwise to change our minds or
cycla you're n6w in contacts could prove : plans at the last moment. However,
more valuable than your expertise.
\ . when !Jiaklng.adjustmonts is when you
AQUARIUS (Ja~. ao-Feb. tt)'Someone ~ likely to tu·nctlon at Y!)ur beat.
who is a c:uually acquaintance might come I· LEO July 23·Aug. 22) AI the present
to ~u IedaY lor ~PIn sorting qui a.prot&gt;, J there are Mverallnterrelated altualion.a
lam. If you take on the assignment, don1 1 Which ,could indlvicNally and
·
be afraf!llo ask f9( a fee:
pun1lable for you. !I you find one,
"18CE8 (Feb. ~h 20) Alliances or I .to lool&lt; lor mort.
panntrsi!IP IIT81lQ4!11!tnts you make at this~ .
·
'
.
time hive exceliet!P'chances.for SUcceSS. VIRG.O {Aug. 23·8ept. 22) A. creative
Youf lnetincto should tell you which are .1 .friend of ~oura might discuss with
productive and which aran'L
:i
1 today a new concept he/81le recently con·
ARIES (Marcil 21·Aprll 11) You'rt ,_ In ; oelved. tra a good ldell and'lhtrt may De
a CJC!e -,.. good lhlnge rntg~t, come to l'· room lor you to share in M.
.· ·
you wlthoul having to expend ioo much
·
. •
..
• • .• • ..
eflo~ on your own beheH. Reap Ito bOne- . UIRA: (llepl. 23-0ct. 13) 'Our iotea In
filii, but do ool k!l this becOme an Wldifler· . .tend to very f""" lime to lime. Sornetimll
ant hebil.
• ,we'rt dl89laleq glvera, iome~I!'OI
TAURUS {Aprllzo.May 20) You won't feel . deelgnateci reclp~le. Happily, you're
comfortable today II somethln.Q !!"portant : the ~er category today.
.

and a IQng, salf·acklressed."Stampod enve·
lope lo Matchmaker, c/o this newspapi,r;
P.O. Box 4465. New York. N.Y. 10163.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dtc. 21)
Although ~ou'll' be a high achiever today.
most of whet you'll do wHI be for lhe beneiM
ol others as well as lor yoursell . The
resuHs ol your effo~s will have lOngevity.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. ,18) Usually .
it's whet .we know thalls .more significent'
than who we kn ow . However, with the .·

I

lri the year ah~'d you might make two :
lllljQr chatj~ which could each branch off
Into dlf(MI• .,..., Anything reta.ted to the
Origlnll ilouiCII Wc&gt;utd fum out lucky.
';
!l=Oil'IIO (0111. 24-HO\i. 22) New llle can'
. De .llraalhed 111\Q an otcl venture today. If,
yi?U tatce
piece by pia»; you mlghti
~ WIOYi to-"*' H80 H produces
llenefb:~ """' to look !Or romance
. end you'U lind 11. Tnt Aatro·Graph:.
Malclwnaker lnJIIniiY reveale which ~
ale .romant~lly pertect for you. Mail $2

-"*"

•

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"

•

•

•

••

�.

'

•

By The Bend

The Daily Se.n tinel
Monday, November 8, 1993 ·
PJGII . ·1.0p

JX)rt.

"In Miami, I met two of the
girls on the trip and they were in
Salvation Army clothes and each
had all their things in one big backpack," said Samosky, a Clark
County native and senior at Witten·
ber~ University.
'I thought Oh, my God. I mean
1 was preppie and I liked comforts ."
From the airport to Belmopan,
Belize, to the research station
where Samosky would spend the
next five weeks studying river
ecology, she was taken progres·
sively further from the comforts of
her Walnut Hills home.
At the research station, drinking
wa1er was collected in a cistern and
inquiries on the availability of ice
were answered with laughter.
Samoskv and other students

•
w·

..

·~

Guitar duet to perform Bargain .hunters ·to blame for dissatisfaction "
at FFA convention
die
lllllr1ri
Ann
•

A Southern High School guitar
duet left Saturday for a week in
Kansas City, Mo. where they wiD
be competing in the talent contest
at the National fFA Convention.
Stephanie Sayre and Fred Matson were selected to compete in the
national contest after performing at
the state convention in June held at
Ohio State University.
The song which won them the
stale title was "Michelle" by Paul
McCartney. Slephanie, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Sayre. plays
bass guitar, and Fred, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Matson, plays
lead guitar.
In Kansas City they will compete for national honors before the
approximately 30,000 people who
are expected to atlend.
Sayre and Matson were selected
as one of 40 entertainers to perform
at 1he convention.
'· ll.~ · .
In addition to competitions,
they are also scheduled to play for
several other programs at the

De.- Ann l•ndel'll: I would lite
to respond to "Blue 1n Ohio." the
IIIOCha' who wu concaacd a11out
her 17-yeat-old sexually active
daugh

teen-agers with the desite to smoke.
There is no ccmpelliag biological
urge to amoke. Sexual ·urgea,
however, are Inborn, glandular and
honnonal, and teen-agers must learn
responsible ways o( dealing with
them. The more they know, the
better their chances of staying out
or trouble. And, yes, I· approve of
sex education in schools. If some
kids don't get it there, they just don't
get iL Period.
Dear Alln Landen: That horror
story from North Jersey about
building a new home really got 10

national convention where they
wiU spend the week.
Three other members of Southern FFA are making the trip to
y:~wudisappoinling.
ANN LANDERS
Missouri. Th~y are Jessica Sayre, You said plralla can do only 10
t 41993, 1M: ADceJt..
Chris Hamm, and Jeff Rose. Aaron much ·and once iDnocalce is loll.
Tlll)tiSyltdlule
Sayre and Mike Duhl are serving as there is no bringing it bact. It
Crellori Syltdlcole",
chaperones for the group. Mr. and
Mrs . Matson also traveled to IOtlllded as if you wm just giving
Kansas City for the convention.
up.
sex bef01e marriage and·to JllliCiic:e
Various organizations and indi·
I urge you 10 give this (n)blem monogamy afterward. We need to
viduals have contributed to the more thought k is not a lost cause. explain these reasons to our kids.
expense of the trip for the students.
I offer the 1ollowing examples:
Over and over. Don't underestimate
Besides being active in the fFA, .- A CXIIICelltrated effort to educate their intelligence. They wiU listen.
both Sayre and Matson are people about the dangers of
We owe it to our children
involved in numerous other school IIIIIDkinl bas bad positive msults. to educate them about sexual
and community activities.
The surgeon gcnc:nl's wamiDg in responsibility. Fifth grade is not too
They are members of the C\Wf ail and oo ciglreue packs bas 80011. (In 80IIIC C88CII, it may be 1110
National Honor Society, the Quiz made .an impact. Smoking is no late.) If, u a nation, we would
Bowl te~m, on St~dent Coun~il, longerconJiden:d cool.
11tac1t aexual iJrelponsibility with
and. are mvo1ved m com.mumty
lncleased knowledge of nutrition the same diligence that we baJde
affatrs and volunteer semce P!U· has resulted in healthier eating tOOaa:o lbule, the futum would be
grams. Sayr~ serves on the Metgs babila. J'coplc ~ ~ label&amp; • -~ ~ ~1«. Pleuc don't
County Jon~ Falt.~O!IJII,JIId ':'-·• to ftnd' out libW'"mllch fit ~d ' at.e up ·•l JtiCK ' IN"-PROVO
~~:f~n~acme Post602, Amen· bow ~any calories they are · UTAH •
.
'
consummg.
DEAR PROVO: Me, gtve up?
There .-e a number of sociologi- Never!
cal, psychological, medical. ethical
I would caution you, however,
and legal raaons to abstain from qainst equaling the aexualqes in

L anderS

me.

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day ot that event. Items
must be received in advance to
assure publication in the eaten·
dar.

Trustees will hold their regular
monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at the
town hall.

'

Ilea price, and after jOb is
they. want to mate expensive
cbaqcs bul don't want the COlt 10

goup.

'

I wish people would stop blamiaj
the conlnlclon. Too often it's th.e
bqain hlllllm who are tupilitsilll5
for shoddy work. They want a lot of
things done after' the deal is madc!i
but they don't want to pay for it .:,
WESTERLY, R.I.
.1
DEAR WEST: I RJCeived sevaal
team ccmplainins about ~
tors. but youts CllDC up.with a JRtl.!

10lid defense. Thank you on behalf

of 1111 contriiCIOI'S, who will applaud
rve been a conttactor for 30 years whal you have written.
.
and have never had a dissatisfied
Oeln of the Day: Never go to a
customer. All my homes carry a doctll' whose office planls have died.
!().year w..-anty.l do not doubt lhat
Ftelbtg pru6UTtd to ilave trU?.
there are crooks in the business. You How we/1-iltfOI'IIfed art yoa? Wrll.l
will 6nd them in .every profession. for AM Landtr1' booklet "Sa IJIId
But the public perception is that tilt Tttll·ager. • Se11d a self-ad·
bll.riltus-lize - ·
bu!'!len ~ve I!10R than.~ir ·~./(lllg,
IJIId a clltcl: or moM)' order for
Many people who build their own $3.65 (this iiiCiuder po1togt tJIId
homes do not chect a COillractor's haNIIillg) to: TttM, clo AM IAIIreputation to find out if his dtrr, P.O. Boz 11562, ChictJgo, Ill.
CtiSIOilleiJ wen: satisfied with biB 60611-0562. (111 Ca11adiJ, stlld
WOtt. Too often, people lid: for the $4.45.)

=·

Community calendar

Heart drug study results disappoint researchers .

By PAUL RAEBURN
AP Science Editor
TUESDAY
ATI.ANT A (AP) - A study of
heart patieniS failed to confll'lll a
CHESlER -The Chester Town· nnding
that magnesium injections
MONDAY
ship Trustees will hold their regular
given
immediately
afler a heart
monthly meeting at 9 a.m. at the
attaclt
could
!educe
deaths.
CHESHIRE - Women Alive Chesler Town Hall.
The study did show that one
will meet at Kyger Creek Club
drug
safely !educes heart pain and
POMEROY • The regular
House at 7 p.m . There will be a
another
reduces the odds of dying
thanksgiving dinner and a devo· monthly meeting of Meigs County from a heart auack.
tiona! speaker. For more informa· forty and. eight will be held at the
In I992, British researchers
Pomeroy American Legion Post studied
lion call992·2469.
2,300 patients and found
with dinner starting at 7:30 p.m.
of magnesium cut
that
injections
RACINE - Racine Board of Members are asked to attend and · heart attack deaths by 25 percent,
Public Affairs will meet at 10 a.m. bring a gucSL
generating great excilement among
at Star Mill Park.
cardiologists.
TUPPERS PLAINS • Meigs
~ut the results of a study of
POMEROY - Disabled Ameri- County Chamber of Commerce 58,000 heart attack patients around
can Veterans and Ladies Auxiliary will have a general membership the world showed that magnesium
will hold their regular monthly meetiflg at the Tuppers ~lains produced no significant decrease in
VFW Post at 7 p.m. Meal will be mortality, one study participant
meeting at 7 p.m.
provided. For more information said. The results of the larger study
DARWIN • Bedford Township call992-5005. ·
were reported Sunday in conjunction with the annual meeting of the
American Heart Association.
"Tht most ~blc explaoation
(of the contradictory ~Its) is that
the previous trials have been too
small,'' said Dr. Lars'Wilhelmsen
By DONNA CASSATA
lion a general medical research of the Eastern Hospital in Golhem- ·
Associated Press Writer
fund. Money for the WOJI!en's cen· burg, Sweden. "It's important to
WASHINGTON (AP) - When ter, perhaps not a full $40 million, have large trials."
it came to nmling $40 million for a will come from the new!)' enlarged
Magnesium is safe and easy to
women's health research center for $200 million general research pic.
use, and doctors had thought it
the military, male lawmakers didn't
Among those who made the might become a valuable weapon
offer to cut a tank or a weapon or su11gestion was Texas Sen. Kay in the fight to save lives after heart
even a single missile.
Batley HutchisoJI, R- Texas, the attacks.
Until the din from women grew only woman on the Armed Ser· The study also examined the
too loud, their solution was 10 raid vices Committee.
effect of drugs called mononitrates,
last year's defense budget for
The issue caine on the heels of which had been shown in studies of
money already allocated to. breast the Senate's wrenching debate over
cancer research.
sexual harassment charges against
" The .o.nly thing they touch is Sen. Bob Packwood 8ild whether
women'sllealth money. They can't the Oregon Republican .bad to tum
find it anywhere else," complained over his diaries to tbe Ethics comFran Visco, president of the mittee.
.
National Breast Cancer Coalition
It closely followed a visit by
and a breast cancer survivor. "It's women's groups to the White
Velma taylor celebrated her
a little pool of money set aside for House where ther, delivered petiwomen."
tions with 2.6 mtllion signat~~res
86th birthday(on Nov. 1 at her
home. ncar Racine. Following a
The skirmish over the breast urging continued research 10 ~potlliCk diitner,' thc afternoon was
cancer funds ended quickly . The catebreastcanccr.
idea originated with committee
Add to that the JCOres of women · spent visiting and reminiaciag.
staffers operating on an initial now in the Houle- 48 .:...11111 the
AttcndiiiJ were Harold and
report that the $210 million set Senate ,_. seven, the still taw
f'yo:-s,s.:.:mer
'l'le~'sHari)'tep
· e·_:n"sonRaubndy
aside in laSI year's budget had tiot images of Anita HiU lind Clarence ,
'
been obligated. Lawmakers then Thomas reviVOd by the Packwood
Don A., Gene.
Lf!We and
learned thete had been requests for . debate and the oft·tepe~ted phrase, Allen Hud&amp;OJI, Joy' Odor and
the funds.
.
"they don'tget IL"
CaiUin, JQyce Marriner and
"That wasn't among the optioos
Rep. Patricia Schroeder, DStebri~te,n. ~l OcmeanaEdle• Jay 8!ld
for .vt:ly long,'' Sen. Sam Nunn, .D- Colo., who bad aponac))"ed tho . . tlllna c..,..ena. .
Hub!l8nf,
Oa., chainitail of the Armed Ser- health center 1114 iho wai'lled law·
Scou, Becky and Michelle Ours,
vicel Commilloe. said Friday:
m.akcrs they would be "walldng &lt; • Bettyoa 'CUrfn.lin.
. S~ fickens and ,
Instead, HoUse and~ nego- into a hornet's IICII~' if ~confer·
DaVid 8!Bm'D·. · · ·
tiatorS wrangling over the defense ence committh Jiied to d'.l! jaw · · · ~g a gift was ~ claagbtet,
biD decided to increase by $20 mil· last year's money
.
·'
Doris WiliOn ofBroobville,illa.

Congress getting the message
on funding research for women

86th birthday
celebrated

about 2,000 patients to reduce mor·
tality after hj:811 attacks.
Again, the new study was a dis·
appointment, failing to find ,any
reductioJI in death rates from
mononitrates. It did find, however,
that the drugs safely and effectively
reduced chest pain following heart
auacks.
"This dru~ is very useful, and
we can give tt without any prob·
Iems," Wilhelmsen said.
The findings might come as a
surprise to inany American doctors,
who prescribe nitrales much more
often than their counterpa~ts in
England.
About 70 percent of the·Ameri·
can patients in .the study were talc·
ing nitrates, compared to about 18
percent of the study patients in
England, said Dr. Rory Collins of
Oxford University, the overall
coordinatcr of the sllldy.
In the third pan of the srudy, the
researchers found that a drug called
Captojlril, one of a class of drugs
called ACE inhibitors, reduced
deaths from 7.33 percent after five
weeks to 6.87 percent, a reduction
unlike! y to be due to chance.
It was especially useful in
patients who had massive heart
auacks, in which the heart's ability
to pump was seriously impaired,
Wilhelmsen said.
Some researchers have criticized
the need for such large trials, sug·
gesting that smaller trials can produce nearly•the same data more
rapidly and at less expense.
'
But the startling fmdings with

magnesium argue against that ettaeks and treatments, and some
view, Wilhelmsen said.
have been followed up to six
The new trial included patients months.
&lt;lrawn from 1,000 hospitals in 30
The three drugs in the trial were
countries in Europe, North arid given to patients ·in different com·South America, Australia and else- binations, but the study was set up
where around the world, Wilhelm· so that each drug was given indi,
sen said.
vidually to half or the patients and
The.patients were followed for a placebo was given to the other
ra-t_leas_t_fiv_e_wee
__ts_ar_ter_th;..c_ir;..h;..eart;.;;.;._ha_lr_.
.
.

HERElACAlE

.•

.

"FORE" YOU

'

IN THE .
ClAtCflfD AM

·

THANKS·
To The Voters of Pon~er.oy For
Your Support.
JOHN MUSSER·
I

~

Pllld for by C.ndktate, 616 Mulberry Hie., Pofi!!IIOY, Oh.

Williams &amp; 4••oc. lnsu
101-M~hanlc

StrHt
Ohio 45769

h.

0

I

Kosar

Pick 3:

cut by

081
Pick 4:

1114
Buckeye 5:

~·

with the School of Field Sllldies, a gy study ptogram in southern India.
Having worlted ·with elep~!J'
Because of problems during 'that and being amazed by their near-:
private a~ency that arranges eco·
logical field studies for college ' trial run, the prograni has not been human intelligence, Samosk-y:
decided to investigate primate•
credit, slept three to a tent on plat· repeated, Samosky said.
The occasional elephant charge research.
·~
forms raised above the jungle floor
to minimize the intrusion .of rain wasn't a problem. Nor-were India's
"But the monkeys (at the prl(· :
and creatures.
customs, such as the need for serve) were so used .to p.eople, :
The system was imperfect
women to avoid addressinl! or they'd come and sit with you oil ·
"The first week I was there, I making eye-contact with unfamtliar benches," she said.
.
·
"I understand the need to :
was praying for a deadly illness so men.
I could go home," she said. "But
The education was up to par. acquaint people with animals, but I :
after two weeks, I started to like The two Indians in charge of the thought it was sad, and I decided to ·
• iL"
program are considered the world's concentrate on something else::
She learned how to travellight.
top elephant-ecologist and ele- That's when they offered the soUd·
waste program."
•
" I only had one bag coming phant-~eterinarian. Samosky said.
Barbados,
like
other
develope&amp;
home. I gave the rest away," she
Customs was another matter.
said.
Students were subjected to innu· islands with little landfill spact•
And after two summers doing merable hassles over their visas, offers a microcosm of the world'(
environmental research in the trop- laptOp computers and other equip- solid-waste disposal problems, an¢
ics, Samosty has learned a few ment they were bringing to the sub- Samosky was given a chance toworlc on a solution.
;
thin~s about herself.
continent
With
two
other
students,
they;
' You learn to know what you
But the worst thing was the eledefinitely n~; you push your lim- phant poachers, who operale with a put together a survey on people't•
attitudes toward recyclin$ an&lt;i;
its," she said. "You don't realize private army.
how much you can take until you
There was no such worry last waste disposal. They mtemewcd:
go to places like this."
summer on the Caribbean island of 327 Barbadians and put 10gether C
series of reports that will help th«f
Samosky earned enrollment in Barbados.
the•school with her published
The accommodations on Barba· Ministry of Health in its waste'
research on Ohio's white -tailed dos were so nice- running water, reduction, recycling and inegaf
deer population, which she wrote electricity, swimming pools and a dum)!ing-prevention campaigns. ,;..
' We were able to make aft
as a Denison University student
wildlife preserve - they were disThC summer after her 1991 trip appointing afler two summers in immediate contribution and that''~!'
what· I've always wanted to do,' (:
to Central America, Samosky set the wild, Samosky said.
·
~
out again with the School for Field . But the worlt helped her refine Samosky said. , _
Studies on Its nrst elephant-ecolo- her career goals.
·.••

By BILL MONAGHAN
SpriDifleld News-Sun
SPRINGPIELD, Ohio (AP) Tisha Samosky was going to the
jungle. So she went to the nearest
Banana Republic oullet and loaded
up on safari outfits.
She packed them, along with her
Walkman, pillows and other vital
gear, into a three-piece, all-leather
set of Eddie Bauer lug¥age and
headed 10 Miami lnlemational Air-

Ohio Lottery

Browns

Student learns about self,_life in jungle

IN COMPETITION • Stephanie Sayre and Fred Mauon will
compete in a talent show at the National FFA Convention In
Kansas City, Mo. Ibis week. Earlier this year they won the state
FFA talent contest held In Columbus which qoalit'led them to compete ror the national title. (fS Photo by Charlene Hoeflich)

·.

It's hard to sboot holes
through our coverage..
Stop In or call for a ·
quote and yte'll gl~
you our best shot.

PageS

Voi. 44,N0.138

Specia~ist tells

·'

,.'

~'

' '..

Low loail:bl 11011ad 30, part.

ly doudy. Wedneeday, partly
IUDDJ, b.li:b ID mld·50..

1 Section, tO P"9" 35 canto
A Mullion.... Inc. !Mwapapw

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 9, 1993

Mulllmodl•tno.

REDA members

Regionalization future trend in economic develop-ment
"If there is a trend in economic
development it's toward regionalization," a specialist in the neld
told mem~rs of the Regional Economic Development Association
Monday,
With increased competition and
dwindling financial resoun:es, Bill
Snyder, a former economic development director with Columbus
Southern Power, said, "Over the
next five to 10 years, very few
counties will be able to 'do it
alone."
REDA membership consists of
nearly two dozen business and
industrial leaders from Mason
County, W. Va., and Gallia, Jackson, Meigs and Vinton counties in

Ohio. The association's stated mission is to expand economic development throughout the region.
"One of the givens of economic
development," Snyder said, "is that
no industrial prospect comes
around and looks at a county - they
look at a region.
"Economic development is not
dead," he added, "but, it has cer·
tainly changed . People that
wouldn't talk to one another nve
years ago because of old football
rivalries are now coming together
and cooperating."
Snyder said this new level of
cooperation results from the real·
ization that communities, "Need to
leverage their money and leverage

their efforts.
Snyder pointed to commercial
exporting as a major growth area in
the field of economic development.
"In many parts of the world
there are maJOr demlinds for Amer·
ican products," he said. 11tere is a
lot of demand, but there is a lot of
red tape.
"We have to teaCh people how
to export...how to make exporting
user friendly," Snyder concluded .
Tuesday's meeting included
reports on comrany visitations and
a discussion o a need to solidify
and clarify the mission of the
newly-formed association.
Organized in September, the
groups first major project involved

a continuing series of visitations to
area businesses and industries
designed to determine existing
needs of established fll'llls.
A first round of visitations
involved contacts with representa·
tives of Facemyre Lumber in
Meigs County, the Pillsbury plant
in Jackson County, and Gallia
County's Bob Evans Farms.
Over the past month, REDA
teams visited the offices of the
Southern Ohio Coal Company,
near Wilkesville in Gallia County,
and Shell Chemical, in Apple
Grove, W.Va.
·
The .illitial contacts, visitation
committees reponed, brought forward numerous suggestions . ·

Coal strike
may ,end
shortly

mislJiiilcc.'' .· .

!nciOOing the development of a leg·
tslative agenda • of the local wood
industry, a need to draw labor
intensive industries to the area, and
cooperative efforts between Bob
Evans Farms and regional tourism
groups.
Additional concerns expressed
by the corporate leaders included
the. need for improvements in edu·
cation, enhancement of the ttans·
portation infrastructure, a regional
approach to grants writing, and
area-wide support for specific projects, such as the proposaliO de vel·
op a regional atrport in Mason
County.
In a focused discussion of the
goals, objectives and mission of the

association, concern was exp-essed
that other regional economic development agencies might perceive
the REDA as a competitive, rather
than cooperalive, body.
"As we clarify our mission,"
REDA president Jim Kessinger,
Oak Hill, "we must make it clear
that our purpose is to work in con·
cert with the efforts of existing
agencies."
The University of Rio Grande,
through the ausptces of its newlf·
developed Center for Economtc
Development, hosted Monday's
meeting.
The next full meeting of the
REDA will be Monday, Jan. 31, at
7 p.m., at the University of Rio
Grande.

Middleport Council OKs
'buy local' resolution

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Gov. Gaston Caperton says he's
cautiously optimistic that a 6month coal strike will be senled
soon, before more damage is done
to West Virginia's economy.
"Now is the time to settle this
strike before the financial diffaculties get any w~,'' Caperton said
Monday. "The (strikers') families,
tho-'wllo!C· coinll!linity, even. dalci
·~, Jiiltieen ,liiijjilacil·b
y

Maft Muchow, director of
reaearch for the Illite Deplll'liilent
of Tax and Revenue, said Monday
that the ilrike is costing the state $2
million a month in lOst coal severililee.taxci.
The state's financial experts
provided for "some· son of downPomeroy. Here Martha Poole, left, and Rutlt
SOLARIUM R!ADING ROOM • Llgltt,
turn in the coal industry" when
Steams enjoy the new facility, while Ruth Pow·
bright, and so invldng with its comfortable furthey budgeted for the previous
ers, right, works on arranging some or the read·
niture Is the newly cOmpleted solarium reading
year, Muchow said. Thus, the ftrst
ing materials. (Photo by Charlene Hoeftlcb)
room at the Meigs County Public Library In
months of the strike did not affect
the state's inoome estimates.
.. ''But-we didn't expect the strike
to go on this long," Muchow said.
"Just since July I, we're $4.5 million short of our estimates, and
that'sall coal strike relaterl."
The UMW began its strike May
10 in a dispute over job security
and future em)lloymcnt for UMW
members. The union says it has
The Meigs County Public with its decor in Williamsburg blue patrons will use to start up the sysabout 17,500 miners on strike in Library, which moved into new and rose.
tem has not been completed.
seven stales in Appalachia and the quarters in 1989 on West Main
Numerous children and adult
The parking problem created by
Midwest.
Street in Pomeroy; continues to the addition of programs at the programs are being added to the
Caperton said Monday that a expand its facilities as well as its library has been partially eliminat- library agenda. In addition to the
special mediator's briefmg on the collection of books and materials, ed by the addition of 10 new regular story hours, special proweekend's marathon negotiations and program offerings for children spaces.
grams for children are featured on a
has given him hope that the long and adults.
They arc located on West Main monthly ba sis. This month the
di~ule wiD be seuled soon.
The most recent addition is a Street on the river side across from library will observe Children's
"For the fliSt time, I would say solarium reading room · which has the library. The area has been Book Week with three special pro·
that I'm cautiousjy optimistic,'' been added to the main floor blacktopped and a guard rail grams.
Caperton .said. "Be sure you put libllll)'.
On Nov. 16, youngsters will be
installed.
that 'cautiously' in there."
making
personalized bulletin
The 29 by 12 foot structure
Plans are moving forward for a
Negotiators for the United Mine with glass ex lending along one side computer search system to be in boards, on Nov . 17 a purple
Worlters and the Bituminous Coal and over the top has bceit furnished operation by the end of the year or dinosaur will visit to entertain the
Oper~tors Association .met late into
with a comfortable sofa and chairs, in early 1994. The computers are in boys and girls, and on Nov. 18, a
the night Saturday and Sunday, takreading tables and racks. It's bright place at the library, but the work of special workshop will be held
ing few bn:W. They reconvened at and light and exttemely inviting preparing new library cards which where the children will make soda
10 a.m. Monday, according to,the
bot~e aquariums.
woman who ans1fered the telephone at the Washington, D.C.,
offiCes of mediator Bill Usety. She
declined 10 give her name.
Calls to Usery's office late
Monday were answered by a
recording.
Usety earlier said he planned to
keep the two sides at the table until
a settlement was reached. While
The Division-of Public Works
Georxe Kaitsa, department chief
By JOHN CHALFANT
mediatin~ the UMW's 1989 negoti·
put
the total at $15 million, includ·
financiaf
ofrteer,
said
the
ad
agency
Associated Press Writer
ations wtth The Pittston Co., Uscty
mg
$11.5 million for construction.
wiU
teeeive
$70,000,
or
1.6
percent
COLUMBUS - Don't be sur·
kept the two sides at the table for
A
previous
estimate pegged con·
92 consecutive hours before an prised if ads touting Ohio's busi- of the total. The rest of the money struction coSts
at $10 million.
ness climate start showing up more goes to produce the ads and buy
agreement was n:ach!:cf.
,
Controllers released $3.5 mil·
broadcast time or print space..
Meanwhile, a top UMW offteial in national newspapers and maga.
lion
for the Lucasville prison. An
Kaitsa
said
$500,000
the
depart·
zines
or
on
radio
and
TV.
in West Vitginia said Monday that
April
riot involving 409 prisoners
ment
spent
on
such
promotion
in
The
state
Controlling
Board
there will be no settlement unless
the last state bud•et •enerated a claimed the lives of a guard and
Eastern Associated Coal Corp. released $4.4 million for a 20·
increase in calls to a tele- nine inmates.
sharp
month
marketing
program
to
agrees to rehire strikers who were
The Ohio Department of Rcha·
pho~~ hot line for business
for
the
state's
increase
exposure
ftred for what the company said economic development programs.
bilitation and Correction was given
tnq~JU~CS ,
was picket line violence.
Sen. Jeff Johnson, D-Cleveland, $2 million to begin restoration of
In other acuon Mon(lay, the
L-Block, site of the disturbance.
said
l)e wanted better evidence.
board released ·$13.5 milhon to
"There will be total amnesty for help pay for initial costs or three
"The returd ori investment The bi$gest chunk of the money,
an our folks or we won't go blck,'' prison construction projects at question has got to be more sub- $1.1 million, goes to MoodyNolan
said Howard Green, a member of Lucasville, Caldwell and St. stantial than il)creased fhone Lui., Columbus, as associate archi·
. ..
the ullion's governing board (CJJ!e· Clairsvillo.
cans;•'· Uid Johnson, one o seven teet.
senting DistriCt 17, covering southAnother $1.5 million will be
The Ohio Department of Devel- members on the board.
em West Virginia and easlem Ken· opment won' approval of a $4.4
Kailsa said an independent comused to hire the Knowlton Contucky.
million coillilll:t with BSBLeff and pany 'WaS hired 10 track results of
struction
Co., Dublin, for initial
Squiceiarini, Columbus, to handle a calls receivcid from businesses.
building worlt. .
"I waqt to be clear on t~at. business marlceting campaign that
Cosu of re~iiB a coUblock
Fred Forbes, public workS direc·
There wein't be any contract wtth- in the past hu included spots on
that riotin1 btlllllllS traShed at the
tor,
said the goal is 10 have L·Block
out all our people going back, .. CNN and ads ill the Wall Street
Southern Ohio Corroctional Faciliblck
in service within five months.
0Jeertsaid.
ty wen: revised tqiWard Monday.
Journal.

Meigs Library continues

to expand its facilities

Ohio to spend $4.4 million
on marketing programs

or

..

2-9-15·27-30

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
A resolution to give ftrst prefer·
ence on projects to local contractors and ·supplii'ZS of miiiCI'ials even
when a lower bid is received was
passed by Middleport Village
Council at Monday night's meeting.
Council's resolution which
passed by unanimous vote provides
that in cases where the cost vari·
ante is not more than five percent
a'i1d 1111 other niquimnents are satis'
fled, then the in-county bid may be
accepted.
The resolution points to the vii·
Iage's desire 10 encourage the use
of local contractors and suppliers
because of their support for the
community through jobs, taxes and
contributions.
No Smoking Ordinance
Following a lengthy discussion,
Council by a vote of four to two,
gave a first reading to an ordinance
prohibiting smoking in Middlepon
village offices, buildings and
enclosed structures.
The ordinance must have three
readings and be adopted before it
becomes law.
It provides for posting of "No

Smoking" signs and penalties for
violators, ranging from $25 for the
first offense to $100 for .the founh
offense.
While Councilman Bob Gilmore
seconded the motion for the first
reading, he was one of the two vot·
ing against it. Miclt Childs also
voted ""no". Since the jail is in Middleport Village hall, Gitinore cited
the problem the proposed ordinance will present for prisoners
who smoke. It was pointed out that
while employees ellA leave the
building to smoke, that is not an
option for prisoners.
The need to protect non-smok.
ers was stressed by Council members, Gerard, Judy Crooks and
James Clatworthy who voted in
favor or the ordinance, as did Jack
Sauerficld.
Grant Applications
Council authorized Jean
Trussell, grants coordinator, to proceed with the energy conservation
grant application with the Ohio
Department or Development.
The grant amount would be 50
percent of the project cost or
$8.555 . The work would involve
installation O[ Storm windows,
Contiaued on Page J

.---Local briefs-Official ballot count Saturday
The Meigs County Board of Elections will meet at It a.m. Saturday to conduct the official count of ballots cast in the Nov. 2 election, Rita Smith, director, announced.
Smith said that 34 ballots cast under provisions of House Bill
237 wiU be counted into the ftnalligures at that time. Absentee ballots were included in the re~ar election returns. Those 34 voters
voted in the Board of Elections office bccat:se they had failed to
change their address p-ior 10 the October deadline.
A race which could vety well be affected by the addition of those
34 ballots, 13 of which are from Salisbury Township. is the Salisbur~ Township uustee race. In that race, Bernard D. Gilkey
recetved 623 votes and l:.arry R. Thomas 621.

Man sentenced on birthday
A Pomeroy man received an unpleasant birthday gift Monday in
the Meigs County Court of Common Pleas when he was sentenced
on a charge of breaking and entering.
Curtis Leroy Wud, who turned 22 Monday. received an ISmonth sentence which will be suspended upon completion of a six.
month program at the Southeastern Probationary Treatment Alter·
native Center in Nelsonville. In addition, he was ordered to pay
prosecution costs of $500. court costs and received five years probation.
Ward pleaded guilty in the Sept. 27 breaking and entering of
Vance Grocery in Harrisonville in which cigarettes and smokeless
tobacco products were stolen.
He received credit for 41 days served in the Meigs County Jail.

Veterans Day observances
are planned for Thu~sday
Veterans Day observances will
be held Thursday at II a.m. in
front of the Meigs County Courthouse, conducted by the Drew
Webster Post of the American
Legloo. The service of veterans of
aU wars will be remembcml.
According to Post Commander
ChliCk Kitchen, Jerry Gust from the
University of Rio Grande will be
the featured speaker.
Gust is a O.S. Air Fon:e veteran
of the Korean Conflict. He was
raised on a farm in northwestern
Minnesota and is a graduate of the
University of Delaware with a
degree in psychology. He earned a
Masters of Business Administra·

lion at Ohio University.
A frequent speaker on subjects
i~cluding ma~ageme_nt by objecttves, leadershtp, IDObvation com.
munications, safety, self and 'subor'
dinate development and threats to
the American free entetprise system, he has spoken to groups
throughout Ohio, as well as New
York City, Dallas and Chic.go.
Kitchen invites all veterans in
the county, veterans organizations
and all citizens 10 be a J111t of Ibis
program. Following the aervl~e
beaDs will be served at the
can Legion building in Poincroy
Everyonc is invited 10 attend.
·

Ameri:

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